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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 8, 1985
Purim Purim we celebrate today
)
FOOT SPECIALISTS •FOOT SURGEONS
We read the Megile though it sounds like a play
Dr. Mathew Borovoy
Dr. Linda Kaplan
Dr. William Hunter
•
Announce The Opening Of Their
We sing and dance with all our friends
We are joyful and glad
That we are Jewish
Mordecai the man of justice
That was his aim in life
26202 West Twelve Mile Road
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GLASS & MIRROR
ken Esther became the queen
A new life for the Jewish people began
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Continued from Page 80
We clasp with our hands and stamp with our feet
THE FRANKLIN MEDICAL BUILDING
So raise your glasses with a l'ckhaiin up high
With gifts and good wishes up to the sky
CD
CD
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hko st
Bowling
We swing our gregars and make a lot of noise
Northwest Suburbs Office
1 N
SPORTS
PURIM CELEBRATION
Associated Podiatrists, P.C.
What happened then
I 1.12!
Can happen again
It did.
OAK PARK OFFICE
548-6717
® Feb. 2, 1985 Phil Goren
We Will Beat
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_ Checking the night's pairings are Steve Mann, Nate Fine, Mark
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A friend of Mark's asked
him to bowl this year in a
Thursday night B'nai B'rith
league at Strike 'n Spare in
Birmingham, so "for the first
time in 15 years" he bowls in a
second league.
"It was," interjects Mrs.
Klinger, "the only night we'd
ever see each other, and now
he's gone then, too:"
Mark says he's been averag-
ing about 170 in the Eddie
Jacobson league and about
184 in the Morgenthau-
L'Chayim Thursday league,
where "I'm a little more re-
laxed. There's no pressure on
me when I go to bowl in the
Morgenthau-L'chayim league.
In the Jacobson league I have
a lot on my mind."
The Jacobson league —
named after the friend of
President Harry Truman —
has a 34-week season which
began in September and runs
into May. Klinger says he
rarely misses a night and the
same goes for most of the bow-
lers.
"The only time I miss," he
says, "is if I'm out of town — or
dead. This year I've missed
more than ever in my life. I
hurt my back and was out four
weeks. I hurt an arm and was
out a week. Most seasons I'll
bowl 90 games. Over 25 years
I've bowled a lot of games."
He says his league origi-
nally was known as the
Livonia B'nai B'rith Bowling
League, but changed to
"Brotherhood" to eliminate
the local connotations.
"We absorbed the Eddie
Jacobson Lodge, which was
very small; some 50 members.
It was a merger of our num-
bers and youth — and their
money!"
The 48-year-old Klinger
laughs. But he is serious when
he talks about the quality of
his league.
"I believe you're only as suc-
cessful as your own bowling
league," he says. "And right
now we're the best — the best
in the country. We're the best
in the fact that we've got the
best blend of young people and
Old people. I've got guys who
are workers and doers. They're
into everything. They're great
participants in everything we
do."
And what do they do?
Plenty, including taking out-
of-town bowling trips.
"I'm traveling approx-
imately 60 guys out of town to
our annual sectional tourna-
ments," Klinger says. "we've
got one in Patterson (N.J.), one
in Columbus (Ohio) and one in
St. Louis. Most of them are
going to Columbus at the end
of March.
"Bowlers pay their own way.
It costs $45 for national sec-
tional tournaments. For that a
man gets a couple meals, he
gets bowling, he gets transpor-
tation from the hotels to the
alleys and back.
"We have a good time," he
says. "I've always been a be-
liever that an organization is
only as strong as its grass
roots. In my league, a lot of us
work very hard to make it suc-
cessful. There's a lot of promo-
tion, a lot of activity. There's
quite a lot of work and it takes
a lot of initiative.
"It's amazing what happens
when leagues are weak .. .
Badly run leagues are real
small leagues, usually."
The Jacobson league has a
men-only banquet at the end
of the year. Prizes are distrib-
uted, along with trophies and
some cash.
"We're not what you call a
money league," Klinger says.
"We charge $9 a week and out
of that it pays a man's lodge
dues. Our dues for my lodge
are $50 a year. Also, we enter
him in a lot of in-house tour-
naments, singles and doubles