To Life! SPOR TS azeit 1,14 Preparing couples for labor, delivery and infant care in a • warm Jewish environment Childbirth Education Series k l:46 Medical Experts Will Teach: Full labor & deliver4 course Infant care safetq r Infant massage & calming techniques and much more „. Also Learn With The Rabbi: Preparing a Jewish home Jewish spiritualitt for pregnanc4 & deliverg Fall 2005 Series Monday Evenings 6:30 to 9:00 PM November 7, 14, 21 & 28 December 5 Si, 12 Where? EUGENE & MARCIA APPLEBAUM CENTER FOR JEWISH LIVING 4200 Walnut Lake Road West Bloomfield, MI 48323 Everyone is Welcome! $100 for members $120 for non-members For more information or to receive a brochure: please contact Rabbi Lauren Berkun at lberkun@shaaretizedek.org or call 248/357-5544 36 local papers. In his later years, Rosenfeld combined his lifelong interest in boxing and his newspaper expe- rience: He compiled a 659-page nonfiction volume about the sport, its history and the social conditions surrounding it in the United States. Its title: Charley Burley: The Life and Hard Times of an Uncrowned Champion (1st Books Library, $17.50). Self-published, the paperback has sold 500 copies, but a hard- cover edition should be in book- stores by year's end. The book is the result of six years of trips to libraries in cities where Burley fought, and waiting for microfilm from the Interlibrary Loan Association. Talking about black athletes in the 1920s,'30s and '40s, Rosenfeld said, "They were the best out there, but never got the best results" from fight officials. Kronk Gym's immortal Emanuel Steward is quoted on the Burley cover: "Rosenfeld's research is extraordinary. And the writing is beautiful. In my 52 years in box- ing, this is one of the most unfor- gettable books I have ever read:' Rosenfeld continues to follow boxing from a distance. He gets all the boxing magazines and occasionally writes for an online boxing site. And he follows the Jewish boxers: A friend of a friend works for Salita, and the new champ will emcee the Standard Club of Chicago's annu- al fight night this fall, produced by Rosenfeld nephew Terry Back In The Game Traditions for welcoming & naming a babij CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK The Fight Game from page 35 Steve Stein Jewish Stars D ebbie Michelson of Birmingham was the queen of the tennis courts during her four years at Washington University in St. Louis. She played in the NCAA Division III tournament from 1990-92 and became the school's first women's tennis All- American in 1992. Her career record was 183-31, including a dominating 106-10 mark in sin- gles. Michelson was inducted into Washington's Sports Hall of Fame in 1997. She's one of 108 inductees since the hall estab- lished in 1992. After earning a degree in mar- keting from Washington, job and time constraints forced Michelson to give up tennis for 10 years. She picked up the game again three years ago and is right back in the spotlight. Michelson, 35, is a member of a Beverly Hills Club team that will play in the United States Tennis Association's Women's 4.5 Adult USA League Tennis nation- al championships Oct. 7-9 in Tucson, Ariz. Debbie Michelson "I'm nowhere near back to where I was in college, but it's fun to be playing tennis again:' Michelson said. And winning again. Michelson is 11-0 in singles and 2-0 in doubles in USA League Tennis play this season, frustrating opponents with her mental toughness and pinpoint serving. The former Birmingham Seaholm High School tennis player will compete at either No. 1 or N6.2 singles in Tucson. She's 3-0 at No. 1 and 8-0 at No. 2. The Beverly Hills Club team is September 29 2005