Possible, yes; probable, unlikely.  In observing Yom Kippur (and Rosh
Hashanah the week earlier), many Jews will not watch TV or listen to the
radio and will spend the majority of the time in their synagogue.  Given
there was information regarding the hurricane for days leading up to
landfall it is highly unlikely that anyone was unaware of the advisory (or
pending advisory).

Gary J. Klatsky, Ph. D.
Director, Human Computer Interaction M.A. Program

Department of Psychology                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Oswego State University (SUNY)       http://www.oswego.edu/~klatsky
7060 State Hwy 104W                      Voice: (315) 312-3474
Oswego, NY 13126                           Fax:   (315) 312-6330

All of us who are concerned for peace and triumph of reason and justice must
be keenly aware how small an influence reason and honest good will exert
upon events in the political field.
                                                                     Albert
Einstein

-----Original Message-----
From: michael sylvester [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 27, 2004 4:07 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: Hurricanes and Jews

While watching the Hurricane coverage on TV,one official remarked
that there was some concern that Jewish residents may not be aware
of advisories issued because this period ran concomitantly
with Jewish holy days and hence some may not be listening to radios
or watching TV.
 Any feedback? is this possible?

Michael Sylvester,PhD
Daytona Beach,Florida

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