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A Service t Private Ow Banks & E ecift4 &pewee/iv Contact Larry a 33700 Woodward Ave. • Between 1 e 248-644-856 36 May 15 • 2014 .151iffillatom 1910400 alter and Judy Coleman have three children and 11 grandchildren. And the dream of every golfer. Each has a hole-in-one. Their aces — the first for the Keego Harbor residents and longtime golf- ers — came less than a month apart recently at the same Boynton Beach, Fla., golf community where they spend time off and on during the winter. Remarkably, while their holes-in- one were shot on different courses at Hunters Run, it was the same hole number. Judy Coleman, 68, scored her hole- in-one March 13 on the par-3, 130- yard 17th hole at the Hunters Run east course. Not to be outdone, Walter Coleman, 71, shot a hole-in-one April 8 on the par-3, 170-yard 17th hole at the Hunters Run north course. His timing couldn't have been better. It was the last round of golf he and his wife played at Hunters Run before they headed north for the season. "I'm glad mom and dad were play- ing together that day. Otherwise my mom might have thought my dad telling her he shot a hole-in-one was a late April Fool's joke," said Kim Teweles of Farmington Hills, one of the couple's three daughters. It was Judy Coleman who first let her husband and the other couple in their foursome know he'd shot a hole- in-one. "My mom was sure my dad's shot went in the hole, so she got into a golf cart and went to check:' Teweles said. "When she saw the ball in the hole, she gave everyone back on the tee a thumb's up:' Walter Coleman was at work in Michigan when Judy Coleman shot her hole-in-one. He's a podiatrist with an office in Sterling Heights. Golfers who shoot a hole-in-one at Hunters Run are honored with a plaque on a wall in the clubhouse. Because no aces were shot in between Judy Coleman's and Walter Coleman's Judy and Walter Coleman holes-in-one, their plaques hang next to one another. Shooting a hole-in-one runs in Judy Coleman's family. Her mother, the late Lillian Meckler, had two aces in her long golf career. Walter and Judy Coleman have been married for 47 years. Their other daughters are Sally Hooberman of West Bloomfield and Bonnie Steinbock of Royal Oak. There are no comments from Walter and Judy Coleman about their holes-in-one in this story and they weren't contacted because their family wants to surprise them. "We're so proud of them:' Teweles said. Mini Mac The Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield is offering children ages 6-11 an opportunity to partici- pate for one day in the JCC Maccabi Games & ArtsFest. Called Mini Mac, the Aug. 18 program includes field day-type activities from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the JCC and joining the parade of athletes and artists during the Maccabi Games & ArtsFest opening cer- emonies at 7 p.m. at Joe Louis Arena in Downtown Detroit. Maccabi Games & ArtsFest will continue through Aug. 22. Campers in the JCC's Echo II and Maccabi Multi-Sports day camps that week are automatically registered for the Mini Mac. For everyone else, registration can be done online at wbcamp.jccdet.org . Cost is $50 by July 1 and $60 after- ward. Deadline is Aug. 1. For information on Mini Mac, con- tact the JCC day camp office at (248) 432-5578 or camp@jccdet.org . Ariella Monson, Maccabi Games & ArtsFest director, said this is the second time Detroit has hosted a Mini Mac pro- gram. About 150 to 200 children partici- pated in 2008, the last time Detroit was home to the Maccabi Games. ❑ Please send sports news to sports@thejewishnews.com.