The Mail-Journal, Volume 14, Number 28, Milford, Kosciusko County, 3 August 1977 — Page 11
John Goebel takes top honors in state tourney
A Wawasee summer resident, 16-year-old John Goebel, walked off with top honors at the Rollie Williams Memorial Indiana Ski Championships last week end. The twoday event was held at Camdot Lake of the Valley located between Milford and Syracuse. Goebel Is the son of Dr. and Mrs, Harold X Goebel of Fort Wayne. He is a member of Water Ski, Inc. .. 7he youth entered the boys dhision where he took first in jump, first in slalom and first in tricks. He has been skiing for 11 years and has won the junior division of the state ski tournament ever since he has entered into the competition. In slalom he scored 34 buoys, one off the state record In tricks he totaledl,.s9o points He fell on hiSnrst jump and received an injury In spite of the injury he took advantage of his three allowed jumps and went 112 feet, only eight feet off the state record Goebel broke the old state record of 1,630 total points to take the first over-all honors with 1,850 points. He was also presented the outstanding male skier award of the tournament Goebel left today (Wednesday)
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for Essex, DI., where be will participate in the regionals with hopes of qualifying for the nationals. While John was in the his sister Pegg4, 18, won honors for herself as she placed fourth in the women’s slalom and third in the women s jqmp ISOSkieri A total of 15d skiers competed in the event. Ejight new Indiana state records were set by the following participants: Junior boys division — Dick Simmons. Lake James Sport Club, over-all Boys division — John Goebel, Water Ski. Inc., over-all Giris divisioh — Kris Golden. Camelot Ski Team, slalom and overall Women’s (Division — Marcia Jochim, Camelot Ski Team, jump Men’s I division — Terry Huber, LaPorte Ski Club, slalom; Bobby Young LaPorte Ski Club and Western Ski Team, jump Men’s II div sion — Jerry Hickman. Cameltit Ski Team and Western Ski Team, jump Host Team The Camelqt Lake of the Valley Ski Club, sponsors of the tournament. competing in the following; events: Junior boys — Mike Golden, t
third in tricks, third in jump and second over-all Novice boys — Timm Blackburn, first in tricks Girls — Kris Golden, first in tricks, first in jump, first in slalom, first over-all Women’s — Marcia Jochim, first in jump, first in slalom, second in tricks and first over-all Men's I — Harley Chalk, seventh in jump Men’s II — Jerry Hickman, first in jump Marcia Jochim was named the outstanding female skier. The crash helmet for the most spectacular fall in the jump event went to Jerry Hickman. The Mark Wiggs Memorial Trophy for the longest jump went to Jim Boonstra. • . r A woman rushed up to famed violinist Fritz Kreisler after a concert and cried: •sfd give my life to play as beautifully as you do ” Kreisler replied, “I did.” The surest way to mishandle a problem is to avoid facing up to it. * Nothing arrives more slowly and passes more quickly than a vacation
Lakeland Living ffTWrorara
— BnHKHBEnHHiHM'fIHUIMKB!* J \ —2^-Agg 1 \ - r «wKN., HF ONE-OF-A-KIND CAR — This one-of-a-kind car, built by the late Harry Nicolai, presently owned by Leonard Greer, seated in the car, will be auctioned off this Saturday. One-of-a-kind car to be sold
When spectators and prospective buyers view the merchandise at the auction sale at Leonard Greer’s, state road 13 south, Syracuse, this Saturday, one of the items offered will be a one-of-a-kind car. Greer obtained the car from Harry Nicolai former Syracuse resident, now deceased. Nicolai was a dealer for the STP Corporation in this area and began building an Indianapolis-type car to promote the company’s product. In his machine shop, several of his employees manufactured the various pieces of the car. “Harry did all the engineering
Cystic Fibrosis Swim-Along set at Syracuse on Saturday
Gamma Sigma Sorority will be holding the Cystic Fibrosis SwimAlong this coming Saturday, Aug. 6, at Wawasee Prep location on Lake Wawasee from 10 a m. until 3 p.m.. according to a release this week from Mrs. Don Storey. The event will be to raise funds to support research and care for children affected by Cystic
Two youths rescued from Sechrist Lake
Two North Webster youths were saved from possible drowning last Sunday after falling off a small raft into Sechrist Lake. Darrel Clark spotted the youths having trouble and sent Thomas Brindle's son Brad to a near-by house where relatives were gathered for county reserve officer Thomas Brindle. Brindle ran to the lake and swam 250-270 yards to the middle of the lake to
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as far as I know, in it,” Greer said. The car’s chassis is a large tubular one, covered next by steel sheeting and then, fiberglass, as heavy as a “Sherman tank,” Greer remarked In the eight years he has had the car, Greer has done a little work on it. Nicolai became disenchanted with the STP company and did not complete the car. so Greer bought it and began finishing it. “I’ve changed the exhaust system,” he says, and he has prepared parts of the body for future chrome work. The car has knock-off hubs, and an electrical system, which
Fibrosis, severe asthma, chronic bronchitis, bronchiectasis and other related lung-damaging diseases. Cystic Fibrosis, an incurable genetic disease, is inherited by one in every 1,500 babies born in the United States. Both parents carry the recessible gene for CF and number among one in 20 persons in the U. S. who may be
where the boys were calling for help. Clark got in a boat and went to assist. Brindle reached Matt Stormbeck and Mike Connolly and pulled them onto the 2 x 5 air raft from which they had fallen. Clark then pulled the boys into the boat and took them to shore. The North Webster emergency unit treated Brindle, Strombeck and Connolly at the scene. Strombeck was taken to the
can be used to raise or lower each * wheel independently. The vehicle is street legal and was going to be used in parades and as a show car by Nicolai. A Crosley engine powers the car, with Crosley and Chrysler transmissions, setting against each other, to obtain the gear ratio Nicolai desired. Greer is auctioning off the car, along with other items, as he now spends eight months a year teaching silversmithing in Fort Myers Beach, Fla. “But everybody around here knew him.” Greer says of the car's creator, Harry Nicolai. "Everybody knew Harry. He was quite a guy.”
carriers, usually without knowing it. Meeting Place The across the lake swimmers are to meet at Lake Vue Cottages on SR 13 south of Syracuse at 10 a.m. with their spotters and boats. Anyone wishing to swim should contact Cyndi Thornburg or Ann Hapner.
Kosciusko Community Hospital at 11 Sunday evening for convultions and leg cramps. He is listed in fair condition. People are like wheelbarrows — they’re easier to pull than to push. No one ever created a great thing suddenly
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Wed., August 3,1977 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL
Fishing good therapy
Fishing is good therapy — both physical and emotional. The American Medical Association points out that the millions of Americans who head for the lakes and streams across the nation each fishing season don’t need a doctor to tell them that fishing is a good sport. They likely have seen their doctor sitting in the next boat with a line in the water. Fishing can be elaborate, complete with a trip to the seashore and renting deep-sea boats and equipment. Or it can be the cane pole and worms affair on the banks of a neighborhood creek. Either way it gets us out in the fresh air and sunshine, gets our minds off the cares of the day. Unless you are the vigorous type who wades through racing rapids or row’s hard for miles, fishing is only mild exercise, but still is good for the body and spirit. Fishing also is a relatively safe sport. But it does have some built-in hazards. Most of them can be avoided. The most common fishing accident is catching a barbed hook in the flesh, usually a finger or hand, but sometimes a leg or other part of the body. Lures and hooks left unprotected on a dock or on the bottom of a boat cause
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many of these Occidents. The wise fisherman guards against hook accidents by shielding the nook. One simple way is to stick a small cork over the barb. Lures should be stored in the tackle box until needed, and returned promptly to the box when removeq from the leader. The band of your favorite fishing hat is, of course, a reasonably safe place to keep lures you intend to use later in the day. Fly or biit casters are responsible for many hook accidents to their fellow fisherman. Train yourself to look before each cast to make certain no one is in the way. This will also save lures from snagging on trees and bushes as you cast. In removing a hook from the fish, hold the fish firmly under the gills, so that its head can’t flop or wiggle. A freshly caught fish is slippery and hard to hold. Get a firm before dislodging the hook, j If. despite precautions, a hook becomes inbedded in your hand or finger, dqp’t try to pull it out. Your physician will snip off the shank and push it through, thus causing less further damage to torn flesh. The doctor wilfalso, if necessary, administer antibiotics and tetanus! toxoid.
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