The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 16 of 20
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ANGRY
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30, 1962
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EDITOR’S NOTE - The
’ in Hollywood hope will lead!,
“History has shown But enter-
mediums go
WOODEN FLEET — Foot armed junta of Am South Viet Nam wooden navy
w« pictured near Saigon. The 34-foot vessel* *r* similar to thOM ta a ttest ef 900 being
built for use «B*lnst the Red ounrillaa. Thorn are \fXH man working on the project
____
QUESTION ANSWERED BY
BOSS WORTH $1 MILLION
'
MIAMI, fh. (AP)—A question,Washington early In World WaT|
t secretary asked her boss 12 H.
Other bequests by Davis include
r^r.ri'Zv’1” 7^ srs £*
$100,000 cash and income in
a million dollars to hef today.
The question was asked in the
Washington office of the Alumi-
num Company of America, where After Davis' suffered an illness
j|Sp5yn Mitchell was head in 1952, Miss Mitchell was seldom
receptionist and secretary to Ar-
thur Vining Davis, chairman of
the board.
41 knew Mr. Davis was setting
up an office in Miami,” Miss
Mitchell recalled Monday. “So I
asked him if he planned to take
“He was a hard worker and
added. “And he expected you to
take care of affairs at Journey’s
End, file-Davis hone south of
town,
A. Given, daughter of his late sec-
ond wife; $500,000 cadi to William
B. Given of New York City, her
iway from his side.
"He had become used to long
hours of work following the death
of his wife. Mrs. Elizabeth Hawk-
ins Davi^ in 1933 and he liked
_____|_, _ I vtah
Mitchell recalled Monday. “So I to krepH&y as muchof the time
^Afte? Davis afifered h critical
illness in 1956, MiSs Mitchell be-
work lone
complaint1
hours and work without
Mss Mitchell, bom" in Newport
News, Va., attended school in
Charleston, W.Va., where she
studied typing and stenography,
to work for Afcqa in
came his constant companion and
looked after him night and day
His will, filed for probate Mon-
day, left her $1 million in cash
and a palatial home opened only
last May.
She also will receive monthly
payment! for life from the income
of an insured trust
late brother
Albert Davis; $10,000 cash and
$337.50 insured life monthly pay-
ments to Anthony Petrilli, his
chauffeur.
To Agnes Flores, a former em-
ploye now living in New York,
IMMD* *■■■ *■ —
,000 and $150 a month for life;
$375 monthly for life to Carl W.
Voss, Davis’ former boat captain,
and other monthly payments for
life to former employe*.
Unnamed educational, religious
and charitable institutions are to
be paid at the discretion of trust-
ees income and principal from 75
per cent of the estate after pay-
ment of the specific bequests.
Davis’ wealth has ben estimat-
ed at $300 to $400 million.
ITALY SURROUNDS SMALL
REPUBLIC OF SAN MARINO
SAN MARINO (AP)—This olti- fog them. The stamps are printed 74-man palace guard with its
est and tiniest republic has in Rome. green trousers and scarlet jack
toned to make a lot out of a san Marfoo resfoents pay a 14 «*• They caM out the J2-man
Wtle. per cent tax on income. There is Police force With its blue and
..... ‘to ism. ' EM ’ '
postage
SSSTti
has no t
murder fo over a century. With
Stamps and its fingernail
the Square mile country
no troubles that a good tour- than 1%
annually.
ist season doesn’t solve. Every
year two million tourists come in There also is handsome profit and declared themselves the legal
to spend a little time and a lot from the sale of wines-rea San-
£jmongthe 15’20fl San
eh. JB stood only'100 yards form
the frontier. Right across the bar-
■Mi - - ■ ...w -v. . liP... - .der, Italy moved'-IB a heavily
peancountry ever wan back from 7®?™ JjA fmported, from Italy’s anned force of police to stand
San Marino claims one further i* boH than can be grown fo foe
VHsHneHnn It i* the only. Euro- cramped mountainside vineyards
wimm'iminn
to^TSKed&Man°st(X|j*^c^SviSd * ;i- „ ri.
mason fled here from DatamtialSJSS^^p^^f^^rt aly called it “routine fall maneuv-
' claims for ^rid^Warn'rMara6 ’n,e situation was explosive.
Marinus and gave his name to Tbere were fights fo Freedom
the nation perched atop rocky Mt. tions. Their panes bomtad San gqUare before the 15th century
Titano, 1.560 feet h^haS 12 ^* m
miles inland from Rimini on both camm marcltod^^^^^^ 1
Daly’s Adriatic Coast Jan*****
The capital and sole city, San ^ ^ Je^ fled herTtor The^ after a we* tfnerve-
Manno, still looks medieval with refuEe , “ wracking strain, moustached Do-
its ancient walls, its three famous ag*. ^ war Ran Marino went menico Morganti, foe Communist
and founded the republic 1,600
years ago. He" lat® >cane' St. 71,6 British
steep and
mobiles.
But San
modem ways.
IV SERVICE
CALL 582*4403
PROM'S
fun
Comet Wagons Feature Both
BBS W. Tens
Comet, complete with service savers such as
self-adjusting brakes, 36,000 mile major chassis
lubrication, and many other features making
your Comet less expensive to operate in addl-
to Comet's low, low price.
MOTORS
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k. - : ■. ■
heights is a retiring, httie-known is introduced. When the movies
executive named Lew Wasserman. became popular, many people
man and Us plans.
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The bow
of foe show business giant many
expect to grow into a eollossus
operates from an office no bigger
than the bedroom of a housing-
tract home.
He sits behind a small desk
with a view of a studio wall and
a parking space. His name does
net qpaai
appear on the office door, but
it is known and respected by
show people everywhere — Lew
Wasserman.
Tall, gentle-spoken and dressed
fo eternal black, Wasserman
foe president of MCA, onCe
commanding leader of the agency
Now, with an assist from the
Justice Department, MCA has
its-ageney-wfor-for
game. It has fashioned a ci
that includes: Universal Pictures,
highly successful producer of fea-
ture films; Revue Productions,
leading maker of television films;
Decca Records, long important in
to recoring industry.
As head man of the entire oper-
ation, Wasserman explained his
difoes: ‘Tm a paper-pusher.”'
When I remarked that Us desk
was devoid of paper, he replied:
“Oh, rye already pushed all foe
papers.’' It was 9 a.m. and he
was well into Us work day.
Pausing for a rare interview,
Wasserman expressed Us faith in
foe movie business.
supposed to have
•rd business, but it
‘‘Radio was
killed the record _ _
is doing better than ever.'Televi-
sion looked like the death of radio.
But the radio stations have gone
through a change of operation,
w recently that two.local
and I saw
stations sold to more than $10
million apiece.
“The movie business has been
adjusting to the changes that were
brought by the challenge of tele-
vision. We have had to change our
methods of production and of ex-
hibition.
Wasserman foresees the movie
Jl tto^^^ch13it^has fogged
behind in postwar years. HeUso
figures Hollywood to maintain its
historical position as world film
leader:
any other American industry,’’ he
remarked.
“The base of our operation will
costs here. It’s not merely the
production costs that can get out
at. hand overseas;., it’s tte
diem. When you take a hundred
people to a location and have to
pay expenses of $50 to $75 a day,
seven days a week, to each of
them, it can kill you.
haifeve to foe big-studio op-
We’ve already spent $10
to improve this lot '
million more.! the-future.’’
.
ORAL POLIOMYELITIS VACCINE
REQUEST FORM
That’s a $25-miliion investment:
that the big studio will last It •
had better.” !
Governor Says
Education Job
Tm h Sadi' j
DALLAS (API-North Carolina \
Gov. Terry Sanford said today he j
(Necessary For All Children Under 21 Years Old, Unmarried And
T Living With Parents)
Physicians of the East Harris County Medical Society, end their assistants, are hereby
requested and authorized to adminiiter Orel PeiiemyelrHe Vaccine to the child, cr
children, whose name (names) appears below:
thinks the South is doing a poor;
job of preparing a new generation ;
of school children.
He spoke before the commission •
on secondary schools of the South-
ern Association of Colleges and
Schools.
The governor said he did not
suggest that Southerners forsake
the past-"the good tilings of the
Wtmm ’ 1 to free
past, but we do need to free our-
selves of the weakening bondage
which has held us down... Our
children must prepare themselves
to be part of foe world, part of,
the dynamic new South, part of >
t&t toSbv to* own new —-
£ “I don’t think we are doing
doing a
good job of this in foe South,”
Sanford " ---------
said. “For that matter
don’t think foe schools across
America are doing what they are
“"“.Me of doing.”
s said foe South needs “bur
own and new kind of emandpa-
fok11 a hundred 500 proclamatkn whidi wi1! set
_ _ . This ^pnd of
proclamation can be written In
one word: ‘education.’ It must be
foe kind of education which series
excellence, reaches all, looks to
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Witnesses: (2)
N«mO. •MMUilHMMMtlMHHH
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(Please Write Plainly)
........ • -•••--j- ......
New Orleans Pickets
Communist Violinist
NEW ORLEANS, La. (APb-The
concert appearance d a violionist
from Communist Poland was
Picketed by about two dozen per-
sona-some of whom wore Aneri*
&H-cftp8, Then wereno
Wanda Wilkomlrria of fl» War-
saw Symphony was guest soloist
Tuesday night at foe fourth New
Orleans Philharmonic Symphony
subscription concert of the season.
SHOP TONIGHT TILL 9 PR.
OPEN DAILY 9 in. to 9 pm.
FOR HOW EDUCJtlKM PUN
FIELD ENTERPRISE CORP
(WORLD BOOK CHUB CRAFT)
For Information Without
Obligation CaN Your
Local Representative
EARL PERRY
Phone 582-7182
I
Affiant
■I ^ —l i . h,ll -----I
NO FRILLS
JUST Mr
DISCOUNTS
The regents
them to
council closed.’
______ Democrats raised
San Marino’s blue and white flag
over an abandoned iron foundry
SS.’Si JT
Ans^i?£sx«. aasasss jjss
road leading into San Marino. It-
alledit1
w*tr San Marino went nak»:
yield. —
... revolution of 1957. „ ’ “We have nodirice,” he said
JIarino bustles with That started when Mother Su- bitteriy. “We are under siegefry
. perior Veronica Serri reopened a an enormous force of foreign
Catholic school at a corrrartwbich troops.”
&SSecommfoftoJSi E ^mmuniM govermnent tad ---------- ,
3,wo Italians commute to ban a ordered dowdr , of the revolution were fired.
On that fori day the only foots
! foe revolution were fired.
As each Communist militiaman
UorWc marched up to prilce to turn in
Marino s ancient leg- his rifle, he fired «*e defiant shot
into the ait. ’ •
country a million dollars a year Sfottnu
1Il'Ste S «» *U"!.
art two joint captains-regent riect-
ForW-five em^oyes are ed for six month terms by the
to the post mice sea- council, Communist and So- Capt. Ettore Sozzl, highest officer
The police and foe army didn’t.
“My men carry carbines,” said
cialist regents then in office, see- of San Marino’s little army. “But
ing their alliance jolted out of the we never issue any bullets. My
—*~rity, dissolved the council men have never tad any firing
ordered new national elec- practice. H they tad ammunition
tions. they might only hurt themselves.”
They called out San Marino’s 8S- con Mart™ fonoed oeacefullv
man volunteer wmy withitsblue tack to its pieasarttllfefond prof-
ft ixtr-is1 x
majority ever since.
.ADMIRAI
iSTEREO&TV
’
YOUR CHOICE
Befora Priced This Low! Hurry Ordtr Now!
flair
Arizona Sponsors
De-Salting Plan
MEXICO CITY (AP)—Arizona
Gov. Paul Fannin says his state
content from Colorado River wa-
ters used to irrigate rich Mexi-
can cotton lands.
Noting that foe United
and Mexican governments hfe
working on the prohlem, Fannin
1 Arizona also should coop-
erate. He said his state and the
Mexican border stale of Sonora
are working in complete harmony.
The governor stopped in Mexico
City Wednesday en route
Puebla, where be will be honored
as “Mexico’s Best Friend in 1962”
by Mexican hotel men.
Cotton growers hi Mexico’s
MpylfjftJi Valley, ‘in recent y/tars
have complained the Colorado
NO MONEY DOWN
START PAYING NEXT YEAR
FIRST PAYMENT DUE MARCH, 1963
PRICES INCLUDE FULL FACTORY WARRANTY AND
90-DAY SERVICE IN YOUR HOME—Delivery optional
at slight extra cost.
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treble tone control and Lighted channel indicator.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101263/m1/16/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.