Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1952 — Page 13
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Inside Indianapolis
By Ed Sovola
IT IS my painful duty to report I fell down on a job. For sale: One pair of swimming trunks. Everyone should know by now the Broad Ripple pool is the scene of much swimming activity. The Olympic final trials, July 4, 5, 6 are the reason. : Hoosier swimmers 'who have hopes of wiggling their fins in Helsinki next month have beén scrut-
inized in and -out of water. Indiana is going to | have sons and daughters swimming under the #
Stars and Stripes. That's for sure. A similar view is being entertained by g supporters of the flashy Town Club of Chic. swimmers. The only way to see how they stack up against our swimmers is to swim with them right? * ¢ + MARGE HULTON, Marilyn Calderini and Jody Alderson smiled prettily when they were intro-
duced by Jim Clark, Indianapolis Athletic §
Club swimming coach. “You're on your own now,” said Jim. Fine. “What will it be first, free style or breast stroke?” I asked. Marilyn and Jody are free style swimmers. Marge, cochampion of the 200-meter national breast stroke event and a member of the 1951 Pan-American team, said the first thing on the program were limbering up exercises. Marilyn, junior national 50-yard free style champion, and Jody, runner-up in the 100-meter AAU event, spread a blanket at the pool's edge. ¢ ¢ @
“WE HAVE A SERIES of exercises,” said Marge. “It's best to limber up the muscles before [going in.” Jim Clark guffawed. I knew what he was thinking. My muscles, the few: that have been with me for several years, were plenty limber. The three members of the weaker sex (I can't write that with a straight face) took their positions for the first exercise. Marge called it the “Air Corps,” and we all jumped up 15 times throwing our arms above our heads and kicking our legs about. . > > » NO. 2 CONSISTED of bending at the hips. As the arms were stretched out, Marge said to inhale deeply and as they were hauled in, she said to exhale. We did that 15 times. My lungs were surprised. Still upright, we folded our arms behind our backs and proceeded to try to dislocate our backs. If we had twisted 20 times instead of 15, I'm sure we would have succeeded. “Knees straight, arms over the head and bend and touch the opposite toes and up,” chanted Marge. (Marge is not being quoted exactly and you certainly understand why not.) The pale blue, crystal clear water in the pooi looked more inviting by the minute. Why aren't
we satisfied with just paddling and splashing in
It Happised Last Night By Ear
on hw RAR hh AH wry A Bg EA CI " as 3 i Ck vile K, June 24° = My Tassels lay crimson to my ‘campaign to’ get Woy” to
abolish the word; “very.” Some of you readers out” enough to write in nominating other words and terms for the slaughter, such as: “As a matter of fact . .. Oh, really? ... I've got news for you... No kidding?" ’ I'm a “No kidding” guy, even say it thoughtlessly sometimes when hearing of a surprising death. There's a report that somebody said “No kidding?” once to a woman who told them she'd had quadruplets, “My, how he’s grown,” is another one—what'd we expect him to do—shrink? I was going along beautifully listing expresgions to be hatcheted. “Already” was one bit of New Yorkese I thought should stay. “Come on, already” is amusing to my ear. The same goes for “ALL RIGHT ALREADY,” when you mean for somebody to shut up. My son Slugger was heard telling his chum the other day, “Drop dead already.” Milton Berle helped circulate these outside New York. Comedian Jackie Gleason did as well for “And a-way we go.” eS, > & LUCILLE BALL, Marie Wilson, Red Skelton and the rest all contribute hunks of forgivable and welcome slang. On Broadway now the B-Bop story—almost anything with the word “crazy” in {t—is the rage. Sample: A B-Bopper sees some shishkabob on a flaming stick. “Man,” he says, “dig that crazy tooth pick.” I wasn’t campaigning for anybody to do away with the lovely, softly pleasant ‘“you-all” of Georgia and Florida, nor the sweet-talk of Texas where a whopping big new Cadillac may be “a little ole Cadillac.” Nor was I attacking the beloved drawl of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, etc., as spoken occasionally by comedian Herb Shriner. Pa le +1 WAS JUST crusading for abolition of some trite, useless deadwood. But about my face-reddening experience. L. E. Teenhoutz of Roslyn Heights, N: Y., writes to me attacking the expression “any more.” He complains us Mid-Westerners use it, “Today in Indiana one can hear it 50 times
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, June 24—We collided with Master Frederick Allen the other day, and notice that he has become cheerfuller as time goes by. Fred's sadness is not assumed, he knows the world is ridiculous, but the world will not agree with him. Fred is preoccupied with the movies at the moment, since his unhappy tilt Fa ‘at television, and has just finished a chore as Ginger Rogers’ husband in a film called “We're Not Married.” Mr. Allen is always just a little gloomier when he returns from. Hollywood than when he goes there. “The true Californian,” says Fred, “Is a man with an orange for an Adam’s apple. The only reason for going to California at all js-to work in the movies -. or retire, and they're both Mr. Ruark pretty simple. After you work in pictures for a little while you can't get a job any more 80 you are in the perfect spot for retirement.” Mr. ‘Allen is plotting heavily against the. television people at the moment. He says that people must be made movie conscious once more, and has devised some Allenesque recipes for the resurgence of the silyer screen. oo o> oo THESE INCLUDE the utilization of holes in doughnuts and the bottoms of coffee cups to plug movies, so that a man may become conscious of empty theaters the very first thing in the morning. % an you need,” explains Fred, “is a little circular placard in the doughnut hole, saying ‘come seé such-and-such at the Paramount’ and the same at the bottom of the cup, When the man eats his sinkers and drinks his coffee in the morning, he immediately starts thinking about the movies.” Fred is thinking about reverse air- conditioning for theaters, so that patrons may be sucked
unexpectedly into theaters by the vacuum. He
also sees a chain of false-front theaters; for people who only go to theaters to eat. Fred would have it look like a movie-house, with all the necessary candy, pop-corn and soft drink apparatus, but would avoid showing any movies whatsoever. ; ¢ @ TI THINK HIS best scheme, in a motorized world, is to have a series of phony detour signs leading to a slight precipice, at the bottom of . which is a drive-in theater.
there were nice :
Fane U
‘Museles, Now They're Off Key
SWIMMING CHAMPS — "Mr. Inside” and Town Club mermaids (left to right) Marilyn Calderini, Marge Hulton and Jody Alderson "limber up.
water? Why do we have to go breaking records and backs? After you get a trophy or a medal, what good is it? Silly questions like that kept cropping up. > AFTER THE FIFTH routine which called for putting your arms behind your head and with the legs apart you were to touch the opposite knee with an elbow, twisting the body each time, I asked how many more exercises, Marge said 10 more. I pulled a leg muscle during No. 6. Marge called No. 7 “Burpies.” In that one, a variation of the simple push-up, the object is to scramble the intestines. To insure a stomach aché, No. 8 is called “Twisties” and this completes the job. No. 9 was easy. We did 15 push-ups to calm down. To further complicate matters, we had the sun in our eyes. o> > ANYTHING A NORMAL human being would not attempt to do with the body, the three Town Club girls did with ease and dispatch. And they seemed to be enjoying themselves. The sun was just a spot of blue or brown, I don't know, when Marge announced they were ready to swim. “Are you planning to swim an hour with us?” she asked. In the concrete with the perspiration off my brow I scrawled “No, good luck.” Just step over me, boy, and let me be. I always shake this way on concrete.
’
Campaign to Oust Corrine Slang’. Embarr
pe ae ENB ST TL “Ea I.
‘an hour in- 50 different senses. Unfortunately, :
Mr. Webster never ventured that way.” Mr. Leenhouts had hoped ‘when he came East he’d never hear or see “any more” any more. So where'd he see “any more”? ¥ In my erudite column’-the one that urged better English. o> SS THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . «,The Marilyn Monroe-Joe DiMaggio romance is on again—right here in N. Y. The biénd beauty sneaked in, and they dined at
Ave., occasionally with an arm around each other while her skirts blew beautifully in the breeze. Fifth Avenuers gaped at her glamorous gams and bare shoulders.
Then they took a long auto ride and Marilyn's head was often on Joe's strong shoylder., Joe and Marilyn were coer oned by Joe Mellino, lly haberdasher; and Joe D.’s famous roommate, Gentleman Georgie Solotaire. Gypsy Rose Lee and Artist Julio De Djego will end their marriage when she returns from Europe . .. Chic Farmer,
Jacquie the publicist, has bad scars from a fight outside the Club Carr . . . Bob Levitt, associate editor of the
American Weekly, and beautiful Sherry Shadburne, will marry as soon as he gets the papers certifying Ethel Merman’s divorce from him. He's about to introduce Sherry to his youngsters . Some -folks think Miss New York (Jacquie Loughery) is the prettiest of the Miss Universe crowd. N. Y. Police Com. Monaghan's Bs8igneY a sleuth to trace leaks to newspapermen . .. Jimmy Roosevelt's around in his Marine major's uniform —for three weeks only. Navy Lt. Ed Luckenbach, back from Singapore and about to be discharged, stopped at Leon & Eddie's to visit old gal friend Sherry Britton. Success, says Russi Landi, is backbone, not wishbone . + . That's Earl, brother.
Fred Allen Plotting Against Television
braced the pratfall, the swished-wrist dance routine, or the spitting-on-people, hurling ice cream or paintpots techniques that seem to be so popular these days. He has nearly always worked with the reverse cliche, which is wit-within-wit and for a long time his following in radio was fanatic, I still think he's essentially a radio commodity, and that cluttering up his Sialog YL visual aids hurts it. @ HERETOFORE FRED has only enjoyed mild success at the movie dodge, which he never took very seriously so long as the radio show commanded the bulk of his attention. But TV more or less slew the comic aspects of radio and Fred didn’t get along very well with TV, so with typical Allen logic I think he is now out to slay TV via the movies in order to bring back his satisfactory old days of Allen's alley on the radio. In order to do this, he of the lugubrious puss must now become a great romantic lead, or some-. thing equally revolting, and it will not surprise me to see him playing juveniles, and referring to himself as the rich man’s Sonny Tufts. Mr. Allen has a most invéntive and tricky mind. He is not really interested in movies and Hollywood. He just wants to bring back radio, the hard way. .
Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith
Q—What could be the trouble with an Irish juniper that is turning brown clear through the middle of the tree? Mrs. L. C. . A~=It is not uncommon for these trees to be brown -in the center. But (especially if the condition is one that’s just appearing) examine the tree carefully for red spider and scale. You will have to examine the branches very closely to find the tiny spider mites. You may be able to see their webs easier than the mites themselves, Scale insects are hatching now into the crawler stage on a great. variety of both evergreen and de-
- ciduous plants. Both mites and the scale are
unusually bad this year. Q—How can I make flowers last in a corsage?
you pick your. flowers for a corsage take a container of water into the. garden with you and plunge the cut stems intosthe water at
of ‘age, inclusive. (One ins | RROWS mA Sripe-Tabast. Lhe 1949 tow=priued-car an -polly) ia Rew 2 ( Eflhw ged bh Huds i “a - $3600-a-year {rica Ngo " sil ert id out of his paycheck: buying a $10, 000 house, 7} ; x ota State Tax A810. re : Tax Amount Still, he feels that taxes and Coun and Townshi death are inevitable. State ..ccooennes «++. $100.75 ty P
Le Pavilon, and walked on 5th
(None of this romantic looking basket.
The Indianapolis MASTER SALESMEN UNVEIL THEIR ig a
Making People Want To Come Back Hs
CHAPTER TWO another which offers similar acBy CONRAD N. HILTON commodations at Somparabis
e t. This hel You COULD buy anything from an ore wagon to a 4 tie pa, ua Fh Bond thread at my father's general store in San Antonio, along these same lines we New Mexico. Crammed inside its adobe walls was the
might be able to offer, equivalent in variety of the A. & P., Woolworth'’s, Sears
In the Stevens, Chicago, we have the world's largest hotel. Roebuck and Milady's Specialty Shoppe.
Midis Ha in mind, we have changed the Steven's slogan to You could in ‘money, or read, “The World's Largest and you could barter with furs, wool Friendliest Hotel.” j or produce. You might even When this new slogan was dicker over a share in-a pos- announced to the personnel, we sible silver strike, taking a chance on parleying a grub-
simply said: “One hotel is like any other hotel. The difference stake into a few hundred thousand dollars.
is in how you treat the guesfs. Bartering like this is, of
All we ask of you is to be nice to people so they will want to course, the way selling began. Today's salesman can profitably
come back.” ~ = ” I GOT A tremendous thrill take a page or two from the horse-trader’s book when it
from being able to acquire the and" restored. to. their original Waldorf-Astoria in New York. comes to patience and tenacity colors by expert workmen For many years I had a picture and thinking up new approaches per wo . of it under the glass top of my for keeping a buyer interested. Actually, when you analyze
desk, across which I had written “the greatest of them all.” . selling as practiced right now, you find that remnants of the
I have every regard for all the old time principles and tra~ - barter are still discernible in a salesman’s talk with his pros-
dition attached to this famous hostelry. I'd have done nothing pect. Although the price asked is usually set, and not subject
to change, only expand constructively. The guests, old to any bargaining, there are and new, “come back.” plenty of other bartering points. » »
As I see it, successful sell- ” ing in any field adds up to just DELIVERY MIGHT be one, or servicing, or special advan-
that — making them want to come back. tages in the design and opera- (Copyright, 1982, by B. C. Forbes & tion of the product. So ER hn, Co.) It was on trips with my father to outlying ranches, mines
“Have Faith In Hits 'Em All—
Here's ‘Tax Bite’ On Average Family
PAGE wr
‘pened at the Plaza, in New York, when patrons learned that that man Hilton from the Wild West was to have a say in its sacrosanct operation.
Disapproval descended on me in an avalanche of letters wishing me the direst of fates if I “touched a speck of the sacred dust of the dear old Plaza.” - The first thing I did was to write a personal letter to each guest asking him to bear with me, assuring him I was as interested as he was in preserving the traditional atmosphere of the Plaza. I saw to it, too, that whatever “sacred dust” we felt needed removing would disappear at night, whenever possible. Almost surreptitiously the long-
Here is the second of a series of five articles in which some of America's most successful men tell how they reached the top.
and sheep camps that I learned what I think is a fundamental in successful selling. It is simply that most “no” answers are not nearly as final as they sound. With a new approach, a good percentage of them can be veered in the direction of “yes.” To me the fascination of any deal is the fact you never know what may make a man change his mind. You figure out one approach and fail, and then you think of another. Often it is the unexpected that turns the tide. The greater part of my own “selling” experience has been in the role of a buyer trying to get someone to sell me a certain hotel property at a price I am willing to pay. However, the basic. principle is the same, for sellers can, and often do, retreat as coyly as buyers. On my side of the fence, 1 have had to find out what factors will make a man willing
CONRAD N. HILTON—'No'
answers are not always final.
THE BRONZE lanterns were cleaned and rejuvenated. The marble and stone-work honed ‘to former brightness in an atmosphere of secrecy. Gradually the suspicions of the guests subsided, and acceptance of the new management flowered, Just as a salesman tries to analyze each individual customer, we in the hotel business try to analyze each particular segment of the traveling public which our hotels attract. It is important that we have a clear idea of what makes these people choose our hotel instead of
to sell, and price iS not always the main object. The salesman searches for the approach that will make his prospect buy, and here, too, price may not be the turning factor. That's why it is so important to keep probing. ~ » "® THERE'S NO BUSINESS like hotel business for learning to focus on the human side of selling.
The best illustration of this in my experience is what hap-
Vincent Peale. By IRVING LEIBOWITZ gallon; on beer, 83¢
per gallon. Moderate - consumption based upon nation-wide per- , ¢tapita averages ...... Poll Tax. Levied on Tnales, 21 to 49 yedrs °
LIKE THE weather, everybody falks about taxes but. fiobody does anything about them. Taxes are too complicated for the average Hoosier. He
The Family Yax'
This is how city, county, state and ' federal government taxes would affect you if you belonged to an avers age Indianapolis family with—
Property Taxes at the rate of 62.7c per $100 of assessed valuation.$ 18.43 Poll Tax. Levied on males, 21 to 49 years) . of age. (One poll)....
County and Township 19.43 City and Schools.... 113.69 Federal ............ 48151
Total ..vsvve. .se+ 3715.38 This amounts to $50.62 a month or for every $69.23 weekly paycheck a tax bite of $13.76.
If he ever does talk about them, he is inclined to shrug and say: “Well what can you do? You can’t: fight City Hall.” This expression covers a multitude of taxes. But the taxes remain, Perhaps the reason ‘for the average Hoosier's ‘inability to comprehend the “tax bite” is because the government through newspapers, radio and television—-talks about billions - of dollars of taxes for defense, for the dam or for a new sewer, But few Hoosiers figure in billions. So the tax is remote. » ” #”
1.00 Total County Tax .....$ 1943
City and School Property Taxes at the rate of $3.85 per $100 of assessed valuation,$113.19 Poll Tax. Levied on males, 21 to 49 years of age. (Oné poll)..
or hidden methods, drains off about one-third of every person's income, But Mr. Dortch disregarded the so-called hidden taxes and concentrated on direct taxes. He knew, for example, that there are about 100 different taxes levied upon an egg when it leaves. the chicken until it
_ 50
amusements. The husband and wife in this typical family use alcoholic beverages moderately and socially.
Adding all this up and Mr.
a gallon of gas; or about 650 gallons’ a .» year. sss 26.00 Autontobile License Tax. Car is sedan of Ford
Total City and School Taxes ....covveens...$113.69
Federal Taxes
Income Taxes Based
fra iesnserensin
DIRECT TAXES are bad gets on the breakfast table. or Plymouth type. ... 11.25 upon Revenue Act of enough out where you can see And that a 19-cent loaf of Dorich discovered: Dor i: YD. (Li- upon with 3 exempthem. But .the hidden taxes are bread is 9 cents taxes. And ONE—This average family cense good for 2 years.) BONS suvscssssosses $320.40 the bad boys. You can’t see that a $15 pair of shoes is $5 Spends $715.38 a year on taxes. Two members of the Gasoline Tax at 2c per them. 4 taxes. And that's out of a -$3600 a family drive the car, gallon .ieecennninnas One thing is certain. There But these are hidden taxes Year salary. ~ only one license due Automobile Excise Tax, is not a tax ‘that doesn’t find and Mr. Dortch felt the frac- TWO—Out of a weekly pay- PACH YOY. 1vervi.on 125 at 7% of manufacturits way to the consumer (and tional taxes were too involved check of $69.23, the family i B Premium T er's price in 1949 (tax that's you, brother). for precise calculation must give $13.76 for taxes IWSWTARCS Tel Ui Ta%, now 10%) amortized When some big corporation So he set out to find the total Lnis, of course, does not in- premiums of ‘outiof- over 5 years. . Origadvertises it paid $50 million {ax that can be accounted for Clude the many numerous hid- State 11f& iRBurance inal manufacturer's in taxes last year, you can rest girectly without running the den taxes. policies. Yearly premi- price — ‘$1200 ....... assured it didn’t come out of maze of hidden taxes. Here's how Mr. Dortch ar- um on $5000 of life Telephone Excise Tax at the company’s pocket. It came . 2.2 rived at his conclusions: surance is. $30 per 15% of $4.50 monthly out of the public's pocket. . : ne 5. wd. Pp rate for 4-party line. The company most likely MR. DORTCH took a typical State Taxes $1000. (This tax is Cigaret Excise Tax. The raised the price of whatever it Indianapolis family — husband, paid by the insurance federal tax is 8c per was selling to cover the tax. wife and child—and gave them Property Tax at the rate company.) seceseenes 4.50. package .i...iveiins To bring taxes ‘“down-to- 1019 low priced ¢ nd » of 15¢ per $100 of as- Intangibles Tax. Ap- Alcoholic Beverages. earth” for Hoosiers, The In- BWA pric ar, a an sessed valuation. plicable to savings ac- Federal tax is $10.50 dianapolis Times asked Carl average $3600-a-year income. (Total valuation, in- count at rate of % of per gallon on ‘“disDortch, research director of the Then, he let them buy a house. cluding auto and fur- 1 per cent. (This tax tilled spirits” and 29c Indianapolis Chamher of Com- with a current market value of niture—$2940.) ...... $ 441 is paid by the bank, per gallon on beer... merce to figure out the “tax $10.000. Gross Income Tax at 1% but reflected in re- Admission Tax. lc for
bite” on the average Indian- To make bis calculations run per cent on salary of duced interest rates.) 1.25 each 5c of admissions
apolis family. true to life, he gave the hus- $3600, less $1000 de- Cigaret Tax. Tax is 3c Price EE 9.00 ge x =» nd Social Security at 114% MR. DORTCH did his job band a package of cigarets a QUOHION. a vata nvr 32.50 per package. ......,. 10.95 of payroll (employee's well. day and allowed the average Gasoline Tax at 4c per Alcohollec Beverages. contribution, only.) .. 54.00
State tax on ‘‘distilled spirits” is $2.08 per
family $54 a year for movies, sporting events and other
It is generally agreed that the total tax, either by direct
News in Pictures—
Cameramen PI
. HAROLD BLUMENFELD is going to have to do some mental nip-ups to top that $2 darkhorse idea he pulled at the GOP convention in Philadel-
gallon. The car aver-
ages over 15 miles to Total Federal Tax .....$481.51
an Camera ‘Angles’
and his chief assistant, Robert Ellis, superintendent of UP Newspicture bureaus, are busy making plans to give the Chicago conventions the best pic-
phia four years ago, but he and ture coverage in American his small army of news pho- political history. tographers at the coming Chi- Mr.- Ellis will be on the
cago presidential conventions are going to do it or bust a strobe trying. As a matter of identification and explanation, Mr, Blumenfeld is the editor of United Press Newspictures, the great world-wide newspicture organiation which serves The Times. At the 1948 convention, Mr. Blumenfeld’s lensmen had shot the convention from every conceivable angle, with and with-
Windy City scene at least a week before the GOP convention opens on July 7 to get all set. He has a prop list of 116 different types of supplies and gadgets that he will take to Chicago from the UP Newspicture’'s New York office or purchase. there. The list runs the gamut from a mop and pail to portable stroboscopic light units and telephoto machines.
» » ” VARIOUS bureau chiefs, tele-
out “strobe” lighting—delegates in smoke-filled rooms, Photo engineers, and photogdelegates orating, delegates Traphers recruited from other
UP bureaus will begin piling in shortly thereafter, and long before the meeting is called to order UP Newspictures will have its whole convention crew on duty. Top executives, headed by UP’'s president, Hugh Baillie, will be on the scene to direct operations. - Mims Thomason, vice president and general manager of United Press Newspic- . tures, ' will supervise picture coverage. A 2000-foot square work-
with placards, delegates looking happy and delegates looking glum, delegates pouring water over their heads from paper cups for momentary relief from the’ Brotherly City heat. Meanwhile the political air was full of dark horses and rumors of dark horses, but none of them was really in the running.
” ” ” SUDDENLY Editor. Blumenfeld had an idea: “Get me a horse,” Be ordered. “A dark horse.” Within 30 minutes, ‘he ‘had it —a picture of an ancient, swaybacked oat burner rented for $2 from a junk wagon operator, pictured being led up the steps of the convention hall. : The dark-horse picture, welcomed by editors and readers alike as a humorous change of pace, was almost as widely pub"lished ‘as that of the sventual candidate himself,
United a Telephoto. PICTURE POPPERS—Picture personnel of United Press Jogger ather to discuss plans for the coverage of the forthcoming political sonvdntions, in Chicago. They are (left to right): Robert Ellis, superintendent of Newspicture Bureaus; H ary eder, assistant rt ront editor in the . New York office; Bert Brandt, veteran photographer, and arold Blumenfeld, United Press Newpic-
tures editor.
Fast-talking, fast-moving Harold Blumenfeld, a veteran of nearly-30 years in the newspicture business, also has a couple of hidden aces up his sleeve, but he isn’t planning to conven
perfect a system of communication between our central control room and the individual photographers on the convention floor. The result is each cameraman . will be equipped with a ‘Handi-Talkie’ short Wave radio, a compact little job that weighs less than six All pounds. ‘afarc “This system will give us
photo into newspaper clients’ offices. For red-hot shots of big importance, he has a “bustroom will be set up in the‘con- a.gusset” figure at about 15 vention. amphitheater only . minutes. about 100 feet from the speak- 8." a 3 ers’ platform. It will house five “IT WILL BE an electronics darkrooms, two printing rooms convention as far as we are and the telephoto machines concerned,” he says. ‘Not only for instantaneous transmis. will we shoot the pictures snd sion of pictures to newspapers deliver them by electronics. all over the country. Our cameramen all over the Mr. Blumenfeld figures 20 hall will receive their assign. minutes is about all it will lake, ments by electronics. g “For several weeks we've
SS 25
