100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

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

August 27, 1999 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-08-27

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

One Size
Does Not
Fit All

For Openers

Saving Graces

SY MANELLO

Editorial Assistant

,
ur langdage is filled with
admonitions involving saving.
We are urged to Save the
W hales. Myriad products
save us time and space to say nothing
of money (maybe that's because there
' are no real savings?)"A penny saved is
a penny earned." And the list goes on.
But how many of us are packrats? Of
course you won't admit to it, but ask
yourself, "Does my stuff have stuff?"
We recently made a trip to a thrift
shop to donate rummage. I was
shamed into making the trip since I
could no longer get to the storage
cupboards in my basement which
were blocked by the boxes we had
been filling with "discards." No soon-
er did I return than I noticed another
box had appeared and begun to fill!
You still have all those wonderful
notes that you made in college, don't
you? Stop telling yourself that you'll
refer to them or need them in any form;
the textbooks they were based on were
ancient history before you graduated.
Yes, everything old may be new
again, but there is no hope for those
outfits that you were able to wear 10
years ago. Even if you could fit into
them, the style is for the less mature
figures. (How's that for putting it
nicely?) Clean out those closets.
Balls of string, balls of tin foil (ask
some WWII-era "survivors"), old
newspapers (there is such a thing as
recycling now): All these may be —
dare I say it? THROWN OUT!!
Don't argue; SAVE your breath.
Don't worry about it; SAVE your
strength. Don't ask about all those
toys in my basement; they're SAVED
for my grandchildren. II

Should hate Web sites be taken down?

The
Yes No
Virtual Vote on JN Online www.detroitjewishnews.com

Voter

Results from last week's poll (17 respondents)

If you traveled to Israel this summer, what city left you with
the best memories? .

Jerusalem (35%) Tel Aviv (24%) Haifa (6%)
Safad (6%) rTiberius (6%) 3. Eilat (18%) Other (6%)

Yiddish Limericks

Off course on his transglobal trek,
An arctic tern got quite a shreck, -
Farblondget, — he found
By valgarine' round,
He's in ally drayrdn avecl*"*

* fright
- lost
wandering
**** no man's land (idiomatic)

by Martha Jo Flesichmann

(This limerick is
rerun to correct an
error on Aug. 6)

If On The Moon, When Would A Jew
Say The Blesssing On The Full Moon?

ur question comes to us from B'Or HaTorah, a journal

JIMAISM

I (Il i
of art, science and modern life in the light of the
Torah. When Apollo 11 landed on the moon 30 years
ago, it raised questions of Halacha (Jewish law) as well as faith. Even the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson, took notice of the historic walk
of astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin.
The first problem arose from the text of the Kiddush Ha'levana (blessing on the
full moon). Since the blessing reads, "Just as I leap toward you but cannot touch
you," some suggested changing the wording of the prayer in light of the latest sci-
entific advancements. But according to Rabbi Yitshak Yehuda Rozen, rearranging
or changing a portion of the text would present a credibility problem for the whole
prayer book. According to the late Lubavitcher Rebbe, no Kiddush Ha'levana
would be necessary for Jews living on the moon.

— Steven H Pollak

To submit a question for consideration, write: Judaism 101, The Jewish News, 27676
Franklin Road, Southfield, MI 48034; by fax: (248) 354-6069;
by e-mail, rsklar@thejewishnews.com
Check out JN Online at www.detroitjewishnews.com and click on Judaism 101
on the homepage.

R.P\WiNG COMM ITTEE AT LAST

wE RECOMME1 ■ )f) THAT- OUR SHUL
ADOPT 11-4E. FAST FOOD FRAMCIA (5 E-

TAILOR-MADE TO EACH
INDIVIDUAL'S NEEDS


WE PROVIDE MORE
THAN DAILY LIVING
ASSISTANCE...
WE PROVIDE A
COMMUNITY.

Friends to meet, activities to

enjoy, cultural and religious

opportunities — all that makes
life full and complete.



JARC INDEPENDENT

LIVING SERVICES

• Newly expanded

• Serving people with
any level of disability

GRAPLIEWZ BY Mendel

AFTER TWO A-ARS,oUR STRATCGIC

JARC
INDEPENDENT
LIVING
SERVICES

weLL,Thars IT. wen READ' TO

ACCEPT OuR 1?el,060170&) G(FT5 t\ICO
Tat, ME AGAIN, TO LIMIT OUR

ReCommet0- moPeL) AND OPEN A NATIONA L
READ,9 To MAKE
CHAIN) OF FAST 51-1ABAT seRvices RABBI, WHY 20 PR06RES5.wE
ATIolk15 ok) Hot.), l.JE CAN
FRAh)cHLse".5
toe Do EVERy - WOULDN'T NAMT
Acm !EVE FINANCJAL- .STA31LIT
TO GET fop FAR
TRIMG 89
COMMITTEE? AHEAD OF THE
REST OF ii-te WORLD

• Professional staff to ensure
your family member's life

is well-coordinated



CALL

248-352-5272

V/TTY

FOR MORE INFORMATION.

A Jewish Association for
Residential Care for persons
with developmental disabilities

28366 Franklin Road
Southfield, MI 48034

8/2
199

Detroit Jewish News

.

5

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan