The Sheboygan Press from Sheboygan, Wisconsin (2024)

Sheboygan Press, Saturday, April 21, 1984 From Page 1. Page 1.. Libya Page 1.. Obituaries Bribes FloR He God so loved His the only world, begotten that gave Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 Funeral services for Mrs.

Dale Reinemann, 50, of 3427 S. 11th Place, who died Thursday morning, will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Christ Lutheran Church. The Rev. Arthur C.

Dingel, pastor, will officiate. Burial will be in Sunrise Memorial Park Cemetery, Friends may call at KroosMason Funeral Home after 4 p.m. Sunday, and at the church. Monday from 11 a.m. until the time of services.

The former Janice I. Kumbalek was born July 11, 1933, in Appleton, a daughter of Norbert P. and Lydia Eichorst Kumbalek of Manitowoc. She attended Manitowoc area schools. On Oct.

6, 1956, she married Dale C. Reinemann in Manitowoc. She was employed at J. C. Penney Co.

for 16 years, retiring in September 1983 due to ill health. Mrs. Reinemann was a member of Christ Lutheran Church, its Mary Martha Guild, and was a former member of the church choir. Survivors include her husband; a son, David of Gastonia, N. a daughter, Mrs.

Mark (Sandra) Kolbo of St. Paul, three brothers, Harold, Richard and John, all of Manitowoc; and two sisters, Mrs. Lois Loveless of Two Rivers, and Mrs. Shirley Brunette, of Fond du Lac. A memorial fund has been established in Mrs.

Reinemann's name for the church organ fund and the Agape Unit at Sheboygan Memorial Hospital. Dean J. Sippel Janice Reinemann Dean J. Sippel, 17, of 732 Wisconsin St, Kiel, died of natural causes Friday morning at Sheboygan Memorial Hospital, where he had been a patient for the past five days. Born Aug.

23, 1966, in Plymouth, he was the son of Joseph and Sandra Sauermilch Sippel. A senior at Kiel High School, he was a member of SS. Peter Paul Catholic Church in Kiel, and belonged to the parish Catholic Youth Organization. Survivors are his parents, one sister, Denise; one brother, David, both at home; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Sauermilch of Manitowoc; paternal grandmother, Mrs. Claude (Lucille) Sippel of Plymouth; and his maternal great-grandmother, Mrs. Serena Leist of Manitowoc. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Monday at Ss.

Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Kiel, following brief family rites at 9:30 at Meiselwitz Funeral Home. The Rev. Francis Kerscher, pastor, will be celebrant. Burial will be in St. Mary Cemetery, Cascade.

Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m., Sunday, where a wake service will be held at 8 p.m. Sunday. Re risen office in Washington saying "This is a Bechtel matter and any statements made about it would appropriately be made by the Bechtel Company." The magazines said Joseph Covington, a lawyer in the fraud section of the criminal division of the Justice Department, is handling the investigation. Covington was not available Friday. Peter Clark, an associate in the same office, said, "'The department's procedures don't allow any attorney for the department to comment on any investigation or confirm or deny that any investigation is under way." Pentagon spokesman Michael Burch said he had discussed the article with Weinberger who was vacationing in Maine.

Weinberger considers it "complete nonsense," Burch said. He said there is "nothing recognizable in the allegations" and that nothing referring to Weinberger is true. The magazines said much of their information came from a man named Daniel Charboneau. He joined Bechtel's San Francisco office in 1974 and in 1978 he was transferred to Bechtel's Korea office, where he served as assistant to Korea Regional Representative and Bechtel vice president Robert Lynn, the magazines said. Charboneau decided on Friday "to go public to protect himself and to ensure that a thorough investigation is conducted," a news release from the magazines said.

The magazines also distributed to news agencies texts of three documents one was identified as Cho's contract, one as a letter the informant wrote to the FBI and one as a letter he wrote to the Internal Revenue Service, discussing Cho's activities. Soon after Cho was retained, Bechtel won a construction and engineering contract for two nuclear power plants in Korea, the article said, and later won a second contract for another pair of reactors. The 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act prohibits payments to foreign officials to obtain or retain business. The authors said that midway through a nine-month investigation they crossed paths with the FBI "which proved to be following many of the same leads and interviewing some of the same sources." "British citizens in Libya are well and are not subjected to any harassment We are trying to calm the masses and urging them to control themselves so that they do not do anything against the British citizens," it said. "If this situation continues, patience has a limit and the suppressed popular anger will explode." Kuwait's undersecretary for foreign affairs, Rashed Abdel-Aziz AlRashed, today said in Kuwait that his government has been 1 mediating in tl the standoff.

At the request of the British goven ernment, Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sabah Al-Ahmed made contact with Libyan government officials "to keep the crisis from escalating," Al-Rashed said. Police have not commented on whether they suspect a link between the embassy standoff and a bombing Friday night at Heathrow Airport in which 22 people were injured. An anarchist group called Angry Brigade claimed responsibility, although officials said the bomb From Page 1 Heathrow were released this afternoon, police said. Hucklesby declined to say whether there might be links between the explosion and the police siege of the Libyan Embassy. Police today maintained their siege of the embassy, which started after a gunman in an embassy window sprayed submachine-gun fire on a crowd of Libyan Tuesday, killing a British policewoman and wounding 11 demonstrators.

The five bombs that went off March 10, and others placed in London and Manchester March 11-12, injured 26 people. All were believed by police to have been aimed at Libyan exiles opposed to the regime of Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy. At least 11 Libyan dissidents have been killed in Britain, West Germany, Greece and Lebanon and scores wounded since Khadafy warned exiles in 1980 they would be "liquidated" if they did not return to their North African homeland. None of those injured 1 in Friday's bombing were believed to be Libyan.

Hucklesby described the airport device as "a professional bomb and we suspect from the Middle East. The persons responsible could still be here or could have flown out to Libya or any other of the flights that took off from here." About 60 passengers and airport staff were in the area when the bomb blast occurred. British Airways ticket officer David Brackley was only yards from the terminal and ran through the smoke to aid the wounded. pulled one man from the rubble who I knew, but I didn't recognize him. His hair was matted with dirt and his face and teeth were completely black," Brackley said.

"He was in a bad way. His clothes were shredded and there was blood everywhere. I tried to loosen his tie and his shirt fell to pieces." Most of the 22 casualties were British or French, with two Italians, a Spaniard and an Indian, police said. The only person identified by name was Air France employee John Blundell, 35, a Briton. He was the most severely wounded, with 70 percent of his body burned and splinter wounds to the spleen, police said.

He underwent emergency surgery at Mount Vernon hospital, where he was reported in critical condition. Four others were in serious condition, police said. Ten people who suffered cuts, shock and ear damage were discharged after treatment, and an additional seven were still in the hospital. Libyan Radio, monitored in London, reported the explosion and said another bomb went off in Heathrow's Terminal 3, wounding 14 people. Police reported finding no other devices in a search of the airport's three main terminal areas.

Milwaukee Livestock MILWAUKEE (AP) Friday's cattle market. choice steers 62-65; choice heifers 60-63; good to choice Holstein steers 52-61; standard steers 45-51; dairy heifers 47-51; utility cows 43-46; canners and cutters 37-43; commercial bulls 49-52; common bulls 46-48. Friday's calf market: choice veal 60-75; good veal 50-60. Friday's hog market: sows 300-350 lbs. 41- 43; 450-500 lbs.

over 500 lbs. 44-47: butchers 220-250 lbs. 47-48; boars 32 and down. No's lamb market was established. Monday's estimated receipts: 1,000 cattle, 900 calves, 100 hogs and 30 lambs.

GerendHabermann Funeral Home 457-7012 903 N. 6th St. was in a piece of unclaimed baggage taken off a Libyan airliner. Members of Angry Brigade, which has no apparent links to Libya, were active in bombings of government offices and officials' homes in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and re-emerged recently to claim responsibility for similar blasts in 1882. Cmdr.

Bill Hucklesby, chief of Scotland Yard's anti- terrorist squad, said there were "similarities" between the 2-pound bomb that exploded in a baggage claim area and six bombs planted by Libyan extremists in London March 10 that wounded 23 people. Yard spokesmen, who declined to be identified, said police chiefs have spoken to the Libyans in the besieged embassy since the bombing, but declined to give any details. "Contacts are continuing as and when necessary," one police official told reporters. He said boxes of dates and other food were sent in to the embassy this morning. The police have provided the embassy with food and other goods throughout the standoff.

Although British officials have declined to disclose any details of their proposals for ending the standoff, Press Association, Britain's domestic news agency, said the sticking point was police demands to search the embassy for weapons. Foreign Office officials stressed Friday the British were sticking to that demand. But there was speculation London was less insistent on its other demand to question Libyans about the killing of the policewoman, Yvonne Fletcher. From Page 1... Storms tonight for southeastern Wyoming and eastern and north-central Colo- rado.

Wyoming's highway patrol closed numerous roads, including Interstate 80 between Cheyenne and Laramie, and urged people not to travel today except in emergencies. In one 45-minute period Friday the patrol received reports of seven accidents. Flights out of Denver's Stapleton International Airport were being delayed three to four hours, and. high winds cut power in several northern Colorado towns. Part of Interstate 25 was shut down for several hours Friday morning, with 20 to 40 accidents at Greeley.

The spring snow worried ranchers in the eastern Colorado plains. "It's not good, it's not good at all," said rancher Harold Weisbrook of New Raymer. "There's a lot of stress on the calves. There's definitely going to be some losses." At least a dozen tornadoes were spotted Friday in Oklahoma and Texas while high winds uprooted trees and damaged numerous mobile homes in the two states, ripping roofs off the trailers or blasting them off their foundations. Emergency communications in Wise County, Texas, were knocked out for six hours after lightning hit the sheriff's department's radio tower.

In Cooke County, about 65 miles north of Dallas, 8-year-old Carol Jean Smith was treated for multiple contusions and bruises after a twister hit the Fred Roy Frank Estate. "She was just sitting in a field behind where my brother-in-law's trailer used to be," said Catherine Bowden. "She was skinned up and bruised, but she had been in (the) trailer, which was blown to pieces." Obituaries In The News Mabel Mercer PITTSFIELD, Mass. (AP) Mabel Mercer, a cabaret singer who introduced "Fly Me to the Moon' and popularized Twelve Days of died Friday of respiratory arrest at age 84. Miss Mercer's fame began in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s and was transplanted to New York City's bistros in the 1940s and 1950s.

Other songs included "The End of a Love Affair" and "While We're Samuel Hinkle HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) Samuel F. Hinkle, a former Hershey Foods Corp. board chairman who developed Hershey's Syrup and the Mr. Goodbar chocolate bar, died Thursday at the age of 83.

Hinkle's laboratory developed and rations that were issued to U.S. troops during World War II. He joined Hershey Chocolate Co. in 1924 as a chemist and became Hershey Foods board chairman in 1961. Wittkopp FUNERAL SERVICE FRANZEN, Fred Arrangements pending.

"Since 1910" PLYMOUTH, WISCONSIN Dial 892-2626 or 892-4326 Funeral services for Marie E. Meinhardt, 63, of 1219 Trimberger Court, who died Friday at Sheboygan Memorial Hospital, will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at Nickel-Lippert Funeral Home. The Rev. Edwin C.

Bek, pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Wildwood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m. and, on Monday, until the time of service.

The former Marie Erickson was born at Pepin, Sept. 19, 1920, a daughter of Adolph and Eva Erickson. She graduated from Durand High School and received a degree in education from River Falls College. On June 17, 1944, she married Kurt Meinhardt at Menominee, where they made their home. She taught at Colfax and Menominee Elementary Schools.

In 1958, the couple moved to Sheboygan, where she taught at Ss. Cyril Methodius School. She also was a driver education instructor for Gottsacker Insurance until 1981. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Rickey of Sheboygan a and Donald of Wyocena; four grandchildren; brothers, Lawrence Erickson of Glendale, Ariz, and Arnold of Pepin; two sisters, Mrs. Ethyle Frank of 1 Pepin and Mrs.

George Barber of Arkansaw, Wis. A memorial fund has been established in Mrs. Meinhardt's name. Marie E. Meinhardt Norma K.

Aleff Funeral services for Norma K. Aleff, 78, of 2420 S. 18th who died Friday at St. Nicholas Hospital, will be held Monday at 1:30 p.m. at Nickel-Lippert Funeral Home.

The Rev. Elmer Becker, visiting pastor at Ebenezer United Church of Christ, will officiate. Entombment will be in Garden Terrace Mausoleum. Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m. and, on Monday, until the time of services.

The former Norma Mathes was born Nov. 13, 1905, in Kiel, a daughter of Robert and Ida Mathes. On Feb. 6, 1960, she married Raymond Aleff at Ebenezer United Church of Christ, where she was a member. Surviving are her husband; a step-son, William Gehrke of Milwaukee; a step-daughter, Mrs.

Donald (Corita) Voll of Rockford, five grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Eleanor Casper of Racine. A memorial fund has been established in Mrs. Aleff's name. Anthony Sakanis Anthony Sakanis, 94, a resident of Rocky Knoll Health Care Facility since 1969, died there Friday.

He was born June 13, 1889, in Lithuania, a son of Paul and Barbara Sakanis. He came to the United States in 1923, and farmed near Dundee and Winooski. He was a member of Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in Sheboygan. Survivors include one son, John, Montello; two daughters, Mrs. Frank (Patrici) Selko of Sheboygan and Ms.

Antoinette Sakanis of Chicago; ten grandchildren, five greatgrandchildren. He was preceded in death by one daughter. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Monday at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, with the Rev. Stephen Groessel, pastor, officiating.

The Mass will be preceded by family rites at 9:30 a.m. at Gerend-Habermann Funeral Home. Burial will be in the parish cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday.

A vigil will be held there at 6:30 Sunday. Fred J. Franzen Fred J. Franzen, 73, of 601 Green Tree Road, Kohler, formerly of Plymouth, died at St. Nicholas Hospital today.

He had been a patient there for the past 11 days. Funeral arrangements are pending at Wittkopp Funeral Home in Plymouth and will be announced Monday. There are thousands of beacons along America's shores and most are on buoys and small stationary towers. Only some 250 are "classical lighthouse structures," according to National Geographic. CONVENIENT PARKING ballhorn Eighth and.

St. Clair Dial 457-4455 RUMMELE, Robert W. Memorial service Monday 10:30 a.m. First Congregational United Church of Christ. No visitation.

BERGER, Mrs. Raymond (Donna) Monday 10:30 a.m. chapel, Friends call 4 p.m. Sunday and Monday to time of service. Years Of Conscientious 1882-1984 Washington i is also the FBI's informant.

"The informant, who knows that he could possibly be charged as an accomplice, has not yet asked for immunity," the article said. "He has asked that his name be withheld until there's a trial, at which he has said he will testify using his own name," the article said. From Page 1... Copter tion on the identities of the helicopter pilots. U.S.

Army Europe is one of three divisions of the Stuttgartbased U.S. European Command. Bernd Duering, a West German border policeman, said in a telephone interview from Frankfurt that he believed the helicopter was in Czech territory when the shooting occurred, but not by more than six miles. When asked if it was easy to stray off course in that region, he said, "It depends. If they hadn't been trained in the area, perhaps.

But if they knew the territory they wouldn't have made that mistake. It doesn't happen often." The Pentagon said the helicopter was "on a routine border aerial mission along the West GermanCzechoslovakian border near Zwiesel, West Germany" when the shooting occurred. Zwiesel is 4.5 miles west of the Czech border. The Cobra is a single-engine attack helicopter which normally carries a crew of two. Some advanced versions of the chopper are armed with TOW anti-tank missiles, 20mm cannon and 2.75-inch rockets.

MiGs are Soviet-built fighters but they are flown not only by the Soviets but also by pilots of Warsaw Pact air forces. President Reagan, who is in California en route to China, was informed about the incident, his spokesmen said. All questions were referred to the Defense Department. A Pentagon official said "it's been a long time" since an incident of this sort has occurred along the border separating the Soviet bloc from Western Europe. Available records suggest that the last such episode took place more than 20 years ago when a Russian fighter shot down a U.S.

Air Force RB-66 reconnaissance plane which strayed into East Germany. The article says the whistleblower it interviewed in Seoul and ROENITZ FESSLER DRUG American Greeting Cards Fanny May Candies OPEN SUNDAYS 8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. 509 Superior Ave. Ph. 457-3644 The beautiful story of Easter contains many messages of hope that have enriched the lives of all those who observe it.

The dramatic events of the most memorable weekend in all history portray the victory of right over We at Nickel-Lippert wish you and blessed not only with material goods but ROENITZ DRUG SOUTH Hallmark Cards Fanny May Candies Cameras Film OPEN SUNDAYS 9:00 A.M.- P.M. 1227 Wilson Ave. Ph. 458-4381 wrong and joy over sorrow, as well as the forgiveness of a deed so terrible that even the ruling magistrate would claim no responsibility for it. It is a time for reflection as well as rejoicing; and if the Son of God dies to atone for our sins and to provide proof of immortality, the least we can do is try to be worthy of that sacrifice by improving our lives and attending the Church of our choice; not only on Easter, but every Sunday throughout the year.

your loved ones a truly happy Easter, overflowing with spiritual joy. NICKEL-LIPPERT FUNERAL HOME Roland E. Lippert J. Michael Lippert Evelyn Lippert Linda Lippert 12th and Superior Phone 452-1481 "Dedicated To Sincerity, Understanding, Courtesy and Personal Roland E. Lippert J.

Michael Lippert.

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