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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 6

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 DAYTON DAILY NEWS April 10, 1982 Piqua police bargaining hits i mpasse t. ,1 rpsnlntlnn drnns tha authnrizpd itronoth frnm 00 Dayton Area Digest Social Security will open appeal office in Dayton 25 officers. i The commission, On March 9, had ordered a freeze on wages and benefits for tight months for all nonunion city employees. At the same time It abolished 10 city positions, including police dispatcher. Sworn police officers and firefighters are Under separate sion had stated last Monday night: "There are no guarantees.

As far as I am concerned the two sides are at an Impasse." Police. officers "are disappointed, but not surprised," Veneronl said. Veneronl said the bargaining unit probably will be disbanded and "We'll try to do police work the best we can with the manpower we've got." A i POLICE DEPARTMENT personnel do not have a By BILL FOX Metropolitan Staff Writer MM Ctuntv SurMU PIQUA The Piqua Police Department bargaining unit And the city have reached an impasse in their dispute over a voluntary freeze on wages and cost-of-living benefits. "It seems kind of senseless to "keep trying to hammer out an agreement they are not going to agree to," Patrolman Paul Veneronl said Friday after the police bargaining unit was told the city commission rejected their latest proposal. Vice Mayor Joe Goetz repeated what the commls- Auto dealership case 4 to the city.

jj-- Acting City Manager Elmo Hastings fried to medi-A; ate the dispute, but the firefighters Tuesday rejected the city's compromise offer because it was the "same offer we turned down before," a union spokesman said. 1 i permanent Bargaining unit. Last Monday night, the commission reduced the number of police and fire personnel after the safety (division failed to agree to the voluntary freeze. The 1 FOLDING TABLES UPHOLSTERED STACK 5- CHAIRS tha Gerraantown City Council has adopted an ordinance providing for the Issuance of revenue bonds for a major water system project due to go into operation next month. The Issue, approved Friday, totals $1.5 million and will pay off Interim financing provided by the Farmers Home Administration.

The city has built a new, 1 million-gallon water tank, constructed a new, four-pump wellfield on Astoria Road and installed new water mains. Work leading to the system goes back at least seven years during which, there were periodic water supply crises and tap-In bans preventing new home construction. Third Urbana paperboy robbed A 12-year-old newspaper carrier was robbed of about $45 Bank of icer freed of charge i DUTY 30x96 II 30x72 MJ.IO I 30x72 S8I.IS CASH-N-CARRY CASH-N-CARRY RACiliG Glass Enclosed Grandstand Bostleman had pleaded Innocent to the single charge of complicity. Shaman said that Bostleman "has and will continue to make full disclosure" In connection with the case. Shaman added that Bostleman "is cooperating in a continuing Investigation" by the prosecution into business activities by Hahn and Lyons.

Both Lyons and Bostleman have been on voluntary leave from the bank pending resolution of the charges. CARROLL GRAUSE, SENIOR vice president of the bank, said he expects Bostleman to be returned to his Job now that the charge against him has been dismissed. Hahn Is charged with 15 counts of passing bad checks, nine counts of auto title violations, three counts of securing writings by deception and two counts of grand theft. He is accused of defrauding several auto companies of large sums in a financing operation that moved through the Miamisburg bank. Shaman has said that before his dealership closed, Hahn owed about $1.4 million to the bank.

By DAVE ALLBAUGH Daily News Staff Writer A charge of complicity against Miamisburg bank Vice President William Bostleman in passing bad checks involved with the defunct auto dealership, Contemporary Dodge was dropped Friday. Montgomery County Assistant Prosecutor Theodore R. "Todd" Shaman said his investigation indicated Bostleman was "merely taking Instructions from (First National Bank of Miamisburg President) Terry Lyons" in the check transactions and "had no idea what was going on The single charge against Bostleman was dismissed at Shaman's recommendation by Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Carl D. Kessler. LYONS REMAINS A CO-DEFENDANT with former Contemporary Dodge owner Larry Hahn.

Hahn last month pleaded innocent to 29 felony charges in connection with the dealership that closed last October. Lyons pleaded innocent to a charge of perjury and complicity in passing bad checks In the case. 5 1 i 5 it Post Time 7:30 p.m. For special group rottt call Una of 932-4936 LEBANON RACEWAY Rt. 48 N.

of Lebanon I asp Caesars Creek trustees sued wrong land owner Friday night as he was making his weekly collections for the Urbana Dally Citizen. Urbana police said the Incident is the third of its kind in the last six months. The two earlier robberies emaln unsolved. Police said the. boy, whom they did not identify, was in an alley in the 400 block of East Ward and East Church streets, at about 5:45 p.m.

A teenage boy, wearing blue Jeans and an Urbana High School Jacket, threatened and shoved the carrier, police said. The robber then snatched the boy's money, which was in a canvas tie-bag, and ran. Judge Love dismisses zoning case The Montgomery County Common Pleas Court has dismissed an appeal from a Huber Heights firm to have a zoning ruling. Wantz Investment Corp. filed the appeal after it was denied rezoning of 10.8 acres on Bellefontaine Road.

The company wants to build 17 four-unit luxury apartment buildings on the property. Retired Judge Rodney M. Love, sitting on assignment, Friday ruled that his court did not have Jurisdiction to hear the appeal and dismissed the case. Neighbors of the Wantz property claim construction of the apartment buildings would decrease property values and cause flooding problems. Prosecutor: Get FBI help in death Butler County Prosecutor John Holcomb says in Hamilton he will file a fugitive warrant so the FBI will help search for Roger Barry Moore, charged in the shooting death of his wife, Betty.

Butler sheriffs detectives charged Moore, 55, with aggravated murder'after his wife's body was found In the trunk of a car April 2 in Fort Wright, Ky. Authorities said she died of a single gunshot wound in her head. Moore is believed to be driving a white 1980 Ford Fiesta automobile and may be heading to Texas. He was described as white, about 5-feet-10 and weighing about 200 pounds. 1 NASA shuttle official to give results The top national space agency official in charge of the space shuttle is to describe results of the first three shuttle flights and what is planned for the future at an April 20 dinner meeting of the Dayton-Cincinnati section of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Speaking will be Maj. Gen. James A. Abrahamson, National Aeronautics and Space Administration associate administrator for li mm "VOUTNOSSUI Vvw. CANDY acre property on Needmore Road east ofXenia.

"The livestock kept getting through the fence," said Caesars Creek Twp. Trustee Glenn W. Devoe who said trustees acted on a complaint by neighboring farmer Bob Humston. "I own the property one lot over. They simply got the wrong property owner," explained Reid.

The adjacent property, she said (and Devoe agrees), is owned by Tara Developers. "The appellant Marilyn J. Reid is not the property owner of the adjoining property," said Weber in his dismissal entry, after Caesars Creek trustees revoked the order. the space transportation system Abrahamson was head of the F- to system program ornce at wngnt-p aneraon Air otce Base fore being assigned to NASA last year. The 6:30 p.m.

meeting is to i be held at the Manchester Inn in Middletown. AIAA officials said non-members are welcome. Two men, 16-year-old shot in Madison Twp. By BETTY KUBIK Metropolitan Special Writer Grant Ctuntv SurMU XENIA Caesars Creek Twp. trustees may double check their property maps before they again order a property owner to make improvements.

Visiting Judge Herman J. Weber Friday dismissed a suit filed August 27 against the Caesars Creek Board of Trustees. Lawyer Marilyn J. Reid filed the suit in Greene County Common Pleas Court, where her husband is a Judge, after the township trustees ordered her to share the cost, of building a fence alongside her undeveloped 5- Mountain Dew contaminffiM Someone may have deliberately put a caustic solution into bottles of Mountain Dew, which are being recalled by Miami Valley health officials, according to the Montgomery County Combined General Health District. Dave Peden, head of enviornmental protection for the district, said today that two 16-ounce, returnable glass bottles of Mountain Dew bottled by GCC Beverages Inc.

were found to contain sodium hydroxide, which is used to wash the bottles before reuse. Two persons were treated and released from local hospitals after they drank from the bottles containing the solution last week, he said. Soda containing the sodium hydroxide would have a strong, bitter taste, and a person probably would spit it out immediately, Peden added. But he and other health officials fear someone might take a big gulp of soda before they realized it contained the foreign substance, he said. The way the machines are designed, it is improbable that the solution could have been dumped Into the soft drink accidentally, said Peden.

It appears someone selectively released the sodium hydroxide into the bottles, he said. The solution could burn the mouth, throat and esophagus and might cause spontaneous vomiting, said health officials, who advised drinking milk and seeking medical help if the affected soda was consumed. The recall is for 16-ounce returnable glass bottles of Mountain Dew distributed in Darke, Preble, Miami, Montgomery, Greene, Champaign, Logan and Clark counties, according to a statement released by the Food and Drug Administration office in Cincinnati. The affected bottles have the name of GCC Beverages, the local bottler, on the bottle caps. The soda should be returned to the place of purchase where consumers may get a refund, health officials said.

Watch for the when the shooting started. He said the man Just walked out of the house at 198 Miller Rd. and fired the shotgun six times. "He (the man with the shotgun) just had on a pair of pants," Freeze said. "I guess he didn't like tht noise.

It seemed like he got mad or something." Freeze said McDonald and another man were fighting when the man came out of the house. Pill and the teenager were attempting to break up the scuffle when they were shot, Freeze said. Freeze said the man fired the shotgun without saying a word and then drove away in a car. Witnesses said the man had moved into the neighborhood a few months ago. "It seemed to come about because of oae of your basic neighborhood fights," said sheriff's detective Jerry Hansen.

"There was an argument that preceded the shooting, and the man ended up with a gun in his hands." By RON CARTER Metropolitan Staff Writer Montgomery County sheriff's deputes are looking for a suspect in the shooting of two men and a teenaged boy Friday night In Madison Twp. Police said the men were shot at about 8:20 p.m. while they were on a "front porch at 190 Miller Road. A wit-it: ness said the man who shot the victims jWlth a shotgun came from the house next door. Wounded were Delbert McDonald, 24, of 190 Miller Paul Pill, 24, of 47 Elkins both of Madison "wind a 16-year-old boy, who was K.

treated and released from St. Elizabeth Medical Center, McDonald was taken to Miami Val-f' ley Hospital, where he was listed in good condition; Pill was in satisfactory condition at Good Samaritin Hospital early today. DAVID FREEZE, 16, said he was on i the porch next door at 184 Miller Rd. Dictionary Detectives On Saturday, April 17, at 12:30 p.m. on Channel 2, 28 of the finest spellers from 11 counties will hold you spellbound with their word wizardry.

During this bewitching hour, you will see the top word-master win the 1982 Regional Spelling Bee title, an all-expense paid trip to the National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. in May, a handsome trophy, and a 30-volume set of Encyclopaedia Britannica III. The Dayton Daily News and WDTN-TV invite you to spell along with your local champion and watch as all 29 contestants become "Dictionary Detectives!" SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 12:30 P.M. ON CHANNEL 2. 4 DAYTON DAILY NEWS SPELLING BEE REGIONAL FINALISTS 1982 Contestants and Representing.

GORDON BOWMAN A Men County Cnompton GEORGE STANLEY WILSON Urn) Gty OtontpMn JOHN COFFIN Auglaixe County Champion BECKY SUZANNE LUNSFORD St. Morys City OiornfHon SILVIA LEE Ctorit County Ommowii JOHN DOUGLAS LOWE Springfield Cjfy Champion JEANNIE M. EVERS Dorke Counfy Oiampton LUKE ROSENBERGER GfOHfviMe City OMMptoti JAMES ROBERT LIVINGSTON Gfeem County Oiompkw TIFFANY OLSEN rotrbom Gfy Owmpton JEFFREY CARLETON HAGLER Xio Ofy Clionpiea RANDALL PAUL KREMER Mefcof County Chonplon JAMIE SCOTT HASSAN CMna City Oompion LARRY ALLEN WEAVER Miami County Chamon RENEE M. CORDONNIER iqua Gty Oiamtpwin STEPHANIE BOERGER Troy Oty OtoinpaM CHERYL KAYE ROBERTSON Dayton Gfy OtoMpno JULIE A. RAKAY KstforinQ City Ommbpm ABBIE HOLP AAiOritfiBbufQ Clly OiaMpioo PAMELA ANN FREI Tfotwooal Ofy Ommpmr LORI MICHELLE LINS A Vondobtt City Omhioioo STEVE ALAN McNEALY Vost Camflton OnmoiM 'i SHARON MARIE SWINGLE tnbte Cewly Champion MICHELLE LEE GARRETT EomOyOanpao KATHY ANN STANGEL SMbyCow yCtiMiaiM JINSOOYUN Sidnoy Ofy QionptM CINDY SWALLOW WofMw Cototfy Chowaiaai STEVE D.BOOKER Miami Valley issues listed FIRST PRIZE: 30-volume set of Encyclopaedia Britannica III Charter changes, levies on June primary ballot THIRD PRIZE: $50 Saving bond and the hardbound edition of the World Almanac' Hardin-Houston 5-mill two-year emergency levy.

Miami County The Bradford School District 5.7-mili two-year levy. Auglaize County Wapakoneta City School District 6.78-mill three-year levy. 5 The filing deadline for emergency j--school levies and charter amendments appear on the June primary election ballot was Friday. Here Is a list of Issues filed in the Miami Valley: Montgomery County Centerville School District 6.99-mill three-year operating levy pro-- vide $3.3 million for operating expenses. LEGAL miKt Tt PuMc mm Commiukm of Ohio Im KhtituM htarim In Cm No.

-37-GE-00 N) comadtf proeo-Mlt to Inwrovo Its Rum, RMuMofti, and PrKticn Gowning fht DiKOflntction of Gil. Natural Gu, or Ettctric Sorvk to RnkWnllol Cuttomtrt. Tito public httrlng win im Monday, May l2, commancing at 10 in tht oHkm of tht Commiuion, South High Strati, Coiumeut, Ohio. Al Mtrnitd ptrtoni wil tivtn tht opportunity to Dt heard Furihpr information may oOftinad by contacting iht Commiuion. Tht PutXiC Ut Comminion of Ohio DAVID M.

POLK, Stcrtttry I SECOND PRIZE: A Zenith S-inch diagonal portable black-and-white TV with FMAM radio and alarm clock. I Clly HO 2VU9 Northmont School District 7.8-jnlll three-year operating levy to pro-Vide SI. 5 million. Germanto wn changes in the vll- DATO DMJLY: MEWS LEGAL NOTICE Wontgomtry County Piaraiing Commiuion MoNct htrtbv tivtn that on ThurMav, May I), tR tt t40 In tht Ttnth Floor Hearing Room, County Admmtilraiion BuMing. 451 M.

Third Street, Dayton, Ohio, a Public hearing rit bt hatd on tht proposed revi-tiont tt tht "Official Thgrouthtart Plan tar Montgomery County, Ohio." Proposed rtvtsiom may bt Inspected during normal otfkt hours in tht office of Iht Montgomery County Planning Commission, Ttnth Floor County Administration luUding, lit yv. Third Street, Dayton, Ohio aStit -BENTON L. KESUNG, Executive Director Former chairman dies MINNETONKA, Minn. (AP) John G. Peterson, a former chairman of the board of Cargill Inc.

and an expert on international commodity financing, has died at the age of 91. J' ShelbyCounty" Fort Loramle 5.5-miU, tour-year Ukvy. Nt. ZlieM.

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