{ title: 'The Medina daily journal and Medina register. (Medina, N.Y.) 1932-1970, July 08, 1970, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-08/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-08/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-08/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066521/1970-07-08/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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What Is Worl.d 1 s Best Governed Co·untry?. A recent Gallup Poll ask- ed leaders and prominent citizens in 40 countries the following question: Omit- ting your own country, what nati(ln of the world do you thing is best governed'? The answers were interesting. Here is how the nations ranked: 1. Switzerland; 2. Britain; 3. Sweden; 4. West Germany; 5. Canada; 6. Urilted States; 7. Denmark; 8. Netherlands; 9. Australia; 10. Japan. These are the opinions of world leaders in such fields as government, science, bus- iness, publishing and edu- cation. The names of those queried were taken from the International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. We . take it for granted that communist nations were in- cluded in the questioning, but it is clear that democ- racies and ri)Onarchies were preferred as forms of gov- ernment by most of those replying. A sixth-place ranking is hardly .a world endorsement of how the United States is governed. How, we wonder, would Americans rate their government'? -Buffalo Courier Express THE EDINA DAILY OURNAl MEDINA REGISTER MEDINA, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1970. $WeotheP Increasing cloudiness, . breezy and wann, chance of thunderstorms ·developing this afternoon. High in 80s. Windy, showers and thunderstorms fikely tonight. Low 55-60. · PRICE 10 CENTS VOL. 68-NO. 113 ----------------~~~--------------~~---------------- I \ I . I . I r i 1 '\ \1:\\•--·· .... ,.. .. , ... --· ~- \'\ - 1•·:. ANNIVERSAUY - It has been nine yea· s since the congregation of Bethel Bap- tbt Church, Allis Rd., Medina, first orgaaizcd and June was chosen as anniversary month. The closing week brought pastors and worshippers from Shiloh, Glad Ti- dings, Mount Olive. Mount Zion and th _. host church with 9th Anniversary serv- ices ni~htly. Shown above at the clu~in ~ Smulay observance (June 28). Front row from left, Mrs. Woods, former choir pr::sicknt; Mrs. Smith, head of home mis- sions; Rev. Dou~las Smith, pastor: M1·s. Long, church mother; Mrs. West, treas- urer of board of deacons. Back row, DL'acon J. C. Grnder; Mr. Newton, tmstecs chairnran; Mr. West, Lhainnan of dcau):l'i:. Mr. Crcy, dmn:h tJ·casurcr; Rev. Mt·. Irving, ass't pastor, imd Deacon Davis, c'minnan of 'iick commiltcc. -(J-R Photo) TEMPERATURES pstate .. ens ... us. at a ows ity By JEFFREY L. FIELD in Congress to dozens of county The new tally, however, is high- ago, is exp~cted to drop from United Press International legislatures. And the swing tc 2r than the 33,750 count of two its 1960 total of 7,781,984. The U.S. Bureau of the Cen· <;uburban and rural areas will fUf has completed its decePnial doubtlessly give cities a Iesse1 cutting of the population pic iJ 1 voice at the county level. . ali of upstate New York. Monroe County showed a gaip · The results show th~ more af- of 120.2.17 persons, to a new to- fluent suburbs and even rura tal of 706,614. At the same time. areas swelling in size. cuttinJ: Rochester, the county's larges th · r 11 f th city, dropped 24,914 to 293,695. . e pie s Ices sma er or c While th() decrease in Rochester major cities. The counties of Monroe, On- is considerahlc - it is less than ondaga, Dutchess and Ene show anticipated. the largest population increase A spokesman in Rochester in the 1970 federal census de- \aid officials expected a max· spite losses in population in the imum drop of 3,000 more than raaior cities in each of the four the 293,69~ figure. The spokes- cou'nties. A survey of nearly man said Rochester, the scene three dozen of the state's cities of the first major outbreak of !>bows none recorder! an in- racial trouble in the 1960s, has (:rease in population. shown it ''can keep people in the city.\ Census figures for the m•Jtro- politan New York area _,_ New Buffalo Drop York City, Nassau, Suffolk, Bu-ffalo, the state's second years ago. Some sources credit the improvement to completion: of two major apartment house complexes - one built on urban renewal land. The over<jll population \\in- crease in the 53 upstate coun- t!es totals 504,669. The figures for the remainder of the 5late are not ready - ''We're <>till hiring people to take the count,\ explains one worker in the New York City office of the Census Bureau - but the city, the nation's largest 10 yer,rs The so-called \bedroom sub- urbs\ of Nassau-Suffolk and Rockland - Westchester are ex- pected to show dramatic jumps in pgpulation. Suffolk County, the eastern section of Long Is1~ and, stood at 666,784 in 196tt :\. 1965 estimate showed a jump of nearly 50 per cent -to above !!00,000. Rockland Coun1y, on the west shore of the Hudson bord~ ering New Jersey, h<Jd a 1950 tot(!) of 136,803. A l!l65 estimate showerl a g-ain of about 45,000, or 3Ui per cenf. Decision_·Reserved on Albion ... Annexation- Westchester and Rockland coun- largest city and the largest in ties _ arc not yet available. the upstate area, showed a drop Tabulations for the state's re- of nearly 75,000 persons to 457,- By JOHN McLAIN Jc,een that merchants have had maining 53 counties are listed 814 in the preliminary tally. J-R Staff Writer no place to move to when build~ as complete, but preliminary But while Buffalo decreased, ALBION - The Village Board ings have been torn down. Our and unofflcial. The official fig- Erie County posted an overall oi Trustees and Town BoarJ of purpose is not to destroy lof'al ures will be made public later gain of nearly 39,000 to 1,103,·· Gaines last night reserved deci~ businesses . .The downtown of AI~ Senate OK's 81 kb. p ld t in principal cities ~~~ ~:f; i~f~:n t~;r;:g~ ~~~u;~~ 41~Vhile Dutchess County jump- ~it~~r~sw::t~he~il\~g~n~~'<~~~~ ~i~~ b~fl~i~;:X:£~'n; d~:~~~n~!: Goodell/s Rural ·ac· u·r··n· resl en ,Buffalo 81 68 lers for accuracy and refined. ed 42 · 223 to 218 ,23!, PoughkPep- from Town of Gaines following But Sidari questioned wiiethrr W P .• · · · · - . . i Chicago 85 72 Aid Decreases sJe. dropped 6,834 to 31,496. And a public hearing on the petition the area could successfully sup. ater rogramS . . Los Angeles 94 76 For the overcrowded cities while Syracuse decreased 23,509 of Victor C. Alloco, Richard L. port new businesses downtOwn WASHINGTON rUPil _ Sen. . Miami Beach 87 73 with a decreased population, the to 192 · 52 ?· Onondaga. County as Dunmire, Curtis L. Lyman and and also a new shopping ploza I School Board Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., was P~ul Blackb~n, prorrunentlrenamed as tax collecter, and New York 86 70 figures will mean a drop in o.,whole mcreased 43,306 to 466,- Riehard A. and Jnan V. Lettis. JUSt north of the .village. Yin· successf).ll Tuesday in his at- 1 Frmt Avenue dairy farmer and 1 Bernard Hart renamed as school, Montreal 82 641 state and federal aid. For tht> 3 ·• 4 · , Attomey Lyman explained cen~ St. John,. president of the tempt to have the Senate ap- 1 member of the Board of Educa-J attorney- ~Pittsburgh 79 58 suburbs showing increases, it r Pe~baps thr Ia! ge~t percent- that the annexation is sought to Ai~JOn Chamber of Commerce, prove $500 million for rural 1 tion since the days of school cen- i Also, Mrs. MarthCJ Ames wa~ I St. Louis 88 70 means a bigger chunk of state cge ~ncreas~ c~m~ m :utn~m permit establishment of ,a resi- Sald he. ·:fully 'supports\ Ly· sewage treatment and water It r f . 1953 _ 54 1 t- named to the new state-required Seattle 79 61 and federal moneys. The chang- you~ Y C't r term1·t t e New dential development of·about 111 •man's• project,. saymg at least supply programs. I ra Iza 10 ~ m '· was e ec position of internal claims audi-! Syracuse 81 59 Ps also signal reapportionment or 1 .Y me ropo 1 an area. houses, ranging from $19,500 to' 100 new ho.Ill:es are neede?, The' Goodell amendment was ~d l~t ~ght as p~ste~t of t~e tor. Cecil Ellithorpe ccntinues 1 Washington 89 71 ot legislative bodies from seats rutna~ ~~~rfas:t 4 ii·. 2 per cent $25,000 in value. and of a ~hop- Mayor Wilham Monacelli, who accepted 55 _ 17 as the James-1../j~r h.t e hsuc~ee t~~~e · as school nurchasing agent. Dr. I r~ · ' C 0 , , . · . ping plaza a1ong Rt. 93. · was. chosen by both_ boar$ to' town N.Y., ·Republican-Liberal' thngbo'; o as re rom Kenneth Clark is school physi-! H drangeV lolunt~' mtedthe lo1A_er , The development . covering\ pre~tde. at the_ h.eanng o~ the ~ · · I e a · cian I H • gh s h I R t• u son a · ey' pos · an m- _ ' . motion of Games Councilman candidate for electJOn said rural Named vice president to sue- · g crease of 33 690 to 217 424 Saint about 44 acr-es of ·the Letbs R b t K' 1J t d th t ·b ~nited. Stat~s was beco~ing :c.e_ed. D:: Robert Gates, ~ho a_Is~ School census takers are J?h~ i I . . c 00 . 0-0· an Lawrence ~unt:x, -in;the-. .llk)fth K~.rl.!; ~n? 1il ~Cl'CS of the Mat\~ b~a:J m~~y~~~ e its d:Cis~o: one big national cesspool. :has ret:ll.'ed from the board, w~s :f~t':. Char1es Mancuso,_Rictiard . Country, boosted its tot'lil to farm, Would oe between Brown within 90 da s. With humor t ~ Sen. Spessard L. Holland, D- ;Lee Roberts, also engaged m Hiwtller and George Skmner.. . • • 137,710 with 26,47!' n~w resi- ~d. and Rt. 93 on the north man asked fuat the two b~arJ.s . Fla., who supported the space I extensive farming operations . Central treasurers for ac!IVI- I R rs N Ce ta n dents. Saratoga Coooty in the mde of the VIllage. nol take that Ion to decid<> appropriations, attacked \fisc- and a resident of the Town of ties accounts of the variOUS I epa I ow r I Upper Hudson Valley p~sted an Lyman's E~planation. '·Maybe 89 days\ 1oked the . t. al irres~onsibility\ in Goodell's Shelby. . . sc~ools were. named as now re-\ increase of 31,228 'to 120,324. Mr. Ly~an esum~ted the pia- tornev. . . . ' . a~ sewage mcreases. . I In _other actiOn at the annual amred (unpaid). They are Mrs: , . . . And Wayne County, on the za would nave :JboLt 200,0~0 sq. . .... \For some reason,\ smd John meetmg of the School Board: Rr.nald Furness, Towne School. 1 Seven bidders subrrutted pro- 1 the roof and parapets IS planned hores of L k ;) t . . d feet of floor spaee. He sa1d the .. ~eCarlo Hearing Pastore, D-R .I., \ev~ryone who J Mrs. E~sie. Quintero was re- Mrs. ~ o bert V?steen, High :~osals. ~esterday on rebuilding, •to halt severe leakage which has J ~ 0 . 725 to 7 :. 7 ~ 4 . n ano, JUmpe ~.nnexation w~_uld_ result ~itially- , DeciS~{)n w~s also rel;ierved by thinks sewers are mflationary elected dJstnct clerk; Laverne School. Mrs. Leslie Kenward, 't esurfaci~g and. related work on jrunined portions of the interior. Sherrill Smallest u a loss of *·26 !n. tax I e~enue ~J;Ie Alhr?n VIllage_ Board on the can find every argument in the \Ehrenreich re-elected school Oak Orc_hard .. and _Mrs. Walter lthe .Medma Htgh School .r~of,. Other bids taken esterda Buffalo was the city showing to the Town. of (,_ame;;; until the application of RI~hard A_~~ world to go to the moon, treasurer· Mrs. Josephine Morse Wanecsk1, Jumor H~gh. .makmg the 45-year-old bwldmg . Y Y the 1 g . t d Sh .. 1 . fu·st house JS bmlt. Carlo for a. _special permit .o · ' Regular board meetin!!s will fit for continued use. were. . ar es ecre~se. err!l' m Total assessed valuation of the construct a mObile home ~ourt be held on the second Monday A \letter of intenf to the ar- Josep~ . Sanders & So1_1, $119,- · 0 f~~da (~u?tY6 2 1 \~he s~~~!e~t project is estimated -at $1:5 mil-. on the northeast corner of the 144 Y Old Alb • of each mon!h. M~rine :rrust chiter~s gives acceptance to !he 1 o37; Williams J. Schmt~t Inc., ? . e s .a e s , CIte~. 0 ICia ~ lion, Lyman continQed. former farm of Sanford T. ·.· · .. · .. - -. e.a· F·- . . . .. IO'n Co. of WNY m Medma Will be II low bidder, Thompson Roofmg I$Slh29,6t96M; Rtaolch$els4te2r15R8ooFfmgdanRd f~r~~ernll don t know how thej Attorney Hamilton Doherty, Chhdurch. don June 15 the board the offici~! deposit~ry of f~nds 1 Co., Inc., of Niagara Falls, with ee e , . , · ; · _re · .. · . d , presenting Gaines, established a vote· to rezone 21 lots of and. Medma Jourmll- -. RegJster: a t?tal bid figure of $99,511. Steele! $151,277, Petromo Con- We _Ju?,t ~n t_ know what t~e .that there were no objections the property to a category tl_mt N I Sold ccntmues as the offiCial news-: Smce there were numerous in- structwn, . $128,000, and Frank flgur~ Is, sal? a spoke~~an m to the petitions as submitted. . wou·ld allow such a court, wh1ch · .... · ,ew. s.pa·per s . . · paper. rterested bidders and the low fi- J. Balcerzak & Son, $155,000. t~e City clerks office;, If you Lyman continued that a hou~ Mr. DeCarlo intends to place . I~ the matter of contract ncgo- :gure is well below the original All bids indicated here include· fm? ou!, let,.us know. ing survey conducted ty Attor- north of _Linwood Ave. and ncar . . . . tJatJOns between the School i maximum allowance of about the base bid and alternates in a . Shernll, \'Ith a ~ 960 P 0 rt~ta- uey Ellsworth Murray for the the housmg . .-<levelopment, pro- ·. ALBIOI-; :- The AlbiOn Repuh-, ~r thP century and a half. of Its Board and Teachers Assoc., it $140,000, work on the roof can lump sum. hon ~f 2 • 922 · doesn t know tne Fereta1 Housing Administration I pos~~ by ;Lyman and the other hcan-~me:JCan, a weekly nrws- i ble. In 1923, M_r. Dragon himself was reported that the outcome proceed this summer as expect- ~ 970 figures ?ecause Ce'?sus_ Bu- showed a need for 25 more hous- petitioners .. paper datmg back to 1826 wht>r.. was an emplo~ee of the paper of. a ballo~ vote ?Y teachers is ed. . 1 o· M· ·1·1·· M· . I e~u :egulatiOn~ p_rohibit dtsse- es in the village. Lymah said it Mrs. Constance Licht voic~d It was founded by LaFayette I before he left 111 1929 to estab- bemg awaited thiS week. I A complete recon.9truction of I ton ore n~l~ation of prehmmary data en is hoped to complete the housing opposition She suggested .pr(,p- ' B h· has L--n sold · ] 1 ·s·h th Advert' er Sh h ld \ Cities and towns t.~nder 10 000. , · · . 0 • eac ' I ~ . ~ e IS . . are 0 ·e·rs In . . , ,· ' . oevelopment over a .· fou.r-year eJ ty valnes o.n Lmwood would 1t was confmned today that· In 1928 James Lonergan en- · 'J'he statJstJC'-S fm Sheri Ill and · d d dd d th t- ·th · d d J' b th' d . . : . ' . · · Alb\ s h I Bud I \h Jl 't ·p peno an a e a. e m us- ec me. y orre- 1 r . Peter A. D~a~on, publisher of, tered mto ? partners!llp With. . .· IO·n c . 00 . . . . et . Nation's Firms Ot er sma er ~ommum_I~S Wl1 trial development in the area \I doift-see how you can gimr- . the other existmg weekly paper: Sanford B. C_hurch, Alb10n·~ttor- · · · ··. , · ; . · · · ·.· U -. S , ~e made public later m the hai:' proven the need for addi- antee that property 'values will here, h~s. pur~hased the na~e 1 ney, ~o pub!I~h the Repu?hcan- • ·· . N~W Y?RK tUPI_)-'J.'he na- :yea~ _once the data has been tiona! housing. He said some or will :not. go down,\ said May- ~nd ~mlmg lists, thus ae~mr- 1 Amencan. This partnership end- H h b $299 000 ti~n .s public compames have 10 cer;_Jf!Cd. . lots have already been sold to or M{)nacelli 1 who replied to an~ mg . ~Itlc to the Republican- I ed several y_ears ago w.hen ~r. 1g er y mllho~ m?re shareholders than Niag~~a Count:t was o~e of persons working in. Rochester, other statement by saying there Amen can. . · Lonergan retired due to Ill health ' they dtd fr~e ye~rs ago, an~ the only e~oh~ counties_ sho~mg a and pointed out that the FHA is is nothing in village raw that sti, Mr. Dragon pub!Jshcs lhc AI- and the paper was sold to Mr. ALBTON _ Residents of the the pia t - 11 b $ 231 000 stock holdmgs m these firms decrease m population. N1a~ar~ \Ommitted to assist in the fin- pulates how many children can .._.. Ad r · d h · a· ' th; H d<>' 1 n WI e ' ' ' com- h d th t 'II' lost 9 081 to a new total of \ · · dOD • v-er 1scr, an e s 1a -, ,s 1 .o om~. , • Albion Central School District )Jared with $ 203 , 000 , an increase now ave passe e . ri Ion r. ' • • • • ancing for 25 houses. . be in a mobile home or trailer worrung that he 1.>11l take Ov~'r · Desp1te the use of the worn will be called upon t.o consider a 0 r $ 27 800 D bt . \ d dollar mark. Investors m up- z33,l88. Roth maJor cities, N 1 - Queo.;tioned by Supv Swier- .court. tilt: Republican-Ame!'ican tom{lr- \Republican\ in its name, it budget of $3 338 41 2 when t!w ed 'fr~m $ 19 ~ 145 s~rv~~~;!{ ~ 7 ~eas- state New York followed the agara Falls and· Lockport: lost cznski. Lyman said th~ house~> \You have to place your fa;th row from its current owner, John has for many years been a annual dist;ic't n;ceting is h~ld I E 1 ' / · ,. ·. · . trend. - 18 • 342 and 1 • 223 respectively, would' be built on a concrete and .confidence in us \ said De- t Hodgim of ~atavia. newspaper of the Democratic here next Tu~sday- Thi!> reprf'-1 ' dmptoyeh be?e Itt:;. which m-~ A New York Stock Exchange to new totals of 84 • 052 and slab on average lot ~izes of 75-by Cflrlo in stating that 'he and 111s It will continue publi<'alion se- faith. This fact was one~ publi- sents a~ increase' ·o·f $299 176 o~- 1 r:_ 1 1 u e e~c ers re ll'~ment, e:n- survey disclosed the increases [ 25 , 220 · · -130 feet The houses would be father. Joseph intend to contin~ t l f th Ad t ; · 1 .., R' 1 · h' ''B I' , · · · ·' J~-oye retirement social secuntv County Losses ·· · · ' , parae Y rom e vcr .~er cnec •JY IP ey m IS e Je\e er the 1969-70 budg·et and will be d bl hi'. 1 • Tuesday noting that they occur- , . a minimum of 1 000 square feet ue to operate well-conducted ' ~'f the present\ , .. 1id l\~r Dt ~ It or Not\ column . ' an ue cross-s e d costs are ' Other coWit!es showmg a de- ' · · l or • ·.\ · - u· . · • , reflected m an approximate $1.00 estimated at $ 468 500 an inc;ease red despite the stock market's ere w e· Ch utau d v:ith at least three bedrooms. ·courts. gon, _hut future pl,ws arc not Whll~ the. Re~mblH~an- ~me:J- increase per thousand of assess- r $ ' . ,. ·' 18-month decline. 1 ase er · a . qua, own There would be no provisions Mr. St. Johh said Albion op- certam. It may lat<'r he merged can has mamtamed Its ~ditonal ed valuation against the real pro- of $81,50~ over last yeat s total I Th h d 44!1 to 144,928; Clmton, down for basements in the \package poses granting DeCarlo a pe·rmit with Dragon's. publlcatio_n. ?ffices here, it has been pri~ted perty of the district. I 0 387 • 0 · . . ~ survey s owe that, go- 1 · 102 to 71 · 620 ; Esse:c, down rice,' Lyman continued, bu.t on the. basis of the low tax rev~ The Republlcan-Amencan had m the past several years m a Th t t bo .. •d f r I 'Budget votmg on Wednesday, mg mto 197~, the nu~ber of 1~457 to 33,843; Franklm, rlown ~ersons could have basements enue to the village from mobile numerous changes of name ov- commercial plant near Buffalo. e amoun o v r~Jse. , rum .;uly 15, from noon until 8 p.m., sha~eholders m the public com- 1,667 to 43,075; Jefferson, down d' ·r th ,· h d homes. the local tax levy ~s ~66G,162 v.ill be accompanied by a reso- pames had reached 30,850,000, 1,841 to 85,994; and Montgom- ~7 1 e~ \\IS e · . ,· · · . . . compared to $614,580 m the pi)Jst lution to raise $ 6 500 for 0 era- compared with 20 , 120 , 000 in erv, down 1 , 987 to 55 , 253 _ . T~ere Is not another_subdtu- Town of _Albwn. Co~c1lman .. · E . . p . s year. The tax rates in the var- tion and .mainte~ance of §wan 1965. And, the market value of Auburn, in Cayuga County, ~1?11 111 the county that IS ~~a~y 1\.Jichael . ~pl~rdoWIS said De- '.- .... ·• .' v· .en. ·.t·ng ·ro·gra.m et ious towns wi~I. vary i).CC?rd~ng Library, the same amount as their holdings had climbed to decreased as did an other ci- With wate~ and sewer faCihtle,~ De<?a~~o deserved the oppor· to the preva1hng equahzahon · d. 1 t · $l 005 trillion from $6 20 243 b'l- t. . th _ b t th de- to be provided that I know of, . tvmty to put m the court. rates. 'raise as year. . . . I Jes m e survey u. e . said Lyman. . Lyman asked the Planning . . Incumbent board members lion. . crease ~as actually an mcre~se Sidari's Statement Board recommendation be read. ·· B . y· th c • • Most. of the budget mcrea:se IS Laurence K Hamilton and Tho ~The Buffalo metropohtan over figures from a special R s·d . b f th 'rh t -u . b Att. ... y ou om·m·tSSIOn f [' m' structi·onal servJ'c , f\-· th . . ' . . . - h d t' t d '>n3 000 . 1968 Th 't t 11' d ~ occo I an, a mem er 0 e e repor ' wn . en y . . or- · ~.· .•- .· · ·. . · · · · _ •· . . . · ~ . . e~ . vr, .e mas E. He-;trd Jr. are candidates. area · a an. es Jma e \\ • census . m · e CI Y a Ie village's Planning Board, con·· ney Sanford L. Church, stated 1 • _ 1 egular day :;chool,. which. -~as . for reelection and are unoppos- shareowners m e~rly 1970, com-134,319 1~ the new report com· tended that the Planning Board that som~ merp.bers believe no There is plenty of recreation, day will be basketball' again. $1.80~,481 last year as c.om~r- ed. ·'file ~nual meeting of the pared to 146,000 m 1965. pared with 35,349 a decade ago. had been \circumvented\ at ·action should be taken on De~ ed with $1,997,076 next year, re- '-'Chool district opens at ~-30 h I , H C I , - l' t' ~•·t • sponsored by Medina Area Youth Also, there will be weight-lift- presenting an increase. of $1!18- ~ . · .. T. fu.d. - ·. h I' . s! ages in t e P annu~g~ e ar- ar? s app tea IOn l _llta.l a · Commission, for those young- ing available. every night begin- ::iS::i. ' p.m., ;~.,., a~, '!\'_ en annua re- gued that the Planmng J3?~rd bousmg nee~s ~urvey Is made. . t t k b thi . t ek ports Villi be. S:!Vlln and budget Have A Ch uc.kl·e • I I bad recommended a rehabthta- But the ma)onty felt that ....... $fers who wan o eep usy s rung nex we · It includes salaries of princi- sti d ~ .- Pee Wee League que ons an$wete · · tion of the downtown section o£ proval should be .given as_ lotv~ .sttnln1er.. pals, teachers and substitut.es, 6 . ·. 'Recreation Director . Gilbe-rt . _AnnoURcing the daftime acti~- clerical workers, monitors., voca- · p C BOSTON (UPI) - The heat is on the Massachusetts tbe village and expressed con~ as no immediate neighbOr ob~ · th · 1hes Mr Irons sru.d there IS e· ac·e· orps cern whether su<;h ·a. project jeets . . ·Irons reported yesterday ·at m · ' · . tion. a! special classes and costs . · · · • · · Legislature· · · ' need for more boys (ages 7 13) - had been \laid aside.\ . Ivtr.. Doherty s:ijd there is a .·addition to the parks, there is . · · · -. . of sending. pupils to BOCES clas- WASHINGTON <UPil -The House and Senate members were informed lues· · m the Pee Wee Baseball League \As soon as the shopping pla- possibility th\! new housing qe:. ·. . evening· program running Boys can sign up any .. morning. ses in Medina. Peace Corps' and its volunteer day that due to a breakdown in electrical equipment za goes in,\ continued Mr. Si~ velopment would be \adversely :fb>m 6 to 9 p.m. each week night . . . . . . . Allotments for ,·nstruct.I'on for members have been cri'ti'ct'_ zed the State House air conditioners will be out of operation downtown . '11 d f , b th b'l . ard S h 1 I thiS week at South Mam St • dari, \ow- WI eter- af ected . y e mo. 1 e hol:n~ . Orch · · c 00 gym. t · . · . · · ~lJecial schools incll.ldes adult for diff. erent reasons but t·he for monMls. . · · h uld 'd rt d · d \'11 ·Bo 'd. \Jj~g~l)jl last night with basketball. Park. · iorate no end. We s o · consi - cou , an · urge. '1 age . ar wil l b f tball t · Pine st. education, summer school, and corps appeared certain today of ------ er this. We ·owe something to not t~ be toQ. hasty in granting ':'f~>:J;Iiight. · . e · oo\' ' . o- Irons hopes for a good turn:-out o1:her special programs is de- ·another year of life. · CAMJ!.RIDGE, M.ass. (UPl) ~ Jgmes Pane, 22, .strip· those who have had their busi. the permit. · ;:.:~~~~;,FS\h! Will ,he ;~~ speCI~l of children at the new Pine St. cveased $2,500 for next year from The House Tuesdl:iy passed its ped- d,i!\tin to his shorts and undersh.irt, stood in line . Ilt)Sses her{).\ Lyman also reiterated his op.o · '\ Ladies Night and Fn- Park, which was officially taken a former total of $15,700. version, which would al;lthorize with s~me SO other men at fhe YMCA Tuesday wait.ing .·\I am as concerned ·.about the position to ttie court. . · · ,';<;,._,_...;:.....~--------\':....---- jntn the playground system_ by The cost of transportation is $98.8 million as reqU.!~~~a_ by to take a ,physical e~amination for appointment to the downtown,as anybody else,\ re- But Joseph Pi-azza, Alphonse 1 the Youth ColUJili$sion this sea- . estimate<! at $219,630, compa:rC'd the administration. The $enate Poli~e Dep,c:~dment. . plied Lyi;han. \Local bUsiness- Capurso, Louis. Monacelli an:d son. It will. be o~n each mp.rn- with· $224.331 last year; ·a de- earlie~ v.o.te,d. a $90 .. miUiQil... At ttlq{~int, four polic;e detective walked in and , tnen wilf have -the .. priority to.· John Weits spoke in fawr' ot ing (9-12) and each afternoon ·crease of $5,301 due to fewer • authonzation. Actual monElY c:~rrested lettn~. .: move their buslnes$es into the DeCarlo'·s proj.ect. Mr.· 'Piaw6;:i (1-4). ·Registration: can be done· buses- bejng pm:chased. · must come la.ter · in . ·atl -.. ·· .fie. w.a~ char11ed with armed robbery of a dairy · shopp1ng plaza~ 'The prohlim1 of praised tbe DeCarlQ coUrt 'on· . anytime. . Opel,'ation and maintenance of appropriatiOn bill. slf,yre in W~tertown Monday night. ·_urban .renewal.ln Batavia has · W. Academy St. ~ I :..-.'· ;,}.,:'j<'·'• ' -~ _,_ .. , } ·' ·. ~- ..... - \i:• '. ·-