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Front Lines

How to Find a Better
Assisted Living Solution

SPORTS

LOOKING FOR assisted living for your loved one doesn't have to
be difficult. As you research your options, look for these 3 features:

Honors individual lifestyles. At Renaissance Gardens, residents
live on their own terms, like at home. There is no set schedule
because people should eat, rest, and engage in activities when
they please.

1

Wiping The Lanes

Local B'nai B'rith bowlers clean up
at tournament in Columbus.

Activities and socializing. At Renaissance Gardens, residents'
schedules are based on their interests. Residents also have access to
the 108-acre Fox Run campus. They can go for a swim in the all-season
pool or grab a bite at one of three on-campus restaurants.

2

Steve Stein

Special to The Jewish News

T

Access to health care. Licensed caregivers are on-site 24 hours
a day at Renaissance Gardens, and the full-time Erickson HealthsM
doctors only see residents of Fox Run. There's even a Medicare Advantage
health insurance plan exclusively for Erickson residents.

3

Call today for your personal tour at

1-888-445-3450

RenaTcsance 9ardens
at Fox R.VN

Near the junction of M-5
and 1-96, 275, and 696

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wvvw.TheCareExperts.com

Photo by David Debalko

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To register for a FREE CEU seminar for.RNs
or far more information on career opportunities,

log on to itenrylonicareers.coin

RN & ALLIED HEALIH PROFESSIONALS

JOB FORUM

Saturday, April 26

Great opportunities

8
2 p.m.
The Westin Southfield

• FREE CEO seminars for RNs

1500 Town Center
Southfield, MI 48075
(248) 827-4000

• Prize drawings

—

• Representatives from all
Henry Ford Health System locations

• On-site interviews

• Complimentary refreshments

FREE PARKING located in the
structure next to the hotel

it.nr,, Ford Health System k an AA/EEO employa.

A10

April 10 • 2008

he Eagles from Downtown
Fox soared in the
International B'nai B'rith
Bowling Association tournament held
last month in Columbus, Ohio.
Captain David Lazarus, Justin
Kaplan, David Moses and Sy Zate
scored 5,514 with handicap and fin-
ished in first place in the team compe-
tition. They won the $600 first prize.
Steve Wood from Greater Lansing
won the Class B (175 average and
below) singles competition with 1,467
(six-game total plus handicap). He
earned $250. Kaplan was second, six
pins behind Wood. He earned $150.
Kaplan also won the Pool B (151-
175 average) scratch singles competi-
tion with 1,183 for six, earning $100.
Phil Horowitz of Pisgah took Pool D
(200 or more average) scratch singles
title with 1,406 for six, winning $115.
Steve Anstandig from Brotherhood
had the best scratch three-game series
(746), taking home a plaque.
When next year's IBBBA tourna-
ment is held in Toronto, Mitch Lefton
will once again be the director. The
Farmington Hills resident just com-
pleted a four-year term as director
and he expects to be voted to another
at the IBBBA meeting next month.

All In The Family?
Justin Boren created quite a stir last
month when he left the University of
Michigan football team, claiming in a
statement that the program's "family
values have eroded" under new coach
Rich Rodriguez.
Boren, the son of former Michigan
football star Mike Boren, was the
Wolverines' most
experienced return-
ing offensive line-
man. After playing in
18 games and start-
ing 14 as a freshman
and sophomore, the
junior-to-be was
pegged to start at
Justin Boren
left guard this fall.
Mike Boren told the Columbus
Dispatch that his son was thinking of
transferring to Ohio State even though

Riwalcaaat

rules prevent a player who transfers
from one Big Ten school to another
from getting an athletic scholarship.
Rodriguez disputed Justin Boren's
claim. He told the Ann Arbor News,
"Anybody who would make a comment
about our values is way off-base."

Ben's Gone
Here's an item from the what-have-
you-done-for-me-lately mentality
in college sports: Ben Braun, the
second-winningest men's basketball
coach in University of California
history, was fired by the school last
month after 12 years on the job.
Braun, who coached at Eastern
Michigan University
from 1986-96 and
Siena Heights
College from 1978-
85 before going to
Cal, went 219-154 in
his dozen seasons
at the helm of the
Ben Braun
Bears. His 552 career
victories over 31
seasons rank him 11th among active
NCAA Division I coaches.
During his first seven years at Cal,
Braun's teams played in the NCAA
Tournament four times and the NIT
twice. But in the past five years, the
Bears were in the NCAA and NIT one
time each. Cal has finished eighth or
ninth in the Pac-10 Conference three
times in the last four years. This year,
the Bears were 17-16 overall and 6-12
in the conference, finishing ninth.

Ben's Down
Birmingham Groves High School grad
Ben Agosto and Tanith Belbin failed
to win an ice dancing medal at the
World Figure Skating Championships
for the first time since 2004, placing
fourth in Goteborg, Sweden.
Agosto and Belbin, Olympic silver
medalists and five-time reigning U.S.
champions, fell in the compulsories
in Sweden and finished 0.26 points
shy of third place and a bronze medal.
Going into the competition, they were
favored to win America's first world
championship in ice dancing.

Send sports news to

sports@thejewishnews.com.

