Coming In October! •" , kt t %at te zet a guide to noshing, entertainment and events around Metropolitan Detroit Hank Greenberg: Hometown Hero All-Star Fever Link up with Southeastern Michigan's major attractions Game brings interactive baseball theme park to Detroit. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News B aseball great Hank Greenberg represented more than athletic prowess in 1930s Detroit. As a Tigers star, the late Greenberg stood for the possibility of breaking through anti-Semitic barriers and holding a place in history. That place will be commemorated July 8-12 as the John Hancock All- Star FanFest, an interactive baseball theme park, makes its first stop in Detroit as part of the 2005 Major League Baseball All-Star Week. The family event, held at the Cobo Conference-Exhibition Center, includes baseball activities and exhibits. Greenberg will be remembered with a plaque in Hometown Heroes, a sec- tion honoring Tiger legends. "Hank Greenberg is a great role model and hero for American Jews," says filmmaker Aviva Kempner, a for- mer Detroiter who recognized the player's achievements in her documen- tary The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg." Greenberg's stand on Yom Kippur (going to synagogue instead of playing Major League baseball) I con- sider to be a real pinnacle moment in the practice of Judaism in America." Give yourself a Metro image FanFest offers hundreds of experi- ences and stories, from the CyberBallpark to the Collector's Showcase. Favorite players will be on hand to provide tips and autographs. Some 40 attractions include the Diamond, which reveals strategy secrets through seminars and hands-on clinics; Video Batting Cages, which can offer participants chances to slug away at actual baseballs pitched by life-sized images of Major League hurlers; the Bullpen, which lets players test their skills in pitching cages; National Baseball Hall of Fame & Museum, which features a collection of artifacts; and FanFest Baseball Cards, which will provide each fan with the opportunity to flip on a hat, button up a jersey and grab a bat for the fan's ultimate portrait on a baseball card that looks like the real thing. ❑ Be a part of your neighborhood's featured businesses in a hip, new guide for fall and winter visitors (think Auto Show and Super Bowl) as well as long-time residents and holiday shoppers. MainStreets is a full-color, glossy publication, reaching an upscale audience with suggestions for dining and fun activities by area— via the area's The John Hancock All-Star FanFest runs July 8-12 at the Cobo Conference-Exhibition Center in downtown Detroit. Hours are 9 a.m. 8 p.m. Friday- Monday and 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Tuesday. $161$11 seniors, mili- tary personnel and children 3-12. (313) 471-BALL (2255). - main streets. From Ann Arbor to Grosse Pointe, from Windsor to Rochester, put yourself in MainStreets. For further details call: (248) 351-5100 7/ 7 2005 37