Unable to eat what you want? Tired of the taste and feel of messy denture adhesives? Trouble speaking clearly? Call for FREE consultation or Second Opinion SPORTS Flashing Skates New Dental Mini Implants Magidson completes high school hockey career at Cranbrook. John Kazanowski, D.D.S. 31700 Telegraph Rd. Suite 100 Bingham Farms Steve Stein Special to The Jewish News 248-433-6000 A www.drkazdds.com DESIGNS IN DECORATOR WOOD & LAMINATES, LTD. It Doesn't Have To Cost A Fortune... Only Look Like It! Complete kitchen and bathroom remodeling as well as furniture design and installation including granite, wood and other materials. 4111 Lois Haron, Allied Member ASID • 248-851-69891 OPEN: Mon - Fri 7-8 Sat 8-8 Sun 8-3 KIDS FREE EAT FREE* SOUR CREAM CAKE Every Saturday from 4-8 pm * From the kids menu. 6 & under. with any tray order for 10 people or more! DELJCATESSEN, RESTAURANT & CATERING 21754 W. 11 MILE RD. • HARVARD ROW 248-352-4940 FAX: 352-9393 25270 Greenfield Road, Oak Park. Michigan 48237 248.967.1161 F. 248.967.1605 55.00 off Your Next Order of $50.00 or more - With Coupon only - 38 April 19 2007 To Life! iN Expires 5/2/07 riel Magidson could barely skate when she first began playing hockey at age 10. Eight years later, she's a second team All-State selection and a future college player. Magidson just com- pleted a stellar four- year career at center for Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook-Kingswood. The Detroit resident was a member of Cranbrook- Kingswood's Michigan Maqidson Metro Girls High School Hockey League state championship team when she was a sopho- more, and she had a combined 50 goals and 29 assists as a junior and senior. She made the All- Belen League team three times, and she was Cranbrook-Kingswood's most valuable player as a junior and a tri-captain as a senior. Magidson accomplished all that despite the distractions of losing a coach to cancer just before the begin- ning of her junior season and having another coach fired just before this year's state playoffs. Coach Lance Wissmueller died of colon cancer Oct. 18,2005, at age 35, only a few months after he guided Cranbrook-Kingswood to a surprising 3-2 upset of Grosse Pointe South in double-overtime in the state champi- onship game. Wissmueller had fought the disease for 3 1/a years. Cranbrook-Kingswood made it to the state championship game this sea- son before falling 5-2 to undefeated Plymouth-Canton-Salem. Magidson scored a hat trick in her team's 5 - 2 win over Livonia Ladywood in the state semifinals. "I really like hockey. I like playing it and watching it," Magidson said. "Once I learned to skate and started playing, I got the hang of it really quickly." Magidson spent five years in the Detroit Dragons travel program of the Detroit Hockey Association before high school. She was captain of the Dragons' under-age-12 girls team. The next stop on Magidson's hockey tour is Lake Forest College in sub- urban Chicago. She'll join an NCAA Division III program that's entering its eighth season. The Foresters were 11- 7-7 last year. To help get ready for the rigors of college hockey, Magidson played field hockey for Cranbrook last fall and she's playing lacrosse this spring. It's her first experience with both sports. Liz Belen of Birmingham was another veteran on this year's Cranbrook-Kingswood girls hockey team. The senior winger had six goals and eight assists. Belen would have been a four-year player, but she missed her junior season after undergoing surgery for a torn ACL suffered when she was tackled during the school's powder puff football game. "I wanted to be part of the hockey team even if I couldn't play, so I was the student manager when I was a junior," Belen said. Belen is headed to Washington University in St. Louis to study art. Junior forward Anna Canis and sophomore defenseman Anne Jacob also contributed to Cranbrook- Kingswood's 2006-07 season. Callis had two goals and eight assists and Jacob had four assists. Movie Time Pisgah/Zeiger B'nai B'rith Unit is sell- ing tickets to the Midwest premiere of First Basket, part of the JCC's Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival. The movie will be shown at 10 a.m. May 6 at the United Artists Theatre on 14 Mile and Haggerty in Commerce Township. It will be preceded by a bagel brunch at 9:30 a.m. Pisgah/Zeiger has purchased a block of tickets for the premiere. Tickets are free for members (limit one), and $5 for non-members. To order, e-mail Rick Sherline at rsherline@divbenefits.com or Lyle Schaefer at lylec21@aol.com . Please send sports news to sports@thejewishnews.corn.