DETROIT GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES! DESIGNER EYEWEAR SALE! Israelis Will Play In U.S. Despite Incident At UM-D RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer A 30% OFF OUR ENTIRE STOCK! MILMV POLICE NEOSTYLE® k RRE Beau monde T A X 1 GIORGIO rMANI NE11 ES GUCCI WE GUARANTEE THE LOWEST PRICES ON EYEWEAR! SOUTHFIELD 647-9790 WEST BLOOMFIELD 626-9590 6667 Orchard Lake Road 30800 Southfield Road Bring in Your Prescription & Save! Bring in Your Prescription & Save! Above prices and discount offers good at West Bloomfield and Southfield stores only. Limited time offer. EXAMINATIONS AVAILABLE! WALK-INS WELCOME! A Pure & Simple Gift.. NIBBLES & NUTS We Create Impressions That Last GIFT BASKETS & TRAYS FOR ALL OCCASIONS OUR SPECIALTY 1 Troy Ounce Pure Silver Holiday Ingots Many Different Styles $995 EACH 737-8088 33020 NORTHWESTERN MasterCard V Outside Of Michigan yl s i 1.800-752-2133 Local & Nationwide Delivery Kosher & Sugarfree Available 16 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1990 E ABBOTTS-COINX CORPORATION 644.8565 1393 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham, MI 48009 s Bks. N. of 14 Mite n Arab students' pro- test Monday night which cancelled a basketball game between the University of Michigan- Dearborn and an Israeli team won't deter Israel from sending more teams to the United States. "Not at all," said Moshe Fox, press consul for the Israeli consulate in Chicago. "Just because a certain uni- versity couldn't handle its people doesn't mean our teams won't play in this country. "We have Israeli teams over here quite often. We re- cently had Maccabi Tel Aviv play in Los Angeles against the Lakers and there was no problem. "We are playing all over the place," he said. The game against UM-D was cancelled after about five minutes when Israeli team manager Amit Gal took his Hapoel Hagalil Elyon team off the floor in the face of continuing pro- Palestinian chanting and flag-waving by Arab pro- testers seated behind the Israeli team's bench. Some 50 protesters — two- thirds of whom were from UM-Dearborn and other area colleges, according to UM-D officials — had mar- ched into the field house before the game and, carry- ing picket signs and waving Palestinian flags, began pro- testing Israeli governmental policies toward West Bank Palestinians. During the teams' warm- up, the protesters sat in the middle of the basketball court. Moved off the court by campus security, they took seats behind the team ben- ches, chanting "Israelis go home," "Victory, victory Palestine," "Freedom for one, freedom for all" and "Victory, victory, long live the Palestinians." The Israeli team moved its chairs to the opposite side of the court, but several pro- testers followed, continuing to chant and wave flags. Mr. Gal, the team manag- er, said he intended to re- start the game, "but not in this kind of atmosphere." After the protesters moved with the team and sat behind them, "the game lost any value of sport," he said. The exhibition contest was the last of eight against Michigan and Ohio college teams for the Israelis, who flew back to Israel Tuesday. There were no reports of pro- tests at the other games. Steve Wasko, UM- Dearborn community rela- tions director, said it was the Israelis who cancelled the game and said he "strongly defended the students' rights to do what they did. It's their right to protest, to dissent, to have free speech, to can-3T banners and signs" as long as "they don't interfere with the progress of the game." However, he said, the pro- testers "could not have been moved (from behind the Israeli bench) without infr- inging on their rights. We do not tell people where to sit at games. They were not on the court. They were not interfering with the game." "It's a joke," said Mr. Fox, the Israeli press officer, of Mr. Wasko's statement. "What does that (disrupting the game) have to do with freedom of speech?" Mr. Fox said the consul of- fice routinely asks all host schools to "beef up their security, to make sure such an incident wouldn't happen. They (UM- Dearborn) didn't do enough." Dr. Peggy Foss, UM-D athletic director, said she tried to get the Israeli team to play the game to thwart the Arab students' goal of stopping it, "but probably they didn't feel totally safe." She also tried to get the Arab students to recognize the Israeli team wasn't the Israeli government and that there were some Americans on the team, "but they were determined to make their point." UM-Dearborn coach Joe Zabrzenski, who stayed with the Israeli team in the field house until the Israelis boarded their bus, said Mr. Gal told him, "Maybe there's (no violence) now, but as the game is going on, who can say." The coach said his players were "humiliated and em- barrassed" by the protest and cancellation. UM-D had scouted the Israelis' vic- tories over Eastern Mich- igan and the University of Detroit and "We thought we could win this thing. It was our limelight and it was taken away from us." Related story, Page 70.