All In The Family his summer, Hugh Broder is going to camp. He'll scribble his name in permanent marker on his T-shirts, a couple pairs of shorts, his favorite jeans and a bathing suit. Week-long experiences and weekend retreats have families going to camp together: PHOTOS BY JOHN M. DISCHER ANNABEL COHEN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Clockwise from top left, Jake, Hugh, Sarah and Ben Broder enjoy camp to- gether. He'll drink bug juice, belt out a few "Hits Brothers" tunes at the talent show, trade jokes with old buddies, get to know some new friends and sail across Lake Nebagamon. And when he comes home, he'll tell his friends what a great time he had on his sum- mer vacation. Hugh Broder is 42. A Franklin resident, he is not the world's oldest camper and he doesn't have a Peter Pan complex. He just loves camp and has been going off and on for more than 30 years. For the past several years, he's also packed his three kids, Ben, Sara and Jake, for what has become a popular trend among nostalgic boomers aching for the good old days: family camp. "I always go with the same friend and his kids. For the first four years, we rented a van and we drove with our five kids. We were Mr. Moms — two divorced dads. And the first summer we went, I don't know if the kids had more fun or if I did." Now the remarried dads take along theli. wives (Broder proposed to wife Julie at camp). Family camps usually offer programs after the regular sea- son or are former camps that have been converted into casu- al resorts. The programs allow families to eat, sleep and play together. Alan and Nancy Simons of West Bloomfield are doing the camp thing. They spend at least a week each year at Camp Michigania, a retreat geared to University of Michi- gan affiliated families, located on lower Michigan's Walloon Lake. "I started going in 1964, when I was 4 ... and we went for 10 or so years after that," said ME Simons. "Now we don't miss a sum- mer." He attributes the popularity of family camps to the fact that parents and young children vacation to- gether but do not have to spend every moment together. Ask the Simons clan, including their two sets of twins, what each likes the most about family camp and each will give a different answer. "That's what's so great about Michiga- nia — there are so FAMILY page 126 125