THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Glickstein Isarel's Tennis Star We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year HERB & FERN BAKER, MARC, JENNIFER, JUDY, ART & STEVE • We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year MR. & MRS. ALEXANDER FRANK We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year MR. & MRS. SZMUL NITKIEWICZ We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year SAM & ESTELLE KAPLAN DESERT HOT SPRINGS, CA. We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year DANNY, SUE & RYAN LEFKOFSKY We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year MOREY & RUTH MOSCOW -- We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year FRANK & FAY RADZINSKI , We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year - AARON & DOROTHY REITMAN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year ALICE & DAVID ROSEN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year MANNY & MARION ROSSMAN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year MR. & MRS. CHARLES SIEGEL RITA & IRVING LIPSKY WISH ALL THEIR FRIENDS A HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR $25,000 Oklahoma classic title. Peter Macnamara, the world's eighth best, also fell victim to Glickstein several months ago. But Glickstein has not yet managed to beat any of the world's top half- dozen players. By SIMON GRIVER World Zionist Press Service We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year DONALD, LINDA, AMY & TERI BLOOMBERG Friday, September 17, 1982 109 - . JERUSALEM — Shlomo Glickstein, rated the 29th best player in the world by the Association of Tennis Players, is a sportsman in both the modern and old- . fashioned sense of the word. The 24-year-old Sabra is a jet-set professional whose tennis skills have capti- vated crowds and been acclaimed by the public and fellow players alike. Since turning professional at the start of 1979, he has risen rapidly up the ladder of suc- cess. At the end of his first sea- son he was 153rd in the ATP ratings; he rose to 57th place the following year, 33rd by the end of 1981 and is now currently holding 29th slot. If he is to continue improving his position, Glickstein needs to reach the quarter-finals of every competition he enters. Now the pressure is really on. But the financial poten- tial is enormous. Last year Glickstein raked in an estimated $120,000 in prize money and bonuses, and much more in advertising endorse- ment contracts. And this year's earnings should be appreciably higher, since the tennis star has moved into the top 30. It was in 1980 that Glick- stein rocketed to fame. He won a grand prix title in Hobart, Australia, was runner up in the British Hard Court Cham- pionships, and at Wimble- don won the Plate for players defeated in the first two rounds. In the main Wimbledon competition it- self he had beaten Mexican ace Rael Ramirez before los- ing to champion Bjorn Borg. Unfortunately, at Wimble- don in 1982 he again lost. Born in Rehovot and raised in Ashkelon, Glicks- tein comes from a tennis- playing family. His father Moshe headed the Youth Committee of the Israel Tennis Association but as a youngster Shlomo was never entirely committed to being a tennis pro. Friends described the young Glicks- tein as an intelligent boy who could have been any- thing he set out to be. After his father's death in 1978, however, his mind was made up. "I was deter- " mined to honor my father's name in tennis," he recalls. At that time Glickstein was still serving the last of his three-year stint in the army, which helped him by stationing him close to the Ramat HaSharon Tennis Center. It was the tennis center that launched him on his career with a loan that he had already succeeded in paying back by the end of his first season. Glickstein feels a special affinity for the Israel Tennis Center's program which es- tablished the Ramat HaSharon Center as the first of its kind in Israel. Today there are 65 courts at seven centers all over the • SHLOMO GLICKSTEIN country, catering to 85,000 children. Glickstein regrets that he can only spend several months a year in Israel. One of the moments most dear to him was when he lit the torch at last summer's Mac- cabia games. He went on to win the tennis cham- pionships, but it was a hol- low victory for him because none of the world's other top Jewish stars had bothered to come to Israel to partici- pate in the "Jewish Olym- pics." For the time being Glick- stein's priority is improving his game. However, his service still remains weak and he lacks aggression on the court, a problem that Glickstein's Australian coach, Ron Steele, has worked hard on. Steele feels, however, that Glicks- tein has overcome many of his problems and is develop- ing into a far tougher and more determined a player. Nevertheless, he ad- mits that Glickstein is not the type of person that enjoys "murdering an opponent." Despite this, Glickstein has defeated some of the world's best players. He re- cently beat the world's 18th ranked player, Roscoe Tan- ner and the 24th rated John Sadri, thus taking the No Mezuza on Synagogue Door Frames By RABBI SAMUEL FOX Nobody ever did anything very foolish except from some strong principle. —Lord Melbourne New Year Greetings From BESSENGER'S designs 23535 Woodward, Ferndale Best Wishes for a Joyous Holiday Season i PAUL INMAN ASS OCIATES enry and Sonia Poslaniec and the LINCOLN BARBER SHOP Wish All Their Friends and Customers A HAPPY NEW YEAR tizrizn `i:3111 112V5 A.R.S. SERVICE CO., INC. Alan R. Sukenic and Family wish their family, friends and customers a happy, health New Year To All Our Friends & Customers and Fellowtlews All Over The World t11112 ;UV, Manny Mittelman & Family (Copyright 1982, JTA, Inc.) It is not necessary to place a mezuza on the door-post of a synagogue. A mezuza is required only for a door-post of a structure used as dwell-- ing in which one eats, sleeps, etc. Since techni- cally one is not allowed to eat or sleep in a synagouge, a mezuza is thus not re- quired. In a synagogue hall where people eat, or a study hall (Beth Hamidrash) where food is sometimes served it is felt that a mezuza would be required. Some sources add to this reasoning the fact that a synagogue usually contains a Torah. Thus, the words of the Almighty are con- stantly the center of atten- tion in the synagogue and there is no need to have them on the door-posts as a reminder. A man with God is always in the majority. Morrie, Eleanor & Gary Schwartz and the staff of MORRIE'S i Service Center, Inc. 24848 Southfield Rd., Southfield 557-1747 corner 10 mile 557-9751 Wish All Their Relatives, Friends & Customers A Happy, Healthy NEW YEAR