When a rabbi is reading for recreation, he may read Time, Field and Stream,
The Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, QST, "Moby Dick", Der Spiegel etc.
When he is reading to develop and enhance the scope and timeliness of his
professional knowledge, a rabbi may read the Torah, other parts of Tanakh,
the Talmud, or any of the thousands of published ancient or contemporary
works of analysis or commentary on them.
read the book and find out yourself.
call your rabbi
I think a Conservative rabbi or Reform rabbi would know.
Rabbi Akiva was one of the foremost Rabbinic Scholars from the Tannaic period. He lived at the time of the descruction of the second temple and joined forces with Bar Kochba in the revolt against the Romans. You can read full biographies about Rabbi Akiva at http://www.answers.com/topic/rabbi-akiva
The person who leads prayers during religious services is called a Cantor.
Originally, it was a rabbi, a rabbi, and a rabbi walk into a bar. . .
Rabbis. Here are a few examples from the Talmud. Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Yonatan ben Uziel, Chanina ben Dosa, Bava ben Buta, Shimon ben Hillel, Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Yehoshua, Rabbi Yossi haKohen, Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel, Rabbi Elazar ben Arakh, Rabbi Yochanan ben Nuri, Rabbi Akiva, Rabbi Nechuniah, Rabbi Nachum Gamzu, Rabbi Yossi Glili, Rabbi Honi Me'agel, Rabbi Abba Shaul, and hundreds of others. Each of these had large groups of disciples.
Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum and Rabbi Zalman Leib Teitelbaum
The rabbi of France
A rabbi is a teacher.
A Chief Rabbi
Rabb Rabbi The Rabbi also Engineer Rabbi