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June 08, 1990 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-06-08

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

EL p RR

50*

WHATEVER THE BOOK SAYS YOUR TRADE IS WORTH $

ILL PAYIII

A

F ORD

01311/13 3110

Corner of 10 Mile & Greenfield
(Exit of 696 frwy)
OAK PARK

1110LE



rfl FAR A

MAPLE

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Jr

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333.3300

450

MIKE ROSENBAUM

Special to The Jewish News

F

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354.6060

ive Jewish players
helped coach Iry Hor-
witz's North Farm-
ington High School varsity
baseball team break even this
season with a 9-9 win-loss
mark.
And since the team has a
number of underclassmen,
the Raiders' coach is pleased
at the prospects for next
season.
With his top pitchers being
only juniors this year, Hor-
witz is confident the Raiders
will be much stronger in
1991.
"We should have the best
team North's had in about
eight or nine years," he said.
"If the sophs that we had on
the junior varsity come
around, it should be an ex-
cellent team:'
Horwitz, in his sixth year as
varsity coach, was not sur-
prised by his team's perfor-
mance. Overall, the team
played "as expected,"
although "we started out a lot
better than I expected. We did
a good job. We lost five
ballgames by one run. It was
a good year?'
Third baseman Dale
Turken was the only senior of
Horwitz's Jewish quintet
The second-year letterman
hit .314. "He'd do anything
for you," said Horwitz. "He
did a great job for us."
Dave Rankin led the team
with 59 at-bats, 22 hits and

22 runs scored while hitting
.373. He posted a .913 fielding
average in center field — "an
excellent year for a junior,"
said the Raider mentor.

Horwitz, who is also an
assistant coach for North Far-
mington's football and wrestl-
ing teams, calls Rankin "a
great all-around athlete who
was a varsity football player.
He's good to work with — a
`yes, sir-no, sir' type."
Second-year letterman An-
drew Margolick, a junior,
played first base and pitched.
He batted .365 with a .942
fielding average. After
posting a 6-1 pitching mark
as a sophomore, Margolick
went 3-3 this year, with a 2.94
earned-run average. But said
Horwitz, "His record doesn't
show who he pitched against.
He lost two games by one run,
one by two runs."
Horwitz added that
Margolick is a potential col-
lege player: "This young man
has good possibilities for a
scholarship!'
Two juniors, Jason Miller
and Marc Galens, both first-
year players, saw limited ac-
tion but, said Horwitz, both
maintained positive at-
titudes, knew their roles and
did not complain. Both will
likely see more action next
season.
Miller batted .571. "This
young man's going to be a
real good starter for us next
year," said Horwitz.
Galens batted .231 with an
.833 fielding average. ❑

Israel Tennis Centers
Observe 'Bar Mitzvah'

RICHARD PEARL

Staff Writer

A

tennis exhibition
June 13 by Israeli
youths will highlight
the Detroit area's celebra-
tion of the Israel Tennis
Centers' "bar mitzvah"
year.
The 6 p.m. exhibition
marking the ITC's 13th an-
niversary will be at the Bir-
mingham home of David and
Doreen Hermelin, according
to Seymour Brode, ITC pres-
ident.
Brode, recently elected to a
second two-year term as
president, said the tennis
centers now operating in the
Jewish state continue to fill
an important need — that of
improving the quality of life
for Israelis.

"When the ITC was found-
ed, people who had come to
Israel — many of them skill-
ed professionals with chil-
dren — found it was a rough
life and they were leaving,"
he said. Fellow Jews in the
United States, South Africa
and England who loved
tennis felt tennis centers for
the youngsters would help
stop the "brain drain."
The centers now have
some 135,000 youngsters
learning the sport, Brode
said.
"But the same thing (los-
ing new citizens) can and
will happen again if these
tennis programs and centers
don't continue," said the ITC
president, pointing out that
Operation Exodus is bring-
ing in many young Soviet
Jewish families with chil-
dren. "We want to maintain

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