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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

April 12, 2007 - Image 41

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2007-04-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

NOW PLAYING! et

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A funny, exuberant look at the lives of women as reflected in music

through the years from "Someone to Watch over won to Will Survive!"
"Ultimate GM? Night Out!"
It's Detroit's

to www.jewishannarbor.org/
jerusalemstringquartet. Questions
about the program may be directed to
Elisha Caplan, (734) 677-0100.
Tickets through UMS are $20, $28,
$36 and $40. (734) 764-2538 or
www.ums.org.

Fringe First

The first ever Detroit Fringe Festival,
a 30-hour marathon featuring danc-
ers, musicians, performance artists,
visual artists, films and other events,
including a re-enactment of Darwin's
theory of evolution and a "Green
Eggs and Ham" breakfast, takes place
8 p.m. Friday, April 12, through 1:30
a.m. Sunday, April 15, in and about
Music Hall Center for the Performing

Arts, where Vince Paul, its Jewish
president and artistic director, is busy
crafting a new and exciting identity
for a historic venue.
In addition to local performers,
national acts include MYO's Garden of
Reason from Los Angeles and Electric
Dinosaurs from New York; partici-
pants from around the world include
Pluck from London and Mia Makela,
aka "SOLU," from Barcelona.
The festival is made possible by the
financial support of Gary Wasserman,
the Frankel Foundation for Art and
Julie and Robert Taubman.
Tickets to the entire festival are $32.
For a complete schedule of events, go
to www.detroitfringefestival.com.

FYI: For Arts related events that you wish to have considered for Out & About, please send the item, with
a detailed description of the event, times, dates, place, ticket prices and publishable phone number, to:
Gail Zimmerman, JN Out & About, The Jewish News, 29200 Northwestern Highway, Suite 110, Southfield,
MI 48034; fax us at (248) 304-8885; or e-mail to qzimmerman@thejewishnews.com . Notice must be
received at least three weeks before the scheduled event. Photos are appreciated but cannot be returned.
All events and dates listed in the Out & About column are subject to

the U.S. Open
Women's champi-
onship. In 2005,
she won the U.S.
Amateur cham-
pionship and fin-
ished second in
the U.S. Open.
Pressel, who
Morgan Pressel
was a bat mitz-
vah and is openly proud of being
Jewish, has lived with her maternal
grandparents, Herb and Evelyn
Krickstein, since her mother,
Kathy, died of breast cancer in
2003 at age 43. They travel with
Morgan on the pro tour, while her
two younger siblings stay with her
father, Mike Pressel.
Morgan has many ties to
Michigan: Her great-grandfa-
ther Joseph Krickstein was a
Conservative rabbi in Ann Arbor.
Her mother was a Big Ten ten-
nis champion at the University of
Michigan (her parents met at a
Blues Brothers concert in suburban
Detroit). Her uncle is tennis star

Aaron Krickstein, once ranked No.
6 in the world.
The Kraft-Nabisco tournament
was founded as the Colgate/
Dinah Shore Winner's Circle
Championship in 1972 by the late
Jewish singer Dinah Shore, and her
name was attached to the event
until 2000. Following tournament
tradition, Pressel celebrated her
Kraft-Nabisco win by jumping into
a pond on the golf course. Her
grandmother also jumped in.
This tradition began in 1988,
when golfer Amy Alcott, one of
the greatest Jewish athletes of
all time, celebrated her victory
by jumping into a pond near the
18th green. In 1991, Dinah Shore
jumped into the pond with Alcott
when Alcott won the third of her
four Shore championships. Since
1994, every winner has jumped in
the pond, and the lake jump is now
the equivalent of getting the green
jacket at the men's Masters Golf
Tournament. I

Audience
Raves
RESPECT
is a Hit!

***

"Tenific...Excellent..
A Really Good Time."

- The Detroit Free Press

"A soaring message of
strength and
self-confidence."

- The Observer & Eccentric

(all Now: (313) 963-9800

Add dinner at the Century Grille or Elwood Bar
& Grill and make your night out complete!
Group discounts available - call for information.

THE HISTORIC

GE

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ft-•

Y

THEATRES

CENTURY
GRILLE

www.gemtheatre.com
333 Madison Ave, Detroit MI 48226

C",)11,11 'S1 Cw!._.VA' LAU/S.1R_

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2nd adult brunch

12 & undo; 1/2 off
5 & under free

201 HAMILTON ROW

DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM

2 4 8 . 6 4 2 - 2 4 8 9

April 12 . 2007

41

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