SHAPES OF THINGS TO COMEA week, works eight hours on Sundays at Hardee's and sometimes teaches power- skating. That's in addition to his 34 hours on the ice at Fraser Skateworld. Dan Hollander's road to ice- skating prominence began when he was 4. His mother took him roller skating with older sister Sandra and her Brownie group. Hollander fell in love with skating and began taking ice-skating lessons. His parents took him to Ice Capades shows and soon Dan was competing. Hollander also has taken ballet and mime lessons and has few problems competing. He has two comedy routines — a mime routine and "Dan and Dolly," the latter seeing him skating around the ice with an inflatable dummy at- tached to him. It ends with Hollander falling on the dummy. "One time a lady thought it was real and yelled when I fell on it," Hollander says. Last fall's Eastern Great Lakes Championships in "I have been fortunate that nothing too bad has happened to me on the ice." — Dan Hollander Cleveland dispelled any doubts about Hollander's skating ability. He finished first in a field of 12 skaters, winning for the third straight year the regional championship. The regional is the first of two competitions leading to the nationals. The second is the sectional, this week in Omaha. The high point on Hollander's road thus far is the seventh place junior divi- sion ranking he earned at the national championships in Salt Lake City. "I wouldn't say I missed out on my childhood," says Hollander, who was a bar mitzvah at Congregation Beth Shalom. "I didn't have time to join AZA, but I did have my playtime." Nevertheless, in 1987, Hollander quit skating for two months. His old coach talked him into returning to compete in the Michigan junior men's state champion- ship. "There was only one other competitor and my coach said he wasn't too good," Hollander says. "There wasn't a lot of preparation in- volved and I wound up winn- ing. Having the time off was nice, but I was itching to get back onto the ice." In 1988, Hollander placed first in the junior men's category at the Eastern Great Lakes Championships in Wyandotte. He captured the same championship in Midland a year later. That same year, he took third in the junior men's category at the Midwestern Champion- ships in Minneapolis. Hollander attributes his success to his coach of 2 1/2 years, Diana Ronayne-Wetzel. "She's a killer, a monster — very disciplined and just a great coach," says Hollander. "She saw my bad habits and helped me fix them. I realiz- ed after I won the Eastern Great Lakes Championship that she knew what she was talking about." "When I first saw him, I saw he had potential," Ronayne-Wetzel said. "He is strong and his body is built a lot like Scott Hamilton's." 1990 wasn't a bad year for Hollander, either. Before the Great Lakes championship, he won the junior men's category at both the Toronto and Colorado championships. "At the Toronto Champion- ships, I felt as happy as he did," Ronayne-Wetzel said. "There were international judges that didn't know Dan and could have easily picked one of their own skaters." However, what Hollander may be most recognized for locally is his appearance on Mort Crim's "Home For The Holidays" television special at the Southfield Ice Arena earlier this year. He also performed last year in the Findlay, Ohio, and Lighthouse Point, Fla., ice shows, besides being the solo principal performer of the Ice Company in Southfield. "I have been fortunate that nothing too bad has happen- ed to me on the ice," says Hollander. "But I was doing my mime routine in Ohio and my prop flower kept falling off. So I threw it up into the crowd, so my girlfriend could hold it. But one lady thought I was throwing it to her and she caught it and was pretty happy. I eventually got it back." "I have gotten burned out before, but you have to keep on pushing or you may get out of shape," he says. "I us- ed to think of all the time I had in front of me, but now the time is a lot closer and I've learned to take it day by day. The feeling of wanting to be number one has kept me going. "I'll never lose interest in skating, even when I'm finished competing," he says. $100 off 44f A the JCC Health Club The Shape of things to come in the New Year are at the JCC Health Club where fitness is our business, • it Jewish Community Center 6600 West Maple Road West Bloomfield, MI 48322 Membership Department 661-1000, ext. 265, 266 • Some Restrictions May Apply • Offer Good Jan. 1-31, 1991 • New Health Club Members Only ATTENTION ALL JEWISH TEENS SHAAREY ZEDEK USY PROUDLY PRESENTS ITS ANNUAL REGION WIDE DANCE AT CONG. SHAAREY ZEDEK-BNAI ISRAEL CENTER (4200 WALNUT LAKE ROAD, WEST BLOOMFIELD) JANUARY 12, 1991 8:OOpm-12:OOpm COST: $5 or $3 with two cans of kosher food for YAD EZRA MUSIC PROVIDED BY CLASS ACT DJ'S BASEBALL *C. 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