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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 11

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OV Till: IIMI Sunday. Sptrmlirr 0. 1062 urn Evicted Family 6I: 7 i NEW COUNTY BUREAU AIDS DISTRESS IN EMERGENCY U. I -r I i A IK iU i. Hippie lialiili, Kdic, licllc And 'Ileal Mama' ltrlte lUYEAlWU) READY FOR CLASS WITH A BULLET IN WS BRAIN SPWNGFIF.LD.

Ohio AP Fourteen-year-old Hon Fli-i por Jr. starts to school tomorrow about a week late, but he can consider himself one of the luckiest "th prad- i ers alive he has a .22 cal- Iber bullet in his brain. i The youth, who was hit accidentally by a friend 1 Aug. J. was given the green lipht to return to M'hiNil, but doctor my must lend a quiet life no uports of any kind.

Don spent 15 days In a hospital, and doctors determin- ed it was too risky to try to remove the bullet, about 4 inches deep. He has been home since Aup. 20. Doctors aaid Don's recovery was as nearly complete as could possibly he exacted. Scar tissue Is es- i peeled to form around the bullet, keeping It In place.

I Following the latest examination, Don celebrated. He pot his first hail cut since the accident. PEOPLE IN THE NEWS I Don't Remember ama Men Of State mrs. com: am) I5.VUY to JP .4 IKE aid to families in trouble. noo to get the program moving, plus salaries for a small staft.

So far Protective SorvicVs has spent more than in direct Joseph Ems, who heads the program, says the service Is just a start. The county appropriated NKRI'MAU North Miami Votes Tuesday North Miami's voters will trek to the polls Tuesday to fill Tom Sasso's empty scat on the City Council. reiile usually are pratefnl for the bel) they receive nnd want to help themselves as soon as possible, Knis reported. "Some of our former recipients of aid are helping vis with the he said. "They answer calls from us in the middle of the and po out to stay with children until other help can be arranged.

"We make every effort to keep out (he chronic chisel-er." he ald. "hut Ihere aren'l very many of them. I'snally, pcoplr don't ant lip on welfare and they don't want to give up their children. "They are ready pnd willim? to help themselves, ilh a little assistance," By JOAN BUCKS lli-porirr uf 'I In- MIimmI NM A family evicted three days ago has a home again because of an agency set up only two months ago by the Dade County Welfare Department. Twenty-four hours a day the new Protective Services Bureau Is on call with trained Investigators In radio cars ready to carry groceries, cash and emergency needs to those who are without food, shelter or clothing.

When Frvin Cole, his wife and 3-mimth-old baby were evicted, Prole Services went to their old. The service received the call at 5 p.m. and shortly after 7 p.m. the Coles moved into an apartment, with the rent paid by Dade Welfare. The next day the case was assigned to a regular welfare caseworker, who will see the family through Its difficulties.

Every Day, Protective Services Investigators answer calls from police, the Juvenile Court and friends and neighbors of people In distress. Three months ago. liefore Protective Services liegan, it was common practice for children to I sent to Youth Hall or the Dade County Children's home, simply because they didn't have anything to eat at home. Today Protective Services steps In. Frequently police officers, called by neighbors, find a home Willi five or six children, all hungry, their parents away for various reasons.

Once they would have taken the children into custody. Today the police call Protective Services and the children are cared for in the tame. END OF PROBLEM Tolice and Juvenile Court officials say Protective Services has relieved them of one of their more troublesome problems: What to do with kid.s in the middle of the night. Protective Services has helped more than 4o() children since it opened July 1. County Welfare Director Group To Bear About Frauds A young adult croup will pet some expert advice from an assistant stale attorney this week on "How to keep from being Carling Stedman, head of the rackets and frauds division under State Attorney Richard Gerstoin, will tell Roth David Young Adults alKUit.

various rackets, swindles, frauds and eon panics in the Miami area. He will speak to the group at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, at 2t.r 3rd Ave. f.OI.nWATFU Tom Miller, who moved up to mayor wlien Sasso resigned, said: "The main issue is who is going to control North Miami Tom Sasso or the people?" "I remember what It was like when we lived with her." With those words Betty I.ee Kovacs, 13, daughter of the late Ernie Kovacs, explained in a Los Angeles court why she doesn't want to hack to her mother. Mr. Itette Kovacs, the comedian's first wife, The girl testified she wants to continue living ith her stepmother, actress 1'ilie Adam.

Kovacs' first wife is also seeking custody of another daughter. Kippie, 13. Miss Adams has asked to he named their guardian. Both Rirls cold-shouldered their mother in court. Relte Ie testified that her home with Miss Adams has a swimming pool and that she takes ballet, ice skating and horseback riding lessons and is driven to a private school by a chauffeur-butler.

"But 1 would still want to live with Kdie Adams Kovacs if we had none of those things," she said. On The lioad Igor Stravinsky, the 82 year-old comM)ser-conducior, is vacationing in Venice, Italy, before traveling to his Nubian homeland for bis first visit in 52 years. Arriving in Venice from a concert series in Israel. Stravinsky said be will no to the Soviet I'nion in October and while there will conduct at Moscow and his birthplace, Breaking lTj Hoiis'k'rHnj; Jim Hope, 70. year-old elder brother of Boh Hope, has lieen divorced in ls AiU'eles by his wife, who testified that he paid too much Attention to their young housekeeiwr, unnamed.

Sasso quit to become a Metro commissioner, but his opponents charge he is still trying to inn things in his old bailiwick by having a "Sasso man" elected. FORMER PRESIDENT DWIf.IIT EISEV-IIOWER is hack into the suing of politics for the first time since returning from his tour of Furopp. Attending a rally on the farm of Rep. diaries McC. Mathlas Jr.

(R-Md.) near Frederick. Eisenhower chatted and shook hands with hundreds of party workers. KWAME NKRl'MAH'S term of office as jiresident of Ghana has been extended to cover the length of his life. The Ghana National Assembly in Accra voted unanimously In favor of the action. TRYCVF, ME, who was first secretary peneral of the United Nations, says he worked to establish the international body's headquarters in New York because he regards that city as the "center of the world." Lie, now governor of Oslo in his native Norway, was guest of honor at a luncheon in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

SEN. BARRY f.OI.DWATER R-Ariz. told a rally in Yuma two recent appointments to the V. S. Supreme Court will make it more conservative.

Colihvater said he felt the naming of Arthur C.iihlherg and Byron (Whiver) White by President Kennedy would pive the court a leaning toward more precise Interpretation of the Constitution. PRESIDENT TITO opened the big Yugo slav International Fair at Zagreb. For hours, in pouring rain, he toured the exhibits and spent almost half an hour in the American pavilion. C.eorge F. Kennan, U.

S. ambassador, welcomed Tito and his wife and party at the entrance of the American pavilion. This year the United Stales featured "the constructive use of leisure time." SW individuals whose hobbies and leisure-tune activities are shown are: William 0. Douglas of the Supreme Court; Mrs. Pierra Salinger, wife of President Kennedy's press secretary; Kbit Novak, movie actress; Dr.

Ywinevar Bush, scientist, educator and Inventor; Floyd Dominy, commissioner of the V. S. Bureau of Reclamation, and Joseph Plutzer, a Brooklyn, N. police lieutenant. AUler han' 1 .1 Kinel is a i All four candidates, in hot pur- "Sasso man suit of the council post, insist JFK Plans Space Talk Kinel.

like Sa-so. is opposed to the planned bond issue liecause it is not subject to a referendum. So is Napolitano. who aNo objects to some of the proposed items. II F.

MOVING? Voting will be from 7 a m. to 7 p.m. nt two locations The Sunkist (irove Community House. NW 12th Ave. and the North Miami Armory, trrfl NF.

ftlh Ae. they are "independent." Ostensibly, they're split over whether or not they favor a proposed niulti-million-dollar bond issue to finance capital improvements. Running are: Charles W. Kinel, of B4n NW a music teacher. Philip J.

Coniglio. of 1" NT. 1.11st a former municipal judge. Angelo Napolitann, of 12118 N. Bayshore a conciete firm execulivt.

Ralph Oliver, of 20 NW 122nd who has a garage and repair service. TITO For Houston HOl'STON. Tex. (AP) President Kennedy will title ill a 4-mile-lnni; ticker tape parade, make a cech in a football sta-ilinm. and visit the site of the nation's Manned Spacecraft Center here Wednesday.

His sX'0(h. on sp.ue and science, will be delivered in Iiice I'nivorsiiy Stadium, which seats TO.non. Vice President Lyndon H. Secretary of Pefensp Ko'o-ert I). McNamara; dames K.

Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration N'AS and David K. Hell, director of the Hsu can, will accompany the Pres ki: Rent a TrucK from RYDER By th hour day weolt U-M Reconvenes Monday year Ryder can supply any size truck you need. 7 if i Willi Enrollment Of 14000 Service yon can depend on! Girl Brings A Neat End To Court Case DANIU'RY, Conn. (AP -Twenty year old Frances Vieta of Fairfield turned to simple mathematics in circuit court to win an acquittal on a charge of overcrowding a motor vehicle. She was arrested Aug.

I I for having three persons on the front 'anil only seat of her SHuls car. When she faced Judge Paul MacDonald in court yesterday. Miss Vieta gave him this set of figures: The seat Is composed of two sections, each of which is 21 Inches wide. The combined posterior measurements of her girl companions totaled 21' inches M'i and 10 leaving ample room for her own unmeasured i posterior. Although she was acquitted on.

the overcrowding charge. Miss Vieta didn't get off scott liee. She was fined for failure to carrv her driver's license. ident. miow net ii rod imncmm 114 Jl TIR.

HI. J-1 171 J000 71 Si. OX 1-SI20 f-n pi P'Kt 1001 5 W. 70i AVI. MO Seven povcrnment officials were here Friday to bepin security, communications and travel prop- nations.

A direct link will be Wilts 2a MNTAl. IMC. maintained between Houston and the While House. 3 A 1 niARRKI) WITH taking from the St. Jiulo Hospital I'nundation uns Willard Walker Scolt, vice jirr-sulent of Hip National P.ank of Commerce at MempliW.

The I'M airi Scott was accused of orbing the name of the Foundation's president to a promissory note. Sebastian Hall on the North Campus, which housed men students last year, ill be closed. There are other changes: The School of F.duralioti has raised the grade-point average students must have to enter Hie internship program required for graduation. Hie Sdmol of F.ngineering lias introduced a freshman course in experimental engineering and one in professional ethics for seniors. Hie School of Law has raised its entrance requirements and reorganized its curriculum for Ixith the bachelor of laws and the master of laws degree.

The Graduate School enters its fourth year of doctoral programs ith more than I no students In residence for the Ph.D. or doctor of education degree. Dr. Pearson became the university's first chancellor. HEAT LATER rot BITTII FUR STORAGI CALL Jl 1-7066 IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION! By LOUISE r.I.ANTIIARD lii-IHirtcr (tf Tin Miami The University of Miami opens Its 37th academic year tomorrow with a new president, more than 70 new faculty members, two new buildings, stiffened requirements nnd about students.

Dr. Henry King Stanford, new president, will welcome an expected 2,300 new freshmen and 500 transfer students In relays at 8, 9 and 10 a.m. at Riviera Theater, on U.S. Highway 1, opposite the main campus. Other students will rep-ister Thursday and Friday.

Classes Sept. 17. For new students, tltfre'll be tests iliiilv through Wrdiie. day. They'll lie greeted at dinners and open houses of the various religious denominations Monday, the President's Reception Tuesday, a "howdy dance" Wednesday, a "mix-er" Thursday.

The 13 national sororities will hold open bouse In their suites In the Mary B. Merritt Pnnhel-lenie House Thursday afternoon, Saturday morning and Sunday afternoon. All students will participate In a pep rally, talent show and dance Friday. UNCOXJJ JUOU) Fori Myers Mom Seeks Her Waifs OAKLAND, Calif. A custody hearing will be held Tuesday In Alameda County Juvenile Court to determine if Mrs, Kenneth Allen, 19, can take her two boys home to Fort Myers, Fla.

The hoys, aged 3 and 4, were abandoned here by their missing 44-year-old grandmother, Mrs. Iva Kroeger, who is being sought for the slaying of Jay Arnesw 70. and his Aile, Mildred. The Amesons' boo''' wer. uncovered in San last month from the basement garage of the Kroeger home.

Ill Sit AM) BOOKED Ralph Kroeger, fil, was arraigned for the murders Friday in Su-period Court. Police are still searching for Mrs. Kroeger. She brought the children here In July but told the parents she was taking them to her San Diego motel. Their father, a hoiiscpaint-er, wanted to move to California.

Mrs. Kroeger liad taken over operation of the Anieson motel in Sanla Rosa. Kenneth Charles Allen 4, and William, 3, were found wandering alone Aug. 21 at Oakland. DIDN'T RETURN They told police they had been staying in a house with a broken window, but they left when their grandmother failed to return nfier telling them she was going out for some doughnuts.

Their mother was met at the airport by ('apt. Harold Peterson of the Oakland Police Department and Mrs. John (). Kut ledge of the Salvation Army. i Tf riearicn 'ilH Dlt.

IIF.VRY KINC. STANFORD Greets Freshman The Pitt-Miami football will be televised oil KlxlU foot screens in the University College Building Saturday afternoon. The Ring Theater that evening will present a program for all new students. Returning students will find the long-awaited library building the Otto CI. Bidder Library ready with more than ooo.ooo volumes.

Also finished is the new 7-story women's residence hall, hull! as a new wing to the 720 Building completed In The two wings accommodate about women. F.aton Hall, a women's residence last year, ill be occupied this year by 4i)0 men. Old San CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING 1 wm mm VIIIA AAtinAII fa I in i a tuururi JK I for a thrilling Plane Crash Girl Heller SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) The two little girls who survived a plane crash that killed their parents are "much Improved" and sharing the same hospital room. Julie Clark, f.

year-old heroine of a 3-day ordeal ithout food or water on a nearby niountalntop, is eating heartily and demanding and getting extra rations of soda pop, said attendants at St. Bernardine's hospital. Her 8-year-old sister, Laurie, whose left leg was broken so badly In the crash that a piece of bone penetrated her thigh, is in serious condition but much improved, a nurse said. The girls were rescued Thursday, three days after the crash that killed their parents, Mr. and Mrs.

William Clark, of San Diego. I 1 I COOLING AND HEATING FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR Ifsnrr run rill IT. nrtU HOUSE FOR AS LITTLE AS 1KOM 9 Wl'lK PAYABLE MONTHLY FHA VP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY AO turns IMVJIIOT at rlorld' Wtrfront Wonderland, fbulou CAPE CORAL aabaiHi lit. Mvin, on Ctloohteh Rlve rirrTirrxTiirrTTrriirixiijnrrrrirrixriEirirrirri SINK TOPS covro UsflSH out Hit! Hit ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION FREE LUNCHEON FREE AIRPLANE RIDE FREE BOAT CRUISE FORMICA TABLE TOPS .2 00 6 00 2.50 8 00 .2.75 9 00 4.00 30x48" DROP LEAF TABLES" Aliortd Colon HICK TURPIN CAPE CORAL, Orpt. MN26C I P.O.

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Pages Available:
1,386,195
Years Available:
1904-1988