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HARVARD ROW MALL • LAHSER & 11 POLE RD.
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1 YEAR:
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7.18%
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD
5 YEARS:
South Haven
Continued from preceding page
throughout the 1970s. A fire
in one of the resort's
buildings late in 1981, follow-
ed by "two disastrous
seasons," and the resort was
teetering on the brink of clos-
ing. '84 was a tremendous
comeback," but her sons had
no interest in carrying on the
business.
Sheila Fidelman accepts
the end of the era
philosophically and prefers to
dwell on the new family
business and a lifetime of
music, good food and wonder-
ful people. "I've been in this
business since I'm 15 years
old. I always had a ball doing
it because it was with peo-
ple."
Morris Horwitz has no illu-
sions about recreating the at-
mosphere of Fidelman's. He
has had to fight just to open
his hotel. "I've had numerous
zoning problems to restore it,
because it's in a residential
area," he complains.
He says many of those who
come to stay at the Victoria
Resort come to South Haven
out of nostalgia. "The 25- to
40-year-olds are the last ones
to know what it was all
about. They come from as far
as California."
"I've had fellas show up
with their children," says
Becky Patner, "to see where
they grew up, where they had
the best times of their lives.
They sit here and actually
cry, just reminiscing."
South Haven is not likely to
return to its heyday. Still,
Morris Horwitz is not totally
pessimistic about the future.
He wants to build a new,
modern building on his pro-
perty and a swimming pool,
"which is what carried the
old resorts. So far I haven't
been able to acquire the city
approval."
What made South Haven
special? Oldtimers cannot
quite put their finger on it.
"It had soft water and sandy
beaches," Donald Horwitz
says. It was close to several
large cities. It was a wonder-
ful place to get away from it
all when the world was a lit-
tle larger, but horizons were
a little nearer. It was a place
to make and renew
friendships.
Whatever the reason, says
Becky Patner, "we were here
68 years, there must have
been something." D
Soviet Concessions
Before Consular Visit
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32
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1987
Lincoln Park
2041 Fort Street
Lincoln Park, MI 48146
Riverview
17800 Fort Street
Riverview, MI 48192
Dearborn
Wyandotte
136 N. Telegraph Road
2211 Fort Street
Dearborn, MI 48128 Wyandotte, MI 48192
Allen Park
14601 Southfield Road
Allen Park, MI 48101
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31550 Northwestern Hwy.
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Southgate
13350 Fort Street
Southgate, MI 48195
Drive-in facility
Jerusalem (JTA) — Foreign
Minister Shimon Peres told
the Knesset last week that
the Soviet Union had agreed
in principle to several signifi-
cant concessions with respect
to Soviet Jews demanded by
Israel before it granted visas
to the Soviet consular delega-
tion which arrived here July
12.
Three senior members of
the delegation left Israel for
Cyprus, reportedly enroute to
Moscow for consultations. But
they will return, the head of
the delegation, Yevgeny An-
tipov, said before his
departure.
The delegation is the first
official Soviet mission to
Israel since Moscow broke
diplomatic relations 20 years
ago. Its stated task is to in-
spect Soviet property in Israel
and renew the passports of
about 2,200 Soviet nationals
here. The latter are func-
tionaries of the Russian Or-
thodox Church and Russian
women married to Israeli
Arabs. The property is most-
ly Church property.
But the visit raised specula-
tion here and abroad that the
delegation could be the van-
guard of a permanent Soviet
diplomatic presence in Israel
in the future. Peres said that
in return for Israeli visas, the
Soviets agreed to increase the
number of exit visas granted
to Soviet Jews, to release
Prisoners of Zion and to ex-
pand religious freedom for
Soviet Jews.
He told the Knesset there
was an "improvement" in all
of those areas. He expressed
confidence that the Soviets
eventually would allow a
reciprocal visit to the USSR
by an Israeli consular delega-
tion, though Moscow has re-
jected this so far.
Antipov, who heads the con-
sular division of the Soviet
Foreign Ministry, said before
leaving that no other Foreign
Ministry officials would be
joining the delegation for the
time being. He dismissed
speculation that the delega-
tion might be enlarged and
authorized to discuss broader
issues of bilateral relations
when he returns.
Shortly after his arrival in
Israel, Antipov told reporters
that his delegation would
return to the USSR before
their 90-day visas expire but
he was sure they will be
replaced by "other officials" of
"a consular nature."
Leaving with him were
Alexei Chestyakov, a Middle
East affairs expert, and
Vladimir Kruglyakov, First
Secretary of the delegation.