rising cases How Jewish summer camps are dealing with the latest COVID-19 spike The BA.5 subvariant has hit some camps harder than others. Getty Images Earlier this year, as summer approached, Amy Skopp Cooper hoped that after three years, children across the Ramah network of Conservative Jewish camps would experience something approximating normalcy. But on the first day of Camp Ramah in the Berkshires on June 28, she received some distressing news: Nearly all of the 40 members of the kitchen and dining room staff had tested positive for COVID-19. They would have to quarantine for six days, per camp...