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The Kokomo Tribune from Kokomo, Indiana • Page 8

Location:
Kokomo, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Vital statistics 8 Tuesday, Oct. 19,1993 Kokomo (Ind.) Tribune Obituaries Mary M. Milas Mary M. Milas, 77, 1222 Meadowbrook Drive, died Sunday, Oct. 17, 1993, in Allen Bennett Memorial Hospital in Greer, S.C., after an extended illness.

A native of Czechoslovakia, she was born Feb. 10, 1916, to Joseph and Anna (Kappa) Mikita. June 22, 1937, she married Michael J. Milas, who died Feb. 24,1990.

She was a homemaker and a member of Northview Christian Church. Surviving are a daughter, Ann Shaneyfelt of Kokomo; a son, Dr. John M. Milas of Greer; two broth- Andrew Mikita and Michael Mikita, and two sisters, Helen and Anna Osifcin, all of Czechoslovakia; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Her parents are deceased.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Northview Christian Church. The Rev. Dr. J.

David Griffin will officiate. Burial be in Albright Cemetery. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. today at Fenn Funeral Home and one hour before services Wednesday at the church. Carolyn Kendall Carolyn L.

Kendall, 58, Windsor Estates, died at 2 a.m. Monday, Oct. 18,1993, in the facility. She was born July 27, 1935, in Kokomo, a daughter of Jack and Evelyn (Ferguson) Kendall. Surviving are two brothers and sisters-in-law, Jack and Janice Kendall of Union City and James and Velva Cline of Kokomo; three sisters and a brother-in-law, Barbara Kicklighter of Metter, Janet Wallace of New Haven and Susan and Bob Wise of Kokomo; 12 niece and nephews, Brad Kendall, Carrie Houston, Jay Cline, Jeff and his wife, Terri Cline, Jamie Cline, Steve and his wife, Pam Wise, Tim Wise, Joey Wise, Kim Wise, Mike Kicklighter, Mark Replogle and Cindy Turk.

Services will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Fenn Funeral Home. Rick Keck will officiate. Burial will be in Albright Cemetery. Friends may call from 1 p.m.

until service time Wednesday at the funeral home. Betty E. Beyer SHELBYVILLE, Ind. Betty E. Beyer, 73, Shelbyville, died at 2 a.m.

Monday, Oct. 18,1993, in her home. She was born Aug. 8, 1920, in Knoxville, to Samuel and Edith (Lloyd) Cunningham. Sept.

2,1933, she married John J. Beyer, who survives. She was a homemaker and medical technician, working at Major Hospital in 1942-1944. A resident of Shelby County, Mrs. Beyer was involved in the following organizations: St.

Anne's Altar Society, member of St. Vincent's Catholic Church and Religious Education Co-ordinator for 6 years for the church. Also surviving are seven children, Stephan A. Beyer of Prescott, Alice A. Bottorff and Michael J.

Beyer, both of Shelbyville, Paul David Beyer of St. Paul, Rose Mary Sheedy of Windfall, Thomas E. Beyer of Geneva and Timothy S. Beyer of Waldron; a sister, Meta Foster of Knoxville, 12 grandchildren; two stepgrandchifdren; and a great-grandchild. A sister preceded her in death.

Services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday in St. Vincent's Catholic Church. The Rev. James Dede will officiate.

Burial will be in St. Vincent Cemetery. Friends may call from 4 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Carmony-Ewing Broadway Chapel where a prayer service will DC conducted at 8 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the church or a charity of donor's choice.

James Schinlaub TIPTON, Ind. James L. Schinlaub, 60, Tipton R.R. 3, died at 10:10 a.m. Monday, Oct.

18, 1993, in St. Vincent Hospital in Indianapolis. He was born Oct. 28, 1932, in Tipton County, to Lewis and Genevieve (Cage) Schinlaub. May 13, 1953, he married Barbara Ley, who survives.

He worked at the plant food division of Top Ag, Inc. and was an Army veteran of the Korean War. He was a member of St. John's Catholic Church, St. John's Ushers Club, Farm Bureau, Inc.

and American Legion. Also surviving are A son, Mark Schinlaub of Indianapolis; two daughters, Jill McCullough of Tipton and Karen Schinlaub of Indianapolis; a stepbrother, Jean Morris of Okeechobee, and two grandsons, Josh and Jaime McCullough. Services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. John's Catholic Church.

The Rev. Fred Gschwind will officiate. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery. Friends may call from 2 to 8 p.m.

Wednesday at Young-Nichols Funeral Home where the rosary will be said at 7 p.m. Death notices Dale Klingerman GREENSBORO, N.C. Dale Klingerman, 65, Greensboro, died about 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 16, 1993, in Lumberton, N.C.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday in Greensboro First Christian Church. Lambeth-Troxler Funeral Home is handling arrangements. Ora B. Barker PERU, Ind.

Ora B. Barker, 59, 1010 Rosewood Drive, died at 3:02 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 17, 1993, in Dukes Memorial Hospital. Services will be at 11 a.m.

Wednesday in Flowers-Leedy Funeral Home. Burial will be in Ever-Rest Memorial Park in Cass County. El Nino threatens for 3rd consecutive year Anzel Lambert Warming could cause storms and drought LAKELAND, Fla. Anzel M. Lambert, 82, Lakeland, died Sunday, Oct.

17,1993, in Lakeland Memorial Hospital. Services will be at 10 a.m. Friday in Planner Buchanan Shadeland Mortuary in Indianapolis. The Rev. Jim McKinney will officiate.

Entombment will be in Crown Hill Mausoleum in Indianapolis. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the mortuary. Funerals Atkinson, Joseph services 10 a.m. Wednesday, France-Wilson Colonial Mortuary.

Hiatt, Margaret services 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Leatherman- Morris-Boyer Funeral Home, Tipton. Turner, Lois Mae (Hill), services 2 p.m. Wednesday, Hoffman- Murray Funeral Home. Obituary information American flags like the one shown here that appear with some obituaries in the Kokomo Tribune signify that the deceased was a military service veteran.

The Tribune charges funeral homes for obituaries and arrangements pending. The charges are $80 for an obituary with a head- and-shoulders picture, $75 for an obituary without a picture and $15 for arrangements pending. There is no charge for obituaries of trustee-paid funerals, Death notices and Funerals. All obituaries and death notices must include: name; age; address of deceased; and time, day, date and location of death. 2 acquitted in Denny beating LOS ANGELES (AP) The jury in the Reginald Denny beating trial finally spoke, and spoke softly, acquitting two black men of some of the most serious charges in the assault on a white trucker at the outset of last year's riots.

The jury returns today to try to reach a verdict on an attempted premeditated murder charge against one of the defendants, Damian Williams. The charge is one of the most severe and carries a maximum life prison term. By DON KIRKMAN Scripps Howard News Service For the third consecutive year, the Pacific Ocean warming called El Nino may cause winter storms in the United States and widespread in other areas of the wdrld. Three consecutive years would be a first. To the surprise of meteorologists and climatologists, a mile wide stretch of warm water has developed along the equator in the eastern and Central Pacific.

If it keeps spreading, as they believe, the warm water will affect the weather in North and South America, Australia, Indonesia and southern Africa during the coming winter and spring. Weather satellites and reports from ships and Pacific islands have determined that El Nino's sea surface temperature currently is three degrees warmer than normal and rising, National Weather Service research meteorologist Vern Kousky said. During this century, most El Ninos nave Upset the world's weather during one winter and spring, then dissipated. A few have affected the weather for two winters and springs. This time, the weather is being affected by an El Nino that refuses to die.

It began during the fall of 1990 and upset the world's weather in the winters and springs of 1991-92 and 1992-93. Weather experts expected it to end this summer. Wrong. It flared up again last month. The big question is how intense the latest outbreak will be.

If it is as severe as last year's upsurge, the southern United States from Florida to central California could be lashed by heavy rainstorms as heat and moisture waft from the equator to the Gulf Coast states, Desert Southwest and California, Kousky said. Last year's outbreak was strong enough to play a major role in breaking California's seven-year drought. Two years ago, the El Nino turned Texas and Louisiana into a vast lake. It also could cause warmer than normal winter and spring temperatures in the northern United States from Washington to Minnesota, Kousky said. Elsewhere, third El Nino surge could cause searing droughts, particularly in northern Australia, the eastern Pacific, southern Africa and northeast Brazil, areas that have been parched for two years.

"We have no idea what causes El Ninos," Kousky said. "This one is especially surprising." Oil embargo under way PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) A potentially devastating oil embargo was reimposed on Haiti today as its army commander ignored demands that he respect a plan for the return from exile of the country's elected president. Six U.S. and three Canadian warships were offshore to enforce the embargo, and a French frigate was on the way to join them. But if Lt.

Gen. Raoul Cedras was worried, it did not show. News of record Births Saint Joseph Hospital Health Center Fitzgerald, Michael and Kristen (Williams), 3038 S. Road 350 West, a boy, Kenneth David, 8 pounds, at 4:03 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.

12, 1993. Dismissals Saint Joseph Hospital Health Center Craig, Erma, 725 W. Foster St. Edgerly, Fred, Logansport Gilbert, Daisy, Kokomo Lipinski, Candy, 3409 Zartman Road Mason, Donna, 4919 Arrowhead Blvd. Moores, Fredrick, Bunker Hill R.R.I Mote, Angela, 1133 S.

Cooper St. Mullenix, John, 1400 E. Jefferson St. Wilson, Donald, 2501 S. Webster St.

Workman, Barbara, Greentown As the midnight deadline for signaling his acceptance of the peace plan approached Monday, Cedras relaxed with aides at army headquarters. News photographers snapped shots of him smoking a cigarette and joking. Asked what the army would do if U.S. troops came ashore to rescue Americans, Cedras said: "I'm certain it will not reach such a point." About 9,000 U.S. citizens live in Haiti, 8,000 of them Haitian- Lottery update Americans.

Belgium and Canada urged their citizens to leave Haiti over the weekend, and many did. In the event an evacuation of American citizens was ordered, helicopters and hundreds of U.S. Marines were moved over the weekend to the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The goal of the embargo is to compel Cedras to live up to terms of the accord he signed to allow President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to return to office Oct.

30. Lottery Hotline (900) 226-0277 95 cents per minute; Touch-Tone telephone required Indiana INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Here are the winning numbers selected Monday in the Hoosier Lottery: Daily Three 9-8-0 Daily Four 5-8-5-2 Estimated Lotto Cash jackpot: $1 million Estimated Powerball jackpot: $9 million Ohio CLEVELAND (AP) Here are Monday night's Ohio Lottery selections: Buckeye 5 23-24-28-31-34 The Super Lotto jackpot is $4 mil- lion. Michigan DETROIT (AP) Here are the winning numbers selected Monday in the Michigan State Lottery: 10-23-24-28-38 Saturday's Bonus Lotto jackpot is worth $20 million. Kentucky LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Here are Monday's winning numbers selected by the Kentucky Lottery: The Pick: 2-3-14-18-22-29-48-52 Estimated Lotto Kentucky jackpot: $3.9 million Illinois SPRINGFIELD, 111, (AP) Here are the winning numbers selected Monday in the Illinois State Lottery: Little Lotto 05-07-16-19-30 Estimated Lotto jackpot $7 million Bands separate high temperature zones for the day Ml South Bend Cloudy a 60 percent chance of showers and possibly t-storms.

Low 50 Sunrise Wed 7:01 a.m. Fort Wayne Sunset tonight 5:58 p.m. Kokomo 62 50 A 90 percent chance of showers and High in the low 60s. First quarter Oct. 22 New moon Nov.

13 Indianapolis 58 56 Last quarter Nov. 7 Chance of showers. Low 40. High 60. Full moon Oct.

30 Partly cloudy with a low in the 40s and a high in the 60s. Almanac Evansville Normal high: 63 Normal low: 40 24 hi precip: trace Monthly precip: 1.82 Avg. monthly precip: 2.80 Previous day's high and overnight low to 8 a.m. EST Partly cloudy with a low in the 40s and a high in the 60s. Sunny cloudy Cloud Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Why should you buy hearing from an audlologlit? Clinical audlologists, (hearing care professionals), offer the appropriate testing, countellng and fitting necessary for sucess with hearing aids, Your cllnlcdraudlologlit should have at least a master's degree In hearing rehabilitation.

Clinical audiologlsts are not trained merely to sell hearing aids, but to provide a full range of hearing care services and give complete and accurate information. You'll feel safe In the hands of Jon Weaver, M.A., CCC-A. orofdsslon slncd IQfiO He received his bachelor's and master's degreeeln agdlology from Ball State University. He Is certified by the American Speech-Language-Hearln Association and Is a fellow of the American Academy of Audtology, as well other professional organizations, state and nation wide. AUDIOLOaY ft HEARING AIDS, Inc.

402 S.lerkleyRd. Suite Kokomo 457-4261 William Wrtaht UI.MD "Comnteta Care far the Eta" Hlcta MD.

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About The Kokomo Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
579,711
Years Available:
1868-1999