~~ — = — =. Ai a eed ee ~\ i ue . ~ SBre ‘e fe sy i all —— = ‘; . { e. nf ARS 4 The Weather , di ) Cloudy, warmer. v a . (Details Page 2) Pee. . ; ‘19th YEAR - kaeeke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ‘6, 1954-30 PAGES INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE hs a § at |’ sre Monday Seryrity Firing | Student Nurse Murdered | : 55 Plates on Sale Here Monday SecyrityFiring | Student Nurse Murdered Forgotten Cards : | , * Be ee - ~ “a ’ Threatened by | ax RE May WhipUp 28 Mace (Lures Student | , Six-Day Week Public St - Into Basement a - ‘ ‘ | Long Cross-Examination ae es Dulles Ousts Veteran Miss Kraai Assaulted, by Defense Attorneys ieWrh rhein. Diplomat John Davies | Then Strangled by Tie; Slows Down Testimony pre for ‘Lack of Judgment’ | Body Found in Lab CLEVELANDW®—A WASHINGTON \® — The | KALAMAZOO, Mich. \?i— judge’s threat of a six-day | m security firing of veteran State police said today a week for the Sheppard mur- § diplomat John Paton Davies patient at the Kalamazoo der trial faced defense law- | fe) Jr. on grounds of “lack of State Mental Hospital had yers today because of their | judgment, discretion and confessed the sex slaying of jong cross examination of wa reliability” threatened to- 21-year-old nurse Marilyn the state’s first witness day to become a new center | Kraai last night. ) As the third week of the of public controversy. | The patient is Louis trial closed yesterday, De- Secretary of State Dulles, | Maurice Smith, 18, com- | fense Atty. William J. Cor- en ; ** announcing the immediate | mitted to the hospital from rigan still was doggedly ~ . dismissal of a key figure in |Parchment, a Kalamazoo i | a -year- | suburb. uestioning Deputy Coroner the 10-year-old dispute over s Seater adeteons, who had I € A ‘ 0) . 0 . =. America’s China policy, said | Detective Chief Victor Beck said , WF i em ; : cmuibmwdeur tia wate a Smith confessed before taking a 1 been-on the-witness stan we . yesterday he was affirming s ; - gs scheduled lie detector test. all day - 4 2 the unanimous findings of | And the attorney said he would a dias Hames bate |e special five-man security | hag tho pele a, admitted ra need at least another hour Monday | yew PLATE: READY — Mrs. Gloria Bottom of 65) stead of the usual EA-FZ letters which were assigned beard. | Me é, | drdtherapy room ‘on the pretext to complete his cross examination | wijliams St., covers this year’s license plate with for distribution in Oakland County in the past. Kel- Dulles said neither he nor the te %& regaining a pack of playing of the witness. the new "55 green and white plate which goes on sale logg said the letters wére Changed because car regis- panel found Davies ‘‘disloyal in the . cards he had left there. . . | Monday at the Secretary of State branch office at 65 trations in Wayne County soared making is nit ssary sense of having any Communist af- | AY wirepacce He told Beck the girl volunteered dudge P mye Migs tsa a. |N. Perry St:, according to Roy Kellogg, assistant (for all plates with the letters AA through FZ to be finity’® or that he “consciously VICTIM — Student nurse Marilyn Kraai, 21, (above) of Holland, was to accompany him to the room to nounced » pace | pe TI . lates, Kellogg id. will be the | sold there. Kellogg expects to sell 70,000 plates of all : cn) — a “tu : . 7 . . . bas laborato recover the cards. trial continued fo be slow, he |™anager. The new plates, ee said, helped’’ an enemy of this country. criminally assaulted and slain Friday night-in a basement laboratory Beck d Smith told h h might start holding Saturday —_ size but will have GA through GZ prefixes in- | types in 1955 oe | ; _ Dulles anneunceg he had ée- at Kalamazoo Michigan State Hospital. State Police reported this billed nara ar tks nallony "Waesteds; Court sources later 0” —_ : cided with the board that “the | ™orning that Louis M. Smith, 18, a patient at the hospital, had con- then ieee be key ring and flust : sald the six-day court week is . . Professor Sees | continued employment of Mr. fessed the slaying. it down a toilet. Afterward, he — peer = _— a s ~ ~ Davies is not clearly consistent ~ Se et ab eee anne ann ae ena mn eeea ane aE locked the door to the room, Beck pe os So. | PF , Gov. Williams with the interests of national ‘ said Smith related. gh RO _ security.” Senate Chiefs Plan Talks ™seciyns veay was tousd in s appeared to be just about as hard | . f P| as 56 President | Davies, who had been cleared search after other nurses be- 4 on the defendant, osteopath Sam- — = | : , —¥ eight tintes under the Truman ad- P d f C came alarmed at her failure to ; uel H. Sheppard, as on the witness. avol Ixon q eS an Paar iso pag ind ministration, announced he would on roce ure O ensure keep a supper date with them. Sar aeaeee sareeed ot chubbing bie [perts on American affairs or enone ne event he did ast | WASHINGTON (P—Senate leaders planned last-min-| 1.) "thetic mess Kot been erin: | pregnant wife to death last July! WASHINGTON (®—More top government officials dicted this week that Gov. G. Men (i. were “adequate grounds” | ute talks today on procedure for the Senate’s special ses- | inalty assaulted and then strangled 4 after an affair with a pretty hos-| were called today to testify in support of the contro- pital technician, fought hard for | versial Dixon-Yates plan to feed private power into the control as seme of the more grue- | jines of the Tennessee Valley Authority. nen Williams of Michigan will be the next President of the United States Prof. Dennis Brogan, former Ox- R. Davies had been in the anspie sion amid predictions a final matic service . years, much oO , : the time in Chika. Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) will He got the word of his dismissal | McCarthy and his staff members meanwhile were re- vote on whether to censure With a red. hospital issue necktie. come in a week or two. Azost of the girl's clothing had some 7 : ford schol nd longtime student ; om tay MAIS OVS eel Rep. Cole (R-NY), chairman of the Senate-House of American afaire, said he be- |i & Personal talk with Dulles and ported arranging strategy meetings with senators friend-| struggie im the laboratory where | ° ~ While Corrigan wag questioning | Atomic Energy Committee, pushed the group’s study Of | jjeveq Williams will be nominated a before a public announce: | ly to his cause. + her —_ was found. The only — Adejson abaut the wounds proposed contract with an unusual Saturday session, | and will win the 1956 election “be-| “,, ° cutward sign of vieieuce was the Son the battered head of Marityn | = ee Recalled for additional |= Sig bas the overwbetning| a. wage sgectc ponierta Devies | plans a detailed pres ta: Fund Campaign a a gripped a Ss. bo . - hie homnis. bit his 1M and closed ~ | testimony in the third day |iiee e} \ eee MONS: | record the: decision against~ hill | tion of his side of the’tase | - oar Oe ae = a nag yen his eyes tightly. His mouth quiv- | y S | of public heariigs Were) He also predicted a Democratic | “™* based. for the benefit of the public, | cations of a struggle. ered as the - Maed such) Chairman Lewis L. Strauss |¥ictory in the 156 congressional| State Department officials |Hut has declined to call ita. Hospital Safety Director Charles + terms as “splintered bones,” : le Bn | elections. were unable to say what effect | defense. ’ Mindeman ordered a seagch for “split skull” and “layers of bone.” in Auto Misha eaterwl ae ae =f re stieeenmneeall the | dtmniosal weal have C 1 ~The Wisconiin. Republican has . — Kraai when three fellow stu- The jurors divided their atten. D ission - u. , " Fetirement benefits, predicted the Senate will vote to . Lynda t nurses said she fhiled to meet tion between the witness on the AEC’s general manager. France Refuses the New York Times said he | censure him at the session starting | Frank S. Lyndall Urges them for supper. She was off duty stand and the defendant. Once, New witnesses summoned were | loses those benefits which Ae Monday, saying only a few mem- All-Out Effort on Part | at 5:3 p.m. , from the coroner's office simply Corrigan, whose reléntless ques- tioning hammered Adelson into making nervous and somewhat de- fiant answers, tried to discredit the autopsy the deputy coroner made of the body. The lawyer told a reporter later: “The police and these people Michael Williamson Dies as Car Roms Tree on Commerce Rd. A 10-month-old boy was killed and his mother was critically in- jurea yesterday when the car which she was driving aparently near Green Lake road in West Bloomfield Township. Dead on arrival at Pontiac Gen- went out to that (Sheppard) house and decided that Sam Sheppard killed his wife. After that, they never made an attempt to see if anyone else did it.” Slash in Coffee Price Boosts Food Trade MUSKEGON (UP) — Mr. and Mrs.Leonard Quackenbush report that businesg at their small res- taurant has doubled since they lowered the price of coffee to five cents a cup. Although the Quackenbushs are losing a penny or More on each cup of coffee, they're making more money because of increased busi- ness, Mrs. Quackenbush said. West Readies Resolution on Atoms-for-Peace Plan | UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. today put final touches on a resolution seeking U.N. en-| dorsement for President Eisenhower's plan for peaceful | sharing of atomi¢ energy as 'eral Hospital was Michael William- son, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Williamson of 3151 Evergreen, | Walled Lake Mrs, Williamson, U4, Was um able to give police any state- ment following the accident in | which she suffered a possible | fraetured skull, Another son, Da- vid, 3, also in the auto, suffered possible head injuries and is re- | ported in fair condition, West Bloomfield Township Pa- trolmen Richard G. Helgemo and Calvin C. Baxter said that Mrs. Williamson apparently lost control of her auto before crashing into the tree about seven miles west of Pontiac. Helgemo said Mrs. Wil- liamson will make a_ statement t'when her condition improves. ee - — (®—Western representatives diplomats anxiously awaited Russia's reaction to the program. The resolution—for submission to the U.N.’s 60-Na- tion Political Committee—was drafted last night by| seven Western nations which have been negotiating on atomic energy. It is expected to ask: 1. Pull U.N. cooperation in developing the interna- tional use of atomic energy for peaceful purposes. 2. The U.N. to call an interna. tional scientific conference next to discuss the possibilities of atomic’ agency, -o---— music systems, rica. He said presentation of the document was being held up until some receive authorization from thelr governments to co-sponsor iit, : The atomic debate got off to a |quick start yesterday with an out- line of the Eisenhower plan by U.S, Chief Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., and endorsements by Britain | The conference to advise the and Canada. But the discussion | On progress made towards | “|see what the Russians would do, slacked off as everyone. waited to The main question appears to be whether Russia will insist on out | lawing all nuclear weapons as @ reso. Premise to taking part in any in ternational atomic pool | ‘pracd terme, Fascia | Herbert D. Vogel, recently apoint- otherwise could have collected (per. of the 96-man “jury” will go ed TVA board chairman, and ; = . . | Frank H. Weitzel, acting comptrol- 0 oin al ey | Davies, 46, has been a diplomatic | mind. | ler-general and political storm center for years| With the opening date only ’ =" : , because during the latter stages’ three days away, Senate Demo- fo tale with Me cotcrmatet | Foreign Office Denies | o¢ World War I! ne urged that the | cratic Leader Lyndon dobinom | os ‘cing. tn os wx i Reported Negotiations United States take firm steps to of Texas flew inte Washington — —_ ies baat y ment po | “revitalize” _Nationalist China's last night for a Saturday con- week. " on Saor Issue | Kuomintang. State Department rec- | ference with Senate Majority ee I L of Solicitors | nm her —_ was — ad With $75,000 of the Pontiac Area | ‘he letter by writing “it is now . © | 9:29 p.m. and I have to go.” United Fund goal of See stil Her body was f 1 at 8:45 p.m. needed. an “all-out” effort was! A student at the Mercy Central utged today by Frank S. Lyndail, | Schoot of Nursing in Grand Rapids, campaign chairman. |Mich., she had started a three- {months tour of duty at the State The. drive, .criginally sched- rammed a tree on Commerce road | One bitter foe of the Dixon-Yates proposal, Sen, Gore (D-Tenn), tes- tified yesterday. | Another critic, Sen. Kefauver | (D-Tenn), said today President El- |senhower could show his willing- 'ness to work with the Democrats (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Youth, 15, Confesses Brutal Slaying of Girl NORWOOD, Mass. ® — Dist Atty. Myron Lane said today that a 15-year-old boy -has confessed the brutal slaying of Geraldine Annesse, also 15, whose body was discovered yesterday in a garage near her home Lane named the boy as Peter Makarewicz Jr., a former altar | boy, who lived around the corner from the Annese home The boy re-enacted the crime before a horrified crowd including his own mother, Lane said the boy admitted after all-night questioning he killed the girl in the cellar of her oe home and then dragged the vy to the garage. handcuffed and was set upon by the dead girl's stepbrother, Philip DeRose. DeRose grabbed Peter and had to be pulled away by police | DeRose shouted at the boy: “My sister's dead. My mother’s dying.” The girl's mother has been grief- stricken” since learning of the | tragedy: t Coffee Ice Cream Tops EAST LANSING (UP)—Coffee- flavored ice cream rates as one | of the most popular flavors in the: _nation, delegates at the dairy man ufacturers conference at Michigan | State College reported Friday. Hunting Mishap Fatal ASANDUSKY (UP) = James The boy was taken to the garage | PARIS (UP) — France refused |Many next week to reopen negotia- tions on the Saar but announced that some points of the historic pact between the two nations still must be settled. | A French foreign ministry spokesman denied a West German jannouncement that the diplomat would go to Bonn and reopert talks on the pact between German Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer and |French Premier Pierre Mendes- France. | The spokesman said neither | chief of cabinet Jean-Marie Sou- tou nor any other French Diplo- mat weeld go to the West Ger- man “apital, as Adenauer had indicated Friday night. But the spokesman said it had always been agreed that certain points in the Saar accord still had to be Completed, The spokesman said it always had been understood that “ar- rangements’’ must come later on |four articles of the Saar accord, | The articles included the key | section of the economic relations | the 991-square-mile territory will | have with beth France and Ger- i ment include that it shall be placed under a neutral commissioner at least until the German peace treaty jis signed: | Adenauer temporarily put down a full-scale revolt within his eoali- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) || In Today's Press | rctre aera Church News . . * ee Comics é Hardy, 30, McGregor, died egly today of wounds he suffered in a | Pheasant hunting accident about two miles north of here. | many. | Main points of the Saar agree- 'ords already published show“ that | Leader Knowland of Galifornia | Davies said such a revitalized party! on what order ef procedure to today to send a diplomat to Ger-| could be a “‘significant force” in a! feitow. Time and place of the meeting were not announced. | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) ‘Woman Explains Do-Nothing Mate to Prying Judge CLEVELAND, ® — Common) | Pleas Judge Benjamin D. Nicola, | |examining prospective jurors yes- terday for a robbery case, asked a woman what her husband's occu- | pation was. week.” He said the Senate is re- “I have no husband,” she re- CO@vening to do “one _ Specific ied, “I'm separated.” | thing’’—dispose of a special com- “Well, now that your separated, | | what does your husband do,” the judge continued. j | wha a , bey rye y@e anything,” she | will be disappointed if it (the spe- cial session) lasts more than a mittee's report recommending that McCarthy should be censured on three counts. | “I don't know where he is or) | entation of his side of _ said, “that’s why we separated.” (Continued on Page 2, Col. One main subject Knowland and Sen. Ferguson (R-Mich). chair- the’ pres- case z He. new letter to 8) uled to end Wednesday, was ex- _ tended one werk to allow (© of the Grand Rapids school, solicitors to complete their enlis | and te give additional time te | liked by her fellow students and Jonson were expected to take up, meet the UF goal. jis whether they can set the early; «we can't afford failure.” Lyn | Person in every way.” | target date some senators are ask-| gan said “We' hoot ’ ling for a showdown vote on the oo we Ka ! ; yh i. fae: goal which represents minimum ‘needs for our community serv- Hospital, last Oct. 4. Sister Mary Xavier, superintend- described the girl as a “faithful nurse, of engaging personality, well hospital patients and an excellent ‘Weekend fo Be Dry ices.” } » ‘ man of the Republicari Policy Com. | : but Cloudy P : mittee, told reporters ‘‘I personally gay gponiy — , og in ontiac which represented only part of the| Pontiac residents can plan on (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | although it will be cloudy for the Rather Quite Bad Form |The U. a nies Bureau says and All That, You Know F wi be warmer tonight and | Downtwon temperatures yester. , 33, was charged Friday with | day ranged from 30 to 40 degrees wounding Doris Long with intent | with cloudy skies but no precipi- After Halliday stabbed Miss Long { ing to 41 by 1 p.m. faybe the Time Is Ripe for Another ‘Cleanup. oe 2 { VU —— EX a , i f Ng — aoe. 2 Sell |. syne ie — ——— ee a a Ha ET a Ee BBS hel lad eaplita il HT i lS i Fd: ad i 2 fi FEE uit Re g SERGUH Hb Cet FET aa ee hi = B Hil a2 tutti Cat! Ree Una ead os | ea i SRA ea a itz § : rt Pog Hi Bian ; 3 Hi, ged ee He hea ie ile (Sie a tan HPs diese | 9 qj Breil: aul HUH RE atgelt|s te th TE Esfer } ifs? c= 2g 55S | iS z il BPH aE ES 5 toll ; it 5 pike CH z¢ 35-85 ex |} sy sit] go MUU a cite OSM Fi qu|eg ae = 5 nd ful] Bae ag pla ED MEM GE g gia a wl | “ eS ee i i |B SA =) Hi] 8-0 it THU Tar ial '¢ ra dh i | Boi)” ep 4 R: fi etl lt & uilis oat Bit eke davai HB iL® , dO 3 seit 33 T 3 = a TF THEIR : ee ame mmm ic He aE f° H) £2 isl: Hits rl i ag 2nte ct | iB Blue | iilig ars um Mi = ti il i Ae en ily | 1 i iE an Hk i Se leet Uh Mn a TE) eeshien de, = BF HORT it jane ih 7 Te ee ene ee ties Mia de elie UB See MLA a i satis eae Se iia Sait a EM a ya Bg a A cesta sitesi HEHE RS Lote wilt Bh ‘aE Mittal Be aici: Petia | fell | ae ae i Che it Mi pill 8 pay J a HL f j ae fi: |edit] i sis = i Hits ya i i at Bit; ith i : el | i if SST 7 ro ee ibe ‘a lt rr Hitt, Lille bu ; eee He ith ft ft i! i i ih HT ht i i si ie | Haeacac duet avdaenetdeates tape fecreereeet ute] Heri tle ela ey sae iieuih| Bua HH sel ea iit iat ee RR a a i ti Published from Tus Powrme Parss Building Hasctp A. Fitzcenste, Publisher Conas N Editor Hosscs F. Beoors Rusests Basert: Advertising Manager Nat’) Adv Mgr. p. “e 4 = 4 Entered at Post Office. Pontiac. Mich. as second cjass matter MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Associated Press ts entitied exclusively to the use ation of all local news printed in this news- all AP news dispatches Tus Powruc Perss ® week: where cartier service is not available by mail tr Oskiand. + livingston, Lapeer and Washtenaw Coupties tt is 81206 a r: elsewhere tn Michigan and al) other places in the United States $20 00 All mail subscriptions are pavable {mn advance & year Phone Pontiac PE 2-818! MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1954 Sousa’s Centenary Saturday, November 6, has special significance for all lovers of band music for it is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Joun Paiuip Sousa, the March King. , The son of a Portuguese father and a German mother, this pro- lific composer first saw the light of day in Washington, D. C. in a house near the Marine barracks. * * * The young Sousa showed musical aptitude early in life. At six he was taking violin lessons. At 13 his father, a Marine Band trombonist, enlisted him as a band apprentice to forestall the boy's acceptance of an invitation to join a troop of circus musicians. . As he neared manhood, Sousa’s musical stature grew rapidly. At 20 he was conducting orchestras in theaters and’ pablishing ! 1880 at a salary of $1,500 a year. In the next 12 years under his lead- ership the band became one of the best and most popular in the country. When in 1892 he organized his own band, it was an instantaneous sutcess, winning : wide acclaim at home and in Europe. » : * x * # Sousa wrote more than 100 marches, . for the first few of which he was paid as little as 100 printed copies of the a composition. When he finally got things on @ royalty basis, one of his marches — - him $300,000. He also composed 50 ; songs, 10 comic operas and a number of ; waltzes, overtures and suites. AC PRESS | y hip of India and Red China tial to the peace of Asia entire world. * * * Thus his message could have dis- appointed only those who expected that the Prime Minister’s closeup view of Chinese Communism would make him more of 4 realist. Instead, he returned to India apparently convinced that China's preoccupation with its enormous problems of industrialization would keep it too busy to devote any energy to aggression. This is a reminder that not so long ago many thought Russia would be too busy with recon- struction to seek foreign military adventures. Events proved other- wise about Russia as Chinese in- tervention in Korea proved about Mao Tse-tung. * * * India's leader, however, did have the good sense to reject Peiping’s attempt to lure him into a “peace alliance” di- rected against the new Pacific defense pact and the United States. He may yet be jolted into realizing what the West already knows — world conquest still fs Communism’'s No. | aim. The People’s Business GOP Lost Early Couldn’t Have Done Much to Half Dem Sweep Here By JACK I. GREEN LANSING—Michigan Repubdlicans should stop bewailling: “If only we’d—”, or “Why didn't we—.” In the light of the tremendous majorities rolled up by Democrats in last Tuesday's election, it can be said that there was little the Republicans could have done to change the picture very much. ~ : The whispered protests of more than a mfflion persons combined to create a whir!- wind which would have wrecked any party or any candidate. : His death*on March 6, 1932, ended and better than many. With the excep- tien of ali had been proven one of the Nation's most noteworthy hn tite thpretiie detines. | musical careers, , ‘ There is evidence that Republiefn cam- paign leadership was not too effective. It . apparently relied too heavily on adveftising . publican failing these days—and not enough A Gapaigh from Washington tells on seasoned political operators. how Britain's Queen Mother went tour- There were rivalries and factions within ing with Mamie Eisennower in Wash- the party, but they really seemed to be less j ington. troublesome this year than in several recent ’ And what was one result? Why, Mrs. oa er al for EISENHOWER saw some interesting sights The Republicans didn't have nearly as in W sh much campaign money as the Democrats oe e never had seen be- said they did—but they had , But with a million dollars te spend, The same thing is true of people everywhere. Many fail to see the worth | - While sights that are all about them. Yet they travel long distances to see place and things they have read or heard about. . . ° At one time it was said that far more outsiders than Detroiters had gone through the huge Ford plant at River Rouge. In the same way, there are prob- ably thousands of Pontiac residents who have never taken the trouble to tour the Pontiac Motor Division. There are still many Pontiac residents who fail to realize that the city has made substantial progress in the past few years in the development of its parks. Mahy have never visited the fine ‘beach at Pontiac Lake, or the Huron- Clinton Metropolitan Authority's beau- tiful Kensington Park layout. . Cranbrook, with its beautiful church, schools and grounds, attracts thousands of visitors from distant cities and even from foreign countries, yet many Pon- ™ tiae people never have taken the time to enjoy its beauties. ‘ We might well take a leaf from Mamiz EISENHOWER’s book and look about us. It shouldn't be necessary to have visitors from away to induce us ; to go to see these beauty spots. There ‘ are worth while sights to see right here 7 at home. Neliru and Red China Prime Minister Neurvu said in tta about his visit to Peiping in- dicates his trip has changed his policy of neutralism or modified his benevolent |. Im fact he told a welcoming | erowd of nearly 2,000,000 that the ° In addition, the Democrats did a magnifi- cent campaign job in Michigan—and well they should have with six years of expe- rience. Their campaign was tightly focussed on the issues they had decided to make the issues of the campaign. They chose the bat- tle ground. Having learned by long and painful and costly experience, the Democrats made more effective use of television. The governor's press agent, Paul Weber, poured out speeches till his fingers bled—speeches which were tailored expertly to his candidate and his theme. Ctra ena Voice of the People "God's Acad 7 Rea: geet eS! emic Crowning _- “EXCEPT YE BE CONVERTED, AND BECOME A6 LITTLE CHILDREN, . 29°" YB SHALL NOT ENTER INTO THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN.’ CHRIST” Se 5 P : awe __ MATE 10:3 © Norman Buckner Tells About Zionists and the American Council for Judaism (Letters will be condensed when neces — of lack of space Full name, end telephone number will pot be publ if the writer so requests unless the letter is critical in its netere.) The Zionist Organization has re- ceived much publicity recently re- garding its attempt to fight ‘‘anti- Israel propaganda and the ene- mies of Israel."’ Some of its re- leases have implied that the American Council for Judaism is ber but 10 per cent of American deup they still try to speak for all Jews. One of the principles eof the Council is that “Ne Jew or group of Jews can speak for, or represent, all the Jews of America.” The Council is neither pro nor anti-Israel. The Counci] hopes that Israel develops as a democracy in peace and prosperity along with the rest of the Middle East, and that its citizens enjoy life, liberty and happiness. But the national- ism of Israel must be confined to the boundaries of that State! 209 National Building Would Help Organize ‘Lonely Folks’ Club Having seen the letter from the ‘Lonesome Widow,” I am with her 100 per cent and would be only tod Case Records of a Psychologist Most-Divorces Develop From of Knowledge About Proper Behavior vf F i i F i i iz ; i | ris i | F % perience with this ‘Worry Clinic” feature. In. fact, one reason why I launched this column dealing with bitin i! tt : i i i ' Lack St. Martin of Tours Honored Next Week Actually, of f rit | | fe if é : i ti i A i Fer ; uf : Ht i : ti i ; F fH Es il I : i I FTE | Hi E Fe 2 ia our : sf it . i z i rh rf $2 ifz | Z g : fi : H cl Ht i i ; é r i rf if cf 3 f i 5 ‘| HH 2 F f a3 3 i [ i! 7 E FF Fee sf | | Fake | Hi i f 7 | ! , i is | 7 | H i i ll 5s i dee FES t it | H : : EE i i Ar vélle i | hd : uli | i & i il fr i i Ff f } | | th i | fi it th a i i i i il i" 3 tals ‘ F: i : | i 8s ! 1 t i z iH bE : | i i et i i i i! ae | i z i : F: of: %:9°8 : | 18 a fiait. 37 f 34 Faedi jy: = ; if | fF f | rf ii 43 pears i lll: 7 mn a& I gé Hi i fl i | t ? tt estlit tt i i i i ti ij Zs P| ™ * i ; $ +