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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 4
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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 4

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Madison, Wisconsin
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4
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PAGE 4, SECTION 4 WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, 1971 Rothlauf Funeral Mrs. Vahlen Rites The funeral for Mrs. Irving Obituaries Girl GotW hat She Wanted Severed Arm Reattached LOS ANGELES un Anne 15 Million East Pakistan Deaths Seen NEW YORK Sunday (UPI) James T. Schwartz Tax Auditor, Dies MIDDLETON James T. Schwartz, 40.

of 6711 North an auditor for the Statei Dept. of Taxation, died early Saturday (July 31. 1971) in hospital after an illness. Mrs. Rosina Swenink RICHLAND CENTER Mrs.

Rosina Swenink, 78, died Saturday (July 31, 1971) in a nursing home after an illness. The former Rosina Dieter was a lifelong county resident. Her husband, Fred, died in 1945. Surviving are a a Mrs. Keith Clary, Richland Center; three sons, Theron, 1519 Simpson Madison; Byron, Viroqua; and Blue River; a half-brother, Louie Dieter, Richland Center; two sisters, Mrs.

Emma Lewis, Muscoda; and Mrs. Cleon Hin-kle, Blue River; nine grandchildren; two step-grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Pratt Funeral Home, where friends may call after 3 p.m. Monday.

A 1968 graduate in Mrs. Laura K. Smith. Fontana Mrs. Edward Becker Dies at Age of 95 BELOIT Mrs.

Edward C. Becker, 95, Clinton, died Friday (July 30, 1971) inanursing an illness The former Laura Mack was ala native of Chicago Surviving are a a two grandchildren: and five great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Monday in the Clinton Funeral Home, where friends may call after 3 p.m. today Robert Mathews REEDSBURG Robert K.

Mathews, 44, Mingo Junction, 0., died Friday (July 30. 1971) in a hospital after an illness. He was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church, Stu- i 1 1 e. the American Legion, the VFW, and the Elks.

He was employed as a Vahlen, 85, of 3394 E. Washing ton who died Friday, will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Trinity Lutheran Church. Friends may call after 4 p.m. Monday at the Schroeder Fu neral Home, 3325 E.

Washington Ave. Burial will be in the Burke Lutheran Cemetery. The former Helen Hansen, a Town of Burke native, was mar. ried in 1908. Her husband died in 1966.

She was a member of the church and its Ladies Aid Society. Surviving are f6ur brothers, Theodore Hansen, Sun Prairie; Lloyd Hansen, Cottage Grove; Herbert Hansen, Rt. 1, Madi son; and Orvin Hansen, 4201 Dwight and a sister, Mrs. Everett McCoy, Sun Prairie. Mrs.

Otto Kolhs WATERTOWN Mrs. Otto Kolhs, 75, died Saturday (July 3V1971) in a hospital after a brief illness. She was a lifelong Watertown resident. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. i 1 1 a and Mrs.

Donald Schwenkner, both of Water- town; two sons, Louis and Walter, both of Watertown; four brothers, Carl, George, Hugo, and Erwin Block, all of Water- town; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Moravian Church. Friends may call after 4 p.m. Monday at the Pederson Funeral Home.

Raymond Neis Shelly says she's a spoiled teen age brat who always gets her way. When her left arm was se vered by an airplane propeller July 22 she knew it would be saved. "I wanted my arm and I have it," she says. Miss Shelly, celebrating her 16th birthday today, is in Ortho pedic Hospital recovering from surgery to restore the arm which involved sewing together four major nerve sheaths. Ann arm was severed tour inches below the shoulder.

"I've never been sick," she said in an interview. "Being sick is a waste of time. I have no bad feelings. It happened. It's fixed.

That's about i.t" The Sherman Oaks girl, who said she was sure the night of the accident that her arm would be saved, credits her con fidence to a faith in God. "I have always considered myself a sort of spoiled brat because I've always gotten what I want." Anne, daughter of a television writer, was with a friend at Van Nuys- Airport who was showing her a plane. "I walked into the propeller," she says. "It was night and I couldn't see it. If you're around horses you don't walk behind them and if you know anything truck driver for the Fralleyolzinger, 82, a retired farmer, The funeral for George L.

Rothlauf, 74, of 2554 Hoard who died Friday, will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Schroeder Funeral Home, 3325 E. Washington where friends may call after 4 p.m. Monday. Mr.

Rothlauf was born in Bur lington, and was a Madison resident most of his life. He worked many years as a stock man in the Truax Field stores before retiring. He was a veteran of World War I. His wife, Margaret, died in 1970. There are no immediate survivors.

Burial will be in Roselawn Memorial Park. Hans Johnson STOUGHTON Hans 0. Johnson, 83, died Saturday (July 31, 971) in a nursing home after a long illness. A native of Norway, he came to the United States in 1910 and married Marie Schneider in 1925. He was a member of the First Lutheran Church and was employed by the Mellum-Schu-macher Sheet Metal Works, retiring in 1957.

Surviving are his wife; a son, Eugene, La Crosse; a sister and two brothers in Norway; and seven grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Skallen Home Chapel. Friends may call ot the Edison-Olson Funeral Home, after 7 p.m. Monday.

Keith Kypke Rites RICHLAND CENTER The funeral for Keith Kypke, 54, Sacramento, a former died Saturday after an apparent heart attack, will be in California. Mr. Kypke was the son of Mrs. Edward Kypke of Boaz where he formerly lived. Surviving are his wife, the former Dorothy Minett, for merly of Richland County; two sons.

Gene and Gary; a daugh ter, Sherrille; and a grandchild, all of Sacramento. Schilling Trucking Mingo Junction. Surviving are his wife, the former Lucille Neibuhr, Reeds- burg; a stepson, Carl Schuett, H21 Debra Lane, Madison; three stepdaughters, Mrs. Rob- en neoara, wu remme lt Madison; Mrs. Paul Mrs.

Clem Lacke, 5202 Hampton, and Mrs. BertjConey Weston Place, Madison; Thoralf Thorsen, 70, Former Clothier, Dies Thoralf B. Thorsen, 70, Moun tainside, N.J., formerly of Madison, died July 1 in New Jersey. Mr. Thorsen lived in Madison from 1945 to 1952 when he co- owned I a and Thorsen men's clothing store formerly on State St.

He was owner and manager of the Torco Machine Co. in Ro-selle, N.J. Surviving are his wife, the former Sigrid Stensrud; two daughters, Karen, Trenton, N.J.; and Mrs. Edward (Kristi) Shanahan, Madison; and a sister, Mrs. Henry Valtzersen, Pittsburgh, Pa.

The funeral was in the Presbyterian church, i 1 N.J., and burial was in Valhalla Cemetery, Staten Island, N.Y. tllSWOrtn nOIZinger LANCASTER Ellsworth died at home Friday (July 30, 1971) after an apparent heart attack. Surviving are his wife, the for. mer Ruth Petty; two sons, Loren, Lancaster; and Harold, Arborditae; a daughter, Mrs. Acnes Gates.

Lancaster; two and Mrs. Cliff i 1 piatteville: a brother, Ruben, Patch Grove; nine grandchil dren; and five great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m, Monday in the First Presby terian Church. Friends may call after 2 p.m. today at the O'Rourke Funeral Home.

Mrs. H. C. Horn PLATTEVILLE Mrs. H.

C. (Frances) Horn, 83, died unex- 1 Saturday (July 31, vniuui anu lis Altar Society. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. David (Gladys) Bottoms, Platteville; two sons; Kenneth, Mequon; and LeRoy, Platteville; a sister, Mrs. Nellie Beede, Santa Cruz, a brother, William Margan, Platteville; five grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren; and three great-great-grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the church. Friends may call at the Mergen Funeral Home from 4 to 9 p.m. Monday. The parish rosary will be recited at 8 p.m.

Monday. Everett Hansen FOX LAKE Everett Han-1 sen, 78, died Thursday (July 29, 1971) in a Madison hospital after a long illness. He was a bulk truck driver for Canniff Oil Co. for many years. A vptPran nf IVnrlH ffar Via stat planes you don't walk intoipl ic bv tnree times- That Tinker, Janesvilie; his mother, Mrs.

Viola Kenoe, Plattevuie; a brother, Ronald, Mineral Point; two stepbrothers, Melvin Kehoe, Prairie du Chien, and Delvin Kehoe, Platteville; three stepsisters, Mrs. Mary Hartz and Mrs. I. J. Kalar, Platteville, and Mrs.

Alice Peterson, Darlington. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Hammer Funeral Home here, where friends may call after noon on Tuesday. AAnllit Harrison BARABOO Raymond County resident who EDGERTON Miss ln a nosPuai- pt warren rfiprf Pririav she was a member of St, propellers." The friend, Davis Lasky, 18, had taxied the aircraft down the runwayy and Anne got out of the plane. Doctors say it could be two years before they can deter mine the success of the surgery.

"Nerves can grow at a rate of an inch a month," said Dr. Kenneth Head. "The nerves must regenerate. How com pletely they do so will deter mine how much movement she! will have in the arm and fin- gers. sorry to see him slip into the past.

"He's been a part of Waterloo for as long as most of us can remember." The grandson of the man who embalmed Bailey said he made 54, died Friday (July 30, 1971) of an apparent heart attack while visiting friends at Logan-ville. A lifelong Baraboo resident, he worked ot the Badger Army Ammunition Plant for the past 20 years. He was a veteran of World War II and a member of the vfw, and the Elks Surviving are a son, Don, La Crosse; a daughter, Mrs. James Kling, Fall Creek; two brothers, George, Baraboo; and Theodore, Portage; seven sisters, Mrs. Frank Pings, Mrs.

Alice a and Mrs. Calvin Bergner, all of Baraboo; Mrs. Emma Bazzill, Lake Delton; Mrs. Ralph Sutfin, Mrs. Edward Epenbach, Evansville; and Mrs Charles Norris, Portage; and two grandsons.

The funeral will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Redlin-Scheible Funeral Home, where friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Mon day. Mrs. Robert Gasser BARABOO Mrs.

Robert W. Gasser, 78, died Friday (July 30, 1971) in a hospital after a long illness Mrs. Schuetz MIDDLETON Mrs. Inga-borg M. Schuetz, 62, of 7021 Hubbard died Saturday (July 31, 1971) in a Madison hospital after a long illness.

A native of Stoughton, the former Ingaborg Ustad lived in Middleton for the past 45 years. Her husband, Erwin, died in 1952. She was a member of St. Luke's Lutheran Church, Mid-! dleton. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs.

Allie Roth, Waunakee; Mrs. Roy i Spring Green; Mrs. Kenneth Cripe, Middleton; and Janet, Middle-ton; five sons, Leslie, Mc-Farland; Robert, Colorado Springs, Paul and Don ald, both of Middleton; and John, Waunakee; two brothers, John, Stoughton; and Donald, Middleton; five sisters, Mrs. Herman Arneson, Stoughton; Mrs. Nancy Mueller, Lake Del-ton; Mrs.

Louis Stolen, Stoughton; and Mrs. Harvey Buss, Wa tertown; and Jeanette, Chicago; 33 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in the church Burial will be in Middleton Junction Cemetery, Friends may call after 4 p.m. Monday at the Gruber Funeral Home, 7032 Elmwood Ave.

Walter Accola BARABOO Walter D. Ac- cola, 69, was dead on arrival Friday (July 30, 1971) at a Bar aboo hospital after an apparent heart attack. He was a lifelong Sauk County resident and a member of the Church of Christ Scientist, the Sauk County Law Enforcement and the Baraboo Elks Club. He was a retired police dis patcher for the Sauk County Sheriff's Dept. Surviving are his wife, the former Verna Crocker; a son, Thomas Reedsburg; three brothers, Edwin, Clam Lake; Earl, Miss Gladys Accola, Clearwater, and Mrs.

Lilah, Murphy, Prairie du Sac; and two grandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Monday in the Hanson Funeral Home, Baraboo. There will be no visitation. The family suggested memorials to the Heart Fund.

Martin Thormodseth DeFOREST Martin O. Thormodseth, 67, died in a hospital Saturday (July 31, 1971) after a heart attack at home. He was a retired laborer for University Farms. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Mina Thormodseth, Lodi; and a sister, Mrs.

Clifford Cum-mings, Portage. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Monday in the Edwardson Funeral Home, where friends may call after 4 p.m. today. Bill Bailey Goes to Grave 72 Years After His Death WATERLOO.

N. Y. (UPI) George (Bill) Bailey, an itinerant farmhand, was buried Friday, 72 years, four months, and seven days after he died of apoplexy. Bill Bailey had lain on a table in a barn behind the Genung Funeral Home, covered only by a loincloth, since he was embalmed. Since 1899 Bill Bailey served as a demonstration of arterial embalming.

It was thought he was the first person to be (July 30, 1971) in a hnnital. after an illness. She worked for many years at the Edgerton Tobacco Warehouses. She was a member of Central Lutheran Church and its Martha Circle, a charter member of the American Legion Auxiliary, and a member of the Service Star. Surviving are two i Mrs.

Fred Lipke and Mrs. Elmer Thronson, Edgerton. The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. Monday in the church. Friends may call after 4 p.m.

today at the Ellingson Funeral Home, where the Legion Auxiliary will hold services at 7 tonight. Mrs. Fern LaDue SPARTA Mrs. Fern 58, died Friday (July 30, 1971) at home after an illness. The former Fern Olson was born in Sparta and was married to Spencer LaDue in 1930.

Mr. LaDue died in 1967. Surviving are seven Mrs. Leonard Meltz, Sparta; Mrs. Jackie Walls, Mrs.

Kenneth Garves, Mrs. Gary Wood-worth, and Mrs. Daniel Mars-den, all of Janesvilie; Jean-nette, Madison; and Margaret, at home; three sons, Spencer An East Pakistani who 'recently resigned from the staff of Pakistan's embassy in Washington has warned that as many as 15 million Bengalis may die of starvation as a result of the Pakistani civil war. Abulmaal A. Muhith, a for mer economic counselor in the Pakistani embassy and a one time deputy secretary of the cabinet under Pakistani President Yahya Khan, said in a television program broadcast today that a breadkown of internal transportation in East Pakistan and a smaller-than-usual har vest could result in mass starvation.

MUHITH said, "In East Paki stan today, the extent of human misery is simply incomprehen sible, leaving aside the death roll and destruction of property on account of armed strife. The specter of famine is horrifying. Total disruption of the commu nication network, coupled with the gripping sense of terror, virtually has halted all economic activies and movement of food, grains, and other necessities." Muhith said a famine in 1943, caused by dislocation during World War II, took a toll of between 2.5 and 5 million lives. "This time," he said, "the death toll is going to be multi means between 7.5 and 15 mil lion people people will starve within the next three months." MUHITH added, "Instead of guaranteeing the security of life and property of its citizens, tha government of Pakistan has made the fact of staying alive the greatest luxury in East Pak istan. "Atrocities that this government is committing in East Pakistan, the frenzv with which 11 out ot me LUU" 11 ana ine suppression that it is making of its dissent in both wings of the country not only forfeit the right of the government to a place in a civilized world but also make it responsible for dismemberment of the country." Little Progress in Speer Murder Case Reported Police reported little progress Saturday in the search for the murderer of Dr.

Thomas A. Speer, who was killed Wednesday night in a parking lot of the Qaulity Motel, 4916 E. Broadway. City detectives dispatched a nation-wide bulletin Sntnrrfaw tion on a possible suspect who reportedly resembles the description of the gunman. Lt.

David Baggot indicated the bulletin was a routine information check. The suspect is described as a white man, about 6-feet tall, 150 pounds, with blond or light brown hair possibly waved in front, and clean shaven with no glasses. He was reported driving a 1968 or 1969 gold or yellow, two-door hardtop Chevrolet. Dr. Speer was killed with two shots from a .25 caliber handgun by a man who was apparently waiting in a parked car as Speer started to enter a side door to his motel room.

255-0344 administration and accounting from the Madison Area 1 echni- cal( College, he had worked for the'state for two years. He was born in Roxbury and married Marie Haller of Plain in 1956. He was a member of St. Bernard's Catholic Church here, the Knights of Columbus Council No. 3099 of Sauk City, and was active in the Middleton Little League baseball program.

Surviving are a a Diane, and three sons, Greg. Kevin, and Eric, all at home: his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jotin Schwartz. Roxbury; three sis-; ters.

Mrs. Duane Loy, Sauk; City; Mrs. Ralph Nachreiner, Portage; and Mrs. LeRoy Acker, Middleton; and three brothers. Klement, Waunakee; Hubert, Middleton; and Gerard, Kenosha.

The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Mnnav the churcn. isunai will be in the church cemetery Friends may call after 4 p.m, nrfav at the Gruber Funeral Home, 7432 Elmwooa where the parish rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. and the Knights of Columbus rosary at 8:30 p.m. The family suggested metm rials to the University of Wis consin Medical School for gas trointestinal and liver disease research.

Mrs. Lawrence user BAGLEY Mrs. Lawrence Huser, 41, rural Bagley, died Saturday (July 31, 1971) in a home after an illness. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Susan and Mary Regina, and two sons, Henry and William, at home; three sisters, Mrs. Robert Breen, Whea-ton, Mrs.

Jeanie Dohse, Wisconsin Rapids; and Mrs. James Malecki, New Ulm, and two brothers, David Kreig, Oregon; and Allen, Prairie du Chien. The funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday in St. John's Cath olic Church, Patch Grove.

Friends may call after 2 p.m. today at the Metcalf-Kuenster Funeral Home, Bioomington, where the rosary will be said at 8 tonight. The a i 1 suggested that flowers be omitted and that memorials be made. Mrs. Wuestenberg WATERTOWN Mrs.

Albert Wuestenberg, 83, died Friday July 30, 1971) in a nursing home after an illness. The former Adina Oestreich lived in Watertown for 42 years. She was married on May 9. 1906. Mr.

Wuestenberg died on Nov. 21, 1958. She was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.

Victor Raether and Mrs.1 Roy Godfroy, Watertown; three sons, George and Elmer, Water-i town; and Edwin, Clyman; 16 grandchildren; and 35 greatgrandchildren. The funeral will be at 2 p.m.j Monday in the church. Friends! may call at the Hafemeisterj Funeral Home from 3 to 9 p.m. today and until 10 a.m. Monday.

Walter von Gnechten Walter D. von Gnechten, 47, of 2018 Prairie died Saturday (July 31, 1971) in a hospital after a brief illness. A Madison resident for the past nine years, he was an audi tor for the State Dept. of Reve nue. He was a veteran of World War II and a member of St.

Ra phael Cathedral parish. Surviving are his wife, Geral dine; two sons, Jeffery and Todd, both at home; and three sisters, Mrs. Ivan Adler, Elk-horn; Mrs. Robert Keyes, Pipe stone. Minn and Mrs.

John LaMoncle, Chicago. 111. The funeral will be at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in the cathedral. Friends may call after 4 p.m.

Monday at the Joyce Funeral Home, 5701 Odana where the rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Monday. Burial will be in Forest Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Thomas Lysne GAYS MILLS Mrs.

Thomas Lysne, 64. Mt. Sterling, died Friday (July 31. 1971) in a hos pital after an illness. The former Helen Rolfe was a member of the Mt.

Sterling Lu-t a Church, where she taught Sunday school for several years. Surviving are her husband: a son, Duane. and a sister, Mrs. Arthur Lysne. Mt.

Sterling: and three grandchildren. xne tunerai win De at p.m. Monday in the church. Friends may call after 2 p.m. today at the Martin Funeral Home.

"ii.arternoon asking for informa- The former Louise said that as a little girl she thA Baraboo; and a. i an' was a scientific experiment," said John Genung. "and after 72 years I think it's been proven successful. There was no reason to keep him around any longer. GENUNG 'S grandfather, Charles Genung, conducted experiments in th 1390s to find an efficient and practical method of embalming.

It was he who developed the arterial embalming method used on Bailey. Bill Bailey was buried in the Genung family plot at Maple Grove cemetery. Fifty feet away lies the grave of Charles Genung. "It seemed like the only Christian thing to do," John Genung said. "After all, this man touched four generations of my family." me utxisiun to oury mm.

South Beloit, Gerald, Madison: andn Glenn. ailHarOld Crawford was a Sauk County school teacher for several years. She was a member of the Emanuel United Methodist Church. Surviving are her husband: two sons, Melvin, Baraboo; and William, McLean, a daugh ter, Elaine, New York, N.Y.; two sisters, Miss Hattie Reh- bein, Baraboo; and Mrs. Edwin Kindschi, Prairie du Sac; two brothers, Rudolph Rehbein, Grosse Tsle, and Ernest Kehbein, Baraboo; and seven grandchildren.

The funeral will be at 2 p.m. Monday in the church. Friends may call at the Redlin-Scheible Funeral Home from 7 to 9 tonight. BLAST HURTS SIX SAIGON ib A small explosive charge was detonated in the doorway of a Saigon news paper Friday night. It wounded six Vietnamese civilians, including two children.

auu nit vvuuu iroi i udi- racks, No. 2449. Surviving are two brothers. Clarence and Warren, both of Phoenix, Ariz. The funeral will be at 2 p.m.

Tuesday in the Kratz Funeral Home, where friends may call after 3 p.m. Monday and until time of services Tuesday. STOUGHTON Harold F. Crawford, 65, died unexpectedly at home Saturday (July 31, 1971). He was a salesman for Thos.

Oscar and Son Ford garage for more than 25 years. He married Borghild Trulson in 1928. Surviving is his wife. The funeral will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Skaalen Home Chapel.

Friends may call after 7 p.m. Monday at the Edison-Ol- son Funeral Home. home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Olson, Sparta; two sisters, Mrs.

a i Panek and Mrs. Harlan Gilbert-son, both of Sparta; two brothers. Spencer and Harley, both of Sparta; and 17 grandchildren. The funeral will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in St.

Patrick's Catholic Church. Friends may call after 2 p.m. Monday at the Rob ert Page Funeral Home, where the rosary will be recited at 4 and 8 p.m. I I TODAY l2to 5 P.My jjJW embalmed exclusively with arterial injections. THIRTY PERSONS gathered for a brief service at the funeral home, but only one shed a tear for Bill Bailey.

Mrs. Arvilla Warner was the only mourner who said she remembered Bai ley when he was alive. Mrs. Warner, now in her late knew Bailey as a big man who used to do odd jobs for farmers in this portion of the Finger Lakes region. When he died, Bailey was said to be 6-feet-2 and weighed 200 pounds.

But the ashen body buried Friday weighed only 48 pounds and measured 5-feet-ll. BILL BAILEY was dressed in a gray suit, a white shirt, and a tie. His face was blackened by 72 years of dust which settled on his body as long as he was on exhibit. On a 460 persons passed by the walnut-finished casket in which he lay for one last look at a man who died be fore most of them were born. Mrs.

Betty Auten, Waterloo, a newspaper woman, sent a sym pathy card. Mrs. Auten said she was glad Bill Bailey finally was given a good ana decent Dur ial," but, she said, she was Farm Units Push Dairy Promotion Two of Wisconsin's major general farm organizations have agreed that state dairy farmers should push for dairy promotion and research through the Milk Advertising and Promotion Program (MAPP). Gilbert Greenwood, i of the Wisconsin Farmers Union, and Neeuan Nelson, Argyle, president of the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation, Saturday announced the unprecedented meeting and statement of agreement. An estimated 59,000 Wisconsin dairy farmers have one month left in which to vote for the $3.5 million a year program that would provide mandatory farmer support for promotion and research.

Nelson and Rohde agreed that the MAPP proposal was essential for Wisconsin's image as the number one dairy state. "In addition, it is an attempt to strengthen markets for milk used for manufactured dairy products," the statement said. The two farm leaders noted the decline in per capita con sumption of dairy products and i the growing share of the dairy markst that's being taken over by substitutes. U.S. Wins UN-Pakistan OK New York Times Exclusive Visit our huge Vi acre store and see what we mean by uBig City Selections-Small Town Prices, ANNUAL SEALY SUMMER SALE NOW IN PROGRESS predominantly composed of Pa-than and Punjari troops from West Pakistan to intervene in the predominantly Bengali Eastern province and suppress widespread demands there for political autonomy.

Since then, the army's actions have led to widespread loss of life, property, damage, economic dislocation, and the flight of an estimated 7 million refugees into adjoining India. One official on Saturday described the agreement of Thant and of Yahya to the U.S.-spon-sored proposals for a UN "presence" in East Pakiston as "the only ray of sunshine in an otherwise damned gloomy situation." Pakistan's agreement to a semi-permanent civilian force in East Pakistan is said to have been inspired largely by unremitting unpublicized U.S. pressure on Yahya. In recent years, the U.S. has contrib-u annually approximately $200 million of the $450 million in economic aid funnelled to Pakistan each year by an international consortium headed by the World Bank.

By BENJAMIN WELLES (c) N.Y. Times News Service WASHINGTON The United States government, working behind the scenes, has won agreement from Pakistan and the United Nations for the stationing under UN auspices of a group of 153 civilian relief and rehabilitation experts in East Pakistan, U.S. officials said Saturday. Moreoever, the officials said, the U.S. has notified Thant.

UN secretary-general, that it will contribute $1 million at once as an initial payment to help the UN group to organize, obtain equipment, and fan out across war-torn East Pakistan. THE UN STAFF will include 73 "monitors" who will be stationed at four area offices Dacca. Chittagong. Rajshani, and Khu'na and at 69 other spots. Each monitor will be linked by radio with the group's headquarters in Dacca.

"The presence of 73 UN monitors, each reporting on conditions in his area, may cool off passions and damp down mill- tary reprisals," one informant said. Informants stressed that the UN force will concern itself primarily with helping the East Pakiston authorities alleviate the threat of starvation and dis-e a and with rehabilitating homes and shelters for millions who have either fled into the countryside or whose homes have been wrecked. They also will help Pakistan restore communications and remobilize the province's private fleet of 40,000 river boats and 10,000 trucks. "The UN itself won't operate anything but it will provide coaching and technical assistance and help restore confidence in the East Pakistani administration," said one informant. ON MAR.

25. President Agh Mohammad Yahya Khan or dered the Pakistani army MIL FURNITURE COilPAfJY Ridgeway, Wisconsin Drive out Rts. 18 and 151 Madison Phone.

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