TRAVEL loomminm . _ . .gi 14 HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS. WISHING EVERYONE A HAPPY & PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR 6257 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield 851-3707 . Hotels TO SOVE OF YOU Continued from Page 76 THIS YEAR HAS BEEN ONE OF SORROW. -:, :i TO VA\Y OF YOU, A YEAR OF MERCY. 1 WE ASK YOU TO JOIN US IN AGAIN OFFERING OUR CONDOLENCES TO : . =7:4::= THOSE FAVILIES THAT WE ASSISTED. nom f7si ion WISHING YOU AND YOURS A HEALTHY NEW YEAR HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL O rt , b .60'4:` Nit` 0 C 0 60 slp 1§1 ■ 4'•\* .e 6' t"b ik c,c) (413 WISHING OUR CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS A HEALTHY AND HAPPY NEW YEAR Slades Gift Shop May the coming year be one filled with health, happiness and prosperity for all our friends and family. n THE NURSING HOME GROU P hillside furniture clearance center contemporary for less Applegate Square 354-0066 Happy New Year!! LOTS OF LEATHER STYLES & COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! PLUS... WALL UNITS, DINING RMS., DINETTES, BEDROOMS, LAMPS, PAINTINGS AND MUCH MORE! HOURS: MON, THURS, FRI 10-9 & TUES, WED, SAT 10-6 ORCHARD MALL Maple at Orchard Lk. Rd. 855-4065 from everyone at Robert Alexander Jewelers PRinev CPPTPAARFR 91 loan /0 0 You Like Our Breads — You'll Love Our lbrtes! staff, but so far they are limited to behind-the-scenes jobs where their language limitations don't interfere. In order to forge ahead, the Hyatt is cultivating several new markets, with Japan high on the list. Among other things, the hotel has printed informational . material in Japanese and has trained its kitchen staff to prepare dishes that are popular in Tokyo. Tourists from Japan and other countries find plenty to do in the city. There are even enclaves of tranquility on the eastern side, one of the most notable being the new Museum of the History of Jerusalem in the lbwer of David. Using ultramodern audiovisual techniques, the museum manages to give a comprehensive picture of Jerusalem history without, incidentally, downplaying the role of either Christians or Moslems in it. The synagogues and ar- cheological digs in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City are also thronged with visitors, who remain untouched by "the situation." This can't be said, however, of Jewish Quarter residents; they, note, with considerable regret, that they are no longer welcome in the shops of the other quarters because Arab mer- chants fear being branded as "collaborators" should they serve Jewish customers. To escape this situation, a few of those merchants have opened up businesses in west Jerusalem. Thus one finds an "Old City Bazaar" in the mall of an exclusively Jewish neighborhood and flourishing western branches of mori- bund east Jerusalem restaurants. Of course, almost all eating places in west Jerusalem are Jewish and kosher, par- ticularly in the Orthodox neighborhoods. There, for the first time, you also see a large number of take-out food shops, set up mainly by obser- vant American immigrants who have arrived in recent years. These picturesque religious quarters, with their Polish ghetto attire and lifestyle, are an important tourist attraction. Arabs seem completely at ease in west Jerusalem. When my wife and I recently visited the Israel Museum, for example, we found several traditionally-clad Arab mothers sitting in the children's section, where their offspring — side by side with Jewish kids — were making cutouts and playing with clay. ❑