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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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Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i Dian Fossey's life Weaver proud of role TempoD-l New Taurus Bullish on power Slower growth Economic indicators 0 Bengals: fast times in LA Reds 8, Braves 7 Bearcats at crossroads 0 Withrow 56, Milford 24 Inside: Business A-6 Permit denial 2nd for CECOS site MetroC-l Weather: cioudy; chance of showers. High of 79; low of 61. Full report, Page A-2. Section Raiders' Willie Gault "Gorillas' Sigourney Weaver TempoD-4 RMO rer FINAL350 GEIM01 Tv TTv A mW HllX TfTT NC Jl. JL VJL ILJLL JLL Jl MjL.

1 mm 'Rose is back for two years Tim Sullivan's K) Seoul 09 Report Terms secret, but there was no pay cut With two games remaining in the season, Rose has posted a 364-321 record for a winning percentage of .531. He was hired as player-manager Aug. 16, 1984. Rose took over a last place team that year and guided it to fifth with a 19-22 finish. In his four full seasons, he has led the Reds to four-straight second place (Please see ROSE, back page, this section) Contract was no surprise, Page EM.

"We have mutually decided that we are not going to disclose the terms," said Reuven Katz, Rose's long time legal representative. "He did not take a pay cut I won't comment on whether or not he got a raise. He is very happy. There was no problem." Reds General Manager Murray Cook made the announcement prior to Friday night's game against the Atlanta Braves. "It (the two-year extension) is a reflection on what I perceive as the success of this club," Cook said.

"Even though we may not have won a division, the club has done extremely well since Pete has been here." BY GREG HOARD The Cincinnati Enquirer The Pete Rose way will continue for two more years. After a season dotted with speculation regarding his status as manager, the Reds announced Friday that Rose's contract had been extended for two years. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed, but Rose said he did not take a pay cut. Ask if he was given a raise, Rose said he would offer no details. He made $500,000 this season, making him one of the highest paid managers in the game.

Empty hotel rooms, unfounded fears Hotel rooms are empty. Seats have gone unsold. Hard feelings are being harbored. The United States' relationship with Korea has been hurt. We are to blame.

"Thanks to the U.S. news media, many tourists to the Olympics felt it was unsafe to come and canceled their reservations," wrote Edward B. Adams in Friday's Korea Times. "Any foreign resident will probably tell you that the streets of Seoul are safer at any time of day or night than Chicago, New York or LA." Regular coverage of student rioting especially that of the nightly news as well as the possibility of a North Korean disturbance, created a lot of concern about coming to the Summer Games. It turns out, so far, that these fears were unfounded.

Except for the boxing venue, what little civil unrest surfaces has been confined to a small section of the city. If I had known what was getting into when I came here, I never "would have wasted $3 on one of those 'airport life insurance machines. Pete Rose Look homeward, astronaut 4 tH'-M- ft 'i Crowding 'erodes' jail terms Some sentences cut by 75, judge says BY DAVID WELLS The Cincinnati Enquirer Prisoners serving as little as one-fourth of their sentences are being released from the Hamilton County jail because of overcrowding, judges and jail officials say. "It's getting to be a matter of crisis," Presiding Municipal Judge David Albanese said Friday. "It is absurd.

The judges are being held hostage. We are seeing a constant erosion of our sentences. When we sentence someone, we cannot be sure they will stay in jail." Jail crowding and a federally ordered cap on the number of prisoners that can be kept at the Justice Center, downtown, has prompted Sheriff Simon Leis Jr. to release prisoners early in some cases after serving only 25 of their sentences. That is a far better deal than any of the alternative sentences offered by the county, according to Municipal Judge Sylvia Hendon.

"It has just decimated the community service program," she said. That program, which reduces sentences by one day for every day a prisoner works on community service projects, has declined by 50 in recent months, sheriffs representative Frank Weikel said. Weikel attributed the decline to (Please see JAIL, back page, this section) TRACK AND FIELD: Florence Griffith Joyner will cart three gold medals and one silver back to the United States after completing her Olympic schedule today. She ran the third leg on the U.S. 400-meter women's relay team that won the gold, and anchored the 1 relay team that lit I 3- The Associated Press Louise Ritter celebrates her victory.

David Hilmer aims camera toward Earth, while Richard Covey, center, and Frederick Hauck pursue other tasks. Shuttle jobs include sightseeing won the silver. Louise Ritter of the United States upset world record-holder Stefka Kostadinova of Bulgaria for the gold medal in the high jump. BOXING: Ray Mercer and Kennedy McKinney won gold medals for the United States, while Michael Carbajal lost in the finals and had to settle for a silver. tem.

Later flights, he said, will require more from the crew. Several experiments aboard the or-biter were turned on by mission specialist George D. Nelson, 38, an astronomer, but most of the experiments are similar to others that have flown on longer missions in the past. The five astronauts were a quiet, (Please see SHUTTLE, back page, this section) flin, a flight director at the Johnson Space Center, conceded that the astronauts are not exactly overloaded with chores. "The commander and the pilot and the other folks will be doing Earth observations," Heflin said.

That is NASA talk for looking out the window. But he added quickly that that is appropriate because this is primarily a test flight for a vastly redesigned sys ENQUIRER NEWS SERVICES HOUSTON The $100 million communications satellite launched by Discovery was responding perfectly to commands from the ground Friday as the five astronauts aboard the spacecraft enjoyed such a leisurely voyage that they found themselves with little to do. There were a few nagging, minor problems to deal with, but Milton He- Complete results, Sports, Section B. mm Gorbachev gains in Kremlin shake-up since he took over as party gen enlargement of the powers of the president, who now operates during an extraordinary one-hour meeting of the Communist Party's 300-member Central Committee, were accompanied by a sweeping reorganization of the party apparatus and the elevation to the Politburo of four new members. The results seemed to diplomats to reflect the most significant enhancement of Gorbachev's power ENQUIRER NEWS SERVICES MOSCOW In a major Kremlin shake-up that appears to strengthen the position of Mikhail S.

Gorbachev, the Soviet Central Committee on Friday dismissed three veteran members of the Politburo and ap; proved the retirement of Andrei A. Gromyko. The moves, which occurred NBC, Channels 5 and 22 Today 12 to 1 p.m. EDT: Live and taped coverage expected to include water polo final, soccer final, table tennis singles and doubles finals. 4 to 7 p.m.: Taped coverage and features, including wrestling finals.

7:30 p.m. to midnight: Live coverage expected to include six boxing finals, men's volleyball final (U.S. vs. Soviets), Grand Prix Jumping final. 12:30 to 2:30 a.m.: Live coverage expected to include men's marathon.

Sunday 8 a.m. to noon: Live and taped coverage. 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.: Taped coverage of closing ceremonies. eral secretary in March, 1985.

The departure from the Politburo of Gromyko, who is also the Soviet Union's titular president, opened the way for Gorbachev to be elected president when the national legislature, the Supreme Soviet, meets today. One of the changes that Gorbachev called for in June was an very much as a figurehead. He said he would like the president to become the foreign-policy and (Please see SOVIET, back page, this section) Gromyko cites age in quitting, A-3. U.S. reaction, A-12.

mik V- Mikhail S. Gorbachev praises Gromyko Summer fades; fall takes charge 1 1 Four sections 148th year, No. 175 Copyright, 1988 The Cincinnati Enquirer Scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-6 Classified B-10-19 Make a house your homelnstyle. Manic depression; One family's storyTempo. The '89 Reds: A look aheadSports, Toyota in KentuckyBusiness.

Area's 100 top businesses Tristate magazine. Wyoming Fall Festival from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today in Wyoming. Sharon Woods Village Harvest Festival is noon to 5 p.m.

Sunday. It's $3 for adults, $2 for seniors, $1 for children. Harvest Festival at Farbach-Werner Nature Preserve in Cole-rain Township from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. If the festivals are not enough to introduce fall, daytime temperatures next week will: Monday's high in the 60s will sink to the low to mid 50s by Wednesday.

PI Main news I QBustness theirs, play their last games of the season at 2:15 p.m. today and Sunday. Kings Island opens at 10 a.m. today and Sunday; it closes at 10 p.m. Riverwalk, a four-mile walking tour through the Cincinnati, Covington and Newport riverfronts, will be dedicated today at an 11:45 a.m.

ribbon-cutting. About 6,000 people will tear the ribbon at notched points. Just show up at a spot you like. The autumn festival season gets rolling with: THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER This is the weekend to say goodbye to summer and hello to autumn. It is goodbye to baseball and roller-coasters as the Reds and Kings Island close out seasons and hello to a harvest of festivals.

The weather, though, will be summer-like. Highs will be near 80 today and around 70 Sunday. Chance of rain is 40 today, 70 tonight and Sunday. Lows will be near 60. The Reds, with second place all nines ts A-2 Portfolio A-6 World A-3 Stocks A-7 Nation A-4 Mutual funds A-9 Mary Tyler Moore Fall TV season beginsArts Leisure.

Tempo niMetro 7 C-1 TVradio D-6 A rv ion r1 1 C-4 Classified C-5-23 911 SAVES LIVES. CALL IN CASE OF POLICE. FIRE OR MEDICAL EMERGENCY..

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