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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 2

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

,1975 OHIO Record tabor i funds help elect Dems CLEVELAND, Ohio Special interests spent more than $379,000 electing the 116 members of the Ohio legislature last fall. Organized labor chipped in $205,000, more than half the total. The figures come from candidates' eipenditure reports filed with county elections boards and the secretary of state. The United Auto Work- em gave the most, $60,000. Other units of organized labor contributing to winning campaigns were the Ohio AFL-CIO, the Communications Workers of America, the Teamsters Union, Hearings set on public employe strike bill COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings begin in the legislature this week on a bill that would make It legal in Ohio for public em- ployes to go on strike.

Similar legislation has failed at recent sessions of the legislature controlled by control of both chambers. Veteran Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartln, D-51 Youngstow'n, introduced the bill. It and other similar measures, besides repealing the strike- prohibiting Ferguson Act, provide for disputes between public employers and their Republicans, but the outlook employees to' be settled by is different this time with la- means of arbitration.

In bor-oriented Democrats The bill comes up for Its first hearing at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the House Commerce Labor Committee. The same panel also will begin deliberations on another bill that permits persons who quit their jobs to qualify for unemployment compensation if unable to find other employment in 90 days. The Senate opens Its fourth week of work with a floor session tonight at p.m. although no bills are scheduled for floor action.

The House convenes at 11 a.m. Tuesday. One of the week's major Items Is consideration by committees In both houses of Identical, Democratic leadership bills appropriating a $91.3 million state surplus for public schools. Re- publicans are pretty much aligned against (he measure In the House, claiming the money should be put Into the kitty for a new state money distribution plan now in the works for public schools. The Senate Finance Committee, headed by Sen.

Harry Meshel, D-33 Youngstown, will take up the bill again at 8 tonight. More tes- nvnnHwi from Tuesday morning, said his "TV uX pas- is about ready to ap- sch00 TheTil maid Jive prove It-GOP objections lonai brings the bill up Rites for air crash victims are Tuesday organized school teachers and local groups. After the record influx of union funds, Democrats captured the Senate after 15 years of Republican control. Democrats have majorities in both houses for the first time since 1959. Other major special interests and their contributions include: and loan Industry $31,050, physicians $31,015, real estate salesmen COL'UMBUS, Ohio (AP) Funeral services are scheduled here Tuesday for Edgar T.

Wolfe Frederick W. LeVeque and Carlton Dargusch prominent Columbus businessmen killed in the crash of a light plane near Washington. Meanwhile, in Washington, federal investigators continued probing the cause of the accident, and hearings were to begin today into the crash of another plane bound from Columbus to the nation's capital. Services for Wolfe, 49, publisher and board chairman of The Columbus Dispatch, will be held at 11:30 a.m. in Trinity Episcopal Church.

Last rites for LeVeque, arid brokers $22,760, building 49, president and owner of contractors $17,250, automo- Tower Parking Co. and sev- blfe dealers $15,950, manufacturers $14,792 and trial lawyers $13,850. Rites scheduled TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) Funeral services will be held here Tuesday for Harold Ottesen, 65, retired vice president of Owens-Illinois, Inc. Ottesen, who was in charge of the firm's Western Hemisphere operations, including subsidiaries in Brazil, Mexico and Columbia, when he retired in 1973, died Saturday, in a Toledo hospital. eral other businesses, are scheduled for 3 p.m.

in the Central College Presbyterian Church. Funeral services for Dargusch, a partner in the law firm of Dargusch and Day, will be held at 10 a.m. in Trinity Episcopal Church. The three men, along with pilots Robert D. Ha-, tern, 28, and Richard White, 49, also of Columbus, were killed Saturday when their light twin-engine plane slammed into a radio tower and hurtled to the ground on the American University campus.

No one was hurt on the ground. Students in the area said one fuel tank apparently exploded when the plane hit the tower and the other at the point of impact. The plane apparently struck the 765-foot tower about 30 feet from the top. Federal Aviation Agency officials said the plane should have been at an altitude of at, least 1,500 feet at that point, about four miles from National Airport. The weather was foggy and cloudy with some drizzle, and airport officials said the ceiling was about 700 feet.

The three men were flying to Washington to attend a dinner of the Alfalfa Club, a group which spoofs politicians and government officials. Sen. Robert Taft R-Ohio, who had invited them, was at the airport awaiting the plane's arrival. President Ford sent a telegram Sunday to Wolfe's brother, John Walton Wolfe, expressing his sympathy. The President said Wolfe would be "long remembered in the fields of commerce, communications and affairs." Ford also sent personal letters to Wolfe's mother and children and to the families of LeVeque and Dargusch.

Dayton prof says individual tests reveal 'reaV student a group of'other students, tain the right answer Gray said. educator said. "It shows nothing about what a kid can do, about his sess district an nctdi- notwithstanding-arid send It nor pupil during on to the Rules Committee T- cr ho for assignment to a floor the last three months of tnc wr school year. weej kpf House and Senate com- manor, j.j ousc Fi- mlttecs are hearing the pro- Committee which posal simultaneously to save jme thflt monoy be available sooner for financially troubled school districts. Some of the hardest pressed districts had local school levies rejected by voters last year as many as three times' The House scheduled a full round of 16 committee hearings Tuesday through the Thursday while 6 were EDGAR T.

WOLFE JR. Columbus publisher Fords send sympathies to families WASHINGTON (AP) President Ford sent the following telegram Sunday to John Walton Wolfe to express his sympathy over the civic death of his brother, Edgar T. Wolfe board chair- 1 man of the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, in a plane crash near here.Saturday: DAYTON, Ohio testing is the answer to setting up individualized instruction uunc me curricula, according to a strengths and how he's or- quired skills, and also free th svs University of Dayton profes- ganizing his world, how he's of cultural bias, Gray said. a 'B schools looking at it," he said. A fourth grade level ability tern schools Gray said his test shows to read standard English is will be heard Tuesday after- thai logical thinking pro- needed to take the test, he cesses the student is capable said.

of using. The teacher then Gray has conducted his ffla can tailor the curriculum to study for the last six years requ.re the teaching of the the student and build on under the auspices of the what the student can learn, Biological Sciences Curricii- Gray explained. lum Study of Denver, "The important factor in which furnished a grant of this test is not the right an- $10,000 and administered the swer but the reasoning pro- experimental test to 500 jun- cess the student uses to at- ior high students throughout the country. sor. Dr.

William M. Gray, assistant professor of education, has tested and constructed a test which describes the kinds of thinking processes of the individually tested student. Other standardized tests, such as intelligence quotient and achievement tests, show where a student falls within A bill to require the noon by the House Education Committee. Another measure before that panel would Entire synthetic eye Former Dem seen in 6 to 8 years leader dies GAINESVILLE, Fla. very small electric current (AP) Synthetic eyes pat- to prompt the undamaged terned after the light panels portion of the retina to send on space vehicles may help visual messages to the some blind people see, says researcher at the Univer- MIAMI histories of minority groups.

The House State Government Committee will meet Tuesday night to consider five bills, including a proposal that would require the state to issue identification cards to non-drivers for check cashing and other identification purposes. At 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, the House Energy Environment Committee will take up two bills earmarking half of the severance tax revenues to restore strip Wolfe was named publisher and board chairman in January 1973. He also was a director of BancOhio RadiOhio, WBNS-TV, Agri- "I was deeply grieved to learn of your brother's death. Edgar Wolfe Jr.

was an outstanding publisher and a patriot in the finest tradition of your great family. He will be long remembered as a sity of Florida. Dr. William Dawson, director of the sight laboratory, says it's a tough project, but he is optimistic that researchers are near, a breakthrough. Dawson said scientists at the university have been brain.

A tiny electrode placed on the eye's outer surface can transmit electrical currents to inner layers and cause a blind person to see light, Dawson said. One of Dawson's volunteers who saw light for the first time in years described the scene as "brilliant as (he mined land. At 8 p.m. Democratic Wednesday, the House Eco- National Committeeman nomic Affairs Federal Re- Frank M. McHale of In- lations Committee holds its dianapolis, who was hospi- second hearing on a proposal talized here 6ne week ago to establish a board of eco- after arriving for a vacation, nomic advisors for the legis- died Sunday at the age of 84.

lature. The Senate Transportation Local Government Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday to consider a pair of bills, one extend- Funeral arrangements were incomplete. working to duplicate the ret- aurora borealis." cultural Lands Buckeye a man of achievement and A ii i Union Insurance Co. and the Neil House hotel.

Survivors include his mother, Alice Alcorn Lind; four children and the brother, John. LeVeque was a vice president and director of a major downtown office building called 50 W. Broad Inc. and also had interests in the car leasing business and auto parking lot. He is survived by his widow, Katherine, five children and two sisters.

dedication in the fields of commerce, communications and civic affairs. Mrs. Ford and I extend our heartfelt sympathy to you and his fine family." Ford also sent personal letters to Edgar Wolfe's mother and children and to the families of two other prominent Columbus businessmen also killed in the accident, Frederick W. Le veque and Carlton Dargusch Jr. ina, perhaps the most crucial part of the eye.

The eye's cornea and lenses already have been duplicated, he said. An entire synthetic eye may be developed in six to eight years, he said. The retina, the eye's innermost portion, is the "seeing" instrument It focuses light rays and transmits them to the brain. Retinal disease and damage account for about 20 per cent of all blindness and are usually incurable, Dawson said. In other labs, animals A prominent lawyer, banker, railroad executive and political organizer who had never sought or held public office, McHale was ing by a month the winter period during which studded snow tires may be used on state highways, and the oth- are undergoing tests to de- born in Logan'sport Ind the er that rec uires the licensing termine how much electrical son mm jg ra nt par and inspection of swimming ents.

current is needed to produce the actual visual image on the eye, Dawson said. The University of Florida plan involves implanting 50,000 to 100,000 tiny light converters, miniatures patterned after the solar light panels used on the Skylab space station and other space vehicles. The small converters would excite previously in- pools. At 8 p.m. Wednesday, the Senate Commerce Labor Committee hears bills that make revisions in the state's female labor laws He had served as national committeeman from Indiana for 15 years and was credited with helping two Democratic lawyers Paul andT make the third Monday V.

McNutt and Roger Jan "fy 9 state holiday to Branigan, become governor memory of slain of the Hoosier State civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. But he said research by active nerves in the retina. the Gainesville team has shown that it takes only a You could get your full tax refund -and more-right We can loan you the amount of your refund It works like any other loan, and you don't have to wait for what's coming to you. Phone or stop in and apply. Tell us how much the government owes you, plus how much extra you'd like.

We'll set up a Tax Refund Loan right You can repay the bulk of the loan when your refund arrives. (Owe tax money? Let us help. We loan money to pay taxes, too. Phone today!) only to our usual credit policy. If the converters known as photovoltaic cells could stimulate enough nerves, an image would form on another portion of the retina and be relayed to the brain.

And there would be sight. Dawson said that to be useful, researchers must make the artificial retina so complex it would be able to recognize subtle differences in intensity from thousands of points that reflect light to it each second. Without this sophistication, a person would see only patterns of light and dark, rather than specific objects. E.R. AG AOAN, M.D.

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Third Street Utirichsville Randy Brooks, Manager Ph 922-4441 NewPhila-Dover 343-5613 Mrs. Dorothy Houck's 2-year-old daughter, Kristin, huddles close to her as they view a super-enlarged photo of a flea's claw, part of a display at the Pacific Science Center in Seattle, of 100 photographs made with a scanning electron microscope. The microscope can magnify objects hundreds of thousands of times. The display is being circulated by Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. (DPI Telephoto) Sandwich Spread ib 891 Gibson No.

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

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