TaR leads the way community leaders. The University in training the ne Y GOLDSMITH Sta KRISTA HUSA Photographer r. n the final day last semester, the aromas of French roast and banana bread filled the classroom in the Frieze Building in Ann Arbor, home of the University of Michigan's School of Social Work. By appearances, the scene wasn't strict- ly academic. Students pulled their desks together in groups of three, discussing issues that a casual observer would not take to be vital to the future of the Jewish community. The closeness of its students sets apart the Project STaR program from the general School of Social Work and other Jewish communal pro- grams, says Katherine Sholder, program adminis- trator. "In the regular School of Social Work, students see their adviser twice a year, and they are one of 600 students," she said. "In STaR (Service, Training, and Research in Jewish Communal Development), students see the staff daily. They also confer with each other regularly." Since the two-year master's program got started seven years ago, enrollment has grown from two students in 1990 to 15 students today. The seventh class will graduate in May with seven students. Sholder says similar programs in the United States — the Hornstein Program for Jewish Communal Services at Brandeis University and a program at Hebrew Union College/University of Southern California — have about 20 students each. "We are very selective and only take half the students who apply," she said. "We are looking for students who have the potential to be real leaders 2/6 1998 80 in the Jewish community. We could take more, but we want our students to achieve the most they can and to help us maintain the high reputation that the program has garnered in a relatively short time." Last year, two-thirds of graduating STaR students had job offers before graduation. Armand Lauffer, founder and director of Project STaR, would like to see the program double in size, through a fellowship program. "There is a shortage of well-trained, Jewishly committed young professionals in the field," he said. Nine years ago, the Council of Jewish Federations conducted a study that showed a grad- ual, growing scarcity of Jewish communal profes- sionals. At the time, only two graduate programs, Hebrew Union/USC and Hornstein, were designed to train such professionals. The University of Michigan wanted to put its name on this map, and with the help of Lauffer, a social work professor, started Project STaR in 1990. "I figured I had 10 or 15 years before I retired," said Lauffer, 64. "I wanted to see if we could put together something that would be meaningful, and could cause a long-term impact on Jewish commu- nal life. I wanted to bring my Jewish background and my professional background together." Born in Belgium, Lauffer was 5 years old when he came to the United States with his family, just before 1938. He began teaching at U-M in 1968 after getting his master's degree at Wayne State University and his Ph.D. at Brandeis. In the early '80s, Lauffer began exploring the