100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 05, 1966 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1966-08-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Maxine Stone Marries
Stuart H Brickner

Jews in Sports

By JESSE SILVER

(Copyright, 1966, JTA, Inc.)

The United States Committee
Sports for Israel has announced the
name of the baseketball coach and
five of the players who will par-
ticipate in the Pan-American Mac-
cabiah Games in Sao Paulo, Bra-
zil, from August 23-28.
The players named were Dave
Newmark, Columbia; Eugene Dres-
ler, Harvard; Bob Beller, Har-
yd; Bill Baum, Rochester and
Turenshine, St. Francis of
)ooklyn. Roy Rubin, coach of
Long Island U. will handle the
10-man squad.
Rubin has been coach of LIU
since 1961 and enjoyed his best
year last season. The Blackbirds
had a 22-4 record, captured the
Tri-State title and were named
the ECAC Small College Team of
the Year. Rubin played his col-
lege ball at LIU and Louisville.
Newmark, a seven-footer, made
All-America in his sophomore year.
The big boy averaged 22.8 points
a game and was a bear off the
board. Dressler and Beller are six-
footers, and Dressler is the new,
Harvard captain. Baum goes 6'3",
while Turenshine is 6'5". Part of
the funds that will send Turen-
shine to Brazil will come from the
priests of St. Francis!
The other nations entered in the
basketball competition are Brazil,
Argentina, Canada, Chile, Mexico,
Paraguay and Uruguay.
*
*
Mark Spitz of Santa Clara, Calif.,
who captured the four gold medals
in last year's Maccabiah Games,
has been named to the 19$6 High
School All-American Swimming
Team. Spitz was the most out-
standing performer on the team,
placing in six of the eight indi-
vidual events, and in both the re-
lays. The only swimming events he
failed to make were the 50 yard
freestyle and the 100 yard breast-
stroke.
Spitz set national high school
records in the 100 yard butterfly
(51.9) and the 200 yard individual
medley (1:59.0). His other short
course marks were 100 yard free,
48.5; 200 yard free, 1:47.8; 400
yard free, 3:49.5 and the 100 yard
backstroke, 54.9. Both of his Santa
Clara High School relay teams, the
200 yard - medley and the 400 yard
freestyle, set national records.
In a July 4 meet Spitz recorded
his greatest swimming feat to date.
He tied Olympia _ n Don Schollander
in a 200 meter freestyle in 2:01.3.
The clocking would have been good
for 10th place on the 196'5 world
list.

-

Joining Spitz on the High School
All-America Swimming Team were
Ken Ziskin of Burbank, Calif., Dave
Solomon of Pittsburgh, Pa., and
Lee Chesneau of Coral Gables,
Fla. Ziskin recorded a 1:01.8 for
the 100 yard breastroke, Solomon
53.3, for the 100 yard butterfly and
Chesneau 3:54.0 for the 400 yard
freestyle. All were members of last
year's Maccabiah Games team. An-
other Maccabian who should have
made All-America was Paul Katz
of New York. Katz' 400 yard free-
style time of 3:56.3 qualified him
for the team. Somehow he was
overlooked.
Pamela Taub, Rhonda Sue Dick-
son and Brett Borisoff were the
standout swimmers at the Seventh
Annual Southern California Mac-
cabiah Swim Meet . . . Paul Katz
was named the Metropolitan AAU's
most outstanding swimmer . . .
Ira Haspel of the Bronx was named
co-captain of the 1967 Colgate U.
swim team . . . Dave Timpone of
the Cerritos of Calif. team was
picked to the 1966 Indoor All-Am-
erica AAU National Water Polo
Team . .. John Reitman of Santa
Monica and Terry Heller of Fresno
made the 1966 All-America Junior-
College Swimming Team. Reitman
in the 100 (53.0) and 200 yard
butterfly (2:02.2) and Heller in the
50 yard free (22.3).
Tiny Cathy Cole of North Miami
Beach has been named to the 1966
High School Girls All-American
Swimming Team. She was also
selected Swimmer of the Year by
the Miami Herald and named to
the Herald and the Miami News
high school all-star swimming
squad. Miss Cole is the same girl
who captured seven medals at
last year's Maccabiah Games.
Janis Lewis of Miami also made
the All-America team in the butter-
fly event. She too was selected to
the all-star teams.
Miss Cole made the All-America
in the 50, 200 and 400 yard free-
style and the 100 yard butterfly.
She clocked 25.5, 2:02 and 4:24.7
in the freestyle events.
The 15-year-old really got going
later in the outdoor events. She
broke a Florida Gold Coast AAU
record for the 1,500 meters with a
19:17.3 clocking. That time would
have been good for eighth place
on the 1965 world list. Then she
competed in the Southern AAU
Championships in Atlanta and set
meet records in the 200 meter free
2:19.5 and 400 meter free, 4:58.6.
She also tied the 200 meter butter-
fly mark of 2:45.0.
Steve Semryck of NYU won the
100 and 200 yard breaststroke
events at the N.Y. Metropolitan
Collegiate swimming champion-
ships.

Atlas

by

HAL GORDON

and Orchestras

UN 3.8982

UN 3.5730

The word "atlas," which we use
to refer to a collection of maps,
originated with a figure of the
giant Atlas supporting the world
on his shoulders used as a decora-
tion on a folder of maps. It was
probably the Flemish geographer
Gerhardus Mercator who first used
the word atlas for a collection of
maps that he began in 1585 and
his son completed in 1594.

FINAL CLEARANCE OF ALL

SUMMER DRESSES

SPECIAL GROUP
y r:u4s 5 $800

a hi ic

16007 W. 8 MILE

ALL OTHERS

UP IIW e
()
TO Ar

70

iginat

Friday, August 5, 1966-21

Bnai Mitzvah

BRIAN SOLOWAY, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Soloway of Trenton,
will celebrate his Bar Mitzva, Sat-
urday at Beth Isaac Synagogue.
* •
The Bar Mitzva of Phillip
Marcuson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Marcuson of Livonia will be
celebrated Aug. 13 at Cong. Bnai
Moshe.

Max Schrut

For the HY Spot
Of Your Affair

For Good Photographs
and Prompt Service
Call Me at

Music by

BLAIR STUDIO

Hy Herman

And His Orchestra

MRS. STUART BRICKNER

Maxine Carol Stone and Stuart
Harvey Brickner exchanged mar-
riage vows at a recent candlelight
ceremony at Cong. Ahavas Achim.
Rabbi Seymour A. Panitz and Can-
tor Simon Bermanis officiated.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Stone of Marlow
Ave., Oak Park. The bridegroom's
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Brickner of Ohio Ave.
The bride wore a gown of

peau de . soie, appliqued with
large clusters of Alencon lace
with a matching coat train. A
handmade cluster of seed pearls
and rhinestones secured her illu-
sion veil. She carried a satin
Bible covered with her bouquet
of Stephanotis, ivy and orchids.

Mrs. Jerald Chudler was her
sister's matron of honor. Marlene
Brickner, sister of the bridegroom,
was maid of honor. Bridesmaids
were Susan Roth, Mrs. Raymond
Linivitz and Mrs. Morrise Kent.
Junior bridesmaids were Marsha
Bricknet, sister of the bridegroom
and Francine and Lori Kent Sta-
cey Chudler and Susan Brickner
were flower girls.
Lawrence Bricker was his
brother's best man. Ushers were
David Weiss,- Donald Shephard
and Morrise Kent.
After a honeymoon trip to Miami
Beach, the couple will reside in
Royal Oak.



(Hy Utchenik)

Weddings - Bar Mitzvahs

342-9424

We Come to Your Home
With Samples

OFF

UN 4-6845

TY 5-8805

Distinctive Ceremonies
a Specialty!

WONDER WHY..

.

SO MANY PEOPLE PREFER

The Unique and Original Flower Designs by
Ceil and Ben Stocker for Those Very Special
Occasions?

Come in and Let Us Show YOU Why!

&I'M& Nil- Cf2a

Party Flower Specialists

15212 W. 7

MILE RD.

&

Bet. Sussex
Whitcomb

AcLort c hcrt

345-4383

STOCKER'S MARKET

SERVING DETROIT FOR 38 YEARS WITH THE

FINEST GIFT BASKETS, VINTAGE
WINES & CHAMPAGNES FROM OUR
UNDERGROUND WINE CELLAR.

NO ACCOUNT TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL

BASKETS CUSTOM ARRANGED FOR ALL OCCASIONS
15000 GRAND RIVER corner Robson

CITY WIDE DELIVERY — VE 5-1316

• HAND BAGS • BRIEF CASES
• BILLFOLDS • LUGGAGE

• REPAIRING

Unconscious Vengeance

By DR. JACOB KLATZKIN
If you look deeply into the

events of history, you will find
that the gravest acts of vengeance
were perpetrated unconsciously.
Illustrations in point are Heine's
revenge upon the Germany that
was so far from him and so near
to him, Jiermann Cohen's revenge
upon German culture, which he
knowingly praised to the utmost,
and unknowingly undermined. We
may explain the pre-eminence of
Jewish participation in the great
revolutions of the world as uncon-
scious acts of vengeance. It is as
though an angel, say, the Angel
of History, stood behind the backs
of Jews and urged them: "Take
your revenge! Sacrifice yourselves
for others!"
This is the character and the
beauty of our history-making ven-
geance. It brings blessing to the
nation upon whom the vengeance
is wreaked, and sacrifices no one
but the avenger. Thereby he, too,
is blessed.
When I see many, many writers
who had their origin in the Jewish

6338 W. McNichols, nr. Livernois

Large selection of china
in many designs and
coiors.

fold, most powerful in negation
and destructiveness, I think to my-
self: Haply, this is Israel's revenge
upon the gentile nations — a re-

venge which begets blessing.

272-2522

Parking in Rear
Corner Rutherford
BERNICE DICKSTEIN - SARA SALLEN

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

"Israel Bonds constitute an in-
tegral part of the development
budget, and as such make a vital
contribution to the future growth
and prosperity of the State of
Israel . . . Here indeed is im-
pressive and tangible evidence of
the eternal ties which bind us to-
gether in our historic quest of
Israel's sovereign rebirth."
Levi Eshkol, prime minister

of Israel.

SAVE 25%

This is our Everyday
Discount on Sterling Silver

. • •

41111

UN 2-5611

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan