YOUR CHOICE
AT
(1"),
LEXUS OF LANSING
1994 GS300
Detroit Joins 27 Cities
As Mini-Scho of Site
W
•Leather Seats
•Sunroof
•Traction Control
•Dual Air Bags
•Anti-Lock Braking System
• Remote Entry System
• 4 year/50,000 Mile Limited Warranty
• 6 year/70,000 Mile Powertrain Warranty
• 24 Hour Roadside Assistance
• Free Pick-up and Delivery Service
• (PLUS CD Player on the LS400)
per mo.
24 Months
Stk# 94152
i%•
litiatiCOM
\;•, , ,, ,::..V.k.: SM .,Z,ZN 'W M\
'92 ES300
$24,800
'94 ES300
'30,485
'92 ES300
$23,981
Beige/Ivory Leather,
sunroof, heated seats
only 25,000 miles
'91 LS400
'26,997
Amethyst/Taupe Leather,
Sunroof, Heated Seats,
CD Player, Only 6,000 Miles
Emerald Green/Ivory Leather,
Sunroof, Heated Seats,
CD Player
Burgundy/Burgundy Leather,
sunroof, complete service
records
* 1994 GS300 based on MSRP of $44,503, 1994 LS 400 based on MSRP of $58,333. 24 mo. closed end lease. 10% cap reduction, 15,000
miles per year, 150 per mile in excess of 24,000. $500 ref. sec. dep. Total obligation: GS300 $17,804, LS400 $21,584. Plus use tax, plates,
transfer fee. Customer responsible for excess wear and tear. Option to purchase: GS300: $28,099.59. LS400: $37,357.98.
LEXUS OF LANSING
The Relentless Pursuit of Perfection
For a personal showing:
Call 1-800-539-8748 OR 1-800-LEXUS-4-U
Exit 104 off 1-96 • 5709 S. Pennsylvania, Lansing • 517/394-8000
Ci)
(CALL COLLECT)
We Are More Than Just The News.
LIJ
F—
CD
CC
w
0
20
Midrasha Director Nancy Kaplan
around in congregations, Jewish
federations and delis — the kinds
of words a lot of Jews feel they
should know but are too intimi-
dated to ask about. Origins of the
words, along with definitions and
context, are introduced.
Other lessons explore para-
doxes like "one people, several de-
nominations, spread throughout
the world."
The style, Ms. Kaplan said, is
comprehensive yet accessible.
She said some early lessons are
elementary, "but what so many
people need to get a handle. They
don't talk the insiders' language.'
"I see brain surgeons who don't
know how to do an aliyah. Peo-
ple want to feel as competent as
Jews as they do in the rest of
their lives."
For costs or more information
regarding the Melton Mini-
School, contact Nancy Kaplan at
the Midrasha, 354-1050. D
New Mikvah Might
Offer New Options
LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER
w
Cr)
aiting lists and new
faces are considered
signs of success in the
realm of adult Jewish
education.
Both are found at some of the
sites of the Florence Melton Mini-
School.
Nancy Kaplan, director of the
Agency for Jewish Education's
Midrasha Center for Adult Jew-
ish Learning, hopes for the same
results this fall when the mini-
school adds Detroit to its list of
locations.
The program was developed in
the early 1980s by Florence
Melton and a team of educators
at the Melton Centre for Jewish
Education in the Diaspora at the
Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
The adult mini-school is a two-
year program focusing on basic
Jewish literacy within a non-de-
nominational framework. Most
cities run the Melton courses out
of a central education agency, as
in Detroit, or a Jewish Commu-
nity Center.
In 1986 three sites opened with
73 students. Last year, the pro-
gram boasted 1510 students at
22 locations in North America
and Australia.
"People are appearing at these
programs who have never been
seen in their communities be-
fore," Ms. Kaplan said. "It an-
swers a need. There are many in
the community doing nothing
specifically Jewish, but looking
for an entree."
Class structure is 2 1/2 hours,
once a week, for two years. The
curriculum centers around Jew-
ish living — its vocabulary, pur-
poses, dilemmas, rhythms and
ethics.
A sample vocabulary lesson in-
troduces words commonly tossed
PHOTO BY GLENN TRIEST
LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER
In addition to 52 weeks of insightful and
valuable coverage of the Jewish community, we are proud to
bring you these useful supplements:
Gift Guides
Auto
Parenting
Camp
Health and Fitness
Business/Finance
Circus of Values
Coupon Sections
or years in the 1970s Rab-
bi A. Irving Schnipper of
Congregation Beth Abra-
ham Hillel Moses had two
options when he performed con-
versions: drive to Cleveland to use
a mikvah open to all denomina-
tions, or use natural bodies of wa-
ter like the lake at Kensington
Metro Park.
Some Conservative and Re-
form rabbis in Detroit did the
same. Others used the swimming
pool at the Oak Park Jewish
Community Center for the ritu-
al immersion — even though it
didn't meet halachic standards.
The only mikvah which exist-
ed in the community was Ortho-
dox Mikvah Israel in Oak Park.
As the Orthodox movement does
not recognize Reform and Con-
servative conversions, the mik-
vah was not available for