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* Momcilo Djujic; Anti-Communist Activist

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Momcilo Djujic, 92, a political emigre and one of the top leaders of World War II anti-Nazi, anti-communist Serbian troops known as Chetniks. Trained as a priest at a Serbian Orthodox seminary in his native Serbia, Djujic became a wartime leader when Nazis invaded the former Yugoslavia in 1941. He led his units in what is today central and southern Croatia, where he fought against the Germans, local pro-Nazi Croats and the communist-led local guerrillas supported by the Soviets. In 1945, Djujic was hunted by the triumphant Communist guerrillas led by Josip Broz Tito, but managed to escape to the United States. Under Tito’s 35-year rule, Djujic was banned from returning to the country and the U.S. government consistently rejected extradition attempts from Belgrade, which sought him as an alleged war criminal. A Serbian anti-Communist activist in Chicago and later California, Djujic advocated restarting the monarchy in Yugoslavia and abolishing the Communist regime established in the late 1940s. He founded the political exile group Ravna Gora and edited the publication Srbija. On Saturday in San Marcos, Calif.

* Mohammed Ali Fahmy;

Egyptian Military Advisor

Field Marshall Mohammed Ali Fahmy, 77, Egypt’s former army chief of staff and commander of Air Defense Forces during the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. Dubbed “the father of the Egyptian air defenses,” Fahmy became famous for establishing the so-called impenetrable wall against Israeli warplanes in the 1973 conflict. During the war, Fahmy developed a close friendship with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who was then commander of Egypt’s air force. After Mubarak became president in 1981, he named Fahmy as army chief of staff and later his military advisor. A graduate of Soviet military academies, Fahmy also had been a close advisorto former presidents Gamal Abdel-Nasser and Anwar Sadat. Fahmy wrote a number of books on military affairs and the history of war in the Middle East. On Sunday in London of kidneyfailure.

* Marvin Reimer;

Former Times Marketing Executive

Marvin W. Reimer, 90, former marketing executive for The Times during the fiercely competitive 1950s and 1960s. Reimer was advertising director when the newspaper, and its afternoon sister paper The Mirror-News, were fighting with two local Hearst-owned papers for advertisers and subscribers. First at The Times, and then for the Mirror, Reimer helped the papers gain in the difficult market. When Times Mirror bought the San Bernardino Sun in 1965, Reimer moved to the Inland Empire as Sun publisher until his retirement in 1974. The Sun was later sold to the Gannett newspaper chain. After retiring from Times Mirror, Reimer started a company printing Sunday color comic sections for The Times and 300 other newspapers throughout the country. On Thursday in Dana Point, Calif.

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* Otto Silha;

Former Newspaper Publisher

Otto A. Silha, 80, former publisher and president of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune and a champion of media ethics. A Chicago native, Silha spent 40 years with that newspaper and after his retirement in 1984, started Silha Associates, a national media and management consulting organization. He served in Army intelligence during World War II, and later was a member of the board of directors of Associated Press. Silha contributed $1.5 million to help support the Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law established in his honor by his alma mater, the University of Minnesota. In his retirement, Silha also founded and served as chairman and president of City Innovation, a Minneapolis-based national volunteer program. On Saturday in Minneapolis of a heart attack.

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