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February 03, 1989 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-02-03

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

SPORTS

PICTURE
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Hartman Earns
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1989

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GET REMITS •

Call The Jewish News

354-6060

After playing parts of the
past two seasons in the Na-
tional Hockey League, Mike
Hartman of Bloomfield Hills
is now a regular skater with
the Buffalo Sabres.
Through the Sabres' Jan.
25 game in Detroit, Hartman
had four goals and five assists
on the season, playing most-
ly a defensive role.
Hartman's scoring pace
picked up in December, when
he tallied a point in five
straight games. He soon miss-
ed six games with a back in-
jury and has only recently
regained top form.
Hartman, who started on
left wing against the Red
Wings, played sparingly for
most of the game. Now that
he is back in shape, he hopes
to "get back in the groove. I
was on a checking line, play-
ing the last minute of the
game for awhile, up until I got
hurt. . Since then I haven't
really been seeing so much
action. That's just the way it
goes. I'm just going to have to
work harder and work myself
back in the lineup again."
Hartman was disappointed
that his parents did not see
him play much in Detroit last
week, although they have at-
tended Buffalo games in
Chicago and Montreal when
he was skating more often.
Still, being in the NHL all
season is a thrill in itself for
the 21-year-old Hartman. He
spent most of last season in
the minors and most of the
previous campaign in Cana-
dian junior hockey. "Every
night's exciting," he says.
"I'm living my dream and
making a lot of money doing
it. What else can you ask
for?"
A recent hot streak put Buf-
falo at the .500 mark. They
trail only Montreal in the
Adams Division. For the rest
of the season, Hartman says,
"I want to accumulate some
points and just do my job. And
make sure the Buffalo Sabres
stay in second place and work
their way up to the top.
Hopefully, by the time the
playoffs come around we'll be
a little better than Montreal."

Volleyball Team
Is Forming

Elitzur, an international
sports movement originating
in Israel, will open an Elitzur
Sports League in Detroit in
co-ordination with the B'nei
Akiva youth organization.
The goals of Detroit-Elitzur
include physical fitness, high
team motivation, participa-
tion in Elitzur sporting

events nationwide, as well as
participation in the Third An-
nual Elitzur Games in Israel.
Elitzur is accepting applica-
tions for the Elitzur-Golda
Meir Volleyball team for girls
grades 7-12. The team will
meet Wednesday evenings,
5:10-7 p.m. at Akiva Hebrew
Day School, 27700 Southfield
Road, Lathrup Village,
through May 17. The coach is
Karen Sklar, volleyball coach
of the 1988 Detroit Maccabbi
squad.
For information, contact
Elitzur director Hedy Mantel,
355-5025, or B'nei Akiva
Shaliach Benny Appel at
967-3742.

Eight Named
To Jewish Hall

New York (JTA) — Three
Americans are among eight
athletes from five countries
who will be inducted into the
International Jewish Sports
Hall of Fame in Israel in July.
The Americans include
former boxing champion Al
McCoy, basketball star
Barney Sedman and basket-
ball referee Mendy Rudolph.
McCoy, born Al Rudolph,
held the world middleweight
crown from 1914-1917 and
was the first left-hander ever
to win a world championship.
Sedran, only 5 feet 4 inches
tall and 118 pounds, was
known professionally as one
half of the "Heavenly Twins,"
together with Marty Fried-
man. He was the highest paid
professional hoopster of the
pre-World War I era.
When he was inducted into
the Naismith Memorial
Basketball Hall of Fame in
Massachusetts, Sedran was
labeled "the most complete
player of his time . . . the
greatest little man who ever
played the game."
The third American, former
National Basketball Associa-
tion referee Rudolph, set the
standard for all professional
court officials in his 24-year
career.
One athlete elected for in-
duction won Olympic medals
in two different sports. Otto
Herschmann of Austria won a
bronze medal in 100-meter
freestyle swimming at the
first modern Olympics in
1896, and a silver medal in
fencing in 1912.
Also selected are Olympic
fencer Grigory Kriss of the
Soviet Union, who won a
silver medal in epee in 1972;
Dr. Ozkar Gerde of Hungary,
a gold medalist in the team
sabre event at the 1908 and
1912 Olympics; and Felix
Flatow, a gymnast from Ger-
many, who won gold medals
in the team horizontal bars

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