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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 15

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Eoston Globe Saturday. June 16. 15 ECONOMIC NEWS IN BRIEF ANN LANDERS MASS.NEWS IN BRIEF No thanks Nortek charged in suit CRANSTON Nortek Inc. has been named in a class action suit in Philadelphia charging the firm used news releases last August to inflate the price of its stock. The releases concerned Nortek's negotiations to invest in the Atlantic City Hotel business.

The company denied the charge. Air fare increase WASHINGTON The CAB has approved a 66 percent increase in domestic air fares, beginning in August and warned rising fuel costs may bring another increase within three months. Additionally, CAB regulations allow another 5 percent to 10 percent increase for limited period without CAB approvaL .11 Ford ret ails ears trucks DEDICATION His widow, Anna, speaks at yesterday's ceremony at which new East Boston park was dedicated to late state Sen. Michael LoPresti Sr. Four-acre, $2 million recreational area is on site of former North Ferry Park on Summer street on East Boston's waterfront and affords visitors a striking view of Boston Harbor and the downtown skyline beyond.

Facilities include a promenade, Fishing pier, basketball and tennis courts and picnic and play areas. (Globe photo by Joe Runri) Don't halt MBTA job, judge advised Dear Ana Landers Please help us get something across to our kids through your column: -We love you but dont want to live with you." My son and his wife are begging us to get rid of our big house and share their home. True, it would be cheaper, but we are too old to conform to someone else's lifestyle. We like our independence. They tell us we would have our own room, but we'd have to be dressed at all times in case some of their friends came by.

They have four children who keep the kitchen littered with dirty glasses, dishes in the sink, pans on the stove, and whatever dirt they drag in on their feet. I like to keep a neat house. Messiness upsets me. My husband enjoys sitting around in his undershirt He also likes to chew tobacco. I'm afraid we'd feel trapped if we gave up our home and moved in with the children.

We are in good health and can care for ourselves. Will you please give us a hand? Nameless in Cincinnati I think it's lovely that the children want you, but you are wise to say "No, thanks," for all the reasons mentioned in your letter and more. Don't give in. You'd be miserable. Dear Ann Landers: I read in the paper yesterday that two men were legally married in California.

My friend and I live in Minnesota and we can't be married in this state. How about Illinois? Also, where should we look for a home in Chicago? We like the Near North Side. Please advise. Two in Love Two members of the same sex cannot be legally married in any state of the union. They may have a "religious" ceremony but this does not constitute a legal marriage.

As for location, Chicago has many nice areas. One thing is certain, you don't need to be near a school. Dear Ann Landers: I have followed with interest the controversy in your column about where to meet members of the opposite sex. As a college professor, I frequently find myself giving advice to graduate students on this topic. A few of my observations may be of value to you.

One must be comfortable with one's self in order to be comfortable with others. Thus, a person who abhors singles bars should not go scouting in such a place. No matter how many eligibles are around it won't work. A woman who hates sports shouldn't go to ball games to meet men. She will meet people whose interests are not the same as hers.

Campus activities are a good setting for getting acquainted. The sarno goes for art galleries, museums and libraries If possible, get on a committee, become involved in learning discussions. One will be more comfortable with a new acquaintance if both are working toward a mutual goal. In this way they can start out as friends and a deeper relationship can develop naturally. BJI.B., Loyola Univ.

Thanks for the input from academia. The words are a little different, but the melodv is the same. Fiedler making gool progress Boston Pops conductor Arthur Fiedler is making "good progress" in his recovery from his fifth heart attack, and was transferred Thursday from the cardiac care unit to a private room, according to a spokesman for Tufts New England Medical Center. Fiedler suffered the heart attack last Saturday. This is the second time he has been hospitalized in the last three months.

He suffered from exhaustion and was hospitalized shortly after he celebrated his fiftieth anniversary with the Pops this spring. Breakdown on the Hetl Line An MBTA car on the Red Line ripped up 300 feet of the electrically charged third rail in the Tenean Beach area of Dorchester yesterday afternoon, temporarily halting service on the line. About 100 passengers were evacuated from the car after the 2 p.m. accident, and service was stopped for about 20 minutes. No injuries were reported.

Innocent plea on shooting Virginia Clark, 42, of 170 Alraont st pleaded innocent yesterday to a charge that she tried to murder her husband, Boston police officer George Clark, in their home Thursday night She was charged with shooting Clark in the back during a domestic disturbance. A probable cause hearing on a charge of assault with intent to murder was scheduled for July 3, and she was held on $5000 surety or (250 cash bail, a court spokeswoman said. Her husband, an 18-year veteran of the force, was listed in fair condition in the intensive care unit at Boston City Hospital yesterday. 18-to-20 year sentence in assault case A 27-year-old Jamaica Plain man was sentenced to 18 to 20 years at Walpole State Prison yesterday in connection with the shooting of Brian Harrison, 33, of San Franciso, in Brighton on April 11, 1974. Anthony Zaccag-nini, of 220 South was convicted Thursday by a Suffolk County Superior Court jury of assault with intent to murder, and assault and battery with a deadly weapon.

Harrison survived the shooting with no permanent injury. Medford dormitory protest to get trial Medford residents who went to court last year to try to stop Tufts University from building a dormitory in their neighborhood are entitled to a trial in that case, the state Appeals Court ruled yesterday. The court reversed a Middlesex Superior Court order that dismissed the case brought by John J. Twomey of Sunset avenue and other members of the Citizens for Neighborhood Preservation. High court rejects McKenney suit The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court refused yesterday to order the state Judicial Conduct Commission to dismiss a complaint that makes allegations of misconduct by Roxbury District Court Judge Elwood S.

McKenney. McKenney, in a suit against the nine-member commission, charged the complaint filed by a Worcester commission member was based only on a Jan. 11, 1979 broadcast by the WBZ-TV I-Team and did not meet the requirements set by the Supreme Coifrt for complaints made against judges. Justice, Benjamin Kaplan ruled that the status of, the complaint should be decided by the commission upon further investigation. DETROIT Ford Motor Co.

recalled yesterday 223,000 cars and trucks to fix brakes. One recall included every Ford, Mercury and Lincoln assembled in North America from Feb. 21 through March 17, along with all Econoline vans, F-series light trucks with speed control and Broncos with speed control made in that period about 99,000 vehicles. In another recall, the owners of 124.000 Ford LTD and Mercury Marquis cars from the 1979 model year were asked to take them to dealers for inspection of the front brakes. Dollar loses value The US dollar lost substantial value on foreign exchange markets yesterday, and dealers attributed the sharpness of the drop to a lack of support from central banks, including the Federal Reserve.

Gold was higher, Xerox cash for johs STAMFORD, Conn. Xerox Corp. has given the US Labor Department $500,000 to provide neighborhood summer jobs for 600 innercity teenagers across the country. The jobs will go to economically disadvantaged youths between 14 and 19 whose family income is below minimum government guidelines. Paper mill contract vote WESTBROOK, Maine About 1100 production workers at the S.D.

Warren Co. paper mill began voting on a proposed two-year contract that won the endorsement of union leaders. The contract would provide a 10 percent wage hike the first year and 8 percent the second. The starting wage is now $5.26 an hour. Foreign tax rule WASHINGTON The Treasury issued proposedfreg-ulations clarifying how much of the billions of dollars in foreign taxes paid by American-based companies are creditable against US taxes.

The proposed regulations established three circumstances in which payments are clearly taxes: the foreign country imposes an income tax which does not treat producers differently from other taxpayers; where no income tax is imposed on non-producers, the income tax on producers does not exceed 46 quately considered the Alewife alternative. The opinion stated that while the environmental impact statement indicated that terminus was not the best alternative, it gave sufficent information to federal authorities to make a decision. The environmental study's purpose, Cohen maintained, is to "insure that officials made a choice whether right or wrong with 'eyes open' as to the impact on the environment." The coalition insisted that the project changes required a supplemental report Other changes included the shift from a mole-tunnel boring device to dynamiting and the contractor's use of a proposed ventilation shaft on Massachusetts avenue as a major excavation site. Cohen said, "It is not enough to simply pick away at an environmental impact statement with a fine-tooth comb, suggesting here and there that more could have been said then leaving it to the court to speculate that there might be irreparable harm to the environment Preliminary injunctions are drastic remedies accommodating drastic needs." Cohen added that the citizens had failed to show that the Alewife terminus was permanent, especially in light of the nation's present energy crisis. The project's legal woes, however, are not over.

Cambridge has filed suit in Middlesex Superior Court to challenge the MBTA's contention that its contractors need not obtain city building permits for construction. The HarvardBrattle station, open since March, has not been inspected. At stake is about $300,000 in permit fees, which the MBTA would rather not pay. The city also will ask a Superior Court judge Monday for summary judgment in a suit filed by the city challenging the state fire marshal's decision to overrule the Cambridge fire chief. He refused to issue blasting permits from 8 p.m.

to 11 p.m., as called for in the MBTA contract. By David McKay Wilson Globe Correspondent -Construction of the MBTA's Red Line extension will not be halted by a challenge from the Red Line Alert and the city of Cambridge if federal Judge David Nelson follows the recommendation of a federal magistrate in Boston. US First District Court Magistrate Lawrence Cohen, in a 31-page opinion presented to Nelson, said the $560 million subway project's Environmental Impact Statement is "comprehensive in scope, detail and analysis of alternatives." Nelson will make the final decision as to whether a preliminary injunction is to be granted. Red Line Alert attorney Gregor McGregor has until June 25 to file objections. The Alert, a coalition of North Cam-, bridge residents and local businessmen, and the city' challenged the study's adequacy and hoped to stall the project until further environmental studies were completed.

Cambridge Mayor Thomas Danehy, an opponent of the extension, said, "It doesn't surprise me, but I'm a little disappointed." Don Eagles, MBTA public information director, said, "Of course we are pleased. If the city wants to proceed further with the suit, it can. But construction will continue. The subway is very important for the cities of Boston and Cambridge." The Alert group wanted a restudy of the extension's planned terminus at Alewife, near the end of Route 2 in West Cambridge. When the impact study was completed in 1977, the extension was planned to Arlington.

Federal mass-transit funding cutbacks and local opposition forced the government to end the subway at Alewife, at least temporarily. Since September 1977, projected costs of the extension have escalated 81 percent, from $309 to $560 million, according to MBTA figures. Cohen said the 1500-page study ade-. percent; 11 prouueers are suDjeci iu a lax wnun i nui an income tax rather than the foreign country's general income tax, the acmount paid is comparable to what would have been paid under the country's general income AMEX OPTIONS CONFIDENTIAL CHAT You can recover CALLS Jvn See) Vol Last Vol Last 311 3 213 4' nt nt 474 slS IS II 11 nt nt S3 10 OH 7 tft ls7 370 2'A nt nt 25 Vi 710'A 51114 303 5 2M 7V 4781 SlS 1410 3 a S'A nt nt 001 si 144 ls7 Auction ends factory era GARDNER An equipment auction has marked the end of one of this central Massachusetts industrial city's most important institutions. The Heywood-Wakefield furniture factory marked its demise Wednesday night with an auction at its sprawling old factory complex.

Company President John H. Heywood said the firm would keep its headquarters here and continue to operate aluminum furniture factories in Michigan and Tennessee. Heywood said the price of heating oil played a large role in the factory's death. He said several years ago the company was paying $600,000 in a winter for oil. Doc Stk Vol Lost Pr 30 44 10' 203 IV 101 nt nt 21 20 4 21 5 64 364 1 2s9 364 33 Sl3 364 31 114 36'A 14 74 36 407 44 26'A nt nt 3S 5 34 35V 13 35V 4 3 VVt 111 sS 37V nt nt 34V 7 4 34V 1 44 104 39 4 104 22 3 32 26 tl3 32 10 5 34 91 1st 34 51 44 474 106 2' 47 Jon Stk nt 7 sS nt 10 nt nt nt 15 155 S3 nt si nt nt nt nt nt nt It 34 nt nt 132 7 121 IVl 143 2 so nt nt 34 31 21 322 si 340 SI5 00 3 nt nt 1 si 157 IsS CALLS Jul Oct Vol Last Vol Last Vol Last Pr Dear Sweetpea In An Onion Patch I read the Chat every day, and until now have always been too busy to write.

I am 41 and had my stroke 11 years ago. Since then I have raised three children (now 11, 15, 17), acquired a master's degree and a job, and separated from my husband after 17 years of marriage. None of it has been easy; but, believe me, you can recover a normal life. And, if you look upon this experience as a positive factor in your life, your next 43 years can surpass the past 43. I begin each day with thanks for this wonderful gift called life and a determination to make the most of every minute I have been given.

Hang in there, the bouts of depression eventually end, with hard work, most of the physical problems will improve. But, most of all, you eventually learn to accept your residual damage as a minor inconvenience. And, with good humor, so will everyone you meet. Most of my acquaintances assume I was born clumsy, and I don't bother td correct them, because it just doesn't matter. Please write.

It's always comforting to know that the strange feelings you have had are not unique. Eternal Optimist nt nt 10 8 27 2 1 2i 21 si SO 1 3 2 nt nt 24 si 104 3 4 1 II King gets an earful on Berkshire needs nt nt 25 2 6 i 3 126 U12 Only 12 million bottle caps to go The school year is drawing to a close, but the great bottle cap hunt continues at the Frank I. Brown Elementary School in South Portland, Maine. Last fall, fifth graders in Douglas Caldwell's math class set a goal of collecting one million bottle caps by June of 1980, just to see what one million of anything looked like. The count has now reached more than 400,000.

Students will continue to look for bottle caps this summer. They have more than 500,000 to go. 16011 200 2 0 no no 314 13 3'k 314 nt nt 314 7 3 264 nt nt 264 nt nt 344 nt nt 344 12 34 27'A 20 1 27'4 101 134 '71 140 7 71 3 24 71 5 164 no no 544 1 04 544 9 34 544 0 34 354 2 14 354 no no 354 5 16i )29V 40 10' 129V 12 6 129' no no 129V 4M 00 l' 30 si nt nt VWi no no 404 5'4 200 TV 234 240 2' 51 1 5 2 24 S3 12 sl3 5 s5 14 14" 74 46 34 00 1 4 77 11 3 2 nt nt nt nt mm 420 34 303 4 10 Mi 93 31 17 S7 nt nt Striko Pr Aserco Aura 30 BeaFd 30 BeaFd 25 ChesM ChasM 35 ChasM 40 CstlSG 15 CstlSG 20 CstlSG 25 Deere 30 Deere Dmt 40 GTE 25 GTE 30 Gfett 25 Giett 30 Hercul 15 Htroil 20 Pfuer 30 Pfizer 3S PNMr 30 PNMr 35 SteOC 45 siaac so OptlM 1 Strike Pr Aetn 23 Aetna 30 Aetn 33 ACyan 25 ACyan 30 AExp 30 AExp 35 A Horn 25 AHom 30 Brohs 40 Brghs 70 Brghs 00 CtfTel 20 DigitE 45 DigitE 50 DigitE 60 Disney 35 Disney 40 Disney 45 OuPt 120 DuPt 130 DuPt 140 DuPt ISO FsOrt 15 FsOrt 20 GdyrT 15 GtfyrT 20 Greyh 10 Greyh 15 GuHO) 25 GuHOt 30 HFC 20 UyS 45 Uya 50 uya Merrt. 15 Merrt 20 MesaP 30 MesaP 35 MesaP 40 MesaP 45 Motrol 40 Motrol 45 PhfO 20 Pn0 25 PNpO 30 PHney 30 ProcG 70 ProcG 00 RtteAd 20 RiteAO 25 Tandy 20 Tandy 25 Tandy TRW 35 TRW 40 Txaco 20 Txac 25 Txaco 30 UCarb 30 UCarb 35 UCarb 40 USSN 20 USSff 25 Warm. 25 WstgE 15 WstgE 20 WstgE 25 Option Strike Pr AMF 15 AMF 20 10 si 14 4 13 44 19 91 ls9 19 1 24 164 6 4 164 1 44 144 251 14 144 42 3 264 150 4 264 4 4 194 nt nt 172 s5 139 sl3 Bottle problem 173 2 44 Vi 272 si 35 5 S3 107 iim nt nt 10 44 2 7 34 $7 140 14 110 34 17 I 094 4 212 1s3 nt nt 5254 52194 020 no no 564 1 0 564 2 24 564 00 44 10' W9IS11 II1 no no 534 ASA 30 IS 74 9 04 no no ASA 25 243 24 97 4 19 44 27 ASA 30 513 4 216 Is 46 2s5 Anet 20 131 4 aj 1 nt nt 184 BIMf 22' 1S23V no no no no 454 BalMf 25 91204 4520V no no 45 1 BalMf 30 358 154 170 1S4 66 16V ,454 BatMf 35 130711 43511V 305124 4S4 BalMf 40 298 7 797 04 440 94 454 CatrTr 55 4 Is nt nt nt; nt S4V4 CalrTr 60 nt nt 1 4 155 14 54' CatrTr 70 11 si nt nt no.

no S4' ConEd 20 114' nt t. nt 244 ConEd 25 303 s5 230 $9 59 4 244 OrPep 10 10 54 nt'nf no' no-154 DrPep 15 53 IsS 70 2 135 34 154 OrPep 30 119 4 21 s9! 10 sll 154 BPm 15 2 44 5 5 nt nt 194 EPaS 30 132 4 45 14 45 14 Heetw 10 0 4 45 20 Sll 04 Gract 25 1 24 nt nt nt nt 274 Grace 30 35 l3 3 4 nt 01 774 LaPac 30 4 14 5 2s7 -1 113 LaPae 25 nt nt 3 s7 nt nt 71 MOtC 15 1M nt nt re no 4 MGIC 30 36 54 1 6' nt nt 344 MdC 25 W71sl3 91 24 40 S4 244 NtSem 15 20114 111 no-no 264 NtSem 20 84 7V4 14 74 101 8V 264 NtSem 25 517 34 70 4' 14 54 264 NtSem 30 402 14 98 3s5 342slS 264 NtOist 30 3 14 nt nt nt nt 1Y NtDist 25 JO $3 nt nt 4 4 214 Norms 15 nt nt 10 lvo 70-14 IS' NortnS 20 nt nt 4 si nt nt IS1 Penny 30 32 14 14 24 24 31V Penny 35 22 s3 23 St 4 4 314 Phft 25 1 111 no no no 364 PMPt 30 12 64 nt nt 2 8 364 PMPt 35 02 2V 37 34 407 44 364 PNPI 40 62 4 46 14 lit nt 364 RsvO) nt nt 30114 no no 21 RsvOO 15 45 4V 157 64 111 74 21 RsvOi 20 1142 3sll 1004 3V 398 $4 31 Seano 10 47 44 34 44 10 44 144 Searle IS 452 224 slS 33 IsS 144 Sear 20 25 si 4 4 nt nt 144 SimpP H) 143 24 29 34 21 34 12V SanpP IS 368 4 73 15 279 14 124 StrlgD 30 131 Sl3 99 14 15 34 20 Tenco 25 nt nt 1 94 no no 34V Tenco 30 40 4 4 35 4) 25 S' 34V Tenco 35 200 4 399 ls7 139 2s I MVi Tigrltl 20 20 5 nt nt nt nt 25 Tigrltl 25 01 14 19 24 3 34 25 Tigrltl 30 nt nt 103 4 26 14 25 Zenith 10 12 34 15 14 5 34 134 Zerilh 15 33 4 60 s9 27 sll 124 PUTS Option Jul Oct Jo St Strike Pr Vol Last Vol Last Vol Last- Pr Aetn 264 4 si 5 s5 2 s7 314 Aetna 30 93 s5 5 4 37 14 314 Aetn 334 0 14 7 24 nt nt 314 MesaP 30 3 si nt nt 00 534 MesaP 40 91 si 35 si .14 sS 534 MesaP 45 335 S3 116 sll 107 SlS 434 WstgE 15 nt nt 4 236 -s7 104 WstgE 20 13 ls3 41 Istl 202 2 141 PUTS Option Au No Fee Stk Strike Pr Vol Last Vol Last Vol Last Pr ASA 35 161 4 4 20 ASA 30 24 34 6 IV 3 34 37' RsvOO 15 301 4 12 4 3' 4 31' RsvOO 30 387 1 141 14 731111.31. Footnotes: Wins, nt no trading, no option not offered Strkinj price- price at whicn holder can exercise option Open Interest contracts, outstanding Stock price is NYSE DIVIDENDS -I-- Company Div. Pay Roc Am.Bakerles 30c Joty 15 June 25 Argus 0 20c Aug 31 July 31 Charles River BreedingLabs Vht July 20 June 29 CTS 0 20c Aug 5 Juno 29 FtaGuHRttyTr. 0 32c July 12 June 28 Hess's 0 15c Aug 20 July 26 LawsonPdts 7c July 18 July 3 Letinar Wc Aug 15 Aug 3 MartinProces.

a 10c Aug 1 July 13 Mutual Savings Lifelns. 0 23c July 2 Juno ,25 NtlSpirming 0 5c July 20 July 5 J.ntl 57V July 14 June 29 Ranchers 0 Kfc July JT. June. 29 topid-Am. 20c July 31 July 16 WggsNtJBnk oMash.D.C.

0 60c July 16 June 29 SI PaulSecw. 8.4c July 16 June 29 SdnlasticMag. 0. 15c July 31 July 17 Sterndent 15c Aug 22 Aug 8 SurveyorFO 5c July 20 Juno 21 Tidewater 22'c July 13 Juno 29 TowKMIg. 22c July 31 June 29 Valspar 9c July 16 July 2 Wal-Mart 0 7'c July 17 Juno 29 MlStl ComfittmslM Care 4c Aug.

23 July. 31 Fresns 0 15c July 23 JuM '29 Inttt-flegtonal Finckfrp 15c July 16 July 2 KaiserCement 0 35c July 31 July 13 MTMtge.lnv. 0 40c July 16 Juno 25 MrshSptmkts 0 8c Aug 6 July 20 NflFueifias 0 63'ic July 15 June 30 UNCResources 12' July 19 July 5 root CmprhnsCr 2lor1 July 26 June 30 A -Annual Monthly. Q-Quarteily. S-Semi-Annual.

Y-Year End. BIRD SIGHTINGS Bird sightings this week as reported to the Massachusetts Audubon Society. Reports from the Manomet area recently included two chuck-will's-wldow, a green heron nest with young, young kill-deer, a kingfisher nest, a yellow-bellied flycatcher, several Carolina wrens and a blackburnian warbler. In the Miles Stan-dish State Forest, three yellow-rumped warblers were found. In Westport, a chuck-will's-widow was heard calling for one everting only.

In North Reading, two yellow-billed cuckoos were seen; in the Wrentham-Franklin area there were four yellow-billed cuckoos, four black-billed cuckoos, a nest building blue-gray gnatcatcher, two warbling vireos, a golden-winged warbler, nine blue-winged warblers and three chestnut-sided warblers. 49014' 224154 1406 Vh 460llb2 71 5 3 tVi 07 3 1021V 534 177164 534 471 124 534 nt nt 45'4 nt nt 45Vi nt nt 254 I 3 2S4 47 1 254 nt nt 254 nt nt 784 nt nt 784 nt nt 201 3 sll 20V 13 24 20' 59 1' 20' no no 20li 1 3V 37 II ls7 37 199 14 30 36 IsS 67 si 17 si nt nt 145 1 5 nt nt 126 11 90 nt nt 3 2V 151 nt nt nt nt 17 2s7 nt nt nt nt 2010 5 2s7 nt nt 12 A 10 2Mi 50 4 4 4 15 3 43 slS 2 64 no no 36V 44 2s7 36' 67 14 53 14 si 123 133 S9 26' 4 59 74 nt nt no no 37V 3 44 37'A nt NORTH ADAMS Continued from Page 13 executive directer of the Northern Berkshire Industrial Development Commission. "And the most important link of that highway would be a Pittsf ield bypass." North Adams is 31 miles from the Massachusetts Turnpike, but it requires "an hour and five minutes to get there," Lane said after the meeting. About 40 minutes of the trip is through an industrial part of Pittsfield. A bypass, planned for many years on Route 8 to run north-south through the county, would reduce the traveling time between North Adams and the turnpike 15 or 20 minutes people here estimate.

"Industry and the tourists are suffering from this need," Nicholas Spearanzo, a former labor leader in Pittsfield, told the meeting. The only other highways through the area are Route 2, which runs east-west along the Mohawk Trail, and Route 7, which parallels Route 8. People in this area want to keep both as scenic roadways. King, Transportation Secretary Barry M. Locke and James Carlin, Department of Commerce and Development commissioner, all pledged to help get the bypass project moved forward.

Carlin's pledge to try to have a public hearing planned for January moved up drew more applause. The officials were also asked to improve airline service and to fill other needs of this region at six economic development workshops conducted by departmental secretaries and other high-ranking state officials at the college in conjunction with the meeting. King took part briefly in each workshop. The other officials were Byron Matthews, secretary of communities and de- nt nt 53 sl3 13 Vi nt 115 nt 143 nt Vt 4 42 40 4 5 4 10 4Vt 71 4 39 3H GOV. KING to check on bill velopment; George S.

Kariotis, secretary of economic affairs; John A. Bewick, secretary of environmental affairs; Eileen Schell, secretary of consumer affairs and Joseph F. Fitzpatrick, state energy 19 ls5 37' nt nt 224 63 lsl 224 355 14 34' 304 44 104 272 14 184 no no 104 Foe Stk Vol Last Pr 4 iVl 164 21 S9 164 173 14 1 si no no CALLS Chatters I've read Chat for sometime and now find myself in need of your advice. My 2-year-old daughter refuses to give up her bottle. Although she uses a cup at mealtimes and for other drinks during the day, at nap and bedtimes, she requires a bottle.

I realize this was a bad habit and never should have been encouraged. However, as an infant, she was a terrible sleeper and the bottle seemed to alleviate the bedtime blues. I'm sure some of you have conquered this problem and perhaps you would share your methods. I must add that we also have an 8-month-old daughter, so I cannot simply pack the bottles away and hope for an "out of sight out of mind" solution. Shamrocks And Knockwurst After a loss Dear Path To The Sea, Minouche, Creating Faith, May And June, Flagstones and all the Chatters who answered my letter I couldn't believe how many of you cared enough to write me.

Your support helped me through a difficult time, and I'll always be grateful. I've waited so long to respond because I wanted to be able to tell you all the good news. Early this past March, I gave birth to a fine, healthy son. I was able to carry him to term with no mishaps. Needless to say, my husband and I are overjoyed, and the miscarriage suddenly doesn't seem so terrible anymore.

As Eight DownSeven Up said (quoting Emerson): "For everything you have missed, you have gained something else." How much I have gained with our little son! Pilgrim's Inn Aug Nov Vol Last Vol Last 2 11 l't nt nt 19 4 EARNINGS THIS DAY IN HISTORY United Press International Today is Saturday, June 16, the 167th day of 1979 with 198 to follow. The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Venus and Mars. The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini.

American soprano Helen Traubel was born June 16, 1903. On this day in history: In 1871, the Ancient Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine was organized in New York City by Dr. Walter Fleming. In 1963, Russia put the first woman into space Valentina Tereshkova. In 1973, Soviet Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev arrived in the United States for a meeting with President Nixon.

In 1978, President Carter joined the Panamanian ceremonies formally concluding the new Panama Canal treaties. A thought for the day; British poet Sydney Smith said, "Avoid shame, but do not seek glory nothing so expensive as glory." Period Company Aerosomc- 3 mos 6 mos Year Latest Ago .05 .04 1.90 1.35 .39 .24 .52 .47 .38 .38 .90 1.04 .69 .66 .13. .18 1.71 2.53 1.14 1.06 .35 .57 1.21 .82 .42 .09 loss .05 .63 68 .07 .01 China to offer tours Associated Press TOKYO The China Tourist Department says charter flights, coupled with extensive tours, will begin June 30 between Hong Kong and Hangzhou, one of East China's most famous scenic spots, Peking's official Xinhua news agency reported yesterday. Tourists may stay eight, 10 or 14 days and may visit Shanghai, Suzhou, Wuxi, Nanjing, Changzhou and Hangzhou. Aro.

Artec Mfg Am. Greetings Burnup Sims Comp. Fla. Gulf Rlty Grt. Basin Pile LabattfJohn) Marsh SupsrmMs MM) MST Mtge NoMlty Homes Ocetnoeflng tnU PemU Powell Indus.

Pier 1 1mports BEIT of America ftusco Indus Silo Sup. Eq.iSyst Watsco 3 mos 3 mos 12 mos 12 mos 12 mos 9 mos 12 mos 12 mos 6 mos 9 mos 6 mos (mos 9 mos 6 mos 12 mos 6 mos 3 mos 9 mos 9 mos 3 mos 1.81 1.25 1.76 98 toss .26 2.73 1.88 .44 .35 .19 .15.

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