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Continued from preceding page
came against Dartmouth,
when he poured in 21 points.
At the season's end, Arditti
was the Eagles' team leader
in 3-point field goals and in
free throw percentage.
"I feel pretty comfortable
now," said Arditti, who fig-
ured it won't be long before
he regains his playing time.
"Now I know much more. I
know what they are expec-
ting of me."
Seton Hall's Barnea, a 6-8
small forward from Haifa,
has also tasted frustration.
He too has been hit by the in-
jury bug.
"I was practicing two mon-
ths and finally it's time for
the start of the season and I
get injured," said Barnea,
who suffered a stress frac-
ture in his shin, but was to
be ready for play by mid-
December. "I feel like I have
to start all over again."
Once he gets going,
Barnea is confident he can
produce for the Pirates,
whose whole team has been
plagued by injuries.
"Still I know I have to
build my reputation here in
the United States," said
Barnea. "They don't know
me here."
Freshman Mosovitz, a 6-
foot guard from Ramat-Gan,
is expected to play both point
and shooting guard for the
LSU Tigers. He averaged 25
points and 15 assists per
game for Maccabi Ramat-
Gan. ❑
Karp's Tennis Record
Gets National Spotlight
STEPHEN LIPSEN
Special to The Jewish News
H
er mother says it
finally hit Stacey
Karp when she saw
herself in the national sports
magazine.
"It was one thing when
they (Sports Illustrated)
came over to talk to her and
take her picture," says Mar-
jorie Karp of her 17-year-old
tennis star, whom she says is
"a little on the modest side.
"But when she actually
saw her picture in the maga-
zine, that was really some-
thing."
Karp, a senior at Ann Ar-
bor Huron High School,
merited her appearance in
the magazine's Dec. 17
"Faces in the Crowd" sec-
tion for being apparently the
only female in Michigan
high school doubles tennis
history to go three years
without a defeat.
The mark, estimated by
Huron tennis coach Martin
Topliss at 67 wins and no
losses, came while the 5-foot-
3-inch netter was winning
three consecutive state
doubles titles, including this
past fall season.
Being small physically and
minus any big weapons on
court, Karp chose to stick
with doubles tennis.
"I guess the best parts of
my game are my consistent
play and my shot place-
ment," said Stacey. "I've
always had a partner who
can power the ball more, so
I've always complemented
them." Her bigger-hitting
partners were Suki McClat-
chey in Karp's sophomore
year and Amy Eisner the
last two seasons.
Stacey Karp:
Evert's her idol.
"I've always been patient
on the court," she added.
"I've always taken advan-
tage of opponents' mistakes
and set up my shots well."
She models her tennis
game after her longtime
idol, Chris Evert. "Chris
used her head to beat her
opponents," said Karp. "She
was mentally strong and she
had the best placement on
her shots. She also took ad-
vantage of her opponents'
mistakes."
Karp has displayed her
own form of mental
toughness: she won her third
straight state doubles title
Oct. 20, just a month after
her father, Bruce, who got
his family into playing
tennis, died of cancer.
His death "was hard on
Stacey and the rest of us,"
said Marjorie, including
Stacey's older sister,
Carolynn, a junior at the
University of Wisconsin. It
brought the three women
closer.
Stacey Karp began tennis
at age 8, when her father got
.