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gave a concert
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1_,0 call y, while the Holocaust
Ivlemorial Center was announcing a
multi-million-dollar expansion, the
Detroit Institute of the Arts staged
a Ivell-reviewed and well-attended
exhibit of rare and beautiful Jewish
cultural objects. The annual Jewish
Book Fair drew its accustomed
crowds to the D. Dan & Betty
Kahn Building of the Jewish
Community Center, but the news
was the launch of the Lenore
Marwil Jewish Film Festival that
played to almost sold-out houses
every day.
On a somewhat less ratified level,
baseball fans got a tour of the
Jewish highlights of Detroit's soon-
to-be-replaced Tiger Stadium where
this year rookie Gabe Kappler
brought back some fond memories
of Hank Greenberg. And Shabtai
Zisel ben Avraham v'Rachel Rivka
— more commonly known as Bob
Dylan — rocked concert stages here
and around the country. Li
Clockwise, from top left:
Tigers outfielder Gabe Kapler wowed
'em in Toledo first.
"The Prince of Egypt" was a cultural
and commercial success that won
general religious approval as well.
•
A manuscript page from the well-
received Detroit Institute of Arts
judaica exhibit.
Bob Dylan performs at St. Andrew's
Hall in Detroit.
9/24
1999
24 Detroit Jewish News
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September 24, 1999 - Image 24
- Resource type:
- Text
- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-09-24
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