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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 13

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

REPORTER B-l DOVER NEW PHILADELPHIA, 0. FRIDAY, JAN, 9, 1970 Thieu Says US Combat Troops Have to Stay Beyond 1970 By ESPER SAIGON (AP) President Nguyen Van Thieu said today American combat troops will be needed in South Vietnam beyond 1970 to protect remaining U.S. support troops and to aid the Saigon government's forces. Thieu's statement to a news conference contrasted with hopes expressed by some U.S. officials that all combat troops might be withdrawn by the end of this "Not, all combat troops will be withdrawn in 1970," Thieu said, "because we have not enough combat troops for 1970 to re- Phila Boy Receives Some Help Jimmy Marks, 4, is getting the helping hands he needs and although he can't express his appreciation his mother, Mrs.

William Marks of 831 Zella av. NW, New Philadelphia said today: "I am very grateful. How can I express my appreciation for all the help that has been offered." Mrs. Marks received 18 telephone calls from residents offering to assist with therapy treatments for Jimmy, a cerebral palsy victim, after his picture and story appeared in Wednesday's Times-Reporter. "The phone didn't stop ringing for 3 hours after people read the paper," Mrs.

Marks stated. "We could still use more volunteers since it takes 3 people for each treatment. But we are very thankful for those who called." 1 place all combat troops of the United States. "Secondly, it is very imprudent to withdraw U.S. combat troops while many U.S.

logistical and support troops remain in Vietnam." To do this, Thieu said, would be running the risk of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacks on the logistical bases. Nixon already has. 60,000 American' President withdrawn troops, both combat and sifp. port, and another 50,000 are scheduled to leave by April 15. This will lower the authorized U.S.

troop strength in Vietnam to 434,000. Thieu said money and 'material aid are needed frbrti the United Slates to raise thejay of the South Vietnamese farmed ttflftif morale. "We have a plan," Tlflbii said. "We are working U.S. Embassy here and Ihj.

U.S. Command. I cannot tell you the content of that plan. Boll listed 'all of out" needs, not only for 'military-equipment, but also for funds and, more particularly, the material help to improve the condition of life of the Vietnamese soldiers and their fami- Appalachia Group Rates Impact Nil By MARK BROWN WASHINGTON (AP) The federal agency created five years ago to pull poverty-ridden Appalachia into the mainstream of American affluence acknowledges its impact so far has been "damn small, damn modest." Half a decade after the Appa lachian Regional Commission came to life the average Appalachian mountaineer's income remains well below that of other Americans, malnutrition still scars his children, employment is only a memory and subpar education preordains his offspring to failure. Counties in the Appalachian Regional Commission area include Tuscarawas, Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes, Muskingum, Carroll octon.

Jefferson, and Cosh- Graduate Education Course Set at Branch Graduate Education 605 will be offered at the Tuscarawas County Kent State University Branch Campus Monday night from 6:30 to 9 p.m. beginning Monday. The course emphasizes motivation, varied materials and methods, real verses superficial learning, individual needs, and sources of teacher help. Instructor will be Dr. Burton W.

Gor- has been offered at Kent Slate University since 1955 and approximately 2000 students have been enrolled. The course is app 1 i a 1 from kindergarten through University level teaching. It can be taken, according to Dr. Gorman, in any Master's Degree program offered at Kent State University. But the from John commission, born F.

Kennedy's incre- he saw Virginia and given Lyndon B. success in campaign President measures lies. "As you know, we are in a difficult economic situation. The soldiers and their families have a very low salary. They cannot have an adequate condition of life.

So that affects the. morale of the troops in Thieu added that his troops also "need time for training. We; need time to provide leadership i for new units. So, I repeat, the' strengthening of Vietnamese! forces and the replacement ofj U.S. forces can be done only in an orderly and manner.

I cannot disclose any specific numbers." dulity at the poverty during the I960 West primary life by Johnson, tiny gains. "They were at the bottom of the barrel and it's difficult to turn that around," Howard Bray, deputy director of the agency committed to improving the income, health and transportation of the 18 million people isolated in a 13-state area. Bray pointed to development of the "hardware of new roads, hospitals, schools and sanitation facilities. But these have been damn small, damn modest." But now for the sick there are hundreds more hospital beds and for the young there are vocational-technical schools. Dozens of communities have new sewage treatment plants and nearly 2,600 miles of new roads are in use, under construction or in planning stages.

i And the administration, 'Congress and representatives of the! affected states have shown! near-unanimous enthusiasm for seeing the effort through. "Every single one of the governors of the Appalachian states, and we cover the whole range of the political spectrum, likes this program," West Virginia's Republican Gov. Arch to approve lowering the voting TAKES POST. Lowell J. Swartz, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Luther F. Swartz of 1003 Kaderly av. NW, New Philadelphia, has been promoted as an industrial sales representative for the Bostwick- Braun Co. in Toledo.

He has been with the firm since his 1961 graduation from New Philadelphia High. He and his wife reside at 1250 Wildwood Toledo. Applegate Plans Second Try to Drop Voting Age Masonite Buys Firm Officials of Masonite the world's largest producer of hardboard, announced today that agreement has been reached on terms to purchase Molalla Forest Products o( Cloverdale, according to John M. Coates, Masonite chairman. Molalla has an annual sales volume of about $10 million.

It operates saw mills and a lumber treatingplant at Cloverdale and Gualala, Calif. Some acres of land, 100 miles north of NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)-Gov San Francisco, a 40-mile private 1 Richard J. Hughes issued a road and cutting contracts for scathing statement Thursday 200 million feet of timber arc in-! about the release of FHI eluded in the acquisition of Mo-; Iranscript.s of alleged lalla and separate purchases'conversations in which Ins from related partnerships. ''name was mentioned.

This is Ma.sonile's second ven- The governor later modified LOOK MA. NO PRINTS. Several members of tin- same family in N.V. were discovered by the stale identification and intelligence system to have no finger or palm prints. Identification experts describe the odds of such an occurence as Slum ing their limitless hand- are Chi'is Hale, (rear left) Mrs.

Jennie Smith. Gilbert Hale, Patricia Smith. (front left) and Hale II. Judy and Chris are children of Mr. Gilbert Hale.

Mrs, Smith is Male's mother. Patricia is Male's half-sister and daughter of Mrs. Smith. Telephoto) Jersey Governor Dover-Ashland Game Postponed The A.shland-Dover basketball game has been canceled tonight at Dover gym. Ashland schools closed today due to bad weather conditions and Ashland school officials saM they not send a team on Die road.

The game has been rescheduled for Tuesiiav. Feb. 10. eathervane ture in the lumber industry in the past year, having acquired the Thrasher Lumber Co. of Ca- pella, last February.

The newly-purchased Molalla company will supply wood chips his statement saying he did not to the court which released transcripts of the tapes. Initially Hughes the release of the 1,200 page to the Masonite hardboard plant; transcript by federal officials, at Ukiah, plant saying "there is a difference plies headboard for the new between law enforcement and Marlite plant at Modesto, Calif. I the dissemination of gossip and Panthers Ignore Ceasefire Order, Policeman Testifies Douglas Applegate, (D-Steubenville), state senator from the 30th senatorial district which in- elude eastern Tuscarawas I CHICAGO (AP) An inquest into the shooting deaths of two Black Panther party leaders in a police raid has been told by Sgt. Daniel R. Groth that he County, has announced that he plans to introduce a resolution, when legislature reconvenes next week, to again ask voters man, professor of education and; wh are not specifically con- iViA ararlnnto I a member of the graduate facul ty at Kent State University.

Dr. Gorman holds the Ph. D. degree from George Peabody College. Registration will remain open through Monday.

The branch office will be open from 7:30 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 9:00 p.m. Students who wish to register in the course must have been admitted to the Kent State versity Graduate School and must present their graduate ac. ceptance cards upon registration. The registration fee for the class is $63.00.

Improving Classroom Instruction falls in the area of educational curriculum. The course 1 fin- I 1 i Education 60s may be used as: Moorc Jr lold a House pub ic age to Works i 11 last. Lasl November such a con- i stitutional amendment was re- an elective in those programs cerned with curriculum and instruction. Students who wish for the course but have it listed on spring. President Njxon, while trim-j jected by a narrow margin of school advisors for permission to enrol! in the class.

It 1 is genera 1 1 understood that any course may be used as an elective even if it is not listed on the prospectus. Prospective students with questions can contact Robert ming back on most items in thei O11 'y 48,000 votes. Applegate will to apply I budget left him by the outgoing i request it be placed on the ballot again in November. "It is paradoxical that GO per cent of the young men who are Vietnam battle casualties do not have the right to vote a right they are fighting to defend," he who do not; Johnson administration, left the their pros-; money for the commission in- pectus should contact their Kent i la l- State University Con ress Congress responded ing the commission's appropriation from $174.4 million for the year ending last June' 30 $283.4 million for the current fis-l cal year. Yet the commission, author- for a six-year period ending June 30, 1971, faces an uncertain; future.

times while the raid wa.s in pro-'and the shotgun blast was fired grcss. from the first bedroom." Each lime, Groin testified! Groth said he ordered an- Thursday, gunfire continued other cease-fire and was told from inside the West Side apart- that some of the occupants ol ment building where he had Die rear of the aparlmenl were gone svith 13 other policemen surrendering, with a warrant to search for As those Panthers were sur- illegal weapons. rendering, Groth said, "I plead- Fred Hampton, 21, leader of ed with the occupants of the the Black Panther party in Illi- front bedroom to surrender." nois, and Mark Clark, 22, a He said another shot came dosvnstate party leader, ssere from the front bedroom and one killed, Groth and the 13 other of the policemen began pouring Chicago policemen who conduct- fire into it. ed the raid did so under special It wa.s then, Groth thai assignment to the Cook County the occupants of the front bed- assassination braggarts and name-droppers." He denied statements in the transcripts that he had met with a strongman sent by reputed Mafia leader Angelo "Gyp" DeCarlo and that Hudson County Democratic boss John V. Keiinnny had influenced him to appoint David Kelly as state superintendent of police.

In tii.s later statement Hughes said he had avoided any criticism whatsoever of the decision of the courts to release the tapes because of my lifelong and professional respect for judicial discretion." The governor, who has II more days in office before yielding to Governor-Kloct William T. Cahill, a Republican, added that his eritici.sm had been directed "at a means for cease-fire and heard another po- gathering information that lias as one incveilable consequence, the indiscriminate slander and character assassination honest men." In another development, ing from the release of the. transcripts Tuesday by a federal judge, two Monmoulh County officials announced they would sue a Mafia boss for sill million on Hie basis tif statements the recorded conversations. Monmoulh County Prosecutor Vincent P. Keuper and Del ('apt.

Andrew a member of Keiiper's staff, they would DeCarlo and Anthonv "Little I'ussv" Hus.so YF.STF.ItDAV High Low -6 TODAY a in -2 SNOWFALL liceman in the rear say, "Come out with your hands up." He said "a voice came from what I considered to be the first bedroom and said, 'Shoot it McC'ullagh at the branch office. Monday between 9 and noon and 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. at 364-5561. Glennan Named to Head KSU Branch Advisory Board Well-Known Cage Official Suffers Injury Robert Glennan of Zoarville was promoted to chairman of Tuscarawas County Kent Slate University Branch advisory board during a re-organizational meeting Wednesday.

Editor Harry Yockey wa.s elected a new board member, and named treasurer. Other officers are Kl. Rev. M.sgr. Ambrose L.

Freund of Newcomerslown, sice chairman, and Mabel Hammersley of Tuscarawas, secretary. Joseph Pompey and Tony Battalio, both of New Philadelphia, membership ducets. Comic W0ds "There are several' options," Bray says. "It dies, it is extended, it is modified. We'll be-doing a lot of evaluating atid soul- searching over the' next 18 months." Thomas D.

(Pete) Copeland, 45, of Wayncsburg, a well-known imo area basketball official, i.s "guarded" in Canton Aullmaii Ho.splial where he underwent LAS VEGAS, Nov. (AP) sur ol 'y Thursday for rVht arm The board has sent letters to Jack K. Leonard, the comic who an(l wnM in an accident every club and organization in spares almost no one from his: at owcl st Shale Co. the county soliciting support of 'iharp-tongued insults, was at A spokesman for the Ilow- Ihe branch's half-mill levy for nervous iit' 58 erston firm said Copeland and operating expenses to appear on Thursday. another worker were attempting the May primary ballot.

The is-1 He was married in a Betiding'to start a power shovel in the sue has been endorsed by scv- chapel Thursday lo pjladys; pit when his hand became en- eral area in- Ksther urt'Uiltrac-: tangled in gears. He said a eluding the AFL-CIO council live, dark-haired art exfybitor problem wa.s caused by and Twin City area Senior Cili- who wa.s divorced Ihx; previous the extreme cold of dav in Ventura, Calif. i Students William Walker of It was the second manage 1(I k( lui Donnison and Jim Cauder of for Leonard, who.se ftrsL wife lll)S )tal Dennison alter New Philadelphia attended the died in 1968. fellow workmen were able to charge, session. They are currently I Mrs.

Westling, who the free his arm and he later was Hull state's attorney's office. Groth testified that when the men he wa.s directing attempted to serve the warrant at Hampton's apartment they were met with gunfire. Earlier Thursday the six-man jury, a racially mixed group ol leading Chicagoans, toured the apartment for 10 minutes. Groth said he ordered the first cease-fire because he thought of his policemen wa.s said he told all him to cea.se fir- room surrendered. for alleging they had accepted bribes for permit ling gambling in areas under their jurisdiction.

Israel Denies U.S. Access To Captured Radar Station police) rang out resumed his wounded. He five men near ing. he said, and I hey (the their firing." Groth said he Phila Resident Jailed 3 Months L. Hull.

111. ol 7uil High New Philadelphia, wa.s sentenced lo month-- in tin 1 counts and lined SL'llli northern dislrn I court Thursday assatiil ami batters LOMKJ.V ((Til-Diplomatic sources said today Israel so lar has denied the Tinted Stales access to (he Soviet radar station Israeli soldiers captured from Egypt. While no direct 1' approach been made to Israel on the matter, the -aid. di erect feelers have been put out to the Isreli military 'I here has no re-pon-e. hip omals expected 1 a 1 experts eventually wuiild be able to examine the even-ion installation-price, perhaps a change Middle ,1 policies The v'Tel.

the So 1 i adar tat.mi ai According to the I'lL' siaiioji is of an ads aiiced type and was only d. Il mounted Irucks and can Soviet-made air antiain i all doing live broadcasts over comedian while transferred have been appointed temporary WJER and WBTl dio stations paintings here last August-, has pilal. The of branch activities. children Uihmii in-if o-chairmcn of th-j branch Scholarship-Loan Booster Club. Officers of the newly-formed organization will mrel Wednesday night at 7:30 at the branch.

Jack Panchcr reported dona- don of 4 lo be awarded to in a membership ticket drive for the booster club. They are llJOO-pound beef, a used car, mi radio and a 2.j-pouiul turkey. The area will be canvassed to sell the about 10:30 to the Canton hos- aecident occurred i a.m. sault yg David Little. Ill, of Bolivar, on August Mustang on lit, Midvale Residant Pbads Innocent HERE I AM 5TANPIN6 KfOft THE HEAP DRIVES, I'll W' YOU CAU COWTON 6(Ri ABSOLUTELY, THE HEADBEASLEHASiJPOkEN MY COURSE 16 CLEAR! LIES AHEAD! HE AND'I MUST OBEV! TOMOKKOW Sunrise 7 Sunset High III Low belosv Forecast Variable cloudi- ii' i.

uith slowly moderating temperatures and gradually diminishing winds tonight. Partly sunny and not as cold Saturday. Highs in the mid and upper teens. Outlook Sunday: cloudy with a chance of snow and not as cold. OHIO FIVE DAY FOKIICAST Temperatures will rnodera'o somewhat but remain below normal Saturday through Wednesday.

Highs will be in tho -Us and the hms will be in the low teens. Temperatures wi! ri-e user the weeken before possibly turning coldei again toward the middle of Ih week. Snosv flurries almost dail; 1 ill average .5 to inch melt ed. Avalanche May Have Claimed 5 GLACIF.H AT I 0 A I'AliK, Mont. (I'PI) Five young mountain climbers ing more than a sveck on I'ool Ml.

Cleveland apparently never made it to the (op ainl mas have been to their deaths by an avalanche, Officials said Thursday a ranger lowered from a helicopter lo the summit found none of the missing climbers' names in the register there. Search crews continued probing through rock and ice asalanche.s on the slope for i he bodies of he climbers, who disappeared on a bold ssirrtci climb undertaken Dec. 27. The mountain is the highest in Glacier Park. Th parly of college all experienced climbers, apparent- Is tried tn -calo its Ireacheron notih wind) had nevci been inter or summer back pack, a parka and a i a'jiera were the only traces 1 ill fated expedition found II) hi Wedliesdav In earlv Thill Park half Nelsmi sair -eenieil certain that nt the i limbers uen here 111 the piles, ol rock ii tr.un the ti cquein the peak of Mi I 'I I ioM i limber, Wele Clai i I'M and Kay bo' "i Mark I.evitan, na.

Jerry IS and James Andei UK Is, Hmtork All were college students. Columbus to Honor Figures in Sports i Hi.l mm nan om 17 -tales ,11 it- 1 aiil dinner Jan il- ili he ter ill basketball,.

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

Pages Available:
194,329
Years Available:
1933-1977