After the 17-medal success of the first day, the swim team won 18 more on Tuesday. Jonathan Schwartz won three more gold medals in the 50 freestyle, 200 breaststroke, and the 400 medley relay for the 13-14 age group, giving him six after the first two days. On Wednesday, Detroit earned 15 medals on the fi- nal day of the swim competition. Another successful unit was Detroit's boys golf team. Josh Hoffman won the overall gold for 13-14-year-olds, and Scott Lieberman the silver medal for the 15-16 group. In addition, every competitor on the Detroit team won medals in the daily competition, or in the scram- ble on Thursday. "All the medals we won were truly an indication of /— how good this team is," coach Al Adelson said. "Detroit was dominant." In tennis, Danny Matz and Eric Megdall teamed up to win a bronze medal in the 13-14-year-old doubles tournament, defeating an Israeli pair that defeated both Detroiters, on separate occasions, in singles. The toughest part of the tournament for the tennis players was when Matz and Megdall had to play each other in the round of 16. Matz went on to defeat Meg- dall, only to lose to the eventual winner in the quar- terfinals. Jamie Royal took the bronze medal in the girls 13- 14 tournament. In the 15-16-year-old competition, Brad Jaffe won the silver, and Jay Frankel defeated teammate Mark Frankel for the bronze. Mark Frankel and Jaffe de- feated Jay Frankel and Aaron Beitner for the gold medal in doubles. The rain was so hard on Wednesday, only boys and girls soccer saw outdoor action. Although they lost to D.C., the girls defeated Pittsburgh by the same 5-0 score. Meanwhile, the boys team dropped a heartbreaking 3-1 decision to North Jersey. Both teams had entered the game undefeat- ed. While the volleyball team stayed dry in the gym at the Pittsburgh JCC, their chance at a medal ended ear- ly in the final round as they fell to Columbus. Detroit delegation head Jill Spokojny was pleased with how well the local athletes competed. "It was a very successful week," she said. "We have competitive athletes and they were rewarded for it. Every athlete commented that it was a wonderful ex- perience, on and off the field." Seattle Ten Detroit track and field athletes, for lack of a real track meet in Pittsburgh or Milwaukee, headed north- west to Seattle to compete. Erica Soloway medaled in three distance events in the girls 15-16-year-old age group. She won silver medals in the 800 meter and mile runs, and a gold in the two mile. She, with teammate Scot Goldman, was part of a coed mile relay team that won a bronze. In the sprint events, Elyse Simon and Erica Rives finished second and third in the girls 15-16 100 meter race. Nathan Miller took bronze medals in the 100 and 400 meters, and gold in the 110 and 300 meter hurdles for 15-16-year-olds. Miller, along with Goldman, Dave Livshitz and Sean Teeple, were on the silver medal win- ning 400 meter relay team. Teeple, who won a silver medal at the Maccabiah in Israel last month, teamed with Miller, Simon and Rives to win silver in the 400 meter coed relay. Teeple, Miller, Livshitz and Dave Raban won the silver medal in the mile relay. Raban and Livshitz also took silver and bronze in the 800 meter run and the two mile run. Livshitz took third place honors in the mile run and the high jump. In the girls 13-14 division, Blair Teeple took a sil- ver in the 100 meter hurdles and a silver in the shot put. ❑ Above: Howard Dworman attacks the Upper West Side defense. Left: Stacey Raf fends off a Pittsburgh defender.