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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 9

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PAGE 18 SANDUSKY REGISTER JUNE 23, 196(5 No Evil In Athletics Will Be Official CHICAGO (UPI) Tlip na- timi's athletic directors were warned today that the public may indulge a decline in morality among public officials, businessmen and others but "will not condone or tolerate even the appearance of evil in college athletic programs." The warning came fro Ronald B. Thompson, executive dean for admissions and registrations at Ohio Stale University in an address to the first convenljon of the new National Association of College Directors of Athletics. "The public is not quite sure whether to continue to place confidence in our athletic programs as they claim a place in the structure of our educational system," Thompson said, "or to withdraw this support until it can be shown that these programs are worthy of confidence." Thompson said the directors are under pressure to win and to do that they must recruit good players but: "How can we first attract these good players to (he school, then build up' their confidence, discipline their bodies, motivate Ihem to win, and still develop in each of them a well-rounded personality, mold desirable character traits, and, when necessary, help them financially through school and all the while keep them academically respectable." Thompson added the solution of ihis problem has an effect on the athletes that could be adverse. "The young athlete for whom stated admission requirements are forgntfpn, who is given scholarships, whose regular university fees are waived or paid by someone else, who is given, under the table, aid while in college in order to encourage him to play for the honor of the old Alma Mater will, of course, sume that he should sell out to the highest bidder in business and or in politics," Thompson said. "The least he will expect will be that he should enjoy the fruits of other men's labors without effort on his part." Thompson concluded that the directors should, in order to avoid this and other pitfalls, exercise as much internal control over their program.s as possible or "an aroused public convinced that the programs are wrong can quickly destroy all that has been built up with careful work and plans." Key Pagoda Raided Center Of Buddhist Protests SAIGON (UPI) -Combat police and Vietnamese marines moved into the Vien Hoa Dao Pagoda today and arrested several hundred diehard rebels without firing a shot.

They ripped down anti-government banners and confiscated several weapons. The officers found a young Military Tracked Satellites By OSU City Briefs PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL Releases from Providence Hospital were: Mrs. Adeline Hall, Upper Sandusky; Mrs. Rosemary Hider, Huron; Mrs. Gladys Kitohin, Tiffin; Scott Love, RR 1, Sandusky; Thomas Pusateri, 334 Perry Timothy Walland, 1316 Columbus Ave.

Johnie Morris, 1803 Fourtih Joe Williams, 124 Homestead Carl Smith, E. Jefferson Mollv McKenna, 713 W. Park Mrs. Mary Renande, 1622 Milan Road; Mrs. Katherine Harp, 809 Force Gregory and Debra Shaw, Castalia; Adolphus Matthews, 1704 Knupke Don Hutchinson, Port Clinton: John Ridenour, 514 Taylor Mrs.

Emma Lazzara, 216 E. Boalt Earl V. Seitz. 1607 Cedar Point Chaussee and Ronald Saylor, Castalia. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Released from Memorial Hospital were: Mrs.

Florence Showalter, Vermilion; Mrs. Walter Green, 1816 Fourth Mrs. Clifford Brown and baby, 2605 W. Perkins Mark Oney, Collins; Charles Stroup, Fremont; Mrs. Luck Allen, New London and Randy Kaufman, 303 Hendry St.

GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL Dischar'ged from Good Samaritan Hospital were: Lewis D. Miller 1, Sandusky; Mrs. Joseph Babcock, 1813 Pierce Mrs. Ruth E. Allendorf, Huron; Charles Dietrick, 1600 Dietrick Frances Lambert, Huron; Leslie O'Hara, Huron; Charles P.

Hanck, 824 Central Mrs. Johnnie Jackson, .1721 Miss Debra Muehlfeld, Huron; Mrs. Sheldon J. Port, 1510 W. Bogart Road; Beth Ellen Flickinger, Norwalk and David Brock, 1113 Ogontz.

St. CARD PARTY Huron Grange is holding a public card party on Saturday at 8 p.m. GRADUATES Sally Stierhoff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Stierhoff 3505 S.

Hayes was named to the dean's list for the spring quarter at Kent State University with'a grade point average of 3.87 GRANGE PARTY A public card party will be held Sunday at Oxford Grange. Door prizes will be awarded and lunch served. AWM WINNERS Prizes at the recent American War Mothers card party went to Mrs. Harold Radde, Mrs. Al Strickfaden, Mrs.

Faye Miller, Mrs. Margaret Brauer, Walter Hutton, Mrs. Leona Gillis, Mrs. Helma White and Mrs. Elizabeth Boesch.

AMVET WINNERS Winners at the weekly card party at the Amvets Post 17 were Frances Hassenmier. Elsie Stocker, Mrs. Joe Wein- gates, Walter Hutton, Mrs. Thomas Hine and Mrs. Albert Royer.

The next party is slated for June 28. COLUMBUS I UPI) State University's "saucer field," a satellite communications experiment that proves several small antennae can do the job of one large expensive one, has tracked the seven communications satellites in the new U.S. space network. Electrical engineers, using four 30-foot saucer like anten- naes, say they made contact with the seven satellites that were launched aboard a Titan 3 rocket last Thursday along with an eighth experimental satellite. The OSU engineers, using bits of information in published newspaper accounts about the satellites that will set up a communications network for governmental and military use, made contact with each of the stations last Friday.

They were tracked for more than six hours during the night. Next Wednesday the satellites will be back within range of the OSU tracking field, and an at- Ohio tempt will be made to make contact a second time. The experiment with the satel lite string is expected to provide valuable data for studies later this year at OSU. The saucer field antennae plan, started in 1960, is designed to demonstrate that several medium-sized antennae do the work of one large one, at a fraction of the cost. Initially the saucer antennae operated on the receiving end only.

Now they are being equipped with a 10 kilowatt transmitter which will be used in the future on studies with the satellite network. One saucer already has its equipment, others are expected to be completed by December. The seven orbiting satellites, which stand almost stationary in relationship to the earth, will be joined later this year by 14 more which are to be placed into orbit by two additional Titan launchings. U.S. Communists Plot New Strategy Twins Both Lose Leg In Viet War HONOLULU (UPI I -Richard and Ronald Sanoria, identical 19-year-old twins who enlisted In the Marines last year and were sent to Viet Nam, will be reunited next week at Tripler General Hospital.

Each lost his left leg above the knee as the result of exploding Viet Cong mines. The Sanoria twins are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Lucie Sanoria, plantation workers in the village of Pahoa on the island of Hawaii. They joined the Marines Jan.

12, 1965, and went to Viet Nam on Aug. 27, Although they were assigned to separate units in the Nang area, the young Marines saw each other frequently until Feb. 19 when Richard, a private first class, was wounded by a mine while on patrol. He was evacuated to Tripler March 16 and his leg removed Ronald, a lance corporal, was and legs, and later shot in the stomach by a sniper before he could be evacuated. He had returned to duty previously after being shot in the arm by a sniper six months earlier.

Ronald currently is at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines, but is scheduled to join al Tripler about June 29. Marines at Pacific headquarters here have begun a fundraising campaign to bring Mr. and Mrs. Sanoria, who have four other children including a son in the Navy, to Honolulu for a reunion with their wounded twins. NEW YORK (UPI) -America's top 300 Communists went to work today on a plan to put themselves into the mainstream of American political life and to put an independent leftist candidate into the White House in 1969.

Emerging from the shadows for the first time in seven years, the delegates to the national convention of the Communist party, went over, section by section and word by word, a massive three-hour, 36,000 word speech delivered Wednesday night in a hoarse voice by a perspiring Gus Hall, the untitled leader of the homegrown Reds. Hall's theme was simple: The time is ripe for radicalism. Communism is "relevant" to America. And Communists must unite in a popular front with the peace movement and the civil rights movement to defeat both President Johnson and his "depraved insanity" in Viet Nam and the candidate named by the Republicans in 1968. Hall said he had no one man in mind as candidate.

Naming one at this point, he told newsmen, "would create an obstacle." But he said of Sen. Wayne Morse, "I think Red Tug Awaits U.S. Carrier THE HAGUE, The Netherlands (UPI) Russian tug was lying off the hook of The Netherlands today, waiting to "bird dog" the aircraft carrier USS Randolph when it returns to international waters from a visit to Rotterdam, sources said. They said the tug, Agalan, followed the Randolph to port Friday, then took up a position outside Dutch territorial waters to await the American vessel's return to sea today. he's been playing a big role." Morse is a constant critic of Johnson's Viet Nam policies.

Today the Communists went back behind closed doors to debate Hall's thesis that "working class unity" could give Communists a real role in the nation's politics if the party puts its revolutionary goals on the back burner. About 300 Communists from 40 states and 200 invited observers jammed the Webster Hall ballroom, once the site of high society dances. They lustily cheered Hall's call for an independent candidate for the Scandal Hits Wisconsin Politicians (Continued from Page 1) banking bill. Alfonsi, who urged voters "to withhold judgment until I have been tried," pleaded innocent to the charges in Dane County Circuit Court. Hutnik also pleaded innocent.

Meister' did not enter a plea. He said he would challenge the legality of the jury that retm-ned the indictments. Alfonsi, first elected to the assembly in 1933, termed the charge against htm "preposterous." Hutnik, a 14-year legislative veteran, said in a statement: "I am positive the facts wUl not support the charge. The facts will show I am innocent." Meister said the charge was a "smear." Alfonsi was schesluled for trial July 6 and Hutnik for July 11. Circuit Judge Edwin Wilkie will hear quash motions from Meister Monday.

man In monk's robes hiding in bed. He was arrested on charges of killing a policeman during rioting against the government last Saturday and marched off to jail. The Government forces said they seized the pagoda, center of Buddhism in Viet Nam and strategy center for the past three months of anti-government agitation, in order to return it to its rector, moderate Buddhist leader Thich ram Chau. Led by the tough police chief for Cholon, the Chinese section of Saigon, troops armed with bayonet-tipped rifles stormed through the red gates of the great national pagoda while many of the monks and their followers still were asleep. "Don't anybody move," the )olice chief shouted.

"If any- )ody moves, he will be shot." Scores of youths were herded into trucks and buses and taken to police lieadquarters. About 140 monks were moved behind a wire enclosure and placed under guard. Vien Hoa Dao, which represents the last significant center of rebellion against the government of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, had been under siege since Saturday. Police temporarily lifted the siege to let several hundred persons out Wednesday, hut then sealed the compound off again, vowing not to leave until the policeman's killer had been captured. The suspected nuirdercr was found hiding in a small bed box, a low affair on which a straw mat is spread for sleeping.

He carried a monk's identification card in the name of Tran Van Huu, ljut authorities said his real name was Ngo Van Bay. Beautiful Harassed (Continued from Page 1) and Mrs. Edward Karr, 114 E. Cherry were dressed in pink dresses given to them by their grandfather. For Susie it wasn't too bad, but it was obvious Tammy would've rather been in her shorts.

Dark-hatred Joey, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. I. Shank, 227 Bu-dseye, thought it was, just fine "being dressed up," adding she likes to wear dresses.

THERE WERE all types of hair styles for the little girls, from Shirley Temple locks to short bobs, pony tails, and just plain ringlets. And the costumes ranged from peek-a-boo dresses, revealing ruffled panties, to red twin sailor outfits to replicas of grandmother's dress, complete with pantaloons. Joyce Aimie, three year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson, was dressed and decorated in authentic costume.

Her dress, a white tucked and embroidered baptismal dress, was found in the attic of the home recently purchased by the Jackson.s Although she did not know the Babies; Judges City Man Hurt In Viet War July 3, not the fourth of July, was going to be a big day of celebration for the Capt. Jude Tlieibert family. That was the day the former Blue Streak All- Ohio football star was coming home, his year of duty as a South Vietnamese battallion advisor completed. But now, his family isn't sure when he'll be home and when he does return, his homecoming won't be as happy. Theibert, 31, 2828 Hinde St.

is now in the Third Field Hospital in Saigon, his right foot amputated and fragmentation wounds on his left thigh, arm and leg. The 1953 SHS graduate stepped on a land mine Sunday, during what was his last volunteer mission in Viet Nam. He had been in almost constant combat in the Cam Tho area of the Mekong Delta since April 14. His wife, Joanne, received a telegram from the Defense Department Monday informing her of her husband's injuries. age of the dress, Jackson said it looked hand-sewn.

A GOLD LOCKET and mesh purse Joyce carried was her great-great-aunt's and is probably 70 years old, A gold bracelet of her great- gi'eat-great-aunt, estimated at 100 years, old adorned her wrist. According to one onlooker, Joyce appeared as "a little dresden doll, with her dark ringlets encircling her light complexioned face with rosy cheeks. One little girl was dressed in a Japanese costume with parasol. THE EVENT may have even been the spot where one little romance started. A blonde girl dressed in a red and white jump suit kept running around a little blue-clad boy, until he finally said "hi" to her.

When the sun's heal became unbearable it was too late for wash cloths and combs, the hair was either too curly or too straight and fingerprints streaked across perspiration-damp foreheads and cheeks. So, the mothers, tired of chasing and primping, sat down to wait the judges decision, while the kids romped on the hills, slid down slides and played on swings. Market Reports STOCKS SI NEW YORK ACF Indu.qtrlPS Air Products AIlcBlictiy Uidliiin Allcghcn.v Power Anied Chomlcnl Alcon American Alrlliiei! Americnn Can Amerlc.in Cvlnnmid American To! Tel American Tobacco Anaconda Armco Stele Armour Atchison Belhlclicm Steel Bocinfi Aircraft Boi'don Chosapeal(e Ohio Chrs.vler Cin Coca Cola Colo F-Ir Coii.soUdnlcd CiRar Nal Gnu Con.soUdatPd Coal CoppcrwrkI Slorl Cnu'U)lc Del Kdlson DouRla.s Alri'rafI Dow Chemical nuPont Ka.stern Airlines Fires I one Ford Gcneriil General FcKid.s General Motors General Telephone Goodyear Great Atlantic 54 -I- '4 37 -I- 8u8 oE 37 3-1 Greyhound Gulf Oil Harbison Walker Hercules Inc Hershcy Illinois Central IBM International Harv International Jones it Laughlln Joy MnnufacturInK Kennccolt Koppers Latrolie Steel 1-chiKh Val Ind Ijone Slar Cm Mack Truck Mon.sanIo Motorola National Aviatioti National BLscult New York Central North American Av Ouens Owen Illinois Glais Pan Am World Ar Peabody Peiin Pennsylvania RR PepsiCo Phillips Pet Pittsburgh Plate Gl Pittsburgh Steel Polaroid Procter Gamble nCA Reading Republic Steel Reynolds Met Sinclair Southern Railway Standard Brand Standard Oil Cal StaJdnrd Oil Indiana Standard Oil NJ Studcbaker Swift Tenneco Texaco Tidewater Oil Timken Roller Brng Trans World Air Union Carbide United Aircraft United Airlines US Rubber US Steel Va Western Union Westinghousc Air Br Westinghousc Elec Wheeling Steel Xerox Corp Youngslown Zenith American Tobaccd Anaconda Armco Steel Admiral Am Home Am Std Anchor Hg 72 7(ini I Ifi aa 1- (i.V.i;— 2.fn~ 1 IHI-'il I 'i. I In 11(1 ao -'B-l- 'a 53 Pac 31 -I- ''4 t.i, (ii) 3 (i2 77Tn-f "4 -U 37'H- '1 Hi 'n IV! 'B llip.j-l 'a .12 '4 fin -'4 -i- '4 aPfl-i- 34 -I- 14 G9 '4 'n 'b '4 'b 'h 4H33 4- 'Ji 3ISs4- G5 44-' a 'a B9 HSU 'B 8 71 '4 4II4- 'a iim Bl '4 94 'a 'a 42 '4 44' '4 '4 267 'a 35 -i- 'a 'a 'a 103 70 'a 20'2 'a '4 LIVESTOCK CtjEVELAND (ttPT) Uvf- slock; Hags 2,5 cents lower. 1-2 200-220 11) 220-240 Ih 240-200 lb 200-280 lb 24.25-25.25, pacldng sows CalUc 100.

Choice steers 25-20, good to choice 25, cominerclnl and standard 22-24, choice heifers 23-25, good heifers 21-23, common and dalr.v heifers 19-21, commercial and fnt cows 19-20, uUllt.v and cutlers 10.50-20.ao, fanner and fat yellow cows l'i-17, bologna hulls 20-21, heavy fat butcher bulls 18 Calves M. Prime na- Uves 30-34. good to choice 25.30, commercial 20-25, coinmon 17-20. Sheep and lambs 200. Steady.

Choice clipped lambs 21 22, choice spring lambs 25-20, common 17-21. choice wether sheep fl-9, choice ewes 8-0, cull nnd medium GRAIN TOLEDO Ca.sh grain, cenUs New York: No, 2 soft red 1 No. 2 soft white l.H2'i: Corn: No. 2 yellow Oats; No, 2 soft white 30 lbs; Soybeans; No. 1 yellow a.44, 13 per cent.

COLUMBUS (UPI) cash grain prices paid to farmers Thursday at grain clovalorB In Central, Norlliwestcrn, and Southwestern Ohio as quoted b.v the Ohio Department of Agriculture are: No. 2 Wheat (bu), to 5 lower, 1.75, mosUy 1.70; No. 2 Ear Corn (bu), unchanged to 1 higher. 1.19 1.25. mosUy 1.21 No, 2 Shelled Corn (bu), unchanged to 1 higher, 1.20 1,28, mo.stly 1.23 No.

2 Shelled Corn (100 lb), unclianged to 2 higher, 2.14 2.23, mostly 2.202.2.3; No. 2 Oats (bu). mosUy unchanged, ,09 ,80, mosUy No. 1 Sovheans (bul, 4,1 higher, a.at mostly a API Inst Ashid Oil AVCO Cp Babcock Benguct Borden Brstl My Case I Cin Com CrdJt (irown Zel Dia AJk Dow Ch El Pa Ng Essex Firestone FMC CP Gen Mill Gen Tel Gen Glidden House Fin Int Paper Kresge Lear Sieg Litton Marathon Mar Md Martin Medusa PC MMM Ohio Ed Panh PL Phillips Rock Std Rubbermaid SCM Corp Scott Pap Shell Oil Std Oh Slauffer Sun Oil Toledo TRW Inc Un on Cal us Play Vanadium Va Whirlpool bPi-l- 28'a- v. 'a 3 3312-1- 99 -)- 2G -i- 45 -14-1- '4 38 68I3 473,, f-1', 59-'a- Va 44 a 8 3(i I 23 2fl34- '4 80 52 -l- 24 27'a -I- 34 i- 'a 'a '4 2a-'4 1 'a 32 6014-f Vfl 41 V4 '-a 40 49 t- 55i -j -r '4 20-14 27', 40 Alcometer Test Void CLEVELAND (UPn an appeals court ruled Wednesday that evidence obtained by alco- meters, used by police to test motorists' sobriety, is inadmis- sable in court.

The Cuyahoga County Court of Appeals said the alcometer test has not been proven accurate. The ruling came when the judges upset the 1965 conviction in Parma Municipal Court, of Lloyd F. Thomas. He had been found guilty of drunk driving, on the basis of an alcometer test. Three appellate judges, Daniel H.

Wasserman, Lee E. Skeel and Charles W. White concurred in the decision. "The accuracy of such testing is not a matter of common knowledge or general notoriety and the reading from the test in this instance is wholly discredited by all the other evidence as to the defendant's condition at the time of his arrest and thereafter," the judges wrote. Sandusky and vicinity; Fair with little temperature change tonight and Friday.

Low tonight 66, high Friday 88. Islands, reefs and Sandusky hit by a mine explosion June 11! a while on patrol near Da Nang, Bay: Variable winds of 6-10 he was wounded in the back knots tonight. High Wednesday 86, low this morning 75, no precipitation. June 23 Thru June 26 REVIVAL MEETING New Hope Baptist Church 7 P.M. Ni9hrly 620 Brown St.

Clyde. Ohio See ond Hear Pastor T. A. Benefield of First Toledo BoptUr Church Today's Locals Dr. D.

Cuthbertson resumes practice June 22. Parkview Barber Siiop Will Be Closed June 22 to 26th. Attention Elks Friday nite fish, chicken and beef dinners, serving 5 p.m. tiU p.m. Goodyear New Plant Ohio (UPD Goodyear Tire Rubber Company announced plans today to build a multi-million dollar plant here to manufacture rubber conveyor belling.

Robert B. Warren, general manager of the company's Industrial Products Division, said the plant will operate as a satellite of the main belting plani at Akron. Work on the 104,000 suqare- foot plant will begin this summer with operations scheduled to begin in June, 1967, with 100- man work force, he said. The facility will be built on some 100 acres of farmland on Ohio 33, three miles south of Marysville. The plant will adjoin the tracks of the New York Central Railroad, he said.

The Marysville plant will supplement the Akron supply with production scheduling and the preparation of basic materials being handled by tho Akron plant. Warren explained. Some special types of conveyor belting will continue to be manufactured at Goodyear's V-belt plant at Lincoln, he said. The plant, to be Goodyear's Announces For Ohio eighth in Ohio and Wh in tho United States, will be able to produce belting wider than any rubber belting presently manufactured in this country. Conventional conveyor belting ranges in width to six i feet, although Goodyear has made belts seven feet wide for use in strip mining, Warren pointed out.

Even wider belting is in de: mand to handle ore, coal and I other heavy tonnage bulk ma' lerials carried by dep-sea and Great Lakes cargo ships, he said. Conveyor belting is used to carry a wide range of materials and commodities, including ore, stone, sand, coal, mail, fruit, fish, metal stampings, grain, automobile parl5 and people. Fire Calls Deaths Pythian Sisters Rummage Sale Fri. June 24-25, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

1603 liQyes Ave. at Subway. COW by tranjportj to supply oytpost ynitj have been battlefield business as usual since World War II. But there was something unusual abotit the mission of the C-123 at left. Cargo included a cow, right, that reached the ground at the U.S.

Army Special Forces Camp at Phu Tuc, South Viet Nam, apparently none the worse for the despite a ightly battere crate- Live animals are being airlifted regularly to isolated positions to be kept for food when needed- MRS. MAUDE LIVINGSTON Mrs. Maude Knox Linvings- ton, 87, a resident of 417 Lawrence died Wednesday in Good Samaritan Hospital after a brief illness. Surviving are a number of distanf relatives. She was preceded in death by her husband, John on July 31, Friends are being received al the Frey Funeral Home, where funeral services will be held al 9 a.m.

Friday, the Rev. Robert George, officiating. Burial is to be in Oakland Cemetery. JONAS J. REAMER Services for Jonas J.

Reamer were held this morning in the Andres Funeral Home and SS. Peter and Paul Church, the Rev. Henry Szteiter, officiating. Burial was in Castalia Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Ralph Schaefer, Harry Presser, Mark Rhine, Edward Ries, Byron Deeter and Ray Miller.

WEDNESDAY 10:10 a.m., No. 2 rescue, City of Sandusky area, new address survey and inspection. 7:32 p.m.. No. 3 engine, 423 W.

Perkins short in washer, waslier shut off and disconnected. 8:04 p.m., general, 1702V2, electric fan cord burned on range element. Fan was sitting on the range, damage to cord only. THURSDAY 2:30 a.m., No. 5 engine, 1730 S.

Harrison cigarette dropped in car seat, extensive damage to whole car, a Pontiac. SILVANrS Mart- Means Big Food Value H14 Milan REAP THE CLASSIFIED PAGES.

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About The Sandusky Register Archive

Pages Available:
227,541
Years Available:
1849-1968