,7 :77 tip- 7 V7 52 Friday, September 16, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40 — BUSINESS CARDS WALL WASHING (By Machine) Paper Hanging Former Maccabia Star and Physician Working Hard to Better Olympic Athletes' Performance, Health Satisfaction Guaranteed In_ u re a BY HASKELL COHEN (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) Call before 9 affi orYtQf 7 PM This corner has written in the past about Dr. Irving Dardik, an outstanding vas- cular surgeon, who was a track performer in past Maccabiot and last summer served as a physician for the United States Olympic team. Irving and his brother, Herbert, have cut quite a niche out for themselves in medicine in the devel- opment of a coronary bypass graft technique using human umbilical cords, for which they won the American Medical Asso- ciation's Hektoen Gold Medal last year. That pro- cedure is helping a lot of ar- teriosclerosis patients lead more active lives. Now our young hero—he is just past 40—is engrossed in a program that aims to improve the nation's health using Olympic athletes as "walking fitness labora- tories." He has been placed in charge of. the United States Olympic Squaw Val- ley, Calif. training camp program to help prepare young athletes for the games in the Soviet Union in 1980. His basic concern is to see to it that the young athletes serve as talking, walking laboratories of waLs 341.-5322 DRAIN -RITE SEWER A DRAIN CLEANING $22.50 531-0726 METRO CARPET a FLOOR SERVICE Carpet steam cleaning, wood-vinyl floor service. Up- holstery cleaning. Free Estimates. 541-0278 51 — MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE— Brother blind hem- mer, for alterations. with swing arm. 2 years old. Like new. $500. 649-5885 53 — ENTERTAINMENT BAND Excellent Music For All Social Occasions 731-6081 Scoliosis Group Will Hold Party r 125 EXHIBITS ANTIQUE Dr. Dardik has been ap- pointed by the United States Olympic Committee to set up the first of several sports medical institutions at the training center in Squaw Valley in order to help Olympic caliber athlet- es learn more about their bodies and improve, second- ly, the physical fitness of the, nation as a whole. "These Olympic athletes are ordinary people. Ordi- nary people who have tal- ent. And they need to train and learn to live with that talent. We can learn a tre- mendous amount from them," Dr. Dardik claims. Some 200 Olympic quality athletes and coaches and trainers come to the Squaw Valley center and spend a few days or a few weeks there in an atmosphere that is a combination of a col- lege campus and a mon- astery. Instead of the pot- bellied type of instructor one usually sees giving com- mands to athletes in gymna- siums, the athletes at the Olympic Village respond to a fellow by the name of Dr. Gideon Ariel, a computer scientist who hails original- ly from Israel. As a matter of fact, he participated in the 1960 and To: The Jewish News 17515 W, 9 Mile Rd. The Scoliosis Club of Southeastern Michigan will meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Beaumont HospitaL Guest speaker will be psychologist Dr. Tom Coleman of the Wayne State University fac- ulty. Officers of the Scoliosis Club are Iris Mickel, presi- dent; Bettye Graham, exec- utive vice president; Wilma Bammer and Marilyn . Brown, vice presidents; Harold Mickel, executive secretary; Rita Shamis, treasurer; and Debbie Bak- shi, fund-raising chairman. DETROIT physical fitness who might be able to improve the na- tion's health. Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 WEI JUST from Paste in Sept. 14-18 old label E. 8 Mi. Armory 4400 E. 8 Mile : Hours: 12-10 Daily' Sun. 1-8 p.m. Present This Ad Save 50e On One Adult Admission SEPT15 - SENIORS DAY - ADM $1.00 ENTER MS ANTIQUE CONTEST CALL 885-6900 MGT STEINER PROMOTIONS The computer then ana- lyzes the athlete's move- ments step by step, and the end product is a thick print- out which compares the ath- lete's maneuver with the theoretically perfect man- ner to perform the same task. Actually the computer demonstrates exactly how and where the athlete should change his style, modify and improve his technique, drop unneces- sary movements, laterally, etc. Apparently this system works, for earlier in the year Dr. Ariel went to work on Mac Wilkins, the discus thrower, who came to his laboratory at Amherst and went through the gyrations of the discus throw for the benefit of Ariel's high speed camera, which moves at a rate of 10,000 frames-per- second and analyzes, for ex- ample, how a tennis ball strikes a racket. (In case you are really interested, a tennis ball hits the strings of a racket for only .004 sec- onds, so that the thump felt in the racket is not the ball, it is the reaction of the strings themselves which is much more lasting.) At any rate, Wilkins was throwing poorly of late, about 216 feet, and the com- puter indicated he should be throwing the discus 250 Argentine Jews Under Arrest SHOW-SALE Free Parking L 1964 Olympiads as a discus thrower for Israel and now is involved in combining sports in the field of biome- chanics. Dr. Ariel is work- ing closely with Dr. Dardik and has discovered a meth- od of taking motion pic- tures of athletes performing typical sports skills such as a basketball player making a jump shot, for example, or a shot putter throwing the put, and then trans- lating critical body motions involved on to a computer grid. NAME Please Allow Two Weeks BUENOS AIRES—Five members of a Jewish fam- ily who were reported kid- naped by 12 armed men al- most three weeks ago in northern Argentina are under arrest on suspicion of • having links with left-wing guerrillas, according to the Argentine army. The case is causing con- cern among Argentine Jews, as it is seen to be tied to the recent upsurge of anti-Semitism in the coun- try. Meanwhile, President Jorge Rafael Videla of Ar- gentina. in a Rosh Hashana greeting to the Jewish corn- munity. addressed to Dr. Nehemias Rexnizky, presi- dent of the DAIA, said: "I wish to express to you, on this occasion. very spe- cial wishes of peace and well-being due to this com- munity on this noble Argen- tine soil which has received it for a long time in its midst. May I renew the as- surances of my highest es- teem." feet. What happened was that the camera spotted a flaw in the way Wilkins' left leg was working. The flaw was corrected, and two days later the athlete broke the world's discus re- cords with a 232 foot toss. Dr. Ariel, who was helped to a certain extent when he attended college in the United States as an under- graduate by the United States Committee Sports for Israel., works together with Dr. Dardik, and in con- junction they are creating new ways of developing a sports medicine technology that figures to pay off hand- somely in the 1980 Games. Dr. Dardik, who won medals for running in the sprints in the 1957 Mac- cabia and then came back in 1969 to win a good as a member of a re earn, believes that Olympic sports medicine is very much in its infancy. The good doctor explained, "We are trying to develop the questions at Squaw Valley, not just the answers. We are trying to set up the model. Not just a training center, but a teaching cen- ter as well." He doesn't put down the talent which has worked in the U.S. in sports medicine or sports science, but does point out that the doctors have never gotten their in- formation across to the ath- letes and coaches who have been working all these years with archaic meth- ods. Dr. Dardik feels that the U.S., surprisingly, is far be- hind other countries in this program, pointing out that he just returned from West Germany where he worked with orthopedists and car- diologists who specialize in sports medicine; He feels that the program here should not only be devel- oping injury treatment methods, but preventive medicine as well. He illus- trates by showing that biomechanics can reveal how a wrong movement can result in a trauma over a period of time. It is Dr. Dardik's that sports specialists should be talking about nu- trition, exercise, .phys- iology, the psychology of sports, pointing out that when he was at the last Olympics the athletes would come up to him with questions about training, nu- trition, and about drugs. That's when he got the idea of talking to Tniteci States Olympic Gs_ Alittee about setting up the in- stitutions because there are so many things our people just don't know about. Dr. Dardik wants to make certain that Dr Ariel's work, as well as his own, is not placed in the "jock" category, but is a stepping stone in training- for the next Olympics. As a matter of fact, he has an of- fshoot program working al- ready in his own back yard-, in Englewood, N.J. where he is using Olympic athlet- es to work "one on one" with juvenile diabetics. With the help of various medical agencies for dia- betic kids, as well as other ailing youngsters, and through fitness -?raining pro- grams conducted by the Olympic athletes, the pro- gram figures to expand on a national scale with U.S- Olympic Committee sanc- tioned gyms under Dr. Dar- dik's aegis springing up all over the nation. Thus far with diabetics the side effects have been working extremely well, the youngsters' insuliit needs have been lowered sharply, and all of those participating in the pro- gram have felt better, looked better and have dis- played much greater self- confidence as a result of this Olympic-based fitness program. Judaism and Christianity (Editor's note: This quiz is part of a series taken from one of the various courses offered by the American Jewish Committee's Academy for Jewish Studies Without Walls.) L (Copyright 1977, JTA, Inc.) Indicate by T or F whether the following statements are true or false. 1. Paui considered himself a Pharisee. 2. Paul went first to synagogues to preach his message. 3. Paul saw Jews who kept the Law as more important than gentiles who did not observe the Law. 4. Gentile Christianity always continued to have a second- class position in the church. )ring 5. Christians view the messiah as someone who \ political redemption tq the Jewish people. 6. The concept of the messiah is absolutely necessary for Christianity to be Christianity. 7. Christians see no connection between the heroes of the Hebrew Bible and Christianity. 8. All mankind suffers from original sin because of the transgression of Adam, according to Christian theology. 9. David Kimhi argues that the Bible should be under- stood literally unless the simple meaning of the text is un- tenable. 10. Jewish polemicists argued that since Jesus observed the Law, present-day Christians should also observe it. A nswers A *,L*01 •6 '8 :Id .g : ,4 :1 :,L