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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 9

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

UTrTr? Miami Twilby Says: The beat: Sunny and warm with a high around 80. Early Bird Edition Fiftera Cents THE BEST XEWSPAPEll UXDER THE SUN Complete Weather Page 4A Telephone 371-6211 Established In 1896 Miami, Sunday, January 20, 1963 Names Miami U.S. Firm In Urging Britain For Mart L. Keeneyi BRUSSELS. Belgium 'API United States has politely notified French President Charles As Fire Chief de Gaulle that Washington will continue to press for British membership in the Common Market and for a multi-national nuclear arm under NATO.

The American position was set forth as De Gaulle's partners in the 6-nation trading alliance won at least a delay in French efforts to bar Britain's entry. After 2 days of often heated discussion, the French agreed to continue negotiations on the British application Jan. 28. The interval provides the opportunity for possible American pressure on the French to persuade them to change their i i x. 1 X' I However, any American intervention would have to be discreet.

De Gaulle already has shown he J. A. YOUELL Won Job In Court GLENN L. BARON In Charge Of Operations believes that Britain's entry into the Common Market would tend to transform the European group into an Atlantic community under American leadership. A speech by U.

S. Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen in Paris Friday night was seen as part of the spadework. He addressed the France-Etats Unis Association, 3n Calm Katanga Cleaning Up By DICK NELLIUS Brportrr el Tht Mliml Nrirf Miami officials announced the appointment yesterday of a new fire chief and three assistant police chiefs who will play a key role in their department's planned reorganiation. City Manager Melvin L.

Reese said District Fire Chief Lawrence L. Kenney will be Miami's new fire chief, replacing N. L. Wheeler, who recently retired. And Public Safety Director Donald D.

Pomerleau named as his assistant chiefs: Capt. Glenn L. Baron, head of the Internal Security Squad the last 2Mi years; he will be in charge of operations and have control of the patrol, traffic and criminal investigations sections. Inspector A. W.

Anderson, a traffic expert, will be in charge of administration, including the planning, inspection, training, personnel, internal security and intelligence sections. Assistant Chief J. A Youell, longtime No. 2 man in the department, will have charge of general services, including records and communication, central services and technical aids section. EFFECTIVE TOMORROW All four appointments are effective tomorrow, and the assistant chiefs will keep their present salaries until a wage study can be made.

Chief Kenney, who joined the department in 1941 and has been a district chief since 1957, will receive $13,750 a year. His pres- Continued on Page 6A, Col. 7 organizaton devoted to promoting ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga (AP) This copper capital was sweeping away the debris of se-cessionism yesterday. President Moise Tshombe flew back to Kolwezi to order Katangan troops to lay down their arms before U.N. forces move into that stronghold Monday.

i studies Span i Mineral rich Katanga, the loser in a 3-week war, was making ready to rejoin the Congo with U.N. occupation of Kolwezi as a significant step on the Ion road back. Invite JFK MADRID AP The Spanish good relations between the 2 countries. Bohlen said he wanted to correct what he called an illusion that "the United States has lost interest or might lose interest in defending Western Europe." He also said he wanted to down another illusion that "the United States wants to dominate its allies." In both cases, this was an indirect reference to statements made by De Gaulle last Monday at the news conference at which he all but slammed the Common Market door on Britain and rejected President Kennedy's offer of polaris missiles. Bohlen said the United Stales is determined to negotiate the formation of a multi-national nuclear arm within, the NATO alliance.

He said that obviously NATO members have atomic capabilities while some do not and that others might favor a multinational force while others might not. In Bonn, a government expert said the talks on Britain's entry Continued on Page fiA, Col. 8 Nik Shuns Showdown In Fuss With China government is quietly investigating the possibility of inviting President Kennedy to include Spain in his visit to Europe in April, reliable sources said yesterday. Some embassy and other American officials would especially welcome a presidential visit to Spain in April. By that time, they Elisabethvllle's problems economic, political and human are immense.

Save for Ha. human element, they exceed those of Leopoldville, the sprawling sister city 1,009 miles to the northwest that Is the seat of the central Congo government. Both face basically the same tangled skein of tasks. Inflation is here and moving up. Food is rationed the biggest Continued on Page (A, Col.

say, active negotiations should be under way toward renovation or renewal of the 10-year aid-for- bases pact with Spain which expires next September. same time many of them feel that in a Marxist-Leninist dialectical argument, such as would develop at a world Communist congress, he might not come out so well. For that reason they don't expect such a big-scale congress soon, although clearly China would like it. Instead, the battle may be fought out by means of letters, as often in the past, if Russia has her way. These might wait a long time for publication.

detachment of U. S. imperialism for carrying out its counter-revolutionary global strategy." When the selected list of delegates to the congress shouted down the Peking spokesman in Berlin, a good many of them must have known that they were" also shouting down a tough line in Berlin. Western diplomats feel Khrushchev has the good sense of the argument. But at the MOSCOW (AP) Premier Khrushchev, caught in a 2-front political battle on both sides of the Iron Curtain, this week asked Red China for a public ceasefire.

For Khrushchev, it represented his second turn-back in 3 months. The first was the rocket pull-out from Cuba. The second was his suggestion this week In a speech to 4f mm If jou ro down in Ihc woods today, you're sure of a big surprise. If you go down in the woods today, you'd you'd better go in disguise. For every bear that ever there was, Will gather there for certain, because Today's the day the teddy bears have their picnic.

Maybe, to twist the words of the famous children's song a little, that shovld read pic-NIK. Soviet Premier. Khrushchev got big surprise when he was presented with this magnificent stuffed teddy bear during his visit to an East Berlin electronics factory on Fri- day. But while Nik was down in the woods, or rather at the factory, Chinese delegate Wu Hsui-chuan was attacking his policy of co- -existing with the West and being booed by oth-' er delegates to the East. German Communist Party Congress.

It's no picnic being Nik. it INSIDE The News MARRIAGE ON THEIR MINDS? Slaughter On Roads Unheeded Miami News To Sell For 10 Cents On Street The Miami News, whose daily editions have sold for a nickel since 1896, Monday will go to 10 cents on the streets and at newsstands. The home delivery price will continue at 43 cents a week. Throughout the years, first as the Miami Metropolis, then as The Daily News and Metropolis and later as The Miami News, this newspaper has held its daily street sale price firm despite ever-increasing production cost. Now The Miami News will sell its dally edition at newsstands and on the streets for 10 cents a copy.

The Sunday edition price will remain at IS cents. Inasmuch as home delivered prices will remain the same, we urge our ever-growing number of regular News readers to take advantage of the bargain home subscription rate. To get your subscription started immediately, call The Miami News Circulation Department, 374-6211 or fill out and mail the coupon below: People 9 A Sports 1-4C Travel 10-12E U.S.A. 7 A Volker SB Women 1-10E Amuse. Guide Movies 5 Rau 2 Showbill 5 TV-Radio 6-11 Fla.

Living Bridge 12 Crossword 12 Garden 8 Camera 11 Bars 4B Birthi ISA Books 6B Business 8-11C Bv Gcorjre ISA Cashwords 4D Classif. 12-lfiC Editorials 4B Globe 2A Hendrix 4B Homes 1-6D Jane Dare Keasler SB Marriages 16A McGill 4B Music. Art 8E 0 1 I the Berlin Party Congress, after some harsh words thrown at the Red Chinese, that struggles within the Communist camp be argued out behind closed doors. China had suggested such a course from the beginning. Even if the battle is kept behind closed doors, many observers feel Khrushchev will avoid a worldwide party showdown with the Red Chinese.

For burying the battle won't bury the problem for the Soviet premier. In his policy of peaceful coexistence he has committed his country to avoid open war with the United States. This involved a reversal in Cuba and many believe it is prompting a more cautious tone in the dispute over Germany and Berlin. Yet every gesture Khrushchev makes toward easing the tension between the Soviet Union and the United States increases the difficulty with Red China. In the Cuban affair, Peking accused Khrushchev of backing away from a "paper tiger." The Chinese spokesman in Berlin, Wu Hsiu-chuan, left no doubts of his country's atttude when he accused Russia, indirectly of "acting as a special Gar Kills His Girl v- i I 1 PENSACOLA (AP) A 16-year-old Pensacola girl died Friday night of injuries received when she was struck down by an automobile driven by her 18-year-old fiance.

Dead is Julia Ann Fowler, Booked by sheriff's officers on a manslaughter charge was Joseph Stanley Ritner, a Navy enlisted man, stationed at Saufley Field, Pensacola. Two other Pensacola teenagers Mail To: THE MIAMI NEWS, CIRCULATION 1001 N.W. 7TH ST. MIAMI 52, FLORIDA. Please start porch delivery of the Final Home' Edition of THE MIAMI NEWS immediately.

I 1 Two professional prizefighters died last year as the result of injuries suffered in the ring. The deaths so revolted a large segment of the public that there has been serious talk in many states of banning the sport or, at least, of finding some way to protect fighters. In the same year, traffic in Dade County alone took 188 lives. And 13 more persons have been killed in 19 days of this year. But the traffic deaths unrne-hnw fall to register as the catastrophe which they represent.

If the public could be made aware that auto collisions are preventable and are not accidents in the "act of God' sense, police say, there would be about half as many of them. You can help to reduce the toll and to hold down your insurance rates if you will: Pay attention to your driv-ing. Give up your "road rights" if necessary to avoid a tragedy. Be fair when you make or adjust an insurance claim. Inform The Miami News when you're approached by an ambulance chasing lawyer or his runner.

were injured, one critically. In critical condition was June Ann Gresham, 36, and in fair condition was Shirley Faye Mason, 16. Officers said the youths had been at a party at the Fowler home in suburban Pensacola. Ritner told officers he had an argument with his girl friend and had left the house. He was followed outside by the three girls.

He said drove a short distance down the road and had started back past the Fowler residence at a speed he estimated at between 60 and 70 miles per hour. Ritner said he saw Miss Fowler standing on the edge of the pavement and when he tried to drive past her, she ran into the path of his automobile. Officers said the automobile spun around in the yard and knocked down a utility pole. The two girls who were hospitalized were believed to have been injured when struck either by the falling pole or the snapping guy wires. Please Check One: DAILY SUNDAY DAILY ONLY SUNDAY ONLY 43c Per Week 30c Per Week 15c Per Week Name Address Apt.

No'. City Pnone Truman Rests Comfortably KANSAS CITY (AP) Former President Harry S. Truman was reported in good condition and resting comfortably yesterday after his hernia operation. He had orange juice, broth, gel A WHALE OF A CATCH There's a whale of a lot. to fish for in The Miami News Classified pages.

Prize catches such as homes, jobs, furnishings, services and even fishing gear. Read and use News want ads. Place your ad by calling 374-6211. TIIKY SAID they're on their way to the premiere of his latest movie, 10 pounds of Trouble, but rumor mills say actor Tony Curtis and German actress Christine Kaufmann, 18, may use the occasion to get married. The couple is pictured at Los Angeles International Airport just before taking off for Lake Tahoe, New, yesterday.

For Immediate Service Please call 374-6211 and ask for the CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT. atin and tea for breakfast and requested that the barber come around and give him a shave. 11.

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