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                  <text>Pta•

10-The Daily Sa 1tinel

Pomero~

Ml •rar ort Ohio
'

,.--Local news briefs---.
Continued from page 1
Bill Nease, Dave Baker, Dick Owens, Chuck Kitchen, Dr. Nick
Robinson, Tom Reed, and Joe Clark.
'
Tickets are also available at Royal Oak, Simon's Plck·A·Pafr,
Mlddeport Departt'tlent Store. Jennifer Sheets, Bahr Clothiers,
and The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce office. Add! donal
Information on the event may be obtained by contacting the
Chamber orrtce, 992·5005.

Immunization ·dates changed

•

The Meigs County Health Department . wlll give free
Immunizations In March but. the announced dates have been
changed, Mrs. Norma Torres ..R. N. nursing director. reported
.
today .
The change was necessary to allow for other special $!riles
With physicians from Children's Hospital.
The shois will be given i)!ls month on March 16 and March 27
and Include measles, mumps, rubella, polio, tfffi, dlptheria,
,
·
pertussis and tetapus.·
. Mrs . Torres reminded that since kindergarten and first grade
registration will be taking place soon, parents should be
thinking about bringing their children's Immunizations up to
date.

Deputies probe theft of items
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department Is Investigating a
theft report from Roy Pierce, ol the Racine area. Pierce
reported to au thor! ties that he had disCovered that someone had
stole.n a spare tire and wheel from his 19!!3 Foi'd. The date of the'
theft Is unknown.
'" ·
·
On Saturday, Jake Holman , also of'!he .Racine are!!. reported
that sometime early Saturday mol'l!ing, a .set of new brake
shoes was stolen from his vehicle 'Which was parked at his
residence near Racine. This incident is also under
Investigation.
'

Haggy sentenced to prison

Walter J . Haggy II has been sentenced to prison by Meigs
Common Pleas Judge Fred crow III on charges of forgery and
grand theft. Haggy had p1eaded guilty to the charges In a
previous appearance before Judge Crow. Haggy was sentenced ·
to six months In prison on each charge, to run consecutively,
with credit given for six days previously served In the Meigs
.County Jail. He was fined $200 and ordeted to make restitution
In the amount of $600 to West VIrginia Chipping; Inc. Haggy was
remanded to the custody of the Meigs County Sheriff pending
transportto the Orient Correctlonallnstltutlon.
,
·
In another court matter, Kelly Spaulding waived rights to
trial, Indictment and counsel, and entered a vo)untary plea Qi
guilty to a charge of aggravated assault as contained In a blll of
Information. Sentencing bas been scheduled for April 11 and
Spaulding released from custody on a $5,000 persQna)
recognizance bond. Spaulding was referred to Adult Probation
Officer Phillip McKinley for preperallon of a pre-sentence
_Investigation.

Abel fund raiser set Friday
StatP Rep. Mary Abel's campaign committee wlll host a ·
political lund· raiser on Friday, March 9, at the American
Legion Hall, 520 W. Union St., Athens.
Vern Riffe, longtime' spea·k er of .the Ohio House of
Representatives, wlll be on hand, along with other dignitaries
,
from Columbus.
Abel, a Democrat, is 's eeking to retain a seat in the State
House of RepreSentatives (94th District) . Abel has emphasized
education as a top priority since assuming the unexpired term
of JQylnn Boster Butler last year. She has also Introduced
legislation dealing with the
problems of solid waste
management.
,
The fund raiser wlll begin at 5 p.m. Tickets are available for a
$25 donation and can be obtained at the door.
For tutther Information, contact David Frey, campa,lgn
tl'easurer, 594·3574 or 592-4007.

T11

din/. Ml!ch I. 1!!0

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'

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'

Ohi9 Lottery

Snow forces. ·schools to close in· Northeast
.
.
.
By United PreM lateraa&amp;IDul
morning commuters Jn parts of l"ay) 80 along the 1011th shore of
Snow closed schools II! the Connecticut and cau!M!d schoola make road travel euler.
Northeast and blanketed I'Qids ln . many communities to either
A snow1torm •struck Utah
along the Creal Salt Lake In Utah · ~ancel classes for the day or open
\he Creal Salt. Lake Is DOW·
Tuesday, while shOwers spread . later .than usual. Up to 3 Inches packed and' very •lick," NWS'
across the southern Plains and wu reported in New Canaan.
forecaster David Carpenter ald.
dry winds tossed sand arourW In
Salt and ~ding crews were
The snowfall began decr¢ulng
California's Mojave Desert:
dispatched ~11 befot:e dawn to around daWilllut Carpenter s&amp;ld
The National Weather Service overnight MOnday, dumping tile addltlonalacewnulatlons ol ~ to6
Issued an advisory for. freezing white stuff In ·the state's moun·
Inches )"ere possible In ,t he
drizzle that It warned could Ice talns and valleys. Nlne•lnches feU l mountal1111.
roads In northern Indiana. Rain·
In Little Cottonwood Canyon,
Skies were gen~rally clear
showers covered eastern Mls· east of Salt Lake City.
souri and southern Dllnols.
''The. Utah·' Highway P.atrol
reports that Inters late (High·
Snow made roads slippery for

alCIIII the Cf~l Lakl!l, with
temperatures falling to the llells
Ia Wleconsln and below zero In
MlchigaP.
I
' Scattered ralll fell aci'Ois aor·
theast New llbldco aad part of
the Texas Pan~le early Tues·
.day, and '!be weathe~ sen.Jce~­
.lssued a saow advisory tor ~h .
of the region. IJght rain also, ·
·. covered parts of Oklahoma and
Arkansas.
·

.rouDdup.·.

• PiC!k 3
562
Piek4
2112

•

----~------17eallier-.---------­
South Central Oblo
Partly cloudy Tueselay J!lght,
with a lowneai'30. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, ·with a chance of
showers and highs In the mld .40s.
Chance of rain Is 30 percent.
Exleaded f'oreetp*
Thursday lhroql) S-*urday
A chance of· rain Thursday and

Frlday, with fair weather on
Saturday. Highs will be In the 50s,
Thursday IIJid Friday and rang·'
ing from the mid 50s to the mid
60s Saturday. Overnig)lt lows will
range from the mid 20s to the mid
30s Thu)'Sday·momlng, In the 30s
early Friday and In ihe 40s · ,
Saturday morning.

'

Vot.40. No.21 o

.. ,~ 1880 •' '

•

.'

EMS has 16 Mo~day calls -·
Sixteen callS for assistance
were answered · on Monday by
-. units of the Meigs C9unty Emer·
gency Medical SerVIces.
At 2:01 a.m., Rutland went to
Meigs Mine No. 31 for Carl
Thompson who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Pom,eroy at 7: 28 a.m. treated
but did not · transport Todd
Norton at the scene of an auto
accident on Route 124. .
At 8: 58 a.n'l., Racine was called
to Trouble Creek Road 'for Mary
Kerns to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 11:13a.m. trans·
ported Georgia Watson from the
Overbrook .Center to ' Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Racine Fire Department at
11:26 a.m. transported F1orence
Circle from an auto accident on
County Road 35 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Rutland Fire Department at
11:45 a.m.hwa~ called to a brush
fire on Side ,Hill Road. ,Salem
Township Fire Department was
called at 12: u · p.m. to assist
Rutland.
Pomeroy at 11:50'a.m. went to '
Butternut Ave. for John Houck to

COUncl"l

'

•W•·

Aptnlicattons
• , , ·j Or prODTQ'IJl
·
"ll.·
.
W
l
r
be' acce,nted
unt;l
r,
. "' March· 22 ;

.

.

~75: WiDiaiDs •

~venues."
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI)
About 93 ~rcent of the pack·
Gov. Richard \Celi!S.te's $945
age
wlll be flnanced 'wilh long·
·
' million ca~ltal ' Improvements
term
revenue bonds. Interest
plan began rocketing through th~
, Ohio lf9use Tuesday, on Ita way payments on the bonds ·are the
to possible passage ~Y the end of onlycurreritobltgatlonslilcurred
by a building program.
'
the week.
Nedeff said S422 mtll!on of the
. The state Office of Budget alld
Mana&amp;!i!ment presen~ the two- appropriation would go toward
year building program to the malnllilnlng existing state
.. 1
.,
House Finance . Committee, facilities.
·or
.the
total
package,
$566
whlc)l scheduled a vote for !at~
Wednesday. That coul9 P!lt the mUlton·tsearmarkedforeoUeges
a 11d universities _ $89 miiUon
~pproprl;ttlon on the Ho~se fiiX!r
~ore
than ' the 8Qard of Reients
·
Thursday.
~uested.
., ·
Veroitlqa Nedeff, ~sslstant dl·
Rep.
Pat.
rick
'
sweeney,
' D· .
rectOr of qBM; told the commit·
tE:e; 'the governor's package Is ,Cleveland, chalr~an of the com·
" 1 "affordable, within
current mlttee, wryly observed that! !the

.

regents are not satisfied, "·they
have no shame."
.
Rep. · Daniel Troy, D·
WIUowlck, queatloned. the tnclu·
slon of $13.5 mUllon · for a
biomedical' research project In·
votvlng Case Western ~rve
University, a · private college In .
Cleveland.
Troy· said the state has not
awarded capital funding to prl·
vate· universities, and tl)at' the
University of Dayton and other
priVate colleges might want
!und!Dg Ill ihe future.
.But . Nedeff pointed out that
other Cleveland . publiC health
,facUlties are Involved In the
research, jus t1 fyl ng th.e

'

~,,-r-

'

~puties
'

aaa

To

'•"W

mar

,

,-, ''

Jtlarria8e · ._ .

.

•u;

'HIItellnlal
cni!'D *-• '"1'1 111"'" Rec!IJea of tile
arrived from ·
&amp;lie Jilin I rt. Pldtlnd llere Iii M&amp;rJ
rlpt, c:balrman of the '
J ... p'ee••nlal OOI!IIIIIItlee, dlllrtbulln1 tile flnl cookbook to
)IIIUie MJ41dft, Only a lbnl&amp;ed numbet of flnt onler cookboolla .
nraa111. ·A eecoad erder ollbe cooldloGkllhould arrive later IIIIa

mtn&amp;b. ,

· Loc8l.news briefs---.....

. ·' Boord hirel par~·time teacher

w••

' , Joyce~Ott~
employed u ahalt·tlme le~nlng !llsabllltles
'' teach« when the •Ealtern l.ocal ~d of Ellucatlon met In
weclal ses&amp;lori at Eu•rn High School Tuesday night.
The 'new jJosltJqn.wa• reQlll~ In order to brlna the district
Into complia~ With alate replatlona and was neces&amp;ltatzd
)lecauae of ei!J'I!Dme11.t lncreul!l, It !!'• explained by SupL Dr.
Dplel ..lllhli·
.
,,
c
•
· In olber aCtion the board adopted a resolution requesting a
one Y¥l extension of lhe.Potl Sel.'ondary Enrollment Option of
. ' Senate Btli 140.

, EMS ·hs. three ~Us i~
I

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f

•

.

·T hree oalll ...e adswered on Tuelday by unltl ot the ~igs ·
County Ealerp~ey Mldleal Smllcea.
·
Mlddlllport at 2:01 p.IJL waa called to Clles ter for Keith
Coatlnued on paae 5
·

menial Center to the Wayne ·
County Fire Rescue Association. :
The association would pay $1 :
to~ the 56 acres and in turn ·
provide fire safety training wlih· :
out charge for center staff and :
the staffs of other such centers. ·
Before adjourning until Wed·
nesday, the Senate also approved
leglslatioq making It a minor
misdemeanor to violate a dog· .
control ordinance or resolution '
adopted by county commission·
ers or township trustees.
The bill was passed ' 30.0 and :
sent to the governor.
·:
Both · the .House an~ Senate
adjourned untll 1:30 p.m .
Wednesday.

I

~

Wolfe refraining Iron! a. vote' oil. noted that workers .wm not
the lssl\e since the bid was from a continue to clP.an up spilled trash. :
relative.
Marshall David :E. Huddleston
Jeannetie Lawrence I!P~afed
lit~ present to request purchase
before council concernlng)ltt~r·
bt a:shlrl and trousers which was ·
lng and disturbance on the street aia tho'rlzed. Councilman Bob
by her business. M•yor Cleland
~ie .was also autho.rized, to
adVIsed that she coytd sl,gt~,. ,a
cli,!!Ck on prices for a portable
complaint against the o!tenelers. rjldlo;
Ditches which neeil ' cleaning
Several Items needed
by the
,..,_.,
'
were discussed by.councll and It
s .. .,d commissioner were au tho·
was decided . to authqrlze ,,th~ tized for purchase but requested
street commissioner \0 get a
reiialrs on a weed eater and
crew started on the project right mpw"' were tabled until a later
away.
,
meeting.
Representativa, from Buck·
Fire Chief Robert Johnson was
eye . Adminlstt:a'~ , Insurance, · Jll'S:!I)ed permission to purchase
· •. Ir~IIID •. Jf;!!f,f present at the ~ ~alr-IICJI.fpr the'(lump~n·one
tn:eerltlli' 'to' diiCUII the new ·of the fire trucks.
Insurance cove~age of th.e vii·
It was reported '!hat !he natural
!age. Arrangements were made . gas bill for the fire department Is
by council to ,lnclqde -the !Ire·
too high and the chief was asked
men's gunshot buDding on Lo~g to confer with department
Hollow Road.
·
members on how that . might be
DISCU14lon on time which reduced.
,
workers are haylni to spend . Jeff Thornton was appointed to
cleaning up at certain places head the shade tree committee .
when picking· up refuse )lias which will also be In cl)arge of
.discuSsed and It was decided that li.ndscaplng projects. The next
residents muscit place all refuse meeting was set for April 2 at
Jn suitable containers. for easy ·wlilch time bids will be opene&lt;l
handling by the workers·.
. , for the sale of the backhoe.
CouncillldVIsed that according
Attending were Mayor Cleto the ordlna11ce, the contaJners land, Clerk Jane Beegle, Council
are to be of a suitable strength to members, Robert Beegle, Henry
withstAnd the elements .and are Bentz, Ron Clark, Carrol Tea: '
to be placed at the curb. Coopera· ·lord, Thornton and Wolfe, along
tlon of the customers Is being with Fire Chief Johnson.
requested by Council and It was

COLUMBUS, .' 011,~ (UPI) It also contains .$1 million 'as
The admlnlltratloil· of Cciv. Ri-' tliesulle's shareorthei:ontrover·
Opal Conger, qf Route 2,' chard Celeste has Introduced a
sial "Son of Heaven" Chinese art
Racine, notified the Meigs $150 mUllein supplemental approCounty Sheriffs Deparlment on priations bll~ mainly to bead off
Tuesday that her outblilldinl Oil • a projected lhQrtfallln Medicaid
..
· Sharo1,1. HoUow Road had beett f\Uids.
In
offering
the
bill
In
the
Senate
entered and a chain saw and·
Tuesday,
the
state
Office
of
numerous hand tools taken.
Budget and Management also
'
According to the re~t, the ·reduced ita revenue estimates
rear door . of the building was lor fiSCal 1990-91 by S37 mUllon,
kicked lntogalnentry, Invl!ltlga· matniy because of a lag In
lion Is conllnul!lg II! to the matter. co~raUon toea: · · ·
The supplemental approprla·
· Brenda Woodruff, Ebenezer. tion ' Is scheduled' for a hearlnc
st., Pomeroy; reported Monitay Wednesday ill the Benate Fl· .
to authorities that' her autbmo- nance Committee; and Is ex·
blle had broken doWII · ancl wu "pected to move lwiftly thrqh
parked at a residence at 'Antlq· the Legl.slature.
ulty: When she returned to' the
The bill will require oo add!·
vehicle on Monday, ·she dlseo- tiona!' revenues. Financial holes
vered that the radlocauetie will be plllfil!d by shlfllnc
player, a radar detector and the unspl!nl money from Other areas
battezy had been reiiiOved.
of tilt! budret, 111d Lee Walker,
. ' '.
director of the QBM.
Deputles are alJO lnvettlptlng
The . ap)II'OP,rlatlon shltts $116
tbe reported theft of three bap of million more to the Ohlo Depart·
Pro-Mix potting lou from the meat of Human Servlcet. Of that,
:fohn IDII fann at Letart Falll. $92.7 mlllloala nee !led toofflet an
The theft occurred Friday but . bnpelllitnaahOrtqe In the Midi·
wu nbt r,pc;~rted until Monday-.
cald aceD~~~~!, wllldl provtdu
The department II cllecktna llealltl care tot t11o11 unable to
· Into the report of a t!Dielt calf pay.
Ver0111Ca Nldeff, alalltant dl·
from the Macle Qeek fann at
rectar
of the OBM, Aid tu.l
. Great Bi!nd. Act.'ordlna to !he
report, the Hereford bullcalfwu .m~loa Ia added to tbe Depart·
meat of ftellallllltatloa ud Cor·
Ito~ OB Thunday.
rec:11oulMipt for an llliCetl of
.
Ctlldy ~. . . . . . liNd.
Ntltft .... tuA . . . . . .
Loq Bottom, , ..... li111 dlllt let·
Dr•l I •,
urday night. - - tclel! a addld to llle
~- . 1114 a~ llound · ~- fer ··~ .. liNd
frGm ba' )lh...il:y.
' . . ' crllllll!aJI ..................
dltfly . tor 41'111
ADd- ...... Sberjlt , . _
,
M. Soullby wanta ~ 111'!11 tile ~
A.Gillill QI.JefM!MIIIUIJ
bnpcll'taiiCe of l'tlld•ta neerdlq tile Mrlal nlllllllln for IUM. for
5 -~ 1ollu
clilin . Aw,, VCR~
It ·II ......... 1'111. . . . . H • .
bnpartut that 110111e IMilll ,llf
•IDiot far An~ert~ora
ldendtlcatlon beavallablethotild bawaano.l Oaa a iiMw to be
the ltemJ be atolen.
tta~r&gt;ed Ia Columbat.

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n
1
·::. 'u r.·., uante .

.

26 Centa

A Multlmodil Inc. NtwiPAP••

·Supplettaent81 budget is introduced ·

of tools .

··-:

r••••••'•'• •••••••••••••••

w.

'

probe theft

_ _ Area -deaths _ _

R. Trent

•

paving projects to be
carr)ed out, wltl), Issue 2 monies
were. discussed . at Monday
·, night's meeting of Racine VIUage
.. Council at the Star MIU Park
building.
· The need for JIOislbly stripping
. the pavement jllo"' Tl)lrd Street
so that the street will not be
, h!lher than the sidewalk was
discus~ and Mayor · Frank
Cleland was autliOriZed to cheCk
· with Cpunty Engineer Phil ·Roberll for a recommendation on
someone to do that. T~ Street
Is one of the Village •.treets
.IC~led for bot mix paVIni
some\lme-.tllll.siiDUIIi!r,lt.was:
polniAidouttlllt tblrlwlll~·
. bly be enouah Issue 2 money over
the five year period to resurface
all of the streets.
Clerk Jane Beegle ·repOrted
that the slate tax commissioner
baa Jll'&amp;nted tax exemption for
· the five acret of !and •recently
purcbaledfOI'theStarMIUPark.
·It wu noted that there Is now 11
acre~ for the Star Mill Park as
well as a buffer zone for the
Village water system's well field.
Sealed bids from D. R. ~ush,
Portland, and Wolfe's Carage at
Racine submitted bids on the
repair of •the Village dump truck
were opened at the tneetlilg. ·The
bid oftbe Wolfe's in the amount of
$2,943 was accepted for partnnd
labor, with CoUJI(liJman Larry

.~j,eUmg ~olitest·

Mein .anno'uncemen•:o ·

.

2 Section,, 1 8 Pogoo

expelldlture.
would Increase by a , specific
Jan Skunda of Owens Tech1!1· amount or percentage each ;vear.
caiCoUege,aslred,thecommlttee
The biU gives school districts
for an addll1ona112.75 million for · lacking real estate tax growth an
a new building on the college's option for offsetting Inflation,
Findlay campu. She said enrol·
said the sponsor,·Sen: ,Richard
lment Is Increasing by M p,e~t Finan, R·(;lnclnnatl.
t"ls spring over last sprinc. and
"Probably 90 percent of the
that · studenta are sitting In the districts won't even want to
balla between classes because of consljler It," said Sen. Cooper
a lack of space.
Snyd~r. IJ.·HIIIsboro, chairman
In the Senate, leaJslatlon was of the Education and Retirement
approved allowlnc vQters to Comnilttee. ·
pass, In a single election, up to , . The measure was p~sed ~1·0
five property tax levies that
and sent to 'the 'House.
would be phased In over a period
Sen~ tors also voted, 30.0, to
of time.
.
·
concur,ln House amendments to
Voters also could approve a a · bill transferring state-owned
single property tax levy that land at the Apple Creek De~elop-

~treet

Stocks ·

..

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Issue II funds for street
.projects Racine C~yncil topic ,

.

to mow their lawns at least three ment . at MO. $75 and
;
times a year, at specific times. deperidlng uPc)n'&lt; the tyjle' · of
·
:
·•
,
,
• '
Such an ordinance eXIsts In other perml~ ·w 11 nted .• ' ·•
. ·. ·
Becky. Williams, datfghte~ · or'·. · ~ky ~eler~ Kelley Crueaer."
communities the mayor pointed
Coun:c,lllnlln . :r'hom¥ Werry ~nlse and Randy ,William$ • . S•m ·CowU. Rll:hle Hagen; l,ll·;r
out. Councilman Larry Wehrung reported he.ls still checking Into LangsVIlle, Is the Meigs Junior ·' chelle Ward, .Vanesssa Camp-··.
suggested that "something of training classes which are proHigh SchCl\11 spelling champion..
ston, Ronda · Raymond, Andrea
this type coUld be specified In the Vlded by the Ohio Bureau of
Runner-up Is Jennifer Car·
McDonald, Jnon Ceorg'e, Jer!:'od':'.
proposed zoning ordinance" Criminal Investigation cBC!) to man, daughter o1 Dennis and
Douglas, and Billy Eakins . .
whlc.h Is presently under review law enforcem!!nt personnel who . Sarah.Carma11, P.omeroy.
Cookbooks IIITive
for the. Village. ·
wish to update their ltriowledge of
· Becky will now 09mpete for
The Pomeroy sesquicentennial
It was reported that. parking firearms and related Jaws. BCI
champion In the Mejgs County
cOokbook$, "Treasured Recipes •
meters ate being replaced provides_ the training free; with spelling bee to be held on March ;of the Past" ,have arrlved.·ftorn' .
'
· throughout the vllll\ge and that the only expense to the Village 12 at 7: :j9 p.m at Southern High
the printers.
continued rrom page 1 .
new yearly parking permits are being for ammunition.
SchooL
Those who have ordered cook·
available from the p&lt;illce depart·
AlsoWerryreportedoncoststo
To win at her school, Becky
books may piCk, them up at the .
preparing to rake the state's case
Netzley also questioned a two·
the Village for a gasoline tank for corrected the ·word ''le·s lon"
,
to the Supreme Court. "It' s not a year '$30 million contract entered
0
use
by
village
personnel.
CounciL
misspelled
by
Jennifer,
and
then
-~
~=~.o~rcbym:O~~:tln~l~~~:
:;
matter of Mr. Kane sltting.on his
by the Ohio Lottery Commission
, agreed to lmitall. )he gasoline w~nton to spell the next word, "II· ' Dmon at The Dally Sentinel.
•.
hands and billing the state for it,"
with Marcus Advertising Inc. of
tank
uolE!III·
It
fs.determlned
that
able"
to
become
the
school's
:
For
~ole
whO
wish
to
purchase
'.
he said .
Clevelal)d, for advertising and
Dally stoek prices
the vlliq'l! clllnot- affOrd
.
the
champion.
,
.
kbo
.
ok
h
1
$6
50
~
Netzley Indicated the state · promotion,. without . competitive
·
Th
111
b
a coo
, · t e ·cost s . . •
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
required Insurance for the tank. ·
e
spe ng ee was con· · More ll)fol'l!latlon may IN! .0 !). •
should Mnslder.ending the legal
bidding.
Bryce'and Mark Smith
Clerk .Brenda Morris Is to check dueled by 'the reading ·and
tal ned by conlactlng 'Mary Pebattle. since It has recovered $135
Ronald Nabakowskl, director of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
on
the
lnsurancecosts.lfthetank
spelling
teachers,
Suzanne
.
well at the Chamber Qf Vom·
mUllan - more than the $129
of the lottery, said Marcus had
l.
s
Installed,
It
will
be.o
.
'"'
.
r.
a
ted
by
Bentz,
Carla
S!lelens,
and
Jeanne
·
mUllan It spent In balling out the
done "excellent" work since the , Am Electri~ Power , ............ 30\&lt;J .
,.,..
·
merce Offlee in p omeroy,
a
·
switch
Inside
tl)e
pollee
depart·
Bowen,
Debbie
Brel!nan,
princl·
thrifts.
·
lottery's Inception and was tak· AT&amp;T ........ ......................... 39%
merit..
'·
'
pal, su(lerVIsed 'the competition·. ' 992 ·5005 ·
"So you will let Mr. Warner
lng only 11 percent as a commls· Ashland 011 ........... ............. 35%
The book conlalns over. 400 ,;
The other par tl c 1pants were
touncllman Larry Wehrung
"oldtlme" recipes from famUieli ,.
and ·Mr.' Schiebel walk away
slon Instead of the advertlsln~ Bob Evans ............... ,'....,. ..... 12%
.rejleried a request frotn the car Allison Lee. K~nny · Flowers.
of the area, as well as old 1
from· prison when they stole
industry standard gf 15 percent.
Charming Shoppes ..... .......... 93;4 clubat'Chestertousetheparking Tony Brown, David Pierce,
money from the depositors of the
"We don't want to ~tart from
fashioned ret)'ledles and cures . . ,;·
City Holding Co..... ... ........... 13
lot,
possibly
both
the
1,1pper,
and
:
.
.
.
state of Ohio?" asked Cele·
1
scratch with a brand new Federal Mogul ............,. .. , .... 17%
brezze. pointing his finger · at
agency," said NabakoWski, ad·
lor .a car show later in
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ... .... .... .... 34')1 lower-lots.
the year. Council approved the
-e~
~
NelZJey. "That's excactly what
ding that "It probably wouldn't . Heck's ...................................3
request
but
sugaested~
that
car
.,
_.
•
.
•
H
1
you're saying."
be' nearly worth the trouble."
Key ,Centurion ..... ............... 13\&lt;l club officers ·discuss possible
PennU. av~lable ·
exception or ,the $tiO area; and :
Lands' End .......................... 19 · dates with members of the
. ·Signs are going up to designate $175 to park !ifany parking meter · !
Limited Inc......... .... :., .. ......36% Pomeroy Nferchants Association
the west sldeoffomeroy's lower anywhere In the Village.
•
..
Multimedia Inc .................. .. 75
arid Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial
parkll!g Jot for "permit parking
Rax Restaurants .................. 1% Committee, before . making a
only." Anyone wishing to pur· To meet tonlcbt
· .
,
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... : ...... .15\&lt;J final decl,alon on a !late.
will
lie
In
Keebaugh
Cemetery.
chase a permit may, do ·so at the
·.PomeroyChapter •l86, Order of . '
Arthur Spencer
Shoney's 111c ........................ . 11
Frjends may .call at the funeral
Pomeroy Pollee Department the Eastern Star, will meet at ' !
Council is looking for anyone In
Star
Bank ........................... 18\&lt;J PomeroY who might be Inter·
from7a.m. to3p.m.Costsforthe 7:30 tonight !Tuesday) at the · :
Arthur L. Spencer, 71, of Rout!! home 7 to 9 p.m. tod;~.y and 2 to 4
Wendy's Int'l. .... ....... ........... 4% es ted in laying out ball fields for
and 7 to 9 p.m Wednesday.
annual perrplts are S69 for the MasoniC , Temple "In Chester. 1
3. Pomeroy, died Monday at
Worthington Ind ...... ............ 20% use by the younger ball teams In
west side of the lower Jot; $75 for Then! ~Ill be Initiatory practice. ;
Camden Clark Hospital, Par· . ,. • f ., ·-r
·kersburg, W. Va.
··
the Village. Anyone who would
anywhere along the river side of Members are not required to : ;
like to assist with the fields ' the upper and l~r lots, with the wear c.Hapter dresses.
!
· He was a retired employee of'' ·.'Defyl Northup
Kaiser Aluminum Co. and , also · ~
·
......_ __ , North 78 Clif
should
Councllnian
·Bill'
1 ....,.,~
was a farmer.
up, ,
•
Young. contact
Co)lncl~· hopes
to develop
Veterus Memorial
Born on May 27, 1918, at ton, • ·early today, ~h S,
fields at the· Monkey Run P!U'~ ,.
Monday admissions - Car los
1
t:::\ .:_
r
•
and
also bt!liind the old tennis •, . '
Btdwe11 he was the son of the Ia te .. 1990,.at Plcasarn Valley Hospual.
Snowden, Pomeroy; Jolin E.
CO)lrl on , Ei!Sl Main . St. The
Kirtley ' Spencer and Tressle
BOrn' June 1, 1911 in Harrison Houck, Pomeroy·.
Meadows Spencer. He was a County, he was a son of the late · Monday discharges - Robert village ,would provide the grad'
lng arid ' put in ·back stops If
member of the St. Paul Metho· 'I'ItOmat ' and Mary (Canlerbury) Beegle, Guy Thoma, William
volunteers
would just place the
dlst Church at Tuppers Plains.
Northup.,
. ,
.
Coleman, Dwight Spencer.
fll!lds.
Youngpolntedoutthat
the
Survivors Include his · wife
Sumvmg are · his wife, 01;\lbiC
work
needs
to'be
done
as
soon
as
Margaret Spencer, Pomeroy; (Rickard) .Norlhup: two . sons llld
Library
new8
possible In order to J;le ready for
'
five daughters, Sarah Josephine · daughters-m-law, Thomlli lnd RDib
,, , Family Practice
this year's ball season.
·
Shone, Toledo; Audrey Jean Northup, Gallipolis Ferry, Gary llld
Let the hunt begin!
· The probiein of dogs running
..
Spencer, Columbus; Connie Bal· Donna Nortbup, Clifton: dlree
'
'
March Is Fine Free Month at
loose ln•. the Village was dJs ..
lard, Chesterville; Brenda dlualiten and sons-in-law, Lucy
,
the Pomeroy and Middleport cussed, buiJ!odeclslonwaamade
.,
Weber, Pomeroy, and Loretta and Gerald Johason, ~. Miry
Libraries and loealllbrary users on bdw to el)mtnate the problem, ~ . ,
·
Brown, Pomeroy; 10 grandchild· and John Lilchlicld, New Haven,
are
being asked to hunt out all .other than the mayor wd. he
Monday~ ruesday, 'Thursday and Friday
r e n , and four great. Carolyn lllld John Beaver, Pomeroy,
books that might belpng to the
9a.~. • 5 p.m.
•
grandchildren.
Obip; 14 pndcllilcbn, llld aiDe libraries. There wtn be no would advise Pollee Chief Jerry '
1
· Rought to contact the county dog
Also surviVIng are four sisters, gn:at·pldchildreo.
charges for returning overdue warden whe~er loose dogs are
.Wednesday
Eunice Ml\lklff, F1orlda, VIolet
He wu preceded in dellh by •
books during the entire month.,
. '·
,
. 9 a.m. • Noon
Parker, . Long Bottom, Mildred infant sm, Mi:IJKI ~""'
However, the fJne.free IJQUcy seen.
. A propolal · to give Village ·
Holler, Mansfield, and Mary· · two graadsoDs, Mic:hao1
applies only to printed materials, employees a five percent across'
l
.
•
'
Jane Osbourn, Washington, W.
and em, Northup; four 1i11er1,
not Videos. There wtllltlll IN! a $1 the board ralee was' ta bleil until ·
:, Appointments ana :Walk-in-s·Welcome
va.; one step-sister, Jessie Me;~- Jie .Yestcr, MD Fowler, B!Juhedl
a day!lnefot'eachoverduevideo.
the
next
meeting.
·
•
dows, Spence,
Va. and five
Wauah. and Nellie ltcAierll; IIIII
And finally, themay'or'sreport
brothers, QueDton Spencer, New two bnJiben, Sh.._ ad Dlnlis
of'$2,538 1t1 fi~~N and fees to the
Mexico; Cuy Spencer and Rl·
Northup.
·
Office Staff:
village for then\onth olFebl'uary
cbard Spencer, Tuppers Plains;
He WIS a member cl tbo. LAtbor
.,
Lisa Thome, LPN
The Meigs County Common wu approved. ·
V!rill Spencer, Somerset; and Lot:al S43 iD IJt~, W.Va.
.,.
·'
'
Kirtle)' S"ncer, Crow City. .
Service will~
1:30p.m.on Pleas Court CUI of' Tamara
Gail Hoveatter
Hawley, a minor, by .her next ·
. Belldft hll parents, he wu ~.. ""&gt;' It llio Fclllu
end
p;wceded In death by two broth· Fuacni Home. willa die Rev. Llny belt friend, Unda Hawley,
'
l:.inda trent ·
era. Earl and J~trry Spencer.
GWand oM
Burial will be M against Jeffrey Acree, hu been
Steplien R. Tatterson, Po!ll•
'
'
settled and dllml&amp;led. The c.,e roy, ..-ct JIQbyn D. Tatter1011,
Fuaeral services will be held
tile Orllilm Cemlluy.
Tbunctay at 1 p.m at the Ewing
Ailll*
Clll 11 ille funml ' , was mIlia kenly rep:~rted as Hartford,; W,\fa., have fllell to
.138 Main St., ~~w .Haven, WV • (3Q4) 882-31,~
'Funer~ Home. The Rev. Don ·llome 1'uesday mniaB from 6 10 9 Hawley against James Acree In :M:eJ&amp;S comlnoli'Ple&amp;S Court for a ;·
Formerly Bend Area MedicaH:enter
Sunday's Time-Sentinel.
Arder Wll otnctate and burial p.m.
dissolution of their marrtaae.
'--------:--...:...--.......-~------..,-

Hospital news

•

Pomeroy~Middl&amp;pon, Ohto, Wedn-.ley. March 7. 1990

State ..-.

l

·,

Celeste's capital construction bill on the move

Veterims Memorial HosJ)ltal.
Chester Fin! Department was
called to a brush fire on Keno
Road at 1: '07 p.m.
, WEATHER,M AP- Alate wtater lltQnn wtU.pnad a .mjxt,ure ci{ ·,
· Rutland at 1: 27 p.m. went to ' rain aad freezlnc rain acr0111 lbe Norib'"' Pl~a Balli ,.W ,)
Route 684 where they treated but • }lreceed the system Ia the South . .A seeoDd wealller 1)'8&amp;em. Is .
did not transport Gerald Domovlnc ollllllore In the Paclftc Nortbwesl, brlqiDJ ram to IOftr ,. .
nahue. At 7:22 p.m., Rutlanc!
'elevatloos aDd saow to the mouatal•. Cool and dry coildltlo• will •
transported Joe Reeves from
ecintlnile over'the Ohio Valley aad New Englaild
(UPI)
•,
Meigs Mine No. 2 to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospnal.
At 10:14 p,m.. Chester Fire •
Depa~tment a,Jid Tuppers PlaiD!'
l' "·
EMS were called to an •·auto
accljlent op Route 248. Edn;~ ·.
, .
Driggs was taken from thescen.....
,
,
•
to·St. Joseph's Hospital. .
Applications for 'the multlflora Conservation District and. the '
TUppers Plains Fire Depart.'
,ose co&amp;t-share prokram will~ Cooperatl'(e -Exte~lcin Service. Is ~
mentat10:18p.m. was called tea
taken by the Meigs SoU and a requirement.
·
.
brush fire on Success Road.
Water Conservation District ~
Control of the multiflora rose '
Middleport at 10: 54' p.m. went · ginning Friday and continuing must be maintained for a min·
to the Overbrook Center forOkey .. through March 22. •
!mum of two years following the
Cart to Veterans Memorial
Rules for the program will be year of the cost-share treat·
Hosplt;~J.
..
the same a_s In .previous years. ''m ents, 11 was reported.
·
Pomeroy at 11:11 p.m. trans· ' Thoseapplylngmust•beacooper:
According to the rules, resl· ,
ported Jared Ridenour from a
ator of the Meigs SoU and Water dents . must have at least one
car,. a~ldenl .. on Route. 7'· to · Conservation District , a,nd be equivalent acre of multiflora
Vete~ans Memorial Hospital.
·,,willing to follow a conservation . rose to qual.lfy and the cost-share
At; ,ll: 32 p,m., Rutland was · p!an 9n' th9se i~lds · In which rale Is $100 per equivalent a~re ..
·
Residents may slgn 'up for the
called' to New Uma. Road for · treatme11t.ls 'appcoved.
Rl&lt;;hllrd Conkey to O'Bleness·
Attendance at a work$1J9P on ' Prolll'amattheMSW~D.o~eop
Memo~lal H011pltal.
, multiflora rose control span·
the ~nd floor of 't~e F,a p:pers .
sorejl by the ~u : and Water
~nk bulld·l ng In Pomeroy ::''·
t
• • ~ Cohtinued from page

f .'•

.

....,..,.....

.d...... .

*·

eu

=

"'"'L ....)

w. ..

display which lost $1.7 million
during a six-month run In Colum·
bus last summer and tall.

�·.

'

"'

-~Commentacy .

....
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coun Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTEBESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~'h

sm~

~v

f"'T"'-',_....,..,,.,....,..,;;d,"""' '

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher

CHARLEN$ HOEFLICH
General .Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulltanl Publlllher/ControUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Iltland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words lana. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wttb
name, addreas and telephone number. No unsigned letters w111 be pub·
Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personaII·

;::.bed.

•·

'The ~even Deadly
Sins, of Budgeting'

'

·. ·

•

Is USSR priln~ for·r8mpa.)t crime?
WASHINGTON - · Tbe t11e ,m111tary loft l,t52; t11e IDteand Improved Soviet Ulllon 18 U· . riDrc 111iD11try pollei! loll 1,!182;
perlellclng a bit of Weatern cui· other pollee !oat 1,0311; bank
lure that the Eastern Bl~ would guards 1011296; the KGBlostl38;
just as aoon skip- an Increase Ia the ,foeroDot lost 28.
crlme.
Eltber the Soviets have ·slip, Accordlnetooursourceslnthe perytlneersorlllllru!Onelaamu·
Soviet UliloiJ, In too many cases sing a hup cacbe of weltpQns
•It appears that the pollee areln ' withOut meeting any mlstUce.
leaeue with the criminals, and. ·
Ae the weapona get distributed
~he crtmJnaJJ a,e part of a ra,-' to arlmlnals, tbe rate ·of violent
pldly growing organized . crime . crime In the Soviet Union takes
syndicate.
' ·on Western proportions.
~e!\tly.- durtng· a •Ingle 24·
One . who · bu publicly tie·
hour period In the western part of moaned the Increase Is top Soviet
the Georgian republic, weapons . fllminaker Stanlslav Govorunk·
were stolen from eight different hln. He makes action films and
pollee .•~tlons and the aecurl~ ..worka closely with· the pollee to
transportation lervice.
'The develop 1!11 plota.
thieves ll'illde oft' with 1,441 wea-' ~··He wrote a candid article for
pons, Including 56 machine guns. the Soviet magazine "Sovets·
the raids occurred wltiiOut the kaya Kultura" 'llrid our lntellt·
pollee .firing a sliigle 11hot. BPPa· gence sources tell UB that the ar·
rently.Mvlnlbeeri pald'oft. ·
tlcle made Mikhail Gorbachev
· : Using secret Soviet records, sit up and take notice. .
out source calculated the total
Govorukbln related the follow·
number of !!rearms "lost" or sto- lng encounters with crime that
len throughoul'the Soviet Union ·. he bad over a short period:
on the same day as the Georgian ·· -His neighbors bad saved
thetis occurred. Vrlous pollee most oftheir adult lives for a car.
They parked It lor 15 minutes,
training centers lost 2,069 I!IIDS;

r ·k

Anderson - ..J Dale '"

J 0C
ana
,. all
and tt wu siDleD.
shrink with horror looldn• at the
Govorukbln rented a room at a
lnnbcent face of a boy wbo, tocOuntry bouse for clnematoaelhet wttb bls fi1ends, raped bl8
araphers to work on a script. He
own inothtll'! And then there are
beard a notse downstalrl ·and
pictures Qf young iJrll With
rushed to tnvestliate. A. fellow
heavy makeUp. T)ley areouly 11·
film dh:ector had left her room · 12 years old, but they are prostt.
·ror five minutes, and It wu belq ·lutes. They were recruited tor
burglarized. The pollee admit to
the rich "sheiks" In Central
an Increase In' such hit-and-run
Asia," he wrote.
room burglaries; " When the rest·
"The wave of crime Is roliJne
dentteavestheroom,theybreak
over the country. the streeta of
In," Govorukhln wrote; "But · ourcltteaamelloflt. Tbelblev•,
that's today. Tomorrow, maybe
the muners, the klllen are rtaht
they'll just walk In, strangle the
on our doorstep. ~ot everybody
elderly resident and take what
understands that. Otherwise, tile
they want."
Coaaress of Deputies wauld have
-Govorukhln's cameraman
paid more attention to it."
lost a wallet and Important pap·
Govorilkhln concluded
by-ers to a thle!..'rhen tile bold thief
pleading for more ila•nost,
call~!~) him on the phone and otmore open~s. when II comes to
feredtoreturnthedoc\lmentsfor
talking about crtme and the solu·
money.
·
!Ions. Publication ·of articles
, GOvilrukhtn's · research takes
such as his Indicate that GOrb·
him through arlm pollee cases.
achev Is open to taking thllt dis·
"How can one stay calm while cusston public. .
looking at the photos ofthe dead
DAMAGE CONTROL - The
people who were skinned alive In failure of Drexel Burnham LamFergana? How can 'one not bert, the super Wall Street brok·
erage house that made a fortune
In junk bonds, has precipitated
emergency diScussions lnalde
the Cabinet. Top government of.
flclals are closely monitoring
Drexel's collapse for idgns that It
mteht spread to other large fl.
. nanctal lnstttutton$. Eyeh after
the Drexel Burnham Lambert
failure blows over, the long-term
perils remain.
Druel dreve the junk bond
market, creating more than 1200
billion In high-Interest, hlih·rlsk
bonds. A broad spectrum of fl·
nanclal Institutions, Including Insurance companies,
mutual
funds and· even ·savings and
loans, bec~e heav}r lnv~tors lh
tjle Junk bond. market. But over
the last year, that market haS
been fal\f!i"Jng.
. · ,
One source told us l)lat a dozen
more tnstltutlons may go·,IJell~·
up from the aftershocki of
Drexel's collapse. That Is why
many officials believe the Frexel
bsnkruptcy Is the beilnnlni, not
the end, of a major story.
·

By ~UD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) - Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind. , calls them
" The Seven Deadly Sins of Budgeting': and, by his standard,
President Bush is going straight to hell for violating all of them.
The scholarly Hamilton, chairman of Congress's Joint Economic
Committee, listed Bush's budget abuses during a recent hearing of
the House Budget Committee, which must soon draft its version of a
· .
·
flscal1991 budget.
' 'Let me ldentffy seven so1,1rces of Inaccuracy and Imprudence In
the pres ident's !budget) approach ;_ what I' would call' 'The Seven
;;
, Deadly Sins of Budgeting,"' Hamilton said.
First Is "smoke," those overlY optimistic ' and unrealistic
assumptions about rates of economic growth, Inflation.and Interest
. rates In Bush's budget.
" They start the process on the wrong foo( distorting everything
that follows ," Hamilton said.
He said the admlnlstratop's long-term forecasts "Invariably call
for rapid real growth and falling Interest rates, with the tantalizing
'
result that the deficit melts away just over the horizon."
Hamilton 's second budget sin Is " mirrors, " as In smoke and
mirrors.
;
.
·
" Mirrors," he said, are "deficit red\ICtlons that. appear bigger In
the fun house mirrors than ' in technicians's cold calculations.'' .
Among Bush's mirrors, he . said, ·are Pentagon ·"management
reforms." '
, 1
·· 11&lt; · •
The third sin Is "pennywtse and pound foolish," p(J!Icles " whose Ill
effects outweigh the 'budget savings."· Hamilton's examples Include
"the failure to provide ttle resources' obviously · needed :Cor
infrastructure Investments and forth~ Jndepted developtntg nations
and Eastern Europe."
i . · ·
'
,
Fourth Is ""pass the buck," which Involves shlftlng ·the financial
burden from the federal goverl\!llent to states and cities by cutting
programs. like sewage treat ent plant C!;)nstruction and public
housing modernization. .
.
•·
· • Fifth Is "cut now, pay later, !' sin Involving " policies that se.e m to
·
reduce the deficit now but make It worse In {uture years."
Hamilton said the prime culprit Is Busl!'s capital gains tax cut
proposal, which congressional studies sliow "would reslilt in revenue
losses In every year after t)le !list" In which If woutd add revenue.
,,
•
•
,l••
Sixth Is "shell games," or pollctes· "that claim to save money by
.
'
. Ohio high school students once
Sounds, Shapes, Motions: Expres- , ~nee working on. a research team · , vlded for students who 'live bey~
'm oving actlvttty from · one ' shell . to another.'' For example,
again this summer Will have the 'sing Yourself Throuili lite Arts, . and learn what Impact supercom·
dally ·commuting distance• .nte
eliminating indirect subsidies !o the Postal Service "would cut
opportunity
to
exiJ!Il!d
their
horl·
·
'Mathematics
ad
Scteoce;
lind
Su·
pulerS
are
havtilg
on
the
sciences,
on-budget outlays but .ratse off-budget outlays-by an equal amount' '
cost of room and me~ for a camzons at the Governor's Summer
'percompliters In TOdays Society. en81Jleerlng and thearts.
' - resulting In artificial savings .' &lt;
•
pus n!llldence hall It $tll.OO for a
lnsttt~te Proaram. . .
, ·One of tbe best upectl of the
Students learn how to.program
· Hamilton's final budgeL sin ls "non-starters" - proposals for
two-waeJ! ·program. Flaandal ~d
AI the Institute, glfted,and ta·
proanm 18 the tact that students tile most powerful and fastest su- also II avaUable for u- needing
·· spending cuts repeatedly '$.1ibmltted 'by ,Repu~Ucan administrations
len ted students ~an explore thett
P! to aie· the !lfiOUrces ot "The percomputer ID the world and pro- . aaall)ance. Tbei'e are .. no JnstnJc.
but repeatedly rejected by .the Q.emoctlitlc-co'lltrolled Coongress. ·
Interest In the arts,, agriculture, · 01110 tstate, pnlveralty and alao .. duce a supercomputer-geaerated · tlonal (ees.
"Together, practices of·&gt;these Seven-•lleildly Sins of Budgeting
sciences, )lumanltles, education
take advantage ot tbe aurround· video of their project Ill their se- ·
T1!e appllqatton deadline ts
discredit the president's budget~document.'" Hamilton testified. "I
tng.lndt,lstiial, scientific and cui· lected aras of science. This S1Jper· , April 6, with th~ final decision be; • believe that only $10 billion of :uw president's $36. btlllon of spending ,and, supercomputers In ways riot
often wsstble In h!gh school or· .,ural environment In Columbus. computer 3,000 to 5,000 ttn\es fas·
Ing made by the Ohio State dereduction and revenue Increases (for flseall991• are likely to offer
college seltll!rs.
The sessiOI\S are spoiJSO~ by ter than personal ~mputers.
· · '' ·· .
partments responsible for the
credible and lasting deficit rec'lu1:tion." ; .. ·:"" ': ·
.
T
he
two-week
programs,
all
·
·
Ohio
State's
Honors
Center.
,
Last
year,
students
In
the
suprograms. Deets to~ ·on admls·
He also questioned Bush's "no pew taxes" pledge, stnce Bush's new
taklnr
place·
Jp
,July,
offeF
areat
A
popular
course
'
ts
t&amp;e
propercomputer
proaram
also
went
budget requests $16 bllllon In revenue lnereases·and he accepted '$5.7
slons wUI be made by May 18:
opportunities for studenis with
gram Supercomputers In To· to the Center, tor Science and In·
, .btllton In new revenue last year '
-~ ,, ~ ' ·
' '· •
·
. Please contact me If you want
day's Society. This program dustry (COS!), learned team·
!)lore Information on. the Suin·
: :' "Slogans aside, we are raising t8lles , ''. Hamilton ·said. "But by: · high abtllty, .strong tqterest and
experience !n one. of the lnstl·
gives 20 high scllobl freshmen work at Camp Mary Orton High·
mer Institute Program, or tbe
requiring that It be done In hiding, we are Insuring that It
be·done
lute's program areas.
and sophomores the opportunity Ropes Course, let up the giant supercomputer. ·My, pboa' aumbadly. " .
::ntts.year's couraes Include Bto.
to work with Ohio's superompu- scoreboard at the Ohio Stadium her at the StatehOuse It (614) t66Hamilton proposed '•a balanced package of spending cuts for lower
technology
In
Food,
P~t
and
Ani·
ter. Th'at'a
opportunity .nor- and took home a highlight video 8156. You can get application ma·
priority functions and moderate tJIX Increases'' to obtain honest
mat.
Sciences;
lntepslve
Prosram
mally
reserved
for professional of tbelr two-week experiences.
terlals . by contactln1·. Elaine
.
deficit reduction that would restore credibility with the public.
In
tbelArts;
DlmenSIDD
of
Teach·
scientists
and
engineers.
· Houalng Is not Included In the Hamilton at 1224 KIDnear Road
''We must somehow create an airtight packag~- one that we can't
lng and Learning; 'Computers In
In this course, students learn to Governor's Summer Institute Pro.
wiggle out or," he said. "We will l)ave to put ourselves on record and
In COlumbus, 43212·11M. Her
Engineering;
'
Exploring
'
Africa:
use
a supercomputer, get exper~ gram llselt · However, rooms In phone nuymber Is (614) ~15.
on the spot with the public. ... We will need to craft th~tmechanlsm so
Land,' People
· and·• Cultures·
..· that It does not reward accounting games as the current process
university residence halls are proI
.
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~· 2-The o.lly ......
PomaO¥ M'1 'gpalt. Ohio
M8n:h 7. 1110

CAMP(

SWAMP~

a

The

go~emor's .· summer.institute.___;;:s;:,:.;_;
.en.:.... ;.,:Lo~~. ~·,£..
~

will

an

does .''

After llsteqtng to flamUton ' s si!IS list, House Budget Committee
Chairman l.eon Panetta: D.Callf. , said he wasn't su,re his panel could •
avoid all seven sins In the budget .It ·drafts.
·
·
·
"I don' t think we'll get to !leaven but maybe•we'll end up In
purgatory.' :.Panetta llatd. ,· ·
•·' . '
'. , ·
· .
For tile president, ho\Vever; making It to budget purgatory would be
'
·
a long, uphtl,l ~ll!nb (rom where he 11 now..

f.
'• f

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·

·
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/'

'

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a.

•,

BJ G. SPBNCEa OIIBOBNE
'lrlbull*alt Wdter
Hannan Trace's flrl) trtp to tile
district tournament In two years
turned Into a heartachi. 'and It
was delivered by the Eagles .
Beaver Eastern cashed In on
the Wildcats' numerous turnov·
ers tn , the first bait wltb a
run-and-gun at tack that put each
of Its starteu tn double figures,
which sent the EaJ)es on their
· way to a ·75-62· victory Tuesday
night tn the 'DivisiOn IV district
semlftllal game at Ohio Untversl·
ty's Convocation Cente,.
"Seventeen turnovers In the
first half. Tliat's why we lost the
eame," said Hannan Trace chief
Mike Jenkins of his crew, who
ended the season at 12·11.
The openlne minutes of the
contest looked promising for the
GaiUans, as a three-point shot
from the left corner by junior
forward Riehle Cornell survived
being tipped by an Eastern eager
en route to the nylon In the first .
mtnute, giving the Wlld.cats a 3·2
lead. . .
.
·
After senior · guard Justin
McBee, who earned his sharpshooter's
medal with a game·
SWAIN IN THE LANE - llanun Trac4i f8rWIIrll CllalliiWalD
high
23
points,
scored on a layup
( wltb ball l atepa In' lbe laae to take a Uot alnldlt lbree Beaver
to
·
p
ut
the
Eagles
ahead 4·3 with
Eaatern cqen dudng Tuesday a~Jid'a Dlvllloa IV 6trtd
6:
54
left
In
act
one,
Trace got
IOIII'IIUIH!IIt gune In AtheM. The Ea}lee downed tile Wildcat&amp;
back-to-back
baskets
from jun·
75-62. ( OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne 1 :
tors Todd Boothe (6: 37) and Eric
Lloyd (6: 11) to take a 7-4 lead,
.
·(All 1iunes&gt;
Oak Hm ......... 5 17 1279 1557 their largest of the night.
Eastern center Pete Keller, a
· TEAM
W L PF PA Kyger Creek ... 1 20 1161 1622
; Eastern .......... 15 6 1577, 1504 boltl - sdllln tourney
·, Soutll~ ........ . l4 B 1589 1356
Tuesday'ucore •
· North Ciallla .. c 13 . g 1512 1367 , At Ohio Bnfverslty - Beaver
· Hannan Trace 12 11 1406 1373 . Eastern 75, Hannan Trace 62
So,uthwestern .. 8 13 1496 1492
Wetlnesday's J~e
.S.Valley .......... 8 13 1232 1297
New Boston vs. Racine South·
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio
.- . .
'
·
ern at Ohio University, 8:15p.m.
University's Dave Jamerson was
the lone unanimous cboice for the
All·Mid·Amerlcan Conference
basketball team selected by the
MAC coaches.
The 6-foot·5· Jamerson, second
In the nation In scoring with a 31.1
point-per-game average, heads
an All· MAC first team 11\at also
~ · prtmarUy young but eager · Chillicothe.'
Jim Havrilla of Western
Includes
University of Rio Grande ba~eComan was the only Rio
·Ric Blevins of Kent
Michigan,
- ball ~am takes to the field for Its cJtailde pl;lyer to make !he
State, Clinton Venable of Bo1990 season Wednesday at 1 p.IJl. · AII·Mid·Ohlo Conference team
wling Gree.n and Ball State's
· in a hOme double~eader with . Usthill' last year. Gary Harrison,
Parts
McCurdy , the only first
Marshall University.
a Junior from Gallipolis 1olntng
team
repeater
. .
The Redmen, starting their
the team this year, Is set for the
·
Jamerson,
a
senior from Stow,
third season under the steward· Infield.
Ohio.
has
scored
842 points gotng
ship of Dave Oglesby, returned
MAC
tournament
Into
Ohio'
s
· over the weekend from a pre·
Sophomores Include ptteher
game
Friday
night
against
Ball
season trip to Panama City, Fla., Duane McCarty, Willow Wood;
State,
just
two
points
shy
of
the
where they compiled a 5·2 record outfielder James Lewis, Clncln·
MAC
record
held
single-season
against such schools . as t he
nat!; Infielder Roger Boles, PeeMilwaukee School of Engineer· bi!!S; outfielder Brent Bissell, by former Bowling Green star
ing, Rose Hulman and Bluffton, a .Tuppers Plains; Infielder Jon Howard " Butch" Komlves.
Jamerson's 2,304 career points
: • Dis trlct 22 opponent.
,
GIQ&amp;on, .Chesapeake; pitcher . also Is second to Miami's Ron
'Oglesby felt the team proved It
Rob Kuhn, Oak Hill; and ln- Harper, .who finished wltll 2,377.
can put runs on the scoreboard.
fl ·elder Mark . LaFon ,
131~1ns, a 6-foot-7 senior from
but needed to work on Its defense. Chesapeake.
Warren,
Ohio, ranks third In the
''We're '· hoping for anoll!er
MAC In scrirtng with an average
winning season, to challenge IJle
Playing with the Redmen for ~-·of 18.2 points per game.
district crown," Oglesby said. the first time are the following
Havrilla, a 6-foot·10sophomore
·'We have a young team, but we freshmen: ·Phil Johnson, Vln·
;, a lso have some experience and cent, pitcher; Chad Kaltenbach,
· ·au starters "are lettermen. There South Webster, Infield; Jeff
· are some prQblems with catch· McElroy, Pomeroy , outfield;
, lng, buthope'fully we'll iron them Terry . Farley , Chesapeake ,
· out.
.
'
catcher; Jas'on Wright, Carroll,
'foumey scores
" We had some problems on pitcher-outfield; Wes Young,
1
. defense, but we think we are 'a Pomeroy , Infield ; Andy Bulach,
..
8 i unad Pl'ft .....aer ~atlo•l
defensively better te;im,'' . he
&lt;,added. "The nltchtng staff, hope·. • Hamilton, , pitcher: and Mike
n.~.~:::;:•
,..
Voorheis, Lucasville, pitcher.
01
1
· . fully. will come through ,tor us. . The regular season cans for
· . •.. c ...,,....~t.",;
Fau."
, . l\sarsha!l will be a good test,
Rio Grande to play 38games, two
~.:~:;· ~:.:;!:.~':~:: 1 N• ..,1...
. because If we can compe.t e with of them stngle, nine-Inning con·
,.
· them 'a ndgivethemag6odg· arne,
Neworkn.eo1o...........
.
tests. Along •With the opener,
soow11, •••lit c,. 1
· we're o~y. If not, we'll have to home games will be played
St•onp~l~l&lt;.l.oNinSoutftvJ .. eo
. watt and see.''
WooMeru. ~ . . ., .. cboal7
against West VIrginia State,
Dlvlllaoll
The Rio men were 19-18!n 1989. West'. VIrginia Tech, Findlay,.
a.1~ev .. e , Lnl•ll""
,: In the District 22 Playoffs las t · Ohio Dominican, Malone, Mount
~~:::::"!:~1';';:~~~...m. ,.
, May, . the team knocked off Vernon Nazarene, Walsh and
n.. w... , . a.Ro...-a. ... ..
ton-seeded
0.hlo DominiCan be- Central State.
•·-• '~ ,..,. tllooloaiJ
r
ere,.• Hn .. u . &amp;lltl•llta 11
fore ' being eliminated by
uma Ba~h " · .,.. •
Defiance.
Lorain Breollalde 11. .\vo 11 L~t~~el,. fOil
Ass is tlng Oglesby In coaching
Fait."· c.-......
.
During the fall , (he team this season· Is John Chafin of
Pauo...u........ "· ,...,.,. """
v... w.nn, p,.,.,...,. n
Posted a 2·6, rain-Interrupted Wellston.
WGe-aii.Soloo"'
. practice season In games against
..
EJ,,,. cat• ::,·~~~~~ .,
" , Marshall. ~hlo University, Wll-'
RIO GRA.!&gt;o'DE REDMEN
Dlvl•~n IV ,,
. . mington B;Dd .,West Virginia
... Bueball
lk&gt;M'er E••rn11. Han•n Trarto It·

SVAC standings

Fat. cats Wtlnt
.
mqre
boat before It bltil the wati!S' lt
neetll a II~ toa.-whleli hu to
be I'IIICIAcd eYf!I"Y tllree yean.
N-=:.:pllrutlillt at Natural
II --·to be a
mlflltyblfeltablllltmftt and all
plallllld to make money; I prefer
"' io to .... little IIOOkl alld Cl"811•
IIIII 10 nJoy natllre. Btl public
aeconunodatlonaere llot fdr me.
Real nature II
disag)peariJil
trom the Colllltry. There II some

.

now

\ •~.f.;

...

rebouad and aank a Jumper from
the r)abt baseline with 5:50 left to
cut the lead to H. On tile
Wildcats' foUowiD, : possession
Trace lost the handle on tile ball,
but when Eagle fOIWard Dustten
Alley batted the ball back In
bowids, It went Into the hands of
Lloyd, Wbo was In tile middle of
the lane. Lloyd dropped In the
Jumper, and the Guyan five went
aheacl 9-6. ,
Alley connected on a layup
with 5:23 left to cut Trace's lead
to 9-8, but on the Wildcats' next
posseutolf, junior center Craig
Rankin, who ended tile nllht with
15 points, was fouled In the paint,
and he sank one of two tree
throws to gtvetbe Wildcats a 10-8
lead, their last of the night, with
4:52 left.
Sophomore guard Eric Caudill
sUpped· Inside for a layup 14
seconds later to tle the game at
10, setting the stage for the 6-3
Alley to attempt an alley-oop
. dunk, which In spite of Its failure
mathnhaged todgbet thke tl!balltlthrough
e oop an rea
e· e.
Alley scored 62 seconds later
on a · layup, and with 2:44 left,
Junior foiWard Larry Caudill
connected on a jumper from the
left side of the lane to push the
Eagles' lead to 16·10. But 14
seconds. later Lloyd canned a
three-spot and followed that by
turning a Rankin pass Into a long
jumper from the left wing to hack

from Portage, Ind., was second
In scoring ( 20.8) and third In
rebounding (8.6).
The 6-foot-7 McCurdy, from
Detroit, averaged 11.5 points per
game for the champion Card!·
nsls and was second In the league
In rebounding at 8.7 per contest.
Venable, a 5-fopt-11 junior
from Landover, Md., was fourth
In he leagu eln scoring (1.7.4) and
tl!trd In assists (4,8) .

:Rio baseball team
'o pens Wednesday

19~98

.

Eutern's lead to 16-15 with 2:07
left. But Beaver put ltl transition
PJM to work and outscored tlle
Galllans 10-4 to take a n!M-potnl
lead Into the second quarm.
''l'be transition i&amp;ine got Ul
th!! lead, '' said Eu tern cagemas·
ter Gree Slone. " We like to run
the ball, and Ws been good to us."
The Eagles reeled off 10
stralrht points (three by McBee,
two by Keller and five by Larry
Caudill, In that order) In the first
1:40 oflhe second frame to boost
their lead to 38·19, but . Trace
came rlrht back with a layup
from Cornell and a trey froQ'l
junior guard J .J. Bevan, which
cut the lead to 14 wltl) 4: 16 left.
But from then until halftime, the
Eagles outscored the Wildcats
12-6 to take a 20-polnt lead at
halftime.
In the· second half, Hannan
Trace started using their quick·
ness to dissipate some of the
Eagles' lead, which at the end of
the third 'quarter had shrunk to
15; But the lack of time was
Guyan's worst enemy, as It CoS I .
the Wildcats plenty of It to trim
the margin to Its final 13-potnt ·
shape.
This was the last game for
guard Steven Sanders, Hannan
Trace's only.senior.
In a rematch of last year's
district championship contest,
the Eagles (18-4) will play
Franklin Furnace Green, who
beat Hemlock Miller 54-42 In the

tca•D.f7,

precedlq eame. on Saturday at 1
p.m . at the Convocation Cftt.r
tor the upper-bracllet dlatrlct
title.
Score
Hannan Trace ... 19 11 18 14-62
Pike Eastern ..... 28.2ll 13 U-75

by...,..,.

EAiftBN

('71)

Justin McBee .........
.Eric Caudill ............
Dustten Alley .........
~ete Keller .. ..... ......
Larry Caudill .........

3 6-23
1-15
0 0-14
0 0-12
.0 1-11

4
7
7
6
5

o

TOTALS ........ : ........ %!~ S 8-'71

Field pals - 32·62 (51.6% )
Three-pointer• - 3-11 (27.3%)
Free throwa - .8·11 (72. 7%)
Bebollllds - 33 (Alley 10)
Blocked Mota - 5
ANista- 1) (E. Caudtlt 6)
steal• - 14 (McBee 6)
Tllnovera - 17
Fouls- 8
HANNAN TRACE (62)
Riehle Cornell . .. ... . . 3 3 2-17
Craig Rankin .......... 6 0 3-15
Eric Lloyd . ............. 3 1 2-11
J .J . Bevan ... .. ......... 1 2 0- 8
Todd Boothe ....... :.:. 4 0 0- 8
Chris Strow .. . .. .. .. .. . 1 0 · 0- 2
Matt Sanders. ,........ 0 0 1- 1
TOTALS .. ........ ... .... 18 6 8-82
Field 1oal1 - 24·60 (40%)
Tlu'ee-potaters- 6-11 (54.5%)
Free throws - 8·10 (80%)
BeboUDds - 36 (Boothe 10)
Assists- 5
Steals - 6 (Rankin 3)
Tumovers - 26
Fouls- 9

.

Hilltop II, ~~""''Je

011 ~
Oglesby will be looking for
Lo&lt;atlon
March 7-Mushali. ., ................ :.......... H
"· leadership from tus veterans.
March 9-W.Wa. State..... ..................... A
1 • There .are !our seniors on the
March 13-W.Va. Tedi .......... .............. H
t«;&gt;am, Including outfielders Chris
March 24-wFlndlay .................... ......... , H
March 2~W . Va. Tedi ........................ A
. Boggs Of HamUton and Jimmy
March 28-Marletla ................... ..... ..... A
' , Kearns of McGuffey. pitcher
March 31-Blul!tm ..................·............ A
·' Bucky Spindler of Chillicothe and
April 2-W.Va. Stale ............................ H
.
Ch
C
Aprii7-Cedarvllle .............................. A
catcher-Infielder rls urlls of
April 8-Central sta~ .......................... A
' ; Springboro.
April10-l1rbana ......... .......:................ A
·
A
A
·
Juniors returning to the team
P rit 13-De!'·
~nee...............................
. 1'nclu&lt;le catcher Herb ShaPieApril 14::-Titlln......... ........................... A
. April17-0hlo Dominican ..... , .............. H
· · naker, Columbus;. outfleld~:r · April 21-Malooe ................................ . H

· Donnie Becker. Middleport:
· pitcher Darrell Marcull), HamiI·
· .. ton; Infielder Bob Young, Utica ;
· · and ' Infielder Mike Coman,

April2f-Mount Vernon
Aprii22-0IIerbeln
...... ,.......................
..................... .. A
H
Apni28-Wal•h ................................... H
Apni29-Cenlra1 State ........................ H
May 3-Wtlmlnfllm .............. .... :..........•,'\

SPECIAL OF Till WEEKI

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:.,c;,:;:: s'!:":"a:'J:."=:::"
Ohio Gl•lo IDato ..,..., BMiotboll
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College scores

· The Daily Sentinel

-------ittl
'
$PRINS WIU ·.:',

cr.... .tlle •• 1111•

••a.

Bobb y T ;1y lor , Toledo ;
Chandler Thompson, Ball
State; ' Harold Walton, Kent
State; Dennis Whitaker. Ohio
University.

'

SH Us Toclay ..On ...
AI Your Seed· Needs·-

Atv..
K.rntoa Bidet' M, 0• Wy.miiC 43
N' Unton IS. ~~~ Lopll ..f.t
'

,.o.,.,.,.,,............,
•
.....

Second 'l"eun
Eric Glenn, Kent State, 6-3,
Senior, 13.0.
Curtis Ktdd, Ball State, 6-9,
Senior, 10.3.
Joe Moore, Bowling Green. 6·3,
Junior, 11.9.
Lorenzo Neely, Eastern Michl·
gan, 5·11, Junior, 13.5.
Tim Stewar t, Miami, 6·6. Se·
ntor, 13;9.
, ,
Honorable Mention , . . ,
, ",
Mark .Brown, Western Michl·
gan; Kory ijallas,. Eastern
Michigan; Shawn Par.rlsh, Ball
State, Cralg Sutters: T ole~q; ,
f

All-MAC Dream Teun
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -The
1990 all·Mid·Amerlcan Confer·
ence men's basketball team,
listing name, school, height,
class and scoring average:
'
FlniTeun
Ric Blevii)S, Kent State, 6·7,
Senior, i8.2. ·
· Jill! Havrilla, Western Michl·
gan, Sophomore, 20.8.
Dave Jamerson, Ohio Untver·
stty, S:5, Senior, 31.2.
Parts McCurdy, Ball State, 6·7,
Senior, Ii.5.
Ct'tnton Venable, Bowling
Green, 5·11, Junior, 17.4.

Scoreboard ...

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:_........_, ,,,..,.,, •·

of

~

. ,·

...... -L.:,..__. t-

gue,d was crucial to sus~lntng would engult 25 to 30 miles of
than a century ago a ad~provided
reg!o~l arowth.
·
potable water to realdenta
spectillnslarly "' beautlfill Chees.~ cost of building the con- • man·CAnyon, ~nsurpused for Its
thousands of commulJitles.
,
crete structure 615 teet high and .recreation opportunities, partie·
Indeed, 37,000 ·ot the nation's
1,700 feet Wide was estimated at ularly Ita trout tisblng.
68,000 dams span w~ WAJS
$500 million to $,1 btlllon, but the
Opponents. of the dam also
west of the MllalulpJ)I River.
,local colll'orttum was committed ; noted that It WO!Jid endanger th.e
But 'the fnferlor DepartmeDt'l
. to pay all of those e:JI!Jll!llleS·
·water
to a untque.sandhUI
Burea11 of Rlclanletion, 'tbe
The dam's proponents devoted . crane habitat alq .the banks.of
llency .t hat bullt·llllllY $If them,
eight years and $40 mUIIon to the Platte River In central Ne- .. announced 1n 19&amp;7 tbat· lt would
· com~letlng the environmental braska, probably dtmiptllii the
phaseoutdamconattucllonlnfa·
Impact studies .required by fed· birds' mlgratto:n patteru .
vor of environmental Protection
· eral law. In June 1988, Colorado
~n addition, they pointed out · and conser\&gt;atlbn activities. ,.
Go:v. Roy Romer gave bls qual· that at least one: third of lm·
Almost a year bali passeciiiDce
!fled approval to th~ project. In .pounded,water was tobeusedilot
Reilly pertonally lnterveDed 111
March 1989, the Army Corps of to slake the thirst of the region's
the two .Forks bam: dlapute. Pub·
Engln~ 18aued a coutnx:tton
growing population- but to keep
lie hearings were held 1n Col·
permit.
.
the Denver a.rea's lawns and eolf
orado and Nebraska lalt auBut the Two Forks Dam 'al· courses lush.
turon, hut no final declaton hu
waya had more than Its share Qf
The country's leadine conaer- · been forthcomlq trom EPA.
crltlca, largely becaulll! tbe 7,300 vatton organizations made the
Moreover; tHre 18 no reeaon to
acre reaervolr created by It future of Two Forka Dam an
believe that EPA"I action will
early test of President Bush's end the dispute. Otflclals ot tbe ..
commitment to protecttne the
Denver area's water &amp;IIJIPI¥
envlrorunent - and In Marcb ' aeenctea, for example, baw
19891heheadoftheEnvtronmen·
t})reate~~ed to ·sue 1M federal
tal Protection' Agency drama!!· • l(lveriu'nent to aecurethertcht tO
..
cally blocked further work on the
reviVe tile proJeCt. '
project.
'
·
Just u wrely u !he Icy water.
kind of hunetne .almost' year · · Arguing that tile dam could re• of the Soutl! Platte' I North Fork
around. Thew.tldthiDplhatcan · sulttn"theveryheavy,flnaland
have roared tbrqb Buffalo
find a place tO. hide are luc:ky.
Irremediable loat of an environ· Craell: for decadea, tbe •tnale
The polltlct.na bit 111 with one mental treasure ot national •II· over tbe river' a fa tare _ 8lltJ
little tax after another. 1bey nlftcance," EPA AdmiDIItrator ·COIIDtJeu
slmllar
diaplltll
ow ..OJ...
William K. Reilly took jurlldlc· tJirourbout tbt COIIIJVy - wiJl
we
•vl'lft one before tloD •.
hl.s aa-cy's ft11oJ1aJ coatlaue vnabMed, U U..llle
~ ~11: up anotber one. They off!
M'Vel' come out tor 1 bll tax. Of
ce and ordered a special re· qulcki!S', more etflcl•t way to
course, they are aralnlt tuea. view of the project. ,
reaohe pull1lc policy d!HI'•
·Tiley wan~ 10 stay popular and
Relll)"1 dectatan wu wlcltly menta that cllvtlla WIJl.bl-.
s~y Iii office.
InterPreted U marldq tbt ead tiODed pt10ple, nalully U .,. to
. Gayle Price or an ambitious dam-lllllltllni Jtaw JtS.ntlfled lt.
·
.,.
era In the West that bel¥ more
•.

6-4 sen tar, arabbed an offenalve

OU's Jamerson lone MAC unanimous choice

W es leyan.

.;;.• ·. Veterans should write representatives ·

I .•

keeps ·on flowing Robert Walters

Pike Eastem beats Hannan Trace·75-62

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··
I am wr iting this letter hoping
" to bflng to the attention of the
•· people of Meigs County that our
:: veterans need peoplE' to write
·:. , their representatives In suppop
;. · of them.
·
;',,
I do not know why the health
. benefits of our men and women
· who . have given their time and
health for their country are being
cuI . .They are Ihe first to get cut
:·· and they are !~first to ask to
give again and again..We t)eed to
wrtte Our representatives, not
;: just one. but many. Our veterans
should be the first to be consl·
;: dered and they and their depend·
'
'
'
1 :~ ents taken care of ..
1 ••
· Alsb the veterans need to know
· tbat :' fl!en tbouill. they have
,,
• worke&lt;t and have social security
• · and penaton plana from · t11e1r
'Diftt·l!la Pl'OPOIII before tbe
Jobs, tftheydle)'Oungandleavea • OIIWI!IIeL~at~Jatareto tax cat·
·• wife under 60, she has to turn to alq IIIII TV salel. TIMre II also a
· • non-service connected penslona prCipOaal to tax call: Tile cat tax
- hecaulll! at that aee she 11 . too
IJ.,IIIlDir to
doltaaiDI law.
• young to get any of the oilier
l Willi• 'lrllat lila cilia have
- benefits.
· ~ ,._ tllet'a Ill a PICIJGied
•
I'd also like to point outtbtlaet .lliOif« -lorelttlenawbolllreto
• rhat all veter111.1 and tbelr wi•
ftlla. For muy ye&amp;rl older·peo.
•• would be wise to Join the DAlY. I pie 4NIIIIII lluy a lltetline llceilae
• am a widow who the DAV .Jiu 1IU tltalldea aeema to be rolne
: , ltelped a lot since I l~t IQ)' oat tile door with a lot of tlteotber
~· · husband a year 110.
goodies. If you have an old Jolin·

'

W~t~r·~·td.ispute

By Robert Walten , .
BUFFALO CREE;K, , Colo.
•
(NEA) - rThe ..d~ade·long controversy over whet\lj!r to b)IUd
......
the twQ Forks Dam typifies the
difficulty In resolving fundamen·
tal dlsaareements about bow ,we
use tbe nation's resources. ' .
.Althol!gb 'the ~~~ near the conThey will and do help.not only ·
fiuence
of the South Platte River
the.~terans but the ~lslows and
and
Its
1-jorth ~ork, 24. miles
dependents who need help. A
southwest
o1 Denver, was con~ld·
lifetime men\hersblp Is good for
ered
a
loglcallocat
lon fpr a dam
It ·builds the DAV null!bers and
as early as 1921. serl~us pla;:ni!Jg
we all know that numbel'i cowl(.
tor tbe proj~t did not get under·
Let. s let our repmen tatlves
way until 1981.
.
know that we want our veterans
politically
powerful
DenThe
taken care ot, not just ·their
ver
Water
Poard
IIDd
Q'l!Jnlclpal
health care, bUt. all their needs.
water-supply ae~~es In ·ap· Our DAV commander ·s ays, our
proximately 40 subUrban corn·
v e I era n s are . b e 'l n g
m11.
nltles, ~ted ,. the Metropol·
~rtchanged:
.
~tan Water Providers, then .be·
· Dor~ M. Deeter: ., · ~an pressing for !lie dam th~ ar·
. Long Bottom .'

Letters·to the editOr .
'

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The o.ilv

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¥·

_..rr,•o

Wednesday, March 21, 1990
'

AD DUDUftl TUISDA Y, IUICH 13, 1990.

l . .rve Your Ad Space Today

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN BILUNGS
OR DAVE HARRIS . .

�Ohio

Ohio

Towson, Illinois State gain NCAA
BJ Ualted Preu laterllldoaal
Two teams Tuesday joined the
field for the NCAA Tournament,
bringing the number of automalic bids to 10. .
Towson State earned Its first· ·
ever Tournament appearance bY
posdng a 73-60 victory over
Lehigh In the championship
game of the East Coast Confer·
ence tournament. DUnols State
secured a bertll bY capturing the
Missouri Valley Conference ser·
les with an 81-78 ylctory over ·
SQutllern Illinois.
.
Six schoo)s captured their
.tolll'llaments to qualify for the
:rournament. They are Coppin
State (Mid-Eastern Athletic),
East Tennessee State (Soutll· . ·
ern) , La Salle (Metro Atlantic
Athletic), Richmond (ColOnial),
Robert Morris (N~rtlleast) and
Soutll Florida (Sun Belt). Two
schools qualified because they
were the regular-season champions, Loyola Marymount (West
Coast) and Princeton Clvy
Lea~e) . .
At Towson, Md. , Kurk Lee,
ECC. Player of the Year, scored
22 points. to guide Towson State.
Lee connected on 8 of 11 shots
from the field and made all five
free-throw shots for the Tigers,
18-12.
Lee hit two straight field goals
early In the second half to extend
Towson State:s lead to 45-38.

FIG RT j'OR REBOUND - Southern DBnols' Rick Shipley (left)
fights with UDnols State's Jon Pemberton lor a rebound Tuesday
night at Dltnols State Unlv'i'rslty's Redbird .A rena. DHnols Slate .
won 81•78. (UPJ)
·

aot

Lehleh never
closer tllan
three points the rest of the way.
The Engineers missed three
straJaht one-and-one free throw
opportunities and Towson State
went on an 11·2 run late In the •·
second half to clinch the victory.
Dev9D Boyd scored 13 points for
the Tigers, Kelly Wlli1BI11llon
added 11 and Mike Morin had 10.
Dozle Mbonu scored 23 polnls
and Bob Krlzansky finished with
12 points and 11 rebounds to pace
tile Engineers, who finished the
season at 18·12.
.
At Nonnal; DJ., Jarrod Coleman scored 23 points to lead
OUnols State over top-seed Sou til·
ern llUnols.
IIUnols State Improved tolS-12,
winning 12 of 15 games after a 6-9
start.
·
"I hoped we wouldn't glve ·up
whenwewere6-9,butlt'sllkethe
lights were dim and they were
fllclterlng a little bit,;, first-year
:t'!Unols State Coach Bob Bender ·
said.
The team ha.d a meeting after
tile bad beginning to the season
and agreed Tuesday It really
turned things around.
·
"We had the meeting and gota
lot of f.r ustratlon out of our
system," senior Randy Blair
said. "From thenonweplayedas
one."
·
The Redbirds will be making
their fourtll appearance In the

To~t ID

ll!e paJt decade.

Southern

Dllaols. 26-7, the
MVC cllamplons,
Is expeeted to aet an at-larp bid
when they are announced
SUnday.
Coleman pOured 1D 13 JIO!nts In
the first half, Including atne IDa
span of 2: :W late In the half,
helping the Redbirds to a 42-~
lead.
The Salukls closed to a POint In
the second half before Rickey
Jackson scored 10 points In just
under four minutes (o help
DUnoll State exriand Its lead to
75-69.
.
Jerry Jones, who led Southern

replar·•-

D!ln()il with 21 poiDIJ, • • twq
tree tbrows with M IICNN til
play to draw the Saluldl. •IbiD
' '79-'18. But Freddie McSiraln
milled a lhrefopo!Dt attle!Jlpl at
the bu:a:er that WI!Uid llave lie\!
tbe ICOre.
Elsewhere In conferanee tournaments Tuesday, In the .flrlt
· round of the ECAC Nortli Atlan·
tic, Boston University beat New
· HamPihlre 63-56, Collate~
Hartford M-53 and Vermont .
defeated Maine 78-75.
·,
i\t (,the Mid -Continent,
·Wllconsln-Green Bay beat West·
ern llllnots 49-46 and Northern
Iowa edged "Southwest Dllllois
63-611n the Mmlflnals. ·

.I

Browns sign free agent Baab

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COUNn
&amp;

APPLIANCES
w
a .,•.,.
'- ..

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IIJ ~ ...... ' '
Mnsl
LatAI will_. ltorla plied up
I80W Ill. !be Rodllll ud New
· haJeM Watrllay, dellahllnl

MeCanY to Holler Medical Oeatllr.
' ·
·· ·
At 3;t7 p.m., ....... 111'1 tire Deparlmat W11 Wild 111 a
llnlll fire on the Audrey 8r 1Vl')' PICIPII. at lb'lw.
dallari!,IJeDtat•:~p.m.!ll'llcallldtoallnllll!INoilllll
•

:r::e

-r -

flooll .warlllnp Blld flub flood
w,atdlellormuchl!(nortiiTexu .
IW'ble-slzed ball was reporied
Tuesday In central and nortll

lkten but tunallll ~ lntn • · Tau.
mess, while· tbuaderatorms
111e South wu caught between
~·
t
, o
,
callled lloocliiiiJ ID Texu and a hlall·prealllln! syatem off the
_ _ .,._
lllowera IOiked much Of ·the Atlanticcoutandalow-presaure
· CUSTED ~. - Colo.
;
;.
Mlct..t.
l)'lfam IIICivlniiDfram the west.
(UP
· Tbere·Wilre no.aaturtl eas or
TbeiiiOWitormshlthardlntlle Themlxturelroulhllitpcloudl· ·
• 11 - IDYI!Itipton souallt propane llnel to iite bank central Pllina, where up to 18 ne.. to Mlsalsalpp~ Abbama,
pOulble l!Db Wednellday be- buildiiiJ.
lnchel t1l snow Tuelday ciOied Te.lllll!lllee and. the norida Pan·
• apt"st
the
...
.Jo .
~.Wyo., airport and
handle but little rain. TemperatweeD town
reeeatbu.__.
bomb and
tl!rMta
• w.,llw1tbthllldera1Bureau
explqllo
t1l Aleobol, ·.~ and Fire- 1111 II waya, lealilnr tram tile . 1111'S were warm, ranging from
ltory ~~b:!n~~lnla.;: 11'1111 ~· to Cnltect'ltut• to . capital city. The . NatiOnal
551D Allan!a to 54 IIi CharleSton,
. people and IDju....&amp;l•. ~'"-. ,
bealD an lmw.,.tlen. , The ·Weather service !Slued IIi bllz· s.c,. 52 in KnOxville, Tenn.,and
The
•-a '" ""'"'"
ap~~IIIDcliiiMd maftlllen of the zard warnlqiD n'ortlleut ColO-' 6811 Miami.
. ·
·
the ~~s:~~ ·bureau's eUte 114t1011al .Xp~o- raclo, and 3' feet of snow was ·
~uthernNewEnglanddugout"
•
_ ... after It _ _. "'·-..ay. alva team.•
.
reported at Taos ski valley In · tram up to 6 Inches of snow tllat
..,........, • .._.
Lis "\•"ford. a spolrelman to~ · New lilexlco.
fell Tuellday, while 110rthern
' 1110•""
A wide area of thunderstorms states balked ln.sunshine. Snow
: Momeats 'lata', the reel hl'lck the te1111, 11tc1 be •as confldent
·.· the laws tipton could.
"
.... __
· ·
quickly moved tllrolllh . ·Texas, Ollta· . ln. Masaachuaetts, connecticut
•• wall•
S coDaJ*!d,
PICII '""'about the cau~e 'o f determlnl Ule caue.
bonia, Arkansal and Louisiana
and Rhode Island made roads
•
!' bomb
the Qlllollon
centered
on
either
a
or a bulld·up of methane · Gov. Roy l'lomer allo otfered Wednellday, caullng Some flood·
sUe~ and triggered several car
•
.the belP of tile COlorado Bureau big. Man! t11an 3 IDCbel of rain accidents.
f eas. ' ~ ,vere several coal of lnvet!!ptlon. . '
feU In ueuliorthwestof Dallas·
The mercury dipped to a
., ::.~~~ !:~ov;: a 0{~0:,t
There bad • ·• b threats Fort . Worth, prompUng tile record 7 deerees early Wednes·
,: valleytnJOUthwes•a•nColora·..,..
made to two· Created Butte weat¥!' service to Issue fiash
daylnHart1ord, Conn., breaking
....
uv.
bullnetlf!l clllnq tile weekend. ·

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e)
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ha
. Dk bJae'

Ue8

'he=

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tile old mark of 8 tet lilt yqr,
and PrOYideace. R.I.. tied the
reeor,s 10 de&amp;i8• tet Ill 1t13.
CU.. weuand 11e11t raiD coYered
much of the euterll lla1t of
Mlsaollri and 1011tn.t part of
Dllnoil, accompanied by temper·
atures ID the upper 401 and low
501. Ellewbere around the Mldw·
e1 t and Great Lakes .akl.f!l were ·
11ener111y clear~ with tempera•

•

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hlrel

ranatnl

frCIIII

1 daji Ell

below zero at AIJ!tna, Mlcll., to 25
clelrees at Mllwaulrle.
Sktea were mo-tly clear ov«
Pennsylvania, Maryland. Weit
vtratllla, and 1011thern NeW .
Jersey . Temperature lows
ranpd tram zero to the loW
Pennsylvania, allll from the
teen• to the mid 20s In Maryland
and southern New Jer~ey .

201m

Rain in Ohio forecast

·.Stocks
.· :. ·. · - =-~=~:~~~
,.
~Roell

. '.

flliete

(Aa of 11:. a.m.)

, &amp;r,ee ud Jtirk 8mllh
of ..... Dill • Loewl

.,

Am Electri p
c ower .............30JA

!!'.:;~·Oii·:::::::::::: :::::::::::::~ .

mtaht lndlcate a 11omb.
·.
'"Tberre' a .notlllq left but -the
bank vault slttlq 1D the rubble,"
said MlcbelleEnillab-Batc:helor,
a pauerby. ' 1t juatlu't there. It
wllll a bla bulldlq. Now It's just
an empty ~q~ace. "
a

~e!~!nlql~n=~r::u~

BJ, United Preaa later national
Rain will return toOhtoThurs·
day, spreading across the Buck·
eye State from the southwest, bUt
the weather system will also

~m~t:,esth

brlnt:;r;n:
~eackend n
.e
.
,e
W~ d~ at d
a oss Ohio
. were•, chilly 15 ~:2s. ~tl'i some
areas·see!J!r wlnd-chUI readings
of near zero.
,
' '
A large htgh pressure area was
centered north of Lake Ontario
. and extended across Ohio. The
high was holding a low pressure
system and hence tile rainfall at
bay.
,
·
. However, as tile high moves to
the east Thursday It will allow
rain to spread across the state. It

. , , Bob FJV8JU! ..........................12% · the~ hank emplOy~ were
·.. - ' Charming ~hOJ!Pe' ............... 9% lnilde said Bob Gillen ~pokes
~:Z Holding Co...... .,......: ...13% mail ior the amallto~'s elner:
· C:.OC:al M~fRI·..,. ,; .. ........ , ... , 18 · gency response team. Only seven
~,
r~ar
....... ,....... ,., ..35JA of the . l'n .j!l.red requited
~- Hei&lt;eyckc!;;.. "'k,"""' ................. 3~ . hospitalization.
•• •
1
:
· , tur 1\ ............. ,......13%.
'1t'samiraclethat ·a llyonegot
:· Landi £~ .......... ................19% out ~live," said John Norton, a
· · ~mlted Inc................... .. ...38% resident.
' ~tl:e:a ~cts
. ......·... .. ....... : 77
!IS uran .. ,............... 2%
• Robbins • Myers ... ............. 15'!4
, Shoney·~ Inc. . ... ........ : ..........11% "" The jury trial scheclu
' led for
· Star Balik
19
•·
··
........... ,.. ....... ,.......
Friday In Meigs CoiiDty -Court
. · Wendy's Int'l ..... ........ :......... 4%
hasbeen.cartcelledandthejurors
· Wol'tblngtton Ind . ............. .. 20% . need n"' report
. will begin In the soutllwest but
· ·.. ,
' ·, • .•
.
"''
•
will DQt teach nortlleast Ohio
til lat
It """'
I
:enlng. e . a er._n or ear y

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Baseball negotiations end
again with no settlement

on

Winter stonns smack Rockies, New

1

Blazers finish strong
to _top Knick~, J12-100

By IAN LOVE
Trail Brazers own the fourlll·hest
UPI Sports Writer
record In· the NBA and trail the
On a night when Clyde Drexler
Los Angeles Lakers by 3 'h
played his worst statistical game
games. ·Their 40-18 recQrd has
of the season, Kevin Duckwortll
surpassed their 39 victories of
played his best
last season.
The Portland Trail Blazers
In other games Indiana
NEW YORK (UP I) -Baseball · solnetime after tile owners' labor
needed
all of Duckworth's 'dumped Washington 113-98, De. pegottator·s ended a ' six·hour committee meets In the morning.
season-high 28 points to pull troit defeated Sacramento 101·91,
" bargaining session Wednesi!~y , ' !11ih!! pos!t!9n they've taken on
away
from New York down the Chicago clipped Milwaukee 114·
morning without a key to solving ,l)u !rights ,·.Is ,. regressive,'' Fehr
stretch
TueSday night and post a 105, Phoenix toppe(j Altanta
, ' the arbitration Issue at Ill!;' center n~lllli ~.'.'Tile, po.s~tlon they've taken
112·100
victory
over tile Knlcks.
113·111, Utah beat Orlando 111·
, of a three-week spring tralnthg ?.91\!#,lg/.\l.lli!Y, Is something that
13-0
surge
Duckwortll
keyed
a
101, Houston defeated the LA
. · .,
1 ·lloOOdy sJ'. !cpow of thinks can
lockout ·· ·. .
with
4
baskets
that
took
the
Lakers 112'95, Denver whipped
Union chief Don Fehr said the provide the · basis for an
mazers from a 99-98lead toli2-98 Charlotte 122-96, and Seattle heat
·. parties made some progres~ '.on ;:,aln'E:M\eq\; ' ,.
with 1: 23 remaining. Terry Por- Cl evela.nd 93-90
. minimum salaries and q\1 'ipe ·•~J ll'IW~&lt;I!}Yi~c.!Jargalnlng session
ter, who finished with 16 points,
Pacers 113, Bullets 18
' benefit plan, but added tit!!'gap , ,IJt:g!m ·~ltPrl}y ,,after 6 p.m. EST
scored
the oilier 5 polo ts In the
At Indianapolis, Chuck Person
' had widened on outrl{:)lt .•. • n4;. ~1!:ve~jil factors led to hope
ruil.
,
· scored 36 points and Rlk Smits
• , thAtH! r.~JPel)'lent might result.
assignments.' ' .
'1
Drexler, who returned last added 24 to allow Indiana to
' Fehr reported no change the ~ ¥1r~ 4· t'l~re·i\VaS tile sheer length
Tuesday
after missing a week break a three-game losing
:'Issue of when players c'an be- of the talks; they las!l!d more
with
a
sprained
ankle, scored streak. . Jeff Malone scored 19
come eligible for salary arbit~a· . ,thaq ml!·lto\lrs.
,
just
3
points
against
the •Knlcks. points for Washington.
. tlon. He also said ownerf; lit'te ', ~pc); , thePRChadcaucused
In
finishing
20
points
below his
Platoa 181, IUnp '91
:: trytngteellmlnatethemaxlmtlm ' e;u:llf;'r in the day, raising the
.
avera,ge,
Prexler
h!ld
a
Slflng
of
At Au bum Hills, . Mich., Joe
·ilaycut rule. ·
•,
.• possibility that new . proposals
181 double-figure games Dumars scored 8 of his 25 points
''If anybody tllought there•was
might be lortllcomlng, Third,
snapped. ·
during a 15-0 Detroit run midway
an agreement In sight, that was owners Indefinitely postponed
He converted just 1 of 10 shots through the fourtll quarter to ileal
not right," said Fe hr.
~ P• ~ ~ th,eJr.~~;,heduJed mej!tlngs Thurs·
from the field, but did have a the triumph. Wayman Tisdale
- - ''The b'ad news Is tllat Wl!"l!M''"' day m-'Hartas;
·
·
led Sacramento by tying a career
· not bridged the gap on the
F"ourth, the proximity of Open- . game-high 9 assists.
"Clyde
didn't
have
that
good
a
high
of 40 points:
fwo-three year arbltratlori;'"sald ·o·~rul' . P!!Y ~ ·provided a certain
game,"
said
Portland
Coach
Bulla ll,, Bucks lOG
. :~huck O'Connor, who repr8ents ,~ u~ency. Both sides agree ·thf;'f
Rick
Adelman.
·
,
'But.
tile
great
At
Milwaukee,.
Michael Jordan
· owners. ' 'The.good news Is thal I "l'!IJJ, ,lose, IJ\1!..scheduled season
thing
about
Clyde
Is
tllat
he
did
scored
35
points,
Including the
think we have narrowed thl!&gt;gap uOP.e~r .!lt._..!\prU 2 unless an
not
Ioree
anytlltng
and
did
oilier
to. cap a
flnsl
'two
baskets
' on .. a number of remaining agreement comes by the end of
things
to
contribute
to
the
win.
game-ending 10-0 run for Chi·
issues."
· •ll l'l'l' l ,rtlle~.""'' n· ;.,
That says a lot about our team, cago. The Bulls posted their ninth
' · Asked to asse$s the progres6, .. ,, ~~plle;~l.I.t!Jose factors, talks
guys have been stepping up and straight victory ..
·National League player r~ipre · cllel.'llr!Qr:l!ted over tile arbitration
doing
the job."
SuM 113, Hawks 111
!;entat!ve Tom Herr said, '"¥ou vlll;~e. ; ·1~··
The Blazers held the Knlcks
At Atlanta, Jeff Hornacek hit a
have to dissect each Issue. We're ,, ~ ;,;•;J;I)e clubs' position through 10
closer on some, we're farther .:mJnl!!Wi.:l;lgo Is there will be no scorel!!;'S for 3: 58 In the closing 20 · footer with 25.2 seconds
.:. apart On OtherS."
, I 'movemeni.On, Salary aroltratiOD minutes. The only points they remalnl!lg and Tom Chambers
Both sides said they expect r, eijgJlnUty, :•. Fehr said. "You could muster In the llnal4: 11 was scored 31 points to give Phoenix
a meaningless basket by Patrick the victory. Dominique Wilkins
talks to resume Wednesday, ca!t.t.1:e.t there from here."
Ewing with 13.5 seconds scored 43 points for the Hawks.
remaining.
Jazz 111, Ml\gic 101 .
''There was a lot ot talent out
At Orlando, Fla., Karl Malone
there with many guys capable of scored 16 of his 31 points In the
scoring so we knew the differ- final period to propel the Jazz.
ence would be who wanted It The Magic led 82-77 going Into the
BEREA, Ohio !UPI) - The Columbia, S.C., did not want to
more on the defensive end," final period.
Browns Tuesday signed free
pick up roots and become an NFL
Duckwortll said.
Rockets 112, Lakers liS
agent Mike Baab, who spent six
assistant, most of whom lead
Ewing, who shook off a twisted
At Houston, Akeem Plajuwon
years with Clevelanil before
peripatetic lives.
ankle In tile third period, finished
had Tl points, l4 rebounds and 8
being traded to New England for
Shell, who also Is a part-time with 40 points for the Knlcks.
blocks for the Rockets. Magic
a fifth-round draft choice In 1988.
assistant at Spring Valley !S.C.) whose lead over Philadelphia
Johnson sc9red 27 points and
A 6,foot-( 270-pound center, &lt;' Hjgh School, did offer to comt! up dwindled· to a half-game · In the ·James Worthy had 18 for the
Baab was a fifth-round pick of the
to Cleveland during .training Atlantic Division. The Knleks
Lakers.
Browns In 1982 out of Texas and
camp to help the Brown's defen· and Slxers play Wejlnesday In
Nuggets 122, Hornets N
became an ln~gral part of the s I v e b a c k s w o r k 0 n Philadelphia. ,
At Denver, Danny Schayes
offensive line. In 1985, the fundamentals.
. ,
' "Things Just aren't going
came In from Denver's seasonBrowns had two 1,000-yard
"~knew It would be a long shot
right," Ewing sa,ld. "I don't
high snowstorm to shoot a
rushers In Earnest Byner and
at best," Carson said of hiring really have an elQilanatlon for it.
red·hot 7-for-7 from the floor,
Kevin Mack.
SheiL "He dOt&gt;sn't want to take We just have to start playing
9-for-9 from the free throw line,
But when Baab was Injured In
the life of a nomad, which Is what better and get back to what we
and . grab a game-hlgg 12
the 1988 AFC Championship happens when you become a were doing early In the season
rebounds.
when we had 11ur big winning
game at Denver, Gregg Rakoczy coach.
Sonlcs 93, Cavalien 90
stepped In and played well. The
At Seattle,.rookle Dana Barros
"He said he'll make himself streak."
next summer, Coach Marty
available In training camp If we
Charles Oakley finished with 13 scored 23 points to help the
SchoJtenheimer asked Baab to
need him. That's when all the · points and.14 rebounds (or New
Supersonics overcome a 14-polnt
play a backup role, and Baab fundamental work Is done. I York. Jerome Kersey added 19 first qu;irter deficit. The Sonlcs;
said he would prefer to be traded
would be comfortable wlth'that." points and 10 rebounds and Buck
30-28, missed tllelr first 12 shots
.
rather than sit on the bench~
Former ' Minnesota Viking Williams ~1 points for Portland,
and didn't score for nearly five
,~""behind Rakoczy.
.
Charlie West has taken himself which snapped, a .four-game roa&lt;!
minutes. But the Cavaliers, who
He was tra,ded to New Eng- out o~ contention for the Job and losing streak. ·
•
have lost five straight road
1 land, a move that s.o upset the
The Trail Blazers are entering games, could manage only six
·former Raider .secondary c'oach
i team practice on the day of the .Chet . Fran~lill Is out ol , the a key part of their schedule as' . points of their own during that
l trade was called off, and the play running. That leaves Mike Faul- they play seven of their next 11 stretch.
i
of the offensive line has deterloklner, at leastfor the moment, as • games away from home. 'n!e
1
l rated since. With Baab back, It Is the secQndary coach, although he
• expected Rakoczy wm move to otlglna!Jy was hired to helpoutln
; guard, a position devastated by
the backfield as well as do quality
: Injuries to Dan Flke and Ted control work.
·
"I'm leaving some opdons
••• Banker.
The day the Patriots an- opep," Car~qn said.
nounced they were leaving Baab
j unprotected, Browns' executive
. 1 vice president ~rnle Accorsl said
1 the club was detlnlt.ely lnteres bl
~ 1GOOD USD
• In re-signing him.
HYDS,
The Plain Dealer reported
; Tuesday that the club also was
• close to signing former Brown
GAS EUC. UNGIS
• • Frank Wlntert, a lona snspper
who left vta·PJan Blast year.
•
In addition, former Plttsbureh
: strong safety Donnie Shell MoD: day turned . down Coach Bull ·
, Carson's offer to becQme the
627
AYe.,
: club's secondary coach. Shell,
, . PIL 446· " "
t who runs a sports counseling
'IOUISIIAJI..6P.&amp;
• .lluslllels In his · hometowp ot
'
'
'I • .
J.

·Load
news brief•···-. .
Coatlallld fi'IIID .....
.- .
•

•
•

Trial cancelled

' ' Gil
, ., Jl"I ·scoul Ie'aders. .·m'eet·,,. . '
SCRAMBLE· FOR BAIL - Charlotte Hornets forward Kell)'
Trlpucka dives lor a 1 - ball between Denver Nuggets' Jerome
Lane (L) and Blalr-Rasm...en (R) during fourth quarter action
TuesdO)'. Tbe Nunets heat the Hornets 12Z.96. (UPI)

Valvano withdraws offer ai NC State ·
RALEIGH, N.C. , CUP!) · Nortll Carollna State coach Jim
.Valvano's attorney says he has
withdrawn all proposals to settle
Valvano's contract with the
university, and the embattled
coach will stay. on until the
university rules otherwise. •
Art Kaminsky refuted statements bY Interim athletic director Harold Hoptenberg who said
Valvano asked for the contract
settlement talks and Indicated he
wanted to resign In the face of
allegations of player payoffs and
point· shaving.
''This Is the end of the whole
esc ;ipade," Kaminsky told The
Charlotte Observer Tuesday.
"The situation now Is Jim's still
thi! basketball coach there Until
the university says otherwise."
Both sides said they do not
expect a solution until alter this
week's Atlantic Coast Confer·
ence Tournament In Charlotte.
Valvano will coach the Woltpack
during the tournament
N.C. State officials decided
Tuesday to seek private counsel

to represent the university In Its

clint~ct Mgotilltlons' 1'wttl'i tlle

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.. •

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Pleas Court
.·
.
· ·
·

,..

ap~~~e':Jc:! t~:~:~f ~

------Weather-~--~
. iloeill Central Ohio
.· Mostly . cloUdy VI!'ednesday
night, wl~h a chance or rain and~
. low between 35 and 40. Cbance of
rain Is 30 percent. Occaslonsl
rain and windy Thursday, with
highs near 50. Chance or ralnls80
• cent. ·
per
, .·

S1 00 PIIIAG

.

MILl IEPUtiiS

Milk Fonnulll I Milk l'armula Ill
KLOD AD Lll Fonnulll
Lomb MAk llepl-.
Pig Nurllng Formula

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Ph. 614·H2·M79 •
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9

CHESTER
QUICK
STOP
(ForiMfly ••ills S...OCo)
Thank You For Your Patience,
C~peratlon, and Patrona11 During
Our Recent Construction. ·
,,

FRIDAY, MARCH 9th AND
SATURDAY~· MARCH l'Oth
"Ca1fo~er Appreilatloa Day'~··
FIB COOliES a·COfFEE
"
-.WATCH FOI OUI GUND OPEMNG
HAIOLD &amp;
.

a.·a r-

·!

ro.

will ~

buJldllf fwd,

.

.,

One was lined and six others ".felted a $43 bond on a, stop slin
forfeited boncls on · speeding •violation. Others fined we~
Chari" In the court of Pomeroy Beverly Holley, Middleport, $,63
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday , a4ld costs, permitting an unUnight.
, ...
c~lllf!(l driver to operate her
Fined on the charge was David vehicle; Jenetta West, MiddleSnoderass, Racine, $55 and cOsts. port $375 and costs, DWI and $63
Forfeiting bonds were KIIVIn and costs, operating under · sus. I&gt;uaan, Racine, $46; Ludesta .. penalon, and Stepbanle .English,
. Cole, GallipOlis, $50; Carolyn Mlddlf,'VOrt, · $213 and costs,
Nei.On,· Point Pleasant, $46; assaut't.
Mark Brown, Racine ,. $!12; VICki
Ellis, Gallipolis, $49, aDd 'Da¥1d
(EGAL NOTICE
Cunnll)lham, GalllpoUs, $53'. •
The Public Utilities ComWalii!r.Arnold, Langsville, for·

miseion of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case .

Hospital news
Veterau Memoltal

=.

TIJESDAY ADMISsiONSRandy R. Martin, Racine; ·
George E, Conroy, l..ong
Bottom; Mardn Andrew MeAn·
I\IS, Pomeroy.
TIJESDAY DISCHARGES Frank Wallace.

h~h'::s:'::!':.te

'

Papers fUed
secretary of Stae Sherrod
Brown reported today. that articles of Incorporation bave been
filed with hll. oJflce In Columbus
by J's Service Center, Inc.,
Pomeory. The .lncorpOI'Itors are
Jay H. Rlclpay, John H,. Rlclr·
way; Jr., and Hilda M. smtth.
JllY H. Ridgway of M168 State
Route 7,'Pomei'PY ts.the agent.

_ _ _ Meigs an'nouncements ~--

No. 90-01-El-EFC, lo

review the fuel prOcurement practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the· opel1lkin
of its Electric fuel Component, and rellled IIIII·
ters. This hearing is
'scheduled to . begin .at

1:30p.m:, onMan:h12, .
1990 tt Clly Council
ChamberS, 218 Cleveland
Avenue,. S.W., Clntan,
Ohio 44702.
All interested .puUes wtll
be glwn Ill oppor1unity
to bt hllnl. fultt.-lnfar.
.ma1lan lillY IIi ablalned
by COI1IICIIng the Commission it 110 East
l!rold St., Coiumbus,
Ohio 43266-0573.

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Family PlliuuRg
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IV1 Tlta lomlly ol ptcft u'Gn~ll .

~-:.::,:

CHEBa, Olio
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' i·

'

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.

,

2i·•7-9

..

'

__ Pomeroy Court news _ _

seeu 'c···-

~~ ·Qnueb

.,.

~

A.t:::r·

~=~==~
c-..
C!lu.s. Amy .a

~;

'

uy. · Reds cancel four more spring tilts

.

• I '. '1·&gt;u •

Bobby G. Wines; Pomeroy; only, running a stop sign; a~d
was lined on three ·chargeS and Charles McCloud, Middleport,
given jail sentences·on two·when $100 and costs and five days In
hi! appeared Tuesday night In the , Ja!l. destruction oJ t~roperty.
Forleldng bonds 11/eTe Robert
·court of Middleport Mayor Fred
R. Taylor, Cheshire, $460, D~ ;
Hottman:
,
Wines was lined S50 alid •costs William A. Lyncll. Columbus,
$210, flnsnclal risk suspenslo'n;
on a disorderly manner ·charge;
$100 and costs and five days In Bobby Ray Van Meter, Letart,
W. Va., $460, Dw,I; and Paul A.
jail on a charge of assaulting a
Lambert,
Michigan, $460, DWI.
pollee officer, a.n d 5100 and costs
Charles
Ritchie, Mlddlep()rt,
and five days In Jail for resisting
entered a plea of Innocent to
arrest.
,
Othet's tined In the court were charges of dlsorder)y manner
Wlllam A. Lynch, ColumbUs, $10 and domestic violence In mayfine only, flctltloiiS tags; David or's court and the matter was
L. Lynch, ·Middleport, $10 fine transferred ip Meigs County
Court. ,
·

~

JEFF WAINER INSURANCE

Extended Forecast .
Frldl)' ·through SundO)' ..
A chance of rain each day, with
highs ranging from the mid 50s to
the 'm id 60s. &lt;Nernlght lows will
be In the 30s early Friday and In
the 40s Saturday and Sunday
mornings.

Middleport.:Court n.ews

.

01 Mg Dllf PIOIUCTS
1-IG IIAICII

'

WEATHER MAP- A low presaure system In the central U11lte!l .
S&amp;atel will brlal a m!Kaare of now and Ice tn the Dallotu tbrollall
the Grell&amp; Lakes ud lllllndentorma from lbe Ohio River V aiiBJ
lbr..,ll lbe Tau 0111. Hlp preuure wlll btlq - I I ) ' fair
co a Jltlo1• to the But and Southeast. A P aclflc cold frolltwlU moYe
. ~hrllllfllthe Kocklel willie vel')' SUIIIIJ and warm rt'Ml11p will
occur In lbe Soalbwest,
.

deaI h.8 ' "
Jlillon

i'

SAVE

H ·

ThWith the arrival of tl!e rainfall
Ursday, temtfratureS ~liD·
creas~ reach g the mid s to
nefooking ahead. through the
weekend, there will 'Qe a: chance
t I
d
1· h hi. hs I
~h:~rd~~r~ ;~~~ Lo!s wi~
helnthe30sFrlday,andlntlle40s
Saturday and Sunday.
On tile early morning weather
map, high pressure was centered
nortll of Lake Ontario and
te ded
Ohl A dee 1
ex n
across
o. ·
P owb
pressure center was over t e
southern Plains. By Thursday
morning, the high wl.ll be along
h A
C
t e tlanlic oast while the low
pres sun) moves nortlleast. The
low will be over western IIUnois

GU·t'
W~k . Ja~ . Peavley In ch~~ · of
~
bY late Thursday. · ·
. I• actlvitlt!~ Were diSCUssed at the
fiOWef·~~ • .
•• .
. , •
· March: (neettng of the Big Bend ·
It w•• reported !hat delf;'gates
. · ·
·~
·
.
~• J
.
. Girl Scout ~rvlce Unit. Heading_ are still ·needed tor AprU · 28 .
. ·
·
•.
the meeting was Dee I::awrence, . annual meeting of Black. Dla·
TOLtDO: Ohto (UP!) - :The forward Its recommendations lor
.d irector of the Athens Girl Scout mood CQIIDcii; to be held at
Ohio Supreme Court's Board of possible action against the la\Vy·
Field Office.
'
Institute, W.Va. A:Iry 'rqtsterecl Commlaslons on Cirtevances and' ers to !he Ohio Supreme Court.
Amoq special actMtles being scout,J• and lip, Is ellelble to be a
DlsclpUne has sc'lieduled a meet·
Five lawyers who were not
plannedto,rGirl~utWeekarea .delaal*. The deteeates must be lnglaterthlsmonfhwith.agroup
prosecuted allegedly took docu·
skat1n1 party on March 10, 2 to approved at the Area IllmeeUne of lawyers charaecl with remov:
mentsoutofthecourtsystemand
4:30 p.m., at the Ch4!ster Slla· · . . to 1Je .hel4 later filii month ln. , lng d~uments .f rom Toledo Mil·
also will appear before the
te-A~.a:'(. , f;'pr lna11fance pur· .:.. Par~lbufl, W.Va.. A:Iryoi)e tn· ·nlclpal Court.
. . .
commission as · a res)llt of a
polS,~ event I• ·&lt;!~ qnly to · .terelt*ll 1p · b\!ID&amp; ji· delegate
Six Tol~ lawyers have been
Toledo ' Bar Assoclatlo.n
reatatered. scoutB, leaderi and· should ·confact NaDCY, .'k'oacham' convicted ~n Lucas Coulltr Com- , ,inYesdgatlon.
.
!110n Pl'as Co\lrt ol obsb'ilctinll . . Jim Bate8, asslslant' Lucas
· parepts. Skate ren1411 will be 75 as soon u potalble.
: cepts.
.
'·
. ,..
· .. Leacjel'l are uraed to turn In official . business for rem&lt;lvlng
~untr. prosecutor, said Wednes·
1
An. event for Junior Scouts Is
rePortS for fh~ Girl Scout Diary . affidavits from the court system,
day his lnyestlgat!on examined
plannedforMan;h12,,:30to6:30 whiChluuppolldto'bepubllslled and at least five other lawyers ' 547 affidavits that were·!1llsslng
· • [ .p.m., at tile MIQdleport ¥.&amp;sonic monthly IIJ The Dally Sendiiel.
were re~red to the dlsclpUnary
from the court sYstem: The
· , Temple. Tile event IJ· being . Le~s m•·v tel~ tile Seil· board )ly,tlleToledo Bar Alsocla·
Indictments were handed up .In
; ; sponsored by the Middleport tlnel 'office and g1W ii!po(ti to tton for PO&amp;Ilble sanctions.
·• . November 1988.
: Junior Troop and Ropr . Whl·
Nancy Yoacbaln, or elM a~lt . Jon Marlhall, seCretary of 't he
Two lawyers, Sheldon Witten· ·
:,.. taker, president of Black Dla·
lllrltten reportl to YO.Cbarii by board,_said the Marcb Tf.heartng
berg and RoMie Wingate, were
; mood Girl Scout Council, will be the lOth of each I'IIQdtl\~ Tli8 Girl .ill Lucas County Commoii'Pleas
named In a 130-count Indictment
' ' preseni to help the 81rls complete Sco11.t Diary tor March sbQWd ·Co':'rt Is aimed&gt; at setting a 'trial
charring them wttll tampering
'· sorne badge requirements. .
.. ·cover actlvttla from tbe first of : date. Tile disciplinary board.will
with records
:' .PiansfortheannualGiriScout ".. the. year tllt'O!lih ' Febtuary . .
eo
·
'·
.
.
. I Mother-daqhter Banquet are·. April's Diary wOUld ~hen c(lver . . eunil
.
. f underway with leaders. Gladys
all March activities,
· ·•- .t:
· -e~
· 1·Thomas and Teresa Evans In
The next meet"'' .or Blt Beiid .
A •o~tosure act·ion' has been c · 111 h
te ped down 'a' s
·
row
ass
P the case
· of '·
' chargeoffoocl; De. b~leCooke-ln ·SerVIce .U nlt:wlllbe 'at7p._hl.on ftled' .1' ~Me•- eom'"'on PI-s
~
presldlngautllorltyln
h
c arge 9f set up and cle!lli up;
·April 5 . at Pomeroy United · Court bY Farmers B&amp;nk imd Megan Smith and Wesley M.
' April H~qil In charge of the . Methodist Church.
Savings Company, POmeroy, Smith, due to confilets of
program; a.~dTeresa· wllsonand
· against ' Richard A. Flnlaw, Interest.
"'
., ' .t_ _..,._
Pomeroy; Gertrude Flnlaw,
. A temporary restraljllngorder
.: t
. ~ .
Pomeroy; et al.
has been Issued against the .
,
.
,
. A judgment action has been defendant In the case of Anlll J.
. . I Paul
Millen R~h .
tiled by Robin Franklin, Galllpo- Taylor against CarlL. Taylor . .
•
,
.
lis, against Victor Counts,
The case of Michael L. Lam·
E.
62, Clifloa, · Syracuse.
.
'
· bert against Mary E. ·Lambert
: Paul Orr, .82, of EaaJe Ridge .
0
; Road, Loq Bottom. died Mon·
.Marth
Teachers
. ; , iday at' Kimes Convalescent Cel)·
Maaa. he .or Oh,lo against Kendall Lem)ey. Retirement Board of Oh!Q. In
; ter, Athe!l•. following an ex· Wi1 tbe•1011
tile
JlaDaa \!. Lemley Is to be relea.sed from care of Chemical Mortgage Co.,
· · ltended Illness.
·
lloulh
1114 QD A.
ROulh, custody on a $2,500 personal against CharleS R. Spaun, et al,
'
ClifDI. wllow.W.
recognizance bond.
. has been dismissed bUt may be
•I
•'
Oilier IUIYI¥011 a hil wife.
Common Pleas JudJe Fred reactivated upon good c~use .
I · A f1U'111er, he wu born pn Jan. Gllllja M. I,.., Ojftnp· two
·
.
·
i 7. 1901· at Baahan, the son of ...., MB10n 1t1y lb , •.Pu •
~ WUllam Issac Orr and MIDDle
ud 'any L. lloulll. Oiftoa: two
· : •· Moore Orr.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The , against the PhlladeiPatla Phil·
.....
Mn. Della (Dia 0.)
He Ia slll'\'lved bY a sister; ·
Cincinnati
Reds Wednesday can· · lieS, March 12 and 16 games
lloulh, Jr.. New ........ Mrs.
, Edith McE...,..h, Alhley; a
celed four mor;e exblbltton aaatnst tile Texas Rangers and a
slster·ln-law, Ethel Orr, Chester,
Lowll
Mana: games scheduled at theiF Plant·· March 13contestagal!llttheNeW
.....
t four nlecet and several ,real' · Olle lllllldltlr.
City, Fla., ~prlng training site . • -York Mets.
·
·'.lllecel and nepbewl.
.
becaule of the lockout.
I
'
The Reds now have canceled
· : ,Besides his parents, he was
Wednesday's cancellations In- · nine of the 16 games which had
WOibd for die
~ for
· ; '. prectlc!ed In .death by b~ wife,
eluded
the March 11 game • n scheduled at Plant City.
fhellna Orr In 1917, two brotlt!l!ts•. · 42 ,..... He Wll • lll ••
Wll a me•ber ol
Wayne ancl Artllur, and a aliter,
Sm~.;helt
Pole No. 140;
.. , Lottie.
,
I s ~~- ' ,....,,
1111 VF'W
'
·~
SIDWIII-1r••
No. 9926, Blll'eall', ·a' . ct.. eari,.
meet
Funeral services
u-.
. Tbe License Bureau will close ToThe
Big Bend Youth League
Tbu~y at 3:ll p;m. at ' the
Slrlicl wiD be PtidiY • 1:30 atl p.m. on Thursday In order lor will have an orrantzatlonal meet·
EwiDI I'IIJII'fal Home. nt.&amp;ev. p.&amp; MPJ!IIkc Ill r..l !lame II t11011 ~ployeel to at tend a log at 7 p.m Tuellday at tthe
KeD Baker will otf!c!•telud Mlllae Willa M Joy, II ' I
Syraculf! Elementary School .
~ ID Atlaelll.
. burial will be lD tbeSut!Dilt1Dite4
a.w
wiD lie
''
Metbodllt Church. Tbe tamll)' Ia I I lit Ill Ill OlniiD •
· will receive frlendl Oft!! ~ ~ IT! "J dill wiD .. coaI!J'(or to tbe. III'Yice. Ill lllu of ..... .... ,., It
lftowers. contrlbutlolll may be . ,..•• ~ _, al • Jbe ....... .
lllacSe to tile SuttoD UJIIted ...... IJtu J ; .·

t,J~mlni

t ..

.

Today was to he mostly sunny,
with highs In the mld-308 In tile
nortll to the upper 40s In the
south. Lows tonight will be ill tile
mld-20s In tile nortll to the upper ·
30s In the south.

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Poma-ov-Middlaport. Ohio

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POWBLL'S COUPON ·

..

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday ·
.'
. 8 AM. 10 PM·
. . ·.

.. ----·---

. 7'9'&lt;!

.-:~

· · ·.cilao&amp;IY :auowru'S

.

'GOaoSUN.IWI. 4111111SAT.MM. 10

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·soc·: : o~F·
'.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

GROUND

... .

.,

BEEF ·
•

1

Rlbeye Steak .•••.'!·.$499
USDA.CHOIC,E BONELESS BEEF ..
$ ·l· 89 -----------Rump Roast......... . .50 (''~· .o'FF·.
FLAVORITE ASSORTED . .
.·.
9
GRADE A WHOLI
2
51
Lunc·h·Meats
••••••L:.• ·.. . ..
CHICKEN
' AT PoMu 'S . '
GOOD ONlY
GOOD SUN. MM. 4 TIIIU
MM. 10
.

SUP~RIOR FRANKIES.

oz.

.:

W1eners ••••••••••••••.••

LB.

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rPot'~rDscouPON'I.' .
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II

$

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GOLDE,N CRISPY

Cod

I

SqWJ~_es

HOMEMDE ·

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FLAVOil1[ . ;
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'BACON·.:

...

.,( .,
~ .5 0· .·oF·F
POWELL'S COUPON
.J

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Sancl~ic~ if;iead ...~... 99 &lt;
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.......L:.. . '· .· .

"'-11 ... · ~ ~~. / ..: ·.

0

·:-1-LB,. PA€~GE · ·~ · .,

I·

·. PACUGE ·fRESH' :

.TOMATOES
·
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GOOD~Y

GOOD ~fl:.~..:.t
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POW.ELL'S COUPON,

J ',

. ·J !

"

FAMILY PAK

C~le~.y

,

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.' ». ,. 1 $. . ].

BUNCH

•••••••••••••••• ~i ~ :

4

. •·

"PORK 'CHOPS·
'
4
-·--------GOOt ONlY AT I'OIIllL'S
GOQO SUN., ... f ..U SAT, . .:·10

FLAVORIJE . .

2°/o Milk
. ·

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TV D'lnners~
. •••••~.~.~~.~ ·. .· ·&lt;·: •~oc·. . OFF:
.-.
~,

BANQUET

Kidney Beans ·.~!·~i!~ 3/Sl
PICKERS PRID£. CHERRY·

·

•!

!

OR
136 OZ. lOX ·
IIIUliiJUI

aEACH -

TIDE DPERGENT

..5629 ' .
• .,. ••-

Only At Powll.l's Suplr Yalt ·
Sun. Mar. 4 tlwu
Mar. 1D

· CHARMIH
41011

PIG.

'f.

• • • • ••• • • • • • .• • • •

99t .·

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·,. .·(.
99
~

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TOILO·TISSUE .

~

. MOUNTAI~ TO~.c-RU~B . ~PPLE OR .· .
18. · .· . 26 oz. .

.
.
Apple
p
Pie. Filling •••••••!~~~~.:69~
.
.

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_.... ____·--·-·--·-""'

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TYSON ,(HI(KEN
FILLttS

COFFEE . ,

$499.

...

.... ·~ ·· .. Ra•a uattelll •,111e . M·•·~·

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· Page 1·:
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V.:ednx.ctay, MM:h 7,
.

Science ·Day.set .at
Meigs Junior High

. .._ . .

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Open house
set for shop

••

~;·•• Chester
~

~{·

·

~

o• CHUNKS .

0000 o•Y AT I'OIIlll'S
'GO~ SUII., .,. 4iwu SAT. MM.

lO

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··

B)' 1,fnMe_d Press IDmnallonal
The number' of. women In the
U.S. armed foi'CI!II lhot up from
approximately 45,000 In 1972 to
223,000 In 1989, and women now
make up 19·.6 percent of all
active-dutY· petsonnel.

becoming advocates for homeless children and youth.
The scripture read. was Isaih
49:20, Matthew 8:20, Luke 9: 46,
and Proverbs 22: 6.' A prayer
lltany ·was also read.
·
~elen. Wolf read "Adult Behav:
tor Mold• the Child.''
·
The group sang "0 God Our
Help In Ages Past." and the
program closed with prayer.
. Mrs. Mae Young presided at
the meeting with 13 members
present. and 53 sick and shut In
calls reported.
.
.
Easter lilies were discussed,
. and It was discussed to gtve $50 to
· the M'lg&amp; Methodist Cooperative,
Pamsh.
.

PTO gathers,
,

for .meeting. ... .. '. .

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SUPIIIOI
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Now you knaw

tJMw meets

-: · "~omf!less Children l·n Ainer·
:: lea' was the title pt the program
. presented by Ml;a. &gt;M~llyp
:, Spencer .l!ld Mrs: ~ Wolf at .
• • the·Marcb meetIn&amp; of the Cliester ·
:• .' United MetbOIIIst Wllmen.
: . The 'JI'OIIP sane !)\way In a
• · Mangel'" wlth~atbryn 'Baum as
pianist.
.
.
. :. The_ purpose of the program
~ . .waa to false coiLICioitsneu re~ ~~~~~ tl1l! P.llght of homeless
; · elllldi'ell in the United States, to
;l ' recOgllizl! the various categories
• of· perSO!II described as home' . tess, with particular Interest on
chlld~n. and to discover practl·
1
cal . and appropriate: ways for
.~:

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and must be made by Tuesday
with ·Mrs. George Skinner. at .
992·3249. Mrs. Ronald Reynolds ·
at 992·2600, or Mrs. Eileen Buck .
' 'at 247-2723.
Gties~ will be the Good dti· .
, zens winners and the American
History Essay winners.
. Hostesses will be Mrs. Rey··: · nolds, Mrs: Buck, Mrs. Matk
': GnieSer ;Jr •• Mrs: Sillnner, and
~ : · .Mt~. Clarence. Struble. ·

l . The March meeting of the
: , Chester PTO was OJII!!Ied with .
. : Paula Mora leading the pledge to
·,
: • , the tlag.
: . , Reports of the secretary and
. : . treasurer were given and II was
·· noted that · Big Bear receipts
. , must be turned In by March .17.

' SCIENCE DAY ..: Tom Cremeans, an elghtb rrader at Meigs
Juillor IUgb School, Is busy at '!"Ork on his project, "How SaltWater
of Dlffereilt Arnounta Effect Electrical Current," for the Science
Day whlcb will he held at dleschOI'lonTuesday.Anopenhousewill
beJID at 1: 38 p.m. followed by an awards ceremony at '7: 30 p.m.
VALASSIS

COUPON VALUES

--..-·---·- -----··---- --· ....

---VALASS /5

SAVE $1.00
.

· Parenting c/.asses
: set at Extension
• A second series o( parenting
• clAsses will be offered begtllll,lna
• March 12 tram 1-3 p.m. at the
• . MeigS County Extension Office.
: The cluses are being offei ed
; throUJ(l . the ~teulon Service ..
1 and the topic will be "Punlab• ment.versus Dlaclpllne- What's
·• •the Difference and What Should I
The Jiroaram will Include dl•

; cuutpn, VIdeo tape, and practl·

• cal partlltlg auat~tlona. Llpt
' refrelbmtlltl · wtU be IIII'Yed
foUowtna the r.•am·
r.
for tile Claula
req..ted llr M oii . U, .~ ·

Prereri111'a bn

1111
Exlelllloll Oftlce. ._

r«l ........

• County

~

~ ~All parenta and cblktren are

.111vlted to attend.

HOMEMADE MEAT SALAD •••• ~t-•• 89c·

BEAVER VAllEY

•

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HEAD LmUCU.t.~'"""59c

LARGE EGGS •••••••R9J, S1,29
FLESCHMAII'S QUAITERS

MARGARINES ....U.9J,. S1.29
VELVEETA
CHEESE .............}.U1... SS.S9

on

NEW GREEN
CABBAGE ..............~......49'
..
CEllO PACK

CARROTS ........!f.9.t.. 2/19'

with
Baby Lotion

FRESHLIK£ PEAS ••••:••••••1M!. S1.59 .
IIIDSEYI
COOL WHIP •••• ~............u.~!. S1.59
ORE-IDA TATOR TOTS ••.3.\P.z.Sl.99 .
CHICKEN OF

'

TU"A ••••••••••••••••••••••,••••t!'lJ».z. S1. 19
LIP JEA •••••••••••••••••••••••• !!.~•• S2 .09 .
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JUMBO BOlOGNA •••••••••••••~•• S1.,3 t
DIU MADI
. SttaEDOfD '2.19 LL
COOKED HAM ••••••••,••••• SliCED Ll. Sl.99
ICIIttH
.
TURKEY BREAST •••••·•••••••••••. !. S3.49 .

.

1

r·1 nor· ·

ADC,

·~XwELL HOUS~

.. .

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Club -.meets

..

Charter Day
h · ,. . · ..
'LUOC eon set

~-rl ·Qteste~
.

GQ00 ONLY AJ POW&amp;L'S 1
GOOD SUN., IM; 4 THIU SAT, MM. 10

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DOZEN

I

The Daily Sentinel.

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Med...- E·ggs ·...............

OF ARC LIGHT RED

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HANGING lOCK

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At lllnlde, Mrs. S..Sat braved fanatics 1p .the-army . · ·
' ' tile book, "A Woman 0( WIIYPt'' the ,PoUtlcal aalldatorms of
Ltrida Damewood of ' near :
Mrs. Sadat now Uv.es In Vtrgt·
" • by 'Jib411 Sadat, at · !be recent
rumor, treachlry, and treUOJl. nta arut lectures and teaches ·at .• The Meigs Junior High School. rriedlcal award, by Dr. James Tuppers Plains has opened a
:· · rneetlna of~Micldleportl.IU!r­ She ~me the flrat woman to South Carollpa University .
beauty shop, Linda's Hair Loft . .
In cooll'!ratlon With the Ohio ·conde; and an achievement
•. · ary Cl11b bel'd at Overbrook· ba.ve her pli;ture ID'the newapap·
Mrs. Georg~ J{ackett Jr., pre·
The "ew beauty shop Is loCated :
Academy o1 Science. will be award, by the Meigs Loc~l
'·• l '-"G'
"'~nter • '..
.
•
••
er~. ,travel oulllde bl!f country, . sided at the. meeting in which
In
her home on County Road 28, •
conducting, a Science Day on Teachers Association.
• ·
Mrs.' Fisher s'-ted tbat the aad lllbt fOr womens riJbta and Mark MurphY,, Overbrook Center
Locust
Grovo;l RQ4d. Sunday she :
Governor's Awards for Excel·
Tuesday at the scbool. ·
: : . bQok was the stDry: Sadat's love educatloll.
Administrator, introduced his
will have an open house from lJG ~
of tile day, accord· lence will be given In the at~as of
. I tor Anwar Saclat and that colin· · Mnl.l'laber went OJJ to say tbat employees to.' the group and InaTbeto purpose
4
p.m. ,and residents of the area agriculture
and
,
energy
research,
Rusty Bookman, 'science
try. lt also reveata the richness,. Mra: Sadat refonned EIYllt's welcom~ them.
are
Invited to visit the new shop. :
food
science
research
,
water
day director· and teacher, Is to
glory, and traaf!dY of one worn- divorce Jaws. Sbe al10 supported · Roll call was answered with 12 · , s~mulale Interest ln. sclenCI!, to resource research, litter preven·
A gPaduate of Valley Beauty ·
. ·.. an's extraordinary lite. She tells her hulba~s quest for peact!'ln lnerl).~s !lad twq guests, Mrs .
Schoo~ In Marietta, Mrs. Dame,·;
promote, rese~ch. to promoII! tton and recycling research, and
~ of her romance at age 1~ to' a · the Mlddllf East and WMn lie Jack Bechtel a11d Mrs. Harry scienllli£' llnowledge, al14 to environmental,research.
. wood jworked at Gallery Hair ~
: , 35-year old revolullonary, and
traVeledtoJer~lemlbefeared Chesher, stating what their PY·
Arts, ~tnd then became assistant ·
There will also be a special
reCOil!lze high achievement' In
• J thetr adventtirousllfe toaetber as
for bla life. Sadat wu 'usassl· ramlds would contalit.
manaeer
for two years at'Ftesta :
award
given
this
year
for
the
best
attaining· these objectives ..
Allwar Sadat rose trom WIIJ',bero Dated IJIOctober,l98lbyMusllm
The , fen te r served
Hair
SalOl!
In Belpre.
· .
:
overall project, the"lohn Mora
Each e,lghtli grade student will
• • I to leader to ruler of Egypt.
..
·, refreshments.
Mrs:
Damewood's
hours
are
·
Memorial Award,
be required to have a protect for
••
•
Tuesc!ay,
Wednesday,
Friday
:
this day. Projects will be judged
and
Saturday.
8
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
by a team of professionals or
and
Thursday,
11
a.m.
to
8
p.m,
:
educators in four areas, original·
Appointments may be made by :
lty and creativity, clarity of
t
I
•
•
calling
985-4278.
•
,NEW YORK (UPI) -Perrier 'United States laSt month, leading ready to drink the product again expression, use of scientific
She lls married to John Dame- :
• · sparkling water, yanked trorn
Perrier to announce· Feb. . 14 it ·~ when lt becomes available." · · method , an!l knowledge
wood
and ·the couple has two :
tJ¥! market because of a contamt· was withdrawing 160 million
It.takeS 24 days to get'the water achieved. In each.of these areas
children,
Kevin, a senior at n,tion scare last month, Is
bottles · from stores. around the from Vergeze to the United students may achieve a rating of
Eastern
High
School. and An· :
flowing again.
.
world.
·
,
States and 70 million bottles to fill superior, excellent; good, or
gela,
a
graduate
of Mountain ·
Ronald V, I!&amp;vls, president of
Davia de~erlbe(l the recait as the American plpeltne, which If satlsfaclory. Al1 students who
State
College.
'
.~ , American · Perrier, said water
"ol,ll' time of pain." ·
placed end to end would stretch receive an excellent rating will
Imported for U.S. supermarkets
"It was aeverahealthorsafety from Paris to Dallas, Davis said. be eligible to go on to district
, and reetaurants will appear In
concern as both u.s. and French .
"Perrier will staPt , arriving competition at · Ohio. UniversitY'
There will be a cheerleadlng :
: . •the .fam11lar pear-shaped· green
health authorithn assured us early In AprU' tri New Yotk and Ol\ April 7.
clinic
open to all elementary age :
An open house will be held at
. ; bottles with the · desiiJiatlon
alter careful examination but to · will be available In all American
on Saturday at Eastern students
. :" "nouvelle production" bY .earty
ensure tbe eood name of Perrier, markets in three months, but not the school on Tuesday at · 6: 30
High
School.
Registration begins :
' 1 ApPII on the East Coast.
.
the recall was ordered of all the In all si~es l ani! flavors unUI p.m : Parents, st11dents, and the
at 8:30a.m. and there Is a $5 sign ·
· :·\
Perrier's ·West · Coast reproduct currently on the 'sometime this summer,'" Davis public are Invited to attend and
up
fee. Lunch will be $2 and all :
view the projects until 7: 30 p.m.
•. , Introduction will begin April 22.
market " he said.
said.
proceeds will go the athletic :
,\
"We sbap return!" ·Davis
A n~ Intensified· quality con·
The Perrier Group is the Refreshmen Is will be served. At
boosters
. Parents may pick up •
~ · · ~!aimed .Tut!sd&amp;Y at a packed . tiol procedure Involving double
largest bottled w!lter company In 7: 30 p.m. there will be an awards
their
children
at 3 p.m. and·:
JONATHAN Z. NEWELL
:~ ~ eonteren,ce at the French•· filtration of the natural carbonic
America. Since the withdrawal · ceremony to reward all students
awards
will
be
given. Can•:
Coe••l~jte on Fifth Avenue.
. Ju that gtves Perrier Its fizz has of Its product, abOut 50 percent of for the completion of their work.
949-2603 or 667-6269 for •
Awards to be given include
''Tile J!T~cli. Mltliatry of
been ln,Uhtted at Vergeze in the .market s!lelf space has been
information.
certlflc&lt;J,tes
for each stud'ent; a
• lftlth.buctrllflecltbeWU'itYof · SOI!thern France, where the taken bY,Otherbottled:Waters,of
•
'Mr. and Mrs. Jeffri!Y Di
: ·· · $'lrrler and tbewa..rlll'ilesame · water .originates, Davis said. which Italy's San.Pellegrlno and bes1 electrical project award,
Newell, Long Bottom, · ~e ani
• Ult always ·hu beell. The only
''Teams of ln11!rnatlonal experts France's EV!an were reported sponsored by Ohio Power; an
'
achievement
award,
sponsored
nouncing
the birth pf a son,l.
• lhll~J that will be difterea~ IS tile were monitoring and verifying leading sellers.
by
the·
.
.
Meigs
.
Jaycees;
best
Jonathan
Zackarla.
ori Feb. 16 ar
· · ~ label; wlilch sayi 'nouvelle
the pr&lt;icedu~."
·
Martel
ta
Memorial
Hospital.
1!roductlon.'"
.
·
· Perrier will spend $25 million
weighed·
eight
The
lnfan.
t
· Small quanUtles of b,enzene · lntbenext12weeksonarelau!lch
pounds
and
three
ounces
and
was
• • were found In some bottles In the
prO(II:am In the United States,
20
and
three
quarter
-inches
long
..
.. '
·
·
beglnnlnJW'edileldayivlt\l'tiews·
Grandparents are Mr. and
paper ail(l ·ra&amp;o adv~r.Uslng,, he
Mrs.
John Newell, Long .Bottom;
.
.
.said. ' Tbe campaiJD will be
and
·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
I.
aim~ at CODvtnclng ~illlutners
Wright,
Belpre.
or.the · ttuth of lm!·recalt ac!s:
Great
grandparents are Mr.
..
·
.· ·
'&lt;It's pure. It's Perrier." .
aqd
Mrs.
Hobart Newell, Ches· ·
• The Return Jonathan Meigs
).'et· Davis nld International
ter;
Mr.
and Mrs. Mwrvln
Ch'apter,bauihteraottheArner· consumer surveys 'shOwed ·nine
Walker,
Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and
·• lean Revolution will bold · Its · out of 10 mineral water di'Jnkers
Mrs.
Robert
J.
Wright,
Parkers·
~: Charter Day I.Dacheon on March were awareofPerrll!r'seontalill·
bu..-g,
W.Va.;
and
Mr.
and
Mrs. 1
• 16; 12:30 p.m. at ttie Overbrook nation problem·; and eight out of
Walter H. Sams, Parkersburg,
,. Ceoteqn Mj~dl~t.
, .
lOPerrlerdrlnkers "say thl!}'are
W.Va.

·

'$ ]' OEF·~'i
..
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Newell birth

GOOD ONLY AT POIIIIil'S
GOOD $1111. MM. 4 THn sAT. MM. '10
1;.1..-.--~-- ---•..:.--.

12

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Leg Quarf.ers ..........
· c,. ...-.. ,.
50 0.,F

CHICKEN
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Cheerleading clinic :

POWELL'S COlJPON

.

•p

l'· '

2 LIS. OR MORE

LB:

I"

~:: ~Nouvelle' :Pe~r, co~s bac'k ~on, "tap . .

COUPON

LB.

_.

:. ' ; Mrs. Robert Fllber reviewed

_,.

DISHWASHiNG: UQUID

PRICES EFFECnYI: SUN., MAR. '4 THRU SAT.~ MAR. 10, 1990 , .

Bonel.ess Ham •••••• •

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. ·. ·. ;, DOVE ~· ::

., ·.:· .':.·.. ·Sl·19

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.................
,.;·
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POWELL'S·COUPON

298 SECOND St
POMEROY, OH.

COUNTRY LEAN'"

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RC
PRODUCTS

' 110011 DillY AT I'CIIIIll'S
110011 SUN. MAl, 4TIIIIIIAT• U. 10

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We Reserve The Riehl To
Limit Quantities

.

•

Motnl 4 PACK

SNACK PACK PUDDINGS ...'S1.39
DINWI · ~
' lllf~ oz. $1 •49
REG. CAKE MIX •••••••••••••••••
I

Rlif CIOCIII . ~

RTS FROSTING ••••••••••••~t~.,~~ S1.39
7 oz.
.
PRINGLE POTATO CHIPS •••• S1·.49
SillilY
,
CAKE SUGAR ~ •••:•••••••.s.!.~t. S2.39 ·
CIISC0 OIL .................lt.~•• S1.19 :
Clrf&amp;l.'S 011• Of
MUSHROOM SOUP ••lfl\llh2/S1.19
LIVINGSTON BULK GARDEN SEED

�J

Community cal~ndar _

South~rn

Local District
pupils
.
observe 'Right to, Read We~e~~

''·
.TVDDAi'

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mtlat
•
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.

students In the South.e m Local SchoOl Dliltrlct are
"reading like wild" In conjunction with · tills
week's special Right to Read activities at their .
respective scboota. A few atadeata from the .leur
elemeatary schools l'atllered oa Tuesday to share
Rll'bt 10 Read tales IJICiudlq lint grader Kayla
Stover, from Letart Falls Elemeatary, lying OD
the Door and readlq a book on whales; and IJnt

'

grader Jenaller ~o•maii;" tr.O.KJII~IIIe
hugi(IDJ a sluffed wllale. In
left to
are Todd BIRr, .a Portland Elemeatary
fourth grader, and IIIII llrother Jamea Rber, a
sixth grader at Por11811d, both boldiDJ ltelllll
related 10 their ahdlee of American lndfau; and
Syracuae Elemeatary HCODd grader Adam
Cumlnp with a book oa dlnrie•un aadu ''almoat
genuine" diDOHUr egg.

Fourth .quarter worker productivity sluggish
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tbe
Labor Department, In a .revised
report, said Wednesday that
worker productivity edged up by
a scant Q.2 percel1t In the fourth
quarter of 1989 wblle pay jumped
by 6 pet cen t.
For the entire year, worker
productivity Increased by 0.9
·: percent.
: · The revised. report, complied
· :by the department's Bureau of
: : Labor Statistics, Is Identical to a
~ · prellritlnary estimate that tbe
: :government ls.sued last month
. .:and Indicates Americans may
; ;liave to pay more for go()!ls and
I

..

services.
The reason: · While worker
productivity lagged, ia'bor/ costs
·
·
Increased.
The number of hours worked,
mean',Vhlle, fell by 0.2 percent
during October, November and
December, and a key inflation
g;auge tied to the report Increased 3.4 percent tn· the fourth
quarter, ct&gt;~pared to a 2.7
percent Increase In the third
quarter. "
All the statistics are adjusted
for seasonal factors and calculated at an annual rate.

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.
RACINE - TheSouthernLocal

School District O!ap~r I Program W)l be sponsorlnJ a N~s­
paper In Education WorkshOp to
be ~ekl ·a t the Southern Hlgb
School cafeteria · on Tuesday
from 6-8·p.m.
•

'

:_:.. : WASHINGTON (UPI) ;·:Thirty-five potential jurors had
;.:passed muster for the Iran1-Contra trial of John Poindexter
; - 4nd the presiding judge pre-

--

dieted that opening statements
could begin Thursday·.
U.S. District Judge Harold
Greene - joined by defense and
prosecution lawyers - quest!-

..

REEPSVILJ,E -"rhe Eastern
Local Board of Education will
meet In special session on Tuesday 1116: 15 p.m. In the highschool
cafeteria to deal with' personnel
· ~tters.
•··
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§Jtalian . leader
to address COngress
.

~...:. : WASHINGTON IUPPI) i::Armed with assuranc,es from
- et"esldent Bush tbat NATO will
;~ consulted on tbe reunification
;;:.of Germany. Italian Prime Min·
!- liter Glulto Andreotti moved to
.!:::P.fess his case Wednesday before
•:.&amp;joint session of Congress.
~..:-: A day after · his ceremonial
•::meeting and dinner with Bush at
:.-the White House, the six-term .
·: nallan prime minister was scbe- ·
.duled to appear before both
·houses of Congress .
• . On Tuesday, after declaring
thatthe16NATOmembersmust
"handle together" a U.S. ·backed
·reunification proposal, An·dreotti, TO, sought and obtained
·assurances from Bush that all
:NATO nations - not just tbe
·Onlted $tales, Britain, P)'ance,
:and the Soviet Union - ·would be
.
:tiiVolved.
· Raymond Seltz, assistant secretaryofstateforEuropeanand
Canadian Affairs, said the two
leaders.alsoagreed that a single
German state should remain a
full member of NATO and that
. (eunlflcation sbould honor the
.':extstlngbordersofothernatlons.
£ - West German Chancellor He!.h ~JtUt Kobl moved to defuse the
.·:.xplollve Issue Tuesday by back· · iilg dnwn from earlier stalementa linking recognition of the
Polish border with Poland's
renunciation of reparations from
World War'II.
Under the "1wo-plus-four"
reunification formula offered by
the Big· Four aiUes, East and
West Germany are to negotiate

•

• eco11om1c and political terms of
unlf!catlon as a · prelude to
discussions on Security Issues
with tin! United States, Britain,
France ·a nd ttte Soviet Union.
•·
·
Italy and otber NATO
members have suggested that a
conference be held to ·address
reunification and bow It would
affect the alliance. The Bush ·
administration opposes sucli a
meeting, but reiterated Tuesday
·· that all NATO memllers will be
Involved.
e
I'Tbe · two-plus-four mechanjsm is ·not regarded, in any
fashion, as a· substitute for
legitimate discussion of alliance
concerns within NATO," said
Seltz, who is to represent the
United States at a preliminary
reunification· meeting In Bonn
next week.
White House press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater also said,
"We're 111 the process of estabII sh 1n g re gu Ia r · NATO
consullatlons."
Before meeting with Bus,h In ·
the Oval Office, Andreotti was
asked If he believed the formula
would give Italy . an adequate
voice In reualflcatlon. "I ihlnk
that all the member countries of
the Atlantic alliance must handle
together these problems," he
said.
The prlll'le minister and bls ·
wife, Livia, were also the guests
·or the Bushes Tuesday night at a
state dllmer In their honor, which
featured fine food and drink and
many Italian-Americans In

attendance.
In exchanging toasts, the two
leaders praised th~lr .relation·
sblp and spoke of future challenges that lay ahead.
"We certainly agree on the key
role tba~ Italy plays In the ilew
emerging Europe," Bush told tbe
guests. "I can think of no time In
modern history when our strong
transatlantic partnership was
more crucial. :.. And as we bave
done so often In the past, we
found much agreement."
Andreotti In turn heralded the
"new Europe (that) Is coming
into being" but continued to
stress the need tor a new, subtler
''system for comprehensive
dialogue."
"We Italians have · always
believed that Atlantic solidarity
would one day bear fruit, '"""e
said. " Italy 1.s still convinced,
today .. . that this solidarity must
continue to Inspire our actions."

·

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,to thwart a coneressionallnves tl·
gallon of the·Reagan admlnlatra·
tlon's Iran-Contra scandal.
Greene ordered jury selection
to resume Wednesday.
Only 45 qualified jurors - 1~
more - are needed before
lawyers for botb sides begin
wlnnnwing tbe final number
down to 18 - 1% regular jurors
and six al(ernates.
Greene expressed optimism
that a jury could be selected
Wednesday,andtbatlawyersfor
Poindexter and Iran-Contra prollecutor Lawl:ence Walsh could
give their OJ!eDing statements
Thursday. Greene gave lawyers
a draft of bls proposed lnstruc·
tlons to the panel. .
Poindexter, 53, was President
Reagan's aatlonal security ad·
vlser and Is the highest-ranking
administration official Indicted
In the scandal.
A retired rear admiral, Poln·
dexterworeanavyblueplnstrlpe
suit Tuesday•, matched with a
blue patterned tie ·and a white
· shirt. He held his trademark pipe
In bls hand because smoking Is
not allowed In the courtroom.
The defendant's wife, Unda,
an Episcopal priest, did not
attend the second day of jury
selection In tbe case. She was
. present Monday.

·~~.

~~---";: ·Tbe Alr Force has estimated
::}he procram will cott $70 bliUon
!"16 build 132 planes -an average
·«about S530 mDIIon per bomber.
··: "A full B-2 buy now looks
elltremely unlikely - th.e ultl-

r

mate number may be closer to
the 15 we've authorized to date
than the 132 originally envisioned," committee Chairman Lea
Aspln, 0 -WI.s., told Chain.
The general, reflecting tbe
view of many Pentagon officials,
said he applauded the changes In
the Soviet Union but that his Job
Is to ensure an effective deterrent against a nuclear war now
and In the future.

...

Chain said tbat In the event of
war he needs a bolllber to
penetrate SovletalrdefeDNiand
locate Sovtet mobile mlllllea and
commai\Cf centers.
' 'The B-52 can dD It today. The
B-1 call do It tomorrow. but we
JM!ed the B-2 to do it In the out
years," he said.
''The 8 ·2 In the START agreement 11 the moilt Important
element ~f my support for a
START ag'reem~t." Chl!l.n said.
f

. IICOIPOUnort ON

..IHUISDAY, AHIL
26, 1990.
.
.

Lottery numbers
CLEvELAND .( UPI) - 'lUes·
· !lay's wln'11ng . Ohio · Lotte ry
numbe~~: ·. · •
·
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•
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,288,767,' with a payoff due of
$697,922.
PICK-4
'I
2112.1
PICJ{-4 tlcllet sales totaled
$245,321.50, with a payoff due of

$493.. .

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World Day of .Prayer was held ·
recently at the Pomeroy .U111ted
, Methodist Church by the Cburch
.. Women United of Meigs County.
Dgrothy Downie, key woman
from the church, served as
leader. The theme was "A Better
Tomorrow - Justice For All."
The program was writ ten by 14 .
. · · women from Czechoslovakia .
\ Members of · CWU attending
were Rev. Katherine Riley, VIrginia Hoyt, Racbael Downie,
Lulu Hampton, Doris Grueser,.
Faye Wallace. Ada Titus, Flor·
ence Richards. Mary Frances
Baumgardner, Sue Grace; and
Glenna Rummell.
Senoi!ral · songs were sung,
Including a solo by Rachael
' Downie, "Lead On o Cloud of
Yahweh," with Martha Hoover
accompanying on the plano.
.
Approximately .45 women at·
:: tended. CollectiOn was taken up
· ~ by Betty McGulre;and Marjorie
:. · Reuter. Benediction was read In
· unison by the congregation. ·

,. Politics lead
,. to
Austin s.exodus
.,

STARDI/ST

•

OffER GOOD
MAllO!
I
TO
M,\Y
31, 1990.
,j
.
'
.......... EXa.lmii.Y BY

·R. JOHNS, LTD.

.

IIIAN IILUNGS or DAVE HilliS
\

DORITOS
TORTLLA '
CHIPS

CO:KE

SWANSON

PRODU(TS

..

,COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - .
' ·Cleveland politics and Catholt·
clsm led to the exodus of Gerald
Austin, politiCal advisor for De;
mocratlc gubernatorial candi·
date Anthony Celebrezze. ·
One source said AusU~. wpo Is
Jewish, made "ugly slurs"·about
the Catholic religion, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported ' .
Wednesday .
.
Austin bas been credited with
convincing Celebrezze to tWitch
from an anti-abortion to pro- ···
abordon pos1tlon. ·Austin ' recently explained '!lie IWitch by
saying It was !lue. 1!1 .till! "rtlyths
you jrow up with In tbe CathoDe
Cliurth.'' ·
·.
., ·•
·
AIIGiher sou~ . ~ld . pete- ·
brezze,could ~~~lie won tbe
support of Cleve~ Mayor Mike
White since Austin : masterminded George Forbes' bardfought- maroral campaign
agalnat Wblte.
, • .
The outlpoken. Aullla ·was ·
called a '"J.ooee c.u..oa" that
' could JeoPardize Oelelftzze11
chances to defeat ftepubllcan
opponent George Voblovlcb In
November.
·
Aulllln ·and .Ce!ebl'ezzle could '·
I • llot , ~ tea~ fOr comment
. TU~if'.ly.

'

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,

ried' Chicken·

IESEIYE YOUI
AD SPACE TODAY-·
•

992-2156
.
.

WIN A

Sat ., M•rct.IO , 990 • USOA Food Sttmps and WIC Coupons AC·
ceptt d .• Not R·es ponaible for Typogrephlca l or Plctortal Errors

STUDENT OF THE WEEK - Heidi Huffman was named
studeat of the Week at Melp Junior Hlgb 'Scll0iirla8t we~k' liMed
on her ·a cademic performance In science and her clas~room
cooperat!oa and conduct. Here D!ln Dixon, teacher, presented ber
wltb a ~ertlflcate. ·
"

~~o
ausine.s~
tq-t
.

;.1

:
t\\ •

-~

Attentio·n
Meigs
ltPJ County

THE .DAILY SENTINEL.WIU
PUIUSH ·A COMMIMOUnVE
ISSUE OF THE ·VI'IGE or·
PO.IOY'S 1SO YEllS OF

-

"

,

WASHINGTON (UPI) - ' Air
Force Gen. John Chain, chief of
• the Strategic Alr Command, told
Congress be would not be able to ·
support a U.S.-Sovlet START
treatY If the B-2 stealth bomber
program were canceled.
Both RepubJic!ln and Democratic members of the House
Armed SerYtces Committee,
however, told Chain Tuesday he
;: -~ unlikely to get the 132 radar·-evadl~ planes he wants aDd that ·
the expenalve bomber program
r Ilia doubt on Capitol Hill.
~ ~ · "The B-2 is In trouble; II really
:-lll," Rep. William Dickinson,
•• '"R·Aia., the ranking RepUblican
::.4n
the panel, told Chain.

.

.

RW~EY. W.VA . ;_The River
VatleiHerbaltsts will meet Toes·

:[:-SAC
chief links B-2 to START . treaty
I
I

Wa Accept
W.I.C. and FEDERAL
.
Food Stamps

.
We Rt 18rve ~he Right t o ~im·lt Quantities • Prl~n Effect ive t hru

POMEROY-Tile fund raising
and publtCrty_~onimtttees· !Jf;.the ·
Pomeroy Sesqulclmtennlal Com'
· mtttee will meerTile~ay .7 p.m. •
at the 'St. Paull:."U!Jieran·Churcb'
In P.o~rily.; · ;: •
. .,. '

. APPLY U STOlE

'

MIDDLEPORT -There , will
bi! . a replar meeting' of tbe.
MlddlepQrt':Lodre' No. 363 F and
AM n.n .T\Ieldll)( at 7:30 p:m.
Plans will be made for lodge·
lnapecttOn .o n April 6. Inapectlon
·Will be In the fellowcraft. degree
and refreshments will be'served.'

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oned 52 ·potential jurors Monday
and Tuesday: Thirty-five were
judged qualified to bear the
Poindexter case.
Poindexter, fonner top White
House aide, Is accused of trying

Low·PI'iced·Supermal'ket

EXPERIENCED
PART TIME HELP ·
WANTED

ODLAN

• PO¥EROY -The Ladjes,Auxlllary of the Fraternal Order or
Eagles 2171 will meet Tuesday, 7 ·
p.m . All members are"ljtged to
. attend and bring a covered dish
for the potluck.
'·

:;~Jury selection continues in.
case
. Poindexte~
.
.... _ .

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy flre·

.Youl' lodepeadeotly Owned

''

SYRACUSE ~The Syracuse
Youth League will have an
organlzailoaal meeting on Tuesday at 7 ·p.m. at Syracuse
El~mentary SchOOl; .
'

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.The OH-KAN Chapter or the
Pioneer Rlvermen wjll meet 2
p.m. Sunday in the meet lng room
of the Point Pleasant Library .AII
former and present men and
wome n who have' worked on the
river, a nd . their spouses, are
Invited.

~,._f\CH

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l

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be reviva l Thursday through
Sunday at the VIctory Baptist
O!urch at 7 p.m. nJihtly. Guest
speaker Is Dr. Larry Emery.
Pastor James E . Keesee Invites
the public.

.

'

men will have a chicken and r(g
barbeque Sunday at the firehouse with ser vi ng to begin at 11
a.m.

old high school build ing. Cheshire, sponsored by Me igs Gallla
Community Action Agency .

OIG BE NQ••••·•··

.,

. .•

Athletic.Boosters will meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the high
school.

PAGEVI'LLE -The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet .
THURSDAY
Wedneday, 6 p.m. at the township
POME ROY - The Pomeroy
buUdlng In Pagevllle.
Chapters o! A.A. and Al-Anon
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at the .
PORTL NO -The Lebanon Sacred Heart Catholic Ch urch.
Ti:lwnshlp Trustees will meet For. more Information call
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the · 1-800-333-5051.
township building.
CHE;SHIRE -Free clothing
REEDSVILLE ·-The Eastern day ; Thursday, 9 a .m. to noon.

day, 7 p.m. at the home ·or Rose
M.,-le Dubltes in Ripley, W.Va.
.Local mem bers should meet a t
Sboney9s In Ripley al 6: 30 p.m.
and go in groups.

· RU'fl.!.~ -:-Meigs Area Holl·
ness Assoetatlon will bold Indoor.
camp, tbro'Gj(h. SJihd' y . with
:
sefV!cea .nl&amp;htly at 7 p.m. and 6 ·
p.m. pn Stlnday. Spec:llll speaker .
Is Rev. at;ne Grate and song
evangelist Is' ' 'The · Dumtres"
from Tennessee. The public Is
·Invited to attend. ·

·. ~

The drop 1n hours worked deal more rapidly" at 2.8 percent
marks the first decline since the during the quarter,. the depart·
second quarter of. 1986, and tbe ment saldi Butractocy outputfell
small lncreall!! In · productivity by 1.6·percentand the number of
compared .to a bealthter 2.4 hours worked was off by 4.3
percent increase during July, percent, It addiid.
"Hourly compensation of
August and September, the de- .
partinent said.
maunfacturlng workers In·
Hourly compensation In· creased 6.9 percent during tbe
creased by 6 percent In the fourth fourth quarter, the largest such
quarter, but when .Inflation Is Increase since the second quar·
taken Into account, that amounts ter of 1982 when It rose 8.2
to a gain of only 1.9 percent, the percent," tbe report said.
Labor Department said In Its
When Inflation · Is taken In to
account, that Increase In pay
revision.
In · the manufacturing sector, amounts to a gain of 2.8 percent,
prOI!uctlvlty "lncrea~ a good . the Labor Department said.

meet Wednesday I p.m. at the
home Iva Powell in Pomeroy.

POMEROY -There will be a
weekend revival at the Faith
Ta~cle"Cburc:h on Bailey's
RoD Road with David Wedlund,
Columbus, as evangallit. The
revtvall'una through 'Sunday and
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
services start at 7 p.m. nlgbtly.
Emmett Rawson, pastor,lnvltes · County Saloil8 and 40 No. 710 will
• '
lbe public. '

.

Students &amp;lid teacberalU South- participate In various' actiVIties Indians. During official Right to
ern· Local Scllool District are centered around dlnos,.urs. Be- Read Week, March 5--9, district
celebratln&amp;' tbelr "rl&amp;hlto read" aldet mystery games ' contes ts, and county school offlclalJ will
aa tbey parUctpale tJu'oUCIIOut vtdeoe, a balloon laUDC~. dress up vls1t the school and read to
tbe week In apec:llll Rlpt to Read day and tee shirt 1day, the students. ' Videos of past and
1
activities at their achools.
students ·will be dotpg lotS of present native Americans will be
At Ract11e Elementary, the anent ree,Sing. A bte~taht of the shown and siiJdents will be
theme for .the week Ia "Readtne week for Letart Fal~, And Syra- allotted time to IJsten to special
Is Oceaus or Fun." Actlvltlel cuse students will be 1vtstta from.
tape recordllliS-There will be an
durllle the week Include rea41Di members of the Reured Senior · archery demonstration during
(under a beach umbrella, no Volunteer Program (RSVP) who tbe week by Ann McKinney, and
less), shell crafts, and of cour,e; · will be reading to l!nd sharing James Smttb will explain flint
Iota of reading. Also. vlllton are lntonnation with the children.
napping to the students. Portland
scheduled tbrouehout tbe week,
At Portland Eil!mentary, will culminate their American
Jnclucllne people from Ohio Unl· Right to Read actlyltles are a ·llldlan study the fdlloWtng week,
vei-stty who will share Informs· continuation of tbe ~bool's.year · Marcb 1%-16, with a varleiy of
tlon about ocean llte lfnd the long study on Nat!• American ' other special activities.
environment, and other area
experta shanne tnfonnaUon on
Ice fishing and scuba dlvlna. Ill
•
addition, people from the )peal
libraries wiU visit the schoOl to
' .
read stories to ' the chlldren. '"
Sounds like the studenll•wlll be
having a "whale" of a good Ume
all week long. '
At Letart ~alii and Syra~use
Elementarles, "Readllli Is Di!IO"
Mite! " In keeping with the
dlno-mlte theme, students will

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

VJ dlatdav. Mllcl• 7, 1990

M.ch 7,1890

Ohio

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Paga 10-The Daily Saotitel

Vietnam vet Kovic opts.
against run for Congress .

'

SANTA ANA. Calif. (UPII Ron Kovic, the Vietnam veteran
and anti-war activist whose lite Is
dramatized In the hit flltn, •'Born
on the Fourth of July;" has
announced ihat hewlllnotrun!Or
Congress, officials said.
Tuesday's ann,o uncement
doused growing speculation the
decorated Marine, left paralyzed
by an enemy bullet, would run as
a Democrat against Incumbent
Robert Dornan, R-Calll., In the
38th Congressional District ·race
next November.
Kovic, In a telephone call ·to
Democratic Party operatives,
said he had decided not to run.
Tim Carpenter, a Democratic
Parry acUvlst, said he spoke with
Kovic. who told · him of .his
· decision.
Carpenter said Kovic gave no
specific reason for his decision
and did not Issue a statement .
Sid Gallanty, a political consul·
tant helping to form a campaign
for Kovlc, ·-said he was
disappointed.
"Ron's decision must be a
great joy for Mr. Dornan and a
great sigh of relief," Gallanty
said.
Speculation that Kovic would
run, prompted Dornan to mail
oo10,000 copies of a f!Jndralsil!g
letter to supporters that Included
a reproducllon of Kovlc supposedly burning a draft card and
calling the anti-war activist the
favorite of the ''ultraliberal ...
Hollywood left."
· Dornan issued a statement
from his Washington office spec- ·
. ulaUng Kovlc's reasons for not
running.
''It is my belief that recent
media accounts of the lies,
distortions and half-truths con-

tal~

In Oliver Stone's so-called
true biographical account of Ron
Kovic's life ... have forced Ron
Kovtc to decide against running
In the congressional district I
represent ·.... "
Kovic attended the Berlin Fll-!11
Festival last · week in East
Germany and Gallanty said the
two met last Friday to discuss
" what It means to run for
Co11gress and to be In Congress."
Several Democr'ilts had urged
Kovic to consider a candidacy,
Including House Speaker Tho·
mas Foley, 0 -Wash., and House
Majority leader Richard Gephardt, D·Mo.
"All Indications we had were
that Do~nan Is very vulnerable In
that district and his seai was
winnable· by a man of Ron's
cha~acter," Gallanty said. "Ron
would have given Dornan a tough
race."
·
·The 38th district Includes one of
the nation's largest Vietnamese
communities, members of whOm ·
are largely anti-communist. and
disdain anti-war protesters.
Kovlc, who has been Involved
In countless antl-miUtary and
other causes In recent years, was
the subject ofthe film focusing on ·
his personal metamorphosis
from straight-laced Marine vO.
lunteer to handicapj)lid veteran
left bitter by the war.
Starring Tom Cruise as Ron
Kovlc, "Born on the 'Fourth of
July" has received e igh1
Academy Award nomlnatlpns.
There was speculation recently thaf the dramatic license
Stone took with Kovlc's autoblo·
graphy was fodder for potential
campaign trouble. Stone and
Kovlc say the film was an
accurat~ account of events.

Actor,s·palimony
victory in. ~ppe,al

NEW YORK (.UPl) -Former . Notes - Letters to Myself."
·
ballerina Sandra Jennings hoped · After ' Sllbermann ruled
· to get another . crac;:k at actor ' against his client, Golub
William Hurt's $10 million for- slammed the judge for being "so
tune Wednesday at an appeals madly In love with ·this defend·
court hearing on her -palimony ant, Bill ~urt, that we·, never
case against the star of "The Big could h&lt;!Ve gotten a fair shake."
· Chill."
He said., he would take the
, Jennings. 32, lost her bid last ruling.c to the ftve-man appellate
'summer In state Supreme Court panel: adding, "Let five judges
In Manhattan to. prove that she ·who are men decide this. Not one
and Hurt: 39, had a common-law woman who' Is. Impressed by a
marriage.
movie star:" ·
·
The court's 'disclplinary com:."
· The . former New York City
Ballet d!lncer wbo is the mother mtttee is considering reprilJiand, of Hurt's 7·year-old son had . lng,.Golub for the remarks. . .
planned , to sue Hurt later for
• During the palimony trial last
, divorce and seek half his e!ltn- .sulnrher, Jenni.ngs testified that ·
lngs, estimated at $10 million.
HUrl told her they had a "spirit- ·
Jennings claims she and the ual marl'lage Iii the eyes of GOd,"
boy,Aiex,arellvinglnpovertyin a stronger bond ·th$n- a . civil
Manhattan on the $65,000 In ceremony.
annual child support Hurt pays.
Hurt Insists he never cons!. Lawyers for both sides were dered Jennings his, wile.
, ·· ·
due In the appellate division of
Hurt married bandleader ..
state Supreme Court on Wednes- Ski\.Ch Henderson's. daughter,
day for oral arguments In Jen.. . Hel!ll, ·l~j~ll March and s11e ga~e
nlngs' appeal.
' birth to their baby In the fall.
"We're going to talk about all
He recently 'finished filming a
the errors the judge made," said
Woody AUen movie that's scheJennlngs' lawyer, Richard
dialed· for· release this fall. Hurt
Golub, of Justlcf Jacqueline
will be heading for Paris later ·
Sllbermlllm.
. this month to begin filming .
Specifically, Golub claimed "Until the End of the World," a
Sllbermann erroneously barred
futuristic love story in which he
from evidence Hurt's personal stars as the object of actress
diary, which he t)lle'd "Personal Solveig Dommartln's de~ Ire.

'

PUCO on!ers ne'lf phone service
COLUMBUS. Ohio !UP!) The PubliC Utilities Commission
of Ohio Tuesday au thorlzed I weway. measured-rate ex tended
area service · between the
Hakslns-Tontogany and Toledo
exchanges to be be instituted as
quickly as 'possible.
· PUCO officials said they found
enough community interest betWeen the two exchanges to
warrant the new service. Custo·
mers should see substantial
savings on their phone bills.
·
"It Is rewarding to see consumers in Haskins-Tontogany and
Toledo benefit from a reduction
In the toll rates between their

communities," said PUCO
Chairman Jolynn Barry Butler.
Ohio Bell serves 179,032 customers in Toledo while GTE se~ves
928 customers in the HaskinsTontogany exchange.

By Ulllte4 rr..JateriiM ..aal
CLBEU: GETS AN ELMER: JoiMI aeese, star of "A Fish
Called Wanda," was presented an award called Elmer by the
Harvard Lampoon. The Sunday nleht ceremonies were limited
to the Harvard commiUllty at Cleese's request but they were
. quite festive. The former Monty Python member was etven the
S.foot·hlgh trophy at the school's Sanders Theater and then
paraded to Lampoon Castle, the humor magazine's offtces,
;lbQard a, 25-foot-IOJ!&amp; . Inflatable· banana as he threw
autQgraphed rubber chickens to the crowd. ·The award for
achievement In hunior was named In honor of Elmer Greea, the
• Lampoon caretaker for 40 years who once said he wanted to be
dipped in bronze when be died. He passed away In 1977 without
bronzing. Past recipients of the Elmer include.Jq Leao; Jtobln
Wllllllma, Bill Cosby, Jolm Candy and Pee-wee Bermea.
MADELINE'S HEAJ)ACilE: What started out as a minor .
fender"bender for the daughter of Gov. Mario C.omo has
blossomed Into a .big headache. It began last week when
. Madel lee Caoino, 25, was Involved In a car wreck In Albany and
a police officer failed to ticket her for driving with an expir~
license. Now the driver oftheothercar, KareaBellamy, 28, says
$he is facing an undeserved Increase In her lnst~rance rates
because the pollee report says she backed l_nto Cuomo's car.
Bellamy contends that Cuomo actually rear-ended ber. "I don ' t
want this to be a smear campaign," Bellamy said. "But 1want
everything cleared up." Bellamy also questioned Cuomo's
attitude. She says the governor's daughter told her to hurry as
they traded. Insurance information "because I don't have time
for this:" ' 'So I screamed at her, 'What do you mean you don't
have time for this? You Just hit me,'" Bellamy said.

·--

...

JO fU(I

,,'"!.,;

'

:

..
£;
..
.. ...
'

125 popnds, attacked him several
times, backing off and then
charging ag11in.
''1 threw my .arms up and
knocked its front feet away from
me and caught It by the horns,"
Bur~~ettsaid. "lwrappedmylegs
around his horns; but It was
working Ol! me with its front feet
all the time."
State Wildlife enforcement of·
fleer Keith TeJ'1lpleton said he
doubted Bur~~ett when when he
first called about the encounter.
But Templeton .. ld he was
convinced . after talking to him
and seeing his Injuries·.
"lfoughtthe Chinese, lfought
the Koreans and I have fought
local fellows, but I've )lever been
Ina fight llkethat.''saidBurnett.

Kaniaroo gels pacemaker
SAN FRANCISCO IUPil

Skippy the kangaroo will be
hopping to the beat of a pacemaker wben she recovers from
surgery In a few weeks.
A dozen doctors and technl·
clans from the University Qf
California at San Francisco and
Stanford Medical Center Installed the device In a two-hour -·
operation ,Monday on the · 80·
pound Australian red kangaroo.
"It went well," said Dr.''jc)n
Langberg, head of the medl.c al
team. "Nobody can predict with
absolute certainty bu.t she looks
good right now. We'll just have to
keep our fingers crossed."
Skippy collapsed Saturday .
while on exhibit. Doctors discovered her heart rate, which had
declined steadily for a week, was
only 20 beats per minute rather
than the normal120 or more.
Man, deer go hand 1!1 bool
Act'lng zoo director Phil Arnold
·. ASHEVILLE. N.C. (UPI) · said staff veterinarians sugState wlfdlite ()fficlals were ske}J· . gested a pacemaker for her, even
tical at first; but they now believe though they knew of no other zoo
a man 's story that he was forced
an !mal who had received one
into a violent hand-to-hoof strug·
succesfully.
gle with a large deer that
Pacesetter Systems donated
attacked him on a road near his the Instrument, saying the gift
home.
was for "anlmaltarlan'' reasons.
Mac Burnett, 61, said Tuesday
"We're assuming that she's
he was locked into a battle with fine -she's over the hump," said
the . slx·po'lilt buck that was
Arnold. The zoo predicts Skippy
initially frlen~ly as a ·puppy dog will be on exhibit by March 17.
but then turned ugly and tried to
The ZOl) director said ·'a fairly
gore him.
standard human pacemaker"
Burnett said he suffered at worked for Skippy. It'just had to
least one broken rib, numerous be adjusted to a healthy kanga- .
cuts and brulsestrom the strange roo's quick heart rate -125to175
man vs. beast fracas that con· beats per minute at rest, higher
eluded when'he
. to get a during strenuous activity, he

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

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.f•dlm•·iu1! lf'l,.l,l•mw ,._,·f·lrnn/!~
. . '·• · ··
Gltk•Coun•y
Mtott t.OU"'I~
M•""
Ctt W"¥
AJWICH•It4
Ar11CIHI~tlt4
AruCad,3o• ·

~

II · $•...rl

Jeoif+l~•

Southern

.......

'It · •n- I Mornft 1oo Jal•

71 Auto P.,,. 1 Ace•-·•

'17 ·A.IIo ....,,..
11
.,~r~o, '"v~

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'11 - Ctmp•• • Motor t1o"'"

Oet Retafte Fut

ReadtheBest
Seier:
A
.
· · .
· .OFCASH
.

.

.

. .

.

ISRIIEit'
THAI A

propoo• to exiJind the
1reu for room and pill•.un-

derground mining. provide
for pHI• ..........t on thoM

,,...., •.nd to pennh INa

for longwllt mining.
The IPpllcetton lo on fll. .t
tho pill- of the Melgo

County Rocorcltr. Melgo
County Court Hou•. S.·
cond

•

"

992-6674 .
.
611 EAST IIAI1111 SIUE.I
I'OMIIOY, OliO

.

' __,;,_....;..

___

dealership_
moJd h(Jmc. ~taning "' SP ..Ji fl
R.cwin your .;urn:nt jo~ .

~~
:·11

NO ONE UNDEI II YWS
S50.00 Pll GAME
. IONUS GAME IN 4#
All PAPER liNGO GAMES

COffEE

HARRISONVILlE FIRE HOUSE

.SATURDAy MARCH 10, 1990
7:00P.M.
I

PEACH JELLO • GUPE NUTS
· MARSHMALlOWS

AU

T••ltrf Otdl11 Now F" 12/troh R1661t1

New

Merchandise

REFR,ESHMENTS AVAILABLE

KEITH MOLDEN • AUCTIONEER.

. OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS.

I

.

by

' 514 East Main -~
992·6910
P-rey r
·
·
We A••pt
-·

__

I'

POSITION
.
AVAILABLE IN
MEIGS COUNTY·.

•'

Fire

"

Experienced in~ Typing, Filing. ·
FULL n&amp;U EMPLOYMENT
BEiEFITS

9
If You Are Looking For A

Caner --:- Not Just A Job
· w.~re Looking For Youl

Melgo Co. .....,6ry Glrdtno
lit. a
'
Pomtrtly, OH:41711
•
(114)ftll·7440
MMOnlc Ellafbllity Certllloate

UN'S APPLIANCE

992-5315 II' 915-3561

992 ·5335 or 915-3561

21 7 L Sec~ P-ey
POIIIIOY; 01110

n...,.,. Of ...... ....,.,.. p,,.,
.

Will ......

Ht'VISEIIOIDIMISCB.LANEOUS:8pc.BIIckwedgelhng
room IU!te, conllltng of ctop leaftoble and 6 carved
chaill and Chino hutch. Motlogonv llunk. 'beautifUl 2
pc. Metcalfe Brc;~~. Ec:rtv Amailc&lt;in llllng room lUte,
l!]me 01 ~. telephone ltand, Mohogooy collee

labia onct enct tobiel, rec:lhtt. comer lhall, 25' Zanllh
cator conooie TV. blOCk andWhtlll portable TV. maple
rOclcer, tobtel. Hot Point FrOit Free relrtgerator. Kelvtlator cr ..,cl11c range. 'Water fall c t - ond chelt,
mopte llllalrAI bed comptlle, 3 pc. Kroelller twin bedroom Ute, 3P~:. maple boeiocm Ute. metal cabinet,
WhiiiPOQ! walher and dryer, 1\.a, gta.ware. Fel•lou
111011 ~ boola, recordl. Pink Dtlplelion C\.lllf, diJI.
iefll. 1r11 pitcher, Pink Dlpr8ltlon ClOCker .)Of. GINn
DeprulonJ~JgQ~ onct.cremner.klrge ~. ~

tor deiUnlclllt!. hiiGtel. fan. Hoo\'111 ",.'""· ~
ellcfrlc bloom, clockl. mbclll. brol4tr .,.,.,, c:OifH
maklt, lnenl, tow.~~. ~. lltP ~toot. 2 htltt
back lawn chah. lew hand tooll,
dcler, 0001111
andmore. ·
·
·

10/30/'H tin

KOUNTRY KlUB

ROOFING .

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4422

992-2772

.

DOZER
·ROADS
.
ClEARING

*SHRUB It TREE
TRIM end RE-

NE._WLAND
ENTERPRISES

*LIGHT HAUUNG

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
· REPAII

FREE ESTIMATES
2·1·'90-1 mo.

p4.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At R.al4lllllblt Prices''
PH. 949-2101
or lo1. 949.•2160
.Dtiy or Night
ND SIINDA Y CALLS
4-1&amp;-15-1111

Real

Eltate Genel'tll

L-ttd at Yaloy lu I r
In ........... Olo.
PIIIRTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cydo
enoin81
Stock Porto lor
..

Homeli1e. Weeduter,
TtiCumoeh, Brtggo &amp;

Stratton.

PH.

SEIVICE
992·5335 or

·M·• .. . .

POMEROY; OH.
992-2269
·. NEW LISTING- NEW LiliA

.ROAD~ Very

neat and very
nice!! 3 bedroom ranch, 2
baths, central air, back deck
on large lot. $42,000.00.

NEW LISTING- SYRACUSE
- Abeautilul bi·level hoine
in excellent condnion. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, a large
family room with fireplace.
Attic fans, storage workshop
and fenced yard. Ail this for
only $47,000.00

4-25·Hn

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE
70-3018
•Tire Saloa

•Front End

npair Gal Tanks.

Alignment
•Oil Chango &amp; Lube

•Brake Work
IIAIN ST., 1U1U11D

992·2196

1-IS-'10-1111

..... COUNT.Y ...--.
-~~--

MOBILE .
HOME PAn

CHEMR, 01110
Cu1tom Built
Homes,
Remodeling It
Repeir Wqrk ·

•Mobile Home

Pana

/ •Mobile Homo

,.

Rental a
•Lot Rental•

985-3365

992-7479

36629 517
OHIO

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Rt.

u

lhrtlt ..

,·

,_ey,OIIIe'

1·12-'11-tln

PIZZA

NO SIIIDAY

1

FREE LOCAL DBIVERY
POMEROY AND .DDLEPOU'S ONLY
LOCAL! Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

"Freo E1timoteo"

or les. 949-2860

'

lOWEST .PIIICE S
tiGHEST QUALITY

... ...

PH. 949·2101

...

.MAIN STREET

BISSELL
StDING
.._ CO.,

· Pizza-Subs·_Salads-Daily Specials
992-2228
1110•

NEW

NEW LISTING - SUNNY
HOLLOW - Appi 30W

GUN SHOOT

Stop. In and See

lAClNE
FilE DEPT.

'AY

lalil!lli lulldlllfl

'•

DALE HILL
. ..

YIIOU11
.399

wood Hoors. New shingled

roof and nice front siting
porch. $21,900.00.

PRICE REDUCED - LE·
TART AREA- Appx, 2a~e

mini farm w~h small b•n.
fencing to the sheds, pluu
1978 modul• un~ with 3
bed~ooms. satellite dish. 2
•eas.. Or~ted

s. lhlrd, ••••,....

992-6421

acres vacant land. Ideal
Strk~fly
hunting and camping s~e._
Electric available and all m~ Ill..._______....,.
nerals, $13,000.00 .

z:ze ·eo.;

PLIIMNG&amp;

lllwiHttlatk
16i lltrfh Soctntl
., •• ,, ti Ollie 45760

SALES &amp; SE.IYICE

Wo Corry Flolllrollupptl.

Your Phone

lila Hll'e

GIEG lAilEY .
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

AGreat Cambinatian"Quality .•d lea~l 'Prices"

WE GO M EmA •u••"
992-6110

..

mo.

K and J CONSTRUCTION

rOoms and bath. Carpet and

... !."

DODGE

f•tw• rholco
12 Ga19
Only

OWNER WILL TAKE All OF·
FER - POMEROY - 1~ .
story house w~h 3 bed-

..

PAT HILL

EYERY·
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

~ ..•·
.,
•

-"
'

'.

~

·•

"

992~6173
s.th 4111 St.
Oh.

"UIW

'

, REPAIR
Alte Tr11a•lu!••
PH. 992·5682 .
or 992-7121

,

......._

,.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK .

r1111llr n racare
and
heater cor". We can
alto acid boil ond
out rltdlator1, We

OHia

!17

lt. 124, , _ . , Olllo

EVENINGS
4-6-lt-dn

·3561

AcrOII

Roger Hysell
Garage

992·2269

PAT HILL FORD.

..

Factory Ch()ked
12 Gauge Only
9-6-19-1111

SLA(K

FURNACE

lEN'S APPUA1111CE

'E

BIL~

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

FUINACE

Start• at 1:00 P.M.

*FIREWOOD

Middleport, -: ·:.o-~

PARTS ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

EVElY SUNDAY

MOVAL ·

22

FURNACE

.RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SH.OOT

3:5-'90-1110.

I

7-11-'19-lln

Painting

-9·9-2168

YIN YLSIDING
VINYL REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS

(614) 667-3271
Gr•t A. Newland

Gutters
Downepouta
Gutter Cleaning

·

Wl•t•r Steohl 0•

DUMP TRUCK
Send-Stona-Oirt

NEW ;_ REPAIR

.

•GRAVEL
•UMESTONE
•Fill. DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL
1·11·80-tfn

Howard L WrltiHI'

I

INSULATION

CHESTU, 01110

I T.I:.C.

f.

J&amp;L

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Good.._

PUBLIC INVITED
~ASTOI J-S E. IIISEE
I.

992-621 s

Pometor.,
Ohio
.
·30-'H-2 ....

POIUIOY, 01110 ·

'27YrL!Jql.

f

Y. C. YOIIIG M

·'

IIMCIIOf.SbV!cl-..,._..._;._ _ _ __

'

(FREE

CALL ·

Acr- , _ Pott OHia

""'*

•te..,lete Trainini
•No bp.erlence _NICitlary

, .

S.rwice

Residential 6
Commorcial

SEIVICE

•Exllillllt Earning Potential

•

•

Heat....,(~,
hfrltieratlon

IP

316/'90/1111

NEW UmNG - 50 Acrm ol
vacant land, T.P.C. water avaif.
a!je. Gas well. $19,!mOO.

POINT PLEASANT, WV

'

"

· Pldc Up. ·
lEN'S AHuANCE
SIIYICE

SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1990 _,
10:00A.M.
LOCATED AT 2408 UNCOI.N AVENUE,

RECEniONIST POSITION
NOW AV-AILABLE

MIDDlEPORT, OliO

CONTIOL

ESTATE
AUCTION

•

'

AllMAm .
lrlnt it In Or We

- SALEI
Anice 3 be!ioom
mobile home, 14x70
attached famly room
Electric heat pump pius coal
comooslion stave. Equipped
1\itchen. Storage 00ildin111o
orch•d and grape arbor.
$19.500.00.

foetiSf_,a

11 · Help wanted

'

_

... . ...... . ·-- ·---·...

CUMAIE,

OYIIIIIPIII

GAMES START 7:00P.M.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Ne•ltelllt.... ·

,

HUMP-Y1 S

OPEN 5:00 p.M. .

Bright Green··

'

~OM#.._

"Ill ~

Public Sale
6 Auction

'uy 6 Get. 1 FREE

.......,5_,

' i.OC!Kiil

Pohorll\'~"" k.~

!\nno-.:t,. l,·n f''"•.:~

•

Milk • Yellow • White • Pink.

EVERY THURSDAY
VFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.

C1il Don Hickmun
« '•II F rC".: I·MIIJ..hJJ..tHl7!1 or
( "olll:ct fll.'-~W-1 7:: 1 .. ·

MOLDS ..........~•••••••••••••••••••~••• s1~60

l'm .........,;,t.fY: ....,w.

.BINGO

~ln\"e!ltment 111\ secure~ hy

'

... ..,,.......~ ......... ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . CA,

3 Announcements

D~IIICOOIII'OIIIIftW.

Merchllndl•

..

Stre.t,
McArthur, Ohio
4111111 lor public viewing. .
·written comment• and/ Of '
roquooto for ' on lnformll
aonfereriDII miiJ be 1ent 10
tho Olvlolon of Roclomlllon,
Fountll~ Squlfe, · Bulcllng
B·3, Cc*lmllua, Ohio 43224,
30 cM,ooflhe t.l ...o
of publlcMian of lhll notice.

121 21, Z,; 131 7. 14. 4tc

log homes

54 Miscellaneous

'' .

f!troet. Pomorvy, Ohio

43768
lft.d the VInton
County Recorder. Vinton
County Court Hou•. Mlln.

Me ret. nell•

f'

•ctoWAY.E

.,_m,... _ _

~,.

:..

. ,_. .

'

1

MIIllo County, 81!1111 Town-

54 Ml~eellaneous

1~

Coal

lhlp, l-Ion 34 ond VInton
~. WUU.VIIe Townlhlp. llectton 4. The propolld u-..-,ncl mining
\8.41
1,..
ocreo ond lo loce1od on the
wtl~•vttto 7'11 minute U.l.
G.S. guodrlngle mop, ••·
tondtna W..t 10 the Ylllltlle
of WHk•YIIte. ond 0. 711
mil• Eat oft.,. Yltt ..o of
Wttk-lllo. The eppii!Mitlon

99.2 -2156
I

.

.......

2001. OFF ON ALL

. flllmoo~ct•

OFSIIIF

'

.

2, 'P, D. Box 410, Atheno.
Ohio 411701, h• oubmttt.d
on Application to Rev!M 1
c...r Mlniflg end Roclematlon Permil nun\borod R·
·031111·20 to the Ohio 0.
ponment of Notural R•
IDUOCM, Dlvlolon of Reel•
mellon. the pr-lld cool
mining ond ...,...,olton oporetlon wit be cond11C111dln t i i -

.,,7it "~··· r......
n-•••••wo •
74
T•vc~•

Ohio

Compeny. Melgo Mine No.

'·1.
;.::

•

ADIIIIIS

14 . ...... Ottl..

" . w-•M •• 0.

&amp;

•

· .,

~

IJ -llwntnclo

IARAIE~Fll

America'i TU: -~

...

ADDENDUM TO PART I,
ITEM E (Ill .
SOUTHEII N OHIO COAL
COMPANYMEIGI MINE NO. 2
LEGAL NOTICE

II Wllllftlto luy

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YilT IWOIWU
IIAVI l&amp;lillllaS

(6141915-4110

BLOCK CHOCOLATE.......... s1.90 lb.
.
'
.
$
WIITE
... CHOCOLATE........., 2.15 lb.
MElliN'S DUNIENS ........ .$2.35 lb,

' ..~.

lot • • It ht" you.

'

~·
••

"Potbelly · pigs are ~tentie,
.;i
loveable little creatures who
:-·
bring many hours of pleasure to . .-;
people who are lucky enough to '. • •..
be around them,". he said,
If Springfield lets the pigs In\ it •. ~
will be In some classy company· • ~
Beverly Hills, ·calif., rpcently
repealed Its ban on pigs . to
accommodate , th~ r potbellies,
which sell for upwards of$2,000.

NOTICE TO ALL
ONS

MAICH ·8th thru 11th
7:00P.M. EACH EVENING

OI.OQ

.AnD6P.&amp;

"farmer: rowa' s .
· Splee of Life"··

.

,•..••.

..0

•u.oa
11.30/ . .

11
11

Moruhty

.

11.00

.•

cleaner,
andormore
cile than smarter
either dogs
cats. do·

City to study "Pic ownerllhlp
SPRINGFJELO, Ore. (UPI) Cl ty lawmakers are ready to
review a request from potbelly
pig lovers to repeal or modify an
ordinance prohibit! ng swine
. within city limits. .
Thecltlzenswanttoabletoown
, miniature VIetnamese potbelly
pigs , which are becoming the
latest pel· craze to ·sweep the
nation. The pig lovers sent a
·letter to the City Council asking
for the change.
The council- agreed Monday
night that . the · matter needed
some study and asked the City
Planning Commission to review
It.
·
'
··
Gary Case said he recently
acquired twQ of the small
porkers, named Hambone and r
Patsy Swine. But the pigs havetQ
staY with frlen!Js outside the city
because of the ordinance.
"They are nice quiet anbnals
and they're not going •to bother
your neighbors,': C~!fC said.
Rick Carter, a llr~r who
owns Heartbreak Farms, S@ld
pebple in Eugene and Sprln~iet_d
have exp~ssed Interest ln. the
pigs. Eugene also has an ordi·
nance banning pigs In the city
limits·.
Carter ~aid the potbellies are

I

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.
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w.r•
,:10

o,.r tl

• 14.DO

11
11

FFIEE EITIMATEI .
labtllo ... IUief

••&lt;'

--Quirks in the' news-~---:-,--The deer, which weighed about

••

. ,. . .1118101

. ,.

'

sa td ·

....

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PAINI.G &amp; CO.

;..

f

h ti rifle and s h00-11h· e raging
a~:!n:f.

••a•s

-~

· VICTORY BAPTIST·
CHURCH

,.

. ..

Business Services

_.,...

. Dtn

...... t

~ '4 . ..

By United P~s lnternaUIIaal
'Bad' taxi ~lver may loae
lleeue
NEW YORK (UPI) -Even In
a city where bold disregard 'tor
common courtesy and motor
vehicle laws Is legend, Vehbi
Gundc:&gt;z stands out.
But · the contentious cabbie
may soon have his license ·lifted
because of a city pr.o gram to get
rid of the nastiest taxi drivers.
Gundoz is the second drlv.er to
come under the scrutiny of the
city Taxi and Limousine Commission's bad drivers program
that was started last October,
said Tony Carter, a spokesman
for the agency.
·
Carter said Gundoz racked up
119 violations since 1986 includ·
ing refusing to pick up' pas·
sengers and assaulting an air·
port dispatcher after jumping a
waiting line.
,
:rhe bad drivers program was
set u!! as part of TLC efforts to
curb a ·pattern of drivers repeatedly receiving summonses; pay.
Ing fines for their offenses and
relurnlng to the. wheel, Carter
sa d.
,
The progratn was started on
October 15th. Carter said Gundoz
managed -to bring his name to the
top of the computer list two or
three days later.
,
"He was abu slve to a dis·
patcher," Carter said. "l think
he threatened io kill him."
Gundoz was s~lieduled to ap· ·
. pear before the Office for Administrative Trials and Hearings on
Friday, March 9.
Gundoz was not considered an
11nsafe driver. "He was an unruly
oqe,," said Rebecca Bowser. ·a
TLC spokesw\)man.

AN AD &lt;AU "2·2156
.,..DAY thru FIID4Y a -··· to 5 P.M.
I A.M. •Ill NOGit SAIUIDA Y

'

was pleased to announce a "new development in American·
Soviet relations" Monday night with musjc by Gershwin and
Prokofiev. The Soviet Embassy was host to a recliaiiJY this.
year's Amerlcan·SovleiYouth Orchestra, wlilch begins Its 1999
world tour July 21 In Moscow. "This Is another event !n our
cultural sphere," Oublnln told guests, Including Bruce Gelb,
director of th~ U.S. llltormatlon Agency,.former amb~sador
Arlllur Hanmu and Sens. Rlcbard Lilcar. R·lnd., and Nucy
KMRbaum, R·Kan. •'We believe the cooperation •of, our ·
governments will create a new ·plank of cultural excite~nt.
Music knows no borders." The 100-metnber orchestra . Is
directed this year by .Leotw'd Slatkin, director of the St. Louis
Symphony, and Alexander Lazarev of the Moscow Conserya·
tory. First lady Barbara Bub and Ralaa Gorbachev, wife of
Soviet leader Mlldlall Gorbachev. are this year's honorary
chairwomen of the orchestra.

Revival Meeting

r

·••

Pomeroy Middlaport. Ohio

• The Area's Number 1. •rketplace

.

DR. LAllY EMilY·

•

•

CLASSICAL GLASNOST• Soviet Ambassador Vud Dablala

The Bedford Township Trustees will have their regular
meeting on Monday at 7 p.m. at
the townhall.

SPECW SPtAUI

-• • r~·--~• • • ~- - "·-

Classified

CUSTODY BAm.i!: ROYALl!:: ·AI! the prbiCipala In the ·
Morgan-Foretlc!J custody battle are In New Zeeland now. Dr.
Ellubetli Mol'Ju, who spent two years In jaU to keep her
daughter, Hilary ; away from her ex-husband, arrived, In
AuCkland Tuesday and manaced to dodce the horde of reporter•
coverlngg the story. Hilary's father, Dr. .Brl!: Foredc.. arrived
In New Zealand last week but both parents have •creed to st.ly
away from the girl untu the matter can get to court. Morgan
claims Foretlch, 47, an oral surgeon from Falll Chu~h. ya ..
sexually abused Hilary and the girl had been living on lhe run
with Morgan's parents until she was discovered last month In
Christchurch.

•

525 NORTH SECOND

• • • ~•

7,1990

· Trustees to meet

.

!

• -••••- •• ....

••

••:...

�The Daily Sentinel
Anno unet:

llL nt::

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

1

Ponwoy-M' Utpll"i, Ohio

7,1810

32 MObile Hom•
for Sale

......

v......,.

.

How lo Dlctoto . ,..,, raiftontlo
delllny. "'"": FGr FfN. Con- • '

Pl--.--~.1--~.
P.O.
llcno 10C3, Qollpollo,
uro
4N31.

':'u':' ~~lX-4~~se
lotr ClAY I.
,_..,.,.....
'
'"""" "' ""'

Television

3 Announcementl

low 10 lono fovr Jlillplo - •·

I 11 I I I I'

Giveaway

Blk &amp; Sliver Oor111011 Shtpllood,
tem•l• pup 7 ma akt, ...a
country home, 304 . . .

x=.

b&lt;Mdlng. 614-448-9477.

,.., - :.ra

doa. doa.

houoo, chioln I otob. ~
2106:
Pan AuotriU-n Shepherd pup.

Collie T.V. 114

1.

.

·50 IF lliE &amp;AL~ IS

~If TO TilE~.

\olE FUP5 IT TO TME

5ECOJoiP lAHMAN

WHO~ITfO

tr•• t._.

---

1

1:01 (J) . . ,.,., IUIItl.ae
·2-1 Conlllct Q
~ ~(J) Ill NIC Nlglolr Newe

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II~=£
OHIIM•

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J:.::'

Wanted to Buy

Junk · CIIN wllh or: whhout
molora. C.M Urry lively 114:IN-9303.

' '

•'

OuiHo
Pre 1840 quiiiL AnY' condhlon.
Cuh Pold. Coli 114'992-5817 or
614..$92·2*1 .
.

7:30~~ '~::-'
.....

. I··=--ITonlglll

r::·

.Ill ......... . ,

!~~!~IIPirdJI Q

• Nlglll CoU!I

7:31 (]) lan'*cl And lon ·
1:00 (J) MOVII: ...... 01 The

eiJl 18UnUMd

M y - Rljlcln 11&amp;111 I
double Mrved 1 Nazi war
criminal' alii ttrm, (R) Q
• • Ourlpwn, Our

Prall lim

CD C!l ..._. CleogNpl&amp;lc
Sp I Dill Ollfwent lj)eclu
play OUI 11&amp;11 dramas.of 11&amp;11

\'loulcl llko to Buy: Po!Kip or
Cronk.Up Compor. 614-388.

Africen pllln. Q

8896.

.Ill Glowing hlna Mike.

Carol and Ben each recllve
$5000.00 In tar1y tnhlrttanee.

Employment Serv1ces
11

bad been declarer a do2en timel dar·
InC tile game and bad milplayed elpt
banda, aola&amp; 11et five tlpleJ ill coatraeta be llbould bave made. Undlullt·
ed, be o(lllled one no-tnunp. ud
equaUy andallllled, 1111 pll1lllr railed
111m lo
On tile
burt
lead, w y went rl&amp;bt up wl dummy's q-. Wilen E11t (Ill up tile
kina, Willy puned 111111p1 1111 llllnwd·
ly played low. Just )IOIIIbly tile lead
milbt be from a m-ard llllt. and tile
club liCe ml&amp;bt be ID tbe biDd wltb
only two beerll. Tbat -... wllbful
tblnkiDI Ellt played a ~~~lead beart.
Declarer won aad pl8yed e club. Eait
too1t tile a, and- anotber beartlet
Welt late eiloull! trtca to let tbe con·
tract. Tbat made WWy declarer 1.1
times tbal evenlnl. aoiD&amp;IitliK times
In contracta tbat iillould line been
made.
.
llo fa~ to WWy, . _ be would
loave 1ot it ript bllore aballltlcmllet
ln. For tile belt allot at maltiDa three
,. '

lily (2:00)

~ow grodo ook - · - - $180
JHr thouNnd. o.llftnd"to Ohio
Pallot Co. Pomoroy, 011,

IR)~

eo

OM•.,.••
••

Spooro, 304-675-1421.
AVON • AU

5.

Bartondorl w.n.... \'lontMI:
Exporolnc;od DNirod · but 1101
necnury, ov., 21, allllly In
pen;on, 'I t the all neW Aadlaan
Club. 588 U- River Rd. 12
Noon till 2p.m.

31 W. IJII. 2 br., 1 belli, prlvoto
• cl 1 d pdo. Clolill to
e-Y . . _ I llhoppl!'l ...,_
for,
Wllor,
-~ •. trooh
pmidad. $21S/mo. ~~ 1'14--

o-.

UT1UTY

Excell•nl lncDIIIII pat.nU•.
Dotallo, {11 1105-187-eoGG Ell." Y·
4562.
.

EARN MOHEV RMcllng· lloOb!
$30,000/yr. 1 - pOioqtlol.
Dotollo. {11
10189.

--Ell. Y·

Eom $300 lo S!OO por wook

RMdlng Boob II h~mo.. Coli
615-47:J-74U Ell. B303.

Expio-·· "" . . . -

ontrr

TOmfiOI'~ oltlaoiot dolo
pollltOn wa,.ed. 20 YNf'l; U·
114 311 I~ or 114-

=-""";,'"··

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
3 IR lpiH - · LA, FA, FP, OR; UTATEI. 131 ' ' on Plb
Qchen,6 A.NIIIncea UA, 1 111
I
botho 0.. HOot l Coni, Air In- . , _ 11am.. \'loll&lt; to ,,....nd Pool. 807 Ollk Drl.. rioovloo. Coii114-44&amp;-ZMI. EOH.
Spring Voller. 114,500. II 4-411- &amp;-..do Aport-. 1 BR,
11838
utiiMr -up, Iorge ldtcllon.
114~48 1137.
.3 BR, LR1 Fi!J Dfl, 2 botho, now
heat ana A~, kala Df ltorap
Furnlohod
. _ , !IIU 1,..._,.. 11001, I C:O.J!Iololr
..._., IUhabll
tor 1 •
Dl' 2

cor -

cttv oclloolo, 571

Joy Dr., Clolllpollo. $17,100: ., ...
44t·7Z31.

33Z.f741.

...,:-·:--, .. 56

5 lnd both. Control air.
.
Locotod on St.Rt.143. Phone
llol&gt;'o Lawn Coro, grooo cunlng, 614-9G2-T785 oftor 5:30p.m.

..........

-·-.--.

,..,.

Filii Tonk, 2413 Jookoon Avo.
Point PlnMnt, 3CM47S.2013, 1G
gol oot• up 114." end ID HI
oomplotol43.25.
, _ blook ~ Soanlllp6M, full blcadld ·bul · No
poporo. 304..7~
:
Groom and SUpply Shap Pte

Ell.

'"'"

441 1113.

trimming,
-Jilng, !roo ootlmotoo, For Solo br Owner • 3 Br. brlok

Fum- Ap4. 241 Jaobon
Pika, Oolllpollo, 1br, - utlltl ... pd. ,,, ue .. ,, after
7p.lll.
•

1r.T.:

Orocl... living. 1 end 2 booJ.

--AII-.AI-

Apon- In lllddtoport. F atl4. lhi'OIIIIh 11ora1t 11.

OMAKC Reg- ScllniUUl
...... 1. 112 , .... old. l!ad ..,
very ........ 114:112-7113
111015:110 P"!!·

-. ·

304-175-1111.
h - , dining room,. n........,
EIA T.- s.n1co. T-'...:, -helt, llnod
, ~Ufll
goa
CA, anacn.a
·
lflmmlnll. ahNbe
I. trw Locllled noar'goll
rornovan&gt;runlng Hodg•. 614- &amp;14-445-2573.
- - "• Y.

"""'t"'···

HI 1111 ·

c•po~~

Flrol -

.•A.=

...... , . . 10 · -

-EOH.quollly, Coli 114-1112·7717.
Large 1 I 2 bedroom fumlohod

~~~

OIIIJ,.....,._
11
or 17HI11

~

Chi---

LDI-2-alnMI-Io.

S.rloul lnoulrM onJr. Coli 614-

112-2211,

nma1h1111L..1 bedroom,
II
I n Point .,..._,., At,cond, tl' FH I, dWiW .... ,
WID - .... vory - . 30417W774.

zr!

the Classified
Section!
. -

Colll14-441-0131.

'

111M E. lloln ...... Pon•OJ·
_
, M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
1:00 to 1:~ p.m.

,

Unouc ala1111l II....._ ...,.,...
tM. Locll NflterlGII lurftllhtl.
F.... Mtlmlil•. Colt . \ '.
114437-04811, . , ... nlglll,

w.to,_llng.

'

· (!) CIIMI Mcnwll l'rilln The

1-t
• ••

....(1:30)

elll Duglall¥w•, M.D.

Son
Pol~"='~
Rooftng,

.....

Afllr I liNIIICI argumenl with

!Ill parent~, Doogle -

utMI O.Oko ,... . . .
timatN. 11447G-2ii0.
• : .i

oul. (A)

Joo'o TV S.rvlco. 304-675-~

Co.npllll

HNice

rnf'•lnd morllll

on

'

0 LMJ lllniiMI

'.

•
• -,
·_
A'ndll'liMt
1M .........
A l&amp;tlllll&amp;
to fill ~ of Its

lnl- pointing, lor .... ...
1 - Clll Cop!, SINmor

.IIIZI,._
;=r=2.......,

aMnoro, 114-446-4404 or 30417142N.

1880 Moldo RX7. $100.114-112•

(2:00) Starao.

7041.

ID44»tMt.

54 MlacellllneoU8
Merchancllle

171-2704. '

Ne!WQ1&lt;'1 -~~~

.........

pertormancee from

Rotory or coblo tool _ , . ,

-

.................. •m(dfi

=rl.~

and .......

~.

Dovlo
--Vac .. ........
oaa~ CI'Mk Rd. Part.. ·~
............... lnd dollnry: "4;
ii48-0fM. .
' ~

~DU
THAT GOT ME TO

so IT WAS

I MUS'f BE

FIX IN' TO GIT

COMPANY ..

ITCHIN' fl

top

~
~.
1:30. (J) . Ill .,.., , . . ol,olln
' litH 10 llfO'Iia IIIII he'l not
dependent on filii eupport
gnii}P.

Q

Anr•••lut "- Q
a.

tiUn&amp; ~

Sam ltiPe Into fill life Df a

1Wo Oono pupploo lor
-7914. Pure - · Coli 614-112-

57

PILinblng &amp;

. H18tllot .

.ca............

Musical
lnatrumenta

·

ondHMIIna
-·ndl'ilo

.

'

women Cllcidlto 11o1c1 a

~1'41111~1:
Mcirl4e: A
or

(J)

.I

..

utllltr llulldlna I
Ill. ~· ..14-

&amp;

BERNICE·

BBDI£~L

Mtll Rollin lily,

one

Amlrlcll'eleidlllll

IJOiill,

exptorel ' - men ll*'k and

about.,..,

feel
iet... their
roltlln - . , , ll&amp;d
,...llon!iftlpe r.et&gt;..en - ·

Chllllld 110m fill

~~~~-~~~--·
~Dflntulwa.

......
11:t01
......
l!i;i':..n

•.,

... __

OBCG.I

C0

'

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r

f

t

I,

I

• • 1111 llllllln Ill

one. (Pi

•~ .., 11111111

'

AU pu1

Opening lead: • 3

i&amp;O-trump, be 'aloould play low from
. dummy at tbe lint trick. Ellt WMid
play tf!e !{1, won by Willy's - · lilt
now, wbea Eut won tile club -.·tile
queen of beerll would . _ 1arp ID
dummy u a elopper. Declarer WOIIId
bave nine tricki &amp;efore Welt bad tbe
opportualty of leac11D1 throu&amp;b dam. my's beert queen apln.

317

fl\ thil sample A Is uaed

CIIYPI'OQUOTE

.,

CA
.ISSY

GS0

V G S P .I 8

Q C G Y.
CA

OS

0 S

OBV

PAV

B'· l R V

QICG
C,O. -

YVAUIXOVA
Ys II

'

'

3 NT

for the three L'a, X for the two.0'1, etc. Single letters,
apaltlqrha, the._ and formation ol the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.

In •ow to Mia. ICing
(I) • • • Ill • • •

.

!Will . ' -

Pus

One letter 8tandl for another.

10:30(!).._ ............. .
l.ullllno PIVIRIIII , . , . to
II fl I (II)
'

I c.

Wet!

1 NT

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFEL,LOW

eOhllail~llir1rlh

~

S.lll

DAILY CRl'FI'OQUOTES- Here'11Mnr &amp;o worllt:

a"ii.1ne ......

"Racently dlvorCICI?"

c:::&amp;

Q\:,::.-r:.,.
"*· c

!IIIW,~.,_ Calta

Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer' Soutb

birthstone
40Tarzan's
eplthel
· 41 Pleasant
42Say
43 Fencer's
sword

Trying 10 filM mcnll, the

114~0hlo

84

a

• • • Ill Cltlnl .....

''
..

tAH
.JIG 54

380ct.

lmallloWn~/

mortlciM.

90VTH

.AK72
•AI

29 Hankering
30 Landed
32 Emulate
Bing
33Catsup
base

(I)CIIIIIIIMk. . .

e111

tJ7U

25 Foreign
negative
28 Shunt
aside
28 Chrlstoph81i

..........ry With

.(J) Ill

=:......

hi -

·

CoJ &amp;llr Muelo Barbera end
Johnny Cuh ealula country
muetc and The NaeiN!IIe

11180 Oklo Omogo, $100, 304-

10:00 CJl 7110 CUI Will&amp; J1et
R1l11rtnn
·

p.IIL

32 Mobile Homes
for Salt

.

•AillarlafuleTo

, paid.
qullle, .
polntlngo,

:.or"io':,;."";,saatale
•lloau-t
,or

a

(]) 1..,. The ,._,.,.. WMP:
. TIII'W, VllgiiU Mllll Will

=•= Old·-o1.
I lnoh IIIII tt b11me. I ~
12
·-fl4-1112-1114
· 1 . . 1111~
1 ,....
11 · 11.
"""'
a,oo

.roduood· 2 bedroom
houoo, oloctrlc hoot, 1.18 .., .
on Broedrun Aoadi 304-112·
2672.
.......

I'll , _ OMlor. Julll

II,

• CrNIIl ChHe
GICIII .. Iatllelbel
t:ooeiJl Ill Nlgl&amp;t ~ vakov
. Bike Harry to elCIIInd his
vlll!!ng falhlr'e viaa. Q

i{'.="'-Q: C;7l:'=

PI-VII
4100 clOp I
nlgllta.

Little things
are Worth Alot

53 Antlqu•
;:.-_.:,;::;;;:;.::.,..=-lluv or Nil. R - Anllqull,

-

-

u

1178 Tro ....Am, $!00
C a l - - 1 8 oft• 4:00 .

kM. (R)D

IAIEIIENT
W.criiiPIIOOF'INO

R-

1171 Pontiac IAMan'8 110, AT,
PS, TW, CC, New Palnl, whht
loiter u.... SUGII. 114-4114482. I,

Hlmlloran ldttono. Chaw olud cor. S500. 114-446-0712.
- 114 441 3141 altor 7

-

Fum. Apl. All utiiHI• pold.
upo~an.l14

·

.
Oro-.,d eanory l&lt;olinol • 614-247-1,
Perilln, ·
841rnne
and 1177 Buick Rogel. Good ,;;.k

Sc-, In nice nolgnborhootfi 0444.
114 311 MV, 11~1-0310. . I

18 ' wanted to Do

Pets for.sale

25&amp;·1 270.

Blocl! l...,....d Pupl.
eoruotto, · point,
No popo .., , - .... 114-:Ma- 1m
original motor, avto. $5300. Al80
1113, lllor 41'1"" .
' .
1"" Conrotto Conv•. 4 lf&gt;Md.

WII do lwb~oHdngln IIIJ homo. 3br1 ronoh '"' 2 lolo wHh go~ For Rent: Fumlohod . Ape, 4
..,.._ thru •rl o.,. onlr- Coli
In
IUHwlh
-CIA.
--OaH
F loh
= CHJ
lllr&lt; -od. -""" dopoolt ..
114.a 1101.
nooo
... . , _ rwqulrod. 114-446-

Eooy \'lorkl Excotlont Pari Aa-

Mrrible Productli at Home. C.ll
lor lnformotlon. 504-149-0170
313.

._ , . ._ OopooH •
.14~48-03311 .

SPECIAL:

:!Ox4011Q' wHh , 15110' eliding
dOor I Ht'VIoo daor.'$1777 orooloci. IliON· HORSE ILDOS. 114-

31 HOmll for sara

or daY to! IJicli1Y ~ Nn 'In ·c:r.J.
llpOifi. ,114 '*'!lit l!ltor 3P.M.

.
BLDG.

. Alan gn milled aignals from
~ VMU, who to b1 In

I

lmprovemeJita

·' 1.10-411n,
$2000,
1m
Opel.
O.T, $100.
114-

581·50U
· .
·
1171 Clllvollo, $1,000; 1111'
Cllovollo olok-up, $1 ,ooo· 18ao
Model Yolbwogon D.OhO;,
M50j For Solo 'or Trodo. 114-

Home

81

··

· t:IO e111 Held 01 n.e C1ua

AutO. for sale

11111 Dodgo Cluorgor, 311 11110,

1 - . brick, ol- winHnlolo, otc. Cloudo Win,_ Rio
OH Coli 11424U121.
·

411.0213.

EARN MOHEV RMcllng Bookll

71

Building
Supplies

Real Estate

26,1990.

Gllloglln'e Henle,

1:01 (J) MOVI!: Mr. Ham (3:20)

Selv1ces

•u

~ :• 1

ACROSS
DOWN
1·Baseball
1. Necessity
. ploy
for 1
aeross
5 Be
av':,~rage
2
Prellx
10
again
with cycle
11 Excessive 3 Basketball
fondneu
equipment
12 Yugoslav
4 Cheater
name
of sorts .
13 Pay back 5 Secret
8 Roman road
14 Clock·
watcher
7 Rather
of sorts
8 Ovum
20 Subside · 33 Greek
18 Small
9 Female 21 Remain
letter
slice
grouse 23 Basketball 34 Choose
18 Female
11 Baroness
term
' 35 J".V. opera
animal
houee
15 Creeper 27 lnlr.aclable
18 Sert
person
37 Fruit eeed
2t ~V:.t 17 Compare 28 Greek
38 Tennis
18 Deride
leHer
coup
22 Island
Pointed
31
Imminently
39
Pinky
19
24 ~~scale
arch
32 Arrived . . or Peggy

• Cono....... Willi DIM!&amp;

Transportation

:

by !HO.M~S JOSIPH

OILIIII,IIoeW-A
Vary Good v. . For Murdtr

.

-~ Cd MOrllyn

WIIVIr 304-882

·

...,~CNMcle

AVON I All Arou I SNrter

EAST ,

.QIOII
.K117

CROSSWORD

Ill Aiiii·Drul lp nw
MOVI!: Mandel• (2:00&gt;

Help Wanted

wEsT

-m,, and be wu a Uttle tired. He .

7:01(1) ,....,_ '•

.

'

It wu Willy Nilly's last deal of tile

• VIICidi14DKC:O:cMurun..lnrrY (O::IC))
. · Gil M1101t Alii;! Coalello

Flft.I'T PI,HT ·
lfti~~UH~.-

.Q54
tKH
' .KQ.72

.JUU

s-.

T:HI

•u

.JI3

IOiel pontrolltylng to figure
out wt&amp;o'1 llhi&lt;IOWlng him.

l'fCI&gt;fl- - - IT.
cPMES WI~ ·.

I . 1: 1"11111

Playing
in a fog

;S:v:.C:!.n
•• ANP ,THIS IJ.:OLI{t ,
·. (IWO/t~Y Wit$T"

UNSCIAMII.E llTTUS TO

r rrrl'tl'l

NOilTII

e(J)~An.tr

.. .
' (!) C!l Maallll LIIWr

Ill WIIMI 01

' .

,events.'
Gby

SCUM liTS ANSWIIS
H
Omelet ..:.. VoNI}' ·- Drift- Kingly ..:,_ FAMILY
A molt)er has only to step into tile.tub to be Instantly
remlndad thalshels l{ldlspensable to her entire FAMILY!

., J:OOI iclincrow • Mra. King

I

1 1

GIT ANSWfl

•.
GIHIIngtn'ln
' 1:11 a_i Andy Glttllllo

.

·~

.HINT NUMIEifD LETTEIS
IN THfSf S91JA!ES

• Top c.nt Conlullntt
combine -lnmentlrl'lla
with filii luck ol the draw.

·

·1 17

"I reaDy feel old." lighed my
friend. 'Why?'laslled. He,.
D!ied, "What my eon learns in·
history I learned In ·---

Complete tho chu&lt;klo qUOiad
..-..1-..L-..L-.L-1.-J
filling In tM milling words
.J
.
vou d...\op from Slop No. 3 below.

!1Bf"""Q

-

s.

TERBAY

. . . (J)

&lt;

.

.

Ci.lllt Ill CNrgt

FlltST FOl Till
DOIJ~E PLI»( !

Wood of two
for
cutting I cloonup. 614-446-7581.'

9

I
I 1·'

HUP NC

l up,

~ ., .

olos,'7 ... old, 304-&amp;75-31481i~
lor 5:00. •
Pan Collie, Part Shopllord, I rro
old, good walch dog, 30W7$o
1201.

.I I I

..... lorlpMplt,t17.10 .....

0

German Shephwd fltule 18

~ I.___.R..-~.E
I I'_r.~,."_''--'1
I' I . .

---=--·

Crum polnl Hlmol.,.n lomolo
cot. To • CliiOd holrio. Hoi lor
mot ~d . ~ 'Mitch

~ ·-

I U T MAR
I

homo. lion fOil lao mucll. Eel.

4

.......

11011~"

.....

••e•a CIUit=aiiii WHAT WE CAU. FAI·

LURE IS NOT 11E AUJNG. DOWN, BUT 1HE
STAYING DOWN.- MARY PICKFORD

�I

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14-The Daily Sentinel

Baseball
playen offer

2

Report says U. S. population passeS quarte~ ·billion mark: :-~~--

mse
,. l

. WASHINGTON (UPI) - With
tbe aatlon's population growing
by one person every 14 seconds,
Census Bureau demograp)lers
esUmated the United States has
hit the quarter·bllllon mark of 250
mUIIon people.
The esdmate Tuesday came
three· weeks before . the na(lon
takes part tn "the big count," or
the A.pr111 once-a -decade census.
Bureau otftctals said they can
make a more accurate estimate
of when the population passed the
250 mtlllon milestone"after the
results of the decennial census
are known.

A population total of 250 million
people would reprasent a 10.4
percent Increase ovel" the 1980
count of 226,545,805. The nation
totaled 200 mUllan on Nov. 20,
1967, officials said.

Accordlll&amp;" to tilt demo·
grapbers, tile utlon Ia growtna
by about 6,300 people dally, with
some 4,400 comlnJ frcrn a sur·
plus of blrtbl - 10,600 dally over deatba - .6,200 - and an
averaae of 2,000 new lmmlarants
. ,
The first.census In 1790 counted aday.
feWer than 4 mUllan people. By
Census detJioeraphers said the
1880, tl)e pOpulation had reached
net gain of one perso11 every 14
5!J mUIIon and by 1915 the nation's . seconds Is baud on · one ll!rth
population totaled lOOmllllon; In every eight seconds, one death
1949, 11 hit the 150 million mark.
·every 14 secondl, one Immigrant
Census. projections Indicate entering the country every 35
that the pOpulation' could reach seconds and one persojlleavlna '
the 300 -million mark In about 30 every three minutes.
years.
The 250 million people make

.

.

tbe lJalted Stttel tbe. world's
tourdl11101t populous utlon - a
rankin&amp; It 11M beld for many
decades. !'latfciM with tarpr
populatlona lllclude Obllla, with
•

U

billion people, Inclla, 833
m Wlon, and tile Soviet Union, 289
mUllan people.
Just tralUng the United States
are lndonesla, with 188 mllUon
people, Brazil. 151 mUilon pea-

Oliio TUrnpike·study
CoLUMBUS. Ohio (UPJ) Ohio Senate ~ Houle leaders.
-TIInday appointed a apeclal
blpartlsa!l JlUW !i!'·mmit11ee to
resolve a sfal•ate· om, the
future of tbe Obto Turnpike.
'I'I!e 10-member ~nunlttee, .to
be headed by Rep. Marc Guthrie,
0-Newark, was
R:~Signed to

pill', hjU, 1211

...

·•eicll Ntaerla
apd
with ~ m

Rewldll!i Clift

J

•

th~ 241-mile east·
weat ton raad will operate after
Its debt Is retired In 1992.
The Senate a40pted a bill 111
April 1989 retalnlllg tons and
expanding the pOWers of the Ohio
Turnpike Coll,.lmlsslon, but that
btU has been blocked In the
House.
.•

Piek-4
3128
' .
Super Lotto
15-17-22-23-24 43
Kicker 541829 ·

tbl! top ·lfl niatt

papuloua coliatrlet. Ia !Wdltu,
~tb 110 mUUon people,, :
·

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.Page 4.
'

. Rep. Frederick ~. ·o.
Monroevllle, has repeatedly
called for the conunlllloa to be
aboUshed and tbe ~ to be
operated by the Oh~ IlepU't·
men! of Transpol'tatloq,.wblcb Ia
IIi charge of all other . alate
highways.
'.

Copyrighted 1990

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
first pl)ase · of that · project.
Sentinel News Staff
' Roberts said that consultants.a re ·
Pomeroy Vlllage was granted now In the process of completing
an additional $792.733 In Issue 2 · plans on thi! upgrading project.
Rutland VIllage had applied
monies · for sewage treatment .·
plant upgrading at a meetlng for .. a. grant · of $837,000 for
Wednesday afternoon of the '· ·_ con~tructoln of a treatm~nt plant
Small Government CommiSsion ·an'il collection system for the
.held In Columllus.
..
village but that project was not
Meigs County Engineer Phll tllnded, Roberts.reportell.
He explained that Rutland's
Roberts, a member of the com·
mllisl~n. madr the grant an·
project Is a new cine and the
noi!Jlcementthls morning. · .
commission Is limited to only ·
He noted that It Is Pomeroy's $600,000 total for new projects
second· grant for sewage treat·
this year. He wen ton to state that
ment plant upgrading. The vii·
the total for new projects next
!age had earlier been .awarded
year Is expected to double.
approximately. $280,000 for , the
The commission, according to
.

•

I

' .

&lt;Ne r1'' rtJn out of an adver.t1sed 1tem. we will offttr ~ vou your choice ol a
&lt;: nm 1lar aW• 11en• .· whtt,; ava,lable~- re flec ting rtte same savmgs .Qt a rain check
wh11'i h w dl cn t1t le ..,.ou to uur r.h asi! the advert ised ~t~m at the advertised price ~­
lf\j llhln 30 rfd¥t:o Qnlv u "e ven\"lo r cou pon ol'llill be accepted per rtem purchased

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granted by the Commission celved from the total of $120
money to take care an Ohio River
as · Roberts . explained, million received from the sale of
since,
bank erosion · problem at the
money for s treets ·has a low Issue 2 bonds.
sell'age lagoons was not acted on
Other proj\-'cts in District 18
priority by the Dis trlct which Is
by the Commission sln~e It Is
funded
In addition to Pomeroy
rating sewer and water projects
considered an emergency
Chesterh.IIJ.
$431,640 and
were
higher at this time.
project,
·
·Bethesda,
$500,000,
with Bealls·
He noted that the decision on · Last month five projects In
ville
being
awarded
a zero
Meigs County were awarded
funding that project, since It Is
Issue· 2 monies of approximately percent interest loan on a 20 year
classified as an emergency, wlll
$420,000,
designated primarily basis of $112,203.
be made by the Randall Howard,
Melgfi County Commissioner
·
for
road,
street and bridge
director of the Ohio Public Works
Richard
Jones Is a member of the
projects
in
vlJlage$
along
with
Commission. A meeting with
district
Integrating committee
one
project
In
Pomeroy
for
w.ater
Howard. Is being planned by
Issue
2 funding program
on
the
tank
repair.
Engineer Roberts and Middle·
In
cooperation with
and
works
Small
Government
Com·
The
port Mayor Fred Hoffman.
he
Small
Government
t
mission
yesterday
allocated
to
Middleport's application for
Commission.
projects the $12 mlllion !t restreet project funding was not

·.First public hearing is held
on ·purchase of rest_a-urant
.
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the Meigs engineer, Is sending a
letter to District 18 of which
Rutland Is a part, te111ng It that
Rutland rated high llnd IS a vital
project Iii the eyes of commission
members and the EnVlronmen·
tal Protection Agency, afid re·
commending that Rutland vn:
!age reapply In 1991.
Roberts further said that In
checking with the EPA the
commission was advised that the
village wlll not be ready to start
on the. sewage system project
until next year anyway.
Roberts said that Middleport's
application for some emergency ·

.'f

&lt;tv.ut abll! for ~ale m ecich Kr Oger Store , e~~:cept as sPecificallv noled in t~is ad. If

Low Prices.
And More.

&gt;,

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•ovERfiSEO ITEM POUCY··Eac t1 o t 1hese ad ... ertised 1tems IS required.' lo be readily

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\0 LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SQLO TO
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COPYRIGHT 1990 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICE$ GOOD SUNDAY,
MARCH 4. THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1990, IN POMEROY. OHIO
,

2 Sectiona, 16 Pages 25 Cents
A Muhimedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio.-fhursday; March a. 1990

Pomeroy iS awarded second Issue II grant

;

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Low tolllgllt !a mid 401.
Chance of ra1n near 100
percent. Partly cloudy Friday. Hlp Ia mid lOs. Chance
of raJa 110 per(;ent.

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·Yol.40, No.21t

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
DEALERS

Lottery

Daily Number
229

altemative

.
. Jlllilll.

.,
committee appointed Tuesday

decide ·._

Ohi~

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.,

By JULIE ltiLLON
Block Grant revolving loan fund, The lodge's offer of$22,500for the
also through the D~partment of. two lots was declined but after
Sentinel News Staff
The first of two public hearings Development. Other monies wlJI some discussion an offer was
was held at Wednesday's regular come from l;:conomlc Develop· made by the commissioners" of
meeting . of the Meigs County ment Admlriistratlon (EDAl re' $12,500 for the vacant lot closest
to the courthouse and a right -of·.
Commissioners regarding I he volving loan fund money .
Shields stated that the neces· way next fo that property which
purchase of Pleaser's Restau ·
·
rapt in Pomeroy by Jim Hll) of saty. grant. application form had adj"otns the courthouse.
Syracuse. If the purchase· goes beeri completed and that the · Teaford stated he would pres·
through, 14 additional jobs could project proposal and· all other ent the offer to the lodge
be created at the popular area necessary paperwork should be , . members and report back to the .
restaurant. Presently there are ready by n.ext Thursday to commissioners on Wednesday.
In another matter, It was noted
26 full-time jobs at Pleasers.
submll'to the state.
Hill has been manager of the
When asked by Commissioner that the specifications for a new
· restaurant since 1981 and Is also Richard Jones how long It would computer system In Meigs
president of Syracuse Village take before something was heard County Court were completed
council. At the ttme the .estab- from the state, . Shields stated and that bids wlJI be iet {or the
felt word should be proj~ct. Tile new system will be
llshmenf Is purchased. Hlll will that
also do renovaHon work. He received by the first part of April. set up so that !!necessary it could
hopes to add .a sola,ri~m dining _•.••JP.n~ j!qdei!Jh\lt .!le felt very . b!! expanded at a later date. •
FlilallY, Metes CountySher)ff
area that coujd pffi\ll.!l~ .seil!fllg . cO.ll)fQrta~le.,l~ proect would go
James
. M. :§OulsW·· presenbid 'lo
for approximately '75. Tlils ar'ea thro11gh and {hat ''the commts1
the
commissioners
a plan 'for
·could al5&lt;1 be' used as a meeting slonfi!rS endorse Jim Hill's pro·
place fcir various civic and ject whole heartedly and will renovation worli at the sheriff's
community groups. HIJI noted make the necessary recommen· office. Sheriff Souls by stated that
that If all goes ,as planned he dations to carry It through." He the work was necessary because
would like to develop the estab- went on to say that the commls· · of safety factors. He went on to
lishment Into a full service sioners "want to try to work with· say t~at the work Involves no
restaurant, which would add the , you (Hill) in every way we CliD -" , m,.jor const~uctton, only · cos·
rV · to.urnameni. The To1:11adoes will baUie 14 new jobs.
SOVTBERN f~s had lots to cheer about In Oblo
.
In other matters, Bruce Tea- metlc renovation.
Leesburg-Fairfield for a berth In the regional
,1Jalvenlty's Convocation Center WedDesday
Durtngthepubllchearlng,Kim ford. or Teaford Realty, was .. Jones stated -that the work
tournament at OU Saturday, beginning at 3 p.m . . Shields, Meigs County Director present at the meeting to present could be justified but that he felt
nlaltlas lh!l Tornadoes disposed of the New Boston
Tigers, 'J7-84,1n semi-final play of the 1990 District ·
(Sentinel photo by ScoU Wolfe)
of Development, presented to the to the board. on behalf of the the sheriff's department should
commissioners a cost anaylsis or Pomeroy Masonic Temple, an get another bid on the job. He
what monies would be ·needed offer to buy the Pomeroy -Lodge went' on to say if the bid could be
and from where those monies
No. 164 F &amp; AM properties tl\at kept under $10,000 that work
when ready .
would come.
are adjacent to the courthouse. could
The total budget for the project
Is $157,810. Of that total, $'78,875
will hopefully come from the
0 1( l'O tJ 1't'(
Ohio Department of Develop·
ment and $47,000 wlll come from
By SCOTT WOLFE
lion Center to claim · the first ' Furnace Green at 1 p.m.
the . Community Development
: Sentinel Correspondent
round of the DivisiOn IV District
Southern, now 15-8, meets Ports·
, After rocketing to a 22-4 first
seml·flnal game over ~ew Bos·
mouth Ea·s·t, 19·3. ·
period lead and near-perfect first
ton Glenwood, 77-64 .
Portsmouth East edged Lees·
half; the Southern Tornadoes
Southern now advances to the
burg Fairfield, · 57-55 In tlie
capl(allzed on clu'tch free throw district finals to be played this
preliminary Wednesday .
s)lootlng to escape by the skin of Saturday. March 10 at 3 p.m., the
Leading Southern In scoring
their teeth here Wedn.esday even. secon(j ga!lle of another high
with . his second consecutive
\n2 atOhio University's Convoca- · school doubleheader; which pits
Contlnued'on page 3
. ' ''
Eastern-Pike against Franklin
'
Meigs .County · Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that deputies
Investigated a three-car accident
Wednesday evening on Route 124
at Well's Run.
According to the report, the
accident occurred shortly- after
6:30 p.m.- A northbound vehicle
driven by Donald Jordan, Bel·
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) propr,lation for 1991-92 sped out of of Representatives.
pre. andownedby,DavldWatson,
Gov. Richard Celeste's $945 committee Wednesday for a . The House Finance Committee
Coolville, went over the hlll crest
million capital construction ap· Thursday vote' In the Ohlo"House gave the giant bonded spending
and struck a pickup truck that
.
.
measure 21·3 approval a little
was .stopped northbound In the
more than 24 hours after Its
southbound-lane.
Introduction.
· The stopped pickup truck was
Meanwhile, 'the Senate un·
owned by James Suttle, Perry
antmously approved a bill requlr·
Run. The Suttle vehicle went left
'IF· YOU CAN .
TIDS...' • Ma,son County teachers set up
and struck a parked car owned
lng that the state sales tax be
pickets at tile mtrao~ to scllool racllltles tills monlna, jolma 11 ot11er
collected on out-of-state catalog
by Robert Gary Holter, Long
West
Vlralnla counties m a sll:lke
bJPer waga •ld more beaellll.
Bottom.
By LEE ANN WELCH
thereafter 1. she heard. a ."thump sales and on home shopping
Teadler
WOllam
McWharter
Is
a11tnm
C!OM!Ic!e the wcatloaal CeDter
television merchandise.
Accordong to slatements, Sut·
OVP News Staff
against the houll4l."
and
Point
l'leiSIDt
Jtmlor
Hlp
Scllool
tills •III'IIIDI wltllllll lip
And the Celeste administration
tie had been stopped along the
A Gallipolis man was kllled
A .second sister went outside
wbicb
states
"Ir
you
WI
read
tills...
Tllabk
i poar tac:ller. Sapport
highway looking at a sUp that had
Wednesday night when he )Vas and found Galllan• upright, presented to the Senate Finance
us.''
,
occurred. His vehicle got stuck In
crushed between his truck and crushed between 'the truck and Committee a $140 mUllan supple·
menial appropriation ~o cover a ·. the soft berm. His wife bad been
home, according to the Gallla house .
Medicaid
funding shortfall and
notified to bring the pickUp truck
County Sheriff's Deplirtmenl.
Deputies surmise the truck
rearrange
other
deficiencies
pull out the car.
to
. Kelly W. Galllan, 25, of Route 3 jumped gear, traveled down the
c
from
the
bildget
passed
last
~(alter
stopped ancl parked his
Box 116, GaiHpoUs, died at Holzer driveway and plilned Galllan. He .
vehicle to help. They had just
Medical Center after the 8: 30 was taken to Holzer Medical June.
Virgin~n
.
The
capital
1m
provements
bill,
pulled tbe car out of the soft spot
accident In 1'Vhlch hla truck rolled Center, where he died:
when Jordan came ovi!r tbe
A West VlrJinla man was ·lnjun!d In a motorcycle crash
down lhl! driveway, plnnlna hlm
Galllan, a c'orrectlons officer assembled on a blpartinn"basls
hlllcrelt and struck !he stopped
aaalnat the house. lOCated on at lhe Southen Oblo ~rrectlonal by tbe administration and legis·
Wednesday at 7: 15 p:m. In Racine on S.R. 124, acaordlll&amp; to the
truck In the rear, knockinJlt Into
State ·Rou~ ~; · approximately Facility at Lucasville, Is sur- latlve leaders during the past two
Gallla·Melgs Poat of tile State IJiihway Patrol.
months,
conlalnslll86
mllUon
for
Holter's
parked vehicle. Jordan
Robert K. Wisnewski, 32, ot Rave,.wood, was taken by
one mile west of Haskins Road. vived by hla parentl, Ruasell K.
told au lhorltles ht wu blinded by
ambulance to' Veteraaa Memorial Hospital, wbere l)e was
j The cause of death Is listed. as and Jackie Dodson of Route 8, construction at coUege and unl·
.
·
car Ugh~.
admitted for obllervallon·a ftersufferlna a possible head Injury .
1massive head Injuries.
·
-GafUpolls. He Is also survived by verslty campusetl.
·
Thel'e waa moderate damage
The
1tate
Office
of
Blldget
and
i Accordlll&amp; to the . deputy's a fiance, Lora Masters Boaess
At last report he WL, listed In stable COndition.
to Holter'a 11184 Buick, Moderate
Mllnqement Rid U22·mUllpn Is
· 'report, Ga)Uan was working on
Wlsnewakl, rldlnll a 1982 Honda Goldwing, was travellnJ east
of Ga,IUpolls, a· brother and f0\11'
Intended for upkeep ot exls dng
to heavy damaae waa listed to
tbe Chevy pickup true~ earller In
when he went off the rtaht side of the road, overturnlna his
alsters. •
,
Watson's 1~'17 Ford truck, which
Funaral iefvtces will be .con· fac!Utlea.
mott!fCYcle In the pi'QCess. Tbouab he was th~own frcrn \he
tbeday.
Few
changes
were
accepted
to
was driven by Holter. and heavy
· His famUy was preparing to 10 ducted Saturday at.11 ii.m. In
motorcycle, he was. weirtu bb helmet tbi'OUIIhout the ltt~~ldent .
out•fC)r the evening, and a alsler Wffils Funeral ilom~ bY pastor the original version. Bowling damage to Suttle'• 1979 Ford
He was chargee! with PWl ani! cited for ral)ure to control.
Green
State
Unlvenlty
·was
truck.
SUttle's
au1Dmoblle
was
·
· Continued on paae 16
told tbe lber!ff'r department the DenD&gt;' Coburn.
·
not damapd.
VIctim weat outside, and· •oortly
Continued on page 16

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Maxwell House .
Ground·Coffee
31-~
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Frozen Young
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0~

51
LIMIT 2 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

' "LENTEN SPECIA~" .
INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN

a.JI.Ct.

RED OR

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Skim

Shrimp In ,·,
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Thompson White
Seedless Grapes

Gallein

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Healthy Choice_:·
. • 'Dinnan . .
1li-11.1&amp;-oz. ' '

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FIIOZEN KAOOEII POT PIES 7·0Z.

'-'-·-

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K.ROGER QIIAt)E A LA"GE EGGS DOZ•.. ti.IXI

Tills . ~ .
T~ank 0

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S_upporl lb. ·

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Galli:pOlis· man .dies
·after freak accident:

ror

LoCal :news briefs--

West

• "AI UJQIE .. lV"
FROZEN · ·

Bath Tissue 9

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White Cloud

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·capital.c()nstru~tioh bill
speeds·· -toward hoilse vote

Pound

250-SHEETS PER ROLL2·PlY.

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Deputies
probe auto
accident ·

U.S . GRADE A 14·7-LB . AVG .}

Select Pack
Chicken

..

Southern gains IV District
title game with 77-64 -win

·

•

U.S. GRADE A IS-DRUMSTICK-S,
6-THIGHS &amp; S-WINGS) ROCKINGHAM

...

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- -----

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