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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 2

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 The Tribune Friday, March 20, 1992 25 OSaft Zaftig ELY Business People Number 11 for 'Cheers' BURBANK, Calif. (AP) The gang at 'Cheers' will be back for another round Smith begins residency ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Dr. William Kennedy Smith will begin his Doc: Too sick or jail XEWYORK(AP) LeonaHelmsleyis too ill to go to federal prison for income tax evasion because she has extensive blood vessel disease and probably has "substantial coronary dis- medical residency at the University of New Mexico this summer, a year after he was to have started the program and six months after being acquitted of rape. The uni- i a i i NBC renewed an 11th season for the bar-r comedy.

"Cheers" is NBC's series and the No. 4-rated series on tele- ease, her personal physician said Thursday. Mrs. Alley 60 Mi vision this season, trailing CBS' Blade workers authorize strike TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) All eight unions representing workers at The Blade have authorized a strike, but a date has not been set and contract negotiations continue. The Toledo Newspaper Guild voted 202-2 Thursday to authorize the strike, said Guild Vice President Tom Bendycki.

The current contract expires at midnight Saturday. The guild is the newspaper's largest union, representing 330 of The Blade's 900 employees. The seven other unions previously had voted to authorize a strike. Negotiations on a new three-year contract began in November between individual unions and the company. Talks also are under way between the Toledo Council of Newspaper Unions and the company.

Another session was scheduled for today, Bendycki said. There have been two previous strikes at The Blade, in 1963 and 1966-67. Trade gap narrows a bit WASHINGTON (AP) The merchandise trade deficit narrowed slightly to $5.77 billion in January even though American exports fell for a third straight month, the government said. The Bush administration Thursday called the weakness in exports temporary, but private economists worried that the lull could prove more lasting and imperil chances to mount a sustained recovery. Ghost of Pan Am still flying NEW YORK(AP) Pan Am landed in the graveyard offailed airlines last year, but don't be too surprised if you see its once-proud blue ball logo fly by.

And don't worry, you're not seeing ghosts of the bygone Pan Am clippers. Trans World Airlines just hasn't gotten around to repainting all the planes it bought when it acquired Pan Am Express, a commuter carrier, in Pan Am's bankruptcy case. The planes now fly as Trans World Express, TWA's commuter carrier, although its not always clear from the paint job. Smith versity said Thursday that Smith would join 19 other first-year internal medicine residents the last week of June. The program lasts three years.

However, but doctors sign up one year at a time. Smith, 31, nephew of Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, was acquitted in December of charges of raping a woman at his family's Palm Beach, estate last Easter weekend. Despite the jury's verdict, his accuser maintained, he was guilty and appeared on a primetime television show to make her case. Smith graduated from Georgetown University Medical School last year.

He delayed starting his career because of the trial. Leona's doctor Helmsley, 71, was admitted to New York Hospital on Wednesday suffering from palpitations and chest pressure. Four hours earlier, she was resentenced to four years in prison. Pritchett, an internist, said none of the completed tests indicated a heart attack. But he said she is a prime candidate for heart disease based on family history and her personal history as a former three-pack-a-day smoker with high cholesterol and high blood pressure, and who has suffered three minor strokes.

"In my opinion, the stress of prison is very likely to have a very deleterious effect on her and could result in a fatal termination," Pritchett said. U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa ordered her to surrender April 15. nutes," ABC's "Roseanne" and CBS' "Murphy Brown." Only "Bonanza" ranked as high in its 10th season. The cast of that popular western included that late Michael Landon.

Salaries for the cast, including Ted Danson, George Wendt, Kirstie Alley and Woody Harrelson, help make "Cheers" the most costly series in TV history. Danson and Alley have are also pursuing lucrative careers in Hollywood and television movies. "Cheers" is produced by Paramount Television. Both Paramount and NBC declined to say Thursday how much the network paid for next season's shows. Nationworld New findings on second-hand smoke Grain markets Non-smokers' arteries narrowed COSHOCTON GRAIN: These are the price paid until 10:25 a.m.

today at Coshocton Gram Co. on Brown's Lane. Following the cash price is the basis, the difference between the local price and futures pnce on the Chicago Board of Trade, and the trading month. CORN WHEAT BEANS Mar. 2 May Mar.

3.79; May Mar. 5.85; May April 2 May NCrop 82 3.60 Jiiy Apr! 5.87; May May. 2 70; July NCrop 83 35; -25 July May 5.94; July NCrop 2.50; Dec. OATS NCrop 6.10; Nov. Dec 2 54; Mar.

Mar. 1.84; .33 May Jan 6.25; -JX Jan. Jan. 2.58; Mar. NCrop.

1.46; July searcher says. The link between secondhand smoke and narrowing of the arteries by virtue of a thickening of the artery walls "is a strong effect," said George Howard of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C. He is principal author of the study released Thursday. Narrower arteries are more prone to clogging by cholesterol deposits and clots. Blockage of those arteries causes heart attacks and strokes.

The study is the first to use ultrasound to examine arteries directly to look for the effects of second-hand smoke, Howard said. "The point is to get a more direct measure of the process" that leads to a heart attack, Howard said at the annual American Heart Association meeting on OHIO CASH GRAIN: Prices for Thursday: Wht Corn Oalt Bean NEOfto 3.78 2.63 1.78 5.71 Central NWOho 3.77 2.61 1.63 5 82 SWOhiO Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. Exposure to second-hand cigarette smoke increases the risk of heart disease among non-smokers by significantly narrowing their arteries, a re Wht Corn Oat Bean 3.77 2.67 1.92 5.85 3.79 2.67 NA 5.87 Central 3.74 2.61 1.42 5.75 Trends TRENDS: SL-Sharply Lower; L-Lower; U-Unchanged; H-Higher; SH-Shaply Higher. Chicago Board of Trade CHICAGO (AP) Futures trading on the Open High Lsw Last Chg. WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum; dollar per buahel Mar 3 93 3 93V.

3.90 3 93 .02 3 87 3.89K 3.86 3.8ST. .02 Chicago Board of Trade Open High Low Last Chg. OATS 5,000 bu minimum; dollsrs per bushel Mar 1.49 149 1.48 148 .61 May 1.54 1.55 1.49 1.50 .04 Jul 1.60 1.61 1.55 1.56 .04 Sep 1.62". 1.62 1.59 1.60 .03 Dec 1.68 1.69 1.66 1.66 .03 Mar 1.72 .04 Wed. salea 2.123 open int 14.642 SOYBEANS May Jul Sep Dec Mar 3.7014 3.721 .00 3.74 3.75K .00 3 83V4 3.84V4 .01 3.854 3.86 .00 3.48 3.50 3.73 3.74 3.77M 3.78 3.85 3.86 387 3.89 3.52 3.52 Jul heart disease epidemiology.

Exposure to second-hand smoke is an established risk factor for lung cancer, but its role in heart disease has only recently become clear, researchers said. Last year, a study in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation found that second-hand smoke caused an estimated 37,000 heart disease deaths per year among non-smokers in the United States. Threats against Iraq not serious Diplomats assess U.S. statements Scripps Howard News Services U.S. and British threats to take military action against Iraq if it does not destroy its major weapons systems are heavy-handed but not yet serious, United Nations diplomats and international affairs specialists say.

"It's a last resort if there's going to be anything like that," a Wed tales 15,617 5,000 bu minimum; dollars per bushel .02 593 Mar 5.92 5.93 5.68 599 6.08 6.12 6.15'. .02 .02 .01 .02 5.97 6.07 6.11 6.14 601 594 6.10 6.04 6.14 6.06 617 6.1Z 6 25 6.19 open int 59,824. up 248 CORN 5,000 bu minimum; dollar per bushel Mar 2.65 2.65K 2.63 2.64V. May 2 71 2.71Y. 2.69 2.71 .00 Jul 2.76 276 2.74 2.75V.

.00 Sap 2 69 269 2 67 2.68 .01 Dec 265 2.651 2.63 264 .01 Mar 2 72 272 2.71 .01 May 2.76 276 2.75 2.75 .01 Wed't sales 27.760 open Int 281,833 May Jul Aug Sep Nov Jan Mar May 621 6.29 6.34 6.27. 638 6.42 6.36 6.23 .03 6.33 .04 6 42 .05 6.49 .06 136.573 sales 29.662 open Int Stocks AP The following closing quotes were provided by Edward D.Jones Company, 228 Coshocton. The quotes do not include retail markup, markdown or commission. Wed 19 39 78 36 14 339 00 87 48 29 4 56 44 42 19 14 Thu 19 40 78 38 13 33920 86 47 30 4 58 43 42 19 14 Wed Thu AEP 31 31 EnnisBF Ames 1V32 1332 Ford 39 39 GE Amerilech 58 58 GM BANK ONE 46 46 GenCorp BectonDck 68 69 Gold BoO Evans 27 26 IBM Brush Peed 55 55 LncCol Bfl 22 22 LrndStres ChmngShop 30 31 LSI Ind Chrysler 17 18 MayCo OrrtwGas 18 18 McDonalds Comar 19 19 NtCtyBnk ConRail 79 81 CtuoEdson Cyc 21 21 PanEatl Wed Thu Penneys 66 66 Premaik 46 46 R.P.M. 21 22 Sara Lee 53 53 Stone 30 31 TeiecomnA 16 17 United Tech 52 53 WMT 53 53 WMX 40 41 Wendys 12 12 WhlngPI 7 7 Wrthngm 24 23 Falcon Oil 1 1 PacDunlop 15 15 Dowln 3261.40 up 7.15 auction house in London, Thursday.

They are part of 200 lots of torture instruments put up for sale. FOR SALE Birmingham antique dealer Michael Fireman displays a pair ol leg leg irons at Christie's Tools of torture up for sale Western diplomat at the U.N. said. "You need an awful lot of preparation for that," said Gabriel Ben-Dor, an Israeli professor of political science currently at York University. "You need troops and ships and planes in place and, at the moment, the United States doesn't have them." British and U.S.

actions against Iraq are "limited by the precedents established during the (Persian Gulf) war," said Jean Franois Rioux, a research fellow with the Ottawa-based Canadian Institute for International Peace and Security. "Canada and other (U.N.-member) countries would like to be consulted and to have a vote." The Tribune Michael G. Sipe PublisherGeneral Manager Judith McGovem Karl Miller Managing Editor Advertising Manager Patrick J. Roelen Elaine Lipps Circulation Manager Accountant City Editor Don Buchanan Lifestyles Editor Roger Foster Sports Editor Frank Shepherd placed on prisoners to the Bible he carried to executions are scheduled to be auctioned off along with other relics of torture and punishment spanning four centuries. "I'm 63 and you can't take it with you, although I would love to and ask St.

Peter's permission," said antique dealer Michael Forman, whose collection of more than 200 chilling artifacts will be sold by Christie's May 29. Other pieces to be sold include a German executioner's ax of 1634 with 16 punched stars recording aristocratic beheadings; an 18th-century "scold's bridle" to gag gossips; leg irons; thumbscrews; a birching bench and birch and an iron whip. But Gallagher believes Pier-repoint's "Execution Record Book" could be one of the top items, possibly fetching more than $50,000. Antiques include executioner's ax and thumb screws Associated Press LONDON Famed hangman Albert Pierrepoint may have retired from the scaffold, but the tools of his macabre trade are heading for the block. Everything from the hood he Chicks, ducks can spread salmonella Associated Press ATLANTA Those fuzzy chicks and ducklings popular in Easter baskets can spread deadly salmonella to children, federal health officials said.

Researchers at the federal ffQyD Unlocking The Doors Through i i ra i Parent-Student Information Night Tuesday, March 24; 7:00 p.m. For Subscribers: If you have not received your issue of The Tribune, first contact your carrier. If further assistance is required, call the circulation desk before 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and before 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.

622-1122 BUSINESS OFFICE 622-1125 CIRCULATION (USPS 133-700) COPYRIGHT 1992 Published dairy and Sunday except New Yeas Day. Memorial Day, July 4. Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day at 550 Main Coshocton, Ohio 43812. Second class postage paid at Coshocton, Ohio. Subscription rates: By carrier, $1.85 per week, by motor route (in advance), 1 month, $8.00: 3 months, $24 00; 8 months, 1 year, $96 00.

By next day mail in Coshocton and adjoining counties (in advance), 1 month, $8 55; 3 months, $25 60; 6 months, 1 year, $102.40. Other mail rates outside Coshocton and adjoining counties (in advance) 1 month $8.90, 3 months $26 60. 6 months $53 .20, 1 year $106 40 Mail subscriptions are not accepted where carrier or motor route delivery service is provided. POSTMASTER: Send address changes lo The Trbune. 550 Main Coshocton, Ohio 43812.

Phone 614-622-1125. SUBSCRIBERS: In case o( non-delivery of your newspaper, first call your carrier. If further assistance is needed, call the office of The Trbune at 622-1 1 25 before 6 :30 P.M. Monday tiru Friday and before 10.00 A M. Saturday and Sunday.

ADVERTISERS: The advertiser agrees that tie publisher shall not be liable for damages arising out of errors In advertisements beyond the amount paid lor space actually occupied by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred, whether such error Is due lo tie negligence of the publisher's servants or otherwise, and there shall be no liability lor norv Insertion of any advertisement beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. Complete Tours of JVS Refreshments Pr9ram Course Mine content n. Enrollment Information Equipment Displays Door Prizes Up To Dale Career Centers for Disease Control have long suspected live poultry could pass salmonella to people, but its study published Thursday was the first to prove it, said Dr. Eric Mintz, a CDC expert in preventive medicine. Ducklings and chicks should not be kept as household pets for infants and young children, the CDC said.

The risk can be reduced if the pets are kept outside and people wash carefully after handling them, Mintz said. Coshocton County Joint Vocational School 23640 CR 202, Coshocton, OH. 43812 622-0211.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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