metro " We can live here for about the same as what we were paying in our condo." -Dan and Nori Braude, enjoying life at Fox Run since 2003 For affordable retirement living, no place compares to Fox Run in Novi. Practically all of your expenses, including property taxes, utilities and an unmatched staff to serve you, are covered by a single check you write just once a month for a set amount. And since every apartment home is main- tenance-free, you never have to worry about costly surprise repairs or replacements again. Discover how carefree and economical life at Fox Run in Novi will be! Call 1-800-306-2814 today for your free 25-page brochure. Add more Living to your Life' 18 June 7 2012 College Students Invited To 'Work, Live Play! In Detroit' CommunityNext has an exclusive invitation for college students to spend Wednesday, June 20, getting to know Detroit with behind-the-scene tours of the Compuware, Chase and M@dison Buildings, a meet-and-greet with moguls who are influencing Detroit to be the next Silicon Valley, culminating in the Detroit Tigers vs. St. Louis Cardinals game at Comerica Park. Cost is only $10 for the whole day. A bus leaves from the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit building (6735 Telegraph in Bloomfield Hills) at 1:30 p.m. (show up at 1:15 if you plan on riding) and will return after the game. If you plan to drive yourself, the program itself starts at 2:30 p.m. in the lobby of the Compuware Building. After the building tours, attendees will mingle and enjoy refreshments on the M@dison rooftop before heading to the auditorium to hear from five up-and-coming young Jewish leaders in Detroit: Jacob Cohen, vice president at Detroit Venture Partners, a seed and early stage venture capital fund formed by partners Josh Linkner, Dan Gilbert, Brian Hermelin and Earvin "Magic" Johnson; Stacy Goldberg, owner of Savorfull, which tracks down real gluten-free, dairy-free, milk-free and peanut-free foods that taste fantastic and delivers them straight to custom- ers' doors; Ben Bator, co-founder of textsfromlastnight.com , who also sits on the advisory board of Ponyride, Conservative Rabbis Set Gay Wedding Guidelines (JTA) — The Rabbinical Assembly's Committee on Jewish Law and Standards — which sets halachic policy for the Conservative movement — has voted to provide guidelines on performing same-sex marriages. The move is an official sanction of the ceremonies by the movement. The CJLS approved the documents May 31 by a 13-0 vote with one abstaining ballot. For years, the Rabbi Daniel Conservative move- Nevins ment has debated how to approach same-sex unions. Traditionalists often opposed such relationships while urging respect as progressives — par- ticularly some rabbinical students — pushed for full equality. 70 AT EXCLUSIVE FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS! Meet the moguls who are infinenci Detroit to be the next Silicon Valley. Behind the scenes tours of the Compuware Chase and Nl@clison Buildings then T]gers Cardinals game at Comerica Park. 'U n i ta Bedroc a social incubator in Detroit; Ben Falik, manager of Detroit Service Initiatives for Repair the World and co-founder of Summer in the City, a Detroit nonprofit that has mobilized over 150,000 hours of service in Detroit; and Jonathon Triest, previ- ously creative director for New York's Discovery Productions and founder of the Triest Group, a mid-level advertising firm. After a Q & A with the panelists, attendees will head to Comerica Park for the ballgame. Sound like fun? Head over to www. jewishdetroit.org/summerterm to sign up. In 2006, the CJLS officially sanc- tioned gay relationships. At the time, it stressed that rabbis were not obligated to perform such ceremonies, but could do so and not be violating RA stan- dards. Rabbis Daniel Nevins (for- merly of Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills), Avram Reisner and Elliot Dorff created the new ritual guidelines. They offer two types of gay weddings, as well as gay divorce. Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum, who heads the LGBT Congregation Beit Simchat Torah in New York, told JTA that these new guidelines represent a major step forward in Conservative Judaism's sensitivity toward the LGBT community "We can't be held hostage to the radical right wing of the Jewish world," said Kleinbaum, who was ordained by the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. "The Conservative movement is rejecting religion based on bigotry."