I s Eyir, • POP- 4,4 •• ) 20 Friday, March 14, 1980 1414 1.1 +147 Agil +1 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Israel Cagers Beat Spain Team PASSOVER TORTES lit MINIATURE PASTRIES Kosher For Passover available at ELIZABETH'S HUNGARIAN PASTRIES 545-6900 13730 W. 9 Mile, Oak Park Place Your Order Early under supervision of the Council of Orthodox. Rabbis NEW YORK (JTA) — The Maccabi Tel Aviv bas- ketball team defeated the Real Madrid team of Spain 110-100 in a crucial game last week in Tel Aviv before a sell-out crowd of 10,000- plus at Yad Eliyahu. The win automatically placed the Israeli team in the European Cup Final Championship series, which will take place March 27 in Berlin against Real Madrid. Yeshiva U. Assures Supporters Following Mortgage Problems NEW YORK (JTA) — Dr. Norman Lamm, president of Yeshiva University, commenting on a press re- port last week that a major New York City bank, the Bowery Savings Bank, is seeking to foreclose its por- tion of the university's $40 million mortgage, said that "there is no way that Yeshiva University will fold." The most exciting jewelry in Detroit is now 30% off. For one week only. A spokesman for the uni- versity had told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, before Lamm's statement was pub- licized, that the university had been involved for sev- eral months in efforts to reorganize the mortgage. The spokesman said the mortgage had been under- written by a consortium of commercial and savings banks in the 1970s, adding that the commercial banks were "relatively respon- sive" to those debt reorgan- ization efforts while the sav- ings banks, including the Bowery Savings Bank, have been "less so." The university was estab- lished in 1886, and has grown- to become a four- campus, 7,000-student Or- thodox institution. According to the press report, the university has not paid anything to the Bowery Savings Bank on the mortgage since Sep- tember. The spokesman said the university has made payments totaling $5.5 million since Sep- tember and was making every effort to work out a negotiated formula to stretch out future pay- ments. Lamm also said, "We want to reassure the fa- culty, our students and sup- porters of our continuing strength and determination to function as a major edu- cational force in this coun- try." He also said "our at- torneys are studying the papers in the current law suit and we will respona shortly." Acting State Supreme Court Justice Beverly Cohen signed an order re- quiring the university to show why the Bowery Sav- ings Bank should not "re- cover from Yeshiva Univer- sity all unrestricted pledges and contributions . . . as se- curity" for the mortgage. Mortgage terms require the university to make monthly $373,000 payments until 1997. The court order was part of the lawsuit to which Lamm referred. The university, which has an annual budget of $115 million, is currently in the midst of a campaign to raise $100 million, with hopes of completing that campaign in 1986, the 100th anniver- sary of the university's founding. 20 Hurt in Nuremburg Clash Between Police, Neo-Nazis V one of a Kind jewelry Saturday, March 15 through Saturday March 22 Sale on displayed pieces only. Applegate Square, Northwestern Highway, Southfield 358-1280 BONN (JTA) — Eleven policemen and nine passersby were injured in a fierce clash between police and neo-Nazi demon- strators in Nuremberg Tuesday. The neo-Nazis are mem- bers of the Wehrs- portsgruppe Hoffman which was recently declared unconstitutional b3'7Interior Minister Gerhard Baum. Its self-styled "fuehrer," 42- year-old Carl-Heinz Hoffman and three other members were arrested and taken into temporary cus- tody. The street battle occurred when police attempted to disperse the neo-Nazis, who were staging a demonstra- tion in violation of a ban by the local authorities. The Wehrsportsgruppe Hoff- man, which masquer- aded as a sports organ- ization, has appealed against Baum's decision and is seeking to re- establish its legal status. In another develop- ment, the Duesseldorf state prosecutor con- firmed that additional charges are being con- sidered against Ernst Heinrichsohn, the former mayor of Buergstadt in Bavaria, who was sen- tenced to six years' im- prisonment by a Cologne court last month for his role in the deportation of French Jews and others when he served with the Gestapo in Paris during World War II. Heinrichsohn, who was re-arrested last week after being released on bail raised by townspeople of Buergstadt, has appealed to the high court in Karlsruhe against his sentence. The state prosecutor said that Heinrichsohn is suspected of having murdered five French resistance fighters in 1944, but could not say whether the investigation of this matter will result in a new trial. Dulzin Declines to Meet Pope JERUSALEM (JTA) — World Zionist Organization Executive chairman Leon Dulzin declined an invita- tion to meet with Pope John Paul II at the Vatican, ap- parently because it was ex- tended to him on a personal basis rather than as WZO head. The WZO Executive de- cided to discuss the incident when Dulzin returns from his current visit to Latin America. Dulzin reportedly was to have stopped off in Rome ey , route to Venezuela and tc. have lunched with the Pope Monday. Instead, he flew directly to his destination. According to one re- port, he will meet with the Pope on his way back to Israel. Another report said the Pope will receive Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasir Arafat next week. Dulzin was praised for his snub to the Pope by Raphael Kotlowitz, head of the Jewish Agency's immigra- tion department. He said, at the WZO Executive -meet- ing, that Dulzin acted prop- erly when he refused to meet the Pontiff except as a representative of the Jewish people.