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May 21, 1993 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-05-21

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

ADVICE page 43

jWokheaty'soaugc000ud
idJreew
peisaht

in

front of anyone?

A

young man was talking with his mother about the
recent Michigan Miracle Mission to Israel. That
got him thinking about travel, and he mentioned
to his mother, 'Think about those astronauts. Do
you know how much it costs to go to the moon? Millions and
millions!"
"Well," his mother replied, "if you have money, you
travel."
— Max Sosin,
of Southfield, a retired
salesman and still-active stand-up comedian

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What's the easiest wag
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for Pesach?

S

tart early. "The best time to start cleaning is right
after Purim. "Also, try to do a little preparing each
year. The more Pesach utensils you have, the bet-
ter. Silverware, pots and pans can be kashered if
necessary. But it's a lot better to have Pesach-only items.
Depending on your budget and storing space, you can try to
buy a few items each year. That's what we do in our house.
"It's also helpful if you have a second refrigerator, if
you're so blessed, so you can start cleaning one out early and
begin to store things."
— Rabbi Elliot Pachter,

Congregation B'nai Moshe

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354-5959

19
L

How do you get great
photos at a Jewish
sirnchah?

et people be themselves. I like to take pictures of
people when they're not looking. At a wedding, I
look through the camera the whole night — except
when I'm eating — just waiting for the right mo-
ment. I'll take posed shots if that's what people want, but
that isn't the way life really is. Nobody sees us posed or
through a filter. I like pictures of things the way they really
are. Like just this morning, I was davening at the minyan at
Beth Yehudah, and I happened to see a little boy looking up
at his rebbe. I thought, 'Now this would make a great shot.' "
— Irwin Cohen,
of Irwin Cohen Photography in Oak Park

20

What's the best Jewish
lullaby to sing to your
baby to get her to sleep?

edtime routines are very important. (Our daugh-
ter) Rivka Ayelet always has to hear the same
song, and if you vary or substitute words YOU
ARE IN TROUBLE!
"We begin our bedtime by saying the first paragraph of
the Sh'ma. Then we sing Hamalachah HaGoel (`The Re-
deeming Angel,' Yaakov's blessing to his sons in Genesis
48:16) to the tune of 'Braham's Lullaby.' Last, we sing
`Noomi, Noomi' (an Israeli song meaning, 'Sleep, sleep').
"And if we wake up in the middle of the night, we sing 'I
Love You a Bushel and a Peck,' (from Guys and Dolls). It
always works.
"I have spent many, many hours singing these songs."
— Janet Snider,
of Southfield, a pediatrician with Medical Center
Pediatrics and the mother of 2-year-old Rivka Ayelet,
and Leah Tova, 6 months

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