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CC 1979-09-27 Advertisement
x STATE OF FLORIDA COUNTY OF DADS attrigiicies Published weekly Miami, Dade County, FloHda ss 71 OCT 111979 PROOF OF PUBLICA IQN 5 Before the undersigned authority personally appeared GARTH C. REEVES, who on oath saashat.lds.at" Executive Editor of THE MIAMI TIMES, weekly newspaper published at Miami, Dade County, Fiorid�a"�',"thaltusit- tacbed copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper in the issues of: jeroieniQkAi /3t /q), Attaint further states that THE MIAMI TIMES is a newspaper published in Miami, Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper has heretofore; been continuously published in said Dade County, Florida each week and has been entered as second class mail matter at the U.S. Post Office in Miami, Dade County, Florida, for a period of more than one year next preceeding date of publication of the attached copy of advertisement; futher attain! says that he has neither paid nor promised any firm, person or corporation any discount, rebate, commission or refund for the purpose of securing this advertisement for publication in this newspaper. ^ — Sworn to and subscribed beforeme on this, the v [J day of •U� NOTARY PUBLI ATE OF FLORIDA AT LARGE. My c mission expires: 1 NOTARY PI1BI1' 7.1 a i1 Of IDA Al LAB M,Y (OMMIy'.ION FXPIRF= ^:(• 71 19g1 ftflNI; Il • . r Executive Editor AD 19 ?, 7he STATE OF FLORIDA i COUNTY OF DADE amaiiices Published Weekly Miami, Dade County, Florida SS PROOF OF PUBLICATION Before the undersigned authority personally appeared GARTH C. REEVES, who on oath says that, be is the Executive Editor of THE MIAMI TIMES, weekly newspaper published at Miami, Dade County, Florida; that the at- tached copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper in the issues of : 44.1,2,) 6/Py' Affaint further states that THE MIAMI TIMES is a newspaper published in Miami, Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper has heretofore been continuously published in said Dade County, Florida each week and has been entered as second class mail matter at the U.S. Post Office in Miami, Dade County, Florida, for a period of more than one year next preceeding date of publication of the attached copy of advertisement; futher affaint says that he has neither paid nor promised tidy firm, person or corporation any discount, rebate, commission or refund for the purpose of securing this advertisement for publication in this newspaper. ce.at Sworn to and subscribed before me on this, the "'If day of NOTARY PUIIC STATE OF FLORIDA AT LARGE. My commission expires: NOTA4Y PI IFS, i1 of •I op I[) A•I LAID Ms' ( C)41T'J'r'.R):J f •I,•41.. .ilr. . 1081 IONDi11 • WI) .it! ;ni t•t,, •i?FR•.RITEIS TWURRIN Executive Editor Zhe Miami licralb A KNIGHT•RIDDER NEWSPAPER THE MIAMI NEWS A COX NEWSPAPER Two editorially independent newspapers, printed. sold and distributed by THE MIAMI HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY 1 HERALD PLAZA, MIAMI. FLORIDA 33101 • (AREA CODE 305) 350-2111 CITY OF MIAMI Before the undersigned authority personally- appeared Leon Rick, who on oath says that he is the Assistant Retail Advertising Manager of the Miami Herald. and the Miami News, daily newspaper (s) published at Miami in Dade County, Florida; that the attached copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper (s) in the issue of: MIAMI HERALD MIAMI' NEWS SEPTEMBER 06, 1979 PAGE;! 08C SEPTEMBER 06, 19.79. PAGE 07A Affiant further states that the said. THE:MIAMI:`.HERALD%NEWS are newspapers published at Miami, in said Dade County, F'lorida,.' and that the said newspapers have here -to -foie • been, continuously published in said Dade County, Florida, each day, and have been entered as second class mail matter at the Post Office in Miami, in said Dade County, Florida, for a period. of one year next preceding the first publication of the advertisement Sworn to and Subsc.ibed:to efore me this day of Notary Public (Seal) 7 NOTARY PUBLIC STATE Of FLORIDA Al LARQ �1; ,r ti�gMrShlO�1 E PIReS AUG. 1198C• � ).. p�Yyg BONDED TNRU GENERAL INS UNDERwRivElES- 0"?i [ Yc 7 8�Ctief 114111 0000 THE MIAMI h.ALD Thursday, Sept. I,11870 0111, What In the World! Beach Art Wendy Fratta works on sand replica of Ger- many's Heidelberg Castle built on the beach at Cardiff, north of San Diego, Calif. Dozens helped build the sand castle which measured 48 feet long, 40 feet wide and took 400 tons of ' sand. Engine Takes 50-Mile Taunt, with No One at the Throttle From Herold Wire S,rvic„ OAKFIELD, N.Y. — Conrail Engine 6483 proba- bly had a little help getting started on its driverless 50-mile jaunt to Oakfield from a Buffalo suburb, a .railroad spokesman says. The $l-million locomotive caused quite a rumble in this western New York community when it left the 'Mils of an abandoned siding and ground to a halt — lust 1168'feet short of a hotel -bowling complex. A state police investigation has started into the question of whether it left its West Seneca yard acci- dentally or with human help. Meanwhile, Robert Sullivan, a Conrail spokesman, 'said the locomotive could only have been started by someone who knows about trains. He .said the engine. was equipped with a "dead Man'n switch," a device designed to keep an locomo- tive front operating without an engineer at the throt- tle. • "Apparently; he knew what he was doing," Sulli- van said of the possible culprit. He said Conrail investigators will also be looking -into the Incident, which police believe started some - 'tithe between 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Monday. - • :- Trooper M.V.• Quinlan played a Paul Revere role after a woman called the Clarence substation to say ;she had seen.an empty engine roll by her at a crossing without blowing a warning whistle. It was doing about 35 m.p.h., she said. Quinlan chased the runaway near Oakfield, warned_.aff...tnotorists. and passers-by with his car siren and radioed ahead to clear the hotel and bowling alley. He boarded the locomotive after it came to a stop and shut off its diesel engines. The throttle was set for "three" on a scale from zero to eight, he said. Along the route. the en ine went throu h bout Case Had the Cops Scratching NEW YORK — Police were scratching their heads over the arrest of three people in Harlem on drug charges — and their arms, legs and everywhere else from fleas. Police said officers in Manhattan arrested three people for possession of drugs and a shotgun in a first -floor apartment. "It turns out that the apartment along with the three people arrested were infested with fleas," one officer said. Officers James Kissane and James Schatz were assisted in the arrests by eight to 10 other policemen. "Subsequently they were all infested with fleas," the officer said. To make matters worse, two or three radio cars and a patrol wagon became infested on the way to the stationhouse. An exterminator had to spray the vehicles and the stationhouse with a pesticide. The officers and prison- ers had to take showers. "Right now we have it under control," the officer said early Wednesday. Cigarets Are Not for the Birds KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Don't offer a bird a ciga- ret — It's against the law. An ordinance passed by City Council on first read- ing calls for a $50 fine for anyone convicted of giving or offering "tobacco, alcohol or other known noxious substances" to a bird or animal. The regulation is one of 50 rules relating to the use of city parks. They cover everything from failure i 1 t 1 .1 1 •1 i i f to cooperate in keeping restrooms neat to setting ft. , I Las Vega Casino.Hote! Is Indicted Union Pension Fund Misuse Is Charged LAS VEGAS, Nev. — (UPI) — A special federal grand jury has brought charges against the Alad- lin Hotel Corp., which already has legal troubles with state and federal authorities, of taking part in a $1- million• conspiracy against the Teamsters Union pension fund. The grand jury accused the hotel :orporation, the Del E. Webb Corp. and six individuals of conspiring to lefraud the pension fund. The 43 count indictment charged it million in pension fund money, Tart of a 620•million loan for con- struction of a high-rise addition to he Hotel, was fraudulently divert- )d and misappropriated from 1974 0 1976. Since the hotel corporation and 'our individuals were convicted in a 3etroit federal court March 13 of :onspicing to allow hidden interests o control the Aladdin, Nevada ;ambling authorities have been try- ng to force the sale of the hotel-ca- lino. WHEN NO sale was made, state )fficials revoked the Aladdin's gam - )ling license and tried to close it town, but were stalled by a federal :ourt order, which the state is ap- )ealing. The indictment said Lee Linton, trchitect for a hotel addition, solic- ted and received kickbacks, fees Ind commissions from various con- ractors, subcontractors and suppli .rs who worked on the project. Hotel attorney Sorkis Webbe was accused of applying to the pension. fund for the loans, and concealing that some of the loan money would be diverted. Webbe also was accused of trans- porting checks and cash from the pension fund in interstate com- merce. THE DEFENDANTS included Linton, Webbe, Fred Kennedy, for- mer Aladdin Hotel Assistant Gener- al Manager Dennis Piotrowski, Las Vegas contractor Robert Tindell and Del Webb Corp. vice president James Comer of Phoenix. Webbe was arrested late Tuesday n St. Louis. The other defendants were arrested in Las Vegas and ,vere arraigned before U.S. Magis- .rate Joseph Ward Tuesday night. The U.S. attorney for Nevada, B. Mahlon Brown, said Tuesday the in- fictments culminated a three-year oint investigation by the FBI and he Internal Revenue Service. They were returned by a special ederal grand jury, recently impan- Ied by U.S. District Judge Roger 'oley to hear evidence presented by DEATH NOTICES' Iau.afiwi Adverlitinp 111.01 Ilesth Notices 10.01 Beath Wets AA-01 loath Notices COPPAGE LIu" T c;tnl o+hare MMIil M8 01n MI oa. Survlyyld br L bro hiir, Ta for. 'raft!, acntadvlaa►61.�ht_}�L h!. CN7o. OCNA' FlaeNr JORDAN CVRUS (Cv) Auoustys III 72. p�al�sNd dIjw�ar��Truueds..11MMtpar a lone Bor0 l Okset C.mi nt 2 w�IM MS pa1Mill, 1 fa Ur. Crru� J dsn II.nAA Lucy%sr- ner oq n vls ship tom .I - vest !aim tp1y. fo Ker.WIII 10.n tl eddIIb m tlN cl 01 MI I In 1976 .kar p yeearrs o1 serrvice. y��.7e wfn, s I,e�o OIv1 W °Puolt' A�ifimfi nd the Unlvf pQf Flli nW t &.mody n rch otgMI. `)l .r0i° Was TRR 14rrt0110* lty o .110 d� ro,trt�e arts Oa far, n. Marl rn J�onr R.oulbAsiprr�lrnvHir° }fin. 1r�ne rrrn h1hN.I t1GW w1L11ttt niii� rRn' VIM layIneMl�C'.rno.m l.nt.rm,nt II.Y W Ilona►$ ttM f.mter s In ..mar cos P. il D Pugs. L.p1 RlvaiMi-1616 PLUMMER Ills a 1 p -lihin 3333 CALL CLASSIFIED 524. s PRICE M o1 Miami, i BRv SMi 72 0tlt, orrgiel�y,� hilt r iloi J.etot. SUrit- s $ 1717 SW ]) EV,11 laml ROSE MR WWWMal; .IArCOS formN- iwtv '10 Rrdsortnl1, TIL pr with CoMIMMR$dI0Ind R.rlcan Alrw rs, efan fr ssMtaxrvcirg 1t Ili T11U 1o�mpsrder rill f p afsehltep_ene .5 of n m llri0lmprFingS•Z7owflWJ.onluuEy 1 0sslc In If7(. Ssurvlvine wlh, Oos fp,�s, W rr.n Jonn, sw- ranCe G. R dicnard L. ose, daughters, Judy & 51 fi .n eN flap-d.uahler, Is!Lla °Elwe,I sisters Mrf Evelyn .nd, Nlrs. Lrdia smftft, Mrs. Annn Manning sndarAMnsd.clls��Irrknr wattttt lonely c1lSN FrI. 7•s P.Mp. FAfNLrIMhRIp? AM� I� 1R eillprllt ..ln'lieu 0 wBt s 1 y eonlKIMIONc f Keilii n an Itowl 60fn and Bird AtiElINRO uMM 647-1a33 STRAESSLEY SVtosER Mo�eSiAI �nl�rod C i t w vta�14111 Ceotulttrrvv SUAREZ jUAAN ��1�vr w. NNnto► was Iq►11 n REGON 1Aa aortaliptolfor UGENT AN. fa.M. of Nowt Writes THE RIVERSI E" 7J30 Hollrwood Ivtl. WEISSMAN IDA. SS of NMS. Services wet. Igo NE if J►vi �ii , Y•0A7 RM retnrlan L iti 1.11lwrobi1uil�Ni rvou rest flaa0e. XMEN. Y oUt laeotre° 4osu a►. ch110,M, mOtfN, G1.ee, a04 a slf-. 101h------ - - - AI40 Oeu1eq LM s PickCTimaNrrSW set rni wn Used and new TV at Sig-niticant savings: Classification N1.10 Dade: 350-2222 Broward: 524-2535 public workshop. BROWNSVILLE STATION The METRORAIL Brownsville Station • Committee will meet to receive a presentation on alternative strategies or approaches for meeting the goals and t~101140.►hicb had warning devices...Itground to ' �` fitter its weight destroyed the irOtted rtiibed of an Ibandoned deadend siding. .. ,au The rules a_ lounging on pa. One more rock, tree or sit. Hotel Fire Kills Six On North Sea Isle that it broke out in a dining r ="'� after midnight and quickly engulf': the Hotel Graf Luckner. Two guests died in their row - and four others were found dead a stairwell. The victims included d married couple and two others, po. lice said, but would not release the names. NORDDORF, West Germany — (AP) — Fire destroyed a hotek and killed six guests early Wednesday on the North Sea resort island of Antrum oft the West German coast, police said. Authorities were unable to deter- mine the cause of the fire, but said DEATHS Cyrus A.. Jordan III, Surveyor Cyrus Augustus Jordan III, 72, a retired land surveyor who worked for the city of Miami 44 years, died Tuesday in Larkin General Hospital. Mr. Jordan was born in Oklaho- ma. With his parents, he came by ship from Texas to Key West and then to Miami in 1912. He retired from the city of Mi- ami's Public Works Department In 1976. Mr. Jordan was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Miami and served on the church'e' administrative board. He leaves his wife, Minnie Ite,44 erts; daughter, Marilyn and grandson. Armstrong' Friends may call from 7 to 9 p,ma today at the Philbrick and Son 1 neral Church. Services will be the funeral home at 3 p.m. Friday. Alberto Di Jorio, 95, Oldest Cardinal VATICAN CITY — (AP) — Al- berto Cardinal Di Jorio died at his Rome residence early Wednesday, the Vatican announced. Cardinal Di Jorio, an Italian, was 95 and the oldest member of the College of Cardinals. Elevated to cardinal by Pope John XXIII in 1958, Cardinal Di Jorio served in various administra- tive posts in the Curia, the Vatici n' central administration. He had UV*, in retirement since Nov. 6, 19614; when he resigned as vice president; of the pontifical commission dealing;` with the internal affairs of Vatican City. The death of Cardinal Di Jorio re•' duced the number of Roman Catho• lic cardinals to 131. Charles J. Sime Memorial Services A memorial service for Charles J. Sime, 76, father of Olympic silver medalist runner Dr. David W. Sime, will be at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Key Biscayne Presbyterian Church. Mr. Sime, a retired painting con- tractor, died Monday at the Miami Heart Institute. Dr. Sime won the silver Olympic� medal in the 100 meters in 1960 and formerly was the bolder of eight world track records. Besides his son, Mr. Sime leaves his wive, Evelyn; and three grand- children. Memorial Rites for Doris Highleyman A memorial service for Doris De Garmo Highleyman, 73, a native Miamian and daughter of Walter De Germo. a pioneer architect, will be at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Van Ors - del Coral Gables Chapel. Mrs. Highleyman died Monday at Mercy Hospital. She is survived by her husband,_ Daly; son, Charles Laurence Collier; brother. Kenneth De Garnto; a sis- ter, Mabel Harris; and three grand- children. DEATHS ELSEWHERE TESHIGAWARA, Sofu, 78, founder of the Sogetsu (Grass and Moon) school of flower arrangement in 1926; in Tokyo. He also founded the International Flower Ar- • rangement Association, with members in the United States and Europe. BEREND, Frank H., 81, a pioneer in the concept of special events to raise funds; in Beverly Hilo, Calif. His clients included the United Services Organizations Inc., the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Red Cross. EMPIE, The Rev. Dr. Paul C., 70, an international leader of the Lu- theran Church; in Zionsville, Pe. ti vhIblt sleeping or "protractively" � ehea. ' ! taw: Hitching your horse to a a Illegal. ressessessessep What's hot. And what's not. TtfisNion food anIn d ' People ... II you're reeding "What's Hot" in In Tha •Iaml !ht,1v1np Todaeld,y you're HOT. Assessassesessesil e strike Home. PHILBRICK'S NI : i. I • .rJII MORE SERVICE MORE CHAPELS MORE VALUES VAN ORSDEL'S lea chapels & e►amettsri 446.4612 objectives previously went fled in tree, 'Brownsville Station area. Neighbors of the station are urged to attend. Tuesday, September 11, 7:30.p.m. Joseph Caleb Center, Room 112 5400 N.W. 22nd Avenue For Information, please call C. Gaor , 579-5643. Metro -Dade Transportation Administration NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC All interested persons take notice that the City of Miami, Florida, proposes to increase your property taxes by 7.25 percent. Please be ad- vised that a Public Hearing in con- nection with such proposed increase is scheduled to be held on Sep- tember .13, 1979, at 5:00 P.M., in the Commission Chambers, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida. • • TROA Vafer iefs.. er 'many glasses of water each day. It's k the right amount. and Mountain Valley "soy to do this — so palatable. so "light" on • Mountain Valley Water, you'll feel like 1 water for the first time. Drink it awhile what incomparably good water can mean as'earned nationwide acclaim — Mountain one American spring has been in constant the Mountain Valley spring in Hot Springs, a glass dome protects that spring so that llution can effect the precious water. is delivered to you only in glass bottles. taffOralle ate( MOT SPR S, ARK. REE HOME DELIVERY CALL or BROWARD 463-0030 At last... 7 eres .help 1 smoking, e weight, and stop I addiction rst' unbiased, true story famous Schick Centers trot of Smoking .and Weight Shade' Hospitals for Alcohol .Why Patrick Frawley, Jr. hick Safety Razor Co. rate on the study of havior. 411 V0 T&�TORY OUTL1IT SHOE STORES • The Only Place In Town Where New Shoes Don't Hurt. NORTH MIAMI BEACH: 2037 N.E. 183rd ST. ( NEAR 163rd ST. SHOPPING CENTER) 947.2308 MON: FRI.: 9:30 am-9 pm/SAT.: 9:30 am-8 pm/SUN.: 10 am-5 pm. MIAMI: 3415 N.E. 2nd AVE., 578.6005/MON: SAT: 8:30 am-6 pm. DADELAND PLAZA: 9589 S. DIXIE HIGHWAY, 886-9434 MON: FRI.:9:30am•9pm/SAT:9:30am-8pm/SUN,: 10am-5pm. FORT LAUDERDALE: 1626 N. FEDERAL HIGHWAY, 566.5807 MON.-FRI.: 9:30 am-9 pm/SAT,• 9:30 am-6 pm/SUN.: 10 am-5 pm. VISA AND MASTER CHARGE ACCEPTED. ALL STORES EXCEPT MIAMI OPEN SUNDAYS. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC All interested persons take notice that the City of Miami, Florida, proposes to increase your property taxes by 7.25 percent. Please be ad- vised that a Public Hearing in con- nection with such proposed increase is scheduled to be held on Sep- tember 13, 1979, at 5:00 P.M., in the Commission Chambers, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida. ©90 NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC RE: HEARING ON PROPOSED BUDGET OF THE DEPARTMENT OF OFF-STREET PARKING OF THE CITY OF MIAMI, FLORIDA FOR. THE FISCAL YEAR OCTOBER 1, 1979 TO SEPTEMBER 30, 1980 Notice is hereby given that the City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida will sit, as a Committee of the Whole in the City Commission Room, first floor, City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Dinner Key, Miami, Florida at the meeting of the Commission at 2:30 p.m. on September 27, 1979 to hear all persons who desire to be heard on the proposed budget of the Department of Off - Street Parking for the fiscal year October 1, 1979 to September 30, 1.980. Copies of the proposed budget are open to inspection in the office of the Director of the Department, 190 NE 3rd Street, Miami, Florida. MITCHELL WOLFSON Chairman Off -Street Parking Board t r 4' t he !Miami 13cralb A KNIGHT•RIDDER NEWSPAPER THE MIAMI NEWS A COX NEWSPAPER TWo editorially independent newspapers, printed, sold and distributed by HE MIAMI HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY 1 HERALD. PLAZA, MIAMI, FLORIDA 33101 • (AREA CODE 305) 350-2111 CITY OF MIAMI Before the undersigned authority personally appeared Leon Rick, who on oath says that he is the Assistant Retail Advertising Manager of. the Miami Herald. and the Miami News,. daily newspaper (s) published at Miami in Dade County, Florida; that the attached copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper (s) in the, issue of: MIAMI HERALD MIAMI NEWS SEPTEMBER , 18`, 1979 PAGE 05C SEPTEMBER 18, 1979 PAGE04. Affiant further states that the said THE MIAMI: HERALD/NEWS are newspapers published. at Miami, in said Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspapers have her e -to -fore been continuously published in said Dade County, Florida, each day, and have been entered as second class mail matter at the Post Office in Miami,in said Dade County, Florida, for a period of one;;. year next preceding the first publication of the advertisement. Sworn to and Subscribed to; lefore me this day of c��,A.D., Notary Public. (Seal) NOIARY PUBLIC S STAIR OF FLORIDA AlAI LARC • t) M"y,IO 4 E PIRr5 AUG I tVBO smog!) THRU (ANTRAL INS I)NDIRWRITIRS ^�t•. AcuuJiv I s PAYABLE y / ( c a03'9 U.S. Eyes Insurance Claims to Ni WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The government may have to force the insurance industry and persuade big retailers to surrender claims Infor- mation so emerging hazards can be nipped, a new member of the Con- sumer Product Safety Commission said in an interview published Mon- day. He said Insurers have data on closed claims that would be useful, and other sources of information that might be explored include major retailers which maintain files on consumer complaints, and per- haps doctors and electricians. Stuart Stotler, who was sworn to as one of five commissioners Last month, said he Is "especially con- cerned that not enough attention Is being given to the concept of emerging product hazards. ... I'm not convinced that sufficient atten- tion is being directed to that area." IN AN INTERVIEW with the Product Safety and Liability Re- porter, a publication of the Bureau of National Affairs, Statier said he told the other commissioners in a memo that the agency must develop fresh sources of information to nip hazards early, before they become full blown. "Some of the sources that we will be discussing over the next several weeks include working, hopefully cooperatively — but 11 not, then mandatorily — with the insurance industry," he said. "Insurers have a host of data which could be extremely useful to the commission. ... They have files on closed claims which could pro- vide information that's often al- ready recorded and coded, and which the CPSC could use in the area of emerging hazards," he added. "Other data sources that could be better explored Include high-level commission involvement. with major retailers — Sears, Penney's, K-Mart and Montgomery Ward among others — which maintain files on consumer complaints," Statler said. "Information in these files fre- quently relates to safety matters. Retailers are on the front line. They sometimes learn of safety com- plaints even before the manufactur- er," he said. STATLER ALSO said many doc- tors would probably be willing to "share their information periodical- ly„ with the agency. "We need to develop a system which can help us tap that resource most effectively," he said. He also said electricians would be a "good source of data on shock and fire incidents. As the ones actually repairing defective products, they might be able to detect trends long before an injury pattern develops." The commission is charged with policing the marketplace to insure Jobs -Bias Panel Clarifying Religious.Practices Rules WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is proposing revised guidelines that would clarify com- panies' duties to try and accommo- date workers' religious practices. Eleanor Holmes Norton, who chairs the federal commission, said the revisions are designed to con- tain "damage done by misinterpre- tation of, and doubts created by, a 1977 Supreme Court decision." The Supreme Court's 7.2 ruling, issued June 16, 1977, involved the case of an airline employe named Larry Hardison who was dismissed for refusing to work Saturdays after he joined' the Worldwide Church of God, which celebrates Saturday as the Sabbath. The high court concluded that civil rights laws do not require em- ployers to take extraordinary mea- sures — such as paying another worker overtime to fill in for Hardi- son on Saturdays — in order to ac- commodate a worker's religious be- liefs. The proposed revised guidelines, published in the Federal Register, attempt to make It clear the Hardi- son decision does not eliminate em- ployers' obligation to accommodate religious practices, an EEOC state- ment said. Some employers automatically rule out all applicants who are not available for all shifts and week- ends. The proposed guidelines, on which comment is now being ac- cepted, would bar questions on an applicant's availability until after he has been selected except in "lim- ited and compelling circumstances." the safety of thousands of consumer; products ranging from hair dryers] to skateboards. Some critics have' suggested in the put that the agen-! cy is slow in responding to probe' lems because its information-coilee tion systems lag too tar behind. BRAD TAKES S OF % NTMMARRIAGE ON ROCKS: Donna Robert c. ANGP ®S3M ONCrLOST A` ERlus` NGP oti A SIZZ susposet Judd H'and avit0 star. TAXI "M 1 14 l a 0 4 4 ip Hazards In the interview, Statier said he feels the commission has reUed too heavily in the put on the National Electronic Injury Surveillance Sys- tem•which collects etatistcs by inju- ry category from hospital emergen- cy rooms across the nation. E IOW GIVESE �... DI0l'�DVIL MAKEHIM 001t= Ne^Nirdaid • i►VUnVler star'OS "PI MH CHRISSY W jjtG ANYtH. • K • O KSAFFAR% opCfitter. Joyce DeWitt, star. . f SOW COOprM Tuesday, Sept. 18,1978 THE MIAMI HERALD •••• 341 Harry Patterson Jack l liggins HIS CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT under any name 510.95 One of the exciting unknown stories of World War 11: Hitler's plot to put the Duke and Duchess of Windsor on the throne of England under Nazi rule! Selected by 3 major book clubs! 46 Stein and Day s1 New bestseller ■ Clip dollars off your food bill with the coupons In Food Today Thursday. XXX:$$$ 7:30PM •ti •• ,• 4'0 • ;w • • Tic Toc Dough Xs or Os oil in o row meon big money ... and o shot at the• bonus round worth over three thousand ; : dollars! Host: Wink Martindale Lobo meets the shark from"Jaws"I --c 8.00PM The Micrulvwnt igm t' water used across the nation is the velvety -smooth taste plus the last- ing satisfaction it gives. From a deep, protected spring in the health resort region of Hot Springs, Ark. — Mountain Valley Water has been a quality drink for 100 years. dViountaii1`Nialle A tef FROM NOT SPRINGS, ARK. FOR HOME, HOTEL OR OFFICE DELIVERY CALL: DADE 266-6000 OR BROWARD 463-0030 NOTICE OF TAX INCREASE All interested persons take notice that the City of Miami, Florida, proposesto increase your property taxes by 7.25 percent. However, the millage rate for General Operating Purposes and Debt Service is 13.960 which is .527 mills less.. than the millage rate for the current year. Please be advised that a Public Hearing in connection with such proposed increase is scheduled to be held on September 27, 1979, at 2:00 P.M., in the Commission Chambers, 3500. Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida. ...