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The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 28

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DEATHS BLESKOWSKI Donald Paul BlesKowski, 24, of 204 Mary May 27, 1975. Survived by his par entv Mr and Mrs. Albert Bleskowskl; five sister, Mrs. Susan judoe, Mrs. Caroline McGuire, Mary Henessey, Mrs.

Kathleen Veri and Mrs. Judith Cooney; eiyht brothers, Joseph, Albert Robert, William, John, Raymond. James and Thomas, Bleskowski, several nieces and nepnews. Funeral services Saturday 8:30 a.m. at the John E.

Casey Funeral Home, and 9 a.m. in Holy Trinity Church. Burial in Assumption Cemetery. Friends may FIELD Miss Eleanor L. Field of Apulia Station.

ters Mrs. Grance Tuftley, Mrs. Mary Simpson, Mrs. Edna uniey; one Apulia United Methodist Church. HARTWELL FUNERAL HOME GREEN p.m.

Thursday at 1 Iweg Lunsford Funeral Home, 461 lina St. Burial Valley Cemetery, i may call Thursday 7 to 9 p.m. 8ALIW6G IUNSFORO. INC. HUNDLEY Sakwood May 24, 52, of 4 (fzgerald Hundley; and Mrs.

Wiima "grandchildren and a great grandchild. Serv, al Oakwood Cemetery. Friends may tc9p.m. JOSEPH Mrs. Edmee Richer Welch Syra Iridgeport Cemetery.

chael Rogus, 86, of 415 WiiKinsor av 26, He was a member of th Ify Wieczorek; a son, Joseph Rogus; ildren; a Vincent Royys; sev 15 a.m. from the Bordynski Funeral! Sacred Heart Cemetery. BALLWEG LUNSFORD Bordynski Funeral Home, M3I W.O'knESEE Callahan Hanley Mooney Carter JFuneral Cline Funeral Home, Inc Donald W. Knight GANG MEMORIAL CHAPEL Garfield Funeral Home, Inc. Greenleaf Funeral Home, Inc.

503 A Onondaga St. 475 1673 KEEGAN OSBELT Maurer Funeral Home. Inc. PIRRO SONS, Inc Writer Funeral portable) hospital operated by the 10tn Lomoat suppori Hospital from Ft. Meade, Md.

Early Wednesday, Rogers watched a tank firing exercise conducted by the 1st Battalion, 172nd and field artillery firing exercise by the 1st Battalion, 86th Field Artillery, 50th Armored Division. Motorist Pays Fine scene of an accident. Gary Besaw, 25, of Fulton RD 7. paid a $50 fine and his license was suspended for 60 days on a charge of speeding. jWARD WILKINSON DEATHS ette Rd.

Survived by his wife Caura; a son R.chard A. Ward; a daughter Mrs. Ronald P. Wilber; a sister Mrs. Charles S.

Planer; 12 grandchildren; one great the Heart WELTER FUNWAl HOME. INC. land Fayetteville. Way 28. 1975.

Survived by two sisters, Mrs. Arthur Ma one nlphews. 'services' Saturday a.m. at the Eaton Tubbs Funeral Home, Fayettevme, Rev. David P.

Muy skens officiating. Burial Union Hill Cemetery, Cato, N.Y. Friends may call Pri ma? be made tc Cemetery UU 1 1 Monvnrenfs HAYEvS MONUMENTS Nurses Headed By Mrs. Lewis SENECA FALLS Mrs. Gregory, Myers Community, Shirley A.

Lewis, director of Soldiers and Sailors Memorial, nurses at Seneca Falls Hospi Taylor Brown and Seneca tal, has been elected chairman Falls, of the Eastern Tier Nursing Nursing directors meet Directors Committee of the monthly to review regional Rochester Regional Hospital changes in nursing practice Association. and mandates. Topics are dis The committee represents 11 cussed regularly by state and area hospitals, including Gen local speakers, eva General, Newark Wayne Members of the committee Community, F. F. Thompson, make suggestions for improve Canandaigua Veterans Admin ment of patient care.

istration. wiuara rsycniamc Center. Clifton Springs, Arnold General Inspects Ft.Drum Mrs. Smith, Former Nurse, Succumbs at 77 INTERLAKEN Mrs. Beatrice E.

Smith, 77. of Deerlick Springs Road died Tuesday at the Reconstruction Home. Services will be at 11 a.m. versitv's denartment of struc Home fural engineering and a leader an inspection visit here Tues off Applied Mechanics dav and Wednesday. she a Equate of Colum Rogers arrived at Wheeler rrppnwiph He will be one of four in Sack Army Airfield here Tues ternational experts in the field day morning and was greeted nn to rl5Ve are.

new as a appHed mechanics to by Col. M. E. Lee fort nurse until her re at commanaer. ternational congress.

trainina the Order of Eastern Star. Home Fire At Lansing 'Suspicious' LANSING Lansing and Cayuga Heights fire fighters battled a blaze Wednesday at 496 Triphammer Road which caused extensive damage to FULTON Harrv Cook 25 tne first and second stories of a by soaking the interior of the home with water and covering the flames with foam. Firemen chopped holes in the roof and tore off siding in efforts to vent the smoke and get at the flames. His field of finite element operations of reserve units, in mJQd fQf examining struc. analysis is a mathematical Mrs Mildred eluding a tour of a MUST (mo tnrpc and nlhpr nhvsiral bile unit self contained trans several nieces meenaaAmong are" and nephews.

Youths Get Jail Terms late Wednesday afternoon. One person appeared on a vio No injuries were reported in lation of the do9 ordinance and the fire, paid a $5 fine. CORTLAND CHANGES SUNDAY MEAL HOURS CORTLAND The Cortland County Nutrition Program announced Wednesday new hours of service for its Cortland site in the Port Watson Street senior citizens building. Sunday only, meals will be served from 11 a.m. until noon.

The dining room will then close until 12:30 p.m., when it will reopen for service until 1:30 p.m. Persons over 60 are invited to come at the most convenient hour. Weekday meal setvice will be unchanged, running from 11 30 a until 1 p.m. All dinners are served on a donation only basis. POST STANDARD I Peregrine Falcons Get a 2nd Chance Special to The Post Standard GROUNDS, Md.

The place a man made nest 75 feet high marked the first broad where they have disappeared preme skill and grace that can ment for four eantive bred. in the Edeewood area of the scale efforts to restock these or dwindled. ABERDEEN PROVING month old peregrine falcons in Aberdeen Proving Grounds, valued birds of prey into areas The peregrine, a bird of Med Center Graduates 236 NEW YORK CITY Gradu ceived B.S. degrees in nursing, The traditional academic University and president of the The Cornell Medical College ation exercises for Cornell 19 received Ph.D. degrees and procession was led by Prof.

Cornell Medical Center, and is affiliated with severa of the Tinivprsitv's Medical College, two received M.S. decrees in Blanchard L. Rideout, univer Dr. Richard T. Silver, presi nation leading health i in School of Nursing and Gradu medical sciences.

sity marshal. The mace bearer dent of the Cornell Medical stitutions, including New York resident of the Com 1941. From 1878 to 1941, when Hugh Luckey, vice president Hippocratic oath to the new inroat Hospital, ana Nortn monwealth Fund, gave the it was known as the New York for medical aftairs oi Cornell pnysicians. commencement address. Hospital School of Nursing, the The Cornell Medical College school graduated 1,563 nurses.

Alumni Association presented The candidates for the de the 1975 Award of Distinction grees were presented to Cor to Dr. Gustave J. Dammin, son by deans of their respec ciass of '38, "for his notable tive schools, Dr. J. Robert Bu achievements in the field of chanan, dean of the Medical pathology." College; Dr.

Eleanor C. Lam Dale R. Corson, president of bertsen, dean of the School of Cornell, conferred degrees on Nursing, and Dr. Thomas H. the 236 students.

Of these, 99 Meikle dean of the Gradu received M.D. degrees, 116 re ate School of Medical Sciences. State Art Council Award Gov. Carey, right, presents an award for rector, at a ceremony sponsored by the the Cavuga County Homesite Development State Council for the Arts in Albany's In Corp. to Peter Spock, chairman of the stttute of History and Art.

(AP Laser board, and Barbara Lamphere, housing di photo) Engineer to Lecture ITHACA Richard Gallag her, chairman of Cornell Uni sign, an affiliate of the University of Genoa, Italy. He recently a text Gallagher has had experience as a practicing struc tural designer and industrial TTT ntjTTM Pniir ctar hOme. bUml Will De in Tear 77 "7 i nitril Burial will be in Frear Memorial rr'i" isi Rivard to Speak On Historic Mill the relation of finite element SENECA FALLS Paul ter Mill historical site for five analysis to studies of nuclear Rjvard of Corning, director of years before assuming his po reactor structures and pollu tne Rockwell Corning Museum sition in Corning, tion phenomena. and president of the Society for During his directorship, the Gallagher will conduct a industrial Archaeology, will collection was enlarged and snort coursi in mm june on da speak at p.m. Friday at the displays reorganizes vancea topics unite element Seneca Falls Historical Mu analysis for the International seum on "The Slater Mill and Centre for Computer Aided De Textile Manufacturing.

The lecture win De open t0 the public. According to Mrs. bnirley Patterson, museum director, Rivard was director of the Sla Vet's Kin $200 Wednesday on a charge of The origin of the fire is un sentenced to jail terms fnr driving while intoxicated. der investigation and the cause ad a Fulton woman was fined MlglOie JUr Cook was lined by City court mis weeK in City uourt Dy Judge Wallace Auser, who dis by detectives. Judge Thomas McGough.

missed charges of unlicensed arrived at about 6 6 nnpratinn pnd lppvlrp tho 7:10 a.m. and found the first Michael Woolworth of 103 E. operation and leav.ng tne engulfed in flames. a charge of petit larceny and Working for about an hour was sentenced to 60 days in the and 15 minutes, the crews county jail. brought tne fire under control ITHACA Wives and chil dren of totally and permanently disabled veterans, The mill, in Pawtucket, R.

began the industrial spinning of cotton by waterpower in 1793. This technique helped launch the industrial revolution in the new world. Rivard is a native of Maine. His interest in history was stimulated in his boyhood by his contact with the York, Maine, Historical Society. He has a bachelor's degree from the University of Maine and received a master's.

HealthCare TC3 Offers 2 Subjects guilty of unauthorized use of an are eligible for hospital and Cortland Community (TC3) duiomoune ctnu was given a medical care according to college nere. or.e year term at the jail Howard J. Forbes, state veter American history tn 1877 is a Eleanor Hall of Fulton was ans counselor. class scheduled to begin June 9 fmind aniUv nf driuina while The Drocram. commonly with the second half of the his ThP is owned hv her ability was impaired and known as "CHAMPVA," pro tory sequence to begin July 21.

trude Filmer of the Bronx The was fined $50. vides care in non VA facilities. Both are offered afternoons. Twelve other nersons an Forte pointed out, however The introductory course in Raymond, was not at home at peared on charges of speeding the time. or running stop signs and paid He had not been notified by fines ranging from $10 to $25.

that if hospital and medical geography, also offered after care is available to people un noons, will oegin June y. der the program for the Uni Registration for all courses formed Services or Medicare, is June 5 and 6 at the air condi these individuals are precluded tioned campus here. Tuition is from participating in $20 per credit hour. CHAMPVA, Registration materials and Further information on me further information may be ob dical and hospital benefits tained by contacting the sum available to veterans and their mer session office at TC3. families may be obtained from the local counseling center of the New York State Division of Veterans Affairs at 304 Bab cock Hall.

Terrace Hill, Ith Vicinity Deaths Mr i. E. Smith, Grow W.r4 W. Coward Wretm reawa. W.

plunge to seize its prey at speeds of 150 miles an hour was, until the early 1960s, widely distributed in North America, until that time per The daughter of the late ened raptors mmand (Forscomi, made day at the fifth Canadian Con and aerospace engineering, structural engineering from hatch of' 20 major problems of propagating these birds of prey in captivity. In 1974, five pairs of peregrines laid 34 fertile eggs, of which 24 hatched. These two dozen yielded 23 viable young. "When we I pairs, we can produce 200 or 19fi5 more young peiegiiiiea a jctu for restocking programs and other research purposes," said Cade, "That number takes on May 29, 1975 morial Hospital. 3 7 Deaths MRS.

MARIE COHL GROTON Mrs. Marie Ott egrines even nested in the Cohl. 86, formerly of Stauber rocky New Jersey Palisades Road, Groton RD 2, died opposite New York City. Wednesday at a local nursing "But man's destruction of will be at 10 a.m. their natural habitat and per Fridav in St.

Anthony's vasive use of the pesticide Burial wiIl be in st Aninony uemeiery Since its Sing in 1898, the was Prof. Herbert L. Everett. College Alumni Association. Hospital, the Hospital for Spe I t0 9 Dr Lambertsen adminis New York Hospital Cornell graduated 5,164 physicians, gram were Stanley Osborne, tered the international pledge egrines," said Tom Cade, pro Medical Center.

me scnooi or cursing nas uw iZTuZlVHZr vZ lessor of ornithology at the rhnrrh Hino P.mH Dr Carleton B. ChaDman, awarded 2,380 degrees since New York Hospital; Dr. E. Dr. Luckey administered tne ier, Mannaiian aar ana Shore University Hospital.

State university college otAg Surviving are a sorii Fred. riculture and Life Sciences at edck 0u of Summerhill; two Cornell University, Ithaca. brotherS) AugUst and Franz The effort was a large step Kress, both of Germany; a sis in meeting the goal of Prof. ter. Mrs.

Josephine Wixted of Cade, who was the first to have New York City: seven grand consistent success in breeding children; 22 great grand laree numbers of Derecrines in children, and several nieces captivity, to build up popu and nephews, lations of peregrines in se She was born in Germany, lected sites across the United Mrs. Cohl was superinten States. dent of an apartment building Aberdeen Proving Grounds in New York City until 20 years was selected for the release of She had lived in the Sum peregrines because it has low SIX years. DDT residues, sufficient food supply in the form of readily available prey and because it is protected from human disturbance. JOSEPH McLOUGHLIN CORTLAND Joseph The restocking method will McLoughlin, 44, of Tucson, use a modification of the an husband of the former cient falconer's "hacking" Mary Johnson of Cortland, technique.

The nestlings, aiea luesaay, apparently 01 a placed into the Edgewood heart attack, at Tucson Medic aerie (nest site), will be fed al Hospital. He had undergone and cared for bv humans until open heart surgery twice, midsummer, when they have Services will be at 9 a.m. fledged and are hunting on Friday in St. Francis De Sales their own. Stanley Temple, a cnurcn, i'ucson, tne Kev.

roaa postdoctoral associate at Corn O'Leary officiating. Burial will ell, and Army personnel will be in Tucson. serve as the foster parents. Calling hours will be 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at this way, the young Palms Mortuary, 5225 E.

should become imprinted on Speedway, Tucson. ably, some would survive to re at 8461 Timrod St Tucson turn as adult. breeders said Arjz he is survived by a Cade. ''Of course, we still have daughter, Ann Kathleen the problem of early mortality McLoughUn 0f Tucson; several to deal with, for example, pro cousins nieces and nephewS; a tecting the nestlings from pre Eiieen johnson aanon uy me gieai nuiucu and tWQ brothers in law, Don owl aid and Robert Johnson, all of Later this summer, addition Cortland, al peregrines will be released He was the son of Joseph and in upstate New York, near Helen Nickerson McLoughlin Cornell and in the Catskills, of Chatham Center. Mr.

and in Massachusetts and sev McLoughlin taught science for tain States. School in Tucson. Cade explained that Cornell book, "Finite Analysis Funda researcher. He has bachelor's began a iong term project in 1970 to restock rare and threat (birds of prey). MICHAEL FICALORA record breaking paott ama naval architecture, civil engi the State University at Buf demonstrated that Cornell re npprina and fiplrfs fnln haH nirprPnmo the nVC; dt searchers had overcome the Arrangements are by Frank E.

Campbell Funeral Home, New York City. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery, Flushing. surviving are two sons, An This spring, 12 breeding 4. pairs which are still produc tore ofChappaqua; a daughter, mg, have already hatched 12 Louis Vanaria of Cort He moved to Cortland in MILTON J.

WEAVER considerable meaning when one considers that 200 young INTERLAKEN Milton J. represent more than the natu Weaver. 66, of Cayuga Street, ral annual production of the en died Wednesday at Taylor tire population of peregrines Brown Memorial Hospital, Wa that used to breed east of the terloo, after a long illness. Mississippi before the era of Services will be at the con DDT." venience of the family. Hurl Cade expects his laboratory hurt Funeral Home has charge to have at least 37 producing of arrangements, pairs by 1977.

Mr. Weaver was born in Last year limited efforts to Cortland and had been a resi reintroduce prairie and per dent of Interlaken for 10 years, egrine falcons into their for He attended the University mer habitats were made. But nf Alabama and New York en route to the Colorado re University, and was a member lease site four of the 12 prairie 0f Sigma Phi Epsilon. falcon chicks were killed in an He was a member of Univer overneatmg accident in trie sa(ist Church of Cortland and and Qitrvivina widows and rhil HRVnF.N Hpncrranhv and nlono'e oafnn hnld And an at. mi rr Robert W.

Dumas Of 827 One veterans who died Of a hi stnrv courses are available tomnt hrina hank to the Catskills was curtailed Surviving are a daughter, when the pair disappeared Mrs Sydney W. Keller of Tan mysteriously. The female's and two grand wing, obvirvisly severed by a knife, was found in a wooded area. The male was never found. "This year our cooperative project with the U.S.

Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Armv Materiel Command will permit us to introduce falcons on protected lands under federal jurisdiction," said Cade. "These areas, which are as Fund Sought By VICA CORTLAND A benefit free as possible ffom human will ha hv molestation, will provide ideal Vocational Industrial Clubs of sites for re establishing America (VICA) at 7 p.m. egrine falcons." Wednesday at McEvoy Educa tional Center. EQUALIZATION RATES tificates and merchandise so NNOUNCED FOR SENECA I SsT cdunty The purpose of the auction is WATERLOO John Durso, director of real property t0 raise money to send the tax services for Seneca Countv.

Wednesday released ten at the tative equalization rates for 1975. He advised the Board of Supervisors Tuesday night that anyone desiring to protest the rates should contact him immediately New York State VICA com petition to competition at the national conference June 22 25 in Washington. Persons or businesses wish The new rates are: Covert, 94.02: Fayette. 125.92: Lodi, me to contribute monev mav 98; Ovid. 115.75; Romulus, 115.82; Seneca Falls.

116.47. send it fo the McFvov Fdtica Waterloo. 113.41 tional in of Vic.

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About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978