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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 14

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1970 PRESS, Binghamton, N. Y. 9-C AvJryfA NY-Penn- Ola fnm US. WMfHIt AU UU Atom Industry Opens Fire On Scientists. Other Critics QT fOT FifltfrM Shaw Low Imrtpmmtmm fzpactadj Until Friday Associated Press WIREPHOTO Map.

SHOWERS are forecast today for the Southwest, north of Montana, and the middle Atlantic states. Rain is predicted for the South. Cool weather is expected for the Northwest and Northeast. Warm temperatures are forecast for the middle of the nation. By U.

S. Weather Bureau Binghamton and Vicinity Fair tonight. Low in mid 60s. Tomorrow partly sunny. High in mid to upper 80s.

Precipitation probability 20 per cent through tomorrow. Saturday fair, warm, humid. Barometer reading at 9 a. m. Kising .29.98 Mean temperature yesterday (Airport) 74 Maximum temperature yesterday Minimum, last night (Airport) iMirpon 84 Mean one year ago today it was 68 Two years ago today it was 66 75 0 Five years ago today it was precipitation to 7 a.

m. Sun rises tomorrow at 6:10 a. m. Sun sets tomorrow at 8:07 p. m.

Temperatures in Other Cities (Continued From Page 1C) mittee, March of Dimes, Mr. Keeler said: "NY-Penn has no policing powers to require the health agencies to participate in programs we set up. The only power we have is as a lobby-. ing group or when a federal or state agency asks us for an opinion on a health agency program." MR. ODFLL SAID that the health agencies are beng asked to buy a pig in a "We must know more about the lines along which NY-Penn will be effective before we give it wholehearted support," he said.

'If we produce, everyone and his uncle will ask for help," replied Mr. Keeler. "If not, we're as extinct as the dodo. We can only tell you i what the results will be once we start working to get those results. There is no guarantee what various programs will work.

ft "But," he added, "we are at least giving the opportunity to try advanced programs in 't health care and problem pre- vention. That is our aim as a planning organization." Representatives of the March of Dimes, Musclar Dystrophy and the Broome I County Heart Association ex- pressed fears that NY-Penn's required 50 per cent local funding would cut into the health agencies' individual fund-raising campaigns. They asked for assurances that NY-Penn would not over- lap their period of local fund raising. They contend that it would strip them of hard-to- find volunteer workers and i foster resentment among con- tributors who would now have one more in a long list of fund- raising drives to give to. ecting the construction of hundreds of massive plants and heating billions of gallons of waters is difficult to understand," said a British delegate to an international symposium here on the environmental aspects of nuclear power stations.

The meeting this past week sponsored jointly by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the AEC was set up as a forum for nuclear power advocates i Bird Print Market Booming Louisville, Ky. (UPI) Famed 19th Century ornithologist and naturalist John James Audubon apparently was born 150 years too soon if the current booming market for bird prints is any indication. Audubon, who was forced to tutor children and paint steamboat murals early in his career to stay financially solvent, had to obtain subscriptions before he could get his elephant folio "Birds of America" published. And then he had to go to England to find a suitable publisher willing to take the risk. But with the current popularity of colorful bird prints and the spreading American Albany 88 59 Miami B'ch 89 81 Anchorage 68 58 Minneapolis 85 68 Boston 87 67 New Orleans 87 71 Buffalo 80 65 New York 90 73 Chicago 78 72 Philadelphia 89 71 Cleveland 76 58 Pittsburgh 86 60 Denver 95 58 San Fr'cisco 58 51 Detroit 89 62 Syracuse 84 60 Harrisburg 90 65 St.

Louis 85 65 Jacksonville 82 76 Tampa 87 79 Los Angeles 90 76 Washington 92 70 Massena 85 68 Births Lourdes Hospital To Mr. and Mrs. William R. Jayne, Colesville Road, Binghamton RD a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Glenford R. Tait, Harpursville RD 2, a son. To Mr. and Mrs.

Robert P. La Due, 31 Blanchard Avenue, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J.

DeFlippo 3d, 605 Circle Drive, Vestal, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Gleason, Morgan Road, Binghamton RD 1, a daughter.

To Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Webster, 44 Winding Way, Binghamton, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. David W. Smith, 132' a West End Avenue, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs.

John Pilipovic, Jenks Trailer Park, Port Crane, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Melvin D. Snitchler, Upper Park Avenue, Binghamton RD 2, a son.

To Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Keesler, Saddlemire Road, Binghamton RD 1, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Eugene A. Dempsey, Conklin RD 1, a son. To Mr. ann Mrs.

Robert A. Couse, 921 Vestal Road- Vestal, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Earl M.

Eaton, 3 Elm Street, Greene, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Miller, Main Street, Kirkwood, a son.

To Mr. and Mrs. David L. Beal, 3508 Maplecrest Drive, Vestal, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Nicholas J. Innarella, 1112 Katherine Lane, Vestal, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs.

William L. Parisot, 74 Martin Avenue, Johnson City, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Earl S.

Best, 12 Mather Street, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. John Russell, 44 Railroad Street, Hallstead, a daughter. To Mr.

and Mrs. David E. McDonough, Wick Road, Apalachin, a son. To Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas E. Colvard, 23 Allen Street, Deposit, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L.

Bishop, 165 Endwell Street, Johnson City, a daughter. Binghamton Genera Hospital To Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Kidder, 66 Pine Street, Binghamton, a daughter.

To Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Adrian, Kattelville Road, Binghamton RD 4, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Michael P. Gince-rowski, 30 Myrtle Avenue, Binghamton, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph V. DeAngeleo, 317 Raylene Drive, Vestal, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L.

Williams, 150 Moeller Street, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. John F. Donnellon, 2418 Maria Boulevard, Binghamton, a son.

To Mr. and Mrs. Karl R. Berg, 58 Thorpe Street, Binghamton, a son. To Mr.

and Mrs. Robert H. Lipscombe, Penn View Drive, Binghamton, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs.

Keith J. Heggelke, 39 Lusk Street, Johnson City, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Walter A.

Jacobson, 66 Chestnut Street, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. George J. Buckland, Hartman Road, Greene RD 1, a son.

To Mr. and Mrs. John P. Urban, 14 Wilson Street, Binghamton, a daughter. To Mr.

and Mrs. Donald P. Cron, 22 Shadowbrook Drive, Endicott, a son. To Mr. and Mrs.

Peter Sheyuk, 44 Rush Avenue, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy A. Cleveland, 1 Dickinson Street, Binghamton, a son.

To Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Shoffler, 70 Whig Street, Newark Valley, a daughter. To Mr.

and Mrs. John Lash, 14 Sharon Drive, Conklin, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Louis R.

Nytch, 24 North Morningside Drive, Binghamton, a son. To Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Williams, Tappan Road, Newark Valley RD 2, a daughter. To Mr.

and Mrs. Victor Faconti, 2422 Karen Court, Binghamton, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald O.

Lewis, Box 35, Chenango Forks, a son. To Mr. and Johannes Borchers, 83 Old Vestal Road, Vestal, a son. To Mr. and Mrs.

Frederick W. Haynes, 26 Lewis Street, Binghamton, a son. Skeleton Sales Up NEW DELHI (AP) The overseas sale of Indian human skeletons more than doubled from 22,790 in 1968 to 49,341 last year, officials reported. around the world to answer their critics and to offer scientific evidence that they said showed little, if any, detrimental effects from nuclear power operations. ONE OF THE HARSHEST attacks on the critics came from AEC Commissioner James T.

Rainey, who said he was "appalled at some of the sensational misrepresentation of the facts" by environmentalists. Some of the opposition comes from scientists outside the nuclear field "who are not familiar with available technical data," he said, adding the AEC had been able to resolve many of the questions on a "scientist-to-scientist" basis. "Of course," Rainey said, "we have also run into opposition led by unqualified people who make their living playing on the fears of the public, setting themselves up in charge of 'instant' conservation organizations and stirring up controversy. It is difficult to combat these 'stirrer-uppers' and their public hysteria-level, and propaganda-type opposition, but, fortunately, it often speaks itself." RAINEY DID NOT single out any individuals but he made it plain he was referring to citizens' groups that had held up construction of scores of nuclear plants around the country. He complained that "openness" of the AEC's licensing process to the public "lends itself to the ill-intentioned or, at best, to unnecessary delays while the concerns of those who are not well-informed are answered." This contention was challenged during the meeting by S.

David Freeman of President Nixon's Office of Science and Technology, who said the siting of nuclear plants had been done largelyin secret. "The past practice of planning facilities in isolation and revealing plans to the public only shortly vbef ore the land is cleared and concrete poured is just not satisfactory for the future," he said. FREEMAN ADVISED utilities to climb aboard the environmental bandwagon and hire their own specialists. "It is not sufficient to make an engineer who has worked on other matters all his life be responsible for environmental protection," he said. Several of the nuclear perts at the meeting, including some from Japan and India, sought to minimize thermal pollution on the ground scientific evidence was lacking on adverse effects to aquatic life.

Theos J. Thompson, another AEC commissioner, went so far as to say thermal pollution was not in the true sense." It only means, he said, "that the waters of a river, lake or sea are warmed a few degrees." Thompson said the real problem facing the nuclear industry was that the public didn't understand the complexities of plant operations, or the numerous built-in safeguards. Atomic energy, he said, "is under a cloud." By WILLIAM E. HOWARD Gannett News Service Special I A-TIONS Nuclear power industry leaders are on the counter-attack against their environmentalist critics. They claim fears of atomic catast-" rophe are being generated by uninformed scientists and "professional stirrer-uppers." Moreover, they contend most objections to building power plants are unfounded and the public is suffering be- cause construction delays are crimping production of electricity.

But privately officials of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission concede much of today's opposition results from the AEC's own mistakes. HIGH ON THE LIST of mistakes, in the opinion of one official, is the AEC's decision to ignore for years the consequences of thermal pollutionthe heating of rivers, lakes and estuaries with water run through atomic power reactors. "Our people were aware of the problem, but somebody chose to ignore it," he said.

"And now we're paying for it. power plants cause thermal pollution, but practically the only complaints you hear today are about nuclear plants." (The New York State Electric Gas Corp. of Binghamton has postponed executing its plan for construction of a nuclear-powered generating plant on the east shore of Cayuga Lake 15 miles north of Ithaca. (This decision was made after a lengthy campaign by a group of Ithacans protesting because of what it contended was a thermal heat threat to the life of the lake. The utility said its postponement is to give it time to make its own studies of the effect of such a plant on the life of the lake, and to reach a conclusion based on them.) THE OFFICIAL AEC explanation for the oversight on thermal heat is that under the Atomic Energy Act, it had no legal authority over environmental matters other than those concerned with radioactivity and safety.

The agency never mentions that it didn't seek a broadened mandate to cover thermal pollution, even though it had been actively promoting nuclear power around the world. "How they thought the thermal problem would never come up when they were proj- Patient Speaks With Forked Tongue, Nurse DENVER (AP) A nurse tucked a thermometer under the tongue of a 15-year-old patient at National Jewish Hospital, then went about business elsewhere. When she returned a few minutes later, the hospital said, she removed the thermometer and stood rooted in horror as a small, green snake followed it. The hospital, which declined to identify the youth or nurse, said the patient apparently snared the harmless reptile on a field trip and saved it for the occasion, concealing it in his mouth during the nurse's absence. Now a Bar Is, A Saloon Is SACRAMENTO, Cal.

(AP) A carryover law from the days of prohibition has finally been laid to rest with Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature on a law that allows Californians to call a saloon a saloon and a bar a bar. Use of the words by California drinking establishments had been banned since 1935. Deaths FRABLE Walter H. Frable, ville, died Wednesday as me highway accident.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Martha Frable, Stilesville; daughter. Miss Helen Frable, Hancock; a son, David Frable, at home; a grandson; a sister, Mrs. Mae Wiesel, Elmhurst, Pa. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.

m. at the Polumbo Funeral Home, 48 Pine Deposit. The Rev. W. Glenn McCarty, pastor of the Deposit United Methodist Church, will officiate.

Friends may call at the funeral home this evening from to and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. JENNINGS John W. Jennings, 42, of 14 Main Candor, died this morning aiier a long illness at the Robert Packer Hospital, Sayre, Pa. He is survived by his mother, Mrs.

Daisey H. Jennings, Candor; three sisters, Mrs. Eleanor Myatt, Lake Worth, Miss Francis Jennings, and Miss Janet Jennings, both of Binghamton; one brother, James H. Jennings III, Candor; an uncle, two aunts and several cousins. He was employed by Cornell University in the Department of Housing and Dining.

He was a member of St. Marks Episcopal Church, Candor. He was a member of. the VFW Post 1371, Owego. He was a graduate of Candor Central High School and of Manilus School, and also attended Syracuse University.

He was a veteran of the United States Air Force, serving in Japan. Funeral services are pending at the Allen Funeral Home, 86 Main Candor. STANLEY Guy C. Stanley, 74, of 432 Har ry L. Johnson city, died at 6:40 p.m.

Wednesday in Wilson Memorial Hospital. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Bertha C. Stanley, Johnson City; a son, Charles G. Stanley, Apalachin; a brother, Harry E.

Stanley, Binghamton; four granddaughters, Mrs. Charles (Betty) Preston, Apalachin, Mrs. Leslie (Martha) Staples, Johnson City, Mrs. Charles (Georgia) Forinash, Johnson City, Mrs. Douglas (Patricia) Stanek, Binghamton; a grandson.

Bill Stanley, Apalachin; five great grandchildren; a nephew. Jack Stanley, -Champaign Urbana, three cousins. He was a member of Sarah Jane Johnson United Methodist Church of Johnson City. He was a naval veteran of World War 1 and a 50 year member of the Frank A. Johnson American Legion Post 758, Johnson City.

He was heating engineer of the State Armory of Binghamton for many years. He was a member of the Old Timers' Radio Club and a member of the Quarter Century Radio Association. Funeral services will be held at the J. F. Rice Funeral Home, 150 Main Johnson City at 1 :30 p.m.

Saturday. The Rev. William E. Davies, pastor of the Sarah Jane Johnson United Methodist Church, will officiate. Burial will be In the Veterans' Section of Vestal Hills Memorial Park.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p.m. ADDITIONAL DEATH NOTICES ON FOLLOWING PAGE JOHNSON CITY FLORIST Specializing In FUNERAL FLOWERS 777 Hoiry t. J.C. 797-44JI Whatever else I I you do "let flowers i express i. sentiment" MacLENNAN'S I 499 COURT ST.

722-6484 i 4 Just phone 7-292-292 SAKOIH CENTER 35 LIFE CASUALTY "WE'RE NOT GOING after the individuals and small busi-1 nessmen," Mr. Keeler said, ft "We're after major industries i and foundations. It would be ideal if we could get all our backing from 12 or 15 groups. "I don't mean to demean your fund-raising procedures," he said after Mr. Pet-tengill accused him of "minimizing our character." "Your strength has been with the individual.

We just don't see that method as our avenue of approach." The other 50 per cent of the council's funds come from the Federal Government through the Department of Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare. -t Mr. Keeler said that he and the NY-Penn board will try to open more spots for represen- tatives of the various health -y services but that federal quotas limit the number of representatives from a par- ticular group. j. FEDERAL GUIDELINES require that the board be made up of 60 per cent health consumers and 40 per cent health providers.

It must also have a proportionate dis-y tribution of board members representing various economic and minority groups, numerous health fields and representatives of local government. "There are inequities," Mr. Keeler said, "and with your help we'll work them out." Mr. Keeler, at the request of the health agency representa-tives, also pointed out that "the health agencies are not members of NY-Penn. They are only related as far as they want to be." Some agency representa- tives felt that the public had received the impression that all such health programs had been consolidated into one group, subservient to NY-Penn.

Other agencies represented at the meeting were the Broome County unit of the American Cancer Society, Tri County Respiratory Health Association, Multiple Sclerosis Society ana the cystic fibrosis organization. Shootout Guns Linked To Angela SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) State authorities have charged Angela Davis originally bought two of the guns used in a courthouse shootout which took four lives. Davis, 26, an avowed Communist and former philosophy instructor at UCLA, has not been located by newsmen for comment since the gun purchase was revealed Tuesday. Asst.

Atty. Gen. Al Harrisa said no action was planned against Miss Davis "unless it can be proved she gave the guns to a minor with intent to use in the escape." State Atty. Gen. Thomas C.

Lynch issued a statement Wednesday confirming that Miss Davis bought a Browning automatic pistol Jan. 12, 1968, and a Plainfield carbine April 7, 1969. The purchases were at different Los Angeles gun-shops, he said. These two guns, along with a sawed-off shotgun of Spanish make, were carried into the Marin County courtroom of Judge Harold J. Haley last Friday by Jonathan Jackson, witnesses said.

Jackson, 17, gave guns to a convict on trial and two other convicts present as witnesses and the four took Judge Haley and four other hostages outside to a waiting van. In a shootout as the van started to leave, Judge Haley, Jackson and two of the were killed. The other convict and two hostages were wounded. Lynch said he made his statement on Miss Davis' pur-' chase of the two weapons because the information had been disclosed by the San Francisco Examiner in a copyrighted story. "Because of the imminence of a criminal prosecution growing out of the escape attempt and the imperative need for further investigation, no further comment can be made on the investigative efforts, nor will any questions by answered," Lynch said.

Miss Davis, who is appealing her dismissal by the university of California regents from a philosophy instruc-torship at UCLA, had been seen recently in the company of Jackson. They were together at a recent San Francisco Meeting where Miss Davis sought support for the defense of three Negro prisoners accused of killing a white guard at Soledad State Prison last Jan. 16. Jackson's brother, George, 28, is one of the three who are scheduled for trial in San Francisco Sept. 21.

The Jack-sons; mother, Georgia Jackson of Pasadena, told newsmen: "I don't think Angela Davis would give a 17-year-old a gun." Greece Frees Arab Guerrillas ATHENS, Greece (AP) -Greece carried out a pledge it made to plane hijackers last month and released seven Palestinian commandos from an Athens prison early yesterday. Nicholas Daskalopoulos, chief of Athens' security police, said the seven were turned over to an International Red Cross official who took them to the airport. They were flown later to an Arab nation which Daskalopoulos would not name. Castro Declines Eaton Invitation CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E.

I. (AP) Cuban Premier Fidel Castro has turned down an invitation by industrialist Cyrus Eaton to attend a cattle show at this Prince Edward Island community. Eaton, attending the show with his family, told a hews conference Wednesday he had received a cable from Castro saying the invitation came too late to make travel SYMPATHY FLOWERS of Outstanding Design HIGH QUALITY FLOWKJ ARRANGED IN GOOD TASTE $6, $7.50, $10, $15, $25 and up. Delivery instructions carefully followed. Your personal message included.

7 Flowers wired anywhere. efVersce CZjardens fOHMCKLY T. C. "Your wnviniint FID fitrijt" 165 Rwrside Driw, Johnson Cily Cut Davis Tells Students ST. PAUL, Minn.

(AP) Student antiwar activists may move off the nation's campuses this fall to direct their activities at war industries and the federal government, a speaker at the 23rd Annual National Student Association NSA Congress indicated Wednesday. Radical organizer Rennie Davis, a defendant in the Chicago Eight trial, is organizing an emergency national teach-in on repression and the Indochina war for early October to determine future strategy. He suggested to student delegates that (hey shut down the federal government by blocking roads so that federal workers could not get to their jobs. He added the only way to bring the war to an end is with disruption of war industries and noted how the National Liberation Front had cut all major roads in Vietnam. Davis' proposed teach-in would include closed-circuit telecasts from the NLF at the Paris peace talks and talks by Black Panther Huey Newton to show "dramatic instances of repression in America." Davis, who was given a standing ovation by the delegates, accused President Nixon of increasing bombing in Southeast Asia and predicted that he would call for "massive escalation of the war and might even use nuclear weapons in Southeast Asia." Claiming that the National Liberation Front, or Vietcong, have the support of 80 to 90 per cent of the people in South Vietnam, Davis said the United States must escalate its activity or "it stands to face dramatic defeat." In Cambodia, he said, government officials are saying that unless there is massive intervention, the "freedom fighters" will take over.

Live Steer Has a Real Bay Window Fresno, Cal. (UPI) A live steer with a window in the side of his stomach provides agriculture students at Fresno State College with first hand knowledge of the digestive process in cattle. The black angus steer appears to have suffered no ill-effects from the operation which bared his internal workings for inspection. SCHOOL VETERINARIAN Bill Smith sutured the animal's stomach wall to a fistula cover with a removable cap more than a year ago. In addition to allowing students a unique inside look at the digestive process, the porthole will aid researchers attempting to determine the digestibility of cottonseed products for the project's sponsor, Rancher's Cotton Oil Co.

Of particular interest to the researchers is the animal's ability to digest cottonseed meal and hulls. SMALL NYLON BAGS containing different food products and tied to a plastic strip can be inserted into the steer's stomach and left for 24 hours. When they are withdrawn, the samples can be studied to determine which are most NEW IN NEW affluence, wildlife artists are becoming wealthy. A NUMBER of newspapers, particularly in the Midwest, now have numerous advertisements daily in their classified sections offering prints for sale usually for several hundred dollars each if the artist is well known. Prices for early prints by Ray Harm, a former Ohio artist who now lives, at Chenoa, are soaring.

Harm's Eagle and Osprey, limited to an edition of 500 which originally sold for $75, now brings $2,500 when one appears on the market. And his Kentucky Cardinal with dogwood rose from an original selling price of $75 to $373 to $400. "THIS IS PARTLY because of speculators, of course," a spokesman for a gallery here which handles Harm's work said. "People are investing in his prints just as they do in stocks, antiques and other art works. Several one-man shows and Harm's numerous appearances on television, including an hour-long woodland tour two years abo, have brought his paintings before a much wider public.

And Harm's success has attracted numerous other artists to the lucrative birdprint field. Many galleries and antique Shops in a number of states now sell prints by Guy Coheleach, of Huntington, N. and Don Richard Eckel-berry, of Babylon, N. Y. THEIR PRINTS, in limited issues like Harm's, are printed by offset lithography which allows incredibly good reproduction of color and the most minute detail.

Charles Harper, of Cincinnati, Ohio, who teaches art at the Cincinnati Art Academy, does stylized birds and animals which also are selling well. Harper's prints are silk-screened, since his individual print production is much smaller. But despite modern printing methods, these 20th Century "Audubons" will find it difficult to outstrip the 19th Century master. For Audubon, the nation's foremost ornithologist, created thousands of bird and animal prints during his long life. AUniUn MAHDC IMP JldDW-SODSll Crime- (Continued From Page 1C) U.

S. last year. The previous high of 76 was set in 1967. One policeman was slain in the Binghamton metropolitan area. Forrest Alan Hall, a 23-year-old Owego policeman, was killed in the line of duty by a shotgun blast.

The slaying occurred Oct. 13, 1969, in a service station lot off North Avenue. YORK. TTlki 101 Jefferson Avenue Endicott, N.Y. Ip(D)tew0 CORRECTION Loblaws' ad of August 1 2th BUFFERIN TABLETS should have been advertised as BOTTLE OF 36 TABLETS ZJQ ALL AREA LOBLAWS SUPERMARKETS BLAIIDII1G .1.

Dl Etna's done something to cut the high cost of insurance in New York: -the new Auto-Rite policy, available here for the first time. The safer your driving record, the lower your rates- on a complete, comprehensive package of auto insurance. Find out how much you can save, Simply call or visit our office. Dr. Green Attends Podiatry Sessions Dr.

John E. Green of 108 Murray Street, Binghamton, attended the 58th annual meet-ing of the American Podiatry Association held in San Fran-- cisco this week. Dr. Green served as a dele-! gate to the 1970 sessions of the APA House of Delegates and 'i attended the meetings with his son, Lt. Richard M.

Green, who is chief of podiatry ser- vices at Camp Pendleton, Cal. More than 1,500 podiatrists and other health professionals attended the convention. Jf uurinimu niv. CIIDDIV Electrical Contractor Phone BUSINESS AS USUAL 729-631 5 Call for Free Estimates NOW 729-3545 225 GRAND AVENUE JOHNSON Representing Aetna Casualty Surety Hartford, Conn..

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