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Rabbi Menachem Creditor
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CNS "Davening Lab" led by Hannah Dressner
Four 90 minute sessions, every other Shabbat
Oct. 30, Nov. 13, 10:30 - 12:00
This "davening lab" is meant to hold a container for experimentation with the Shabbat morning davening, for the purpose of further vitalizing our personal experiences of prayer. We hope that skills and insights gained in this smaller context will, ultimately, enhance the larger Netivot shabbat morning service. To keep us in sync with the main service, the Slim Shalom siddur (and a transliterated siddur) will be used as a basis for this investigation, augmented by other sources. Modes and enhancements of prayer to be explored will include: becoming comfortable with traditional nusach and its riffs, the usefulness of chant, the place for silence, davening in translation, and creation of privacy within one's tallit, and, of course, some new melodies.
Each session will take the form of an abbreviated service, with study of at least one prayer or psalm within that context. Please come with a tallit (even if taken for the Netivot supply) and an open heart. Please leave all writing and recording instruments behind, as we are learning while doing, and Shabbat does not traditionally include these activities. And be prepared to re-integrate with the full community by staying for kiddush! If you especially enjoyed Hannah's service leadership style during Yamim Nora'im, you will really enjoy this new window to prayer. Please join her on Saturday Oct. 30 and Nov. 13 at 10:30 upstairs for an alternative service.
WASHINGTON — Two suspicious packages were found on U.S.-bound cargo flights from Yemen overnight, the White House said Friday, triggering searches of other cargo flights that had landed in the U.S. and an investigation into whether al-Qaida was behind a new terror plot.
Sources told NBC News that both packages contained toner cartridges with wires and white powder.
Two suspicious devices, toner cartridges that had wires and white powder, were found on U.S.-bound cargo flights from Yemen overnight, the White House said Friday. Full story
"The president was notified of a potential terrorist threat on Thursday night at 10:30," the White House said in a statement.
Homeland Security said in a statement it was taking new measures, "including heightened cargo screening and additional security at airports."
The devices were found aboard U.S.-bound cargo planes in Britain and Dubai.
A law enforcement official told NBC that the two packages were addressed to a synagogue and a Jewish community center in Chicago.
One U.S. official said authorities are investigating whether the incident was a dry run for a plot to send bombs through the mail delivery system.
Yemen is the home of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the offshoot branch that claimed responsibility for an attempted bombing of a U.S.-bound airliner last Christmas.
Information about the Dubai device was not available, but test results for explosives were negative on the cartridge found in Britain, one law enforcement official said. The UPS cargo flight had been bound for Chicago but was at a British airport during a routine stopover when the cartridge was spotted.
Officials found the suspicious item during basic security screening.
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In Chicago, synagogues were warned to be on alert Friday.
"We were notified this morning that synagogues should be on the alert," Linda Haase, associate vice president of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago, told Reuters. "We are taking appropriate precautions and are advising local synagogues to do likewise."
TSA issues alert
The Transportation Security Administration earlier said that cargo flights that landed safely at Newark and Philadelphia airports were being searched after "reports of potentially suspicious items onboard."
Fact file: UPS
UPS describes itself as "the world's largest package delivery company." Here are some facts:
Founded: 1907
Headquarters: Atlanta
Main U.S. air hub:Louisville, Ky.
2009 revenue: $45.3 billion
Worldwide employees:408,000
Jet aircraft fleet: 216 in service
Other vehicles: 95,244 package cars, vans, tractors, motorcycles.
Daily flight segments:1,691
Airports served: 766
Source: UPS.com
"Out of an abundance of caution the planes were moved to a remote location where they are being met by law enforcement officials and swept," TSA added.
Two jets in Philadelphia belonging to UPS were searched. A federal law enforcement official told the AP that nothing suspicious was found.
The flight that landed at Newark, N.J., also was a UPS cargo jet. After the jet was searched, officials gave the all clear.
In New York, a UPS truck was searched and then cleared in Brooklyn.
Al-Qaida active in Yemen
The United States has stepped up its training, intelligence and military aid to Yemen after the failed Christmas Day plot, for which the Yemeni wing of al-Qaida claimed responsibility.
The accused Christmas Day bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, has told U.S. investigators he received the explosive device and training from al-Qaida militants in Yemen.
Yemen has been trying to quell a resurgent branch of al-Qaida, which has stepped up attacks on Western and government targets in the Arabian Peninsula country.
The Associated Press and Reuters, as well as NBC's Pete Williams and Robert Windrem, contributed to this report.