To fe SPORT TORAH POR ON Six-Pointed Star N. Farmington cager makes his point against Division I rivals. Steve Stein Special to The Jewish News B rent Flusty finished with a flourish. On Senior Night, in his final home game, the North Farmington High School basketball player scored a career-high and team-high 14 points to lead the Raiders past Southfield-Lathrup 50- 45. "I was just in the right place at the right time Flusty said about the March 2 game. "What's more important is our team played great defense, the best defense we played in a while." Playing solid defense is difficult in Oakland Activities Association Division I, arguably one of the toughest boys basket- ball leagues in the state. North Farmington finished 11-8 over- all in the regular season but just 2-8 in its first year in Division I after mov- ing up from Division II. The Raiders split with Division I rivals West Bloomfield and Lathrup. Flusty said North Farmington's lopsided Division I record is misleading. "We looked at playing in Division I as a challenge, and our goal was to show everyone that we belong in the division. I think we did that:' Flusty said. "We were competitive, and we worked hard on defense every night." Flusty showed he belonged person- ally. In his second varsity season and first year as a starter, the 6-foot-4 for- ward was reportedly the lone Jewish starter among the division's six teams. "I have a sense of pride in that accomplishment," Flusty said. "It sets me apart from everyone else in Division I." Flusty, 18, is headed to the University of Michigan or Michigan State University after he graduates from North Farmington. He won't be playing collegiate basketball. The son of Rick and Wendy Flusty has a sister Laura, 16, a junior at North Farmington who is on the school's porn pon team. The family lives in Farmington Hills. 40 March 15 2007 In The Genes The name Flusty may ring a bell with fans of the 1946 Detroit Central High School basketball team. Norton Flusty, Brent Flusty's grandfather, was a member of what's believed to be the only all-Jewish starting lineup for a Detroit city champion basketball team. Norton Flusty and Obbie Friedman were the forwards. Harold Kutnick and Alex Taub were the guards and Lloyd Adelson was the center. Each went on to play college basketball. "All five of those guys have died. Norton was the last of the Mohicans. He died May 28, 2005:' said Maynard Flusty of West Bloomfield, Norton Flusty's brother and the unof- ficial historian for the Central team. "I went to all of their games that season:' said Maynard, who was 41/2 years younger than his brother. "What a great team." Friedman set a city record when he scored 33 points against Detroit Redford. "That's an especially amazing feat when you consider there wasn't a 3- point line back then, and there was a jump ball after each basket:' Flusty said. Road Warriors March 3 was a memorable day for Wayne State University freshman ath- letes Slava Zingerman and Jared Katz. Zingerman, a fencer from Ashkelon, Israel, won the individual epee com- petition at the Midwest Fencing Conference championships at Notre Dame. He defeated teammate Marek Petraszek in the finals after beating Ohio State's Sean Harder and Noam Gill and Notre Dame's Karol Kostka in the earlier round of 16 matches. Katz scored the game-winning goal in the third period of the Wayne State hockey team's 5-4 victory at Robert Morris. Please send sports news to sports®thejewishnews.com . Our Lives As Tabernacles Shabbat Vayhel-Pekude (Shabbat Hahodesh): Exodus 35:1-40:38; 12:1-20; Ezekiel 45:16-46:18. I have been blessed with many role. Instead, the Torah speaks time strengths and skills in my life. and again of people contributing in Yet, put a hammer and nail in my whatever ways their heart and spirit hand, and I am useless. Ask me to re- so moves them; and these gifts, too, design a space, and I am a waste. Tell represented a vital element in the me to create an arts and crafts project Tabernacle's construction. then watch me hide, create Living a Jewish life can an excuse, or call someone be just as daunting as our else over to do it. ancestors' construction of I have the spatial-relations the Tabernacle. Some of us capabilities of a six-month- may want to run and hide old. from its complexities, to cre- So, whenever I read the ate an excuse not to practice account of the construction its customs, or to call some- of the ancient Tabernacle — one else to do it in our place. Ra bbi which we do in this week's But as long as we devote Aaron Starr parashah, Vayhel-Pekude ourselves to Jewish life in a Specia I to the way that our heart or spirit — I want desperately to flip Jewis h News ahead to the next portion. truly moves us, then we too For the next week I'll wake may feel God's presence up in a cold sweat, dreaming merci- among us — just as our ancestors did lessly of pegs, posts and sockets; acacia through the Tabernacle. E wood, lapis lazuli and goats' hair. I take heart, however, in know- Aaron Starr is a rabbi at Congregation ing that Moses did not demand each Shir Tikvah in Troy. Israelite have a hand in the actual building of the mishkan. Rather, those Conversations truly skilled in engineering and archi- With what skills are you blessed? tecture — Bezalel and Oholiab — led How can you make someone a team of gifted craftsmen and women else feel more comfortable in in the actual construction. But every- the synagogue or in Jewish life, one had a part to play: rich or poor, despite his/her apparent lack of young or old, skilled or terribly inept, knowledge or understanding? In "everyone whose heart so moves him" what additional ways does your brought a gift to contribute to the place heart move you to contribute to where God's presence was to dwell. your own Jewish life? Judaism is an incredibly complex religion, filled with "rights" and wrongs" and certain ways of doing things. Like the construction of the Lunch, Learn Set Tabernacle, we have a set of blueprints Ohr Somayach Detroit will host a (namely, the written and oral Torah) lunch and learn with Rabbi Mordechai for creating a life in which we might Becher 12:30-1:30 p.m. Monday, feel God's presence. March 26, at the Franklin Athletic Yet, not everyone is skilled in read- Club in Southfield. ing the plans and, frankly, not every- Rabbi Becher's topic is "Jews Are one agrees that the instructions say From the Moon, Egyptians Are From the same thing. Not all of us can be the Sun — The History, Origins and Bezalal, Oholiab or those others skilled Philosophy of the Jewish Calendar." in particular crafts. For reservations, call Ohr Somayach, So, thankfully, the Torah does not (248) 352-4870. The $18 charge demand that each of us play the same includes lunch and valet parking. C C