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The Daily Times-News from Burlington, North Carolina • Page 20

Location:
Burlington, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8-B Burlington (N.C.) Times-News, Friday, May 16.1969 More Violence Flares ROBERT BERRELLEZ MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) Increased protection was ordered for Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's visit to Nicaragua today after a second flareup of violent during the New York gov- Rockefeller Gets Protection ernor's stay in neighboring Hon- sources said the duras. Reliable caraguan government more plainclothesmen to duty amid reports that university students were planning protests during Rockefeller's fact-finding visit for President Nixon. A sizable group of U.S.

Secret Servicemen also was detailed to protect the governor and his party of more than 20 experts. Press reports from Honduras said the Secret Service handled Entertainers Join Battle Against Hopeless Disease Elon First Baptist Kindergarten By HENRIETTA LETTH YORK (AP) A frail guitar-strumming ghost seemed toliover high in the rafters of high-fashion photographer Richard Avedon's modern studio as a doctor spoke about a hopeless hereditary disease and the need for funds to fight it. The theater folk were there Thursday as they frequently are for such causes-- Robert Ryan, Theodore Bikel, Elaine May, Arthur Perm, Judy Collins, Actors Equity President Frederick O'Neal. Many others who couldn't be there lent their names and support. ton's Disease.

But the real reason most were there was because they still remember Woody. It has been only a year and a half since Woody Guthrie, the balladeer of the people who work with their hands in fields and factories, died of Huntington's disease in a state hospital. But it has been many long years Shown here are 1969 graduates of the First Baptist Church of Elon College Kindergarten The pupils and their parents are. from left to right as follows- First row-Vicky Hahn Mr. and Mrs.

Hahn Tracy Thomas, Mrs- Cliff Parrisher Wendy Milliard. Mr and Mrs. Henry Hilhard; Teresa Dickerson. Mr. and Mrs.

William Dickerson; and Christina Bradley, Mr and Mrs. J.W Bradley. Second row-Kim Summers, Mr. and Mrs. H.G.

Summers; Chris Grumpier, Mr. and Mrs. John Grumpier; Ken Bowling, Mr and Mrs BV. Bowling; Jeff Price, Mr. and Mrs Price; and Kevin Stanley, Mr.

and Mrs. Bangle Stanley Third row--Randy Radford, Mr. and Mrs. D.R. Radford; Greg Price, Mr.

and Mrs. WE. Price; Kent Hursey, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hursey; Dale Wheeley, Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Wheeley; Keith Holland, Mr. and Mrs. Holland; Donald Higgins, Mr. and Mrs.

J.R. Higgins; and Vernon Goodwin, Mr. and Mrs. T. E.

Goodwin, Absent when the photo was taken was Larry Jobe, Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Jobe. (Photo by Fairish Studios).

They had come ostensibly to join the medical men in announcing the formation of a Theater Arts Council of the Committee to Combat Hunting- posed while Dr. John R. Whittier, director of psychiatric research at the Creedmoor Institute for Psychobiologic Studies and chairman of her committee's medical council, explained that children of Huntington sufferers have a 50-50 chance of suffering the disease. In most cases, they can expect the symptoms, to start in JJUIt IV hill, since he strummed the guitar or their 20s or 30s. sang "This Land is Your Land" or any of a thousand songs lie wrote and sang across the land.

The disease disabled bun and killed his voice long before he died. Marjorie Guthrie, the widow, who once danced with Martha Graham but now spends all her time on the committee and with her three children, sat com- Submarine Sinks While Undergoing Remodeling Her children are now 19, 20 and 21. The eldest, Arlo, who is busy with a movie about the life of Woody Guthrie, in which he a Woody -a movie named "Alice's Restaurant' after the song Arlo recordec with fantastic success--s "om josed, too, seeming in different, while the doctor ex plained why the old name disease, Huntington's chorea, was changed. The chorea or "dance" that is characteristic of Huntington patients as they lose coordination, Dr. Whittier explained, is just one of a number of symptoms of local newsmen roughly and would not let them near Rockefeller.

As in Guatemala earlier, there has been sharp criticism of the Rockefeller mission by some politicians and businessmen. The Social Christian party called the visit useless. In Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, students burned a Honduran flag Thursday night on the steps of the National Cathedral where a youth was killed by a policeman during an anti- S. demonstration the day before. The students rejected a (400 scholarship offered by tpe Rockefeller party in memory of, the slain youth, shouting: "The blood of a Honduran cannot fte.

bought!" Violence broke out for the second time during Rockefeller's visit when about 500 students left the sanctuary of the university campus and marched through streets chanting, "Death to the military lictatorship." Club-swinging police charged into the crowd, but VALLEJO, $50 million Calif. Navy (AP) A submarine being remodeled at Mare Island Naval Shipyard sank Thursday night into the Napa River. No one was injured. The Navy said the USS Guit- taro was at dockside for outfit- were ting as a nuclear-powered fast attack submarine when she started to sink bow first hi the 34-foot-deep river. There is no danger of radioactivity, the Navy said, since the nuclear core for the power plant had not yet been installed.

Flooding started in a forward compartment, Navy officers said, and the crew and Mare Island workmen were quickly forced from the craft which was launched here in July 1968. No cause for the flooding was given immediately. Workmen and the crew unable to close hatches quickly since welding lines and air hoses had been pulled through bem from the shore. The sub sank in five minutes, an official said. Since she is on a tilt, the rear sail fin and the mast remained out of water.

Grace Methodist Kindergarten this "Mendelian mechanism." Sweet-faced, Bystanders said electrical equipment appeared heavil damaged. FBI Edits Home Movies For Visitor To Capital dominated silver-haired 7 no serious injuries were reported. Rockefeller said the death of the 19-year-old student Wednesday was a tragedy and sent flowers and a message of sympathy to the boy's family. Police said the shooting was accidental. Medical students disputed this, comme.iting in a statement: "Will the public believe that a firearm can accidentally shoot three bullets into the upper part of the body of a running person?" Rockefeller spent Thursday in meetings with finance ministers of the five Central American Common Market countries.

WASHINGTON (AP) Leonard Donahe's home i from Christmas are ready now --the FBI the film. has finished editing Shown here are 1969 graduates of Grace Methodist Church Kindergarten Their teachers are Mrs. Michael Clayton and Mrs. Fleenor. The pupils and their parents are from left to right, as follows: First row--Kara Horton, Mr and Mrs.

WE. Horton; Tim Roney, Mr. and Mrs. James Roney. Jimmy Trollmger, Mr.

and Mrs. James Trollmger: Tammj Garrison, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Garrison; Phyllis Stadler, Mr. and Mrs.

J.A. Stadler; Bryan Albright, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Albright; Jamie Wicker, Mr. and Mrs.

Don Wicser. Second row-Tim Wicker, Mr. and Mrs. Don Wicker; Ginger Boswell, Mr. and Mrs.

Sam Boswell; Laurie Jarrett, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jarrett; Timmy Allbntton, Mr. and Mrs. ID.

Allbritton, Cheryl Madren, Mr and Mrs E.A Madren; Mack McCorkle, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo McCorkle; Rhonna Shatterly, Mr. and Mrs. DK.

Shatterly; Kim Smith, Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Smith. Third row--Carl Walker, Mr.

and Mrs. Glenn Walker; Sallie Hiatt, Mrs. Jane Hiatt; Delisa Ann Cobb, Mr. and Mrs. F.L.

Cobb; Bobby Frantz, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frantz; Tammy Lynn Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hayes; Amy Patterson, Mr.

and Mrs. C.E. Patterson; Tim Boswell, Mr. and Mrs. William Boswell; Rachelle Crumpton, Mr.

and Mrs. E. Crumpton. (limes-News Photo). Donahe and his wife came to Washington last Christmas to be with their daughter for the holidays and await the birth of their first grandchild.

Donahe, a 30-year resident of Fort Dodge, Iowa, used a lot of film in shooting movies of his daughter's home and the area in and around Washington. The movie-making made them the object of a four-month security investigation. The trouble started innocently when the Donahes and their daughter, Mrs. Larry Handy, went for a drive in the suburban Maryland countryside, hoping ball on stilts," said Mrs. Donahe "You know, when we took tne pictures we saw a car parked along the road and we joked that maybe there was a spy in she sari.

"Well it turned out somebody thought we spies." The FBI showed up last February at their Iowa home after tracing a license number and the ride on bumpy Route might speed her labor. 28 Marjorie said she just wanted to say to her son: "By golly Arlo, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is not the way I'd put it. Have a meaningful life--it's not how long you live but what you do with it." "I get letters," she said, from people who are shocked to find out that someone else has Huntington's disease. There are 25,000 known cases and the doctors estimate there are al least 100,000. Not only families hide it--sometimes doctors don't even tell their patients they have it There are 10 families hi Dayton, OIuo, who have it and they don't even know each other.

I'm going to organize a chapter there." Mrs. Guthrie said the only other chapter now is hi Los Angeles Theodore Bikel said he was there "because of Woody--I knew him and loved him and some of us saw him in the latter stages of his life. Robert Ryan didn't explain to the crowd why he was there. Asked later, he said it was because Lz had known Woody. "I delivered the eulogy at Woody's memorial service," he talking with Donahe's fellow employes at National CJypsum Co.

in Fort Dodge. "He seemed satisfied and said the whole thing would probably be dropped," said Mrs. Donahe. But the agent came back several weeks later and asked for the film. "By then we could have sold anything we wanted to the Rus- said, addirg with characteristic Ryan grimness: "I didn't come here to get my picture taken." Murder Case Opens In Detroit MASON, Mich.

(AP) The prosecution calls it murder "with premeditation and malice aforethought" The defendant's lawyer says it was a killing in self-defense while "battlefield conditions" prevailed during the Detroit not of 1967. These opposing views were the highlights of opening statements to a jury of 13 women and one man Thursday in the Algiers Motel murder trial of a suspended policeman. The all-white jury is hearing the case of Ronald August, 31, accused in the shotgun slaying of 19-year-old Aubrey Pollard on the night of July 26, 1967. August is white. Pollard was a Negro.

Two other Negro teen-agers- Carl Cooper, 17, and Fred Temple, 18--were killed by shotgun blasts at close range. Original police reports said all three died as snipers in a gun hattip with officers and National Guard troops. sians," Mrs. Donahe said. She told the agent the Timely Farm Topics film Uglll J.it.1.

They stopped on the road had been sent to Mr. and Mrs. three miles west of Rockville Handy in Maryland. AUhe end while Donahe shot some home movies of the Army's Nike missile base including the white radar dome. "It looked like a big white golf South Said 'Occupied Territory' WASHINGTON (AP) A representative of the conservative Liberty Lobby says the Voting Rights Act of 1965 has reduced a number of Southern states, including North Carolina and South Carolina, to the status of occupied territories.

In making UK charge, Jack McGann called on Congress to life the restrictions on voting procedures now it ffect in seven Southern state, as a result of the Voting Rights bill. McGann appeared before the House Judiciary Committee in opposition to a bill which would extend for five more years of April an agent went to the Handy home and took the film. It was returned 10 days later with the Nike scenes edited out, she said. An FBI spokesman in the bureau's regional office, asked to explain why pictures could not be taken of objects visible from public roads, said: "Any time anyone would take a picture of a restricted area it could present a problem of possible ecurity aspects. I just don't vant to get involved in a discus- ion of all government policies lat have to io with restricted reas." By F.

E. PEEBLES Agricultural Extension Agent Greensboro Grader Feeder Pig Sale is operated for Northern Piedmont Area Development Association Swine and Feeder Pig Committee by Foust Livestock Market, the second and fourth Thursday of every month, at 2 p.m. at the Guilford County Agricultural Center (E Market Old Burlington Road) Greensboro. The rules and regulations are as follows: 1. Only pigs may Shiloh Presbyterian Kindergarten Shown here are 1969 graduates of Shiloh Presbyterian Church Kindergarten.

Their teacher is Mrs. A.L. Harris. The pupils and their parents are, from left to right, as follows: First row-Timmothy Hayworth, Mr. and Mrs.

Hubert Hayworth; Amy Mooneyham, Mr. and Mrs. E.L. Mooneynam; JohT SOL Mr- and Mrs. John Stitt; Terry Kfcziah, Mr.

and Swiggett, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Swiggett Ricky James, Mr. and Mrs. S.L.

James Jeff Peterson, Mr. and Mn; ReU Peterson; Howard Ramsey, Mrs. Ramsey. Second row-Ronnie Sharp, NEW8PAPEK.flR Mr. and Mrs.

Jerry Sharp; Scott Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. RE. Lawson; Jud Williams, Mr. and Mrs.

Paul Williams; Keith McCullock, Mr. and Mrs. Mac McCullock; Kim Welch, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Welch; Mike Smyder, Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph Smyder; Laurie Swanson, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Swanson; Tenley Fox, Mr. and Mrs.

William Fox; Steve Goslen, Mr. and Mrs. Max Golsen. Absent when the picture was made, Daniel Signer, Mr. and Mrs.

Gary Signor. (Times-News Photo). provision outlawing literacy tests and other devices in a number of states. The states restricted by the law are Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Virginia and parts of north Carolina. Another witness, Lawrenc Speiser, Washington director the American Civil Libertte Union, said he feared that if th law were allowed to expire, Negroes Ilife.

in areas of be cut oft apparently healthy be unloaded at the sale barn 2. Pigs must be delivered at the sales barn between 7:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon on Sale Days. The sale will begin Man Killed As Vehicle Falls FOREST CITY, N. C.

(AP) --A Rutherford County a was killed today when an automobile he was attempting to repair slipped off a jack and rushed him. The victim was identified as David Keeter, 25. Officers said Keeter and two companions were riding around early today when the car developed trouble and Keeter attempted to check it. at 2:00 p.m. 3.

Pigs must be consigned at least ten days prior to the sale. To be eligible for consignment pigs must be farrowed on the farm of the consignor. 4. Pigs vaccinated on the farm by a veterinarian be accepted. Pigs must be properly ear tagged and accompanied by a health certificate.

If not vaccinated on the farm, tfiei will be vaccinated on sales day at barn. This vaccination cost will be deductible from sell ers check. 5. Pgs must haw been treated for internal para uctioned to the highest bidder a hundredweight basis. 9.

ales fee will be 5 per cent the sale price, which will include the grading cost. Beef Cattle Keep clean water, loose salt, nd a mixture of two parts teamed bonemeal, one race mineral salt available for attle the year round. If calves re to be sold each fall, creep eeding will pay. A mixture of qual parts by measure of helled corn and whole oats is excellent creep mixture. In he latter part of the seasoa during a dry season the addi- ion of 10 pounds of a pelleted jrotein supplement per 100 rounds of gain is advisable.

Dehorn, castrate, and vacci- iate for Blackleg and Shipping ever while they are small. Use dehorning paste, electric de- lorning or Barns dehorners for the horns and a sharp knife for sites with an approved materia and be free from external para sites and weigh between Court's Pages Paws serve in the U.S. weight categories and grade and SuwSne Court are named by sold as groups. Owners will be merit by thTcourt's marshal paid on the average price hi of the chief the group of pigs containing hi ihnals when pens are sp'i then- high school castration. All cattle usually in the winter time, dust if infected.

have lice Spray ot Control flies in the sufnmet regular spraying or dusting Follow directions exactly to in sure no build-up of harmful resi due. Stomach worms take a heavj toll in gains on calves and year ings. a witt Phenothiazine in spring and fal will pay for younger animals wv ------------IDS All boar must be cas- When infestation is severe, trea trated and healed. 6. Pigs wffl entire herd to reduce worn be state graded according to population pasture fields.

US. Department of Agriculture 1 Feeder Pig Grades U.S. 1, 2 U.S. 3, Medium and Cull No. 3 and cull pigs will no be sold.

All pigs will grouped by weight within 10 Ib french powder or liquid drench The ultra-fine product is pre (erred. Move cattle to clean pas hire after treatment. Thioben zote and cu-nie are as effectlv as Phenothateine and a rotatim of the three is the preferrtc method of control. Early detection, separntioi and treatment of contagious dis eases such as pink eye am UIIBIB wiicu -r All groups of pigs will foot will save money. fVSPAPKRl.

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