THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 23, 1974-11 Your new MEDICAL OFFICE! Medical Village Plaza 40600 Van Dyke • ..,to‘c)" -g- . - `t-t " Al featuring .. . Custom interior layouts Luxurious carpeting - Vinyl covered walls Sound proof suites - Formica cabinets Private exits - Paved parking for 180 cars IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! CONTACT Sionstr aso 676-4040 939-9881 Greek Ships Chartered by Zim Ordered to Stay in Israel Ports TEL AVIV (JTA)—Three Greek ships chartered by the Zim Shipping Co. were or- dered to remain in port pend- ing the clarification of the political and military situa- tion in Cyprus. Two of the ships are an- chored in Haifa, with con- signment for Black Sea and Turkish ports. The third is in a Greek port. The Israeli training ship, "Mavoot Yam," which rescued 42 Turkish armed forces mem- bers several weeks ago when the boat they were on sank, was again ordered back to port after it had set sail for another training mission with maritime school cadets. All foreign airlines Sunday had resumed their regular schedule to and from Israel, after both Turkey and Greece reopened their air- space and said the region was out of danger. El Al has renewed its flights to Istanbul and Teh- 11 0 11111%! eran. The resumption of ac- tivities by foreign airlines has reduced the pressure on El Al which for the last four days has had, to add extra flights to handle persons stranded in Israel or Israelis stranded in Efirope. Meanwhile, it was reported that El Al's special efforts to transport out of Israel thousands of stranded tourists after foreign airlines can- celled their flights to and from Ren-Gurion Airport be- cause of the Cyprus situation has greatly increased the prestige of the Israel airline, according to Mordechai Ben- Ari, its general director. Ben-Ari, who has just re- turned from France, Britain and Switzerland,- said that in addition, the relatively small drop in tourism to Israel as compared to European coun- tries also attracted the atten- tion of travel agents and air- lines in Europe. Ben-Ari also reported that NYC Promises Better Protection for Jews in City's Lower East Side NEW YORK (JTA)—Rep- Jewish delegation following resentatives of Mayor Abra- a demonstration outside City ham Beame's office and the Hall by some 35 persons led by the Jewish Defense city police department pro- League. mised better police protection One of the demonstrators, for synagogues and other re- Rabbi Julius Neumann, a ligious institutions, especially former commissioner of hu- on Manhattan's Lower East man rights for New York Side, after meeting with a City and now a candidate for councilman in Manhat- tan, said that the demonstra- tion, was precipitated by the death of Arnold Roth, 43, an observant Jew who was at- tacked in front of his Lower East Side shoe repair shop. Roth, who was active in Jewish social work, was the latest victim in an ongoing flood of violent crime, van- dalism and harassment which has taken place in the New York Jewish community, said Rabbi Neumann. The City Hall meeting was attended by Joe Erazzo, as- sistant to Beame, and four representatives of the police _department, including Sgt. Edwin Dahlem, the officer in charge of the investigation into Roth's death. Two JDL members and three other members of the city's Jewish community, including Rabbi Neumann, also attended. The Lower East Side area is one in which a particularly I large amount of crimes take I place against the Jewish community, said Rabbi Neu- I mann, adding, "We need / I more police protection in this area." Police officers "have been taken from" this area "and /1 , reassigned to other areas be- cause their residents out pressures on the city govern- ment," he charged. The demonstrators asked for the allocation of more funds to provide for better police protection in the city • I, and especially on the Lower East Side, as well as the im- mediate assignment of uni- formed or undercover police to areas such as those where Roth was killed. 714% ■1 . 1.131611#41# . 111 1,4 411 471--%; right in your neighborhood. kookit. : t:aillito AI* & fr VPI N51 14311- diii kiPtst. You needn't go far to earn a big 71/4 % on your savings — safe, secure, guaranteed for 4 years. It's just around the corner at NBS, the neighborhood banks that are big and strong. Easy as this: You buy a 4-year NBS Savings Certificate for $1,000 or more. Then we pay your 7 1/4 % interest by check quarterly, semi-annually, or annually — the choice is yours. (It comes to $150.23 a year on $2,000, for instance.) If you bring in a passbook from someplace else, we'll even handle the transfer for you. 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NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD A subsidiary of NBS Financial Corporation • 29201 TELEGRAPH ROAD** at 12 Mile Road • 17000 WEST 8 MILE ROAD, Southfield Office Plaza • 15565 NORTHLAND DRIVE, Northland Point • 20000 WEST 12 MILE ROAD** at Evergreen Road / Member F.D.1.C. / 'Information Months' Initiated by WZO OFFERING COMPLETE TRUST SERVICES Member Federal Reserve System • 27100 LAHSER ROAD** at 11 Mile Road • 6070 WEST MAPLE ROAD** at Farmington Road HOURS: 9:30 to 4:30 Daily, except Friday 9:30 to 6:00 Friday "These offices also open Saturday, 9:30 to 4:30 ALL DRIVE-IN WINDOWS open 8:00 to 4:30 NASD Neighborhood banks that are big and strong, JERUSALEM (JTA)—The World Zionist Organization is planning a series of "infor- mation months" in the larger Jewish communities around the world in a major effort to explain Israel's policy aims to Jews and non-Jews alike. The first "month" will be in France in October. Pro- grams planned include: ap- pearances of leading Israelis, films of Israeli and Jewish interest, stepped up dissemi- nation of printed material on Israel, and seminars and lec- tures for Jewish and Zionist activists and others. his proposal to have a third -and much cheaper class, known as the' "V a cation Class," on airlines as a sub- stitute for charter flights is being discussed by the mem- bers of the International Air Travel Association. He said it could come into effect in 1976. Ben-Ari said his proposal would' be to increase the num- ber of seats for this class by eliminating meals and nar- rowing the aisles. He said if this class was established there would be no need for charters. In Jerusalem, the foreign ministry reported that all the Israelis known to be in Cy- prus are safe and well. There are some 15 families known to be in Cyprus, many of them Solel Boneh employes -working on a project under- taken by the Israeli construc- tion firm on the island. In addition to the 15 fami- lies, there is the staff of the Israel Embassy and their families who are all safe in the embassy premises. The others are mostly in the Hil- ton- Hotel, although some are _ in smaller towns outside Ni- cosia. Israel's aerial communica- tions were still reduced to a single air line—El Al, the national carrier — after all foreign - airlines suspended operations to and from Ben- Gurion Airport because of the war on Cyprus. There was no response to Transport Minister Gad Yaacobi's ap- peal to foreign carriers _ to fly a new route well south of the Cyprus danger zone. El Al is maintaining its regular schedules and added seven unscheduled flights to European cities to ease the backlog of passengers strand- ed by the foreign carriers. Flowers For - Every Occasion . 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