The Keylog Archives

Keylog Spring 2020

The Lemonade Issue

"When life gives you lemons, make lemonade."

(Be seated and read)

A Summer Like No Other

by Adam Kaplan

To say that it is strange to be up at camp this summer would be a massive understatement. No campers. No counselors. No staff beyond essentially the full-time staff. No cabin doors flying open and slamming (for some reason, that’s been the biggest void for me). No little voices belting out big songs (one reason why this issue of the Keylog offers you some YouTube links to other versions of camp tunes). No MOCA in the Big House. No wood being chopped at CNOC. No sails being unfurled. No bows being strung. No cabin plaques being created. No fish being caught.

I won’t sugarcoat it. It is intensely emotionally difficult to be a camp director at a camp dominated by what isn’t happening there. Just like it’s hard to be a young person of camper age in a summer without camp. Walking around the property here, the quiet dominates. And the images seem out of place. As I write this, we’re into late July, and the canoes are still stacked, the O-tent is still down, the wake-up bell is still covered, the Project Board is in storage. To say the very least, it is certainly a different perspective of camp at mid-summer (We’ve taken that notion and turned it on its head a bit with a photo gallery in this issue showing that there’s always a unique perspective to be found at camp).

But if life gives you lemons… so instead of dwelling too much on what we can’t do this summer, we’ve tried to focus on what we can do.

For one thing, we can spruce the place up a bit, so when the campers and counselors do enthusiastically return, they return to a new-and-improved (well, very old and improved) place. Andy Mack, Joe Crain, and Jack Raatz (our intrepid caretaking crew), for instance, have been spending the summer taking on projects that wouldn’t have been possible with scores of campers swarming the 77 acres. They’ve re-seeded the Lower Diamond. They’ve replaced a bunch of railroad ties to shore up the roads in camp and the steps to the Upper Diamond. They’ve slathered new coats of paint on the sailing shack and the Big House porch and the Waldorf Castoria. They’ve started to construct a hand-washing station behind the Rec Hall and a brand new mountain biking flow track just outside the bike shack. Joe Crain even handmade a really cool fish-themed whirligig that now stands a few steps from the Buddy Board.  And we’ve used our free time on smaller tweaks, too – like updating the “Alumni Authors” library in the Wanegan, which is now features 42 published alums.

We’ve also been diligently maintaining camp relationships – not only by offering online Sunday Services (thank you, Troy Brodsky and Jessie Stein Diamond) and an at-home Chef’s Cap (coming soon). Our latest Council Fire included a hilarious Zoom skit featuring camp song characters (check it out on Facebook if you missed it), but we’ve also been doing real-life (well, virtual) Zoom calls with various age groups. Louis Levin and a few alumni even came up with a trivia contest that we’ve offered to several groups – and we’ve included a new 20-question trivia test for alumni in this Keylog. See how well you do. Some of you will surely knock it out of the park.

We also have campers and staff doing their best to create a camp-at-home feeling in creative ways, and that has been particularly inspiring. For instance, Nelson Mendels and Adam Eberhard, who would have been 9th-grade campers this year, have launched a podcast (“What Keeps the Fires Burning”) dedicated to all things Nebagamon. So yeah, as we discussed in our recent Council Fire, “camp is always with us.” 

We’re also sending out care packages to all those who had signed up for this camp summer. It includes a camp sticker, postcards pre-addressed to cabinmates, a candy line (!) and even – get this – a vial of sand from the beach at the Waterfront. Care packages – the name says it all. Because the camp family truly cares about each other.

Which brings me to my main point. This has been a tough spring and summer for all of us. Life has been turned upside down. Plans have been dashed. People are struggling in ways big and small. But if anything has buoyed Steph and me, it has been the overwhelming response from the camp family. When we made the announcement that there would be no campers at Camp Nebagamon for the first summer since 1929, we expected a mixed reaction. We were certain most people would understand the reasons why. But we, ourselves, understood that parenting and a child’s happiness are profoundly emotional concepts. There were bound to be some people who disagreed with our thinking. And yet… zero. Not a single parent or alumnus has expressed a contrary opinion. Just the opposite, in fact. The emails and phone calls and texts and Facebook comments have all been so supportive, so understanding, so unbelievably generous in spirit.

That generosity has extended to the financial arena, as well – again, remarkably so. It is a challenge, of course, to run a summer camp and lose a summer. But, whether it’s the through the big-heartedness of alumni who want to assure the continued operation of their favorite place on Earth or parents of current campers who have opted to rollover their deposits until next summer (because it’s their child’s favorite place on Earth), we have come to realize just how much the camp family cares. You might think this is the kind of thing that happens at most summer camps. It isn’t. We are a special place beloved by special people.

So while that place looks different this summer, the camp family has reminded us that there is much more to Camp Nebagamon than the physical aspect. The people, the relationships, the bonds… those constitute the heart of what makes the place so unusual. And that has been the biggest takeaway from this surreal summer.

Which is about as lemonade-ish as it gets.

Perspective

The unprecedented national and world events of 2020 have led many of us toward a new way of looking at things — regarding values and priorities, relationships and interactions, history and inequality, the need to speak out and the desire to reach out. If nothing else, the past few months have offered a lesson in perspective. A summer at camp without campers and staff? That’s an entirely new perspective as well. With that in mind, here’s a collection of photos of familiar camp places… from unusual points of view.

20 Questions

Campers have been enjoying a Nebagamon trivia contest during their Zoom calls with Adam and the staff. So we thought we’d offer up an alumni version covering nearly a century of factoids. Answers are at the bottom (below the photo).

Question 1: In what year was the current Paul Bunyan statue created?

A) 1955 B) 1959 C) 1965 D) 1969

Question 2: Which of these languages is not (yet) part of the “Welcome for All” sign?

A) Swedish B) Afrikaans C) Javanese D) Ojibwa

Question 3: Nardie Stein’s first job at Nebagamon was as a senior counselor in which cabin?

A) Throck B) Swamper 1 C) Logger 3 D) Axeman 7

Question 4: Which current cabin was originally two cabins divided by a partition?

A) Swamper 1 B) Logger 5 C) Axeman 3 D) Lumberjack .5

Question 5: Where are the heads of the original two Paul Bunyan statues today?

A) Herb Hollinger Museum B) Under the Rec Hall C) Big House basement D) lost

Question 6: In what year did Camp Nebagamon’s four-week option begin?

A) 1978 B) 1974 C) 1969 D) 1966

Question 7: In what year was the infirmary named the “Waldorf Castoria”?

A) 1929 B) 1941 C) 1953 D) 1966

Question 8: Who came up with the name the “Little House”?

A) Maggie Rolfe B) Janet Lorber C) Sally Lorber Stein D) Jane Stein Kerr

Question 9: The Herb Hollinger Museum was originally a log cabin in what town?

A) Hayward B) Brule C) Iron River D) Superior

Question 10: Which actress used to own a home on Lake Nebagamon?

A) Sigourney Weaver B) Kathy Bates C) Jessica Lange D) Jodie Foster

Question 11: In what year did afternoon project periods begin?

A) 1929 B) 1946 C) 1963 D) 1974

Question 12: What was the name of Nebagamon’s first nature museum?

A) Skunk Hollow B) Chipmunk Valley C) Pine Cabin D) The Range

Question 13: Which of these camp buildings was NOT moved from somewhere outside of camp?

A) The Jail B) Axeman Push Shack C) Pioneer Post D) Fish Shack

Question 14: Which of the following appeared first at camp?

A) A.K. Agikamik B) Orienteering C) Cookout boxes D) Four-square

Question 15: During camp’s first few decades, Cruiser Day took place on which day of the week?

A) Monday B) Tuesday) C) Wednesday D) Thursday

Question 16: The Camp Nebagamon Boat House was dismantled in 1944. Some materials were used to construct which current cabin?

A) Swamper 6 B) Logger 5 C) The Annex D) Voyageur

Question 17: Which U.S. president had a “Summer White House” along the Brule River?

A) Millard Fillmore B) Grover Cleveland C) Woodrow Wilson D) Calvin Coolidge

Question 18: When was the Big House built?

A) 1870 B) 1898 C) 1912 D) 1930

Question 19: In what year did the staff horse-n-goggle tournament begin?

A) 1964 B) 1975 C) 1986 D) 1997

Question 20: How many campers attended Nebagamon in it first summer, 1929?

A) 47 B) 77 C) 107 D) 157

Answers: 1 (D), 2 (C), 3 (B), 4 (D), 5 (A), 6 (B), 7 (C), 8 (D), 9 (B), 10 (C), 11 (C), 12 (A), 13 (D), 14 (A), 15 (B), 16 (D), 17 (D), 18 (B), 19 (C), 20 (A)

Sing Along at Home

Staying home? Social distancing? Missing camp? Here’s something that might make you feel just a tiny bit better about all of it: Camp songs. But while these are songs sung in the Rec Hall, we’ve located some “professional” versions. For instance: “Good Morning, Mr. Zip Zip Zip” as sung by Eugene Buckley and the Peerless Quartette during World War I… and Pete Seeger crooning “Logger Lover” in 1963… and Hugh Jackman singing ‘Oh, What a Beautiful Morning”… and “The Happy Wanderer” as performed by The Chardon Polka Band.

Sure, they’re not necessarily sung the way we belt them out these days (in lyrics and/or style). For instance, it seems that the wind and rain the night before jumbled billboards even more than we suspected. And who knew there could be a whole narrative to “The Itsy Bitsy Spider?” But still, a smile will certainly creep across your face. Click on a song to find a YouTube link to sing along with.

Good Morning, Mr. Zip Zip Zip

Oh What a Beautiful Morning

The Itsy Bitsy Spider

In the Good Old Summertime

Skinnamarink

The Little Bird Song (Way Up in the Sky)

Logger Lover

The Happy Wanderer

The Billboard Song

Hanskeleva

One Dark Night

Welcome For All… at Home

We all have fond memories of the sign that greets each visitor to Camp Nebagamon with its iconic message of inclusion stating, “This Shall Be a Place of Welcome for All,” translated into 33 languages.

Camp has always welcomed people of all backgrounds. This creed began with camp’s founders Muggs and Janet Lorber, and inspired Nardie Stein to design and post the sign in the early 1970s. He and co-director Sally Lorber Stein and later co-directors Roger and Judy Wallenstein, and Adam Kaplan and Steph Hanson have each continued this tradition — adding new panels in languages that reflect our ever-expanding camp family.

Welcome, kindness, decency and inclusivity are needed now more than ever during this quarantine summer. Global economic hardship echoes conditions just-after Nebagamon’s founding in 1929. Simultaneously, our country is reckoning with the legacy of 400+ years of racism.

These remarkable times inspired us to create a tangible reminder of our Nebagamon values: a two inch by two foot replica of the welcome sign, which you can bring to your own home while supporting future summers of camping for children who need it most.

This replica can be yours for a suggested donation of $100 plus $21.50 to cover the cost of production, packaging, and shipping. Our pre-order window closes on Monday, September 7th, so be sure to place your order today. (To do so, simply click here).

As you consider how much to contribute for your sign, or how many to order for friends, family, and fellow alums, keep in mind that camp’s affiliated charities, the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund (CNSF) and Camperships for Nebagamon (CFN), will split all contributions . The money we raise will share the life-changing experience of a summer at camp with kids who need this most during summers to come.

We hope you’ll feel inspired to contribute and to continue to make your home “A Place of Welcome for All” with this reminder that all that we send into the lives of others comes back into our own!

From the Mailbag

After Nardie and Sally Stein send a thank-you note to Josh Levy (Cleveland/Washington, DC 85-87, 89, 92) for his contribution to the Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund, Josh sent back a reply that includes a summary of the interesting work he’s been doing:

“I welled up seeing this note from you. The 15-year old boy in me leapt from my chest. Like most of us in the camp family, I cherish the memories of that time in life. It’s just wonderful hearing from you. An update on my life?  True, I’m no longer 15. I live in Bethesda with my wife, Liz, and kids, Eva (16), Max (13), and Georgia (10). Liz and I have been living in DC for nearly 20 years.  

I’m a lawyer, but a happy one. About six years ago, I co-founded a law firm that would allow us to do good and do well. After practicing law at a big firm in DC and then serving as counsel to Senator Chuck Schumer and, after that, the US Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs (investigating the government’s foul ups responding to Hurricane Katrina), I joined another firm as a partner and developed a practice representing clients in investigations and litigation. At that time, I also started teaching courses on “Congressional Investigations” and “Health Care Fraud” at Georgetown Law, and I haven’t stopped.  

At our firm — Levy Firestone Muse — we have been investigating, on behalf of the Government of Rwanda, the role of senior French government officials in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. We have another office in Kigali, Rwanda, and I’ve been there every quarter for the last few years. In the middle of that, I’ve also been representing Glenn Simpson, Peter Fritsch, and Fusion GPS who contracted with Christopher Steele to write the memos now known as the “Trump Dossier,” in response to Republican congressional investigations and lawsuits filed against them by Russian oligarchs.

The president and his allies on the Hill & in the news media (and the oligarchs) have been at war with my clients for the last few years. You should know that camp is a big reason why we’ve been able to protect them from this brutal course of retaliation. First, I’ve been co-counsel with fellow Nebaga-alum Steve Salky (and other fabulous lawyers), and Steve and I have had a ball reminiscing and bonding on our shared camp memories, even though we are a generation apart. Steve’s fast become one of my best friends and professional heroes in DC.  Second, Nardie is the first person in my life to tell me it was ok to push a bully — the advice came as an enormous shock on many levels, but he was right. Really what you were saying, Nardie, was “stand up for yourself,” and I needed to hear that. Now, that’s basically my job — standing up for others. I love being the shepherd for those caught in the middle of Washington inquiries. It’s given me a front row seat to history, and it’s allowed me to help good people who have found themselves in some real binds.

Little did more for my character and self-confidence as a teenager than camp. I credit it with so much. Others need to have that experience, and it’s my absolute pleasure to contribute to the fund. Thank you for keeping the fund going, and for absolutely everything you’ve done for thousands of us. We are all in your debt.”

Camp Political Convention, 1984

Roger Wallenstein sent in a write-up from the Chicago Sun-Times last November. In it, Kenna Turner, who went on to win four Super Bowls in the 1980s as a linebacker with the San Francisco 49ers, recalled his days playing high school football at Chicago Vocational. Turner, a member of the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame, attended the school a generation after Chicago Vocational’s most famous linebacker-alumnus – NFL Hall of Famer Dick Butkus. You can read the article here, but what caught Roger’s eye was the glowing mention of the longtime Chicago Vocational head coach – none other than Bernie “Obie” O’Brien, who was a vital member of the Camp Nebagamon staff from 1943 through 1960:

“Butkus might have been an inspiration, but it would be late Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame coach Bernie O’Brien who helped advance Turner’s football career, his zest for winning trickling down to his team. “O’Brien was your typical scrappy Irish coach – a little man with a drive to win who inspired his players to want to win,” Turner said. “And, keep in mind, O’Brien went from coaching predominantly white teams to an all-black team and remained the same. He was all about football, not the color of his players’ skin. That said a lot about not only his love and integrity for the game but his character as a coach.”

Before his Nebagamon years, “Obie” O’Brien played halfback at Notre Dame, graduating in 1935. In 1941, he began his high school coaching career, eventually becoming Chicago Vocational’s head varsity coach in 1957, the same year Dick Butkus arrived. The coach led the school to seven Public League championships and earned Chicago Sports Hall of Fame honors in 1996, four years before he passed away. In a Chicago Tribune obituary, Butkus said “To me, he portrayed what a real high school coach should be. He had the ability to deal with all kinds of kids from different backgrounds… We’ve had a number of reunions, and I never heard a single person–not even an equipment kid–say a bad word about him.”

Roger included the following picture from his files, showing the coach and the Butkus family.

Last November, Mike Samuels (Youngstown, OH/Washington, D.C. 50-58) was remarried at the age of 80 to Lena Auerbach in a small ceremony in the chambers of the Honorable David Tatel, a well-known judge of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the D. C. Circuit. After two stints as a U.S. ambassador and positions as Deputy U.S. Trade Representative and president of an international business consulting firm, Mike knows a bit about leadership and the challenges of balancing priorities. So it was nice that, after seeing Adam Kaplan at the Washington, D.C. camp reunion, he wrote the following note as a grateful alumnus: “I meant to tell you this after the 90th, but never did — I am thrilled at your guidance and leadership that has both kept the Nebagamon that made such a positive difference in my life and modernized it. I am sure it hasn’t been easy doing both simultaneously, so I am doubly appreciative.” 

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]).

Mike Maidenberg (Marion, IN/Oakland 61-62), who served as publisher of the Grand Forks Herald from 1982-2004 and helped lead the newspaper to a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service following a devastating 1997 flood, was chosen as the sixth recipient of the North Dakota Newspaper Association’s Distinguished Service Award. He left the Herald in 2004 to become vice president of the Knight Foundation and retired in 2010. Here’s a link to a story about the award… Charles Hirschhorn (Cincinnati/Pacific Palisades, CA) 68-72, 74-79, 04, 11) recently began a new position as President of Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles… Danny Meyer (St. Louis/New York 68-70, 72-73, 75) was interviewed by Trevor Noah on The Daily Show in early May. Watch it hereJoe Shacter (Chicago 71-75, 78-85) sings in the Apollo Chorus of Chicago, which boasts more than 100 members. Last December at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, the chorus put on its annual performance of Handel’s “Messiah,” an Apollo holiday tradition since 1879…

The late Al Goldman leading archery, 1958

Howard Handler (Detroit 72-74, 78-80) has moved back to his native 313 area code after taking a new job as President of 313 Presents, a Detroit-based company that provides world-class, live entertainment at venues of all sizes in southeastern Michigan and beyond. He is overseeing booking, production, marketing, and business opportunities at various arenas, ballparks and theaters… Scott Silberstein (Chicago 77, 79) and his HMS Media partner Matt Hoffman (Chicago 73-78, 80) were the subject of an April feature article in the Chicago Reader about their work creating a quarantined video of Carole King’s “You’ve Got a Friend,” featuring actors and musicians from Beautiful, the hit King biomusical. Read about it (and notice the Nebagamon mention) hereMichael Gordon (Middletown, OH/Washington, D.C. 80-84, 86-87) served as investigative counsel for the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform during the impeachment process… Stephen Sachs (St. Louis/Chapel Hill 89-95), a law professor at Duke University, has been named by the Federalist Society as the winner of the 2020 Joseph Story Award, which recognizes academics 40 years old and younger who have shown excellence in legal education.

Swamper 1, 1980

Guitarist, composer, and music eductator Ty Citerman (St. Louis/Brooklyn, NY 85-89, 91-93) has composed the theme music for a podcast hosted by Dan Gorenstein (Chicago/Philadelphia 91-92, 96-00), which premiered in October. The “Tradeoffs” podcast is described as examining the intersection of health care, policy, and people…. Josh Goldman (St. Louis 87-91, 93-95) started a new position at St Louis University as Director of Community Engagement in the School of Education… Ryan Glasspiegel (CT/Chicago 96-02, 04-07, 09) is a sports writer for Outkick the Coverage and was recently a guest with TNT NBA host Ernie Johnson’s live show on TwitterBen Falik (Detroit 94-97, 00) writes for The Jewish News in Detroit. In February, he contributed a deftly-written piece featuring Nebagamon program director Louis Levin (Northbrook, IL/Detroit 05-10, 12-20) and including the following mid-article disclaimer: “I am an alumnus of Camp Nebagamon; it has been 20 years since my last CN summer, so I can now say with dispassionate objectivity that the camp is the bestest camp.)”

Logger 4, 1997

Michael Freeman (Denver 98-03, 05-09) is spending a semester teacher data visualization in Madrid on a Fulbright Scholarship… John Robert Allman (Houston/New York City 05-06) has a new book out called “A is for Audra: Broadway’s Leading Ladies from A to Z”. It can be found here... Michael Blonsky (Denver 05-07, 09) works on renewable energy integration for the National Renewable Energy Lab… Ben Huston (Denver/Netanya, Israel 09-12, 16-19) moved to Israel to join the Israel Defense Forces… Jonah Docter-Loeb (Washington, D.C., 11-17, 19) has received quite a bit of attention for organizing a 3-D printing project to create protective medical equipment in the fight against COVID-19. You can read about it hereChloe Ahmann (Maryland/Ithaca, NY 12) has joined the faculty at Cornell University as an environmental anthropologist… Max Setteneri (Fairfield, CT/D.C. 15-16) works for the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C…Zach Sullivan (Chippewa Falls, WI/Duluth 16, 18) is the Program Director for the Duluth Folk School, creating and implementing classes with both children and adults… Zayla Asquith-Heinz (Haines, AK/Duluth 17-18) is a tax site supervisor for Community Action Duluth.

Argo, 2012

Our productive alumni:

Kyle Hopkins (Kansas City 02-06, 08-09, 12) and Emily Ferris – Charles 

Dylan Perry (Boston 07) and Liza Perry — Rye

We are sad to report the deaths of the following alumni:

Art Davidson (Omaha 37-41)

Aaron Scharff (Memphis/Southport, ME 41-43)

John Isaacs III (St. Louis 41-47, 50)

Robert (Bob) Rosenberg (Cincinnati 43-47)

Alan Goldman (St. Louis/Raleigh, NC 48-61)

Steve Kalish (St. Louis/Redmond, WA 52-59)

Art Loomstein (St. Louis 54)

Jay Hoffman (Minnetonka, MN 57, 62, 69)

Sue “Freida” Weisner (Superior, WI/Orlando 68-69)

Laurel Starstead (Superior 70-75)

Thank You, Donors

Bring the spirit of Nebagamon into your home! Donate to Camp Nebagamon charities and receive your own replica “THIS SHALL BE A PLACE OF WELCOME FOR ALL” sign. Click here for more information.

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. In honor of Camp Nebagamon’s 90th season, 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, 2019, through April 30, 2020:

Kathy and Rick Abeles
Steve Addison
Jeffrey and Kelly Alderman
Max Alpert
Anonymous (1)
Pam and Tom Arenberg
Susan Arenberg
Art and Marian Auer
Deb and Joe Badt
Andrew and Elizabeth Baer
Camilla and Frank Baer
Benji Ballin
Kathy and Stuart Barnett
Bob and Linda Barrows
Charlie Barrows
Samuel Barrows
Jim and June Baumoel
Herb Behrstock
Babs and Bob Benton
Rita Bernstein
The Peter Bloch Family Fund
Alison and Andy Bloom
Jim Blumenfeld
Dale Brodsky
Matt Brody
Ann and Ken Brown
Mark Caro and Mary Dixon
Jose Chay, D.D.S.
Bob and Stacie Chukerman
Ellen and Scott Chukerman
Andy Cohen
Carol and Ed Cohen
Mitch Cohen and Stephanie Tomasky
Cole-Belin Education Foundation
Michael Coletta
Jeff Colman and Ellen Nissenbaum
Jon and Suzi Colman
Jim and Suzy Cornbleet
Carla and David Crane
Hank Crane
Jennifer Daskal
Gene Dattel and Licia Hahn
Jerry Dattel
Becky and Raven Deerwater
Michelle and Stan DeGroote
Bill and Leann Dexter
Jessie and Scott Diamond
Jed Dreifus
David Dreifus and Jennifer Sosensky
Jon Dreifus
Bob Dubinsky and Sarah Rubenstein
Ellen and Henry Dubinsky
Steve Ehrlich
Jim Feldman and Christine Taylor
Amy Foxman
Brad Foxman
Judy and Ron Foxman
Steve Frank
Janet Freed
Bill and Laura Freeman
Andrew and Jennifer Friedman
Bud and Julie Friedman
Jodi and Matt Friedman
Betsy and Spencer Garland
Alan Geismer, Jr.
Aliza and Jim Gerstein
David and Ellen Gibbs
Ricky Gitt
Bob and Susan Glasspiegel
Karla Bright and Ryan Glasspiegel
Chad and Debbie Goldenberg
Jeff Goldenberg
Stephen Goldfarb
Elaine and Mike Goldman
Joanie and Mark Goldstein
Jonathan Goldstein
Jerrold and Martha Graber
Jim and Martha Gray
Josh Gray
Douglas Greene Family Foundation
Debbie and Paul Guggenheim
Bill and Cheryl Guthman
Bobbie and Mark Gutman
Alan and Julie Halpern
Ted Harris
John Hart and Carol Prins
Paula Hassinger
Barnett and Shirley Helzberg Jr.
Bill and Jaye Hensel
Jaime Hensel
Alice and Joe Herz
Bob and Karen Herz
Amy and Brad Herzog
Bud and Hazel Herzog
Cathy and Rick Hirschmann
Ellyn and Matt Hoffman
Dina and Steve Isaacs
Helaine and Warner Isaacs
Dan Jackson
Ted Jadwin
Craig and Shari Jankowsky
Joe Jankowsky
Anne and Fred Joseph, III
Caryn and Harlan Kahn
Diane and John Kalishman
John Kander
Stephanie Hanson and Adam Kaplan
Laura Dembo and Andrew Kaplan
Nathalie Feldman and Andy Kaplan
Cheryl Bondy Kaplan and Mark Kaplan
Nancy Kassel
Jennifer Gilbert-Kaufmann and Robert Kaufmann
Euan and Jane Kerr
Malcolm Kerr
Wendy Bloom and Arthur Kessler
Barbara and Dennis Kessler
Chloe and Jake Kessler
Keybank Foundation (Matching Gift)
Carol Kiersky
Bud Kolbrener II
Alan Korn and Claudia Simons
Danielle Brinker and John Kramer
Emily and Michael Laskin
Marc Lawrence (Modestus Bauer Foundation)
Dan Laytin
Rose Lenehan
Bob and Cissy Lenobel
Alan and Sondra Levi
Jeffrey Levinson
Lia Grigg and Dan Levis
Joshua Levy
Hagit and Roger Lewis
Judith Axelrod and Kenneth Lewis
Drew Lieberman and Randi Shafton
Tom Loeb
Richard Lowenthal
Eric and Linda Lucy
Ken and Laura Mack
Reed Maidenberg
Andrew and Jill Kiersky Marcus
Fred and Joyce Marcus
Dru Margolin
Nancy Brown and Andrew May
Matt and Norah Meadows
Medtronics (Matching Gift)
Jeff and Mary Kate Mellow
Bob and Susan Mendelsohn
Julia Gittleman and Tom Mendelsohn
Misa Galazzi and David Michel
Jean Middleton
Erika and John Montag
Spence Myer
Jamie and Leah Myers
Bob and Mary Nefsky
Network for Good
Buzz Neusteter and Judi Perrill
Brule & Thad Kurowski and Katy Neusteter
Lee Anne Hartley and Tom Nevers
Peter Newman
Robert Oppenheimer
PepsiCo (Matching Gift)
Jim Platt and Deborah Snyder
Jennifer Pritzker, IL ARNG (Ret)
Daniel Quiat
David and Kim Reich
Renee Reiner
Frank and Joan Revson
Jay and Jennifer Riven
Larry and Michele Rivkin
Steven Rivkin and Hana Ruzicka
Don Robertson
Cindy and Jon Rogen
Anthony and Marya Rose
Jim and Sherri Rosen
Ellie and Trent Rosenbloom
Brian and Lori Rosenthal
Carol and Roger Rosenthal
Chris and Frank Sachs
Gail Ifshin and Steven Salky
Dan and Dawn Saltzstein
Mike Samuels
Jon and Sue Scharff
Barbara and Bruce Schimberg
Lee and Martha Schimberg
Bennett and Shelley Schmidt
Clayton Schmidt
Fred and Pat Schonwald, Jr.
Bud and Peggy Schram
Lynn and Skip Schrayer
Carol and Jeff Schulman
Ed and Laura Schwarz
Monique and Robert Schweich
Lee and Mark Scissors
Arlene Semel
Colleen Carroll and Mitch Semel
Joe and Sara Shacter
Jodi and Tom Shapira
Susie Ansehl and Rand Shapiro
Allan and Judy Sher
Daniel Sherman
Bob and Natalie Silverman
Slosburg Families
Brandon Snow
Michael Sobel
Geula and Josh Solomon
Nancy Chasen and Don Spero
Frank and Mindy Star
Elena Stein
Nardie and Sally Stein
Noah Stein
Perrin and Ted Stein
Corky and Rick Steiner Family Foundation
John Stephenson and Karin Susens
Ann and Will Stern
David and Mary Elizabeth Calhoon Stern
Gloria and Paul Sternberg, Jr.
Jim Stewart and Amanda Whalen
Emily Glasser and Bill Susman
Brian and Carolyn Swett
Michael and Peggi Touff
Alan and Jo Anne Travis
Madge and Tom Treeger
Anita Tyler
Donald Ullmann
Judy and Roger Wallenstein
Daniel Wasserman
Harriet and Paul Weinberg
Michael Weinberg (II)
Hank Wineman
Adam and Deborah Winick
Michael Woldenberg
Emily Jodock Yale 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, 2019, through April 30, 2020:

Kathy and Rick Abeles
Keith Abeles and Amy Levin
Steve Addison
Carol and David Adelson
Chuck and Ruth Adler
Mary Allen
Amazon Smile Foundation
Steve Apter
Pam and Tom Arenberg
Jeanne and Michael Aronoff
Art and Marian Auer
Deb and Joe Badt
Andrew and Elizabeth Baer
Benji Ballin
David and Karen Balser Family
Kathy and Stuart Barnett
Bob and Linda Barrows
Charlie Barrows
Jim and June Baumoel
Leo Bearman, Jr.
Herb Behrstock
Rick Bendix, Jr.
Babs and Bob Benton
Bert and Joan Berkley
Bob Best and Linda Tate
Ric Best
Michael Blonsky
Alison and Andy Bloom
Bob Bloom and Alison Kamine
David and Linda Blumberg
Jim Blumenfeld
BMO Harris Bank N.A.
Adam and Julie Braude
Hugh Broder
Dale Brodsky
Troika Brodsky and Elizabeth Potter
Barbara and Jim Bronner
Spencer Brown
Jean and Mark Burnstine
Jeff Burnstine
Mark Caro and Mary Dixon
Bob and Stacie Chukerman
Ellen and Scott Chukerman
Carol Bayersdorfer Cohen and Ed Cohen
Ellie Cohen
Evelyn and Louis Cohen
James Cohen
Mitch Cohen and Stephanie Tomasky
Pat Cohn
Kevin Cole
Cole-Belin Education Foundation
Jeff Colman and Ellen Nissenbaum
Jon amd Suzi Colman
Jennifer Daskal
Jane Davis
Becky and Raven Deerwater
Michelle and Stan DeGroote
Jessie and Scott Diamond
David Dreifus and Jennifer Sosensky
James and Nicole Druckman
Bob Dubinsky and Sarah Rubenstein
Ben Edmunds
Steve Ehrlich
Fred Fechheimer
Jim Feldman and Christine Taylor
Dan and Gayle Weiswasser Feldman
Mary and Richard Fisher
Brad Foxman
Marjorie and Terry Franc
Michael and Molly Frank
Bill and Laura Freeman
Barbara and Richard Fried
Bill and Marissa Jones Friedman
Bud and Julie Friedman
Jane and Sam Friedman
Jodi and Matt Friedman
Lisa and Steve Friedman
William Friedman
Stephen Galpern and Caroline Portis
Betsy and Spencer Garland
Alan Geismer, Jr.
Glenn and Phyllis Gerstell
David and Ellen Gibbs
Gilead Sciences (Matching Gift)
Ricky Gitt
Bill and Sandy Glassman
Bob and Susan Glasspiegel
Dale Glasspiegel
Ryan Glasspiegel
Chad and Debbie Goldenberg
Jeff Goldenberg
Stephen Goldfarb
Josh and Sarah Goldman
Thomas Goldman
Malcolm and Mildred Goldsmith
Max Goldsmith
Jonathan Goldstein
GOOGLE, Inc. (Matching Gift)
Alex and Julie Gordon
Jerrold and Martha Graber
Marty Gradman
Janice Anderson and Tom Gram
Jim and Martha Gray
Josh Gray
Douglas Greene Family Foundation
Scott and Sheliah Gruber
Debbie and Paul Guggenheim
Bill and Cheryl Guthman
Edward and Mary Lou Harrison
Paula Hassinger
Emma Heath
Mike Heldman
Bill and Jaye Hensel
Jaime Hensel
Alice and Joe Herz
Barbara Herz
Bob and Karen Herz
Amy and Brad Herzog
Amy and Brian Herzog
Bud and Hazel Herzog
Charles and Cynthia Hirschhorn
Jason Hirschhorn
Jennifer Hodges
Elizabeth Hoffman
Ellyn and Matt Hoffman
Douglas and Hallie Hohner
Anne Ledell-Hong and Nathaniel Hong
The Horner Family Foundation
Maggie Horvath
Stephen Howard, M. D. and Clare Saulnier
HYPERAMS, LLC
Derek Iger
Helaine and Warner Isaacs
Dan Jackson
Amy and Craig Jacobs
Craig and Shari Jankowsky
Kathy and Mike Jay
Joseph Family
Caryn and Harlan Kahn
Diane and John Kalishman
Ben and Melinda Kanter
Daniel, Noah & Suzanne Kanter
Steph Hanson and Adam Kaplan
Cheryl Bondy Kaplan and Mark Kaplan
Marjorie and Robert Kaplan
Benjamin Katz
Jennifer Gilbert-Kaufmann and Robert Kaufmann
Dmitri and Irene Kaznachey
Euan and Jane Kerr
Malcolm Kerr
Barbara and Dennis Kessler
Heide and Jim Klein
Bud Kolbrener II
Tom Kolbrener
Sara Jill Rubel and Eric Kramer
Danielle Brinker and John Kramer
Janet Koestring and John Kupper
Marc Lawrence (Modestus Bauer Foundation)
Dan Laytin
Eli Lehrer
Rose Lenehan
Bob and Cissy Lenobel
Alan and Sondra Levi
Jeff and Suzanne Levi
Jill and John Levi
Lia Grigg and Dan Levis
Tom Loeb
Henry Docter and Elizabeth Loeb
Alice Luz
Leslie and Paul Lux
Ken and Laura Mack
Dru Margolin
Julie and Steve Mathes
Robert Matz and Peggy Warner
Trace McCreary
Matt and Norah Meadows
Jeff and Mary Kate Mellow
Don and Marji Mendelsohn
Jim Mendelsohn
Lauren Martini and Matthew Mendelsohn
Julia Gittleman and Tom Mendelsohn
Audrey and Danny Meyer
Nancy Meyer and Marc Weiss
Misa Galazzi and David Michel
Zach Mollengarden
Kristin Ahlberg and Phil Myers
Bob and Mary Nefsky
Buzz Neusteter and Judi Perrill
Brule & Thad Kurowski and Katy Neusteter
Andy and Peggy Newman
Gail and Sean O’Connor
Robert Oppenheimer
PepsiCo Foundation (Matching Gift)
Betty and Tom Philipsborn
The Pittsburgh Foundation
Laurie and Todd Platt
Deborah Snyder and Jim Platt
Jerry and Jill Polacheck
Kevin and Rita Powers
Jennifer Pritzker, IL ARNG (Ret)
Judy and Paul Putzel
Daniel Quiat
Laurin and Mindy Quiat
The Reggi Marder Foundation
Jay and Jennifer Riven
Larry and Michele Rivkin
Janet and Lee Rodgers
Cindy and Jon Rogen
Alyne and Jim Rolfe
Andy and Cynthia Rolfe
Anthony and Marya Rose
Jim and Sherri Rosen
Kathy and Skip Rosenblatt
Ellie and Trent Rosenbloom
Joseph Rosenbloom, III
Brian and Lori Rosenthal
Robert Rudich
Bruce and Diana Sabados
Chris and Frank Sachs
Stephen Sachs
Gail Ifshin and Steven Salky
Erin and Seth Salomon
Mike Samuels
Ruth Sang
Laury and Lewis Scharff
Darcy and Ron Scharff III
Marc Schechter
Bennett and Shelley Schmidt
Marily and Spike Schonthal, Jr
Bud and Peggy Schram
Lynn and Skip Schrayer
Carol and Jeff Schulman
Andrew and Debbie Schwartz
Monique and Robert Schweich
Joanne Grossman and John Seesel
Colleen Carroll and Mitch Semel
Joe and Sara Shacter
Susie Ansehl and Rand Shapiro
Allan and Judy Sher
Siena Lending Group
Bob and Natalie Silverman
Kevin Silverman
Stephanie Rivkin and Joel Sircus
Bill and Judy Sloan
Bob and Sue Smith
Lael Culiner and Josh Smith
Julie and Rick Smith
Geula and Josh Solomon
Nancy Chasen and Don Spero
Frank Star
Frank and Mindy Star
Irene and Norton Starr
Elena Stein
Nardie and Sally Stein
Perrin and Ted Stein
Ann and Will Stern
David Stern and Mary Elizabeth Calhoon Stern
Merrill and Michael Stern
Susquehanna International Group (Matching Gift)
Laurel J. Southworth and Andrew Susser
Debra Levis and Emanuel Tabachnik
Tableau Software (Matching Gift)
Jim and Merryl Tisch
Madge and Tom Treeger
Loris and Robert Ungar
United Health Group (Matching Gift)
Daniel Wasserman
David and Michelle Weber
Michael Weinberg (II)
Nancy Werthan
Suzanne Whiting
Hank and Trudi Wineman
Adam and Deborah Winick
Stephen Woldenberg
James and Nancy Wolf
Joanne and Trip Wolf
Lee Wurtzburger
Emily Jodock Yale and Jason Yale
Carol and Michael Yunker
Judy and Lon Zimmerman