Out & About from page 52 maker Deborah Levine of North Carolina, glass blower Stan Megdall of Michigan and painter Stan Kotzen of New Jersey. Live music, storytelling, craft demonstrations and an array of specialty foods round out the event. New children's entertain- ment includes the Blue Sky Puppet theatre, which will per- form original scripts and music on topics like individuality, ener- gy conservation, self-esteem and peaceful conflict resolution. Rock Financial Showplace is located at 46100 Grand River Ave. Daily adult admission is $7, free for children under 12. Parking is free. To preview the show, get discount admission coupons, detailed directions and more, visit Sugarloaf's Web site at wiAPAr.SugarloafArtFair.com or call (800) 210-9900. Jews Who Rock Former Phish bassist Mark Gordon will take the stage 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23, at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. He'll join guitar virtuoso Leo Kottke, with whom he collabo- rated on the recently released album Sixty-six Steps, a follow- up to their first collaboration, 2002's Clone. Inspired by Gordon's memo- ries of calypso band the Mustangs, heard on a childhood trip to the Bahamas, Sixty-six Steps is an experimental piece that fuses island rhythms with Kottke and Gordon's usual folksy rock and blues. They'll be joined by drum- mer Neil Symonette. Tickets are $32.50. (248) 645-6666. Known as the "the hip-hop vio- linist," classically trained Miri Ben- Ari has been "throwing bows" Miri Ben-Ari with everyone from Wynton Marsalis to Jay-Z over the last few years. Recently appearing on Twista's hit Overnight Celebrity and on Kanye West's The College Dropout, Ben-Ari is now pulling strings on her own aptly titled debut, The Hip-Hop Violinist, featuring Kanye West, Scarface, Anthony Hamilton and a roster of other A-list artists. "I don't believe in limit- ing myself musically:' she explains, "but hip-hop is who I am. Hear Ben-Ari 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 24, at the Royal Oak Music Theatre, as she performs with hip-hop artist Busta Rhymes and All Mighty Senators. Tickets are $15 advance/$19 day of show. 18 and older. (248) 399-2980. Vocalist Chris Robinson "appropriated the sound and style of vintage Rod Stewart" while guitarist Rich Robinson "fused Keith Resistance during World War II. Richards' lean attack with Ron When he is Wood's messy rhyth- rejected, he mic sense" when the takes anoth- brothers founded the er job — Black Crowes in 1990. collaborator While Chris Robinson with the (hubby of Kate Gestapo. Hudson) has been pur- Later, he suing a solo career of becomes as late, the band comes involved back together to cele- with a brate 15 years of "cos- Jewish tailor mic rock 'n' roll" 7:30 and his p.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, Pierre Blaise in daughter, at the State Theater in Lacombe, Lucien who are in Detroit. Tickets are hiding. $39.50. (248) 645- "Malle poses the question of 6666. what a moral choice is, how one is made, and just what is the pre- cise point at which one crosses from self-interest to evil:' Writes Elliot Wilhem in VideoHound's The Detroit Film Theatre at the World Cinema, adding, "Malle DIA presents Louis Malle's mas- distills political and ideological terwork Lacombe, Lucien 7 p.m. madness to its simplest, most Sunday, Oct. 23. The film was human elements, creating what inspired by the director's memo- may be the most important mas- ries of a childhood during the terpiece of his career." German occupation of France. Tickets are $6.50-$7.50. In the film, 17-year-old Lucien (313) 833-3237. Lacombe (Pierre Blaise) makes an attempt to join the French some movie critics would take note of before declaring that such-and- such actor doesn't "look Jewish enough" (or looks "too Jewish") for a part. ner, Israeli economist/mathe- matician Robert Aumann, has been widely covered in the Jewish press. The other Jewish winner, physicist Roy J. Glauber, has not. Glauber, 80, grew up in New York City and graduated from the famous Bronx High School of Science. He went to work for the Manhattan Project (build- ing the first atomic bomb) right out of high school. A Harvard professor, Glauber was awarded his Nobel for his theoretical description of how particles of light act. His research helped explain how light can spread around a large area or form a narrow line of intense light, as from a laser. Three Nobel Prizes for a group (Jews) that numbers about one- quarter of 1 percent of-the world's population isn't bad. By the way, the most com- mon method to count Jewish Nobel Prize winners is to include "half-Jewish" winners regardless of how they were raised and to count in a few Jewish winners who converted away (plus one winner who converted to Orthodox Judaism). By this standard, 170 Nobel Prize winners are count- ed as "Jewish:' or about 22 per- cent of all winners of a Nobel — ever. Malle Masterwork Celebrity Jews from page 52 novels cover the adven- tures of a 14- year-old boy who happens to be a James Bond-type secret agent. The novels have sold over 8 mil- lion copies to Sophie Okonedo date. Jewish actresses Alicia Silverstone and Sophie Okonedo co star. Okonedo, an Oscar nominee for The Hotel Rwanda, is English Jewish on her mother's side and Nigerian on her father's side (she identifies as Jewish). Silverstone and Okonedo make an interesting statement about the diversity of the Jewish peo- ple — a statement that I wish - October 20 2005 Nobel Work This was a significant year for Jewish Nobel Prize winners. British playwright Harold Pinter was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Best known for enigmatic plays like The Birthday Party and The Homecoming, Pinter, born in London in 1930 to working-class Jewish parents, also is a well-known peace activist. Another Jewish win- Harold Pinter Roy J. Glauber Weisz Hot, Moss Not The beautiful actress Rachel Weisz, hot after co- starring in The Constant Gardener (a rare crit- ical and box-office hit), has reportedly been Rachel Weisz offered the position of chief model for the Burberry clothing company. Weisz would take over the job from super- model Kate Moss, who was fired by Burberry after the publica- tion of photos showing her using cocaine. 53