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                  <text>Pomaroy-MicHipot1. Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Wlldcats
adVance ·in

RC COLA

&amp; RC PRODUCTS

l'h'.k 3
732

Pick 4
0143
Superl4to
17-18-26-30-33-38
Kicker 885732

tounlament

U-12 01. CANS

We Reserve The Right To
llmit Quantities

P~3 .·

STORE HOURS

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8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH~
PRICES EFfECnVE SUN., FEB. 18, THRU SAT., FEB. 24

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SUNSHINE

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DOG

•' vol.40,
·;,

Chucl&lt; Roasts ••~••••
FRESH PORK BUTT . .

LB. . . .

RC COLA

Sl 39

LB. .

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ground In finance, having served
"No area of the state has been
as Executive VIce P,resldent of more. neglected than Southeast·
both the Farmers Bank and ern Ohio an!! the 94th District,"
Pomeroy National Bank for Jones said. ''Today, we find some
nearly 20 years prior to being .of our counties and townships ·
elected CO!Illllissloner.
bordering on baAkruptcy; vii·
In addition to the commission- Iages and cities flndlngltdtftlcult
er's post, Jones has also served to provide peeded se~vices and
as the first president ofthe Meigs unable to meet state and federal
Local School District Boatd of mandates; and school boards
Education. He was a member unable to fund adequate educa·
and served as clerk of the tiona! programs . While other
Pomeroy Jloard of Education, areas of the state get new
and was also a member · of . h\dustry to provide ·jobs. our
Pomeroy Village Council.

$. 69
Chuck Roasts....... 1 .

·SUP~RIOR'S

. .

FRANKIES · . . .

Wieners ••••••••••••••••

A

WHOLE
CHICKEN

LB.

$

12 OZ. PKG.

Pork ·Sausage •••••• $1 39

Coupon

$.
199
Fdiets I Patt1es •••••

199
.
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
10 Ll. lAG

to add more ·workers

.

CHARMIN
TISSUE
4 ROLL PIIG.

$

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

99&lt;

.

Good Only at Powell's
Supermarket

$1
8
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
L
I
I
! 2°/o MILK !
La~ge
Eggs
•••.••
:::~
••.
6
9
&lt;
.
. . L
Jeno's Pizza ••••••••• 79(. I $149

FLAVORITE

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r.-~--------~--.,

. GAL.

I

GOOD FRIDAY
FEB. 23 ONLY

I

HANGING ROCK GRADE A

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FLAYOIITE

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7·4 to 8.1 OZ. FROZEN

·Crackers ••••••••••~••••• 79( MOUNTAIN TOP
Gala Towels •••••••••:59( Cherry Pie

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ROU

1

GALLON

1·

Good Only at Powell'•
Supermarket

·- ___ ..,.___
1

-··--·--·~

GRAN. SUGAR
4.4 Ll.

MAXWBL HOUSE

$119

$499

Oily At l'ewlll's s.- Yolu
s.. ftll. It thru Sat.• , •• 24

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~

I

cOFFEE

Gootl OI!IY At Pow••• Suptr Yalu
GOIII s..i., ••• II thru Sat. Fell. 24

•

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GOLDEN WHEAT

MAC. &amp; CH.EESE
7.25

oz.

5/Slv•

Gootl 0n1y At ,..••• s.Good Sun...... 1I thru Sat., Fell. 24

BOLD DETERGENT
1360L

$599

GOIII Ollly At Powlll's Slpw Yalu
&amp;.ad SUn.. fell. 18 llwu Sat. f .. 24

r

Hieronimus
seeks
Local news briefs-.....,
.
Ohio Senate seat
·Deputies probe valdalism reports
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Deputies of the MeigS Councy Shertrf's Department are
Investigating two reports of vandalism taken on Wednesday.
Sharon Durham, Vance Road, Pomeroy, reports · she
dlscorered that someone had sHt the rear wheel cover on the
.
spare tire of her vehicle.
The second report was taken from Carl Nichols, Wolf Pen,
who repOrted someone had entered a house he owns and
·damaged the doors· and ·windows. No estimate of the damage
was gl\ien. .
,.
·
.
·• Sheriff Jamell M1 Soulsby reports that 31-year old· Paul
Hatfield, Bra'dbury Road, Pomeroy, was cited toMelgl County
' Coui1 on an old warranffor disorderly condul!t, Because of the
minor misdemeanor, ·a ·citation to court wu llsued. He will
appear next Wednesday.

,,

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36 OZ. fRENCH ROAST
39 OZ. AD(, ELEC. Pill, lEG.

insurance coverage for food
stamps was accepted by the
commls~ioners, based upon !he
recommendation of Michael
Swisher, director of the Meigs
Department of Human Services.
The bid was from the Downing,
Childs, Mullen, Musser Agency,
Pomeroy.
· If desired, the agency can
provide a three-year policy for
food stamp coverage, butdld not
list exact terms. A three-year
policy would be acceptable to
Swisher and the commissioners,
If the three-year premium is
satisfactory.
A bid from Smith-Nelson Motors for a leased vehicle for
Chlldrens' Services was also
accepted by ' the board at
Swisher's recommendation. The
lease agreement for a GMC
Safari van is for $384.90 per
month, with a $400 security
deposit. The security deposit will
be returned at the end oft he lease
contract.
Both the insurance bid and the
bid for the vehicle were lone bids.
A request from the Southeast ·
Ohio Regional Council for a
donation to off set costs to
SEORC associated with the re·
cent printing of a publication to
promote the area for industry,

. Sidney Edwards and David
Gloeckner, of the Gallia·Melgs
·Community Action Agency, met
Wednesday with the Meigs
County Commissioners to give to
the county a check for approxl·
mately $16,000. This amount
represents about a 10 pereent
share of bonus money to the local
JTPA program.
The bonus money comes
through
the regional district
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) . LotteryDlrectorRonaldNaba·
which
overseesJTPA.
TheJTPA
The state . Controlling Board · kowskl said the commission will .
program
receives
bonus
money,
au thorlzed the Ohio Department spend $1.7 million more than
based
upon
the
effective
yearly
o.f Transportation Tuesday to lnidgeted for this; fiscal year to
opera!
Ions
or
the
prograin.
In the
hire imother·200 employees dur· . purchase G-Tech s new system
case
of
the
local
program,
"we
lng the ttext iwo year-s, using an which can process Instant lottery
met or exceeded all our goals."
automatic ·gas· tax hike which tickets and give faster weekly
stated'
Gfoeckner.
accounting of sales agents's
takes effect in July.
The
10
percent in bonus money
• ·the board agreed to raise the transactions.
to
the
county
may be used by the
ceiling on . the number of emNabakowski said ticket sales
or.ly to generate
commissioners
ployees, set in 1981, from 7,640 to are up by $140 million, and that
employment
opportunities
In the
7,840. The department said it the commission also Is upgrading
county.
needs the extra workers becauSe Its computer terminals.
. . Edwards, Gloeckner and·· the
of a heavy construction schedule . The excess lottery profits are
planned by the Ce·leste being shared by schools. The · commissioners also reviewed
other aspects of the JTPA
administration.
board voted to release $44 million
program, includillg anticipated
·T he money' \vin come .f rom a ·In excess lottery profits from last
fu(Ure
cuts In funding, and the
2.2·cent a gallon Increase In the year to 612' public -school disrecent
lmpk!mentatlon of a progasoline tax as of July 1. The trlcts, 49 joint vocational schools,
gram
to
provide retraining for
increase is part of a 5.2-cent hike 59 county school boards. 722
area
coal
miners who lost their
voted last year as part of the non:public schoolS, an.d87mental
jobs
In
lay
orts last year at
. slate transpor~&amp;tlon .budg~t.
retardallon boards.
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
The , board also approved a
The money must be used for
In other matters, a bid of
change In ·the Ohio Lottery textbooks and equipment, and
$16,000
a year fpr $400,000 of
Commission .contract with G- may not be used for salaries.
Tech Corp., Providence, R.I.,
James VanKeuren of the Ohio
which operates the lottery.
Continued on page 6

·Highway ·departme'!t

:Savi"gs
'

PUlE SWEET

coach.
Asbesth, Marietta, was employed as asbestos management
consultant for the district at a
charge of $2200 a year.
The board ,approved the pur·
chase or a printer for a computer
to be used ln .the business office
education program at a cost of
approximately $500, and also
gave approval to the Racine Ball
Association to use the ball fields
at both the junior high and high
school for summer programs.
Anthony Paul Frederick was
employed as substitute custodian
and the resignation of Bo~ble Ord
as transportation supervisor was

accepted.
Members of the board. Supt.
Ord. Treasurer Dennis Htll and
his assistant will attend the Ohio
School Boards Association's Sou,
theast Regional spring confer ~
ence to held March 13 at · the
Sportsman In Athens.
A discussion was held on House
Bill 140 which deals with the
secondary enrollment option and
the delay until '1991 , of its
implementation: ·
Attending the meeting were
Charles Norris, president, Denny
Evans, Gaty · ,Willford, Susie
Grueser, and Scott Wolfe, and
Treasurer Hilt.

.·eheck·'"for JTPA· 'program

TY!ON CHICKEN BR~AST 9;10 Oz. Box

&amp;actions, 1 6 Pages

25 Cenu

ahead, I look forward to meeting
troubled'' about this continued
neglectofthlspartofthestate. "I· with the people of this dlstricl
and diSC\ISSing their concerns. "
W()Uid like to be a leader In trying
Jones. who Is a . life time
to reverse this trend. INs f.o r that
·resident
of Meigs County , resides
·reason that I .. shall seek this
with his wife, Donna, on Laurel
position.
Cliff Road. They are the parents
''Experience In finance, experlence in educational matters, · of three children; Kim Quinn, a
music teacher who lives at
experience In all types of local
Hartford, Conn .; Brett, of' Pomegovernment, four terms as a
roy; and Susan, a student at Ohio
county commissioner and a deUniversity . He and his wife are
sire to serve are the credentials I
both members of the St. Paul
will ~ring to this off)ce," Jones
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
stated. ''In theweeksandmonths

~~~!Y ge\~4 · ~l6,~ ~!.lu~

BALLARDS 1~LB. ROLL or 10 Oz. LINK

ZESTA,

welfare rolls continue to grow .
Others get new and modern
highways while we get promises
at election time and then watt 20
years for construction," Jones
stated.
"SIInply put," he added, " we
continue to be the forgotten area
of the State of Ohio. To those who .
would advance the Idea that our
state is doing so well, I say come
to the 94th District," challenged
Jones.
Jones said he Is deeply

A contract for roof repair at the
Racine Elementary School In the
amount of $6,628 has l;leen
awarded to Manuel Gheen of.
Gheen's Painting by the South·
ern Local Board of Education.
The board, meeting Monday
night at the school also employed
a teacher's aide for 11.0 hpurs, to
' provide as sis talice in tes ling
special education St\ldents. The
. teacher will be paid with federal
· Title 6B funds, It was noted.
Also hired by the board was
John VanReeth as director of the
pep band, Bill Hensler as reserve
baseball coach, and TamJ11y
Chapman as reserve softball

FARMSTEAD

GRADE

~

A MuttWnedia Inc . New,apfH'

Gheen firm ·awarded rOOf ·
contract by Southern ·boam

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2
Sliced BolognO •••~ $1

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Pomeroy.. Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, Februairv 22. 1990 ·

2 LITER BTL.

Steaks/Roasts...... .
BROWN &amp; ~RISPY SQUARES
$
Cod F1sh ...............

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'"By NANCY YOACHAM
•.. Sel!llaei'Ne"eStaff •
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones has announced
,that h!! will seek the Republican
nominatlonforstateRepresenta·
Uve tJ:om the 94th Olstrl.c t. Jones,
)Vho also serves as Meigs CQunty
Republican Executive Committee Chairman, was· first elected
, to ·the'· oomintsstoner's post In
1976 and IS ~ently servi~~~: his
fourth· term, . • .. . .
,
...Jones al~o has a, broad ,back.

$299

$). CJ 9

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J'()~es see~ house seat ·. on Republican ticket

20 LB.

U.S. D. A. CH_OICE BONELESS BEEF

No.zoi

Copyolg~ 1890

FOOD

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Monday thru Sunday

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Low toalpt Ill
48a.
Chance of rain 100 percent.
Friday, hllh near 50. Chance
of rain 60 percent.

. Police probe ·three Dcc~nts ,
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Three accidents were investtaa~d by, Pomeroy pollee

Wednesday.

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. A~ 7:27 p.m. at the lr\leUectlOI\ of,Uncoln Hill and LiJICOin
Terra~. ca~• driven~ !lt~ ·Fred S.loy, Hlah Street a~
Micbael Mullen, ,Li~~CDbl Hejgh~, coWcle4. ·
Baloy wu traveltq doWJI J.lncobl Hill when Mu,Uen. going up,
wenUeft or cen~ ~ •lrliCIIJhe Baloy\oe~lcle, pollee reported.
Mullen was Cited for lett of ce11ter.
•·
Continued on page 6

. Lawrence County Sheriff Dan The district Includes Athens,
Hleronimu&amp; annnounced Wed·
Gallla, .Jackson,' · Lawrence,
nesday his candidacy for tbe
Meigs, Pickaway. Ross , and
Ohio 17th District Senate seat
Vinton counties.
now held · by Jan Michael Long,
"AI a llfelpng resident · of
D.Ctrclevllle. ·
Lawrence County and southern
Hleronimus, a Republican, has Ohio, I understand your conbeen sheriff since 1981 and made cerns: your needs and your
a Wednesday morning an1101111ce" values," Hleronimus said. "If
ment in Athens. He traveled to · glveri the opporllinity tci serre as
Ironton and Chillicothe In the
your representative in the Ohio
afternoon.
Senate, I pledge to flghtfor safer
•Tbe llsuee I plarn to focus on nelihborhoods, quality educa·
durln1 the upcomiDJ campaitn
tlon for our children, securtty·for
are crime •.education, taxee, the ·our senior citizens, and more
economy alld HlllDr cltlzeu,"
jobl and lncreued opportunity
Hlerontmua said. "I want the
for the people of the 17th District:
opportunity to be a ,part of the
"I look forward to a campalp
Ohio Senate and to take an active
based on solid lasuee and atrong
· role In cjeterminlng the future of
values," Hteronimua Concluded.
our great state for alt Ohioans,
"Voters will !lave a clear choice
and espem.IJy for the cltlzena of
to make on the direction of the
IOUihern Olllo."
Ohio Senate and the future of
If succeutill In Norember,
Ohio thla election."
Hleronimua will serve In the
Hteronimus has two children,
m•Jorlty party In the Senate
Danll!le, U, and Tyler, 11, and
where, he said, he ~II be able to
realdes In 'Ironton with his wife,
accompllah more for !he i!lltrict.
Janet.

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was welJ.recelved by 'the commls·
stoners. Appar.ently, copies of the
publication were taken to Japan
In a recent visit state d~velop.
men! officials, .as well as being
dlstrlbu ted throughout Ohio and
surrounding ~tales. Commls.- ·
stoner Richard Jone~ described
the publication as "excellent"
and said It would be well worth it
for Meigs County to do Its Share
in helping tQdefray the costs . The
commissioners wlll be cl!ecklng
with surrounding counties t~
ascertain the size of their dona·
Uons, and will then try to come up
with a comparative amount from
Meigs County.
·
County Engineer Philip Roberts and Highway Superintend·
ent Ted Warner were at the
meeting to discuss upcoming
State Issue II projects. Roberts ·
arid Warner were also questioned
by - the commls~ioners about
minor road problems througtiout
the county. The two men re·
ported that som~ f,epalrs have
been made, while others will be
taken care of as soon as !Vi! ather · ·
permits. Roberts also reported
that the county's mowing tractor
Is back on the road.
Finally, the COJ11mlssioner's
approved a request from County
Recorder Emmogene Congo to
attend a continuing education
seminar which is · being sponsored by the Ohio Recorder's
Association.
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IDEAS SHARED - ··Donald
Schmidt, execullve director of
tbe Ohio Parks and Recreation Association, Inc., Colurn·
'bus. shares Ideas for develop1!11 recreational programs ·
t!O'ou1ho\Jt Melp County. .
Scl!mldt·- ..,.,It~ W,dnj!s·
dily n..IK au •JII!elal meetlnl
which wai 1po1119red by tbe
Melp COunty Park District.
Tlie meet1n1 ns held at the
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy. ·

Park district
.
r,mprovements.
are discussed ·
'

Area reslde!l'ts may not know
It, but Meigs County has its own
Park District.
,
And although relatively new,
the Meigs County ParkDlstrkt is
working diligently , and on a
lbnlted budget, to !levelop plans
for Possible recreational projects
throughout the county.
The park district Is also trying ·
to get Information out to government officials thl'o~ghout the
county, that they want to work
hand· In-hand with Interested
people in the county to bring :
recreatlonalfacllltles to the local ·
area: An effort to Inform govern· ·
ment leaders took place Wednes·
day night at the Meigs Senior-·
Citizens Center In Pomeroy with '
a few local officials taking
advantage of the chance to hear
from Donald Sclunldt, executive
director or the Ohio Parks and
Recreation Association. Inc.,
Columbus.
Although SchJ11idt shared
much Information with' those at
the meeting regitrding ways to go '
about develdping recreational
·,:'.' projects, of major Importance,
· , ' he said, Is the need for the park :
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (UPI) .-' · district to better a~uaint Itself·
The Ohio Department .ot ~eallh ' · · with area offlcta:ls. Schmidt :
. says an outbreak ·or 'l;Ype:A · explained the many types or-:
Shanghai flu is n!J . longer at . things that a park dlstrlctis able .
epidemic levels in.,the s'tate.
to accomplish, especially When u;.
The state healltl ·dl!l*rtment· Is supported by local residents.-·
Wednesday clas$1fled tile oilt- ,. ;' as well as by local governmen{
break as ''regional," meaning
le!l&lt;lera.
·
.:
less than half pf ' tile slllte!s'
Schmidt encouraged park dis· '
population Is noW vulnerable' lo •... ·.trjcl board members, not to stop ·.
the virus said Tony P.Ytoll. the · with local officials either, but to •:
departm~nt's health plainilng begtri no\V to talk with state ::
administrator.
'
Cl)ntlnued on page 6
.·

•d •
CanceI .epl ermc.

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.Indep~nd~n~ ~1tdidafes have :
Ullti~.~qy.: 7 to, file petitions ·~
Candidates wllo.flll! lnclepend·
ent or the Republic~ qr Democratic Parties havell'ntll May7 at'
4 p.m. to present their petitions to
the Melgl County Board of
Elections, ac:cOrdJng. to, Jane ,
Frymyer, director.
'
By· flltng as an Independent,
candidates by-pass the primary
election· and !Ia· riJht Into the

reneral election In November ·
she explained. P4!tltiona requlr~ ·:
the signatures of 70 registered :
voters.
· '
·
·;
The deaciUne ror fllinl petit Ions •
of candidacy within the two 1111rty ~
syste"' or resolutions to place tax
•Issues on the May 8 ballot Is 4
p.m. Thursday (today), Mrs.
Frymyer noted,

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�·c ommentary·

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Thundav. February 22. 1990

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Page 2-Tht Dilly Sa 1tinll •

helps Man_d ela

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Jack Andersbn and Dale V«nAtta
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Ill Court Street

~·.Ohio

Thuradey. Febl _.,.,. 22•.198o

mediatq~

tian

.RIMJLJ

WASHINGTON - If and w.h en amo11g tbe bestneeotlatcirs In the
·
Nelson Mandela walks ,out of world, apd .they are more Inter·
"
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DEVOTED ro·THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA
prison In South Africa, he will ested In resolution than taking did take."
·apartheid acilvltles.' Bu~ he bas
owe his freedom, in large part, to credit.
·
On Feb. 2, South African
refu~ the terms.
'
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~lb
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ISlm~ ,...,.,_,.__,..., ......-.:=.c:loo=o
a formidable Egyptian diplomat
Mandela, n, has been 1n prllon President F .W. de Klerk shocked
, t'bOut two,. years . ago, Ghqll · ,
who has been negotiating In for 'r7 rears on char,es or whites and blacks In his -country, began applying pressure to all
~v
.
•
secret for two years to free
sabotage against the govern· .by lifting a 30-year ,ban on 35
sides' In the,. negotiation~. ·u.s, .
ROBERT L . WINGETT .
CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
Mandela and roll back apa,rtbeld. ment tor his ANC activities 1n the antl·apartheld groups, Including . and Europelln officials sensed a
Publisher
General M._naaer
Only a few Insiders hAve known
1960s. His filial words to the court tbe ANC, and offering to release ·.rchange In the wind. wiJen Ghall
I.
about
the
WQrk
of
&amp;utros
Ghall,
when he was sentenced to lite are Mandela.
took an·lnterest. High-level State
'·
PAT WHITEHEAD
the Egyptian minister of state. . recited by ·black school children
Mandela, who' is holdlrigout!or
Department sources told us his
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer
Our Intelligence sources say In South Africa today:
release on hi$ own terms, Is
work has been "plvo!al." ,Ghall
Ghall has clout because of
"There comes a ttme as Jt crediting the stubborn reslStance
has been mlqister ohtate since
A MEMBER of The United Press ln~natlonal,lnlai!d Dally Press
Egypt'·s history of funding two came In my lite, when a man is of the ANC and foreign sitl!CIIf&gt;ns
1978.
when he was .appointed by ·
AssOciation an&lt;J tbe American Ne.rspaper Publlsllers Association.
banned . anti-apartheid groups,
denied tl!e right to live a normal against South Africa for forcing
President ·Anwar · Sadat. s_ad.a t
the Pan Afrlcanlst Congress and life, when he can only live the life• de Klerk to negotiate. Mandel a was so Impressed by·htm that he
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shc~ld ·be less tban 300
. Mandela's group, the African .o fanoutlawbecausethegovern· kept secret the debt he owes .to
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be .signed wltb
leaned heavUy 011 Gllall whea the
name. address and telephone number. No unsi$ned letters Will be pubNational Congress.
ment has so decreed 'to use the · GhaJI.
.. .
Camp David Pei~e accord 'WI!' .
lished. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personaliGhall follows a long Egyptian
Jaw to Impose a state of outlawry
There have· been many efforts
negotlat~: · GhaWa'utllored the ;
ties.
·
tradition of mediation In the
upon him. I was driven to this to free ·Mandela over the years,
speech Sadat delj:V'e reil in ·
Mi&lt;ldle East and Atrlcl!. Egypsituation, and I do not
·
always tied to the gov¢rnment
Jeruselum.
· ~· .. ' p! ~: ..
tlan for~llll service plflcers are
having taken the;.;
· d;rec;;;;l•;;;lo~ns~T'T-re;.;
· a~ve,;,at ~that he end ·
antlGhall kept his meet!Dis \l'lth
South African offlcl&amp;!s•qufet and .· •..
held th~m on n~tral gro~nd In ·
Paris, Cairo •and' Harare, ZimI
babwe. Fll'l!t he concentrated on
By GARY SILVERMAN
getting
the PAC and ANC to work
WASHINGTON (UP!)- In addition Io killing nearly 400,000people,
togethl!r.
Then he drew the South
smoking costs the economy $52 billion every year, imposing a
African
government Into the
"hidden tax " of $221 on each American, a Health and Human Services
I(~W
Thefl!
were · ri11merous
talks.
Deparlment reported earlier this week.
·
.
'
other
meetings
With
top officials
In releasing the study at a Senate hearing, HHS Secretary Louis
of
the
"frontline
·~tales," those
Sullivan renewed his attack on the "corporate irresponsibility" of
black nations that 'have. given
tobacco companies that target minorities. women ._anc! other groups
. support and safe haven to' anti·
with their advertisements.
aparthe,id, ~q_t!Y,lsts. : ,
.
Sullivan called on ad'agencles and athletic events tobr~ak theiFties .·
When
de
Klerk
b¢came
South
· with tobac.co companles: In particular, Sullivan urged the women'·s
· Africa·s ·~~~prestdent la~t .year,
·· tennis tour, In Washington this week, to end its assoela11on w'tth•
Gliall .was unCiaunted. ·t:&gt;e Klerk
Virgln.ia Slims cigarettes:·,
·
··
'
had . a repu~a·IJon as a man· \lhth
. "Is Is morally wrong to promote a product which, when. used as
'
"steel teeth'·' ..,. an Afrikaner
Intended. ca11ses death, trading death for corparate profit,:• h·e .sald.
Idiom·
for an adamant suppoJter
. But Sui !Ivan declined to endorse a $185 mill,lon bill propdsect by the ·
of
apartheid.
Never once In his 17
chairman of the Labo'r and· Human Resources Committee, Sen.
years
In
'
Parliament
and the
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. , that calls for paid television ads against
Cabinet
ha!l
de
Klerk
Introduced
smoking. a center to regula!e tobacco as well as public disclosure and
a single measure to. f!!fonn
government regulation of cigarette additives.
apartheid.
He would be a tough .
Sullivan said a separate agency was unneccesaryand that although
customer.
he favored telling cons\uners about additives, he thought his role was
But Ghali was tougher. And
to end smoking and not give the impression that some cigarettes are
when
de I;Clerk made the first
safer than others.
'
· . ·:
historic
'step earlier , this month
On TV ads, Sullivan noted his department is ilmited by the budget .
on
the
road
toward elimination of
de(lclt and Instead ·'challenged'' the television networks to run public
,
apartheid,
Ghall
.took no credit. . ·.
: service. ;a ds against cigare!teS 'in prime time, sayjng 11. was t·helr
.. ,.,.
.
·• ·
· ,
· responsibility to do so. ... ·.
.
' ., .
· The 300-page report, "Smoking 'and Healtb: A National StatusReport," said smoking each year drains $52 billion from the·natlon's
economy, .prlmarlly In increased healtb care and Insurance costs as
well as lost productivity.
"Cigarette smoking has an adverse economic impact on every
Ame•·ican, whether or not he or she smokes," Sul!lvan sa]d , "Each
MIAMI (NEA) - 'L~rry Cook lng, trucking, real estate, ac- ' view of his work. "This Js not a
and every American is paying a hidden tax of approximately $221 per
has a tough job. His title with the counting and other businesses.
bleeding heart socla.l program,"
· ·. · · ·
/
·
;. person per year."
;
Florida Department or Labor
Muchofhlssuccess lsattrlbu·
be says. "We help jleople ·who
ap~Ucan~ha~ebeell'bond.ed,the
•· Smokers pay even more since they spend' $49 billion a year on
and Employment Security ·Is table to a little-known. lo)V~
want . to get · jobs. We •help · defl\ult rate _,the-proportion of
t: cigarettes, cigars and pipe tobacco, ttie report said .
"ex-offender placement special· budget government · lnltlath(e
employers hire the people they ·CaSeS lri Which, claims must be ·
•· The annual per-capita costs of smoking-related disease range from
1st," which means he ·has to find called the Federal. Bonding Proneed."
. .
·
pa!d ~au511of111shcnesty-l\as
~ $56 in Utah and $120 in New Mexico to $283 in Nevada and $~ In .. work for the former convicts few gram. •:u It wasn't for FBP,
Those ro;!Questtng FBP ilsslSI· ' , averaged Jess than .2· J)ercent
~ Rhode Island.
·
·
·· .. ·
:· ·
people trust:
.
these people wouldli't have jobs.
ance through the more than 2,000 .. aitnually .' · ,
·I
'
The average state loses $1 billion a year. Cailfornla Jeads the list at
That task ~omes especially It's .that simple. I hope they never
Job Service' offices o~rated by
The program's most ·~~vlo,us
: $5.8 billion, followed by New York, $4.6 billion; Texas. $3.4 billion;
complicated when ex-convicts kill the program," says,Cook.
· state and l~al government~
weaknl!ss. Is, 1~ limited a&amp;ep. Pennsylvania, $2.9 billion'; Illinois, $2.8 billion: ·Ohio, $2.6 billion; and
wlth records of theft, embezzleIndeed, FBpP Is a model of
across the country must havi! a tance,. lnJ~reat measure attrlbu: Michigan, $2.1 bllilon. At the bottom of the llst are Alas~a. $82.3
ment or similar crimes are what the federal government , firm offer of a permanent,
table to.• a lack pt Information
• million: Wyoming, $85.8 million; and t:Jtah, $92.1 mllllon.
·
candidates fo.r jobs. that ·g ive ought to l:!e doing for · those who
fuiJ.time'job and he qualified for ' about and · acceptance ·or FBP
( The study said smoking kills about 390,000 people annually :- more
them access to everything from
need help most. "We're talking
the position they seek.
among ,representatives of state
''than one of every six deaths - and · Is increasingly -concentrated
valuable Inventories to subs tan- about giving people a chance to
When an application Is ap·
and local public ·employment
• among low-Income, minority and less-educated Americans.
tlal amounts of cash.
build some sort of career Instead
proved, t~e employer receives. a ·. service~ .
·
'.'I am especially concerned that we make moJe progress In
Even would-~ bosses who carr of spending the rest of their Jives
six-month lldellty bond_l$sued by
Last year; for example, more
reac~ng young people, women, minorities and ·blue-coUar 'workers
overcome their reluctance to working In a car wash," says Bill
the Aetna Casualty &amp; Insurance
than 70 percent of the 883 ·F BP
with accurate and compelling Information about smoking," Sulllvan
hire ex-offenders routinely insist Throckmorton, the program's
Co. under a .special arrangement . . bonds written '!Veie issued In only
said.
that thepotentlalnewemployees
nallonal coordinator.
with FBP .. At lhe . employer's
six states- Texas, New York,
Sullivan was saluted by committee members for his successful
be covered by fidelity bonds to
. request, coverage can by . exVirginia, Illinois, California and
: effort to force R.J. Reynolds to withdraw Its plans to market the
protect the company ·against
The FBP staff consists of tended for an addlllonal six
Florida _ where . Job Service
' Uptown cigarette, targeted at blacks, and his criticism during 'the
Throckmorton and two asslSt- months. Aetna ~an contlnuj!: officials are enthUsiastic about
dishonesty. But almost no insu·
: weekend of the company's plan .for a Dakota cigarette aimed at
ranee company will Issue such a
ants - all part-time employees.
coverage beyond the first year,
the program·. :
·
..
: "virile" young women who enjoy going to bars.
·
bond because or the perceived
In an . era or federal budgets but FBP pays tile premiums only,
In more than half of the states,
• The secretary said his other anti -smoking efforts would incluede
high risk Involved.
exceedl!lg $1 trillion annually,
for the lnltlall2 .months. ·
however, fewer than fo 11 r bonds'
: writing tp each hospital urging ·it. to declare Itself a smoke-free zone
Nevertheless, Cook has placed
FBP operates ·. on less than
FBP began as an experiment . ·were Issued in 1989. .The pro; and to tobacco retailers. such as national store chains, to ask lor
ex-convicts in senslllve poslllons
$200,000 per year.
at selected publiC· employment. gram, proven as an .effective
· vigorous enforcement or laws that exist In 44 states prohibiting the
with companies selling meat,
Throckmorton, who refuses to .offices In 1966 and· became a
means of rehabilitating 'ex: sale of tobacco to minors.
tobacco and beauty products, as
engage in empire-building, has a
nallonwide program In 1971.
convl ~Is, d ese ~ves wider
well as firms engaged In caterrefreshingly simple. and honest Although more than 24,000 job
acceptance.
Pomeroy, Oblo

17

:Sullivan renews attack r'k~esT; PaD! _:r.Was Rf&lt;!Jtr
it4 THe. MiPPI.a tiF 'fffiS. HUGe
SCat4DaL, sur x PiDN'T .·
a 'THIN&lt;; aBoliT iT!

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Lloyd (4:51), two on a jumper
Trlbaae Staff ·wrller
from the right baseline by junior
SaUd defensive pressure and
guard Jason Black 12:35) and a
, tough Inside . play by Hannan · foul .shot by junior center Craig
Trace ·spelled victory tor the
Rankin (1: 12) .
.
Wildcats, who claimed a 75-61
"We had trouble getting on the
victory over Ironton St . Joe
boards In the first half," said St.
Wednesday night In the Division
Joe head coach Jim Mains.
IV sectional tournament at the
whose Fiyers ended their season
University of Rio Grande 's Lyne
at 1·19.
Center ..
"Our defensive pressure early . As for the Flyers, their offense
helped us, but because we might didn 't register· in double figures
have been-looking ahead (to their until Matt Smith, a 6-5 j\lnlor
rematch in the upper-bracket center who had a game-high 15
, sectional final against North rebounds, scored on a turna·
Gallla, whleh will start Tuesday . round jumper from the right side
at 6:30 p,m . at Lyne Center ), we · of the lane at the 6: 30 mark In the
. flat stunk In the fo urth quarter," second ·p eriod to cut the Gallians'
said Hannan Trace chief Mike lead to 27-11 . But In a quarter In
Jenkins, whose troops survived which both teams essentially
being outscored 29·15 in the last traded baskets, Hannan Trace,
eight minutes to boost their which In the last two minutes
record to ~l-10 .
held a 25-poln t lead, allowed St.
Trace ruled the court , !'Spe- Joe to whitTle away at that
cially In the paint, in the first mar gin until the Wildcat s' half·
half, as the Wildcats scored their time canyon was. the sa me size it
first 10 points on layups. In was at the end of the first quarter
;ulditlon; half of all the Wildcats' - 19 points .
Jay ups In the opening act caJ!le on
Lloyd, who led the Wildca ts
offensive rebounds. As a result , with 17 points, anti sophomore
only five of Guyan's 25 first- forward Chad Swain. who
quarter points didn 't come .from chipped in with 14, were the
layups - two on an outside primary ingredients ·1n Trace' s
jumper by junior guard· Eric staying out In front in the third

.

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Small program a big help

Roi;)ert•.'JfiJ.ters

....

Can food labels give you heartbu~

Berry~s Wo'rld

·

•'

.

Vmcent Carroll
.

••

Congressman's hourly· effort tQ run
the perpetual campaign machine.
.
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r ...

NQthlng so Illustrates bur agslty, Is ·one of those who doubts them perfect Information . .If
Ing Into a society of fussbudgets
,,
our collective savvy. "This can . government only would banish
relatl.vely low· in fats, salts and
as , the ongoing attack on a
give a misleading Impression misleading health claims and
sugar Is better . than the one
food·labeling plan by tlie Amerl·
that margarine Is a heart- Impose nutritional guidelines can Heart Association.
healthy food," he told The New If It would educate and regulate ·· favorect by Jackie Gieasoh?·" ·
Lighten up, fussbudgets.· Some
At worse, the association's
York Times, " and clearly It is more strictly - we'd soon find
of
us fancy a rich meal for the
seals of approval, which are
not."
the candy-makers out of same reason we throttle.up a car
supposed to start appearing on
I don' t know 'about Dr. Blum- · business.
store Items this month, wm be berg, but I would never mistake a
on a lonely patch of hlf!hWay: '
But Is there an American alive
because longevitY by· Itself Is a
Ignored by consumers. At best, seal of approval on a stick of
paltry reward''
.,
'·
:
they'll funnel . a few buyers margarine .as · an Invitation to who doesn't know that a diet
toward products slightly better serve It In place of a slde dish of
. for their arteries than .t he stuff carrots. I'd simply assume that
,..•
.. '
they'd been eating. ·
margarine clogged ll'ly·heart less
'
'·
And the plan will make money than, say, butter or lard - and I
for a good cause, too, .since think most other people would,
producers pay the association a too.
.
Today Is Thursday, Ji'eb. 22, the 53rd day.of 1990 with 3l 2 to follow.
few - anywhere from $15,000 to
The. moon is waning, movilig toward Its new phase.
But then I don't believe most
'
$640,000- for a seal of approval. adults need their hands held
The morning stars are .Mercury, Venus, Mars and .Satu~n.
,
So what's the problem? Well, when making every trivial consu.
.
·, ·. .
,
The even~ star Is Jupiter.
some crltles sniff at the very mer deelslon. The Insatiable
Those born on this date are&lt;UIIder 1Qe sign of Plces, They Include,;
notion that a private group urge to regulate, of course, stems
George Washington, first president of the United States, In 1732; . . .
should Issue nutritional guide- precisely from the conviction
(Jerman philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer In 1788; ·poet, diplomat
lines. Better that the government tbat one's own common sense Is
and editor James Lowell In 1819; Ena:ll&amp;hman Robert Bade~~·Powell; ·
- which, as everyone know1, quite rare apd that 'the feilow
fo11nder of the Boy !ilcout movement, ahd German physlctSt:Helnrlch
·
.rarely errs In regulatory matters next ·door moonlights as a mud
Hertz, discoverer of radio waves, both In 1857; poet Edna St. Vlacent
. - should control such labelillg.
wrestler.
.
·
Millay In 1892; Spanish· film· director Luis Bunuel In 1900;, I!Ctors
"It's the goverllJ!)ellt's respon- ·
Dr. Blumberg personlftes this
Robert Yo!IDi In 1907 '(age 83)•and John ,Mills In 1908 (age 8:1~;· Sen. •
slblllty, and they ought to get on paternalism. Here, for example,
Edward .M. ~nnedy, D.,Mass, In 1932 (age 58); and llasketball !'
with It," said an official :of the IB aJlolher of bls preelous objec·
player Julius Erving, ' 'Dr. J .," ln .l950 (age .40.)
AgrlcUIIIIral Department. A lions: "The messag~ Is that what
' '· .
former director of the federal : Is labeled Is good food, and wha I
.
.
·On this date In history:
Ji'Ood and OnJg Administration Is not Is bad food. And fresh foods
In 1819, a treaty with Spain ceded Florldli' to the United Sta't es.
1ec0nds that notion, saying the are not going to be labeled at all."
In 1862, Jefferson Dav.is witS' ln~~ougurated ·ils president· of ·the •
plan reOects "anarchy" ·In food
Awful, IBn't It? Lett untutored
Confederate States of America.
.
labeling and health claims.
by a label, Americans will soon
In 1972, ~!dent Richard Nixon arrived· In BeiJing on a .historic
Other fault-finders believe consider oran~ and peas as
.
·
· · . .
visit to China.
Amerlc11111 are too 'thick to heart-conJI!Itlng blights on the
Ia 1973, 'lJraell flgl'lter· )llanes shot down . an .unarmed Libyan .
ullderltaad the meaning of the national diet. Perbapl every
commerctaiii.J~IIDer, kUling 1otof !he l13,people aboard.
,
Iabeii, aDd 10 wDI gorp lbem· kltcheu faucet should be labeled,
In 1987, the United States, Japan; ·West 61!!11'1any, Bl'ttalil, France ·
selves from heaping pluten of too, t6 avoid confusion over the
and Canada ll.greed to coopera~ to stem .the decllnl! of !Iollar. That
mar&amp;arlae, caraf• of .lalad safety of water.
· same day, artlat Andy W~hol \fled' ql bea1't faihlre at age 88.
drei•IIW and tubl of olive bU.
.
~
.
'.f.
~umerllll like ·BllllftberJ
Dr. Jeffrey B111mberg, prof~~· act a1 If all people would behave , A tho11Jhl for the day:
"Edna St. Vl!ICI!!)t · Millay ·~ate, .
sor of nutrition at Tufts Unlver· rationally In a worl!f that offered
• 'Whatever I do I glw up my wllole .~1( t.Q lt." , ,
,, .

F'Oei

..

·

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I

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...

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.,

HANNAN TRACE (75)

Feeding the bali into the hands
of Mark Erslan and Jeff Brown,
who each scored more •than 20
points, the University of Rio
·Grande men 's basketball team
crested to · victory over Ohio
Dominican Wednesday on the
Panthers' court, 109-74.
All five of Coach John Lawhorn's starters contributed bal·
anced scoring performances to
put away ODC's threat early In
the game and post a 3~point
• cushion at the lnterml$slon. .
Lou Sartori's Panthers, paced
by Jody Dillard's 13·point performance, came as close as·seven In
the first half before the Redmen
exploded to pull away.
Erslan, who netted six assists,
was given the ball through
effective guard work and connected on seven three-point field
goals. Brown, who led the team
Individually on the boards with a
carPer high of 13 rebounds,
utilized his control of the ball to
post five outside baskets and
keep the visitors ahead.
The Redmen , now 15-15 overall
. and 4-5 in ihe Mid -Ohio Conference, shot 55.6 percent !44-79)
from tile field and scored 54
points on 18 of 33 tbree-point field
goal attempts. The Pantbers
.were held to 39.2 percent (31·79)
from the field. but managed to
sink six of 14 tries from trilecta
land.
,
The quick-moving game resulted In few fouls , with Rio
Grande going to the free throw
line on three of fo\lr attempts and

(All games)
TEAM.
.W L
Eastern .......... 15 5
North Gallia ... 13 7
Southern .. ..... .. 12 . 8
Hannan Trace 11 10
f-S-Valley .. ;.... 8. 13
Southwestern .. 8 12
Oak Hill .... .... . 5 16
Kyger Creek.. . 1 19

DRIVEII FOR LAYUP :... With Ironton st: Joe guard Tim WoOds
(33) In his path, Hannan Trace guard J.J. Bevan drives Into the
Jan~ for the layup In the seco'nd quarter of Wednesday night's
Division IV sectional at ·Rio Grande. The Wildcats won 75·111 to
'
. '
advance to Tuesday night's upper-bracket title game against
Norlh Gallla. (Tribune photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Navratilova an easy winner ,
in Virginia Slims tournament
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Top
seed Martina Navratilova
needed just 49 mlnu.tes io defeat
Ann Grossman. 6-0, 6-0, Wednesday to advance to the third round
of the $350,000 VIrginia Slims of
Washington. ·
Navratiiova combined overpowering ground strokes wi th
her Strong serve to keep Gross man running back and forth
along the baseline. When Grossman approached the net, Navratil ova passed her at wilL
After winning the firs t set In 19
minu tEs, Navratilova appeared
on her way to a qui ck shutout in
the second set as welL Grossman, 19. delayed the outcome
slightly when she fo rced live
deuces in the third game before
succumbing.
' 'I think that game took the air
out ofht&gt;r. " Navratiiova said. " It

Eric Lloyd ....... .. ... 6 1 2 17
Craig Rahkin. ..... .. 5 1 2 15
Cha\1 Swain .......... 6 0 2 14
Jason Black.......... 4 0 0 8
Riehle Cornell .. .. .. 3 0 2 8
Todd Boothe ... .. .. .. 3 o o 6
J .J . Bevan ............ 1 0 2 4
Brian Unroe ...... .. . 1 0 0 2
Steve Sanders ..... .. 0 0 1 1
TOTALS .............. . 29 2 ll 75
Fleld ,I(Oal$- 31-69 (44.9%)
Tbree-polnters - 2·13 (15 . 4~ l
Free throws- 11·24 (45.8%1
· Rebouuds- 37 (Ra nkin 9)
Aialats -14 (Boothe 5) ·

PF PA
1497 1406
1454 1302
1412 1229
1279 1240
1232 1297
1446 1421
1237 1479
1114 1543

Ohio Dominican on six of eight
tries.
Individually, . Gary Hart!son,
ranked seventh nationally this
week by lite NAIA In assists, kept
his average Intact by contrlbut·
ing ·seven assists to the game.
The Rio men had 53 rebounds to
Ohio Dominican's 39, with Mike
-L ang and Jeff Overmyer snatching·eight each. Scott Grundel and
Greg Woodard had three assists
each for the hosts. Rio Grande
lurned over the ball on 15
occasions and Ohio Dominican
lost control14 ·times.
Rio Grande rings the curtain
down on the season Saturday at
home against Walsh at 7:30p.m.
for O'Dell Lumber Night. Ohio
Dominican, now 2-26 and 1·11 In ·
the MOC, ends Its campaign
Saturdayat Central State .
·Box score: · ·
OHIO DOMINICAN (74)
Doug Duco, 3-1-0-9; Don Brokaw,
1-1-0-5; Jeff Overmyer. 1-0-2;
Jody Dlllard, 3.-1-4-13; Scott
Grundel, 1·0-2; Richard Dean,
3-2-0-12; Derrick Johnson , 2-2-6;
Jim Nagy, 4-1-0-11; Mike Lang.
2·0·4: Andy Jados • . 5·0·10. TOTALS 25-6-8-14.
RIO GRANDE (109) - Gary
Harrison, 3·2·1·13; Mark Erslan.
1-7-1-24; Brad Schubert, 3-4-0-18;
Jeff Brown, 5-5-0-25; John
Lambcke, 4-0-8; Troy Donaldson,
3·0-6; Joe Edwards, 1·0-2; Tim
CllriStlan, 2-1-5; Darius WUIIams, 4-0-8. TOTALS 26-18-3-109.
Halftime IICOre - Rio. Grande
63, Ohio Dominican 2"/.

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41APA~

,....

,....

. (-finished season·
Wednesday's result
At Unlv. or Rio Grande -

helpe!( make it quicker and didn' t
let her get all pumped up."
Friday Navratilova . who had a
firs t round bye. will facE' th e
winner of the Claudia j(ohdeKilsch-Anne Smith ·match.
In other ma tches Wednesday,
Pam Shrlver ·and Natalia Zver·
eva s truggled into the quarterfl-

Hannan Trace 75, lron(on St. Joe
61
.
This week's tourneys
. Thursday - Kyger Creek vs.
Racine Southern at Meigs H.S.,
7:30p.m .
·
Saturday Oak lUll vs. "
Chesapeake at Rock Hill H.S., 7
p.m.

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IRONTON ST. JOE (81)
Mike Akers ........... 8 2 2 24
Matt Smith ........... 8 .o 6 22
Chuck Jones .. .. ..... 3 0 6 12
Rob Niese!... ......... 1 0 0 2
Tim Latka .. .......... 0 0 1 1
TOTALS ............... 20 2 15 61
Field goals- 22·54 (40.7%)
Free throws .,.. i5-24 (62.5'!1.)
Rebouuds - 34 (Matt Smith 15)
Aa!iiBts - 12
Turnovers - 31

The Nike Air Cross Truiner• Low.

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Steala- 20
Turnovers - 20

Redmen ·put away'
Panthers, 109-74 ·.

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who had 12 of his 22 points In the
last frame. This was also the
Mike Akers Show, as the 5-ll
junior forward, who led all
scorers with 24 points, collected
11 points on hard drives downcourt against a Wildcat defense
more Willing to trade points for
time, which eventually ran out on
the Flyers .
Score by quarters
Hannan Trace ... 25 17 18 !5-75
St . Joe ................. 6 17 9 29-61

quarter, as they combined to
score all but four of their team's
18 points In that frame. The other
points came on a layup by Black
(1: 25) and on a fadeaway jumper
In the lane by Junior forward
Richie Cornell, who had Smith on
.his back, before stepping away
and putting the sort touch on the
ball to give Hannan Trace a 60·30
lead , Its largest ol the night.
The Wildcats let up In the final
round, as the Ironton five scored
the first 10 points in ,l hat quarter,
eight of which came from Smith,

SVAC standings

The Daily Sentinel

.

TodaY' in history

The Daily Sentinei.,-Paga 3

Hannan Trace· will battle North Gallia for sectional title

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The Daily .Sentin.el

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�Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. February 22, 1980

Poineroy. Middleport. Ohio

NBA roundup

Cleveland hands Portland.l21-l09loss

FIGHTS TREE - Portland lrontman Drazea Petrovic (44)
lights the Cavaliers' Tree RoWns (30) In the palntfortbe loose ball
In the fourth quarter of Wednesday night's game In Richfield, Oblo.
The host Cavs won 12H09. (UPI)

Scoreboard .u
Toumey scores
&amp;y• Ohio Hla;h Schoo' SuEt ball
8y Unlld Press IIIIer ......,
" 'ednKd"-Y , Feb. !1
lepJar SeMon

Jelfenon 1!. Aslt Edpwood 61
M~tPW H11!7!, Bartlerlon 11
Woodrtd~ t

II. .. dtpe•*nr~ n
Touawam•ot

·

Dlvtsktn I
llrunuric.ll

~.

Graflo. Mld\.1..,.. 3&amp;

C~tn GhmOak 64, N Can

Hoowr -13
Col \\'eti llud t:. Col Mlfftln 3!1
Col Nothlud 81, f'ruldln HI!J $II
Delawarf' 1:. Col Markin f'tanii3K
Parltlll FOrJf' 33, St ronpvllle U

.,

Dl~lslon II
Grt f'nflfld MCC:::Ialn 53, Ml~q~! Tract' 38
Oberlin f1reland $$, Pl&amp;l'm Norff\llndy

Parma Paduu Iii, Rock)· Rl~er 32
·
Divis ion IV
Hanran·Tract 75. Iro.aon Sl.-.loe 61
\hlerford U, S"]'WP 65
Glrl!oi Ohio

Hl~:hSchool8u.lletball

WedDesdQ' . Feb. 21

Tournament
IMvlslon I
\Mr Garfled 13, .\kr Kenmol'l' 19
BarbtriOn 78, .4.kr rt~ n Ho~· f'r 3K
Boardman lif. " 'arre• Hardin&amp; 2$
Krnt Ro0Jie\'tl1411, Warn!aWan R•v S&amp;
lontl n Soulhvlew .t8, Lakewo~ u
Unklnlown Lah.'17. Lodl Clovrrlullil
\\'"'Uakf' 17, S Ricl&amp;evllle 19
DI~I!Jion

II

.\kr 1\iorth n. Ca•lon s -11
J\.llr Hoh,an o111, ..U.r SprtnJ: 311
Athca ~ IIJ, Vlnreal Warren 111
&amp;•llrvur til, Ro._,ord 37
Garfltoid Ht ~ Trln -16, Brescks\&gt;tl~ :!fi
Girard ~ti. Vt;HIIp Sftulh 3! '
Oran .IJ' -1 I, Kr'ntl.~;~n U
SlruU.t'rs ~. Cortland Lakf'\'1_. 37
VIlla r\n~ Stl, Char ND Cath I.IU!n r,
Wei Gt-....:11

H.

Buumonl 39

- Dlvl•"-n Ill
Blad. Rf""' Jt, Col11111bla D
_
8roald)11-ll. ROC! Rlv lAtta"' .at (ol)
lbqrin 81. .. dlonl Ch-I~
CroobYIUt 1!. Al~altder l~

, "'111\,·G~en Bay 11, Mroa H
M'l!i.·PiatWvlll• 73, WI,..-Otihkosh Q
WI&gt;~' , ·RI'vt"J" Falls 77, H"lsA~Iout 73
Baylor 60, Tf'u.!i Tf&gt;ll'h .u&amp;
Hou!lllon H2. Tcu~o {' hr~IIIUI 62

Klln!IIUO lOS, CCI lorado 11
S. Methodl!&lt;l tiS, Rh.'t' 64

M'est
Arl:loiM 9:!. f'atlfonllla ill
Kllllt!IL'i lfll. (;~;~lorado il
S. OrE'~n KO. Orf'~n Tl'f.' h ;~;

This week's ,games
Qhlu ( oUel(e Bas keUtall SchPdulf'
F'Oc'b. ~

rlncl n,_. l al Soull11~rn Mls'i!!lsip~
,\!lhJan d at Soulhf'rn Indiana
Day tan Bl Builf'r
X:11\'h•r at l)(oc role
NCAC To...,.mr.nt srmlflr'QI ~
~ida;v , Fl'b. 2::1

0 .\(' Toumam••nii!C'mlOrul!'i
,
Saturday , Ft&gt;b. :!4
Ohio Sl at runlut•
Ohio U a&amp; KPnl St
&amp;wlln,; GN!en ill E a~\ern Michi!P;;Wl
Miami at To ledo
Cint'lniWilll at '1\Liant&gt;
Cleve lan.d Stat Wl!!ller n Dllnolo;
Duy 10n at Drt rolt
Alron at " 'rl1ht St

X.avlt&gt;r at Bullrr
l ' oun.,_a-·n St at Llht&gt;rt)· ( \'&lt;~ J
AI Wand Ill K.. nltl(•ky \\'e~k:&gt;yan
Ml \t!rno•NIWlrl'nt' at Ce dlU'toillto
Ohio l&gt;emo ...n'n &lt;~I C~ntr.d Si
\hiM at Rio Graadr
lJrhaM ld TUllo
Blldtton itl Ddlant'l'
Stw~A· nt&gt;.t&gt; Stat nyli ..
tf'lq;ila,t· 111 M'llmlnRton

College scores
ft.lllf'~l' Ba..Wth~l RI'S ..IS

Eas l

,\mcfli,·:an 3 ~ .

·

·'ll"""' ~1a.,..n .5~

''"'~~nptlon ~&amp; • .'\1 , Ml,• hal'l'~ Iii
lk•ntll')' Ill. SinN' hill 1111
Hh1om~hu ,..- II'!, )liiii'I'Millr i !l
Rridii!'POI'I n l .o~J'A PII i'9
ftr)·anl7:0, :\h•rrimat'lt -;~
Rul'lon: ll -.:!, Tn~&lt;;~mSI . 6~
f alllornl u ll' u. l lll . flllfklnli:l
( 'anhlu stl/4, Dl., trttot ot (ol..n hla 6~
nark ":!. BrJ.ndi•l,. ; :1
·
folh,,· PI'!, 8o~A-dnla13
( 'opltln St . H. !'li. Car fll l rp_ ,\ i f 69
Or.-u•l ;o , Laf~~,ti'IW fll
.
F'r-.tnlllln Pl..rrr i:l. Ra.t•f'f'd Ht&gt;w't G:!
Grow('il)' ~ll . :\lllloi.- 61l
Harl•il.'ll !It, Elmira 73
H11r1fnrd 7:1. ( 'OII(I&amp;It&gt; :n
Ho~ra U. khll(h 60
Lc&gt;mu)ttr il':, Sl. Rolli!' ItS
UbtortyiU , f , Con.. Ltlcul&amp;'l
Lot•k tla\'t'n Ill ... dlaAa (Pa.l ' '
M~t.llr a , lkudon U. it
.\tanJIItf'l•1o, Kutaown &amp;i
Srw \'ork Tf'rh 7'!:, q..,tnM; 1. OT
Sf'W Ham...,. I"' f !J, 92, iol . COIIIK"CIIt'Ul

"

Pro resuhs
l\',\TION"L IAKKETBM.L ,~jo~.
"'ect-d~~t,v RP!l-'t s
Sew .ft'r~· t5. Mlnnl!!lnlB !13
SeaJ:IIe '~ Miami R5
Clt'vebmd 1'!1, Portland 109
Dt'troll 1.&amp;0, Orllltdo 109
In II an. 1!!, Allllnta tl
LA Laker" 11 3, J:honwr Ill
Utah Ill, lo111t.n 103
•
Phlladl,'iJIIIaltl. GG)dea Statl t:)
Th•l'!ld 1.Y Game!!~
N't'w Vorkal Wllll!blqtoll. 7::l8p.m .
Dallas al Mll~'aukee, ~ : 31 p.m.
l llah at LA Cllp~rs, ID: 30 p',m.
PhoenbF. Ill S1u.n mento, IO:lll p.m .
t"rlda,r Ganr.o~

HoullloalU N!!tA' IPr!ll')', nl~t
:\lllwau.llc e at O!arfoUl•, nl_..

S t'w \ ' ork at Mlunl, ni!P;;ht
•
Orllndo a t £'1Pnlartd; nl•ht
Dalla-; at lndhlna . niiChl
Dt'Cruk u.l Atb•ta. nll(ht
l'nrtland a t rhk:l•o, 111~
Mlnii'SOIU al ~lUI AntooJo. ni Khl
1.,\ l 'llppt"hat Of.nwr, nlthl
!'&lt;.~r.&amp;mt'nt o a1 St'a.ltlf•, nlr;ht
Phlladt'lphi;l at L\ Lak1•n., n ight

"ATIONAL HOCK£\' LE,\GL' F:
M·l·dnl'flda,y

S l. .Jnhn'"fit (i••olltf'tOWR

\'lllamm &amp;;). Tr mpk• lit

lit

W....t fb.,.;to •r liS, E . Stroud.'Jbul1fi 3 3

\\llthun,;, ;;, ,' llddll't!UI']· Oi, 20T
·rorlt fl':. Prnn SI .- Harriloihu~ a

" 'lnMpPifil4 !II' N ·ltr'lf!'Y, i:IS,p.m.
&amp;•ton iU Ch IUI(O, M: 35 p.m.
Phi a. d~phia at St. Lou18, fl: U p.m .
Toronlo Ill fal ..ry. 9: 3S p.m .
Frld~l G~o~meo4

)1,\.IQR ISDOOR SOCfER LEAt;L'E
\\'t&gt;dnt'!ld"'' Rf'!o .. l
Wl'IOI· ,\11 !-liar ~ ~. E11141 ,\II Siano'
Thul'!ld.~~Y Gamf!!l

~ n g• mt'!'i ~· heWk&gt;d

'
fl'lda,\' GamN
Ralllmor.· at Sun Dl e.r;l), 19: »p. m.
St LoWJJ at Tal'OIYIOI, Ill : 3i p.m .

Thu~:uo Sj)on r; CalmdW'

South

Of'mllfln 11!1, 'hilt' F•re..t 75

~·a 'Bt&gt;~tell.

U.wall- L... GA 13lO,DOO

l:a.o; l l'llrolh•IIJ , Rh.·hmoNI111. OT

TPC at Prettan1·la

117, Ml!1sl581pjll 113
,Jota1on C. ~mlh Ill , St. l"•h '23
LctiiP'CtOd 88, N.f .·GI'f"en!Jboro n
l.o ..!llana St . 75, .\Jahama n
·'"h"•"'lllppl St . '71, fo1orida #t
Mo.·KUI• ftcyit. All'llrtt!ift. 8t
S. ( 'MraiiM Sl . il, O.kf' ~~
N.(' .· Cit•IM~ IS. 0111 Dominlen Jilt

T~... ..-. II!. &amp;fo~tlut•ky Ill

VlrJCialaiJiat•U.II.

"'-~u!CII'II''!'il!

" '· K~lll.rky 11. fl. K.e ntocll)' U
Wllllllm 1: Mar} 1$, S.C' . · "' IfnUni'IOIII&amp;~
Mlft~l

,\drlaul ll. ..Uma s,;
WISt . '21, Ml~o~~~~l (Ollie) iJ

IIDwi•A: Grera 115, Tokoclo 61
C. )ll cW.- It, £ . Ml,·td.-an H
Cal.ta II. Olh.'f't Tf
Dt.P•• 51, T.;rlor tt
. t:lm•nt M. ·"lllldn 1:1
, ... _, •· !Jhawllr'eSC. tl
. . . . . . . . . .bMII71
•peii.Kalama... JI

•

Golf
Orb: Ha"·~tllan Open

Geor~la

'

~' l!!l.duls

Unw.. P f' ru - Soulh American Gamet~

foafft..l (' ar~llll. HI, Wllldlrep U
l'o•·ord 115, D.vi.o1 A ElldBMIII
t.:. Car !II• Ill. Rlchmoal 78, OT

£ . Tenrr~&gt;~ ~~r r Sl. Ill, Orallf' 71

nl~

,.,, Ran~r ~ al M'Mhln«ton,niJhl
Toronto a1 EdmMton, AIKhl ,

r\ I• , · Rrooddu~ 9.'1. Sheptwml1~

( ', i'lortda !II, 81'11111*: Cuokm:~n K3
ft'nle•ary IU, i\tl ~ llll!i!4"ppt Con. It'~

By United Press International
When the going gets tough, the
tough get going. the saying goes .
So do Ball State's seniors.
The Cardinals, coming. off a
68-47 loss at Toledo last Saturday
thai cut their Mid-American
Conference lead to one game, got
superb efforts from ·a number of
veterans Wednesday night to .
beat Miami 79·73 In Oxford.
"The fans got into the game
and our seniors had tc:5 take
control in the second halt" said
an elated Ball State coach Dick
Hunsaker. "Collectively, our se·
niors played their best game of
the year."
Paris McCurdy led the · way
with 22 points, Bllly Butts added
16, Curtis Kidd 12 and Shawn ·
Parrish eight to go along with
seven rebounds.
It was Kjdd's fast-break layup

An..,.
s.....
~"

bpleA -

No

PO" Nla,.. 1M!

Ope•
ota, F1a. - ChrpiH stnlor&lt;'up,
~

jii:Amf'l

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MISL
11Chta.ltd
Skllq

CrttWII !1•1W', Colo. -

t: .~ . i\lplnP

f:b.,..,.O ....l ..
T~al"

'

Oldallonw. nty - 11111.•1 Vlfll•ll
SUftWI of Oklahoma
Phlladelphi.l ·- II mUIIon ~~. 'Pro
'*loor OlampkllllihiPfl
StuU,rart, M'""t Gt'rn.a)· - II million
KIIIIIUrl O•lllc
" '•llllnP••- l.'t5fl,ltl0 \' lr~•Ja Slll'n'l
., O'IUihl ... on
·,

Transact ions

with 2:49 to play tl)at put Ball
State up for good at 70·69 and
McCurdy hit four free throws in
the flnal13 seconds to ice 11. ·
The victory kept Ball State. ·
now 18-6 overall and 10·3 in the
MAC, one game ahead of second
place Kent State (18·6 and 9-4), a
78-76 overtime winner at Western
. Michigan. Both teQms have three
games remaining.
In the other two MAC games ·
Wednesday night. Bowling
Green beat up on Toledo, 85-66.
and Central Michigan edged
Eastern Michigan, 59·56.
"Here we go again," said
Miami's Jerry Peirson. whose
Redsk!ns los !for the sixth ttme in
their last eight games after
opening the MAC ' season with a
5-0 mark. "We played hard and
well enough and we outre·
bounded them (34·27). What can

By LISA "HARRIS
UPI Sporlll ·Writer
James "Buster' • Douglas Wed·
nesday flied a lawsuit to break
his promotional contract with
·Don King and signed a condl·
tiona! contract to fight his first
heavyweight title defense with
The Mirage Hotel-Casino.
. The Mirage said ~~ sign~ a
conditional contract ·to hold the
fight - probably against toprated contender Evander H0ly·
field ,- contingent on the out·
come of the lawsuit. tiled In
Nevada state court as James
· 'Buster' • Douglas, John Johnson
and the Mirage Hotei·Casino .vs.
Don King Productions Inc.
Mirage spokesman Alan Feld·
man said that if the court rules to
dissolve the contract between

Hanford 3. Quf'hl:t· -:
F..dmonlon 7, llllffllJo 3
Lori :\IIJ:"'Ie~S .J, ~II nne/iota 2
Thar!lday Gam~
M•ntrcal al Qut'hec!, 7: l3 p.m.
Nl' IM ..nder!l 111 Ptttliburwh. ; :u p.m .

HarUonl at lluflalo.

:\'o rth l';wk'rn1B. \l ermon 511
~ .l :ll'k 11(1, St . , Jo~ph'!6 !itt
Prn\tdt&gt;nt·t' 1111 , :'o111U11i 1Fh. ) 8':
Qulnhlpi:U' !1;1, ,\mrrtt· ran lnt1 !lfl. O'r
Rutrrr.. !II. St . .lo . .. ph',;; 1r.., 1110
SUpp!'t,\ ' Rod1 II!, Edlrltoro UI;J
Sl . ,\n~lm ti.1 . ~prlnll:fit'ld lift. rrr

'

HP s ull~

Ruph t D!!trok .J, lie

~'l'

blocked five shots and Nance
four.
"We weren't giving up a lot of
easy shots and when that
happens, you are able to get out
Into the open court," Cleveland
coach Lenny Wilkens said. "The
defense has to give you the easy
opportunities and we got some
tonight."
Elsewhere In the NBA, New
Jersey nipped Minnesota 95-93,
Seattle slapped Mlarill 92·85.
Detroit dodged Orlando 140-109,
Indiana Iced Atlanta 123-96, the
Los Angeles Lakers defeated
Denver 113-111, Utah beat Boston
116-103, and Philadelphia nipped
Golden State 96-95.
Neta95, Tlmberwolves 93
At East Rutherford, N.J.,
Lester Conner hit a jumper with
time running out against Minnesota to help New Jersey snap a
14-game losing str:l)ak: Before the
game, New Jersey traded center
Joe Barry Carroll to Denver for
guard Mlcha~tl : Cutright and
acquired backup center Chris
Dudley from Cleveland for two
second-round draft picks.
SuperSonics 92. Heal 85
At Miami, Dana Barros scored
18 points and Xavier .McDaniel
added ·17 to help Seattle, which
has won seven of . eight road
games. Miami, led bv Tellis
Frank and Glen Rice, who each
scored 17 points, suffered its
eighth straight lo~s. ·
Pl'tons 140, Magic 109
At Auburn Hills, Mich. , · Joe

you say?
.
''Their seniors came through
and they were able to ·regroup
and get the job done. " added
Peirson.
Jim Pa\11. Miami's 6·10 junior·
center, scored 22 points ancj led
both teams with 15 rebounds.
"We couldil't contain Paul,"
said Hunsaker. "He was an
animal out there tonight."
At Kalamazoo. Mich., Eric
Glenn scored 16 points, David
Barnwelll5 and Ric Blevins 131n
Kent State's nar'ro~ escape over '
Western Michigan.
Weslt'rn's Mark Brown had
sent the game Into overtime with
a three-point. goal with ·seven
seconds remaining In regulation.
Jim Havrilla led all scorers with
26 points and Brown added 20 for
the Ch'lpj&gt;ewas.
Bowllng Green's Billy Johnson

Douglas .files lawsuit to break ,pact

J.akL• Erlt&gt; at :\lall'llll'

0 ,\(' To"nut"!••nl fln~~l,..
:'\TAC Toul'l'lllmt'nt fimls

~

E Canloa 86. Uberty -II
Ff'd Hocklal( 1~. GlollBtn-Trlmhlt' 311
S Ranp 5~. l.el'tolllla ·U
ShUler Hh Lauft'llt. PHry U
\\'a&amp;~ rloo -lA, G'\'11,.. Garfield~~
Woo*lp: 13, Wlnll•am t2
DMsloaiV
.btu !MIS St le ... .&amp;$, Berbhlre U
CollfT!til~na II. Sou Ill !lila. 36 .
O.y Val Chr ~I , El)'ffa Op Doorn iot)
kl dron Chr .W, Dalton 40
Rl('hmond Ht!l 37, Kirtland 25

rounder, either 1992 or 1994, to
Houston for Cblevous.
Cbievous . a second-year
player from Missouri, was aver·
aging 6.0 points per game and
will try to fill the void !eft by the
departure or Ron Harper. who
was traded along with tbreedrart
choices to the Los Ange1~s
· Clippers earUer this season.
The 6-11 Dudley ; who was· ·
traded a day before his 25th
birthday, Is in his third NBA
season and was averaging 5.0
points per game and 5.5 rebounds. He bad not played In the
last four games.
Cleveland led 64-48 at halftime
and ~cored tbe first six points of
the third quarter to move ahead
70-48. Portland never seriously
challenged the Cavaliers again.
"In tbls,league, there are some
· games where you just seem lobe
treading water. •• Portland coach
Rick Adelman said: "That's
what we were doing tonight. We
just couldn 't get. going from the
start."
Cleveland ·converted 50 of 89 ,
shots from the field. including
10-of-14 shooting by Brown and
8-of-10 shooting by Price. After
having his three-point shooting
streak stopped at 34 games
Monday , Price ' hit on three of
four three-pointers.
Craig Eblo scored 14 points.
John "Hot Rod" Williamsl3, and
Brad Daugherty 12 for Cleve·
land. Wayne "Tree" Rolllns

TVC standings

Douglas and King, the Mirage
wiJJ be the site of the first defense
since Douglas dethroned Mike
Tyson.
"We are flUng the suit against
Don King Productions because
it's the only way we can get the
Douglas fight. It Isn't that we
have anything against Don King
·
Productions;" he said.
The court suit said In part that
Do.u glas and Johnson request "a
judgment declaring 'the rights
and obligations of the parties,
including without limitation. that
the 1988 contract and 1989 con·
tract are null and void or
voidable."
. Klng·s attornE&gt;y In New· York.
Bob Hirth, said he would not
comment until be sees the actual
suit, raiher than a release that
the suit bas been flied.
"Nothing bas been served to
us," he told Unltt'd. Press Inter·
OP national Wednesday night.
Douglas said his contract with
1171
King
Is for ' the duration of his
1458
boxing
career, In exchange for
1250
getting
the title fight King
1154
promoted
against Tyson. How·
1198
ever,
in
the
wake of · King's
1265
1402 , protest that Douglas benefitted
1478
1501

iAII Games)
TEAM
W 'L P
Wellston . .. .. .... 17 3 1461
Miller ............. 14 6 1277
Alexander .. ,... 13 8 1343
x-Belpre .... ..... 12 9 1515
Trimble .......... 11 9 1219
X· VInton' ..... .. .. 11 10 1330
Fed-Hocktng ... 10 11 1442
Meigs ............. 4 17 1140
x -Nels-York .... 2 19 1129
"·Comp~ted season
Friday's games:
Fairland vs. Meigs at 'Rio
Grande, 6:30p.m.
Ross-Southeastern vs. Federal
Hocking. at Athens, 8 p.m.
Crooksville vs. Alexander, at
Athens, 6:30p.m.
.
Ga!Upolls •VS. Wellston at Rio
.
Grande, 8: 15 p.m.
Saturday's games: '
Warren Local vs. Sheridan, at
Crooksville, 6: 30 p.m. .
Feb. 27 game:
Miller V$. trimble, .at Meigs,
7:30p.m.

MOC slandings

All Con!.
WLWL
TEAM
Tiffin ...... .. ............ 24 5 9 2
Mt. Vernon ... . :.... .. 21 8 8 3
Cedarville .. .. .. ...... 19 11' 6 5
Wal$h ..... .............. 19 9 6 · 6
Urbana ................. 18 10 5 6
Rio Grande .. ........ . 15 15 4 5
ODo
'
· mlnlcan
........ 2 26 · 1 11
.
Tuesday'• - Cedarville 111, Walsh 99
Tiffin 82, Mt. Vernon 74 .
Wedaeeclay's ecores
Rio Grande 109, ODC 74
Urbana 90, Wllmlngton 88

from a delayed count dur1ng the
upset of Tyson, Douglas bas
become disenchanted with the
promoter.
Initially, 'King's actions - and
lack of. communication with
Douglas threatened the posslbll·
tty of an Immediate rematch with
Tyson; now, even If Douglas
fights Holy(leld first, he Is
seeking to sever his contract with
King.

111 W. Main St.

' ~~:~~ai~~~~~;:~~~~~n~s~

FOlD, UNCOLN,
MEICUIY I MAZDA
1·100-456·1261
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Pomeroy, Ohio

AYAIUIU

FOUNDAlJOIIS, EXCAVADONS,
WllS, SIPYJCS, IK

IN THE HOCKING YlllEY
. IN SIIVKI
.

992-2124

It

CUSTO.I sansucnoN

CUISIDSIINIAY

·

"WHIIIIIIIWICI MIANI YOUR

IATIIIIACTION"

"

•

GIBSON

INTIISKTICIII IT. 31 I 595
LOUIL OliO 315·4167
OP.. MilfL.SAT. ltiO··DO

J

.GOES 'fO HOOP- Georretown forward,Anlholl)' AileD (!tlloeti
to the hoop agalut Sl . John's Sean Mulo durlnr ri~t-ball action In
Wednesday night's game In Landover, Md. The Reclmen edged the
host Hoyas 63-62. ( UPI)

SEE:
STEVE RIFFLE
AT

3 IEDIOOMS, 2 fUll lATHS

DOMINO'S
PillA
DEUVEIS
FlEE•

. \. ,

1989 FORD
THUNDERBIRD SUPER
COUPE

•• JUST ARRIVED"

,.

~ohn'~

Ll'lTLE HOCKING YELLOW JACKETS- The
Utile Hocking Yellow Jackets fifth grade
basketball team recently took first place at the
Eastern Athletic Boosters Annual 5th A 6th Grade
Basketball Tournament. The Yellow Jackets beat
Pomeroy, Shade and Chester to capture the title.
Members .of the team are lrom left to right. In

'

,gay , with players rejecting man·
agement's latest proposal as a
provocation that endangers Op· ·
' entng Day.
·
: Union head Don Fehr said he
has scheduled no talks with
O)liners on Thursday. though he
said someone , woul~ be In his
office If management decides to
call. He refu'sed to say how long
he would wait for the phone to
ring.
, ._ "Tba~·s not high on my priority
Jist," Fehr said.
• "I would hope that It wouldn't
have to be my nickel," replied
Chuck O'Co••nor, wbo.represents
management.
'.O'Connor said the owners'
Flayer . ~elations Committee
would meet at 9 a.m. EST ,
'i'!Jursday. with Cqmm issioner
Fay. Vlnc.e nt present.
The owners' latest proposal
offered financial Improvements
for second· and third· year play·
ers, but also contained changes
·ill the arbitration system. Fehr
said players considered not even
returning to the table, but did so
at VIncent's request.
) Gene Orza, associate general
counsel of the Pl~yers Assocla·
tiOn, ridiculed the proposal.
: "I've mentioned this before
· I\!IW Important It Is. especially in
baseball negotiations, to read
.Edgar Allan Poe's 'The Pur·
l~lned Letter' because some·
ttnes the answer Is staring you
rl&amp;htln the face and you~an'tsee
It," Orza said.
, "The proposal was designed
npt to be acc:epted. It's deslgried
t9 provoke·a coafronlatlon. Why
el1111 makt tuch a rldlculaut
ptopo181? It was designed to put
.till! season on the brink. And It
h.....
,O'Connor Insisted the proposal
was . made In 110od talth, jnlt ·
aeknowledged "This wasn't a
good day at the ranch." He said
bOth sides
,, . might now benefit' '

from some time away from the
table.
Fehr sa-id the owners' new bid
called for:
-No change in the arbl.tratlon
eligibility for players with less
than three years of major-league
service;
- Elimination of free agent
salaries and multi-year con·
tracts from consideration In
sl'lary arbitration hearings;
'- Limiting comparisons In
salary arbltrallon to players who
play the same position and own
exactly the same amount of
service time;
- Elimination of the maxi '
mu!ll (pay) cut rule for ali
players eligible for arbitration.

front Tony 'F redericks. Second row.Shane Salder,
Shawn Taylor, Brandoa Church, J. R. Robr,
Jeremy Thomas, and Ryan Kimberly. Third
row-Tom Sald.e r assl81ant coach and Kevin
Thomas head coach. Brandon Chun:b recleved
both awards tor most points and mosUoul shois
made In the IItle game. ·

edges Georgetown 63-62

By TOM WITHERS
Seton Hall.
UP1 Sports Writer
''He's getting experienced at
It's bad enough you have to
doing It and we hope he keeps
play the Georgetown Hoyas. but
doing it," Carnesecca said. ' 'It
playing them at home in the
was a great shot , a great shot ."
Capital Centre Is abominable.
With the Hoyas leading 62·60.
Except when you're the St .
Dwayne Bryant mjssed the front
John's Redmen.
end of a one-and-one free-throw
Boo Harvey drille!i a three·
situation with 20 seconds left and
pointer from the top of the k!'y
Malik Sealy. who led the Red men
with eight seconds left Wednes·
with' 21 points. grabbed the
day night. lifting the Redmen to a
rebound. Carnesecca elected not
63,62 victory over the third·
to call a timeout and Harvey .
ranked Hoyas.
· dribbled p'a st Bryant and
. VIctories over the ·Hoyas, in
launched the game-winner.
Landover, Md. have become as
··r. looked to the sidellnes to see
common to the Redmen as
if Coach wanted a timeout and he
last-second heroics by Harvey .
sal( rio. He said, 'Go'," Harvey
Georgetown is 117-14 at home
said. ''(Bryant) tried to cut me
with six of those losses coml~g at
off from my right 'a nd I threw it
the hands of St. John's.
behind my back with my left
"I wish I knew it," said
hand and It freed me up for a
Redmen coac)l Lou Carnesecca
second to get a shot off. I kind of
on the Redmen's secret for
felt it was going to go in ."
success on the road. "J.JJ take 11
Harvey added 17 points for the
back with me and tryUat home."
Redmen. Mark Tlllmoil, who led
St. John's, wbjch Improved to . Georgetown w'th 1~ point~.
· 21·7 overall and 9-5 In the Big · missed a ·~esperatlon three-polrlt
East, Wiped out a sj.x-point deficit
j UIJ1per a 1· ~he buzzer,
In a'(englng 'a Feb. :3 loss to tlie· , "We have lost before," George·
•. town coach John Thompson said.
game, a 74-67 loss to the
"You hope that you lose at the
Hoy as, was especially damaging · rlg!lt time so that you profit from
. for the Redmen as they lost
lt. We don't ever want to lose and
senior center Jayson ·Williams
it hurts when you lose a home
'for the remainder of the season
ga~~. especially that way ~~ the
with a broken right foot.
end. ·It hurts riow, but tomorrow
"I simply can't believe thfs,"
will be. another day and we will
Carnesecca said. ''These kids
work hard·. ··
didn't die and they haven't died·
Alonzo Mourning added 13
all year. This Is a great win. · points and 'Bryant had 12 for the
especially at this time and
Hoy as.
·beating that club ."
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty,
· Harvey .h as stepped up his
No.1 MissouJ;I topped Io.wa State ·
game In Williams' · absence.
89·85, No. 2 Kansas routed 103·71,
averaging 2~ . 5 points per game,
and 6.5 assists In the foUr gaines.
Earlier this seaso.n. Harvey hit
a last-second game -winner
against DePaul and his buzzer·
beating jumper on Valentine's
Day sent the Redmen on their
way to an overtime victory over

No. 4 Duke was upended by North
Carolina State 76·71, No. 7
Purdue fell to IIUnols 90-78, No. 12
Arkansas downed Texas A&amp;M
114-100, and No. 13 'Louisiana
State 75, bopped Alabama 75-69.
At Columbia, Mo. , Doug Smith
scored 34 points and top-ranked
Mlssour1 held off Iowa State to
win its 31st cons~culive home
game. Nathan Buntin added 18
points and hit a pair of free·
throw s late in the game to seal
the victory. The Tigers raised
their record to25·2 and li·l In the
Big Eight. Doug Collins had 21
points as · Iowa State lost its
seventh straight Big Eight game
and fell to 8-16 and 2·9.
At Boulder. Colo.. Kevin Prlt·
chard · scored 18 points and
handed out 8 assists to help the

Jay hawks improve to26·2 overall
and 9·2 In conference play. The
Buffaloes dropped to 10·15 and
2·10. KU shot 66 P"rcentfrom the
field, with Pritchard a perfect 7
of 7 from the field. Ricky
Galloway added 17 points for
Kansas , while Terry Brown and
Mark Randall each added 14.
Colorado's Shaun Vandiver
scored 27 points grabbed 11
rebounds.
At Raleigh, N.C.. Rodney Mon·
roe scored 19of his 22 points in the
second half, Including four free "
throws In the final 15 seconds to
carry North Carollna State past
No. 4 Duke and lighten the
Atlantlc Coast Conference race.
The loss cut Duke's lead In the
ACC to one-half game over
Clemson.

·Free

Hi::;

:
By MIKE TUIJLY
: IJPI National Baseball Wrlier.
• NEW YORK (UP!) - Talks

*****************

c.... 18

OIIW.. II. Nfoltrula M
... , ....... Oltle ......... .,~
IW ...... AI, Nl•-ri 8cntllrrn II
tlrtl- H. WIIINIIIi•• K1
......,. ••• N. Mla. .ri M
·-~·.... ,.. .,....,.,,. r.

St.

.

o•

. . . . : Lnl~•.••uc . (Kan.J 7t, OT

Utile Hocklnr Ia the finals. Team members are,
tront row from left fo. rlgbt·John Drlrgs, Pat
Alker, Eric Dillard, Rickie Hollan and Adam Me
Daniel. Second row·DanUe Otto, Chris Bailey,
Laura Eastman, Crystal Holsinger, Palsy Alker
and Rick HoUan, coach.

;Players reject management
!proposal;
lockout continues
. .

WE IKOI life TIE IIKM IIUT
, _ FOI All
1101111 AND
"'''UI fiOIIS

. . . . . . . . . . . . 81. 81

fifth grade basketball team recently took second
' place In the Eastern Athletic Boosters Annual 5th
·A 6th Grade Basketball Tournament. Chesler
,.,beat Amesville and Portland before losing to

scored 19 points to lead five
players in double of players In the
Falcons win over Toledo.
The Falconl'1ed 39-32 at half·
time and broke t~e game open In
the second half by bitting on 18 of
27 field goal attempts. A 24-10
gave BG a 75·51lead, Its biggest
of the game, with 4: 16 to 'play.
Toledo's Bobby Tay!Qr led all
scorers with 24 J)oints.
All four seeded teams 'Won In
the quarterfinals of the Ohio
Athletic Conference.tournament.
Otterbein beat Mount Union
98·84,· Muskingum edged Ohio
Northern 54·50, Baldwin-Wallace
defeated Capital 63-51 and Hel·
delberg took Hiram 76-72.
Friday night semifinals at
Otterbein's Rlke Center matches
Musklnguril against Heidelberg
al 6:30 and B!lldwln·Wallace
against Otterbein at 9. , ·
.
rn other games Wednesday
night. Akron dropPed a 73-59
decision at Wisconsin Green Bay,
Rio Grande thumped Ohio Do·
minlcan 109-74, Urbana edged
Wilmington 90-88. Findlay beat
Shawnee State 80·63 and Grove
City iPa.) defeated Malone 78·88.

IN VALUE

. _........ .-.,... ,.

•

AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION

....... ,....., .. 17,011lkJMdCN.r77

..........114; TJMrnu Mor. 11
Knill. 11. W. Mlellll.- 'II, OT

'
CIIES'I'£R
EAGLES - The Chester Earles

.PUBLIC NOTICE

MultJ.flght promotional deals
are nott recognized in Nevada
and when Douglas and Johnson
seemed to lean toward sites In
Las Vegas. the possibility was
raised he was trying to get out of
his contract with King. However.
th.e suit Is necessary to cut all ties
with King.
Johnson announced the deal.
with the Mirage would pay
Douglas a record purse of $25
million. Reportedly., Holyfield Is
expected to receive $8 million but
Holyfield's co-manager Shelly
Finkel said no such offer bas
been extended.
,
''That's not true at all," Fl.nkel
said.

01_ ..... _ , .

........1111,

Dumars scored 22 polilts to reach
5,000 for his career and belp
Detroit run the longest winning
streak In the NBA this season to
13 games. The Pistons surpassed
Philadelphia's 12-game streak.
Pacers 123, Hawlla 16
At Indlan!}polls, Chuck Person
scored· 22 points and the Pacers
had seven double-figure scorers
to total as many victories this
season as they managed all of
last season. Atlanta los tits fourth
straight game . .
Lakers 113, Nurgets 111
At Denver, Byron Scott scored
24 points. Including three threepointers, to rally the Lakers from
a 13-point deficit. Tbt' Lakers
won their fourth straight g;ame
away from home. giving them a
league-leading 16·9 road record.
Jazz 116, Celtlcs lOS
At Salt Lake Clty, Karl Malone
and Thurl Bailey .e ach scored 27
points to lead Utah past Boston.
Bailey's tOtl!l was a season-high.
Boston's Kevin McHalescored34 .
points and Larry Bird added 24; ·
but no other Celtic scored In .
double figures.
Slxers 116, Warriors 95
At Oakland. Calif.. Charles
Barkley scored 24 points and
grab~ 11 rebounds to lead ·
Philadelphia. Hersey Hawkins,
who added 16 points, hit a
three-poinlt'r with less than a
minute left to give the Slxers a
96-93 lead. Pblladelplila won for .
the eighth time In 11 road game$. ,

Ball State posts 79-?3 victory oyer Miami

Southwt&gt;!il

Ark*HMM IU, Texa.01 U:\1 IDtl

Thul'!ld~·.

By STEVE RtiftOWSJU
UPI Sports Writer
After attempting to Improve
their lineup on paper earlier In
the day . the Cleveland Cavaliers
Immediately Improved their per·
formance on the court.
Cleveland. hours after trading
backup center Chris Dudley and
acqulrlngswlngman Derr·lck
Chievo)ls In two ~parate deals.
. Wednesday night routed . the
Portland Trail Blazers 121-109.
In the team;s third-best shoot·
lng game of the year,. rookie ·
Chucky Brown and Mark Price
each scored 24 points to lead six
Cavaliers In double figures .
Price also handed out 16 of tile
team's 41 assists, both season
highs . Cleveland also biocked Its
most shots of the season, with 13.
"We had a talk today i Wednes·
day ) and we kno;&gt;w our backs
were against the wall." Cleve·
land forward Larry · Nance i16
pointS! said. "We want to be as
good a team as we should be. We
have to start playing ha~d like we
did tonight."
Kevin Duckworih and Jerome
Kersey each seored 20 points for
Portland, which was without ·
Clyde Drexler, who has a
sprained ankle.
Cleveland, looking lor added
scoring punch at small forward
and off guard. traded Dudley ·to
New Jersey in exc}jange tor
second-round picks inl991 and
1993. Then , Ihe Cavalie.rs traded
those picks and another second·

Free

SATURDAY, FEBURARY 24, 1990
9:30 A.M.-12:00 P.M.

McCoys Best Western's Conference Center
llplty, Wilt Ylrtllnla

APPALACHIAN LOG mumiES wil holtl an intlepth It·
minor far persons c-ltlarlng LOG IIOMI UYING. Slltla alttl
vltlaa pr01011tatlan and Question anti Answer session wHI
coyer flnaMing, tnanufacturlng, conitruction, anti fin·
hhatl homes. Aftet'llaali taur of tnetlel homes wll be

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Wt hope to Itt yau thtrtl .
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\

Pat Hill Ford, 'Inc.

Lifeguard
coui'Se8lo
be·offered
at Rio Grande

The University of Rio Grande
Is offering two separate courses
In American Red Cross Life·
"This Is the kind of approach
guard training during Its spring
which causes the players to react
quarter. One section Is a one·
primarily by saying, 'Why are we ., credit pour class meeting Friday
here? There's nothing to do; we evenings, beginning March 9 at 7
can all go back to our famllles, "' p.m. ~·
Febr said.
The second class Is a non-credit
· "The reaction of the union was section meeting Saturday morn·
decidedly negative." O'Connor lngs, beginning March 10 at 9
said.
a.m.
O'Connor criticized the union
· The program Is ten w~ks long,
for making public the proposals
ending the week of May 12. Cost
but said because It had done so.
of the non-credit class Ill $60.
he would offer his view of t.he
The AmtrlCBJI Red Cross Is
·owners' pitch. He says the
replacing the old Advanced Life·
newest proposal contained
savlnl certificates with a newer
"about 10 items'; ana offered:
Lifeguard Training certlllcatlon
- Base salaries of $75,000 for which . Js ,much more
first-year pia) ers, $100,000 for comprehensive.
one-year players, and $250,000
All pool Ufe111ards will need the
for two-year players.
new certifiCation ~n(!e their pres·
ent certlflc!lllon expires. Partlcl·
- An S8 mtJUon bonus pool, pjlntaln the cour11111 must hold a
based on performance, for one- valid First Aid and CPR (cardioand two-year players In lieu of pulmonary resueclta tlon 1
arbitration. O'CoDIIOr claims this certification.
would raise the average salary of
A qualltytne swim test will be
players In this II'OUP by 154,000.
administered at the first class. ·
- A provllloa making It more Participants must be at leaat 15
difficult to outright a player to years of age.
'
the minors.
·
Also, appllcatlons are now
- VatlatiOns In arbitration being accepted for the positions
procedure, Including holding all of llfeRUard, IU!ad Uteguard. and
hearlnga at one site, using three swimming Instructor at the Mid·
arbitrators Instead of one; and dleport Pool. Appllcatlons may
l)okllng declsiO'ns imUI the end of be picked up at the Middleport
VIllage Hall.
the arbltratlo" period.

1988 FORD ESCORT
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Air, Power Windows, Power
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Auto .• Trans .. Air Cond., Tilt,
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PAT HILL FOlD, IIC.
992-2196

461 South tlllrtl

•••lpert, Olllo
~

........

.

-~· --------

....

''
'
•
j

•

�Peat

6 The Daily Sentinel

.,

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs...-...,

. Continued from page 1
.
:There was heavy damage to the len front and sides ~r both
vehicles, acrordi!Ji to pollee. 'lbe Pomeroy unit or the Meigs
Co1111ty Emergency Medical Service was called to the scene and
the EMS reported that both drivers were treated but not
transported.
Wednesday at 9:15a.m . Pomeroy poUce were called to East
Mala at New Street to lnvesdgate a one-vehicle accident. A
truck driven by Rex Cumings, Sryacuse, struck II barrier sign In
a detour area, There was moderate damage to the passenger
side of hi~ truck, but no Injuries or citations were Issued.
A tblrd accident occurred at 3:07p.m on Shammy's parking
lot at 160() Nye Ave. Jacqueline Ginther, Portland, backed her
truck Into a parked Cllr owned by Donna Jones, Pomeroy. There
was light damage to the ,front end of tile Jones vehlc;le but no
damage to the Ginther truck. Ginther was. cited for Improper
backing.
,
·

EMS has six Wednesday call$
Six calls lor assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Wednesdl!y.
At 5: 15 a.m. the Syracuse unli went to the State Route 124
. residence of Mary Jane Arms who was transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At 7:05a.m. Phyllis Walker was transported
from New Portland Road· to the Holzer Medical Center by the
Syraucse unit, and at 9: 23 p.m. the Pomeroy squad took Mary
Seaman from her Ann Stret residence to the Holzer Medical
' Center. .
.
·
.•
Hester Houck was taken to.Yeterans Memorial Hospital frorn
Butternut Ave. by the Pomeroy unit at 7:09p.m . Treated by the
Pomeroy squad but not transported were Michael Mulien aild
Stephen Fred' Baloy at an accident site on Uncoln Hill at 7:32 .
p.m .
AI 9:,52 p.m. the Sryacuse unit went to Water Street lor Jane ·
Teaford who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center.·

.Sheriffs' group
· ..~seeks associates

:. Sheriff James Soulsby today
announced that Meigs County
pltlzens who would like to join In
the fight against crime are
Invited to become Associate
)'.tembers of the Buckeye State
Sheriffs' Association.
: The Buckeye State Sheriffs'
(l.ssoclatlon Is a professional and
educational organization dedi·
cated to the preservation or
peace and the protectipn or the
lives and property of the citizens
iif Ohio, according to the Sheriff.
:; The Associate Membership
program was begun to provide.
citizens with an opportunity to
lend their support to more
effective law enforcement and to
· )letter help local sheriffs protect
~he lives and property of citizens.
· "We are Inviting the public to
:help us better serve them by
loinlng to fight fov effective law
enforcement,' Sheriff Soulsby
:Said.
·
Meigs County residents should
soon receive membership appll·
cations ln.the mall. "It lsdlfflcul!
to get an application to everyone

.

By United Preulaterna&amp;lonal

a flood watch lor all ·of Ohio,
The unseasonably warm
Immediately for the southern
temperatures across Qblli will be two-thl~s of the state and for
short·llved, as an oncqmlng afternoon and evening for the
Alberta Clipper will give . the northern third.
Buckeye State its coldes I weeRal n ' moved Into the western
kend since Christmas.
half or the state during the early
Rain was la!Ung acros.s · the . morning hours today and It likely
state at daybreak today, and the will be heavy into tonight,
National Weather Service Issued meaning creeks and rivers may
get high enough to flood once
again.

the next few days.
Much colder Arctic air will
arrive across the state on Friday
and temperatures will be steady
· In the 30s or eveh fall slowly
during the atter1100n. It should be
c;pld enough IQr snow flurries
over most of the state. oiliY the
extreme southern -counties will
sdll be warm enough for rain on
Friday.
du~ng

Most of the state's streams are
s~ll high from last week's rain
and 1 to 2 Inches of ra.ln would
push many of them above their
banks. Radar · Indicated some
significant moderate rain before
dawn In the Toledo and Findlay
areas, as well as farther south In
the miami valley.
The heavy rains today 11nd
tonight will only be the beginning
of weather problems acr()l;s Ohio

Stocks

Dally ICock prices
(AI of 10:30' Lm.)
Bryce ud Mark SmHh
of Bluat, Ellil &amp; Loewi
AT&amp;T ................ ................. 38%
Ashland Oil ........................ 36~
Bob Evans ...... .................... 12.%
Charming Shoppes ............... 8¥8
City Holding Co......... .......... 14·
Federal Mogul ................ ,.... 18
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ ....... 33~
' :... ...... .~. ... 2!Va
Heck •s ...................
~ey Centurion ......... : ...... : .. .12~ ·
Lands~ End ................. ~ ;....... 17'4
Umlted Inc.......... .. ............ 341h
Multimedia Inc .. :................. 78
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
. Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15'!4
Shor~ey ' s Inc .............. ....... .. 10%
Star Bank ........................... 18~
Wendy's lnt'l ...................... .4~
Worthington lnd .................. 20%

Park...

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SALE
ENDS
Feb. 28

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VALEN'l1NE PRIZE WINNER - Overnight
accomodatlons lor two 1\l the Clarion Hotel In
. Cincinnati.. and SJOO 'n spending money, were
presented yesterday to Middleport resident ,
Nancy Cale, center, by Lenny. Eliason, of WMPO
. • Radio, and Annie Chapman, of Chapman's Shoes.
Cale's priZe was provided by the Pomeroy Area
Merchants'. Association, of which Chapman is

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02( 01/90

1990

~U!ol , uu

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Jim

. ··- ··· "'"

COUNCR. ON AG lNG - 1990 officers have been elected and
several new members have been named to the Melp County
· Council on Aging Board of Tr...tees. The new members plctllf'd
' standing left to right are Rev. Don Meadows, lane Walton, 101!
Stnble, also a Jllember at large to the execudve cornmltiee, Bob
"Hoeflich, and James Moumlng. Other members and the offlcer.s
., \ are from the left, seJ~ted, Lula Hampton, Mary Baumgardner, ··

•

POMEROY,,OHIO .

Wildlife; and Robert Arms,
ranger, at Boy Scouts' ·Camp
Klashuta at Chester. Hiking
trails which will be.open to the
public are presently being deve·
loped on the Scout camp property. The park district hopes to
be able to announce within
another month when the trails
.c an be officially opened.
Other projects are also In the
planning stages Powell said.
Members of the Meigs County
Park District Board are Charles
Barrett, of the Rutland area;
Lloyd Blackwood, of the East
Meigs area; and Mark YoachAm,
of the Racine area.

_....,._Meigs announcements _ __

.,. ....

A meeting of Dlltrlct 13,
Dlluahter• of Ametlca, .will be
beld thll saturday, at 1 p.m., at
tile Cbetter Lodae HaiL

·a.. ......

Tile U. POmeroy Hlp kllool

..

Clau will bave another ljrllnlon
plannlq lelllon on SUridliY at ·
1:30 p.m at the
·Local
SUperintendent'• otftee. Anyone ,
with qUettlloDI CODCel'ldng tbe
mHiinl or plans for tbe reunion
may contact DoMa Carr.

MelP

INSTANT REBATE COUPON

I I ' All RCA, Zenith, Sharp 19" &amp;

REBATE I

'

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----------------

I

20

"

1

$2 s i
.

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REBA IE

City

-----------

-------------------

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•· INSTAN:r REBATE couP"o'N_______ i r-------iNsTANTREBATECOUPON-------,

$1

II

AI Gibson, Whirlpocil
Side~by-~ide REFRIGERATORS
,
.
Address

1

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$s- 0

All Gibson, Whirlpool frost-free·
14, 17, 18 &amp; 19 ui. fl.
REFRIGERATORS . '

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Name

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Address ----~~-----

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INSTANT REBATE couPoN --~---1 :-------~;8-;~;T-;E~~;;~o-u-;~;------,

·-----------------------I
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$s 0

All ,Whirlpool, Gibson,
Speed,'QuHn, Roper WASHERS
Noooe

:;ess ~

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--·- ---

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I 1 All Whirlpool, Gibson,
:I· Speed QuHn, Roper J)RYERS
II
I ! Address · - - - - - - · - - - - Nome

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REBATE 1

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.

INSTANT RI!;BATE COUPON

~

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'

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------------~,

· INSTANT REBt\'I'E COUPON

· All Whirlpool &amp; Crosley ·
RANGES Standard &amp; Self Cleaning

I

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All Sharp, Zenith, RCA,

N~me -----~------

Addrm ----~-:----'--..,.--

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-~~---------------------~---~
·'·

To play Saturday
The Harlem All·Stars will be at
Eastern High School for a game
against the staff and faculty at a
p.m. Saturday.
Advance tickets wlll ·b e on sale
at . the high sehoo) and the
elementary &amp;eltooll on Friday
momm, at S2.50 for 1tudents and
$3.50 for adult•. Ticket&amp; at the
door will be$3for students and$4
tor adulta.
·

r----~-.-----------·-------------

I I

-------------

.

·Meigs

-

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-____________
$2 s..il
RElATE ..,....
'

.

ELLIOTTS .......
" ELLIOTTS
SILVER BRIDGE PLA.ZA
PHONE 446·805'1

'

'

'

RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE TODAY-

)

992-6614

$s 0 ~ i ::,

: : . &amp;7J" '""''' fN••I.O

I

Attention

..

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-~GEO, INC.

Cobb
308 EAST MAIN

' All RCA, z;nith, Sharp 25",

Name

president, as part of their recent Valentine's Day
promodon. '1 never win anything," said Cale.
Then she qualified herself, "Except one other
tbne when I won a flve·pound bag or pancake
flour." The trip to Cincinnati sounds !Ike a
much·better prize than pancake flou~. Cale has
unill October to use her prize. ·
"

Jill I:PJI.W t:tiiVI\Ulf'f lll , lt~oroU /ilLI · t.:AIJ1Utllt; , I HII,
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INSTANT REBATE COUPON

I
1

;
•
:

REEDSVILLE -The River·
view Garden Club will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
home of Pauline Myers. Co
hoytesses will be Marlene Put·
man and Nola Young. An auction
will also be held.
MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a meeting or the Middleport

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,

-----------------------------,...

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I

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;
·
:

THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUBLISH A COMMEMORATIVE
ISSUE OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY'S 150 YEARS OF
INCORPORATION ON
THURSDAY; APRIL 26, 1990.

'

:t;enten .Breakfast
·planned .Feb. 28

I

.

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'

MJ'D OLE PORT -The
Women's .Fellowship of Meigs
County Churches of Christ will
meet Thursday at 7:30p.m . at the
Mlddlepori Church of Christ.

.. ,.DI.IiUI'tOIIII[ 1111/UllQN
UElltkAL&lt; Mil IIIIi tQflt&lt;Oiu,IIOll
LA.. I UIU IUCNUIAIIf ~IIYWI
.
,.

!:

r---------------

Friday at I p.m . at the Pomeroy :
United Methodist Church. All key ·
church women are urged to ;
attend.

IIAL.t&amp; ftUIIIL I Fl'o C, Ut ' l :;,

Veterans Memorial ,
Admitted - Margaret Priddy ,
Pomeory; Kenneth Hartley.
Pomeroy; Hester Houck, P&lt;ime·
roy, and Ada Kessee, Pomeroy.
Discharged - · John Davis,
Irene Hanson, and Einma
Jacobs.

.

Youth League on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the old American Legion
Hallin Middleport.

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
. POMEROY -The Senior Clti ~
tens
Dance
Club
will
have
a
SAL,EM
CENTE,R -'!'he Sa·
POMEROY - 'I'he Pomeroy
dance
·
Friday
from
8-11
p.m.
lem
Township
Trustees rneet
group of A.A. anll Al-Anon will
Music
'
b_y
True
Country
.
9
a
.m.
, Salem Center
Saturday,
meet Thursday at 7 p.m . .at the
Ramblers.
Admission
S2
per
Fire
House.
Sacred Jieart Catholic Church In '
person. Bring snacks tor the
Pomeroy. For ln'lormation, call
snack
table.
, BRADFORD -House warm·
1·800-333·5051.
lng shower for Phyllis Morris at
·
POMEROY
-The
Meigs
Bradbu~· Church of Christ on
MIDDLEPORT - A birthday
CouQty
Church
Women
United
Saturday
, 1·5 p.m.
party for residents of the Over·
be
held
planning
session
will
brook Center will be held Thurs.
day at 2 p.m. Family and friends
are invited to at tend .

WITH THE HELP OF FACTORY INCENTIVES ANY
IN STOCK, SOLD AT INVOICE~

Hospital neWs .

continued from page 1

legislators about project Ideas
and available funding. "Now Is
the time to do. It," Schmidt said,
meaning li~lk to state legislators.
•'They're going through the
blidget process noW. Asking
doesn't mean you'll gel funding,"
he pointed out. "But asking is a
start."
· Schmidt also point~ .out that
many corporations are wi!Utig to
'sponsor events "be It arts and
&lt;crafts festivals or band concerts.
You can get a lot of funds for
SJM!Cial events In this way, but
x~u have to ask."
. Other Ideas to promote recrea·
tiona! programs may be carried
out without cost, he also stated.
A!! example of such would be
creatiOn of a volunteer organlza·
tiOn of In teres ted residents who
would volunteer their time to
projects, such as night hikes or
a tronomy hikes.
;: Mary Powell, director of the
Melp County Patk District,
IIi the county thro111h a joint
e(fort with Jim .MIIHron, of the
Sbade River State Forest; Keith
Wood, of the OhiO Department of
Natural Resource'• Dlvlllon of

'l'HUIISDAY
RACII)IE -The Racine Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the post
home to vote on girls state.

.

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19~

Thursday, Febru.-y. 22,
Page 7 .

·

. Community

INVOICE S.AlE!!!

Continued from
. page 1 .
Department of EducalloQ said ··
public schools would receive '
$24.19 per pupil and non-publtc
schools $5.48 per pupil.
The board authorized the Ohio
Highway Patrol to spend $23,880
for six drug·snlfflng dogs to use
In patrol cars In high drug-use
areas and In state prisons.
:
The contract went to Metropol·
ltan Internatlonal .of Timonium,
Md., the low bl!lder among six
companies. The money will corne
from funds derived ·from drllg·
related property seizures,

1

·

Annual Oldsmobile

Am Electric Power ............. 29%

Cily

The Daily Sentinel: .

'

'

Homestead exemption
to be transferred
: COLUMBUS, Ohio· (UPl) of at least 55 years of age If she
'file Ohio House or Represents· · remained In the same household.
lives voted unanlmouslyWednes- The exemption now expires upon
day for a constitutional amend·
the death ill the property owner.
men! to guarantee a widow a
The Leglsla'tive Budget Office
continuing homestead exeinp- . said the proposal would cost local
lion from taxation.
.
goverpments a small. amount of
The House also passed, 86·8,
money, and the state would
and sent to the Senate a bill sustain a revenue Joss of $1.'9
making It easier lor local govern·
mUllan a year.
l!lents to cooperate in joint
If passed by the Senate, the
districts · te dispose or solid
proposal would go oh . the.. No·
Wastes.
vember ballot for a vote of the
A homestead exemption Is a
people.
real estate tax reduction granted
The soUd waste revision, proto Jow.Jncome bhioans who are
posed by Rep. Mary Abel,
either permanently and . totally D·Aihens, would affect seven
disabled or 65 or older.
multi·county soUd waste dis·
; The resolution sponsored by
trlcts which mlgl\1 have trouble
IJ,ep. Joseph Vukovich, D·
gaining unanimity· for a solid
Youngstown, would extend the ~aste disposal plan and the
exempdon to a surviving.spouse
accompanying disposal fees.

•

By The ~nd

'Alberta Clipper' heading .toward Ohio

High:way...

· who might · want to · join the
Buckeye Slate Sheriffs' Assocla·
tion as an Associaie Member,'.'
the Sheriff said. "If you don't
receive an application by mall,
you can come by my office or sent
your name, address and check,
$25 for Individual membership,
to the Buckeye State Sheriffs'
Association, 6230 Busch Blvd.,
Suite 300, Columbus, Ohio 43229.
Members dues ·are used to
upgrade, ·. professionalize and
· train sheriffs to protect the men,
women and children of Ohio. All
Associate Member.s will receive
a membership card for their
wallet, a bumper sticker and
window decal for their car, $2,500
accidental death and dlsmem·
berment Insurance, and a year's
subscription to the · quarterly
magazine, The Buckeye Sheriff.
"I hope that all law·abl!llng
citizens of this county will join
me In the fight for good law
enforcement by. joining the Buck·
eye State Sheriffs' Association
when your membership Jetter Is
recelve.d." 'Souls by said.

-

Thursday, Febru.,Y 22. 1990

.I

The · Trinity Congregational
Church In Pomeroy will have a
Lrnten Br~aklast and Quiet Hour
:on Ash Wednesday, Feb. 28 at
7:45a.m.
The public Is im~ted . and
,encouraged to attend.
. Reservations can b~ made by
'calling the church. Reserva.tion s
must be made to attend the
, breakfast.
'

•

11asketba/l tourney
':set at Southern

.

Cindy Oliveri, vice president, personnel and finance; Florence
Smith, presl~nt; James Dlelll, Marion Ebersbach, vice
president, program and evaluation commltlee; WOllam Middles·
warth, secretary; Dorothy Downie, Eva Mae Chrllldan, and Mae
McPeek. New members of the council not presenl for the picture
were Richard .Jones, Betty OhllnJer, and John WIUiarns .

992-2156
ASK FOR
BRIAN BILLINGS or DAVE HARRIS

'

'

Bake sale set

'February
Sale Days!

•'

Ther.e will be a bake sale ai the
St. , Paul United Methodist
Church In Tupper.s' Plains . on
March 3 from 9-11 a.m. The sale
will be held In the church
basement.

Comervancy
District to meet
The Leading Creek Conser:
yancy District will meet Feb. 28
at 9 a.m.

"·

" The SOuthern Boosters are
sponsoring an lndependen t Mens
.Basketball Tournament on
Marchh3 and 4. First place will
'be awarded 12 trophies plus a
sponsors trophy. Entry fee is SlOO
per team . For rnore information.
'contact Dave Grjndstaff at 949·
2025.

Yaid, bake sale _
The Faith Gospel Ladles'ctrcle
of the Faith Gospel Church will
have a yard. bake, soup, and hot
dog sale on March 3 at the
Reedsville Fire House from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m.

Pfemlock Grange meeting held
"President's Day" ·was the
theme of the pfogram presented
when the Hemlock Grange No.
2049 met recently wlih Ziba
Midkiff presiding.
'A rea,d{ng, "Oath of Office"
was read' by D:Oris Eastman, and
"Facts About fresldents" was ·
·read by Rosalie Stor~·. A contest. •.
on President's first names was
w11n by Ziba Midkiff and the
program closed with thP SOD!!.

- ~i Ga~ma

"Battle Hymn of the Republic."
An announcement of the spe·
cia I meeting planned, for March
17 was made, with exchange
student. Danyel VanGarderen
from Holland slated as the guest
speaker. A potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. will precede the .progi'am.
and the Hemlock Grange will
provide the meat .
,
.
, The meeting closed In regular
form.
·

FEBRUARY SALE .PRICES
ON QUALITY
FURNISHINGS \FOR
YOUR HOME!l

Mu Ghapter meets

Niese! Gerard and Carolyn . Sheila Harris thanked the
Grueser presented · a cultural group for Its ·p articipation In
program entitled "Roots: How selling Watkins products.
Well Do You Know Your City?"
Hostesses·for the evening were
at ·the recent meeting or the XI Kay Adkins and Gayle Roush.
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phl Sorority held at the
borne A.R. !&lt;'night In Pomeroy.
.
&lt; Members participated in a
Karl R.'. Rusaeu,' son of Pearl L.
game ,In JVIilcl:l a historical
Russell, Racine, has been named
plli.ture ,of a Meigs County person
to the Dean's List !or the fall
or place was displayed and the .semester of 1989 at MidAmerlca
participants had to match each
Nazarene College In Olathe,
~tcture with the name of the
Kansas. Qualifications for this
place or person cho!en from a
academic honor requires 12
given list. Following· the game.
hours or more with a grade point
. Mrs. Gerard gave detailed !acts · averllge of 3.5-3.99 for tbe
on each picture that had been
semester. 'Karl Ia a senior majorpreSented.
Ing In elementary education at
A lttler trorn Brenda Clark,
MANC.
DIVis iDn Cbalnnan, was read In
MidAmerlca Nazarene College
wldch assistance was offerf!d In
is one of the lar1es1 prlvaie
p..J\Ining chapter · events for the
coUeges In Kansas. It Is a
remainder of the year and tnt!) co-educational, undergraduate
• next sorority year.
•
the
coUege . of liberal .arts. The
Members were reminded that coUege Is located In suburban
the . nl!l(t meeting will be the Kanlas City.
lflOvi~to~nc! pizza. party.
"
.
'

•Curios
•Dining Room
•Open Ste»ck Bedrooms
Furniture
•Whirlpool &amp; Roper
•Dinette Sets
Appliances
•Serta •ttresses
•Sylvania Televisions
•Bedroom Suites
•Carpet &amp; Pa4
•Hall TrHs
•Berkline Recliners - · •Wallpaper
•Uno..um
•Sofa, Loveseats
•Occasional Tables
eptiks

On ·dean's list.

-

.
Delivery I
~

.STORE HOURS
Monday

•·

9:30-8:00

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-6:00

••

~tiY.~~K~

FIIIIIIYUII, APPUAIICIS, IV'S, Root COVIIIIG

992-1671
DOWNTOWN

... --·-'=--- ......-------'::,_,_____"!"11-i

�.

. Pt

8-The
I

0.., S.ltinoll

~People

- .......
. ,.
1

F'omei:OJ' Mldcl aport. OhiO

in .the news---------. Surgery beats . radiation for some
brain tumor treatments, srudy says

By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
.·.
Ualled
Press
Jnlernatlonal
CoafD*,
music
producer
Kerry
Gordy
(son
of
•
BABB'S ELVIS: Two of tile tabloids' favorite
Motown fouuder · Berry Gordy) and Hollywood
.: subjects - Roleune Barr and Elvia- Will be on
fitness trai~Jer Du ·JaaaCHII will be among those
• 11- display for a tllree-nlgllt stand in San Carlos,
passing Judgment on tile contestants In tile Marcil
2 pageant from Wichita, Kan.
. ~ Calif., starting Thursday. It Will be Barr's ftrst
·
• stand-up show In three years and tile sitcom star
WAS HE REALLY SICK!: A lawyer Is goiftg
: says she plans to sing an Elvis tribute as part of
after ,Mlelaaellaeboa because he says tile singer
her act, which also Will Include new husband Tom
wasn 1 really sick when he canceled three
Araold as an Elvis Impersonator. "I'm Singing,"
concerts in Tacoma, ·Wash., In 1988. Seattle
Barr said. "I know my fans have walteel a long
attorney Tbomu Wampollf bas flied a class·
time to hear that." . But Barr declined .to give a
action suit on behalf of Jackson fans against the
preview of her Elvis vocals at a promotional · Tlcketmaster Corp. last spring, demanding
appearance In a $5,000-a-nlglll penthouse suite at
return of the 52.50 to $4.50 service fees tile agency
·• a San .Francisco hotel. 'Tm afraid If 1 gave ·It kept when II Issued refunds on tile $23.50 tickets.
away,.they (her fans) would go wild, kind ofllke Now he has asked the court to add Jackson and the
the 'War of the Worlds " ' she cracked
. city of Tacoma as co-defendants. Court d:icuCOSTNER'S NEW' LOOK: Kevl~ Coallier . mentssay Jackson "statedhewasslckandunable
IOC1ked less than elegant with a baseball-covered to perform when ... In fact he was not" but give no
bra and panties puUed on over his tuxedo TUesday Indication of a possible motive. Wampold,
night as he was honored as man of the year by however, told~ newspaper that Jackson called off
Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theatricals "' the shows "In a !It of anger or on a whim."
group .. "My !ather was terribly concerned th"a t · DOWNEY AND OUT: Morton Downey Jr., the
this type of thing would occur as a resuit of loud-mouthed talk show host who faded away, has.
. acting," the pony-tailed Costner said. "I was surfaced again In bankruptcy court. Downey filed
terribly concerned there'd be cameras here.''The for bankruptcy protection last week In New
• leaders of the Hasty Pudding group said Costner Jersey With a list of creditors that Includes banks
was singled out for the honor for three· reasons. In three states, Neiman Marcus, a limo company,
•'Tom Cruise was carded at the champagne expensive jewelers and the high-\) lass 21 Club
reception," said. Sharon owyang. ''And Elvis restaurant·in New York. Downey says he has$6.92
couldn't make lt." "But the Number 1 reason was, mUllan In assets'- far more than his $2.39 million
we kept hearing these voices " said Huli MlUer
In liabilities - but says the assets Include $6.3
referring to the voices that Costner's characte; m.llllon In commissions, fees and syndication
heard In "Field of Dreams." ·
·
rights that are disputed anel not liquidated. His
'rilEY SIT IN JUDGMENT: The judging panel bankruptcy petition also listed $100 as cash on
for the Miss USA pageant Is an eclectic one. hand and $320 In two bank accounts. Downey now
Fonner astronaut Gordon Cooper Olympic gold lias a cable show called "Morton Downey Jr.'s
medal Winner Jackie Joyner-Ke~see, "As the . Showdown" that Is not quite as rowdy as tile one
World Turns" star Eileen Fullon. skater Robin that made him famous.

BOSTON !Ufll When
Among those who received the
now coliductlng, PakheU said he
cancer spreads to a person's . 'combination treatment, the meIs trylne to determine whether
brain In the form of a slnele dian survival Ume wu 40 weeks.
radiation combhled With IMII"IerY
tumor, the beat way to treat It Is But the med.lall survlval.aiiiOIIg
II slenlflcantly more effective
with sureery and radiation, tile group treated with racUation
than sureery alone Ia treaUq a
rather !han radiation •lone, a alone waa Just I5 weeki.
slmDar group of patleQ~. .
new study showed Wednesday.
Results of the research were
Patchell called "alll"plislng"
Researchers aald tile study of published Wednesday In The
one statlaUc that emer&amp;ed trorn
48 cancer patieats In Kentucky New England Journal ·of
his study - alx people, or 11
showed lbose\tliorecelvedsurel· Medicine.
percent of those Initially
caJ·and radiation treatment lived
Patchell emphasized surgery . sc~ned. had brain Ieslona that
longer~· bad a lower relapse rate
Is not appropriate for ,pj!rhaps ,did nc&gt;t turn out to 1;1e cancerous. ·
and a better quality of life than tllr~uarters of .cancer sutter"No one had ever looked at tile
those who received only .. ers who·develop bJ'aln tumors. It
mlldlagnosls rate am(lllg these
radiation.
cannot help those .With multiple
kinds of patients belofe,'' PatOr. Roy A. Patchell,' who led tumors or those whose tumors chell. said. "It turned out ·to be
the · tllree-year study, said the are In inaccessible p,a rts of the quite l!lgh."
.
.
,
results appear to sllttfe a lolig- brain.
·
In an editorial allOOmJNinytoi
standlngcontroversylnthemedHowever, he said that still
Patchell'~ study, Dr. .Jerome
leal world about how ltesttotreat leaves about 5,000 people each Posner. of the Memo"'! Sloanbrain. tumors In "some people year In ·the· Unite!~ States who · · Kettering Cancer Center in -~~ ·
suffering from · an· advanced could potentiallybelietttfrom the
York echoed . 'the·· view tliat
stage of cancer.
combined sureery and radiation '· ·surgery and radiation DOW •aP.
Patchell and his colleagues at approach.
·
pears to be the best ireatmentfor
the University ofKentuckyMedl- · Without surgery, the rapidly patients. like those 111 the ){encal Center divided the patients spreading brain tumots' them,
tucky study.
lnio two groups. Brain tumors lri ··selves · commonty cause death,
Posne~: noted .iisks associated
25 were . removed · surgically, Patchell said. But among those In With such surgery iiave declined ·
followed by high doses of the study whose tumors were greatly In recent years, so !hilt
radiation. .
surgically removed, tile eventual they are no greater now tha!i
The other 23 received the more cau&amp;j! of ileath was usually the risks posed by radlaftoh
traditional treatment of radla- original cancer - In this case,
treatment.
·
generally lung cancer.
lion alone, Patchell said.
Although only 10 percent of the
Patchell said tests also indlpeople In botll treatment groups cated that those who received
were still alive at the end of 90 surgery tended to feel better and
weeks, be said tge difference In function at least as well as 'those
.
~·
. .The Ru !land Flremens Ladles
short-term survival was who were given only radiation.
dramatic.
In a f&lt;illow-llp study t_h at he Is Auxiliary Will meet Feb. 28,

Auxiliary to meet .,
'

:Quirks in the news
Jud1e siiDp beehlv·e llurler

Brody, 27, said Sterling
. PRINCETON, Ill. (UPI) -A
man ·convicted of hurling man- "freaked out" and shot the dog
just as she was about to give the
made beehives tllrough the win· postman
his Christmas present,
dows of a tavern has been stung
a
bottle
of
vodka. She said Skippy
himself by a Judge who sentenced
was
not
menacing
SterUng at tile
him to eight months ln~a!L
time.
Charles Lucas, 41, was con. vlctecl of tossing the beehives Into ' Sterllngentered his plea on one
count of cruelty to animNeur s Tavern In setonvllle on felony
als.
The
charge carries a maxi' consecutive rilghts last June.
mum
sentence
of three years In
• Afterwards, the tavern was
,
: forced to hire a beekeeper to state _prlson.
However,
as
part
of a plea ·
,"-·round up the Insects.
bargain
with
prose&lt;;utors;
Ste,: AssoclateJudgeJamesWlmblrling
will
not
be sentenced on
.;:cus sentenced Lucas Wednesday
March 29 to state prison. Instead,
.::: to eight months in the Bureau he will face a maximum punish·
- County Jail and orderi!d him to
inent of one year In a county jail;
: ·PaY $750 In restitution for crlml· . said
Deputy District Attorney
::~tllll damage to property.
David
Lopez.
•.::: Lucas could have been sentPollee
said an autopsy of the
~- enced to 364 days In )all plus a
d&lt;lg
revealed
that SterUng shot
:t $1,000 fine.
·
.•
,.
. ___
Skippy while the canine was ,.
::·_Pialol·packlng postman kills running away from him. The
~. family pooch
poslman said he had been bitten
.. SAN FERNANDO, Calif.
by Skippy in tile past.
.
U.S. Postal Service spokesman
(UPI) - A posll)'lan iPleaded no
contest to charge$ he sliot and
Ron Cook said · Sterling was
'' killed a family's . dog while placed on leave following the
delivering .their mall just before shooting. Postal service carriers
the owners planOOc! to give him a· are ' not authorized to carry
bottle of vodka as a Christmas
llrearms .-Sterllng remained free
on
ball pending sentlmclng.
. oresent .
• Prosecutors said Floyd SteThe Brody family burled
.rUng, 34, shot Skippy, a 2-year- Skippy during an elaborate fun: old mixed German shepherd eral service at a Calabasas•pet
·• owned by Tammie Brody and her .· · cemetery Jan. 3. The postal
: ·family, while on his .postal route service helped to pay for the
. : 'Dec. 26 In Arleta.
·
·
funeral.

·:.. PmSBURGH (UPI) -Doc' 1ors said Stonnle Jones, the
-world's . first recipient . of a
heart-liver transplant who received a second transplant liver
·this week and . then endured yet
~naresurgery,hadthecourageto

recover "no matter ,what."
' The 12-year-old from White
. Settlement, Texas, had suffered
·from hepatitis In tile liver that
·. •she received along With a heart In
. a pioneering double trans plan tin
1984, and received a new organ
Tuesday In a 10-hour operation at
Children's Hospital.
Doctors operated another 10·
hours Wednesday after noticing
a drop In her blood pressure
.caused by a ruptured artery. She
lost an .estimated nine pints of
blood, tllree during the .operation, said her surgeon, Dr.
:Andreas Tzakls.
·
; ·. Tzakls said the girl showed
·- coura,e In facing the new
:,.IUJ'II!fY· ''Whatever It takes, she
..will just go for It," be said. "I
c'tbtnk she's determined to make It
~ do matter what."
~
Jones was listed In critical
eondiUon Wediiesday night, but
. the holpital en\phaslzed !hat was
• (landard after such surgery and
•Jbe wu not believed to be In any
,daqer.
,. Tile eurgeon also expressed
· confldelll:e that Jones would
'. $COver tully. "I feel she will do
'well." be ald. ·
· Jones made medical hlsiory at
Qilldrell'l lfolpltal when abe
,'*"mt the world'• ,l int heart-IIWr ~ntreclpient on Feb.
~. lilA, llld II believed to be the
Ill vlvar of ' such a double

"I don't have one.''
Stormle's step_father, Alan
Purcell, said the girl's positive
attitude buoys' the family's spir·
Its. "How can.we get down when
· she stays up,'' he ·said:
No complications were reported during Tuesday's 10-hour
transplant. Tzakls said the trans·
planted heart was "perfectly
stable" and that Jones could be ·
sent home within four weeks.
The girl needed a second liver
transplant becauSj! the other
liver was severely damaged by
. hepatitis, doctors said. Tzakls
· saldhedldnotknowthecausebut
added , the virus may l!ave
stemmed from organ rejection
and Inflammation of the liver.
Jones needed the do.uble tranS.
plant because · of a eenetlc
disorder that prevented her own
liver from p~JlCessine choles·
terol, resulting In clogged arterIes and a heart attack in 1983.

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1989 DELTA 88

tn IJI nt.
·
·' Tliii.....1 bu !Jeen a frequent
.)lllleet It tbe hospital since tile
_lr.lpt

a

JIOI(tlve atiJtude, her
· li~er laid. Alked her biggest
~-· Loll "Stille" PurceU, said,

t m•
outcome

··· I

992-2156
)!.

enter8 direct broadca8t joint·venture

NEW YORK (UPI) - NBC
said Wedllelday It wu launchlni
.
a $1 biWon Joint venture With
three partners to brine the first
1
PIA ~~
. . .·
hlgh·powtr direct broadcasting
-~ :n '
satellite aervlce to the United
•
..
States by late 1993.
.
ANCHORAGE, AlUka (UPI) · : mJilht be ta,lnted If they 1~ ·
NBC aald It was Joining flnan·
_ WbUe '11'1\t
~~ated
ot Ex]Con's wishes. HazelwoOd ls cial ~nd technological resources
ExxonCorp.lllraJIIjJo.ephH:aZel· , named as 8 co-defendant With 1 With Calilevlsion Systems Corp..
wood convlcteif In the' onlY ·Exxon In many of the 150 state N-,s Corp. Ltd., and J{ughes
criminal ~I tn:~DII thedi$uaad federal civil suits arising out Communications Inc. to launch
trous Alaaka oU. spo~· one oUhe , of the .ll·mUllon-gallon _spUI.
S19' Olble; the flnt U.S. direct
compuy'~ . own···keY em)&gt;Ioy'ees .
Hazelwood, ,43( auntipgton,
brOadcast sateiHte service that
raliled the posslbiUty tliaf the oil &lt;N.Y., w-. olle of Exxon's most Will allow mWions of Arnetlcans ·
.• a hl!ldlin !lienda In !he . l{Rlue&lt;J captai.. ; with.20 years at
to receive lUI extra 108
case'.
. • ·)
• ;.-.~
. sell" for tbe world's largest oil
new cable channels.
An ~xxon· t:an'k*'capq.ln 1es11- · company. A week after the
Direct Broadcut- Syatem, or ·
fled WedJr~aY ihe • company ,. txxon Valdez hlt'Bllgh Reef, he DBS, can deliver a Wide range of
may haVe ' !Uf;; lbterest In tile · :,was'· fired :whim · blood • tests '. progra~ through a .' dish anoutcOme of lbe Hazelwood trlai , sho~ alcohOl Ill hla· sysiem. ., · ,. tenna. DBS Is parUcularly useful
~aullie of ipimding civil suits
lie faces up to ,seven years and ·· In remote areas ou~dethereach
that 'col''lcl i-elult , In· extremely ·~months In jaU and a $61,000 of television ~lgnals, but It can
blill:.clamaiJf!? .•i-11111&amp; from .the .fi!Je,.,lf convicted or reckless· also. deliver adciiUonal cable
natio~~· wlltil oil spUI.
'. . .•• eiidallgermen!, !)peratlne ' the .. ~rvlces to any television viewer
The ,itiat~t by «;apt. :MI- • ·~nker \vhl~ (ntoxlcatect, negli- u~lng a dlsb.
chael StalZer was the first ojien ge11t discharge ot on and crlmlCurrent dishes arelOfeet wide,
ac~mowtedament during the trial nalmlschlef. .
which restricts their use. They
that : Exxon . hils "stake 1ri Its ' . The 987-foot super.tanker, car-. . are priced between $2,000 11nd
outcome: Until Wednesday, the . rylng· 53 million gallons of oil $3,000,a prohibitive cost for most
lssue.ofwhelhertlleoUcompany from the port of Valdez to homeY!ewers.
'·
.
wants the skipper 11 flre.d after SoutllernCallfornla,crashedlnto
NBC,- a subsidiary of General
the accident convicted has been the reef. shortly after midnight Electric Co.. said ·the DBS
tile chief unspoken subplot In the · March 24 after aazelwood had system will use a revolutionary .
trlal,"nbw· In Its fourth week.
gone !0 hi's cabin to do paper- ·
·Lawyers treated the ISsue of work. He had taken tile ship on a
Exxon's lnterestln the case like a detour to avoid Icebergs and left
hot po~to, knowing the(ntonna-· steering orders w,lth the third
tlon could lnstalitly burn either . mate, WbO passed them on to the ,
side it the Jury learned what helmsman.
,
·
Soudt Central Ohio
Exxon wanted from thE; trial.
Ell'xon's crew coordinator at.
Occasional rain Thursday
' speculation haS been that a the time of the accident testified. night, with a low In tile mid 40s.
Hazelwood Conviction would tie Wednesday . that Hazelwood
Chance of rain Is near 100
convenlenrfor the oil industry as blamed himself for the wreck in a. percent. Showers ·ukely Friday,
a whole because HazelwOOd · conversation just an hour and a
with highs near 50. Chance of rain
would then. legally become the half after tile wreck.
·
Is W percent..
culprit In the disastrous groundPaul Myers, now In charge of
Extended Forecut
lng and spill. Hazelwood's Jawy- · the huge Exxon Valdez repair
Saturday through Monday
ers. have charged· jle Is . being job, said Hazelwood told h'lm by
A chance of snow Satt.irday .
made a ' scapept '· by th!l oil shore-to-ship telephone . that the with fair weather Sunday and·~
companies and the~ gavernnlent ' tanker was ''hung up on Bligh chance of snow or rain MOnday.
regulators - who they Sa)/ all Reel ...
Highs Will be between 30 and 35
share In the blame.
·;
"He' Indicated that It was . his Saturday, between 15,, and 25
But Insiders have said Exxon 'Jault, he was to blame, that he Sunday and between 2~ and 35
wants Hazelwood acquitted. If • had just. gone down to do some • Monday. OVernight .)ows Will
Hazelwood Is ' convicted of reck- paperwork when this happened range from 15 tn ·25 ear 1y
lessless- meniloi!Eid In two of his and be should have been on the Saturday, and between zero and
.
four charges - . lhen It could be ' ~rl~ge," Myers testified.
10 Sunday . and Monday
easier for- tile 8"'-te" Alaska to
·,.Defense -lawyers tried to por- mornings.
·
p~~ . gross negligence In lis tray Hazelwood as a sklppe~
pelldlne civil suit against Erion.' atsumlng responsibility (or his
Gross negligence In civil oil ship and· Its crew, ' but not
•sp.U) cases carr.les penalties '. lve . criminally, responsible for ac·
til\i811 h!i!ler :ttuin the basic "P.Ii :lions of others.
.
spUI -!lne In civil cases whjre ,. Stalzer was tile second Exxon.
gros.s'ileglleence ls.not involved.
captain to testify they thought a
.~t11ough stoplll!!i· by the Judge ., skipper should be on the bridge
!rOD)' .~eallng Exxon's secret .through Prince William Sound on
dflitreit, Stalzer, lilld, "PerjUips a detour llround lceberl!"s. .
tlltputcorne ohh"ls caSe wil,l.l!ave
Stalzer, skipper of the Exxon
an~t on .!IOIYie ,of \be ·oilier
V~~dez before H~lwood, said
pi!
. "lltlptlbn."
·
"·· II."· believed It was company
WJieil··· S~lier ·got bi!JSI! , to . ',.policy for the captain to he on the
possib!y·. r.eveal!ng liow Exxon .. bl:ldge In I~ condltloll)l. But he
mi(h~ . lll!e .tO. , ~ the trlai.turn ,acknowledged th~l the Exxon
out, . Superior Court Judge Karl tanker manual was a only
Johnstone stopped him before he guideline and allowed room for
could answer. .
· ,
dl~retlon and Interpretation . .
The· ,lawyers . on ootll sides
Defense lawye~s st;essed that
seemed well aware that tile j
even a violation , of an Exxon
·
·
ury
policy was not a crime.
o
'
·

o

d
.
·

·

·

ltave

g~t

new 12·by-18-lnch dish antenna
the size of a napkin, wblcb can be
.Installed virtually anywhere. Ineluding a wlndQW, and will be
aHordably ppced at between
$250 and $300.
"We are talking about the
future of cable television," said,
Bob Wright, NBC president and
chief executive officer.
"WIIIDBSreplacecable,?No,''
said Wright, adding that several

services now available through
cable could be Included In the
DBS service.
Subscribers will be able to·
order DBS directly from Sky
Cable, which Is likely to limit the
existing cable companies' role to
maintenance.
News Corp. Is partoftbemedla
etnptre or Australian-born Ru- ·
pert Mui-doch. Murilocb'smedl~
Interests Include Twentieth Cen·

tury Fox Films, Fox BroadcastJng and the TV Guide weekly
magazine 85 well as tile wotld's
only plivate DBS service called
Sky Television which broadcast
In Britain_ at a loss.
"We will need about 3 million
subscribers 10 break even, "
Murdocl! said, adding that the
basic service Will be available to
subscrlbersrorafeeofabout$300
a year .

•.

vif~WerS

rr--------------~----..;--~~::e~~ It~;;:=~-----

'I

GET

WELL
·S )\LE

a

weather

Stop By Our Store And
. Save Big BuckS On &amp;edroom Suites,
Uving Room Suites, Sectionals, RecUners,
Bedding, Dining Rooms, And Milch, Much More!
· But Burey ·This Sale Ends SlitUrcla~ """· Z4, 1990!
~

~;

'

. So.u th,e ast Ohio Truck Dealers
Adve.rti$ing Association!'-!.! ' ·

7
7

M

Ia. :it

w'IHtt
I t 3

• .I

..

Love t~,i(li;gle . suspe,ct~d
in· ~~ath ~of detective · '
NORTH PATCHOGUE, N:Y.
and his wlie appeared to be "the
tV PI) :.... The pollee officer happiest couple around."
lde!Jtlflect as a prime suspect In
Another neighbor, . Steven
the car . bomb ltllllng of an Braccla, 22, who lives next door
undercover I narC&lt;ltJCS deteCtiVe 10 the cOUple Sa(d he had knOWn
will stay on duty but has been them since IIIey moved lnt:i their
given a~ ~ver11lgh! de$\C job until home. He described them as
the lnves tlgatlop Is complete.
"wonderful people" and said
autllorltles said.
they · gave an annual Fourth of
I~vestigato~s :queslloned Nas- July party.
·
sau Count~.poliee,officer Robert .
''He helped ime wltll my car
Horan on Wlidn,esday. about the and with my term papers,"
death of undercover narcotics Braccla said. "IJe was like a
·detective :Depnls Wilstenhoff, second father to me."
according to .law( enforcement
' Both Corso and Braccia salt!
sources. . ', . • , .
.
, th'ey had been questioned TuesWustenhoff, .• who was killed . day·by pollee. ·
last Thursday, was Involved In a
BraceIa said pollee had
romance with the Wife of Horan, · searched Horan's home Tueswl!o ~.ad ,be.ep assl~ed .· to th.e , .· daY.-., Braccia · said Horan had
pollee Emergency service Unit • .' · glv~n · his father the key to the
, Horan: 43, hils since .• been · offlc~r·s house and police used It
reassigned to tile. records bureau to get Inside. Pollee used bombof tile overn,htdetentfon area In . 'sl)lfflng dogs to search the home.
pollee headquarter's In: Mineola,. ; ~urces said Horan Is a· Vieta source sald.l&gt;ollce sources said,. .n am veteran who had ''a limited .
Horan was being ·qul!$doned ·by , 1!-riowl~ge" of the handling or ."
pollee In Suffplk. ·
' ·
bombs.
. The sources said Hotan's wife,
The · sources noted that the
Nancy J.,anon, Is employed as a bombing of the car occurred on
· se~retary by the federal Dr,ug . the same day tllat President
Enforcement Administration In Bush attended the Andean -drug •
Melville, Long Island.
conference In Cartagena, Colom· ·
The couple I~ for.a.vacatlon In 'I!It ...to posslllly ·make It appear
«;:ooperstown, In upstate New ' that the blast W¥ drug-related. .
York: shortly after Wuiterihoff .... Suffolk pollee refused com.\Vas fatally Injured by a ·bomb ment on the reports. ·
.
rigged in his couuty-owned Cadll·
Spokesman William McKean
lac, parked In front of his North said: "We're not giving any
PatchOgue home., sources said. •· pr-Qgress reports. It Is not In the
· · Horan's father, Walter', a ' bestlnteres!B of the Investigation
former Nassau ,County police to do so. A report will be Issued
officer, has a. \(&amp;calion ()orne In when the Investigation Is ·
Cooperstown.
,
, .
' completed.." ·
At a news collference on
N!'libbors .• aid ' the'coUple, had ·
. ~ f!l&amp;trled about elgllt or nine Friday, Sufl'blk ~uce Commlsyears and lived In tbell' modest sloner Dalllel Guido said one
borne· lit Bethpaee ab!lut eight focus of the lnvesUgallon would
~ars,
, ,
. be a cbeck . on the detective's
' Oe~tlve Richard 'S"nlzek, a
persanatllfe.
Nassau County pollee spokes• , However, Guldp eald at that
mali
Horan's tempc!raJiY • time tbe; IDDIIt likely motive for
reas.Dilnt ~ effect at
the Slaytq would be "revenge
12:01 un. ··~y' two days
for a drui bust."
before : ~~~ M schedUled to
· Guido said he believed the·
retura ·. tr!Jr11 hl.s one-week: bolpb was· alme!i a't Wuatenhoff
ilacatiCin'.
"In a OJH!sOn·one situation" by
· Ner,llbol: . john Corso des- · ,someone who bali experience In
c:rlbed lloran as· ''the greatest . making bombs "whose force was
guy In the world." He said HoFan . directed upwards."
,

-aid

.-v

:leatbriark operation but she has

.
has 1·
Ha

·-. ~ys · Exxon ~C

-

ot

.

{&amp;!rgeofls replace
[~bleeding artery ·

The o.ily s.,,.tirloii-Page 9

Ponwov-MiddllfJOI't Ohio

Febn.N!rY 22. 1980

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�'"'~· f ....lrY 22,1980 .

Pega 10-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

Holocaust denying instructor fired

Bonnie Raitt big c ·rammys winner .
Movln' ."
LOS ANGELES (UPI} -Bon· the Year for Mtdler.
Anita Baker won the sixth
nle Raitt, who had never won a
Former Beatie Paul McCart·_
Grammy of her career wtth the
Grammy tn a 15-year career ney was given· a Lifetime
best R&amp;B female award for
ranging from pop to country to Achlevemrnt Award to a s~nd·
"Giving You · the Best That I
rhythm and blues. won four tng ovatlo.n .
·
awards, and Record and Song of
Tlie Beatles ·were Jhe ','best Got."'
Former Eagle Don Henley took
the Year honors went to Bette band tn the world." McCartney
the award for best male rock
Mldler's "Wind Beneath · My said. "I've got to take this
Jierformance for "End of the
Wings" at the 32nd annual opportunity now that 1 got this
Innocence.''
Grammy Awards.
award to thank John, George and
Relative newcomer Mt~hael
The 40-year-old Ratti went Ringo for being beautiful
four-for-four · Wednesday night, people."
Bolton's "How Am I Supposed to ·
winning all categories In which
Also receiving lifetime . Live Without You" won for best
she was nominated.
· achtevementawardswereslnger pop male vocal performance
"W~ke .me up when thts iS
N:a! King Cole. jazz trumpeter over such heavyweights as Btlly
over, Ratttsatd as she strode to ·Miles Davis , classical pianist ·Joel, Prince and the late Roy
the stage for the fourth and final Vladimir Horowitz and producer Orblson.
"We all know about the over·
time to ~ccept her Grammy for Dick Clark.
best pop vocal performance.
Davis, the Nitty Gritty Dirt night success, and I figured out
Raitt had· been nominated Band and Soul II Soul were It's about 3,642 nights," Bolton
three times tn past years. but her . amo~g the multiple-award said tn accepting. the first'
lOth album, "Nick of Time," was .winners In the pr"telecast por· Grammy of hts career.
Linda Ronstadt aiiQ . Aaron
the charm tn drawing recognt; tton. of the program at the Shrine
Neville's duet ·" Don't Know
tion from members or the Na- AudttorJum. ·.
Ilona! Academy of Recording . Davis's "Aura'.' album won for Much" took the award for best
Arts &amp; Sciences.
jazz. Instrumental performance pop vocal performance by a duo.
Appearing truly as tonished as by a solblst ·and. big band jazz The record also won·Producer of
the Year credit for Peter Asher.
she heard "Nick of Time" tns'trumental.
European pop duo Mtllt Va11illt
announced as Album of the Year,
The Nitty ·c rttty Dirt Band 's
Raitt said, ' 'I'll never get ·over album .. "Will the C,lrcle Be was voted best new artist.
this as long as I Itve.
Unbroken .Volume II" won for beating out Tone. Loc, Soul II
"This Is a real miracle for me bestcountrygroupperformance, Soul, Neneh Cherry and Indigo
after all this lime," she said ' the group'sffrst Graml'lly. Two Girls.
One of the Mllll Vanllll duo,
· when accepting the award for of tts tracks, "The ValleY Road,"
Rob
Ptlatus, almost didn't make
' best rock female vocal for the recorded by Bruce Hornsby
single track of "Nick of Time."
along with the Nitty Gritty Dirt tt Into the auditorium to accept
Riiltt also won for best ,tradt· ' Band, won beslb\uegi-a~srecord' his Grammy because of a scuffle
ttonal blues recording .for her lng and the "·Amazing. Grace" wtth pollee.
.
"I wanted to get In and the
collaboration with John Lee •trac.k by Randy Scruggs won the
· pollee wouldn't let me ln. The
Hooker on "I'm In the Mood."
country Instrumental award.
• "Wind Beneath My Wings"
Soul n Soul won best R&amp;B gentleman didn't know who I
won the songwriters ' award for performancebyavocalgroupfor was, so I pusheil him .and ·he
Larry Henley and Jeff Stlbar, "Back to Ltfe" and R&amp;B tnstru· wanted to arrest me," Ptlatus
who wrote the number for the mental for · "African Dance" said backstage. "They didn't
film "Beaches." It won Record of from
arrest me and I got tn, but for a

INDIANAPOLIS (UPU -Orrt·
clall ·at Indiana UniversitY· .
Purdue University at lndtanapo- ·
lis have fired a part-time history
Instructor who taught his classes
that the Holocaust did , not
happen.
John Barlow, dean of the
School ot Liberal Arts at IUPUI.
said Donald Dean Hiner would
not meet wtth htm Wednesday so
be read to him on the telephpne a
letter outllnlng reasons for the
• dismissal, wh(ch Is effeCtive
~arch 1. The letter w's sent to
Hiner by certified mall, Barlow
said.
Hiner, 51, could not be reached
tor comment.
The letter said Hiner "pres·
ented at length" material that
was "not relevant to the content
of the courses and which lacks
scholarly substance." .
"The key words are that he
presented It at length," Barlow
said. "He just didn't mention lt."
The, letter also noted Hiner's
crtmll\al record for stealing
World War II artifacts and

The group was given lhe Gr~my 'rorBe.;j New
Arllat. (UPI)
'
'
.
.
.

THtiMJis UP - Members of lhe II'OUP MIDI
Van Oil clve a thurnbil up · ail lhey pose ' lot
phololl'aphera at lhe Grammy Awards Iaat nl«ht.

.,

whlle ·I wasn't too sure."
metal •performa~;~ce. "The Tra·
veltng Wllburys, Volume 1" was
· "Lyle Lovett and his Large
Band" won the Grammy for best
chosen as best rock vocal performance by a group.
country male . vocal perfor·
A group of Guardian Angels
mance, and the best country
female went to k.d. lang for . marched outside the auditorium
to protest what· they said · were
"Absolute Torch And Twang."
raclstlyrtcs by the group Guns N' ·
Best spoken word or non·
musical record went to the late
Roses and allegedly anti-Semtttc
Gilda Radner for "It's Always _ songs by the · rapper Public
Eneiny·. They carried signs read·
Something."
Metallic a, who lost last year, to
tng " No Grammys for Hate
veteran Jethro Tull, won for best

World Bank to lend $5 billion
for Eastem Europe refonns

Rock~rs."

,
Guns N' Ro~s _lost ' out to
Living Colour's "Cult of Person- ,
altly" for beSt hard rock perfor·
mance, and Flavor Flav, wl!o '
was nominated as PlJbl tc E11~my
for Ills rap "Ftght ,the Power,"
lost to ·'Bust a Move'' by Marvjn
Youpg, wh!) recor!Js as Y0111;1g
M. C., tn only the ,second year of
rap competition and the first ,
televised , presentation .of the
award.

WARSAW, Poland. (lJPI) The ,World Bank chief Thursday
pledged a $5 btuton, 3-year
lending program to support the
economic reforms sweeping
Eastern Europe but said a global
f
"peace dividend" Is needed to
avoid depriving other nations of
vital credit.
About half of the aid was
vice and said 280 or the original eral an,d what claim It has on earmarked Cor Poland. Bank
645 employees had quit.
cash and the (casino} bankroll." President Barber Conable said.
U.S . Bankruptcy Judge Clive
O'Retlly also called for ftnanThe bank wtll open a resident
Jo,nes as well as representattws ctal Information "to assure all mission tn Warsaw wtthtn three
of Loyds Bank, which holds the gaming patrons are protected" . months and strengthen Its East
$23.5 mtllion first trustee d~ed.
He wants monthly financial European program of policy .
have asked that the resort statements, a showing of com- advice, technical work, research ·
continue operating In order to pliance with bankruptcy court and training as well as expand Its
bolster a quick sale at a better dictates and a list of all financial financial assistance to the reobligations Jncludlng expenses · giPn's countries. Conabie said.
price. .
Incurred but not paid.
A representative qf the bank
An advance text of Conable's
warned commissioners WednesGeorge Swarls. a former speech was made available to
day that tf an agreement could m~mber of tile :Nevadil Gaming reporters· · In Warsaw and
nor be neg&lt;?tiated for the ftnan· Commission and a CPA for the Washington .
·
cia! Institution to share tn hotel Landmark. told the commission
.Reminding the International
profits Including rent. that the the job of the trustee and the community .that $600 billion ts
bank probably would seek a court admtntstrattve staff was "to spent annually for mtutary purorder laying claim to the cash on make certain we have cash poses, Conable asked for "a
·hand.
.
reserves high enough to pay peace dividend jor all nat.tons"
·
·
U.S. bankrutpcy laws and state · players."
that would allow expansion of atd
gaming regulations · sometimes
Swarts told the commission the resources to avoid the diversion
are at odds. Bankruptcy allows a Landmark had paid $190,000 In of assistance from one needy
business to operate without pay- state and !!OUnty taxes und'er the region ·ro anotlier, "Peace dtvt·
Ing debt service, while state new trustee. HoweVer, a com- dend" refers to public funds
· gamtqg regulations require that plete accounting of taxes owed diverted from mtlttary budgets
a ttcensee be current tn payment was not discussed In the public as perceived security threats
meeting.
of gambling taxes.
recede. ·
·
Commission chairman John
The board was told last month
"~ssistance to Eastern Europe
O'Retlly told Landmark officials that the gambling license of should be additional so as not to
Wednesday to compile detailed Landmark hotel owner William come at the ~xpense of assist·
financial Information for the '.'Wildcat" lapsed when the re- ance to other - and poorer state spelltng out the "status of sort was $500,000 In behind tn
parts or tlie Third World," he
nego\tattons on the cash collat- taxes and penalties.
said. Some nations tn Africa,
Asia and Latin · America have
voiced fear that Eastern Europe
,.
will grab the attention of the
wor.td's aid-givers.
Conable came to Warsaw to
sign two loans totaling $360
million for development of agricultural and Industrial exports to

RECEPTION HONORS MAES111.0 - Presl·
dent and Mrs. Bush pose with maestro Msttslav
Rostropovlch, right, during a White House
reception honoring him . following his just·
.

.

. completed vlall to his !!ovlet hotpeland from
which he waa banished 16 years ago. The National
Symphony Orchestra conductor led a lfOUP of 12
NSO celllats performing 11 work for cello In the
East Room yesterday. (UPI}

••
landmark hotel•casino gets state reprieve

A

. LIFETIME AWARD- Former Beatie Paul McCartney raises
·. his fist after being awarded the Lifetime Achievement Grammy
:last night, (UPI) •
.

BIG WINNER - Sonptreas Bonnie Raitt poses with her four
Grammy Awards last night. She won an award for every category
she was nominated ln. (UPI)

i'

0

COUNTRY WINNERS- Country artlsiS, kd lang, lett, and Lyle· •.
Lovett, right, pose with their Grammy Awards 11181 nl«hi .. Lang
won Best Female Country Vocal Performance ·and Lovell won ,
Best Male Country Vocal Performance. (UPI}

:D efiant sheriff, state officials discuss options to amtory
SPRINGFIELD, ,Mass. (UPI} • another suitable site.
- State officials bargained with
"Un)ess we get something
a sheriff who seized an armory
that's as good or better, we're
because of overcrowding at his
staying, " said Richard
county jatl, but an aide to the
McCarthy, Ashe's spokesman.
defiant lawman says " we're
"The negotiations are contlnust.aytng· : unless a better facility
tng. The state Indicated that they
ts provided.
, would talk untu we go to court at 2
Meanwhile. Sheriff Michael · ·.p.m. IThursd'!Y / ::
Asne ·and at.torneys who .repreS '
A spokeswoman for Gov. Mi:
ent state Public Safety Secretary chael Dukakts said one topic
Charles Barry and the National under discussion· would be the
Guard were slated to return to use of a different armory, one
Hampden County Superior Court better suited , to housing
Thursday afternoon for another prisoners.
.'
hearing on'Ashe's takeover oft he
"Our hope is that we can come
National Guard's Springfield up with some kind of short-term
armory.
resolution," Dukakts spokeswoAshe -last Friday placed 15 man Mindy Lub!Kir said.
minimum-security inmates In a
The National Guard locked tts
gymnasium at the armory be- buildings around the s~te Wedcause his 102-year-old county jail nesday, fearing other sheriffs
is !tiled to capacity and criminals might copy Ashe's tactics.
have been released early or had
their jail sentences delayed.
'
"All' National' Guard facilities ,
The sheriff. under court order. throughout Massachusetts are
sat down with negotiators for the locked even through regular
s.tate and National Guard Wed: working hours. Everybody who
nesday to see whether a building comes to the factttty is screened
other than the Springfield ar· before given entry," said Capt.
mory could be used as a tempor· Tammy Miracle, spokeswomen
ary lockup. A spokesman for lor the Massachusetts National
Ashe. however, was not opttmts· Guard .
about the chances of flnd.ing
"It's just a scary thing for us

(lc

Chevrol~t

updates incentives

WARREN. Mich. (UP!} Chevrolet Motor DjvtsoQ. ts doubling t Sl.OOO the rebates the
company already offers as Incentives on 1990·1989 models of
Camaro and Cavalier.
The rebates are effective Feb.
21 through May 2, 1990, the
General Motors Corp. dtvtston
siild tn a statement Issued late

Wednesday.
Cash rebates on 1990·1989Astro
models, however, wtll be reduced
from the current $750 to $500,
et!ectl'ves with deliveries made
on March 8 th"ough May 2.
Alternative financing begins at
6.9 percent for 24-&lt;18 months to
lll.9 percent on contracts of 60
months.

.

Unemployment claims Increase
WASHIN6TON IUPil -The . ment's Employ!Rent and Train·
n11m~r of tnttJal claims for state
ing Administration Indicated.
Ullemployment Insurance bene!·
The government also said that
Its Increased by 20,000 to 372,000 durlng the week of Feb. 3 the
tor the week ending Feb. 10. the unadjusted rate of Insured unem·
Labor ~par~ent reported ployment tncre~ to 2.9 perTbunday.
cent from 2.8 ~.percent, with
1'he revised f.leUre for the 3,042,900 workefs claiming state
benefits, 147,200 more than the
JIIII!VIou• week remathed at
352,0 lnltlal claims, the depart·
weekbefore.
'

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because we don't know if this ts
going to have a domino effect,"
Miracle added.
,
Ashe also spent parto!Wedriesday at a 100-untt, htgh-rtse
building that houses ·the elderly
and dtsableH. ThebuUdtng ts next
door to the armory and Ashe
wanted to quell the tenants' fears
about the security at. the site.
Springfield Mayor Mary Hurley has made several statements
of support In an attempt to curb
the fears of citizens Uvtng tn the
residential neighborhood where
the armory is located.
· '1 would much rather see these
very low-risk prisoners moved to
(the armory) so that we can
make room for the bums and the
scum that are out'on the streets,"
Hurley said.
On Tuesday, Judge George
Keady extended a restraining

order which allowed Ashe to keep
the Inmates Jailed at the National
Guard armory untll ill least ·
Thursday .
·
Ashe has praised Keady's
decision to continue the temporary restraining order. but vowed
to appeal to a higher court tf his
jatt guards and inmates are
ordered out of the armory .
·.
Keady was one of two county
judges war~d a day in advance
by Ashe of the then Impending
takeover ~ On Monday, Judge
John Moriarty Issued the tntttai a
tempgrary resttatnlngorderbar·
ring the National Guard from
ousting ,the )all guards and
Inmates. Moriarty ts the other
Judge who received the advance
warning from Ashe.
·
Ashe did not' tell the judges
which building he planned to
commandeer.

· Ashe led about 30 deputies
Friday Into the armory and
declared the military factltty., an
annex to hts overcrowded )all.
Gen. . Chester · Gorski, commander ·of the National Guard's
26th Yankee Infantry DivisiOn.
compared Ashe's mov~ \O "a
Gestapo action."
Ashe said he chose 1he armory
because of Its showers, toilets.
kitchen and athletic equipment.
The state and National .Guard
threatened Ashe with criminal
trespass charges almost as soon
as he seized the l:luildtng, but the
sheriff refused .to budge' and
ordered deputies to stand guarc;t.
The county )aU tn downtown
Springfield has reached a federal

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent

Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome

co.urt -ordered cap of 4§0 prison·
ers several tlmes in the past
year, most. recently on · Ja~. 2~.
The court ordere!l the cap more
than a year ago after the .Jail
population, which has · a listed
'' grew to
..
capacity of 312 Inmates,
724 prisoners.
'
·
·

ClASSIFIED ADf

.asupernlarkef · .,
for eveiything ·
.

,,

LAS VEGAS. Nev. fUPII The Nevada Gaming Commts·
ston, seeking guarantees tl}at •the
bankrupt Landmark hotel-casino
can cover casino winners, has
allowed the space-ne~le shaped
,resort to remain open at teasttwo
more weeks whtle state experts
analyzed cash flow problems.
The 498-room resort, which
owes numerous creditors S43
mtllion to $46 million, has con·
ttnued to operate under a court·
appointed.irustee since Jan. 2 tn
a Chapter 7 U.S. Bankruptcy
Court proceeding.
Bankruptcy trustee Richard
Davis, a Las Vegas real estate
execu live and the owner of a
f~Jnerat home. has been operat·
ing the resort for the past six
weeks with , approval of · the
" Nevada &lt;;Gamtng· &lt;lQmmtasion:
The ·cdmmtsston was to decide
Wednesday whether to extend
the Itcense or order tt ·surrendered for failure to pay fees and
taxes.
·
By unanimous vote,' the commission agreed Wednesday to
extend the gambling license until
a March 5 hearing following a
state analysis of more detatleq
accounting figures.
General Manager Forrest
Woodward told the comm\sston
Wednesday that the hotel currently has $562,000 cash on hand
Including $175,000 in pro!tts accumulated during the past six
weeks. He said county and state
taxes and . payroll were being
paid on a weekly basts and that
;advertising i:os1s· and flat gambl tng fees were paid tn advance.
. He said payment to vendors was
current.
Woodward acknowledged that
current profits could not cover
administrative fees or debt ser·

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the West. The loans marked tile
multilateral organization's firs! ·
lending to Poland.
"1 anticipate tl!at the bank will
lend over $5 btllton to our current
Eastern European borrowers
over the next. three years- up to
$2.5 btlltoil for Poland," Conable
said.
Poland, Hungary, Romania .
and Yugoslavia are members of
the World Bank and can borrow
from th~ organization. Because
of the uncertain political situation tn Romania, most of the $2.5
btllion not earmarked for Poland,
will be divided betweenHungary
and Yugoslavia.
: ·Lending to other new
members would follow , as when
they Join and ·It Is determined
.that they are eltgtble for B&lt;,~nk
assistance." Conable said.
CZechoslovakia, a member
untll1954, recently applied to
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Income could preclude It from
borrowing from the tnsttiutlon, .
bank offlchls said .
The International Monetary
Fund recently began a ma)or
study of the per-capita Incomes
of East European cour&gt;trtes .
· The World Bank wtll support
the restructuring of all facets of
the Eastern European econo·
mtes and market-oriented
change through lending for structural adjustment. Conable said .
Conable said the bank wtll help
to finance the restructuring of
Industry and banking to moder·
ntze and expand Infrastructure,
to support environmental reba·
bllitatton and to help restructure
the soctat sectors.
The bank's afftltates support·
ing the private sector - the
International Finance Corporation and the Multtlateral Invest·
ment Guarantee. Agency - are
expanding their actlvtttes tn
Eastern Europe, Conable said.

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Linda Trent

to make th!JiiS look worse tllan
they actually were; and that the
worst thlrig Hitler did was to
ens\lre the creation of Israel. ·
·In 1988 Hiner was placed on
probation for a ·y ear after plead·
ing gull\)' to stealing World War
11 ttems1rom the Indiana World
War Memorial.' Including Items
that were part of Nazi uniforms.
He admitted that he replaced the
!terns with Inferior replicas thai .
museum curators later
discovered .
Court documents said Hiner
gained access to the Items by
writing a letter to Cl!rators teutng
.them he had "extensive expertise" tn Nazi artifacts, and he
falsely claimed. he had a doctorate In history from Ill .
Hiner has bachelor's and mas·
ter 's degrees from the Untverstiy
of.lowa, Barlow said. ·
Barlow said someone who stole
historic artifacts should not be
teaching history. He also satd
Hiner lied on his employment
application when,he said he was.a
1990 candidate for a doctoral
degree tn history.

lalslftcatlon of tntormation on his
employment application, Barlow
said.
Hiner was suspended wlth pay
Feb. 14 after a student com·
platned he ·taught the class that
Adolf Hitler had no plan to
exterminate Jews and that the
Holocaust was a myth.
The matter has drawn lnterna·
tlonal attention, Including a call
for Hiner's dismissal from the
Los Angeles-based Simon Wles·
enthal Center. which promotes
awareness of the Holocaust
through education.
Historical evidence strongly
Indicates that Hitler planned a
systematic genocide known as
the Holocaust and kUled 6 million
Jews durlng World War II.
A student taped a Feb. 9lecture
In which, among other things,
Hiner told students that: there ts
no proof concentration camp
victims were gassed; that people
died of starvation and typhus, for
which the Germans can accept
some responstbltty; that photo·
graphs and films of death camps
and mass graves were doctored

DILES HEARING CENTER
856 Third Avenue I"

•

Phnr

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HELPING PEOPLE HEAR ·SINCE 1949
326 West Union Street, P.O. Box 511~ Athens, Ohio 45701
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I

�P~~ge-12-The

•
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, FebruarY 22, 1990

PO(Yleroy-,..iddleport, Ohio

.Flag Protection Act

. Tanker explodes
in .Persian ·Gulf
was 15 mUes from the ~leer at
tbe time and rtllhed to the aite.
·Anotller Navy ship In the vlclnlty
joined the rescue operation aloq
with coast guard Jblps of the
UAE that wereworklngtoputout
..
the last of the fires .
'
A spokesman for tile sblpplng
Insurer Ll~s of London said tbe
explosion happened dul;iq tankcleaning malntalnence, but said
it was not clear If that .wu the
c.a use..
.
The shipping sources specu·
lated the explosion mlg~t havE'
been caused by a drifting .mine
!bat l&gt;rQke from Its .I!DCbor .after
being planted duriq 'the eight·
year Persian Gulf war. "
Kuwait put 11 oU tankers h31i Its flet!t -'Under the U.S.'flag
In July 1986 at the belght of the
"tanker· war" betwet!n Iraq and
Iran to protect them from Iran:
ian attacks.
,
Alter Iraq and Iran agreed to a
U.N.-medlated cease·ftre In Au· ·.
gust 1988, Kuwait In early 1989 .
de-flagged six of the 11 tankers
and they reverted to Kuwaiti
registry.
The explosion carne as the
helped primarily
countries to be represented, tile
United States reportedly was
Troop 1259 have tulips and windmills on their minds. The !!Iris have
to settle Pomeroy and MeigS County- Germany, Wales, Encland,
reconsidering Its naval policy in
for the past lew weeks been studying about The Netherlands In
Scotland and Ireland - will also be· stnrled out. Sat!H'day
the region. A classified document
·preparation .lor Saturday's apnual Girl Scout Thinking Day. This
afternoon's Thlnl!lng Day prorram Is being held at Pomeroy
by the Defense Department
.· Elembtary School. The program wlll begin at 4: 30 p.m. and the
··year's Thinking Day is being held in conjunction wilh Pomeroy's
quoted by The New York Times
public is Invited.
:Sesquicentennial· anniversary, so In addition to many other
and The Washington Post recentlY' said the United States no
longer considers the Soviet Union
a threat In the region.
The blast also came a day after
l
six g\llf states signed a pact
JOHANNESBURG. South the the summit because it has
"The primary purpose of this
"It is my intention·and desire
aimed at protecting, Us waters
Africa (UPI) - A weekend im~ted De Klerk contrary to the
working visit Is to investigate to c.ontrlbute to bringing about
against
pollution originating
meeting in Zaire of South African Organization of African Unity's
ways of stopping the violence in peace In Natal. I'm quite hopeful
from
their
lands.
President Frederlk de Klerk, declaration to isolate South
the province · and to reduce the
that this will do some good," said
·The
protocol,
signed In Kuwait
Zalrean President Mol)utu Sese Africa."
tension as far as possible, "
Slslilu, a close associate of
Wednesday
by
the members of
Sako and other central African
The South African Broadcast·
Cosatu·UDF representative Dil- Mandela who was released last
the
Regional
Organization
for
leaders has been postponed, ing Corp. (eported that Foreign
iza Mji told a news conference year from lite Imprisonment In
Protecting
of
the
Marine
Envlr·
sources said Thursday.
Wednesday.
Minister Roelof "Pik" Both a had
connection with the same case as
onment, provides for joint action
:The Zairean news agency · postponed a scheduled visit to
Pollee reported Thursday that
Mandela.
by the member states to handle
AZAP said the summit meeting Kenya and Angola on this week.
one person was killed and five
De Klerk's visit to Zaire would
waste that pours Into the oil-rich
was being delayed because the No details wer.e provided for the others were wounded in scat · have 'been his first foreign trip
waterway.
eastern resort town of Goma did sohedull.ng changes.
tered incidents of violence in the since unveiling a racial reform
The pact was signed by Ku·
not have "facilities of hospital·
province Wednesday In the con·
Meanwhile, ANC representa·
program on Feb. 2 that included
wait,
Saudi 'Arabla, Qatar .. Bah·
ity" for visiting ·heads of state tlves arrived in Durban Thurs·
tinulng bloodletting that already
Mandela's release .after 27 years
rain,
United
Arab Emirates and
TOKYO (UP!) -Honda Motor .
who requested overnight
day for the first direct talks in
has killed more than 250 people · In prison and the lifting of a
Iran.
Iraq
and
Oman were to sign
Co. reported Thursday its third
accommodat tons.
.
South Africa with a rival tribal
this year.
30-year ban o.n the ANC. .
·
the
ptotoco
I
pending
final appro·
Vaugh an Dewing, a spokes· movement aimed at ending a
Black nationalist leader NeF · Zambian President ·Kenneth quarter net inrome flill 7.8
val
by
their
respective
percent to $156 million, or 16
man for the South African bloody conflict that threatens son Mandela, who had attempted
Kaunda said In an lnten1ew with
cents
a share, from $168 million , governments.
Foreign Ministry, said a state· . black unity in negotiations with
to mediate an end to the conflict
the U.S. radio network National
The protocol provides for con·
men• on. the. trip would be issued the white government.
during the months before his
Public Radio on Wednesday that · or 17 cents a share, a year ago.
sldertng means of safeguarding
The company said the lowe.r
by the president's office later in
The protracted battle between Feb. 11 release from liie lmprl· South Africa must continue to be
the marine environment, lnclud·
earnings
for
the
periOd
ended
the day.
supporters of the ANC-llnked· sonment, has warned of the
Isolated Internationally "until
lng.cleanlng
up wreckage caused
Dec.
31
was
due
mainly
to
foreign
"The trip Is off. We will put out United Democratic Front and Its
"enormous task'' ahead to regenuine changes take place in the
_the
eight-year
gulf war.
by
exchange losses and Interest
a clarifying statement shortly,"
country.''
al lied Congress of South African solve the deep differences behe said.
·
Trade Unions and the rival Zulu · ' tween the rival groups. Mandela
The South African government, expenses.
Brisk sales of automobiles in
The African National Congress
Inkatha movement of Manggosu· is expected to address a major never confirmed any of the
both North AmeriCa alid Japan
attacked the Zairean invitation . thu Buthelezl has left as many as
ral)y In Durban on Sunday.
leaders with wliom de Klerk
enabled Honda to realize an 8.5
to de Klerk, saying It ran counter 3;000 dead in Natal province
·'We want to do everything to- would meet except lor Mobutu,
percent Increase In consolidated
to an African policy of isolating
since 1987.
bring about peace In Natal, "
who hosted de Klerk last August
AND
net
sales . to $6.547 billion, a
the white government In
In recent years, officials of the former ANC Secretary-Gen'e ral
before he became president.
company record for any three. Pretoria.
·two organizations have met Walter Sisulu. 77, told a news
Unofficial reports said the
month period, Honda Indicated.
IIi a statement Issued from Its
abroad but failed to resolve their conference at Durban ·airport on summit also would include the
For the nine months ended
headquarters In exile in Lusaka,
differences or bring peace to the his arrival at the head of a
leaders of the Central African
Dec.
31, net lneome plunged 24.4
the ANC said, " We are against
four-member ANC delegation.
troubled region.
Republic, Burundi and Rwanti_a .
percent to $383 mUIIon, or 39
cents a share, on sales of $19.115
billion from $476 billion, or 51
cents a share, on sales of $18.07
billion In the year-earlier period.

.

c ,,lftl n\1~ 1 111~ ~
I•I .Mt:tnuftrllt \

MONDAY PAP E.R
, TU ESDAY PAPER

WtbNfSDAV PAPER
Tt.fURSOAv' PAPER
t-HtOAY PAPER
SUNOAV PAPER

ban on parties.
,A second general strike has
~en called for March 2 In the
fourth phase of t.he movement.
The new protests came as
Ganesh Man Singh, septugener·
Ian leader of the Nepali Congress
Party, rejected a proposal to
open negotiations with · the go·
The organliation, which gave vernment to end the criSis.
. In· a telephone Interview with
no numbers, said prisoners were
Press International from
United
being tortured to get them to
his
home,
where he Is under
"recant their association with
house
arrest,
Singh accused the
the democratic movement.
government
of
starting the vioHuron said "concerned fami·
lence
that
has
wracked the
lies are unable to retrieve the
bodies of the dead from the mountainous kingdom by open·
lng fire on peaceful protesters.
authorities,"
."The government Is responsl·
While the government has
b.
l
e for the widespread violence,"
confirmed 11 deaths In three days .
he
said. "We have remained
of violence, opposition and news·
peaceful
and nonviolent through·
paper reports say•29 people have
out.
The
government
has opened
so been kUied, scores Injured and
demonstra·
fire
on
unprovoked
about 5,000 arrested. ·
A goyernment spokesman said lions. The violence proves that
Thursday that more than 500 the government Is run hy people
who have lost faith In political
people arrested during the pro·
solution to a political problem."
tests
have
been
released.
He.
said
"It's (tobacco) a legal product
"We reject this Idea," he said
with legal companies who have a . about 1,0!KJ were arrested.
of
the offer or negot.ations. "The
The movement has united for
legal right to have their mes·
present
constitutio.n Is undemo·.
sages out," said David Zimmer· the first time the social demo·
cratlc
and
anti-people. We have
man of Gateway, one of the city's cratic Nepali Congress Party
started
the
movement against
major billboard companies. " I and seven pro-communist par·
the
constitution
ltaelf so there Is
have to wonder from a health ties in an common e!fort to
no
possibility
of opening a
restore political parties In the
aspect what's next - fried
dialogue."
·
chicken? Cholesterol is a killer , world's only Hindu kingdom. ·
He called on King Btrendra to
Activists plan a massive
too."
Intervene to "seek an Immediate
march In Katmandu Sunday
I
.
solution to the political problem
carrying party flags and wearing
the country is facing."
black armbands to protest the

injury. Opposition sources said
15 people w11re arrested.
T.he banned Nepali Congress
Party and seven left·wingparties
had called for demonstrations In
the Nepalese capita) to protest
pollee killings and repression
since a movement was lauhched
Sunday for the restoration of a
multi-party system in Nepal.
Under the party-less pan·
chayat syst.em, the king enjoys
absolute power and the prime
minister implements tlle klng's
policies.
The protesters want an end to
Nepal's 29-year-old autocratic
political system, demanding a
return to the earlier parliamen·
tary system. King Blrendra _has
rejected a return to party polit·
lcs, saying the present system
was approved by 54 percent of the
voters in a 1980 referendum ..

The Human Rights Organiza·
lion· of NepaL knonwn as Huron.
said in a statement thl\t people
were being detained in crowded
"godowns" or warehouses and
were being "denied even such
m m 1m urn requirements as
meals and toUet facUlties ."

Billboard companies said they
will form an advisory council to
negotiate voluntary restrictions
on tobacco and alcohol· ads
around schools, as well as to
guide anti-drug ad campaigns.
. Board President Dr. Whitney
Addington called smoking·
related deaths ·" our No. 1 preven·
table cancer.;'
·
.
· ''Why wouldctgarettecompan·
lei spend money putting up
biUboardl? They must feel It's·
effective advertising," Adding·
to• said. "I think It.'s such a
Jiealth threat that the Board of
Heallb has to flabt lt."
Jndllatry officials predicted
sutb an ordlnanc~: would be
declared unconstitutiOnal.

t

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABll PIKHI

BUTTONS
&amp; BOWS
992-5177

220 Eln MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Public

PR~CE

z,

2122/89

Who Passed Away One
Year Aao Today

.

-ON THE WINGS Of PlAYER
Juot ctooe you1 oyoo and
open your holrl
And fool vou•worrlel ond
certo deport.
Jutt yield yaurllllf to the
· Fathlf obovo
And lot Him hold you sa·
." cure in HII tovo-'

•EARRINGS •CHAINS •RINGS
•BRACELETS •SCARF' CLIPS
•PINS •HAIR ACCESSORIES

'

..

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,
•·

.

Slielplaleann
Gaqe llldlealll tile diameter of a
lbol&amp;aD ban. All illteraatlaul..,_
lllllll lllipl mllllmeter meanre io
eaclt pace:
)

. '•

'

OFFER
GOOD
TRIOUGR

-101. II .PII.

Mon. llwu Sol. I,QO a.m. to I,QO P.ll'·
Sundar 10:00 •.m. to •:oo p.m. ,

PRESCRtrTIO,.,I

E. Mlln

.

Fri.... loovloo

PH. 112-:1111

-

· ap.,. w.n Nltfoll 'Ill .

.... OH .

.,.,,,
..•••,
26, 1990

'

1
I

l

l'
I

I

•
J

'

IISTI!R8

.20
.30
.42

~6 . 00

$9 .00
$13 .00
$1 .30/ day

.05/ day

,

•••
367

992 ' Mtddl~urt
Pomlfroy
985 Chester

615

843 pon.land
247 letart hils
949 Ro~ctntt

173

643 Ar.Jbta 0!ft
379 Wollnut

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 .00 P fJI THURSDAY
' 2 ~0 PM . FRIDAY

702

Rull.n\1

667 Cootvttle

§

Happy Ads

AnnOutemenh

JJ
Jl
J5

6 lost and Found
7 Y.-d S•l~lpa•d 10 acNan c tJI
8 Public Sille I. Auc111.111
9 W~nt..a IO Buy

n••·•·r 1hf'

•••
"6

Gwe.-way

36

44

Aparlmeol for Ruru

45
46
47

Sp•ce tor Ren t

Busintllis OppOIIUIIt lf
MunBV 'Io Loan

23

Pt OfeiSibnal 51tf"tctK

SMALL ENGINE
IEPAIR

L-hd ., wiley~.
., MIJjl1port, Oh.

1·16-'10·1

P'ARTS ANO SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cycle
engln•

USED APPUANaS

Stock Porto for
Homelfte•. Weedeeter,
"). Tecumsllh. Briggs &amp;

Stfllflon.

PH. 992-3922

up

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
.CLEARING

NE.WLAND
ENTERPRISES

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SERVICE

992.5335 Dr 985-3561
Across From Post Offko

We con repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
alsa cxid boil and rod
out radiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
'

............

W. Va. Chipping, Inc.
~.

• P-y, Oltlo

PH. 9f2·3561

$15 50 ptr ten Buying

Hour~:

7 :30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri. ·
7:30·4:00 Saturday
1·2·'90-11110.

· BINGO
EVERY THURSDJY
VFW POST 9t26

MASON, W.VA•
OPEN ·S:OO P.M.
GA•s STAIT 7:00P.M.

Perta

•Mobile Home

Rontalo
• Lot Rentalo

SandsStone•Dirt ·

992·7479

1614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newknl

It. 33 North of

r-roy, Ohio

1·12·'... tlw

7-11-'19-tfn ·

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Ntw l&lt;ocallon:
161 North Socood
Middlopo11, Ohio 45760

CHESTR, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

SAkES &amp; SERVICE
We C•rry Fithlntluppll•

Your Phone
8ilt1 Here
IUI!NISS PHON!

"14! tt2-•sso
PIIONI
1614)

985-4422 .

1·11·90-tln

1·13·11•

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

•Mobile Homo

DUMP TRUCK

6· 21-'1.9-'"

MICRO

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

MoiQI Cycl tJS
Bmtls &amp; MotDn fur So~l c
76 Aut o Pan ~ &amp; ACCtlS ..OIIt..'S
77 A\II U Rupatr ,
71t" Camp•nn Eqtuputt!l'll
79 Co~mp t! tli &amp; Mol or Hu•um.
7S

Services
81
82
83
84
86
86

Anllql.lll' 5

M1S C Mer ch,;andls v
Blllldtng Supphl.li&gt;
Pets lor Sail!
MuSical hutr~t~nonu
58 Fruth &amp; Vegl:ftabl ·•
59 f o r Siilt~ Of Tradt1

1

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At hnMnablt Pritts"

150.00 ra GAll
IONUS GAME IN 41
AU PAPII INGO lUIS

FREE ESTIMATES
, ... 1111 poln OUI of
(Hilllt...
let .. ., it fw yw.

Curnom Built
Home•.

...

""'··~-··

fiR COF EE

11·11-'. . 1 ... .

STIIn

• MOTHifl

PIZZA

JACCiU....NE .
. ,WHO t.AIIIO ..

FIEILOW IIIIIVRY
PO.IOY AND ..UPOIJ'S ONlY
LOCAllY OWNED PIDA SHOP•

,._WAY ONE YiAR
. AGOTODAV.
SADLY MillED
IYHIR

· Pi•za-Subs·Salads-Daily Specials
t92-2221
.
.

DAUGHTIR.r

NICOLi:

.

•

Remodeling 8t
Repair Work

915·3365
1. .19517

POMROY, OliO
'

Mobtle Hum.: R ttpillln

Gutters
Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

._,
EUM

Good Rat"
T.l.C.
27 Yro. Exp.
ReferMoea

992-6173

· 209 South 4th St.
Mitldlepart, Oh.

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2-}.'90-l mo. pd.

"UIW IIICOIIE . . . . .

FURNACE

WANTED

*SHRUB 8t TREE

FURNACE
FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-SllS or 915-3561

,.,... ,,_ , ... Office
217 E. Soc. Pa-oy
lllll/'191fn

LOW GUDE OAK

TRIM and RE-

SAW LOGS
S160 n.!'....

MOVAL?

DEUVDID TO
OHIO P~LI.ET

COMPANY

POMIIOY 01.

•Tire Seln
•Front End

Allgn11111nt

NO SUIIM T CAUS

'EVENINGS
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Adtlltlono
-0u11or Work
-Eioctrlcot • Plumbing
-Concroto Work
.:..Roo•na
-Interior • EJ&lt;torlor
Pelntlng
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Pomeroy,· Ohio

II. 1124, ~..,.,., Ollit

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2160

BILL SUCI
992-2269

olflkl Work
IIAIN n., n•uu.1u

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.
"Fr• E111ml1•"

'

*FIREWOOD

Y. C. YOUNG HI

Roger Hysell

....

.

*LIGHT HAUI-11\tG

•011 Ohenp 8t Lube

•VINYL SlOt NO
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

...

1 -12·'to· 1 mo.

Garage

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR

AI" Tra•ellileelefl
PH. 992·5612
or 992·7121

4-25-tfn

992-6215

1·30-'lt-2.._

JXCAYATING
&amp; TIUCIING

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE
949-2493

lr4 Street,

...

011.

DI@IRdtl*ll•dlll A~ Illes I Semict
HtitltW £nltlltllnl for All AlaS

USA MJ~r· M.S.

UIWES1 PIICI$
IIOIIST QUAUTY

~

NEW -REPAIR

742-3011

CHinD, OliO

E IICJtVllltnR
Ele&lt;:tft(: al &amp; RefngurotH on
Gun.,.-•1 Ha4hnoy

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9·6·89·11n

· EYEIY
SIT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

. . . . . IU.OR

1614)911·4180

ROOFING

lcnhan lulldlng

UWIN
CONSTIUCnON

lf1116PJL

Howard L. Writtnl

RICIIIE
ARE DEn.

UNDA'S
PAINtiNG &amp; CO.

YRYIUSOfWU
lllVI I&amp;IIINCES

NO ONE UIIDfl 11 YWS

Storts at 1:00 P.M.

Homtt lnlpr ovcrnent !&gt;
Plumbu t g &amp; He !1: 111 u

87 U pholsttH'1

RUTLAND niE
SALIS and
SIIYICE

Face.ry dleltt
12 Gautt ...... Only
Stricktly Ellforutl

4-16-8&amp;-tln

EVElY SUNDI Y

GUN SHOOT

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
·

R4CINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

Au,os tor Satu

74

Business Services
DAVE'S

Buy

Trucks lor Sitlc
73 V;tns &amp; 4 WO 's

Merchandise

liUthiQ6JI
2~

71
72

Housuhold G oods
62 · Sporlmg Goods

54
55
5fi
57

to

li"We5tock
Hay &amp; Guu,
Sued &amp; hutlll ~ r

Trans orlat10n

Sl

!ill

21

65

WanhHII O R e nt '·
Equtpment lot Rmu
For le ilttl

49

PI Pl tt•anl

882 New ttawen
895 le~au
937 B1.1fliio

6J
64

Furmshed RoOIIlli

48

lt!Oh
Mo~son

61. farm Equlpmt.-nl

62 W-.tt:d

41 i-touws lot Rent
42 Mobtle Home~ l or Run!
43 Fauns for Aen1

11 HelD Wo~nl ud
12. · SttuatiDn W.wuoo
I 3 insur&lt;~n c;e
14 Busn'i en fr&lt;HrH!l !l
15 Sch,;»ols &amp; htslruc tton
16 RadtO. TV tlo CO Rcp.m
17 Mtu:l!llo~noou s ,
1 B W&lt;~nttld lo Do

.-pplt!'Gro" e

.&amp; L1vestuck

Homt.s tor Sal.,.
,
MObtlr.Honteslot S al!!
Fo.rms tor Sat.. ·
.BustnenBUIIdlng"
lois e. Acre•ylt'
Rlt'al Ett•ht W.ntl'd

.•;mtna

bnpluyn'e nt
~&gt;I' I v 1r:e s

Masun .C o . WV
Are a Cnd e 304

(jalhpolu;

31
· 32

2 In Memo'y
J
4

Farm SuppiiP.S

Real Estate

Ciifd of thanks

1

.60

Me•gs Cou"nt,
Areil Code 614

245 R!u Gr;~nde
256 G~o~y.Jn D11ol

IN MEM9.RY OF
· MYI8t;OVID

E.•UNCH

.

G allnt County
ArttOI Codt! 614

Cheshtt e
388 Vmton

3 Announcements

JACQUELINE E. BUNCH

Announcements

Over 15 Word s

fo/lowiiiJ( f df'/llttllll ' f'.H"/IIttiJ(t'.' .. .

PAT HILL FORD

In Memory

Rate
$4,00

Un .~ .~i.fi•••l lmJ(''·'

p M ,fU£SOA)

' 'The freedom of speech ensh·
rined In our F(rst Amendment Is
the crucial foundation without
. which other democratic values
cannot !lourls.h," Rothstein 's rul·
ing said.
The defendants are rep res·
en ted by Kunstler and David Cole
of New York, the same lawyers
who argued the case for Gregory
" Joey " Johnson, arrested under
a Texas law fo r burning a flag
outside the 1984 Republican Na·
tiona! Convention.
Last year's controversial 5·4
decision by the Supreme Court
upheld a Texas appeals court
ruling that overturned Johnson 's
conviction, and touched off a
wave of sentiment for the flag·in
CongrE'ss that resulted In the new
law,
Bush signed the law, but said

he would prefer a COIIII!ltuttonal
amendment forbldllilli flag desecration for fear that the statute
would not survive a .court
challenae.
Kunstler maintained that the
new statute failed the con.sUtu·
tiona I test of strict neutrality In
llfnitl.ng a form of expression
because i! sillllled out certain
uses of the nag and not others. He
also said It included some uses of
the flag thai · people might find
objectionable but which caused
no permanent physical damage
to the flag.
·-•·Jt Is not an icon. It 's not a
religious symbol, " Kunstler
said. "It Is the symbol of the
United States. It Is a symbol of .
good and ii Is a symbol of bad,
and people ought to be able to use
It to protest the bad."
Government attorneys said the
law was backed by the full weight
of a Congress mindful of the
consti t utional Issues. They
argued that as a symbol of U.S.
sovereignty, the flag was similar
to a copyright or trademark and
the nation has a right to see 1t Is
protected.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Ratesa1c tor r::on~culf'We runs. brokenupdfiYs will be ch•ged
fur each diP( ;as separate ads

ill otice

In tlemory Of

. .

Monthly

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
On FellniiiY 8, 1990. In
tho Meigs County Probllo
Court, Cue No . 28820,
Merllyn J. Strother. 410&amp;
Sin M•rco1 R011d, louilvltlo, KY. 40298, oppolntod E&gt;ooout01 of tho
- t o of Wllb•" Thoobold,
dleoMed. loto of 137 South
lloeond Avenue, Mlddl•
port, OH . 46780.
Robert E. Buck,
Pr.o blloJudge
I.e no K. Nooto11ood, Cto•h
(2) 111, 22; 13) I 3tc

JEWELRY

16
16

10

(2) 1 &amp;. 22: (3) 1 3tc

COMPLETE STOCK

Now 1/2

6 '

tO DAY waaANTY

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On February 7, 1990, in
the Melgo County Proboto
Court. Cue No. 28528.
Guy E. Hunt111, Mlin Stroot.
Rutland, Ohio 4&amp;77&amp;, oppolnted Admlnillrator of
the 'ftlllo of Thomu 81111111'
Hunter, Ill; deceMed. lote of
121 Union A-ue, Pome.
roy, Ohio 467811.
Robort E. Buctc,
Proboto Judge
leno K. Nntolrood, Cleric

10:00 AM-5:00 PM

Two games scheduled for sec·
tiOnal play this weekend at
Athens High School were lncor·
rectly listed for Saturday night
Instead of Friday night. The
Alexander· and Crooksvllie and
the Federal Hocking and Ross
Southeastern games ·are to be
played on FridaY night and not
Saturday at Athens.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4574

Public Notice

HOURS:
SATURDAY

Correction

Outdoor smoking ad ban proposed
CHICAGO (UPI) - The Chi·
. cago Board of Health has proposed a ban on cigarette adver·
Using on outdoor billboards,
buses, tr,a lns and taxicabs, the
Chicago Sun-Times reported
Thursday.
The board voted unanimously
·Wednesday to draft an ordlriance
which could be presented to the
city council as early as next
month . The proposal came on the
heels of a new federal anti·
smoking proposal.

Lena K. Ne1Mir011d, Clerlc.
t21 1 &amp;. 22: (3) 1 31c

15
. I5

3

DAY BEFORE PUBLI C AfiON
1 I 00 AM SATURDAY
1 00 PM MONDAY

NOTICE OF
j .
• " APPOINTMEN'f ~
0P PIOUCIARY
·an Fellnll,., 9. 19110. 1n
tho Melgo County Probate
Court, Cooe No. 28492,
Rabiort Wingett. Bo• 78.
Syrocuto, Ohio 411779, wu
appointed e..cutor of the
ntato of Emoot A. Wingett,
deceootd. lalo of Elm Stroot.
Rocino, Ohio 4&amp;171.
'
Robert E. B..,..,
•
Probote Judo•

"Melg1 Coanlf'l
Only Chll•ren'•
Specialty Shop."

'

.

KATMANDU, Nepal tUPil About 500 women, wear ing gags
over their mouths to symbol·lze
the lack ·of free speecb, marched
through the southeastern indus·
trial town of Biratnagar Thurs·
day to ·protest police killings
during Nepal's pro-democracy
movement.
Residents of the city reached
by telephone from Katmandu
said pollee did not interfere
during the demonstration, a part
oft he crisis at the top of the world
- home to Mount Everest, the
world's highest peak.
In the capital of Katmandu,
one group of demonstrators
smashed a police community
center and pollee with batons
charged another group of. a bout
200 prates tors who were were
shouting pro-democracy slo·
gans. There were no reports of

1

Hr!IJPY Atb
V .trtt .S.tll!!.

2 00

Words
l5

Days

• A ,-t ... :. •f •tld .,clvo.IIISCIIlt)ll\ pl.tt:o:"d Ill 1 ht: o ,.. ty S o:tll lll d (u ll
t. t:ftl
clot SS dh!d tltl&gt;pl .,y. Bu ~ tnt..'l&gt;~ Cmd mull t.~ t ·" noHc csl
'WIIi .. ts o oiPJWotr .. , tilt• Pt PhM!.OIIlt R tl \Jt!&gt;UH .md lhu Go~l!t
polis O;utv Tr •tlttllt :. m.tchm~t pvm l 8 .000 hu ruc:.

COP'I' OE-AOliNE: .

addressed tnat argument by
writing. "This Is an ln•pirlnl!
time for those of us who treasure
freedom. Countries all over the
world are striving to adopt
democratic principles derived
from our Constitution as part of
their forms of government.

RATE

~~~ ,,lh:r pubirc.aiiOIII O rn.tkr. c:orrt!Citu n
'Ads 1f1atmust btl po11d •n •~lvdrlcc ,j',.~

BOWS

.

•
Classi II

.

fiOUCitS
'Ad~ oulstdt: Me• g.. Gall•a or Mason counlteo&gt; IUU I&gt;I be put
pa•d
·: · •
'Rucmv•! $ 60 1hs~;uun1 lor .uls p;aul111 ;uNancl!
'
· ' h1m outs_ G1Ve&lt;tway iilld Fo und ads t~ndt'f 15 words w1tt be
""' j dtrfS at no ch•ge
'Puc•! ol ;ut lor a ll cap11al ft.11ers t:o double pucu t)l iltf co st
• 7 ~tunl lme type onlY ust!d
•Stmlu\t~ tS 1101 r~spol•stble lur crrur10 o~l\lrr hr li l 1lay (ChtH;k
lm ttr"llli first day o~d rutts 111 Pilpm~ Cilll bt!f o rc 2 00 p m

aunoNs

decision Is a real victory fo r the
people ... It needs · to be said,
however , thts battle Is far from
over.
The case Is headed to the
the earlier Supreme Court decl·
Supreme
Court . This is a
U.S.
slon, said Rothstein's ruling
fight
we
are
determined
to win. ''
effectively ' •is the law of the
One
of·
the defendants, the
land."
mohawk -topped Darius Strong,
Kunstler said the ruling was
promptly ripped an Amer ican
the beginning of the end for the
flagburnlnglaw,butwarnedthat ' flag from the back of his black
leather coat and burned it on the
It would allow President Bush to
steps.
of the courthouse, pro·
gq ahead with plans for a
clajming,
:'If you love Ameri ca,
constltut.lonal amendment to p,ro·
you
should
burn the flag."
teet the flag .
" It will be the first time in the
Tile defendants still fa ce trial
count ry that anyone has attemp·
on
'charges of destruction of .
ted to amend the Bill of Rights. "
government
property for burn·
he said of the proposed constitu·
ing
the
post
office
flag, and could
tiona! amendment.
face the flag burning charges
The four Washington defend·
again If the Supreme Cou rt ·
ants, who all have made stat e·
overturn.s Rothstein's ruling.
ments Jn favor of MarKism and
The defense had said In court
extremist political views, Joined
that
freedom fighters In Roma·
dozens of protesters In Seattle .In
nia who cutoutthe center of their
burning hundreds of tiny flags
flag to protest their oppresslye
and some bigger ones, Including
reglm.e were glorified by the U.S.
one flying over a post office,
government. Onder the U.S. law ,
moments after the law took
the same action would be Illegal
effect at midnight Oct. 28 .
In
the United States.
Jn a joint statement issued
Rothstein,
the chief judge in
after the ruUng, three of the
the
western
Washin~:ton
district,
defendants said, "Today's court

.

. TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-21511 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M• .
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
·ClOSED SUNDAY

Honda reports
higher sales,
lower income

Women protest ·against killings in Nepal

~Jnconstitutional

not consecrate the nag by punish·
lng Its desecration, for In doing so
we dilute the freedom that this
cherished emblem represents.
The goverment may not prohibit
expression simply• because It
disagre~ with Its message."
The ruling will be au tomati·
cally appealed directly to the
Supreme Court under a provision
Inserted by Congress to have the
matter settled decisively as
quickly as possible.
In the meantime, while her
ruling technically overturns the
law only in the Western Washing·
ton District of the federal court
system, It is unlikely that federal
judges elsewhere will rule other·
wise pending_ the Supreme Court
review .. especially In light of the
high court's own ruling last year
that burning the flag ,Is a form of
expression protected by the First
Amendment. ·
.
William Kunstler, the New
York lawyer who argued the case
for the defendants In Seattle as
well as th'e Texas
case. that led to
'

SEATI'LE ( UPI) -Saving the
right to political prote1t Is more
llnportant than saving the Amer·
lean flag from desecra tlon , a
federal judge said in overturning
the Flag Protection- Act of 19891n
its first court test.
U.S. District Judge Barbara J.
Rothstein diSmissed charges
Wednesday against four young
people who · burned American
flags ·In defiance of the law
moments after It took effect last
June.
" Burning the flag as an expres·
slon of political dlsaent. while·
repellent to many Americans,
d()fs ·not jeopardize the 'lreedom
which we hold dear, " Rothstein
wrote In a . 16-page decision.
' 'What would threaten our liberty
Is allowing . the government to
encroach on our right to political
protest."
Rothsteip's language was sirii·
liar to that in the U.S. Supreme
Court's majority opinion, Issued
june 21. 1989, In which Justice
William Brennpn wrote: "We do

MANAMA, Bahrain (UP!) An explosion ripped through a
U.S..tlageed Kuwaiti tanker
Thursday In the southe~ Per·
sian Gulf, Injuring several crew.
men and leaving two missing In
the first suchincldentslncea 1988
Iran· Iraq cease-fire took effect.
U.S. Navy officials and gulf·
based sblpplng. sources said the
explosion aboard the gas carrier
Surf City occurred about 11 a.m.
Tbursclay while the tanker was
sailing laden With refined oil
products past Iran's Abu ,Musa
Island !leal' the mouth of the eulf.
The explosion sparked five .
separate fires and loreed the
mostly i\merlcan crew to a ban·
don the 81,283-ton ship, a naphta
and gas carrier.
·
Capt. Ron Wildermuth, chief
spokesman (or the Navy's Cen·
tral Command, said 23 of the 25
crew members were rescued by the missile frigate USS Simpson,
one of the Navy ships still
patrolling the gulf. The other two ·
~jlors ~malned miSsing, he
said.
Wildermuth also said some
crew members were Injured and
· two were airlifted to Sheikh
Rashid Hospital in Dubal, 'united
Arab Emirates, but he gave no
details on their conditton or
injuries.
'
A survivor interviewed on
Dubal television said the
tanker's bridge ''was completely
destroyed" by a "great explo·
slon." He said he was surprised
most of t~e crew escaped. ·
"I didn't thlnkwewere going to
make it." the unidentified sailor
said. "I thought the whole ship
was going to explode."
Wildermuth said the Sllnpson

De Klerk's trip to Zaire postponed

The Daly Sllliiiii-Pigs 13 :

Pgnwoy-Middlaport Ohio

lJCIIItd

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I

. Page 14-The Ollily Sentinel

Poma'oy-Middlaport. Ohio

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INVE1f1011YIIli'PLY CLERK
( PIII·Timo)

zo houro Pll'-

Yard Sale

7

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lntilvld..: wKh on OhiO EIIT-A
C1011-lon lo "" tho p 011tton
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&amp; VICinity

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ALL Yard Soloo Mull 8o Pllti In al_,lo ftlllnllnoneo - ·
Advlnco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. l n i - · 1pt&gt;11eon11 ohoukl
lhl dly boloto 1111 ad II to Nn. : John 8 - . S£0£118
SU-r edKian • 2:00 p.m. 4, Bo~; ~~~ 01111&gt;0111, Oil
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=::.""l'·

li.IIA5 JEST THINKIN'
ABOUT YOU,

Soptlc Tonk Purnptna hO,_Oolllo ,
Co. RON EVANS ENlEAP~aSES •
Jooltoon, OH t.-al741111. ' '

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ARIIII.....,.. ti·April

DAILY CRYPIOQUVI ES- Here'• bow te worlt It:

•

.

~

Buchwald
27 Innate gift
30To and31 Sports ·
equipment
32 Latin god
33 Alley
Inhabitant,
at tlmea
35 Latvian
38Conclle

Aenc!W.Iull
Hrviee 1!)dly ragardii'Q what you ptOtn·
iH&lt;I to do lor oth&lt;lro. You'll llllnk mare
of youl'lelf II you rills! lncilrtetlone to .

II LONGFELLOW
. One letter l&amp;lndl for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'1, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlel'!l,'
apostropher, the lenlth and fonnation of the words are all
hints. !:Kh day the code 1ettm ~re cllffmnt.
. CIIYn'OQUOTI!

32 Mobile Homaa
torSrla ·

1·11

LA VAN

XAVXPO~P

XMANTPF

fllTII

ZVQ

CPAKCP

•

'

HZ.RP

HAK P

MTPKF

992-2156
675-1333

I 2122

AIYDLBAAXR

by maNing

$1.25 to As1ro-Groph,c/o 1hle . _.
per, P.O. Box 91~28, C - . OH
&lt;lol10 1-3428. Be sure to lttie your zodl·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOI:

.

eCD • • ew a eo
•

ACROsS 37 Fairy tale
t Bus depot
monster
(abbr.)
38 Wu S8JTY
4 High-class 31 Mellow
party
DOWN
8 Like peas 1 Lacro818,
·Infor one
9 Another
2 Roughneck
name
3 Annex
11 Vociferous 4 Funda12 Horse
mentals ·
ol e color 5 Like a
14 Work unit
bump on _ 15 Sails
24 Barmy
15 Gaelic
8 Olivier's 18 Humorous 25 Said
dance
title
poet
28 Potassium
18 Genes'
7 Tough guy 21 See 31
· form
material
8 Sheltered
across
29 Carry
17 Of a race 10 Upper
22 Vegetable 31 See 31
19 Slorage
classman 23 Ac ~
Across
box
13 TaH
compllsh· 34 VIneyard
· 20 True!&lt;
and thin
ment
35 Mauna sections
21Volume
22 Ornery
person
23 Blond
24 ShOrt,
: !list race
25 Trede
for money

26-

aPollee
• oceplure
Knoll Llncllng
the m11n who

THAT'S ALL !I

j

otlcllllloraporiii-Conllal

.

(!) Legltlltlve Updltl

..

~84~:::E~Iact;._rlcr-l&amp;.._--.;..,,

17.4Miour ....................

1111.......

1tiNt-leh

I'LL ·GtT MY: ..
POCKETBOOK ·
ENNYHOW

.,~-

oil ond ... """ '"""
-""' illl1hl doyo oil.
lWi L.RN. only

...
p t- - al - ·
Jocltoon ......
OH
41131. 11...-1112. LO.L

Klni .......
0 ......... , . _,
llttnder Night l'lgllla

IIIN-"¥11ieNow
9:30. CJ) a Onincl Janice and
Eddie hash out the :orms oi

~-- GjllliltiOIII
pooltlon
IVIIilblo,
roqulfld
with lcnowltdae of tldft oara,
••. Dey _ , •hlr

--·--.
.....,
c..-· ..

next victim. Q

. GJ) LMry

repilf'l: .. WV
51 ........

Plumbing &amp;
Hsatlng

e

tiS lel•ncl Son A serial'
kilter targats Daniel aa his

MILl.tONS AI-D
51L.LtON60F

104-4.,._2:1:111 ~ Ohio

eo::.\'!t"l"ngblng
Fourth ond PTno
. OoUI-Ohla

-In
• lull
tlftllDll'ltitl.
"'"' bo_.y
....
JO dlyo
I jiiY
Odllr WI II inCJ Oft. M.aliwbotiOilo In~
moy
111 ..., - · wnh - . , or
lllttlna
llilry
dllil....tloi otlclllllor
ehllll end _ . . . ... lor
L.P.N. • Slotting •lory b R.N.
S10.l'Miour-nlillotlcllll
l o r - - ond ...........
,.. TltM end Port TltM

t1.-·

Rhodel. D

8

A011'o TV Service, opodoit.lna
In Z..Kh 1110 Hrvlclng ....
olhlr llnoncio. Houol Cliil, lilo
' Mml

1•1 Chev., loyl. ~ ...., NIW
, 1'11111, ....,. new parfa, 1100•
112 3 wt1111r, new tiNe.

to
Woodllnd

---for

rOCinl

1 - PontiiiC lonnw. ., PS,

.:=.:

.

Boil~.

PB,
-3CM-1'7S-1171.
· no rvot;
rune AIIIFII
no, t1 ,300.

~.lid
._...Ired. Send.... rMumo

COIM. IOO 31N1S2.

•kllng,

Grel&lt;M5, ALL

......,. 4410571.

Musical
Instrument•

Ctlilnt!'· Elporlll- in ...-,.

=

new/Npalr,

- - l r , corponlry, odd lobi.
eotlmol•. 514-171-2820, lilt for
Mitch.

PllnUng, lniorlor ond ollorior,

PIMIIdof• Auallabtt: COnal Ae....,. lor 24-- ehlltinln'o
_.,.m In Jocltoon

Woodllnd Cont.,.,
Inc:, no1
on
lhlbnloal,....-,.....:.
nollonol origin. ,_, or lypo
of . .blllly.
Pwltksne Anllltlll: Full and
;orlllftll
AN onci ....
LPN, Ill 1 - ehlllo

llolnlono,_:

frN ......... J04.871..21.1 .

Nlw HaVen, WY 21215.

~

young Easterner w!lhel to
model himHii alter his hero,
Hickok. Q
.
ID (!) MrlllfYI Polrot Is 011
holiday 11 the Palace Hotel In

.

:u....p, good 11111, new.o:anor,
braD~. ind AJC conv;w
cr,

bar

• • eill Youi'Q Aklln A

AROUND 'IOU.

•-lnp.

CD ta' Chelr8 Robin

spende hil day off in the
competing with Sam. D

1174 Chivy Llguno, $100. -

l?l-e174.

1111 -·ng " : : bul ......

C.rwr Opporlunfty lor 1 -..,
NCIAall,.. tor PN-n11ll FUneral
Pion. '1111 or PorH- ~
tlonll, mahn IJIJIIII'MOI and
diJ!IFdMII trMipDnat6on I
..... En- pol...lol ln-

1:00 •

Roofing,

111.-lr. For • - onci liP'
- " "111.
' Into..
coli o.m.-e:oo
21-.117,
1331 8:00
21. 1110. R,~...... 10 ... p.m. 7diP,
. . - or ..........., to: Jonlco
~. Cilfil,
¥1111111 oi Pari time .... r ltlau, .....
dlro,
ond !' I llio.
" - · Third 81.,
hna •ume to P. 0. Bo1 110,
01145771.

s,.......

• Ctoolll CIIIH

14-

N9n, In good oond,

Prevlewa GMa

arletOCI'Itl of the air are
feiiiUrod. D

liouMioold

II

til Dm.t.ftl WINid
Whitley ts tempted 19
sabOtage 1111 date sha HI up
for~•tno.Q
.. .

(J) Wild Atnerlca The

-

1171 Whtte

by 'HOMAS JOSEPH

VIdeO

1 - i'onl OIIUy I Cyi onglno,
nc cond, dlptrMhlbte, ~75-IID1.
.

acflon
_,.,.Ioyer, Wood..ncl Cent.,.,
Inc., noo - r i m - on

CROSSWORD

e (I)

(ll

d-~-~orit.
t:OOO.
1 - ll. .ury
r,

lhl bnlo of ,.... - · c...:,
nlt6onll arlaln. qce, . .Kt or
lyjio of tiloobliKy.
1110

..

1M8 OIIC plo!Hip, Nrll I

dlolomo or
voild
drtnr'• 1101,.. r
. Send
...,,.. to Sonciro llcFolllnci,
W-lnci eon:.,. Inc.. 412
1
Vlroon Pika, Oollpolil.
OH
41131, Woodlond ·Coni.,., Inc.,
II I ....... - • I K _.
porolton

,."

,,'

Home

81

1:30

•

Serv:ces

ID4-47WHI.

Qulftl

PallneNtwa

OMu-,She ·Wrota
.
Wltnlll For The lleflftH

Trans port at ion

per 1-nci. 11e11w...r1o Ohio
Polloi Co. Pomwoy, OH.
·

.a:

(2:00)

Pl..-- Com, S43 por boa

11.._

••••

• &lt;Il t11 eo.b' Show a

1m 11. 112 n. TI&lt;!Y • - Bool,
40 H.P. Meroury Eng. JUII....,.

445-2424,1-e00o271-0274.

.

7:35 (I) S.nlold And Son
1:00 (J) MOVIE: Drum• Along The
. Moll..... (2:00)

1m 17 ft. SIIICtllt Til-Hull

Rlw.,.lda llartn.. Rt. 7, Oltlati. Will ._d, 814 441 IDJO

332.. 741.

0 Abbot And C...teilo
7:05(]) ...~1

1M? y.,.ohl
3e0, • ·. - ·
. 11180;
-~76-2110.

NORI'II
Z.l!·N
.AKQS.
.AI097

.J

;·e:o~:y

•

SCil6M LETS ANSWIRS
' • ·11
Exhume - Drift - Quill- Kaiser - FIX the LEAK
'•
My husband had never fe~ more humble than when
our plumber found out that my husband had tried to
FIX the L!=AK. ·
.. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

· Everyone knows that the play of a
tQ8 ~
hand il detennlnecl by declarer's per- ·
+3
ceptloa of tbe location of !be defend·
EAST
ers' key cards. Tttat perception il of WEST
coune guided by the bidding as wen as • 10 8 5 3
·K~2
the early defense. In today's deal, the • 6
tKH
defenders, Matt and Pam .Granovet- • 10 8 3
+KQJ986
ter. distorted the declarer's view of , • A 7 5 • 2
the locatlcio of the cards, with devas·
SOUTH
tatlng effect.
·
t762
.QJSU
Matt Granovetter led his fourth·
tAHZ
best club. Tbat was a step ahead of
+to
this writer. (I would bave led club ace,
just In case I needed to attack a sideVulnerable: Both
suit at trick two.) East won the jack of
Dealer: East
clube, suuesttng to declarer an orlgi·
W.ot Nort~ Ent
nal club boldi111 ol A·K·Q-J. Back Sao,.
t+
came the jack of spades. South woa in
z+ s• Dbl. .
dummy and played ace and a beart.
All pa,.
East won the king, and now West con·
tributed to declarer's cooflllion by sig·
Opening lead: +t
naUng with tbe 10 of diaiiiOIIds. Wben
East ~ulifully led a lo~~r diamond, d~ L.----~----:----i!' ,
clarer grabbed the ace, drew the last
,.
trump and then played spades. Declar- West's raiBO tii t wo clube mlgbt ,tJe
er had to ruff tbe fourth spade and now baled on five little clube and the dia'l
·led ap to dummy's diamoild queen. mOod king. If that were the CAM, deNeecllea to say, there wu much clarer could not afford to play low on.
fiDUblng of declarer teeth when East East's ·low diamond. (West could win· .
turned up with the IH. But declarer's the diamond kinl and give JNII'tner
cplay wu quite reuonable. East would spade ruff.) Kudo&amp; to the Granovetters·
• have a nonnal opening bid with A·K·' for creating an illlllion, causing .de-'
Q-J of clube and kln1 of bearts. and clarer to fail.

suspiCia a rape victim of
having her oWn plan lor

FRANK AND ERNEST

111111

TO GET ANSWER

BRIDGE

0 M....l V'" Trudy

:sa,oocr.

ted. IRON HORSE BLDGS. 114-

I1WII:Me1.

UNSCRAMilf AIIOVf LETTERS

(l) (J) MMNell L -

-T~c-1Q
tiS
,....

Nuinbor
Ad,
· 10
- Airport
worlt. · Ook
...
....... Ohio, behind l"ounnatn IIOiiol.

Llf111 AOIInci Boloo ol Hoy, f1D

e Ill elll CurNnl Alfelr
Na•ettour
,. • ill til Wheel 01

MH310.
1N4 Yomoho 4tl0 runo ac,

1NI Yomot,. YI, 280, · ~
._t, Nne-. 1800.11.......,
115M.
.

Hay &amp; Grain

hq ·-

'

Cu~

L..-ock

63

,

1 ·~ •• ?limo. Dop. •••fed .

114

__ - ·

11110. 1110 Foni -

Apartment
tor Rent

(I)~

~74~,.:Mot;.;;:.:.:;:orcy;:.:..c~I~H~~
INO Suzuki 1180 o1o. _,., ..,
IIWIIor;2-ltl;:t t1,1DO. 0.1.0. 114-441·
~~~~~~·~ :~~-~~~~~~~
1M3 SUzuki PE .175. $40o. ett.
..... -

Sind Hill Rood, 304-e · 4.
2 bed_, lrollor lor ~. !!!!!!&gt;
~

(I

i&amp;CJ&gt;PMMig&amp;IIM

HousehOld
Goodl

.... Poull'l Doy eo.. Conlor.
Soil, o-blo, chlldcoro. II·F
e l .m. - 5:30 ~- 21A·10. 2 bedroom apta. for rllht. ear.
.Bolan!, oi1or
. iln&gt;p-lno IIOied. Nlco -II!G, llundry
WilD DIM. 114 4411224.
fadllt'-' lntlabte. Cill 814-lt2•
3711 EOH..

. Pro 1M0 qutno. Anr - i a n.
CMh Plitf. C.H 114-tl2-1117 or

IHESE SQUARES

I

OH...... 'In
6:35(1) Andy Orllfilh
7:0ogJ ~w l M~. King

Complete tho chuckle quoted

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

.Topc.ld

- o r Poniol, Dll~t~IIM: .14-

4411-21",

I

by filling ln the miuing words
...-..J.L-.J.L-.J.-.J.......I.--.J you dl'lelop
lrom llop No. J below.

Olle-Min

9 .Wanted to Buy
1804.

Newa
ID-...,1
_
···=NewaQ
Q

1:30~=Niglltlr

IIL~=;.'l,

We'll oome ta you1 · 304-87&amp;-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

C0 RH

Ill 3-2·1 Cont8Ct

;
2br llobllo - · •• £ -.
_,..,.. o-pt. P.O. Ia S44, Gaf.. No
SUncioy Colli. 114-1'1$-2171.
lipolil OH 41131. Equol Opporlunlly Empioyor.
2br, Mobile Home. $170/mo.
Wo ~
lor 2 ..,.... raq'd. 11W17.0UZ.
ro-: bobpillot
child""' In .., - . 2 or 3 2br, untumllhed, all ltec. AC,
u.,...
1 - - . I on w.klnde.
Mull
hove
1,...portotlon, corpoled, orivoto lal, .At •. 588.
- a d wllhln cKy or Oolllpcllo, ·, 114-441-2102.
..
114 11 1m
_.
·
·
·

1117.

8

Chllr!M In Chlrge
1:06 (I) lleverly Hlltlllll

'aociihomeGIIIpal ...
OilloiNI,ID4-47&amp;-7110.

.. truth and honesty but very few ·
shocked by ....... .

:...

0

...

TECH-

I~~~-::;~·
r iT r~~-~-~I~~ ~:~re ~·by~
El [
l.are
r
l I I I IC 0

·

O.letn

-

ULTRA410UND
NOLOGIST
Lorgo
aoo.-m

llllllon Q

(!)lquare OM TV Q
ellD Andy Orlllllh
tiS WINid toa,

5~E'S 601N6 TO CALL ON
ME NEXT, MARCIE .. q\JICK,
WAAT'S Ti-lE ANSWER?

,......,.r.

Pomeroy,
•

(l) ....... T1ll:e

47 wanted to Rant

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

I

H 0 N.' C T

1-TI.;....;y.rl'::...,:..-1.:r--~1 ·

MOIIM'Crcll AIIDCII.DR

.....

.

EARN MONEY . A-..g
EI-nl lnt:Oftll polllllial.

'I

a(1)_01...__.
Newt

at.taf·k our
enemy, what sav
Wf' invadf'
'
Uw k i t.d If' nr·

Oolollo. (1) - - Ell. y.

F'OUIID: Ch,_ !loy 011 Firwl
AvenUI, GaiDDOIIL •ap In to

\.Ill •• ill

Wf'

.

I_'

• (I)• •
.,.

srxl!.ome~-S.: ~-.-1.. • 3w4?
71~-:-·

••

•

I:OOiactWdCillle And

gNtlfl

home,

lAIII

EVENING

11111111'. ' cyl,
... eond.1114-11W414·

month .... - . ..
A~ 1·'-==::======T:::=:::=::::====I
foet-•
wllh ·
ell-..
Lllllr
--------trolnod. I1.._7U20.
11 Help Wanted
11 Help Wanted

· with .c,age onci
oupplllo,:ID4-4.,._1711

Qol•

1- -

laoll;1!!_11 ..tr 'Ml: lf1W, 304-

-:':X:"., 3D4-I7Hm
- 4 .-hi
~or

Toaood _ _ _ _

M THtJRs.. FEB. 22

' IJ.'(~

41 Houaaa tor Rant

~ T.V. Wc!rb- 11..,...:

--.. -.-

Ill:&gt; '

Rrnliils

• Wllll old P'IJIII 112 aa.o11
Lllll1 112 Collil. 1C - . ,..

I'IS-74!1D.

f\Jrntlb IT

45 SPICe for Rent

- . •• H1 111a.

moi!W;3Moe71-1-

Qome

-- ...

II..Ung • ~~Holel. 114 • •• rna.
II : · .._ , _ Wilh

....

Television
Viewing

1.21 .... 1a1
AI. 110, 4 iiou.
....,., - . ... - 11._ AIM lrll_. ...... All fl I Ufl&amp;.
Cell 2:00 p.m., -.m.
5ea1,--.wv. .
.

GlvMWay

r,.,:

Fumllhed •
Rooml

35 Lota ·a Acnrga

I

4

45

1171, -1:3Cip.ftl.

•ai IWI'TIC)W C:£A&amp; Ciulla.
Qp 'hi&amp; ......... 1111
i!o~ .u........ .

72 Truckl .tor Sale

llT 'N' CARLYLE~ lly Larry Wript

- .........____

33 Farms for Sale

LAFF·A·DAY

8
V'~,

115

.NT Z V

HZRP

NTZN

SOVP

SOVP

. HPV,

S OVP

s p z.

iOVf · UOKLF.

EZFTOVCNAV

.... II:JOM'T KMOW HOW

.

ro SF1• rr

446-2342

'

'

I

'·

-- --

......

-

~.-..--

....._.._

·--·

------.

\

1

'

..
'

•I

'

' '

�\

22.1990 '

Ohio

•
Gulf Coa8t gets ram;
mercury falls in East
By ValtM Preu lateraa&amp;loaal .
Heavy ralu drenched the Gulf
Coast again Tbur.c,ay ,leading to
fla$h fiood watches and appeals ·
for federal disaster relief, whUe .
light . snow fell In the Texas ~
Panhandle and mowers were
scattered thrqh the Midwest.
A low-pressure system fun·
neled moisture from the Gulf
throughout thi! South and the
National Weather Service Issued
flash fiood watches In Mlssls·
sippi, · Alabama and north
Georg~ .

Nine couatlea appUed for fed·
era! dllaater relief from flooding
that hu devastated the reeton
this week . .
Temperatures remained rela·
tlvely nilld for winter. Readings
acroes tbe reeton ranged from 55
In At)Uta to 60 In Klloxvllle,
Tenn., 621n Charleston, S.C., 671n
,Jacksonville, fla. , and 76 In
Miami.
Cold moist air wrapping
around an upper-level storm
brought lliht to moderate snow
to the · Texas and Oklahoma

panllandlel but no slanlflcut
ac:cumulatiliu were expeeted as

a low-pressure system IIICM!d out
of the area. Uiht rain fell on
parts of Oklahoma and
Ark•nu•.
.
Warm winter temperatures
kept scattered rain showers
acr011 the Midwest from turn In&amp;
Into snow. Tbe wea,ther service
reported cloudy sklei throughout
the region, with light rain and

drizzle thrQ!IIb southern Dllnol.l
and M!JIOUrl.
Heavy rain was reported at
Sprln&amp;fleld, DL, with f3 de&amp;reea.
St. Louis had ralq and 48.
New Enilanden enJoyed dry,
relatively mild weather, bUt the
NWS Issued a flOod watch In
southern Vermont for late In the
day. Fo~asterJ said the comb!·
nation of hi!avy rain and mel Ung
snow could cause rivera and
streams to rise

FOR SER\1CE - RecegnKion ro~ yean of .

The Mountaineer Mortgage
Credit Certificate Program offered through ihe West VIrginia
Housing Develqf.inent Fund has
been. renewed for 1990, Judy
Northup, real estate loan officer
of the Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant, announced today.
Under the program, qualified
homebuyers receive a tax credit
which · reduces the amount of
their federal Income tax, accord·
lng to Northup. The annual ·
amount of the tax credit Is equal
to a percentage or the annual
Interest paid on the mortg'age
loan for the residence, she
explained, noting thaHhe per·
centage (credit rate) Is determined by the mortgage loan
amount. The ll\X credit can be
taken each year for.the life of the
mortgage loan.
To further explain the pro· ·
gram, Northup said that, for
example, a mortgage loan of
$50,000 at a 10 percent Interest
rate for 30 years will have first
year interest of $4,987. The
amount of the tax credit for the
first year will be . $1,745 (35
percent of $4,987) , which means
that the homeowner's federal
Income tax liability will be
reduced bv $1,745, a · savings of'

left, .of Pomeroy at a dlniler party held In hill honor at the Ohio
Un!versliy lan recently. Don Booae, president or Logan
Monument, rlgbt, pre~ented Vaughan wltb a framed certificate.

Vaughan is honored
·for 40 years service .
Leo L. Vaughan, Pomeroy,

Cross of Honor, the American
was honored for 40 years of Legion, and Megls County
service to the Logan Monument Chamber of Commerce. He has
Co., Logan, at a recent dinner been secretary to the. Meigs
held in .his honor.
County Veterans Memorial Hos"Company President Don Boone pital Commission for 43 years.
presented Vaughan with a
Vaughan Is a lifelong resident
framed certificate and a letter ·of Pomergy. He served five yeats
. prlalsng his many acc;omplish· . tn the U. S. Army, participating
ments. Citing the many residents in · the European Theatre of
he has assisted In Southeastern Operations during Wor,ld War 1~:
Ohio, Boone stressed Vaughan's He and his wife, Rowena, a
professionalism in working with Mlddlepogt native, · have five
·ramllles remembering their children and 12 grandchildren.
loved ones.
They are me.mbers of the United
In addition to his outstanding Methodist Church.
Logan Monument Co. Is Souservice to the company. Vaughan
has been active in the Blue Lodge theastern Oho's largest monuChapter Council Commandry, ment company with offices in
where he Is a Knight of the York Logan. Pomeroy, Vinrpn, Well·
ston and Circleville. The company dates back to 1890.

Qne player wins
~uper

3

'

'·

Meigs voters to face tax
;~

~

~

.-

. •\ 1-

. . . . ~· ~··

=l'l

:::

'777'.
!£L.L.

........ J-c·:
:,- : ~·

:: t•: : ·.: . ! ' !

s::"":'l

; . ; . ;.

.,.,~ •• ~

,_....

................
_.....

s ·• : - ~'11'\'

- ..,...- ··~ ·t
: ·: ::1: :· .. 1 : - .: ·; . . " .•.

:_

~:.;:~·•

::

~· - - ~ ..
Uh

~

.

.
·,,
', '.
WEATHER MAP - Wet ud atormy weatber expected over
eaatern third of tbe aatlon along aad behllld a •low movlag celd
front with strong thunderslonna •eveloplnl ahead of tbe front.
Colder air .will filter late the Great Lakes repon glvlnl tbem
.
nurrte. and llpt snow. Hlp preaeare lUid Ioiii of aunllhlne and mOd · '
temperatures from the West Coast all the way lnlo the Mldlaada.
'
Rain expected thr0111hout Mldweat.
·

Squads
have six calls Tuesday
.
.

\

'

Six calls were answered on
Tuesday by the Meigs Emergency Medical Services.
·
Pomeroy at 12:14 a.m. went to
Maple. St. for Russell Robinson
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 7:15 a .m. went to
Langsville for Mary Riggs to
Holzer Medical Center. ·
~t 8:54 a.m. , Pomeroy was
called to Pomeroy Pike for
&amp;&gt;verly Gaul '!"ho was taken to

Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Middleport went at 10: 14 a .m.
to Mill St. for Mae Lightfoot to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. . ·
At 3:19 p.m., Pomergy was
called to the sheriffs office for
Russell Robinson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·
Racine Fire Department was
called at 6: 23 p.m. to a brush.fire
·on the Greg Garretson property
on Route 338.

'10 RAIDER 4x2
.

I

'

STOCK NO.

389

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Wed·
riesday 's winning Ohio Lottery
.n umbers:
PICK·3
732.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,409.~.50. with a payoff due of
$675,437.50'.
PICK-4
0143.
PICK·4 ticket s~les totaled
$274,086.50, with a payoff due of
$113,200.
Super wtlo
17, 18, 26, 30, 33, and 38 . .
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$8,584,242.
885732.
Klckj!r ticket · sales totaled
$1,231,873.

STOCKNP.
9697 '

UP TO 60 MONTHS
TO QUALIFIED
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1Det11ng, ·

Hospital news
Vtter- Memorial
TUesday admissions -Bertha
RoblDion, Pomeroy; l.ef Blrig,
Pomeroy;
John
Davis,
M•Mlepnrt.
'l'llllday d!Kharges -

Mar·

......-- --4-·- .

·- .

pret Prltldy, Arthur Barr. Mary
Boaeculll!r, Lola Stetner.
.·
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7 Otb. . ln"able
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Dell . . Aetlrlne tt.bate. Tax and Till Extra.
.
U'JC. APR For 4111ont._. Avallabla To Quallflacl Appllcante.
'

Court

Russell Goblnson, Middleport,
was flned on lour charges when
he appeared Iii the court of
Pomergy Mayor Richal'll Seyler
Tuesday night.
He was lined $375and costs on a
DWl charge, $313 acd costs on
destruction or property, $50 and
costs for no financial responslbil· ·
lty, and $63 and costs for failure
to control.
Others fined In the court were
Gary Cremeans, Rutland, ~3
. and costs, dr lvlng under suspension; Beverly Walls, Point Plea·
sant, $51 and costs, speeding;
Jdfrey Zembry, Point Pleasant,
148 and costs, speeding; Michael
Brothers, Pomeroy, $52 and
coats, speeding, and Hobart
Templeton, Pomeroy, $63 and
costa~ failure to comply.
Forfeltlnr bonds In the court
were John Jeffers, Syracuse, $63,
expired vehicle registration and
Mtcbael Palmer, Pomeroy, S62,

'7711°

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M~yor's

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2 Sections; 14 Pogoa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh.io, Friday, February 23, 199() ·

· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH •
Senttnel News Start
Meigs' County voters will decide on several tax measures,
nominate a democratic candi·
date for commlsslo!ler, and select centqll committeemen when
they go to the polls In the May
Primary.
·
At the 4 p.m. deadline Thurs·
day, resolutions bad been llled to
put three school levies &amp;nd fire
levy on the ballot.
Thre~ Democratic candidates
had filed to be nominated by their
party to run lor the one seat on
the Meigs· County . Board of
Commissioners, and In two Republtc~n precincts and three·
Democratic precincts there
emerged contests for central
committeemen.
·
Tax lllsues
The only county-wide ljlx Issue
to.be on 1he May ballot will be the
1.5 mill levy for three years for
maintenance and operation of
Car.leton•School and Meigs Indus-

a

tries. Thai new tax . which Is in
addition to the 1.5 mUI levy
already in ·place, wlli gene~ate
approximately $3!3,000peryear,
according to the county
treasurer.
Voters of the Meigs Local
School District will decide on a 1
mill continuing operating·levy to
generate $105,606.34 a year.
Eastern Local School voters
will cast their ballots on an
·addltional5.0'mllls for two years
to provide for the emergency
requirements of the district to
reduce tfle operating deficit. The
Easte~n' levy if passed will
generateSl5~ .6!l9 a year.
A 2.0 mill levy for fire. protection will be decided· by Orange
Township voters. That levy
would generate each year a total
of $12,,690.84.
All of the tax levies require a
majority affirmative vote for
passa~e.
.
·
,
Candldales
Filing their petitions of candl·

dacy for a seat on the Meigs
County Board of Commissoners
were Janet L. Howard, Pomeroy; Cecil Gillogly, Columbia
Township, and Bill Quickel,
Middleport.
The wlnrier of that race in the
Democratic primary will face
Manning K. Roush, Republican
incumbent, in the fall general
election.
There will be no contest in the
May primary for the probate·
juvenile judge position In the
primary.
Filing for judge were Robert E.
Buck, · Republican. Incumbent ,
and Don Michael Mullen, Democratic, who will face each other In
November.
Dr. Douglas D. Hunter, Repub·
l!can, incumbent, was the only
ca'n dldate filing for the unex·
plred term of coroner. Dr.
Hunter was appointed coroner by
the Republican Central Commit·
tee after the re'tiremenrofDr. R.

'

'

· · CLEVELAND (UPI) · - One
.player picked all six numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed·
nesday night to become eligible
to claim the $15 million jackpot.
The winner wlll receive
$735,000 a yea,r . after mandatory
federal withholding taxes, for the
next 20 ~ars, a lottery commls·
slon spokesman said Thursday .
Tbe wlnnint numbers were 17, ·
18, 26, 30, 33 and 38.
Tbere were 217 players who
picked five Of Six, . Winning
numbers for $1,000 each.
There was also one winner who
had all six numbers In the Kicker
game for $100,000. Sixteen play·
ei\S got five of six numbers In the
Kicker, for $5,000 · each. The
wjnnlng Kicker combination was
885732.
'

'

Vot.•o; No.202
Co!&gt;Yrtyh.... 1980

~ t ~c..

Low lonlght In mid 30s.
Chance of snow 60 percent.
High Saturday · near 40.
Chance of snow 60 percent.

•
e .n tne

Lotto jackpot

•'

'

$145 each month.
Single family homes, condominiums; and manufactured homes
(Including mobile homes) aJ:e all
eligible for the program, pro-·
vlded they are locatedln)hestate
or West VIrginia ,, and are the
prlntclpal residence ol the homebuyer, Northup explalnE!d. Both
new and existing homes can
qualify ·but the purchase price
cannot exceed $134,460 for a new
hoine or $60,455 ·for less for an
existing home.
HomebUyers must have an
annual Income of $31,700 or less
for a one or two person family, or
$36,455 or less for a famlly or
three or more, Northup said.
They cannot have owned a
principal residence In the three
years prior to the date on wh!.ch
·
the certiflc·a.te Is Issued.
Interested homebuyers must
apply for the certificate no later
than 10 days prior to their loan
closing, according to Northup. A
$100 application fee may apply,
depending on family income.
More Information on the Mountaineer Mortgage Credit Pro·
gram Is available by calling the
Loan Department at any Peoples
Bank location. Northup
conclude&lt;).

Piek 3
082
riek 4
0379

toumament

Peoples Bank
·certification renewed
· service lo the,Logaa Monument Co. wu pven Leo L. Vaughaa,

OJ:tio Lottery

Tornadoes
advanee in

•Issues m
•

•
pru.....,.nary

The other candidates for RePickens last June and Is now
publican
Central Committee
seeking election to the unexpired
are:
term Which ends in January,
North Chester, Rodney · G.
1993.
Chevalier; South Chester, David
The only candidate to file for
county auditor was William R . J. Koblentz; WestChester, VIrgil
Windon; Columbia, Gay F . John·
Wickline , Republican
. son; Lebanon, G. Denny Evans;
Incumbent. .
Tbe only contests for Central Letart, Harry C. Hili; North
Comitteeman to emerge at filing Olive, Bill Francis; Orange
Roger C. Gaul; Rutland VIllage,
deadline were In rtve precincts.
EliZabeth
Hobstetter; East Ru In the Republican Primary,
there will be contests· In two tland, Florence Barrett; West
prlnclncts, Bedford between Rutland, Ann B. Barrett; Salem,
James .H. Qulvey apd Brenda S, John F. Colwell.
Middleport 1st. Ruth Powers;
Roush , and South Olive between
Dorsel E , Larkins and Kirk D. Middleport 2nd , Fred ·Hoffman ;
Middlepori 3rd. Paul Gerard;
Reed.
In the Democra.tlc primary the Middleport 4th, Dorothy McGufconies ts will be between Alison fin; Pomeroy ist, Roger F .
L. Cauthorn~ Kreiss and Melody Dillard; Pomeroy 2nd, Evelyn
.L. Roberts In South Olive, Mau - Clark ; Pomeroy 3rd, George L.
reen E. Hennessy and VIncentE. Harris; Bradbury, · Larry R.
Knight , Sr. In Pomeroy First Thomas; Laurel Cliff, Nathan P .
Ward; and Lawrence H. Hayman Biggs; Rocksprings , George Wiland Teresa A. Evans In Ham Nesselroad; Scipio. Lola E.
Clark; Racine Village, Cora B.
Lebanon..
~-

2&amp; Canto

A Multimedia Inc. NOW!POPOr

Beegle; Syracuse Viiiage, Em·
mogene Holsteiri Congo; Miners·
v!Ue, Fred E. Smith, and Racine
.Pet ., Otis F. Knopp .
T)Je other candltlates filing for
the Democratic Central Commit·
tee were:
Bedford, Edith Leach; North
Chester, Mary J . Hunter; Columbia, Thaddeus S. Dye; North
Olive, Robert A. Malson, Jr.;
Orange, Norman 0. Weber;
Rutland Viliage, Samuel B. May;
East Rutland, Janet L. Howard;
West Rutland, Norman C. Will;
Saiem, Edward D. Anderson;
lVliddleport 2nd. Kenneth E.
Imboden; · Midleport 3rd; Connie
J. Dodson, Middleport 4th, Bar·
bara A. Hudson.
Pomeroy 2nd. Rebecc a J.
Triplett; Pomeroy 3rd, Catherine L. Welsh; Bradbury, Lisa A.
Roush; Laurel Cliff. Gregory S.
Eblin; Rocksprings, Carol A.
Ohlinger; Minersville, John lhle,
and Racine Pet. Edwin S. Cozart. .

Fisher challenged
bY three Democrats

By LEE LEONARD
" We fully support Senator ,general lor 12 years.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
Fisher and we Intend to work to
"We are taking ail our oppoCOLUMBUS - Three Demohelp him get the nomination,"
nents seriously," said Fisher.
crats filed against the party·
said Democratic State Chairman
Middleton is a former assistant
endorsed candidate for attorney
James Ruvolo, ad&lt;;ling that
attorney general and assistant
general, state Sen. Lee Fisher,
Fisher will be featured In party Cuyahoga County prosecutor
who . was the assistant.,. law
by Tl)ursday's. cle~d\J.!lil,,lll~lllng~ . llteJ;~!j(f ~~d wjll ,be the bene!!·
that the premier race In this
clar~ of the party s direct mall
director for East Clevl!fand from
sprlllg's primary camtlatin.
campaign to Democrats through· 1982-88.
He said his main issues wlli be
Fisher, D-Shaker Heights, a
out the state.
10-year state legislator, was t)Je
Brown, 66, was most recently
consumer fraud, organized
only endorsed candidate among
asslstantdlsclplinarycounsel for
crime, missing children and
victims of violent crime.
either Democrats or Republl· the Ohio Supreme Court In its
cans facing serious opposition as
Cleveland office .. a position held .
Filing against Celebrezze and
the 4 p.m . deaclllne passed for
held from 1984 thro~gh last
Branstool were Henry King and
Charles Shreve or Lo.raln, and .
filing petitions of candidacy for
November.
the May 8 primary.'
Brown has been a prosecutor
Michael Lord of Ravenna and ·
Anthony Celebrezze, the De- and a defense attorney. He Is a
Judy Wynn-Parker of Ravenna. :
mocratlc party-endorsed candl· former chief prosecutor for
Running write-In campaigns :
date for governor, and his
Geauga County and said he
for th~ Democratic nomination ·
running mate , Sen, Eugene Bran- wants to address the problems or
for governor-lieu tenant governor :
stool or Utica, face two teams on drugs, pornography . corruption
will be James Attla of Columbus :
the ballot and two more tandems In public office and destruction of
and Chris Shutrump of Young- '
as write-Ins, None is widely the environment.
stown, and Daniel Ciofanl or :
known. ·
·
Fisher said Brown is running
Cleveland Heights and Robert
Filing against Fisher were primarily because the name
Galvin of Galloway.
·
· Mahonlng County Prosecutor "Brown" has proven popular In
Unoposed for re-nomination :
.
James Philomena, ' Cleveland Ohio politics over the years.
are Secretary of State Sherrod ·
DAFFODD. DAYS - D!'olfodll Days for the
the check to Lillian Moore, right, local dlreclor of
attorney Charles Brown, and
·:we will expose his candidacy
Brown. Auditor Thomas Fergu- :·
American · Cancer .Sodety will be held March
the American Cancer Society, are Bruce Reecl
Frederick Middleton, a black for what It Is," said Fisher. ' :we
son. and Treasurer Mary Ellen :
"15-20 throughout Middleport and Pomeroy. The
and Iris Payne. The society Is oeeklnl organlza·
attorney from Shaker Heights. . are going to run and win against
Withrow .
flowers, which will cost S.~ a piece, were
lions who .are willing to sell the dalfodlls.
"We expected ail afong to have the name game. "
Unopposed Democrats rununderwritten by 'rhe Farmer's Bank. ~ntlng
a tough primary," said Fisher.
In 1970, an unknown named
ning for the Ohio Supreme Court
"i't really does not alter our plans William Brown ran against John
are Stuart Banks of Youngstown
and Mary Caclopp&lt;i &lt;jf Cuyahoga
very much. This will help in . McDonald, then theHouseDemobullding momentum for the gen- cratlc leader. for attorney gen· · Falls, both of whom will face
eral election." · ·
· era! and won dl'!splte being given
Republican Incumbents In the
little
chance.
He
was
attorney
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presfail.
government
equal
opportunity
beleagured panel.
ident Bush, seeking to breathe
programs, It was· reauthorized
I~ Fletcher Is confirmed by the
· new life Into the U.S. Commission ·senate, the eight-member panel
last year by Congress through
on Civil Rights, lflli nominate . would have only one vacancy, fiscal year '1991.
Arthur Fletcher as the new Fitzwater said, "which we exFitzwater denied there has
and down about 15 degrees . Showers moved rapidly norBy United Press International
chairman, his spokesman an- pect to fill very soon. "
been any admln!stratloll delay In
Winds were also rather gusty
theast across Ohio ahead of the
A cold rpmt entered Ohio early
nounced Friday.
putting forward candidates for
Four members are appointed
from
the southwest ahead of the
front
overnight
.
White Ho11se press secretary by the preSident; four by
the rights • board and said Friday, ushering In the begin·
front.
Temperatures
ahead
or
the
:
Marlin Fitzwater said Bush Congress . ·
Fletcher ~nd Bush would discuss ning or an expected big chill for
The National Weather Service
front were in the 40s during the
would also meet Friday with
the future of the panel, as well as the weekend.
Alter 'much controversy over
said
once the front ·gets through
night but quickly dropped Into
An arctic cold front slipped
Fletcher, whose name .has sur: the effectiveness of the commls· . administration proposals on civil
the
state,
It wlli be all down hill
the 30s right behind the front.
through the northwest third of
. r~ced frequently in the past year · slon.' which Is · charged with
tights legislation.
for
the
weekend.
Temperatures
EarUer in the night the front
as a candidate to head the monitoring federal laws and
"We have said all along that we Ohio before dawn and colder air
wanted to name a new chairman changed precipitation from rain wandered back and forth across will slowly fall Friday night and
probably even some on Saturday.
and reinvigorate the commission to snow. The trend was expected Cleveland, · shifting the winds
By
S~nday ·morning, readings
from
south
to
northwest
and
back
to
continue
the
rest
of
the
but we had to have a vacancy to
reach the teens.
should
temperature
up
and
pushing
the
do ,II," Fitzwater said. "They'll morning for the remainder or
·
talk about the future of the Ohio.
'
commission. The president will
empbas~ his support for the
· work of the commission and his
NEW YORK !UP!) - CBS· and others close to Rooney have
Interest In seeing It as an ·
'
'
may shorten commt:ntator. Andy been going on this week.
effective Institution."
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
The
thett
of
two
old
radiators
from the Richards and Son
Rooney's suspension because or
The newspaper quoted sources
Fitzwater added, "We ' have Warren businessman has been
Company
at
Letart
Falls
is being Investigated by the·
Gravel
sentenced to two years In prison
television. viewer protests and as saying that CBS management
felt that It could be stronger and
Meigs County Sheriff's, Department. According to a report from
rears or other network compel!· still was trying to decide bow and
more forceful in representing the for committing fraud to obtain
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the radiators ·were stolen Sunday
mUIIons or dollars In loans from
tlon io "60 Minutes," Newsday when to end · the suspsnslon of concern• or minorities and others
afternoon but not reported until Thursday.
·'
said Friday.
• Ro'oney .'
·
• andweexpectittooperatelnthilt Bank One.
On
Wednesday
evening,
deputies
too
a
report
or
adeercar
William F. Llvorlo, 48, had
The newspaper quoted sources
Network officials did not com'
fashion ... .' We think It can do a
accident Involving Hershel W. White, of Pomeroy. White was
pleaded guilty to both bank fraud
better Job."
as saying the droll essayist, ment Immediately on the report.
traveling north on Route7 approximately one quarter mile from
suspended by CBS for three
Tbe paper said Burke teleTbe spokesman said B.ush an!l and Income tax fraud. He was
the
Intersection or Forest Run Road when a deer jumped Into the
months , for COfllments about phpned Rooney and asl«!d him to
Fletcher would also· diScuss the sentenced Thur$day by U.s.
path
or his 1988Ford Escort. The accident occurred around 9:30
Dis trlct Judge Thomas D.
blacks, might ev.e n be back as come for a meeting and they m.e t . civil rights amendments prop.m
.
There was moderate damage to the vehicle. W.hlte was not
Lambros.
early as March 4.
at ' the CBS News broadcast posed by the administration In
Injured.
Joyce George,
Attorney In
Many viewers have expresaed · cepter on West 57th Street on
lhewakeotcrltlclsmforalackof
Sheriff Soulsby also reports that 23 year-old Timothy L.
opposition to·the.suspensjon, and
Wednesday.
ac;tlon following Supreme Court charae of the Northern District of
$mlth,
ol Stewart, fonnerty ofPordand, w.uarr8tedThursday
Ohio, laid L!vort..o oblal!ll!d loans
Jl!ewsday quoted sources as iay;·we had a very Jlleasant · ' decision widely regarded as
evening
on a bench warrantfram Me~CoutyCol.lrtforfallure
lng CBS was concerned at lower , conversation ·and he condeded tumln&amp; back affirmative action llle&amp;ally .. an officer or part10
complY
with court orders. Smith Is lildpd In !be Meigs County
owner of E.utern Resorts, Bo
ratlnp for "60 Minutes" since · th8t thi!I'! wU JI.Othin, personal.
praerams. ·
,
Jail.
.
the suspension, and fear that
I •like him fine," Rooney told
Fletcher's name has been Anthony . Land, Bo Anthony,
ABC would move It• hiJh-ranked Newlday. .
bandied about 11nce at least Resorts Consultants of America,
Euro Imports, Bo Anthony Im·
"America's FUMieat Horne VI·
,RoOlley said "It would not be March 1989 when .former chair·
Republican voters will have a choice In the May Prbnary for
ports, Uvorlo Motors and c&amp;s
di!OI" pJ"Oil'lm opposite the lpaccurate" to SIIY his return to man, WWiam Barclay Alleb was
state senator from 11\e 17th District and representative !rom the
Real Estate.
PfOIII'am.
"60 Mlnulll!ll" Is Imminent.
entangled In a controversy over
Sftb District.
He was accused tomakiJri loan
New York Newsday said that
But he said he did not know kidnapping charges relating to
At filing deadline Thursday afternoon, three Republicans had
appUcatlons for properties tha~
talkl tnvoMq Rooaey • David when the suspension would be an ac!Optlon cue on an Jndlaq
· Continued on page 10
Burke, president or. CBS News. ll*'ed.
·
·
reservation.
. Individuals hall paid lor In cash.

.

Bush 'to nominate Fletche-r for post

Cold front ·reaches Buckeye ·State

.{tooiJey suspe~sion
may be lifted early

Man sentenced
in bank fraud case

Local -news briefs---.

Deputies probe theft

u.s.

Legislt.ztive contests •ured

..-·Y

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