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  • 8/3/2019 2 Degrees 1973

    1/1

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    there?*lite....

    BY HOPE STRONG

    "In statesmanship,get the formalitiesright; never mindaboutthe moralities."M a r kTwain.

    Miss SallyJo Carlton,227 4N. GlenwoodAve.,ha s beennominated by ImogenePrichard, presidentof theLima Able-DisabledC l u b ,to be acandidatein theQueenof Handi-CapHorizonscontest , sponsorednationally by the Indianapolischapter.

    Selectionw i l lbe madewhile SallyJo and others are on aHawaiian tourin June. Corrine Snipeof Kentonalso is anominee. Mem berswi l lcast ballotsby payinga p e n n ype rwith themoneyto beusedfo r special eventson the 17-daytour.1 Miss Carlton, asubstitute teacher here,w as graduatedfromO h i oNorthernUniversi tyafteralso at tendingthe O S U -Lima Campus.She is amemberof theAmericanAssociationo f Universi ty women; service chairmanof Kappa LamdaChapter, Beta SigmaPh i Sorority;i n A l l enCounty Chaptero f O N UWomen;past secretaryof Able-DisabledClub; mTeays Chapter, National Association for the Handicapped;Trinity Chapter, Order of EasternStar,and on the board ofShawneeUnitedMethodist Church.

    Graduates

    D O U G L A SFERG USO N DEN N ISBECHTOL

    Douglas A. Ferguson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Fer-guson,552 S.Woodlawn,recently graduatedfromOhioStateUniversity receivingtw odegrees undera special four-yearprogram.

    He graduated summa cum laude with a bachelor ofartsand a master ofarts from the graduate school. His majorfieldwas speech communication,withan emphasis on radioand television broadcasting.

    The subject of his thesis concerned acasestudy of a cabletelevision system, near Cleveland.

    Whileattending Lima SeniorHighSchool, he w as employedby the Lima Public Library and briefly by The News. Fer-gusonalso was activein theater while in high school and atEncoreTheater, where he played Eugene Gant in "LookHomeward, Angel"and thepartof Mordredin "Camelot"Dougalso worked as a part-time announcer forWIMA-radio,while attendinghis first two years of college atOSU-LunaBranch. . _

    Fergusomisseeking mpj&ymefirirtheJieldof ' b r tMTdcas t -ing, e speciallyin thelca"bleTV . * '

    Meanw hi l eDennisL . Bechtol, son of Mr. andMrs. MarqueF.; Bechtol, 811 N or t he rn Ave . ,received an AB degreeinphysical educat ionf rom Florida State University, Tallahas-see, Fla.

    A graduate of Lima SeniorHigh, hespent four years in theA ir Force and for theremainder of theyear willbe asubsti-tute teacher in Florida.

    Meets Golda

    Tenny' With Golda

    Fourth District Congressman Tennyson Guyer is seen greet-in gIsrael's Prime Minister Golda Meierin aspecial ForeignAffairsComm ittee briefing on the MiddleEastsituation.

    Guyeris amemberof the comm ittee.

    Amongstudentsat Anderson,Ind.,College recognized thisyearwith scholarshipsare twofromth eLimaarea.

    JaneEllenFisher,daughterof Mr. andMrs.Paul L.Fish-

    er, 1037 Fulto nAve,, aseniormajoring-'Insocialworkan dpsychology, receiveda me rit scholarship.She is agraduateof Shawnee SeniorSchool

    DebraM aeDupler,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.HarryDupler,1.130St JohnsAve.,a juniorat theChurchof Godliberalartsschool wasrecipientof a merit scholarship. A grad uate ofLima Senior High School, she is majoring inEnglishinpreparationfor acareerin teaching.

    John C Qiiazza,son of Mr. andMrs. SamuelL. Chiarza,4 < y >SellsR < 3 ,Lancaster,formerly ofLima,ha sbeenappoint-ed ,o the 1973seniorclasscommittee ofOhioStateUniversi-ty .

    The committee'sprojectis raising$50,000to aid blind andother d isabledstudentsat th eschool.

    Specifically, they wan t to rafceenoughfends to buy a tapecenteron campus, tobe availableto blindstudentsthrough-out thestate,se tup a braille library,establishan emergencyloanf u n dfo rdisabledstudentsan d < tw pa f u n dto beusedal th e discrctimiof th e Off i c eof DisabilityServicesat OhioSlateduring the next10 years.

    AccwdinRto th e Office of DisabilityServicestherear e 41 b l i n d10 deaf and atotalof 81!disabled studentsatOhioS l A J ew h o w i l lbenefit.

    Chiazza.a marketingmajorat O h i oState,is a pastpres-ident ofOhioSlatm, Inc.,a studentserviceorganization.H eis a i*69graduateof ShawneeHighSchool.

    Miss UlianaNunez,Lima, daughter of thelate Dr. andMrs.RigobcTto N unez,recentlyha sbecome pledgeof ZetaTa n Alphasorority.Miss Nunezis a juniorat Ohio NorthernUniversity,Ada,majoringin pharmacy.

    S PA P F R I

    T H E L I M A N E W S ,PACE IIFriday,Murch N, 1971

    REHEARSAL- "Hi-Fever Follies" RockettesUmberup fortheir performance s next Fridayan d

    Anne ArmstrongA Token?

    Saturdayevenings,A p r i l6 and 7,w i t hdirectorChris Goodyearp r o v i d i n gthe "call-down."The bi-annualmusicalextravaganza,sponsoredby M e m o -

    rial HospitalA u x i l i a r y,w i l lbe in Lima SeniorHighSchoo la u d i t o r i u m .Ticketsare $3 perpersonand all seatsare reserved. (NewsPhoto)

    Varied Jobs For CounselorWASHINGTON, ( N A N A -

    STAR-NEWS) "SometimesI wish I was more of atoken."

    The speaker wasA n n eArmstrong, the new counselorto thePresidentat theWhiteHouse, and thehalf-smileonhe r faceshowedsh edidn'tre -al ly meanit.

    But thecommentdi dspeakto wha thas happenedto 46 -year-oldAnne Armstrong asshe digs into her new job.(She was formerly cochair-m an of the Republican .Na-t ional Com mittee).

    H erpost,whichcarriescab-inet rank,is,a "first for awoman.Althoughhe r cabinetrank doesn'trate a cabinet-level salary(theyge t$60,000ayear,she gets $42,000),it stillis the highest White Housepost ever heldby awoman."

    Ever since Mrs. Armstrongwas nam ed counselorlastD e-cember,thereha s beena lotof speculation about whe therher job will have meaty sub-stance,or bejust a "token"thrown to women who hadbeen clamoring forNixontoappointa w o m a nto Mscabi-net.

    Whateverhis motivein ap-pointingher, the Presidentseems d etermined to showthather job is no token. Herwistful comment thatshecould do with a little moretokenism camethe otherda y

    , after s h e w a stold thatsh ewas to be amemberof theWhite House domestic coun-cil. It was thellth responsi-bilitythat had come her way.

    Th e others rangedfrom

    parks to the price of ham-burger,from the nation's bi-centennial to bright-eyedyouth.

    They also includethe newfederalism , the Equal RightsAmendmentand beingW h i teHouse's representative toSpanish-speakingpeople(i nhe r part of east Texas nearth e Mexican border,almosteveryone is bi-lingual).There are several programsinvolving women, in additionto the ERA. Sh e will helpWhiteHousetalentscout Bar-bara Franklinf indqualifiedwomenfor high-level govern-ment jobs. Sh e also is amember of the new federalcommittee on the economicroleof women .

    It is President Nixon's ideathat severalof the programssh e is involvedin should havenothingto do with women'sissues, Mrs. Armstrong says.Th e Presidenttold her, "Ithink you can bemuch moreeffective if you willtake someareasthathavenothingto dowith women.I thinkit willen d up being anassetto thecause of womenin the longr u n "

    A n n e Armstrong thinks"Thatw asvery wiseadvice."

    She will have astaff ofabout 15 to help her carry outher far-flung responsibilitiesand, in addition, getsstaffhelp from groups she serveson such as the domestic coun-cil.- Shethinksin Nixon'sfirstfouryears"We saw his mostremarkable str ides madeinthe field offoreignpolicy and.bringingus peace.In these

    nextf o u ryears, If ee lthat hemay be rem embe red as thePresidentw ho gave govern-ment backto thepeople. . .1believe this iswhatthe peoplewant.

    "I believewe arealreadyseeingstrongpublicapproval-fo r a l imited nationalgovern-men t ,fo r h o l d i n gth e l i neo ntaxes an d inflation,fo r cut-tinggovernments p e n d i n gan dfo r takingth e responsibility,wherever possible,ou t o fWashington, to the states andcommunities.This is some-thingI willbe working on."

    Mrs. Arm strong also is theWhiteHouse liaison personwith NewYork Gov. NelsonRockefellerwho is"undertak-in g a studyth e Presidentisbacking,"m atwill "seek newconc-ptso f g o v e r n m e n twhere the local, state or fed-e ral g o v e r n m e n t c a n n olonger meet the needs of thepeople,"sh esays.

    She plans to investigatesometax reformideasof Ca-lifornia Gov. Ronald Reagan.

    A n d she hasbeen namedchairmanof thefederal gov-ernment's property reviewboard. Thisis theagency thatsurveys governmentl a n dholdingsand f rom time to

    time turn s som e parcels looseto localauthorities for publicparks. It's calledth e legacyof parks program and Mrs.Nixon promoted it heavilylast year.

    Ho wwillsfiemanageit all?"If youhave a goodstaff,

    yo u can carry out all thesethings,"sh e says confidently."Mendo. IthinkI shouldbeable to."

    C O U N S E L O R A n n eArmstrong,firstwomanto hold cabinetrank in theNixonAdministration is digging in her heels ather new White House job. A brunette with bright blue eyesand a size 10 figure (kept by dieting), Mrs. A rmstrongis45 .

    B y E L E &WA LTD U L A N E YDear Ele andWalt:I want

    to have y o u ropinonof the"Exorcist."M y teacher as-signedit for ourclassto read,an d I thinkit's dirty, but ha.ven't said so in class or any-thingyet.Rachael

    Dear Rachael: The"Exor-cist"is abookabouta humanbeingwho ispossessedby thedevil, andaboutth e struggleto rescue that personf romthe "septic tank"of incarnateevil.Th ewords, images and actsare s u l f u r o u s ,an d f r e q u e n t l ystomach-turning.Bu t they'redescribedfor a purpose,tooutline thepotentialfo rcruel-ty an d destruction that lurksin everyh u m a nbeing.

    Neveronced idw ehave th eimpression that the authorw as smirkingto himselfan dsaying, "Wow ,wi l lthis freakthem out and get the booktalkedabout."

    Instead throughout therewas aprofoundsense of griefat the agony of the child andhe r loved ones,and a stead-fast hope that man cant r iumphover his own "tal-ent" for war, assassination,bitchery andslander,an driseup to hisbest insteadof sink-ing downto hisworst

    W ef o u n dthe bookterrify-ing, depressing, exhilaratingand thought-provoking.Al-thoughthere were numerouslewdacts involved in the de-vil's "rape"of the child, wewouldnever judge the book tobe "dirty."

    Our prime advice: Don'treadit whenyo uknow you'regoingto bealone. Your imag-inationwillbe too hyper forcomfort. Ele andW alt

    Shoes BargainA N T W E R P, B elg ium

    (WNS) W illiamBrouwer,42 ,advertised aclosing-outofshoesat half-priceat hershopbut couldn'tget rid ofthem.Th erush began when she putup a sign: "ShoesFree".Free they were,bu t onlyon eto a customer."Justpay theregularprice for the secondshoem atmatches,' 'said Mrs.Brouwer. Most customersdid.

    Lyndon Johnson's LifestyleAffected His Heart Ailment

    Ex-President LyndonJohnsonson's fa ta lheart ai lmentpos-sibly"couldhavebeenhelpedby betterhabi tsin hi s early

    Effects Contain Gal's PhotoDearA nnLanders:I'll be t

    you'resick of hearingfrompeople who have explanationsfo r that widow whof o u n dapretty woman in her hus-band'swallet two weeks aftershe buried him. Well, my hus-band was kil led in Vietnam.Amonghis possessions whichcameto me in aneat bundlew asa photographof abeauti-fu lyoung Asiangirl.

    I have no idea who she isan d I don't care,it mighthave belongedto abunkmatefo r all I know.M yhusbandwas a wonderfulguy. Helovedm e a n d It rusted him.Irefuse to spend five minuteswonderingwhy that picturewas in his gear.

    My sister was*with m e

    Today's RecipeSCALLOPED POTATOES..

    WITH CHEESE3 tbsp.butter3 tbsp.flourVh c. milkIV i cups (packed down)

    grated (medium-fine) sharpCheddarcheese

    V t tsp.salt% tsp. pepper1 qt. cubedOi-in.)cooked

    potatoesO n e - t h i r d c u p i n e d r y

    b r e a d c r u m b s

    In a 1-quartsaucepan overlow heat,melt butter;stir inflour; removefromheat; gra-dually stir in milk keepingsmooth. Cook,stirringcon- .stanlly,over moderately lowbeatuntil thickened andboil-ing; offbeatstir in 1 cup ofth e cheeseuntil meltedan dsalt an d pepper.Turn pota-toes intoa 2-quart squareglassbaking dish(8 by 8 by 2inches) or similarutensil;pour sauce over potatoes;sprinklewith remaining '/cu p cheese,thu i w i t hbreadcrumbs.Bakein a preheated350 degreeoven until bubblyhot andtoppingis golden30minutes. Makes6 servings.

    Note:Yo uwi l lneed6 medi-um p o t a t o e s (about I V ipounds)c o o k e din saltedwaterfo rthisredpc.

    This mixtureis on thesaltysideso omitsalt whencook-ing th epeas.

    ANNLANDERS

    w h e n I openedthe box. Shelooked horr i f iedw h e n w ecame across that photograph.I'm sure she m o u g h t theworst. I said, "Look, there'san explanat ionfo r this. I'llne ve rk n o w w h a tit is but onething is certain it meansnothingt o me , andI'm goingto forgetI saw it."

    It all boilsd o w nto fa i th .Ifyo u have i t , you don ' tneedanything else. I f you don' thave i t , yourwhole lifeis onebig quest ionm a r k .You a r eneve r sure of anything oranybody and youwil l neve rknow peace. O n e W h o H a sIt

    Dear Has It: There is m o r ec o m m o nsense in your letterthan I've seen in any oneplace in a very long time.Th ank you forsaying it sosimply an d convincingly.Dear A nn Landers: Willkeeping my h ome o rde r l ymake m y children neurot ic?A close friendw homajo redinpsychologysays it will. I wasraised in a clean house whe reth e rulewas, "A place for ev-erything andeverythingin i tsplace," Mother taughtus that

    w h e n your surroundings areclut teredyour m i n d is clut-tered.

    I know this is t rue becauseI am at my calmestand hap-piestw h e nm y h o m e ,closetsand shelves are inperfectorder. In otherwords, m yemotionalconditionis directlyconnectedto the condition ofm y h o m e .

    M y friend insists that w h e nchi ldrenare reared with somuch emphas i s o n o rde r l ine s sthey are too "programmed,"an d i t can re sul t in aseries ofhangupswhich stifles creati-vity. W e would like y o u rv i ewson this . Nea tA ndComfy

    Dear N. and C: Sinceyouwere raised with that philoso-ph y I c an see w hy youbelievein i t , but I havek n o w npeoplewhosehomeswere models ofperfect ion and theirmindsw e r eno t only unclut tered butsterile. My own desk usual lylooks likea dag's breakfastbu t I know w h e r eeverythingi s and no one hadbetter movea thing,u nde rth e threat o fdeath.

    Dear An nLanders: In y ou ranswer to "One" on January9, yousaid, " In n ostate in theunion is mar r i agebetweenmembers of the same se x

    consideredvalid." I beg todiffer with you.A n article int h e New YorkTimes, datedJanuary 7,1972, reportedthata marriage licensewas issuedto two men on August16,1971,in Minneapol is .In Sep t embe r3, 1971,t h ey we re m ar r i edbya minis ter of theUnitedMethodis tChurchin a pr ivatece remony.

    Please retract your state-men t i n t he n ame o faccura-cy. Yo u r apologiesare ac-cepted. I'm One,To o

    Dear One: Sorry, yo uhaven ' t kept upwith th e lat-est I suggest t h a t you getcurrent in the name ofaccu-racy. Tha tso-cal led marr iagebetween those two fe l lowsw as deeme dnul l an d void.Th eb n d eand g r oom a r e no win th e courts t ryingto get areversal. T o da te ,they havebeenunsuccessful.Your apol-ogies are accepted.

    G ot thoseweddingbell bluesove r costs. . .guest list. ..wha t to wear. . .and other,detai ls? AnnLanders' com-pletely ne w "The Bride'sGuide"willhelp.For a copy,senda dollarbill, plusa long,self-addressed, stampedenve-lope(1 6cents postage)to AnnLande r s ,Bo x 3346, Chicago,Illinois 60654. !

    life," his daughterasserted.Lynda Johnson Robb, wri t -

    in g in th e Ladies' H o m eJour-nal, said sh e hoped her fa-ther's illness "will m a k epeo-ple m o r e aware of ... theneed fo rcontinuingresearch"in heart disease and arterios-clerosis.

    "I also hopeit willhelp peo-ple realize the simple nutr i -tional, mental an d physicalsteps theycan take to providean opt imumsettingfo r theirhearts," she added .

    Mrs. Robb stated that longbeforeher fa ther 'sdeath sh ewas conce rnedabouthe r ownchances, an d thoseof herhus-bandan d chi ldren,of develop-in g heart p rob l em s .

    D r. W illisHurst ,immed ia t epast presidentof the Ameri-ca n Heart Association,w asPresident Johnson's familydoctor. Mrs. Robbsaid for thepast year she hasbeen plyinghi m and his-associateswithquest ions.

    In h er art icle ,Mrs. Robblisted these precaut ionsfami-lies can take to reduce theirchanc e o fheart attacks.

    Limi tth e intakeof an ima l(saturated fa ts and choles-terol). A v o i d being over-we igh t . Besure al l m e m b e r sof th e familyge t regular ex -ercise, win t e ran d summer.

    When tensionsbuild or an

    unusual problemmust befaced, don'tlet yourselfge tovertired.Plan schedulestoinclude plentyof rest

    Non-smokingparentstendto have non-smoking children.Kickthe habit if youcan.

    G et regularmedical check-ups. Only your doctorcan tellif your blood pressure or cho-lesteroltestsare normal.

    Know the early warningsigns of heartattack:pro-longed,heavy pressure orsqueezing painin thecenterof the chest, behind thebreastbone; painm ay spreadto the shoulder, arm, neck or

    jaw; painor discomfortisoftenaccompanied bysweat-ing, nausea, vomiting, short-ness of breath ma y alsooccur; symptoms may sub-side and then return,"Mrs.Robb said.

    LAURAS BOUTIQUESpring Sale20-50% Off

    IS Mtei West el Umo on ft. 117,v* mle wwti on in between 117and Ft. Amanda Rd. OPEN: Men. -Prt T-JO - f O P, So :JB - ,Son i-(

    FA TOVERWEIGHTOdrmexcan helpyou b e c o m ethe trimslimperson you want o be.Odrinexisa linytablet and easily swallowed. Con-tainsno dangerousdrugs.NostarvingN ospecial exercise. Get rid ofe x c e s stat and live longer.Odnnex hasbee no s e dsuccessfullyby housands alloverMiecountrv for 14jears. O d n n e xPlancosts$3.25and the large economysize$5 25. Youmust lose uglyfat or yourmoneywil be refundedbyyourdrujjist.No questions asked.Acceptno sub-stitutes.Soldwith thisguaranteeby:

    FOR A LIFETIME OF HAPPY MEMORIES ...

    FREE"STAIN GUARD

    TREATMENTWJHi In-Home W*1I-T-W*II

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