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Medina County Gazette from Medina, Ohio • Page 1

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Medina, Ohio
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1
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edina ounty azette I35fh Year No. 148 Twalve Pages MEDINA, OHIO 44256MONDAY. JUNE 26, 1967 MEDINA 725-4166 BRUNSWICK 225-3177 7 Citizens Committee Is Named In City's 'Workable Program' north MEDINA SHRINERS paraded through town prior to their annual Moslem east Saturday. Starting at the athletic field, they marched around Public Square before breaking np to attend the feast. A i i committee to represent Medina city in he required by the federal government in housing aid matters has en appointed by Mayor Fred Greenwood.

The IS-member group representing various civic, religious, ethnic, labor, banking and welfare interests, will be nam formally tonight at the regular council session at Municip a 1 Court. Named to three-year terms are: L. J. Turney, Paul Norris, Alfred Thomas, Mrs. Dorothy Jones and Frederick Leadon.

Two-year terms go to Da i (Jack) Medley, Augie Rios, Mike Klimko, John Jeandrevin and Rev. Harold Simones, (hie- year members are Richard Nye, Ralph Waite, Mrs. Elizabeth Pope Proclaims 27 New Cardinals, Asks Change In Jerusalem's Status VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Pope Paul VI in a streamlined ceremony today proclaimed 27 new caidinals, including four Americans. He appealed then in a speech that the city of Jerusalem be made a oasis of peace and with guaranteed international status. The new cardinals, including the four Americans, a first cardinal for Indonesia and a second one for Communist Poland, raised the College of Cardinals to an all time high of 118.

It also raised to 44 the number of countries represent ed. Among the new cardinals formally notified of their election in a centuries old custom were Archbishops Patrick Louis of Washington, D.C., John P. Cody of Chicago and John Joseph Krol of Philadelphia, and Msgr. Francis J. Brennan of Shenandoah, Pa.

ceremonies were secret; there will be a ptiblic consistory Wednesday in which each cardinal will receive his square red hat. In his major address the pontiff reviewed world pnrt)- lems. He appealed for peace in Vietnam and the Middle East and deplored lack of religious freedom in Communist and other countries. condition of the Palestinian in the Middle East makes us sorrow he said in his Latin language address. He called for an and generous to that problem as well as to and complex problems whkh have long awaited a reasMiable aolutitm md which the armed conflict has now put in a tragic must be confronted without delay for the sake of the Pope said.

The city of Jerusalem, sacred to Christians, Moslems and Jews, remain for all that which it city of free oasis of peace and prayer, a meeting place of nobility and concern for all with appropriate riatus internationally be said. Referring to the Vietnam wer, he noted that the conditkm of Southeast Asia is still greatly tcxmented although have multiplied our for peace. The pontiff joined 35 present cardinals in the consistorial hall and recited a prayer of invocation to the Holy Spirit. The Pope then delivered an address praising and proposing the elevation of 27 new cardinals according to ancient custom. was a time in the Roman Catholic Church when See Pope Page 3 Brooke, Mrs.

Pauline Riegger and Floyd Burd. A five-man subcommittee on mincHity group housing will be appointed (from this at the organizational meeting on Wednesday, July 5 at 7:30 p.m. in the Municipal Court rooms. Legislation authorizing taUishment of a advisory committee was passed last March, as a requisite for application for federal aid in the erection of a senior housing complex. initiated primarily in accordance with U.S.

Housing and Urban Development pro- Council Agenda Includes Paving Smith and Lake Road paving jobs will be on the council agenda at Municipal Court rooms tonight, both items having received tentative council approval recently. Other projects be- f(Me the legislators will be the changing of ward boundaries in preparation for the first waM electicms, and the ance authorizing an engineering survey on the sewer system ot the city. appropriation land for a sewer easement oa the Gabe Simon on Wadsworth Roid be befive the body again. the is expected to aid in future planning in matters of housing codes, zoning and other city needs. Subcommittees to be formed include: mlimrity housing, research and information, neighborhood improvement, home financing, imban renewal and downtown improvements.

Other areas to be explored include: capital imiH'ovement, transportation, industrial devel- opmoit, parks and playgrounds, social welfare beautification, annexation, municipal finance and code enforcement. plication for federal funds is presently in federal hands with no decision expected until the pro- is implemented. Committee affiliations are as follows: L.J. Directw of research at H.W. Madison Company, and city councilman.

PAUL NORRIS Operator of the Mecca Paving Company in Medina. Assistant editor of the Medina County Gazette, and former councilman. DOROTHY JONES Housewife and fwmer teacher. FREDERICK LEADON Sales representative f(x a steel firm. AUGIE RIOS Medina Junior High School principal, and city recreation for niim years until his resignation his month.

JACK MEDLEY Employed by Medna and the Metropolitan Housing Authority. MKE KLIMKO Employed by Henry Ftntiace Company and active in union vrork. JOHN JEANDREVIN An attorney in Medina. REV. HAROLD SIMONES Pastor the First Christ! a Church in Medina.

RICHARD NYE Active in the Medina Junior of See Citizens Page 3 BNl Rec Department Effective Wednesday, the new address and phone number of the Medina Recreation Department will be Medina City Hall, 132 N. Elmwood St, Medina, 44256, and the phone, BiQ Duim is the new director. Medina Girl Hospitalized For 2nd Kidney Removal Three-year-old Janette Garver, who was bom with four kidneys, entered Akrcm Hospital Simday aftmiKxm to have her second kidney removed. One of her four kidneys was removed last July. Doctors thmigbt she might have a tumor which was pushing her kidneys mit at place until X-rays showed the unusual omdltion.

Medical authorities say a case a being bora with four kidneys is very rare. the one kidney was removed, doctxs told her parents, Mr. and Bfrs. Robert L. Garver, CR 24, Medina, that after about a recuperation, they would remove the other.

After Destruction Of Two U.S. Platoons Allied Forces Kill 156 In Anti-Guerrilla Drives SAIGON troops today reported 156 Communists in anti-guerrilla drives along the South Vietnamese coast. In a lightning strike led by armwed perscxuiel crack government units and killed 105 Viet on the oikskirts of the ancient imperial city of Hue 380 miles northeast of Saigon. South Korean troops trilled 43 suffering a U.S. Marines killed eight.

The victcxies followed one of the bloodiest American in- DIRECTORS OF Valley City Chamber of Commerce pose for picture after their recent meeting held in the Community Hall. Seated (left to right) are Gil Caita, treasurer; Cy Schaefer, president; Harold Kiene. vice president: and Dan Mack, secretary. Other directors, standing (left to right) are Jay Reynolds. Ray Kemp.

Urban Nilgea, Roger Mack and Jim Ignatius. Absent from photo are Jim Frisk and Dkk Wachtel. cidents of the Communist destruction of two U.S. army 173rd Airbortm brigade platoons caught in a river of machinegun fire and attacks near the Cambodian border in Itie Central Highlands. U.S.

spidtesmen reported 80 kilted and 34 wounded in the Thursday. They said 75 of the dead came the two lost platoons. But the Americans wem down flatting. At Saigon, U.S. high command spokesmen said 106 Communists were kilted.

At the scene, officers and men who survived the human wave Communist some called them attacks and others claimed the North Vietnamese boosted their courage with they kilted 475. Ihe Cmnmunists had 27 hours to clear away their dead before American relMorce- ments reached the spot where the two units of Alpha Company became much to say. We met a bunch of and got into a go back and fight them Richey Sanchez, 22, of Chico, said. While the 173rd geared toe a return match, U.S. alllM repented killing 151 Communists Sunday.

Oach South Vietnamese paratroopers killed 108 guerrillas in a sweep near the ancient imperial city of Hue, 380 mites northeast of Saigon. They also captured 14 suspected Viet Cong, including a guerrilla captain rare Communist district chief, qiokesmen said. The government troops used armored personnel carriers in tbefa- stunning coastal drive which ccMt them only camialttes. Farther down the coast, about 250 niilea northeast of Saigon, South Korean troops caught and killed 43 Communists witlKWt suffering a single casualty themselves. In the air, American jets Sunday streaiked into North Vietnam and used bombs and rockets against trucks trying to reach tlw Mu Gia pass, gateway to the Ho Chi Minh supply trail to South Vietnam.

operation, however, had to be moved ahead because of an infection which developed and necessitated her hospitalization again. doctors wanted me to keep her on antibiotics until the other kidney could be removed, tnd she had a bad reactiao to the antibiotics and they said to stop givini liiMn to Mrs. Garvnr said. oofidi- tkm has baao over since then, except for an occasional cold such as everyone else has from time to fime. doctors ttenk it is this kidney that has caused the infection.

If all four had been fuiKtioning the doctors said they would not have to be removed, but the extra two were not fimc- her mother said. Janette has five brothers and sisters: Deborah, 11; David, 10; Teresa, Stephen, and Patricia, 1. Garver works for tixrs at Brookpark. MEDINA HIGH SCHOOL class of 1012 held its 55th reuBkHi Friday at the heme at Mrs. EalaUa Damon Todd.

751 Wadsworth Rd. The It class members preseat are (front, from left) Mbs Helen Yoder, Mrs. Estiier Hale Anit of Sarasota, FIs, Mrs. Mildred Kramer Wheeler of Largo. Mrs.

Janet Case Fraacey, Mrs. ArviUa Adams Rau, Mrs. Netha Reed Carsten, Mrs. Halite Shaw Reger of Conneaut. Back, from left.

Mrr Enlalia Damoa Todd, Miss Hazel Clark, Mrs. Floreace Braden GUI, Mrs. Ellsaheth RoUlas Leach. Sidney Feaa, Forrest Lenity. Mrs.

Effie Gates Anderson. Miss Bertha Bohtey. Emma Shlldrick Moriock, George Rtekert, Mrs. Dorothy Branch Waltoa of Lakewood. CliftMi Loomis of Chester Depot, Vt Ualets stated otherwise, members are residents of Medina Cooaty.

mm Johnson Says World Now A Little Less Dangerous' WASHINGTON (UPD -The United States and Russia are as far apart as ever on Vietnam and the Middle East, but in the view of President Johnson the Glassboro summit talks made the world little less The Chief Executive gave his cautiously hopeful assessment of the two-day summit Sunday night shortly after he and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin ended nearly 10 hours of talks in the small southern New Jersey town. Johnson returned to the White House to tell the nation on television and radio that, despite wide disagreement on a number of issues, the two nuclear superpowers had made progress in reducing misunderstanding and in reaffirming our common commitment to seek A few minutes after Johnson spoke, Kosygin gave a far more restrained view of the talks during a televised news conference at the United Nations in New York. The discussions, he said, had been On Vietnam, Johnson said the area of his agreement with Kosygin was defined by fact that the dangers and difficulties of any one area must never be allowed to become a cause of wider But the Russian, acknowledging over the war, said the issue could be settled only if U.S. bombhig of North Vietnam were halted and American troops withdrawn from South Vietnam.

0 the Middle East, Johnson reported agreement in principle that state has a right to clear reference to there should be an end to the war in the Middle East, and that in the right circumstances there should be withdrawal of Kosygin condemned Israel as an aggressor and demanded again that its troops withdraw to their positions before the war erupted June 5 before any other matters are considered, including reduction of arms shipments to the Middle East. The area which the two leaders seemed to have agreed was on what the termed urgent need for prompt on a treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko were to confer further in New York diis week on the question. Since both Moscow and Washington have several times expressed strong interest in such a treaty in the past, much of the needed diplomatic groundwm-k has already beoi accomplished.

Thus the major achievement of the Glassboro summit appeared to be that it gave the leaders of the two most powerful nations a chance to size each other up, to take each measure. Sometimes, said Johnson does help a lot to sit down and look at a in the eye and try to reason with him, particularly if he is trying to reason with you. may have differences and difficulties alwad, but I think they will be lessened, and not increased, by our new knowledge of each the President added. In that respect, Johnson said the two men planned to keep in touch in the future, both directly and their top- level aides. impressed Johnson as a fair, strong, firm and articulate leader who could put the Soviet position across fully without becoming loud or offensive.

4 There was blunt talk between the two leaders, some tough Friday and it never reached a point of warnings or ultlma- tuma. One of major aims in meeting Kosygin was to impress himself on the Soviet leader as a man of resolve, a man who strongly wants peace, and a man with a passionate desire to improve Uie economic and social lot of Americans through the Great Society. The point was that if the two aupopowera can deal with one amrther hi peace they can set an exaiiMiite other nations to get along. The two talks lasted aboik 44 hours, fnnn the time they first met until siMMrtly before they emerged from the home of the Glassboro State College president, about dusk. Johnscm brought his wife and elder Lynda Bird, and Kosygin brought his daughtw, Mrs.

Lyudmila Gvishiani, to the Sunday mimintt. The wimien iqient the afternoon at Island N.J., the rammer hmne of Gov. Richard J. where they were entertained by Mrs. Hugbra..

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About Medina County Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
11,413
Years Available:
1965-1968