European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - May 16, 1962, Darmstadt, Hesse The stars and stripes Page in a police have. A bodies two the to Ink of an Tito nicked on a residential Street a / Ign appeared to be the i Kui ii gland style slay n the in were tentatively Identa Barnes milk no 25, and Haw Mccarthy 25, both they kid Lefen reported Earls twi my nth Viand ,3tfe and were granted sentence tin til tuesday were to surrender them exit hollies and Start their Federal prison., t i ase of death was not im-1 determined but police it Larch be Krisus said it the Mert May have been the head and to near s trunk said Tfaye car in Wlinich the ,f0und had been parked of Abou three weeks Tost recent Chicago area style slaying occurred one week ago when Imichael Ragna found Iff hts mate Model had been driven into a Southw St Side build jihad been shot twice , 3" ,. Re. Than \ two t weeks of Nien vend their woman lion were shot to death in its car in suburban Elm pc so crime commission annual report noted that Jurj 15-Ganglandttype slay a Chicago last year the High Stone 1935.m. Blaze kills pled wife 73 re Conn up a a j3-year-Bld woman Wasi her 83-year-old, husband " per cent of Els body 5pt their did at St Hospital apparently the f of Emoke inhalation and fors of the 2%-Jjtory House fat Home when the Blaze cause of the fire has of Viaven. Mich. Twp Ioe report Dorthe state. Department is missing ads of steel beams. Be Chisholm a employee up Dent reported a thief had taken four weighing nearly two m their Hub or Island sbe1 liquor official s salary in dry state second Only to . President a j Lucratie Mississippi 9ob wiped out Jackson Mes. Up the Mississippi legislature has voted to abolish the Job of its state tax collector who receives the second highest salary of Rany Public official in the cation for collecting taxes on whisky Sale in thit legally dry state. " the Black Market tax on the illegal liquor sales however will remain Tri effect it will be collected by the state tax com Mission. But the lucrative 10 per cent fee which last year save tax collector William p. Winter a Gross income of $147,949 would be , a former state representative who oddly enough favors abolishing the office and fee said he netted j65,000 last year after salary was larger than any Public official except the president who receives $100,-000 annually plus 550,000 Lor expenses. It was $40,000 More than the governor s. It was also greater than salaries of the vice president . Supreme court justices an Cabinet ministers. The measure which still must be approved by the governor would abolish the office at the end of Winter s current term on Jan 1, 1964., Winter., was appointed to the Job in 3956 Tofill an unix i red term and was later elected to a four year term beginning in i960. He said he favored abolishing the Post and fee collection system to improve efficiency and Economy in state government. Mississippi the Only legally dry state in the nation is actually a Little Damp. In certain areas particularly the resort sections along the Gulf coast whisky la openly served. The tax was enacted As a Compromise arrangement Between the wets and Drys to partially control and produce Revenue fro these illegal sales. I heartily approve of the action Winter said. It is consistent with the position took As a . Tariff cuts., backed in Houise unit Washington a president Kennedy s supporters in the House ways and Means committee won a solid Victory for the Tariff cutting basis of his sweeping new Trade program. Chairman win build Mills d Ark broke _. Silence. About the closed door sessions at the tax writing group to Tell newsmen the Basic Tariff authority the resident seeks has come through essentially unchanged despite efforts to Amend it. J. This Means the legislation sent to the. House in All probability will contain authority for the president to negotiate for outright abolition of tariffs on Industrial goods 6f, which the uniter Tats and its trading Parl Tieri produce at least 80 per Centof world exports. Reduction ,tariffs up so per get Welve years " 4-,-cancellafioni/ji tariffs with rates not More than 5 per to cell special consideration for the agricultural products of develop ing countries. _ committee considering the Bill Section by Section forged into the proposals for help to Busi Nesses hard hit by in creased imports. Jet twas under stood no votes were taken As yet Mills said one or two Amend ments to earlier portions of the Bill remain for final disposal but none of these affects the presi Dent s Tariff bargaining Powers. It was understood one unresolved amendment would impose a quota on Oil imports. Administration supporters predicted de feat of this. " founder of Paris . Library Dies Chillicothe 6kio and Young Scott was left without regular supervision. The Only steadying influence in his life he said was his grand father a weekly editor who die when Carpenter was 11. Carpenter said he was in a car wreck in 1946 and was unconscious for four Days. In the two weeks he remained in the Hospital he thought about himself and decided he had been behaving she suffered from tuber cd once out of the Hospital he Hov Srim his Uthai univ worked harder in College and gave up his old crowd. He began to Date Rene Price and they were married in 1948." a naval career followed topped off by Carpenter s selection As an astronaut of Massachusetts he described those As knowledge of the Moon and outer space and said he was not re erring to any militarily strategic gains. At a Brief news Jon Ferere earlier von Braun snid lunar exploration would be valuable be cause we will learn 3 great Deal in doing it rather than for strategic reasons. Peaceful uses asked about the future of push warfare he said his position As a rocket expert with the National aeronautics and space Agency concerned peaceful exploration of outer because of All the acquired knowledge of outer space Many say we Don t need Faith von Braun said in his talk. But this is a fallacy. To understand nature now we need belief in a divine being More urgently than those who lived in the Middle Union chief hospitalized new York up transport workers Union president Michael j. Quill was taken to a Hospital after he became ill during a Union meeting. Sex american in Moscow Pines for . Moscow up Robert web Ster n former american plastics technician from Pennsylvania who settled Down in Russia 2% year ago said he wants to return to his wife and children if they Wouldhave him Back. Webster picked up a visa at the american embassy which would allow him to enter the United states As an immigrant since he accepted russian citizenship. He expects to leave the soviet Union by the weekend. The 33-Yenr-old technician he gave he his american citizenship to Jive in the soviet Union because he wanted to you could Call it temporary in sanity he said. There were no inducements no offers or blackmail from the rus sians to get him to stay behind the Iron curtain when he worked on the 1959 . Exhibition held in Moscow Webster maintained. The haste reason i decided to remain in Russia is very hard to explain. It was not political. I said when i decided to stay Here that the reason was politics but it waa matter of convenience the real reason was that i wanted to escape my responsibilities. What i want now is to return to my two children and wife if she wants me he said. Rail worker to testify on life in Russia Washington up1 a uj5 Railroad worker who decided the russian Way of life did not live up to communist promises will Tell his Story to the House com Mittee on in american activities,a,.congressional source said. The source said David p. John son a 32-year-old former Pennsyl Vania Railroad timekeeper was subpoenaed by the committee Las Friday Johnson probably will testify within the next two weeks. It was not immediately known whether he would be questioned in an. Open or closed hearing. Johnson told . Njef.,radio newsman that the dangers of communism should be taught in american schools. The Railroad worker his wife Joanne and their 4-year-old twin sons Colin and Linday returned from the soviet Union last week at the same time of his return Johnson called the trip a fire hits Ohio Plant loss at $1.5 million Canton. Ohio up a fire raged out of control for More than two hours at the Industrial forge & steel Plant Here causing damage estimated at $15 million. Witnesses in the area said they heard an explosion shortly before the four Story factory a engulfed in flames. The fire apparently started in the machine shop area of the Plant which practically was a total Losa
