FlU tutA ors- 930a.m -53pm Page 8.-Friday, July 18, 1980-The Michigc Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily I I -1 I AN UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN holds a handkerchief up to her bandaged eye as she waits for an ambulance Wednesday night after she and other passengers on a Dade County metro bus were injured when rioters hurled bricks through the windows. Miami is in it's third day of racial disturbances. Blacks overtake bus; Miami curfew returns a II i-EKIK HA1MIVILL "n IOHMbIN r'.U " L -.PmIlIC n1nFit1 BILLY DEE WILLIAMS - ANTHONY DANIELS c,.a-DAVID PROWSE KENNY BAKER -PETER MAYHEW FRANK OZ SEATS AVAILABLE AS DAILY AT 1:00-3:15-7:30-10:00 LATE AS SHOWTIME NO PASSES- 1 214 s. university NO MONDAY GUEST NIGHT NO WED. BARGAIN MATINEE AFTERNOON SHOWS .............. $3.00 EVENING & HOLIDAYS ..... ....... $4.00 Thea tre Phone 8-6416 CHILD 14 & UNDER .................$2.00 MIAMI (AP) - The National Guard was activated and police enforced a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew in part of Miami's Liberty City area "to restore order to the streets" yesterday in the third day of violence in this racially torn city. Early in the day, masked black youths armed with knives and a gun commandeered a school bus on its way to pick up students, and two women were wounded in separate shootings. i . .. . ........................ .... rS T lflfhen $tatwth a fei ou S hrinV Ctoe ngo1ut 'n a r du gei u ShriW nrice. ry,. tender bay r a bed O u rsse f er et sauce colate 575 CAli1(f r * St1O * a hAnguscrayc l or"t1 ny nothrough GO - F '5" f C4 4 j t COUNTY MANAGER Merrett Stierheim declared a state of emergen- cy and set the curfew in the James E. Scott housing project in the largely black Liberty City district. Gov. Bob Graham's office announced that 400 Guardsmen were placed on ready reserve in Miami-area armories and that 50 Florida Highway Patrol troops also were put on alert in the city. Stierheim's state of emergency con- ditions included establishment of police barricades around the area to prevent nonresidents from entering and bans on sale and public display of firearms, sale of gasoline except directly into a gas tank and the carrying of alcoholic beverages in public places. "WE'RE TRYING to restore order to the streets," Robert Dempsey, acting director of the Dade County Public Safety Department, announced at a news conference with Stierheim. "Right now that area is under the control of criminal elements, people with guns," he said. "This will give us a tool to go after the criminals and take their firearms away." The curfew will last at least three nights, but could be extended further, Dempsey said. DEMPSEY SAID officers would arrest anyone on the streets in the restricted area without "good reason." The predicted day-long rain that police had hoped would calm tensions didn't last past noon. Violence in the Liberty City neigh- borhood, scene of rioting in May in which 18 people were killed, erupted Tuesday after the shooting of a white officer who was pursuing two black robbery suspects. "We chased them in the project area," said wounded officer Sgt. Fred Pelny. "They fought us. They started hollering to the crowd and the crowd started coming and they started shbotingat6s."