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June 06, 1969 - Image 31

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-06-06

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

Maccabia Games a Bull's-Eye Away
for Oak Park Pisto 1 Shooter, 26

For three years, a pistol-packing
Oak Park man has been hitting
targets in competition. But to com-
pete in the eighth World Maccabia,
he'll have to hit another target,
$1,500, by Monday.
Herschel Goldstein, 26, of 10631
Saratoga, is listed as one of five
Americans to take part in the free
pistol events of the games, held
in Israel every four years with the
participation of Jewish athletes
from throughout the world. This
year, they will be held July 28-
Aug. 7.
Goldstein, a night school student
at Wayne State University, has
chalked up a a number of trophies
in the three years that he has pur-
sued the sport of pistol shooting.
Two weeks ago, he placed second
in the Indiana State Championship,
master class. He holds seven first-
and second-place awards in state
competition and a first in the re-
gional championship.
He figures there's one man to
beat on the ace U.S. team (indi-
vidual competition): Ron Krelstein,
a Tennesseean who holds the gold

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medal in -Maccabia competition
four years ago. Goldstein would
like to take him on, but he's not
sure he can raise the funds to get
the chance. The U.S. Committee
Sports for Israel has asked each of
his teammates to work toward a
$7,000 team goal to cover transpor-
tation and upkeep in Maccabia
Village, Tel Aviv. The committee
set a June 9 deadline.
Goldstein mourns that there
is no organized group here to
finance athletes taking part in

the games, and has found that

the average person knows little
of the purpose of the Maccabia:
to forge links between young
Jews of all countries through the
medium of sports.
He added that Israel benefits
from the Maccabia competition in
that its national airline, El Al, flies
the athletes, and there is much

tourist interest in the games. More
than 30 countries particpate in the
20 Olympic-type events.
Goldstein said he knows of two
other Michigan contestants in the
games, one of them Leon Grun-
stein, a University of Michigan
track and field star. Michael Al-
len, a U-M student from California,
will compete in butterfly. Goldstein
thought there was another athlete
from Michigan State University,
whom he does not know.
Married to the former Barbara
Kaluzny, Goldstein has two chil-
dren. He acknowledges that pistol
shooting has not been a common
sport among Jews ("I'm about the
only Jew in pistol shooting in the
state"), but feels there is a grow-
ing interest. Half the membership
of the Oak Park Gun Club, to
which he belongs, is Jewish.
He said that despite the con•

cern for defense among Israel's
civilian army, they provide little
competition in Maccabia pistol
events.
Goldstein is hoping to show them
what an Oak Park pistol shooter

can do. Those who wish to help can
send checks made out to the U.S.
Committee-Sports for Israel, Inc.,
care of Herschel Goldstein, 10631

Saratoga, Oak Park 48237.


Manischewitz Purchases

Interest in Air Carrier

NEW YORK — The B. Mani-
schewitz Co., producer of Jewish
foods, has acquired a substantial
stock interest in a Canadian car-
rier — the result of a mer-
ger of two Canadian airlines. Ber-
nard Manischewitz, president of
the food concern, said under the
terms of the agreement, Northland
Airlines, Ltd.. a Canadian carrier
in which the B. Manischewitz Co.
had substantial stock interest, is
now merged with Midwest Avia-
tion, Ltd., another carrier operat-
ing in Canada. The new airline
henceforth will be known as Mid-
west Airlines, Ltd.

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Business
Brevities

LOUIS I. ZUCKERMAN received
a certificate and congratulations
from NEW YOFK LIFE INSUR-
ANCE CO.'s executive vice presi-
dent, Paul A. Norton, for being a
top honor winner in a statewide
spring campaign. The presentation
was made at an awards dinner at
the Raleigh House, Southfield.
Zuckerman joined New York Life
in Detroit in 1959. He has been a
member of the life insurance in-
dustry's Million Dollar Round
Table for the past nine years and
has received the industry's Na-
tional Quality Award each year
since 1961. He is a consistent
member of New York Life's Presi-
dent's Council. Zuckerman is a
past president of the Temple Is-
rael Men's Club.
* * s
Herb Silverman has been ap-
pointed as a life underwriter for
the Raboy Agency, Connecticut
Mutual Life Insurance Co. In his
early years, Silverman took a
small appliance repair shop and
built it into a sv-
large department
store. More re-
cently, he w a s
district manager
in Michigan for
Encyclopaedia
Brita nnic a and
the Great Books
of the Western
World in three
months, Silver-
man has written
Silverman
his first half-million dollars of
family and business protection.
* * s
The board of directors of Albert
Kahn Associates, Inc., Architects
and Engineers, has elected three
new vice presidents, it is announc-
ed by Sol King, president of the
firm. They are LOUIS MENK,
DANIEL H. SHAMAN, and SAM-
UEL D. POPKIN. Menk is treas-
urer of the firm and a newly
elected member of the College of
Fellows of the American Institute
of Architects. Shahan is corporate
secretary of AKA and its director
of civil and structural engineer-
ing, and Popkin is an administra-
tor in the firm's architectural de-
partment. All three are members
of the AKA board of directors.
* *
MELVIN WEISZ, associate of
the RUBIN S. GOLD AGENCY of
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insur-
ance Co., has been named "Man
of the Month" for April by the
company. Weisz joined the Gold
agency in 1960 after a 15-year
teaching career in the Detroit pub-
lic school system. For the past
seven years, he has continuously
qualified for his company's Presi-
dent's Club by underwriting more
than $1,000,000 of life insurance
each year, and for the last three
years, the elite Inner Circle, with
more than $2,000,000 of production
to his annual credit.
* * *
JOSEPH KRAMER of Lincoln
Blvd., Oak Park, has been named
registered representative of WAD-
DEL AND REED, INC., national
distributor of the United Funds
group of mutual funds, it was an-
nounced by the firm's headquarters
in Kansas City. Since 1964, Kram-
er. a graduate of the University of
Pennsylvania, has been employed
as an engineer. He is a member of
Cong. Beth Shalom, and serves on
the board of directors and as sec-
retary' of the men's club.
* * *
MAURICE A. BETMAN and
Professional Planning Associates
have moved into larger offices—
Suite 792 Detroit Trade Center.
The company has added Fran
Wiencek to the staff. She has more
than 20 years experience in the in-
surance industry, and will be
executive secretary.

Unsurpassed, in navigational im-
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Superior with the other four Great
Lakes.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

J

Friday, June 6, 1969-31

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