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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 24

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I. I 1-1 A i i i Tn ifl i nJMImi STORY IN COL. 5 he Miami New Closing Markets THE BESr NEWSPAPER UNDER THE SUN ABO Miami, Thursday, June 14, 1962 Telephone FR 4 6211 Established In 1896 i mm MM 1 i 'J 0 lj Lk; fSnf 1 I estruction Of A Igeria AS 0 Begins Tomorrow ists. The announcer said the failure was due to "divergencies" among the Moslem leaders. Thousands of tense Europeans besieged harbors and airports today in the wake of a previous Secret Army broadcast telling them to prepare to flee and leave the country in flames.

ALGIEIS The Secret Army Organization tonight ordered all Europeans to leave Algeria and said massive destruction of the country will begin tomorrow. In a clandestine radio broadcast beamed on Algiers, the European resistance group formally acknowledged failure of its efforts to obtain a compromise with the Moslem national Special Session Likely Bryant Another Charge By Nikita TOKYO Soviet Premier Nikita said "President Kennedy thinks he has the By DOUGLAS KIKER Miami Newt Washington Burniu CO 192 by Th Miami Nw WASHINGTON Stockpiling investigators are looking into the background of a contract the government signed with a California aluminum company that was represented in its Washington negotiations by Thomas E. Dewey, The Miami News has learned. The investigation centers around the fact that the Harvey Corp. was given a hefty stockpiling contract in 1955, even though the aluminum industry's production capacity already exceeded any projected national emergency needs.

Dewey and his New York law firm of Dewey and Ballentine were retained by the company to represent it in its dealings with Eisenhower Administration officials. One of those officials was Maxwell Elliott, at the time general counsel for the General Services Administration, and the person charged with the preparation of the contract between the government and the company. The contract was signed on Sept. 13, 1955. On July 23, 1956, Elliott resigned from his post and went to work for the Harvey Corp.

as an attorney. He is still employed there. Full details of the Harvey case will be brought out later in summer when the Senate subcommittee investigating stockpiling of strategic materials works its way into the field of aluminum. The history of the Harvey case begins in 1952 when the Eisenhower Administration decided the nation's capacity to produce aluminum should be increased. Contracts were signed then between the government and the nation's three largest aluminum producers, Alcoa, Reynolds and Kaiser.

The Harvey Corp. was scheduled to participate in this move, but didn't because of production difficulties. Three years later, in 1955, the company notified the government that it now was ready to sign a contract. GSA officials, noting that the aluminum expansion goals had already been met, notified the company that the contract would not be awarded. It was at this point that the company retained Dewey.

The New York lawyer, who twice ran as Republican candidate for president, Full Story Starts on Page 1A right to start a thermonuclear war." The charge was made in another exchange of letters with Japan's Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda. On April 20 Ikeda urged Khrushchev to accept an international inspection system for early conclusion of a nuclear test ban treaty. Khrushchev said he rejected Western control plans because such a system is only necessary NIKITA TALLAHASSEE Gov. Farris Bryant said today the chances are "fairly good" that he will call the Florida Legislature into special session to write a new reapportionment formula. Bryant declined to be pinned down on a likely date, but he said, "I can conceive of calling it between next week and next January." Two suits attacking Florida's legislative reapportionment as unconstitutional will go to trial July 12 in Miami before a three-judge Federal Court.

Train, Bus Tax Halt OK'd WASHINGTON The Senate Finance Committee voted unanimously to abolish the 10 per cent tax on train and bus passenger tickets at the end of this month. Sponsors of the move said thpy were trying particularly to help hard-pressed railroads. Many lines are losing heavily on passenger business. The House, which earlier passed its version of the tax bill, voted to continue the present 10 per cent tax on airline tickets to Jan. 1 and then cut it to 5 per cent.

The Senate committee left this undisturbed. I Mar got, Greene Honored CORINNE SUZETTE STEIN, platinum blonde showgirl from Pittsburgh, appears today before the Senate Investigations subcommittee. She told the subcommittee she got nowhere in complaining to the AFL-CIO American Guild for Variety Artists (AGVA) about working conditions in night clubs, including Miami's Clover Club. Mrs. Stein said she had never succumbed to night club coercion to mix with or prostitute herself for male customers.

Story starts on Page 1A. for aggressive countries to conduct military spying. Corps A Training Ground WASHINGTON President Kennedy said he hoped the Peace Corps would become a training ground for U. S. diplomats of the future.

He said corps members are "exactly the kind of people we will want to get into the Foreign Service." The President talked to the Washington staff of the corps and a group of trainees. He received loud applause when he arrived at the auditorium of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce for the talk. "I never thought I'd get such a warm hand at the Chamber of Commerce," he said with a grin.

Chinese Troops Move Up RANGOON, Burma The newspaper The Nation said 1,000 Communist Chinese troops have gone into camp just across the Chinese-Burma border on the Shweli River. The Nation, quoting its border correspondent, said the troop movement was clearly visible from the Burmese side of the border. It said the deployment was believed to be part of general moves by Red China to strengthen her frontier defenses following the recent stationing of II. S. military forces in Thailand, Burma's neighbor to the east.

A Windfall' For Russia? WASHINGTON George Kennan, ambassador to Yugoslavia, holds that congressional i CAMBRIDGE, England Ballerina Dame Margot Fonteyn and novelist Graham Greene received honorary degrees from Cambridge University. Dame Margot received a doctorate of law. "Whatever she dances, she interprets the music perfectly, not only through the beauty of her body but also through the subtlety of feeling which she possesses," said University Orator L. P. Wilkinson, speaking in Latin.

Of Graham Greene, who received a doctorate of letters, the orator said: "Even in dealing with commonplace matters he has a touch of the sinister and ill-omened, though he tempers this in season with humor and wit." Tribute To Congressmen SJ. in H.SBLowtlo..Cl-,. XII Union Gets JFK Plea On Strike NEW YORK (AP) Followln th complete ubulation of Thurday' trannnotiorn en tht New York Stock Exchange; Sales In hrie. High Low Cine Chi. Am MFdy .90 Am Met CI 1.40 Am Met Pd 1 72 24 V'l 23i'! I 228 13.

13'4i 13 mmmmmmmm Am Meter 1 20 Am Mot 80b 38 I 30' 31 'i I F4I11.IF.R S3' 54'4 I BNTBIKM, rAtiB 40 Am flat 1.20 176 39'. Am Newa 1 IB 31 Am Opt leal 2b 9 55 Am Photo .33 119 Am Potash 1.20 33 35'' Am Resrch .61 18 16' Am Sealing I 60 42 30' 16'4 16 I 31 '4 324-3 I' 16'- 30 30''i '4 9' 9- 52 52-lt 5 2 63 22 141 28 57' 20 12 24 26 17 12V4 0 55 Strike Looms, See Ahrus Fd 1.231 Abbott 1.60a ABC Vnd ACF Ind 2 50 Acme Btl Adama Ex .30 AdsmsMIIIH .72 Addfesaog Admiral WASHINGTON The Boy Scouts of Airline Page 1A. 38 2 13Vj 55 12 25 12 511 114 22't 13'A AmRhipBd 1,121 I 10' Amnmeit 3.40 34 wt WASHINGTON AP) Presi- Aroqtlip 56 12' 42 23 13 14 26 48 Am Smelt pt 2 HO 148 148 148 1 Am Snuft 1 1 24'1 24't 24'i Am SnuM pli 210 127 127 127 -1'4 Am SoAfnc .40 75 2' 28 29- Am Std .80 50 14 13 13- '4 Am Stores 2h 22 73' 72 7 -2 Am Sugar 1.60a 12 34 '4 33'4 34' Air control I5 46 dent Kennedy appealed to the Air Prod Air RMlue 2 SO AJ Induat 251 69 50 28 3 3 Ala Gaa 1.70 America will pay special tribute tonight to the two surviving members of the 64th Congress which granted the organization its congressional charter in 1916. Sen. Carl Hayden (D-Ariz.) and Rep.

Carl Vinson will receive the Silver Buffalo, Scouting's highest award, for distinguished Alco Prod .40 moves to crack down on u. a. "aid and trade with that Communist nation are a "windfall" for Russia and a severe blow to U.S. aims in Eastern Europe. Kennan expressed that view in a private message from Belgrade to Secre- tanr nf State Tloan Pnolr T7nolr Aldne 80 AllfU Cp Allpg P' tt AI1p Lud 2 Allen Pw I SO Allen Ind 1 20 4 Ail ed Ch 1.80 Allied Kid .50 Allied Mills 2 it was learned, also has received a 1 33 331 22 16'4 15' 23 28 26 89 7H 7V 16 21 19 34 35' 33H 36 43' 7 18 18Vi 164 39V 38 13 13I4 12 38 37' 23 57 55 Z310 874 86 38 114 11 66 l6'- 15; 35 22 57 2 334 22 199 19l 18 48 52J 503 12 17 164 22 19'A 18' 38-! 62 -1 13- 55 -1 12'i 25 -1 12 14 51'- 11- Vl 22 1314- '4 49-1 3l 'A 33 15..

27 -1 7V4- 19 -2 33- '4 UV4- 38'i- IVM-Vt 5 11 i 23 'A 22 -1 19 50-lii I6J4- '4 18 88 11 1714 21- '4 25 13 45 '4 25 40'4- 39 'A 43 -1 58-3'4 20- 22 '4- i)i 35 -1 Allied 8trs 3 Allied at pt 4 Allied Sup .60 Aim Cbal .50. Alpha PC 1.50 1 rl BELMONT THIRD RACE About milei (hurdles, Guardian AnBel iBurns S.40 3.00 2 20 a -fa Wold (Murphy 2 20 Note Well iShpatheri 2 40 Time 2:48 2-5. Black East. Boating Party, a-Ano Now. We're Delighted.

Parly, a-And Now, We're Delighted also ran. A. C. Boalwick Mrs. O.

Phllppa entry, DELAWARE PARK THIRD RACE-S furlontes. Aconltum i Lee) 87 00 27.40 13 80 Leander a Love tThornburg) (.00 6 20 Invealor itim 4 49 Time 1:01: Flag Master, Flying En-plKn, Macic UniF, Mr. Itoc, r.reek Poet, Dandy nuke, Bhlrland, Huddy' Boy, Rippling also ran, SUFFOLK DOWNS Clear alow F1RFT RACK 1 mile and 70 varda. Apple Man introlni 13.20 80 5.80 Karen's Jet iLanderal 9.40 5.40 Maura 'Fairbanks 1460 Time 1:47 15 Blailng Fast. Two TlminR l.adv.

Beau Fleet Sepnelino, tiiickv ftM Pnnnv. F.tllptiral also ran. BKCONP. RACE-! 1-14 mllea l.lcht Mllee iCal'drelU) 10.40 5 0 4.W Power Bit (Mercler) 5,60 4.49 Catawba Maid (8tova.HI 14 20 Time I 48 I S. Fun lnver, Dr.

T)u- bloua, Pracla, Rant Rave, Ablsha, Pepper, Iceman alao ran, ItoJijr Ptaihlel (7 4) pavM t77.lt. BALMORAL flr-ar and (l. FIRST RACK- furlongs. Old Faker iNlrhnl 48 40 22 80 10 80 Ar.iavriee iCatstemi 14.20 7.60 Pete Brandne irjomezt 3 40 Tim 1:11 4 5. Boxlrfa? Whia, Cloyce, Vienna Lure, Tulsa Miss.

Joyful static, Fr Liberty. Gem's Royal. Black Admiral, Wagon Bank lao ran. A laid .55 Alum Ltd .60 Alcoa 1.20 Amal Bug Ameraca Amerada 3 151 87Mt Flight Engineers Union today to refrain from striking three major airlines as the Union has threatened. He called for a peaceful settlement in the public interest.

He made the appeal at a news I conference following Union rejec- I I tion of an arbitration proposal he had offered. The airlines Pan American, I- Trans World and Eastern had accepted the Kennedy plan. I tl Kennedy was asked whether he Uvas considering asking Congress power to seize and operate he affected airlines if they are struck. The President replied he would have to wait and see whether the Flight Engineers accepted his suggestion to refrain from striking I' and permit the dispute to be set-si'Ued via peaceful means. Turn to Back Page Stocks Take Big Loss NEW.

YORK (AP)-The stock market today another heavy loss, toppling to another low for the year and decisively breaking through the lows set in the big plunge of May 28. In early trading, a steep drop was countered by a buying wave which put the averages higher temporarily but the rise was short-lived, Further selling developed and drove prices to their worst of the day by the final bell. 24 2m 66 17 43 22 "4 3 25' AmAmCh .50. Am Airlln 1 Am Baiter 1.80 Am BkNota .70 Am Boach service to eoynood. ine awards vinson will be presented at a charter observance dinner by Justice Tom Clark of the Supreme Court and Paul A.

Siple of Washington who, as a Boy Scout, accompanied Adm. Richard Byrd on an exploration of the Antarctic. House Passes Debt Bill WASHINGTON The House passed a bill today to raise the national debt limit to a record 308 billion dollars, after defeating a Republican effort to hold the ceiling 2 billion dollars lower. The roll call vote on passage was 211 to 192. The legislation now goes to the Senate, where quick action is assured.

Unless Congress acts, the limit now 300 billion will automatically drop June 30 to 285 billion, which may be almost 9 billion under the actual debt at that time. 34 1 a message from Ambassador John kpjmAv Moors Cabot at Warsaw predict- tININA ing a "violent change" in U. S. Polish relations if the proposals become law; Cabot forecast a sharp setback for the U.S. policy of encouraging and supporting Poland's trend toward independence from Moscow domination.

2-18-1 a bit of royal advice Art Man In New Post DETROIT Willis Woods, director of the Norton Gallery of aPlm Beach and a prominent figure in Florida art circles, has been appointed director of the Detroit Institute of Arts. Woods, 42, will take over his duties in August. Woods is a former director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Wassington, D. C. 453 Am Br 2 40 23 25; Am Bd Par lb 20' i 16 21 25 12 45 24 40' 391 43 584 20 21 35 39 33 56 "i 36 13 8 VS 4' 18 19 3914-1 33 -1V Am Can 2 89 41H Am Can pfl.75 14 40' Am Chain 2 50 1 43 Am Chicle 1.60a 15 60 Am Barge 1.50 13 20 Am Con Ind lb 22' Am Cryat 8 2 3 Am Cyan 1.60 98 40H Am Diatlll 1 20 17 Am Pw 1.9 89 58' Am tfnka 80exd 38 39 Am Export 25 14'4 Am Pw .64 59 9 Am Hardw 1 40a 7 28 AmHomP 1 44a, 14 Si Am Hoapit .25 1 39 20'4 Am Inv 1 I 57 -3 36 -an 13- 14 8- 2'- 4'4-l 19'4- 1.

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About The Miami News Archive

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