Metro The Snowflakes Won't Know What Hit Them The inside Track Saab 9-2X Linear LEASE A 2005 SAAB 9-2X LINEAR 99* Maimonides Leaders Fellowship offers recipe for Jewish life. MO./24 MOS. 12,000 MILES/YEAR* $3,625 due at signing KATE SCHMIER Saab 9-3 Linear $ 22 5* LEASE A 2005 SAAB 9-3 LINEAR INSURANCE MTITUTE IIHS Double Best Pick! Saab 9-5 Arc Sport Sedan LEASE A 2005 SAAB 9-5 ARC SPORT SEDAN ' 3 25* MO./24 MOS. 12,000 MILES/YEAR* $1,500 due at signing Drive a new Saab and receive No Charge Scheduled Maintenance; world-class safety features and available OnStar.' SAAB Based on GM pricing w/Oldsmobile owner loyalty. Plus tax, title, plate & destination.All rebates to dealer. Security deposit waived based on credit approval. GM Bonus money used in pymts. 24 mo. lease has total of 24,000 miles. $1,000 Olds owner already included in pricing. GLOSSMOM SAAB On Telegraph Road At The Tel-12 Mall, Southfield Mon & Thur 9am – 9pm I TWF 9am – 6pm I Open Saturdays 10am – 4pm 1-888-306-5188 www.glassmanauto.com Benjamin Moore° Paints 930910 Teknicolor Paints, Inc. AND A Paint Store and More! Great Service Great Products 2oz. COLOR SAMPLES 3.99 per can Available in 260 Benjamin Moore colors. A great cost-effective way to test colors!! The best way to test color is to put it on your walls! Teknicolors, the name you can trust and the service you deserve!! FARMINGTON HILLS 27849 Orchard Lake Rd. 248-994-1300 2/3 2005 24 Birmingham 33422 Woodward Ave. • 248-646-5924 Pontiac 51616 Woodward Ave. • 248-745-0003 Visit us at www.teknicolors.com or at 1 of our 3 convenient locations Ann Arbor niversity of Michigan sopho- more Lauren Levin of West Bloomfield is a member of a "club of Jewish introspection." Membership is growing in this club called the Maimonides Leaders Fellowship, which began in September 2002 in Ann Arbor and has spawned 15 branches across the United States and Canada. So far, about 550 students have graduated from the program in North America. The 10-week leadership develop- ment program is the vision of Rabbi Avraham Jacobovitz, affectionately known to the stu- dents as "Rabbi J." In addition to a weekly two-hour course on a wide range of Jewish issues, participants have the opportu- nity to interact with individuals who have made Judaism the focal point of their lives. Five field trips range from spend- ing Shabbat in the Orthodox commu- nity of Oak Park to visiting a sixth- grade Talmud class in Toronto. "I couldn't have asked for a better Gross experience," Levin said. "I have always had a strong faith, and the program definitely con- firmed it." Levin was one of 25 U-M students who graduated recently from the Maimonides pro- gram offered at the Levin Jewish Resource Center (JRC) near campus. "Four years ago, I wanted to create a framework for students that would encourage Jewish education in a meaningful way," said Rabbi J, a U MO./24 MOS. 12,000 MILES/YEAR* $1,500 due at signing Welcome to the state of independence Special to the Jewish News 913410 native of Tel Aviv, who has served as a Jewish educator on various college campuses in Michigan for the past 25 years. One of the challenges he faced was that many students needed part-time jobs and therefore could not commit to the program. To address this issue, he gained financial support from various phi- lanthropists; he now uses these resources, in addi- tion to national funding, to provide participants with a $400 stipend. "We were able to answer students' concerns by bring- ing together a comprehensive package," said Rabbi J, founder of the Oak Park-based Macon L'Torah — The Jewish Learning Network of Michigan. "I think one of the biggest indica- Landau tors of the success of the program is that 85 percent of the participants last semester were referrals," said Rabbi Aaron Eisemann, who coordinates the Maimonides Fellowship. He calls it a "club of Jewish introspection." Rabbi Eisemann compared the Fellowship to a cooking class in which students "learn the recipe of how and why Judaism works and to taste it in the world around them. "This is part of Jewish philosophy — to go out into the Jewish world, to live by Jewish principles and to use Jewish values to help others." Because Judaism is a religion that encourages participation in society, one of the goals, according to Rabbi Eisemann, is to present the Torah as "as system through which you can maximize your potential." "As part of the course, we bring in professionals who are also successful in their Judaism," he explained. "They feel that they are successful professionally because of their Judaism, not in spite of it."