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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 3

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday, Juno 6, 1932 Ttie Coshocton Trlbmo 3 1.7 Mill ion Expected To Cast Ballots JL COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The political spotlight focused on Ohio voters today as they went to the polls to nominate candidates for the Nov. 2 general election. Polls opened from 6:30 a.m. congressional districts. Incumbent Democratic Sen.

Howard Metzenbaum was assured of renomination, facing only token opposition from Norbert Dennerll, operator of private schools in the Cleveland area. "I think I ran a low-key campaign, enough to have him (Metzenbaum) spend not that much money," Dennerll said Monday. "I think we might be a to 7:30 p.m. today, but state elections officials predicted party vote in the state in 12 years. The Democratic gubernatorial campaign, often marked by verbal mudslinging, has attracted the most attention of any statewide race.

The office is being vacated by Gov. JamesA. Rhodes, who is barred from seeking another term. He has held the governor's job for 16 of the past 20 years. Seeking the Democratic nomination were former' Lt.

Gov. Richard F. Celeste, 44; Ohio Attorney General William J. Brown, 41; and former Cincinnati City Councilman Jerry Springer, 38. The three focused much of.

their campaign rhetoric on Ohio's economic condition. The state, with an unemployment rate of 11.4 percent, faces a possible deficit of $1.5 billion. As a result, the Legislature is considering the third tax increase in less than a year. Celeste, a former state legislator, assistant to the U.S. ambassador to India and director of the Peace Corps under President Jimmy Carter, has emphasized his variety of governmental experience.

Brown predicted victory and said he would have 15,000 supporters helping get out the vote today. Springer, who is trailing Ce leste and Brown, received national attention after airing a television ad in which he discussed his 1974 visit to a Ken- tucky prostitute. "The primary will be won in the streets," he said. The four Republican gubernatorial candidates include U.S. Rep.

Clarence Brown 'of Urbana; Seth Taft, 59, a former Cuyahoga County commissioner and grandson of former President William Howard Taft; conservative state Sen. Thomas Van Meter of Ashland; and Robert Teater, on leave from his job as state natural resources director. Brown declined to predict victory in a Monday appearance at Cincinnati, saying, "I don't do that as a matter of personal superstition. But I think things look pretty good." Van Meter and Teater have run third and fourth in various gubernatorial polls. Teater aide Roy Shinaberry said his candidate had special plans for Tuesday.

"He's thinking about going fishing," Shinaberry said. "What else can you do on election day?" Voters today were also being asked to choose among nominees for state treasurer, secretary of state and three Ohio supreme court seats. Candidates seeking nominations for stale auditor and attorney general were unopposed on the ballot. Also at stake were 99 Ohio House seats; 17 Ohio Senate seats; state political parties governing committees and various local races, including candidates for 21 new that only one-third ot the state's 5.54 million registered voters were expected to cast ballots or about 1.77 million. The secretary of state's office said it was likely that 1 million Democrats across the state will vote along with nearly 800,000 Republicans and a handful of voters for Libertarian candidates.

The Libertarian Party, which qualified for the ballot this year, is the first third- Earn current Daily Merest Income on your idle funds with: VISA Canh Trust PARTLY CLOUDY drawn by Tommy Partly cloudy skies are Guilliams, son of Mr. and predicted for Wednesday. Mrs. Tom Guilliams, 1031 This weather scene was Cassingham Hollow Drive. Coshocton Outlook Conference To Focus On City Redevelopment Edward Q.

Jonn tr Co. ASSETS EXCEED 816.7 MILLION The Coshocton area Yield 13.5 forecast calls for partly cloudy skies tonight with a low near 60. Winds will be '4 WW light and easterly. There will IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL be increasing cloudiness on Wednesday with a high 80-85 or thunderstorms Thursday and fair conditions Friday and Saturday. The highs will be in the 70s.

The low will be 55-65 Thursday and in the 50s Friday and Saturday. The high on Monday was 72, and the low was 49. One year ago, the high was 82, and the low was 50. The sun will set today at 8:58 p.m., and sunrise on Wednesday will be 5 :53 a.m. and a 20 percent chance ol rain.

The extended forecast, Thursday through Saturday, calls for a chance of showers CLEVELAND AP) There are many success stories in American urban redevelopment. The problem is that only those who live near the projects know about them. Paul Porter, who helped rebuild Europe's cities after World War II, hopes to solve part of that problem this week in Cleveland, where he is coordinating the Cities' Congress on Roads to Recovery. The idea behind the three-day meeting, which begins Wednesday and is sponsored by the city, Cleveland State University and The Plain Dealer, is to share information on successful redevelopments. One such project occurred in Salt Lake Cityl where a coalition battled a planned high-rise for a residential neighborhood and caused the project to be relocated in a largely abandoned warehouse area.

"All of these redevelopment projects have worked and very few are known outside their own communities," says Porter, a CSU adjunct professor of urban studies. "I have had nobody else tell me about what's happening in Brooklyn. And what's happening in Salt Lake City might as well be happening on the moon." Representatives from Brooklyn will discuss how a utility company helped revive old brownstone apartment buildings, which also attracted new business to a section of the city. From St. Louis, a delegation will tell about the revival of commercial and residential 1: WITHOUT INTEREST PENALTY Open your Edward D.

Jones Co. Daily Passport Cash Trust Account today and take advantage of the following feature Daily dividends. No interest penalty lor early withdrawal. Money immediately available by imply writing a free check. Accounts opened with as little as $5,000.

i The Forecast For 8a.m. EDT Wednesday, June 9 RainH SnoEl Showers Flumesgg Low temperatures '4 til development around a new university medical center. Cleveland Mayor George Voinovich will speak about the task force of borrowed business executives that helped reorganize the city's finances and about redevelopment projects such as Playhouse Square, the city's renovated downtown theater area. Porter, who was an assistant administrator of the Marshall Plan that rebuilt much of post-World War II Europe, said congress organizers approached 54 cities with more than 150,000 people that lost population between 1970 and 1980. Forty are sending representatives.

"Cleveland lost one of four residents and St. Louis was even worse than that," says Porter. "Yet that is where the most dramatic redevelopment is going on." Porter, 72, who commutes to CSU from his home in suburban Washington, D.C., began his urban studies as a retirement interest after ending careers in the foreign service and business. "It dawned on me that a number of our cities were developing a permanent dependency on outside subsidies, primarily from the federal government," Porter said. HEADS CITY CON- Wednesday in Cleveland.

Six- FERENCE Cleveland State teen major city success University professor Paul R. stories, including Cleveland's, Porter is coordinating the are to be spotlighted Auring Cities Congress on Roads to the three-day conference. Recovery slated to begin (AP) 7 tfav annua'iot) yield ending Juno 4. 198? was 13.7 AvHfaiie portfolio malunty was 3b days This yield will vary as shun letm interest, tales change. est Delave Lottery Kecpi i wurm National Weathei Service NOAA Oept ol Commerce BO' OCo.

Members New York Slock Exchange, Inc. "Member Securities Investor Protection Corporation Fronts: Cold T-v Warm Occluded Stationary Ohio Forecast collection system. OK'd bureau of workers compensation and industrial commission plans to contract with the Health Department, for $79,876, for an employee health center in Columbus. Agreed to let the Mental Health Department contract, for $28,501, for smoke detectors at Massillon State Hospital. Please send me a free prospectus with more complete information, including current yield, advisory fees, distribution be touched off tomorrow as low pressure moves from the central Plains to the upper charges and other expenses so I may Great Lakes.

read it carefully before I invest or send Showers and thunderstorms moved into money. southern Ohio overnight, with very heavy rains associated with some of the Clubs-Schools-Sport Leagues-Businesses By The Associated Press The National Weather Ser-vies says a cold front which slowly made its way across Indiana last night is to cross through Ohio today, then return as a warm front and cross the state again tomorrow. Since the front is rather weak, no major temperature changes are expected as it passes. Higher temperatures are forecast for tomorrow, when a southwest flow of warn Gulf air is expected to move into the Ohio Valley. New areas of thunderstorms could COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State lottery officials have discovered that winning approval of a request before the Controlling Board is not always a sure bet.

Controllers on Monday deferred for at least two weeks a lottey commission request to buy a computer terminal system it now leases from a private company for its games. Edwin C. Taylor, lottery executive director, said buying the gear from the General Instrument Hunt Valley, would save money and ease problems in dealing with some vendors. "It is our conclusion that we can save the state approximately $50 million by entering into the contract rather than bidding on a new system," Taylor told the board. Under the proposal, General Instrument would sell the state 2,000 terminals and the computer program for $5.8 storms.

low the amount anticipated last November when the current budget was approved. May revenue from the auto sales tax was $2.8 million above March estimates; non-auto sales tax income was up $6 million; and personal income tax was up $6.4 million. Tax income in April was $58.1 million higher than anticipated. Senate President Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, said there was "nothing significant" to change the stata's fiscal picture.

A legislative conference committee is working on a tax hikespending cut bill. Controllers also: Released $42.7 million in federal funds to schools for special education programs for handicapped students. Approved a $12,000 loan to the village of South Zanesville in Muskingum County for improvements to a wastewater million. The firm would get a percentage of income from the daily number game on a service contract. Taylor said the company would make $6 million worth of improvements to the system as part of the agreement.

Controllers were urged by a competing firm, Control Data Corp. of New York, to advertise for bids. The lottery now uses 1,800 terminals and generates about $7 million a week in sales. Controllers voted to defer action pending study. In other action, controllers were told that the state collected more tax revenue during May than expected.

Fiscal analysts said the improvement was too slight to warrant revision of a $1.3 billion budget deficit projection. The Office of Budget and Management said May income was $13.3 million above March estimates, but $45.6 million be CUSTOM SCREEN PRINTING The weather service office in Dayton issued an urban and small stream flood bulletin because of heavy thunderstorms in the Miami T-Shirts Jackets Caps IFootball, Soccer and Baseball Jerseys I Logo 1 Valley. The storms were associated with the Indiana 3-4 DAY SERVICE All Processes Done In Our Store Resident artist to assist you with your design. Wholesale Quantity Prices. cold front.

T-SHIRT DESIGNS UNLIMITED Nation's Weather Arthur R. Amundsen 132 S. 3rd St. Coshocton, O. 43812 (614)623-8084 UN.

4th St. Newark, Oh. Phone: 349-7707 Take Rt. 16 to the 4th St. Exit reported at St.

Louis and in parts of Central Illinois. Showers and thunderstorms were scat tered from the northern Plains to the northern Rockies, with clear skies Ohio Briefs By The Associated Press Hail and thunderstorms pummeling east central Missouri and central Illinois fanned out today into the Texas Panhandle and southern Indiana. A tornado was sighted on the ground Monday near Silverton, Texas, but no serious damage was reported. At Rosebud, power lines were clipped by high winds, and some trees were felled at Maryland Heights and Morrison. Golf ball size hail was over much of the rest of the Plains, and across the upper Mississippi Valley region.

A few showers dampened the New England states, where the clean up operation for last weekends heavy rains fmm ph-622-3004 Farm Prices Increase WE DELIVER Friendly Service was under way. Temperatures before dawn We reserve the right to limit quantities our meat is one CUT ABOVE THE REST ranged from 37 at Butte, to 84 in Phoenix, Ariz. We redeem FOOD STAMPS 311 South Fifteenth St. Prices Good Wed. Thru Sat.

cent below what it was a year earlier. The index for all crops for mid-May advanced 2 percent, but remained 11 percent below last year's index. The mid-month average of $2.62 per bushel for corn was up 5 cents from April, but 70 cents below last year. Prices for soybeans gained 11 cents to average $6.45 per bushel, but were $1 less than a year COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Prices received by Ohio farmers increased 2 percent since April, with corn and soybeans making slight gains and hogs, beef cattle and calves up sharply, the Ohio Crop Reporting Service says. The index of all farm commodities advanced during the month ending May 15, moving to 129 percent of the 1977 base.

However, the index was 2 per DIFFER BELL Secretary Sought After 10 Months 11 LB. Development Office Backed PORK CHOPS SKURFRESH WIENERS LB. HAM LOAF pork, mm GROUND BEEF TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Some 10 months ago, Cynthia Jane Anderson went to her job as a legal secretary just as she did most mornings, at a glass-fronted law office in a Toledo shopping center. She hasn't been seen since, and both police and her parents in Lambertville, say they have no idea what happened to the 20-year-old woman after 10 a.m. last Aug.

4, when she vanished. "We don't have a clue," said her father, Mike Anderson. ROUND Unemployment in the area stands at more than 12 percent. The city seeks a $22,500 federal Economic Development Administration grant. Urbana has been hit herd by reductions in the work force at an International Harvester plant six miles away.

General relief rolls have increased by 551 percent over the past two years in the county. More than one-third of those who still are employed in the county must comhute to other counties for their jobs. i COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State Development Director James Duerk has endorsed a proposal for a full-time economic development office for the city of Urbana. He also recommended Monday that its funds come from the federal government. Urbana officials want to combine and augment development efforts of the Chamber of Commerce, banks and businessmen and the Champaign County Community Improvement Corp.

1 1 LEAN LB. LB. LB. Base To Gel Squadron Almanac Described as a decent, Christian girl, everybody agrees that Cynthia Jane Anderson was not the type of woman to run away. "Cindy was the sweetest girl, she had so much going for her," said one of her best friends, Terri Lynn Schultz.

"She was a very nice, upstanding, moral person, the last person anyone would expect this to happen to." Said her mother, Margaret, "I know my daughter. She did not run away. She's a very sponsible person." "It's the most extensive missing person investigation we've ever conducted," said Mihailoff. Adds Adams, "We've got nothing, absolutely nothing. We've checked dental records with homicide victims from Arkansas to California." From day one, police say, they've treated the case of Cynthia Jane Anderson as more than that of runaway.

Foul play was suspected from theoutset. Ms. Anderson arrived at the law offices of James Rabbitt and Riqhard Neller and parked her car near the office. She was seen by a maintenance worker at 8.50 a.m. and by a passerby who looked into the window of the law office to check the time, at 9:45 a.m.

Meanwhile, her mother tried to call her between 9:40 a.m. and 10. There was no answer. The lawyers she worked for would later find the office entrance locked, mail in the door, Bnd a radio, lights and the air conditioner all on. IS STILL PROGRESS SO COME JOin THE PARADE.

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -Wright-Patterson Air Force Base soon will have an operational Air Force Reserve fighter squadron that eventually will hire 270 full-time employees and enlist 800 reservists. The unit, the 906th Tactical Fighter Group, begins operations July 1 and will be part of the selected reserve com ponents of the nation's armed forces, said Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio. Members of the selected reserve may be called to active duty in time of war or national emergency or for up to 90 days without such a declaration, Hall said. He said the new fighter group at Wright-Patterson is part of an effort to beef up reserve strength.

B0RDENS SHURFRESI1 ICE CREAIU1 BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE SHURFRESH BUNS 8CT.PKG. Teachers'' Salaries Averaged By The Associated Press Today is Tuesday, June 8, the 159th day of 1982. There are 206 days left in the year. Today's highlight in history: On June 8, 632, the Prophet Mohammed died. On this date: In 1942, Japanese submarines shelled Sydney, Australia, in World War II.

In 1965, U.S. troops in Vietnam were authorized to engage in offensive operations. In 1971, President Salvador Allende declared a state of emergency in Chile after an anti-leftist politician was killed by terrorists. And in 1973, Spain's Generalissimo Francisco Franco relinquished some of his power by naming Admiral Louis Car-rero Blanco as Premier. GAL LB.

RENT A RIHSE-N-VAC school year. According to the council, teachers' salaries accounted for $1.8 billion, or 62.1 percent of the total personnel cost for the state's public schools this year. Classroom teachers in city school districts received the highest average salaries, the council said. County boards paid the lowest average salaries, $14,216, it said. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Classroom teachers in Ohio's public schools were paid an average salary of $18,561 at the beginning of the 1981-82 school year, the Ohio Public Expenditure Council says.

The council, a non-partisan private tax research organization, said Monday the salary level increased 9.8 percent over the average salary paid to teachers in the 1980-81 SWEET-JUICY CANTALOUPES iff REDRPE TOMATOES iJlJ LB..

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