Metro Kaufman Gift Aids Hillel Israel Trip I n May, 40 Michigan Jewish college students climbed aboard a tour bus for a Jewish identity-building trip throughout Israel. The trip of a lifetime was made possible by a $25,000 dona- tion from Alan J. and Sue Kaufman and family of Bloomfield Hills. Students from Michigan State University, University of Michigan, Grand Valley, Central Michigan, Western Michigan and Alma College joined Rachel Kaplan together to share a journey that would take them to the north and south of Israel to explore Masada, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and the Negev Desert. "Our trip to Israel is a wonderful memory that I will cherish forever',' said Rachel Kaplan of Farmington Hills, a WMU sophomore. "How lucky I am to be given this great experience' Zack Fenton, an MSU junior from Bloomfield Hills, said the trip was excit- ing. "We never had a dull moment and COME IN NOW AND HARDWOOD FLOORS. DUSTLESS SAND AN REFINISH OR it was inspirational connecting to my roots in Israel. It was the best time of my life." According to Cindy Hughey, executive director of the Lester and Jewell Morris Hillel Jewish Student Center at MSU, the generous Kaufman family gift was ear- marked to reduce the Birthright Israel waitlist at MSU. "None of the wait-listed students were left behind and we were able to take 80 students on two buses this past May:' Asked if the trips truly reshape how young Jews feel about Israel and their own Jewish identities, Wayne Firestone, president of Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life, says the Birthright trips "inspire and invigorate this gen- eration." He added that the Taglit-Birthright Israel Program has for the last 10 years sent more than a quarter-million col- lege-age students to Israel, ensuring that young Jews have meaningful expe- riences that further connect them to Judaism and help shape the narrative that will continue to sustain us through the ages. E Still On Board SCREEN AND COAT. Rands reflects on Interchange role. N SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1971 HARDWOOD REFINISHING LAMINATE MARBLE/GRANITE VINYL 3021 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD KEEGO HARBOR, MICHIGAN 48320 248.681.6460 WWW.HARBORFLOORS.COM HOURS: M-F 8 AM - 6 PM, SAT. 9 AM - 5 PM OR CALL TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT CARPET CERAMIC CORK AREA RUGS COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL 1601740 20 July 22 - 2010 anci J. Rands of Bloomfield Hills has completed a two- year term as national chair of Project Interchange. Founded in 1982, Project Interchange, an educa- tional institute of the American Jewish Committee (AJC), has brought 5,000 opinion leaders and policy-makers to Israel from 60 coun- tries, offering them broad exposure to the complex issues facing Israel and the region. Rands, a mem- ber of the National Association of Nanci Rands Realtors, will remain on the Project Interchange board. "Introducing Israel to leaders in a variety of sectors and from all over the world allows me to share my pas- sion for Israel," she said. "The global impact of Project Interchange, espe- cially through the work of our alumni, is inspiring, and I am tremendously proud to be a part of it." During Rand's term as national chair, Project Interchange conducted two-dozen programs in Israel for hundreds of opinion leaders and policymakers from the United States as well as Turkey, France, Ireland and Indonesia. She previously served Project Interchange for a five-year period as vice chair for alumni relations. Rands, a frequent traveler to Israel, joined two Project Interchange delega- tions on their visits — one comprised of university presidents and chancel- lors from across the United States, and a second of American civic and policy leaders. Rands is also on the AJC national board of governors. She was invited in 2009 to take part in the Adenauer Exchange Program, which brings American Jewish leaders to Germany for meetings with German political, academic, military and civic leaders. Rands was succeeded in May as Project Interchange chair by Robert S. Peckar of New Jersey. [1]