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RUNDOWN page 42

Ex-Tiger Mickey Lolich has
been hired as Mr. Lewis' camp di-
rector and Joe Ginsberg will be
one of the coaches.
The campers will make a first-
ever road trip to Sarasota, Fla.,
for a series of games against Bal-
timore Orioles fantasy campers
and they'll play their annual
"Fantasy Game" against the
coaches under the lights at Hen-
ley Field.
Among the ex-Orioles on the
Baltimore fantasy camp staff are
Brooks Robinson, Boog Powell,
Paul Blair and Earl Weaver.
"As long as our alumni want
me to put on a camp, I'll do it. I
won't give it up," Mr. Lewis said.
Mr. Dietz says the Tigers'
camp also is nearly a sellout. The
team is hoping for about 100
campers.
Among the Dream Week high-
lights are mini-tournaments, au-
tograph and photo sessions, use
of the indoor/outdoor batting
cages at Tigertown, barbecues
and meals in the Tigers' cafete-
ria.
Most of Mr. Lewis' campers
during the years have been male
professionals, and quite a few,
like Mr. Lewis, have been Jew-
ish.
Rabbi David Nelson of Con-
gregation Beth Shalom in Oak
Park, who attended the 25th an-
niversary of the 1968 World
Championship camp in 1993 as
a gift from his congregants, says
the Tigers' decision not to include
Mr. Lewis in their camp plans
"seems selfish, unfair and mean-
spirited.
"Jerry created his camp with
a lot of heart and soul and he
runs it that way. It doesn't make
sense to me that the Tigers don't
want to tap into that expertise,"
Rabbi Nelson said.

144

kAA

Podiatrist Harvey Saperstein
has been to all of Mr. Lewis'
camps but one, and he plans to
be there again in February.
Now 61, Dr. Saperstein at-
tended the inaugural camp in
1984 thanks to a 50th birthday
present from his wife, Brenda.
He's now considered the "captain"
of the alumni and he writes most
of the stories for the alumni
newsletter.
"Many camp alumni are close
to both Jerry (Lewis) and Jim

"I still love the
Tigers."

—Jerry Lewis

(Price), so we're kind of torn be-
tween the two guys," Dr. Saper-
stein said. "If the Tigers are
smart, they'll hire Jerry to run
their camp. After all these years,
he knows how to do it.
"What it looks like now is a big
company trying to push a small
businessman out of business, and
I really hope that doesn't hap-
pen."
Dr. Saperstein said Mr. Lewis
has been known to "work with"
campers, especially alumni, if
they are having a difficult time
affording the camp fee, and he
personally takes care of other
problems.
"Each year, about half of the
campers are alumni, and I think
that's a tribute to Jerry," Dr.
Saperstein said.
Dr. Saperstein's son, Guy, 38,
who's also a podiatrist, went to
his first camp earlier this year
and he'll also be back in Febru-
ary.

.

ir k s .

Student Confesses
To Fabricating Column

Phoenix (JTA) — An Arizona
State University student jour-
nalist has admitted that a con-
troversial column, in which she
claimed to have witnessed Or-
thodox Jews stoning a paraplegic
to death at the Western Wall in
Jerusalem, was a fabrication, ac-
cording to two ASU journalism
professors.
The State Press, the ASU stu-
dent newspaper in which the col-
umn appeared, printed a
retraction in a Nov. 29 editorial
titled "State Press repentance."
The student, Mary Leigh Sum-
merton, now faces disciplinary
action that could include expul-
sion from the journalism school
or from the university.

The incident, which has at-
tracted widespread media atten-
tion here, began Nov. 15, when
the State Press printed a guest
column in which Ms. Summer-
ton, a senior journalism student
and former managing editor of
the paper, claimed to have wit-
nessed Orthodox Jews, who were
praying at the Western Wall,
stone and kill a paraplegic in an
electric wheelchair.
She said the Jews were angry
because the man was using elec-
tricity on the Sabbath.
She wrote that the incident oc-
curred while she was on a "Unit-
ed Nations-sponsored trip to the
Middle East."

