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August 03, 1973 - Image 26

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1973-08-03

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

U.S. Wins 76 Gold Medals to Beat
Israel as Maccabiah Champions

MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT

RESTAURANT

TEL AVIV — American
athletes captured 76 gold
medals, emerging as leaders
of the ninth Maccabiah
games here. Israel received
60 gold medals.
A sweep of nine golds in
freestyle wrestling assured
the American victory, which
also included 51 silver and
35 bronze medals.
Israel's final tally was 60
golds, 45 1/2 silvers and 531/2
bronzes.

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ILANA KLOSS

The nearest challengers
were the South Africans, who
won 16 golds, eight silvers
and 16 bronzes. Among the
winning athletes was 17-
year-old Ilana Kloss, who
became the youngest woman
ever to win the Maccabiah
tennis championships. Her
team made a clean sweep of
all the tennis titles.
Ilana, winner of last year's
Junior Wimbledon, is ranked
No. 2 in South Africa. In the

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in fourth in the final Mac-
cabiah tally.
Great Britain placed fifth
with five gold medals.
The ninth Maccabiah was
disappointing to Israel, who
had won the eighth games
with 88 gold medals to
America's 63 1/2.
Athletes from 27 countries
participated in the games,
Which closed at the end of 10
days with a celebration at-
tended by 40,000 onlookers.
Spontaneous dancing and an
international soccer match,
in which Israel lost to Uru-
guay, closed the Maccabiah.

Arthur Miller on U-M Faculty

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U.S.A.
Israel
South Africa
Sweden
Great Britain
Germany
France
Holland
Australia
Mexico
Italy-
Belgium
Austria
Canada
Brazil
Argentina
Japan
Rhodesia
Greece

she defeated
Maccabiah,
American Janet Haas to gain
her second gold medal of the
tennis tournament. Earlier
she won the women's doubles
with her compatriot Helen
Weiner.
"Athlete of the Ninth Mac-
cabiah" was Swedish Olym-
pic swimming star Anita
Zarnowiecki, 19, who won
seven gold medals at the
Maccabiah, believed to be a
games record. Her twin
brother, Bernt, gained an-
other two golds in swimming
— taking nine of Sweden's,
11 gold medals. Sweden came



4

FINAL MEDAL STANDINGS:

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The Pulitzer Prize-winning
playwright Arthur Miller has
been appointed adjunct pro-
fessor in residence to the
University of Michigan's
theater area, Richard D.
Meyer, U-M director of thea-
ter programs, announced.
Miller will return to Michi-
gan to conduct informal
seminars with the theater
students and advise the
faculty at the encouragement
of Meyer, who worked with
Miller at Lincoln Center on
"After the Fall." Meyer is
working to bring the uni-
versity's theater area and
its professional program
more closely aligned. He
hopes to direct a new work
of Miller's some time this
season for the university.
Miller, whose most recent
Broadway play was "The
Creation of the World and
Other Business," was grad-
uated in 1938 from the Uni-
versity of Michigan, where
he studied playwriting with
Prof. Emeritus Kenneth
Rowe.
After graduating from
Michigan, he returned to
New York to work in the
Federal Theater Project and
write plays for various radio
programs. He was engaged
by a Hollywood studio to tour
army camps, collecting back-
ground material for a film of
Ernie Pyle's "Story of GI
Joe." Out of that he com-
piled a diary report which
he published under the title
"Situation Normal" in 1944.

"Focus," a novel on the sub-
ject of anti-Semitism, was
published in 1945.
Miller's first Broadway
production, "The Man Who
Had All the Luck," in 1941,
ironically, played only four
performances. In 1947, "All
My Sons" won the New York
Critic's Circle Award and
the Tony and Donaldson
Awards.
In 1949 "Death of a Sales-
man" opened on Broadway
and was awarded the Pulit-
zer Prize as well as Critic's
Circle Award.
In 1950, Miller adapted
Ibsen's "An Enemy of the
People" for Broadway and
in 1953 "The Crucible" was
presented, winning him an-
other Tony Award. "A
Memory of Two Mondays"
and "A View from the
Bridge" were two one-act
plays produced as a double
bill under the latter title on
Broadway in 1955.
"After the Fall" (1963)
was followed by "Incident
at Vichy" (1964), written for
the Repertory Theater of
Lincoln Center. "The Price"
(1968) and "Death of a Sales-
man" have been recreated as
television network specials.
Miller's last visit to the
Ann Arbor campus was in
1963 to distribute the Avery
Hopwood Awards in play-
wrighting and to receive an
Honorary Doctor of Letters.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
26—Friday, August 3, 1973

Novel Details
Czech Life
in W W II

Life in Czechoslovakia dur-
ing the tyranny and terror
of World War II, with an
underlying love story be-
tween a gentile Czech cap-
tain and a Jewish girl,
marks the setting of a novel
written by a Czech officer
living during those times.
In "In the Shadow of
Tyranny," by Peter Vlcko,
published by Vantage Press,
the former lieutenant colonel
of the Czechoslovak army
enumerates the offenses
against the Jews, with an
occasional reference to tl-
who tried to save them,
those who connived to save
themselves.
Throughout the book the
hatred is seen as stemming
from the anti-Jewish cam-
paign in Czechoslovakia. He
describes this campaign as
follows: "The wave of terror
against the Jews struck ir-
regularly and unexpectedly.
Only the quick and courage-
ous survived."
During the campaign, Jews
are prohibited from a uni-
versity and medical school,
they are beaten in the streets
by German officers who
oversee clean-up operations
following frequent bombings,
and are prevented from get-
ting jobs.

Vlcko mentions the meth-
ods Jews tried to save them-
selves. For example, they
would form organizations
"explicity opposed to gen-
tiles" or would manage to
get false or borrowed birth
certificates to be spared de-
portation. In a rare instance,
some Aryans risked their
"futures" to save Jewish
girls from deportation.
Underground life, outwit-
ting the Nazis and Soviet
Communists, and finally the
arrival of escapees in the
United States are all detailed
in the novel.
During and after the war,
Vlcko held a number of
military posts with the Czech
government. After the Com-
munist takeover of his coun-
try in 1948, Vlcko, who re-
fused to accept the Soviet
ideology, escaped his coun-
try, and now lives in Dear-
born,
"In the Shadow of Tyr-
anny" gives a different van-
tage point to the hopelessness
suffered by Europeans, and
especially Jews during World
War II. —Heidi Press

Honest statesmanship
the wise employment of in-
dividual meanness for the
public good.—Abraham Lin-
Classifieds Get Quick Results coln.

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On WKBD-TV 50. From Sunday, September 2, 10:30 p.m.,
through Monday, September 3, Labor Day, 6:30 p.m.
To benefit Muscular Dystrophy Associations of America.

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