UAV WO IV ES Full Service Travel Agency Traveling Has Never Been Easier Pick up the phone & we'll handle the rest... • • • • • • • • • • Instant Ticketing Boarding Passes Free Ticket Delivery Corporate Account Incentive Package Cruises Groups Rail Air Hotel & Car Reservations Charters mew staista,=4:1',,K.: Harvard's Hillel A College Town With Jewish Flavor (313) 827-9920 1-800 729-9820 FAX (313) 355-1701 RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News A Half of Your New Kitchen is Already Finished Doors & Drawers will custom build new door and drawer fronts and reface your existing cabinets giving the look of all new. We also design and build: • Conan counter tops • Laminate counter tops • Custom built cabinets Oak Ash Cherry Laminate Call today for a free in-home Consultation. D0015 D ra WC IS /1111•11 ■ 111mminmmummill A TASTE OF THE PAST We Hove A Substantial Collection of Older, Discontinued Madame Alex- ander Dolls In Mint Condition. Enhance Your Child's Collection At ... "THE WONDERLAND OF BEAUTIFUL DOLLS & TOYS" oxe Dell qtsoreied • •70, 1 ; 4 9 °1 4 ; .S Va r 1 21 1■15 ° 11 sdcart Sigto d r i d:71:1:18 e y BOOKS M Cabinet refacing in quality hardwoods and premium laminates. Ann Arbor 3751 Varsity Dr. 971-0800 Royal Oak _ 4609 N. Woodward Ave. • 549-1161 THE PRIORITY CARD We Buy and Sell Good Used Books LIBRARY BOOKSTORE 545-4300 'Open 7 Days Books Bought In Your Home M. Sempliner YOUR CAR IN ISRAEL e/dan RENT-A-CAR IT'S WAITING JUST FOR YOU AT FASHION HAS NO SIZE 14 PLUS Sugar Tree ‘ 60 6209 Orchard Lake Rd. • W. Bloomfield • 851.8001;1 FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1990 543.3115 FROM ' EXC C, IN .PAI 331-n -mcan * PER WEEK Unlimited Huge Monthly Rates from $750 incl. C.D.W. USA & CANADA RESERVAT & PREPYMNT 800-533-8778; IN NY: 212-629-6090 VALID 233 - 21f7 AND 27/8 - 31/10/90 t the Harvard Square kiosk, students stop to greet each other or to look at publications from around the world. Others hurry by, bookbags in hand, to enter the gate that leads to Harvard Yard. Steps away, at Forbes Plaza, other students sit at outdoor cafe tables reading news- papers, sipping coffee and con- versing, often in foreign languages. Others watch a chess game in progress, or listen to an impromptu con- cert given by a student strum- ming his guitar under a tree. Cambridge, the town just across the Charles River from Boston, is dominated by the presence of its most famous university. Even though it is also home to the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, it is Harvard that gives Cam- bridge its distinctive identity. The subway stop is called "Harvard;" the stores are full of Harvard souvenirs; and Harvard Square, the town's most famous landmark is even listed on the National Register of Historic Places. For the tourist, Cambridge offers the chance to simply soak up the college ambiance at Harvard Square or tour the campus. The tour guides are Harvard undergraduates who lead visitors through Harvard Yard with its ivy-covered buildings as they explain the history of the nation's oldest university. That university also has an active Jewish presence — and exploring it is another pleasure for the Jewish traveler. For example, just a five minute walk from Har- vard Square, at No. 74 Mt. Auburn Street, is a brick building with a palladium window which is head- quarters for Harvard Hillel, which has one of the most ac- tive Hillel programs on any campus. "Harvard Hillel is a large, pluralistic community with five automonous congrega- tions," says Rabbi Ben-Zion Gold, who's been with Har- vard Hillel for 32 years. "And there's no other Hillel like that, as far as I know." The congregations include Orthodox, Reform and three different Conservative groups. For the observant students, there are services twice daily. And on Friday evenings, when the various congregations begin worship at different times, they all wait for each other after ser- vices so they can join together in a festive Shabbat meal. Recently retired as Hillel director, Rabbi Gold is now adviser to the Worship and Study Congregation made up of faculty and graduate students. He's one of three rabbi advisers and 40 student leaders who help guide the Harvard and Radcliffe students. Facilities here include a kosher restaurant, the only one in Cambridge, which is open to the public; and meeting rooms for student organizations and for Hillel's varied cultural programs which range from Israeli folk dancing to Talmud courses. "This is a very rich cultural institution," Rabbi Gold says. "And we've evolved into a community of students and teachers who govern themselves." Further up Mt. Auburn Street at No. 99 is another evidence of the Jewish presence in this college town; in this case, it's an example of Jewish enterprise and ingenuity.