-
-
.
TRAVEL
BERKLEY TOURS
& TRAVEL INC.
, ,. You Don't Have To Go
, ,
, ,
To The Dealer!
D
/
/
/ I.,.
\
E
• a
■
c ) : ! (11 ?
s- .
0 \
Pa
m
(
D..m
co
z
=
0
ii
(1 7, . 0 •
ft -. 9_. 0 --, , b0 <
o a g tri m
-„, (1), -1 E• a ri M
• co o
-
oR
ANN ARBOR ROYAL OAK SOUTHGATE
O
2
3
C D
g D d --
-
.
E
-' "0
2470
F
(I ) -(0)1
(
D C
Q
802 S. Main Comerof Northline and Dix
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Saturday 8-Noon
Mat c.. Instant Credit On Approval im Vr aim
4__L
D -0 411 )010
6
W. Stadium
994-0202 544-8440 283-9644
m
e
E --E 2.'. z
g)
6
7<
(2 0
"
c)
. 0 ,..1 _.,„
• D D,„„
HOT SPOTS FOR SUMMER
TRAVEL - CALL FOR LOW,
LOW RATES!!!
/
\
t
e
M
7,5°
- E"c d 3
8
0
0
0
Travel U.S. on
Senior Pass
CX u
et
0
44
il,
From $ 432 P.P.
MOTORCOACH TOURS
0
0
(5
a)
ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER'S
z
PHANTOM OF THE
OPERA • TORONTO
$18-i,
P.P.
DBL.
• R.T. BUS • EXCELLENT PHANTOM SEAT • 1
OR 2 NITES HOTEL • TOUR (2 NITE PKG. ONLY)
from
• c , 0
WEEK-END PACKAGES THROUGH OCT.
TRAIN PACKAGES ALSO AVAILABLE
ZT
"LES MISERABLES" - TORONTO
8 R.
Mu
c 0 .
r) 0
0
0
-,7 • , E
/
WITH COUPON ONLY
239g
JULY 19-21
(SEE "PHANTOM" SAME WEEK-END!)
STRATFORD FESTIVAL
$ 4 P.P.
1 DAY (Carousel)
JULY 20, 24; AUG. 4, 7, 18, 28; SEPT. 14;
NOV. 3
P.P.
From 189 Dbl.
JULY 13-14; 26-27; AUG. 30-31;
and DATES THRU NOV.
Call for Add. Dates, Plays and Details!
OVERNIGHT
SHAW FESTIVAL
NIAGRA•ON-THE•LAKE, ONT.
JULY 12-14
Drs. M. B. Bardenstein, M. M. Green,
D. E. Schechter & R. Krugel, P.C.
2 PLAYS!
$ 325
PDBL
.
RALEIGH HOTEL-CATSKILLS
KOSHER!
g
AUG. 17-24
$ 585
• BUS • HOTELS • MEALS • ENTERTAINMENT
& MUCH MORE!!
"THE TEMPEL LIPIZZANS"
THE "BALLET" OF THE
WHITE STALLIONS
AUG. 24.26
ELGIN, ILL
only$ 199 D P B P L
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE
THE ASSOCIATION OF
MEALS, ENTERTAINMENT, LIPIZZAN HORSE SHOW,
TOURS AND MORE!
Stuart A. Katz, M.D.
WESTGATE DINNER THEATRE
TOLEDO
IN OUR PRACTICE OF ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
Located at:
4400 Town Center, Suite 275
Southfield, Michigan 48075
358-5520
Affiliated with Sinai Hospital and Grace Hospital
CHESANING SHOWBOAT
JULY 18 OR 20
from $ 53 P.P.
AUG. 4
"42ND STREET"
$47
Christmas and New Year's Cruises
LIMITED TIME - LIMITED SPACE
You need to call and book NOW!
(313)
GatewaY Ttavel
353-8600
SCULPTURE
PRINTS
PAINTINGS
TABLE TOP ART
PHOTOGRAPHY
ARTBOOKS
CUSTOM FRAMING
Breast
self-examination —
LEARN. Call us.
iAMERICAN
SOCIETY
CANCER'
FINE
431 1
LINDA HAYMAN GALLERY
32500 Northwestern Hwy., Farmington Hills, Ml 48334 932-0080
FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1991
PP
WE ALSO DO CRUISES
AND AIR TRAVEL!!
CALL FOR
ADDITIONAL TRIPS!
1-800-875-TOUR or
559-8620
g
62
Museums
Continued from preceding page
(CANADIAN ROCKIES, ALASKA CRUISE,
ST. LAWRENCE CRUISE)
0
o° 0 0
.
CW0t- 0
2
0
o. In g - i , , 0 0
LLI CV) < - E
Pan Examination • \ 2,
°
IM / / • FREE Road Test • FREE
\
/
•FREE Towing • FREE Adjustment
Diagnosis
•FREE Hoist Check
SPECIAL SAVINGS
1"'"1
crank out illegal pamphlets.
Eventually, the underground
press managed to distribute a
total of 44 million pieces of il-
legal printed material.
Often the methods were in-
genious. In one display case is
a small, cylindrical bomb
with a curious opening at the
top, where subversive leaflets
were stuffed. Later, the bombs
were released and the Danes
were flooded with leaflets,
and the Nazis could not iden-
tify who had violated the law.
For most Jewish travelers,
the most memorable exhibit
is the one devoted to the
heroic rescue of the Danish
Jews. With photos, newspaper
clippings and explanatory
panels, the exhibit recounts
this remarkable episode in
Danish history.
During a period of ten days
in October 1943, non-Jewish
During a period of
ten days in
October 1943, non-
Jewish Danes
managed to
rescue 7,000
Danish Jews —
almost the entire
Danish Jewish
population. They
risked their own
lives to do so.
Danes managed to rescue
7000 Danish Jews — almost
the entire Danish Jewish
population. They risked their
own lives to do so. First they
hid Jewish families in their
own homes and in hospitals
when word got out that the
Jews were to be rounded up
by the Nazis.
Then they transported their
Jewish countrymen to safety
in nearby Sweden by rowing
them across the water at
night, using small fishing
boats and often paddling
through fog, darkness, and
danger to deliver them safe-
ly on Swedish shores.
The Danish museum re-
counts this story in typically
modest Scandinavian fashion,
carefully but not boastfully.
But it's an impressive story of
courage; and seeing it
recreated in the capital of the
country where the rescue
took place is a special oppor-
tunity for the Jewish traveler.
In fact, both these museums
present an unusual chance
for American Jews, who were
safe from danger in their own
country, to follow two com-
pelling stories that show how
many of the citizens of two
small Scandinavian nations,
faced with a despised Nazi oc-
cupation, found the courage
to resist. ❑
,