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1674-3 Herbert FrinkCANDIDATES FOR SEA Frink, Gold. ' i-Tanc�rf a �.•.� , member of the Council for the rs, will stand for re- Miam each for 231 yea s, Frink, a na e Floridian, tw ce has been el cted vice -may- or a n d garnered the highest num- be of votes in th4 city's history during h 1 s cam- paign four years ago. Owner and op- erator of the FRINF Vann Cleaners, fought vigorously for the building of a municipal auditorium, city hos- pital, purchase of ocean -front prop- ;he erfoyer (u�blic parks. I �icted, he htlth >fACr. r� t ng of a ,yo rest' n e r and work for better municipal lighting and needed repaving of streets and • sidewalks. • Frink is a member of the Elks, Masons, Scottish Rite, Shriners, Odd Fellows, Kiwanis, Miami Beach Junior Chamber of Com- merce. Member of the Methodist church, he lives with his wife and two children at 1700 Jefferson ave. ��H rbe rin , ex -mayor, w a e,.fi• 193irrs_t..,k rr Sltnan in Jur9. In t election Frink's cot tci s began wh oui i n im to fill th • oc pied by Art Childers, res ned holdover. In 1941, Frink was second high man to Bur - bridge and was elected to a four- year terns and repeated this V< in 1945. Thus, when his present term expires in *June, 1949, he w f 1 1 have served as coun- cilman for 10 cons ecutive years. In 1943 `r FRINI{ he was elected to a two-year term as mayor. Frink gained the reputation of being the most active mayor in history of the city, often devoting as much as 18 hours a day to his job. He owns a highly successful laundry and dry cleaning estab- lishment. I DON'T KNOW whether ayor Herb Frin - of Miami Beach took advice (fYfISTTe rela- tions consul, or whethe he proceeded on his own - when he wrote to,ent Harry S. Truman, suggesting thus% mic bombs to break up hurric s, but'the'results haven't been so good. ii- with, Herb's letter got a whale of a ,1 • publicity. But a considerable segment of h s constituency doesn't like that kind of pub- licity, and is saying so with some 'teat. On the other hand, he finds support from some theorists, but for the most part writers point out that the letter tied up Miami Beach with hurricanes, which they don't regard as too wholesome an idea. The mayor's letter was an extension of a long- standing argument as to whether these disturb- ances can be destroyed by counter disturbances. In the early years of the discussion the sending of warships to fire salvos in the middle of the storms was suggested. Then the flight of bomb - dropping airplanes came next, after which the atomic bomb. Weathermen generally are agreed that such suggestions are interesting but futile. LT. MICHAEL ROBBE of AAF Redistribution Station No. 2, Miami Beach, has a theory which takes that of Mayor Frink a little further. Instead of dropping the bomb in the center of the storm, he would drop it far out at sea on the per- imeter to create a new low pressure area. "Atmospheric conditions inside an area of an atomic bomb explosion," he says, "may be inviting enough for the hurricane to enter this area. The hurricane may lose its potency, in fact it may be further activated, but it will have changed its course."