T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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653.1 | Taxing questions | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 07 1989 15:08 | 5 |
| If he is working in ZKO, then living in Mass. will increase his taxes
quite noticably (no personal income tax in NH). Unless that isn't a factor,
he may want to stay north of the border.
Eric
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653.2 | May be tough for singles | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Tue Mar 07 1989 16:58 | 22 |
| RE: 653.0
Newton certainly has an active Jewish community, with several different
synagogues/havurot, but I'm not sure how well he would do finding young
singles. It may also be difficult finding rental space, since it is a
city with predominantly private homes.
It might be worth his while to visit some of the congregations and see
how he reacts to them. (He should also try to get a copy of Jewish
Boston.)
Some of the Newton shuls are:
Temple Reyim - Conservative
Temple Emanuel - Conservative
Congregation Mishkan Tefila - Conservative
Congregation <name escapes me, it's on Ward St/Commonwealth> - Orthodox
Shir Hadash - Reconstructionist
Newton Egalitarian Minyan - Traditional
Temple Shalom - Reform
Aaron
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653.3 | Beth-El in Newton | VINO::WEINER | Sam | Tue Mar 07 1989 21:46 | 9 |
| Beth-El Atereth Israel is the Orthodox shul at the west end of Ward
St in Newton. There is a new Rabbi so I can't say anything about
him but generally I would classify it as modern Orthodox.
Last time I was there, a lot of new folks had joined but it was
mostly young families.
There is also a much smaller shul around the corner on Morseland.
Its after my time in Newton so I can't add any more.
|
653.4 | | CSG::ROSENBLUH | | Wed Mar 08 1989 10:33 | 31 |
| Tell him:
1) Commute time to ZK from Cambridge is ~50 minutes.
2) Considering his requirements, Brookline/Allston and Cambridge/Somerville
are far and away the best choices.
3) The difference between Brookline and Cambridge is as follows:
(Don't flame me; these are obviously highly generalized stereotypical comments.)
Among their 'conservadox' constituencies:
Cambridge has lots of Harvard undergrads, some Harv. & MIT grads,
relatively few single 'professional' working people, and VERY few
young families w/ children.
Brookline has some BU undergrads, some grad students from many area
schools, some single yuppie-types (definitely more than Cambridge)
and lots of young families w/ children. Also, in Brookline he has
a wider choice of shuls and easier access to kosher butchers, etc.
3) Rent is cheaper in Allston and Somerville, but it's not hard to find
a 2-bedroom for $1000 in Brookline or Cambridge either.
4) Allston is a good compromise - the part of it which is within easy
walking distance of both Harvard Hillel and various Brookline ortho shuls.
5) I believe there is a commuter van from this area to ZK.
Finally, having lived 7 single and 1 married year in Cambridge (with absolutely
no regrets, personally), I believe most single non-student people would be
happier living and 'looking' in Brookline, so that's what I would recommend
for him.
|
653.5 | | DELNI::C_MILLER | | Wed Mar 08 1989 12:27 | 13 |
| I'd suggest he start reading the Jewish Advocate (you can buy single
copies in the Brookline/Brighton/Cambrige newstand area). They
list apartments for rent, and people looking for Jewish roommates.
The JCC in both Newton and Brighton has a VERY active singles
organization. They send out monthly lists of activities and put
you on the mailing lists of other single Jewish organizations.
As for location: anything beyond the Lexington/Concord area is fairly
rural and not too Jewishy. I have been investigating Nashua and
found it caters more to young families. I'd suggest he get into
a house or roommate situation in the Arlington/Lexington area, the
commute would be about 35-40 minutes up 128 to Rte 3 (Nashua).
|
653.6 | we need members... | ASANA::CHERSON | can't think of one at the moment | Wed Mar 08 1989 12:43 | 9 |
| re; .4
Kathy, you forgot to mention the Tremont St. Shul in Cambridge
(Temple Beth Shalom to the rest of the world). We're always open to receive
new members, single or not(and besides there are single women there also :-).
You know of course that we are "conservadox" (what a term!)`, and besides
there's Reb Moishe.
David
|
653.7 | Jewish Young Adult Center | CRUISE::SPEARL | | Thu Mar 09 1989 12:21 | 10 |
| A good place to meet young Jewish singles is "Centerpoint", formerly
known as the Jewish Young Adult Center. It is in Brookline on Beacon
St. The telephone number is 617-566-5946. They publish a calender
of events to be held during the course of each month. There was
and still should be a bulletin board at the center which has ads
for apartments to share/roommates wanted. The organization now
has about 1000 members. The have a wide assortment of cultural,
educational, sports and social activities.
Simms
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653.8 | Live near Brookline | BAGELS::SREBNICK | Bad pblm now? Wait 'til we solve it! | Thu Mar 09 1989 14:57 | 31 |
| And don't forget about Shabat Shalom Boston. Synagogue Council
in Newton would be helpful.
FYI -- I have been a co-chairman of the United Synagogue (Conservative)
Young Leadership (22-40 yr old) committee for several years. Although
there seems to be a great need for groups and activities for young
singles, most synagogues don't have them.
The reason seems to be that most young singles are interested in
purely social events with lots of people and lots of opportunity
for meeting "significant others." (I mean no disrespect, it just
seems to be the general case.) Small group activities are difficult
to sustain. Also, most young singles can't or don't want
to afford memberships in synagogues; the married leadership of
synagogues can't see the benefit in spending any time doing anything
for singles because there's no membership money to support it.
Temple Emunah in Lexington (spitting distance from "less expensive"
communities such as Woburn, Waltham) has a nice service, a great
Rabbi, and pleasant people. As for social needs, stick with
"Centerpoint" and Shabbat Shalom Boston, and other activities in
Boston.
Another suggestion: some recent college graduates end up as youth
group chapter advisors. For those who like this sort of thing,
it can be a great way to meet friends & SO's (not the kids; I mean
other advisors). I have a lot of (now married) friends who met that
way. If your friend wants to do this, I can be contacted directly
for more info and a possible shidduch.
Dave
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653.9 | | BOSTON::SOHN | Me & Lou Reed - born today (3/2) | Fri Mar 10 1989 11:59 | 11 |
| Personally, I wouldn't recommend Allston. It's a student ghetto,
and the quality of housing stock leaves much to be desired.
Also personally, Cambridge makes me queasy, partly from the students
and partly because of the infamous "Cambridge mentality"...
Brookline and Newton are the safest bets. Brookline's more urban and
urbane, as well as more accessible (B, C, and D lines are all close
enough to walk to), but Newton's cheaper.
--axe--
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653.10 | total weekly schlepping time | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Fri Mar 10 1989 14:34 | 16 |
| ZKO is a serious schlep from Brookline, more than 45 minutes if
you drive anywhere near legally, even without traffic! Newton's
big; Auburndale is on 128 but that has heavy rush-hour traffic.
I live in Arlington (Lexington line) and it's 30 minutes to LKG,
probably about 40-45 to ZKO. I can get to Brookline off-hours in
about 20-25 minutes. Since there's not much Jewish singles activity
in the 128 area, it's still better to drive 25 minutes to Brookline
a couple times a week than have to brave that schlep to ZKO every
day.
BTW, while it's not close to ZKO, Brighton (up the hill) is much
less the student ghetto than Allston (down the hill) and quite a
nice place to live. Ward 21 Precinct 13 is about 90% Jewish, I think.
The drive to Rt. 2 every day got to me, though.
fred
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653.11 | Brighton to ZKO's not so bad | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Mar 10 1989 15:30 | 3 |
| I live in Brighton (the heart of the ghetto) and work at ZKO.
I vanpool from Newton. It's a 20 minute drive, followed by a
40 minute ride, during which I can read, study, sleep, etc.
|
653.12 | "Cambridge mentality"??? | ASANA::CHERSON | Bird lives | Mon Mar 13 1989 09:30 | 7 |
| re: .9
I'd like to know what "Cambridge mentality" you are referring to. Despite
the "attractions" of communities like Brookline and Newton they're pretty
sterile compared to Cambridge.
David
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653.13 | Cambridge by far | ACESMK::FRANCUS | Mets in '89 | Tue Mar 14 1989 16:45 | 18 |
| I live in Cambridge, work in MKO (Merrimack) and it takes me about
an hour to work, 50 minutes from work. I live near Harvard Square
and to get to ZK is about 45 minutes.
I had the same decision to make about a year ago and chose Cambridge
because it had a much nicer mix then what I saw in Brookiline.
Cambridge has lots of young working singles while Brookline seemed
to be more of a "married with kids" kind of place. This is not to
denigrate one or the other, just the facts. So I chose Cambridge,
I have a car so I can get to Brookline if I need something from
there, I usually go to Harvard Hillel - which has many minyanim
of all varieties.
You get the drift. I would make the same choice all over again and
it would be as clear a choice as when I first made it.
yoseff
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653.14 | How about two homes??? | ACESMK::MALMBERG | | Mon Mar 27 1989 14:00 | 41 |
| Before I was married a year ago, I lived sampled several of the
above-mentioned communities!
I lived in Brookline when I first came to Boston in 1981 I was married
to a BU professor at the time). When I was divorced six years ago,
I moved to Cambridge to an inexpensive sublet (of someone on sabbatical)
for a year. I attended Harvard Hillel and was working in Lexington.
I found it hard to meet people at Harvard Hillel, even though friends
had introduced me to a number of people who regularly attend services
there.
When my sublet was drawing to its end, I used the excellent housing
listings at Harvard Hillel to find another place to live. What I
discovered was that the mix of roommates is what makes or breaks
the living situation. Established roommates make it much easier
to meet new people. I lived in Allston for several years, then
bought a condominium in Brookline and lived alone. Brookline worked
for me because it is safer and the apartments are nicer than Allston,
but the friends I had met through my roommates in Allston were quite
important. I would not say that simply a congregation or the singles
mixers (yes, I went to those too) work unless the fellow is a very
out-going person, so a living situation with a few people willing
to help him meet new people is important.
Another place to meet people is Israeli dancing at MIT -- even if
he does not think he is graceful enough! The people are nice and
friendly and helpful and it is good exercise.
One last suggestion -- just before I was married I changed DEC jobs
from the Boston sales office to here in Merrimack. I had a hard
choice (and no plans to marry) because people said it is not easy
to live in New Hampshire as a Jewish single. The decision I made
was to continue to live in Brookline, but get a 'pied a terre' (sp?)
in New Hampshire. I would change my legal residence to New Hampshire
and the savings in income taxes and automobile insurance paid for
the extra living space because I could get an inexpensive shared
apartment here. This would minimize the commute during the week
and at the same time allow me continue to live in my Jewish community.
Yours,
Meredith
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