COME HIKE WITH US AT CANYON RANCH November 9 - November 15 Special Group Rates • Limited Space Available • Book By Sept. 1 Jewish Boston: Reality And Resonance GABRIEL LEVENSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS I Other Specials Mailable: CANCUN December 23-January 1 Northwest Air Available PUERTA VALLARTA December 24-January 2 Continental Airlines Available FLORIDA December 23-January 1 Northwest Air Available STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, COLORADO March 5-March 10 HOTEL AVAILABLE IN DEERFIELD BEACH, FLORIDA AND MANY OTHER TRIPS AVAILABLE Call For Details. Ask For ISABEL or LORIE WOLFE TRAVEL CORPORATION Crosswinds Mall 4301 Orchard Lake Road, Suite 205 West Bloomfield, Michigan 48323 810-855-4100 F 1HF Wh y Pay More? 1 lainilton. NliIler, I ludson Orlando $1499 From '0 und Trip Saturday Departures 7 or 14 nts. Faync TraN el Corporation Colorado From 16 SNIRT N3•X Men's furnishings and accessories 19011 West Ten Mile Road Southfield, Michtemr48075 90 (Between Southfield and Evergreen) Round Trip 352-1080 Nonstops Mon, Fri, & Sat Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Thursday 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. 3, 4, 7, 10, 11 or 14 nts. PARKING AND ENTRANCE IN REAR Las Vegas $19990 Round Trip From Nonstops Every Day but Tue 3, 4, 7, 10 or 14 nts. Cancun $ 4990 o o es Round Trip Fr m From Sat Nonstops 7 or 14 nts To Book, Call any Travel Agent! 02 Limited space on all special rates. Prices are airfare only unless otherwise noted. They will vary according to day, duration, airline and time of travel. Fares are capacity controlled. Please add airport PFC charges and 10% FET on airfare portion (domestic nights only), and any applicable taxes on international departures. Fares are nonretroactive, and good on new bookings only Participation Contract Required. PROTECT YOUR TRIP! ASK ABOUT HMHF'S EVP. An RR . n Travel Company SUMMER HOURS: TUESDAY-SATURDAY 9:30-5:30 CLOSED SUNDAY & MONDAY NEXT TO THE BIRMINGHAM THEATRE 642-1690 wo Rs — for Reality and Resonance — characterize the 350 years of the Jewish experience in Boston, from the arrival, and speedy depar- ture, of scholar and trader Solomon Franco in 1649 to the series of events memorializing the centenary of the Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston (CJP) in 1995. Franco was cheated of his wages and left penniless upon his arrival at the Boston docks. The town council voted him "six shillings p weeke for tenne weeks" for his subsistance and then shipped him back to Hol- land. The Franco story is contained in the splendid, newly-pub- lished The Jews of Boston, a 350-page, richly illustrated his- tory edited by Ellen Smith, curator of the American Jewish Historical Society, and Jonathan D. Sarna, the Joseph H. & Belle R. Professor of -- American ff Jewish His- ,,L/Z.-.; tory at V Brandeis University. The work, com- missioned by CJP for the centenary, is the chronicle of a long journey, from the plight of a single Jew to the progress achieved by the 200,000 Jews who presently constitute America's sixth Jew- ish largest commu- nity. Franco's immediate goal was six shillings. The long-range goal of CJP is $100 million, in a mul- ti-year Cainpaign for Our Second Century which has just been launched. Visitors to Greater Boston in this centennial year will find the reality of a visible Jewish pres- ence in such suburban entities as Brookline amd Newton, rather than in Boston proper. Brookline's Harvard Street, most particularly, offers the tan- gible reasssurance of kosher restaurants like Rubin's Deli (fleishig) and Cafe Shalom (milchig), kosher bakeries, per- fuming the neighborhood with the bouquet of fresh-baked chal- lah; a spectrum of synagogues from the Lubavitch Congregation Chai Odom to Temple Ohabei Shalom, the oldest Reform con- gregation in New England; famed institutions, like the Maimonides School, where the late Rav Joseph B. Soloveitchik inspired generations of students, and the New England Chasidic Center, run by the Bostoner Rebbe, Grand Rabbi Levi Y. Horowitz. Harvard St. is also the venue of the multi-faceted Israel Book Shop, whose proprietor, Eli Dovek, can recommend the most appropriate book gift for a bat mitzvah, design your daughter's ketubah or check your own tweed jacket for shaatnes; and the Kol- bo Gallery, displaying the finest collection of contemporary Judaica I have seen in any retail shop anywhere. A pleasant trolley ride — on "C" of the MBTA Green Line to the Coolidge Corner stop — will bring the inquiring traveler to Harvard Street in Brookline, it- self one of the several towns, like Newton and Salem, to which the overwhelming majority of Boston's Jews have moved in re- cent decades. In these sanctuaries distanced from the inner cities, as in De- troit's Southfield or the Bronx's Westchester, a new reality of Jewish life has been firmly es- tablished. Certainly, on Harvard Street, the evidences are mani- fest. One needs no help in find- ing them.