THE TRIBUNE, SEYMOUR, IND. TUESDAY OCTOBER 8 1996 2A WEATHER The AccuWeather forecast for noon, Wednesday, Oct. 9. Bands separate high temperature zones for the day. 60s South Bend 40s 80s 60s 505 Lafayette 60s: 7053 ILL.
705 70s 90s 80s Seymour 100s 80s FRONTS: Evansville COLD WARM STATIONARY 1996 Accu Weather, Inc. Pressure High Low Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy T-storms EXTENDED FORECAST The cool weather should stick around Thursday with highs in the middle 50s and lower 60s. But temperatures could creep back into the 70s Friday and Saturday, though skies are expected to be partly cloudy. Reading's indicate previous day's highs and overnight low to 8 a.m.
City Low Precip. Albuquerque ........80 55 .00 Anchorage ..........47 26 :00 56 .27 59 .04 50 .00 70 51 .01 Denver ............67 45 .00 Detroit: 48 .00 El Paso ................86 60 .00 Readings indicate previous day's high, low and precipitation in past 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.: REGION City Low Precip, 46 Cincinnati ...........73 48 .01 Cleveland ............73 54 .00 Louisville ..............77 52 .00 48 .15 NATION Fairbanks ............40 20 .00 Grand Rapids ......59 44 .14 Helena ................77 48 .00 Honolulu ..............91 76 .00 Houston .............81 59 .00 Jacksonville ........72 63 3.74 Kansas City ........57 40 .00 Las 68 .00 Little 55 .00 Los Angeles .........87 62 .00 Memphis ..............77 57 .00 Miami Beach ........87 82 .00 Mpls-St Paul ........57 30 .00 OBITUARIES John Michael Hill Helen Williams Sept. 27, 1954-Oct. 6, 1996 Nov. 13, 1912-Oct.
6, 1996 and Norma Hill. They survive in Seymour. He married Gaye Johnson, and she also survives. Other survivors include a daughter, Gayle Michelle Hill; a son, John Matthew Hill; a grandfather, Edwin Hill, Seymour; and a grandmother, Virginia Hart, Seymour. Services will be conducted at 10 a.m.
Thursday at Neurath and Underwood Funeral Home in Louisville. Graveside services will be conducted at noon Thursday at Riverview Cemetery, Seymour. Friends may call from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.
Mansfield Hollan Aug. 22, 1903-Oct. 7, 1996 Mansfield Hollan, 93, of Austin died at 11:45 a.m. Monday, Oct. 7, 1996, at Memorial Hospital in Seymour.
Mr. Hollan had been employed with Morgan Foods Inc. and was a member of House of Prayer in Austin. Born Aug. 22, 1903, in Breathitt County, he was a son of George Hollan and Dora Coomer.
He married Elizabeth Hensley, and she survives. Other survivors include five sons, Robert Hollan, Vernon Hollan, Glen Hollan and Charles Hollan, all of Austin; and Russell Hollan, Scottsburg; six daughters, Dorothy JACKSON COUNTY with a 40 percent chance of showers. Cool. Low in the upper 40s. sunny.
High around 60. The high and low temperature readings, precipitation reports and level of the East Fork White River are provided by National Weather Service Observer Ruth Everhart of Rockford: High Monday. 75 Low Monday 42 Precipitation past 24 Precipitation this Precipitation this White River at High level for year. 19.07. (Flood stage is 12 feet) Sunset today.
6:17 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ............6:49 a.m. John Michael Hill, 42, of Louisville died Sunday, Oct. 6, 1996, at Norton Hospital in Louisville. Mr.
Hill was a member of. the Louisville First Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, for which he Hill served as high priest. He was a former employee of Tube Turns and an employee of Accent Marketing in Louisville. Born Sept. 27, 1954, in Seymour, he was a son of John Noble, Emily City, Golden Cross, Athol, and Orine Turner, Betty Deaton, Della Donnell and Martha Batista, all of Austin; a brother, Ray Hollan, Austin; 42.
grandchildren, 61 greatgrandchildren and 12 greatgreat-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a son, Billy Ray Hollan. The Rev. Virgil Barrett will conduct services at 2 p.m. Thursday at Buchanan Funeral Home, Austin, with burial to take place at New Providence Cemetery, Austin.
Friends may call from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Prescription on drugs shew up in Hoosier schools GAS CITY, Ind. (AP) Mississinewa High School' officials are investigating allegations of wrongful prescription drug use involving about 10 students.
Mississinewa School Corp. Superintendent Bob Bothwell told the school board Monday that a student who had legitimate access to Ritalin sold or distributed the drug to stu-. dents in the schools. Bothwell said most of the students were freshmen. Ritalin is a drug prescribed MICH.
Fort Wayne 5 Tribune photo by Aubrey Woods One of ultra-light crafts make a fly-over at the Southern Indiana Flying Eagles field near Brownstown on Sunday afternoon. Rust Continued from Page 1A al's headquarters was not immediately returned. 'Doug Durliat of Ohio Farmers Union said she spoke at length with Rust. His group, which represents about 10,000 family farms in Ohio, has fought AgriGeneral since it opened its LaRue egg farm in September 1995. "He is legitimate.
He is the past president of Rose Acre Farms. He is a communityminded guy. He has done a lot 'of profit-sharing with the community in Indiana," Durliat Pope Continued from Page 1A the seventh day after surgery. The pope's surgeon suggested John Paul could be in the hospital longer, however, because of his age. "Let's not forget we have a 76-year-old man here," Crucitti said.
Dr. Corrado Colagrande, a consulting radiologist on the pope's medical team, was asked if the operation was a success. "The doctors were happy. They are very fond of this pope," he said, adding that the operation "was made a little more difficult" by scar tissue from the Pope's 1992 bowel surgery and emergency surgery after he was shot in 1981. said the surgeons removed the scar tissue so they could reach the appendix.
"After this operation he'll surely be better, but it's not like he's going to turn young said. "But I just can't picture AgriGeneral hiring this guy doing what he has been doing." Larry Harder, a farmer whose land borders AgriGeneral's, said he believes Rust has good intentions. He said Rust told him that he read about the community's problems with AgriGeneral and wanted to help. This is the latest twist in the community's fight against A- griGeneral and its farm of 2.5 million hens. It plans to open two more egg farms, two pullet operations and a feed mill in the area, south of Toledo.
again," Colagrande added. The next medical bulletin was expected at noon Wednesday. Many Catholics said prayers, and get-well messages poured into the Gemelli Polyclinic, Rome's Catholic teaching hospital, including one reportedly sent from prison by the Turk who shot the pope. "I'm spiritually close to you and pray for you," Mehmet Ali Agca wrote in a telegram sent from his jail cell, the ANSA news agency reported. John Paul was admitted Sunday night and underwent a battery of tests Monday, including heart checks and a CT scan.
His doctors had pronounced both his spirits and his heart in good form: An electrocardiogram and an eco-doppler, which helps determine any narrowing of arteries, showed no problems, said Attilio Maseri, the pope's Candidates for governor square off GREENCASTLE, Ind. (AP) It was 55 minutes of cordial political debate between gubernatorial candidates Stephen Goldsmith and Frank O'Bannon with five minutes of attack. To nobody's surprise the breakdown was 55 minutes on issues such as taxes, government services, education and legalized gambling and five minutes on negative ads. When Goldsmith, Republican mayor of Indianapolis, was asked about a group of his city's police officers who allegedly engaged in a downtown brawl, he said those proven responsible would be disciplined. When O'Bannon.
was asked to comment, the Democratic leiutenant governor would not pass judgment on how Goldsmith has handled the controversy. "It's a local problem," he said. But when Monday's televised debate sponsored by DePauw University and Indianapolis PBS affiliate WFYI turned to negative ads, it was a different story. Goldsmith said he agreed early to run a clean campaign, but O'Bannon "immediately began to take public opinion polls testing the most Louisville INDIANA Temperature extremes for selected Hoosier cities and precipitation in past 24 hours ending at 7 a.m.: Low Precip 75 53 .00 Fort 75 49 .00 74 52 .00 South 58 47 .00 Nashville ..............75 52 .00 New Orleans ........77 64 .00 New York City ......67 59 .00 Philadelphia ........67 57 .00 73 .00 Pittsburgh ............72 47 .00 Sacramento :.......97 63 .00 San Antonio ........84 59 .00 San 62 .00 San 65 .00 Santa Fe ..............77 .00 53 .00 59 .13 Helen Williams, 83, of Seymour died Sunday, Oct. 6, 1996, at her home.
Mrs. Williams was a homemaker and attended First Baptist Church in Seymour. Born Nov. 13, 1912, in Seymour, she was a daughter of Clarence Sr. and Ethel Jones Stark.
On Aug. 6, 1931, in Jeffersonville, she married Herbert G. Williams who died March 7, 1984. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Marvin (Betty) Stuckwisch, Seymour; three sons, Ronald B.
"Skip" Williams, Thomas R. Williams and Herbert G. Williams III, all of Seymour; two brothers, Arthur Jay Stark and Donald Stark, both of Seymour; three sisters, Faye Stark and Lois Zumhingst, both of Seymour; and Kathryn Tuttle, Hayden; 11 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by two brothers, Clarence "Butch" Stark Jr. and Willard Stark; and three sisters, Edna Railing, Mildred Eddy and Doris L.
Williams. The Rev. Bruce Cochran will conduct services at 10 a.m. Thursday at Voss and Suns Funeral Service, Voss Chapel, Seymour, with burial to take place at Riverview Cemetery, Seymour. Friends may call from 4 p.m.
to 8 p.m. Wednesday and after 9 a.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be given to the American Heart Association or donor's choice. Hill Anna L.
Trowbridge March 13, 1927-Oct. 7, 1996 4 Anna L. Trowbridge, 69, of Brownstown died at 1:45 a.m. Monday, Oct. 7, 1996, at Memorial Hospital in Seymour.
Mrs. Trowbridge was a homemaker, a member of Brownstown Christian Church and a former member of Pythian Sisters of Brownstown. Born March 13, 1927, in Jackson County, she was a daughter of Benjamin M. and Laura. Esther Boknecht Wheeler.
On Sept. 27, 1947, in Vallonia, she married Alva Trowbridge, who died Dec. 15, 1973. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Speed (Beverly Collingsworth, Mansfield, Texas; and Mrs.
Steve (Judith Schlicker, Brownstown; a son, David L. Trowbridge, Speedway; a granddaughter, Heidi A. Schlicker; four brothers, Robert Wheel- er, North Vernon; Lindy E. Wheeler, Bedford; Billy Wheeler, Seymour; and Jackie Wheeler, Brownstown; and two sisters, Eva Jane White, Haleysburg; and Betty Foster, Seymour. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Lana L.
Trowbridge; a sister, Norma Jean Wheeler; and two brothers, Benjamin M. Wheeler Jr. and Jimmy Wheeler. The Rev. Gary Morning will conduct services at 2 p.m.
Thursday at WinklepleckWeesner Funeral Home in Brownstown, with burial to take place at Fairview Cemetery in Brownstown. Friends may call from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday and after noon Thursday at the funeral home. Memorials may be given to Brownstown Christian Church or donor's choice.
Press left, and Goldsmith at the debate. negative and I think deceitful messages against me that could possibly have been done." O'Bannon, who seemed relaxed during most of the debate but angry in this exchange, said he knew from history that Goldsmith would go negative. It was Goldsmith, who ran the first negative spot, and so many that have followed, he said. When they were offered another minute to discuss negative ads, Goldsmith said he did not need minute. for people with attention deficit disorders.
It allows them to focus their attention. If taken by someone who doesn't need it, it causes excitation. "It's like taking an overdose of caffeine," said Bob Brunett, a Marion pharmacist. It was a case of curiosity, Bothwell said. "These are not bad kids," he said.
"We just found out last Thursday. A student came forward and told us about it. We have good kids who don't want to see anything happen." Obituary policy The Tribune accepts obituaries from Jackson County and the surrounding area or from persons with associations in the area. Obituaries from persons not known to The Tribune must be submitted through funeral homes. The information submitted to a funeral home from a family designee will be final: The Tribune accepts obituary photographs, which must be studio portrait quality and be delivered to The Tribune no later than 10 a.m.
the same day as the obituary information. The Tribune does not charge for this service..