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Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
at T., . Day, 3 to 5 and 6:30 - at? 30. 0,0. 16th Beaver Pa Love _Mom D The Lions Roar The ' London Times, harrumphing, announced the other day that an auction gallery was a \national in- stitution\ whose \survival-in its present form matters to Britain.\ What prompted this remarkable statement was a bid by two brash Yanks, Stepehn Swid and Marshall Cogan, to take control of financially troubled Sotheby Parke Bernet. More remarkable still is the statement of the gallery's chief executive, Graham Llewellyn, about what he would do if the Yanks prevailed: \\I shall blow my brains out.\ With respect, that seems extreme. British resery; lfll‘f what it used to be. la & Sotheby's years ago acquired Parke-Bernet, the leading American galiery, without provoking any such agitated - language. - We decline to believe that another change of management really matters very much. Oceans no longer divide the English-speaking, world, as the The Times ought to know. That great national institution recently passed from Canadian ownership to, yes, Australian. -NEW YORK TIMES Cuomo: Make Education Top Issue BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) - Gov. Mario Cuomo wrapped up a two-day tripto western New York by telling 1,000 Buffalo teachers to make education the top issue in next year's presidential election. Speaking to the members of the Buffalo Teachers Federa- 'tion, Cuomo said Wednesday the Reagan Administration \has gone backwards on ong an about a “gfiinfl gfoeducafioniuthe upcoming prmldential elec- tion.\ Cuomo also reminded teach ers the state allocated $8.8 billion out of its $18.5 billion budget for education. He said that if his \administration is marked for any characteristic, it will be for education.\ The teachers are affiliated with the National Education Association's New York chap- ter. The chapter's more than 30,000 members heavily sup- ported Cuomo in last year's election. Israel Charges Syria Broke Cease-Fire By UnitedPress International Israel charged that Syria's missile attack on an Israeli reconnaissance . plane over Lebanon was a \serious\ cease-fire violation and part of an attempt to sa e the ~ Israeli-Lebanese with drawal accord. ''The Israeli Defense Force is all means necessary to defend Israeli soldiers wherev- er they may be as well as the Lebanese-Israeli agreement,\ the Israel military command said Wednesday. Deaths BRENDLINGER, GUY A. MORE GIFTS TO JOURNAL-REGISTER CAMP FUKD Mr. & Mrs. Albert Johnson Ange! & Rose Marle 15.00 Papedinoff ________ 10.00 in memory of loved ones trom Mr. & Mrs. Kenne: C. Lewis _________ S60 Mrs. Sidney Johnston 10.00 in memory of Josagh D. Costs From Dorothy P. Coats in memory of Edward Maxon & Halen Gerner Anngyonms ______ 19.00 Ur. & Ausfin O. 10.00 $5400 tam VOL. 81 - NO. 80 Time Capsule Holds > for The ‘B: MEDINA, NEW YORK THURSDAY MAY 26, 1983 Opening Slebf for Local BiCentennial - 5 MAKING HISTORY--Margaret Krozel and Margaret Shannon of the Sesquicentennial Committee pack capsule while Mayor Marcia -(J-R Photos) Tuohey reads list of contents. Over 100 Medinans, including a good number of elementary school students, gathered near a specially erected tent this morning to witness the burial of Medina's ang time capsule, dedicated to opening in the year 2032. Near pl r, a City Hall building completely decorated with bunting and | 12) F welcome banners, Mayor Marcia Tuohey led ceremonies ma ve Tn nF placing mementoes of the Medina Sesquicentennial Year under ground. The ceremony today included the following remarks by Mdyor Tuohey and a list of items included in the capsule. (Other data on the historic ceremony will be published - tomorrow along with the text of six essays prepared by Medina 6th graders on ''Predictions for Medina in 2032.) MA YOR=== Last evening as I read the winning sixth grade essays about Medina in 2032 1 was impressed with the imagination and yet reality of some of the ideas. For instance - 1. The mayor and village board will be robots as well as the teachers, doctors and nurses. 2. Everything will be computerized - grocery stores, cars. 3. Meals will be capsules, pills or wafers. 4. Medina will have moving sidewalks, a subway connecting us with Chicago and Boston. - 5. Solar power will be used for heating and running cars. 6. The canal will be a parking lot for a huge Main Street mall. ' 7. Cars will be operated by verbal com- mands. > 8. We'll have a public airport. 9. World War IH will occur in 1994 and last 29 years ... after which everything will be underground, including a conveyor system forgarbageeollecfim 0. Dentists will put on invisible braces. Buttberewassfilltbeawmdethaudedina will be a great place to live in 2032. Now I would like to address you 6th graders who are special guests here today .... Over the next 50 years all of you at some time or other will pass City Hall and this time cap- sule. Remember this day and the respon- sibility we are giving you to see that this capsule is opened in the year 2032. Some of you will move to other com munities, but when you return for visits I know you will be drawn to this place and will read the plaque and remember this day. You will all be in your early 60s, although same of you girls won't admit it. Maybe even one or two of you will be on the Board of Trustees or even mayor, if there are such people then Remember us and this past year of out- birthday. At the beginning of this Seaqui year last year's 6th graders were asked to wrile an essay on why I like Eving in Medina .... The thought in those essays was: People are rice and friendly -- like one big And this is what this community has been Bis ._ ome tig family. Tgcflggmmm and I think we all feel a Effie sad sat the passing of a greet year for a proud villege MEMORAETLIA LIST FOR CAPSULE 1 1%3 Calendar, Musecm Society. 1. 19%2 Calendar, Medina Historical 1. 183 Calendar, Medina Historical ooo oona r ase eran SHRHi 7. Apple Grove menu. 8. Letter from Medina Retired Teachers to Mayor Marcia Tuohey with a dollar biff at- tached. 9. Copy of \Medina Past and Present\ by Cecilia White, village historian. 10. Copy of \I Love New York Orleans County Travel Guide.\ - 11. Sesquicentennial bumper sticker and banner. 12. Membership list of the Medina Business and Professional Women's Club. 13. 1982 United States proof set coins. 14. 1982 Medina High School Mirror. 15. Porcelain bell made by Bea Blisset for 1982 Sesquicentennial. 16. Guide of Medina. 17. Certificate given by Sesquicentennial committee for recognition in promoting the affair. Certificate for \gold patrons\ at the Sesquicentennial Ball, March 1982. 18. Program of retirement party for the Rev. H. Burton Entrekin, 1954-1982. 19. Copy of parade schedule Saturday, July 17, 1962. Copy of Medina Sesquicer tennial Calendar of Events as compiled by Frank Berger. 20. Sesquicentennial button with logo done fay Robert Zimmerman. 21. Porcelain tile, Medina coat of arms. 22. Cancellation by Medina Post Office in December 1982. 23. Apple bank manufactured by Fisher- Price Crop. 24. Six (6) essays, \Life in Medina 2032,\ written by: Aaron Dutcher, Meaghan Boice, Jon Seott, Amy Fuller, Richard Kenward, Molly Maak. 25. \Town of Shelby,\ by Mrs. Walter Zacher. 26. Scroll with signers at the 1983 Sesqui Ball at Medina Armory. Z7. Cap with Medina Sesqui logo. 28. Newspapers ... Medina Daily Journal. quyeDaper.Beflsadvsfim 3% Penny Saver, TV Guide, J.C. Perny advertisement 31. Picture of the Sesquicentennial Com- mittee: Margaret Krozel and Cell White, chairmen; Joann Brundage, festival chairman; Anne Albone, Margaret M. mmemm 3. Pictire of Médina Vilage Board of Trustees. mmarfimgfiebmfizgafflfismp— QWMW to fig szgeaflfledfna. Carborundum Construction NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (UPD - The Carborunmt=nCo. kas begm crstracton of a FBO part st fis Kilectro Products Division in the Niags- re Commiy townof Sanborn A spokesucomen for the Erm Weesizy ssM the plari, which will be commleted in the 1982 - 2032 MEMORABILIA OF 1982 W THIS CAPSULE OPENED 2032 Serving The Lake Plums Country— Orleans, Nzagara,Genesee In iF-WeaI/i er Partly cloudy tonight, low near 40, in 305 with scattered frost in southern tier. West winds 5-15 mph. Mostly cloudy and cool Friday, high about 55. American Killed Salvador Gunman Escapes After Shooting Military Adviser ByMICHAEL W. DRUDGE - SAN SALVADOR, El Salva- dor (UPI) - An unidentified gunman shot and killed the commander of the U.S. tary advisers in El Salva- dor - the first slaying of a U.S. officer in the war-torn nation. Thegunmanescaped. The U.S. Embassy said Cmdr. Albert Schaufelberger, 32, of San Diego was shot point blank four times in the head Wednesday on the campus of the Jesuit-run Central Ameri- can University while waiting in his bullet-proof embassy car for a friend. The car's window was open. Schaufelberger was deputy commander for military per- sonnel at the embassy and the 55 naval, air force and army advisers sent to help train El Salvador's armed forces, embassy spokesman Donald R. Hamilton said. The slain officer was a man \who believed in what we are doing here,\ Hamilton said. A Pentagon spokesman said Schaufelberger was single. Hamilton said the gunman apparently fired into the window of the officer's car then Tuition ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -The largest tuition hike in the history of the State University has been approved by the institution's Board of Trustees, who voted to raise yearly undergraduate tuition for state residents by $300. - Beginningin September, resi- dent students who attend SUNY colleges will pay $1,350 a year for tuition. In the past, the largest annual tuition increase was $150. fled as he slumped over the wheel. A passer-by took Schau felberger to San Salvador's Military Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival. Schaufelberger was alone at the time of attack, wearing civilian clothes and apparently was armed, since that \is normal procedure,\ Hamilton said. But the officer did not fire at his assailant, the spokesman added. Noone responsibility for the slaying, which marked the first death of an American military officerin ElSalvador. Green Beret Sgt. Jay Stanley was shot in the leg Feb. 5 when rebels withdrawing from the town of Berlin fired on a helicopter carrying. him and three other a rs. He was the first U.S. adviser wounded in the Central American nation. In Washington, Deputy White House Press Secretary Peter Roussel said President Reagan was informed of the killing Wednesday two hours after it occurred by National Security Adviser William Clark. \We deeply regret it,\ Roussel said. \The matter is under investigation.\ Salvado- PRICE - 25° ran President Alvaro Magana promised a full investigation into the slaying. The embassy said there would be an autopsy ofSchaufelberger'sbody. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Schaufelberger had arrived in the country last Aug. 1 and was a member of the elite \SEAL\ squad - the Navy's Sea, Air and Land equivalent of U.S. Army Green Berets. In addition to military securi- ty, he also directed U.S. Navy training of El Salvador's small navy and helped concentrate naval patrols to stop weapons smuggling along the coast. The United States sent military advisers to El Salva- dor in 1981 and pledged economic and military aid. The number of U.S. advisers in El Salvador has been kept at a self-imposed limit of 55. Leftistrebels, meanwhile, cut off the eastern part of the nation, reportedly executing 13 captured soldiers and killing 31 others in an attack that destroyed a key bridge on the Pan American highway, offi- cials said. Col. Dionisio Hernandez of the 5th Infantry Brigade of San Vicente said the assault oc- curred on the Quebrada Seca Bridge, 37 miles east of San Salvador. Hike Approved Acting at a meeting Wednes- day, the trustees also raised dormitory rent by $150, to $1,400 annually. Executive Vice Chancellor Donald O'Dowd saidenrollment could drop by up to 6 percent because of the hikes, which altogether should generate about $53 million more for SUNY. '\Fvery $100 in tuition (hikes) costs between 1 and 2 percent in enrollment,\ O'Dowd ex- Albion Voters Approve '83-84 Spending Plan ALBION - In a relatively \light\ voter turnout, the proposed $9.1 million 198344 budget for the Albion Central School District was approved by a nearly 3-1 margin. Meanwhile, voters also ap- proved funds for the Swan Library and elected two members to the Board of Education. According to district of- ficials, a total of 834 votes were cast in the day-long balloting, more than 300 less voters than a year sgo and a decline of nearly 1,500 from the record 2,300 ballots of two years ago. Despite an increase in ap- propriations of $540,000 over the current budget, district officials have said that there will be no increase in the district's prcperty tax levy. Superintendent Dr Houck said the mcreased appropriations, which amount to approximately seven per cent, will be covered through a $400,000 budget surplus from the current year and an in crease in state aid to the district. Houck said the majority of the increase can be projected hikes in utilities despite energy conservation moves made by the district Voters in the district ap- proved the budget by a 530-191 margin, a result which ''pleased\' district officials. ''We feel it is a sound budget, one which will enable us to continue our programs at no «extra cost to the taxpayers,\ Houck said. Although there will be in creased appropriations, little of the hike will be borne by the district's taxpayers. Houck said only around 22 per cent of the total budget is paid through local property taxes with a majority of the remaining 78 per cent paid through state aid. Houck said, \Local schools are doing well this year because we spent a lot of time in Albany this past winter keeping in touch with our state officials and doing plenty of lobbying. People may not believe i, but the major job of a superin tendent is to relate with Albany to make sure they respond to our needs.\ Despite the passage of the budget, tax rates for the district's towns will not be known until August District Electron Gun Under Devefiopment LIVERMORE, Cal.(UFTY- Researchers are cing a §§ milicn device in tying to develop a gun to destroy enemy missiles with \electron ballets\ aspart of President Reagan's proposed\Star Wars\ defense system Rickard J. Briggs. who leads the wespors project st the LawrenceLivermareLeborats w,mdwm&egm a o o o o oo o So e 3 we ae pager§mxx bor a Boa aod dd ah an cn incite dh dich B mas as al as d a al ae ae lap a n n Tchad dod non Aboa - clerk Leonard Rice said tax rates will be computed when the district receives the necessary equalization rates and assessment rolls for each of the towns. In other matters, in- cumbents Sandra Caldwell and Dorothy Nassar were re- elected to five-year terms on the board. Caldwell, who ran unopposed, received 554 votes while Nassar received 561 votes to defeat challenger Gary Aduccl, an Albion policeman, who received 240 votes. Voters in the district also gave overwhelming approval to a $25,000 appropriation for the operation of the Swan Library in Albion. The vote there was 530-171 in favor of the contribution. plained. With a hike of $300, enrollment could decline be- 'tween 3 and 6 percent, he said. The increases will affect SUNY's29universities, colleges and health science centers. While there will be no immediate effect on SUNY's 30 community colleges, tuition at those campuses can legally rise to the level at state-operated campuses, and ultimately it is expected they will. The board also voted to raise tuition for out-of-state under- graduates by $900, to $2,650 a year. A $450 tuition hike for New York graduate students puts their total annual tuition at $2,150; non-resident graduate tuition jumps to $3,185 - a $1,000 hike. In formulating his executive budget proposal in February, Gov. Mario Cuomo - faced with an estimated $1.8 billion deficit - handed down a pared SUNY budget that called for a $250 general tuition hike plus a $25 computer fee. But SUNY Chancellor Clifton Wharton, calling the proposal a \survival budget,\ predicted nearly 3,000 faculty and staff would have to be laid off if it stood. He came back with his own plan to raise tuition by $300, save money through energy conservationandgeneratereve nue by raising such things as state university hospital fees. Those measures, plus a last- minute legislative infusion of $29.5 million, brought SUNY's budget to $12 billion and forestalledma jorprogram cuts Sheriff Warns Of 'Flam' Operators ALBION - Orleans County Sheriff David Green is urging srea residents to be on the watch for a '\hand of gypsies\ who have been reported in upstate New York attempting to obtain money, mostly from QMJOEShabbyl-qmr Gmafimhxat performning poet work on driveways and roofs Green said the \gypsies\ mmmm [ed reas them [$33me repair work done. The quailty of the work is seid to be very por\ sling wih the ue o Green said. 'These people pressure the cider people to get their money then do the work with motor ofl. The driveway looks real good for about 15 tungtes by which time the people are gone and the person out a let of money.\ Green said that there have been no reports of sech in ciderts as of yer im Orleans County . Bui, this is a problem we have every year.\ he sand \We know they're heading this way so we fust ward to warn people so they're aon the lookcast.\ Green advised that all