Join Our "LUCKY" LADY1506 for the Summer of Your Life! counselors "grew up" at the camp, and how many return from year to year? • Ask how many campers return from one summer to the next. • If your child has any health con- cerns, including allergies, asthma, or the use of medication, be sure the camp can handle them. • Camp can be costly. Ask if uniforms or special equipment are required, and if transportation is included. Realize that most camps, even some private camps, offer scholarships. Some con- gregations offer support for members' children at camps run by their own movement. DAY** CAMP modate the family's kosher food requirements. Garver brought a package of kosher hot dogs and parve (neither milk nor meat) buns so Dan could participate in the cookout, and prepared detailed lists of what he could and could not eat. "I told them he couldn't eat meat and milk in the same meal, but they misunderstood and thought he couldn't eat any dairy foods!" she laughs, remembering. "The poor kid had to eat dry cereal and unbuttered toast for breakfast." In recent years, Dan, a freshman at Andover High School, has gone to Camp Rotary in Clare, Mich., for a week with his Boy Scout troop, sometimes accompanied by his father. The camp tries to meet their dietary needs, but Dan, now a vege- tarian, often makes do with salad and peanut butter sandwiches. Sessions Begin June 17th (2.40) 661- SeS0 summer> impression's ACCREDITED CAMP DAY CAMP Accomodating Daily chapel services are mandatory at Boy Scout camp, said Allen Wolf, and the camp has been very good about making them non-denomina- tional and inclusive. "But I was appalled when I saw the symbol hanging in the chapel," he said. "It was a cross overlaid with a yellow Star of David. I found it very offen- sive because the mingling of the cross and the star made me think of Jews for Jesus, and the yellow star made me think of Nazis." He also felt the symbol excluded campers who weren't Christian or Jewish. Wolf talked to Dan's scoutmaster and his troop's committee chair about his concerns and wrote to the camp director and the area Boy Scout council. About six months later, he learned the symbol had been removed. "I feel very positive about the experience," he said. "They were responsive. If we had not gone to that camp, that symbol would still be hanging there." Dan also attends Jewish camps every summer. He's been to Camp Tamarack and Habonim-Dror Camp Tavor, both in Michigan, and last year went to Camp Young Judaea in Wisconsin. While Dan enjoys the activities at Boy Scout camp and being with his troopmates, he admits he sometimes feels out of place there as a Jew. "At. the Jewish camps, I feel like I'm at home," he said. ❑ 4150 Middlebelt Road (between Lone Pine & Long Lake Roads) West Bloomfield 48323 kV e American Camping Association Genesis at Brandeis Universit Genesis is a vibrant., pluralistic, learning community where students from around North America and the world develop close, respectful relationships. Return to your . community with more knowledge, a new perspective, and the creative energy to do your part in repairing the world. www.brandeis.edu/genesis genesis@brandeis.edu 781-736-8416 Genesis at Brandeis University is a program at the Rabb School of Summer and Continuing Studies A SUMMER PROGRAM FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS INTEGRATING JEWISH STUDIES, THE ARTS, HUMANITIES, AND SOCIAL ACTION Headquarters 0 5700 Drake Rd. Just South of Walnut Lake Rd. GET 41 NI Li E or CIP ■- 11111 - PRO SHOP Your Inline Hockey (2 4 8 ) C inside U.S. Blades WE SPECIALIZE IN FITTING CHILDREN OF ALL AGES HEAD TO TOE! • The Best Selection of Ice C Inline Hockey Gear • Newest Innovation in Skate Sharpening • You 0 ›- to 661-1184 0 ar C) CAN'T BEAT THE PRICES! i0% off total purchase with this ad. ~.7'g Huntington Woods, a seventh-grader at Roeper School, will be returning to Interlochen Arts Camp in north- ern Michigan for the fourth year. Interlochen campers come from all over the United States and other countries, and about 12 percent are Jewish. A talented violinist, Sarah likes to attend the regular Friday night Shabbat services at the camp. Campers run the services, which attract as many as 50. Vegetarian fare is available in the cafeteria for those who keep kosher. Other camps are willing to make special arrangements to accommo- date the needs of Jewish campers. Mandy Garver and Allen Wolf of Bloomfield Township sent their son, Daniel Wolf, 15, to Camp Fire's Camp Wathana in Ortonville when he was 6. "It was his first overnight camp, and the main reason we picked it was because it was a very short program — just three or four nights — for the youngest campers," said Garver. She liked the fact that her son, even at such a young age, would meet children he wouldn't meet oth- erwise. "When the enrollment ques- tionnaire had questions about whether the family was getting Aid to Families With Dependent Children or food stamps, I knew this camp would be different," she said. Dan's camp friends included one boy who shared a bedroom at home with six siblings. "Daniel didn't know any black kids then, and there were a lot of them at this camp. He found out they weren't so different from him. It was a very positive experience," said Garver. The camp was willing to accom- Your Inline Hockey E Ice Hockey Headquarters 12/14 2001