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April 10, 2008 - Image 41

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2008-04-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Jake Provizer of

Farmington Hills on
the soccer field

July reunion to mark
day camp's 40th
summer.

Bill Carroll

Special to the Jewish News

H

appy campers for almost 50
years, Lorraine and Arnie
Fisher of West Bloomfield are
preparing for their 40th summer as own-
ers of Willoway Day Camp in Milford.
Childhood camping experiences became
a lifetime of camping fun and a highly
successful family business for the Fishers.
"It all started as a dream in the 1960s
and became a reality for over 20,000
campers and counselors in the past 40
years," said Lorraine, who compares the
operation to a mom-and-pop-type fam-
ily business, where children can thrive
and develop in a safe, non-competitive,
family-like environment."We're proud
that, over the years, many of our Jewish
community's leaders have looked back
at camp with good feelings as they get
their own children ready for the `Willoway
rience:"
Arnie Fisher graduated from Detroit
Central High. School in 1948, eventually
becoming an administrator in the Detroit
Public Schools. Lorraine is a 1954 gradu-
ate of Detroit Mumford High.
Arnie borroWed $200 from the teach-
rs" ,.. gedit union to buy a bus and the
Fishers operated the old Thunderbird
ay Camp near Kensington Metro Park
s. They then took a five-year
iks as Arnie continued to work for the
Detroit schools and Lorraine was a stay-
at-home mom, raising three children.
The Fishers then opened Willoway
on the 16-acre site of the former Camp
Totem Pole at 12 Mile and Beck roads in
Novi.
"We all loved willow trees — there are
many legends about willows and native
Americans, so someone in our family
came up with the Willoway name': Arnie

Camp on page A42

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0 • 2008

A41

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