At Grenoble . . . and the Olympics THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—Friday, FeLruary 13; 1968 By JESSE SILVER DRIVE-INS LIT INAPTAREK BIKE QUIRE TEWAY MAIL CINEMA II CINEMA HEST AIMER PARK CINEMA VIAREPN VIIIAGE WYAI AVEll ALGIER S' BEL AIR DEARBORN EAST SIDE FORD-WYOMING ORT GEORGE GRATIOT TRoy VAN Dili ztf; ET SIDE MALLg 11{- 1 1 ItrioiRIF") AMEN s . For ShoW Times. See Moyle Guide in Detroit Shopplan Now THE HAPPIEST MILLIONAIRE a zinging, heel-thumping musical made of th e magical stuff of Plymouth West of Middles e" .. 64 7- 1200 Sat, 'Mary Poppins'!" • WaltDISIttt Sul:Iniftrts 20, 17:'50 1°;79:"1, .48 9:55 apPlest Nillionaim HOUSEKEEPING meg TECHNICOLOR° GREER TOW, GERRLIRME MacMURRAY STEELE GARSON PAS WARREN es MI COOPER HE RMIElhE BADDELEY ifsierne "•• et MO, veep. JOHN DAVIOSOR rn,a, u ,HP,14•••■ 1Q0Bir a s,ese In the splendor of 70min. wide screen and full stereophonic sound! DAjl_ •_ ..GONE WITH THE WIND" STARR , NC, CLARKGABLE VIVIEN LEIGH LESLIE HOWARD OLIVIA de HAVILLAND SELINICY Th • INTERNATiONAL PICTURE • VIGTOR 111;11N A Di• yrt • METRO-'6OLTPR Y - ATIR u.• Box Office Open Daily 12 Noon to 9:00 P.M. MADISON For Theatre Party and Group Sales Call Woodrow Fraught at 963-3538 POOmmINCESCREEN • STEREOPHOMCS0130 UURO(XIOR /4314 EOM' RESERVED SEAT TICKETS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL SCHEDULE OF PRSCES AND PERFORMANCES Orchestr a C.eatar Upper ALL EVENINGS' MATINEES: (Sun.& Holidays) MATINEES: (Saturdays) MATINEES: (Wednesdays) tees Balcony Salem $2.50 $1.93 12.00 &On 2.50 2.011 2.50 2.00 1.80 150 1.50 1.25 EVENINGS at atO P.M. (Except SUNDAYS at 700 P.M.) ALL MATINEES at 200 P.M. (Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) Nat Holman, former basketball coach of the City College of New York, has been voted into the college's athletic Hall of Fame. Holman who retired in 1960, be- came the first non - alumnus selected for the honor. He guided Dr. Alain Calmat had the great honor of lighting the Olympic flame at the 10th Winter Olympic Games in Grenoble, France. Cal- mat, a physician in the French army, is a former figure skater his teams to a 422-188 record. Other Jewish athletes voted into who captured a silver medal at the 1964 Olympic Games in Innsbruck, the CCNY Hall of Fame were the present New York Knick coach, Austria. Spindell and He carried the torch up 96 steps Red Holzman, Lou the late Ira Streusand, basketball; as 60.000 people. including French Alex Axelrod, Olympic medal win. President de Gaulle and Avery fencing and Halsey Joseph- Brundage, chairman of the Inter- ner in son and Iry Spanier in baseball. national Olympic Games Commit- • • • tee, looked on. Calmat, who comes from a Yiddish-speaking family, Jewish Basketballers was awarded the Legion of Honor in 1966. He also served as physi- Are Good, Not Great cian to the French Olympic Alpine Larry Brown of the New Orleans Buccaneers was named the Most ski team. Valuable Player at the first Ameri- • • • If Lebanon can send a ski team can Basketball Association East- to the Winter Olympics, can Israel West All-Star game. Brown, at be far behind? The Israelis now 5-10, the smallest man on the occupy part of Mount Hermon, the court, was chosen to play in the same mountain the Lebanese use contest only because another for skiing. The 11th in Winter Olym- player couldn't make it. Despite pies will be held Sapporo, Brown's 17 points and five assists the West team lost to the East Japan, in 1972. Two other ice skaters, these play squad 126-120. with sticks, are Larry Zeidel and Brown, who leads the ABA in Jeff Cohen. Zeidel is a defenseman assists, is helping keep the Buc- for the Philadelphia Flyers of the caneers atop the Western division. National Hockey League, and Co- A good but not great player at hen guards the net for the Boston North Carolina, Brown won a gold College ice hockey team. medal at the 1961 Maccabiah ckHeLy ' Games and another gold medal at Zeidel HlaesthapslapylaeydedinictehehoN the 1964 • Olympic Games. He in for 16 years, mostly in the minors. played AAU basketball for two gort s e a t " seasons and was named an A R- c touarcnhe dc a allsei d d e him shots in America in 1965. He served as an aftheern'hse C° the Eagles 5-2 win over Clarkson. assistant coach at North Carolina a • • • I for two seasons before joining New Final results of the 1967 track Orleans. and field season show that six Herb Brown, Larry's older Jewish athletes placed in the "top brother, is the head basketball and 50" list of the British National , baseball coach at Stony Brook Col- Union of Track Statisticians. lege in New York. . . . Art Hey- Danny Herman. 9.9, 100 yards; man seems to have found a home Ray Roseman, 3:44.5 and 4:02.3, in Pittsburgh. After he was traded 1,500-meters and mile; Mike Selby, to the Pipers of the ABA, the team 6' 31/4", high jump: Len Walters, won 15 straight games.. . Larry 48.2 and 1:49.7. 440 and 880; Ian Brown may lead the ABA in Morgan. 48.8 and 53.1, 440 and 440 assists, but Steve Chubin of the hurdles and Lawrence Abrahams, Anaheim Amigos holds the single 12' 6", pole vault. game mark. He picked up 22 The United States "top 50" in- assists and 24 points as the Amigos elude Steve Ma r c u s, 59' 9 1 :2' • dropped one to Dallas, 130-123. shot; Marty Eisner. 56' 8" and Chubin, the former Rhode Island 176' 5", shot and discus; Bill Bel - star, h has been averaging about 17 fer, 177' 0", discus: Milt Sonsky. points a game. 250' 8", javelin and Sam Gold- • * berg. 7276 points decathlon. Although the NYU alumni lost United States rankings by the Track and Field News lists Sonsky the annual game with the varsity, sixth in the javelin, Goldberg Adolph Schayes showed he could seventh in the decathlon and Mar- still put the ball in the basket. cus eighth in the shot. Marcus of The former pro great, and present UCLA recently had an indoor toss supervisor - of NBA officials, was of 61' 8" at the Seattle Invitation. the game's high scorer with 21 That placed him second behind points. The varsity won 92-71. Schayes wasn't the only former Gary Gubner on the Jewish list. Other indoor marks are a 6.2 sec- All-American in the lineup for the and 60-yard dash by Rich Robin- alumni. Sid Tanenbaum and Don Ison of Yale. a 1:56.8 half-mile by Forman. who both played with I Dan Rosen of NYU and a 2:11.8 Schayes. w:..re present as well as half - mile by Canada's Abby Hoff- Milt Schulman. Others who cons- man. peted were Abe Becker, Dr. Len • • Maidman, Mel Seeman and last Gene Comroe of the Los Angeles season's ace Bruce Kaplan. For- Striders placed fifth at the West- man is an attorney in Dallas, Tex., ern Hemisphere Marathon in while Kaplan is attending NYU Culver City. Calif. He clocked . medical school. 2:26.0. Melvyn Watman has been Jerry Fleishman, also an NYU named editor of "Athletics Week- R a fp h Kaplowitz, ly•" Britain's leading track and i another ex-Violet, Cy Kaselman field magazine. and Petey Rosenberg took part in Irena Kiszenstein, women's 100 an Oldtimers game in Philadel- and 200 - meter world record holder phia. All four were members of was married recently in Warsaw. the. 1946 - 47 champion Warriors. The Her husband is Janusz Szewinski; contest was played prior to a 76ers an engineer and amateur sports game in the Spectrum. photographer. Dr. Alan Fox has been returned Bruce Selman of NYU was to the top 10 national tennis rank- named to the Metropolitan AAU ings for 1967. He was the only long-distance team in the 20-kilo- Jewish player to make it in either meter run. men's or women's singles. Fox's Richard Sofman, a wrestler No. 4 ranking in 1962 is his best from West O r a n g e, has been showing to date. He recently re - named New Jersey's outstanding ceived his PhD in psychology. amateur athlete by the Boys' Club The best of the women were Mar- of Newark. Sofman won a gold ilyn Aschner and Pam Richmond, medal in the flyweight class at both gained Class A ranking. the Pan-American Games. • • • Pennsylvania University's new Agency Loans $4.6 Million SAN FRANCISCO (JTA)—A total $2,900,000 gymnasium is named for the late Bernard F. Gimble. He of $4,615,445 has been loaned to was chairman of the board of more than 25,000 San Francisco Gimble Brothers, Inc. Gimble, an and Bay area Jewish families by alumnus of Penn's Class of 1907, the Hebrew Free Loan Association played football and boxed for the since it was founded 70 years ago, school. He contrbiuted $500,000 to according to a report by Daniel T. Goldberg, president. the biulding of the gym.