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March 20, 1992 - Image 54

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-03-20

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

1 SPORTS I

Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit

HEALTH CLUB / SINGLES

PURIM
LAS VEGAS
NIGHT

(21 and over)

Saturday, March 21, 1992

8:00 p.m.

JCC - Maple/Drake Building

Admission: $6.00 or FREE with the purchase
of ten $1.00 raffle tickets.

Black Jack

Roulette

Wheel Games

Big Prize Drawing
Round Trip to Las Vegas

(Courtesy of Hamilton, Miller, Hudson and Fayne Travel Co.)

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

License No. M21571

For further information and/or a volunteer form,
please call 661-1000, ext. 301 or 347.

Maf cledners'

Weisman
Cleaners
Tailoring and
Wedding Gowns.

The Finishing Touch:

Pressing a fine garment is the finishing touch
in successful dry cleaning. Quality pressers ac-
quire their skills over a lifetime of work. At
MY Cleaners our quality pressers use the old
manual style presses to achieve the custom-
finished look the discriminating customer
demands.

The finishing touch — one of the many
reasons why knowledgeable customers say
"MY Cleaners is my cleaners."

Located on Northwestern Highway
at 12 Mile Rd.

Orchard Lake Rd. North of Maple • West Bloomfield

COUPON

WALLED LAKE COLLISION

2025 Maple Road
11/2 Miles West of Haggerty

BIG SAVINGS —

Farmer's
armer's — State Farm

Books !ought

— Mic INSURED

in Your Home

SAVE ALL OR PART OF YOUR INSURANCE DEDUCTIBLE

AMERICAN
CANCER
tige SOCIETY'

Depending On Dollar Amount Of Damage.

All work comes with a lifetime warranty Exp. 7/30/92

COUPON

54

FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1992

Continued from preceding page

his biography, will provide a
running narrative.
"My only regret about this
project is that I never got a
chance to meet Hank," Kemp-
ner said.
Greenberg, who was born
Jan. 1, 1911 in New York Ci-
ty, died of cancer Sept. 4, 1986
in Beverly Hills, Calif.
It took seven years for
Kempner to research, co-
write and produce Partisans
of Vilna, which has been
shown at film festivals
around the world and on the
Public Broadcasting Service's
(PBS) Point of View series.
The record based on the film
was nominated for a 1991
Grammy Award.
There are plans to
distribute The Life and Times
of Hank Greenberg to movie
theaters and show it on more
than 300 public television sta-
tions coast-to-coast.
It will be available for
release on cable television
and it will be provided to
schools, libraries, religious in-
stitutions, civic groups and
sports organizations.

To date, Kempner has been
able to raise funds for just five
days of shooting. She feels she
needs another 25 days along
with six months of editing to
complete the project.
Kempner estimates about
$400,000 must be raised and
$90,000 has been generated
so far, including a $6,000
grant from the D.C. Com-
munity Humanities Council

It will be available
for release on
cable television
and provided to
schools.

and a $5,000 research and
development grant from PBS.
"As we approach the end of
the 20th century, the most ef-
fective medium for getting a
message across is cinema, but
it's also the most expensive,"
Kempner said.
lb contact Kepmner, write
to The Ciesla Foundation at
1707 Lanier Place, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20009 or
call 1-202-462-7528.



"I Played Handball With Hank Greenberg"

3501 3

624-4547

Hank On Film

I

Help us keep winning.

It was a rainy day. The
year? 1936 or 1937, recalls
Meyer King. The exact date
isn't important.
It's what happened at the
old Jewish Community
Center on Woodward and
Clairmount near Detroit Nor-
thern High School that King
always will remember.
On that day, King, now a
74-year-old retired tool
salesman who lives in Farm-
ington Hills, played handball
with his boyhood hero,
Detroit Tigers star Hank
Greenberg.
"There was nobody playing
when I first got to the Com-
munity Center, so I thought
I'd hit the ball off the wall for
a little while. You know, get
some exercise and go home,"
said King, who was about 18
at the time.
"Well, I had been fooling
around for about 15 minutes
when a guy walked in who
looked like Hank Greenberg.
I didn't believe it was him,
but I knew one thing: I'm
6-foot-1 and I was looking up
at this fellow."
It seems Greenberg, who
was 6-3 and weighed 210
pounds during his major
league career, wasn't needed
at Briggs Stadium because
the Tigers' game was rained
out.
He went to the JCC looking
to play handball, and he ran
into teen-ager Meyer King. At
the time, Greenberg was in
his mid-20s.
"I was a pretty good hand-
ball player then," King said.
"I wasn't world class, but I

Meyer King

thought I was competitive!'
After the two men volleyed
for a while, they started play-
ing and Greenberg won 21-0.
"I was surprised," King
said. "I asked Hank where he
learned to play handball, and
he said he used to play a lot
at the 'Y' in the Bronx, where
he grew up.
"I felt bad because I didn't
give him much of a game. In
the second game, he let me
have three or four points.
"After it was over, it dawn-
ed on me what a great athlete
thiS man was. I'm sure you
know he still was a fine ten-
nis player in his later years.
I also thought this would be
something I could tell my
grandchildren!" ❑

Steve Stein

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