New Jersey Jewish Standard, January 31, 2014

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

"Standing together with Sinai"

Citation preview

  • Calendar

    Jewish standard JanUarY 31, 2014 41

    JS-41*

    wine, soda, and coffee. the tournament will be run by professional dealers and equipment from wild willys Casino Parties. Proceeds benefit the JCC scholarship Childrens Fund. 1050 Kennedy Boulevard. (201) 436-6900 or [email protected].

    Book discussion in Washington Township: temple Beth Ors book club meets to discuss Mitchell J. Kaplans book, By Fire, By water, 7:30 p.m. 56 ridgewood road. (201) 664-7422 or www.templebethornj.org.

    Justice Neal HendelPhoTo Provided

    israeli Supreme Court Justice in Teaneck: Congregation rinat Yisrael joins with nefesh Bnefesh in hosting israeli supreme Court Justice neal hendel who will address the Journey of an american Oleh who Became an israeli supreme Court Justice, 8 p.m. a graduate of Yeshiva of Flatbush, new York and hofstra universities, and a talmud student with rabbi Joseph B. soloveitchik, he made aliyah in 1983, and continued his law career in israel until he was appointed to the supreme Court of israel in 2009. 389 w. englewood ave. (201) 837-2795.

    Friday

    Shabbat in Franklin Lakes: the Chabad Center of nw Bergen County holds its monthly character tot shabbat with songs, cartoon character guests, food crafts, and dinner, for children up to age 6, 4 p.m. 375 Pulis ave. (201) 848-0449 or www.chabadplace.org.

    Shabbat in Closter: rabbi david s. widzer and Cantor rica timman lead informal tot shabbat with songs, stories, and crafts, 5:15 p.m., followed by an optional Chinese dinner at 5:45, and family friendly service at 6:45. 221 schraalenburgh road. (201) 768-5112.

    Shabbat in Woodcliff Lake: temple emanuel of the Pascack Valley holds a service for young families, 6:15 p.m. 87 Overlook drive. (201) 391-0801.

    Shabbat in emerson: Congregation Bnai israel hosts a fun and casual adon Olam service; members and non-members are invited to share a few stanzas of adon Olam sung to various melodies, 7:30 p.m. 53 Palisade ave. (201) 265-2272 or www.bisrael.com.

    Saturday

    havdalah in emerson: Congregation Bnai israel offers Pajama havdalah for families with children to age 8, along with their parents, grandparents, and siblings, 5:30 p.m. Bring a bedtime toy and pillow. 53 Palisade ave. (201) 265-2272 or www.bisrael.com.

    Mentalist/mind reader in Wayne: asi wind entertains at Congregation shomrei torah. doors open at 7:30 p.m. admission includes one drink per ticket. (973) 696-2500 or [email protected].

    Wine tasting in Franklin Lakes: Barnert temple offers a gourmet dinner with spectacular wines from around the world, 7 p.m. 747 route 208 south. (201) 848-1800 or www.barnerttemple.org.

    Music in ridgewood: temple israel and JCC continues its season of winter Music saturdays with a concert by pianist/congregant Jonathan taylor performing works by Chopin. havdalah at 7:45 p.m.; concert follows. 475 Grove st. (201) 201-444-9320 or www.synagogue.org.

    Stephanie Prezant

    Tribute concert in Tenafly: the Kaplen JCC on the Palisades presents More songs that she Loved, a tribute for stephanie Prezant, 8 p.m. Ms. Prezant died in a rock climbing accident in 2012 a month before she would have graduated from the University of delaware. Funds raised will support the JCCs stephanie i. Prezant Maccabi Fund. (201) 408-1406 or www.jccotp.org.

    Sunday

    Blood drive in englewood: Congregation ahavath torah holds a blood drive, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 240 Broad ave. (800) 933-2566 or www.nybloodcenter.org.

    Get rid of clutter: the sisterhood of temple Beth el in Closter offers a fun workshop, Cut the Clutter the top 7 tips to an Organized home, 9:30 a.m. refreshments. 221 schraalenburgh road. (201) 768-5112.

    Toddler program in Washington Township: as part of the shuls holiday happenings program, the sisterhood of temple Beth Or offers music, stories, crafts, and snacks, all with a shabbat theme, for 2- to 6-year-olds and their parents, 11:15 a.m. 56 ridgewood road. (201) 664-7422 or www.templebethornj.org.

    Pajama party in Tenafly: Lubavitch on the Palisades Preschool hosts a preschool pajama party with a dairy dinner and a bedtime story with Meish Goldish a published author, storyteller, and entertainer, 5 p.m., 11 harold st. (201) 871-1152 or www.lpsnj.org.

    in New YorkSunday

    Maccabeats sing: the Maccabeats will perform live in concert at Park east synagogue, 11 a.m. 164 east 68 st. (212) 737-6900 or www.

    parkeastdayschool.org/community.

    SinglesSaturday

    Winter party: the Mosaic Outdoor Mountain Club of Greater

    new York holds a winter party at ansche Chesed in Manhattan, 7-11:30 p.m. doors open at 6:45. square dancing with professional caller, a live band, Girls on top, snacks, and games. $25 at the door. register in advance to volunteer for a discounted admission fee. 251 west 100th st. (212) 502-0820 or www.mosaic-gny.org.

    CorreCtion:thanks for all the calls and emails about the Claremont diner salad recipe that appeared in last weeks super Bowl section. somehow the vinegar disap-peared from the ingredients.

    Below is the corrected recipe from GrJC: Great recipes from Jewish Cooks! which debuted last year from the Glen rock Jewish Center.

    again, go team. dont overeat. enjoy. and dont drink and drive!!! BJC

    Claremont Diner Salad1 medium head cabbage, shredded2 cucumbers, thinly sliced3 carrots, thinly sliced1 Bermuda onion, thinly sliced3/4 cup white vinegar3/4 cup white sugar3/4 cup vegetable oil4 tablespoons water3 teaspoons salt

  • Calendar

    42 Jewish standard JanUarY 31, 2014

    JS-42*

    Haifa Symphony orchestra will perform at bergenPACThe Haifa Symphony Orchestra of Israel, musically directed by maestro Noam Sher-iff, will perform on Wednesday, Febru-ary 5, at bergenPAC in Englewood at 8 p.m. Tickets will be avail-able at 50 percent off through February 4 at 10 p.m.; use code FLUTE. Additional fees and charges may apply. Call (201) 227-1030 or go to www.ticketmas-ter.com or www.ber-genpac.org.

    The orchestra will also perform at Kean Universitys Wilkins Theatre on Sunday, February 2 at 4 p.m. Wilkins Theatre is on Kean Universitys main campus at 1000 Morris Ave. in Union. Call (908) 737-SHOW (7469) or go to www.keanstage.com. Boguslaw Dawidow will be guest conductor at both concerts.

    Boguslaw Boris Dawidow is the principal guest conductor of the Haifa Symphony Orchestra. d NaGL

    Bake challah, do a mitzvahThe Jewish Home at Rockleigh is look-ing for volunteers to help support its new challah baking program, which started this month on Thursdays at 10:15 a.m. Participants will prepare small loaves and rolls for the challah baking in the homes new portable convection oven. The program will provide room-bound residents with the pleasures of baking. There will be other baking projects as time goes on, designed around the seasons and holidays. The convection oven was generously donated by Gutterman & Musicant Jewish Funeral Directors in Hackensack.

    To volunteer, call Charlene Van-nucci, director of volunteer ser-vices for the Jewish Home Family, at (201) 750-4237 or email her at [email protected].

    JHR resident Theresa Spag-nuolo shapes the dough for a challah at the Jewish Home at Rockleigh. CourTeSY Jhr

    Juniors choirs will entertainTemple Beth Or in Washington Town-ship is hosting the second annual Ber-gen County Junior Choir Festival on February 9 at 2 p.m.

    Elementary school to high school singers representing Temple Beth Or, Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge, Congregation Beth Sholom and Temple Emeth in Teaneck, and Temple Beth El in Closter will sing a selection of tradi-tional and contemporary Jewish music. A dessert reception will follow. Beth Or is at 56 Ridgewood Road. Call Beth Felixson at (201) 664-7422 or email her at [email protected].

    Maccabeats coming to rocklandThe Maccabeats, the popular a cappella group that rocketed to fame in 2010 with its Chanukah spoof of Taio Cruzs Dyna-mite, will be the main attraction at a family festival, Come in from the Cold, hosted by New City Jewish Center on Sun-day, February 9.

    The festival, which includes brunch, an indoor street fair, and the concert, gets roll-ing at 11 a.m.; the concert begins at 12:45 p.m. Tickets cost $18 per person and family pricing starts at $50. The cost for reserved concert seating is $36; family pricing starts at $100. All prices go up on February 1.

    The street fair will sell everything from Jewish art to childrens books and jew-elry. A strolling guitarist, magician, and pianist will entertain, and there will be games and activities going on throughout the morning. There will also be a raffle of one- to three-week internships for college-age students at various businesses and organizations.

    The Maccabeats came together in 2007 as Yeshiva Universitys student vocal group. It is a phenomenon in both Jew-ish and a cappella music, with a large fan base; more than 10 million views on YouTube; many television appearances,

    including the Today show; and success with two albums, 2010s Voices From the Heights and 2012s Out of the Box. They have appeared at the White House during Jewish American Heritage Month.

    Tickets are available online at www.

    newcityjc.org. Vendors who wish to work at the fair are welcome and should call the synagogue at (845) 638-6900 or go to www.newcityjc.org for more information. The New City Jewish Center is at 47 Old Schoolhouse Road, New City, N.Y.

    oU marriage retreat planned for July 13One of the Orthodox Unions signature programs, its annual Marriage Enrich-ment Retreat, returns this summer, from Friday, July 11, to Sunday, July 13, at the Woodcliff Lake Hilton. The pro-gram is an initiative of the OU Depart-ment of Community Engagement.

    The adult retreat is geared toward happily married couples who are look-ing for a new level of marital content-ment. The weekend is free from daily distractions and routines, allowing couples to concentrate on one another and strengthen their marriage bonds. Participants have ranged from newly-weds to those married 50+ years, com-ing from all walks of life.

    Presenters include veterans of past OU marriage retreats and Rabbi Dr. Tzvi H. Weinreb, the OUs executive vice president emeritus.

    Registration is now open. For infor-mation, call Hannah Farkas at (212) 613-8351 or email her at [email protected].

    Announce your eventswe welcome announcements of upcoming events. announcements are free. accompanying photos must be high resolution, jpg files. send announcements 2 to 3 weeks in advance. not every release will be published. include a daytime telephone number and send to:

    NJ Jewish Media Group [email protected] 201-837-8818

  • Calendar

    Jewish standard JanUarY 31, 2014 43

    JS-43*

    Modern Jewish history exploredThe Rohr Jewish Learning Institute begins To Be a Jew in the Free World: Jewish Identity Through the Lens of Modern History, the insti-tutes new six-session course, on February 4 at 8 p.m. at Lubavitch on the Palisades. Rabbi Mordechai Shain will teach the course.

    Participants will tackle questions of allegiance and issues in which Judaism and contemporary society appear to be in conflict.

    The program is for those at all levels of Jewish knowledge, includ-ing those without any prior experience or background in Jewish learning. To register, go www.myjli.com or call (201) 871-1152 or email [email protected].

    Turning fundraising resolutions into realityThe Not-for-Profit Industry Service Group at SaxBST in Clifton hosts a program with Danny Wood of Sandler Sales.

    A challenge not-for-profits face is generating income from contributions. As the need for contributions contin-ues to increase and the number of non-profits grows, finding and maintaining a steady stream of donors and dona-tions is becoming increasingly difficult.

    Mr. Wood will offer tips on when to ask for donations and how to get the most out of relationships.

    The program will be at the offices of SaxBST LLP, 855 Valley Road in Clifton, on Thursday, February 6, at 2 p.m. It costs $39. For information, call (973) 472-6250 or go to www.saxbst.com.

    Museum exhibit showcases Iraqi Jewish heritageDiscovery and Recovery: Preserv-ing Iraqi Jewish Heritage, a dramatic exhibition of rarely seen artifacts curated by the National Archives, is on loan for a limited time in New York at the Museum of Jewish Heri-tage A Living Memorial to the Holo-caust. The exhibit, set to run from February 4 through May 18, features 24 recovered items including Jew-ish books, documents, and religious artifacts, and a behind-the-scenes video of the fascinating preservation process.

    The exhibit details the dramatic recovery of historic materials relat-ing to the Jewish community of Iraq in a flooded basement in Saddam Husseins intelligence headquarters, and the National Archives ongoing work in support of U.S. government efforts to preserve these materials. The Museum of Jewish Heritage is the only other U.S. venue for the exhibi-tion besides the National Archives, which displayed it from October through January. The full collection includes more than 2,700 books and tens of thousands of documents in Hebrew, Arabic, Judeo-Arabic, and English, dating from 1540 to the 1970s. A special website, http://www.ija.archives.gov, has been launched to make the historic materials avail-able online as they are digitized and catalogued.

    The museum is at 36 Battery Place. For information, call (646) 437-4202 or go to www.mjhnyc.org.

    116Main Street, Fort Lee201.947.2500

    www.inapoli.com

    Sammys

    North Jerseys Premier ItalianSteak, Seafood & Pasta EateryJoinUseverytuesdayandthursdayforthelobsterspecial,anystyleAnddontforgeteveryMondayandWednesdayareDelmonicoSteakNightsComebyMon.throughSat.,4:00-6:00pmforourawesomeearlybird,completemealwithdrink

    You asked for it for the last 20 years andnow its here! Chef Sams Basil VinaigretteHouse Dressing is now bottled to go.Bring this Ad into receive aFree Bottle

    min. $40 purchase

    Expires 6/30/13

    only

    $19.95

    only

    $19.95

    also

    $19.95 3493212-01napoli5/17/13subitecanali/singer

    carrol/BB

    This ad is copyrighted by NorthJersey Media Group and may notbe reproduced in any form, orreplicated in a similar version,without approval from NorthJersey Media Group.

    3493212-01

    NJMG

    116Main Street, Fort Lee201.947.2500

    www.inapoli.com

    Sammys

    North Jerseys Premier ItalianSteak, Seafood & Pasta EateryJoinUseverytuesdayandthursdayforthelobsterspecial,anystyleAnddontforgeteveryMondayandWednesdayareDelmonicoSteakNightsComebyMon.throughSat.,4:00-6:00pmforourawesomeearlybird,completemealwithdrink

    You asked for it for the last 20 years andnow its here! Chef Sams Basil VinaigretteHouse Dressing is now bottled to go.Bring this Ad into receive aFree Bottle

    min. $40 purchase

    Expires 6/30/13

    only

    $19.95

    only

    $19.95

    also

    $19.95 3493212-01napoli5/17/13subitecanali/singer

    carrol/BB

    This ad is copyrighted by NorthJersey Media Group and may notbe reproduced in any form, orreplicated in a similar version,without approval from NorthJersey Media Group.

    3493212-01

    NJMG

    Tuesday and ThursdayOur famous seafood special Call for details

    ONLY$21.95

    ONLY$21.95

    ONLY$21.95

    Monday and WednesdaySteak Night special

    Come by Mon. through Sat.,4:00-6:00pm for our awesomeearly bird, complete mealwith drink

    Bring this Ad in to receive a

    Free Bottlemin. $40

    purchaseExpires 2/14/14

    Tik (Torah case) and glass panel from Baghdad, either 19th or 20th century. In Jewish com-munities throughout the Middle East, the Torah scroll is generally housed in a tik a rigid case made of wood or metal. Courtesy MJHNyC

    Rabbi Mordechai ShainCourtesy LubavitCH oN tHe PaLisades

    Casino, Outdoor Movie Theater, Nightly Shows

    Full Court Basketball, Little Tykes Playground, Billiards,Ping Pong, Foosball...

    Exciting Day Camp/Tiny Tots/

    Teen Programs

    Daily Kids Entertainment

    & Shows

    6,000 Sq Ft Sundeck Oasis

    Complimentary Spa Treatments

    GLATTKOSHERSUPERVISION OUR

    12THYEAR!

    KOSHERKOSHERKOSHERKOSHERKOSHERKOSHERKOSHERSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISIONSUPERVISION

    Scholars-in-Residence Program Led byRABBI ARYEH LEBOWITZ

    Beis Haknesses of North Woodmere

    Hosted byJEFF BRAVERMAN

    Passover DirectorDAVID GROSS

    www.jstandard.com

  • Jewish World

    44 Jewish standard JanUarY 31, 2014

    JS-44

    Mr. Tischs Giants defeated the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl twice. The Patriots are owned by another Jewish man, Robert Kraft.

    So this year, Mr. Tischs G-men arent playing in the big game, but the game is being played at MetLife Stadium. Home turf. So this year he gets to play the host of the first northern venue for a Super Bowl in an outdoor stadium ever.

    Mr. Tisch also has helped the Jewish community but kept outside the spotlight. During a visit to the tiny Cuban Jewish community last July, he learned that the Cuban Maccabiah team did not have the funds to pay for uniforms. According to an account in the New York Jewish Week, Mr. Tisch paid for the uniforms on the spot at Temple Beth Shalom in Havana so the team could compete in Israel.

    Getting people to say nice things about Mr. Tisch isnt difficult.

    But before we get to that, here are a cou-ple of the questions the Jewish Standard sent to Mr. Tisch through Mr. Hanlon.

    How does the world of football com-pare to the world of Hollywood?

    What gives you more satisfaction, win-ning the Super Bowl or winning an Oscar?

    Is it easier dealing with (Giants quarter-back) Eli Manning or (actor) Tom Cruise?

    Is it easier producing a hit movie than winning a Super Bowl?

    What does it take, besides luck, to win two Super Bowls and an Oscar?

    Mr. Hanlon told us that he turned the questions over to Mr. Tisch.

    At the risk of pestering Mr. Hanlon, which were pretty sure we did, we kept asking and asking about the questions and an interview.

    We extended the deadline. We told him how important he was to the Jewish com-munity of New Jersey.

    As of Monday night, January 20, Mr. Tisch wasnt answering, and for the most part, Mr. Hanlon stopped as well; and last week we got a final answer.

    It was no.So we decided to ask others to answer

    the questions in lieu of Mr. Tisch.One of them was Randy Levine,

    president of the New York Yankees. Mr. Levine knows Mr. Tisch and knows for sure how to build a winning team.

    Steve is a wonderful person, Mr. Levine said. I cant answer the questions about his movies or the Giants, but I will tell you that he is a caring man, who gives back to the community in big ways. Its not an accident that hes so successful. Hes worked for it, and hes won with it.

    We also were able to get in touch with Bart Oates. Mr. Oates has three Super Bowl rings. He played center for the Giants from 1985-93 and won two Super Bowls. Then he added one more ring playing for the San Francisco 49ers in the 1994-95 season.

    A local real estate broker, Mr. Oates described Mr. Tisch as a caring human being, who loved to be around his coaches and players.

    There was that part of him that loved the Giants, and as a player it was easy to see that in him. But we as players respected him, because we knew that he cared about the communities in New York and New Jersey. I was proud to be part of the Giants, because they were and

    still are so loved by this community. Mr. Tisch has a great deal to do with that.

    Our last quotes about Mr. Tisch came from someone who is familiar with the Tisch family through UJA Federa-tion of New York and wished to remain nameless.

    He is the real deal, she said. It is no accident that he is a winner in everything he does, and that winning includes help-ing other people, and caring about the Jewish community and the community at large.

    Mr. Tisch is involved in many chari-ties, including as the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Cancer Center at Duke Uni-versity. He has been on the board of the Sundance Institute and many arts orga-nization. His Steve Tisch Foundation has given generously to the Womens Cancer Research Center and the Pediatric AIDS Foundation. He is a member of the Board of Advisors at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University.

    And on Sunday, hell host what is argu-ably this nations biggest party, the Super Bowl.

    Tisch from page 12

    Briefs

    New excavations show horrors of Sobibor death campA recent excavation has provided silent testimony to the mass killing of about 250,000 Jews at the Nazis Sobibor death camp in Poland, 70 years after the perpe-trators tried to cover their tracks by raz-ing the site to its core and planting what was to become a thick forest. Their deci-sion was prompted by a prisoners revolt.

    Archaeologists Yoram Haimi and Wojciech Mazurek, from Israel and Poland, respectively, recently discovered nine open-air cremation pits and a cabin that housed Jews who were used for slave labor. About 5 feet below the floor, a man-made tunnel was unearthed. As it led toward the barbed wire surrounding the camp, the excavators believe it was used as an escape route.

    In 2012, Israel Hayom reported that Haimi and his team had successfully uncovered the road to heaven, a cyni-cal name Nazis used for the walkway thousands of naked Jews took to the gas chambers. JNs.OrG

    Lockheed Martin announces deal with Israel firm to spur technologyAmerican defense giant Lockheed Martin is teaming up with the EMC Corporation

    to jointly invest in developing Israelis booming technology industry.

    Our goal is to foster applied research and continued growth in Israels technol-ogy sector, said Lockheed Martin execu-tive John Evans. We recognize evolving global needs, as well as the wealth of innovation taking place within Israel and its universities.

    Last Fall, EMC Corp. signed a deal with the Israeli government to establish a technology center in the southern city of Beersheba.

    Under their new deal, Lockheed Mar-tin and EMC intend to work together to jointly develop partnerships with Israeli industry, government and academic insti-tutions to focus on areas such as cloud computing, data analytics, and cyber technologies. JNs.OrG

    Syrian opposition, Lebanese military blame Israel for missile-site strikeSyrian opposition groups and the Leba-nese military claimed on Monday that Israeli Air Force planes bombed S-300 missile launchers in the Syrian port city of Latakia on Sunday night.

    The S-300 is an advanced Russian anti-aircraft system. Despite the claims, Russia has apparently not yet supplied Syria with the S-300. The Lebanese mili-tary said Israel planes entered Lebanese

    airspace in the northern part of the country at 10:45 p.m. Sunday and exited at 11:55 p.m. over the Naqoura area of southern Lebanon.

    Other reports said the Latakia blast was related to artillery fire that had no connection to Israel.

    Israel has issued repeated warnings that it will not permit the transfer of advanced weaponry from Syria to Leba-non. The Lebanese terrorist group Hez-bollah is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assads regime. JNs.OrG

    Netanyahu unveils CyberSpark plan for Beersheeba areaDuring the opening of the CyberTech Conference in Tel Aviv on Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the establishment of Cyber-Spark, an international cybercenter in the Negev city of Beersheba.

    The prime minister, who made the announcement with the president of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and the mayor of Beersheba, said turning Beersheba into a cyberhub was an effec-tive realization of the vision that Israels first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, had for the Negev.

    There is huge development in [Isra-els] south, and housing prices are sig-nificantly lower than in the Dan region. Whoever has common sense should

    head there, Netanyahu said, according to Israel Hayom.

    The cyberpark will include a high school geared toward science and tech-nology, and a cyber studies center. Staff members have already been recruited.

    JNs.OrG

    World leaders mark International Holocaust Day at United NationsWorld leaders and other dignitaries held a special ceremony marking Interna-tional Holocaust Remembrance Day at the United Nations on Monday.

    The State of Israel is the only guaran-tee that the future and fate of the Jewish people will be held in our own hand, Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Ron Prosor said.

    Oscar-winning Jewish American film-maker Steven Spielberg, who directed the famed Holocaust film Schindlers List, praised the importance of hearing Holocaust survivors stories.

    It is a great accomplishment of our species that the testimonies [of survi-vors] can be heard in the high chambers of society, said Spielberg.

    In a video message, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon reflected on his first visit to Auschwitz last year.

    JNs.OrG

  • 52 Jewish standard JanUarY 31, 2014

    JS-52

    RCBC

    Like Glatt Express Supermarket on

    Facebook for daily specials and offers!

    1400 Queen Anne Rd Teaneck, NJ 201-837-8110 *While Supplies last the

    week of February 2.

    *

    $100 $199$199

    79

    $299 $459

    $169

    $289

    $299

    2 for$100

    2 for$500

    2 for$500

    Arizona Ice Tea/Lemonade

    Gallon

    Heinz Ketchup Squeeze

    38 oz.

    Heinz Chili Sauce

    12 oz. Apple & Eve Apple Juice

    64 oz.

    Heinz Vegetarian Baked Beans 16 oz.

    Tofutti Cream Cheese

    Parve Plain 8 oz.

    Dannon Yogurt

    All Flavors 6 oz.

    Ortega Taco

    Seasoning 1.25 oz

    Kikkoman Panko Bread

    Crumbs 8 oz.

    Mc Cain French Fries

    All Types

    Taamti Sabra Potato/Vegetarian

    Cigars 14.4 oz.

    Sabra Guacamole

    Classic/Spicy 8 oz.

    Mashgiach Temidi / Open Sun & Mon 7am-6pm Tues 7am-7pmWed & Thurs 7am-9pm Fri 7am-3:00pm