Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 28

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY, MAY 25, lM THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- C-i BRIEFLY Itudent Prosecutor to hand over riot photos wins in case stemming from Little 500 Miiaiia FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS bating whether he should turn over the photographs. Schultz also talked with Arbutus publisher David Adams and an attorney trained media law to determine whether the case raised issues about freedom of the Schultz could have taken his case to. the Indiana Court of Appeals, But Schultz and his attorney were concerned that the seriousness of the riot. which two police officers also were slightly injured, might outweigh Schultz's wish to hold on to the photos. Schultz, who Is from Massachusetts said Indiana's conservative laws led to the Judge's order.

"I think the law was Interpreted wrong but It doesn't seem that taking It any further is going to get the law reinterpreted," said Schultz, adding, "I think perhaps In another state, the same laws would be Interpreted differently." 21 disturbance at Varsity Villas condominiums on the north side of Bloomington. Schultz was taking pictures of the riot for the yearbook. He sold one of the photos to the Indiana Daily Student, which ran it April 22. The 23-year-old senior said he took about 80 photographs but that only 10 show people overturning the car. He has agreed to print all the photos, English said.

Schultz faced a contempt-of-court citation and possibly Jail If he did not turn over the photos. The threat of Jail did not figure prominently Into Schultz's decision, English said. Police already have charged two people with felonies, an Investigation aided In part by photos supplied by an Independent photographer, Scott Richardson. A photo by Richardson appeared In the The Herald-Times. English said Schultz spent the week de By SCOTT MILEY STAR STAFF WRITER Indiana University student photographer Richard Schultz will hand over photos he took of a post-Little 500 riot In Bloomington to authorities, his attorney said Friday.

Schultz, a photographer for the IU yearbook Arbutus, was ordered last week by Monroe Circuit Judge Elizabeth N. Mann to hand over the photos to police. "He decided that he would cooperate although he's clearly not very happy about it. He's doing It under protest," said Schultz's attorney, Terry English. Schultz's deadline was noon Friday.

However, Schultz Is printing the photos this weekend and Is expected to give them to Monroe County Prosecutor Robert T. Miller by Wednesday, said English. Miller Is seeking the photos to Identify rioters who overturned a car during an April TERRE HAUTE Uose-Hulman Institute Rose-Ilulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute voted Friday against accepting women to the school's all-male undergraduate program. The vote by the Hoard of Managers was close and followed several hours of debate, said Vi.ce Chairman Guille Cox. lie declined to disclose the vote total, noting that changing the institution's charter to allow women must be approved by 75 percent of the 46 board members.

"The board did also agree, however, to reconsider the co- DROWNING Gary teen-ager dies in Authorities say the body of a 17-year-old student from Gary has been recovered from the i Deerfield River in Massachu-'. setts. Northwestern' District Attorney Judd Carhart said divers re- covered the body Thursday eve-ning In Deerfield after searchers found some of the boy's belong- Indfi nlnnrf thp riupr hnk The victim was Identified as Uatasho J. Stokes, said Massachusetts State Trooper Michael He said the youth was FEDERAL CHARGE pay for good life, columnist says'; Trucker charged in kidnap of Richmond boy FILE PHOTO George Will recommends limiting legislative terms. For the first time, he asserted, people graduating from high school have a worse education U.S.

won't By FRED D. CAVINDER STAR STAFF WRITER An American tradition that each generation Improves Its lot could be In trouble. That's the grim assessment of syndicated Washington columnist George F. Will, who spoke Friday to 200 GTE executives and their customers In Indianapolis for 500-Mile Race festivities. Will, whose column appears twice a week In The Indianapolis Star, said the United States has developed a permanently divided government at the moment when extreme, and perhaps painful, united measures are needed to alter a growing fiscal and social nightmare.

Because there Is de facto conservative control of the executive branch, liberal control of Congress and a prevailing political philosophy that fears taxes, the Stopwatch Continued from Page 1 sit on the second floor of the scoring tower with a clipboard. The clipboard contained a built-in stopwatch with an LED display much like a Jogger's wrist-watch. When that timer's car finished a lap, he or she would punch a black button on. the clipboard that recorded the time. The time was then divided Into the track length (2.5 miles) to determine the car's speed.

Although the clipboard stopwatches were capable of determining times out to 11. 000th of a second, they were subject to the delay and variations of human reaction time. It takes roughly 11 00th of second for the brain to send a message to the limbs and for them to respond; the DATA-1 system has no such delay, and can calculates times down to 110,000 of a second. (The clipboards, though, still are used as a backup for DATA-1) Calculating speeds faster than human reaction time Is not just an exercise In theoretical physics; there are dollars at stake. In the 1988 race.

Michael An- tour Cwte than the preceding class. "And the government Is doing exactly what the American people are voting for," he said. )'I don't know what Americans Intend to do about lt." Privately, Will said If he had the power to make changes, he would freeze entitlement programs, permit veto of single Items In the federal budget, and put limits on legislative tenure; "I can't see an alternatlv.to getting professionalism out 'of politics." he said, admitting-' this Is a change In his long-standiiig philosophy. He Illustrated his thoughton tenure limitation by talking about his experience on board of the Baltimore Orjojes baseball team. After the team lost 107 games with experiifve veteran players, the board dcQfd-ed the team could Just as easily lose with underpaid rookies.

Mi', til i. HIV votes against women education issue in October of this year," Cox said. It was the second time the Terre Haute college has rejected a motion to go co-educational. The board voted against a similar proposal in 1986. The college's graduate program Is already co-ed.

Rose-Hulman was founded In 1874 by industrialist Chauncy Rose. It was known as Rose Polytechnic Institute until 1971 when the name was changed to recognize a century of support from the Hulman family of Terre Haute. Massachusetts river last seen about 7 p.m. Wednesday. Pending results of an autopsy, his death Is being considered an accidental drowning, Carhart said.

Stokes had been a student at Deerfield Academy. Headmaster Robert Kauf-mann said a search was launched Thursday after Stokes failed to show up for classes. Kaufmann said students sometimes swim In the river behind the school. Police allege that Gnegy abducted the 7-year-old boy In Richmond on Tuesday and kept him locked In the cab of Gnegy's rig, which he drove for Logan Transport of Canton, Ohio. Richmond police contacted Mlddletown police about noon Wednesday after learning Gnegy was to arrive shortly at the Armco Steel Co.

mill in Middle-town. Police said they discovered the boy in the truck cab, alert but frightened. The boy was examined at Mlddletown Regional Hospital and reunited with his parents when they arrived there Wednesday afternoon, police said. Authorities originally had planned to ask Gnegy to waive extradition proceedings so he could be transferred to Indiana to face state charges in the alleged abduction. in home STAR STAFF ILLUSTRATION had been established.

Officials declined to say If she had been sexually assaulted. An autopsy was scheduled at noon today at Memorial Hospital, said Deputy Coroner Thomas Trenerry. He would not say If he had established a preliminary cause of death. Bridget Marshall attended the College of Mount St. Joseph In Cincinnati, a liberal arts Catholic college of about 2,600 students.

gas line The line ruptured when construction workers struck It with a power auger, said Carmel Fire Department Battalion Chief Gary Dufek. The workers were putting up a fence. Indiana Gas Co. crews shut off the gas, and residents were allowed back Into their home after about 30 minutes. on overdue bills to the property until the overdue bill Is paid.

Among the more extreme measures the city could take Is to sell the property to get Its money. The city describes the lien as "the city's last-resort collection effort and not the process we prefer." Though It has been challenged In court In the past, the practice has been upheld. Other methods have included disconnecting water service. Sewer fees support approximately 2,500 miles of sewer lines In Marion County, as well as 200 lift stations. Tney also pay for inspections.

St Joseph Courty SOUth I Mishawaka Bend A Lio I MILES straltjacket on government shows most vividly In the mounting budget deficit, he said. "We have a voracious appetite but an unwillingness to pay for it." Will said. As the number of people over 65 continues to grow, more money will be spent on them, he said. On the other end of the age scale Is the critical problem of education. Those in the middle resist paying for programs for either young or old, and elected officials therefore see taxes as a barrier to election, Will said.

What's worse, he said, Is most Americans agree with this. They will gladly vote for those proposing giveaways but cry economy at budget time. Will said the upshot Is that for the first time In history, U.S. fiscal policy, by Increasing debt, Is lowering the standard of living for the generation yet to come. drettl Bnd Bobby Rahal finished In fourth and fifth place, with speeds separated by Just 1 1.000th of a mile a hour.

An-drettl received Rahal. $151,453. The DATA-1 system also has an advantage for the timekeepers. In the old days, timing crews frequently worked through the night and Into the morning to have official results ready by 8 a.m. Last year, with the advent of DATA-1.

the crews called It quits at 10:30 p.m. race night. "We can do things so much faster," said Klmbrell. A timing system Incorporating the DATA-1 network Is being installed this year at 16 other race tracks that make up the Indy-car circuit. This system, known as TRACK, was used for the first time In March at the Australia Grand Prix.

"The results were excellent," said Poole, director of communications for CART. USAC has been experimenting with computerized timing systems for years. In 1981 lt Installed a system, but In the 1984 race It failed after 70 laps. The Dorian system, so far, seems to have worked well. "We've had no complaints," said Kimbrell.

"Questions, but no complaints." Inside, waited outside the bank. He was wearing shorts, a sleeveless T-shirt and a white sailor cap. He also had a sea horse tattooed on his lower right leg. Both men were seen running west from the bank after the holdup. The FBI refused to divulge the amount of money taken.

Anyone with any Information about the robbery should call the FBI at (317) 639-3301 or the Indianapolis Police Department at (317) 236-3733. 8-year sentence with the Winter Park (Fla.) Police Department at the time of the robbery made it Impossible for her to reduce Foye's sentence to the six-year minimum. Authorities said Foye had been visiting re atives In Craw fordsvllle during Thanksgiving ana robbed the bank to get mon ey to make the return trip to lorida. He was arrested a short time after the holdup driving on I- 465. Police recovered about $2,000 taken In the robbery.

"Regardless of what some people may think, I do feel sad about what happened," Foye said. Results of psychological test ing introduced at the trial Indi cated Foye Is prone to compul sive behavior. A truck driver who allegedly abducted a 7-year-old Indiana boy, drove him Into Ohio and sexually molested him was charged today with a federal offense of interstate kidnapping. FBI spokesman Ed Boldt said the charge was filed against Uruck driver Glen A. Gnegy, 37.

Brilliant. Ohio. Gnegy was arrested by Mlddletown (Ohio) police In that city Wednesday. Gnegy was brought Into Mlddletown Municipal Court Friday morning, and a prosecutor dropped the state charge of flee- ing from Justice to give precedence to the federal kidnapping charge, court clerks said. U.S.

marshals took possession of Gnegy for an Initial appearance before a Dayton federal magistrate, who could order Gnegy's transfer to Indianapolis to face the kidnapping charge, Boldt said. SOUTH BEND College student is killed South Bend police believe a burglar may have been responsible for the death of a 20-year-old woman who had Just returned home from college for the sum- mer. Bridget Marshall was found dead In her family's South Bend home Thursday afternoon, police said. I Police spokesman Lt. Norval Williams said "several rooms in home had been ransacked, and it appeared that the ransacking was a possible burglary." The woman had been In the house, he said.

Marshall's mother, Sheila Marshall, returned home from chopping and found her daughter partially clothed In a bed-Jroom with her hands bound. Williams said. Sheila Marshall called fire department paramedics, who were unable to revive Jthe woman. Williams said there were no signs of forced entry to the 5iome. It was not Immediately Jknown If anything was missing.

Bridget Marshall had not been shot or stabbed, but police Refused to say If a cause of death CARMEL Fence-diggers rupture A 1-Inch gas service line was ruptured Friday morning In Car-mcl. forcing a 30-mlnute evacuation of local residents and business workers. I Eleven buildings were evacuated In the Hunter's Glen Condominiums, and about 30 employees In a real estate firm were Jasked to leave the area In the 200 block of East Carmel Drive. SEWER BILLS Residents to get notices If you haven't paid your sew-er bill yet, the city of doesn't want to lien on you. In hopes of avoiding that, the 'Department of Public Works will "be mailing about 6,300 notices next week to property owners who have overdue sewer bills.

I Those people owe the city 100.92. That doesn't count jjeople who owe less than $1 1 or whp have bills that have been luc for less than 60 days. To avoid the lien, property owners who get the letters must pay by June 24. When a lien Is placed on property, it gives the city a claim FBI seeks two suspects in robbery of Downtown INB bank branch A Star newspaper route is a great spring and summer job! Deliver newspapers in the morning and have the rest of the day free for tennis, baseball, jogging or whatever warm-weather activity you're into. A Star newspaper route will put money in your pocket and your savings acciunt.

A new bicycle a tennis racquet funds for college even an opportunity to win a scholorship. You name it you can earn it. If you're looking for a warm-weather job, look into being a Star newspaper carrier. Fill out this coupon or call the Carrier Action Line at 633-1 1 1 1 for more information. The Star STAR STAFF REPORT FBI agents are seeking two black men In the robbery of INB National Bank branch.

One North Capital Avenue, about 3:30 p.m. Friday. One man, wearing a red baseball cap. navy blue sweat pants and a red sweat jacket and armed with a small revolver, entered the bank and demanded money from tellers. The second suspect, whom agents believe assisted the man Ex-policeman gets ASSOCIATED PRESS Lebanon, Ind.

A former Florida police officer has been sentenced to eight years in prison for the robbery of a Lebanon bank last November. Ricky Lee Foye, 33, was sentenced Thursday by Special Judge Kathy Smith In Boone Superior Court. Foye was convicted March 1 for the armed robbery of MldState Bank West Branch last year. Smith said she placed considerable weight on the testimony of bank teller Yvonne Baird, who was seven months pregnant when Foye confronted her with a pistol during the holdup. Baird testified she still has nightmares about the incident.

Smith said Balrd's testimony and Foye's status as an officer Carrier Application Circulation Department The Indianapolis Star P.0, Box 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 Name Street City Date of Birth Name of Parent or Guardian: Zip Phone.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Indianapolis Star
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Indianapolis Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,552,592
Years Available:
1862-2024