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April 15, 1988 - Image 51

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-04-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

LES VERSATILES BY MIREILLE

A Collection of
Cotton and Wool
Jersey Knits

will be available for
order and purchase

Call 443-0749

Goldstein in Benton Harbor.
A high school baseball and
football star at Lane Tech in
Chicago, then at Benton Har-
bor High, he turned down the
chance to play college football
under Knute Rockne_because
his mother objected to Notre
Dame's mandatory chapel at-
tendance policy.
After earning four letters in
football at Western, Bishop
was hired as Northwestern's
football coach. His football
teams won six city and two
state titles. He later coached
Northwestern baseball and
track teams.
Bishop coached many star
players at Northwestern, in-
cluding former Tiger out-
fielder Willie Horton. His
memory is still treasured at
Northwestern, where the
athletic field carries his
name. The school gave
Bishop's son Mel a replica of
the sign which hangs at the
field.
"The day that they gave
that sign to my brother,"
recalls Bishop's daughter,
Madelyn, "he said, 'Gee, I
thought that always was my
dad's field. How come they
just got around now to nam-
ing it?' We spent so much
time with the family there. It.
was a very important part of
all of our lives."
Mrs. Liss said that her
father never considered mov-
ing to another school. This
honor, she adds, would have
meant a great deal to him.
"He was on his deathbed
when he got word that he
made the Michigan Hall of
Fame. And I'll tell you, it
couldn't have been a greater
gift. This would certainly be
just another accolade to some
people, but it would be a
highlight in his life."
The honorees will be in-
ducted at the hall's annual
banquet on Nov. 7 at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek. Monty Hall
will be the master of
ceremonies. ❑

Hoops End;
No Title

The Honey Berris basket-
ball league season at the
Maple/Drake Jewish Com-
munity Center ended without
a playoff champion. The

scheduled finalists, the Bulls
and Knicks, could not agree
on a date and time for the ti-
tle contest. The Bulls were 9-0
in round-robin play. The
Celtics and Pistons finished
7-2, the Lakers and Knicks
4-5, the 76'ers 3-6 and the
Rockets 2-7. The Pistons beat
the 76'ers and the Knicks
downed the Lakers in first-
round playoff action. The
Bulls beat the Pistons and
the Knicks upset the Celtics
in the second round.

Oak Park
Offers Classes

The Oak Park Recreation
Department is offering the
following summer adult
classes: Aerobic moves; ladies'
total body workout; golf;
paint workshop; karate;
bridge I and II; calligraphy;
basic drawing; horseback
riding; round dance; social
dance; and tennis instruction.

I

For information contact Sol
Cohen, 545-6400.

MCIIP S1111C11) SAIILCIS

Jewish Vets'
Bowling Scores

High games:
Iry Marash
Arnold Weiss
Dave Broder
Abe Duke
Burl Singer
Herb Benson . . . .
Seymour Burg
Albert Fagenson
Randy Harwood
David Margolis
Brian Bez
Milt Burg
Mitchell Epstein .
Larry Garfinkle
Carl Berlin
Jay Manchel
Seymour Burg
Harold Baskin
Jay Superstein
Albert Fagenson
Herb Benson

NEWS

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202
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200

I

Israel's Arab Neighbors
Enter Missile Race

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Gen. Dan
Shomron, the Israel Defense
Force chief of staff, said in an
interview with Israel Radio,
that all of Israel's Arab
neighbors, with the exception
of Jordan, have entered the
missile race. However,
Shomron said that the IDF
possesses the defensive and
offensive power to deter their
use.
Shomron said the danger of
the missile race was the
tendency to develop chemical,
biological or nuclear weapons.
The Chinese-made CSS-2 in-
termediate range missiles
recently acquired by Saudi
Arabia are capable of carry-
ing nuclear warheads, but
both China and the Saudis
have denied they are so
armed.
According to Shomron,
Israel's ability to strike back
has deterred the Arab states
from using chemical weapons
in their wars with Israel.
Egypt used chemical weapons
during its campaign in
Yemen in the 1960s, but not

in the 1967 war with Israel.
Similarly, Syria had chemical
weapons at the time of the
1973 Yom Kippur War, but
neither the Syrians nor, the
Egyptians employed them
against Israel.
Shomron also supported
Defense Minister Yitzhak
Rabin's recent comment that
air power, in which Israel ex-
cels, is a more effective attack
system than missiles. He
noted that while Syria's
Soviet-made Skud missiles
can carry 100 tons of ex-
plosives, a warplane that car-
ries five tons is much more ac-
curate.

Senior Program

New York — Magen David
Adorn in Jerusalem recently
inaugerated Yitav — a senior
citizen help program by com-
bining the services of teenage
high school volunteers in-
terested in community work
together with the services of
retired senior citizens.

1 564,e1

tre,24/t&_)

La Mirage, 29555 Northwestern Highway

Southfield, Michigan 48034

Monday thru Saturday 353-5110

Health News...

A Slipped Disc Can Be
A Painful "Slip-Up"

BY DR. STANLEY LEVINE, D.C.
Dr. of Chiropractic

Intervertebral disc. What a
tongue-twister of a name for a
shock absorber!
"Unfortunately, tongue-twisting
isn't the only twist involved with
this little disc?' explains Dr. Levine,
D.C.
Anyone who does a lot of lifting,
with the con-
sequent twist-
ing and bend-
ing, is a prime
candidate for
a slipped disc
injury."
Although it
works for us
twenty-four
hours a day,
most people
take the spi-
DR. LEVINE
nal disc for granted.
"Its center contains a jelly-like
substance that is enclosed by a
tough, fibrous cartilage," the good
Doctor continues. "This is in turn
encased in the ligaments which
hold the vertebrae together. The
discs cushion the vertebrae and act
as a shock absorber, keeping the
vertebrae from grinding together
as we bounce, twist, and bend
through life. Equally important,
the discs help to form the nerve

openings between the vertebrae."
If these nerves should become
pinched, nerve impulses from the
brain will be short-circuited.
"Proper functioning of these
nerves is essential to every phase
of your life." warns Dr. Levine.
"When they are pinched by
misaligned vertebrae or a slipped
disc, any number of things can go
wrong. Antibodies cannot get
through the blood to fight infec-
tion or your stomach may tell you
to eat immediately after a meal."
If the back is weak, the spine
cannot endure the heavy abuse
which it might otherwise
withstand.
Office workers, truck drivers,
and others who maintain a pro-
longed sitting position are prone
to disc injury because their back
muscles may become weak and
flabby from disuse.
"The Doctor of Chiropractic is
well qualified to show you a series
of exercises designed to help keep
your back in shape," concludes Dr.
Levine. "While his specialized
knowledge is treating nerve, mus-
cle, and bone disorders is especial-
ly suited to slipped disc cases, he
would rather help you prevent the
need for such treatment.

Don't live with pain

LEVINE CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

We can help

31390 Northwestern Hwy.
Farmington Hills 48018

855-2666

Dr. Stephen M. Tepper
Dr. Robert W. Levine

THE DETROIT JEWI H N

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