Banner Graphic, Volume 13, Number 104, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 January 1983 — Page 6
A6
1 he Putnam County Banner-Graphic, January 8,1983
Peanuts
( I CAN uveY “I I/uIHOKNOWS'AU',Be\ I I'M maffv just TiiuvnnnuJ « E l WITH THAT ) \ SOMEPAY THINGS I , BEING IN THE JHAN YOU LOVE ME VuyLL "ON PECK CIRCLE
Garfield
t f> I CANT BELIEVE ~T THE ONLV THING TO VO 16TO BUT... V ( THAT TACKV PACK ) GET RIGHT BACK UP THERE SOMEHOW IT) N > OF MUSIC. HATERS / ANP START SINGING AGAIN JUST ISN'T / T —X FENcTpOWN J - THE ’ ’ -Y' JPM ly ,9a?nn„«if i i ■' .1 1 , i . i
John Darling
jCOULP 1 REALLY 7 \ Since T'M-THE ONE / WELL, MAYBE YES ; 60 TO JAIL FOR ( MAYBE/) _ WHO COULD ENP UP V anp MAYBE NO/ J PERUSING TO TURN y ROTTING away in V , , y OVER MY NOTES, J/ — J JAIL, IV appreciate. J _V ~ ' LI,<L ' K '"" N
Beetle Bailey
I SAR&E \ 1)5 I 1 WANT TO SEE 7 ! THEY CUT ACROSS
Buz Sawyer
'//ey/ AMI SLAP fl'M A FRIENP OF TME iS THAT ’ BUT T \ YE AM? OUR^ SEE YOU 6UYS YOUR MAN PS 1 T ! HOMEOWNER/ WHV YOU PIPM'T... ;T \ I &UARP '‘~ , "*" ' t>o * s
Hi and Lois
' HOWPV, T'/VI from The \ Ves, \ OH,VVMAT \ 1/ part st.&erhard, part TIZ - Hi.Vf. KIMP IS ~ . ; V l -.’PTII '.,;;
Blondie
'"i YOU SAID YOU I THOUGHT YOU WERE WHAT KIND OP ENERGY ~7^V f WERE GOING TO J s IN TAVOR OP r-Y ARE YOU CONSERVING G fMY OWN ' j l INSULATE THE {\ &L CONSERVING > I SIMPLY LYING <&jg V / / ATTIC ,7 | ENERGY Tv THERE ON JY it C . I is-VC_Ly(i AM ULs- (THE3OPA-: \l Jto f, r JjeJ -4&S&! f*®; §*s& x7n ; x7l SL xcu vn
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
(r HUR ii v COME ON IN!! I s l
Redeye
MOW WAS THE HCW DIP YOU 9 \ TUST A WILP WINE-TASTING KNICW TP o££N TP ‘ t(l \ GUESS * >V PARTY ? A WINE-TASTING \{) y ?
People in the news
South Dakota feud with Minnesota headed for TV? PIERRE, S.D. (AP) South Dakota Gov. Bill Janklow said Friday he would be happy to take his feud with Minnesota Gov, Rudy Perpich to national television and clear up the accusation that his state is “s()th in everything.” Bryant Gumbel of NBC’s “Today Show” issued an invitation for a televised confrontation Friday after reporting on the war of words between the two governors. “I’ve been ready, willing and eager to debate with Rudy Perpich ever since he started criticizing South Dakota several months ago, but he never seems to have the time to debate the merits of his wild statements,” Janklow said in a written statement. Perpich, a Democrat, belittled neighboring South Dakota during his election campaign as “50th in everything" among the states, sparking Janklow’s anger. Janklow has conducted a campaign for several years to lure businesses from Minnesota to South Dakota, contending his state has a better business climate because of many factors, including, the lack of a corporate income tax. Janklow challenged Perpich to a debate after Perpich was elected, but the Minnesota governor said he was too busy. Perpich said Wednesday that he and Janklow should end their feud and concentrate instead on ways their two states can help each other. In a peace offering, Perpich invited Janklow to be his guest at the Minnesota Vikings-Atlanta Falcons National Football League playoff game on Sunday. Janklow said he was too busy. ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) —Country-western singer June Carter gcash is “coming along just fine” after undergoing abdominal surgery for a "benign condition,” husband Johnny Cash says. Mrs. Cash. 51, was admitted to St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester for surgery Thursday, according to a Mayo Clinicspokesman who declined to be more specific about the nature of the surgery. Cash, who has been staying at the nearby Kahler Hotel while his wife is hospitalized, said Friday she was “coming along just fine, just fine." Cash, 50. said the surgery was “nothing serious" and his wife should be hospitalized about five days. Cash and his wife live in Hendersonville. Tenn., a suburb of Nashville.
Harmony-raised Osmonds go country
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) Those all-American, ever wholesome brothers with smiles as wide as the great Salt Lake, have gone country. Music, that is. Alan, Wayne, Merrill and Jay the original Osmonds have joined country music’s well-stocked roster of family acts such as the Mandrell sisters, Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers, the Bellamy Brothers and Loretta Lynn and little sister Crystal Gayle The Osmonds can now be heard on country music radio stations with current. non-Osmond songs such as. “She Got the Goldmine (I Got The Shaft),” "She’s Not Really Cheatin' (She’s Just Gettin’ Even)’’ and “Get Into Reggae Cowboy ” Even sister Marie Osmond is still venturing into country music. Her song. “Back to Believing Again," was on the national country music charts in August and September. "Paper Roses” was a big country hit for her in the mid--19705. The four brothers, who range in age from 27 to 33, say country music is not that removed from their musical upbringing and what they used to sing on “The Andy Williams Show,” “The Jerry Lewis Show,” “Donny and Marie" and other television programs. “We were raised on good solid harmony,” Alan Osmond
El Matadoif Authentic Mexican Food cs\shley Squall Opening Soon Ei Matador Nachos Two tacot, one enchilada, rice and beam El Toro I llkim s tad a Mexican Chef Salad lU|F|JI| ** mt " U Soup of the Day Huevos Rancheros Tamales Two eggs, beans and rice lu.-o tamales, rice and beans
',vt Y'sljjk
BRYAIMT GUMBEL Offers TV time
NEW YORK (AP) British rock singer Andy Gibb has filed a $150,000 damage suit claiming a video entertainment company failed to pay him for a television musical he made. The suit was filed Friday in U.S. District Court against American Video Productions Inc., of Manhattan, and its president, Ellis Eisenstein. Gibb said he made a musical entitled “Something’s Afoot” under a contract with Video Productions for a fee of $25,000 payable in three equal installments last September and October. Gibb said the musical was intended for cable television sale, but he was to receive extra compensation if it was sold to a commercial broadcaster. The entertainer claimed the defendants never paid him. Gibb seeks $25,000 for the work, plus SIOO,OOO damages on a claim that the defendants intended to “deceive and defraud” him and $25,000 in punitive damages. There was no answer to a phone call to American Video Friday afternoon. • SAN DIEGO (AP) Even though his salary doubled when he took the oath of office this week, former San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson may be the poorest man in the U.S. Senate, a lobbyist says. “He could be the least wealthy of the senators," said Jay Hediund, a lobbyist for Common Cause, which tries to track the role of money in politics. “That's a distinct possibility,” said Wilson’s press secretary, Otto Bos. Wilson’s salary as mayor $60,662.50 after he was sworn in Tuesday, but that still isn't a lot of money by Washington standards. The Republican has no car in Washington and will live in a $550-a-month apartment one block from his new quarters in the Hart Senate Office Building.
said in a telephone interview from Provo, Utah, where the Osmond clan lives. “Now we re back to our first love country and gospel harmony. It’s where our roots are.” Their single, “It’s Like Falling in Love (Over and Over)," is moving steadily up the country music charts. Their first country music song, “I Think About Your Lovin',” was released earlier and reached the top 20 of the charts. They also have a country music album out, “The Osmond Brothers.” And even though they don’t drink and have an AllAmerican image, the four brothers are making the rounds of the country music clubs where the liquor flows and fights often are commonplace. They sing no suggestive lyrics and most of their songs have love themes: “Never Ending Song of Love,” “You’ll Be Seeing Me,” “Blue All Over You.” As for the other members of the Osmond clan, brother Donny just made a television movie, “No Man's Land,” and may do a motion picture for theater release. Marie recently was married to Steve Craig, a basketball player at Brigham Young University. She will be recording more songs again soon with country music producer Tom Collins of Nashville.
Hr*: £ gjwV * Sip fir '
ANDY GIBB Wants $150,000
