Cover Story/Sports Left: Ben Kaplan, 13, of Farmington Hills gets a dribbling tip om soccer coach. Ed Raykhinshteyn. **4 .0 Below: Cary Rosen, 14, of Commerce Township warms up with the soccer ball. help people and it makes you feel real good." The table tennis team spent one Sunday morning packaging, sorting, and passing out food at Yad Ezra, the kosher food bank in Oak Park. "It's a great service to the commu- nity," says table tennis coach Roger Black of Farmington Hills, "and it fits in with the feeling of Maccabi and community service. It was good for the kids to see the people and how helpful this is." Another goal of the mitzvah program is to promote team unity. "It brought us together as a team and helped us to bond,"says Brandon Schram. The mitzvah program is an exten- sion of the Day of Caring/Day of Sharing, which takes place during the Games. In 1997, the Milwaukee delegation began the program, with participants spending half a day doing a mitzvah project in the host Far left: Michael Goode, 16, of Bloomfield Hills returns the volley. Below: Brad Snider, 13, of West Bloomfield checks his record with table tennis coach Roger Black. 0 8/3 2001 76 city. The teams work together, usual- ly with teams from other delega- tions. In Philadelphia, each athlete will bring a food item and one project will include sorting and packaging the donations for a food pantry. At Jersey Shore, athletes will take part in "The Many Faces of Our Community." Activities will include working with athletes with special needs and senior adults, as well as videotaping interviews with war vet- erans and Holocaust survivors. Jodi Berris, a Maccabi alumna and one of Detroit's girls soccer coaches, feels that community service enhances the Maccabi experience. "I definitely think it's necessary because Maccabi is nut just about sports. It should encompass other community and Jewish acitivities as well." ❑