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The Journal Herald from Dayton, Ohio • 1

Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

COLOR WEATHER Confident Rookie shortstop making believers out of management Page 12 Dreams Ruth, Walter Knecht share an intrigue with the unknown Page 23 Preps C-J21 Vandalia7 Versailles 12 Coldwater7 Other scores Page 8 Sunny today. I fith 75 to 80. Clear tonight Low near 50. Almost no chance of rain today through tonight. Page 22.

me Journal Herald 179th Year No. 220 uayton, umo 25 Cents CcenV IM. TX Journal HvM -J UA Baniloff out of jail but still prisoner 1 1 ii A on military jet engines. Daniloff, 51, was arrested in Moscow a week later by the KGB after accepting from a Soviet acquaintance a package that allegedly contained classified maps of military installations. U.S.

officials have maintained from the start that Daniloff is not a spy and that he was framed by the KGB on false charges so that he could be traded for Zakharov an exchange the administration continued to reject Friday. Shultz, who decried Daniloff's arrest as "just plain outrageous," said the cases of Zakharov and Daniloff "are in no way comparable and we are not going to trade them off against each other." SEE DANILOFF4 President Reagan, who has ruled out a direct trade of prisoners to settle the matter, referred to Daniloff as "our hostage in Moscow" and called Zakharov "the Soviet spy" in some remarks about the dual release before a group of school principals at the White House. Secretary of State George Shultz said at a news conference that the actions Friday were only an "interim step" taken to protect the well-being of Daniloff, a correspondent for U.S. News A World Report magazine. Daniloff had been sharing an 8-by-10-foot prison cell with a Russian man In Moscow since his arrest on Aug.

30, and undergoing long interrogations by Russian security agents. "The only thing that has changed is the location of these two people," said Shultz, who added that the Reagan administration still considered Daniloff to be a "hostage" and would continue to press for his complete freedom. Shultz also emphasized that Friday's action did not signal that the U.S. government was "equating" the cases of Daniloff and Zakharov. "The point is that Zakharov was caught spying, and he's been charged and we have the evidence," Shultz said.

As far as Mr. Daniloff is concerned, he is not a spy. He was set up." Zakharov, 39, a Soviet physicist attached to the United Nations secretariat in New York, was arrested by the FBI on Aug. 23 as he allegedly handed over $1,000 to an FBI informant for classified documents By OwenUllmann and David Heaa KNIGHT RIDDER NEWS SERVICE WASHINGTON In prearranged reciprocal actions Friday, the Soviet Union released Jailed American journalist Nicholas Daniloff to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and the United States turned over imprisoned Soviet U.N.

employee Gennadiy Zakharov to the Soviet ambassador in New York. But the simultaneous transfer of the two men to the custody of their respective embassies did not change their status as prisoners, or resolve an escalating superpower dispute triggered by their detention to face trial on espionage charges. Nicholas Daniloff Burning wreckage SATURDAY JOURNAL S. Africa sanctions bill OK'd Veto expected WORLD SPttO; .1 tlMlT 13.51 AMERICAN KIDNAPPED. An American accountant is ambushed, pistol-whipped and kidnapped in Beirut.

Page 2. LEADERS PLAN FOR PEACE. Egyp ia-rifii- tian President Hosni Mubarak and Israeli Prime ft Minister Shimon Peres end two days of talks with a Mideast peace plan. Page 4. TRIAL A The Philippine Su Y.

a preme Court calls the Benigno Aquino assassl nation trial a sham orchestrated by Ferdinand Marcos and orders a new trial. Page 4. AREA It-. WASHINGTON (AP) The House, in a bipartisan challenge to President Reagan, voted 308-77 Friday to accept a Senate package of strong economic sanctions against South Africa's white minority government that Reagan is almost certain to veto. The bill being sent to the White House would, among other steps, ban new U.S.

Investments and bank loans in South Africa, clamp down on mineral and food imports and end regular airline service between the two countries. The majority of Ohio lawmakers voted in favor of the sanctions. Only five of the state's representatives, all of them Republicans, Tom Kindness, Delbert Latta, Bob McEwen, Clarence Miller and Michael Oxley voted against the bill. Ohio Democrats were unanimous in their support of the bill. All 11 Douglas Applegate, Dennis Eckart, Edward Feighan, Tony Hall, Marcy Kap-tur, Thomas Luken, Mary Oakar, Donald Pease, John Seiberling, Louis Stokes and James Traficant voted to accept the sanctions package.

They were joined by Republicans Michael SEE SANCTIONS4 BILL OARLOWSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHER A Dayton firefighter moves to extinguish of 1 395 Guenther Road, was driving on struck the pole. He managed to free hlm- the fire that engulfed a Dayton man's car, West Third Street when a car pulled out from self and crawl to safety. He was in fair condl-briefly trapping him, after it smashed Into a Marlon Street, a witness said. Tolliver tion Friday night at St. Elizabeth Medical utility pole Friday morning.

Kevin Tolliver, 1 8, swerved to avoid it, smashed Into a curb and Center. Damage was estimated at $8,000. REPORT FAULTED. Dayton's NAACP president says he Is disgusted by a report of the police investigation into a racial incident on Warren Street. Page 3.

DAYTON WALTHER SUES. Dayton Walther Corp. charges that a Cincinnati clinic and two doctors incorrectly diagnosed Dayton Walther workers as suffering from work-related illnesses. Page 3. TECHNOLOGY CALLED KEY.

Retired Admiral Bobby R. Inman says the United States' ability to compete in the international marketplace depends on how quickly technology can be put to use. Page 3. DOOR-TO-DOOR FOR DOGS. Montgomery County is cracking down on dog owners who don't license their pets.

Page 15. SPORTS NCAA LOSES. Rep. Thomas Luken proposes a national commission to study the place of sports at college. Page 7.

MOSES WINS AGAIN. Edwin Moses wins his 1 19th consecutive 400 meters hurdles race, in the McVitie's International Challenge track and field meet. Page 12. PLAYING A ROUND. Area golf pros are friendly, not cutthroat, as they compete In the Miami Valley PGA tournament.

Page 12. OPINION THE PAST, THE FUTURE. William Wild, Laurence Newman and Ellen Belcher remember what was and look forward to what will be (Page 20). No panic here, Dayton broker says Next Sunday, the color comics sections of the Dayton Dally News and The Jour- i2 Dal Herald Join to bring you an expanded 8-page section of funnies. The Saturday comics section of The Journal Herald will be discontinued after today so its gang of characters can get together with the Sunday bunch to help you by professional Investors playing individual stocks against futures contracts on market Indexes.

On Friday, by contrast, the primary sellers at the opening appeared to be individual Investors who had been frightened by the news accounts they had read, heard and seen about the market's plunge, LeFevre said. While some market forecasters were proclaiming the end of Wall Street's four-year bull market, and others were insisting that the drop was only a short-term setback. Patrick Kane, a vice president of Merrill Lynch, called the market's downward drop "Just a temporary aberration. SEE MARKET 16 though." Calls late Thursday and early Friday were primarily inquiries about why the market dropped so sharply, Fritz said. In later calls, "They were checking on their own portfolios.

There's certainly no panic," he added. Stock prices gyrated wildly in record trading Friday In the aftermath of Thursday's unprecedented drop. In the first hour of trading Friday, the Dow was down about 46 points. It then began edging up, actually getting ahead by 0.71 point at noon, but another slide set By the end of the day, the average stood at 1,758.72, down 34.17 points from Thursday's close. By all accounts, Thursday's selloff was due in large measure to computer program selling Market tumble called temporary aberration FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Investors Friday were not flocking Into the Dayton offices of the Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner Smith stock brokerage, even in the wake the stock market's record-setting tumble on Thursday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 86.61 points, stopping at 1792.89. "We really have not had that many people actually come in," said Will Fritz, Merrill Lynch office manager. "We've had far more than the normal number of phone calls, start your Sundays with laughter. The Sunday section will include 32 comicsfrom Annie to Wizard of Id, from Beetle Bailey to Mary Worth. BUSINESS GM PLANS CUTS.

General Motors Corp. plans to reduce the salaried work force of Its sprawling Chevrolet-Pontlac-Canada group by 10 percent In the next year. Page 16. 0- Leonard tries 'magic' on Miami students Communications key to politics, mayor says PEOPLE 4 a. MM hit II Entertainer Stavia Wonder urged a crowd at a downtown Cincinnati rally Friday to register to vote and become informed participants.

The singer, who was to perform Friday night at Riverfront Coliseum, attended the rally at the request of civil rights "This Is a media world these days; It's really a media profession. Paul Leonard on politics, while en route to Butler County on Wednesday afternoon for a campaign blitz at Miami University. Non-attorney files for judge, citing old law MOUNT VERNON, Ohio (AP) Mary E. Giffln filed Friday as a write-in candidate for Knox County Common Pleas Court judge, claiming privilege under the federal Northwest Territorial Ordinance of 1787. She contends that Public Law 204 of 1953, which corrected an oversight and officially made Ohio a state, was an ex-post-facto law making statehood retroactive to 1803 and that this is unconstitutional.

State law requires candidates for Judge to hav practiced law for at least six years. Ms. Gifln is not an attorney, but she contends that because the law making Ohio a state is unconstitutional, the Northwest Ordinance prevails. The Northwest Ordinance had no such provision for Judgeships. Ms.

Giffln ran for sheriff In 1 956 and for county commissioner In 1958, losing both elections by wide margins. She Is running against Common Pleas Judge Thomas Badger, a Republi By David E. Kappla STAFF WRITER OXFORD He earned a degree In groups sponsoring a drive to register 8,000 new black voters In time to vote in the Nov. 4 election. He also urged his audience to help get drunken drivers off the streets and to avoid use of drugs.

"Remember that drugs Is another form of genocide whether it be crack or anything else. It's all something that we don't need In our systems." Journalism, and worked In public relations while attending law school in the why Journalism has been extremely helpful to me In terms of communication." Gov. Richard Celeste, the man who tapped Leonard for his first statewide race, picked running mate who knows how to effectively and efficiently carry his message. And boiled down to Its most simple terms, the message Leonard brought to students In this lovely old college town Wednesday was this; Jim Rhodes, the Republican gubernatorial nominee and former four-term governor, represents Ohio's past. The future belongs to Celeste.

Tanned, energetic and, In his own words, "well-oiled" after virtually two consecutive years on the campaign trail dating back to last year's mayoral race, Leonard strode confidently Into Miami University's Bishop Hail dormitory to address a group of about 60 honors students following dinner at the Lambda 1960s. He put In brief stint as a television A news commentator in 1984. He's written all his press releases during his entire political career. INDEX And like another "Great Communi cator," Dayton Mayor Paul Leonard, the Democratic candidate for lieuten Page 43 30 6 7-13 44,45 ant governor, has even done a couple of turns at acting. Lottery Obituaries Religion Sports TVRadio Page Accent 23-27 Amusements28, 29 Business 16-19 Comics 42 Editorial 20,21 Horoscope 43 "I think success in this profession is can who was appointed to the tw-nch four years ago and is his flnt -i-i innh hi ni the art of communication," Leonard said.

"I don't think anyone exemplifies that more than Ronald Reagan. That's see leonard4 Leonard is interviewed by Miami student Traci Matkin 'tietieo term ''iff.

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Pages Available:
695,853
Years Available:
1940-1986