SPORTS I
Buy a new 1991
Cadillac and receive
a set of wallet-size
Presidential portraits.
800329665A 2
Table Tennis: Michael
Brown 13/14 doubles bronze;
Jeff Gutman 13/14 doubles
2 800329885A
BONUS*
$2,500 CASH
BONUS*
$2,000 CASH
Cash Bonus Example
1991
SEDAN DEVILLE
stk. #1042
Roadside
(That's nvo Grover Clevelands
plus one William McKinley.)
on any new 1991 DeVille
$31,641
$4,108
$2,000
YOUR PRICE $2$,533
ILLAC
A General Motors Family Since 1917
758-1800
The JCC Health Club
Check Us Out!
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Indoor/Ourdoor Pools & Tracks
Tennis", Racquetball & Squash
Basketball & Walley ball
Steam, Sauna & Whirlpools
StairMasters, lifecycles, Versaclimber
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Nautilus, Treadmills, Rowing Machines & more
Weight Rooms & Aerobic Classes for all levels
Interest charge, initiation fee or
hidden expenses
Savings from $150•275
"additional cost for tennis court fees
• $275 savings for 18.25 year olds only
• Good September 1991 only
• must not have been a Health Club member in past year
• some restrictions may apply
56
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1991
Tennis: Elite Ben-Ozer
13/14 doubles silver, singles
silver; Nathan Cohen 13/14
doubles silver; Ben Hurvitz
13/14 doubles silver; Jared
Miller 15/16 singles bronze;
Rachel Seligson 13/14
doubles silver.
(That's a pair of Clevelands)
MSRP
RINKE DISCOUNT
CASH BONUS
Y7S11.
im ■ or
bronze; Jeff Horowitz 13/14
doubles bronze; Adam
Lenter 15/16 singles bronze,
doubles bronze; Michael
Redisch 13/14 doubles
bronze; Frank Reinstein
15/16 doubles bronze; Aaron
Weckstein 15/16 silver sin-
gles, silver doubles.
Birmingham Fencer
Wins Pan Am Silver
on any new 1991 Brougham.
OGER INKE
SMARTLEASE
Scott Aaronson, Gennifer
Bertin, Jennifer Madvin,
Sarah Patt, Stacy
Rothenberg, David Serlin,
Jared Starr, Leah Trahey,
Jason Weiner.
Racquetball: Howard Kaye
15/16 singles silver, 15/16
doubles bronze; Jason Miller
15/16 singles bronze, doubles
gold; David Rochlen 15/16
doubles gold; Marc Selik
13/14 singles silver.
!TAN t F.1 t
9 100001215 A
Maccabi Results
Continued from preceding page
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For further information, please contact the
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of Metropolitan Detroit
MEMBERSHIP DEPARTMENT at
661.1000, ext. 265, 266.
NOAM M.M. NEUSNER
Staff Writer
irmingham's David
Stollman won a silver
medal last month in
the Pan American Games in
Havana, Cuba — an achiev-
ement, he said, that
"validates my entire ca-
reer."
In team sabre competition,
one of the divisions of fenc-
ing, Stollman played a
pivotal role. While the team
lost to Cuba for the gold, he
finished with an 8-5 record.
His biggest victory, against
world-ranked Canadian
Jean Marie Banos, 5-2,
helped the Americans ad-
vance to the gold medal
round.
Stollman, who went to
Cranbrook School, is now
looking forward to the U.S.
Olympic trials, where he
will try to win a spot on the
Barcelona-bound team. To
get there, he will have to
beat some experienced com-
petition.
"The difficult part is that
being only 22, I have to rely
on my dilligence, whereas a
lot of these guys are relying
solely on their experience,"
he said. Stollman was the
youngest fencer on the U.S.
sabre team. His teammates
ranged in age from 28-39.
"It's like playing poker,"
he said. "It's how you play
your hand, no matter that
you both have the same
cards."
Stollman, following his
Cuban victory, will be leav-
ing soon to train in
Budapest, Hungary. Europe,
the hotbed of world fencing,
is where serious students of
the sport go, and Stollman,
who recently graduated from
the University of Penn-
sylvania, will be under the
tutelage of Akosh Bodoki.
Even if he makes the
Olympic team, Stollman
concedes that he'll have a
tough time winning a medal.
"I don't think I'll get close
at all," he said. Most fencers
reach their peak at age 30 or
so, and Stollman would have
to compete not only with
fencers with equal skill, but
with advanced guile and
technique.
Besides, he said, the great
fencers of Europe have
better support.
"The top guys in Hungary
are the equivalent of mill-
ionaires here," he said.
Stollman, while his training
is being underwritten partly
by the U.S. Olympic Corn-
mittee, but mostly by his
family, will most likely
enter law school after the
Olympics.
"In the U.S., each in-
dividual works on his own. If
you want to be a world-class
fencer, you have to do it on
your own," he said.
Stollman is a graduate of
the Michigan Fencing Acad-
emy, located in Southfield.
There, he studied under Uri
Rabinowitz, a former Soviet
junior champion. El
B'nai B'rith
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