One Happy Camper Fair's organizer is true believer in fun, educational summer experiences for kids. LYNNE SCHREIBER Special to the Jewish News E laine R. Sturman has been a camper all her life. It makes sense, then, that she would enjoy running Super Summers For Kids, an annual fair to advertise available camps and activities to area families. A dozen years ago, when her kids attended Camp Walden in northern Michigan, camp director Neal Schechter wondered why Detroit was one of only a few cities Elaine Sturman that did not host a camp fair. Then development director for the Merrill-Palmer Institute at Wayne State University in Detroit, Sturman brought the idea to her boss, who told her to run with it as a fund-raising effort. When she left the agency three years ago, he told her to take the event with her. "Camp is the most wonderful, social and educational opportunity for children away from their families," says Sturman, whose father was an assistant director at Camp Tamarack before she was born. "They gain social skills, par- ticipating with peers outside of the traditional educational environment." This year, Sturman, of Bloomfield Hills-based Elaine S. Events, expects as many as 4,000 people to stop in at the Birmingham Public Schools Conference and Training Center between 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 4, to check out videos and posters that will line the hallways. Of the nearly 80 camps represented, three Jewish camps — Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, Tamarack Camps and Camp Young Judaea — will strut their stuff at full displays. Tables and booths will fill the hall and_ the main room, which is like a carpeted gym. The fair features day and overnight camps as well as pro- grams in Canada, Australia and other overseas locations. The camps cater to youngsters and teens ages 2 to 18. All the camps at the fair are licensed by the American Camping Association or the state. Specialty programs include teen trav- el, overseas trips, horseback riding, computers, music, art and drama, sports and special needs; Randy Topper, Camp JCC assistant director, will be there with a 21-page brochure, registration materials and answers to questions. More people ask for information than sign up at the fair, but "a lot of people find out about us this way," he says. Founded in 1935, ACA-accredited Camp JCC has 50 dif- ferent offerings for children of all ages. They provide door-to- door busing in the metro area. Programs include four-week camps, teen travel pro- grams and Camp of the Arts as well as "Imagitivity," one-week arts and science camps, and week-long Maccabi Pro Sports programs. Susie Zaks says Tamarack Camps will bring bells and whistles to the fair, includ- ing a video and brochures. Founded in 1902, Tamarack is a sleepover, nonprofit kosher camp in Ortonville. Many of the campers are affiliated with the Reform movement, a third are unaffiliated and a third attend on scholarship. About 2,000 . campers participate in a Tamarack pro- gram each summer, including trips out West and to Alaska. "It's good for us to be [at the fair] because we're part of this community," she says. "We do get some campers from this." Ben Sadek, director of Camp Young Judaea in Waupaca, Wis., will also represent his camp at the fair. Run by Hadassah since 1969, it is a kosher, shomer Shabbat, Zionist overnight camp. His second year at this fair, Sadek will show pictures, posters and a video of the 140-kid camp. Children from about 25 Detroit families attend one of Camp Young Judaea's two four-week sessions. "It takes time to build a base in any community," Sadek says. "Families have two working parents more and more, and they want to find good outlets for their children in the sum- mer when they're not occupied in school," Sturman says. "Camp solves all those issues. It gives them the chance to be with peers in an environment where it is not school and they also know their children are safe, learning something and having fun." ❑ If You Go Super Summers For Kids: A Camp and Activities Fair will take place Sunday, March 4, 11 a.m.-3:30 p.m., at the Birmingham Public Schools Conference and Training Center, 31209 Evergreen, adjacent to Groves High School, in Beverly Hills. Admission is free and includes a reference directory of the camps and programs. Event cosponsors are the Observer Eccentric Newspapers and Metro Parent magazine. For information, call (248) 851-7342. After the fair, Camp Young Judaea will hold a rally at the Hadassah House, 5030 Orchard Lake, in West Bloomfield, 5-7 p.m. . Slatkin, Citrin Chair Countdown Susan Citrin and Robert Slatkin will chair the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's 2001 Annual Campaign Countdown March 25-29. Campaign Countdown is a series of events, meetings and phonathons focus- ing on the community's efforts to close the 2001 campaign, the Federation's annual appeal. Citrin, current chair of the Jewish Community Archives, has served on numerous com- mittees of the Federation Women's Campaign and Education Department, Robert Slatkin including the Lion of Judah Affinity Committee, the Women's Department Board of Directors and the Women's Department Endowment Susan Citrin Committee. She has served as an officer of the United Jewish Foundation and on the executive committee of Federation's Board of Governors. She is a member of the Birmingham Temple. Slatkin, president of Slatkin Corp., is past president of the United Jewish Foundation. He is past president of Federation's Young Adult Division and past president of the Jewish Community Center. He has served on Federation's Young Leadership Cabinet and received the Frank A. Wetsman Young Leadership Award. He is a member of Temple Israel. From March 25-29, volunteers will make calls throughout the community asking for pledges to the 2001 cam- paign. Immediately following Campaign Countdown, decisions will be made on how campaign dollars will be allocated to Federation-supported agencies in Detroit and around the world. Every gift increase over last year — and every new gift — will be doubled in value by the Schostak Family Challenge Fund. For information or to volunteer for the phonathons, call David Contorer, 248) 203-1490. j14: 3/2 2001 33