-7s Mitch Rosenwasser, his wife Jenifer and son Ian, enjoy camp life. A fter years of participat- ing in outdoor adven- tures through a variety of ad hoc channels, University of Michigan alum Mitch Rosenwasser has finally realized his dream of running a summer camp. Rosenwasser, 40, was recently named director of the University of Michigan Alumni Association's family camp, Camp Michigania, situated on 400 acres of rolling hills off the shores of Walloon Lake at the northern edge of Michigan's Lower Peninsula. In his first year as director, Rosenwasser speaks with the enthusiasm of one of his campers when describing how he ended up as Michigania's camp director. "I've been involved in camping all my life," he said. "Plus I'm a huge Michigan fan, a fanatic if you will, and this position came up ... and I felt it was a perfect fit." A Detroit-area native, Rosenwasser grew up in Southfield and graduated from Southfield-Lathrup High School in 1981. He then went on to grad- uate from the University of Michigan in 1985 with a pre-lased background. "I went pre-med because I real- ly wasn't sure what I wanted to do," he said, adding that after graduation he decided to pursue what many unfocused graduates before him have done — become a ski bum in Aspen, Colo. "I tried to set up my life so that in the winter I could ski and in the spring and summer I could be a (counselor) at Camp Tamarack," located in Ortonville, Mich. And while skiing in the winter and teaching archery and hiking in the summer are appealing, Rosenwasser acknowledged that there was more to life than just living for the moment. In 1990 he again graduated from Michigan, this time with a teaching certifi- cate with a major in English. For the last several years Rosenwasser was the "director of watching all the money" at StarTrax, the Southfield-based entertainment company. He said the interaction with people enticed him to give up his ruck- sack for a briefcase. You can take the boy from the country, but you can't take the country from the boy. So when this self-professed "camp-a-holic" had an opportunity to apply for the director's position at Michigania he said he knew this was, in his words, "... a unique opportunity to make a career of my love for the outdoors." With the support of his wife, Jenifer, a teacher at West Bloomfield High School, Rosenwasser met with Michigania's board of directors and now calls the Boyne City area home for nearly five months out of the year. "There were only two places I would have left Star Trax for and one of them was Michigania," he said (the other being Camp Tamarack). "It was just a great opportunity to fulfill a lifelong dream of being a camp director." With nearly 1,000 families under his charge throughout the summer, and more than 200 more on a waiting list, Rosenwasser expresses the gratitude of a man who has hit his stride and is confi- dent about the direction life is tak- ing him. "I would say that my goal in life is to help people have great expe- riences. At camp we create what we call `Michigania Magic,' (and) to see parents be able to see their kids have fun or play tennis for the first time, that's what makes it rewarding." (Related story on page 15) S I. E AT T I-1 E JN • AU CI S T 2 003 • 1 3