Meet
Ethan Goldstein, M.D.
Obstetrics and
Gynecology
sports
Varsity Times 2
Kalamazoo freshman hopes to play
both basketball and volleyball.
Office hours
Appointments available
Monday and Wednesday -
Friday
Steve Stein
Special to the Jewish News
Office location
39630 W. 14 Mile Road
Commerce Twp., MI 4S390
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Services offered
• Prenatal and
obstetrical care
• Comprehensive
gynecological care
• Birth control
counseling
• Infertility evaluation
and treatment
248.669.3517
Beaumont Hospitals
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arly Zeitlin is headed to
Kalamazoo College to play
basketball ... and maybe vol-
leyball, too.
Playing multiple
sports wouldn't be a
new experience for
the former Walled
Lake Western High
School star. She was
a four-year varsity
athlete in basketball,
Carly Zeitlin
volleyball and track in
high school.
"I love basketball and volleyball,"
Zeitlin said when asked why she
wanted to tackle both sports at the col-
legiate level.
"I was recruited by Kalamazoo for
basketball, but I can't live without
volleyball," she said. "That's why I'm
meeting with the (volleyball) coach to
see if I can play both sports!'
Zeitlin was a basketball forward in
high school. At 5-foot-8, she'll be a
guard or small forward at Kalamazoo.
She plays outside hitter in volley-
ball, specializing in defense. "I love to
`pancake' a ball," Zeitlin said, describ-
ing how she puts her hands flat on
the floor to prevent opponents' spikes
from scoring a point.
Zeitlin won a myriad of athletic
honors at WL Western. She's also
proud about helping the basketball
team post an 18-4 record last winter,
its best season in 25 years. In track,
Zeitlin was one of the leading sprint-
ers in the Western Lakes Activities
Association the past two seasons.
Keeping up with schoolwork in high
school wasn't a problem for Zeitlin,
who earned Academic All-State honors
in three sports for three years. She
graduated from WL Western with a 3.4
grade point average.
"Time management, that was the
key," she said. "Plus, I always want to
give my best effort, either in athletics
or academics. I want to do well in a
game, and I want to do well on a test."
Zeitlin, 18, plans to major in politi-
cal science at Kalamazoo. Her career
goal, at the moment, is becoming a
lawyer.
Going to Kalamazoo was an easy
choice for Zeitlin. "Nothing about it
turned me off' she said.
The Kalamazoo women's basketball
team can use a winner like Zeitlin. It
finished 4-21 last season, and Coach
Tes Sobomehin resigned in June to
become the coach at Augusta St. (Ga.).
Zeitlin's older sister, Lindsay, 22,
won't be too far away when Carly
arrives at Kalamazoo. Lindsay will be
graduating in December from Western
Michigan University and she may be
staying in the area after that.
Dave Zeitlin, 24, is the oldest of
Barry and Lisa Zeitlin's three chil-
dren. A former basketball player at
Lake Superior State University, Dave
now lives in Florida. Barry and Lisa
Zeitlin live in Farmington Hills.
Sports Briefs
• The press box at Nationals Park,
the Washington Nationals' new sta-
dium, has been named the Shirley
Povich Media Center in honor of the
late Washington Post sportswriter.
Povich, who grew up in an Orthodox
household in Bar Harbor, Maine,
never worked on Yom Kippur. He was
inducted into the writers' wing of the
Baseball Hall of Fame in 1975, some 13
years before his death at age 92.
• Baseball is mourning the death
of Chicago sportswriter Jerome
Holtzman, who was elected to the
International Jewish Sports Hall of
Fame in 2005. Holtzman created the
save rule in 1959, and it was adopted
as an official baseball statistic in 1969.
He died July 19 at age 82.
• Shawn Green retired from base-
ball this season with 328 career home
runs, three less than former Detroit
Tigers great Hank Greenberg. Green
is best known for a 2002 game in
Milwaukee in which he hit four home
runs, a double and a single for a record
19 total bases while playing for the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
• Los Angeles Lakers guard Jordan
Farmar is headed to Israel next month
to conduct basketball clinics for Israeli
and Palestinian children. The clin-
ics are sponsored by the Peres Peace
Center, a foundation started in 1996 by
Israeli President Shimon Peres. 11
Please send sports news to
sports@thejewishnews.com.