TRAVEL
••••BERKLEYm"
TRAVEL INCC. .. "
presents
NEW YEARS DAYTON, OHIO
"LA COMEDIA DINNER THEATRE"
NEW YEARS EVE, TORONTO
MURDERIMYSTERY SNOW & PARTY
DEC. 31-1
DEC. 30-JAN. 1 $21 5(Z..
$119
R.T. MTRCH., 1 NITE HOTEL HOLIDAY SPECTACULAR
SHOW, DINNER, DANCING, CHAMPAGNE, BRUNCH
R.T. MTRCH., 2 NITES HOTEL; DINNER;
MURDER MYSTERY; DANCING; PARTY;
CHAMPAGNE & MORE!
LAS VEGAS SPECIAL
ANDY WILLIAMS
HOLIDAY SHOW
NEW YEAR'S EVE
DEC. 29-JAN. 1
NIAGARA FALLS
DEC. 18-19
499
• R.T. AIR & TRANS. • 3 NITES HOTEL
• ALL BAG HANDLING & TAXES
_
• R.T. MOTORCOACH • ORCHESTRA SEAT SHOW • 1
NITE HOTEL • 1 DINNER • 1 LUNCH • SEE FESTIVAL
OF LIGHTS-NIAGARA FALLS
RED WINGS vs MAPLE LEAFS
IN TORONTO
DEC. 9.11; 10-11
MARCH 24.26; 25.26
NIAGARA FALLS
FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS
JAN. 28-29
$115
PP. DBL.
FROM
$99
• R.T. MTRCH., 2 DINNERS, TOUR & MORE!
R.T. MTRCH; 1 or 2 NITES — WESTBURY OR
IBIS HOTEL • SAT. NITE GAME TICKET;
BREAKFAST (Ibis Hotel Only)
THE MUSIC MAN
WESTGATE DINNER THEATRE—TOLEDO
WINTER GETAWAY
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.
FEB. 1-28
27 NIGHTS $1095
PP
$115 .
NOV. 13
$38
• R . T.MOTORCOACH, LUNCH & SHOW
P.P.
ACAPULCO
DBL.
R.T. AIR, 3 MEALS DAILY, PLANNED
ACTIVITIES DAILY
SENIOR VACATION HOTEL
DEC. 24-31 FR$799
D RB PL.
• R.T. AIR & TRANSFERS, 7 NITES HOTEL
23100 Providence Dr. • Suite 105, Southfield, Michigan 48075
(Clausen Building North)
•Nl 559.8620 • •••••••••••
O•selow
Marching down Jaffa Road, Detroiters lead the crowd to UJA Square.
Detroiters On Jubilee Mission
Express Solidarity With Israel
""41".."""
AT LARRY PASKOW'S
HARBOR ISLAND SPA
"THE PRICE IS TWICE AS NICE"
ONE WEEK FREE
Stay 2 Weeks
Pay for I
1 Value For Men & Women-One Week Free
Harbor Island Spas
"Lose Weight-Super Room Rate" Includes:
* 3 Nutritionally Balanced
Meals Daily plus Snacks
* Pounds off Now Program
* Nutritionist
* Massages
* Facial & Herbal Wrap
* Sauna-Steam-Jacuzzi
* Exercise-Yoga Classes
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Water Exercise
Spas For Men & Women
Free Tennis Clinic
HBO/Cable
Day & Evening Activities
Nitely Dinner Dancing
Shows & Entertainment
Every Resort Facility
II8 Day/7 Mite Plan Available
Call for Information & Reservations
Lanyclinkoves
r
81.) a.
(
.
1-800-SPA-SLIM
7900 LARRY PASKOW WAY
NO. BAY VILLAGE, MIAMI BCH, FLA 33141
Last Check In Date Nov. 28th
Alr Conditioned & Heated
SCHECHTER'S
‘7711271440
KOSHER HOTEL
2 Hours More of
Sunshine daily
GLATT
YOUR HOME AWAY FROM HOME
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
OPENING NOV. 20th
Reserve Now
For Your
Winter Vacation
CALL TOLL FREE:
HEATED THERAPEUTIC WHIRLPOOL
PRIVATE BEACH FREE PARKING
COLOR TV & RADIO IN ALL ROOMS
NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT
WE CATER TO ALL DIETS
FREE CABLE TV
OCEANFRONT BOARDWALK
1-800-327-8185
Entire Oceanfront Block 37th to 38th Sts. Miami Beach
SCHECHTER Family Management
62
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1988
CHARLOTTE DUBIN
Special to The Jewish News
T
he Jewish world took
on a more intimate
meaning for 75
Detroiters who recently
returned from a unique mis-
sion of solidarity.
They were among nearly
1,000 Americans who took
part in the national United
Jewish Appeal Jubilee Mis-
sion, so named because of the
50th anniversary of this life-
sustaining organization.
What made this journey
unique was the number of
lives it touched. Before the
national mission came
together for six days in Israel,
separate pre-missions visited
Jewish communities in eight
countries. Three groups of
Detroiters — nearly 50 of
them — took a message of
hope and solidarity to
refuseniks in the Soviet
Union. Led by Paul Borman,
a fourth group of 17 reched
out to the proud, but dwindl-
ing, Jewish enclave of Moroc-
co. And one Detroiter joined a
pre-mission to Hungary,
where 80,000 Jews are sus-
taining a vibrant Jewish
community.
It was the largest Detroit
contingent ever to participate
in a mission of this kind.
The underlying message
was the unity of the Jewish
People. But there were other
messages as well. Noting the
scarcity of tourists, Israel
Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres commented: "Your
presence here is heart-
warming. I express thanks
from all our people from the
depths of our hearts."
Detroiter Ibm Klein put it his
own way: "What we read in
the papers back home, and
the sense of normalcy we see
here, are quite different.
When I get back, if I can get
just one person to visit Israel,
I will have accomplished
something!'
Dedication of UJA Square
in the heart of Jerusalem was
one of several events that ex-
pressed the Israelis' gratitude
for a longtime partnership
with American Jewry. A
special presentation to
Detroit's Jane Sherman
acknowledged her devotion to
Project Renewal from its
inception.
For the Detroiters, there
was another bonus: a visit to
the Project Renewal
neighborhood park in Yavneh
that will be dedicated soon in
the name of Henry Ford II.
Plans for the park were pro-
udly displayed by Yavneh
Mayor Yehudah Boros, who
said the beautification will
include features that are uni-
quely "Detroit," including
model cars on which children
can play and climb.
The Detroiters' welcome to
Yavneh included a night on
the town with the residents.
Neot Shazar neighborhood
families invited the mission
participants into their homes
for an evening of friendship —
and mountains of food. Over-
come by the hospitality (and
carrying a sack of fruit his
hosts insisted he take on the
bus "in case you get
hungry"), Marvin Novick ex-
pressed his enthusiasm:
"This is what Jews are all
about."
The majority of Yavneh's
hosts were of Moroccan origin
— tracing their roots back
centuries to a land where
350,000 Jews lived only 40
years ago. Today, after waves
of emigration, fewer than
10,000 remain.
Only days before their
Yavneh visit, Marlene Bor-
man had been in Morocco,
where her husband Paul led
a pre-mission. She described
the personal impact of two
days in Casablanca and Mar-
rakech, where Jewish leaders
welcomed one of the largest
American delegations in re-
cent years:
"The Joint Distribution
Committee has lent a digni-
ty to their lives, helping the
community provide schools,
homes for the aged and
health care. Many would have
no resources without the
JDC. When the lights go out
and the Jewish community
has all but left, the JDC will
be there, helping the few who
remain!'
It was in the Soviet Union
— Moscow, Leningrad, Minsk
and Riga — where the situa-
tion of contemporary Jewry
was played out most
dramatically for the Detroit
mission participants.
Refusenik families who have
waited years to leave, young