Jewish athletes
Found in 30 Collections and/or Records:
Basketball: Salz, 1959-1961
Harvey Salz, from Brooklyn, New York, played for the DC Truckers in AAU competitions, passing up try-outs with the St. Louis Hawks (now Atlanta Hawks) and the New York Knicks to play for the Truckers during the early 1960s. He also played with the Truckers in a tournement in Ecuador in 1962. Salz also played handball as well.
Boxing: Coffee, 1950-1976
Colorado Jewish Athletes Collection
Collection contains notes and newsclipping of individual Jewish athletes from Colorado: Leonard Alterman, Abe Attell, Mandel Berenbaum, Joe Coffee; Max Cohan, Nate Grimes, Dorothy Heitler, Irwin Hoffman, Helen Hyman, Blanche Lange, Larry Loeb, Aaron Lutz, Alice Marx, Fay Morris, Ed Pepper, Harvey Salz, Howard Schechtel, Jack Shapiro, Morey Sharp, Craig Silverman, Sam Sugarman, and William Winograd.
Cook's Baths Baseball Team, 1912
Cook's Baths Baseball Team, 1912
Members of the 1912 Cook's Baths Baseball Team line up in front of a brick building. Left to right: Al Fishman, Dave Cook, Harry Gibbons, Max Sedalnick (Shep), [unidentified team member], Sam Kay [Sam Kantowitz, coach], Judi Goldberg, Sam Waitz, Louie Spector, Max Gelfond, Abe Pringle, and Louis Cook. Team members are wearing uniforms that display the word ''Cooks'' on their shirts.
David Speken, 1927 - 1930
Figure Skating: Lang
Blanche Lang, from Evergreen, Colorado was active in figure skating on the front range of Colorado in the 1920s and 1930s, helping to form the Denver Figure Skating Club before moving to Los Angeles, California in the 1940s.
Football: Schechtel, 1938-1942
Howard Schechtel was a multi-sports star at East High School, being honored in football, baseball, and basketball (in AAU). He later competed in tennis at senior level.
Football: Sugarman, 1940-1943
Sam Sugarman starred in football with the now-defunct University of Denver program in the late 1930s, earning all-American honors twice and earning headlines for sitting out a game that was scheduled on Yom Kippur in 1940 for religious reasons. After graduation, he turned down an offer to play with the Newark Bears, joined the military and played semi-pro football with a team in Honolulu, Hawaii. Sugarman retired from playing in 1944.