Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 195, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1990 Page: 1 of 28
twenty eight pages : ill. ; page 23 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Sulphur Springs
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Bush protests Iraqi plan to move Americans
KENNEBUNKPORT,
CAP) — President Bush today
protested Iraqi attempts to move
Americas trapped Kuwait
by JccdbTs
3tS
tee* will m contraveoooo
embargo against Iraq
Busk after a pre-dawn call to the
i room at the Whne House,
new con-
the 2^00 Americans barred
Kuwait But ashed
happen if they were
to Iraq, he said: “I don't
anybody ought to be moved
Bush also said there were reports
"about moving 30 Amencans
someplace” from the hotel where
they hud been confined in the Iraqi
capital of Baghdad, but didn't
provide details in his brief remarks
before heading for the golf course.
He also said "the Japanese were
told that they cannot leave"
Kuwait, either.
Defense Secretary Pick Cheney
was bound for Riyadh today to visit
Amencan troops standing guard m
the Saudi desert against a possible
further thrust by Iraq's Saddam
Hussem, whose troops overran
Kuwait Aug. 2.
The unprecedented deployment
of U.S. military ground and an
power in strarric areas of Saudi
Arabia continued today with the un-
loading of tanks and other heavy
equipment and arms, U.S. Marines
are rapidly budding to a force of
45.000 in the Middle East — al-
most a quarter of their full strength.
Bush, after spending more than
two hours with Jordan's King Hus-
sein on Thursday, said, "l can't say
1 am satisfied, big what I am isen-
abide by the United Nations
King Hussein’s brote, Crown
Prince Hassan, said on CBS “This
Morning" that "His majesty made
it clear (to Bush) that we wdl ad-
here to the U.N. resolution."
Bush, at a news conference out-
side his summer home, tempered
his own alarm, calhag the
Americans’ situation "a hole
vague” and saying, "U rets more
dangerous, l think, if 1 heighten the
concern that I’ve already expres-
tn Kuwait. Howell protested the mg goods
h*fi enter ter .Americans to as- w--"
sembte in the Kuwaiti tmrmunnil
Hotel. Howell told the Iraqi
authorities "he couhi micro. ^ lJk.
he had no power torader them**
more," uhI State Deomtmest
.m-K~ U* “***
called die action Pentagon sources smd tee
totally uncalled for Most Marines are luiilrtiaf to a farce of
Americans would be better off m 45,000 m the Virile East — at-
U.S. ship commanders in the Mid- now believed to
dte East to intercept ah ships carry- 160.000 in
Speaker says attitudes
changing on disabilities
serve ail youngsters, it helped
families. Children with a disability
no longer have to be vent away to
school — they can be cured for in
the home and grow up as\i member
of a family rather than a pptK^u at
an institution.
Putman explained that early
childhood covers from birth to age
3 and special education extends
from ages 3 to 22.
While a person with a disability
does not outgrow tlx disability, he
or she is, with the help available,
now much better prepared to take
an active role in the community
and. as Putman sau*. often becomes
an exceptional worker and tax-
pnyet
He said a person with a disability
can learn to do repetitive jobs that
might drive someone else up the
waul with boredom. "They make
tew mrtaHt ami are rood, vkuen
dabk workers,” he^Skf^L J*y
He urged employers icy consider
people with disabiiitjies When they
have a special job, and he urred
others to be supportive of firms that
provide opportunities for citizens
with one or more disabilities.
v ious disorders,” he said.
He said a child or a grandchild
usually offers hopes far the child’s
achievements m the future. The real
tragedy far a family to foam is that
there is a disability.
"When this occurs, we im-
medwuely ttewtapexpeettions that
it is going no be overcome, with the
rigid doctors and the right
programs.
"What is really amazing.’* he
added, "is that it is sue. ”
While the action in 1976 re-
quired public schools to adapt to
Fund drive set for heart recipient
Other events will be conducted
throughout the city. Wiimsboro
High School cheerleaders and lag
craps members will be collecting
money at four-way stops
throughout the «tay. A city-wide
garage sale will be conducted at
Whispering Pines Nursing Home.
An air show featuring the East
Texas Flying Circus Team will
begin at noon at Winasboro
Munic ipal Airport. The cost to at-
tend the air show. $2, will go to the
Strawbndge fund
arid never amt a person with a dis-
ability” Putman smd. adding that
he abo went through four years of
high school and about eight years
of college without meeting e «u
dent with a disability .
"People with a physical or men-
tal disability were sent off to a state
school, so we didn’t see teem.” he
told the Rotanaos.
Chtgfing attitudes ^
H,ntnUf dvtcMr iflhtfittO
Grant funds available
for downtown businesses
fswbridge
k Events scheduled fra tee day »-
formerly of elude a volleyball tournament, a
rent heart concession stand and a (finding
Saturday, July booth. At It acm. members of the
sily Medical local gymnastics squad will exhibit
« insurance their taieoL From noon until l pm.
lb apply far a grant. Buckley
smd owners must submit a letter of
request to tee Mam Sheet Board of
Advtswsc The letter must include a
detailed description of the inkraded
work, sketched plans and color
TMOplTT.
Recently, tee Main Street Board
of Advisers approved a $247.91 re-
quest from tee Community Players
to paint tee exterior of tee Main
Street Theatre and replace its win-
dows. The Community Players wifl
First-year teachers and other new
staff members from aB seven
school districts in Hopkins County
have been invited to a breakfast
scheduled from 7:15 to 8:25 am.
"Fierce competition bumped 21
of test year's rich-hstcis off this
year’s list — and 21 even wealthier
Texans have taken their place,”
Texas Monthly said. And the
wortes were conservative.
Of tee 79 repenting rich. 40
ranked higher this year tern Inst
Otey 10 repeaters dropped in the
doit* derby.
And if you sprit up the total as-
sets of the 100 richest — a whop-
ping $34.4 billion combined —
broadcasting fortune with mother
Oveta Culp Hobby and sister Jes-
sica Hobby Catto-
One fanner governor made «.
Uvalde rancher Doteh Briscoe's
wrath isestiaaalcdat $140 trillion.
Among tee once-Big Rich who
foil short tens year are: WW Fhrtsh,
Robert and Lee — Bass.
Other favored cities and their
count of really wealtey are: San
Antonia, six; Midland, five; Austin,
Corpus Christi and Victoria, three
each; and Denton, two.
Twenty of the 100 richest are
women, the magazine said only
one — Dallas cosmetics queen
Mary Kay Ash —is self-made.
One of tee women listed, at $120
million, is Pauhne Gill Sullivan of
Dallas; ex-wife of oilman Gov. Bill
Clements Texas Monthly said her
half of Clements' interest in od-
gtant Sedco "grew to be wrate
Ross Perot, whore wrath is es-
timated at S3 biUioa
“Perot is <S© years old. male,
white, a native Ibxan, and self-
made — a ventaWe posaer child far
the Tbxas 100." rexas Monthly
AUSTIN (AP) — The price tag
far joining the 100 richest Texans is
gong up.
According to Texas Monthly
mtgiiinr'i new fisting of tee Texas
100, it took a $120 million fortune
to qualify this ye*—a $20 million
Mop 100,
! Houston,
was thud
to
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 195, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1990, newspaper, August 17, 1990; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824203/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.