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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 2
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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 2

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Montana Standard, Butte, Sunday, August 26, 1984 Miniseries 'V' repeats tonight LOS ANGELES NBC is bringing back its highly touted 1983 miniseries on Sunday and Monday, and you can bet that before the new season begins, the sequel, The Final Battle," will air. That way, the Peacock can be sure to heighten anticipation of its new Friday-night series based on the space-age drama. Marc Singer and Faye Grant star in the original two-parter that begins on Sunday at 8 p.m. (conclusion on Monday), and it's that opening presentation that you'll want to catch. Not only is it the stronger of the two parts, but it is also the one that explains the project's alien-invasion theme so well.

It also features some of television's greatest special effects ever. For a change, I think they really have the makings of a very popular series here. Lord knows, NBC could use one. HIGHLIGHTS BOX: And Justice for All," ABC at 8 p.m.: A powerful drama starring Al Pacino as a man determined to see that inequities and corruption in the American legal system are corrected. The lawyer's indictment of the system at the conclusion is most stirring monologues in recent film history.

Jack Warden, John Forsythe and Lee Strasberg also star in the 1979 movie. SERIES SAMPLINGS: "Ripley's Believe It or Not!" ABC at 6 p.m.: A device that helps paralyzed kids get back on their feet; people who have refused to be handicapped by disabilities; and some of the oddities of New York City are featured in this repeat installment. Jack Palance hosts. Day at a Time," CBS at 7 p.m.: Romance is in the air when the attraction between Barbara and fellow-worker Max becomes too strong to ignore. Valerie Bertinelli.

Repeat. "Hardcastle and McCormick," CFAC at 6 and ABC at 7: A strange series of events lead to the presumption that the Judge is dead. Now, the killers set out to eliminate Mark as well. Conclusion of a two Daniel Hugh-Kelly. Repeat.

"Knight Rider," NBC at 7 p.m.: Michael poses as a rock singer Obituaries Darlene D. Baker, 49 Darlene D. Baker of Opportunity died Saturday at her home. She was 49. Mrs.

Baker was born July 8, 1935, in Saxon, to John and Francis Aho. She moved to Montana i in 1954 and was married to Eugene Baker. She is survived by her husband of Opportunity; sons and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Baker of Anaconda and Robert of Opportunity; daughters and son-inlaw, Chris and Bill Field and Elizabeth Baker, both of Anaconda; her mother of Butte; a brother, Sheldon Aho of Butte; sisters, Sharon of Cheyenne, Kathy Griffin of Butte, and Doris Blank of Opportunity; and five grandchildren.

Cremation has taken place and a memorial service will be held later. Longfellow's Finnegan Funeral Home is in charge. Calendar Organizations Butte Athletic Council will have its first fall meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the War Bonnett Inn. All members are urged to attend.

Women's Aglow Fellowship will meet Monday at 12:30 p.m. at Terri's Restaurant. Guest speaker will be Sharon Drews. John B. Lappin, 38.

A Memorial Mass is scheduled Monday at 10:30 in Anaconda's Holy Family Church for John B. Lappin, 38, of 515 Spruce, Anaconda. He died Friday after a long' illness. Mr. Lappin was born May 1 14, 1946, in Anaconda to Raymond F.

and Marian Johnson Lappin. He attended Anaconda schools and served in the National Guard. He drove schools buses for the Central Bus Company and was employed by Joe's Dairy Products before working as an engineer at W.K. Dwyer School. He was a member of the Teamsters and Engineers unions.

Mr. Lappin married Carol Hildebrant March 20, 1969. He is survived by his wife, his parents, and two brothers, Raymond and P.J., all of Anaconda. Cremation is planned. Longfellow's Finnegan Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Memorials are suggested to the Anaconda stadium project or to a charity of the donor's choice. Tour year ends The Anaconda Minerals tours of mine operations will end Friday, the Butte Chamber of Commerce announced. The free tours will resume next season. Butte statistics NEW ARRIVALS In St. James Community Hospital Saturday: A daughter to Janet and Daniel Martin of 2670 Parrot.

A daughter to Charmaine and Bernard Everett of Anaconda. A daughter to Deborah Pierce of 2005 Carolina. Police reports Mrs. June Johnson, owner of Trevillion-Johnson Gems, 2400 S. Montana, reported to police Saturday that a 14-carat yellow gold semiblack opal ring with five diamonds worth $1,995 was stolen sometime between 9 and 5 Friday at the business.

Mrs. Johnson reported that none of her employees recalled showing the ring to customers Friday. Fire calls Saturday, 2:48 a.m. Gas spill near the Civic Center. Corrections Two surviving brothers of Anaconda native Joseph Connors, 61, were inadvertently omitted from a Saturday obituary.

They are Pat Connors of Tucson and Dennis Connors of Las Vegas. Errors of fact (not typographical errors unless they significantly change the meaning of a story) may be brought to the attention of The Standard by calling 782-8301 between 9 and 5 weekdays, or 4-8 p.m. weekends. The Montana Established June 1, 1876 Den Berryman Bert Geskill. Editor Dennis Morgan Comptroller Den Killoy Advertising Director Jim Ruork Systems Coordinator Pom Swiger City Editor Mick Lyon Circulation Mgr.

George Toy Press- Plate Foreman Dennis Biteri. Moilroom Mgr. The Montana Standard is published daily and Sunday at 25 W. Granite Butte, Montana 59701. Second-Class Postage paid of Butte, Montana.

Owned by Lee Enterprises, Inc. 130 E. Second Street, Davenport, lowa 52801. No part this newspaper may be reproduced without the written consent of the publisher. Member of the fudit Bureau of Circulation and Associated Press.

Advertising Dept. Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Send new subscriptions and change of address de The Mentane Standard, P.O. Box 1627, Butte, Mentana 99703.

HOME DELIVERY RATE BY INDEPENDENT CARRIER DAILY AND SUNDAY Foot Carrier. $1.80 per week Route per week SENIOR CITIZENS Senior Citizen $1.65 per week Motor $1.76 per week MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN MONTANA Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 3 mos. $99.00 $53.00 $27.75 Report foresees crisis in low teacher pay TV tonight Rick Sherwood while investigating the "accidental" death of the band's former lead singer. David Hasselhoff.

Repeat. "Goodnight, Beantown," CBS at 7:30 p.m.: Matt proposes to an old sweetheart and there's nothing Jenny can do to convince him he has made a mistake. Bill Bixby, Mariette Hartley. Repeat. "Alice," CBS at 8:30 p.m.: James Coco guests as a dentist who falls for Alice after examining a tooth she broke while eating Mel's chili.

Linda Lavin. Repeat. SPORTING GOODS: "PGA Golf," CBS at 2 p.m.: Fourth round in the $700,000 World Series of Golf from the Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. "NFL Football," CBS at 11 a.m.: The Buffalo Bills take on the Chicago Bears in an exhibition game from the Hoosier Dome in Indianapolis. "The Arlington Million," NBC at 3 p.m.: The international turf classic horse racing's first $1-million event and still the world's richest stakes race featuring 14 fine thoroughbreds.

From Arlington Park in Chicago. John Henry and Tolomeo are among the favorites. "Sportsworld," NBC at p.m.: The CART Pocono 500, the third leg of Indy Car auto racing's 500-mile triple crown, taped last week at Pocono International Raceway in Long Pond, Olympians and other track-and-field stars compete in international meets in Budapest and Zurich. Times THE PARK-LIKE SETTING at 200 Little Basin Creek Road reflects the creative landscaping skills of Cheryl and David Zobenica, who are the latest recipients of the Golden Spade Award from the Englewood-Emerson Garden Club. A walnut-stained fence with 10 brick flower boxes lines the driveway.

A brick planter filled with double petunias, marigolds and pansies spans the full length of the home's front, flanked by two tiered rock gardens with aniums, moss roses and small shrubs. That's not all the large lawn has an oval garden with poppies, lillies, and columbine around boulders and a wine barrel overflows with blooms elsewhere. There's a vegetable garden about ready to harvest and young trees including quaking aspen, pine, fir, poplar, willow, crabapple and lilac bushes which will provide shade and color eventually. The couple has worked the magic in only six years at a pair of huge petrified ram's horns and the location. (Staff ceramic objects among daisies, iris, ger- Bear didn't know fur isn't washable WEST YELLOWSTONE (AP) A bear, thought to be a young grizzly, took a stroll through a laundromat here about the same time two other grizzlies were spotted in town, raiding garbage bins.

Floyd Morris, owner of the Driftwood Cleaner and Trailer Park, said Saturday that a small grizzly pushed through the window of his building about 1:45 a.m. Friday. He said that tracks and signs in and out of the building showed that the bear walked to the window, pushed it in, walked to the back the laundromat, shook broken glass off its body and then left the building the same way it came in. Morris said his parents were sleeping in an adjacent apartment and were awakened by the crash. He said they entered the room and identified the bear as a grizzly.

Morris said it will cost more than $800 to replace his plate glass window. He said neighbors told him they had seen a small grizzly in their garbage dumpsters before and after they heard the crash when the window was broken. -Morris who lives in a mobile home next door to his laundromat, said he saw the bear just after it left the laundry. He said it was walking slowly through his trailer park, where about 15 people were sleeping. Morris said he attempted to report the incident to game warden Dave Etzwiler Friday morning, but Etzwiler was out of town.

Etzwiler's wife reported the incident along with the other bear sightings to the Bozeman office of the state Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks. Game warden Bud Hubbard came here Friday with two other FWP employees. Hubbard said he had received reports that two grizzlies, one a young bear with a radio collar and other an older grizzly, had been raiding garbage bins in town late Thursday night and early Friday morning. Hubbard said he set two culvert traps on the outskirts of town, but no bears had entered the traps by Friday night. Hubbard said Etzwiler may attempt to trap the bears when he returns to town.

"We just can't have grizzlies in town," Hubbard said. "If people here enjoy seeing bears in town because they know it's the grizzlies that will According to management guidelines written by the Interagency Grizzly Study Team, a grizzly trapped as few as three times for raiding garbage cans may be put to death because it may no longer be able to survive strictly on natural food sources. Does anyone have anything to say about the Bear Trap? BOZEMAN (AP) The Bureau of Land Management can't seem to interest the public in commenting on its proposed management plan for the agency's first wilderness area, Bear Trap Canyon. had a public meeting in Bozeman and about 12 people showed up," said Phil Gezon. "We had another in Ennis, and I'll let you guess how many came to that one.

Nobody came. "And we've received fewer than 10 unsolicited letters on this." The BLM's draft plan for the new, wilderness southwest of Bozeman includes restrictions on the number of floaters and bans on overnight float trips and, horseback By Lee Mitgang AP Education Writer Education reform efforts in many states will fail unless far more is done to boost the profession's status and pay, a new report by the Rand Corp. warned. "The a search for excellence as it is being conducted in most states will not solve the problem," said the 19- page study, 'Beyond the Commission Reports: The Coming Crisis in Teaching." The report warned that the nation faces severe teacher shortages by 1988 unless expensive steps are taken to raise teaching to a profession. The report, by Rand social scientist Linda Darling-Hammond, recommended that teacher salaries start at $20,000 and reach $50,000, compared with current starting salaries that average $13,000 lower than almost any other career requiring a bachelor's degree.

Teacher salaries, in real terms, have declined percent between 1971 and 1981, the report said. The Rand report was the latest in a growing library of more than a dozen education reform proposals issued since President Reagan's National Commission on Excellence Read Time Out TV guide on Saturday in The Mootana Standard in Education warned 16 months ago of a "rising tide of mediocrity" in public schools. Besides boosting salaries, it called for: Establishing a career ladder allowing experienced teachers to supervise new teachers and develop programs. Offering recruitment incentives such as scholarships and forgivable loans for college students with good grades to enter teaching. Making teacher education harder.

Requiring teacher internships before tenure is granted. Improving working conditions by allowing paraprofessionals to assume non-teaching duties. If those steps aren't taken, the report warned, the "'least academically able students will become the tenured teaching force for the next two generations of American school The report was silent on how to remove incompetent teachers from the classroom. Darling-Hammond said in an interview that she couldn't put a price tag on the proposed reforms. The report suggested that part of the cost might be offset by cutting back on the "layers of bureaucracy" that hobble some school districts, especially the largest ones.

Efforts by many states to boost educational standards by increased student and teacher competency testing and stiffer course requirements might actually worsen the looming teacher shortage, said Darling-Hammond. Such steps make teaching less attractive by imposing more bureaucratic controls, she said. The Rand study instead urged greater freedom for teachers to tailor their methods to students' individual needs. The report estimated that the supply of new graduates may satisfy only 80 percent of the demand for new teachers by 1988. A surplus of teachers for most of the past decade has already turned shortages in certain areas, including math, physics, computer programming, chemistry, data processing, bilingual education, special education, earth science, biology and English, the report said.

LEARN TO PREPARE INCOME TAXES America's Finest Income Tax Course Will Be Taught In Butte. Developed Taught By Block The Income Tax People. Classes Begin Sept. 5 HIR THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE For More Information Call Now 782-4244 BUTTE Standard USPS 885 760 Daily Only $93.00 $49.00 $26.00 Sunday Only $56.00 $30.00 $15.50 MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES OUTSIDE MONTANA Daily and Sunday 1 Yr. 6 mos.

3 mos. $111.00 $59.00 $31.00 Daily Only, $106.00 $56.00 $30.00 Sunday Only $63.00 $34.00 $18.50 TO REPORT DELIVERY ERRORS in Butte, please call 723-6666 before 10 a.m. weekdays, Sundays and holidays. If your paper has not arrived by 7:30 a.m., please contact your carrier. TO START OR STOP THE STANDARD the deadline 1s 4.30 p.m.

Monday through Friday for the neat morning The distribution office is closed on Saturday and Sunday after 10 CARRIER SERVICE STAFF may be contacted by calling the following phone numbers in your are BUTTE, office 782-8301 563-6951 683-4475 DEER LODGE HELENA 443-3189 Montana The Standard a 13 COCO 11 SUNDAY'S WINNING NUMBERS Just call The Montana Standard at 782-8301, to claim your prize winning certificate. Sponsored by SKAGGS MALL CO 525-22-6296 1.0.1. Thea PLAZA TWIN 804 1140 THEATRES 516-26-9523 Van 4.13. My Social Security Number is: Nome Address City. Zip.

Ol am a subscriber Phone Number Please lam not start convenient home delivery bill me pa use in the scenic Madison River gorge. Gezon, who is charged with producing a management plan, said he may advertise by putting the draft plan in sporting goods stores in Bozeman and Butte, along with letters requesting comment. He met this week in Bozeman with about 15 people, mostly members of the Bozeman Canoe and Kayak Club, to explain the management proposal. A final version should come out around the first of the year, he said. The BLM hopes to hire a seasonal river ranger to monitor use in the canyon and base further recommendations on the ranger's reports..

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Pages Available:
1,048,779
Years Available:
1928-2024