Sunday Evening

The Council Fire has been a Camp Nebagamon custom since the earliest days of the institution. For decades and decades, it has begun with “Our camp family has now assembled.” And it has concluded with that camp family singing around a fire fed by keylogs. So sitting around that blazing fire feels a bit like claiming a spot in history. Heck, Herb Hollinger once conducted a Council Fire… about lumberjacks.

But most traditions survive with some welcome tweaks over the years. There are, in fact, some elements of a Sunday Council Fire that have evolved or changed over time. For instance:

THE TOTEM POLE

The totem pole has stood guard over the Council Fire Ring since 1936, as evidenced by the date carved into it. In the summer of 1961, it was repainted—by Lumberjack 4 and counselor Chuck Long. But by 2017, after 81 years, it was rotting considerably. So in the winter of 2017-18, the totem pole was rebuilt entirely by longtime head caretaker Andy Mack, who remained as faithful to the original as possible. Only the date is different.

THE RING

Take a look at the two photos below—from 1939 and 1949. You’ll notice two things in particular. First, the totem pole towers over the saplings that surround the area. That scene has certainly changed. Second, it was—quite literally—a Council Fire Ring. Benches all the way around. By the 1960s, the current seating configurement was in place. But in the early days, watching a Council Fire was a bit like attending a theater-in-the-round. In fact, Sally Stein remembers why: It was a horseback riding ring.

THE ENTRANCE

The act of entering the Council Fire Ring—village by village, completely silent—is a long Nebagamon tradition (the photo below is from 1962). And it’s a special one. But we’ve found a couple of references to other kinds of entrances that were… unexpected. In 1995, staff member Axel Berger made an entrance into the Paul Bunyan Day Council Fire that saw him fly from a tree with the help of an almost-invisible guide wire. And then there is this excerpt from Keeping the Fires Burning by Nardie and Sally Stein: “In early years sometimes a flaming torch or an arrow was fastened to a string reaching from the Upper Diamond to the center of the Council Fire. It slid down the string, lighting the fire, which gave a dramatic, if slightly dangerous, opening to the evening’s program.”

THE KEYLOG BOX

Keylogs to conclude Council Fires have been around forever—organic thank-you notes that become symbols of a community keeping the fires burning. But alumni who haven’t set foot in the Council Fire Ring in four decades might not be familiar with the Keylog Box where campers and staff can pick up one of those logs as they approach the Council Fire Ring.

Specifically, it’s the Matt Cohen Memorial Keylog Box. In Keeping the Fires Burning, the Steins described its creation this way: “Matt Cohen, a camper in 1979 and 1980, was the son of former camper and staff member Mike Cohen and Kathy Byrne. Matt had an incurable heart condition. His parents knew his days were numbered, but wanted to pack what time he had left with joyful experiences. And so he came to camp for two summers. Between his second and what would have been his third summer, Matt died suddenly while playing soccer. The Keylog Box is how camp has memorialized him.”

There are larger memorials. There are more widely-known memorials. But a Keylog represents heartfelt gratitude to people who made a difference in someone’s life. And the Council Fire Ring is a sacred place that keeps memories alive over generations. So there may not be a more appropriate memorial.

So a Council Fire blends decades of tradition with attempts at profundity and performance innovation. Here, several alumni recall memories from their own Council Fires:

Ron Koretz (1984): I co-wrote a Council Fire with Adam Kaplan. Yes, that Adam Kaplan. The theme of our Council Fire was victimization,” he recalled. “This was a meaningful topic for us because it symbolized that we had grown up and no longer accepted that ‘boys will be boys.’ The final scene featured the bully going to a job interview with the CEO of a now large and successful company. The CEO was, you guessed it, the guy who had been bullied as a kid. Suffice it to say the bully did not get the job!”

Michael Weinberg (1971): “My” Council Fire, on July 10, 1971, was really “our” Council Fire, as it was jointly written by several senior counselors, including me. The theme of our collaborative effort was Friendship. We opened with a recording of Carole King singing “You’ve Got a Friend”, after which, to get things going, I read a poem about friendship by A.P. Stanley. Friendship is such an integral part of the camp experience, and so emphasized throughout the season, that we had to work hard to avoid letting our message get hackneyed or cliched (and I hope we succeeded!). Highlights were a story told by Darryl Couts about a friendship between a camper and counselor that lapsed, until they were unexpectedly reunited during a frightening wartime flight; a reading by Ed Lewin of a letter from a son to his deceased dad about the son’s missed opportunities for friendship with his father when he was alive; and Ken Kanter’s recital of how the friendship of a counselor for a boy who was physically weak and introverted, and bullied by other campers, had brought the boy happiness in what was to be his last summer before dying of leukemia. Other participants in the Council Fire included Steve Lewin, Mike Stern, Dave Gibbs, Randy Hearsh and David Lapin.  We closed with — what else? — “We Shall Keep The Friends We Found Here.”

Walt Fromm (2017): I wrote a council fire about passionately trying new things. It was really important to me at the time because I was about to depart on a nine-month study abroad program that moved throughout Asia with a group of people that I didn’t know all that well. Jumping into new things is a skill I learned at camp as a boy and is the reason I was able to study abroad in Asia on what would be the most amazing educational experience of my life. My camp experience definitely helped out when I was sharing a room with six people in 90-degree Mumbai and our air conditioner broke for four days.

Irl Scissors (1993): Adam Winick and I wrote a Council Fire about friendship. Camp is full of opportunities to challenge yourself honing skills in everything from tennis to canoeing, but one of its greatest assets is the friendships you make when you are there. Our skits relayed that friendships came in all shapes, sizes, ages and they last beyond camp, onto college, marriage, and eventually new generations.

Louis Levin (2014): In 2014 I was provided the opportunity to present a Council Fire for camp, and I presented on “Go Mode”, or, how to change your mindset to accomplish goals. Being 18 and a bit of a contrarian, I tried to break the mold of scripted Council fires and opted for more of a workshop on mindset change. I had campers pair up and talk to one another about highlights from their summer, and then share back observations of the physical changes in their posture, face, hands, when they discussed successes. It was incredibly fun having 200 campers telling each other stories about their best camp moments all around the Council Fire Ring to access their own Go Mode!

Of course, Council Fires are most inspirational when they affect others. So we asked Joey Laskin to recall a powerful one from his camp years:

The Council Fire that was the most memorable to me was written by Phil Yenawine. The theme was art, which at face value is a unique topic that was out of the box from what you typically see on Sunday evenings. What made it memorable was how he involved so many kids, who mostly were younger and were not your typical Council Fire “actors.” These kids all frequented the art shack, where Phil was a staple, and they were not the most outgoing and extroverted kids at camp. To see them have an opportunity to shine in front of the camp family and show off what they are passionate about… it was so inspiring. Much like art is enhanced by collaboration, this Council Fire was enhanced by a collaborative approach with a diverse and wide ranging set of “actors.”

Camp Family News

Keep us posted! You can send life updates to Louis Levin in the Camp Nebagamon office ([email protected]) or directly to Keylog editor Brad Herzog ([email protected]).

Paul Chutkow (Highland Park, IL/Napa, CA 58-62, 64-66) is the president of Val de Grace Books, a small publishing house that he founded in 2005. A former foreign correspondent for the Associated Press and regular contributor to The New York Times, he has authored several books. His light-hearted memoir Zelda, the Queen of Paris received a Benjamin Franklin Award in 2018… Scott Silberstein (77, 79 Evanston, IL) was honored in January as the first recipient of the Chicago Dance History Project’s Maurice Seymour Award for Vision and Service. Scott is the producer and co-founder (with Matt Hoffman) of HMS Media, an Emmy Award-winning multimedia company that creates broadcast, online, and mobile content for theatre and dance companies in Chicago and nationally…

1975

Dan Feldman (St. Louis, Bethesda, MD 80-81, 83-85) has joined the Biden Administration as Chief of Staff and Counselor to John Kerry, who has been tapped as the Special Presidential Envoy for Climate… Jen Daskal (Washington D.C. 91-92, 96, 99) has been named Deputy General Counsel (Cyber and Technology) at the Department of Homeland Security… Jeff Rosenberg (Shaker Heights, OH/Los Angeles 92-97, 99) is a filmmaker who has worked on television shows such as Veep, The Good Place, and The League. He has written and directed a feature film called We Broke Up, just released on demand. It’s about a couple breaking up right before her sister’s wedding and pretending to still be together to not ruin the fun. The wedding takes place at her old summer camp, and there is an extended sequence of games lovingly referred to as… Paul Bunyan Day! Check out the trailer here.

2016

Michael Kaplan (Evanston/Los Angeles 01-05, 07-08) is an investigative producer for CBS News… Evan Dorfman (Chicago/Brooklyn 99-04) and Ben Cronin (Chicago/Brooklyn 04, 06-12) of the band Gilligan Moss released a new single, Slow Down, and a debut album. You can watch the music video hereCharles Meyer (New York City 06-11, 12) has also released new songs on streaming platforms. You can listen to “Love” and “Strongman” hereChelsea Tom (Hawaii/Los Angeles 13) is a pediatric oncology nurse at UCLA Mattel Children’s Hospital.

1953

Our productive alumni:

Jeff Schram (Boston/Lutz Florida 97-02, 04-06) and Natalie Mandel – Weston

Jessa DeGroote (Austin, TX/New Jersey 10) and Joshua Bernstein – Mara

Ryan Glasspiegel (Simsbury, CT/Chicago 96-02, 04-07, 09) and Karla Bright – Effie

Danny Cohen (Washington, D.C./Los Angeles 95-01, 03-07, 10-11) and Emily Towers – Margaret

___________

We are sad to report the following deaths:

Chuck Cohen (St. Louis 34-37, 39, 42)

Michael Cohen (St. Louis/Duluth, MN 46-54, 56)

Henry “Bunky” Harris (Cincinnati 48-55)

David Rosenblatt (Hopkins, MN 51-57)

Ted Koplar (St. Louis 53-57)

Victor Cohen (St. Louis 67-68)

Thanks for the Pines Book

Want an inspiring way to experience CN year-round? Leave it on your coffee table. There are still copies of THANKS FOR THE PINES: A Celebration of Camp Nebagamon available here. Hundreds of photos, dozens of essays, countless memories. Open it any time you’re feeling wistful.

Footsteps

As these campers roam the 77 acres of Camp Nebagamon this summer, they’ll be following in ancestral footsteps:

Sebastian & Jude Alderman (Tulsa) – father Jeff Alderman

Zander Aronoff (Englewood, CO) – father Joel Aronoff

Alexander Averbuch (Atlanta) – father Greg Averbuch

Ace & Addison Burvall (San Diego) – mother Amber Burvall

Darren & Zach Bell (Denver) – grandfather Fred Joseph

Daniel Brick (Kansas City) – father David Brick

Aaron & Max Brine (Boulder, CO) – grandfather Jon Colman

Judah Callen (Kensington, CA) – father David Callen

Jack Chait (East Hampton, NY) – father Daniel Chait

Asher Corndorf (Minneapolis) – father Eric Corndorf

Josh Desenberg (Arlington, VA) – father Jon Desenberg

Adam Eberhard (Chicago) – father Jeff Eberhard

Evan Friedman (Chicago) – grandfather Bud Friedman

Emmitt Gerstein (Washington, D.C.) – father Jim Gerstein

Mark Gingiss (Buffalo Grove, IL) — Father Dan Gingiss

Max & Will Goldfarb (Bellaire, TX) – father David Goldfarb

Matthew Gordon (Deerfield, IL) – father Andrew Gordon

Charlie Goshko (Washington, D.C.) – father Matt Goshko

Will Gray (Deerfield, IL) – father Josh Gray, grandfather Jim Gray

Benjamin Green (Northbrook, IL) – father Howard Green

Jacob Greenwald (Atlanta) – father Keith Greenwald

Ari Held (Silver Spring, MD) – father Larry Held

Gabriel Heller (New York City) – father John Heller

Eli Hoffman (Lexington, KY) – father Mark Hoffman

Adam Kaufman (Anchorage, AK) – father Bob Kaufman

Simon Kessler (Washington, D.C.) – father Eric Kessler

Stanley & Stafford Klein (Northbrook, IL) – father Spencer Klein

Chase Kornblet (Glenview, IL) – father Ben Kornblet

Max Kotin (Chicago) – father Josh Kotin

Benjamin & Jacob Laytin (Chicago) – father Dan Laytin, grandfather Bill Laytin

David Levick (Chicago) – father Michael Levick

Edge Levine (New Orleans) – grandfather Arthur Pulitzer

Benjamin Mack (Washington, D.C.) – father Andy Mack, grandfather Alan Mack

Ryan Mack (Bedford Hills, NY) – father Ken Mack, grandfather Alan Mack

Avi Maidenberg (Oakland, CA) – father Daniel Maidenberg, grandfather Mike Maidenberg

Ezra Maidenberg (Oakland, CA) – father Joe Maidenberg, grandfather Mike Maidenberg

Josh Marcus (Chicago) – mother Jill Kiersky Marcus, grandfather Jim Kiersky

Holden May (Germantown, TN) – father Jonathan May

Sam Montag (Atlanta) – father John Montag

Will Needlman (Evanston, IL) – father Randy Needlman

Bokai Portis (Evanston, IL) – father Charlie Portis

Zach Riven (Dallas) – father Jay Riven, grandfather Steve Riven

Jacob Rolfe (Highland Park, IL) – father Jim Rolfe, grandfather Mike Rolfe

Graham Rontal (Portland, OR) – father Andrew Rontal

Jonah Rontal (Huntington Woods, MI) – father Matt Rontal

Myles Rontal (Birmingham, MI) – father Dan Rontal

Sebastian Rorsted (Pöcking, Germany) – father Kasper Rorsted, grandfather Bendt Rorsted

Micah Rosenbloom (Nashville) – father Trent Rosenbloom

Sidney & Lazer Rosenbloom (Brooklyn, NY) — father Brice Rosenbloom

Zachary & Kai Ruwitch (Shanghai, China) – father John Ruwitch, grandfather Joe Ruwitch

Danny Schottenstein (Tiburon, CA) – father Jeff Schottenstein

Griffin & Dylan Scissors (St. Louis) – father Irl Scissors

William Schwarz (Woodbury, MN) – father Edward Schwarz, grandfather Roy Schwarz

Logan Segal (Edina, MN) – father Mark Segal

Brett Sholiton (San Antonio, TX) – father Mike Sholiton

Matan and Sagiv Siegel (Stamford, CT) – father Michael Siegel

Benji & Jacob Solomon (New York City) – father Josh Solomon

Nathan & Seth Starhill (Arlington, MA) – father Jon Star, grandfather Frank Star

Eli Terman (Chicago) – grandfather Tom Philipsborn

Asher & Tanner Toback (Chicago) – mother Keri Rosenbloom

Jonah Tone – (Cabin John, MD) – grandfather Joel Salon Jr., great grandfather Joel Salon Sr.

Jake Wallenstein (Issaquah, WA) – father Chet Wallenstein, grandparents Roger & Judy Wallenstein

Murray Wieseneck (Iowa City, IA) – father David Wieseneck

Dax Winegarden (Ann Arbor, MI) – father Jay Winegarden, mother Lisa Markman

Charlie Zeeck (Oklahoma City) – father Andy Zeeck

Thank You, Donors

The Camp Nebagamon Charities website www.cncharities.org is dedicated to both the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund (CNSF) and Camperships For Nebagamon (CFN). Learn about different donation options, read about each charity, and more.

New Level of Alumni Support for Nebagamon-Affiliated Charities

Nebagamon’s alumni community has stepped up support for our affiliated charities in recent years in meaningful ways. In addition to generous direct support for both Camperships for Nebagamon and the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund, alumni have increasingly encouraged donations to one or both funds as memorials and to honor happy occasions. Camp Nebagamon Charities also instituted a virtual keylog program, a means of giving while thanking someone special (you can donate and fill out a message here). Contributions are split evenly between Nebagamon’s two affiliated charities. You will receive two separate emails confirming your contribution to each fund. If you’d like to give a unique donation to CFN or CNSF of if you’d like to give a gift in honor or memory of someone, please use the CFN-specific and CNSF-specific donation pages.

Recent Donors to the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund

Recent generous donations to the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund (CNSF) helped 224 kids attend non-profit camps in the summer of 2019. CNSF helps children and teens who experience poverty and disability attend non-profit summer camps that specialize in meeting their needs. Recipient camps (located near communities where Nebagamon campers live) offer expert therapeutic and adaptive recreation and a nurturing environment for kids who have been exposed to adversity and trauma. Children are among peers and role models for success at these camps as they enjoy friendship, adventure and personal growth — opening new possibilities for a more positive future.

CNSF was founded in 1947 by Muggs and Janet Lorber, Nebagamon’s founding directors, and administered for 50+ years by Nebagamon’s former directors, Nardie and Sally Lorber Stein. Check out our Instagram and Facebook page to learn more!

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The following individuals, foundations, and corporations supported CNSF from November 1, 2020, through April 30, 2021:

Steve Addison
Chuck and Ruth Adler
Jeffrey and Kelly Alderman
Amazon Smile Foundation
Anonymous
Pam and Tom Arenberg
Susan Arenberg
Art and Marian Auer
Deb and Joe Badt
Andrew and Elizabeth Baer
Nancy and Richard Baer
Dmitry Balyasny
Kathy and Stuart Barnett
Bob and Linda Barrows
Charlie Barrows
Jim and June Baumoel
Allen Bennett
Babs and Bob Benton
Big Lots! (Matching Gift)
The Peter Bloch Family
Lisa and Paul Blumberg
Jim Blumenfeld and Chris Cooney
Ronald Borod
Elizabeth and John Breyer, Jr.
Dale Brodsky
Matt Brody
Ann and Ken Brown
Mark Caro and Mary Dixon
Bob and Stacie Chukerman
Andrew Joseph (Andy) Cohen
Carol Bayersdorfer Cohen and Ed Cohen
Mitch Cohen and Stephanie Tomasky
Bonnie and Mike Cole
Jeff Colman and Ellen Nissenbaum
Louis Coppersmith
Jim and Suzy Cornbleet
Stuart Cowles
Carla and David Crane
Charles Dan
Jennifer Daskal
Gene Dattel and Licia Hahn
Jerry Dattel
Becky and Raven Deerwater
Bill and Leann Dexter
Jessie and Scott Diamond
Lou and Marilyn Diamond
David Dreifus and Jennifer Sosensky
Jed Dreifus
Jon Dreifus
Bill Dubinsky and Elizabeth Moss
Bob Dubinsky and Sarah Rubenstein
Ellen and Henry Dubinsky
Jim Feldman and Christine Taylor
Mary and Richard Fisher
Amy Foxman
Brad Foxman
Marjorie and Terry Franc
Cindy and Steve Frank
Bill and Laura Freeman
Bud and Julie Friedman
Jodi and Matt Friedman
Greg and Osnat Gafni-Pappas
Betsy and Spencer Garland
Alan Geismer, Jr.
Aliza and Jim Gerstein
Ricky Gitt
Bob and Susan Glasspiegel
Karla Bright and Ryan Glasspiegel
Lindsay and Michael Goldberg
Bill and Susan Goldenberg
Elaine and Mike Goldman
Jonathan Goldstein
Jim and Martha Gray
Josh Gray
Roger Greenbaum
Doug Greene Family Foundation
Scott and Sheliah Gruber
Debbie and Paul Guggenheim
Alan and Julie Halpern
Ted Harris
John Hart and Carol Prins
Paula Hassinger
Sara Feinstein and Larry Held
Oliver Held
Barnett and Shirley Helzberg, Jr. Foundation
Jaime Hensel
Alice and Joe Herz
Bob and Karen Herz
Bud and Hazel Herzog
Anna Hess
Hirsch-Schwartz Foundation
Ellyn and Matt Hoffman
Cathy Ann Kaufman Iger and Mark Iger
Dina and Steve Isaacs
Dan Jackson
Carol and Joel Jankowsky
Craig and Shari Jankowsky
Anne and Fred Joseph III
Ed Juda
Caryn and Harlan Kahn
John Kander
Ken Kanter
Stephanie Hanson and Adam Kaplan
Nathalie Feldman and Andy Kaplan
Cheryl Bondy Kaplan and Mark Kaplan
Jennifer Gilbert-Kaufmann and Robert Kaufmann
Euan and Jane Kerr
Malcolm Kerr
Sarah Kerr
Wendy Bloom and Arthur Kessler
Barbara and Dennis Kessler
Carol Kiersky
Stephen and Yael Klein Family Foundation
Jeff Kohn
Bud Kolbrener II
Rick and Stephanie Koretz
Andrea and Brian Kramer
Danielle Brinker and John Kramer
Janet C. Koestring and John Kupper
Emily and Michael Laskin
Marc Lawrence (Modestus Bauer Foundation)
Nancy Laytin
Bob and Cissy Lenobel
Jeff Levinson
Lia Grigg and Dan Levis
Hoagie Lippman
Courtney and Eddie Loeb
Steve Loeb
Richard Lowenthal
Donn and Michele Lux
Ted Silberstein and Jackie Mack
Ken and Laura Mack
Reed Maidenberg
Jorie and Robby Malk
Andrew and Jill Marcus
Nancy Marcus
Nancy Brown, M.D. and Andrew May
Jack and Lynn May Foundation
Matt and Norah Meadows
Medtronics (Matching Gift)
Jeff and Mary Kate Mellow
Bob and Susan Mendelsohn
Julia Gittleman, Ph.D. and Tom Mendelsohn
David and Deborah Mendelson
Misa Galazzi and David Michel
Jean Middleton
Malcolm and Paula Milsten
John and Sally Mitani
Erika and John Montag
Jamie and Leah Myers
Kristin Ahlberg and Phil Myers
Bill Nefsky
Bob and Mary Nefsky
Network for Good
Rick Cohn and Ben Neuman
Buzz Neusteter and Judi Perrill
Brule & Thad Kurowski and Katy Neusteter
Lee Anne Hartley and Tom Nevers
Geraldine and Jay Newmark
Robert Oppenheimer
PepsiCo (Matching Gifts)
Laurie and Todd Platt
Jerry and Jill Polacheck
Jennifer Pritzker, IL ARNG (Ret)
David and Kim Reich
Frank and Joan Revson
Hana Ruzicka Rivkin and Steven Rivkin
Don Robertson
Janet and Lee Rodgers
Cindy and Jon Rogen
Anthony and Marya Rose
Jim and Sherri Rosen
Carol Rosenblatt
Ellie and Trent Rosenbloom
Keri Rosenbloom and Jonathan Tobak
John and Nancy Ross
Lauren Katz and Joel Rubenstein
Gail G. Ifshin and Steven Salky
Mike Samuels
Laury and Lewis Scharff
Lee and Martha Schimberg
Bennett and Shelley Schmidt
Wendy Schoppert
Lynn and Max Schrayer
Carol and Jeff Schulman
Andrew Schwarz
Ed and Laura Schwarz
Monique and Robert Schweich
Glenda and Jim Seldin
Colleen Carroll and Mitch Semel
Joe and Sara Shacter
Jodi and Tom Shapira
Susie Ansehl and Rand Shapiro
Allan and Judy Sher
Bob and Natalie Silverman
Linda and Ron Sklar
Grace Slosburg
Krista Nelson and Tucker Slosburg
Michael Sobel
Geula and Josh Solomon
Nancy Chasen and Don Spero
Frank Star
Elena Stein
Nardie and Sally Stein
Perrin and Ted Stein
Elise and Richard Steinbaum
Corky and Rick Steiner Family Foundation
Ann and Will Stern
Alexandra Ackerman and David Stern
David Stern and Mary Elizabeth Calhoon Stern
Emily Glasser and Bill Susman
Brian and Carolyn Swett
TAWANI Foundation
Alan and Jo Anne Travis
Madge Treeger
Viasat, Inc. (Matching Gift)
Judy and Roger Wallenstein
Esther Starrels and John Wasserman
David and Michelle Weber
Michael Weinberg (II)
Cathy and Craig Weiss
Hank Wineman
Henry (Hank) and Trudi Wineman
Adam and Deborah Winick
Michael Woldenberg
Lee Wurtzburger
Emily and Jason Yale
David Zalk
Cory Zigler
Judy and Lon Zimmerman
John Zuraw

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Recent Donors to Camperships for Nebagamon

Camperships for Nebagamon (CFN) was established in 1995 to enable children who would not otherwise have the opportunity to have a camping experience. Over the years, the CFN endowment fund has provided camperships for boys to attend Nebagamon and girls to attend Camp WeHaKee. Campers receiving camperships help to diversify their camp communities by virtue of their racial, ethnic, religious and socioeconomic status. In addition, CFN continues the tradition of support to sons and grandsons of Nebagamon alumni who demonstrate financial need.

Over the past decade, more than 500 Camperships have been given out to more than 250 boys and girls attending Nebagamon and WeHaKee. Over $2 million has gone to support the cost of tuition and related expenses for these boys and girls.

The following individuals, foundation, and corporations supported CFN from November 1, 2020, through April 30, 2021:

Keith Abeles and Amy Levin
Steve Addison
Richard Allman
Amazon Smile Foundation
Anonymous
Pam and Tom Arenberg
Jeanne and Michael Aronoff
Art and Marian Auer
Deb and Joe Badt
Andrew and Elizabeth Baer
Camilla and Frank Baer
Nancy and Richard Baer
David and Karen Balser Family
Bob and Linda Barrows
Charlie Barrows
Jim and June Baumoel
Allen Bennett
Bert and Joan Berkley
Rita Bernstein
Simon and Susan Blattner
Bob Bloom and Alison Kamine
Susan and Tony Blumberg
Jim Blumenfeld and Chris Cooney
Adam and Julie Braude
Elizabeth and John Breyer Jr.
Hugh Broder
Dale Brodsky
Ann and Ken Brown
Spencer Brown
Jean and Mark Burnstine
Mark Caro and Mary Dixon
Marcia and Mark Cherniack
Bob and Stacie Chukerman
Andrew Joseph (Andy) Cohen
Andy Cohen
Carol Bayersdorfer Cohen and Ed Cohen
Ellie Cohen
Mitch Cohen and Stephanie Tomasky
Ralph Cohen
Patricia and Richard Cohn Family
Bonnie and Mike Cole
Kevin Cole
Michael Coletta
Jeff Colman and Ellen Nissenbaum
Louis Coppersmith
Hank Crane
Jennifer Daskal
Jane Davis
Becky and Raven Deerwater
Bill and Leann Dexter
Jessie and Scott Diamond
David Dreifus and Jennifer Sosensky
Luise Drolson
Bill Dubinsky and Elizabeth Moss
Bob Dubinsky and Sarah Rubenstein
Adam Eberhard
Judy-Ann Ehrlich
Deborah and Joe Eppstein
Peter Fechheimer and Jeannette F. McNeil
Kelli Cohen Fein, M.D. and Marty Fein
Jim Feldman and Christine Taylor
Brad Foxman
Adam Frapart
Bill and Laura Freeman
Barbara and Richard Fried
Bill Friedman and Marissa Jones
Bud and Julie Friedman
Jodi and Matt Friedman
Lisa and Steve Friedman
Greg and Osnat Gafni-Pappas
Judy Garfinkel
Betsy and Spencer Garland
Gartner (Matching Gift)
Alan Geismer, Jr.
Samuel Gellman
Scott Genshaft
Laurie Bruder and Tom Gerson
Glenn and Phyllis Gerstell
David and Ellen Gibbs
Ricky Gitt
Bill and Sandy Glassman
Bob and Susan Glasspiegel
Karla Bright and Ryan Glasspiegel
Bill and Susan Goldenberg
Chad and Debbie Goldenberg
Thomas Goldman
Malcolm and Mildred B. Goldsmith
Jonathan Goldstein
GOOGLE, Inc. (Matching Gifts)
Jerrold and Martha Graber
Marty Gradman
Janice Anderson and Tom Gram
Jesse Gray
Jim and Martha Gray
Josh Gray
Doug Greene Family
Debbie and Paul Guggenheim
Marc Gurstel
Jon and Judith Harris
Paula Hassinger
Mike Heldman
Jaime Hensel
Amie and Fred Herbert
Alice and Joe Herz
Barbara Herz
Bob and Karen Herz
Amy and Brian Herzog
Bud and Hazel Herzog
Charles and Cynthia Hirschhorn
Jason Hirschhorn
Jennifer Hodges
Anne Ledell-Hong and Nathaniel Hong
Nancy Mendelsohn, M.D. and Jay Horvath
Jim and Marybeth Hucker
Cathy Ann Kaufman Iger and Mark Iger
Derek Iger
Helaine and Warner Isaacs
Amy and Craig Jacobs
Craig and Shari Jankowsky
Joe Jankowsky
Kathy and Mike Jay
Anne and Fred Joseph, III
Ed Juda
Bob and Fiona Kahn
Caryn and Harlan Kahn
Diane and John Kalishman
Ben and Melinda Kanter
Daniel, Noah & Suzanne Kanter
Ken Kanter
Stephanie Hanson and Adam Kaplan
Cheryl Bondy Kaplan and Mark Kaplan
Alex Katz
Benjamin Katz
Jennifer Gilbert-Kaufmann and Robert Kaufmann
Leo Kayser III
Euan and Jane Kerr
Heide and Jim Klein
Tom Kolbrener
Bud Kolbrener II
Rick and Stephanie Koretz
Claudia Simons and Alan Korn
Andrea and Brian Kramer
Danielle Brinker and John Kramer
Marc Lawrence (Modestus Bauer Foundation)
Dan Laytin
Nancy Laytin
Eli Lehrer
Bob and Cissy Lenobel
Jeff Levinson
Lia Grigg and Dan Levis
Joshua Levy
Drew Lieberman and Randi Shafton
Hoagie Lippman
Henry Docter and Elizabeth Loeb
Tom Loeb
Ken and Laura Mack
Jorie and Robby Malk
The Reggi Marder Foundation
Dru Margolin
Julie and Steve Mathes
Robert Matz and Peggy Warner
Trace McCreary
Matt and Norah Meadows
Jeff and Mary Kate Mellow
Joe Mendels
Bill Mendelsohn and Peggy Tracy
Don and Marji Mendelsohn
Jim Mendelsohn
Lauren Martini and Matthew Mendelsohn
Julia Gittleman, Ph.D. and Tom Mendelsohn
Audrey and Danny Meyer
Nancy Meyer and Marc Weiss
Misa Galazzi and David Michel
Dick and Nancy Milsten
Leslie and Stuart Milsten
Malcolm and Paula Milsten
Ann and Gary Mollengarden
Zach Mollengarden
Mike and Teena Myers
Jeffrey Nefouse
Bill Nefsky
Bob and Mary Nefsky
Jeff Neuman and Cynthia Wachtell
Buzz Neusteter and Judi Perrill
Brule & Thad Kurowski and Katy Neusteter
Andy and Peggy Newman
Geraldine and Jay Newmark
Chi Nguyen
Gail and Sean O’Connor
Robert Oppenheimer
PepsiCo Foundation (Matching Gifts)
Betty and Tom Philipsborn
Laurie and Todd Platt
Kevin and Rita Powers
Jennifer Pritzker, IL ARNG (Ret)
Marcia Kaplan, M.D. and Michael Privitera, M.D.
Laurin and Mindy Quiat
Cindy and Jon Rogen
Alyne and Jim Rolfe
Andy and Cynthia Rolfe
Anthony and Marya Rose
Jim and Sherri Rosen
Carol Rosenblatt
Kathy and Skip Rosenblatt
Ellie and Trent Rosenbloom
Keri Rosenbloom and Jonathan Tobak
Joseph Rosenbloom III
Carol and Roger Rosenthal
Lauren Katz and Joel Rubenstein
Trish Russell
Chris and Frank Sachs
David Sachs
Stephen Sachs
Gail G. Ifshin and Steven Salky
Erin and Seth Salomon
Dan and Dawn Saltzstein
Mike Samuels
Ruth Sang
John Sawyer
James and Tiffany Scharff
Jon and Sue Scharff
Laury and Lewis Scharff
Sue Ann Schiff
Marily and Spike Schonthal, Jr
Fred and Pat Schonwald, Jr.
Wendy Schoppert
Lynn and Max Schrayer
Carol and Jeff Schulman
Andrew and Debbie Schwartz
Monique and Robert Schweich
Lee and Mark Scissors
Joanne Grossman and John Seesel
Judith and Mark Segal
Colleen Carroll and Mitch Semel
Joe and Sara Shacter
Susie Ansehl and Rand Shapiro
Allan and Judy Sher
Joseph Shlaferman and Judy Zins
Ashley and Mike Sholiton
Bob and Natalie Silverman
Irwin and Patti Silverman
Kevin Silverman
Stephanie Rivkin and Joel Sircus
Linda and Ron Sklar
Grace Slosburg
Krista Nelson and Tucker Slosburg
Bob and Sue Smith
Julie and Rick Smith
Geula and Josh Solomon
Nancy Chasen and Don Spero
Elena Stein
Perrin and Ted Stein
Sally and Nardie Stein
Elise and Richard Steinbaum
John Stephenson and Karin Susens
Ann and Will Stern
David Stern and Mary Elizabeth Calhoon Stern
Barney and Nancy Straus, Jr.
Debra Levis and Emanuel Tabachnik
TAWANI Foundation
The Pittsburgh Foundation
Leslie Milsten Thornton
Jim and Merryl Tisch
Michael and Pegi Touff
Madge Treeger
Jeff Trenton
Beth and Phil Trout
Loris and Robert Ungar
UHG – United Health Group (Matching Gifts)
Viasat, Inc. (Matching Gift)
Judy and Roger Wallenstein
Esther Starrels and John Wasserman
David and Michelle Weber
Tom Weinberg
Michael Weinberg II
Cathy and Craig Weiss
Nancy Werthan
Jordan White
Hank Wineman
Adam and Deborah Winick
Stephen Woldenberg
Joanne and Trip Wolf
Lee Wurtzburger
Emily and Jason Yale
Carol and Michael Yunker
Cory Zigler
Judy and Lon Zimmerman

Total Recall

How does one mark the passage of time during a camp summer? Is it a matter of acknowledging the days? Sunday services, Monday cookouts, Cruiser Day, Paul Bunyan Day… Is it weeks or sessions? Four-week campers, eight-week campers… No, when I really think about it, and when most of us look back on our Northwoods summers, I would suggest that it’s mostly a matter of moments. Here at Camp Nebagamon, we’re in the business of making memories — one moment at a time.

Years later, those moments come back into our thoughts in various ways. It may be a discovery of long-forgotten camp artifacts, a spark of recall regarding an unforgettable trip to camp, a past-and-present encounter that calls for a discussion of camp’s highlights, or photos that bring us back years or decades to a particular time and place. You can find all of those in this MEMORIES-themed issue of The Keylog.

But each of us has those memory moments filed in our brain. Password: 54849. Sometimes they reflect seminal moments in our camp experience; sometimes it’s just a recollection of something goofy or spontaneous or life-affirming. By way of example, off the top of my head, here are a handful of moments that rush into my mind when I open the floodgates:

Moment #1: Despite the fact that I have turned into a relatively nice adult, I was not always a nice kid — so much so, that one of my most important and detailed memories of my camp experience…of my childhood…was a meeting in the Lumberjack Push Shack during my 8th grade summer with Nardie and Sally. I vividly remember being summoned there by my village director that afternoon. I had a small sense of dread as talks with him were never pleasant. But when I opened the door and saw Sally and Nardie sitting there, a whole new level of dread set in. This was the big one…I braced myself to hear a litany of examples of what I had done wrong and an order to pack my bags. As it turned out, this was not a meeting to enumerate my numerous incidents of poor behavior. Quite the opposite really. It was a meeting in which my camp directors told me that they saw within me the makings of someone special and a good leader. They wanted me to know that they saw the potential in me and really challenged me to find that potential and live up to its promise. My Nebagamon career — and without exaggeration, my life — changed in that moment. I promised myself, and my camp directors, that I would do better….be better. And ever since that day, I have tried to do so. (And it didn’t hurt that they also informed me that if I didn’t start to move in the direction of reaching my potential, I would be sent home early and not be welcomed back to Nebagamon again!!)

Nardie and Sally, 1980

Moment #2: I was not a big tripper by any stretch of the imagination. Truth be told, I used to take one trip each session just to keep my counselors off my back.  By the time I was a 9th grade camper, I had never even ventured into the Boundary Waters. I finally decided to go. As anyone who works in the camp office will tell you, to this day, I remain proud of my Round-to-Kawishiwi six-day trip. I can tell you where we camped, the length of the portages, and all of the members of the trip. It is a memory burned into my brain. I specifically remember an afternoon at an island campsite on Little Saganaga Lake….when nothing special happened. Just a group of guys sitting around on the rocks all afternoon having fun and telling stories. Again, not a particularly remarkable experience, but, to this day, one of my most important experiences in nature.

Trippers, 1996

Moment #3: Cruiser Days are always punctuation marks in a camper’s experience. Having said that, by the time one becomes a Lumberjack, it can be hard to fully buy into yet another Star Wars Day on Cruiser Day! Our counselors that week decided that we would try something new. A true CRUISE-er Day. We would paddle across Lake Nebagamon and up the Minnesuing Creek all the way to Lake Minnesuing itself. To be clear, the Minnesuing Creek is very much that… a creek. It is not really conducive to paddling. So the day was a challenging one. From portaging over countless fallen logs, to mosquito infestations, to more leeches than any of us had ever experienced, the day was full of things to test our mettle and dampen our spirits. And yet, when we finally reached Lake Minnesuing, we felt as though we were Lewis and Clark (except that we actually found what we sought!) Our celebratory feast of soggy peanut butter and jelly sandwiches was one of the best meals I have ever eaten.

On Lake Nebagamon, 1983

Moment #4: My full circle memory as a counselor involves a very challenging camper from Denver. He was a bright guy and not without charm and promise, but he just seemed to have trouble being kind to the others around him. From bullying episodes, to unkind jokes that were meant to hurt, to acts of vandalism around camp, this guy just was not cutting it as a camper… So, I invited him to meet with me in… the Lumberjack Push Shack. It was there that told him that I saw within him the makings of someone special and a good leader. I wanted him to know that I saw the potential in him and really challenged him to find that potential and live up to its promise. He took what I said to heart and had a great final two summers at camp, working to be that person that he knew was inside. He became an outstanding counselor, and we are still close to this day.  (And it didn’t hurt that I also informed him that if he didn’t start to move in the direction of reaching his potential, he would be sent home early and not be welcomed back to Nebagamon again!!)

Thanks for the Pines book

Want an inspiring way to experience CN year-round? Leave it on your coffee table. There are still copies of THANKS FOR THE PINES: A Celebration of Camp Nebagamon available here. Hundreds of photos, dozens of essays, countless memories. Open it any time your feeling wistful.

Camp Family News

Keep us posted! You can send life updates to Louis Levin in the Camp Nebagamon office ([email protected]) or directly to Keylog editor Brad Herzog ([email protected]).

Ken Lewis (Prospect, KY 61, 75) is a liquor retailer and entrepreneur who owns the New Riff distillery in Newport, KY, known for its rye whiskey blends… Brian Herzog (Highland Park, IL 78-83, 85-89) and Chad Goldenberg (Hopkins, MN 78-83, 85-89) are partners in a business called Hotel Staffing Solutions, headquartered in Northbrook, IL… Brad Herzog (Deerfield, IL/Pacific Grove, CA) has published a new book, DETOUR: A Cross-Country Drive Through America’s Wrong Turns, which includes a few pages about a familiar 77 acres in Wisconsin. You can read more about it hereJustin Karbel (Detroit/Stamford, CT 79-83) is Managing Director of Land n Sea, a New York-based apparel manufacturer, where he has worked for 20 years… Jay Sternberg (Bethesda, MD 82-86, 89-90, 95) lives in Maryland with his wife and two sons. For the past five years, he has served as Vice President of Marketing for Operation Homefront, a national nonprofit serving America’s military families… Jill Kiersky Marcus (Chicago 89-95) started a new job as Assistant Professor, Family Medicine at Rush University in Chicago… Kim Swenson (Superior, WI/Hong Kong 89-97, 01) is the communications lead in corporate real estate at HSBC in Hong Kong.

Lumberjack 1, 1977

Amber Burvall (San Diego 99, 12-19) is a lactation consultant at Sharp Healthcare and also runs a private practice visiting new moms at home. She also started her own handmade swimwear and lingerie business called Surfmade in San Diego… Robby Balikov (Chicago/Bloomington, IN 01-06, 08-11) is currently getting his MBA at Indiana University’s Kelley Business School…Recently engaged Max Sapiro (Englewood, CO/Park City, UT 02-07, 09-12) owns a couple of stores called Double Diamond Shoes – one in Park City and one in Vail, Colorado… Jaime Hensel (Atlanta/Minneapolis 05-09, 11-13, 17) has accepted a job with the pain and palliative care department at Children’s Minnesota… Luca Bacci (Highland Park, IL/Minneapolis 06-07, 09-12, 14), who was recently married, is territory manager for KEEN footwear… Walt Fromm (Kansas City/Minneapolis 06-12, 14-15, 17, 19) is co-founding The People’s Canvass, which is a progressive organization that is set to be the biggest deep canvassing operation in the country.

Logger 4, 1997

Bailey Aro Hutchence (Duluth 08-10, 12) and Joe Hutchence (Duluth 07-12) who met at camp a dozen years ago, recently launched a new business called Cedar Bound, which offers buildable cabin kits nationwide… Margeaux Settinerri (Lake Hawea, New Zealand 13-16) is happily trapped near the New Zealand city of Wanaka, where she has been working as a canyoning guide for the past three summers. When she’s not canyoning, she is helping organize local festivals and developing her meditation practice… Todd Ahlers (Chicago/Winter Park, CO  16-18) spent the summer fighting wildfires for the Cedar City Hotshots based out of Cedar City, UT… Zach Sullivan (Duluth 16, 18) has been creating adventure bags for biking and other outdoor activities… Kate Bennett (Columbus, OH 17-19 ) is finishing up her final months at Mount Carmel School of Nursing in Columbus, Ohio, including clinical training in the ICU with COVID patients… Matthew Wihelm (Wausau, WI/Burnsville, North Carolina 17-19) has been teaching at Arthur Morgan School, a partial boarding middle school in Burnsville, North Carolina.

Hodag, 2007

________

Our productive alumni:

Bill Reichert (Cincinnati/Dubai 78-83, 85) and Olga Khlusova – Thomas

Andrew Oshman (Dallas 85-88) and Amy Oshman – Nola

Brian Neil (Denver 95-00, 02-04) and Jessica Neil – Max

Daniel Abrams (Deerfield, IL 99-05, 07-08) and Rhonda Abrams – twins Jennie and Quinn

Peter Stein (Memphis/Durham 98-02, 11) and Lizzy Stokes-Cawley – Eli

Elisa Noble (Minneapolis 09-11) and Luke Noble – Jack

Kathryn Korchak (Gallagher) (Lake Nebagamon/Minneapolis 09-11, 15) and Kostiantyn Korchak – Vira

________

We are sad to report the following deaths:

Bud Meissner (St. Louis) 33-34. 

Harris Frank (St. Louis) 36-37, 40-42

Leo Bearman (Memphis) 45-54, 56

Tom Gidwitz (Chicago/Nantucket, MA) 63-67

Sue Weisner (Superior/Englewood, FL) 67-69. *Note: In 1969, as director of what was then known as the craftshop, Sue was camp’s first female head of program.

Gordon “Gordy” Westlund (Lake Nebagamon/Superior) CN head caretaker from 1973-95

Found Treasures

by Brad Herzog

I can’t think of camp without thinking of keepsakes. I’ve often said that the vast majority of my childhood memories seem to revolve around the nine weeks a year (family camp counts!) that I spent in the Northwoods. But keepsakes are valuable to assist in maintaining those memories, sort of the way a grainy home movie might remind you of the trip you took to Disney World at age seven.

So one of my prized possessions is a Ziploc bag brimming with letters from camp. Naturally, my mom saved them all. I know I’m not the only guy my age who still has them. Andy Cohen, who experienced the same six camper summers as I, even printed some of his saved letters in his memoir, Most Talkative, and read a few of them on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. And for his 40th birthday about a dozen years ago, his friends produced a video for him showing a few of his famous pals — the likes of Jerry Seinfeld and Liam Neeson — hilariously reading some of those letters aloud.

And my six-year cabinmate, Jonathan Ringel, saved some letters, too. One of them has proven to confirm a vital memory to me. You see, on a cabin trip as a Swamper in 1978, I caught what wound up being the biggest fish snagged all summer — an impressive northern pike. Remarkably, a photograph exists of me holding a fishing pole bent dramatically. Just as remarkably, the photo doesn’t show the darn fish! The proof of the biggest fish I’ve ever caught is missing. In fact, I even reference it at the beginning of a TED talk I gave several years ago about “Catching Creative Ideas” — as an example of how we’re sometimes forced to use our imagination.

So the idea for a talk about ideas began with the above frustrating photo. But thanks to Jonathan Ringel, I finally have firsthand confirmation. Jonathan sent me a letter he came across… and there it is! In writing! “Brad Herzog caught a 20 inch fish.” Sure, for years I’ve been recalling it as a 24-incher. But still… proof.

So what a find it is when we come across something unexpected from our past, something to spark a memory, something to take you back in time to a moment that is suddenly vivid in your recollection. Frankly, this happens every time I return to visit my parents in the house in which I grew up in Deerfield, Illinois. I spent much of my time there sifting through about 50 years of collected stuff — in old files, in basement boxes, etc. I consider it “decluttering.” My parents, given my frequent “did you even know you had this?” admonitions, consider it rather annoying. But really, I’m exploring. I’m seeking out hidden treasures.

It’s a tall task, a bit like trying to make sense of the the stuff brimming in the Big House… and the Wanegan… and the Herb Hollinger Museum. A sort of organized chaos. But, actually, it’s an apt comparison. Why? Because amid the generations of materials (much of which could be easily discarded), I came across an unexpected treasure. It came in the form of a large envelope of Nebaga-memorabilia that had been saved by my dad, Buddy Herzog. So what do you find when you dive into the stuff that Bud Herzog saved during his nearly six-decade association with Camp Nebagamon? What kind of memories were saved? Let’s take a look:

There were old photos — cabin pics, staff photos, my father and his good pal (the late Al Goldman) livening up a Follies, my father and grandfather standing next to the Council Ring in its 1952 iteration — but there were also some really cool keepsakes. I found, for instance, a couple of staff contracts — to be a C.I.T. in 1957 and a first-year junior counselor in 1958 — signed by Max J. Lorber and Bud Herzog. The C.I.T. stint was unpaid, the J.C. job nearly so — $75 was his salary. “You’re signature on this contract,” it read, “implies that you are satisfied with it.” I’m sure it was gleefully signed.

Equally fascinating to me was another find — the actual scripts from both a Sunday Service and a Council Fire at the beginning of the 1960s. Bud and Al did the Sunday Service together, a sort of farewell after several years on staff. They called it “This We Have Gained,” and it was about “gains which are noticed only after a relatively long period of time” — the Nebagamon experience “of a more hidden, intangible nature” in which “values are concerned with relationship between people…” That was in 1961. Many of my father’s camp relationships still thrive 59 years later.

Also in the treasure box, a photograph of Andy Rinde, autographed by the man himself. Rinde was a legend at camp, a staff member from 1937 to 1963. That’s Rinde, as in Rinde Ball. So it’s kind of like having an autographed picture of Rudolf Diesel or Louis Braille or Charles Boycott. Kind of.

Another photograph find dates back to 1967, a rather blurry pic of my dad standing beneath the “Camp Nebagamon” sign during one of his first forays into family camp. It was the start of a tradition that is one of the most meaningful in his life — he’s a been a family camper for something like 45 of the past 50 years. But what’s particularly intriguing about the photo is this: You’ll notice no Paul Bunyan in the background. It was that fleeting moment between Pauls.

Also saved with care over the years were a couple of letters from Muggs Lorber himself, including one in which he expresses his pleasure at meeting Bud’s five-year-old twin sons Brian and Brad and another quick note from several years later, in 1981, less than a year before he passed away. That solemn occasion was marked by two final artifacts. One was a copy of Nardie Stein’s marvelous eulogy (on March 21, 1982), which included these sentences: “It is said that we mortals live in hope and die in despair; that men are only dreamers who reach for the stars. We remember today a person who early in life looked up, saw what he wanted to do, and then did it.”

And finally, I found a typewritten letter written from Bud Herzog to Janet Lorber in Miami Beach soon after: “I remember when I was at the University of Michigan one of my assignments was to write a paper about the man that I most admired. I chose to write this paper on Muggs Lorber… Muggs had the uncanny ability when talking to an individual, whether this individual be eight years old or 68 years old, to instill.. the feeling that Muggs was totally interested in the person… He made you feel special. He made you feel that you were the most important person at that moment in Muggs’s life.”

So that’s what camp keepsakes offer. A recollection of an impactful scene, a proud moment, an unforgettable mentor, a valued emotion. I placed the above treasures, along with a whole bunch of other old camp photos, into a “this is your life” scrapbook that I put together for my dad’s 80th birthday last July. Many of us have those camp memories stored somewhere. But perhaps some of us have forgotten where. It’s never too late to rediscover them.

A Priceless Diamond Memory

Recalled by Reed Maidenberg with Mike Maidenberg

It’s the fall of 1958. Muggs and Janet Lorber drive to my home in Marion, Indiana to present to me and my parents a funky slide show and eight mm movie about a place called Camp Nebagamon, which we had heard about from my parents’ friends, the Pragers in Indianapolis. Their son Tom had gone there and had high praise. Suitably impressed with the Muggs and Janet presentation, we agree that I should try Nebagamon for the eight-week session beginning near the end of June 1959.

With our plans cemented, I say I would like to try the camp train option leaving from Indianapolis to Chicago on the Monon Railroad. Campers and staff would gather in Chicago, attend a baseball game, then leave in the evening for Wisconsin on the overnight train.

I am beyond excited, and of course nervous about the summer ahead, the newness of the experience, and the unknown. But I am a pretty adventurous kid. I like to try new things. I’m up for it.

I don’t recall much about the gathering with campers and staff. That’s all a blur. But the baseball game was unforgettable, for entirely unforeseen reasons. It’s the Yankees vs. the White Sox in Comiskey Park. The White Sox have one of the best teams in years, and they will go on to win the pennant, though lose to the Dodgers in the World Series. For the moment, though, I am a big- time Yankees fan, and I’m thrilled to see my team!

All of us campers are seated together with Nebagamon staff along the first base line behind the Yankees dugout. The parents are seated a bit further away. My dad, Milt Maidenberg, is at the game but he will be leaving to drive home to Indiana well before the game ends.

It’s Billy Pierce pitching for the Sox, Art Ditmar for the Yankees, who have their now legendary players on the roster: Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Gil McDougald, Hector Lopez, Bobby Richardson, Bill “Moose” Skowron, Hank Bauer.

It’s the top of the sixth inning. The Yankees are leading 6-2. Moose Skowron is up to bat. He hits a towering pop-up that soars above the dugout, and we watch it with rapt attention. Some campers have brought their mitts to the game. They take them out, eyes on the now plunging ball.

Down it comes, nearer and nearer. The mitts are outstretched, like flowers awaiting raindrops. All eyes follow the ball’s descent. Down, down, down…

Blam! The ball hits the top of the dugout and caroms toward us! I watch it fly over my head behind me, then I see a hand reach up and make a barehand catch! It’s my dad! Pure reflex! He is walking over to find me to say goodbye and catches the ball! The stadium crowd erupts in a cheer. I am beside myself with excitement!

Milt, my hero in so many ways, adds another feather to his cap. He comes down a few rows, presents me with the ball, gives me a hug and kiss, and leaves for the drive back to Marion.

I have a cool thing to share with my cabinmates. I’ll be in Swamper One this summer, Muggs’s last as director, with the great Paul Kent as counselor. The overnight train ride from Chicago to Hayward is magical and memorable. I’m sleeping in the upper bunk, and the rocking and rolling motion portends the changes coming in my life, and in the lives of all others in the years to come. I don’t remember sleeping that much.

The railroads are nearing the end of their heyday, and their many decades of service to the travelers of the country. President Eisenhower has championed a great network of Interstate Highways that will serve the ever growing number of private automobiles, with their bombastic and often grandiose designs, giant tail fins, huge iconic lumbering machines that will cruise this great network of roads and render the railroads obsolete for mass passenger travel.

I have this beautiful scuffed baseball, along with a few others, in my drawer in my room at home for years. Then, as I grow older and look to places far away for new experiences and adventures, I leave my home in Indiana, and the treasures of my boyhood gathered in a few shoeboxes. One day I will return to find not only my room has been completely gutted, my built-in desk and dresser removed, but my treasured objects are also gone! I thought they were safe, but the vicissitudes of time and my seeming indifference to their fate made these totems of my youth vulnerable to the crusading remodeling instincts of my mother.

I don’t have the scuffed Skowron foul ball anymore. My parents have both passed away, and the family home was sold in 2009 after having been built and occupied by our family for 61 years.  

What remains are the memories formed in the head and heart of a young boy. They are as vital to me today as in that instant when I saw the grin on my father’s face as he put a baseball in my hand, and I left for my first summer at Camp Nebagamon.