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The Sheboygan Press from Sheboygan, Wisconsin • Page 4

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Sheboygan Press, Friday, Welles Continued From Page 1 Actor Yul Brynner also died Thursday, in New York City. Composer-arranger Nelson Riddle died Sunday, and actor Rock Hudson died last week. Welles starred in such classics as "The Third Man," "'The Magnificent Ambersons," from and scores of other films, including two memorable Shakespearean productions: "Falstaff," based on Henry IV (also released as at and "Othello." Dailey said Welles had trimmed about 12 inches off his waistline in recent months, an estimated weight loss of 40 to 50 pounds. Welles' attorney, Eli Blumenfeld, said no funeral arrangements had been made but that his wife and three daughters were flying to Los Angeles. 1938 Mercury Theater of the Air radio adaptation of H.G.

Wells' "War of the Worlds" terrified millions of listeners who believed the nation really was being invaded by Martians. During the same period, Welles staged an allblack production of Shakespeare's in New York, set in Haiti instead of Scotland. After "Citizen in 1941, Welles' dealings with the studios deteriorated. "'The Magnificent Peace Continued From Page 1 Lown and his Soviet co-founder, Dr. Yevgeny Chazov of the USSR Cardiological Institute, hugged and kissed.

Chazoy said, "I feel that no single person can do something worthwhile. Only a big movement, a large organization can move things ahead." Lown told reporters the award would mean publicity for the group and "therefore we will have an opportunity perhaps to address a wider In its citation, the five-member committee said it believes the doctors' organization activity "contributes to an increase in the pressure of public opposition to the prolification of atomic weapons and to redefining priorities with greater attention being paid to health and other humanitarian issues." The Nobel committee said it would invite Lown and Chazov to receive the prize in Oslo on Dec. Nobel jurors said in their cita- Hijack Continued From Page 1 "was surrounded by American and Italian troops," officials said. The hijackers were taken off the aircraft for trial in Italy, the spokesman for Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi told The Associated Press. It was not immediately clear what charges might be brought.

Western diplomats say the Palestinians killed Leon Klinghoffer, 69, of New York City. Klinghoffer was partially paralyzed after suffering a stroke and was often confined to a wheelchair. Speakes today said the United States is willing to have the hijackers prosecuted in Italy but would file an extradition request with Italy so "if the matter is not disposed of legally in Italy, the United States will have an opportunity to try them." The United States and Italy signed an extradition treaty in Sept. 1984. But Italy does not have capital punishment and has previously rejected requests to extradite suspects if they risked receiving the death penalty.

Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Andretti also said Italy would "likely" release the PLO members who accompanied the pirates on the jet. Israeli army radio said the officials were believed to be Mohammed Abbas, head of the Palestine Liberation Front to which the hijackers claimed to belong, and Hani Al Hassan, the senior aide to PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, the radio said. Arafat, who was in Senegal today, made no immediate comment on the U.S. military action Answer Continued From Page 1 The surprise ending to the Palestinians' odyssey began earlier in the day in Chicago as President Reagan toured a Sara Lee baking plant and the Saratoga steamed on normal operations in the Adriatic Sea, running northwest along the Albanian coast. Reagan ordered preparations made ready for an intercept, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, and the order was sent to the giant ship about 2 p.m.

EDT. The 30-year-old Saratoga and its 85 warplanes turned around and steamed south. Two hours later, Reagan gave the final approval and the carrier's warplanes were launched along with radar planes and tankers for refueling. Weinberger said the F-14 Tomcats streaked south across Crete and circled, waiting for the chartered Egyptian 737. It carried the four hijackers suspected of killing a 69-year-old crippled American, as well as two other Palestinians, four Egyptians, and the plane's crew, Weinberger told the news conference.

October 11, 1985 Ambersons'1 and "Journey Into Fear" were badly edited by others and dumped on double-bills. He starred with his second wife, Rita Hayworth, in "The Lady From Shanghai" and made a low-budget "Macbeth." Disillusioned, he moved to Europe where he hired out as an actor Black "'The Third Man'') to finance his projects, such as and "Chimes at Midnight." He received a special Oscar in 1970 for "superlative artistry and versatility in the creation of motion pictures." In 1975, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award of the American Film Institute, and last year the Directors Guild gave him its highest honor, the D.W. Griffith award. His final performance was an introduction to a 1940s black-andwhite sequence for next Tuesday night's episode of ABC-TV's "Moonlighting," and executive producer Glenn Caron said the episode would be dedicated to Welles. Born May 6, 1915, in Kenosha, Welles read at age 2, played the violin for Stravinsky and Ravel at 7, and played Shakespeare in modern dress at 10.

By age 16 he was acting in Dublin, and founded the Mercury Theater with John Houseman in 1937. tion that they attached "particular importance to the fact that the organization was formed as a result of a joint initiative by Soviet and American They said the organization now is supported by 145,000 doctors and health professionals in more than 40 countries around the world. It has a branch office in London. The Nobel committee said members of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War agreed: To work to prevent nuclear war as "a consequence of their professional commitments to protect life and preserve health." To involve physicians from both East and West and to circulate "factual information about nuclear war throughout the world." Not to take positions on the specific policies of any government, even though they might advocate steps to prevent nuclear war. 10.

To restrict their focus to nuclear war. that forced the hijackers to Italy. A spokesman for Craxi said the hijackers had been moved to a location off the NATO base, but would not say where. "They were moved to a secure place and they are now at the disposition of judicial authorities who will interrogate them," he told The Associated Press. Italian news agencies Thursday quoted Foreign Ministry sources as saying there had been a series of contacts between the Italian foreign minister, Giulio Andretti, and Egyptian and American officials.

However, Speakes said no deal had been reached with the Egyptians to allow interception of the plane, and said the United States "strongly disagreed" with Egypt's decision to allow the Palestinians to depart. Egyptian Foreign Ministry today released a carefully worded statement that said Egypt was "regrettably taken by surprise" by the U.S. action to intercept the plane. Officials said the plane would be allowed to return to Egypt. For much of Thursday the whereabouts of the hijackers was unclear.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak insisted they had left the country and were the responsibility of the PLO, but the PLO said it never received custody. Arafat denied his organization had anything to do with the piracy. But Israeli officials said Thursday they had little doubt Arafat knew the gunmen would be on the ship for a planned attack in Ashdod, Israel, the next port of call after Port Said. The F-14s intercepted the 737 at 5:30 p.m. EDT and the two sides began talking on their radios.

The Egyptian crew radioed to Tunis for landing approval, but was rejected. on Another call for an OK to land at Athens was also turned down. At that point, the 737 "accepted our intercept and agreed it would be taken by us to a NATO base" in Sicily, Weinberger said. No shots were fired. The F-14 is one of the Navy's most potent planes and normally carries both cannons and rockets.

Guided closely by the F-14s and followed by the other Navy planes, the 737 was escorted for 75 minutes until it landed at the joint U.S.-Italian NATO base at Sigonella. There for the six Palestinians were arrested and the Egyptian crew was told it could take its plane back to Cairo, Weinberger said. The Reagan administration has threatened to act before against terrorism and has been under pressure by critics here to do something. This time, the United States was ready, Weinberger: said. Obituaries John Knaub John Knaub, 75, 1404 N.

13th died Thursday evening at Sunny Ridge after a lengthy illness. Mr. Knaub had been a resident at Sunny Ridge the past years. He was born Oct. 10, 1910, in Russia, son of John Sr.

and Katherine He Bauer came his family to Sheboygan, where he attended Trinity Lutheran School and Sheboygan Vocational School. Mr. Knaub was employed by Garton Toy Co. for 40 years, retiring in 1972. During World War II, he served in the U.S.

Army in Europe. On May 28, 1949, he married Katherine Klauser of Sheboygan, at Ebenezer Lutheran Church. He was a member of Trinity Lutheran Church and Sheboygan Memorial Post No. 9156 of the VFW. Survivors include his wife; one son, Staff Sgt.

John J. Knaub, U.S. Marine Corps, stationed at Irving, three grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Julie Dann, Mrs. Sophie Dekanich and Mrs.

Emily Grunwald, all of Sheboygan, and Mrs. Tripoli of Chicago; and three brothers, Gottlieb of Sheboygan, Fred Sheboygan Falls and John Fromm of Coral Springs, Fla. He was preceded in death by two brothers and one sister. Funeral services will be Monday at 2 p.m. at Ballhorn Funeral Chapels, with the Rev.

Lawrence Schmidt, pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, officiating. Burial will be in Lutheran Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral chapel from 4 p.m. Sunday to time of services on Monday. A memorial fund has been established in his name for the Keeping Trinity Together fund.

Marguerite Scheibe Marguerite Scheibe, 86, formerly of 118 Mead Plymouth, died early this morning at Rocky Knoll Health Care Facility, where she had been a patient the past seven years. The former Marguerite Gummo was born May 7, 1899, in Spencer, daughter of the late Charles and Amanda Purdue Gummo. She graduated from Rib Lake High and Central State Teachers College in Stevens Point. She taught in public schools in Mauston, Plymouth and Two Rivers, and had been a substitute teacher in the Plymouth school system for many years. She was married to Roland Scheibe of Plymouth, who preceded her in death Oct.

30, 1959. Mrs. Scheibe was a member of the Plymouth Women's Club, an associate member of the Kohler Women's Club and a charter member of the Plymouth Book Club. Survivors include nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by two 'sisters and one brother.

Friends may call at Wittkopp Funeral Home from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. Her body will be cremated. A memorial service will be held at the funeral home at a date to be announced later.

A memorial fund has been established in Mrs. Scheibe's name for the American Cancer Society, Dorothy L. Jaeger Mrs. Dorothy L. Jaeger, 67, Bradenton, died Oct.

6 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Tampa, Fla. The former Dorothy Rehm was born in Sheboygan, daughter of Otto and Hattie Rehm. She moved to Crofton, Md. in 1952, and moved to Florida in 1982.

She worked for 30 years for the Department of Defense. Mrs. Jaeger was a member of Concordia Lutheran Church in Sarasota, the Dorcas Circle of the church, and the Phoenix Society, Maryland. Survivors include her husband, Eldred; one brother, Milton Rehm of Sheboygan; and two sisters, Mildred Strohmeyer and Helen Herring, both of Bradenton. Griffith-Cline Funeral Home handled the arrangements.

Burial was in Palms Memorial Park in Sarasota. Memorials can be made to the American Heart Association or the American Cancer Society, MIAs Continued From Page 1 Hanoi previously has limited American teams to rare visits of crash sites. U.S. and Vietnamese officials have agreed to another meeting, possibly a high-level one, to discuss Hanoi's plan, but no specific arrangements have been made, the State Department official said. Giang said he agreed with the State Department that the talks were the most positive step in more than four years of trying to account for the 2,455 U.S.

servicemen and civilians still listed as missing or unaccounted for in Southeast Asia, including 1,811 in Vietnam. Bird Seed Sale The Sheboygan Audubon Society will hold a sale at County. First Interstate Bank-Sheboygan Falls branch, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday. Proceeds from the sale will help fund scholarships to conservation camps.

Clarence A. Fasse, 80, Town of Sheboygan Falls, died Thursday afternoon at Rocky Knoll Health Care Facility, where he had been a patient the past 11 months. He was born Aug. 15, 1905, in the Town of Sheboygan Falls, son of William and Augusta Kuhfus Fasse. He attended Johnsonville school.

On May 24, 1924, he married Wanda Hummitzsch in the Town of Sheboygan Falls. The couple lived in the town a short time, then moved to Sheboygan, where he was a mason, until 1937. Since 1937, they lived and farmed on the Fasse homestead in the Town of Sheboygan Falls. He was a member of Saron United Church of Christ in the Town of Sheboygan Falls, and the Brotherhood Society of the church, serving as treasurer of the society. He was also a member of the church's dartball team, the Johnsonville Fire Department, the Johnsonville Rod and Gun Club and the Sheboygan Barbershoppers.

He was an honorary member of the Plymouth Golden Agers Survivors include three Societyite: daughters, Mrs. Warren (Virginia) Feldmann, Town of Sheboygan Falls; Mrs. William (Audrey) Laack, Johnsonville, and Mrs. Ted (Joyce) Riviers, Sheboygan Falls; a son, William of Tampa, 16 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren; five step-grandchildren and nine step-great-grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Henry Sommer of Sheboygan, and a brother, Hubert, Town of Sheboygan Falls.

He was preceded in death by two grandchildren and a sister. Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at Saron United Church of Christ, with the Rev. Edward Beatty, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Friends may call at Wittkopp Funeral Home in Plymouth from 4 p.m. Sunday until a.m. Monday, and at the church from noon Monday until the time of services. Members of the Plymouth Golden Agers are asked to meet at the church at 1:45 p.m. Monday to attend services as a group.

A memorial fund has been established in his name. Clarence A. Fasse Evangeline Linter Evangeline Lintner, 82, a resident of Valley Manor Nursing Home in Plymouth, died there Thursday evening after a lengthy illness. The former Evangeline Laack was born July 3, 1903, in the Town of Plymouth, daughter of the late Herman and Emma Carthaus Laack. On Sept.

20, 1927, she married Ernest Will at Waukegan, Ill. The couple lived in the Town of Plymouth before moving to Plymouth in 1951. Mr. Will died Aug. 23, 1957.

On Sept. 9, 1965, she married Fred W. Lintner. They lived in Sheboygan until 1983, before moving to South Horizon Apartments in Plymouth. He preceded her in death July 20, 1984.

Mrs. Lintner was a member of First Church of Christ Scientist in Sheboygan. Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. Bud (Carol) Kolpin of Plymouth; three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by one brother and one sister.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at Wittkopp Funeral Home in Plymouth, with Wilbert Grams of the First Church of Christ Scientist officiating. Burial will be in the Plymouth Woodlawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 11 a.m. Saturday until time of services.

Judo Tournament Set Oct. 19 At South High The fourth annual United States Judo Association open tournament, sponsored by Judo-No-Kata II of Sheboygan, will be held Oct. 19 at South High School. The tourney will start at noon, with weigh-ins taking place from 11 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.

The entry fee for the tourney is $5. There will be boy's and girl's divisions in light, medium, and heavyweight classes, and men's and women's divisions in light, medium, heavy and open weight classes. Pre-registration and checks to enter the tourney can be mailed to Judo- II, Eight Tacoma Trail, Sheboygan, 53081. For more information, call Matthew Elliott, 458-8688. Campus Life Invites Youth To 'Match Game' Campus Life's version of the "Match Game" will be featured at the junior high program at the Campus Life Teen Center, 2304 Superior Sheboygan, on Saturday, Oct.12, beginning at 7:30 p.m.

Contestants will be taken from the audience to match their answers with those of a panel of experts. Prizes will be awarded. Slides of the recent Campus Life Hayrides involving more than 400 teens and staff will also be shown. In addition, the first quizzing of the year will match teams for competition. The program wil conclude by 9:30 p.m.

All 7th and 8th graders are invited. There is no charge. 6 Shot At McDonalds DETROIT (AP) At least six people were shot today at a McDonald's restaurant on the city's west side, according to broadcast reports. Police received the call about 11:45 a.m. today, said Officer John Leavens.

Police could not immediately confirm details. Detroit radio station WWJ said at least six people were shot, and at least three of them were children. Television station WDIV reported that some youngsters had gotten into a fight and one returned to the scene with a shotgun. The fast-food restaurant is near a high school. Senate OKs Debt Hike WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate has agreed to raise the national debt above $2 trillion, after including an amendment to gradually stop the overspending that's been adding $200 billion a year to the government's ocean of red ink.

But the Treasury, which has run out of borrowing power and used up its cash reserve, remains on the edge of insolvency. The debt ceiling increase won't take effect until the House and Senate can settle their differences over the deficit-reduction amendment. The Senate spent most of Thursday revising details of the deficitcutting plan of Sens. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, Warren Rudman, and Ernest Hollings, which was first approved Wednesday. That accomplished, the lawmakers voted 51-37 to approve the Reagan administration's request for a new debt ceiling of $2.078 trillion, more than double the national debt when President Reagan took office.

They then rushed away for a long Columbus Day holiday weekend. The House scheduled a legislative session today to receive the Senate plan, but no decision was expected. Americans Heading Home CAIRO, Egypt (AP) American passengers from the hijacked Italian cruise ship will leave Egypt Friday night aboard a special military charter flight, a U.S. Embassy official said. The official, Ray Johnson, told The Associated Press that the group would leave as soon as the remaining six Americans from the liner Achille Lauros arrived by bus from Port Said, where the ship has been docked since Thursday.

Earlier Friday, U.S. officials here said the Americans would leave Saturday aboard commercial flights. AIDS Victim Suing Blood Plasma Company INDIANAPOLIS (AP) A man who claims he contracted AIDS from contaminated blood plasma used to treat hemophilia has filed a $10 million lawsuit against the company he says supplied product. Mark D. Ellis, 30, of Hope, contracted acquired immune deficiency syndrome in July as doctors prepared him for a knee operation, according to the suit filed Thursday in Marion Superior Court.

The lawsuit says the blood plasma was distributed through Cutter Biological Division, a company owned by Miles Laboratories of Elkhart, and contained HTLV-3 virus, an organism believed to cause AIDS. Ellis has relied on the plasma because of his hemophilia, a disease that interfers with the blood's clotting ability, according to the suit. Officials of Miles Laboratories were unavailable for comment on the suit Thursday night. Since contracting AIDS, the suit says, Ellis can no longer hug and kiss his wife and two sons and has had to give up his job and face the prospect of a diminished lifespan. suit also seeks $200,000 for Ellis' wife.

Mrs. Ellis had to quit her job with an Indianapolis company because other employees were afraid to work with her, according to Earl C. Townsend, attorney for the family. "I'm not doing it for money for myself," said Ellis. He said he has received Social Security benefits since 1981 because of his hemophilia.

get $503 a month, my wife can't work. I'm a poor person. But I don't want my kids to be poor and without a dad." he said. AIDS destroys the body's ability to fight infections. Victims are mainly male homosexuals, hemophiliacs and abusers of intravenous drugs.

The deadly disease, which has struck more than 13,600 Americans, is believed passed through sexual contact, contaminated blood products and dirty needles. Aspirin A Day Backed To Reduce Heart Risk WASHINGTON (AP) An aspirin a day could lower the risk of a fatal heart attack by 20 percent to 50 percent for some heart patients, the government says, and it estimates the regimen could save 000 to 50,000 lives a year. Margaret M. Heckler, the secretary of health and human services, said Thursday the aspirin treatment now has the approval of the Food and Drug Administration, based on the results of scientific studies involving more than 11,000 patients. She told a news conference the aspirin studies showed a 20 percent lower death rate from second heart attacks among people who already have suffered one, and a 50 percent lower death rate among men suffering from unstable angina or worsening chest pains.

The studies did not deal with the question of whether healthy people also benefit by taking an aspirin a day, Mrs. Heckler said, but she noted that many doctors already have made aspirin part of their own daily routine. "There's a certain reasonableness to thinking it might be" useful in healthy people, added Dr. Robert Temple, FDA's drug chief. "But that's not the same as knowing it." Long-term studies are now under 3 Chapels On Ground Floor No Steps To Climb CONVENIENT PARKING ballhorn dighth and St.

Clair Dial 457-4455 KNAUB, John Monday 2 p.m. chapel. Friends call 4 p.m. Sunday and Monday to time of service. Years Of Conscientious Service" 1882-1985 way to determine the effect on healthy people.

Temple is one of those participating; he said he takes a tablet each day, but because of the controlled nature of the study, he does not know if it is aspirin or an inactive placebo. Mrs. Heckler also stressed that aspirin "is not a substitute for other preventive therapies for heart attack. A lot of us need to stop smoking, eat better, lose weight and exercise sensibly." At the same news conference, Mrs. Heckler announced FDA approval of a new implantable defibrillator that can deliver a lifesaving electrical jolt to the heart of a person suffering a potentially fatal heart flutter, Rescue squads now use portable defibrillators to jolt heart attack victims, but they must reach the victim first.

The new defibrillator, implanted in the body, fires its jolt as soon as it senses that the heart has lost its rhythm. About 1.5 million people suffer from ventricular tachycardia, the heart problem that causes the flutter, Temple said. Wittkopp FUNERAL SERVICE FASSE, Clarence A. Monday 2 p.m. at Saron U.C.C., Town of Sheboygan Falls.

Friends call at funeral home from 4 p.m. Sunday until 11 a.m. Monday; at church from noon until time of service. Plymouth Golden Agers are asked to meet at church 1:45 on Monday. LINTNER, Mrs.

Evangeline Saturday 2 p.m. at funeral home. Friends call from 11 a.m. Saturday to time of service. SCHEIBE, Mrs.

Marguerite Friends call at funeral home from 3 to 8 p.m. on Sunday. Following Cremation Memorial service to be held at a date to be announced later. "Since 1910" PLYMOUTH, WISCONSIN Dial 892-2626 or 892-4326.

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