• 6—Friday, Sept. 6, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Austria Moves Transit Camp (Continued from Page 1) tages by Arab terrorists. He said the risk was too big for Austria to permit the Jewish Agency to run the Schoenau Camp. World-wide protests were the result. Then, the Austrian govern- ment installed the Wollers- dorf transit camp, but Krei- sky said the site of the camp would be changed from time to time to avoid unnecessary security risks. Interior Minister Ott o Roesch admitted Wednesday he received protests of peo- ple living near the new camp because they feared Arab terrorist actions. "Such a risk does hardly exist," Roesch said. "We have to fulfill a humanitarian task." Some critics said it was a risk to establish the transit camp in a densely populated city area. The right-wing Freedom Party is planning protest ac- tions demanding to transfer the camp to another area. Roesch said: "Everybody must understand that it is our duty to help other peo- ple." Without giving exact fig- ures, government officials said Wollersdorf Camp had hosted several thousand So- viet Jews in the eight months of its existence. Jews Send Letter of Condolence to Envoy Davies' Family WASHINGTON (JTA)—The Greater Washington Jewish Community Council's presi- dent, Judge William C. Levy, has sent a letter of condo- lence on behalf of the Wash- ington Jewish community to the family of the slain Amer- ican Ambassador in Cyprus, Rodger Paul Davies. The letter declared that the Jewish community knows "too well and too often the tragedy of terrorism." Just two summers ago 11 Israelis were massacred in Munich. Rodger Davies, then deputy assistant secretary of state, was among those who eulo- gized their deaths; and called out for an end to terrorism. Levy also said that it was ironic that a "similar trage- dy perpetrated by men of similar contempt for human life snuff e d out Rodger Davies' life." CARS TO BE DRIVEN To any state. Also drivers furnished to drive your car anywhere. Legally insured and I.C.C. licensed DRIVEAWAY SERVICE 9970 Grand River Detroit, Mich. 48204 WE 1 -0620-21 -22 El Al Mechanics End Slowdown; Normal Flight Schedules Resume TEL AVIV (JTA)—El Al mechanics ended their work slowdown Monday as a con- dition for a meeting they re- quested with Transport Min- ister Gad Yaacobi who cut short a trip to England and returned home to deal with the airline's worsening labor dispute. El Al resumed normal flight schedules Monday eve- ning, relieving a backlog of some 2,000 stranded pas- sengers at Ben-Gurion Air- port. El Al was grounded 7,by a work stoppage earlier Mon- day after the five-member mechanics union committee was summoned to police headquarters to answer charges that they had dis- obeyed last • week's court order to the mechanics to resume normal work. 41.4 i‘r# —r Nee a a CAR? Buy it . Wholesale Any New American Made Car or Truck And We Accept Trade-Ins! Financing Available 353-3151 Now taking Orders on 75's Leasing Available JAY STUART Auto Brokers 21540 W. 11 Mile Southfield, Mich. 48076 The union representatives were released on IL 1,500 bail each, but outrage over the police intervention threat- ened for a time to precipi- tate a general strike of all El Al employes. Various workers commit- tees met during the after- noon to consider retaliatory action but dropped their threat, for the time being at least, when the mechanics said they were ready to meet with Yacobi to discuss a settlement. The government stepped into the El Al dispute with a cabinet call to the 450 El Al mechanics to end Their rule- book slowdown which pre- vented the airline from ad hering to its published flight schedules. The cabinet agreed to allow El Al to charter foreign air- craft to replace its grounded fleet and Labor Minister Moshe Baram said the gov- ernment w .a s considering shutting down El Al and es- tablishing a new national air carrier as a last resort. The airline which ended last year with a marginal profit says it has suffered severe losses from the work slow-down and a 24-hour strike by mechanics and maintenance men that pre- ceded it. El Al has had to pay hotel expenses for thousands of stranded passengers and must reimburse foreign air- lines for its passengers di- verted to them. The me- chanics claimed that a man- power shortage, not their slow down, was responsible for the delays and accused the El Al management of misleading the public. - Oil Prospectors Due hifman's Outerwear Extravaganza! Another shrewd way to save and still be a fashion leader. September 5th through September 15th, Shifman's complete line of Fall and Winter outerwear is reduced $10 to $35. 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