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July 1, 2013

10 Tips for Summer Entertaining [Recipes]

1. Don’t make it fancy. Nobody likes a stuffy party. Let your guests pour their own drinks, take off their shoes and kick their feet up where they want.

2. Ask your friends to help you during the party! They want to! Slicing bread, setting the table, lighting candles, serving prosecco or ” target=”_blank”>Famous Guiltless Cobbler recipe with strawberries and raspberries and serve with coconut milk ice cream.

4. Use tomatoes. They are also in season now which means they are super sweet and delicious. Try ” target=”_blank”>Heirloom Gazpacho with Grapefruit and Basil, or ” target=”_blank”>link to the one I have. Ask a local firewood company to make a delivery to your house so you can have wood in stock all the time. Folding camping chairs with drink holders (I know, not chic) have always been the favorites of my guests because they’re comfortable. I just store them away at the end of night.

6. String up some white christmas lights on a tree or from one tree to another. This will add an enchanted feel to your garden and add magic to your party. Don’t ever take them down!

7. Don’t have a summery house? Invite your friends to a potluck picnic at the beach or a local park. Make a ” target=”_blank”>mealandaspiel.com.

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ESPN: Israel’s Mekel to sign with NBA’s Mavericks

Israeli point guard Gal Mekel is poised to become the second Israeli to play in the NBA after giving a verbal commitment to the Dallas Mavericks.

Mekel, 25, informed the Mavs early Monday morning that he would sign a three-year contract with the 2011 champions at the end of the annual trade and signing moratorium on July 10, ESPN reported.

He has agreed to sign a minimum salary contract, which according to ESPN’s Marc Stein helps his chances of being signed since the Mavs are looking to save money as they pursue star center Dwight Howard in free agency.

Mekel led Maccabi Haifa to its first Israeli championship and was the Super League MVP.

Shortly after winning the title, he arrived in the U.S., where he was also courted by five other NBA teams: Milwaukee, Toronto, Atlanta, Indiana and Memphis.

Mekel played in college for Wichita State from 2006 to 2008.

In other NBA news, Omri Casspi, the first Israeli to play in the league, became an unrestricted free agent on Sunday after the Cleveland Cavaliers opted not to extend his $3.3 million contract. He has played in Cleveland for the past two seasons.

ESPN: Israel’s Mekel to sign with NBA’s Mavericks Read More »

Celebrating the Big Cheese on July 4th

Happy Birthday USA! This week we celebrate July 4th, American Independence Day. Before we get into this week’s recipe, I would like to state how grateful I am to be living as a free Jew in the United States of America in 2013. Also, unlike the past few blogs this week’s recipe will not be featured at my popup restaurant Fress, because I will be celebrating the holiday with family and friends. This week’s dish is perfect for sharing and I highly recommend making it for your July 4th celebration.

Ajin Taimani is a flaky dough, similar to puff pastry, that comes from the Jews of Yemen (EJF pg 7). The history of Jews in Yemen is marked by oppression and scarcity. Most of the recipes from this region like Ajin are simple and utilize humble ingredients. This week’s recipe forces me to remember Jews who have lived a difficult life, while at the same time, I am determined to celebrate the bounty I available to me in modern day Los Angeles.

I am making Brie en Croute or baked brie with peach-basil compote. I have simplified the dough recipe from EJF with the help of a textbook from culinary school. Summer peaches are in their prime right now, so the fruit compote will be extra delicious. I am thinking like a Jew in Yemen, using the same recipe, but prepared in a new way. I am stuffing and baking the Ajin Taimani, instead of making it flat or rolling it into cylinders for frying. I decided to incorporate cheese in the recipe because I have always loved the combination of flaky pastry and runny, warm cheese. The addition of peaches and basil is my way of celebrating the availability of incredible stone fruits and fresh herbs in our Los Angeles farmer’s markets now. Lastly, this is a dish that is meant to be shared with special people, which is one of the best parts of July 4th.

To me, this recipe represents what it means to be a Jew in America. We always find ways to connect with the difficult times in our history, yet never let it get in the way of throwing a great party. I hope that you make this recipe and feel pride in the fact that Jews have always found ways to flourish even under the worst conditions, and then relish in the fact that we are so damn lucky to be living in the US of A.

Ajin Taimani
makes 1 pound of dough

Ingredients
8oz   All Purpose Flour
8oz   Butter, ¼ “ cubes (margarine for parve preparations)
½ t   Kosher Salt
5oz   Cold Water

Procedure
1. In the bowl of a stand mixer, add the flour and butter cubes. Toss the butter until coated with flour.
2. Mix the salt and water together.
3. Add the water and salt mixture to the bowl of the mixer with the flour and butter. Mix on low speed using the hook attachment until the dough forms a shaggy mass.
4. Cover the dough and let rest under refrigeration for 20 minutes.
5. Roll out the dough to ½“  thickness into a round shape.
6. Place a wedge of your favorite brie or soft cheese (I use Pont-l’Évêque from Trader Joe’s) in the center of the dough.
7. Spread the peach-basil compote (recipe to follow) over the cheese.
8. Wrap dough around the cheese. Place on a greased baking sheet or on a piece of parchment paper. Brush dough with egg wash (1 egg beaten with a dash of water or cream).
9. Bake at 350 degrees for approximately 35-40 minutes until the dough is golden brown and flaky.


Peach-Basil Compote
makes 1 pound

Ingredients
5ea   Peaches, diced
1ea   Juice of Lemon
¼ C   Granulated Sugar
pinch   Kosher Salt
6 ea   Basil Leaves, finely chopped

Procedure:
1. In a small sauce pot over low heat, add the peaches, lemon juice, salt and sugar.
2. Let cook for 25-30 minutes until the mixture becomes thick.
3. Remove from heat and add the basil.

Celebrating the Big Cheese on July 4th Read More »

Mandela family’s message to Jews

This letter was conveyed last week by South African Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein:

Dear Friends

I hope you are well.

This morning I spoke to Dr. Makaziwe Mandela, President Nelson Mandela’s daughter, to convey our community’s prayers and support. She asked me to thank the South African Jewish community on her behalf and that of the entire Mandela family for our love and support at this difficult time, as well as for the many years during the past. Makaziwe specifically said that I should convey to the Jewish community that her father cherishes the special and warm relationship he has had with South African Jews throughout his life. She said that her father deeply appreciates that throughout his life he has enjoyed the warmth, kindness and support of our community.

At this time let us continue to pray for the comfort, strength and well-being of President Nelson Mandela as he continues to bravely fight for his life.

Kind regards and good Shabbos,

Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein

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The Rosner-Golinkin Exchange, Part 2: On ‘Picking and Choosing’ Your Sources in Judaism

Rabbi Prof. David Golinkin is President and Professor of Jewish Law at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem. For twenty years he served as Chair of the Va'ad Halakhah (Law Committee) of the Rabbinical Assembly which writes responsa and gives halakhic guidance to the Masorti (Conservative) Movement in Israel. He is the founder and Director of the Institute of Applied Halakhah at The Schechter Institute whose goal is to publish a library of halakhic literature for the Conservative and Masorti Movements. He is also the Director of the Center for Women in Jewish Law at the Schechter Institute whose goal is to find halakhic solutions for agunot or “chained women” who are unable to obtain a get from their husbands.

In part two of this exchange about his new book- The Status of Women in Jewish Law:Responsa– we talk with Rabbi Golinkin about the sources he relies on to reach Halakhik decisions.

(Part one of the exchange can be found here)

 

Dear Rabbi Golinkin,

Thank you for your answer, on which I'm going to ask my next question. Like in the case of Teffilin, we find throughout your book this 'thorough investigation' uncovering opinions once held and later abandoned to be replaced by stricter rules. In the chapter about Mehitzahs (barriers between men's and women's sections) in synagogues you go back to look at evidence that men and women mingled at the temple in Jerusalem and state that “there is no literary source or archeological proof for the existence of a women's gallery in the ancient synagogue”. Yet, at some point Mehitzahs were added to the synagogue – at some point the rules changed. You suggest that changing them back to where they were at previous times is recommended, as “this custom hurts the feelings of many women and keeps them away from the synagogue”. 

My question is this: When you go searching for evidence from the past on the basis of which you prescribe a change to a certain custom, are you not engaging in a 'pick and choose' mechanism – namely, are you not only using more ancient sources when they serve the goal of less strictness, yet stick to later rulings on other contentious matters? 

I am eagerly awaiting your response.

Best Regards,

Shmuel.

 

Dear Shmuel,

You ask whether I am engaged “in a pick and choose mechanism, only using more ancient sources when they serve the goal of less strictness”? The answer is: not at all. As I explained in the book we are discussing (The Status of Women in Jewish Law: Responsa, Jerusalem, 2012, pp. 112-115), my approach follows that of the Geonim (ca. 500-1000 c.e.), Maimonides, the Rosh (1250-1327), Rabbi Shlomo Luria (16th century), the Vilna Gaon (18th century), as well as important halakhic authorities in the 20th century — from very different backgrounds  — such as Rabbis Abraham Isaac Kook, Louis Ginzberg, Moshe Feinstein and Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi. They established the principle that the Babylonian Talmud is the highest authority in Jewish law.

The Rosh said that “one can contradict the words [of the Geonim], because all of the things that are not explicitly in the Talmud arranged by Rav Ashi and Ravina, a person can contradict or build up, even to contradict the words of the Geonim” (the Rosh to Sanhedrin, Chapter 4, parag. 6).

Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi (1924-1998), longtime Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv, wrote:

“and if your intent is to hint to me that that great rabbi [an oblique reference to Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef] already ruled and [therefore] one cannot change [what he said]… I will reply to you that that is the power of the halakhah. And there was never a ruling of any great rabbi in Israel after the sealing of the Talmud which was binding, and permission is given to any person to disagree with correct and honest proofs, even with his own teachers… and even Maimonides and Maran [Rabbi Yosef Karo] z”l, were disagreed with both by contemporaries and those who came after them, and in many matters we do not do like them…” (Aseh Lekhah Rav, Vol. 2, pp. 146-147).

This is my approach in the fifteen responsa in this volume, as well as in hundreds of other responsa which I have written. For example, in this volume I prove that according to the Talmud and almost all of the Rishonim, it is perfectly permissible for women to wear tefillin; the “prohibition” was invented by Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg in the 13th century (Chapter 1). Similarly, there is no blanket Talmudic prohibition against women singing; that “prohibition” was invented by Rabbi Moshe Sofer in the early 19th century (Chapter 2). Women are required to recite the Amidah three times a day exactly like men and may be counted in a minyan – on the basis of a very careful reading of the Talmud itself (Chapter 3). Women may read the Megillah in public exactly like men because the Talmud clearly states that they have the same obligation as men (Chapter 7). Finally, women may serve as Mohalot based on the Talmud itself (Chapter 9).

Thus, my method is not about picking and choosing; it is about examining all of the major halakhic sources for a law or custom and giving precedence to the Talmud and the Rishonim (early authorities).

 

Best Regards,

David Golinkin

The Rosner-Golinkin Exchange, Part 2: On ‘Picking and Choosing’ Your Sources in Judaism Read More »

Israel launches crackdown on pro-settler vandals

Israel announced a crackdown on Monday against Jewish ultranationalists who vandalize Palestinian property, saying they were tantamount to terrorists and their attacks could fan sectarian violence.

The move followed the arrest of a 22-year Israeli from an Orthodox Jewish town near Tel Aviv for the vandalism of a Christian monastery in the West Bank last year. The attack was carried out in solidarity with hardline Jewish settlers.

Graffiti left on the 19th-century Latrun Monastery referred to Migron, an unauthorized settler outpost evacuated by the Israeli government. The words “Jesus is a monkey” were also daubed on the wall in Hebrew, and the monastery's doors torched.

Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon said those suspected in so-called “Price Tag” incidents would now be subject to measures such as longer detentions and denial of access to lawyers while under interrogation – measures akin to those used by Israel's security services in tackling Palestinian militants.

“Price Tag perpetrators' conduct is identical to the conduct of modern terrorist groups, including ideological inspiration and covert action,” the Defense Ministry said in a statement.

“Its main objective is to prevent the legitimate Israeli government from carrying out moves, whether of state or regarding law enforcement, and to sow fear among the nation's leaders of making decisions of one kind or another.”

The ultranationalists have desecrated mosques, torched cars and chopped down trees belonging to Palestinians, saying they sought to make the government “pay” for curbing unauthorized West Bank settlement

They have occasionally hit Israeli army facilities, churches or Arab sites inside the Jewish state. But Israeli authorities are most troubled by the possibility that Palestinian victims could lash out in reprisal, upending the West Bank's relative calm at a time of peacemaking stalemate.

“It is our duty to toughen up the penalties against these miscreants, because this activity has catastrophic potential,” the statement quoted Yaalon as saying. “We must fight an all-out war against them, with minimum tolerance and maximum means.”

IMPUNITY

Palestinians, who exercise limited autonomy in the West Bank under 1993 interim peace deals, have long complained settlers enjoy impunity under Israeli military control of the territory.

Israel's Shin Bet security service says dozens of suspects have been arrested. But convictions have been rare, a fact Israeli officials blame on suspects' secrecy and withstanding of pressure to confess under interrogation.

Settler leaders have disavowed the Price Tag perpetrators, many of whom are self-styled “Hilltop Youths,” zealots in their teens or 20s who spurn the authority of the secular state.

In one incident last August, six Palestinians were hurt when their taxi was firebombed. Several Israeli minors from a settlement were arrested but released for lack of evidence.

Writing by Dan Williams, Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Angus MacSwan

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R.I.P. Arak culture: Tel Aviv liquor prices will almost double today

As the clocks throughout Tel Aviv's constellation of liquor stores struck 23:00 last night, and the townspeople lugged home their final bottles of 35-to-40-shekel Arak, a rare summertime sadness settled over the city.

“Arak is considered the cheap and good and everyone can afford it, and it's always available,” said Itay Zecharia, a 20-year-old clerk closing down his nondescript corner store, a couple blocks off Rothschild Boulevard, for the night. “Now it's not going to be like that. It's just crazy.”

The morning of Monday, July 1 marks the start of a bleak new era for Israel: Today is the day that the country's only cheap liquors, Arak and vodka, almost double in price to around 70 and 100 shekels per bottle, respectively. This, thanks to ” target=”_blank”>Lapid is backtracking a bit on his support for the law in the news today.)

There are very few cheap thrills left in Tel Aviv — among them a spot in the sand, a dip in the sea and a plastic cup full of Arak-grapefruit. In the blazing Mediterranean summer, locally brewed Arak runs in the veins of the Israelis; normal resting blood-alcohol content is approximately two cups of Arak.

So naturally, the new alcohol tax has been widely mourned as an assault on the national identity. Wrote Liel Leibotvitz in ” target=”_blank”>Sabbath in sin city: Keep the shops open“.) Although God's presence can still be felt over here, in the wicked thunderstorm sunrises and the breeze over a topless French girl on the beach, his touch is softer and more open to interpretation than on the cold synagogue stones of Jerusalem. Although this new alcohol tax isn't distinctly religious (just like the Turkish prime minister's ” target=”_blank”>a recent music video with over 85,000 views on YouTube.

Their harsh warnings for Lapid and his cronies, as translated by ” target=”_blank”>called on his vast following — or “we the Arak people” — to shove the Finance Minister's cigar up his butt.

But will a pricier drunk be enough to send Tel Aviv's more-or-less comfortable middle class into the streets, a la Istanbul? Is our cheap summertime Arak worth the tear gas?

“I don't think people will drink less, I just think they'll be more bitter,” said Itay Haza, the 28-year-old manager of Va'ad Habayit, one of the best dance bars along Rothschild. Asked how the tax will affect him on a personal level, he said ominously: “Ask me next week. But I hope it's not going to be what I think it's going to be.”

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July 1, 2013

The US

Headline: Kerry plans return to Middle East after visit yields no deal

To Read: David Ignatius believes that President Obama has a terrible case of 'the slows' when it comes to implementing policies in the Middle East-

Centuries of theatergoers have puzzled over the riddle of why it took Shakespeare’s Hamlet so long to act once he had set his mind to it. The Arab world has the same question about President Obama’s delay in implementing his policies in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East.

Quote: “I'm pleased to tell you that we have made real progress on this trip. And I believe that with a little more work, the start of final status negotiations could be within reach”, John Kerry's upbeat statement following his visit.

Number: $28.6 Billion, the amount of Aid distributed by USAid in Egypt between 1975-2009.

 

Israel

Headline: Danon, Katz, Elkin win Likud races

To Read: Raphael Ahren tries to understand the source of John Kerry's unending confidence and optimism about Israel and Palestine-

For now, though, he looks like the hapless top diplomat from the world’s only superpower, gradually reducing the prestige of his office by making himself overfamiliar to two recalcitrant leaders over whom he plainly wields no particular influence.

In June 1990, one of Kerry’s predecessors, James Baker, resonantly declared that “the telephone number (of the White House) is 1-202-456-1414. When you’re serious about peace, call us.” Kerry’s message could hardly be more different. No need to call, he assures Netanyahu and Abbas. I’ll be back soon anyway.

Quote:  “Progress that should not be underestimated”, President Peres describing the progress made during the Kerry visit.

Number: 2, Gal Mekel is going to be the second Israeli to play in the NBA.

 

The Middle East

Headline: Egypt protesters storm Muslim Brotherhood headquarters

To Read: Walter Russell Mead writes about the anatomy of the Egyptian people's discontent with the revolution and about Morsi's possible responses-

Nobody knows what will happen in Egypt this week, and the Muslim Brotherhood could lose the battle for public opinion but gain the power for control of the state. Sometimes revolutionary movements prevail even though they fail to satisfy the hopes that brought them to power. Revolutionaries often turn out to be failures at utopia-building, but very good at building police states.

That could be happening in Egypt this summer; we shall see. But the hopeful phase of the Egyptian Revolution has come to a close. It looks more and more as if the Muslim Brotherhood must either become a much harsher movement in a much bleaker world, or it must learn to watch power slip from its hands.

Quote:  “(Morsi) has until 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, July 2 to leave power. He must do this in order for Egyptian state institutions to prepare for early presidential elections”, a statement by 'Tamarod', a popular Egyptian rebel movement, giving President Morsi an ultimatum.

Number: 50, the percentage of Iranians who don't have enough money to provide their families with adequate food and shelter, according to a recent poll.

 

The Jewish World

Headline: LA’s first Jewish mayor takes the helm

To Read: David Turner examines the deep Anti-Semitism of the great heroes of the French enlightenment, Voltaire and Diderot-

Some modern philosophers would rescue Voltaire-as-antisemite by pointing out that his attack on the Jews was part of a more general assault on Christianity. And perhaps, had he limited his critique to Judaism-as-religion the argument might be somewhat credible. But Voltaire singled out “the Jews,” the “nation.” Nor are such antisemitic attacks limited to Voltaire. “The Jews” also appear with regularity in the writings of many others identified as Philosophes, and Jews and Judaism occupy more than twenty-five percent of Voltaire’s Dictionary.

Voltaire and Diderot and most of the Philosophes, Europe’s intellectual avant-garde, were dedicated to liberating the continent from superstition and prejudice, from intolerance and what they perceived as the darkness of religion: how explain their unreflective import of 1700 years of anti-Jewish prejudice into their “rational” and secular model for a just and modern society?

Quote: “The claim that the swastika is not always associated with Nazism is not true. Placing such symbols in public places should be definitely regarded as promoting Nazism and fascism”, Tadeusz Marek, chief prosecutor of Bilaystok, discussing swastikas.

Number: $1.5m, the amount of money that has been awarded thus far to young Jewish Americans by Hellen Diller's Tikun Olam awards initiative.

July 1, 2013 Read More »

Aunt Trudy Will Not Be Saying Kaddish For Prop 8

The first wail of mourning that I ever heard in my life was at my great-aunt Trudy’s funeral.

For forty-five years, Aunt Trudy had been my great-aunt Charlotte’s – what’s the word here? “Room mate?” “Apartment mate?” That’s what they were, technically – sharing a small, plainly furnished apartment on the Grand Concourse of the Bronx, long after the neighborhood had changed from the being the Jewish Champs D’Elysee to something much different.

It didn’t much matter. We often went out there for Sunday dinner, braving the interminable traffic on the Cross Bronx Expressway. Charlotte was my mother’s aunt, the younger sister of my grandmother. And Trudy was her – well, actually no one ever labeled her, or their relationship. They were always simply the tantes. I remember asking, as a small child, why they had never gotten married. I meant, of course, to men – which is precisely how they each responded: “No man ever wanted to marry us.” And that was it. What was the term back then? “Spinster?” “Old maid?”

And then, one day Aunt Trudy became sick with cancer. And as she declined, Charlotte cared for her, full time, until she died. And when the day of her funeral came, I heard the wail of grief which, to this day, pierces my bones, because even though I have been a rabbi for several decades I have never, ever, heard a scream like the one that emerged from the lips of dear Aunt Charlotte. As the funeral began, the funeral director escorted Charlotte out to the chapel – as, in the decades hence, I have seen funeral directors escort grieving spouses out, over and over again.

Yes, grieving spouses. Let’s just hold onto that one for a few moments.

As the pall bearers were carrying Trudy’s coffin out into the hearse, my mother wondered aloud, somewhat off-handedly: “I wonder if Trudy’s family will be here.” To which I replied: “I thought that we were Aunt Trudy’s family.”

Fast forward twenty years. I was already a rabbi. When I visited Aunt Charlotte in the nursing home, I noticed that her siddur was in tatters. I offered to replace it for her. She demurred, saying, “Thanks, Jeff, but this one has Trudy in it.” It had been Trudy’s, and Charlotte could not bear to part with it.

Fast forward fifteen years after that. The waves of social change that were already sweeping across America got me thinking. Were Charlotte and Trudy more than simply “roommates?” By then, there was almost no one left to ask. My mother had died, as had Charlotte, and when I thought to subtly broach the subject to the remaining distant relatives, they shrugged their shoulders. One recalled that there were twin beds in their bedroom. Sure, but Ozzie and Harriet had twin beds as well. It didn’t prove or disprove anything.

And so it was that I constructed a story for myself. To this day, I cannot know if it is true or a myth that I have created. I came to imagine the context of my mother’s stray query: “I wonder if Trudy’s family will be here.” I came to imagine that yes, they had been lovers and partners, k’ilu (as if) they had been married. I came to imagine that back in the 1920s, Trudy’s family could not handle that truth and that they had disowned her or had emotionally abandoned her. (It would not have been the first, nor certainly not the last time). I came to realize that my maternal grandparents had unequivocally opened their home and their hearts to this (k’ilu married) couple, and had made no separation between themselves and Charlotte and Trudy. And neither had anyone else in the family. It wasn’t only a familial version of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” It was also a familial version of “don’t ask, don’t tell, doesn’t matter.”

I tell this story for all the obvious reasons. As both DOMA and Proposition Eight wind up on the well-deserved kaddish list, I am thinking of all the couples, all the spiritual descendants of Charlotte and Trudy, who are now free to legally bind their lives together. I think of Edith Windsor and the late Thea Spyer, who were together for forty two years until Thea’s death, in whose name the Supreme Court acted last week – Edith Windsor, who can now claim the federal estate tax exemption for surviving spouses. I looked at Edith Windsor, and I saw the faces of Charlotte and Trudy.

All I know is this. The love and devotion that Charlotte and Trudy showed to each other was a living, breathing part of my childhood. It not only did me no harm. It did me great good.

And all I know is this, as well. I have been thinking about DOMA, and thinking about a Hebrew pun that should be married to it as well. DOMA sounds like duma, the Hebrew word for silence.

So now the multitude of silences can end.

And I would like to believe that Charlotte and Trudy are in the World to Come, applauding the death of Proposition 8 and DOMA. 

Aunt Trudy Will Not Be Saying Kaddish For Prop 8 Read More »

This week from Israel

TLV-Eye?

International company Freij Entertainment‬, which built the London Eye and the world's largest mobile rides in Hong Kong, New York, Paris and other cities, will build a gigantic Ferris Wheel at Tel-Aviv port, sometimes during 2014. The wheel will be 80 meters (263 feet) tall and will include 42 sealed and air-conditioned passenger capsules, which can hold up to six people each. It will also feature a VIP section, where people could dine as Israel's beautiful scenery would reflect from their window.

Read more ” target=”_blank”>here

 

Chicago-Israel newest collaboration

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, visited Jerusalem last Monday, to sign a cooperation agreement between Ben-Gurion University and The University of Chicago. Both universities, which have been working together for the last 18 months, have come up with a series of proposals that would look at ways to purify water at the molecular level, making clean, fresh drinking-water more plentiful and less expensive by 2020.

Read more ” target=”_blank”>here.

 

Wibbitz you news

After two years of work and a month-long closed beta test, the new Israeli startup, Wibbitz, went public last week, with a free iPhone and iPad app that lets users automatically convert news stories into videos. How does it work? An automated voice reads out a news story on one of dozens of news sites, with the audio accompanied by still photos, videos, and infographics relating to the story.

Read more This week from Israel Read More »