If your property tax is excessive, hire the experts in property tax la Hoffej& Ampciates • wry See our ad on page 17 Myles B. Hotted $2.00 FEB. 6-12, 2014 / 6-12 ADAR I 5774 A JEWISH RENAISSANCE MEDIA PUBLICATION theJEWISHNEWS.com » Posthumous Honor Michigan Civil Rights Commission memorializes its slain director Burton Gordin. See page 14. » Love Is In The Air Take your Valentine to one of these romantic area restaurants. See page 43. DETROIT JEWISH NEWS » Beatlemania At 50 A multimedia salute — five decades after the Fab Four's appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. See page 51. The Beatles appeared 50 years ago on The Ed Sullivan Show. metro Enhancing Judaism Two new internship programs boost interaction with young people. Barbara Lewis I Contributing Writer T Local athlete helps Israel assemble an Olympic curling team. —1 Harry Kirsbaum I Contributing Writer 11 hey don't consider themselves enough to compete in the 2018 Winter Jeff Lutz a 21st-century version of the Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea. is ready to Jamaican bobsledding team, nor The odds are long. They need to find release a does Jeff Lutz, 29, of Bloomfield Hills and people who are willing to become Israeli curling stone, his curling colleagues from far and wide citizens and — if young enough — perhaps or "rock." have enough time in the day to think about serve in the military. Then they have to who would play them in the movie version, possess the mad skills to win a qualify- or what that movie would even be called — Cool ing championship to become one of only 10 teams Brooms, perhaps? allowed to play for gold. But to Lutz, it's worth the Lutz is far too busy helping to field an Israeli late-night emails to Israeli officials and curling clubs Olympic curling team from his house. around North America. With a mid-May 2014 deadline, the goal is to "We're starting from scratch:' said Lutz, who has find a team of curlers — four men and four women, CONTINUED ON PAGE 8 either Israeli or with dual-citizenship — good wo innovative internship programs, the Ramah Fellowship and the Steinsaltz Ambassadors, are enriching Detroit's Jewish educational institutions with young adults intent on sharing their love of Judaism. The Ramah Fellowship program, funded by the Davidson Foundation and being piloted for two years in Detroit, has a simple premise. Jewish communal professionals know that Jewish camps are a great way to build Jewish identity, said Rebecca Starr, who works part time as mentor and supervisor to the three fellows. What if they could bring the camp model to a community year-round? Ramah, the camping arm of Conservative Judaism, oper- ates eight overnight camps, three day camps and several Israel programs. The fellowship grew out of the Ramah Service Corps, which started three years ago and employs students who work part time in several Jewish communities. Detroit's Ramah Fellows work full time. The fellows, all Ramah alumni, arrived in September and are working with six Conservative congregations, Hillel Day School, Frankel Jewish Academy and University of Michigan Hillel. They'll be here through the end of the school year and then will work at one of the Ramah camps. CONTINUED ON PAGE 12 - 1'411111n I 1942 - 2013 Covering and Connecting Jewish Detroit Eve y Week Steinsaltz Ambassadors from Israel: !do Sinchon and Amitai Tzuriel