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St. Cloud Times from Saint Cloud, Minnesota • Page 2

Publication:
St. Cloud Timesi
Location:
Saint Cloud, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2AJ Daily Times. St. Cloud. Minni Sept. 9, 1987 Weather roundup WEDNESDAY St.

Cloud Thursday Cloudy Tonight Cloudy 20 chance of showers or thunderstorms. Low around CAP 40 chance of showers or thunderstorms; cooler. High Record for date High: 102 In 1931 Low: 36 In 1924 upper 60s. Hourly temperatures Tuesday 89 10 11N12345 48 51 59 63676871687170 Wednesday 89 10 11 Ml 2345 56 52 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 44 6 71 50. Temperatures TuMday Sam date 1986 High: 73 High: 69 Low: 46 Low: 45 Mean: 60 Normal: 60 Precipitation Tuesday Month to date: JSYear to date: 1 5.06.

Degree days (Season July 1-Jurte 30) 7 68 7 43 6 44 IPeopI Moon phases More information Local weather: 251-1400 St. Cloud area road conditions: 255-4265 Sept 8, 1986: Fuel consumption: 1 Normal season: 105 Tuesdays Season to date: 98 Last season: 141 QO0O Sept 14 Sept 22 Sept 30 Oct. 6 Other state roads: 296-3676 Weather Service radio frequency: 162.475. Sunset: 7:40 Sunrise Thurs. 6:48 MinnesotaMidwest Compiled from Times wire services Jerusalem welcomes Bob Dylan JERUSALEM Singer Bob Dylan, 46, abruptly canceled a meeting with Israel's foreign minister, but did not disappoint 9,000 fans at his first concert in this city Monday.

Dylan performed with a charged delivery of classic hits but the concert came to an abrupt end when the sound system failed during the first encore. Dylan's enthusiastic reception in Jerusalem contrasted sharply with the criticism he received after a performance Saturday in Tel Aviv, where hundreds of the 40,000 fans walked out in disappointment. Before Monday's concert, Dylan provoked more criticism by calling off a meeting with Foreign Minister Shimon Peres without explanation. The singer also canceled a visit to the Western Wall, one of udaism's holiest sites. Friday Dylan failed to show up for a traditional Sabbath meal of chopped liver and gefilte fish held in his honor, an appearance on a national TV talk show and a guided tour of Tel Aviv.

Israeli newspapers criticized Dylan. "Robert Zimmer Forecast roundup: Minnesota: Tonight, partly to mostly cloudy with pos- sible showers or thundershowers statewide. Not as cool. Lows from the middle 40s far north to the lower 50s in the south. Thursday, cooler.

Scattered showers with mostly cloudy skies. Highs generally in the 60s. Friday through Sunday: Minnesota: Partly cloudy and cool Friday and Satur- day. Partly cloudy and a little warmer Sunday. Highs in the 60s Friday and Saturday, mid 60s to mid 70s Sun- day.

Lows in mid 40s to low 50s. North Dakota: Little precipitation expected Friday i through Sunday. Highs upper 60s to low 70s. Lows in the 40s. South Dakota: No significant rain expected Friday through Sunday.

Highs mostly in the 70s. Lows mostly in the 40s. Vv Intl Falls Grand Forks SUAV.U I 7841-- SrSozX 7643- Alexandria tm)S' I TbdTl -7547" Little Falls 7840" 4cioud. 75.48Tr- 7346- I eoT Sioux Falls I Rochester V. L8042" 7846Tr.

7056.29 a HiLowPrecip. i AP photo Singer Bob Dylan received an enthusiastic reception from 9,000 fans in Jerusalem Monday. During a performance in Tel Aviv Saturday, hundreds of disappointed fans walked out on his concert. United States The Accu-Weather forecast for 8 A.M., Thursday, September 10 60. His man, your time has passed," said the daily Maariv, in a reference to the singer's classic "The Times They Are A' Changing." Dylan, born to a Jewish family in Duluth, changed his name after he became a singer.

Things get out of hand at concert PROVIDENCE, R.I. Police learned the hard way that 30 officers were not enough to control 18,000 to 20,000 fans of the Grateful Dead. Roughly 15,000 "Deadheads," as the fans call themselves, got in to see the band's Monday night concert at the Civic Center, and the rest laid siege to the building, police said. Before the night was over, two policemen had facial cuts from thrown bottles, more than 60 people were arrested, two Civic Center doors were ripped from their hinges, a center employee suffered a broken arm while trying to hold a door shut and a fan broke his leg when he fell or was pushed from the center's parapet to the sidewalk. Broderick returns to United States NEW YORK Actor Matthew Broderick returned to the United States pending a February court date in Ireland on charges stemming from an automobile accident that killed two people.

Broderick, who faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted on a charge of causing death by reckless driving, declined to discuss details of the Aug. 5 accident Tuesday at Kennedy International Airport. "I can just tell you it was a terrible, terrible accident," said the 25-year-old actor, who was with his girlfriend, actress Jennifer Grey, 23. Broderick, who was hospitalized with a broken leg, walked with crutches. Grey was with Broderick when his car collided with a vehicle carrying two women about 80 miles southwest of Belfast near Enniskillen in County Fermanagh, but the actor said he couldn't remember details about the accident.

Associated Press Showers and scattered thunderstorms prevailed across much of New England and rivers rose in the rain-soaked middle Atlantic Coast states today, while powerful thunderstorms gusted across the Plains. Flood warnings were posted for the lower and middle James River in Virginia, which is expected to cause minor flooding Thursday at Richmond with a crest at 11 to 12 feet above flood stage. In eastern Pennsylvania, more than 5 inches of rain had fallen across the lower Lehigh River basin since Tuesday afternoon, causing rapid rises along the eastern Pennsylvania river. Dense fog cut visibilities to a mile or less across much of the Great Lakes region from lower Michigan through northern Ohio, northwest Pennsylvania, upstate New York, West Virginia and along the northwest coast of California. Today's forecast: rain east Great Lakes, Appalachians, Atlantic Coast, Gulf Coast to Florida, New England, northeast New York to Maine, central Plains and south Texas.

Highs: 70s and 80s much of nation; upper 60s north North Dakota eastward through upper Michigan; 90s California valleys through south Texas, Southeast; 100 to 1 10 desert Southwest. Game show host Barker is a natural LOS ANGELES TV game show host Bob Barker got a standing ovation on the set of 'The Price Is Right" for giving up his dyed brown pompadour and reverting to his natural gray-white shade. 'The women were screaming and whistling and howling," Barker's publicist, Roger Neal, said Tuesday. "He's going to let the people decide how to wear his hair," Neal said. The television audience will be asked to write in with their choice, he said.

Barker said Tuesday that he stopped dyeing his hair while on a recent vacation in Europe. When he returned to CBS studios, 'They all said go with the gray. Barker's "new look" debuts Oct. 15 on the popular game show, which was videotaped oh Labor Day. FRONTS Warm Cold Stationary 1987 Accu-Weather, Inc.

83 56 clr 83 55 clr 66 clr 98 98 Yesterday Today Hi Lo Otlk HI Lo Otlk 88 70 cdy 89 69 cdy 83 60 clr 80 65 clr 74 Portland.Ore. StLouis SanDiego SanFrancisco Seattle 77 57 clr 78 In brief Actress Pam Dawber is three months pregnant. The star of CBS' "My Sister Sam," is "thrilled" and "feels marvelous," according to her spokeswoman Jay Mulford. Dawber, 35, is married to actor Mark Harmon, 36. 65 cdy 86 76 cdy 91 69 cdy 84 74 cdv 92 89 93 83 93 78 85 76 LasVegas LosAngeles MiamiBeach NewYorkCity Orlando Phoenix Pittsburgh 67 clr 64 cdy 76 cdy 69 cdy 74 cdy 73 Clr 58 cdy 79 65 cdy 77 62 cdy 65 cdy 58 clr 54 cdy 76 cdy 71 cdy Atlanta Chicago Cleveland Dalls-FtWrth Denver Honolulu 55 cdy 58 cdy 67 cdy 51 cdy 76 clr 90 65 cir yi 58 clr 78 53 cdy 77 76 cdy 90 72 cdy 84 91 Tampa-StPtrsbg 80 51 cdy 81 104 72 clr 105 76 61 rn 75 Washington.D.C.

89 91 76 clr 91 I f. Ammn A $1L TJt it dp Dm EU3inuists Man charged with woman's murder BRAINERD (AP) An East Gull Lake man has been charged in the apparent death of a 68-year-old widow two I years ago, although the woman's body has not been found. Jerome Edwin Bye, 40, was arraigned Tuesday on charges of first-degree murder and theft in the disappear- ance of Charlotte Irene Lysdale, whose house he had bought. Lysdale, who was living in Pine River, was last seen visiting Bye's real estate office in June 1985. "I don't know if in Minnesota there has been a case pro- secuted in which the body has hot been found," Crow Wing County Attorney Stephen Rathke, who is prosecuting this case with Cass County Attorney Earl Maus, said Tues- day.

Man pleads guilty to sex charge ROCHESTER (AP) A man whom authorities said kidnapped and raped a young girl out of revenge toward one of her relatives, the Winona County attorney, pleaded guilty Tuesday to a lesser charge, the prosecutor said. Winona County District Judge Lawrence Collins ac- cepted Albert Bolstad's guilty plea to one count of third-de- gree criminal sexual conduct and set sentencing for Oct. 5, said William Klumpp, a special assistant attorney general serving as the prosecutor. Bolstad, 37, of Winona faces a 49-month prison sentence, Klumpp said. He has been held in the Winona County Jail since his arrest May 6 in La Crosse, Wis.

Officer sentenced in embezzlement NEW ULM AP) A former New Ulm police officer has been sentenced to 34 months in Stillwater state prison after his conviction on charges of embezzling police pen- i sion funds. Charles Nalipinski, 48, also was ordered Tuesday by Brown County District Judge Noan Rosenbloom to make restitution and was placed on probation for ten years. Nalipinski, a New Ulm police officer for nearly 18 years, was arrested last March and charged with taking more I than $30,000 over a four-year period from the New Ulm Police Relief Association. He had been treasurer of the fund since 1979. As.

AP photo A tangle of twins The teachers at Longfellow Elementary School in Portland, Maine, are likely to be doing a series of double takes when they see five sets of twins in their building. The twins, who make up 6 percent of the 160 kindergartners in the school, Board denies Speck parole CHICAGO AP) Convicted mass killer Richard Speck was denied parole today by the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, 21 years after the brutal slayings of eight student nurses in a Chicago apartment. Last week, Cook County prosecutors and some friends and relatives of the victims jammed an emotional hearing on Speck's parole request, pleading with the Illinois Prisoner Review Board to keep him behind bars. Speck, who is imprisoned at the Stateville Correctional Center, did not appear at the hearing. Speck was originally sentenced to death for the deaths of the women, who lived together while studying nursing at South Chicago Community Hospital.

But that sentence was voided along with the Illinois death penalty in 1972. Justice Marshall rips Reagan WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Court Justice Thur-good Marshall puts President Reagan at the bottom in a ranking of U.S. presidents because the justice says Reagan has allowed an erosion of civil rights. "I don't care whether he's the president, the governor, the mayor, the sheriff," Marshall said in an interview to be broadcast Sunday on WUSA-TV. "Whoever calls the shots determines whether we have integration, segregation or decency.

That starts exactly with the president." Marshall, 79, predicted that Harry Truman "will come out on top" in the judgment of history, but that Reagan ranks with Herbert Hoover and Woodrow Wilson among the worst presidents ever. Anonymous note hits Playboy TULSA, Okla. (AP) Playboy Channel officials are investigating an unauthorized message piped in by someone who beamed a message on the cable television station warning viewers to "repent your sins," a newspaper reported today. Playboy Channel officials in Los Angeles were unable to. provide estimates on how many viewers across the nation actually saw the message Sunday night, the Tulsa World reported.

Channel officials first heard of the illegal transmission when notified Tuesday by a subscriber in Texas, the newspaper reported. FAA probes executive's close call WASHINGTON AP) The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating a pilot error involving the agency's executive jet as it carried FAA administrator Allan McArtor to Tennessee last week, officials sayi An agency spokesman said Tuesday the pilot of the FAA aircraft misunderstood an air traffic controller's direction and flew 800 feet below his assigned altitude while approaching the Memphis, airport. The agency has begun an investigation into the reported "pilot deviation," FAA spokesman Bob Buckhorn said. Most Catholics support church KANSAS CITY, Mo. AP) A poll of U.S.

Roman Catholics found that most consider the church an important part of their lives but would like more say in the formation of policies on birth control, abortion and homosexuality. The poll was conducted by the Gallup organization for the National Catholic Reporter, an independent weekly newspaper published in Kansas City, and appeared in Friday's edition, which was mailed in advance of the pope's U.S. visit this week. The newspaper described it as the first survey of its kind and said it "showed widespread support throughout the church spectrum for significant change." include, front row from left, Ely and Amos Le-Blanc-Simpson and Adrianne and Carrie Lock; back row from left, Monica and Jessica Weth-erington, Eric and Scott Wespi and Lacy and Jeffrey Smith. U.S.

Constitution: Jp3 200 years ago today AA Venezuela's northern coast to the city of Maracay, 20 miles south. No official casualty figures were released and officials said a thorough search for bodies could take weeks. Danish prime minister resigns COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Prime Minister Poul Schlueter resigned today after his center-right minority coalition suffered an unexpected election setback. Schlueter, 58, who lost his working majority in Parlia ment in Tuesday's voting, handed his resignation to Queen Margrethe II at Amalienborg Palace following a meeting with opposition leaders and his partners in the four-party On ttae vjqvM London bus crash injures 20 LONDON (AP) A bus with American tourists among its passengers was one of seven vehicles involved in a highway pileup today that killed three people and injured 20 others, according to local authorities and media. A police official provided the casualty figures.

He said the crash and pileup occurred on the M4 Motorway between London and Heathrow Airport. Press Association, the British domestic news agency, said two buses, one truck and four cars were involved in the crash. Scotland Yard could not immediately confirm the report. Angel Motors, the company operating the tourist bus on a day trip to Windsor Castle outside London, said about 40 people were aboard, many of them Americans. The company did not have a precise breakdown on the passengers' nationalities, and it was not immediately clear whether any of them were injured.

Venezuela buries flood victims MARAC AY, Venezuela, (AP) Rescue crews today dug for bodies along a three-mile stretch of mountain road where a torrent of mud swept away hundreds of cars. At least 200 people were reported dead in the mudslide and floods. More than 250 people were missing, 1,000 were injured and 20,000 left homeless following heavy rains Sunday that left a trail of destruction from the Ocumare resort on Sunday, Sept. 9, 1787 PHILADELPHIA TODAY The weather was cool and pleasant. Jacob Hiltzheimer's daughters Kitty and Hannah went with William Rush and family in the Rush family carriage to Oxford Church.

CONFEDERATION TODAY The several delegates to Congress who had been waiting in New York for enough additional delegates to form a quorum continued to wait more or less patiently. CONVENTION TODAY As the Convention enjoyed its customary Sunday recess, even the most pessimistic of the delegates must have felt that its work was nearly complete. The Convention had worked itself through the report of the Committee on Style and Arrangement except for the provisions for ratifying and amending the document, had debated the work of the Committee on Unfinished Parts, had finally agreed on a method of electing the executive which most delegates could support, and had appointed a committee to put the new frame of government in final form. Probably most delegates assumed that this would be their last Sunday in Philadelphia. If so, none of them regretted that coalition.

The resignation signaled a political crisis calling for the involvement of the queen, who must now consult the nine parties in Parliament to resolve the deadlock. Korean plant reopens under guard SEOUL, South Korea (AP) The country's second-largest automaker today resumed operations under police protection at its main assembly plant, which was shut down for two weeks by a violent strike. About 900 riot police in green combat uniforms and black helmets guarded the main gate at Daewoo Motor main plant at Pupyong, near Seoul, as thousands of workers returned to their jobs. No violence was reported. -tr.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1928-2024