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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 18
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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 18

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Binghamton, New York
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18
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OBITUARIES The Evening Press Dec 3, 1983 Binghamton, Cuomo victory edge 180,526 Pea raotttces Analysis Paul Habala of Binghamton Paul Habala, 85 of Binghamton, died Thursday at Wilson Memorial Hospital, after a long illness. He is survived by two. daughters and sons-in-law. Lynn (Pete) Howe HarryT. Hayes of St.

Petersburg, Fla. of Port Dickinson Lynn (Pete) Howe, 65, Funeral and committal lllLSt. Petersburg Fla. died services for Harry P. monday in St.

Petersburg. Hayes will be held Satur-He is survived by two day at 1:00 p.m. at the daughters, Mrs. Gladys Thomas J. Shea Funeral Withey, New Mexico, Mrs.

Home 137 Robinson Darlene Bianco. Whitnev Street, Binghamton. Rev. Willis 0. Fisher of Johnson City Mr.

Willis 0. Fisher, 72, of Mountain Shadow Apartments, Johnson City, died Thursday at 1 p.m. at Wilson Memorial Hospital after a short illness. He was predeceased by two brothers, Chellis Wilma and Nickolas Vande Sande, Ashville, Point; three sons, John Richard H. Schuster, pas Howe, Lisle, Carl and tor ot the Ogden-Hillcrest N.C., Marion and George mi Eiowin Fisner He is ''Air 1 I.WMMWiIiHIWjm...

i Larry Howe, St. Peters- United Methodist Church Yusko, Endwell; six survived by his wife, Dor- burg; three sisters Mrs. will officiate. Burial will grandchildren; several othy (Griffin) Fisher, Elanor Guyles, Cortland, Chenango Valley great-grandchildren; also jonnson City; two sons Mrs. Beatrice Fair, Cemetery at the conven- several nices and and daughters-in-law, mfs.

Manna uircocK, Ul inyiiy. ucs.ircainu uonaid w. (Shirley lien- employee oi enmcou tiP pkhpr rnirhpsrpr Dwego; one brother Mau- are invited to call rice Howe, Berkshire; one Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to By JOSEPH GALU The Associated Press ALBANY Democrat-Liberal Mario M. Cuomo won the Nov. 2 election for governor by 180,526 votes over Republican-Conservative Lewis E.

Lehrman, according to complete vote tallies from the state's 62 counties assembled by The Associated Press. Democrats and Republicans made strong showings compared to 1978, while the apparent strength of all other parties in the state declined. The count, completed yesterday, showed that the anti-abortion Right to Life Party barely survived with 52,350 votes, not the 54,512 reported Nov. 3 by the News Election Service. Final tallies showed a reduced vote count for the party in virtually all of the state's larger counties.

Parties that fail to obtain 50,000 votes for their gubernatorial candidate lose the right to nominate by convention and to hold party primary elections. That means they have to circulate petitions to nominate for statewide offices. Cuomo's final margin of victory increased by 16,000 votes from election night, largely because of a 90-vote overcount on the Conservative line in Genesee County. Cuomo also made substantial gains in complete counts from Oneida and Erie counties and Manhattan. Figures from 57 county boards of election "and from the five counties covered by the Vew York City Board of Election showed 2uomo won Erie, Albany, Rockland and Westchester counties as well as the five counties.

Election night figures showed Lehrman orotner-in-iaw, Stanley le iuuwai JPuller, Nanticoke, N.Y,; me- In "eu of flowers, 11 grandchildren and family suggests that JohnsonCorp. vt mld D. (De- Privatc i funeral services iores jjundell) Fisher, will be Saturday at the Boca Raton) j. two Bednarsky Funeral Home, daughters and sons-in-Inc, 96 Glenwood Ave. jaw Jean and WMiam Bunal wdl be Slovak Kaiser Johnson City "ti'ree ereat-erandchil- contributions be made to the Hospice Unit ter extremely close.

The Liberal Party polled 115,594 votes, its smallest total ever for governor but enough to regain the fourth ballot position, ahead of the Right to Life Party. Democrats retained Row where they have been since Gov. Hugh L. Carey's 1974 landslide, with 2,559,287 votes for Cuomo. Republicans ran second with 2,248,325 and the Conservatives remained on Row with 230,103 for Lehrman.

Ballot positions for the next four years are determined by the gubernatorial vote cast for each party. The Conservative total for governor was their lowest since 1962 when they burst on the electoral scene. Lehrman also received 15,918 votes on an independent line. The Right to Life Party, which tallied 130,193 votes in 1978, may have been hurt by a massive last-minute drive by the New York State Right to Life Committee and its political action arm, which supported Lehrman over RTL candidate Robert Bohner. The RTL Party-RTL Committee schism has resulted in much confusion with the party insisting on a rigid anti-abortion stance and the committee adopting a more, pragmatic position.

Lehrman opposed legislation to outlaw abortions as demanded by the Right to Life Party, but he supported a cutoff of Medicaid funds to pay for poor women's abortions of his Funeral and interment HosPital vauium. wireic J. mac jme an(j yeniOn KOW- will be no calling hours. sevices wUl be held at 11 w- Dorothy M. Burr of Binghamton baturday at the Nichols Funeral Home, "Whitney Point.

The Rev. "diaries L. Murn of the of Dorothy M. Burr, Lisle Associated Church Thurc. will officiate.

Cremation UUJ ItlUl Ulilg M. IIVHIV, Mario M. Cuomo complete count in a chief goal of the committee. While the Liberal, Conservative and RTL tallies went down, the Republican vote rose by nearly 335,000 and the Democratic vote increased by more than 250,000 from four years ago. The Free Libertarian vote was 15,554, down from 18,990 four years ago.

The Socialist Workers tallied 5,512 votes, down from 12,987 in 1978. The new Unity Party received 6,321 votes, while the New Alliance ran last with 5,294. "ill take place at a late date. The family will lands, Endicott; four sisters, Garnet (Mrs. Raymond) Webb, Binghamton, Ruby (Mrs.

Paul) Karaim, Johnson City, Pearl (Mrs. Paul) Grit-man, West Windsor and Jane (Mrs. Harold) Place, Harpursville; 12 grandchildren; one great -granddaughter, several nieces and nephews. Survivors also include a former daughter-in-law, Jeanette (Mrs. George) VanDriesen, Concord, N.C., and two sisters-in- She was predeceased by her husband, Gordon F.

Burr and is survived by hpr son Dniiulas Rnrr. receive mends this eve ning from 7 to 9 at the Ni Home, Greenwich; a grandson, chols runeral Whitney Point. winning trie ano nociuana witn westcnes- Governor-elect names 3 to key posts law, Esther Fisher, Johnson City and Julia Fisher, Vestal. He was a retired employee of Ozalid retiring in 1972 after 33 years of employment. Funeral services will be at 10 a.m.

Monday at the H.P. Moat Funeral Home, 765 Main Vestal, and at 11 a.m. at St. James Church, Johnson City, where a Mass of Christian Burial will be offered. Burial will be in Vestal Hills Memorial Park.

Family will receive friends at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Lora B. Riley of St. Peters Village, Pa.

Mrs. Lora B. Riley, 91, of St. Peters Village, formerly of Springville, Pa. died Thursday in Pottstown.

She was predeceased by her husband, Minot B. Riiey. She was born in Auburn Four Corners, Pa. She is survived by a daughter, Emily B. Riley, St.

Peters Village, one son, Minot Riley, "27 Griffin Drive, Apalachin, N.Y.; one granddaughter. She was a graduate of the Montrose High School and Mansfield State Normal School, Class of 1910. In 1961 she retired after 23 years employment as a caseworker for the Department of Public Assistance, Montrose, Pa. Since 1918 she had been a member of-the Montrose Chapter of N.S.D.A.R. She was Past Regent and Past Registrar.

She was a member of the Northeast Regents Club and the National 50 Year Club. She was a member of Springville Baptist Church where she had served as Organist and Pianist for many years. Funeral services will be at 3 p.m. Sunday from the Springville Baptist Church. Rev.

Gary Anderson and the Rev. Wilbur McCullough will officiate. The family will receive friends at the Springville Baptist Church 2 to 3 p.m. Sunday. Interment will be in the Lynn Cemetery.

Arrangements by Wilson Funeral Home, Pottstown, Pa. his administration. Last night, while taping an interview to be aired Sunday on WABC-TV's Witness News Conference, Cuomo said" it was "a shameful confession to make" that no woman had ever served in the top three Albany jobs of budget director, secretary and counsel. He declined to give any hints at future appointments except to say that "we'll have women, we'll have minorities, we'll have upstaters it will be a very balanced administration." At the news conference announcing the new appointments, both Cuomo and Finnerty said the state will have to cut expenditures and eliminate waste to close a $600 million budget gap for this fiscal year and a possible $1.5 billion gap for the next year. Cuomo sounded the same theme in the By HENRIETTA LEITH The Associated Press NEW YORK Mario M.

Cuomo has named three more top aides and promised that women, blacks, Hispanics and upstaters will be among those getting key posts in the next two weeks. Cuomo also indicated that he hopes to have the opportunity to put a woman on the Court of Appeals, the state's highest court. The governor-elect announced yesterday that he had appointed Michael Finnerty, now secretary to Gov. Hugh L. Carey, to the post of budget director; Michael Del Guidice as secretary to the governor, and Fabian Palomino as special counsel.

Cuomo, who on Wednesday named Alice Glantz Daniel as his counsel, now needs only to name a communications director to round out what he calls the "Big Five" of television interview, and said there might even be layoffs of state workers. Cuomo reiterated his opposition to increases in the personal income, business and sales taxes, saying they would hurt the state's ability to compete for business and industry. Instead, he said, he favors a capital gains tax that "is not going to hurt business," and possibly taxes on aviation fuel and electronic games. Finnerty, 38, served as first deputy director of the budget and held other fiscal jobs before becoming secretary to Carey. Del Guidice, 39, has been first vice president of public finance for Shearson-Ameri-can Express since September 1981, and has held several government posts, including that of director of state operations and poli cy management in the governor's office.

Andrew Burr, Greenwich, N.Y.; a sister, Gertrude Swayze, Union Springs, N.Y. and a brother, Benjamin Swayze, Union Springs. Mrs. Burr was a retired school teacher with the Chenango Valley School system. Funeral services will be today at 9 p.m.

from the Wm. R. Chase Son Inc. Funeral Home, 737 Chenango with the Rev. James Newhard, officiating.

Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Sci-pioville, N.Y. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 7 to 9 p.m. John J. Tingley California John J. Tingley, 67, Stockton, and formerly of Binghamton, died November 22, 1982, at St.

Joseph's Hospital, Stockton, Cal. He is survived bv his wife, Betty Tingley, Stockton; two step-daughters, Sharon Gleason and Sharon Pullen, San Jose, Cal; a brother, David Tingley, San Jose, Cal. He was a retired employee of the Binghamton Pos't Office and a retired Colonel in the U.S. Air Force. Funeral services were at 9 a.m., November 26, 1982 at the Church of the Presentation, Stockton, Cal.

where a Mass of wucic Joseph Randall of Binghamton Joseph Randall, 78, of 154 Conklin Avenue, died Thursday morning at Binghamton General Hospital. He is survived by his sister, Lillian Spencer, Jacksonville, Fla; three riieces, Mrs. Ellen Beach, Binghamton, Susan and Marty Baudendistel, both Of" Binghamton; six nephews, Walter Randall, Binghamton, Robert Randall, Chenango Bridge, Phillip Randall, Apala-chin, William and Kenneth Spencer, Fla. and Bruce Knox, Binghamton; two sisters-in-law, Ida Baun-dendistel, Binghamton and Grace Knox, Bing-batPton. Mr.

Randall was a -retired superintendent ei Maintenance with Ansco amd a member of Otsiningo Lodge 435 A.M. "Funeral amd committal services will be Saturday a.m. at the Wm. R. Chase Son Inc.

Funeral Home, 737 Chenango St." Port Dickinson with the Rev. Thomas G. Swales, D.D. officiating. Burial will be in Vestal Hills Memorial Park.

Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 tod and 7 to 9 p.m. Otsin- In WH1TTAKER In loving memory of our ost president. Jutw M. Whil-toker, who passed owoy a year aoo today. December 3.

1981. From Past Presidents oi George Jonnson American Legion 1700 New mid-Hudson span likely by 1990 Want Ads Bring Results Dial 798-1141 For an 'AD-visor' lane, east-west span connecting Dorsey Lane and Route 299 in the Town of Lloyd, Ulster County. A Poughkeepsie bridge would be a oneway span linking the westbound arterial and Highland. That bridge might be more appealing because it could use the Mid-Hudson Highland toll booths; a Hyde Park bridge would require a sixth $1.50 charge. The authority has talked about building another span for at least three years, but Cameron's statement was the first time an official had said a new bridge was definite.

In October, he said expanding the Mid-Hudson to accommodate more traffic would be uneconomical. By JONATHAN SALTZMAN Gannett News Service POUGHKEEPSIE The New York State Bridge Authority plans to build a span north of the Mid-Hudson Bridge probably before 1990, to relieve traffic delays of up to 15 minutes between Poughkeepsie and Highland, the authority's top administrator said yesterday. "There's a new bridge in the future that's definite," said Gordon K. Cameron, the authority executive director. Authority Chairman John S.

Stillman said a new span would cost at least $100 million and would probably require tripling current 50-cent, one-way tolls on the au thority's five Hudson River bridges. The authority is considering constructing -the bridge in Poughkeepsie next to the Mid-Hudson or about three miles north in Hyde Park. Cameron said the preliminary findings of a New York City traffic firm predict what he called obviously unacceptable commuter delays of up to 30 minutes in 1990, making another span necessary. The firm, Vollmer Associates, submitted a preliminary report Wednesday on Mid-Hudson congestion. Vollmer is conducting its second study in four years for the authority at a cost of $11,000.

A bridge in Hyde Park would be a four- I juie 1 uuugc fftoj wui iidvc christian Rnrial was of a-memorial service this iaD" Reagan aides seen mapping '84 re-election This announcement is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy these securities. The offer is made only by the Prospectus. 1CICU. UI1CU WdS 111 31. Patrick's Cemetery.

Johnson City, November 30, 1982 at 10 a.m. Local arrangements were by the Walter D. Sullivan Sons Funeral Home, 45 Oak Binghamton. Cornelius A. Donlon of Endwell Cornelius A.

Donlon, 67, 620 Lowell Endwell, died at Wilson Memorial Hospital Friday at 12:30 a.m. after an extended illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth E. Donlon, Endwell; one daughter, Mrs.

Lawrence (Eileen) Wheelock, Endi-cott; three sons, Michael J. Donlon, Glen Aubrey, Patrick F. Donlon and daughter-in-law, Jean Donlon, Endicott, and evening at 7:30 p.m. Lyle W. Naylor UJ.

of Conklin Lyle W. Naylor, 79, of 25 Cherry Drive, died Monday at Binghamton General Hospital He is survived by -three daughters, Mary F. Naylor of Conklin, Mrs. Orville (Alice) Whitcher, Temple City, California, Virginia Stasukevich, Baltimore Maryland; five grandchildren, Wayne Nayjor of Conklin. Scott Whitcher, Los Angelas California, Gregory Whitcher, South Pasadena California, Leslie Whitcher.

Seattle Washington, -Tyler Whitcher, Temple City Calif iornia; four great-grandchildren. He New Issue December 2, 1982 $100,000,000 New York State Electric Gas Corporation First Mortgage Bonds, 13s8 Series due 2012 wa.6 a retired employee of John C. Donlon, Endwell; Price 99.375 and accrued interest from December 1, 1982 SAN DIEGO (AP) Some of President Reagan's closest political advisers will meet in Washington Monday to begin planning for a presidential re-election campaign in 1984, the San Diego Union said in today's editions. Former White House political adviser Lyn Nofziger was quoted as saying that while the president is aware of the meeting, the planning session does not mean that Reagan has decided to run for a second term. "The president is aware of the meeting," Nofziger told the Union, "But he didn't tell me to do it; he didn't tell me not to do it.

He didn't tell me he was running; he didn't tell me he was not running." Nofziger added that he was convinced Reagan would run again, and he characterized the meeting as an important preliminary step in that presidential campaign, according to the newspaper. "It will be a very informal meeting of a small group just to find out what's going on around the country, where the president stands politically and (to) see who wants to be involved," Nofziger was quoted as saying. The newspaper said Nofziger declined to say who would be attending the meeting. The Union said it had learned that those expected to attend include Edward J. Rollins and Lee Atwater from the White House political office and Frank Fahrenkopf, the Nevada Republican chairman who is about to assume control of the day-to-day activities of the national GOP organization.

Sen. Paul Laxalt, who headed Reagan's 1980 campaign, was also invited to Monday's session, but it was not certain whether he would attend, the newspaper said. The Union quoted an unidentified White House aide as saying that Rollins and Atwater would be there "only as observers." The newspaper quoted other unidentified White House political advisers as saying the meeting was badly needed. "It's past time for this," one aide reportedly said. Another White House aide was quoted as characterizing the meeting as a "let's put our cards on the table" session.

"This is badly needed because, frankly, no one has ever sat down in the same room and talked re-election ever," the Union quoted the aide as saying. Copies of the Prospectus may be obtained in any State in which this announcement is circulateclorily from such of the undersigned as may legally offer these securities in such State. the New York State Dept. one granddaughter, Lau-trf Labor; a member of St. rie Wheelock, Endicott, Marys Church, Kirkwood, and nieces, nephews and NLY.

He was a volunteer cousins. He was a mem-for-the Broome County ber of St. Ambrose Office of the Aging; and Church, Endicott; the re-was a senior volunteer in tired owner' of Main St. 4h USA Retired Seniors Garage, Endicott; a Pon-Pxogram. He was a volun- tiac dealer and former teer of the Binghamton Studebaker dealer for 14 tbychriatric Center, a years prior to his retire-member of the Maine ment; a veteran of World Community Band, a for- War II serving in the Ordi-mer member of the Kirby nance Division of the Air Band in Nichols N.Y., an Force.

Honorary Life member of Funeral services will be of Columbus, Monday at 9:30 a.m. from North Toriawanda, N.Y,; the Allen Memorial Home, and was an honorably dis- 511-513 E. Main Endi-chrged member of the cott, and at 10 a.m. from United state Navy. St.

Ambrose Church Funeral -services were where a Mass of Christian held Wednesday at St. Burial will be offered. Marys Church Kirkwood, Burial will be in Calvary KIT. Burial was in Cal- Cemetery, Johnson City, vary Cemetery. Arrange- The family will receive ments were by the James friends at the memorial V.

DeMarco and sons Fu- home Sunday from 2 to 4 "fleral Home, 199 Court and 7 to 9 p.m. with a J3LnghamtonN.Y. prayer service Sunday Salomon Brothers Inc Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb Incorporated Merrill Lynch White Weld Capital Markets Group Merrill Lynch, Pierce. Fenner Smith Incorporated The First Boston Corporation Goldman, Sachs Co. Morgan Stanley Co.

Incorporated Bear, Stearns Co. Blyth Eastman Paine Webber Dillon, Read Co. Inc. Incorporated bonaldson, Lufkin Jenrette Drexel Burnham Lambert E. F.

Hutton Company Inc. Securities Corporation Incorporated Kidder, Peabody Co. Lazard Freres Co. Prudential-Bache Incorporated Securitie. L.

F. Rothschild, Unterberg, Towbin ShearsonAmerican Express Inc. L' evening. Ens fl travel Ifimrral Home Dimlimj Consult those listed below for Professional Services in Time of need Warburg Paribas Becker A. G.

Becker Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. Smith Barney, Harris Upham Co. Incorporated Wertheim Inc. Take a trip every Sunday in Susquehanna magazine in Tlic Sunday Press Ernest H. Parsons Funeral Home, Inc.

WM. CHASE SON. Inc FUNERAL HOME First Albany Corporation 71 Main Bing. 772-0320 724-1336 UlUillllllMlllllllllllllilllillHIIIHItllllllilimillllllllillilillllllllllillllU.

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