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Courier-Post from Camden, New Jersey • Page 8

Publication:
Courier-Posti
Location:
Camden, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3 COURItMOST, Comdtn, N. J. Tttunrfsy, II, H1 Chairman Named For Yule Seal Drive 4-H Notes Seaside Weekend Set for Leaders ciation was announced by Norman W. Edmund, association president. v-t I IM nm? By HILDE A.

HOGE and ALFRED DUNCAN who went to Russia with the Courier -Post Ptioto by Bob Bartasi condition have brought the reply that the tree is the residents' responsibility. Meanwhile, the tree remains and the sidewalk has been roped off. TART OF a decayed tree fell into the yard of Mrs. Sarah Burch at 428 Benson Street yesterday. Residents of the block claim repeated complaints to the city about the tree's Glassboro delegation.

Other business at the leader's meeting will deal with organization material for 4-H leaders. Mrs. Lawrence Andress, Had-donfield, will preside over the group. Achievement Night The achievement recognition committee of the 4-H Leaders' Association met on Tuesday to make plans for 4-H Achievement Night to be held Oct. 6 in Over-brook Regional High School, Lindenwold.

Members of the committee are Mrs. Fred Stavely, Chews Landing; Miss Donna Pierson, Lindenv)ld Mrs. George Adams, Blackwood and Mrs. Lu-cien Willis, Haddon Heights. 4-H agents Alfred M.

Duncan and Hilde A. Hoge will attend a training meeting today for the Heads-Up program. Heads-Up is a program de veloped by the cooperative Extension Service under a special government grant. The subject matter is youth employabihty and is aimed at preparing low income youth for future jobs through training in personal grooming, clothes grooming, clothes selection and preparation of job applications. Workshops to train leaders of youth groups in Camden will be set up for January and Febru ary.

Agencies or individuals wishing more information about the program should contact the Camden County Extension Serv ice, 4-H, 152 Ohio Avenue, Clementon, 08021. Mrs. John Neu of Collings- wood is organizing a 4-H club in that community. Announce ment about the first meeting will be made in schools. Others who will be working as leaders of the clube are Mrs.

Alfred Lintner, Mrs. Charles Long, Mrs. Walter Motson, and Mrs. Thomas McCarron, all of Collingswood. A new club in Runnemede is under the leadership of Mrs.

William Saunders and Mrs. James Robinson of Runnemede. Change of Theater Policy City Center Season to Run Tivo Revivals Instead of 3 "Life with Father." the How. Charles W. Omrod of 269 Windsor Avenue, Haddonfield, has been named general chair man of the 1967 Christmas Seal Campaign in Camden County.

Omrod's selection to head the annual fund-raising drive of the Camden County Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Asso- Calif. Nurse Volunteers For Viet SAN FRANCISCO is my way of showing my appreciation of being alive in this world," said school nurse Bertha Sanchez of Daly City, Calif. She left recently for her third tour of unpaid duty in Vietnam, treating and teaching the South Vietnamese and Montangard tribesmen of the Central High lands. Miss Sanchez witnessed the horrors, of war in her native Philippines during World War II. She paid her own fare of $969 roundtrip to Vietnam for the 10-week tour with the Pro ject Concern Hospital.

Solt cotton flannel PRINTS, SOLIDS FOR SLEEPWEAR Ideal for gowns, pajamas, even robes. Prints in dots, stripes, floral, juvenile patterns. Solid pastels, white. 35-36" wide. VM LI The 1967 New Jersey 4-H lead er's weekend by-the-sea will be discussed at the Camden County 4-H Leader's Association meeting next Wednesday.

The weekend will be held in Atlantic City on Nov. 3, 4 and 5. The pro gram is open to leaders and their wives or husbands. The group will be addressed by International Farm Youth Exchange delegates and by Di ane Valentine, a former 4-H'er, WILLIAM BUTLER Butler Heads Woodbury Units WOODBURY HEIGHTS Civic leader William Butler was elected president of the Woodbury Heights Planning Board and Boys' Club at recent meetings of the two groups. Active with both groups during the last five years, he also is past president of the local country club and board of education and continues as business management adviser for Gloucester County Community College.

A management engineering director at RCA, Builer resides in the Heights with his wife Jean and four children. ROUTE 130 and NICHOLSON RD. GLOUCESTER, N. J. GL 6-9695 Daily 9 to 7 P.M.

Friday 9 to 9 Saturday 9 to 5:30 SUNDAY 10 to 4 JET TOP ALUMINUM lifetime Guarantee FREE ROPE PULLEY 28 FT. 191 AfiL 20 FT. 1 $13" I Jersey's Largest Ladder Factory Outlet Industrial agent for the Penn sylvania-Reading Seashore Lines since 1963, Omrod has been a member of the TB association's board of directors for seven years and has piloted the fund drive for the past three years. The Christmas Seal drive will open Nov. 14, and run through December.

Contributions are used to underwrite costs of the association's respiratory disease and TB-fighting program, including case detection, research and health education projects for the public and medical groups. The 1966 drive raised $60,027 in contributions. ORT President Convention-Bound Mrs. Martin Caplan, president of the Towers of Windsor Park chapter of Women's American Organization for Rehabilitation through Training (ORT), will leave Monday for the 19th biennial convention in Chicago. ORT, a Jewish vocational training organization, is the largest non-governmental training agency in the world.

It maintains over 600 installations in 22 countries in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Print and solids DECORATOR COTTONS Hopsaclcings, osnaburgs, barkcloths. Prints -in florals, stripes, paisleys, Early American "looks. Assorted solids. 36-45" wide.

iVo ironinq nvvded CH ALUS AND JERSEY PRINTS 43 yd. Orion acrylic challis, bonded acetate jersey or matte acetate jersey. Assorted prints. 41-15" wide. when the Beaumont has to be turned over to its regular tenant, the Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center, for its new season, producer Alexander H.

Cohen is moving the Ustinov drama to a Broadway house, the George Abbott Theater, where it will continue Indefinitely, beginning Sept. 18, with the original company. This is no ordinary transfer, since the production at the Beaumont was designed for a thrust stage, while the Abbott has the conventional proscenium stage. So director John Dexter had to come back from London to make the adjustment. Grant Delay Protested by Penn Faculty PHILADELPHIA (UPI) A government delay in renewing the research contract of Dr.

Stephen Smale, controversial mathematician at the Univer sity of California at Berkeley came under fire yesterday from 35 faculty members of the University of Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania instructors announced their intent to re nounce all personal use of re search money from the National Science Foundation (NSF) until it explains why Dr. Smale's $247,900 research grant applica tion has been held up. The NSF has said the annlira. tion of Dr.

Smale was delayed because its "administrative ar- rangement are unacceptable." The protest pledge at Penn was drafted by Dr. Peter Freyd, associate professor of mathematics. He contended the delay has the appearance, at least of a political reprisal for Smale's outspoken opposition to the U.S policy in Vietnam. ard Lindsay-Russel Crouse com-pHv that hnlHs the Rrnariwav ivy lib iuu vsji v. vMVviio vvv.

with Dorothy Stickney, the org- inal Mother Day, back in the role. This time Miss Stickney, who is Mrs. Lindsay, will have a new Father Day in the person of Leon Ames. Lindsay was the original in this role. No Stranger to Role Ames was not one of several who played Father Day during the original heyday of the comedy on the stage, but he did have the part when it was a television series later and played it recently in a revival at the Pasadena Playhouse in California.

"The Tenth Man," Paddy Chavefsky's Broadway hit of 1959-60, will open at the City Center on Nov. 8 and run through Nov. 26. Incidentally, Miss Dalrymple and star Franchot Tone, friends and occasional theatrical associates for many years, have acquired control of Theater Fojr in West 55th Street, one of the handful of really first-rate off-Broadway houses. Ustinov Play to Move Plans call for their first production there to be "Beyond Desire," an adaptation, with music, of Pierre La Mure's novel of the same title about composer Felix Mendelssohn.

Tone is to play Karl Klinge-mann, the Mendelssohn family friend, and also serve as nar rator. Betsy von Furstenberg will plav Mrs. Mendelssohn. inis production is scneauiea tor uci- Originally booked at the Vivian Beaumont theater in Lincoln Center in July for a five-week engagement, Peter Ustinov's new play, "The Unknown Soldier and His Wife," proved to be popular enough to rate an extension through Sept. 16.

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Pages Available:
1,868,172
Years Available:
1876-2024