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Page 2 THE KEY WEST ¢: The Weatherman Says " Key West and vicinity: Mostly @loudy with occasional showers to- day, partly cloudy tonight and Sat- day. Not much change in tem- erature. Moderate to fresh south- @ast and south winds becoming ®outh and southwest, occasionally @oderately strong off shore. Florida: Partly cloudy to cloudy With scattered showers thru Sat- @tday. Continued mild and windy, Jacksonville thru the Florida Straits: Small craft warning dis- yed from Daytona southward fresh to moderately. strong southeast to south winds diminish- fng Saturday. Partly cloudy to @loudy and scattered showers, East Gulf: Small craft warnings are displayed from Tampa south- ward for fresh to strong east to southeast winds over north portion today and tonight. Otherwise fresh to strong southeast to south winds slowly diminishing Saturday. Most- ly overcast weather with occas- donal showers thru Saturday. Western Caribbean: Moderate to fresh east to south winds and partly. overcast weather thru Sat- urday. Showers at a few widely scattered places. The remains of the tropical low pressure area which has been in the vicinity of the northern Yu- catan-southern Gulf area has gra- dually moved northward and was located about 200° miles west of Fort Myers early today. It will pro- bably move up and over northern Florida tonight and Saturday. .| being paid by the taxpayers of this .| county for teaching or smearing? Excess this month Total this: year Excess this year Relative Humidity at 00 A.M 82% Barometer (Sea Level) 9:00 A.M. 29.94 ins.—1013.5 mbs, Tomorrow's Almanac 5:36 a.m. » 7:15 p.m. 4:18 a.m. 5:16 p.m, LOCAL BEAUTIES (Continued from Page One) famous brand items of merchan- dise. He asks for the information on contestants at the earliest possible date since the Daytona Beach con- test is but one month away, WORK TO START (Continued from Page One) dential districts during the busy tourist season. Clifford and Cooper have estab- lished a local office ‘and haye nam- ed Myron Potter of Homestead, a veteran of World War II service in the Seabees, as resident engineer. In addition, the city will maintain @ close check on the progress of construction. ‘The engineering firm has design- ed sewer systems for several Flor- ida cities. They are also the con- sulting engineers for the cities of Hialeah, North Miami and North Miami Beach. Their planning re- quired the services of 16 men. EXHIBIT IS SET (Continued from Page One) eampaign during a full calendar year, An impartial committee Judged 10:58 a.m. 10:27 p.m. the overall effectiveness of the material submitted by mem- : ber companies and government agencies and selected the winner. Civilian supervisors are “key men” in the effort of beneficial suggestions and much of the credit for winning the NASS Achievement Awards is due to their effective work. Navy em- Ployees in the Key West area res- ponded enthusiastically to this promotional effort and submitted beneficial suggestions. These civi- lians are really co-winners of this award among whom are: George Sikes, John M. Camero, Harold Haskins, William Plow- man, Arthur G, Borntraeger, Wil- fred P. Valder. Thomas E. Hutt, Russell B. Par- ker, Isidore Gordon, Mario Blan- co, David J. Rees, Marcel Ma- veau, Harold C. Williams, Fidel Lopez. Howard Griffin, Noble R. Wil- Nams, Everett L. Spencer, Frank Veliz, Joseph Watkins, Floyd L. McLean, Joseph M. Welters, Leroy Falco. E. T. Woodson, Kenneth S. Cla- sen, Benjamin Lowe, Winton John- @on, Edward Hooper, Raymond Fincher. "| the issue, Stark screamed Pasa- ,| dena! Might I remind the people ITIZEN Friday, June 5, 1953 No Execution Stay For Rosenhergs NEW YORK (#—The U. S. Court of Appeals today denied a stay of execution to condemned atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, sched- uled to die in Sing Sing prison’s electric chair June 18, Judge Thomas E. Swan told Emanuel Bloch, counsel for the Rosenbergs, that he might apply for a stay before the Supreme Court of the United States. The court already has refused three times to review the case. Bloch said several days ago if all else failed he would appeal to President Eisenhower for clemency Eisenhower previously has refused such a request. NEW YORK (#—William Perl, former Columbia University phys- ics instructor convicted of perjury in connection with the Rosenberg atom bomb spy case, was sen- tenced today to five years in Prison, The 34-year-old jet propulsion expert was accused of falsely tell- ing the federal grand jury that} he did not know Julius Rosenberg and Morton Sobell. Rosenberg and his wife, Ethel, are scheduled to die June 18 in the Sing Sing prison electric chair. Sobell was sentenced to 30 years for his part in the spy plot. BILLY ROBERTS (Continued From Page One) me, but many members of the fac- ulty, public officials and a man of God behind the ciosed doors of her class-room. Her dictatorial, emotional tantrums are indeed common knowledge throughout the school. Her anger and wrath against me is due to my refusal to allow her to re-write my speech- ed with appeasement und “Stark- style” concoctions, delete my words against Communism and ref- erences to Almighty God. My “maze of generalities and cliches” have won for this county and my- self honors that her “literary gems” have failed to outdo. Is she “In a calculated effort to cloud that throughout this great nation today “pink” educators are being uncovered by the thousands and are defending themselves by deni- al, smear, and fifth amendment. In speaking of the remedy for the Red infiltration, the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin, Joseph W, McCarthy warns,‘I warn you, however, that the task will not be a pleasant one. When you detect and start to expose a teacher with Communist mind,” you will be damned and smeared, You will be accused of endangering ac- ademic freedom. Remember, to those Communist - minded teach- ers academic freedom means their right to force you to hire them to teach your children a philosophy in which you do not believe. To Communist - minded teachers ac- ademic freedom means their right to deny you the freedom to hire loyal Americans to teach your children.’ Her distorted references to Pasadena are ridiculous. The people will not be fooled because many of them already have chal- lenged her under-handed methods. “Is it true that during the last ears the English depart- ited lowest on achieve- Is xt true that Mar- jan Stark was once removed as head of the English department? Why? The students reed protection against the loose, hateful smears of a few warped personalities who believe that self - righteousness an hypocrisy are Christian virtues. “T bave nothing but pity in’ my | heart for Marian Stark, She must indeed be tortured with an over- burdened conscience. Bishop Ful- ton J. Sheen once wrote, ‘A rea-| son for forgiving those who make us suffer unjustly is that if we don’t forgive, hate will multiply until the whole world is hateful. | Hate is extremely fertile; it re- produces itself with amazing rap- idity, Communism knows hate can! disrupt society more quickly than | armies, that is why it never speaks | of charity, That too is why it sows | hatred in labor against capital, | hatred in atheists against religion; | hatred in themselves against all who oppose them. How can all} this hatred be stopped when one | man is slapping another on the. cheek? There is only one way, and that is by turning the other cheek, to hate you. If I hate you, I will add my quota to the sum total of hate. This I refuse to do, I will kill your hate, I will drive it from the | earth: I will love you’. | “This course I will attempt to/ follow because Marian Stark needs | it more than anyone I have ever! known. I am confident that truth! and justice will finally and power- fully prevail | NO INJURIES IN SHIP COLLISION MESSINA, Sicily, —An Ameri- can freighter and a Norwegian jtanker collided in the Straits of Messina today xod exploded in flames. Al crewmen escaped in- jury and both vessels were towed j into port here a/ver the fires were put out. ‘ TRUCE TALKS (Continued From Pege One) resisting repatriation would be re- ferred to a post-armistice political conference. On this point, the Allied plan further provided that should the political conference fail to settle the problem, it would be referred to the U. N. General Assembly. The Communist reply called for the U. N. to drop the Assembly provision. Observers in Panmunjom say the proposal may have been in- corporated as a trading point. They say the U. N. Command may agree to drop it if the Reds will agree to a time limit on a post-war politi- cal conference which would con- sider the prisoners’ fate after the Reds talk to them. Another point of difference is that the Red proposal would name India executive agent of the five- nation neutral commission as well as chairman, The U. N. plan had just called for India to be chair- man. Other nations nominated for the commissign are Sweden, Switzer- land, and Communist satellites Po- land and Czechoslovakia.. Two other points of difference, as reported by South Korean sources, were both regarded as minor, The Reds asked that the number of agents permitted in prisoner | camps for “explanations” be in- creased three times above the 105/ North Korean and 45 Chinese rep-| resentatives provided in the U. N.| plan. The other point was the Com- | munist request that their represen- tatives be allowed to use radio communications while in South Korea. Under the plan, only India would send troops—reportedly 1,000—to guard the prisoners. Pyun warned that South Korea will not allow Indian troops to guard the prisoners nor allow the Communists to send representa- tives into the republic. “There will be bloodshed, no doubt about that,” Pyun told Asso- ciated Pess reporter Bill Shinn. Pyun made the statement Thurs- day after he conferred with Rhee. The meeting scheduled for Sat- urday could produce the climactic | moment in the prolonged talks. Initially, the session will continue in the secrecy that covered discus- sions of the meeting a week ago Monday and again Thursday. But the possibility arose that both sides now were ready to lift secrecy and make public the offi- cial terms. A South Korean source said a| general review of the other armi- stice terms would follow a final agreement on the troublesome prisoner repatriation issue. The focal point of such a review would be a possible revision of the demarcation line that will separate the opposing armies during a truce. A line which coincided with the battleline was drawn up in No- vember, 1951, and since then there has been little change, although the Communists have captured a series of Allied posts in recent weeks, A truce now would leave Korea divided roughly along the 38th Par- allel, the old political boundary created after World War II. Rhee has demanded that unifi-| cation of Korea and withdrawal of Chinese Communist forces be made part of the truce. The U. N. Command has proceed- ed in the negotiations on the assumption that these and other matters would be referred to a/ political conference after an armi-| stice. Only this week, Rhee said that to leave the Red Chinese on Ko- rean soil would amount to a “death sentence” for South Korea. But Rhee also intimated that he would reluctantly accept a truce and not fight on alone as his gov- ernment leaders have threatened. Rhee said Tuesday “wisdom and common sense” require that South Korea co-operate with the United States at any cost and that “We must accept anything the U. S. President wants.” One source close to the Rhee government said South Korea would maintain a “non-recognition without resistance” policy toward an armistice. He said: “We are weak, so what we can do physically is limited. But our spirit and struggle to achieve our national unification for ourselves and for defense of the United States and other friendly allies will never cease.” } Meanwhile, in London, prime wealth states agreed the Allies should try to meet the Red ob- jection to the U. N. assembly hav- ing ultimate jurisdiction over balk- ing prisoners. They were reported to have con- LEGISLATURE IS (Continued From Page One) | off suddenly and the higher figure wasn’t heard again. The governor himself only put on one big push. That was when | his aides, backed up by many |mewspapers throughout the state, got a Senate committee to change its mind and give a favorable re- Port to the dog track ¢rofits re- duction bill. The bill. whizzed through to become law after htat. McCarty, recuperating from a heart attack, couldn’t deliver his opening message to the Legislature and he didn’t show up in his Capi- tol office until 10 days before the end of the session, He had very little direct contact with the legislators but his staff kept closely in touch with his bills and, working through friends, kept them moving. Few of them actual- ly cleared until the final three weeks, however. Throughout the session, humor was good. There were few ill- tempered exchanges, bitter at- | tacks and counter-attacks on per- sonal privilege speeches, or obsti- nate refusals to compromise be- tween legislators. There was little talk of improper influence being used to pass or defeat legislation, and few of the ugly hints of bribery attempts that have marred the records of some recent Florida legislative sessions. It didn’t raise any general taxes (although it took for the state a bigger share of betting taxes col- lected by dog tracks and put an extra assessment on grapefruit to finance an expanded fruit adver- tising program). It gave tax relief to a few—by repealing the $500,000 a year slid- ing scale license tax on chain stores and offering farmers and commercial fishermen a rebate on gas taxes paid for their tractor and boat fuel. Its record 342 million dollar gen- eral appropriations act became law Thursday when Gov. McCarty sent it to the secretary of state’s office without a single change or objection—the first time that has happened in many years, Although the Legislature left something less than half the 25 million dollar working capital the governor requested, he said the appropriations act contained safe- guards which “with prudent busi- ness management” will let the state maintain a sound financial Position.” | He referred to a big building fund and clauses in the law which will let him and the Cabinet Budg- et Commission withhold from ex- penditure part of the appropriated funds if they think it is necessary. The Senate Appropriations Com- mittee rel just before the ses- sion adjourned a balance sheet | showing total general fund ‘appro- priations of $352,229,935, which | would leave a balance of $9,170,065 on June 30, 1955, if all of it were spent, It estimated total available funds | of $361,880,000 for the biennium. | Some forecasts range as high as | 377 millions. The Legislature was generous with funds for education (54 mil- lion dollars more than ever be- |fore), health, welfare, state parks ernment. | college and a new mental hospital TAFT SEEKS TO | (Continued From Page One) driving of the Chinese from Korea }and its unification.” Taft said that if the U. S. is able to “disentangle” itself from the |U. N., it already has treaties with | Australia, New Zealand, Japan and | ind a very defi-| ing with the French | |the Philippines, ‘ | nite understa’ in Indochina.” | “TI think we should have a free hand to form an alliance with the British if we possibly can do so as }to how Far Eastern affairs should be conducted,” he said. “An alliance has this advantage | over the United Nations—that each member can express his views and no other member can veto his ac- tion, as the United Nations or Sec- retary Acheson vetoed the hot pur- suit by our airplanes in Manchuria. “I believe we should try to work with Britain in a military alliance | in the East, but not one in which | they possess any final veto against our policies.” Taft's reference was to former Secreatry of State Acheson, who some critics say permittec U. N. allies to overrule a decision by the U. S. Joint Chiefs of Staff that U. S planes should pursue attacking Communist aircraft across the Ya which means: “I forgive: I refuse | ministers of nine British Common- | lu River border between Korea and Manchuria. sidered Red China's difficulty in accepting the proposal since the Communist nation is not a U. N. member. “ ANNOUNCING NEW LOCATION! 600 TRUMAN AVENUE Corner of TRUMAN AVENUE and SIMONTON STREETS Tax Consultation - General Accounting Specializing In STATE AND FEDERAL TAXES ROBERT J OFFICE PHONE wea - GROVER RESIDENCE PHONE Oe ead and nearly all the agencies of gov- | It provided money for a medical | in the biggest two-year building program the state has ever under+ taken—37 million dollars in all. Other projects include completion of the Women’s prison, buildings at the universities and custodial institutions. It gave the school teachers a $350 pay raise, boosted the maxi; mum old age assistance grant to $60 a month from $50, and for the first time provided money to help needy persons who are totally dis- abled. It granted bigger pay checks for nearly all state workers, too. It opened the welfare rolls to Public inspection by overriding the veto of a 1951 act by former Gov. Fuller Warren. It authorized construction of the southernmost 110 miles of the pro- Posed Jacksonville-to-Miami toll turnpike with borrowed money and set up machinery for planning a | northward extension. It started a three million dollar fight to eradicate mosquitoes with money for research as well as actual insect control work. | It adopted most of the 25-point | Program Gov. McCarty laid out for it at the beginning of the ses- sion, but wouldn’t go ‘along with his recommendations for some broad, long-range measures to re-| organize the government—consti- HESTER BATTERY For Chev., Ply., Dodge, Studebaker, Kaiser, Nash, Willy’s, Etc. 12 MONTHS .... $ 8.95 exch. 18 MONTHS n...scernnen 11.95 exch. 3 YEARS ....... 17.85 exch. LOU SMITH, 1116 White ROLLER SKATE CHILDREN’S MATINEE Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 P.M. - 4:30 P.M. NIGHTLY 8:00 - 10:30 420 Southard Street Your Grocer SELLS That Good STAR * BRAND AMERICAN COFFEE and CUBAN ——TRY A POUND TODAY—— | i} STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE! tutional revision, a tax commis; sion, fee system abolishment, con- solidation of tax gathering func- tions and conservation agencies. But though it didn’t consolidate much, it didn’t follow precedent | and create many new state boards | | either—just the special authority jto build the turnpike. | | _ It abolished the embattled Flori- | da Livestock Sanitary Board and | let the governor start over by ap-| Pointing a new one. | It shook up the Florida Milk | Commission by adding two new} | consumer members to give the | | milk buyer an: equal voice with the milk seller in fixing pricse. | It authorized a council of state | purchasing agents to set standards | and maximum prices for all agen- cy and institutional buying and | | gave it the power to arrange vol- |ume purchases where possible to | save money. DR. J. A. VALDES OPTOMETRIST Duplication of Lenses and Frames OFFICE HOURS 9-12 — 2-5 619 DUVAL STREET (Upstairs) TELEPHONE 2.7821 Bill’s Licensed PAWN SHOP 716 DUVAL ST. RUGS CLEANED All Formal Garments chemically processed. All work guaranteed and fully insured, POINCIANA DRY CLEANERS 218 Simonton St. Dial 2-7632 { MIAMI HOTEL AMERICA Conveniently Located For Downtown Shoppers — % Block |} From Bus Station i 274.N. E. Ind STREET PHONE 30672 Special Rates For Servicemen Triumph Coffee Mill ; at ALL GROCERS POOR OLD. CRAIG SERVICE STATION Francis at Truman DIAL 2.9193 YOUR PURE OIL DEALER Tires . . Tubes . . Batteries + « Accessories $4 DOUBLE ROOM FOR 2 Air Conditioned Rooms Also Available — Parking Facilities Se Habla Espanol * f RADIO and CIFELLI'S #0". TV. Ser Factory Methods Used ~ All Work Guaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equipment FOR rROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE — SEB... DAVID CIFELLI 920 Truman Ave. (Rear) Diel 2-7637 MONROE All This Week Notwine Ever Lixe ft in NATURAL VISION OREN Pec FRAN Love -ParLLS RE OES PRA CL. Se we -c em eee CONTINUOUS SHOW First Show ___ a HU “4 4:05 ~ 6% $:08 BOX OFFICE OPE: Mat. 2 & 4:06 Night 6:12 & 8:18 AIR CONDITIONED June 7-8-9 Mat. 3:30 Night 6:30 & 8:30 AiR COOLEO June 7-8-9-10 MARCIANO WALCOTT ee oe NS DAILY AT MONROE MOTORS, Inc. NEW CAR TRADE-INS All Cars Guaranteed "50 Ford $995.00 |‘49 Ply. $795.00 New Tires - New Paint New Paint - Radio 4 DOOR FLEETLINE PICK-UP TRUCK "48 Chev. $695.00 | ‘51 Ford $895.00 Radio - New Paint Low Mileage - Clean '46 Ply. $545.00 | 47 Ford $285.00 TWO LOTS Ph, 2-5631 1117 White Street or Ph, 2-5881 CORNER GREENE and SIMONTON STREETS Box Office Opens 1:45 P.M, CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE Phone 2.3419 For Time Schedule San Carlos Theatre Saturday Only THE SCREEN IN Coe ar Faense Thursday and Friday Sailors On