School Bond Issue Draws Fire From Rancher "The doctor evidently has made study of the athletic activities in the smaller counties such as ours. In that opinion he states that the benefits obtained from the activities in these small counties are very small compared to the cost. a long time we have had ideas. In fact member we of have the wondered if any (athletic squad has received any lasting benefit. "Wouldn't most of them have been better off if they had devoted the time given to these studite? letic activities to their "Our squad wins a game now and then when they play teams from other communities such as Even if they should win ours.
there is but little satisfaction." Higby challenged the cost of school athletic activities. "Does anyone know the cost," he asked. "It must be high many "If we thousands should do away with each year. A Greenland rancher protested proposed $1,400,000 bond issue for new schools now under hearling in reorganized Dougias County today. issue will be voted "Lets get a little business in our (school ideas and we can save enough money to provide accomjodations for all our school Lou Higby, owner of a 000 acre ranch at Greenland, begged the taxpayers.
The bond issue will raise taxes in Douglas County 7.2 mills if it succeeds, Lowell Baumunk, Douglas County district superintendent of schools, said today. Baumunk said, "'The tax levy in Douglas County averages 49.6 mills now. The bond issue will result in a 7.2 mill increase bringing taxes to 36.8 mills on a county average." He said the county is about 5,000 people. The idea behind the bond issue, Baumunk said, is to raise Douglas County education to the same standards. as Denver and Colorado Springs schools.
Part of the $1,400,000 will be used to build a new high school one mile north of Castle Rock. The rest of the money will be used for schools additions to including seven male elementary rooms to be used as combination lunch rooms, recreation rooms and class rooms, Baumunk said. classrooms as they are needed by saving and not by borrowing." Higby said. "The 000 would be a lot of fun to spend. "A few might benefit from it but not the taxpayer.
Would the pupil be benefitted to any extent?" Higby said perhaps no family in the couny is more interested in schools than his family. have six grandchildren of which we are very proud," Higby said. "We want to have every opportunity that will be beneficial to them. "However, we are interested not only in the children of the county but also in the general welfare of the entire community. "In the Dec.
10 issue of the Douglas County News an opinion by Dr. Calvin an Grieder of Colorado University. letics we could build a classroom each year in an outlying district that needs an extra room. would save plenty of money to do this. The five multi-purrooms are not necessary pose and are proposed only as vote getters." Public hearings are now being held thruout the county on the bond proposal.
The final hearing will be held Thursday at 8 p. at Plum Creek school. Rites Thursday For J. B. Hildrich Services for Joseph B.
Hildrich, 633 N. Franklin will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in Lehmberg Chapel of the First Methodist Church. Dr. Ben F.
Lehmberg will officiate and interment will be in Evergreen Cemetery. Mr. Hildrich was born Feb. 28, at White County, Ill. and came to Colorado Springs in 1898.
He was one of the oldest painters and decorators in the City, and had never retired. He was member of the First Methodist Church. He and his wife, Alice had been married 54 years last July, and were active in many square daneing groups in the region. They had been special guests at the Denver Golden Wedding Anniversary Ball held in the Cosmopolitan Hotel, and were known 8.8 the "Dancing Kids." They had belong. ed to the Broadmoor Promenaders for six years.
Mr. Hildrich was one of a family of 10 and only one sister survives. He was an honorary member of the Junior Chamber of Commerce. His wife and sister, Mrs. Mary Lewis of Little Rock, Ark.
survive him. The only daughter preceded him in death last Pallbearers for the service will be: Bill Matheny, Frank Grindinger, Al Girard, Don Lawrie, Clayton Lind, Kenneth Gammon. Honorary pallbearers: Tom Roberts, Maurice Glass, Willard, P. Davis, Howard Palmer, Edwin Langdon, Charles Young, Henry Novak, Clarence Anderson, Ernest Chase, Harold Heyse, Heyse, Don Autry, Ralph Pendergrast, W. D.
Slaughter, Stanley Heyse, Fred Schneider, E. Marlo County GOP COLORADO SPRINGS Officers Select March 12 GAZETTE TELEGRAPH EI Paso County Republican Chairman Weldon Tarter said a meeting of the parCentral Committee has been (ty's scheduled for 1:30 p.m. March 12 in a room of the District Court. Purpose of the meeting will be to elect party officers, 88 required by law every two years. Tarter 1 said Tuesday he had not yet decided whether he was candidate for re-election as county party chairman.
also announced the Lincoln Day Dinner of El Paso County Republicans will be held at the Broadmoor Hotel the night of Feb. 10. The main speaker schedof the Third Congressional Disuled is Rep. a J. Edgar en Chenoweth trict.
The dinner will be held that day in order to permit a number of the county party members to attend the $100 a plate "Dinner With Ike" at Denver Feb. 12, in which a closed-circuit television setup will bring the group an address by. the president. New Construction Trades Council to Receive Charter Ceremonies climaxing a successful effort to weld the AFLCIO construction unions of southern Colorado into a single labor organization will be held here Saturday. The charter of the new Southern Colorado Building Construction Trades Council will be installed during a banquet in the Antlers Hotel, according to Ed R.
Nelson, council manager. More than 100 labor leaders and their wives will attend the affair. Charter presentation will be made by Robert E. Shadix of Denver, regional director of the AFLCIO Building Trades Dept. The council is composed of 18 construction unions with 7,500 members in 35 east and southern Colorado counties, Nelson said.
He predicted the number of union members under council jurisdiction will reach 12,500 before the end of the year. Larry A. Ader, business agent of Carpenters Local 515 and president of the council, will act as master of ceremonies at the dinner. Ader said the guests will clude international officers of affiliated unions, members of the Colorado Industrial Commission, AFL-CIO headquarters representatives, and leaders of the Colorado Labor Council, the Denver Area Labor Federation and the Northern Colorado Building Trades Council. A business session of delegates from the Colorado Springs, Pueblo and Durango units of the council will be held in Carpenters Hall Saturday afternoon.
The wives will be treated to a tour of the Air Force Academy. Dist. 11 Give Once Club to Cancer Fund The Give Once Club of District 11 joined the 1960 fight against cancer by presenting the El Paso County Unit of the AmerCancer Society a check for nearly $924. The Cancer Society donation is the second largest the District 11 GO Club will make this year. Of the 11 health and welfare agencies it helps support, only the munity Chest will receive a larger amount, according to Stephen W.
Mindock, GO Club Committee chairman. The nearly 600 school employees enrolled in GO Club have allocated pledged a total of $12,476 which is in accordance with the expressed desires of members, Mindock said. AID IN WAR ON CANCER District 11 Give Once Club, American Cancer Society. the Cancer Society, are Dr. president of the Board of San Isabel Ranchers Ask Probe of Forest Service COLORADO SPRINGS- THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1960 four members of the music screening committee of the SELECT MUSIC--Above are Educators Association, picking music to be played at a reading clinic Pikes Peak Music at Cheyenne Mountain High School Saturday.
From left are Charles Callahan, Cheyenne Mountain High School; John Stowe, Air Academy High School; Floyd Frame, Harrison High; and Bernard Ehrlich, Cheyenne Mountain Elementary Schools director. The 12 directors in the PPMEA will hear and conduct 36 selections at the Saturday clinic performed by an all star high school band of players picked 11 participating high schools. From these selections a program will be chosfrom the for a massed and all star band concert to be held Mar. 15 at the City Auditorium. en (Gazette Telegraph Photo) Film Society Shows Unusual Movies Friday From the archives of the Museum of Modern Art in New York come the unusual reels shown by the Film Society Friday night.
Lew Tilley, society president who selected the program, said the main feature will be part of the footage shot by the great Russian film maker, Sergei Eisenstein, in Mexico in 1930-31, Eisenstein had sketched a scenario of six episodes to reveal all the passion and beauty of Mexi-. can life, from the swamps of Yucatan to the snows of Popocatepetl, and from the life of the bracero to death in the bullring. He was never able to assemble his "Que Viva Mexico" in final form, but other producers carved "'Thunder Over Mexico" and "Time in the Sun" from Eisenstein's material, The shorter feature will be "In (the Street," made by James Agee and associates to explore candid photography as a means of entering into the vital stream of a great city. "In the Street" is based on shots obtained along 105th Street on New York's East. Side.
Friday's meeting of the Film Society, at 8 p.m. in the music room of the Fine Arts Center, is open to members only; however, anyone may join the society at this time. Those who already are members may bring one guest each. The society will elect officers and discuss a new membership plan, Tilley said. $180,000 Permit Issued For Filter Plant Work A representative of Lembke Construction Co.
took out a 000 building permit Wednesday morning at the office of County Building Inspector W. A. West for an addition to the city's Mesa Filter Plant. The permit was taken out by W. D.
Ritchie of the company on behalf of the city. The addition will measure 40 by 55 feet and will be located on the 80-acre tract and 235 feet northeast of Road. FIGHT In accepting the contribution, Dr. Leo L. Nassimbene, president of the Board of Directors of the El Paso County Unit, praised the GO Club plan as an excellent method of organized giving.
He said the increasing number of GO Clubs being formed in the county means better support for the extremely important research and educational projects conducted by the Cancer Society. El Paso County Unit records show that 36 of the 69 GO Clubs in the county are now making continuous contributions to the Cancer Society. In the fiscal year beginning September 1, 1959, over half the previous years contribution has already been received from GO Clubs. DANCE Stephen W. Mindock, displays the amount of school Accepting the contribution for R.
F. Dillon, medical advisor, Directors, Vista area joined forces with the Pikes Peak Region ranchers today by demanding an opportunity to air their grievances with the Forest Service before Congress. In a letter to Rep. Michael Ker. win (D-Ohio) 26 ranchers in the San Isabel Forest joined forces with Pike National Forest ranchers urging Congressional hearings being re-opened on requested $10 million additional tion to their regular budget by the Forest Service.
Kerwin is. chairman of the committee which held the hearings, the House Appropriations subcommittee on the Interior. The San Isabel Forest petition was signed by ranchers thruout the area from Canon City to the southeast to Leadville on the north. About three counties were included in the sign-up. Spokesmen for the group stated they could have obtained many more signatures but because of pressure of time, registered as many signers as possible.
They hope to re-open the hearings within the next week. Rep. Keith Thomson (R promised support to the bitter ranchers protesting Forest Service administration in Colorado last week after the Wyoming man learned of the controversy in Colorado between the ranchers and the government agency. San Isabel Forest ranchers had the same complaints to register to Congress as the Pike National Forest group. The Buena Vista-Salida ranchers told Kerwin the Forest Service refuses to recognize the state laws which Colorado people abide by.
The incident sparking the statement, was Buena the case Vista of who Homer had five head of cattle confiscated by group of Forest Rangers last August who attempted to sell the rancher's cattle at the Salida sale ring. A Colorado brand inspector, Bob Dilley of Canon City, found the federal employees in violation of Colorado brand and livestock laws and refused to let them sell the confiscated cattle. Carl Rundell, owner of the Salida sale ring, refused to allow sale Ranchers in the Salida-Buenajof Truck Upsets When Driver Falls Asleep A pick-up truck driver escaped what could have been possible serious injury Tuesday when his truck, loaded with 1,800 pounds of steel, left U.S. Highway 85-87 three miles south of Fountain and turned over onto its top. The truck driver, Edward Lutz, 33, Arvada, told investigating State Patrolman Gordon Baumgardner that he had fallen asleep at the wheel of the vehicle and when he awakened he thought he could drive the truck out from the unpaved area to the south of the highway, but didn't see a snow covered concrete culvert.
Baumgardner reported that the vehicle left the right side of the road and traveled 319 feet in a barrow pit before striking the snow covered concrete culvert. After striking the culvert the pickup truck flew thru the air for 32 and landed in an upright position with the front suspension of the vehicle torn completely off. The truck dug into the ground and then rolled over one half turn coming to rest on its top. Baumgardner said the truck, valued at $3,000 was demolished. Woman Injured In Car Collision Julia Ann Carpenter, 64, 1815 N.
Tejon St. suffered minor injuries when the car she was driving was struck broadside by a car driven by Gerald Melvin Smith, 19, 113 W. Brookside at the intersection of South Tejon Street and Brookside Street Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Carpenter suffered bruises and abrasions of the right leg below the knee as a result of the accident.
Investigating State Patrolman, Gordon Baumgardner reported that Mrs. Carpenter was southbound on Tejon Street and was passing thru the intersection with the green light giving her the right of way. Smith was eastbound on West Brookside Street and when he attempted to stop for the red light, the brakes on his car failed and his vehicle continued on into the intersection striking Mrs. Carpenter's auto on the right side. Boy Scout Troop 69 Plans Hot Cake Supper Boy Scout Troop 69 at Ascension Lutheran Church announced plans today for a bot cake supper Friday night.
A menu of hot cakes, sausage, coffee and milk will be served from 6 to 9. p.m. Friday at the church, 3502 Holiday Lane. The public is invited. The pancake supper is the Annual money raising project.
Funds raised from the supper will bel used for additional equipment needed by the troop and for expenses of the summer camp session at Camp Alexander, John S. Talbott, troop leader said. The scouts will serve the supper which will be cooked by an adult ladvisory committee of the the cattle because he felt it was "an illegal The rangers had no condemnation papers on the cattle, no legal confiscation instruments and proof of ownership. Winters had to pay $373 1 in cash to Jacob Jauch, a Salida Forest Ranger, before Jim Lucas, a Lead. ville Forest Ranger, would tel turn the rancher's cattle.
The San Isabel Forest ranchers told Kerwin in their letter to him today that the Forest Service has "spent untold amounts of money for experiments, the results of. which they themselves refuse to recognize." Kerwin was told Forest Service policy of eliminating grazing had cut the tax assessment base in most of the mountain counties 50. per cent. The ranchers asked for a chance to testify before Congress on the "corruption in the administration of Forest Service lands in Colorado." The San Isabel Forest group at: so protested secrecy of adminise tration of the Forest Service ale fices and suppression of the g9f: ernment files and "This agency is destroying what it was created to protect at the expense of the taxpayers," the Salida-Buena Vista ranchers toid. Kerwin.
JACK ZINSER Columbia Savings Names Manager Of Branch Here Kenneth King, president of Columbia Savings and Loan Association, announced the appointment of Jack Zinser, as vice president and manager of the Colorado Springs branch at a staff dinner Wednesday night at the Broadmoor Hotel. important post has been vacant since the sudden death of highly esteemed George Bauman last June, who had been with Columbia over 20 years," King said, "and, of course, we have taken great care in our selection. Jack's long administrative experience in the Savings and Loan field and his sincere interest in civic affairs makes him a valuable addition to our talented and conscientious staff." Zinser recently resigned his pesition as executive vice president and manager of the Peoples Savings Loan Association of Chillicothe, where he had been associated for 12 years. A graduate of Knox College in Galesburg. he was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa national Honocary fraternity and Phi Delta Theta social fraternity.
Zinser served as a Naval Lieutenant and had 18 months of sea duty in the Pacific from 1943 to 1946. Past president, of the Greater Peoria Savings and Loan League, Zinser also served as a committee member of the Illinois and Loan League and the U. S. Sayings and Loan League. He was vice president of.
the Chillicothe Chamber of Commerce and cutive of the Boy Scouts, first Chairman of the Chillicothe Planning Commission, one of the founders of the Chillicothe Downtion, and a member of the Peoria town Shopping Center AssociaCounty Housing Board. Althe new to Colorado, Zinser and his wife, Betty, will arrive here Feb. 14. Their four grown children are Jerry, an 1 Ensign with the U.S. Coast Guard: Jean Zinsec.
Slonneger of Peoria, James, a sophomore at Bradley University in Peoria, and Betty Ann, sophomore at the University of Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Zinser will reside ati4 Westpoint Road. King reported that Columbia cilocation to reserves and undivided for 1939 were the highest in the histagy of the institution.
He also reported that assets of Columbia Savings increased by a record $5,942,803.63, or 13.77% in 1959, reaching the all-time high figure el $49,069,307.32 at years' end. He reported the payment dividends, to savers totaling $1,382,416.51 in 1959, being 11.65% above the 1958 figure. The year end statement of the institution reflects capital and reserves increased to $3,575,784.83, representing 19.59 per cent of the conventional and construction loan mortgage, portfolio of the institutien and 8.78 per cent of the savings accounts of the institution. The association reports a gain of 2,064, or 11.04 per cent, in savings account holders, bringing the total savings account holders of the institution as of Dec. 31, 1959, to 20,951.
Loans made during the year exceeded $13 million. During 1950 the Columbia ings' Colorado Springs branch was expanded to double the previous floor area and the Pueblo office moved to new and more, spacious quarters, The association will open a branch office in Fort Colins during 1960, making a total of five Columbia locations: Denver (heme office), Littleton, Colorado. Springs, Pueblo and Fort Collina. Court of Amaranth Organization Planned A meeting of persons interested in organizing a Court of the Order of the Amaranth in the Pikes Peak Region will be held at the Masonic Temple, 455 El Paso Manitou Springs at. 7:30 -is p.m., Friday.
Announcement made by Bertha M. Halfyard, grand royal matron for the Grand Court of Colorado of the order. Persons who are already memhers of the Masonic affiliated order and others eligible to membership are invited to attend the sheeting. HAS DRAFT ADLAI PLANS MADISON, Wis. (UPD) Altorney James E.
Doyle, head of. Americans for Dernocratic Action, says he will ansounce Thursday plans of a nationwide group draft Adlai E. Stevenson for president. Angelo Bonicelli, Retired Truck Gardener, Dies Angelo Bonicelli, 105 W. Arvada retired truck gardener and Colorado Springs businessman, died in a local hospital Wednesday.
Mr. Bonicelli was born 9, 1889 in Bergamo, 0. Italy. He came to the United States in 1912 and lived one year in 1 San Francisco and another year in Salt Lake City before coming to Colorado Springs. He entered truck gardening and other business intrests in Springs and in 1954 he retired following 40 year of work.
Mr. Bonicelli was preceded in death by his wife, Mary, in 1953. He is survived by two sons, Sylvio and Joseph Bonicelli, both of Colo-1 rado Springs; six grandchildren; three brothers and two sisters all living in Bergamo, Italy. The rosary will be recited in the Swan Funeral Home Drawing room at 7:30 p.m. Monday.
Rehigh mass will be recited quiem at 9 a.m. Tuesday at St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church. Interment will follow in Evergreen Cemetery. City Issues 14 New Home Permits Permits for 14 new homes have been issued recently by the office of the city building inspector.
Seven of the permits were taken out by Sproul Homes for $11,500 to $13,000 frame houses in the 700 block of Bryce Street. Other permits included the following: Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Burgan, $18,000, brick veneer residence, 2315 Marlborough St. Smartt Construction 000, frame house. 6 Garo St. Shepard Construction $12,. ath-000, brick veneer residence, 1412 Monteagle St.
Smartt Construction 000, frame residence, 119 Balfour St. Shepard Construction 500, brick veneer residence, 2222 Clarkson St. Smartt Construction Co, frame house, 125 Balfour St. Shepard Construction 500, brick veneer dwelling, 2214 Clarkson St. Rev.
Hurley Begun, Will Preach Last Sermon Sunday High School Musicians Join In Reading Clinic Saturday The cream of the crop, of the area's young musicians will perform together for the first time Saturday at a reading clinic, sponsored by the Pikes Peak Music Educators Association, to be held at Cheyenne Mountain High School. The PPMEA has chosen 108 bandsmen from 11 area high schools to play in an all star band This band will perform for members of the association at the Saturday reading clinic and again on Mar. 15, when with massed bands from the schools, it will present a concert in the City Auditorium. Ralph Levy of Pueblo Junior Colliege will conduct both bands at that time. Saturday's sessions, however, will be held from 10 a.m.
to 12 noon and from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., for the purpose of letting band directors in the area hear new music which is available for program use and contests played by, a select group of musicians. Twelve directors will conduct the 36 selections to be played Saturday, and from these pieces the Mar. 15 program will be selected. The participating schools and their band directors are Air Academy High, John Stowe; Vista, Lou Patrick; Calhan, Lloyd Brewer; Cheyenne Mountain, Charles Callahan; Florence, Joe Rocco: Fountain, Dale David; Harrison, Floyd Frame; MonuFrancis DiMarco; St. ment, Mary's, Rei Christopher: Widefield, David Austin; Woodland Park, Bob Kelpe; and Colorado College, Dr.
Earl Juhas. The massed bands of the schools perform every year, but this is the first year an all-star band has been picked. The members of the select group were by their respective directors, auditions were held on Dec. 12. 1959 to decide upon place in the group.
The auditions were conducted by a committee of directors. Members of the all star band are as follows: Flutes, Judy cell, Gene Sue Riegel, Martha Gates, and Betty Hoebel, all of Cheyenne Mountain; Marilyn Manning, Harrison; Linda Tudor, Air Academy; Mary Runyan, Cheyenne: Sally Chinn, Air Academy; Cindy Proctor and Charline New Bids Asked On Tree Repair New bids for trimming and pruning city trees damaged in the snowstorm last fall will opened at 10 a.m. Feb. 17 in the City Council chambers, it was reported today by James Taylor, director of the Parks and Recreation Dept. The first bids for this work were rejected by council at its last meeting as being in excess of funds available.
Taylor said the forestry division is continuing its trimming in city parks in order to get a better idea on costs of doing the work. These city costs will be stacked up against bids submitted by private firms when the new bids are opened. The city will have the right tor accept or reject all bids, so possible the city will wind up trimming its own trees in and side parkings. Three of the 12 areas in Colorado Springs have already been designated to be done by the forestry division workers. Dr.
Hurley Begun will give his last sermon Sunday before his ice as minister of All Souls Unix retirement after 35 years of serve tarian Church. His sermon topic will be Ask About God: the Humanist, the Theist, the Naturalist: What Then is Religion?" Special music has been arranged for the occasion with a viola Cash, Harrison; Charlene Mech and Beverly Crawford, Monument: Myrna Johnson, Florence: Sharn Perotti, St. Mary's: and Kuhnke and Linda Owen, Cheyenne. clarinets: Sally Barnes and Evelyn 0'Kane, Cheyenne; Geraldine Gwyn, Harrison; Margaret Huffaker and Johnny Monument; Karen Culver, Air Academy; Roger Downey, St. Mary's; Roberta a Bender, Do Cheyenne; Mary Lee Peters, Widefield; Eva Ann Grundeitz, Alta Vista: Terry Taylor, Widefield; Gwen Morgan, Alta Vista: Betty Ormond, Cheyenne; Daren Morris, Alta Vista; Ralph, Hagan, Air Academy: Marilyn and Dianne Miller, Widefield: June Fansler, Harrison; Karen Ellis, Woodland Park.
and Nancy Seller and Mary West, Bass clarinets: Karen Tooley Nancy Taber, Cheyenne: Carolyn Manning, Harrison; and John Fertig, Woodland Park. CONTRA BASS CLARINET Marilyn Burnett, Cheyenne. BASSOONS Kent Nelson, Sue Brown, Cheyenne. ALTO CLARINETS Avery Keener, Lois Welch, Gale Nelson, Cheyenne. flat CLARINET B.
Bishop, Cheyennne. OBOES Davey Ann Singer, Cheyenne; Amy Quick, Harrison. ALTO Margaret Millhollin, Harrison; Linda Roach, Alt Vista; Tom Lorig, Cheyenne; John Chrissmar, Cheyenne: Dwight Engal, Monument; Sheryl Bradley. Cheyenne; John Hall, St. Mary's.
TENOR Frank Whittier, Mounment; Tom Brosh, Cheyenne; Sally Voran, Cheyenne. BARITONE Hill Culver, Air Academy; Bob Ogier, Florence. TRUMPETS AND CORNETS Nancy Donelson, Harrison: Dan Bull, Air Academy: Barry Smith, Cheyenne: John Hicks, Air Chuck Armstrong, ne; Vernon Morris, Alta Vista: Ruth Hougen. Cheyenne; Elizie Wilson, Fountain; Craig Moore, Air Academy; Patty Babitz, Florence: Ronald Chambers, St. Mary's.
HORNS Kay SheiPur-ton, Cheyenne; Clayton Satow, Cheyenne; Carlton Mortenson, Harrison; Steven Vincent, Harrison; Claudia Cavender, Cheyenne; an Baker, Harrison; Clifton Bradley, Cheyenne; Scott Atwell, St. Mary's. TROMBONES David Johnson, Cheyenne; David Gotwals, ment; Howard Crosslen, Air Academy; Danny Pavey, Alta Vista; Larry Gardner, Alta Vista: Ronald Archibald. Harrison: Harold Hartman, Florence; John Wilbar, Florence. SOUSAPHONES Ken Barber, Monument; Carl Williams, Frank Gray, Air Academy: Dexter Lawson, Alta Vista; Vic Gerber, Harrison; Dave Schlupp, Woodland Park; Jim Fisher, De.
Cheyenne; James Murray, CheyenBARITONE Bob Brenner, Cheyenne; Karl Arthur Hebelein, tump Fountain; Widefield; Beverly Lloyd, Florence; Mary Dey, Monument, PERCUSSION SNARE Donnie Disch, St. Mary's; Bill Ferguson, Air Academy; Joe Trabucco, Florence. CYMBAL Bruce Ferguson, Air. BELLS Academy, Frankie Morris, Cheyenne. TIMPANI Warren Brown, Cheyenne.
BASS DRUM Michael ColAir Academy, Providing the music for the reading clinic and the concert are Miller Music Colorado Springs Music A and A I Music and Colorado College, REV. HURLEY BEGUN solo, "If Thou Art by Back; played by Janice Elliott, and a vocal solo by Arline Kushnir, "The Lord Is My by Tschaikowski. Following the services coffee will served to his friends and well-wishers by Mrs. C. H.
Miller, Mrs. Simon Halle and Mrs. Emily Johnson. Since Dr. Begun will serve as minister emeritus, the formal 00- casion in recognition of his serv.
alice will be held during February, His friends thruout the community are invited to attend the Sunday morning service to hear the man who has been called the dean of Unitarian ministers. Exam Ordered For Non-Support: Case Defendant District Judge Austin Hoyt issued an order Wednesday' appoint ing Dr. Francis A. O'Donnell to psychiatrically examine a defendant charged with non support. The judge issued the order at the request of Attorney Jack K.
Agee, who was court-appointed do represent the defendant, Eugene A. Wasinger, 39, 2410 N. Cascade who is charged with failure to support two children, ages 7 and 8. Deputy District Attorney Robert L. Russel appeared for prosecution as Agee asked the court to add to Wasinger's earlier innocent plea the plea of innocent by reason of insanity.
Judge Host denied Agee's quest, pomting out that the court had no authority to accept such a plea, since it was not made at the sale time as Wasinger's earlier innocent plea. Agee then asked and was granted the hoquest to have a doctor appointed to examine the defendant. Agee said the defendant was examined by the same doctor in 1957 and that the doctor was familiar with the defendant's medical record. Judge Hoyt also vacated the trial date that had been sat 00. the case, next Tuesday, and re dated it for Feb.
23. VITAMIN SHORTAGE LOS ANGELES (UPD) Stud. fail to get the proper amounts of ies show that many Americans vitamins A and in their daily diets. The Western Growers ciation suggests a remedy: eat more fresh fruits and vegetables, which are major contributors of these vitamips. (right) chairman of the School employees' donation to the the El Paso County Unit of and Dr.
Leo L. Nassimbene, (Knutson-Bonus Photo),.