THE COURIER-JOURNAL

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CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8
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December 22, 2016
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August 11, 2009
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43
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June 24, 1978
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28 Pages Approved For Release 2009/08/11 : CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 tOui&ville., Saturday,- June 24, 19/8 Copyright (0 1978, Tho Courier-Journal Dispute over diplomat's s U.S. recalls to protest stance in By GRAHAM HOVEY New York Times News Service WASHINGTON ? The United States recalled its ambassador to Chile yester- day to protest that country's alleged failure to cooperate in the investigation of the 1976 assassination of a former Chilean diplomat in Washington. -Chilean authorities have not been forthcoming on important requests by the Justice Department which have been pending for some time," said John H. Trattner, a State Department spokes- man, in explaining the recall of Ambas- sador George W. Landau ''for consulta- tions." The requests involve the fatal bomb- ing Sept. 21, 1976, of an automobile car- rying Orlando Letelier and his associ- ate, Ronni K. Moffitt. Letelier was a for- mer Chilean ambassador to the United States and minister in cabinets of the late President Salvador Allende. An American expatriate, Michael Vernon Townley, and three Cuban ex- iles have been charged with conspiracy in connection with the deaths. U. S. investigators have said privately that they expect shortly to obtain feder- al grand jury indictments against three Chilean army officers suspected of plot- ting the assassination of Letelier, who was an outspoken critic of the military government. Sources close to the investigation have identified one of the officers as Oen. Manuel Contreras Sepulveda, the retired head of Chile's secret police and a confidant of President Augusto Rino- Met. Neither the State Department nor the Justice Department would disclose the requests that Chile had not responded to,, but administration officials have an- ticipated difficulty in obtaining the ex- trfaittonet Contreras and the other offi , - cers the event they were indicted. -"We are got asking for the extradition of three people," a,State Department of- ficial said esterday. "You don't ask for extradition until people are indicted." He said it could be assumed that the requests were "for information and be- ? operation short 'of extradition." , An official at the Jlistice Department said that the recall of Landed was meant to signal Chile that "we're seri- ous about our request for certain things, that the Chilean government. can pro- vide but refuses to do - The Justice Department. also feared that Chile would refuSe to turn over Contreras and his two officer colleagues for trial in the United States If the Chilean government refuses ex- tradition when the time comes, the offi- cial said, the Justice Department at least wants to be "Very, insistent that these people will be tried seriously in the Chilean coutts,"'-. He said that the indictments in the United States will name ?Hie:people in the Chilean secret; police who wriZ re- sponsible for the death Or fjetelier. The indictments also will make public the evidence of "how things started in Chile" that led to the. assassination in Washington, he said. The Chilean.. secret police were charged by international agencies with political murders, torture and disap- pearances of opponents ofthe military regime after the overthrow of Allende's government, in September 1973. Chile's foreign minister, attending the General Assembly of the Organization of American States in Washington, said his- government was not surprised by Landau's recall. - "We think it Would be useful that he conveys to his government what we have told him in Chile," said the minis- ter, Hernan Cubillos. He added that Chile was cooperating with U.S. authori- ties in the Letelier investigation but said Washington was not provicling-enough information ta support its requests , , In addition to announcing the ambas- sador's recall, Trattner also told a State Department` briefing that tins govern- ment intended to hold up the, loading of fins for bombs, which had been ordered . ? . See ENVOY - , Back page t col. 3 this section Westeta Kentucky affected Col Harlan Sanders greets lackey Steve Cauthen during dinner on rural estate near Owensboro. stgt.PhOlo#y keittt wiw By BILL OSINSKI Courier-Journal Staff Writer OWENSBORO, Ky. ?,Fancier fingers have never been licked clean of the Colonel's fried chicken. , ' The stars came out early yesterday evening under a fent set up on a rural estate west of Owenboro. Celebrities in- cluding jockey Steve Cauthen, singer Debby Boone, actor Edward Amer, and actress Clods Leachman -=-- not to men.- .., tion hundreds of the nation's most hont ored youths and scores of adult supef- achievers ? dined on chicken prepared, under the auspices of pone other' than Col. Harlan Sanders., The Colonel, came out of retireinon 1 to Preside over the fixings for th gal evening that ended the first full ay o AdditiOinai pictures, Page B 3. the 17th annual "Salute to Excellence" weekend being helis in Owensboro. Th event a frac0 distinguished lead- ers t 0.141 ftom the fiel of science, business, law, and entertv merit to be honored themselves art to mix with the young people. / But when the group came together under the tent, it was the entertainment stars that shone the brightest. Young people who had. been locked in brisk, high-levet discussions earlier in the day became typically eager autograph hounds when the big names came out. F57: bridge ? may help traffic, 'hurt :too-410i By BILL POWELL Courier-Journal,Staff Writer CAIRO, Ill. ? Illinois and Missouri of- ficials opened a $50 million bridge link- ing their two states yesterday, bringing both good news and bad news for far Western Kentucky. The good news is that the bridge, part of Interstate 57, should ease traffic con- gestion on U.S. 51 in four Kentucky counties. The congestion has been caused by the funneling of motorists into Kentucky from Cairo, where 1-57 had ended. And the bridge will give Western Ken- tucky easy access to the now-completed interstate highway chain linking Chica- go and New Orleans. The bad news is that Kentucky tour- ist-oriented businesses on U.S. si may lose many of their customers, and the communities along the highway may lose their main argument for improve- ments to U.S. 51. - "(U.S.) 51 will never again be what it was ... ," Wickliffe, Ky., Mayor Tom Juett said yesterday. "Every governor I can remember has promised to four- lane it for us, and none ever did. I don't suppose it ever will be now, or that it even needs it." Traffic started rolling yesterday on the new bridge at Cairo after a ceremo- ny under a hastily erected tent at the, center of the bridge. The bridge closes a gap in the inter- See OPENING Back page, col. 1; this section MISSOURI KENTUtKY TENNESSEE Staff Ma0 New Interstate 57 bridge link- ing Illinois and Missouri will ease congestion on U.S. 51. Carter accuses unnamed groups of making Brzezinski a By TERENCE SMITH New York Time's News Service FORT WORTH ? PreSident Carter accused unnamed "special interest groups" yesterday of making Zbigniew Brzezinski, his national security adviser, into the "scapegoat" of the administra- tion's foreign policy. Addressing some 6,000 people at a civic luncheon in the convention center at Fort Worth, Carter also said it was "not fair and certainly not right for the Soviet Union and Cuba to jump on Dr. Brzezinski when I am the one who shapes the policy after getting advice from him and others." Inside today A Miss America' Miss America, Susan Perkins, came to Louisville yesterday and talked about how the Miss America Pageant was not an exploitation of women, but rather a fine opportunity for them. In Accent, Page B 6. Carter did not identify the groups he had in mind. Later his aides said they were not sure to 'Whom he was refer- ring. In recent months trzezinski's hard- line approach to Middle East policy and Soviet actions in Africa has beeri at- tacked by the pro-Israel lobby and by private groups seeking to encourage de- tente. A White House offiCial said last night that it was fair to assume that these were the groups to which Carter had referred, but he stressed that he did not knqw for a fact that they were. The audience, which had paid $7 each for the taco-and-roast-beef lunch scapegoat eon, responded with sustained applause when the president pledged that "we are not going to let the Soviet Union push us around." The Fort Worth luncheon was the president's first stop on a two-day politi- cal trip to Texas that was to carry him to Houston, Beaumont and Fort Hood before he returns to Washington tomor- row night. In Houston, he addressed an audience of 1,300 people at a $1,000-per- couple fund raiser for the Democratic National Committee. Energy and farm prices were subjects ? See GROUPS Back page, col. 1, this section Cauthen's arrival easily got the big- gest response from the nearly 1,500 peo- ple.gathered in the back yard of the Tom Green estate. The wonder jockey was quickly surrounded by a group of girls his age squealing for his signature. "I feel like I'm lost," Cauthen said, shrugging off the trappings of celebrity about as easily as one of his many stakes-race wins. Cauthen came to Owensboro barely long enough to receive his Golden Plate Award from the American Academy of Achievement, the sponsoring group for the weekend. He had flown in after rid- ing in one race and was to leave soon after, the dinner for another. Miss Boone was also making a quick Victory at sea Shark takes boat for 14-hour stop for her award an/ leaving shortly afterward. Asner, however, came' with his tapiify and will remain" to fake 'part in,' die grand finale tonight. As he broke through a cluster of a(ite- graph seekers, Asner said he consiqfs the academy recognition "a hell *o_f-.1n honor." He received his Golden ptale last year and will participate hilthis Year's presentation ceremonies; Asner, Who still lit the' televrsitin show "Lou Grant," amiably mugged' lor the army of Instamatic camera shutter bugs who had their pictures made Filth him, and he said he appreciates 04-- See SWIRL OP STARS Back page, col. 4, this set:t.! n Associated Press MON-FAUX, N.Y. -- The shark hunt- ers who were aboard the charter boat Ebb Tide last night have a fish story to tell about a half-day fight for a great white shark whose dimensions grew as the day wore on. You guessed it -,-- it got away. "The fish Won fair and square," Capt. John Sweetman of the Ebb Tide radioed fo the Montauk Marine Basin last night. He said his 40-foot wooden boat was dragged for almost 14 hours by the shark, frequently backwards. During the long day, the fish had been described as being from 20 to 40 feet long and weighing from 2,000 to 8,000 pounds. Sweetman said that his son, Jimmy, sunk a harpoon into "a very, very big White" at about 7 a.m, The end came when the big fish A shot at victory A 51.3 shooting percentage couldn't sae the Kentucky All Starsfrom last week's loss to Indiana. Coach Tom Creamer says even better shooting is needed in tonight's rematch at Indianapolis. In Sports, Page C 1. Dappled days National Weather Service . LOUISVILLE area 7-- Partly sunny today and tomorrow, with a 30 percent chance or thunders1lowqrs today. High today, mid- 80s; tomorrow, upper 80s. Low tonight, upper 60s. ' KENTUCKY ? Partly sunny today and fa-morrow. Chance of mainly afternoon and evening thundershowers west today and statewide tomorrow. Highs today, 80s; to- ` morrow, mid- to upper 80s. Lows tonight, 60s to low 70s. High yesterday, 81; low, 63. .Year ago yesterday: High, 87; low, 65, Sun n Rises, 6;21; sets, 9;10. Moon: Rises, 12;16 a.m.; sets, 16:48 a.rti-. Weather map and details, Page C 12. which had surfaced only twice during the fight, snapped a quarter-inch, 1,650- pound-test line attached to the harpoon. The fish got away, Sweetman said, when the boat was 30 miles south of Montauk Point at the eastern tip of Long Island, about 'a dozen miles from where it was first sighted. The men on board were, manuevering the boat so the fish could be killed, the captain said. Throughout the day, the only infor- mation about the battle came from the professional shark hunters aboard_ the boat. Although there was no independent confirm,ation of the harpooning, there seemed to be no question that the boat had hooked something big. The crew said the fish pulled the Ebb Tide at speeds that ranged from one-half mph to 3 mph. ride, then bolt About 10 years ago a 17? foot 45d'0 pound great white shark was landed'Aff Montauk. Before being landed, that fish bit the boat. Sightings of sharks are not unusual:In the waters off eastern, Long Island. Great white sharks, the subject of the films "Jaws" and "Jaws 2,," may reach 40 feet in length and Weigh several thousand pounds. Carl Darenberg, operator of the Ma- rine basin, said there were two rePorts of shark sightings yesterday in the area ? one by the Ebb Tide and the other, of a smaller shark, by another charier- vessel, the Montauk. - . , Darenberg said the Montauk had chased the smaller shark for several: ? hours before the fish disappeared. ? Red: fliikc410..,.104.4. 0,v0.4 15-year sentence Associated Press TURIN, Italy -- A court in Turin sen- tenced Red Brigade founder Renato Curcio and 28 others to up to 15 years in prison yesterday. As the sentences were announced, Italian police prepared for revenge at- tacks by urban guerrillas who had tried ? several times to stop the trial. - The verdict ended the third attempt to try Curcio and other leaders of the ' Red Brigades. Their comrades. on the outside had tried to break uo the trial by kidnapping former Premier. Aldo Moro and demanding freedom for Cur- cio and three other defendants in ex- change for Moro 's life. When the government refused to bar- gain, Moro was slain. - During the three-month trial, the F'ed Brigades also claimed responsibility for killing 10 other people, including Mero's five bodyguards, and threatened vio- lence against judges, lawyers, jurors and witnesses. - The heaviest sentences, 15 year went to Curcio and Pietro Bassi. Three other Red Brigade ringleaders; Pietro Bertolazzi, Albeerte D Alberto RED and See, Back page, col 4, this section' Accent 13 6, Classified ads C 10, 12 Comics .0 11 Deaths 13 5 Marketplace . B 8-10 Vol 246, No. t75 Opinion page A 4 Racing entries C 9 Show clock B t $ports C 1-9 TV, radio 62 Son and shadow With a legendary father and a etas - sic stage mother, Hank Williams Jr. - grew up an idol by proxy. He seemed bent on replaying his fa- ther's 'melodrama -- to live hard and die young. In the Magazine. Approved For Release 2009/08/11': CIA-RDPO5S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 THE WIRIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24 1978 Rhodesian troops supported by jet fi4liter-bombers struck tWo places - in,..$Otithwestern Mozambique, kill- peOnie in one raid, Mozam- bique' claimed. Rebels of the Mo- zambique People's Liberation .Forces Said the dead were 17 refu- gees and two United Nations tech- niCian With a battle cry of "Bring on the recall," Cleveland Mayor Dennis J. Kutinich launched a campaign to stay in office. Shortly before, the city clerk had certified that there were enough valid signatures on petitions to force a recall election. Page A3 South Korea has proposed talks witk,North Korea on opening trade beeween the two countries. South Korea wants to obtain ,unprocessed mineral's from North Korea in ex- Change for rice and manufactured &Oda- There was no response from the North, The Supreme Court ruled that fed- eral judges can limit the amount of time prison officials can keep in- mates in punishment cells. Page A 3 prison shOotout in Baja Califor- nia resulted in at least five deaths, ecliIding the Warden and his assis- tarii, Police said the shooting began aftela guard was taken hostage by several inmates. Federal troops later restored order. The first'. of an expected several thousand demonstrators arrived at Seabrook, N.H., for a weekend pro- test against nuclear power. The protesters plan to sleep at eight campgrounds near the 715 acre site where the $2.3 billion Sea- brook nuClear plant is being built. Associated Prest Sandy Allen, the werld's tallest living woman at 7-71/4, shook hands with Henri LaMothe, 74, the world record holder in shallow-high diving, outside the new Guinness Museum of World Records on Thursday. The museum, in Niagara Falls, Ontario, was celebrating its grand opening. Keeping it in th,e _family. Presi- dent Ferdinand E. Marcos of the Philippines has made the first pre- sentation of his country's highest foreign-service award - to his wife, Imelda. She was cited (or her "zeal ... in discharging all the spe- cial assignments and tasks given to her by the president." Muhammad All is "the world's most recognized human," he says, and he wants to be president of the WORLD. All said he is planning to organize something called the World Organization for Rights, Li- berty and Dignity. He said six in- ternational leaders already have signed up for the board of direc- tors, but he did not identify them. An Iranian heiress is being tried in London on charges of stealing $367,000 worth of jewels from Car- tier. The prosecution alleges that Kitty Milinaire, 39, the daughter-in- law of the Duchess of Bedford, took jewelry from the firm on ap- proval and kept it without paying for it. Mrs. Milinaire denied that, but admitted she gambled heavily and once lost $190,000 in a few hours. Engelbert Humperdinck canceled the remainder of an engagement at a Las Vegas hotel because of a viral throat infection, a hotel spokesman said. The singer was able to perform for only four days of a 14-day contract. Flip Wilson is filling in, the spokesman said. Cesar Chavez and his wife Helen were convicted of violating an in- junction barring picketing at Ari- zona melon fields by the United Farm Workers, which Chavez heads. The couple were placed on probation for six months. Chavez said the Conviction would be ari- pealed, but he said no more picket- ing is planned because the crop has been harvested. Caroline Kennedy may not work as a summer intern for the Los An- geles Herald-Examiner after all. There have been reports that pub- licity following the announcement that she had been hired has Caused her to change her mind about tak- ing the job. The paper's editor, Jim Bellows, said he still hopes she will come to work, "but it's very possi- ble she won't." Ben ,Crenshaw suffered disaster on one .hole and Nancy Lopez, trying for a sixth straight LPGA victory, never get it going in golf yesterday. Page C 1 There was no love yesterday in the Metro Classic tennis tourna- nWrit match between Jim Novitsky - and Alladin Mahe. : Page C 3 D6yg McMackin gave a reporter a `Short --- but quick - ride, and a glYenliorn fele the thrill of drag racing in a warmup for tonight's program at Ohio Valley Raceway. Page C 5 The inflation rate will determine Whether or not the giant Teamsters Union moderates wage demands, said the president of the nation's largest union. Page 13 8 An aviation partnership is the top- ic the British prime minister, James Callaghan, will? discuss with U.S. businesS and government offi- cials in Washington this weekend. Page 13 8 The Dow Jones industrials average dropped 4.68 points. Page B 9 The head of the federal Interstate Commerce Commission said he will take action to force better coal-hauling service by the Louis- ville & Nashville Railroad Co. But A. Daniel O'Neal told Eastern Ken- tucky coal operators in Washington that he didn't know specifically what that action would be. Page 81 Arnold Miller?, president of the ,United mine Workers, plans to re- turn to work Monday. He has been recuperating from a heart attack and stroke suffered in late March, orean official tight by U.S.. ,csigns post By CHAiLES BABCOCK L.A. Times-ArashIngtoo Post service -- The ,former South Kottan ambassador , whci has .hecome the, center of ai congressional bribery cOntloversy resigned his government POS1 yesterday, renewing hopes that he mig..bt eventually cooperate with investi- gatoirs. Dong Jo, a foreign policy adviser to.,SOuth Korean President Park Chung ' Beet, said he resigned because of the trotible his involvement in the case has caused his country. ' , also said that he could not cooper- ate a with congressional investigators while he was an Official of his go?Yern- meht. Kim's resignation came a day after th4 House voted to cut $56 million in fciOd aid to Korea ...The House cited the Seoul government's refusal to, allow Kiii to answer questions about pay- merits he allegedly', made to members of Cotigress while he was ambassador to Washington frveni 1987 to 1973. ? , gefurces familiar with the negotiations on'Kim's testimony said yesterday that the:y, viewed his resignation as a "neces- sary?. first step" to cooperation because of the Korean assertion that diplomats ard. immune from appearing as wit- nes. IFOwever, Leon Jaworski, special coitnsel to the House Committee on Stajistards of Official Conduct, Said that he.wasn't as optimistic about Kim's ac- tion, kcan't throw my head up in the air and. start cheering," he said. "I believe he has testimony that would be so star- tling that his goverranent has arrived at a :decision that it would be just too WOO for him to come forward, so they have decided to totally stonewall , laworski seemed resigned in his com- ment to completing his investigation without information from Kim. "That would mean we only batted .500 on Our keit witnesses," he said. "We got Tong suit 'Park and he and Ambassador Kim were in competition. They were trying to. outdo each other. So it does mean we''d have some 'loose ends." .Park, a wealthy rice dealer, was in- dicted on federal bribery charges, but Weed to cooperate with investigators. He:: testified he made more than $7,50,000 in payments, mostly cash, to mejnbers of Congress. ,Vithout Kim's information, the 18- mpn,th-old House investigation may be finished. With it, investigators are ' knoWni to feel they may have cases against several more members for seri- on's ;violations. 'Any move leading to Kim's coopera- tiOn in the investigation probably will net occur for a few weeks, sources said. ? ? ?Meanwhile, the House investigating committee ended a third day of private talks on, possible disciplinary action against members who accepted money from Park. They are scheduled to re- cOnvene Tuesday. Queen rules termite society A termite society is a totalitarian soci- ety controlled by a single matriarch, the ? queen. A terniite queen can lay from 5,000 to 30,000 eggs daily. Associated Press Pool call Veterinarian Frank Wright leaned over the edge of an indoor pool at Brookfield Zoe near Chicago to give an ailing dolphin an inoculation of antibiotics yesterday. Officials feared the 6-year-old dolphin, Bunker, was suffering from pneumonia. Attendants helped hold Bunker steady while Dr. Wright gave the injection. Compromise approved on civil service firtngs Associated Press ? WASHINGTON - A House commit- tee yesterday narrowly upheld a com- promise amendment setting standards on firing federal workers. , Many Democrats opposed the amend- ment to a civil service bill before the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee, and ,they promised greater problems for the bill when it reaches the full House. Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., who is sponsoring President Carter's civil ser- vice revision bill, proposed the compro! mise, which contains two standards for agencies to use in dismissing employ- ees. In trying to fire incompetent workers, the agency would have to show "sub- stantial evidence' against the employ- ee. To fire employees accused, of mis- conduct, the agency would have to show a "preponderance of evidence" against them. The compromise, approved 12-11, was supported by all but one Republican and "a minority of Democrats on the committee. The compromise was intended to re- Move opposition to Carter's original pro- posal, which would have required the employee to show that a dismissal order was "arbitrary and capricious." Many congressmen objected to that, partly because it put the burden of proof on the worker rather than on the agency. But the compromise brought new complications. Rep. William D. Ford, D- Mich., said that the compromise amend- ment would jeopardize too many em- ployees' rights and that his support and that of many colleagues for the civil service bill was in doubt Rep. Richard White, D-Texas, com- plained that the "substantial evidence" against incompetent employees could inc rude hearsay. - That was disputed by Jule Sugarman, vice chairman of the Civil Service Com- mission. "The bill says you have to tell an em- ployee how his performance is not meeting the requirements, how he can improve it, and then prove he didn't im- prove ,it," Sugarman said. Plane hits car, killing driver MALINDI, Kenya (AP) - A light air- plane making an emergency landing on a highway near this tourist resort crashed into an automobile, killing its driver, authorities said. The pilot and three passengers in the plane escaped unhurt. shortly after the end of the 111-day nationwide UMW strike. He Said yesterday he wants to change the way coal miners' contracts are ne- gotiated. Page B 1 Work on KY 292 in Martin County, where residents blocked the road to protest damage caused by over- weight COal trucks, is being re- sumed. Contractors were directed to return to the stretch after a judge, ruled that the group barri- cading the road must let construc- tion equipment through. Page B 4 Oldham County residents are be- ing asked by the Transit Authority of River City what they need and want in bus service to and from the Louisville area. Oldham County is not now served by TARC. The advisory Panel charged with selecting at least four Jefferson County elementary schools for 'closing in the fall has now accept- ed the plans of the school board staff ta redistribute the students of eight schools recommended for closing. The firm that holas the franchise for cable , television in Louisville has purchased land in Butchertown to build its headquarters. A spokes- man said the purchase is a "niiles- tone" for the long-delayed system. Jurors will begin deliberating the fate of three Louisville men charged with slaying a southern Jefferson County woman and rap- ing her daughter last September. The case will go to the jury today after the attorneys make their fi- nal arguments. If convicted on the murder charge, the three defen- dants could be sentenced to death. Turkey, Soviet Union sign accords By 13AN FISHER C L.A. Times-Washington Post Service MOSCOW Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit signed a series of politi- cal, economic and cultural agreements with the Soviet Union yesterday, but said that military aid had neither been, offered nor requested:: --- His: remarks, at` an afternoon news aconfw,pce,, apparently we designed to, reassure his allies in the 'United States and Western Eurbpe that a closer relationship between Turkey and its Communist neighbor will not weaken NATO's southern flank. The Soviet Union has stepped up its diplomatic overtures to Turkey since the United States embargoed further arms sales to Fcevit's country in 1975. The arms embargo followed Turkey's 1974 invasion of Cyprus. Ecevit had denied before his trip to Russia that the visit was aimed at put- ting pressure on the United States to lift its embargo, and he repeated the point in Moscow. Asked how long he would wait before seeking military aid elsewhere, Ecevit replied: "New that there are hopeful signs in congressional circles in the U.S., I don't think I should talk in terms of negative hypotheses.',' President Carter said in a news Con- ference last week that lifting the arms embargo against Turkey is "the most immediate and urgent foreign policy de- i?CISIOtT to be,madeisy the currrent legisla- tiVel `seSsion." The- embargo has "driven a wedge befween Turkey and Greece" ,and "has weakened the cohesion and ithe readiness of NATO," he said. Observers Said the political document signed by tcevit and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin apparently was word- ed to reassure Turkey's allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The document stresses that it is "not directed against any state" and says the principles outlined "do not affect the rights or obligations of the U.S.S.R. and the Turkish Republic under any agree- ments." The document also contains a non-ag- gression clause that was in the 1972 dec- laration of "good-neighborly relations" between the two countries. Asked if the clause is consistent with Turkey's NATO commitments, Ecevit replied: "Defense is something else from aggression. I don't think NATO has aggressive inten- tions," During his talks with Kosygin and So- viet President Leonid I. Brezhnev, Ece- vit said, "They have refrained from of- fering any military supplies to Turkey in view of the fact we are members of different alliances and we Made no such suggestion." ? , Perhaps the most significant of the Turkish-Soviet agreements covers oil. Beginning next year, tcevit said, the So- viet Unica will deliVer 3 million' tons of oil per year to Turkey - about one-fifth of its total requirement. Price has yet to be established, the prime minister said, but the countries have agreed that Tur- key will pay for the oil with wheat and "certain metals." Any oil that Turkey can't pay for in commodities it will pay for in cash after three years, Ecevit said. The Kremlin also has agreed to help Turkey explore for oil on its own territory. Ecevit said negotiators were unable to conclude an agreement regarding "a system of regulating the Black Sea." But he said that Turkish specialists will stay behind after he leaves to work on a pact. Such an agreement also could be important for oil exploration rights. Ecevit left Moscow last night for a visit to Kiev before returning to Ankara. For Information Latest sports scores: 582-4871. Want to know your congressman's address or the winner/ of the. 21st Kentucky Derby? Our Readers' Ser.' vice Department will answer your questions. It's open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Call 582- 4545. We also have a service for more extensive research. Call the chief librarian, 582-4184. Managing Editor Michael Davies (in charge of The Courier-Journal news operation), 582-4613. 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Broadway, Louisville, Ky., 40202, PHONE: Area Code 502-582-4011. Consolidation of The Focus, 1826; The Louisville Daily Journal, 1830; The Morning Courier,' 1837; The Daily Democrat, 1843. First issued as. The Courier-Journal Nov. 8, 1865. ' Editor And Publisher, Barry Bingham,, Jr.; Vice President and Executive Editor, Robert P. Clark; Managing Editor, Michael .1. Davies. Chairman of the Board, Barry Bingham, Sr.; President, Cyrus MacKinnon; Senior Vice- President, John L. Richards', Vice President and General Manager, George N. Gill; Vice- President,,Secretary and Treasurer, Leon Tallichet; ice Presidents, Maurice J. Buchart, Jr. (Sales), Earl Bullard (Organization and Planning), Donald B. Towles (Public Affairs). The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to republish local news originated by The Courier-Journal, as well as all other AP news. Second-class postage paid at Louisville, Ky. Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 tligh cotiti allows;, U.S judges to limt inmate punishment By MORTON MINTZ t L.A. Times-W,ashington Post Service WASHINGTON ? In a ruling that may lead to improved conditions or re- lease for large numbers of prisoners, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday that extended confinement in punitive isola- tion cells may violate the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment. The ruling was the first in which the court has applied the Eighth Amend- ment to physical conditions in penal in- stitutions. The justices acted in a case from Ar- kansas, but the decision has major im- plications for many other states, most immediately Alabama, Whose prison systems have been challenged in the federal courts. The central part of a three-phase rul- ing concerned the power of a U.S. Dis- trict Court judge to deal with the overall conditions of incarceration. .The court ruled 8-1 that a judge may find a par- ticular condition, such as punitive isola- tion, which is itself permissible, uncon- stitutional if it occurs in conditions that taken together are impermissible. Some states say they can't afford to correct conditions that federal judges have found intolerable. That forces them to consider releasing large num- bers of prisoners on parole or to work- release and halfway-house programs. That happened in Alabama after Judge Frank M. Johnson issued an or- der in January 1976 to correct viola- tions, such as overcrowding, violence, filth, and inadequate food, shelter, Medical care and staff. Unable to comply with some of the terms of the order, Alabama has re- leased about 2,000 of 5,400 prisoners on parole to work-release programs and to.. half-way houses; said Alvin 3, Bronstein, executive director of the National Pris- olit Project of the American Civil Liber- ties Union. In the second phase of yesterday's de- cision, the court, on a 7-2 vote, empow- ? ered a federal judge to force cotnpll- ance with his orders to inipreve penal conditions by upholding the award of $20,000 in attorneys' fees that Arkansas prison officials must pay to the prison- ers' counsel. In the final Part of the decision, the court upheld, 5-4, the award by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals of an extra $2,500 for the prisoners' lawyers. The state must pay the fees even though jt claimed immunity under the 11th Amendment and was not a defen- dant in the lawsuit, the court held. A key issue in the Arkansas case was disciplining with punitive isolation: lock- ing up four to 11 convicts in a window- less 8-by-10 foot cell with a water tap, a toilet flushable only from outside and no furniture. At night, mattregses that could spread infectious diseases were thrown on the floor. Meals provided fewer than 1,000 calories daily and con- sisted mainly of "g,rue," a baked paste made from various ingredients. Chief federal Judge J. Smith Henley tried repeatedly to get the state to im- prove conditions. But, after eight years of hearings and litigation, and after con- ditions had worsened, he ordered a spe- cific cure. It included a 30-day limit on punitive isolation and payment of the attorneys' fees to prisoners' lawyers. The duration of confinement "cannot be ignored" in deciding whether it "meets constitutional standards," Jus- tice John Paul Stevens wrote for the court. "A filthy, overcrowded cell and a diet of gruel might be tolerable for a few days and intoleraby cruel for weeks or months." Justice William H. Rehnquist dissent- ed. In a separate decision,_ the court vot- ed 7-2 to strike down a New Jersey law that prohibits Other states from using New Jersey garbage dumps. The ruling casts doubt on the validity of similar laws in nine other' states. (Kentucky and Indiana are not among the nine.) Cleveland mayor vows he'll beat recall vote Associated Press CLEVELAND ? "Bring ,on the re- call," said embattled Mayor Dennis J. Kucinich. "I'll take it on and I'll. win. reunite this city." With that vow at a news conference yesterday, the 3-year-old .maverick Democrat- prepared to, fight efforts to remove him, from office. by taking the issue to the people. Moments before the pews conference, City Clerk Mercedes Cotner set the stage for the recall by certifying that more than the required 37,552 valid sig- natures were on recall petitions. The recall election is required in 40 to 60 days unless Kucinich, whose ad- Ministration began last Nov. 14, resigns within the next five days. The mayor fepeatedly has rejected that course. When the five-day period ends, the city council must set an election date. A majority vote is needed to remove the mayor, who would be out of office upon certification of defeat. The council would select an interim mayor pending another election; Mrs. Cotner said. Thursday the state Supreme Court upheld lower-court rulings that any reg- istered Cleveland voter was eligible to sign recall petitions. Kucinich had contended the petition process should be limited to those who voted for mayor last Nov. 8. But he said yesterday he had no plans to appeal the Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 state court ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, Kucinich produced a black-and-or- ange 6iiinper, Sticker at the news.ecinfer- ease that .said., ,`!$ppp,Ort ,Kucinich ? the people's mayor." He said, he ordered them before his? court setback 'Thurs- day. pa Kucinich said the central issue ef the recall campaign is Whether "the people want to continue an anti-corruption, pro- gressive administration in City Hall." Democratic Councilman William T. Sullivan, a leader of the recall drive, said the campaign against the mayor "will present a true picture of what's going on rather than what comes from the mouth of the mayor." "The issues will be incompetency, in- ability to govern and failure to act on financial problems, coupled with the style of the administration ? its Gesta- po tactics,?" Sullivan said. The recall drive was triggered by Ku- cinich's dismissal March 24 of Police Chief Richard D. Hengist?, a former sheriff of San Francisco County. Hongisto said he was fired for resist- ing what he characterized as pressure from the mayor's office. Hengist? claimed that he heard Kucinich say at a staff meeting that Sullivan must be pun- ished for failing to vote as the mayor wished. Kucinich later locked horns with the entire council, calling the members "a bunch of buffoons" and "lunatics." West Germany pulls off bidding coup for art By ROON LEWALD Associated Press BONN, West Germany ? A West Ger- man consortium pulled off a $20 million bidding coup this week, returning major German art treasures to the homeland of the Nazi-era Jewish fugitive who pur- chased them. "We made a list of every item of ma- jor German historical interest, and we get them all ? for 5 percent less than we planned to spend," said Rudi Walther, a member of the consortium. He had helped draw up the plan for one 61 the biggest bidding operations in art history. , The art collection of leather magnate Robert von Hirsch, ranging from paint- ings of Old World masters to Gothic enamels, is being sold this week at Soth- eby Parke Bernet's auction house in London. ,,,Von Hirsch fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s for Basel, Switzerland. He died there last November at age 94. He had bought some of the world's most valuable art works from collectors who were forced by pre-war political upheavals to sell their possessions. The sale, which continues next week with French Impressionist paintings, has brought in more than $23 million. Walther said retired Frankfurt bank- er Hermann J. Abs secretly coordinated the winning bids through art dealers from several nations against interna- tional opposition. "He put up different strawmen to bid for each item on our list. Then he showed them how to bid with the usual signals to prevent anyone from catching on ? you know, stamping his foot, twitching his eye, raising a finger and so on," Walther said. Of $20 million made available by fed- eral, state and museum authorities, Abs's bidders spent more than $19 mil- lion to bring works by Albrecht Durer and other early German masters back home, he said. Among the items secured for West Germany in the bidding were: le* A 5%-inch enameled gilt medal- lion. The medallion was bought for $2.22 million for West Berlin's Kunstgewerbe Museum. Dating from about 1150, it is attributed to Belgian goldsmith Godefroid de Claire and de- picts "Operatics," the Angel of Charity. I, A 1495 watercolor landscape by Al- brecht Durer, which fetched $1.2 mil- lion. It went to the German National Museum in Nuremberg, Durer's home- town. A Durer pen drawing depicting Christ on the Mount of Olives. It was purchased for $555,000 for the Kunsth- alle in the central German industrial city of Karlsruhe. I, An enameled, gilt-copper arm or- nament believed to have formed part of German Emperor Frederick Barbaros- sa's coronation vestments in 1165. It cost $2.035 million. THE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 A 3 i'ltSk. 1 Grounded Goonybird H. E. Roland of Cardiff, Calif., has a motor home that was built by combining the fuselage of a DC-3 and the chassis of a bus. He has nicknamed it the Associated Press Goonybird. When people see it in traffic, Roland says, they react by doing "double takes, triple takes and quadruple takes." Funding group, for Reagan sued by FEC Associated Press WASHINGTON -- The Federal Elec. tion Commission has filed suit against. Ronald Reagan's 1976 presidential caMi' paign committee, charging that it faded; to file reports on about 40 percent be those who had contributed more thaw $100. Under the law, treasurers of politica committees for a candidate for federal; office must report all contributions pf more than $100 ? with business a4' dress and occupation of the contributor.' It is the latter information the commiF sion wants from the Reagan campalg< The complaint, filed in U.S. District, Court on Thursday, said the commission' had tried unsuccessfully to correct the violation "by informal methods of collie ference, conciliation and persuasion.'!..7.7' The commission asked the court rd.:. force the Reagan campaign committee:, and its treasurer to comply with the law- and to fine them $5,000. A spokesman for Reagan, a Republle, can, said the former California gover.., nor was traveling in Pennsylvania and was not immediately available for com- ment. The commission has found that the: presidential campaign organizations ot California Gov. Jerry Brown, Sent Frank Church and Sen. Henry M. Jack:, son failed to file such reports. All three- are Democrats. A commission spokesman said yestet; day that the FEC was satisfied when" those committees made the "best eti: fort" to supply the information and tiler those cases didn't reach the lawsuit: stage. , MI Intilintftninnittintint 0.4._ ? ? *a: Ota? fita. 44 44 a? Os a? SO 44 a. 40 00 00 a. 4. aa 00 a. 60 ? a, a? a ? *a a* as ? a ? a? a? S. ? ? ? a? a? ?? a? na, ? ?? a ? a* a* a? ? I ? ' ?? :H is story will hazy you - singing, laughing, crying, cheering THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY,,,,, GARY BUSEY ah6g.?,,n6DON STROUD?CHARLES MARTIN SMITH ,,,tar,g CONRAD JANIS.WILLIAM JORDAN r4e.clucedb5 FRED EALJER. Diri,ted by STEVE RASH es v racer, EDWARD H.COHEN am FRED T KUEFENERT Screer,pl.?;by ROBERT GITTLER? Story by ALAI4 'SWYE1 , tie ctr (1-"' ange_ , sou o ?music eggySuet' " "Oil Boy:9"th SO Easy," "lhat'll get The pay:. "Ravi Oni 'Is+Iray be Bal;y":411d many more... 4 a. ale IO a? a. as SO a? 40 a. a? 14 64, a. a? 09 a? a? a? a. a. a. a* a ? 00 Oa 00 a. 44 tt 09 as 64 a. a. a. ?? a? ?? Os as a. SO a? ? ? as 00 a? a? So a? ? a? ? ? 44 ? IS S. ?? SO Os as 46 a? 414 Os a? as ?? ad C. 46 GO 00 a. 00 ?? 60 a. Of Os Is a? ?? ? Shelbyville && & Wellman Ele1.7 Raceland Mall Westland Mall 014 ? , 94 se , 94 94 4 ? 94 , ta 94 es C. S4 sa 45 9,40 ?;"l UUHIUUHI1IUUUWUIUflUU ?? TELLY SAVALAS, iiAL HOLBROOK THE GANGSTER ELLIOTT GOULD ROBERT MITCHUM, ROY CLARK, and MATILDA El rA ICURN ONE irg SkIhdle III far Raceland Mall ORA NI E14u54 50 Raceland Mall Westland Mad 0.J. sitaPSON KAREN BLACK You'll see things you couldn't even dream of. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Best A or Richard Dreyfuss RICHARD DREYFUSS k. MARSHA MASON U/1,N M00/1/ CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OP THE THIRD KIND Starring RlCHARD DREYFUSS 454-4027 1 933 3244 the Bard Westland Bards,ovo, C 100,, 1k. Rtc .cknOia 4.1-A4k 013 421134 OMR Cater Westland Mall c 11119,9 fLp Raceland TOOSIY FROM OPENING usatti. a 30 0 se Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 *0 04 A 0. tat RS CO SS GO *0 011 sa ea s? 50 s? a. 9111 ea 94 04 99 00 ? ? ? ? ourier-Sourn BARRY BINGHAM JR. ,Editor and Publisher Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 , ROBERT T, BARNARD Opinion Page Editor Associate Editors JOHN' HART JAMES EDDLEMAN BERT EMKE CAROLINE KREBS HUGH HAYNIE, Cartoonist SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978. FOUNDED 1826. Opinion Legislative veto is poor way of curbing regulatory abuse ALTHOUGH both houses of Congress are controlled by his political party, Jim- my Carter has the unenviable luck of be- ing president at a_ time when the legisla- tive branch has rediscovered its indepen- dence. It would be an exaggeration to say that the imperial presidency has given way to an imperial Congress. But not much of an exaggeration. For an activist like Mr. Carter, it must be frustrating to have to deal with law- makers who have become accustomed, after the abuses of the Nixon years, to viewing the executive branch with suspi- cio0, or even outright hostility, Even worse is to be second-guessed by legisla- tori who make Political hay by denounc- ing regulatory excesses that flow inevita- bly, from well-intentioned but ill-drafted laws Congress itself has passed. Not legally bound by vetoes? 'these frustrations are at the heart of Mr. Carter's special message to Capitol Hill this week, warning that he believes "legislative vetoes" are unconstitutional. This veto, power is provided in about 200- 1aws dating bgcic` to 1932 and is embedded in 40 or. 50 pending bills. It allows COn- gress (in some cases, even a single house of Congress) to veto executive action.. The constitutional validity of legislative vetoes has yet to be determined in court. But Mr. Carter and Attorney General Bell argue that a president is not legally bound by: such vetoes, whether in the field of foreign affairs ? such as the recent Mid- east arms sales ? or in domestic areas. The President has agreed, for courtesy:s sake, to abide by congressional vetoes ex- ercised under the War Powers Act and under laws governing military sales. But heciraws the line at vetoes affecting do- mestic programs. 6 He seems justified in doing so, on prac- tical if not constitutional grounds. The Constitution specifically gives the Presi- dent power to veto bills. It doesn't men- tion legislative vetoes, though Congress obviously has the power, through the nor- mal, legislative process, to enact laws a president opposes and to override his veto if he exercises it, The iSsue is of considerable importance at the moment because several bills have been introduced that would give either house of Congress authority to veto regu- lations proposed by various executive- branch agencies. The bills quite clearly are intended to capitalize on the growing public resentment of Big Government, es- pecially the accumulated resentments of the business community. Thus, for instance, Mr. Carter's fellow Georgian, Representative Elliott Levitas, is pushing legislation that would make all new Federal Trade Commission regula- tions subject to a veto by either house within 60 days after they're issued. Mr. Le:vitas says Congress, en behalf of the American people, should "send a message' to Washington's "unelected bureaucrats." Attacking the FT is sure to please many businessmen who are nervous about that agency's investigations of the automobile, pharmaceutical and funeral industries and of TV advertising directed at children. Congress created the agencies There are those on Capitol Hill who claim that the congressional backlash against federal regulation is a proper re- flection of the public IDacklash against high taxes and governmental intrusive- ness, Perhaps it is. But all those regula- tions:that fill the Federal Register didn't just materialize out of than air. They are prepared by agencies crested by Congress Failure to get pro team WE SHARE the widespread disappoint- ment that John Y. Brown Jr. has decided not to bring the Buffalo Braves to Louis- ville. But professional basketball is a busi- ness, and the location of a team is a hard- headed business decision. It may be possible for some entertain- ment ventures to survive on enthusiasm alone. But the bottom line for profit-mak- ers in this industry is not sentiment but ticket sales. The larger the city and the fewer the competing attractions, the more potential customers. (In 1974, Louisville.. ?Vd,S, listed as, the nation's 39thi:',',Iargest:,: me0oPo1itan area. Buffalo ; \'`qere tb rave failed to attract ' sufficient- support,,',. was.:21tlis Minneapolis and now being considereer4y;M Brown, Were 16th and 20th-, respectively). There also is a substantial advantage for a city which already hs a satisfactory Children deserve better To the Editor Of The Courier-Journal: Weil, here we go again! Why is it that when- ever there is 3 blidge_.t: cut, it always affects young childrenthere iS ample research mate- rial available that proves the first sik' years are the most crucial to the developing, child. Yet this is where the ax always falli ? ? Surely prevention is less costly than the cure. Isn't there someone ,among our educators and public officials who can see that Monies wisely spent in services during these early years will save greater expenditures later in remedial measures? Such feeble attempts are more like closing the barn door after the horse has run away. We are in danger of losing valuable services from the Health Department, including early screening for hearing. Early eye and auditory screening is so important it is ludicrous to think those in charge cannot see the value. The earlier either problem is detected and acted upon, the better it is for the child. When are we going to learn from experience 'and stop repeating the same stupid mistakes? Our children deserve a better break. RIVA D,RUTZ, Director Adath Jeshurun Nursery-Kindergarten 2401 Woodbourne Ave., Louisville Dolphin slaughter 'shocking' I was shocked and sickened by the slaughter of 1,000 dolphins by Japanese fishermen. What has the human race come to? We kill baby seals right before their moth- er's eyes so that some rich bitch can decorate herself with the fur, and we slaughter friendly, intelligent dolphins for doing no more than what comes natural ? feeding themselves.' . Man has totally upset the balance of nature ? we do not fit in --'nor do we even. try. We kill for the most unnatural reasons and refuse to recognize the fact? that the animals have a purpose for being on this earth and it is NOT to be exploited by the human race. There was even a local debate over putting a z playing arena. In Louisville, the need fel' a new facility, or extensive renovations at Freedom Hall, would have demanded large infusions of tax dollars. The dollar return 'on such an investment is difficult to gauge. But it's certain that no private investor or lending institution would make such a commitment without government underwriting. Despite the failure of the Braves to move to Louisville, it seems to us that some people in this community deserve more thanks than theY have gotten. While a few have had their names in print, doz- ens of government leaders, prominent businessmen and just plain citizens offered financial, support to shift the team to this city', .Their efforts fell short. But this., newspaper, if no one else, feels they de- serve some expression of gratitude. We salute them for their commitment. For our own part, Mr. Brown never goon; 'Thank goodness everything has cleared up.' and operating under congressional man- dates to protect consumers, to reduce acci- dents that maim and kill workers, or to assure rail, air and truck service to count- less small towns in almost every congres- sional diStrict, Some agencies may well be useless, or worse. Many critics claim, for instance, that the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Civil Aeronautics Board could be abolished tomorrow with few ill effects. And we are not alone in finding the FTC's proposed restrictions on advertising directed at children a questionable restric- tion on First Amendment rights. But the answer, if government is not to grind to a halt, is for Congress to tackle these problems head-on. If an agency isn't doing its job, Congress can and should use its power over the federal purse-strings to insist on better performance. If its inter- pretation of congressional intent is wrong, is sad, tired of stating that fiis franchise could not , succeed in Louisville without the support of The Courier-Journal and Louisnlle Times, He pointed to the success of local arts organizations and implied that the community gets behind them because the newspapers do. We challenge that assump- tion on twO grounds: 1. This community's appreciation of the- ater and the arts long predates the first issue of The Courier-Journal, This is not to say that the arts have not benefited from press attention. But we also must observe that this attention often has been Critical and highly resented: Additionally, professional sports are un- deniably a civic asset. But they are hardly comparable to the arts as a necessity in a civilized community. The few wealthy families who have "provided the bulk of backing for the arts over the years need not feel embarrassed if they still see more re ers' Letters submitted for publication must be ad- dressed to: Readers' Views, The Courier-Journal, Louisville, Ky. 40202. . , Best-read letters are brief (under 200 words) and on topics of general interest. letters must carry the signatures and addresses of writers. Editors reserve the right to condense or reject any letter and limit frequent writers. bounty on, beaver because they have built too many dams to suit us. Once again, the beaver is only doing what is natural ? just like the dolphins eating too many fish to suit the Japa- nese. If man had not been involved, there would not be too much of anything. The bal- ance would take care of itself. Will we ever learn that it is our place to work with nature, not hers to make concessions for us? PHYLLIS WHITE 178 Northgate, Fairdale, Ky. 'Get off his back!' Since you are so intent on smear attacks on our safety director, "Ticky" Scholtz, I'd like to suggest that you try to investigate his high, school football performance. Perhaps you ? can uncover some report that he was offsides a few times, charged with vicious tackling: disagree- ing with the referee often, maybe even, unnec- essary roughness. - You- make me sick! He has paid his dues. . He's' back in the club. Let him continue doing the good job he's capable of doing, without - your continued harassment. Get off his back! LLOYD W. DURHAM 4001 Ormond Rd., Louisville On raises for state employees Again, I have received, about a 5.5 percent "cost of living" increase for- state employees. At least at the University of Kentucky's Southeast Community College at Cumberland, where I have been employed for some 15 years, it has continually been stressed that the 5.5 percent increases cover prothotions and merit increases; 5 percent is the total available for all mid-management and classified employees, and, except for occasionally funded catch-up money for teaching faculty, only 4.5, percent is avail- able for raises for faculty. Cost-of-living in- creases could fairly be judged to be 3 percent. It seems to me that if proirio?tional and merit raises are possible in addition to 5.5 percent cost-of-living increases, for other state employ= ees, the University of Kentucky should not be an exception. ? Also, it is deceptive to say that cost-of-living increases are "across the board." The 5 percent' and 4.3 percent increases are allocated to a budget unit on the basis of total salaries in each category. However, the, use of the term "across the board" suggests (erroneously) that each individual gets 4.5 percent or 5 percent of his salary added on. WALTER P. GERLACH' Box 669, Lynch, Ky. 'Appalled' at obituary. After I attended the sad service held for attorney Jasper Hagan, at which he was eulo- gized as the great man he was, I was more than ever appalled regarding a May 30 Courier- Journal story. The writer infers that Mr. Hagan may have been involved once in unethical deals, but quickly states that he was never charged. Why, then, was this brought up at all in the obituary of a man whose name has 'always stood for integrity ,and whose word has been better than a contract? IRMA PFANNMOELLER 8116 Watterson Trail, LouisVille Congress can write a new law. If an agen- cy's assigned job turns out to be unneces- sary, or unacceptable to the public, the agency can be abolished. But legislative vetoes of agency regula- tions are beth impractical and subject to possible abuse. They are impractical be- cause Congress Simply' hasn't the time to second-guess all the rules isSued by agen- cies. And the veto power could be abused because business lobbyists would have an opportunity, as they do when tax revisions are under consideration, to sabotage regu- lations opposed by special interests. These are the practical objections. The courts, of course, might decide that legisla- tive vetoes are legally valid, at least in certain circumstances. But until the consti- tutional question has been resolved, Mr. Carter is right to proceed under the as- sumption that execution of the laws is the exclusive job of the executive branch. Veterans' preference too one-sided THE CARTER administration has vowed a fight in the Senate to reScue its proposed limitation on the lifetime veter- ans preference in federal-, hiring. That's good. Most veterans no longer need such a permanent advantage. And the preference impedes progress toward an improved, more democratic Civil Service. Alan Campbell, head of the Civil Ser- vice Commission, offers sound arguments for having most veterans stand on the same footing as others when 'seeking fed- eral employment. Under the presidential plan, the preference would expire 10 years after discharge from the service. High- ranking officers would be denied prefer- ence points altogether, since their pensions and experience in most cases fully equip them for a swift transition to civilian life. Young veterans treated unjustly Two sides are in centention. The veter- ans organizations endorse the idea of a lifetime "reward for service," whether the recipient needs it or not. Opposed are women's groups and advocates of Civil Service reform. The women cite such evidence as test scores for a correctional services job in Atlanta on which the first woman came in 82nd, behind 81 male veterans entitled to: , extra points. Without this preferential, , treatment, it's claimed, the woman applii, cant would have headed the list. But the main injustice of the lifetimev preference is the way it denies special,? help to younger veterans who need it the'''. most. They must compete on government, rosters with all the other veterans, inclucl- ing those who left the service 30 or mo? years ago. All, no matter what their rela- tive need, gain an automatic five points on test scores. Caught in the middle in this dispute is the perplexed taxpayer, whose main inter- est is in cutting bureaucratic costs. In 'v16'4; of that pressure,-it's irenic that the plan tel, streamline Civil Service -- of which the._!... preference is part ? now faces such bleak chances in Congress. The federal unions obviously are making more noise than the-a a citizenry at large. At stake is the $44 billion federal pay- roll. The President contends it can be bet- ter managed if government bosses are giv- en hiring-and-firing authority like that of their counterparts in private business. The veterans preference limitation is an important part of Mr. Carter's reform. It should be retained loy the House,and, put :back in the Senate bill. '"'n'- ame's name is still dollars point in StliVortikg tinclerp'aid than a $200,900 ballplayer. 2. In a face-to-face discussion, Mr. Brown was told that this newspaper's ethi- cal policies do not permit it or any of its executives to invest in local business ven- tures. Until the end, Mr. Brown seemed to expect that an exception would be made for his franchise. The management was not willing: to make such a concession. It did, however, promise to buy a block of season tickets, Mr. Brown also, in no uncertain terms, demanded favorable news coverage for his team. He was highly critical of the way the Louisville papers covered the sale of Dan Issel when the ABA Colonels were in Louisville. He would expect no compara- ble criticism, he said, if his NBA team were to shift to this city. : - But there was more. He said his teeth could only: succeed if the newspapers served as , its' "inerchandizing,.arm." He even asked that, its the event of a minute scheduling change, the papers pub.7,.., lish a prominent news story to "save me: $300 ad." No Louisville organization, eic"r. ther in business or the arts, has ever made such brazen and unacceptable demands. ? P Newspapers in a few other cities may be willing to heed such requests. But The,?, Courier Journal and Louisville Times have _.7 never done so for anyone in the past '....e. There is no prospect that they ever Finally, despite our disagreements with John Y. Brown Jr., we wish him well. i-fe' is a dynamic businessman with an aston- ishing track record ef success. Wherever he moves his team, we hope that he and that community will prosper. As he said himself: "In life you have to learn to make logical decisions based on something other than emotion." In any enterprise, that is the most likely formula for success. 'Free of political spoils' agree 100 percent with your'April 4 editori- al, 'Wildlife policy is worth keeping," endors- ing the type of professional management of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Re- sources as pioneered and established by conser- vation-minded hunters and fishermen in 1944. It is our own unique policy, free of political spoils, that has given many distinct advantages in the department's primary function' of pro- tecting and insuring a continued supply, of nat- ural wildlife resources for sport and recreation all Kentucky citizens may enjoy. REDMON PAYNE 212 S. Main, Franklin, Ky. State control of boards During the 1978 session of' the General As- sembly, legislation was introduced in the House of ,RepresentativeS that would place additional state controls on regional boards and the men- tal health-mental retardation treatment centers for which they are responsible. The \Vestern Kentucky Mental Health-Men- tal Retardation Board elected to oppose the passage and implementation of House Bill 686. This legislation came about because of prob- lems incurred. by 'regional mental health-men- tal, retardation boards in other areas of Ken- tucky, yet it implemented sweeping state con- trol of all Kentucky boards. It was felt that if passed, local boards would lose their autonomy and perhaps thus restrict their ability to operate in a manner beneficial to local clients. After all was said and done, however, the bill passed both houses of the General Assemloly and has become law. On behalf ,of the Western Kentucky Mental Health Menta' Retardation Board, r would like to express outi,sincere appreciation to Represen-' tatives Dolly McNutt, Butch Burnett, Johnny Boatwright, Lloyd Clapp, Kenneth fines and J. R. Gray, and Senator Richard Weisenberger for the tremendous support and guidance they gave the Western Kentucky Regional Board in op- posing House Bill 686: These' representatives Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 and Senator Weisenberger gave many hours of their valuable time listening to the members of our board and evaluating the impact of this bill on local health-mental retardation programs and services. DAN H. AKIN, Chairman of the Board Western Kentucky Mental Health Mental Retardation Board 1530 Lone Oak Rd., Paducah, Ky. < Shawnee High reunion The Shawnee High School class of 1953 will hold a reunion at Executive West, July 15 at 6 p.m. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of the', following alumni, please contact the under- - signed: Joseph C. Anderson, Mary Jane Colven,'. Eileen Cook, David Harney, William Kucher,: George Jenkins, E. M. Minton, Barbara Oakley,. Isabelle Rearden: Sharon PoIsgrove, Jenny A Stoll Thurman and Mary Walker. Mrs. L. R. RIDDLE' 5904 Cabin Way, Louisville; A 'Offer a subtle message' Having just been transferred from Louisville-' to Columbus, Ohio, we maintain a deep interest in Kentucky news. One subject familiar to me . because of living in other states where differ- ent standards exist is that of auto plates. License plates with certain designs are called. graphic plates. They offer a subtle message in: behalf of the sponsoring state, which is good. public relations. In most cases they are pleasing to the eye, certainly in contrast to Kentucky's plates. Another big advantage is that they serve as a safety device at night since they reflect lights from other vehicles. In states where I have lived previously? research has proven the value of these' plates both ways ? as promo- tionaI pieces and as accident preventers. My present Ohio license plates lack all inge- nuity in promoting Ohio, but I feel safer since its plates are reflectorized. RICHARD K. PASCHEN 5201 Honeytree Loop, East, Columbus, Ohio Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Spain By RONALD KOVEN o The Washington Post MADRID ? Many Spaniards profess to be unsurprised that the transition to democracy since tee death of Genera- lissimo Francisco Franco in 1976 has been so smooth, but hardly anyone ex- pected that the country would be on the verge of transforming itself peacefully from one of the world's most rigidly centralized states into something like a federal union. As in France and England, the ener- gies of Spanish kings were spent turning Spain from a collection of warring prov- inces and principalities into a centrally governed state. Historically, centralization in Spain was identified not only with the idea of the modern nation-state, but also with the political right and its traditional in- stitutions --- the monarchy, the church and the -army. . It is probably only the nanie of Fran- co's successor, King Juan Carlos, on the royal decrees- granting provisional autonomy to Catalonia and the Basque country ? whose separatisni kept them in continual conflict with the Franco government ? that has made it toler- able to the army, which regards itself as the guarantor of national unity. The experiment in regionalism is also being looked upon with some disquiet in the rest of Western Europe, where most countries are beset by troublesonte re- gionalist movements. French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who came into power preach- ing decentralization, has just made it clear in a tour of Corsica, a separatist hotbed, that he has reversed himself and is not at all sure that regional gov- ernment is such a- good idea. The French are also worried about separatism in Brittany and the poten- tially dangerous example the separatists might give to linguistic minorities on al- most all of France's frontiers the Flerhlsh of Flanders, the Germans of Alsaee,' the Italians of Nice and Savoy, the Proventals and the inhabitants of Fraftee's own Basque country., - A page obackgray9 interpretation Ctnel'cornreentor federal union' problem.; Suarez' doesn't know what he ?. wants. All ilae does is surrender contin- ually to the demands of the Basques and Catalans.".' Blas Timer, the leader of the Sinail but vigpeenie Fascist Party, goes even further, speaking of the surrender of Spain to autonoiniat governments Which hope to become independent sthtel." They are a vehicle, be said, for Marxist s parties to take over the country. Even before a final text is ready; Tinar'S New Force Party is covering the country The English haVe recently seen that with'graftitl reading, "No to the Consti- ' , nationalism was waiting to be .reeinaeccv tution.n in Scotland, Wales, . Cornwall and the Even 'Frage recognizes that there isle of Man, net to speak of Ulster, Bel? must be some regionalism, but he advo- gium's unity is plagued by cates that if be along the lines of the ly warring Flemish and WallOOns. ? weak ,Italian regions that took 20 years , The exact form Of reenar autonomy to set up after they were first provided e for in the Italian constitution. He said in Spain has not been spelled outand iS the most controversial question teeing, there could also be special arrange. ments for particular regions, like the drafters of the new. Constitution, Pre- mier Adolfo Suarez is widely Suspected ones, for Sicily and German- of . encouraging all of Pettl's traditionalspeaking Trentmo region. regions to seek autonomy as 4 way ota Spain's Commuensts are being very reducing the impact of giving it taiathe prudent, Ramon Tainaines, one or the Basques and Catalans, the only main- - Communist constitutional negotiators in land autonornistS with recognized Ian- the small parliamentary committee guages of their own. - working on the text, Said in an interview The transition from dictatorship ie that the draft Will be ambiguous and democracy has happened with break- that the final forte of regional auton- o neck speed, yet there seems RI 154 fairly my will be left to detailed negotiations widespread disillusionment that demec- over an enabling law. racy has not solved the country'S prob.` 'Tainames displayed vivid awareness lems overnight, least of. all high infle- of the anxiety over the issue in an army tion and unemployment. SO the focus of that fought under France to reduce the hopes by the large proportion Of the 36 Catalan and Basque bastions of republi- million Spaniards who are unhappy canism. Rightists identify the two re- with their lot has shifted from demo- gions with republicanism and the left. cratic central government to some When the Spanish Civil War broke out vague expectation of salvation by the in 1936, Franco expected the heavily new regional autonorniai that Suarez Catholic Basques to side with him. The has offered. a special vengeance that Franco wreaked Manuel Freaga Iriberne, a former on the Besques when they did not is Franco cabinet minister who describes offered as an explanation for the refus- himself as the leader of the "civilized al of ETA, the Basque independence right" in the 'provisional* parliament, Movement, to lay down its arms even said in an interview,- "In- the United now that there is a government in Ma- States, federalism was a way, as you - drid ready to compromise. , Americans puf it, to form a more per- Tarnames, the Communist, said he feet union.' But it makes rio sense to thought regionalism is far less of a divide a unitary state. What happens threat to national unity now than under with the regiPASis PO most serious . the republic. ? California tax vote reflected a mixture of impulses The writer is a senior editorial writer for The Los Angeles Times. By PHIL KERBY Dear Sen. George McGovern, I have long known that you can swing a neat phrase, but you really were in top form when you said that Califor- nians who voted to cut property taxes responded to a "degrading' heddnism that tells them to ask wnat thee: can take from the needy.' ' - - Yee don't know theltalf. o it, senator. We have all sOrTS of strange hedonists in Cal iftirnia. Here's 'an example for your next-speech. He's a retired policeman. Last month ,(pre-Jarvis) his lavish one- bath- two-bedreom house was re- appraised at 113 percent above its prior value. The taxes on his place would have gone up by $1,000. In typical hedo- nist cant, he said, 'I simply -don't know what I'm going to do. The house is only valuable to me if I sell it." For some odd reason, senator, he didn't want to leavethe home where he had lived for 25 years. Here is another equally apt illustra- tion. This fellow didn't like Proposition 13. He was worried about its effect on education. Then he visited the asses- sor's office (pre-Tarvis) and discovered that the value of his home, reappraised last year at $60,000, had been boosted to $104,000 this year. His current taxes, a little over $2,000, were scheduled to jump to $3,580 ? about a $1,500 hike in just one year. He voted for 13. ? ;That $1,500 increase alone, senator, would pay the full tax bill on. a $60,000 home in your state of South Dakota, which I discovered, to my surprise, has no , state income tax. Hedonism and South Dakota are evident contradictions in terms, so I wouldn't be prepared to say that South Dakotans keep their tax- es low to avoid their obligation to "the needy," You are in a better position to render a judgment on that, but I might point out that hedonist California, in ad- dition to whopping property taxes, im- poses an 11 percent state income tax. In California, senator, we have had a marvelously efficient tax-collection sys- tem. Tax assessors were required to pe- riodically update the valuation of prop- erty to reflect the latest market price. As values increased, home taxes went THE COUR1ER-JOURNAL4 SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 194 ,A 5 by Garry Trudeau "The integration of Spain is much stronger now than in the '30s," he said. "Then, we had no electricity, television. There were not the same population flows between regions. We did not have a national market. Even the spread of the Spanish language has had a big boost in the past few years. Catalonia is a bilingual country today. So is the Basque country." , In a'country beset with major eco- nomic worries, the disadvantages as seen at the Finance Ministry of giving up tax revenues to the regions and of finding money to help them set up new administrative structures seem to outweigh the advantages. Ministry offi- cials also wonder what will happen to the bureaucracies in Spain's 50 adminis- trative provinces. , - There will probably be 13 mainland regions if Navarre accepts the Basque efforts to absorb it, plus the Canaries off the Atlantic shores of Africa and the Balearic Islands in the Meditetanean: "Catalonia will take care of itself," - said the Finance Ministry man. "The standard of living in Barcelona is com- parable to Milan's," he said,likening Spain's northern industrial metropolis to Italy's: "But I'm not so sure about the other regions." Says Tierno Galvan, Spain's leading constitutional-law professor, "We can't predict where all this autonomy is lead- ing. Today, it is positive. It provides for decentralization and guarantees of de- mocracy. :Tomorrow, it could create economic strains among the regions and create a new layer of bureaucracy. woov se'5 YOi}, VICTOR. ANDY. GO MUCH YO(i aliF5 APPR'r;CIATED )91R GREAT AT SZIPP2k7 OF 716 77e T- AFRICAN IN6 MOS NA710N5. Z MORNING.. ocAo7l) oo Ir. SAY, WIV515 011R FRI&V PH,REO TONIGHT? z THOU6g7" NA5 COMING OV. - -V IM NOT RIR 5. 64,A5 CALLED OUT OF THE HAL4 'TODAY EICFORS H FINI5a.F.0 HIS sPEECH EXCalaCY? THE JANITOR OKAY, R./T a101/10 LI KO 7- HIM 7C) 00 THO TO KEeP FLOORS, /7' Patint. SR 4.1 up and up, and rivers of cash flowed to government agencies. In five years, property-tax collections jumped from 86.6 billion to $12 billion. Total personal and corporate income taxes rOse during the same period from .$2.6 to $5.4 bil- lion. Well, Senator, the hedonists started to grumble, but the state's sensitive $40 billion-a-year bureaucracy swept aside their sniveling complaints. A year ago, a move was started to return one-tenth of a massive state surplus tO hdyneowner* but you will be greet to know the effort failed. Perhaps the Proposition 13 vote was totally selfish. I think more likely it was a vote based on a mixture of impulses, including reaction against the arro- gance reflected in the attitude of a Los Angeles public official who was asked whether he would give up hi S official car to help the county government meet the emergency. "No way," he said. "I wouldn't want to use my own car, even getting reimbursed for mileage. I don't want pigeon droppings on it and all the other wear and tear." 0 The Los Angeles Times Advertisemeat "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 "FOR THE WAGES OF SIN IS DEATH: BUT THE GIFT OF GOO IS ETERNAL LIFE THROUGH JESUS CHRIST OUR LORD!" -- Romans 6:23 "AND MUCH STUDY IS A WEARINESS OF THE FLESH. LET US HEAR THE CONCILISION OF THE WHOLE * MATTER: FEAR *OD, AND KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS: FOR THIS 13 THE wHoLe DUTY OF MAN. FOR GOD SHALL BROUS EVERY !NOM ?INTO JJJOGNIEr WiTH EVERY SECRET THING, WHETHER IT $E G. OD, OR WHETHER IT ilE4VILI Ecclesiastes 12:12-1.4 Whoever' shall undertake to wrote a history of the familia!, that fear not God nor regard the dutleS they owe te Man, but 'live andilot on thili miseries-of their kind, will portray to the wend an awfully instructive chapter of the retributive justice of God - many a family that started out in life and formed a family connection under the most auspicious circumstances. They were industrious, enterprising, frugal and seem to have started fair for domestic peace and a happy competence. Yet in an evil hour they yielded to the delusive bait of temptation - they were in haste to be rich. They turned aside from the paths of honest industry and domestic tran- quility and plunged into a dissipating and iniquitious ? business, which, while it seems to promise wealth and future independence, it was but the sure presursor, to ruin and disgrace; or the same ruinous result Was arrived at no less effectively by the violation of The Holy Day! How awfully in the history of families is the truth sometimes illustrated that God will "POUR OUT HIS FURY UPON THE FAMILIES THAT CALL NOT ON HIS NAME." "THEY THAT DESPISE ME SHALL BE LIGHTLY ESTEEMED." Examples crowd upon us from every quarter: Every neighborhood furnishes them!" in Numbers 32:23 God says: "BE SURE YOUR SINS WILL FIND YOU our:. h aeuteronomy 32:29 God says ':.'0 THAT THEY WOULD CONSIDER THEIR LATTER END!" "Sin Is any went of conformity unto, or tran,sgression of The Law of . God!" We now quote God's second C walla n d merit es found th Exodus 20: 4-6: , _ "THOU SHALT NOT MAKE UNTO THEE ANY GRAVEN IMAGE; OR ANY LIKENESS OF ANYTHING THAT I It4 THE HEAVEN ABOVE, OR THAT IS IN THE EARTH BENEATH, OR THAT 1$ IN THE WATER UNDER THE EARTH: THOU SHALT NOT BOW DOWN THYSELF TO THEM, NOR SERVE THEM: FOR I THE LORD THY GOD AM A JEALOUS GOD, VISITING THE INIQUITY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE ME: AND SHOWING MERCY UNTO THOUSANDS OF THEM THAT LOVE ME, AND KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS." Several times friends with the desire to be helpful have suggested a change in the name of this Column. Wonder if unconsciously, they too resent the negative of God's "THOU SHALT NOT!" What use have you for a servant that won't carry out orders? "WHY CALL YE ME LORD, LORD, AND DO NOT THE THINGS WHICH I SAY" - Luke 6:46. True Faith follows after Perfect Obedience. ROST. D. SCOTT, P.O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 YOU'LL RECCOtstIZE nos Fol1/4.. MOUS MAKER COMFORTAbLE LONG WEARING SHOE $22 value 10,4..4 ONLY LADIES siZE$ ONLY 4012 DuPont Circle (behind Red Lobster in DuPont Sqvate) STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 10-830 SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY 12-5 ecorate your livi g room is is your way! Famous Ethan Allen Quality Sofas and Chairs ? Custom covered Just for You ? at No Extra Cost Think of all the ways you use your living room. It's a stage where you entertain your friends, a haven where you relax or a "board room" for family discussions. it's important to have comfortable, durable and handsome furniture for that room ... Where, you can truly express your personal style and taste through the color, texture and de- ? sign in fabrics you select. Whether it's a brand new room or an older one you'd like to do over, Ethan Allen and our Interior Designers are ready to help you You can choose from hundreds of sofas, chairs and loveseats all can be covered in your choice of more than 800 beautiful fabrics at ready-made prices. Ouse len Gallery 9801 Linn Station Rood ? Louisvdle, Kentucky 40223 ? Phone 502.426.4595 (Jost off Hurstbourne lane in Plainview) Mart., Wed., Fri. 9:30 A.M.-9:00 P.M., toes, Thurs., Sat, 9:30 A.M.?530 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY 1 P.M.-5 P.M. Approved For Release 2009/08/11 : CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 f , Approved For Release 2009/08/1 1 : CIA-RDP05S00620R00060 1460043-8 The Courier-Journal, Saturday, June 24 1078 V 4 regional news ? business ? accent Fire destroys camp building ? HOPKINSVILLE -- A fire of undetermined cause has destroyed a building that housed the dining facilities and a loft sleeping area for Girl Scouts at Camp LaTonka at Lake Morris. ? ? ? :- BobbY Kelley, chief of the West Side Fire Department, said the Converted barn was falling in when firefighters arrived Wednesday night No Scouts were camping in the area at the time. Ilendersoft fire may be probed HENDERSON -- Fire Chief Charles Trodglen's report on a $1 million Henderson warehouse district fire will be turned over to County Attorney Bill Markwell for possible criminal investigation. Trodglen said this week he will submit a copy of the report to Markwell as soon as it is completed. There have been reports that an outdoor trash fire was the origin of , flames that destroyed three buildings last Friday. In submitting the report to Markwell, Trodglen will be following the advice of City Attorney Ron Sheffer, who concluded Wednesday that open burning without a per- mit violates a city ordinance and is a misdemeanor. .0-04tsos action on coalhooft...;-$.0.-roice; By HOWARD FINgaVIAN - Courier-Journal Staff Writer WASHINGTON --- The head of the federal Interstate Commerce Commis- sion said yesterday that he will "take some actions" soon to_ force better coal- hauling service by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co, ? "We've tried voluntary compliance, and. that hasn't been satisfactory," said A. Daniel O'Neal," chairman of the ICC. But he 'told a group of Coal operators in Washington that he couldn't yet , re- veal the specific of such actions. and that, in any event, there were limits to What the ICC could do. ; "We can't make freight cars with ICC orders,.' said O'Neal,. after listening to two hours of 'complaints about the L&N's service in Eastern Kentucky., "But we do have Powers to make sure that cars are moved expeditiously and, within limits, that users are treated equitably,". he said. Cloyd McDowell,. president of the Harlan County Coal Operators Associ- ation, said after the meeting that he thought O'Neal "has an open mind" on the matter. ? ? By law, the ICC must see that rail- roads provide reasonably adequate ser- vice to- all customers. With? increasing anger, some Eastern Kentucky coal operators have charged that L&N is ignoring that duty and that the ICC hasn't done anything about it Especially hard-hit, they say, are the so-called single-car shippers, who may order dozens of cars a day but whose cars don't make up' an entire? "unit" train. ? According to Jack Nail, L&N's vice president for Coal traffic, single-car shippers are receiving only 20 percent of their daily order of cars. Lind ship- who led the coal operator's delegation, pers generally the biggest companies said that the number of coal cars or ? are getting about 60 percent of their engines on the L&N isn't the issue.' ? "Within the limits of our ability," Nall said, L&N's service is adequate. But he ? said the single-car shippers "have ?a le- gitimate concern." ?" McDowell said- the situation has brought many small= and medium-size coal companies "near practical ruin." L&N, a subsidiary of the Seaboard Coast Line of Jacksonville, Fla., has long been the only railroad serving the Harlan and Hazard coalfields. ? In 1969, a group of coal operators brought a complaint against the L&N but dropped it in 1975 after being prom- ised better serVice. "We were assured that the service would get better, but it's gotten worse," said McDowell. ? Fred Karem, a Lexington attorney While the number of L&N cars_ has been steady in the last few years, he said, the quality of service in the Harlan and Hazard fields ? especially to sin- gle-car shippers ? has deteriorated drastically. ..-- "The L&N has converted the 't ar shortage' into its standard operating procedure ? in Eastern ?Kentucky," Karem told O'Neal. "The L&N is a pub- lic disgrace and a national outrage, and the ICC is being painted with the same ? If service doesn't improve, Karem said, the ICC "should commence imme- diate action to cancel, transfer o* ?re- voke L&N's operating rights in areas See COAL RAGE 3, coL 1, this section ? '4-- - Union residents fighting tax MORGANFIELD- ? Union Couhey residents Who are = fighting the school hoard's (keupational tax have raised more than $1,800 to pay legal costs and have hired an - attorney. ? A suit asking that the court rule on a petition against the proposed tax could be filed this month, said the attOr- ney, Frank King of Henderson. The school board has rejected a 1,785-signature peti- tion calling for a public vote on the new tax. The rejec- tion was on the advice of the board's lawyer, wheo said enough signatures were invalid to void the petition. About 790 valid signatures are required to force a vote. Center planned at Burnside SOMERSET ? Construction is scheduled to start this fall on a convention center and recreational eomplex on a 29 acre site: at the southwest Corner of the U.S. 27 KY 90 intersection in Burnside, " '?, DeVetobet ,IOW-rackson gaid tile eenter:is enlecled be reedy for. use in 1980r He declined to rey,eal the amount ot money to be- invested in the project but said financing is no Problem. , 5 ' Sh?iner's schedule tractor pull GLASGOW The Glasgow Shrine Club will have its eighth annual tractor pull at Edmonton Fairgrounds at 7 The tractor pull is the local Shrine Club's main money raising project ter the Kosair Crippled Children's Hospi- ?tal. p.m. on l'uly 1. ' A little Miss-tified A pause ,irt' rehearsals yesterday gave Susan Perkins, the 1977 Miss America, time to consider tonight's Miss Kentucky pageant at Macau- - , ??o1ic believe Iwo-00+d irian ? is recoverm Beecli Bend Park report is clue BOWLING GREEN -- A grand jury will hear one more witness before issuing a short report, including tWO majei recomniendaticins: for improvements ` at BeeCif tend' Park, says Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Torn Lewi,. He said the jury might recommend that a nevi' road ,t Beech Bend be built and that park security he Streng ened to control crowds as large add unruly as the one attracted last weekend by the Motorcycle Record Nation- als. Two people died in an accident, and two shootings and one stabbing were reported as 30,000 motorcycle enthusi- asts gathered at the park. Two Graves boys. are found safe MAYFIELD ? Two young Graves County bike riders were found in good condition yesterday morning after officers and rescue squads spent much of the night:' searching for them. Rodney Clark, 8, was found, then later in the morning Steve Langston, 12, was located. Authorities said the boys became separated after going for a ride Thursday afternoon. ? Couple injured in plane crash HAZARD ? A North Carolina couple were injured Thursday when their light plane crashed shortly after takeoff from the Hazard airport. Jeffrey Cassell and his wife, Connie, both 31, from - Fayetteville, were taken to Hazard Appalachian Regional Hospital for treatment of leg injuries and burns, officials said. The couple had just taken off from the airport when their Tr-Pacer aircraft struck a power line, flipped over, and landed atop some nearby trees. Authorities said there was no fire but the couple suf- fered second-degree burns when the power lines snapped. They were trapped in the plane for about 90 minutes before firemen rescued them. The Cassells were reportedly ea reute to Texas at the time of the accident. Frankfort hospital aide name FRANKFORT -- William F. Nowak, formerly of Orlan- do, Fla.,? has been appointed assistant administrator at King's Daughters Memorial Hospital in Frankfort. Administrator Ronald Tyrer, who announced the at), pointment, said that expansions in medical services and rapid growth in patient care led to the new position. Nowak has been associated with the Florida Hospital Association and was internal auditor and administrative assistant at St. Anthony's Hospital in St, Petersburg. ? From Associated Press Dispatches *;3 Associated press ASHLAND, ley:- ? A weunded Ohio men sought sine Monday in connection with a shooting and attempted abduc- tion is apparently aliye,, reportedly aid ed by a friend who removed a bullet from his neck witli a hunting knife. Atithorities have been in direct cod tact with the , wounded man, Bill McClain, according tO Detective, Sgt. Cuytis Keeton of the Ashland police. Keeton said yesterday that one of three Boyd County prisoners charged in connection with the incident has been allowed to make telephone calls to friends of McClain to get information. ? Keeton said tha after several calls, he received information Thursday night that McClain is -"getting along all right now:, McClain,' 37, of Carroutown, Ohio, is believed to be the man ,who waS shot Monday night during a robbery attempt at an Ironton, Ohio, home. ? Later that night, two women and a Man were arrested in Ashland and charged with kidnapping in incidents police believe involved attempts to get medical help for Mcoain. Those arrested are Thelma Delling, 26-, of Shively, Ky., in Jefferson County; Tina Schindler, 25, of Carrolltown; and Richard Duane Wifson, 24, Shively. They have been indicted by a Boyd grand jury on kidnapping charges. An unsuccessful attempt was first made to kidnap, an Ashland osteopath, police said. A nurse was later abducted. The three were arrested* when a car containing the nurse and three other people was stopped, Polke`said. Officers had feared that, without medical attention, McClain Might die from' his Wound, and have been looking for him since Tuesday.' Kentucky authorities have no war- rants for McClain but apparently, want to question him. ley_ Theatre in Louisville. Miss Perkins, a former Miss Ohio, will bi singing during the pageant. (Story in Accent, Page B 6.) ' 1 ' Republicans name Hopkins 5. SI seek 6th C011 resston' al sea ? Hy FRANK? ASHLEY Courier-Journal Politicat Editor LE(INOTON, --? Central 'Ken- tucky Republicans last night unanimous- nothinated state Sen. Larry Hopkins of' Lexington as the party's candidate for the 6th Congressional District seat now held by U.S. Rep. John Breckin- ridge,? Hokpins, 44, a stock broker, will _ I op- pose Democratic state Sen. Tom Easter- ? ly, 38, Frankfort attorney who upSet ?Breckinridge in the May primary. Beg your pardon Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Courier Journal incor- ? rectly said processing of a mortgage ? loan application to the Federal Housing Administration takes 60 days It gener- ally. takes 30 days. Hundreds of precinct officials from ? the 17 county districts gave roaring ap- "platise after the mini-convention chose Hopkins by acclamation. As expected, no other candidates were nominated at ?the convention, which was a small version of a natienal party convention with bunting, delegate placards and campaign posters. ? Hopkins replaces Mary Louise Foust ? who withdrew recently after receiving the GOP nomination without opposition in the May primary. Miss Foust was state auditor until 1976. In his acceptance speech, Hopkins called for bipartisan support for his election and urged supporters to work harder because of his late start. He continued his attack on Easterly's labor support, an issue expected to dominate theyace. ? Easterly, who has charged that Miss Foust's withdrawal was engineered by party officials, was endorsed by the state AFL-CIO during the primary. During the convention, supporters handed out copies of a recent labor union article detailing labor support for Easterly. The article was first handed out by Hopkins last week. Hopkins, who was joined by his fam- ily, Outlined a number of potential is- sue's and, at times, alluded tO the tax revolt in California and elsewhere. "I ? want to go to Congress to tax less, spend ? less and, not cut, but eliminate waste. That is the answer to inflation and it's time we let Washington_ in on it," he said. ? Unless we breek out of the vicious ? cycle of waste, excessive spending, huge deficits, higher taxes and rising Infla- tion, not only our economic, but our precious personal freedom will be lost." Hopkins urged supporters to contrast his political philosophy with Easterly's and to point out the differences be? tween the voting records in the state legislature. Hopkins served three terms in the ?slate House before being elected to the states senate last year troll j;lexmngtod- ? .(4 5 ty," I _ Last year Easterly was elected to his second term in the state Senate repre- senting Franklin, Owen, Shelby' and Spencer counties. ?? After last night's meeting, severatiop Republican ? officials were obviAsly pleased with Hopkins' selection and:gaid that they believe this is the year tcr add a third GOP' congressman to Kenticity's delegation. - , Kentucky now has five Democratic and two- Republican congressmen.,.-.2; In an interview, 'Kentucky GOP aair- man Lee Nunn said that jlopking,ka winner' and again denied reports that party officials pressured Miss FoOst to drop out of the race in favor of Hopkins with his larger Lexington base Miss Foust who has since endoiled Hopkins, said in an interview, that no one "forced" her out of the race but She conceded that some Republicans p'eint- ed out how difficult it would be for her to win. She said she dropped out of the ',race because she did not believe she cootid overcome Easterly's strong labor back- ing. ? Miller recovered front heart attack , W chiefreturns to work Mow Associated Press CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller, who has been recuperating for 13 weeks from a heart attack and a stroke, said yesterday he will return to work Mon- day. Miller suffered a heart attack while vacationing in Florida shortly after the end of the 111-day nationwide UMW strike in late March. Vice President Sant Church has been running UMW's day-to-day affairs- in Miller's absence. Miller said that one of the things he intends to do is change the way the unieri negotiates contracts with the 13itu- minous Coal Operators Association. ? He said he plans to eliminate the un- bargaining council, which must ap-t:* prove tentative settlements before they are sent to the membership for a ratifi- cation vote. Meanwhile, some coalfield leaders of the union have warned of another strike, this time a wildcat strike, to pro- test the way health insurance provided under the new contract is being admin- istered. The leaders said that some doc- tors, are requiring union members to pay them directly; then to bill the insur- , ance company for? reimbursement ? The? contract provides that the doc- tors are to bill the insurance companies and that miners need not pay directly, the leaders said. Miller said that payments were a problem but that the "left wing' of the union was responsible for the strike threats ? Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 "The communists are trying tnfind some issues," Miller said. "If the benefits are not provided, we're going to lbok to the ciperatorsu for enforcement he said. ? Miller repeated his criticisrn of.Ken- tucky Gov. Julian Carroll that he- had broken a promise about the presenee of state police during the bitter strike a,t the Justus mine of the Blue Diamond Coal 'Co. at Stearns in Eastern Ken- tticky. - ? , "We've had problems organizing down there and he's promised uS, that there would be no, interference by law enforcement agencies, particularly the state police, and he has not delivered," Miller said. Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 THE COURIVI-JOVFLNAL, SATURDAY, 112.s,iE 2t 1978 B elevision star Edward Asner greets Gale Warner, a student from , Ashville, Ohio, with a big smooch at a picnic last night featuring fried chicken- made by Kentucky's chicken magnate, Col. Harlan Sanders. Kelly Satterwhite, Owensboro, took tine out from her hostess duties to pose for a picture with newspaper columnist Erma Bombeck. Mrs. Bombeck is one of the scores of super achievers from every phase of _ adult life who have converged on Owensboro, along with 350 of the nation's most honored youths, for a weekend "Salute to Excellence' The guests will be honored at a featured banquet tonight. Adm, Stansfield Turner, direc- - tor of the Central Intelligence Agency, met with some of the honored youths yesterday. STAFF PHOTOS BY KEITH WILLIAMS Sean McBride; chairman of Amnesty International, talked with students at an informal gathering. Fresh from talking with Presi- dent Carter, U.S. Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., spoke at a morn- ing symposium. Coal onerators criticize L&N service Continued from Page B 1 wlieie it can't or won't provide reason- ab fese rvice." O'Neal said the ICC already has sev- eral investigations of L&N under way. 1- Lest week, he said, the agency issued an }- order requiring more efficient use of coal ears Next week, he said, the ICC wilt" begin a "saturation" review of L&N' s freight traffic policies. Karetri said the ICC- already had on haiia' a "massive record" about L&N's ,t11 A.M. 71 nral Tenneva 7:3, jugs Bunny 8:0 ..ht,K. Phooey 8:30 Globetrotters 10:30.,pink Panther 11:00 Baggy PantS 11:3g, Space Sentinels Bristol Tenn 9 ? WCYB-TV (Channel 5) 12:30 Thunder 1.00 Wrestling 12:00 Land of Lost -Johnson City, Tenn. WJIIL-TV (Channel 11) , 1:30 Film Festival 7:15 Uncle Hank 2:00 Wrestling 2:00 To be announced 4:00 NBC Baseball 7:00 Lawrence Welk 8:00 Bionic Woman 9:00 NBC Movie 11:00 WCYEU News 11:30 Saturday Night 7:30 Wackck 8:00 Robonic Stooges 8:40_,Speed Buggy 9:00 Bug Bunny 10:30 Batman/Tarpts ' 11:30 Secrets of Isis P.M. 12:00 Cosby Kids 12:30 Space Academy 3:00 Marty Robbins 3:30 Arthur Smith 4:00 Canadian Open 5:00 COS Sports 6;00 YYJHL. News 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Hee Haw 8:00 Oral Roberts 9:00 CBS Movie 11:00 WJHL Newt problems but, thus far, had "failed to follow through." Nearly a year ago, he said, a regional ICC official had learned that L&N was favoring one of its largest customers ? the U.S. Steel Co.'s mines in Harlan, County. Several coal operators said U.S. Steel was getting 100 percent of its orders for cars. Nall, the L&N vice president, de- nied that assertion and said all unit- train shippers, including U.S. Steel, were getting 60 percent. A law passed in 1975, O'Neal said, may somewhat limit the ICC's ability to attack the problem. Under. an amendment to the law, sponsored by U.S. Sen. Wendell H. Ford, Disc jockey makes claim to record-playing record OSLO, Norway (AP) ? Rudolf Kris- liansen of Narvik in north Norway . claims his 811 hours of continuous rec- ord playing is a world record for disc jockeys Kristiansen, 20, began his marathon' presentation at a restaurant in Narvik on May 19 and did not stop until Thurs- day. He was allowed two hours of rest a day. i 1.00 mister magoo 11?30 WJHL, Movie State schedules hearnu Harrisburg, HI. on rules for kindergarten WSIL-TV (Channel 3) A.M. 4:00 Wide World Sports 7:00 Supertriends 5:30 ABC News 8:00. Scooby boo 10:00 Ktof its Show 11:00 Dynomutt 11:30 Ater. Bandstand 12:30 Sports Challenge ' 1:00,p7e Racers 1:30 sportsman's Friend , 20,0;t1AA Champions 1:00 WSIL News 6:00 Lawrence Welk 7:00 Free Country 7:30 Comedy Specie 8:00 The Love Boat 9:00 Fantasy Island 10:00 Oral Roberts 11:00 ABC News 11:15 WSIL News 11:30 Rock Concert Special to The Courier-Journal FRANKFORT, Ky. ? The Kentucky Department of Education will hold a public hearing Monday on regulations it proposes for kindergarten programs. The hearing will begin at 3 p.m. in the state board of education room on the 17th floor of Capital Plaza Tower in Franfort. D-Ky., and drafted by L&N attorneys, railroads have been allowed to set up separate service categories for single. car and unit-train shippers. As a result, O'Neal said, the ICC may well be barred from charging that L&N is illegally discriminating against single- car shippers. Even so, Karenn and McDowell said, L&N still has a diltY to provide 'each category of customers with adequate service. O'Neal also promised to investigate charges that L&N had denied coal cars to operators whe complained about its service. ' "To my. knowledge," Nall said in a later telephone interview, "there has never been any retaliation against any producer in the coalfields for any state- ments they made ? good or bad." State cancels bids on construction at governor s house The Courier -Journal Bureau FRANKFORT, Ky.,? The scheduled opening of bids on about $480,000 worth of construction work ,at the governor's mansion has been canceled, Russell Mc- Clure, state finance and administration secretary, said yesterday. . McClure said he canceled the June 30 bid opening because of lack of interest from contractors, No general contrac- tors had requested copies of specifica- tions, he said. The project was to include a new front driveway and an iron fence across the back of the mansion grounds, State Auditor George Adkins had criticized the project earlier. McClure said criticism of the project ,was not a factor in his decision. ? uri..ersof for t'hose who want to know, or know they need to. -To subscribe, phone 582-475'2. or 1;800-292-6568 (in Ky. outside Jefferson Co.) 4VONINNONINIENNEMENNNIP4.4... 4 Yes,. I'm 14 or older and wish to learn more -- without 111 obligation about becoming : a newspaper Carrier. ? Need money? Need business ? experteno .in handling mon- . ey? Dealin% with customers? Salesmanship? Responsibility? Then a Courier-Journal and Louisville. Times ? newspaper route is for you. Lots of our newspaper carriers are prov- in% d pays pretty well. If you're 14 or older and wont the de- ? toils of having you? own route, call 582-4752 (Louisvilie, area), ? toll free 1-806-292-6568 (in Kentucky), at send in the coupon. Age Phone Address City.... . State Zip Mail to: The Circulation Dept. The Courier-Journal M and Louisville Times MI Louisville, Ky. 40202 - Call Approved For Release 2'009/08/11 : CIA-RDPO5S00620R000601460043-8 ' Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 THE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 around No ItentuckyAl Klan rally planned NICHOLASVILLE ? The United Klans of America has scheduled a state Ku Klux Klan rally July 1 on a farm 1 i/a miles south of Nicholas- ville. John Palmore of Louisville, grand knight hawk for Kentucky, said yes- terday the rally would be open to the public. A similar rally was held at the,,same site last October. Stones tickets set record ' LEXINGTON ? Ticket sales for Thursday's Rolling Stones concert set a record for Rupp Arena, according td Rick Reno, director of operations for the 23,000-seat facility. "W? e sold approximately 20,000 tickets in eight hours," Reno said. Reno said a few hundred tickets remained available yesterday. All wete $8 "obstructed view" bleacher seats behind the stage in the arena's upper deck. Tit.' sellout would break the state *Ord of 20,422 for an indoor con- cert audience set at a Fleetwodd Mae concert in Rupp Arena last year. Some 21,300 tickets were sold for" last August's Elvis Presley con- cert, which was canceled after the singer's death. 1 'UK official charged FORT KNOX ? Fred Marshall Kimmey, an official of the Universi- ty of Kentucky Center at Fort Knox, his been charged with the theft of more than $17,000 from the center, accprding p Larry Long, a spokes. man for the FBI. 'The warrant for- Kimmey's arrest waS issued May 31, but Kinney has nO been apprehended, Long said. , - T116 warrant states that Kiinmey is c arged with taking $17,613 in Gen- e al Equivlancy- Diploma funds, $73 in"currency returned to Kiminey in connection with a previous burglary, and $68 in unauthorized and unpaid telephone bills. Long said that because the alleged acts Occurred on the Army post the FBI has jurisdiction. 1:Doctor pleads guilty pADUCAH ? Dr. Clarence Jer- ome Mills, 55, of Clinton, Ky. pleaded guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court to 21 counts of submitting false Medi- caid payment requests, according to a release from I3enjamine H. cook, FBL special agent in Louisville: Mint was indicted', by af federal grapct Jur)/i4 tiiitisville on S,IV I en the, 21 misdemeanor violations, ills was fined $10,000 and sea- tented to one year probation under th condition that he donate his set- vices to an area public health clinic or1day a week during the probation. he charges were the result of an Investigation by the FBI, the state at- tor?pey general and the Kentucky De- parfment for Human Resources. abama alumni to meet L_EXINGTON,? The University of Alabama Alumni Association has scledtiled two meetings next week in Kentucky. , The group's Lexingteo and Rich- mop chapter" will meet at 7 P.m. Tue,day at the Ramada Inn, 232 Nevf Circle Road, Lexington. The Bowling Green chapter will meet at 7 gin. Wednesday at the Holiday Inri-,,Midtown on U.S. 31W Bypass, Bovxling Green. ?=4, Concert set at EkU RJCHMOND -- The Stephen Col- linf,Foster Symphony Orchestra will prlent a concert at 8:15 p.m. tomor- row in the Van Peursem Pavilion at Eastern Kentucky University. The orchestra, composed of young must- clan? attending music camp at EKU, will. be directed by John Smarelli, eOnductor of the Springfield, Ohio, youth Symphony. ' ' UK president honored 4./ LEXINGTON ? University of Kentucky President Otis Singletary 6as been honored for "distinguished contributions to the advancement of higher education in the South." 4 , i In presenting the Soathern Region- al Education Board award at a meet- mg in Atlanta, President Winfred L. 9oilwin noted that Singletary has earned a national reputation as a atrOng voice for universities. The UK preOdent served two consecutive terms as vice chairman of the board. O * O 1 (11.1CA011 post filled tar* OWENSBORO ? Dr. Jude Weisen- 1 eck, vice president for academic at- airs at Brescia College, has been ap- ointed to a fout-year term on the entucky Council on Teacher Educe- Von and Certification. ,..0 The appointment was made by Dr. lames B. Graham, superintendent of teublic instruction, to serve until June 30, 1982. / f, The Council on Teacher Education tnd Certification was created by the 972 General Assembly. Council embers develop and recommend licies and standards relating to acher preparation and certifica- . , On. f real Special, and AP Dispatches 'There's not a whole lot we can do' Landiuse planning stirs protests in Madison Coun Associated Press RICHMOND, Ky. ? A proposal for land-use planning in Madison County has become ,a major controversy, with Fiscal Court saying that such planning is needed to meet rapid growth and many residents charging that the government is trying to grab control of their land. Three public meetings were held this week and a fourth was scheduled last night at the Union City Ruritan Club. Glenn Roberts, a farmer and co- founder of Concerned Citizens Opposed to Forced County Zoning, said in are- cent interview that 95 percent of the cotinty's residents are opposed to zon- ing. , "Let's aay you've got 20 acres and your son is getting married and you want to give him a couple of acres to build a house and get started," Roberts said. "Well, with zoning, you couldn't do that. You'd have to give him at least 10 acres because there would be a 10-acre limit on home sites.," Roberts Conceded, however, there was little the group could do except try to persuade the magistrates to abandon efforts to appoint a, planning and zoning commission. "There's not a whole lot we can do, as far as I know," he said. "We hope that, it this fiscal court has the power to vote it in, then the next fiscal' court will have the, power to vote it out," Asked if the group planned court ac- tion to prevent appointment of the com- mission, Roberts said, "I don't really think so. I don't see how we'd benefit by that, personally think some of the mag- istrates are, beginning to come over a bit. I can see some weakening about some of them." Roberts helped form an anti-zoning rally Wednesday night at Madison Cen- tral High School. Harvey Howard, a Nashville Republican opposing U.S. Sen. Howard Baker in Tennessee's senatorial primary, told approximately 800 cbunty residents to appear in force before Fis- cal Court and demand an end to zoning plans. Another 100 residents attended a pub- lic forum Thursday night in Berea, which was sponsored by the Berea League of Women Voters, Magistrate Ed Chenault said the coun- ty's imminent growth problems prompt- ed Fiscal Court to contract for a land- Grandntother's helper Edmonton in Metcalfe County. Mrs. Bunch said her beans were doing fine but could use a little more rain. Doug Bunch, 6, helped his grandmother, Mrs. Millard Bunch, hoe the the weeds out of the rows of pole beans in her garden on U.S., 68 near est In peace Let's bury John Y. Brown's Louisville won't be getting a profes- sional basketball team. Dies irae, dies illa! I went down to jump off the bridge as soon as I heard but couldn't fight My way to the rail. The whole thing makes me wonder how John Y. Brown Jr. ever got to be a chicken magnate. lie must get his pub- lic relations advisers from the Yellow P. n Pages. By making public the process fiiiatreau whereby Louisville was eliminated as a potential NBA franchise, Brown guaran- teed that those fans who have forgiven him for trading Dan Issel away from COUrier-Journal ColUmnist the old Kentucky Colonels will hate him, - anew for declining to Move his NBA teani to Louisville. -- I don't know how Louisville could have courted Brown any more abjectly than it has. Local businessmen, dis- missed as deadbeats, have meekly suf- fered Brown's abuse. Sportswriters have accepted Brown's specious equation of basketball and progress without skepti- cism. County Attorney Bruce Miller has devoted, a couple of years of his life to the cause. Gov. Julian Carroll has made oblique assurances of his help and sup- port As might have been expeeted, Brown blamed the arts for Louisville's basket- ball loss. It the city's movers and shak- ers had been as interested in basketball as in such things as theater, opera and , ballet; Brawn said, we'd be akle to get a ? team. Staff Photo by Al Cross losing proposition anti fprget it Louisville. Times sports editor Dick Fenlon compounded Brown's lapse of logic by noting that a group of Louisvil- liens last year managed to raise $1.5 million to buy a Rembrandt, but nobody wants to invest in a pro basketball team. But the biggest reasons Brown failed to find patrons have nothing to do with the arts, or with penuriousness. These are the real problems: Pro basketball players are paid better than God. National Basketball Association teams Play an endless schedule of killingly boring games to eliminate only a hand- ful of teams from the playoffs. : At its best, professional basketball isn't half as exciting as college and high school ball ? especially in Kentucky. Another thing Brown carefully avoid- ed mentioning is that he was asking Under the terms of the ordinance, Louisville's business community to in- certain city employees who have vest in a franchise that has been a ft- earned merit raises in the past, and nancial disaster and an athletic blight, consequently make more than some The Buffalo franchise has been the othera of equal status, would be de- NBA's biggest embarragment prived of such raises in the future. The Buffalo Braves surely shouldn't To cap all these clever moves, and be compared to a Rembrandt. And I kill off morale wherever it survives, don't know why Louisville's business Stansbury this week ordered his person. community should be expected to share nel director to require that city employ- Brown's losses. If he wants to own a pro ees work a.40-hour week instead of the team --_ surely the most indulgent of 35 or 37V hpurs Ihey:ve he o hobbies ? he's ,entitled to the heart- ache. 13ut we shauldn't assume he was trying to peddle a winner here; he was hunting for beck-up moifey.-Better" we should invest in Universal Widgets. I especially have been appalled by Brown's tendency to consider pro sports the index of a community's progressive- ness. That's patently ridiculous. 0 More on Mayor William Stansbury's new payroll ordinance: Forty-four city employees could get unscheduled raises under the new pro- posal. If each got the maximum, the city payroll would be increased by $152,000. There is no such money in Stans- bury's city budget, so any increases in the payroll would have to come from some other budget category. You rob Peter, and rob Paul and pay Jacques Limit controls on coal mines, governor says Associated PresS WASHINGTON ? West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller Iv wants less govern- mental regulation of the coal industry as a means of boosting production and efficiency. Rockefeller told the Mining and. Rec- lamation Council of America yesterday that govenment "over-regulation can be as damaging to our livelihoods as under- regulation can be to our lives." Recently named by President Carter as chairman of the Presidential Corn- Coed sues college foot Associated Press KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- A University of Tennessee coed filed a $2 million suit yesterday against a university football player indicted on a charge of assault- ing her in a fight over a parking space. The suit filed on behalf' of Judith Theg in Knox County Circuit Court, also names as a defendant the owner of the apartment complex where her boy- friend lived and where the altercation occurred last Jan. 29. Nashville police vote Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. ? Nashville po- lice, who have demanded a 10 percent pay raise, are to vote on a proposal Monday giving them an 11 percent hike by January if residents approve a local sales tax increase. The Monday vote would come the day before the Metropolitan Council's third and final reading of the $283 million budget for the next fiscal year. Police- men are threatening to strike at mid- =ow the state line mission on commission government tions. Coal, Rockefeller said the would address the issue of regulations in its investiga- If a person wants to open a mine, he said, he must deal with 15 government agencies and fill out endless forms. "I do believe we can do better than that," lie said, ball player for assault Rick Powers, 20, of Birmingham, Ala., is accused in the suit of striking Miss, Theg, 20, of Knoxville, with the back of his hand, causing permanent loss of vision in her right eye. 4?11.p. Powers, a junior linebacker, waived a formal arraignment yesterday on a_ criminal charge of mayhem in connec- tion with the incident on the Shelbourne Towers parking lot near the UT cam- pus. Monday on pay raise night Tuesday if their demands are not met. In addition to the pay increase, po- licemen are asking the city government, which pays 50 percent of their health insurance premiums, to pick up the en- tire tab. The council's Budget and Finance Committee voted Thursday night to rec- ommend that a referendum on increas- ing the local sales tax by three-quarters of a cent be placed on the November election ballot . . r , w rising for years. 4 d, Naturally, this change will affect the lowest-ranking ,city employees (the ones whose raises Win be held at 5.5 percent to battle inflation) most profoundly, while making little difference to the honchos. The troops in City Hall reportedly are up in arms ? organizing protests, erect- ing defiant Posters, weeping in the cor- ridors, swearing political vengeance, talking about a union. What statesmanship! What diplomacy! What tact! Verily, Louisville doesn't deserve a mayor of Stansbury's inestimable class. (Late bulletin: An akiermanic com- mittee yesterday recommended turnin down most of Stansbury's proposals, in- cluding the 40-hour week. Now the rec- ommendations go to the full board.) ; 11 1978, Th..4) Cpur.er-Journal , k I use study by the Blue Grass Area DeVel- opment District, John Shell, an employee of the agen- cy; said the researchers studied peril) and population and how growth relate to jobs, homes, community, transporta- tion facilities, and total environmeht But public sentiment at the foruna seemed overwhelmingly anti-zoning.-- An unidentified spectator said, "We , don't want it Why don't you fix` the roads and send these people (the plan; nets) back to Lexington? We're having a harder time with politicians thanpur forefathers had with the Indians." - r.t - Contractors- to resume KY 292 job " Residents orderd to let workers in Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. ? Work on im- proving KY 292 in Martin County,,halt- ed when residents blocked the road to protest damage caused by overweight . coal trucks, is being resumed. ; _ State Transportation Secretary Calvin Grayson has directed Bureau of High- ways contractors to continue their wcirlF,N. Members of the Martin County Be? - Roads Organization closed off a 3.9-milq, section of the highway near Lovely her this month to dramatize complaints: that heavy trucks were tearing uP-the gravel and asphalt road and spreading Coal dust, The ? chain and fence blockade- pre- , vented construction workers from bringing in equipment to work on. a ' $400,000 road base reconstruction pro- , ject. Transportation officials, concerned about the delay in the project originally scheduled to be completed by Sept. l', filed suit in Martin Circuit Court last week seeking to5 reopen the road. Martin Circuit Judge W. B. Hazelrigg, said Thursday the makeshift barricade could remain, so lang as Bureau. of Highways trucks, construction equip- ment and school buses are able to- Use, the road. The judge scheduled another hearing July 10. 300,000 children handicapped iyA$IiiSoTt5b/' AjDo'ut: 200 ()09-.-0 the nation's 45 million school-age chil--- dren have ortheiiedic impairments, the U.S. Department of _Health; Education and Welfare says. Nearly 40,000 have serious visual impairments and 230,00% are deaf or hard of hearing, WiiMiniMMien.er.WW:MOP PRICE Executive director of agency serving Appalachia resigns Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Harry Teter Jr. re- signed yesterday as executive director of the 13-state Appalachian Regional Commission, apparently at the request of the commission. The resignation is effective July 1. Teter, executive director for five years, told a meeting of the commission State panel\ reviewing personal service pacts holds first meeting Associated Pres! FRANKFORT, Ky. -- The new state Professional Employment Commission held its first meeting yesterday and agreed to study procedures proposed by the Department of Personnel for award- ing professional service contracts. The five-member commission was created by the 1978 General Assembly to replace the Personal Service Con- tract Review Commission, Boyle County farmer William Belden was elected chairman and said he hopes to make the work of the commis- sion non-controversial by discussing the Contracts as openly as possible. The awarding of personal service Contracts for various professional ser- vices to state government has generated controversy. The new commission will review pro- fessional services not covered by a new registry established in the Personnel Department as well as appeals from denials of contracts. Life insurance benefits have risen Life insurance benefit payments in the United States totaled nearly $10 bil- lion in 1977, up from $9.6 billion a year earlier, according to the American Council of Life Insurance. 4.4 Save at service time with our low prices on tune-ups, ;04 shocks, filters, ',cur oil changes grid . //t more. Callus, staff: "I have always shared the under- standing with the federal and states co- chairmen that when they felt that a change in leadership would be benefi- cial to the program, I would honor that decision." The executive director is appointed by and is responsible to the full com- mission, which is composed of a federal co-chairman appointed by the president and the governors of the 13 Appala- chian states. Teter joined the commission staff in 1971 aS assistant general counsel. He said that he intends to return to private law practice. , In 1976, Teter was involved in an in- ternal flap over a request for $30,000 in ARC money to build a recreational park in Dekalb, Miss, Teter's staff recommended that the project be withdrawn. Teter disagreed with the staff report, and it was re- placed in the file with a more positive assessment. The project ultimately was financed, and the staff report was re- turned to the file. .V. COOK CHEVROLET 861 $. Third St. A Metro Nine Chevro-leader $.:mosionammemiommonow.k Courier-Journal Advertising Standards Advertising published in The Courier-Journal irot74-f"-- cepted on the premise that the merchandise cniai'l services offered are accurately described and ingly sold to customers at the advertised price, Aof"; vertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertis- ing that does not conform to these standards oel that is deceptive or misleading is ntver knowingly", , accepted., If any Courier-Journal reader en- counters non-compliance with these standards, we ask that you inform The Courier-Journal Advertising Department 582-4384 525 West Broadway Of your Better Business Bureau 583-6546 312W, Chestnut Louisville's FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH , at 3rd & St. Catherine Hear Our. Pastor, Dr. Wayne Dehoney Sunday Morning, 830 & 10:50 A.W., On Television - Channel 11 - at 11 HOW TOje l3r.E180:1IN6 AGAIN Sunday Evening Service, 7:30 P.M. ? THE UNWANTED CROSS . (The merger of First and Second Baptist) Louio ilk's Historic do mono (fr aittuf tf tkpth3f QH1?rcL Only Minutes Away By Expressway ? Downtown .2 blocksoff 1-65 at St. Catherine r Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 ? THE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 B State court rejects Owensboro testing of all electricians Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. - The city of Owensboro has no aythority to pass an ordinance requiring an examination of all ' electricians regardless of experi- ence, the Kentucky Court of Appeals ruled yesterday. It affirmed a Daviess Circuit Court decision -directing the city to issue a master electrician's license to Wayne Hughes of Owensboro. The city had argued it is illogical to claim that experience - Hilehes has been an electrician for 13 years - can serve as a substitute for an examination in determining ability. ' "We cannot see how these contentions by the city have any merit," the three- judge panel said. "A resident electrician who has a reputation for 'burning' his customerSwill have a difficult time pro- wing jobs, no matter how Many li- censes he holds." - The court said it is reasonable to al- low electricians and electrical contrac- tors with five years' experience to ob- tain a license without testing. In another case, the appellate court affirmed a Laurel Circuit Court decision barring Boyd L. Boggs, a developer, from keeping residents of the Dixie Belle subdivision from using a 9.7-acre tract that was designated as a park within the subdivision. "Property owners were induced to buy lots in the subdivieion by th,e desir- ability of a park area," the appellate court said. "Furthermore, every deed conveying lots in this subdivision re- ferred to the recorded plot ... as a park." . However, the court also upheld the trial court's ruling that the 48 landown- ers who sued cannot remove Bogs' house in the park or sue for damages. It said that because more than four years have elapsed between construc- tion and complaint, the residents "can7 not now be heard to complain or de- mancrremoval of Boggs' dwelling when they failed to make timely notice of their grievance." Minutes of Court of Appeals ' FRANKFORT - The minutes of the Kentucky Court of Appeals yesterday: -f AFFIRMING HARLAN COUNTY - Buttermore et al vs. Wilson, Judge James Park Jr. , DAVIESS City,of Owensboro vs. Hughes, Judge Johk,,P. Hayes. JEFFERSON'- Paul vs, Keller Industries, Judge Charles Bruce Lester (Judge William M. Gant dissent- JEFFERSON - Wimsatt Construction Co. Inc. et it vs. Louisville Mortgage Service Co. et al, Judge J. William Howerton.; r MAGOFFIN - Adkins ef al vs. Frazier et al, Chief Judge Boyce F. Martin Jr. RUSSELL - Criswell et al vs. Andrew et al, Judge Anthony M. Wilhoif. . JEFFERSON -- Jolicoeur vs, Peake et at, Judge Elijah M. Hogge. JEFFERSON - Iron Gate Country Club vs, Lcigsdo4 et al, Wilhoit. - - " LOGAN Kemp et af vs, Kapco Inc. et al, Judge Charles H. Reynolds. LAUREL - United Road Machinery Co, vs. Jasper ef al, fudge John D. White. LEE Ashland Oil Co. et al vs, Hobbs et al, White. LAUREL - Herron et a? vs, Boggs et al; and Boggs et al vs. Herron et al; White. CNRISTIAN. - Brodie et al vs. Brodie et al, Judge Harris S. Howard. KENTON - Sebastian vs. Floyd et at, Judge Donald C. Wintersheimer. - OLDHAM - Thompson vs. Commonwealth, Hogge. UNION - Island Creek Coal Co, eta? vs. Hawkins of al, Reynolds. REVERSING FAYETTE - McIntyre eta? vs. Town Properties Inc., Park. FLOYD - United States of America vs. The Bank of Josephine et al, FAYETTE Labach vs. Clendenin, Gant. HARLAN - Caldwell vs, Yocom et al, Park, REVERSING AND REMANDING JEFFERSON - Mackey, guardian, vs. Sipes, Judge Kenton J. Cooper. JESSAMINE - Hamilton et al vt, Johnson et al, Wilhoit. FAYETTE - Leibel vs. Raynor Manufacturing CO, Howerton, OLDHAM - Sanders vs. Mesker et al, Winter- zheimer, ' JEFFERSON - Fischer Packing CO. vs. Tipton et al, Cooper. . DISMISSING APPEAL JEFFERSON - Gailor vs, Hollart et al, Lester. KNOX - Blackaby et al vs. Jackson et al. JEFFERSON - Hudson vs. Stomski, etc. OTHER JEFFERSON - Richmond, administrator, vs. Louis- ville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District et al, denying petitions for rehearing, withdrawing i original opinion and issuing new opinion, affirming n part, reversing in part, Hogge (Martin dissenting in part). fled. FFERSON - University of Louisville vs. Martin; and Martin vs. University of Louisville; opinion moat- ALLEN - Sarver et al vs, Allen County, opinion modified. , FAYETTE - Campbell vs. Commonwealth, HARDIN,- Brewer et al vs. Carson et at.. Nuclear power foes learning nonviolence t' JAN CARROLL Associated Press ENGLISH, Ind. - Borrbwing strate- gies forged during the civil rights and anti-war movements, Mark Megenity is training opponents of nuclear power in the art of non-violent protest. sMegenity, 24, a carpentry teacher at avocational school and a veteran of anti-nuclear demonstrations, launched the training program a few months ago. Milt of the participants have been members of the Paddlewheel Alliance, are,'environmental group with chapters inIndiana and Kentucky. I'm an environmentalist to begin with," he said in an interview at his par- entS' rural home near English. "I pay a lot of lip service to a lot of enviromnen- tat causes." . One of the causes is opposition to public Serviee Indiana's proposed Mar- ble, Hill nuclear generating plant, on a bluff overlooking the Ohio River near Madison Ind 31 miles upstream from ? Louisville. Through conversations with members of # food co-op in Bloorniegton, Megen- ity decided to turn his verbal support into action, and the idea ftir non-vio- lenee training was born, eFroin there, it kind of snowballed. 10 impossible to get uninvolved, espe- cially if you can see something coming Of it." he said. Megenity, who graduated from Indi- ana University in 1973 with a bachelor's degree in biology, views the anti-nucle- er movement and the non-violent ap- proach to protest as a moral imperative. ','We really feel it's morally wrong to bring substances into the environment that we're going to have to be dealing with for years,' he said. "Most, if not all, legal remedies for opposing nuclear power have been exhausted. Civil dis- obedience is about the only thing now that can put the issue of Marble Hill and nuclear power before the courts. It can put it back on a jury level and let some citizens have a say in it."' Participants in Megenity's training -Judge sets trial date for man, 19, charged m girl's- rape-murder is Jefferson Circuit Judge Charles H. Anderson yesterday set July 26 for the Alai of Lyle Kent Johnson, charged with nenider, rape and sodomy in connection with the death of Carolyn Sue Perry, 11, op Easter weekend. Johnson, 19, of the 200 block of East thlrnett Avenue, is being held in the Jet- ftrson County Jail in. lieu Of a $200,400 cash bond. "! Johnson was arrested March 27, the (ley after the girl's body was found in a seeond-floor closet of a vacant apart- lent building at 1,452 S. Brook St, had been raped and strangled, ac,Cording to police and the coroner's offite. ' IShe had been missing from her home at 1457 S. Brook St. since about 6 p.m. On. March 25. 1 ? sessions are ex0oSed to a blend Of pp, psychology and consensus politics. They are divided into affinity groups, com- posed of "people who understand their reason for being there and whci trust each other," he said. ' From there, they engage in role-play- ing, reacting to situations posed by the trainers. The first is known as the ele- phant walk, in which particip.ants are blindfolded and led through a maze by group leaders using sounds - not words - as signals. "Then a couple of provocateurs come in and knock them down and break the line apart. And those signals have to see the game through," Megenity said. "They have to understand the logistics of pulling off a direct action. If you Went to a nuclear plant, you'd be like you were blind, because you wouldn't know what to expect." Then the students are faced with lo- gistical problems: what to do if someone sprains an ankle at a demonstration, if an argument breaks out between two protesters, or if a demonstrator is beat- en during. the course of an arrest. They must think fast; the solutions are due in a matter of seconds. And there is Ile majority rule; there must be consensus among all members of the groUp on every decision. Megenity says that eliminates the problem of splinter- ing in a real demonstration. Megenity's sessions are designed not only to train participants in non-vio- lence but also to expose anyone who, might have trouble with the peaceful approach to protest. ? - "Some of them are inclined to a vio- lent action. They have romantically en- tertained the idea of sabotage," he said. "But it comes out in the role-playing. It's hard to control." The strategy faces its first test today, when the Paddlewheel Alliance plans to stage a demonstration at Madison. Megenity won't disclose how many people are expected "you never tell that, But we'd like to see a lot of people, of course," Currently, the Paddlewheel Alliance has no plans to demonstrate at the Mar- ble Hill site itself. "It could be very risky," he said. "Those workers have a lot to lose if that plant gets closed down. For them, it's a job, it's food on the table, it's clothes on their families' backs. It's a real gut feel- ing on both sides." Megenity said opposing nuclear -pow- er isn't just a left-wing cause; it cuts across all political lines. In fact, the American Legion and the city council in Tell City recently joined the Paddle- wheel Alliance to protest a nuclear dumping site in Southern Indiana; he said. "The Energy Research and Develop- ment Association was doing core drill- ing for a large radioactive waste facility 12 miles from here. The plans were well-fabricated for a high-level dump site that would accept a third of the na- tion's nuclear Waste," he said. "It's' scary when you think about it so close to home." ' Megenity said the American Legion expressed its displeasure by putting this message on a sign outside its post: "No nuke puke in Tell City." BETSY LAYNE - Charles Ray Ir- ricks, 29, died Tuesday in an auto- mobile accident in Logansport, Ind. His wife, Pamela, survives. Funeral, 11 a.m. Sunday, Tram Church of God. Visitation is at the church. BOONEVILLE - Lucy Turner Bow- man, 74, died Thursday in Manchester. Funeral, 2 pan. Sunday, Elk Lick Bap- tist, Church. Visitation at Searcy & Strong Funeral Home here will be after 4 p.m. Saturday. - BOWLING GREEN - Mrs. Yvonne Numan Smith, 46, died here Friday. Her husband, Gilbert, and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Numan, survive. Fu- neral, 2 p.m. Saturday, Arch L. Heady. Johnson Funeral Home here. BOWLING GREEN - Gene E. Park- er, 80, died Friday at his home. His wife, Dickie, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Monday, Arch L Heady Johnson Funer- al Home here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 7 p.m. Saturday. BOWLING GREEN -- A. N. Hen- dricks, 69, Route 4, Bowling Green, died here Friday. His wife, Eva, survives Funeral, 2:30 p.m: Sunday, Old Union Missionary Baptist Church. Visitation is at J. C. Kirby Funeral Home here. BOWLING GREEN -- Thomas Ches- ter White Sr., 63, formerly of Bowling' Green, died Thursday in Gainesville, Fla. His wife, Hazel, survives. Funeral, 2:30ni p,. Tuesday, I. C. Kirby Funeral Home- here. Visitation, at the funeral home will be after 6 p.m. Monday. ' BRODHEAD - Joseph Ross, 53, died Wednesday in Lexington. Funeral, 11 a.m. Saturday, Watson Funeral Home here. BROWNSVILLE - Mrs. Kate Logan Madison, 89, Route 2, Smiths Grove, died Friday in Bowling Green. Funeral, 2 p.m. Sunday, Chalybeate Baptist Church. Visitation is at Patton Funeral Horne here. CAMPBELLSVILLE - Mrs Cather- ine Morgan, 62, Finley, died here Thursday. Funeral, 1 p.m. Saturday, Our Lady of the Hills Catholic Church. Visi- tation is 'at Parrott & Ramsey Funeral Home here. DAWSON SPRINGS - Mrs. Rosa Cook, 84, died here Thursday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Saturday, Eieshear Funeral Home here. GLASGOW - John A. Williams, 86, died here Thursday. His wife, Lela, survives. Funeral, 2 pert. Saturday, A. F. Crow & Son Funeral Home here. GLASGOW - Marvin Garrett, 59, died Friday in Louisville. His wife, Tress, survives, Funeral, 2 p.m. Sunday, Grider Memorial Baptist Church. Visita- tion is at A. F. Crow & Son Funeral Home here, GREENSBURG - Mrs. Mamie Wright Cavell, 82,, died Thursday in Columbia.- Funeral,' t p.m. Saturday', Cowherd & Parrott Funerat Home here. - A ? HARLAN' Mrs- ? S411), .SieWeete .67; died Wednesday in Lincoln Parks, Mich. Funeral, 2 p.m. Saturday, Mount Pleas- , ant Mortuary here. HARLAN - William S. Hensley, 56, died Thursday in Detroit. His Mother, Mrs. Vinie Hensley, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m. Monday, Mount Pleasant Mortuary here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 1 p.m. Sunday. e HARLAN - Charles F. Clawson Nr., 79, died here Friday. His wife, Lizzie, survives. Funeral, Z p.m. Sunday, Dres? sin Church of God. Visitation at Mount Pleasant Mortuary here will be after 6 p.m. Saturday. HARRODSBURG - Mrs. Elmer Dar- land, 96, died Thursday in Louisville. 'Funeral, 11 a.m. Saturday, Alexander & Royalty Funeral Home here, HAZARD - Miss Lula M. Hale, 87, Ary, died herd Wednesday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Saturday, Homeplace Community Center in Ary. Visitation is at Engle Funeral Home here. HAZARD - Earnest Luther Pender- grass, 72, Hyden, died here Thursday. His wife, Ruth, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Monday, Engle Funeral Home here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 5 p.m. Saturday. LANCASTER - Larry Lilburis East, 28, Route 4, Lancaster, died 'Thursday of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, ae- cording to Garrard County Deputy Coro- ner Gordon C. Mcquerry. Funeral, 2 p.m. Saturday, Stith Funeral Home in Danville. LEXINGTON - Charles C. Ketron, 26Sclied Thursday in a truck accident in Ohio County. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Ketron, survive. Funeral, 10 a.m. Monday, St: Peter Catholic Church. Visitation at Kerr Brothers Funeral Home here will be after 6 p.m. Satur- day. LEXINGTON - Mrs. Velma Wal- lace, 78, died here Friday. Funeral, 1:30 p.m. Monday, Kerr Brothers Funeral Home here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 2 pen. Sunday. LEXINGTON - Mrs. Grace Jones, 75, died here Friday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Monday, Kerr Brothers Funerals Hoene here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 5 p.m. Sunday. ? LEXINGTON - Freddy Owens, 40, died Tuesday in Odessa, Wash. Funeral, 11;30 a.m. Monday, Kerr Brothers Fu- neral Home here. Visitation at the fu- neral home will be after 7 p.m. Satur- day. LEXINGTON - Mrs. Mayine Evans, 94, died here Thursday. Funeral, 10:30 a.ite. Monday, Aaron Smith Funeral Home here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 3 p.m. Sunday. ? LEXINGTON! -0', Mrs. Eddie Toliver, 79, died here Wednesday. Funeral, 1 p. in. Saturday, ,M4rtTirle,Fu1e? Home here., . e ee. s LONDON Mrs'. Dora Minton, 83, 7 died Wednesday in Scottsburg, Ind. Fu- neral, 2 pert. Saturday, & Rawl; ings Funeral Home here. Boone, Kenton, Campbell counties need one congressman, Sloane says Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. - Former Louis- ville Mayor Harvey Sloane wound up a two-week campaign tour of Northern Kentucky yesterday with the promise that, if elected governor, he would work to see that residents of Kenton, Camp- bell and Boone counties are represent- ed in a single congressional district. Sloane said in a telephone interview that many Northern Kentucky residents told him they are concerned that, un- like the other two major metropolitan areas of the state, they, don't have a uni- fied voice in Congress. He said the 1982 General Assembly and Kentucky's congressmen should Mau charged with taking pistol from security guard Louisville police have charged a 20- year-old man in connection with the robbery last Saturday of a guard at an A&P Food Store at 2421 W. Market Se Gary D. Bratcher, the guard, told po- lice that two men approached him about 4 p.m. and robbed him of his pis- tol._ Joseph M. Tuten of the 500 block North 17th Street was arrested at 7 p.m. Wednesday and charged with robbery. Police are looking for another man. have an opportunity to comment on whrch other counties should be included in the district. Northern Kentucky residents now are divided between the 6th and the 4th dis- tricts. Alan is sentenced to 20 years m death of youth at church Marion Caldwell, convicted last month of manslaughter in the death of Douglas Edward "Chipper' Flynn, was sentenced yesterday to 20 years in pris- on. Jefferson Cireuit Judge Laurence E. Higgins sentenced Caldwell, 26, of the 2400 block of Ralph Avenue, to 10 years on the manslaughter charge but added 10 years because Caldwell was also con- victed as a persistent felony offender. Flynn, 15; was killed by a shot fired from a passing car while he stood out- 'side the Ralph Avenue Baptist Church, 2900. Ralph Ave., after a church meet- ing Oct. 6. Caldwell was arrested after police re- ceived two anonymous tips linking his car to one seen at the scene of the shooting. Caldwell's attorney, Aubrey Williams, has said he will appeal the conviction, MAYFIELD - Mrs. Paesy Jones, 41, died Friday in Paducala after an illness. Her husbapd, Jimmy, survives. Funeral, 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Roberts Funeral Home here. MAYFIELD - Mrs. Ruth Griffin, 81, died Friday in Owensboro. Funeral, 3 pin. Saturday, Roberts Funeral Home here. MONTICELLO - Mrs. Wanda Jean Boston, 30, died Wednesday in Somer- set after a short illness. Her husband, Tom, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Satur- day, Richard Lee Funeral Home here. MONTICELLO - Charles Fred Poe, 82, died Thursday at his home. His wife, Lula, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Sunday, United Methodist Church in Cabell. Visi- tation at Richard Lee Funeral Home here will be after 3:30 p.m. Saturday. MORGANTOWN - Calbert W. Saunders, 54, died Friday in Bowling Green. His wife, Moreen, survives. Fu- neral, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Smith Funeral Home here. - MURRAY - George Roscoe Dixon, 80, died Friday in Mayfield. Funeral; 1, p.m, Sunday, I. H. Churchill Funeral Home here. - OWENSBORO -- The funeral for Mrs. Minnie 0. Jarnigan, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at Haley-McGinnis Fie, neral Home here. She died Thursday., OWENSBORO - Mrs. Bonnie T. Dawson, 59, died here Thursday. Funer- al, 1 pan. Monday, Haley-McGinnis Fu- neral Home here. PADUCAH - Conley Broyles, 79, died here Thursday. Funeral, 3 p.m. Saturday, Roth Funeral Home here. PADUCAH -- Mrs. Floy Fay Nelson, 74, died here Thursday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Sunday, Roth Funeral Home here. PADUCAH - James Wurth, 63, died here Friday. His wife, Glenna, survives. Funeral, 9:30 a.m. Monday, St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church. Visitation is at Roth Funeral HOme here. PADUCAH - Mrs. Lottie Boyle, 79, died lterffi Thursday. Funeral, .3 1)-111- Saturday', Lindsq Funeral Herne here. PADUCAH - Mrs. Vettie Vick, 74, died here Friday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Satur- day, Fendley-Barker & Harris Funeral Home here. PIKEVILLE - Earl Lynch, 72, for- merly of Pikeville, died June 6 in High- land Park, Mich. Funeral, 2 p.m, Sun- day, Baker Funeral Home here, RICHMOND - Miss Mossie Lynton Stocker, a former teacher, died Friday at her home. Funeral, 10 a.m. Monday, Oldham, Roberts & Powell Funeral Home here. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 2 p.m. Sunday. RUSSELL SPRINGS - Henry. Clay Hatfielde.77 Jebez, died Thursday in Somerset. His wife; Retta; survives- Fu- neral, 1 p.m. Sunday, Bernard Funeral Horne here.e see- -- : , ? ?? - SCIENCE HILL - Mrs. Della Den- , ton, 57, died Friday at her home. He husbands Lloyd, survives. Funera0 p.m. Saturday, Morris & Hislope Funer- al Home here. SOMERSET - Esau Phillips, 89, died here Thursday. His wife, Delia, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Saturday, Som- erset Undertaking Co. here. WILLIAMSBURG - Ronnie Wa 21, Newport, died Sunday in a boatin accident in the Ohio River near Cincin- nati, His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Je$Seci Walden, survive. Funeral, II a.m. Saturday, Croley Funeral Home here. "A e e-- ..ess Metcalfe County mai.:.="! killed in accident with logging truck A 25-year-old Metcalfe County died last night at Louisville Generale Hospital after he Was involved in a car- truck crash near his home yesterday afternoon. Donnie Hurt, of Edmonton, died-ilf. head injuries, according to Jeffersik County Deputy Coroner Lloyd Woelee , man. . ,Keptucky State Police at Columbla said the accident occurred at 3:30 pb. (CDT) on KY 640, one mile north U.S. 68. Police said Hurt's car northbound when it rounded a sharp curve and crossed into the southbotincle lanes, colliding with a logging triislee driven by James Dial. e? Dial, 35, of Route 3, Edmonton, and his 12-year-old Son, Timothy, were treat- ed at the Glasgow Community Hospital and released. No charges were filed in connectais with the accident. sees( Hurt's body was taken tie the Butter see-. Funeral Home in Edmonton. WEIKEL _ REAL ESTATE SCHOOL:', Preporatioa for Stole Esont FOR SALESMAN'S LICENSte" Morning Of Evening, , START NOW 459-6636 WATTERSON TOWER* ?=`' 1939 BISHOP 4101 r ******************* ; 3 MONTHS VACATION IFOII ONLY 489 I(Family of 4) Enjoy Olympic Pool, Free Swimming Lessons, Tennis, & Volleyball in Country Club Surroundings NO ENTRANCE FEE 4* For Details 969-9696 70' .4,6' .0449 qwei edw.oppeea ********************, 3-- FACTORY SALESROOM tits PLANTSIDE DR. 491-8547 BLUEGRASS INDUSTRIAL PARK 1-64 8 HURSTBOURNE LN. DIXIE HIGHWAY SALESROOM 4747 DIXIE HGWY. 447-2020 SAME SERVICE AT BOTH LOCATIONS OPEN MON.-SAT. 'Tit. 430 P.M. The Help Line is a list of telephone numbers of local organizations that are ready to give you help or advice any hour of the day or night on 'a variety of problems. Help Line runs twice weekly in the Family section. The Louisville Times Fantastic Fins with Fantastic the Largest Lighted Glass Dance Floor In the US. NO COVER S NO JEANS * DRESS SHARP 964-1590 969-96964 It's All Hoppening at 104-esestestesee, V4,14 Ved, 7 Does the Times' Sports Hot Line answer personal questions about sports figures tlIP This peppy column by veteran sportswriters Mickey Herskowitz and Steve Perkins offers personal, provocative, sometimes funny and always alk reliable information"' Read Sports Hot Line every Wednesday and Saturday in The Loyisville Times INK C. V. Myers & Howard Ruff Will the crash have a silver lining? C.V. Myers Says a depression leen the way. And he ' ' If thinks silver is the best way to come out of it ahead, He's _; been right before, when he told people to buy gold long before the price skyrocketed. So join Howard J. Ruff and 'j lend him an ear. ee Returning is Albert J. Lowry, who went from rags to Ruf f !louse: , ,, riches in real estate,, .. and says you can, too. it,75/WEJUS1141/1? 3 li Channel 41, Saturday at 10 P.M. Pets Galore 25091 Grinstecid Drive WANTS TO BE YOUR PET SHOP! lee r Over 160 stocked fresh and salt water tanks on display FREE FISH or LIVE PLANTS with the purchase of a complete aquarium set, any size. We will ? stock it for you. ???????? PARKING PETS. GALORE 0 GALORE low GRINSTEAD DRIVE Shopping hours 9 fo 9 Monday thry Friday, 9,t? 6 Saturday, 7 to 6 Sunday Grooming hours 8 to 5 Monday thrto Saturday 452-152 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 136 TliE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1978 iss America: Staff Photo by mark Lyons Susan Perkins: "I'm no Raquel Welch." By BRUCE BULIISIA. ,Couritiennarrial Staff Writer ;JPZAREfl, Ky. ? Once there were ' of them, and they Were younger full of hope. lit the, Roman Catholic Sisters of rity of Nazareth, whose General As- bly is in session here this week, measured the signs of the future ?d they are entering it unafraid. We new know we are not in this . ," says Sister Barbara Lawler' Mas, Superior General at the Naze- Motherhouse here. "We are fewer ia number, and Maybe this is the way. ngth is not always in numbers. I inSt smtFifl awe of our common dreams and f mission." dreams Spirit o . e"dreams for the community, as, e.Qressed here this week, are shaped a...pew spirit of cooperafient_ forged. oiLof. a growing sense of Istnitatienys:s Jlie Sister i of CharityY of Azateilt,' founded near here 166 years, ago by " :Catherine Spalding, has Siitfered?.the,f same fate as virtually, all other Romaft' Cholic religious orders: Fewer men Uy JOE WARD courier-Journal Staff Writer Susan Perkins believes in the wom- en's movement and the Equal Rights Amendment, but she doesn't have any- thing against the Miss America Pageant. Contrary to what some women's lead- ers have sisp,gested, she said yesterday, it is not true that the pageant is an ex- ploitation of women, that Miss Americas are chosen for their bodies. ? ? She said she's living proof of that. "If that were true, I sure wouldn't be here," she said. "I'm no Raquel Welch. And some of those other girls were." Actually, she said, Miss Americas are chosen for their talent ? in some enter- tainment field, such as singing -- for their speaking ability and poise, and for their bodies. She said some people say the swim- ming-suit competition in the pageant iS a measure of poise and bearing, but that's "bunk." "That's the physical aspect of it," she said. It wasn't her "favorite part of the competition," but she showed up in the suit only for about two minutes and she "didn't find it extremely painful." She's not ashamed of having done it Actually, she said, why should she be? Psychologists have known for years "that people respond more positively to an average build." Appearance is con- sidered for many jobs. "What about modeling?" she asked. "Should we abol- ish modeling? That would be ridicu- lous." What it boils down to, she said what the Miss America, judges really are looking for ? is an indication that the candidate can "do the job." "The job" is going around the country doing interviews with the media, mak- ing appearances on stage and television, and delivering a lot of impromptu speeches, all without botching any and embarrassing the sponsors. If you don't do well in the private interview with the judges, your looks in a bathing suit won't do much for you, she suggested. She said most of the women who criti- cize the pageant don't understand it. ' They are in favor of opportunities for women, aren't they? Well, the Miss America pageant has to be one of the .better opportunites around. The winner gets a $20,000 scholarship ? for openers ? to be used essentially as she sees fit. Then she has a crack at up to $80,000 in public-appearance fees, depending on how many appearances can be lined up. And she gets a lot of public exposure, as it were, which can be prieeless if her ambitions run toward entertainment, the media or politics. Miss Perkins' ambitions run toward some of those things. She got into the pageant in the first'place because of an interest in singing, rather than because she dreamed as a little girl of being Miss America. She thought it would be "a great way to start a career." On her first try, she was runner-up in the Miss Ohio contest and got three job offers. She also found out the pageant is not a one-shot deal. "The girl who won, had been in it three times. So I said, 'Oh. So that's how you do it.'," She was graduated from college thet year, and she took a job with the Repub- lican caucus in the Ohio legislature ? both because she believes in 'Republi- canism and because "it would be terrif- ic on a resume for the pageant." The next time around, she found an "open pageant" ? which anybody can enter ? at Urichsville, Ohio', and sent her spruced-up resume in. She's from Middletown. That time was a charm. She's had one chance at national show business ? the .Donnie & Marie Show ? and a lot of public appearances, many of them for political events. She hopes te use it all as a spring- board to a job in the media ? as host for a talk show, ideally. She'd like to use that as a springboard into politics some day. If that doesn't work out ? or even it it does -- she has the $20,000 scholar- ship money to study speech or dance or voice. She thinks her prospects are good for a woman of 24. ? Actually, Miss Perkins is not what you'd call a flaming libber ? if you'd want to call anybody that. She supports the ERA, but not the proposed extension of the time limit on getting it through the states. .-ntt.t:fiher.,.,btt-r. not OedieLitiOrt. and women are willing to make a life. tlont commitment to a religious Niece io - .. And so, for this year's 'General As- sembly at Nazareth, the sisters fOr the first time have invited people outside theorder --- including 10 American Ro- maneatholic bishops', more than a doz- en priests and a handful of Protestant clergymen ? to participate in the delib- erations. The sessions, which attracted 300 sis- ters and more than 100 "outsiders," con- clude today. Dpring the week, the sisters have heard a call to an even deeper mission to the world's disadvantaged and dispos- sessed, to live simply and act justly, to implore otters to walk the same path. "The pelted in which the leadership rests solely with bishops and clergy and religious is passing- away, says Sister Marr Ransom Burke, the editor of the community's newspAper, SCNews. "The laity is becoming more interested in the Work of the church': There is collabora- tion at last." - Such an egalitarian notion has long received lip service from the hierarchy of the worldwide Roman Catholic com- munion. But only since the Second Vati- can cOuncil in the 1060s have there been indications that the laity is fully being encouraged to assume its share of ecclesiastical responsibilities. "Now we are seeing a pioneer Spirit again, a willingness to risk, to explore frontier needs," says Sister Barbara Thomas. The new frontier for the religious or- der here haa moved out beyond the wil- derness of 19th-century Kentucky into the poverty and (stinger of 20th-century India and Central America, Its 1,200 sisters are now scattered throughout the world, conducting the or- der's traditional ministries Of education, health care, social 'services, communi- cations and pastoral care. , . We have come to the day of reckon- ing," said Sister Marie Augusta Neel, a professor of sociology at Emmanuel College in Boston qnd he keynote speaker at the General Assembly. "The prophetic role of the Church' calls for the' liberation of the oppressed. We he due to The Cheap Detective' to regard it as light summer 'fun By WILLIAM MOOTZ courier-Journal Critic , ..Neil Simon must have enjoyed poking 01?1) at old movie thrillers in his,?"Mpr- 44:.by' Death.", He's' back at the sama- g4Me in "The Cheap DefectiVe.o.? which: ?rived yesterday at Showcase CiriernaS, rthe results this time are even sit- 0, ,I.in beginning to develop a theory, A out Neil Simon and these gumshoe capers. He writes them, I'm convinced, (Vicl himself of all the puns he's had to itstOcard from his more serious work for emema and stage. ,...ss esRight at the beginning of "The Cheap etective," you see, there's a shot of a rbage can. It's apparently piled high w ? debris cast aside by wastrels flee- 0-Wasted lives. vs-ofitit I wonder if, lurking there sytn- WiCally, among the other rot, aren't owe gags Simon once pared from his roadway hits. ".Somewhere deep inside Neil Simon th-ere's a Mel Brooks trying to fight his . way out. "The Cheap Detective" is going t st wow the same crowds that loved ;TO Anxiety." It's a lot better movie, osk s.ss Movie review and Simons humor is of a higher polish than Breolts" lowbrow slapstick. But Simon is on Brooks' wave length in "The Cheap Detective," even if the results are more genial and clever than any of Brooks' recent fiascos. If someone ? handed the original screenplays of "Casablanca," "The Mal- tese Falcon," and "The Big Sleep" to an editor of Mad magazine and told him to compress the three into one story line, something like "The Cheap Detective" might be the result. So we get Peter Falk back from "Murder by Death," again giving his Bo- gie imitation as a down-at-the-heels de- tective in San Francisco. San Francisco has just been invaded by the Nazis (the time, of course, is the late 1930s), and they, like' everybody else in the movie, are after some pre- cious jewels, stolen centuries ago by 12 Albanian fishermen ? after they con- quered the whole of Mongolia and Ti- bet. he steely eyed Peter Falk makes like his namesake in The Cheap Detective," a put-on of a ' put-ori e!, a ... Something like this, at any rate, is go- ing on in "The Cheap Detective." It's hard to be entirely certain. The whole movie, however, is merely an excuse to give Hollywood headlinerS of today a chance to trot out their party parodies of illustrious stars from .Holly- wood's golden era. Simon gives them lots of corny lines to dress up their acts. When a telephone rings, Falk picks it up and in his best Bogie lisp says, "Oh, hi, Georgia. I guess I must have had you on my mint" Yeah, I know, that one's pretty low. But I don't* want to spoil your fun by giving away Simon's best laughs. Take my word for it, though, that some of them are nicely turned, And the performances are invariably fun. Madeline Kahn's around as a wom- an of so many aliases she can't remem- ber her real name. Sometimes she in- sists she's Norma Shearer or Barbara Stanwycks but she's really Mary Astor. Eileen Brennan hilariously spoofs the world-weafiness that Lauren Bacall wore as a trademark in her early mov- ies, and Louise Fletcher is awesomely noble as an Ingrid Bergman determined to sacrifice her happiness to save the world. - Ann-Margret, Stockard Channing, Dom DeLuise, John Housemann, James Coco, and Sid Caesar are among the others who bring back memories of the old Warner Bros. stock company. They obviously enjoy teaming up with Simon to irreverently open a door on a cine- matic past not quite beyond recall. They make "The Cheap Detective" a slight, pleasant summer diversion. Rated PG: An occasional raunchy in- nuendo, but compared to most films these days, this is a pure G flick. Police artists' drawings help COI1N let criminals WASHINGTON (AP) ? Sketches made by police artists after talking to witnesses have helped put hundreds of criminals behind bars, according to Na- tional Geographic. It says, "so convincing are some ? sketches that the mere sight of them has helped convict criminals." Donald C. Cherry, police artist in the District of Columbia, says a good wit- ness for him is not only the person with a good memory, but the individual with whom he can establish easy rapport during an interview. Says Cherry, "It's the person open to suggestion, who can let the mind wander a little, so it can produce those fleeting memories of fea- tures, expressions, affectations." must ask: Where is the institutional church, and where should it be? Where are the sisters, and where should they be?" The answers were heard resounding- ly all week. The church and the sisters, they said, must be more effective agents of evangelization. "Evangelizing is the grace and voca- tion proper to the church, her deepest Identity," proclaimed Pope Paul VI in a 1975 Apostolic Exhortation. And eariier this spring in Chicago, U. S. Catholic bishops embarked on a , The cut-off doesn't put any "time lim- - it on justice," as some have suggested, she said. If the amendment fails this time, which she thinks it will, women should "re-introduce it ? try again." She'll work for it, she,said. She believes women Should be corpo- ration executives if they can handle the Job, but she doesn't like "radical femin- ists who look down on housewives." , She admires Anita Bryant's "courage" in her campaign against public accep- tance of homosexuality. But she thinks Miss Bryant "got herself into something she couldn't get out of" on the issue. , "I don't think homosexuality is natu- ral, but I don't have all the answers," she said. "I don't want to judge seme- body else." Miss Perkins admires Republican politicians, and believes in a certain amount of pragmatism. Ronald Reagan, she said, "may be a bit of an extrem- ist," but he did a good job in California and deserves admiration for it Gerald Ford, she thinks, may well be the next president. She thinks "people were too hard" on Richard Nixon. "It's terrible that he lied," but "he was no worse than a lot of other politicians." She doesn't think that's any reason to stay away from politicians or out of politics. "If everybody backs off, what are we left with?" she asked. Miss Perkins was in Louisville for an - appearance last night at the Miss Ken- tucky Pageant. new program of evangelization, direct- ed at the nation's 80 million un- churched, 12 million of whom are disen- franchised Roman Catholics. "The Pope has put a strong emphasis on witness and personal conversion," says Sister Mary Lynn Fields, who heads up the Belize, Central America, mission for the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. "We don't want to make ev- eryone a Roman Catholic. We simply want to bring people in touch with God. We want to empower people ? all peo- ple ? tO share their faith." ? FOR 1NFORmATION OR RESERVATIONS CALL: 606-986-9331 OR (Tall Free in KY) 800-262-7471 OR WRITE: WILDERNESS ROAD, CPO 2355, BEREA, KY 40404 THE ? STORY UNDER TOE STARS America's Favorite Outdoor Musical E3ARDSTOWN, KENTUCKY :1).7-..30 P.M. EDT NIGHTLY foicepi Mays (Juno NY. Sept FOR FlialtVATIONS: Louisville Me1'ro Area ? TOLL TRLk: 584 2254 ? An Others Dari (502) 348 5971 " Only 5O Minutes from Louisville Via 165 (take KY 245 to Bardstown) ' Follow the signs. , TON IT thru TUES. BOX 0 filtE 0 ENS $ P. HISPAOSatia ?mu, KEMN000 RATIO K' SOFRO* OP el WNW)I 054 movie ? ?? ? ? . . ._. . (R) v (PG) . . . . KING KONG CIKK& JANE (PG) : (PG) ? ? PKAY 01 FTN &Ain.. us ? 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Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 B8' THE COURIER.JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978' Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Stocks down 4.68 See Page B 9 Teamsters chief.Sa S inflatioi will....d.etertnioe:. wage..-:donatids From New York Times and AP Dispatches WASHINGTON - Teamsteri Presi- dent Frank Fitzsimmons, accusing the White House of snubbing him, said yes- terday that his union will show wage restraint at the bargaining table only if the government curbs rising prices first. "Wage restraint alone is not going to beat inflation," Fitzsimmons said. His liniOn? negotiates contracts for more than 750,000 workers next year. , -.He added at a news conference that any' union bargainer who tries to re- strain wages in negotiations without tak- mg into account the rising cost of living "is crazy." Fitzsimmons attacked White House eC000mic advisers for ignoring the na- tion's largest union while trying to win pledges from other large unions to sup- port President Carter's anti-inflation program. . I haven't been contacted officially from the administration since the presi- dent took office . . No call, no invita- tion, nothingr said Fitzsimmons, whose 2-million member union has been the subject of numerous federal investiga- tions into alleged corruption. - "I think that if I was president of the United States and I had this problem, I would talk to the janitor if I, had to," he said. He said inflation is caused, by high Net prices, deficit spending, high inter est rates, trade deficits and tax in- creases. ' The administration has asked most major industries and unions to support the voluntary anti-inflation program. The Teamsters begin bargaining late this year on three national trucking agreements that expire next March. The pacts cover 500,000 workers and set the pattern for other agreements cover- ing another 250,000 to 500,000 Team- sters. Asked if the Teamsters will ignore Carter's wage guidelines, Fitzsimmons said, "We don't mean to be Johnny out- step. We will do anything that anybody else does," Last month, AFL-CIO President George Measly' said organized labor would not bargain for smaller wage in- creases in upcoming negotiations unless the administration first succeeds in 'slowing price rises. In a prepared statement on inflation yesterday, Fitzsimmons called on the administration "to put the brakes on in- flation," which has been, running at an annual rate of about 10 percent. "If inflation continues at the current high level,'when we go to the bargain- ing table we will adjust or demands accordingly to protect our members from its effects," Fitzsimmons said. "While this may disappoint those who think that Teamster families should pay the cost of inflation, it is simply unrea- sonable to, in effect, double tax our members for something over which they have absolutely no control," he ad- ded. During the conference, Fitzsimmons was asked about allegations that his union_ was jnYolVed in racketeering, ne- gotiated "sweetheart" Contracts and that he and other Union officials were paid excessive salaries. He replied that the Teamsters' mas- ter freight contract had been approved by an overwhelming majority of the union and that his salary, which an aide Associated Press The laugh's on whom? Trades issues between Japan and the United States were the topic when Ford Motor Co. Chairman Henry Ford II, left, met with Eiji Toyota, president of Toyota Motor Co. yesterday H. at the Toyota plant near Na- goya, Japan. said was about $156,000 a year plus ex- penses, was lower than that of corpo- rate executives. As for racketeering, he said that the union had been "investigated from hell to high water" and challenged the Jug- tice Department to "indict and pros- etute us" if it had the evidence. He also denied that the Teamsters' Central States Pension Fund, which has been under extended investigation, owed money and wou,ld have to take part of the nein wage increase.' Ile did concede, however, that the fund shows a number of loans in default. ticker tape From Dow Jonet and AP Dispatches KU profits down, A drop in profits in the 12 months ended May 31 was reported by Ken- tucky. Utilities Co. The Lexington firm had net income of $16.84 million, equal to $1.38 a common share, on revenue of $283.89 million, compared with net in- come of $24.81 million, or $2.52 a com- mon share, on revenue of $233.27 mil- lion in the previous 12 months. Coal production up Soft-coal production in the week end- ed June 17 rose to 13.675 million tons from 15.395 million tons the week be- fore and 15.305 million tons in the year- earlier week, the National Coal Associ- ation reported. However, coal prOduc- tion this year, is below the comparable 1977 period because of the 110-day, min- ers' strike that ended'March 25. LG&E plans stock sale Louisville Gas & Electric Co. plans to sell 250,000 preferred shares of stock on Tuesday through conwetitive bids. The proceeds will be used to retire short- term debt linked to new construction. 97 F-15s oredered The Air Force yesterday announced the award of 'a $980.8 million contract Last year, the government forced Fitzsimmons and several other union of- ficers to resign as trustees of the Cen- tral States pension fund. In February, the Labor Department sued Fitzsim- mons and 17 other former trustees for millions of dollars that the government alleged were lost by the fund because of bad loans. Finally, Fitzsimmons denied reports he was planning to retire and said that, on the contrary, he planned to run again for president of the union in 1981. Before Fitzsimmons's news confer- ence, Pete Carnarata, a leader of a dis- sident teamster group, Teamsters for a Democratic Union, announced that he planned to run for the presidency of the union. Camarata, 31, a truck loader from Detroit, charged that Fitzsimmons and other union officials engaged in "sweetheart deols'' with employers at the expense of rank and file members. "All they do iS take the money and run," he said. Teamsters for a Dentocratic Union is one of several dissident Teamster groups seeking to oust Fitzsimmons. Associated Press Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons said yesterday that de- spite President Carter's plea that labor help decelerate inflation, his union, the largest in the nation, wonld, not moderate wage demands "until the time comes when government can assure, Teamsters that inflation is under control." to McDonnell Douglas Corp. of St. Louis for production of 97 F-15 jet fighter planes this fiscal year. The contract alsO covers advance buys of materials to be used in produc- tion of F-15s next fiscal year, as well as a variety of supporting equipment. The Air Force plans a total 6f 729 F-' 15s, of which more than 254 hive been delivered so far. Muse restores AmtraI cuts The House yesterday approved a stay of execution for more than 4ne-third of the Amtrak passenger rad network, which, Transportation Secretary Brock Adams wants to cut. The bill, passed 204 to 89, keeps 8,100 miles of passenger track and service in the system that Adams proposed to cut from the 27,000-mile network. ' Adams Said Amtrak deficits could soar to $1 billion by 1984 if the route structure is not trimmed. Auto sales soar again Auto sales kept up their breathless pace in mid-June, shattering by 11.8 percent the record set a year ago, U.S. automakers reported yesterday. Ford Motor Co. and General. Motors Corp. again set records for the period. For domestic manufacturers as a group icultural markets Chicago futures Futures contracts are commitments by traders to buy or sett commodities by a specified future date, normally at the end of the contract month. Only a few per cent of contracts actually leads to delivery of a commodity. The others are cancelled prior to that time. Traders move in and out of the markets to balance their positions, offsetting a commitment to buy or sell a commedity by assuming a similar commit- r,nent to sell or, buy the same item. Futures prices provide market "guesses" about where prices are headed. The prices quoted are for contract months and, can be roughly translated into price levels expected by traders at those times. . . Open High Low Close Cho WHEAT . 5,0(10 bu.; dollars per NI. 'Jul 3.27 3.233/4 1191/2 1211/4 -.011/4 Sets 3.26 3.261/2 3.211/2 1231/2 -.011/2 Dec 3.301/2 3.32'2 3271/2 3.2934 -.0034 Mar 3.321/4 3.331/4 3.28 3.28 -.023/4 .May 3.30 3.301/2 3.26 3.26 -.021/4 Jul 3.19 3.22 3.18 3.18 -.0214 ; Sales Thur.: 11,275. , Total open interest Thur. 34,629, off 330 ,from Wed. CORN . 5,000 bu.; dollars per bu. Jul , . 2.59 2601/2 257? 2.5734 -.0134 Sep 2.60 2.62 2.5814 2.5832-0132 Dee 2.621/2 2.633/4 2.601/4 2.62 -.0034 Mar 2.681/2 2.71 247 2.6834 -.01 May, 2.7234 2.74 2,70,/2 2.72 ---.003/4 'Jul 2.74 2.74' 2.72, 2 2.72's -.0034 t Sales Thur.: 28,631. ' ?Total open interest Thur. 127,145, off 2,- 547 from Wed. , OATS 5,000 bu.; dollars per bu . !Jul . 1.35 1.35 1.333/4 1.34 -.011/2 .5eat 1411/4 1.411/4 1.3934 1.40 -.01V2 ,prec 1.4634 1.47 i 1.4514 1.46 -.011/2 ?Mar 1.4? 1.501/2 1.49 1.501/2 -.0114 May 1.511/2 -.011/2 , Sales Thur.; 838. , Total open interest Thur. 4,264,off 9 ? , :front Wed. ,SCIYBEANS 5,000 bu.; dollars Per bu. , ,Jul6.84 ? 6.91 6,76; 6,79 7-.07,2 ,Aug . 6.72 / 6.761/2 6.66' 6.69'4-.021/4 el),, 6.63 6.51 6.47- 6 531/2 +.0314 ,Nov 6.29 6.391/2 6.284 6.354 +.071/4 :Jan, 6.34 6.43 6.33 6.391/2 +.07 Mar 6.40 6.50 6.391/2 6.46 .1-.07 May 6.44 6.53 6.44 6.50 +.08!4 'Jul 6.47 6521/2 6.47 6.50 , +.09 ' Sales Thur: 29,790. ' Total open interest Thur. 97,911, off 671 from Wed. . )CED BROILERS .30,000 lbs.; cents per lb. 'Jun 52.50 52.50 52.25 52.50 + .80 49.40 50.05 49.40 49.55 + .20 46.80, 47.20 46.80 46.82 + .22 44.201 44.20 44.20 44.20- + .70 42.70 42,85, 42.60 42.60 + .30 41.25 41.85 41.15 41.85 + .80 42.65 + .55 43.00 43.09 42.40 42.40 + .23 604. ' interest Thur. 3,109, off 59 ',Jul 'Aug 'Sets Oct Nov Dec :Jan , Sales Thur. , Tota/ open ,frorn Wed. SOYBEAN 60,000 lbs.; Jut Aug Sep Oct Dec Jan Mar May Jul Sales Thur. Total open from Wed. SOYBEAN MEAL 100 tons; dollars per ton Jul Aug Sep Oct Dec Jan Mar May Jul Sales Thur, Total open from Wed. OIL cents per lb. ' 25.40 25.85 24.75 25.20 24.10 24.60 23.40 24.00 22.65 23.45 22.55 23.20 22.40 23.00 22.20 22.90 22.10 22.65 10,050. interest Thur. LIVE 40,000 Aug Oct Dec Jan Feb Apr Jun Aug 'Oct EsTottt 124 from Wed, 25.30 25.55 24.74 24.97 24.10 24.52 23.40 23.97 22.65 23.30 22.55 23.02 22.40 22.93 22.20 22.85 22.10 22.63 + ,12 + 30 + .47 + .60 + .70 + .70 + 68 + .80 + .71 PORK BELLIES' 36,000 lbs.; cents per lb. Jul 51.65 52.20, 50.05 Aug 50.60 51.20 :49.15 Feb 54.27 54.27 54.27 Mar 53.40 53.40 53.40 May Jul Aug Est. sales: 6,093; sales Thur. 5,891. Total open interest Thur. 10,372, down 303 from Wed. 53,360, off 148 ? , 1Ltvestock markets Federal-State Market News Service (Quotations are in cents per pound) LOU. 1NOPLS. E.ST.I... HOGS Receipts 1,000 3,000 Price- Trend Steady Off 1/2 1,2,3 (210-240 lbs.) . 471/2-48 47-471/2 . , Peak 481/2 473/4 Sows (400-550 lbs.) 38-40 391/2-41 50.85 + .0/ 49.67 + .3 54.27 +2.0 53,40 +2.00 53.25 +2.00 53.25 +2.00 51.00 +2.00 175.50 176.00 172.60 173.30 -2.90 175.00 175.90 173.00 173.90 -2.00 175.00 175.90 173.50 174.20 -1.70 172,00 174.00 171.50 172.60 - .10 169,50 172.00 169.50 170.70 + .50 - 171.50 172.00 170.50 170.60 + '.60 , 172.00 173.50 172.00 172.50 + .70 174.50 175.00 173.50 .173.50 + .70 174,00 174.50 174,00 174.20 +1.20' 11,780. interest Thur. 52,443, off 67 Oven High Low Close Cho BEEF CATTLE lbs.; cents per lb. 49.00 50.20 08.60 49.35 - .25 48.50 49,40 47.60 48.87 + .95 49.20 50.45 48.95 50.40 +1.45 49.32 50.82 49.32 50.82 +1.50 50.10 51.20 49.90 51.20 +1.50 50.75, 51.97 50.60 51.97 +1.50 51,50 52.60 51.50 52.60 +1.50 51.10 52.60 51.10 52.60 +1.50 , 51.20 52.40 51.20 52.40 +1.50 sales; 32,279; sales Thur. 3,348. open interest Thur. 77,098, down FEEDER CATTLE ? 42,000 lbs.; cents per lb. Aug , 55.00 57.20 55.00 56.97 - Sep 54.00 56,47 54.00 56.47 Oct, " 54.70 56.20 54.70 56.20 hipv ' 55.25 56 50 55.05 56.50 Jan 51.05 58.80 57.05 58.80 Mar 58.60 59.45 58.50 59.45 Apr 58.75 60.05 58.75 60.05 May ' 58.47 59.97 58.70 59.97 Est. sales: 1,919; sales Thur. 577, Total open interest Thur. 17,572, 252 ? from Wed. LIVE HOGS 30,000 lbs,; cents per lb. Jul ' Aug Oct Dec Feb Apr Jun +1.27 +1.50 +1.50 +1.50 +1,50 +1.50 +1.50 +1.50 down 47.90 48.15 4750' 47.95'+1.30 45.20' 45.20 44.65 45.20 +1.50 41,85 41.85 41.85 41 85 +1.5.... 42.92 42.92 42.92 '42.92, +1.50 41.92 41.92 41.92 41,92' +1.50, 39.70 39.70 39.701 39.70 .+150, 40.90 40.90 40,90 40.90 "+1 50 41.10 +1.50 Aug 38 50 ' +1.50 Est, sales: 2,617;, sales Thur. 7,622. Total open interest Thur. 16,790, down ,105 from Wed. , Cash grain prices (Prices per Thisbe? Louisville Ohio Valley Penryrile CORN No. 2Y 2.46-2.47 2.38-2.44 2.38.2.55 CORN No. 2W 2.80 2.85-2.90 SOYBEANS No, 1Y 45.79-6,791/2 6.70-6.73 6.40-6.70 WHEAT No. 2SRW 3.06 2.96-3.09 2.91-3.00 OATS No. 2W 1.94-1.96 --- .1i1ARLEY No. 2 1.80 1.65 . ' Purchase Chicago Indpis. CORN No, 2Y 2.40-2.45 2.50-2.54 2.24-2.32 SOYBEANS No, lY 6.57-6.63 6.76 6.57-668. WHEAT No. 2SRW 2.80-3.06 3.1714 2,80-2.90 OATS No. 2W - 1.44 , 1.50 MILO (cwt.) 3.50 ---- ---- Opening contract prices for corn and soybeans Jun* Through July; wheat for July delivery.' Wheat for 1971 crop. , GRAIN: Louisville Ohio Valley CORN No. 2Y 2,46 2.38-2.44 SOYBEANS No. lY 6.79-6,791/2 6.70-6.73 WHEAT - 101-3.06 3.09 Penristrile Purchase Area WHEAT No. 2 ' 2.94-2,96 - 2.80-3.06 , Kentucky farm weather , Sunshine: Will average 30 percent west and 50 to 60 percent east today and 40 to 50 percent over the state tomorrow, precipitation amounts: Will average '4-inch with spotty amounts to 114 inches in the west today and '4- to 34i-nch over the rest of the state through tomorrow. Humidity range: Humidities will increase to greater than 80 percent toward sunrise this arid tumor 'ow mornings and decrease to 50 to 60 percent during the afternoons today and tomorrow. Harvesting conditions: Good in the east today but risky in the west due to showers and thundershowers. Harvesting will be risky over the entire state tomorrow as the showerS spread to the east Soil temperatures; Are no* averaging in the mid ? to upper 70s and will change IMIe through tomorrow. Livestock weather safety index: Will reach the mar- ginal category over ihe entire state today and will climb into the danger category in the afternoon in the west today and over the entire state tomorrow' it was the second straight record 10-day sales period. Chrysler Corp, reported that the sales rate for its new Plymouth Horizon and Dodge Otani jumped 21 percent fron1 levels earlier this month. - Pet ogress to takeover Pet Inc. yesterday dropped its opposi; tion to a takeover by IC Industries and agreed to a revised public offer of $55 a share for all of the firm's outstanding stOck. In a joint statement the firms also agreed that the Chicago-based IC and St. Louis-based pet will negotiate to ac- quire Hardee's Food Systems Inc. of Rocky Mount, N.C. based fast-food chain. May U.S. deficit $1.7 billion The government feCordd a deficit of $1.7 billion in May, bringing the total, deficit so far this. fiscal year to $49.7 billion, the Treasifry Department said yesterday. - The Treasury Department did not re-' vise its estimate of .a fiscal year deficit of $53 billion. State to help farmers battle beetle invasion Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. - Some central Kentuckians are going to get state help to battle an invasion of Japanese bee- tleS. ' - - - ' That's, not a new. kind of small import-, ed, car or the latest international rock band, but a plague of shiny gfeen in- Seets-4- Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner Themes Harris promised yesterday to spend $15,000 to fight the insects, and he said he's also asked for federal aid because it appears that problems with the pests may be even greater this year than last. Japanese beetles destroyed hundreds of acres of the central Kentucky corn crop last summer, reducing yields by 5 percent to 100 percent in some fields, Harris said. While Harris IS optimistic that the beetles-,can be controlled with insecti- cide, he is pessimistic about the cost, noting that farmers may have to spray more than Once. "You're talking about $7 an acre," he said. "If they have to spray three or four times, there goes the profit." ' Harris said he has not decided how to allocate the $15,000 in the department's budget, saying only that he's looking for the most effective way." Aviation is Callaghan's topic in U.S. By ARTHUR L. GAVSHON Associated Press LONDON - Prime Minister James Callaghan will arrive in Washington to- day to explore possibilities for a long- term British-American partnership in the aviation industry. The outcome of his talks with top ex- ecutives of the Boeing, Eastern Airlines and McDonnell Douglas companies will affect Britain's aviation policies until the. end of the century. It also will influence Britain's decision on whether to authorize the state-owned British Airways to buy a new fleet of air- liners from the United States. Big issues are at stake, Callaghan's aides reported privately, and they go fait beyond the multibillion-dollar invest- ments to be made. They also involve Britain's future col; laboration with its main Common Mar- ket partners - France and West Ger- many -- and the fate of the British avi- ation industry. The French and Germans want Cal- laghan to join them rather than the Americans or, alternatively, to go for an overall European-American cooperative. venture. These are among the options facina the British: V They could accept Boeing's offer tp the state-run firm British Aerospace for a 50-50 share in the production of the planned new Boeing 757, a narrow-bod- ied, medium-range jetliner. The deal IS linked with a proposal to power the 75/ with a version of Britain's Rolls-Royce 211-535 engine. Callaghan will discuss this tomorrow With Boeing Chairman Terry Wilson. 1,." They could join France and West Germany in setting up a consortium td produce a European jetliner rivaling th4 757. Callaghan will discuss this possibill ity with' French President Valery GiSt card d'Estaing and German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in Bremen, West Ger- many, July 6-7.. A variation of such an arrangement would be for the proposed European consortium to link up with Boeing and other U.S. firms to produce a new generation of airliners. V They could go it alone in the hope of preserving a viable and independent British aircraft industry. But this would require sure guarantees of foreign sales:: Frank Borman, the former astronaut who is President of Eastern Airlines; will see Callaghan today. He is expected tc't make clear that Eastern would prefer to buy American-built and British-powered Boeings rather than any new British vet"; sion. Borman took Eastern to the interna Ilona] aviation market in April, announ? ing that the airline was buying 23 A-300A Whisperliners, built by the Airbus con-,.: sortium led by France and West Ger- many. Callaghan also will meet with McDon- nell Douglas chief Sandy McDonnell td discuss that firm's plans for a narrow:. bodied, medium-range jetliner. The Brit- ish clearly are playing off the manufac: turers against each other to win better terms. The commercial failure of th.4 French-British supersonic Concorde veni- ture is a major factor in the Labor gosi4 ernment's search for a possible U.S: partner. Callaghan's industry secretary; Eric Varley, says "commercial, not po- litical" , considerations will shape Bri tam's future aerospace policies, imply- ing that political factors drew the for: mer Conservative government into tb,e. costly Concorde deal with France. money and minerals Over the counter Quotations are from the National Association of Securities Cteatera and are representative of inter.dealer Prices as of 4 P.m. Juni 23. The prkek do not include markup, markdown or commission. Volume figures are available only for companies whose stock is listed on the NASD's automated quote system - NASDAQ. Prey. Sales Bid Asked Bid American Fletcher Cord, .. 5,356 173/4 151/2 (5 Bank of Louisville VNA Begley Drug 0 Belknap Inc, 1,921 Citizent Fidelity ........ ......... ,..... 91 Convenient Industries 1,700 Dean Foods Co.' ... . . ?. ..... 1,462 Dollar General Corp. .. ..... 9,325 First Ky. National Corp. 846' Investors Heritage 407 Jerrico Inc. " 11,666 Kentucky Centret Life ., 3,562 Kentucky Investori ' ? 1,147 Kentucky Property Trust SBI 250 Kimball Intl. B ' ,300 Liberty National Bank .... 1,250 Lincoln Income Life ? , 500 Liquid Transporters 0 Louisville Gas 5% of. 181. Louisville Gas 7.45% pf, Metridata Computing .... Nati. Recreation Prod, VNA PBA, Inc. Provident Nati. Pk). 2 Reliance Universal 8,800 S & T Industries VNA &honey's . . .. _ .. ........ ... 5,654 Stock Yards Bank VNA Third National ........ ..... .0 United Kentucky ,...? .. . Western Kentucky Gas 0 Weiterau Int. . ........ 7,768 WOrthington Industries 45,736 (VNA) - Volume not available. (x) - Ex-dividend. 2714 121/4 111/2 25 141/2 321/4 113/4 2734 111/4 1934 133/4 63/4 2' 19'te 261/2 131/4 133/4 131/4 20 1514 5,4 .152 23/3 141'2 17 1714 42 21',9 171/4 1434 153/4 29 1314 12' 12 113/4 26 25 151/2 1434 3314 321/4 121/2 123/4 21334 3,4 27 12 111/4 201/2 2014 1334 133/4 67's 21/2 21/2 193/4 191/2 28 261/2 14 1314 13141 1348 141/4 131/4 21 2014 17 151/2 61/4 51/2 161/2 151/2 251/2 23Vi 151/2 15,- , .17. 18 174 42 213/4 211/4 184 1714 153/4 1434 161/2 16 293/4 3014 FinancialfutureS U.S. treasury bills ($1 million) ? Open High Low doss Chg. June .186.30 186.90 186.20 186.80 + .60 September ....189.00 190.10 188.70 188.80 - .50 December 193.50 194.60 193.20 193.40 - .30 March 197.70 199.10 197.70 198.40 + ,10 June ... . 203.40 203.90 202.90 203.10 + .10 September , 207.80 208.50 207.50 207.60 - .20 , Subtract price from 100 to determine yield. Interest rate trends May-be reflected in price movements, with higher prices for Treasury bills indicating a lower yield and lower interest rates; lower prices may signal higher interest rates, The bills traded here have matur- ities of 90 days. - CHICAGO MERCANTILE GOLD Open High Low Close Chg. June 186.30 186.9d 186.20 186.80 4- .60 September - 189.00 190.10 188.70 188.80 - .50 December 193.50 194.60 193.20 193.40 - .30 March 197.70 199,10 197.70 198.40 + .10 June 203.40 203.90 202.90 203.10 +,.10 September 207.80 208.50 207.50 207.60 - .20 Est. sales: Fri. 6,210; pales Thur. 11,700. Total open interest Thur. 52,033, off 576 from Wed. ' ? - ? NEle, YOR/K SILVER FUTURES ' . Open High Low Close 'Chg. July 533.00535.59 531.00 530.60 -0.80 September 540.80 543.00 538.50 539.00 -0.70 December 553.00 555.00 551.00 550.80 -0.70 January 556-10 558.10 554.50 554.80 -0.70 March 565.50 566.30 563.00 563.10 -0,70 May 574.20 575.30 572,40 571.80 -0.60 Est. saleS: 8,900; sales Thur. 13,507. Total open interest Thur. 196,894, off 2,482 from Wed. Div idends Pe- Stk. of pay- nod Rate record able IRREGULAR ' United Nuclear . 10 7-5 7-19 STOCK Amer Precision 20pc 7-17 8-15 Little,Arthur 0, x 7-20 8-18 x-3 for 2 split Medford Co x x-2 for 1 split,subiect to approval. Record & Pay dates unannounced. Oshmns SptoGd 50pC 7-7 7-21 INCREASED Lazare Kaplan 08 7-10 8'8 Little,Arthur 0, 33 7-5 7-14 Millitsore CP 05 7-7 7-25 Ninwstm Steel 35 7-7 7-25 Reliance El CO 375 7-14 7-31 Service Co 7-31 Sthn Bancorp SC, x 125 6-30 7-7 4--Clarifying prey announced name. CORRECTION Sthn Bancorp SC, x 125 6-30 7-7 47-Clarifying prey announced came Dow Jones futures indexes Spot Commodity price index closed at 363.52, off 2.04. Commodity futures index closed at 350.59, off 2.21. Bond ntarl?ets Fri. Domestic 18,690,000 Foreign, 140,000 rota) 18,930,000 Dow Jones closing bond averages: 20 Bonds, 87,59, down 0.24. 10 Public Utilities, 90.77, unchanged, 10 Industrials, 84.42, clown 0.411 NONFERROUS METALS Thurs. 20,970,000 320,000 21,360,000 NEW YORK (AP), - Spot nonferrous metal prices yesterday; copper 6,53/4 cents a pound, U.S. destination; lead 3Tcents a pound; zinc 31 cents a pound, delivered; tin 56.0091 a pound, New York; gold $185.80 a troy ounce, New York; silver $5 325 a troy ounce, New York.; quicksilver $149 a flask, New York. , Am Precision n .09 OshmnSotoGd 035 Proprietors Cp n ?.. 025 Bell Indust .03 KYSOf Indust 25 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 10-2 7-7 6-30 7-21 9-1 10-16 7-21 7-15 8-15 9-26 Local municipal bonds ,, ) Kentucky: Coupon June 22 - -O Yiel4 d Coupon Maturity Maturifyi 11/9063 66..71. 00, Kentucky Housing Corp. 5.90 7/1/96 6.001" Kentucky Turnpike Bowling Green Water Rev. _65 6605 75,/, Bullitt Co. SBR5 40 3/196 6.40 9 . Campbellsville WIT*. Rev. 5.85 7/1,99 6.40,1' Fayette Co. Det, Corp. ...? 5.50 10(1/95 5.90 -. Henderson El. Lt. & Pwr, 5.70 , 3/1'03 6.093 ' Hopkins Co. Hosp. Rev. 6.75 9/1/02 6.75. Jefferson Co. PCR 725 9/1/00 6.30 Louisville Wtr. Rev, 5.80 11/15/01 6.05 Indiana: Indiana University, 6,00 Bloomington Swr. Rev. 6.10 Evansville Swr. Rev 540 Indianapolis San, Dist. ... 5.10 Purdue Univ. Rev. 400 7/1/82 2/1/03 8/1/85 1/1/01 7/1/02 4.30 6.40 ' 4,50, 5.90 6.50 Recent issues and yield 10 maturity ? 1979 1983 1988 1993 1999 Richmond Ky. Wtr.,Swr. 4.30 4.75 5.30 5.875 5.875 Winchester Util. Rev, .?4.20 4.70 5.20 5.75 6.35 Boone Co. GO 4.00 4.50 5.00 5.50 6.00 Hazard Ky. SBR 5.70 6.20 Marion Co. -- 5.60 6.05 These are serial revenue bonds, with varying maturi. ty dates. National Bond Indexes Week Ended June 22 Week Ended June IS Long Term AAA Bell (1) .., 8.87 8.87 Bond Buyers Ind,ex (2)- 6.26 6.16 (1) An index of selected American Telephone-Tele,.. graph 30-year bonds, including subsidiary company offerings. 12) Assuming 20 large municipalities sold long-term bonds last Thursday, this would be the average valu- ation of such bonds, according to a weekly surbey of bond offers, Prices supplied by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, Smith. Key' interest rates Federal funds in an open market: day's high, 7,7i, percent; low, 744 percent; closing bid, 734, percent offered, 73/4 percent, Prime lending rate at large New York banks: 834 percent, ? Commercial paper placed directly by a major fft nance company: 30 to 270 days, 71/2 percent. High-grade commercial paper sold through dealer* 30 days, 7,70; 60 days, 7.80 percent; 90 days, 7.85 percent, . Certificates of deposit - $100,000 or more - top reel paid by major banks in the newly issued market: one month, 7.70 percent; two months, 7.80 percent; three months, 8 percent; six months, 8v2 percent; one year, "IRapteerscesnhotwn are only a guideline to general trend's and don't necessarily represent actual transactions. Approved For Release 2009/08/11 ? CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 1 The Courier-Journal, Saturday, June 24, 1978 racing sports beat classified ? comics For major sports results, call 582-4871 ' That's Amy,: taking atm Amy Dougherty zeroes in a re- turn yesterday during a 6-3, 6-3 semifinal victory over Susan Nolan in the Women's Open Singles division of the Metro., Classic at the Louisville Tennis . Center. She'll meet Laura Mar- tin in the championship match at 2 p.m. today. (Story, C 3.) STAFF PHOTO BY MELISSA FARLOW ' 'tit' ail...1...fit). p. et By BOB %mug Courier-Journal & Times Staff Writer INDIANAPOLIS ? Fifty-one per cent shooting will win most basketball games, but it didn't for the Kentucky All-Stars last Saturday night in Louis- ville. That's why coach Tom Creamer is hoping for better accuracy from his players tonight when they try to keep Indiana from sweeping the two-game se- ries. . "I wasn't all that pleased with our 51.3 per cent shooting in the first game," Creamer said, referring to.Ken- tucky's 100-90 loss to the Hoosiers in the opener of the annual World Series of high school basketball. "If we improve on our shot selection, we can shoot 55 to 60 per cent. Our shot selection wasn't bad from long range, but it was from 8- 10 feet." Creamer says that Kentucky also must control the tempo of play if it is to overcome Indiana's overwhelming height advantage and the partisan Hoo- sier crowd of 16,000 that is expected to pack Market Square Arena for the 8:30 p.m. (CDT) tipoff. Before the boys tangle, Kentucky's girls go after their fourth straight win over Indiana in their 6:30 p.m. contest Kentucky won a week ago 64-50, giving coach Roy Bowling a 3-0 mark in his two years as coach and Kentucky a 4-1 edge in the young series. Indiana's boys will be seeking their fourtif sweep ie the last five years, their 16th win ip the last 20 games and 40th victory overall against 21 defeats in the series that benefits blind people from both states. "Indiana won the first game early (when it spurted to a 12-2 lead) and when it went into the four-corner of- fense (with eight minutes left and lead- ing 78-69)," Creamer said. "What we want to do this time is jump out on them and control the tempo so that we can have something to say about the style of play late in the game. Of course, that's all based on which team is, ahead." Kentucky's hones of grabbing an ear- ly lead, and possibly going into a four- corner offense of its own, may be better the second time around because Vince e 4 Staff Photo by Mark Lyons ? jttry,EvesAf the 1,eritqcky,?All-4Stars aims a pass Saturgals ser es opener won, br Indiana 10079 Witt1iaof naa in 1s' Th ms me again tonight at Indianapolis., ash of injuries tits Morgan on sidelines for Dodger series ? Taylor will be in the starting lineu . Taylor, a 6-foot-5 guard-forward fror4 Lexington Tates Creek, came off the, bench with his team trailing 12-2 arid" pumped in 22 points. Only Jack Moore: of Muncie Central, the 5-9 guard who ran Indiana's four-corner offense to per- , fectien, scored _more points (24). Creamer, coach of Shelby County's state champions, plans to start three guards and two inside people. Taylor, 4 Jerry Eaves of Ballard and 6-4 Jeff Jones of Apollo will rotate among the one guard spot and two wing positionS in Kentucky's 1-2-2 offense. ' Creamer said he favors starting 6-4 Mr. Basket .- ball Doug Schloemer of Covington Holmes and 6-5 Harold Moore of Lei-- ington Henry Clay inside, but there is a, chance 6-6 Gus Rudolph of Shawnee may start. Indiana has five players taller thai Rudolph ? Kentucky's biggest man -7-- with 7-1 Wallace Bryant of Gary Emer; son the giant among giants. Starting- 4 See HOOSIERS Page C 2, Cot, . No, Associated Press LOS ANGELES ? Joe Morgan, suf- fering from muscle pulls, is a doubtfia- staiter as the Cincinnati', Reds. play. the: Loslingeles Dodgers in a' three-game, yidellend series. Teday'S, garne wilt be ffmtional television? 09c,., Channel 3 , in Louisville, 4 0.0# EDI:Y. Wirgan who Went" 04 Wednesda,Y:' night in San Francisco, did not play in die Reds' 5-0 shutout of the Giants on ThOday night. , lin taking off. I don't know how range' just hope they don't need me. I Ilea they can win without me, but I Can't take this now," said the Reds' All- Stersecond baseman. ' Ntargan has been bothered by a groin injury, a lower abdomen muscle pull, a Soret..wrist and a bruised thigh. "Ccan't concentrate up there at the plater he said. "Really, I sat down ,after thegame (Wednesday) and I tried to rernanber how they pitched to me. I 'ttste," don't know. I always can tell you what pitch a guy threw me and how he set me tip, but I was blank. I don't know the "sequence." "I just get up an stroll o the park a t O'Od hope seine of them come. I juSt keen-My fingers crossed," said manager Sper14 Anderson phifesphieelly '''pe his ailing Squad. The Reds trail the Giants by a game for the National League West lead. Morgan, 34, had an eight-game hitting streak going until he pulled a stomach muscle Saturday diving into third base, Since then, he has only one hit in 12 times at bat. "Thirty-four is not old. Baseball peo- ple may think so, but I do net agree," Morgan said. "I don't agree with a lot of things baseball people say." The Reds beat the Giants 5-0 ThurS- day night on a combined three-hitter by Bill Bonham (8-1) and Manny Sar- miento. Anderson, pleased with the vic- .45pez traits Blalock by six tory, said, "You can't let anybody get too far in front. From Sept. 9 to 28, the Reds, Giants and Dodgers play each other, and I don't want anyone going into that stretch too relaxed, "It Sion get behind two other clubs, it's tough, et expect a. three-team race all the way. Losing two out of three to us probably won't bother the Giants, though. They have the pitching and they play hard." Giants' starter Bob Knepper was jolt- ed for two runs in the first, while vic- timized by shoddy fielding. Ken Griffey singled with one out and scored with the help of two errors by center fielder Larry Herndon. San Francisco manager Joe Altobelll said, "We're looking forward to playing Atlanta (four games) and we also know the Reds and Dodgers will be facing each other. So we have a chance to gain some ground." In conjunction with our new Store, opening in Lexington come In and register for either: Ram Accubars 1 or Lynx Master 9 frons/4 Woods Valued at $42500 To be given away FREE If The Best Stick In Your Bag Is Your Pencil; Try ? Reg. sALR These Specials $494.00 $299.95 RAM GARY PLAYER, 9 Irons, 4 Woods $362.00 $229.00 LYNX MASTER, Mens & Ladies, 8 Irons, 4 Woods $500.00 299.00 MocGREGOR MT'S, Mens Right & Left. 9 Irons, 4 Woods $460.00 249.00 TITLBST 100's, 8 Irons, 3 Woods $410.00 199.9$ LYNX PREDITOR, 9 Irons $350.00 240.00 PREDITOR WOODS ?$240.00 160.00 SPALDING EXECUTIVE, 8 Irons, 4 Woods '4'rensha' blows..shOf..fotlead' isMfr Associated Press ,pen Crenshaw was on his way to as- suining the second-round lead in the Cagdian Open golf tournament yester- day until he came to No. 18 ? his ninth tiele:of the day since he started at No. 10v-s was two-under for the round and titree-under for the tourney when: '-eo He dumped his third shot into a pond guarding the green on the pee five hole' and had to lay out with, a penalty. e ,-),He walked back 80 yards or So to ie (top; then hit into a bunker behind the green for five., tot He exploded out of the trap but 4164 of the putting surface for six, rAl:He chipped 15 feet past the cup for seven. " He putted two feet past for eight. ,1%.! He sank the two-footer for nine. -;.),;11hen it was over, Crenshaw dropped ?tits gutter and applauded himself. When the day ended, Jeff Hewes and Pat'McGowan shared the lead in the V000 tournament at Oakville, Ont., with 36-hole totals of 140, two under par OnAhe 7,050-yard Glen Abbey Golf Club course. trot e McGowan birdied the final hole for a three-under 68 while Hewes, the first- day; leader with a 67, slipped to a 73. Cierrshaw was at 144 after his 74. - ' ' ' Jane Blalock Ben Crenshaw "What can I say? That's just an awful big number on One said Cren- shaw. "I Aft two bad shots and they cost me a lot. I went to sleep on my third shot, quit on it and it drifted to the right. Then I hit a bad shot after the drop. That's the real sin. I was trying to get too cute with it, get it close to the hole, and buried it in the bunker. "After a while, I was just trying to finish. I was looking for a place to hide, but there was no place to go, nothing to do but keep on flogging at it. It's an awful lonesome feeling." LPGA ? Jane Blalock fired a 5-un- der-par 67 to break a woman's course record at the Hershey (Pa.) Country Club and grab a two-stroke lead after 18 holes of the $50,000 Lady Keystone Open. Six strokes back was Nancy Lopez, who was stumbling in her bid to extend her all-time women's professional golf record to six straight victories and close in on the men's record of 11 in a row by Byron Nelson in 1945. Her 73 left her back in the pack with 36 holes to play on the 6,398-yard course. "I just didn't have the concentration today," Lopez said. "I was tired. I was thinking about interviews instead of my golf game." - Blalock, who lost to Lopez in a stir- ring stretch duet last weekend at Roch- ester, N.Y., made a late charge' picking up five birdies on tile back side for a 32. ? She was one under at the turn, and birdied the last three holes after her caddy, Lee Hetrick, promised to buy her dinner if she could get in five-un- der. "I'm going to look in the Yellow Pages for an expensive restaurant," she said, smiling. All week Lopez has been besieged by photographers, writers and autograph- seeking fans. It may have cost her. "I think last week I was getting tired, but it was such a high I kept my strength," Lopez said at a post-round news conference. "This week the 'pres- sure wasn't as great and I just tired out. started getting a headache on the last couple of holes." ? 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Right ond Left ......... . .... $14.95 and up ? 4406 Shelbyville Rd., Louisville, Ky. 197-51117 DAILY 10-7?30, SAT. 10-6, SUN. 12-4 2350 Woodhill, Lexissiton, Ky., 269-4442 DAILY 104:30, SAT. 10-6, CLOSED SUN. vs Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 C2 THE COURIER?JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Ornb i 1 S, Potter to duel for Women's title By JOHNNY CARRICO Courier-Journal & Times Staff Writer PAINTSVILLE, Ky. -- No. 4 :for Combs or No. 3 for Potter? The answer to the question will start to unfold at 10 a.m. today at the Paints- ville Country Club as defending champi- on Anne Combs of Lexington and Kaye Potter of Louisville battle for the Wom- en's State Amateur Golf Championship. ? Being in the championship round hardly is a novel experience for .them. The 33-year-old Combs is in the round of two for the fourth straight year and her fifth altogether. Potter is making her sixth try for a title, having won twice. Combs defeated her longtime friend, Jackie Hacker of Versailles, 5 and 4 in yesterday's semifinals. Potter had to go alrnost the route before subduing Joan Rizer of Bardstown 2 and 1. Their meeting over 18 holes will be the fourth match between two women who 'rank at the top of Kentucky golf. Potter has won all three of them, which Haye Potter- Anne Combs may provide some psychological advan- tages for the 27-year-old housewife who won her titles as Kaye Beard of Camp- bellsville. Her first was here in 1966. Combs' victories carte at Lexington Tates Creek in 1967, at Winchester in 1974 and last year at lcholasville. Pot- ter's other title was achieved at Wild- wood in Louisville in 1969. Although she was only 15 years old when she claimed her first crown, she now has gone 12 years without a title. She was runnerup three times and skipped 1976 while starting a family.. In contrast to her walkaway 9 and 7 victory over Lee Davis of Bowling Green in the quarter-finals, Potter was in trouble early in the semifinals. Rizer, a five-time South Central Kentucky champion, bagged the first two holes with pars as Potter lost a stroke in a water hole hazard On No. 1 and three- putted No. 2. Potter got one back on the third when Rizer landed in a ditch that cost her a stroke and the match went even at No. 5 'when Potter holed a five- foot putt for a birdie, "I wasn't trying to make it because it was downhill and I wanted to play it safe," Potter said. "But it went in." Potter went ahead for the first time on the seventh where Rizer three-put- ted, then added No, 8 although she three-putted for a bogey five. She turned 2 up with a five-over par 40. Rizer narrowed the gap with a birdie Hoosiers plan to exploit size Continued From Page, C 1 with Bryant and Moore will be 6-8 Mr. Basketball Dave Magley of South Bend La?alle and 6-7 Thad Garner of Ham. mood Noll at forwards, and 6-5 Randy Wiqma,n of Indianapolis Ben Davis at th; other guard. Itidiana spent most of this week work- ing on rebounding and defense. The shoe/ter but quicker Kentucky team out- rehpunded Indiana 39-36 in the 'first garpe. 'Our weak-side forward must go to the's' boards harder because their zone is depth:1g up on Bryant to keep him off thes beards," Indiana coach Eric Clark say. "If they didn't, he'd eat 'em up. Also, we need to get back quicker on defense. We gave them too many fast- break baskets and let Taylor penetrate too; much." , ,? , Indiana will use its two tallest- play- r erti; Bryant and 6-9 Landerf?Turfier- of ' Infanapolls Tech, at the same time but Turner will not start. 'We want to utilize their height be- cape Kentucky outrebounded us the last time," Clark said. "If both get into play a tighter defense," Bowling said? taut' treirble; we can still, match Ken- "We hurt them a lot inside the first tucky in size. It was our height acivan- game. Indiana will apply more pressure tage which forced Kentucky into a zone defense, but if we play up to our paten- defense. Their zone doesn't worry me tial we can win." because we have the outside shooting Sharon Miller of, Moore, who scored (Indiana shot 55.4 per cent in it first 10 points as a reserve in the first game, win)." will replace Fogle. Barbara Harkins of GIRLS ? Kentucky is down to 11 Ashland Blazer or Bonnie Sizemore of players after Tanya Fogle of Lexington Laurel County will start at the other for- Lafayette and Robin Harmon of Shel- ward with Donna Stephens of Harrison rt back after the County at center, and Miss Basketball don Clark failed to repo first game. "Tanya didn't tell me she Irene Moore of Breathitt County and Shari Price of Henry County at guards, wasn't coming back so when I got in touch with her I told her it would be better if she didn't return," coach Bowl- ing said. "Harmon just got homesick." Laurie Heltsley of Hughes-Kirk, who missed the first game because of strep throat, is back but she won't play .much. "She doesn't have much strength,?' Bowling said. ? frein state champion` Laurel ei5uni-Y, expects (we new faces id Indl- ana's lineup, 6-foot Kathie Calloway of Michigan City Rogers and 5-4 Rita Fos- ter Jac-Ceti-Del: 4I figure Indiana will try and shut off the middle and , .. Almond Cooke's DIDININITANY ; NEW 1978 #? NOVA 2 DOOR :6 Cylinder. Equipped. Blue Green Metallic. 0No. 1531 Stock $4143 DELIVERED s ' i NEW 1978 MONTE CARLO' ; It. Blue, V-8 4-Speed. t, Equipped. . - NEW 1978 MALIBU 2 DOOR V-8 Engine. Equipped. Light Green Metallic. Stock No. 1963 $499 9 DELIVERED ; Stock ;No. 1533 $4 78 DELIVERED ?40.404~144.444t,~4mitsowswoovmes~~#~ cHE91,100R Camel Metallic with Camel Vin- yl, Air Condition. Equipped. No. 1885 $4 6199 Stock D? ELIVERED NOTICE EFFECTIVE 6-23-78. ACCEPTING ORDERS ON 1979 CHEVROLET CARS AND TRUCKS. FLEET LEASING OR RETAIL BUYERS. NOVA WEEK 15' 1976& 1977-2 AND 4 DOOR V8 & 6 Cylinder Automatic, Power Steering and Some with Air Condition. --EXAMPLE-- 1976 Nova 4 Door, e tn995 Cylinder Automatic, Power Steering and Factory Air ONLY "fid 717 Wi Broadway ?Phone 582-2531 OPEN-MON.,WED. & FRI. MIES 'til 8:30 4 on the 10th and squared the match at No. 13 with a par after Potter had trou- ble with trees, After Potter halved 14 by sinking a five-foot pressure putt, she captured the 15th when Rizer took two to get out of a trap on the par three. After the 16th was halved, Potter wrapped it up on the 17th with a par three. She knocked her tee shot five feet from the pin while Rizer was short, chipped to six feet and missed the putt. Potter was six over for the 17 holes. "I was wild sometimes and over- swinging," Potter said. "For some rea- son I felt kinda tight or tense this morn- ing. I had to wait a long time for break- fast at this restaurant and that kind made me upset," ' "I could have played better," Rizer said. "I was chipping short and putting short all day. I had my opportunities. The hole that beat me, maybe was that par three when I got in the trap." Combs, one over for 14 holes, zoomed into a 3 up lead with a string of three straight wins starting with No. 3, She took the third when Hacker put her sec- ond in, a trap, the fourth with a par and the fifth with a birdie two-foot putt. She increased the margin to 4 up at No. 7 with a par and kicked it to 5 up at the eighth with a par when Hacker pushed her tee shot, leaving her a diffi- cult approach to an elevated green. Hacker won her only hole of the day at No, 9 with a par three as Combs three- putted. Combs turned 4 up with a par 33 and from then on Hacker, the 1973 win- ner, was living on borrowed time. "Jackie didn't play' her Usual game," Combs noted. "I fully expected to go 18 holes." Hacker said she hit the ball well until she got to the green, "and then I putted atrociously. I was mostly missing the short ones. But Anne was very good." 8TH ANNUAL FIRECRACKER TOURNAMENT - ATHANASIUS Men's double elimination Drawing Mon. 626 8 PM at Field interested teams call 0* I 9; ? 9 ; 1 DIESE? L LEFT. Iteeeiwitpwvo Volkswagen Subaru 4926 Dixie Hgwy. 448-6666 1 Mite South of Watterson ? THE DIESEL POWERED RABBITS ARE ARRIVING ' 44444444..... The amazing VW rabbits with diesel engines have arrived , at Don Corlett's. When they arrive, you'll be able to test ;? drive one of these fantastic diesels and see for yourself why it is America's #1 economy car. 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"Because I was so cocky." Yesterday at the Louisville Tennis Center, be* applied the name to Alladin Mitha, his opponent in a men's singles quarter-final of the Metro Classic. Mitha, wasn't well pleased. "He started calling me obscenities," Mitha said, "which I don't appreciate at all." Novitsky, who wound up losing 6-3, 6- 4, said that he hadn't meant to be ob- scene ... that the name was intended to refer to Mitha's demeanor, which he felt was cocky. Unfortunately, the communication gap couldn't be bridged. Finally, with Mitha leading the sec- ond set 5-4, a confrontation developed. Mitha, ahead 40-0 in the 10th game, tossed the ball up as if to serve. Instead of swinging at it, however, he let it drop, "One of the players on the court be- side us was moving toward Jim," Mitha. said., "Had ; hit the ball,, Jim would have asked for a let." NOvitsky claimed that, 'Mithat had faulted. , "If you swing the racket and you miss the ball, then it's a fault," Mitha said later. "I didn't make any attempt to hit ? Soon as, NevitskY called the fault, Mitha asked bystanders to summon a tournament official. "Get the tourna- ment referee or the director of the tour- nament," Mafia said. When tournament referee Helene Gorman arrived on the scene, Mitha said, "I'd like to lodge a complaint. My opponent has been calling me the foul- est ef names." When he explained the serving controversy, Gorman ruled in his favor. "You can look it up in the rule book," Mitha told a reporter after the match. Mitha,' a quiet, 27-year-old teaching pro at Big Spring Country Club, was shaken by. the cpritroversy., "It's ridiculous," he said as he- re- laxed on a bench. "I know he's a good player; and he knows I'iri a good player . , I've played all over the world. It's childish for him to try to pull a stunt like that. It was triple match point. Why would 1 want to do anything silly then?" Novitsky, 31, a teaching pro at Louis- ville Indoor' Racquet Club,, iatially re- fused to talk to a reporter. "NO' inter- ,view," he said as he walked away. "What's the difference? He's the win- ner, go talk to him. He knows it all." ' Moments later, however, NoyitskY, had cooled off somewhat. "I'm a nice guy off the court,", he said. "But when you're on the court, it's like Conners says: 'It's a different ball genie.' You've got to have that killer instinct, and to- day I didn't have it" Because he didn't, Mitha was able to rally from a 4-0 defleit in the second set. "I lost my concentration," said the bearded Novitsky. "I don't get a chance to play enough during the week. I teach during the day and then work the night shift at the Ford truck plant (where he's a quality-control inspector). "I get home at 2:30 in the morning, get up at 8, then teach four or five hours. I leave the tennis club at about 4 and start work (at the truck plant) at 111 COURI!lR-JOURL. SATVIIDAY..11.nNE 2 , 1978 ? ertius,.m 4:30. It's tough, but you've got to make a living some way." Novitsky geld ,the name he caned Mitha "was nothitig vulgar. T would neiz- er do anything like that." I. admitted, howeN4ri: that Mitha - and 4 gallery of about 50 - 'might have misunderstood him, .` "Five years ago, when I Was younger and wilder, I would have gone' over the net and had a fight with him," said Mahe, whQ WaS born in Uganda but raised in England. "But the only 'fight' is supposed to be beating the man ,on the court - and doing it in a gentle- manly manner." Mitha, who is' unseeded; said he had no reason to expect any trouble from the seventh-seeded Novitsky. "I spoke to him on the phone last night," Mitha said. "I wanted to play the match earli- er in the day (it was scheduled for 1:30 but began a bit late), bilt he said he had to work and couldn't change it, "I wanted to, play it at 10 so r cOuld get back and teach from 12 to 2 As a result, I had to cancel two clinics - one of them had 18 or 20 girls in it -- and those are where you make your mon- ey." That however, wasn't what bothered , Alladin Mitha. ' names," Mitha said, "and he turns T " asked him to stop calling me C3 around and says, 'Okay, you, In another quarter-final, Jamiq Howell was leading fellow teaching prok Sonny Garner 1-6, 6-0, 4-1 when Garitu, ' quit after a disputed line call. "It was called out, an Howell thought it was, in," tournament director Rick Kincaid""4 said. ' The day's,upsets came in the, worn, en's 21 singles, where Amy Dougherty defeated top-seeded Laura Martin 6-3, 6: 3 in a semifinal, and the men's 35 sit'-'gleS, where No. 2-Gene Schagene lost quarter-final to'unseeded Chuck Thomti- son 6-0, 6-4, ' ? The tournament will be televised Channel 15 from 1-5 p.m. today and 24 p.m. Sunday. - ., MI LET0RAHEInis e TENNIS A r Mess's singles (quarter-finals) - Kevin Walsh d?,,,? Robbie Wessel 6-3, 6-27, J. T. Sims d. Brian Garman 6-4,1-' 6-3; Jamie Howell d. Sonny Garner 1-6, 6-(3, 4-1 (retired,iltt Alladin Mitha d. Jim Novitsky 6-3, 6-4. Today - Walsh "l;;;oi Howell vt Millie, noon - Men's 35 Fant d.Wi ham Morrison 6-4, 6-0; Everett Eggintort d, CR Wil Hams p-f, 6-1; Chuck Thompson d. Gene Schagene 6-0, ifrf 4. Today - Fent vs. Egginton, 9 am; Guy Wiggintcip vs. Thompson, 9. Men's 50 singles (quarter-finals) - William Ray d. Edwin Weir 6-3, 6-1; Phil Applebaum d. Tomas Aguilera 6-Z 6-4; Dick Swigart d, Grayson Hanks (default), Today -- Bob Russell vs. Ray, 9 a.m.; Applebaum v Swigart, 9. Women's singles (semifinals) - Amy Do gherty d. Susan Nolan 6-3, 6-3; Laura Martin d. Sharb Cashon 6-1,6-0. Today Dougherty vs. Martin, 2 p.m Women's 21 (semifinal) - Amy Dougherty d. Laur Martin 6-3, 6-3. Sunday - Teri Wheeler vs. Dougherty, 3 p.m. ',Paul Blair ShOwS versatility , Compiled from AP and Special. Dispatches ?' Drivers Joe t Peddle 'and Chuck qualified'iviisS Madison and respectively, fqr,Svr 4444.4,irit:of Detroit race rot u ted hydroplanes' IU has 4,28-15 lead in the series. te"., Rick Robey0, who played on last -seagOa's University of., Keptucky_ria- tiOnat-champiciaship- tea*, has filed for ?- diverce- from' his,, wife ',o," 11% Mary Dtiee McCord Robey. Fayette Circuit'COart records in Lex- ington, Ky., showed the 22-year-old New Orleans native filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on June 2 in the name of F. Rohert Robey. An emended Petition fifed-,Jtine 16 said -__"the Marriage irretrievably bro ,keri," ',..rwefother'bpats.,e, Oh Boy Dina?, t!ri-04,11factiniedt of Seat.: itiemild...f..akestio're, piloted, by Terry 'turner Of Fullerton, Calif,- Will at-- ite-apt to qualify, early Senday? If they ,are successful, there will be 10- rearing over , the three-mile course On the Detroit River le quest ttTie $35,006 in prize money, First priZe will be worth just ,over $8,000. go, qualifying is set for today.. BASEBALL ; ?4.111e top qualifier in three days of tr'"' Paul Blair, one of the top de- was Atlas Van LineS? driven by fensive center fielders in the major IVIoncey, at 129.186 miles per - leagues, made hig big-league debut Muncey wen tlie seasen Opener Thursday night as a shortstop and June 4 id secorid baseman in a the New- York ler, the defending national chain,. Yankee Manager Billy Martin, 1.4 YlctOrY at ,Detroit, ;e0ther`qualifiers include MiSs bud.; Yankees driven by Ron Snyder; Tao", Short of players to maneayer?. seet Squire She (Chip Hanaaer); Miss' = Blair Ori CO play' second base in the nerlt Teol (Steve Jdnes); U-66 (Tom ? eighth iflfiin6 Ire clidn't do badly ei- Martin); Probe (Bob Miller), ther, but then Blair twice was an all- unday's race is the final teneup city shortstop daring high- scheol in !Wore the July 2 Gold Cup at ()wens- boro, Ky. V Ex-New York Yankee great, Mickey Mantle, 47, was listed in good condition last night in a Dallas BASKETBALL hospital. Mantle was admitted t, Next season's game between Wednesday suffering from bleeding Indiana University and Notre Dame, ulcers, and was listed critical. slated for Dec. 13 at South Bend, is still listed on the Notre Dame sched- COLLEGES ule, but IU is assuming it will not be - played and is looking for another op- v Vanderbilt athletic direator ponent on that date. Clay Stapleton who had apParently , weathered an intensive campaign by "I can't find anyhodyi to give me some alumni for his ouster after Ewe the full? story on it," 11.1 sports infor- dismal football seasons in a row,:re- illation director Tom Miller said by , signed unexpectedly Thursday after' phone yesterday. "This was my un- putting the school's program into the derstanding, that Notre Dame was black financially. The resignatiop is trying to change the date because . effective 31. Vandy president they didn't want to, play two tough. rii - Aug.' ... EmelV Fields said that Stapleton opponents like UCLA and ,Indiana in __ a native of Neon, Ky. - had not the same week." been fired. John Heisler, assistant SID at Notre Dame, said the Irish "official- ly have the game on our schedule. It would be the first year of a two-year agreement, with next year at Bloom- ington. But it has not been signed be- cause the' dates are still in question." Heisler said the dates that Notre Dame originally had scheduled for UCLA and IU were Dec. 12 and 14, respectively, both at South Bend. But Notre Dame didn't like that arrange- ment and switched the UCLA game to Dec. 9 at LA, apparently eliminat- ing any conflict in dates. "The question now is next year," said Heisler. "It's up to them (IU). They don't -want to play when we want to. (Coaches) Digger (Phelps) and Bobby, (Knight) couldn't agree , on a date, so Bobby (the IU coach) apparently said, 'forget it.'" Earlier this week, Knight teld an Indiana alumni dinner grpup. at Ft. Wayne that this season's game with the Irish had been canceled, but he wouldn't elaborate. Knight did comfirm that 6-foot-9 junior forward Glen Grunwald will miss the entire season will leg prob- lems. "Hopefully, we'll have him for two more seasons," Knight said. ? ALTO RACING v Sheldon Kinser, Jerry Karl, Al Loquasto and, Gary Bettenhausen qualified for Sunday's $400,000 Poco- no (Pa.) 500, bringing the field to 30 ter, the final qualifying session. ace officials filled the remaining three spots by naming Phil Thre- shie, Lee Kunzman and Bill Vuko- vich to the last row. Danny Ongais captured the pole position Thursday with an. average speed of 190.335 mph. BOXING v' Ex-heavyweight champion Mu- hammed All, an instant hit on a goodwill tear to Russia this week, wants to erganize an international human rights group called WORLD - the World Organization fOr Rights, Liberty and Dignity. "You can't imagine the people who are going to join up in Africa, Europe th,e wOrld. I'll be the president," he said. All said he has been invited to re- turn to the Soviet Union after his September fight, with Leon Spinks and talk about his WORLD Plansti "I will be the unofficial Andy Young. The unofficial Kissinger: And doing things that they would be glad te do," All said. tog..ti,*416 se.mifitutl.. Associated Press Chris Evert dropped a set but still de- , feated Australia's Wendy Turnbull 3-6, 6-1, 6-1 and Martina Navratilova beat Billie Jean King 6-4, 6-2 yesterday in the semifinals of England's Eastbourne In- ternational tennis tOurnarnent. - - The final today' maY,Well be' a- pre- view of the women's final at Wimble- don ,iii,whiCh Evert and Na?ratilova also are seeded Nes. apd. 2, respea-_, tively. A swirling wind that continually changed direction upset Evert in the first set of her match against Turnbull, then she went one down in the second but regained her composure just in time. Navratilova, on the tither hand, Said the wind did not bother her at all and both girls said afterwards they are look- ing forward to Wimbledon - which starts next week - with confidence. "It seems to me I'm peaking perfect- ly," said Navratilova. "Last year I was overconfident but this year I'm much more consistent." "I'm beginning to get nervous, and that is a good thing," said Evert. "f haven't been feeling this way for some time. When I'm not nervous I get lazy." Turnbull, a 25-year-old they call "rab- bit" because she is so fast on grass, seemed initially to be on the way to the first major upset of the tournament when_ she took the opening set 6-3 against Evert, who was unsettled in the blustery conditions. Evert fell behind 0-1 on Turnbull's service in the second set but the turning point of the match came in the next game. Evert nearly dropped it. She had advantage against her twice but finally - after a grim battl$,'-- pressured the Australian into overdriving and then sent her scuttling back vainly after a lob. That battle over, Evert streaked ahead. In the next four games she al- lowed Turnbull only four points, break- ing her twice, then finished the set off at 6-1 with her third break. QUEEN'S, CLUB - Play finally was halted by heavy rainswith fourth-seed- ed John McEnroe of the United States leading fellow Americari Tom Gullikson 3-2 in the third and final set of a quar- ter-final match. Gullikson took the first set 6-4 after two lengthy stoppages. McEnroe won the second 6-2, despite a delay of over two hours, then played some fine tennis to lead 3-2 in the last set before another downpour ended play for the day.' The organizers hope to conclude the match this morning, along with the oth- er quarter-final between Australians Co- lin Dibley and John Alexander. The se- mifinals are scheduled this afternOon with the final now moved back to Sun- day - the day before Wimbledon starts. - In May, we set a new Oldsmobile Cin- chinati Zone Sales Record of 242 cars. To stay number one in the Oldsniobile's New 1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme Hard- top Coupe equipped with automatic transmission, white walls, custom color coordinated wheel covers, Bold N'tlizarre's fast finish nets Boman Brother Purse ELMONT; N.Y. (AP) - Bola N Bi- zarre drew out in the stretch to win the $15,000. Roman Brother Purse yesterday at Belmont Park. The 5-year-old son of Graustark-Bold Belle, ridden by Jean- Luc Samyn, carried 117 pounds a mile and 1/16 in 1.41. Bold N Bizarre won by 33/4 lengths over Come Away With Me, who took second by 21/2 lengths over Roman Reasoning. Third choice in the betting of the crowd of 15,770, Bold N Bizarre paid $10.40, $5.40 and $3.80. Now our award-winning ,Ser- Olds & Fiat 39/0 Dutchmans Lane Watterton X-Way at Breckinridge Us. .897-6541 ? 4 , vice Department is open Mon- ' day through Thursday nights 'until midnight and ALL _DAY SATURDAY, Approved For Release 2009/08/11 : CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Naillett playing inanager of i)ro tetini 00,14th6-4s. 400. .pitch to Schr?er " By JOEL BIERIG courier-Journal & Times Staff Writer . The new manager of the Kentucky Bburbons professional softball , team isl.k.ts? Envelope, please . '?3 PHIL SCHROEFt ... Phil Schroer. Phil Schroer? a good man," said Larry Gatti se,' Pile of the team's three owners. "He's been playing softball a long tine,, andflie's a coach at the school he teach- es, at He's very knowledgeable in the field, of softball." Tlie Bourbons yesterday named Wilber, their No. 1 pitcher, to replace Bob l Hildenbrand as field manager. Gatti, whp fired Hildenbrand on Thurs- day because of a "communication gap," said he would handle the general man- agers duties himself. -"P asked Phil about it last week, and he said he wanted to think about it," -' Now manages his teammates :tt.Sttk?.v. said Gatti. "He made his decision last night." Schroer, 31, Joined the Bourbons last ? year for tbeir first American Profes- sional Sb-Pitch Softball League season. Head basketball and assistant baseball coach at Providence High in Clarksville, Ind., he hit .535 last season and won 15 games as a pitcher. "I always said that coaching high , school took a lot of patience," Schroer said yesterday. "Well, this might take even more. Schr'oei, who leads the team in hitting with a .544 average, will continue to pitch and play a few games at second base. "I've got pretty good people at my side in (coaches) Dave Burke and Steve Coffman," Schroer said. "I'll place a lot of confidence in them, and hope they keep their eyes and ears open while I'm out on the field." Said Gatti: "He knows what he's com- ing into. I asked him how he would feel about managing some of his buddies. And he said, 'I have a business to run. If my buddies are truly my buddies, they'll be the first ones to help."' The new manager said he hopes he and his teammates "can develop a good relationship from a player-manager standpoint. I feel they'll expect me, like any manager, to be fair. I think they're looking for a guy who'll be willing to go to bat for them. I'll respect thern all as Roller skating regionals set: professionals." ball players and try to treat them aS Division championship last year under Retbel faces tough schedule Hildenbrands guidance, got off to a 1-7 start this year. Entering tonight's dou- f ? The Southern Regionals of the U.S. Amateur Roller Skating Championships, will be held Sunday through Thursday' at Champ's Rollerdrome in the Canielot shopping Centert , ?- Some 600 roller skaters from Ken- tticky, Tennessee, South Carolina,. Geor- gia, Mississippi, Alabama and' Florida will compete for places in the national ch,nrnpionships in artistic and speed qualifications. The artistic events are slated for Sun- cl-4 through Tuesday and speed compe- tition, Wednesday and Thursday. All ses- sieb.4 will be open to the public. Xfitong the competitors will be Rob- be Coleman, the 15-year-old roller-rink stAif- trom Memphis, Tenn. Coleman bes gen competing when she was seven and ha 9 won. national championships in ev- ejy age from primary to senior. - ; In Louisville, she will be skating with pet. partner, Pat Jones, .also of Mein- phis:-The Coleman-Jones team finished second in the freestyle pairs at the 1977 World Champlonships ill Montreal. They're hoping to qualify for the nation- al championships at .Lincoln, Neb., in late July:and early August under the sponsorship of the U. S. Amateur Con- fe'dfration of Roller Skating. ;`siders are hoping that roller skating will be contested at the 1984 OlyMpic d'ariSes in Los Angeles. If so, the win- rt Louisville may become part of tie. 3.S. roller skating team. , - .'these factors make the t978 region- als here the most important in our histo- ry," said Joe Chainpa, 'operator of Champ's and the meet direct6r, ,The Bourbons, who won the Central bleheader Milwankee, they're 8-10, , firs around the town although only one game outo place. place. Schroer said he plans no roster L BASKETBALL -- "For the first time since I have been at Bellarmine, we will be competing against Division II oppo- nents early," said Joe Reibel, who will be entering his eighth year as head coach at the Louisville college next fall. Bellarmine's 1978-79 schedule in- cludes one National Collegiate Athletic Association Division school -- More- head State -= and 17 Division II foes. Fifteen games will be played at Knights Hall and 11 on the road. Nov.: 2S-26 ? Bel:ermine Tipotf Tourney (Augusta, Berea-, Lincoln Memorial, Belfarmine); 30 ? at St. Joseph's. Dec.1 *2 at Georgetown; 7 ? Eastern Illinois; 4 ? Transylvania; 14 Indiana Central; 19 Morehead State.; 21 ? S Joseph's. . Jait.t 3 at Youngstown State; 9 Indiana State- Evansville; 11 ? Unigrti Wesleyan; 20 ? at Northern Kentucky; 21 ? Campbellsville; 2$ ? at Thomas More; 29 at Eastern Illinois; 31 ? at Ofl- Pauw. Feb:: ? Kentucky State; 7?at Kentucky Wesleyak 10 ? Wright State; 13 ? at Indiana State-Evansville; 17 ? Northern Kentucky; 22 ? Thomas More; 24 ? at Transylvania; 27 ? at Indiana Central, GOLF Barger Jr., Mike Lena. han, Bill Parr, Vaughan Jones and Jodie Mudd are among the favorites in the 36- hole USGA Publinks qualifying tourney at Long Run Golf Course, set for today and Sunday. Three players will qualify for the National Publinks Championship at Bangor, Maine,- July 10-1'5. Barger was co-Champion of this spring's Kentucky nigh school tourney and Lenahan played on Trinity's state championship team. Parr, Jones and Mudd are fermer national qualifierS. 'changes but added that he "might try a couple of different things as far as posi- tions and batting order are concerned. I'd like to see what Craig Milburn can do, and Dave Bair is a luxury in that he can play more than one position. I'd like to be able to find a spot for him." THE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 , THE DOGWOOD STAKES For three-year-old fillies, 7 furlongs, ,$20,000. ' For Clubhouse reserved seats, phone 636-3541 before noon. Dining room reservations, phone 636-3351. . . -was; Si I j ? , Henry Earle has joined Kentuckian- a's Number On'e Sale Team.' Henry Wants alt his old ? friends and. wt.- tomer! to visit him ? at Colonel Chrysler- Plymouth and find out 'why' were Ken tuckiana's LARGEST Chrysler-PlymotAll Dealer. Daily 9 HI 9. Sundays 12 til 5 4120 BARDSTOWN ROAD 499-9660 n ,r0bably, ST' Could Be NV.ortli,s300 - 19000 More To Jim Cook 81.1,11( AIR, POWER BRAKES & STEERING, AUTOMATIC, TINTED GLASS, V-0 301 ENGINE, sge THIS?LIST OF OTHER EQUIPMENT. STICKER PRICE $0,527.00. '7* VERAL COLORS 10 TO CHOOSE FROM AT: 9 g Yes, we've got cars, and more cars, right at 400 and the factory keeps on sending and we keep on selling '78 Dmicks. New Car ? Used Car Sales, Leasing ? Parts ? Servree ? Body Shop. They've Got To Co New Cars Will Be Sold In June - Come & Save Open DailY 8:3?4'9, Sat. 8:` 0-6 Just To Serve You Better, Plea8es Us Very Muth, Open Sunday 12:00 to 6 Ai ? Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 0 (l'IrIANKS) 'ME COIJRIERJOURNAL, 8ATURISAY, .10E4 24, 197$ By BILL DOOLITTLE Courier-Journal & Times Correspondent e first sound you hear is a tiny iltiT when Doug McMackin flicks a swi cb on the dashboard Or his 1969 , ffuetang. But this isn't jusd any nine- ye4r old car. Its a super-stock drag rae- in Machine, built by Doug and his bfether John McMackin of Louisville. or a hitchhiking reporter, who haS er been in a lire racing car- the rring noise just heightens the antic!- Oft of whet is Conii4 next- - le Thursday night, and Doug eckin is giving 4 new transmission in the ear 4light gtekedewe, and at the sae time providing a new thrill for couple of repotters- cMackin turns a key, and instantly th electric fuel injection (the whirring nol5e) feeds the $6,000 Ford Cobra pow- tplant what it craves; 428 cubic inches of engine muscle blast into action, t an idle speed, the big engine cr clei along in a loatieg rhythm, each enruffled explosion of the eight cylin. d?definable to the ear. cMackin's dragster is entered in racing programs tonight and Sunday moon at Ohio Valley Raceway, 15 imp south of the.: Wetterson Express- eraio s on Dixie Highway at Katherine Sta. ti Road. McMackin' car is just one of 1:16 type of dragster, from stocks to tsel, el, which will be competing this weekend in one of the International Hot Irp0 Association's eight National Points meets. Qualifying goes on all day teday. V competition beginning about 7 p.m. Ot Sunday gates open at 10 a.m., with eli 'Mations in the top national classes se fOr 2 p.m, eMeckin slowly rolls the car in a tt U-turn. coming full-around to point desie the 1A-mile asphalt strip at Ohio Stre*lit ahead is a long blue g4V rod divided by a yellow line, with Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 SketkOlOW.W: sluikes tip. guard rails on each side. Away to the The view stays etatiOnary in front, ex- distance is a flat field with trees on WA, dept, Cones right at you, a tinerarna " farrrgriegoing be a vierv sho'rt tnoviengprorpf4ion,g43;o4pru:tyases ytoowuasredes .,Itt a very, very short ernoUnt Of " 43 it cOnlea into foci-14 and a subtle shift "We're only going to get Up to about a gears settles you into a flying glide ... 95 miles per Mut," says McMackik ca- jot then, it is over. seally. Then he gives the ter a couple the few seconds seemed even briefer short toward blasts to heat up the rub- than they were, and the distance cov- bef en the rear tires. erect seethed as if it couldn't have been At the starting pile, the ee,f pit c e41 # slightly forward lira moment's pause. " ""-4!" (1'4 a alliae Then, SUddenly, we leap away frOnt As McMackin brakes the car the ten- the Hee; the toreee pushing us back Sten 4 released and YO4 real4e you against the seat, an there is a trernen- haVe only breathed one lireath. doils roar from the engine, now with no We make the same kind of run back distinction in its beat, no gravel in its toward the starting point. With a grin voice.. " the hitchiker pops out and discovefs his unigan leads wireuto,wire, Dominion Frost also wins Special to The Courier-Journal LEXINGTON, Ky. Dunigan be- came the first 2-year-old to cover a mile in two minutes at the Red Mile's spring meeting when the son of Meadow Skip- per led from, wire-to-wire in winning the second division of the $28,774 Kentucky Sires Stakes colt pace last night. Winless in three previous outings at The- Meadowlands- in East Rutherforcir NJ., Deniean posted fractions Of :3), t:00415 and 1:31, then covered the final two furlengs in 29 secontig for a clock- ing of 2.00 flat. He paid $21, $7 and $4.80. Secoed place Bret's Class returned $3.40 and $2.80, and firet Who was 63.60 to show. DoMinion Frost, who didn't figure in pre-face speculation, certainly clewed at the ceeclusion of the first division of the stakes. The 2-year-old son of Bret Hanover won in 2:01 by a length over Plat Du Rea with Truth third. The pre-race fa- vorite Social Outcast, who was never far off the early pace, wound up fifth. Trainer-driver Doug McIntosh kept Dominion Frost near the lead, racing second at the opening quarter of :302/a, fourth at the 1:0044i half, and moved for the lead in the final turn. At the top of the stretch Dominion Prost drew" the top and never looked back. The winner, who 1/4,vas purchased for $26,500 at the 1977" Tattersalls Yearling Sale by the Erie Shores Stable of Wheatley, Ontario, returned $13.60, 7.20, 5.40. Plat du Jour paid $6.60 and 6.20 while Truth was $5.80 to show. The victory pushes Dominion Frost's earnings to $8,583. The juvenile's next Kentucky Sires Stakes engagement will be July, 3rd at Louisville Downs. racing grOXI4oi?ti feet are tingling as he stands on the pavement. On another run, the sounds gain iden- tity: an exploding blast of a seund tor those spectatOre behind the start; and then when McMackin turns and alines at MI from the far end of tile strip, it is a new sound you hear. Froth the 41s- tance, after you see the car come 143 and come on, you hear a higher Pitched "wh000000" tone of power, the engine's full-thrOttled voice. After one ride, there is no longer any wonder what intoxicates a man go Much he would want to go from. a standing start to 187 miles per hour in MX sec- onds. SATURDAY NITE MID SEASON STREET STOCKERS World's Fastest Figure 8 Racing a:00 PM JEFFERSON VILLI SPORTS DROME ? SPEEDWAY Where Rqcing is Great in '78 (812) 282-7551 THERE AREN'T MANY OPTIONS LEFT SPECIAL SALE PRICES G000 THROUGH MON., JUNE 26, 1978 New 1978 Audi 5000 4-Speed Transmission. Was $10,364 Now $9,358 Stock 4096 New Audi 5000 Automatic transmisibn. Was $10,338.90 Now 9,226.3O Stock 0043 5-4linder fuel-injected engine.) Power-assisted brakes) Front-wheel drive ? Full-wheel covers ? Cruise control ? Electric clock ? Tinted glass ? Power-assisted rack & pinion steering ? Passenger vanity mirror ? Lockable glove compartment ? Electrit rear window defogger) Carpeted luggage compartment ? 185/70 HR 14 steel-belted radial tires ? Fully reclining front seats with adjustable headrests ? Center console w/astftray and storage compartments ? TEST DRIVE THE AUDI 5000 PORSC E+ 741 South Third St. 5 by *giving to the first 25 customers who buy a new 1978 car or truck horn our stock this Friday and Saturday a '78 Graiut Prix OVEIV4 TO CHOOSE FROM List $6563.54 Discount $1000,00 SALE PRICE Renatiit Let us make your down payment. MONTHLY PAYMENTS 19ricla leacaltioit includes: rs **" *Om Otanty Wee tat Cent at our boautfful OT AIR IIALLOON tethered on our lot and ready for lift-off, weather j)erittitting, Juno 23* 24. 4. Ocean cu',d poedc.de .0 forhO, "`in vtir444 stieetkrtEr:'',77. it 40,1,941,4f.. irri?Orti44441 .' ? ? 4Fri'ofiirtto.ri be lir. this is a git from Sb Hcck rial e?14f Thank you Louisville, fog 25 years of successful business, Bob Hook Chevrolet. Le Cary Renault Let us make your down payment MONTHLY PAYMENTS S'IL'E $3 8000 PRICE Cr price ;3480, 48 monthly payments of $95.73 at annul percentage rite Of 12,3, do payment, S40,00 deferred payment price $4795,64 Air, V8 automatic, power Steering & brakes, Sierra Grarwe package, special two - tone paint-, white wall tires, AM radio. 11 Ft. Slide In Camper List $13,940 Discount $2,040 SALE PRICE 1 Soft ray glass, color key floor mat, door edge guard, all weather air, intermitting windshield wiper. Extend- ed camper mirror, speed & cruise control, heavy duty power brakes, 454 Vit engine, automatic transmis- sion, auxiliary fuel tank, power steering, dual rear wheels, wheel covers; heavy duty battery, radio, heavy duty transmission, step bumper. Sierra Special Deluxe two tone paint, camper special, 7,50-16 Gres, titer Chevy is the N IT YOU S 4144 Bardstown Road 499-0800 PA Bob Hook trucks .,.Save you bucks! a .4 4 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 THE COURIMIOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 vammomasmaimpiRsr C7 -Z. 3 03 f't Fleehicle PICKUP Steck #T-630 List $4144.25 Now :o Every car is eligible for our works program, 12 months, 20,000 miles, free rental car. Coupes and 4-Drs. 3 to Choose From Every car is eligible for Our works program, 12 months, 20,000 miles, free rental car. Every ear is eligible for our Works program, . 12 months, 20,000 miles, free rental cer. Every car is . eligible for our works program, 12 months, 20,000 miles, free rental car. ,77 Delta 68 $4795 ? Every car is eligible for our works program, 12 months, ? 20,000 miles, free rental ear. '76 AMC Hornet Wagon Every car is "eligible tor our works program, 12 months, 20,000 miles, free rental car. 77 LTD Ford 2 and 4-Drs. Ch F 8 to OOS0 r gin 4495 _ /7v eii a if - r' vaolotia 2-Or. Coupe - - i 4795 Every car Is eligible for our works program, ' . la months, 1- 20,000 milee,. free rental car, '77 Malibu Coupe .5 to Choose From $4895 '77 Nova 2-9rs., 4-gra, and Hatchbacks 10 dhoose Frtoom $3995 Every car is' eligible for our works program, 12 months, 20,0Q0 mi.les, free rental car. '72 ? Grand Prix *2295 eirsammommerscino? 70 Chelifette - - Aytomatic an Air . $2 i !p. * Choice of 50 trucks and Up' *1995 70 impala . 4-Dr? ' 0- ? ? 2495 - - , ? '75 Olds Convertible Mr blue , .$4695 eligible Par is for oLlr works Program, 20,.'000 miles, tree reptal Oar.' 1 7 0 $ of 595 Grand Prix t' '6 rd if?' onto Choice A _ . MO) tei n := ' ?Vidiloriti , . .- - - Every car is eligible for OW works program, ? 12 months, 20,000 -miles, free rental car. '73 Riviera Landau 18,000 miles * 4296 Aagtimaimaft?i?MMI,101?ISIIMMINOIRMMIMMIMNPMMIIMMIIMs '77 Mustang II $3695 . v , rISIMMINEMMI1F1110111100044111MMMIPNIMIKOMBIlligpi Every car is, eligible for our works program, 12 months, , 20000 miles , , free rental car. ? Choice of 20 Wagons 41 from .1495 _IMINimimIlelal:PM?01.11:MIIIMMILIIM,M01......... . ,'76 Maverick < Air $ 995 2 AVIS NAM //fiat an, Sap, %ass/mu .4 ;79, Aft 40) Sates Hours; Mon, -Fri. 9,AM-6 PM; eat. 9 AM-6 PM; Syn, 1g-6 PM ? Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 THE COUR1ER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 From AP and Special Oispatches Veteran Jimmy Nichols moved Sea klayaity to the outside for the stretch run and the 4-year-old daughter of Na, Royalty just got up in time to win the $9,500 Her Grace Purse by a head yOterday at Churchill Downs.4 \./rcheerfut,,Princess,,4 11 lukewarm fa- t Vorite in the field of 11 3-and-4-year-old fifties, held on for second Macey While Matinee Mame, the pacesetter to the to of the stretch, was third. - 4 tlichols stored his second win of the day and 10th of the meeting in booting ? ?.;?? ecting - etter horses by a half length in last fall's Golden Rod Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 tn titnelo win Downs feature Se4 Rciyalty home in 1:11 flat for the six furlongs. Sea Royalty returned $15,40, $6.80 and 84.40 to her backers among , the crowd of 7,552. Cheerful Princess paid $3.20 and $2.40 and Matinee Mama $3.20. Jim McKnight registered his 47th win of the meeting when he won the third race with Mad Bush. He is tied with julto Espinoza for riding honors. Jerry Santage brought Dancing Image ti6me a winner in the sixth race for the meet's' largest w n payoff ? $258.20 for a $2 bet. ? After an unsuccessful bid against older females in last 'week's Fleur de ? Lis HandicaP, Bold Rendezvous returns 'against rivals in her own age group in "today's $23,025 Dogwood Stakes at Chur- chill Downs. r Bold Rendezvous Will carry an impost of 121 pounds in the seven-furlong test that has draw a field of 12 fillies. Rainy Princess, who lost to Bold Rendezvous By, JIM, BOLUS; courier-404mm a Tirrira Staff Writer; , ..,:;?With a hefty increase irt purse Money, Ellis Park director Of racing Donnie Richardson expects a substantial, im- pOvement in the quality of hOrseS that *itl be competing at the Henderson, 1cyt, track's summer meeting, which opfns next Friday. ..-1;s1The overall quality will prObably be SC percent better than it's ever been," Richardson said. Richardson said a primary reason for atttacting better horses is Ellis Park's expanded staket program. He noted that Ellis will run 13 stakes, races at its 0-day meeting (June 30-Sept. 4). Last year Ellis ran only fiVe stakes, accord- in to, Richardson. .Richardson said that $205,009 will be .04 into the Ellis stakes program, in- cluding $140,000 corning from a new State fund designed to upgrade the level ot 'racing at the track. will launch its meeting in g big ,.t:VaS, with stakes races On three of its first teUr days. Each of these hree kceS. will be a six-furlong sprint vith ljarse0! $15,000 added. ped opening-day feature is the Inau- 601,7Handicap for 3-year-olds and Twenty-five horses were nominated to tii0 race, including Inca Roca, Naughty Jake, Mr. Barb, Best Person, Tinsley's Hope and Faneuil Boy. ? The feature on July 1 is the Brent- WOW Handicap for 3-year-olds. Among th4 nominees to this race are Special HOor, the long,shot winner of the Ohio Derby last Sunday; Grandeza, Weird Emperor, Guilford H. and Braze and .!....011 July 4, Ellis will stage the Consti- tinjon Handicap for fillies and Mares, 3- ids and up. Nominees to, thi? race gsLikely Exchange, *Inner of the 7,51kleur del Li* Handicap atChur- VAnS14st citurday: Whet. aason, by rate cap -4Foyt; ,,,,AptO,L4ft sting, BOA! Lightning,, FaMedv? Princess, Belle of pO'clge Me, Plika? Need a Dime and ./.03( Pride. .' kithardson Said a stakesrraCe will be run fach Saturday of the meeting, as Ar.0 as on the Sept. 5 Labor Day card. schedule calls for 12 of the 13 stale to be valued at $15,000 added .hLlG one ? the Governor's Handicap . 12? will carry a $25,000'-added pin-s Riihardson said that newcomers in the nklis' trainers' ranks will include Joe Petalleo, Art Yocam, Earl Puckett, John Fischer, Dennis Freking and E P. t- Confirm. ..:10chardson added thai*ii*fa,,vipce, wilta division Of Dae, asafe'r'establec ! , _ .., Wit be returning to Ellis after a Fong lkSe. , '.!.improvements at Ellis Park include a ne* .,Iumninurn rail and A nes!! 32-sta1t bgiN Richardson noted, . )1di Nan is the No. 1 man - TOKY0 (AP). -- Taiwan's veteran Pr...0, listen Min Nan, battling heavy rain, flke a 4-under-par 68 yesterday for a 00 pd took a five-stroke lead after the SO1 d round of the $119,000 Shizuoka Open Golf Tournament. Stakes, will carry na in her return from Ak-Sar-Ben. With six in-theminney finishes in sev- en starts this year, Bold Rendezvous is the early favorite. She ran third in the Fleur de Lis, weakening after six fur- longs and losing to Likely Exchange and Time for Pleasure, Trainer Jim Morgan has decided to put Anthony Rini up in place of Paul Nicolo, who rode Bold Rendezvous to third-place finishes last week and in the Kentucky Oaks. A strong field of nine 3-year-old fil- lies, including B. Thoughtful, Grenzen and Equanimity, carrying 121 pounds each, will contest the 1 ya-mile, $100,000- apdadriec, Hollywood Oaks at Hollywood B. Thoughtful won by eight lengths in her last start, the 1 1/16-mile Princess Stakes at HollywOod June 10. Grenzen was badly beaten in the May 27 Acorn at Belmont but won the Santa Ynez and Santa Susana at Santa Anita. Equanim- TRACTORS AND TILLERS ity' won the Fantasy Stakes March 2$ at Oaklawn Park but has not repeated that form. ? Belmont Park's feature will be the 1 1/16-mile New York Handicap for fillies and mares on the grass which will be run in two $50,000-added divisions. Pearl Necklace will carry top weight of 122 pounds in the nine-hot-8e first di- vision, spotting four pounds to bottle's Doll. The 10-horse second section is headed by One Sum, the winner of the Affectionately, Next Move and Shuvee handicaps who is high-weighted at 122 pounds, and Flying Water, 121, an im- pressive winner recently at Belmont.- Also on tap this weekend' is the 119th running of the 11/4-mile, $100,000 Queen's Plate, the oldest stakes race in North America. Eleven 3-year-olds will contest the race at WoOdbine in Tema- to, including Overskate, the filly L'Ale- zarie, Pleasure Bent, High. Roller and Forty Bye Two. having a Weekend SALE You'll NEVER Forget!! .1% so. TOP 3 MIDSIZE GM SALER ova :0 ************** 4000 SO. FT.'SPRINKLING SYSTEM FSALE EXPIRES -4( REE 7114-78 :txr * .with purchase of tractor **,k******* icilk?Alr,.*:**vrirarytirieFurr************* kow$204_7' DISCOUNT. $043.90 LIST PRICE $2934.90 ? 12 HP KPHLER ENGINE WITH. 42' MOWER , ? HYDROSTATIC CONTROL ? SNOW BLOWER (OPTIONAL) 7 HP ROCKET TILLER WITH ELEC. STARTER' NOW 79750 DISCOUNT $152.45 L/51'5949.95 Your Choice Not just one car but many of the top GM Midsize car. like Monte Carlo by. Choy- rOlet,-'??78 Grand Prix by Pontiac, '78 Cutlass Su- preme by Oldsmobile, all have air condition, V-8 engine, power steering, power brakes, with and Without bucket seats, and much, much more. 1 4 11 P HYDROSTATIC CONTROL WITH 42' MOWER TILLER (OPTIONAL) NOW $21 509? ( LIST $3054.90 DISCOUNT , $904.90 10 HP GEAR KOHLER ENGINE WITH 42' MOWER BLADE (OPTIONAL), NOW I! LIST $2409.90 DISCOUNT $654.90 Inc!ucleci are Z-28, it, Coupes and Sp-Ort Coupes.' These Camaro's come in a variety of colors and are equipped with lots of. extras. Don't wait?drive one today! Green Tree Mall and Coyle Chevrolet presimii*; VAN & TRUCK SHOW ? NOw thru June 25 Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m; Sun. 12:30 to 5:30 On display inside GREEN TREE MALL are over 40 Super-Customized COYLE cHevr VANS and RUGGED CHEVY TRUCkS. Also: see tHg CHEVY SHOW . . . a Chevy Blazer cut in half.to let you see all the inner working parts in motion. .4 HP CHAIN DRIVE tiNr LISt$289.9,'":: 'SAVE $.110.45 NOW $ 51 795? SATURDAY 8 AM 'til 6 PM MONDAY TNRU FRIDAY 8 AM, 'til 8 PM 4723 owe HiovirAY AT ROCKFORD 447-3171 weather The page Al weather summary tells you where to look Inside The Courier-Journal for complete weather news. Gas Saver The TROJAN HORSE: Sie MUSTANG II Funny Car In our showroom, and visit Ohio Valley Raceway to watch it in action Sunday. New '78..6 cylindeic power Steering, tinted glass, paint stripes, body side moldinge and much More, Stock 4 1698 t One Only New 178. Summer White with White vinyl roof. AIR CONDI- , TIONED, automatic, power steering, power brakes, wide body ? side moldings', tinted glass, dual sport mirrors. Stook #1668 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 Approved For Release 2009/08/11: CIA-RDP05S00620R000601460043-8 BLONDIE I ;EEL GUILTY ABOur TODAY WERE ENJOYING OURSELVES WHILE OUR WIVES ARE_ POME 'WORRYING SINCE WE'RE PEELt NG GUILTY THERE'S ONLY ONE THING TO: po' LET'S HAVE SOME ask THE COURIER-JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1978 C Want to ask a question and maybe win an encyclopedia or cash? Mail it to ASK ANDY, The Courier-Journal, Louisville, Ky. 40202. Give your name, age and address. ? , GIL IIIORP TOUGH 1-055, GIL... WE WERE ALL HOPING MILFORD WOULD WIN IT5 FINAL GAME, ' ALL IE BUTLER MADE A 5UGGE$TION THAT I THINK HA 5 5CME - MERIT! What are carpenter bees? There are 10,000 species of bees, and they can be found in almost every part of the world except the North and South Poles. They gather pollen and nectar from flowers on many fruits and vegeta- bles. The two major groups are the social bees, which live in colonies, and the solitary bees, which live alone. Ifoneybee are social bees. They live in colonies that may have as few as 10 members or as many as 80,000. Each colony includes one queen, which lays the eggs; many workers, which gather food and care for the young, and lots of drones, irhich have the function of mat- ing with the colony's queen or a young queen. . Most bees fall into the solitary group. JEFF HAWKE TANK MeNA,MARA Mie.OXFEFPER, 115 RUMORED. NAT TO SIM TY1Z01\15, YOUR Fik-T RovNt? DRAFT Cl-01C, YOUti. lAVE TO MT 1-115 PRICE OF 4,2-3 MI1.LION1. iT VT, NRonle ? CO1 SO YOU ALIENS DON'T KNOW WHAT TELEVISION 131 They live alone, although sometimes thousands may gather in a rather small area and build their nests close togeth- er. But solitary bees do not depend on each other. The carpenter bee is one of the soli- tary species. They can range from about a quarter of an inch long up to a full inch. They build nests in dead twigs or branches. A female, carpenter bee will dig its own tunnel home. It will then put pollen and nectar at the bottom and lay an egg on top of the stored food. A female carpenter bee has strong, sharp jaws and can easily dig a tunnel into the wood. It spreads tiny bits of wood chips, cemented together with sa- liva, across the top of the cell. This ceil- ing acts as a floor for a cell above, so that the tunnel becomes filled with a GOI;W, I LOVE 'ME GAME MUCH PLAY IT FOR, $60 A WEFX. YOU'LiEARDAICE TRY, OUT NoTD01.0 CfZAL CONNAcil TO WM( LET'S CUT THIS SHORT SO THAT OUR UNWELCOME VISITORS CAN GET ON TNEIR WAY' TELEVISION IS JUST A VISUAL METHOD OF MASS COMMUNICATION! series of cells, each holding a bit .1 food and one egg. There are no worker bees among the solitary group. Each female is like:a queen and must do its own work. After t> it has laid eggs and sealed the last Ce14-1 the carpenter bee flies away. The eggs hatch in a few weeks and the larvae, which come out' of the eggs', live on the pollen and nectar. In a fesy days they work themselves out of the tunnel. 4 Other solitary bees include the _ cutter bees, the miners, masons and- cockoo bees. _ Andy sends a dictionary to Briairl'' Nelson, 111 of Newport Beach, Calif,. ;T. for his question. ? Los Angeles Times Syndicate NOW THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT WE WERE LOOKING FOR? HOW REMARKABLE! 00 4THINKE ? COULD USE SOME'. TELEVISION ? Dist 197 Unite Feature Syndicate REX MORGAN, M.D. BEETLE BAILEY GOLLY! THEY'RE ELIRE RECALLING A LOT OF THE NEW CARS BACK TO DETRO I IT HAPPENING ALL OVER JUDGE PARKER YOU HAVE NO INTENTION OF LEAVING TOWN, DO you? NANCY SAID ?GIVE ME 111. THAT MONEY, GEORGIA! NO! I CHANGED MY MI NO.. 'T YES, AND I'M SURE YOU woN BELIEvE IT FUNKY WINKEIIBEAN DAILY ACROSS - abbr. 1 Lake of Geneva 27 Tanzanian states- 6 Big laugh, in man theatrical slang 30 Unexciting 10 Honshu city 33 Kind of eard 14 St. Teresa's 36 Jockey birthplace of a type 15 Unusual person 38 See 33 Down 16 Slip ? (make 39 Road of a kind an error) 41 Famous name in 17 Greek city-state -Vienna 18 One unduly 43 Persian fearful of 44 Uppity one ' foreigners 46 City east of 20 Rehearse, in a Acapulco sense 47 C.P. ?, British 22 Ball team author 23 Yemeni capital 49 State of Mexico 24 Low islands 51 Gain 24 Stenographer's 53 Italian painter Answer To Yesterday's Puzzle LT. FUZZ HAG BEEN RECALLEP TO CUPLIP MILlTARY , GCHOOL.;., 0,9'1 ;Jmirer..1 Pr. SymikQte NOT REALLY.' OKAY I'LL CALL YOURE *WOAD YOU IN A C'AY WITI4 U Akimf ORSO! You? 80(16141. TUE TICKETS ALMOST A MONTIl A60! YOU KNOW UTTER THAN TO GET ME UPSET, 5WEETH ART! 197 Un nature dicate, ? e7nsq?E-? ZAL,SH,..rt. LE*. TODN tklE.'RE BRINGING 4bt.) 11-lE. NATIONAL DRAG REiCIN.C.7 cHAMPIo-11P, AND WE'RE RE.A(X) FOR 11-IE FAR.T OF 71-18 FIR5T RACE C 110 S SW 011 TD Guido 54 Author O'Flaherty 58 Key 81 Relative of the boa 63 Canada's Great 65 Mountain range of North Africa 66 Narrative 67 Of poetry 68 Schedules 69 Birds of prey 70 Pinto 71 Moving back and forth DOWN 1 Kola Peninsula dwellers 2 City in S. Portugal 3 "La Scala" city 4 Mediterranean port of Spain 5 American cartoonist Freight carrier 19 7 Late some sacks 21 8 Bailiwick for 9 Down 25 9 Croaker 28 10 Town in NE Massachusetts 11 S. American peak 32 12 Man's name: Abbr. 33 13 21 arid others .311.1 2.4 AND. GOEb eRUCE: MiNGING AWN FROM THE 6TARTING LIKE ! "B.C." MITH FAMILY NeW OAPAnte..Se, &ANDFAT-R5R CLCU