Premium Post
Eber’s Tishrei Liquor and Wine Sale

Mazal Tov's View More

Picture of the Day

When you live in Crown Heights and such things like the Police, locked doors, and car alarms hardly deter thieves at all, some residents have had to come up with creative ways to keep those bent on stealing out of their vehicles. This guy absolutely nailed it.

Picture of the Day

It’s a bird, it’s a plane, nope, it’s a Jewish owned minivan. Don’t ask how, but this Toyota Sienna minivan managed to get itself off the ground and hanging on overhead wires in the Catskills. Just thinking about this makes you want to ask yourself if that maybe superman is a real person.

Picture of the Day

A sea of people stood outside 770 Friday morning to pay their respects to Rabbi Yoel Kahn OBM, as his Levaya passed on its way to Montefiore Cemetery in Queens. Reb Yoel was a famed Choizer of he Rebbe, as well as a mentor for thousands of Lubavitchers worldwide.

Picture of the Day

Golan Vach, Commander of IDF delegation assisting in recovery efforts in Surfside Florida, paid a visit to the grieving Ainsworth family, informing them that he was with the party that found their parents in the rubble. While there, he received an aliya, and was part of the naming of a new Ainsworth grandchild, welcoming a new baby Itty Ainsworth to the family.

Picture of the Day

It’s sleek, it’s shiny, it’s new, and it belongs to the NYPD’s Highway Patrol. This new Tesla has found its home in the NYPD, where its incredible performance and sleek design will make patrolling New York City’s highways that much easier, and cooler.

Picture of the Day

Last night’s thunderstorm came through Crown Heights with gusto, leaving debris littered across the community, but little real damage. Having said that, this car parked on Carroll Street was down on its luck, having a branch fall down and blow out its rear window.

Picture of the Day

It’s voting time, and Crown Heights has not disappointed. Throngs of Crown Heightsers have flocked to the local voting sites and overwhelmed the underprepared workers. While the sites were less prepared, United Crown Heights was much more so, and quickly had a worker from the board of elections on-site to help ensure that every vote counted.