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The Miami Herald from Miami, Florida • 23

Publication:
The Miami Heraldi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TV-RADI04c ANN LANDERS2C MOVIE TIMES5C LIVELY ARTS6C 31 Have you noticed all the lights in the windows of Tibor Ho Ilo's once-dark Venetia complex on Biscayne Bay? "It's lighted up like a Christmas tree" he says happily Nearly three years after the building opened Ho llo finally has sold or leased 70 percent outs 810 apartments And in January Ho llo will open a 152-suite Grand Prix Hotel in his building Until now the hotel rooms had been leased by the Marriott next door Venetia's under-used Toucan restaurant has been reopened as Windows of Venetia and by February he plans to open a second bay-front restaurant Andiamo "Thank goodness it's going well" he says "I grew old with it for a couple of years" How soon will the 1992 presidential race begin? Well US Sen Alan Cranston D-Calif has reserved Ho llo's Windows of Venetia restaurant on Jan 22 Super Bowl Sunday for a 71 private get-together with other heavyweight I Dems Insiders say he won't run for president but would like a say in who does 1:1 Sad irony: Police I officers used to stretch black electrical tape a across their badges for police funerals But it IL tended to strip the finish off the badges Now a Cranston Miami company Public Safety Devices sells a half-inch-wide black elastic loop that can be stretched over the badge And reused They're only 75 cents "It's not something we'd want to make a profit on" says the firm's Mike Cowen ll Dear Continental Airlines: Your "Florida Special" ad for $198 round trips from New York to 11 cities here sounds great And your picture of Florida wind-surfers looks inviting In fact I have a friend in Manhattan who wants to fly to the very spot in that picture You know the one with the mountains in the background Before you ask: The highest spot in Florida is 345 feet on the Alabama state line 47 miles from the Gulf of Mexico Today's lesson on getting along in Miami: The local chapter of the National Council of Jewish Women has started a fund to buy Christmas presents for foster children here Call Cindy Lerner at 387-4257 IN Picture a race between two sailboats powered by ego As part of the Super Bowl media mogul Ted Turner and America's Cup skipper Dennis Conner will go headto-head on Jan 18 and 19 in Biscayne Bay They've been rivals since 1980 when Conner's Courageous beat Turner's Freedom in the America's Cup prelims This time they'll race 40-foot catamarans smaller versions of the 65-foot controversial cat Conner used to whip New Zealand's Michael Fay in September's America's Cup Don't panic opera-goers La Tasca restaurant beside Dade County Auditorium was closed only temporarily for stove repairs It should be open again tonight Ruth Ann Galatas lobby pianist at the Grand Bay Hotel wants to praise Billy Cypress chairman of the Miccosukee Tribe She ran out of gas at 1 am on Alligator Alley in the middle of the Everglades When a passing car stopped she was so frightened at first that she ran to hide behind a bush The driver of course was Cypress who wouldn't even let her pay for the gas he gave "It did my heart good to know there are people like this here" Just to put everybody in the right mood let me report that at least one post office is handling the holiday rush with military precision They had all seven windows open at the Snapper Creek branch Saturday The smiling clerks handled 37 customers between 10:02 am and 10:09 am IN WLRN-Channel 17 manager Don MacCullough is abashed Because of a computer glitch during the station's John Kennedy special Nov 18 the final credits failed to roll So no credit went to the Mitchell Wolfson Media Library for the priceless WTVJ-Channel 4 footage of JFK's final visit to Miami "There's a lot of other film around that ought to go into that library so I hate to blow it" he says II If you're at Vito's Pizzeria Mexico Lin-do the House of India the Caribbean Connection or Mr Conch this week you might be stunned to see world-famous food critic Craig Claiborne be! side you sampling their pepperiest fare He is researching Craig ali- borne's Hot Hot Spots ex' -1 Restaurant Guide a -1 Baedeker of blistering 4 s' bistros in 20 US cities The guide is sponsored 1- 11 Maximum Strength 4 Pepto-Bismol Jay Tischenkel secretary of the Florida 'Claiborne Restaurant Association fretted while hosting 70 visiting French restaurant owners who insisted on lunching at a Wendy's To Tischenkel's relief they pronounced their burgers hot juicy and merreilkux He did have to rescue one Frenchman who became befuddled at the bar and started ladling chocolate pudding on his lettuce Mitch Glazer who wrote the hit movie Scrooged credits growing up in South Florida for his offbeat view of the world By RYAN MURPHY Herald Writer (4144 creenwriter Mitch Glazer's soonto-be produced film Arrive Alive begins with a startling dream sequence The screen grows fuzzy the music ebbs into silence And then "And then this Indian maiden in an aquarium gets decapitated by a killer whale" says Glazer almost sheepishly "That was always my nightmare as a kid" Glazer grew up on Miami Beach in the swinging '60s His upbringing as he recalls' it was "a combination of a sane suburban childhood and a Bobby Darin movie" The beach experience the pungent sea breeze the rotting pastel strip exotic tourists and ocean beasts colored his growing-up years and twisted his dreams Knowing that the death of an Indian maiden by a killer whale seems suddenly less peculiar "Growing up in a tourist town is strange it can make you strange but I loved it" says Glazer 35 who now resides in the sensitive low-key city of New York with actresswile Wendy Malick "You get the feeling that everyone wants to come to where you are It gives you a feeling for the overblown" The current hit Scrooged Glazer's film debut which he co-wrote with close friend Michael O'Donoghue reflects his garish gift Inspired by Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol the film is an odd (and devious) telling of an old sentimental tale Glazer's The Herald won a Pulitzer for exposing illegal games and gangsters but its publisher loved the ponies and the dice john Knight the Pulitzer Prize-winning multimillionaire newspaperman was a conservative businessman but he loved to shoot craps play cards and bet on horses In the second excerpt from his new biography Knight: A Publisher in the Tumultuous Century herald columnist Charles Whited describes the editor's love ambling and his newspaper's reporting on gain bling figures Knight: A Publisher in the Tumultuous Century will be published Dec 15 by EP Dutton Inc of New York loved d' to hogoadnl utTes kTnheewv' Jhaacdk ant i cghhet -11- him for years in the Miami casinos attired in tuxedo and surrounded by his fancy friends coolly shooting craps and playing cards And who occupied a box seat at Hialeah racetrack when the thoroughbreds ran? John Shively Knight of course There was no justification for his partici- pation in the casino games Their very existence violated Florida law They flouted the standards of community propriety that his Miami Herald advocated Editors and reporters were painfully aware of the contradiction but Jack Knight was Jack Knight and could do as he pleased And it pleased him to taste the high life even if his losses helped to fatten the coffers of organized crime Gambling was an adventure albeit calculated when he gambled a man and the dice could seek their own destinies with fate the final arbiter It was in a mixed-up world of rules and pressures to conform a pleasant nonconformity with manly appeal Besides in Miami the powers-that-be condoned such pleasures in the name of tourism the industry that fed and clothed them and added substance to their bank accounts But Knight's nights at the tables were numbered His own Miami Herald turned up Monday December 5 1988 In Scrooged Bill Murray plays TV executive Frank Cross He encounters the Ghost of Christmas Present Carol Kane who is the unlikely possessor of a mean right hook 0a gruff Ebenezer Scrooge (Bill Murray's television executive Frank Cross) for instance is not only tight in the Dickens tradition but downright devilish as well He turns his back on needy children he fires employees the day before Christmas he staples antlers onto the heads of tiny mice (don't ask) Glazer's Ghost of Christmas Present (Carol Kane) is likewise loud but she breaks with Dickensian tradition: She looks like a gift shop knickknack not an old-fashioned the burners of reform drawing Sen Estes Kefauver's Senate Crime Committee to Miami to expose and shut down the local rackets Ironically it was a move instigated by managing editor Lee Inns andiames Knight But publisheriack came quickly to the focus You're shot it all Knight! headlined The Morning Mail a local newspaper that sprang up suddenly in defense of casinos and their mob operators "Knight shoots a thousand dollars in a crap game but says it's wrong for Joe Blow to play pennies He will find that those who use men as pawns in any gamble eventually wind up with the stick man saying 'Seven the devil Next shooter'" The critique had been published in Feb The Miami Herald Section Mitch Glazer left with co-writer Michael O'Donoghue and Murray spirit Slathered in glitter her method of time-travel is not a magic wand but a mean right hook And there's more In Glazer's version of the classic Tiny Tim is played by Mary Lou Retton and Murray's Cross wins over homeless friends with an off-color Richard Burton imitation How kitschy The Technicolor view of the Christmas season snowflakes the size of your palm takes nter ge Miami Herald John Knight right after a victory at Hialeah Race Course in 1967 with George Widener left Bryant Ott and jockey Earlie Fires ruary Now it wasjuly and the weather like the heat on the mob had turned torrid In the steamy courtroom of Miami's Federal Building Smilin'Jimmy Sullivan a former traffic cop elected Dade County sheriff on personal popularity sat in the witness chair before the Kefauver Committee sweating and talking The sweat was caused by the failure of the building's air conditioning: the talk was Sullivan's admission that he had banked $70000 in four years on an annual salary of $10000 At the same time the Mi- ami Beach-based rackets syndicate had done $160 million in illegal off-track bookmaking casino gambling flourished and South Florida was infested with hood Turn to KNIGHT 3C a strand of bright lights on every tree in Manhattan is one of the film's biggest draws (that and Bill Murray) and was also inspired by Glazer's childhood "In Miami your conception of what a northern traditional Christmas is like comes to you through television My whole image of that Christmas comes from television shows like Bob Goulet's Old-Fashioned Cajun Christmas So in the movie we paro dy those shows that spirit that I remembered" The feeling of hyper-good cheer that slinks throughout Scrooged is apparently catchy In its first five days (Scrooged was released the day before Thanksgiving) the film grossed $185 million a box-office record for a nonsequel holiday movie The production team is giddy over the movie's success Paramount executive called me at the end of that weekend practically as are Glazer's parents Len and Zelda who still live in Miami Beach "My parents saw the movie" says Glazer "and my mother burst into tears during the credits" "We're extremely proud" says Zelda Glazer's writing career took root in the mid-'70s when he moved to New York to study English at NUL After graduation he profiled celebrities for publications such as Crawdaddy and Rolling Stone One subject Belushi then entrenched on Saturday Night introduced him to O'Donoghue a writer on the show The two struck Turn to GLAZER 2C Fruitcake just doesn't cut it Somewhere out there is someone who likes fruitcake but you and I probably don't know this person That's a broad interpretation of a survey by American Express that confirms what some of us have long suspected: People don't really like fruitcake and people don't like to open a package with great expectations only to find its festive wrappings have concealed a heavy dark-brown fruit-filled thing that one is supposed to eat Well what do people do with gifts they don't like? Thirty-one percent hide them in the closet (Don't do this with fruitcake in South Florida It is an invitation to entomological disaster) And the runner-up to fruitcake in Amex's survey of 1000 men and women across the country? No gift at all (Give these people you-know-what) FELICIA GRESSETTE Today at New Music America: The Kronos Quartet performs Morton Feldman's six-hour String Quartet II at the First Presbyterian Church Mary Luft's Kiss Your Mama Goodbye takes over the Metrorail system Two series of free daily mini-concerts start at Bayside and at the Center for Fine Arts After hours on South Beach free jazz with the David Weisbrot Quintet and avant-garde David Linton both at The Strand See schedule page 6C For information call 347-3763 I TV-RADIO4c 0 0 ANN LANDERS2C "fi 1--- 4'''-'1 MOVIE TIMES5C LIVELY ARTS6C )1-iEtW Ell'illi 'o on The Miami Herald Sect Monday December 5 1988 i -ik: 44 444V 4441 3' 14'4t111 1 ''''''52 --r's'---' 11'1'e'''''' Fred I 1:) Tastier i '7 i :4 1 :4 :10 0 'k N' 14i OP 1I Hollo's hutch 4 4 korL s- -re itf 11 i i 'I tk 'Mt i il10: A -v 4i :0: ifi 4 :40 1: 0-4 0-i r- 9A0 4 4 ik i( ::4 'te is no longer 44Til :::::::::::::::44:" --'w4 1:: IF: ::::7:: ezi3il: Pl ''e i03e144: r'l 8 I 'Ckkfil 9 sohollow t' -1: Vf-44A 47K4-V1 Vio 111 a 1 44 NA 'g :1 1 complex on Biscayne Bay It Have you noticed all the lights in the in Irl4111A -Vi dows of Tibor IIollo's once-dark Venetia i 1 2:1 "'s lighted up iff -7041 i like a Christmas tree he says happily 44' A wl 4 I Nearly three years after the building 'N percent of its 810 apartments And in Janu It 4 -ti I opened Hollo finally has sold or leased 70 '4 NIP r'i 'I- 4 4 -Ng-: 4 rooms had been leased by the Marriott next ::::::0 Ip'? kt ary Hollo will open a 152-suite Grand Prix Hotel in his building Until now the hotel 115rcoL 0 1:4 4: '''K netia 4 :4:: 4 door Venetia under used Toucan restau- rant has been reopened as Windows of Ve- i- i and by February he plans to open a 1-(- ow- i second bay front restaurant Andiamo "Thank goodness it's going well he says 4 i s''- 1 "I grew old with it for a couple of years" 1 race begin? WellUS Sen Alan Cran How soon will the 1992 presidential In Scrooged Bill Murray plays TV executive Frank Cross Ile encounters the Ghost of ston D-Calif has reserved Hollo's Win- Christmas Present Carol Kane who is the unlikely possessor of a mean right hook dows of Venetia restaurant on Jan 22 Su- per Bowl Sunday for a private get-together Mitch Glazer who wrote the hit movi r1 Scrooged with other heavyweight Florida for his offbeat view of the world :1 ii Dems Insiders say he credits growing up in South A i won't run for president 7 but would like a say in ---g: a strand of bright lights on every tree in By RYAN MURPHY k- :4 '-'ii'' Manhattan who does Herald Writer A'1- ''''''5 1:: is one of the film biggest 1 A' '4" -44-'Vi'N draws (that and Bill Murray) and was also 1 0 Sad irony: Police i creenwriter Mitch Glazer's soon- I officers used to stretch black electrical tape inspired by Glazer's childhood begins with a startling dream se to produced film A rr z' Alive 6::: 'tt "In Miami your conception of what a '''''z'' across their badges for northern traditional Christmas is like 4 1 quence The screen grows fuzzy i1: icmomageesotof that cthhrrojustgmhatselceovmiseiosnirMomy twehleovlei Cranston 4 police funerals But it the music ebbs into silence And '''s 1 tended to the finish 3:: 'P''' eneo strip inis f4 yr off the badges Now a then iV o-' nV sion shows like Bob Goulet's Old Fashioned Safety Devices sells a half-inch-wide black And then this Indian maiden in an "0 ti" 4I' '-'i-: kk ''VA'-' Cajun Christmas So in the movie we par elastic loop that can be stretched over the whale says Glazer almost sheepish Miami company Public aquarium gets decapitated by a killerl 1Ilki'r' bdeyrtehdoF shows that spirit that I remem- 'k V- 'fp" zN44 The feeling of hyper-good cheer that badge And reused They That was always my nightmare as a kid 're only 75 cents zergrew up on Miami Beach in the 1: 44 4' e''''' eri 0 slinks throughout Scrooged is apparently It's not something We'd want to make a Gla swinging 60s His upbringing as he recalls' i $: 'A -47s Profit on" says the firm's Alike Cowen 0 Dear Continental Airlines: Your "Flor- was a com Ina ion a sa i 1- re ea it ne suburban a 'frr 1k 7 'A0 toote' 4' 41- catchy In its first five days (Scrooged was I sed the day before Thanksgiving) the childhood and a Bobby Darin movie" The 41 film grossed $185 million a box-office York to 11 cities here sounds great ida Special" ad for $198 round trips from beach experience the pungent sea New 4 0: i4g 4F record for a nonsequel holiday movie The kilit 4 pro duct breeze the rotting pastel strip exotic tour- 4Te f6-A 4 4 ion team is giddy over the movs ie And your picture of Florida wind-surfers ists and ocean beasts colored his grow- "a Paramount executive called me looks inviting In fact I have a friend in ing-up years and twisted his dreams 141 -41 '''''''141 success( at the end of that weekend practically chor- Manhattan who wants to fly to the very spot Knowing tha the death of an Indian 4- tli as are Gl ng less eculiar azer' arents Len and in that picture You know the one with the Zelda who still live in Miami Beach maiden by a killer whale seems suddenly mountains in the background 0 Before you ask: The highest spot in "ly parents saw the movie" says Glaz- "Growing up in a tourist town is strange ''e s'''''''''' Florida is 345 feet on the Alabama state line er "and my mother burst into tears during it can make you strange but I loved Mitch Glazer left with co-writer Michael O'Donoghue and Murray the credits" 47 miles from the Gulf of Mexico it" says Glazer 35 who now resides in the Today's lesson on getting along in Nli- sensitive low-key city ny of New York with ac- gruff Ebenezer Scrooge (Bill Murray's tele- spirit Slathered in glitter her method of We re extremely proud says Zelda ami: The local chapter of the National Coun- tresswile Wendy Malick ou get i et the feel- mid- 70s hen he moved to New York to vision executive Frank Cross) for instance time-travel is not a magic wand but a mean Glazer's writing career took root in the i' iN cil of Jewish Women has started a fund to ing that everyone wants to come where not only tight in the Dickens tradition but right hook buy Christmas presents for foster children you are It gives you a feeling for the over- downright devilish as well He turns his And there more study English at NYU After graduation he here Call Cindy Lerner at 387-4257 blown" back on needy children he fires employees In Glazer's version of the classic Tiny profiled celebrities for publications such as 0 Picture a race between two sailboats The current hit Glazeren onto Murray's Cross wins over homeless friends 's film the day before Christmas he staples antlers Tim is played by Mary Lou Retton and Crawdaddy and Rolling Stone One subject powered by ego As part of the Super Bowl debut which he co-wrote with close friend the heads of tiny mice (don't ask) Belushi then entrenched on Satur- media mogul Ted Turner and America's Michael O'Donoghue reflects his garish Glazer's Ghost of Christmas Present with an off-color Richard Burton imitation day Night introduced him to O'Don- Cup skipper Dennis Conner will go head- gift Inspired by Charles Dickens' A Christ- (Carol Kane) is likewise loud but she breaks How kitschy oghue a writer on the show The two struck to-head on Jan18 and 19 in Biscayne Bay tnas Carol the film is an odd (and devious) with Dickensian tradition: She looks like a The Technicolor view of the Christmas They've been rivals since 1980 when Con- telling of an old sentimental tale Glazer's gift shop knickknack not an old-fashioned season snowflakes the size of your palm Turn to GLAZER 2C ner's Courageous beat Turner's Freedom in ma IMEENIIIMMEMEDIM 4 the America's Cup prelims This time Ao they'll race 40-foot catamarans smaller versions of the 65-foot controversial cat 1 0 7 Conner used to whip New Zealand's Mi- 4 chael Fay in September's America's Cup a 4 I I Tins tak1 ies canter 4' ge 1 i Don't panic opera-goers La Tasca elP4 rvt '11 restaurant beside Dade County Auditori- um was closed only temporarily for stove 11J 1 'It! 4 w-' lk -c-414 repairs It should be open again tonight The Won a :1 Herald 1 1 si I Ruth Ann Galatas lobby pianist at A :0 '4 j0--: -''0 a t' the Grand Bay Hotel wants to praise Billy PI 11147 gar rt 1 Oa N2' r't 1 yl :1 4 i 1 Ltiltil-4LL IA A pig ::4: 41 Cypress chairman of the Nliccosukee i Tribe She ran out of gas at 1 am on Alliga- 'ilea-al games and II i tor Alley in the middle of the Everglades 'll 1 '7' Iltstlitedlie (1St When a passing car stopped she 1k'as so ganasters 13ut it frightened at first that she ran to hide be 7 i i hind a bush The driver of course was Cy- publisher loved the 0 doesn't ctit press who wouldn't even let her pay for the gas he gave "It did my heart good ponies and the dice to know there are people like this here" $Alti -'It iik li 1::::: -k A te 0 Just to put everybody in the right John Knight the Pulitzer Prize-win- 7 1 rr omehere out there is someone 1 mood let me report that at least one post ni ng multimillionaire neu spauptehr he ti oa in leas 1A That ho likes fruitcake but ou and I -A- office is handling the holiday rush with mili- a conservative businessmadn ed to 1 4'''1 1 il 3'fe probably don't know this person 's a broad interpretation of a tary precision They had all seven Windows shoot craps play cards an bet obiography nhorsesln 1w 0': survey by American Express that con open at the Snapper Creek branch Satur- the second excerpt from his new 4: firms what some of us have long sus- day The smiling clerks handled 37 custom- Knight: A Publisher in tthce TumuItuous en- s1 4 Jo pected: People don't really like fruit- tury Herald column's harles It kited de- 1 4 2 3" ers between 10:02 am and 10:09 am only to computer glitch during the station John 0 WLRN-Channel 17 manager Don scribes the editor's love fgambling and AlacCullough is abashed Because of a his new spaper reporting on gai li glig nb- )1 1 i "71 7 1 7:1 find its festi rap pings 11: ccp eaa akc Ike ane and people great redeadartoknexpectations ri ngoi hav nt uPiet tireKs wpis -filled Kennedy special Nov 18 the final cred- night: A Publisher in the Tumultuous d0 ii3'' t31T) 1 thing that one is supposed to eat its failed to roll So no credit went to the Century ill be published Dec 15 by EP -1 4::: i A i4 4 Well what do people do ith gifts ii' 1 i I 1 Mitchell Wolfson Media Library for the Dutton Inc INew York 4 l'i they don't like? Thirty-one percent hide priceless ViTVI-Channel 4 footage of JFK's final visit to Miami "There's a lot of other 1 iami's hoodlums knew Jack Knight ttl': 1407 4::::::1: ii them in the closet (Don't do this with oved to gambl The had watched 't ii 1 1--- :1 film around that ought to go into that li I fruitcake in South Florida It is an ini- -i him for years in the Miami casinos 7ve brary so I hate to blow it" he says 4 I I a Ai nn dt to heen rt on nn Tel or gni cpatIodfi rsua isttceark Ie i attired in tuxedo and surrounded by his fan- II If you're at Vito's Pizzeria Nlexico Lin- Amex's survey of 1000 men and worn- cy friends coolly shooting craps and playinl b-- 4: 1 do the House of India the Caribbean Con- en across the country? No gift at all cards And who occupied a box seat at thale- i nection or Mr Conch this week you might ah racetrack when the thoroughbreds ran (Give these people you-know-what) be stunned to see world-famous food critic John Shively Knight of course miami Herald FELICIA GRESSETTE Craig Claiborne be- There was nojustification for his partici- John Knight right after a victory at Hialeah Race Course in 1967 with side you sampling their researching Craig aai- pation in the casino games Their standards of community propriety that hi ery exis- George Widener left Bryant Ott and jockey Earlie Fires 1 pepperiest fare He is i tence violated Florida law They flouted the VEINIAIISICtAMERICAMEI borne's Hot Hot Spots I liami Herald advocated Editors and re- the burners of reform drawing Sen Estes ruary Now it wasJuly and the Weather ea' Restaurant Guide a I Si: Baedeker of blistering porters were painfully are of the contra- Kefauver's Senate Crime Committee to Mi- like the heat on the mob had turned torrid diction but Jack Knight was Jack Knight and ami to expose and shut the local rack- In the steamy courtroom of Miami's Federal Today at New Music America: ''ts': 0'-' bistros in 20 US cities could do as he pleased And it pleased him to ets Ironically it was a rrim instigated igated by Building Smilin' Jimmy Sullilan a former The Kronos Quartet performs Mor ton Feldman 2 The guide is sponsored taste the high life even if his losses helped managing editor Lee Hills and James traffic cop elected Dade County sheriff on SIX hour String Quer- '1 li by Strength Maximum trengt to fatten the coffers of organized crime Knight But publisher Jack came quickly to personal popularity sat in the witness chair tet II at the First Presbyterian 1- Gambling was an adventure albeit calculat- the focus Pepto-Bismol before the Kefauver Committee sweating Kiss Your Mama Church Mary Luft Jay Tischenkel ed when he gambled a man and thh edice Knight! headlined The and talking The sweat was caused by the Goodbye takes over the Metrorail system secretary of the Florida could seek their cnvn destinies wit a the ou shot it all Morning Mail a local newspaper that failure of the building air conditioning the Two series of free daily mini- Claiborn Restaurant Association final arbiter It was in a mixed-up world sprang up suddenly in defense of casinos and talk was Sullivan's admission that he had concerts start at Bayside and at the fretted while hosting 70 rules and pressures to conform a pleasant mob operators banked $70000 in four years on an annual Center for Fine Arts After hours on 1 visiti ng French restaurant owners who in- nonconformity with manly appeal Besides 'Knight shoots a thousand dollars in a salary of $10000 At the same time the Mi- South Beach free jazz with the David sisted on lunching at a Wendv's To us- in Miami the powers-that-be condoned crap game but says it's wrong for Joe Blow ami Beach-based Grakets si dicatk percussion St David Linton both at Weisbrot Cuintet and avant-garde chenkel's relief they pronounced their bur- such pleasures in the name of tourism the to pia pennies pennies He will find that those had done $160 million in 'Legal off -trat gers hot juicy and merrcilkux He did have industry that fed and clothed them and add- who use men as pawns in any gamble even- bookmaking casino gambling flourished The Strand to rescue one Frenchman who became be- ed substance to their bank accounts tually wind up with the stic man saving mg and South Florida was infested with hood- See schedule page 6C For infor- fuddled at the sala'clessert bar and started But Knight's nights at the tables were 'Seven the devil Next shooter mation call 347-3763 ladling chocolate pudding on his lettuce numbered His own Miami Herald turned up The critique had been published in Feb- Turn to KNIGHT 3C.

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Pages Available:
9,277,007
Years Available:
1911-2024