That message in statues didn't last

Material Information

Title:
That message in statues didn't last
Creator:
Ciment, Perry ( Author, Primary )
Place of Publication:
Miami, Fla. :
Publisher:
The Miami Herald,
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 clipping : ill. ; 38 x 10 cm.
Measurements:
38 x 10
Physical Location:
Box 2. Third Floor, City Hall.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Miami Beach (Fla.)--Pictorial works. ( lcsh )
Miami Beach (Fla.)--History--20th century--Pictorial works. ( lcsh )
Monuments & memorials--1960-1970. ( lctgm )
Sculptures--1960-1970. ( lctgm )
Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )
newspaper ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Miami Beach

Notes

Abstract:
Article responds to the new statue of Dr. Luis Henri De Bayle in Collins Park by calling attention to the presence of an older bust of Cuban Dr. Carlos Finlay and relating it to the political trauma contemporary to the articles time, spawned by the Cuban Revolution. Dr. Finlay discovered the causes of Yellow Fever. Dr. De Bayle was a Nicaraguan who advanced the use and reach of modern medicine.
General Note:
1964 Article from The Miami Herald, dated April 20, 1964, titled :That Message in Statues Didn't Last, by Perry Ciment re: busts of Carlos Finlay, who discovered the transmission of yellow fever, presented to the City on "Cuba Day" 1919, and Dr. Luis Henri DeBayle, who brought modern medicine to Latin America. Presented to Miami Beach by the city of Leon, on Pan American Day, April 14, 1959.

Record Information

Source Institution:
City of Miami Beach
Holding Location:
City of Miami Beach
Rights Management:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Resource Identifier:
MB 86
MB00000146