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People Sell Community Mancuso Tells Medirtans MEDINA—“The people sella community,” Joseph L. Man cuso, director of both the Me dina and Batavia industrial centers, told more than 125 persons at a special “Medina DeGaulle Stirring Resentment WASHINGTON (AP) - The attitude of Washington officials toward the actions of French President Charles de Gaulle ranges from annoyance to acute frustration. At the moment acute frustration is on the in crease. This could have become ex plosively apparent in recent days were it not for the fact that President Johnson decided long ago against open quarreling with De Gaulle because he wants to minimize damage to the Atlantic Alliance and to long-term French-American re lations. Frustration has swelled be hind the scenes, however, be cause many officials are con vinced De Gaulle’s present ac tive diplomacy has the effect o: undermining U.S. war policy in Viet Nam. The problem is not that France wants a peaceful settle ment, they say. The problem, as they see it, is that France is pressing hard for immediate negotiations to end the war at a time when the United States is increasing military pressure on the Communists in an effort to create more favorable condi tions for negotiation. Press reports obviously eman ating from official sources in P a r is e a r lier this w eek rep r e sented the view of the De Gaulle government as being that (1) Neutralization of South Viet Nam offers the only possible lolution; (2) Continuation of the lontlict by the United States Jisks a major war with Red Chi na; (3) If the United States gets into a war with Red China, France will have no part of it These arguments are not new. The De Gaulle government presented them through French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville to Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk here last month. It now appears, however, that De Gaulle, working with the Soviet Union, is trying to build worldwide public pressure against U.S. strategy in Viet Nam, presumably with the in tent of forcing this country to the conference table as rapidly as possible. Sergei Vim> Gradon, the So viet ambassador to Paris, was quoted in press dispatches Thursday as saying France and the Soviet Union are in agree ment on the course that should be followed in convening an In ternational conference to settle the conflict. What is frustrating about the situatiun from the U.S. point of view is that although France is a key member of the Atlantic Alliance, officials here find no evidence that efforts and argu ments or persuasion have any impact on De Gaulle’s position. Industrial Night” sponsored by the Medina Chamber of Com merce. The meeting was at the Apple Grove Inn. “You work with what you have. You have to make the industries in your community happy and help them to grow, he said. He emphasized that one should not think solely in terms of large industries and said that many people were employ ed in services and trades. “The retail establishments in Orleans County account for 25 per cent of the working force alone,” he commented. In speaking of plans for de veloping the Medina Industrial Center which is in the Heinz complex, he said, “I have no doubt that in two or three years you won’t be able to recognize your industrial development, am not afraid of the future,” he said. P o l l f a x E n d S t a g g e r s J u r y S y s t e m LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — The poll tax is dead as a voting requirement ahd its death has staggered Arkansas’ criminal court system. In some courts, trials ceased temporarily. State law requires that a juror be a registered voter, but the poll tax system became invalid Feb. 28 and Arkansas had not registered voters under a new system adopted last Nov. 3. That new system still has not been implemented because of litigation concerning the print ing contract for the registration form. The state legislature tried to 6V6i‘66M& ik6 gittbktil dicing the interim by passing a law saying anyone who was a regis tered voter under the poll tax system Dec. 31, 1964, would be a qualified juror. But some judges doubt that the law will stand up in court since the amendment that es tablished the new registration system\explicitly excluded any other system. Judge Paul Wolfe of , Fort Smith halted trial of- criminal cases. Judge William J. Kirby at Little Rock halted such trials, too,, but later empaneled a jury and told them, “you know that you may not be qualified under law for this task.” Judge Melvin Mayfield, also of El Dorado, said he believed any verdict the juries handed down could be reversed on ap peal because of the registration situation. -$> THE BATAVIA DAILY NEWS 2 Monday, March 15, 1965 ^ MUSICAL CAST — Pembroke Central students will present Franklin Dow, Roxanne Lawrence, Patricia Worthington, the mus)ical\Comedy \Where Is the Mayor?\ at 8 p. m. Diane Lennon, Susan McCormack/ Debbie Sharick, Patricia March 18 and 19 at the school auditorium. The cast, from Kriger, Louis Varga; third row, Newton Worthington, Joseph left, front, Debbie Tooley, Arthur Mrucxek, Jean Cook, Strezlec, Gary Dick, Ronald Mruczek, Gary Nachtrieb. Mr. Sandra Lawrence, Diane Jermy, James Muskopf; second row, Dow and Mr. Varga are directing the production. America's Only Entry in Oscar Race c By RAYMOND E. PALMER LONDON (AP) - The fact he is the only American nominated for an Oscar as best actor this year is a source of pleasure to Anthony Qiuinn. “It means,” he said in an in- erview, “that I ’m accepted as an American at last. The Amer icans regard me as one of them selves. That’s the most exciting thing that's ever -happened to me.” Quinn won his Oscar nomina tion for “Zorba, the Greek,” a movie he says was made with “spit and love and a little tal- third. The movie has collected seven Oscar nominations in var ious categories/ Quinn’s rivals for the leading actor award are British — Peter Sellers, Rex Harrison, Richard Burton and Peter O’Toole. Quinn was asked why his posi tion afe the only American in the list was so exciting to him. Out side the United States he has always been taken for Ameri can. “My mother was Mexican,” he said, “and my father was Irish. As a kid in Los Angeles I always had to decide whether to fight for the Mexicans or the Irish. But I always thought of I ’d lived there all my life. It never occurred to me that I was anything else. “Then in 1947 I wanted to come to Europe and*they told me I wasn’t entitled to a pass port because I was a Mexican. It shattered me. It was like finding out your parents had adopted you, “I took out American citizen ship papers right away. But it wasn’t the same. Ever since, I’ve felt like a guest in Ameri ca.” Now he finds that the Ameri cans not only accept him — but claim him. He’s their only rep resentative in the Oscar list for ent” and of which he owns one- myself as Ameerican. I mean, leading actors. Price Fixing Ending in Great Britain S u r v i v a l T r i p O n t h e A g e n d a FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — Twelve soldiers and a dog team will start a 150-mile hike Mon day across treeless countryside, a frozen river and the ice of Bering Strait to. a destination 35 miles from Soviet soil. They are members of a U.S. Army intelligence patrol called Arctic Lemming. The men are volunteers fom the infantry and Signal Corps. The hike was described as a survival trip. This weekend they fly by heli- fiapte* ib the tiny Eskimo vil lage of Taylor on Seward Penin sula, about 400 miles west of here, to start the hike to the vil lage of Wales. Wales is 35 miles from the Soviet island Big Diomede. L e R o y P r o g r a m O n S c a n d i n a v i a LE ROY — The History of Art Club will close its 1964-65. season this afteroon at the Le Roy House with election of of ficers for the ensuing year. The program will be on “Scanning Scandinavia.” Mrs. Gertrude Baumer, co-ordinator of the Interior Design Dept, of Mangurian’s, Inc. in Rochester, will be the guest speaker. Mrs, B a u m e r recently returned af ter world Congress of Designs tour which included a visit td Scandinavia. Receiving Communion The U n ited Holy N a m e So ciety of Le Roy’s three Catholic parishes will receive commun ion in a body at the 7:30 a. m. mass in St. Joseph’s Church on Sunday. A coffee hour will follow in the church hall. Parsley Cheese Pass a bowl of creamstyle cottage cheese, mixed with loads of minced parsley, with those hot dinner rolls. R e n n e t * u o m e e V*rr«f BuiH U I I RMdy <Jw» W I L L I A M F. H I N Z Salts Representative Erector 3400 Dodgeson Rd., .Alexander Phone Fi 3-8485 1965 Catalogs Now Available 2 4 H o u r G u a r a n te e d W A T C H SERVICE Don't b* without your watch anotfir day! Brenner's has the most modern and efficient equipment to put your watch in perfect running condition. 24 hour service'lf requested when your watch It left. Watch crystals, bracelets and straps fitted while you wait. Rings and jewelry remodeled to give them that new 'I! look. Pearls and beads restrung. Engraving of any article done on the premises. ’S 1M Main St. Open Friday Evenings B y HAL. R . C O O P E R sLONDON (AP) — The floor has been yanked from under a vast range of retail prices in Britain and the march of events may soon catch up at last with Napoleon. The gifted little French war rior once contemptuously de scribed Britain as a nation of shopkeepers. Within limits — the British did, after all, beat his ears off in the end — Napo leon continues to be basically right. But an economic hurricane is A k r o n F i r e m e n I n s t a l l L e a d e r s AKRON — Officers installed at a dinner meeting of the Ak ron Fire Company are: Chief, Harvey Meahl; first as sistant chief, J. Gail Fisher; second assistant, James Holzt; foreman, Robert Kopp; war dens, James Akin and Edmund Schmigel; trustees, Joe* Capan, Claude Frey and Fred Luekter- hand. President, Charles Ritecz; vice president, Charles Kopn; secretary, David EckersuT; treasurer, Kenneth Litfin, and communications officer, Robert Litfin. A 35-year plaque was pre sented to Roland Laese and a certificate of merit was awarded to Thomas Lotz. Guests included members of the Akron Village Board, New- stead Town Board, chiefs and presidents from neighboring fire companies and exempt firemen from the Akron Fire Company. Save! T U S S Y ANNUAL 8 0 0 DEODORANT SALE! 5L |MS jtttf JNOft protection »Hw russy i/'J'ussrif. :| S&L-flil STICK , . jj» p J* Mch bUC. CREAM • ROLL-ON . STICK Crw» Dcodonnt Lasts a Season* DEAN’S Prices plus tax fast shaping up which may blow thousands of hole-in-the-corner neighborhood shops out of busi ness, leaving the field largely to chain stores and supermarkets. The menacing wind is the new resale prices law, effective April 30, which, with certain exceptions, makes it illegal for manufacturers and suppliers to fix the prices at which their wares may be retailed. Major stores have jumped the gun with slashes in prices of goods ranging from liquor to candy and cosmetics. Whisky plummeted from the fixed price of $6.20 to $5.25. Gin dropped from $5.88 to $4.86. For the kiddies, the prices of boxed and bar candy were cut as much as 12 per cent. N e e d s H e l p F o r T h i s G i f t KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - State Sen. Jasper M. Brancato has asked the Kansas City Board of Education for its ap proval of his wedding gift to his daughter. The daughter is to be married to Joseph Conova, who owns a food store close to an elemen tary school. Brancato wants to present the bride and groom with a package liquor department for the store. He needs the board’s permission to locate it that close to the school. I t w a s w o n d e r f u l n e w s fo r th e customers, trapped in an infla tionary price spiral for years. The big stores could stand the lower profit margin because of their vast turnover. But a chill premonition of ap proaching bankruptcy came to roost in the little neighborhood shops, commonly run by wi dows on nest-egg investments, small pensions, ex-army types and others seeking a modest income for their old age. Until now, the fixed retail price system has been the small shopkeepers’ shield. With all stores charging the same price for standard items, there was no incentive to go bargain- hunting, and the little neighbor hood shops could count on a steady trade — with a fixed profit margin. The law provides that after April 30 prices should be fixed solely by retailers unless the manufacturers or suppliers met certain conditions. More than 700 firms producing 121 classes of goods have filed for exemption. The bulk of manufacturers, how ever, have concluded they could not win and have decided to let matters take their course. The big breach came when The Distillers Co., Ltd., which makes half the country’s whisky and gin, announced that it was abandoning retail price mainte nance • immediately, without w aiting for the A p ril 30 dead line. After that came the deluge. J u n i o r H i g h S i n g i n g A t P a v i l i o n ALEXANDER — The Junior High County Music Festival will be March 26 and 27 at Pavilion Central School. Students from the Alexander Central School will take part under the direc tion of Mrs. Arlene Beckwith and Mrs. Shirley Simmons, as follows: Susan Blake, Nancy Ilg, Cheryl Krauss, Patty Hinz, Kathy Dishaw, Renee Doktor, Marilyn Caccamise, Laura Par rish, Robert Kriner, Robert Morrison, Danny Lapp, Bruce Judkins, Melvin Williams, Wil liam Fritts, Glenn Merrill. This group consists of 7, 8 and 9th graders. The Alexander students will De taKen foy bus to Pavilion Friday afternoon for practice and also on Saturday morning for additional practice. Satur day night there will be a con cert to which the public is in vited. Blasted Abbey The Abbey of Montecassino, Italy, was blasted to rubble by U. 5. bombers in World War II in the belief that Nazi soldiers were using it as a bastion to pin down the Allies in their drive from Anzio to Rome. Always a Complete Selection of U n iform s Shown above, #79449 Radiant Knit Jersey in 60% dacron; 4 0 % nylon. Piped scroll sets off the jewel neck, skirt box-pleated all around. Front gripper closing. 9 8 % and Short Sleeves. 8-16 and 5-11 Also'In 100% Cotton Poplin at 10.98 1 2 Always a-large selection of uniforms to choose from in white and colors. Sizes 6-52, 5-15 and 1 2 Vi-26 V 2 222- 1 5 9 8 ElltCOTT ST. * EVENINGS O p e n Daily 9 A. M.-9 P. M. Park Free Front or Rear :-x.- L . S . / M . E T . f i l t e r s m w LUCKYSIRIKE m m P U T B A C K T H E T A S T E O T H E R S T A K E A W A Y © X. T. Co T R Y NEW L U C K Y S T R I K E F I L T E R S . 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