Team to Play Here Feb. 14 ilympic Quintet to Oppose Michigan All Stars at U. D. Detroit Jewry and the com- munity at large will have an opportunity, on Feb. 14, to see 'Isr a e l's Olympic basketball squad in action, when the 12- man Israeli team arrives in De- NATHAN LURIE troit to play a game against the "Michigan All Stars" at Uni- versity of Detroit's fieldhouse. The Israeli team's appearance here is one o f several (N e w York, Boston, Baltimore, Los A n g e l e s, San Francisco and Pittsburgh are the others) being made around the country under the joint auspices of the Hearst Newspapers (Detroit Times and Sports Editor Edgar Hayes here) and the United States Committee for Sports in Israel. The Hearst organization has underwritten the entire expense of Israel's team coming to the United States for this tour, and proceeds from this series of basketball games will go to Israeli sports activities for youth. Col. Harry D. Henshel, of New York, chairman of the United. States Committee for Sports in Israel and chairman of. the United States Olympia basketball committee, has ap- - pointed Detr oi ter Nathan Lurie, chairman of the Board of ACF-Wrigley Stores, Inc., as local head of the drive. Lurie, in accepting the post, said: "These youngsters have traveled thousands of miles from Israel to show their wares .. . and isn't it gratifying that it is sports they come armed with . . . not weapons of war." He continued, "this is a won- derful opportunity to see Israel's youth in action, not lobbing grenades at tanks, but lobbing basketballs on a public court, before Detroit's citizenry." Aiding Mr. Lurie are Lou Luckoff, prominent Detroit ad- vertising executive who • h a s been named head of the publicity a n d proinotion group; Herman Fishman, f o r- mer six-letter athlete a t the Universi t y of Michigan in basketball and baseball, and H. Fishman well known in Detroit insurance circles, and Robert Morrison, Detroit book executive and member of the United States' 1952 Olympic track squad. The latter two will supervise ticket sales. Elmer Ripley, who has coach- ed Yale, Columbia and Notre Dame basketball squads, has been in Israel over a year work- ing with the team, and is the Israeli cagers' coach for their tour of the United States. Ripley was quoted in New York, on the team's. arrival: "Unfortunately c i r cumstances did not permit the team's com- peting in the Olympics, but I'm sure that they would have taken a 4th . at the very least, since we beal Bulgaria in pre-Olym- pic warmups twice, and they (Bulgaria) finished 4th in Olympic competition." By American standards of player size, the Israeli team is short in the height department .. the team's tallest member is only 6'-4". However, one ob- server, watching the squad work out at Jennie Grossinger's up- state New York resort said: "Did you notice the spring those boys have? They can outjump players who stand 3 to 4 inches taller than themselves. They'll do okay in this country." J6e Lapchick, coach o f S t. John's College, Brooklyn, and one-time head coach of the famed professional New York Knickerbockers said: "I never expected to see these fellows shoot so well. They certainly are w e 11-grounded i n basketball fundamentals and show more savvy and drive than many col- legiate teams I've seen M this country." With about 9,500 seats avail- able at U. of D's fieldhouse, an early sell-out is anticipated. A plus-attraction will be an exhibition • match between members of the Detroit Lions football squad, who play bas- ketball in the off-season for physital conditioning, and a similar group, composed of major league ball players, many of them from the roster of the Detroit Tigers. It is hoped that, at half-time, a shot-making exhibition may be offered, featuring many well- known Detroiters, who have long since retired from active participation in basketball, The Israeli squad will take the floor at 8:15 p.m., to oppose the "Michigan All Stars" whose head coach is University of De- troit's Bob Calihan. He will be assisted by Bill Perigo of the University of Michigan, Fordy Anderson of Michigan- State University, and Joel Mason of Wayne State University. While the entire composition of the Michigan All Stars has not yet been announced by Cali- han, the team will include three former University o Detroit "greats." They include Sam Taub, an outstanding guard for the Titans and a - graduate o f Taub Central High School; Ralph Goldstein, an- other U. of D. guard who cap- tained the 1955-56 team and de- veloped into the highest scoring guard in U. of D. history; and Norman Swanson, 6-6 center who made the All-Missouri con- ference team and set a school scoring record which was sub- sequently broken by Guy Spar- row. Tickets, priced at $5, $3 and $2, are available at the Davison and 10-Mile-Oak Park Jewish Centers, Grinnell's and the Uni- versity of Detroit Fieldhouse ticket office. Coptic Church Head in Israel Arrested; Called Egyptian Spy JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Israeli authorities have arrested Mor- cos el Antony, head of the Cop- tic Church in Israel, on charges of spying for Egypt, his • native country, the Jerusalem Post re- ported. " The arrest was made last week, the Post dispatch said, after Rev. el Antony, who re- sides in Jaffa, returned to Israel from a visit to Jordan. It is ex- pected that the head of the Christian ohurch will be tried in camera. Israel's Hoop Stars Two Egyptians Play on Tour By HAROLD U. RIBALOW (Copyright, 1957, JTA, Inc.) the U. S. Olympic Basketball Committee. Charles Kahaner, Philadelphia philanthropist, i s chairman for the current tour. Elmer Ripley will coach the Israel team. He says that there are two Egyptians on the squad and fans in Boston, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Detroit, L o s An- ' geles, San Francisco and other cities (to be named later, prob- ably because arrangements haven't yet been completed), will . see the Egyptians play a major role in the Israeli attack (basketball, that is). Marcel Hefez, team captain and Zach- aria Ofri are the Egyptians, Jewish ones, naturally. Hefez' mother is still in Nasser's Egypt, unable to leave because s h e owns property there and hopes to salvage it. Ripley believes that the best set-shot on the team is Danny Erez and a big boy, Hemmo (6-4), usually is top scorer. His size, no doubt, helps h i m. Socky Peled and Erez Lustig \ are first in catch- ing on to the jump shot, but all in all, the Israel team is be- hind latest American tactics. Weeks ago, we pointed out that Israel's national basketball team, which did not perform in the Olympic Games, will visit the United States. Since that time there has been comparative silence on most sports fronts. Now, however, with the an- nouncement that the first game will be played with Yeshiva University at Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Feb. 3, and a later game with the Brandeis Judges, a new power on the na- tional basketball scene, sports columnists are busily filling up their space with accounts about Israel's players. The trans-continental tour is sponsored by the Hearst news- A Digest of World Jewish Happenings, from papers and the State Commit- Dispatches of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and tee for Sports in Israel. The Committee's chairman is Col. Other News Gathering Media. Harry Henshel, a dedicated United States sports fan and chairman also of NEW YORK—Of the 18,000 Jewish refugees from Hungary who have reached Austria thus far, 75 per cent have been or are in the process Of being settled in 122 communities in 18 states in the U. S., United Hies Service reported. The Joint Distribution Committee has allocated $1,500,000 to ORT for its 1957 vocational training program. ... An "Anne Frank Memorial" to assist young (Direct JTA Teletype Wire Israeli writers, has been added to the expanding scholarship pro- to The Jewish News) WASHINGTON — President gram of the America-Israel Cultural Foundation (AICF), for- Eisenhower told a press con- merly American Fund for Israel Institutions. The memorial was ference here Wednesday that established through the AICF by a gift from Frances Goodrich he deplored any discourtesy and Albert Hackett, authors of the hit drama, "The Diary of Anne shown a visitor like King Saud Frank." . . Moses A. Leavitt, JDC executive vice-chairman, was reelected chairman of the American Council of Voluntary Agen- of Arabia. The President said that an cies for Foreign Service . . . Bnai Akiva of North America, reli- official reception for the king gious Zionist youth movement, at its three-day conference here, -did not necessarily imply any endorsed a scholarship institute in Israel to provide a year-long approval of internal actions work and rabbinical study program. within another country. The - WASHINGTON—A proposal to eliminate the national origins president has been asked of quota requirements from the present immigration law was made his views of criticism of Saud. in Congress by 28 Democratic Congressmen, headed by Rep. In the President's view it Emanuel Celler. did not promote the cause of Canada peace by talking only with MONTREAL — A shipment of 375,000 bushels of Canadian those with whom you agree. wheat worth $950,000 left from Vancouver aboard the S.S. Pan- Mr. Eisenhower said you must egos, it was announced by the Canada-Israel Corporation, bring- at times talk with people -with ing to $8,500,000 the total value of Canadian wheat shipments to whom you disagreed to elimi- Israel. nate misunderstandings a n d TORONTO — The government of Ontario was told by the work towards peace. Canadian Jewish Congress that the worst fears it entertained 11 In this light, said the Presi- years ago before the introduction of religious instruction in the dent, he was obliged to any public schools of the province have been realized in the interven- head of estate who, was willing ing years... to come to talk to him and who realized the President's diffi- Europe - culty of visiting abroad. PARIS—The Joint Distribution Committee has given the The President was asked if Association for the Establishment of Foreign Refugees a check he intended to take up with for 10,000,000 francs in recognition of its aid to Jewish expellees Saud questions of slavery in from Egypt. Saudi Arabia and racial and THE HAGUE—There are 65 Jews among the 5,000 Hungarian religious discrimination. Mr. refugees admitted into Holland, and 27 of them hope eventually ._ Eisenhower said he was not to enter the United States, Canada and Australia. going to be discourteous to the FRANKFURT—Edmund Weiss, a 15-year-old machinist's ap- king by saying in advance what he would discuss. But, prentice, was sentenced to 20 hours work to repairs damages said, the President, he had in when he persuaded four friends to join in smashing 30 tomb- the past pleaded for equal stones in the Jewish cemetery of qickenhofen, near Darmstadt. BRUSSELS — Belgian authorities are assisting 30 Jewish treatment for all Americans. Hungarian refugees to settle here. ISTANBUL — The historian and world famous Sephardic New York City Bars leader, Prof. Abraham Galante, was honored here on his 74th Reception to Saud birthday. He is the author of 59 books on Ottoman Jewish history and is a former member of the Turkish Parliament. (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) LONDON—The Jewish Colonization Association has made NEW YORK — The City of special grants to assist Jewish refugees from Hungary and Egypt New made it clear Tuesday that ... Jewish communities in Poland have decided- . to accept the offer King Saud of Saudi Arabia, of the Rabbinical Council of America to provide Polish Jewry while being the guest of Presi- with a gift of 100 tons of matzoth and 5 tons of ,Matzoh flour, it- dent Eisenhower is not the guest was reported here from Warsaw. of the city. No hospitality what- KIEL — Carl Clauberg, Nazi gynecologist who subjected soever was extended by the city to the Arab ruler when he ar- thousands of Jewish woman to agonizing sterilization tests in Nazi concentration camps, was indicted here, 13 months after rived Tuesday morning. M o r e than 100 policemen his arrest. were assigned to keep the Israel crowds away from the pier TEL AVIV—Habimah Theater has announced that it will where the king's party landed and a motorcycle escort pro- sponsor the planting of an Anne Frank . Forest in Israel to honor tected the king on his way to the memory of the adolescent Dutch Jewish girl who died at the the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, but hands of the Nazis and the memory of other Netherlands Jews unprecedented orders were is- who died at the hand of the Nazis. "The Diary of Anne Frank" sued by the police department had its premiere in Jerusalem on Jan. 31. . . . Two ships with to the escort to observe all traf- 1,100 immigrants, including 600 Egyptian Jews, landed in Haifa fic regulations, including speed Sunday. JERUSALEM—Mayor Gershon Agron told a Rotary Club limits and traffic lights. While New York ignored King meeting that whole sections of Israel's capital have been marked Saud's arrival, a squadron of for demolition as part of a campaign to modernize the city. . . . Navy Destroyers gave a 21 gun The ultra-orthodox Neturei Karta, which regularly requires po- salute, a military band and a lice attention, sent blessings to Yehiel Langer, retiring assistant marine guard of honor greeted police superintendent who had a farewell party here. . . . A pro- the Arab ruler on behalf of the posal to insure women against accidents in the home was made United States Government. The here by Mapai Knesset member Mrs. D. Netzer during discussion king proceeded to Washington on amending the national insurance law. . . . Haifa and Tel Aviv where he was met at the air- are vying for the site of a major observance of ISrael's tenth anniversary. port by President Eisenhower. Afround the Eisenhower Asks Courtesy for Saud