THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS is gymnastic team mates call H him "Hollywood Mitch," as much for his good looks as his flashy style on the horizontal bars. But it was a quiet, soft-spoken Mit- chell Gaylord, yamulke on head, who welcomed the entire Israeli Olympic team to' "my shul" during Friday evening services at Stephen S. Wise Temple. A few days later, Gaylord's bril- liant performance on the rings was to help lead his team to a gold medal in an upset victory over the Chinese. Last Saturday evening in the in- dividual apparatus finals, Gaylord showed his skill by winning three me- dals: the silver on the vault, the bronze on the rings and the bronze on the parallel bars. But on that Erev Shabbat, the 23-year old Gaylord was more in- . terested in talking about his Jewish upbringing and especially about his 1981 visit to Israel, which he de- . scribed as "perhaps the most ex- citing experience of my life." On that trip, as a member of the American team to the Maccabiah games, Mitch won seven gold medals in gymnastics, while his older brother Chuck garnered two more in the same sport. In the past several years, Mitch has won a host of national and international gymnastic competi- tions, both in team and individual events. In 1984, he was selected NCAA Collegiate Gymnastic Cham- pion. - His Jewish education started with kindergarten at the same Stephen S. Wise Temple, a large, handsome Reform congregation of which his parents were founding members. He celebrated his Bar Mitzvah and con- firmation there, studying at the ' Religious School until the age of 16, including four years of Hebrew. Recently, recalling the thrills of some of his athletic victories, he com- pared them to the emotional high of his Bar Mitzvah celebration. His mother Linda, also athletic, teaches Israeli folk dancing to children's groups. The 33 Israeli athletes, who attend- ed the services in their team-issued blue-and-white yamulkes, have, as ex- pected, enjoyed only modest success in competition. Currently, the best showing has been by weightlifter Meir Deluya, who placed a respectable tenth in the 114.5-pound class. Israel's yachts- men were still in serious contention, while the two women gymnasts plac- ed disappointingly among the last in their sport. Zehava Shmueli ran in the women's marathon Sunday, fi- nishing 30th among the 44 runners who finished the race. Other Israelis have been partici- pating in track and field, Swimming, judo, boxing, fencing, canoeing, shooting and tennis. However, off the field, the Israelis have been the focus of considerable media attention. In • a ceremony car-, I ' a • • • • • • International Olympic Committee (IOC) to honor the victims by gran- ting at least a moment of silence at the Games' opening ceremony, on the grounds that it might inject "poli- tics" into the Olympics. No IOC member showed up for the City Hall ceremony. Although all formal appearances by the Israeli team have been sha- dowed by heavy security, individual athletes have been able to slip out to the beach and for dates in Westwood, adjoining the UCLA Olympic Vil- lage. In the first heady days after their arrival, a few of the more carefree men went sightseeing on their own, sporting T-shirts with the Israeli Olympic emblem, but security clamps , subsequently tightened considerably. Nevertheless, the male athletes have continued to enjoy unabashed popularity among the local female population, both among young wo- men working at the Olympic Village and Jewish ladies attending official receptions for the team. According to observations by this eyewitness, the advances have not been rebuffed by the Israeli sportsmen. Another upbeat note: In the in- tense trading market in national Olympic pins, the Israeli pin — in contrast to the shekel — is counted as one of the most valuable. Jewish participation on other na- tional teams has been low compared to previous Olympiads, with about a dozen (besides Gaylord) on the American team, three with - the British and two Canadians. There was a brief flurry of excite- ment that U.S. swimmer Tiffany Cohen had won the initial "Jewish" medal when she took the gold in the 400-meter freestyle. A closer check revealed that although Tiffany's father is Jewish, her mother is Catholic and the 18-year old swim- mer has not been raised as a Jew. (There is also a Richard Cohen on the British fencing team, who is not Jewish. As the man said, "What's in a name?") An odd sidelight of the Games is that' both the American women's volleyball team and the West Ger- man men's basketball team are coached by ex-Israelis. Arie Selinger, the hard-driving volleyball coach, was born in Poland, survived the concentration camps as a child, and came to Israel after World War II. He became a player and then coach for Israel and was signed on as U.S. coach in 1975. Ralph Klein, the basketball coach, was born in Berlin. His father was killed at Auschwitz, and he arrived in Israel in 1950. Klein was a star basketball player and then coach for the Tel Aviv Maccabi athletic club and only last year took over the Ger- man team. Klein has been bitterly attacked by many Israelis, including Ktiesset CH His good looks and flashy style have earned U,S. gymnast Mitchell Gaylord a glamorous nickname. BY TOM TUGEND Special'to The Jewish News vied on national television, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley led a solemn observance at City Hall com- memorating the 11 Israelis slain by terrorists at the 1972 Olympics in Munich. "We call upon people everywhere to recall Munich and to say at last of that day and of all terrorist days, `Never again' " declared Bradley. The tavo top leaders of the Los Angeles Olympic host committee, Paul Ziffren and Peter Ueberroth, joined the Israeli athletes and Jewish dignitaries in unveiling a large bronze plaque with the names of the 11 vic- tims, which will be permanently mounted at the L.A. Coliseum. The ceremony was seen, in part, as . a protest against the. refusal ,of. the Friday, August 10,1944 25 . continued= neict page.: