TRAVEL I DAVID SKLAR, ASID •1111111100 and his design staff are your consultants. Ameoxon trews /yen, MOTOR COACH TOURS — 13 YEARS EXPERIENCE! BRING THE BLUEPRINTS... BRING US YOUR IDEAS... * WE HAVE CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY INSURANCE * Protect Yourself & Demand Proof Before Booking Any Trip! * * * "MISS SAIGON" — NEW YORK * * *TRAVERSE CITY & * * INTERLOCHEN *Aug. 7-19 $259* * Hotel • "Anything Goes" at * * Interlochen • Meals • Musical* *Review! * * * * STRATFORD FESTIVAL "ROMEO * * *& JULIET" & "HMS PINAFORE" * * Aug. 15, 19; Sept. 5, 13 $69* *1 Day - 1 Play *Aug. 28-29; Sept. 15-16 .$169* *2 Plays - Dinner • Tour * More dates through October * * * * RIVERBOAT GAMBLING, IOWA * July-Oct. Dates . ...Fr. $169 * 2 Cruises • Hotel • Meals ... • * * AMERIFLORA '92 Columbus, Ohio * July-Oct. Dates $140 * 2 Days Adm. Hotel, Dinner * Theatre. Also dates thru Oct. * * * * *"INTRIGUE" MUSICAL REVIEW * * *Top Hat Supper Club *Windsor — Aug. 9 * Lunch & Show * * * $43 * * SHIPSHEWANA, IND. 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Northwestern Hwy. at Inkster 352-7112 Temple Beth El in Chappaqua There Is Quiet Life Beyond NY City RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News A lthough it's only an hour from New York City, the tranquil town of Chappaqua in West- chester County seems a world away. It's a town of wide, win- ding country roads, tall, dense trees that shelter spacious estates and fragrant country air. No wonder show business stars and celebrities such as producer Billy Rose have chosen to live here. The town's most prominent resident was Horace Greeley, who com- muted to New York City to publish the Tribune. A high school, a street, even a taxi company in town are all nam- ed for him. It's on land originally own- ed by Horace Greeley that Chappaqua's distinctive syna- gogue, Temple Beth El, now stands. This is a synagogue unusual enough to make Chappaqua an interesting ex- cursion from New York City for Jewish travelers. Set in the woods and stan- ding out dramatically from the stone mansions nearby, Temple Beth El is simple, even stark, in design. Constructed of concrete and wood, it is the only synagogue ever designed by the architect Louis Kahn. He designed it in the style of the 17th-century wooden synagogues of Poland. So unusual is its design — a hexagonal building with a tower above it — that it regularly attracts architec- ture students, who come to look at it from every angle and often sketch it, too. Mr. Kahn was contacted by members of Beth El back in the early 1970s when they decided to build their own synagogue. "We needed a larger synagogue, so our rab- bi contacted Louis Kahn, and then a delegation went to Philadelpia to talk to him," explains Lissa Weseley, a member of Beth El for 21 years. Standing in the foyer, she points out the large photo- graph of a Polish wooden synagogue that was Mr. Kahn's inspiration for Temple Beth El. It took several years until the designs were finalized and the construction was completed. The new syna- gogue, set on six acres of wooded land, was dedicated in 1972. "Kahn's concept was that everyone should be part of the service and close to the bimah," says Ms. Wesley, leading the way into the sanc- tuary. It is a hexagonal space, deliberately designed that way so that all the worship- pers are equidistant from the bimah. Surrounding the sanctuary are classrooms. During High Holy Days, the walls of these classrooms open up, creating a much larger space. Instead of a sanctuary seating 200 worshippers, it can then seat 750. But that's not the only reason the classrooms were built around the sanctuary, with no separate corridor leading to them. "Kahn felt that the sanc- tuary should be part of every- day life and not apart from it," says Ms. Weseley, explain- ing that when youngsters come for Hebrew classes, they gather in the sanctuary be- fore going into the classrooms that directly adjoin it. The congregants of Beth El have added their own creativity to the architect's design. For example, an inlaid carpet on the bimah is a specifically made needlepoint carpet which was used in the