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Fort Lauderdale News from Fort Lauderdale, Florida • Page 6

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Fort Lauderdale, Florida
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FORT LAUDERDALE NEWS, Saturday, Oct. 17, 16. Arms-Making In W. Germany On Increase BONN, Germany. (P-Arms-making is on the increase in West Germany, and American money and technical know-how--almost by accident--are giving it a big boost.

Just how far it will go remains to be seen. U.S. government officials say they are watching the development with interest and some concern. The defense ministry says major arms industry grow up it can't do anything to prevent their money and how they it has no desire to see a again in Germany but adds Americans from spending wish. American and German industrialists agree that armsmaking is not the major concern of American investors here.

But, a German official said, "who can say where arms production begins and ends." The statement came from Rudolf Richter, director of the stock market division of the influential German bank. He and American experts agree there are three major U.S. money is going chiefly into the building of wholly factors in the ev flow of U.S. dollars into owned subsidiary plants rather than in purchase of shares German industry: in Germany industry. FIRM FOOTHOLD IN MARKET The U.S.

Chamber of Commerce office in West Berlin 1. Americans want to get a firm foothold in the Euro- reports there are now about 350 wholly owned American pean market, particularly in Germany, before the six-nation firms operating in West Germany and Berlin. common market erects a formidable tariff wall against There also are numerous firms in which Germans and American goods. Americans share ownership. The number of these could 2.

American investors estimate their money can go not be learned. further where production costs, particularly labor, are SIMILAR GROWTH IN FRANCE cheaper than at home. A similar growth of U.S. investment is reported in 3. Americans feel that West Germany is going to grow France, and, to a lesser degree, in the other four countries more and more important as an arms producer and that of the common market--Italy, Holland, Belgium and profit is to be had in the field.

Luxembourg. The German defense ministry is in a bit of a box. It "But the latter point is essentially a by-product of the does not want to let the impression get abroad, particularly first two," says Richter. in the Communist world, that Germany is once again to become a war arsenal. American officials point out that the major area of At the same time Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss U.S.

investment in 1 the field of defense production has been says increased arms production will give West Germany aircraft. more of a say in NATO councils. are taking the rap be- Films Replace CBS Quizzes TV Ban Criticized NEW YORK. cause there have This was the "The Big Pay-Off," bia Broadcasting (P) am stunned. Honest programs been phoney ones." reaction yesterday of Walt Framer, one of the television quiz shows to be System in the wake of of disclosures that were fixed.

Framer's statement followed announcement in New Orleans by CBS President Frank Stanton that his network is eliminating all TV shows involving awards of big money or expensive prizes. Stanton identified the shows to be cancelled as "The Big Pay-Off," "Top Dollar," and "Name That Tune." Since last year CBS has abandoned "Dotto," 000 Question," "The $64,000 Challenge," and "For Love Or Money." An NBC spokesman Said yesterday that NBC had no comment on the Stanton announcement, made before a meeting of radio and TV news directors. The American Broadcasting said it had no shows in the quiz category. It said its audience participation shows consisted of stunts, music and comedy. The House investigating subcommittee, which has been concentrating on NBC's "TwentyOne" and other NBS quiz programs no longer on the air, is in recess until Nov.

2. The discontinued CBS "$64,000 Question" and 000 Challenge" also will come under subcommittee scrutiny. In New York, CBS announced that "top dollar" and "The Big Pay-Off" would be replaced by reruns of filmed TV plays, starting Monday. The shows had appeared during the day from Monday through Friday. Nothing was said immediately about replacement plans for "Name That Tune," which gives as much as $25,000 to a pair of contestants who can identify the music played.

Harry Salter, the show's creator and producer, said last night he did not consider the show a quiz, adding: "It's the only program where expert knowledge is not quired. We play songs people have heard all their lives." CBS shows not mentioned by Stanton, and apparently to be retained, are "What's My Line," "T've Got A Secret," "To Tell The Truth," and "GE College Bowl." A contestant can win only $50 on "What's My "To Tell The Truth" pays those who stump the panel a maximum of $1,000 to be divided among three persons. "I've Got A Secret" is a panel show in which a prize of only $80 is involved. More About STEEL From Page 1-AJ Washington this afternoon to give Union President David J. McDonald their answer on his The reply could take the form of a counter -proposal It was noted that the union's new offer, paring down prior money demands about a third, would do nothing toward meeting the management demand for more freedom in changing work practices to gain economies.

The industry probably will want some concession here, even a token one. The union proposal of around 10 cents per hour in each of two years was designed to have an anti-inflationary appeal by clusively in insurance, pension concentrating the money and other benefits for the first year. The second year's installment would be in a wage hike. Previously McDonald had been holding out for 15 cents per hour for each year of a new contract. Both sides operated under a 48-hour deadline.

They are scheduled to report back Sunday morning at an open hearing before the White House inquiry panel headed by George W. Taylor. Taylor's three-man group is supposed to file a report Monday with President Eisenhower, after which the Chief Executive will be free to seek a court injunction that would halt the strike for 80 days. This schedule is subject to change, it was indicated, if the disputants appear to be getting somewhere and need a little more leeway. But if a new deadlock develops it is clear an injunction will be sought before many days.

NO COASTAL TAX? WOMAN HOPES NOT LONDON elderly woman income tax collection called "inland revenue" in Britain -would be much more formidable if renamed. According to the journal of the Society of Civil Servants, she refused to pay her tax and explained: "I am liable to inland revenue as I live on the coast." 1:00 EST Oct. 17.1959 Date From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU Dept. of Commerce OCCLUDED 29 42 32 50 31.

HIGH 30.53 52 35 66 HIGH 30.10 40 30 50 50 Are Average 30 50 Rain 60 Until Sunday Morning Snow FORECAST 60 Low Temperatures Expected OCCLUDED 40 Data from U.S. WEATHER BUREAU 30 30 Dept. COLD HIGH 30.39 40 30 HIGH 30.53 30 LOW 60- 29.65 100 Rain FORECAST Until Sunday Morning Figures Show Low Temperatures Expected WEATHER FORECAST- -Occasional rain is expected tonight along the northwest Pacific and in the Gulf coast region reaching into southern Georgia and the coastal sections of the Carolinas. A few showers are due along Lakes Erie and Ontario. Rain is forecast in western Tennessee.

It will be warmer in northern and central Plateau, northern Plains and the upper Mississippi valley, and cooler in the area from Colorado and New Mexico eastward into New England and the mid Atlantic states. (AP Wirephoto) A spokesman for Strauss said yesterday, "it is entirely untrue that West Germany will develop a great arms industry with or without the help of U.S. capital." West Germany is barred by treaties from producing the more powerful weapons of war, such as atomic bombs, battleships and long-distance missiles. But it can build aircraft, tanks, short-range missiles, sophisticated electronic equipment and the like. Many of these items are produced by companies which have their primary interest in civilian production.

The biggest single military project in the foreseeable future is the production under license here of the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, selected by the defense ministry as the new Luftwaffe's basic jet fighter. The Germans plan to have about 300 of these aircraft but are buying less than a third of them in the United States. The others are being built under license at the Heinkel and Messerschmitt plants, former makers of German military aircraft in World Wars I and II. Quizzes independent producer of dropped by the Columsome top TV quizzes School Tiff Didn't Need Taft-Hartley HOLLYWOOD It didn't take much negotiating to settle a dispute bet ween "labor" and management at McNicol Junior High School. The ninth grade class, 325 strong, boycotted the school cafeteria Thursday.

They were protesting a rule that they must sit at designated seats, rather than anywhere they wanted. Principal Earl Stabler did not have to resort to any outside governmental agency to help "mediate" the problem. Stabler, who reported he was amazed and somewhat shocked at the dispatch with which the ninth graders organized, laid down the law. He told the pupils they could sit wherever they wanted once they had sharpened up on their table manners. He said before ninth-graders used to sit anywhere but they lost that "privilege" when they began littering the cafeteria.

INVOKED SEATING School officials, unable to pinpoint the offenders, then invoked the special seating. Both Thursday and Friday ninth graders brought their own lunches to school. But during the assembly called Friday the pupils apologized and admitted their position was rather untenable. The principal said the ringleaders in the abortive boycott a "secondary" boycott. were members of a group which charitably could be called not overly studious.

Old Vet To See 117th Birthday HOUSTON, Tex. (P) Confederate veteran Walter Williams apparently will reach his 117th birthday, his doctor says. Williams, last surviving vetnotleran of the Civil War, fell ill with pnaumonia last summer and was on the critical list for weeks. Doctors at that time said death was only a few days away. Buth is holding up well and "probably will live beyond his 117th birthday if his present condition continues," Dr.

Russell Wolfe said yesterday. Williams has said he'll have barbecued pork ribs on his birthday. EX-BROWARD DEPUTY HONORED Claude Tindall, left, former Broward. County deputy sheriff for 16 years, receives a plaque from St. Cloud Mayor Bolden Warner, right, and Gordon Dawson, St.

Cloud Chamber of Commerce manager, for outstanding services to thein More About MINERS From Page trying to come up underneath them." Russell Joy, the only doctor in the area, was there too. "I'm afraid that my services won't be required," the doctor said. Wike estimated the cave-in occurred in the early-morning hours. "About 2:30," he said, "some of the boys in camp heard a rumble. But they didn't figure it was a cave-in and they went back to sleep.

Then when the day shift started to go to work they found the cave-in." The three men were working a night shift, loading ore into cars. They weren't using explosives. Wike said the cave-in was unexplained. "We never had anything like this before," he said. "A state mining inspector was out here within the last 10 days to look the place over, and it was okay." It was estimated the cave-in covered about 150 feet of the tunnel.

"Boulders bigger than a car fell into that shaft," said one newsman who was at the scene. The three men below had no food or water, but Wike contradicted an earlier report that they probably had no air. "There should be air in there," he said. "Unless they're crushed they may have gotten to open areas and they could be getting air." Wike said an attempt would be made to pipe air into the tunnel. "We've got plenty of manpower and equipment," he said.

"The trouble is we can work only three men at a time in each tunnel because there's not much room." WEATHER FORECAST ST Forecasts FT. LAUDERDALE AND VICINITY: Partly cloudy today and tomorrow with widely scattered showers. High today 85-89. Low tonight 75-80. Southeasterly winds 10-18 miles per hour except occasionally higher near beaches and in showers.

MARINE: Jacksonville through Florida Straits Northeast to East winds 10-18 miles per hour. in extreme north portion. East and southeast winds 12-20 miles per hour in the straits and in showers over extreme south portion. Showers more numerous extreme north and south portions. EAST GULF: Northeast and east winds 10-18 miles per hour and occasional rain extreme north portion.

East and southeast winds 12-25 miles per hour with scattered showers extreme south portion. Weather Summary A.M. Barometer (inches) 29.98 Humidity (per cent) 89 Temperature 78 High (last 24 hours) 87 Low (last 24 hours) 69 Mean temperature 78 Wind velocity (MPH) 5-10 Total precipitation last 24 1.24 Total precipitation Oct. to 2.07 Total precipitation year to date 54.95 Tide Data (Port Everglades Inlet) HIGH LOW a.m. p.m.

a.m. p.m. Today 8:25 8:32 2:10 2:32 Tomorrow 9:02 9:08 2:44 3:09 NOTE: For accurate tides at other points add the following corrections in hours and minutes to Port Everglades time: Fort Pierce Inlet, subtract St. Lucie Inlet: subtract Sewall Point add 1:35 (high), add 2:35 (low): Jupiter Inlet (near lighthouse), add Port of Palm Beach, Lake Worth, add In Dallas Truman Talk Due Boycott DALLAS, Tex. (UPD promised he will not deliver at a rally here tonight, but ocrats still say they will Truman was in his More About MARSHALL From Page lamation immediately after the death ordering that all U.

S. flags be lowered to half staff until after the funeral. The defense department said Marshall's death, at 5:08 p.m. Ft. Lauderdale time, was caused by age combined with complications resulting from cardiovascular renal disease and cerebral vascular accidents which began when he suffered a brain spasm last Jan.

15. After the initial spasm at his winter home in Pinehurst, N. Marshall was taken to Womack Army Hospital, Ft. Bragg, N. where he suffered a more severe stroke Feb.

17. He was flown to Walter Reed March 11 where he was a fellow-patient for a time of the late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. The department said Mrs. Marshall his second wife, had been in "almost constant attendance since the general's initial accident." But Lt. Col.

Clarence J. George, Marshall's aide for 13 years, said she was not at the bedside when the end In addition Marcamers. shall, the general is survived by a sister, Mrs. John J. Singer of Greensburg, and a step-daughter, Mrs.

James J. Winn of Leesburg, Va. Children Having A Bang-Up Time ALPENA, Mich. (P) Police went on the jump after discovering children were using Air Force rockets for toys yesterday. The officers rounded up 11 of the rockets and put them safely in a vault until the Air Force could have a look.

Where did the rockets come from? Parents of some of the children said the youngsters told them they got them from fishermen who netted them in Lake Huron. Wurthsmith Air Base at Oscoda, not far from here, has a jet practice firing range over the lake. The base is investigating. Former President Truman a "give 'em speech some conservative Demboycott his appearance. second day of a Texas tour during which he frankly admits he wants to talk politics.

Democrats in the state already are split over his appearance. The Truman visit has renewed a bitter feud between conservative and liberal-loyalist factions of the party. The conservatives bolted in 1952 and 1956 to vote for President Eisenhower. The liberal-loyalists of Dallas County stuck with Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson, with the Osceola County 'sheriff's department for past three years. Tindall has returned to Ft.

Lauderdale to start duties as producer and director of an international rodeo to be staged in the Miami Orange Bowl Feb. 25-28 under sponsorship of the Dade County Fraternal Order Jury Frees Mom Of 3 In Hold-Ups BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (P) "We got home, woke the babies up and looked at them." A joyful Mrs. Charles Anderson said that was how she celebrated her acquittal on charges of armed robbery. The attractive blonde, a 30-year-old mother of three, was acquitted last night after a federal court jury deliberated one hour and 50 minutes.

Mrs. Anderson, wife of an insurance executive, was charged with the daring noonhour holdups of two suburban savings and loan offices last year. The first office was robbed of $1,663, the second of 311 three months later. Mrs. Anderson was arrested her suburban home May 29, 1958-one week after the second holdup.

Conviction on both counts would have brought sentences of 50 years in prison and fines up to $20,000. NEED FOR MONEY The government contended she needed the money to make up a shortage at an insurance company in Atlanta where she formerly worked. She said she made up the shortage five days after the first robbery--with $1,689 her father had saved for her. Four employes of the loan association offices identified her as the woman who robbed them. The verdict tore away the composure she maintained through the five-day trial.

Tears streaming down her face, she stood up, turned to her husband and said: "Let's call Damon so we can go home." Damon, 9, is the oldest of her three children. "Thank thank you," she told the jurors as they filed past her out of the courtroom. "COLD DEFENDANT' Then to no one in particular she said: "This coldest defendant in the world is a human being too." This apparently was a reference to U. S. Atty.

W. L. Longshore's remark to the jury that "I think she's the coldest defendant charged with a serious crime I've ever seen in a courtroom." But Truman refused to comment on that split or its renewal on his arrival here yesterday. He said he didn't even know Ed Drake, chairman of the Dallas County Democratic Committee, who claims he will lead the boycott. At a press conference, Truman said "I didn't come here to talk about foreign policy.

came to talk about politics." WOLFER From Page dren, pointed out that his old-4 est will be ready to enter next year. daughter: "We haven't fully decided what school she will attend, but my family agrees that no matter where she goes, we'll be much closer in Ft. Lauderdale than we would be in Santiago," he laughed. Wolfer, who was city manager at Tucson, before coming to Ft. Lauderdale in 1954, served as the city's administrative head for 16 months before resigning late in 1955 to accept his present post with the State Department.

During his two-day stay here Wolfer talked with city department heads with whom he formerly worked and made a hurried but careful study of current administration procedures. He indicated that he would make some radical changes in the present arrangement, but declined to elaborate as to what they would involve and how soon they would take place. "Let's just say there'll be some changes made," he concluded. Man Accused Of Ex-Wife's Slaying Freed CHICAGO (PA jury of 10 women and 2 men took just 80 minutes of deliberation to acquit Duncan Hansen, 29, of a charge of murdering his former wife, Susan. Screams of happiness from the defendant's relatives friends filled Criminal Court last night as the jury foreman read the verdict to Judge Robert E.

English. plan to return to a mal- life," Hansen told newsmen who streamed toward him. "I want to see my children very badly." Hansen has three children, and one of them, Nancy, 6, testified in his defense in a tense, dramatic appearance before a packed courtroom. The decision came on the 21st day of the trial, one of the most spectacular in recent Chicago courtroom history. Hansen, a tall, bespectacled part-time school teacher, was accused of slaying Susan Hansen, 25, May 24 in her South Side home a month after she had divorced him on grounds of cruelty.

CHANGES MIND But only hours later, after flying to Lubbock, he talked about foreign policy at length to a meeting of the Lubbock United Nations Association. -He called the world organization the "best hope of mankind for deliverance from mutual destruction." -He urged a permanent United Nations police force. -He said the United Nations is the one place where disarmament should be dealt with. -He took an indirect slap at President Eisenhower for conducting disarmament talks outside the United Nations. The former President said it was too early to tell if Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschev's disarmament proposal to the UN was made in good faith.

He said he hoped it was no "grandstand play," however. ACTOR MONTE BLUE WEDS AGAIN TODAY LOS ANGELES (P -Monte Blue, an actor who made his first motion picture 49 years ago, is getting married again today. The bride is Mrs. Betty Munson Mess, 42, a portrait painter and widowed mother of four children. Blue, 72, is working now on a television western.

He is a widower. Both he and Mrs. Mess have been married 1 twice before. To These Yea, though 1 walk through the valley of. Farewell.

the Thou shadow art with of me. death, I shall fear no evil, for. -23rd Psalm Palm Beach (ocean), subtract Hillsboro Inlet, add Pompano Beach Bridge, add Oakland Park Bridge, add Sunrise Bridge, add Las Olas Bridge, add Andrews Ave. Bridge, add Dania Bridge, add Florida (west side), Key Biscayne, add Soldier Key, add Fowery Rocks Light, Largo Sound, Key Largo, add Tavernier, add Alligator Reef Light, add Long Key (west end), add 0:45. Sunset today 5:52 p.m.

Sunset tomorrow 6:22 a.m. Moonrise today 6:45 p.m. Moonset tomorrow 7:05 a.m. Temperatures High and low temperature re readings for 24-hour period ending at a.m. (EST), Oct.

17- FLORIDA Apalachicola 73 66 Orlando 74 Jacksonville 77 67 Pensacola Key West 88 74 Tallahassee Miami 86 74 Tampa Ocala 90 72 W. P. Beach 87 74 SOUTH Atlanta Asheville Memphis 61 66 75 51 49 56 New Raleigh Nashville Orleans 65 8 EAST Boston 61 45 Pittsburgh New York 60 50 Washington 88 4 Philadelphia 64 45 MIDWEST Chicago 73 45 Kansas City Cincinnati 72 48 Milwaukee Des Moines 60 St. Louis 78 Cleveland 66 53 Indianapolis 72 50 WEST Bismarck Brownsville 47 25 Okla. City 76 78 30 68 Phoenix Denver 48 San Antonio Galveston 74 67 Seattle 50 Los Angeles 87 58 CANADIAN STATIONS Montreal 55 48 Toronto 63 45 PAN-AMERICAN STATIONS Balboa, Kingston C.Z.

86 74 San Nassau Juan 92 73 WEST HOLLYWOOD Funeral services are pending at Boyd's Funeral Home for Mr. Frank G. Guinan, 60, who died yesterday at Memorial Hospital. A native of Baltimore, Mr. Guinan has resided at 5627 NW 28th St.

for seven years. He was a retired secretary. LEE ROOT SR. FRANK J. GUINAN HOLLYWOOD -Rosary services will be held at 7 p.m.

today at the Alan Wright Funeral Chapel, for Lee Root 63, who died Thursday at Broward General Hospital. A retired wholesale meat salesman, member of the Church of the Little Flower, he came here two years ago from Dunkirk, N. Y. He lived at 1850 Lincoln St. Surviving are his wife, Kathryn, two sons and two daughters.

Mass will be said at 9 a.m. Monday in the Church of the Little Flower. Burial will be in Hollywood Memorial Gardens. NICOLA LAUDA Nicola Lauda, 76, died yesterday at Holy Cross Hospital. Mr.

Lauda, 5241 Andrews was born in Italy and came to Ft. Lauderdale in July from Sloatsburg, N. Y. He was a construction worker. He belonged to the Joan of Arc Catholic Church in Sloatsburg.

Surviving are his wife, Annie; a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Manso; two grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Rosary services will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Fannin Funeral Home Chapel. Mass will be said at 9:30 a.m.

Monday in St. Clements Catholic Church with the Rev. Fr. Joseph Cronin officiating. Burial will be in Lauderdale Memorial Gardens Cemetery.

Friends may call after 3 p.m. today..

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