PRIOR AMOUNT

YEAR

2012

TINOS NOT
A TAX BILL

CURRENT AMOUNT

YEAR:

2013

1. TAXABLE VALUE (Current amount is tentative):
2. ASSESSED VALUE:

If twice the amount in this box is more than your
property's actual value, you are being overtaxed!

Hoffert & Associates

• See our ad on page 17 •

BoiRefffaal

$2.00 FEB.14-20,

248-702-6100 • hoffertlaw.com

2013 / 4-10

ADAR

5773

HOFFERT &

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theJEWISHNEWS.com

A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION

» Offensive Sign Auschwitz slogan removed from
Detroit's abandoned Packard Plant. See page 10.

» View From 10,000 Feet Holocaust survivor
jumps from plane to mark 90th birthday. See page 40.

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

metro

» 100 Years Of Restful Sleep Berta Restokraft's
three generations of mattress making. See page 26.

Nathan Offen flies through the sky.

» cover story

IF

Bat Mitzvah
Comes Of Age

New exhibit at Charach Gallery
celebrates coming-of-age rite.

I

Elizabeth Applebaum

Special to the Jewish News

j udith Kaplan had one day to prepare

for her bat mitzvah ceremony.
On Friday, March 17, 1922, her
father, Rabbi Mordecai M. Kaplan (the future
co-founder of Reconstructionist Judaism),

CONTINUED ON PAGE 45

Jewish homeschooling families
prefer to learn out of the box.

I I ;—

Judith Ginsberg and Adele Wall Ginsberg of

Lynne Meredith Golodner I Special to the Jewish News

ost mornings, Aliana Schwartz, 12, wakes
before the rest of her family to write. She
writes all sorts of things — stories, essays,
rants — and the freedom she has to explore a variety of
genres and see where they take her is largely due to the
way her educational experience flows.
Schwartz and her 10-year-old brother, Itamar Moltz,
have been homeschooled all their lives. The Beverly Hills

Larchmont, N. Y., Sept. 19, 1959

r

ichil gan

Covering and
Connecting
Jewish Detroit
Eve y Week

siblings, children of Dahlia Schwartz
and Kathleen Moltz, love their life,
which offers freedom, exploration
and limitless discovery.
"It's fun and it's encouraging, and
I don't feel learning is as much of a
chore as a fun activity when I do it
with my family:' says Aliana, who is
poised, articulate and confident —
characteristics her parents believe
grew out of the way she is being
educated.
"I am so pleased with the way
our children have grown up," says
Kathleen Moltz, the full-time, works-

CONTINUED ON PAGE 8

9336

3

Aliana

Schwartz,

12, and her

mother Dahlia

Schwartz work

on algebra

together while

her brother

Itamar Moltz,

10, works on

his fractions

in the dining

room.

