To L fe !
CONGRATULATE
YOUR STUDENT'S SUCCESS
SPORTS
with an ad in The Jewish News
featuring our 2006 graduates!
ISSUE DATE:
May 25, 2006
AD DEADLINE:
May 19, 2006
•
sample ad (4.75" x 3" size)
Alexandra Cohen
Steve Stein
Special to The Jewish News
On having a dream and making it come
true. Good- hick on your new adventure
at the University of Michigan.
0
Id friendships were rekin-
dled and new ones sparked
at the first Southfield
Hockey Club Alumni Day reunion.
Hundreds of former players, coach-
es and managers and their families.
reminisced, read through yearbooks
and newspaper clippings, played pick-
up hockey and participated in an open
skate April 2 at the Southfield Civic
Center Arena.
"Everyone seemed to have fun and
All our love,
Morn, Dad and Jenn
Border #1 ❑
SIZES/PRICES
4.75" x 2" — $45 •
4.75" x 3" — $65
4.75" x 4" — $85
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Additional sizes available upon request.
Border
#2 ❑
Alumni On Ice
Border #3
❑
"We started organizing the reunion
in the fall:' Spaulding said. "The
hardest part was reaching people.
Thousands have been involved in the
league through the years."
Spaulding has run the club's begin-
ners program for 20 years. She's also
been office manager for several years.
Streak Ends
St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Jason
Marquis helped put an end to the
eighth-longest hitting streak in major
league baseball history. Marquis
retired Philadelphia Phillies star
Jimmy Rollins three times on flyouts
April 6. Rollins ended up going 0-for-
4, ending his 38-game hitting streak
that stretched over two seasons.
Rollins has had his problems with
Marquis. He's just 3-for-25 lifetime
against him.
Moving Over
Adam Kraus is the University of
Border
#4 ❑
Border #5 ❑
Southfield hockey reunion:
.
From left, front row: Adam Brophy,
Kourtney Spaulding, Ari Katz, Ryan
For more information, call 248.351.5100
Levitt. Back row: Brian Brophy,
Scott Stoller, Scott Goldman, Josh
Please write your congratulatory message legibly.
Be sure to enclose photo if you'd like.
.Lebovic, Andrew Gilgallon, Matt
If you would like your photo back, please include a self-addressed stamped envelope
Border Choice #:
Check Enclosed for $
Acct. #
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Exp. Date
Signature
WE CANNOT PRINT YOUR AD WITHOUT THE FOLLOWING
INFORMATION, WHICH WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL.
Name
Telephone
Address
City
E-mail
State
Zip
Editorial submissions are separate.
Attn: Cap & Gown — The Detroit Jewish News
29200 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 110
Southfield, MI 48034
Phone: 248.351.5100 • Fax: 248.304.0049
38
April 20 • 2006
i102620
Schulte, Justin Shaw.
saw people they hadn't seen in a long
time," said Shelley Spaulding, who
headed the reunion organizing corn-
mittee.
Reunion participants came from
near and far. Matt Beresh trav-
eled from Chicago. "Matt was one of
the first people who contacted us:'
Spaulding said. "His mother saw a
notice about the reunion in the Jewish
News and told him about it."
More than 8,000 boys and girls
have played hockey in the club during
its 36-year history, including.a large
Jewish contingent in the 1970s-1980s.
Among those working with
Spaulding on the reunion committee
were Ron Greenberg and his wife,
Sheryl Greenberg, and Joanne
Katz and her son, Ari Katz. Ron
Greenberg is a past club president.
Joanne Katz's late husband, Steve Katz,
was a board member for many years
and Ari Katz played from ages 5-18.
Michigan football team's first-string
left guard after starting at center in
the Wolverines' first eight games last
year. A knee injury ended Kraus' sea-
son prematurely last fall.
The 6-foot-6, 307-pound junior
from New Orleans came to U-N1 as a
tight end but switched to the offensive
line during spring drills in 2004.
Obituary
Marshall Goldberg, an All-America
running back at the University of
Pittsburgh and NFL star with the
Chicago Cardinals, died April 2 in
Chicago at age 88.
Goldberg was a member of national
champion Pitt's "Dream Backfield"
in 1937 and the runner-up for the
Heisman Trophy in 1938. He was
inducted into the College Football Hall
of Fame in 1958.
A six-time All-Pro defensive back
with the Cardinals during the 1940s,
Goldberg had a key interception in its
victory over the Philadelphia Eagles in
the 1947 NFL championship game.
Goldberg's NFL career was inter-
rupted by a three-year stint as a line
officer in the U.S. Navy during World
War II. A native of Elkins, W.Va.,
Goldberg owned a suburban Chicago
machine tool company for decades
after his playing days ended.
❑
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