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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1963)
Teacher Shortage, Student Surplus Result In Parochial School Crisis BUILDING DEDICATED The new addition to St. Pius X Catholic Church, designated as a parish hall and con fraternity classrooms, was formally dedicated Tuesday morning by the Bishop of Baker, Most Rev. Francis P. Leipiig, D.D., right, shown with the pastor, Rev. George Murphy. Constructed at an approximate cost of $73,727, the multipurpose unit includes two halls equipped with sliding sound-proof partitions which can be arranged for any combination of rooms. Previously without a parish hall, the church will use the building for all social activi ties as well as for the religious instruction of its parishioners. Wickedest By Eastern By LOL'IS CASSELS United Press International One hot summer day in 1877. the train from the east pulled into Dodge Cily, Kan., bearing a Graham Fair Site Readied NEW YORK (CBN) - The Bil ly Graham Pavilion at the New York World's Fair will cost ap proximately $400,000. exclusive of the site and landscaping. Con struction began in March and is expected to be completed by No vember.' according to officials of The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Made available by the New York World's Fair Corporation, the site, nearly 50,000 square feet in extent, will be enclosed by an octangular garden wall to pro vide a quiet atmosphere in the area immediately surrounding the pavilion. The pavilion will have exits on both New York Avenue and the Avenue of Europe and incorporate a theater section with a seating capacity of 500. Octagonal in shape, the pavilion will be encircled by a gallery area which will house exhibits from many countries. The rotunda will also include a chapel which will scat 150; counseling rooms; and a lounge and offices for Graham's team members and counselors, who will be on duty each day. The theater and exhibition gal lery will be air-conditioned. The gallery will provide an area for leisure enjoyment as well as serving as a waiting room be tween showings of a 28-minute evangelistic film each hour in the theater section. Meet Held For Laymen Four representatives of the First Methodist Church are at tending the eighth annual Oregon Methodist Men's Assembly which opened today in Salem. They are C. H. Barnstable. Harvey Bran nan. Harry Lemler, and Bruce .'Stewart. The theme for the meeting is '"Religion in an Age of Scientific Technology." Dr. Donald William Stotler, science supervisor of the Portland Public Schools since 1949, is one of the featured speakers. His family was elected "Metho dist Family of the Year" in 1962. Held on the Willamette Univer sity campus, the Sept. fi-8 assem bly is sponsored by the Board of Lay Activities of the Methodist vnurcn in uregnn. ial." MORMON METHOD Performed Funeral Service ! In those strait-laced davs, most NEW YORK iL'PD Mormons j ministers would have huffily re tithe a full 10 per cent of all they jeeted such a request. But t h e have and earn, and alter this to the church, they still support their j local ward parish and Cunate their work besides, says Catholic Di gest. Zealous Mormon men also consider it a duty to devote two years to the missions at their own expense, the publication said. Aik about daily "Buiincti Card" SPOT ADS TU 4-1111 .11 Town In West' Tamed Pastor With Purpose small, dignified man in top hat and tailcoat. He attracted curious looks and a few snickers as he climbed down from Ihe dusty railroad coach, claimed his valise, and made his way through a crowd of roughly dressed cowpokes to the hotel on Front Street. If the onlookers had known who! he was, and why he came to Dodge City, they wouldn't have snickered. They'd have laughed out loud. Dodge Cily in those days was proud of its reputation as "the wickedest town in the West.' And it fully deserved the title Front Street was about as wide open as a street can get. The sa loons stayed open all night, and the houses of prostitution did a booming business. Any cattleman who got tired of liquor and sex could find a high-stakes poker game to keep him amused. Gun fights and wanton killings were almost as common, in actual fact. as TV Westerns would have you believe. The one thing that Dodge City didn't have and didn't want- was a church. Ministers Left Quickly Several itinerant preachers had ventured into the "Babylon of the West" but all of them had left precipitately, at the invitation of the townfolk. The little man in the top hat may have thought 01 all tnis when he boldly signed his name in the hole! register: The Reverend O r m 0 n d W. Wright." The Hev. Mr. Wright was a field representative of the Pres byterian Board of Home Missions in New York. He had not come to Dodge City to conduct a few preaching services and flee for his life. His audacious purpose was to plant the cross of Christ firmlv and consoicuouslv in this 'citadel of Satan. He had come, in short, to build a church. The incredible fact is that he did it. He even managed, in time, to make deacons out of Bat Mas terson and Wyatt Earp. "Why this man succeeded where others had failed remains a historical mystery," said Pres byterian Life magaiine this week, in an article paying overdue trib ute to the little-known preacher. Actually, it's not such a mys tery. Old histories of Dodge City record an incident which took place shortly after the Rev. Mr. Wright's arrival, which made a tremendous impression on the gun-toting cowboys and the wom en who entertained them. A prostitute had been killed by a stray bullet during a saloon brawl. A delegation of dismayed and drunken cowboys went to the preacher's hotel room and awak ened him wiih loud knocking on the door. They told him what had happen0() a)d ask(fd c;ive Ih -,ri -phricjn h, Rev. Mr. Wright did not. He per. formed the funeral service, read- ing over the girl's grave the Gos pel account of Christ's tenderness toward a woman taken in adult ery. This act of compassion seems to have established a rapport he- 10:10 A.M. tm SUNDAY rjJJ KFtW 1450 ICe EDITOR'S NOTE: What are (he hard fads behind Ihe much discussed "crisis In Catholic ed ucation?" In the following dis patch, I'PI correspondent Louis Cassels examines in depth the problems of too few teachers, too many students in the Catho lic educational system. United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI)-St. Leo's Catholic School in suburban Fair fax, Va.. is typical of thousands of parochial schools in the United Stales. It has a shortage of teachers and a surplus of students. In the past, St. Leo s has of fered a complete elementary school program, from kindergar ten through the eighth grade. This fall, however, it is dropping its kindergarten and first grade We feel it is more necessary to have the upper grades than the lower grades if we can't have them all." explained Father W'al ter F. Malloy. Throughout the nation, paro chial schools are I Hiding it in creasingly difficult, if not impos sible, to expand their teaching staffs and classroom space to ac commodate an ever-growing bodv nf applicants. More and more of them are solving the problem, or at least easing it somewhat, by dropping their lower grades. Some parochial schools in Cin- twecn the prim-looking little preacher and the rough men and women whom he had come to serve. The Rev. Mr. Wright soon began to hold religious services in whatever quarters were avail able to him usually a saloon or dance hall. He was able to tell the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions- his first offi- cial report, that he had 13 regu lar members of his congregation. The board sent word that it would contribute $450 a whop ping sum in those days for the conslruction of a church building, provided the local resi dents would raise a matching sum. It was taken for granted in New York that it would take the Rev. Mr. Wright a year or two to obtain his half of the building fund. 1 But the word got around Front Street that Preacher Wright need ed $450 to build a church. The hat was passed in the saloons and bawdy houses, and on one roai ing Saturday night, the whole sum was contributed, with a few dollars to spare. And that s how Dodge Cily got its first church. Rally Day Marks Race Of Balloons The first annual balloon race will climax Rally Day at the ruamaui L,uiiierau emu en un Sunday, Sept. 8, adding a unique 11 feature to the observance. Each child attending the 9:30 a.m. Sunday School on Rally Day will receive a helium-filled bal-1 loon with a return postcard at tached. The card will include the child's name, an invitation to worship at Klamath Lutheran. and a blank to be filled in by the finder giving the exact location the balloon was found. Prizes will be awarded Sun- day. Oct. 13, to children whose balloons traveled the greatest distance and to those who have the best attendance at Sunday School up to that time. The cards, as they are re- turned, will be placed on a map in Hie parish education unit to show where each ballloon was found. Willard McKinny, chairman ol Ihe hoard of parish education, said a full Sunday School staff will be ready to serve tlie number of students anticipated on Rally Day and that new materials have been secured for all age groups from the department of parish eduta. tion of the American Lutheran Church. On Sunday, Sept. 15, an adult Sunday School class will be add ed to the church program. Sched uled at 9:30 a.m., the class will be Instructed by Rev. Malcolm Unseth, pastor. FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS To Every Creed ond Purse WARD'S Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite Word ond Sons 925 High Ph. TU 2-4404 cinnati, Ohio, have already cur tailed their lower grades, and Bishop Paul F. Leibold announced recently that it may be necessary to drop the first lour grades of all church-operated schools in the; archdiocese. Curtailment Begun According lo the National Catho lic Welfare Conference, curtail ment of lower grades has also begun in Kansas City; St. Louis Cleveland; Colunpbus, Ohio; Green Bay, Wis.; Spokane, Wash.; Far go. N.C.; Clinton, Iowa; St. Paul, .Minn., and Kichmond, Va. It is under consideration in many oth cr dioceses. Whenever a parochial school drops , one or more grades, the public schools serving the same community experience a sudden spurt in enrollment. Some Catholic educators have seriously proposed closing down all elementary grades in parochial schools, in order to concentrate the church's educational efforts! on the high school years. If this were done, U.S. public schools would have to find class rooms and teachers for 4.5 mil lion children more than they are now educating. It also would mean a corresponding increase in the local tax, load. Such a drastic shifting of the educational burden is not likely to take place in the foreseeable future. Most Catholic authorities are still committed to the ideal of providing a religiously-oriented education for Catholic children throughout their formative years. But even the most ardent ad vocates of this ideal are being compelled to admit the necessity making some compromise with the goal of "every Catholic child in a Catholic school." Xo Room At present, fewer than half of the nation s Catholic youngsters are enrolled in Catholic schools. About 54 per cent are going to public schools, some by choice, many because there fs simply no room for them in parochial schools. Despite the millions of children who are perforce turned away each fall. Catholic schools in many cities are severely over crowded. Where public schools are trying to limit class size to a maximum of 25 or 30 students, many parochial schools have classes of B0 to 70 students. DAVID TERRY CATMULL Youth Called To Australia A call to serve on a full-time mission for the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been received by David Terry Cat- mull, 20. Following a week of orientation in Salt Lake City. tatmull lett Sept. 2 with a group of nine other young LDS missionaries assigned to Sydney, Australia. He will serve his church there for two years. Catmull. a graduate of Klamath Union High School, attended Ricks ICollgee in Rcxburg, Idaho, for the past one and a half years. Major- mg in prc-Ocntistry, he plans to complete his college education upon returning from the mission ''pd- A member ol the Klamath rails First Ward, Catmull was given a farewell testimonial at the LDS Church on Aug. 18. He is the son of Dr. and Irs. Harold L. Cat mull, 2237 Lakcshore Drive. PRAYER UNITY The World Day of Prayer, ob served on the first Friday in Lent and sponsored by women of the major Protestant and Orthodox communions, has a history of 75 years. Basically, the same service is used by groups in approximate ly 150 countries and areas of the world. i,i u i-,l IV' Jiw tit frVllK. . .1 First Church of Christ, Scientist A Branch al Th Mathar Church. Tho Pint Church of Chrilf. Scitnliit in Soitan, Man, Sarvicatt Sunday Sirvtca 1l:OU e.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Wtdnudoy Inning Taitimony Matting 8:00 O'Clotk I etson-Scrmon Subject September 8, 1963 "MAN" Golden Tut: Piolmi 112:1. thi Lord, that dilighttth greatly in hit commondmanta. Nursery facilities available durinf church tirvlcat. This kind of overcrowding makes it difficult to do an effec tive job of leaching, and protests from Catholic parents have in duced a number of major dio cese', including those of St. Louis. Richmond and Baltimore. to take steps to limit parochial school classes to 50 students or less Enforcement of this ceiling will mean turning many additional applicants away to the public schools. Why dont Catholics expand their school system to handle all the children seeking admission? The. answer is that they have tried to do just that, but have been overwhelmed by the sheer! magnitude nf the task. Enroll ment in Catholic schools has al most doubled since 1950. The frantic pace of expansion is illus trated by the archdiocese of Chi cago, which has invested more than $60 million in new schools during the past 5 years. Nation wiac, tne iota! investment in Catholic school buildings is now estimated at $5 billion. There are more than 13.000 Catholic schools of all types. Their annual opcr- atinfV-costs exceed $825 million. And the costs are rising sharp ly. In the past, Catholic schools have been able to provide cduca tion at a far lower cost per child than public schools because most of their teachers were unsalaried nuns. In 1950, only 7 per cent of all elementary teachers in Catholic schools were lavmen Hire Lay Tenchcrs But the number of nuns avail able for leaching duty has not grown as fast as the number of children to be taught. As a re sult, catholic schools have in creasingly had to hire lay teach ers and pay them salaries. This fall, about 30 per cent of the elementary teaching staff in parochial schools will be com posed of laymen. To finance the rising cost of the world's largest private school system, the Catholic Church re lies heavily on voluntary contri butions from its members, or the proceeds of fund-raising activities such as bake sales, bazaars or bingo games. Tuition payments have traditionally been kept low ior the sake of poor families and large families. At the elementary school level, they rarely exceed $90 to $100 per year, compared to the $600 to $1,000 tuition charge which a parent would encounter at a private day school. These are the hard facts be hind the much-discussed "crisis' in Catholic education." They ex-. plain why Catholics feel strongly about having parochial schools included in any general program of federal aid lo educa tion. . .why they are ready to ex periment with "shared time" ar rangements under which Catholic school children take some of their. courses in public schools. . .and why Catholic parents in a grow ing number of parishes are being told that they'll have to start their children in a public school even though they prelcr a paro-i chial education. Church Bell Ringing Set LANGELL VALLEY At the Aug. 29 meeting of the Guild of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church at the home of Chervl Kcady, it was reported that the rock bell tower for the church had been completed. The tower s bell, the old Bonan za High School bell, was donated to the church by the Clements Ranch of Bonanza, and the guild was instrumental in raising funds to install it. Erected in memory of Tommy Lindsay, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Marion Lindsay, the bell will ring for the first time on Sept. 8. In other business, the members voted to sponsor a rummage sale at the old variety store in Bo nanza on Oct. 5. Following the meeting, attend ed by nine members and two guests, the women sewed articles for the guild's fall btzaar. The next meeting is scheduled Sept. 26 at tlie home of Ethel Jones in Dairy. BI.ASPflEMY VETOED WASHINGTON. D.C.-A Johan nesburg, South Africa artist. Har old Rubin, has been acquitted on charges of blasphemy connected with his controversial painting nf Christ, says Church end State magazine. The publication quoted Ihe magistrate as replying, "What was considered blasphemy in the Middle Ages Is no longer consid ered so by us in South Africa." 10'h end Wothington Bltiwd !i the man thot faorith HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Hope Lutheran Outlines Fall Plans Hope Lutheran Church will open its Prc-School Church School for children from 3 to S years jld on Monday, Sept. 9. Conducted from 9:30 to 11:30 each morning for two weeks, the school will have a regis tration fee of 75 cents per child. A daily offering will also be re ceived. The director of the school will be Miss Nancy-Jo Nelson, the par ish worker assigned to the church. Her staff will include Mrs. Loyal Neth, Mrs. Frank Wheeler, Mi's. Warren W. Pechman. Mrs. James Stuntabcck. and Mrs. Richard Young. Rallv Day for the Hope Luth eran Sunday Church School will be held Sunday, Sept. 8, with the teaching staff to be installed at the 8:30 and 11 a.m. worship serv ices. A coffee hour in honor of the teachers will follow the sec ond service. The staff includes Ted Moore, superintendent; George Kilen, chairman of the Christian Educa tion Committee: William Hager man. Rev. and Mrs. Warren Pech man, Mrs. Frank Wheeler, Mrs. Winston Kurth, Mrs. Mariese Malme, Mrs. Claud Rodgers, Miss Patricia Isensee, and Miss Mary Voss. The Sunday Church School will include classes for all ages from 3 to senior high school. The Weekday Church School for young people entering the fifth through the tenth grades will be gin with the Parent, Student, Teacher Conference at 7:30 p.m. Convention Hears Close Approximately 70,000 delegates. representing all 50 states and 43 foreign countries, are expected at the international convention of Je hovah's Witnesses when it climax es at the Pasadena Rose Bowl on Sunday. George Hncziscse. presiding minister of the Klamath Falls Congregation of Jehovah's Wit nesses, is attending the eight-day assembly with a large group of local members. Meetings of the local congregation have been can celled until after the convention, One of the highlights of the Pasadena gathering, which opened Sept. I. will be a mass baptism on Saturday. Convention officials estimate that 1,500 new candi dates will be baptized by immer sion, in water at the special serv ice N. II. Knoor. president of the Watchtower Bible and Tract So ciety of New York, convention sponsor, will deliver the principal address on Sunday at 3 p.m. to conclude the final session. The peak attendance is expected at the Rose Bowl for his lecture, "When God Is King Over All the Earth." Rrst Chrjstjan Area Bible School Clinic A Bible School Clinic, open to all churches in the area, will be ponsored by the Fint Christian Church for three days, Sept. 12-14. from 7:30 to 9:15 p.m. each evening. With the general theme, "Build ing a Better Bible School, the lime will be directed toward Bi ble School teachers and oflicers and other church workers inter ested in Bible School programs. Tile featured speaker at the Aug. 22 meeting of the Women's Missionary Union of the First Bap tist Church was Solvcig Arvids son, a native of Sweden who pre sented a program of slides de picting life in her country. While visiting in Klamath rails for a week. Miss Arvidsson was the housegucst of M.Sgt. and Mrs. M. M. Crotwell of KingsWy Field. Wtraii It's TU 4-7425 move m CALL "Y'1 PEOPLES WAREHOUSE "SINCE 1918" -...rV.v.';-.".';: "" free estimates STORAGE . . . CRATING . . . PACKING Atnti lr Btktm Having A Hicrii Lt). . . . MI1tflw.de Mflflff Falls, Ore. Friday, on Sept. 12. Regular classes will be conducted each week on Wed nesday afternoon at 4:30. with the exception of the senior conlirmation class (ninth and tenth grades 1 which will meet at 7 p.m. Also on Hope Lutheran's fall agenda is a series of leadership classes for the congregation to prepare the teachers of the vari ous church schools. The leader I FUTURE MISSIONARIES Delivering his farewell ser mon at the Lorella Full Gospel Church last Sunday, Rev. Eugene Willis planned to move to Portland this week to prepare (or a foreign mission assignment in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Accompanying him to the mission field will be his daughter Kathy, 4; son Bobby, 3; and his wife, Joyce. Lorella Pastor Awaits Ecuador Mission Work Rev. Eugene Willis and his fam ily are already making plans for their future missionary work in Ecuador, although lus appoint ment to the town of Guayaquil will probably not become effec tive until next summer. Moving to Langell Valley three years and eight months ago from Portland, the family was to re turn there this week to prepare for the four-year foreign mission assignment. Rev. Willis delivered his farewell sermon at the Lorel la Full Gospel Church on Sept. 1, the day after the congregation honored the family with a picnic at Bonanza Big Springs Park. With Portland as a center ol operations, Itcv. and Mrs. Willis will begin an itinerant schedule among the Oregon Assemblies of Jod, traveling on a preaching cir- Promotes The clinic, held under the aus pices of the Standard Publishing Company, will be directed by its West Coast representative, Bill Jessup, and his wife. Jessup is a noted Iigurc in tno held ot Christian education who served as president of the San Jose Bible College for 20 years. The opening assembly of each program will include a song serv ice, prayer, and a film strip. Fol-j lowing the assembly, those at tending will divide into two dis cussion groups. Jessup will lead the class sessions concerned with youths of junior ago and above, and Mrs. Jessup will lead the kindergarten and primary ses sions. Bible School program plan ning, teacher training, visual aids, and visitation are among Ihe subjects to be studied and discussed during the inlormal cluss periods. Ucfroshmonls will be served by Ihe host church alter the pro gram. No nflerings will be taken i. 1 11 n m September 6, 1963 ship courses, "As tho Teacher Teaches" and "Helping Children and loulh Know Doctrine, will be forerunners of the new curricu lum now being prepaid by the Lutheran Church in America. The first course will be taught by Rev. Warren Pechman on Sept. 25, beginning at 12 noon. Miss Nelson will instruct tho second course each Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. - lcuit. Later this fall, they will re- I turn to the Klamath section to conduct special missionary serv ices. ' Rev. Willis hopes to go to Costa Rica for language studies in May, and then take up his mission ary duties within the next few months. He will be among tlioi first missionaries of his denomina tion assigned to the country, as the work in Ecuador was just opened to tho Assemblies of God in December of 1962. A graduate of the Central Bible institute and Seminary in Springfield, Mo., where lie ob tained his B. A. degree in Bible, Rev, Willis also attended the Can- yonville Bible Academy for two years. while in Portland, Hev. and Mrs. Willis, with their two chil dren. Kathy, 4, and Bobby, 3, will reside with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emmanuel Keller, at 3177 North Willamette Blvd. Adventists Talk Health Dr. ft. W. Graham and Elder Manley Miles, pastor of the local Seventh-day Advcntist Church, were among some 400 doctors and ministers of the Oregon Con ference of Seventy-day Adventists who attended the first annual Med ical-Ministerial Council. Held at tlie church-owned Big Lake Camp, east of Salem, the meetings were concerned with matters of community health in terests and health education, in cluding public health drives, home nursing, nutrition, and services in convalescent homes. Five-day slop smoking clinics, conducted as a public service, were also studied and updated. and first aid classes in civil de fense projects were planned. The fourday conference ended Sept. FOOD FOR "B- iMk. ka watchful: vaur roaring Man, wajkath oboul talking whom ha may davour." (1 Par. 5:8). Tha devtl li hire lihanad lo lion Making far pray. Thit biait of lha farair hunri ttoalrhily and anly roan whan ha ipringi. Sa rha devil It iraalthy and daet nat aa warning of hit approach, bur it always ready to tpring upon and davour any wandlir from lha fold of tafaly, Tha admonition to tha child of Gad, than, It to bo calm of mind, having mmral tall-control, baing constantly aware of tha dalibirora, fiarca and lubtlt partlitanca of tha dutroyar of man's touli. (. WAYNI LOW!, Ivangtllit - CHURCH OF CHRIST 2:05 Wintland Ava. Ph. TU 2-0174, 2-4S79 You Arc Cordially Invitad To Worship With Us PAGE S Epic Movie Made 'To End All' ROME (UPD - Someplace in the woods not far from Rome, a young couple is going to gambol in the nude before the movio cameras in what the producer in sists is in the most "innocent" scene ever filmed. It is one of the opening se quences of Dino de Laurentis' epic to end all epics "The Bi ble." A'er three years of writing and preparation, the shooting starts in the Garden of Eden, showing Adam and Eve dressed as Adam and Eve. De Laurentis admits that he has spent a good deal of time thinking about how the scene can be made. First, we have to have a girl who portrays innocence itself. She cannot be any known actress, that immediately would do away with the effect. "And she must be absolutely uninhibited. If there is any indi cation she is self-conscious, then the scene automatically falls into the class of nude scenes In hun dreds of other movies." Well-kept Secret De Laurcntiis isn't savins where the actual shooting will take place. It's a well-kept . se cret and all pains are being taken to make certain it doesn't leak out. Directing the scene Is France's Robert Bresson. He is charged with directing the first part of Ihe Bible" dealing with the cre ation on through to the murder of Abel by Cain. Doing the entire script is Chris topher Fry, noted poet and play wright. Even while shooting Is getting underway for the opening of the epic, preparations are almost complete for further scenes. Or- sen Wells will direct the Abraham-Isaac episode and sets are being constructed on the lava- scarred slopes of Mount Etna. the active volcano in Sicily. Tho third director taking part in the first, three-hour-long film of "The Bible" fs Italy's Luchino Visconti, who does the Joseph and his brethren episodes. These will get underway in Egypt in Oc tober. Film Segmented Actually, the entire film will be broken down into three or four parts. The opening, three - hour film contains the episodes mentioned above. What I want to make." ex plains De Laurentis. "is a film that will be as good 50 years from now as it is nowr. "It must follow truly the Bible. fn other words, it is a storv that if done as It should be done once. will never have to be done again." De Laurentis is no newcomer to Bible epics. His film "Bara bas" still is making money around the world. But the producer himself is the first to admit that "The Bible" must go a long way ahead of "Barabas" in artistic merit. "I have pulled together the best writer, Christopher Fry, and the best directors alive today. I'm certain that the end result will bo a film we all can bo proud of, a film that will not fado with tho years." , SPOILS LONG RECORD MARLOW, England (UPD -Charles Athcrton Atchley, 82, said his 50-ycar record of driving with out receiving a ticket was spoiled Thursday when lie was fined $5.60 for a parking violation. Molotort's PRE-SCHOOL Hot Rprlnti AddltUn TU l-MM Chtarfal. Mutiny flu ire tin ding Modern Education Fsrl1lUi Etptrlancrd Teichr Mn., Wd. rn. 9 til It uuuu Ubi uvuuiut THOUGHT aoVartarv lha davil. al Au.-r,.v.r V.' KWiia v." V..-V? ..EV