2 McHENRY PLAINDEALER Section A Tuesday, August 13,1905 Today Weather TEMPERATURE & PRECIPITATION ?SHOWERS y 90 IOO100 Figures indicate maximum temperatures FRONTAL SYSTEMS A AIR FLOW 30.00 30.00. 30.00 - High (P~ Low 30.00 National Weather Service Forecast to 7 p.m. EST8-13-85 UPI Weather Fotocast <w Forecast By United Pre* International Illinois: Tuesday thunderstorms ending northwest, chance of thun derstorms northeast and central. Partly sunny, hot and humid south. Highs ranging from the lower 80s northwest to the lower 90s south east. Tuesday night fair and cooler north, chance of thunderstorms south. Lows from the lower 80s north to the lower 70s south. Wednesday mostly sunny north, partly sunny central and south with a chance of thunderstorms south third. Highs from the lower 80s far north to around 90 far south. Southern Illinois: Variable cloudi ness Tuesday, very warm and hu mid with a SO percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. High in the middle or upper 80s. South to southwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Tues day night a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms early, then partly cloudy and turning cooler. Low in the middle 60s. Wednesday partly sunny and warm. High in the mid dle SOS. McHenry: Tuesday considerable cloudiness with a 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Warm and humid with a high in the lower or middle 80s. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph. Tuesday night clearing and cooler. Low in the low er or middle 60s. Wednesday mostly sunny, warm but less humid. High in the lower 80s. Extended forecast for Illinois: Thursday through Saturday: Partly cloudy sides with a chance of thun derstorms south Friday or Satur day. Warm with dally highs mostly in the 80s. Lows at night mostly in the 60s. CKjr HI Lo Pep Peoria Chicago O'Hare 80 64 mm Qufaocy Decatur 80 61 mm Roekford Moilne 79 60 mm Springfield 80 66 MM 82 65 MM 7ft Ml nflna CKjr HI Lo Pep Peoria Chicago O'Hare 80 64 mm Qufaocy Decatur 80 61 mm Roekford Moilne 79 60 mm Springfield '• w UUIIC 80 60 none CityAPcat HI Lo Pes LaaVegaac 180 73 Albuquerque pc a 98 .88 little Rock *y 93 75 Anchorage r AahevlUe sy 88 53 87 63 .18 Loo Angaleepc Louisville ay 78 64 88 71 Atlanta ay 88 73 .40 Masnphiaay 93 75 Billings ah 60 a .16 Miami Beach pc 88 81 Birmingham pc 86 73 .73 Milwaukee pc 75 64 Boston ay Brownsville Tex.pc 87 70 86 76 .17 MtaMapotls ta Naahvllleay 78 63 93 71 1.04 .Buffalo ay 78 54 New Orleans pc 93 73 3.90 Burlington Vt. ay 80 56 .06 New York ay 88 68 .58 Charteaton S.C. ay 81 77 Oklahoma City ay 97 73 Charlotte N.C. ay 61 70 Omaha ay 80 73 Chicago pc 80 64 Philadelphia ay 86 65 Cincinnati ay 86 M Phoenix ay 103 83 Cleveland ay 78 53 Pittsburgh sy 84 56 Columbus sy 83 60 Portland Me. ay 84 65 Dallaaay 183 77 Portland Ore, sy 65 58 Denver pc 80 M !oa Providence ay 64 69 .03 Dea Moines ta 83 70 Richmond sy 9174- Detroit ay 78 56 St. Louis pc 86 71 Duluth ta 68 56 .16 Salt Lake City f 73 60 .03 ElPaaopc 88 70 San Antonio pc 87 75 Evansvlllesy 81 68 San Diego pc 73 68 Hartford sy 68 63 173 SanPrandacof 69 50 Honolulu ay 03 78 San Juan f 89 76 ~03 Houston ay 84 78 Seattle pc 80 55 IndianapoUa ay 86 65 Spokane pc 74 52 .04 Jackson Mlaa. ay 86 68 Tampa pc 90 75 JackaonvWepc 88 73 Washington ay 90 73 Kanaaa City pc 84 73 Wichita pc 90 74 Stock Market Report By UP Ellen PreiUch I Business Writer NEW YORK - The stock market closed lower in light trading Mon day as investors adjusted their sights to lower-than-anticlpated eco nomic growth in the second half of. the year. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 6.50 to 1,314.29. Broader indexes also declined. The New York Stock Exchange In dex fell 0.40 to 108.66. Standard & Poor's 500-stock index declined 0.69 to 187.63. The price of an average share fell 12 cents. ARE YOU NEW IN The McHenry Area? Do You Know Someone New? We Would Like To Extend A Royal Welcome To Every Newcomer To Our Area!!!" CALL 385-5475 A ROYAL WELCOME ROYAL WELCOME Know Your Area -- Royal Welcome Doea It Beat Almanac By United Press International > follow. Today is Tuesday, Aug. 13, the 225th day of 1965 with 140 to! The moon is moving toward its new phase. The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include pioneer social reformer Lucy Stone in 1818, film director Alfred Hitchcock in 1899, golfer Ben Hogan in 1912, Cuban leader Fidel Castro in 1926 (age 59), and film director Roman Polanski in 1933 (age 52). On this date in history: In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, U.S. forces in the Philippines captured Manila. In 1930, Capt. Frank Hawkes set an air speed record by flying from Los Angeles to New York in 12 hours, 25 minutes. In 1961, East Germany suddenly closed the Brandenburg Gate and began building the Berlin Wall. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter was nominated by the Democratic National convention in New York as tbeparty's presidential candidate and picked Vice President Walter Mondale as his running mate. They were defeated in Novemeber by Ronald Reagan and George Bush. In 1984, moderate, pro-Western Morocco and revolutionary Libya raised international eyebrows by announcing a unification pact. A thought for the day: The Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. said, "I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of nuclear destaictkm." Reagan preparing major campaign to push issues Judge awards $1.2 million for bad weather fforcast By Norman D. Sandler SANTA BARBARA, Calif. - President Reagan is planning a vig orous fall effort to push his political agenda and does not expect "any limiting factors" despite his conva lescence from cancer surgery, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Monday. As Reagan savored the first full day of a three-week vacation at his mountaintop ranch, Speakes said senior White House officials in Cali fornia and Washington will confer Tuesday on a blueprint for pursuing his domestic and foreign policy pri orities and selling them to the public. Directed by White House chief of staff Donald Regan, the high-level review will cover the gamut of is sues and "produce ways he (Rea gan) can use to communicate his viewpoint," Speakes told reporters. In an unusual move intended to underscore the Importance of the session, the White House planned to permit reporters and photographers to witness the start of the session. Hinting at a busy schedule in the months to come, Speakes said Rea gan is expected td use a variety of tactics, including speeches in Wash ington, nationwide travel, his week ly radio broadcasts, occasional tele vision addresses, meetings with out- of-town Journalists and speeches by Cabinet members to campaign for his objectives. Among the issues to be covered, he said, are budget and tax reform, Reagan's speech in October to the United Nations and his November summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, efforts to revitalize the Middle East peace process and the turmoil in Central America," Speakes said. Despite the rigorous nature of that proposed schedule, Speakes said there is no doubt in the White House that Reagan, still on the mend from the removal of a cancer ous intestinal growth, will be ready to invest the time and effort needed to achieve his objectives, including passage this year of a controversial tax reform plan. "I'm sure he'll be vigorous, healthy and able to travel around," Speakes said. "I don't look for any limiting factors." Reagan spent Monday tending to paperwork, including briefing mate rial on his upcoming summit with Gorbachev, and surveying property on his 688-acre ranch on foot and by Jeep. With the White House deter mined to ensure his vacation is wor ry tree, no meetings with his advis ers were scheduled and Reagan was not slated to participate in the long- range planning session set for Tuesday. The results of that session are expected to be in Reagan's hand by week's end, Speakes said. The plan ning will be more detailed and long range in focus than previous efforts, Speakes said, because of the "rath er unprecedented" set of issues Reagan faces as he looks ahead to the completion of his presidency. At the same time, Speakes denied the intensified effort to develop a successful program to pursue such priorities as budget restraint, tax reform and improved relations with Moscow was an Indication of dissat isfaction with what many outside the administration regard as a mixed bag of successes and failures during the first half of 1985. "On balance, when you look at the accomplishments of the first year of the (second) Reagan administra tion, you will find that they stack up favorably, if not superior, to the previous four years," Speakes said. ByGinoDelGuerck) Ufrffrd Press fnhnuMtpai BOSTON -- A federal court Judge Monday awarded $1.2 million to the families of three lobstermen who drowned five years ago in a severe November storm that was inaccu rately forecast by the National Weather Service. The case is believed to set a pre cedent that would allow mariners and aviators to collect damages from the federal government when they are injured by inaccurate fore casts caused by improperly main tained weather equipment. The forecast in this case, issued on Nov. 22, 1980, was innacurate because a computerized weather buoy did not relay severe wind con ditions at sea. The storm created 50- foot seas and 70-mph winds. The lobster boat F-V Fairwind sakn, drowning its three occupants, and a lobsterman aboard a second boat, the Sea Fever, was washed overboard and drowned. Other sea men were injured by the storm, but their cases were not involved in this suit. U.S. District Judge Joseph L. Tauro found last March the federal government was responsible for the deaths of the three lobstermen -- two aboard the Fairwind and the man from the Sea Fever. Based on that decision, Tauro awarded the three families $700,000, $412,000 and $59,000. The differences were determined by the ages of the men and their lost potential earning power. "We're very happy with the deci sion," said Michael B. Latty, a law yer for the families of the drowned seamen. "We now have a case for other courts to refer to to find against the United States when it fails to properly maintain weather buoys which result in a bad forecast. "The United States owes a duty, or has a responsibility, to these fish ermen and mariners who go to sea based on weather forecasts," he said. The decision also may apply to aviators who depend on weather forecasts to a similar extent and are "induced to rely on the forecasts by seminars and through literature," he said. While most of the damages were awarded because of the loss of in come due to the death of a family member, the estate of Gary Brown, the 27-year-old lobsterman swept overboard, was awarded $50,000 for his pain and suffering. Brown's crewmates estimated he was in the frigid water for 10 min utes before he drowned. "In abso lute terms, 10 minutes is not a long time," stated the court memoran dum. "Given this setting, a man fighting for his life in a crushing, frigid November sea, 10 minutes can reasonably be considered an eternity." GET MONEY ANDPOWER Call Your Bryant Air Conditioning Dealer. Shopping for a central air conditioning system or heat pump? Then get a written bid on a deluxe Bryant 545, 544 heat pump, 569, 568 or 567 m conditioner. After you buy any equivalent unit (even a competitive brand). Bryant will give you a $50 savings bond. Free! 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