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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 11

Location:
Des Moines, Iowa
Issue Date:
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11
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DES MOINES SUNDAY REGISTER February 3, 1991 JB WEATHER Information from National Weather Service and Freese Notis Weather Center National Weather Service 74-Ikwi refolded report (515) 285 U.S. TEMPERATURES AND FORECASTS low Precipitation (P) is for 24 hours endinj at 7 (W) is Satarday HLP 59 32000 7753 00 54220 00 33,3000 .60 ,780 00 7970OO0 3612000 34 0 00 55,70000 59400 00 little Roc Los Angeles. Louisville Madison Memphis Miami Beach Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Oneans Temperatures (H, L) indicate daytime highovernight the weather forecast. (NA) is not available. Saturday Today Monday H1VP HAW HlW Albany 2512001 379cdy AltJuqueroue 5419 DM 56 21 56 ,75 clr Anchorage 6-60 00 155cdy Atlanta 53 31 0 00 62 33 clr 65 3 car Atlantic City 3913 4525cdy 5028 clr Austm 6332000 6140cdy 6048cdy Baltimore 42 21 00 52 21 cdy 6030 clr Billings 5535wdy Birmingham 5925000 6427dr 6831 car Bismarck 5011 0 00 5216clr 4315 A Boise 51170.00 4823 cdy 46 .33 'rain Boston 28200 00 4819 clr 52 34 clr Brownsville 71450 00 6854 cdy 6956cdy Buffalo 27190.02 3818 clr 4928 cdy Burlington.

VI 13M02 333cdy 4126cdy Casper 47 30 0 00 49 29 4830 Charleston, SC 53400 00 5934 'clr 6540 clr Charleston. WV 51 180 00 5821 dr 59 ,79 clr Charlotte. NC 51280 00 6028 clr 6635 clr Cheyenne 57370 00 5824 57 30 cdy Chicago 39180 00 4726clr 5431 err Cincinnati 4820.D00 5228 cdy 5831dr Cleveland 377000 43 73 5129 clr Colo. Springs 6126000 6226 cdy 5925 'cdy Columbus. OH 451 70 00 4723 cdy 54 ,78 clr Concord.

NH 1910000 363cdy 4120cdy Dallas 62290.00 6234dr 6245 cdy Denver 5929000 6026cdy 5726cdy DesMoines 4417000 5124 clr 5331 clr Detroit 318000 4123 clr 4929 clr Duluth 26-100 00 4017 cdy 4424 cdy El Paso 63 29 0 00 6231 cdy 65 34 cdy Evansville 51260 00 5628 clr 6231 clr Fairbanks -107-4200- -17-33snow -15-26snow Fargo 3910000 4322 45 clr Flagstaff 4714000 51 A 5117 cdy Grand Rapids 3112000 4224 clr 4930 clr Great falls 52400 00 5S42wdy 5442wdy Hartford 29210 00 46 clr 5028clr Honolulu 81 63000 8361 clr 82 clr Houston 6531 000 6734 cdy 6346 cdy Indianapolis 4618000 51 26 clr 58 ,30 clr Jackson, MS 6026000 6627cli 6932 clr Jacksonville 61450 00 6344 cdy 6749 cdy Kansas City 51 31 000 5934clr Las Vegas 63360 00 65 ,35 cdy 6339 cdy Lincoln 49130 00 5420clr 5624clr CANADA Monday HIW 64 36 clr 73 52 clr 64 34, clr 48 30 cti 66 .37 clr 79 '68 cdy 5032 cdy 4626 cdy 64 32 clr 6742 cdy 52 ,35. clr 60,36 6119r'i 6639cd, 51, 76, '60, cdy 5734 clr 5776 clr 75, '48, cdy 5079 clr 43 ,74 cdy 53 42 rain 5233 6631 A 58 .76 cdy 5231, 'coy 6431 clr 58 '45 cdy 6236 clr 4475 cdy 60 cdy 66 '50 clr 60 SO 'cdy 8472 cdy 4325 clr 52, '45Min 6637, 'cdy 5020 clr 4437 cdy '37 clr 75 '60 'rdy 6030 cdy 74 cdy 6641 clr 60 35 clr 6031 cdy 5829 Today Ml 6430 'Ur 73 752. 'cdy 59 ,31 44 ,70 'clr 6433 clr 7968 'Cdy 4523 dr 4420 cdy 6226, clr 6438 'Clr 4775 cdy 5529 'coy 6415 'clr 6635df 4919 clr 7359 cdy 4828 47 73 cdy 7548 clr 46 70fdy 388 cdy 56 '45 rain 48'17cli 6024 Clr 6024 Clr 5527iain 5725, 'cdy 5940cdv 5932dr 3914 cdy 6137 cdy 6549 cdy 61 4 7 rain 8372 cdy 3410 cdy 56 'rain 64 78 clr 47 1 7 clr 46 ,34 cdy 6031 'clr 7356 r.tlv 1538 clr 5228 cdy 6029 clr 492 WWNj Rain Fluml Snow S'Mj70' i' uit l'yn New York 3523000 Norfolk, VA 49 ,78 tOO North Platte Oklahoma 6230000 Omaha 4429000 Orlando 6558001 Peoria 40220 00 Philadelphia 37 00 Phoenu 75530 00 Pittsburgh 41 fl 00 Portland. ME 1912000 Portland. OR 5339,1) 02 Providence 312100O Raleigh 5225000 Rapid City 5624000 Reno 59160 00 Richmond 5170000 Sacramento 6033000 St Louis 58330 00 Salt Lake City 36120 00 San Antonio 63290 00 SanOiego 6847000 San Francisco 62 45000 Santa Fe 4818007 SI.

Ste Mane 13-50 06 Seattle 54450 72 Shreveport 62260 00 Sioux Falls 4212000 Spokane 5131000 Springfield. MO .58300 00 Showers DES MOINES WEATHER ZONE FORECASTS Pf S. 5619 i Quad CitilS Mostly sunny, highs in mid- to 50s. lows in low to mid-30s. Saturday, Feb.

2, 1991 Hourly temporatures lam ...31 9a.rn 33 5pm 45 2am 32 10am 37 6p.m .42 3a.m 30 11 am 41 7p.m 40 4 am 31 Noon 44 8pm NA 5am 27 1pm 47 9pm NA 6am 29 2pm 49 10pm NA 'am 29 3p.m 49 11pm NA 8 am 28 4p.m 48 Midnight NA Council Bluffs Mostly sunny, high 45 to 50, low 25 to 30 Monday, mostly sunny, high 45 to 50. Ottumwa, Burlington Mostly sunny, highs 50 to 55, lows in low 30s. Monday, partly sunny, high near 50. Mason City, Cedar Rapids Mostly sunny, highs 45 to 50. lows in mid-20s Monday, partly sunny, low in mid-20s.

Decorah, Waterloo, Dubuque Mostly sunny, highs 45 to 50. lows in mid-20s. Monday, partly sunny, low in mid-20s. Carroll, Des Moines, Shenandoah, Lamoni Mostly sunny, highs 50 to 55, lows near 30 Monday, partly sunny and mild, highs near 50. Spencer, Fort Dodge, Storm Lake, Sioux City Mostly sunny, highs upper 40s.

lows in mid-20s. Monday, partly sunny, high in mid- to upper 40s. lampa-St Pete Topeka lucson Tulsa Washington Wichita 67560 00 .61300 00 7848000 6233000 4524000 6329000 oVJ MasonCily 4825 Ji6 Spencer 50 25 4925 FortDodie Waterloo 4925 525 Rxkford Norfolk SroiixCity Dubuque 5232 5525 4925 50 25 Carroll IOWA ft Clinton NEBRASKA 5530 CedarRapids 4925 Dm Molnas 50 25 4533 5026 5025 at, I WIS 5530 Burlintfon Shenandoah 1 5532T 5552 4930 5530 HnMH. 5540 I ILLINOIS KANSAS 7 Spnnfiw Topeka NpjtaiwCiln 59 30 5732 TODAYS REGIONAL FORECAST Wilmington, OE 3819000 PAN AMERICA Temperatures: High 49 at 2 p.m.; low 27 at 5 a Normal high 29; normal low 12. Mean 38: normal mean 21, Excess tot the day, 17, excess lor the month.

28; deficiency since first of year. 26. Year ago high 27, low 17. Precipitation: By midnight Saturday.none Total this month, none normal since first of month. 0 06.

total this year. 0 95; normal since Ian. 1, 107 Deficiency since Ian. 1,0.12. Heating Degree Days: Base is 65 degrees Saturday's total 27.

Year ago. NA Total this month. 61, which is 28 below normal Total this season, 3968. which is 6 below normal. Highs and lows through 7 a.m.

Saturday. Highs and lows through 6 a.m. Saturday. Wtr Wtr I Wtr Arapulco 86 73 lair Nassau Calgary 52 30 cdy Regma 37 29 cdy EXTENDED FORECAST Tuesday through Thursday in Iowa Fair and mild. Highs Tuesday and Wednesday in 40s to mid-50s.

Thursday in 30s and 40s, lows 20s to mrd-30s. I Wtr 84 69 fan 82 73 cdy 85 72 ram 69 64 cdy Edmonton 45 38 cdy Toronto 24 16 clr Montreal II -2 cdy Vancouver 53 49 rain Ottawa 11-7 cdy Winnipeg 29 19 clr Bennuda 71 59 cdy Kingston 95 71 fair MeucoCrty 73 46 fan San )uan St thonrn VeraCrw WORLD TEMPERATURES ASTRONOMY IOWAREGIONAL WEATHER DATA AND RECAP Feb 2. 1991 2, 1991 Friday's temperatures and conditions from midnight to midnight. Record Low Pet of normal Record High Daily Precip. Precip.

for year High Amsterdam 36 Athens 39 Bangkok 91 WEATHER HOT LINE 1-900-370-8728 The 24-hour Weather Hot Line gives Touch-Tone telephone callers temperatures, time, weather forecasts and current conditions for Des Moines and 488 Cities worldwide. After dialing the number 'above, punch in the area code of the city or the first three letters of a foreign city. This service is not available on rotary telephones. The call costs 75 cents for the first minute, SO cents for each additional minute. T-Ties record; new record Daytime 18 hr Record Record Daily Precip.

Pet. of ILLINOIS Hleh Low Hl'n Lo" tnap. for year normal Peoria 49 30 54 (1920) -20 (1905) 000 1.19 700 Rockford 41 21 52 (1987) -22 (1976) 0 00 112 7 4 5 Springfield 49 31 58 (1931) -16 (1905) 000 1.29 76 5 MISSOURI Kansas City 57 32 69 (1924) -14 (1905) 000 137 102 3 Kirksvlle 51 33 64 (1924) -8 (1959) 000 119 740 NEBRASKA Lincoln 48 18 65 (1924) -22 (1905) 0 00 0 92 1134 Norfolk 53 20 67 (1924) -35 (1905) 0 00 0 87 128 8 SOUTH DAKOTA SiouxFalls 56 19 1 56 (1924) -37 (1905 000 0 22 34 1 MINNESOTA Minneapolis 48 15 47 (1987) -28 (1965) 000 0 4 9 62 0 Rochester 40 IS 47 (1931) -25 (1951) 000 067 96 2 WISCONSIN LaCrosse 43 18 48 (1987) -32 (1873 0 00 0 93 91 0 Madison 45 47 (1987) -28 (1959) 0.00 116 88 0 Barbados 84 Beiing 37 Beirut 63 Belgrade 18 Berlin 32 Jan. 30 Feb. 6 Feb.

14 Feb. 21 Sets 9 20 a and rises at 1111 today PLANETS Mercury: Rises at 6 15 am tow southeast at dawn. Venus: Southwest at dusk, sets by 7:15 Mars: South at 7 30 sets by 3 a Jupiter: Low southeast at dusk, south by 12.30 am Saturn: Rises at 6:45 a.m.; difficult. Schedule Irom Or. Lawrence Staunton, Drake University Dept.

of Physics and Astronomy. Ha 59 Brussels 32 Daytime 18-hr. IOWA Hitf Algona 37 18 Ames 47 19 Atlantic 42 12 Burlington 48 29 Carroll 43 22 Cedar Rapids 40 22 Clinton 46 25 Council Bluffs 45 33 Creslon 47 25 Davenport 48 25 Des Moines 49 26 Dubuque 20 Fort Dodge 41 Iowa City 45 21 Lamoni 49 30 Marshalltown 48 14 Mason City 39 20 Newton 47 26 Oskaloosa 46 28 Ottumwa 47 29 Shenandoah 44 19 Sioux City 42 22 Spencer 45 14 Waterloo 45 10 KANSAS Topeka 59 30 low 25 30 68 75 25 54 8 23 42 21 70 46 61 30 NA 32 16 28 33 71 19 55 23 NA Wthr cdy cdy clr clr cdy clr cdy cdy clr clr rain rain cdy cdy NA clr cdy cdy cdy cdy clr clr cdy NA High Johannesburg 75 Kiev 32 lima 79 Lisbon 55 London 39 Madrid 48 Manila 86 Moscow 32 New Delhi 72 Oslo 32 Pans 34 Rio 97 Rome 50 Santiago 86 Sao Paulo 82 Seoul 39 Singapore 88 Stockholm 28 Sydney 79 Taipei 63 Tel Aviv NA Tokyo 50 Vienna 26 Warsaw 10 Low 61 30 66 37 36 36 75 10 SO 30 28 70 27 50 70 23 77 21 72 55 NA 37 17 -5 Wthr cdy cdy clr rain cdy rain cdy cdy clr cdy cdy rain cdy clr rain clr clr cdy cdy cdy NA clr clr cdy 54 (1987) -28 (1905) 000 0 44 55 7 62 (1987) -28 (1905) 000 094 1164 63 (1924) -36 (1905) 000 0 83 100.1 59 (1987) -22 (19051 000 1 10 71 4 59 (1987) -17 (1949) 000 0 89 99 9 59 (1931) -22 (1918) 0 00 0.98 73 9 55 (1987) -22 (1905) 000 0 84 50 0 62 (1924) -25 (1905) 0.00 0 92 1102 63 (1987) -13 (1951) 0.00 0 93 9 5 5 58 (1987) -22 (1905) 000 1 19 67 9 65 (1924) -26 (1905) 000 0.95 87 2 51 (1927) -22 (1959) 000 1 16 76.1 58 (1987) -29 (1918) 0 00 0 41 43 4 59 (1987) -27 (1905) 000 1 04 902 64 (1931) -19 (1918) 0 00 0 99 94 4 60 (1987) -27 (1905) 000 098 95 9 53 (1987) -26 (1917) 0.00 058 658 62 (1937) -12 (1965) 000 090 89 2 61 (1987) -29 (1905) 000 1 35 104 8 64 (1924) -12 (1951) 000 0.71 58.2 60 (1987) -12 (1978) 000 1.40 175 3 59 (1924) -30 (1905) 0.00 0 46 690 58 (1924) -28 (1916) 000 0 50 77 2 59 (1924) -28 (1918) 000 0 76 86,1 72 (1924) -15 (1905) 000 0 76 73.1 Buenos Aires .75 Cairo 64 Caracas 93 Copenhagen 34 Dtiahran NA Dublin 43 WATER LEVELS At a.m. Saturday Des Moines River at Southeast 14th Street; (bank full 231. Mississippi River at Dubuque: 7 6 (bank full 17).

at Davenport: 4.6 Ibank full 15); at Burlington: 7 8 (bank full 15). Missouri River at Sioux City: 14.6 (bank full 36); at Council Bluffs: 1 1 1 (bank full 29). Rathbun Reservoir: 904 feet above sea level (normal 904); flow rale 20 els Coralville Reservoir: 680 40 feet above sea level (normal 670 to 683), How rate 450 els. Lake Red Rock: 734.32 leet above sea level (normal 734), flow rate 890 els. Saylorville Reservoir: 836.33 feet above sea level (normal 836); flow rate 200 els.

Frankfurt 34 Geneva 34 Guadalajara 78 Havana 82 Helsinki 27 Hong Kong 63 Istanbul 30 ROAD CONDITIONS The Iowa Department ol Public Salely provides a recorded telephone message on winter mad conditions in the stale. It is a long-distance call, except in the Des Moines area The number is (515) 288-1047. Jerusalem NA The Register Dubuque eyes extra traffic IMleJtfV. aIaAAA aSfcM HANAIHA Blumberg case shows libraries' vulnerability qo uiiugu uiudtft lui lupaiid Rv nrRnn a wit By DEBORA WILEY Wisconsin Bridge t-T 3 Continued from Page IB rt.V a OoVt Harbor -Mississippi River ILLINOIS tMP DUBUQUE I East Dtibuqu Julien Dubuque Bridge closes Monday Eastbound traffic Westbound traffic Map not drawn to scale Of The Register's Cedar Rapids Bureau DUBUQUE, IA. The surface of the U.S.

Highway 20 Julien Dubuque bridge here is the pits literally. Driving through downtown Dubuque might be the pits figuratively from Monday until December while the key span over the Mississippi River is closed and a new deck is installed. Some 20,000 cars and trucks a day which normally pass over the 1943 truss bridge will be diverted through Iowa's oldest city, doubling, tripling or quadrupling the normal traffic flow. That's why Dubuque leaders are asking motorists to keep their cool, plan on a bit longer trip and "enjoy detour of de town." "It's going to be patience time, let me tell you," said Maury Burr of Cedar Rapids, district engineer for the Iowa Department of Transportation. Costing Iowa $2 Million Iowa will pay about $2 million of the $13.4 million cost, and Illinois will pay about $1.5 million.

A federal grant pays for the rest. When it's finished, the rebuilt bridge will have a 28-foot-wir'e road bed, 4 feet wider than it is now. The extra width will come from the north-side pedestrian walkway, which will be moved to the outside of the southbound lane, Burr said. Though some Dubuque city leaders were pushing to have a new four-lane bridge constructed instead of just replacing the deck, "we weren't able to accommodate them at this time," said Burr, who predicts the highway will someday be expanded into two bridges, each carrying two lanes of traffic. "The bridge needed to be repaired right now," Burr said.

"We couldn't leave this one sit without putting a bunch of money into it, and building a new one would take six to eight years. It just wasn't in the book." Once repaired, the Julien Dubuque bridge should last another 30 to 40 years, Burr estimated. Bridge to Wisconsin The detour takes cars farther north through town and across the river on the U.S. Highway 61 bridge to Wisconsin. Construction of a new route carrying Highway 61 through the city is about half done but won't be finished in time to ease some of the congestion, Burr said.

The detour adds about 6.4 miles to a trip taking the driver from the west end of the bridge to the east end. Du-buquers who are spoiled by their five-or 10-minute commutes to work will simply have to relax and enjoy the 20-minute drive that the greater distance or traffic congestion may cause, said Steve Horman of the Dubuque Chamber of Commerce. Horman said many businesses already have started making strategic plans to ease the detour's impact. Some businesses are offering discounts; restaurants and transportation companies are sending out maps to tour groups and truck companies. A few businesses even are offering delivery service to their customers.

Businesses might help their workers avoid traffic tie-ups by adjusting work shifts to less-busy hours, Horman said. bergs of the world," said William Moffett, the director of the Huntington Library in San Marino, and former president of the Association of College and Research Libraries. "They dramatize the problems of libraries. The FBI and law enforcement officials 'don't usually respond to the story of a library book being stolen. But we're talking about items of significant value." Sgt.

Steve Huntsberry of the Washington State University Police in Pullman was the exception. He started investigating Blumberg in February 1988 after books were discovered to be missing at the university's library. With the help of fingerprints, he tracked Blumberg's location to St. Paul, and even talked over the phone to his father, Henry Blumberg. Huntsberry said that when he heard of the arrest at Riverside, he told authorities there that Blumberg was using an alias.

Still, they prosecuted him under the fake name, he said. "It's like you tell a cop to investigate a book theft and he groans," Huntsberry said. "You tell him to investigate a felony assault and he gets excited." Increased Security In the wake of Blumberg's thefts, many libraries are beefing up security. At Washington State, students are hired to keep watch during peak hours at libraries. Extra alarm systems also have been installed.

Blumberg had no problem slipping through the earlier systems. He used razor blades, sandpaper, even his tongue to remove the identifying markers from books. Then he replaced the markers with ones that said the books were from the University of Minnesota. If he was stopped, he would show a fake card that identified him as a professor from the University of Minnesota and say he was doing research. Later, he became more advanced, stealing keys to university libraries throughout the nation.

In all, he amassed more than 20,000 books worth $10 million to $20 million, federal investigators say. The owners of more than half the books have yet to be identified, said Linda Reade, an assistant U.S. attorney. Roger Stoddard, the curator of rare books for Harvard University libraries in Cambridge, said the identifying markers of the books had been so defaced that determining the ownership of some books would be impossible. Stoddard said he identified some of his school's books by recognizing binding repair.

Some people are bound to find their own special techniques for getting around town off the detour route, Burr said. Horman said local residents will be affected more than tourists, who because of riverboat gambling are expected to pour into Dubuque in numbers even greater than the 1 million who visited last year. "I think visitors to an area are used to construction and detours," Horman said. "We are trying to minimize any impact we can. But we know we are going to have some irritated visitors.

We're just going to have to be even more friendly than we are already, as patient and courteous as we can." East Dubuque, 111., at the east end of the Julien Dubuque bridge and known for its strip of night clubs and bars, also is expected to be affected. "But they are purchasing their own advertising which suggests that motorists simply take the scenic route," Horman said. East Dubuque also bought a used ambulance to help ease delays in emergencies. Dubuque officials will monitor emergency vehicles to ensure safety isn't impaired by traffic congestion. "One of our biggest concerns on the detour route is the Soo Line railroad route which crosses the detour," Horman said.

"There are delays with traffic being very heavy at times." being gone and being presumed lost forever was a complete joy," he said. Fraser Cocks, curator of special collections of the Knight Library at the University of Oregon at Eugene, is looking forward to seeing the Oliver C. Applegate papers returned to his library. The papers, which detail the life of a family living in Oregon in the 1800s, were discovered to be missing in 1987, prompting an extensive Cocks said he was not at the library when the theft occurred. "My predecessors had to deal with all the anguish and anger," he said.

"There was a sense of violation." When the disappearance was discovered, Cocks said, the library announced that the people of Oregon had lost a piece of their heritage. "Painful, Embarrassing" "I still get letters from people who say they would like to look at the materials," Cocks said. "At least now I can say the FBI has them, but before March 20, 1 had to say, 'Those have been stolen. We don't know where they That's painful; it's embarrassing." Guido said he felt guilty when books were discovered to be missing at his library. "You don't want to believe that has happened during your watch, your stewardship of this material," Guido said.

"You like to think you're going to pass those materials on to successive generations. You almost feel as if you've let future generations down." At some libraries, suspicion focused on researchers and library employees when books started disappearing, said Victoria Steele of the special collections department at University of Southern California library at Los Angeles. Attention to Book Thefts Some librarians said Blumberg's arrest has brought attention to book thefts, which they say law enforcement officials often don't treat seriously. They noted that Blumberg glided through the system even when he was caught. In 1974, he faced a Colorado felony charge of stealing books from a university, but the case was dismissed.

In April 1988, Blumberg was arrested in the University of California-Riverside library and charged with possessing burglary tools and trespassing. He pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in July 1988 and was fined $1,065 and given a suspended jail sentence. "I'm appreciative of the Blum- UNI employees receiving salaries of $35,000 or more STATE SALARIES One in a sen'es. Caputo, Norwalk, $55,000, Phyllis E. Cartln, Waverly, Thomas Carlisle, Janesvllle, Roland CarrWo, $53,625, G.

Scott Caweltl, Janesvllle, $46,388. Jamet G. Chadnav, Bruce B. Chamberlain, Jamei C. Chang, $58,850, Paul W.F.

Chao, $60,800, Susan M. ChKcott, C. David Chrlitensen, Grant W. Cltrittensen, Ronald A. Chung, Hudson, Roy Chung, Edward A.

Clark, Robert E. Clark, $35,398, Robert E. Claut, Bernard L. Clausen, Dennis E. Clavson, Waterloo, Phyllis Conklln, $37,979, Forrest Conklln, $45,273, John E.

Connor, $92,500, Roxarme Conrad, Timothy M. Coonev, 54, 540; Carol Cooper, Jeffrey S. Copeland, Steven B. Corbhi, Waterloo, $68,379, Dennis M. Corrlgan, Waterloo, Lee E.

Courtnage, Waterloo, $58,758, Arthur T. Cox, John S. Cross, David R. Crownfleld, Demit C. Crver, Donald Cummlngs, Janesvllle, Constantino W.

Currls, $118,800, Donald R. Dar-row, Chandrasekhar Das, $71,135, Nadone E. Davidson, $38,180, Charles H. Davis, Oarrof W. Davis, Thomas M.

Davit, $57,832, Kenneth J. DeNautt, $39,983, Robert H. Decker, $46,162, Charters V. Dedrlck, Walter E. DeKock, $40,054, Eunice A.

Dee, Waterloo, $51,380, E.A. Dennis, Aricla M. De-vrles, Joan E. Diamond, Saul L. Diamond, Douglas D.

Ootriman, Fori Dodge, Forrest A. Dolgmr, Su-sarm G. Doodv, $60,500, Gregory M. Dotsoth, Jomot L. Doud, Jacques Dubois, Jerry M.

Ouea, Joan E. Ouea, Ann M. Dunbar, Waterloo, David R. Duncan, $71,439, Morris M. Durham, $45,665, Lynn K.

Dykstra, Waterloo, $36,056, J. Philip East, Charlono M. Eblen, Felipe R. Echever-rla, Jay A. Edetnarrt, H.

Stephen Eager, James A. Egtl, John L. Eiklor, $53,585, Clark K. Elmer, David K. Else, Ralph D.

Engardt, Cynthia P. Ensign, $38,481, Donald R. Erusna, Susan L. Etscheldt, Mohammed P. Fahmv, $57,444, David C.

Fanter, Waverlv, John T. Feclk, Ame C. Federleln, Waterloo, Merk A. Fienup, Judith M. Flnkeltteln, D.

Louis Fktsand, Thomas M. Fogarty, Sue E. Fotlon, Stephen J. Fortgang, Waterloo, Bruce E. Forystek, Roberta L.

Fox, AdoMo M. Franca, Robert L. Frank, Mary L. Franken, Joseph E. Fratlanm, Clinton, Arnold i.

Frettag, $50,163. MONDAY: More salaries of University of Northern Iowa employees. Here is a list of employees of the University of Northern Iowa who were paid $35,000 or more during the fiscal year that ended June 30, 1990. Unless noted otherwise, the employees live in Cedar Falls. The information comes from the annual employee salary book issued recently by the state.

Janice F. Abel, Fred J. Abraham, Ronald J. Abraham, 148.867; Charles M. Adelman, $36,749, Pita O.

Aabesa, Waterloo, Irads Ahrabl-Fard, Howard Al-bef, Janesvllle, Lvl K. Alberti, $41,988, James E. Albrtcht, Mary K. Aldrldee, Hudson, Terrv Allen, Edward W. Amend, Janesvllle, Duana C.

Ander, Bruce W. Anderson, Ronald J. Anderson, Waterloo, Wavnt I. Anderton, Laverne W. Andreessen, Waverlv, Donald L.

Ashbaugh, C. Murray Austin, FranciKO X. Barrios, Waterloo, Thomas M. Barry, Clemens L. BartoHas, Kenneth E.

Bauehman, Diane Baum, Walter E. Been, Waverly, James E. Becker, Judy Marltham Beckman, Mary G. Beckman, Thomas R. Berg, Waterloo, Virginia A.

Berg, $42,848, Margaret L. Berghammer, Barton L. Bergqultt, Marlbdle H. Betterton, Roger M. Berts, Hugs L.

Bevklrch, $44,758, Ronald K. Bigelow, Gerald D. Blsbev, $38,738, James E. Bodenstei-ner, $38,960, Cart W. Botlwinkel, Myra D.

Boots, Lvt L. Bowlln, Robert A. Bowlsby, $64,765, Mary E. Boiik, Lynn A. Brant, $42,213, Donald B.

Brlggs, Ronald D. Bro, Leander A. Brown, $48, 145; John E. Brviha, Relnhold K. Bub-ser, Waterloo, David J.

Buch, Waterloo, Winston Burt, Ray R. Bust, Waterloo, Daniel J. CahlU, Kenneth W. Caldwell, $69,777, William 0. Calhoun, William P.

Callahan, B. Campbell, $41,855, Christine L. Canning, Philip J..

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