By Donald H. Harrison
Thanks to Melanie Rubin, our sharp-eyed "license plate
bureau chief," we know that some proud Jewish mothers are on the
California roadways, not only bringing smiles to the lips of the passengers in
cars behind theirs, but also helping to build our Jewish-interest license
plate collection.
This gives us a chance to mention our alphabetizing system. There is a
large space after "ema" in the EMA TO3 license plate, but a much
smaller one after the "ema" in EMA FOR4 . In our
alphabetizing system, spaces and punctuation go prior to letters. For
example A MENSCH, would go before AMENSCH.
I haven't figured out yet in what order to put punctuation. Suppose the
license plate read: A-MENSCH? I suppose that would go after A MENSCH and
before AMENSCH. On the other hand, suppose the license plate read
A+MENSCH, would that go after A-MENSCH on the theory that one meant A-Plus
Mensch, while the other mean A-Minus Mensch?
Oy, such problems!
Yiddish: Upright, outstanding
person Yididish: For you, only good
Hebrew: In
peace
Yiddish: Grandma
Yiddish: Grandma
2
Hebrew & English: Mother to 3
Hebrew & English: Mother for
4
Yiddish: Little Mindy
Yiddish: Woe is me,
Ma
Yiddish:
Grandpa
Biblical: A life as long as Moses'