i 'C*°via, N. Ytf Wednesday, October 11:19jj?ir*. J^ tlr.lOitCenjts“v? ‘V •* /**£.■“* V * v'-^•: r* *«?3f, *'T-A-r » • *— -—■ -■- - v J 5• • - * -? **• k *-* _*,. r *-•* .* C ’v V-V V y - .* * -^ ... *e'.'. Cazehovte cSlfe^ wM pres, . Among special bft»t«,to ept'a, spebluF^a^rci-%^Jihrilmy Jimmy over the weekend Win be ^-®euseh -o^detoher. 21 In a . series of hisyj| | i V 11 \JM. 3L j- V/ v\J fj \f ill A fr* h IIIhQho#iof Aliis ^many ;pontribu-*^, the Cazenoyi^eollege Choir antihouse decorations on the themeVU ■ . _ . htiori to^ Attierican culture in the composition^Hof popular, music.Mr. Vanv,Heusen attended Caz-enovia Junior College and Syracuse University.fTl tlownIncumbentsUnopposedTown Supervisor Bernard T. Brown, Jr., heads a slate of seven incumbent Republican town officials who will run for re-election next month. They are all unopposed.The rest of the slate includesMorris S. Weeden, town councilman; Albert E. Tait, Jr., justice of the peace; Mrs. Alice Foster, town clerk; Lewis D. Me Manus, town superintendent of highways, and Charles Heath and Fred Winchell, town assessors.Mr. Brown has been superivsor since 1962, when he was appointed to fill the unexpired term of the late Malcolm Norton, and is running for his third elected term.of his records prepared by Caz-enoyia College students.Friday evening; October 20, N Ight with J iriimy Van Heusen*“will be sponsored by the Caz-enovia College Auxiliary, whenJimmy will autograph -recordalbums which will be auctioned off to the highest bidder.JIMMY wa§ a radio announcer for WSYR and WFBL in Syracuse before going on to a career in musical composition. The man whose professional name is synonymous with the best in popular music over three decades, was bom Edward Chester Babcock In Syracuse.Mr. VanHeusen’s grandmother was named Foster and is said to be a descendant of Stephen Foster.One of Jimmy* s most recent triumphs has been the music for “Thoroughly Modem Millie, currently appearing In motion picture theatres across the country.In February, his music with lyrics by Sammy Cahn, his partner for more than 15 years, will be hear on an NBC television special, “The Legend of Robin-hood.The famous T _has been represent^onBr%d-way in reoerit^years'ing .Happy*, »apdt ^^scraper** THEIR MUSIC^fp;fcifi^1966 television specfecularf;'‘ fack ;and the Beanstalk* helped'-to win an Emmy for. the reduction, which starred Gene Kelly.Among VanHeusehtunesivKich+4** -£• '* **£* * * ♦have wpn. spefcial- attention are,* Call Me -Ir;rjesponsible,*~^ High Hopes, “All the Way,*, and “ Swinging on a Star',* which received Academy Award Oscars.The Van Heusen - Cahn song* Love and Marriage* is the' only single song ever to receive a television Emmy award. VanHeusen is associated with a string.of hit tunes which read like aWhat’s What* in popularHe has received -Academy Award nominations for such tunes as “Aren’t YouGladYou’reYou, “My Kind of Town, “Where Love Has Gone,* Sleighride in July,* ‘ Love is the Tender Trap,* “To Love and be Loved,* “Pocketful of Miracles, and “The Second Time Around.DURING WORLD WAR H he received a citation for distinguished service rendered in behalf of the War Finance Program from the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. He also received^ Silver Medal for distinguishedservice tcTthe U.S. Treasury Department.For School Board SeatSchool district voters will have— Teitch, just half as many candidates to Charles choose from, when they castrtKeir ballots for School Board on October 16, as they did in the first go-around last month.Seven men and a woman filed petitions of candidacy for two School Board posts created by a vote at the annual district meeting on July 11 to enlarge the board from five to seven members. However, in the vote held September 6, none of the eight received a needed majority, and a new election had to be scheduled.The four candidates who filed on October 2 for the second elec-meats'rard lt;LH risb Gregg.andMr. Shove and Mr. Teitsch are opponentsTor the five-year termon the board. On September 6, Mr. Shove polled 352 votes to 346 for Mr. Teitsch.Mr. Frisbey and Mr. Gregg are contending for the four-year term. In the earlier election, Mr. Frisbey received the most votes, 476, and Mr. Gregg ran third, with 213. The second-runner, James A. Luker,whohad 252 votes, withdrew from the re-run.A dapper bachelor, Jimmy i8 aveteran of 9,000flying hours (he was a test pilot at Lockheed Aircraft during World War H), and now owns and filed a Hughes Model 300 helicopter and raises Tennessee walking horses on his large Yucca Valley, California, ranch.Jimmy began composing In his early tepns while going to Central High School in Syracuse, and was expelled for singing a song called “My Canary Has Circles Under His Eyes* at an assembly of the entire student body, the feature of which was a science dem-tion are John D. Shove, Jr., JohnVotingday from the highonstration of a Speak-o-Phone recording machine.AT THE AGE of 16, he was an announcer at local radio station,(Continued on Page 5)— Jimmy Van Heusen, Cazenovia Seminary alumnus, at piano, performed at Cazenovia College in 1962 with his songwriting partner, Sammy Cahn,HOLLYWOOD HEREwithmicrophone. The Academy Award-winning tunesmith has donated his musical library to the college and will be given a special award here on October 21. He will be present at a dance at the college the previous evening, where he will autograph his record albums.