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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1989
355•2050
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Call The Jewish News
354-6060
The Hillel Foundation at
the University of Michigan
and the Jewish Community
Center of Washtenaw County
have announced the 1989-90
Celebration of Jewish Arts
and the Writers series.
The opening event features
the Maxwell Street Klezmer
Band from Chicago, which
combines Eastern European
Jewish music with jazz and
humor. They have appeared
at the Taste of Chicago, the
University of Chicago Folk
Festival and Studs Thrkel's
radio shows. The group will
appear Oct. 28 at 8:15 p.m.
The price of admission in-
cludes hors d'oeuvres and
beverages.
Voice of the Turtle is a
quartet of multi-instrumen-
talists whose repertoire
focuses on the folk music of
the Sephardim, the Jews of
Spain and Portugal. Their
performance will be Feb. 3 at
8 p.m.
Claudia Stevens will pre-
sent a one-woman presenta-
tion based on Playing for
Time, Fania Fenelon's ac-
count of her life as a musician
at Auschwitz, on March 18 at
7:30 p.m. Fenelon performed
and arranged music in order
to survive in the death camp.
Stevens recreates the
unimaginable horror of
Asuchwitz and the courage of
its inmates. She is a classical-
ly trained pianist, singer and
actress who combines her
skills in interdisciplinary
compositions. Her perfor-
mance will also be the begin-
ning of the 11th Annual Con-
ference of the Holocaust.
Ethan Canin, author of
Emperor of the Air, will speak
on Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m. Canin
was 27 when he published
this first collection of short
stories in 1988 to critical ac-
claim and best-seller berths
in the New York Times,
Boston Globe and San Fran-
cisco Chronicle. Canin is now
in San Francisco, where he is
completing his medical
residency. His visit is co-
sponsored by the Master of
Fine Arts Program in
Creative Writing at the
University of Michigan.
Jerome Badanes will ap-
pear on Nov. 16 at 7:30 p.m.
He is the author of The Final
Opus of Leon Solomon, which
was published in early 1989.
Badanes grew up in
Brooklyn, and was educatd at
Brooklyn Collee and the
University of Michigan,
where he won the. Hopwood
Award in Poetry. He wrote
and conducted the on-screen
interviews for Image Before
My Eyes, an award-winning
documentary about Jewish
life in Poland before the
Holocaust. He now teaches in
the creative writing program
at Sarah Lawrence College.
Badanes's visit is co-
sponsored by the University
of Michigan's office of ethics
and religion, program in
Judaic studies, and the
M.F.A. program in creative
writing.
Harold Kushner will be
speaking Jan. 23, at 7:30 p.m.
He is the author of When Bad
Things Happen to Good Peo-
ple, which was a national
best-seller for more than a
year, and has been translated
into 11 languages. His most
recent book, When All You've
Ever Wanted Isn't Enough,
was an instant best-seller and
a choice of the Literary Guild.
In 1987, it received the
Christopher Medal in
recognition of its "contribu-
tion to the exalation of the
human spirit." His latest
book is When Children Ask
About God.
Leonard Fein, writer and
teacher, is the founding editor
of Moment magazine and a
former professor at
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and Brandeis
University. In 1985, he found-
ed Mazon, American Jewry's
response to the problem of
hunger. His latest book,
Where Are We? The Inner Life
of America's Jews, looks at
American Jewry today. He
will be speaking on Feb. 20 at
7:30 p.m.
Adrienne Rich is wdiely
considered one of this coun-
try's greatest poets. She has
been awarded two Guggen-
heim Fellowships. She is cur-
rently professor of English
and feminist studies at Stan-
ford. Rich has published 14
books of poems, most recent-
ly Time's Power in 1989. She
is also the author of three
prose books, including Of
Woman Born and On Lies,
Secrets and Silence. In 1986,
Rich became the first reci-
pient of the Ruth Lilly Poetry
Prize for outstanding achieve-
ment in American poetry. She
will be appearing on April 1,
at 7:30 p.m. at Rackham
Auditorium on the U-M cam-
pus in Ann Arbor.
All events will be at the Ir-
win Green Auditorium at the
Mandell L. Berman Center at
the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun-
dation, 1429 Hill St., unless
otherwise noted. Series
tickets are availble through
Hillel. The Writers Series is
.