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Telegraph-Forum from Bucyrus, Ohio • 7

Publication:
Telegraph-Forumi
Location:
Bucyrus, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

(i'll Ik Monday, January 8, 1534 BUCYRUg ((mid) TELEGRAPH-FORUM Page Sevea LIFESTYLE telegraph-forum Glenn voted with Reagan more often than against Jailed girl refuses to testify in court told to go to her room, as aodety requires of her, until she tells the truth. Tin girl bad been living with her maternal grandparents because the mother and atop-' father were stripped of custody when the alleged molestation waa brought to the attention of authorities. On Saturday, Superior Court Judge Richard M. Harris ordered the girl placed in a foster home pending a hearing Tuesday on whether his order should be made permanent Amys Jl-y ear-old mother, a former nurse, and her stepfather also have fe l-year-old child. Amy was confined in a 4-by-S-foot room containing little more than a bed and a tight bulb.

Since she had committed no crime, abe had to be kept away from the other children, all of whom were facing criminal charges. She waa allowed outside the room only if no other children were around. An intricate system of canals developed by the Hobokam Indians between 500 and 1200, is the basis of an irrigation system still in use in Arizona. be destroyed. The stepfathers lawyer, Garry Ichikawa, said the -childs family had sought counseling last summer about the alleged molestation and what was a family derision wound up in the courts because of a 1980 state law requiring counselors to report all cases of child abuse, even when help is ought voluntarily.

DeRonde noted the law was designed to protect children. When it was determined that her stepfather allegedly molested her, the facts were reported to the district attorney, who as required by law then filed charges. The prosecutor. Deputy District Attorney Kenneth Kobrin, said of the girls being jailed, Its the only remedy the law gives me. I really have no choice.

It is unusual, yes. Cruel, no. She is a member of society. She is not being beaten. She is not being tortured.

She has been if Wylie of Worthington, with Reagan 79 percent, against 17 percent Republican John Kasich of Westerville, with Reagan 77 percent against 23 percent Republican Bob McEwen of Hillsboro, with Reagan 72 percent, against 28 percent Republican Bill Gradison of Cincinnati, with Reagan 72 percent against 27 percent. Republican Clarence Miller of Lancaster, with Reagan 68 percent against 29 percent Republican Ralph Regula of Navarre, with Reagan 66 permit, against 29 permit Democrat Thomas Luken of Cincinnati, with Reagan 29 percent against 68 percent Democrat Douglas Applegate of Steubenville, with Reagan 27 permit, against 72 percent Democrat Mary Rose Oakar of Cleveland, with Reagan 26 percent against 73 percent Democrat Tony Hall of Dayton, with Reagan 21 percent, against 74 permit. Democrat Edward Feighan of Cleveland, with Reagan 20 percent against 78 permit. -Democrat John Selberling of Akron, with Reagan 20 percent against 79 permit Democrat Donald Pease of Oberlin, with Reagan 20 percent against 80 percent Democrat Dennis Eckart of Concord Township, with Reagan 18 percent against 82 percent Democrat Louis Stokes of Warrensville Heights, with Reagan 11 percent against 80 percent. She opposed Reagan in 85 per-cent of the votes and supported the presidents position only 12 percent of the time.

Rep. Lyle Williams of Warren was the most rebellious Republican in the Ohio delega- tion, opposing Reagan 43 percent of the time and voting with him 40 percent of the time. Overall, the survey found congressional support for Reagan dropped during 1983, continuing 1 a steady decline since 1981. Congress endorsed Reagans position 82.4 percent of the time in 1981; 72.4 percent of the time in 1982; and 67.1 percent of the time in 1983. Congressional Quarterly cautioned that its survey did not provide a clearcut view of an individual lawmakers support of Reagan.

For example, the survey weighs all votes equally, making no distinction between major and minor issues. Nor does it count important issues on which Reagan expressed no solid position. The survey also does not reflect behind-the-scenes maneuvering by congressmen in which Reagan initiatives were dumped, compromised or passed on a voice vote. Here are the ratings given other Ohio congressmen, starting with those who most often supported Reagan: Michael DeWlne of Cedarville, voted with Reagan 84 percent of the time, against him 15 percent of the time. Republican Thomas Kindness of Hamilton, with Reagan 84 percent, against 15 percent Republican Chalmers FAIRFIELD, Calif.

(UPI) -A 12-year-old girl, who spent nine days In solitary confinement for contempt of Court, refuses to testily against her stepfather in a child molesting case because she does not want to destroy her family, her attorney says. 1 The seventh grader, identified only as Amy because of her age, was to appear again today before Municipal Court Judge John Her lawyer indicated she would continue to remain silent Amy was released Saturday after spending nine days in a windowless cell at Fairfield Juvenile Hall for refusing to testify against her stepfather, a 32-year-old Vacaville physician who is charged with felony lewd and lascivious conduct for allegedly fondling her. There has been a breakdown in the exercise of judicial responsility, said Thomas Hagler, the girl lawyer. You can just imagine what it would be like for a 12-year-old girl to be in solitary confinement He said she does not want to testify for fear her family will mtzzii'S RESTAC2AKT Tuesday SPECIAL INDIVIDUAL Meat Loaf Moshod Potato Colo Slaw $3.25 OPEN UNTIL 10 P.M. si) a OPEN UP TO A WORLD OF BEAUTY, DURABILITY ENERGY SAVINGS Aluminum Storm Doors and Windows BUCYRUS UPHOLSTERY ua W.

Kfaf, M. rra. bOrnfa. 7 2 j- Wobbly Economist sees rosy times during 1984 A father holds his limp son, who appears to be a bit wobbly on skates, at Pekings Bei Hal Lake near the Forbidden City. With lakes and moats frozen over, thousands of Chinese enjoy the winter recreation.

spaeim Jan. 10 flhzo Jan. 17, 1900 LY- No conclusion on burning doll test WASHINGTON (UPI) -Economist Henry Kaufman is predicting rosy things for the American economy in 1984, seeing economic growth of 5.5 percent this year and a drop in unemployment to 7 permit. But Kaufman, appearing on ABCs This Week with David Brinkley, warned federal deficits threaten to undermine continued recovery. inti sin! bn i'aiii PjWj i jsl 1 ws WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen.

John Glenn, D-Ohlo, voted In support of President Reagan more often than he opposed him during the 1983 session, according to a new survey. The survey by Congressional Quarterly, based on 85 Senate votes and 82 House votes in which Reagan publicly stated his position, also found Glenn voted with Reagan more frequently than any other Ohio Democrat i Glenn voted with Reagan 39 percent of the time and against him 36 percent of the time, ac-' cording to the survey. The survey showed Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, dubbed the most liberal- senator by the Americans for Democratic Ac- -tion, was among those senators who most often voted against Reagan. Metzenbaum voted against Reagan 60 percept of the time while backing him 36 percent of the time, according to the survey by Congressional Quarterly.

Sen. David Pryor, voted against Reagan 71 percent of the time, more often than any senator. Following Pryor were Sens. Carl Levin, John Melcher, D-Mont; Donald Riegle, George Mitchell, D-Maine; and then Metzenbaum. In Ohios 21-member House delegation, Republican Reps.

Delbert Latta of Bowling Green and Michael Oxley of Findlay were among those House members who most often voted in accordance with Reagans wishes. i Latta voted with Reagan 87 percent of the time, ranking behind only three other House members in support of the president. He opposed the White House only 10 percent of the time. Oxley ranked 10th among the Houses 435 members in support of Reagan. He voted with Reagan 85 percent of the time and opposed him only 12 percent of the time.

Freshman Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur of Toledo voted against Reagan more often than any other Ohio congressman. Court to case I oh insanity COLUMBUS (UPI) The Ohio Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments about what should be done with insane criminals who are hospitalized because they are Incompetent to stand trial. The high court will decide the case of admitted murderer George W. Burton, who contends he should be freed because hik illness, schizophrenia, is in remission.

Burton admitted killing a Jersey, Ohio, pizza store clerk in October 1978. He was indicted on an aggravated murder charge but was found incompetent to stand trial. He was sent to lima State Hospital for the criminally insane and in 1981 found competent Burton was indicted again, but the Licking County Common Pleas Court found him incompetent, dismissed the charge and declared him mentally ill. He was then sent to the Moritz Forensic Center in Col- umbus, where he is still a patient Cemetery preserved CHARDON, Ohio (UPI) -For a decade, ever since she stumbled on it while walking her dog, an 85-year-old Chardon woman has been researching and restoring a weed-tangled 19th-century cemetery. Dorothy Russell, a genealogy buff and artist got Boy Scouts and veterans to help her weed -and clean and she tracked down surviving descendants of the founders of the cemetery.

Her efforts to preserve the burial ground where some of the 40 graves date to 1838, have paid off and the village this week will take over the quarter-acre site near 'the villages busiest intersection as a historic landmark. The forgotten, cemetery, she said, turned Out to be the Riders family private burial plot and In its graves are Char-dons earliest settlers and Revolutionary War veterans. She plotted a family tree, tracing the Riders to Deacon Benjamin Rider, a Baptist minister who came to Chardon in 1817 from Provincetown, with his wife and nine children. Ms. Russell then found Rider descendants in Connecticut and Ohio.

One of them, Ron Rogers of Wickliffe, said, Im glad that people (like Russell) and other local people have shown such an interest. Its a real fine tribute. cisAtN Your Garment Maintenance Center CLEAHEQS COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) A state fire official recently set one of the coveted Cabbage Patch Kid dolls on fire to deter-mine, its -flammability, but refused afterward to say whether the test proved the doll was a safe toy. Terry Weber, chief of the state fire marshals prevention division, conducted the tests for a Columbus newspaper after fire officials reported the rapid incineration of a Cabbage Patch Kid belonging to Taryn Miller, 8, of Zanesville. Wphor rpfiwAv tn COHCludS thS doll was a safe toy, but said it did not seem to bum particularly rapidly even when plunged directly into a flame.

He said a number of variables would determine the flammability of individual Cabbage Patch Kids. A spokesman for Coleco Industries said several Hong Kong firms produce parts for the doll and a representative sample of each lot Is tested for fire safety. Dick Hagan, a fire prevention specialist who investigated the Dec. 31 Zanesville doll fire, praised the test. If this causes 556 S.

Sandusky Avo. Ph. 562-2083 4 j. UPI skater just one parent to be more award of fire hazards, Ill be happy, he said. Heat from a kitchen candle apparently ignited Tqjyns doll, but investigators could not determine if the doll was In the.

candles flame or just close to it, Weber said. Weber ran a number of tests, including holdLig the arm of a Cabbage Patch Kid about an inch from the flame of a candle for two minutes. It did not catch fire. The dolls yarn hair caught me wlieu put in uie Same but stopped burning when it was pulled away. Weber also Ignited a leg of the doll, holding it in the candles flame for 10 seconds.

The fire slowly spread up the dolls corduroy suit and consumed the body of the doll within a few minutes. Fifteen minutes later, the blaze engulfed the doll except for its head and extremities. The fire burned fastest in the toys stuffing, hollowing out the doll as the clothing burned slowly. 1 Sell by Classified State. Zip cost Is guaranteed at todays will not Increase In rite future.

but probably both are needed to bring deficits under control. We can do something, but everyone has to put something into the pot, Moynihan said, i Kaufman said: I believe the American economy this year will do quite welL In terms of (gross national product), I suspect the economy, year-over-year, will increase close to 5.5 percent, tnqt consumption will be strong, that we will have continued expansion in business investment, he said. Kaufman, partner in the Salomon Brothers Wall Street investment company, said the economy is about to move into a new phase of recovery, characterized by unemployment as low as 7 percent and higher spending for plant mortrnljHn. But he also said there would be renewed friction in the wage and price structure that could push prices and wages higher. And, Kaufman warned, budget deficits approaching $200 billion a year could become a retarding force in the economy by the end of the year.

President Reagan and Congress should immediately move to curb spending and increase taxes, he advised. During this year corporate profits are going to rise very significantly, he said. This will be most evidenced in the first half of the year, while in the second half profits will slow. To maintain the recovery, he said, We have to do some painful things. i We have to reduce outlays and increase revenues.

I would urge the president to move ahead and accept some revenue raising measures and at the same time prune the budget more in outlays. Pliny the Elder (born Gaius Plinius Secudus), a Roman naturalist, is noted for one surviving work, Historia Naturalis. It was his encylopedia of natural science. Want Ads Pay and Daniel Moynihan, who agreed something needs to be done this year about deficits. They also agreed it is unlikely anything will be.

Dole, chairman of the Senate Finance said Reagan and House Speaker Thomas ONeill had to agree on solutions before any meaningful action could be taken. He said Keagan wants budget cuts and ONeill wants to raise taxes Meteor seen big area THIEF RIVER FALLS, Minn. (UPI) A large meteor that sent a flash of blue-white light and a sonic boom as it sped toward the atmosphere was seen by northwestern Minnesota residents In a nearly area. The meteor Sunday night also lit up switchboards throughout the area, as worried residents called tow enforcement agencies to ask what caused the flash and the sonic boom. Bill Moegline, an astronomy Instructor at Northland Community College, said he was out driving and saw the flash.

He said it was probably a meteor that burned up in the atmosphere before impact Moegline said the meteor must have been large to create -the sonic boom. One observer at Middle River said the flash lit up the sky like daylight for several seconds. The light was sighted from Bemidji to the North Dakota border, and from the Canadian border to Crookston an area of nearly 10,000 square miles. Its. 781 do was to eat 135 Ks.

182 228 "All I had to nghtl 'THANK G5 Wiso Funeral Home Now Offers INFLATION-PROOF FUNERAL PRE-ARRANGEMENTS Question Will Wise Funeral Home's INFLATION-PROOF funeral arrangements relieve my survivors from financial worry? Answer Paying for your funeral at Wises now enables you to leave your insurance and savings for your family. Your funeral will be guaranteed at any later date. want to know more about the Inflation-proof funeral plan. I Nome I GOD FOR AMERICAN MEDICAL" The Program Physical Included IKDSu Satisfaction Guaranteed Nutrition Counseling 4 Dibs, First Church of The Nazarene 2165 S.R. 4, Bucyrus, Ohio 6 Months FREE TO ANYONE: Let Us Check Your Blood Pressure Cc3 And Slat Todayl 7 FOR A FREE CONSULTATION CALL 562-9090 OCCCQ TO FIRST TIMS PATIFNTS ONLY LIMITED TlVt OFFES Address.

I City- I Telephone I lnflotlon-proof meani that the I prices. If you buy now your price I i I I I irw Insurant Farm PreeoMod inwramw rwtm Youth Week Mid-Winter Revival January 11-15, 1984 7:00 p.m. Each Evening 10:35 a.m. Sunday Morn. Rev.

Tim Ginter, Speaker Singer hmitcim tM Rev. Ginter is an ordained elder and full-time evangelist in the Church of the Nazarene. He served as pastor in Orrville, Ohio for three years and associate pastor in Bucyrus prior to his present assignment. Rev. Ginter was educated in the Bucyrus School system.

He attended the Nazarene Bible College in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Mount Vernon Nazarene College, Mount Vernon, Ohio. He traveled os a mnmber of the Ginter family singing group before he entered the ministry. I 1 i. Everyone Welcome Melvin L. Thompson Pastor Specialists in Safe, Fast Weight Control 119 W.

WARREN BUCYRUS AMERICAN MEDICAL WEIGHT ASSOCIATION iTDiae FUNERAL HOME ,1 129 W. Warren Bucyrus, Ohio 44523 I- 0, iruLt- Iff MKHA a 41 A MP A 4 Mi A-.

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Years Available:
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