Above: The newlyweds. Left: Married at Camp Tanuga. Campers Forever Jenny Kellman and Ron Fritz wed in their favorite place: summer camp. JULIE EDGAR News Editor Kellman's first summer at Camp Tanuga had her hooked. enny j For the next 17 years, she spent every summer there as a camper, counselor, head counselor, and this summer, as assistant director. When it was time to get married, Kellman and her fiance, Ron Fritz, a new Tanuga devotee, thought Tanuga's sylvan set- ting would be the perfect backdrop for a wedding. It was. On Labor Day weekend, Kellman and Fritz were married on the banks of Manistee Lake, in front of 225 dressed-down guests, about 75 of them former campers and Tanuga 9/18 1998 156 Detroit Jewish News staffers. Kellman, 28, was attired in an upscale sundress. Fritz, also 28, wore linen pants and a white shirt, sans tie. Accompanying her and Fritz down the "aisle" was their chocolate lab, Briggs. Rabbi Stacie Fine of Ahavat Shalom in Traverse City performed the ceremo- ny. Afterward, guests wound through paths lit by lanterns to get to the din- ing hall and the rec hall. "My whole life I envisioned this wedding. When Ron and I got engaged, we planned that we would work it out and have it here. I didn't think my parents would go for it, but they did," Kellman said. Tanuga Directors Sid Friedman and Mark Coden, working with Jenny's parents, Betsy and Joel Kellman, arranged the ceremony. Guests began streaming into camp on Friday, setting up in cabins. The other half of the wedding party stayed in hotels in nearby Kalkaska or in Tra- verse City, coming in for a barbecue and campfire. On Saturday, guests ate breakfast and lunch and indulged in waterski- ing, rollerblade hockey, basketball, sailing, wall climbing and mountain biking. The wedding ceremony began at 5 p.m., followed by dinner and dancing in the camp's new lodge. On Sunday, the couple hosted a farewell brunch: - Kellman, a Berkley High School grad, met Fritz, a Novi native, at the University of Michigan in 1996. He is currently finishing a master's degree in education at U-M, while Kellman is finishing her doctorate in sociology, also at U-M. She works with male substance abusers in the state correc- tions system. Before they bought their house in Ann Arbor, Kellman and Fritz moved to New York City while Fritz partici- pated in an educational program called Teach for America. Kellman got a job there as a social worker. They returned to Michigan, she said, because "the city was crazy for us. We're both camp people." Friedman, Tanuga's owner, said the Kellman-Fritz wedding was the second to be held at Tanuga. The first was in May, but on a much smaller scale. Arranging the wedding while run- ning the summer camp was "a bit stressful," he said, but "after the fact, we looked and back and said it was well, well, well worth it." ❑