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54
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1989
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Detroit flagbearers (from left) David Hitsky, Ari Nessel and Robert Kamins lead the delegation in the opening
ceremony.
Detroiters Looking To 1990
After Successes At Pittsburgh
RICHARD PEARL
Staff Writer
W
ith Jody Shapiro
leading the way,
Detroit's Junior
Maccabi entry in the 1989
Regional Games at Pitt-
sburgh returned home with
bagsful of medals and an eye
toward the North American
Junior Maccabi which Detroit
will host in 1990.
Shapiro, competing in the
Girls 14-Year-Old swimming
and 12-14 track, captured 13
medals — 11 in swimming,
two in track. In swimming,
she won two golds, six silvers
and three bronzes; while in
track, she won a gold and a
silver.
"The Junior Maccabi is get-
ting to where it should be,"
said Jay Robinson, general
chairman of the 1990 Games,
in discussing the Pittsburgh
program. "We're getting peo-
ple who are knowledgeable
about staging and organizing
these events. Pittburgh was
very well run.
"That helps because, as
things improve, the kids who
participate go and tell other
kids and it builds participa-
tion." While Pittsburgh's
regional brought in about 450
youngsters from six states
and Canada, the North
American Games next year
will have a field of about
2,200 from around the world,
according to Robinson.
"It was exciting to see the
kids from Detroit marching
in," said Larry Miller of
Bloomfield Hills, who attend-
ed for the first time and
whose son Jared was a
member of Detroit's
74-member delegation. "I get
chills just knowing these are
all Jewish kids who all are
getting together for a good
purpose and having a good
time."
"The kids all had a great
time" and represented the
Detroit area well both in par-
ticipation and comportment,
said Alan Horowitz, Detroit
team- coordinator.
Among other - individual
performances, Jeanette
Rubinstein in the 15-16 Girls
finished with four gold
medals, winning the
100-meter hurdles, the 100-
and 200-meter dashes and the
high jump. All tolled, the
Detroit track team brought
home 36 medals, including 13
golds and 12 silvers.
In team sports, Detroit's
soccer and softball teams
brought home silver medals
as runners-up while the
basketball team won the
bronze for third place.
.
The soccer team, which
finished runner-up to Wayne,
N.J., in the medal competi-
tion, got its first taste of the
easterners when it lost, 2-0, to
the Jerseyites in the first
game. The Detroiters reached
the semifinals and defeated
Cleveland, 5-0, to gain the
berth opposite Wayne in the
gold-medal game. The New
Jersey team scored a penalty
kick halfway through the se-
cond half to win the gold, 1-0.
The Detroit fast-pitch soft-
ball team defeated host Pitt-
sburgh in the semifinals
before losing to Chicago in
the title game.
In basketball, Detroit lost
to eventual gold-medal win-
ner Wayne, 79-71, in Game 3,
then defeated Pittsburgh,
78-52, in Game 4 to enter the
medal round. But Miami edg-
ed Detroit, 64-62, in the
semifinals, pitting Detroit
against Chicago for the
bronze, which Detroit cap-
tured, 85-77, led Scott Zack's
15 points and Joey Hurshe's
13.
In the Boys 13-14 raquet-
ball singles, Neal Brand won
the gold by forfeit over team-
mate David Gottesman due to
an injury to Gottesman. Both
played in in the Boys 15-16
doubles final, defeating the
Dayton, Ohio, team of Renas