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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 2

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ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL November 11, 1963 Journal Index Bridge B-10 Crossword Puzzle B-10 Classified B-5-8 Comics B-9 Dear Abby B-4 Editorials A-4 From Hollywood B-3 Movies B-3 Obituaries A-2 Patterns B-9 Readers' Letters A-5 Sports B-1-2 TV Log A-11 TV Previews A-11 Weather Table B-4 Soviet Union's 1' Lauded: By Red Scientist MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet Union's top science spokesman said that Russia's "Polyot 1" (flight one) maneuverable space opened the way for establishes ment of heavy manned space; stations and manned round trips to the moon, Mars and Venus. Mstislav Keldysh, of the Soviet academy of sciences, made the state ent over Moscow Radio in answer to questions from correspondents of the newspapers Izvestia and Pravda and the Soviet news agency Tass. Feats Accomplished He said that Poly ot 1, launched Nov. 1, had "successfully accomplished its maneuvers' -indicating that the unmanned vehicle may have been brought back to earth or was no longer tioning. The Soviet press and radio have not mentioned any new.

feats of the vehicle in recent days or even said that scientists are still in touch with it. "The success of the world's first maneuverable space apparatus, Polyot which has accomplished its' maneuvers in space, is a new leap forward and anotherproof that the priority is still in the hands of Soviet science," Kel- dysh said. New Accomplishment "This is a new Soviet technical accomplishment and of great significance for development of cosmonauts' space flights, for large scale maneuvers during a space flight and for the development of new apparatus." Asked what the breakthrough meant for further space exploration, Keldysh said: "The capability of this apparatus to maneuver enlarges the opportunities for flights. It allows the change of the angle of inclination, to change the orbit according to the problem -both before the flight and also by radio it will be helpful for satellites so they can be placed in the most interesting weather areas." Young Hunter Is Found Dead TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES (P The body of a 17-year-old Hatch youth, missing since Saturday from a hunting party, was found Sunday in a dry creek bed about 50 miles southwest of here. State Policeman Wayne Negley said Antonio Flores had been through the head with a pistol he was still holding when a search party found his body.

Negley speculated the youth had fired one shot into the creek bed and lifted the gun to blow away the smoke, when it discharged with the slug hitting under the jaw. He said there was no evidence of foul play and that Flores probably bled to death. An inquest by Hillsboro Peace Justice Dave Cushman ruled that death resulted from a self-inflicted wound. Flores had gone hunting Saturday with members of his family from Hatch on the Luke Apodaco Ranch. They left him in their camp to cook, but he was gone when the party returned.

After searching until midnight, they reported he was missing. Two Men Arrested In Alleged Kidnaping SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (P) Two men and a 12-year-of old girl from Utah are being held in San Bernardino after 24 the girl told sheriff's deputies the two men kidnaped her. The two men, Dennis Beck, 21, and Jeffrey Allen Thomassen, 22, both of Salt Lake City, are being held in San Bernardino County jail, booked for investigation of kidnaping. The girl, Kathy Lee Mitten, of Murray, Utah, is being held in juvenile hall.

They were halted in Victorville, when Sheriff's deputies noticed their car had no license tags. Dick Gregory Says Law Protects Animals Better Than It Does American Negro By TED HULBERT Animals enjoy greater protection from the law than do American Negroes, comedian and author 1 Dick Gregory said here Sunday. a deer season, an elk season, and you can't shoot those animals out of season. But it's open season on Negroes," Gregory said during an afternoon interview. Gregory will appear in a Birmingham, county court hearing today.

He is charged with parading without a permit after his arrest during integration demonstrations. Gregory appeared at Johnson Gymnasium Sunday night with the Vince Guaraldi jazz trio. Gregory believes his humor attracts audiences because his incisive remarks cut through to the truth of the American segregation crisis. "I don't think it's so much Dick Gregory being accepted as it is the truth being accepted," he said. Although he handles the Negro problem with humor, Gregory is convinced that the current situation is nothing less than a crisis.

Social Monster Segregation and nation, he said, represent a "social monster which can destroy this country in five years." The Negro has demonstrated a deep capacity to demand reform without violence, and the Negro can exert even greater non-violent methods to extend his demands, Gregory said. "What would happen to the economy if all Negores decided not to spend any money for a week?" Gregory pointled out that most Negroes spend only hard money, while whites buy on credit, and he believes Negro non for a week would be a powerful means of achieving Negro demands for civil rights. If every Negro in the country agreed to mail 10 letters on a certain day, the Negroes could bring down disaster on on the postal department thereby achieving response to their demands to the federal government. Or it every Negro in any large American city agreed to flush his toilet at a given moment on a given day, they could cause catastrophe to the city's sewer systems land at the same time bring action from the municipality on local grievances. Same Result Such tactics, Gregory said, would have the same result as the march of 200,000 persons on Washington in August.

The march proved to the nation that the Negro is "not mad, but just plain tired of discrimination." As a result, he said, "millions Americans have opened their eyes to the fact that this great monster (of discrimination) exists." Still other millions of Americans may not realize the ex- Manila President Closes Campaign MANILA (P) President Diosdado Macapagal returned Manila after a hard campaign in the provinces for senate seats for his Liberal party candidates in Tuesday's off-year elections. Polls predict the president will take most of the seats at stake to break his senate deadlock with opposition Nacionalistas (Nationalists). Eight seats will be contested along with municipal and provincial offices. The senate is presently divided 12-12 between the Liberals and Nacionalistas. Two private polling izations predicted a victory for Macapagal by a comfortable margin.

They also forecast an easy win for incumbent Liberal party Mayor Antonio Villegas Manila. An unidentified polling organization joined Robot Statistics, an affiliate of the GalPoll, in a survey which said Liberals would win five or six the seats at stake. The elections involve one-third of the senate seats. The liberals have a majority in the house. $200,000 Theft $200,000 Theft NEW YORK (P) Thieves broke into the 10th floor apartment of Mr.

and Mrs. Emanuel Simon over the weekend and stole jewelry worth about $200,000, police reported. Police quoted Mrs. Simon as saying the gems were taken, along with her jewel case, from a bedroom closet. Stepdaughter Charged in Knife Death of Fighter NEW YORK (P) -Young Jack Johnson's 18 year old stepdaughter was charged Sunday with stabbing to death Johnson, twice heavyweight and one-time boxing champion Knockoutalifornia over former heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles.

The girl Bobbie Steptoe, was charged with homicide. Police said she stabbed the fighter, whose real name was John Lee Storey, while two policemen looked on. The boxer refused medical aid and accompanied the policemen to the station. While charges of felonious assault against his stepdaughter were being prepared, Storey suddenly keeled over. He died before an ambulance could arrive.

The police were called to the Storey home in Queens Saturday night to investigate a family quarrel. Two patrolmen found the 35-year-old boxer arguing with his stepdaughter. Storey's wife, Matilda, 34, tried to seperate them. The stepdaughter slipped into the house and returned with a knife. Police said she scuffled with Storey, and stabbed him in the chest before they could stop her.

Hottest British Political Fight Of Century Seen LONDON (P The British Parliament reconvenes Tuesday for the start of the Conservatives' battle to stay in power. Britons expect the hottest political fight of the century. The new prime minister, Sir Alec Douglas-Home, will take his freshly won seat in the House of Commons 1 to face the assault of opposition his Labor party, which pollsters predict stands a good chance of taking control for the first time since 1951. Douglas-Home must call new national elections within year's time. It's near-Herculean task Sir Alex is taking on.

He's got to reverse a voting tide that has been running against the conversatives persistently in special elections for the last two years. Buffeted By Scandal He must reinvigorate a government and party that has been sorely buffeted by sex and security scandals the past year, that has been accused of letting Britain lag at home and abroad and failing to grasp the problemsand opportunities--of the new age of automation and scientific marvels. But the willowy, 60-year old ex-nobleman, who gave up an ancient peerage for the rough and of political battle, has already given signs that he doesn't intend to be a hapless Daniel thrown into den of Laborite lions. He's fresh from a personal triumph scored in Scotland's Kinross and West Perthshire district, where he swamped Labor and Liberal opponents win the seat that brought him back to the Commons for the first time since 1951, when he left it and went into the House of Lords with his inherited title of 14th Earl of Home. Sees Confidence Vote Sir Alec publicy interpreted his victory as a turning of the tide for the Conservatives a vote of confidence in himself and his government.

But on the same day Labor won a significant victory. It captured the Commons seat at Luton, a booming automotive center near London, by trouncing the Conservative candidate in special election. At Luton the Conservatives were rejected by an electrorate which has probably "never had it so good." Fishing OK'd TOKYO (P Communist China signed a two-year fishery agreement with a private Japanese fishery group in Peking, it was reported. The Japanese Kyodo news service said in a dispatch from Peking the agreement was designed mainly to guarantee the safety of Japanese fishing boats operating in the East China Sea. Business Bits Raymond Pineda 1506 Ridgecrest SE, a University of New Mexico student, has received a working scholarship from Phillip Morris Inc.

and will serve as a company representative on the campus. Love Leasing Inc. at 201 La Veta NE has been appointed a licensee-member of Chrysler Leasing System. National in scope, the system is being developed on city-by-city 'basis. Limited Nuclear Warfare Brings Opposite Views WEST BADEN, Ind.

(P) A Soviet diplomat and a U.S. defense expert disagreed sharply over whether nuclear warfare can be limited to anything less than a worldwide conflict. P. Karpov, first secretary of the Soviet Embassy in Washington, said Communist leaders had discarded an instrument of policy and's argued that the only to disarmament is nuclear devastation. Dr.

Alain C. Enthoven, U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense, contended, "there is no technical reason why the use of nuclear weapons cannot be controlled in a nuclear war." Rejects Debate Indiana hills. "Enthoven, Enthoven rejected any debate on nuclear disarmament as fruitless. He said it was not scientifically possible to police such a ban and added, "the advantages associated with cheating are great, probably decisive." The youthful officials spoke separately at the closing session of a three-day seminar on the morals of nuclear warfare at the Jesuit operated West Baden College, housed in a one-time gambling casino at a spa in the Southern 33, said the current U.S.

defense policy calls for a wide range of choices open to the President for use of nucler various conventional and forces to combat world threats. Karpov, 35, termed it folly to believe there could be rules of war or humanitarian considerations in a nuclear outbreak. The Soviet diplomat said the world, with its atomic arsenals, has the equivalent of 80 pounds of explosives for each man, woman and child on earth. Former Wife Of Late AEC Drowns SAN DIEGO, Calif. Klara Eckart, 52, former wife of Atomic Energy Commissioner John Von Neumann, drowned Sunday in the ocean at La Jolla.

The coroner's office listed her death as a suicide. She was a noted mathematician. She and Neumann came to America from Budapest around 1938 and worked together on the atomic bomb at Aberdeen Proving Ground, and Los Alamos, N.M., in World War II. Neumann, who died in 1957, ling ballastics theorist international missiles. He was appointed to the AEC in 1955.

She married Dr. Carl Eckart in 1958. Eckart, a former director of Scripps Institute, is a professor of physics at University of California at San Diego. Deputy Coroner M. T.

McKisic said the Eckarts had been entertaining friends until early Sunday morning, when she drove from her La Jolla home to the beach. She apparently walked into the surf, taking her own life, McKisic said. Services are pending. Eckarts had no children. Discuss Progress Drs.

Howard Anderson and Perry Avery, representing the Southern California Conference of the United of Christ, met with members of the Church of the Good Shepard recently to discuss progress of the church during the past year. The church is located at 200 Juan NE. Burglary Probed Police are investigating a burglary in which $230 in jewelry and a ring with a garnet setting valued from $500 to $2200 were taken from the home of E. D. Cunningham, 2701 Rhode Island NE.

The burglary occurred late Saturday night and entry was through a broken kitchen window, officers said. Iroquois Indians carried miniature canoes as amulets to keep from drowning. Deaths and Funerals BLAZOVIC Funeral mass will be said for Phil Blazovic this morning at 9 o'clock in the St. Therese Catholic church. Father Francis Gleason officiating.

Interment locally, and the following AS pallbearers: Tony Yucic. Mike Dzula. John A. Flaska. J.

J. Radosevich. Karl Juric, and Rudd Mills. Strong Thorne Mortuary, Directors. JACOBSON Mrs.

Juno Spencer cobson. 85. passed and resident here of Sunday this city follow. 42 away ding 8 long illness. She came to New in Mexico from Michigan and lived Belen.

N.M. two years before coming to Albuquerque. She is survived by her husband. Mr. Bernard Jacobson, here; two nephews, and niece living in or near Chicago, Ill.

She WAS past matron of Adah Chapter No. 5. O.E.S. and was An ardent worker in the AlbuquerWoman's Club, and the Church of Christ Scientist where for many years she resided worked at 1303 in Roma NE. Funeral Ar.

the Sunday School. She rangements will be announced by the Strong Mortuary. JONES Rosary services for Mrs. Florence Jones will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Exter-Tonella Mortuary Chapel.

Requiem mass will be offered 9 a.m. Tuesday at the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church ing. Escorts: Ben Edwin T. Viwith Rev. Edward V.

Rutowski officiatcent and Robert L. White. Interment in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, LAPP Mrs. Lucile M.

Lapp. 50, died at her home, 2008 Candelaria NW. Sunday afternoon after A long illness. She WAs A resident here 13 years and member of the First Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband.

Gerald H. Lapp: two daughters. Mrs. Sharon Elaine Irby of Vir. ginia Beach, and Miss Rita Ann Lapp, at home: four brothers.

Glen and Wendell Longaberger of Dresden, Ohio, Kenneth Longaberger of Cleveland, Ohio, and Gerald Longaberger of Charleston, W. and three grandchildren. Arrangements by Exter-Tonella Mortuary. E. C.

Wasmund Rites Tuesday Retired contractor Edward C. Wasmund, a nine year resident here, died in a hospital here Sunday following a lengthy illness. He was 78. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in Redeemer Lutheran Church with the Rev.

W. E. Meyer officiating. Burial will be in East Detroit. Strong-Thorne Mortuary is directing arrangements here and the body will remain at the mortuary from 6 to 9:30 p.m.

today. The family requests memorials be made to Redeemer Lutheran Church. Wasmund, who made his home at 601 Madison SE, is survived by his wife, Mrs. Clara a S- mund; two sons, Edward L. Wasmund, Albuquerque, and F.

Wasmund, East Detroit, a daughter, Mrs. Charles Kortman, Taylor, a brother, Alfred Wasmund, Detroit; and eight grandchildren. Ex-Grid Player At AHS Killed A former Albuquerque High School football player, Max Gutierrez was killed in Las Vegas, Saturday when he was crushed by his auto, which he was readying for a race. Young Gutierrez left here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Max Gutierrez, in 1954 to live in Las Vegas. The family made their home for many years at 2203 William sw here. The son attended Lincoln Junior High and Albuquerque High before moving to Las Vegas, where he was an outstanding football player at the high school and college level. He was about 27, his aunt, Mrs. Ernestine Gonzales, said here.

He was married and had four children. His grandfather is Antonio D. Perea of Albuquerque. He is also survived by a brother, John Gutierrez, and by several aunts in Albuquerque and Belen. Council Fathers Mark Birthday of Bishop, 101 VATICAN CITY (UPI) Hundreds of ecumenical counfathers joined this last weekend in celebrations of the 101st birthday of the oldest Roman Catholic bishop in the world.

Msgr. Carinci, a titarchbishop and secretary emeritus of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, marked his birthday Saturday. At 101 he is not only the oldest bishop attending the council but the only one with a personal recollection of the first Vatican council held in 1869-1870. RED JAMMERS BUSY WASHINGTON Behind the Iron Curtain the Soviets use as many as 2000 transmitters to jam Voice of America broadcasts. Back of the Bamboo Curtain the Red Chinese use about 1500 for the same purpose.

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Medical tests proved this formula The secret is -Primatene combines stops asthma attacks in minutes and 8 medicines (in full prescription gives hours of freedom from recur- strength) found most effective in of painful is so effective spasms. that combination for asthma distress. Fence asthma This formula the physician's leading asthma Each performs a special at purpose. prescription safe when used sold and So look freedoms forward from to asthma sleep spasma. night, that now it can be passeription in most states Get Primatene at any drugstore.

Advertisement MULLER Mrs. Eva Belle Muller, 70, and resident here 40 years, passed away Saturday following a short illness. She came here from Seymore, and is survived by one brother, John Minnick, here; two sisters, Mrs. C. L.

Evenson, Mantiko, and Mrs. Mike Robertson, of this city, and two grandchildren. She was a member of the Presbyterian church and the Rebecca Lodge. Funeral services will be held Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock in Palm Chapel in the -Thorne Mortuary. Graveside services will be held in Stanley, N.M, at 1:30 p.m.

MILLIGAN Sidney M. Milligan, 60. and resident here one year and life long resident of New Mexico, passed away here Sunday following a long Illness. He resided at 330 Arizona, SE and 1s survived by his wife, Katherine, here; one brother, John A. Milligan, and a nephew John A.

Milligan, Jr. of Lubbock. Tex. He was retired road contractor, and WAs member of the Mesa Grande Baptist church. and 8 veteran of World War II.

Funeral arrangements by the Strong-Thorne Mortuary, MARTINEZ Rosary services for Mrs. Florita L. Martinez will be held Tuesday evening at 7:30, in Palm Chapel in the Strong- Thorne Mortuary, Mass will be said Wednesday morning at 9, in the Holy Rosary Church with the Rev. Richard E. Spellman officiating.

Interment in Mount Calvary cemetery, MARTINEZ Funeral services for Charlene Martinez will be held today at 10:30 a.m. at St. Anne Catholic Church. Burial will be at Armijo cemetery. Pallbearers: Ralph Otero, Albert Perea, Manuel Perea.

Dan Gallegos, Richard Baca, and Epimenio Lopez. The Salazar and Sons Mortuary is in charge. MONTOYA Funeral services for Mrs. Francisquita S. Montoya will be held this morning at 10 at Tajique Catholic Church, with requiem high mass.

Pallbearers: Joe Sanchez. David Sanchez, Petronilo Sanchez, Claudio Montoya, Nick Montoya, and Fidel Otero. Interment at Tijique. Gabaldon Mortuary in charge. PENN Rosary will be said for James Albert Penn this evening at 7:30, in Palm Chapel of the StrongThorne Mortuary.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock in the Catholic Church in San Antonio, N.M., with interment following in the National cemetery in Santa Fe, N.M. at 1 o'clock, with full military honors. Pallbearers: Polito Garcia, Leonard Trujillo, Paul P. Aragon, Herbert F. son, Wayne Lewis, and Paul Haughton.

RAMIREZ Frances Mares de Ramirez 47 of 2923 First St. NW, died Saturday. She is survived by her husband, Isaac Ramirez; four sons, Freddie, Billy, Robert and Dickie Martinez; two daughters. Mrs. Betty Ruth Ramirez and Miss Evelyn Martinez; two brothers, Johnny and Raymond Mares, here: six sisters, Mrs.

Mela Monreal and Mrs. Ruth McCabe in Mrs. Judy Aragon, Miss Grace Mares and Miss Mallery Mares, here, and Mrs. Peggy Valdez, and five grandchildren. Funeral services are pending and will be announced by the Salazar and Sons Mortuary.

Dick Gregory tent to which segregation isl practiced, he said. Traveling across the country, Gregory has discovered that certain motels are open to Negroes in the winter but not in the summer since their swimming pools are then open and are segregated. A young boy not too many months ago asked Gregroy for his autograph. Then the boy realized he had no pencil or paper. There was a restaurant nearby, but Gregory could not go inside to borrow a pencil because he knew the restaurant was closed to NeFrustrated, Gregory leroes, away without giving his admirer an autograph.

Treated More Honestly Discrimination is by no means a southern problem. In fact, Gregory said, Negroes are treated more honestly in the South than in the North. "In Mississippi, you see the large house where the white man lives and out back the shack where the Negro lives. They live that close together. Up North, a Negro couldn't live that close to a white man." Gregory charged Barry Goldwater with duplicity in his statements on segregation, which Gregory said vary according to whether Goldwater is speaking in the North or the South.

Goldwater once said, Gregory recalled," 'If I were, a Negro, 1 be But, said Gregory, "It he were a Negro, no one would care. If he were a Negro and his daughter was kidnaped in the South tonight, I wonder if he'd go to the state police." Agrees With King Gregory agreed with a statement which Dr. Martin Luther King made last week. Dr. King said that while civil rights legislation could not make a man love him, it could prevent that man from lynching him.

Gregory added: "Whites may have a right to move out of a neighborhood if I move in, but they don't have the right to throw bricks through my window or burn crosses on my lawn." And he said: "This happens up North as well as down South. Gregory will appear on KNME-TV at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, and again at 2:30 p.m. Friday, in a discussion which was videotaped here Sunday. At his Johnson Gymnasium appearance, Gregory's audience of about 2500 largely university students responded with heavy applause as he directed barbs indiscriminately against Barry Goldwater, President n- ed Premier Khrushchev and Gen.

Eisenhower. Turning to sports, he described football as the only game in which "a Negro can chase a white man with 000 people standing up to cheer." At Civic Auditorium Philharmonic Lives Up To Majestic Reputation: A crowd numbering 3000 listened with delight Sunday night to the London Philharmonic Orchestra here under the aegis of the Albuquerque Community Concert Assn. Conducted by Georges Pretre, brilliant young Frenchman, the Royal Philharmonic lived up in every respect to its majestic reputation. Opening with Rimsky-Korsakoff's colorful Capriccio espanol, the orchestra proceeded to Bizet's Symphony No. 1 in major, capturing all the vigor and nostalgia written into the score.

The strings were exceptional in shading in this and the closing selection, Jean Sibelius' Symphony No. 5 in major, the latter music that is unfamiliar to a large portion of the Albuquerque audience. Although the sound shell was not used at the Civic Auditorium for the performance, placement of flats at the back and sides of the stages ef- Two Youths Hurt In Collision Two 17-year-old youths were hospitalized Sunday after the auto they were riding in collided with another car at 12th and Griegos NW. Injured were Elijio Sanchez, 5800 Simon SW, who suffered a broken shoulder blade, and "Friny" Gonzales of 2331 Bridge SW, admitted to Bernalillo County Indian Hospital for observation, police said. Woodrow Stater of Kirtland AFB, told police he ran a stop sign at 12th and Griegos and was involved in the collision.

Sanchez was driver of the other car. Stater was cited for careless driving. SMITH The body of John T. Smith, who died Saturday, will be taken to Atoka, Okla. for services and interment accompanied by his family.

Strong. Thorne Mortuary in charge. STREETER Services for Lyman H. Streeter will be held this afternoon at 2 in the Chapel in the Garden of French-Fitzgerald Mortuary with Rev. Robert E.

Smith officiating. Escorts: J. B. Miller. W.

F. Lawler, J. E. Gurule, W. R.

Rundell, V. G. Fleisch and A. F. Marth.

Sandia Moun. tain Lodge No. 72. A.F. A.M..

will conduct services at Park. the graveside at Memorial SANCHEZ Requiem mASS will be offered at 9 a.m. today in St. dette's Catholic Church for Mrs. Elisa.

beth K. Sanchez with Msgr. Albert Chavez officiating. Interment in Mt. Calvary Cemetery.

Arrangements by Mortuary WASMUND Edward C. Wasmund, 78, resident of this city nine years from Detroit, died early Sunday morning in a hospital after 8 long illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Clara Wasmund of the family home 601 Madison SE; two sons, Edward L. of this city and Wm.

F. of East Detroit, a daughter, Mrs. Charles. Kortman of Taylor, brother, Alfred Wasmund of Detroit, and elght grandchildren. He WAS 8 retired contractor and WAS 8 member of the Redeemer Lutheran Church.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 10 at the Redeemer Lutheran Church with Rev. W. E. Meyer officiating. The remains, accompanied by his wife and son, will be taken Tuesday afternoon to East Detroit for interment.

The family memorials to be made to the Redeemer Lutheran Church. The body will lie In state at the Strong Thorne 9:30 Mortuary today from 6:00 until p.m. The casket will not be opened at the church. Penn State Dorm Ripped by Blast projected the music. It is hoped that Albuquerque will again be honored when the Philharmonic makes another tour in the United Accident Causes Damage to Store A window and three slabs of marble were broken early Sunday morning after a car, driven by a 15-year-old youth, ran a red light at Second and Central, collided with another auto and was knocked into the side of Fogg's Jewelers, 124 Central SW, police said.

Officers said the car, driven by S. L. Davis, son of R.H. Davis, 305 Truman NE, collided with another driven by R. R.

Torrez, 22, of Alameda. The Davis auto struck a "No Parking" sign, dislodged a mail box and forced it into the side of the jewelry store, breaking a window on North side and cracking the marble slabs, police said. Young Davis was cited for running a red light. Native New Mexican Dies Following Illness Sidney M. Milligan, 60, native New Mexican who lived in Albuquerque a year, died Sunday after a long illness.

He was a retired road contractor and was a member of Mesa Grande Baptist Church. Survivors include his widow, Katherine Milligan, of Albuquerque; a brother, John A. Milligan and a nephew, John A. Milligan both of Lubbock, Tex. Strong-Thorne Mortuary is in charge of arrangements.

ALTOONA, Pa. (UPI) A dynamite blast Sunday ripped through a part of the new dormitory at the Pennsylvania State University campus here, causing several thousand lars worth of damage. Investigating authorities said someone apparently tied several sticks of dynamite to a steel I-beam supporting the second floor of the building, which is under construction and unoccupied. Construction of the buildling has been a subject of heated labor dispute. No injuries were reported in the blast, which authorities weakened building to (said point that the second floor was in danger of collapsing.

The Blair County court last month enjoined the Carpenters and Joiners Union of Pittsburgh from any further picketing or violence at the campus. The court action followed several labor incidents at the campus over a three-month period. Sunday's incident was the first since the court action. POWERFUL PLUNGER CLEARS CLOGGED TOILETS in a jiffy! NEVER AGAIN sick feeling overflows Toilet ALL ANGLE Plunger Unlike ordinary plungers, Toilaflex does not permit compressed air or messy water to splash back or escape. With Toilaflex the full pressure plows through the clogging mass and swishes it down.

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