TRAVEL We Carry Motor City Muffins ORCHARD 12 PLAZA 21885 ORCHARD LAKE RD, AT 12 ALE 553-2165 FRE E jEWISH CALEND 1991 AR MIDDLE EASTERN SPECIALTIES FREE Package of Pita Bread with purchase of 8 oz. Hommus Hommus 8 oz. Toboule Daba Ghanouj Pita Dread 7 oz 8 oz Coupon BITE SIZE $'1.89 $1.89 $1.89 79C for Exp. 8/31/90 Exp. 8/31/90 PITTED PRUNES 1.00 99' lb. Exp. 8/31/90 Exp. 8/31/90 10% OFF 0 Coupon Coupon 1.7 oz. bag $ Coupon ON ANY PURCHASE 0 Excluding Sole Items N Expires 8/31/90 Coupon OAT BRAN DARK PRETZEL BRIDGE RAISINS MIX NUGGETS 4,39 lb. $ 1.99 lb. 79'. COMBOS $1.59 lb. Exp. 8/31/90 C 1 per customer while supplies lost Coupon TOOTSIE ROLLS Mon.-Sot. 9-9 Sun. 12-5 We honor all other competitor coupons Coupon CADILLAC COFFEE OF THE MONTH RAW ALMONDS Vanilla Creme Decaf $ 1.00 OFF rt:' $ 1.99 lb. Exp. 8/31/90 C 0 t U I P I Exp. 8/31/90 D/PY Expires 8/31/90 ALL FRUIT BASE 1KD A synagogue in Copenhagen. t I 0 I , DUY 2 GET I FREE! 1 , „ ri I I I: • Non Dairy • No Cholesterol • Kosher i No Fat • • Low Sodium • 9 Calories_ per ounce Copenhagen Tells Of A Jewish Rescue RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News SUPER SUMMER SPECIAL BROKEN WINDSHIELD 6' 00 SAVE $25,00 • When you pay cash/or off your deductible • Must be replaed in shop • Domestic cars only PURITAN AUTO GLASS IrSoc Offer Expires 9/1/90 — By Appointment $ 5000 O 444 OFF ANY DEDUCTIBLE On Collision Over $500.00 Conditional FREE Loaner Car — Please present ad with order FREE RUB•OUT with any collision job over $500 00 10 YEARS' EXPERIENCE — BODY REPAIR — PAINT WORK • Corvette & Mustang Specialists • Insurance Claims • Touch Ups Puritan Auto Service 355-1200 M I - din-5 pm. ',It S ALL WORK GUARANTEED 2 1 545 Telegraph Nom' Just .1()tith ut Niti• Lenny's Body Shop 357-3020 S dm-5 pin. ‘Idt. S am-noon Tables • Desks Wall Units Bedrooms Dining Rooms V 68 For Appt Call 10 Years Experience & Expertise in the Design of Affordable Laminate, Lucite & Wood Furniture Muriel Wetsman FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1990 661-3838 n September 6, 1819, a tall, awkward boy arrived in Copen- hagen on the mail coach from Odense. At age 14, Hans Christian Andersen came to the Danish capital to seek his fortune. He dreamed of becoming a famous actor at the Royal Theater. Though that dream did not come true, he did become a world famous writer of fairy-tales who remained enchanted with Copenhagen throughout his life. Just as it charmed Andersen, Copenhagen con- tinues to enchant visitors. The Little Mermaid statue, the lush Tivoli gardens, the mile-long walking street, pastel colored canal houses, copper domes — all make this a fairy-tale city for tourists. For Jewish travelers, Copenhagen is even more. This is a city where a story of courage and rescue — the rescue of 7,000 Danish Jews from the Nazis — actually happened. The dangers, the drama, the triumphant con- clusion of this story make it far better than any fairy-tale. Copenhagen also offers specific attractions for the Jewish travelers. They can visit a museum which re- counts the Danes' four years of resistance to the Nazis and includes vividly detailed displays of the famous rescue of Danish Jews. Jewish tourists can also visit the tower where the Torah scrolls were hidden during the Nazi occupation and see the synagogue where Jews returned to celebrate after the liberation. The first stop on the Jewish traveler's itinerary should be the modest-looking museum in Churchillparken which of- fers the best-documented ac- count of the story of Danish Resistance. Outside the Frihedsmuseet (Museum of Freedom), the Danish flag is flying, and the atmosphere gives the visitor no preparation for the drama of the story that's told inside. Newspaper clippings, maps, photographs, even old prin- ting presses which turned out secret newsletters — all docu- ment how the citizens of the small country built a resistance movement from 1940 to 1945, when Denmark was occupied by the Nazis. One wall of exhibits is devoted to the rescue of the Danish Jews. Here visitors may view the photos, the maps, the detailed account of the rescue that took place in October, 1943, when 7,000 Danish Jews were saved from deportation. As the exhibits explain, the Danes had learned in ad- vance that the Nazis planned to round up all Danish Jews. Quickly the non-Jewish Danes mobilized. They hid Jews in their homes and in hospitals. And then they started to transport them across the water to neutral Sweden. They used small fishing boats, rowing across the water at night, steering through fog, danger and darkness, risking their lives to deliver the Jews to safety. The Jewish visitor can follow still another aspect of this inspiring rescue story by ,