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Most psychiatric disorders are a result of a chemical imbalance in the brain? Fear and stigma make it difficult to get support and treatment? One in five families in our community is touched by mental illness. Kadima can help... You are not alone... We understand... CALL US. Caring. Helping. Mental Illness. I 15999 W. 12 Mile Rd. Southfield, MI 48076 Phone: 248-559-8235 Fax: 248-559-0229 Email: kadimaplus@msn.corn www.kadimacenter.org 1189190 46 March 29 a 2007 iN Super Subs 1 f you like to bowl but don't want to join a league, the Metropolitan Detroit B'nai B'rith Bowling Association has a solution. "We're always looking for inde- pendent bowlers',' said MDBBBA President Howard Waxer. "Any B'nai B'rith member can join our associa- tion for a $10 fee and be eligible for our awards and local and interna- tional tournaments." Three of this season's MCBBBA local tournaments are in the books. Larry Schecter won the Fall Eliminator; Mark Feinberg and Dennis Sobol were the Chanukah Mystery Doubles champs and Ivan Fenyvesi and Sy Zate won the Windsor Doubles title. Four 299 games were bowled in league play during the first half of the season. Mitch Fenkel and Phil Horowitz from Pisgah, Dave Reiger from Brotherhood-Eddie Jacobson and Mike Rott from Morgenthau L'Chayim-Zeiger Gross each came oh-so-close to a perfect 300 score. Lyle Schaefer of Pisgah had the highest series, an 803. Phil Ross, a Brotherhood-Eddie Jacobson 173 bowler, bowled a 290. She's Honorable It's a nice honor, but it's getting monot- onous. Bowler Sarah Nagel made the All-Greater Oakland Northern Lakes Conference honorable mention list for the third consecutive season. "Next year, I want the real deal. I want to make the All-Conference team," said Nagel, a junior at Waterford Kettering High School. Greater Oakland Northern Lakes bowlers earn conference honors based on how well they perform in conference competition. It isn't a subjective pro- cess. Nagel's 180.82 average this season was one of the highest in the confer- ence, and so was her 237 high game rolled at Airway Lanes in Waterford. "I've been bowling at Airway since I was 3, so I'm real used to the lanes there," Nagel said. Nagel won two gold medals and one silver medal in the girls ages 15-16 division at last summer's JCC Maccabi Games in Phoenix. It was her fourth year as a member of the Maccabi team. 4 Not Enough It almost was a heck of a story. After scoring eight goals all season, Detroit Country Day hockey player Ben Rosenfeld scored four goals in the Yellowjackets' state tournament opener. Unfortunately, Country Day dropped a 6-5 double-overtime heartbreaker to Dearborn Heights Crestwood in a Division 3 pre-regional game at UM-Dearborn Arena, and Rosenfeld's high school hockey career came to a sudden end. "Believe it or not, Ben could have had a couple more goals in that game,' said Country Day coach Chuck Carvey. "I couldn't be happier for him. It was a nice reward" forall of his hard work." This was Rosenfeld's fourth season. He played defense as a freshman and then forward. The Huntington Woods resident finished with 12 goals and 10 assists in 25 games this year. Those numbers could have been higher, but he spent several games on a checking line because he was such a reliable defensive forward. The loss to Crestwood left Country Day with a 14-8-3 record. They were state-ranked early in the season. Rosenfeld hopes to earn nine var- sity letters before he leaves Country Day. He's gotten four in hockey, two in football, one in baseball and one in lacrosse, and he's playing lacrosse this spring. He was the quarterback of Country Day's state playoff-qualifying football team last fall. 200 Club Member Detroit Red Wings defenseman Mathieu Schneider, the highest scoring Jewish player in NHL history, reached a milestone when he scored his 200th career goal during a 4-3 vic- tory over Nashville at Joe Louis Arena. Schneider was given a standing ovation by the sellout crowd and a pat on the shoulder by fellow defense- man Nicklas Lidstrom, who scored his 200th career goal four days earlier. I — Please send sports news to sports@thejewishnews.com .