![]() ![]() |
![]() |
UFDC Home | Search all Groups | Florida Digital Newspaper Library | Florida Newspapers | Judaica Collections | Florida Jewish Newspapers | | Help |
Material Information
Subjects
Notes
Record Information
Related Items
|
Full Text |
THE
I) m ^S^Numbar 17 Two Sactlona Miami, FloridaFriday, April 29,1983 * frtd Shochtl bm.i eoc.ni* Price 50 Cants West Bank Choices: Between Bad and Worse By YITZHAK RABI NEW YORK-(JTA)- L of the world's leading Urts on the Arab-Israeli onflict claims that Israel i two options regarding K future of the West lank: one bad, the other orse. Prof. Yehoshafat Harkabi, a former chief of Israel's intelli- gence service and presently a professor of international relations and Middle East studies at Hebrew University in Jeru- salem, believes that "The choices Israel is facing are not between good and bad, but between bad and worse. The worse for Israel is to annex the West Bank. By annexation, Israel will solve some of its security problems but, at the same time, will significantly increase the number of the Arabs in the country, creating a new Jewish-Arab state with many, many tensions." ACCORDING TO Harkabi, who is also a General (res.) in the Israeli army. "Israel will become a new Belfast in the Mideast. Such a state will be an easy target for the Arab countries. It will be a weak and unstable state." Furthermore, he said, "Jews from other countries will not come to settle in such a state, and Israel will be further isolated in the international community and in the United Nations since (Security Council) Resolution 242, the only resolution accepted so far by the Arabs and Israel as a basis for a Mideast settlement, does not recognize annexation." Harkabi warned that the annexation of the West Bank by Israel "would perpetuate the Arab-Israeli conflict. The Arabs are presently weak and Israel is Continued on Page 9-A Ihultz Visit Seen As A Critical Time Suddenly, Lebanon Hardens, Even Reneges On Earlier Concessions ihe's Disappearing? By GARY ROSENBLATT Copyright Baltimore Jewish Times Rtpnnt by Special Arrangement In the beginning, there |*as Marjorie Morningstar W Marjorie slept with nally. on page 557) that a. Noel Airman, but mar- 1 Milton Schwartz, a e, dull lawyer. And Marjorie begat fwda Patimkin of Philip m. Goodbye, Colum- ns. AND BRENDA, of the mis- placed diaphragm, begat Stacey in Great Neck and Debbie in Pikesville and countless other pampered girls who have come to be known in the 1980s as Jewish American Princesses, or simply JAPs. By now, we all know what a JAP is, and not one of the characteristics that come to mind is positive. She is, above all else. spoiled and self-centered. She also happens to be materialistic, aggressive, calculating and em- Continued on Page 10-A By DAVID LANDAU JERUSALEM (JTA) Israel is preparing for what Cabinet sources here called a "critical week" in its drawn-out effort to obtain a withdrawal-and- security agreement with Lebanon. U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz was due here Wednesday, anxious to wrap up the agreement. Meanwhile, Lebanon has noticeably hardened its positions over the last few days, and there are an increasing number of voices within the Israeli Cabinet urging a unilateral pullback by the IDF to the Awali River, the boundary of the 28-mile security zone in south Lebanon. THIS PULLBACK proposal was aired at the weekly Cabinet meeting Synday but there was no decision. Most ministers felt it would be inadvisable for Israel to make such a decision on the eve of Shultz's visit. At the same time, the prevailing sentiment in the Cabinet was that the current setback in the talks with Leba- non could not be allowed to develop into a long deadlock. Ministers heard from Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir that Lebanon has gone back on under- standings reached in the talks on key security and normalization issues. This hardening on Lebanon's part began at the negotiating round in Khalde last Thursday. It was echoed in a briefing by President Amin Gemayel to media editors in Beirut which was widely publicized over the weekend. THE LEBANESE President Secretary Shultz insisted that there would be no Israel dictation regarding the future role of its ally, Maj. Saad Haddad. Nor would there be normalized relations between the two countries merely an end of belligerence agreement. "We also reject the concept of mutual patrols," Gemayel said. He said there would be U.S.-Israel- Lebanon supervisory teams, but not military patrols to oversee security in south Lebanon. On many of these points. Israeli negotiators say they had reached understandings with their Lebanese counterparts which have now been thrown into question. Cabinet sources in- sisted that Israel "will not rcnt- gotiate these matters.'' If, during the tour or five sessions to be held this week it turns out that last Thursday's backsliding und remarks rep- resented a new Lebanese policy, "then that will he that," a top source said. Secret Reagan Note Israel Seeks Clarification Of Letter to Assad JERUSALEM (JTA) Israel is seeking "clarifi- cation" from the U.S. of a recent letter President Reagan sent to President Hafez Assad of Syria, re- portedly intimating that Washington would include the return of the Golan Heights to Syria on the agenda of broadened Mid- dle East peace negotiations based on United Nations Security Council Resolu- tion 242. Israeli policy-makers were not reassured by the assertion of Ad- ministration officials that Reag- an's message to Assad contained nothing new and was no more than a reiteration of longstanding American positions on the mean- ing of Resolution 242 and its ap- plication to all aspects of the Middle East conflict. Continued on Page 14-A Memories How It Was At Auschwitz-Birkenau 1 MILTON JACOBY AUSCHWITZ (JTA) **? than 20,000 people Ijunmed the green fields Jotted with deserted bar- Lm, 8i-and the P^a > !lng the striking monument to the dead of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp. Jewish delegations from all Over the world, scores of Polish government officials, ordinary Poles, Jews and non-Jews alike from many towns and cities all over Poland were present. It was one of the largest gatherings ever to be held at this death site since the war, apparently exceeded in numbers only at the time Pope John Paul II visited the site in 1979. record for murder: Up to 60,000 people a day were killed by the use of zyklone B gas. First, in 1940, it was mainly Polish Jews, and then Jews from every coun- try of Europe. By 1944 more than three million were executed. AUSCHWITZ held the world's Continued on Page 10-A President Assad Mi5n .nnifi^'"' Paige 2-A The Jewish Floridian/Friday, April 29, 1983 Times of London Suspends Printing Of Hitler's 'Diary' LONDON The Times of London on Monday an- nounced that it would tem- porarily suspend publica- tion of the supposedly newly-discovered diaries of Adolt Hitler. The Times on Sunday published the first installment of the 60- volume, hand-written diary, for which it paid the German magazine, Stern, in excess of $3 million in publication rights. The next installment is due in one month. The diaries suddenly surfaced with their announced publication and the story behind their alleged discovery in last weekend's edition of Stern. Editor-in-chief of that magazine, Peter Koch, refused Monday to reveal how much it had paid for the diaries or even its source. THE TIMES of London decided to purchase publication rights when H. R. Trevor-Roper, one of the most distinguished British scholars of the Hitler period, expressed his belief that the diaries were authentic. But over the weekend, he ap- parently had second thoughts after saying that he would stake his professional reputation on the documents. Emphasizing that he had mis- understood the editors of Stern magazine. Trevor-Roper ob- Anniversary Fete MONTREAL (JTA) - About 1.500 persons attended festivities marking the 35th anni- versary of Israel's Independence at the Expo Theater here. David Azieli. chairman of the Canadian Zionist Federation's Eastern Region, saluted the people of Is- rael and assured them of the unanimous support of the Jewish community of Montreal. served that he had been mistaken in his belief that the diaries were in the possession of just one man from the time they were allegedly lost in 1945. The Times of London said that it would now do "everything pos- sible ... to provide (historians) with facilities" to do further study of the documents. TREVOR-ROPER meanwhile emphasized that since his initial authentication of the diaries, he learned that their discoverer, Stem reporter Gerd Heidemann, did not receive them from the same man who allegedly rescued them from a wrecked airplane that was attempting to smuggle them out of Berlin at Adolf Hit- ler's orders in his final hours in a bunker there. According to the story sur- rounding the "discovery," the plane crashed, and the diaries were rescued from the burning JU52 transport. They were then hidden in a mountain retreat, but Stern does not reveal who handed them over to their reporter, or why it took so many years for the transfer to take place. Another question is why none of the 60 volumnes shows any signs of scorch marks. The diaries contain commen- taries by Hitler on some of his closest cronies, from Goering to Goebels, from Martin Bormann to Rudolph Hess, who is still alive today and languishing in Spandau prison outside of Berlin. THE DIARIES allegedly indicate that Hitler declared he did not know his Nazi Party had gone as far as it did in the "Final Solution" to the Jewish question and expressed the belief that the genocide campaign had in fact gone too far. On the other hand, he is pur- ported to have written that if Germany could not handle the "Jewish question" successfully, he would recommend that the Jews be taken out into the middle of the ocean on ships and drowned there. ISRAELI Thursday, May 8-10PM Hoit: Stanley M. Rosenblatt Guest: ,L BabbiMdrKahane Orthodox Rabbi Meir Kahane explains why Israel should not give up an inch on the West Bank and why Arabs and Jews cannot 1 ive together. Don't miss the inside story! nm* wuvrwo* MVDVtNIUMDa p ... ......... ,-*.* "..t. .'..,' ,'..**....... '*........ *%** ...... , ' IUl Yeot\ Ja5 To Sfivr ReMWECwEPwr-.' Mik* in Yd>ot Aehroo. cm Ux r o< timimvtalma World Coofanoca on Sovwt Jewry. USSR's Gates May Be Padlocked NEW YORK (JTA) - The anti-Zionist manifesto signed by eight prominent Soviet Jews and published in Pravda last Friday "might presage a period in which the iron gates of the USSR could be padlocked shut against any Jewish exit," two Soviet Jewry groups warned here. According to the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry (SSSJ) and the Union of Councils for So- viet Jews (UCSJ), the docu- ment's assertion that Russian Jews are "citizens of the USSR, part and parcel of the Soviet peo- ple" makes it clear that any Jew who wishes to go to Israel or ap- plies for emigration "can be classified as an enemy of the state and treated as such." THE TWO groups pointed out that another article under the byline of Tsezar Soladar, a Jew- ish journalist, which appeared in the March 9 edition of Litertr- tumaya Gazeta, distinguished between capitalists, backers of Premier Menachem Begin and ordinary workers. Both represent "the newest and most frightening aspect yet of the Kremlin's anti- Semitic campaign," the groups said. The anti-Zionist manifesto was signed by Gen. David Dragunsky and law professor Samuel Zivs. both of whom had previously de- nounced Israel and Jews se to leave the Soviet Union. THEY CALLED for the en lishment of an "Anti-Zion Committee of the Soviet Publi and urged intellectuals, wo and farmers to be active "political exposure of ZionisJ and firmly rebuff its intrigues' [ The SSSJ and UCSJ obeovt. that "the only positive note is] rumor that other prominent S viet Jews had bravely refused I sign the manifesto." OFFICE SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT sezsbs JIPMENT 31 DIVISION OF SCHRElBER INDUSTRIES SOI SCHRElBER PRESIDENT AND CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD '.._,., YQUR COMPLETE OFFICE SUPPLIER SINCE 1933 Dade: 757-8513 Broward: 463-9680 Main Warehouse and General Offices 228 N.E. 59 Street. Miami. Florida 33137 UltraCom Cable T.V. Presents... CANCER: THELlFE At The End Of The Tunnel Cancer. The Winners IImi iiKinniil embul u\ diviiihheiiifi t<4iiiff ban-earner A timt iiIhh meiliial/m h Same en Olivesdeny IirnwicIi/m- \mlnnistpithi luavaaH(tl\ then r-mr winners Meet Ibnv \/iinletl iiii/inilimh n Ik, /wire en/ml irilb Ibe ili:: I mi:/i"ini('i Ibriuigb/Mis ixltlsiintl livittmenl \tnr Imii iln l/iei Iximlli /In-htissiMit] (ifjhinreiHV hindiml iilh-n Sii/*r\liit/tin II Illy I be American (inner Sarirtx mul Hie \<~ia lake tin nfibenl /n/unntrtiie ImJt ul canar AnMOjpt the f|H oftbree lie Inns (lehrminei/ In Ih' irinmis SuperStationWTBS SbmiiiK trw /*/ ttitHMMi- (mi ft On UltraCom Cable Channel "25C" To Order Call UltraCom Cable TV 861-1564 "fMng Mot Beacfr and South M<*mi Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Florid/an Page 3-A Behind the Shultz Trip All-Out Reagan Effort to Succeed By DAVID FRIEDMAN WASHINGTON - (JTA) Secretary of State George Shultz's departure for the Middle East appears U, be an all-out effort to re- suscitate President Reag- an's Sept. 1 peace initiative before it is officially pro- nounced dead, as many have already done. Yet Reagan's official an- nouncement of the trip, Shultz's first to the Mideast as Secretary of State, concentrated on the effort to achieve an agreement on the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon. Shultz's an- nounced itinerary included only Egyp^ 'srae' ant* Lebanon, al- though other Arab countries were not ruled out and presumably will be included if progress is made in Lebanon. The "primary purpose" of the Shultz trip is "to bring to a suc- cessful conclusion the negotia- tions in Lebanon," the President said in announcing the trip at a brief news conference Friday. But when he was asked if he thought his peace initiative was still aUve, Reagan replied, "Yes, that's why George Shultz is going there." THE PRESIDENT indicated that an agreement on Israeli withdrawal would be needed be- fore progress could be made on bringing King Hussein of Jordan into the peace negotiations. In an interview published in The Washington Post, Shultz suggested that Arab leaders may be taking a second look at Reag- an's peace initiative. "It does seem to me that there's a certain shuck that has taken hold, as I read the cables from the various Arab capitals, in which people are saying to themselves, 'Are we really going to pass this up? Maybe we cant afford to do that." "Shultzsaid. According to Shultz, "the desire for peace is not dead. It's very much alive." The Secretary was also optimistic that "an agreement between Lebanon and Israel is very likely." He said both "agree on the essential in- gredients they both want a secure southern Lebanon. Neither wants to see PLO terror- ist groups re-enter that country, particularly that area." HE ADDED: "That being the case, the construction of security arrangements is not a matter, you might say, of high principle or strategy It's a question of working out in a kind of tactical way what those arrangements are, consistent with Lebanese sovereignty, and giving assur- ance of security in the area. Both want it." Shultz reiterated the Adminis- tration's earlier contention that K'ng Hussein had a tentative agreement in principle with PLO ik nYasir Arafat t represent the Palestinians in peace talks, out Arafat bowed to "radical" elements within the PLO and set new conditions that were unac- ceptable to Hussein and to the U.S. But according to Shultz, Hus- sein needed assurances that Isra- el would freeze its settlement ac- tivities on the West Bank for the duration of negotiations, a key point in Reagan's peace plan. "WE HAVE consistently con- tinued to emphasize the impor- tance of that because, after all, you're talking about a negotia- tion dealing with an area and, if the area is being changed while you are in the process of negotia- ting or considering negotiating, it's tough to make that negotia- tion as meaningful as it otherwise might be," Shultz said. He explained that the Presi- dent had told Hussein in effect, "I will not press you actually to sit down at the bargaining table unless we can find some form of freeze ... Of course. King Hus- sein might decide to sit down anyway and say. The first thing I want to talk about is a settle- ment freeze." But we haven't got to that point." Shultz said. "I MIGHT note that in the President's plan it's very explicit that if the settlers want to stay in their settlement, they stay, but they would live under the juris- diction of whatever is the juris- diction of that territory. In the President's plan, it's perfectly consistent with Jews living in the West Bank," he said. The Secretary of State's trip comes after a week in which both Shultz and Reagan were under increased personal attack for being themselves to blame for the failure of the Reagan initiative. Shi ltz has been criticized for months for not going to the Mid- east. Both he and the President were accused of not giving enough attention to the problem. Karen Elliott House, the Wall Street Journal's Middle East expert, in an article last Wednes- day (April 20), accused Reagan of seeming "not to understand his own initiative" and Shultz of ap- pearing "studiously aloof from the plan." Similar criticism has appeared in other publications with the usually anonymous sources in the White House and State Department sniping at each other. However, Mrs. House's article, as well as her series on the Mid- east which preceded it, seemed aimed at getting Hussein off the hook. She even criticized Saudi Arabia and Morocco. In fact, much of the media has sought to absolve Hussein of the blame. THE STATE Department was visibly shocked when Hussein announced that he would not join the negotiations. But as one pro- Israel observer here said, Israel's supporters in Washington were not surprised, they never ex- pected Hussein to enter. The "plucky king" has long been praised in the United States for his courage, but his courage is based on his desire to stay alive. Long-time observers of Hussein did not expect him to follow the example of the late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. The Israelis, who would agree with this assessment, were at the same time visibly relieved that Hussein blamed the Palestine I.iteration Organization and not Israel, especially as the Reagan Administration also took this po- sition. Yet. by placing the blame on the PLO the Administration is again refusing to deal with the problem of Hussein. Many believe that the problem has been the failure of the Administration to put pressure on Hussein. AFTER ALL, Reagan an- nounced his initiative after he re- portedly had the assurance from Hussein that he would agree to enter the negotiations. The Presi- dent was willing to anger the Is- raelis to achieve his goal. Israel angrily rejected the peace initia- tive because Premier Menachem Begin charged that it made pro- mises to the Arabs that would violate Israel's security. But part of Israel's anger was due to the initiative being dis- cussed secretly with Jordan despite an agreement with Israel that it be kept informed on all matters concerning its security. Throughout the period there has been pressure on Israel to freeze settlements, to leave Leba- non; weapons deliveries like the F-16 jet fighter have been held up. Yet no similar action has been Continued on Page 14-A ISRAEL .$510. 2 WEEK VACATION -s510. I 5 Nights In TEL AVIV 2 Nights in TI3ERI AS 6 Nights In JERUSALEM include Hotat Aeeom, 8 Days of Slahtaaatng, Twin Baddad Room*, laraal Styto Koahar Buffet Braaktaat, Tmnafan A Portaraga. 4 WEEK TOUR OF LEISURE $1022. IWTTH LATE DEPARTURES, LITTLE WALKING A SLOWER PACE 3 WEEKS IN NETANYA* 1 WEEK IN JERUSALEM Tour Indudma: Accommodation In Flnt Class Hotal, Twin Badoad ftooma, 2 Koahar MaaH Evaty Day, 8 Days of Sfgntsesino, Transtata A Porterage, Trat/ahra Insurance: Madlcal, Financial 8. Panonal .& FOR RESERVATIONS & INFORMATION ON THESE TOURS, OR OUR OTHER ISRAELI TRIPS, CALL MIRIAM COLLECT AT TRIANGLE TOURS- 931 -3031 18407 W. Dixie Highway North Miami Beach_______ -S^ Kiamesha Lake. New York 12751 Telephone: (9141794-6900 Direct N.Y.C. Phone: (2121924-6162 Hotel GIBBER Surrounded by our 400 private acres, in the beautiful Catskills. 3 Meals DailyStrictly KosherAII Diets Catered to Rabbi and Masgiach on Premisses* Two Health CiubsMassage Room-lndocr ana Outdoor Pools* Music and Entertainment Daily-Planned Activities AH Rooms Air Conditioned-TV'sCapacity 450 GuesU Make 'Gibbers" Your Summer Vacation Home, You'll Love Us. The Gibber Family JEFFERSON NATIONAL BANKS OUR STRENGTH IS TOUR SECURITT. MIAMI BEACH NORMANDY ISLE KEY BISCAYNE NORTH DADE Trust Accounts of $300 000 01 mot* will b* consldamt Contact Jowpf. 5 WtUM. Senior vic PtMKtent ft 5moi Truit OMni. 533-6461 ci JManon Bcr.ccrp Ine Mrr.brs: FCIC .- : ,,.-. 14 Page 4-A The Jewish Floridian / Friday, April 29, 1983 It's Tough To Wish Secretary Shultz 'Good Luck' We would be hard-pressed to wish Secre- tary of State George Shultz well on his trip to the Middle East. If he succeeds, it can only mean trouble for Israel. U.S. policy in the Middle East today is not to achieve peace between Israel and Lebanon, but to feed Israel to the dogs of Arab opportunism bent on amputating Is- rael out of existence. If Israel is the key to the current dilemma, then why, as usual, did the U.S. policy-makers send Mr. Shultz off to Cairo first? This is no mere exercise in protocol, but no American negotiator not Philip Habib, not Morris Draperhas ever gone to Israel first. Their object has always been at the outset to meet with the Arabsin Cairo, in Beirut, in Amman, in Riyadhfor some anti-Israel consensus on which to base renewed pressures against the Israelis that would wrest still more concessions from them. Doubtless, this is what Mr. Shultz has in mind as a modus operandi now, too. Devious U.S. Role For their part, the Israelis are not anxious to see the already-eroded relationship between Jerusalem and Washington erode yet further, and as they prepared to meet with Mr. Shultz this week, the attitude was one of dominant conflict and confusion. On the one hand, there was the growing anger that the Reagan Administration has been playing a role in Lebanon more of strong-arm gutter criminal than of mediator in the peace talks between Israel and that beleaguered country. Since the announcement by President Reagan that Mr. Shultz would be going to the Middle East, the position of the Lebanese has hardened so considerably, that the Israelis were reporting by Monday that the Lebanese were now reneging on peace committments to which they had already agreed in earlier negotiations sessions. This could only mean that what the Israelis are saying is correct: that Washington has been secretly urging the Lebanese to come to no terms with the Israelis. Because, what Mr. Shultz has been sent to the Middle East to achieve is, in effect, an unconditional Israeli withdrawal. But if the Israelis were angry, they were also passing a signal to Washington that they are anxious for an accommodation. The growing number of casualties they have been suffering in Lebanon as a result of terrorist attacks there has contributed to mounting demands in Israel to bring the Israel Defense Forces back home come what may. Under these conflicting and confusing circumstances, it is hard at to say what the conclusion of Mr. Shultz *s Mideast tour will be. The hardliners in Jerusalem hope that, it the message he brings from Mr. Reagan is a one-sided demand for Israeli con- cessions and nothing more, then let the Shultz mission fail. But those more in accord with labor Party opinion express optimistic hopes for success, with limits in their minds as to the amount of concessions Israel should be prepared to make. (Jewish Floridian IPLAMT- iMiuk, miii, rw. nin ro ioiii r J..Mi Km 1kl 1 IXOMINDLIN mo SUZANNE 3H(X HKT II in hur HH.. Mmm. rt. USKHUE r II II WmMw Ej rntmr -"iiiipWi in hi hi ii ^e.o tmw.hum, w. u.oi ^miKiifci I " HEEL *Mal EEWM uaacumoH Kates i. ae.. I Tim I IEEE fc^fciiu \tmmll^tml\rmMl^T'^mnmckmmu^l\Olmmmami'L J.~ II V Qfk W HE* tmmtn -r rn The trouble is, neither Washington nor any of its cronies in Europe and the Middle East has a single limit so far as Israeli concessions are concerned. And that is where we came in. And so we find it hard to wish our Secretary of State out-and-out luck, or even well. Adolf Hitler's 'Diary' Isn't it remarkable that a 60-volume diary purportedly belonging to Adolf Hitler has been "discovered" in this, the 50th anniversary of his rise to power in Ger- many? Isn't it all the more remarkable that the diary was published in the German magazine, Stern, just one week after in- ternational gatherings of Holocaust vic- tims in the United States, as well as of Holocaust remembrances and the Warsaw Ghetto uprising memorial in Israel, Poland, the United States and elsewhere? What strikes us as most nauseous is the lamentable decision of the Times of London to shell out in excess of $3 million for publication rights and to begin publication of excerpts of the diary on the slim basis of an H. R. Trevor-Roper authentication of the diary without his even having examined the original. Forget the obvious motives of Stern which says all that has to be said these days about the mass media. How could so distinguished a British historian of the Hitler era make such a profoundly unscholarly assessment? All we can think of are the comments of some of Germany's most distinguished observers who have warned against making a big thing of the 50th anniversary of Hitler's rise to power. In their view, contrary to the observance serving as a reminder of a bitter period in human history, there would be those who would pervert the occasion to rewrite Der Fuehrer into the hallowed halls of heroism. The alleged diaries are doing just that. The Fruit of Reagan's Treachery Friday. April 29, 1983 Volume 56 16IYAR5743 Number 17 EVERYONE keeps talking, all over again, about Israel's decep- tion perpetrated upon the U.S. in Lebanon the distortion of its intentions there following the June 6 invasion. The implication is clear: Israel is in the end at fault for the tragic terrorist bombing of the American Em- bassy in Beirut. If only the Israe- lis went home, there would have been no bombing. There is no way to deal with this absurdity other, I suppose. than to turn the argument around. What about the U.S. de- ceptions perpetrated upon Israel all over the Middle East? FOR STARTERS: Despite our repeated declarations to the con- trary, we have had close and complex relations with the PLO for the last ten years. Then, there is President Reagan, who has made secret promises to Jordan and Saudi Arabia about pressuring Israel so far as a Palestinian "en- tity" is concerned if only King Hussein represented the Pales- tinians in face-to-face talks with Israel. What pressure? Whv to force the Israelis out of the West Bank and Gaza a purpose in clear violation of Camp David, where the deal was the return of the Sinai just one year ago this week for peace with Egypt plus the tacit recognition of Israel's rights in these territories. In fact, it was on this basis that President Reagan early on SS&WSW::W:S::x::^^^ 1 s Mimlliia ^:*::::r:::::::::w^^ proclaimed his position that Is- rael's settlement activities on the West Bank were not illegal. BUT THINGS soured well before the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut. Not only did Jimmy Carter lose his balance once the accords were signed, and he suddenly struck the pose of a messiah in frank imitation of Anwar Sadat's own pose. But Mr. Reagan, who came after him, in an orchestrated performance of sanctimonious pro-Israel senti- ment, is now in his third genera- tion of Middle Eastern political prophecy. After his pronouncement upon the legality of Israel's settlement activity came the President's second generation the Shultz - Weinberger era proposing Israel as the main stumbling block to peace. And, therefore, Israel as the enemy of the purity of Ameri- can intentions in that agonized part of the world. The predictable Hussein rejec- tion of the apex of the Reagan peace initiative of Sept. 1 the king's face-to-face talks with Is- rael as spokesman for the I'LO - stunned Mr. Reagan and all of his very naive men into a mud- dlement of confusion. But the bombing in Beirut galvanized him into action. Suddenly, the President wonders: Who in hell is the PLO anyway? Who elected Arafat and his multi-colored band to their role as spokesman for the Palestinians anyway? TO THE world at large. Mr. Reagan proposes: Our victims in Beirut notwithstanding, we shall not be swayed. We will redouble our peace efforts there. We will do what is right. So. what is right? Why. more pressure on Israel. Ergo. Mr. Shultz is this week in the Middle East. But Prime Minister Begin has already told Mr. Reagan what he thinks of all those secret commitments of his offered to Jordan and the Saudis, always with Israel as the sacrificial lamb. He has already told Mr. Reagan what he thinks of his proposed pressure about the settlements by launching a brand new one on Independence Day last week, and by promptly announcing plans for three more to be estabhshed in the near future. What, then, has Mr. Shultz to offer the Israelis in JW The word is some high-technolo- gy for their new Lavie, out that would be a terrible exchange. Well, Mr. Shultz might sweeten the pot by explaining, Continued on Page 13-A Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish JToridiap Page 6-A .,...'.'.*...'**-'--*...............,.. /.v. .............T...T...........................ii;---------------------. KKK paramilitary is being trained 'to kill Jews and niggers in the coming race war' Children Indoctrinated Into Klan's Philosophy By MARIA VON TRAPP The film, "The Sound of Music,'" told the story of how we the Trapp Family Singers fled from Hitler infested Austria and came to this country. I re- member the shock and dis- belief we felt when a sharp voice announced over the radio. "Austria is dead: Long live the Third Reich!" But a photograph has also shocked me. At first, I thought it must surely have been taken dur- ing World War II. but then I learned that it was made recently right here in the United States. It shows a federal agent of the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms with illegal weapons, dynamite, and Klan literature seized in New Orleans from Ku Klux Klan members. Klansmen now openly associate with Nazis and often use the dreaded swastika emblem. 1 hope the photograph has the same impact on you as it had on me. and I am writing to alert readers everywhere to the grow- ing threat the Klan poses in America today. FROM ALABAMA to Cali- fornia, secret KKK paramilitary camps are training members to kill Jews and niggers in the coming race war." Even children are being indoctrinated in their philosophy of hate. Young boys in a Klan camp in Texas have been taught how to choke "Jews and niggers" to death. Just as Hitler announced his plans in "Mein Kampf," the Klan does not flinch at making its in- tentions perfectly clear. In a "Parade" magazine ar- ticle, I was sickened to read the comments of an Alabama Klan leader named Bill Riccio. Riccio is quoted as saying, "The Jewish problem must be settled, a Final The Ku Klux Klan has been given a nrrmit to march in Miami on May 7. Community leaders, in particular Jewish organizations such as the American Jewish Committee, are urging 'curiosity-seekers' to stay away from the march. The Klan, according to AJCommittee director William Gralnick, has been baiting local populations throughout the country, and those who show up at these marches 'just to rubberneck,' or even to engage in dispute with the mar- chers, are helping the Klan by falling for the bait. Herewith, we present a column by the late Maria von Trapp to remind Floridians to stay away and why. Solution. I'm not going to hang up my robe until the last Jew is deported to Palestine or exe- cuted." When asked what he thought about the murders in Atlanta, he said, "Little niggers grow up to be big niggers. And that's 20 of 'em we won't have to kill later." I FIND these statements so repulsive that- I considered not including them in my article, but if they help to alert readers to the fact that Klansmen are very dan- gerous people, then they have served their purpose. They should also know that the Klan has grown increasingly bold in backing up its words with brutal action. The number of anti-Semitic cases continues to be alarming. There have been at- Israel's Bravest Hero Hurling Grenades, He Went First tempts to bomb synagogues, and rabbis have been hung in effigy. Robed Klansmen armed with clubs and guns have attacked peaceful black marchers, and the Klan conducted a fear campaign to drive out immigrant Viet- namese fishermen in Texas. THAT THIS should happen in America fills me with disgust and outrage. I firmly believe that something must be done to counter the Klan's malevolent activities. That is why I have become a member of the Southern Poverty Law Center and its Klanwatch Project. The Southern Poverty Law Center, located in Montgomery, Ala., has for 12 years been a leader in the struggle for minority rights, from the in- tegration of Alabama's all-white state troopers to the defense of countless poor Southern blacks victimized by racism. In 1980, in response to growing Klan violence and harrassment, the Center began its Klanwatch Project. Klanwatch uses the same methods to document KKK activity as the Wiesenthal Center for the Study of the Holocaust, which has been extremely suc- cessful in tracking down Nazi war criminals. SO FAR the Klanwatch staff has identified over 2,000 Klan members and American Nazis, including over 250 violence-prone members who have been charged over the past three years with crimes ranging from illegal parading to suspicion of murder. They have researched and re- corded hundreds of recent inci- dents of assaults, shootings, beatings, cross burnings, vandal- ism, threats and bombings by Klan supporters, and the in- formation that Klanwatch gathers on the KKK is dis- tributed to law enforcement agencies, and to the offices of every attorney general in America. But Klanwatch does far more than passively distribute in- formation about the Klan. When Klansmen break the law, Klan- watch fights in court to see that the wrongdoers are punished. When Klansmen belonging to Bill Wilkinson's Invisible Empire attacked peaceful black marchers in Decatur, Alabama, Klanwatch attorneys quickly brought a suit on behalf of the marchers asking for an injunction and money damages from the Klansmen. IN TEXAS, they won a per- manent injunction against Klan harassment of Vietnamese fisher- men on the Gulf Coast. Klanwatch also recently won a historic legal victory in Texas when a federal judge banned all Klan paramilitary activity in that state. Immediately after this major victory, they filed suit to stop Klan paramilitary activity in Alabama. To alert more Americans to the dangers of the Klan, Klanwatch Continued on Page 13-A By MOSHE BEN YOSEF In the dry words of the official citation, Res. Lieut. Mordechai Goldman's act of bravery in Operation Peace for Galilee is de- scribed as follows: "Deputy commander of the force that captured the Beaufort Castle, Segen Goldman's force was com- manded to take the north- ern positions. While moving toward the objec- tive, the force was at- tacked, resulting in several casualties. When the re- maining force reached the objective and entered the enemy's trenches two more soldiers were hit, but de- spite the few men he had left under his command, Segen Goldman decided to continue with the battle. "He personally led his men, running on the outside of the trench, hurling grenades and en- gaging enemy forces. He was often compelled to return to the main body of his men for more ammunition, and he continued fighting until the position was captured. During the actual fighting, Goldman's company commander was hit. Goldman as- sumed command and successful- ly captured the position." LIKE MOST of those who re- ceived citations for their out- standing bravery in action, Motti Goldman neither looks nor be- haves like a hero. Twenty-three years old, he was born in Afula and now lives in Moshav B'nei Atarot, near Jerusalem. An en- gineering student at Tel Aviv University, Motti's leg wound prevents him troro participating in sporting activities, and he doesn't know if and when he'll go back to Reserve duty in the IDF. Lieut. Mordechai Goldman Continued on Page 12-A An officer sets a personal example.. . Israel's Defense Minister Moshe Arens congratulates Lieut Mordechai Goldman, who won Tsra- '' Hghnt military citation. the Medal of Valor, for bravery in the Leb- anese war. Former IDF Ch'"f of Staff Rav Aluf Raphael Eitan looks on. t r,^ Page 6-A The Jewish Floridian / Friday, April 29. 1988 Israeli Casualties Raise Pressure for IDF Return By DAVID LANDAU And GIL SEDAN JERUSALEM (JTA) Mounting Israeli casual- ties in Lebanon have in- creased concern here that Syria may be seeking a new military confrontation with Israel. They have also brought calls from both coalition and opposition sources for a unilateral withdrawal of Israeli forces to a security zone in south Lebanon. The latest fatalities were Capt. Zvi Makles. 21. of Savion and Lt. Menachem Reich, of Haifa, also in his early twenties, who were killed in a clash with Palestinians along the Beirut-Damascus high- way near So far on the Israeli- Syrian ceasefire line. A MILITARY spokesman said four Palestinians were killed try- ing to infiltrate the Israeli lines from the Syrian-occupied area of east Lebanon. They were carry- ing Soviet-made Kalachnikov rifles and U.S. M-16s. The deaths of the two Israeli officers brought to three the number of fatalities suffered by Israel's armed forces in Lebanon in a period of six days. An Israeli soldier was killed on Apr. 14. Sources here said the improved weather in Lebanon has resulted in stepped up attacks on Israeli forces by Syrians using Palestine Liberation Organization units sheltered behind their lines as proxies. Israeli fatalities in Lebanon, both during the war last summer and after the ceasefire in Septem- ber, are approaching 500. This has led to proposals that Israel pull its forces back to the Awali river line which is the approxi- mate border of the 28-mile security zone in south Lebanon to spare further casualties. MINISTER-Without- Portfolio Mordechai Ben-Porat said that Israel had to consider only its own security needs and expressed hope that the Cabinet would now discuss his proposal for a uni- lateral withdrawal. Ben-Porat, a member of the former Telem fac- tion which merged with Likud after the death of its founder, the late Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, is regarded as a hardliner. But similar urgings for a uni- lateral withdrawal came from Labor MKs Gad Yaabovi and Yossi Sarid, an outspoken dove. Yaabovi called on Labor Party chairman Shimon Peres to con- vene the party's political com- mittee immediately on the issue. Sarid said Israel is paying a daily price in blood for no possible political or security gain. He warned that the Likud govern- ment could lead the country into a new war with Syria. The Labor Party in fact has issued a communique in a similar vein. It stated that the tension caused in part by the continued deployment of Israeli forces in Lebanon could be relieved only by their withdrawal. "It is unac- ceptable to maintain a prolonged negotiations process with false announcements of breakthroughs when our soldiers sink in the Lebanese mud, and when the prospect of another war knocks at our door," the statement said. The government so far is pur- suing its political and security aims in the four month-old tripartite talks between Israel. Lebanon and the U.S. It insists that Israeli forces will be with- drawn from Lebanon only after satisfactory security arrange- ments and some degree of po- litical normalization are agreed to COME UP TO THE IFE AT BROWN'S In The Comfort Of The Catskills! HI I I Beverly His $1,034 Imperial 4 Regency $1,055 Princess $1,099 Spmol Otacounts tor longm stay* $1,521 $1,553 $1,620 EVERYTHING INCLUDED IN OUR CARE-FREE VACATION PACKAGE! C? Baggage Handling And Limo Transportation To and From Hotel 'AH Taxes and Gratuities Included In Rate [Personalized Service With Extra Care For Special Oiets > 3 Gourmet Meals Daly QCocktail Parties I Great Entertanment Q 2 Shows Nightly 'Dancing to 3 Orchestras Free Golf on Two 18-Hole Golf Courses, Tennis, Rofler Skating, Health Club, Indoor-Outdoor Pools, Outstanding Social Programs & Speakers-And Much More! Wonwrtiou and Ratarvallow 800-431-3856 Bi$wn*s Loch Sbcldmkc, NY 12759 ^^ (14) 434-5151 mmjor cndn cards honond by the Beirut government, and only if Syrian and PLO forces pull out. SOME OBSERVERS have suggested that the increase in Syrian-backed PLO ambushes and hit-and-run attacks on Israeli forces represent the application of pressure by Damascus on the Lebanese government not to make political concession to Is- rael. The attacks are being es- calated because an Israeli-Leba- nese agreement seems to be im- minent, they said. This theory is given some credence by the fact that the Syrians are exerting strict control over the PLO forces under their protection meaning that they intend to avoid an all- out direct confrontation with Is- rael. Only a few hundred yards separate Israeli and Syrian Unes in Lebanon. An estimated 5,000- 6,000 PLO men are believed to be based behind the Syrian lines and another 1,500 deployed in north Lebanon. But the Israelis have detected large-scale military hardware supplied by the Soviet Union to replace the heavy losses the Syrian army and air force sustained during the war in Lebanon last summer. Defense Minister Moshe Arens said it was not entirely clear whether the Syrians, egged on by the Soviets, are preparing for re- newed warfare with Israel in Lebanon or are taking defensive measures against a possible at- tack by Israel. There are "worry- ing signs" from Syria, Arens said in a briefing to the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security Committee. HE SAID the Israel army must remain on maximum alert because the Syrians may think that they can act with impunity under the umbrella of Soviet SAM-5 long-range anti-aircraft missiles. "But the umbrella has holes in it," Arens warned. He also implied that there was a possibility that the Syrians and their Soviet patrons genuinely fear that Israel may take the initiative against them. Former Premier Yitzhak Rabin endorsed that idea in a recently Dublin article ,n which he analvJdT Soviet warning last month that i, Israel attacks Syria, the Svr?. would not fight alone yians Still another view is tha. Syrian military moves and X tough rhetoric from both Damascus and Moscow is Davin Ta ofLebanon without seemS to do so under duress. g Meanwhile, according to the T^heyaredointh^be to torpedo an Israeli-Lebanei agreement. Some Israeli circle, blame Syria for the IW government's refusal to agree to Israeli security demands and po- litical normalization. Kohl Postpones Plans For Trip to Israel BONN (JTA) Chancellor Helmut Kohl has postponed his visit to Israel, tentatively scheduled for early this summer. The West German leader is expected to go to the Middle East some time next fall and will follow his visit to Israel with visits to Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, diplomatic sources here said. THE SOURCES firmly denied that Kohl is deliberately delaying his planned visit to Israel. But they confirmed that the Chancellor preferred that the visit be part of a series of talks with the leaders of other Middle Eastern nations rather than an isolated event. The sources said Kohl, leader of the ruling Christian Democratic Union (CDU), intends to give priority to the Geneva talks limiting the deployment of medium range nuclear missiles in Europe and will go to Moscow shortly at the invitation of Soviet leader Yuri Andropov for talks related to that objective and other matters. Quality, Affordable Dental Care! Open Wide at The Mall at 163rd Street. Lower prices. Longer hours. Convenient locations. State of the art equipment. Hand picked professionals. Personal care. Unlvtr$Hy of LouUvtHa 4, Emergency walk-in-care. David R Katz. DOS UnivrHty of Detroit Morris MHIstwn. 0 0 S rVew York Unlwttly COMPARE and SAVE Cleaning .......................$15 X-rays, examination & check-up Silver amalgam (one svdace.i White composite (oneuttacei Regular denture (full upper or lower) Deluxe denture (lull upper or lower) Partial denture (acrylic) Partial denture (cast) Full crown or cap (non-precious) Single rool canal (each additional root) Orthodontics (braces) 29 14 16 249 299 239 299 249 99 50 1299 (m)Open Wide~Specid_ _ Receive a regularly priced $29 00 thorough examination, x-rays and check-up FREE Omni entix The Man ai I63'0 SJ. 947-6555 or* (v Ut, } 'Ml Now Open Wide! The Mall at 163rd Street 800am-9:30pm Monday-Saturday 12 00noon-5 00pm Sunday , \5mWUX 305-947-6555 Business Systems Alto t: Boston Dartmouth, Hyannis and Medford. Mass Ithaca. Utica and Glens Fans New York Soon At: Jacksonville and Ft Lauderdaie. Florida Chicago Virginia New York Rhode island^ Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 7-A Peruvian Asks Expulsion of Palestinian Propagandist NEW YORK (JTA) A member of the Peruvian Congress has demanded the expulsion of Raji Burhum, a Palestinian propagandist who has engaged in anti-Semitic activities. The legislator also asked the government to explain why the Palestine Liberation Organization office is operating in Lima, the capital city. According to Rabbi Morton Rosen- thai. Latin American Affairs director of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith. the call for Burhum's expulsion was made by Wilson Benzaquen Rengifo, a member of the Chamber of Deputies. ROSENTH AL SAID THAT Burhum, host and producer of the radio program 1'alestino-americana, "has been described by Peruvian newspapers as an agent of the PLO" and as "a PLO militant. At a press conference in Lima, Deputy Benzaquen Rengifo called Burhum's activities "subversive," citing the use of his program on Radio Santa Rosa to offer free copies of anti-Semitic books like "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and "The Worst Enemies of Our People." He showed journalists a leaflet signed by Burhum, which urged military and police officers to "be careful of Masonry, a Jewish device to enslave you" and which claimed that the "Jew will take over your land and the land of countrymen." your This literature was found in the libraries of military installations, but has since been removed as a result of a public outcry, Rosenthalobserved. THE ADL OFFICIAL reported that Foreign Minister Fernando Schwalb has responded to Benzaquen Rengifo by declaring that the government would not permit discrimination against Jews, since this is violative of the constitution. The Foreign Minister further stated, according to Rosenthal, that the PLO office "has no diplomatic status and certainly we will not permit it to violate the neutrality of Peru, precisely because we have normal relations with Israel." A spokesman for the Ministry of Interior told the press that an in- vestigation has begun in Burhum's activities, and that he could be subject to expulsion under the country's im- migration laws. Reform Rabbi Urges Firm Stand on Nuclear Freeze DALLAS. Tex. In his Ikeynote address to the 83rd {annual Rabbinical Assem- bly convention, rabbi JRobert Gordis, past presi- dent of the Assembly and [former professor of Bible at [the Jewish Theological [Seminary of America, |called upon Americans to stand firm in their resolve Ithat a nuclear freeze be im- Iposed on the manufacture |olthese lethal weapons." Speaking at the Holocaust Memorial Program at the Dallas lewish Community Center, Dr. fcnrilis cited a high administra- te official who said "A nuclear parmay'not be undesirable" and "ndcmncd those who are "at- limptinn spoon-feed the l\meruan people the nonsense Jhat a nuclear war is thinkable ndwinnable." He called on this oat-Holocaust generation to in- Mead build toward a "moral ((generation of mankind." "WE ARE now facing the reetest moral crisis in the his- l'-"r> of Western civilization." raid Dr. Gordis, "and the final denigration of human lies in the Inuclear arms race and the threat |of nuclear annihilation." Dr. Gordis was one of the lead- Pi supporters of a resolution Iwopted by the Assembly to im- plement a bilateral mutual cessa- |ln of the production and de- ployment of nuclear weapons. [ resolution was passed by the dy of 1,200 Conservative IKabbis representing 1.5 million |mgregants and reads as Wi- llows: toad's Image Down, Veil Warns By EDWIN EYTAN lviARI? ,JTA) ~ Simone I a former President of the w.e8n Parli"nent. has I tew ^nous. steady de- IS?n of Israel' image in |2* circle8 VeU "aid most Ui Parliamentarians now *'srael as "a colonial power" B12 Unaware of tle history of S^Td of IsrMl' humani- Mnu> Philosophy. JeSkin.gat a seminar for W> intellectuals organized by I Jew' W branch of the Worid llaThl ongress- Veil "id 8he ^nSth Ting ^8 deterkT. hw, alarm and concern. luonhr 'lon has becon"> "catas- EJl '" recent months, she We. the members of the Rabbinical Assembly Declare ourselves morally bound to participate in the strug- gle against proliferation and to commit ourselves to join with others in working toward eliminating the threat of nuclear war. Call upon President Reagan and the Congress to press for- ward more vigorously toward the achievement of effective non-pro- liferation treaties; and to stop the transfer of nuclear arms tech- nology to other nations. Urge the Governments of the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R. to im- plement a bilateral mutual and verifiable total cessation of the production and deployment of nuclear weapons while both parties reconvene negotiations in an effort to achieve significant utbacks of nuclear weapons in in effective phased and verifiable arms control treaty. Urge each of the political parties to incorporate in its plat- form support for such a cessa- tion. Educate the Jewish Com- munity about the perils of nu- clear proliferation in keeping with the teachings of Judaism which stress the pursuit of peace; and sensitize the Jewish Community to a recognition that indifference is a fatal mistake leading to world destruction. By HUGH ORGEL TEL AVIV (JTA) The collapse of the minaret of a long- abandoned mosque in Jaffa has raised tension in Arab and other Moslem communities in Israel and triggered a controversy be- tween the Tel Aviv municipality and the government over which was responsible for delaying repairs on the structure, the Has- san Bek mosque. The minaret, a slender tower from which the Moslem faithful are summoned to prayer, col- lapsed early Saturday morning. No one was injured. Police engin- eers ruled out an explosion and said the structure fell apart because of neglect. The mosque has been abandoned since the Is- raeli state was created in 1948. Jaffa, once an Arab town, was subsequently incorporated into Tel Aviv. TWO YEARS ago, a private contractor attempted to lease the roofless, unused structure to turn it into a tourist shopping center. The bid was blocked by Moslems and by the Tel Aviv municipality. The Tel Aviv au- thorities and the local branch of the Wakf. the Moslem property association, agreed that the mosque should be repaired and used once again as a house of worship, although few if any Arabs or Moslems now live in the vicinity. rcwisH iwnofv\L RfllD Jewish National Fund i Rabbi Irving Lehrman Chrmn.JNFFdtn. Abraham Grunhut Pres.JNFGr. Miami Ernest Samuels V.P.JNFGr. Miami Rabbi Mayer Abramowitz Chrmn. JNF Exec. Board GIVE HONOR UNTO WHOM HONOR IS DUE For Information and Reservations Jewish National Fund 420 Lincoln Road, Suite 353, Miami Beach, Fl. 33139 Tel 538^464 Jewish National Fund Strengthens Israel Strengthen the Jewish National Fund lOOQBOei Page 8-A The Jewish Floridjan /.Friday. April 29. 1983 Only If Lebanese Are Flexible, Too Israel Preparing to Cooperate ? By DAVID LANDAU JERUSALEM (JTA) Israeli policymakers are prepared to cooperate with U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz to facilitate the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon and to improve relations with Washington which have been badly strained since the war in Lebanon last summer. This consensus emerged after Sunday's Cabinet meeting when several ministers indicated un- officially that there could still be some "give" in the Israeli posi- tions, including its insistence on a commanding role for Maj. Saad Haddad in south Lebanon. BUT THE ministers made it clear that Israel would be more flexible only if there was similar flexibility on the part of the Lebanese government and if Shultz could demonstrate that an agreement was within sight. The American Secretary of State, on his first Mideast tour since taking office, was in Cairo Monday and was due here Wednesday. It is not known whether he will undertake "shut- tle" diplomacy between Jeru- salem and Beirut in order to wrap up an agreement. His meeting with Premier Menachem Begin was their first. Shultz will also confer with Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Defense Minister Moshe Arens, both of whom he knows well. Meanwhile. the tripartite negotiations between Israel, Lebanon and the U.S. will be in- tensified. The three negotiating teams planned to meet at least four and possibly five times dur- ing this week, paralleling Shultz s higher level efforts to break the impasse. NEVERTHELESS, on the eve of Shultzs arrival, Israeli offi- cials were seriously disturbed over what they see as a sudden hardening of Lebanon s position, confusing signals as to Syira's intentions and the possibility of a new Israeli-Syrian military con- frontation in Lebanon. The Israelis accuse President Amin (iemayel of reneging on key points which had already been unn-ed to by the Israeli and Lebanese negotiators. They are aflgered by Gemuyel's tough re- marks at a Beirut press con- ference last Friday at which the Lebanese President rejected normalized relations with Israel, rejected joint Israeli-Lebanese security patrols in south Lebanon and declared that Israel could not dictate a commanding role for its ally. Haddad. According to Israeli sources, Gemayel is backtracking on issues that were already agreed to or were close to agreement in order to re-use them as bargain- ing chips to extract further con- cessions from Israel. The Cabinet made it clear that Israel has no intention to re-negotiate over those issues. THE CABINET meeting was fraught with tension because of former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon's bitter harangue against the U.S. and his scarcely veiled criticism of his successor, Arens. Sharon spoke forcefully against any "concessions or gesture" by Author Dies at 82 MONTREAL (JTA> - Yaacov Zipper, an educator and author whose many novels, short stories and poems in Yiddish and Hebrew depicted Jewish life in pre-war Poland, died here at the age of 82. He was buried last Thursday. Israel in the talks with Lebanon, implying that the government leadership might be contemplat- ing concessions in order to ac- commodate Shultz. Sharon accused the U.S. of in- stigating the Lebanese govern- ment to harden its positions so that Beirut can now offer Shultz "concessions" which it had pre- viously made to Israel and since revoked. The purpose, he claimed was to enable Shultz to extract "parallel" concessions from Is- rael. Most ministers did not share Sharon's views. "You talk like Washington is Israel's number one enemy," Deputy Premier Simcha Ehrlich told him. Sharon complained bitterly that Israel has taken no direct act ion "against terrorists" of late despite repeated attacks on Is- raeli forces in Lebanon which are taking a steady toll of casualties. He said he was not suggesting any large-scale action. But he noted that never in the past had Israel allowed terrorist attacks to go unanswered. His remarks seemed to be aimed at defense chief Arens who listened quietly to Sharon but offered no re- sponse. ISRAEL WAS expected to press Shultz for firm assurances that Syria will cooperate in any agreement requiring the with- drawal of all foreign forces from Lebanon. So far, Damascus has given diplomatic assurances to the U.S. and other third parties that it will pull its forces out of Lebanon simultaneously with an Israeli pullout. At the same time, the Syrians have warned that they will not accept any agreement between the two countries that leaves Israel's surrogate, Haddad, in charge of security in south Leba- Another unknown factor is the Soviet role. There have been con- flicting signals from Moscow. Foreign Minister and First Deputy Premier Andrei Gromyko spoke recently in favor of the "withdrawal of all foreign forces" from Lebanon. But at the same time, the Soviets seem to be supporting, or at least condon- ing, Syrian military threats which have heightened tensions along the Bekaa valley line separating Syrian and Israeli forces in eastern Lebanon. Israel Radio reported that of- ficers of the United Nations Dis- engagement Observers Force Completing her first five years as dean of Yeshiva University'! I Stern College for Women in Manhattan is Dr. Karen K Bacon who teaches one section of the introductory biology course tfl the College. Dr. Bacon holds a doctorate in microbiology from] the University of California. (UNDOF) on the Golan Heights the Syrian capital. UNDOF re- report some military activity in ports no bellicose activities by Damascus although they say either Syria or Israel on the there is no war-like atmosphere in Golan Heights front Study medicine in Israel, A challenge and an opportunity. Touro College and Technion- Israel Institute of Technology announce a new program leading to an M.D. degree A new door is open to an M.D. degree from one of the world's great teaching and research centers. Starting in September 1983, the Touro-Technion Program will offer qualified college graduates a unique American-Israel educational experience. The program's 18-month American phase provides advanced science and Hebrew language studies at Touro College's beautiful 15-acre campus in the New York City suburb of Huntington. Upon successful completion of these courses, students will receive a second baccalaureate degree and may continue their studies in Israel. Israel phases of the program comprise 6 months of initial bridging courses. 2 years of advanced clinical study at Technion's Faculty of Medicine in Haifa, a thesis and a year of in- ternship in Israel. An M.D. degree will be award- ed by Technion to students who successfully complete its program requirements. Our goal is the development of skilled and compassionate physicians who also will be well-prepared to meet internship, residency and licensing requirements in the United States. For applications and information call or write: Center for Biomedical Education Touro College 30 West 44th Street New York. N.Y. 10036 (212)575-0190 Friday. April 29,1983 / the Jewish Floridian Page 9-A West Bank Choices: Between Bad and Worse Continued from Page 1-A mng, but this situation might -nge in the future. " THE OTHER choice for Israel, , he termed the lesser of two js to relinquish the West although it would be to Is disadvantage from the oint of security, Harkabi tinted out. Nevertheless, he Itinued. "1 believe it is the Ict choice for Israel. I am not ftist. All I am interested in is welfare of Israel, and I idied the conclusion that a ate policy would benefit better than a hawkish proach " Irlarkabi, who was an adviser , Arab affairs to both Premier Juhak Rabin and to Premier lenachem Begin ("I resigned as is adviser after a few jnths"), said he is in favor of a xmditional negotiation" bet- ten Israel and the Palestine leration Organization. "I believe that a survey among stinians would prove that ; of them consider the PLO as their representative," he said. "This is an ugly organization, no doubt, by its actions and ideology but one does not negotiate only with those he loves." Harkabi conceded that "the public in Israel is not willing to negotiate with the PLO. But I do not differentiate between the PLO and the Palestinians. If we will not negotiate with them, we will perpetuate the conflict. Perpetuation of the conflict is not in Israel's interest." BEGINS POLICY toward the Palestinians "is not realistic," he observed. "The approach of Israel toward solving the Arab- Israeli conflict is not realistic." Harkabi's contention that Begin's policy toward the Pales- tinians is not realistic is in line with the major thesis in his book, "The Bar Kokhba Syndrome" (Rossel Books, New York, $15.95). The English-language edition was released in New York this week. The Hebrew-language edition appeared last year in Is- rael and caused a fierce contro- versy there. In it, Harkabi claims that Bar Kokhba, the legendary Jewish hero, waged a futile and very unrealistic revolt against the Roman occupation of Israel in the years 132 CE to 135 CE. The Bar Kokhba rebellion resulted in the destruction of Judaea and the exile of the Jewish population and its dispersion around the world. "The Bar Kokhba example teaches us a lesson about the value of realism," Harkabi said. "My criticism of Bar Kokhba is an instrument with which I hope to induce realistic thinking in today's Israel and among the Jewish people. Once a people changes its view of the past, then it will change the future and its behavior in the future. A prospect on the past can bring changes in the present." TURNING TO current developments, Harkabi said that he does not think that King Hussein's rejection recently of FLACLEP negotiations with Israel is final. "Without a settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict the Arabs will have to prepare for a major new confrontation with Israel," Harkabi said. "Such a confronta- tion is not possible without major political changes and even revolutions in the Arab coun- tries." Hussein, along with Saudi Arabia's rulers and those of other Arab countries "are most afraid of these changes," Harkabi observed. "Hussein understands that without progress in the Mideast the whole Arab world will be engulfed in turmoil. Therefore, it is in Hussein's interest to want to find a settlement. I think, how- ever, that as long as Israel continues with implementing settlements on the West Bank he cannot enter into negotiations, because if he does, it is as if he endorses Israeli settlements." CONTINUING, Harkabi said: "It seems to me that the Arabs are now starting to distinguish between their vision of doing away with Israel and the policy of reconciling themselves to its existence. The Arabs used to have the same vision and the same policy: elimination of the State of Israel. The vision is still the same, but not the policy. I think this is applicable even to (PLO chief) Yasir Arafat." Harkabi warned that "if the Arabs will not achieve political progress regarding their conflict with Israel, there is a danger that they will return to match their vision with their policy against Israel." Youths on Trial JERUSALEM (JTAI - Five Arab youths from Dahariya went on trial for manslaughter here in connection with the death of 22-year-old Esther Ohanna, an Israeli woman hit by a rock while driving through that West Bank town last January. The accused, who were appre- hended less than a week after the incident, are also charged with membership in an illegal organ- ization, incitement of school children, barricading roads and stoning Israeli vehicles.______ SAVIflGS & LEAH ASSCLIAT iin FFfif is here. Flagler Federal's federally insured fund. CURRENT INTEREST RATE:8.40% Rate guaranteed through May 8, 1983 I HI BEST OF TWO WORLDS. Flagler Federal* iederalh insured fund- FFfif-gnes you the high rates "I money market funds and the security of .1 savings account insured by an agency of the federal government. HIGHER RATES THAN MONEY MARKET ' I NDS. The rate advantage of money market funds is 1 thing of the past. FFfif gives vou more. INSURED BY F.S.L.I.C. You don't risk one pour) with FFfif because your money is insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, an agency of the federal government. INSTANT LIQUIDITY. Vou can withdraw from FFfif any time with neither penaltv nor waiting period. Vou mav also deposit additional funds to FFfif any time. LOW MINIMUM BALANCE. Big bucks are not required to take advantage of the many FFfif benefits. The minimum balance required to earn the high rates of FFfif is only $2500. CONVENIENCE. With FFfif. you have the conven- ience of 29 Flagler Federal offices throughout South Florida. Vou receive a detailed statement each month and when you require information on your FFfif, vou speak to a friendly Flagler Federal financial professional, not a cold computer. ACT NOW. FFfif, the account that give* vou the best <>t two worlds is here. Gel it now at Flagler Federal. HIGH RATES OF MONEY MARKET FUNDS INSTAWT LIQUIDITY 10W MINIMUM "balance 42500 Visit any of our 29 convenient offices in Dade, Broward or Palm Beach Counties. Or call 377-1711 in Dade, 525-1557 in Broward. Page 10-A The Jewish Floridian Friday. April 29, 1983 Memories of How It Was at Auschwitz Jewish American Princess Continued from Page 1-A Under the bright sun, on this 40th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, to the accom- paniment of military drums, one delegation after another marched to the monument to lay its wreath. They included repre- sentatives of the Polish govern- ment, the Union of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy, the In- ternational Auschwitz Commit- tee, the World Federation of Jew- ish Combatants, the World Jew- ish Congress and others. The large Israeli contingent laid a blue and white flowered wreath and then stood beside the monument proudly holding aloft the Israeli flag the most visi- ble symbol of the Jewish presence at this enormous observance. A FEW HOURS earlier, a 16- member official delegation had left Warsaw upon learning that a PT,0 representative had placed a wreath the day before at the Warsaw Ghetto fighters memorial well after the cere- monies were concluded. They had sent a note to Poland's Ministry of Education to protest this action which had occurred at a time when many members of the diplomatic corps were paying their respects. But the remaining 300 Israelis were firmly resolved to continue with their schedule until the end. And they certainly have made their presence felt. A speech of welcome was given by Prof. Chlebowczak. chairman Federal Suit Dismissed DETROIT (JTA) A suit filed against the federal govern- ment to reverse the deportation order against Archbishop Valer- ian Trifa of the Rumanian Ortho- dox Church in the United States, was summarily dismissed by U.S. District Court Judge Horace Gilmore here. - The suit was filed last month by eight members of the church. Their argument that the deporta- tion of Trifa would mean the "virtual destruction" of the church and deprive its 35,000 members of the right to practice their religion, was described by Gilmore as "frivolous." An eight-year investigation of Trifa's past by the Department of Justice and other government agencies determined that he had gained admission to the U.S. and obtained U.S. citizenship by con- cealing his Nazi activities when he was a leader of the anti- Semitic Iron Guard in Rumania during World War II. lrvin W. Katz \i Ed P A College Admission Counseling. School Selection and Aptitude Testing. Career Guidance. Test Preparation: S.A.T./L.S.A.T. M.C.A.T./G.R.E. SS.A.T./G.M.A.T. G E.D./T.O.E.F.L. P.S.A.T. 8951775* 12550 Biscavne Blvd. 2742711 8100 S.W. 81st Drive li\ appointment of Pron (Patriotic Movement of National Revival). Other ad- dresses were by the Vicemarshal of the Polish Parliament, Z. Gertych, by Rabbi Alexander Schindler, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega- tions. A moving appeal to the na- tions of the world was delivered by Dr. Smolen. a prisoner at Auschwitz and now director of the Jewish Museum there. THEN BY the thousands, the participants wended their way to the Auschwitz sector and to the infamous death wall where so many Jews were executed by firing squads, and again they placed garlands of flowers. Heads were bowed, tears flowed, every- thing faded away except the bit- ter memory of loss and the iron resolve that this must never, never happen again. As this reporter watched the ceremonies he recalled some lines inscribed on a wall of the Ghetto of Venice: "And nothing shall purge your deaths from our memories for our memories are your only graves. The rest is silence." Continued from Page 1-A asculating. And that's just for starters. JAP jokes abound today. A sampling: What does a JAP housewife make for dinner? Reservations. What's the difference between a JAP and a vulture? A vulture waits till you're dead to eat your heart out. GET THE message? Part of the reason for the increased popularity, or at least interest, in Jewish American Princesses these days is the publication of two current bestsellers. The Jew- ish American Princess Hand- book, by Debbie Lukatsky and Sandy Barnett Toback; and The OfficialJAP Handbook, by Anna Sequoia. These two paperbacks have taken the stereotype and flushed her out ad naseam, telling us more than we could ever care to know about the JAP who she is and how to become one. And if these books weren't written by Jews, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith would probably be keeping files on the authors. Why is the Jewish woman being depicted in such negative terms, and how did we come to this perception of her? PART OF the answer can be found in literature, because it is often through fiction that we shed light on who we really are and how we present ourselves to the world. It is in prose that Jew- ish writers tend to depict "their own" so critically. Marjorie Morningstar, the heroine of Herman Wouk's best- selling 1955 novel, was really the first Jewish princess in American literature. The Jewish females portrayed in American fiction before World War II were any- thing but pampered. Most of them, in fact, were part of another stereotype Jewish mothers, those hard-working, well-meaning, but overbearing women who were the glue of the Jewish family. For the most part, fiction then dealt with fathers and sons. Women were too busy cooking and cleaning to make compelling characters. But with success and upward mobility in the post-war genera- tion came the chance for parents to spoil their children, to give their daughter the clothes and proper training to enable her to cult task for parents was keenin their daughters priorities inT proper perspective." to makel remember that she was trained not to succeed on , own, God forbid, but rather u become an ideal mate and "iriJ ing" mother. 61 Which brings us to Marjorie. The saga of a bright . beautiful "nice Jewish girl's" fated love affair with a chai but superficial playwright *m awfully dated today, revolvi around whether or not she vft lose her virginity. Marjories hard-working, migrant father has moved , family from the Bronx to Centn Park West for the sake of U, children. "She's entitled to to. best, isn't she.' Marjoriel mother asks her husband earlvi the novel, which spans the '30 and '40s. "The West Side where the good families live. Her] she has the best chance of i ing somebody worthwile." And later in the conversation Mrs. Morganstern tells her hu. band: "Don't forget one thin She gets the man she loves. Sb gets what she wants, not what i pick. That's the right way." "She gets what she wants?1 asks the father. "In this world! marry "The Right Man." SOMETIMES, the most diff i- Continued on follow ing page Take TWA to Europe and take off up to 51%. Now get great savings over regular coach fares. TWA has cut the cost of Europe. Now you can save from 11% to 51% over regular coach fares. Just buy your tickets now to guarantee these low summer fares. Roundtrip Airfares London $770 Paris 879 Madrid *710 YHXAP60 t Add $3.00 departure tax. TWA also has great deals on vacation packages Almost all of our 72 Getaway*Europe Vacations are now priced less than last year. TWAs Europe. For reserva- tions or more information call your travel agent, or TWA in Miami at (305) 371-7471. You're going to like FARE CONDITIONS: Some fares subject lo government approval. TheTe are advance purchase and minimum/maximum stay requirements as well as cancellation penalties associated with these fares which vary by destination. Certain fares require travel on specific days of the week. Travel at these fares must originate/terminate by a specific date varying by destination. Seats are limited. All tares require roundtrip purchase and are subject to change. Friday, April 29. 1983 The Jewish Floridian Page 11 -A ....... l_ Hi I' *> if -SBiv ij wish American Princess kinued from preceding page Jven in America. She'll get he deserves." | sense, the res', of the novel I that conversation. Mar- rejects her parents' cultural pligious traditions in search mce and professional ful- Jt Changing her name [Morganstern to Morning- ^ but one sign of the break, e seeks to remain a "good I end. Marjorie does not t she wants but what she es fcU0RIE. the Jewish an Princess of the 1950s, stark contrast to Patunkin. the JAP of the I middle-class values wa by Herman Wouk are a F f the young Philip Roth, whose heroine in Goodbye, Columbus lacks the finer quali- ties of Marjorie. Brenda of Short Hills, N.J., is beautiful, witty (though a bit ob- tuse), pampered and self-cen- tered. Neil, who falls in love with her, is poor and idealistic, work- ing in a library in Newark. Neil narrates the story, and though he loves Brenda, he is not blind to her faults and she comes across as arrogant and controll- ing. At one point she talks to him about her mother and money: "Money! My mother's up to here with it. But whenever 1 buy a coat you should hear her. 'You don't have to go to Bonwit's, young lady. Ohrbach's has the strongest fabrics of any of them.' Who wants a strong fabric! Finally I get what I want, but not till she's had a chance to ag- gravate me. Money is a waste for her. She doesn't even know how to enjoy it. She still thinks we live in Newark." UNLIKE THE princess of the Marjorie Morningstar era, Brenda, child of the '60s, is eager to go to bed with Neil. The couple's problem focuses on the fact that Brenda ieaves her dia- phragm at home when she re- turns to Radcliffe. and her mother discovers it. Neil believes that she subcon- sciously wanted her parents to find out. He realizes that Brenda is not only bound to her parents, but too much their daughter for his liking. The story ends when Neil leaves her. Where Marjories was the JAP of the 1950s, seeking fulfillment through love, Brenda is the JAP of the '60's, seeking pleasure for pleasure's sake. The princesses in the literature of the 1970s were a mixed bag. Gail Parent's Sheila Levine of Sheila Levine is Dead and Living in New York was a schlepp. Un- married and 30, she concluded that suicide is the only way out, but even here she is unsuccessful. SASHA, the heroine of Alix Kate Shulman's Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen, is a beauty. But men don't take her seriously and she, too, is unhappy. Similarly, our understanding of why two publishers have come out in recent months with JAP handbooks they sell well is no reason for us not to feel ex- IHut I'd by the books. After the success of the Preppy Handbook, it was only a matter of time until someone decided to cash in on a Jewish version. In- deed, the subheadline on the cover of the Jewish American Princess Handbook sums it up neatly: "Oy vey, now it's our turn." The funniest part of the book, written by Debbie Lukatsky and Sandy Barnett Toback, is found in some of the title headings, which include "Hadassah Baro- que (The Heritage of Over- decorating)," "Gelt Without Guilt" and From Hair to Eternity." BUT THERE is not enough humor to sustain the 144-page guide. Anna Sequoia's Official JAP Handbook is more of the same this book is 206 pages, and the credo used to introduce it is "More is more." But it manages ilong the way to offer some in sight and humor and ever pathy for the JAP According to Sequoia, the two guiding print-- pies at the core of the born JAP are "I am terrific and Daddy will pay." She defines JAPs as warm, coddling, funny, smart and achieving. "They are wonderful, dedi cated mothers," she continues, describing them also as "con- summate homemakers," loving wives and women who "always look great." "It's no wonder," she writes, "that so many among us work so hard to be JAPs or just to look like one." AND LESLIE TONNER, in her book. Nothing But The Best: The Luck Of The Jewish Prin- cess, wrote, "I began to see that when peoDle used the phrase 'Jewish Princess' they meant the connotation of 'spoiled, pam- pered, overbearing, snotty, materialistic' But the more I met the real thing, the more I came to see their strengths, their intelli- gence and their marvelous ability to laugh at themselves, and with these more positive views, my own background became more relevant. I, too, had adoring parents who provided me with orthodontia, camp, music and dancing lessons, and like many of the young women described in these pages. I came out of this environment rather well- equipped to stand up for myself, to work hard and to believe in my abilities. These are the attitudes that now seem to me to be more of a common denominator for Jewish Princesses than clothing labels, credit cards, interior decorators or number of days per week you have a maid." Like every stereotype, the legend of the Jewish American Princess has much in it that's true. But legends are based on history. So maybe the good news that the two handbooks bring is that the whole JAP mind set is yesterday's news. How many JAPs does it take to change a light bulb? Two. One to call Daddy and one to pour the Diet Pepsi. All Publication Rights Reserved SUMMER AT THE PINES ...You deserve every beautiful moment of it. Golden days, exciting nights, living life to its fullest... that's what The Pines is all about! Come, choose from a world of activities right on the premises. Feel the warmth of com- panionship with newly discovered friends. En- joy wonderful meals TOed as though for you personally. Laugh like a at tickle-your-funnybone shows. Do it' Let your- 8o...to the pleasures awaiting you at The Pines! SKJAL SENIOR CITIZEN RATES MIDWEEK-WEEKENDS-WEEKLY txtra-Low Hates for Extended Stays or GrouP Information Call Mr. Steve Ehrlich '"00O Mr ^.r "* S"",n5 """ Si> .- toi^J On* M '- ; tmettin I Cumn D Intonrmiion wutes Solh Ftfltttira. Nn York 12771 1(141 434 BOOT cm toil tr.e (8001431-3124 Or Sh You- I'|vi Agff MKir CMtg 1 MM nofiorM Were 82 years old, and we never looked younger! We've come a long way since we used to send the horse and buggy down to the Railroad Station to pick up our guests and boasted about electricity in every room. From the country place that became the summer refuge of those who spent the other 50 weeks of the year in crowded city apartments, we've grown into one of the most pampering resorts of the land. Yet deep down we re- main the same. A friendly, welcoming stopping off place where you can get away from the tensions and problems of day-to- day living and discover a new world of pleasure. As we start our 9th decade, and with a 5th generation of hosts warming in the wings, we say to you just as we've been saying these last 82 years: Come up to the Nevele. And enjoy yourself. Nevele Hotel Ellenville. New York 12428 Hotel (910 617-6000 l fatunw: I* Hole (lolf Course 1(1 Outdoor All Weather Tennis Courts (Day & Nightl Magnificent Outdoor Mega I'ool Health Club Indoor Pool Indoor Tennis Kucquelbull Riding Private l-ake Entertainment Page 12-A The Jewish Floridian / Friday. April 29. 1983 Hurling Grenades, Hero Went First Continued from Page 5-A was part of a force whose mis- sion was to capture the infa- mous Beaufort Castle, a terrorist stronghold dominating the strip of Israeli territory called the "finger of Galilee," the most northerly part of the map of Is- rael. The conquest of the Beau- fort was one of the first actions in the war. At an early stage of the opera- tion, the officer in charge was wounded, and the command was taken over by Goni Harnik (an active member of the Peace Now movement!, who also fell in action. Because of delays on the way to Beaufort, the battle was fought by night, with the area lit by flares. WITH THE vehicles at their disposal damaged or stuck, the force decided to proceed on foot. Some 21 soldiers moved with Motti towards the trenches on the slopes of the fortress, 150 meters of running under heavy fire. When Motti looked back, he saw that he was left with 10 fighting men. "It was now," Motti recalls, "that I killed the first terrorist who dashed to- wards me. I came to a cover point and threw a grenade. That's how I moved forward gradually throwing a grenade and moving on." "I ordered two soldiers to pass me, but since I am stocky, I had to get out of the trench to let them pass, only then continuing my advance. Both men were hit, and we had to drag them back to a place of refuge. Continuing to clear the trenches ahead, I found myself left with two soldiers, both suffering from a degree of shock." Asked why he didn"t put more stress on activizing his men. Motti replied: "I myself don't know. I was educated to believe that an officer sets a personal example, and in war it's rather difficult to work only through giving orders to others. That's why I decided that what I can do myself, I'll do. Incidentally, it was only in the course of the fighting that I realized what a fortress we were taking on. It was built in such a way that neither shell nor grenade nor an explo- sive charge would move a single stone from its place. It was flab- bergasting to see the resistance of such walls. "At the intersection of two trenches. I met Goni, and he again took command. Meanwhile I noticed that I was running on my own. but it was no longer of interest. I wanted to go on . Suddenly I heard a cry Goni Harnik straightened up once, and Israel Reveals Three New Settlements Planned for West Bank By GIL SEDAN JERUSALEM (JTA) The Ministerial Settle- ment Committee has ap- proved the establishment of three new settlements on the West Bank but ruled that further settlements would be approved only after a body of experts con- firms that all essential services will be available to integrate them firmly in the territory. The decision was announced despite growing differences among Cabinet ministers as to the wisdom of establishing a new civilian settlement, Beracha, which was formally dedicated on a hill overlooking Nablus, the largest Arab city on the West Bank. THE ANNOUNCEMENT came in the face of hints from Washington that the Reagan Ad- ministration's decision to lift its ban on the transfer of American technology for the development of Israel's second generation jet fighter plane, the Lavie, was made with the understanding that Israel would be more cir- cumspect in its settlement poli- cies. The transformation of Beracha, a former military (Nahal) outpost into a civilian settlement, drew thousands of protestors from the Peace Now movement. Acting Premier Simcha F.hrlich criticized Deputy Premier and Housing Minister David Levy for attending the ceremonies, Israel's Indepen- dence Day. Ehrlich said there was prior agreement that the issue of a Jewish settlement virtually on top of Nablus would be brought before the Ministerial Settlement Committee which he heads. LEVY, absent from the Cabi- net session, did not reply. But Likud MK Ehud Olmert, who just returned from a visit to the U.S., criticized the government's settlement policy in a radio inter- view. That in itself was rare, coming from a member of the rul- ing party. THE FAMILY JACOBS' KOSHEB %0ji iv"1 open all yea 251*. COLLINS MIAMI BEACH. GALA SHOW ALL Rooms Watervlew cJiourTV Air Conditioned % Strictly Dietary; L.> Music Entertainment Social Programmes Pool free Chaises individual Diet Catering Strict Pahblncal supervision aa_ .-rved dally poolslde . 4Dys-3Nlflhts : r;;;v^ro.U".occ.p.", E0A^"NDSPC,AL a lone bullet killed him on the spot. The command was mine again. "IT WAS a tough blow. Goni was revered. Such a fine com- mander to see him dead sud- denly was an awful blow. But it was necessary to continue. the operation went on all night, and only in the morning hours did we take the fortress itself without serious opposition. We suffered heavy losses six dead and 11 wounded. For a long time, I looked at the threatening fortress which had been a source of fear for the whole of the 'Galilee Fin- ger' Satisfaction? Not really. Perhaps because the fighting was over, but I had not time for other feelings because of the weight of responsibility imposed on me." Motti conceals nothing. "At one stage," he tells, "I lay on my back and thought to myself enough. I'll rest a bit. It's hard to conquer the 'Beaufort' with only two soldiers. We'll wait for rein- forcements, and they will conquer the target, and then we'll see how things go. But a moment later, I thought to myself then they'll say that my unit isn't what it was. This thought got me up from my place and gave me strength to go on until we'd conquered the target." THE STORY of Motti Gold- man is that of a reserve officer facing an exceptionally formid- able task, who unexpectedly finds himself tackling it almost single-handedly, yet he continues without regard to his personal safety because he "was educated to believe that an officer sets a personal example that's why I decided that what I can do for myself, I'll do." When the recipient of Israel's highest award for bravery was asked in a TV interview whether what he did should be considered heroism, Motti looked embar- rassed and replied that he didn't know.________________________ I New Tourism Campaign] In Jerusalem is Hadassah national Tourism chairman,, Sondheim, with Mayor Teddy Kollek at Unitours r marking organization's appointment as Hadassah'i Tourism agent and the launching of an intensive camp help increase much-needed tourism to Israel. Tht Glitt Klthtr ShoReClU0 *^^^^ HOIII 4 lACMCCUi ^^^^ \ Tht Only Glad Koihar Hotel In Tht Lincoln Road Area CELEBRATE THE SHEVUOT HOLIDAYS and YOUR SUMMER VACATION WITH US SPECIAL PACKAGE RATES AVAILABLE TV in All Rooms Movies Free Parking Entertainment Private Beach Olympic Pool Mashgiach and Synagogue on Prtmists Reserve Now For The HIGH HOLY DAYS and SUCCOTH Services Conducted by Prominent Cantor Phone:538-7811 I THE OCEAN at I to ST.. MIAMI BEACH FLA ! CM Coll.* (305) 5M-5721 "Finally, a Catskill resort that lets you stop eating long enough to have some fun..." $350.nd$365 Per week, per person (dbi.occ.) Every Room with Private Bath, Air-Conditioning and Color TV When you escape the Florida heat this Summer, escape to something more than non-stop overeating. Escape to the Brickman We know that you go on vacation to do more than live from one meal to the next. That's why we're on the Modified American Plan, serving two sumptuous meals daily. Breakfast (until II :30 am). and Dinner (from 6:30 to 8:30 pm) mid-day snacks? Magnificent Pool side Coffee Shop. There will be no announcement at I pm calling you back to the Dining Room which you just left, no need to rush off the golf course or tennis courts Linger at the pool all day if you choose We have one outdoor and indoor (con taining health club and jet whirlpool spa). Play duplicate bridge, take art classes, go folk dancing, jog. or work out on our Universal mini-gym. In short, enjoy a full day of outdoor activities and sunshine, and all the other fabulous things we have to offer, including enter tainment that's second to none. So come to the Brickman. Where the meals are fun.. .not something that gets in the way of fun! For reservations and information phone TOLL FREE 1-800-431-3854 Hotel Brickman South Fallsburg. NY. I2779 Master Card, Visa. Amex Overlooking a great 18 hole golf course. Rric1 *^J don't fit the" Your host for three gene^lions. The Posner Family Friday, April 29,1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 13-A o Mindlin uit of Reagan's Treachery dfn>mPg*4-A Weinberger. He . forth on the syste- ,ican exclusion of le- nt on a cosmetic basis, foaior defense plans for LEast and the Persian .against further Soviet IeXAMPLE. Israel may V suited and technolo- Kveloped in the highest TserveasaU.S. base for J Deployment Force ,Russiansmakeamove Transcaucasian and regions on the Per- llittoral are presently some 22 ^visions on the northern (Iransituated within 900 f the Persian Gulf. By . the bulk of our RDF is Eooo miles away in the (States proper. According Idv bv Martin Indyk, et I the time that it would > Soviet Union to occupy locations in the Gulf armored divisions," [we could do in a counter- lould be to "deploy about ine battalion and one air- jade to the front." ily have we spurned the - their strategic their technology, their fsutus as an ally but contrary we have aiy sought the following hie alternatives to the Is- kthe face of the monolithic ion of the states involved efense intentions for the Defense Minister Bayulken has flatly I that "It is out of the i for Turkey to take part pid Deployment Force published by the U.S." iore. Turksv i the only member of the NOfth fTreaty Organization and dally concerned about ipposition to American j intervention in the area [their own defense. i Arabia: The Dhahran sis theoretically ideal, but the Saudis have consistently rejected American efforts to acquire basing privileges there, especially voicing their opposi- tion to any kind of American presence in the Gulf region. One reason for this is the growing Saudi fear of the destabilization efforts against the monarchy by the rising Islamic fundamen- talists. To acquiesce to an Ameri- can presence may well stimulate their revolutionary activity even further. These considerations apart, any facility in eastern Saudi Arabia would be especially vulnerable to Soviet strikes from South Yemen and from the new Soviet air bases in Afghanistan. Oman: Sultan Qaboos seems to be more willing thanahe Sau- e only- drs to wwperaje- wtth CTfe RDE^, plo in 1970. NorUt7 fWcorfsequeiice is that the UJB. pim,iiv th has already installed some jet fuel storage sites in Oman. But two caveats remain primary: Oman's vulnerability to attack and political stability of the Qaboos sultanate. Storage tanks at Masirah, Seeb and Thumrait are all easy targets for Soviet attack from medium-range bombers based in Afghanistan. Furthermore, the Omani Air Force is inadequate, and Qaboos has said quite openly that he opposes U.S. Air Force squadrons in his country. THE SUDAN apart, this leaves Jordan, which poses the kind of problems mat even Washington recognizes Hus- sein's vulnerability to the pres- sure of the other Arab states could not have been more ap- parent than when he turned President Reagan down last week. And although much has been said in the past about the highly-trained Jordanian air and ground forces, they have not in fact been tested since 1967 except for their brief foray against the Ighting Against the Klan lontinued from Page 5-A prepared a 30-minute Mary, produced by the Guggenheim Produc- i film is now being dis- I to public TV stations, synagogues, schools ges across America. I evidence of this educa- Ifilm's quality and impor- the fact that it has been the coveted Chris [or Social Studies [Ms been honored with a . Eagle award from the on International Non- Events, and has e" nominated for an Award in the short Ptary category. [Wonwatch staff has also i a, 68-page educational I and high school teachers in all parts of the nation have or- dered it for use in their class- rooms. The Klan does not represent the real America. The real Ameri- ca is open, spontaneous, generous, for whose big heart all the vast plains, towering trees and high mountains are but an appropriate setting. Soon after World War 11, when the people of Austria were suffer- ing from starvation and a lack of clothing and shelter, my family founded the Trapp Family Aus- trian Relief. In a little over two years with the grace of God, we managed to send to Austria around three hundred thousand pounds of clothing, food and other goods donated by the American people. These Americans today must help all forces stop the Klan. Ban Ours ForeverBegin JERUSALEM (JTA) Premier Menachem in k resPnded obliquely to reports that President ll assured President Hafez Assad of Syria that 0 would insist that the return of the Golan Heights the agenda of comprehensive peace Finally, there is Egypt, where Mr. Shultz touched down first early this week. But here, sabotage is a major considera- tion. Furthermore, before his assassination, Anwar Sadat set strict limits on strategic co- operation with the U.S. He faced precisely the kind of Islamic fundamentalist challenges that keep Saudi Arabia on the qui vive today. Sadat's successor, Hosni Mubarak, is no less cautious. But while Egypt's growing economic plight makes Mubarak's capacity to be choosy less realistic, at the same time, the Moslem fundamentalist pro- paganda now of the U.S. as having "Imperialist" intentions in Egypt-has strengthened. All of this has caused the Reagan Administration to fall back from its campaign to establish an RDF base in Egypt, except for an already existing fuel storage supply at Ras Banas, the reasoning presumably being that a "friendly" Egypt is more important than a base that might ultimately tear Egypt apart and hurl it back into the fun- demantalist fold. ALL THIS leaves Israel, the ideal base, which the Adminis- tration consistently excludes as a Kssibility, led by the Wein- rger anti-Israel rhetoric. Under no circumstances are the Reagan Administration decisions military. In almost every in- stance, they are political, as the Indyk study concludes. For a man so dead set on American security, or at least so he says, itkLE agenda of comprehensive peace ^*m*****opposed* ti? o.based on United Nations Security Council rdf base in Israel? The Heights "came under Israeli law and Ration a year and a half ago and will continue to gin told a Herut rally in Tel Aviv. "It will apply th ?' he said-Tne Knesset vote to apply Israeli j JJ J"*" territory in December, 1981, was widely facto annexation in Israel and abroad. But Gni 0rKdly told A*8"** ***** Resolution 242 applies 'an Heights no less than to the West Bank and On the Bookshelf Story of Sephardim Who Moved to U.S. La America: The Sephardic Ex- perience in the United States. By Marc D. Angel. Philadel- phia: Jewish Publication Soci- ety, 1982. 220 Pp., $15.95. By MORTON I. TEICHER Jewish Floridian Book Editor This is the captivating story of a small, little known segment of American Jewry. It deals with the Sephardim who moved to America from Turkey. Greece, Syria and the Balkans during the period from 1890 to 1924. About 30,000 of them settled in the United States, primarily in New York. For the most part, they spoke Ladino. or as the author calls it, 'Judeo-Spanish." Both their language and their customs set them apart from the dominant group of East Europe- an Jews who spoke Yiddish. These Sephardim are related to, but different from, the early Sephardic settlers who were among the first Jews in the New World. It was this first group which, in 1654, established Shearith Israel, the Spanish and Portugese Synagogue of New York, which is the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States. THE RELATIONSHIP be- tween these two groups of Se- phardim was sorely strained, echoing the difficulties between the established German Jewish community and the later arriving East European Jews. In both in- stances, there were all the ten- sions which exist between new- comers and old timers, between well-to-do, well-meaning philan- thropists and the objects of their beneficence. The author of the book, Marc D. Angel, is in an excellent posi- tion to tell the story, since he bridged the gap between the new and the old Sephardim. Although his grandparents belonged to the group which immigrated between 1890 and 1924, he is today the rabbi of the Spanish and Portu- gese Synagogue. His background and his position enable him to tell the story with the "love and ex- citement" which he says charac- terized his research. The result in the form of this fascinating book clearly shows the devotion he has for his subject. Angel chooses to present his picture of the "new" Sephardim through emphasizing a bio- graphy of Moise Gadol who came to the United States from Bul- garia in 1910. A few months aftar arriving, Gadol began to publish La America, a Judeo-Spanish newspaper which lasted from common argument in Washing- ton reduces itself crudely to this: What would the Arabs say? As Secretary of State Shulz sits down with the Israelis to apply his muscle, the question is: What will he say to neutralize the negativism? What can he say to a beleaguered people who know precisely where he is coming from? 1910 to 1925. Although he lived on for 16 years after the paper died, in effect, the end of the paper was his end as well. GADOL WAS an ardent advo- cate of the Sephardim. He strug- gled mightily to help in their adaptation to the United States. He fought unsuccessfully to unify the "Sephardic colony," being defeated and thwarted by endless dissensions and rivalries By and large, the Sephardim in the United States have now been eclipsed and for all intents and purposes, their language. Ladino. is pretty much gone. They have intermarried with Ashkenazim and are generally assimilated into the larger American Jewish com- munity. Very recently, efforts have been made to revive interest in the American Sephardim, stimulated perhaps by the growing dominance of the Se- phardim in Israel. The tensions between the Se- phardim and the Ashkenazim in Israel is a profound, intractable problem, almost as ominous in some ways as the Arab-Israel struggle. The resolution of this problem in America holds out some promise for its eventual so- lution in Israel. Angel's book makes an enormous contribution to our understanding of these issues. This is a book to savor and to flavor. It enlarges our under- standing and enhances our knowledge of one significant aspect of American Jewish histo- ry. It is eminently worth reading. Israelis Oppose Concessions TEL AVIV (JTA) A public opinion poll published in Maariv shows a steady increase in the percentage of Israelis who oppose any territorial conces- sions on the West Bank. The poll, conducted by the Modi'in Ezrachi Institute, also showed that exactly half of those questioned were in favor of a temporary freeze on West Bank settlement activities to enable the start of negotiations with Jordan, while 35.5 percent were against such a settlement halt. The number against territorial concessions rose from 42.4 percent in December 1982 to 46.6 percent in Febaury to 50.2 percent in March 1983. Those in favor of giving up "certain parts" dropped in those months from 39.8 percent to 31.9 percent last month. CALL MR. GUNTER 531-6092 10 AM to 6 PM Perfect Parties with all the frills... At no frills prices! Weddings Parties Banquets Affairs to Remember 25 to 350 persons Open bar receptions with elaborate hot and cold hors d'oeuvres Sumptuous dinner Champagne toast and wine service throughout dinner Dessert and beverage Floral centerpiece each table Luncheons & Dinners available to Organizations and Business Groups at Special Prices Sans Souci/ Versailles Ocean, 31st to 35th Streets Miami Beach, Florida Secret Reagan Note Israel Studies Letter to Syria's Assad Continued from Page 1-A RADIO MONTE CARLO, an Arabic-language radio station in Paris, reported that Reagan sent his letter to Assad on Sunday, April 17, on the occasion of Syria's National Day which cele- brates its independence at the end of the French mandate. Ac- cording to this report, Reagan emphasized that the U.S. is de- termined to expand Middle East negotiations based on Resolution 242 which he said, deals with the West Bank, Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights, in order to estab- lish real peace in the region. State Department deputy spokesman Alan Romberg refused to make public the con- tents of Reagan's letter but said the Syrians could do so if they wished. The Wall Street Journal reported that Reagan had "hinted" to Syria that the U.S. may demand that return of the Golan Heights be included in any future peace negotiations. The Knesset voted in Decem- ber, 1981, to apply Israeli law to the Golan Heights, an act viewed in most quarters as defacto an- nexation of the territory captured from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War. The Journal article, by corre- spondent David Ignatius, was based on the Reagan letter, the partial text of which was pub- lished in Arabic over the weekend by the official Syrian news agency, SANA. IGNATIUS, reporting from Beirut, quoted SANA as saying Reagan wrote: "We believe that the best way to serve the future of your coun- try and the prosperity of your people is by reaching a peaceful Invite Assured BONN (JTA) The West German government has assured Israel that it will be invited to participate in negotiations between the European Economic Community and Mediterranean countries over trade problems arising from the enlargement of the Common Market. and just settlement to the prob- lems of the region Therefore, I shall continue to work for ex- panded negotiations on the basis of United Nations Security Council Resolution 242, which calls for the exchange of territory for real peace and applies to the West Bank, Gaza and the Golan Heights." What is most disturbing, ac- cording to Israeli sources, is not only the contents of the message but its timing. The Israelis ap- parently fear that the U.S., having failed to draw King Hus- sein of Jordan into negotiations over the West Bank, may now be considering broadened negotia- tions which would embrace the Golan Heights to try to induce Syria into the peace process, and possibly the Soviet Union, now Syria's main arms supplier. SUCH A strategy would inevi- tably increase tensions between Israel and Washington, the sources pointed out. When Israel applied its laws to the Golan Heights, Foreign Minister Yit- zhak Shamir insisted that nego- tiations still could be held with Syria without preconditions. But Israel has made it clear that it has no intention ever to relin- quish the Golan Heights. Shamir said at a Cabinet meet- ing that the Reagan letter was apparently intended to improve the climate of U.S.-Syrian rela- tions in order to advance prospects for the withdrawal of all foreign forces from Lebanon. The U.S. and Israel both hope that once an agreement is reached between Israel and Leba- non on withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon, the Syrians will cooperate by making a simultaneous withdrawal of their own troops from Lebanon and that the remaining units of the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion would leave with them. BUT ISRAELI policymakers are anxious that American efforts to improve relations with Da- mascus do not lead Washington into pledging concessions from Israel which it cannot deliver. Defense Minister Moshe Arens Introducing nightly dinner specials at the spec Dors ral Hotel Each evening a sumptuous dinner specialty is being offered in the RESTAURANT from 530 pm. to 930 p.m. for only Price includes: a delicious entree, soup, salad, potato or vegetable, rolls & butter dessert and coffeejtea or Sanka. Complimentary ^T~\ Valei Parking worn Hotel On-the-Ocean 48th & CoHins 'ach told the Knesset's Foreign Af- fairs and Security Committee of "worrying military preparations" by Syria. But he conceded that Israel is not certain whether those measures were being taken in preparation for aggression against Israel or for defense against a feared attack on Syria by Israel. Arens warned on a television interview a week ago that the Is- raeli army must be alert and vigilant on the eastern front in Lebanon because of military moves on the Syrian side of the line. He said at the time that "this does not mean there will be war" but the possibility could not be ruled out and Israel must keep on guard. MEANWHILE, tensions were heightened by the presence of two Soviet electronic surveillance ships in positions just off the Is- raeli and Lebanese coasts. They were first reported by HaareU, and Israel Television filmed them from a low-flying plane. Israeli sources said the "spy ships" are capable of monitoring all broadcasts inside Israel and Lebanon. Such vessels off Israeli coastal waters are not new, but Moscow normally employs only one in the eastern Mediterranean. Behind the Shultz Tri\ Reagan's All-Out Effort to Succeed Continued from Page 3-A taken against Jordan. Hussein likes to appear as a friend, but his friendship means that the U.S should protect his country when it is in danger and expect nothing in return. At the same time, the recent events may have had some bene- ficial effects in making the PLO irrelevant to the Mideast peace process. Many believe the only reason that Arafat has been ne- gotiating with Hussein is because he fears that if he doesn't, the knockout blow the PLO received from Israel in Lebanon will finally be recognized in the Arab world. SHULTZ SUGGESTED that very thing when he indicated that the Arab League take away the mandate to represent the Pales- tinians it gave the PLO in Rabat, Morocco in 1974. It was no coin- cidence that the next day Arafat denied that he had broken nego- tiations with Hussein. The Secretary of State zeroed in again on the PLO in his inter- view with the Washington Post. "If they are given leadership of a group and there's an opportunity for something constructive and they don't do it, it ten into question whether ou should continue to havi leadership."!* said "l forms of Palestinian m tron there may be rern seen, but there are al possibilities.'' REAGAN ALSOpoi, the PLO's irrelevance 'Maybe we are makingtM more important than the- he said. "The negotiation; have to hinge on the PLO President added: "There has to be a sola the problem of the No one ever elected tbj among the Palestinians. think that what an eieri that group is doing shoulj us away from trying to fi lution to the problems dredfl of thousands, millk fact, of Palestinians who] radical and who simplyI something of a homeland, j But if the negotiations J hinge on the PLO, let i radical elements in it, tk| hinge on Hussein Perht Shultz gets to Amman hi| give Hussein the samei gave the PLO about its i "Use it, or lose it." TO THE BANK YOU MAY BE A 'SMALL' BUSINESSMAN BUT TO YOUR MOTHER ... AND PENCOA ... YOU'RE A CAPTAIN OF INDUSTRY. AND YOU NEED A TAX DEDUCTIBLE PLAN INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED TO SHELTER THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF DOLLARS AS MUCH AS THE GUY WHO RUNS THE BANK. MAYBE MORE. CALL PENCOA TODAY. WE WORK FOR YOU. call ot wim (in) mm m NM I2tt ST / MIAMI. FL UI2C PEnCOA PENSION CORPORATION OF AMERICA A familiar sight at Kutshers. ? FLORIDA < m BROWARD mm So many Roridiane com* to Kutoher's because we know fum what you want in a vacation and offar ft with the warmth and personal caring that you value. And everything to keep you busy and happy is right on the premises! Only a few steps to the gotf course, tennis, boating and fishing, any sport you tike including shuffleboard on four new beautifully designed courts! Of course there are slso interesting seminars, theme parties, barbecues, countless delights that make the days seem far too short. All explain- ing why Fkxidians favor Kutsher's not just for a change of scenery, but a change of pace! ON THE PREMISES: 1S-Hote, 7,t57 Vard Qotf Cows* 12 Outdoor Tennis Courts 4 Racquetbali Courts indoor 4 Outdoor Pools Indoor ice Rink Miniature Qotf Baahlbafl Top Entertainment A Dancing N^ritly Two Nightclub* Supervised Day Camp Taan Program Much mom CAREFUL ATTENTION GIVEN TO SPECIAL DIETS Week After Week of Great Summer Entertainment JOAN RIVERS*ROBERT GOULET*BEN VEREEN CONNIE FRANCIS* LOLA FALANA* VIC DAMONE JACK JONES DAVID BRENNER Plus Many Other Stars To So Announced Kutsher's Montlcello. New York 12701 i914) 794-6000 CALL TOLL FREE: (800* 431-1273 Mator r.mrltt ("JVOa hznorao ' Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 15-A COME TO ISRAEL NOW AND WELL GIVE TO THE X * It's all yours. A wonderful vacation in ancient, mystical Jerusalem or the sparkling Mediterranean city of Tel Aviv. With hotel, car and round trip airfare included. It's El Al's "Sunsation 83" tour package. And its unbelievable for only $829. You'll board an El Al jumbo Jet at JFK Airport in New York and fly non-stop to Ben Gurion Airport. You may choose to stay in the exciting 20th Century city of Tel Aviv in a luxurious hotel overlooking the sea. Or you may want to go on to Jerusalemwhere first class accommo- dations will make you feel like King Solomon. An Avis Rent A Car will be yours for 5 full days so you can leisurely drive to the places you've only read about in the Bible. You'll love exploringfrom the Jordan \fclley to the breathtaking heights of Masada. One thing more. As a special bonus. El Al will give everyone on our special "Sunsation '83" 6 Day/5 Night tour a 20% discount voucher. You'll be able to use it on your next roundtrip El Al flight from the USA to Israel anytime through May 31st. 1984. So call your Travel Agent or ring El Al and ask for the sun. the moon and the stars. This April and May. you can get them. EL7U1L7M The Airline of Israel Price is per person fused on double occupancy, effective Apnl 5th to May 28th 198) One Avis cat per double 100m gas. mileage and Insurance charges nol included Call El Al loi prices loi deluie accommodations, childien's fares and complete tout details tf 3 Laromme Jerusalem hotaL Jerusalem hilton ? TEL AVIV MlT^n '-..' .- Mm. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. SOFT PACK 100s FILTER. MENTHOL 2 mg. "tar", 0.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method. Competitive tar levels reflect either the Dec 81 FTC Report or FTC method NOW THE LOWEST OF AJJ, BRANDS 8mg u^** We promise you less. CONRPMED BY THE LATEST U.S.QOVTRCPOST ON TARJ yassah Conference to Host ormer Israeli Press Sec'y* rv-. Kitey Liami Region of Hadassah has Jduled The Reel Thing." ite . Annual Region Conference, Itake place May l-*-"*3* \ Four Ambassadors Hotel. w300 women from the Miami are expected to attend. Le Conference will host Dan Ltir former press secretary to foil Prime Minister Menachem Km who will address the men during a Sunday evening man- Session He will speak on rent issues facing Israel. biational vice president of Jassah. Joyce C Kitey of pentown. Penn will serve as tlerence adviser, and Sylvia an is overall chairman of It event. IaIso involved in planning the Tent are Linda Minkes, presi- L of the Miami Region; trley Kaplan, workshop coor- tto'r: and Dorothy Handshu. Wer coordinator Pattlr. a newsman who served president of Israeli Journalists fcociation. was the Prime Buster's press secretary from li.'i through 1981. He was a tmber of the Israeli team that ducted peace negotiations Ith President Carter and pptian President Sadat. He was also at Begin's side Herman Minkes during meetings with President Carter in Washington and Jeru- salem and with President Sadat in Cairo, lsmailia. El Arish. Beersheba. Alexandria. Haifa, and Aswan. As the Prime Minis- ter's counselor for media affairs, he supervised press arrange- ments for Sadat's visit to Jeru- salem in 1977. Pattir also accompanied Begin on Israeli leaders journeys to Rumania. Great Britain, to re- ceive his Nobel Prize in Oslo, and on many trips to the U.S. He is currently engaged in a special re- search project on the Egyptian- Israeli peace process as a fellow of the American Enterprise Insti- tute in Washington. Kitey currently serves both as national chairman of Hadassah's Promotion Department and as a member of the executive commit tee. She was president of Eastern Pennsylvania Region for three years and currently serves on the following national committees: education. HMO. Zionist, leader- ship development, and 70th An- niversary A co-founder of a tri-regional Kalian." which has been held at Camp Tel Yehuda in Barryville. N.Y. each summer since 1978. Kitey has been a life member of Hadassah since 1963. Gary Holtzman to Receive ADL Award on Behalf of Jordan Marsh |Gary Y. Holt/.man has been iled to receive a 1983 Ameri- U Award of the Anti- Wamation League of B'nai frith (in behalf of Jordan Marsh liimpany. according to an an- fincement by Jonathan I. islak. chairman of Florida fgional Board of the League, M Jerome ('. Berlin, chairman Horida Society of Fellows. rat/man is executive vice sident of Jordan Marsh in ami |The award will be presented at 1 ala dinner dance to be Nsored by the League Thurs- f)' at the Four Ambassadors |jlel Holtzman served as general chairman of Israel 35th Anni- versary Celebration, is adminis- trative vice president of Temple Adath Yeshurun. and is a member of the board of directors of Michael-Ann Russell Jewish Community Center. He sits on Dade County Safety Council, the board of advisors of Opportunities Industrialization Center, and has been involved with Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce. Florida Retail Federation. Florida Business Round Table. United Way, and Greater Miami Jewish Federation. Jewish IFloridliajm ml, Florida-Friday, April 29,1983 Section B Eight-Day Phonathon Set to Benefit Federation Campaign , MG";er Miami Jewish Federation will sponsor "Eight Days in U 11? Phonathon to benefit 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal- rael Emergency Fund, May 2-5 and May 9-12, to take place at "* Federation building. anri0KUnjfre are currently being recruited to man the phones i EZL u Plede cards. Six two-hour time slots, running be- ' mSr; e hours of 8:30 a.m. and 9 p.m., have been scheduled for [* of the eight days. The 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund , surpassed the $19 million mark, but if we are to attain our rtL prvwling quality human services to needy Jews we must Charl"? addltional *3 million by June 30," Phonathon Chairman fcoJth stated. "This is a unique opportunity, and we ofthe ,l everyone who shares our concern will give a few hours "ar tune to help us with this important effort." Senator Henry Jackson of Washington was guest speaker at Greater Miami Jewish Federation's annual Cuban Hebrew Dinner Dance on behalf of 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund. The evening was also highlighted by an Israel Inde- pendence celebration. Shown above from left are Henry I'ercul. dinner chairman; Susan Penal: Senator Jackson: Nancy Lipoff: Norman Lipoff. president of Greater Miami Jewish Federation: Keta Sostchin; and Guillermo Sostchin. Cuban Hebrew Com- mittee chairman. U.S. Congressman William Lehman (D., N. Dade) met with representatives of South- eastern Florida Holocaust Memorial Center during the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors in Washington. All are from the North Miami area. Shown from left are Jeff Ehrlich. survivor's son; Barbara Pass; her mother, Hilde Fox. a survivor; her daughter and the congressman's daughter- in-law. Shirley Lehman; Congressman Leh- man: Goldie R. Goldstein, executive vice president of Holocaust Memorial Ctnter; Rositta Ehrlich Kenigsberg; and her father, Henry Ehrlich, a survivor. The congressnian is a member of Holocaust Memorial Cn\ter Board of Governors. &* Every floor in every store is brimming with brisk savings You'll find outstanding values on everything you need for your family and home. Hurry in early for the best selection. Sorry, no mail or phone orders lordant Jmarsn l jnii o* *uir MOW* Use vour Jordan Marsh charge card, American Express. Diners Club We welcome them c.V SHOP JM DAILY. 10 AM TO 9 PM: SUNDAY. 12 NOON TO 5:30 PM Wa*7H 1 he Jewiph.Wnidiwi Friday, April 29,1983, ./..-..- .*.'...'. .'. ."-w.'.v.v: .v.v.vv/.-,....... I League Installed mh^^^^h Shown above from left are Dr. Sol Stein, president of Israel Histadrut Foundation, who presented the awards; Anselm and Alice Vigil, honorees, and Betty Tragaut and Rathe Glasco, presidium of Histadrut Women's Council. Shown above from left are Dr. Stein, Sara Peters, honoree, Glasco, Tragaut, and Irving Gordon, Histadrut's U.S. Southeastern Region executive director. Histadrut Honored Vigils, Peters, Supporters of Israel Anselm and Alice Vigil and Sarah Peters were the recipients of Histadrut's Silver Menorah Award in recognition of their support of the organization and Israel. The awards were presen- ted by Dr. Sol Stein, president of Israel Histadrut Foundation, at the Konovwr Hotel. The Vigils had sponsored a room at Yasski Bet Clinic in Beersheba, Israel in honor of their daughter, Rachel, and Peters underwrote a room at the clinic in memory of her parents. The clinic, named in memory of Dr. Haim Yassky, former director of Hadassah Hospital who was killed in an Arab am- bush, is part of "Kupat Holim" medical program that provides care to much of Israel's population. Betty Tragaut and Ruthe Glasco, presidium of Histadrut Women's Council, recounted the honorees' past accomplishments, and Tragaut announced that a $21,000 pledge for refurbishing a playground for underprivileged children in the Katamon section of Jerusalem, which the Women's Council sponsored several years ago, has been fulfilled. She also stated that during a forthcoming Mission to Israel, the group will find another project. Benjamin Abileah, Israel's consul general in Washington, in a keynote address, spoke of the history of the Arab-Israel conflict and its characteristics today. Irving Gordon, executive director of Histadrut for U.S. Southeastern Region, presented a report and appealed to those present to support Israel through Histadrut's scholarships and its medical program in Israel. A Haggada service followed, featuring Cantor Zvi Adler and a choral group, and later, Cantor Adler presented a concert. Harold Bauman was dinner chairman. He and his wife, Lilly were honored at Histadrut's Spring Scholarship Ball held recently at the Konover Hotel. They sponsored two rooms at Yasski Bet Clinic. Residents of New Horizons celebrated an annual Salute to Israel and pledged continued support for Israel's economic development through the Israel Bonds program. Celebrating Israel's 35th anniversary at the function are Gertrude Lissauer- Goffman and Arthur Schloss, co-chairpersons. Woman President li.Hn' Kern was installed as the first woman president Sunday of Civic League of Miami Beach at the organization's annual instal- lation luncheon. Honoree for the affair was Allen Goldberg, who received a "Civic Leaguer of the Year" award. Also installed were Bob Levy, George Whitney, and Gerald Schwartz, vice presidents; Sara Ross, recording secretary; Sol Roth, treasurer; and Irene Coo- perman, financial secretary. Board of directors members in- stalled were John Berger, Leon- ard Berg, Joan Liberty Balkin, Austin Burke, Steve Cypen, Leon Firtel, Murray Gold, Allen Gold- berg, Barton Goldberg, Leo Hack, Lou Jacobson, Neisan Kasdin, Peter Libasci, Harry Milsen. and Al Nason. Also. David Nevel, Joseph Nevel. Sam Pearlman, Mel Rich- ardson, Ida Roth, So! Roth, Stanley K. Shapiro. Bruce Sin- ger. Milton Sirkin, Ruth Stetzer, Larry Taylor. Leon Teesler, Herbert Zemel, Leonard Zilbert. and David Lewin. WPBT to Host Defense League Founder Rabbi Meir Kahane. founder ut the Jewish Defense league, will be featured guest on Israeli Diary, WPBT-Channel 2"a inter view program. Thursday at 10 p in Host-producer Stanley M. Rosenblatt interviews Kahane, who will discuss his opinions of American Jewish leadership. possible Arab rule in Israel due to their population growth, and why Israel should not give up the West Bank Rosenblatt will interview former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin Thursday. May 12 at 10 pm. Rabin will discuss the aftermath of Israel's opera- tion in Lebanon, settlements on the West Bank, and Arab rights in Israel. Israeli Diary is directed by Kevan Cramer. Sisterhood Event Set A 1983-84 Installation of Of- ficers has been scheduled by Temple Menorah Sisterhood to take place May 11 at 1 p.m. in the Temple Social Hall. Miami Beach. Rabbi Mayer Abramo- witz, spiritual leader of the tem- ple, will be installing officer. Rose Schiff-^an and Edith Simsohn are in charge of ar- rangements. 3+ 1*0* m*s OPEN ALL YEAR RESERVE NOW FOR SUMMER REASONABLE RATES New Indoor/Outdoor pools Free Golf*Private Lake* Elevator Service Fully Supervised Day Camp & Teen Program. N.Y.C. DIRECT WIRE 212-244-3610 All major credit cards honored. Choice Convention Dates Available Joe Wagner, General Manager Miriam Olson celebrated a birthday recently by becom' founder of Miami Jewish Home and Hospital for the Ami Congratulating her at an April 13 Founders Dinner Meeting her husband, Sidney Olson, right, Dr. Martin Faletti resauH director of Stein Gerontological Institute, second from ririil and Arthur Pearlman. vice president and chairman ofthi Home's Development Committee. I p^BH *\. Sam and Lillian Traurig were honored recently by Beth David Congregation at its annual brunch on behalf of Jeuislj Theological Seminary of America. Rabbi David AuerbacK spiritual leader of the congregation, presented the award. Not since the birth of Israel has something so tiny mads it so big. It s Tetley's tiny little tea leaves They've been making it big in Jewish homes lor years Tetley knows that |ust as tiny lamb chops and tiny peas are the most flavorful, the same is true for tea leaves Thats why for rich, refreshing tea. Tetley bags are packed with tiny little tea leaves Because liny is tastier1 TETLEY sast BAGS K Certified Kosher TETLEY. TEA ******* r/kT t> w * p/vn and Otto Stieber, who will dedicate an Observation \fiva at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. [ebrew U. to Honor Stieber Rolling Green to Hold Bonds Event Residents of Rolling Green E in North Miami Beach will hold an annual Night in Israel to express support for the economic development of the Jewish State through the Israel Bonds pro- gram. The event is sponsored by Rolling Green E Israel Bonds Committee and Greater Miami State of Israel Bonds Organiza- tion. Theodore and Rose Rauchman will receive Israel's Scroll of Honor Award recognizing par- ticipation in Jewish communal affairs. They have been active in B'nai B'rith, Israel Bonds, and United Jewish Appeal. Special guest will be Lieutenant Danny Tadmore. a member of Israel's Defense Forces, who is on leave from the Israeli Tank Corps. Chairman of the event is Raymond Herman, and assistant to the chairman is Morris Abarbanel. Ida Gold- smith is treasurer. Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Floridian ,Page3-B Installation Set By Temple Beth Am Outgoing officers and members of the board of Temple Beth Am will be honored for their service to the temple at a biennial Shab- bat Installation Dinner to be held Friday evening. May 13 at 6:15 p.m. New officers and board of directors members will be instal- led for the coming year. Officers for 1983-84 will include Barry Goldstein, president; Evelyn Goodman, executive vice president; Jack Orkin, Ira Pozin, Selma Rappaport. Edie Spiegel, and Michael Weisberg, vice presidents; Michael Brown, financial secretary; Jerold Sch- wartz, treasurer: Iris Franco, corresponding secretary; and Teddi Segal, recording secretary. Board of directors members will be Leslie Freedman, Murray Greenberg, Eleazer Greenstein, Edgar Lewis, Dr. Mark Oren, Nancy Persily, Prof. Robert Sandier. Morton Stubins, Jerome Berlin. Miriam Cohen. Howard Frank. Harold Gaffin, Jack Miller, and Herb Newman. Also, Maurice Noble, Dr. Arvey Rogers, Peggy Bieley. Helene Dubbin. Dr. Harvey Graff. Howard Katzen. Barbara Kaufman. Doreen Marx. Sydell Olchick. and Betty Suchman. y HVVISH rwnotw Correction Jewish National Fund Bikurim Honorees At Ceremonies in Israel Mother's Party set 'Otto Stieber of Hallandale, Dan of State of Florida, _ rican Friends of Hebrew fOniversity, will receive an honor- lay doctorate of philosophy [during convocation ceremonies at IrWirew University's Amphithe- atre on Mount Scopus, Israel. Ifl* event will be one highlight of l"Ciravan Deluxe," a trip to Isra- la planned by American Friends lofHebrew University. Stieber, who helped organize Southeast Region of American Friends, was elected to receive ]the doctorate by the university's ienate. The "Caravan1' tour will begin June 22, bringing friends of the Diversity from around the world & Israel for a look at the univer- y, its relation to the growth of psrael. and its ties to Diaspora immunities. Meetings with Israeli officials i Hebrew University President lUraham Harman. Senior Vice esident Bernard Cherrick, and (Vice President Simcha Dinitz, jformer ambassador, have been [scheduled for the touring group. fine convocation conference [will confer honorary degrees on Itoiericans who have made con- tributions to Hebrew University lind Israel, and will also host an lihimni reunion. The tour will [host participants in Jerusalem H Tel Aviv Also scheduled to take place Idurinn the conference is the dedi- ption of the Evelyn and Otto IStieber Observation Plaza. The lewemorues will also honor new 1'ounders and donors of rooms |ud facilities to the university. Florida House of Hebrew Uni- Hsty, dedicated two years ago PLANNING ON MOVING u TO ISRAEL? HOW WONDERFUL Call me, Esther, 635-6554 and let me quote youf [ates. Also local moving & l0n9 distance moving ywhere in the U.S. o overseas. A.B. VAN LINES INC. (of Mi Beth Din Other- 01 Florida . RABBI DR. TIBORH. STERN Senior Orthodox Rabbi _ ALL LEGAL RABBINIC MATTERS se-vicmg Local, and foreign countries. J532 Washington Avenue .an Seacn. FtorKla 33139 " 534.1004 or 677-0004 ' and underwritten by Florida Friends, is a major part of a new humanities complex just com- pleted at the university's original home on Mount Scopus, on a hill overlooking the old city of Jeru- salem. The completed complex will also be open to the visitors to view. The Jewish National Fund regrets the omission of the following leaders from last week's article: An annual Mother's Day cele- bration to be held by Social Clubs of Lincoln Road has been sched- uled to take place at the Shel- borne Hotel Sunday, May 8. Dinner, entertainment, and dancing to the Lea Wagman Rand will be featured. Sam Cohen Sydney Ehrenreich Mr. & Mrs. Marcus Fuchs Mr. & Mrs. Morris Grauer Mr. & Mrs. Sam Pascoe Oscar Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. George Wind you never had it so good! IL-------------- If you think you know from bagels n cream cheese, its time you tried something even better: Soft PHILAOElPHIA BRAND " Cream Cheese on a Lenders* Bagel. Lender's makes bagels at their best. AH of their 11 delicious frozen varieties have absolutely no preservatives and they're certified Kosher. And nothing could be easier than toasting a pre-sliced ^%n,ataA tr0 Lender's Bagel into a crusty, soft-centered treat. J Now to top such a bagel wouldn't it be silly not to use PhHry? It s the cream cheese that's spreadin' ready right from the refrigerator. And it's certified Kosher, too. with a creamy richness that's undupUcated. So for your next breakfast, brunch or snack, pamper yourself with Lender's Bagels and Soft PHfLLY Cream Cheese. (Then you'll know from bagels n cream cheese?) A^^j^ c, ..,-il>.V: .. .,., 'I'hP-.louncb Wl*wiAl**m* j G^nUJ-- Page 4-B The Jewish Floridian Friday, April 29. 1983 Temple Sinai of North Dade celebrated Sinai Academy's second year and the completion of the first Sinai Academy Ad Journal at a dinner dance held recently at the temple. U.S. Congressman William Lehman con- gratulated the Academy on its ahievements, and Rabbi Ralph Kingsley, spiritual leader. spoke. Honorees were the founding families of the school Shown from left are Rabbi Julian Cook, Academy director; Barbara S. Ramsay, synagogue administrator; Rabbi Kingsley; Susan Rachleff, ways and means vice president; and Barbara Fass, Ad Journal editor. 12,000 Attended Dual Israel 35 Celebrations Sunday at Area JCC's More than 12,000 Miami resi- dents celebrated Israel's birthday during a dual "Israel 35" celebra- tion held Sunday at Michael-Ann Russell Jewish Community Cen- ter in North Miami B ach and South Dade Jewish ( ,mmunity Center. Coordinated by Jewish Com- munity Centers of South Florida in cooperation with Greater Miami Jewish Federation, a fes- tival and a walkathon at each location were teatured. "We are just one of thousands of communities celebrating this joyous occasion," said Metro- Dade Commissioner Ruth Shack, president of Jewish Community Centers and grand marshal of Is- rael 35. "We are pleased to be sponsoring Israel 35. which has drawn the participation of thousands of Dade County resi- dents." Both walkathons raised funds on behalf of Greater Miami Jew- ish Federation's 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund Campaign. "Israel's 35th anniversary is an occasion that is being celebrated in Jewish com- munities throughout the world." Federation President Norman H. Lipoff stated. "Our local celebra- tion has demonstrated our joy and solidarity with the people of Israel." Among the personalities who were present at the events were Israeli Consul General Joel Arnon. Metro-Dade Commis- sioner Barry Schreiber. State Senator Gwen Margolis. and Deputy Israeli Consul Oded Ben Hur. In recognition of the dual pro- gram and Israel's anniversary. Metro-Dade Mayor Stephen P. Clark declared April 24 as "Is- rael 35-Yom Ha'Atzmaut Cele- bration in Dade County." Barry University Graduate Program in Jewish Studies Summer 1983 Session I May 10-June 17 Registration: Wed., May 4 6:00-9:00 P.M. Mon.&Wed. 6:00-9:30 P.M. "Introduction to the Bible Ancient Israel" Rabbi David Lehrfield Tues. &Th. 6:00-9:30 P.M. Modern Jewish Nationalism" Dr. Yehuda Shamir June 20-July 29 Registration: Wed., June 15 1:00-4:00 P.M. 6:00-9:00 P.M. 6:00-9:30 P.M. "Modern Hebrew Literature" Rabbi Rami Shapiro 6:00-9:30 P.M. "Selected Portions of the Bible" Dr. A. Atkins____________ Summer School students registered in Jewish Studies are entitled to a 30% discount. ADM ISSIONS OFFICE: 11300 N.E. 2nd Ave. 758-3392 Miami Shores. FL 33161 NAME______.----------------------------------------------------------- ADDRESS___ CITY________ El Al Announces 'Sunsation '83' Vacation Package to Israel NEW YORK If there was ever a time to visit Israel, it's now, during "Sunsation '83." El Al Israel Airlines' "Sunsation '83" is this season's vacation sensation, a six-day, five-night hotel package including round trip New York-Tel Aviv-New York airfare and free car rental for only $829 first class or $929 deluxe. It's available to anyone traveling to Israel between April 5 and May 28. With "Sunsation '83," passengers can have it all-accom- modations at 4 or 5-star hotels in either Tel Aviv or Jerusalem and a free car from Avis for five days (not including mileage, in- surance, and gas). Extra nights and upgraded car rentals are available for nominal additional fees. "Sunsation '83" also includes a discount voucher on an Egged bus tour plus an admission voucher to a special attraction. And that's not all. Passengers traveling round-trip to Israel between March 6 and May 28 will receive a discount voucher for 20 percent off on their next round-trip flight to Israel. Vouchers are valid until May 31, 1984. For complete details contact El Al or your travel agent. Charles H. Glueck has been elected senior vice president of Jefferson Bancorp, Inc., according to an announcement made by Arthur H. Courshon, chairman of the board of the publicly-held Miami Beach- headquartered holding company and of Jefferson Banks. Lag B'Omer Picnic Set An Annual Lag B'Omer Picnic has been scheduled by Samuel Scheck Hillel Community Day School, North Miami Beach, to take place Sunday at 10 a.m. at T.Y. Park, Hollywood, Pavilion 12. The school will celebrate with a Sports Festival for students, faculty, and families. Jewish Junior High to Honor Goldei Alfred Golden, immediate past president of Central Agency for Jewish Education, will be hon- ored at an upcoming First An- nual Scholarship Dinner of Jewish Junior High School, Sam Lasko, headmaster, and Barry Ross, president, announced. The event is scheduled to take place Thursday, May 12 at 6 p.m. at Beth David Congregation. The school's board of directors, along with Sandi Samole are chairing the dinner. A clinical psychologist, Golden has served as a member of Dade County Personnel Advisory Board and Miami Beach Public Relations and Advisory Boards. He was chairman of Hillel Foun- dations of Florida, chairman of that organization's Community Board of Dade County, and a na- tional Hillel commissioner. Golden currently serves on the board of directors of Greater Forum Agendas Set Norman Sevin. president of South Florida B'nai [Frith Council, will be principal speak, at a weekly Forum of B'nai Brill Lodge 1591 Friday. April 29 ai 12:30 at Lincoln Road Social Hall A speaker from Mount Sinai Medical Center has been scheduled to address the Lodge Friday. May 6 at 12:30 p.m. in the Social Hall. Nat Agranove will be luncheon host. Alfred Golden Miami Jewish Federation and thel Federations of South Browardl and Greater Fort I.auderdale. Hel sits on the executive committeel of Jewish Kducational Services oil North America and i* a national! vice chairman ol Committed onl College Youth and Facultv | Programs ot Council of Jewish Federations and \\ elfare Funds He is a national commissionery of Anti-Defamation League anr* serves as executive vice president/ of Riverside Memorial Chapels of| Florida. Jewish Junior High School is|| funded in part by Greater Miami| Jewish Federation Highly qualified Hebrew-Jewish teacher needed for private day school. Send resume to Hillel School, 2801 Bayshore Blvd., Tampa, FL 33629 KXHUHSKSS HWHWHWUHHI Session II Mon.&Wed. Tues. &Th. MECHAYEH FISH 6th STREET AND MERIDIAN AVENUE (ACROSS FROM CARNIVAL FRUIT) MIAMI BEACH 673-1664 FREE DELIVERIES SHOMER SHABBOS JWNED4 MANAGED FEATURING ONE OF THE WIDEST SELECTIONS OF FRESH FISH IN TOWN. PHONE ORDERS UKDtK ORTHODOX MIIIKICH COUNCIL SUPERVISION .ZIP .PHONE_ - t HOURS Monday to Thursday 8 00AM to 6.30 P.M Friday C A M lo 4 30 P M Sunday 8.30 A M to 4 30 P M. :*' *w v \vy" ,.-.<-' Over 200 members of Southeastern Florida Region of Women's American ORT attended an annual Tribute Luncheon held re- cently at the Doral Hotel Tribute members, including those who financially support an ORT student for one year, were hon- ored for their contributions. Pictured, top row, from left, are Ceel Segall and Sonnie Waters, chairpersons of the day; Pearl Schwartz, and Mimi Weiner. Bottom row, from left are Bea Schultz, Ann Speroni, Jean Rose, and Dale Flam, Region presi- dent. Na'amat Sets Awards Day Lunch An Annual Installation, Mem- bership Salute, and Awards Day Luncheon of South Florida Coun- cil of Pioneer Women-Na'amat has been scheduled for Tuesday, May 10 at noon at the Carillon Hotel. Miami Reach. Felice P. Schwartz, vice presi- dent of the Council, was named chairman of the event by' Presi- dent Harriet Green. Schwartz is a member of the lx>ard of Miami Beach Jewish Community Cen- ter, past president of a Miami chapter of Hadassah, and a board member ol South Dade Women's Division ol Greater Miami Jew- ish Federation. Shi' is the recipient of national awards from State of Israel Bonds Organization and Ameri- can Keii Mugen David for Israel, and she participated in the 30th Zionist Congress in Jerusalem in December Cantor Moshe Huryn of Cuban Hebrew Congregation will head- line a musical tribute to Pioneer Women and their health, cul- STUDIO Felice P. Schwartz turul. educational, and welfare facilities throughout Israel. Schwartz noted that the event will be held on the eve of Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Day, marking the 16th anniversary of the reunification of Israel's capital. Continental Cuisine FRtDJOSSI welcomes you bach lo hl renowned STUDIO RESTAURANT 'ore unique dmtng experience Meicn your lablato your mood m on* ol 5 individual rooms ThaTant Wine Cellar. Studio. Place Pigane Swiss Chalet Fine Entertainment t the Piano Alto violin playing for your pleasure OPENS AT 5 P.M. 'Private luncheons arranged) ENJOY COCKTAILS IN "THE GROTTO" MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONOREO "2340 SW 32 AVE. 445-5371 ^ eloaad Mondays Ronald M. Friedman, outgo- ing president of South Dade Council of B'nai B'rith, was honored recently by the Coun- cil for his service as president as well as his work in helping produce Dade County Out- standing Citizen's Luncheon and B'nai B'rith Youth Orga- nization's Junior Maccabiah Games. tOYAL HUNGARIANifflRESTAUnANT Crime Watch Names 1983-84 Executives Citizen's Crime Watch of Dade County has announced those elected to its volunteer executive committee for 1983-84. Directing the activities of the citizen-based crime fighting organization will be Janet Gemmill, as president. Ellen Johnson has been named first vice president; Mike Stur- gille, second vice president; Will Johnson, third vice president; Heather Molans, fourth vice president; Ruth Young, secre- tary; W. V. Smithson, treasurer; Beth Martinez, member-at-large; and Betty Ann Good is past president. The upcoming term will mark Gemmfll's fourth as president of the county-wide program that operates at the grass-roots level. Crime Watchers act as eyes and ears of the police department. I'riday, April 29, 1983 The Jewish Floridian Page 5-B 4 Dr. Irving Lehrman, chairman of Jewish National Fund Foundation, will be guest speaker at an upcoming JNF Bikurim Banquet Celebration to be held Sunday, May 15 at noon at the Konover Hotel. The celebration will honor JNF honorees, chairmen, and leaders who have worked on behalf of the organization throughout the year, accord- ing to Abraham Grunhut, JNF Greater Miami president. Report on Confab Set A report of a recent Hadassah Region Conference will be presented at Haim Yassky Chap- ter's next meeting Wednesday, May 4 at Byron Hall, Miami Beach. A social hour starts at noon, with meeting starting at 1 p.m. Wedding Mrs. Marti Sue Geller DENKERGELLER Marti Sue Denker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Denker of Miami, was married to Jeffrey Geller of Miami, son cf Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Geller of St. Johns, Mich.. Sunday at Sheraton River House in Miami. Rabbi Edwin Farber officiated. The bride graduated from Miami Coral Park High School and University of Florida and is employed by Metro-Dade Police Department as a police officer. The groom attended schools in Michigan and Miami Dade Community College. He is a homicide detective with Metro-Dade Police Department. AmeriFirst to Offer Blood Pressure Tests i ' Free blood pressure readings will be offered at AmeriFirst Federal Savings and Loan Asso- ciation's Bay Harbor Office during regular office hours, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., beginning May 2. Customers and visitors coming into the office, located on Kane Concourse, may check their blood pressure at the Blood Pressure Teller. "We're happy to provide this important medical service free to our customers and visitors," commented Yvonne Betzold, vice president and manager of the branch. Installation Planned Miami Beach Vice Mayor Malcolm Fromberg will install officers and members of the board of Forte Towers Chapter of Hadassah at a meeting to be held Monday, May 9. Entertainment will follow, Geraldine Ramme and Pauline Lessem, presidium, announced. Supervision Opening 3:30 p.m. Mother's Day Friday Dinner prepaid or PAIDby5PMFrl. WEISS FAMILY 2001 Collins Ave. 538-5401 Summer is Special at Stevensville. SPECIAL DISCOUNTED RATES FOR MINIMUM 4-WEEK STAY DURING JULY AND AUGUST! Join the Dinnerstein and Friehling Families at one of the Catskill's finest resorts this summer and get everything we're famous for PLUS special discounts on our rates. You'll enjoy luxurious accommodations, our own magnificent 18-hole championship golf course, indoor and outdoor tennis, 3 sumptuous meals daily and an exciting line-up of big-name performers all summer long. So, come to Stevensville. Spend the summeror a monthat very special savings. Olympic-size Outdoor Pool Indoor Pool Men's & Women's Health Clubs (Saunas, Massage) Sailing, Boating, Fishing on 5-Mile Lake Roller Skating Professional Social Staff CALL TOLL FREE 800-431-3858 ASK FOR KATHY ^^ Or Call Your Travel Agent Stevensville Stevensville Country Club, Swan Lake. NY. 17783 Hotel Phone (914) 792-8000 Your Hosts. The Dinnerstein t Friehling Families Thsik in, ..t-wisn -Floruiiar Fr:uay. Apn! 2$ :9-* ' Gordon Named 1st Woman Speaker Pro Tempore Stale Representative Elaine Gordon (D.. Dist. 102) was the first woman to be named speaker pro tempore of the Florida House of Representatives when House democrats chose her at their April 25 caucus. Rep. James Harold Thompson (D., Dist. 8) was selected to serve as speaker. Both will take office, contingent upon reelection, at a November 1984 Organizational Session. Gordon was nominated by Rules Chairman Rep. Sam Bell of Daytona Beach, and Rep. Barry Kutun of Dade County, former speaker pro tempore, gave a sec- onding speech. As speaker pro tempore, Gor- don will hold the second highest leadership position in the 120- member House. "The needs of my district and Dade County will be heard at the highest levels of legislative influ- ence," Gordon stated. She will be empowered to serve Sisterhood Lunch Set National Banking Corp. Names Officer Representative Elaine Gordon as an exofficio voting member of all House committees. Gordon is serving her sixth consecutive term in the State Legislature. She represents North Miami, Miami Shores. Biscayne Park, El Portal and adjacent areas of North Dade. ChaseFederal Regional Officers' Duties Expand Chase Federal Savings and Loan Association has announced that William F. Marquardt has been promoted to regional vice Gildersleeve Desmond president, to supervise the asso- ciation's Stuart. Deerfield Beach. West Palm Beach, and Sunrise locations. Current regional vice presi- dents. Charles T. Desmond, Allen B. Gildersleeve, and Robert L. Brown have had their responsi- bilities expanded to include over- all supervision of savings and mortgage activities of Chase Federal's other branches. Desmond will be responsible for Lincoln Road, North Bay Vil- lage, Dadeland, South Miami, North Beach, Briar Bay, and Crossings locations; Gilder- sleeve, Aventura, Surfside. Mia- mi Shores, Plantation, Planta- tion-West, and Concord bran- ches; and Brown, Margate, Cooper City, 41st Street, Gerald Ooldfarb was reelected president of Temple Zion at an annual congregational meeting held recently at the temple. Gold far b, a long-time Temple Zion member, has served on the board of direc- tors and executive board, has held vice president positions, and has worked on the board of directors of Men's Club and Mr. and Mrs. Club. He will serve a second term as presi dgrrKyyfc'.MUWWM^W Hallandale, and Coconut Creek locations. Chase Federal is headquar- tered in Miami and serves Dade. Broward. Palm Beach, and Mar- tin counites. ,?:?>*? Mollie Kafin will be honored as "Woman of Merit" at a Donor Luncheon Sunday to be held by Sisterhood of Temple Ner Tamid. Rabbi Eugene Labovitz, spiritual leader of the temple, will present the award at the event, scheduled to take place at the Carillon Hotel, Royal Palm Room. Entertainment wi! provided by Cantor Edward Klein and Company, Mrs. Miklos Klausner and Mrs. Sidney Zachary. donor chairmen, ann. unced. Mrs. Carlton Blake is president of the sisterhood. Gala Installation Set A Gala Installation of Officers has been scheduled by Bay Har- bor Chapter of Hadassah, to take place Monday, May 9 at noon at First Nationwide Bank, Kane Concourse. Bay Harbor Vice Mayor Mar- tin Shapiro will officiate, Ruth Klein, publicity chairman, an- nounced. Wise Chapter to Meet Installation of officers of Stephen S. Wise Chapter of Hadassah will take place at the Ocean Pavilion Hotel Monday. May 2 at 11:30 a.m. Chairman of the day is Betty Schaffer, and installing officer Beatrice Auer- bach. Entertainment will be provided by Mary Uchitel, pianist. National Banking Corporation of Florida has announced the ap- pointment of Norman S. Edelcup to the position of vice chairman and chief operating officer of the Miami-based bank holding com- pany. Its principal subsidiary is National Bank of Florida. Joseph H. Kanter, chairman, stated that the appointment sig- nalled the start of an expansion program for National Banking Corporation into a range of banking, financial, and business services. Edelcup was formerly execu- tive vice president and chief fi- nancial officer of Avatar Hold- ings Inc.. community developers in Florida and Arizona, where he was involved in a Chapter X reor- ganization of the former GAC Corporation. He joined GAC in 1976 and in 1980, emerged with Avatar from the reorganization proceedings. Later, he coordi- nated the transition of the com- ADL Official to Talk Jack Gould of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith will speak on how the League deals with current problems in the U.S., Europe, and the Near East at a meeting of B'nai B'rith Sholem Lodge 1024. The event will take place Sunday at 10:30 a.m. at Israelite Center Temple. A question and answer period will follow the talk. ? ? Norman S. Edelcup pany's operations to the new management. Edelcup has previously served as senior vice president and vice chairman of the board of Keller Industries. Inc. here. He is a graduate of Northwestern Uni- versity and holds a business ad- ministrative degree, and current ly serves as a trustee of Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce. Literal attractive professional king special Intimate friend ship with giant-sized lovely lady, extreme lull-figure or super- heavy charms. Personality, photo a must. Box PAJ do Jewish Florldlan, P.O. Box 012973, Miami, Fla. 33101. k-a-likes can often Mxi know there are a lot of in- surance plans and other HMO's who have Medicare-type plans and supplements, but we consider this a compliment. Because just like International Medical Centers, there is only one original. I'm the real Glenn Ford, he's just my bok-a- like You know you should be very careful when you hear about those other Medicare plans. They may cover fewer benefits than International Medical Centers and charge you for them. Just take a look at this chart comparison and you'll see. cc IMfVUtfSON Of BENEFITS SERVICE LOOK-A-UKES TMf. ORIGINAL INTIRNATIONAI MEDICAL CENTERS omcEvrsrrs ft] 00per vim No cha'ge MENTAL HEALTH ft} OOtoSS OOpervmt No charge EYEGLASSES SSOO.fttOOO SilS 00 surcharges No charge EYEGLASSES One pair per year Two pair per year eosrneiY SMMtoftM.M pereaerttn REE SMKHTHMAPV ft 1 00 to ft S 00 surcharges No charge rfettownoN DRUGS ft 1 00 per prescription to (64 00 deductible No ctwg for Pert A and beneficiariet EMfMGCNCV CAM Look-e-iiket charge pec-c*nleg and co-payments Covered in full HEARING APPLIANCES Surcharge for office visits ft 100.00co-payment for Heating appliances No charge' "Ona r*ry thue years he* w moottn coot** mine With the United States Govern- ment's approval, International Medical Centers introduced the Gold Plus Plan with virtually free Medicare benefits to over 125.000 South Hondians. So it you're looking to take better care of yourself and want to save up to thousands of dollars each year on your medical expenses, call international Medical Centers today rternern- ber, I'm the real Glenn Ford representing the original Medi- care plan with virtually free benefits from International Medical Centers. Check the facts, because took-a-likes can often fool you. Call now for your free brochure: Toll Free 1-800-228-1616 SCecvnpMiSfJ mma>oni Mwkcai Cemrn. afl International SB Medical Centers |w HMO A Federslly Ouai.fiea Health Maintenance OnjantZJtor KOf those under 65. group P* ** Asa ou' empMY*^ inOeoeCoontf *nnd---------------------- Community Corner Stephen M. Backman, son of Herbert and Fan net te Backman of North Miami Beach, has been promoted in the U.S. Air Force to the rank of major. Thomas P. E. Miller, son of Don M. Miller of Miami and June R. Nierenberg of Miami Beach, has been specially identified for early promotion to senior airman in the U.S. Air Force. Historical Museum of Southern Florida will host a "Bagels- Onthe Ba\ canoe trip on Biscayne Bay May 7 starting at 7:30 a.m. 1983 Big Brothers-Big Sisters Appreciation Week in Dade County will be held May 16 through 22. Mayors will recognize Big Brothers and Big Sisters in their municipalities, and the week will culminate with a brunch banquet at Omni Interna- tional Hotel May 22 at 12:30 p.m. A Donor Luncheon has been scheduled by Renanah Chapter of Hadassah to take place May 9 at the Carillon Hotel. Miami Beach Symphony's 1982-83 season will close May 1 with the presentation of melodies from Vienna operettas and Zarzuelas from Spain. The orchestra, Alfredo Munar, conductor, will offer symphonic overtures from Verdi's operas at the event, scheduled to take place at Miami Beach Theatre of the Perform- ing Arts. An "Estamos Ahi" event featuring University of Miami Con- cert Jazz Band at Rogers on the Green has been scheduled for 6 p.m. to midnight for Sunday. Also performing will be UM Bebop Ensemble, the Company, UM Fusion Ensemble, and recording artist, Paquito D'Rivera. The Sisterhood of Ohev Shalom Congregation will hold a Spring Luncheon and Book Review May 25 at the synagogue. Men's Club of Sephardic Jewish Center will honor Sisterhood members at a brunch in their honor Sunday, May 15. The Sister- hood has planned a meeting for May 11 at 7:30 p.m. to feature a member of the fire department who will speak on CPR. Stall Sergeant Richard A. Barbash, son of Seymour and Louise J Barbasb of North Miami Beach, has reenlisted in the > \n Force at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base. S.C.. after more than five years military service. Uub Bridge Workshop and Miami Department of Recreation an co-sponsoring a series of "play-lectures'' by Lester KiN-Alba). to be held in the Recreation Building at Legion Park wi Wednesdays at 1:30 p.m. Kiluurd l.esinson was reelected chairman and Sid Gerca vice duiirnian .t; i recent meeting of Miami Beach Convention Unler Ad\ isoi \ Hoard. Lowe Levinson Art Gallery of Temple Beth Sholom is pnseaiuuj still lite and infrared photographs of artist. Jill KifirM through May 10. I niled W u) Area Agency on Aging will sponsor a 7th Annual Sailor Showcase, to highlight the contributions that older Jdulis have made to the South Florida community, Wednesday, May II at Coconut Grove Exhibition Center from 11 a.m. to 2 I'm Congressman Claude Pepper. Metro Mayor Steve Clark, "id Miami Mayor Maurice Ferre will attend. Ariel Sharon Meets With Bonds Leaders In Coral Gables Leonard I. Berkowitz, asso- ciate professor of hospitality management at Florida International University, has been selected the nation's 19H3 "Outstanding Educator in Food Science" by National Association of Meat Pur- veyors. Presentation of the award was made by NAMP President William H. Jones at the association 's 26th Annual Management Conference. G. Ariel Sharon, former de- " minister of Israel, will be a LW, rPest of State of l8el "Vnas Organization this weekend 3? ,e comes to Miami to meet [ leadership of the Israel 'campaign. Gerson. Israel Bonds general campaign chairman, and will ap- pear at a parlor meeting in a private home in Coral Gables. Sharon will discuss the latest political situation in Israel and will bring the group up-to-date on ^^^nt8 Sharon will be flying directly the latest peace initiative. **""* ,m'"ad. according to Gary R ___________________________________________ 31 YEARS ON 163rd STREET r NATIONAL COMPUTER CAMPS 0 Cn. '"e' 'oeaf/onr wct,cut eM1MOur. Oregon COMPUTER CAMP On. o, mm^mtH sessions Ul-August .Co-^JAOM 9-18 Novice to Advanced "MtftiMi./ or Commufrr Jjn-onn Computer Cemps; inc 0 Boi MSC '"ge. CT 08477 '"Phone (203) 795-9867 I FAMILY DENTISTRY Full Upper Denture...$50 & Up DENTURES...............................jjgjj 0 PARTIALS................................F 3M FROM FROM $20 $15 CLEANING................ EXTRACT.ONSLL.NG.s.c.R()wN BR|DGES Call For Appt. 1661 NE 163rd St. 940-6000 North Miami Beach Da &L RHODES, H. CHAMBERS, T.L CHEEPING FLA. LICENSED Minimum Fee May Vary Because of Complexity In Any Given Case With This Coupon Only Friday, April 29. 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 7-B Chabad Programs to be Highlighted At Open House Lag B'Omer Party Mr. and Mrs. Steven Feig. Miami Jewish community lead- ers, will host a cocktail party on behalf of Florida Friends of Lub- avitch Sunday at their home on Bay Harbor Island. Long-time supporters of Chabad Lubavitch outreach pro- grams, the Feigs will open their home for a Lag B*Omer celebra- tion in an effort to educate the community about services Chabad offers. "Chabad Lubavitch brings Jewish awareness to our es- tranged youth and reaches out to numerous children who would be lost to heritage and traditions if not for these noble rescue ef- forts." said Feig. "We feel the work of Chabaa is absolutely es- sential to Jewish survival, and we Rooney to Star in 'Sugar Babies' at TOPA Mickey Rooney and Ann Miller will appear in "Sugar Babies." a Broadway burlesque musical, in South Florida Wednesday, May 18 through Saturday, June 4. The event will close Zev Huffman's 1983 winter subscrip- tion theatrical season and will run at Miami Beach Theatre of the Performing Arts. A special low-priced preview is scheduled for May 18. to be fol- lowed by a regular matinee performance May 19 at 2 p.m. The official gala premiere wdl take place May 19 at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Feig in the State of Florida are fortun- ate to have this organization in our midst." "Our son has been a camper at the Chabad Camp Gan Israel, and we feel he has benefit ted im- measurably from the experi- ence," Mrs. Feig stated. "We are grateful to Chabad and want to express our appreciation." Rabbi Abraham Kori, regional director of the organization, stated, "This event will serve as the kick-off for a banquet spon- sored by Friends of Lubavitch to be held at the Eden Roc Hotel on May 22, our main fundraising event." Honorees at the May 22 event will be the Schottenstein- Wuensch families. Miami Beach Mayor Norman Ciment is serving as dinner chairman. Murray Gaby, Miami painter, lithographer, sculptor, and graphic designer, is exhibiting his work at Plaza Versailles at Omni International. The dis- play opened April 22 at a re- ception sponsored by Marlin and Steve Arkt, Bella and Lester Goldstein, Marcie and Burt Belenke, and Ellie and Larry Gordon. A repeat of the gallery-in-the-mall exhibit will run in May. Beth Am to Host Klanwatch Director Randall Williams of Alabama, project director of Klanwatch, an organization formed to monitor and observe activities of the Ku Klux Klan, will speak at Temple Beth Am Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. A film by Charles Guggenheim which was recently nominated for an Academy Award for best short documentary will also be shown. Sisterhood Program Chairman Joan Ravich is in charge of IJeerSt""' . 'sis rSgSSLf MOVING & STORAGE 2035 Grant St., Hollywood NICE JEWISH BOS WITH TRIO Clean Fireproof Building Private Containers Available Fire and Burglar Alarms Piano Moving Confidential Pick-up 7 Days and Evenings STORAGE 1st MONTH FREE SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT 923-3300 You'll Low Our Long Distance Raft TEMPORARY NURSING SERVICES 0 j Home Nursing Licensed Personnel Aides Companions Home Makers Miami 891-5322 Ft. Laud. 491-6003 Page 8-B The Jewish FloridJan > Friday, April 29, 1983 Graham Appointed Levy to U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council Harry A. (Hap) Levy, presi- dent of Greater Miami Jewish Federation's Zachor Institute for Holocaust Studies, has been appointed by Governor Bob Graham to serve on United States Holocaust Memorial Council. Governors of all states are ap- pointing members to the council, which was created by the federal government. Holocaust author and scholar, Elie Wiesel recom- mended Levy for the council, the body having the dual aim of es- tablishing a Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington and an annual national Days of Remem- brance Holocaust observance. "I'm very honored to have been appointed to a council that has been charged with the impor- tant responsibility of perpetuat- ing the memory of the six million Jews who perished in the Holo- casut," Levy said. "Only by edu- cating about the past can we help protect the future." FEDERAL DISCOUNT PHARMACY 45 N.E. 1st Avenue Miami, Florida Harry A. (Hap) Levy Zachor Institute recently sponsored South Florida's first Holocaust Education Week, a community-wide series of lec- tures, exhibits, films, cultural performances, and other events devoted to the Holocaust. First through sixth grade students at North Beach Elementary School Gifted Center came up with ideas and designs for telephones of the future when John Thomas, manager of public relations for Southern Bell. Miami Beach, visited the school recently. Shown from left viewing a student model of a future phone are Joshua Unger, Thomas, and Benjamin Shapiro. IN lTRoouaNG SEfl Antiseotic for Sensitive Skin . $1 39 4oz. I 10 oz. . Aa $Q 39 __Ifttte jj|___ condition Shampoo 40c OFF-LABEL Condition II 16 ounce Available in Normal Oily Extra Body Dry and Permed Color-Treated Formulas p.- P-5J Only $1. 79 L Instant After Shampoo Treatment 40* OFF-LABEL 16 ounce Available in Normal. Extra Body and Extra Protection Formulas Only *1 n speed stick SUPER DRY ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT hMINNIrt $1_79 2 25 oz -Fresh Scent Uracentod Spea HAWK d.MENNEN AFTER SHAVE 3.2 OZ. $2_99 FOR THE MAM WHO REACHES HIGHERl NEW! pHJSOPUFF NONMEDCAJED CLEANSING SPONGE Alvin Goldberg, executive vice president of Mount Sinai Medical Center, greets WPLG TV-Channel 10 meteorologist, Don Noe at an Annual Meeting of the hospital auxiliary. Noe discussed preparedness for hurricanes, and Goldberg provided a hospital update. AMW Sets 1st Combined Chapter Donor Lunch American Mizrachi Women chapters will hold a Donor Luncheon Sunday in the Ameri- can Ballroom of the Konover Ho- tel. Guest speaker will be Ainstee Ferdie, past national commander of Jewish War Veterans and past president of Temple Zamora. Ferdie recently returned from a JWV Conference held in Israel, and he will speak on present Mid die East problems. Mother in Israel chairwomen will also be honored during the day, and entertainment will be provided by Tony Simone, tenor who sings in six languages. The event will mark the first annual combined Chapter Donor Luncheon to be held by Florida Council of America Mizrachi Women. JERGENS ALOE& LANOLIN , Conditioning |c"i&,"*1 Lotion 18 oz. $2. 99 tmrm W >fW? GREAT HOLD AND SOFT NATURAL FEEL pmiem kmr spray ONLY I. 99 9oz Regular Hold I Scent Unscent) Extra Hold (Scent Unscent) NEO- SYNEPHRINE Nose Drops 1oz. $1 09 99 JERGENS Deodorant Soap 4.75 oz. GENTLETOUCH Bath Soap With Baby Oil 4 Bars 4.75 oz. $19 JERGENS Extra Dry Skin Lotion 15oz. MILLIONAIRE DvMNNEN After Shave 3oz. 4. 49 Mnfcuipufa? fit* flHuffiw! Neo-Synephrine Nasal Spray 1% 1. BRONKAID BREATHE EASB4 WTTH BROMtMO cmiiMiigi 15cc Refill S4-19 FOR SALE NORTH MIAMI BAY VIEW TOWERS SAN SOUCI ESTATES A Deluxe 2 Br. 2 be. Apt. Overlooking Water-Near Synagogue-Shopping Bus Transportation-10th Floor Hi Rise-Covered Parking. Furnished or Unfurnished Owner 893-9882 FOR SALE Lovely large S.E. corner 1 bedroom condo Pool central heat & Air, elevator. Much More. Low 40'a. atS-4674 (After 4:30) ADOPTION Happily married professional couple with loving home, wants to adopt white infant. All expenses paid. Call collect 212 77*2060 Dluettes GLOVES DuPont Neoprene Knit Cotton Lined Insulated Comfort Durable Washable Small Medium Large 3. 89 JOHNSON & JOHNSON Cotton Balls +* /COTTON U BALLS 130's JOHNSON & JOHNSON 26 First Aid Kit Regular O- Compact Kit ** Synopsis of the Weekly Torah Portion "Seven days ye shall eat unleavened bread" (Lev. 23.6). . a memorial. blast of horns ..." (23.23). "... the fruit of goodly trees" (23.40). EMOR j. \idh "And the Lord said unto Moses: Speak unto the priests the sons of Aaron, and say unto them: There shall none defile himself for the dead among his people: except for his kin that is near unto him, for his mother, and for his father, and for his son. and for his daughter, and for his brother: and for his sister a virgin They shall not take a woman that is a harlot. or profaned; neither shall they take a woman put away from her husband (Leviticus 21.1-7). The high priest "shall take a wife in her virginity. A widow, or one divorced, or a profaned woman, or a harlot, these shall he not take" /Leviticus 21.13-14). No priest with a blemish might approach the altar to offer a sacrifice the impure priest might not even approach the holy food nor eat it. No animal with a blemish might be an offering. The seasons of the holy convocations are then described: "The seventh day is a sabbath of solemn rest ... ye shall do no manner of work . In the first month, on the fourteenth day ... at dusk, is the Lord's passover ... on the fifteenth day of the same month is the feast of unleavened bread seven days ye shall eat unleavened bread" (Leviticus 23.3-6). The festival of the First Fruits (Shavuot) occurs on the fiftieth day after the first day of Passover. "In the seventh month, in the first day of the month, shall be a solemn rest unto you, a memorial proclaimed with the blast of horns, a holy convocation. Ye shall do no manner of servile work Howbeit on the tenth day of this seventh month is the day of atonement and ye shall afflict your souls . And ye shall do no manner of work in that same day; for it is a day of atonement, to make atonement for you before the Lord your God ... On the fifteenth day of this seventh month is the feast of tabernacles for seven days unto the Lord" (Leviticus 2324-84). "And ye shall take you on the first day the fruit of goodly trees, branches of palm-trees, and boughs of thick trees, and willows of the brook, and ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God ... it is a statute for ever in your generations And Moses declared unto the children of Israel the appointed seasons of the Lord" (Leviticus 23.40-41, 44). (The recounting ol the Weekly Portion o the Law is extracted and based upon "The Graphic History of the Jewish Heritage." edited by P. Wollman- Tsamir. tis. published by Shengold. The volume is available at 75 Maiden Lane. New York, N.Y. 10038 Joseph Schlang is president ot the society dis- tributing the volume.) Bar/Bat ) Mitzvah Friday, April 29, 1983 The Jewish Floridian Page 9-B Rosenthal Chait SCOTT ROSENTHAL Scott Eugene Rosenthal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Rosen- thai, will be called to the Torah as Bar Mitzvah Saturday at 9 a.m. at Beth David Congregation. The celebrant is a student in the Beth David Religious School, and he attends Carver Junior High School in the seventh grade. Mr. and Mrs. Rosenthal will host the Kiddush following services in honor of the occasion and a reception Saturday at the Grove Isle Club. ELIZABETH CHAIT Elizabeth Ann Chait, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chait of Miami Beach, will be called to the Torah as a Bat Mitzvah Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at Temple Beth Sholom. Rabbi Leon Kronish will officiate. During the ceremony. Sima Khagrevd Rabaev, a refusenik from the Soviet Union, will also become Bat Mitzvah. Commenting on the "twin- ning" ceremony. Elizabeth stated, "It is my privilege and honor to be called to the Torah on I the occasion of my Bat Mitzvah not only for myself but for my 'twin' as well. Sima has been denied the freedom to live her life in the Jewish tradition." Elizabeth is a student at Ran- som-Everglades Middle School in I the seventh grade. She attended Lehrman Day School through sixth grade. Mr. and Mrs. Chait will host the Kiddush following services. Members of New Leadership Division, State of Israel Bonds Organization, gathered to meet Tali Zelinger, Israel's first woman newspaper military correspondent, at a meeting held at the home of Gary and Sherri PoUakoff. Zelinger discussed Is- rael's military maneuvers in Lebanon, as well as the general po- litical situation in the Jewish State. From left, Mr. and Mrs. PoUakoff Zelinger, and Barbara and Jeffrey Rosenberg, co- chairpersons for the North Dade-South Broward group. I ""0MPuf^R"^t"A"MP Professionally designed and conducted course available 'or chddren ol aH ages enrolled at our eight-week | camps | CAMP WOHELO for girls I i\MP COMET lor boys o */ vWuy C.mp,n. By A Mi I. -J v-""ty \.mmfni\g ty miJl Ih' '"' *""f' Hof , "avnesboro. PA ami Fmmily ""niesooro. PA Contact: Owner-Director, Morgan I. Levy. C.C.O. rSj| 1531 t.W. 2nd Court. Miami. Fie. 33144. 2*1-1500 I * A Well Bmlantrd Summer Program . SPORTS e SATIRE e ARTS e SCIE.SCE e COMPUTERS Large Florida Area Enrollment 70 Miles From Washington Max Mansfield a resident of Miami Beach for the past 19 years, was selected Interna- tional Medical Centers-HMO March Employee of the Month. The 77-year-old is enrollment coordinator at IMC Center 6, Miami Beach, where he has worked for one year. Mansfield also serves on District XI Advisory Com- mittee of State of Florida Health and Rehabilitative Services. National Hebrew Israeli Gift Center Inc. ReligiousBar Mitzvah sets Crystal'Gifts 1507 Washington Avenue (3051532-2210 RETIREMENT RESIDENCE ALL SEASONS GUEST HOUSE, INC. 260 Northeast 26th Terrace ,_, (Omni Area) ueiuxe Lodging Dependable Linen Service *3 Pamily-Style Meals Convenient to Bus Line Courteous Maid Service Practical Living $550. MONTHLY RATE pr space reservation or add'l info., please contact: ar"s Joseph, Phone 856-7274. American O Israeli LARGE SELECTION OF TALAISIM IN WOOL or RAYON SEDURIM SKULL (JAPS Everything lor all year around Specializing in Bar Mitzvah Sets We Have A Sofer On Premises 1357 WASHINGTON AVE MIAMI BEACH Phone:531-7722 Synagogue Listing Candlelighting time: 7:31 TEMPLE ADATH YESHURUN 1025 NE Miami Gardens Drive Norih Miami Beach 947 1435 Rabbi Simchq Freedman Cantor Ian Alpem Conservative Frt., Sleterhood Installation Satvlca Sat., Bar Mitzvah. Adam Chernov. Mlncha. Bar Mitzvah. Naator Lubovlcz. Mlnyona. Sun., 9 am and 6 30 pm Mon thru Frt., 7:30 am and 6:30 pm Sat.,e 30 am and 8 30 pm AVENTURA JEWISH CENTER 297' Aventura Blvd. Miami, Fl. 93f 666 Conservative David B. Saltzman, Rabbi I awrence Tuchinskv. Cantor Frt., 8:15 pm. Rabbi Saltzman: "Tha Roia ol Law In a Fro* Society Hebrew tiudanta to participate. Sat., 845 am and 5 15 pm. Dally _______eervlcee at 9:30 am and S:1S pm. TEMPLE BETr" AM Dr. Herbert 5950 N. Kendall Dr. Baumgard S. Miami 667 6667 Senior Rabbi Morton Hoffman, Associate Rabbi Robert Goldstein, Associate Rabbi Frt., 8 15 pm, "Tha Jewlth Contribution to tho Broadway Stag*." Rabbi Baumgard, narrator. Choir, undor direction of Selmt Baumgard. to perform. Sat., B'nal Mltnah: 8 15 em, Tor Hyemt, 11:15 am, Janice Klein end Debit Mahler. BETH DAVID CONGREGATION Corel Way 2625 S w 3rd Avenue South Dede 7500 SW I20lh Street RABBI DAVID H. AUERBACH CANTOR WILLIAM W. LIPSON South Dede Chapel Frt., pm, Oneg Shebbet Dlecuealon- Ask the Rebbl." Set., 10 em, Junior Congregation Service. Corel Way Senctuary Set., 9 em, Shebbet Senrlcea conducted by Rabbi Uavid H. Auerbech end Cantor Llpaon. Bar Mitzvah ol Scott Roeenthal end Mlcheel Robblne. BETH KODtSH Modern Traditional 1101 S.W. 12 Ave. Rabbi Max Shapiro 858 6334 Cantor Leon Segal Rose Berlin Executive Secretary Saturday morning. Bat Mitzvah of Jacqueline Lee limb Set 8 45 am and 5 pm Sun 8 am and 5 pi.> Caily Minyan Serv 7 45 am and 5 pm TEMPLE DETH M03HE 2225 NE 121 St. N.Miami. Fl 33181 891-5508 Conservative Only Temple in North Miami Rab"M Louis M. Lederman Cantor Moshe Friedler Rabbi Emeritus Joseph A Gorfinkel Daily services 8:15 a.m. 5 p.m. Frt.. Shabbat evening Service!. Congreeimen William Lehman to tpeak:.,___ 'Current Evente In the Middle Eeat." /'Af&V. Sal 9 am, Shabbal Service. \(\ W J TEMPLE BETH RAPHAEL 1545 Jeflerson Ave., M.B. Fl. 33139 Tel. 538-4112 Rabbi Dr. Jehuda Melber Cantor Benjamin Adlnr Wee*day tervtcet 9 am and 8:30 pm. Saturday nvomtng eenrlca* 9:30 am, Queet CentorNleelm Benyemlnl ol Itreel to perform TEMPLE BETH SHOLOaJ Chase Ave. ft 41st St. 538 7231 Dr. Leon "ronish. Rabbi Liberal C.-itor David Conviser Frt, 9 pm. Servloee. Sat. 10:45 em, Sabbath Service* BETH TORAH CONSERVATIVE CONGREGATION 947 7528 1051 N. Miami Beach Blvd. Dr. Max A. Lipschitz, Rabbi Zvee Aroni, Cantor Harvey L. Brown, Exec. Director Fri.. 5:15 end 9 pm . Sat .9:30 am end 5 15 pm BETH YOSESEPH CHAIM CONGREGATION Orthodox 843 Meridian Ave. Dow Rozencwaig, Rabbi RABBINICAL ASSOCIATION OF GREATER MIAMI 4200 Biscayne Boulevard Miami, Florida 33137 Phone 5784000 Rabbi Solomon Schitf Executive Vice President Religious Inlorma'ion Concerning Greater Miami Houses of Worship Phone 575-4000 Rabbimca^sscciaiionOMice TEMPLE EMANUEL 1701 Washington Avenue Miami Beach Dr. Irving Lehrman, Rabbi Zvi Adler, Cantor Frldey Evening Service 9 pm. Sabbeth Morning Service 9e.m. Or Lehrmen will preech et 10:30 HEBREW ACADEMY BETH-EL CONGREGATION 24C0 Pinetree Drive. Miami Be_h 532-6421 Cantor, Rabbi Solomon Schiff TEMPLE ISRAEL Of Greater Miami Miami's Pioneer Ralorm Congregation 137 N.E. 19th St.. Miami. 573-5900 9990 N. Kendall Dr.. 595-5055 Senior Rabbi: Haskell M. Bernat Asst. Rabbi: Jeffrey K. Salkin Cantor: Jacob G. Bornstein Frt.. 9 pm. Downtown. Rabbi Httkeli Bernel "Tha Code Ol America ' Kendall. Rebbl Jeffrey Salkin "We end Our Big Mouth TEMPLE JUDEA 5500 Granada Blvd. Reform Coral Gables 667-5657 Michael B. Eisenstat. Rabbi Frt., 9:15 pm. Sltterhood Sebbath. Shabbat Emof. Leviticui 21:124:33. Heltereh Ezeklel 44:19-31. Sat., 11:19 am. Sabbath Service. Bet Mltzveh ol Jeml Pa tek oil TEMPLE KING SOLOMON 910 Lincoln Rd. Tel. 534-9776 DR. DAVID RAAB. Rabbi EDWAPP BARON, Cantor Fri. 7:30 pm Set .9 30 em TEMPLE MENORAH 620 75th SI Miami Beach 33141 Rabbi Mayer Abramowitz Cantor Murray Yavneh Set 9 em TEMPLE NERTAMID 7902 Carlyle Ave.. Miami Beach 33141 RaLu, Eugene Labovitz Cantor Edward Klein Delly Mlnyen et 9 em. Sabbath Service* at 8 45 em. Sundey Mlnyen et 9:30 em. SHAARAYTEFILLAH of North Miami Beach 971 Northeast 172nd St North Miami Beach 651-1562 Yaakov Sprung, Rabbi SHAARE TEFILLAH OF KENDALL 15410 SW 75 Circle Lane Miami, Fl. Modern Othodox Rabbi Warren Kasztl 382-3343 Rabbi Speak* on Torah portion Seturday Fri.. 5 15 pm, Sabbelh Service* Sat.. 9:30 em end 5:30 pm Mlnche Oelly Morning Mlnyana M m Th. 9:45 am T.W.F. 7 em TEMPLE SINAI 18801 NE 22 Ave. North Dade's Reform Congregation Ralph P. Kangcty, Rabbi 932-9010 Julian I. Cook, Associate Rabbi Irving Shulkes, Cantor Barbara S. Ramsay, Administrator Frt., 9.-15pm. Worship Service Sermon: "Maw Stretegtee to Save Soviet Jewry: A Report From th* Washington Conference Adult Choir will ting and Cantor Shulka* will chant liturgy Sat, 10:10 am. B'nal Mitzvah, Adam Welder and Mlcheel WeMer. Torah portion Emor. Levrtlcue 21:1 24:23. Heftareh-EzekM 44:14-91. TEMPLE ZION Conservative 8000 Miller Dr. 271-2311 Dr. Norman N. Shapiro, Rabbi Minyan Servicea Mon 9 Thura 7 am Sabbath Eve. Servicet 9:15 pm r Sebbath Servicea 9 am (( *>, Quoit! Are Welcome w), Frt., 9:15 om. Sabbath Eva Servicea Dr. Norman Shapiro "That Which We Che-, n Moat." Set.. 9:30 am. Bar Mitzvah Corey |BJN*jf Ore reglalratlon Fall Rellgloue Schoc Kindergarten through Confirmation SOUTHEAST REGION UNITED SYNAGOGUE OF AMERICA 1110NE 193rd St. N Miami Beech Fl 33 947 6094 Harold Withna.etecutlvedirr. Franklin 0 Kreutzer. regionel pretident UNION OF AMERICAN HEBREW CONGREGATIONS Doral Executive Office Park, 3785 NW 82 Ave.. Suite 210. Miami. Fl. 33166. 592-4792. Rabbi Lewis C. Littman. regional director "F& Page 10-B The Jewish Floridian / Friday, April 29. 1983 cPnde ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD APRIL 28-MAY 4. 1983 WE REDEEM FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS FLORIDA OR SHIPPED PREMIUM FRESH 3 BREASTS 8 3 LEG QTRS W BACKS. 3 GIBLET PACKAGES Lots of Chicken (SAVE2W) USOA CHOICE KING'S PRIDE CORNED BEEF BRISKET GRADE 'A'FROZEN TURKEY DRUMSTICKS USDA CHOICE FRESH AMERICAN SHOULDER BLADE LAMB CHOPS FLORIDA OR SHIPPED PREMIUM FRESH CHICKEN WINGS COMPARE MILK FED USDA CHOICE SHOULDER BLADE .. . 'NlSE Veal Chops BONELESS 4 SKINLES CHICKEN SJ99 Cutlet COMPARE USDA Cube Steak - CHOICE LB (SAVE IOC) KING S PRIDE USDA CHOICE Corned Beef Round $QG9 COMPARE ?? COMPARE LUlWJl &" FAMILY PAK SECTION FROZEN SAVE WHEN YOU BUY SEAFOOD. 3 LBS. OR MORE Fryer Combo......... 1.19 %t en* o ro. oz pjg ^ ' .,, __ Scrod Almondkie 1.79 L^ Fryer Tughs......... .99 sfALVj ,0_. Pll0 ---- Fryer Breast.......... I 1.19 Sole AlmondlnO 1.89 LlJ Chock Combo :;_, \" Flounder Fillet -1.39 |jo] Shoulder Combo 2.19 COMPARE CtlK 'Ml il PRCI S COMPARE CHIC" b*Vl *MESl PRICES COMPARE CMfcCH SAVE HlSt PfllC'S compare gggg CMC **vt Mjj PRCES oanIRv PRIUc REG OR UNSAL'ED 16 0. BO BO" | _| .59 QJ Sattine Crackers mo^ s wtm pulp r~m CMK>EN iOZ CAN Vienna Sausage Corned Beef .'> Vanilla Wafers HAG M 30 GAI lON Trash Bags . .39lj3 K1.39H . .99 @ 20 CT 1.59 JO 8AGM I 1 GALLON 'An I----------1 Kitchen Bags ..1.69 Li] PLAN'tR S I I Cheese Balls .125 .99 LiJ Bowl Cleaner 1.19 I NEW BREED Dog Food...... 2.19 PAN'R. PHlOE CUT t*. 0.' AM Green Beans 3 1.00 L_LJ PANIR- "O10E |----------1 Dip-NChips....:. .89 Qo] PAN'R* PRIDE T-Ol CUPS PAN'R* PWDt HOZ BAL, ----------1 PAN'R- PHlOE 7 Ol C Potato Chips.......89 M Cold Cups 100 CT PANTH PRIDE All40 O* BTL Vegetable OH . PAMRt PRlOE PHINTfeO OW *STEL Paper Napkins PAN'R* PRICE PANTR* PHIO* 46 02 CAN 1.69 L,0J Tomato Juice PANTR* PRJOE OvERMGM'-fOR BAB* On 1.49 13 .79 03 .69 US. CI 6.99 ' BONUS PACK KlTTy WHITE .^1.49 UJ Cat Utter 12* LB AA BAG iO PANTH* Prtim & .79 PAN'R* Pot* IIOMT OM OARK ISO? CANS Kidney ISO? CANS I---------1 3 1.00 U*\ GIAC*R Spring Water PAN'R* Pt*OE GREEN OlSH IOAL CA JUG .* .99 WE RESERVE THE RKSM LIMIT QUANTITIES NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAl ERRORS 4G 06 20 Friday, April 29,1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 11-B SWEET AND TENDER FLORIDA YeUow7/( (SAVE 804) Corn EARS HALF GALLON ASSORTED FLAVORS ICECREAM CRISP AND CRUNCHY GREEN PEPPERS cPtide ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD APRIL 28-MAY 4, 1983 WE REDEEM FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS GARDEN FRESH TENDER U-PICK GREEN BEANS COMPARE Cheeztt Jiffy Mix 'OCM BO .. . PRICES .77 QH 4!o-.?i1.00 I Pretzels.....IfcS. .89 CHI WINES Riunite Wine Avid Wine .. 'sum a e%r% BTL tt. W 1.99 50 COMPARE Orange Juice V. 1.19 Li?. Sour Cream .89 \jo\ Velveeta Slices 1.89 I -nil ,..- ph a a Cream Cheese 1.09 Ricotta Cheese 1.49 > PHO.S Yellow Onions .23 [oH 'E' 'i-OWNlG 6 ~Z HAWAIIAN Pineapples Potatoes.....5 20 .99 Lij US' I----------1 .79 QoJ HA,, r--------1 Delicious Apples 1.69 \J] TAM'N A GARDEN FRESH FLAtfORFli RFRSKNGCAUl -- |----------1 Lemons 8 : .79 |_12j t st A*. ( l) N 7EXAA6 20 , (-HABUS 0 vis ROSE N. Mountain 5.69 30 Sharp Cheddar Coffee Cream 2 3.19 Ui .99 CD Zucchini Squash .49 N .....' SIZl |U PICK White Seedless Grapefruit 50 1.89 Q] Florida Carrots US .49 Q] SWEE* E*TtNG NORTHWEST Lo 1 10 S2 U PICK |----------1 Anjou Pears .59 L_LJ tMFbMi CU' ASvlMTfO COLORS |----------\ Floral Bouquet 1.69 i 6 MAViiVi BASKET rfE' A^'HAC'IVE f---------1 Boston Fern.....2.99 L5J (SAVE 34CI dsjiiMl ^V^W GSW PIZZAS UVERWURST COMPARE IJI^JJ'I JAN'R- BHlOC SHOESTRING Potatoes......*& .69 CoffeeRteh ...,6c?s .39 C53 Apple Juice...,2c2s .79 H ""'B. PRIDE cut OR FRENCH OZ BOXES Green Beans 2,o .89 "" S CHOCOLATE Eclairs..... 20 HVGRAOt BALI PARR MEAI OR BEFf Frankfurters OSCAR MAYER MEAI OR BEEF Bologna..... AMERICAS KOSHER KNOCKWURST OR I I Frankfurters.. "M 1.99 LJo] CLAUSSES S WHOLE HALVES OH SlrCFS ."pSSI.69 so .'8J1.19 20 GENERICS WNtRC Bleach 1 GAL M JUG iWV GENERIC JUMBO GtVRiC IA. CLAUSSES S WHOLE HALVES OH 3UCFS I >rv| Pickles........jar 1.59 LHJ MISSION JUMBO I ,n| Flour TortHIa k' .89 LiJ HEBREW NATIONAl MICX.I I SALAMI OR I---------1 Bologna.....'? 2.59 LioJ HEALTH & BEAUTY! RVl OS REG OILY BODY CONOUIONEn OR Flex Shampoo 1. 1 5 OZ SPRAY CAS BOD OEOOORAST COMPARE |lf^:.'^ AUNT HANNAH 4 PC IN PKG I _| Jelly Rolls.....SS .79LiJ PANTRY PRIOF BROWN & SERVE CLOVERlEAF PARTYFlAKEOR Twin Rolls ..2 5SS AOtt-RS JEWISH Rye Bread ....'?< A t C ITALIAN SPOLHIES OR Onion Rolls .75 LiaJ VELVET i i.l wi BOX OF 13 Glazed Donuts .99LiJ .69 03 1.29 Ho] April in flaris JHl f RlNt HCHttSI I 'Y*1S MkdAi'l "Ml Ol tlAR' CHECK SAVE THESE PRICES SOT AVAILABLE IS ALL STORES JACK < JILl ^^| "1 Q Bologna .1 vlb PAUL Y BRAND CHEESE i---------- Sweet Munchee 1.69 QoJ Bakery & Hot Foods NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES CRISPY 8 OZ LOAF I 1 French Bread 2 .79 LiPJ WITH OR W SEE OS JEWISH STYLE Kitchen Bags *ENEPC Bath Tissue .. OtNERK. CHUSK LKJHT Tuna ui water ... .79 4RCHI ** PKG I I '" AO CAN lOV t 3 \JC TTTV' w' Owb www ~ -- ___ Impulse 2.27 HAIR SPRAY 7 OZ REG HOLD UNSCNTO SON AEPO REG Hi" 0 UNSCNTO Silkience..........2.17 Vt CRI *M I OZ CA cuimAi nn r.rv.oju 1.47 1.67 iO 0< lABf L- SHAVE CRI AM I OZ CAN HtG I i MON LlUt MESTHOl OP COCONUT Foamy MAiR REMOVER 4 02 BTL Nair........ IP) CKJR SERVICE DELI 'NOT Al All SI "I SOFT RIPE NED Delice De France 1.29 OLD WORLO HAHTBFUI Smoked Rambol 1.19 CRfc*MV WITH KIRSCH Qourmandise___'a .99 SMOOTH Fropain Des Mages 1.19 PRiDE Of FRANv-t WITH n.R W SEEDS JEWISH STYLE I 1 Rye Bread.....u .89 L^ OVENFHtSH l----------1 Apple Pie......e.1.89 L_LJ Cremeux OTR 4 . . LB 1*4 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS Page 12-B The Jewish Floridian Friday, April 29. 1983 Dr. Papper, Rabbi Lehrfield to Speak on Medicine at Temple Israel Dr. Emanuel Papper. former' vice president for medical affairs and dean at University of Miami School of Medicine, and Rabbi Dr. David Lehrfield. spiritual leader of Kneseth Israel Congre- gation, will present a dialogue on Medicine. Caveat Emptor? Thel Doctor Patient Relationship" May 5 at Temple Israel of Greater Miami. The speakers will present a secular and religious view of the subject during the event, which is part of an ongoing Institute on Ethics co-sponsored by Temple Israel and the Greater Miami Chapter of the American Jewish Committee. Dr. Papper has received eight medical degrees from six coun- tries, and he currently serves as professor of anesthesiology and pharmacology at University of Miami. He has authored many scientific papers and books and is listed in Who's Who in America, in the East and World Jewry, Who's Who in Health Care, and International Who's Who in Ed- ucation. Rabbi Lehrfield received his Bachelor of Science from North-' western University, was ordained from Hebrew Theological ColleRe in Chicago, and has received' advanced degrees in Hebrew lit- erature from Israel Torah Re- search Institute as well as an ad- vanced degree in rabbinic law. He is on the board of Hebrew Academy and Mesivta of Greater Miami and is former president of Mizrachi of Greater Miami and Orthodox Rabbinical Council. In 1972. Rabbi Lehrfield received the State of Israel's Shalom Award. Co-chairpersons of Institute on Ethics are David B. Fleeman and Dr. Papper. Serving as advisory staff are Rabbi Haskell M. Ber- nat. spiritual leader of Temple Is- rael, and William A. Gralnick. Southeast Regional director of American Jewish Committee. MDCC's Schlazer To Receive AJC's 1983 SAGE Award Dr. Albert Schlazer. director of athletics at Miami-Dad? Com- munity College. New World Cen- ter, is slated to receive Greater Miami Chapter of the American Jewish Committee's Sondra Auerbach Grossman Education Award at a Commentary forum to take place Wednesday at noon at the Holiday Inn at Brickell Point. Otawa Room. Miami City Manager Howard Gary will present a keynote ad- dress during the event, his topic being Tntergroup Relations in Dade County The SAGE Award is named after Grossman in recognition of her "tireless volunteer efforts dedicated to the promotion of in- tergroup understanding in Dade County.'" The annual award of $1,000 recognizes educators who demonstrate "excellence in the promotion of human relations and understanding.' according to Shepard King, president of the AJ Commit tee s Miami Chapter Serving on the SAGE Com- mittee are Brenda Shapiro. Raymond Grossman. Judge Robert Newman. Larry Forman. Bernita King, and Annette Foosaner Commentary Commit- tee includes Joseph Fleming. Commissioner Ruth Shack. Marshall Harris, and Shepard King Vice presidents of the Chapter are Aaron Foosaner. Gary Brooks. Neil Alter. Ruth Shack, and Richard Wolfson. Diabetes Research Institute past president and current board member, Doug Gallagher presents past presidents of Suburban League, an organization of women who work to support diabetes research. Awards of Appreciation for supporting the goals of the Institute for the past five years, raising in excess of $100,000 Recipients are, from left. Feme Toccin of Kendall, Lois Abrams of Kendall, and Suzi Goldberg of Kendall. Family League to Present Speakers Ira Giller. president-elect of Miami Beach Chamber of Com merce. Arthur Unger. president of Miami Beach Jaycees. and Laine Unger. president of Miami Beach Jaycee Women, will be featured speakers at a meeting of Temple Emanu-El Family League Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. They will speak on Community Concerns of the Synagogue. " Miami Beach Vice Mayor Mal- colm Fromberg and his wife. Ar- lene. immediate past co-presi- dents of Family League, will host he meeting at their Miami Beach home. Sandy and Gary Dix are current co-presidents. Sorman Sholk. a Miami Jew- ish community leader, has been appointed to the Board ->' Overseers of Jewish The- ical Seminary of America. Ronny Shalom, head of Israel's Helen Knit- ting Mills, a maker of cloth for Israeli and European clothing manufacturers, visited Miami recently to detail Israel's position in international business, as well as to give an update on the latest political situation in the Middle East. Hosted by State of Israel Bonds Organization, a welcoming reception was held at the home of Israel Consul : General Joel Arnon. Shalom visited Miami as part of Israel Bonds' Operation Enter- prise. From left are Phil Warren. Operation Enterprise chairman; Consul General Arnon. Dr. Irving Lehrman, Chairman of Israel Bonds board of governors; Shalom. Dr. Leon Kronish Israel Bonds national campaign chairman; and Gary R Gerson, Israel Bonds* Greater Miami general campaign chairman. A synagogue at Manischewitz Company matzo bakery. Jersey City. N.J., was rededi- cated recently after being fully refurbished and invested with new ark curtain and altar cloths. Those participating in the ceremony included Robert M. Starr, company presi- dent: Bernard Manischewitz, chairman of the board: Rabbi Chaim Karlinsky of Board of Rabbis; William B. Manischewitz, direc- tor; Robert A. Mann, vice president; Rabbi Maurice L. Schwartz of Board of Rabbis: Mr. and Mrs. Willie Zimmerman, and Rose Berlin. Mrs. Zimmerman, a company em- ployee, rededicated the altar cltohs in memory of her parents and brothers who died during the Holocaust, and the ark cur- tain was rededicated by the Manischewitz family in memory of Natalie Manischewitt. wife of the company's founder. Employees use the synagogue for daily prayer and study. AmeriFirst Federal Savings and Loan held a 10th anniversary party in honor of Public Health Trust, governing body for Jackson Memorial Hospital, Tuesday at the bank's main office downtown. Tom Bomar. presi- dent of AmeriFirst. welcomed trust mem- bers The event launched a health campaign that will bring a new Health Care-A-Van from University of Miami-Jack son Memorial Medical Center to area AmeriFirst offices. Free blood pressure checks, literature o health needs, and private consulatwns u'ili be available when the van is stationed Fn day. April 29 at the bank office at i Street and Biscavne Blvd; Tuesday attni S'orth Shore office; Wednesday at office: and Friday. May 6. at the henaa* Lakes office. Friday, April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 13-B Steins Donated $1 Million Towards New Home Facility In the not too distant future, ' DouRlas Gardens will be graced by the Louis and Bess Stein Commons Building, pursuant to a unanimous decision by the board of directors of Miami Jewish Home and Hospital for the Aged," according to Fred D. Hirt, Home executive director. The announcement was made at a recent board meeting where 25 members of the Stein family Beth Or, New Reconstructionist Temple Opens in South Miami Temple Beth Or, a synagogue community merging Jewish tradition with modernist trends in physics, psychology, and con- sciousness studies, has estab- lished itself in South Miami. Temple Beth Or is affiliated with the Reconstructionist move- ment founded by Rabbi Mor- dechai Kaplan in the 1920's, and according to Rabbi Rami Shapiro, spiritual leader, upholds the following principals: "The centrality of the Jewish people as a source of unity, con- tinuity, and creative growth in Judaism; the need to incorporate democratically generated change in Jewish law and to experiment with ritual and liturgy as part of the process of growth in Jewish life; and the value of collective celebration, study, and explora- tion in shaping one's individual Jewish identity." Other principles of the move- ment are "the recognition of Is- rael as a symbolic and physical focus for Jews that is interdepen- dent with vital Jewish communi- ties in the Diaspora; explanation of Torah not as rigid law, but as .he epic of the continual Jewish search lor the meaning of God. creative Jewish life, and human fulfillment; and an understand- ing of God as anchored in Jewish historical experience, yet chang- ing as values, experience, tradi- tions, science. and human spirituality change and deepen," the rabbi added. Rabbi Shapiro, a graduate of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and a PhD candidate in Jewish mysticism and transpersonal psychology, is a writer and professor at Univer- sity of Miami and Barry Univer- sity. His most recent book, Alef- Bet: A Primer for a Davvenen Universe, is a collection of poems linking contemporary physics and psychology with ancient Jewish mysticism. Temple Beth Or holds Shabbat services every Friday evening at 8 p.m. at South Dade Jewish Community Center and Sunday school programs weekly. Bar and Bat Mitzvah training, adult education, retreats, and seminars are also a part of Temple Beth Or's program. Louis and Bess Stein gathered to celebrate Louis and Bess Stein's 55th wedding anni- versary. "Designation of the Stein Commons Building recognizes years of dedicated service and generous support to the Miami Jewish Home," Hirt added, "elevated recently with a one million dollar contribution for construction of the new facility." Planned as part of a large capi- tal expansion program for Doug- las Gardens, Stein Commons Building will house Stein Gerontological Institute, Com- munity Care Adult Day Center, Ambulatory Health Center, Mental Health Center, physical and occupational therapy programs, and the Beck Dining Room. All are currently located in different sections of the 17-acre Douglas Gardens Campus. Construction ot tie new building is scheduled to begin upon completion of Chernin Nursing Building, a 200-bed nursing facility which will ex- pand the Home's capacity by 130 skilled nursing beds. Other components of the expansion program include enlarged parking facilities and renovation of the Ablin and Baron and Polly deHirsch Meyer Nursing Buildings. "The Steins' generous one million dollar donation comes only a few years after endowment of the research, planning, and training division of the Miami Jewish Home, known as Stein Gerontological Institute," Hirt said. "The institute has developed an international reputation as a leader in the field of geriatric research through studies of behavioral patterns such as interaction of impaired elders with the environment and the bereavement process." Residents of Miami Beach, the Steins are founders of the Home and have also endowed Stein Research Building at Jefferson University Medical School in Philadelphia and the Stein Award at Fordham University in New York. Stein serves as vice president of the Home, a board member of Technion, and a trustee of Jewish Theological Seminary. "WHEN SOMETHING AS DELICATE AS HUMAN SIGHT IS AT STAKE THE LAW SHOULD BE TILTED TO THE SIDE OF CAUTION" LAKELAND FLORIDA LEDGER, 5/2/81. ^bi Rubin R. Dobin of JJw Beach has been named ^f^n-residence by Theodor *l Institute of New Yorh, Hording to Sidney Rosen- 1ill Pjysram coordinator. S" Do-bin's theme will be 'fte Jewish Case Against fnversions." This will be his xtn year as lecturer. Torah Fund Brunch Set "The Heart of the Matter," a 1. depicting the rebuilding of 2J library at Jewish Theological seminary after a fire destroyed X Ullding n the late 1960's. ""I be shown at an Annual Torah fund Brunch of Sisterhood of '"nple Emanu-El, to take place Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the ay Harbor Island home of ^rameCooperman. L Dryle Prager is chairman of orah Fund and the event. . DON'T BE BLINDED BY LEGISLATION TO MAKE OPTOMETRISTS MEDICAL OPHTHALMOLOGISTS (Eye Doctors) STUDY 12 YEARS TO PERFORM SURGERY AND PRESCRIBE DRUGS. OPTOMETRISTS TRAIN SIX YEARS TO CORRECT VISION WITH GLASSES House Bill 189 and Senate Bill 168 would let optometrists use prescription drugs to treat eye disease...North Carolina has documented more than 25 cases of blindness since they enacted such a law. WRITE YOUR LEGISLATORS TO VOTE NO on H.B. 189 and S.B. 168. Only a MEDICAL DOCTOR can treat eye disease. "...Says Henry Peters, Dean of the University of Alabama School of Optometry: 'Medical treatment of eye disease is an inappropriate goal for optometry.' "The Florida Legislature would do well to agree with Dean Peters and the medical profession and restrict optometrists to the functions for which they have been properly trained." -Daytona Beach Evening News, 4/24/81 PLEASE CUT OUT AND MAIL TO: The following members of the Dade County Delegation at: State Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Sen. John A. Hill Sen. Joseph Gersten Sen. Jack Gordon Sen. Carrie P. Meek Sen. G wen Margolis Sen. Larry Plummer Sen. Roberta Fox Rep. Michael Abrams Rep. Elaine Gordon Rep. Michael Freidman Rep. Barry Kutun Rep. Hal Spaet Rep. Jefferson Reaves Rep. James Burke Rep. Willis Logan Rep Robert Reynolds Rep. Jleana Ros Rep. Robert Casas Rep. John Cosgrove Rep. Humberto Cortina Rep. Elizabeth Metcalf Rep. Tim Murphy Rep. Art Simon Rep. Tom Gallagher Rep. Dexter Lehtinen Rep. Lawrence Hawkins Rep. Joe Alien GOVERNOR BOB GRAHAM The Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32301 HONORABLE LEGISLATOR: My Name Is Address------- (signature) As a citizen of Florida, I am opposed to any and all legislation that would allow optometrists to use potentially dangerous drugs in treatment of the human eye. Optometrists are not medically qualified to prescribe and 'e these drugs. This advertisement paid for by FLORIDA SOCIETY OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, INC William J. Broussard, M.D., President; Michael Redmond, M.D., Secretary-Treasurer Ffiffa^M I hp .Launab UU*miAi~~ EW-I------.. Page 14-B The Jewish Floridian / Friday, April 29, 1983 Workmen's Circle Plans Yiddish Weekend \ A Second Annual Institute for Yiddish Culture will be sponsored by Workmen's Circle Friday. May 13 through Sunday, May 15 at Palm Beach Hilton Hotel. Guest lecturers and artists will include Professor S. Portnoy. chairman of History Department at Florida Atlantic University; Professor I. Goldberg, lecturer on Yiddish literature, author, and editor: and Khayele Ash and Arieh Furman. Yiddish artists. Public Notice NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name KING FISH at 2028 NW 27 Ave. - Miami. Fla 33142 intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Oa.de County. Florida. Laurentlno Gonzalez KING FISH. CORP. 188*2 April 99: may 6.13.20, IMS NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 3 13*55 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: JASMIN CRUZ, and JESUS MANUEL CRUZ. TO: JESUS MANUEL CRUZ. Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dis- solution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on A. Koss. Attorney At Law P.A. attorney for PeUUoner. whose address Is 101 NW. 12th Avenue, Miami. Florida 33128, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20.1863 other- wise a default will be entered a>:aint you for the relief de- manded In the complaint or petition. This noUce shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal oi said court at Miami. Florida on this day of April 18, 1983 KICHARD P. BRINKER s Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By M J Hartnett As Deputy Clerk MARIANO SOLE, ESQ. A. KOSS. ATTORNEY AT LAW. PA. 101 NW. 12th Avenue Miami. Florida 33128 (3081325-8844 Attorney for Petitioner 18844 April 22. *: May6. 13. 1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUIT COURT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OP FLORI DA, IN ANO POR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 83-14801 ACTION POR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOE IN RE The Marriage of LEONARD CESAR. Petitioner Wife. and DULCE CESAR, Respond* nt Husban d. TO: DULCE CESAR, RESPONDENT Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to it on LLOYD M ROUTMAN, attor nay tor Petitioner, whoa* ad- draw la 181 N.E. 81 Street. Miami. FL 33188, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27, 1983; otherwise a da- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition This notice shall be published ones each weak for four con- secuUve weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 28 day of APRIL, 1883 RICHARD P. BRINKER / As Clerk, Circuit Court ' Dad* County. Florida By K Selfried Aa Deputy Clark (Circuit Court Saal) Lloyd M. Routman. Esquire 181 N E 82 Street Miami, FU38138 Telephone: (305)707-6800 Attorney for Pet 1 tlorter iajT7 AprUSi; May 8. 18. JO 1888 Seminars will feature Yiddish art. theatre, literature, and histo- ry- Talk on Dentistry Set A meeting has been set by Bnai B'rith Women, Friendship Chapter, to take place at 1 p.m.. May 1 at the Carillon Hotel. Poinciana Room. Dr. Charles Braverman will discuss "What's New in Dentis- try^________________________ NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name Zac- hor Institute for Holocaust Studies at 4200 Blscayne Boule- vard. Miami, Florida 33131 In- tends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Zachor Institute for Holocaust Studies. Inc. By: Harry A. 'Hap" Levy, President Jeffrey Berkowltz, Esq. Attorney for Applicant 18837 April 22. 28; _____________________May 8.18,1888 NOTICE OP ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 81-14802 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of TIPHAINE ALFRED. Petitioner-Husband. and JEANOJE M. ALFRED. Respondent-Wife. TO: JEANINE M. ALFRED, Respondent Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN. at- torney for PeUUoner. whose address Is 181 N.E. 82 Street. Miami, FL 33138. and fUe the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. 1883; otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 28 day of April. 1883. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County. Florida HvK SK IKK IK 11 As Deputv Clerk Lloyd M. Routman, Esquire 181 N.E. 82 Street Miami. FL 33138 (305)767-6800 Attorney for PeUUoner 18878 April 29; ____________May 6, 13.20. 1888 INTHECIRCUITCOURT FOR DADE COUNTY. FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 13-520 Division (01 > IN RE: ESTATE OF ROBERTA KATZ. Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION The administration of the es- tate of ROBERTA KATZ, de- ceased, FUe Number 8S-820 (01), U pending In the Circuit Court for Dads County. Flor- ida, Probate Division, the ad- dress of which la 78 West Flag- ler Street. Miami. Florida. 33130. The names and ad- dresses of the personal repre- sentative and the personal rep- reaantatlve's attorney are set forth below. All Interested parsons are re- quired to file with this court, WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims against the estate and (2) any objection by an inter- ested parson to whom notice was mailed that challenges the validity of the will, the quallfl catlons of the personal repre- sentative, venue, or Jurisdic- tion of the court. ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC- TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. PubUcaUon of this NoUce has begun on April 22. 1988 In the Jewish Floridian. Peraonal Repreeentatlve: Mr. J. Seymour Katz 420 Fayette Street Perth Amboy, New Jersey 08861 Attorney for Personal RepresentaUva: Sanford A. Fraedman. Esq. 12700 Blscayne Boulevard Suite 410 North Miami, FL88181 Telephone: (806)891-6863 April M.29.1963 Neshei Lag B*Omer Parade, Picnic Set Neshei Chabad, women's arm of Chabad Lubavitch Organiza- tion, will sponsor a City-Wide Parade and Barbeque Picnic in honor of Lag B'Omer Sunday to start in front of Beth Israel Syn- agogue, Miami Beach, at 11:30 a.m. Children from yeshivos, day schools, and public schools are expected to participate and march in the parade that will fea- ture floats, banners, and a band, culminating at Muss Park, where the barbeque picnic is set to take place. Rina Kramer, president, stated. "We are proud of our her- itage and traditions, and we want our children to feel likewise. It is the duty of the woman to educate her child, and this is one of the ways in which we hope to incul- cate true Jewish values in our children." Proceeds from the parade will help support Neshei's outreach work, including providing candle lighting kits and food to needy members of the community. NOTICE OP ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY. Civil Action No. 13-1 475 GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF LUDISPERAZA, Petitioner and EDUARDO PERAZA Respondent. TO: EDUARDO PERAZA c-o Jerry A. O'Brien. Warden U.S. Penitentiary Leavenworth Kansas 1300 Met ropoli tan Leavenworth. Kansas 86048 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a peUUon for Disso- lution of your Marriage has been filed and commenced In this court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any. to It on MOR- TIMER S COHEN. ESQ.. at- torney for PeUUoner, whose address Is 150 S.E. 2nd Avenue. Suite 1000. Miami. Florida 33131. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. 1983; otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief prayed for In the complaint or petition This notice shall be published once each week for four con- aecuUve weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 28 day of AprU, 1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By C. P. Copeland Aa Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) MORTIMER S. COHEN Attorney At Law Suite 1000 160 S.E. and Ave. Miami. Fla. Attorney for PeUUoner 18678 April 39; May 6. IS, 20.198S NOTICE OP ACTION (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIY COURT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND POR DADE COUNTY. F LOR IDA FAMILY DIVISION CASE NO.: 83-14744 IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF PATRICIA YIP Petitioner-Wife and JOSE YIP Respondent Husband TO: JOSE YIP Residence Address 762 Madison Ave Elizabeth. New Jersey YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for dissolution of marriage has been filed against you and you are re- quired to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to It on Bruce N. Crown. Esq.. 16490 N.W. 7th Avenue. Suite SOS, Miami, Florida SS1W on or be- fore May 27. 1988 and file the original with the Clerk of Una Court either before service on Petitioner's attorney or Im- mediately thereafter; other- wise a default wUI be entered against you for the relief de- manded in the Petition. DATED: AprU 28,1983 RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk of Circuit Court (Circuit Court Seal) By K Selfried aa Deputy Clerk 1S878 AprU SB: Residents of Surfside held an annual Salute to Israel on behalf of State of Israel Bonds Organization and pledged support for the economic development of the Jewish State. Surfside Mayor Ben Levine received Israel's Negev Award recognizing par- ticipation in philanthropic and civic organizations. From left Mayor Levine, Howard Klein, Israel Bonds executive are director. Jerome Gleekel, Mideast authority and political scientist, and committee member, Sam Brenner. m bbt 'M tV 'r . h*safl ^ M K V I W ^av aawaaBB- aw affln ** -i blV ! bhYjI aa r EaA__ BBS -sal )wtrmmm^ aa" bw\V *' U W Lea'at at 1 W ^BPea sjaJJST as AV W fjjwaj 9> ^9J ^Rjjl yjsJHBfl an'an Ie ^"^^T^^M flail North Bay Village Jewish Center and State of Israel Bonds Organization held an annual Salute to Israel Dinner in honor of two synagogue members, Mitchell Potter and Gladys Sable. who received Israel Negev Awards in recognition of par- ticipation in Jewish community affairs as well as civic organizations. From left are Leo and Blossom Zivin. co- chairmen of the event; Potter, Sable, and Irving Ceranka, co- chairman. Rabbi Marvin Rose is the spiritual leader of Sorth Bay Village Jewish Center. Residents of Admiral's Port in North Miami itmmin gathered for an annual Salute to Israel and pledged support for the economic development of the Jewish State through the Israel Bonds program. Israel Bonds David Ben-Gurion A ward was presented to Hilda Mazur, recognizing service to Israel Bonds Organization and other groups. From left are Nathan Katzen. co-chairman, Mazur, Eric Salm, general chairman, Lauretta Berkman and Murray Weil, co-chairpersons. Mays. IS.SO, 1988 Masada to Celebrate The 10th birthday of Masada Chapter of Pioneer Women- Na'amat and the 35th anniver- sary of Israel will be celebrated by the chapter Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. in the auditorium of American Savings and Loan As- sociation, Miami Beach. According to Bertha Lieb- mann, president, a candle light- ing ceremony and a speaker will be featured. NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the flcUUoua name AMERICAN HELP TECHNIQUES at 6200 S.W. 8 St.. Suite 202-B, Intend to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. EUROPEAN BEAUTY WRAP. INC. Florence E. Hasfner Purs Castro Attorney for Applicant: OARY P. COHEN. P.A. 18488 AprU St; May 8, 13. SO, 1988 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the HcUuous nsms KANGURO TOURS st mm Byron Avenue. No. 8 Miami Beach. FL 881341 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. s-SALLY DORFMAN 18683 APril "' May 8.18.2C. 1883 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LA" NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the unde"'"** desiring to engsge In buslne- under the "f*Ji XTRA SUPER WD CW TER at 1840 West 49th SUttl Htelaah. Florida 33012 Intend. to reeteter said name with W dark of the Circuit Court of Dade County^rtd*JnRP XTRA FOODS CORP CYPEN.CYPENADRIB^ Attorneys for XTRA rw aa, Arthur OodfreyRoad Friday. April 29.1983 The Jewish Floridian Kap- IPublic Notice NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHECIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL fIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 63-14380 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE W RE: ROYCE E.JOHNSON. 1R Petitioner Husband ""sUSAN MAE JOHNSON. Respondent-Wife TO luSAN MAE JOHNSON Teel Road Wlnchendon, uuMchusetts 01470 TOV ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you tre required to serve a copy of vour written defemea. If any, to It on EUGENE J. WEISS. ESQUIRE, attorney for Peti- tioner, whose addreea la Pent- house Northeast. 407 Lincoln Road. Miami Beach, Florida SS138. and file the original with the clerk of the above atyled court on or before May 27.1083; otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 25 day of April lies RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk Circuit Court DadeCounty, Florida By D C Bryant As Deoutv Clerk EUGENE J WEISS, ESQUIRE 107 Lincoln Road, Penthouse NE Miami Beach. Florida 33138 Telephone 534-4721 Attorney for Petitioner 1M74 April 28; ________ May8.13. 20.1883 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO NAYDA R1CARDO Jefferson Hotel No. 317 12115th Street Miami Beach. Florida 33139 or 56160th Street West New York. New Jersey 07083 On 5 April 1883 the Police Department of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Besch, Dade County. Florida a 1978 Ford Thunderblrd auto- mobile VIN F8G87H227852F, 19*4 New Jersey 220 VUI. employed as an Instrumental- Ity In the commission of a Wony to-wlt Possession of a Controlled Substance cocaine), F.S. 883.13 and In rtolatlon of Section 832.701 thru MJ.T04 of the Florida Contra- tand Forfeiture Act. A Petition lor a Rule to Show Cause why iis vehicle should not be forfeited Is anticipated to be Wed on or about 2 June 1883, In jfc Circuit Court In and for 0de County. Florida, nth Judicial Circuit Civil Division. tV allen douoh- City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH "00 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach. Florida 33138 Tel: 13051 8737817-28 By DANIELGALLUP ant City Attorney Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach uu .Flori April 28. May 8.1883 c~NOTTce UNDO----------- JES1* HEREBY "j that the undersized. "Merthe fictitious names (1) HP* Aviation. (J) Ever P!".A"*?** Service at 10311 llm 160.Tmt. Miami, FTa. *" Intend, to regurter ...d 52 "1th ">e Clerk of the *J* Court of Dad. County. Thorpe Aviation, Inc. By: Brian Thorpe, I r_.. President 22** '< Applicant April JS; May. 18, 20. 1883 notice00'"^""" i0rvv,f. I8 HEREBY mSrS, en**"e business H0LYB? caU" name Uend. ,1, NW 19T,rr No-4. "^ County. FloHda. UllNWl8Terr.No I u^ MUmi. Florida .'PW* tO,it, 28 1883 STATE OF FLORIDA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION Cse No. SC-82 001 DOAHCsi.Noi 1102* Ml CONSENT ORDER Order No. US-104 Issued: April 11,181 IN RE METROPOLITAN DADE COUNTY AND LOCAL 281, TRANSPORT WORKERS OF AMERICA. AFL-CIO. PETER SABATTNO, WALLACE TOO- MER. MARCELLUS TUCK- ER. WEBSTER PRATT. RIO- OBERTO PAULA. KARL HOEFLTNGER. a-k-a GOLD- F1NGER JEROME LANIER, J.C. STRONG, GARY GAUSE CURTIS DORSETT, HENRY HOOD, CLAUDE ROLFE. Richard Weiss. Miami, attor- ney for Metropolitan Dade County. Alan Greenfield and Linda Ehrilch, Miami, attorneys for Transport Workers of America and individual respondents On April 11 and 12, 1883, Met- ropolitan Dade County, Trans- port Workers of America Local 281, AFL-CIO. the Individuals named In the style of this case. and the General Counsel of the Public Employees Relations Commission (Commission) entered Into a settlement stipu- lation, subject to approval by this Commission, providing for the entry of a consent order by the Commission and a consent judgement by any appropriate Florida court. The parties waived all further notice, hear- ing and other procedures be- fore the Commission or the Di- vision of Administrative Hear- ings to which they may be en- titled under Chapter 447, Part II. or Chapter 120 of the Florida Statutes or the Rules of the Commission. The settlement stipulation Is hereby approved and made a part of this record herein. Upon the basis of the settlement stipulation and the agreed upon record, the Com- mission makes the following findings: 1 On November 18. 1882. the Commission's General Counsel Issued an Administrative Com- plaint against Loral 281 which set forth certain proposed factual, legal and policy state- ments and further proposed penalties based on those state- ments Any party or affected person disputing any of the proposed findings was allowed the opportunity to file re- sponses In a prescribed man- ner. 2. A timely response waa filed on behalf of Local 281. 3. By order Issued on Decem- ber 28. 1882. the Commission referred PERC Case No. SC-82- 001 to the Division of Adminis- trative Hearings of the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAHi for the conducting of an evidentiary hearing on certain specific Issues. 4. A second Administrative Complaint against the Indivi- dual officers and agents named In the style above waa Issued on March IB, 1883 5. Respondent Local 201 la now. and has been at all times material hereto, a labor orga- nization within the meaning of SecUon 447.203(11), Florida Statutes (1881). and la the cer- tified bargaining agent for a unit of transit workers. 6. Respondent, Local 281 and the individuals named In the style of this case have with- drawn their previously filed answers and waive further response. Based the above findings of fact, the settlement stipulation and the agreed upon record, and pursuant to Section ?47.506(8). Florida Statutes (1881), the Oommlaalon orders that: Respondent Local 281. Its of- ficers, agents, successors and assigns, shall: (A) Cease and desist from: Engaging In, or Inducing or encouraging any Individual employed by Metropolitan Dade County or any other pub- lic employee to engage In a strike or other concerted refusal to work as described In SecUon 447.208(6) of the Act. (B) Take the following affir- mative action to effectuate the policies of the Act: (1) Post In conspicuous places at lta business office In Miami. Florida. Including all places where notices to members are customarily posted, a copy of the Notice to All Members attached hereto and marked "Appendix A. Copies of the Notice to be fur- nished by the Oaneral Counsel shall, after being duly signed by Local 281'a representative, be posted by Respondent Local 291 Immediately after receipt thereof and maintained by It for sixty (60) consecutive days thereafter. Local 281 will further provide for publication of the Consent Order and the Notice for ten consecutive days In a local newspaper of general circulation Rs*eoabte W" shall be taken by Local 281 to Insure that said Notices are not altered, detected or covered by anyother materials. (2) Submit a signed copy of said Notice to the General Counsel of the Commission who will forward sufficient copies to the County for posting, the em- ployer willing. In conspicuous places In and about the em- ployer's premises where no- tices to employees are custo- marily posted. (3) Pay a fine of Nine Thou- sand Dollars to Metropolitan Dade County pursuant to Sec- tion 447.507(61 of the Act. The fine so paid shall be used to es- tablish a Safety Fund to be Jointly administered by the County and Local 281 to Im- prove safety conditions for em- ployees and the public In the operation of the County transit system. (4) Refrain from asserting representational rights under PERC Certification No. 358 covering transit workers until payment In full of the fine specified above. (6) Notify the Chairman of the Commission within ten (10) days from the date of this Order what steps Respondent Local 281 has taken to comply herewith. The Individuals named In the style of this case, except Claude Rolfe. shall each pay a fine of $180.00 to Metropolitan Dade County to be credited to the Safety F"und described above. Aa agreed In the settlement stipulation, the Commission General Counsel Is directed to file a copy of this order with the Healing Officer of the Division of Administrative Hearings, requesting dismissal with prejudice of the Administrative Complaints filed In this cause. It Is so ordered. POWERS, Chairman, BROOKS and RENOVITCH. Commissioners, concur I HEREBY CERTIFY that this document was filed and a copy served on each party on April 13, 1883. BY: AnnT Nugyen Deputy Clerk Seal Public Employees Relations Commission STATE OF FLORIDA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED PURSUANT TO A CONSENT ORDER BASED UPON A SETTLEMENT STI- PULATION PROVIDING FOR CONSENT JUDGMENT IN ANY APPROPRIATE STATE COURT WE HEREBY NOTIFY YOU THAT: WE WILL pay a fine of Nine Thousand Dollars to the Met- ropolitan Dade County for the establishment of a Safety Fund to be jointly administered by the County and Local 281. WE WILL NOT engage In. or Induce or encourage any Indiv- idual employed by Metropolit- an Dade County or any other public employee to engage In. a strike or any other concerted refusal to work as described In Section 447203(61 of Florida Statutes (18811 LOCAL 281, TR AN SPORT WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA DATE: April 18.1883 BYC. Rolfe TITLE President THIS IS AN OFFICIAL GOV- ERNMENT NOTICE AND MUST NOT BE DEFACED. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material. Any questions concerning this notice or compliance with its provision may be directed to the: PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION 2600 Blair Stone Road, Suite 300 Tallahassee, Florida 83801 (804)488-8641 APPENDIX A 018684 April 28: May 6.188S NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name of SEWING PARTS UNLIMITED at 601 N.w list Avenue. Miami. Florida Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. LIBERTY MACHINERY ft EXPORT COMPANY HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN Attorney for LIBERTY MACHINERY A EXPORT 420 Lincoln Road, Suite 378 Miami Beach. Florida 83139 Telephone: (806)831-0881 18660 April 28; Mav IS. 30.1988 INTHECIHCUITCOURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number u 2334 IN RE. ESTATE OF ETHEL EPSTEIN Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that the administration of the estate of ETHEL EP- STEIN, deceased. File Number 83-2334, Is pending in the Cir- cuit Court for Dade County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which Is 78 West Flagler Street, Miami, Florida 33130. The personal rep- resentative of the estate Is FA YE CUTLER, whose ad- dress is 21803 Arrlba Real, Boca Raton, Florida. The name and address of the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All persons having claims or demands against the estate are required. WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA- TION OF THIS NOTICE, to file with the clerk of the above court a written statement of any claim or demand they may have. Each claim must be In writing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and address of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim Is not yet due, the date when It will become due shall be stated. If the claim Is contin- gent or unliquidated, the nature of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim la se- cured, the security shall be de- scribed. The claimant, shall deliver sufficient copies of the claim to the clerk to enable the clerk to mall one copy to each personal representative. AD persons Interested in the estate to whom a copy of this Notice of Administration has been mailed are required. WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE, to file any ob- jections they may have that challenges the validity of the decedent's will, the quali- fications of the personal rep- resentative, or the venue or jurisdiction of the court. ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Date of the first publication of this Notice of Adminis- tration: April 28.1883. FA YE CUTLER As Personal Representative of the Estate of ETHEL EPSTEIN Deceased ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: LOUIS H. STALLMAN 407 Lincoln Road Miami Beach. Florida 38138 18656 April28, May 6,1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHECIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN ANO FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. II-1 4) 75 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF WANDA RAMOS. Wife Petitioner, and ANGEL D. RAMOS. Husband-Respondent. TO: ANGEL D. RAMOS SM Crescent Street Brooklyn. N.Y. 11208 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on ALBERT L. CARRICARTE. P.A., attorney for Petitioner, whose address is 3481 N.W. 7th Street. Miami, Florida 83126. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. 1883; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the com- plaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this Slat day of April. 1883. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By V. Barkley As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Albert L. Carricarte. 2481 N.W. 7th Street Miami, Florida 33125 Telephone: 13061648-7817 Attorney for Petitioner 18663 April 28: May 6.18.30. 1883 INTHECIRCUITCOURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number (3-3362 Division 03 IN RE: ESTATE OF SOLOMON COHEN Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ES- TATE: Within three months from the time of the first publication of this notice you are required to file with the clerk of the Circuit Court of DADE County, Flor- ida, Probate Division, the ad- dress of which Is 73 West Flag- ler Street, Miami, Florida 38130, a written statement of any claim or demand you may have against the estate of SO- LOMON COHEN, deceased. Each claim must be In writ- ing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and ad- dress of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim Is not yet due, the date when It will become due shall be stated. If the claim Is contin- gent or unliquidated, the na- ture of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim Is secured, the security shall be described. The claimant shall deliver suf- ficient copies of the claim to the clerk to enable the clerk to mall one copy to each personal rep- resentative. ALL CLAIMS AND DE- MANDS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED Dated April 22.1888. Aa personal Representatives: Bernard Kane W lima Plnckney Elaine Laker of the Estate of SOLOMON COHEN Deceased HYMAN P. GALBUT. ESQ. Attorney GALBUT. GALBUT A MENIN 888 Washington Avenue Miami Beach. Fla. 33188 Telephone: (306)672-8100 18666 April 28; ___________________May 6^1888 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 83 14 24 2 FAMILY DIVISION ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF LONNIE LOUIS McCOR- MICK. Petitioner-Husband, and POLLY McCORMICK, Respondent Wife TO: POLLY McCORMICK Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dis- solution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN, at- torney for Petitioner, whose address Is 430 Lincoln Road- Suite 378. Miami Beach, Florida 88188. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. 1888; otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 36 day of April, 1888. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By DC. Bryant As Deputy Clerk HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN 420 Lincoln Road-Suits 878 Miami Beach. Florida 38188 Attorney for Petitioner 18878 April 28; May 6,18.20,1863 ELEVENTH CIRCUIT COURT DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PC Cat* NO. 83-14284 IN RE: The Marriage of ANNE MARIE COOPER Petitioner-Wife. and EDMUND COOPER Respondent-Husband. To: EDMUND COOPER Residence unknown, shall aerve copy of your An- swer to the Petition for Disso- lution of Marriage upon GEORGE NICHOLAS. Attor- ney. 612 N.W. 13th Avenue. Miami. Florida, 88186. and file original with Court Clerk on or before May 27, 1888, otherwise a default will be entered. April 32,1883 RICHARD BRINKER By:M. J.Hartnett 18887 April 38: May 6, 13.30,1883 INTHECIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CASE NO. 11-14028 NOTICE OF ACTION NO PROPERTY IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF WALTER NIELSEN. Petitioner-Husband. VS. CHERYL NIELSEN. Respondent-Wife. TO: CHERYL NIELSEN Residence Unknown You are notified that an ac- tion for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are requested to serve a copy of your written answer and defenses. If any, to it on IRIS L. BENSON, plaintiff's attorney, whose address la: 7857 West Flagler Street. Miami. Florida 33144, on or be- fore May 27, 1883: and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on plaintiff's attorney or immedi- ately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. WITNESS my hand and the seal of this Court on April 20. 1883. RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk of the Court BY K. Self tied As Deputy Clerk IRIS I. BENSON Attorney at Law 7357 West Flagler Street Miami. Florida 33144 Telephone: 381-4642 18666 April 28. May 6, 13.20.1888 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO: RAYMOND PAUL CARRV Address Unknown On 8 February 1883 the Police Department of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beach, Dade County. Florida a 1878 Ford Mustang automobile, VIN 8F04W26387B. 1883 Texas tag P 1788, employed as an in- strumentality in the commis- sion of a felony, to-wlt. Grand theft, F.S. 812.014 and Forgery, F.S. 831.01 and in violation of Section 832.701 thru 832.704 of | the Florida Contraband Forfel- ture Act A Petition for a Rule to Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited is antici- pated to be filed on or about 8 June 1883, In the Circuit Court in and for Dade County, Flor- ida, 11th Judicial Circuit Civil Division. Lucia Allen Dougherty City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1700 Convention Center Dr. Miami Beach, Florida 33138 Telephone: (306)678-7818-28 By: DANIELGALLUP Assistant City Attorney DG-pb Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida 18668 April 28; May 6,1888 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION NO. 83-14884 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of ULRICK FAUSTTN, Petitioner Husband and FRANTZE FAUSTTN, Respondent-Wife. TO: FRANTZE FAUSTTN Respondent Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you ar required to aerve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN. attorney for Petitioner, whoae address Is 181 N.E. 82 Street. Miami. FL SS1S8. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27, 1888; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In TUX JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the j seal of said court at Miami, I Florida on this 36th day of April, 1888. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County. Florida ByKSETFRTED Aa Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) LLOYD M. ROUTMAN 181 N.E. S3 Street Miami, FL 88138 Telephone: (806) 787-8800 Attorney for Petitioner 1A078 April 38; May 6 13.20. 1883 Page 16-B The Jewish Floridian Friday, April 29, 1983 \ Public Notice, IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR I DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 61-1263 Division 01 IN RE: ESTATE OF ALEX LEVINSON, Deceased The Administration of the estate Of ALEX LEVINSON. deceased. File Number 83-3383, la pending In the Circuit Court for Dade County, Florida, the addreaa of which la T8 Wast Flakier 8treet, Miami. FL MHO The name and addresses of the personal representative and the personal rep resentative's attorney are set forth be low All InterssUd persons are re- quired to Ola with this court, WITHIN THRE E MONTHS OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims against the sstats and (3) any objection by an inter - estsd person to whom this no- tice was mailed that challenges the validity of the will, the ifiallflTiitt'''^ of the personal representatlve. venue, or Juris- diction of the court ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC- TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Publication of this Notice has begun on April 39. IMS. ' Personal Representative: PERLELEVTNSON 9100 Weet Bay Harbor Drive No. S-BW Bay Harbor Island, FLS81B4 8TANLEY S. LEVINSON 9800 West Bay Harbor Drive Bay Harbor Island, FLS31M Attorney for Personal Representative: CYPEN. CYPEN A DRIBIN P.O. BOX 402099 Miami Beach. FL 33154 Telephone: 13061 532-3200 By: Michael A Drlbln. Esq 18664 April 29: May 6,1983 NOTICE OF ACTION (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA FAMILY DIVISION CASE NO.: 63-11271 IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF Novelette Fay Hanse Petltloner-Wlfe and Carol R. Hanse Respondent-Husband TO: Carol R. Hanse Residence Address: 210 Humber Boulevard. Apt. No. CIS Toronto, Canada YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for dissolution of marriage has been filed against you and you are re- quired to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on Bruce N. Crown. Esq., 16490 N.W. 7th Ave.. Suite 308. Miami. Florida SS169. on or be- fore May 6, 1983 and file the original with the clerk of this Court either before service on Petitioner's attorney or Imme- diately thereafter; otherwise a default win be entered against you for the relief demanded In the Petition. DATED: March 30.1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk of Circuit Court (Circuit Court Seal) BY: V. Berkley aa Deputy Clerk 18894 April 8. IB. 33. 39. 1961 I NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO: JUAN SEBASTIAN CASTILLO 3816 Bay Drive Apt. 3 or 7138 Rue Granvllle Miami Beach, Florida On 6 April 1983. the Police De- partment of the City of Miami Beach, seised on Miami Beach, Dade County. Florida a 1981 Pontlac Grand Prix automo- bile. VTN 2AJS7A9BP8099. 1988 Florida tag HI v 896, employed aa an Instrumentality In the commission of a felony, to-wit Posseslon of a Controlled Sub- stance (cocaine). F.S. 898.186, and In violation of Section 982- 701 thru 983-704 of the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act. A Petition for a Rule to Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited Is anticipated to be filed on or about 3 June 1968. In the Circuit Court In and for Dade County. Florida, 11th Judicial Circuit Civil Division Lucia Allen Dougherty City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1700 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach. Florida SUM Telephone: (306)673 7919-29 By: DANIEL GALLUP Assistant City Attorney Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida I 1MM Anrua.39.ny NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 13-13031 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF . RAYNELLE PRATT Petitioner and JOHN LELAND PRATT Respondent TO: JOHN LELAND PRATT Residence unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any. to It on MILTON C GOODMAN, attorney for Petitioner, whose addreaa la IS West Flagler Street, Suite 830 Miami, Florida 881SO, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or be tore May 20th, 1989. otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or pettOon. This notice shall be published once each week for four con secutlve wsefcs In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this is day of April 198. RICHARD P. BRINKER Aa Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By N. A. Hewett As Deputy Clerk MILTON C GOODMAN. ESQ. 19 West Flagler Street. Suite 830 Miami. FloridaS81S0 Phone .879-1880 Attorney for Petitioner 18629 April 18. a. 39: May 6.1983- I NOTICE UNDER I FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engsge In business under the fictitious name PAR Machine Shop at 3646 NW 48th Terrace Miami FL 88143 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Roberto Padron 18661 April 29; May 6.18. 30.1983 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engsge In business under the fictitious name C A C LEASING at 9618 Sunset Drive. Miami. Florida 88184 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dad* County, Florida. LARRY S MARKS STEVEN SILVERMAN. PA. Attorney for Applicant 18617 April IB. a, S; May 6, ltd. INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN ANDFOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA Case No. 63-11624 FAMILY DIVISION In re the marriage of LL'ISE. QUINONES Petitioner and CANDY QUINONES Respondent NOTICE OF ACTION TO: CANDY QUINONES Residence Unknown YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are re- quired to serve a copy of your written defense, If any, on ROBERT M. ZIEJA, ESQ.. at- torney for Petitioner, 633 N E 167 St., N.M.B., Fl 33162 on or before May 30.1983. and file the original with the clerk of this court: otherwise s default will be entered against you. Dated: April 19.1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk by K. Selfrled As Deputy Clerk 18648 April 33. 29; May 6. 13.1983 ELEVENTH CIRCUIT COURT DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA IN RE: The Marriage of: HUGUESST. CULUS. Petitioner-Husband and VIOLETTE ST. CULUS, Respondent Wife To: VIOLETTE ST. CULUS c-o Sylvia Thomas DelmaaSO, No. 6 Port-Au-Prtnee, Haiti, shall serve copy of your An- swer to the Petition for Disso- lution of Marrlags upon GEORGE NICHOLAS, Attor- ney. 613 N.W. 13th Avenue. Miami. Florida, 33186, and file original with Court Clerk on or before May 20. 1983, otherwise a default will be entered. April 19. 1983 RICHARD BRINKER By:M.J. Hartnett 10 April 33.26; May 6.18.1988 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name of SHEILA'S RESTAURANT f-k-a CHUCKWAGON RE8TAURANT at 73S4 &W. 117th Avenue. In the City of Miami, Florida, Intends to reg- ister the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of! Dade County, Florida- Dated at Dade County. Florida, this 11th day of April. ' 1961. I FLORIDA EATS, INC.. , A Florida Corporation By: SHEILA EPSTEIN. President MALAND AND TURETSKY.! PA. By: ERICB. TURETSKY Attorney for Applicant 18630 April 18, 22. 29: May 6,1983. IN THE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AMD FOR DADE COUNTY. FLORIOA FAMILY DIVISION CASE NO 8^662* NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: PATRICK) RUFTN, Petitioner-Husband va. MARIA PATRICIA DUVAL RUFIN. Respondent-Wife NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE TO: Maria Patricia Duval Rufln 8868 Campo de Mayo. Santiago. Chile YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a Petition for Dissolution of your Marriage has been filed and commenced In this Court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any. to It on R A. del PINO, Esq.. Attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 1401 West Flagler Street, Suite 201. Miami. Florida 33186. and file the original with the Clerk of the above styled Court on or before May 20, 1983; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief prayed for In the complaint or petition This Notice shall be published once each week for four (4) consecutive weeks In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of aald Court at Miami, Florida, on this 13th day of April. 1983 RICHARD P. BRINKER. As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By: B.J.FOY As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) R A. del PINO 1401 West Flagler Street Miami. Florida 33188 Telephone: (808)649-4411 Attorney for Petitioner 18632 April 22, 29; May 6. 13. 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO 13-110X1 FAMILY DIVISION NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF ORLANDO J. PADRON, Petitioner. Husband and CARMEN MARIA PADRON. Respondent-Wife TO: CARMEN MARIA PADRON Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a petition for Dissolution of your marriage has been filed and commenced in this court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenaee. If any, to It on DAVID I. SCHLOSBERG. attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 836 N.W. 27th Avenue, Suite 100, Miami, Florida 33126 and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before April 29. 1988: otherwise a default will be entered agalnat you for the relief prayed for In the complaint or petition. WITNESS my hand and the teal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 29th day of March. 1983 RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By M. J. HARTNETT As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Attorney for Petitioner: DAVID I. SCHLOSBERO 836 N w 27th Avenue. Suite 100 Miami. Florida 88128 Telephone: (108) 648-4616 AprU6.u.a.a. l NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIOA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 63-11744 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: ROBERT GILBERT, Petitioner-Husband and SUZANNE GILBERT. Respondent-Wife. TO: SUZANNE GILBERT 31 Rouen St e Therese Terrebonne Quebec, Canada YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenaee. If any, to It on GEORGE T. RAMANI. attorney for Petitioner, whose addreaa la 711 Blscayne Bldg.. It West Flagler Street. Miami. Florida 33180, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 6. 1963: otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each weak for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 1st day of April, 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By M.J. HARTNETT As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Attorney for Petitioner: GEORGE T RAMANI 711 Blscayne Bldg. 19 West Flagler Street Miami, Florida 33130 18601 April8. 15. 22. 29. 1983 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. [_ desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name WEST HIALEAH MUFFLERS at 22S0 Weet 10th Avenue. In the City of Hlaleah. Florida, Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Dated at Hlaleah, Florida. this 7th day of April. 1983 OCTA VIO TOLE DO ENRIQUE MILIAN 018743 April 16. a. 39; May 9.1983 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to ensaee In business under the fictitious name of SOLWICK ENTERPRISES. INC. at 7460 Byron Avenue A 630 78th Street. Miami Beach. Florida Intend to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. BILLY SOLOMON HARVEY SWICKLE Harvey D. Friedman. Esq. Attorney for SOLWICK ENTERPRISES, INC. 430 Lincoln Road. Suite 379 Miami Beach, Florida 83139 Telephone: (306)631-0391 18689 April 29 May 6.13. 30. 1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITINANDFOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO. 81-1216* IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF ELBA MARTINEZ. Petitioner. and ROBERT MARTINEZ Respondent NOTICE OF ACTION TO: ROBERT MARTINEZ, Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a Petition for Dlaso lutlon of Marriage haa been Died agalnat you, and that you are required to serve a copy of your response or pleading to the Petition upon the Petition- er's attorney, JANIS L. FEL- DER. ESQ.. HUNTER, CALVO. WICHMANN A SWARD. P.A.. 1990 Tylar Street. Hollywood, FL 88030, and file the original response or pleading in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court, on or before the 18 day of May, 1988. H you fall to do so a default Judgment will be taken against you for the relief demanded In the Petition DATED at Hollywood. Brow ard County. Florida, thla 13 day of April, ISM. Richard P. Brlnker Clerk of Circuit Court By: D.C.Bryant 18634 Apru is. a. a; May 6,1988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION Ne. 83-11644 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF CARLOS A. TAURA. Husband, and MINTA TAURA, Wife. TO: MINTA TAURA 8800 leth Street, N.W. Apt. No. 1011 Washington. D.C. 30010 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action lor Dissolution of Marriage has been filed agalnat you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to It OR ALBERT L. CARRICARTE, PA, attorney tor Petitioner, whose ddran u MAI N.W. 7th Street, Miami. Florida 33136, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before Mav W. IMS; otherwise a de mutt will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published ones each week for four con- secutive weeks m THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this day of April IS, 1983. RICHARD BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By Clarinda Brown As Deputy Clerk ALBERT L. CARRICARTE, PA. 3491 N.W. 7th Street Miami. Florida 33136 Telephone: (808)649-7917 Attorney for Petitioner 18628 April IB. 22. 28; May 6. 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITCOURTOF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADECOUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 81-11177 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: PABLO BERLAN SOTO. Petitioner-Husband and LEONTINA DEL CARMEN ESPINA GONZALEZ SOTO. Respondent-Wife TO: Leon Una Del Carmen Esptna Gonaalez Soto. Lo Beltran 2141 Las Condes Santiago. Chile YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to It on DAVID 8. BERGER. attorney for Petitioner, whose addreas Is 999 Washington Avenue. Miami Beach. Florida 33139. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May a, IMS; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the com- plaint or petition. Thla notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 14th day of April, IMS. RICHARD P. BRINKER Aa Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By:C.P.COPELAND As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) DAVIDS. BERGER 999 Washington Avenue Miami Beach. Florida 83139 Telephone: (808)673-3100 18834 April a. a; May 6,18.1983 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO: STEPHEN I HABERMAN 12407 S.W. 112th Terrace Miami. Florida On 31 March 1983. the Police Department of the City 0, Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beech. Dade County, Florida a 1981 Toyota Cellca automobile VTN J13RA4422B66H)921 IBM Florid, tag RUE-444,' env ployed as an Instrumentality in the commission of a felony, to- ^,h- e"'0n0"ControU S^L ta vlo,aon of Sec- tion 933.701 thru 932 704 of the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act A Petition for r,,,, J Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited It anUcl paled to be filed on or about 2 June 1963, in the Circuit Court to and for Dade County. Flor- ida. 11th Judicial Circuit Chll Dtvimon. Lucia AUen Dougherty City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1709 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach, Florida 33136 Telephone (306) 673 7919-29 By: DANIEL GALLUP Assistant aty Attorney Office of the City Attorney aty of Miami Beach Florida 1*0 April 32,29. imj NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In buslnea under the fictitious names (l) Oompra y Vents. (2) The Penny savers: (3) The Money Savers, at 16604 N.E. Third Avenue, North Miami Beach. Fla. 33162 Intends to register said names with the Clerk 0! the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida Welcome Publishing Co., Inc By: Alfred Kaplan. President 18613 April 15. 22.29; Mav 6.1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OFFLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No.11-11111 ACTION FOR DISSOI.I TION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF JOSE CABRERA. Petitioner and MARIA ISABEL ARRILLAGA CABRERA, Respondent TO: MARIA ISABEL ARRILLAGA CABRERA. Residence I'nknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI FT ED that an action (or Dissolution of Marriage hai been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, lo It on MILTON C GOODMAN, attorney for Petitioner, whose address is 19 West Flagler Street. No 620. Miami. Fl 33130, and file the original with the Clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20,1983. otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 14th day of April, 1983 RICHARD P BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By M J Hartnett As Deputy Clerk MILTON C. GOODMAN. ESQ 19 West Flsgler. Street. No 530 Miami. Florida 33130 Phone: 379-1885 Attorney for Petitioner 18633 April 22, Nj May 6,13,1913 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engsge In business under the fictitious name of Gables Medical Center at 1918- B S.W. 17 Avenue, Miami, Flor- ida, in the aty of Miami, Flor- ida. Florida. Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade Coun- ty, Florida. DATED at Miami. Florida, this 8th day of April, 1983. Lees Medical Center, Inc. David E. Stone Attorney for Applicant Stone, Sostchln A Gonialex, P.A. 1401W. Flagler Street. no. an Miami. Florida 88186 18633 April 16. 33,39: Msy6,1988 NOTICI UNDER FICTITIOUS NAM! UN NOTICE IS HKWtBT GIVEN that ths underdT** desiring to sngsge In MSBMN under th n<*Uoul,SI 2 CECIL MEDICAL CENTER* 1918-B S.W. 67 Avenue kUtfU- Florida, in the City of MlanU Florida, intends to rag*** "J said nemswlto toeOsrkofW Circuit Court of Dads CoaHJ. Florida. ,-(* DATED at MlamljTlorf" this 8th day of April, 1981 Lees Medical Center. Inc. David E. Stone Attomsy for Applicant Stone. Sostchln A Oonsales. P.A. 1401W. Flagler Street. a?-sagas r*..: j----- :i on i ooo / T'Urt IV ..- U'l.vri/linn Poo* IQ-R Friday. April 29, 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 17- B Public Notice NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN 1 HE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. SS-S71 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: HENRY WILSON SCOTT, Petitioner-Husband and ___ BERTA HODELTN SCOTT, Respondent-Wife TO: Berta Hodelln Scott EmllloOlroEntee iySOeitellOe Guantanamo Oriente, Cut* YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action tor Dissolution of Marriage ha* been filed against you and you ire required to serve a copy of your written defenaea. If any. to It on STEVEN JUOO, attorney for Petitioner, whose addresa Is 1SS0 N.w 7th Street, Suite 101, Miami, Dade County. Florida, USA. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May ]0. 1983. otherwise a default -ill be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the sasl of said court at Miami, Florida on this 14th day of April. 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Cle rk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By: DC. BRYANT As Deputy Clerk {Circuit Court Seal) JUGO AND FERRADAZ Steven Jugo 1830N W. 7th Street. Suite 102 Miami. Florida SSI26 Attorney for Petitioner 18C3B April 22. 2; May 6. IS. 1983 ELEVENTH CIRCUIT COURT DADE COUNTY,FLORIDA FC CASE NO 13 134*3 IN RE The Marriage of CLORAINK RIVERA Petitioner-Wife and ANTONIO RIVERA Respondent -Husband TO ANTONIO RIVERA, Residence. unknown, shall Mrvc copy of your Answer to UK Petition lor Dissolution of MarnaKe upon GEORGE NICHOLAS Attorney. 812 N W. 12th Avenue Miami. Florida, BUS, and (lie original with Court Clerk on or before May 20. 1983. otherwise a default Mil be entered. Dated April 15.1883. RICHARD BRINKER By V HARKLEY. DC 1*2 April 22. 29; May8. IS. 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUITOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION NO 83 11289 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MARIA Zl.'LMA GALLEOO. Petitioner, Wife and CARLOS MARIO CARVAJAL. Respondent-Husband TO CARLOS MARIO CARVAJAL Diagonal S3, No. 34. A.S. 36 (Envlgadoi Medellln, Colombia YOl ARE HEREBY NOTI- CED that an action for Wssolutlon of Marriage has i filed against you and you *" required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any. to " LEONARDO P. MEN- pEZ. Esq.. attorney for Peti- on. whose address Is 1487 1L Flr Street. Miami. Mglnai with the clerk of the ~ve styled court on or before y 1983; otherwise a J" 'or the relief demanded on "^complaint or petition Thi, notlce thua N puon.^jj Wc??aCh week ror K con SS,' In THE vi.H "-ORIDIAN. J^TNESS my hand Md me "J of said court at Miami. ">Ma on this SOth day of hi 1983 RICHARD P. BRINKER * Cler*. Circuit Court "de County, Florida By C.P. COPELAND ICi A'DeP"ty Clerk **.FLSS156 Phone: (806) 849-8484 April 8, IB, 82, 29,1984 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION N0.83-I2S44 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF JOSE TIBERIO ARCILA Petitioner-Husband and JOANN ARCILA Respondent-Wife TO: JOANN ARCILA Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to it on HARVEY D. FRIED- MAN, attorney for Petitioner. whose address Is 430 Lincoln Road, Suits 878, Miami Beach, Florida, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 30, IMS; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint of petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four conse- cutive weeks in THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 13th day of April 1888. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By:B.J.FOY As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) LAW OFFICES OF HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN 430 Lincoln Road Suite 878 Miami Beach, Florida33189 Telephone: (808)581-0881 Attorney for Petitioner 18681 April 23, 29; ________ May*. 13.198.1 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engsge In business under the fictitious name WEST HI ALE AH AUTO REPAIRS at 2230 West 10th Avenue, in the City of Hlaleah, Florida. Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida Dated at Hlaleah, Florida, this 7th day of April 1983 OCT A VIO TOLEDO ENRIQUE MTLIAN 018741 April 15.22,29; May 8.198S NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name GRETS ROOFING at 10370 N.W. 1S5 Street. In the City of Hlaleah. Florida, Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida Dated at Hlaleah. Florida, this 3rd day of April, 1883 FERNANDO MENDEZ Owner 18821 April 15, 22,28: May6.1883 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name Ad Design at 570 N.W. 180 St.. Miami. Fla 33188 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida Rhonda Falchi, Owner 1M48 April 22, 28; May 8.13.1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION No. 8313721 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF VINCENT P. MEDINA Petitioner Husband and BARBARA ANN MEDINA Respondent-Wife TO: BARBARA ANN MEDINA Address and Residence unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to it on LOUIS R. HELLER. Esq.. at- torney for Petitioner, whose address Is 420 Lincoln Road. Suite 238. Miami Beach, Florida 33138, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20, 1883; otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this IB day of April. 1883. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By M. J. Hartnett As Deputy Clerk 18643 April 22. 28; May6.13,1883 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name COUNTY CONTRACTORS COMPANY at 8160 N.W. 83 Street. Miami. Florida 83168 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. E. L Ball. Partner Wanda Brand! 1. Partner 18867 April 28; May 6. IS. 20. 1888 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAMC LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name CHILDREN'S EMPORIUM at 2802 N.W. 6 Avenue, Miami, Florida Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. Modem Merchandising, Inc. 360 N.W. 107 Avenue Miami. Florida Armando Outlerres. Esquire Attorney for Applicant 18669 April 29; May 6, 18, 20,1883 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO; FRANKR. DeJOSEPH. JR. 3525 N.W. SBth Avenue FortLauderdale, Florida On 6 April 1B8S, The Police De- partment of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beach. Dade County, Florida a 1881 Chevrolet Monte Carlo auto- mobile. VTN 1Z37JAR436906. 1984 Florida tag W-68407, em- ployed as an Instrumentality In the commission of a felony, to- wn Possession of a Controlled Substance (cocaine). F.S. 883.135 and In violation of Sec- tion 932.701 thru 932.704 of the Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act. A Petition for a Rule to Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited Is antici- pated to be filed on or about 2 June 1983. In the Circuit Court in and for Dade County, Flor- ida, 11th Judicial Circuit Civil Division. Lucia Allen Dougherty City Attorney CITY OF MI AMI BE ACH 1700 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach, Florida 33139 Telephone: (305)673 7919-29 By: DANIEL GALLUP Assistant City Attorney Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida 18639 April 22. 29.1883 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. desiring to engsge In business under the fictitious name C A E Building Maintenance at 19366 N. E S6th Court, North Miami Beach. Fla. 83180 intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. DAE Building Maintenance, Inc. By Edward Elsenberg. President 18618 April 16. 22. 28; May 6,1988 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name Shop- re n I Investments at 1401 Bric- kell Avenue, Suite 808, Miami, Florida 38131 intends to regis- ter said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade Coun- ty, Florida. Shopcen I Investments, Inc. Backbone Corporation N.V. 18630 April 22. 29; May 6,13.1883 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name of TIFFANY INTERNATIONAL at number 1466 NW 107 Ave., Store No. 834. in the City of Miami, Florida. Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Dated at Miami. Florida, this 23rd day of March. 1888. CARMEN M. LAMAS, Owner 18687 April 8, J5. 23.28,1888 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 611 35*3 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF: ALPHONSE FINCE. PETITIONER AND OCTAVIA FINCE. RESPONDENT. TO: OCTAVIA FINCE (RESIDENCE UNKNOWN I YOU ARE HEREBY NOT! FIED that a Petition for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and the Peti- tion seeks an award that certain property owned by you and Petitioner, ALPHONSE FINCE. as tenants by the en- tirety, located at 6415-17 N. W. 6th Avenue, Miami, Florida, and more particularly de- scribed as: Lot 17. Block 8. BUENA VISTA GARDENS, according to the Plat thereof, as recorded In Plat Book 5. at Page 46. of the Public Records of Dade County, Florida: a-k-a 5415-17 N W 8th Avenue. Miami. Flor- ida. to the Petitioner as a special equity and-or equitable distri- bution and you are required to serve a copy of your written de- fenses, if any. on to HOWARD HILL BENNETT. ESQUIRE, attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 18 West Flagler Street, No. 530. Miami. Florida 33130. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled Court on or before May 30.1883, otherwise a Default will be en- tered against you for the relief prayed for in the Petition. This notice shall be published once every week for four con- secutive weeks In the JEWISH FLORIDIAN. 120 N.E. 6 Street, Miami. FL. SSI82. WITNESS my hand and seal of said Court at Miami. Dade County. Florida on this 18 day of April. 1888. RICHARD P. BRINKER as Clerk of the Circuit Court. Dade County, Florida ByM.J. Hartnett DEPUTY CLERK (Circuit Court Seal I Attorney for Petitioner HOWARD HILL BENNETT. ESQ 19 West Flagler St. No. 520 Miami. Florida 33130 Telephone: 379-1885 -Hi.', April 22. 29, May 6. 13.1983 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO: STEPHEN I. HABERMAN 12407 S.W. U3th Terrace Miami, Florida On 31 March 1983. the Police Department of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beach, Dade County, Florida a 1881 Toyota Cellca automobile, VTN J12RA4433B6618831. 1888 Florida tag RUE-444. em- ployed as an Instrumentality in the commission of a felony, to- wn Possession of a Controlled Substance (cannabls), F.S. 883.18 and in violation of Section 832.701 thru 932.704 of the Florida Contraband For- feiture Act. A Petition for a Rule to Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited Is anticipated to be filed on or about 6 June 1888, in the Circuit Court in and for Dade County, Florida, nth Judicial Circuit Civil Division. LUCIA ALLEN DOUGHERTY City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1700 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach. Florida SS139 Tel: (806)678 7918-28 By: DANIEL GALLUP Assistant City Attorney DG-pb Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida 18671 April 38. May 6, 1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITCOURTOF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION NO. 13 11 S3* ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE I IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: I JUAN BENITEZ PEREZ, Petitioner. Husband, and FASTUMA BENTTEZ PEREZ, Respondent-Wife, TO: Mrs. Fastuma Benltez Aids 531 South Thornburg, Apt. F. San Maria, California YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for l Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you I are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to It on EMILIO C. PASTOR, 1 ESQ., attorney for Petitioner. j whost address Is 202 28 West | Flagler Street, Miami, Florida I 88180, and tile the original with \ the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 8,1883; otherwise a default will be ' entered against you for the I relief demanded in the com- plaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this Slat day of March, 1883. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida ByM.J. HARTNETT As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Attorney for Petitioner: EMILIO C. PASTOR, ESQ. 202-28 West Flagler Street Miami. Florida 33130 18688 April 8,16. 33, 28. 1888 7 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAMC LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name Was- ssrlauf Data Corporation D-B- A Vertical Management Sys- tems at 7310 Red Road Suite 308 A South Miami. Florida S814S Intend to register said names with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. Barnard J. Wassertauf - President Thomas N. Wassertauf - Vice-Presldent Monlna A. Wassertauf - Secretary Attorney for Robert G Benin 7800 West Flagler St. Miami, Fla S8144 18606 April8,16, 22, 39 198S INTHE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 83 02291 AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION (PROPERTY) HELEN HALPEK and JOHN E MANDABLL, Plaintiffs. vs MARVIN M. GREEN. TRUS- TEE, and HARRY J. SHER- MAN Defendants. TO: Harry J Sherman 2654 W Birrhwood Avenue Chicago. Illinois 60646 YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a mort- gage on the following property in Dade County. Florida. Lot 1, In Block 7, of ALTOS DEL MAR No. 6, according to the Plat thereof, recorded In Plat Book 8. at page 108, of the Public Records of Dade Coun- ty, Florida; together with the imporvements thereon and the appurtenances thereto, and all of the furniture, furnishings, fixtures and equipment therein contained. has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on HENRY M. WAITZKIN. plaintiffs' attor- ney, whose address Is 740 7lst Street. Miami Beach. Florida. 33141. on or before May 13.1883. and file the original with the clerk of this court either before service on plaintiffs' attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. WITNESS my hand and the seal of this Court on April 6. 1883 RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk of the Court By D.C.Bryant As Deputy Clerk 18607 April 8. 16. 23,29,1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICL (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA, IK AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION NO. 93-14805 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of ANTOINE LOUI8, Petitioner-Husband and MARIALA DURAND LOUIS, Respondent-Wife TO: MARIALA DURAND 'LOUIS, Respondent Address and residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- . FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN. attorney for Petitioner, whose address is 181 N.E. 82nd Street. Miami, FL SS1S8, and fUe the original with the clerk of die above styled court on or before May 37, 1888; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 38th day of April, 1888. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By K. SEIFRIED As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) LLOYD M. ROUTMAN, ESQ. 181 N.E. 83 Street Miami, FL 88188 Telephone: (806)767-6800 Attorney for Petitioner 18680 April 38; May 6.13,30.1888 i-St"--------------------- NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. desiring to engage In business < under the fictitious name of IBAL HARBOR IN VESTMENTS at number 1120 88th Street, in the City of Miami. Florida. Intends to register the said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of 1 Dade County. Florida. Dated at Miami, Florida, this 31 day ot March, 1883. RUTH BRANDT Owner ROBERT A. BRANDT Attorney lor Applicant 58 Merrtck Way Suite 201 Coral Gables. FL 33134 186UM April 8.16. 23. 29. 1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 83-114) Division 03 IN RE: ESTATE OF GUSSIELEVINE, Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS (Summary Administration. TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE: Please be advised that an Order of Summary Admlnin- tratlon has been entered by the above styled Court and that the total value of the above estate Is S4.il4.28 consisting of a savings account and shares of stock of various companied. and that said assets have been assigned to ESTELLE FREUND. Within three months from the time of the first publication of this notice you are required to file with the clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Probate Division, the address of which is 73 West Flagler Street. Miami, Florida 33130. a written statement of any claim or demand you may have against the estate of GUSSIE LEVTNE, deceased. Each claim must be in writing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and addresa of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim la not yet due. the date when it will become due shall be stated. If the claim Is con tin- | gent or unliquidated, the nature of the uncertainty shall I be stated If the claim la 1 secured, the security shall be 1 described. The claimant shall deliver a copy of the claim to , the clerk who shall serve the j copy on the personal rep- i resentatlve. ALL CLAIMS AND DEMANDS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Dated February 18.1988. SCOTT F. BARNETT, P.A. I 10011 ves Dairy Road, Ste. 308 Miami, Florida88178 Telephone: (808)663-4042 Attorney 18668 April 29; Mhv6. 1983 NOTICE UNOE" FICTITIOUS NAMF LAW NOTICE IS H'.REBY GIVEN that the und> -ugned desiring to engage In islness under the fictitious n* M BIS- CAY NE BUILDING, a-19 West Flagler Street. Mian Florida 8S1S0, intends to reg er such name with the Clerk 10 Cir- cuit Court of Dad' ounry. Florida. BISCAYNE BUILDING. I BY: i a -'M F^-'.rNJ lent 18693 ;8. 15 .."ig c~ *v - Page 18-B The Jewish Floridian / Friday, April 29. 1983 Public Notice IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT------- FOR DADE COUNTY,FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION FILE NUMBER 13-47 Divilion 01 IN RE: ESTATE OF SADIE FRIEDFELD. Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ES- TATE AND ALL OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that the administration of the estate of SADIE FRIED FELD. deceased. File Number 83-87. Is pending In the Circuit Court for Dad* County. Flor- ida. Probate Division, the ad- dress of which la 73 West Flan ler Street. Miami. Florida. The personal representative of the . estate is Hilda Prager whos address Is 4101 Pine Tree Drive. Miami, Florida and Corlnne MoakovlU whose ad- dress Is 3054 North Bay Road. North Miami. Florida. The name and address ol the per- sonal representative's attorney are set forth below. All persons having claims or demands against the estate are required, WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA- TION OF THIS NOTICE, to flle with the clerk of the above court a written statement of any claim or demand they may have. Each claim must be In writing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and address of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim is not yet due. the date when It will become due shall be stated. If the claim Is contin- gent or unliquidated, the nature of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim Is se- cured, the security shall be de- scribed. The claimant, shall deliver sufficient copies of the claim to the clerk to enable the clerk to mall one copy to each personal representative. All persons Interested in the estate to whom a copy of this Notice of Administration has been mailed are required. WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE, to file any ob- jections they may have that challenges the validity of the decedent's will, the quali- fications of the personal rep- resentative, or the venue or Jurisdiction of the court. ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Date of the first publication of this Notice of Administra- tion April 22. 1983 Hilda Prager and Corlnne Moskovlts As Personal Representative of the Estate of Sadie Frledfeld Deceased ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Daniel Retter. Esquire AmerlFlrst Building. Suite 2250 One S. E. Third Avenue Miami. Florida 33181 Telephone (3061358-6090 18841 April 22, 28.1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 13-14504 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OFMARRIAOI IN RE: The Marriage of MERLE M. DAVIS, wife and LINCOLN V. DAVTD. husband. TO: LINCOLN V DAVIS RESIDENCE UNKNOWN YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has bean filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on ARTHUR H. LTPSON. attorney for Petitioner whose address la 1980 TYLER STREET. HOLLYWOOD. FLA., and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27,1988: otherwise a default will be enured against you for the relief demanded in the com- plaint or petition. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 26th day of April, 1988 RICHARD P BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By C P. COPELAND \ Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Se" i 18672 April 29, j. JO. 1988 NOTICE OF ACTION ! CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE ' (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 83-12038 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: JORGE MEZA. Husband-Petitioner and MAGOLA MEZA. Wife-Respondent. TO: MAGOLA MEZA 1718th. Ave. Apt. 3 Paterson. Jew Jersey YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to it on ALBERT L. CARRICARTE. P.A.. attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 2491 N.W. 7th St.. Miami. Florida 33125. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 6. 1983. otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 5 day of April, 1983 RICHARD P. BR1NKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida ByC. i> Cope land As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Albert L Carricarte. P.A. 2491 N.W. 7th Street Miami. Florida38126 Telephone: 1306)648-7917 Attorney for Petitioner 18608 April 8. 16. 22. 29. 1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA FAMILY DIVISION CASE NO. 83-14284 NOTICE OF ACTION In Re: The Marriage of CAROL A. WILLIAMS. Petitioner-Wife vs. JACKIE WILLIAMS, Respondent-Husband TO: JACKIE WILLIAMS Residence Unknown YOU JACKIE WILLIAMS are hereby notified to flle your answer to this Petition for Dis- solution of Marriage with the Clerk of the Court and mall a copv to Petitioner's Attorney DANIEL GALLUP. 13145 Coro- nado Terrace. North Miami. Florida. 33181. on or before May 27. 1983. else Petition will be taken as confessed. This 22nd day of April. 1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk Circuit Court By M. J. Haroiett Deputy Clerk 18668 April 29; May 6, IS. 20.1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 83-11343 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF DAPHNE A. GREEN Petitioner-Wife, and ALFRED GREEN. Respondent. Husband TO: ALFRED GREEN 128 Rose Mont Toronto, Canada M6E1B3 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on GEORGE T. RAMANI. attorney for Petitioner, whose address la 711 Biscayne Bldg., 19 West Flatter Street. Miami. Florida 88180. and fUe the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before I May 80. 1988; otherwise a " default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each weak for four con- secutive weskj In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 14th day of April. 1983 RICHARD P. BRINKER AS Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By: N.A. HEWETT As Deputy Clerk I Circuit Court Seal) GEORGE T. RAMANI 711 Blacayne Bldg. 12 West F'.agler Street Miami, Florida88180 Attorney for Petitioner 18838 April 22, 29; May 6.13, 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 8J-878 FAMILY DIVISION (FC-29) NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE : THE MARRIAGE OF KATHLEEN ANN GORE Petitioner-Wife and WALTER EVERETT GORE Respondent-Husband TO: Walter Everett Gore 512 King Richard Drive Virginia Beach. V. 23452 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a petition for Dissolution of your Marriage has been filed and commenced in this court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on KRAMER A GOLDEN. PA. attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is Biscayne Centre Building. Suite 203. 12000 Biscayne Boulevard. North Miami. Florida 33181. and (He the original with the clerk uf the above styled court on or before May 20. 1983; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief prayed for In the complaint or petition This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 18th day of April. 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By DC. BRYANT As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) ATTORNEY FOR PETI- TIONER: SANFORD H. KRAMER KRAMER* GOLDEN. P.A. Biscayne Centre Building Suite 203 12000 Biscayne Boulevard North Miami. FL 33181 18646 April 22. 29; May 6, 13.1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 83-1831 DIVISION 03 IN RE: ESTATE OF LESTER SANTLY Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE: Within three months from the time of the first publication of this notice you are required to file with the clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. Probate Division, the address of which la 73 West Flagler Street. Miami. Florida 38130. a written and verified statement of any claim or demand you may have against the estate of LESTER SANTLY. deceased. Each claim must be In writing and must indicate the | basis for the claim, the name and address of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim Is not yet due. the date when It will become due shall be stated. If the claim Is con- tingent or unliquidated, the nature of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim is secured, the security shall be described. The claimant shall deliver a copy of the claim to the clerk who shall serve the copy on the personal rep- resentative. ALL CLAIMS AND DEMANDS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Dated April 19.1983. JOSEPHINE P SANTLY As Personal Representative of the Estate of LESTERSANTLY Deceased Attorney: Ben Essen ESSEN AND ESSEN. P.A. 814 Dupont Plaxa Center Miami. Florida 88181 Telephone I 306) 371-6141 18664 April 29, May 6, 1983 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name GLOBAL ENTERPRISES at 10698 N.W. South River Drive, Medley, Florida 83178 Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. SOUTHEAST BONDED WAREHOUSE, INC. BY:TONYNAPOU. President GARY P. COHEN. ESQ. Attorney for Applicant 18611 April IS, 22.29: May 6.1988. INTHE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION Divlsian No. 83-13*16 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE BESSIE D. GALBUT. Trustee. Plaintiff, -vs- BLANCHE CHEPOTERUIZ, Defendant TO: BLANCHE CHEPOTE- RUIZ Malecon ArmendorU 271 EdlflcloBrisas Marinas DPTO 2 A Lima 18 PERU. SOUTH AMERICA YOU ARE HEREBY NOT! FIED that an Action to Fore- close a Mortgage on the follow- ing described property In Dade County, Florida: Condominium Unit Num- ber 302 of JEFFERSON GAR- DENS CONDOMINIUM, INC., a Condominium according to the Declaration of Condomi- nium thereof, filed for record December 27. 1979 In Official Records Book 10611 at Page 160 and subsequent amendment thereto, of the Public Records of Dade County, Florida to- gether with proportionate undi- vided shares in the common elements appurtenant thereto, as established in said Declara- tion of Condominium, has been fllee against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any. to it on ABRAHAM A. GALBUT. ESQUIRE. Attorney for the Plaintiff, whose address is 999 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach. Florida. 33139. on or before May 20, 1983. and flle the original with the Clerk of this Court either before serv- ice on Plaintiff's attorney or immediately thereafter; other- wise, a default will be entered against you for the relief de- manded in the Complaint. WITNESS MY HAND and Seal of this Court on this April 20,1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk of the Court By: M. J. Hartnett Deputy Clerk Abraham A. Galbut. Esq. Attorney for Plaintiff 999 Washington Avenue Miami Beach, Florida 33139 Telephone: (305)672-3100 18651 April 22. 29; May 6, 13.1983 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name THE CLAY BOX at 6000 W. 4th Avenue. Hlaleah. Florida, intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. CATHERINE R. BROWN Applicant NATHANIEL L. BARONE, JR Attorney for Applicant 6361 Sunset Drive South Miami. Florida 38143 18670 April 29 May 6.13.20, 1988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION No. 62 14344-FC4 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of: GRACTELA ALAMILLA ALARCON and RODOLFO ALARCON TO: Mr. RODOLFO ALARCON YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dis- solution of Marriage has bean filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. if any, to It on RAFAEL SILVA, Esq.. at- torney for Petitioner, whose address Is 1016 Capri St, Coral Gables. Florida, and flle the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 13. 1888; otherwise a da- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice snail be published ones each weak for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 8th day of April 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida ByB.J.Foy As Deputy Clerk Attorney for Petitioner Rafael Sllva 1018Capri Street. Coral Gables. Florida 83184 18616 April 16. 22, 29; Mia/6.1988 si'B' IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR .DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 83-3341 Division 02 IN RE: ESTATE OF BARNEY CANTOR Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION The administration of the es- tate of BARNEY CANTOR, de- ceased. FUe Number 88-8861. la pending In the Circuit Court for DADE County. Florida. Pro- bate Division, the address of which Is 78 West Flagler Street. Miami. Florida. 33130. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All Interested persons are re- quired to file with this court, WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims against the estate and (2) any objection by an Inter- ested person to whom notice waa mailed that challenges the validity of the will, the qualifi- cations of the personal repre- sentative, venue, or Jurisdic- tion of the court. ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC- TIONS NOT SO FILED WTLL BE FOREVER BARRED. Publication of this Notice has begun on April 29.1988. Personal Representative CECILEG KLUOER 1901 Collins Avenue Miami Beach. Florida 33139 Attorney for Personal Representative: HYMAN P. GALBUT. Esq. Galbut. Galbut A Menln. PA. 999 Washington Avenue Miami Beach. Florida. 38189 Telephone: 672-8100 18665 April 29; May 6.1988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADS COUNTY CIVILACTION No. 83-1 MM IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: IBRAHIM LOPEZ, Husband-Petitioner. and ELS A MONTE RO LOPEZ. Wife-Respondent. TO: ELSA MONTERO LOPEZ Call* 308 No. 1908 Santa Fa ICarianao. Cuba YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dis- solution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to It on ALBERT L. CARRICARTE. P.A. attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 2491 N.W. 7th St. Miami. Florida 38126. and flle the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20. 1988; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief de- manded in the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEWISH FLORrDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this IS day of April, 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By N. A. Hi wett As Deputy Clerk ALBERT L. CARRICARTE, P.A. 2491 N.W. 7th Street Miami. Florida 3SIM (808)649-7917 Attorney for Petitioner 18627 April 16. 22.29: May 9.1983 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR DAOE COUNTY, FLORIDA Cat* No. 83-11892 BEN GEIS1NGER Petitioner Plaintiff and AUGUSTO MONSALVE and LOLA MONSALVE Respondent De fendante NOTICE OF ACTION TO: AUGUSTO MONSALVE and LOLA MONSALVE YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for specific per- formance of a Contract and Damages has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any. on ROBERT M ZIEJA. ESQ Attorney for Petitioner. 888 N.E.. 167 St., N.M.b.. FL 33162 on or before May 6, If"7 and file the original with th* :.erk of this court: otherwise a default will be entered against you Dated: April4.1983 RICHARD P BRINKER Clerk By: C.P. COPELAND As Deputy Clerk 18604 ArpUS, 15.22.29. 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUIT COURTYOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 93-10421 FAMILY CIVIL DIVISION NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of POORANDATH RAMKISSOON. Petitioner, and BLANCA I. RAMKISSOON. Respondent. TO: Blanca I. Ramlclssoon Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOT! FIED that a petition for Dlsso lutlon of your Marriage has been filed and commenced In this court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defensea. U any, to It on David E. Stone; Stone. Soetchln a Gonxales. PA.; 1401 W Flag- ler Street, Ste. 201. Miami. Florida 33135. attorney for Pe- titioner, whose address Is (As stated above), and file the orig- inal with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 13, 1988: otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief prayed for In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 7 day of April, 1988. RICHARD P BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By D. C. Bryant Aa Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) David E. Stone Stone. Soetchln* Gonxales. P.A. 1401 W. Flagler Street. Ste. 201 Miami. Florida 33135 Attorney for Petitioner 18616 April 15.22,29; May 8,1983 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE) (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVILACTION NO, 63-128Sf ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of CEMANES RAPHAEL Petitioner-Husband, and CLARETHA RAPHAEL. Respondent-Wife. TO: CLARETHA RAPHAEL. Respondent Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy ol your written defense. If any. to it on LLOYD M ROl'TMAN. attorney for Petitioner whose address Is 181 N.E 82nd Street, Second Floor. Miami. Florida SS1S8, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20 l3; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the com- plaint or petition This notice shall be published once each week for 'our con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 12th day ot April. 1983 ___ RICHARD P BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By: N.A. HE WETT As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Attorney for Petitioner LLOYD M. ROUTMAN. E30. 181 N.E. 82nd Street. Second Floor Miami. FL 33138 May 8. l*W NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HgS GIVEN that the undersigned- de.lring to engage in bu.lne- under the fictitious nsm. DIASALCO and RSI IMJ* 1st Avenue, in the City of Miami. Florida. W8* register the said name with DM Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida Dated at Miami BjOtj Florida, this 2nd day December 1982 _ RICHARD SWAEBE. W Owner MURRAY B.WEIL. Jr. EM Law Offices of Murray 0 W,U| Jr.. P.A. Attorney for Applicant Apr;> Merrier, 60-Year Resident, Passes Friday, April 29. 1983 / The Jewish Floridian Page 19-B Michael (Lefty) Schemer, a [I SS of Miami for over 60 12**2 APrU 22 fluNorth Em General Hospital. He was 165 vears old. Mr Schemer retired in 1975 (mm his position as supervisor ifttv of Miami Parks and Rec- 5 .on Department. He had SIS for the department for 27 1 Nil* He was a member of American Legion Post 29, DAV, and Old Timers Baseball Association. Survivors include a wife, Doris; son, Michael Lee; three daughters, Nancy Wetmore. Donna Thompson, and Sophie Schemer; two brothers. Maurice and Isadore; a sister, Fannie Siegel, and two grandchildren. Irene Sussman, ORT Founder Irene Sussman, co-founder and firs, president of Southeast Re- pon of Women's American ORT. 5ii Sunday at South Miami Hospital. She was 65. A native of Poland. Mrs. Suss- man moved to Miami in 1951. She also served on the board ol Greater Miami Jewish Federa- tion. Survivors include her husband, Irving; sons, William and Mark; and three grandchildren. Funeral services were held April 26 at Temple Judea, with interment following at Mt. Nebo Cemetery. Riverside Chapel was in charge of arrangements. JWV Presented Award To Police Detective \i a recent meeting of Abe Horowitz Post 6H2. Jewish War Veterans, Commander Harvey Malise awarded North Miami Beach Detective Harold Jones a --Policeman of the Year" award for community service. In addition to the engraved plaque. Detective Jones was presented a U.S. Savings Pond. Past National Commander lrwin Steinberg and police Lieutenant Horowitz also attended the cere- mony Jewish Contribution to B'Way to be Featured \n annual program entitled lewish Contribution to the Broadwaj Stage" will be pre- ai Temple Beth Am Kri- d.i\ evening, April 29 at 8:15 p.m. The temple choir, under the covert a ? 4. i Li Mount Nebo Cemetery 550S Nor'tiAv 3fd Street V 261 761? direction of Selma Maumgard. and soloists will be featured. Rabbi Herbert Haumgard. spiritual leader, will present an original narration which coor- dinates the music and a story of how life experiences ol Jews in the early twentieth century in America led them to create songs for "Sound of Music," "West Side Story," "Carousel." "The Man of La Mancha." and other musicals. Reward Luncheon Set Betty Kestenbaum, president of Miami Beach Region of Had- assah, has announced plans for an Annual Donor Reward Lunch- eon to take place at the Carillon Hotel Monday, May 9 and Tues- day, May 10. Approximately 1,400 members are expected to attend, according to Faye Yar- row, donor chairman, and Au- gusta Mentz Richland, co-chair- man. Lottie Zaimoff and Anne Yar- row are in charge of hostesses, and Rosalie Williams and Tony Nicodema, with Paula Cohen at the piano, will present "An Af- ternoon of Melodic Entertain- ment" during the event. Area Cantors to Attend 36th Assembly A number of cantors who are members of Florida Region of the Cantors Assembly and who serve in the Miami area will attend a 36th Annual Cantors Assembly Convention at Grossinger's in New York, starting May 1. ROSEN Margie. 72, of Miami, passed away April 21. She had made her home here lor the part 45 years She was a member of Belli David Congregauon and a mem- ber of Club 60 She was the wife of Ir- ving; mother of Jerome; grandmother of two; and aunt of one. Funeral serv- ices were held April 22 at Gordon Funeral Home Interment followed at Mt Nebo Cemetery. WEINSTEIN Charlotte, a resident of Miami Beach for the past 31 years, died. She was the sister of Saul of Miami Beach and aunt of Carl of Mass and William of Calif. Craveslde services were held April 21. Arrangements were by Riverside Me- morial Chapel. COHEN Jerome D.. a resident of Miami for the past 37 years and a member of Temple Israel, passed away. He was president of Financial F.nglneerlng Assoclauon- ' Agency and a member of CLU. He was the husband of Mildred; father of Philip of Fort Lauderdale. Jeff of Miami, and Suzy Hallpertn of Miami; grandfather of two; and brother of Shirley Hutchln- son of Cocoa Beach. Funeral services were held April 28 at Riverside Chapel Interment followed at Star of David Cemetery. RAUZIN Jerome, 54. of Las Vegas, Nev died April 23 He had been a long-time resi- dent of Miami He attended Shenandoah Junior High School and Georgia Mili- tary Academy. He was the husband of Illene. father of Sidney of Las Vegas and Jan Miller of Denver, Co ; and grandfather of two Graveside services and Interment were held April 26 at Mt Nebo Cemetery. AH arrangements were by Gordon Funeral Home. SCHEMER Michael (I.efty) 66. of North Miami, passed away April 22. A resident of Miami for over 60 years, he was a su- pervisor for the City of Miami Parks and Recreation Department. He was a member of the American legion Post 29, the DAV. and the Old Timers Base- ball Association Survived by his wife. Doris, son. Mlchaell.ee Schemer, three daughters. Nancy Wetmore. Donna Thompson, and Sophie Schemer; two brothers, Maurice Schemer and Isadore Schemer; sister Fannie Siegel; and two grandchildren. BERNSTEIN, Alec. North Miami Beach. April 28. GOODSTEIN, William S Rubln-Zllbert FIEDLER, Charles A Miami Beach. April 24 Riverside Clements, Pioneer Banker, Passes When a loss occurs away from home. FOREST PARK CHAPEL, INC. Here and in New York, to assure swift and understanding service. Dade County 949-1656 Broward County 925-3396 1921 Pembroke Rd. 18840 West Dixie Hwy. "presented by S levilt, F.O. New York: (212) 263-7600 Queen* Blvd & 76th Rd., Forest Hills, N.Y. Charles L. Clements, a pio- neering financier who helped build Chase Federal Savings and Loan Association, died April 14 at St. Francis Hospital after a long illness. He was 87 years old. Mr. Clements helped establish the savings and loan in 1933 with $2,500 and a small grant from the government. After receiving its federal charter in 1934 as First Federal Savings and Loan, the bank became Chase Federal in 1936. Mr. Clements retired as chairman in 1977 but continued BECKER. Helen, Miami Beach, April 19. KESSLER. Harry I... Miami Beach Riverside MARKOWITZ, Rachel. 82 Rubln- Zllbert. MISROCH. Margaret. Miami Beach. Rubln-Zllbert. SCHWARTZ. Eva. Miami Beach Rubin Zllbert TICKER. Helen. Miami. April 21 Gordon WINSTON. David E.. Miami Beach. April 21 Hlaaberg. HARRON. John. 80. April 22 Riverside BRIER. Sara! Rebecca. April 21 Riverside. GOODKIN. Nathan. Miami. Aprll24 GREENFIELD. Helen. 71. North Miami Beach. April 22. Riverside YATROFSKY. Max. 78. Miami Beach, April 26 TANNEN, Louis. North Miami Beach. April 27 We Hope ' You Never Need Us But IfYou Do Call Mrs. Evelyn Sarasohn City Memorial &Monument, Inc. 7610 Northeast 2nd Avenue 759-1669_____ as president of the firm. Survivors include a wife, Lena Pafford of Miami Beach; son, Charles, Jr.; daughters, Virginia Peterson and Marion Ishman; a brother, Albert; a sister, Alman Clements Vann; 11 grandchil- dren: and three great-grandchil- dren. Services were held April 15. . ! if \T AO<* A > 71 ,0b -' RUBIN-ZILBERT MEMORIAL CHAPEL O Murray Rubin, F.D. Three Generations of our Family Serving You in Dade Miami Beach 1701 Alton Road 538-6371 The only Guaranteed Pre-Arrangements No Money In Advance Broward Hallandale 100 S. Dixie Hwy 456-4011 Simple, Dignified &>According to Jewish Tradition Pre-Need and Cemetery Counseling & Arrangements Worldwide Shipping Available Chapels in: Fort Lauderdale, Margate, Deerf ield Beach, W. Palm Beach and N. Miami Beach Broward 742-6000 Dade 945-3939 Palm Beach 627-2277 South Palm Beach 427-4700 NORTON CfTtl - ] a OUR NEWEST STORE IN PEMBROKE PINES 110J N. UNIVERSITY DRIVE PHONE 435-1383 IRE 40,000 MILE LIMITED WARRANTY LOW COST HI6H MILEAGE (OUTSTANDING VALUE RADIAL SgE PRICE FET 155SR12 40.26 19 145SR13 35.52''15 155SR13 42.03 24 165SR13 45.58 53 175SR14 52.10,1 ei 185SR14 55.06 21' 165SR15 53.28 1 n QUALITY VALUE PERFORMANCE r\ P METRIC TUBELESS X WHITEWALLS sax PRICE FE T P155.80R13 39.84 1&o P165 80R13 44.70 i w XZX TUBELESS BLACKWALLS ~VTT SZE ci-,CE 145 -13 36.26 '63J 155 -13 41.39 142 P185 80R13 58.16 1 90 P185-75R14 59.55 200 165 13 46.45 1 55 175-14 53.18 2 08 Pi95,75Ru 62.53 2'3 185-14 57.35 2 15 P205 75R14 70,73 2 34 165,15 51#36,72 P215 75R14 73.66 2 49 165 70-13 44.76 155 P205/75R15 71.95 244 175 70.13 49 93 66 P215/75R15 74.98 2 59 P225-75R15 77.48 2 74 185 70-14 58.94 1 99 185 70-13 55.24 1 78 XCA UGHT TRUCK TUBELESS BLACKWALLS SIZE 700-15 73.8I297 750-16 87.91 '5 800-16 5 90.65 3 79 875 16 5 9&104 55 950 16 5 111.95 4 95 10:165 116.66 ^ TUBELESS BLACK ce : 27 195/70-14 205/70-14 81.85 87.33 IMPORT TRUCKS MICHELIN XCT 185-14 FE T 2 40 ' LKFGoodrich STEEL BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALL BELTED CLM LIFESAVBI XLM P-METRIC POLYESTER CORD FIBERGLASS BELT WHITEWALLS P155/80B12 P3/70 BEST SELLING RADIAL DUAL STEEL BELTS .SOL. PRICE FET. 165/70SR13'44.73 1 26 Plus 149 FET SIZE PRICE FET P155/80B13 31.97 144 SIZE SALE PRICE FET P165/80B13 33.81 m P1W/80R13 46.861 ,w P175/WB13 35.75 i.a P175/80R13 43.57 P18S/80B13 37.93 1 h "I5/I0B13 49.85 HIGH TECH P175/75B14 38.79 ' RADIALS P185/758U 39.88 "> P19570R13 5Q.82 1 71 1 2 1 9t P20570RU 56.92 2n 175/70SR13 50.47 1 32 185/70SR13 55.06 1 57 I185/70SR1' 65 195r70SRl 88 llRELL WIDE RADIALS P77 REVOLUTIONARY ALL SEASON NAOMI WE ALSO CARRY P5,P6,P7ndP8 SIZES TO FTT MOST | AMEINCAN MPOm CARS AT MOST STORES 50. 60 & 70 SERIES P195/75B14 41.82 ,1 and the new P205/75B14 42.92 *" COMP T/A P175/75R14 47.5Q l3 P185/75R14 52.32 '* P215 75814 44.25 229 P195/75R14 56.92 P20575A14 59.37 P215/75R14 60.45 ?4S w2y7Mi4|46.57i P155/M815 35.75 ;1M P1K/S0B15 37.44 ;i- ^95/75815 59.70 211 234 P225 75R14 64.62 * P2K/75R15 61.73 n*mus 44.14 " P71V75B15 45.8Q 2 34 minuns 64.( pgs^seis 47.78 j P22V75R15 66.44 bmbj "* <*ac pan RmbNmi rotori inas^ n*. aaa* Rapac* M>p Cuac* c*cot Omi iy*ar- txad aa raqurad Criac and ad- iuat raar Crm Road last W35/7M15 150.1Q P23S/75R15 71.26 SKONROtF TOTAL HEADQUARTERS 233 2.47 2.M 2 71 3J1 ON. CHANGE, FILTER A LUBE UPT05QTS armmm uwup CWRUBI tamnmum THE NEW GENERATION ' RADIAL RADIAL BLACKWALLS SJZE PRICE FE T 165 70-365 77.08 2 180 65-390 90.30 --: '90 65-390 99.91 220 55-390 MM r< 102.39 2 *t pBvomuNGf naum 4 TRX RADIALS & 4 MAG WHEELS <9os-woo o **-c kP CAP SCJAi LOW PfOCf PREMHJM4PIYI POLYESTER CORD WHITEWALLS SIZE PRICE FE T A78 13 25.01 C78 13 27.91 <* C78 14 28.53 88 E78 i4 29.73 2 01 P78-14 [ 31.16 2'2 G78-14 32.85 [2 26 I H78 14 I 34.39 2 49 G78-15 32.93 2 3^ H78 -15 i 34.61 2 54 L78-15 36.56 2 79 Avanatve m 2 *y oN MAXI-TRAC HIGHWAY RADIAL WHITEWALLS *ice >E ' P165 80R13 35.62 6' P175 80R13 38.39 &* Pi 85 80R13 40.09 78 P185 75R14 41.25 '93 P195 75R14 42.62 206 P205 75R14 43.90 2 3i P215 75R14 45.89 P215 75R15 46.28 ?49 P225 75R15 48.77 2JTJ P235 75R15I53.61 '2 89 FOR FOREIGN A MOST DOMESTIC SMALL A WTERMfDIATE CARS 155SR13 32.55 1 61 165SR13 35.62 ;ioJ 175SR13'37.36'202 165SR14 175SR14 185SR14 38^5 85 3934 42.86 155SRl5f36.04 165SR15|39.46 204 228 i 82 1 90 wc HONOR *-. 4 : mh-c VMA OlnWaClub ICC i^t-won uai a -* -*4' -aamaaaacM a.i M9 HV'< 'MMVMBMaCM NTS 3>w K)-WI CUTVf aooi SIMS 9w n>u<' mil inii 11 aw -r).a.9 tanm aaniaow 'Mn3n !* traia hi,..... &:*** aau o.Ma>ai aouM r> .-;-' IN s iwiv, :r <-< saajaj >m Mi. CaMimiM : ~ ^ ..laawwar ^^"a.9 .* I" r'" nimirn jr 'n.". s*- 7 cuwTwt* at*c< WMM.M *- .urn* WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS |
Full Text |
Friday, April 29.1983 The Jewish Floridian Page I
[public Notice NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) iutHECIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA. IN AND FORDADECOUNTY CIVIL ACTION N0.O-H3M ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE W RE: ROYCE E. JOHNSON. ID Petitioner Husband ""'sUSAN MAE JOHNSON. ^aTmAEJOHNSON TeelRoad Wlnchendon. VUMChuseltx 01478 TOO ARE HEREBY NOTI- HED that an action for resolution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you at required to serve a copy of ,our written defenses, If any. to Hn EVGENE J. WEISS. ESQUIRE, attorney for Peti- tioner, whose addreas Is Pent- house Northeast. 407 Lincoln Road. Mlsml Beach. Florida ai. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. IMS; otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 28 day of April IMS. RICHARD P BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By DC Bryant As Deoutv Clerk EUGENE J WEISS. ESQUIRE 407 Lincoln Road. Penthouse NE Miami Beach. Florida 33138 Telephone 834-4721 Attorney for Petitioner 18174 April 29; May 8.13. 20.1883 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO NAYDARICARDO Jefferson Hotel No. 317 12115th Street Miami Beach. Florida 33138 or Ml 60th Street West New York. New Jersey 07083 On 9 April 1883 the Police Department of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beach. Dade County. Florida a 1W8 Ford Thunderblrd auto- mobile VIN F8G8TH227852F. 1184 New Jersey 220 VUI. employed as an Instrumental Ity In the commission of a lelony. to-wlt Posaeaslon of a Controlled Substance cocaine). F.8. 8B3.1S and In violation of Section 832.701 thru ' 704 of the Florida Contra- bnd Forfeiture Act. A PetlUon lor a Rule to Show Cause why *" vehicle should not be forfeited Is anticipated to be Med on or about 2 June 1983. In jte Circuit Court In and for tWe County. Florida. 11th Judicial Circuit civil Division. LLC1A ALLEN DOUGH- ' HERTY }C!ty Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1700 Convention Center Drive Miami Beach. Florida83188 | Tel: (806)873 7917-29 By DANIEL GALLUP distant City Attorney Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida April 29. May 8,1888 "notTcb under------- ^'"iJ'OUS NAME LAW ' ln8ft M HEREBY 22 *' lhe undersigned. *yt engage in business "Mer the fictlUoua name, (i) *pot Aviation. (2) Ever- PMM Aircraft Service at 10811 ** 80 Terrace. Miami. FU. TO Intends to register said g?2 2* Clerk of the fionda D*de CmaAy- Thorpe Aviation. Inc. By: Brian Thorpe. . President ^"erlckC.Sake.Eaq. Jmy for Applicant April 29; May 8,18, 80.1988 I 05m??. HEREBY S.?*1 undersigned, una8 to en in buSnea. H0LYH?* "etUlou. name Court c7n?M^. 0f ** arcult [ ".% wty. Florida. Ul'NW l9T.tr. No 4 I n^, Mmi Florida .'Pril JM, 39 1988 STATE OF FLORIDA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION Cat* NO. SCI J-001 DO AH Cat* NOS. IJ 034 IJ-8S1 CONSENT ORDER Order No. $35-104 Issued: April II, 1463 INRE METROPOLITAN DADE COUNTY AND LOCAL 291. TRANSPORT WORKERS OF AMERICA. AFL-CIO. PETER SABATINO. WALLACE TOO- MER. MARCEIJ.l'S TUCK- ER. WEBSTER PRATT. RIG- OBERTO PAULA. KARL HOEFLINGER, a-k-a GOLD- FINGER JEROME LAMER, J.C. STRONG. GARY GAUSE CURTIS DORSETT, HENRY HOOD, CLAUDE ROLFE. Richard Weiss. Miami, attor- ney for Metropolitan Dade County. Alan Greenfield and Linda Ehrllch, Miami, attorneys for Transport Workers of America and individual respondents On April 11 and 12, 1988, Met- ropolitan Dade County, Trans- port Workers of America Local 291. AFL-CIO. the Individuals named In the style of this case, and the General Counsel of the Public Employees Relations Commission (Commission) entered into a settlement stipu- lation, subject to approval by this Commission, providing for the entry of a consent order by the Commission and a consent judgement by any appropriate Florida court. The parties waived all further notice, hear- ing and other procedures be- fore the Commission or the Di- vision of Administrative Hear- ings to which they may be en- titled under Chapter 447. Part II. or Chapter 120 of the Florida Statutes or the Rules of the Commission The settlement stipulation Is hereby approved and made a part of this record herein. Upon the basis of the settlement stipulation and the agreed upon record, the Com- mission makes the following findings: 1. On November 19. 1982. the Commission's General Counsel Issued an Administrative Com- plaint against Loral 291 which set forth certain proposed factual, legal and policy state- ments and further proposed penalties baaed on those state- ments. Any party or affected person disputing any of the proposed findings was allowed the opportunity to file re- sponses In a prescribed man- ner. 2. A timely response was filed on behalf of Local 291 S. By order issued on Decem- ber 29. 1982. the Commission referred PERC Case No. SC-82- 001 to the Division of Adminis- trative Hearings of the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAHl for the conducting of an evidentiary hearing on certain specific Issues. 4. A second Administrative Complaint against the Indivi- dual office rsandagenUnamed In the style above waa Issued on March 18.1983 5. Respondent Local 291 la now. and has been at all times material hereto, a labor orga- nisation within the meaning of Section 447.208(11), Florida Statutes (1981). and U the cer- tified bargaining agent for a unit of transit workers. 6. Respondent. Local 291 and the Individuals named In the style of this case have with- drawn their previously filed answers and waive further response. Baaed the above findings of fact, the settlement stipulation and the agreed upon record, and pursuant to 8sctlon 447.008(6). Florida Statutes (1981). the Commission orders that: Respondent Local 291. its of- ficers, agents, successors and assigns, shall: (A) Cease and desist from: Engaging In. or Inducing or encouraging any Individual employed by Metropolitan Dade County or any other pub- lic employee to engage In a strike or other concerted refusal to work as described In Section 447.208(6) of the Act. (B) Take the following affir- mative action to effectuate the policies of the Act: (1) Post In conaplcuoua places at Its business office In Miami. Florida, Including all places where noUces to members are customarily posted, a copy of the Notice to All Members attachsd hereto and marked "Appendix A. Copies of the Notice to be fur- nished by the General Counsel shall, attar being duly signed by Local 291 s representative, be posted by Respondent Local 291 Immediately after receipt thereof and maintained by It for sixty (60) consecutive days thereafter Local 291 will further provide for publication of the Consent Order and the Notice for ten consecutive days In a local newspaper of general circulation Reasonable slaps shall be token by Local 291 to Insure that said NoUces are not altered, detacted or covered by anyother materials. (2) Submit a signed copy of said Notice to the General Counael of the Commission who will forward sufficient copies to the County for posting, the em- ployer willing. In conspicuous places In and about the em- ployer's premlaes where no- tices to employees are custo- marily posted (3) Pay a fine of Nine Thou- sand Dollars to Metropolitan Dade County pursuant to Sec tlon 447.607(8) of the Act. The fine so paid shall be used to es- tablish a Safety Fund to be Jointly administered by the County and Local 291 to Im- prove safety conditions for em- ployees and the public in the operation of the County transit system. (4) Refrain from asserting representational rights under PERC Certification No. 889 covering transit workers until payment In full of the fine specified above. (6) Notify the Chairman of the Commission within ten (10) days from the date of this Order what steps Respondent Local 291 has taken to comply herewith. The Individuals named In the style of this case, except Claude Rolfe, shall each pay a tine Of $180.00 to Metropolitan Dade County to be credited to the Safety Fund described above. As agreed In the settlement stipulation, the Commission General Counsel Is directed to file a copy of this order with the Hearing Officer of the Division of Administrative Hearings, requesting dismissal with prejudice of the Administrative Complaints filed In this cause. It Is so ordered. POWERS. Chairman, BROOKS and RENOVITCH. Commissioners, concur I HEREBY CERTIFY that this document was filed and a copy served on each party on April 13.1988. BY: AnnT Nugyen Deputy Clerk Seal Public Employeea Relations Commission STATE OF FLORIDA PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES POSTED PURSUANT TO A CONSENT ORDER BASED UPON A SETTLEMENT STI- PULATION PROVIDING FOR CONSENT JUDGMENT IN ANY APPROPRIATE STATE COURT WE HEREBY NOTIFY YOU THAT: WE WILL pay a fine of Nine Thousand Dollars to the Met- ropolitan Dade County for the establishment of a Safety Fund to be Jointly administered by the County and Local 291. WE WILL NOT engage In, or Induce or encourage any Indiv- idual employed by Metropolit- an Dade County or any other public employee to engage In, a strike or any other concerted refusal to work as described In Section 447.203(6) of Florida Statutes (1981) LOCAL 291, TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA DATE: April 19,1988 BYC Rolfe TITLE President THIS IS AN OFFICIAL GOV- ERNMENT NOTICE AND MUST NOT BE DEFACED. This notice must remain posted for 60 consecutive days from the date of posting and must not be altered, defaced, or covered by any other material Any questions concerning this notice or compliance with Its provision may be directed to the: PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RELATIONS COMMISSION 2600 Blalr Stone Road. Suite SOD Tallahassee, Florida 82801 (904) 488-8641 APPENDIX A 018684 April 26: May 6,1988 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name of SEWING PARTS UNLIMITED at 601 N.W. sist Avenue. Miami, Florida Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. LIBERTY MACHINERY * EXPORT COMPANY HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN Attorney for LIBERTY MACHINERY A EXPORT 420 Lincoln Road, Suite 879 Miami Beach. Florida 88139 Telephone: (808)831-0891 18880 April 29; May8 18.30.198$ IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION Flit Number 83-2334 INRE: ESTATE OF ETHEL EPSTEIN Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that the administration of the estate of ETHEL EP- STEIN, deceased, File Number 83-2334. Is pending in the Cir- cuit Court for Dade County, Florida. Probate Division, the address of which la 73 West Flagler Street. Miami. Florida 33130. The personal rep- resentative of the estate Is FAYE CUTLER, whose ad- dress Is 21803 Arrlba Real, Boca Raton, Florida. The name and addreas of the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All persons having claims or demands against the estate are required. WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA- TION OF THIS NOTICE, to file with the clerk of the above court a written statement of any claim or demand they may have. Each claim muat be In writing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and addreas of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim Is not yet due, the date when It will become due shall be stated. If the claim la contin- gent or unliquidated, the nature of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim Is se- cured, the security shall be de- scribed. The claimant, shall deliver sufficient copies of the claim to the clerk to enable the clerk to mall one copy to each personal representative. All persons Interested In the estate to whom a copy of this Notice of Administration has been mailed are required, WITHIN THREE MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE, to file any ob- jections they may have that challenges the validity of the decedent's will, the quali- fications of the personal rep- resentative, or the venue or Jurisdiction of the court. ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED Date of the first publication of this Notice of Adminis- tration: April 29.1983 FAYE CUTLER As Personal Representative of the Estate of ETHEL EPSTEIN Deceased ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: LOUIS H. STALLMAN 407 Lincoln Road Miami Beach, Florida 83139 18656 Ap rl 128. May 6,1988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 83-14175 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF WANDA RAMOS. Wife-Petitioner. and ANGEL D.RAMOS, Husband-Respondent. TO: ANGEL D. RAMOS 884 Crescent Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11208 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of you r written defenses. If any. to it on ALBERT L. CARRICARTE. P.A.. attorney for Petitioner. whose addreas Is 2491 N.W. 7th Street, Miami, Florida 88129. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27. 1988: otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the com- plaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 21st day of April, 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By V. Berkley As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Albert L. Canicarte, 2481 N.W.Tth Street Miami, Florida 88128 Telephone: (806)649-7917 Attorney for Petitioner 18663 April 29; May6,18.20. 19*3 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION Flit Number 83-3342 Division 03 INRE: ESTATE OF SOLOMON COHEN Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS TO ALL PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST THE ABOVE ES- TATE: Within three months from the time of the first publication of this notice you are required to file with the clerk of the Circuit Court of DADE County, Flor- ida, Probate Division, the ad- dress of which Is 78 West Flag- ler Street. Miami, Florida 38130, a written statement of any claim or demand you may have against the estate of SO- LOMON COHEN, deceased. Each claim must be In writ- ing and must Indicate the basis for the claim, the name and ad- dress of the creditor or his agent or attorney, and the amount claimed. If the claim Is not yet due, the date when it will become due shall be stated If the claim la contin- gent or unliquidated, the na- ture of the uncertainty shall be stated. If the claim la secured. the security shall be described The claimant shall deliver suf- ficient copies of the claim to the clerk to enable the clerk to mall one copy to each personal rep- resentative. ALL CLAIMS AND DE- MANDS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Dated April 22.1988. As personal Representatives: Bernard Kane Wllma Plnckney Elaine Laker of the Estate of SOLOMON COHEN Deceased HYMAN P. GALBUT, ESQ. Attorney GALBUT, GALBUT* MENIN 999 Washington Avenue Miami Beach. Fla. 38139 Telephone: (306)672-3100 18686 April 29; _________________May 8^988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 63-14242 FAMILY DIVISION ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF LONNTE LOUIS McCOR- MICK. I'etltloner-Husband. and POLLY McCORMICK, Respondent Wife TO: POLLY McCORMICK Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dis- solution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any. to It on HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN, at- torney for Petitioner, whose address is 420 Lincoln Road- Suite 879. Miami Beach. Florida 38189, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27, 1988; otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami. Florida on this 26 day of April, 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida By DC. Bryant As Deputy Clerk HARVEY D. FRIEDMAN 420 Lincoln Road-Suite 879 Miami Beach. Florida 88188 Attorney for Petitioner 186TS April 29: Mays, 18, 20, 1888 INTHE CIRCUIT COURT OP THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CASE NO. 63-14028 NOTICE OF ACTION NO PROPERTY INRE: THE MARRIAGE OF WALTER NIELSEN. Petitioner Husband. VS CHERYL NIELSEN. Reapondent-Wlfe. TO: CHERYL NIELSEN Residence Unknown You are notified that an ac- tion for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are requested to serve a copy of your written answer end defenses, if any. to it on IRIS L. BENSON, plaintiffs attorney, whose address Is: 7867 West Flagler Street, Miami. Florida 33144. on or be- fore May 27. 1888: and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on plaintiff's attorney or Immedi- ately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. WITNESS my hand and the aeal of this Court on April 20. 1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER Clerk of the Court BYK Selfrted As Deputy Clerk IRIS L. BENSON Attorney at Law 7367 Weat Flagler Street Miami. Florida 88144 Telephone: 261-4642 18688 April 29; May 6.13, 20.1968 ELEVENTH CIRCUIT COURT DADS COUNTY, FLORIDA PC C8 NO. $9-142*4 IN RE: The Marriage of: ANNE MARIE COOPER Petitioner-Wife, and EDMUND COOPER Respondent-Husband. To: EDMUND COOPER Residence unknown, shall serve copy of your An- swer to the Petition for Disso- lution of Marriage upon GEORGE NICHOLAS. Attor- ney. 612 N.W. 12th Avenue, Miami. Florida, 88186. and file original with Court Clerk on or before May 27, 1988, otherwise a default will be entered. April 22,1983. RICHARD BRINKER Bv: M. J.Hartnett 18667 April 29: May6. 18.20, 1968 NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDING TO: RAYMOND PAUL CARRV Address Unknown On 9 February 1988 the Police Department of the City of Miami Beach, seized on Miami Beach, Dade County, Florida a 1979 Ford Mustang automobile, VIN 9F04W263879. 1983 Texas tag P 1788, employed as an In- strumentality In the commla- slon of a felony, to-wlt. Grand theft, F.S. 812.014 and Forgery, F.S. 831.01 and In violation of Section 932.701 thru 932.704 of the Florida Contraband Forfei- ture Act A Petition for a Rule to Show Cause why this vehicle should not be forfeited Is antici- pated to be filed on or about 9 June 1883. In the arcult Court In and for Dade County. Flor- ida, 11th Judicial Circuit Civil Division. Lucia Allen Dougherty City Attorney CITY OF MIAMI BEACH 1700 Convention Center Dr. Miami Beach, Florida 33138 Telephone: (806)673-7818-29 By: DANIEL GALLUP Assistant City Attorney DG-pb Office of the City Attorney City of Miami Beach Florida 18668 April 29; May 8,1988 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 83-14984 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of ULRICK FAUSTTN, Petitioner-Husband and FRANTZE FAUSTTN, Respondent-Wife. TO: FRANTZE FAUSTTN Respondent Addreas and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage haa been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any, to It on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN, attorney for Petitioner, whose address Is 181 N.E. 82 Street, Miami, FL 88188, and file the original with the clerk of the ' above styled court on or before May 27, 1988: otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- l secutlve weeks In THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 26th day of April. 1988. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida ByK.SEIFRIED As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) LLOYD M. ROUTMAN 181 N E. 82 Street Miami, FL88188 Telephone: (8061787-6800 Attorney for Petitioner lK78 April 28; Mays la 20, 1983 xml version 1.0 encoding UTF-8 REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd INGEST IEID ERYEZ67BD_LWEE0Z INGEST_TIME 2013-06-18T01:20:16Z PACKAGE AA00010090_02830 AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT UF PROJECT UFDC FILES idassah Conference to Host irmer Israeli Press Sec'y. ^. Kitty Miami Region of Hadassah has C Th, Reel Thing." it* [\nnual Region Conference. Replace May I, 2. and 3 at Four Ambassadors Hotel. -300 women from the Miami fare expected to attend. - Conference will host Dan fcir. former press secretary to Prime Minister Menachem , who will address the pen during a Sunday evening Cry Session He will speak on Wt issues facing Israel. luional vice president of issah. Joyce C. Kitey of mtown. Penn will serve as Iference adviser, and Sylvia an is overall chairman of levent Uso involved in planning the V: are Linda Minkes. presi- t of the Miami Region; [rlev Kaplan, workshop coor- Vo'r: and Dorothy Handshu, pter coordinator Jattir. a newsman who served president of Israeli Journalists Lxiation. was the Prime bur's press secretary from through 1981. He was a giber of the Israeli team that ducted peace negotiations President Carter and vptian President Sadat. He was also at Begins side Herman Minkes during meetings with President Carter in Washington and Jeru- salem and with President Sadat in Cairo, lsmailia, El Arish. Beershe'oa. Alexandria. Haifa, and Aswan. As the Prime Minis- ter's counselor for media affairs. he supervised press arrange- ments for Sadat's visit to Jeru- salem in 1977. 1 '.it i ii also accompanied Begin on Israeli leaders journeys to Rumania, Great Britain, to re- ceive his Nobel Prize in Oslo, and on many trips to the U.S. He is currently engaged in a special re- search project on the Egyptian- Israeli peace process as a fellow of the American Enterprise Insti- tute in Washington. Kitey currently serves both as national chairman of Hadassah's Promotion Department and as a member of the executive commit- tee. She was president of Eastern Pennsylvania Region for three years and currently serves on the following national committees: education. HMO. Zionist, leader- ship development, and 70th An- niversary A co-founder of a tri-regional "Kallah." which has been held at Camp Tel Yehuda in Barryville. N.Y. each summer since 1978. Kitey has been a life member of Hadassah since 1963. |Gary Holtzman to Receive ADL Iward on Behalf of Jordan Marsh liary Y Holtzman has been I to receive a 1983 Ameri- |wn Award of the Anti- Ifamation League of B'nai fith on behalf of Jordan Marsh tnpany. according to an an- nulment by Jonathan I. Nt- chairman of Florida ponal Board of the League. I Jerome ('. Berlin, chairman I Honda Society of Fellows. Ifcman is executive vice Nent of Jordan Marsh in mi. 'award will be presented at |gala dinner dance to be "Mired by the League Thurs- at the Four Ambassadors liel Holtzman served as general chairman of Israel 35th Anni- versary Celebration, is adminis- trative vice president of Temple Adath Yeshurun. and is a member of the board of directors of Michael-Ann Russell Jewish Community Center. He sits on Dade County Safety Council, the board of advisors of Opportunities Industrialization Center, and has been involved with Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce. Florida Retail Federation. Florida Business Round Table. United Way. and Greater Miami Jewish Federation. Jewish Floridiaim M Florida Friday, April 29,1983 Section B Eight-Day Phonathon Set to Benefit Federation Campaign I Ma ^*ter Miami Jewish Federation will sponsor "Eight Days in ls'i e phonathn to benefit 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal- G75 Emergency Fund, May 2-5 and May 9-12. to take place at p federation building. lndhUn!n*rs are currently being recruited to man the phones Uwnl'i I P'edge cards. Six two-hour time slots, running be- Lrh Le hours of 8:30 and 9 p.m., have been scheduled for I"* of the eight days. IhteoM 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund goal 0f SSed the S19 mimn mark, but if we are to attain our I raise 1 PtA j'ding uality human services to needy Jews we must Kharlmt8 utlonal $3 mUuon by June 30," Phonathon Chairman honeth d 8tated- "Tni> unique opportunity, and we M thiT evervone who shares our concern will give a few hours time to help us with this important effort.'' , Senator Henry Jackson of Washington was guest speaker at Greater Miami Jewish Federation's annual Cuban Hebrew Dinner Dance on behalf of 1983 Combined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emergency Fund. The evening WtU also highlighted by an Israel Inde- pendence celebration. Shown above from left are Henry I'ercal. dinner chairman: Susan Penal: Senutor Jackson: \'ancy Lipoff: Norman Lipoff. president of Greater Miami Jewish Federation: Keta Sostchin; and (luillermo Sostchin. Cuban Hebrew Com- mittee chairman ' 4 U.S. Congressman William Lehman ID., N. Dade) met with representatives of South- eastern Florida Holocaust Memorial Center during the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors in Washington. All are from the North Miami area. Shown from left are Jeff Ehrlich. survivor's son: Barbara Fass: her mother, Hilde Fox, a survivor: her daughter and the congressman's daughter- in-law. Shirley Lehman: Congressman Leh- man: Goldie R. Goldstein, executive vice president of Holocaust Memorial Canter; Rositta Ehrlich Kenigsberg: and her father, Henry Ehrlich, a survivor. The congressman is a member of Holocaust Memorial Center Board of Governors. Every floor in every store is brimming with brisk savings You'll find outstanding values on everything you need for your family and home. Hurry in early for the best selection. Sorry, no mail or phone orders lordani Jmarsn tt,! o< Au-ir> s'ems TCS vour Jordan Marsh charge card, Amer.can Express, Diners Club We "elcorne them c:,; Use your^Jora^ ^ ^^ ^ am tq 9 pM SUNDAY 12 NQON TO 5 30 pM >.-. MM "*" -", Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health SOFT PACK 100s FILTER. MENTHOL 2 mg. "iaf. 0.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method. Competitive tar levels reflect eithei the Dec 81 FTC Report or FTC method NOW. THE LOWEST OF ALL BRANDS. 8 nig *Sf We promise you less. (CONHPMED BY THE LATEST U.S. QOVt REPORT ON TABl Page 14-B The Jewish Floridian Friday, April 29. 1983 Workmen's Circle Plans Yiddish Weekend \ A Second Annual Institute for Yiddish Culture will be sponsored by Workmen's Circle Friday. May 13 through Sunday, May 15 at Palm Beach Hilton Hotel. Guest lecturers and artists will include Professor S. Portnoy. chairman of History Department at Florida Atlantic University; Professor I. Goldberg, lecturer on Yiddish literature, author, and editor; and Khayele Ash and Arieh Furman. Yiddish artists. Public Notice NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name KING FISH at 2028 NW 27 Ave. - Miami. Fla. 33i Intends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County. Florida. Laurentlno Gonzalei KING FISH, CORP. 12 April 28: mayo, 1S.20. 1963 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION NO. 13 13*52 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF: JASMIN CRUZ, and JESUS MANUEL CRUZ. TO: JESUS MANUEL CRUZ. Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an acUon for Dis- solution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any. to It on A. Koss. Attorney At Law P.A. attorney for PeUUoner. whose address Is 101 N.W. 12th Avenue. Miami. Florida 33128, and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 20.1983other- wise a default will be entered agalnt you for the relief de- manded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secuuve weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal oi said court at Miami. Florida on this day of April 18. 1983. U'HARDP BRINKER - Clark, Circuit Court Dade County. Florida ByM J.Hartnett As Deputy Clerk MARIANO SOLE. ESQ. A KOSS. ATTORNEY AT LAW, PA. 101 N.W. 12th Avenue Miami, Florida 33128 13081325-8844 Attorney for PetlUoner 18844 April 22. 29 May 8.13. 1883 NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) IN THE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY Civil Action No. 83-1 4M1 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of LEONARD CESAR. Petltloner-Wlfe. am) DULCE CESAR, Respondent-Husband TO: DULCE CESAR, RESPONDENT Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, If any, to It on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN. attor- ney for Petitioner, whose ad- dress la 181 N.E. 82 Street, Miami, FI. SS1S8, and file the original with the dork of the above styled court on or before May ST. 19S8; otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each weak for four con- secuUve weeks In THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this at day of APRIL, 19M. RICHARD P. BRINKER / As Clerk, Circuit Court ' Dade County, Florida By K. Self ried Aa Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) Lloyd M Routman. Esquire 181 N E. 82 Street Miami, FL3813* Telephone: (8061 767 MOO Attorney for PetlUoner 1HTT AprUJB; May8, 18,90 lsW Seminars will feature Yiddish art. theatre, literature, and histo- ry- Talk on Dentistry Set A meeting has been set by B'nai B'rith Women, Friendship Chapter, to take place at 1 p.m.. May 1 at the Carillon Hotel. Poinciana Room. Dr. Charles Braverman will discuss "What's New in Dentis- try^-------_-------------------------- NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name Zac- hor Institute for Holocaust Studies at 4200 Blscayne Boule- vard. Miami. Florida 33131 In- tends to register said name with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. Zachor Institute for Holocaust Studies. Inc. By: Haffy A. "Hap" Levy, President Jeffrey Berkowlts. Esq. Attorney for Applicant 18837 April 22. 29: _____________________May 6.18, IMS NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY CIVIL ACTION No. 83-14802 ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: The Marriage of TIPHAINE ALFRED. Petitioner Husband. and JK ANINE M. ALFRED. Respondent-Wife. TO: JEANINE M. ALFRED, Respondent Address and Residence Unknown YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that an action for Disso- lution of Marriage has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on LLOYD M. ROUTMAN, at- torney for PetlUoner, whose address Is 181 N.E. 82 Street, Miami, FL 331S8. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27, 1983: otherwise a de- fault will be entered against you for the relief demanded In the complaint or petition. This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 28 day of April. 1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk, Circuit Court Dade County, Florida ByK.SEIFRIED As Deputv Clerk Lloyd M. Routman, Esquire 181 N.E. 82 Street Miami, FL 33138 (306)767-8800 Attorney for PetlUoner 18678 April 29: May 6. 13.20. 1988 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File Number 13-520 Division (01) IN RE: ESTATE OF ROBERTA KATZ, Deceased NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION The administration of the es- tate of ROBERTA KATZ. de- ceased. File Number 88-820 (01). la pending In the Circuit Court for Dade County. Flor- ida, Probate Division, the ad- dress of which is 78 West Flag- ler Street, Miami, Florida, 33130. The names and ad- dresses of the personal repre- sentative and the personal rep resentaUve's attorney are sat forth below. All Interested persons are re- quired to file with this court, WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE: (l) all claims against the estate and (2) any objection by an inter- ested person to whom notice was mailed that challenges the validity of the win, the qualifi- cations of the personal repre- sentaUve, venue, or Jurisdic- tion of the court. ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC- TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. Publication of this Notice has begun on April 22. 1988 In the Jewish Floridian. Personal Representative: Mr. J. Seymour Katz 420 Fayatte Street Perth Am boy, New Jersey 08881 Attorney for Personal RepresentaUve: Sanford A. Freedman. Esq. 12700 Blscayne Boulevard Suite 410 North Miami. PL 38181 Telephone: (806)881-6862 April SS.SS.1SSS Neshei Lag BX)mer Parade, Picnic Set Neshei Chabad, women's arm of Chabad Lubavitch Organiza- tion, will sponsor a City-Wide Parade and Barbeque Picnic in honor of Lag B'Omer Sunday to start in front of Beth Israel Syn- agogue. Miami Beach, at 11:30 a.m. Children from yeshivos, day schools, and public schools are expected to participate and march in the parade that will fea- ture floats, banners, and a band, culminating at Muss Park, where the barbeque picnic is set to take place. Hina Kramer, president, stated, "We are proud of our her- itage and traditions, and we want our children to feel likewise. It is the duty of the woman to educate her child, and this is one of the ways in which we hope to incul- cate true Jewish values in our children." Proceeds from the parade will help support Neshei's outreach work, including providing candle lighting kits and food to needy members of the community. NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY. Civil Action No 83-147*5 GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION NOTICE FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF LUDISPERAZA, PetlUoner and EDUARDOPERAZA Respondent. TO:EDUARDO PERAZA c-o Jerry A. O'Brien. Warden U.S. Penitentiary Leavenworth Kansas 1300 Metro poll tan Leavenworth. Kansas 88048 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- FIED that a petition for Disso- lution of your Marriage has been filed and commenced in this court and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to It on MOR- TIMER S COHEN. ESQ.. at- torney for PetlUoner. whose address Is ISO S.E. 2nd Avenue. Suite 1000. Miami. Florida 33131. and file the original with the clerk of the above styled court on or before May 27, 1983: otherwise a default will be en- tered against you for the relief prayed for in the complaint or petition This notice shall be published once each week for four con- secutive weeks in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Miami, Florida on this 26 day of April, 1983. RICHARD P. BRINKER As Clerk. Circuit Court Dade County. Florida By C. P. Cope land As Deputy Clerk (Circuit Court Seal) MORTIMER S. COHEN Attorney At Law Suite 1000 180SE 2nd Ave. Miami. Fla Attorney for Petitioner 18878 April S9; MayB, IS. 20, 1983 NOTICE OF ACTION (NO PROPERTY) INTHE CIRCUITCOURTOF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA FAMILY DIVISION CASE NO.: 83-14744 IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF PATRICIA YD? Petitioner-Wife and JOSE YIP Respondent Husband TO: JOSE YD? Residence Address 782 Madison Ave Elisabeth. New Jersey YOU ARE NOTIFIED that aa action for dissolution of marriage has been filed against you and you are re- quired to serve a copy of your written defenses. If any. to It on Bruce N. Crown. Esq., 15490 N.W. 7th Avenue, Suite SOS, Miami, Florida SS1M on or be- fore May 37, 1888 and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on Petitioner's attorney or Im- mediately thereafter: other- wise a default will be entered against you for the relief de- manded in the Petition DATED: April 28,1988 RICHARD P BRINKER Clerk of Circuit Court (Circuit Court Seal) By: K. Seifried as Deputy Clark 1*"6 April 28: May8. 18, SO. 1988 Residents of Surfside held an annual Salute to Israel on behalf of State of Israel Bonds Organization and pledged support for the economic development of the Jewish State. Surfside Mayor Ben Levine received Israel's Negev Award recognizing par- ticipation in philanthropic and civic organizations. From left are Mayor Levine, Howard Klein, Israel Bonds executive director, Jerome Gleekel, Mideast authority and political scientist, and committee member, Sam Brenner. North Bay Village Jewish Center and State of Israel Bonds Organization held an annual Salute to Israel Dinner in honor of two synagogue members. Mitchell Potter and Gladys Sable, who received Israel Negev Awards in recognition of par- ticipation in Jewish community affairs as well as civic organizations. From left are Leo and Blossom Zivin, co- chairmen of the event; Potter. Sable, and Irving Ceranka. co- chairman. Rabbi Marvin Rose is the spiritual leader of Sorth Bay Village Jewish Center. .-. Residents of Admiral's Port in North Miami beu^n gathered for an annual Salute to Israel and pledged support for the economic development of the Jewish State through the Israel Bonds program, Israel Bonds David Ben-Gurion A ward was presented to Hilda Mazur. recognizing service to Israel Bonds Organization and other groups. From left are Nathan Katzen co-chairman, Mazur, Eric Salm, general chairman, Lauretta Berkman and Murray Weil, co-chairpersons. Masada to Celebrate The 10th birthday of Masada Chapter of Pioneer Women- Na'amat and the 35th anniver- sary of Israel will be celebrated by the chapter Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. in the auditorium of American Savings and Loan As- sociation, Miami Beach. According to Bertha Lieb- mann, president, a candle light- ing ceremony and a speaker will be featured. NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. desiring to engage In business under the fictitious name AMERICAN HELP TECHNIQUES at 8300 S.W. S St., Suite 202B, Intend to register said name with the Clark of the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida. EUROPEAN BEAUTY WRAP. INC. Florence E. Hetfner Pura Castro Attorney for Applicant: GARY P. COHEN. PA 18888 AprtllO: May 8. II, 20,1088 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engsge in business under the fictitious name KANGURO TOURS at "> Byron Avenue. No. 8 MUnM Beach. FL 8S1S41 Intends to register said name wUh the Clerk of the Circuit Courl of Dade County. Florida. -SALLY DORFMAN 18882 APrt1?; May8.13,20,19 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS "AMV^ov NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the underslgnec, d^lrtng to engM. m bu.ln- altA the txcaa^m^'o' XTRA SUPER FOOD CEN TER at 1840 West 9th Street. IS* Florid. 33012 intend. toregtatareeidn.m.wlth'W Clerk of the Circuit Court o> Dade County, Ftoj^-pp XTRA FOODS CORF CTPEN.CYPEN*D^B,D Attorneys for XTRA rw S Arthur OodfreyBoad Port Office BOX4020W Miami Beach. Florid. l |