seaway s will graduate traffic miner;...

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Al I \ I v ~ SUNDAY, JUNE 16 PAGE THIRTEEN SEAWAY TRAFFIC . FRIDAY, JUNE 7 Upbound — Manchester City, Britain, 502; Transiniand, Can ada, 251; Eugene W. Pargny, U.S., 600; Carpathia, Germany, 301; Goderich, Canada, 537; Coastal Carrier, Canada, 256; Frank A. Sherman, Canada, 681; Sonia D. Canada, 142; John A*. Trance, Canada, 723; Mon tevideo Maru, Japan, 494; Sprucebranch, Canada, 329; Harbor Master No. 1, Canada, 50; Dot Sweep Scow No. 2, Can ada, 50; Whitefish Bay, Canada, 730; Alfred Theodor, Germany, 474; Ridgetown, Canada, 569; James Transport, Canada, 371; Helen Evans, Canada, 552; Eagleseliffe Hall, Canada, 259. Downbound — Westdale,Can ada. 569; Wheatking, Canada, 556; Shelter Bay, Canada, 552; Sirefjell, Norway, 355; Red Wing, Canada, 730; Hildagard Doernkamp, Germany, 371; Constantia, Germany, 496; Hil da Marianne, Canada, 730; Hud son Transport, Canada, 356; Thomas W. Lamont, U.S., 640; Aristidis, Greece, 398; Silver Isle, Canada, 730; French Riv er, Canada, 404; Lachinedoc, Canada, 252; Lozan, Greece, 340. SATURDAY, JUNE 8 Upbound — Mathewston, Can ada, 550: Canadoc, Canada, 602; Naumburg, Germany, 302; Tex aco Mississippi, U.S., 624; Es kimo, Canada, 360; Transontar- io, Germany, 430: Paterson, Canada, 574; Jalakiriti. India, 502; Elmdale, Canada, 464; R. Bruce Angus, Canada, 620: Er win Schroefer, Germany, 335; Cape Breton Miner, Canada, 682; Las Minas, Liberia, 543; Montrealais, Canada, 730; Con- gar, Canada. 256. Downbound — Halifax, Cana da, 445: Quebecois, Canada, 730; Menihek Lake, Canada, 715; Benjamin Fairless, U.S., 640; J. N. McWatters. Canada, 730: Northern Venture, Canada, 730; Atlantic Maru, Japan, 493; Imp. Cnllingvvnod, Canada. 300; Labra Doc, Canada. 315. Pri vate Launch. Canada. 3.5- Sim- cne, Canada. 730; Coastal Creek. Canada. 258: Ashcroft, Canada, 560; A. S, Glnrsbren- ner. Canada, 730. SUNDAY. JUNE 9 Upbound — Mantacloc, Cana da, 608: Ufvik, Norway, 490; Georgian Bay. Canada, 620; Hudson Transport, Canada. 356; IJ. -hinednc. Canada. 252: Park- dale, Canada. 604; Frifrc. Nor way. 314: Ravnangor. Norway, 476: Pointe Noire, Canada, 600; Jean L. D., France, 454: French River. Canada. 404; Frontenac, Canada, 730; LeiniU De Lille, Canada, 102: Eva. Canada, 160; Halifax, Canada, 445: Sarania- doe, Canada, 253. Downbound — A. S Gloss- brenner, Canada, 730: Maple- ciiffe Hall. Canada. 730. Coastal Carrier. Canada. 260: Cecilien- ne, Canada, 170: Jos. Simard, Canada, 412; Silverweir. Brit ain, 5n0; Sprucebranch, Canada, 3^i). Comeadoc. Canada. 730; Liquilassie. Canada, 366- Holm- side, Britain, 396; Seaway Queen, Canada. 717; Dimitris N Germany. 348; English River. Canada, 404: Transiniand, Can ada. 25!; Bari, Germanv. 335; Kristin Brovig, Norwav, 527. THURSDAY, JUNE 13 Upbound — Shelter Bay, Can ada, 552; Moordrecht, Holland, 575; Martha Hindman, Canada, 545; Frankquelin, Canada, 349; Montreal City, Britain, 440; Sil ver Isle, Canada, 730; Eglan- time, France, 645; Innstein, Germanv, 392; Timna, Israel, 676; J. N. McWatters, Canada, 7,30; Piran, Yugoslavia, 519; Private Launch 1. Canada, 50; Roonagh Head, Ireland, 455; Sirius, Germany, 295; Michael L, Liberia, 551; Jean Schneider, France, 567. Downbound — Alfredo Rpri- ma", Italy, 580; Erwin Schroed- er,: Germany, 335; Coastal Car rier, Canada, 256; Petite Her- mine, Canada, 730; Prins Phil ips! Willem, Holland, 435; Sus- antle Reith, Germany, 290; Ern est Mittman, Germany, 399; Clio, Germany. 321; Maj Ragne, Sweden, 374; Huson Transport, Canada, 356; Richelieu, Canada, 730; Surrey Trader, Britain, Golden Hind, Canada, 621, Postal Creek, Canada, 258: 5*83 '; Toronto City, Britain, 464; Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, Can ada, 500: Coniscliffe Hall, Can ada, 259; Texaco Mississippi, U.S., 624. s Will Graduate miner; Hopes VIDEO TAPING—Teaching intern Richard McNamara, standing ait right, a graduate student in The State Uni versity College at Potsdam’s prospective teacher fiHmv- slnp program, has had movements recorded on video tape as he conducts chemistry class at Potsdam Central School. Doing th e taping is William Lewkowitz, second from left, Potsdam Central chemistry teacher, as Dr. Paul Merritt ot the college s chemistry faculty observes. BOCA RATON, Fla. (APi —• Edith Stern, genius and teen- by an 11 or 12 year old. Each , Edith Stern graduates from col- ager, coexists with the forces of student read his essay to the jlege this summer, seven years ,her life, learning and growing class, which then judged the early, a prodigy whose mind .up faster than other people have level of understanding. When takes her to the nether regions jto. or can. , Edith read hers, the class crit- of mathematics, who can't, “it shakes them up some- ics pronounced it “ too ad- remember ever being unable to u wh [ -nt s, ^ and jvanced too hard to under- read. ; . b ,, t .stand. For 12-year-old Edith, But for genius, time is an iro- °UF a comic book, she says :trying to write for 12-year-olds ny. Edith grew up hiding her w’ilh a rare smile, “and then;and keep her own age a secret, ;youth from her classmates and .turn around and buy a pack of Tt was frustrating and awkward. Ifriends, found herself in adoles-1 cigarettes.” The teacher, who knew her age, cence when all about her were 1 “I can pass for my own a g e,,sat grinning, and Edith kept losing theirs, closed the door of |or for 21," she says, and so she;saying to herself. "Please don't her room to the intolerance of does. She faces the skin and itell. Please, don’t tell.” older ideas. Now, just 15 years ,weight problems of adolescence,i Bocaraton, Gal. 2 Run-of-the old, she lives a private, some- but iearns io use eye makeup I mil! genius te: 11. times lonely compromise be-,from her roommates. She wears , She still remembers the first !tween the world her mind de- her dark, brown hair long, de- time she admitted her age. “I mands, and the world her age .spite her lather’s insistence th a t!was in the sixth grade. Every- deerees. it isn’t heart. She looks, by her one was 12 years old. I had a In the academic world. Edith , measure, like a person of "inde-jfriend who was very good in 'finished grammar school m four terminate age," and so she is. IEnglish. I told her my age was years, skipped high school alto- It seems it's always been that |9, but she wouldn’t believe me. getlier. She begins a teaching ,way. Because of her innate bril- .'After keeping my age a secret fellowship this fall at Michigan Jiance, Edith has always been I for so long, I found myself Suite University, hopes for her :out of step with the slower-'trying to prove I really was 9. I doctorate before she is IS Even I paced world around her. :finally had to get my birth cer- now she practices the dialogue; Her mother, Bella, taught her itificate." of teaching algebra to students1 the alphabet and how to recog-! For all her ability, Edith's i several years her senior. T'nejnize some short words before I father, Aaron, a former inmate irony is not lost on Edith who :she was 2. She was reading my-;of a Nazi concentration camp, a 1 has a friend just starting as a jthology before she started I Hebrew teacher and scholar, high school instructor. "She's |school. Edith stepped into the!claims some of the credit for teaching my age group this'standard educational system j her progress. He and his wife year,” Edith says softly. "Next with kindergarten at 5, but it |came to the United States in season I'll be teaching hers." was always an unequal match. 11949. Suffering from cancer of Edith's other world escapes She was out of grammar school!the jawbone, he underwent sur- time and fact, visits fancy. It is and into junior high school at 9. igery at the Mayo Clime. He also a three-foot stack of comic when all her cohorts were 12.1 studied at New York's Brooklyn books featuring Spiderman and .She started junior college at 12. j College, where, he says, he kindred heroes, a Friday night when everyone else was 18 or learned his degree in 13 months, date with the televised imerpia- older. |He created in his home a total netary odyssey nf "Star Trek." Her age was an embarrass-'teaching environment: reading, a Saturday morning excursion ment. and so she kept it a se- [mathematics, classical music, with the televised adventures of eret, or tried to. In her first'discussion and debate, chess, Spiderman again, and a cartoon year at Dade County Junior Col-;whatever he could glean from satire called "George of the iege. Miami, she had to write an , the world’s literature and ex- explainmg a poem in jperienee. Edith’s days, from the terms that could be understood j time she cast aside her dolls, were filled with learning. Meanwhile, the family—which D ,also includes a son, David 8,— .shuttled back and forth between s jNew York, Indiana, Illinois and 4'ns\<r* ; Florida with Stern teaching in jvarious colleges. themselves don’t 1 ”I can’t remember anyplace we went where we didn t go to iv.iv,-. swiHfH aim..«t imnnt the library,” Edith recalls. "I ur. ia . wirled aim ... unn t photographed. Women aie per-1was onlv allowed to take out as iced around the hermit monks . x . L . * “ • “u " cu lu u Wirli Oplt nutted to visit the monastery, many books as I could carry. hut not to stav there. ' i But- witb each book, the gulf They live in a remote mnnas- ' between Edith and the public tcry wedged into the elil'Lide of The father nf the monastery, |school system increased. Her a lion-foot gorge in the desolate who is called St. George, has,own mentalability was tar hills amund Jericho. been living in a cave tor 19 The blue dorncs and pale vears He descends once a adobe huts oi the Greek Ortho- ’week t0 prav ln the tim chapel,“ ““““&• »*« ‘Yu,,u .**• * I hv W , , . w ; C8SS Wlt.h n0.thlT1§ to..do- SklP’ APi Three Midd'e East mind visitors, but refuse to be above those she studied with, and buttressed by her home framing, she found herself in ping grades didn’t really help. vs> r - TEACHING EVALUATION — Richard McNamara, sec ond from left, and other students and laculty analyze video tape for a chemistry class conducted by McNa mara al Potsdam Central School as a graduate intern aval.. is studying in The State University College's prospective teacher fellowship program. Dr. Paul Merritt, right, pro fessor of chemistry at the college and director of the fellowship program, leads the discussion monastery of St. George decorated by frescoes and chan- were built 1.438 years ago by a te lie rs from the 6 th and 13th i„ Cvprint saint with money sup-centurv an(j smellin" of in-1 ,^tern that child psycholo- piicd by Byzantine Emperor ln ! gists warned him that the pres- Justinian. It once accommodat- sures w! firm mnnk-5 the InnI The only sound to be heard a t ;onA mnde conk Irindvmin a short Ihe monastery is the thunder of :s c b ° o1 administrators, he says aunie-ennK-nanavnian. a simrt, , , . . a - c k . f„«i he was applying would hurt Edith. Reluctant leduet to tr'ed t0 ber back- She took N Editor's note; How much do dor Dali; ici Marisol. vou remember about the news 3. The mayor of the city wa: of the world'.’ This weekly quiz I injured and seven other high the death penalty cannot auto Mass. will help you find out. if you.ranking oftieials. including the- maticully be kept off juries in score fewer than five correct city's police chief, were killed capital cases; tb i convictions of answers you had better read the when an explosion ripped the all persons currently under sen- paper a little more carefully. If building they were using for a you do eight or better, you rate military command post in; iai an “A." Jerusalem: ib Senegal; io 1. An European nation cele- Saigon, brated the Republic's 22nd 4. Dr. Jose Maria Velasco ital ease, birthday in a mood of political Ibarra was re-eiecled president available, crisis and student unrest. Hun- for the fifth time in: ml Pana- 3 Atter claiming victory in dreds of students barricaded ma: tb 1 Ecuador: ten Haiti. the California Democratic pri vates tu the main university, 5. Charging "undercutting’ mary. Sen. Robert Kennedy was campus to push reform de-by his superior, John Daly re- struck down by an assassin. His mands. A decision by the Social- signed as head of; taiNBC; ibi body was flown to New York to list Central Committee to pull Voice of America; (cl CIA. lie'in state at St. Patrick's lout of the center-left alliance j 6 . A major league record of | with the Christian Democrats jsix consecutive shutouts was set I left awry the coalition that has, by; (a) Don Drysdale; (bi Jer- ’ (governed for the past four and a ry Koosman; ic 1 Steve Carlton, half years. The country current-, 7. The Republicans chose as ly searching for a newgovern-. the permanent chairman of ment is: iai Sweden; ib Portu-.their convention which opens gal: 10 Italy. ;Aug. 5 in Miami Beach: <a 1 2. An artist knownfor his:Gov. Daniel J. Evans of Wash- Ipop contributions to American Iington; ibi Rep. Gerald R. Ford films, sculpture and painting of Michigan; i d Sen. Edward I was wounded in his studio. 1-Ie I Brooke of Mass. is: (al Andy Warhol; (b) Salva-| 8 . The Supreme Court ruled eonK-nanayman. a xii ..... smiling Greek with snwv white ''’ater, down a stone aqueau measnrp her in 1 -nir who nrofcrs to remain the CItT of Jericho. 11 miles to ^fY m 1961 t(! me.asure hei in- n.ur, unn prut is m lemain telhgenee. registering scores of anon\ mous tiL 154. pmH 901 hut experts s&id ,154 and 201. but About 3 ihi were slaughtered bv The monks have livedunder probably no test could accurate- lthat: ia >personsexpressing Cathedral, following which he an invading Persian army in 614 j™r_differentrulers in the past'lyguage her mentalability - conscientious scruples against wasburied at: fa*Hyannisport. A.P. Gradually the rest drifted 5eaI‘s- Asks away and main. These work ui nearby Jericho, in orange groves, and live in Aldington National Cemetery: im New York City. 10. In order to protect the value of the franc. France; ta tence of death must be set closeddown the Paris stnck- aside; ici persons against the market indefinitely: ib) im- death penalty will mily be per- posed an exit tax on allforeign milted to serve as jurors in cap- tourists amounting to 825 a if no other jurors are hend; i et borrowed §745 million . from the International Morie- mostly school children on tour tarv Fund. . ' QUIZ ANSWERS 2 a 5. b 60 years, and they say none of Both her parents say that the today onlv edit re- them has ever t r i e c i interfere;disparity between Edith and her with their uneventful way of classmates gave Edith a snobb- life. .ish. know-it-all attitude, and an iacid wit to keep fellow students . . fo ,.,.p ■, “Nobody make trouble here,” !at a distance. ernes gouged out of the ditfside muttered the guide, who hasn’t Edith says only, "I felt sorry above the monastery iet-t tjje monastery for eight'at a distance. Here they sleep, meditate and years_ -can’t even get here " j Edith says only, “I felt sorry ------------------------------ 'for them, because thev couldn’t Only a handtul ot visitors- n ..,i do the things I could do." Sales of tlu d whole m lk, DeSpite stern's continuing in- -make the 4 a-minute «-alk dropped over the country lasli(erest_ Edjth nmv charts her down the narrow donkey path to year, the National Dairy Cmm- i. e 4. b 7, b 3. c 6 , a 9. b 10.C Seaway Festival Parade e Bigger, Better BIT OF NATURE SAVED GLENIEW, 111. (AP) - In stead of becoming part of a miniature golf course and driv ing range, a tract of land con sidered to be the Chicago area’s last bit of virgin prairie will be maintained as a “living nature laboratory" by the University of Illinois. The 5.14-acre tract, known as the Peacock Prairie and located southwest of here, was saved from commercialism when it was purchased from a Chicago rp&I estate dealer with match ing funds from the U.S. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation and the Chicago Community Trust. *29 ; , Elwood A. Cameron, Float lever seen in the North Country jChairman of this year's Seaway; is beginning to take shape. The festival Parade, has issued a 1 date of this year’s Seaway Fes- special appeal to all civic, fra- tival Parade is July 27th. iternal, service clubs, and to alii Thp floafg jn thfe pararfe have ibusiness establishments and in- |jncrease(j jn both number and jdustries to contact him in re- j qUanty every year and with this ! S31’1,to entering a Float in this ,bejng Centennial year, we ex- Iyears Parade. pect an even grea(;ei. increase. i c Barf 4 e’„^° o? ‘le^d 01li We are sure vou will want to :Saturday, July 27, will carry out1 , , „ - ,, , , jthe general theme of “Centen-Ibe a Part ot l:hls eventbJ' bu,ld- ]nial Salute,” in cooperation with mg and entering a float m this Ogdensburg’s entries: first and parade. The theme of the par- second prizes for Theme floats; ade is "Centennial Salute.” one for the best commercial There will be two trophies — float, and one for the best in ;first and second for Theme the miscellaneous category. lf, , , , _ • The Ninth Annual Ogdens- |{1 ,oats„.: °.ne troPhy foil C0Pam . er: burg International Seawav Fes-if, floats, and one liophy foi tival, to open Thursday evening, Ith? best 91 ,th® nuscfllaneous ‘ July 25, and to run through cstegoi y. It is hoped there will Sunday, July 28, promises to be 0 praes also. the biggest and best to date. All citizens are urgently asked to be a part of this great civic undertaking. Mr. Cameron's letter follows: Dear Friend, The biggest and best parade Trees weakened by drought, especially the slow-growing va rieties such as beech, sugar ma-, pie, and white oak, require! from three to four years to re-j gain normal growth patterns, I NEW JAYCEE OFFICERS - The Ogdensburg Jayeees held their Installation Banquet at the Lakeside Inn on the Black Lake Road Thursday night. Pictured, left to right, James White, External Vice-President; Roger Cohn of Canton, District President of the N. Y State Jayeees who was installing officer; Walter Aubertine, President-elect; William Vielhauer, Internal Vice-Presi- , , „ , , .own wav. takes courses he can’t the monastery. This path can be vil reports, but sales ot ilu dJunderstan(L Time tends to in_ reached only with a strong car, non- at and Iwj-hh. milL crease the distance, via an ancient, bumpv. pot- reacheda record 39.„ pints peri The Jeap from junior high to holed, Roman-built road. capita. jcoliege brought Edith into her own intellectual environment at jlast. Despite greater age differ- ' .ences. she also found it easier to #jmake friends. Said one class- •? . mate. “She scared me a little at j;first, She tests you, but once . you understand that, you get I along fine," Anothe classmate sent Edith I a comic postcard w h i c h she likes and saves. It says, “De bt spite a tremendous amount of rr > ' 8 ability, experience, efficiency and foresight, deep down I’m no different than any other run-af- tlie-mill genius.” This summer, Edith gradu ates from Florida Atlantic Uni versity, a new senior college in the state system at Boca Raton, She rooms there in a two-bed room, study-room suite with three other girls. For Edith, mathematics has become the real challenge. “When I became a math ma jor, I had to start working,” she says. Mathematics is something you get involved with. When you do math, you're preparing your self for something. I love to solve problems. I suppose its like some people watching a murder mystery. You’ve got to find out the answer.” To Edith, her future at Michi gan State is in a sense a visit to yet another galaxy. She looks forward to the independence, to getting a driver's license if she can, at 15, under Michigan law. If she can’t, she will grudgingly yield to the fact of being defeat ed again by her own age, but she still has plans for the facul ty parking place she is entitled to on campus. “I thought I’d just put up a lit tle but there,” she said with a wry smile, “ and use it as a place to iiieep my books.” dent. Rear row: James Morrow, Treasurer-elect; James Spaulding, Immediate Past-President; Joseph McDonald, Secretary-elect: Ed Wicks, Director and Richard Fox, Director. Assemblyman Edward J. Keenan and Mayor John F. Byrnes were guests at the installation. (Jack Wood Photo)

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Page 1: SEAWAY s Will Graduate TRAFFIC miner; Hopesnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn90066433/1968-06-16/ed-1/seq-13.pdf · of teaching algebra to students1 the alphabet and how to ... Spiderman

Al I \ I v ~ SUNDAY, JUN E 16 PA G E THIRTEEN

SEAWAYTRAFFIC

. FRIDAY, JUNE 7Upbound — Manchester City,

Britain, 502; Transiniand, Can­ada, 251; Eugene W. Pargny, U.S., 600; Carpathia, Germany, 301; Goderich, Canada, 537; Coastal Carrier, Canada, 256; Frank A. Sherman, Canada, 681; Sonia D. Canada, 142; John A*. Trance, Canada, 723; Mon­tevideo Maru, Japan, 494; Sprucebranch, Canada, 329;Harbor Master No. 1, Canada, 50; Dot Sweep Scow No. 2, Can­ada, 50; Whitefish Bay, Canada, 730; Alfred Theodor, Germany, 474; Ridgetown, Canada, 569; J a m e s Transport, Canada, 371; Helen Evans, Canada, 552;Eagleseliffe Hall, Canada, 259.

Downbound — Westdale,Can­ada. 569; Wheatking, Canada, 556; Shelter Bay, Canada, 552; Sirefjell, Norway, 355; RedWing, Canada, 730; Hildagard Doernkamp, Germany, 371; Constantia, Germany, 496; Hil­da Marianne, Canada, 730; Hud­son Transport, Canada, 356;Thomas W. Lamont, U.S., 640; Aristidis, Greece, 398; Silver Isle, Canada, 730; French Riv­er, Canada, 404; Lachinedoc, Canada, 252; Lozan, Greece, 340.

SATURDAY, JUNE 8Upbound — Mathewston, Can­

ada, 550: Canadoc, Canada, 602; Naumburg, Germany, 302; Tex­aco Mississippi, U.S., 624; Es­kimo, Canada, 360; Transontar- io, Germany, 430: Paterson, Canada, 574; Jalakiriti. India, 502; Elmdale, Canada, 464; R. Bruce Angus, Canada, 620: Er­win Schroefer, Germany, 335; Cape Breton Miner, Canada, 682; Las Minas, Liberia, 543; Montrealais, Canada, 730; Con- gar, Canada. 256.

Downbound — Halifax, Cana­da, 445: Quebecois, Canada, 730; Menihek Lake, Canada, 715; Benjamin Fairless, U.S., 640; J. N. McWatters. Canada, 730: Northern Venture, Canada, 730; Atlantic Maru, Japan, 493; Imp. Cnllingvvnod, Canada. 300; Labra Doc, Canada. 315. Pri­vate Launch. Canada. 3.5- Sim- cne, Canada. 730; Coastal Creek. Canada. 258: Ashcroft, Canada, 560; A. S, Glnrsbren- ner. Canada, 730.

SUNDAY. JUNE 9Upbound — Mantacloc, Cana­

da, 608: Ufvik, Norway, 490; Georgian Bay. Canada, 620; Hudson Transport, Canada. 356; IJ. -hinednc. Canada. 252: Park- dale, Canada. 604; Frifrc. Nor­way. 314: Ravnangor. Norway, 476: Pointe Noire, Canada, 600; Jean L. D., France, 454: French River. Canada. 404; Frontenac, Canada, 730; LeiniU De Lille, Canada, 102: Eva. Canada, 160; Halifax, Canada, 445: Sarania- doe, Canada, 253.

Downbound — A. S Gloss- brenner, Canada, 730: Maple- ciiffe Hall. Canada. 730. Coastal Carrier. Canada. 260: Cecilien- ne, Canada, 170: Jos. Simard, Canada, 412; Silverweir. Brit­ain, 5n0; Sprucebranch, Canada, 3̂ i). Comeadoc. Canada. 730; Liquilassie. Canada, 366- Holm- side, Britain, 396; Seaway Queen, Canada. 717; Dimitris N Germany. 348; English River. Canada, 404: Transiniand, Can­ada. 25!; Bari, Germanv. 335; Kristin Brovig, Norwav, 527.

THURSDAY, JUNE 13Upbound — Shelter Bay, Can­

ada, 552; Moordrecht, Holland, 575; Martha Hindman, Canada, 545; Frankquelin, Canada, 349; Montreal City, Britain, 440; Sil­ver Isle, Canada, 730; Eglan- time, France, 645; Innstein, Germanv, 392; Timna, Israel, 676; J. N. McWatters, Canada, 7,30; Piran, Yugoslavia, 519; Private Launch 1. Canada, 50; Roonagh Head, Ireland, 455; Sirius, Germany, 295; Michael L, Liberia, 551; Jean Schneider, France, 567.

Downbound — Alfredo Rpri- ma", Italy, 580; Erwin Schroed- er,: Germany, 335; Coastal Car­rier, Canada, 256; Petite Her- mine, Canada, 730; Prins Phil­ips! Willem, Holland, 435; Sus- antle Reith, Germany, 290; Ern­est Mittman, Germany, 399; Clio, Germany. 321; Maj Ragne, Sweden, 374; Huson Transport, Canada, 356; Richelieu, Canada, 730; Surrey Trader, Britain, Golden Hind, Canada, 621, Postal Creek, Canada, 258: 5*83'; Toronto City, Britain, 464; Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, Can­ada, 500: Coniscliffe Hall, Can­ada, 259; Texaco Mississippi, U.S., 624.

s Will Graduate miner; Hopes

VIDEO TAPING—Teaching intern Richard McNamara, standing ait right, a graduate student in The State Uni­versity College at Potsdam’s prospective teacher fiHmv- slnp program, has had movements recorded on video

tape as he conducts chemistry class at Potsdam Central School. Doing the taping is William Lewkowitz, second from left, Potsdam Central chemistry teacher, as Dr. Paul Merritt ot the college s chemistry faculty observes.

BOCA RATON, Fla. (APi —• Edith Stern, genius and teen- by an 11 or 12 year old. Each , Edith Stern graduates from col- ager, coexists with the forces of student read his essay to the jlege this summer, seven years ,her life, learning and growing class, which then judged the early, a prodigy whose mind . up faster than other people have level of understanding. When takes her to the nether regions j to. or can. , Edith read hers, the class crit-of mathematics, who can't, “it shakes them up some- ics pronounced it “ too ad- remember ever being unable to u wh [ -nt s, ^ and jvanced too hard to under- read. ; . b ,, t .stand. For 12-year-old Edith,

But for genius, time is an iro- °UF a comic book, she says : trying to write for 12-year-olds ny. Edith grew up hiding her w’ilh a rare smile, “and then;and keep her own age a secret,

;youth from her classmates and .turn around and buy a pack of Tt was frustrating and awkward.I friends, found herself in adoles-1 cigarettes.” The teacher, who knew her age,cence when all about her were 1 “ I can pass for my own ag e ,, sat grinning, and Edith kept losing theirs, closed the door of |or for 21," she says, and so she;saying to herself. "Please don't her room to the intolerance of does. She faces the skin and i tell. Please, don’t tell.” older ideas. Now, just 15 years , weight problems of adolescence,i Bocaraton, Gal. 2 Run-of-the old, she lives a private, some- but iearns io use eye makeup I mil! genius te: 11. times lonely compromise be-, from her roommates. She wears , She still remembers the first

!tween the world her mind de- her dark, brown hair long, de- time she admitted her age. “I mands, and the world her age .spite her lather’s insistence th a t!was in the sixth grade. Every- deerees. it isn’t heart. She looks, by h e r one w a s 12 years old. I had a

In the academic world. Edith , measure, like a person of "inde-jfriend who was very good in 'finished grammar school m four terminate age," and so she is. I English. I told her my age was years, skipped high school alto- It seems it's always been that |9, but she wouldn’t believe me. getlier. She begins a teaching ,way. Because of her innate bril- .'After keeping my age a secret fellowship this fall at Michigan Jiance, Edith has always been I for so long, I found myself Suite University, hopes for her :out of step with the slower-'trying to prove I really was 9. I doctorate before she is IS Even I paced world around her. :finally had to get my birth cer-now she practices the dialogue; Her mother, Bella, taught her itificate." of teaching algebra to students1 the alphabet and how to recog-! For all her ability, Edith's

i several years her senior. T'nejnize some short words before I father, Aaron, a former inmate irony is not lost on Edith who :she was 2. She was reading my-;of a Nazi concentration camp, a

1 has a friend just starting as a jthology before she started I Hebrew teacher and scholar, high school instructor. "She's |school. Edith stepped into the!claims some of the credit for teaching my age group this'standard educational system j her progress. He and his wife year,” Edith says softly. "Next with kindergarten at 5, but it |came to the United States in season I'll be teaching hers." was always an unequal match. 11949. Suffering from cancer of

Edith's other world escapes She was out of grammar school!the jawbone, he underwent sur- time and fact, visits fancy. It is and into junior high school at 9. igery at the Mayo Clime. He also a three-foot stack of comic when all her cohorts were 12.1 studied at New York's Brooklyn books featuring Spiderman and . She started junior college at 12. j College, where, he says, he kindred heroes, a Friday night when everyone else was 18 or learned his degree in 13 months, date with the televised imerpia- older. |He created in his home a totalnetary odyssey nf "Star Trek." Her age was an embarrass-'teaching environment: reading, a Saturday morning excursion ment. and so she kept it a se- [mathematics, classical music, with the televised adventures of eret, or tried to. In her first'discussion and debate, chess, Spiderman again, and a cartoon year at Dade County Junior Col-;whatever he could glean from satire called "George of the iege. Miami, she had to write an , the world’s literature and ex-

explainmg a poem in j perienee. Edith’s days, from the terms that could be understood j time she cast aside her dolls,

were filled with learning. Meanwhile, the family—which

D , also includes a son, David 8,—. shuttled back and forth between

• s jNew York, Indiana, Illinois and4 ' n s \ < r * ; Florida with Stern teaching in

j various colleges.themselves don’t 1 ”I can’t remember anyplace

we went where we didn t go toiv.iv,-. swiHfH aim..«t imnnt the library,” Edith recalls. "Iur. ia . wirled aim ... unn t photographed. Women aie per-1was onlv allowed to take out as iced around the hermit monks . x ‘ . L. * “ • “u " cu lu

u Wirli Oplt nutted to visit the monastery, many books as I could carry.hut not to stav there. ' i But- witb each book, the gulf

They live in a remote mnnas- ' between Edith and the publictcry wedged into the elil'Lide of The father nf the monastery, |school system increased. Her a lion-foot gorge in the desolate who is called St. George, has,own mental ability was tarhills amund Jericho. been living in a cave tor 19

The blue dorncs and pale vears He descends once a adobe huts oi the Greek Ortho- ’week t0 prav ln the tim chapel, “ ““““&• »*« ‘Yu,,u .**•

* I hv W, , . w ; C 8SS Wlt.h n0.thlT1§ to..do- SklP’

APi — Three Midd'e East mind visitors, but refuse to be

above those she studied with, and buttressed by her home framing, she found herself in

ping grades didn’t really help.vs> r -

TEACHING EVALUATION — Richard McNamara, sec­ond from left, and other students and laculty analyze video tape for a chemistry class conducted by McNa­mara al Potsdam Central School as a graduate intern

aval.. isstudying in The State University College's prospective teacher fellowship program. Dr. Paul Merritt, right, pro­fessor of chemistry at the college and director of the

fellowship program, leads the discussion

monastery of St. George decorated by frescoes and chan- were built 1.438 years ago by a te lie rs from the 6 th and 13th i„Cvprint saint with money sup-centurv an(j smellin" of in- 1 ,^tern that child psycholo- piicd by Byzantine Emperor ln ! gists warned him that the pres-Justinian. It once accommodat- suresw! firm mnnk-5 the InnI The only sound to be heard a t ; onAmnde conk Irindvmin a short Ihe monastery is the thunder of :s cb ° o1 administrators, he says aunie-ennK-nanavnian. a simrt, , ■ , . . a - c k . f„«i

he was applying would hurt Edith. Reluctant

leduet to tr'ed t0 ber back- She took

NEditor's note; How much do dor Dali; ici Marisol.

vou remember about the news 3. The mayor of the city wa:of the world'.’ This weekly quiz I injured and seven other high the death penalty cannot auto Mass.

will help you find out. if you.ranking oftieials. including the- maticully be kept off juries in score fewer than five correct city's police chief, were killed capital cases; tb i convictions of answers you had better read the when an explosion ripped the all persons currently under sen- paper a little more carefully. If building they were using for a you do eight or better, you rate military command post in; iai an “A." Jerusalem: ib Senegal; i o

1. An European nation cele- Saigon, brated the Republic's 22nd 4. Dr. Jose Maria Velasco ital ease, birthday in a mood of political Ibarra was re-eiecled president available, crisis and student unrest. Hun- for the fifth time in: ml Pana- 3 Atter claiming victory in dreds of students barricaded ma: tb 1 Ecuador: ten Haiti. the California Democratic pri­

vates tu the main university, 5. Charging "undercutting’ mary. Sen. Robert Kennedy was campus to push reform de-by his superior, John Daly re- struck down by an assassin. His mands. A decision by the Social- signed as head of; taiNBC; ibi body was flown to New York to

list Central Committee to pull Voice of America; (cl CIA. lie'in state at St. Patrick's lout of the center-left alliance j 6 . A major league record of | with the Christian Democrats j six consecutive shutouts was set I left awry the coalition that has, by; (a) Don Drysdale; (bi Jer- ’(governed for the past four and a ry Koosman; ic 1 Steve Carlton, half years. The country current-, 7. The Republicans chose asly searching for a new govern-. the permanent chairman ofment is: iai Sweden; ib Portu-.their convention which opens gal: 1 0 Italy. ;Aug. 5 in Miami Beach: <a 1

2. An artist known for his:Gov. Daniel J. Evans of Wash-Ipop contributions to American I ington; ibi Rep. Gerald R. Ford films, sculpture and painting of Michigan; i d Sen. Edward

I was wounded in his studio. 1-Ie I Brooke of Mass. is: (al Andy Warhol; (b) Salva-| 8 . The Supreme Court ruled

eonK-nanayman. a xii.....smiling Greek with snw v white ''’ater, down a stone aqueau measnrp her in1-nir who nrofcrs to remain the CItT of Jericho. 11 miles to ^fY m 1961 t(! me.asure hei in-n.ur, unn p ru t is m lemain telhgenee. registering scores ofanon\ mous tiL 154. pmH 901 hut experts s&id,154 and 201. but

About 3ihi were slaughtered bv The monks have lived under probably no test could accurate-lthat: i a > persons expressing Cathedral, following which he an invading Persian army in 614 j™r_ different rulers in the past'lyguage her mental ability

- conscientious scruples against was buried at: fa* Hyannisport. A.P. Gradually the rest drifted 5eaI‘s-

Asksaway and main.

These work ui nearby Jericho, in orange groves, and live in

Aldington National Cemetery: im New York City.

10. In order to protect the value of the franc. France; ta

tence of death must be set closed down the Paris stnck-aside; i c i persons against the market indefinitely: ib) im-death penalty will mily be per- posed an exit tax on all foreignmilted to serve as jurors in cap- tourists amounting to 825 a

if no other jurors are hend; i et borrowed §745 million .from the International Morie- mostly school children on tour tarv Fund.. ' QUIZ ANSWERS

2 a 5. b

60 years, and they say none of Both her parents say that the today onlv ed it re- them has ever t r i e c i interfere; disparity between Edith and her

’ with their uneventful way of classmates gave Edith a snobb-life. . ish. know-it-all attitude, and an

iacid wit to keep fellow students. . fo ,.,.p ■, “Nobody make trouble here,” !at a distance.

ernes gouged out of the ditfside muttered the guide, who hasn’t Edith says only, "I felt sorry above the monastery iet-t tjje monastery for eight'at a distance.

Here they sleep, meditate and years_ -can’t even get here " j Edith says only, “I felt sorry ------------------------------ 'for them, because thev couldn’t

Only a handtul ot visitors- n ..,i do the things I could do."Sales of tlu d whole m lk, DeSpite stern's continuing in-

-make the 4a-minute «-alk dropped over the country lasli(erest_ Edjth nmv charts her down the narrow donkey path to year, the National Dairy Cmm-

i. e 4. b

7, b

3. c 6 , a 9. b

10.C

Seaway Festival Parade e Bigger, Better

BIT OF NATURE SAVEDGLENIEW, 111. (AP) - In­

stead of becoming part of a miniature golf course and driv­ing range, a tract of land con­sidered to be the Chicago area’s last bit of virgin prairie will be maintained as a “living nature laboratory" by the University of Illinois.

The 5.14-acre tract, known as the Peacock Prairie and located southwest of here, was saved from commercialism when it was purchased from a Chicago rp&I estate dealer with match­ing funds from the U.S. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation and the Chicago Community Trust.

*29 ;, Elwood A. Cameron, Float lever seen in the North Country j Chairman of this year's Seaway; is beginning to take shape. The festival Parade, has issued a 1 date of this year’s Seaway Fes- special appeal to all civic, fra- tival Parade is July 27th.

iternal, service clubs, and to alii Thp floafg jn thfe pararfe have ibusiness establishments and in- |jncrease(j jn both number and jdustries to contact him in re- j qUanty every year and with this ! S31’1, to entering a Float in this , bejng Centennial year, we ex- Iyears Parade. pect an even grea(;ei. increase.

i c Barf4 e’„^° o? ‘le d̂ 01li We are sure vou will want to : Saturday, July 27, will carry out1 , , „ - ,, , ,j the general theme of “Centen-Ibe a Part ot l:hls eventbJ' bu,ld- ] nial Salute,” in cooperation with mg and entering a float m this Ogdensburg’s entries: first and parade. The theme of the par- second prizes for Theme floats; ade is "Centennial Salute.” one for the best commercial There will be two trophies — float, and one for the best in ;first and second for Theme the miscellaneous category. lf, , , , _• The Ninth Annual Ogdens- |{1,oats„.: °.ne troPhy foil C0Pam.er: burg International Seawav Fes-if, floats, and one liophy foi tival, to open Thursday evening, Ith? best 91 ,th® nuscfllaneous ‘ July 25, and to run through cstegoi y. It is hoped there will Sunday, July 28, promises to be 0 praes also.the biggest and best to date. All citizens are urgently asked to be a part of this great civic undertaking.

Mr. Cameron's letter follows: Dear Friend,

The biggest and best parade

Trees weakened by drought, especially the slow-growing va­rieties such as beech, sugar ma-, pie, and white oak, require! from three to four years to re-j gain normal growth patterns, I

NEW JAYCEE OFFICERS - The Ogdensburg Jayeees held their Installation Banquet at the Lakeside Inn on the Black Lake Road Thursday night. Pictured, left to right, James White, External Vice-President; Roger Cohn of Canton, District President of the N. Y State Jayeees who was installing officer; Walter Aubertine, President-elect; William Vielhauer, Internal Vice-Presi-

, , „ , , .own wav. takes courses he can’tthe monastery. This path can be vil reports, but sales ot ilu dJunderstan(L Time tends to in_reached only with a strong car, non- at and Iwj-hh. milL crease the distance,via an ancient, bumpv. pot- reached a record 39.„ pints peri The Jeap from junior high toholed, Roman-built road. capita. jcoliege brought Edith into her

own intellectual environment at jlast. Despite greater age differ-

' .ences. she also found it easier to # j make friends. Said one class- •?. mate. “She scared me a little at j;first, She tests you, but once . you understand that, you get I along fine,"

Anothe classmate sent Edith I a comic postcard w h i c h she likes and saves. It says, “De­

bt spite a tremendous amount of r r > ' 8 ability, experience, efficiency

and foresight, deep down I’m no different than any other run-af- tlie-mill genius.”

This summer, Edith gradu­ates from Florida Atlantic Uni­versity, a new senior college in the state system at Boca Raton, She rooms there in a two-bed­room, study-room suite with three other girls.

For Edith, mathematics has become the real challenge.

“When I became a math ma­jor, I had to start working,” she says. Mathematics is something you get involved with. When you do math, you're preparing your­self for something. I love to solve problems. I suppose its like some people watching a murder mystery. You’ve got to find out the answer.”

To Edith, her future at Michi­gan State is in a sense a visit to yet another galaxy. She looks forward to the independence, to getting a driver's license if she can, at 15, under Michigan law. If she can’t, she will grudgingly yield to the fact of being defeat­ed again by her own age, but she still has plans for the facul­ty parking place she is entitled to on campus.

“I thought I ’d just put up a lit­tle but there,” she said with a wry smile, “ and use it as a place to iiieep my books.”

dent. R ear row: James Morrow, Treasurer-elect; James Spaulding, Immediate Past-President; Joseph McDonald, Secretary-elect: Ed Wicks, Director and Richard Fox, Director. Assemblyman Edward J. Keenan and Mayor John F. Byrnes were guests at the installation. (Jack

Wood Photo)