Port Lavaca Wave (Port Lavaca, Tex.), Vol. 96, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 6, 1987 Page: 4 of 51
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SALE STARTS MAY 6TH
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The Islip barge is “a very good
dramatization of the NIMBY syn-
drome Not In My Back Yard."
said Fitzhugh Green, an KPA of
ficial
If something isn’t done quickly,
the spectacle of mobile, un-
wanted garbage will become
more common, experts say
In Islip, authorities were forced
to ship commercial garbage
elsewhere because New York
state closed the Ixing Island
town's dump to protect drinking
water Islip is seeking to reopen
the dump
BeHm CaocIceas
COOKBOOK
ol politics. I now welcome mat
"To me, character is what is left
after al) the charges and mnuen
does, sensationalism and unfairness
have been thrown and disappeared
Character is really about saying no
to FACs even when you have a debt
to pay It’s about standing up to
Gramm Rudman and Reaganomics
and unfair tax cuts. MX missiles and
covert wars It’s really about doing
whats right even when its un
popular
Hart was traveling to New Hamp
shire today However, he canceled
scheduled appearances Thursday
night and Friday to fly home Thurs-
day to Denver, "where he will spend
time with his family,” said an an-
nouncement issued by his campaign
staff
The story linking Hart to ZD-year-
old Donna Rice of Miami "deserves
a big yawn” and probably will get
that from New Hampshire voters,
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"This story was written by
reporters who by their own admis-
sion undertook a spotty surveillance,
reached inaccurate conclusions bas-
ed on incomplete facts, who after
publishing a false story now concede
they may have gotten it wrong, and
who, most outrageously, refused to
interview the very people who could
have given them the facts before fil-
ing their story which we asked and
urged them to do.”
He said Broadhurst contacted the
Herald reporters Saturday night and
offered them “all the facts
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A
said George Bruno ot Manchester.
N H . immediate past chairman of
the state Democratic Party
"1 get the sense that not too many
people here are paying much atten-
tion to 1988 yet,” he said
The Herald story said the 50-year
old candidate and Rice, an actress
model and pharmaceutical
saleswoman, spent Friday night and
most of Saturday together at his
townhouse while his wife, Lee. was
in Denver
The Herald had assigned
reporters to stake out Hart's house
Friday and Saturday after an
anonymous tip. but admitted Mon
day that entrances were unwatched
for up to five hours
Rice and Hart’s aides said the
woman did not spend the night at
Hart's townhouse, but at the nearby
home of Hart's friend, William
Broadhurst Rice, in an interview
Monday, also denied that she had
and was his first public appearance
since then
On lYiesday night. Hart began
rallying his supporters with a speech
at a fund raiser in which he vowed to
continue fighting through "these
hard days ”
“Anyone who wants to test my
character is in for a surprise 1 may
bend, but 1 don't break,” Hart told
an enthusiastic crowd. “I can be
bruised and I can be battered but I
will come back because this fight
must goon
"These are hard days, but we will
prevail for one single reason the
truth will prevail. fight on and
march on.”
Hart, whose campaign has been
dogged by rumors of womanizing,
added. “1 expect, since I am
realistic, that this race will continue
to focus on me and my character
And as uncomfortable as 1 have
always been with the personal side
89.88
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ALLIED PLASTIC?
z
1
Jr
I
sex with him
Hart told the publishers that the
Herald story was plain wrong
"Last weekend, a newspaper
published a misleading and false
story that hurt my family and other
innocent people and reflected badly
on my character
N. ■ • * aicvctfs
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Page 4A—Port Lavaca Wave,
Americans
see sign of
trash crisis
NEW YORK (API- Some peo-
ple laughed when they heard
about the scow of New York gar
bage being rejected by four
states and two countries, but the
barge nobody wants is a serious
omen, say experts on waste
disposal.
"This barge is a warning Hey
people, there is a crisis in this
country and we've got to do
something about it,”' said Bill
Taormina, a director of Anaheim
Disposal, a private collection
company in Anaheim. Calif
The 3.UOO tons of floating gar
bage left Islip, NY, on March 22
and were rejected by North
Carolina. Alabama, Mississippi.
Louisiana. Mexico and Belize
The "barge to nowhere," which
remained off Key West, Fla , to-
day. has drawn public attention
to a problem that has been grow-
ing for years no place to put the
garbage
Americans generate about 220
million tons of garbage each
year, and 95 percent of it is buried
in landfills, according to the Na-
tional Solid Wastes Management
Association, an industry trade
group
But about one-quarter of the
nation's cities have less than five
years' space left in their landfills,
according to Combustion
Engineering, a Connecticut-
based supplier of garbage-
burning electric generating
plants
“If a community has a landfill
that has fewer than five years'
useful life, then that community
has a problem," said Sheila Pnn-
diville, director of the solid waste
program for the National Solid
Wastes Management Associa-
tion
“Will Americans wake up next
week and see every flat surface
covered ankle deep in orange
peels9 The answer is no,” said
Ms Pnndiville. "Will it happen
locally? The answer is yes, and
it's happening now."
Almost every state has a
disposal problem somew here. ac-
cording to a U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency survey that
tound trouble in all states except
Kansas. Nevada and the
Dakotas
"The issue is, sites are
reaching permanent capacity, or
they're closing for environmental
reasons, and they're not being
replaced fast enough.” said
Robert Morris, a senior policy
analyst for the solid-waste in-
dustry group
Public opposition to landfills
was often cited as a major reason
for the shortfall
gg gg ■■ 212 N. Hwy 35 BYPASS SALE STAKia mat oin
Bottom W Dollar: iavaca' texas ends sundav' M zs
We Reserve
^^STORF HOURS: fVvW IB"™
SUNDAY 10 a m to 6 p.m
ft/ PHONE 552-6711
•HAMILTON BEACH H
FOOD PROCESSOR
, I 1 It grates, chops,
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quickly.
Wednesday, Mav6.1987
Hart vows to keep campaigning
NEW YORK (AP> - Saying "I
may bend, but I don t break." Gary
Hart is fighting to get his presiden-
tial campaign back on track even as
he concedes the controversy about
his weekend activities with a Miami
woman is not over
The former Colorado senator, in a
speech Tuesday before the nation's
newspaper publishers, denounced as
"false and misleading" a Miami
Herald report that a young woman
spent Friday night with him at his
Capitol Hill home
"Did I make a mistake by putting
myself in circumstances that could
be misconstrued? Of course I did
That goes without saying," the
Democrat said "Did I do anything
immoral9 1 absolutely did not.”
Hart's afternoon speech at the an-
nual meeting of the American
Newspaper Publishers Association
had been scheduled before the
Herald story was published Sunday
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Surber, Chester C. & Fulghum, Gary. Port Lavaca Wave (Port Lavaca, Tex.), Vol. 96, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 6, 1987, newspaper, May 6, 1987; Port Lavaca, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1280540/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Calhoun County Public Library.