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Esau gets a Toyota Camel for
his birthday, I get a computer
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continued from B1
in the snow, and I know what my limits are."
Though these restrictions may seem extreme to teens, national statistics show that
traffic crashes are the leading cause of teen fatalities, accounting for 44 percent of teen
deaths in the U.S. The National Safety Council sees the issue as a national crisis.
Along with safe driving come many other new responsibilities. Some teens help
their parents by doing errands or taking younger siblings places. And many end up
schlepping around friends who have yet to harness the same freedom a license brings.
That can turn into a regular routine.
Josh 007 at License to Thrill
"My friends all ask [if I can take them places]," Silman said. "Three or four of
them all got their licenses in December, so that's nice."
To Have A Car Or Not
A driver's license is both a significant corning-of-age factor and a pivotal point in a
teen's life, so many get their licenses right on their birthday; even leaving school early
if necessary. In addition, many households wrestle with such questions as whether a
new teen driver gets a car on his birthday, who pays for it, is it new or used, and who
buys the gas and pays for the insurance.
Josh and his Secret Agents at License to Thrill
Lett Sky Spin
Arting on New
"Most everyone gets a car in the area we live in," said Becca Milen, 15, a sopho-
more at Birmingham Groves. "I have an older sister, so my parents are pretty lenient
when it comes to me."
Her father, Bruce, recalled wistfully, "I had been working, and I
took $30 and bought a neighbor's 1954 Ford. It didn't have air condi-
tioning; it didn't have a CD player; it didn't have GPS. All it had Was
an AM radio, and that was the car I drove."
Years Eve
Seth Samuels, 17, Is a junior at Birmingham Groves High School.
teen2teen staff • hotline: (248) 351 5144 • kcohen@the jewishnews.com
Right: Jennifer
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and Noga at
Reporters: Gabriella Ring (Berkley); Jake Wayne (Birmingham Derby); Hadas Corey, Grace Klein,
Peace, Love,
Jacob Rosen, Spencer Wayne, Sydney Wolf (Birmingham Seaholm); Ariel Mann, Seth Samuels (Bir-
and Tedi
mingham Groves); Jamie Gorosh, Alexa Eisenberg, Lauren Lewis, Sara Smoler, Teddi Cantor, Rachel
Raquel Cohen, Carly Cykiert, Danielle DePriest, Atara Lakritz, Rachel Margolin, Blake Orman (Frankel
Jewish Academy, West Bloomfield); Jennifer Finkel (Hillel Day School, Farmington Hills); Mitchell
Barnett, Scott Scher, Stephanie Steinberg (North Farmington); Kale Davidoff, Bridget Labe, Rebecca
Liebman, Allison Shipper, Shaye Winer, Ariella Yedwab (West Bloomfield); David Lehmann, Sarah
Spitzer (Yeshivat Akiva, Southfield).
Photographers: Morgan Pomish (North Farmington), Allie Gold (West Bloomfield), Jessica Polk (FJA)
Cartoonist: Josh Loney (Bloomfield Hills Andover)
Jon and Tedi
supervising staff
at Peace, Love,
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B4 teen2teen January • 2008
I iii
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