A L ,71Z-4 A * 1 I TRAVEL I 01 0 0 ,0 IM O • • At. LsRAEL AIRLINES WCW/ 01 VIM '1' n/ 'nom Come to Israel This Winter! Why? The Price is RIGHT! $699. Roundtrip Airfare Chicago/Tel Aviv (same as New York) via El Al's direct service from Chicago. HOTEL PRICES ARE MUCH LOWER--Yes . . . . LOWER than last year! There are so many NEW attractions to see...Making it an unforgettable winter sunshine experience! It's WARM There! It Sure Beats FREEZING Here! Israel Come stay with friends. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • irei • Sounds Good To Me...Please send me information on... • • Israel this Winter. • • • • • • • • • • • Israel Government Tourist Office, 5 South Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60603 • • • • • • • • • • Name • Address • Zip State • City • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Some Restrictions Apply. Another Fun In The Sun Trip For DONESON / WORLD CLASS TRAVEL They do their own Hotel Inspections in Disney World. Here we are in the Grand Floridian Hotel's Lobby. SHIFRA, YOLANDA, JAN, ROZ, MIRIAM, SYLVIA, SANDY, LESLEY & SUZANNE World Class Travel of Michigan, Inc. TRAVEL AGENCY 21720 Eleven Mile Rd. • Harvard Row Mall • Southfield, MI • 353.5811 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 6 8 . FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1990 Nathan Rapaport sculpture Toronto, Ontario A Swiss New York RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News T he sign outside Greyfe's Bagel Bakery reads, "Sorry, no bagel. Sold out for today." But hungry noshers need not worry. Along one three- block strip of Bathurst Street in Toronto are stores selling a smorgasboard of Jewish delicacies. At Chocolate Charm, the miniature chocolate shofars are kosher, Stroli's sells kosher TV dinners; Joe Kirschen stocks kosher meat and fish; Kosher Express features glatt-kosher foods to go. And that's not all. Across the street, hot European bagels are ready at My Zaidy's Bagel Bakers. Nearby, too, are Matt's Falafel House, Murray's Deli, and the Milk `n Honey Restaurant. The abundance of ethnic eateries is just one of the at- tractions of Bathurst Street in Toronto. This wide street reflects the diversity of Jewish life in the city with Canada's largest Jewish population. Toronto's Jews, who number 125,000 in a population of three million, are served by over 50 synagogues, numerous Jewish day schools, and a full-facility Jewish com- munity center. They live in a cosmopolitan city that's described as "New York run by the Swiss" because of its size, ethnic diversity, and civilized, sparkling clean modernity. But while they enjoy the ur- bane environment, the Jews here prefer to live in their own neighborhoods. Former- ly, the clustered in the Spadina-Kensington area. But now, Jewish Toronto is further north along Bathurst Street. For the Jewish traveler, a trip up and down Bathurst Street is a chance to see a variety of Jewish sites. A Judaica museum, The Jewish community center, the elaborate facade of Holy Blossom Synagogue, kosher butcher shops and dairy restaurants — all are on a street that captures the essence of modern Jewish Toronto. The food strip is a good star- ting point for touring Bathurst Street. Not only is it guaranteed to satisfy Jewish appetites, but it also evokes the ethnic flavor of this neighborhood. On one street lampost is an ad for specially made sukkot