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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • 2

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Draft NATO Proposal To Hike Power (Continued from Page 1) Evening Gazette, Friday, May 24, 1963. Mellon Institute Marks Birthday PITTSBURGH (AP) Speakers from the fields of science industry will highlight the 50th (niversary observance of Mellon Institute now underway. The public, for only the third time in the institute's existence, being allowed into its massive Greek-columned building during the observance, which began Thursday. The institute is a non-profit Ber-ganization established to promote scientific research with emphasis on application to industry. and chemistry are major areas research.

An estimated 1,000 scientists attending the program. Sugar Price Hike Cause Of Concern (Continued from Page 1) The Shop and Stop supermarket chain surveyed its stores from Manchester, N.H., to North Prov-1 idence, R.I., and reported buying was normal everywhere except an increase at one Rhode land store. Grocers in Chicago, Denver and other cities gave a similar report. A Los Angeles merchant said he's seen little evidence of stockup, but adds he rather expects some "when the news around." In Midland, the price of 5-pound bag jumped from cents last week to 79 cents Thursday. In Chicago, some independent grocers are asking 79-89 cents.

The problem is worldwide. London, the Cabinet met Thursday on the problem of prices reaching, "a quite unprecedented level." In Ottawa, the House was asked to investigate. In the United States the impact of sugar price. boosts on sugared items has softened or layed by longterm contract ling, stiff price competition the 'fact sugar is often a minor portion of the retail price of item. There has been switching to non-caloric sweeten-.

ers. An Austin, baker says has boosted doughnut prices 5 cents and that his $1-party now costs $1.10. If sugar price rises keep ling, stocks of sugar bought at lower prices will disappear many manufacturers will have pass along at least part of increase. Some food handlers. say there could be another 50 per boost in wholesale prices the fall beet crop comes in.

There is no threat of a shortage in the United States, spokesmen and Agriculture partment officials have insisted. is merely a matter that the ed States has been forced to progressively higher to get eign sugar. There could be a shortage the United States, of course, ments W. H. Louviere, president of Imperial Sugar of Houston, if consumers panic.

"Sudden hoarding," he "could temporarily tax enough to keep grocers' physical ability to ship a filled." The holdout mood expressed Mrs. Apruzzese seems well trenched however, judging the cold stares no takers one New York shop's "stock now" placard. In addition, said an Atlanta, resident, the higher prices it a little easier to do a job: Diet. To Retire Sailor In Spy Case NEW YORK Navy Yeoman Nelson C. Drummond will be retired June 3 on charges of stealing secret documents from his post at the Newport, R.I., naval station and selling then to Soviet agents.

The Baltimore-born Negro -the first of his race to be tried for! his life as a cold war spy--remained under $100,000 bail after (his first trial ended in a hung jury Thursday. The only Negro on the jury, Edward L. Watkins, 35, said he was the lone holdout, with the other 11 jurors voting fur conviction. He said race had nothing to do with it and that he would have voted guilty on the conspiracy count in the indictment, which carried a possible penalty of life imprisonment, if the others had voted acquittal on the espionage count, which carried a possible death sentence. Remembers Taxi Driver In Will PHILADELPHIA (AP) C.

Evans, widow, was a regular passenger in a taxicab driven by Michael Varallo. She died May 4 at the age of 90. Her will disclosed Thursday she left $1.000 to Varallo as "the taxicab driver who has served for many years." Deep, Pervading Silence Settles Over Big Pentagon Change Nearing Completion EDITOR'S NOTE change is under way at the tagon, military men are reported odds with Secretary Robert S. McNamara and other civilian chiefs, the TFX contract hangs overhead like a dark cloud. Elton C.

Fay, who has covered the Pentagon beat for the Associated Press for two decades, reviews the situation in the following ar-! ticle. WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara's vast revamping of the military establishment its administrative organization, its chain of command, its multibillion-dollar operation is all but complete, Reorganization of the Navy remains to be completed. Some final moving around of offices, furniture and people in other to carry out consolidation plans will continue for some months more, although the broad changes have been made. The revamping has been done without asking Congress for new legislation, with McNamara actling under provisions of the unification law and its revisions.

Criticism by Congress members generally has been restrained. But within the military, there have been stated objections by some officers, sharp private disagrement by others. One of the commanders is on the way out, with McNamara opposing reappointment of Adm. George W. Anderson to a second term as chief of naval operations.

And Gen. Curtis E. LeMay was given only half of a usual two-year tenure for his reappointment as Air Force chief of staff. A deep and pervading silence has settled among generals and admirals. Will this end disputes within the Pentagon? President Kennedy does not think so.

"I am sure there'll continue to be disputes," le he says. The people in the Pentagon are "strong men," says Kennedy, but completely loyal to their country. He says, too, that "we have to have a secretary to make the final judgment." Some officers worry that the thrust of McNamara's reorganization is toward eventual merger lof the services into one single unit. Ask Copter Flight For 2 Climbers KATMANDU, Nepal De- American Everest It asked today for an helicopter flight to take bid Bishop and William F. for- a hospital in Katmandu.

to the top of Everest in Bishop by the south com- by the west ridge. A radio report from camp said they were on all their toes warned, refiners up spent on the without mountain shelter fast summit climbs. shelves Thomas F. Hornbein ther G. Jerstad by frostbite so far as he en- pedition leader Norman from renfurth up Unsold, radioed.

from made his climb with Ga. San Diego, make! from Washington, employe of the tough graphic Society, which the expedition, climbed (AP)-The expedition emergency Barry C. Unsoeld to They got Wednesday, col, Unsoeld the frostbitten during a night 28,000 feet following the and escaped serious. knows, R. Dyh- No, say McNamara's aides, aren't unifying the services, we are unifying the effort." They mention his "package" program under which each service with a similar function has been brought under central, coordinated direction.

Examples are the strategic roles of the Air Force and Navy and the tactical roles of the Army and Air Force, now in 8 combined 'Strike Command." As a former automobile executive McNamara is a product of the industrial world. To him, the reorganization spells back the worst of investment in dollars and manpower for national defense. In the uniformed military family, the objections are not to more effectiveness, but to McNamara's techniques. There is a feeling in the Pentagon that the military man, including those on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is being downgraded and by passed, that strategy is being devised by civilians and orders Issued directly by civilians to field commands, NEW TWO-SEAT JET FIGHTER Here's the F-105F, the Air Force's new two-seat supersonic tactical jet fighter, The 1400-milean-hour craft can carry 4 4,000 combinations of nuclear and conventional weapons. Officials of Republic Aviation Farmingdale, L.I., N.Y., builder of the plane, say it will have the same mission capabilities as the single seat version (F-105D) and at the same time will be used to improve the mission training program for combat pilots.

(AP Wirephoto) France, Spain In Cooperation PARIS (AP)-France is cooprating closely with Spain in aerial defense, the French armed forces information bulletin disclosed Thursday. It pointed out that although Spain is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, such cooperation was imposed by geography. The United States has a bilat-: eral defense agreement with as does Madrid's neighbor, Pope John Continues Improve of the 81-year-old Roman ruler was satisfactory and that the clearly was showing a steady gain of energy. But the officials cautiously avoided speaking of a complete recovery, It was clear that there still was concern that he might suffer a relapse again, His illness--anemia and a stomach disorder believed to be ulcer or cancer with hemorrhaging has been marked by alterpating periods of strength and weakness. A Vatican official said Archbishop Angelo Dell'Acqua, Vati- VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope John XXIII continued to show progressive improvement today and did a bit of work before beginning a nine-day spiritual retreat, Vatican officials said.

The officials said the condition can substitute secretary of state, was with the Pope briefly this morning. It was understood that the archbishop visited the pontiff on a rent business matter. The Pope's health is causing concern for the future of the Vatican Ecumenical Council which regards as the climactic event his reign. Worried clerical circles that if the Pope remains in health, there is little chance council will resume on schedule Sept. 8.

Should he die, the great assembly of bishops he launched; last fall would be suspended tomatically until a successor cided whether to reconvene it to let it lapse. The ailing pontiff began a day spiritual retreat, or novena, today in preparation for Pentecost Sunday June 2. Physicians hoped the period of rest would help Pope regain his strength. Dr. Piero Mazzoni, the Pope'S regular Rome physician, kept vigil for the third night inside apostolic palace as the spiritual ruler rallied slowly from his lest setback.

Pa. Man Faces Murder Charge CARLSBAD, N.M. -A Pennsylvania man charged with mutdering Texan has been bound over to district court following preliminary hearing. The action was taken Thursday against Harold L. Brown, 37, of Franklin, charged with slaying Albin Thoren, 55, of Harlingen, Tex.

No trial date was set. Brown 18 accused of killing Thoren Feb. 22 in a Carisbad motel. The body was found in a trunk in a Florida swamp, Brown was picked up March 5 in Grants, N.M., driving Thoren's car. Love Affair With US Grows Two Major Problems For US Churches today with two disturbing paraships doxes and involving the public race schools.

In both cases, to an extent, ideals are at war with realities. The problems, which got some sharp attention here this week, are, in short: 1. The fact that the churches officially oppose racial discrimination, yet admittedly are Involved in it. 2. The fact that they believe religion applies to all spheres of life, yet it often causes trouble if affirmed in public schools, What are the solutions? Seeking way through these high-voltage fields, the United Presbyterian Church In the U.S.A.

has espoused some stiff remedies. DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) American churches are wrestling LARRY RUSSELL STEWART of N. Water Street, Kittanning, son of Albert and Arlene Jay Stewart, died in Chintren's Hospital, Pittsburgh, May 24, for 1900, at a.m. He had been ill three cern. their in tance cure lin, the er, the its In as on an that "to arms." In has ther force was no any der the of with first first and will ber Ministers also expressed disquiet over recent events Laos and stressed the imporof sustained efforts to serespect for the Geneva agreements." Turning to Germany and the statement observed that threat has certainly not disap peared.

"Thanks to the firm attitude maintained by the West, howevdevelopments detrimental to interests of Berlin and the Alliance abides by the terms of declaration of 16 Dec. 1958 on: Berlin," It added. this declaration, the a whole made plain any attack West Berlin would be deemed attack on NATO territory. The draft communique stressed NATO recognized the need achieve a satisfactory balance between nuclear and conventional this context, the permanent council of the Alliance in Paris been instructed to make fur-. studies, in cooperation with Lemnitzer's staff, of "the interrelated questions of strategy, requirements and the resources available to meet them." Agreement on the nuclear force the chief achievement of the three-day meeting of the North The new interallied foreign and defense inistersears name, in deference to French President Charles de Gaulle, internationalism he doesn't dominate.

But formation of the force unU.S. Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, supreme allied commander Europe, represents a major velopment in the political military relations of the Western alliance for these reasons: 1. It opens the way to a sharing some U.S. nuclear the European allies, in context of both weaponry operations.

2. It gives West Germany active nuclear strike role for time. That many mean tensions with the Soviet Union. 3. It represents a tentative step toward bringing present future nuclear forces of alliance under collective management.

The nuclear force at the outset be made up of the three Polaris submarines in the Mediterranean, Britain's 180-plane bomber force, and fighter-bomunits of Canada, West many, the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Turkey and Italy, French fighter squadrons tioned in West Germany may be included. Agreement on the nuclear force was reached Wednesday, the ference's first day. Thursday allied statesmen assessed aims, Intentions and policies the Soviet Union and her munist partners, They ranged swiftly around world's major trouble spots, the Caribbean to the Indo-Chinese Peninsula. The consensus which emerged suggested that the Communist world may be on the brink of changes. In their view the Union a and Red China are nearing sonfrontation- early July mentioned--which will show those two giants are going to tle their political differences, break with each other or just on bickering.

U.S. Secretary of State Rusk urged his partners to be guard against a sudden deterioration in the Soviet temper. British Foreign Secretary home, more hopeful, that the allies must be ready recognize and act upon any ous for a reconciliation. France's Maurice Couve Murville thought the allies be chasing a rainbow if they lieved they could influence opments inside the Soviet Gerhard Schroeder of Germany warned against estimating the importance of Peking-Moscow dispute. counts, he said, is that the military potential has increased considerably and the has no abandoned its aims Western Europe.

To Retire At 63 From WRAF LONDON (AP) Flight Sgt. Maisie Wilson of the Women's. Royal Air Force was advised today she is eight years overdue for retirement. Maisie, 63, a grandmother, is. dean of the WRAF age and service, having joined up in 1941.

She is now in charge of the equipment warehouse at the Wit-. tering bomber base in Northamp-1 tonshire. "Flt. Sgt. Wilson should have been retired at 55," a WRAF spokesman said, "but her Was not revealed because of a clerical error." She will be mustered out next month.

The Iroquois Federation, called the Five Nations, was made up of Mohawk, Oneida. Onondago, Cayuga and Seneca Indian tribes. days. He was born in Armstrong County Memorial Hospital August 30, 1962. Besides his he furvived by three brothers, Ronald Allan, Donald Albert, and dy Martin, all at home; his ternal grandmother, Mrs.

Bessie Jay of Dayton R.D, 1, and pater(nal grandparents, Mr. Mrs. Martin' Stewart of Kittanning R.D, Friends will be received at the Roy W. Carson Funeral Home, Rural Valley, where services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 25, the Rev.

Harry Stevenson officiating. Interment will follow in the Salem Reformed Cemetery, and clear away situations of racial discrimination, in the church and out, and to join with other church groups in doing so, with the aim of translating past pronouncements into performance. On the racial matter, it has TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-Francis undertaken to tighten its rules MERLE NEAL HOUSER, 66, of Lazzaro's love affair with the against inequities, and has em- Gaskill Avenue, Jeannette, died United States began when he ar- powered mobile, action team to May 23, 1963, at the Jeannette rived from Italy as boy seven go to work a "to close the gap be- Memorial Hospital. years ago, thanks to class- tween profession of Intent and He was born in Blairsville Today, it's stronger June than ever, some who knew what he wanted performance of duty." 9, 1896, son mates of Neal and Katherine most for graduation present: Regarding the schools, even Gray Houser, and had lived in to his parents again. though reiterating that God reigns Jeannette for the past five years.

a It was big secret, the fund- over all sectors of life, the Church He was a retired foundry worker, the in that religion has no and member of the Blairsville raising project teen-agers place in the classroom, or in any Francis' class at Lake High other Baptist Church. School in nearby Walbridge governmental arena, He is survived by his wife, Isey planned. They told Francis that Prayers and Bible reading "as Piper Houser and daughters: they raising to buy devotional acts" should be ex- Mrs. John (Madeline) Yockey of were money cluded, the denomination asserts. a victory bell for the school.

And at the Derry; George Mrs. (Naomi) HenFrancis, president of the class, The policy, adopted ry of Blairsville; Mrs. Ralph (Yopitched in with his usual enthu- Church's legislative general as landa) Kelly of Blairsville R.D. siasm. sembly 'which closed here this Edith Houser and Joyce Johnston, The class held dances, skating week, seems certain to stir rever- both at home; three sons, Eugene and to raise berations, in church circles M.

of Jeannette; Charles R. at for parties, come. home; Lloyd Skillman, N.J. car washings money. It treads bluntly through some There are 18 grandchildren; three The students raised more than of the thorniest tangles concern- great-grandchildren; one brother, enough, they said, for ing relationships between church Bert Houser of Blairsville; two their 'class project.

and state, including the school sisters, Mrs. Dale Piper of BlairsTuesday Francis' classmates prayer and Bible reading ques- ville and Mrs. Maude Richardson, broke the news to him: his now before the Supreme Johnstown. ents Mr. and Mrs.

Antonio Laz- Court. He was preceded in death by zaro were coming from their Its combustible nature was re- a daughter Ethel B. and a son, home in Fossa, Italy, for his flected in the assembly here. Dale G. graduation as a present from his The policy doubtlessly faces Friends will be received on Satclass.

further appraisals, voiced although the urday after 2 p.m. at the FerguThe big event took place Thurs- assembly earnest hopes son Funeral Home, Blairsville, day night when Francis' parents that all Christian forces la- where services will be held Monwould arrived in Detroit. A motorcade bor more unitedly to strengthen day, May 27, at 2 p.m. The Rev. accompanied the excited 19-year- the moral fabric of the nation Kenneth Miller will officiate and old boy to Detroit, and a tear- and its people.

interment will follow in the Salem filled reunion followed. Despite differing church views Cemetery. "You're sO grown, you're al- of the problem, the United Presmost a grown man," his mother byterians hope for in- ZENA JANE HOFFMAN, 93, of expressed exclaimed tearfully at their first creasingly closer relations and 339 N. Ninth Street, passed away meeting in seven years. teamwork among all Christians, May 23, 1963, in the Cameron Rest His father seemed surprised at including Protestants and Roman Home.

crowd that was for Catholics. She was born April 1, 1870, in them. "I think this is The Rev. Dr. Eugene Carson Indiana, daughter of Samuel he said in Italian.

Neither of Blake, the Church's chief execu- and Mary (McQuown) Lydic, and Francis' parents speak English. tive, said recent developments had lived in Indiana for her kids are just great," have provided "increasing oppor- tire lifetime. She was a member Francis said with a broad smile. tunities for better understand- of the First Regular Baptist "I don't know what to say or how ing," between the two branches Church of Indiana. to thank them." of Christianity.

These grandchildren survive: Francis has loved the United "There has been real im- Mrs. Mazulma Buterbaugh of States ever since he and his fam- provement," he said. "In this at- Pethesda, Monroe Lydic of ily visited the country mosphere, we want to do as much Clymer R.D. Robert Lydic; years ago, and when time came as we can to further it, and we Mrs. John (Zena Jane) Yorko of (to thought.

go back he couldn't bear the of hope cooperation." more the way Kittanning; 16 greatfor ahead in and three in America is 50 One prospect, he noted, is joint dren. beautiful. I didn't want to leave," Catholic-Protestant action on ra- Friends will be received at the he explained. He has been living cial problems. Richard T.

Bell Funeral Home, Inin Walbridge with an aunt and The Presbyterian assembly set diana, afrer 3 p.m. today and seruncle, Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Pas- up an extraordinary vices will be held there at 2 p.m. qualone, and became an Ameri- year purse, solely to finance spe- Saturday, May 25.

The Rev. F. can citizen in September 1962. He cial operations on the racial front Burton Long, her pastor, will ofplans to enter the University of -by a new national commission ficiate and interment will follow in Toledo in the fall to study busi- of Negro and white experts. Greenwood Cemetery, Indiana.

ness administration. Their assignment: To dig out The Barbor Bible Class will and to their that cent before Most Mergers Rejected toi seri- de would bedevel-1 Union. West over-! the What Soviet Kremlin in stad, from Eugene, Ore. The world's highest mountain never! before had been conquered from the west ridge, the route Unsold and Hornbein took. It was the first time any nation had had four men on the peak of Mt.

Everest Ion the same day. The four barely missed each other at the very top, but Bishop and Jerstad finally discovered the other two had crossed over the peak and were coming down the south col. The four met below the main' summit at 9 p.m. Wednesday. In Corvallis, Hornbein, Calif.

Bishop, D.C., and an National Geosponsored with Jer- darkness they were unable to find Camp 6 at 27,400 feet, where the safety of tents and sleeping bags' awaited them. They had to spendi the night on an open slope about' 28,000 feet up. Dybrenfurth said they probably were also without; the oxygen supplies that ally used in rarified air at that' altitude, because they had emp tied their oxygen cylinders. Widower Asks $200,000 In Wife's Death LOS ANGELES (AP) A 25- year widower seeks $200,000 trom a drug company, alleging his wife died after taking birth control pills. Robert M.

Ellis, a technical representative for an aerospace' firm, filed a damage suit Thursday in Superior Court. His wife, Linda, 22, died last, Aug. 4. eight months after her marriage. An autopsy showed her death was caused by blood clots in the brain, heart and other vital organs.

HARRISBURG (AP)-The merly ger two-thirds of the school disquestion was rejected in tricts voting on the issue. Of 164 districts voting whether to merge with neighbors, 103 rejected the idea, 60 accepted and results in one district were not available in reports to the Bureau of School Reorganization in the state Department of Public Instruction. Nevertheless, Bureau Director Herbert Bryan said today he found encouragement in the fact that in more than half of the proposed school' systems involved there was at least partial approval. The 1964 districts were voting to form 38 districts. There was complete approval in 14 of the proposed districts and partial approval in six others.

In the other 18 units, the school districts involved rejected the question outright. But the approval in the 60 will mean 42 fewer districts when the 1963-64 school year begins. The votes were spread over counties. More than half of the 103 that rejected mergers were three counties: Butler, Potter and Schuylkill. In Butler, 25 out of 28 districts voted down mergers.

One report -was not available. The other two voted favorably, but since they were in proposed separate units, their favorable vote was meaningless. Nineteen out of 29 Potter ty districts rejected mergers 110 out of 13 Schuylkill County tricts voted the question down. The 10 included six legally classed by the state as distressed: unable to operate their school systems the black, he In Blair, Clarion, Clearfield, of Northumberland and Westmoreland counties, there was unanisaid' mous disapproval in the districts poor voting. That included three the Blair, five each in Clarion Clearfield, six in Northumberland and two in Westmoreland.

In Tioga County, 15 districts' au- voted and only six approved. In other counties: Armstrong, or 3 of 3 approved; Bedford, 1 of Berks, one of one; Cameron, 2 nine-'5; Crawford, 5 of Franklin, of Huntingdon, 9 of 13; Kean, 5 of Mercer, 2 of Northampton, 4 of Venango, the of Westmoreland. Of the 38 systems contemplated in Tuesday's voting, all but three were based on 1953 reorganization the plans. The 35 systems accounted for 143 of the districts. lat- was 49 in favor, 93 against Claims Vision of Virgin Mary ALICE, Tex.

(AP)-People are flocking to a farm near this south Texas town where housewife says she saw a vision of Virgin Mary on an old tank, County officials estimate 19,000 persons have visited the farm since Mrs. Tony Botello Sr. reported seeing the image April 17. A charge of 8 dollar per car by the farm owner hasn't reduced the traffic, they said. The farm, owned by Jack B.

Butler, Alice, is rented by the Botello family. Mrs. Botello, about 35 and a mother of three, said she saw the vision about 7 a.m. as she gazed from a kitchen window. Some visitors claim they can see an image in wood of the tank but others think it is a grain deviation.

Mrs. Botello said she was afriad of the snakes on the farm and had planned to move. But, she said, the image spoke to her in Spanish, saying "Daughter. do not leave. Do not be afriad.

Stay here. Happiness will be in this place." $4,000 Theft On Street In Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH (AP) A woman messenger was roibed of about $4,000 today as she walked across the street from an insurance com-: pany to a bank. Sergeant Paul Ryan said the woman was identified as Anna, Hoetzlein, about 50-years-old, an employe of the American General. Insruance Co. in the West End section, Three thugs accosted her and one knocked her to the ground and grabbed her deposit which police estimated contained $4,100.

Then the bandits fled in a which they, later abandoned; lon the South Side. meet at the Funeral Home at 7 p.m. today. Army Engineers Workload Big Cost $132,300 Cost $132,300 LONDON (AP)-A small painting by the Italian Renaissance master Tintoretto sold at auction at Christie's today for $132,300. The picture, "Christ at the Pool of Bethesda," was bought by the Agnew Gallery of London.

It was submitted for sale by Dr. James Hasson of London. PITTSBURGH (AP) The big. gest workload in its 95-year history currently faces the Pittsburgh office of the Army Corps of gineers. Col.

Bert deMelker, district engineer, said Tuesday work on the Ohio and Monongahela rivers in the Allegheny, Beaver and Monongahela valleys totals more than $350 million. "MAKE REQUEST FORM SABIN ORAL POLIO VACCINE SPONSORED BY THE Indiana County Medical Society TYPE I VACCINE May 26, 1963 (Please print clearly) Last name First name Initial Age Address If recepient is a minor, fill out below: Physicians of the Poliomyelitis Program and their assistants are hereby requested and authorized to administer Oral Poliomyelitis Vaccine to the child or minor whose name appears above. Signature of parent (or guardian) NECESSARY if patient is under 21 years of age. (Fill in and present at Sabin Oral Clinic on Sunday, May 26) "MAKE-UP VACCINE REQUEST FORM Above is the request form every individual will need who wishes to receive Sabin Oral Polio Vaccine on Sunday, May 26, from noon to 5 p.m., at two "make-up" clinics in Indiana and Blairsville. Parents of minor children must sign their name on the bottom line.

Adults need unly till in the upper portion of the request form. This coupon may be taken to either the clinic at Eisenhower School or the clinic at Blairsville High School. 1.

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