STANCE page 107 ...a break. Get your own subscription to The Jewish News and leave her copy alone when you visit (She's in the kitchen. Go see her.) TIME YOU GOT YOUR OWN COPY. ❑ YES! Please send me 52 issues of The Jewish News plus five issues of Style Magazine for only $46 ($63 out-of-state). ❑ Please Bill Me. Charge my: ❑ VISA ❑ Payment Enclosed. ❑ I'd like to send a subscription as a gift to: ❑ MasterCard Gift Card Message New susbscribers only Please send all payments with this coupon to: The Jewish News • P.O. Box 2267 • Southfield, MI 48037-2267 Or fax us at (810) 354-1210 • Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. Solomon says, despite being a minority, he has encountered lit- tle anti-Semitism in the NFL, al- though he feels that many in the league and many fans have a stereotype of Jews. "Most people think of Jews as small, intellectual types, and all of my Jewish friends are lawyers and accountants. I'm intellectu- al, too, but I'm certainly not small." In the NFL, "You have to break that stereotype that peo- ple perceive of how Jews are. rye done that by showing that I'm not just big and tall, but I cm tough, too." Solomon and his parents, Ira and Hope Solomon, belong to Har HaShem, a Conservative synagogue in Boulder, where he had his bar mitzvah. The Solomons, who operate an aquarium business, always stressed the importance of ob- serving Jewish holidays and tra- ditions and taught Ariel to take pride in his Jewish identity. "I celebrated Passover with my family, I was active in B'nai B'rith in Pittsburgh, and I enjoy attending synagogue with my family when I can," Solomon said. When the football season con- flicts with Rosh HaShanah or Yom Kippur, though, Solomon says that he must play. "It's not like Sandy Koufax," the former Los Angeles Dodger star who re- fused to pitch on Yom Kippur. "I have to play through the holi- days," Solomon said. Solomon and wife Kristen have a 2.5-year-old son, Dakota. Kristen, although not Jewish, said she always wished that she - were. "I really identify with and admire the Jewish emphasis on family and education, and I en- joy attending synagogue with Ariel on the High Holidays," she said. Solomon also brags that "my wife cooks some awesome potato pancakes, potato kugel, and matzah ball soup." Solomon is also teaching his son about his Jewish roots by in- cluding him in such family events as lighting the Sabbath candles on Friday evenings and the menorah candles on Chanukah. The Solomon family includes several Israeli cousins who are Orthodox and live on the Modi- am moshav between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. His cousin Ben- Tzion Solomon owns the Modi- am recording studio and is in the Diaspora Yeshiva Band, which won the Israeli Music Festival four years in a row and will be playing at Radio City Music Hall this summer. Solomon has nev- er been to Israel, though he hopes to visit there in the future. However, he enjoyed having his Israeli cousins visit him during the football season when he played in Pittsburgh. "We koshered my house, putting rocks in the pans and boiling water in them. I also took my cousins to an NFL game, and they had never seen Astroturf before. They saw the cars and houses that Americans have and thought we were all movie stars." Jack Henry, who is the Lions' new offensive line coach, was also Solomon's coach in Pitts- burgh. He sees Solomon playing primarily center and guard for the Lions, and perhaps at tack- le as well. "Ariel is very intelligent and has a lot of flexibility. He can play a number of positions on our team, and I see him in a back-up role in a number of places," Henry said. Solomon's "toughness and reliability will make him a good role player" in backing up Lions' starters Kevin Glover at center, Jeff Hartings at right guard and Mike Comp- ton at left guard, according to Henry. Solomon knows that his pro football career can't last forever, and he plans to eventually go into stock brokerage or banking when he retires from football. With his economics degree from Colorado, he was prepared to fol- low those careers when he grad- uated, "but football chose me." He is also looking into investing in car washes. In the off-season, Solomon and his family live in Boulder, where he enjoys, skiing, scuba diving and riding his Harley Davidson "Fat Boy" motorcycle. In past off-seasons, he also worked in the district sales of- fice of USAir. Although he does not yet know where he and his family will live in the Detroit area, Solomon is scouting various neighborhoods. "Wherever we live, I hope that it's very close to the Silverdome," he said. Excit- ed about playing for the Lions and its new coaching staff, Solomon is also excited about getting involved in the Detroit Jewish community. "We didn't have such a large Jewish community in Boulder, and I enjoyed being involved in a large Jewish community in Pittsburgh. I look forward to do- ing the same in Detroit." ❑ Precision Skate Try-Outs June 21 The Pizzazz Precision Skating Teams will hold final try-outs for the 1997-98 season on Saturday, June 21, at John Lindell Ice Are- na, south of Kimball High School in Royal Oak. Try-outs for ages 9 and under will be from 8-8:30 a.m.; 11 and under, 8:30-9 a.m.; 14 and un- der, 9-9:50 a.m. For information, call Tammy Doroshewitz, (248) 280-3991; or Carole Mascioti, (248) 399-0240.