SPORTS Finally, something to do during the commercials tonight that won't make you fat. & '11 774 alL3 ' Continental wia-rg Cablevision® The enjoyable way to shop from home. 24 hours a day on cable channel 53. 353-3900 3HE 0 1•1 S A V E S A V E Metro Detroit's Volume Honda Dealer '92 Honda Accord Lx 4Dr. Full Power A/C Driver's Air Bail( 42 x $1 99 W/Free Power Moonroof 'LA :Le WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD S A V E 21350 WOODWARD • FERNDALE S A V E (3 Blks N. of 8 Mile Rd.) 548-6300 "Plus tax, title & destination. *42 mos. closed-end lease. 1st payment $207.99 + $250 security dep. + advertising & desti- nation fees and bank fees, + license & title due at delivery. Total 10,000 miles per yr. w/15 per mile over. Total of payments $8735.58. P.O.P. is $9313.20. Lessee is responsible for ex- cess wear & tear. SALE ENDS 6/13/92. SAVE 52 er Mo. FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1992 WB Commissioner To Pedal 1,000 Miles STEVE STEIN Special to The Jewish News M aurice Freed is will- ing to go to great lengths for some- thing he believes in. Even 1,000 miles — on a bicycle — in just three days. Mr. Freed, a member of the West Bloomfield Parks and Recreation Commission, plans a solo ride around the perimeter of Michigan's Lower Peninsula to raise funds for the proposed West Bloomfield Recreation Ac- tivities Center. He will leave West Bloom- field on June 19. If all goes well, Mr. Freed will be some- where between Alpena and Rogers City in the northeast corner of the state that night, he said. Mr. Freed, 37, will need to ride for 17 hours a day, cover- ing around 335 miles, to make it back in three days. "I'll make it," Mr. Freed said. "Sure, there could be some mechanical break- downs, or we could be stopped by rain or a tornado. But that's not going to happen. No way." Mr. Freed, who stands 5-foot-7 and weighs 150 pounds, is an experienced long-distance cyclist who rode 434 miles in 24 hours in 1984. He's also an accomplished runner, skier and rower. He has been training for next weekend's ride since the end of March. Mr. Freed picked days which will have the most hours of daylight of any dur- ing the year. If the skies are clear, there will be a full moon at night. To save time, he will be eating and drinking while he is riding. Of the remaining seven hours during each 24-hour period, about five will be spent sleeping. The others will be devoted to relaxing and taking care of hygiene. Mr. Freed's crew includes Billy Jacobson, owner of Jake's Bike Shop in Harper Woods, who will be following behind in a car. He will have at least one spare bike and ex- tra wheels. Mr. Freed would like to make Empire or Frankfort located southwest of Traverse City by the end of Saturday. He wants to be back in West Bloomfield on Sunday after taking a route through Muskegon. All travel will be on secondary roads. Mr. Freed said he'll make the ride in no more than five days. If he's back in four days, he wants those who pledged money per mile to double their donation. If he's home in three days, he wants the pledges to triple. If the ride takes longer than five days, "I'll let everyone off the hook," Mr. Freed said. The proposed Recreation Activities Center is a $6 million project. At least $1.6 million is needed to complete the first phase. It is hoped that all the money will come from private sources. "I'd like to raise that $1.6 million through the ride," Mr. Freed said. ❑ Washtenaw JCC Readies Maccabi Team This summer, Washtenaw County will send its largest- ever delegation to the inter- national North American Jewish Community Center's Youth Maccabi Games, in- cluding the county's first-ever girl's basketball team. Eighteen youngsters signed up for the Olympic-like games for Jewish athletes to be held in Baltimore Aug. 23-30. Young people, ages 13-16, are eligible for the biennial games which include over 2,000 young Jewish athletes from all over the globe, including the former Soviet Union, Israel, Mexico and Australia. Local delegates will com- pete in girls and boys basket- ball and a number of in- dividual sports. Currently, both the boys and girls basketball teams are meeting twice a week at the JCC for practices under the direction of head coaches Noel Aaron Cimmino and Mark Singer. Cimmino, who grew up in Bergen County, New Jersey, is a veteran of two Maccabis and worked as a coach for over four years when he was in high school. Cimmino will be the head coach for the boys team in Baltimore. Singer, 20, grew up in Muskegon where he played varsity basketball and work- ed as a coach at basketball camps throughout his high C=3 O cC O C