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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 36

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
36
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pantagraah fcVU IImJtvrrmal, III. TWfi Pak 14, 1174 rx 1 Ministers told time's right for Latin America freedom ku ivkrre, Ifwt oViin cVtv iJullrd mijfivd from wnlnxjt hy (ore iftn fenern-nvfils or corpnraUont, or by foreign money, but would emerge as a "spiritual consentus from wftnin the people Urmselves. Such an approach, he admitted, is revolutionary ami has at tt flrwt rial the stn-ersnce of latin America1! hlstortcal-1 pendent rrlatioahlp. Thi lathering; of about 40 persons, mostly elderly, and many pators of area churches, nodVd Unr heads In agree ment with Kathrr llmde. It tru a that 10 years ago would have seemed Impossible In Uiis country.

tbey nrrd afi'l not on stimulating through diki advrttiing consumer habit i thry can ill al'rd The Itev. lUcr llde, Carmelite priest who krnt I ears working w.tn pravints on the shores of lUJula's lake Titraca, propmrd a nk I for dcelj nvnt of latin America baa on ill uiiKjue social irulinj, Ms human need afvl phyical tnurcrt. Kathrf Idnde, Uklng Iris cue Irom a dmunrnt written by a council of latin AmrfH an biJin(i in li. mpord a UmtUiHf of Ilia-ration." whrrrby social anl eronimic dcrlo(Mm-nt would (M be If Jim Plain Three tlrrg)mrn. with total uf 21 )tars nTHni mturfurir in latin Amrfira.

told a mcrting of (i niral Illinois Cwfrrnre on Ministries Wednesday Mm time root Ir I in America to drlar IU lmlra-nlrirf 11m? Itev. Jirph I. MtVary. an II rr trtr ran irf misiary work In lloilvu. oprnrd the ntfifrrrmr trmirur.

rut it led luilm Anrrxan Itralilira," with a -i4gK-al profile of Ijittn America's fiif Hut sjiJ has riot rhangrd ml generations" Alwt iO (ht rwt of nil Ulirt Amr-n-ran children. MVary Mid. brfon tlx age ol 1 and 4 Ue ttut survlvr, prr ot are adult illiterates. And fur evrry 10 ooo cMlrm tint entrr the fin grade, only sis graduate from high rhool. To lhi.

McOrary Mid. add a $100 yrarly rr r.ixU locnc ami ntran lllf-lan of 37 )rr. attd a t(1urt uf "tragic human wade" In Ulin Anrrk-a it romplrtr. The ryrlc of pMvrrty world orr. MOjry said, hntia to br a rlrrd one that prrpt-tuAtrs llvlf from Rrnrr-Atitn to the nrti.

A nigh Infant murtality rale, he aaid, Imtm-r the dnure to ha large numbrri of children. lmutfmrtaUI on a sutnUtrnre Income, which in turn rau-irs malnutniin. aitknra and early oVaih. Tle Hev. Jisrjh Wdndw'e.

who returned from Santiago do Uule In CXto- mii and tailly to the I'mlrd Mln That oVpwli-fwy, Klrxl Mid. ha brrn not only piJiiK'al and mimic, but cultural. jtun Amrrira'i and rtuomtic rwlri with 0e US. hat remained ftuWrvirnt. iMUio aki.

lrraue of tlr paternalism lnihril In the iTm nrnt a foreign aid puram. the ovrr-jrarm4 Influriii-e i miiitiruiMwul nrj-Mmh in dctrliifNii rinmit and a US foreign puliry rttnyrd to ptren Matality and a limate lamrahle for US invrMment In lutin Amrrwa IM even nvxe damainjt In ltm American aut'totny, rJridiie Mid. ha ln-rn the Irrvlnry of tut Antrriran rlilc. ahoul Z) prr mil of the Delation, to adopt Anvriran cultural valom. In particular thoe of a ma consumption ail mau produiiiiMi economy Tlw Ajwriran tivufc'l for in duttrlaliatlon and dVTlnptnnit.

nde Mid. may not lr Uie lri pmble fur latin America wlrr cultural traditions and social and ecorvnic conditions Jfcf from thise In the U.S. that prevailrd during Us I'Kh crrrtury imla-anal tv pamion Itrail. the rcunumic miracle of Ur 1970s, thanks lar ly to large Invnl-mcnts of forriil capital, hat utn a rapid Increase In Uie production and ctjasumption of consumrr piods. Vet.

Klridce Mid. Uie purchasing ntr of Die Urailun Door Is kns todav December snows shorten, vocation 2 U-r. 1973. following a picmlrr military liays lost frtim Drttmbrr snowitorms will shorten spring vacation for lltoom-IngVai public schr4 stulrnu this ytar. but nest year sh da-s will be made up in June.

That was the 4 to 2 decision of the liWxnington school board Wednesday night. A 1974 71 school calendar provldrs five snow make-up da)f between June 9 and IX The district has h.id to make up snow days in only five of Ue past 3) school years. Sunt. George Stimelmg said. A 10-day spring vacation, March 22 through 31, will remain intact regardless of snow days next year.

If the extra das In June are necessary, It will be known early enough to coordinate Uie end of, school In June. Stimrling said. This year's spring Vacation will begin after classes April 10, and run through April IS. The boahd Wednesday agreed to switch that schedule to provide a day off from clavses on April 13 rather than on April 10. Otherwise, SUmrtlng Mid, those returning from trips would have to drive on a gasless Sunday or return on the Saturday before Kastcr.

Originally, this year's spring vacation had been set up to Include April through 13. Three days were lost, however, because of December snows. Dunn fierce argurd that the 1974 7i school calendar srrmed to discriminate In favor of people taking trips during spring vacation. The new calendar had Urn proposed by teachers and administrators. Pierre and Jack Ingold voted against the new calendar because parental opinion had not been sought and said that the current system of shortening spring vacation should be followed.

The adopted 1974 73 calendar calls for classes to begin Aug. 23. ChrUUius vacation will extend from Saturday, Dec. 21. through Sunday, Jan.

S. Four half-day teacher Institutes will be held Nov. Jan. 20. Feb.

17 and May 11 coup In that country, attributed "ia jt as In I'M. The fruits of a mass Contribution Tlv ytarld Sttvt SchMtktl of S64 E. WilUw, Narmal, p4 ttw htart at Eattltnd Shapoimj Camtr Twatday night while tnltrtainer Jo Dawtll, fermar Pantograph carriar-ialttman, anltr-lainad th fthappart. Making hr can-tnbuttan I Htt Ma art Fund was Swt McElvanay 90 N. Allm.

Tht Naturals, a Twin city danca band, will rtftMi at the mall at 7:11 and p.m. today. (Paragraph Phot) dertievelopment" and Uie related problem of poverty In Latin America to an historical relationship of dependency. Kirst. as a colony, latin America was dependent upon Uie Spanish monarrhy, Udiidgc said, and thrn following In- production and consumption economy, added, haw not, and probably will not, trickle diwn to Uie mavses of the people.

Primary emphasis, Klridge said, should be placed on giving Uie poor what eaeeeeeeeeeweeeeeMefaeeeeeew Central nilinoos UDeaihs eeeaaaaeeeaeaaaaaaeeeeeeeeaeeeaeeeeaeeeeeaaeeee Mrs. Edith Hines DDcatDis Mrs. Bertha Jones Clarence Grebner METAMORA-Oarence J. Grebner, 63. of It.

It. 2 died at 12 20 a.m. Wednesday at his hrime His funeral will be at 10 am. Saturday at St. Mary's Catholic Church.

Ijourdcs, with Father Aurelian Munch officiating. Burial ill be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Visitation will be from 3 to and 7 to I pm. Friday at the Mason Funeral Home.

Metamora. Tie Rosary will be recited at 8 m. Mr. Grebner was born Aug. 29.

1908. in Worth Township, a son of John and ficer of the Pioneer Club of the General Telephone Co. He was a former elder of Eastview Christian Church, a former chairman of the church board and a former chairman of the church building committee. He was a member and elder of the Emerson Street Christian Church and former chairman of its official board. He was a trustee six years at the Lincoln Christian College and chairman of the board of trustees at the colleges for the last two years.

He was a former trustee of the Toronto Christian Mission in Toronto, Canada. IWU enrollment Services for Mrs. Bertha Jones, S3, of 702 W. Market, who died Tuesday morning, will be Friday at 1:30 pn at East Lawn Memorial Chapel, the Rev. Paul Barnes officiating.

Burial will be In East Lawn Memorial Cemetery. Visitation will be from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the chapel She was bom March 17, 193). at Clinton, a daughter of Henry and Gladys Dillman Waldrui. Surviving are a brother, Hiram Waldron.

R.R. 4. Normal; six sisters. Mrs. Gloria Forth, Mrs.

Betty Jarrett and Mrs. Dorothy Brakebill. all of Pompano Beach. Mrs. Clara belle Muff flintnn- Mrt M.irinn Cammi the Preston Funeral Home, with the Itev.

Hubert Kntwislc officiating. Burial will be in lake View Cemetery. Visitation will be from 7 to 9 pm. today at the funeral home. She was born Aug.

18. 1893, at Logansport. Ind. a daughter of George and Hat tie Rice Minter. She was married to Miles Delell in I92X He died March 13.

1954. Surviving are a stepson. Lewis Delell, Pikin; two half sisters. Mrs. Nina McMahon, South Ih-nd.

and Mrs. Lulu Kline. Iogan.port, and seven slepgrandchildrvn. Mrs. Eva Dodson PONTIAC PNSl-Mrs.

Kva R. Dodson. 75, died about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at her home. She had been in failing health five years.

Her funeral will be at II a.m. Saturday at the Raleigh J. Harris Funeral Home, with the Rev. Joseph Doughetl officiating. Burial will lie in South Side Cemetery.

Visitation will I- from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. She was born July 19, 1898, in Randolph, a daughter of Elmer and Ida Mary Mclntyrc Runyon. She was married to Berley C. IXnLson Aug.

19, 1922, in Pontiac. Surviving are her husband; three sons, Berley DeWayne, Romlull, all of Pontiac; a Mrs. Lambert Meismer, Metamora; three sisters. Mrs. Velma Richardson, Santa Ana.

Mrs. Robert Jacobs. Chcnoa! Mrs. Con- 1 way Johnson, Pontiac; four brothers, Clifford Runyon, Chatsworth; Robert Runyon, Costa Mesa, Bill Runyon, Pontiac; Clayton Runyon, address unknown; 11 grandchildren. FAIRBURY lPNS-Mrs.

With llinc. 87. was found dead at her home about 4.13 pm. Wednesday. She had been ill five years.

Livingston County Coroner Keith Von (Jualcn conducted an inquiry and reported death was due to natural causes. Her funeral will be at 2 p.m. Friday at Uie Stiver Home for Funerals, with the Itev. Cecil Lockard officiating. Burial will be in Graceland Cemetery.

Visitation will begin at 6 p.m. today at the Sliver Home. She was born Oct. IKifi. in rural McLean County, a daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Anton Kwasigroh. SI married William Hines Jan. 21. 1'JOl He died (XL 7.

1963. They farmed south of Fairbury until hi.s death. Surviving are two daughters. Mrs. Hazel Morrow nnd Mrs.

Mabel Ilill-ingslcy, both of Fairbury; two sons, Gilbert. Gorin. und Gene. Fairbury; a brother. Joe Kwasigroh, 611 K.

Mulberry, Bloomington; a sister, Mrs. Frances Studeman, Heyworth; 12 grandchildren, including Mrs. Frances Brown of Fairbury, who was reared in the Hines home; 30 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Tomblinson MANSFIELD (PNSl-Mrs.

Marilyn Tomblinson, 37. died at her home at 5 a.m. Tuesday. She had been in ill health for some time. Her funeral will be at 2 p.m.

Saturday at Zerkle Funeral Home at Olncy, with burial in Forest Hidgc Cemetery, Noble. Visitation will bo from 7 to 9 p.m. today at Stcnscls' Funeral Home, and from 4 to 9 p.m. Friday at Zerkle Funeral Home. Citrus Heights.

and Mrs. Uia -rfisMisr aIaIi'ha Lindlc, Broderick City, Calif. Hannah Karlarich Pled, lie moved to KuUand with his parents when he was 2 years old. He worked as a farmer until his health failed. Surviving are two brothers.

Lewis and Joseph Pleshe. both of Malibu. and two sisters. Miss Frances lleshe of Malibu. and Mrs.

Mary Itacki of Yucaipa, Calif. Mrs. Olive Haynes DWIGHT (PNSl-Mrs. Olive M. Haynes.

83. of Higginsville, and formerly of Dwight, died at 2 a.m. Wednesday at Memorial Hospital, Lexington, Mo. Services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at Baker Funeral Home, the Rev.

Virgil Smith officiating. Burial will be in Oaklawn Cemetery. Visitation will be from 3 to and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. She was born July 2.

1890, in Washington, a daughter of Thomas and Olive Wright Jordan. She married Harry II. Haynes Nov. 13, 1907, in Joliet. He died In 1964.

Surviving arc one son, William, Wisconsin Rapids, three daughters, Mrs. Virginia Roesslcr, Chicago; Mrs. Elizabeth Vermillion. Higginsville, Mrs. Kathryn Kumming.

Coal City; eight grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. Mrs. Virginia Lawson PEKIN (PNSl-Mrs. Virginia M. Law-son, 62, of 500 Illinois died at 10:25 p.m.

Tuesday at Pekin Memorial Hospital. She had been a patient since Sunday. Her funeral will be at 11 a.m. Friday at the Noel-Henderson Funeral Home, with the Rev. Ralph Cordcs officiating.

Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Visitation will be from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the funeral home. Memorials may be made to Second Reformed Church Building Fund. She was born Oct.

21, 1911. at Pekin, a daughter of Steven and Delia Brooks Griffin. She was married to Vernill Lawson June 2, 1934, at Pekin. He died October 8. 1973.

Bertha Sutter Grebner. He married Josephine Krumholz Oct. 21. 1933, at St. Mary's.

Surviving are his wife; four sons. Donald. Raymond and Eugene, all of Metamora; Bernard, Peoria; four daughters. Mrs. Bemicc Scheirer, Mrs.

Mary Mitzelfctt, and Misses Evelyn and Christine Grebner. all of Metamora; two brothers, Fred, GlasfordT Elmer, Metamora; and II grandchildren. He a farmer and a lifelong resident of the area. He was a member of the Men's Club of St. Mary's Church and the Catholic Order of Foresters.

Henry W. Rohrer LINCOLN-Henry W. Rohrer, 70. R.R. 2.

died at 9 a.m. Wednesday at the Springfield Memorial Medical Center in Springfield. Services will be at .1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Frickc Memorial Home, with the Rev. Wallace Rcifstcck officiating.

Burial will be Saturday at Union Cemetery. Mr. Rohrer was member of the Brotherhood of St. John Church of Christ, the Logan County Farm Bureau and the Central Illinois Rose Society. He was born March 3.

1903, in Logan County, the son of William and Minnie Zurkammer Rohrer. He married Ruth Damarin in Mount Pulaski Oct. 10. 1928. Surviving arc his wife; a daughter, Mrs.

Rita R. Wilson, Springfield; a son, Arthur, Lincoln; a brother, Elmer, Lincoln; and six grandchildren. Battery taken from car Eugene Crosier, 906 N. Lee, told police a $30 battery was stolen from his 1969 Plymouth about 10:30 p. nu Wednesday.

The car was parked at his home. Second semester enrollment at Illinois Wesleyan University stands at 1.571 full-time students, James Barbour, registrar, announced Thursday. That compares to the 1,587 full-time students enrolled for Uie same period last year, Barbour said, and is a drop of 103 from the 1.674 enrolled for the first semester last fall. Enrollment dropped' 102 full-time students between semesters last year. Funeral Friday for Lincoln man LINCOLN A private funeral for Charles W.

Stoltz, 88, who died Tuesday, be at 10:30 a.m. Friday at the Fricke Memorial Home. The Rev. Wallace Reifsteck will officiate and burial will be in Union Cemetery. Visitation will be at the funeral home an hour preceding Uie sen-ice.

He was born in Lincoln Jan. 24. 1886. a son of Ernest and Rosina Ryan Stoltz. He married Emma Borchardt.

Surviving are his wife; four daughters. Miss Helen. Mrs. Catherine Shcley, both of Lincoln; Mrs. Evelyn Phillips.

R. R. I. Normal; Miss Lucille Stoltz, Blooming-ton; seven grandchildren, and 11 greatgrandchildren. Five brothers and two sisters preceded him in death.

Glenn Arthington Glenn R. Arthington. S3, of 21 Knollcrest, Normal, died at 5.03 Thursday at Brokaw Hospital. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Eastview Christian Church.

1705 Towanda. Officiating will be the Rev. Jack Thompson, the Rev. Robert Phillips and Chancellor Earl Hargrove. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery.

Visitation will be from 3 to 9 p.m. Friday and 12 to 1 p.m. Saturday at the Melzler Memorial Home. Memorials may be made to the Emerson Street Christian Church building fund. Mr.

Arthington was born Oct. 26. 1920. in Wapclla, the son of Asa and Elsie Nelson Arthington. He was married to Dorothy M.

Hartley on April 26, 1941, in Clinton. Surviving arc his wife; his parents of St. Petersburg three children, Gary, Naperville; Mrs. Cheryl Grant, Belleville, and Mrs. Kathy Bennett, Lincoln; one sister.

Mrs. Wilma Jackson, St. Petersburg. and four grandchildren. He was a tax accounting manager of General Telephone having been associated with the company 25 years.

He was second vice-president of Illinois Taxpayers' Representatives and an of- She was born at Olncy, May 22, 1936, a daughter of Arch R. and Bertha Heady Mason. She was married to. Donald L. Tomblinson at El Paso, June 19, 1953.

Surviving are her husband; a son. Dallas, at homo, and her mother, Noble. Mrs. Maud Delzell PKKIN PNSl-Mrs. Maud A.

Detail. 80. formerly of 220 Caroline died at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday at Pekin Memorial Hospital. She had been a patient a week.

She had resided at Washburn Nursing David Pleshe RUTLAND (PNS)-David Pleshe. 79. died at 9:55 p.m. Tuesday at Uie Heritage Manor Nursing Home in Strcator after an extended illness. His funeral Will be at 10 a.m.

Friday at the Sacred Heart Church with the Rev. Francis Ryan of Toluca officiating. Burial will be at St. Ann's Ccmetary in Toluca. Visitation will be.

from 4 to 9 p.m. Thursday at the Thierry Funeral Home in Wenona. A prayer service will be held at 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Mr.

Pleshe was bom at Lokva. Yugoslavia, Jan. 1, 1895, the son of Joseph and Surviving arc three sons. Robert and Danny, both of Pekin: Gary, Kansas City, and nine grandchildren. She was a member of Second Reformed Church, the Volunteer Society of the church, the Rcbckah Lodge and the Golden Age Club.

Home for a year. Her funeral will be at 1 p.m. Friday at We con weather energy crisis-economist switch from a system of lease-loans whereby oil compjinies must lease federal lands for exploration at prohibitive prices, to a system of royalty bidding whereby the federal government would receive a percentage of the profits from tiil discovered on the land. Finally, the federal government should eschew any elaborate rationing or allocations system in favor of a traditional market pricing and allocation because the abuses possible under a bureau-cratically controlled rationing system would be greater. Brown said, than the inequities of a system where fuel goes to the highest bidder.

With regard to demand. Brown said, "I think that a lot of experts are going to be surprised, (with a competitive market system). Demand will rise less rapidly than most experts are By Jim Flannary Dr. Keith Brown, associate professor of economics at Purdue University, said Wednesday night in a lecture at Illinois Wesleyan University the United States has the resources and technology available to resolve its energy crisis. But he doubted the U.S.

would be able to meet President Nixon's goal of self-sufficiency in fuel by 1980. Higher prices for fuel in an unregulated competitive market will reduce the demand for energy, Brown said, and Improve the marketability of fuel sources that are not now economically feasible. At the same time, research and Improved technology should make available new sources of energy for wide U.S. oil supplies, Brown said, have been artificially limited by production rationing imposed during the post-World War II period when oil supplies far exceeded demand nnd by import quotas designed to protect the U.S. oil industry from cheaper Middle Eastern oil.

The current oil shortages, Brown said, have been brought about by the Middle East embargo and by a decline in available supplies from other oil-producing countries such as Venezuela. The oil Industry, which produces about 32 per cent of the nation's fuel, has not aggressively explored or drilled new fields because of environmental restrictions and the prohibitive cost of leasing government land for exploration, Brown said. The supply of natural gas has been The 1980 goal is unrealistic Brown said, because it would require a reduction in energy consumption too great to be acceptable to the American public. Brown, a 40-ycar-old economist who joined the Purdue faculty In 1966 after three years with the U.S. Department of Defense as an electronic engineer, traced the origins of the fuel shortage in each of the four major energy groupings.

The consumption of coal, Brown said, has declined from a 1920 high of 80 per cent of our energy use to a 1973 low of 25 per cent of fuel consumption. Coal, Brown said, has become less economical as a fuel because of high transportation costs from far-flung fields and the high sulfur content of lower grade deposits. Strip-mining, a more economical method of extracting coal from the earth, lias been limited by low prices set the Federal Power Commission in 1954. Natural gas currently accounts for about 39 per cent of our energy consumption, he said. Hydroelectric and nuclear power together account for about 4 per' cent of our energy production and cannot be signficantly increased for about 15 years due to technical and environmental problems, but nuclear energy offers one of the better long-term hopes for increased energy production, Brown said.

Among the immediate measures the government could take to alleviate energy shortages, Brown said, are the de-regulation of natural gas prices and the comprehensive review of environmental standards, with particular emphasis upon opening up the continental shelf and shale fields to oil exploration. The government, Brown said, should predicting. spread use, he said. artificially restricted by unrealisticallv environmental considerations. jjjjjj jfffffffffrrr rrfrrrrr rr err rr i MM.

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Pages Available:
1,649,342
Years Available:
1857-2024