SPORTS I

T he

Volleyball

Schvitz

Continued from preceding page

Since 1930

(Formerly Oakland Bath House)

Relaxed, Comfortable Setting, Great Stress Reliever

• Valet Parking

• Limited Menu, but Better Service

• Private Parties, Banquet Facilities,
Bachelor/Bachelorette Parties

• Memberships Available

FREE •PLATZA!

$20 Daily Admission
$35 Friday Couples Night
. (Includes Beer
$475 Yearly Membership $45 Saturday Couples Night • and Munchies)

"B.Y.O.B." (Bring Your Own Bagel)
7 a.m.-1 p.m.
Ladies Day (3rd Sunday of Every Month) . . . .2 p.m.-11 p.m.
"PRIMP" — All Services Provided — Manicurist, Pedicurist, Facials

HOURS:
Tues.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Fri. 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 7 a.m-1 p.m.
Couples: Fri. & Sat. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. Ladies: Sun. 2 p.m.-11 p.m.

(3rd Sunday of Month)

8295 OAKLAND, DETROIT 871-8715 or 871-9707

MEL
FARR
"Superstar Dealer"

MERCURY

LI NCOLN

NEW '92
CONTINENTAL

"Executive Series"

Stk. #20404

Mel Farr
Lincoln
Mercury

683.9500

Ask for:

BUY TODAY ONLY $25,300*
LEASE $310 mop

This is absolutely the lowest price anywhere!
'Plus ... we guarantee $450 more for your trade.

LARRY WALLINGFORD

or CHARLES LEWIS

4178 Highland Road
(M•59 near Pontiac Lake Road)
WATERFORD

S450 more (or your trade based on avg. black book value less mileage, appearance and reconditioning. Applies to trades 55000 and above. Price & pymts, based on S1000 Lincoln Loyalty Rebate
to qualified buyers. See dealer for details. Sale ends 6 pm; Fri., Feb. 21, 1992. 36 months with 10% down, less all rebates + best. & delivery. 15.000 miles per year limit. 11' per mile excess. Closed
end lease. Leasee responsible for excess wear & fear,.subject to 4% use tax. To get total pymts. on lease multiply pymt, by f of months. With approved credit.

David Biber

Crestview Cadillac

656-9500 toll free 541.4133

555 Rochester Rd. (1 Mile N. of Avon) Rochester

46

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1992

• "Car of the Year"
1992 Seville STS
available for
immediate delivery

• Sales & Leasing

• Pick-up &
Drop-off service

at Grosse Isle High School
and Ferris State University,
has a perplexing problem: her
Blue Jays do well in tourneys
against much tougher op-
ponents, then fall apart
against lesser foes.
"We beat both Detroit
Northwestern and Cass Tech
in a tourney, winning all four
games by 16-14 scores," says
Lehmann. "Then we lost to
Andover and Southfield-Lath-
rup on mental errors.
"We go from hot to cold and
we haven't found the happy
medium yet," she says of her
crew, 11-21 overall and 0-10 in
the SMA.
A tall team, with four
starters between 5-9 and 5-11,
the Jays are becoming much
more aggressive, says the
coach. They lost by only two
.points (16-14) to league-leader
Ti;oy.
The starting lineup in-
cludes Flavia Colgen, a 5-11
freshman from Brazil; cap-
tain Ericka Walker, 5-9; and
Camari Stith and Thomara
Latimer, both 5-10. Latimer
leads in spikes, with Walker
No. 2.
Andrea Jakubiack, a junior
back row player has regained
her starting position after an
early-season illness. "She's an
all-around player and can
definitely handle things,"
says Coach Lehmann. "She's
my strongest back-row player.
She's the only one out of all
six starters who can handle
any kind of spike that comes
at her."
At SMA rival Berkley;
where Berkley alumna
Theresa Stanichuk has suc-
ceeded 14-year veteran coach
Sharon Underwood, there's a
special chemistry.
That's because Stanichuk
has coached all her 1992
players in either volleyball or
softball since they were fresh-
men or sophomores.
"We've therefore adjusted
the offense and defense to suit
the personnel," she says, and
the Bears "are playing their
best ever."
The girls have defeated
Hazel Park, Andover and
Southfield (twice) and own a
split with powerhouse Birm-
ingham Seaholm enroute to
their 6-6 season record. And
although the Bears have lost
twice to potent Troy and
Royal Oak Kimball, they
finished fourth of 25 teams in
a Feb. 8 tourney at Wayne
State.
Berkley is led by senior co-
captains Gagi Kepes and
Amy Sokolowski. Kepes,
who's 5-3, is a top setter and
scorer from the serving line
while Sokolowski is a block-
ing leader and the team
spark plug.
Other top players include

seniors Allison Elder, a back-
row specialist, and Krissy Fa-
miano; and juniors Carrie
Finch, Cori Somers, Racheal
Schleede and Michelle
Butash.
"I want them to have fun
first," says Coach Stanichuk,
"but they have so much
talent, I think we can win a
lot, too."
Coach Betty Norman's
Class B Royal Oak Dondero
team, which owns two vic-
torie over Class A's 15th-
ranked Rochester Adams, is
10-8-1 overall and 7-3 in the
MSAA. The Oaks have four
returning seniors, including
Sheri Gross and Molly Harris
and a returning junior, Angie
Bartnik.

❑

Maccabi Club
Plans For Summer

The officers and board of
directors of the Maccabi Club
of Detroit announce that Dr.
Alan Horowitz will lead the
delegation to Baltimore this
summer. Assisting him will
be co-managers Jill Spokojny
and Dr. Michael Kobernick.
The coaching staff will in-
clude: boys basketball,
Howard Golding; girls basket-
ball, Mark Jeross; boys soft-
ball, Gary Levitt; girls soft-
ball, Tony Spokojny and Lisa
Slovis; volleyball, Ken Bertin;
soccer, Gabe Attar; racquet-
ball, Stuart Gottesman; boys
tennis, Larry Miller; girls
tennis, Linda Okun; table
tennis, the Mantel family;
swimming, Herb Bernstein;
track and field and cross
country, Joel Kashdan;
wrestling, Eric Schwartz; and
golf, Matthew Lester.
The team will consist of
125-175 participants. Tryouts
will be held during March.
For information, call Alan
Horowitz, 737-0639.

LOCAL NEWS imm

CPCS Hosts
Two Programs

The Center for Peace and
Conflict Studies of Wayne
State University will host
Detroit City Council Presi-
dent Maryann Mahaffey at a
seminar "Cuba Today: In-
sights of a Visitor" 12:30 p.m.
Feb. 20 at 2339 Faculty Ad-
ministration Building, Wayne
State University. This event
is free and open to the public.
The Center's Great Deci-
sions '92 will continue with
"Planet Earth: Dying Spe-
cies, Disappearing Habitats,"
7:15-8:45 p.m. March 2 at the
Grosse Pointe Unitarian
Church, 17150 Maumee.
There is a charge. For infor-
mation, call the center,
577-3453.

