ISRAEL d hopping at Somerset means letting go of a few holiday traditions. Like driving around and around WZPS/Doug las Guthrie in the snow, looking for a parking spot. Complimentary valet parking. COLLECTION Big Beaver Road at Coolidge, Troy. Mon.-Fri. 10-9; Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5 WHAT EVERY SKIER . WANTS! OPENED NOV. 9th EARLIEST OPENING EVER! Convenient Holiday Shopping !pine alley Southeast Michigan's Mountain of Fun 6775 E. Highland Rd. • White Lake, MI 48383 N YOUR EXERCISE CONNECTION • TREADMILLS Electric/Manual •__STAIR CLIMBERS • HEALTH BIKES Manual/Dual Action/Electric • ROWING MACHINES • MISC. GYM EQUIPMENT Gift Certificates For SKI LIFT TICKETS Available by phone 887-2180 SKIERS Compare our prices... They can't be beat! All top quality ski equipment ON SALE NOW Great savings & selection! (ALL ITEMS DISCOUNTED) LARRY ARONOFF ACTON RENTAL & SALES 891.6500 60 540.5550 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1991 Don gkontas Ls'portkaus) Bloomlield Plaza • Telegraph al Maple Birmingham, Mich. • 626-9500 The Damascus Gate is the largest and most ornate of all gates leading into the Old City. Eleven Gates Pierce The Walls The eleven gates which pierce the Old City walls at ir- regular intervals were built by Suleiman the Magnificent during the 16th century, part- ly on remains from earlier epochs — some as far back as the Second Temple period. Four of the gates have been sealed for centuries and seven now give access to the Old City. These gates differ greatly in size and design, but all offer an indirect or staggered entry into the City — an old defense device to give advantage to the guards protecting the gate, and all but one are L-shaped. Zion Gate is in the form of a tower projecting from the ci- ty wall and its facade holds the central arched portal with a somewhat smaller archway recessed about two feet be- hind it, which gives onto a staggered passageway lead- ing into the city. The facade, crowned by battlements, was decorated by Suleiman's sculptures with traditional Ottoman ornamentation. Ancient stone stairwells lead up from the passage chamber to a series of rooms on the upper level of the gate, probably guard rooms, and to the observation roof, which commands a superb view both of the Old City and the history-laden countryside. Jaffa Gate (the only non- roofed gate) is in the form of a tower which projects for- ward from the wall, and its arched entranceway is topped by embrasures and stone tur- rets. On entering the gate one finds oneself in a vaulted chamber which is part of the L-shaped passageway leading through the tower into the Old City. For centuries this was the sole entry from the west. The New Gate is the least interesting of all the gates. It is little more than an opening in the wall — wide enough to take motor traffic — and it was constructed in 1887 by Sultan Abdul Hamid to pro- vide easy access to the Chris- tian Quarter of the Old City from the developing new northern suburbs outside the walls. It still serves this pur- pose, though not very ade- quately, and its architecture is unexciting. All offer a staggered entry into the City. The Damascus Gate is the largest and most ornate of all Jerusalem's gates. Its central location makes it the prin- cipal entrance to the Old Ci- ty from the north. The gate is one of the richest examples of early Ottoman architecture in the region, and is monumental yet graceful. Its walls are 16 meters high and it is flanked on each side by a great tower and topped by pinnacled battlements. The staggered entrance is hand- somely vaulted, and after a left and right turn the passageway opens into the bazaar area of the Old City. Herod's Gate, so named by pilgrims who erroneously believed that it led to Herod's palace, in fact leads directly into the Moslem Quarter of the Old City. As does Jaffa Gate, Herod's Gate projects from the wall, like a jutting tower. Its original en- tranceway was in the sidewall of the tower at right-angles to the City wall but as it was too narrow to admit wheeled traf- I 4