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: •>: A* *- -J ^?V ?<•' *W ^#4*\^& r tf I OOWGRATULATIONS - Mr* Virginia As- iersoa, right, Pen's Teacher if the Year, if Tkmdfty by Mrs* Betty Hifbef, aH&mkmm mittee. Teachers Arce applaud* is of tescoers f booer com- member Fred WHITB PLAINS. NX (AP) Secretary of the Ia«riop-Stew- art L UdalT joined Democratic gubernatorial candidate Frank D. O'Connor Thursday In crtti- emit* Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's administration on air and water pollution. Kennedy helped O'Connor's campaign swim; to draw sizea- ble crowds in Westchester Coun- ty, where traditionally Republi- can voters oppose Rockefeller's plan to build a Hudson River expressway. Rockefeller also campaigned in Westchester, his home coun- ty, warning voters that O'Con- nor would allow the New York City Democratic political ma- chine and crime to creep into the suburban counties. While the major party candi- dates were campaigning in Westchester, Conservative par- ty candidate Paul L. Adams told a crowd in Manhattan's Wall Street district that the state's budget would rise ramdly to 55 billion under Rockefeller or O'- Connor. He called for a \tax rebel- lion? by voters and suggested that protest votes be cast for him as a warning to state legis- lators to curb the states bur- geoning budget. New Yorkers, said Adams, are now the highest taxpayers in the nation. He made the plea a?P m npziigte Mocky Mrs. Anderson Peru's Teacher of Year PTOU-Mrs. Virginia Ander- son, high school mathematics teacher at Peru school, was chosen Peru Teacher of the Year by the 190 teachers of the school district Thursday after- nooa. *Tm very thrilled and very flattered I think every teacher in file Peru system is tops. It's an unusual-system: That's why I'm flattered,\ she said. Mrs. Anderson, co-chairman of the mathematics department, wiH represent Peru for New York State's Teacher of the Year award to be presented by James E. Allen Jr., commission- er of education, • • • i The teacher receiving this! **ard becomes New York's | nominee for National Teacher of the Year, I Candidates are selected for \superior ability to impart knowledge to students and to fan spire toem with a love of learn-, tog.\ Mrs. Anderson received rec- ommendations from School Su- perintendent James E. Hutchin- son; George W. Carroll, high school principal; W. Graeme! Francis, director of pupil per- i sonnet services, and from fellow | teachers. j ~'She\aad her husband, Ken- { neth, who teaches driver educa-1 tion at Peru, live in Keeseville. J Their daughter. JiU, teaches; French at Peru Elementary i School. A son, Robert, is a col- j lege coach in Tennessee. Their j daughter Julie, is a sophomore j at Ithaca College! and another; son f Christopher, is a sopho- more at Mount Assumption In- stitute. • • * She was born to Champagne, 111., received her bachelor of! science degree in mathematics I at the University of Illinois, and her master of science degree at State University College at Plattsburgh. She has been a member of the Illinois State Library staff, ad- viser to the National Honor So- ciety, adviser to Mu Alpha Theta, a mathematics honor so- ciety, and has taught for 10 years at Peru. Her award was presented at a meeting of the Peru Associa- tion of Teachers held in the sen- ior high school cafeteria. Classes were dismissed early to allow teachers to attend. Assorition pesident Daniel McKillip urged teachers to work for a strong professional asso- ciation. He stressed the need for sup- port of local, state, and national teachers organizations, and charged: I among teachers is a disgrace to the profession and will con- ! tinue until teachers not only I stand up for their rights but also j accept the responsibilities in- i herem in the profession.\ also in a Brooklyn street rylly Atom 1$ expected to draw a substantial number of dissert* dent votes from the Democratic and Republican columns. Rock- efeller and O'Connor were cam- paigning in the New York City suburbs to try to offset possible voter defection* to Adams and Libera] oarty candidate Frank- lin D. Roosevelt Jr. Roosevelt shifted his cam- paign to Buffalo, but t>efore leavii\ his Manhattan ^ad- quarters he charged that O'Con- nor wants to end rent control in New York City. He cited a story in a real estate newspaper that quoted O'Connor as saying. \As long as rent is controlled, we will have a real problem.\ O'Connor labeled the Roose- velt version of the story as a *'smear\ and said he always favored rent control as long as it is necessary. Most rents are controlled in New York City multinle dwellings by state law for the benefit of low-income families. O'Connor, with Kennedy and Udall at his side, campaigned in Ossining. Yonkers, White Plains, Port Chester. New Ro- chelle. and Mount Vernon in Westchester. Kennedy also ap- plauded vigorously at each stop > efforts of Democratic Con- gressman Richard L. Ottineer ^or leading the fight for a feder- al program to purify the Hudson River and beautify its shores. Rockefeller spoke at the W r estchester County Courthouse in White Plains, where he said he put New York State \a step ahead\ of the rest of the nation in modernizing crime-fighting machinery. the New York State identifica- tion aH intelligence system. It is designed to help law enforce- ment agencies exchange in- formation quickly on known criminals, racketters and their associates Rockefeller lauded his own $81 million narcotics program for mandatory treatment of ad- dicts, and said O'Connor's pledge to scrap the program would M w crime to creep into the suburbs from New York City. Rockefeller warned Republi- cans dissatisfied with his ad- ministration that his defeat would be a seriate blow to \pro- gressive Republicanism.\ The jBayKQSL.bfcM a &&** reception for senior citizens in Croton-on-Hudson; addressed the Reader's Digest employes in Pleaaantville; talked to workers at \^ General Foods offices in White Plains, and spoke before countv law pnfnr^ment offi- cials at the White Plains court- house. The Rockefeller narcotics pro- gram, criticized by Kennedy, drew plaudits from Sen, Jacob K, Javits, the governor's cam- paign manager. Javits said Kc dy's opposition was based on \some kind of fuzzy civil lib- erties ground\ because the pro- gram calls for compulsory com- mitment of addicts. 4 The fart is that in one breath Sen. Kennedy applauds the Cali- fornia system of dealing with addicts, and in another breath condemns the very program California adopted—which is the Rockefeller program, 1 * the Re- publican senator said. He watched s demonstration of the first installation in the planned 105-station network of Group discussion among the Peru faculty blamed teacher i complacency on too little time, 'suggesting released time for!Chutists collide professional meetings; lack of understanding of the function of ; teacher associations, and the | feeling that organizations are too large, not requiring individ- ual participation. I* Hie apathy- that now exists The Alps are Europe's most popular and spectacular scenic attraction. Snow-covered granite peaks overlooking paftoral val- leys extend 680 nUies from southern France to the Danube plain. PoJ»t»cqt Advftts#m»nt PoJtfucc' Advertisement PoltftCQt Atfrmyttatm+nt Political Adv«rtt*»m«nt October 11,1962 DID YOU BELIEVE? FORLI. Italy (AP) — At 900 feet. Maria Grazia Faietta, 19. collided with another practicing parachutist after leaping from a plane for her second jump in amateur training. Her chute opened only half way and she plummeted to earth but landed in rain-soaked soil and suffered onlv minor bruises. CURRENT ANNUAL RATE THIS MONTH ASB EVERY MONTH THE MONEY YOU SAVE BY THE 10th EARNS FROM THE FIRST AND WE PAY THE POSTAGE WHEN YOU SAVE BY MAR. UiivUinatcn FEDERAL SAVINGS QJUJL Stouti Cl^fcidtiett ISO BANK STREET tUtUNGTON, VERMONT v of in Th to P a c P bv au d h ei ti \I can say to you categorically there will be no increase in taxes in the next four years/ 7 Nelson A. Rockefeller, October 11,1962 WOULD YOU BELIEVE — HIM AGAIN? WHO DID ROCKEFELLER TAX??? HE TAXED YOU - THE AVERAGE WAGE-EARNER! <Ar 1889\ Personal Income tax up 43%. Exemptions reduced up to 52% to include one million additional middle and low income families in the Rockefeller income tax program. Gasoline tax INCREASED by 50%. Cigarette tax INCREASED by 66%. Taxes on liquor INCREASED by $32,000,000. flfe- -ADDITIONAL TAXES (called Fees) on small busi- |ihd professionals. ^ Vehicle ^gistration Taxes UP 50%. rette tax DOUBLED to 10* a pock. INCREASED to $64,000,000. he u ca foi ed tal V'fc'\. ••«« •-*. , *.w-j^= 2% safes tax. Middle ond lower income _ 7 to )0 percent MORE of their income the sales tax them the taxpayer in the artf $100,000 brackets. v r - ,<£*-*• ir> -?• *W TOMS UP ft.1% Unto RoektMkr! T IS A VOTE — ** ;*;&&&**/&* t - ; -•- *** . > •& ~~ r • # *!*' w*. '**?>< ou *7 LTD by Ford The '6% are here. What are you driving? WFtfrttfttSQO/ I T Exp y- 0 IWre ahead with tbe Uvggjr_Oj£.JItarftad Dealers see Ihe Lively unes.. .\tour Local Ford Dealer\ •ii M?tm. •.•jEaH^** ^ t - U ,- -- <§*-*-. c- • *-.