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April 23, 1993 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-04-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

•,`

SOUTHFIELD

page 15

each other, our different
cultures, religions, ethnic
origins, and this should be
a rewarding experience,"
Mr. Brown added.
Keynote guest speaker
will be Lynette Campbell,
of the Community Foun-
dation of Southeastern
Michigan, a Southfield
resident who specializes
in working with multicul-
tural neighborhoods.

The Coalition, estab-
lished in December of
1991 by the Jewish Com-
munity Council and the
Neighborhood Project, is
comprised of representa-
tives of more than 20 area
organizations.
Already, nearly 100 peo-
ple have registered for the
Forum. Call the JCCou-
ncil for information at
642-5393. Ill

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Co-owner David Bale, Bob Simon and Vic Norris

(15
MILE)

MAPLE

Way Beyond
Indian Summer

-I

KIMBERLY LIFTON STAFF WRITER

erhaps it is fitting
that Vic Norris mar-
ried a doctor. For
the co-director of
Camp Tamakwa, which
this week leaped into the
spotlight with the upcom-
ing release of the movie
about the summer haven
for youth, Indian Summer,
a young doctor named
Ronda Barak was the love
of his life.

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"We had fallen in love,"
he recalls. "I brought her
to camp because I had to
see if she would love it, or
at least cope with it. This
was the place to propose.
"I thought she would
make a great camp physi-
cian," he jests.
Dr. Barak passed Mr.
Norris' litmus test, he
passed muster with her,
and the two were married
in August 1990. Now, each
summer she tries to take a
week-long vacation in
Huntsville, Ontario,
where she spends time
with her husband and
serves as camp doctor.
Romance is not uncom-
mon for graduates of
Tamakwa. In fact, it has
been the setting of many
camper-to-camper part-
nerships in the Detroit
Jewish community.

The friendships that
blossom after summer
camp are highlighted by
Indian Summer's opening
this week at area the-
aters. And for the many
local insiders who attend-
ed Camp Tamakwa, the
film may even trigger a
few nostalgic memories of
a place close to their
hearts.
Indian Summer is the
story of eight adult
friends who are brought
together for a week at
Tamakwa by its retiring
director, Uncle Lou,
played by Alan Arkin.
"Camp Tamakwa is a
very fond place for me
where I developed a lot of
my youthful adult tenden-
cies," says the film's
writer and producer and
director, Michael Binder,
also from Detroit.
It is where David
Hermelin, who as a young
teen, met his wife, Doreen
Curtis; where Suzan
Folbe met her husband,
Michael Curhan; and
where Karen Blum met
her husband, Michael
Kelman.
For Tessa Stein, who in
1983 immigrated to To-
ronto from South Africa
SUMMER page 18

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