Archive for October, 2007

US Stocks Rally on Microsoft Profit, Countrywide Forecast

Friday, October 26th, 2007

U.S. stocks rallied after Microsoft Corp. and Countrywide Financial Corp. reassured investors that profits will extend five years of growth.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index posted its sixth increase in seven weeks after 65 percent of 301 members reported quarterly earnings that topped analysts’ forecasts. Profits may grow 7 percent in 2007 and 12.3 percent in 2008, based on the average analyst estimate from a Bloomberg survey.

Microsoft, the world’s biggest software company, climbed 9.5 percent to a six-year high after quarterly sales beat projections by more than $1 billion. Countrywide, the largest U.S. mortgage lender, had the biggest gain since at least 1982 after saying last quarter was its “earnings trough.”

The S&P 500 climbed 20.88, or 1.4 percent, to 1,535.28, its steepest advance this month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 134.78, or 1 percent, to 13,806.7. The Nasdaq Composite Index jumped 53.33, or 1.9 percent, to 2,804.19. [MORE]

Simchas Bais Boston (Flatbush)

Friday, October 26th, 2007

This Shabbos is the Auf Ruf for the son of the Bostoner Rebbe Shlita of Flatbush in the Bostoner Bais Medrash.

Burshtein Rebbe Spending Shabbos In London

Friday, October 26th, 2007

The Burshtein Rebbe Shlita is spending Shabbos in London. The Tefillos and Tish are taking place in the Yismach Lev Hall.

Simchas Bais Skver/Viznitz (Bnei Brak)

Friday, October 26th, 2007

This Shabbos is the Auf Ruf Of the Einikle of Skver Rebbe Shlita and Rav Yisroel Hager Shlita (Viznitz Bnei Brak) in New Square. Rav Yisroel Hager Shlita is spending Shabbos in New Square Likovid the Simcha.

 

 

Rav Ahron Schecter Spending Shabbos In Dallas Texas

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Rav Ahron Schecter Shlita – Rosh Yeshivas Chaim Berlin – along with other Rabbonim are spending Shabbos in Dallas Texas for the opening of a new Frum Shul. (No further information was available to Yeshivaworld on this news item.)

Toldos Ahron Rebbe Spending Shabbos In Monsey

Friday, October 26th, 2007

The Toldos Ahron Rebbe Shlita will be spending Shabbos in Monsey – Davening & Tish will take place at the special Shul set up for Shabbos.

Daughter Of Skver Rebbe (BP) Kallah

Friday, October 26th, 2007

The Daughter of the Skver Rebbe Shlita of Boro Park became a Kallah to the son of Rav Dovid Twersky Shlita – the Av Beis Din of Rachmanstrivka (Yerushalayim). The Vort will I”H take place this Motzei Shabbos in the Skver Bais Medrash in Boro Park on 47th Street at 10:00PM.

12:30PM EST: Incident At United Nations

Friday, October 26th, 2007

According to the Breaking News Network, An unusual incident occurred a few moments ago, leaving two officers injured – one critically. Apparently, a security unit driving a Cushman Golf Cart was involved in an accident – and both officers were ejected from the vehicle. Both were transported to Bellevue Trauma Center – with one officer reportedly in grave condition.

12:20PM EST: NYC: Incident @ Mexican Consulate:

Friday, October 26th, 2007

A small explosive device was detonated earlier this morning at the Mexican Consulate in Manhattan (Park Avenue at 39th Street). Channel 7 is reporting that possibly two grenades were tossed at the building – with one of them detonating. There were no injuries reported – and a large crime scene has been set-up. No further information is available.

OU Commends Bush Administration For New Iran Sanctions

Friday, October 26th, 2007

ou logo.jpgToday, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, commended the Bush Administration for the newly announced sanctions against Iran – which were reported HERE on YW.

Secretary of State Rice and Secretary of Treasury Paulson announced the toughest sanctions against Iran by an American administration since the 1979 Iranian revolution, against three state owned banks: Bank Melli, Bank Mellat, and Bank Saderat for their aiding Iran’s nuclear proliferation efforts and their financial support of international terrorism, as well as designating the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps a “specially designated global terrorist entity”. The Revolutionary Guards supports and facilitates terror worldwide. The U.S. Government believes them complicit in deaths of U.S. servicemen in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Nathan J. Diament, UOJCA Director of Public Policy stated:

As the time to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambition grows shorter and Iran’s own efforts at terror against America and Israel, which it has threatened to wipe off the map, grow increasingly bolder, keeping the pressure on Tehran is the best hope for the region and the world. These sanctions will deny Iran access to funds and markets to further its evil intentions, and send a clear message that the United States joins all people of good will in using every possible means to ensure Iran does not cause further death and destruction to innocents.

We commend Secretary Rice and Secretary Paulson for their action announced today, and thank President Bush for his leadership on this critical issue.

Abbas & Olmert Meet

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Ehud Olmert and Mahmoud Abbas met in Jerusalem. The Israeli prime minister and Palestinian Authority president held their latest in a series of accelerated summits over lunch Friday afternoon amid efforts to agree on the agenda for the upcoming peace conference in Annapolis, Md., officials said.

 

Oil Hits $92

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Crude oil prices spiked above $92 in Asia Friday on growing tensions in the Middle East and renewed concern about oil supplies. The United States announced new sanctions against Iran Thursday, targeting the elite Revolutionary Guards, which Washington accused of backing Shiite militants in Iraq. A confrontation between the world’s largest oil consumer and its fourth largest oil producer could upend markets.

 

Shul Along With Sifrei Torah Burned To Ground In Yad Yair Settlement

Friday, October 26th, 2007

fire131.jpgPeople arriving for Davening this morning in the Yad Yair Shul were utterly shocked to see their Shul burned to the ground – along with the Sifrei Torah! This Shul was once before set ablaze – as reported HERE on YW – in January 2007.

Security officials insist, that both attacks were nationalistically motivated. No suspects were arrested in the previous incident.

Rabbi Avi Shafran: Resurrection

Friday, October 26th, 2007

editorial3.jpgThat the unveiling of a new Reform prayer book didn’t elicit applause from the Orthodox world was hardly surprising. Despite media hailings of the movement’s new liturgical offering as a turn toward Jewish tradition, the new prayer book, “Mishkan T’filah,” still pointedly omits vital elements of tefillah (indeed of the Torah itself) that its editors found discomfiting.

The essence of the Jewish mesora does not change; the very premise of Reform theology (and, as has become increasingly evident, Conservative theology no less) is that Judaism can be redefined according to the wishes of contemporary Jews.  As a Reform leader once candidly explained, he examines each mitzvah and asks himself, “Do I feel commanded [to heed it]?”

Still and all, some encouragement may lie in the fact that a movement so rejective of Judaism’s heart has even subtly and tepidly reclaimed an element of the Judaism of the ages.  The Kotzker Rebbe, it is told, once asked:  Who is more worthy, someone on the 49th level of spiritual accomplishment or on the 1st?  His answer: “It depends on the direction in which each is heading.”

And for all the new Reform prayer book’s profound faults – and those of the theology that produced it – it seems to signal a change in direction.

Take the book’s very formatting.  If Marshall McLuhan was right that there is message in the medium, Mishkan T’filah immediately telegraphs its distinction from earlier Reform prayer books.  Unlike its predecessors, it includes the word “siddur” on its cover.  It not only includes a Hebrew text but opens and reads from right to left.  (The left side of each open pair of pages offers modernistic comments on the Hebrew to the right, recalling – to me, at least – Shlomo Hamelech’s words: “The heart of the wise one is to his right” [Koheles, 10:2].)

But even those of us inclined to dismiss such changes as mere window dressing might note the amendments made – after years of sometimes contentious disagreement among the prayer book’s editors – to the actual Reform liturgy itself.

For instance, in utter affront to the Reform movement’s longstanding rejection of the concept of techiyas hameisim, Mishkan T’filah offers the option of reciting the bracha acknowledging that essential Jewish belief.

In a nod to (forgive the pun) die-hard Reform “traditionalists” (a word rather turned on its head in this context), Mishkan T’filah still suggests that the phrase “He Who gives life to the dead” be understood as “a powerful metaphor.”  But – and, again, small changes can hold larger significance – the editors’ note adds that the resurrection of the dead “may be taken literally” as well.

It is easy to glibly dismiss that concession.  With sociologists predicting that American Jews least connected to Jewish belief and observance (a group that includes the majority of the million-plus who identify as Reform Jews) are headed for Jewish extinction, it would seem Panglossian to see an editorial change in a prayer book as a harbinger of hope.

But I can’t help but imagine an astute Reform worshipper motivated to indeed ponder the kind of “techiyas hameisim” we witness daily, like decaying organic matter fertilizing the soil, spurring dormant seeds to unfold into plants and trees.  And then being stirred further to consider the relationship between such everyday “quickening of the dead” and the ultimate one that the Torah teaches lies, for those who merit it, at the end of history.

As Rav Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler, zt”l, wrote, the only reason we consider the germination of a seed to be natural and resurrection of the dead miraculous is because we are accustomed to the former but not the latter.  What we choose to call the “laws of nature,” he explains, are not inherently “sensible”; they simply are what they are: Hashem’s will.

We can describe how a plant grows, how its genes code for the stages of that process, even the workings of the atomic structure underlying its DNA.  But why any of that should work the way it does is ultimately answerable only with: “Because, well, that’s just the way it is.”  Or, from the Jewish perspective: because Hashem has so willed it.  And, notes Rav Dessler, He can no less easily will things that strike us as incredible.

The editors of the new Reform prayer book may insist that its users needn’t subscribe to the Jewish belief that the righteous will one day rise from their graves.  But their inclusion of the blessing of Mechayeh Hameisim, however they may have sought to soften it, reflects unquestionably the deep stirrings of Jews alienated from our eternal beliefs groping uneasily toward their acceptance.

It may be naive to imagine that changes in the Reform prayer book hold out hope that Reform-affiliated Jews might yet come to consider returning to the fullness of our mesorah.

But I’m not willing to consider a million-plus fellow Jews as nothing more than a desiccated limb of the Jewish people, hopelessly destined to wither and fall away.

Not only because there are encouragingly many once-distant-from-Judaism Jews living fully Torah-observant lives today.

But because I believe in techiyas hameisim.

© 2007 AM ECHAD RESOURCES

[Rabbi Shafran is director of public affairs for Agudath Israel of America.]

Tzefas & Chaifa Hit With Swastikas….Again

Friday, October 26th, 2007

as63.jpgThe Israeli police are searching for clues in catching the person(s) responsible for spray-painting swastikas on houses and private vehicles in Chaifa & Tzefas overnight. Additionally, a bus stop had been sprayed with the words “Olmert must die.”

Hebrew Acadamy Of Cleveland’s Kollel Hosts Rav Shmuel Kaminetsky

Friday, October 26th, 2007

sb.jpg(Click HERE for additional photos) An overflow crowd of Rabbonim, Mechanchim, parents and friends representing Cleveland’s Jewish community filled the auditorium of the Hebrew Academy Of Cleveland’s Yavne High school auditorium last night to mark the milestone establishment of the Academy’s new Kollel.

The program included introductory remarks by Rabbi Simcha Dessler, Menahel; divrei bracha by Rabbi Chaim Stein, Shlita, Telshe Rosh HaYeshiva and chairman of the Vaad HaChinuch; divrei bracha by Rabbi Nochum Zev Dessler, Shlita, Dean; and a major address by guest speaker, Rabbi Shmuel Kamenetsky, Shlita, Philadelphia Rosh Yeshiva, member of Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah and Vaad Roshei Yeshiva of Torah Umesorah.

Rav Chaim Stein and Rav Shmuel Kamenetsky lauded the Academy for its innovation, commented on the exceptional group of Kollel members and the Kollel’s communal impact, and offered their heartfelt personal brachos for the Kollel’s continued success—l’hagdil Torah u’lhaadira. Rav Dessler spoke of the vibrant ruach haTorah of the Kollel and the exceptional chesed that the yungerleit have already done in extending themselves on behalf of the talmidim of the school.

The program concluded with a presentation by Kollel member, Rabbi Dov Zilber in appreciation to Rabbi Busel, Rosh Kollel, and Rabbi Busel’s response.

While in Cleveland Rav Kamenetsky also visited the Academy’s Sapirstein Campus and addressed the school’s Yeshiva High School and Kollel.

NYC Health Department Says 7th Grader Died Possibly From MRSA

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

mrsa.jpgThe NYC Health Department has released the following statement: “The Health Department has learned of a case of MRSA infection (Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus) in a student at IS 211 (Canarsie). The student died, and the infection is a probable cause.

The Health Department has no reason to believe that other children or school employees are at increased risk of Staph infection. The Health Department has medical staff and mental health professionals available at the school to help answer questions and provide support to students, parents, and staff.”

The New York State Health Department issued the following statement today:

The State Health Department and the State Education Department today issued a health advisory to all state schools about Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) and how they can prevent and reduce the risk of MRSA infections among students in schools.

Recent reports in the media of Community-Associated MRSA infections (CA-MRSA) in schools have raised understandable concerns among school officials, students, teachers and parents. It is important to note that MRSA infections are preventable and treatable, and that steps can be taken to reduce exposure to students and staff. Schools should report MRSA outbreaks to their local health department, which can provide assistance about proper infection control and prevention.

“I want to reassure the public that staph is a common bacteria present in the environment and is not a threat to the average person,” said state Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines, M.D. “Some strains of staph are now resistant to the antibiotic Methicillin, and may cause minor to serious infections under specific conditions. Our goal is to reduce the prevalence of these antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the community and to quickly identify and properly treat the infections. The medical community should be on the alert to even minor infections that could be caused by MRSA and treat them properly.”

“The health advisory we issued today emphasizes how important common-sense precautions like hand-washing are in reducing MRSA infections in schools,” Dr. Daines said. “Community-Associated MRSA infection is preventable and treatable. This advisory will provide educators and parents with the information they need about how to prevent and control this increasing public health problem.”

“It is critically important that schools and parents work together to prevent the spread of MRSA,” said state Education Commissioner Richard Mills. “We are asking all school officers, teachers, and parents to ensure the school environment stays clean, and communicate regularly about the best ways to reduce and eliminate exposure.”

The state health advisory provides information on the prevention, transmission and treatment of CA-MRSA in school settings and stresses the importance of hygiene, environmental cleaning and disinfection. The advisory is posted on the state Health Department website at:

Staphylococcus Aureus, or “staph” bacteria is commonly carried on the skin or in the nose of healthy people. Infection occurs when staph enters through a break in the skin. While staph infections, including MRSA infections, occur most frequently among people in health-care facilities, there have been increased reports of community-associated MRSA infections.

Community-Associated MRSA outbreaks are reportable to state and local health departments and are monitored closely. The State Health Department continues to work with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the State Education Department and local health departments to ensure that proper infection control measures are instituted to prevent the transmission of MRSA.

Steps everyone can take to prevent infection include:

Keep your hands clean by washing thoroughly with soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
Keep cuts and scrapes clean and covered with a bandage until healed.
Avoid contact with other people’s wounds or bandages.
Avoid sharing personal items such as towels or razors.

5:30PM EST: Brooklyn: Overturned Auto

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

Belt Parkway (west-bound) near Cropsey Avenue. Expect serious delays in the area.

(YW-3122)

4:55PM EST: Manhattan: Transit Alert

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

According to the MTA, there is no 4, 5 and 6 train service between the 96th Street Station and 125th Street Station in both
directions – due to NYPD activity.

(Source: WNBC / YW-112)

The FACTS Of The Lakewood Arrest

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

lpd.jpgMany different rumors are being passed around the community, about the circumstances which led to the arrest of the person who brutally assaulted Rabbi Mordechai Moskowitz with a baseball bat. The Lakewood PD was kind enough to send Yeshivaworld the FACTS:

On Wednesday October 24, 2007, at approx. 3:00PM, officers from the Lakewood Police Department, and the Ocean County Prosecutors Office arrested Lee Tucker for the attempted murder of Rabbi Mordechai Moskowitz. Tucker was also charged with possession of a weapon, and possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose. The arrest took place at the corner of 4th Street and Princeton Ave, approx. 8 blocks from the original assault.

Information developed through tips and investigative leads led Detective Steve Wexler and Inv. Carlos Trujillo-Tovar to make Tucker a person of interest, who was interviewed on Tuesday October 23. Tucker was subsequently released on that date. On October 24, charges were signed by Det. Steve Wexler, and Tucker arrested.

Tucker lists his address as Ventura Drive in Lakewood, with a date of birth of 05-30-1970.

Superior court judge Barbara Villano set the bail for Tucker at $375,000.00 no 10%.

Editors Note: The Lakewood Police Department must be publicly commended for their hard work in this investigation, which led to this mans arrest.