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

The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 6

Location:
Zanesville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6-A THE TIMES RECORDER FRI. AUG. 28, 1992 WEJWHEQ Friday, Aug. 28 Accu-Weather forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures LA Law's Conchata Ferrell gets ax in attempt to boost lagging ratings MICH. I Cleveland 69 JffXpToledol 68 Manstield69 Youngstown 1 73' IND.

rS A hit the stage with his harmonica to raise money for victims of Hurricane Andrew. a. Dayton 7V being in trouble," she said. "They saw last year as being a very dark year and I came to symbolize last year. I think I got caught in the political backlash." She said she worried about her future on the show after Diana Muldaur, who played attorney Rosalind Shays, was written out of the show.

Her character fell down an elevator shaft. "I watched that elevator shaft all year. It finally got me," Ferrell said. PITTSBURGH (AP) -BRUCE WILLIS took a break from filming his next movie and The actor and his band, the Termites, played Wednesday night at a riverfront complex along the Allegheny River. In sunglasses and a khaki suit, Wil-lis crooned CHARLESTON, W.Va.

(AP) -CONCHATA FERRELL, who Iilayed a pushy entertainment awyer on "LA Law," said she was fired in an effort to save the show. "I've just about worked through being bumped from the show. It hit me pretty hard," Ferrell said in an interview published Thursday in The Charleston Gazette. Ferrell, who portrayed Susan Bloom, was let go in June after one season. Several other stars also left.

The NBC show's ratings have dropped steadily. "They perceive the show as PHILADELPHIA (AP) -NBC reporter ANDREA MITCHELL said she probably wouldn't have appeared on the "Tonight" show last week had she known she was a replacement for fellow reporter Arthur Kent. Kent was suspended by NBC on Aug. 12 for refusing an assignment and Mitchell said she learned just an hour before taping Aug. 21 that he had been fired.

"I didn't want it to appear I was in any way taking sides by appearing on the show' she said- Zanesville 7on Columbus Cincinnati Willis "Who Do You Love?" and other rhythm and blues tunes. KY. Portsmouth 75 I Tie-dyed slam-dunkin' skeleton T's a hit Shirts donated to Team Lithuania by Grateful Dead selling fast Showera T-atorma Rain Flurriea Snow Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy 1992 Accu-Weather, Inc. Vit Associated Press GraphkxNet Local forecast 6 ft 6 The forecast for today calls for periods of rain, which could be heavy at times.

The high temperature will be in the lower 70s with north winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain is 90 percent. Rain is likely again tonight. Low temperature will be in the mid-50s. Chance of rain is 60 percent.

Saturday is expected to be partly cloudy with a high temperature ranging between 70 and 75. (Sketch by Heather Wilson while a seventh grader at Grover Cleveland Junior High.) cost goes to the Lithuanian Olympic Committee; the band got nothing more than a good time. "A small-time little thing, a small gesture from the heart, has become a fad," said Grateful Dead spokesman Dennis McNally. While America's Dream Team was busy obscuring its warm-up logo with American flags, the Lithuanians proudly accepted their bronze medals in multicolored outfits more suited to Jerry (Garcia) than Larry (Bird). "All those American millionaires covering up their logos, and then these guys We felt great," McNally said.

"Obviously, it was a gas." Journalists in Barcelona paid $50 to get extras, while Lithuanian team members received offers of up to $150 for the green shirts off their backs. A flood of callers to the NBA's Golden State Warriors in Oak land, where Lithuanian star Sarunas Marciulionis plays, knocked out the switchboard last week. The demand coupled with Lithuania's need for funding for its post-Soviet Olympic program prompted the sale. The shirts are sold via the band's fax and toll-free phone numbers and by Ticketmaster. McNally said the band's merchandising arm has received 20,000 orders since the shirts went on sale last week.

Ticket-master reported more than 5,000 orders in 48 hours. McNally said the band led by Jerry Garcia and legendary for the loyalty of its "Deadhead" fans is not making any money from sales of the shirts, which were created by Phoenix entre- Eireneur Mike Fitzgerald and Not i'ade Away Tie-Dye Co. based in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. They get a portion of the profits. By LARRY McSHANE Associated Press Writer NEW YORK Reebok dropped $25 million on Dan and Dave.

Nike paid muchas pesetas to promote Air Jordan. So who came away with the greatest return on their Olympic investment? Could it be Team Lithuania and the Grateful Dead? The tie-dyed shirts worn by the basketball bronze-medalists were paid for by the veteran rock band that emerged from the 1960s psychedelic era. Featuring a slam-dunking skeleton, the shirts are the hottest-selling item to emerge from the Summer Games in Barcelona. Thousands of Americans are scarfing up T-shirts like those worn at the Olympic medal ceremonies by household names (in Vilnius, anyway) Rimas Kurti-naitis and Valdemaras Khomi-cus. One-third of the $30 shirt Donn Nelson, an assistant coach of the Golden State Warriors, models a tie-dyed Lithuanian basketball team warm-up shirt.

The T's, donated by the Grateful Dead, are the hottest-selling items to emerge from this month's Summer Olympic Grames. (AP) Looking ahead The extended forecast for Sunday through Tuesday calls for fair conditions throughout the period. High temperatures are expected to range from the mid 70s to lower 80s. Lows will be in the 50s all three days. Ag advisory JkiM il Jg; life.

s-iiilRStefc mM. MMisig materials Numerous showers and thunderstorms will prevail today with heavy rains possible. Growers with equipment or livestock in low-lying areas should move them to safe ground as flash flooding is a possibility. Rainfall totals of 1 to 2 inches will be common through today with heavier amounts of as high as 4 to 5 inches possible over southwestei i and west-central areas of the state. The damp weather will provide a poor environment for ripening tomatoes and any unharvested vegetables.

More damp weather is expected next week, reducing prospects for harvesting seasonal vegetables and planting canola. The forecast for next Tuesday through Saturday predicts above normal rainfall accompanied by near normal temperatures. The Accu-Weather8 forecast for noon, Friday, Aug. 28. HI II 1 if JT 1, MM Lines separate high temperature zones for the day.

Pressure-Treated Lumb 70s wmm SIZE 8' 10' 12' 14' 16' 12' 1 14' 16' $3.95 $4.46 $5.63 $6.14 $6.84 $8.07 ffiUHAuei Art i a 2X4 1 GRADE An tn Art 2X6 "H.OO 1 WAUtl Am AJ A A Mr I $8.191 2X8 D.d I IW COLO WARM STATIONARY 0 1992Accu-Waathr, Inc 1 UHAUt aa --I A A HL $12.09 15.18 WU HH3H LOW SHOWERS RAIN T-STORMS FLURRIES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY 2X10 0.3f I ff.W VmAuocmlmlPmu 1 GRADE $13.95 $18.43 $10.70 2X12 $6.27 $6.631 $9.111 PREMIUM DECKING 54X6 $4.41 $5.06 1 I I ROUGH SAWN maj (QA4 1 $3.291 $3.711 $4.371 1X6 vO.UI ROUGH SAWN aj (AAA National scene The tropical depression that was Hurricane Andrew caused wet, windy weather and spawned a few tornadoes as it moved northeast Thursday. Tornadoes touched down southwest of Valdosta, and near Montgomery, Ala. Baseball-size hail fell near Wa-pakeneto, Ohio. Thunderstorm winds caused damage in parts of Alabama.

Much of the state got heavy rain and there was some flooding. At 1 p.m. EDT, showers and thunderstorms extended over much of the Atlantic coastal states, Gulf states, lower half of the Mississippi Valley, Tennessee Valley, Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. Temperatures around the nation at 3 p.m. EDT ranged from 54 at Areata, and Crescent City, to 105 at Yuma, Ariz.

Temperatures elsewhere $4.74 $5.15 $5.94 1X8 I "O.UII I $8.081 4X4 $5.11 $7.06 i i. i 4X6 $8.08 $9.21 -t- i 6X6 $13.26 $15.66 I'rc (II Ik .19 cdy .13 cdy clr cdy clr 74 91 72 87 68 92 76 91 78 69 55 89 73 clr clr clr .03 cdy cdy .58 cdy rn "SHOW-HOW" DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS ON 45 Hi ju 57 86 72 HI 53 HO 71 67 39 72 60 69 48 93 68 60 50 69 44 8 77 83 73 2.03 cdy I Vegas Little Kock I Angeles Memphis Miami Beach Milwaukee Nashville New Orleans New York City Phoenix St Louis Salt l.ake City San Francisco Sioux Falls Spokane Tucson HOME DO-IT-YOURSELF PROJECTS Anchorage Atlanta Boise Boston Cheyenne Chicago Denver El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Juneau Kansas City 73 cdy clr clr .01 cdy cdy clr cdy 30 cdy 14 cdy .21 cdy 90 72 IOI 81 91 66 1 75 47 73 54 62 54 81 54 96 65 cdy clr 80 cdy clr cdy 02 cdy cdy clr THOMAS LUMBERTOWN ZANESVILLE, OHIO 97 73 84 67 58 40 63 54 ASH osim out VI it CARRY Hours: 3100 DiUn FaUs RL Mon. Fri. to 8pm Zanesville, OH 43701 452-9931 TR rime Temperature USATime. Wed.

Thurs. to 5pm (614) 454-0146 Saturday to 4pm i.

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 Times Recorder
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Times Recorder Archive

Pages Available:
1,034,143
Years Available:
1885-2024