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Spokane Chronicle from Spokane, Washington • 12

Publication:
Spokane Chroniclei
Location:
Spokane, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AS SPOKANE CHRONICLE, FEB. 19, 1985 rgrrk. 4 Laajl 9 REGIONAL New Lake City mayor drops teacher from library board Yout Ire Re 72141-alilue got 21meTzT I 'saw lege, and social science teacher James L. Lien of Canfield Junior High. Stone said he selected those committee members for their science backgrounds not because they all are teachers.

He called Randall's business background "essential" to the Library Board. Partington and Randall were the only ones to apply for the post, according to Stone. Stone named new committees to study hazardous waste, beautification and the city's centennial in 1987. Other members of the hazardous waste committee are: Lee Ray, Lee Penman, Bill Gray, Police Capt. Dave Scates, City Administrator Gene McAdams and Mike Budvarson, assistant fire chief.

Five former mayors, including Fromm, were named to Stone's new centennial committee: temporary chairman John McHugh, Johnston, Larry Gardner, Marc Souther and P.A. Christianson. Other members include George Wilson, Marcia Souther, Leslie Ulveling and Virginia Atwood. Additionally, Stone appointed a new beautification committee: Robert L. Bemis, Allen Baldridge, Kathy Teague, Mabel Hanson, Gordon Wilcox, Red Halpern, Jim Coleman and Mike McDowell.

location on Harrison Avenue last December. The English teacher said his top personal feat was to talk then-Mayor Johnston into refusing to accept Chairman Norm Gissel's resignation. Gissel had submitted the resignation in frustration over lack of communication between the library board and staff and the council. "If Gissel hadn't been chairman, you could have kissed a lot of things goodbye," Partington said. He said the library still needs to expand its hours and increase staff salaries, bringing them in line with communities of the same size.

"They're very underpaid," he said. Stone said Partington had done a satisfactory job, but the committee already had two people with ties to education North Idaho College dean Owen Cargol and former teacher Fay Sweney. "I wanted someone who could be more of a representative to all the folks in the community," he said. However, the council approved Stone's nominations of five teachers to the new hazardous waste committee: chemistry teachers Ken Wright and Bill Pecha and biology teachers Jim Burns and Dick Raymond, all of North Idaho Col By D.F. Oliveria Staff water COEUR d'ALENE Coeur d'Alene High teacher Joe Parting.

ton became a victim of the political spoils system Tuesday night when he failed to win reappointment to the library board. Mayor Ray Stone nominated Sunset Dodge bookkeeper Kaye Randall despite receiving an application from Partin gton for reappointment. The City Council unanimously approved the nomination along with a host of others made by Stone. "1 served at the pleasure of those people in power," said Partington. "1 certainly cared enough to serve additionally." Stone wouldn't say if his nomination was politically motivated.

Partington managed former Mayor Jim Fromm's 1981 campaign. Stone defeated Fromm last November in his bid for re-election. Former Mayor Don Johnston appointed Partington to the library board six years ago. In an interview Tuesday, Partington listed the board's major accomplishments during his tenure as hiring Library Director Julie Meier and moving the library to its new Straw Hat turns the predictable pizza into a really great experience. Your favorite toppings on a variety of pizzas, tasty fresh salad bar, beers, wines and soft drinks, movies and gamesand real friendly people to serve you.

Come and join the celebration soon. rmi Immo Dm nun Ens nom css ictable pizza ence. Your aety of Lr, beers, ovies and people join the lems win at PIZZA. 2 i all' 7 a i. 1 ,...4 1 er 0) A a 1 ,1,4, 1 0 0 4r ip .04.

---4 ap. ot. 0 7 6 ,4, 0 0 4 .4,, 4 El Large lidarge Original Plui la Li only tax. IIWith your choice of any two fresh vegetable or all-meat toppings. At these prices, you get free slices! 0 Good at all three locations: North 1801 Hamilton straw a (2 blocks north of Mission and Hamilton) Large Original pizza with rk Pi North 7116 Division SO.99 plus tax with this coin El Across from U.

City $1.00 more for Pan Pizza. coupon when ordering. One in the Valley person per visit. Not valid discounts or coupons. Delivi LI Coupon good thru March 31, 1986.

Copyright 1985 Straw Hat Re Straw Large Original Pizza with S6.99 plus tax with this coupon. $1.00 more for Pan Pizza. coupon when ordering. One person per visit. Not valid discounts or coupons.

Delivery Copyright I985 Straw Hat ginal Pizza Ills tax. two fresh vegetable or all-meat you get free slices! tions: IV )n straw Hat I Hamilton) Large Original Pizza with I $6.99 plus tax with this coupon. Air Force aid sought in search for skiers two toppings Present coupon per with other extra. Rectaurants. Inc.

two toppings CZ43 i C7Ci 1:231 C133 CZNI 'Join the Grand Opening Celebration! VStraw Hat. NEW LOCATION yr A Dm 1111 13 3 111231 3153 1E11 1:131211 21 Bran 33411 LI Pizza Lunch Special s299 plus tax EACH 11 4.zwi p1us tax EACH (Coupon good for to 5 people) 8 Associated Press BOZEMAN Gallatin County officials are seeking help from a military helicopter to help search for two Bozeman skiers feared killed in an avalanche near Bear Canyon. But Sheriff Ron Cutting said weather must improve and avalanche danger subside before the search is resumed, because of danger to the searchers. Cutting said Tuesday he plans to ask the U.S. Air Force for use of a helicopter to help search the Bear Canyon area south of Bozeman and also said he would meet with search leaders next week.

A search for David and Sppencer Ore, two Bozeman brothers, was suspended last Tuesday after several days on intensive probing of a snow slide. North 1801 Hamilton (2 blocks north of 11 Mission Hamilton) .11 CALL 487-1929 up 0 Luncheon Pizza with any two toppings, plus salad kind a regular-size soft drink. Tell the lunch bunch about It! 0 Good at all three locations: North 1801 Hamilton Straw at I (2 blocks north of Mission and Hamilton) Luncheon Pizza. any two toppings. VI North 7116 Division and regular-size of drink at special 0 Across from U.

City stated with coupon. Ptment this cour when ordering. Offer good I lam to I in the Valley Monday thru Friday. One coupon per per visit. Not valid with other discou coupons.

Not valid for home delivers Coupon good thru March 31, 1986. Copyright lYS5 Straw Hat Restaut Straw at Luncheon Pizza. any two toppings. and regular-size soft drink at special stated with coupon. Present this coupon when ordering.

Offer good I lam to Monday thru Friday. One coupon per per visit. Not valid with other discounts coupons. Not valid for home delivery. Copyright lYS5 Straw Hat Restaurants.

salad price 1pm. person or Inc. for Take-Out. SUN. Mil 1.1 FRI.

H-MIDNIGHT Straw Hat is great for birthdays, parties a and special events. 1 1 1 11 1I I1 1 MI 1I 1 IZZ1 1 MINERAL Wash. Body may be one of missing couple A body found near this Lewis County town may be one of two people who have been missing since December, when they were last seen heading out to check traps, police say. The body was found near a truck Tuesday night and was left overnight for an investigation today. Pierce County Sgt.

Nick Dunbar said investigators assume the pickup truck was the one driven by Michael Riemer 36, and Diana Robertson, 21, of Puyallup. The body found near the truck has not been identified, but Dunbar said it is "possibly female." The body was found by a motorist who stopped to walk his dog just off Washington 7 near the Pierce-Lewis county line. Riemer and Robertson have been missing since they left to check animal traps along the Nisqually River. Their two-year-old daughter, Crystal, was found at a store in Spanaway on the evening of Dec. 12, the day the couple was last seen.

She was unable to tell police anything. Searches by officials and other searches organized by Riemer's father, Michael Riemer failed to turn up any sign of the missing couple. GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, Mont. New boss named for Glacier Park Gil Lusk, the superintendent of Big Bend National Park in Texas, has been named the new superintendent of Glacier National Park in Montana. Lusk said he expects to assume his new duties in April.

He succeeds Robert Haraden, who retired as Glacier superintendent earlier this year. "I feel like a kid in a candy store," Lusk said Tuesday. "I feel really good about the Haraden, a 30-year veteran with the National Park Service, also was superintendent at Big Bend before coming to Glacier in 1981. It's a long way from Glacier Park to Big Bend Park, but the two national parks have many similarities. Both border neighboring countries, harbor threatened species and are known for their mountain scenery.

The Texas park covers 732,000 acres of the Chihuahuan Desert and preserves 118 miles of the Rio Grande along the Texas-Mexico border. Lusk also was responsible for the Rio Grande National Wild and Scenic River, which protects 245 miles of the river. SEATTLE Man convicted of extortion try A 41-year-old apartment building manager has been convicted of extortion for threatening to blow up the Rainier Tower unless bank officials gave him $150,000. Deputy Prosecutor Michael Danko said the King County Superior Court conviction of Mark Edwin Sullivan was based largely on circumstantial evidence because no witness could positively identify him. Sullivan testified he knew nothing of the Sept.

9 incident and his lawyer, Michael Filipovic, said the verdict handed down Friday would be appealed. The case arose when a bank security guard was directed to a typewritten extortion note that said there were motion-sensitive and radio-controlled bombs in the building. The note demanded that a young female bank employee place $150,000 in the manila folder that contained the note and take it to a downtown phone booth. A city police detective went to the site, answered the phone and was told to go to another telephone booth, where she received another call telling her to place the money in a bag under a telephone booth and leave. Sullivan was arrested when he arrived and lifted the bag.

LAS VEGAS, Net. Ex-federal witness to face fraud counts A former protected witness connected to New York organized crime figures has been ordered returned to Salt Lake City to face fraud charges. In Las Vegas, U.S. Magistrate Philip Pro denied bail for Charles J. O'Donnell and ordered him returned to Salt Lake City to face charges he posed as a Teamsters union trustee to arrange the transfer of $200,000 from a Seattle bank to Utah last Dec.

24. O'Donnell, 44, also known as Charles Bertinelli and Charles Gambino, was arrested Friday by Las Vegas FBI agents. Last month a federal judge in New York ordered O'Donnell to testify in the trial of reputed mob figure Carmine O'Donnell told Pro during a hearing Tuesday he was an FBI informant in New York for three years before becoming a federally protected witness a year ago, when he changed his name to Bertinelli and moved with his wife and two teen-age children to Salt Lake City. Assistant U.S. Attorney David Moynihan said O'Donnell should not be released because he was "less than candid" with officials after his arrest and "has been a con man for years." I :7, al 1 0 ItZilti Os iraVitE) a itiffi ts 1.11 a ri qiiP LrOg1 0 i141111.

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1 CHARGE IT ON YOUR BON 9 9 AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCOUNT ro A UNIT OF ALLIED STORES. I Al A CHARGE IT ON YOUR BON 99 AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCOUA From wire reports Justice Building remodeling adds court, centralized filing ago. But it remained closed, used mainly for storage. Remodeling became a priority with office overcrowding and an increasing shortage of courtrooms. A couple of years ago, when all courtrooms were being used at once, proceedings had to be conducted in a rented room at the North Shore Resort, said county Commissioner Frank Henderson.

Money from court fines and forfeitures, added to federal revenue funds that commissioners put away each year, paid for the $320,000 project. "No local property tax money was used at all," Henderson said. "We were saving for this specific purpose." A bit more work, in the area that used to contain criminal files, will provide an additional courtroom with yet another planned for the county's new jail. project. "No local property tax money was used at all, Henderson said.

"We were saving for this specific purpose." A bit more work, in the area that used to contain criminal files, will provide an additional courtroom with yet another planned for the county's new jail. COEUR d'ALENE Months of construction have transformed the dark recesses of Kootenai County's Justice Building into a spacious setup that includes a new courtroom and centralized filing. At their first day of work in new surroundings Tuesday, court employees said adjusting to the system was hectic but satisfying. Traffic court, and both criminal and civil divisions which previously had been spread out between two buildings now are together in the Garden Avenue's new square-foot section. Later this spring, the county's law library will be moved there as well.

The county clerk and auditing departments, in the old courthouse adjacent to the judicial building, will move upstairs to the office that used to house civil files. The judicial building's lower level was partially finished when the facility was built several years M.1 iticti avn-Launs. Later this spring, the law library will be moved there as well. The county clerk and auditing departments, in the old courthouse adjacent to the judicial building, will move upstairs to the office that used to house civil files. The judicial building's lower level was partially finished when the facility was built.

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Pages Available:
1,319,550
Years Available:
1890-1992