I SPORTS lot of people who have surgeries to the knee?' Front says his own athletic par- ticipation helps him deal with his pa- tients' injuries. "I think it gives me a lot more insight into dealing with them?' Front's work earned him his trip to Israel in 1985, plus an invitation to return in 1989. He hopes to accept that second invitation. As for his first excursion, he says, "I thoroughly en- joyed it. It was a very humbling ex- perience, to be there and to feel the identity of Judaism at its basic roots. 1 1 n a time when many sports headlines tell tales of drug use, player strikes or college re- cruiting violations, it is well to remember the many positive and beneficial roles that sports can play. Many of those roles are ex- emplified by Huntington Woods resi- dent Jack Front. A physical therapist, Front treats many people with sports injuries, an occupation which led him to Israel and the international Mac- cabi Games in 1985, as a U.S. team trainer. Front also competed in the 1987 Pan Am Maccabi Games in the half-marathon, and he will coach Detroit's girls basketball team in Chicago this year. Additionally, Front, 53, is a regular in the Jewish Com- munity Center's basketball leagues, taking on some players half his age. While Front says he receives dif- ferent types of satisfaction from dif- ferent types of athletic involvement, the common denominator is people. "I just enjoy working with people," he says. "It's just the relationship, the rapport that I can establish with peo- ple is enjoyable to me." In his medical career, he adds, he has treated "peo- ple who've had strokes and amputa- tions down to the sports injuries, the sprains and very minor problems, the whole gamut. I enjoy working with many of the people that I've been associated with." Front competed in varsity foot- ball, basketball and track at Woodrow Wilson High School in Beckley, West Virginia. He went on to rim track and swim at West Virginia University. Front was director of physical therapy at WVU hospital before he moved to Michigan in 1967 to take a similar position at the Detroit Rehabilitation Institute's Medical Center, where he remained for 13 years. He then set up a private prac- tice in Bloomfield Hills, where he remains. Up Front For Good Sports As coach, trainer, physical therapist and athlete, Jack Front personifies the positive aspect of sports MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer "We see a lot of people who have arthritis, patients who have had sports injuries . . . Not professional athletes, because professional teams have their own trainers, but these are weekend warriors like myself who've injured themselves. We have a lot of people who have orthopedic problems, who have had fractures of the bones, been in casts and need strengthening and exercises to develop motion and strength after the cast is removed, a "One of the most memorable ex- periences was going into Jerusalem, the old city, and seeing the Western Wall, the old city itself — it's just so steeped in religion. You definitely know that this is a religious city." Front returned to Maccabi action as a competitor in Caracas, Venezuela, last summer. Although he only ran the master's half-marathon "as a challenge" and was proud to complete the race, he was more in- terested in learning how the Jewish population of Caracas lives. "It was interesting because the country is predominantly Catholic there, 90 per- cent Catholic. The Jewish population is a very small population. But they tend to be almost cloistered into an area of town. The majority of the Jews in Caracas lived in one section of the town and they had their own school, and their own facility there, it was almost like a country club, where they had athletic facilities and a school for the children in the community, through high school. It was in- teresting to see that, that they tried to preserve the Jewish identity in this manner?' Front says the Caracas Jewish community is thriving. "They seem to be very happy there. There didn't seem to be any inhibitions of civil liberties there. The Jews, from my ROUND UP Recent Scores In B'nai B'rith Bowling Leagues Ben Lusky Traveling High games: Cy Rott Burt Ellstein Jerry Lash238 High series (4 games): Jerry Lash Mort Friedman Phil Horowitz 268 244 880 867 799 Zager-Stone/Tucker-Grant • High games: 243 Sheldon Rakotz 212 Ron Jacobs High series: 652 Sheldon Rakotz Bill Oram Shel Sherman Harvey Sherman 569 546 542 Downtown Fox High game: Steve Kay Bloch-Israel High game: Neil Werner Pisgah High game: Mort Friedman High series: Mort Friedman Brotherhood Eddie Jacobson High game: Steve Weinberg 250 253 257 701 256 tick, Gary Heicklen, Paul Katz, Eric Kaczander and Robert Lyan. Kenny Goldman Titles Won The Grey team coached by Tare Wigod won the cham- pionship of the Kenny Goldman eight-to-10 year-old league at the Jewish Com- munity Center on Dec. 20, 4-3, over the Green team coached by Peter May. Playing for the victors were: Michael Bagdade, Garon Oseff, Scott Schwartz, Howard Kahn, Randy Modell, Jordan Field, Brandon Jarvis and Owen Alterman. Green team competitors were: Bob- by Zaid, Shawn Feldman, Alan Feldman, Freddie Hor- JCC Teams Meet Toronto • The Jewish Community Center varsity and junior var- sity basketball teams travel to Toronto the weekend of Jan. 8-10 to compete against Thronto's JCC varsity and JV squads. The local JCC varsi- ty is 4-0 in games and 2-0 in scrimmages this season, ac- cording to coach Barry Bershad. The varsity squad includes: Tare Wigod, Greg Wolgin, J.J. Modell, Marty Upfall, Ryan Jaffe, Jason Vieder, Scott Lucas, Greg Feldhandler, Scott Segal, Steve Cohen, Joe Zeff, Tom Sweeny, Marty Belkin and Bob Frankel. Good Sports? If you know of an athlete, coach or sporting event-in the community which you would like us to mention in our sports page, let us know. Call Mike Rosen- baum at 354-6060 between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m., Monday- Thursday. Or write to us: The Jewish News, 20300 Civic Center Dr., Suite 240, Southfield, MI 48076. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 59