Saturday, September 25, 2021

Food With Friends

Monday, September 20, 2021
The weekend's real estate section had two interesting items.  First, "The Best (and Worst) Metro Areas for Electric Cars."  https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/16/realestate/best-places-electric-cars.html 
 
Availability of public charging stations was an important factor in the ratings and the Left Coast has a big lead in that.  I don't know which came first -- acceptance or infrastructure -- but the prevalence of Teslas was apparent on our June trips to Northern California.  Here, the debate is only beginning on who should bear the cost of installing charging stations in residential complexes, especially since electric vehicles are still the exception. 
 
Secondly, describing the hunt for attractive housing in the Holy Land, the newspaper reported the following: "With a budget of up to $500,000 . . . the couple couldn't quite afford what they wanted in the neighborhoods they knew and liked, Harlem and Bed-Stuy."  This is provocative news; "bad neighborhoods" have become highly desirable destinations.  On the other hand, those folks who once had little choice of location, now face dramatic, possibly unbearable, increases in their housing costs as the stigma of their surroundings has disappeared.   
. . . 
 
Tonight is the first night of Sukkot, a seven-day Jewish holiday celebrating the fruit harvest and commemorating the exile in Sinai.  Accordingly, Jews erect and occupy temporary shelters (Sukkahs) for the week, akin to the makeshift quarters inhabited during the long desert trek.  Right now, it is hard to distinguish some Jewish neighborhoods from popular restaurant areas covered with the rough accommodations erected in response to Covid-19 protocols. 
 
Significantly, it was the first time in two years that I had the pleasure of enjoying and reporting on Aunt Judi's cuisine.  We missed two Passovers and last year's Sukkot, occasions when she usually demonstrates the latest and greatest in Kosher cooking.  So, we were delighted to accept the invitation to spend an evening in the Sukkah proudly constructed by Uncle Stu and eat portobello mushrooms covered by veal ragù, rolled and stuffed chicken breast, barbecued beef ribs, roasted cauliflower, carrot muffins and cole slaw.  Dessert followed, chocolate chocolate chip cookies and lemon meringue pudding.  As always, a fine assortment of wine came from Stu's collection -- all Kosher, food and beverages.  This certainly helps keep me on board. 
 
Tuesday, September 21, 2021
I have the advantage of having America's Favorite Epidemiologist under my roof, studying and analyzing the course of the Covid-19 pandemic.  Lacking that, other sources are available to you, including the pop star Nicki Minaj, who offered this insight on the worldwide vaccination efforts.  "My cousin in Trinidad won’t get the vaccine cuz his friend got it & became impotent.  His testicles became swollen.  His friend was weeks away from getting married, now the girl called off the wedding."  Proceed accordingly.
. . . 
 
At Terrific Tom's suggestion, the Boyz Club emerged from Chinatown and found its way to Ariana Afghan Kebab, 787 Ninth Avenue.  It is owned by Mr. Wali, who left Afghanistan in 1992, worked in odd jobs until landing at Ariana, which he was eventually able to buy, becoming a U.S. citizen along the way.  However, he was only able to get the rest of his family here last month. The seven of us ate outside in what we regarded as an Afghan Sukkah.  We shared spinach and chicken samosas and each had his own main course.  I had 4 baby lamb chops, marinated, spiced, served with basmati rice and salad.  Good food, good bargain ($23).  
 
Wednesday, September 22, 2021
We were back in a real Sukkah for lunch, guests of Butch and Toby in Englewood,  New Jersey.  We were joined by several people, including Jill and Steve, with whom we last traveled together to India in January 2020, a very long time ago.  The main courses were roasted salmon and roasted tilapia, served on platters of potatoes, peppers and onions cooked with them.  The highlights of the meal were the beginning and the end, mushroom caps stuffed with faux sausage and cheese (Kosher all the way) and chocolate-covered blueberries, homemade by another guest. 
 
Thursday, September 23, 2021
I drove up to the Northampton-Amherst area today for a mini reunion.  While I have seen Dean Alfange, retired from UMass, twice this year already, it was only the third time in over 50 years that we had the company of Lyell Henry from Iowa and Wayne Shannon from Ohio.  These three were of the "senior class" of Cornell University's Government Department's graduate students.  All went on to long teaching careers, while I, true to my Hebraic heritage, wandered the employment desert for almost 40 years. 
 
To prepare myself, I stopped for lunch on the way at Nardelli's Grinder Shoppe, 540 Plank Road, Waterbury, Connecticut, one of several in the state.  I have to deny the ugly rumor that I took this trip just to have a roast beef sandwich with all the fixings, a bag of pickle-flavored potato chips and Nardelli's private label diet root beer.  It's just not true -- entirely.  In fact, there were no pickle-flavored potato chips, so I had Old Bay® Seasoned potato chips instead. 
. . .
 
The reminiscences came hot and heavy among the four of us, although given the level of "maturity" that we have achieved, never did all chime in "I remember that."  Barbara Alfange joined the four of us for dinner, pizza, which to accommodate the variety of personalities at the table, seemed to have a different topping every square inch.  The evening ended with Wayne, who plays piano professionally, entertaining us with songs written no later than 1940, almost too progressive for Dean's taste.

Friday, September 24, 2021
We four old men met for breakfast at the Whately Diner, 372 State Road, Whately, Massachusetts.  It served its breakfast items in such large portions that I was satisfied with just one blueberry pancake.
. . .

I learned that Lyell, a student of the underexplored corners of American history, is working on a book about Pedestrianism, the sport of long distance walking, popular from the Civil War to the start of WWI.  While it gave rise to race walking, Pedestrianism was notable for the sheer distance covered rather than the time taken, which is how the American version eventually overshadowed its British origins.  https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20210723-the-strange-19th-century-sport-that-was-cooler-than-football  
 
According to Lyell, New York to San Francisco was a typical course, although the popularity of Pedestrianism led to indoor contests at Madison Square Garden.  One of the superstars of the sport was Frank Hart, a Black man, esteemed and abused for his accomplishments.  https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/frank-hart-pedestrianism
. . .
 
One the way home, I met up with Marge C., retired plastic surgeon, active wonderful person.  We skipped lunch and went directly to Holy Cow Ice Cream Shop, 51 Church Hill Road, Newtown, Connecticut.  Holy Cow makes its own ice cream.  I had one scoop of Caramel Apple Nut, apple ice cream with peanuts and caramel swirl, and one scoop of Chocolate Peanut Butter Chip, chocolate ice cream with chocolate chips and a peanut butter swirl.  What's not to like?
 
Note that we were very close to the site of the Sandy Hook Massacre, where 26 people, including 20 children between six and seven years old, were murdered by one person with an assault rifle.  Thoughts and prayers were profuse nationally after this tragedy.  Connecticut, New York and Maryland enacted some gun control measures as a result; ten other states loosened gun control measures.  https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2013/04/post-newtown-states-loosen-gun-restrictions.html
 
The federal government did nothing.
 
 
 

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Wait 'Til Next Year

Monday, September 13, 2021
As a partial antidote to the stories about September 11, 2001 on Saturday morning, I looked at the New York Times, first in print and then online, for a story about the Mets-Yankees Subway Series baseball game Friday night.  As a Mets fan, I was delighted by the 10-3 outcome. 
 
However, my enthusiasm was not shared by my favorite newspaper's sports section.  In the print edition, most space was devoted to the US Open tennis tournament and 9/11-related stories.  Online had far more stories - pro football, college football, US Open, high school basketball summer camp, 9/11, horse racing, pro soccer, disciplining a major league baseball player, auto racing, conviction of an Olympics big shot, pro surfing, Olympic diving, high school field hockey, tactics of baseball managers, dragon boat racing, Derek Jeter, obituaries, World Cup soccer, Mohammed Ali documentary and crimes by NFL players, alleged and convicted.  Not one word about the baseball game: nada, rien, gor nisht, niente, méiyǒu, tipota, nihil, zippo.   
 
Come on, fellas.  This is Noo Yawk we're tawkin' about.
. . . 
 
"Josh Mandel, Jewish Ohio Senate candidate, compares Biden’s vaccine mandate to the Gestapo."  Guess which political party he belongs to?
. . . 
 
Two years after I left Morton Street in Greenwich Village another legend arrived.  Kenny Shopsin took over a grocery store on the corner, applying his formidable culinary skills and idiosyncratic personality traits to make it into a landmark.  Calvin Trillin provided a good account of the man and his business in The New Yorker.   https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2002/04/15/dont-mention-it 
 
Shopsin's has moved twice and the owner has died by the time I actually caught up with it yesterday in its location inside the Essex Market a/k/a Essex Street Market, 88 Essex Street.  By the way, the Essex Market, created by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia in 1940 to bring pushcart peddlers indoors for health and safety reasons, has moved across Delancey Street (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094921/) into a large, three-story building housing vendors notably removed ethnically, socially and economically from the original occupants.  
 
Shopsin's serves breakfast and lunch from an enormous menu to a handful of tables and a small counter facing the hectic kitchen.  The many dishes offer familiar ingredients in often unthought of combinations, for instance, "Chubby 2 Slutty Stuffed Pancakes - Mac’n Cheddar / Veggie Saus., Egg, Cheese" ($17) and "Gidget - Tuna, Avocado, Bacon, Tomato Pesto Bread" (I don't know if one or more commas is missing) ($17).  I had "Blisters on My Sisters - Broil Chedda over Sunnies, Peppers, Beans, Collards, Onions, Tomato, Rice, on Corn Tortillas" with diced chorizo extra ($19).  
 
It was excellent and, in ordering it, I broke one of the rules that Kenny used to punitively enforce: You cannot copy a neighbor's order.  Sitting at the counter, I could not avoid the lure of the Blisters being eaten by a young man nearby, although I almost stopped on my immediate right at "Bubba - Crispy Fried Shrimp, Grits, Eggs, Corn Bread" ($21) in front of his girlfriend.   The quality of the food was very high, the prices slightly high.  Note that currently Shopsin's is open only Wednesday-Sunday, 10 AM to 4 PM.  Do not wait as long as I did to eat here.  And, the young man at the counter taking orders showed none of the founder's fabled belligerence. 
. . . 
 
One thing that particularly annoys me about Republican politicians is how they give hypocrisy such a bad name.  Top of the list right now is their reaction to the Covid-19 pandemic, which has already killed almost 700,000 Americans, presumably including some Republicans.  Republican governors, especially in states with high infection rates, insist on preventing proven public health measures, notably vaccinations and mask mandates, at least while a Democrat is in the White House.  Yet, such programs are everyday functions of their own state governments.   https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/12/us/politics/vaccine-mandates-republicans.html
 
Promoting the general welfare is not a new idea in American governance.  
. . . 
 
I had lunch today with Jeffrey Heller, licensed attorney, registered nurse, human rights crusader.  The pandemic has forced Jeffrey to suspend temporarily his crosscountry bicycle rides to raise awareness and funds for the just treatment of refugees.  
 
We went to Pho Shop, 141 West 72nd Street, a reliable Vietnamese restaurant with six rickety tables outside.  We each had a banh mi, the classic Vietnamese sandwich on baguette, his crispy fillet of sole, mine beef bulgogi (both $12).  Not only did I enjoy the sandwich and the company, but Jeffrey gave me this button advocating universal human rights.  
 
The sentiment is important, but note that FDR spoke it exactly 80 years before our failed Fascist putsch.  
 
Tuesday, September 14, 2021
My sandwich yesterday was Vietnamese, but the beef was cooked Korean-style.  Today, after a doctor's appointment in Tribeca, I sought a whole Korean restaurant, Gunbae, 67 Murray Street.  It's a deep, relatively narrow joint, with about 15 sturdy tables anchored to the floor.  Each has an embedded grill, with a sexy, chrome exhaust mechanism directly above resembling a submarine's periscope.  
 
I did not order BBQ, the house specialty in a dozen varieties, more appropriate for a dinner.  Instead, I had a large portion of japchae, rice noodles with thinly-sliced rib-eye, shredded carrots, yellow onions, chives, mushrooms, zucchini slivers and sesame seeds ($17).  It seemed too bland; the "oyster soy sauce" that it was cooked in lacked punch.  Or, maybe the hot, spicy, peppery taste of four of the six salads that accompany every meal threw my normally resilient taste buds off.  
 
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
I learned that 163 countries and territories prescribe motor vehicle traffic driving on the right side of the road, while 76 keep to the left.  That's an interesting, but useless fact. 
 
By contrast, an interesting and valuable fact is that California spent $276 million on yesterday's recall election, all in behalf of a Republican masturbatory fantasy.  Apparently rehearsing for every November to come in the future, they were crying Foul even before the first vote was counted.  Were they looking in the mirror, that would be an apt reaction. 
. . . 
 
Tonight begins Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.  A major myth wrapped around the Jewish High Holy Days is that the Great Decider opens the Book of Life for the coming year on Rosh HaShanah and seals it on Yom Kippur, having made the fitting inscriptions.  When Mother Ruth Gotthelf died a few hours before the (sundown) start of Yom Kippur in 2012, I allowed myself to believe that she had earned almost every minute of the year ending.  Today, fellow members of West End Synagogue may be experiencing similar feelings upon the news of the death this morning of Jane Weprin Menzi, a founder, builder and continuing supporter of our community.  R.I.P. 
 
Friday, September 17, 2021
Having just completed observing the High Holy Days, looking to both atone for past transgressions and setting forth on a more responsible path, I have to reach out to my Republican brethren.  I am sorry for my harsh words, my uncritical opposition, my narrow perspective.  Now, in 5782, I will try to act as a good Jew as long as you don't act like a horse's ass.
. . .
 
Two weeks ago, I presented a photograph of several pinpoints of light, far less than President George H. W. Bush's "thousand points of light."  Your response to me was hardly more enthusiastic than the country's to him.  The few guesses came nowhere close.   
 
The scene was my (really our) desk in a darkened room.  It shows that, rivaling natural moonlight or starlight, we have abolished darkness.  There were at least seven sources of light clustered together - computer, printer, router, mouse.  There were also a few more scattered around the room, beyond the camera's eye.   While I am only a modestly "green" person, I realized how much fuel is wasted by providing an unnecessary soft glow in millions of empty rooms. 
. . .
 
I anticipate having to apologize to Republicans again next year at this time on the brink of 5783.  However, today, I added another group that evoked atonement-worthy behavior.  At midday, I went out shopping and found more than a dozen Lubavitcher Hasidim congregating near the intersection of 72nd Street and Broadway.  Not one was wearing a mask, not around the chin, not around the elbow, not a mask in sight.  
 
Motivated by the Jewish obligation to "repair the world" (tikkun olam), I told each and every one of them that they were killing Jews by not wearing a mask.  I wasn't able to repair much of the world, however, because none of them seemed to speak English.  They had not been merely imported from 770 Eastern Parkway, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, they came from downtown Israel, where the CDC reports "Very High Level of COVID-19 in Israel."  https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-israel
 
What a New Year's present.
 
 
 
 

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Do the Right Thing

Monday, September 6, 2021
This article says that "[w]ith the quick escalation of home prices during the pandemic, it’s become increasingly difficult to qualify for a typical mortgage."   https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/02/realestate/can-you-still-afford-a-mortgage.html 
 
The contrast between locations is dramatic.  To qualify for a mortgage on a median-priced home in San Jose, California requires an annual income of $286,703, while $38,275 is sufficient in Pittsburgh.  In fact, it's more than dramatic, it's extraordinary.  Yet, we get a different picture when we put it in terms that I can best appreciate.  A center ice ticket, 19 rows back from the ice, at an upcoming San Jose Sharks game in October is $183; the same seat at a Pittsburgh Penguins game is $219.  Of course, the Sharks have never won a Stanley Cup and the Penguins have three this century already. 
 
Now, I'll turn it over to a mathematician to determine how many hockey games it will take to even up the income differential between San Jose and Pittsburgh.
. . . 
 
Now, to move from the profane to the sacred or is it the other way around, I want to look at religious philosophy.  An essay suggests that "We Should All Be a Little More Like Dorothy Day."  https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/05/opinion/dorothy-day-christian-labor.html?smid=url-share
 
Dorothy Day converted to Catholicism after leading a bohemian existence in Greenwich Village in the early part of the 20th century.  While adhering to the formal rituals of the Church, she lived her life to the challenging demands of the Sermon on the Mount:
  • feed the hungry
  • give water to the thirsty
  • clothe the naked
  • shelter the homeless
  • visit the sick
She founded the Catholic Worker Movement which established Houses of Hospitality around the country putting these "works of mercy" into practice.    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Works_of_mercy#Corporal_works_of_mercy 
 
For those of us who only take holy water internally, this may still be familiar. "Gemilut Hasadim is the most comprehensive and fundamental of all Jewish social virtues, which encompasses the whole range of the duties of sympathetic consideration toward one's fellow man."  https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/gemilut-hasadim  
 
"A few examples of gemilut hasadim are clothing the naked, feeding the hungry, burying the dead, and visiting the sick."  https://www.123helpme.com/essay/Gemilut-Hasadim-Analysis-PJHLMLYQBG  
 
Tuesday, September 7, 2021
Today is the first full day of 5782, our new year.  When I first looked back to the year past, I lamented our failure in Afghanistan, having been raised on the myth of American omnipotence.  Then, I tallied our record with a more critical eye.  In the last half century, we have lost the War on Poverty,the War on Drugs, the Vietnam War, the War on Cancer and the Afghanistan War.  Maybe we should try pacifism. 
 
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
I had excellent professors of constitutional law in law school, but last night I learned an important lesson in the subject from Rachel Maddow.  Massachusetts had a law permitting churches to veto applications for liquor licenses in nearby establishments.  In 1982, the United State Supreme Court ruled that law unconstitutional in Larkin v. Grendel's Den, Inc., 459 U.S. 116 (1982), because it delegated state power to a religious institution in violation of the First Amendment.  The decision was 8-1. 
 
This decision may well serve as a precedent in attacking the new Texas anti-abortion law, which delegates enforcement to private citizens, just about any and all private citizens.  On the other hand, we have seen that the Coney Island Court is firmly exercising the political role designed by Mitch McConnell, so predicting reliance on Larkin may be wishful thinking.  
 
Thursday, September 9, 2021
I happened to be thinking about some great disc jockeys of the past, such as William B. Williams, Al "Jazzbo" Collins and Allison Steele, when I heard of the death of Phil Schaap.  With his encyclopedic knowledge of jazz and his relatively uninflected vocal delivery, he seemed to be an eternal presence on FM radio, WKCR, King's Crown Radio at Columbia University, yet he was only 70 when he died. 
 
Sometimes, I got impatient with Schaap.  While he put together long sets of great music, he would follow with equally long discussions of what we just heard.  It wasn't just the information that was once found on liner notes.  (For those of you under 50-years old - Liner notes were writings on the back cover of 12" long playing vinyl records, discussing the music and performers.  Note also that liner notes are a clue in the PBS series "Guilt," ending this weekend.)  Schaap would not only identify the date, place and even time of a recording session, but also the musicians who failed to show up.  He was brilliant and irreplaceable. 
 
Friday, September 10, 2021
"God Has No Place in Supreme Court Opinions"  Read this.    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/09/opinion/abortion-supreme-court-religion.html
. . . 
 
I had the pleasure of eating lunch with Irwin Wall, University of California professor emeritus of modern European history.  We agreed to meet at Szechuan Gourmet,  242 West 56th Street, which changed its name to Rong Cheng House by the time that we got there.  It has no outdoor seating, but we felt comfortable with only a few tables occupied indoors during our visit.  
 
At lunch time, it offers over 40 dishes plus soup and rice in addition to its regular menu.  We shared a very good scallion pancake ($5.95) and six gummy soup dumplings ($8.95).  Irwin enjoyed pork with baby eggplant in a rich brown sauce ($11.95), while I had a generous portion of Singapore mei fun, angel hair pasta with chicken, egg, pork, green onion and bean sprouts flavored with curry powder ($11.95), both as lunch specials.  
 
We walked home, Irwin to 64th Street, me to 69th Street, more than compensating for the amount of food that we ate, or so we said. 
. . . 
 
Andy Borowitz informs us that "Texas Governor Greg Abbott said that he was 'actively considering' additional measures to prevent people from wanting to ever set foot in the state."

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Good Question

Monday, August 29, 2021 
Yesterday was the 58th anniversary of the historic March on Washington. I've confessed before that I sat at a great distance from the podium, soaking my feet in a reflecting pool, while Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered his famous speech. I still can't believe that I found the right bus to get back among the hundreds and hundreds parked all over the place. 
 
So, what has changed? The right to vote was a stated goal of the March. Now, there are notorious efforts to limit voting times, places and methods in many states. Hey, Texas, explain to your grandkids what part of democracy you don't like.
 . . . 
 
Memo to American nationalists: Of the 13 U.S. troops killed in the Kabul bombing last week, four had Hispanic surnames and one married woman had a Hispanic maiden name. 
. . . 
 
76 years after the end of WWII, there are still active disputes over the ownership of artworks owned by Jews before the rise of the Nazis. In one current case, in the Netherlands, Amsterdam's governing body, the College of Mayor and Alderpersons, called for a Kandinsky painting to be turned over to the heirs of the pre-war Jewish owners. https://nyti.ms/3mz2SpB 
 
“The suffering inflicted on Jewish citizens in particular during the Second World War is unprecedented and irreversible,” they wrote in February, adding that society had “a moral obligation” to redress that. Affirmative action, anyone? 
. . . 
 
Take a look at two studies. First, we have "The Best and Worst Cities to Live Without a Car." https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/29/realestate/the-best-and-worst-cities-to-live-without-a-car.html?smid=em-share 
 
I don't have all the data, but I am guessing that there is probably higher granola sales in San Francisco, Portland, Oregon and Washington, at the top of the list, rather than Shreveport, Louisiana, Montgomery, Alabama and Little Rock, Arkansas, at the bottom. Second is "Where Are Workers Making the Longest Commutes?" identified as "metropolitan areas [that] have the highest rates of workers whose commutes last 90 minutes or more in each direction.  https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/26/realestate/supercommuter-longest-commutes.html
 
Long commutes don't seem to correspond to the convenience of a car. The only pattern that I can discern is the proximity to real estate "hot spots," the need to work in places too expensive to live in. 
. . . 
 
We had dinner with Barbara and Bernie, cousins of cousins, tonight and their residency on the East Side led us into unfamiliar territory. And, we were all happy that it did. We went to Chez Nick, 1737 York Avenue, a friendly place with extensive outdoor seating opposite Asphalt Green, a large public park that allowed us to see a lot of sky. 
 
Nick’s menu is fairly simple, three or four salads, three or four pastas, five or six main courses. We shared two excellent salads, the Heirloom Tomatoes with grilled peaches, herbed goat cheese, and black pepper vinaigrette ($16), and the Little Gem Lettuces with shallot vinaigrette, marinated marble size potatoes, baby beets, gremolata (a green sauce made of chopped parsley, lemon zest, and garlic), and manchego cheese ($15). 
 
We then went off into separate directions, “Amish Chicken” for Bernie (no, it did not arrive at the table in a horse-drawn buggy) ($25), Baja shrimp for Barbara ($19), chicken liver mousse, with shallot marmalade, whole grain mustard and cornichons, for me ($14) and roasted Branzino for my young bride ($29). Everyone liked everything, a recipe for world peace that eludes us. 
 
Tuesday, August 31, 2021 
Fortunately, the University of Santiago de Compostela in Spain canceled the seminar “Auschwitz/Gaza: A Testing Ground for Comparative Literature.” https://forward.com/fast-forward/474687/spanish-university-cancels-auschwitz-gaza-seminar-comparing-holocaust-to/?utm_source=Email%20Article&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Email%20Article 
 
What might have been the basis for comparison? The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has been tracking deaths in and around the occupied territories, Gaza and the West Bank, since 2008 and its data show that 5,600 Palestinians died up to 2020 while 115,000 were injured. According to Wikipedia, "Of the 1.3 million people sent to Auschwitz [1940-1945], 1.1 million died. The death toll includes 960,000 Jews (865,000 of whom were gassed on arrival), 74,000 ethnic Poles, 21,000 Roma, 15,000 Soviet prisoners of war, and up to 15,000 other Europeans." 
 
I am not naive enough to think that the seminar was organized to dispel the overheated rhetoric that Israel's opponents resort to in trying to eliminate it from the family of nations. Putting Auschwitz and Gaza together was simply an attempt to tar Israel with the murderous brush once lavishly applied to Jews. 
. . . 
 
Last week, we had the Chief Rabbi of Israel trying to keep a Jewish cemetery pure, now we have news that the good citizens of Oberlin, Louisiana, when they could still keep their heads above water, sought to preserve the racial integrity of their local cemetery. https://www.klfy.com/louisiana/allen-parish-family-denied-burial-because-of-skin-color-people-need-to-know-its-just-not-right/ 
 
In the immortal words of Roseanne Roseannadanna, "It's always something." 
. . . 
 
As long as I did not read the newspapers, today was a good day. I walked around midtown Manhattan, stopping for lunch at Joe's Home of Soup Dumplings, 7 East 48 Street, a very big, open space appearing even airier by having predominantly blonde furniture. It contained a dozen tables spaced far apart inside and four more outside. One long wall enclosed four cooks at work behind a glass partition. A counter with 12 stools widely spaced apart faced the partition. 
 
Joe has a very big menu, but, true to its name, soup dumplings are the main attraction. In fact, very few other dumplings or buns are offered. But, these were really great soup dumplings, crab meat and pork stuffed in thin wrappers, six pieces for $11.95. It wasn't just the real estate that justified the high price; the conventionally-sized dumplings were filled with far more meat than found elsewhere. While the cold sesame noodles were just average ($7.95), the soup dumplings will not be forgotten. 
 
Wednesday, September1, 2021 
Quote of the day comes from Terry Trieller, dental hygienist from Lake Placid, N.Y. "If you’re not booing, you’re not a Mets fan." 
. . . 
 
What is this? A free lunch for the first correct answer.

 
Thursday, September 2, 2021 
Michael Ratner and I planned to go to the Mets game tonight, expecting to issue sounds of delight or dismay in response to what we were witnessing. However, the opportunity was denied us by the flotsam and jetsam left by Hurricane Ida, the fifth largest in U.S. history. In our absence, the Mets won. 
 
Friday, September 3, 2021
My brother informed me of the death of Mal Z. Lawrence, a classic Borscht Belt comedian. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/02/arts/mal-z-lawrence-dead.html
 
He will always be remembered for telling of the waiter who went over to the table of alte kockers (senior citizens) and asked, "Is anything OK?"