/Sports FRANK'S RULES from page 134 YOUR DU1 AMER HEADQUARTER Specializing in Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery • Cosmetic Surgery of the Face and Body • Laser Surgery •Facial & Skull Bone Reconstrucfion • Liposuction (800) 728-6618 Downriver Surgery Center • 1823 Fort Street, Wyandotte Somerset Medical Group • 3290 W. Big Beaver, Troy and 1995 team captain Micah Heil- brun. Ivan Frank was a captain in 1990 and was the team's first most valuable player. A third Frank broth- er, Ethan, is director of Birmingham Junior Lacrosse, which involves play- ers in the district's middle and ele- mentary schools. Aaron Frank has twice been voted Michigan's high school lacrosse coach of the year and served as president of the Michigan Scholastic Lacrosse Association in 1995-96. Frank has no desire to coach in college, which is the highest level of lacrosse in the United Sates. "When I was 21, I owned my own business and we were doing well, and I thought that it was pretty fulfilling," he admits. "[When I started coach- ing], then I realized how little it [business success] really meant to me. "I've had kids come up to me and say, 'My senior year of lacrosse was the best three months of my life, I really had so much fun."' For Frank, words like that repre- sent his most important victories. 111 Lessons On Ice LANA GORDON TRAVEL rio.omc4 slbv W.& Sw.z.se Experienced and personal service to SBB (053. Stan Chodun coaches the game he's always loved. FOR ALL YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LYNNE MEREDITH COHN Special to The Jewish News CALL LANA 248-626-5800 Fun, Affordable & Exciting! Dental Implants The Other Option No Unsightly Clasps • No Drilling on Teeth • No Messy Adhesive Dr. Novetsky, Lukacs and Associates N Call today for an appointment Implant Group 248-553-4740 We accept 1303S and Medicare • 71010114... I t only took one Red Wings game at Olympia Stadium for Stan Chodun to fall in love. "It was the best place to watch the game, bar none," said the Detroit Country Day School hockey coach and middle school administra- tor. "It's a very emotional game, played by emotional players, watched by emotional fans — there's not another game like it." Chodun has been on the ice in one way or another most of his life. He started playing hockey in alleys with a tin can. That turned into juve- nile leagues in Detroit, then leagues in Oak Park, near his boyhood and adult home in Huntington Woods, and later a club team at Ferris State. "I hated school; I lived to play hock- ey," he says. How ironic, then, that he has devoted his life to teaching. Like all DCDS administrators, Chodun also teaches — two sections of sixth-grade science. And he's a dean of the mid- dle school, responsible for attendance and discipline. The coaching began in Royal Oak, and then Chodun went to DCDS 15 years ago. "I taught public school for 15 years; I got pink-slipped in 10 of those 15 years," Chodun recalls. Then he heard about an opening at Country Day and was hired to teach fifth grade. At Country Day, "I have control of my destiny," he says. Chodun's coaching philosophy matches his teaching philosophy: The kids have to enjoy the game, like what they're doing, build a sense of team pride, work together and estab- lish a safe sense of discipline. "There's a lot of teaching in coach- ing, and I love being in the class- room," he says. His red and white office is plas- tered with Red Wings paraphernalia — large, framed pictures of Steve Yzerman holding the Stanley Cup, a teddy bear wearing a Red Wings sweater, framed tickets from his sea- son package at Olympia Stadium and bricks from Olympia. When he's not teaching or coach- ing or maniacally watching a hockey game on TV, Chodun likes to fish, camp, travel "anywhere — I love the mountains." And he spends as much time as possible with his wife of 32 years, Channel 7 reporter Cheryl Chodun, who is "always my inspira- tion." Former members of Temple Emanu-El, the Choduns have two children and a newborn granddaugh- ter. DCDS hockey coach Stan Chodun.