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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 2

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-A THE MIAMI NEWS Oct. 2, 1969 iTowns 1 AM. ESToi.2 Cf from U.S. WlATHli HJUAU ISSA 3 In OurSL ROUNDUP-Sg some other polite turn-down phrases, Stewart wound up his reply with the adage, "Let me lie here and bleed awhile, then I will up me and fight' again." Girl jockey Barbara Jo Rubin, herself a child polio victim, will ride for the March of Dimes in a horse show Sunday at the South Miami Riding Club. A newsman asked Port Authority Director Alan Stewart to participate, in a tape-recorded panel discussion on the jetport because "much of the public remains confused." Replied Stewart, "You'll never know, if you don't know now" and said he will recommend to his staff that "we have done our best with sticking our necks jout especially mine and should now leave the subject to others." After 26 killed as Navy plane crashes in Gulf of Tonkin law TwnjMNrturM lxpcf4 Until Friday Morning was flying from the naval air station at Cubi Point near Subic Bay in the Philippines to a carrier off Vietnam on a routine supply flight.

Names of the four-man crew and the 22 passengers were withheld pending notification of next of kin. IvVrf. lb i MPATfPnffi LOCAL STATE NATIONAL- INTERNATIONAL Combined Miami Nawi Prtii Strvical ATSUGI, Japan A two-engine U.S. Navy turboprop plane crashed into the Tonkin Gulf off Vietnam today, killing all 26 Navy men aboard, the Navy reported. The Navy said the C2A Greyhound aircraft, used for deliveries to aircraft carriers, New Soviet WASHINGTON The Atomic Energy Commission reported recording low to intermediate "seismic signals" in the Soviet Union's nuclear test area yesterday, the second such blast reported this week.

The AEC would not say the tests were underground TEMPERATURES NATIONAL Skiej Precip. BOATING FORECAST MIAMI FORECAST Rain and occasional thundersqualls today and early tonight with conditions Improving late tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 75. High tomorrow 88. Southeasterly winds 15 to 25 mph becoming stronger and gusty near thundershowers today, decreasing tonight and mostly westerly 15 knots.

Small craft warnings in effect. Rain probability decreasing to 50 per cent tomorrow. LOCAL DATA $21.4 million refinery fire in Spain HALL EISELE 1st 'kitten match' Mill be on Oct. 12 The first kitten match in Florida will be held Oct. 12 at 1 p.m.

in the South Miami Elks hall. The Miami Cat Fanciers Inc. says there are more than 100 entries for the show. Closing of bridges slated for game Four bridges across the Miami River will be closed to boat traffic twice tomorrow night to facilitate auto travel for the UM football game with North Carolina State in the Orange Bowl. In the down position from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

and again from 10:30 to 11:30 p.m be the spans on SW 5th Street, NW 12th Avenue, NW 17th Avenue and NW 22nd Albany. N.Y. cy 7) 44 Albuquerqut 14 47 AshevilK 44 1 84 Atlanta tr .1 Billings cv 48 48 Birmingham drzl 70 40 .83 Bismarck pcy 71 34 Boston fog 71 S3 Brownsvillf 70 Buffalo 72 40 .01 Burlinslon, Vt. cy 43 43 Charleston, C. cy 80 77 Charleston, w.Va.

pcy 59 It Charlotte, N.C 73 48 1 .02 Chicago cy 84 44 Cincinnati pcy 84 59 Cleveland 78 54 Columbus Ohio 81 40 .85 Dallas-Ft. Worth II Denver 75 41 Des Moines fog 80 54 08 Detroit cy 77 43 Duluth fog 55 43 El Paso 45 Great Falls cy 43 44 Houston 90 71 Indianapolis 77 59 .45 Jackson, Miss. 44 53 33 Kansas City 89 41 .30 Las Vegas 97 75 Little Rock 83 54 Los Angeles cy 88 45 Louisville cy 79 42 27 Memphis 48 55 .15 Milwaukee cy 82 54 Mpls, St. Paul fog 75 44 .11 New Orleans 79 53 New York halt 74 42 Oklahoma City 86 57 Omaha 80 49 Philadelphia fog 74 54 Phoenix 98 49 Pittsburgh 77 54 .42 Portland, Me. 47 44 Portland, Ort.

cy 45 51 .32 Raleigh cy 79 47 .17 Richmond 77 45 20 St. Louis cy 82 57 Salt Lake City 78 40 San Antonio cy 91 4 San Francisco 67 54 Seattle pcy 41 49 .05 Shreveoorf 88 42 Tucson 95 71 Washington 7f 42 CARTAGENA, Spain An explosion touched off a roaring fire at the Escom-breras oil refinery today, killing one person and causing an estimated $21.4 million damage. Officials evacuated 5,000 inhabitants of the oil community. The cause of the explosion was not immediately known. The refinery is owned jointly by Texaco, Chevron Oil Co.

and the state-owned National Lebanon to expel two Soviets Americana talk, set by astronaut Astronaut Donn Eisele will address the National Association of Retarded Children Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Americana Hotel. Another speaker will be Mrs. Winthrop Rockefeller, wife of the governor of Arkansas, who will be heard at 7:30 that October Anti-Litter Month in Dade Throw it away somewhere else. Metro Mayor Chuck Hall has proclaimed October Anti-Litter Month in Dade County and launched a program to police the area.

Additional trash receptacles, bilingual signs and notices to boating and business groups are being distributed. Orma Surbey poetry discussion topic The poetry of Orma Jean Surbey will be discussed Oct. 17 in the Biscayne Boulevard library. Speakers for Florida Author Night will be Marjory Stoneman Douglas, author, and Fred Shaw, academic dean at the of Miami. Regents for new By CHARLES F.

IIESSER Miami Niwi Politics Wrlttr A total of $1,859,000 for Florida International University at Miami is in the Board of Regents proposed $253.72 million budget for 1970-71. Dade Sen. Robert Haver-field, generally credited with being the "father" of Dade's new state university, said the sum for next year "should prove adequate" to get the institution off the ground, but that big money would be needed in the 1971-72 budget. Hendrix Chandler, Board of Regents secretary, said 1970 is an extremely important year for FIU as it will be the base for the whole structure. Taxpayers The Metro Commission, by a 4-3 vote, rejected a plan yesterday for paying taxes with credit cards.

County Manager Porter Homer, Finance Director W. M. Monroe and Tax Collector R. K. Overstreet were for it Commissioner R.

Hardy All interests should keep in touch with late bulletins from the National Hurricane Center on the tropical depression affecting the marine area. Small craft warnings are in effect from Daytona Beach and Tarpon Springs southward through the Keys. Atlantic coastal waters from Palm Beach to Key Larg'i: Small craft warnings in effect. Southeasterly winds 15 to 25 knots and up to 35 knots in occasional thundersqualls today. Inland waters along the southeast Florida coast including Biscayne and Florida Bays: Small craft warnings in effect.

Southeasterly winds 15 to 25 knots and up to 35 knots in occasional thunder-squalls today. Atlantic coastal waters from Cape Kennedy to Palm Beach: Small craft warnings in effect. East and southeast winds increasing to 15 to 25 knots and up to 35 knots in occasional thundersqualls with seas increasing to 5 to 8 feet. tab $1.8 million Beauty League plans convention National Beauty Culturists League will convene Oct. 26 29 at the New Everglades Hotel for its 17th annual convention.

Easter Seal Society sets State meeting The Easter Seal Society will hold its statewide meeting Oct. 9 11 in St. Volunteers and professional workers, numbering 200, are expected to attend. Coming up Law Enforcement Advisory Board meets tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the police chief's office Miami City Commission, 11 a.m.

Sunday at Dinner Key Beach President's Club, noon Monday i Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce installation, 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Sen. Edward Gurney will speak Four Freedoms Civic club will meet the candidates Monday at 7:30 p.m. Miami News Editor Sylvan Meyer will address Young Lawyers of Dade Bar Monday Ralph Nader to lecture at Fort Lauderdale University Oct.

15, topic unannounced. here ed $350,000 for operating expenses and $1.4 million for capital outlay. But, if FIU Is to open In September 1972, as planned. It will need an additional $16 million in construction money and $9 for operations for its initial year. Student enrollment is projected at 4,250 for 1972 and 10,000 by 1975.

By 1975, $32.7 million will be needed for construction and $26 million for operations. Much of the future construction money needed by FIU would be provided by the educational building constitutional amendment on the Nov. 4 ballot if approved by the voters. pay the county immediately and would charge the taxpayer no interest for 30 days. Objecting commissioners pointed out, however, that the bank charges y2 per cent interest, 18 per cent a year, on the unpaid balance after the first month.

Commissioners Matheson, Ben Shepard, Thomas O'Mal-ley and Earl Carroll voted the plan down. For it were Mayor Chuck Hall, Alex Gordon and Harold Greene. BEIRUT The Lebanese government has ordered expulsion of two Soviets charged with plotting to steal a Lebanese air force jet fighter. Both were seriously wounded by gunfire in a raid Tuesday night by Lebanese security forces on a Beirut apartment. The Soviet Embassy said men were victims of a carefully staged Lebanese plot and were shot British defuse LONDON Army engineers have defused a World War II sea mine after its discovery caused the evacuation of 500 perople from northwest London and halted subways in the vicinity.

Maj. George Fletcher of the Royal Engineers said: "A whisper could have triggered it. I rank this as one of the U.S.A. university Of the 1970-71 appropriation, $701,000 would be used to start developing the library. "You can't put 100,000 books in a library overnight," explained Hendrix.

Nearly a million dollars would be used to start assembling the administrative structure, while would go for operation and maintenance. Dr. Charles E. Perry, president of FIU, and a small staff are already working out of the control tower at the Old Tamiami Airport, site of one phase of the new university. The other is to be at Interama if and when that project's financial ills are overcome.

So far, FIU has accumulat CANADA Skies Precip. 56 28 58 42 59 50 pcy 59 45 cy 50 44 66 52 01 cy SO 38 04 cy 41 48 .45 Calgary Edmonton Montreal Ottawa Regina Toronto Winnipeg Vancouver ALASKA Skies Precip. pcy 53 44 pcy 48 30 52 40 .11 Anchoraoa Fairbanks Juneau HAWAII Honolulu 17 73 .04 SOUTH AMERICA Buenos Aires Rie Dt Janeiro) 8 pm 52 put 74 PAN AMERICAN Skies Precip. Buenos Aires 8 am 66 Montevideo cy 9 pm 44 Rio de Janeiro cy pm 48 INTERNATIONAL TIDES reported or that nuclear weapons were involved. But in contrast to atmospheric tests which are more easily detected and identified, underground testing is more difficult to pin down as such.

The nuclear test-ban treaty of 1963 prohibited aerial weapons testing. Institute of Industry. It is capable of processing 6 million tons of crude oil a year. Spokesmen said the flames spread to storage tanks containing 1.8 million gallons of petroleum. Firefighters from a dozen neighboring communities, including a small U.S.Spanish joint military base near Cartagena, cleared a three-mile belt around the area.

in cold blood. It denied the men were involved in an attempt to steal a Lebanese Mirage jet fighter. A Lebanese Foreign Ministry statement said the decision to ask the two Russians to leave as soon as they are able was taken "in accord with diplomatic norms and after consultation with Lebanese judicial authorities and Soviet Embassy officials." dangerous mine nastiest jobs I have ever done. The fuse had a booby trap in it." The mine, packed with pounds of explosives, was unearthed by a mechanical digger on a building site in Kentish Town district. Two hundred families in the vicinity were evacuated.

United Fund charged the appointment was a conspiracy on the part of militant whites "to try to project to the outside world a new, white, liberal image." Mayor Albert Thomas said in announcing the appointment of Seavers that he hoped it would reduce racial tensions in Cairo which has been torn by racial turmoil for several years and violence has increased in recent months. students had been permitted to delay induction only to the end of the semester. The delay now will cover the entire academic year. The White House estimated that about 10,000 young men would be affected by the shift in policy. crew 'feasible' monaut could, with a little extra training, be a member of an Apollo crew.

Some U.S. space officials have suggested it might be desirable to promote international space cooperation by inviting the Soviet Union to contribute a crew member for a future U.S. moon landing. Red missile in 70s quarter mile accuracy. Rep.

Leslie C. Arends 111.,) senior Republican on the Armed Services Committee, said the Soviet missile can deliver a warhead "with great accuracy." Arends also said the development of its weapons system is one of the main reasons the United States needs the ABM. can't ay, 'Charge if ROUNDUP Skies Time Precii Ankara pcy 3 am 50 Athens 2 am 46 Berlin 1 am 34 Brussels 1 am 41 Cairo 2 am 70 Copenhagen 1 am 43 Dublin mdnt 50 Geneva 1 am 41 Hong Kong 8 am 75 London mdnt 45 Madrid 1 am 72 Manila 8 am 77 Moscow pcy 3 am 45 New Delhi 4 am 72 Oslo cy 1 am 43 Paris 1 am 43 Rome 1 am 43 Saigon cv 8 am 77 Stockholm 1 am 41 Sydney 10 am 59 Tel Aviy 2 am 70 Tokyo pcy 9 am 72 Vienna pcy I am 52 Warsaw 1 am 43 Negro is named to council in racially troubled Cairo 7:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m. Yesterday Today Barometer (S.L.) tncht 29 S3 29.85 Ret.

tumidity V. High temp, yesterday Low temp, last night Excess since 1st of mo. Excess since 1st of year MJ High low record since 1939 93 48 Total precip. last 24 hrs. Total precip.

since 1st of mo. Excess since 1st of mo. Total precip. since Jan. 1 Excess since Jan.

I GREATER MIAMI Coral Gables 87 75 .51 Airoort Bayfront Park 90 74 12 Miami Beach 74 1J N. Miami Beach 90 74 FLORIDA Precip. Apalachicola Bradenton Clewtston Daytona Beach Ft. Lauderdale Ft. Myers Gainesville Homestead Islamorada Jacksonville Key West Lakeland Ocala Orlando Pensacoll Sarasota St.

Petersburg; Tallahassee Tampa Vero Beach W. Palm Beach 11 71 .01 87 74 42 72 87 74 90 74 84 74 .75 .04 MO 57 1.59 89 75 90 74 88 74 40 73 87 78 87 73 86 73 41 73 68 61 87 74 84 77 86 47 87 75 87 74 84 80 .53 .27 1 24 1 42 54 .28 .34 .14 .75 62 34 33 1 45 .47 SUN AND MOON RISE SET Sun 7:13 a.m. 7:07 p.m. Moon 12:03 a.m. 1:43 p.m.

TODAY High Low TOMORROW High Low 1:540 3:224 10: 3:390 1:43 4:701 lO.lOp 11:030 M4a 11:211 8:701 8 8:201 4:771 2: 30 a 12: I- 7:211 Tioa 8: Sip NW Uth Ct. Girl, lb. 4 ol. DAVIS, Mr. and Mrs.

Arthur, of 14960 Filmore St. Girl, 7 lb. 4 oz. JAIMES, Mr. and Mrs.

Manuel, of 174 NE 43rd St. Boy, 4 lb. 2 oz. SPIVEY, Mr. and Mrs.

Henry, of 2571 NW 139th St. Opa-locka. Boy 7 lb. 13 oz. JACKSON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL THOMAS, Mr.

and Mrs. Edward of 2271 Sept. 27. NW 71st St. Boy, 7 lb.

13 oz. VASQUEZ, Mr. and Mrs. Miguel, of 244 NW 34th Ter. Boy, 7 lb.

1 oz. Sept. 28 ANSELMO, Mr. and Mrs. Robert, of 38 Oviedo Boy 4 lb.

15' i oz. STEWART, Mr. and Mrs. Randy, of 44 West 30th St. Apt.

1. Girl, 8 lb. 8Vi oz. DETRES, Mr. and Mrs.

Juan, P.O. Box 3313 Florida City. Girl, 7 lb. 10 oz. REYNOLDS, Mr.

and Mrs. H. C. Of 9524 NW 24th Ave. Boy, 4 lb.

1 OZ. 9524 NW 24th Ave. Boy, 4 lb. 1 oi. WHITMOfcr, Mr.

and Mrs. John, of 2041 North 41st Ave. Boy, lb. 3 oz. MITCHELL, Mr.

and Mrs. Eddie, of 1790 NW 51st St. Girl, 7 lb. 4 OI. VEREGAS, Mr.

and Mrs. Vencent, of SW 100th Ave. Girt, 7 lb. 2Vi az. BANKRUPTCY PETITIONS Filed Sept.

29 BLOCKER, Carolyn Jean 908 Glades St. Immokalee, Collier County. (Housewife) Voluntary BLOCKER, Cleveland Alvin 908 Glades St. Immokalee, Collier County (Occupation: Farmer) Voluntary TITE MIAMI NEWS is pub-lished dailv except Sunday at, 1 Herald. Plaza, Miami, Fla.

33101. News and Editorial Classified ads 350-2223 Circulation 374-8211 Subscription rates by carrier are 4(1 cents weekly. Sub-, script ions by mail are 45 cents weekly. Second class mail privileges authorized at the post office, Miami, Fla. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use) for publication of all the local and foreign news published by the staff of this newspaper as well as all Associated Press dispatches.

Voting registration deadline Dade County news of record Combintd Mitml Ntwt Prtii Servicai CAIRO, 111. A Negro was named to the city council of this racially-split city yesterday, and a spokesman for a black organization attacked the appointment as a "conspiracy." Norman Seavers, 54-year-old machine operator, was unanimously endorsed by the council to fill a vacancy caused by the recent resignation of a white councilman. Greston Ewing of the Cairo OF HAVING FUN Persons qualified to vote and those who have changed legal residence have about two weeks to register if they want to vote in the upcoming City of Miami elections, city clerk Frank Correll announced today. The following locations will be open daily through Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Fire Stations No.

1, 144 NE 5th No. 8, 2917 Oak No. 9, 7561 NE 1st No. 11, 5920 W. Flagler and No.

12, 1455 NW 46th St. The supervisor of elections office, 1351 NW 12th will register voters daily Grad deferments good for year Miami Harbor Entrance Miami Beach Miami City Yacht Basin 79th St. Causeway Cape Florida (West Side) o.gqed Keys (Biscayne Bay) Anaelfish Key (Biscayne Bay) Pumpkin Key (Card Sound) Fort Lauderdale (Bahia Mar) Fort Lauderdale (Andrews Ave. Br.) Port Everglades (Jetties) Hillsboro Inlet Fowey Rocks Light Garden Cove (Key Largo) Tavernier Long Key (West End) Sombrero Key Light Marathon (North Side) Bahia Honda Bridge Boca Chica Channel Key West Marquesas Keys Garden Key (Dry Tortugas) Loggerhead Key (Dry Tortugas) Bobby J. Cason, 29, 2138 NW 51 and Mary Broomfield, 24, same address Thnmai Lition Plant.

26. 184 NW 147 and Angelica Sue Howell, 19, 1065 NE 87 Miami William Magaziner, 71, 2140 Park Beach, and Lilyan Tudor, 41, 1100 West Miami Beach Clarence A. Marlow, 32, 12730 NE 4 N. Miami, and Mary June Amodeo, 26, same address Gary H. narper, 18, J645 6.

1 Hialeah, a. Susan Suarez, 16, 214 E. 43 Hialeah Charles N. Bolinder, 26, 855 NW 44 and Kathleen A. Hurley, 27, 8067 SW 73 Miami Donald Lee Alden, 27, 1700 N.

32nd Court, Hollywood, and Leslie Jane McCloskey, 22, 187 NW 57 Apt 3 O-Kenly Dukes 20, 3564 Williams Coconut Grove, and Judy Ann Bell, 17, 125 S. Dixie Highway Apt 304, Coral G. Clinton M. Lowry, 18, 921 E. 14 Place, Hialeah, and Relna I.

Browning, 16, same address Ronald Di Giovanni, 30, 3666 NE 168 NMB, and Lenell Marguerite Allen, 23, same address Jose A. Abreu. 24. 621 E. 40 Hialeah, and Ana C.

Barrera, 17, 1601 NW 18 Miami Wilkie Ray Minor, 12, 716 NE 85 and Frances Charlene Roberts, 20, same address Rawleigh L. Brown, 18, 2337 NW 71 and Deiois Patricia Mathis, 20, 2333 NW 72 St. James William Hinson, 19, 7050 SW 8 and Dorothy Jean Arnold, 16, 7350 SW 21 Miami Robert Bob Kaplan, 47, 3565 NW 36 Stand Dorothy Malamed, 45, 6024 SW 8 Miimi Khosrow Karbalay-Soleyman, 27, 42 Majorca, Coral Gables, and Judith E. Lamey, it, 3121 NW 94 Miami Charles Francis Garrett, 43, 1132 SW 102 Gaurt, rnd Helen Crockett Combs, 33, 6631 SW 42 Miami James Edward Morris, 51, 345 Menores, Coral Gables, and Eunice H. Andrews, 59, 565 NE 132 N.

Miami Samuel A. Strano, 25, 11 Menores, Coral Gables, and Arlyn S. Gelber, 24, 440 SW 60 Court, Miami Michael A. Darany, 23, 11040 NW Miami, and Jacqueline Karen Fenty, 18, 5930 SW 93 Place, Miami Troy L. Hill, 35, 13925 NE 4 N.

Miami, and Linda L. Arnold, 17, 1321 NW 103 No. 135C, Miami DIVORCES GRANTED Ida H. from James Aiken Jr. John R.

from Geraldine Caracciole Charles from Evelyn Davis Sandra G. from Leonard F. Gibreck Florence from Donald W. Grace Mildred from Richard N. Keeler Nancy from Pedro Lorlano Luci from Clarence Magrum Barbara A.

from Luis Nunez Bern, la L. from Vincent E. Osborne Jr. I Norma from manual n. Kya BIRTHS MT.

SINAI HOSPITAL Sent. 30 ROLLE, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, of 7531 Anxiety, fatigue, tension all may mean you've forgotten one simple thing: how (opay. Read how to be alive to the moment, how to follow your impulses, how to reach back for the child within you.

One of 41 articles and features in the October Reader's Digest. Pick up your copy today. READER'S DIGEST Mathescn said the proposal was fantastic and ridiculous. Homer had suggested that taxpayers with "Master Charge" credit cards issued by the First National Bank of Miami be permitted to use them in paying property taxes. The bank, he said, would through Oct.

18, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. THE SECRET MULTIPLE AT Ready Rqads, Vacation 22 Forest mam APPLICATIONS TO WED Manuel Carlos Roias, 32, 409 SE Hialeah, and Jessie L. Ackley, 34, 752 NE 128 Miami Jose A. Fernandez, 30, 3231 NW 19 and Regina Rodriguez, 24, 3220 NW 19 Miami William Logan York, 27, 1965 Bay Drive, Miami Teach, and Mary Ellen Spradlin, 15, 110 SW 9 Hallandale Thomas Carl King, 19, Ft.

Jackson, S.C., and Claudia Irene Tulk, 21, 3415 SW 13 Miami Joe O. Acuff, 48, 2669 S. Bayshore Drive, and Helen M. Martin, 41, same address Arthur Lederman, 22, 15S0 Pennsylvania Miami Beach, Sharon Nancy Leib, 20, 8045 Noremac Miami Beach Richard Bonilla, 22, 214 Glendale Drive, Miami Springs, and Donna Marie Ric- cio, 23, S740 SW 11 West Miami Louis F. Cleri, 39, 11 E.

Okeechobee Road, nd Yvonne Kaplowitl, 45, 766 E. 5 Hialeah Joseph E. Blankinship, 51, 4731 W. 14 Hialeah, and Margaret V. Reynolds, 52, 4935 SW 101 Miami Robert Long, 27, 7420 Ocean Miami Beach, and Josephine Dl Cicco, 20, same address Rexford Dumont MCNeal, 69, 9338 NW 1 Court, Miami Shores, and Zeddith S.

King, 75, 4440 SW 80 Miami. Jesus Mato, 21, 1569 NW 2 Apt Asela Garcia, 19, 7240 NW 6 Miami David Claed Sneed, 21, 12005 NW 10 and Lynnette Gail Currie, 17, 1450 NW 138 Miami Alfredo Cabrera, 31, 47J E. 12 Hialeah, and Clara E. Cancio, 37, 10190 NW 26 Miami David Larry Barton, 16, 7403 SW 82 and Cynthia Kate Spann, 23, 8701 SW 141 Miami Harold Gordon Mitchell, 50, 848 Brickell and Mary-Jean Ferguson, 34, 3560 E. 10 Hialeah Teddy Gene Dougherty, 36, 11495 SW 57 and Gloria Dawn Clark, 34, 7275 SW IS Miami William Ernest Jacobs, 50, 4925 SW 97 Court, and Eleanor Catharine Barry, 42, same address Carlos H.

Perez, 45, 2230 SW 16 and Marta M. Zuniga, 42, 1645 SW IS Miami Steven Joe James, 25, 5215 SW 91 Ft. Lauderdale, Diane M. Wilcox, 19, same address Lorise Bu-ke, 44, 14801 SW 106 and Thelma Smith, 44, same address Steve Raymond Ellis, 19, 7950 SW and Charmaine Rita Antunovich, 17, 19768 Bel Aire Drive. Miami David R.

Robinson, 26, 3951 SW 15 Ft. Lauderdale, and Line Mary M'Sa-dooues, 22, 1450 SW 29 St. Ft. Lauderdale Richard Stanton Osgood, 21, 426 Santan-der Coral Gables and Wendy Lee Morse, 22, 1045 Palm Hialeah Malvin C. Thrasher, 38, 431 E.

27 Hialeah, and Sybil J. Minor, 25, same address ttanlev T. Swartz, 94, 11501 NE N. Miami, and Bonnie J. Hitchcock, 23, 1240 Burlington Opa Locka Rolland E.

Pyle, 38, 1026 1 5 N. Jacksonville, and Gail N. Marion, 34, 12035 NW 20 Court, Miami WASHINGTON President Nixon announced yesterday that all draft-eligible graduate students who do satisfactory work during the current school year will be safe from induction at least until next June. Under old rules, graduate Soviet on Apollo CLOUDCROFT. N.M.

A Soviet space scientist said yesterday it would be technically feasible, and desirable, for a U.S.S.R. cosmonaut to be a member of a future US. Apollo moon-landing crew. Dr. Oleg Gazenko, an authority on biomedical space problems, said a Soviet cos Deadly accurate WASHINGTON U.S.

military experts predict the Soviet Union will have a Jong-range multiple warhead missile with an accuracy of one-quarter of a mile by the middle 1970s. Laird said last May 95 per cent of the U.S. Minuteman missiles could be destroyed by a force of Soviet multiple warhead SS-9s with one- Va acre hqmesites MONTH $595 Total Cath Price 70 PAYMENTS INCLUDE INTEREST AT ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE OF 6 QUANTITIES AVAILABLE WHOLESALE PRICES to build 60-day refund guarantee power, water availabls or retirement lakes and Ocala National within 6 miles COME IN, MAIL COUPON, OR CALL 373-6531 WfBI HEAtTY. REALTORS Intiriachia Laka Eililit. IBM 57 2125 lucayna Miami.

Fit. ill il Dtpl.SP-t Without bligilisa. url tmthuri and dltiili bow I til eitlll komiiiti(i) it wbuliuli, iricti. ADOaMfo) REALTY REALTORS City. i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1904-1988