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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 10

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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10
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-10- PJTTSnUHCH POST-GAZETTE i MONDAY, JULY 17, 1972 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII '(8BpS8 I' ll 'Good Risk' Pen Inmale Still Missing Western Penitentiary inmate John Geppi, 26, of Baltimore, who walked away from a vocational training class in the Oliilnary News Henry G. Beamer, Ex-Supl. of Schools Services for Dr. Henry G. Bcamer, who chose education over engineering and became superintendent of East Pittsburgh schools, will be held at 11 a.

m. tomorrow in the Emily M. Lanigan Funeral Home, 700 Linden East Pittsburgh. Dr. Bcamer, 73, of 810 Long Road, Penn Hills, died Friday In the -J i 1JT3 iMoonsliots Tlcnly Had Medicine' An amateur weatherman on the Capilano Indian Reserve near Vancouver, 13.

attributes some of the recent bad weather to the landing of Americans on the moon. Dominic ft" Burlinganic, Engineer, 79 4 Aft. 1 ir- i ii I $iit l1' i''V', -3 Starling Lineup These baseball fans already had missed a half-hour of the first game of yesterday's Pirates-Houston Astros douhleheader at Three Rivers Stadium because of heavy traffic. Cars were bumper to bumper on Ft. Duquesne bridge long after game time as sell-out crowd of 49,341 poured into the stadium.

It was the largest gate of the 1972 baseball season here. Dominic Charlie fund-raising telethon July 8-9. fl read with great interest that you will be working to help jwif. a Democrat in the White House this fall," Pucinski wrote. JlSince too, will be working for the Democratic nominee, be most grateful to you for whatever assistance you itn give me in my own campaign.

Surely, we will not want -to split the vote in this pivotal state." Sharon is married to fohn D. Rockefeller IV, secretary of state of West Virginia, vwho is Democratic candidate for governor. Mr. and Mrs. James Benjamin Schoonbctk were married iii Muskegon, on Friday and promptly started a honey-jlioon trip in the over-the-highway truck tractor by which he Mobster Eboli Dies In Hail of Gunfire Memorial services for Charles Burlingame, an engineer for the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority, (ALCOS-AN) will be held at 11 a.

m. Wednesday at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Mt. Lebanon. Mr.

Burlingame, 79, of 639 McCully Mt. Lebanon, died Saturday (July 15) at Presbyterian University Hospital. A veteran of both world wars, Mr. Burlingame served on the staff of General Eisenhower in Paris and retired after World War II as a lieutenant colonel. He was a graduate of the University of Colorado and taught mechanical engineering for several years before becoming an engineer with West-i Electric Corp.

in 1920. Mr. Burlingame worked as an engineer for Consolidation Coal Co. from 1934 to 1900 when he joined ALCOSAN. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Ruth C. Burlingame; a son, Dean R. Burlingame of Corpus Christi, and a brother, Dr. R. M.

Burlingame of Delta, Colo. The family suggests memo-r i a 1 contributions may be made to the Memorial Fund of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. Helen 15. O'Connor Mass for Mrs.

Helen B. O'Connor, co-founder of Camp Ronnoco at Lake Chautauqua, N.Y., will be offered at 10:30 a. m. in Sacred Heart Church, 310 Shady Shadyside. Mrs.

O'Connor, 78, of 5738 Kentucky Shadyside, died Saturday (July 15) Lo Shadyside Hospital. Surviving are two sons, J. V. Jr. and James four daughters, Mrs.

R. G. Whitescl, Mrs. J. W.

Neil, Mrs. M. W. Wise Jr. and Isabell 12 grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.

Friends will be received from 7 to 9 p. m. today at the John A. Freyvogel Sons Funeral Home, 4900 Center Shadyside. -Associated Presi Wlreohoto New Patriarch I) i I metropolitan archbishop of Imbros and Te-nedos, Turkey, is seen in Istanbul's St.

George Church alter he was elected leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church. The 58-year-old Demitrius succeeds the late Athenegoras I. PJiny Ignelzi Pliny Ignelzi, 80, a retired civil engineer, died yesterday (July 16) at West Penn Hospital. Mr. Ignelzi of 222 Melwood Avenue, Oakland, was with Chester Engineers of Corao-polis for 30 years before his retirement.

He was a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh School of Engineering. He belonged to the First Methodist Church of Pittsburgh, Eellefield Roval Arch Chapter 299, Scottish Rile, Syria Shrine and the Pennsylvania Society of Professional Engineers. Mr. Ignelzi was also the past worshipful master of Lodge 45. Surviving are a son, Gerard; three brothers, Norbert, Edmundo and Rolando, and a sister, Mrs.

Adelina Pollano. Friends will be received from 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p. m. today and tomorrow at H. Samson 537 Neville Oakland.

Services will be held at 11 a. m. a at First Methodist Church, Center and Aiken Avenues. District Deaths Mrs. Verna of Markle Road, Allegheny Westmoreland County, Saturday (July 15) in her home.

Services will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow at St. Margaret Mary Church, Lower News i Charlie, who has been watch ing weather all of his life and claims to know some things i about weather the official weathermen don't know, says "The moon supposed to be not touched." "No one supposed to go there. Those three men they bothered the moon," and, he reasons, when the moon's not feeling well, neither is the weather.

Rep. Roman Pucinski, MI-, has asked the daugh- ler of Repuolican Sen. Charles H. Percy to help him unseat "er amcr November A election. Pucinski, who is "ft challenging Percv for the Senate scat, wrote Mrs.

Shar- on iiocKeieuer, who partici- i nated in the Democratic 3 Overcome In Park Pool Three young girls were temporarily overcome by too much chlorine released in the Highland Park swimming pool yesterday afternoon, according to police. Christen Tagg, 8, of 1233 Hcrbcrton Highland Tark, Debbie Mclvin, 12, of 7 Mel-vin Acres, Clairton, and Dorothy Tucker, 11, of 7208 Race Ilomewood, were treated at Pittsburgh Hospital and released. Officials said the incident was the result of a breakdown in the water filtration system which had been repaired earlier in the week. Back by popular demand see DOONESBURY daily on the Post-Gazette's great page of comics. 'I 1 1 ii us" (Continued from Page 1) ican Unity Day rally in Columbus Circle in June 1971.

Federal authorities have identified Eboli as an under-boss in the Genovese family while the late Genovese himself, known as the "Boss of Bosses." was in prison for bankrolling a narcotics smuggling operation. State Investigation Commission sources said Eboli's poor health prevented him from gaining the top spot in the mob after Genovese's death in prison in 19ti9. He also was taken into custody in a police raid four years later after the so-called "little Apalachian" meeting of organized crime leaders. Chess Match Adjourns With Fischer Ahead TrurUrr Sclioonhrrk lift Anno over "threshold." makes his living. The Schoonbecks left for his next run to San Francisco.

Schoonbeck, a former Michigan Slate University student, figures he and his bride, the former Carol Anne Honle, will be "keeping-house" in the truck cab for a while. Seattle artist John Ramm has created hitchhiking sculptures of plywood that get his art out on the road. Ramm says he has records showing the "people" are working their way iacross the U.S. and Canada this summer. Drivers are asked to mail back to him a postcard, attached to the reverse of the figures, any time they give one of the users a ride.

(July 14) at home. He retired in 1968 after 22 years in the superintendent's job. He had taught for years in Dauphin and Clarion counties before coming to East Pittsburgh in 1925 to teach i stry, physics, biology and general science. Beamer Dr. Beamer, originally from Manor in Westmoreland County, was graduated from Jeannette High School in 1918 and received a chemical engineering degree from Pennsylvania State University four years later.

He received a master's degree from the University of Pittsburgh in 1932 and a doctorate from Pitt in 1954. He was principal of East Pittsburgh Junior-Senior High School from 1929 to 1942, when Dr. Beamer left to begin a rise from captain to lieutenant colonel in four years with the U.S. Army Chemical Corps. In 1944, he was commander of a Chemical Corps battalion in Europe.

He was awarded the French Croix de Guerre and cluster in 1947 for his military work in Seine, France. He eventually became a reserve colonel. Dr. Beamer returned to East Pittsburgh and became superintendent of the schools in 1946. Friends will be received from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

today at the funeral home. Deaths Elsewhere James P. Reed, 82, retired employe of U.S. Steel Homestead Works, yesterday (July 16) at his home in Jennerstown, Somerset County. Services at 11 a.

m. Wednesday at the J. H. Hoffman Funeral Home, Boswell, Somerset County. Carl T.

Sloan, of West Union Somerset, Somerset County, Saturday, July 15, at home. He was former president of Jeannette Glass Co. Services at 11 a. m. tomorrow in St.

Paul Presbyterian Church, Somerset. v'787. fl Dr. The format and Morality see below The major will be televised The program KDKA-TV Saturday and possibly the afternoon Students will and complete materials. receive a materials and workshops opportunity and interact in the course.

Dr. Reuben undergraduate "Management Samuel D. (three "Law and Society," John (three "Design and Curriculum Dr. Doris T. (three Fur further University Hill District, was still at large last night.

State Police said they spotted Geppi at an Oakland movie theater yesterday afternoon, but a police search failed to locate the escaped inmate. Geppi slipped out of the i 's special class for "good risks" Friday at Connelly Skill Learning Center, Hill District. When prison guards began collecting the inmates at noon for the bus ride back to Woods Run, they discovered that Geppi, who had been seen 10 minutes before, was missing. "We had five guards patrolling the area with walkie-talkies," said Warden Joseph Brierly. "I assume Geppi had planned his escape pretty well." Geppi was serving a five-to-ten-year sentence for larceny, forgery, burglary and possession of narcotics.

He was enrolled in the automotive class of the 13-week-old vocational program. "He was our first escapee in the program," Brierly said, adding that "it's a shame this had to happen because the inmates very jealously guard the program from mistakes." If Geppi is not found within 48 hours, Brierly said, the FBI will be notified. State Police already have issued a fugitive warrant, the warden noted. Kduin P. Harnack Services for Edwin P.

Harnack, a former A 11 gh County assessor, will be held at 2 p. m. today at H. Samson Inc. Funeral Home, 537 N.

Neville Oakland. Mr. Harnack, 74, died Friday (July 14) at his home, 6833 Mead Clairton. He worked at the former East Liberty real estate firm of S. R.

Harnack Co. for 18 years and was a county assessor for many years before retiring in 1968. Mr. Harnack was a member of East Liberty Presbyterian Church and the Clairton Rotary and Lions clubs. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Geo Harnack; a son, E. Reed; two brothers, Theo F. and Bayard and two sisters, Mrs. Howard Hartmann and Mrs. J.

David Steiner. Friends will be received from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m.

today at the funeral home. Burial will be in Lebanon Church Cemetery, Pleasant HIils. Prison Riot Ends in Md. (Continued from Page 1) overcrowded but "not better nor worse" than any other prison. He said prison officials were trying to carry out.

reforms, but were hampered by lack of money. Mitchell, who was earlier refused admittance to the prison because officials said they feared for his safety, accompanied the governor to the fence to talk to the group in the courtyard and then went inside the prison with him. The state police were called after guards tried and failed to end the riot with tear gas. The disturbance quickly grew out of control because the guard force was "woefully understaffed for this size population," said Elmanus Hern-don, assistant director of the State Corrections Department. fun goes out of travel and public events and taxpayers are put to the annoyance and expense of maintaining security personnel who slow things down.

SIC TRANSIT GLORIA! Political enthusiasms are shortlived. The Pied Piper of the 1968 convention in Chicago, former Sen. Eugene McCarthy, was seen one day under the TV lights in the Fontainebleau Ho tel attracting virtually no attention. Usually hundreds would stop and gape when anyone was being interviewed, but this time they passed it up. Subsequently, plans to put McCarthy in nomination for I the presidency were dropped.

COL. HARLAND SANDERS, 81 and elegant in a white suit and goatee to match, received a nice hand when introduced to an audience full of 30,000 free pieces of fried chicken. The ranks of Florida's fryers had been cruelly decimated by the colonel's exploiters, Kentucky Fried Chicken, who not only treated delegates and media to a chicken dinner but also sponsored the telethon which raised nearly $5 million to help pay off the party's enormous debt. ft -Post-Gazett Pholo Eboli's criminal record dates back to 1933 and includes arrests for gambling, vagrancy, assault and consorting with known criminals. Early in his career, he was alleged to be the muscleman for various crime figures and the chauffeur for mobster Albert Anastasia who was slain in a hotel barber shop in 1937.

A native of Italy who became a naturalized citizen in 1906, Eboli reportedly got his start in the underworld in 1932 when he attended the wedding of Joseph Valachi whose testimony before federal probers disclosed much of the structure of organized crime in the United States. 27. -Q-Q2, QR-Kl 28. -R-K3, P-R4 Elapsed time: Spassky 123 minutes, Fischer 102 minutes. 29.

-KR-K2, K-R2 30. -R-K3, K-Ktl 31. -KR-K2, BxKt 32. -QxB, RxP 33. RxR, RxR Elapsed time: Spassky 128 minutes, Fischer 110 minutes.

34. RxR, QxR 35. -B-R6, Q-Kt3 36. -B-B1, Q-K18 37. -K-B1, B-B4 38.

-K-K2, Q-K5CH 39. -Q-K3, Q-B7CH 40. -Q-Q2, Q-Kt6 41. Q.Q1 Fischer's 41st move was given to the referee, Lothar Schmid of West Germany, in a sealed envelope. Elapsed time at adjournment: Spassky 165 minutes, Fischer 135 minutes.

26lli Ward Gels Kef use Pickups City refuse crews will move into the 26th Ward this week to collect rubbish in the annual spring-summer clean-up. Special roll-off boxes placed throughout the ward are to be used by residents to deposit rubbish when possible. Large items wilt be picked up at curbs in front of residences. COL. HARLAND SANDERS His chicken jree at convention.

a sticker showing that it had cleared "customs." By contrast, on the flight down from Greater Pittsburgh Airport, there had been no security check at all, although the flight takes one close to Havana. Coming back, there was a search of hand luggage before boarding. This is part of the enormous cost in time and money to which the nation is put as a result of violence and disorder. Much of the spontaneity and 1 you can't come fo Pitt, now Pift can come fo you. Free Lemonade At 90 Degrees BLUEKIELD, W.

Va. (AP) Bluelicld residents sipped ee lemonade for the firs time in several years Friday as the mrr-c hit the 9(i-degree mark. It's a long-standing tradition in this mountainous city on the West Virginia-Virginia border, elevation 2,558 feet, that Chamber of Commerce officials provide the lemonade when the temperature climbs past 90. Man Hchl Up 20 Times in IJio RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -A truck driver working in a high crime area has been held Up 20 times. "The last time was as exciting as the first," he said.

(Continued from Page 1) Here are the moves in the third game: Spassky white. Fischer black. 1. -P-Q4, Kt-KB3 2. -P-QB4, P-K3 3.

-Kt-KB3, P-B4 4. -P-Q5, PxP 5. -PxP, P-Q3 6. -KI-B3, P-KK 7. -Kt-Q2, QKt-Q2 Elapsed Time: Spassky 5 minutes, Fischer 15 minutes.

8. -P-K4, B-Kt2 9. -B-K2, 0-0 10. 0-0, R-KI 11. -Q-B2, Kt-Rl Elapsed Time: Spassky 25 minutes, Fishcher 32 minutes.

12. -BxKt, PxB 13. -Kt-B4, Kt-K4 14. -Kt-K3, Q-R5 Elapsed Time: Spassky 44 minutes, Fischer 35 minutes. 15.

-B-Q2, Kt-Kt5 16-KtxKt, PxKt 17. -B-B4. Q-B3 18. -P-KKt3, B-Q2 Elapsed Time: Spassky 63 minutes, Fischer 57 minutes. 19.

-P-QR4, 20. -KR-K1, P-QR3 21. -R-K2, P-K14 22. 23. -P-K13, R-K2 24.

25. -PxP, PxP 26. -P-K14, P-B5 For years, educators have known that education is something that takes place within the individual, not solely in a classroom. And for years, they also have known that there arc many people who miss the opportunity for higher education simply because they are unable to be on a college campus on a more or less continu for the fifth course in American Society," will be slightly different. portion of the course content on Sunrise Semester.

will be broadcast on on Tuesday, Thursday, and mornings from a.m., on another channel during andor evening hours. watch these presentations a scries of supplemental These students, too, will package of instructional attend three on-campus in order to give them the to meet their instructor with other students enrolled, Here is the list of ous basis because they work, have families, or live too far away. Now, in a new program, the University of Pittsburgh is trying to do something about that. The program is called the University Monday Ilpporl Different But Chaotic External Studies Program (UHSP), and the basic idea behind it is to package educational curriculum materials in a way that allows people to take "courses" on their own at convenient times and places. The program is part of Pitt's School of General Studies.

For a start, UESP will offer five carefully-selected courses at the undergraduate or post-baccal-aurcate level. Credits earned may be applied toward the present degree courses and the Pitt faculty who will present them: "The Decline and Fall of Modern Europe," Dr. Robert A. Colodny (three undergraduate credits) "Introduction to Economics," IF I E. Slcsingcr (three credits) Theory and Practice," Deep undergraduate credits) Morality in American F.

Karns, Esquire undergraduate credits) Development of Materials," Gow post-baccalaureate credits) programs at Pitt. Here's how the program will work for four of the five courses: Students will enroll for any one of the offered courses through the School of General Studies. They will be re Eicnjbody lias their own idea of a perfect vacation. Mine's Sheraton! Whenever you travel, wherever you travel, S00-323-3533 makes a great trip happen at any Sheraton I lotel or Motor I nn in the world. For business or pleasure, call it free, anytime.

Or have your travel agent call it for vou. 600-323-3335 MAKES IT HAPPEN. Sheraton Hotels Inns A WORLDWIDE StRVICl Of III (Continued from Page 1) overkill and this one was no exception. Some 7,500 journalists turned out to cover the activities of about 5,500 delegates and alternates. Since there weren't enough delegates to go around, newsmen were reduced to interviewing one another and to following the antics of the convention hangers-on in the hotels and in Flamingo Park, where the alienated and the exhibitionists pitched camp.

Here again, much of the activity was geared to hope of attracting a national television audience. Protestors are drawn to the cameras as vacationers are to the sun. IT IS EASIER to enter many countries than it was to breach convention security. In some of the world's air terminals, officials will scarcely deign to look at passports. In Miami, however, one had to show credentials at the heavily manned outer gates and go through an even closer screening at the doors inside the hall.

Before admission to the hall, anyone carrying a typewriter, brief case, handbag or anything else in which a weapon might be concealed, had to open it for inspection and get information, write to the External Studies Program, HAWAII: nnvalHawn'IanSicvaton-MiilklWStirftider PilmeshKHiuLuii, Sheraion-KaualMoana quired to attend only three Saturday workshops, each four or live hours long, held cm-campus during the term. The rest of the time, they will be on their own. Each student will receive a package of instructional materials for the course selected. Deadlines will be stipulated for each part of the program lo insure that all students progress through the materials at an adequate rate and complete the course in one term. School of General Studies, University of Pittsburgh, 407 Cathedral of Learning, Pittsburgh, call (41 2) 681-6011.

IN ATLANTIC CITY: Shci'alon-Deauvillc Sliemton-Seasidc.

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