Sports Hall Of For mers The Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation names four greats to its hall offarne. ALAN HITS KY Associate Editor lit ich Jordan is still immersed in high school sports, even though he's a long way and time from the record-setting performances that gained him entry into the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Jordan, Marissa Pollick, Billy Berris and the late sportscaster and author Dick Schaap will be inducted into the MJSHF on Monday, Nov. 4, at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield. Plaques in their honor will be hung on the Hall of Fame wall at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Richie Jordan The son of Romanian immigrants, Jordan grew up in Fennville, south of Holland, Mich. He averaged 44.4 points per game during the 1964- 65 basketball sea- son, and was a three-time All- State selection in football, rushing for 5,132 career yards and averag- ing 14.5 yards per carry as a senior. In baseball, he hit .550 as a senior; Richie Jordan and in track he was regional champion in the pole vault, high jump and long jump three years in a row. Jordan went on to play basketball at Michigan State University and pro- fessional baseball in the Pittsburgh Pirates system until an arm injury forced his retirement. In 2001, he became the first athlete from Michigan to be inducted into the National High School Sports Hall of Fame. Now 55, Jordan "has a great life" in Sarasota, Fla., where he is the for- mer athletic director and now strength and conditioning coach for 10/18 2002 114 Cardinal Mooney High School, a Catholic school. "They know I'm Jewish," he says. He is married and the father of three, including a son who plays baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers' organization. Jordan's grandfather established the Moskowitz department store in Fennville and his parents still live in the family's home there. The family were the only Jews in the town, and anti-Semitism was an issue "through- out my whole high school career. "There were some problems at times, but they were wonderful times. [The anti-Semitism of opposing play- ers] made me stronger — it gave me a little edge that I carried." Jordan stays in touch with some of his Fennville teammates, and several told him no one is more deserving of Jewish Hall of Fame honors because of the bias. "The community itself is wonderful," he says. "They treated me great. " Marissa Pollick Marissa Pollick becomes the second woman inducted into the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, following boxing promoter Jackie Kallen. At Berkley High School, the then- Huritington Woods resident was a state finalist on the girl's tennis team, but also the first female to earn a var- sity letter on the Berkley boys team. As a four-year letter-winner and two-time co-cap- tain of the women's tennis team, Pollick was among the first women to receive a varsity letter at the University of Michigan in 1974. In 1976, she was among the first group of Marissa Pollick women to receive athletic scholar- ships. In 1999, she was elected the first female president in the 86-year histo- ry of the "M" Club, an organization for U-M varsity letter-winners. Pollick, 45, continues to play ten- nis. Her five-woman team finished in the top 10 nationally in this year's USA League Tennis championships. Pollick graduated U-M Law School in 1981, practiced in Chicago for three years and then with her father. Her parents are Sidney and Esther Pollick of Bloomfield Hills. She was with Butzel Long for 12 years, including its Ann Arbor office, and recently opened a private practice in Ann Arbor. She also dabbles in sports management with her MWP Sports Inc. Billy Berris Billy Berris is the son of basketball star Henry "Honey" Berris, a 1990 inductee into the MJSHF. Billy start- ed playing organized basketball at age 5 at the Jewish Community Center on Davison at Dexter in Detroit. The 52-year-old from West Bloomfield continues a 45-year bas- ketball career that included his selec- tion as player-coach of the United States masters team at the 16th Maccabiah Games in Israel in 2001. He earned All-City honors in both basketball and tennis at Detroit Mumford High School. He went on to play basketball at Wayne State University, averaging 15.2 points a game and leading the team in assists until medical problems ended his col- legiate career. But he was able to come back for Maccabiah. He was the team most valuable player in Israel in 1993; captain of the gold-medal-winning team at the Central American Maccabiah Games in San Paulo, Brazil, in 1994; co-captain of the winning team at the Pan American Maccabiah Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1995; and led the team in assists at the 15th World Maccabiah Games in Israel in 1997. He is also active with the North American JCC Maccabi Youth Games, the U.S. Committee for Sports for Israel and the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation. "I'm obviously overwhelmed," says Berris. "Having a plaque on the [Hall of Fame] wall with my dad is pretty special to me. If my father were around to see this, it would really make it special." Berris says the highlights of his Billy Berris career were play- ing with his dad as a child, having 60,000 fans cheer- ing the U.S. team in Israel and the general reception the U.S. team received at the 2001 Maccabiah. "Everyone was thanking us for hav- ing the courage to come [during the Palestinian uprising]. It really had a profound effect. It put things in per- spective — how important it was to Israel that we were there." Berris has an advertising specialties business, Promotions Plus, and is a partner in the training company Goren and Associates.