AKS Quarterly Newsletter
December 2023
The Master's Edge
9th Dan
AKS Chief Instructor
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to You All
Well another year has come and gone. With optimism, I look forward to the New Year 2024. The past year had some ups and downs. With the passing of Tom Twining which was a shock to all of us. We had a very successful 50th Anniversary summer camp. Our 51st summer camp is in the planning stages, so please submit your ideas by the middle of January so that we can get it on the calendar.
Here at AKS Headquarters, we will be hosting once-a-month Kobudo/ Asian Weapons seminars. We are going to try and keep the tradition that Mr. Twining started with giving additional rank in Kobudo. These classes will be taught by Mr. David Hayes who holds a 7th Dan in Okinawan Kobudo, along with myself and Kristyn Reinecke who achieved her Brown Belt in Kobudo under Mr. Twining. The class will be $20.00 to defer the cost of holding the class. The first seminar will be in January with the date to be announced.
In the past, our style tried to hold group seminars in Toledo and West Virginia along with the AKS summer camp. I thought these seminars were good for the style in general because it was a chance for us to get together, to not only improve on the knowledge of our style, but also a chance for all to meet and grow our friendship in the AKS. Well I'm just putting this out there, I would like to see the clubs from these other areas step up and host an event. Our style's growth is in trouble, and giving the student something to look forward to might help keep the enthusiasm of growth in all the clubs.
As the chief instructor, I also want you know that I'm available to come to any AKS club to hold a seminar - it is in my job description. I hope you all have a joyous holiday season.
Sincerely,
Fred Reinecke
AKS Chief Instructor
231-777-1996
Farphotofred.myportfolio.com
frederic-reinecke.pixels.com
Far Karate Facebook Page
You may also check our AKS Facebook Page for information.
The DoJo
8th Dan AKS
Potential Martial Arts TV Shows
Dave Thomas
- Dancing with the Scars – Remembering tournament “trophies” and
weapons training.
- Kung-Fu – The Golden Years – Kaine teaches nursing home kung-fu.
- Your Other Right Foot – The training begins.
- Good Morning America – Where's the Tylenol?
- RMAOAKS – Real martial artists of the American Karate System.
- Dr. Phil – The AKS obsession episode.
- Everybody Loves Kata – Learning to love your forms.
- Frozen – Winter training.
- Rio Grande Full Contact – AKS in Texas
- The Big Bang Theory – Dropping your sai at a tournament.
- America's Funniest Home Videos – A martial arts staple for 30 years.
- What Happens in Vegas – Would be because of Brian Wolffis.
- Deadliest Catch – Trying to capture one of Sensei Yamashita's weapons.
- Bones – The many places I hit with nunchuks.
- Salem 911 – John Folsom teaches locks, escapes and quick draw dialing.
- Fixer Upper Cut – Taking hand techniques out for a test drive.
- Jeopardy! – The new kid in class that wants to fight the head instructor.
- The Beacon on Apple Ave. – AKS Headquarters and sanctuary.
- Cops – "It was self-defense, check the video."
- Survival Dojo – Knuckle push-ups.
- Mission Impossible – Mastering Chinese splits.
- Make Me Go Home, Country Roads – Jude and Sandy teach bunki in West Virginia.
- Rush Hour – Practicing all your katas before passing out.
- Toledo Shuffle – Training fun with Skip, Andy and their crew.
Happy 2024 - All Year
Dave Thomas
8th Dan
Chief Instructor Emeritus
Dear AKS Brothers and Sisters
The journey started fifty years ago by Ernie and a handful of his students, of which I was blessed to be one, was celebrated this past July. While sitting with the couple who were kind enough to provide me lodging and friendship during my one-night stay, I talked about some of the things I had done with Ernie, along with some of the early history. After a lengthy conversation with a lot of me demonstrating movements and techniques, they thanked me for the history lesson. It was at that point I realized that I was a walking, talking history orator of the AKS.
Now I must tell you there are several others, Mr. Thomas and Mr. Reinecke, who spent a lot more time with Mr Lieb than I did and have a lot more to share. I'll leave that for them to follow with.
What follows is an article I wrote in 2015 about my experinces with my friend, sensei and mentor, Ernest H. Lieb. I ask that each of you who reads this and has similar stories to share, please do so for the benefit of our membership, many who never got to meet our founder.
Merry Christmas to you one and all. May God bless and keep you in His loving goodness.
Chief Instructor Emeritus
Michael A. Sullenger
Chief Instructor - Emeritus
My Experiences & Memories with Ernest H. Lieb, A Martial Arts Legend and Pioneer
Founder of the American Karate Association (AKA) in 1964 & The American Karate System (AKS) in 1973I first met Ernie Lieb at a karate tournament in South Bend, Indiana in November of 1972. His easy going personality and obvious love for the arts were readily apparent. I'd already been studying the martial arts for nearly 13 years. I had attained my 1st Dan in Chung Do Kwan while stationed in Texas, and my 2nd Dan in Tang Soo Do Moo Duk Kwan during an assignment in Spain as an enlisted man in the United States Air Force. Upon returning to the States in October of 1970, I began training again with my original instructor, whose teacher had joined him from Korea. I enjoyed the training but was disenchanted because Mr. Kim wanted me to learn a new set of Hyungs (kata) in order to prepare for testing to 3rd Dan. Having already learned one set for 1st Dan, and another for 2nd, I was not the least bit thrilled with the proposition of having to learn a third set for my next rank.
In the process of talking with Mr. Lieb, I learned the katas he used in his system were virtually the same ones I had originally learned while working towards my 1st Dan. I also learned Ernie was somewhat of a legend in the martial arts community as one of the best fighters in the States. He was undefeated as a middleweight. Add to that he was the first non-Korean to win a national championship in Korea, and you get the picture. The following year, Black Belt Magazine named him Man of the Year. With all of his greatness, skills and abilities, Ernie was as down to earth as anyone I have ever met. To me this was even more impressive since a great many of the top competitors carried around quite an ego. That wasn't the case with this immigrant from Germany.
Ernest H. Lieb was born in Berlin Germany on April 14, 1940. This was the time in history when Hitler's forces were dominating the European landscape with an ease many thought impossible. His Father worked as a policeman during the war, though his profession was that of a painter. His mother worked as a hat maker and cook. The Lieb's ancestors were feared land barons during the 16th Century in Germany. With the end of the war and the occupation of Berlin by the Allies, Ernie's older brother, Herbert, took many chances risking his life and safety to steal food for the family. The hardships that resulted during the post war years resulted in the realization the Lieb family needed to seek a better life elsewhere.
The Liebs came to the United States in 1952, eventually settling in Muskegon, Michigan in 1956. It was during this time frame Ernie began the fulfillment of a lifelong dream to study the martial arts. Though this was the beginning of his career in the martial arts, no one knew the heights his skills would take him in the years to come.
My initial experiences during brief visits to Muskegon for training with Mr. Lieb, after becoming a member in 1973, were of an amazing teacher. Ernie's patience with students of all levels, and his ability to explain how techniques were accomplished, drew hopeful trainees from all parts of western Michigan. He demonstrated a loyalty to his students and friends few could fault.
I relocated from South Bend, Indiana, to southern Texas where my wife Janie was from. There I began my undergraduate studies in Criminal Justice, worked fulltime as a police officer, and continued training and teaching karate. I stayed in touch with my teacher and mentor in Michigan, visiting whenever time and money permitted. I continued to increase in rank within the American Karate System (AKS) and to promote the style wherever I was. This included Germany and England once I graduated from the University of Texas - Pan American and was commissioned a second Lieutenant in the Air Force. During my second tour to Germany, I enlisted the assistance of my number one student, Dr. Rob Debelak. Rob had taken over the karate club I'd started in northern Germany during my first tour there, eventually marrying one of my original German students. When I explained to Rob my plans about running two tournaments at his location in the Hessisch-Oldendorf area, and a third at my base in Wiesbaden in order to raise enough money to bring Mr. Lieb to Germany, he was on board and immediately enthusiastic about the endeavor. The preparations started upon my reassignment back to Germany in December of 1985, from my base at RAF Upper Heyford, England.
My desire to make this happen for my friend and teacher was simple. Over the years Sensei Lieb had been more interested in training me and ensuring I improved and continued to rise in the ranks of the AKS. He didn't ask for money. He only asked for dedication, loyalty and sincerity. If Rob and I were able to pull this off, it would have enabled me to return a small part of what he'd given me over the previous 14 years.
By the summer of 1987, we had accomplished running the two tournaments at Rob's location and purchased the tickets to bring Mr. Lieb back to his homeland. I picked Mr. Lieb and his wife up at the Frankfurt airport in November and drove them to Berlin to visit his family. Though a stranger to the Liebs, I was treated like a long lost relative. For Ernie it had been some 35 years since he had left war torn home town of Berlin with his family. He was returning to his country and town of birth as a pioneer in American Karate with a legacy few of us had yet come to appreciate.
Over the years, Ernie went through highs and lows both in the martial arts and in his personal life; as many of us do. Though he might have been down because of an issue involving his beloved AKS, he didn't stay there long. I sometimes ask myself what it was that motivated so many of us to do what we did. Why did we become and remain members of the AKS? Why did we labor in our training efforts and sweat through hours of testing for rank in this organization? For those of us who've been around a while, the answer is summed up in a name - Ernie Lieb. Throughout the thirty-four years I knew and studied under Ernie, I knew a passionate martial artist, as well as a dedicated friend. His abilities as a fighter were legendary. Those abilities instilled the desire in others to learn. He earned the respect of other martial artists because of his passion and skill that help to establish our respected organization. Yet, with all of his greatness, he was a down to earth man who relished being in a karate Gi and teaching the least of us. He was never overbearing and always ready with a joke. These are the memories I cherish of my friend and teacher.
On September 6th, 2006 Ernie Lieb was killed in a tragic train wreck in Germany, along with 22 others (three who were also AKS members). On the afternoon of October 4th, 2006 (my 59th birthday), I gave the following eulogy representing the entire membership of the AKS.
GOOD AFTERNOON
MY NAME IS MIKE SULLENGER. FOR THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS I'VE HAD THE GOOD FORTUNE TO BE ONE OF ERNIE&339;S ASSISTANT CHIEF INSTRUCTORS. HE WAS MY TEACHER, MY MENTOR, AND MY FRIEND FOR MORE THAN 34 YEARS. THOUGH MY HEART IS HEAVY WITH HIS LOSE, I WANT TO CELEBRATE HIS LIFE AND WHAT HE GAVE TO US. TO SOME IT WAS HIS FRIENDSHIP. TO OTHERS IT WAS KNOWLEDGE AND SKILL IN THE MARTIAL ARTS. EACH OF US HAS A STORY WE COULD TELL OF THIS MAN WHO TOUCHED OUR HEARTS IN SO MANY WAYS.
SINCE HIS PASSING, I HAVE RECEIVED COUNTLESS E-MAIL AND PHONE CALLS FROM PEOPLE I'VE NEVER MET WHO KNEW OF ERNIE AND WHAT HE GAVE THE MARTIAL ARTS WORLD. I THINK ITS SAD WE SOMETIMES DON'T REALIZE THE GREATNESS OF THE PERSON UNTIL THEY'RE GONE. TO THE MARTIAL ARTS WORLD HE WAS MUCH MORE.
ERNIE WAS A TRUE PIONEER IN THE MARTIAL ARTS. HE USED THE WORD "AMERICAN" IN FRONT OF JI DO KWAN DURING A TIME WHEN DOING SO BROUGHT YOU GRIEF FROM OTHERS WHO THOUGHT IT BLASPHEMY. TODAY YOU CAN HARDLY OPEN A PHONE BOOK IN MANY CITIES WITHOUT FINDING SOME INSTRUCTOR ADVERTISING HIS "AMERICAN" SUCH AND SUCH STYLE OF MARTIAL ARTS. I WONDER HOW MANY OF THESE PEOPLE KNOW IT WAS ERNIE WHO PAVED THE WAY? HE STARTED AN ORGANIZATION IN 1964 TO BRING MARTIAL ARTISTS TOGETHER TO SHARE AND LEARN FROM ONE ANOTHER, INSTEAD OF SENSELESS FIGHTING TO PROVE WHOSE STYLE WAS BEST. THE AMERICAN KARATE ASSOCIATION LIVES ON TODAY FULFILLING THAT PART OF HIS DREAM. IN AUGUST OF 1973, I, ALONG WITH TWELVE OTHER HEAD INSTRUCTORS, JOINED WITH ERNIE TO FORM THE AMERICAN KARATE SYSTEM AT OUR FIRST SUMMER CAMP IN MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN.
THOSE WHO MET HIM WHEN HE WAS COMPETING, CAME AWAY WITH A PROFOUND SENSE OF HIS MASTERY OF THE ARTS. ONE FRIEND OF MINE WHO WAS STATIONED WITH ME IN GERMANY HAD SEEN ERNIE COMPETE AT A GEORGE MATTHESON TOURNEMENT IN BOSTON IN NOVEMBER OF 1966. DOM MALDONADO TOLD ME ERNIE GOT INTO THE FINALS AND STEPPED INTO THE RING WITH THEIR EAST COAST CHAMPION JULIO LASSALLE. EVERYONE EXPECTED ERNIE - THE SMALLER GUY - WOULD BE VANQUISHED IN NO TIME. TO THEIR COLLECTIVE AMAZEMENT, MR LIEB BEAT LASSALLE 3 TO 0 IN LESS THAN HALF A MINUTE. DOM SAID, "HE CAUGHT THE EYE OF THE MAN WHO'D JUST SCORED ON LASSALLE. IN THAT INSTANT, I KNEW I WAS FORTUNATE ENOUGH TO BE IN THE PRESENCE OF A TRULY GREAT MASTER."
MY YEARS WITH ERNIE WERE ALWAYS FROM AFAR. AS A MEMBER OF THE AIR FORCE, I WAS NEVER CLOSE BY. YET, WE WERE ALWAYS IN TOUCH WITH EACH OTHER. SINCE RETIRING FROM THE US AIR FORCE IN JUNE OF 1993, I HAVE ENDEAVORED TO WORK WITH ERNIE TO CONTINUE BUILDING HIS DREAM. THE AKS TODAY IS TAUGHT ON TWO CONTINENTS. THANKS TO THE HELP OF MY SENIOR STUDENT, DR. ROB DEBELAK, WE WERE ABLE TO SOW THE SEEDS THAT ESTABLISHED THE AKS IN GERMANY MORE THAN THREE DECADES AGO. WITH GOD'S HELP, AND THAT OF MY FELLOW AKS BROTHERS AND SISTERS, I WILL CONTINUE TO KEEP HIS DREAM AND LEGACY ALIVE.
Had I not written the above comments down to read them, I would not have been able to get through that service without breaking down in tears. After the services were over, several of the other senior AKS black belts and I met to discuss the future of the AKS. We were all resolute in our singular desire to ensure Grand Master Ernest H. Lieb's organizations (the AKA and AKS) and legacies lived on. We were all aware of a fear he had shared with us on various occasions. That fear was the AKS would fall apart because of petty egos and infighting of the senior members over who would become the leader, as was the case in both Robert Trias' United State Karate Association and Ed Parker's International Kempo. Mr. Lieb had made his desires clear. If anything ever happened to him, he wanted me to assume the mantle of leadership. I always told him he would outlive us all, since the thought of losing him was something I didn't want to contemplate. Faced with the harsh realities of his tragic death, I was thrust into a role I was reticent to assume and worried about how I was going to fill such large shoes.
There is much more to the story of this great martial artist than I have covered here. For those of you interested in learning more about the founder of the AKS and one of America's true martial arts pioneers, I invite you to visit the AKS web site at www.aks-usa.org. I'm also honored to be able to say the senior black belts of the AKS have been united with me in our collective desire to ensure Mr. Lieb's dream and legacy live on. This includes the AKS Chief Instructor, Fred Reinecke 9th Dan, and AKS Board Advisor Dave Thomas 8th Dan.
Respectively yours in Budo,
Mike Sullenger, 9th Dan
AKS Chief Instructor Emeritus
Black Belt Promotions
Fred Reinecke
9th Dan
Chief Instructor
John Folsom
8th Dan
Chief Instructor
Dave Thomas
8th Dan
Chief Instructor
E. Jude Gore
7th Dan
Chief Instructor
Andrew Eckhart
5th Dan
Chief Instructor
& Self-Defense Program
Mark Soderstrom
4th Dan
Chief Instructor
John Billie
2nd Dan
Chief Instructor
CONGRATULATIONS to all students who have been promoted this past quarter, and to those we've missed in prior newsletters.
Best wishes in your continued training!
Attention Instructors, if you have students who have been promoted, please send this information so that we may acknowledge their accomplishments.
Website Updates
Yes, I'm still here.
Just want to wish all of you a very Merry Christmas / Holiday, many "New Year" Blessings, and only good things to come.
It is my belief that the AKS will endure. We are coming upon almost 20 years (yes . . . 20) since our founder left this world and the AKS. It is a tribute to our senior leaders that we are STILL a vibrant martial arts community.
As we reflect on 2023, let us make a committment to make Ernie proud. I truly believe that if he could see us today, he would be AMAZED.
You know "that SMILE." He definitely is not done with the AKS! Let it be "Y O U" who makes Ernie proud.
The AKS will endure. PEACE - JOY - LOVE to all.
Laura Werner
AKS Webmaster
✨2024 AKS Summer Camp 50th Anniversary
Summer Camp dates are TBD
Tournament News
No tournaments news reported this quarter.
Black Belt Membership Dues
Please contact Dave Thomas.
Do You Have Member News ?
Please send news (weddings, births, graduations, etc.) so that we may share with our members and friends. Accompanying pictures are most welcome!
If you have a concern, question or suggestion, please let us know and we will address it here in the Punchline.
Please send your information to the AKS Webmaster. We look forward to hearing from you!
Available Clubs and Schedules:
231-736-3205
Schedule a phone call and I'll get in touch
AKS Karate Muskegon
Cassel Training Center
AKS is conducting classes for AGES 8 + up at Cassell Training Center, 710 Alberta Street, Muskegon, MI.
Classes are Tuesdays & Fridays from 6:30p - 8:00p
Cost for individuals - $50.00 a month
Cost for family (immediate) - $75.00 a month
Chief Instructor - Dave Thomas, 8th Dan Black Belt AKS
Guest Instructor - Robert Essenberg, 3rd Dan AKS who was awarded 2009 Instructor of the Year by the Black Belt Hall of Fame
Assistant Instructors: Jim Roy 6th Dan AKS, Debra Roy 6th Dan AKS, Robert Roy 1st Dan AKS.
Call Dave for more information: 231-206-3279
Attention Club Instructors. Please send your club/class schedule to me so that I can include your class schedules here.
hello
Contact Info
Fred Reinecke
far.photo.fred@gmail.com
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John Folsom (304) 782-3756
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Jude Gore / Chairperson
jgore@citynet.net
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Debra Roy
mr.mrsblackbelt@netzero.net
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Andrew Eckhart
aeckhart77@gmail.com
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Kristyn Reinecke
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Mike Sullenger
kick2aks@yahoo.com
The AKS Executive Board is currently working on updating the AKS Student Handbook and The AKS Rules and Regulations. This also includes techniques and requirements. If you find errors in the handbook, please let us know. We would love to hear your ideas and suggestions to grow and improve the AKS.
A.K.S. FACEBOOK PAGES AT
AKS Facebook Fan Page
AKS Karate Headquarters FB
West Virginia AKS FB
AKS Facebook Group
You will need to have a FaceBook Login for the 'Group' link.Our Official Web Address:
www.aks-usa.comIn addition: www.aks-usa.org or www.aks-usa.net will direct you to our website as well.
You can type in www.aks-usa.info and you will be taken directly to our "About Us" web page. Please check us out!!
For Questions or CommentsMike Sullenger - Chief Instructor Emeritus
Se habla Español
AKS Webmaster