gINFINITI Of Farmington Hills INFINITI OF FARMINGTON HILLS IS RANKED NUMBER 1 NATIONALLY FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IN SALES & SERVICE 1996 130 1996 J30 $399* INIO MONEY DOWN! South Florida: A Walker's Paradise HAROLD JACOBSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS CD, Power Windows/Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Air, Dual Air Bags, ABS, Alloy Wheels, Built-In Alarm, Leather, Power Sunroof & Remote Entry. Auto, Aft, Dual Airbags, ABS, Power Windows, Locks, Tilt, Cruise, CD/Cassette, Alloy Wheels, Dual Power Seats, Remote Entry, 190 HP V-6. Leather, Moonroof. $399/mo 36 Mos. 1996 G20 cil &A;r4 " V-8, Power Windows, Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Air, Dual Air Bags, ABS, Alloy Wheels, Built-In Alarm, Leather, Power Sunroof & Remote Entry. Traction Control, Memory Seat 597 Auto, Air, ABS, Alarm, Dual Air Bags, Power Windows & Locks, Power Mirrors, Tilt, Cruise, Alloy Wheels, AM/FM CD, Leather, Power Moonroof. * 36 Mos ° - FREE SERVICE LOANER, FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY INFINITI Of Farmington Hills OPEN SATURDAYS, SALES AND SERVICE 24355 HAGGERTY ROAD • (810) 471.2220 • BETWEEN 10 MILE & GRAND RIVER * 36 mo. closed end lease on G20, J30, Q45. 39 mo. lease on 130. 12,000 miles per year allowed. G20, J30 12c per mile overage. 130 15C per mile overage. Leases require. SO down on 130, $2,500 down on Q45, $3,000 down on J30, $1,500 down on G20. 1st mo. payment doc., title, lic., acq. fee, sec. dep., plus applicable taxes due at inception. Lessee has option but is not obligated to purchase at lease end. All leases subject to credit approval, factory programs & vehicle availability. Standard Guaranteed Auto Protection included. Excludes prior sales & leases.** Plus all applicable taxes, title, license & fees. 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It _ would be easy to say al- most everywhere. However, the inveterate walk- er who returns to Florida only on an occasional basis would be wise to remember that the state's coastal waters and the frequent storms that agitate them do se- rious damage to fondly remem- bered beach fronts. Ecologists and biologists note that erosion patterns activated by hurricanes and pounding surf are consistent in South Florida and that sandy beaches, with rare exceptions, usually go through a 25-year cycle. One area that has fortunately escaped this water attrition is Marco Island on the southern tip of the Gulf Coast. The relative newness of Mar- co Island and the presence of a wild bird preserve near the Mar- riott Marco Island Resort mean that tourists have a 10-mile ex- panse of beach almost 150 yards wide which invites walkers to trek along pathways on sand that is soft yet tightly packed. Naples, 10 miles to the north of Marco Island, offers an equal- ly attractive if somewhat nar- rower strip of beach along its coastline. Half the fun, however, is in accessing the beach prop- er. Local municipal zoning laws barred construction of hotels or condos directly on the beach and, in may places, the only direct path is through dense mangrove thickets. One hotel, the Registry Resort, worked with the Naples city fa- thers to build a covered wooden promenade from the back of the hotel to the waterfront. The promenade, a walker's delight, ambles downward and somewhat circuitously toward the coast wa- ters in a series of twists and turns. It takes almost 25 minutes to complete the walk, which takes the visitor over wild fowl habi- tats, serene lagoons and leafy un- derbrush. The walker does not glimpse the waters of the coast and the beach area until he clears the last bramble and overhanging branch. At that moment, he can see a shimmering beach which stretches north and south for miles. Somewhat less manicured than the Marco Island beach, the Naples beach walkways provide, nonetheless, a feeling of un- touched Eden. Sanibel Island, further north, must have had the same aura when it began to invite walkers to its beaches four decades ago. It did not take long, however, for tourists to realize that Sanibel Is- land was the repository for what is probably the world's largest natural sea shell conservation area. The popularity of this island among the shell-collecting clan has attracted wall-to-wall beach habitues, and walkers would do well to use the early morning hours for their jaunts. The same advice should be giv- en to Miami Beach-bound walk- ers who like to use the city's promenade — which extends at its northernmost point — from the Doral Beach Hotel to a city parking lot near 22nd St., a mile and a half south. By 10 a.m. this elevated seven-foot-wide strip of walkway is clogged with sun seekers. Serious walkers should, therefore, consider donning their sneakers and hitting the prome- nade by 7:30 a.m. It takes ap- proximately one hour and 20 minutes to complete the prome- nade walk to the end and back. There are no limitations on walking on what many consider to be the most serene and tran- quil beach area in Florida, Key Marco Island has 10 miles of sandy walking. Biscayne. Because of the strict zoning laws, Key Biscayne's beaches are unobstructed by mammoth condo developments or giant hotel chains. Apartment buildings are well back from the beach front and the Sonesta Beach Hotel, one of the few ho- tels in the area, draws upon a pyramidal architecture to blend itself quietly into the environs. It is possible to walk on the Key Biscayne beach area from the Sonesta Hotel westward to- ward the beginning of the Rick- enbacker Causeway, a distance of about seven miles, without en- countering more than a half dozen people. The walk, more- over, can be executed for much of the way in waters that are never more than ankle deep and in sight of egrets, seagulls and oth- er water fowl and fauna. Beachcombing is, of course, not the only way for walkers to exer- cise their favorite pastime in