For Openers
Annual Fundraiser
SEE THE
BEST
T
The Generation Gaps
here are many things to be said for being
young. But, given a choice, I think I'll
stick with adulthood.
It was traumatic for both of my chil-
dren when their offspring outgrew naptime; the
adults became even more tired and drawn. I relish
that Shabbat afternoon nap time — and any other
afternoon that such a treat can be squeezed in.
Children have some unusual ideas about cloth-
ing. One, if the color is there, anything can go with
anything else: checks with plaids, stripes with plaids,
dots with — well, you get the
idea. The closet in a young per-
son's room is for hiding in;
clothes are to be left draped
around the room or piled, not
too discreetly, over the carpet.
Adults, on the other hand, are
quite particular about matching
items. We have also managed to
use up all the available closet space
in the house since the children
SY MANELLO
have moved out.
Editorial
As for food, we all have gone
Assistant
through the only-peanut-butter-
and-jelly years; or when the only
"green thing" a child might eat is Jell-O gelatin.
Speaking of the latter, if it can be picked up and
played with, it is surely a winner on a child's plate. I
love vegetables, salads and soups. Though I enjoy
eating asparagus, I really don't care to demonstrate
how wiggly a spear of it can be.
Our children were unable to have pets due to
allergies. Their indomitable spirits went through
daddy longlegs in a jar, a snapping turtle found in a
nearby drainage ditch, several hamsters and many
belly-up goldfish. As adults, we prefer not to be
bound by water changes, vet bills or pet sitters.
"Free-to-get-away" is our motto.
I'll put on my matching shirt and tie; then if you
give me ice cream first and a chance to nap — you
can have the idyllic days of childhood. ❑
WITH THE
By Goldfein
ow does the Hebrew spelling of sukkah instruct us how to
build one?
•arnaDruas tens E JO SLUJOJ JaHso)J asst. a
Qsata •ipm
puu sum °ma solouap ‘,Caci JO u 'Jam' rug aqi •sirm aalqi 2u!
-:ouap 'paps aarql sr 'joy) JO C (Jallar puoDas atli •srium inoj .2u!
-louap 'arEnbs r Jo unoj atp u! siazzal )poicr ur uainJM sr 'vault's
.10 0 'Jana' asJ9 aqi •0 c
Si ,5'u!llads (wavy ay1 :aaa-isuy
E
106611-1 E R
MAU NAILS
coj e o cl or e
O iR el
Yiddish Limericks
viad l e r
abita f
A building inspector named Zeke
Said, "Vay iz mere* does this roof leak!
Your contractor's blind:—
With one gust of wind,
This sukkah won't last past a week."
— Martha Jo Fleischmann
* Woe is me!
** blind
**- temporary, open-roofed structure erected
for the week of Sukkot
^4,
notables
"They wanted to talk to me about fashion.
how much they knew."
I was surprised by
— Italian actress Isabella Rossellini, on the Chasidic women she
met for tea in Antwerp while filming "Left Luggage," in which she
plays a Yiddish-speaking Chasid.
"I support her fight.
port her, period."
41001 001.1111W.2,
I support her ideas and ideals. And I sup-
— Author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiese!, on his decision to
endorse Hillary Rodham Clinton in New York's senatorial race.
"The action must shift from the street to the bargaining table."
— U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to Israeli Foreign Minister
Shlomo Ben-Ami, in a post-Yom Kippur meeting.
FISHER
THEATRE
GLAPLIEWZ BY Mendel
IS THIS SCOTCH
.UP! I ALSO
TAPE -MY Re
USED A GLUE
(Aim G TO HOLD STiCK- (T'S
OUR SUKKAH
EASIER TO USE
IES
DIDN'T THE
SAME THING
HAPPEN LAST
.SEAR ?!
to?.'
WELL HOW WAS
I SUPPOSED To
Kr\INJ THAT A
FPEAK BREEZE
WOULD COME.
ALONG?
calb
WAPi
OPENING NIGHTS
OF NATIONAL TOUR
Tuesday,
October 24
Wednesday,
October 25
28366 Franklin Road
Southfield, MI 4 80 34
248-352-5272 vitt),
fax 248 - 352 - 5279
jarcajarc.org • www.jarc.org
10/13
2000
5