For Volvo Lovers Only New '95 940 Sedan -Final Production Closeout 240 and 740 Owners Take Note! • The 940 has a longer wheelbase for a smoother ride. PHOTO BY B IL L GEMMELL • Antilock Brakes and Dual Airbags • Side Impact Protection (a 1997 safety requirement) • Limited Slip Differential for better winter traction • Lower maintenance cost • 4 year or 50,000 mile factory warranty. $21,995 Price includes: All standard equipment and nordic package. Destination charge, tax, title are additional. CONVENIENT HOURS Open 'di 9 p.m. on Mondays & Thursdays; and Saturdays until 4 p.m. • Volvo On Call roadside assistance. Jenni Bodzin, Emily Bean, Carolyn Feldman, Lindsay Roland and Julie Lepsetz work on their script in film class. Teen Talk Show Planned For Fall JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER DWYER AND T SONS VOLVO/SUBARU Maple Rd. West of Haggerty 624-0400 Sponsored by Women's Division of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit Shalom Detroit is here to welcome newcomers he intent of the latest edu- cational opportunity for Jewish teens is not to cre- ate a talk-show host with the star quality of someone like Oprah Winfrey or Maury Povich. But that might be the result. The Agency for Jewish Edu- cation plans to gather high-school students interested in producing videos this summer to work on an hour-long cable television show with Continental Cablevi- sion. The program would appear on local cable channels in the fall, said local video producer Sari Ci- curel who is working on the video project for the AJE. While the idea of using film with teens is not as cutting edge as it was in the 1980s, having Jewish teens produce something Jewish is a fresh idea. "What is new is that we are talking about Jewish kids doing this, on their own, on an after- school basis," Ms. Cicurel said. 'There is really nothing out there to show them the way. There is literally nothing like this in the country." Harlene Appelman, director of education services for the Agency for Jewish Education, feels the program will be a success with the teen-aged crowd who have few Jewish options outside of syn- agogue-based high school class- es and groups like United Synagogue Youth or B'nai Brith Youth Organization. "No. 1, this is a creative medi- um. No. 2, when you teach other people, you learn yourself. And No. 3, we need something with a far-reaching impact and public cable stations provide that," Ms. Appelman said. The springboard for working with videos in the schools came from an Agency for Jewish Ed- ucation contest held in the fall. Participants, recruited from lo- cal temple and synagogue high- school programs, were required to produce a short video for fourth- or fifth-graders about a Jewish topic. Six videos were turned in from which three winners were cho- Jesse Hermann works with Temple Israel film teacher Fran Victor Kaplan.