Wners Seek to Repossess Items Gal Action Is Taken Gain Reimbursement Rency Valued in Excess of $300

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Wners Seek to Repossess Items Gal Action Is Taken Gain Reimbursement Rency Valued in Excess of $300 Eastern Illinois University The Keep October 1988 10-7-1988 Daily Eastern News: October 07, 1988 Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1988_oct Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Daily Eastern News: October 07, 1988" (1988). October. 5. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1988_oct/5 This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1988 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in October by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. __ In theVERGE , East meets South Area antique stores are becoming more popular. Section B D wners seek to repossess items gal action is taken gain reimbursement rency valued in excess of $300. Theft is a class three felony, which is punishable by two to addition to a criminal com­ five years imprisonment filed against the manager In addition, a civil suit filed part-owner of a new against Calhoun and travel coun­ tontravel agency, co-own­ selor Gaye Snyder, the Travel Chalet, 1407 f 1419 Woodlawn Dr., seeks to repossess Ave., are suing to repos­ several items missing from the -Jeveral missing office items Travel Chalet's office since believe she and another Calhoun and Snyder were hired may have in her posses- yee June 20, when the business opened. ia Calhoun, manager and The missing items include doc­ ner of the Travel Chalet, um en ta ti on on several trip taken into custody arrangements, account files, an y by Charleston police American Express credit card, warrant for her t was records relating a arres books and to the by Coles County State's Travel Chalet Inc., several :I .. • . NancyOwen. accountreceipts and the password later posted bond and the computer system. to . �·��--- The Travel Chaterts-owned ··•·· .. ........... -· · ••••·••·•·········· .... jointly by Calhoun, Robert and ..........•.• ... • ..• .. •,,.• ... ..... ... Anita Drake, 2025 McKinley llADSl;N photographer Offices of theTravel Chalet, Lincoln, Charleston's st travelagency. JEFF I Slaff Ave., and William and Erlene 1419 newe Updegraff, MillerAve. Calhoun could not be reached The money they allegedly owe on either of the lawsuits pending The Drake19 's and the Thursday forcomment, but her Calhoun and Synder is that of litigation. Updegraffs hired Calhoun to daughter stated the other owners commissions and other business Coles County State's Attorney manage the travel operation with of Travel "not pay- payments. Nancy Owen the Chalet are also declined com- Snyder's help. Calhoun been ing the money they owe Gaye Erlene Updegraff declined to ment on criminal which has the case, in the travel busine for years (Snyder) my mother." comment on the accusation and her office prosecuting. ss 18 . and is Student arrested for cannabis posses_sion " e -a laj>s ofjUdgement." By KRIS RASMUSSEN Assistant State's Attorney Mark Novak Dukakis reponers abOard his cam­ stated that Cinefro has been charged with a toldroute Slaff writer en to Texas the debate was Class felony, unlawful possession of paignjet 4 - a "real plus forus"' and call Quayle's per­ An Eastern student was arrested cannabis between 30-500 grams, which is formance "very disturbing." Wednesday afternoon for unlawful posses­ punishable with up to one to three years in _ "I thought was programmmed sion of cannabis. prison and/or a $10,000 .he fine. beyondbelief . extremely insecure, this Sophomore Philip A. Cinefro was arrest­ Larson noted that along with facing fellow,.. Dukakis said inLone Star, Texas, ed by the Universtiy Police for possessing criminal charges, Cinefro will appear in where he campaigned together with over 30 grams of marijuana. frontof the Judicial Board. Bentsen. "He have senseof University Police Chief Tom Larson didn't strength stat­ "Being tried by a criminal court and fac­ or control or anything ... Thinking about ed that it was a police investigation that led ing Judicial Board are two totally different Quayle being a heartbeat away from the to the arrest. processes," said Judicial Board Officer presidency. to watch that,I thi� is very, Cinefro was arrested by the University Keith Kohanzo. very troubling." Police and then brought to the Coles Cine o's preliminary hearing is sched­ fr Republicans from Ford to Ronald County Jail where bond was set at $2,000 uled for 8:30 a.m. Oct. in the Coles 17 Reagan rallied to cause as the by Judge Ashton Waller. County Courthouse. Bush Quayle's organizationappeared to be practic­ ingdamage control. Bush aides conspicuously violated their Cold chill brings complaints ::rule aoout publicly discussing polls. Campaign manager Lee Atwater said the By DAN BUTTERLY the air conditioning has been running in vice Shead inMichigan and their rooms a the temperatures outside pre&dentwas Staffwriter He pre­ s - NewJersey, two keyswing states. continue to drop. dicted the vice president would carry Bm. As the weather becomes cool, so do "It has been so cold in our room due to the classrooms and the residence halls. that Bentsen•s home state ofTexas by at least the air conditioner being on we had to six points. Since the decline in temperature, stu­ cover the air vent to keep the air from con­ dents have started to complain not only "This race is going to quicklyget back to tinually blowing in," said Cannan Hall resi­ the two candidates for president," Atwater­ about the change outside, but also the resi­ dent Brandon Meredith. dence halls and classrooms. said. "There are two gladiators in the arena "The heat in classrooms and residence "It's no wonder people getting sick that aregoing tocount in theend." are halls will officially be turned on when the In Mi�land, Texas, campaignsigns dis­ with the bathrooms and hallways being so weather has shown that it will stay cold, n tributedto childrennding atte a Bush cam­ cold. A person takes a hot shower, steps said Physical Plant Director Victor out, and the temperature of the bath­ paign rally- sai�;'_,"Dan's no Jf'.K. Thank finds Robeson. God.. --, , rooms to be 50 degrees cooler than what "The temperature is supposed to rise his speech ofthe the shower was," said Stuart Andrews, again so we can't tell whether we going B�sh delivefud fi�t are Cannan Hallresident. have to heat or the buildings,n he Continuedon page 6 to coo) • Some students are even complaining that added. The Dall Eastern Ne AIDS not rising among heterosexuals CHICAGO (AP)-AIDS is not exploding among of the American Medical Association. the heterosexual population of the United States, but It reiterates that condoms offer the bestprotec · heterosexual spread of the deadly disease appears to outside of sexual abstinence to prevent the speard be more of a problem among blacks than whites, the AIDS-causing HIV virus. It also said per according toreport published Friday. infected with the HIV virus should receive coun But the report's co-author, Dr. Harry W. Haverkos, ing to prevent them from spreading it to sexual of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, ners. Md., said "heterosexual spead of AIDS is going to A letter from three doctors at the Wiscon be a bigger problem than many people in this coun- Division of Healthin Madison appearingin the \ try up until now have suggested." . JAMA issue criticized on method used in Illinois "The medical community and thepublic should be control heterosexual transmission mandatory Cost estimate down for SDI aware of this and start developing ways to minimize maritaltesting for the HN virus as "ineffective" transmission," said Haverkos. "inefficient." WASHINGTON-In what one official acknowledged was "a startling The report appear in Friday's issue of the Journal change," the Defense Departmentsaid Thursday it has slashed the cost of the firstphase of a Star Wars defensive shield from $115 billion to $69 billion, and the system could be available within•a decade. But Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services ACLU affiliations kept from jury Committee, said thefigures should be viewed with "some skepticism" ALTON, IL (AP}-Brian Lunn contends his con­ this was the firstcase in which the issue had arisen. because the cost of weapons programs often goes down while they are titutional rights were denied by his high school Lunn is seeking a totalof $200,000 in compens in the planning stages andthe rises when production starts. while he was editor of the student newspaper, and and punitive damages form Collinsville High School The new figures arise from a restructuring of the Strategic Defense has enlisted the American Civil Liberties Union's a law suit alleging his Firstand 14th Amendmentri Initiative,the formal name of PresidentReagan's 5-year-oldprogram to help for his courtroom fight. were violatedby the school. develop a high-tech shield against Soviet nuclear attack by Soviet But Lunn his attorneys say recent negative pub­ He is representedby AO..U attorney:ran Whicher nuclearmissiles. and licity about the ACLU in the presidential l:ampaign Chicago and East St Louis lawyerSharon Knapp. Those changes were approved after Defense Secretary Frank C. could sway a jury and a federal judge agreed, ruling motion filed before the atart of the trial this w Carlucci ordered a review when it became apparent the Democratic­ this week that an attorney's ACLU affiliation would be Knapp asked that the ACLU's involement be k controlled Congress would cut Reagan's StarWars budget request for kept secret "not relevant to anyof theissu es." the fiscal yearthat began last Saturday. secret as Jay Miller, executive director of the ACLU's "Any reference to the ACLU may well beinfl Chicago office, said Thursday that to his knowledge, tory and-orpre judicial," the motion said. Woman hears friends' death CHICAGO-A woman who called to chat long-distance with her boyfriend listened in horror as an intruder entered and shot him to Final Illinois presentation given death, but police say herquick action helped them track down the sus­ WASHINGTON (AP)-Energy Secretary John thousands of construction jobs, permanent work pect.
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