Officer 1968

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    SUNDAY, J U N E 2, 1968 THE LIMA N E W S . L I MA . OHIO P A G E A - E L E V E N

    L E A D S E N I O R S Michael Strayer (seated), 53 4Calumet, was elected Lima Senior High Schoolsenior class president in recent elections. Otheroffic e rs are ( f r o m lett) Craig W o r k m a n , 66 4 Calu-met, vice president, and D o u g Ferguson, 552 S .Wnodlawn, treasurer. Sharon Sulkin, 1225 Virginia,was elected secretary. (News Photo)

    Bugle Notes: Limalandersin ServiceAi r Force Col.N. T. Law-rence, brother of Mrs. W .Elaine Chambers of 614 Shock,received the Bronze Star MedalPope AFB, N. C., fo rmeritorious service w hi leengaged in military operationsagainst Viet Cong forces.Col. Lawrence was cited forhis performance a s d e p u t ycommander for operations andas vice commander of the 483rdTactical Airlift Wing at CamElanh Bay AB , Vietnam and hasseen assigned at Pope as vicecommander of the 164thTac-

    tical Airlif t Wing.He served in the EuropeanTheater of Operations duringWorld War II and was com-missioned in 1943 through tileaviation cadet program.A veteran of the Korean War,he graduated from Phoenixville(Pa.) High School and receivedB.A degree in 1958 fromSyracuse (N.Y.) University.His wife, Claudia, is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Archie Garrard of Phoenix.Ariz.

    last assignment with the 9thInfantry Division in Vietnam.A personnel management

    specialist in the 9th InfantryDivision's 5th AdministrationCompany, he entered the Armyin October 1965 and completed

    Motf iliatil CityColonists'Kin HelpBrazilian Industry

    BL U M E NA U , Brazil (AP) A visitor is perhaps most sur-Industry hums today in this t prised to see crowds of blond-spotlessly clean city founded by haired, blue-eyed German de-Ge-rnan Colonists who had to scendants, ma ny of them livingfight off hostile Indians before in chalets reminiscent of theirthey could settle down mot he r country.Its more than 45 0 factories It's also c ommon to hear Ger-ihave a n n u a l sales of more than man spoken on the streets, and36 mil l ion new cruzeiros ($11.3 school classes were still taughtmillion US . ) . Th e y turn ou t in German until World War I I .products from clothing to paints Now, however, classes areand crystal to chocolate. taught in Portuguese and few ofYet Blumenau, locked in the the younger generation arevast coastal mountain range of learning the tongue of their for-southern Brazil, has no com- bearers.mercial air service, is served by ' But while Blumenau residentsno major highways and has only have a lik to their background,the most precarious of tele-'they're also proud of the contri-phoee communications with the butions they've made to Brazil.re=t of Brazil. ' One of t h " most prominentIt was founded in 1850 by 17 monuments in town pays horn-Ge rm a n immigrants who had age to 76 colonists, with suchjoined a colonization society or- names as Schmidt and Muller,gaiuzed by Hermann Bruno Otto who volunteered in 1865 to fightBiumenau, a pharmacist turned for Brazil in the Triple Alliancedrug manufacturer an d doctor! W ar against Paraguay.D r. Blumenau

    A rm y Spec. 4 Robert E. Her-ron II, son of Mr. and Mrs.Robert E. Herron of 809 N.Charles, has received the A rm yCommendation Medal w h i l eserving with the 5th InfantryDivision at Ft. Carson, Colo.Herron earned the award formeritorious service during his

    BAS IC Marine Pvt. T.A. Benjamin, son of Mr .an d Mrs. George A.Benjamin of 525 E.Michael, has completedbasic training at theMarine training base inS an Diego, Calif. His newaddress is Pvt. T. A.Benjamin, 2389454, 3rdBn., 2n d I T R , CampPendelton, Calif., 92055.

    basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky.The 22-year-old soldier wasgraduated from Lima SeniorHigh School in 1963. He at-tended Northwestern School ofCommerce and was employedas a cost accounting clerkbefore entering the Army. Hiswife, Millie, lives at 418 E.Brookside, Colorado Springs,Colo.Army Pvt.Dennis K. Sheets,19, son of Mr. and Mrs. EugeneSheets of 814 Ewing, has com-pleted nine weeks of advancedinfantry training at Ft. Polk,

    La. His last week of trainingwas i'>ent in guerrilla warfareexercises.Airman Bex A. Raman, U SN,son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W .Haman Jr. of Rt. 4, Criders-ville, has reported for dutyaboard t h e anti-submarinewarfare aircraft carrier USSBennington.His address is AA B421091,USS Bennington CVS-20, GMDiv. FPO San Francisco, Calif.,96601.Radioman 2.C. Max R. VanHyning, USN, son of Mr. andMrs. John R. Van Hyning of 109N. Collins, and husband of theformer Glenna J. Pash of Rt. 1,Zanesfield, is serving aboardthe destroyer USS Bigelow inthe Mediterranean.Marine Pfc. Michael E. Shir-key, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs.

    Gene Shirkey of 466 N. Mc-Donel, is serving with tfoe ThirdBattalion, Fifth Marine Regi-ment, First Marine Division inVietnam.Marine Lance Cpl. David E.AHemeifir, 20, son of Mr. andMrs. Carl H. Allemeier of 610N. Washington, Delphos, ishelping to detect and clearmine fields and other enemyfortifications while serving as amember of the First MarineDivision near Danang,Vietnam.Equipment operator 3. C.

    Frederick K. Fleischmann,USN, 21, son of Mrs. Robert 0.Sroufe of 429 Flanders, is help-ing to construct military sup-port facilities in Vietnam.As a "SeaBee" with Nava1Construction Battalion Seventy-One (NCB-71), he assists in thebuilding of port f a c i l i t i e s ,airstrips, bridges and otherprojects.A rm y Pfc. James V. Stine-saugh, 21, son of Mr. and MrsJohn V. Stinebaugh of 827Selley Dr., Wapakoneta, hasseen assigned as a cannoneerin the 4th Infantry Divisionnear Pleiku, Vietnam.

    F O R E I G N S T U D E N T Rona'd Janke (left) 3024Inwood Dr., is one of 24 Wittenberg Universitystudents attending the University of Exeter at Ex-eter, England this year. He is shown chatting withfellow students Cynthia Holtan, Wauwatosa, Wis.,an d Gary Gilmore, Marengo. Th e Wittenbergstudents, all English majors , have been attendinglectures at the English University and arescheduled to return to the Unitsd States June 2 7.School Reunion Plans Revealed

    Lima High School class of1918 will hold its 50th reunionjjuly 20-21, with an informalA rm y Pvt.Joseph J. Fisher, 1 session Saturday evening at the18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy' Argonne Hotel and a SundayE. Fisher of Wapakoneta, has, dinner at noon at the Elks Club,been assigned as a cook in the i according to rs A. W. Ross-

    being sought are Vera ComptonSavage, Lockwcod Williams,Os a Brenneman Howard, Ra yMcCraty. Anyone with knowl-edge of their addresses is urgedto contact Lawrence Keating at62nd Engineer Battalion near'feld, chairman of the event. 2227 W . Spring or Mrs.FredLong Binh, Vietnam. Addresses of class members'Wylie at 1310 W. Market.

    Actor(Continued From Page A-10)

    of philosophy.was a native of the small Ger-|*ma ny community of Hassel-felde".By 1860, the small colonj onthe banks of th* Itajai Ac u Riv-, ------- -rer had 947residents. It also b a d ' his primary theatrical interestsa small cemetery for the graves m recent years.of those who had died in battles, He has portrayed Frostagainst enraged Indians. j several hundred times in "AnBy i%7, the colony's residents Evening's Frost," a play bypointed with pride to their ac- Donald Hall based on the poet'scomplishments, including sever- works, and plays Whitman inhis own show, also based on thepoet's writing."Frost and Whitman areal prizes won at the UniversalExposition in Pans.Blumenau residents are stillpicking up prizes for workman- America's great poets o f theship. (I9 tb and 20th century," GeerThe Hering Textile Co., with a said. "Both are earthy . . . theirnationwide reputation for quali-lwork has a bucolic atmosphere .ty products, can't turn outknit- . . it's simple, but makes people'ear fast enough to meet thedemands of the Brazilian mar-ket.This despite the fact that Her-ing must buy much of its cottonin northeastern Brazil, truck itfor several thousand milesalong precarious highways forprocessing in Blumenau, and re-turn it to marketing centers:along the same highays.Just as well known in BrazilJCllUrCJlDnnerare Hering crystal products,-also made in Blumenau at a Christian Youth Fellowship ofplant employing 500 workers.

    think. Both have a greatsympathy with the young peopleof today."Despite the regularity of hisFrost appearances, Geer hassuccessfully a v o i d e d beingtyped. "I like variety," hegrinned. "Labels should only beput on good whiskey bottles."

    Their daily output of12.00 crys-tal pieces is sold in 600Braziliancities.Central Church of Christ willhold a ham and steak dinnerbeginning at 5 p.m.Thursday.The public is invited and ticketsThe resultant prosperity has are $1.25 for adults and 75centsturned Blumenau into a tidy!for children under 12.community where more and!Tickets may be purchasedmore residents are able to bu y ' f ro CYF members or at thetheir own homes, and cars are door.Proceeds will beused togradually replacing the more defray expenses of young peo-than 30.000 bicyclescrowd the streets. which pie attendingference the CYF con-

    APPOINTMENTS Mrs. Mary Black, R. N., ha sbeen named nursing service supervisor atMemorial Hospital 01 3 the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift.Newly appointed internal auditor is Wilbert Wolfe.Mrs. Black is a graduate of Lima Senior HighSchool and Memorial's School of Nursing. Wolf, agraduate of Hamier High School NorthwesternSchool of Commerceand Ohio Northern University,was formerly assistant auditor of the Limadivision, Ohio Department of Highways.N E W S J P A P E R f l R C H I V E . .

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