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The Sheboygan Press from Sheboygan, Wisconsin • Page 4

Location:
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SHEBOYGAN PRESS, Tuesday, May 25, 1971 Fischer-Taimanov Chess Match Held Up: Illness Peer-Group Pressures Among Factors In Drug Abuse Problem match round will be played Monday. In Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Larsen beat Wolfgang Uhlmann, East Germany, in the 36th move of. their sixth match. Larsen made a merano defense. The match lasted 4Y2 hours.

He now has four points and Uhlmann has two. The seventh match of the ten- MARY i 4- McGRORY By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Grandmasters Tigran Petrc-sian of the Soviet Union and Bent Larsen of Denmark recorded victories Sunday in quarter-finals play of the World Chess Championships but illness forced postponement of the Bobby Fischer-Mark Taimanov elimination match. In Sevilla, Spain, Petrosian defeated Robert Heubner, West Germany, in 40 moves. This was the seventh match between the two players and the first victory by Petrosian. The other six games finished in a tie.

Petrosian made a Sicilian defense in the match which lasted five hours. The Soviet player has four points and Huebner three. The eighth match of the ten- game round will be played greater threat of heroin appeared. They used scare tactics about pot. The GIs, being young, tried it anyway, and had what they called "good experiences." Bored support troopers went on to heroin, and thought, because it could be "smoked" or "snorted" it is 97 percent pure and very strong they would not become junkies.

The military, which has only recently begun rehabilitation attempts, has protested that it is not a social agency. With few exceptions, it has sought to restore the lost souls only if it took a reasonable time to rehabilitate them for military duty. Thousands identified as drug-users, but unrehabilitated, have been given administrative separations for "characterologic ineffectiveness." It is contended, with some justice, that many brought their habit with them luesaay. And in Vancouver, B.C., Soviet Grandmaster Taimanov, 45, asked postponement of the fourth game to seek treatment for high blood oressure. Next BY MARY McGRORY WASHINGTON The dis-positon of young America to "obliterate the pain of living" as one expert called it through drug use is now in full public view here and abroad, in mufti and in uniform.

The President's Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse opened its year-long investigation of marijuana, with the benevolent ex-governor of Pennsylvania, Raymond Shafer, in charge. The President has said that no matter what the commission's findings, he will not legalize the use of marijuana. His attitude probably will have as much deterrent effect as the various legal penalties in force. "Everbody seems to be smoking pot," said John Ruocco, the executive director of a Philadelphia rehabilitation center called Gaudenzia House, "and at all levels of society." None of the well over 30 panel members challenged him. There is a great lack of data, but what is not known about drug use is almost universally suspected by frantic parents.

The same tidings had come from a staff report of Sen. Harold Hughes' Armed Services game in the match will be played 'luesaay. U.S. Grandmaster Fischer IpsHs the 10-eame match. 3-0.

The match is one of a candi Others are Arnold Martin of the Sheboygan Professional Policemen's Association; Mary Crnecki, voted best girl of the 1970 color guard and drill team; and Mrs. Barbara Wessler (right), Buccaneer director. (Sheboygan Press Photo) A THOUSAND DOLLARS changed hands quickly as two pretty Sheboygan Buccaneers accepted $500 checks Monday from each of two co-sponsors one a newcomer to Sheboygan, People's Brewing Co. of Oshkosh represented by Theodore Mack, president, second from left the front door, you don't worry about the common cold coming dates' series designed to choose a challenger for world champion Boris Spassky of the So into service. in the back," he says.

viet Union. Steele believes there is one clear way" to save the Armv and the 260,000 soldiers In Moscow, Viktor Korchnoi of Russia defeated countryman Yeffim Geller Saturday in the still in Vietnam. People's Beer Joins Police In Sponsoring 'Buccaneers' fifth game of their quarter-final "We must brine them back as soon as possible," he counsels. "preventive education." The young men, all survivors of unhappy childhoods, pleaded with the members to start at once a program to tell school children "the truth" about marijuana: that it is not physically addictive, does not produce hangovers or create an emotional dependence that cannot be easily broken. "That's just the up-front information," said one witness.

"The rest is to ask them who they are and what they are worth, so they won't be tempted." In one grisly particular, civilian and military users seem to differ. Dr. Donald B. Louria of the New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry told the commission that in a survey of several thousand teen-age marijuana users, only 20 percent went on to other drugs In most cases to LSD. Progress To Heroin But the appalling news from Vietnam, brought back by Reps.

Robert Steele, and Morgan Murphy, is that 50 percent of marijuana users in Vietnam progressed to herein. Their- findings, which may swamp any revelations about marijuana, are that 10 to 15 percent or from 30,000 to 40,000 of the soldiers still in Vietnam are junkies, hooked on the potent, plentiful local variety, which is four times as strong as the stuff peddled in New York match. The victory, on the 26th move, gave Korchnoi a 3-2 lead in their 10-game series. In 1950, per pupil costs averaged $209 in the U.S. public schools but by 1968 the cost was $659.

And indeed, tne heroin crisis may become a more compelling reason to bring the troops home than all the peace demonstrations and legislative proposals vet fielded. Copyright 1971 Now Steele and Murphy are demanding that the government take full responsibility for curing the soldiers who picked up he habit in Vietnam. Estimate Doubled Steele points out that the National Institute for Mental Health last week doubled its estimate of, the number of heroin addicts here. The figure went from 125,000 to 250,000. "We can't even begin to handle those we have already," says Steele.

"What are we going to do if 30,000 to 40,000 more are unleashed? For their sake, as well as society's, we've got to find them and treat them." He and Murphy paid little attention to the widespread use of subcommittee on drugs. The Washington Star Unlike many of the senior generation, many young Americans, including those in the military, do not regard the use of marijuana as a moral ques Knopp Pigeon Wins 236-Mile Race Sunday Stormy weather slowed the winning pigeon down to 35 miles per hour as 221 birds competed in Sunday's race from Rochester, to Sheboygan. A bird from the Walter Knopp loft won the event, arriving home at 3:37 p.m. altering liberated at 7 a.m. in Rochester, a distance of 236 miles.

The following top 10 lofts are figured in yards per minute: Knopp, 810.53; John Rami, 808.03; Harold Knier, 788.77; Eugene Jeske, 780.06; Ray King, 770.77; Otto Oldenburg, 768.52; William Hagemeier, 751.58; Ray Daehn, 728.41; Harold Hum-mitzsch, 724.52; and Art Gehrke, 683.76. BUTLER BUILDINGS tion," said the report. SEARL STEEL BUILDING COMPANY 262 N. Seymour P.O. Box 667 Fond du Lm, Wiiconjin Phone 922-0850 Local Dealer ELDOR A.

SIEBERT, 3710 Kcehler 452-2813 marijuana in Vietnam. Guarantee Alarm In ghetto and suburb as in the barracks, pot-smoking seems to be an easy way of guaranteeing alarm and outrage from one's elders, of expressing contempt for the life style, values and obliviousness of the estab When the plague is coming in With a $500 check and a smile, Theodore Mack, president of People's Brewing Co. of Oshkosh, put his firm's support behind Sheboygan's Buccaneers Monday. Mack had a few friendly words when newsmen asked why People's had decided to become a co-sponsor of Sheboygan's nationally famous color guard and drill team. "They're the champs.

They help bring prestige to the State of Wisconsin," said Mack whose brewery recently introduced its product to the Sheboygan area. The amount of his check was matched by another check presented by Arnold Martin, representing the Sheboygan Professional Association, a longtime Buccaneers sponsor. The $1,000 changed hands during a brief meeting at Security First National Bank where Mrs. Barbara Wessler, a bank employe and director of The Buccaneers quickly put the funds into a deposit. Others attending the event included Mary Crnecki, Bucc's best girl of 1970 who'll be a junior at Sheboygan South High School, and Joseph J.

Udovich president of the Buccaneers Parent Organization. "The Buccaneers and parents certainly appreciate and welcome Mr. Theodore Mack, president and chairman of People's Brewing as our new co-sponsor along with our own Sheboygan Police Department," said Udovich. "We hope that other industries will follow suit here in Sheboygan so that we can reach our goal of $8,800." The Buccaneers this year have a big financial burden to overcome "because we have to re-equip our entire unit," Udovich explained. Nineteen new girls, ages 8 years and up, have joined the Buccs so far this year, bringing the color guard and drill team force to 50 boys and girls.

The team travels extensively throughout the state and makes national trips, sponsored by the VFW, which this year will be to Dallas, to try for another national drill team title. "We would, like to purchase our own bus which we feel would pay for itself in the very near future," said Udovich, further explaining the $8,800 goal. lishment. In uniform or out, the same personalities are prone the insecure and unloved, those who respond more readily to "peer-group pressure" than to the and one-tenth the price. threat of punishment.

Oconto Ordered To Clean Up Sewage Plant ROMAN WAGNER AGENCY INSURANCE AND INVESTMENT SERVICES 611 NEW YORK AVENUE. SHEBOYGAN. WISCONSIN 53081 PHONE 414-467-7763 ROMAN F. WAGNER, C.L.U., C.P.C.U. BILL BERNDT GOTTLIEB J.

PFISTER The Army, which closed its eyes to the drug problem, in Vietnam for a long time, moved heavily against marijuana and lost its credibility, when the The solution offered the Shafer Commission by four deadly serious young ex-addicts was (MS MADISON, Wis. (AP) The City of Oconto was ordered Monday by Circuit Court to provide continuous disinfection of effluent from its sewage treatment plant by Sept. 1. Judge William Sachtjen directed the city to submit plans to the Department of Natural Resources for construction of improvements to its treatment Such plans, Sachtjen said, must include minimum 85 per cent removal of phosphorus from sewage. The judge said the state would retain $1,000 as a forfeiture from the city for its failure to obey a special antipollution order issued earlier by the Your Social Security n-iULii Nf ILfiA substantial earnings this year.

Is this right? A. Yes, regardless of your earnings, you may receive benefits for any months in which you take no part in your business. Telephone your nearest Social Security Office. Q. I will be age 62 on November 22, 1971, and intend to quit working November 1, 1971.

Do I receive social security benefits from the date of my birth, Nov. 22? A. You will receive benefits beginning November 1, 1971, the first day of the month in which you reached age 62. Q. My husband was receiving social security payments and he died April 27.

Am I entitled to a portion of his April check since he lived 27 days? A. No. Benefits are not payable for the month in which death occurred. Advertising Club Meets At Appleton Louis J. Haugh, Chicago, will on "Ten of the Sharpest Sales Promotion Ideas I've Ever Heard Of" at the Wednesday evening dinner meeting of the Fox Valley Advertising Club to be held at Butte des Morts Country Club in Appleton.

Haugh, formerly a financial writer and advertising marketing columnist for the Chicago Tribune, is now editor of Adver-t i i and Sales Promotion magazine, a publication of Crain Communications, Inc. New officers and directors will be elected at the Wednesday meeting. The Fox Valley Advertising Club will conclude its 1970-71 year on Monday, June 7, with a golf jamboree at Westha-ven Golf Club in Oshkosh. Q. I am a school teacher, age 63.

1 do not teach in June, July, or August but I am paid on a 12-month basis although I am paid only for the 9-month school year. I have heard that I might be able to receive social security checks for the three summer months. Is this correct? A. Yes. Because you do no work in June, July, or August, you may receive benefits for these months.

You should contact your local Social Security Office immediately. Q. I will be age 65 on July 11, 1971. I am working steadily, earning good money, and have no intention of quitting my job. I do not want Medicare protection.

Do I have to retire before I am eligible for Medicare? A. Absolutely not. You do not need to retire in order to get Medicare. You do, however, have to file an application, and in order to get the full protection of Medicare you should file before July, 1971. Filing for Medicare may be done by telephone and will in no way affect your retirement benefits when you do decide to retire.

Q. I am age 20 and receiving social security benefits because I am a college student. I am getting benefits based on my deceased father's employment. I intend to go to school for another year, but I am getting married next month. Will I continue to receive my social security checks? A.

No, your benefits as a student will end the month before the month you get married. You must notify your local Social Security Office at once. Q. I am age 67 and am in business for myself. I have good earnings and although I have signed up for Medicare, I have not been able to receive any monthly benefits because my earnings have been too high.

Since 1 have been working hard all my life, I have decided to take a two-month vacation shortly. I do not intend to retire. I have heard that I could draw benefits for these two months in spite of the fact that I will have Activist's Suicide HUE, Vietnam (UPI)-A 1 6 a r-old student activist burned himself to death today in a demonstration for peace, police reported. Phan Gia Ly, a tailor and activist in Buddhist student organizations, poured gasoline over himself then set himself afire, police said. Between 1957 and 1969, state-local taxes per person more than doubled in all but 10 states.

CREDIT UNION LOANS PROVIDE NEW it "Building at its best" If you aren't a Junior Banker now. you can still attend the big theater party by starting a Junior Savings account now at any Citizens Bank. Good news for all our Junior Bankers another ig Citizens theater par ty at the Sheboygan Theater, from 1:30 to 3:30, June 15, 16, 17, 18. Cartoons and a great feature film. Free popcorn.

A treasure chest on stage. Plus surprises. Free to all Junior Bankers. HERE'S HOW TO GET YOUR THEATER PARTY TICKET 1 Select the day you want to attend. 2.

Bring your Junior Savings passbook to any Citizens Bank in Sheboygan, Sheboygan Falls, Plymouth or Cedar Grove. 3. Pick up your ticket (or have mom or dad do it for you). Don't go through another winter or spring with a leaky roof. It's not only annoying It's damaging.

So go ahead order your new roof and pay for it with an easily arranged Credit Union loan. SHEBOYGAN CHAPTER CREDIT UNIONS Thii metsage it iponiored by the CREDIT UNIONS at the following companies: VoMrath, Kohler, Garton Toy, KohUr General, Leverenx Shot, Polar Ware, rVeu Publishing N.W. Railroad, City and County Lakeland Electric Spray-It, Wiicontin Power and Light, Bemii Manufae-tunng Sehulta Sav-0 General Box, Vinyl Plaitlci, Die Cast, Medical Employeei (Memorial), llion. DEPOSITS INSURED TO $15,000 Masonry Carpentry Concrete Cabinets Torglnol Seamless Floors Citizens lanks QUO BANK OF SHEBOYGAN SHEBOYQAN, PLYMOUTH, SHEBOYQAN FALLS CEDAH GROV8 NORTH 8I0E STATE BANK COMMUNITY SOUTH SIOE BANK CONSTRUCTION CO. 526 North Av.

432-6563.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1904-2024