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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 30
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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 30

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

.2 Section 3 Chicago Tribune, Wednesday, February 11. 1931 BEST COPY AVAILABLE i-i-i-i'i-i-i-i-w Better can out Frozen pizzas have always been a hot item in the freezer- cases at groceries, but the market is thawing considerably lor we people wno Dane ana box an tnose yummy concoc-tions, reports Business Week magazine. Not that pizza lovers are doing without their home-heated specials; sates will be, close to $1 billion this year. The problem, it seems, is that there are simply too many pizzas in the frozen food cases more than 150 brands at last count. The sheer numbers TOr YOU By Christina Winter 'J The biggest action In the watch Industry these clays is a happy marriage of the old and the electronic.

No, it's not a sundial with a microprocessor, or a digital grandfather's clock, but it's almost as good. It's the combination digital-' analog watch, known to those who keep up on such things as the "digl-ana." The' idea behind giving consumers both. Out mrtvontimnl handii ftlua the flashinir readout is to com of competitors, combined with a slight drop in sales after years of astronomical growth, plus soaring prices on meat and cheese, is making for some glum faces at pizza plants. Price competition is so fierce that at least 75 per cent of the pizzas sold are still priced at less than each, and almost 80 per cent are sold on some sort of special. Then are dire predictions of a frozen pizza shakeout, since some of the major conglomerates in the food industry are only puiiing 3 per cem ei ux marees snare, il anyDoay is bine the accuracy of the digital with the overview and beau making money fa frozen -pizzas," said one marketing, veep for Ore-Ida, which produces La Pizzeria pizzas, "they're not ty of the analog, say industry spokesmen.

The analog elves maaing enougn. wmsiaenng tne size or tne market, there been relatively little advertising, with the exception some popular campaigns by Jeno's, positioned at 2 in the field behind Pillsbury's Totino's and Fox Delux brands' sense when fathers' are 'uninterested, afraid, or friendly. Ie points out that since baby knows quite well what is going you "the time in relation to something 'else," a Casio sentative. explains, that the 7:59 broadcast by a dv gital watch and the "five to eight" shown on an analog face are not, precisely the same thing. The digital part, while not you to the rest of the day in relation to the current hour, at least can provide all those handy computer functions, like counting down without losing time, and bo tne prediction is that the next front in the great pizza wars ww pe an eu eui aaverusing cutz.

un, ji fiugay uc wise sian ireaung pinn as an arrival ceremony.for a "trueH. human being, not a partial one. K'y parents who want to get off on the right foot could rehearse some kind of welcoming speech for the newest ''a it iroviding "dual time" tor travelers, logetner yaanave me i of both worlds in a timepiece that so far has proven inpping ouwn nwiajry miss too large for a "lady's model," although Casio am) Leisure- Most of us have a bard enough time remembering when wet: craft are planning to try one out this spring. Prices current- were children, much less babies. The thought of re- ly range from $69,95 to $300.

calling aetaus of our own births seems too bizarre to even. I conswer. nut san mego psycnoiogisi uavia uiamDeriain nas concluded that children under hypnosis. can accurately report what went on around, them when they were born, as verified by their mothers' detailed recollections, also obtained I ani 1.11 11 1 it Ol JiJ. There's nothing like the promise of a good hearty lunch to make sure kids make it to school each 4ay.

Weu. at least inrougn nypnosis. ne cmwren aciuaujr recau buco the promise of the kind of lunch that the kids consider good specifics as the mother's hairstyle, the obstetric Instruments Anything for fashion Guess going to be trendy for fall: sweatshirts. At least an offshoot of the humble old sports uniform is catching on in chic circles as the thing to wear. It seems the history of a fashionable fad works something like this.

Americans came up with the baggy, but absorbent shirts i precisely for the purpose after which they were named to soak up sweat during athletic endeavors. But then terribly stylish European boutiques picked up on this quaint American item and dressed it up for women with band printing, and even feathers, reports Daily News Record. So, back home cosmopolitan Americans have now picked up on "sweatshirt gray" as a major color and the develop ment of fancy, yarn-dyed knitted fleeces for both men and conversation in the delivery room, the character and ana nearty, A Benton Harnor, scnooi oiscoverea tnat class attendance was always lowest on. Fridays, which happened to be the day that the state took an official student count. This meant cuts in school aid, not to mention lost time in the classroom.

School officials finally came up with a way to lure the kiddies out of their sick beds or their hooky-playing hideouts each Friday: They set up. an end-of-the-week meal plan that involved hamburgers from: three local fast-food restaurants. Friday attendance immediately Increased by 68 students, adding an extra $68,000 in aid to district.There's report on whether any of the chil-dren. tried lq eat.and run. behavior of nurses and doctors, and the mother's own emo-' tional and physical state, according to Brain-Mind Bulletin.

The reports contain extremely personal feelings and thoughts as well as small details that no mother would have bothered to communicate to her child, Chamberlain pointed out, so i it's unlikely that these might nave been transr mitted to the child over the years. The accuracy of'the rec- ollections, he added, shows that sophisticated mental activity is at work from the beginning of life, without the need for -formal language skills. He reported that infants note who Is" nervous, careless, tired, crying, smiling, or angry. They women, The fleecy surface can go either inside or outside, making the supercool new sweats practical as well as high Jashion. Of course, it is no longer considered proper to sweat in them, my dear it might make the feathers Isticky or stain the fleece.

Bad apples-or disillusioned emigres? Manacled refugees are transported from Ft Chaffee, Ark, to a federal, prison- in Atlanta. it Coming to emigration': Will the bad apples spoil the barrel? Are they a threat to the community? "When you have this many arrests for murder, theft and sex crimes, yon can draw your own conclusions as to whether they're a danger to the community," Georgettt Continued from first Tempo page ba, since Castro's justice ministry does not make its records available to us. The best the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service could do was to ask the pew arrivals about their backgrounds and weed out those admitting to prison records. There are 1.746 Cuban refugees in employed and hadn't eaten fa three days." ww As for the professional criminals in the group, Asensio says, "One of Cas-J tro's main devices was to discredit Cut bans by sending these types of peopleS over.

There are one million Cubans liv2 ing fa this country, and for years tbe index of crime was very low; now all of a sudden these people come here and bingo, everyone focuses on this one aspect." There also is the question of incen-tive. The refugees of the 1960s, weanedp on capitalism, were go-getters. Today refugees, raised under Marxism, in many cases aren't "There's no Asensio says, "that in a totalitarian society, where tbere no incentives for you to bet- ter yourself financially, you Just dont leam this. But after-vou exnose these day and, right theh and there, sepa-' rated her from my uncle. They told ter.thaW the way it Asensio says considering that it was 'an unplanned emigration, and one that involveoV great risks, "I think they are all adjusting fairly well, and I have faith that eventually they will do just' as well as the ether of Cuban A SURGICAL resident at a local hospital, Asensio belongs, to the Committee for Aid to the Cuban Refugees, the ad hoc agency set up by the Cuban com- munitybere.

Members have raised more than $102,000 for the Immigrants- and Set up an elaborate system to get them fcod, clothing, housing; and medi- '( The attributes some of tbe re-, cent Cuban crime In Chicago to economics. "The other he says, "a young man was arrested for shoplifting two pounds of meat He was un "Then, too, there were a lot more families with children in the earlier group. "ALSO ITS important to note that the motivation for coming to the U.S. is different this time. Last tune, we all -struggled and pushed to be allowed to get out of Cuba.

But how many of those who emigrated last summer were forced to leave Cuba and didn't neces-' sarily want to go? Some in jail or on parole were told they would receive five more years in jail if they didn't get on the boat When this, is the case, when you're made to leave, your whole attitude is going to be different" Dr. Juan Asensio, a leader fa the Chicago Cuban community's own to resettle the refugees, also stresses the "unplanned" nature of last sum- trier's emigration. He tells of an aunt whom Castre deemed politically unde r-s, -y-i "They Just came to the house one they'd find easy jobs, lots of pay, loose living. All of these balloons have been burst 'O "Face it, the cream came over a long time ago the doctors, the professionals," be said. "They were geared toward success and they pros- pered.

The best of any population do well. Meanwhile, most of those I've talked to in this latest group have had very difficult lives. All they've known is failure, and I feel the greatest sympathy for them. I'm not at all sure -we've adequately prepared them for release into the communities." Here is what Erviti, herself i Cuban emigre of 1960 vintage, had to say on the subject: -3 "As a group, I'd say the refugees of the 1960s had a lot more education and they'd had an opportunity to travel, so they were more sophisticated. Many more of them knew English.

This group's average educational level is -v saw people to their compatriots, aid they what tiaa haan aphiaiMwi thtn will emulate it" I coins coins coins I stmwi coins shmm coins ii AMONG THE arrested were Santana Alvarez, and Richards, the men who broke into. Norman' Isaacs' bouse. Shortly after the arrest, Richards, 38, of 2840 N. Orchard told Chicago -Police Sgt, Ron Jablon of Area. property crimes that the men had done time In although he implied ft was for "political crimes." 1 It subsequently came to light that Alvarez, 20, of 4934 N.

Kedzje already had one arrest, in Chicago. He and ha father, bad been charged with robbing their sponsor shfytiy after the two of. were released pa bis signature June 25 from the insfugee camp at Ft, Chaffee, Ark. Santana, 28, also of 4934 N. Kedzie was dlacov-ered to have snuck out of Ft Chaffee without authorization to leave.

The three men were boused in Cook. County Jail under $75,000 bonds. On the advice of their attorney, Adam -Bourgeois, they pleaded guilty when their case came to trial. The judge responded by giving them each two years' probation. Almost immediately, Santana and Alvarez were picked up by the INS and sent to the federal prison in Atlanta, where most of the Cuban detainees are being held.

Richards was allowed to 'remain free. Bourgeois explains, because of a serious heart condition and a heart attack suffered while in County 'Jail. .1 BOURGEOIS CONCEDES lite clients guilt: "They were caught in the act and the victim could identify If I thought they were innocent I would have recommended they go to trial, but in my it was better they plead guilty. Two years' probation is actually very light for what they vera charged Bourgeois insists that his ctfents, 'who were and on welfare, are not professional Criminals. He says the Isaacs burglary "was a crime, of op-portuntty.

They were driving around and decided to do it." This contradicts Jablon, who said in his opinion-Alvarez, Santana, -and -Richards are career criminals, noting that a search of Alvarez's apartment yielded property that appeared to have been In other burglaries; In, replyr Bourgeois says, "the police exaggerate a lot For example, they said there was a high-peed chase in this; case. There was no chase. Their -r tIV Ill lH6fV Chicago At this location for years. Wit PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES FOB ALL GOLD AND SILVER IN ANY FORM MARXEO OR UNMARXED lMC.12K-14lt.18X.20IC.S2K.24K OFFERS AN OUTSTANDING SELECTIONS In our over 300 Books of U.S. and FOREIGN STAMPS COINSJ ruaRiiwW Bracetets TO BUY Chalrw Dental Gold karat Gold FMInfls 'Jswetor'sSwaeos federal prisons as a result of making such admissions of because the INS otherwise determined that they weren't suitable for entry into U.S.

society. One problem is, some of them were Jailed Cuba for offenses that aren't crimes here, for example, planting one's own garden or raising one's own chickens. Others Twere forced stealing food or other essentials be cause: of the scarcity that -has accompanied Castro's economic policies. Mrs. Erviti says one newcomer, 18, had spent seven years in a Cuban jail because be stole a T-shirt when he was 10.

StlU others were upstanding citizens who concocted identities as criminals, prostitutes, or gays to persuade Castro's police to let them on the refugee boats at Mariel. -A VERY NICE woman we are help big got a letter from her. comfe de bwrio (the block club that keeps the neighborhood in line in Cuba) saying she was. a prostitute. That's bow she was able to get out," Mrs.

Erviti says. "Of course, she is nothing of the sort" Some of these people unfortunately carried their masquerade so far that they even related these false, backgrounds to INS investigators and were consequently JaUetf All those detained entitled to hearings. As of last week, lra hear-" ings bad been completed, and 1,183 refugees had been deemed "excludable." Some 500 of them have filed appeals. But what about the criminals and -f misfits who slipped through? After all, the smarter crooks probably wouldn't -admit past prison records if asked, -would Miami already has had a taste of this imported disease. Crime rates there have soared in recent months, and at least, some of the crime has been blamed on recent Cuban arrivals.

IN CHICAGO, If has bMn lesTof a problem, according to Samuel Nolan, director of public safety. 'The criminal threat hasn't been borne out that much," he said. "Although anytime you get a large number of people, some of them turn out to be bad Tbere have, been enougn bad apples to account for 37 arrests among recent Cuban emigres sjnee early November for the following crimes: four mur- den; six thefts; six burglaries; six. cases of breaking and entering; 15 crimes, including "Although we processed many hundreds at Ft. McCoy (Wis.) who admitted to criminal records, in all probability many with records slipped through and were released into the ty," said Ted Georgettt, chief of the investigation section of the Chicago INS office.

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3rd Sun. of each month. Feb. ISttt New laration-Pormerhr Banana car broke down. 1 think the police start off with a prejudice against Cubans.

It's that way with every new group." -5 BUT BOURGEOIS, who ha defended a number of the Cuban newcomers in court, says be is not surprised that 37 have been arrested in the last three months. -i "You. talk to he said, you're faced with the starr realization that this group of Cubans had a Sever misapprehension of what they were going to find in the UA They thought, iFree PH. Admlss. 434-077? OUaamU an Jiaaaf SLVER DOLLAR GALLERIES 1106A W.

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collectors every Sunday Inthe Tribune ah pneaa auDiaci 10 maniai snangaa. WHEAT' PENNIES i ROLLS $2.50 iJJ. -ml if. PAUL'S 1t36 ft" 8lmontll-lt34 STAMPS WANTED WE BUY U.S. Silver Ii OoM Coins LilH til hilt a WUi wina ORAFCOINS CMSSamaCelMlonia Chinese may iry for f)eraf COINS WANTED TOP PRICES PAIO PATHIA 4207 S.

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Uwv Tawa, 1M rn. ia OLD WORLD LTD. TOM W. NatUi A. (4 Mka.

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serve the needs of jnan- kind. Using human sperm for such an experiment is ethically all right he said, because it is produced anyway and most of it is wasted. "Why should we be like the man-that (the ancient Chinese philosopher) Mencius described who likes to eat 'meat but doesn't go anywhere near tbe slaughterhouse." to Date. Keiiett, P.O. Continued from first Tempo page transplant from a human to new creature' could be so that the intelligence of a man can still be used." Though there are shades of Fran- kenstein's monster In his proposals, Jl claims it should not be offensive now that artificial organs are implanted and "organic organs" are theoretically QUESTIONEDABOUT this kind of experimenting when China is engaged in a massive program to limit human births, he responded: "My idea is that Hfrusien 1 1 tvo I fU52A uu.hlMtnn Rlr.nt.nniat 704.15.

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Cash, 392-3374. WANTEO-Old Slocks, Pro 1900 Checks (Tribune-.

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