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Show V The Salt Lake Tribune, Nancy Reagan, Margaret Thatcher Top Recipients of U.S. Admiration - PRINCETON. NJ Fust lady Nancy Reagan. British Prime Minis- ter Margaret Thatcher and Mother Teresa of Calcutta top the list of women most admired by the American people, as determined by these annual Callup contests conducted since the late 194Us. They are followed in this year s voting by the 1984 Demo cratic vice presidential candidate. Geraldine Ferraro, and by Princess Diana, wife of Great Britain's Prince Charles Next is former U S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Jeane Kirkpatrick Seventh-plachonors go to Betty Ford, followed by Queen Elizabeth ii Rounding out the top 10 are Jacqueline Onassis and Sandra Day O'Con- e Last Descendant Of Abe Lincoln Dies in Virginia - Robert HARTFIELD, Va. (AP) Todd Lincoln Beckwith, the last surviving descendant of Abraham Lin- died coln. on Christmas Eve at the age of 81. Beckwith, the great grandson of the 16th president, had lived in a nursing home in Saluda, according to officials of the! funeral homej where the body was taken. Robert Beckwith The community is about 45 miles from Richmond, the capital of the Confederacy. Lincoln and his wife, Mary Todd, had four sons. Three died in their youth, the eldest. Robert Todd Lincoln. served as secretary of War under President James A. Garfield and died in 1926 at the age of 82. Robert Todd Lincoln and his wife. Mary, had three children; their youngest. Jessie, eloped in 1897 with Warren Beckwith, a classmate and football star at Iowa Wesleyan College. They had two children: Mary Lincoln Beckwith, who died in 1975 and Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith, who was born in Riuverside, 111., on July 19. 1904. nor, C S. Supreme Court Justice 5. Receiving frequent mentions in the 1985 survey, but not included in the top 10, are, in alphabetical order Shirley Chisholm, Jane Fonda, Katharine Hepburn, Coretta King and Barbara Wallers. Survey respondents in this study, which the Gallup Poll has conducted for more than three decades, are asked to give their choices without the aid of a prearranged list of names. This procedure, while opening the field to all possible choices, tends to favor those who are currently or have recently been in the news. Survey respondents are asked for their first and second choices: "What woman whom you have heard or read about, living today in any part of the world, do you admire most? Who is your second choice? 6. 7. 9. 10. A't 1985 To Save Oily Birds PUKT ANGELES, Wash. (CPI) Scores of volunteers turned out Christmas Day to rescue more birds and help care for the nearly 1,000 water fowl already scooped out of a massive oil spill off the Washington coast d comparison, here are the results of last year's audit By way of Most Admired Women ' The pilot at the time the oil tanker ARCO Anchorage ran aground at Port Angeles harbor and leaked 109,200 gallons of Alaskan oil was involved in two previous grounding incidents. But no action action was taken in ei- - . ther case. Ray Leson, Woodinville, Wash., ; was also involved in the Jan. 14, . 1983, grounding of the Indian freighter M.V. Jalavallabh near ; Port Townsend and a second, incident near Everett, ac- cording to Ralph White, chairman , of the State Pilotage Commission. 1984 (First and Second Choices Combined) 1. Margaret Thatcher 2. Geraldine Ferraro 3. Mother Teresa 4. Nancy Reagan 5. Jeane Kirkpatrick 6. Betty Ford 7. Queen Elizabeth 11 8. Coretta King 9. Princess Diana 10. Sandra Day O'Connor . less-serio- The results Most Admired Women are based on telephone . interviews with 1,008 adults, 18 years and older, conducted in scientifically selected localities across the nation during the period Nov. Sunday; Most Admired Men 1985 (First and Second Choices Combined) 1. Nancy Reagan 2. Margaret Thatcher 1 Mother Teresa 4. Geraldine Ferraro Nurs.es Volunteer December 26, Volunteers Try Princess Diaua Jeane Kirkpatrick Betty Ford Queen Elizabeth II Jacqueline Onassis Sandra Day O'Connor 8. Thursdav, c Los Angeles Times Syndicate lor Extra Shilts Hospital Staff Reaches Out To Female Heart Patient - Nurses MINNEAPOLIS (AP) are volunteering to work extra shifts for artificial-hear- t recipient Mary Lund, whose slow recovery has worried doctors in the week since her surgery, and her family thanked the hospital staff Wednesday. Staff members also tried to make Christmas as cheerful as possible for her husband and son. I really want to be here and make sure they're all right, said Kristen coordiJohnson, nator for the Minneapolis Heart Institute at Abbott Northwestern Hospital. "I feel responsible for them." Johnson said of DuWayne Lund, 45, and son Scott, 14, who have been staying at the hospital since Mrs. Lund's emergency implant Dec. 18. "They're really a very brave, strong family, Johnson said Wednesday. She had been at the hospital more than 24 hours Christmas Eve and returned to work Christmas morning. "I dont thifik I could handle it nearly as well as they can and that really helps all of us." Lund, 40, the first woman to receive an artificial heart, remained in critical but stable condition Wednesday. Doctors said she had not ' T.. emerged from a light coma and was undergoing dialysis to help her kidneys dispose of waste products. Nothing has changed at all, Abbott Northwestern spokesman Mark Dixon said. We're just continuing to do what we've been doing intravenous feeding, kidney dialysis and so Associated Press Laserphoto Volunteer Jim Toyne spends Christmas holiday rescuing birds drenched from oil spill Sunday off Port Angeles, Wash. The ship hit rocks about 500 meters off shore ripping huge gashes in the tankers hu'l. The Coast Guard reported that the vast majority of the spilled oil has been skimmed up, but clean up crews kept after six large gooey patches that were so thick they slowed down skimmers. Coast Guard Chief I ou Parris said, "The oil concentrations are turning to a consistency of mousse. That is helpful because it tends to make the oil more cohesive and less likely to spread, but it's also a problem because it slows down the skimmers." He said it could take several more days to complete the v v on. Doctors said that although Lund's kidneys had not improved as quickly as hoped since being weakened by her massive heart failure, none of her organs appeared to have been damaged irreversibly. She had not shown any clots or abnormal bleeding, and the miniature Jarvik-7- S IFilm devdopmg tihat wffl. ati every finite. mechanical heart that has kept her alive continued to work well. The heart's working fine, so doctors can really concentrate on helping her other organ systems and that would have been more difficult otherwise, hospital spokeswoman Mary Small said Wednesday. Her chances for survival over the several weeks until she would be healthy enough to receive a human-heatransplant have been put at less than 50 percent, however. Doctors believe she was stricken by a rare virus that destroyed her heart but are awaiting tests to confirm that diagnosis. at rt msrOUR:ONCEYEARk(AF.TER;CHRISTMAS FOOEDS ms? NOW THRU JANUARY 1ST, 1986... 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