TRAVEL Imm""""•••°""mm. OY VAY! I Could Have Bought Wholesale! A group on a photographic walk gets an explanation on the Jewish Quarter. TENNIS BRACELETS From $49.95 Limit 1 per customer with coupon We gift wrap No refunds or exchanges MARK SHOPNICK JEWELERS 28859 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills, Michigan 48018 Market Place Plaza 553-2196 OPEN SUNDAY '12-4 HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 9:30-7, Tues., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 9:30-6 OPEN ALL YEAR NC GLATT KOSHER New Sans Souci RESORT AND SPA MI BEACH Oceanfront on the boardwalk at 32nd St. FULLY AIR CONDITIONED; COLOR T.V. & REFRIGERATOR IN ALL ROOMS Elegantly refurbished & featuring. 3 MEALS DAILY NEW FULLY EQUIPPED SPA State-of-the-art Exercise Equipment • Saunas • Jacuzzis • Whirlpools • Massages & Facials • Beauty Salon DECEMBER SPECIAL JANUARY SPECIAL Any 8 Days/7 Nights th 199 December 1 — 22 Dec. 29 —Jan. 17 c9 ,,,,,p Daily From From DECEMBER 22 - 29 FROM 37 DAILY 3 MEALS DAILY • Free open bar • Salad bar during lunch & dinner. Entertainment with music & dancing nightly. Beautiful Shul • Olympic pool & private beach. Recreational facilities • Daytime activities TOLL FREE 1-800-327-8470 • 305-531 82611 - Film to Video Transfer Transfer Movies 8mm-16mm to VHS or Beta • 401-600 FEET $39.00 • 1-200 FEET $20.00 201-400 FEET $26.00 • 601-800 FEET $52.00 • 801-1000 FEET $65.00 VISA' Film over 1,000 feet add 6$ a foot. Tape $8.00 Additional CCM-WAS 3017 N. Woodward (3 Blks. South of 13 Mile) CA .,AM Daily & i n f.al 10 ° -:, kFri. 10-8 r f uA BUY—SELL—TRADE 58 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1991 288-5444 _IL No 1/1•1 /S/2A EL 17'311 RENT-A-CAR FROM • EXC. &Loy: $189 -DPE . 1 .12p 131 —1113133i1 Call us and say: Eerteut _ 1Q „„ze 12`21 Can g•eara.et 5% discount on your rental to earn starting Sept. 1 1991 Monthly Rates from $790 RESERVAT & PREPYMNT USA & CANADA 800-533-8778; IN NY: 212-629-6090 VALID 2 8 —31 10191 CRUISE DISCOUNTS... Save up to 50% The Cruise Shoppe at Summit Travel 489.5888 Breast self-examination — LEARN. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER sociEni . Photographic Walks Through Jerusalem A rchaeological remains of the various periods of Israel's ancient history are clearly evident on both sides of the wall surroun- ding the Old City of Jerusalem. But have you ever wondered what visitors to the Holy Land saw when visiting the same sites a century or so ago? Jerusalem was never the unchanging, eternal city of popular myth, and nothing shows this better than a look at photographs of the city as it was in the nineteenth cen- tury. The development of the camera in the middle of the last century affords us this in- sight, Vivienne Silver ex- plains, as she takes me on a "then and now" walk around part of the city. Ms. Silver, who came to Israel from Zimbabwe in 1971, is a photo-historian, the granddaughter of two photographers, and owner of Israel's only photo gallery, the Silver Print Gallery. She collects rare old photographs, selling reproductions of them, and leads groups around the Old City. Participants in the walk are given old photographs and en- couraged to take their own shots of the same sight as it is today. Ms. Silver also en- courages tourists to compile a then and now photo album. Personal photos, she claims, are part of history. "In order to learn about the history of Jerusalem, we are partially reliant on personal snap- shots," she points out, "for to- day's snapshots are tomor- row's history." The Silver Print Gallery is a place not only for buying sepia-tone reproductions of old photographs, but also for lectures and seminars on the history of the Land of Israel, as recorded by photographers, and photo-history. Ms. Silver believes that lectures of this kind are particularly suitable for youth groups and are a good follow-up to the tour. The walk, which is led in either English or Hebrew, takes between two and four hours of easy walking, but the tour can be left at any point. It starts at the Dung Gate, continues towards the Western Wall, where Ms. Silver shows picturesque photos of an Arab grazing sheep in front of Robinson's Arch, and then up through the Jewish Quarter. The Participants in the walk are given old photographs and encouraged to take their own shots of the same sight as it is today. reconstructed arch of the Hurva synagogue finally falls into place as part of the sup- port of the synagogue's dome. Out through the Zion Gate and along the side of the Dor- mition Abbey, the tour sud- denly comes out at the top of Mount Zion, where looking down one can see Mishkenot Sha'ananim, the first Jewish settlement built outside the Old City walls. The enclosed atmosphere of the Old City and the open spaces beyond the wall allow the modern tourist to feel some of what the first Jews to settle outside the wall must have felt. A pic- ture of a similar view from the 1860's shows Sir Moses Montefiore's windmill without its blades. The walk - continues through Sultan's Pool and back up to the Jaffa Gate; along the ramparts of the Old City and past the Christian =\'