I SPORTS' Golding's Redskins Are Unpredictable MIKE ROSENBAUM Sports Writer DESIGNER FURNITURE AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS! SAVE 50-70% 2 DAYS ONLY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18 . 1■ 111•NIII SHERWOOD WAREHOUSE • DINETTES • SECTIONALS • WALL UNITS ••DINING ROOMS • SOFAS • LOVE SEATS • LEATHER // FARMINGTON HILLS INDUSTRIAL CENTER A U N SHERWOOD STUDIOS CLEARANCE CENTER 24734 CRESTVIEW CT. FARMINGTON HILLS PHONE: 476-3760 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL SALES FINAL "%mu t 4 • garyAs %.1 U I V ‘ CUSTOM CLEANERS Obtmerly Audrey's Custom Clemens) DRY CLEANED SHIRTS & BLOUSES $ 2.50 !SALLY'S DESIGNS I FASHIONS FOR THE SOPHISTICATED WOMAN. UNIQUE ACCESSORIES OUR SPECIALTY • FASHION JEWELRY • HANDBAGS • BELTS • SCARVES ea. (Excludes silk, linen, fancy) Valid from 12/19 - 12/24 HUNTERS SQUARE 14 Mile & Orchard Lake, Farmington Hills Beauty Salon Max 8. Erma's 855-5653 Hours: 7:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. M-F, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 50 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1988 HOLIDAY & MOVING SALE 20-50% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE 14 Mile SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS CROSSWINDS MALL ( ORCHARD LAKE AT LONE PINE, M A, 5- o S S • 0, WEST BLOOMFIELD (313) 626-0886 oward Golding's sec- ond stint as varsity basketball coach at Oak Park High School began with a pair of upsets. The Redskins, a strong but erratic team last season, opened on Dec. 2 with a 58-56 win over traditional Class A power Birmingham Brother Rice. The win gave the Red- skins a No. 5 ranking in Class B in one of the major state polls. The rating was a tribute, but also a curse to Golding. He felt it would inspire War- ren High, Oak Park's Dec. 6 opponent. "It gives them everything to look forward to — to knock us off. And also it sends a message to the (Oak Park) kids, that they may be better than what they really are." Golding's fears were borne out when the host Orioles dropped • the Redskins, 69-66 in overtime. Oak Park trailed by 12 points midway through the fourth quarter, but rallied and tied the game on Michael Caine's basket with one se- cond left. The Redskins then dropped a Dec. 9 game at Southgate Aquinas, 60-46. Oak Park's win over Brother Rice show- ed that the Redskins could beat a taller team. The War- riors boast a 6-10 center and a pair of 6-5 forwards. Oak Park starts two 6-4 post players, seniors Caine and Michael Odden. The wings are junior Marcus Iverson and sophomore Herb Taylor. Junior Galen Giles starts at point guard. A pair of 6-4 players come off the bench: senior Steven Danner and junior Andre Searcy. "It was a great win to beat Brother Rice," said Golding before the Warren game. "It was something that I dream- ed about forever . . . My kids played good, but we have a lot of room for improvement." Oak Park relies on speed and quickness. "We start with pressing," said Golding, who first coached Oak Park from 1975-77. "We try to con- trol the tempo of the game right off the bat. I use dif- ferent kinds of presses. If one's not working then I go to another one." The Redskins use a variety of zones with the emphasis on aggressive defense. "We trap in the corners," Golding ex plained. "We do a lot of creative things. We basically shut off the paint . . . In our first game we had seven blocked shots in the paint. So they get intimidated coming into the paint. The kids jump really well. It forces you to play on the perimeter- and it forces you to shoot the outside shot, which basically allows me to get the defensive re- bound. When we whip it off, we run:' Golding uses multiple of- fenses. "For everything you do, I'll make an adjustment. Basically it becomes a chess game. You vs. me. And it's just a matter of how I manipulate the kids. The purpose of me as the coach is to put these kids in a position to win. Prepare them and put them in a posi- tion to win." Winning will not be easy in the Suburban Athletic League. Five of the league's seven teams were ranked in the top ten in their respective classes in at least one of the two major polls last week: Oak Park, Highland Park, Willow Run, Inkster and Robichaud. River Rouge and Ecorse round out the league. The Redskins open their league season against Inkster at home tonight. "It's an unbelievable basketball league," said Golding. "We're going to lose some. You can't go through that kind of schedule without a loss?' "'"="1 NEWS 1"'"'" Israelis Attend Center Opening Jerusalem (JTA) — Two Hebrew University professors this week attended the in- auguration of the Center for Jewish Studies in Budapest. The first institution of its kind in Eastern Europe, it was founded in 1987 as a joint venture of the New York- based Meinorial Foundation for Jewish Culture and the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The Center for Jewish Studies does academic research, issues publications and performs archival work, according to Philip Klutznick, chairman of the executive committee of the Memorial Foundation. The center is directed by Dr. Geza Komorczy, who visited the Hebrew University a year ago to take part in a seminar on the economic history of Jews in Hungary. Professor Sara Japhet, chairman of the Institute of