-1---------, Metro HE NCE SPORTS SA ZIT1<,-,1) 7 ,g v HU GE SELECTIC\I PRICES 300 x 5 +GM Employees 24 Month Smart Lease stk. 8169504C Schaefer rolls latest 300 in B'nai B'rith league. M o. $2,979 Due at Signing $ill ourr rinkecacffilaccomIcadillac_CTS_specials.aspx 200S t% a V r_L A One Time 24-Month Lease Payment rt. x Steve Stein Special to the Jewish News +GM Employees S 24 Month Smart Lease $3,200 Due at Signing Stk. # 102582 rinkecadillac.com Cadillac_SRX_specials.aspx WA, One Time 24-Month Lease Payment '11768* 1 er till our specials EY Expect More. We Deliver! 1-696 & VAN DYKE • 1-866-385-9871 Showroom hours: Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 am - 9pm.; Tues., Wed, & Fri. 8:30am - 6:00 pm *Payments based on 24 or 39 month GIVIAC Smartlease. One time payments based on 24 months. 10,000 mile per year. 25 cents per mile over. Subject to approved credit. Plus tax, title, and regis- tration. Pictures may not represent actual vehicles. Programs expire 3131/08 outhfield resident Lyle Schaefer has bowled five sanctioned 300 games. His most recent perfect game is extra spe- cial because it was the first he rolled in a B'nai B'rith league. Schaefer, 49, bowled 300-227- 256 during Pisgah- Zeiger League play Lyle Schaefer earlier this month at Country Lanes in Farmington Hills, site of four of his perfect games. "It was a clean 783 series (no open . frames), but I got tapped with the 10 pin three times in the second game, and that cost me an 800 series',' Schaefer said. "It felt great to finally roll a 300 game in B'nai B'rith, especially because of Pisgah- Zeiger's long bowling history'' Sword Of Slava Skyline & The Back Street Horns •Rumplestiltskin •LUSA •Nightline •Persuasion •Cassens Murphy Band •Simone Vitale Band •Intrigue •Sun Messengers •Radio City Visit our web site wwvv. iorioross.com Newsmaker Joyride Hot Ice 104110 ANS STEALING INTIATIMIMINT Call for free video consultation 248-398-9711 A20 March 27 • 2008 AN Since 1972 1:,k t, 10 NCAA fencing champion Slava Zingerman took the long way to Wayne State University in Detroit. Born in Noyabursh, Russia, Slava Zingerman Zingerman now calls Ashkelon, Israel, home. He graduated from ORT Afrians Ranson High School in Israel in 2002. Zingerman became a two-time NCAA champ in epee when he successfully defended his title earlier this month at Ohio State University. The 24-year-old sophomore defeated Penn State's Arth Urman 15-7 in the national championship bout after taking care of St. John's Stanley Vaksman 15-8 in the semifinals. Earlier this season, Zingerman won his second consecutive Midwest Fencing Conference championship in epee at the conference meet at Notre Dame. He beat Ohio State's Bishara Korkor 15-6 for the title. Epee is one of three swords used in fencing. The others are foil and saber. An epee resembles a dueling sword, or rapi- er. Unlike foil and saber, the entire body can be a target in epee. It's considered fencing 's most popular event, although it isn't the easiest. Zingerman — whose full first name is Viacheslav — was an accomplished fencer in Israel before he arrived on the Wayne State campus. He won Israel's Senior National Championship in 2006 and he placed second in the Junior World Cup in Spain in 2003. An engineering major at Wayne State, Zingerman made the Coach's Honor Roll (3.0 to 3.49 grade point average) for the fall term. Get A Grip Eric Tannenbaum University of Michigan wrestler Eric Tannenbaum is a three-time NCAA All- American and a two-time Big Ten Conference champion. But the fifth-year senior certainly isn't a one-dimensional guy. Last year, Tannenbaum was named an ESPN The Magazine Academic All- American. The future doctor owns a 3.84 grade point average as he works towards a degree in neuroscience. U-M wrestling coach Joe McFarland marvels at what Tannenbaum has accomplished in college. "From day one at Michigan, Eric has said his dream is to be a doctor," McFarland told BigTen.org. "I'm impressed, to say the least, that he's been able to compete in the classroom with the regular student body while maintaining our rigorous schedule." Tannenbaum also is an accomplished deejay who is sought out to work at bars, clubs and house parties in the Ann Arbor area. Like wrestling and his stud- ies, the Naperville, Ill. native takes deejay work very seriously. "You can't be rusty when you're a deejay' Tannenbaum said to BigTen.org . "It would be pretty embarrassing if you were messing up at a party' Tannenbaum won the Big Ten cham- pionship at 165 pounds earlier this month with a 3-2 victory over Iowa's Mark Perry in Minneapolis. He finished second at the NCAA championships last weekend.