Jeff Lazar: "He knows what he wants to do and he does it." HAWKING FOR MDA An Oak Park teenager is raising thousands of dollars for muscular dystrophy research. ALANH1TSKY, r Associate Editor emember those backyard carni- vals you created as a kid, playing with your neighborhood friends on a lazy summer afternoon? Perhaps you and your kids now pre- fer the bigger thrills of carnivals at shopping centers or something more on the order of the State Fair. You're not alone. Oak Park teenager Jeff Lazar will put on his third annual carnival next August or September and turn the thousands of dollars in profits over to the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Last September, Jeff coordinated his second annual carnival for MDA, tur- ning 12 months of badgering area merchants, friends, the Crown Pointe building in Oak Park, city officials and police into $6,373 for muscular dystrophy research. It was a healthy achievement for a 14-year-old, and follows nearly 10 years of door-to-door collecting for MDA, standing outside delis near Lin- coln Center on Greenfield Road and organizing his two carnivals. "Jeff is very innovative and deter- mined," says Kim Sidwell, district di- rector for MDA. "We give him a few posters and balloons, but basically he takes the ball and runs with it." Running with it last year meant get- ting permission from the Crown Pointe owners in New York to use their parking lot, getting approval from Oak Park officials and finding manpower and money — separate from MDA contributions — to run the car- nival. It has become a year-round passion for Jeff, a ninth-grader at Berkley High School. During the school year, with the help of his parents, Al and Sema, he recruits adult volunteers for his carnival committees. In the summer, "I start calling sponsors right after breakfast" and accepts do- nations in front of area stores in the evenings. Raising money for MDA is not the only thing in Jeff's life, but it takes a good deal of his time. He wrestled on the Berkley team this year until he suffered an injury and his grades began to slip. He also babysits for a Down's Syndrome child and wants to become a doctor working with han- dicapped children — "physically han- dicapped especially, and if it didn't take too long (for additional studies), mentally handicapped, too." Jeff's closest friends, David Silver- man and Phil Yamron, are 11th graders at Berkley. The Silvermans and Lazars met in the hospital when Jeff was born. The boys have grown up together in Oak Park. David, Phil and Jeff's other friends are involved with the carnival project. "If he asks, we're here for him," David says. The older boys include Jeff in their plans. "We don't consider him younger — he's one of us. If we're do- ing something Friday night we always ask him. He does everything we do." The three are members of King AZA. For the carnival, "my friends pitch in," Jeff says. "They do their share. I don't expect them to do what I do, but in ask them they'll help." The B'nai B'rith Youth Organiza- tion played a role in Jeff's work for MDA. His older brother and sister were involved in an annual AZA-BBG softball game to raise funds for MDA when Jeff was 5. With his parents' help, he collected $500 in a pail that he presented at the game. Sema Lazar describes her youngest son as sensitive, "in tune with others' feelings." He has participated with his AZA chapter in visiting nursing homes and bowling with senior citizens. While attending Avery Elementary, he volunteered with physically and mentally impaired youngsters, helping them to and from their bus and working in their classroom. During the summer, when not preparing for the carnival, Jeff has volunteered with the Special Olympics and at SCAMP (special education camp). At an MDA workshop for high school students last year, Jeff served as a guest speaker and described what resources are available for MDA fund- raising. This summer, he plans to spend a week at an MDA camp north of Port Huron as a volunteer counselor. For the carnival, Jeff's parents serve as advisers and supporters, help with public relations and pay some of the bills — Jeff's telephone bill for MDA work in February was $100. For Sema, it can be frustrating to get people to respond to hundreds of letters and phone calls. But it is not frustrating for Jeff. "Determination and concern are the words that describe Jeff," says MDA's Kim Sidwell. "He knows what he wants to do and he does it." Says his friend David Silverman, "Jeff's a good student, a good friend, a good kid." ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 69