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Friday, December 13, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

QAciftfor eternity

Eternity Bracelet
Eternity Necklace
Diamond Studs

A gift she will
treasure for-
ever and ever
...A gift for
Eternity

The Finest Expressions of Love comes from .. .

V1S4•

GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALIST
Established 1919
AWARDED COMRCATE BY CA IN GRADING & EMULATION
304E0 TELEGRAPH RD., BIRMINGHAM, M 41618, SINTE 134

J

Daily 10:00-8:30
Sat. 10:00-5:00
S un. 12:00-5:00

AL,

FINE ,JEWELERS

announces the opening
of our second store
Friday, Dec, 13, 1985

located in la mirage mall
29555 Northwestern Hwy.

.

The second store specializes in
sportswear, cocktail clothes, gift
items, perfumes and jewelry.

In addition will be Wanda's department with
young missy contemporary clothes.

We look forward to seeing
you in the new store.

MARGUERITE, THELMA & WANDA

NEWS

Need Joint Effort
To Fight Terror

New York (JTA) — Experts in
the field of international ter-
rorism maintained here that
there is a growing need for a
worldwide coordinated effort to
combat the rise in terrorist at-
tacks. They differed, however,
on whether such activities could
be implemented on an interna-
tional scale and whether they
would be effective.
The experts appeared at a
news conference sponsored by
the Anti-Defamation League of
B'nai B'rith, held to make a
year-end evaluation of the
status of international terrorism
and assess prospects for 1986.
"There must be a coordinated
response because we are con-
fronting an international ter-
rorism network," said Yoram
Dinstein, professor of law at Tel
Aviv University and visiting
professor of law at New York
University.
In addition, also advocating
internationally coordinated ef-
forts to combat terrorism were
Dr. Yonah Alexander, director
of the Institute for International
Terrorism at the State Univer-
sity of New York, and Dr. Eric
Willenz, senior associate at the
Carnegie Endowment for Inter-
national Peace.
Hillenz, a former member of a
State Department unit involved
in counter-intelligence against
terrorism, advocated an interna-
tional anti-terrorist task force
under the aegies of the United
Nations. But he emphasized
that Third World nations must
be involved because "the Third
World is the fulcrum of most
terrorism activities."
Alexander urged the estab-
lishment of "an international
commando unit by likeminded
democratic states" including the
United States and other West
European nations. "Otherwise
the world will remain hostage to
these blackmailers," said Ale-
xander, a senior research
member of the Center for
Strategic and International
studies at Georgetown Univer-
sity.
In a related development, the
recent wave of terrorist attacks
— the Achille Lauro hijack and
the murders of Israelis in Lar-
naca, Cyprus and Barcelona —
have proven to be counter-
productive as far as Palestinian
Arabs are concerned.
The Palestinians are begin-
ning to realize that such out-
rages actually damage their
cause and, for the first time,
local Palestinians have openly
criticized the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization, Col. Ephraim
Sneh, head of the West Bank
civil administration, told a
breakfast meeting of the confer-
ence of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations
at the Jerusalem Hilton Hotel.
According to Sneh, West Bank
Palestinians are becoming more
moderate. A majority of them no
longer talk of pushing the Is-
raelis "into the sea" and most
speak of negotiations with Israel
on the basis of the June 1967
borders, not the borders of the
1947 UN partition resolution as
they have in the past. 'it A le 10

The Palestinians also recog-
nize that Jordan is a necessary
partner in any negotiations with
Israel, Sneh said.
Meanwhile, Tamar Artzi, the
24-year-old Israeli woman who
was the first passenger shot by
the hijackers of Egyptair Flight
648 in Malta on Nov. 23, re-
turned to her home in Kibbutz
Revivim in the Negev last week
to a joyous, tearful welcome.
The young woman left last
month on what was to have
been a carefree vacation tour of
Egypt and the Far East with a
travelling companion, Nitzan
Mendelson. Mendelson, 23, was
the second of the passengers
shot. She died Dec. 1.
In Jerusalem, the police have
not yet determined whether the
murder of Aziz Shehade, a
prominent Palestinian lawyer
and political moderate, outside
his home in Ramallah last week
was an act of terror intended to
warn all moderates in the West
Bank or a criminal assault
motivated by one of Shehade's
intricate, far-flung and often
mysterious business deals.
The 73-year-old lawyer, de-_
scribed by some as a multi-
millionaire, was killed by a
knife slash across the left side of
his neck after parking his car in
his garage. He died instantly.
The weapon was found near
Shehade's home.
Shehade was considered one of
the leading Palestinian moder-
ates in the West Bank. Though
he advocated a Palestinian state
which he saw living in peace
side-by-side with Israel, he fa-
vored dialogue over violence.

AJCongress
Hits Bigotry

New York — The American
Jewish Congress has condemned
bigotry and violence in a white
Philadelphia neighborhood
aimed at driving a black family
out of its newly purchased
home.
"We are outraged that van-
dalism and racial picketing by
their Elmwood white neighbors
have driven the Williams family
from their newly purchased
home in Philadelphia," said Ar-
nold Silvers, president of the
Pennsylvania region of AJCon-
gress.
"The success of these intoler-
able acts of bigotry illustrate
once again how far American
society must still travel to
achieve equal rights and racial
harmony in its neighborhoods."

U.S. Funding

New York — The U.S. De-
partment of Labor has continued
its support, for the 20th year, of
the non-sectarian On the Job
Training Program operated by
the National Council of Young
Israel Employment bureaus in
New York City, Cleveland and
St. Louis.

