The Mail-Journal, Volume 11, Number 45, Milford, Kosciusko County, 4 December 1974 — Page 2
THE MAIL-JOURNAL — Wed., Dec. 4,1974
2
Area girls on state track team
Lorene Spearman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Robert Spearman at r 3 Syracuse, and Roxanna Auer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Xuer of r 1 Milford, have been named to the all state track team. The Indiana Amateur Athletic Union made the announcement of
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Boy * Bontatn Allgy C*t» » 7 » 7 Striker* >• ♦ Stroh* '• ♦ Roll tn' Stone* 17 *0 Windjammer* 14 13 The Gutter* M 11 The Turkey* 1 13 M Strike* For Ttke* ill 14 4 Spare* U IS Blue Bowter* ♦ M The Panda* • 7* Hurricane* 1 K> Gutterchrt’er* I» 21 High team game and *erie* Alley Cat* — AM 1724 200 game* O kern 725. J. Conley 223. T Ever 70S 8 Borer 207. T S<r> 213. 8 B>ce 214. P Morganthaler 241. M DeWitt 203 100 *er let and above O Matt 172. J Dean 122. T Ryman 144. J Dean IIS. A Laub l». D Md6re I*2 M Laub I*2. G Marcnand ’33 A hACU 12’. K Rocnenoaugn ’74. D Brown Ml. J Brown 125. S Crow 11l 8 Conley 151. V Trammel 144. J Buthong IM. R Mar Chand 144. R Happner l(M. O Dieterly 151. O Biella 147. J Gton 142. A Reed 153. O Smith 104. J Nyikot 14*. S Miller Ml. A Hottetier ill. C Clevenger Ml. R Pollock 154. C Clemons Hl. K Walker 151. L. Schacht 142. M wakeland 145, M Clement 127. R Smith M 2. S Siabaugh MS. M Shock Ma. B Harting 140. S Deck 174. J Grot I >42. G we.war MS. K Stanly IM. C Eby I*B. C Mock 117. 8 Burger M 9 County League Liquor LOCker 47 10 Holiday Lane* M ’4 Charlie - * Ten Pin 14 14 Wawatee Bowl 13 M * Bud t Body Shop 1 32 20 Sea Nymph I 24 23 Pilcher * Shoe* 21 24 (Curly - * Keg• er 27 25 Weatherneed 24 24 Anderton Pamt n V Seacon 24 71 Gdden Gram 23 2* Barbee Hotel 72 30 Buthong Barber Shop '* 33 Sea Nymph II M'y 33’* Brannock * Trophy* 171* 34'* Ok San* ’5 37 Parker Seed *3 W High team ter<et and gam* Holiday Lane* - 2743 ”3 400 terie* J Jone* 4M, A RKter Ml. J Land** 404 R Wogbman 411 SOO *er.e* L Siabacb 538. E Harting SM. J Korn SM. N k>*tl*r 541. F Miner S2O S Galbreath SS4 J k.rkdorter 52* H K.rk dorter 543. R Wilham* SOS. G Campbell S4O. H LOCke 55*. R MUler 504 p Royer 511. G Sorensen 50*. D Smith 542. T Jone* 541. M R Simon 50*. M Ganthom $47. R Gate* SM. E Mayo s4l. R Strleby 507. H Cline 517. C Eby MM. E Coburn $42. D Pilcher 500 F Nyiko* S3*. W Aiderter sl2. R Braiei SM. M Dorsey S*7 E Henning 532. A Baker $44 lOOgame* E Hart,ng 725. J JOno* 221. N Kittler 211. F Miller 200. $ Galbreath 205. A Rider 242. J Landt* 404 H Kirkdorter 225. R Wogoman 20*. 2M. G Campbell 300. W Ryan m H Lock* 204. 201 R Miller 207 P Rover 200. k Sfichter 211. T Jone* 107. M Simon 204, M Ganthom 2M. R Gate* 204 Tuesday Night Ladle* Syracuse Rubber 3* 17 • Frog Tavern 31 M Sportsman 33 73 Th* Paper* incorporated 2* V Bellman - * Cate 27 7* Augtburger - * ‘ 27 2* Maple Leet Farm* 25 31 Wawa SA. Club » 31 Ge«r» Keyboard Mu* c I* 37 Walter Drug Co M 38 High tearregame and ter e» Frog Tavern — *32 7357 SOO ter et L Gilbert 111. I*3. 203 s4l. M o>eon IM. 102 IM $32 450 serie* and above J Livengood Ml. 142.4*5 S Keim 173. 172 4*2 I Dull 174 MO. C Moore 171, 17* M 2 S Brown 147 44* $ Gilbert 175 442. L Crow 17*451 I*o game* and above M Haitey 175 J Castro 171. P Smith 170. E Wogoman I*2, F Reed I*s. M P.ter I*2. Y Coburn 144. L MMB 144
skidoo business. And best . a Ski-Doo! Now there are three new T’NT entries for |975. One of them is going to -- suit-you-to-a-T‘NT! dMft T’NT EVEREST - See vour The one that goes in deep snow, with a dealer now. track that covers a vast 1.247 square __ inches for unbeatable flotation. 440 cc. T7I-* — • T’NT FREE AIR -Powered by the super- P 100’ tuned Bombardier-Rotax twin cylinder , , . engine. It’s the overall performance sled. W hue they last. 340 and 440 cc. fISWBBWWBPW T’NT FAN COOL— The all-around. The new 1 booklet all-purpose T NT. Takes twists and turns that’s a must like a cowpony. On the straightaway. for every there’s no way you’ll finish back m the snowmobiler: pack. 340 and 440 cc. . Mechanical tips mrp mw mw • Fuel economy rsThn-iaiTYri A j yFL LLLjJJ I-^uc hra o re wokuxs-iseujnc snowmobile °" ly111 your de,ler eTrj4« Mark* ot BumlWHSw, liwui. AU n<ht~ r.-*rv.-d 3\’<w. IS*I. HAWK'S RECREATION EQUIPMENT, INC. . RD. 13 South Syracuse
the girls' all-state team last Friday. Lorene was seated third in the 100-yard dash and the 220-yard dash. Roxanna was seatedfourth in the long jump. Both girls of the Northern Lakes team. Both are students at Wawasee high school. Tuesday Afternoon Ladies American industries 43 * Cromwell Lumber 34 M State Bank of Syracu** 2*' s 22' y Mock - * Marine Rental 27 25 LaPetite 24 21 M»*tercraf’ M 34 Lakeland Laundry 17 35 Th* Lovable* 15 > 37 7 High team game ano serie* State Bank of Syracu** — 101 721* 500 serie* A Dani*trom s3*. L Neff 510 450 **r.*» and above J Lantj 474, E Hughes 454. D Johnjon 4*7 170 gam** and above A Dahl*from M7. MO. J Lanti 175, A Tomlinson 171, B Kline M 3 (all spare). E Klin* 171. L Nett M 2-, D ‘'Johnson M 2 Words can maim a player At the 1966 Chess Olympiad in Havana, ex-world champion Mikhail Tai was temporarily disabled when assaulted with a bottle by a drunk. No one knows what happened to the maniac. Probably nothing, considering it was only a chessplayer he was trying to kill. In the Middle Ages murders resulting from chess were classed as lesser crimes, like wife-beating and dognaping. Today violence in chess is rare; it is easier to maim a player with words. In London in 1920, when the 8-yearvOld Sammy Reshevesky defeated a local favorite, a reporter wrote, “One can hardly imagine the SPCC on the track of this child... he really does not come under the heading of a child.... He, is as cynical as a middle-aged journalist, and that is saying a good deal.’’ Not all chess journalists are walking ulcers. The author of "Chess Players of New Orleans." Andrew M. Lockett Jr., confided that his 1935 book was "dedicated to L. Albert Hutson, USN — probably the worst player I know. He taught me the game in 1908, setting pieces up to start with both bishops resting comfortably on the knights' squares while the knights’ pawns without protection shuddered at the rapid approach of the opposing forces" — proving you can still love the game without knowing which side is up. But if, like Argentine grandmaster Miguel Najdorf, you do know which side is up, you can also put your finger on the heartbeat of a chess storm When, at Iceland in 1972, the world wondered why the challenger disputed each new compromise, claiming that people working on his behalf were never so authorized, Najdorf sighed, “Fischer
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wants to enter history alone." Terseness, however, is not everyone's bag. Former world champion Vasily Smyslov, whose operatic baritone voice is reputedly top drawer, once defined chess as “an interesting sphere of creative ideas built up on the opposing thoughts of two chess players who, in the process of a tense struggle, are striving to create an artistic conception" —a great hunk of sentence he may have spoken, but you can be sure he never sang. The 19th century British journalist, G.A. McDonnell, was prone to fill the mouths of famous chessplayers — many of them Mittel Europeans — with hightAown phrases full of Victorian pomp and circumstance. Thus, the Viennese Wilhelm Steimtz: “Chess is the grand criterion of intellectual ability. ... You never have but one great chessplayer at a time, and when'his light goes out, there is no other star to shine in his place. You talk to me of prime ministers as the most supreme in intellect. What nonsense! Gladstone goes out of office, and a half-dozen Salisbury’s are ready’ to worthily fill up the gap. But the chess king vacates his throne, and there’s no second Steimtz to grasp the sceptre and wield it with true regal power.” McDonnell then went on to infprm his readers that Steinitz “was 26 years of age before he learnt a word of English ... his diction is seldom happy t and his sentences often clumsy; his meanings not always clear and his idioms thoroughly Germanic. He loves adjectives and adores superlatives." Shortly thereafter the unhappy Steimtz emigrated to Amenca, claiming, according to McDonnell, "I’d rather die in the United States than live in England." And he did — the result of a deteriorating mental illness.
Butz hit on lack of rural progress By DOUG LOWENSTEIN The Mail-Journal’s Washington Bureau WASHINGTON - An Arkansas congressman charged last week that White House inaction has hamstrung programs to develop rural areas of the nation. Rep. Bill Alexander. D-Ark., chairman of the House subcommittee on Family Farms and Rural Development, wrote in an introduction to a review of the Rural Development Act (RDA) of 1972 that “executive branch procrastination in implementing the Rural Development Act (and) delay after delay resulted in failure to operate a number of important programs under the RDA for more than a year.” “In addition,” Alexander wrote, “The Nixon Administration attempted to terminate, in some cases., and severely limit in other cases, programs which had been operating to assist citizens in the countryside." Alexander’s criticisms came in a review prepared at his request by the Congressional Research Service (CRS>, the research arm of Congress The report analyzes the First Annual Rural Development Goals Report, submitted to the Congress by Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz last January The review comes down hard on Butz for failing to provide leadership and comply with congressional directives in implementing the RDA. The act requires the Secretary to report to Congress each year on the goals established for rural development and the progress made in attaining those goals. The act inself authorizes grants and loans to rural communities for industrial development, job expansion, community facilities, sewer and water treatment and conservation, fire protection, educational programs and rural development research. The CRS review is a sharp rebuke to Butz, who signed the first RDA report. It charges that Butz failed “to establish national rural development goals; to provide strong leadership in jhe coordination of a national<program; and to expand research and development efforts " These failures, the review says, “raise serious questions con-’ ceming the Secretary’s compliance with congressional intent." x Butz had said in a preamble to his report that “our progress has beep substantial” toward the ‘Revitalization of rural America.” \ But. the CRS review says that daim "receives scant support” /in the succeeding pages of Butz’ report. \ In several cases, says. Butz did set the proper broad goal for a rural development program but failed to set “specific objectives" to attain the goal. The review by CRS is replete with phrases like “no concrete steps are contained" in the report to meet a particular goal. CRS suggests that Congress reevaluate the reporting provision of RDA to “clarify and tighten the Secretary’s responsibilities." It mentions a proposal drafted by Sen. Lee Metcalf. D-Mont., that would require “qualitative and quantitative” discussion by the Secretary of goals and progress in rural development. ROMANTIC BIT DANGEROUS In the language of flowers. mistletoe means “give me a kiss.” Although it is commonly found in homes at Christmas, it is seldom used in churches because of its pagan associations dating back to the ancient Druids. Mistletoe is also classified "non-edible’’ and should be kept away from children.
Tonite Thru Sunday Adults Only Admission $3.00 We Have Heaters TEENAGE / LOVERS caiw ALSO I
Rescue for Christinas budget
WEST LAFAYETTE — Stop! It may not be too late to rescue your budget from the January doldrums — even if Santa Claus is coming to town. “Before you buy another gift, give your Christmas budget careful scrutiny," says Jan Armstrong, extension consumer education specialist at Purdue university. This is essential in this time of shrinking dollars and budget stress. Dr. Armstrong says, adding that nothing daunts a giver’s cheer like anxiety abotft paying the bills. “If you family is typical,” she continues, “you will have about 20 names on your gift list and will spend about S2OO on gifts this year.” But watch out! There’s more to come. Gifts to babysitters, secretaries, the boss, the clergyman. Greeting cards, postage, gift wrap, decorations? Add to these the cost of gift ex-, changes — both your children’s and yours. And Dr. Armstrong says, holiday food and drink — especially if you do any entertaining — will be more expensive than ever this year. But you edn trim the budget as well as the tree, the specialist notes. All it takes is planning. Plan with care and you can inject a little joy back into what may have become a joyless obligation. First, give your gift list careful consideration. If you can cut it down, do. If you can’t, at least look for ways to save on the gifts you buy. “Look for unusual but inexpensive gifts. For a gardener, extraordinary flower bulbs. For the sun-and-water enthusiast, a wardrobe of inexpensive sun glasses. For the compulsive reader, a low-cost special gift subscription to a magazine or newspaper,” Dr. Armstrong suggests. Also./you can save money by getting the proper clothing sizes before you shop for gifts of clothing. That way, you can pick out clothing at sales prices — without having to fear the “no return” policy. Speaking of sales, the specialist suggests that you start shopping for Christmas 1975 — right after Christmas 1974. July clearance sales are also another good time for inexpensive Christmas shopping. “If you're the creative type, you can save by making gifts. Even beginning seamstresses, cooks, and woodworkers can turn out gift-worthy products if they look for simple projects,” Dr. Armstrong says. Another cost-cutting idea: chop your card list to include only those people who are significant in your life. And eliminate sending cards to those on your gift list. “But remember,” the specialist says, “that cards to children and elderly people have special meaning for them.” You might consider sending cards throughout the year instead of a big Christmas mailing, she adds. That way, you maintain contact with your friends throughout the year — on Easter, Fourth of July, even Halloween. “A card on Ground Hog Day may get an old friend out of the
FREE CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS <J«»aen STAGE AND CARTOON SHOW Featuring Dick Stoner, Nationally famous Magician Saturday, December 14 Shows At 10 A.M. AND 1 P.M. Sponsored By: Syracuse Police And Firemen And The Following Merchants: SYRACUSE Todd Realty Golden Rule Cleaners Byland Jewelers Chet Elder Real Estate Smith Electric Connolly Market Wawasee Hardware Bud Kline’s Excavating My Store Foo 4 Faye’s Restaurant Kozy Korner Kafe , Mr. Pickwick Men’s Wear Chalet Realty Wawasee Electronics Top of the Stairs Booksellers & Gulliver * Tom’s Electric Dr. Wendel Shank Travel Agents Apollo Fence The Arcade Rose Garden Beauty Salon & Boutique Craft Collage Golden Razor Barber Shop LaPetite Shoppe Jack's Sunoco The Greenhouse The Papers Inc. Kale Island Beacon VyLactos Laboratories The Stout Boutique Louie’s Bar & Grill MILLERSBURG Little People Shoppe i American Industries Margie’s Lounge Star Store & National 5 4 19c Store Anderson Paint and Supply k-fcri State Bank of Syracuse Syracuse Rubber Products Lt.tsblko Syracuse Hardware Sea Nymph. Div. of Stanray Corp. Peoples btate BanK Ewing Industries The Weatherhead Company MILFORD Whole-In-One Associates Curls Inc. Uttle & Clark Insurance Jay’s Realty and Insurance Kathy’s Beauty Bazaar Chore-Time Equipment Inc. Palace of Sweets. North Webster-Syracuse Rinkerbuilt Boats Campbell’s Market Das Keller Bishop’s Wawasee Boat Co. Maple Leaf Farms Bushong Barber Shop Lakeland Janitorial Service NORTH WEBSTER Auer’s Amo Supply Inc. Joe Baker Backhoe 4 El-Ko Homes Counting House Bank First Charter Insurance Frances Beauty Salon Lancelot Lounge Love Furniture Bud’s Body Shop Boyer Jewelry Doug Pilcher Shoe 4 Coin Shoppe Overhead Door Co. of Syracuse Inc. Howe’s Super Market Northern Indiana Public Service Compan y Frost Antenna , Don’s Excavating Service United Telephone Company of Indiana Sleepy Owl PIERCETON Chris Koher Insurance Agency Ruch Mower Service e Restaurant Liquor Locker The Maryann Drive-In The Ivy Hut Gaylord Jones CROMWELL Ben Franklin Store John Foster Call Cromwell State Bank ‘ One Aog*burg«rs Food Palace ca*T ropntor tape. Syracuse. Miltord, North Webtter. admit* anyone tree to the show; Burger Dairy labels er caps ar toren Pep* -Cola bottle cap*. Ticket* were given out tor Crow Rooting. Beemer Enterprise*. iu Key Creak Furniture. Ketdaish Vending, JfeniiM’; Consolidated Popcorn, New Paris; Hire Electric; and Appenzeiler Specialties. Santa Will Greet The Children And Give Out Treats Pick Up Free Tickets At Above Merchants -No Tickets Sold At The Door ,
February ‘Blahs’,” she says. Another inflation-fighting step is to do without a few things. For example, you might just have to decide not to give the big party. Make it an intimate affair for close friends instead. Or, you might have to make do with last year s long skirt and other party apparel, Dr. Armstrong says. Will all this cutting down mean a bleak Christmas? Not in the least, the Pardue extension specialist predicts. “The trick is cutting the costs without cutting family ties and relationships with friends. They’re really the most important parts of the Christmas spirit," she concludes. Short on cash this Christmas season? Then you may be wishing you had joined the Christmas club savings program at your bank says Jan Armstrong, extension consumer education specialist at Purdue university. If so, you might consider joining a club this yaar to prepare for gilt-giving 1975. But before you join, check out various Christmas clubs. Dr. Armstrong says some clubs offer interest on your savings, others don’t. Only 58 Hoosier deserters turn to amnesty program By RAND Y FITZGERALD The Mail-Journal’s Washington Bureau WASHINGTON - Only 58 military deserters in Indiana have signed up for President Ford’s “earned amnesty” program to avoid federal prosecution, a spokesman for the Selective Service System said. No civilian draft evaders from Indiana have turned themselves in. The 58 Hixjsiers are among 1,368 deserters nationwide who have registered in "the reconciliation program. There are approximately 12,500 military deserters at large in the United States and overseas. Most of the Indiana men who turned themselves in did so at the Pentagon’s unit at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind. Twleve of these deserters are now working in public service jobs, as required by the new program. The other 46 deserters are allowed two weeks to find their own alternative service jobs in hospitals, schools, non-profit and charitable organizations or in local government offices. Former N'-rw York Sen. Charles Goodell, who heads the Clemency Review Board, has called the response to Ford’s amnesty program “greatly disappointing.” So far, only 508 out of at least 111,000 veterans bolding less than honorable discharges from Vietnam War service have signed up for the program. Only 234 of 8,700 men convicted of draft evasion have volunteered for alternative service in exchange for an eventual jiardon.
FA
food news & cues from the Quaker Test Kitchens
Perfect Pizza — Baked Upside Down! Hi Vim '-4 It’s the richest, most flavorful pizza yet, and certainly the most unusual. Why? Because it’s baked in a pie plate instead of a pizza pan, and upside down! Chopped smoked sliced beef imparts a deliciously different taste. As for the crust, it’s golden and extra good, thanks to the addition of enriched com meal. The family will pronouhee this the best pizza yet! GOLDEN CRUST PIZZA Makes 6 servings Filling for Pizza: One 10-oz. pkg. Mozzarella One 8-oz. can tomato sauce cheese, grated One 6-oz. can tomato paste Pastry: / 2 teaspoon oregano, crushed «/ 4 teaspoon salt 1 / / 2 cups sifted all purpose 1 g teaspoon basil, crushed flour •/ 8 teaspoon cayenne Vz CU P enriched corn meal 1 medium-sized green teaspoon salt pepper, chopped 1 2 cup butter or margarine One 4-oz. pkg. smoked sliced Vz cup cold water beef, chopped Combine tomato sauce, tomato paste, oregano, salt, basil and cayenne; spread in bottom of 10-inch pie plate. Sprinkle with green pepper, beef and cheese reserving cup of the cheese. For ciaist, sift together flour, com meal and salt. Cut butter into dry ingredients until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add water, one tablespoon at a time, stirring lightly until mixture forms a ball. Turn onto lightly floured board and roll out 13inch crust. Place pastry over the top of pie plate; tuck edges of crust under so edge of crust is even with outer rim of plate. Bake in preheated very hot oven (450°F.) 20 t 0.25 minutes. Remove from oven. Immediately invert onto large platter so sauce is on top. Sprinkle remaining cup cheese over sauce and serve.
Sandra Montbleau is injured in accident Sandra Montbleau, 23, North Webster, sustained a bump to the head and a broken front tooth in a two-car collision at 11:30 Monday morning at the intersection of county roads 500 north and 850 west. Driver of the other auto was Jack V. Rhodes, 23, r 1 North Webster. County officers investigated estimating damages at $75 to the Rhodes car and $375 to the Montbleau vehicle.
yf) , A * X Now Thru Tuesday! 0 Sg». ' \ AU ’•*”»’ 00 T| " s Q For Pete’s Sake! x — She Doesn't Sing In This One. x For Pete’s Sake! X — We Could Use A Lot Os Laughs. x For Pete’s Sake! V — Remember “What’s Up, Doc?’’ ? X For Pete’s Sake! X — She’s A Great Comedienne. X Barbra StreisandJKM e e<€<" Sake** po) l »rvvvvvvvvv3nnnnnnootX)OOoOoooooooy
THE MAIL-JOURNAL Published by The Mail Journal every Wednesday and entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at Syracuse. Indiana' 4*s*7* " Second class postage paid at 103 E Mam Street, Syracuse. Indiana 4*5*7 and at additional entry offices Subscription. I*oo per year in Kosciusko County . S» 00 outside county
