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The Oshkosh Northwestern from Oshkosh, Wisconsin • Page 24

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Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
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24
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May 18, 1971 Daily Northwestern 24' New York Stock Quotations 32mtttlragaianli leatlja Ffist Notionol Bonk Building Connally in Cabinet Could Reach Higher mmmmmmmmmmrnm Major Leaders -v. v.v.-.-.v.v swwwi wKvw SsCvJaw.wKwm By United Press International Leading Batters National League G. ABR. H. Pet.

at Byron, and married Louis W. Frei Feb. 12, 1907, in Avery, Okla. They moved to Fairwater in Connally, would you like to tell ning as an American team. This (Furnished by Rdieit W.

Build 4 Oshkosh. ot 12:30 Alcoa 68' 4 23Vt 16' IBM A lean Alum Allis Chal Am Brands Am Can Am Cyan Amer Motorj Amer Home Prod AT4T Armco Steel Arms Cork Bendix Av Beth Steel Bobbie Brooks Borg Warner Brunswick Caterp Tractor Chase Manhattan Int Harv Int Paper Johnson Service Kimberly-Clark Kresge Litton Industries Magnavox Manpower Medalist McGraw Edison Middle So Util Minnesota Mobil Oil Nat Steel No Amer Nor States Northwest 37H 36'4 761 46 19't Wfi 22 I6V4 30 32H 52'4 53 Mining Rockwell Power Airlines Out Marine Pan Am World Air Penney Pepsi Cola Plllsbury Mills Proc tV Gamble RCA Rep Steel Royal Dutch RE Corp Santa Fe Ind St Regis Paper Sears Roebuck Smith (AO) Sperry Rand Square Std Kollsman Std Oil Calif Std Oil Ind Std Oil. NJ Studebaker Tenneco Texaco Trans World Air UAL, Inc 29 50 35'i 37 25V4 35'4 32 22H 95 143 50W 36 63' 116 83 31 '4 51 13 31 V4 26'zj 20' 31 V4 107 29 coastal states Gas Chrysler IZT'L Con Edison continental Tei DoTchemicai DuPont uv Ford Motor Gen Tei gK Lewis Goodyear 5rea. Guf Gulf Oil Honeywell Mil, where they operated a gen- eral store for many years. Mrs.

Frei was a charter mem- ber of Zion Evaneelical Luther- an Church, anH a member of the Ladies Aid since 1915. Surviving are one son, Melvin, Markesan; four daughters, Mrs. Everett Schmuhl, Appleton, Mrs. Robert Middlestead, West Allis. Mrs.

Philip Nelson. WW- tewater, and Mrs. Henry Rede-ker, Menominee Falls; one sister, Mrs. Anna Lenz, Fairwater; 26 grandchildren, and 32 great- grandchildren. Burial was in Fairwater Cem etery.

Harvey Mytton LAKE MILLS Harvey Mytton, 61, Rt. 1, Lake Mills, died Monday at a Madison Hospital. Oshkosh Mrs. Orval Perdue Mrs. Orval F.

Perdue, 34, of 14 W. 14th died Monday at 7-Mnm nt Mprrv Mprfiral On- tpr She had hpfn hnsnit.ali7.0H two weeks. The former Judith E. Kosmer was born in Oshkosh on Dec. 5, 1934, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Bernard Kosmer, and was married to Orval Perdue on Nov. 12, 1955. Mrs. Perdue was a member of St Vincent Catholic Church.

Surviving are her widower, Orval; three sons, Michael, Stephen and James, and two daughters, Linda and Janet, Oshkosh; her parents in Oshkosh; one brother, Ralph Kosmer, and one sister, Paula, also of Oshkosh. Services will be held Wednes day at 11 a.m. at St. Vincent FK STSe at Fiss ill at K'icc At Bills Funeral Home today from 5-9 p.m. Prayer service this evening will be at 8 p.m.

niyc.uw.. Algeroon E. Pickel, 79, died Monday at 2:15 p.m. at Winne- bago County Hospital. He was born in Hancock on r.

A 1901 onn nf ThnmflS and Hannah Pickel, and had former- ly been employed at Miles Co. in Oshkosh. Surviving is one sister, Mrs. Violet Stacey, Fond du Lac. Services will be held Tnursaay at 1:30 p.m, at Seefeld Church Avenue Chapel, with the Rev.

not nf Plvmniith JjyiUI OV.VVU, yanvvi rnereeational Church, offici- "r-, ating. Burial wm De in me mi- tifjo Cemeterv. -s4 i i i i af- in Lake Mills for the past 25 in i.airo tnr Tnp nnsr y.i years. are ms widow, are his Ruth; one daughter, Mrs. James aTNmrtW; JohnAppleton, and Gary, New undoubtedly would find some grumbling in Republican and Democratic ranks but it would satisfy their friends, if they won.

Connally's best asset seems to be his utter frankness. He cuts right through the bureaucratic laneuaee to make a point clear, He has abandoned circles and corners to get to the heart of a matter. His sprinkling his speech with homespun refer- ences to farm life and folksy people takes away the veneer of polished sophisticates and usual- iy makes them enjoy laughing. The result is good for the nation anrj the world, for Nixon and for Connally. ti.

vji-j riM ii i if it-M i i wti ii i.r. in ifiin weeR. Besides me aouar, mere ,1 was tne proposal wax mis i gov- -5-as in loans to Lockheed Aircraft Corp. It was given him to sell to Congress. It is not a sure thing that he can do so.

General Elec- umu uv. MU uu oU. fhf nfthaf then ought to be bought in this country, instead of from Rolls-Royce of England. Yet Connally's agreement with the British that it i i i i- ii Ti TLliT JH, TLk iSheed is based on keeping two big employers in the two countries from going under with the resultant loss in employment. General Electric's argument certainly in in lino iirifh n-sct IT thinkind 13 111 lllll.

VTltil wwwv TT onmnoo onn 1 1 government contracts. If Connally can put this over it Will be a men test Ot mS elO- nupnnp nnH skill at manPUVerinS quence ana skiu ai maneuvering People. Already, ne was trying iu sen government reorganization and revenue sharing, and was sue- ceeding in bringing down inter- est rates and increasing the pub- Enemy Supplies Being Blocked WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. Before the most recent dry military officials say only about season opened last autumn, nno nut nf oanh oirrht innc nf hftwoupr NnrtVi VlPfnam Inct Runs Batted In By SARAH McCLENDON Northwestern Correspondent WASHINGTON While speculation grows from day to day that former governor, now U.S. Treasury Secretary John B.

Conally of Texas will be the next Republican vice presidential candidate on the ticket with President Richard Nixon when he seeks re-election, there is a mushrooming curiosity about the man himself, his whims, habits, expertise. International financiers during this crisis with the dollar and the mark have all been asking if Connally knows enough to lead the U.S. out of this, is he strong enough, and is he determined. ruling uiu, ume, voiuiaiiy was virtually sleep ne on call stand- oiccpmg uu wu, aiauu mg close by his office, only ac- nit rrv mi wprp nun vpn 'W-v JJUnng ail IMS Period Ot stress, there is one story that of- ficia nf the Wnr Bank fnr- the international-Bank for Reconstruction and Devel- opment) have been telling. Since Robert McNamara, former secretary of Defense, is president of the bank, and since John Connally is now secretary of the treasury, it would not be too difficult to reason that the story is authentic.

It is that President John F. Kennedy named a man named McNamara to be Secretary of Defense. He named John Con- nally to be Secretary of the Navy. Then McNamara called Kennedy to tell him of his ivcmicuy swduuweu choice. Kennedy swallowed nard' remembering that in the 1961 race for the Democratic presidential nomination at Los Angeles that one John Connally, thf masfpi nf iho namnQi'on nf one Lyndon B.

Johnson for the same thing, had some pretty harsh things to say about a man from Massachusetts named Ken- nedy. But after recovering from the shock, Kennedy said to Mciamara, "Here is a man whom I think vou should tell aKnnf Mile, At about this amjointment." At that Pint- Kennedy put Vice Presi- aent Lynaon jonnson on tne line, and he heard for the first time what later Johson was given credit for the naming of Con-what later Johnson was given be SecTetary of the credit for the naming of Con- Navy. The story has another chapter, In 1971, President Nixon called former President Lyndon John- son on the telephone earlv one mnmintr at hrpnkfast time frnm the White House He had inst former President Johnson about this? Connally did. Then in many stories and columns, Johnson is given the credit agin for a John Connally appointment that he got on his own. There is no doubt but what Connally is enjoying fully the emancipation now of being a top man in government where he can show his talent for leadership and create some programs and techniques of his own.

The fact that the former President whose water John Connally carried for many years, while he was in the House of Representatives, partly while in the Senate, in Texas in and lt nf rnmnnicms rpnpatpH rT r- -r r)prnrrrimr rnnvpntinn! is nn WpP "VZ ir.jrzsu Connally. One begins to wonder if it woe Hip Hpsiro tn he nut from under Johnson that made TO SM him during campaignS) to work in Washington with him at the Senate and later in the White House or cabinet post. Connally who is considered to have had successful tenures as governor of Texas is now considered to be making a far greater record in the cabinet post. Already, he is receiving the warm priase of other Nixon appointees governor of Texas is now consid- riMVP IlHfl KIH'f'PNM 111 i.t-MllirN AS even though they are men of Nixon's own party. Connally has ii Deen SO Weil received DV Uie public and particularly theW rommunitv that there communuy inai mere seems 10 De 110 sign 01 nvduy 10 1- i plague him in the Nixon admin istration.

Those who might have thought about it would not dare, now. A oocfl in rninf wnc urVion Po ter Flanigan, assistant to the president, was asked about this recently at a press conference, Flanigan would be in the posi- tion to compete with Connally, having been the one on the staff who handled financial, econom- if. Wall Street matters, textile trarlp neuntinrmns anH kinHrerl i matters for the President before Connally arrived. Flanigan said that Connally was not taking a back seat to any one nor was he the type who would. Flanigan praised lavishly Connally's ability and acceptance by the business world.

There is now widespread ac- ceptance of the fact that Con- nally could be the No. 2 man on the next presidential ticket. Just how Nixon and Coally would maneuver this with their resoec- tive parties, no one has nroi- ne was Dorn Aug. za, xauz, in the Town of Vinland, and had been employed at the Badger Motor Manufacturing Co. in Mil- waukee for 33 years prior to his retirement four years ago.

He was a member of the Quarter Century Club of the company. Surviving are the widow, Eve-Otter lyn; one daughter, Mrs. Leslie Kellog) Milwaukee; a son, El-She mer Hoehne, Milwaukee; a hal brother, Edgar Trick, Mil-July waukee; ltwo sjsterS) Mrs. Elsie Churchill, Cudahy, and Mrs. Vinla Knoll rwrfiplrl Fla sir lie debt.

claim more than 22,000 North Some of these issues could Vietnamese trucks were Connally himself into strdyed or damaged between P.M. New York lime) 3364 28'. 38 34'j M't 81 31' 47 39to 16 39 237 113 56'. 46V 27 25 31 37 Wt 6VA 58 50' 59V2 3Wt 28V 44 "4 144 25 40 '4 88 49 25' 9V4 57 60' 77 64 26 36 Un Carbide 4' S3 21 i 51 'A 106 46 Un Pac US Steel Will Ross Wis Elec Power Woolworth Wis Public Serv Xerox Zenith Radio MUTUAL FUNDS Chem Fund 18.63-20.36 Fidelity Fund 16.47-18.00 Fidelity Trend 25.15-27.44 Investor Mutual 10.25-11.14 Invest Stk Fno 20.12-21.87 Manhattan Fnd 5.26- 5.75 MIT 14.61-15.97 VIG 13.00-14.21 Nat'l Inv 8.25- 9.02 Wis Fund 6.77- 7.40 WISCONSIN UNLISIED Banta Co 12-13'4 Bergstrom Paper 16V4-17V4 Consol Papers 23 -23 1st Wis Bnkshrs 33-Gateway Trans 13 -13'i Godfrey Co 24'j-25'A Kearney Tree 14-14 A Krueger 19 -20Vj Madison 14Mhl4 Mortgage Asso 43'j-44A North Central Air 4 4 Oshkosh B'Gosh 20 Bid Pabst 55-56'4 Osh Nat'l frank 28 -29 Shakespeare 10-11 Sta-Rite Ind 16W17 Valley Bancorp 18-19 Western Publ 21'i-22 297 Wis Nat'l Life In 204-20 37 Wis Pow Light 21-22'A vt.vfv. tawmiuii wwb access to the Cambodian port because of the changeover in Cambodia's government.

CfllCGQO CH(CAG0 Cheese; Processed loaf sm-iti brick gie daisies 65'2-70; Swiss blocks 80-100 Grade A 68'-74Va; 44'2-77Va. CHICAGO (UPI) Livestock; Cattle 300; slaughter steers too few for an adequate price test; cows active, 50-7S higher; slaughter steers load choice 1225 lb 32.75; load mixed good and choice 1,00 lb 3J 25; and commercial cows 21.50-23.75; several nigh dressing 24--24-25'" tanner and cutter 19.50- 2U'7 24 sheep none. Cattle estimate for Wednesday: 4,500. (AD) rhirann lAamnlll Exchange Eggs about steady; wme- "SS. WW ums 25; standards checks 17.

Milwaukee MILWAUKEE (AP) Monday's cattle market closed 25-50 lower, good to choice steers 27.50-33.00; good to choice heifers 26.00-32.00; good Holstein steers 27.50- standard to low good steers adn 25.50; utility cows 22.50-25.00; canners and e' relal Calves: Monday's market closed fully xo, good 34.00 and down. heavy butchers 16.75-17.75; light sows 7 boars Lambs: Mondays market dosed fuiiy X.i., ewes and bucks 0500. Estimated receipts for Tuesday: 1,000 Milwaukee ap Potatoes: North Dakota U.S. No. 1 red 50 M.00; North Dakota size 50 Idaho U.S.

No. 1 russet burbanks Wisconsin superiors u.a. rvu. 9.ju, Idaho russet burbanks U.S. No.

1, 10 Inch and larger Florida U.S. No. 1, new, size red 50 lbs. size $4.00. MILWAUKEE (UPI) Cash grain: Oats: 0 received, 0 Inspected.

No. 2 white 71 H. Barley: 46 received, 2 Inspected. Wheat: 0 received, 1 inspected. 1.51.

Corn: 59 received, 1 Inspected. No. 2 yeiiow 1.49V2-1.52. Soybeans: 0 received, 1 inspecteo. 2.93-2.91.

Unlisted Stocks Commerce Capital Vt Vk First Nat'l Leasing 3 3' Glass Fab 2 2Vi First Midwest Inv. Corp. 3 3 Pill and Puff Vt 9 Education Agency Holds Drug Seminar APPLETON Cooperative Educational Service Agency No. Appieton, win now its iirst seminar for drug education lead- ers from throughout the state on Thursday and Friday at the CESA headquarters at 107 N. Douglas Appleton.

Headed by Carl Strassburg, CESA drug education director, 1" velopment of effective teacher-pupil instructional strategies and local adult drug councils. Ceramics Is Topic Of Couples Club Dr. Paul Donhauser of the Wisconsin State University-Oshkosh art department, gave an illustrated talk on ceramics at the May meeting of the Grace Lutheran Church Couples Club. The Sunday dinner was pre- pared by a committee including Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Tesch, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kind, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kramer, Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Landvatter and Mr. and Mrs. William Mueller. Garr, Atl 36 151 29 61 .404 36 140 21 54 .386 32 110 24 40 .364 34 137 27 29 .358 35 138 14 49 .355 Davis, LA Mays, SF Brock StL MUn, Atl Jtaub, Mont Torre, St.L Bckrt, Chi 28 99 18 35 .354 35 133 22 46 .346 36 145 25 47 .324 uroie.

32 108 16 35 .324 American League Oliva, Min 28 118 25 48 .407 28 104 11 34 .327 34 126 15 41 .325 37 143 21 46 .322 90 8 29 .322 34 143 19 45 .315 Rchrdt, Chi Kllbrw, Min Rojas, KC Holt, Min Tovar, Min Ystrzmsk, Bos 32 108 27 34 .315 Bos 32 126 21 39 .310 Jhnsn, Bal 32 118 14 36 .305 Home Runs NATIONAL LEAGUE ssiiiiii i mm Cepeda rw-, T3 fr ri uimus, A1. Horton, De and White, NY 7. el1; nV'ci i i J8: Torre- st and M'Vai v-n AMtiKlLAIN LLAtlLL: Kllle- brew, Minn 28; Powell, Bait and Bando, Oak 25; Yastrzem-ski, Bos 23; Northrup, Det 21. Pitching NATIONAL LEAGUE: Jenkins, Chi 7-2; Dierker, Hou 6-1; Carlton, St.L and Marichal, SF 6-2; six tied with 5. AMERICAN LEAGUE: Blue, pjK i.

Siebert, Bos 6-0; MpNallv Rait anrl t2 pimCT Balt Tnliph 6-2; Palmer, Bait 5-2; Lolich, Det and Perry, Minn 5-3. Nolan Gets New Pact SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Coach Dick Nolan of the San n4S team into its new stadium next season. The 39-year-old coach, who took the 49ers t0 their irst Na' tiorial Football League division tie last fall 6ot the new con- tract Monday from Lou Spadia, president of the -team. Terms were not disclosed, but Nolan is believed to be in the range. His old five-year contract, which had two years to go, was torn UP- The 49ers were 10-3-1 in 1970, Nolan's third season as coach, and won the Western Division of the National Conference.

They missed a trip to the Super Bowl by losing 17-10 to the Dal- las Cowboys in the NFC title game. The 49ers will play their home games in Candlestick Park this year, after 25 seasons in Kezar Stadium. Fischer Wins First Match VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) -Bobby Fischer of Los Angeles won the first game of his 10-game match with Marck Taimanov of the Soviet Union Monday when the Russian chess expert resigned without more play. Their match was adjourned Sunday night after the 40th move.

Fischer leads 1-0 in the quar-finals of the World Chess Championships to decide a challenger to present world champion, Boris Spasky of Russia. In other quarter-final match- es, Bent Larsen of Denmark and Wolfgang Ulhmann of East Germany, tied 1-1, adjourned after the 41st move of their third game at Las Palmas, Canary Islands. Russians Victor Korchnoi and Yefim Geller played to a draw on the 35th move of their third game in Moscow. It was the second draw, with Korchnoi the winner of the other contest. At Seville, Spain, Russia's Tigran Petrosyan and Robert Huebner of West Germany tied for the fourth time in as many games.

Mental Health Group To Meet on Thursday Charles R. Bylsma, executive director of the Wisconsin Mental Health Association, will speak at a special meeting of the Winnebago County Association for Mental Health, Thursday night. The public meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Sherman Hall, Winnebago State Hospital. Those attending will be able to ask the executive director questions about mental health.

May is Mental Health Month, accord-int to county Association trouble with Congress and the American neoole. For example, Unninn tumnla Vnr ovamnlo will all the other firms want government guarantees for loans? His answer Was: "The govern- ment has done this before. It does it nearly every day. We did it extensively in the days of the RFC (Jesse Jones'Reconstruct- inn Finance Cnro.l The eovem- ment does it in defense con- tracts now and in 1967 it guaran- teed $75 millions for Douglas Aircraft." What, mav he developing here mav not be onlv a vice president Gallagher said hearings will start June 14 or 15 and bills to be heard will include the proposed Vietnam Disengagement Act, the House version of the Senate's Hatfield-McGovern amendment for a total withdrawal. Most members of the parent setting a withdrawal date but Gallagher has promised a full hearing.

named John Connally Secretry ected, but it could be that Presi- it may be a president, some of the Treasury. Nixon said to dent Nixon is thinking of run-" day. House Democrats to Vote On Antiwar Proposal Again vuv Wi vuvu wiw xi supplies North Vietnam put into the Ho Chi Minh trail got through to its troops in South Vietnam and Cambodia during the recent six-month dry sea- This amounted to about 7,500 1 tons 01 Supplies, aDOUl lowest loiai to pass aown uic in CDim, tho nff5. dals calculate. rph tut nitrht and dav I attacks on North Vietnamese trucks by U.S.

planes caused planes Caused the bulk of tne supply loss witn the South Vietnamese ground operation into Laos also shar- ing credit. American military analysts Nov. 1 and May 4, roughly twice US manv aS the COm parable dry season last year The analysts Say the CUt in the supplies means North Viet- namese and Viet Cong troops will lack ammunition and other miliary necessities until the next dry season in the fall. This means the Northern and Viet Cong troops Will be in no position to threaten major of- fensives when the dry weatner returns in November, they say, ana nanoi wm nave iu gem uy another hi(T restirmlv drive against strong U.b. air opposi- tion U.S.

Officials indicate the re- suit will be a continued U.S. troop withdrawal without serious threat to shrinking American forces in South Vietnam. U.S. military officials say the North Vietnamese sent more than 57,300 tons into the Ho Chi Minh trail in the 1968-69 dry season and got about 12,400 tons through to their forces. At the time, they still had access to other supplies through a Cambodian seaport.

In the 1969-70 dry Hanoi succeeded in pushing through about 19,000 tons of supplies out of about 55,500 put into the trail, officials said. Team Tours NEW YORK (UPI) -The United States Equestiran Team left Monday for a month and a half tour of European countries. Halas: Art Rooney, owner of the Steelers, and Alex Webster, Giants coach. The first annual Brian nc- colo award will be presented at a dinner following the golf tour- nament. The award will go to a Bear rookie selected by the team's veterans.

Lyon Appointed LA MIRADA, Calif. (AP) Biola College announced Mon- day the appointment of Howard Lyon, 43, a veteran California high school mentor, as head basketball coach. Lyon succeeds Jim Poteet, who resigned to accept a posi- tion at Bethany Nazarene Col- lege in Bethany, Okla. Felker, Oshkosh, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m.

Thursday at the Bouslough Fnnprnl Homo lWillc Friends may call at the funer- al home from 4 until 9 p.m. Wednesday. MmM-MCMm Emer Hoehne Plmor A Hoehne, 68, of 754 Fieldcrest unve weenan, aiea unexpect- edly this morning. TT 1 A nn prflndrhilrtrpn and nnp iwat- grandchild Funeral arrangements are at Ksler Funeral Home. Neenah.

Neenah. Elmer F. OltmannS NEENAH Elmer F. Olt- manns, 61, of 632 Hansen Neenah, died at 1:30 p.m. Mon- day following a lengthy illness.

A Neenah resident for 25 yers, Mr. Oltmanns was born in Al-toona, June 8, 1909. He was a 1933 graduate of Doane Col- lege, Crete, and did gradu- ate work at the University of NeDraska A research engineer, he had been employed as a coating spe-c i a 1 i with Kimberly-Clark Corp. until his retirement in March of this year. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church of Neenah, a former leader with the Boys Brigade for many years and a fo member of the McDowell Chorus.

Surviving are the widow, Frances; a daughter, Miss Mary Oltmanns, Hammond, a son, Thomas, at home; his step- mother, Mrs. Fred Oltmanns, Wisner, three sisters, Mrs. Reuben Meyer, Wood Riv- er, Mrs. Harold Moseman, South Sioux City, and Mrs. Danny Greco, Omaha, two brothers, William, Scottsbluff, and Alvin, Wisner, Neb.

Funeral services will be held at First Presbyterian Chapel, Neenah, at 3 p.m. Thursday. The Rev. John E. Bouquet, DD, will officiate.

Cremation will follow the service. The Westgor Funeral Home, Neenah, is in charge of arrange- ments. There will be no visitation at the funeral home. Births Oshkosh (Mercy Medical Center) Ronald Felker, 1075 Greenfield Trail, Oshkosh, boy. Jerry Dunning, 1418 Power Oshkosh, boy.

William Wissink, 1848 Mt. Vernon Oshkosh, girl. Neenah-Menasha (Theda Clark) Russell Cook, 841 Second Menasha, boy. Appleton (St. Elizabeth) Leon Griesbach, Rt.

1, Greenville, boy. Wautoma (Memorial Hospital) Gerald Verdine, Wautoma, girl, May 13. gress this would jeopardize re- headed by Cornelius E. Galla-lease of American prisoners of gher, WASHINGTON (AP) -House Democrats will vote again Wednesday on ending U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war by Dec.

31 and the results could give some in war or prevent safe withdrawal of U.S. troops. A House foreign affairs subcommittee also will hold offi- them variations on theDec. 31 date, next month. And Common Cause, the citi- dication whether 54 similar pro- cial hearings on some 53 end-posals in House channels have the-war proposals, most of 0 11 1U.

Paul Mueller who preceded her in death in 1951. Mrs. Mueller was a member of Christ Lutheran Church and Golden Age Club. Surviving are two stepsons, Paul Miller, in California, and Nathan Miller, Menasha; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Sylvia Sin-delar, in California, and Mrs.

Mildred Christensen, in Arkansas; one sister, Mrs. Dorothy Andrews, Oshkosh; and six grandchildren. Services will be held Friday at 1:30 p.m. at Konrad Funeral Home, with the Rev. Joseph Wong, pastor of Christ Lutheran Church.

officiating. Burial will be in Oakhill Cemetery, Neenah. Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 4-9 p.m. Edward Finnegan Edward Finnegan, 82, died Sunday at 4:15 pjn. at Winne- bago County Hospital following an extended illness He was born in Illinois on Nov.

22, 1888, and was married to Mary Nichols on March 22, 1952. Mr. Finnegan had been a guard driver for Brinks, and was a former member of Knights of Columbus. Surviving are his widow, Mary, in Oshkosh; one daughter, Mrs. Lucille Dreyer, Chicago; and three grandchildren.

The body was taken to Poklas- ny Funeral Home, and private services will be held Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at Mt. Carmel Cem- etery, with the Rev. Lawrence Maddock officiating. Mrs.

Virginia Newton Mrs. Virginia Newton, 57, of 6410 Fond du Lac Road, died un expectedly Monday at 11:30 p.m. at her home. She was born in Oshkosh on Jan. 9, 1914, and was married on July 20, 1938, to Kenneth Newton who preceded her in death in 1951.

Mrs. Newton owned and operated the Checker Grill. Surviving are one brother, Milton Mand, Oshkosh; and one sister, Mrs. Gladys Jury, Oshkosh. Services will be held Thursday at 1:30 p.m.

at Konrad Funeral Home, with the Rev. Thomas V. Asuma, pastor of St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church, officiating. Burial will be in Lake View Memorial Park.

Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday from 4-9 p.m. Mrs. Ida Frei FAIRWATER Funeral serv ices were held Monday at Zion Friends may can ai we Church Avenue Chapel Wednes- day from 4-6 p.m., and on Thurs- day from 10 a.m. until the hour of services. Mrs.

Anna Mueller Mrs. Anna Mueller, 84, of 637 died today at 2:30 a.m. at Mercy Medical Center. had been ill one week. She was born in Oshkosh on 25, 1886, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Jugler, and was married here in 1921 to zen loooy neaaea Dy tormer Mouse oreign Aitairs uom-Secretary of Health, Education mittee are against Congress' any chance at passage. The Democratic caucus last month rejected a Dec. 31 pull-out but Rep. Bella S.

Abzug, who is asking for the new vote, says she is "very optimistic" the result will be different this time. The next test of the Dec. 31 deadline in the House itself is scheduled next week when the House Armed Services Com mittee will consider whether an amendment to end the war will be attached to the military weapons Dill, me proposal would cut off weapons for the war effective next Jan. 1 unless President Nixon notified Con- Piccolo Fund Golf Tourney and Welfare John Gardner, a further end-the-war amendments will be attached to other House bills. The end-the-war effort before the Armed Services Committee also will be pressed before the full House next month.

It is sponsored by Rep. Lucius N. Nedzi, and Rep. unaries w. wnaien n-unio The remaining 53 proposals will be heard Dy tne House Asian affairs subcommittee Hazel Sir The National Football League's top quarterbacks will collide on the Playboy Club-Hotel golf cmirse in iju Geneva June 7 for the first annual Brian Pic- colo Fund golf tournament.

Among those taking part will be Bart Starr and Zeke Brat- kowski of the Green Bay Packers; Charlie Johnson, Houston Oilers; John Hadl, San Diego Charges; George Blanda, Ok- land Riders; Ron Gabriel, Los Angeles Rams; John Brodie, San Francisco 49ers; Virgil Carter, Cincinnati Bengals; Frank Tarkenton, New York Giants, and Bob Griese, Miami Other players include Ray Nitschke, Green Bay; Alex Karras and Lem Barney, De- troit Lions; Andy Rusell, Pittsburgh Steelers; Jan Stenerud, Kansas City Chiefs; Mike Ditka and Cornell Green of the Dallas Cowboys, and Tucker Fred-erikson, giants. The tournament will honor Piccolo, a Chicago Bears' running back who died in June of cancer. There will be 100 foursomes at $100 per person with all proceeds going to the Piccolo Cancer Research Fund. The foursomes will be made up of three regular golfers who will be joined by someone from the pro football ranks. Besides other Chicago Bears players, participants will in- I tllSTALLED-REPiREo 617 Oregon St.

235-5720 Evangelical Lutheran Church for Mrs. Ida Frei, 86, who died Friday after a three-week ill- neSs. She was born March 17, 1885, a-u Wild KOSe (Wild Rose Hospital Eugene Davey, Wild Rose, boy, May 13. Inc. Wo, Id nihu rw.rvMl "We have a small request.".

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About The Oshkosh Northwestern Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1875-2024