13-year-old Linda Goldstein has some lofty dreams on her swimming horizon At age eight, she competed in the USS state meet against nine and 10 year-olds. She did not win, but she was the youngest participant. The family spent a great deal of time flying or driving to summer swim meets across the Midwest when Barb and Susie were competing. At age 10, it was Linda's turn. Ralph ex- plains that as a self-employed in- vestor, it's easy for him to get away for "long weekends" with his wife and daughters, and the family enjoys it. Linda is an eighth grader at Or- chard Lake Middle School. Next year she will attend West Bloomfield High Schol. She plans to swim for the high school girls team in the fall, then re- join the Stingrays after the high school campaign. Linda moves up to United States Swimming's 13-14-year-old division this season. But Coach McClune says, "She's still a favorite in Michigan .. Linda right now could come in, just the three events that she scored state records in, and do extremely well in the (high school) state meet. Going 5:07 in the 500 free would make her top six in the high school state meet, Class A!" Linda took the summer off from competition. Now that she has resum- ed practice, she is on a tight schedule. She gets home from school around 2:45 p.m., does her homework, then goes to swimming practice at 5:30. She returns home about 8:30 p.m. McClune admits that some swim- mers suffer from overwork, or "burn- out" at Linda's age. But he says that Linda not only shows no signs of burn- out, she is still improving. "She always seems to go beyond, above, what our goals are for her. She seems to have a lot of fun with her training. She's never been so serious that we've ever been worried about her burning out. She has a lot of fun with her friends that she has on the team, training in the water. When it comes down to the end of the season for the Coach Chuck McClune clowns with his star. big meet that we're gonna rest her for, she always seems to go a little bit faster than we've always expected. I honestly think that- we haven't real- ly seen how fast she can go yet." While Linda will swim on an all- girls team in high school next year, she had almost the opposite ex- perience last fall with the Stingrays, who practice in groups based solely on ability. While the older Stingray girls were competing with their high school teams, Linda swam with a group of the team's older boys. "She was kind of like the pet of the group," reports McClune. "Most of the guys that were in this group were anywhere from 14 to 18 years old!' McClune describes Linda's per- sonality as "kind of bubbly. She's very light-hearted, she's real easy to work with, because she'll joke around with you and when you need to get down to serious work, she'll buckle down and do that for you. She's a dream to work with. She's the kind of person that, if you had a whole team of peo- ple like her, it would make your job too easy!' On a recent evening in the base- ment of the Goldstein's West Bloom- field home, with a large case brimm- ing with just some of her trophies nearby, Linda seems unaffected by her success. She matter-of-factly describes her accomplishments, often leaving her justifiably-proud parents to add the embellishments. Is she ever surprised by her success? "Uh huh, a lot;' she responds. "A lot of times I didn't think I'd do as good, or I was almost positive I wasn't gonna go as fast as I did and I went faster and won it. That happened a lot!' She also gives credit to McClune and the other Stingray coaches who train her. But whether it's learned or natural, she has the strong mental at- titude necessary for any athlete. "I push myself when I'm swimming .. . Before every race my coach tells me what to think about and what to just ignore, so I try to think of that before. Then, when you're in the water, when you're either a little bit ahead or a lit- tle bit behind, you can't really think about it. You've just gotta give it all you've got and go!' Of course, Linda generally swims more than a little bit ahead of her competition. "Now I don't think about the person I'm swimming next to, because most of the time they're real- ly far behind me, so I can't really stay with them or else my time will go down . . . You have to swim your own race. So I just think about my own race and now, if somebody else wants to go ahead of me, I let 'em, and I swim my own race, how I know I can swim it." A shared experience for Linda and her father is the Maccabi Games. Ralph played on the gold-medal win- ning U.S. basketball team in the 1961 games in Israel. Linda participated in her first Maccabi competition at Mac- cabi's North American Youth Games in Toronto last year. She took home five gold medals and one silver. She did not compete in this summer's regional youth names in Cleveland because she took the summer off, but she is planning on competing at the North American Games in Chicago next August. Since the only Jewish organiza- tion to which the family belongs is the Jewish Community Center, Linda found the Maccabi event interesting. "I've never been with just Jewish peo- ple before." She stayed in a dorm with . THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27