If your property tax is excessive, hire the experts in property tax law: Hoffert & Associates • See our ad on page 17 • 248-702-6100 • hoffertlaw.com $2.00 FEB. 21-27, 2013 / 11-17 ADAR 5773 A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION HOFFERT & ASSOCIATES theJEWISHNEWS.com » Jewish Detroit The IN launches a series of photo essays by photographer named "Karpov the Wrecked Train:' See page 10. » And The Winner Is ... Do It For Detroit Fund awards its first set of micro-grants for social justice projects. See page 30. » Highly Irreverent Beth Shalom revives its children's Purim spiel for this year's holiday. See page 40. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS metro The cast celebration at the end of the play >> cover story E A Boy Of Summer 1 Justin Prinstein has traveled the world to play baseball. Harry Kirsbaum Contributing Writer I t was never more evident that Justin Prinstein had baseball in his blood than when he smacked a pitched tennis ball through a Southfield neighbor's second-floor window when he was 7 years old. "My parents weren't mad at me," said the lanky, affable, 28-year-old. "They --11 ■ were impressed." The son of a college baseball shortstop and grandson of a professional softball player, "baseball was in my DNA," he said. Since 2007, Prinstein has traveled throughout Europe, Israel and Australia playing, coaching and promoting a sport he Justin Prinstein considers universal. And he managed to graduate from law school as well. He missed his graduation ceremony from the University of Detroit Law School in May 2011 because he was half a world away, pitching the second game of a double-header for the Janossomorja (Hungary) Rascals in the Eastern European Inter-League playoffs against the Erd Aeros. A return to hometown Flint shocks entertainer Sandra Bernhard. Sandra Bernhard leans against the tree she used to meet her friends at after shul. Harry Kirsbaum I Contributing Writer I couldn't get Sandra Bernhard to pose in front of her house on Concord Street in Flint because she said it was "too creepy," and she was right. I wasn't about to stand in front of my old house around the corner, either. In fact, everything about our old neighborhood and everything about the trip up to the old neighborhood could be described as "creepy:' Sandy — comedian, singer, performer, actor and one of my best friends from kindergarten through fifth grade CONTINUED ON PAGE 28 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week — was bringing her show to the Ark in Ann Arbor on a February weekend, but she came in a day early on Jan. 31 so she could visit Flint. She'd been having dreams about the neighborhood, but wasn't sure what was real or not, and who better to take her back home than me? My wife, Mary Ann, and I picked her up at the airport that morning, then took her to her Ann Arbor hotel to drop off her four bags filled with clothing, essentials and "merch" and then made our way up to Flint. On the same crappy, horrible day of the huge pileup on 1-75 in Detroit, we were stuck in traffic because of another huge pileup in Fenton that closed off the southbound lane. As emergency vehicles sped north up the wrong side of US-23, we inched through occasional snow squalls that reduced visibility to zero. The whiteout conditions seemed to transport us to a different world. And Flint, on the best of days, can be considered a different world. CONTINUED ON PAGE 8