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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

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IMNATI THE CII A Combined Communications Newspaper JLJL FINAL EDITIONPRICE 20CHOME DELIVERY: $430 A MONTH Pope Will Lie In State At St. Peter's Tuesday Aug. 0, 1970 MOSTLY SUNNY SHOWERS) 1 1 cntmasme More stories, photos on Pages C-7, D-l, D-3. TOOAY TOMORROW Mostly sunny today with high letters, will be broken jn the presence of VU-lot, according to the custom. The ring, similar to the ones carried by the previous popes, has a gem showing a fisherman -a reference to St.

Peter, who was a fisherman. AN OFFICIAL death certificate published by the Vatican Monday said the arthritic condition of which Pope Paul had suffered for dany years suddenly become worse on Saturday, with acute pains in the joints and the sudden development of acute cystitis. Treatment was initiated by Prof. Fablo Pros-perl, a urologist. During the night between Saturday and Sunday the pontiff was in pain and had a high fever, the certificate said.

Toward 6 p.m. Sunday the poffe developed "an unexpected serious and progressive increase In his blood pressure and an acute pulmonary edema," the certificate said. "Despite. specific cures undertaken immediately, His Holiness Paul VI expired at 9:40 p.m.," the death certificate concluded. 1975 under the name Apostolic Constitution on the Vacancy of the Apostolic See and the Election of the Roman Pontiff.

CHURCH OFFICIALS explained that the purpose of the delay was to give the cardinals time for reflection and negotiation. During the conclave the cardinals will be living in small, specially' constructed apartments in the Vatican. They will hold two secret ballots a day and will not be abe to leave the palace until the new pope has been elected! After each vote the ballots are burned in a chimney sending smoke curling up above the Sistlne Chapel. As long as there is no agreement, the ballots are burned together with damp straw making the smoke black. When the new pontiff is elected, the smoke is white.

Villot, following church custom, Monday sealed the private apartments of Paul in the Vatican palace. The dead pontiff's so-called "fisherman ring," which was used to seal his temperature In the mld-80s. Fair "tonight with low In the mid-30s. 1978, N.Y. TIMES SERVICE ROME The "Regime of the Vacant See," or interval between the death of one pope and the election of his successor, started formally Monday as Jean Cardinal Villot, the second-ranking prelate of the church, acceded to the Apostolic Palace of the Vatican.

Villot, who holds the post of Cardinal Camerlengo, or papal chamberlain, called the first meeting of the Sacred College of Cardinals, the body that will elect the new pope. The cardinals ordered that the body of Pope Paul VI be brought to the Vatican Wednesday from Castel Gandolfo, the summer papal residence In the Alban hills 15 miles southeast of Rome, where he died Sunday night following a heart attack. THE PONTIFF will lie in state in St. Peter's Basilica, the biggest and most famous church of Catholicism, Thursday and Friday, and will be buried in the crypt beneath St. Peter's on Saturday, the cardinals decided.

Possible thundershowers Wednesday afternoon, with high around 85 Chance or rain is io Only a handful of prelates those already in the Rome area when the pope died attended the meeting (the number was not announced There will now be dally meetings of the college. Cardinals from Italy and some European countries started arriving Monday. The members of the Sacred College will set the date for the start of the conclave in which the cardinals from all over the world-all those under 80 years of age will elect the new pontiff in secret balloting. The conclave of the cardinals will begin at the earliest on August 21, 15 days after the death of the pope. The 15-day delay was laid down by Paul In an elaborate, lengthy set of rules Issued in today and tonight Weather map, details on Page A-5.

Durum one of his low moments. Carter caught himself In a lernoie tnougnt: a tnree-martini Junch might not be so bad at that. nslpo 1 Vance Moves Oh Use of artificial birth control by some Catholics, the awareness of racism In the church and prayers In English were Just a few of the many changes that swept the Catholic Church during the reign Pope Paul VI. How did those changes affect the Archdiocese of Cincinnati? Page D-l. A pellet from a gun lodged in the heart of a 10-year-old boy was removed by doctors at Children's Hospital In an unusual medical maneuver that saved the boy the trauma of open-heart surgery.

Page D-l. To Egypt ALEXANDRIA, Egypt Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance launched a last-ditch effort Monday night to keep flickering Mideast, peace hopes alive by persuading Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to reopen face-to-face negotiations' rV I J. Fourteen black employees of the Hamilton County Sheriff's Department have charged racial discrimination and demanded changes from Sheriff Lincoln Stokes. Page D-2.

mm 1 1 -V "a i Jj AFL-CIO President George Meany carries out labor's strongest assault yet on the Carter administration's antl-lnflatlon program. Page A-2. More than 70 antlnuclear demonstrators are arrested In Oregon and California as demonstrations to mark the 33rd anniversary of tfte bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki continue around the country. Page A-2. with Israel.

There was no indication he was able to convince Sadat to renew direct talks with the Israelis, but U.S. State Department spokesman Hod-ding Carter said, "The secretary feels the meeting tonight (Monday) was a very good session." An Egyptian official described the two hours of talks In Sadat's seaside villa as "friendly and smooth with no atmosphere of crisis." Vance arrived at this resort city on the Mediterranean after two days of meetings in Israel. The Egyptian official said Israel Is "playing a game, trying to drive a wedge between the Egyptian and American positions, but it will not succeed in its efforts." An Egyptian spokesman reported Vance delivered a handwritten letter from President Carter to Sadat. He did not reveal its contents or the substance of the Vance-Sadat talks. VANCE LEFT the presidential grounds without talking to reporters.

He and Sadat are expected to hold a joint news conference at the conclusion of another meeting tonight. The secretary Is scheduled to fly. back to Washington Wednesday to report to Mr. Carter and help map. the next U.S.

move In the faltering American mediation efforts. Sadat has ruled out any further negotiations with the Israelis until they agree to relinquish all the Arab, territory conquered during the 1067 Six-Day War. Israel Is prepared to. return the Sinai Desert to Egypt but balks at the Egyptian demand for the return of the Gaza Strip to Egypt and the West Bank of the Jordan River and East Jerusalem to Jordan. Egyptian officials said Sadat is not pressing for any specific.

IIS, proposals or trying to tell the United States how to change Israel's position, but he expects some affirmative American action to break the! deadlock. CunJ Enquirer photo BY ED REINKE Thirty more persons are killed in Rhodesia's six-year bush war, bringing to 2245 the number of civilians killed. Page A-S. MRS. CAROL HENSLEY says her children, left to right, Jason, Jmmy and Joe, have caused no destruction her Bahama Gardens apartment and the family should be permitted to stay.

Landlord's Child Limit Upsets Parents Though more likely in front of a tan than a fire, Cinclnnatlans are still curling up with good books and quite a few bad ones. A rundown is on Page B-l. LjODSS Mrs. Hensley denied her children had been destructive. "The kids haveht destroyed any property," she Insisted.

"No windows have been broken all summer." "I honestly feel it is up to the parents to decide the sleeping arrangements for their children," asserted Mrs. Phyllis Lohman, whose $170-a-month, two-bedroom apartment is located next to the Hensley apartment. Mrs. Lohman and her husband and two children will also be moving soon. TERRY divorced father of three Financially troubled Weeden Holding trader on the Cincinnati Stock Exchange and provider of the exchange's computer services, may merge with a Los Angeles stock brokerage firm.

Page B-ll. AMONG THE options believed. open to President Carter are: Inviting Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to make separate visits to Washington in the the hope presidential Inter boys who lives in a three-bedroom apartment nearby, will be leaving when his lease expires Gardens In the future will house no more than one child per bedroom. Another 30 to 40 children will be moving the end of this month when their parents' leases expire. Some of the "desirable" tenants with too many in too few bedrooms are being asked to stay on in larger apartments, according to Mrs.

Carol Christman, manager of the apartment complex. "We tried for some period of time to accept two children In a two-bedroom apartment and three children in a three-bedroom apartment and we just couldnt operate the kind of complex we wanted to have," Joffe explained. "The only alternative was to ask them to move once the lease was up," he added. JOFFE SAID Bahama Gardens-which is one of the larger apartment complexes in the Cincinnati area-had been one of-the few In a good neighborhood that did accept two children in a two-bedroom apartment "But we couldnt make it work," he insisted. Now Joffe wants to spend "a couple hundred thousand" to upgrade-to paint walls, paper the kitchens and bathrooms, carpet the apartments "and the halls.

"Little children of three and four can be destructive," he reminded. BY MARGARET JOSTEN Enquirer Reporter f' Large numbers of children have always been synonymous with Bahama Gardens, 6473 Baha- ma ML Alry-but that picture is changing rapidly because the landlord wants to "upgrade" his property. The conflict that is resulting is as old as the story of little boys who throw rocks through windows and put frogs in swimming pools. "It isn't that we dont like children," the owner, Sam Joffe, Dayton, Ohio, protested Monday after several soon-to-be-displaced tenants complained of "unfair treatment" to The Enquirer. 'But Joffe's explanation provided little satis-, faction to Mrs; Carol Hensley, mother of boys ages five, three and one, who will be leaving at the end of this month when the lease expires on the $170-a-month, two-bedroom apartment she has rented for four years.

"I cant begin to find another place that can afford," said the young woman who is separated from her husband. FAMILIES REPRESENTING a total of more than 100 children have moved out since Joffe decided around the first of the year that Bahama cession can crack the barrier to a December 1. His rent is $215 a month, but $20 Is taken off the rent because he cleans the halls. "I can see how he (Joffe) could restrict some settlement. Reopening the negotiations in another setting, possibly in the Why should you be noticing more children as TV's commercial stars? Page A-4.

body who comes la now, but I dont see how he United Nations Security Council or could put out somebody who already lives in Geneva, where all the Arab Neusald. parties and the Soviet Union would be involved. Councllwoman Bobbie Sterne has asked City Council to pass an ordinance forbidding land lords to discriminate against children. The cin- Sending Vance back to the Mideast for his sixth mission with cinnatl Human Relations Commission is stronger U.S. suggestions for a set No modern pope lived in less serene times than Paul VI.

Editorial, Page A-6. expected to include the proposal In a fair-housing ordinance currently being drawn, according tlement that would require compro mise from both Egypt and Israel to Mrs. Sterne? off Ice. A Four Sections, 138th Year, No. 121 EPA Re jects Plan For Mexico Bottom Power Plant thinks are necessary to correct the defects It thinks we had in our application.

We do in tend to go ahead with the project and we are determined to build the plant there, he EPA's rejection of the construction per BY DAVID WELLS Indiana Bureau Chief MEXICO BOTTOM, a surprise move Monday the UB. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rejected a plan by Indianapolis Power Light Co. (IPALCO) to buud a $347 million power plant along the Ohio River here. The coal-fired plant was disapproved because "IPALCO failed to demonstrate that mlt does not halt related proceedings Involving the plant, according to company and EPA officials. A public hearing before the US, Army came as a surprise to many persons connected with the project since EPA.

had granted IPALCO preliminary approval to move ahead with 1U plans last February. It was a reversal of our earlier position and it wai based on substantial new Information compiled after the preliminary approval was given," said Brie Cohen, chief of the air compliance section of IPA's Region Five, which includes Indiana. "A LOT of the new data turned up concerned the Increment effect of the sulfur dioxide from the Mexico Bottom plant," Cohen said. EPA officials are concerned about what the cumulative effect would be of pollution from the Mexico Bottom plant joined with the sulfur dioxide emitted from other nearby plants, Cohen said. "We have to take into account where the Corps of Engineers regarding docking and waste water facilities the company wants to build -in the Ohio River at the plant site is ACTION LINE AGE WISE B-8 BRIDGE B-10 BUSINESS B-11-15 CLASSIFIED CLA5SIQUB BT? COLUMNISTS A-7 COMICS oi CROSSWORD B-9 DEAR ABBY B-2 DEATHS Ci EDITORIALS A- ENTERTAINMENT GRAHAM A-7 HEALTH B-2 HERTZEL C-1 HOROSCOPE B-10 HORSE SENSE B-9 JUMBLE EW LANG B-1 RACES OS SOCIETY B-3 TV-RADIO A-4 WE1KEL r2 WHEN I WAS A BOY A-7 still would be possible to construct an acceptable coal-fired plant at Mexico Bottom.

"This decision should not be interpreted as a comment on the general state of the air In the valley," he said. The reason we disapproved was because we we rent satisfied with the way they (IPALCO) presented their plans for the scrubbers. I dont think they basically had even decided on what type' of scrubbers they would use," Cohen said. rejection does not mean the Mexico Bottom plant wul never be built, Cohen said. Company officials have two choices, he said.

"They can either appeal through the federal courts or they can revise their plans and reapply to us for another permit" REAPPLICATION FOR the EPA permission would take at least a year, Cohen sakL John Hardesty, a spokesman for IPALCO, said Monday afternoon the company had not yet received the text of the EPA ruling, "and so we cant really comment on it fully at this time. "I can tell you that when we do get a copy add have a chance to study it, we probably will see If we car take whatever steps EPA scheduled for Thursday in Vevay. That hear' Ing will proceed, Hardesty said. THE COMPANY also is involved in lltlga' tion with Charles Tlllotson, whose 300-acre farm the company condemned and gained possession of as the plant site. Tillotson has the air quality in the area around the plant would not be significantly said 1 Valdas v.

Adamkus, acting Midwest administrator for EPA, who Issued the ruling. It was the first time the EPA has denied a utility permission to build a new power plant in the Midwest on the basis of air pollution. NOTING THAT the section of the Ohio River Valley between Cincinnati and Louisville already contains numerous power plants, Adamkus said the IPALCO proposal failed to spell out to the EPA sufficient details on the type of air pollution scrubber system "which would be needed in this area of high power plant density." Disapproval of the IPALCO proposal asked for a court trial to determine the value he must be paid for the land, if the company pollutants will end up," Cohen said. Much of the air pollution from Mexico Bottom would have moved upstream and combined with that from the other plants In an area that already has an air pollution level which the EPA considers too high. r.

Despite the fears of the cumulative pollution effects, Cohen said the EPA believes it 4 is successrui in evicting nun from we farm. Opponents of the Mexico Bottom plant welcomed the EPA decision, but warned that the plant is a long way from being stopped completely. lo5 WORD GAME.

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Years Available:
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