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The News-Messenger from Fremont, Ohio • 5

Location:
Fremont, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NASON ON EDUCATION: Fremonl News-Messenger Saturday, June 4, 1966 Victim Of Accidental Civil War Pageant Shooting Gets Diploma Plan Activities For Summer Students To Receive Diplomas At Ohio U. One Fremont student and sev eral others from this area will HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) An 18 year-old youth whose life hung in balance for weeks last summer after he was shot during a Civil War Centennial pageant graduated this week from Lakota High School as one of the 10 top science students in Ohio. Stephen Wilhite of Maud was shot in the face June 26, 1965, during the "re-enactment" of Confederate Gen. John Hunt Morgan's said on Winchester, Ohio. Morgan's Raiders passed through Winchester and other your local newspaper to locate such an organization in your town.

It may lead to a very enjoyable and profitable summer. Dear Dr. Nason: Please advise my college son on his choice of courses for summer session. He is vacillating between a beginning course in calculus and one in American history; both of which are required. He would take both except that his summer job will consume too much of his time.

V.A., Richmond, Ind. Answer: The history course would be the better choice. It requires much reading, and reading time will certainly be available to your son since he is limiting himself to one course. Over the years I have found before a Confederate firing squad. The script then called for Morgan to pardon his rash assailant but the way things happened, some shots were fired and Steve was hit under the left eye.

He spent weeks in a Cincinnati hospital, part of the time on the critical list, and did not return home to hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilhite until late in the summer. But he started school with his classmates and earned top honors as a science student. "It's not much I just studied and tried hard, that's all," Steve said of his accomplishment after the commencement.

Steve plans to go to Ohio State University with the help of a scholarship he earned for his work at Lakota. receive degrees Sunday at the 120th commencement of i university. Miss Nanette S. Mann, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs.

Donald Mann, 832 Rawson avenue, will If awarded a Bachelor of Sci ence degree in Education. Guy A. Link, 125 Pfeiffer street, Clyde, will receive a Bachelor of Civil Engineering; James P. Gensman, Port Clin tc a Bachelor of Business Ad ministration; Randall B. Grubb, Bellevue, a Bachelor of Science; Jeffrey, S.

Walters, Bettsvllle, Joanne McWilliams, and Judith L. Garey, Bradner, each a Bachelor of Arts; and Thomas M. Wetmore, Genoa, and Sue K. Eshelman, Port Clinton, each a Bachelor of Science in Educa tion. Leslie J.

Nason, Ed. D. University Of Southern California Dear Dr. Nason: My. two high school students, a boy and a girl, need help in formulating plans for the summer.

They will each be out of town in a summer camp for one week sometime during the middle of the summer but the rest of the summer they will be free and we would like to have them kept busy. A.M., Woodbury, N. J. Answer: There are many opportunities for teen-agers to volunteer their services for community work during the summer. Assistants in recreation areas, especially small boat sailing and swimming, are needed.

Many young people will serve as tutors in special educational programs for the disadvantaged. The list could go on and on. Many cities have a special office through which volunteer services are coordinated. Check your telephone directory or have your son and daughter make inquiries at the library or, perhaps, at vrv v1 southern Ohio towns before they were forced to surrender near West Point on July 26, 1863. But the incident during whose re-enactment Steve was shot never actually happened.

Steve played the part of a youth who supposedly shot off Morgan's hat and was placed NEW EAGLE SCOUTS were honored in a week- Tne tnree bys earning the highest rank in scouting were Robert Verbryke, Russell special ceremony at Harris-Elmore school this Damscnroder and Steve Ames. that most students who attempt to cover the first of a long series of courses during the short sum-; mer session are dissatisfied with the result. A better foundation There are 1,489 candidates to receive degrees at the 1:15 p.m. services. Three Elmore Boys Earn Ranks Of Eagle Scouts and Brent Weis; Second Class pins, Steve Arndt, Jerry Ebert, Mike Foltz, Douglas Giesler, Mike Netz, Don Naumann, Matt Larceny Charged In Stamp Theft Ted W.

Cook, 23, 1907 Hayes avenue, was arrested by police Friday on charge of petit larceny signed by the management oi Certified Oil Company in connection with trading stamps missing from its station at east State street. Cook admitted taking the stamps valued at $37.50. He said he took them in lieu of wages owed by a former employe of the station. Robert Parlow, named as owing the wages, has been found Another Graduating From BG, Will Teach Though her name was missing from the original list of Bowling Green university area graduates, Mrs. Ruth Miller Ac kerman, Route 2, will also be among the 1001 graduating sen iors at the 2 p.m.

Commence ment exercises today at Bowl- Court News (Continued from Page 2.) People In News LONDON (AP) Nicholas Bolton, 10, can't swim. Carol Healey, 21, is a good swimmer. But at the British ocean resort of Brighton last weekend, it was Nicholas who saved Carol from drowning. Floating on a rubber mattress, Nicholas heard Carol's calls for help and paddled out to her. "Hold on," he shouted, "but please don't upset me because I can't swim." After Carol and Nicholas had been returned to shore with the aid of lifeguards, she said: "But for that brave little boy I wouldn't have survived.

"I was doubled up with cramp for the subsequent calculus courses can be laid when the course is spread over a longer period of time than is possible during the summer. The only exception to this would be at a school operating under the quarter system in which a full quarter's work is offered 'luring the summer months. Dear Dr. Nason: My daughter's application has been turned down by the only two colleges to which she applied for admittance. Her high school grades were excellent.

Neither college gave an explanation otter than that they received five times as many applications as could be accepted. She is now considering spending her first two years in a junior college. Will this be a handicap to her getting into a good college in her junior year? N.F., Fresno, California Answer: ing Green. She will receive the Bacnelor of Science degree in Education. guilty in municipal court and fined for giving police false information he reported about an Attending the ceremonies otry in the station on May 27.

The trading stamps were re covered by police at Cook's home. The defendant was held in city jail pending arraignment in municipal court. By Geneva Lohr ELMORE The Eagle award, highest rank in scouting, was presented to Steve Ames, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ames; Russell Damschroder, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Norman Damschroder, and Robert Verbryke, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Verbryke, at a Court of Honor for Troop 314 of Elmore Tuesday in the auditorium of Harris-Elmore school. The Eagle rank was conferred upon the three scouts by Lamar Hetrick, scoutmaster of Troop 314.

Dr. Walter Lohse, Chairman, Ottawa County Boy Scout Committee; Dr. Paul Ridenour. committee chairman for Troop 314, and James Dolph, advisor, Post 314 of Elmore assisted Mr. Hetrick on the court.

Advancement in ranks were presented to the 1 1 i scouts: Life rank, Rex Durdel, John Foster, and Tom Ottney; Star rank, Richard Beck, John Haar, Tom Helmed, Roger Haar, Marc Hanneman, Don Harms, Patrick Johns, David Lubeck, Kenneth Kroos, David Miller, and Steve Schneider. First Class pins, Dana Egert, Greg Frederick, Dave Harms, Gordon Hille, Douglas Ottney, Rickie Rymers, Tom Rymers, Tim Sampson, Kenneth Wax, aiong wun ner nusoana, Tom, and children Chris and Kim, will be her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur E. Miller of Helena.

Mrs. Ackerman taught last year at St. Joseph's Elementary school and this past year did substitute teaching in the Fremont and Old Fort public school systems while attending the Bowling Green Branch here. She has accepted a position with the Old Fort Elementary School system and will teach reading in the departmentalized fifth and sixth grades there. Ridenour, William Tillen, and James Valesek; Tenderfoot pins to Ronald Dangler, Jack Darling, Randy Ford, Joe Gentry, Mike Henry, Douglas Harms, Craig Robenstine.

The following merit badges were presented: Russell Damschroder, camping, citizenship in home, safety, lifesaving, soil and water conservation; Robert Verbryke, soil and water conservation; Steve Ames, soil and water conservation, camping; Rex Durdel, fishing scholarship, personal fitness, camping, soil and water conservation, nature; Richard Beck, model design and building, geology, farm arrangement; John Haar, safety; Tom Helmed, cooking, pioneering, citizenship in nation, safety; Roger Haar, safety; Marc Hanneman, citizenship in nation, pioneering, safety; Don Harms, athletics, safety; Patrick Johns, safety, pioneering, rowing, citizenship in nation; David Lubeck, pioneering, safety, citizenship in nation; Kenneth Kroos, pioneering, music, safety; David Miller, citizenship in nation, pioneering, safety; Mike Thompson, stamp collecting Steve Paule, safety. Mr. Brown Doctor Of Philosophy Degree For Ned Brown L. Ned Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Marion Brown of Lindsey, has received the Doctor of Philosophy degree at Iota State university, Ames, Iowa. A graduate of Ross high school also, Dr. Brown attended Western Reserve university and received his doctor of veterinary medicine degree from Ohio State university. He subsequently received his Master of Science degree from Iowa State, majoring in veterinary bacteriology. Dr.

Brown is married to the former Roberta Gomes of San Mateo, Calif. They have two small daughters, Elaine and Judy. His present plans are to remain at Iowa State where he is engaged in veterinary Company To Mine Coal Under State Park COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-The North American Coal Co. has signed a lease with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to remove coal by underground mining beneath Jefferson State Park in Jefferson County. The department said Friday there are approximately four million tons of mineable coal underneath the park.

The project is expected to produce royalty payments of a half million dollars to the department under terms of the lease. One of the major functions of a junior college is the preparation of students for transfer to universities. Consequently the transfers from junior to senior colleges are usually more successful than those from one senior college to another. For example, the California junior colleges offer courses which closely parallel and are of equal quality to the basic lower division courses offered by the University of California and by the state colleges. The only danger is the possibility that your daughter will take the work too lightly, not realizing that the calibre work required for these courses in a junior college is a high as that required in a university.

Marion To Get Funds WASHINGTON (AP)-Marion, Ohio, will receive funds totaling $553,000 to aid the city in the construction of sewer develop ments. Funds were approved Friday by the Department of Housing and Urban PARTITION SUIT Geraldine Sho ckley 712 Hayes avenue, has filed a real estate partition suit in common pleas court, naming as defendants Robert E. Shockley and others. She informed the court she has a 2-18 interest in a one-half interest in part of in-lot 382 in Fremont and requested that the shares of interest in the property be partitioned or the property sold. STEIN ESTATE Arnold J.

Stein, surviving husband, has been appointed by Judge Bronson as executor of the estate of Loretta M. Stein, late of Fremont. NAME EXECUTRIX Hazel M. Spanfellner, the widow, has been appointed by Judge Bronson as executrix of the estate of Carl W. Spanfellner, late of Woodville township.

WIDOW EXECUTRIX Judge Bronson has appointed Anna Vaffis, the widow, as executrix of the estate of Peter Vaffis, late of Fremont. REALTY TRANSFERS Myron W. and Grace L. Bloom to Lawrence 0. Arndt and Helen A.

Arndt, the west one-half of the southwest fourth of section 15 in Washington township, and also tract 132 and 90 acres of Tract 133 of the Western Reserve and Maumee Turnpike Lands. Clyde E. Overmyer to Lillian M. Overmyer, a one-half interest in 40 acres in section 12 of Washington township. Hildegard H.

Barth to Alfred A. and Katherine M. Krawetz-ke, inlots 575 and 576 in Fremont. Robert J. and June E.

Somogye to John and Donna J. Schaaf, lot 34 in the second addition of Cambridge Acres subdivision in section 10 of Ball-ville township. Rchard T. and Roselyn Louise Snyder to Moffett J. and Nancy E.

Washington, a parcel of land beginning at the southwest corner of inlot 3156 in Fremont. Effie I. Lewis to Irvin S. and Virginia I. Schutzer, the middle part of inlots 3156, 3157, and 3158 in Fremont.

Helen M. and LeRoy Abbott to Robert A. and Betty J. Falkner, inlot 1632 in Fremont. Buddhist Sympathizers and I couldn't have kept my head above the water much longer.

I didn't see him after we were rescued because they hurried me off to hospital (for shock) but I shall certainly be getting in touch with him to thank him." CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) Dosmond Doss 19, a Seventh-day Adventist, is entering the army as a conscientious objector following the example of his father who was credited with helping save the lives of 75 men on Okinawa in World War II. Doss Sr. won the Medal of Honor for crawling among the wounded on Okinawa to give them aid and then, although wounded himself, helping bring them back from behind enemy lines. The younger Doss lives in Chattanooga, and works as a hospital attendant.

He said he plans to ask for hospital duty in the Army. ABILENE, Kan. (AP) -Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower brought the exhumed body of his first-born son to Abilene Friday night for re-burial in the family cemetery plot. Eisenhower was accompanied by his brother, Milton.

The firstborn child, Doud Dwight Eisenhower, died of scarlet fever in 1921 at the age of 3. He had been buried in a Denver, cemetery. The recommittal service was private. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -The American Medical Association's highest award for laymen will be presented to entertainer Danny Thomas.

The AMA laymen's citation for distinguished service will be awarded to Thomas June 29 in Chicago during the AMA convention. A spokesman for the American Lebanese Syrian Association charities, which Thomas founded and heads, said in Indianapolis the honor will recognize the entertainer's work for child victims of leukemia and his help in founding St. Jude Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. TOKYO (AP) Emperor Hi- COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) -About 150 monks students and teachers at the Buddhist University of Vidyodaya demonstrated today in sympathy with Buddhists of South Viet Nam. Acquisition Of Electric Facilities Approved WASHINGTON (AP) -Cus tomers of the Miamisburg Electric Co.

may get increased service and in some cases a rate decrease as the result of a power commission ruling Friday. The commission authorized Dayton (Ohio) Power and Light Co. to acquire the electric facilities of Miamisburg Electric, and Dayton said the acquisition will allow it to form an integrated system with better Making Lite (Continued from Page 4.) Visualize yourself as limp as the empty bag. Now I ask you. What is more relaxed than an empty burlap bag? "Now, second thing, drain the mind.

Mentally drop all resentments, disappointments, anxieties, frustrations. Discard them. Let them go. If you don't, these things accumulate in your mind and harden. Then it takes real blasting to get rid of them.

Drain the mind. "And, third, think spiritually." He did not elaborate on that but to me it meant turning the mind toward God and the great reassurances of faith. The Bible says it in the 37th Psalm: "Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for him: fret not thyself To overcome tension and stress get your body relaxed, the mind quieted and think spiritually in your own way. It takes practice, but the practice leads to big results. Through such relaxation you can stop making life hard for yourself and live with easy power.

RECORDS STOLEN Two 14 year old rural Fremont boys will be referred to juvenile court for shoplifting of 10 phonograph records from the F. W. Woolworth store in Potter Vrirage Friday. The records are valued at a total of $5.80. The manager of the store nabbed the boys.

I a JFJ rohito transplanted rice seed-; lings Friday in Tokyo. The emperor, dressed in rubber boots and felt hat, officiated at the traditional rice planting cere-: mony intended to encourage; Japanese agriculture. The seedlings were planted in mmmmm in MONDAY ONLY a paddy field within the grounds of the Imperial Palace. Before You Go Arrange For Your News-Messenger Vacation Pack Why be at a loss about local happenings while you're away Let us arrange a NEWS-MES-SENGER Vacation Pack for you. All issues of The NEWS-MESSENGER are saved and then delivered in a neat package by your newsboy when you return home.

THERE IS NO EXTRA CHARGE! All you pay is the regular home de livery rate of 40c a week. OR A NEWS-MESSENGER VACATION MAIL AWAY All you need is a post office or other single mailing address anywhere in the United States and we will mail the NEWS-MESSENGER daily. The cost is just 50c a week. CONTACT YOUR NEWSBOY OR CALL 332-5511 THE NEWS-MESSENGER CIRCULATION DEPT. swiss ROUND STATE CAREER JOBS HIGHWAY INSPECTORS Construction Experience Desired This Is an excellent opportunity to receive on-the-iob tralnlnf for steady employment with the Ohio Department of Highways.

APPLY NOW Ohio Department of Highways, J17 East Pos Ri, Bowlinj Green, Ohio. INTERVIEWING Monday through Friday 8 A.M. to 12 and 1 PJVL to PJVL 3) 11 OibjJ Ezi nil nz3 EZ3 nn cJ.

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