RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer F or six "alumni" of the Class of '84, the first Detroit JCC-Maccabi Youth Games were the greatest. The six — Dana Dobran- sky, Joshua Glantz, Hannah Kramer, Samantha Lincoln, Marc Schwartz and Samuel Sterling Heights, Mich., had a special reason for liking the Detroit Games: she was a very nervous lass of 12 participating in her first international meet but, by a stroke of luck, the gym- nastics competition was held where she trained. "I was really young then and I had no idea what to expect," said Dobransky. (The minimum age for Mac- and uneven parallel bars and finished second in the vault, compiling enough points to win the all-around title for her age group. The next year, at age 13, Dobransky went to the World Maccabiah Games in Israel, again winning gold medals — in the vault, bal- ance beam and floor exercise — plus a silver in the uneven parallel bars. Six athletes who participated in Detroit went on to greater competition. Singer — used the 1984 Detroit Games as a spr- ingboard to bigger athletic accomplishments, including participation in the World Maccabiah in Israel. Track star Kramer com- peted in both the 1985 and '89 World Maccabiah Games and also the Pan American Maccabi Games in 1987; the others were in one of the Maccabiahs and recorded other top athletic achiev- ements. Gymnast Dobransky, from M-14 FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1990 cabi has since been raised to 13). Now 20, she is a member of the University of Alabama's 1990 Southeast Conference women's gym- nastics championship team. Dobransky was worried about the Maccabi but, "My mother told me, 'Oh, Dana, just go have fun, have a good time — have fun meeting lots of people and just do the best you can,' " she recalled. She followed the advice and took first place in the balance beam, floor exercise She also won the all- around gold, but her smil- ing, friendly ways earned her another award: the World Maccabiah "congeniality" title. "It was a little plaque they gave me because I always walked around with a smile on my face, saying hello to people all the time." Glantz, a suburban New York City swimmer who was the Mark Spitz of the '84 Detroit Games, winning six gold medals, remembers the