ISRAEL We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year I wish my family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year RENEE & MORRIS ROCHLIN TOLA SCHWARZBERG Citizens Continued from preceding page We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year FRANK & FAY RADZINSKI MANNY & RAE SCHANE We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year RADOMER AID SOCIETY SYLVIA, DAVE & SUSIE SCHANE We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year RHODA & MARVIN PERLIN & FAMILY MARK, ANNETTE & RAND! RUBINSTEIN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year EVELYNE & EDWIN ROTH Hallandale, FL RICHARD & HELEN PERGAMENT A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. MARVIN & GLORIA (GOLDIE) BOOKSTEIN idd a* A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. MARC & KAREN ADELMAN DORI, NICOLE & GEOFFREY A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. *"it 4 " irk M!" dig ,d d aa[m AS. WENDY, JEFFREY & JOSHUA MOSS 106 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 SAM & MINNIE BERMAN national politics but already controls the municipal coun- cils in several large Arab towns and is growing fast. While a final decision has yet to be taken, statements made by the Movement's spiritual leader, Sheih Ab- dallah Nimr Darwish, in- dicate that it will participate in the next Knesset elections, probably as part of an na- tionalistic Arab list. When those elections take place in 1992 (or earlier if the Shamir Government falls beforehand), there will be some 350,000 Arabs eligible to vote, of whom an estimated 80 percent will go to the polls. Should three-quarters of them support a joint Arab list, as appears possible, it would almost certainly be the third largest party in Israel's next parliament (after Labor and the Likud). Such a list will not get as many seats as it might have gotten before the mass im- migration of Russian Jews brought in tens of thousands of new voters, who will claim their share of the electoral pie. But no matter how many seats they win in the next elections — or what happens to Mr. Miari — the "Palesti- nian citizens of Israel" are a force to be reckoned with in the years ahead. ❑ Elephant Trainer Charms Israel Ramat Gan, Israel — Yuri Navotovsky, a 41-year-old Soviet Jewish immigrant to Israel has taken seriously the biblical exhortation to honor the life of beasts — "A righteous man regards the soul of his beast." The only odd part of this is that he's do- ing it as a professional elephant trainer in Israel, where those who are more traditionally skilled live grip- ped by fear of unemployment. Before arriving in Israel, Mr. Navotovsky was guaranteed employment as an animal trainer at the Safari in Israel's National Park in Ramat Gan. For Mr. Navotovsky, animal training in Israel takes on na- tionalistic overtones. A stur- dy man with a slight potbelly, dressed in a green T-shirt, work pants and hiking boots, he says, "Israeli animals are so smart because they live on Jewish land." This unusual theory seems reinforced by an elephant who bows her head to both Hebrew and Russian greetings. Standing on a small circus platform, she continues to show with a few Cossack-style heel clicks. And