Metro ON THE COVER Summer In The City from page A13 Far left: Emily Katz, 15, of Bloomfield Hills works on a mural. Left: Amelia Stone, 14, and Taylor Stewart, 17, both of Birmingham, select bottle - caps for their berm design. SITC's youth enrichment program visited Belle Isle on June 27. Far left: Program supervi- sor Michelle Heller, 18, of Farmington Hills with buddy Omari Mitchell, 6 of Detroit. Left: Former program super- visor Rachel Pultusker, 24, of West Bloomfield with Inajah Johnson, 10, of Detroit unteers get to choose between the cleanup- paintup-fixup-demolition work and the child enrichment program at Glazer. The program is open for five weeks alongside Glazer's summer school program. After summer school ends this month, youth enrichment will shift to All Saints Community Center and a church near Maybury Elementary and Clark Park in southwest Detroit. According to Michelle Heller of Farmington Hills, SITC's youth enrichment supervisor at Glazer, the children do games and puzzles until the volunteers arrive at 9:30 a.m. Each child is then paired with an SITC volunteer for arts-and-crafts projects and playground games. The children also write in their journals, which they often share with their classmates. The program is so popular that several students who attended in 2006 but had to go to summer school last year worked harder during the school year so they could return to the SITC program this summer. The buddy system "gives the children someone to look up to;' said Heller, who just graduated from North Farmington High School and is in her third summer with SITC. "The volunteers try to set a great example. We all have a lot of fun, and it A14 July 10 • 2008 iN gives the children something to remember. "I have a blast doing this; she said. "The kids have such a great time — they're always smiling. I love it. I feel like I'm con- tributing." Heller, who will be a freshman in education at the University of Maryland in the fall, plans to return to Summer in the City next year. Her predecessor, Rachel Pultusker, took over the SITC program at Glazer in 2006, when 20 children were enrolled. Last summer there were 35. This summer, 75 enrolled and some children had to be turned away. Pultusker, 24, has taken a behind-the- scenes role this year because of graduate school commitments. She's working on a master's in library science at the University of Michigan and working three jobs in Ann Arbor. "No question;' she said when asked if she's continuing with SITC. "I'm around, but I can't be there every day' During the school year, she volunteers weekly at Glazer with Temple Beth El members. The West Bloomfield High School gradu- ate fell in love with Detroit while working with a U-M program, Detroit Partnership, as youth program director. She contacted Ben Falik about SITC and worked on expanding the youth enrichment program. Pultusker will graduate next May and plans to stay in Detroit. "I really think these programs matter," she said. "I see what they do for the elemen- tary students, the formative experiences:' Regarding her own experience, she said, "My grandparents and parents grew up in the city. I went to the city for sports and entertainment events, but then went home [to the suburbs]. Now, I can't stay away. And these new high school volunteers are hav- ing the same experience, and it's excitine Describing her successor, Michelle Heller, Pultusker said, "I keep forgetting that she's only 18. She's amazing!" Heller, like the other interns, was chosen from the volun- teer ranks. "As interne; Pultusker said, "they see what has to happen behind the scenes and can give feedback to enhance the pro- gram" Growing Up Pultusker isn't the only Summer in the City staffer who is finding real life getting in the way of her volunteering. Falik is a summer intern at Honigman, Miller, Schwartz & Cohen in Detroit; he's married and working on his law degree and a master's in public policy at U-M. But he's still finding time to be active with SITC and other organiza- tions."I'm working for a real understanding company;' he said of Honigman. Neil Greenberg, co-founder, key num- ber-cruncher and transportation specialist for SITC, is remaining in the background this year. He has moved into Detroit and works as a transit planner for the Southeast Michigan Transportation Authority. His position has been taken over by David Zwickl of Southfield, an economics major at U-M who has been involved with SITC for six years. Zwickl, 19, is the organi- zation's chief financial officer, in charge of the $80,000 budget. Goldberg is doing the heavy work this summer as head of day-to-day operations. But he has completed his degree in second- ary education at Wayne State University in Detroit and is looking for a full-time teach- ing position. With those changes in mind and with the continued growth of the program, SITC this spring re-wrote its bylaws and created a new adult board to help the organiza- tion. Julie Lichtenberg, a senior major gifts officer at Royal Oak-based Beaumont Hospital's Beaumont Foundation, was elect- ed president. Her daughter, Marissa Stern, is a student at Michigan State University, a three-year SITC volunteer and an SITC