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1639-31 Politics FRI NOV 01 1985 ED: FINAL SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: 1B LENGTH: 24 . 46" MEDIUM ILLUST: photo: Alex DAOUD, ,Malcolm FROMBERG, Raphael HERMAN, Mel MENDELSON SOURCE: CRAIG GILBERT Herald Staff Writer DATELINE: MEMO: CAMPAIGN ' 85; MIAMI BEACH MAYOR CANDIDATES BEACH SEES BITTER BRAWL FOR MAYOR CAMPAIGN' S BIG ISSUE: IS CITY RECOVERING OR STILL ON DECLINE? Miami Beach voters, used to a dogfight, have gotten something more this fall: a once-in-a-decade mayoral brawl between bitter foes and perfect opposites. "I think it ' s a choice of substance, in my case, and form in his case, " said Malcolm Fromberg, the reserved, businesslike mayor who is trying to convince voters that this long-stagnant island city is on the road to recovery. "Mr. Fromberg' s in an ivory tower, " said Commissioner Alex Daoud, the self-proclaimed populist and consummate hand-shaker who' s telling tales of decline and vowing to clean house. Rounding out the 1985 mayoral field are Mel Mendelson, meatpacker and ex-commissioner, and Raphael Herman, former furrier and Israeli commando. Both lack the money and organizational support of their better known rivals. Beach voters pick a mayor and six commissioners Tuesday. The city' s biennial campaign has come with usual nastiness: short-lived state attorney' s investigations, a slander suit and the Hitler mustaches that keep popping up on the mayor ' s campaign posters. The Daoud-Fromberg showdown has created such feverish expectations that some people are amazed it hasn' t been dirtier. Commissioner Bruce Singer thinks both sides are afraid to escalate hostilities. "Everybody knows what everybody' s got on everybody else. It ' s like nuclear warfare, " Singer said. "It hasn't been very dirty. The issues are very clear. You either have the perception that the city is doing wonderfully, as portrayed by Malcolm, or has real problems, as portrayed by Alex, " said Gerald Schwartz, Daoud' s public relations man and Beach political broker. "At street level it ' s as nasty as ever, " said Scott Ross, who does Fromberg' s publicity. "The whispering, the smears on the streets, the ripping out of campaign posters, the fliers that are reproduced with false charges. " Ross and Schwartz have clashed repeatedly, most recently in a duel of Claude Pepper ads. The popular congressman won't make a mayoral endorsement, but Ross ran a Fromberg ad that rather looked like one. It featured an excerpt from a laudatory letter Pepper wrote to Fromberg. Schwartz, in a hurry to counter it, ran a similar Daoud ad, only his Pepper quote wasn't a quote. It was a paraphrase of Pepper . . . written by Schwartz . Fromberg ' s people have also complained about the Hitler mustaches that appear regularly on the mayor ' s bus shelter posters. Even before they could protest, Schwartz called The Herald to deny he did it. The nastiness has extended to the commission races, where 15 candidates are fighting for six two-year seats on the city' s governing board. In one race, Mildred Falk accused incumbent William Shockett of violating the open meetings law. When the state attorney' s office cleared Shockett, he sued Falk for slander. Two other races have been particularly heated: incumbent Bruce Singer against Larry Napp and Anselm Vigil, and incumbent Stanley Arkin against Rochelle Malek and Simon Wikler. Singer, Arkin, and Fromberg have all been assailed for their upbeat outlook on the city and their support of the city administration. They have responded by taking bus loads of voters on tours to show off new projects. Like past Beach campaigns, this one has been waged through newspaper ads, through the city' s countless civic groups and senior citizens clubs, and through a grueling circuit of evening debates. The debates have everyone grumbling. No matter where they' re held, they attract the same crowd of partisans and political junkies -- and hardly any uncommitted voters . They also get rowdy. At Beach High Wednesday, Herman, an Israeli, kept pronouncing Daoud' s name "Dah-OOD" instead of "Dowd. " The same thing happened to Daoud six years ago, when an opponent wanted to remind voters in this heavily Jewish city that Daoud' s background is part Lebanese. The crowd started booing. "You shut up over there! " Herman said. "He' s fooling all of you. He' s brainwashing your brains! " It was all broadcast live over WINZ radio. Things got even testier afterward in the high school parking lot, where Schwartz and Singer got into a loud argument: Singer called Schwartz a liar, and the PR man told the commissioner he was "the lowest scum that ever lived in Miami Beach! " While Daoud, 42 , is the dean of the commission with six years in office, he has run an anti-City Hall campaign, vowing to fire City Manager Rob Parkins. Fromberg, 50, a two-year mayor and a two-year commissioner before that, is a friend and supporter of Parkins. Daoud' s campaign, which had raised $94 ,000 by Oct. 18, has featured heavy union support. Fromberg' s, which had raised $111, 000, has been helped by developers and real estate investors. Fromberg is expected to do better in mid-Beach and middle and upper income neighborhoods, while Daoud' s strength is among the poorer and older voters of South Beach. The Beach electorate, which numbers 42 , 809, is 15 percent Hispanic, and 58 percent of them are 65 or older. It is traditionally fickle. It has been 12 years since it gave a mayor two terms in a row. In the end, say both camps, the election may hinge on the "tale of two cities" issue: whether the voters believe the Beach is recovering, as Fromberg says, or still declining, as Daoud says. For an office that is part ceremonial, and carries but one vote on a seven-member commission, they both like to think the stakes are high in this election. How high? "The economic revitalization of the city, " Fromberg says. "The future of Miami Beach, " Daoud says. ADDED TERMS : profile mb campaign mayor candidate END OF DOCUMENT.