AppleTree dip into the mixture and raise to make bubbles. 23) Decorate and destroy "bad guy" balloons. Use permanent markers to decorate balloons with the faces of Haman and other rotten figures from history. Fill the balloons with water and enjoy smashing. 24) Tell a family story. One person starts a tale, the second continues, the third adds and so on and so on until everyone has had a turn. 25) Take a day trip to a nearby town that you've never visited. 26) Make healthy muffins. Serve the muffins at break- fast tomorrow. 27) Buy an inexpensive lip gloss for everyone. Visit your favorite discount store and treat each child to a fla- vored lip-gloss. (Remember when the only choice was cherry? Now you can find everything from mango to almond.) 28) Build a playing-card "synagogue." Challenge your child to use playing cards to build his "dream synagogue." Let him take an old deck and bend the cards to create a much sturdier building. 29) Play "what if." Ask your child "what if" questions, and let her do the same for you: "What if you were able to speak with animals?" "What if you could fly for one day?" "What if you could be invisible for a week?" 30) Encourage your child to teach you something. 31) Write a family newspaper. The paper should have stories about what's going on with every family mem- ber. Send it to relatives and friends. 32) Try to make your own Jewish palindromes. A palindrome is a sentence that reads the same forward and backward, like "Madam, I'm Adam." 3N 6/28 2002 58 33) Make it a snowy day inside. Chip ice and cover with Coke for an instant cold drink. Cut "snowflakes" out of paper. Make miniature snowmen using cotton balls and felt-tip markers. 34) Imagine that your child is a guest in your home, and treat him according- ly for the entire clay. names, those of your grandparents and famous biblical figures — any names that interest you. 35) Play with stickers. Buy a collection of fun stickers and ask your child to place them on paper, then make up a story about what it shows. 44) Take a walk, and let your child choose the directions. 36) Take your child on an imagination journey. Ask her to close her eyes. Tell her you will slowly guide her as you name and she relaxes every part of her body. Then take your child soaring through the skies, over hills, through fields of flowers (remember: go slowly and give lots of details!) until finally she finds a box. Inside is a present just for her. Tell her to carefully look at it, then close the box. Take your child back home (slowly). At the end, ask if she would be willing to tell what she saw in the box. 37) Buy a cheese pizza for dinner and allow everyone to top his pieces with whatever he finds tasty 38) Surprise your daughter. Ask her to come with you on an errand, then take her to buy a CD she has been wanting. 39) Visit the grave of a long- lost loved one, or simply walk through a Jewish cemetery. 40) Do an art project with mark- ers. Draw with markers on a piece of white paper. Wet a tissue and carefully place atop the drawing, which will absorb the colors and copy the picture. 41) Stopping nagging your child for a day. Go an entire day without using any of the following words or phrases with your child: "Don't." "How many times do I have to ...?" "What's the matter with you?" 42) Find something special at a toy store. Look for one of your favorite games from when you were little. Then, play it with your child. 43) Buy a book of Jewish baby names. Learn the meaning of your own 45) Ask your child to complete this sentence: "Here's what is important in my life ..." 46) Have an at-home spa day for you and your girls. Buy an assortment of facial masques, hair conditioners, nail polishes and more. Then, pamper each other. 47) Check out a Jewish celebrity Web site. Find out the Jewish connection of all your favorite celebrities on the Internet at jewhoo.com 48) Write your child a love letter. Leave it under his or her pillow. 49) Read someone else's recommended book. Ask your best friend or your child's teacher about her favorite Jewish book, then find a copy and read it. 50) Do your own cola challenge. Buy Coke, Pepsi, Faygo — all the colas you can find. Pour some of each into a cup (identify on the bottom only). Now, chal- lenge your family members to correctly name each. 51) Be nice to the birds. Make a birdhouse, or make popcorn to take to a favorite bird hangout. never heard of before. 56) Create coupon books. For this project, you will make rip a book for your children, and have them make one up for you. Write up "coupons" that can be traded in for whenever the recipient wants. Try these: "A Night Off From Doing the Dishes," "No Nagging All Day," "Good For An Ice Cream With Four Scoops." 57) Be a news reporter. Ask your child to imagine that he's a reporter and is witnessing an important event in Jewish history. How would he write his fast-breaking news story? 58) Have your child come up with 10 reasons she likes being Jewish. 59) Stay up late to look for the man-in- the-moon. 60) Guess the item. Fill an empty box with four non- breakable items, but don't let your child see. He can shake, smell and feel each -item to guess what it is. 61) Build your dream mall from blocks. Ask your child to decide what each store would sell. 62) Paint a scene on a large rock for a paperweight. Watercolors will not work for this project. Ask someone at an art store to recommend a good, inexpensive paint. Be sure to finish the rock picture with a silicone or acrylic spray so your art will last a long time. 63) Just sing. For a whole hour, sing everything to your children, rather than talk. 52) Play a long-forgotten board game. 53) Make a picture for Shabbat. Use tiny seeds, bits of rice and buttons to make a picture for your Shabbat table. (This is not a project for small children, of course, who might place these items in their mouths.) 54) Dress up a face. Cut out a large photograph of a face from a magazine; or use a photocopied picture of your child. Cut off the hair. Now, encourage your child to make lots of wigs for the face, each on a different piece of paper. Use foil, ribbon and yarn for more fun. 55) Explore the Encyclopedia Judaica. Look through the pages of this resource and learn about someone you've 64) Try some different recipes. Ask a senior family member for recipes from when he or she was young, then fix these for dinner. 65) Check out a book of poems and have everyone read his favorite. 66) Make up silly words that rhyme with "Jewish." 67) Attach a self-addressed, stamped note to a balloon. On the card write, "Whoever finds this, please tell me where the balloon landed and mail this to me. Thank you." Then, release the balloon. 68) Read a comic book aloud with your child.