Shaarey Zeclek Beth 44yeleci Isluirsery School One party, we played human Monopoly. You were like the car or the horse," he said. The game board was on the tennis courts. Michael also remembers a three-day canoe trip in Algonquin Park, where he and about 10 oth- er campers swam, canoed and gathered firewood. He says he's going back to Tamakwa next summer. Michael's brother Evan, 13, doesn't have to dig into his mem- ory bank too far to recall a shin- ing moment from camp last summer. He came in first place in a 2,000-meter portage in which campers had to leave their canoes and carry heavy backpacks to ne- gotiate a dangerous part of a riv- er. Counselors carried the canoes. Dana Benson, 7, of Bloomfield Hills, caught a "real big fish" and earned a blue tag for swimming last year as a day camper at Wil- loway Day Camp in West Bloom- field. "My favorite thing is horseback riding and Fridays, because we have toys in the pool and some- times we have a big campfire," she added. Summer camp, as many will attest, is a place to test the ro- mantic waters, as well. Mitch Rosenwasser met his fu- ture wife on a Tamarack Western Trip in 1984, although neither knew they would someday find each other again. Mr. Rosenwasser, manager of Star Trax and a West Bloomfield resident, was a trip leader on the month-long adventure; Jenifer (Adler) Rosenwasser, director of the Young Adult Division of the Jewish Federation of Metropoli- tan Detroit, was a camper. The two didn't see each other much after the trip, but in 1988, when Mr. Rosenwasser, 32, went back to the University of Michi- gan to study education, he met up with Jenifer again. This time it was in the Brown Jug restaurant, where he worked to earn extra money. "She started coming in late at night with her boyfriend," he said. In 1992, they started dating, but it was on-again, off-again. Last March they got married. Jenifer, in the meantime, re- vealed to Mitch that she had a "huge crush" on him during the Western trip, he said. Visions of peanut butter-and- jelly-on-challah sandwiches, skin- ny dips, kitchen raids and songfests still dance in Carol Rosenberg's mind when she thinks of her years at Camp Tamarack in the late 1950s and early 1960s. "I used to schlep the cartons of milk in those steel cases miles into the pine needles. We put up mos- quito netting and slept on the ground. It was the greatest — the greatest — time of my life," the Troy resident recalled. Ms. Rosenberg became head of Pioneer Village in Ortonville af- ter she'd been a camper for sev- eral years. She remembered that the unit heads developed a kind of Morse Code with bells to com- municate with each other. One night, using their system, they got help, pronto, to two se- nior counselors whose tent went up in flames because of an over- turned gas lantern. She still bumps into one of those counselors now and then. When they look at each other, they don't even need words to "re- member how great the cama- raderie was. "There's a bonding that nobody else knows from. I was just meshugah with camp," she said. ❑ SUMMER CAMP For Ages 2-6 Available at both locations for 8 weeks Smithfield and F'nai Israel/Applebaum Center, W. Bloomfield )14rte Attention: Children of KinAergetrtert Age We have a Special Program for Youl • Weekly Themes • Nature 6- Craft Activities • Music 6- Dance Specialists Activities for beginning and advanced students include painting, draw- ing, mask-making, ceramics, T-shirt painting and much more! To par- ticipate, children must have completed the first grade. Camp begins June 24, 1996. Southfield Theatre Academy Day Camp SOUTHFIELD CENTER FOR THE ARTS SOUTHFIELD ROAD AT 9 1/2 MILE ROAD 810-354-9603 Our talented staff will help your child increase his or her self-confidence and enrich natural talents by means of a fun-filled, active experience in the- ater. At the end of each 2-week session, the campers will star in a fully staged and costumed production with acting and music. This is guaran- teed fun for all. You have the talent ... Now learn to use it! Summer Impressions Day Camp 4150 MIDDLEBELT W. BLOOMFIELD, MI 48323 (810) 661-3630 CAMP LISTINGS page 76 • Parent•Toddler, 15-30 mos. • Terrific Twos • Half 6- Full Pay Programs Extendect 14-otos: 7:30 cost to 5:30 p.Ki. - for inforisiation call Rena Weintraub at 810 -357-5544 or Janet Pont at 810-681-4235 3roadreach coed, ages 13-19 • costs start at $2,400 + airfare 1 no experience necessary this summer... • CAMP LISTINGS page 73 17 - August 9 d %omeithing different Red Sea, Egypt, Israel SCUBA & Camel Trek • St. Martin, St. Barts & Antigua SCUBA & Live-aboard Sailing adventure programs for teens • Turks & Caicos Marine Biology Field Study • Ecuador Amazon to the Andes • Smoky Mountains, NC Mt. Bike, Kayak, Rock Climb, Hike jKt • Antigua & Barbuda Sea Kayaking • call us... Tel: 919-833-1907 Fax: 919-833-2129