I Become historically significant. Health & Fitness SPORTS Medal from page A39 How will we be remembered 100 years from now? What will be said of our choices, our jobs, our lives? What knowledge will it take for you to live a life of substance not only for today, but tomorrow? A JTS education will help you answer these questions. You will be immersed in the ancient texts of Judaism and in communal issues of contemporary significance. JTS offers undergraduate, graduate, cantonal, and rabbinical degrees to prepare religious, academic, educational, and lay leaders for the Jewish community and beyond. Look into it. .i Jure The Theologi s t 41r4 Seminary List College The Graduate School H. L. Miller Cantonal School 3080 BROADWAY NEW YORK, NY 10027 (212) 678-8000 • www.jtsa.edu Davidson Graduate School of Jewish Education The Rabbinical School als in the long jump and 4x100 mixed relay, and bronze medals in the 400 and 4x100 coed mixed relay. "With a couple more years to mature, Olivia should be something when she competes in the 2010 Maccabi Games:' said longtime Windsor delegation head Ron Polsky. Windsor's Grahame McNevin won a bronze medal in the boys 13-14 4x100 mixed relay. Bowlers Zachary Hensz and Jordyn Liebman each won two medals. Tennis player Daniel Ginzberg won a silver medal in the boys 13-14 recreation division. Table tennis player Jacob Gordner won a bronze medal in boys 15-16 singles. Swimmer Miriam Zaltzman won a bronze medal. Soccer player Nadav Bloch from London, Ont., combined with players from North Jersey and Youngstown, Ohio, to win a bronze medal in the boys U14 division. Ellana Blacher (dance), Alex Brudner (swimming), Dylan Liebman (golf), Jenna Monczak (swimming) and Seth Schmitz (swimming) also competed for Windsor. In The Swim The Detroit swim team, coached by Herb Bernstein and Maureen Popkin, earned its share of medals, a total of 26. Bernstein said the talent at Birmingham Seaholm High School's pool was fairly evenly divided, with each delegation having a few outstand- ing athletes. Some 243 teens from 38 communities competed. Noah Zamler, 14, led the way for Detroit with eight individual medals and three relay medals. He won indi- vidual gold in the 200 and 500 yard freestyles and 200 backstroke, silver in 100 butterfly, 100 back, 400 individual medley and 100 free, and bronze in the 50 back. Anna Berezovsky won bronze in the 13-14 400 IM. Jason Sherbel won bronze in the 15-16 50 breast. Detroit won relay medals: silver, 15- 16 200 medley, Mat Devore, Sherbel, Jeremy Raisky, Ben Duchan. Bronze, 15-16 400 free, Devore, Zamler, Sherbel, Duchan. Gold, 15-16 400 medley and silver, 15-16 200 free, Zamler, Sherbel, Raisky, Duchan. ❑ E-mail: sports@thejewishnews.com. emseorei* the Golds Forum On AD/HD 'ICS Famous for our... Dover Sole, Lake Perch, Pancho Burger, Medallions of Beef. $10 OFF Any purchase of $50.00 or more. Excludes tip, liquor & tax. With this ad exp. 9/30/08 T • * the * 'fr. Cau cus l * Cub * : * 130 West Congress Detroit • 313-965-4970 • Main Floor Penobscot Bid ohen Markofsk . Now accepting Rosh Hashanah orders please call 248-592-0200 or email: mimi@elitekoshercatering.com 1425950 A40 September 4 • 2008 he ninth annual Michael Golds Memorial Conference on Attention Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) is 8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26, at Oakland Community College's Orchard Ridge Campus in Farmington Hills. The conference is sponsored by Michigan Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder (CHADD), Oakland Community College and the Michael Golds Memorial Fund. This year's keynoter will be Yvonne Pennington, Ph.D., speak- ing on "Raising Amazing Kids to Adulthood Even if One Has AD/HD." Dr. Pennington's son, Ty Pennington, is the star of ABC's hit show Extreme Makeover Home Edition. She will share her struggles and successes as well as the views of others on what makes for good parenting. She also will conduct one of the conference sessions, "Unveiling the Underlying Issues of AD/HD and What to Do About Them:' The conference is designed for phy- sicians, therapists, educators, social workers, students, adults with AD/HD and their family members. This annual OCC event honors the memory of the late Michael Golds who struggled with AD/HD, was aca- demically successful for the first time in his life upon enrolling at age 30 at Oakland Community College, then graduated with honors from Eastern Michigan University. He was in his second year of graduate school in Florida when he died in an accident. His parents, Barbara Golds of West Bloomfield and the late Jack Golds, established a memorial fund at OCC to sponsor an annual symposium to help others understand and better cope with the impact of AD/HD. General admission for the confer- ence includes lunch, and is $59 before Sept. 15 or $75 at the door. Early reg- istration guarantees a luncheon spot; students presenting ID will be admit- ted for $30. A detailed description of the entire conference is available at the CHADD Web site: www.chaddmi.com . For registration, call Marie Faulkner, (248) 522-3645. ❑