THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 11, 1974-9 Jewish Education Fellowships Planned Fellowships for graduate Classifieds Get Quick Results study in Jewish education will be offered through a special new program of the To any ,state. Also drivers furnish- Institute for Jewish Life, to ed to •drive your car anywhere. create a pool of qualified Legally insured and I.C.C. licensed Jewish educators ultimately DRIVEAWAY SERVICE capable of assuming posi- tions at supervisory levels in 9970 Grand River Hebrew schools, Jewish day Detroit, Mich. 48204 schools, and bureaus of Jew- WE 1-0620-21-22 ish education, according to 1 CARS TO BE DRIVEN MAN OF THE MONTH It is a pleasure to anhounce that Patil L. Sherizen C.L.U. has received the man-of-the-month award as the most outstanding Representative of our Detroit- Gold Agency. The award is in recognition of his excellent service to his policyholders and our Agency. Ruben Gold, C.L.U. General Agent 354-6630 16900 W. 8 Mile — Suite 236 — Southfield MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCIC COMPANY U• .•viring/gejd, 1/r/Avit•h11.1"/f,. I h-ptirtzrrl 18. I 1141 Hyman Safran, IJL chair- man. The announcement of the fellowships, which will com- mence in September, was made at a meeting of the advisory council Fellowships in Jewish Education Leader- ship Program (FIJEL), which is under the auspices of the Institute of Jewish Life. The fellowships will pro- vide stipends for study com- bining advanced work in edu- cation and Jewish studies in approved college and uni- versity programs. FIJEL fellows will also participate in an ongoing seminar pro- gram and perform super- vised field work during their courses of study. Safran, a past president of the Jewish Welfare Federa- tion of Detroit, is the second chairman of the Institute for Jewish Life, a division of the Council of Jewish Feder- ations and Welfare Funds. Federation treasurer George M. Zeltzer, a former chairman of its education division, is a member of the Fellowships in Jewish Educa- tion Leadership advisory council. Detailed information re- garding the fellowships may be obtained from Robert Lapidus, FIJEL project co- ordinator, Institute for Jew- ish Life, 65 William St., Wellesley, Mass. 02181. Major. Airlines Warned of Possible Arab Terrorist Attacks in Europe TEL AVIV (JTA) — All major airlines have been warned or a possible series of Arab terrorist attacks on aircraft and airport installa- tions in England, Germany and Greece, it was reported here this week. The warnings were said to have come from the Inter- national Air Transport Asso- ciation (IATA) and Interpol. The plot was attributed to about 10 terrorist groups whose members came from Beirut and are reportedly now hiding out in Western Europe. According to reliable sources, the warning prompt- ed the extensive security measures instituted at Heath- row Airport near London over the weekend and which are continuing and similar precautions at West German airports. No new security measures were reported at Athens air- port. Tanks, armored cars and more than 200 troops sur- rounded Heathrow in an un- precedented alert prompted by reports that Arab terror- ists planned to shoot down an airliner with portable So- viet-made ground-to-air mis- siles. The cordon was partially lifted at nightfall when air traffic is thin but was re- stored at dawn. Particular attention was be- ing paid to the approaches and takeoff points where ter- rorists would have the best chance of hitting low-flying aircraft. The alert, unprecedented in peace-time Britain, has been linked to reports that Soviet- made SAM-7 missiles were smuggled into Belgium in the luggage of Libyan diplo- mats. The missiles were said to be somewhere "on the loose" in Europe. But there was no indication of the na- ture or source of the warn- ing received by Scotland Yard. The Heathrow emergency coincided with the arraign- ment at a magistrate's court here of three persons sus- pected of an arms smuggling attempt on behalf of Arab ter- rorists. They are Allison Thomp- son, 18, of Santa Barbara, Calif.; Abdelkebir el-Hakka- oui, 25, a Moroccan; and Ather Naseem, 21, a Pakis- tani. Their hearing was con- tinued until Monday. All are being held without bail. Police sources said detec- tives questioning the trio have decided they had no connec- tion with such known Arab terrorist organizations as Al Fatah and Black September. The detectives were reported to believe they were part of a • NEW LINCOLN TOWERS All you'd ever want ... where you want it. I You can walk to the Lincoln Center shopping mall from Lincoln Towers, and do your banking on the way Just down Greenfield is Northland with all its shops and services. You're also near the Southfield and Lodge Freeways, so it's easy going anywhere: downtown, the far northwest suburbs, the lakes and parks beyond. NEW LINCOLN TOWERS Rental Apartments on Lincoln east of Greenfield MODELS HOURS: 12-6 Daily & Sunday PHONE: 968-0011 EQUAL TUN • .1 Southfield apil000 Here you'll find one-bedroom, two-bedroom and studio apartments. Carpeted throughout. With fully equipped kitchens. Tiled baths and mirrored vanities. Heating and air-conditioning systems you control thermostatically for your personal comfort. Lighted, landscaped car parks. %, Lincoln ^ Towers 10 Mile ploiluaaJD Lincoln Towers — a completely new apartment community at Lincoln and Greenfield Roads. An imposing 10-story high rise with four automatic elevators. There's a swimming pool. Sundeck. Community activity center. Central mail room. Laundry and storage lockers on every floor . . . and fantastic views from the private balconies and huge picture windows. Lincoln (101/2 Mile) 8 Mile ' '‘ 1 From $192 Moroccan organization dedi- cated to the overthrow of King Hassan. No connection is known to have been established so far between alleged activities and the shooting Dec. 30 of J. Edward Sieff. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which claimed responsibility for wounding Sieff, has close links with the Irish Republi- can Army. A front organization for the PFLP has an office in Dub- lin and is involved with both the Official and Provisional wings of the IRA. Sieff, shot by an unidenti- fied, hooded assailant, said in a television interview that he had no time or opportunity to observe his attacker. Asked whether the attack would make any difference to the activities of Zionists in this country he replied firm- ly: "Not at all, not at all." Sieff's doctors said that his life was saved by the mirac- ulous fact that the bullet hit his teeth and met resistance. They also said he may be home within a week or so. In Paris, police sources in- dicated the Palestinian ter- rorist ring broken up by po- lice, was preparing major at- tacks on diplomats and Rome's Ciampino Airport. They said questioning of the suspects, 10 of whom are said to be Turkish, and examina- tion of confiscated papers in- dicate the group was aiming to strike at unnamed Euro- pean ambassadors and their families and at Rome's sec- ond airport. The group had been stock- piling explosives and arms in a small villa south of Paris for the past six months, po- lice said. British intelligence experts said that British security forces are convinced that ex- tremist guerilla forces are linking up for coordinated ter- rorist campaigns throughout the world. He was commenting on a report in the Beirut daily newspaper Al Liwa that Pal- estinian guerillas and the Irish Republican Army have agreed to joint acts of terror- ism in Britain. In Tel Aviv, police have uncovered a group of extreme leftists who regard them- selves as anarchists and call themselves "T he Black Front." Five of them have been arrested. Brother of Faisal Snubbed in Brazil RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA) — Seventy Arab and other personalities ignored invita- tions to a dinner in Sao Paulo in honor of Prince Abdul Rahaman Abdul Assiz, broth- er of King Faisal. Of the 220 invited, only 150 attended. Abdul Assiz is visiting major Brazilian cities, pre- sumably looking for large investments. He is also dis- tributing donations for local Arab organizations and mos- ques. At the same time, Mansour Shallita, head of the Arab League office in Brazil, an- nounced an Arab-Brazilian seminar to be held in Rio at the beginning of 1974. Invest- ments and oil supplies will be discussed at the seminar. The goal of the new Fed- eration of Arab Entities of the Americas is to deny Latin Ame-ritari political sup- port to Israel.