metro »
» h ere‘s
Summer Fun:
Tamarack’s Family Fun Day signals
the start of the camping season.
to
The Hanover
Insurance Group,
a leading pro-
vider of prop-
erty and casualty
insurance prod-
ucts and ser-
Korotkin
vices nationwide,
recently honored
KIG with an appointment to its
President’s Club, an elite group of
independent insurance agencies
from across the country. Kenneth
M. Korotkin is president at KIG.
The agency will be formally rec-
ognized for its President’s Club
achievement at a national busi-
ness conference sponsored by the
Hanover.
Families out on the lake canoeing and paddle boarding
Ruhlandt
O
n Sunday, June 19, Tamarack
Camps held its ninth annual
Family Fun Day. More than
1,000 campers, parents, alumni, fam-
ily members and friends came to
Camp Maas in Ortonville to celebrate
Father’s Day and enjoy their favorite
camp activities.
Families and friends celebrated
Tamarack Camps’ rich history at the
Clara & Irvin Charach Tamarack
Museum.
Young boy enjoying a horseback ride
“Tamarack Camps is our Jewish
community’s summer home, and
Family Fun Day has become a won-
derful family tradition of providing
an action-packed day of camp,” said
Tamarack President Darren Findling.
“We are fortunate to be able to
showcase many new and updated
facilities, such as the Applebaum and
Berman Villages, as we complete the
fourth year of our 10-year master
plan.”
One of the hottest spots this year
was the grand opening of the new
Nature (Teva in Hebrew) Complex.
Campers snacked on homemade pita
Families checking out the new Shirley & Merle
bread at the Lockman Fire Pit, made
Harris Nature Center
organic bug spray and engaged in a
myriad of other hands-on activities.
“The Shirley and Merle Harris Nature
Center is a game changer,” said CEO Steve
A song session at the William
Engel. “The facility allows Tamarack to
Davidson Foundation Amphitheater
offer more enriching and diverse pro-
concluded the fun-filled day signifying
grams for both our summer camp and
the start of another amazing Tamarack
outdoor educational participants.”
Camps summer.
*
24 July 21 • 2016
Eisenberg
The law firm of Erman, Teicher,
Zucker & Freedman PC in Southfield
Nationally recog-
nized accounting
and advisory firm
Baker Tilly Virchow
Krause LLP (Baker
Tilly) has named
a new tax partner,
Finegold
Paul Finegold, to
further enhance the
firm’s continuing leadership in provid-
ing specialized tax services. He has
more than 13 years of experience spe-
cializing in tax consulting and compli-
ance and primarily serves privately
held companies and their owners. He
also aids businesses with international
entity considerations and tax issues
through the firm’s Southfield office.
is pleased to announce that Dianne S.
Ruhlandt and David M. Eisenberg
have become shareholders of the firm.
Ruhlandt’s practice focuses on bank-
ruptcy and insolvency-related matters,
commercial litigation and post-judg-
ment collections. Eisenberg’s practice
concentrates on business-related insol-
vency, workout, commercial litigation
and collection matters.
Michigan League for Public Policy President and CEO Gilda Z.
Jacobs has been named one of “100 Most Influential Women in
Michigan” by Crain’s Detroit Business. Jacobs has dedicated her
life to helping others, working as a special education teacher,
helping persons with developmental disabilities and serving in
local government and as a legislator for 12 years before taking
the helm of the League in 2011.
Jacobs
Robert Labe,
a shareholder
with Williams,
Williams, Ratner
& Plunkett PC
in Birmingham,
presented on
“Planning for the
Labe
Family Business
Pre- and Post-
Death” at the recent Probate &
Estate Planning Institute. He prac-
tices in the areas of estate planning,
trusts and estates, probate disputes
and business law. Labe is a Fellow
of the American Bar Foundation
and is listed in Best Lawyers in
America, Michigan Super Lawyers
and Martindale-Hubbell Bar
Register of Preeminent Lawyers.
Scott Haber of
West Bloomfield,
a double major in
cell and molecular
biology and biomedi-
cal engineering at
the University of
Michigan, has been
Haber
named a Bonderman
Fellow by the Center
for Global and Intercultural Study. The
Bonderman Fellowship offers gradu-
ating LSA seniors $20,000 to travel
the world. They must go to six coun-
tries in two regions over the course
of eight months and are expected to
immerse themselves in independent
and enriching explorations and engage
with cultures, people and areas of the
world with which they are not familiar,
providing the opportunity to develop
entirely new perspectives.