COLLEGE BOUND Oongratulations, @an! COLLEGE DECORATED page 71 We're so proud of you and all your wonderful accomplishments! Michael Lane Ginsberg "For all the times you stayed up late to get it right; took an AP class when you knew it meant work; practiced, re- hearsed, and gave it your all; said what you thought instead of what was pop- ular; volunteered your time instead of just hanging out, we applaud you." Stanford University... and so do we! Dan Zimmerman All our love and wishes for a bright and happy future! Love, Mom and Dad Mom, Dad, Julie, and Grandparents Sara Beck: Sorority living. S ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE salutes our congregation's many outstanding high school graduates :4: Brian Seffon We know you will write yourself into history. Congratulations! We are very proud of you. Ar. :4: Love, Dad, Mom, Scott, Fluffy & Furball Congratulations We wish a special Mazal Toy to these students, who have completed our four-year High School Program: Shira Anchill Lawrence Cyrlin Emily Friedman Steven Gill Joshua Herman Evan Kaplan Jodie Klein Benjamin Leibhan Jessica Nack Debbi Schwartzenfeld Anthe Shanbaum Ericka Wolfe Hillel of Metro Detroit for Jewish College Students and Young Adults Canoeing, coffee house nights, Tri-Trippin' in Israel, casino nights, basketball, UJA speakers, AIPAC, pic- nics, billiards and much morel!! H.M.D. Wayne State University Oakland University Oakland Community College Lawrence Technological University University of Detroit-Mercy Phone: (313) 577-3459 Fax: (313) 577-3461 24 Hour Hotline: (313) 577-8888 72 Director: Miriam Starkman Program Director: Jennifer Wasserman To Our Graduate! We're So Proud of You! Carrie Apse! Love, Mom, Dad and Dayna Grandma Helen, Grandma Gerry & Papa hill ili4 C ERIN PODOLSKY ON-LINE AND CONNECTED!!! CAN IT REALLY BE TRUE:THAT IN THE FALL YOU'LL GO BLUE? WITH LOVE AND PRIDE DAD & GABE GRANDMAS,GRANDPA, AUNTS, UNCLES, COUSINS & IDGIE OPPSIE©MUSENET ORG ara Beck shared a house with 50 other college-aged women. No, she didn't live in a mansion; her residence was a sorority house just off the campus of the University of Michigan. Sara, a 1996 graduate from Flint, earned enough points from her activity in the sorority to give her the right to the room of her choice. She spent her last year at U-M living in a single on the third floor of the Alpha Xi Delta house. The size of the small room did not bother the organizational studies major. She did not spend. much time there. When Sara moved in last fall, carpet, a bed, desk and dresser were already there. Her job was to decorate the room. "I brought a lot of things from home to make it feel like my room," she said. She hung a Little Mermaid poster over her bed and stuck glow-in-the-dark stickers of the solar system on the ceiling. She decorated the window sill with various items, including candles and potpourri. Sara also made sure all the necessary electronic items fit into her room. A computer sat on her desk and the stereo took up the entire top of her four-drawer dresser. One corner of the room was reserved for the cart holding her television and VCR. Sara's closet was equally small. As the seasons changed, she had to rotate clothes between her home in Flint and the sorority house. The milk crate is no stranger to any college student. Sara tucked two crates between her dresser and closet, in which she stored snack food and other mis- cellaneous items. "I could pretty much keep everything I needed in my mom," Sara said. ❑