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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 10

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

S3 r-t THE COURIER-JOURNAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15. 1985 5 As one Kentucky city hacks off, another still pursues PCB plant -ill At ilifilllllfc lll Discussions with officials there have been a "we-want-you dialogue," Lower said. "Their support continues even when we've had an obvious upset in West Virginia." Paducah Charles Deaton, executive director of the Paducah Area Chamber of Commerce, said yesterday that he has suggested Union Carbide find another location for its plant "Paducah appears to be an unfriendly environment" for Union Carbide, Deaton said. At a meeting Tuesday morning, the Greater Paducah Industrial Development Association members decided they no longer want the plant in Paducah. The association, a private organization that owns an industrial park on Paducah's west side, has no recourse, though, to keep Union Carbide out The company has already purchased an option on 15 acres in the Coleman Road site, which is owned by the industrial development association, of which Deaton is secretary.

But Deaton said he doesn't expect Union Carbide to act on the option. The primary reason cited by the industrial development association was the potential problem the plant might create for businesses already in the industrial park. Genex Corp. makes an ingredient in G. D.

Searle's low-calorie sweetener NutraSweet Deaton said Genex officials are worried that Searle's might be concerned that PCBs might contaminate the ingredient although Lower said that would be impossible. Tuesday night a group opposing the plant's location presented the Paducah City Commission with a petition signed by 3,800 people. Simone Nace, a westside Paducah woman who led a petition drive, said the plant should be built in a place that does not have so high a cancer rate. Although local officials often dispute the figures, Kentucky's vital statistics report in 1982 showed the Jackson Purchase with 259.7 cancer deaths per 100,000 people, compared with a state average of 193 and an national average of 188.1. From 1952 until 1983, Union Carbide operated the U.S.

Department of Energy's uranium enrichment plant in Paducah. "We went to Paducah first because, given our history, it seemed silly to have to explain to Paducah that we went first to Henderson, where we'd never been before," Lower said. If Paducah's business community proposes a workable alternative site, he said, Union Carbide would consider it Until that happens, however, Paducah is no longer on par with Henderson. Henderson The Henderson Economic Development Council unanimously endorsed efforts to attract the plant at a meeting yesterday. To locate at Henderson's River-port, where the company has an option on 15 acres, Union Carbide will need a conditional use permit from the County Board of Zoning Appeals and the Fiscal Court.

E. S. "Tommy" Nichols, the magistrate who represents the riverport area, said yesterday that Union Carbide's problems have "made people stop and think, 'Is it worth the But Nichols said he'll keep an open mind until the zoning hearings are held and the public speaks out Magistrate Willie Nunley said he had "mixed emotions," about the potential new industry, but he, too, said he wouldn't commit himself until he can sample public opinion. George Warren, a third magistrate, said, "I want to make sure the present Union Carbide management can control the waste. I don't want the same problems here" that occurred in West Virginia.

By TIM ROBERTS Ceurier-Jeuraal Staff Writer PADUCAH, Ky. Paducah business leaders have had second thoughts about their invitation to Union Carbide Corp. to build a PCB-separatlon plant in their industrial park. But the business community in Henderson, the other Kentucky site In the running for the plant still endorses the proposal. Opposition in Paducah began before Sunday, when a chemical ingredient in pesticide leaked from a Union Carbide plant in Institute, W.

sending about 135 people to the hospital. The incident increased the opposition, however. Ted Lower, business director of Union Carbide's Transformer Services, said yesterday that there was no connection between the West Virginia plant and the one that would separate PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, from electric transformers. He also said it is unfair to universally condemn Union Carbide, which manufactures products ranging from agricultural fertilizer to flashlight batteries. The plant would remove PCBs from a liquid wash used to rinse the contaminant from the transformers.

Until 1977, when their use was banned, PCBs were used as a coolant in the electrical equipment Only the rinse would be taken to the plant The transformers would remain in place. A third location outside of Kentucky is also in the running, but Lower would not reveal where it is. Union Carbide hopes to make its decision next week and announce it si week ldter. With opposition growing in Paducah, he said, the competition between the two Western Kentucky cities "has gone from a dead heat to a situation where Henderson is clearly ahead of Paducah." "I'm not ruling Paducah out but I do feel it's inactive," he said. As Union Carbide sees it however, Henderson's business community has shown an increased desire to have the plant, Lower said.

Staff Photo by Bill Kight Mike Howard, a former member of a band the late singer's energy and dynamism dur-with Jimmy Stokley. talked yesterday about ing the time of Exile's hit single. Even back in Kentucky, Stokley appeared lost after quitting Exile Classified Advertising ing. He stimulated his friends and his fans." "He was a funny-type person crazy. You never knew what he was coming out with," Nina Hopper remembered with a smile.

"He was a nice man." Stokley was with the band from the beginning, when it played local nightspots as The Fascinations. And it was Stokley who would sometimes press other band members to keep them on track, Howard said. "When it came to the music, he was all business. That was his life. He lived for the band and to perform.

I'm sure he enjoyed it greatly. That's what he wanted to be." But around 1980, Stokley left Exile. First, he worked in public relations for a chain of nightclubs, the Brass A Saloon, said Luxon. General Information TUCauriH Journal Tr uwmbTinm Grove Waterworks Revenue Offlc Hours Announcements 100 ELLMAN, Mr. John Jr.

formation about how to submit your comments on the application, contact Vice President Randall C. Sumner. (314) 444-S644. The Federal Reserve will consider your comments end any request for a public meet 199 Telephone Sales Monday-Friday: 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Saturday: 7 years. Of Louisville, Ky. Died at Humana Hospital Au Bono, galea ucrooer is, im. by a first pledge of a fixed portion of the gross revenues to be derived from the waterworks system of the City, and bv a first statutory mortgage Hen against said waterworks system. Minimum bid, par value for all of the Bonds, and bidders must name a single Interest rate in a multiple of 16 or 110.

No specific maximum interest rate Is applicable. dubon at 9 pm on Aug. 11, 3 ing or rormai nvarinu nnj appllcatlon If they are received by the Reserve Bank on or before the last date of the comment period. 1985. A memorial mass will be said at Holy Family Catholic Church, 3924 Poplar Level al 930 a.m.

on Aug. 17. HADDAD, Mr Frank 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sundays and Holidays: 3:00 p.m.

to 6:00 p.m. Counter Sales Monday-Friday: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. To Mace a 1985. Carl was born In Louis- Elia, Sr.

vMe, Ky. on Nov. 10, Son of John Tollman, Sr. the former Suianne Elder. He A6VERTISEMENT FOR BID Sealed bids will be received In the Office of the Menager, Purchasing Department, Louisville Water Company, 435 South Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40202 up to 11:00 a.m..

Local Time. Wednesday, August 28, 1985, for the following protect: Proiect Number: (5-881 "It just really seemed like he was having problems finding his place," he said. Howard said he visited Stokley in the hospital last year, after he became ill with hepatitis. He said he found Stokley drained of his old energy. "He gave me the impression that he didn't care about it anymore," Howard said.

"There was nothing left that he wanted to do." When he appeared at the Exile concert in his benefit in October at Eastern Kentucky University, Stokley weighed less than 100 pounds and had to be carried onto the stage, former band members said. But people like Ms. Hopper, 30, still smiled yesterday while remembering an earlier time. "I remember the first time I ever saw him," she said. "He had a duck-tail (hair cut).

I was just a kid I remember him and his little duck-tail. "I just thought, 'Wow. It was at the Richmond Park. It was my dad's company picnic, as a matter of fact, and they hired them to play." Those were the early days, when band members might be lucky to get $50 each for an appearance. Later, people who had listened to him in local nightclubs or at their high school prom remembered when Exile became a national name, Ms.

Hopper said. "They were really proud of them and that they had made it It was like every time the song You All came on, it was, 'Oh, they're from Richmond. I know she said. Stokley's funeral will be at 11 a.m. today at Curry, Parsons Collins Funeral Home.

Several former members of Exile will be among the pallbearers. Stokley is survived by his mother, Marie Simpson, and father, Elmer Stokley. By CAROL MARIE CROPPER Courier-Jeurnal Stiff Writer RICHMOND, Ky. After starring on the stages of the world, Jimmy Stokley returned to his small hometown. Friends say he lost his drive.

He lived the life of a near-recluse, retreating to his home rather than face strangers who would press him about the days when he was lead singer for the rock group Exile. He died Tuesday, at age 41, of a chronic liver disorder. In Richmond yesterday, residents accepted the news of his death without pause. It was not unexpected, noted Harold Park, who attended a benefit concert last year to raise money for Stokley's medical bills. Younger people teen-agers who came to appreciate music after Exile's rock 'n' roll demise (the band now specializes in country music) did not know his name.

Park, 58, was old enough to remember the local boy who made it big. But, he explained, sometimes it's easy to be overlooked in your hometown. "It's like the man in the suit with a briefcase. If he's from out of town, he seems more important," Park said. However, to those closest to Stokley, the singer of the 1978 hit "Kiss You AH Over" was remarkable.

His energy and dynamism would claim the stage, said Mike Howard, who was with the band when it was known as The Exiles. "He was kind of a Mick Jagger type. He had that slinky, sexy, Mick Jagger move. If he was on the stage, I'll bet a lot of people didn't see anyone else," Howard said. "He had a magnetic personality," said Billy Luxon, who also played with Stokley.

"He was very stimulat Passed away In Ms 7lm year Auo 14. 19fJS. at his resi- The rmnA win suDmn a mo for the purchase of the Bonds. In the event that a bld(s) from non-governmental bidder(s) sheH be received, the rale and terms of which are determined bv the FmMA to be reason denca. Devoted husband of Classified Ad, CaH 1-502-M2-M22 Brief Description: By 5 p.m.

the previous day Mrs. Clara (GaUo) Hadoad; loving father of Mr. Frank E. Haddad, Mr. Robert Had-dad Mrs.

Richard (Dolores) Meena; also survived by 6 grandchildren. Brother of Mr. married the former Ethel Mae Tandy on Aug. 19, 1932, at St. Elliabeth's Church in Louisville, Kv.

Mrs. Tetlman survives and their 1 son, John' Tollman III. Carl is survived bv cousins, Mrs. Burnice TeHman Kolross Raymond Tollman; also survived bv nephews A 1 niece. He was preceded bv his parents and a brother, Robert TENTH-STREET 8" MAIN REPLACEMENT MARKET STREET TO MUHAMMAD for regular, single column, ane, men sucn rmnA diu win be withdrawn.

Good faith check, 2 Approving legal opinion by Rubin Hays, Municipal Bond Attorneys, Louisville, Kentucky. Dell very wlH be made within 45 days from date of In the old days, "he was kind of a Mick Jagger type. If he was on the stage, I'll bet a lot of people didn't see anyone else." Joseph F. Haddad, George Edward Haddad Mrs. Mary Hurst.

Mr. Haddad Is sale. Bia t-orms, umaai mr tir nf aI. statement of Es Sidney TeHman. Can was em sential Facts, and other Infor ployed by E.

I. Dupont Corp. for 21 years. He retired In resting at the Hmes point Home of Arch Heady Son, 410 Taylorsvllle where services will be conducted 10 am Sat, with burial In Cave mation, may oe ooieineo irorn the undersigned. (Signed) Barbara Johnson, City Clerk, Oak metropolitan circulation.

Ads for Sunday must be placed by 5 p.m., Friday. For illustrated display and full circulation orders, deadline is two days prior to publication. To Cancel Classified Ad, CaH 1-S02 M2-222 Grove, Kentucky usi. HIM Cemetery. Friends may NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR BANK HOLDING COMPANY Citizens Fidelity Corporation, kindly visit from 7-9 pm Thurs.

fc 2-5 ft 7- fm Fri. Expres sions of sympathy may take the form of contributions to Kosair Children's Hospital or to favorite charities. June of 1970 and nas been traveling for the past 14 years. He returned to Louisville as his permanent residence In July, 198S. The body was cremated and Mrs.

Tollman win receive visitors from 7 pm to 9 pm on Fri. at The Russman A Son Funeral Home, 1041 Goss Ave. Expressions of sympathy may take the form of contributions to "Our Lady's Home for 523 Park Ave. Louisville, Ky. 4020S.

MW west jerterson airof, Louisville, Kentucky 40202 intends to apply to the Federal Reserve Board for permission tn Aroiiir a hank al The Win chester Bank, 120 South Main Street, Winchester, Kentucky HEAVRIN, Mrs. The Louisville Water Company wlH accept bids only from Contractors who have been Keoualified bv the Louisville ater Company. PrequelHica-tlon Forms ere available In the office of the Louisville Water Company, Purchasing Agent, 435 South Third Street. Louisville, Kentucky 40202, (502) 569-3600, extension 173. No proposal may be withdrawn after the time of opening bids Is past.

The right Is reserved to reiect eny end eH bids or waive any Informality in any bid. The eward shall be made on the basis of me lowest evaluated bid price. The criteria utilized for evaluation of bids are contained in the Instructions to Bidders Louisville Water Company Bv: Paul Sumner Title: Manager, Purchasing ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID Safety Barricades A Signs Bid No. 85-24 Sealed bids will be received bv the Purchasing Manager of the Louisville Water Company In his office, located at 435 South Third Street. Louisville, Kentucky, up to 11 KM a.m., local time, Wednesday.

September 4, 1985, for furnishing our annual requirements of safety barricades and signs. Specifications ere on Ale and may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Manager. Awerd will be made based on the best bid as evaluated bv the Louisville Water Company. Verna Etherton Cancellations received before 7 p.m. weekdays will be made for the next day's morning newspaper.

Cancellations for the Sunday paper must be made by Friday. Special Condition Please check your ad. If you find a mistake, please call us at 582-2622 before Died Tues Aug. 13, 19SS, In HMVI. we imena to amuiiv control of The Winchester Bank.

120 South Main Street, Winchester, Kentucky 40391. The Federal Reserve considers a number of factors in deciding whether to approve the application Including the record of performance of banks we own In helping to meet local credit needs. Then he moved back to Richmond and lived with his mother, keeping to himself, Luxon said. Luxon said he is not exactly sure why Stokley left the band, which faded for a while after its 1980 peak but emerged again recently as a country-music band. "I think he basically just became disenchanted." However, the man who had grown up in music "seemed lost outside of it," Luxon said.

63rd year. Residence, EEJ 10410 W. Manslick Rd. Mother of L. G.

Gary Heevrin; daughter of Mr. Fred Ether-ton; sister of Mrs. Jean Elzv, Mr. Hugh Etherton Mr. Don IMPORTANT INFORMATION Etherton of Borden, also survived bv 9 grandchildren 1:00 p.m., so we can REGARDING PUBLICATION OF LEGAL NOTICES legal Notices may be or change it for the next day.

1 great-grandchild. Mrs. you are invttea to suornn comments In writing on this application to the Federal Re- Sirve Bank of St. Louis, P.O. ox 442, St.

Louis, Missouri 63166. The comment period win not end before September 9, 1985, and may be somewhat longer. The Board's procedure for processing applications may be found at 12 C.F.R. AD advertising is subject to the Publisher's Advertising Acceptance Guidelines. Heavrln is resting at Blllv Howell's Falrdale Funeral Home, 411 Falrdale were services win be conducted Fri.

at 10am. Interment wlH be at dered by mail or in person. Notices cannot be received by phone. The Publisher has the right Parr Meade Kv. Part 22.

Procedures tor processing protested applications may be at 12 C.F.R. Section 262.25. To obtain a copy of me Board's procedures or If vou need more in- Deadline for receiving Louisville water company U.S. judge predicts new freedoms for non-whites in South Africa r. faui sumner tie: Purchasing Manager tI.1.

copy IS: MATTMILLER, Monday for Thursday Tuesday for Friday Wednesday for Saturday Consolidated Report of Condition of cwum FkMttv Bank A Trust Co. to decline any advertising which it deems unacceptable. The Publisher's liability for failure to publish or for errors shall be limited to the cost of the ad or of that portion of the ad in which any error appears. Evelyn Gregory Thursday for Sunday and Age 7S years. Resident of 214 of Louievme, Kentucky And Foreign and Domestic Subektiwtet, at the dose of buaineea June 30, 1985.

elate banking Institution organised and operating under the booking lewa of thia state and member of the Federal Reaenre System. Crescent Court. Died Wed. at- Monday a brief Illness at Lyndon Friday for Tuesday and Wednesday Lane Nursing Home. Beloved wife of Ernst G.

MattmlHer; also survived bv a son, Mark PubHahed In accordance wim a can maoe oy ma sane Banning Authority and by the Federal Reeerve Bar of this District. ASSETS ThOiiaafios Cash arid balances due from depository institutions No proof deadline upon L. MattmlHer. Cvnthiana, request. a daughter, Jessica M.

Sando Noninteraet-baartng betencea ana currency aim When submitting copy val; daugnter-tn'-iaw, Mary Gait MattmlHer, Orlando, 27S.72S 202.113 374,182 sister, Mrs. Jessica Smith, Secumtee Minneapolis, Minn. grand please indicate if notice should run in The Courier-Journal, in The Louisville Times or in both The Courier- FacleralfllntaaoldandaecurltieeplrclaaedlJr agreemente to resea oomeeoc emcee oi in bank end of Its Edge and Agreement aubaidiar-iaa. and ki IBFa children. Funeral from Pearson's, 149 Breckinridge Lane, Fri afternoon MO pm.

Interment In Cave Hill Cemetery. 803,638 Journal The Louisville Times and date(s) notice is to Loans and lease financing receivable Visiting 2-5 A 7-9 pm Thurs. Loans and leasee, net or uneemeu appear. 2,115,543 35.872 LESS: Allowance tor loan and tease It submitted person kisses SNEED, Mr. William bring to The Courier-Journal Loans and leases, net of unearned Income, et- Jr.

The Louisville Times Customer Service Counter in the Passed away In his 57th year. first floor lobby. Aug. 13. 1985.

Resi' dence. 550) Indian Oaks Circle. If submitted by mail, send Aseete held kt trading accounts Premises and fixed aeeete (Inckidktg capita Hz ad looses). Other real estate owned Investments In unconsolidated subsidiaries and as- eodatad companies Customers' aebilrty to this bank on acceptance tot 3,079,671 476 JIJWT 4410 25 5,872 3,548 94,746 367,166 Father of Mrs. Karen Rltter and Mrs.

Diane Simpson, both of Florida; son of Mrs. Erma The Courier-Journal and Sneed; brother of Mr. Gene outstanding The Louisville Times "Legal Advertising" Sneed. Mrs. Martha De Intangtbie aaeota Other oeoota George.

Mrs. Peggy Meddox, co Advertising Customer Total I UABILITIES Mrs. Norma Bailey and Mrs. Fave O'Neal of Indiana; also survived bv 4 grandchildren. Mr.

Sneed is resting at the Oak St. Home of Arch L. Heady A Services Department 325 W. Broadway Louisville, Kentucky 40202 2,034,288 In domeotic oftieee Norrtrrtereet-besrtng 504,191 1,530,097 1 1 Son, 1201 E. Oak, where services wlH be conducted tntereet-oe weight and power of the government down on the necks of the people." Jones, 58, who is black, is a former general counsel for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and was appointed by former President Jimmy Carter to the federal appeals bench in Cincinnati in 1979.

He went to South Africa for an eight-day stay as one of a group of U.S. observers at the trial of 16 non-white South Africans charged with treason and terrorism for opposing a government-supported new constitution. South African authorities arrested Jones and four South African companions Saturday for venturing into a black township which, unbeknownst to Jones, had been sealed off by authorities two days earlier. An attorney general's representative called Jones a day later to apologize and to tell him the charge was being dropped. Jones said the charges had not been dropped against his four companions when he left South Africa Monday, but said he was told they probably would be cleared.

Jones said that South African judges and lawyers received him warmly and that he visited other South African townships without problems. He also attended the funeral of Victoria Mxenge, one of the defense lawyers in the trial, who was murdered a day before Jones left for South Africa. Jones was commissioned for the ki foreign offices, Edge and Agreement etibetdkw By JOHN NOLAN Associated Prats CINCINNATI A U.S. appeals court judge who was arrested last week in South Africa for visiting a closed black township predicted yesterday that non-whites fighting South Africa's apartheid restrictions will win new freedoms. "I'm sure there's going to be some change in that country.

Justice is going to come. Change is going to come. Just as sure as I'm sitting here, it's going to change," said Judge Nathaniel R. Jones of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

"You cannot hold 85 percent of the population in the townships and not expect the human spirit to erupt" Non-whites make up 85 percent of South Africa's population. They are forbidden under that country's apartheid system to vote and their travel is restricted. He told a news conference that the blacks and others restricted by apartheid, the official system of racial separation, are uniting in their protests and will eventually force concessions by the white-minority government He said he talked with blacks who had been beaten by police, a black woman who had seen her 20-year-old son shot to death in the family's front yard "for doing nothing" and an elderly black woman who bore scars from being hit in the face by a policeman's whip. "1 realized that this is a sick country. It's a police state.

You have no recourse. You cannot sue a police officer for violation of civil rights," Jones said. "You have the I Aug. Mth, at 11 a.m. inter' The publisher's liability for any errors or failure to print legal notices shall be limited to the cost of the 196 Ml ment, St.

Stephens Cemetery. 198,649 AnitouncnMnU 100 199 Employment 200 249 Instruction 250 299 Financial 300 349 Business to 350 Business 399 Services 400 499 Pats 500 549 Agri-Business 550 599 Real Estate 600 for Bent 649 Real Estate 650 for tale 669 Mobile Living 690 698 Auctions 699 Merchandise 700 for SaleRent 799 Recreation 600 699 Transportation 900 999 Visiting 9-9 pm, Thurs. octvertisementfs). If you need any addition STACKHOUSE, Effie Lea al information, please call Federal fund purchased and sscuritiss sold under agreement to repurcheee ki domoctk. offices of the bank and of Hs Edgs and Agreement eubeidt- aries, and in IBFa.

Demand note teeued to the U.S. Treasury Othsf borFQwod mony Bank's sabUtty on acceptance eiecuted and outstanding Other kWuties 582-4731, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Age II of Palmyra, Ind. Died Tues. at 11:10 m.

at her home. She was a native of Lib Friday. Totelkabiiitiee. 545,979 64,624 106,612 6,973 107,283 3,083,807 30,000 75,398 67,961 183,359 3,267,186 EQUITY CAPITAL Conwnon stock "Justice is going to come. Change is going to come.

Just as sure as I'm sitting here, it's going to change," said Judge Nathaniel R. Jones ofthe6thU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. erty, Kv. and the former Effie Lee Veughan.

She wes a member of the Palmyra Baptist Church. She Is survived by 2 sons, HersheH Steckhouse, Jr. A Glenn Stackhouse both of Sealed bids will be received bv the City of Oak Grove, Kentucky, at the Cltv Hall In said Total eauttv capital Total Habifroe, limtted-iife pre! erred stock, and equity capital New Salisbury; daughters, Lillian GambreH of Louisville, Ky. A Mavme Smith of Marietta. 2 sisters, Ruth City (address mall bids to the underslsned), until C.D.T., on August 27, 1985, for the purchase at not less than par of 1344,000 of Cltv of Oak Grove Waterworks Revenue Bonds of 19S5, to be dated as of the date of delivery end bearing Interest from that date, maturing on January 1, 19M through 2025, inclusive, as sel out in the Official Notice of Sale, Issued pursuant to KRS Barnes of Louisville, Kv.

Anna Keen of Jamestown, 2 brothers, William vaushan A John Veughan both of Jamestown, 12 grandchildren A 15 great' Richard O. Whmy, Vic President Chief Accounting Officer of the above norood bank do hereby declare that thia Report of Condition has been prepared ki conformance with the Instruction issued by the Board of Governor of the Federal Reaerve System end the Stat Banking Authority and I true to the beet of my knowledge end belief. a Richard 0. Whmy We, the underelqned directors, attest to the conectn of this Report of Condition end declare ttiat has been eiamtned by us and to the beet of our knowledge and belief lies been prepared In conformance with the instructions Issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Stat Banking Authority and i true end correct Daniel C. Ukner, Jr.

a Joe M. nodes Dougia D. Stegner Directors mooters o.uq ana so.uiv re wi lb Grandchildren also survive. Funeral services win be held through 96.510, Inclusive, and Fri. at 3 p.m.

at the Love Fu prepavaDia on or auer January 1. 1996. al par plus ac neral Home In Palmyra with burial In the Palmyra Cemetery. Visitation will be Thurs. trip by the Washington-based Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Un crued (merest, without eny repayment penalty, sual tax-exempt status.

Secured on a parity with the outstanding $90,000 City of Oak after 1 p.m. at me Love Fu der Law. neral Home in Palmyra..

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