. SPRING CRUI NORWAY SEAWARD CELEBRATION HOLIDAY • NOW WAS DATE SHIP TRAVEL 411.4 to 4121. Fr.$1475oo Fr. $1180 00 4115 to 4122 $1370oo ,r.$1150°° 444 to 4/21 ,r. $1325oo Fr. $1259 00 Fr. 4114 to 4121 Fr. $ 13 2 5 00 00 Fr. $1259 All Inside/Outside Lowers. Limited Availability Reserve Early For Best Rates. Rates Per Person Based On Double Occupancy. Aix. /off ii nutign 111.!:151.1" 1 HAMILTON MILLER HMG tf FAYNE Travel Corporation 29566 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Mich. 48086-5056 • 313 • 827•4040 A Grand Time For All Aboard The M. S. Seaward's NEW YEAR'S SAILING ravel Agents International For Special Cruise Rates CALL ISABEL 855-1880 don't miss the boot! COME SAIL WITH US! Christmas/New Years 1990 on the Westerdam Special Rates! w•GEIVIINI TRAVEL Orchard Mall • 6393 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield, Ml 48322 60 FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1990 855-3600 ) Simsbury Plaza 14 Mile & Farmington Rd. West Bloomfield Even Dad couldn't build you a sofa as well as we can. What with 1200 fabrics to choose from and 457 sofa styles. Then again, there's our guarantee to consider. And probably, Dad doesn't build custom sofas at all. Newton Furniture Livonia, Nov, Ann Arbor, Sterling Hts. CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354.6060 Ruth Dayan among items for sale at Tamaru. International Crafts An Israeli Display Israel — Tamaru, in Herzliya Pituah, is a "very unusual and exclusive house of crafts," says twenty-two year old Tamar Cohen, a graduate of business and art history from New York University. Cohen, who recently made aliyah, was looking for a business to start in Israel. When Ruth Dayan, a friend of the family, sug- gested an international house of crafts, a meeting place of culture and commerce, Tamar and Ruth joined forces, and names, to create Tamaru. The most difficult crafts to obtain are those of the Israeli Arabs, Dayan admits, for "the craftsmen's children are more interested these days in university studies than conti- nuing traditional crfts." An additional problem, as a result of the ongoing intifada, is getting baskets from Gaza and glass from Hebron. On this point Dayan is par- ticularly sensitive, due to the efforts she has been making since the 1967 Six Day War to encourage the Israeli Arab craft industry. At Tamaru about half the works are by Israeli artists and a wide range of materials are represented, including cotton, silk, wool, wood, ceramics, glass and wrought metal. The bright, modern villa in which Tamaru is situated, is tastefully laid out, with tapestries hanging in the halls. Each room has a different theme and a display of crafts that complement each other. In the Israeli jewelery room, one can find delicate Yemenite necklaces, pendants of silver, mottled turquoise Roman glass and ancient coins; a silver thread macrame necklace and mat- ching earrings, and necklaces by American-born Sara Eins- tein — combinations of bone, amber and other beads and amulets from various eras and cultures, strung together in imaginative ways. The clothing room is filled with Arabic cross-stitch em- broidery, hand-painted silk scarves and embroidered Romanian blouses, printed leather jackets and dresses from Guatemalan woven fabrics, designed by Tamara Jones and sewn in Israel. Even the bathroom is draped with brightly painted South American towels, depicting rural scenes. Mex- ical paper mache fruit fills a wide bowl — papaya, half an avocado, a strawberry, a watermelon slice. In a vase stand corn husk flowers in pink, yellow and purple. Six rooms, in all, each with handicrafts that offer a glimp- se into the relationship Ruth Dayan has with crafts. I NEWS I Sharon Urges Open Border Jerusalem (JTA) — Min- ister of Industry and Trade Ariel Sharon has urged Jor- dan to open its borders to Israeli tourists, and in turn offered that Israel open its borders to Jordanian tourists. Sharon — an advocate for turning Jordan into a Palestinian state — made the offer in a meeting with an economic delegation from Egypt.