have a chance to hone their reading skills through dozens of fun activities, including rhyme-making contraptions and a One Fish, Two Fish matching game. Also on exhibit will be sketches, drawings and other art work reflecting Dr. Seuss' life and creativity. For more information, contact the Children's Muse- urn of Manhattan, 212 W 83rd St., New York, NY 10024, (212) 721-1223. Get Cooking With The Net Delicious and free Passover recipes (so who could com- plain?), ranging from low-cho- lesterol strawberry sponge cake to broccoli-olive basil soup, are available on the Internet. The recipes, offered as a public service of the Pittsburgh- based Jewish bookstore 1-800- JUDAISM, can be found at http://wvvvv.judaism. corn/pass- over. In addition, the site offers an informational section on healthy eating during Passover, developed by nutritionist Joanne Perelman. Take A Bite Out Of This Children, take note: If your parents are driving you crazy, perhaps it's time you shape them up by taking them to meet up with some creatures hanging out at the Oakland Mall. Some very big creatures. From May 9 through July 7, life-sized, roaring dinosaurs will be making their home at the Oakland Mall. Eight of the pre- historic creatures which actual- ly move (thanks to the latest robotics technology) will be on exhibit at the mall. You and your parents can check out a mom and child Chasmosaurus, a Stegosaurs, a Tyrannosaurs Rex (he's especially good to show parents who misbehave), two Protoceratops and a nest of hatching eggs. The Oakland Mall is at 1-75 and 14 Mile Road in Troy. The exhibit is open during mall hours. All you need are baking soda, two glasses, water and vinegar and the apple seeds, of course. First, put one tea- spoonful of bak- ing soda into a dry glass. Second, fill an- other glass halfway with water, then add three teaspoonfuls of vinegar, then several apple seeds. Finally, pour the vinegar mixture into the glass with the baking soda. As the carbon dioxide forms, you'll see some fizzing. Then the fun begins as the apple seeds jump up and down in the water, dancing their little hearts out. So, why does this happen? The carbon dioxide bubbles at- tach themselves to the seeds. As the bubbles go up and down, so- do the seeds. Here's What's Cooking Ina recent issue The Apple- Tree focused on Rosh Chodesh, the new month, and gave a recipe for moon- shaped cookies. We were glad to hear that the Wanetick family of Southfield has made baking these cookies a tradi- tion! "We had a ball making your Rosh Chodesh cookies," they tell us. "In fact, we are mak- ing them each Rosh Chodesh!" Have you had fun doing something mentioned in The AppleTree? If so, please write us a letter or send us a picture. Disco- Dancing Apple Seeds With just a few supplies, you can make apple seeds the coolest dancers since John Tra- volta donned that fabulous white suit in Saturday Night Fever Hanna Berlin, Natalie Wanetick, Francine Wanetick and Sala Wanetick get cooking. Picture Perfect No doubt Rembrandt himself would have loved to take up brush to capture these adorable faces... Mrs. Reiter's kindergarten class at Hillel Day School recently took up the study of group pictures. In the days before the camera, they learned, the only way to cap- ture an image was through the skilled hands of an artist. The class looked at various paintings of groups, and even colored in their own version of Rembrandt's The Syndics [businessmen] of the Draper Guild At the end of the pro- ject, the children posed for a group picture of their own taken by Illana Greenberg.