[raising money to save eight courts]." The board made a similar decision over a year ago when it decided to eliminate the indoor tennis courts to build the Inline Hockey Center. That decision was based on the board's task force recommendation that a large chil- dren and family sports program was missing at the JCC. "We lost 75 tennis players and gained 1,000 new members — young people and their families — in a year," said Sorkin, noting 10,000 JCC mem- bers at its facilities in Oak Park and West Bloomfield. With a health club membership that has dwindled from 1,800 to 1,500 in two years, the JCC needed to modernize the West Bloomfield health facility built in 1976 and to attra c t more members. The health and fitness area is the major money- maker for the Center, Sorkin said. The board heeded advice from sever- al consultants, including the Jewish Community Centers Association of North America, the umbrella organi- zation based in New York City. The West Bloomfield JCC's health and fitness wing was once one of the largest such JCC offerings in the nation. In 1976, such wings were a place for leisure and relaxation. Today's health clubs are more active places. "Just look at our competition like Powerhouse and Life Fitness," Sorkin said. We need to use the space [including the 24,000-square-foot racquet courts area] for a new design for the entire fit- ness facility," said Hannan Lis, a JCC vice president. "It includes a large, open fitness area the way modern clubs are built, with studios for yoga, free weights, aerobic and cardiovascular workouts, and other amenities." Adds Sorkin: "The Center has to - move with the fitness industry, as do other JCCs around the country." But the diehard racquet sports play- ers disagreed. As word spread about the decision, the players became more vocal about the board's decision. "There's no due process here, they held meetings after the fact. They're just bailing out on us," said Lloyd Starr, 63, of West Bloomfield. Plotnick said he told the players at a meeting led by Hart that if they could raise $1.5 million soon, and find major donors to cover the rest of $4 million, the JCC board might reconsider. Starr said that national squash champion Gene Perle of West Bloomfield was at the meeting and said, contrary to what the JCC believes, health clubs are building more squash courts and selling more squash racquets than ever before. "They think racquet sports are a dying sport and want to use the space for something else. It's a mistake," said Harry Topper of Farmington Hills, a longtime JCC racquetball player. "Racquet sports go in cycles ... and when it comes back, they won't have any courts because they tore them out." Without some action to keep some courts, the Center likely will lose the players plus family and friends, they say. Sorkin said: "We feel terrible that even one person would potentially leave the Center because an activity is not there for them. But it's tough to be everything to everybody. We're trying to manage prior- ities for the greatest number of people." When he first heard the news, Dr. Roy Goodman of Bloomfield Hills was ready to leave the Center for the YMCA, taking "all my racquetball bud- dies as soon as the courts are closed," he said. He felt "the Center was throw- ing members out on the street who had been there for generations — at two and three [JCC] locations." Such concerns resulted in the second meeting where Sorkin agreed to look into raising funds to renovate and maintain eight courts. "We have a community mission here. And at the end of the day, we think we'll do the right thing," Hannan Lis said. But the additional $4 million brings the JCC back to the fund-raising task, originally begun after the JCC's 1996 financial crises. "We were losing hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, and needed to make the Center viable," Sorkin said. In 1998, the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and its finance - arm, the United Jewish Foundation, undertook the $50-million Millennium Campaign for Detroit's Jewish Future. The campaign has grown to $58 mil- lion, $33 million of which has gone to the JCC Capital and Endowment Campaign. A joint committee of the Federation, the UJF and the JCC func- tions as a steering committee for the renovations to both JCC buildings, said Mark Davidoff, Federation's chief oper- ations officer. He said that the JCC board is responsible for priority setting and that the joint committee is respon- sible for implementing those priorities. The first two phases of renovation are completed. They include the core lobby fashioned after a town center with the. Milk & Honey Restaurant of West Bloomfield, Marion and David Handleman Hall and Aditorium, the planned Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Judaic Enrichment Center and the Sarah and Irving Pitt Child Development Center. Work on this final health club and fitness area phase, excluding the pro- posed eight courts, will begin later this summer, said Sorkin. The work will take about 16 months. ❑ Previously a purveyor of poultry, Sol shows up every sum- mer with huge jars of delicious pickled cucumbers and toma- toes ... and he grows almost all of the ingredients himself. Who are the morning players? They're mostly older men, emember when the JCC Maccabi Games were mostly retired. Many of them have marvelous names from an held here in 1990? I had a chance to watch some earlier generation. Remember the old joke about Henry Ford of the racquetball competition at the West and the three Jewish engineers named Norm, Max, and Hi? Bloomfield branch of the Jewish Community Max-and Hi have left the game for health reasons, but Norm Center, and I was very impressed by many of the athletes is still going strong. There's Sol, Sam, Sid and Seymour; Lloyd, that other JCCs had sent here to compete. Leo and Leroy; Marvin and Morey; Herb, Herb and Herb. But in the next court, there was an equally remarkable The most common occupation seems to be dentistry; group of athletes. No, they weren't flying around the court like sometimes, there'll be a doubles game where all four players the Day-Glo-clad teenagers, slamming kill shots and scooping are dentists, and sometimes it's like pulling teeth to get up impossible returns. They were remarkable because enough players. Other health professionals include a they were all in their 60s and 70s, and out there play- pharmacist, a podiatrist and an allergist. One former ing racquetball as they did most weekday mornings. regular is a polymer chemist. When the court was Twelve years later, they're still at it! being painted, he informed us that after the epoxy One regular player has an apt phrase for the paint cured, it would all be one molecule. In fact, he morning sessions: "sandlot racquetball."-There's went on, the vulcanized rubber ball was actually one nothing formal about it; whoever shows up, plays. big molecule. For a week or two, this led to encour- Practically all of the games are doubles, so by adjust- aging shouts of "hit that molecule!" ing the teams, it's usually possible to create a pretty Most of the players appear to be indestructible. even game. If there are too many people for one DR. _OY They've come back after prostate surgery, game of doubles and not enough for two, the extras DMAN GOO parotidectomy, back surgery, hip replacement, even sit out a game and then rotate in fpr the losers. Specia / to the open-heart surgery and brain surgery. There has Not sure if the ball made it to the wall? Play the Jewish News been some attrition, but new players appear from point over. One player was in another's way? Play time to time. In fact, not everyone in the morning the point over. The ball hit the metal vent in the game is a septuagenarian or octogenarian. There are some ceiling? Play the point over. sexagenarians, even a couple of "pentagenarians" (50s) and The unofficial leader of the group is Sol the Pickle Man. one trigenarian" (30s), to coin a phrase. He's there more often than anyone else; he's usually the one Me? I'm a mere lad of 53. I'll usually show up on a who arranges the teams and with his sense of fairness, he's Monday or Friday morning, play singles for an hour with the one who decides most of the disputed calls. Sol often one of my regular nemeses, before getting in a few games of shows up wearing a T-shirt hand-painted by his family to doubles with the All-Stars. They're a fun crowd, with a lot commemorate his 83rd birthday or another one they made of good-natured heckling and trash talking, and we usually up for his 84th ... and they're old shirts! At age 87, Sol has can adjust the sides to create an even match. Above all, play- the posture of a retired sergeant-major and the flexibility of ing with these guys gives me hope that I'll still be running a teenager (I could never do toe-touches even when I was a around like a meshuggener 30 years from now. teenager!), and he can still ace a lot of players with his serve. If you're a JCC member, and you have some free time at about 9:15 a.m. on a weekday, come on over to the courts. Roy S. Goodman of Bloomfield Hills is a physician and a JCC We'll fit you into a game. member since 1989. `Still Got Game' R _._ ❑ (a kg 5/31 2002 15