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

The Evening Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 72

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
72
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

D16 THE EVENING SUN FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1989 Body found near Russell St. dangers of drunken driving at a judicial convention. Williams' attorney complained of unfair treatment. But Ciotola refused to change the sentence. Self-Sufficiency plan proposed Cily City police today were attemptinf to identify a man found dead late last night in an alley behind the 1500 block of Russell St.

in south Baltimore. Homicide Detective Ed McAllister said the body was that of a fully clothed black male in Bcdfimbro A plan to focus all of Baltimore County's resources, with some housing aid from the federal government, to break the welfare cycle for 20 families headed by single parents, has been announced by Baltimore shopping center. Police do not believe robbery was the motive, but said they had no suspects. An autopsy was to be conducted by the state medical examiner in Baltimore. Kirkpatrick had the job as part of a work-study program at Brunswick High School, where she was a senior.

"Someone was unhappy with her," said Dr. Robert Roberts, Frederick County medical examiner, referring to the number of wounds on the victim's body. "There was no impression of it being a sexual attack, just a violent attack. Whoever did it would have been very, very bloody." Frederick Police Chief Richard Ashton said no weapon was found. The victim was found by a county sheriff's deputy, moonlighting as a security guard, who entered the unlocked front door at 10:45 p.m.

because he saw a light still burning, officials said. The teen-ager's mother was treated for shock at a Frederick hospital. The parents had gone to the shop after they became concerned about their daughter's whereabouts and arrived before police notified them. 2 charged in cross burning the John F. Kennedy Highway barracks were to inspect the wreckage of a tractor-trailer that crashed on the Millard E.

Tydings Memorial Bridge over the Susquehanna River, killing the driver. Police tentatively identified the victim of the Aberdeen crash, which occurred about 1:30 a.m. at the intersection of eastbound U.S. 40 and Md. 715, as a Cecil County resident.

His name was being withheld pending notification of next of kin. It was not immediately known if the driver of the tractor-trailer was injured. I In yesterday's bridge crash, William David Cleveland, 49, of Cape Coral, was pronounced dead at Harford Memorial Hospital in Havre de Grace shortly before 3 a.m. yesterday, police said. He was ejected from the tractor-trailer he was driving when it flipped on its side and crashed into a cement truck at a construction site.

Edward H. Mayrand, 42, also of Cape Coral, the relief driver, was treated at the Shock-Trauma Unit in Baltimore and released, police said. He was -trapped in the sleeping compartment of the rig for several minutes before rescue workers freed him. The cement-truck driver, Larry Ball, 38, of Edgewood, was uninjured, police said. Police said that shortly after 1 a.m., the tractor-trailer, with a cargo of produce, was northbound on Interstate 95 when Cleveland lost control while driving through a well-lighted and clearly marked construction area on the bridge.

Police said the cause of the accident remains unknown and that a safety inspection team was to examine the tractor-trailer for any defects in its brake system or other safety equipment that may have failed while the driver attempted to maneuver through the construction area. Use self-discipline, builders told County Executive Dennis F. Rasmussen. Entitled Project Self-Sufficiency, the pilot program would provide county assistance in housing, transportation, child care, job training and job placement for the heads of 20 poor single-parent families, considered to have good prospects of getting off welfare. i The federal department of Housing and Urban Development would contribute Section 8 housing vouchers for each family, to make decent housing affordable with the aid of a federal rent subsidy.

County social services would also contribute food stamps, Medicaid health insurance and welfare payments while job training or placement took place. Progress would be monitored weekly. Officials hope that famines involved could get off public assistance in as little as eight weeks in some cases, although the help would be available for up to one year. The Human Resources Development Agency, a quasi-government anti-poverty group, will provide counseling to the families on job seeking, budgeting and personal advice. Families interested may call the county's Occupational Training Administration at 887-4473.

his early 20s and bore signs of blunt trauma to the head; I McAllister said an autopsy was set today to determine the exact cause of death. Jt appears to be a homicide," said McAllister, adding that pending the autopsy the case would be Considered a questionable death. body was found by Officer Larry Yinger, of the Traffic Investigation Section, as he drove down the alley around 11:20 p.m. Yinger said he first saw a man's jacket lying in the alley and when he drove closer and attempted to avoid running over it he noticed the body lying behind the Temps Are Us employment building at 1530 Russell St. McAllister said that it appeared the body was dumped where it was found and that a search of the dead man's pockets failed to reveal any means of identification.

Thieves pose as city workers: Thieves have been posing as city workers in order to trick people into letting them into their homes, according to officials at the Baltimore Department of Public Works. Sal Milio, chief of the metered accounts division of the department, said residents should demand to see picture identification from anyone claiming to be a city worker. He said city workers are not authorized to enter homes unless the visit has been arranged in advance. Milio said in one of several incidents reported recently, a woman in her 80s who lives in the Irvington section of West Baltimore let in two men who claimed to be city workers who needed to check water pressure. I They then attempted to trick her into giving them change for a $100 bill.

Milio said that other thieves will act as city employees so they can rummage through a house looking for items to steal. Milio said residents who encounter suspicious 1 people in such circumstances should call police immediately. 1 Arlene Jenkins, a city police spokeswoman, said residents in South Baltimore and southwest Baltimore have reported similar incidents. In one case, she said, thieves posing as workers discovered where a woman kept cash in the house and escaped with about $2,500. Police have not made any arrests.

When Barbara Norris looked out a window of her home and saw a cross burning, she couldn't believe her eyes. "I was just shocked. Nothing like that's ever happened," said Norris, who is black. Anne Arundel County police arrested two Deale youths Wednesday night and charged County Executive Elizabeth Bo bo, I A Al A. 1 Or EMmmttmMM ner stale 01 lne coumy auuress, IQWurU called on local business leaders jes mulled in porno raid Charge to use self -discipline in developing Howard County, despite the intense pressure to build.

Authorities said they are considering whether to bring charges against the owner of a hnmo nrharp IT nrrcfal 1 inspectors and FBI agents seized a number of child pornographic videotapes. Bruce Chambers, a postal inspector, said his of ice and the FBI yesterday searched a home in the 1400 of Algonquin Court and seized several tapes Chambers characterized as child pornography. It is suspected that the tapes may have been received through the mail, Chambers said, a violation of federal law that carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison or a $100,000 fine. Child pornography is defined as any material that shows minors engaged in sexual acts. Simply possessing or receiving the materials is also a crime, Chambers said.

"We get involved in this kind of case all the time," Chambers said. "It's nothing unusual, but we take it seriously." 2 die in truck accidents them as juveniles with cross burning. The youths, who were released to the custody of their parents, were not publicly identified because of their age. Norris, who has lived in the house with her husband for 20 years, said a neighbor noticed the cross and called her about 8:15 p.m. Wednesday.

She called police and firefighters, who put out the blaze. There was no reported property damage. "I'm hoping that it's only, you know, kids," she said. "I can't believe it's racially inclined. I'm i hoping that it is not." Cross burning is a felony in Maryland.

An adult i convicted of the crime faces a maximum penalty of three years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Sentence for judge stands: a visiting judge has refused to change the drunken-driving sentence he imposed on Anne Arundel County Circuit Court Judge Bruce C. Williams. Williams was arrested in September for failing to stay in one lane on Md. 178.

A breath test registered his blood-alcohol level at 0.15 percent. A driver in Maryland with a reading of 0.10 percent or higher is presumed to be driving drunk. Baltimore District Court Judge Joseph A. Ciotola who was brought in to handle the case, sentenced Williams last October to probation before judgment. He must also attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings twice a week, report to a drunken-driving monitor program once a week, pay a fine of $550 and give a 15-minute speech on the "Are you interested in moving into Howard County and making as much money as you possibly can as quickly as you can, or do you want to make this your home?" Bo bo asked Chamber of Commerce members yesterday during ner speech at the Columbia Inn.

i Land is all the more precious because Howard County is the second smallest county in Maryland, and because Howard has no "large-lot zoning," which would restrict building to lots as large as 50 acres, she said. Bobo pointed out strengths and weaknesses in county protection laws. Except in Ellicott City, for example, the county has done "absolutely nothing" to preserve its historic sites, she said. Unlike neighboring counties, she said, Howard has no power to stop a developer from demolishing historic buildings or toppling old trees. She said the county must also find creative solutions to its shortage of unskilled labor.

need better public transportation from the cities, more child care and a larger stock of subsidized housing, she said. She called on developers to build moderate-and-low-income housing even though they will make smaller profits. The county is prepared to spend money to help get the projects off the ground, she said. 1 From staff and wire reports 1 Frederick girl, 17, slain at store Police in Frederick continued to search today for the killer of a 17-year-old honor student who was fatally stabbed as she worked alone in A man was killed early today when his pickup truck crashed into the rear of a tractor-trailer in Aberdeen and burst into flames, State Police at the Bel Air barracks reported. Also today, State Police at a clothing shop.

The body of Tracey Kirkpatrick, of Point of Rocks, was found about 10:45 p.m. Wednesday in 'a storage room at aileen Ladies Sportswear in a Wkj sitsw, Now Open to the Public Serving Easter Sunday Brunch 11-2 P.M. Family Dinner 2:30 'til INTRODUCTORY OFFER HOODED SWEATS UB foundation raises more than $1 million The University of Baltimore Educational Foundation's 1988 fund-raising campaign has raised more lhan $1 million in contributions. Alumni contributions totaled $401,998 from 6,512 individuals, representing a 25.7 percent increase in dollars and a 7 percent increase in dpnors over 1987. Gifts from companies totaled 146,487, bringing alumni-generated Contributions to $448,485.

$Q98 CASH SAVE 25,75 ORIGINAL OILS LITHOGRAPHS SERICRAPHS ERTE, MckNIGHT, LUONGO, POWELL, BEHRENS, BAZINET, KING and many athrnt Gallery Sale Hours: 12 NOON TO 5 PM FRI. 317 SAT. 318 SUN. 319 TAYLOR FINE ARTS 9G Cwvnnx Mill Court North we! Bun. Onler OwinCH Mill 21117 356-7704 PLUS A $10.00 DEFERRED VOUCHER FOR USE ON A FUTURE TRIP TO THE SANDS $20.00 Cash Bonus on arrivals Sunday thru 4:00 PM Friday.

"NEW RIDERS are those passengers not in poses-sion of a Sands valid $10.00 deferred voucher. FREQUENT (aba) bonus RIDERS VWiUU VALUE INCLUDING $15.00 CASH PLUS A $10.00 DEFERRED VOUCHER FOR USE ON A FUTURE TRIP TO THE SANDS $24.00 Bonus on arrivals Sunday thru 4:00 PM Friday. FREQUENT RIDERS are those passengers in possession of a Sands valid $10.00 deferred voucher. WEEKEND RENTALS HENT FOR 1 DAY, OR MORE! NO MINIMUM REQUIRED! GREEN SPRING INN Welcomes our new Executive Chef Roland Schwegler Dance to the music of Frank Pastore Wed. thru Sun.

Falls Valley Rds. Lutherville For Reservations 823-8600 PUBLIC NOTICE CITY OF BALTIMORE SLEEPING BAGS $-fC16 mJ AND UP.J JHERMALSO Cpandip 6" SPRING BUCK LEATHER WORK SHOES $19" 100 COTTON PANTS NAVY OXFORDS GENLJINE LEATHER BELT POUCH 0 Dodge Shadow BUREAU OF WATER AND WASTE WATER 36' CRONDALL LANE TRANSMISSION MAIN Water customers in the Reisterstown, Owings Mills portion ol Northwest Baltimore County may experience tome Ion of water service on Saturday afternoon, March 18, 1989 as a result of a temporary shutdown of Hie main serving this area. On Friday evening, March 17th, me Department of Public Works, Baltimore City, will shut down a 36 water main to allow a contractor to connect a transmission main which was relocated in conjunction with the construction of Owings Mills Boulevard and Crondall lane. Possible loss of water service may occur for some of the 22,000 residents in the area around noon on Saturday. By mid-afternoon, the connection should be completed and the water service turned back on.

The area that may be affected is bound by 1-795 on the west, Bonrto Avenue on the East, Butler Road on the north, and Owings Mills boulevard on the south. All efforts should be made by consumers to conserve water during the hours indicated this notice. VHS Anytime Thura. thru Mon. Mileage caps and certain restrictions may apply.

Vehicles may be returned to either location, For Thrifty cars in other cities call 1-800-FOR-CARS. VIDEO CASSETTE FRIDAY arrivals after 4:00 PM receive $20.00 Cash and a $5.00 Deferred Voucher. SATURDAY arrivals receive $13.00 Cash and a $5.00 Deferred Voucher. Offer available to persons 21 years of age older. Bonus subject to change at option of the Sands management.

Deferred Vouchers valid for a return bus trip at a later date as specified on back of coupon. Bonuses good only on scheduled line run buses listed below. GLEN BURNIE PIKESVILLE 653-0737 768-4900 Thrifty features quality products of the Chrysler Motors Corporation MINI DOME TENT id i ilium i l.lL'Ir GOLDEN RING TOURS Will. PROVIDE ROUND-TRIP TRANSPORTATION FOR ONLY JI9 95 FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION CALL (301) 391-8704 NEW COMPLIMENTARY BEVERAGE HOSTESS SERVICE. fOIMEl OWNER Of trvce'i CwMunv MRS.

RUBY nw mi Hw staff Baouly kiMmatwaal DICKlE-COVERALlS- JUMBO iLJSEfTr BAGS $Q99 csR 1(9-0770. Weekly buffet specials include soups. Jus! Arrived for Spring appetizers, entrees, ice tt W-mYHODSWIWCHASE cream cookies and Chinese tea MAJMOtARtiECAiro There's a lot going on this weekend at Lexington Market. TODAY: Noon-2 PM: Leprechaun (with Free St. Patrick's Day Lucky Clovers).

Strolling Bagpiper. Raised-Bed Garden (with live vegetable plants). Food Preparation Demonstrations CATONSVILLE 7 30A 6 00P' Double TT Dinner Rolling Rd Bait Natn'l Pike Rt. 40) HIGHLANDTOWN 8 00A White Coffee Pot. jr.

Fleet Dean Sts. HIGHLANDTOWN 805A Smitty's Restaurant. Eastern Avenue BALTIMORE 8 30A 6 45P' Golden Ring Terminal EDGEWOOD 8 4SA 7 OOP Invitation Inn Friday A Saturday Only PIMLICO LEXICO 501 LEXINGTON ST. Across worlijaton Mkt. LEXINGTON MARKET GARAGE RtslAUHANT Finest Fabrics lowest Prices APPARELBRIDAL DRAPESYUP0H0LSTERY We've got it oil.

A vast selection of Fabrics to give your Wardrobe and Home -o Fresh New Look for Spring '89. All at Low Low discount Prices. 25 OFF PATTERNS NOTIONS EVERYDAY FABRIC WAREHOUSE NORTHPOINT PIAZA 2301 NORTHPOINT BLVD. 285-3227 M-F 930-9 Sat. -Sun, 12-5 Advertise In this space Saturday and Sunday And get Both days For under $200 Reisterstown Road at Beltwav Exit 20 486-6776 courtesy vaiet parking HESEXVATIONS SUGGESTED TOMORROW: Food Preparation Demonstrations by Market Merchants.

4-H Club Public Speaking Contests Raised Bed Garden (with live vegetable plants). CONSTRUCTION CO If your building ts not becoming to you. you should be coming to us! WOftlD FAMOUS Cleaning Repomting Masonary Gralitti Cleaning DRAPERIES 20 SAVINGS INCLUDES REHANGING QUAUTY DRVCUANING VELVETONE CLEANERS Call Dave 944-1276 RIVER WATCH RESTAURANT MARINA Experience Waterfront Dining Steak Seafood FRI. SAT. NITE Gil Monroe's Big Band Orchestra SUNDAY 6 P.M.

'Til Stan Rouse Jazz Band For Info. Call 687-1422 207 Nantkoke ltd. Eslex SPRING DISCOUNT GTQN JEW Frpe Estimate 339-9934 Grand Opening Special (Tlini Mar. IMi) CARPET CLEANED 1st 7 rmt.i 2 rm. min.

Add I ran. $14.95 RAINBOW INT L. CARPET CLEANING Call 583-0193 DOWNTOWN PARKING $90, monthly SHERATON INNER HARBOR HOTEL 347-1812 OWNER RETIRING Wicker Rattan Furn. Accessories 40 50 off Ffcks Reed, laneVenture, Henry link, Clark Casual Ends WICKER GALLERY 7676 ERAII RD. 668-5600 Travel weather reports from 25 cities updated twice daily.

'Tree call 24 hours a day. 7 days a week. Look far a directory of categories on peer 2. r3 SUlMDIAi: 783-1800 Is Annr Anjwkej (jxuitv. oil 2M-7736.

The Greatest Food Show WANTED SUPERfNTENDtNTS FOREMEN Growth oriented general Contractor, benefits, tong term opportunities Call 574-4966. arrange interview with is -Boudreu-Roche Consin (-on on Earth.1 a 400-500 W. Lexington Street HOMI EQUITY IOAN5 SI HOUSE of FOAM 1101 light St 39 E. Cross wmiuAiT7270932 Also styrofoyn lattM rubber i FTOWWWWWO TUXEDOS frli. f.mdjt 7 19 fVx 747-I60 COtRNANOM 2,500 Parking Spaces Adjacent to The Market..

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 Evening Sun
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Evening Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,092,033
Years Available:
1910-1992