Metro On The Ice Special Olympians thrill to competition, while volunteers gain more than they give. . KERI GUTEN COHEN Story Development Editor A bbey Katchke of Southfield has been skating since she was a preschooler holding hands with her parents to keep her balance. She's now 33 and she's still skating, although the giant Zamboni ice-resur- facing machine doesn't scare her any- more. Abbey is a Special Olympian, and she proudly claimed her second- place ribbon in figure skating Jan. 16 at the annual Special Olympics competition in the main rink at the Detroit Skating Club in Bloomfield Hills. Having minimal brain dysfunction doesn't stop Abbey, who lives with a roommate in a JARC apartment in Southfield and has a job at a grocery in Troy. During this interview, she was making hamburgers and talking about what makes her happy. "I feel good about me when I skate or swim," she says. "I've been doing it for a long, long time. I'm going to keep doing it. It makes me feel health- ier. And it's fun. If I fall, I get back up and finish. And I smile." Abbey is part of a program run by the Variety FAR Conservatory of Therapeutic and Performing Arts, a nonprofit organization housed in the First Presbyterian Church in Birmingham. The program offers cre- ative arts therapy and recreational services for developmentally delayed and otherwise physically handicapped individuals. Every Sunday afternoon, you can find her and other FAR skaters, such as 14-year-old Joslyn Sessel of Farmington Hills, at the Jennifer Johnson, 12, right, with Crystal, a young girl she coaches. 2/ 24 2005 22