Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. HARRY AND JOAN-GREY PARTRICH Best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year. - MRS. NICHOLAS FENAKEL AND FAMILY WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. LEONARD AND NORMA LEVITIN We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. STUART, SHULA, ASHLEY AND DAVID LEVY We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. HELEN AND HENRY MALTER We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. MALVERN AND HAROLD MORAN TAMARAC, FLORIDA A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. THE NUDELLS LINDA, HOWARD, SHERI, WENDI AND TAMMY A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and firosperous New Year. FRED AND BEVERLY KANDEL JERICHO page R9 We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. HELEN AND GEORGE R KERWIN itanDr ► 711111 TI1V2 111 1 nalz U W'2 to all our friends and relatives. to all my friends and relatives. MARTIN, LISA, ZACHARY AND ERIN EDELSTEIN SYBIL EISENSHTADT vainn nalz illt11"2 lann nalz illt13 1 7 to all our friends and relatives. to all our friends and relatives. ARLENE AND CHUCK BEERMAN KEN, MICHAEL, SHARON AND HOWARD MAX AND CAROL ELBAZ ERIC AND DANIELLE 12.11711 111111 Mtn to all our friends and relatives. SYLVIA AND ARNIE AARON JOANNE, DANNY, MARK, JULIE, MARCI, MICHAEL, SANDY, SARA, BENJAMIN BOCA RATON, FLORIDA laron nalz 11143'2 to all our friends and relatives. MR. AND MRS. NORMAN ADELSBERG A Very Happy and Healthy New Year to All Our Friends and Family. THE WANDERS — BOB AND ELAINE BOCA RATON, FLORIDA May the New Year Bring To All Our Friends and Family — Health, Joy, Prosperity and Everything Good in Life. JACK AND MIRIAM SHENKMAN & FAMILY To All Our Relatives and Friends, Our wish for a year filled with happiness, health and prosperity. JUDI AND JOE SCHNEIDER BRYAN, BRAD AND BRANDON HEATHER AND BRETT SCHNEIDER CAIDEY AND 7.nA spectacular episode took place as no archaeological remains have been found, but scholars put it at the middle of the second millen- nium BCE. Irreverent spirits have been known to suggest that since the walls of Jericho were brought down some 17 times by earthquakes, Joshua might sim- ply have come along just at the right moment. Though the focus of a number of more minor biblical episodes, Jericho never played a major part in the ancient history of Israel. The town was deserted and its in- habitants carried into exile when Jerusalem and its Temple were first destroyed. some later re- turned, but they settled far from the old site. Centuries later, King Herod, who used to winter in Jericho be- cause of the mildness of the cli- mate, built himself a splendid place, and there he died. During the same period, another illus- trious traveller—according to the Gospels—stopped at Jericho on his way to Jerusalem and the Passover festival, where he is said to have performed a miracle. that traveller was Jesus. From the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Second Temple to modern times, the sto- ry of Jericho is similar to that of the rest of the country: an un- ending cycle of destruction as in- vaders and conquerors come and go. By the end of the 19 century, however, it was beginning to en- joy a modest prosperity based on agriculture and pilgrimage, since it was an accepted stop on the way to Jordan and the site of the baptism. Various Christian de- nominations set up churches, con- vents, schools and other charitable institutions. By 1948, the pretty little town had only a few thousands inhabitants, but in the winter hundreds of wealthy Arabs with country homes in Jericho, came from Jerusalem and other cities to en- joy the mild weather. The aftermath of the first Arab-Israeli war found the Jor- danian army entrenched in what was now being called the west bank. Two refugee camps were set up near Jericho and nearly 100,000 people settled there. Af- ter Israel's victory in the 1967 Six-Day war, some 6,000 fled to Jordan. Tourism to Jericho slowly picked up, and Israelis came in droves to buy the splendid fruits and vegetables or just to enjoy a good meal in one of the many restaurants. Then the intifada began. Though Jericho was nev- er an actively hostile city, the roads leading to it were not safe and Israelis stopped coming. Today, Jericho has some 15,000 inhabitants. There is no industry, but it flourishes agriculturally and has a busy regional market. There is a regional hospital and a newly created tourist bureau.