MOTOR COACH TOURS AIR AND CRUISE TRAVEL Fact-A-Day New Years in Chicago 12/30/01 1/2/02 sF - "Sweet Smell of Success" with John Lithgow, music by Marvin Hamlisch, on Sunday, including dinner. "My Fair Lady" at Drury Lane Theatre with gourmet dinner New Years Eve! Champagne toast at midnight, 2 breakfasts $549 "Fully Committed", Century Theatre, Detroit, including MGM Grand & dinner at $89 Mario's 11/18/01 "Mama Mia" Masonic Temple Including lunch or dinner at Mario's $125 1/27/01 $119 2/9/01 All rates P.P. Dbl. -Call for flyers and cruise specials! BERKLEY TOURS AND TRAVEL 248-865-8890 • 1-800-875-8671 poet Charles Reznikoff, drummer Buddy Rich, comedian Joan Rivers, composer Richard Rodgers, author Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, artist Maurice Sendak, singers Paul Simon and Barbra Streisand, actor Peter Strauss, historian Stanley Wolpert and author Herman Wouk. #4) The first "Jewish" union in New York City was the Progressive Cigar Makers, established in 1883. Among those who received his training there was a young Samuel Gompers, later founder of the American Federation of Labor (AFL). #5) The first record of Jewish activity in New York is a real-estate transac- tion. It took place in Albany, under the name of Asser Levy, from 1658. #6) In 1812, the first known census was taken of the Jewish community of New York state, listing 400 resi- dents. Contact RICK ZERNER for Exceptional Personal Service & the Area's Best Selection of Fine Automobiles. #7) Today, the number of Jewish res- idents of New York is 1,651,000 (Jews make up about 9 percent of the state's population). #8) The first Jewish newspaper in New York was called, appropriately enough, The Jew. Making its appear- ance in 1823, The Jew lasted for two years. Unlike many other publications, its goal was not to keep the community advised of news; instead, it was created specifically to combat Christian mission- aries. Your Tri-State Source Since 1956 VIN DEVERS MERCEDES-BENZ • AUDI 5570 MONROE • SYLVANIA, OH 419/885-5111 www.vindevers.com #9) The first ordained rabbis in America came from Europe and settled in New York City in the mid-1800s. They included Rabbi Leo Merzbacher, later a founder of one of the city's oldest and best-known Reform congregations, Temple Emanu-El. #10) New York City is famous for its clothing-manufacturing industry, to which Jews have made a huge contribu- tion. But did you know just how long that connection has been around? In fact, by 1888 the city was home to 241 clothing manufacturers, of which 234 were Jewish-owned (mostly German Jews). Their annual product for 1888 walvstimated at $55 million. #11) Talk-to anyone who grew up in Jewish New York and he'll tell you about egg creams, spritzer and Jewish sour- dough bread. You can make nostalgia come alive by baking your own Jewish sourdough bread. Check out the recipe at: wwvv.breadnet. netinyrye.html 372 Oullette Avenue • Windsor, Canada #13) The first Jewish school in New York City was Yeshibat Minhat Areb, established by Shearith Israel Congregation. Subsidized by public funds, the school taught students Hebrew, math, reading, writing and English. #14) The first English-Hebrew Haggadah was printed in New York in 1837. #15) Among the politicians who, in their day, carried the Lower East Side vote was a young, robust man named Theodore Roosevelt, always a favorite with the Jewish community, and a news- paper publisher named William Randolph Hearst. Hearst ran for mayor of New York City in 1905. His paper, the New York American, often ran stories about the vicious Russian pogroms and sponsored fund- raising campaigns to help the victims. For a brief while, Hearst even had his own Yiddish newspaper. #16) The New York Fair Employment Practice Act was enacted in 1945, mak- ing it illegal to discriminate in the work place. It was the first such legislation in the country and passed in large part thanks to the Jewish members of the New York State Legislature. Until then, -Jews, along with blacks and Catholics, experienced widespread discrimination, especially in such fields as banking, law and retail sales (and often when the managers and owners themselves were • Jewish). Colleges and universities also had a "Jewish quota" — with one exception. For a number of years, Catholic profes- sional schools in New York welcomed Jewish students, who made up a large proportion of their enrollment. #17) Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir received the key to the City of New York in 1969. It was presented by then-mayor John Lindsay. #18) By the 1920s, 45 percent of this country's Jewish community lived in New York City. Less than 20 years later, New York City was established as the center of Jewish life in America. In 1944 40 percent of the Jews listed in Who Who lived in New York City, while virtually every one of the 240 Jewish organizations in America had offices there. #19) Harlem's first Jewish congregation was Temple Israel, founded in 1874.