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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCC 1977-04-28 Advertisement,""k••••-•'"4. • • to ell interested )1151111 minim of the City of Miarnt, arida, will et Went/fling in its regular meeting 0 at City 1 ail, S500.Pan American Drive, Might, Mortal at tta0 At bided, Oil 'Thursday, April 28, 1917, to Ostiiitter pettatuttig of the following city parks: 1, OtEsENT NAME PROPOSED NEW NktriE .—..._ Sylvia Park "Park of the Americas;:. Iltentetinlal Park 'New World center Park" • • Ralph b. Ongie • CitY Clerk . ;r Published Weekly Miami, Dade County, Florida STATE OF FLORIDA , SS PROOF OF PUBLICATION COUNTY or DADE Before the undersigned authority personally appeared GARTH C. REEVES, who on oath says that he is the Editor and Publisher of THE MIAMI TIMES, a weekly newspaper published at Miami, Dade County, Florida; that the attached copy of advertisement was published in said newspaper in the issues of: April 21, 1977 Affiant further states that THE MIAMI TIMES is a newspaper published in Miami, Dade County, Florida, and that the said newspaper has heretofore been continuously •publisned 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 preceding date of Publication of the attached copy of advertisement; further affiant says that he has neither paid nor promised any firm, person or corporation any diacotmt, rebate, commission or refund for the purpose of scuring this advertisement for publication in this newspaper. "/ -7' Editor and Publisher 4‘i'eLtZ Sworn to and sbef ubscribed ore me on this the ...... .......... „,..day of . e 19 A.Dl v." aos-v NOTMY pin= Brie= Or FLORIDA AT l'AR91Fniftrome*Ofromiroimmt*iew coMMIS5O4 IXPIRES Ali% 21, 1977 SONPiPTHIV COMA INSMANCIUNPIWPflt $.D THE MIAMI HERALD Sunday, April 24,1977 NOTICE ?0 ALL •INTERESTED PERSONS The City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida, will hold a Public Hear- ing in, its regular meeting place at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, at 3:00 "P.M. o'clock, on Thursday, April 28, 1977, to' consider renaming of the following city parks: PRESENT NAME • PROPOSED NAME Bayfront Park , "Park of the Americas" Bicentennial Park "New World Center Park" Ralph G. Ongie City Clerk ••• tee O.* .r 1 !- :• !I — JOE ELBERT ; Miami Herald Stall alks About UM Protest ng My Job' they want to see it be. ail next fall's tuition I the arrests Wednes- nt her and other stu- or several hours. "ex - the administration t with us3ecause .stand 'aceountable ho pay their sal- ' • .'irrested." - After:she was released. llavey returned to her dorm where she got about three hoOrs of sleep be- fore againsitting down: With fel- low students and mapping strait- Ber term as student body presi- dent ends the, vverkend. "But I don't really need a title." 'Navvy said, "to he involved in this Slifidayi Aptil NAmt&so HERAtp___ UM Students Want Details of Bud.get CERN PAGE I 0 posing a tuition hike of S2.50 per - credit: the tuition went up anyway. Demonstrators still rally at the City University of New York, where free tuition for residents was abolished last year. "There are other kinds of tac- tics," said Tom Tobin, president of the National Students Association. "The most common Is to try to in- ject themselves into budget hear- ings. or to call for open hearings in college cotninunities:' According to the National Coali- tion fur Lower Tuition in Higher Education, budding organizations of students. teachers, and minority groups in Indiana. Illinois, Michi- gan and Washington are formulat- ing legislation to lower or stabilize college costs. 'There's a lot of talk about the tuitions going up. but there's very little about students getting excit- ed. Most of them feel very power- less," said Helaine Lasky. an editor for the College Press Service in Denver. ADMINISTRATORS from the Tvy League south tell the same sad story about inflation and rising en- ergy costs that have made spring- time the regular season for bad news from the budget office. "T dora think these increases are out of line." said Dick Francis. di- rector of government relations fur the National Association of Inde- pendent Colleges and 'Universities. The SI 00-per-semester hike im- yy • posed by the 'UM adMinistration is. he added, "about par for the course. You're talking about matching inflation." Both the University of tiotida and Florida State Universityare tentatively keeping their yearly tu- ition rates at $675. In fact. the CEEB study showed that state universities and colleges all over the country are attempting to hold the line this fall after tu- ition increases last year that tivi.T- aged S.3 per cent for state resi- dents and outstripped the national inflation rate. Even more sobering is the fact that these costs are tuition only, and do not includecommensurate increases in tees. room and 'board. books and miseellaneous expenses that every college student faces. WHETHER frustrated- students on other campuses will follow the bold hut orderly example set by UM protesters is still a 'question mark. • Layton Olson, president: of • the National Student Educational Fund in Washington. 11: 'C... has' -wit- nessed regular denunciations of the seasonal tuition 'boosts. "It .has al- ways brought about a lot of un- rest." he said, "ICS not highly or- ganized." But it is sometimes liventive.. Two *1.3riiversity, of Montana (To-, nomics students issued a report forecasting ominously that raising. the tuition there would • force be- . tween 300-700 students to quit ." school. thus nullifying any reve- nues gained from the increase. - • I • • 4 • . r EXHIBITOR INFO. 665-8286 • tammoisimir 114t MIAMI iltRALD Sunday, April 24, 197? ‘:2 Slain Men Are Buried In &sward By FRED GRIMM Harald Stall Writer There were many mourners Sat- urday as 13rowarct County buried two victims of the dark side of its character. Five hundred policemen from across Florida came to Dania for the service for Patrolman James Taylor Thomas, 21. Afterward, more than 1,000 per- sons crowded into Fort Lauder- dale's old Mount Olive Baptist Church for the funeral of civic leader Sam Delevoe. THE IWO Nvere. cousins. Both husbands. Both parents of young children. Both black. Both respect- ed. Both killed by gunmen earlier this week in unrelated crimes. Delevoe, 41, died Monday morn- ing, as he stood in his Northwest Fort Lauderdale real estate office, shot, police say, by an enraged gar- dener Delevoe was slow to pay a $50 debt. Joseph Redman, 40, has been charged with his murder. Thomas, off duty, died early the TieXt• morning when. he went into a Griffin Road convenience store just aS two armed robbers were exit- ing. One shook a .357 magnum pis- tol in the policeman's face, bragged of its deadliness and then pulled the trigger. Police are seeking two unidenti- fied gunmen and the driver of their faded blue getaway car. MANY OF those who filled Dania Heights Baptist Church at the Thomas service also attended the Delevoe services. Cited three times for valor es one of Fort Lauderdale's first black policemen and founder of the po- lice community relations unit, De- Jcvne retired in Iftii8 to work with minority contractors, his "street ministry," and the Democrat Party. -7 an emotional service, eulogy, with tradi- NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS. The City Commission of the City of Miami, Florida, will hold a Public Hear- ing in its regular meeting place at City Hall, 3500 Pan American Drive, Miami, Florida, at 3:00 P.M. o'clock, on Thursday, April 28, 1977, to consider renaming of the following city parks: PRESENT NAME PROPOSED NAME Bayfront Park "Park of the Americas" Bicentennial Park "New World Center Park" i r\ • ' rftv' Ralph G. Ongie City Clerk • If you're going to Bogota, we'll be waiting tor you. Bogota Is one of over 50 cities v,tere trip Nitanni Herald International Edition is sold. You'll find it at major hotels and newsstands throughout the Caribbean. Central and South America. ANTIQUES ESTATE AUCTION Friday Evening Apra 29, 1977 8:00 P.M. AN IMPORTANT COLLECTION FROM A NOTED NORTH BAY ROAD ESTATE Antique Furniture, Cut Crystal, 19th Cent. Paintings, Sevres, Oriental Rug Collection, Important Period Silver Collection, Bronze, Chippendale Chairs, French Inlay Furniture, Gilt & Carved Consoles, Pier Mirrors, Clocks, Steinway Grand Piano, Marble Statues, Ivory, Jude, Chinese Porcelains, Cut Crystal Lamp, Antique.' T-..tilc^ Antique Collectables. 'truly '