• • • COMPILED BY ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Torah By Phone T he Torah Communica- tions Network of Brook- lyn has a new service that allows anyone to learn a page a day of Torah, as well as study other subjects of Jew- ish interest, simply by picking up the phone. Dial-a-Daf and Dial-a-Shi- ur are available in English and Yiddish. (Mishnah-on- the-Phone is offered in Eng- lish only.) Topics include Holo- caust studies, tales of tzadikim and Jewish history. A touchtone phone is re- quired for the TorahPhone. Council Report Documents Polish Jewish Communities M ost of the more than 1,000 remaining syn- agogues, cemeteries and other historic Jewish sites throughout Poland are in ru- ins, according to a new survey published by the Jewish Her- itage Council of the World Monuments Fund. Sponsored by the U.S. Commission for the Preser- vation of America's Heritage Abroad, the report considered 300 synagogues and 1,000 cemeteries in Lodz, Krakow and Warsaw, as well as small- er cities and towns. It notes sites that can be chosen for restoration based on their artistic, religious and historic importance; the condition of a specific site; and the receptiv- ity of the local government and community to restoration and future maintenance. The Jewish Heritage Coun- cil's first restoration project is the Tempel Synagogue in Krakow. "Approximately 80 percent of U.S. Jews have ancestors from Poland and Eastern and Looking At Windows nation of Conservative women rabbis. The newsletter also fea- tures book reviews, opinion pieces and interviews. Mabat is an initia- tive of the AJCom- mittee's Institute on American Jewish-Is- rael Relations and will be published six ON AMERICAN JEWRY AND ISRAEL-DIASPORA RELATIONS times a year. For information, contact the Distributed in Israel and AJCornmittee, 165 E. 56th St., the United States, Mabat (Windows) in its most recent ' New York, NY 10022. issue discussed the peace treaty signed by Yitzhak Shamir and Yassir Arafat, Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List and the 10th an- lam a"rnK rani "JD niversary of the ordi- e American Jewish Com- mittee is publishing a new pamphlet that considers key issues relating to Israel- Diaspora relations. WI OWS Central Europe," said Coun- cil Chairman Ronald Lauder. "Each location surveyed is an integral part of America's her- itage." For a copy of the report, which costs $12.50, contact Felicia Mayro at the World Monuments Fund, (212) 517- 9367. Cagadiait ?apex 'Refute `Ktemiaitic Jettil ► k' Ad6 T he Toronto Star has pledged not to print any advertisements from re- ligious groups that are specif- ically directed to Jews. According to a report in the Canadian Jewish News, the decision followed the Star's printing last September of an ad from a group considering itself "Messianic Jews." The ad, announcing High Holy Day services at Beth Sar Shalom, included a Star of David and ran in English, He- brew and Russian. Canadian Jewish groups quickly protested the ad. In a letter to the Star, Canadian Jewish Congress' Ontario re- gion chairwoman Gerda Frieberg labeled the congre- gation "a Christian mission- ary organization whose aim is to convert Jews to Christiani- ty. This church should not be confused with anything Jew- ish." Membership subscription is $8 a month, with a onetime $36 registration fee. For a sample shiur (lesson), call (718) 435-3492. To subscribe or for further information, con- tact the Torah Communica- tions Network, 1618 43rd St., Brooklyn, NY 11204, (718) 436-4999. One Man's Trash Is Baby Jane's Treasure I s there anyone in this entire world who wouldn't give his right arm for a framed piece of a hideous ceramic floor lamp from the home of Roseanne and Tom Arnold? The question is only where to find it. The answer is Baby Jane of Hollywood. Baby Jane, a celebrity mem- orabilia shop, got its big break in celebrity trash during the recent earthquake in Califor- nia. Many homes of Hollywood stars were affected by the quake, and of course big, rich stars don't need to repair all that broken old junk when they can simply throw it away and buy new stuff. Baby Jane owners Roy Windham and Charles Moniz quickly realized, however, that there was gold in them thar garbage cans. They decided to take the broken treasures from the stars' trash, frame them and then sell them, with half the profits going to earth- quake relief. Among their treasures are numerous items from Jewish stars, including Barbra Streisand and Bette Midler. "We had a green planter pot and a black-glass perfume of Bette Midler's," Mr. Windham said. "But those sold." Most of Ms. Streisand's trash — including a broken champagne bottle, cups and a terra cotta planter — is gone, too. "We still have some frag- ments from her walls, though," Mr. Windham said. There's still plenty of the Arnolds' ceramic floor lamp left, but Mr. Windham says it's a pretty strange item. "One of her neighbors called and told us, There's a big bro- ken lamp out on Roseanne's street in the trash. Is that the kind of thing you want?' " Mr. Windham recalled. It was, of course. "It's about six feet, really tacky," he said. "They (Roseanne and Tom) had tak- en crayons and drawn spider webs all over it." Bette Midler