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p•

M.-ch 11, 1990

D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Exports of bip-value products

for poultry f*odu(Jel'l

mean mOre job&amp; for United States

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPlJ Lower· feed costs shollld }lelp
poultry producers In 1990. But
Alan Lines, agricultural economist at Ohio State UniVersity,
says 1990 feed costs could also be
bad news to an over-expanding
Industry.

cop Big 'IO
crown

European Community exports,
but less than half the value of
u.s. shipments. European food ,
processors export nearlY ll per·
cent or their output; U.S. proces·
sora only about 3 percent.
Most or the leading EuropeaJI
ollseeds.'
Yet the United States trails Community firms are subSidlar· '
well . behind other countries In les of u.s. firms. but Henderson
exports of sellll·procesRd and says the export behavior of these
processed products, ,says' Ohio subsidiaries differs slgnlflcantJy
State UniVersity agriCultural from their U.S. parents, thanks
mainly to European CommunitY,
economist Dennis Henderson.
.
For ~~a,:~j
prO'' poUcy.
dUctl8l

COLUMBUS. Ohio !UPII Exports of high-value agrlcultu·
ral praducta ~~rate. substan·
tlally f!Wre lobi and Income for
tbe United States than da..baslc
commodities·such as gr&amp;llll and

With corn priced around $2.30 a
bushel and soybj!an meal much
redu~ In price at $160 a ton,
production costs could be as
much as 12 percent lower ,than In
1989, IJnes says.

MYII'l'EBY FARM ·-

· a II cull • • ,._ tile
Valley hNi+hl
.Co. Leave )'0111' IIJIIIIe, adlbwa aad &amp;ellpllolle·
npmller with Yllll'· oard or leUer. No tellplto•• ··
eo-riatloa Dllltrlcl, Is .located somewhere In
' Galla Couaty. Individuals wtshlnl to parllclpale . call8 wiD be accepted. All coatesl ea""' lboald
be IIIJ'IIH Ia 1o lh' aewlfl&amp;per office by 4 p.m. eaeh
Ia lhe weekly contest may do so by guessln11he.
Wedllellday. In cue of a lie, the winner. will be
farm'• owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
chosen · by lottery. Next ,reek, a Melp Coualy
tile · G&amp;llpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
farm
:wUI be-featiln!d by·tile Melp SoD aad Water
G&amp;llpolill, Ohio, 4$831, or lhe Dally Senllnel, lll
Conservation District.
Court 81., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,aad you may win
.
Tbll week's mystery

··Consenration ·plantings
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
SoU and Water Conservation
Dlltrlct's tree packets will be
arriving soon. When they do
arrive, you should be prepared to
properly handle your seedlings.
Your seedlings should be
planted as soon as possible.
However, as soon as possible for
many people still means having
to do something with the seedlings for awhile till they can get
them planted. The most lmpor·
tant thing to remember Is don't
ever let the roots become dry.
Tbe best place to keep your
seedllnp Is In the ground, heeled
ln. To heel them In, dig a
V-ahaped trench In a moist,.
shady spot.
Then, loosely Jay your seedllnp along the trench evenly. If
they . come with any type of
moistened moss arouod the roots
lay lllal .with the roots In the
trencll, Replace the soU In the
trench and wa,t er well. Pack the
soli -down on the roots i.vell to
remove any air pockets.
When you are ready to plant,
dll up a bundle or two, no more,
wJth lbe mou and put them Into a
bucket with enough water that
covers all the roots. Do not carry
the seedlings around In your
haad as you plant. This wUI dry
the roots out too much and could
cause the seedling not to survive.
Whether you , prefer to plant
wl!h a dibble bar (planting bar),
mattock or shovel the two most
Important things to remember
are 1.) plant the tree at the
correct depth and 2.) make sure
the soli Is firmly packed around
the seedllnlf to prevent leaving
an air pocket around the roots.
The depth of planting Is Important because If the seedlings are
planted too shallow roots are left
expoaecl and If planted too deep
the roots are bent which lnterfers
with necesaary root a bsorpUon
and restabllshment atter the
shock of being transplanted. The
coz:rect depth Is, Ideally, the
depth they were at the nursery or
up to If' deeper with the roots
spread as naturally as possible.
The white pine seedlings In the
packet can be planted on a wide
variety of sites. However, It will
. do It's best on moist sandy loan
soils; also, those . with a small
amount of clay. As a general
rule, they do well on good and

·DelfUJnd...

poor sites and at all exposures
but they do not like to be on wet
sites, well-drained or not. They
are very hardy when It comes to
surviving being transplanted.
The Color.ado blue spruce Is
very adept at surviving droughts
and extremes In temperatures.
This · tree can be used as an
ornamental since It can be
shaped_very successfully and It's ·
foliage Is a lush, beautiful silvery
blue.
The Norway spruce does bette~
on good sites and will proaper on
bottomland that Is well-drained.
This is ~ large tree, many times.
used as a windbreak.,This tree Is
best not put right !lex! to a home
or building due to .tbe size It may
achieve.
. The hybrid' poplar Is a tree that
was developed specifically for
fast ~owth. It Cll\ grow well on
soils.that ra11ge from sandy loans
to the-beavler soils. They also are
very tolerant o~ extremely
acidic soUs right on through to
the very ackaline soils.
Tbe mugho pine Is best des·
crlbed as a shrub. It will do well
planted around the home or yard
as an ornamental. It can be.
successfully trimmed to main·
lain a smaller size If desired.
With this combination ol speC'Ies available, you will have 'at
least one species for every
different type of site you have to
plant. And with proper handling
and planting techniques, yAare
on your way to successtuT"tree
planting.

IRONTON - Danny Montgomery of Waverly, represented
the Ohio Valley RC&amp;D Executive
Committee at the North Central
Association of RC&amp;D COuncils
annual meeting In Bloomington,
. Minnesota last month.
The Ohio Valley RC&amp;D In·
eludes Jackson, VInton, Gallla,
Lawrence; Scioto, Pike, Ross,
Brown, Adams, and Highland.
Tile conference, entitled
"Working Together for Rural
Dev~lopment," Included representatives from 34 RC&amp;D areas
In seven ·s tates.
·The topics Included the role of
the Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice, U.S. Forest Service, and the

GALLIPOLIS - Burley to..
bacco growers will get a 2.5
~eat Increase In ~elr 1990
marketing quotas. The national
marketing quota for 1990 ln\J:ley ·
tobacco Is 602.3 million ·pounds,
14.7 miiUon pounds higher th8!1
the 1989 quota.
After adjustments for over and
undermarket lngs are taken Into
accilunt, the 1990 effective quota
could total about 743 million
pounds, or 82 million pounds
more than the 1989 effective
quota. Under the tobacco price ~
support prQ~P"am, farmers who
produce less than 'their quota or
tobacco In one year - an
· un4ennarketlng ..:. may market
tbe underage ·for the following
year,
The U.S. Department of Aerh ·
culture also increased the price
support level tor 1990 crop burley
to $1.558 per pound,-2.6 cents per
pound more than the 19891evel.
The 1990 crop loans ta..prddueer.
associatiOns will be subject to a
1.4 percent reduction .under the
budget deficit sequester order.

.Y OUR TAXES .••

Personal &amp; Business -Returns ~
Electronic filing
Fast Funds·· 3-Day_Refunds
···student ~~king Club Discou_nts
.

:

~

BY OUR OFFI,CES.

'

r

MQTI'IS--·"·.

SPRING
PLANTING

TIME!

Pulsar

"1·1164

, ......

t.:!'.•

. Tht ltort With "AI Kinde of Stuff" Far,_., 8
L..rge • 8111111 Anlmell, Lawnl • ~·n~nt.

,

•

Carter begins
Middle East
tour today

New 1989 Nissan ·240SX

.
.
~~
~~~Spring~
' •

'

/$pectalsj:

'7.~

Warm temperatu·res
to continue in Ohio

$251 77 *'

o~"~ .

Par·Mo.

SPORTS

85 NISSAN
SENTRA XE

88 FORD
ESCOAT

4 speed, air, cas$elte,
'

sport stripes.

.

'96,.......
89 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
Automallc, only 1,400
.miles, LIKE NEW!

5 speed, air, stereo, reaf'

5 speed, air, casselte ,

wiper/defroster.

cruise, 1onneau

'119 per MO.
85 JEEP
GRAND WAGONEER

Automat•c.·a•r , casseue , power
windows &amp; locks. leather.

'129 --·

'172 p..-mo.

OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

87 DO
ARIES WAGON

Automatlo, air, eteleo, lilt.
cruise &amp; more.

'133 ,., .....

86 NISSAN
KING -CAB 4x4

Automatic, air, stereo, on·
ly 32,000 miles.

'121 ,., .....

1

co.ver.

.. 87 NISSAN
SENTRA
5 speed, rear

det~.ster,

red, like new.

185 po~ mo.

'121 ...~-.

67 FORD
TAURUS

. 86 MERKUR
XR4TI

· Automatic, air, s•ereo,
tow miles .

'121 --·

a&amp; CHEVY

CAVAUER WAGON .

Automatic, air, stereo.
power steering &amp;brak~s .

'105 - ·- .
~~'ll!nl~ l.;~fftl

5 t~ 4l !Ill

:_

...---Local news

briefs~

Trailer destroyed by fire

,

Iitie, afJtt' rebll:e,

J" •. ..

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI)- A lack of name recognition, money previous record, the Dispatch
reported, and Celeste made
busy schedule of speaking trips, and organization.
contacts
with a number of major
The
speaking
and
trade
trips
fund-raising and organizational
national
Democratic .
are
helping
address
the
recognl·
activities point to a possible
contrlbu
tors.
lion
factor.
·
presidential bid by Ohio Gov.
In addition, Celes(e formed
Celeste said the speeches.
Richard Celeste, The Columbus
Participation 2000 In 1988, a Participation 20()()' and organlz·
Dispatch reported Sunday.
Among the moves to Increase federal political action commit· lng boost his chances as ·a
his profile, Celeste has arranged tee. It haS' placed Interns In 25 candidate.
"All of those would be valuable
to send "news" reports of his campaigns .cross the country In
foreign travels to more than 4,000 the past two year, with plans to If I choose to run," Celeste said.
radio stations across the nation. place 35 more this fall. The "But they also have Interest to
Even the leader of Celeste's own Interns would be key organizers me, In and of themselves, not as sort of stepplngslones or any·
Democratic Party, Chairman In a presidential bid.
As the new chairman of the thing else."
James Ruvolo, questions the
"I have to be really honest with
Democratlc Governors' Assocla·
practice, the newspaper said.
Celeste, who Is In the final year tlon, Celeste made calls to help you," he said. ''I'm not a
tenure as organize an $800,000 fUnd-raiser candidate for president, at least
\ of his
been out Q( the · Fel),.26 In 'f{ ~S!!J!lgtOn. The !)Vent as .long a~ I wear thJs beard and
oitheiast38days, made twil!e as much as the · havE!'Ywo dau'ghlers In college."
Including attending a national
governors' conference and lead·
lng International trade trips.
He returned during the weekend from a trip to Seoul, South
t'
Korea, where he attended a
five-day conference of the World
Convocatlpn on Justice, Peace
and
Integrity of Creation, spon·
RiGHTTOREAD-RonaldMcDonaldspeniRD
·observed last week In aii11Chool&amp; In Melp County.
ever, he said crack Is still the
DAYTON, Ohio (UP}) - Au·
sored
by the World Council of thorltles say a new form of
afternoon with the sludenl8 at Tuppers Plains
He pointed oullhe many benefits and Importance
drug of choice among most
Churches.
· smokable heroin, Called "tar," Is
Elementary for Righi to Read .Week which was
of ~adlng. (See story on page 5).
Dayton addicts.
The governor's office defends showing up among the city's
Users have begun a potentially
Celeste's schedule, saying It addicts.
dangerous
practice of mixing
.
.
· boosts education, human servl·
crack
with
tar and powdered
The drug Is said to be even
ces and jobs In Ohio.
heroin to make coming off the
more destructive than the CQBut It . also Is helping place calne derivative "crack" and Is
drugs less harsh an experience.
Celeste In a more favorable reportedly at tractlng crack us·
Heroin Is a narcotic depressant
arguing over words and phrases
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An
U.S. District Judge Harold
position
for
a
lry
for
the
Demoand
cocaine Is a stimulant.
ers
because
Ills
priced
competiangry federal judge Monday Greene was clearly In no mood
In Webb's questions.
cractlc presidential nomination. tively at about $25 a dose.
Like he did Friday, North
ordered retired Marine Lt. coi. for a repeat of North's behavior
He considered running in 1987
Before tar, the standard unit
Oliver North to answer ques- during more than five hours of
repeatedly said he could not
Mixing the two can lead. to
alter
Gary
Hart
dropped
out,
but
dose of heroin was $70 to $100.
tions, and stop· arguing o9er arduous questioning Friday,
remember key details of his
Increased hea ith risks, said Dr.
decided against It because of his
''The truth Is, crack Is so cheap Mark DeBard, emergency room
words and phrases ..' at the Iran·
dealings wlth Poindexter. who
that It caused the price of heroin director at St. Elizabeth Medical
North took the stand Monday North reported to at the White
Contra trial of, John Poindexter.
to go down," said Abdur Zafr, Center.
North's former White House as Poindexter watched and re- House.
who runs Project CURE, a local
,
fused to respond when lead
boss.
St. Elizabeth has had about a
To elicit the Information, Webb
drug and alcol)ol treatment dozen cases of users suffering
11 was North's second day on ·prosecutor Dan Webb said.
had to keep referring North to
progran.
''Good morning, Colonel North.
the sta,nd at the !rim-Contra trial
side effects from mixing the two
stacked
transcripts
of
his
trial
North, who was convicted of
of Poindexter, who was national
Although tar has !Jeen avalla·. drugs, he said. The benefits from
security adviser to Ronald some Iran-Contra crimes during testimony and what North told
ble outside the United States for combl1!1ng them are questionaReagan.
a , trial last year. ·then began Congress during nationally tele·
ble, he said.
~everal years, ..It's new for us,
vised hearings In the summer of
new for Americans," Zafr said.
"In other words, If they bal·
1987.
CAIRO, Egypt IUPI)
. One of tar's main.lures Is that It ance the doses exactly right, at
Greene quickly became angry
Former President Jimmy Carter
doesn't have to be InJected like the right time, lhey can mentally
at North.
arrived Monday to start a Middle
powdered heroin, said Dayton have a rather pleasant trip
"The witness, every time .a
Eas 1 tol!r aimed at rekindling the
pollee Lt. James Finnigan. How - down," DeBard said.
ques don Is asked of him, almost
stalled peace process In which he
every time, says he doesn't
played a key role more than a ·
remember," Greene said. "It's
decade ago.
By Unlled Preas International
most of Ohio during the day like pulling teelh. His recollecThe diplomats said Carter, his
Tuesday.
lion has to be refreshed."
wife, Rosalynn, and an a! de were
After a weekend of the warm·
Despite the threat for wet
When North again began quill-&lt; · on a two-day fact·flodlng visit of
est temperatures of the year.
weather , Tuesday, very mild bllng over a minor point abou' a
Egypt as guests of the Egyptian
Ohio was facing another week of
temperatures will continue. · conversation with Poindexter,
government. Carter Is also sche·
The Skinner Run Road home or Jeff Beeker was destroyed by
Highs Tuesday should be com- . Greene began qiles tionlrig the
high mercury readings, with
duled to go to Syria, Jordan and
!Ire before midnight Saturday. John L, Ridenour, of the Chester
records expected to fall today _ parable to loday's, but additional retired Marine himself.
Israel on his nine-day tour.
Fire Department, reports that his unit was alerted ~Y Meigs
and Tuesday .
·
· clouds and an Increased threat of
"What's the difference? ...
"President Carter' s vlsllls not
Emergency Medical Services at 11: 35 p.m. By the time firemen
At dawn, temperatures ranged
showers and thunderstorms will Those were lies, right?~' asked
spo,nsored by the U.S. .govern·
arrived, the mobile home was practically destroyed, Ridenour
shave a few degrees off the highs Greene.
ment. He Is a guest of the
from the high . 50s to low 60s
says. No one was home at the time the !Ire started and Ridenour
across the Buckeye State. Sun· Wednesday.
"1 did not tell the truth," North
Egyptian government," a U.S.
was not sure who a·lerted EMS. He also wasn't sure If Beeker
day, record highs were set across
Thursday's highs, under 11 said.
diplomatic source said. "Carter
lived alone of had a family, or If the home was Insured. There
all ot the state except for the
threat of rain. will be 55 to 65, but
"Let's not try to be verbatim,."
has always taken a keen Interest
were no Injuries reported. Firemen believe the blaze may have
northeast counties, where
the mercury will reach only 45 to Greenesnapjled, glarlng.down at
In the Mideast P,eace process and
started In a woodburner.
· temperatures were k~pt chilly by 55 Friday. Lows will be 45 to 55 North from the bench. "Let's try
obviously would like to see It
~em Township Fire Department was called at 2:11 ·p.m .
Lake Erie.
Wednesday, In the 40s Thursday to stick to the facts and give
progress." ·
Saturday to a structure fire on the Charles Jones property on
answers to the questions,
Today, readings were ex· and In the lis Friday.
Carter, who mediated the 1978
Route 325, Dick Lambert, of the Salem Department, reports
peeled to be a little more
On the early morning weather ·please."
Camp David .accords that led to
that Jones had been burning doWn an old bulldin~ when It fell
11nlform, . with highs spanning .m ap, a warm front extended
North, sounding contrite, said: . the subsequent Egypt-Israel
against an old chicken house and caueht the chicken house on
from the' mid-70s to low 80s.
from eastern Pennsylvania "Yes, your honor."
·
peace treaty, Is ·scheduled to
fire. Firemen saved the chicken house which Jones had been
Galllpolisrecordedahlghof81 through western New York arid
Poindexter, who was North's meet later Mooday. with Egypusing for storage purposes. Lambl!rt guessed there may have
Sunday,. breaking a 33-year-old central Michigan Into deep low boss at the White House l"nd
tian Minister of State for Foreign
been $200 to $300 In damages to the chicken house.
record of 75 set March 11, 1957 pressure over the Dakotas. High reported directly to Reagan, Is
Affairs Boutroa Gbali, as well as
and justmlsstng Gallla'sall·time pressure just off the Georgia acculled of five felonies -lnclud·
members of business, rellgtOUI
high March reading of 86,-set on coast continued to occupy about lng conspiracy, obstruction of and academic communities.
March 22, 1938 and equaled on the southeast third of tbe nation, Congress and destruction of , He Is Interested In bearing
Milrch 16, 1945 and fVIarch 27, with weaker high pressure over documents.
their views on current attempts
A GaiUpolls woman was cited In a car·truck crash Saturday at
1950. .
New Engjand.
Poindexter Is the highest rank·
to reform and decentralize .
11:20 a.m, In Salisbury Township on C.R. 3, just west of the
EIYPt' s economy, which reA shot of moisture and a weak
The warm front should stay lng Rea;an administration off!.
Junction ot S.R. 7, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
ceiVes almost $1 billion In U.S.
upper level disturbance will be wellnortho!Ohloforthenexlfew clalto staad trial In the scandal,
State Highway Patrol.
economic aid a year, Egyptian
approaching . Ohio late tonlg~t days as the Dakotas' low moves Involving the secret sale or U.S.
Linda L. Lanham, 42, was cited for Improper backing after
Foreign Ministry officials said:
and this could trigger a few very slowly east. By late Tues- . arms to Iran In an effort to free
her 1988 Nlsun pickup truc"k hit a 1982 Dodge Challenger-driven .
On Tue\l(lay, Carter II sche- .
showers, or p.osslbly a thunder- day afternoon the low pressure American hos!Bges In the Middle
by Carol J. Ramsburg, 27, of 34281 Titus Rd., Middleport. .
East, and the diversion of some
duled to meet President Hosnl
storm, before sunrise Tuesday will be approaching the west end
Lanham and Ramsburg were driving eut wben Lanham
over western parts of the state. o!LakeSuperlorwith a cold front
of the profits to support the rebel
Mubarak and then fly to Damas·
stopped and backed up on the road, hlttine Ramsburg' a car In
cus Wednesday. the ministry
The tl\reat ror this scattered type back Into eastern Kansas and
Nicaraguan C«&gt;ntras when Con·
,
tile front. .
or wet weather will expand over central Texas.
gress bamled direct ald . ·
officials said.

North ordered to answer questions

'

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

resumption _of . negotiations, a had been made for a special offer, and he urged educators to
return to work Monday.
special legislative session and a . session.
''The WVF'T leadership ac·
pledge that no punitive action be ' ''It appears thai we are now at
In principle the proposal
.
cepted
Impasse," the WVEA president
taken against strikers.
of
the
governor as a fair and
The WVEA represents a bout said. "The governor has given
honorable
way for all parties to
16,000 of the state's 21,653 West Virginia school employees
resolve
this
strike situation and
teachers, most of whom have ... no cho\ce but to continue the
to
return·
to
the classroom, and
been Idled since the walkout statewide strike."
its acceptance to
recommends
began last Wednesday. Teachers
Legislators ended a 60-day
the
general
membership,"
became Incensed when Caperton rrgular session Satqrday night.
first offered lale.Monday- then but the session was extended ' Brown sa19 . .
Jackie Goodwin, a spokesman
rescinded the following day- a 5 three days to finish work on the
for the WVEA, said Caperton Is
percenl pay raise.
.
state budget.
"going to have make (the next
Meadows said she was forced
Bob Brown, executive director
to ask the teachers to disregard of the state's federaton of move). We're at an Impasse. He
thelrearllervlJtesilfterCaperton teachers, which has about 3,000 has to do something and some·
thing fast. "
appeared on a television news- members, said his union's lead·
cast and said no commitment , ershlp supported Caperton's

Crack addicts tum
to heroin for 'tar'

FORMERLY TAVLOR 'NISSAN

FOI ALL OF
YOUI PLANTING
NEEDS•••••

•x

.
' ..

Gov. Celeste may throw hat
in ring for president in '92

"' ..
CALL .FOR
. . APPOINTMENT 01 STOP

'Rural Electr111catlon Admlnls·
tratlon In rural development.
Training sessions were held on
overcoming barriers to effective
communications and on how to
work effectively with policy
·makers.
·
The Oblo Valley RC&amp;D area
through the conservation .and
development of natural resour·
ces. The ,council is made up of
representatives ot the SoU and
Water Conservation Districts,
county commissioners, and an
at-large member !rom Jackson,
VInton, Gallla, Lawrence; Scioto,
Pike, Brown, Adams, and High·
land Counties.

•SEED POtATOES
•ONION SETS
•BULl SEEDS
•PACiAGI SEEDS
•G~SS SEIDl
•POniNG SOIL
•PIO
•FIITIUIEI
'•UIIII CIIIPS .
'eWES1EINIAII
I•GADIN TOOLS

1

__

. CHARLESTON, wf:va. (UPI) rank·and·flle to stay off the job,
two cooler heads step In and take
-West VIrginia teachers; accus· Caperton denied ever making · over these negotiations or the
lng Gov. Gaston Caperton of any ~uch agreement.
whOle state will go down the
reneging on an offer, agreed to
"We made absolutely -no com· . tubes." he said.
extend a strike that has Idled mllment to a special session,"
Lale Friday , Caperton urged
thousands of educators and Caperton said. "I am so deeply
teachers
to ret'urn to work
forced public schools to close disturbed and disappointed by
·
Monday
morning.
In exchange
statewide.
this statement -that doesn't tell
The West Virginia Education the truth. It Is difficult to he offered to recommend thai
Association charged late Satur- cqmmunlcate with people who local boards of education · pay
teachers for time missed as a
day that Caperton backed out of a don't tell the truth."
promise to call a speclalleglsla·
Secretary of State Keri Hechler result of the strike.
But late Saturday, Meadows
live session to address demands entered the dispute Sunday,
for higher pay and Improve- saying Meadows and Caperton said, "teachers In an averwhelmments In Insurance and were acting "like playground hig maJority of counties" had
retirement.
name-callers" and should let agreed to a settlement based on
An hour after WVEA President
other negotiators try to resolve three con&lt;,lltlollll not mentioned
Kayetta Meadows urged the . the dispute. "It's high time that by _ Caperton: the Immediate

Burlei@h elected

'

Partly ciOady loatpt. Low
In mid 1108. Tuesday, hlllt near
80. Chaace of rain 341 percent.

West Virginia teachers agree to eXtend strike

were Serious

CINCINNATI &lt;UPI) - Wll·
llam R, Burleigh has been
elected executive vice preslden t
of The E. W. Scripps Co., and •
nominated to the company's
board of directors, It was announced Friday.

9302
Super Lotto
10-17·24-25-34-36 ..
Kieker 416447

.~~·~~~-~~·~=~~~~1:;e;o~----~--~--------~--------------P~o~rn~·~·~ro~·y~--.-Nt~i~d~d~le~p~·o~rt~·-O··~h~io~._.M~o•n~d•a•y~,~M-a_rc h_.1_2~._1__9_9_o________~------------~--~l~~~~~~~~~~d~~~r~n~~~-~-·-w~!:-~~c~_·"-

SEE US SOON

EtJ8 production

COLUMBUS, Ohio {UP!) ·E11fprodi1Ctton wlll be up about2
pereent In 1990, with most of the
Increase coming In the second
hall of the year.
Allan Lines, agricultural economllt at Ohio State University.
expects that upturn In production
to continue through the first halt
.ot 1991. He expects wholesale
prk:el to drop to 75 cents a dozen
by tile end of 1990, ·
Total eeg use continues
dowlward. About 83 percent of
thaf total Is for ts ble use but thai
percentage Is declining as eggs
uledln proces~ed products take
on 110re ottbe' market. · •

inc~

Pick-4

2

Seven ·states represented ·
.in recent RC&amp;D ·conference

Continued from D-1
to enter the Ohio Stale Fair·
grounds from the 11th Avenl!e
entrance, since the Expo actiVIties are on the south edge ol the .
Fairgrounds. Other activities
are probably planned from the
'north end making entrance to the
~xpo from 17th Avenue very
dlfflc:ult. ·
Farmers are reminded that the
revlaed copy of the "Ohio Field
Crops-Weed Control Guide" Is
available at the Extension Of.
. flee. Cost Is three dollars. There
are scime maJor revisions and
several new options for weed
control: Stop lor a copy,

•
to ~rease
_

Burley tobacco
market quota ·

Daily Number
891

Page 4

Th~ lower prices are likely to
encourage more expansion In
broiler, egg and turkey produc·
·tlon. And that's likely to com·
pound the profit problems currently faced by the fast-growing
poultry b!IS~esa. .
·
'

farm, leatared by the Gallla SoU aad Water

Ohio Lottery

Spartans

Feeds COlla to drop

Automallc, air, cassette,
sunroof, leather &amp; more,

..

.

'119 ,....
89 NISSAN
STANZA

Aolomatic, air, stereo,
rear defroster. like newl

'225 ,., .....

,
at r:IMid'IIIIIO! ~11111111 &amp;Itt 9C &amp; &amp;9 &amp;IJI'IIO - a&amp; &amp;!I ~ ~ 84. &amp;111W 361111l l'lr\lfiS ID 'ollllor:lrS Mf 11000 1111 Solli!K11Q tt-¥1U i)llrMI

Patrol .cites Gallipolis woman.

-

-·

:-- ----'41- -

~~·

---

-.

-

. I

�•

I

Commentary

~Ma~;~~~~l~'-~d~t~1~2~·~,·~80~~~--~:_~~--:_--~----~~:t~==~~Oh2~~~--~--~~~----~~-----1n.~~~~~~~~

Page-2- The Daly Sa 118111
Pomlloy- Middleport; Ohio
~. MarCh 1~. 1990

Mate~~

1,.,,

'

Th~

Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

'
'DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AR E A
~lb

lSI

.

m~ '"'";'--''-...............,.,

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l'llbllaber

.

r::::loo=t

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manarer

rAT WHITEHEAD
Assl.siant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press Iliternattonal. Inland Dally Press

Association and the Amerk!an Newspaper l'llbllshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Ieos than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good ta s te, addressing Is sues, not personall·

ties.

Havel came to Washington to.
spread the word of democracy a dirty word in Castro's book.
Castro clings to communism like
an addiction. He Is so committed
· t\1 Mar~Cist Ideals that observers
are beginning to wonder about
his mental state. ·He has even
been touting the Idea of putting
Cuba Into a war economy In
which Cubans would survive on
half the food they now have and
hope that patriotism would sus·
taln them.
··
If Castro Insists on being one of
the last world leaders to wave the
old·style communist banner,
then he may have to find another
place In Washington to wave it.
Havel Is already under pressure
from U.S. leaders to dU!llP Guba

Berry's .World

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta.

1-----1

billion a year in'llid from Eastern
as a roommate and fr iend.
..
We have learned that several . Europe, but the sweeping
changes. there wnr push him low
senators, including (lob Graham
on the priority list In countries
D·Fia., John McCain, P ·Ar!z.,
that need all the money they can
and Joe Ueberman, D.COnn. ,
get
to buttress their own changgave Havel a letter during · his
Ing
economies.
Sending money to ' '
Was hlngton visit asking him to
Cuba
so
Castro
can
perpet\llltean
"review the current d!pioinal!c
oppressive system that those
arrangement with Havana." The
countries have cast off just .
letter reminds Havel of a nUmber
doesn't make sense.
of human. rights' abuses attribCuba' s biggest supporter, both
uted to Cuba, such as Imprison·
financially and ldeololically, has
111ent of dissidents.
'
been the Soviet Union.· But as
These are hard times tot
Mikhail Gorbacbev changes the .
Castro, and he stands to lose a lot
course of Soviet politics, Castro
more than just an office In
Is fast becoming the odd man out.
.Washington. He depends on $7

"You're 85! /'m . 104! How a~out a May-December romance? "

1990

.

Denver, Colorado
Marctl31

..

April2

'

.

Denver, ColoraQD ·'
Marc~31

•

MIDWEST
Dallas. Texas.
March.22 &amp; 24

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Mary~
aand, which will be making its
Rnal· postseason appearance un~11993 and last season's runner!!p St. Louis headed the list of 32

teams selected Sunday night for
the Na tiona I In vita t!pn
Tournament.
The list also included DePaul,'
'which· saw !Is streak of six

consecutive NCAA appe!lfances
end when it missed the field .th!-s
season, and Long Beach State,
which was offered a conditional
.NC~ berth butlost the B!gWest
I
· ··
· .
.
, championship. game to Nevada·
Las Vegas . "·
Maryland was b,anned for two
,
years from postseason play,
.
starting next season, after it was
found guilty Of 18 rules vioJatiQnS
1
·
by ule NCAA. ,
·
·
'
'
·
Because of the lateneSs of the '
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cleve- ·point, maybe two pointS'," said
Southwest Athletic Conference
and St. Joseph, Solon and Robbins. "Then I said to myself,
championship g11 me between
•olumbus Ready won state titles
'Why think like that? Think about
Texas Sou.thern and Southern,
• And
tj
the
match
d
i
Ohl
hi
h
h
I
d
th
atur ay at e
o g sc oo
om na ng . '
.
·
NIT officials were working late .
that 's what I did. today ·"
res tlj ng tournamen t ·
into the night to complete pair·
I Cleveland St. Joseph took the
Karl Grove of West Chester
!ngs.G;~mesbi!g!nWednesdayat
, !vision 1 crown with 101 points. Lakota also saw his positive
home sites to be ·determined.
1 h J es utt think! ng pay o,'f·
· was
cond was St ow
New York's 'Madison ·Square
With 91 and a dis tan !'third with 59
"Up until the match, I kep.t. Garden wi-ll host the semifinals
1 ~ was Lakewood St. Edward, using positive motivation;" said March 26 and the final. March 28 .
!Which fell way short In a bid to. Grove. "I thought about how It's
fin its 12th state title in the last13 going to feel standing on the top
The complete list of NIT teams
years.
.
step
of
the
winner
's
platform.
1
is
:
1
'l Solon won the Division II title
knew II was going to feel grelj.t."
Ar~zona Slate, Baylor, Bowling
with 66 ~ po~ts. Parma Padua
And Grove said that's just how
Green, Cincinnati, Creighton;
It felt after he defeated Jason
DePaul, Fordham, Hawaii, Holy
/ was second with 52 and Eaton
)VaS third with 47 ~ ·
• Allen of Worthington in the
Cross, James Madison, Kent
Stale, Louisiana Tech, Long
The Division Ill crown went to Dlvlslon I lOO·pound champion·
Columbus Ready with 73 points. ship match. Grove, who hasn 't
Be~tch State, Marquette, Mary·
SecondwasWetllilgtonwlth651,2 eaten any fatty foods in several
land and Massachusetts.
and third was Archbold with 57 months as he battled to keep his
Others include: Memphis
~.
·
weight below his 103-pound limit ,
State, M!s ~)ssipP,i State, Jl{ew
The three-day tournament, a 1so c e I e brat e d wIth
Mexico, New Or!Hns, Oklahoma
whic h attracted 624,wrestlers cheeseburgers.
State, Oregon, · Penn State,
from throughout the state, was
"I'm eating everything except
Rutgers, St. Louis. Southern,
held for the first time ever in nutritious stuff tonight," he said.
Southern Illinois, Stanford, Ten·
I Cincinnati and Saturday's big·
When DOminic DISabato of
nessee, Tulsa, Vanderbilt and
gest
ch~r
from
the
sold-out
Columbus
Ready
.Pinll!!d
.
Brian
Wisconsin-Green Bay.
1
crowd
at
Cincinnati
Gardens
Miller
of
Sidney
Lehman
in
the
So11thern Illinois Coach Rich
1
.went up for )lometown champion Division III 131J.pound champion· ' Herrill questioned ttie "honesty•
Josh Robbins, the first state ·ship match, it was also a big
and integrity" of the NCAA
winner ever from his school, famlly victory. It marked t!ie· · Sunday when his 26·7 Saluk!s
Cincinnati St. Xavier. .
,
10th state wrestling IItle for
,f ailed to receive a bid to the
\. "I'll neve~ forget thts:.feeting
members of his family~ an Ohio
64-team NCAA Tournament.
record. Five DISabato brothers
the restofmy life, "said Robbins.
I Robbins' perfect record this
preceded Dominic with eight
The Salukls were the winning-.
est team in the nation left out of
Saturday
Was
Domin
wins
and
'.y ear went to 34-0 with a crushin". ·
·
tc's second.
·
·
the tournament.
"
,15·1 romp over Adam Mllison of .
'Th
od
He r! SIU Athletic Director
I'
1
akewood St , Edward in the
' eon Y reason many go
r n,
.
lvlslon I 152·pound class.~ham·
is because my bigger brothers ·
beat me up all the time and ,made
, Ionshl p mate h .
. :
f; " Last night 1 was thl~klng , me tough," said Dominic. · ·
· about how it would be towln bY a
Another family act was Tim
I
and. Matt Dernlan of West Lib·
' ·
erty Salem. The·brQthers capped
perfect seasons with state titles.
The Daily Sentinel
Matt, 17, a junior, flnlshed37·0by
winning the Division III 125(USPS 11. . .1
pound title and Tim, 15, a
A Dlvltlon of M1Kimedla. lne.
freshman, improved to 40·0 by
Published every altOI'IIIIIIII. Mollday
taking the Division III lOO·pound
throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
crown.
"leroy, Oblo, by !he Ohio Vallfll Pub·
II.Shlng 0&gt;mpanY!Multtmedla, In c.,
It was another ' 'close encoun·
Pomeroy, Ohio d7ii9, Pit. 992·2156. S.·
ter"
In the Division I 135-pound
cond clan postage paid at Pomeroy,
championship match. The f~ll·
Ohio.
!ar combatants were Todd
Member : Un ited Press inlernatlonal, '
Hayden of Kimt Ro06evelt and
Inland Qally Press Auorlatlon and the
I Ohlo Newspap..- A" oclotiOn. National
Jason Mack · of neighboring
I. .&lt;ctvertlslng Representative, Branham
Ravel\-..
·
Newspaper Sateo, 733 Third AYelllle,

.s0 Ion tiS. o··IVISIOD
. . ' . 'II

• eh. amp
state wrestlmg

'

,,

'

Military . policy on gays .in· hypocritical
Three gay people made head· lleve his Ilk deserve the opportun·
lines recently. Two of them, !ty to serve their country: ·
Miriam Ben-Shalom and James Ben-Shalom, a · sergeant In the
M. Woodward, were In the news Army Reserve, has been forbid·
because the Supreme Court re- . den to r&lt;"enlis t because she Is a
j~cled their appeals to be allowed
lesbian; Woodward was booted
to continue to serve in .the from the Navy because he Is a
military.
homosexual.
For the third , Armistead Mau·
Set aside for the moment that
pin, it is the second time he's hit these people are being dlscriml·
the news. The first time was nated against solely because of
almost:W years ago, when he won their sexual pret~rence; I'm
a · mll!tary commendatlon from · bewildered as to just what the
then-President Richard Nixon. Pentagon Is afraid of. Do they
Now Mauptn has been in People fear homosexuals may try to
magazine because he's a best· seduce heterosexual soldiers?
selllng author - and because he
. And If so, do they seriously
is gay.
·
. believe homosexuals are going to
How Ironic that Maupin should be successful in that regard, or
resurfal!e just at the time the pose any threat, among . the
Pentagon's "No Gays Allowed" popula.llon of red-blooded, gung· ·
policy is receiving so .much ho heterosexuals the military has
publicity.
his~rlcally attracted?
Maupin might not' have had to
In July 1988, the Marine Corps
- go to Vietnam at all. He joined court·marllaled Sgt. Cheryl
the Navy and volunteered for the
Jameson for engaging In a
war. Afterward, he returned as a
lesbian relationship with a .
civilian to help rebuild the
former recruit. The affair did not
war-torn country.
happen while Jameson was train·
Yet the Pentagon doesn't be·
ing the recruit. The Marines

I'

•'

sentenced her to a year in prison,
then demoted and dishonorably
discharged her,
. I
ln ihe same case, the Marines
responsibility for the actions of
deprived another woman Marine
Its male soldiers who have
of supplementary pay she was . ,I mpregnated Women and abandue as a drill instructor, and put a
doned their children around the
world. ·
negative report in her file. This
Marine, former Staff Sgt. Chris·
· ADd as regards' the Pentagon's
line Rene Hlllnskl, had nothing to
"No' Gays" policy, I can only
do with the lesbian !ncldel!t; ' and
guess that those in charge have
during her 11 years as a Marine,
never known or worked with
she had received nothing but
responsible gays who are·credits
outstanding evaluations.
to their jobs and communities.
Hlllnskl'scrime? While testify· · My experience with gays as
lng as a character witness for the friends, acquaintances and co·
defendant, she was asked by a
workers has been so positive, alii
prosecutor if she agreed with can think Is that Uncle Sam
what Jameson had "done, what should be so l!icky. ·
she has. pi~ guilty to?" Hllln.skl
Perhaps"' government so blind
answered that since the homo·
doesn't deserve to benefit from
sexual affair didn't happen while the talents of the many high·
Jameson was training the requality people, who happen to be
cruit, she had no bad opinion of it.
gay, who would like to serve 11.
You don't have to have an Trouble is, It is their. right as
opinion of Jameson's actions to American citizens to serve in
see the hypocrisy of a system their country's mll!lary. lt's time
that puts a female soldier In 't hat either the Supreme Court.or
prison for making love to another the Congress makes sure that
woman, while shunning any right is respected.

Sarah Overstreet

WILSON, Wyo. (NEA) -In an
era when new threats to human
health and safety surface COl!·
stantly, the risks posed ~
exposure to an obscure natural
element known as selenium are
hardly atop anyone's . list of
hazards.
But Wyoming Gov. Michael J .
Sullivan was concerned enough
in 1987 to assemble a special
78-member task force - 'lnclud·
lng state and federal officials,
representatives of envtronmen·
tal testing laboratories, mining ·
company executives and Univer·
slty of Wyoming. researchers to study the issue.
When that panel reported back
to the governor last year ,It noted
that while there was no cause for
alarm, the presence of seleniUm
at elevated levels at sites acrpas
the state was a matter of

Mlnnelllln,1946 (age 44).
· On this date in history:
In 1912, the first Girl Sco11ts of America troop was organized -In
Savannah, Ga., by Juliette Gordon Low.
In 1930, Mahatma Gandhi !;Iegan a campaign of civil disobedience
against British rule In India.
·
·
In 1947, In a speech to Congress, President Harry ·s. Truman
outlined what became known as the Truman Doctrine, calling for U.S.
aid to countries threatened ~ communist ·revolution.
In 1963, the House of Repre.-ntallves voted to grant former British
Prime Minister Winston ChUrchill honorary U.S. citizenship.

· "Toxic concentrations · of the
potent natural element also taint
the homegrOwn food and drink·
ing water of hundreds, perhaps
·thousands, of farm 11nd ranch
famllies in eight Western
states .... The levels In ' c1,1mmer·
clal foods are ·high enough to
expose . even healthy adults to
more than what current federal
guidelines say Is safe."

Robert Walters

addition, "selenium Intoxication
has been reported In elk and
moose" In the state's northwest.
By far the most serious problem identified anywhere In .the
country Is the Kesterson Na·
tiona! Wildlife Refuge In central
call!ornla. Irrigation water
draining from farms In the San
Although selenium occurs nat.Joaquin Valley leached selenium
urally In rock , soli and water
from the soU, then deposited It In
throughout the world, It is
what was supposed to be a
concentrated lri certain regions
federally protected estilary.
- Including the western half of
Since the Initial discovery
this country .
there of hideously . deformed
Although It is an essential
waterfowl embryos In 1983, thOu·
nutrient In limited amounts,
sands of dead birds, fish and
ingestion of large quantities can
amphibians have been found by
produce damage to the central ' government officials who thus
nervous system, respiratory fall·
far hav11 spent $94 million to '
ure, birth defects, muscle degen·
clean up Kesterson.
eratlon and numerous other toxic
Areas with known or potential
-effects. In aome·cases, death has
selenium problems also exist
been attributed to selenium
else\llbere In California as well as
poisoning.
In Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
In Wyoming, elevated seleUtah, Arizona, New Mexico, ·.
nium levels have been recorded
Colorado, Wyoming and
near Casper, where the gQver·
Montana.
nor's task force reported that
In addltlqn, there is evidence
"higher than normal levels ...
that troublesQme selenl11m dephave recently been found In bird
osits are located as far eut u
eggs, waterfowl and shore
North and South Dakota, Nebirds."
braska, Kansas, Oklahoma and
Game fish taken from rivers in
Texas. But other than ldentlfylnlf '
the Laramie area contained
and ·avoiding areas with blgh
"slgnltlcant amounts of seleconcentrations, llttle C!ln' be
nium," the panel noted. In ·done.

lotJer

The field Includes 13 former
tltllall, with the champions from
the past six tournaments and
nine of the iast 10 enter ed. North
Carolina State, the 19&amp;;1 chaJ;Dplon, is banned from the tournament . becau se ot NCAA
probation.
There a re five ranked teams In
each region. but the Midwest, led
by 1')o. ·1 Oklahoma, has four Top
10 teams. Joining the Sooners In
that region are No. 6 Georgetown, No. 9 Purdue and No. 10
Arkansas.
First-round pairings:
East - At Hartford , Conn. ,
Thursday (1) Connecticu t
(28-5) vs. (16) Boston University
118-11 ); 18) Indiana' (18·10 ) ys .
(9) California· (21·9) ; (5) (:lem·
aon (24-8) vs. (12 ) Brigham
Young 121·8); (4) La Salle 129·1)
vs. (13) Southern Mississippi
(20·11). At Atlanta , Friday- (6)
St. John's (23·9) vs . (!1 ) Temple
(20·10); ,(3) Duke (24·8) vs. (14)
Richmond (22·9) ;· (7) UCLA
( 20·10 ) v s . Alabama ·
Birmingham (22·8) ; (2) Kansas .
(29·4) vs. (15) Robert Morris

seedings despite a 23·5 recol'(l.

rMaryland,
·St. Louis head
NIT pa-rty list
I
·
.

'

VIrginia coach Terni Holland
has announced this tournament
will mark the end of his 21-yea r
coach!ng career and the Caval!· ·
ers will be looking to deliver the
same fareweli present Mar·
quette gave AI MeG u!re in 1977 ..,..

~ , ·'
that Gathe rs'
death said
caused
.off!.
committee
member
Sunday
ijIs~~~~~~=====~-.....;_::..:_~;...~-~=~~~~----_:__::..:_~..,...~======f~~~~~;J
·
cl!lls to drop the Lions l n the

.

..

ltaskl!tball tournament.
The Division I Men's Basket·
ball Coll1lllittee gave No. 1
Oklahoma tbe top seed in the
Mldwelst Relloa while No. 3
Nevada-Las Vegu, the Big Wes t
challip, was left at home In the
. Cooaectlcut, a 1t·game
jut three seas0111 ago, and
Mlclllean State, whlcll lost 18
tlniea twe years ago, eap!tal!D!d
on victories Sunday to assure
t~mselves spots In college bas·
ketball' s pas (Season bonanza:
The Huskies wlll take the
favored spot In the East Region
and wlll p)ay close to home In
Hartford, CoM. Michigan State
heads to the Southeast u the No.
!seed.
No. 7 Conneclicu t upset No. 4
Syracuse 78-75 In the final of the
Big East Tournament whlle the
No. 8 Spartans stopped No. 9
Purdue 72-70 to win tile Big Ten
title.
Loyola Marymount , which con·
s!dered tur ning down an au tomalic berth after the death of
star· player Hank Gathers, was
given the 11th seed In the West. A

' .

Oaklat1d, Cal~.

:.-,·'

tlPIIfana WI Mar

West.

. March 23 &amp;25

.1',!

r---1

Denver, Colo.

. tor the first time IInce 1980 u

KANSAS Cl'l'Y, Mo. (1,/PI) - , ilaltetMII coatlln- to rile In the
.Couect!C11t &amp;lid Mlcblpa State, P8cUic·10 .. Tile collference aaaln
placed follr 1HIIW In the tOUl'lla·
~ wlllaen ot !bell' toller·
ences' automatic bertbs, Sullllay meDt, laeludllll lO.tlme cbam·
received J'io. 1 seedlnp tor 1M plell UClA, Mo. 16 Arizona aad
NCAA '• ; tbree-wNk, 64-tearll Oregon State.

March 23 &amp;25

' WEST

•

3-A

-

Callllmlla JTtWU to the field

., oiOD .IENDI:L

SountEAST
New Oflea,., La.

•

Natural element is cause for concern

(f) 1990 by NEA. Inc.

MEN'S

BASKETBALL

Celebrezze turns tough
By LEE LEONARD ·
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- State Attorney Ge neral Anthony Celebrezze Jr. , the
· Democratic candid ate fo r governor, seems to be turning Into "Tony
the Tiger."
Normally taciturn Tony must have been awakened by public
. opinion polls showing him as many as 12 percentage points behind
Re publican. gubernatoria l candid ate George Voinovlch. Something
had to change.
Ceie brezze apparently accepted the universal advice pouring In
from top Democrats: jettison Gerald Austin as his media consultant
a nd de facto campaign manager.
Although Austin had managed Celebrezze's upset win over
Republican Ted Brown in the.1978 secretary of state' s race, and is
regarded as a masterful strategist, he also was an embarrassment to
the at torney general.
Austin 's close political connections to Gov. Richard Celeste and his
professional position as a moneymaker on Capitol Square did not fit
the image Ce!ebrezze needs to capture the governorship.
Celebrezze must be viewed as ultra·clean, so he reached agreement
with Austin to part company last weekend .
Last Monday , Celebrezze was before the stale Controlling Board
as king for more money to secure criminal convictions in the five-year
old Home State Savings Bank debacle, which has run up a b!ll of $6
million for the state.
The attorney general grew tired of being lathered by state Rep.
Robert Netzley , R·Laura, for allegedly wasting the state's money on
a lost cau se.
1
Ne tzley.sugges ted that maybe Celebrezze should throw In the towel
now that the state has recovered· all it lost In the S&amp;L cras h, plus $6
million, thus breaking even.
" You would a llow (former Home State owner) Marvin Warner and
David Schiebel (a one-time president of Home State) to walk away !t om prison?" said Celebrezze in his booming bass voice, wagging a
finger at Netzl ey. "That's exactly what you're saying. "
,
Netzley muttered a lame retort, and Celebrezze got his money.
Finally, the. attorney general invited himself into the legislative
debate over minority set·aside contracts with a ·strongly-worded
letter to state senators upholding .those contracts.
A bill in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee would end the
set-aside for mlnor!iy businesses In the state's construction and
purchasing programs.
Citing legal precedent, the attorney general said "set-asides are
the only .way to break the cycle of discrimination that prevents .
minority contractors from enjoying an equal opportunity to attain
governmental contracts."
· ·
This not only was an attempt to placate bla~k leaders in (:leveland
who have questioned Celebrezze's commitment to the black
community. It was an attempt to eliminate -the perception that
Celebrezze has done nothing for eight years but be a spectator to the
misc hief at the State house.
If the atiorney general Is to wage a winning campaign this year,
there wi!l have to be a lot more weeks of "tough Tony" and fewer of
"cautious Celebrezze."

ConnectiCut

..

Castro appears to be odd· man out
-WASHINGTON - While U.S.
leaders were t()Uting Czecbos·
lovakl!ln President Vaclav Havel
last week, Fidel Castro had
plenty of reason to bite his nalls.
The democratization ·of Cze.
choslovak!a poses problems for
the Cuban dictator. Until last
year' s breakdown of communist
rule in Czechoslovakia, it was
one of Castro's last bastions of
.support. That could all change
under Havel. '
Since Cuba and the United
·States have no diplomatic rela·
! ions, Castro keeps his Washing·
ton, D.C., base of .operatlons In
the.Czechoslovak Embassy. But
Castro and Havel are about as
compatible as Donald and Ivana
Trump.

(A)nnecticut, MSU ·
NCAA top seeds

I

II

~

\

beet} w(thollt a representative,
Jim Hart, and about 250 suppoc· since none of the other seven
ters had gathered at the Egyp· . members wete· deemed worthy
llan Sports Center !n.Carbondale, of an at:large berth.
Ill., tocelebrate what was to have
Maryland was among some 20 .
been the Salukis' first .NC: ~ other teams considered for the
appearance since 1977.
tournament, but was left out. The
Despite . a loss Tuesday to TerrapinS· ar.e barred from the
Illirto!s Stat.;:, 81·78, in thechal'(l· . NCAAsuntilatleast1993because
pfonshlp gO!he of' the M!ssqur!
they are under probation after
Valley tournament and a weak
this year's tournament.
non·CO!\ference schedule, Herrin
said he expected a bid based on
·his team's regular·seasoh COil·
, NATIONAL IAIUTBM.L .u'!IDc.
terence champ!ons,hip , and !tj .
s_._.., ...
number of victor ies.
·
;_ ~.·
hniM.IIi, W. .I.pnliS

.,ll

"There 's no question we d!dlll.t .
get a fair shake," Herrin said . "f
question the honesty a~d Integ·
r!ty of the selection committee.
We were. treated unfairly ."
SIU received honorable men·
lion votes in the most recent UP!
Board of Coaches poll, which
meant they were easily among
the top 50 teams In the nation,
Herrtn said.
· "Everybody in lhecourtrY had
us in the top 50, why can't the
selection committee get us in the
top 50?" Herrin ask\!d.
Herrtn said the se[ecllon was
based more on politics than
merit. He said he had been told
by a "source'' he . dec!irted to
· name that SIU had been elim!·
nated from consideration· as
early as FridliY.
' There's no sense being a nice
guy about it , I've been a n ~e guy
all my life," Her rin said .
" I know how these dec!s!onli
are made, rve been in on those
kind of meetings, it's poll tics ,"
Herrtn said. " All! know is It's a
snub to our b!l:sketball team:"
Herrin said the Salukis would
accept the NIT bid .
.
"My problem now w!ll be to get
them ready to play .' Herrin said.
"l think I can, but It won't be
easy."

lloll.011 Ill. IWIIM • .

Saa All1onlo 118. Duwr Ill
lA Olppert~ II!, OrMdr&gt; Ill
SUIII.- Rnlll 1 .
lA Lakerli I!J, Atlan&amp;a II~
IeHan 111. Pllllladttpllla II$
,-tlnea.-111'7........... "
Goldett 81•e 111. 8 acn.. e~~lo Ill

.,_.roM II, Clllll'lone Ill

New l'orlt 111. Ml~miM
Ill, DP.11wr 1111
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Mollllf Gamet~
Loll Mlll:dM a&amp; Nt' llull'!f S. 1: SS p.m .
Ml-• ota .t Torelll&amp;o, 1: II p.m .
Wh1lllpe1M Calpr)' , t:SS p.m.
TU8111Q Oameti
Mom~arl ai NV l11 1uder., niKfi
Kt LoW! a1 WM~I)IIlo., alprl

Midwest - At Austin, Texas,
Thursday - (I ) Oklahoma (26·4)
vs. (16) Towson State (18-12) ; (8)
North Carolina (19-12) vs. (9)
Southwest Missouri State (22·6);
(5) Illinois (21·7) vs. (12) Dayton
(21·9) ; (4) Ar kansas (26·4) vs .
(13) P r irtceton (20'6). At Indiana ·
polis , Friday·- (6) Xavier 126·4)
vs. (11) Kansas State (17 -14); (3)
Georgetown (23·6) vs. (14 ) Texas
Southern (19·11) ; (7) Georgia
(20·8) vs . (10) Texas (21·8); (2)
Purdue (21·7) vs. (1 5) Northeast
Loul»&gt;a!lil (22·7) .
'So.U.eaBI - At Knoxville,
Terin., Thursday - (1) Michigan
State (26·5) vs. (16) Murray State
(21·8); (8 ) Houston (24·7) vs. 19)
Cal·Santa Barbara; 15) Louisiana State (22-8) vs. (12) Villan·
ova (18·14); 14) Georgia Tecll
(24 ~6 ) vs . (13) East Tennessee
State !27·6) . At Richmond , Va. ,
Friday - (6 ) Minnesota (21·8)
vs. (!1 ) Texas·El Paso (21-10);
(3) Mis souri 126·5) vs. ( 14)
Northern lows C22·8); (7) Vlrgl·
n!a (19·11) vs. 110) Notre Dame
(16·12); (2) Syracuse (24·6) vs .
(15) Coppin State (26.jj) .
Wlllll - At Salt Lake City,
Thursday - · ( I) Neyada·Las
Vegas (28-!ij vs. (16) Arkansas ·
Little Rock (20-9) ; (8) Ob!o State
(16-12) vs. (9) Pravidence (17·
11) ; (5) Oregon State (22·6) vs. ·
(12) Ball State (24-6); (4 ) Louis·
ville (26·7) vs . (13) Idaho (25-5) .
At Long Beach, Calif., Friday (6J ~ew Mexico State 126·4) vs.
(11) Loyola·Marymount 123-5) ;
(3) Michigan (22·7) vs. (14 )
'Illinois State !18·12); (7 ) Ala·
bama (24-8) vs . UO) Colorado
State (21-8) ; (2) Arizona (24·6)
vs. (15) South Florida (20·10) .

Edmo•o' a1 MWitc. aiJM

Alumni tilt to
be .played
. March 19 .
All Eastern Alumni baseball
players are to take note that the
annual Alumni game ·&gt;will be
Monday , March 19 at 4r30 Ol! the
Eastern baseball field. All
former players are welcome and
asked to attend. If it rains on the
19th the game will be "played on
March 20th.

....,11'1

lo The Dally Seaitnel, ll1 Cou11 St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4578!1.
·

LEAD..G TO THE IllEST
AND CONVICnON OF
PERSON 01 PDSOIIS WHO
HAVI
VAIDAUZIItG

Wl't!lltling standlnp

IVII8CRJPTJON BATES
a, Carrier or Mol or Boote

P1-' tt•

CINCINNA'I'I (lJPI) -

........ .. ... . . . ...... IM:ItMI

One Week ......... ................... ,. :.... $UO
One Month ... .. .1 .~ ..... .. ... ' " .. .. .... .... $6.10

.~

Wlfttl., t.....unllllt:
lltd~ i""

One Year ....................... ....... ... t?2.80
SINGLE COPY

I

.
PmiZ
!latty ................ .......... ......... 25 Centi

1111

Sublcrlbera notdeslrlDI to pay tbecarrter may remit In advOJI&lt;t dlred to
The DallY ilntiDet on a 3, &amp;or l2 , _
bUll. Crtd" will betll-carrllruoll
...ek.
.

No sublerlptlou by maD permtttld bi
aras where borne carrier ltf'Yice ll
Malt S.llaoriDItuloleMelpC..J.
13 Weeki .................................. $19.2t
26 WeekJ ..·......... .... ................... $3'1.16

•

1101101, 01110

Weetu .................................. $7UI
OOIIkle Melp Coulr .

:.6

13 Weeki ........... ........ ;........... .

26 Weetu ..................... ............

52Weekl ..... ................ ........... ~.

a.ITmin
.

·UIIID CO.
sr. n. 1

available.

~2

P..._b: Ill , 111ft..- II, OT
N..w Yol'tllll, New .l~ury II
Cll'"-11'7, ln•IUIIiiiiS

(22·7).

.

New York, NPW York 10017.

POSn.IABTER: S.Od adclms

.

,. · ,, ~t~~~:r~~~::!~!!~2h~J1

.

aun ~C:~ · tltle.

'

~

•
} ,.

+-

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'-81

Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio

4 ""' Daily Sentinel

Mondly. March 12. 1910

•

' .

Tartans hand Southem .M-59

·1

defe~t

-~

.

in district title game

I

Sunday's Miller 1100 NASCAR trlpleheader 1tock
car eveat at Martlnsvllle 'Speedw~.JDs average
speed In mph was 6UII, and he ciabned Slll,3151a
prize moaey. (UPI)

Houston, Ruggiero, Blankenship
post wins in Grand National
MARTINSVILLE, Va, (UPI) from there and held on to win.
- Tommy Houston's Buick
Afterwards. Hou!;ton said the
edged Elton Sawyer's Buick by caution flag "might have 'been
2-10ths of a second Sunday to win the only way I could have gotten
past Elton." He pocketed $13,395
~ controversial 200-lap Grand
for the win.
National race thai highlighted a
NASCAR trlpleheader at the
In the 200-lap modified · race,
Martinsville Speedway,
Ruggler,o of Forestville, Conn.
Also on the card,' Reggie, won $12,625 for · holding , off
Ruggiero won the 200-lap modi- F.u ller' s Chevrolet by 3-10ths of a
fled race by nipping Jeff Fuller second. Ruggiero's Pontiac surand David Blankenship domi- vived a race that Included 12
nated a 100-lap late model stock caution flags for 62 laps, a track
car race that earned him a purse record for the modified class.
of $5,825.
In a race that featured seven
Tommy Ellis of Richmond had ·lead·changes among six drivers,
the pole for the Grand National .Jamie Tomaino's Pontiac -was
third. followed by Chevrolets
race and he led for 174 laps . · wlth a commanding 4.2 second driven by George Kent and Jerry
lead - on the half-mile oval
Kramer. Ruggleroledfor711aps.
·
before his brakes went out.
Blankenship's Pontiac won the
Sawyer took over the lead from
100-lap late model stock car race
Ellis, but moments later he lost and he took the checkered flag
· two places coming out.,.o! a
while the race was being run
caution flag on lap 183 because of under a caution flag. In all, eight
an errant caution light on the
c,u lion flags consumed 27 laps
fourth turn. Houston took over · ahd low~red, the average speed to

Scoreboard ...
Boys pairings

Delpho8 St. JoJm (lt-4) VI. \'•1•
f!HJ , Thund~ , II! II p.m.

Find : Sa&amp;.-dq, I p.m.

By U•Mfd Pre-1 biWilatloMI

A.t ..ttheas
lluver EaMern ()H) V5. Col.aba•
Wehrle (2'1·3) , 'l'hUI'!Id., . 1: IS p.m .
PertAmodl EaM (~I n. lerla
!Uland t%%-2' ). Thund.,-,11 p.m.

Palrlnp for itiiM week's hoJI htP sctloGI
rePo•l buketball t.uramntl!i:
DIVISION I
At Akrua
Cl.-vel .. d St. Joseph 411-1) """ Shaker
Helpt!'l (ZI·Z) , TueMhf,; p.m.
Akron Gufteld (tll-'1) n . Sla• (111-5),
Wedllftdq. 7 p.m.
Fhal: f'rhi:Q. '7: 3t p.m.
"' Canton Ch•!t· Center
Stronp~IW (2J.Il "~· C1t•,.clandSI,·

!

Flral: Saaurd.,-, 1 p.m.

"' o.,... '

Fort l.Mam~ ( 1~11 ) n. Lima CaiMik
( ,._,) , Thun!CIA,w . i: IS p.m.
~prtnl';lleld C11thollc (!N ) ~.. PHIIIMII'
Fra nldlo-Monroe (11·7) , Thllnday, II

p.m .
.
.•
F1ml : Sahtrda,y , I p.m.

IK•U•• ( Ill-~ ). Tutsda,t'. 1 p.m .

CUIOII M cKin~y ( 2Z.I) \'8. Eul
UverpeOI (1-13 ), We*'"da,y, 7 p.m.
Fl . . :. F'l'ldaf. i p.m.
AI Bowlaa- Greea '

Girls ,Ohio Hl'&amp;h Stheol 11M ldbAII

MUlllfiflfSealor CIZ-!) \lA. "' e;&amp;rnU~

Ry Unlled Pre!l!i lat.r ..tiO•I

Saturd!Q', Marth lt
ToumameJII

Thutwd-., 1:31 p.m.

Dlvlsleli I
A.t Parma

FIMI: Saurd.y, I p.m.

At Dayton
Hamilton ( 21·3) n . Clndatall Ollk

Roek Rl\'er M11plflc• II, S.Jon 10
At Mutdllon
N Can loa GlenOak f7, Bartu~ r&amp;on 311
AI Mo11rt Vernon
Pl ekef'lnlf:CNI 51, Lopn !'1
1\1 Vlllldalla-ltullrr
nn Men')' 7$, Dll)' Dunbar .f3
Dl\'lllonll
AI Slow
Garlleld Hi ll Tl'lft 5!, Chmpkln 5I
At Willard
Elida M, Loui11YIIIt H
At Lane•ier
Dre!lden Tri·Val $1, New Le:.lnJtoa ..l
Ai Xenia
UrhiU'IIl -17, TU ¥11 Val U
Dlvh1lon IV

Hlllllll&amp;-11, Tutlida_v , ' : 15 p.m.
Da1 kin Mudowchle HI-M) va. DKI nni.U Waadlward ( tt-4) , Tur.N Q , )I p.m .
Final : F'rldl0',1: 3tp.m.
DIVISION II
At \'ounplown
Canfield l~ll-'l ) u . caritonsoaa. (Ill-$),

Twllday,I: U p.m.
l"ai~\tiW Harwy (U-f) n . Ubric-.
' vlllfo CIQmo• (I &amp;-I ). Tuf'Ad"Y , K p.m.
; Ft•l ; Friday, 'l: 30p.m .
AI Toledo
Wf'I'I IGe•ulM-1 ) \'"' Bellnue (!1-3) ,
'lllr!tdl0',1: • p.m .
OIJM~d
p ,JP,

n.
Th8dn'' .,

-

f.--'-'-

fallK

At Parma
Buvkeye Central st. MeDoMid 51

Friday, 7: 30p.m.
~ AeAthen•·

PoftSmotllh. ( 21-tl ~II. M'alkiM MPmor-

"'Elida
Fort ReODwr;y 58, Kalida~~
AI ll)'n~lle
Berln Hiland II. ~•Won Ad eta II
~ VtYidllla Butler
Mldllftown Feonwkll. 37, M.-.ra u

' Wl'l2-'Z ) Tur!Miq,l: l5p.m.
,

Sll'llti l ll\'ll!l ca-t) \' K. Soudl PGinl

• UW l Tu!lld._v,tl p.m .
Final : Frk1.,, 1: 341' p,m.
At 0QIOII

kdltrlal' Alter Ctlo!) "'"· l&gt;ay1on

f .. e.-1 WIIIW 11.71, WrMeldar. I: IS

Boy11 01111 .. BIJIIIIcliiGol ... ll!tb.
sa....r", MartiiJI

p.m.

flncl..tl

GretnNII~

t::l-1 J vM. BHJey ·

Tournament

(1,...), M'! ~Q . l' p.m .
F'1nal : SllnQ, 7: 11p.m.

DMIIoDI

Akr Garftel4 71, Altr B N

DIVISION Ill
At Can..,n FlrldiMuw

Ca• MeiUalry '71, Wo.-er II
Eut LherJOOI $1IAIM A

\' ouq~tiM'ft Uberiy IU.fl ""· Sandy

On Weadward U . V_.alla BMtler tt
Oe ra. .tu• 14. Cle Mar•an 18

Valley ( IS.II) , " 'f'dnHdiiJ, 1 : II p.m.

n.y 11«--ale tt Plq• II
HamUt011 tJ. DIQ' Du ... ar -tt

Ob«ln t iH ) n . lurto• Berlllllre

w.-...,.

(U.J) ,
K p.m.
Fhal : 81111'11., , 1:a,.m.

MM.fhlt8.8 .... 111:1f'J (lei)

Newar k11, Gal...., w....... II

Ate........

Colwn .. • Harney ( 11-1) VII. S,.rla

R11111aftd ltf.ll), We.. .... IQI . 1: IS p.m.
~r• 81. VI . . ..&amp;. Mai'J ( IUJ n .

O.WII &lt;INI. W...... q.ll p.m.
n_. : s . . ..,. 1:Mp.m.
At AlliiN•

'

W'IIIIIO..
ekcon.,.
.. ,.. (IH) ""Wet liiiii.Wn-

,._ (11·1). Wr.._..,, 1: U p.m.
Rlcllmt• o•lollllllaoler•(ft.l) ws.
..,._.111111! 1-.a,, We.._..,, 8 p.m.
P1-': ......,,7: Jip.m.
.
.41 Tr.,.
llei.,.U (lt-41
-~- . 1 : 11

"'"St. Hu,. ttl ·l l.
,,..,,

•amtt• ....

(1..1) "'" ........

(tl·ll. Wr...,ar.l p.m.
ft_. : Sllii'IIQ, 1:•p.m.

'·

Tel!lcoH II, Tel It do lit 41
W~lentlt. 8 Tt, liPiU Arlllllf.oa 11
..........

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

lMvllltaiD
All.r 8t V'lllltfet •· Ornllle II

•dDt•

Jlfl . .l

(

1._11) \II . .lercm"'

,...,.

fl•=
. laiW'III
. ....•• I ~t.m .
...,. cu-••&gt; ~ .. au.., (n.. J,

na.... l:.p.m.

Spartans end
long droughts

•

•

JOHN A. WAlE, MD.,c Inc.:

...... 'IV

PLIASAIR VAU'Y HOSIIIAL

•-&amp;.•'Jt,

rn.kr.rGr...lll
CoiWeltrte 11. c-1 .,• ....,. 11
Portl EM. RMI• a.11111. . 11
OllleCoU. ..
laeillthiiiOelft
llarelll II

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

Ollie &amp;&amp;ate II. Ill•-• U
·••---o.~~~~rt.ce
illllol...
a.1rra MlciiiiM M
llltml.

'.

SPRING INTO
ACTION!

NOW IS THE TIME TO SEE HOW
OUR CAR WEATHERED·
THROUGH WINTER.

:l

.t'
.,

•

,'WINNER - Dally Haro ,,Rutland, left, recently won·a bicycle
froni Fruth Pllaimacy In Middleport · aad uttra Slbn Fast.
PresentiDg the prize Is Sandra Buah, merchaadlse manarer of the
store.

Eastern students wild
about readirzg'
"Wild About Reading" was the .
theme of Right to Read Week In
the Eastern Local School
District.
Right to Read Week was ·
observed last week and each
elementary school In the district
carried out · various activities
throughout the week.
At Chester Elementary students . read With a friend for
~0-15 minutes In a tent set up
. speclf!cillly for that . purpose.
Each day the enUre school had
silent sustained ,reading time,
and each student also. did research on wildlife In the area. Ori
Wednesday the teachers traded
classrooms In order to share
wildlife, camplpg, or hunting
stories. There were also guest
speakers at the school to tell
about their wildlife experiences,
and the multiple sclerosis sovlety
presented a "readat)lon" program for the students.

·which for each book read a penny
was attached to a certificate. The
room having the most pennies
was dec111red the winner and the
money will be used to buy books
for the library. On Monday
Ronald .McDonald visited the
school and badge day was
observed. Hat day was observed
Tuesday in which students wore
hats that would be worn In the
wilderness. T-shlrt day was
observed Wednesday and dress
up day was observed Thursday.
There were a,lso door decoratjng
and bulletin board decorating
contests.
,.
At Riverview Elementary
there was gri::mp reading, badge
making, students made dioramas. Storytlme , was observed, .
the teachers swaped classrooms,
SUNDAY
senior cltlzeps center In PomeMONDAY.
there were special guest speak!
.
roy. Guest speaker will be Roger
POMEROY ·- Pomeroy firePOMEROY -The Meigs
ers, and the sixth gradecha'p ter 1 · men will have a chicken and rib
Manley,
·
County 4fi" Club will hold Its first
class wrote and presented a play. barbeque Sunday at the firemeeting of the year on·Monclay at
The multiple sclerosis society . hous~ with serving to begin at 11
POMERO~ _:The Pomerqy
7
p.m . . at the 'r,teiJI County ·
hlld a book;_a-thon, and awards a.m.
Flame
Fellowship will meet
Extension .Office In Pomeroy.
· At Tuppers Plaln,s E!ementary were presented · for Winning
Tuesday,
7 p.m. at the senior
Any boy or girl. between t11e aces
special reading ·activities were dioramas .
cit12.
e
ns
·center
In Pomeroy. Gu·
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.of nl!le and 19 Wlshlnl to take
carried out and a campsite area
In each school district The OH-KAN Chapter of the
market lambs or sheep breeding . est speaker will be Bob Shackelwas set up on the stage where "SQUIRT" was observed, which Pioneer Rlvermen Will meet 2
projects 'this year Is Invited to fol'll of Dela\"are.
. stu(lents could read. A penny stands for Silent Quiet Unlnte- p.m. Sunday In the.meeting room
Join the. club. Advisors are Herb
contest was also conducted in 'rupted Reading Time.
CHESTER -The Chester
, of the PolntPleasantLibrary.AII
and SallY' Ervin and more Inforformer and present men and
Township
Trustees will meet
mation · may be obtained by
women who have worked on the
Tuesday,
·
7: 30 p.m. at the
calling 949-2136.
townqall.
·
·
river, ancj their spouses, are
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Invited.
Elementary PTOwlll meet Mon' '
1{ARRISONVILLE -There
day at 7 p.m. at the elementar
will be a free blood pressure
RACINE -The Racine Youth
schooL ·
clinic on Tuesday, 10 a .m . to noon·
League wllll;lave an organization
meeting on Sunday at 5:30p.m.
at the town house In Harrison·
BEDFORD .._The Bedford
at the klndergarden buUdlng In . Township Trustees will meet
ville spqnsored by the Harrisonville Senior Citizens. FolloWing
Racine. All other Interested
Monday, 7 p.m. at the townhall.
the clinic there will be a meeting
coaches are urged to attend.
and
celebration of three month
POMEROY -A skin testing
birthdays
for members.
MIDDLEPORT -The High- clinic wlll be conducted Monday
way Gospel.Singers will be at the
at the Pomeroy Fire Station from
WEDNESDAY
Middleport Christian Union on 4:30-6: 3!J p.ll). All area resiPOMERQY,
- fo. representaSunday. at 7:30p.m. The speaker dents, Including boosters clubs,
will be Sam Anderson.
PTO's, churc)l groups, and other
res'lderits .who are In food service
POMEROY -The Disabled. are urged to take advantage of
American Veterans Ladles Auxthis free ser.vlce, There Will al110
Iliary will hold Its recular meetbe a blood pressure clinic conIng on Monday at 7 p.m. The ducted at this time. Call992-3722
district commander of.the ladles · for mo~ lnfonnatlon.
auxiliary will atteQd. Refresl\TUEsDAY
men.ts will be served.
POMEROY .-The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter, !leta Sllma Phi
RACINE -The Racine Ball , Sorority, will meet Tuesday, 7
Association Will have an organl·
p.m. · at the Grace EJ)tscopal
STUDENT OF THE WEEK -Juan Tqlorwu aamed atudent ·
zatlonal meetlaa Sunday, 5:-30 Church.
,
.
of the week at tbe Melp Junior lOp l!choollut week baaed on bill
p.m. at the Southern kinderPOMEitOY
The
Meigs
academic JH!rfonnuce Ia geoJP'aphy aad his ci~~Uroom
garden buldlq. All persons
County Chamber of Commerce
j:OOperatloa and coadnct. Pictured here Ia J.R. Kennedy, teacher,
Interested In teaching are urged
will hold Its replar luncheon
right, present1D1 Taylor with a certificate.
.
to attend.
meetlnll on Tuesday, nqon, at ~e

l

.

'

, EAI, NOSE &amp; IHIOAI
GINIIAL ALLEIIGISI
"WE IAft REAIIN8 AIDS.,
(304) 675·1244

·

Spring Car Care Edition
Wednesday, Ma..-~h 21, 1990
AD DEADLINE TUESDAY, MAICH 13, 1990.

ltstrvt Your Ad .Spact Today

992·2156
ASK FOR ·BRIAN BILLINGS
OR DAVE HARRIS

--

'
BJ WILLIAM C. TROTI'
,·
United Press Interaatloaal
ANDY'S AR'OSTIC BRO'niER: Andy Warbol wasn't the
only artist In the family. Paul Wlll'holl, 67, a retired sCPap metal
salesman, opened an exhibit Friday In Pittsburgh that Includes
paintings of Heinz ketchup bottles, reminiscent of Andy's soup
cans, and more than two dozen plecestrpm Warhola's "Chicken
Scratch" ·coJII!ction. The chicken technique Involves dipping a
poultry shop's leftoVer feet of ducks, pheasants or chickens In
brlahtly colored paint and then dabbing them on canvas,
WarhOl also uled one of the 100 live l!h!Qkens on his farm by
dipping the bird In paint and wai)Wlg It on canvas. Proceeds
from the sale~ Will benefit a local soup ,.kitchen, mllaioll and
Little Sisters of the Poor. "I'm so happy tliat I can do somethlilg
for them," said Warhola (Andy dl'j)pped the final "a" In the
' family name) . "After you get up In ap; what do you.neecl With
money. Molll!y II only for poorpeoJ)IelUidYQUIIIpeople." Paul's
supporters point out that he helped teach art to Andy, who died
In 1987.
.
HOU.'YWOOD AWARDS: Oliver-. picked up a DireCtors
Guild of America award Saturdaylllght, increasing the chances
thathlsfllm "Born Oil the Fourth af Julir" Mil win anOsCIII'}but
he Wll phllDIIOJibleal a'beut it. ','HOW .Weet It II. And hc)w
fleeting," said Stone, wl!O also won a DGA award for another
Vietnam era movie. -"Platoon." N DGA Winner hal also wonJ
'

ANN UNDJ'RS

.. 1919. lA• "•-"'""
Tim,.. Syetdh,..,. Mid
C."!'litOI'II S ~ndl.-.. ,.

CID 00
YO!Jr
. you
can do a lot about yourself. Stop
being a victim. Tell your mother that
the subject of your divorce, your ex,
his new wife, etc., are of no interest to
you and i( she brings up these subjects again, you will leave the room .
·
Then doiL

Is alcohol rui~ing your life or the
life of a loved one~ "Alcoholism :
How to Recognize It, How to Deal
With It, How to Conquer It" can turn
things around. Send a self-addressed,
long, bu.iiness-size envelope and a
check or money order for $3.65 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562 , Chicago, lit. 60611-0562. (In
Canada. send $4.45 .)

viewing habits ot their children
was to determine the effect of
·adVertising and programming on'
the children's diets and exercise.
But when the researchers
looked at the answers on questionnaires filled out by the parents,
they found the unexpected PBS
viewing pattern, along with
responses that supported preVious fin~lngs a~ut television
viewing among younger
children .
Pre-school c'hildren In the
study watched an average 25
hours of television per week,
considerably more than the 17
hours seen by thoseofschoolage.
The older children generally
received little parentall:llldance
in choosing programs.
·
Taras said hls findings showed
· a clear connection between parental attitudes and the programming children watched.

Community ·calendar

People in the news _ _ _ _....__,,

0

Ann
Landers

Report: 'Kids like public television.

.-

.I

,

the Oscar In 39 of the last 42 years, liloludlng last year when
Barq Levi- took honors for "Rain Main," which al10 won
for belt picture.
.
MOB£ HOUYWOOD . AWARDS: Me1 R)'aa and 111111
CeyiiUI won the belt actlllg &amp;warda for their rolel In "When
Harry Met Sally ... " at Saturday ntaht'a fourth .annual
American Comedy Awarda ceremC~~~¥ , Jule Kavner of ''The
Trace) Yllmaa Show'! .wu a double wlllller In plekfli up .
awardl for tuiiDielt aupportlng actma Ia a TV lerlel aad bel'
part opposite WMIJ .W..Ia "New York Storlll. ".Ulllun waa
named. !ullllleat femaje ~nntl' Ill .a . ,. . 1'111111 Jtlal
Goodman of ."RDaeanne" was flllllllell' malt. Goodman; ·
a BUT. ''lt'a
bowever, gave credit to hll co-a~. ••n
RDale," he lAid. "America's finally ready tor llt!t· Slte'a realty
had herflqerOII thepulletoriiOII)eUme.:•IMilti .. uaadJeft
Foxworth7 were 1111med lusllllllll cOmedy chill l*'fvmen aad
lifetime aclllevtrMAt awarda went to Bl&amp;lr .......An CslniJ
and Garrr MaraUD.
•
COURT TtJRN8 DOWN 1M Ilk fM fA Ollller baa !oat
another court battle. A .tedtral J1ldae lsi M&amp;eml laat WIH
dllmtuecl the $10 rnlllton ault abeftlld aplalt Dlha beea•• tile
airline kicked ber off •lllllrt Ill Atlaata tor llttlsllller tWIIDth
Tzu cloP 1'1111 looae 011 tile plane. Tile Jlllllw ._td lie 11114 ao
jurtsdlcUon In the case but Zaa Zla IID't throulll.

"

tlve from Congressman Clarence ·
Mlller's office will conduct an
open door session from 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. In the Court House.
Anyone with questions concernIng the federal government Is
encouraged to at tend.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Literary Club
meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs.
Daniel Thomas will review the
book "Fa tal S bore." Rollcall Will
be answered Wlthhan unusual
fact about Australia.

will

.. .
•

'

POMEROY -, The license
bureau In Pomeroy wlll be closed
Wednesday and Thursday due to
constnctlon Inside the building.
The bureau wlll reopen Friday at
9 a.m.
POMEROY -The Willing
Workers Class of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church Will
meet at the hOme of Agnes Dixon
on Wednesday.

''

Attention
Meigs
~ ((UJ County
~· ~}:))0 Businesses! ·~

. .·

•oscoum

•.w..-Trau•·

~

talks.produce -no progress

nne

!hiS

INSURANCE

8111e•17
Wllleei .... IJU.Peelll•lll ... )

--·.
. . ·dill-.

I

Dear Ann Landen: You have MENTALHEALTH
alone." No! once has 5he C\)mplibeen tremel,ldously effective in inDEAR Dlt. JUDD: You can caunl menled me on how well! have manforming our nali011 that mental iU- on me. 'rlianks for theopportuliity to aJCd my life as i single woman and
ness is no different from any olhcr tell 111Y readers who want infonna· w~ afine job I am doing of bringing
disease ll!ld that ,people wh~ are tion 'ibput mental health and rne11tal up my .daughter.
.mentally Ill should not be s~ma- illness (and where to get help) that
Mother talks constantly aboul my
1ized. Here are the fac~:
they should write io: Mentlll Health, ex-husband .and his new wife. She
Mental iUncss is not the result of Consume~ Information Ce.n tcr, &amp;sks my daughter loaded questions
pcrsoQalfai)we•.lac!to~willpoweror Pueblo, Colo. 81009. They will re- and "reports back" to me on her an - ·
mora! weakness. It linked to func- . · ceive some
material - at lfo . swers. She clips .metes that focus on
tiona! abnormalities in the brain.
charge. ·
the destructive effects of divorce on
AlthO!Jghmany Americans believe ·
Dear Ann Landers: I am in mY. children !lnd insists on asking the
that mental illneS;S happens '!IllY to 40s. I have a healthy, bright, delight- same old question, "What went wrong
others, ~ truth IS that on~ m .five ful little girl, a challengina career, with your marriage1" When I tell her
people ~U have a mental illness 81 good friends and a lovely Jlo!ne. But' I don't want to talk about the (livorcc
· soii)C po~~t. In fact, nearly 13.percent 1am a terrible disappointment til my . or mY ex anymore, she tells me I need
of our Citizens suffer from a mental mother a failure in life because I'm therapy, because. "Mter four years, it
disorder.
divorced. ·
should not be painful to discuss."
Most. Americans belicye, that
Since the day my ex-husband and
What can I do to keep her (rom
mcntaltllnes~~ are rare.
1s not , 1 separa~~ my mother has done blitrering my self-esteein7 -- AR true. Ten milhon A~:Dencans. have . nothing but sigh abOut my life and LINGTON, VA.
some form of depress1on, 12 mllhon tell me how sad it is thai I am "all
DEAR VA.: There is nothing you
haveaphobia,I.S millionaresc~izo­
phrenic; 2.4 million suffer from
obsessive:compu)sive disorders 8l1ll
· 1.5 million have ~ic disonlen.
Because of misinformation _and
myth, people who have a mental illHowever, when parents
BOSTON (UP!) -A California
ness often encounter fear and preju~
watched
with the children, they
doctor
conducting
a
study
of
dice when seeking work, housing,
were
tnore
likely to watch the
television
and
children's
diets
health care, insuran&lt;:e·IDd friends.
commercial
networks . The findInadvertently
·
discovered
that
Thanks to remarkable progress
Ings
appear
In·
the current Issue
youngsters
are
more
likely
to
in research during the last 20 years,
of
the
American
Journai of
watch
educational
programs
we now have effective treatment
Diseases
of
Children.
when
their
parents
are
not
for many specific mental ~ers.
· "At this point, we really cannot
The tragedy is that a ~ority of around.
Dr. Howard Taras said ftls
say ~tiy . One reas.on may be that
Americans do not realize that help is findings have left l)lm surprised,
the parent would rather watch
available:
'
Intrigued and &gt;lacking In 110methlng other than PBS !PubHope for the presemlies in urgi_ng explanations.
fie Broadcastln~ Service),"
people to seek the help they need.
"It really dld surprise us. We
Taras said.
.
Hope for the future lies ill cpnlinued can only speculate about the
However, he said it Is also
resean:h on the brain and·behavioral reasons until we do another,
possible that at the time of day
problems. The goal of the National larger study ;" lie said.
when most of the youngsters
Tatas and colleagues at the were watching on their own, the
Institu!e of Mental Health for the
comlngdecadeistoeducatelhepublic University of California-San only . chlldrep's programming
and intensify research so th,at we may Diego found that when the available was on PBS.
alleviale the enormous suffering ;md children they studied, between
''So It may not be that the child
disability caused by mental disor• the ages of 3 and 8, were left to actually prefers PBS to 'Ninja
ders. Please continue to help us, Ann. their own .devices, they pte!erred Turtles,'" he said.
•. LEWIS L. JUDD, M.D., DIREC, to tune In programs on public
Taras said the original thrusl
television.
of the study of 66 parents and the
TOR, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF

•s

·DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

s..,.v...., 'JI,&amp;r...••••

.Ball lla&amp;e •

as

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
No. 7 Connecticut and No. 8
Michigan State both broke long
droughts Sunday In Winning their
conferences and en\erglng as top
seeds In the NCAA Tournament.
The Huskies, who hadn't made
an appearance In the NCAAs
since 1979, punctuated their
return With a 78-75 victory over
No. 4 Syracuse to wln the Big
East title and earn the No. 1
seeding In the East Region. ·
Meanwhile, the Spartans won
their first undisputed Big Ten
title since 1978 With a thrilling
72-70 triumph over No. 9 Purdue.
That gave Michigan State the top
seed In the Southeast Region.
· "It feels great. This was a real
emotional high for me," Connecticut guard Tate George said
after UCohn won Its first Big
(All games-final)
East tournament title In the •
TEAM
W L PF PA
conference's 11-year history.
Eastern
..........
1~ , 6 1577 1504
"It's just so special after four
Southern
.........
15
9 1725 1484
years to finally get to this point.
North
Gallla
...
13
8
1512 1367
It's all paid off."
Hannan
Trace
12
11 1406 1373
Connecticut, 28-5, won behind a Southwestern .. 8 13 1496 1492
fierce defense thai again raiUed
S-Valley ......... 8 13 1232 1297
Without Injured center Rod Oak HilL ........ 5 17 1279 1557 ·
Sellers. George led the Huskies
with 22 points, !:hrls Smith added · Kyger Creek... 1 20 1161 1622
20 and reserve John Gwynn 16.
Perhaps more Important was
SaturdQ''s 1ame
the play of Torlano Walker, wllo
At
Ohio
- Portsscored 10 first-half points and mouth ,EastUniversity
f\4,
Racine
Southern
provided so,und defense against 59
.
Syracuse slar Derrick Coleman.
"I had two plans today to Win
~ ·· this game," Connecticut Coach
' '•
Jim Calhoun said, "Plan A was to
go to St. Patri~~·s (Cathedral)
this morning, and Plan B was to
make Derrick Coleman have to
beat us With hll jump shot.'' .
The Orangemen, ~4-6, were led
by Stepben.. Thompson's , 21
111 Second St., I'OIIIIt'oy
points. Coleman finished With
YOUIIIIDIPIIIDINI
just 13 points and 10 rebounds.
''When they went to a man-toAGIIITS SRVIIIG
man, we went to DC three or four
times, blit we just couldn't get It
to him eJIOIIIh," Syracuse Coach
s•CII161
Jim Boeheim said.
·

Ol&amp;ai'IO U, C.l Crawfonl N
. . . ..,,., Cll_,eaiM! 1'2

AICaa&amp;o11
Mu~III!IIIIIM . P..- (114) \'I. Soutlllftl•

. . , ...... III-II), T..I'IIIIIV'. 8 p.M,,

!

C.n 8 U , 'f.um.41flll

DIVUJON IV

: .... INI,T ....tii.I: ISp.m.

Husk~sand

I

+

SVAC standings

Tourney scoreS

· S.lrih '(U.t), ThuNdQ, f:Jt p.m.
,..le*l Stan (!3-IJ w.. N-ark (!I-t),

63.1 mph.
AJrtis Markham's Buick was
second, followed by Barry Beggarly's Chevrolet, Johnny Rumley's Pontiac and Charlie Ford's
Chevrolet. Blankenship was In
the lead for 87 of the 100 laps.
"Curtis tri,ed everything he
could tq get by me, but aS: long as
.I stayed straight, I knew he
wouldn't be able to get by me
because I was a little stronger In
the turns," Blankenship said.

Monday. March 12, 1990
. Pig....:&amp;

Mental iUness affects 13 percent
· of . ~e~ica's ·population directly

j

HOUSTON CONGRATULATED - Tommy
Houston, driving a Buick, sponsored by Roses
Department Stores, froin .IDckory, N.C., won the
200-lap BuS(lh Grand · National ·porjlon of the

.,

'

BJ SVOTl' WOLFE
all the action In Drew Baer's
Cbad Taylor put SHS up 54-48 ·
l&amp;!led
spotlight.
on twa free throws, but Bear
OVP
Despite enjoylq a 10-potnt,
At tbe4: 25 mar)($0uthern built retalleated wltha baseline
!!0-40, lead early In the fourth Its bla;est, lead of 24-13 II$ PE jumper, then Taylor scored on a
j
frame, the Southern Tornadoes· · called time-out and switched nice drive, 56-50.
!••",•
went ·Into a three-minute scoring
back to a man-to-man, a fter
With 3:20 left In the game SHS
drought that allowed the Ports- spending conslderal)le time In a again became a blt too hasty,
mouth East Tartans to escape
2-3 zone and match-up zone. The taking some unWise shots. After
transition psld off and took each miss Bwar hit a baseline
.with a 64-59 wtn and the district
crown. Southern settled for the
Southernouto!ltsrunnlnggame, jumper, Wrlght'hlt a ten footer,
where they had to liet up In an , and Monroe was fouled to tie the ·
runner-up's spot,
As the old adage goes, "Someoffense: something that South- game at 56-56. . ,
.
times you ret tbe Baer and
ern has had some difficulty With
. PE took Its first fourth quarter
sometlmestheBeargetsyou':,so
this season after enjj)ylng so lead at 2:20 whe11 Wright ,hlt
did Saturday's game. For 26
much success off their running another Jumper 58-56. SHS called
minutes the 'Baer', Andy Baei' of
game.
time alter a turnover, then
In !he last 3: 45 of the second Wright hit the first of a two shot
Southern got the best or the
. Portsmouth East Tartans, scor- . canto, Portsmouth outseored foul, :19-56. SHShadaliOthermlss
lng at Will and galning'all38ofhls
SHS 12-2; a run that very well and Baer hit an Inside goal 61·56,
points In the first 26 minutes In a
could have been an underlying then Chad Taylor hit· a three
remarkable performance. In the
factor In the game.
pointer .with 1:33left for a 61-59
last quarter, the Bear, 6-4 ShanThe score at the half stood 26-25 · ilcore.
.
non Bear, got the Tornadoes.
Southern's favor.
' ·
'
In a hectic flnaleTaylortrled a
· Bear, who was held to )usttlve
SHS quclkly went up 28-25 In three pointer, but couldn't conpoints In the tartans win over
the third frame, blit a Monroe necl, then after a · PE bad pass
Leesburg Fairfield on Thursday, . three-pointer ui!d the score for , SHS had 36 seconds to recover the
had just.seven points through the
the first time, ·'then after a steal game. SHS ran theballdown toll
first 26 ·mpnutes of Saturday's
Craig Gampp weht back door for seconds and called tbne, setting
game. In the last six minutes,
a30-28PEiead,thelrflrstofthe up a play, for Andy Baer, but l
however, the Scioto postman was
night. Johnny Wrlgbt canne&lt;) a . Baer's three point try 'Baerly'
nothing but tough, hitting the
jumper after a hutrled up SHS missed and SHS was forced to
baseline Jumper and domlnatll)g
shot, -then Andy Baer brought fout'for any hope at the game. PE
the Inside game completely , and
SHS 'biiCII; to tie 32-32 on a pair of hlt 3 of .4 and that was the game
as a result collecting 10 of his 17
free throws and a Jumper.
64-59.
points In the period.
' That ·~an a string where
Southern hit I2 of 33 fiom the
Southern's Andy Baer led all Southern. coach HoWle Caldwell . floor, 7 of 14 three pointers, and
scorers wlth 38 points and ·a. called a time-out ashls club 14.18 at the line. PE hlt :13 of'49,
~reinendous floor game, but was
made a 10-2 run for a 39-34 score. 4·12, and 4-11 at the line.
double-teamed and denied the
SHS led PE 47-40 after that
PE won the battle ofthe boards
ball for most of the last few
stretch, and had the chance to go with a dominating second half
up by more as ·PE coach Bob 35-2_3 ,Bearl\8d15andMonroe10.
minutes of the .gamme, Next In
line for the Tornadoes was senior
Watkins picked up a technical Maynard had 7 and Baer four for
foul, blit Baer as If momentarily SHS.
·
Chad Taylor, who closed a fine
career With 10 points, as did
plagued ,by gremli!IS ll)lssed both
SHS had 7 steals, 9 turnovers
seniors Brad Maynard and Brent ends of the 'T'. ' ·
· and 16 touls.
The score stood- 47-;0 SouthPE 'had 6 steals, 11 turnovers · '1
Shuler; whO collected 10 and
three respectively. Only four
ern's favor after three frames.
and 14 fouls.
Tornadoes hit the scoring
Although using man-to-man as
Portsmouth East plays the
·
their mainstay PE through In 'winner of the Steubenville dis- .&lt;h
column.
. One of the key players In the some box-and-one on Andy Baer, trict next T)lursday at the Convo- 1:
game, SbannonBear, shared top blit SHS quickly propelled to a . cation Center In regional play.
'"
scoring honors of 17 With team- •50-40 lead In the final roiind, then
PE continues at 20-3, while · '
mate Kevin Monroe, who also · did not score for the ne;~~t two and Southern bows out at 1S-9.
duplicated the feat. ·Monroe, one a half minutes.
Score by quarters
of the 1\eys early In the game did
PE had 8 unanswered points
Port: East.. ........ 9 16 I5 24-64 ·
· not score lnt he final quarter.
Southern qplckly, put the ball in , Southern ..... ....... ,18 . 8 2112-59 .,
John Wright en&lt;led the evening transition and shot several hasty
PORTSMOUTH EAST (64) With 15 points, hltdng nearly all shots as If trying to play catch-up Kevin Monroe 4-3-0-17, Jeremy
of his goals at crucial points In themselves. Each time SHS Cantrell 1-1-0-5, Johnny Wrlgh_t
the game. Randy Abrams had 6,
missed, PE capltal12ed fora 52-48 7-0-1-15, Randy AbrfmS 2-2-6, , \.
Jeremy Cantrell had 5, and Craig score.
.
Shannon Bear 8,0~1-17 and Craig }
Gampp 4.
·
One straw that became lmpOr- Gampp 2-0-4. TOTALS - 24-4-4- (.
From the onset, one could tell tant In breaking the Tornadoes 114 · ·
,
that Saturday's game was again was a steal andover the head full
SOUTHERN (59) -AndyBaer
going to be a dandy as Southern court pass by Kevin Monroe that 8-5-7-38, Chad Taylor 1-2-2-10,
shot out of the gate In race track ·lead to a lay-up for PE. Without . Brent Shuler 0-3-3, Brad Mayfashion, paving the way for two · looking Monroe lofted the alley- . nard 3-0-2-8. TOTALS - 12-7;14stralght three pointers by· Andy oop to Jerry Cantrell.
·. 59
'
~
Baer for a quick 6-0 lead. After
belilg fouled on tl;te fast break,'
lnfo~l
Baer sank two Ire throws for an
· 8-0 score and Brent Shuler hit the
NEW YORK (UPI) -Baseball
No further discussions, formal
first of a two shot foul to give SHS Commissioner Fay VIncent and or Informal, have been schea 9-0 lead. Ironically, Ports- players union chle!Don Fehr met duled. It now seems assured the
mouth 's first goal came on a
regular season will mit start as 1
tWice over the weekend In an
Shannon Bear jumper al the 5: 23 effort to help resolve the .25-day
\
scheduled April 2.
mark.
·
lockout, but reported no
The commissioner said he and .'
At mid-quarter both clubs
progress.
Fehr discussed a series of Issues
·exchanged goals, before SouthFehr met Informally With central to the 'tabor Impasse,
ern again got hot to finish the VIncent both Saturday ·a nd Sun- Including the major sticking
frame at 18-9. Baer had 15 of day at the commissioner's Conpoint of arbitration for players .
· Southern's 18 pointS.
necticut home, but could . not between two and three years of
From the begpnnlng Southern agree on a resolution that would . experience.
had a tough time of It, establish· prompt the opening of spring
The latest proposal by the
log an Inside game as PE's Bear training camps and possibly ·Players Association offers to ; '
pelted away several of South- . preserve Opening Day.
rank players between two and
ern's Inside shots and SHS picked
three years of experience by
"We couldn't figure out a
up a couple crucial offensive graceful way to do that," VIncent service time, with the top 50
fouls.. Southern's entire squad · said.
'
percent eligible for arbitration.
came through With fine balthandllng, but the sWing quards had
trouble penetratln~, centering

c...-,

t

The ·Daily Sentinel

By The .Bend

*'i.,)'lqq .

:

.'

THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUIUSH A COMEMOIATIVE ·

•

ISSUE OF THE VILLAGE ·OF
.P O-lOY'S 150 YEllS·'OF

INCOIPOIAnON ON
THUISDAY; APIIL 2(a, 1990.
RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE TODAY-

''

•

•

992·2156

•••o•

. .AI IIWIIGS or DAVE HilliS

•
'
••

....

i

•

�Ps 8 . 8 The o.ily Santinel

Pomeroy-Midcl~pon.

•

Ohio

•

Rostenkowski calls for end
to federal deficit with taxes

r

WASHiNGTON (UPI)- Rep.
Dan Rostenkowskl, D·Dl., chair·
·. man of lbe powertul House Ways
and Means Committee, chal·
leqed President Bush toenqorse
hla plan to elbnlllllte the federal
budget detlclt, In part, by raising
eonsumer taxes.
RostenkOwskl, who outlined
his five-year plan In Sunday's
Washington Post, also called for ·
a reJection or all tax cut propps·
als, a freeze on spending and
uslqg the "peace dividend" to
reduce the deficit. ·
"This program cuts all the rat
out al)d makes men stand up,"
Rostenkowskl declared In an
Interview on the CBS News
program "Face the Nat!Qn."
"I'm not for any tax decreases, " Rostenkowskl said.
"I'm for Increasing taxes because I think that - fundainen·
tally - IS what has to be done. "
In . presenting his five-year
plan, Rostenkowskl chastized
both Republicans and Democrats for playing politics In the
battle over the federal deficit.
"Nothing could be more dam·
aging to our natlonallnteres IS at
a time when the yawning gap
·between our government's com·
mltments and the revenues avail·
able to pay for them has become
a natiOnal, embarrassment,"
Rostenkowskl wrote In his
editorial.
· · But Rostenkowskl acknowl·
edged that he was facing an
upbUI battle In getti!lg his plan
through Congress and the White
House.
"I've asked Democrats what
they think and how It will be
viewed," he said. ''And In most
Instances I get a scratched head,
and say, 'You're sure you know
what you're doing?"'
But he said that "II I had any
·Influence over George Bush, I'd
ask hbn to endorse this program ·
or try to help me work with it."

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
•

The lllinols Democrat said his taxes on oU, pollutants, alcohol
program would sUpersede the and tobacco. PeOple with "modGramm-Rudman lludget reduc- erate'' Incomes would be allowed
tlon plan, elbnlnate the federal to offset the hl&amp;her taxes through
deficit by 1994 and produce a $34 expansion of the ear\led IncOme
million surplus In 1995.
credit.
·
''For all the Republican rheThe tax hikes would generate
torlc, federal spend Ina wasn•! ' $100 billion, Rostenkowlkl said.
cut at all In the last 10 years; It .
-No Income tax cuts. Rostenwas merely rearran&amp;ed," Ros· kowskl said proposals by the
tenk?wskl wrote. "Payl11g-lnter: · Bush administration to reduce
estonournatlonaldebtlsnowthe the capital gains tax lflll ' not
third largest category of spent!· provide new savings Incentives 1
lpg.... Let's get this problem off as hOped . He said a simUar plan
the national agenda so we can get did not ·work for. ton'ner Prest·
on with building our future."
dent Ronald Reagan In 198l 'and
.
Senate Republican leader Ro· will not work now. ·
bert Dole ot Kansas, saying he
-Eliminating the "Income tax
was not going to criticize Rosten· bubble." Rpstenkowskl said that
kowskl, agreed that legislators · while a surtax boosts the Income '··
need to a,d dress the deficit.
tax rate from 28 percent to 33
"I think Dan Rostenkowskl percenttor the wealthy, the rate
made a very good statement. I drops back down to 28 percent for
hope there's some follo.w -upfrom ·the v.ery wealthy.
Delt)ocrats In the Congress,
Kj!eplng a strict 33 percent rate
Republicans and the adminlstra· for all top wage earners would
lion,", Dole !la.l\1 Monaay on ral~ $44 bljllon, he said~
.
ABC's "Good Morning America"
-Freezing tax Indexing. A
program.
.
moratorium on Inflation adjustThe IJ!ajor points of Rosten· ments In the ·tax c.ode wpuld
kowskl's plan Include: ·.
gener.atf! $50'billlofh he said. T~
-Earmarking the peace dlvl- only -exception would be the
dend for deficit reductions. Ros- earned .Income credit for lowertenkowskl proposes "fundamen- Income famU!es.
tally" restructuring defense . Rostenkowskl .challenged the
spending to reflect the warming · Bush administration t~adopt his · :
of relations with the Soviet Union plan, ''or come up with a better
and other Eastern Bloc one."
countries.
·'But any competitor will have .
He said a reduction In defense to meas11re up to what my plan
spending of 3 percent each year offers: , No smoke and mirrors;
would save $150 billion \JY 1995.
·no 'feel good' promises Or slide-Freezing domestic spending, by budgeting; no picking out one
"really freeze It:" ·The· freeze or tw.o ~mall-pOtato Items ·that
would Include all cost of living woul~n't make a perceivable,
adjustments In all domestic dent In the deficit, leaving the
programs - Including Sofia! hard part to be worked out lolter
Security - except for ''means· by 'budget summit.'
tested" programs for the na"Just solid proposals -lncludtlon's poorest citizens.
lng some that I, as a Democrat,
Estimated savings would be traditionally opposed - . that
$105 billion over five years, produce subslantial, ,lncontesta- .
Rostenkowskl said.
ble savings calling for modest
-Increasing consumption sacrifices for ·nearly every
·
American. "

TO PUCE AN AD &lt;AU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
POliCIES
'Ads outSide MetQI, Gallia 01 Mason counH• muM b e pre

o•d

'Reclttlw S.rtO dttcount for Mh Plid m advi!rlce.
'Free~~
Givit.-vay !lnd found ada uncl• 15-words wtlt ba
run 3 d~• • no ch•ge.
'Pt~c;e of illd to• all c:•••ll ..ters 11 doublu priat ol ad cos1

Barr,

"

'

I

'·

,

'

r·m·

·E mpty oil .tank explodes, ·kills; thre,e .

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

uss

~~~~~1,01( ~-

~--

IV'S,

G•lli• Count¥
Ar•• Cod•&amp;1o4

18,000 hornn

446 GGrllipatts

,..,... Couftty

Mason Co., WV .

Artli Cotle 814

Ar•• Code, 304

912

l67 Ch•hWe
lll v•n~on
24i ftie Grand•
251
Ditt
&amp;•J Ar•bl• Ditt.
31~ Walnut

M,.._

.,

98&amp;

c~

.....

au,..,

247

.,

Mnun
182 New Htvll!ln
IIi letat'l

l~ar1 _ f.U•

14i A•c:in•

742

137 8\Jitaio

' 167

Wented to Rent

Equipment tor Runt

ll
14 lusin•sTr~n•ng
15 Sc:hools• 1nsln1Chon
16 Aadio, TV. C8 Aep;ur

49

For L•••

17

MdcellltiWlll

51
62 53
ft4
55

Hou•hold Goods'
Spo! ling Goods

EIWII
COISTIUCnON
CIIEnEI, 0!110
Cuttom Built
Homes,
Remodeling &amp;
Repair Work

985-3365
3.629 517
POMEIOY OliO

PlUMIING &amp; HilliNG
Htw J.wtionl
161 North Stcond
Middlaporto Ohio 45760

SALES &amp;

ro'"u~~::='·

•VINYL SIDING
oALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

"Free Eltlmlltle"

PH. 94,·2101
or les. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAliS

4-16-16-lfn

ljhliiiitiJI
a~sin•• Opportum•v
22, Moril!¥ 10 Loen
2 1 ~rolel..ona! S•wi c~ .

21

56

57
58
59

Musicallnstrumenh
Fru1t1 &amp; Vegt~t1bl•
For Salt~ 01 Ti111cte

Hom~tlnlprownnent~&gt;

81
82
Bl
8..
85

Plumbmg I&amp; He•mu ·
EM:wahng
Electnc .. 6 Retfug...-t~~l•un
Gllnl!fal Haul•nu

87

Upholstltrv

86 MObile Hume Rupau

•Mobile Home

,Ptrtl
• Mobile Home

Rantala

992·7479

•-•roy, 1·12·'11-tln

-"Gutter Work

-Electrical io Plumbing

-Concreto Work
.-Roofing
-lnt•k»r 6 Extwk»r
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215
Pomtrar., Ohi•
·3fl.'lt-2 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HQMJS &amp; GARAGES
"At lta10111.l1 Prim''

... Pl.
ll!f

Day or fllht
NO SU~DAY4-~:~Ifn

UNDA'S
~

PAINTING

CO.

..._.IITDIOI

,.......

FREE ESTIMATEI

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

(614) 667-3271
Gnmtl.tlewl...

H-19-lla

7·1..'11-1111

Middleport,
1

DAVE'S
SMALl. ENGINE
IEPAII

.

L...tM atYaley Llllllltr

lnMidd....,., Oh.
Plt.RTS AND SERVICE
For Molt 2 1nd 4 -cycle
engines

Stock Parto for
Homelite, Weede1ter,
Tocumooh, Brlggo •
"
Stl'ltton.

PH.

992-!t~U

-

KOUNTRY

FURNACE

20% OFF ON All

GOLF EQUIPMENT ·

FURNACE

•EngriiVing. Trophl•.
Ploqu• • lodg•
ti •New Grips
oCiulll Shortened
'
•Poti.D .
Tago

FUIIACE

PARTS ANP SERVICE
ALL MAKES
, GAS OR ELECTRIC

.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
'

46~11

992·5335., 915-3561
Acr•• ,,.. Pelt Office

TEAFORD

Scilut (GII1D R:oad

217 L

2-1-'!10-1 "''·

....

tiS·IS61

":.

• I '

..

.. .
.

. .-

,,

TRI·COUNTY RECYCUNG

OFniS·J LOCA'I'IONS YO SDVI Yotl •••
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.ll. 143
ALIANY, OHIO: Ill. 10. S.R. 143

CONTROL
H•tlni;1oellnl,

HENDERSON, WV.: Rt. 31 Ad_l. to Sldera Equipment
NEW HOURI:
.
POMEROY: 8 a .m.-7 p.m. 7 O.yo
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·&amp; p.m. I Dayo. Cl-d s::;~~orl. l
HENDERSON: 10 a.m.-11 p.m. I Oayo. Qolitd I .
PAYING AS OF TODAY, JAN. 30, 1110

•triprt~tlen

Senlee

#1 Copper 70¢ per lb.; .

Cl•n

CALL
' 992-5589

Dry Aluminum Cane, 31C

- · IUV ALL NON Ff!IIIIOUIICIIA,,
IT ARTEAI,

tb.
ETC.

2-2·'90-1 o. d. .

'
Stop In and See

Roger Hysell
Garage

DALE HILL

"

lit. 124, , • ..., Ollie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR

PAT HILL
CiiRYSU:R-PLYIIIom

s. 1'111r4, .... , .. ,

23·----..
4

minor repltr. 114-148-

-

-Rot- -~~.
parfblnlI

yre .old.
Lab
aog,
, rr old,

IOW11-417t.

· ,
Fill
d '-It over fnn timber
tlrllllllna,
l!aa)' to 11f1 lei a - t , ·
. , . . . . . .~,
......... long -

.......

=.c..,malo,
.

1 _ , . ojd,

..h onnao .,., 1 -lio,
IOW?WIOI.
Pall Nw nglon Ilk Houo!lf 1
~

-··......-· --" III I

-Hut.

e

to
fluffy.,._
....home.
aood

Lost &amp; Found

.

--.NWfllnt. ,_,lt..W:
""""'.,_._
_.
Dffloa.

-

lUI.

It~

. . . . .1............ .

·~1m..

4-25·1fn

~ .... ·--~·
!D!ts.r:S
-.11-H11.

7

•uGHT HAUUNG

"FIREWOOD
PQgiOY AND -*EPCIII'S Ofi.Y

•LL SUCI

J.OCAU.Y OMB PIZZA SHOP.

992-2269

: Pizza·S•·.Salalh-Daily Specials
992-2221

EYI-GS
l

Glvuway

-.

992-6421

or 992-7121

•:~~·

992-5335 Dr 915·3561
ltr•s ; ..... Pelt Office
POIIIIOT, OliO
' 10/301'19 tin

an~

Announcements

cuun

.,••""' I
~

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Reasanable Prices"
WE GO Til EXTIA MIU.....
992-6110
."Quality

HUMPHREY'S

•sHRUB • TREE
.TRIM and REMOVAL·

~·

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES . •REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING
A Great CDmbination-

,l.

•caowAn

'

GIEG lAlLEY

·
Gutters
. Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2161

'ttl DAY WAIIAIITT
-IIASHEU-$100 up
OIYER$-$69 up
REFRIGERATORs- UOO up
RAIGIS-Gas·Eioc.-$125 up
FREEIERS-o-$125 up
liCRO IMNS-o-$79 up

CTION

K and J

NEW -IEPAII

(61.)915-CIIO
.......
,..........

'II'R•Hltl •

.. . . .

EVOY SUNDAY
Storts at I :00 PJl.

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

PH. ftf-5612

Ill'S IPPIWICI
. SIIVICI

,•

NE._WLAND
ENTERPRISES

,.... ,,. . .lleltl

Or_w.

:_.~

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

SITEWORK • ~OADS
GEARING

Commerai1l ·

1th:1 It 1w
Plcll Up.

':

DOZER

IlL 9•t.;tl60

au•aas

·.

992-2198

985-4422

flew Lima ld.; lutl•d, Ohio
1 Session ........................................ S3,50
6 Sessions..................................... s12.00
12 Slssions ................................... S20.00
15 Sessions ................................... S2S.OO
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

Good Ra101
T.L.C.
27 Yro. Exp.
Rotor.,_

Relidentlal &amp;

ovm llflll

.

PAT HILL FOlD

SUN'S UP TANNING

allll

949-~101

11·111-'•. 1 mo.

••

radiators and
htatll' cartS. Wt, can
also add bail and rod
aUt rllllatars. We aho
rtpair Gas Ta'*•·
CDr.t

1-11-90·tln

.. EUM HOMI

ROOFING

-Room Addlllano

Anii6P&amp;

IDIFRS

,/

1!\AIN St.,

_, ........

Wt can r~ir and re-

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

· •Brake Work

lt. 33 larth of
Ohle

SER~ICE

CIISTII, OliO

•Tire Sele1
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Ch1nge &amp; Lube

•Lot Rentlla

Sittler

R. 1.. HOLLON
TRUCKING

SERVICE
742-3011

CARPENTER SERVICE

IIAVIIRBGS

FULL nME •PLOYIINT

•

Anttques

SALES and

Heward L Writ-'

YIIYIUSONM

Experienced in Typing, Filing.

•

Services

Mise:. Merchandtlfl
Building Supph•
Pets tor SM e

RUTLAND TilE

COUrrllY
MOBIU .
HOME PARK

YOUNG'S

Talct the ,.... ovt of

POSITION
AVAILABLE IN
MEIGS COUfm

. '... " ., .

Merch~ n dtse

USED APPUANCES

wantld

.· RECEmONIS1 POSmON
NOW AVAIWLE

' .

17 A,II O ,.flpau
7 8 Camp1ng Eqmpmttnt
79 C•mpen &amp; Motor H o n1e5

3· 12-110·1 -

. LlluttleltfwJU',
I

1ft ' But~ts • Moto" lut Saht
76 Auto-Parts &amp; A.c c•liotltl*

LOTIONS - s:riCKERS
Call Susan Coleman, 742-2778

a

11

74 Motor C.vct..

Business Services

'

•

n,

Ap•rtmern for Rent
45 Furnish..t RooniS
46 s.,.c:e _tor R tnl
47

77"J

71 AuHts lor Sale
72 TuJC:Iu tor St~h
73 v.. &amp; •wo·,

F1rms tor Rent

44

18 Wanted lo Do

F•rm EqUfl)munt
Wanted to 8uv
li\lntoc:k
H_,. GJatn
Seed • Fert .. iter

TronsporldltOn

48

leon

65

A ~n

Silual10n Wented
Insurance

178 Apple Gro\111!1

143 Pont.nd

.

Y USTAUIANT

'

•sa

&amp;l
64

l;l§dl11
41

992-2772 ·

.·

,.,.JI

&amp;15 .Pt . 'PI . .•nl

Pom•oy

J&amp;L
'lftSULAnON

""'*· ,

CRGW'S

·

·, 1 . Hela Wtnhtd

followin~ ll•lf•/Jii'i"'' f•xdwnw·-~...

By United Press International
A snlper.flred on a moving Greyhound bus near
Jacksonville, Fla., InjUring seven passengers,
and .a uthorities were trying to determine Monday
.IACIIE
If the violence ~as related to the bitter 11-day
FilE DEPT.
strike against the bus line.
lolhan hltllntl
The sniper apparently fired from an overpass
Sunday night along Interstate 95 south . ot
EYEIY·
Jacksonville as the bus, which was -driven by a
SAT. liGHT
replacement worker, headed south toward
Orlando on U.S. 1, said Steve Weintraub, a
6:30P.M.
spokesman for the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office.
, ...., chollt
- Only one bullet struck the !&gt;us and "apparently
12 Il-Ia Shotllftl Only
fragmented," the sheriffs spokesman said. "The .
Strkktly E!lforll4
bus driver heard an explosion, what was a
10-t-ttn
projectile entering the bus," he said. The driver
then pulled over.
One of those on board the bus was struck in ·the
throat and another was~struck In the side.
'
"There were seven total taken to tile hospital
but just two that are serious," Weintraub said.
The others who were Injured were struck by
Wllfer S~11111 0•
shrapnel. ·
.
'VINYL SIDING
The person who suffered a gunshot wound to,the
neck was upgraded from stable to good condition
VINYl REPlACEMENt
at St. Luke's Hospital early Monday, a hospital
WINDOWS
official said. Two others brought to the hospital
FREE ESTIMATES
were treated and released, she said.
No arres Is have been made and there are no
suspects; Weintraub said.
3-5-'90-1 1110Asked If the shootin&amp; was related (o the
strike, Weintraub said, "That's sun being
followed up. That's probaby a correct
assumption...
'
.
PoUce and a Greyhound spokesman said they
had no evidence linking the shooting to the strike.
"We don't ·know. We. just don't know at this
point," said Greyhound spokesma11 Kevin Fry
said.
·Meanwhile, · Greyhound said Sunday It has
expanded Intercity bus service to more than 100
Public Natice
locations without service since 9,000 employees
.
walked off their jobs M~tr~h 2, and union leaders
were, asked to m~t w'!th federal mediators In
NOTICE TO IIDDERS
Washington to discuss stalled contract talks.
AUTO I'UIICHASE
The service expansion Included 120 locations
MEIGS COUNTY
that had been without service since the strike by
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
drivers and· other employees covered by the
Sultci bldo wit · bo ••
Amalgamated Transit l)nlon, Greyho!ind spokesctlvitd bf the Melgt County
man George.Gravley said Sunday.
· Board of Commiotlontro hi
No new contract talks were scheduled but
lhelr olll.. iOCIItltd In the
Courtllou•. S.C:Ond Street.
federal mediators asked union leaders to meet
Pomtr..,, Ohio 4&amp;711 unt~
Monday in Washington to discuss the labor
12
noon on tho 21th doy of
dispute.'
·
·
March, 1HO a11d at 1:30 P.
Whether the mediators will then call In
M. opened bf the Ctorlt of
company officials tO discuss the walkout was up In, uld -rd and raltd aloud
for 1ht purch•e of a Van for
the air, Gravley said'
1hl
, County DapOf!' 'It depends on the circumstances," he said. ·'It ' milntMelgt
of Human llervloet. ·
will be the mediator's decision what the next step
' SpeclfiCitiOnl
fol Mid
is."
Viln may bo obtained from
'·
the Clor!t of tho of
Union representatives were not Immediately
Melgt County Commlaalonavailable for comment on Monday~s talks.
·e ra beh:u11n th1 houra of
Gravley said the company add~-40,937 miles to
1:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.,
Monday through Frldoy.
Its Sunday schedule, an Increase of 19.2 percent
The Commlaalo-• ...
over Saturday, and bringing Its total service
bound by Federoll- which
schedule to 253,689 miles, or 39 percent of
prohllllta oont180tlng from
pre·strlke levels.
an •tooblllhment thoy or a
Greyhound carried 22, million passengers last
family - - ....., hiiVt a .
flnam:lol lnMrelt ln.
year and Is particulary crucial to low-Income
Tile commialkln•• r•travelers who live In smaller communities and as
tho right to rejoq~ any
a carrier of emergency medical supplies.
and oil bldo and/or acoept
VIolent clashes, Including ·one 1that led to the
... beat bid for the lnt.. purpo$1.
.
death of a m,an on a picket last weekend In
Mary
E. Holllim.r. Cltrk
Redding, Call1 :~ have marred the walkout as
Melgt County ao.d of
Greyhound has replaced striking drivers and
Commlatlontrt
(3) 12. 11 2tc
others have crossed the lines and gone back to
·
..
work.
In Chicago, pollee arrested a striking Grey·
hound driver Saturday' for allegedly hitting a
Ad8· .
5
picket , slgn. Riley
reptac;ement driver with
Smith, U, Chicago, was charged with mlldemeanor battery after a scuffle with James Rivers, 27, ,.
a replacement driver, at the company's South
Loop terminal.

OPEN TONIGHT

. TIL 8:8&amp; P.M.

Iii'

l'lll'l'r f

12,

GUN SHOOT

Boy's spirits boosted by protection ·

8 PubUc Sale &amp; Auction

· 61
62

lots &amp; Acr•~•
Real h•••• Wented .

38

S,r v 1•. 1::,

. Cla.~.~iji1•d l'"li,;s

Sniper. fires on
Greyhound bus

SO LONG SOVIETs- Waving national lit flap newly-elected deputies just procialmed the
and bannel'll, Utbuanlans gather In lront of the , Independence of the Republic. (UPI Reuter)
Snpreme Soviet In Vl}nius on Sunda;v where the
,

6 lo•l and, found
7 Y•d Sel• .,..d 1n • .,,,_,c~l ·

[fl ll,llly 11'1

'DAY BEFORE P-UBUCAHON
11 00 A.P,II SATURDAY
MONOAV PAPER
2 DO P.M MONOAV
TUESDAY PAPER
2 :00P.M TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY P ..PER
2•00 PM . WEDNE50AV. ·
THURSO~Y PAP,ER
2 :00PM . :THURSDAY.t-HIOAV !tAPER
2 IJO PM . FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER .

c&lt; '

J Anrw)uUmMt 1
4 Giveaway ' 1
5 H1ppr Ads __.

:) Ll.t;): .. ck

tio'm n lor Sale
Mabiltt Hom" lor Sit111
Ferms lor Sale
8ut1RWI lu~dlngs

3.-1
32
33
3I
35

2 In Memol'y

41 HIHrNs lot Rent
42 Mctbile Homn lor

COPY' DEADLINE •

.Trident 2 missile -aunched by Nary

••

~nbune. IUiiiChmg lWUf

f •'•' , llliliP!S
1 Ctr.d of Than••

9 Wented IO luy

'A clillsthcd adveniltununl pluc ud m lht! Oady S"nhn.ejca
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clotntliOO dll~lt~y . lusinuu Card 11nd htgill nohc:HI
wtlt &lt;thu itPPtr•, Mt thu Pt Pluuunt ReHtSitJJ and lhe Galh

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R•••• hat c:on•rutwe r.,n,_llro..,..upd .. a w.et be ctt•gM
lOt uch d .. u lllfllf•l• .ch.

'Ads that must be pind m •dv•nctt ar•J
Card ollllank\0
H11ppy Ads
lit Momort.ttn
VMd Sill~.-~

Oatly

Ovtr 1 I Wo;dl .
.
.20
$4.00
.30
$6.00
,42
$9.00
$13.00
.60
.05 / day
$1 .30/ doy

15
15
15
16
16

10
Monthly

'1 pomt hne ty.,. onty uHd
• Sen1tnul IJ.· no1 inpontibht lot ltl'rors ither llfll ~- . ICh.ck
tor •nurs twsl d-v ad nms 111 papurl Call ht!fore 2 00 p nr
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Words

3
6

ClOSED SUNDAY

NEW -YORK (UPI) -A boy psychologists, said a counselor at
day night. " He was a little
the center who declined to give embarrassed but he )Vas happy to
who was clubbed and set ablaze
on h)s way to school lay In critical
hei n'a me.
·
see hlmsel{ on TV," she said.
condition Monday and hili alleged
The boy's face was not burned
assailant, described by pollee as
Aupont late last week received
and oniy his arms were bana neighborhood 'bully, was or- birthday greet! rigs from Presl- daged, McCowan said .
dered to, appear In family court.. ' dent Bush, former P~esldent
"He's still critical but stable,"
David, Aujlont, who turned 12 . Ronald Reagan and New York
she sa1d. "He's doing well for
one day after the attack, told 1 City Mayor David Dinkins .•.
what he's been thrbugh. He had a
hospital officials Sunday he was
The , boy was on his way to good night's sleep."
excltedaboutaietterherece1ved school last. Wednesday when a
Aupont, who has told famll;y .
LOS ANGELES (UP!) ~ Bill
from the Guardian 1\.ngel~ offer· neighborhood bully dragged him
members
he wants to become a
Cosby was ·a triple winner at
lng to walk him to school when he Into a basement, tied 1\irri up,
doctor when he grows up, has
Sunday night's 16th annual Peo·
gets out of the hospital.
beat him and poured a fiamma - been described as a fighter by his
,Pie's ChoiCe Awards, and comeAnd the Vietnam Veterans of ble liquid over his body for no doctors and family members.
dian Roseanne Barr and actress
America also sent a message known motive, poll~e said . .
"That's very Important for his
:Meryl Streep walke\1 off with two
· offering to donate skin from Its
The boy escaped from the
recovery In this kind of case,"
'&amp;Wards each.
.
skin bank, said Kathleen•McGo· basement · and ran through the McGowan said.
; The awards are a popularity
wan, a spokeswoman for New streets with his skin and clothing
Because of the risk of Infection
:COntest and are not voted on by
York University-Cornell Medical on fire.
the hospital has asked police to
members of· the entertainment
Center.
Doctprs have given Aupol)t wait until Monday to q!lestion the
:Industry. Thewlnnersarechosen
The 13-year-old charged with· only · a 50 percent chance of boy·about the attack.
Jly an opinion poll conducted by
tying Aupont to a radiator In the surviving his Injuries. '
In another development in the
the Gallup Organization. There
The Incident has brougl\1 an
basement of an abandoned
case, New York Newsday reare no nominees, and those
Brooklyn building, beating him outpouring of support for Aupont
ported Sunday that Aupont's
polled can vote for anyone they
with a baseball bat and seiling and members of his family, who family was considering suing the
wish.
.
hbn" ablaze was scheduled to w~nt back and forth from their owner of the building where the
: ''The Cosby Show" was named
appear Mondlly In ·Family Court. hospital vigils with .arm loads of attack occured.
•
· favorite television comedy series
The ' youth, who has not been gifts:
'
GOOIfHOST; GOOD HOST - Al'llenlo Hall holds up tile award
Tlte family has asked the
for the sixth time, and Cosby, a
Identified beca11se of his age, was
McGowan said the boy asked Manhattan law ftrm of Schelnpresented to hbn drutnr the 18th annual People's Cbolee Awards
;pereimlal winner, wds named
Sunday tn· Los Angeles, namln1 hbn favorite late "lghllalk show , , ordered to appear before Brook' for a teleylslon set Saturday s0 he feld &amp; Mayer to examine possible
favorite male TV performer and
, lyli Family. Court Judge Joseph could watch cartoons . He was
host over Johnny Canon aad David Letterman. (yPl)
legal action against the landlord ·
:au-around male enterlalner.
Equli'ol Jr. for a probable· cause taken off a respliator that day,
who allowed the abandoned base.
: Barr, Cosby's chief rival for
world favorite movie actor and Brown, male musical per·
hearing.
just 24 hours after receiving skin
ment to become an " attractive
the top of the weekly TV ratings, Tom Cruise, an Academy Award former; Paula Abdul, female
The suspect has been held at grafts for burns on his arms.
nuisance," the newspaper
:was named favorite female "I:V
nominee for his starring role In musical performer.
the Spofford Juvenile Center In
Aupont saw himself oil a
reported.
;performer and favorlte all"Born on the Fourth ·of July,"
"Rescue 911" was named,. fa the • Bronx and 'examined by television news program Satur•around female entertainer. ·
was named favorite movie actor.
vorite new TV dramatic series;
: Backstage, Barr took the opAsked to speculate on his O.scar "Doogle Howser M.D." the fa)lortunlty to deny reports that she chances next month, Cruise vorite new comedy series and
-wants out of the ABC series.
replied, "Can't. I just enjoy ")..ook Who's Talking" wop- for
.' 'That was a joke," she said.
this?"
favorite comedy mo~_on plc,ture.
: Streep was the only other
Arsenio Hall was named favor"L.A. Law" was named favor·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
Trident 2 test program, which the surface by powerful charges
-double winner, named favorite
Ite late·nlght talk s~ow host.
lte dramatic series for the fourth (UPI) - A Trident 2 missile
Included 19 launchings from a of compressed gas.
'U.S. movie actress and favorite
"They told me I didn't have the
time . . ''Four more years!" the carrying a load of dummy
ground pad at the Cape CanavRear Adm. -Kenneth lyfalley,
·movie actress In 15 nations which talent, that I was too black," said ensemble cast chanted warheads was successfully
eral Air Force Station.
the
Trident's program manager, , ·
:are also ' surveyed for .favorite . Hall, who won oirer the other two
backstage.
launched Sund'ay night from a
The missile's sea-launch · re· · said engineers · redesigned the
movie, and movie actor and . top vote getters, Johnny Carson
.submerged nuclear submaFine
cord now stancls at nine suc- nozzle system to· make It better
•
actress.
and David Letterman. "If.there's
Most of the winners showed up 1off thecoastof Florida In the 30th
cesses and two fatiures'. Overall, able to withstand the rigors of l.ts
"Batman" - . which set anything you want to do, don't let . to accept their awards, Including test · firing of the Navy's most
the record Is flve 'fatiures and. 25 brief "flight" through the water.
summer box office recon)s -t them take your.dream ·a way:;
Jack Nicholson .a nd Michael powerful nuclear weapon
successes:'
•.
;..
Since the modifications were
was named favorite overall moOther winners Included· Nell Keaton, the stars of "&amp;tmap." . system. .
The firstand third such subma· Implemented, the missile has a
,vle and . co-favorite dramatic Patrick Harris, male performer Tile only major .winners who IJid
The three-stage, $26.5 million
rlne firings In ~rch ani;! August perfect· record.
·motion picture with "Steel Mag- In a new television series; Jamie not appear were Hoffman and
Trident 2 missile was fired from
last year ended Ill spectacular
The Trident 21s thought to have
·nollas," which New Yorker mag- Lee Curtis, female performer In Cosby, who both accepted :vta the USS Pennsylvania, an OhiO'
explosloi)S that ·delayed opera- a maximum range of up to 6,900
'aztne called "chalk scraping a new TV series; Fred Savage, 'VIdeotape.
class nUclear submarine, atlO: 45
tlonal deployment by three miles . .
across tbe blackboard for two young · TV performer; Randy · The program was recorded at p.m. EST, according to Air Force
months .. ·
'
·hours.~'
Travis and Ke.riny Rogers, coun- Universal Studios and broadcast spokeSwoman Alecla Lewis, who
A Navy Investigation deterHEART TO HEART MEETING
Dustin Hoffman was named try music perf~rmers; Bobby
on CBS TV.
. ''
said the test was a success. No
mined the nozzles of the Trident
IHUISDAY, MAKH 15-7:00
PIIASANT VAWY HOSI'IT A
other details were provided.
2's flrst·stage motors were being
DINING ROOM
The launch was part of a
subjected to more water pres·
TOPIC:
Eat
Smart When Eating' Out
routine ''demonstration and
sure than expected as the 126,000fw
Man
lnfor. .tion
shakedown operation" to certifY
pound missile~. were propelled to
Call
1304)
675-4340
a sub crew's ab!Uty to handle the
I
COTI'ON VALLEY, La. (UP!)
Bloxom said witnesses lndl· Monday morning, Collins said..
missile syst~:m.
~ An empty 80,tJOO.gallon oil tank
cated "the explosion was treCollins said the tank that
' II was the first such launch
mendous," ripping the top off the exploded was about 30 feet high
·exploded Sunday, ,kUling thi'ee
from a submarine other than the
men working on Its roof.
't ank and probably killing the and had a diameter of about 114
')'ermessee and the first since
three men .Instantly .
The men were repairing the top
feet.
a rapld·firedoublelaunchFeb.12
of the tank at the Kerr-McGee oil
A brief fire was confined to the ·
In w)Jich two Trident 2 missiles
refinery when sparks apparently
remains of the tank and was - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ·were successfully fired.
lplted petroleum fumes, c aus·
extinguished shortly after the'
In. CO!IIputer language; a paSIWclrd
The flight Sunday was the 11th
explosion, Horton said.
tng an explosion and small fire at
Is a word or code used to Identify an test firln&amp; from a submerged
about 2:10 p.m., .said Webster , Vapors from ~roleum pro·
' submarine and · the 30th in th~
Parish sheriff's deputy Charlie ducts that had been stored In the authorized !J8er.
tank apparently built up,' possl·
-Horton.
bly setUng off. t~ explosion,
Bloxham sa ld.
T.C. Bloxom, the lire chief of
tiHI'by Minden. La, ldenUfied
Pl110t offlclall bad controlled
ONLY
fOI JusT
the blaze by the time fire
the victims as James Chris·
.
IIIWnl
•
Chtly)
topber .Doyls, 22, of Longview, · departments arrived at the
Served wllh whlitJIIII ..--. ohtak•
. '
'
Texas; Steve Vega, 24, of Tyler,
scene.
.
· gr1vy, cole llaw, hot rolllri4
Sorry, no lubttil- IXDIIpl ~
Texas; and Rickey Martin, 3'7, of
The explosion and fire did not
with lddltloMI Jii'ICIM.' ·
rel~se petroleum products or
Jacklonvll~. Texas.
The men were employed by
any hazardous substances of any
NOW FEATURING ttOMEMADE DINNER ROLL
Saker Tank Co. of Arp, Texas, . kind, Colllns said. .
!
Baker Tank Co. officials began
wblch was contracted to renofUIIITUII, APPUAMCIS,
FLOOt COVIIIIG
an lnvesUgatlon of the Incident
vate tbe tank. , said Gerald
PH. ..
POMIIOY I OH.
Collilll, the Louisiana operations
late Sunday afternoon and were
106 lAST 1Wt1 .
"J.J67I
POIIIIOY, OliO
F•lll(lftt 'a l[lldiy Friitl ~scheduled to conUnue their probe
mana&amp;er for Kerr-McGee.

~Cosby,

D1y1
1

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Ylli'CI ....

. ,,

'

�Pca1*CJ' Mf Ua_p , ..
Pa)31

8

8-The Deily Sentinel

PubiiCSIIe
&amp;Auction

44

~

Apartment
for Rent

LAFF-A-DAY

Rick PM,_... AUDt1on Cue p ny

now

Pomaov-Midclaport, Ohio

eucUona, u-

51

""'" llllcllon.

=:".::===: .
,.. - .........414,--.
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wv,

i

Horw. . &amp; PoniM. 11....,2107,
dayo 114-318-4104 Eoonlngo.

llvlne. 1 ond 2 bodroom • P I - ot Vllloao
Minor
IIIII
Rlvoroiio
Aloo~- tn·illll.dCIIof!-iil. IF"""
1114. l l n u a h - II.
F1rol ront lr11 to lhooo
who qUolity. c.c 114-tll2-m7.

motoro. Call Lorry Llvoiy 114388-9303.
Low grade oek 11w tOae. ,, eo
por 11\ouund. Olllh,.~l~ otda
. Palla! Co. Pomeroy, OH.

aurn.

01•1- !lYing. 1 .... 2 bodopor1- • Vllloao

·Would 11ka to Buy; Pop-Up ~

I

•14-311,., ,., •

!"

1·1· Help Wanted

R-

EOH. .

Pr• 1940 quill•. Any condhlon.
Caah P11d. C.ll 614-tl2·5657 or
614-6!12·2461.

Employment Serv1ces

NlwAJHd

•I ' .... , .• ~. ·· •: .... :

,, •• , . · ~ "' ., • ••

"My teadwr says lwredity
· &lt;,:auses stupidity."

~~~ond
ApMNIIII
In
llld# .• rt. FrDm
f114. llnuah April 30.
F1rol ront ho to lhooo
who ..,..lty. ear1 114-11112-m7.
EQH.
.

~.o~ovo • • z - - """~.. v.:l"~"""";.-;,u;t....,.:

~

tne.proi)I)Ud
Ua.ter'a
In
Ed ucodon, lhll
-Hion wMI ontail rnpontlbUhlel ol providing
leodorohlp lor tho Plllfl'..,_
dovoloplng and lmploonwntlng
tha progrom,toochfng port-11-,
so)~lng per80nnel, r.com·
mending llbrlry acqulllllona,
developing rolallonohlpo wtth
ar.. .chool• and ~aping
and monitoring of the budge{.
Ouallfie11Uonali1clude an Nmed
dd&lt;l orall
roquiNid;
dc(monllrolod loadorohlp
gr~duate ltv.l actlvhy 11 well u
feadorohlp In publiC ocliooio;
record
of ac:hollrtr contrlbutlons ; ewldenca al IIHIIctl'll
c:ommunicallon In vtrioua cui..
tur.. l Httlngl and the abiNty lo
«Miculale cunant ,,... •nd ..
BUill In an 'a ca•mtc ..etin" u
•
w&gt;ll " In a !"'bile loium.
Prer.renc• wll be glwn to one
thll eould provide ox~ and
laodorohlp oldllo In munlolo
ariU ot adUCIItlon. lntll'..ted
poroono lhould 11nd o - r of
lnta,...t. cun.nt r.ume Ineluding tM namM and ldd,..
aee of thNI relw.ncee before
tho doodllno olllorch 18, 1110
1o: Mo. Ph~lo
nol olflc:or,
Unl\'ltllly of Rlo
Grondo, P.O. eoi&lt; "?1 Rio
Grondo, OH 4!14174; Tho unl-·
oily of Rio Grondo loon Equol
O ~unlly Affirmative Action
Employor.

tor

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

11

Help Wanted

31 Homes for Sale

=~=~~~~Tj~~.l
SOl lllmorlll
Two
Eomii%.Nofnvooi-.Wrb:
P.O. Box 103,
II 47317.

or thiN bOd.....,. reot, ....,. ndn:ratecl. . llrg~~
-nt.
117U
· L~
Hotghlo.lt4-1!12-A51.

VISANIASTERCARD.
CHARGE Gw.rantNd.
-rc- of Credit Rating.
call Nowt 1-102..a.t2·1011 EJil.

TWo ltory. 3 L 'ocLLu, 1 1f2
blth, llnllhed ful balemtnt, 2
oar 11r- ~~:t0li11B In
Racll'll. lf4.Q4.... rr.

aemente trom yow

0.-.

U.S.

U2a4.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sal'

Wilnlad: - · 4B up to live In

ront - · SmoH ..... noptLIIM. H. . own IM'Ivate &amp;.ttl and
roomo. Muot . ... chtldron. To
ctun. Reference requfrM. 114112-3027.
We •• now 1 llltl epprou8d
nur~~akll tral= proarMI. Do
l or
you hl¥8 thl I tit
Cll'lng?
Tt.r. are m.ny Job opporlunllilli
hllnh ..,. - ·

121141-lloon. 2 br. Coil 1142 45-IOIG.

--.-r.r

.1

304475-tao

tor

4444701olor 4p.m.

lhl hllfth . . . IMm fn juot 11
....U. Enroll naw In 1hli Nurw

Tri-Cou.:l

.,._!do,

·1m -""• 12x11
~ldo ao'::'l'rom Ill
CIA. wood bumor, IIPPIIOncoo,
=.tkHII c.nt.~id ~ 11orogo
bldg. 304475-1011 or
tor 1Ninlnt? WI have a vtre..y
175-4111.
·
ollundl"t _ , _ . anflalolo hlr 1m
oontt,iijtiY fur·
lhooo llilflbM.t=r- lor
Wloton
11.000
tho
-...... Mon:h
281hilcall
1
7-ea&amp;.
catch
1·
tho plrlll
·
·
::=:::;:::__ _ _ _ __ 1174 K l - 10xt2,
llllchon
oODilancoo,- pump, c-.1
12
SHuatlon ·
oli., N
' tllllte dlah. 7 K~ IIIII 1ft..
cludocf wHh 24x24 polo bom.
W!!nted
t20,100. 080. 114-112·2201 or
S0!111co
RopriiOnl111
'
baulldll. Wa htve an lm- Ho.. prlvOIO lor two or 1144~7.
modlola opporlunhy lor • Will
1m t4x70 Footlvol lloblla
R..•on.bltl. 114-112
: In
c rg_a_nlzed, Mlf.moelvattid lnPomeroy.
herd,
ctlrt.
H-.
living room, 2 lull
dlvlduol
lntor ...od
In
bathl. CA. muot bi movad. Call
deVeloping a ca...., In Can. -.... 11~471.
sum. financial ~. (con- tocllal
• """"'
Cll,.,
txp.lor• _.,.
rer. on....
... 1111 C1 ,. WI
14 711 3
oumer IGI!W, home oqul1y llnool
bod,.,.,:;_·on 1 ~ ':...~..
lnsur8net .... In genere - · ~475-41011.
otllco admlnlotrotlon). Tfio ouc- Will olo bolovflllll!ig In mj hiime. cunalnotbllllllo, u"'*Pinnlna,
c••fut candidate m.-t enJoy lion. thou ~~. ,DiJo only. can t1~,100. 304-475-7543 or 11'cheltenglng work, p II I IIi 8144121101.
4414111.
good communlcollono lkllto, I
For ..... 1--~lo • - f11W the ability IO abeorb .net 17 Mlscellaneout
newly
a
;.,'1.'1
apply eompraMn..w 1Ninlng
prognmt: to perform .uc- HEALTH INSURANCE • II ~ of town. I houoo
on thO 'lot, In of ropolro.
• •ofully In crodll, IIIIo, coiMc- •
wlh
llnollaiiOna
fn
ollll
llonl, l odmlniOirotlon. Tolta outpotlint ~~e&lt;•nto. 111011 ,.... Uvo fn - · ond.-tho olhor.
thll .,_tunhr to loin tho · ulallng - - _..., H 111,100. 114 441 02u .... ,
4p.m. .
profMIIIonal eta" II beneflcfal.
,.... qtilllly. Cal Life '
W• offef an attractl¥1 etytlng Accldont.1.-..aH1B1
o r - For •lo or ront !flldo on
startkta lllary I a com~ 757~71T.
slve ltenatft1 pacag.. For
..
,.,...
r O:tdloi~·=
OO!·~.::"'poi"r'o
.
•
•prompt conatwallon ,._..
Forry,
t321. or a.ooo. 3114-17118. Wanted
to
Do
cal. JOHN T, BRUNTOH
'
3017. .
t14-44&amp;-2715
llon-F~
All.....
..,_
- -*lbltulfl,
" doM. ......
.. - -·o.
OUallly
Sl
lb,.......
Ina
.. IIUfta
bl
ti-5:30D.m.
01'1111, .-c. 111111 11)1 ilk -,..
I
Box 411
ror
ronr
e-.,
2
orilloo
""'"
SIIYor Bridal Plaza
llrlotao. ......~
ElR ' Troo ....,,.._ Topping, 77lfii.2•.10447W111;
I
. GIHipoilo, Ott 4!14131
I
,,..
Equol Oppaltunily Employor II- t~mmlne, ohrubo
roiiiOVar. Pruning 11 dgn 114- 14ll711 wlh 'h21 II•
F.
.
441.a411.
poondo olluotod on Ul In
AVON I All Arou I Shl~oy
Point PI
il, I Ill d.,:»o~M,
Spul'l, ~75-1421~ I
G1 crp1 Portable lew 1111111 ..... bolltroom wtth ....... tub,
Don' houl lop ID o mil lOIII -lrlc, -..rotr, oqulpAVOtl • All arNO, can Mlrtlyn call,
. .·11..- to JOUI ~ pooof ltllchon bor, untl•pouw....,., 30+882-2645.
1157.
' '
ntne, roH - . _,., u·
...... ....... . .., oppofnlmonl,
Bt on TV m~~ny riMC1M1 for
~-475-7117,
corn..-lola. Hiring an acrn.
For cutlng Info f15-TII-7tn
SPECIAL PUIICHAIIE. Foctory
oxt. T 583.
lo yaur lot. UIIITIED OF·
FER. 3 hdl-o, 14K7VDon1 bolol behind bor tho ropld
Smoll- ...110
change In manufacturing techof f141.70 APR 11.211.
nology. RocaiYe 8jloclallzoof
1
tf'llnrng In rMChanlcal, h)'d- llaul • - ony IOBh. brulh1 !' C.H t.-721-404B,
rlulic and eteatrlcal co. .-nted IIIIM. Ao.-.pononto of faclory oqul_.r In rotao. Noaotlabia. Call ollyllrne 35 Lots &amp; Ac1'18ge
1111
Adun
lnduo1rlol 114~~21 .
mlln1NN1ncti Proar•m at. The llloa PlluiO'o Doy Caro Contor. Acroogo land Hill floed and
AduR Education Cantor, Til- SOlo, oHontobla, chlldaaro. 11-F Raybtlm Road. col oftor I:GO
PM, a3Dwn;384o.
County
- of funding
Wo e Lm •. • 5:30 p.m. ADII 2,._10.
hav• avariety
t1o1orw, oftor ochool: Drap-lno ~~ mlloo, At. 2,
oourcn o-blo lor ollglbli WJIC:at'M. 114 441 8224.
apptlc.anl•. oa.. bealn
;~i~.
Mairch 21, ca111..-...a7.....-to Will olo houN - l n g and 1724.
!
regia tar.
cloonlng In lluon
.,... ••, 304oo88Z.J733.
EARN MONEY Roadlnt looltal
$30 000/yr. lncomo patonlfll.
Rent~ Is
Dotillo. 11) IOHI7- Ed. Y·
Frn ancr&lt;JI
101ft.

:tbr.-

M•-· -

=-1.~45-1

·- _.,. =-··

·.•

t.o,..

-:m i:i:d

a:'i:t

..

:,::.,::;:;;;..=:=;----:--.--· , ....._

-•to

Sc-.

=

Eom f300 to 1100 por Roadtna 8oofto ot COl
116o47S'7140 bl. 8303.

21

'

BU1In111
Opponunlty

"""Si'4..:tm:r

-r-r:.· t'

41 Hou. . for Rent ·
3br
hotioo
H.l.,
fiNII4:
- n g _,... . , _
,

pluo • •
.-.r.at

F.ull·llml
"'·
R-pllonillDontal
hlr - ·•· omc.
In Columbia. Vory good:=s
tunlly tor ,..,rolocailon to Colu-.
•rta. Tl'tll II • non 8lnOklng
olflce.l14.1tf0-71101,
Hoonh Aldo'o, ......, lor
cMe In thl Wal ...on .,.._
pl._ ....... _.., p,_,.
nol Pool, UOO Ill 3100 lor turthorlntormlllon.

Job Hunllrlg? o aloMI? Wo
troln poGIIIa lor joloo • Auto

&amp;; I .

No pall

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBUBHING CO. 3br, LIIIMIN, II!'VJI 2 car
,.._,....... tho! ,.... tlo
bual11011 wnh paop1a ,.... k.-, lflllllfll, ClaiNpallo CitY . . - .
ond NOT to lind monoy 11.141,814-(.4~.
thi&lt;Migh tho mall untH ,.... hon ~. uotumlaho&amp;t, s bodln-lgalodlho olforfng.
- · DOpao• ollll , . , . , _ ,._
qulood. No polo. DriYo ..,
STRIKE IT RICH!
WITM 80UO STATE VIOEO 107 Locual Sl. 114 Nt-3111 or
IOWUHO. A SPARE Tllll ALL 114-13.

-·

.......

7110.

Wlh - · 114-4*

...
pa.k4hi-....
••••
..., bulv lunll

--

a:::

Bilby Bocla, 4 Dni- - ,
f41;
·4 Chon
............
Moplo Toblo,
I Hut-.;
2pc. Ll¥lng R_, - - Ani~
q -: ou,..n ""~ Drop Lllf
Tobia, 2 Cholro; ts&gt;c •. t - o
Dlnnr-.,
4
aontW:c.!
Cholro, In
""'-1111; Old DIM-'1 6 lmoll
n-. I~ IIIIa Jorrloho Ill. Pl.'
Pleeunt,WV.

0 Woolcl
0 .IIIII

-..
.
""'
f
• • ~ C.ortoo. llock, 213,

,.,...., ttao: · tm

::,171:.:.:"::'"..:4·~-..,......,...,'-:-......,..
Ono
bodroom tumlaho&amp;t apt,
wry c..., and nloe. adulta, no

Cf¥fo I .,..,

1110 -

-~-·:00

,.....,...,._1400.

..
~-

55

Ono• R~nfli.·m,.r••~..!JA Rw~':8'.,,
and . .~ pakl.
Dopoill roq'd. 11~341.

Building
Supplln

• f :.':i..... -.... CIIUtli
:=a.,:
,.....
a-_
OH COl 114-

Toro TOMihouoo Aloo!l--ro.
.,_"' 2br, ttoor, 11M oq.
1 112 bath, CAICH, dlohw01nor,
dlopooal,
2· paola,
wotor, • C,rbl~olnc udod. 81~
01 WI. 14-M ·78SO. ,
Unfimllhad 2br corpotod. No
polo. t~i'44whe, 114-2!141110•

-·0'
-·--·tam·-

n.

l141-1121 .
UTILITY
ILDG.
SPICtAL:
thiO' . ~
.... tROll HOliK ILDGI. 114IIM74L

pt•YI""'"t

......

-tm.

"-···-

R_,. lor : Cln:lo IIGtol.
Blntlo 1 or 2 pooplo, •17.10 pluo
lu, 111111, t7t • up,
cabloT.UH IIWS01.
R-lor
or month.
81artl1 II .f120/mo, Ollila
HoteL 1
~11
1110
4,.
Slooplng """"" wtth cooking.
Aloo 111111r apooo. Al--upo.
Call oftor 1:00 p.on., 3114-713.
a&amp;at,lla- WV.
·

ronl·-

s....-- for Rent

·1 , _ omc. 1or Nnl. f100 por
room. All utll- lnctudod. Call
Lofltjallo ,lllaN. 114-441-GZZ.
oultablo hlr
1 1,000 oq
bOcty ~. flrOgo ai-r
bUinooo. 11411111 a'""hl'l: por
·-, 304-

It·-•·

1m
1uto1t lloaaL - - lp
w
. ..-.11...a01u.

•

For LIIIII

FOR ~E:,..
__ ~
unlllrnlobod ~. OJII, 11-

11lolgo.•tar. Noli polo.
Dopoall 8i1d oolot• an , .
qulnd, 1$111 por month _ ,
lind au provldod).
por
rnontfi, - . prowtd•lft. Call

ond

!'il'Jj

11.4 ... t341,
a14 441 4421,
114-446-2321.
Lovoly
Untumia'l'

-arid
ator apt, In ·~
hlatorlo home, ••• I n,
llpolla,

- . llolrlgoootor,
UIHIIIio not InCluded,
no oalo, " - h l ,.,_..

t275'mo-

~

tAerctlandrse
HOUMhOid
GoodI
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Klclior
•

/

a

S3

--. -

Antiques

.::.:;_ __;.;;;;;;_::::.:.;;,.,...,.,..lua'.or ooll. Rlwrlno Anlfq-.
11
E Mal ltroo•
·
n
.,
·
Houro: II.T.W, 10:00 Lm. to 1:
p.m ,1 ~ndoy. t :00 to 1:00 p.m.
114 --21121.

'o:=

·!:~:.,;~ Pl~i~~d

.: . ..•

to - · 114-4*

cantfW. 20 ft.,
good oondhion.
~lltely ""lontaiNd. 1.14112 t7Sorlt.,_,_,
·
1110 -

':",!,.";,

=

...... wtth
drill
Pftllll with malor
aaw
tololo •w. lla
viol iiid
wor1i 1 - . Con Ill _ , ot
Molgo county -lor Coni•.
...... ... ·not lOIII ft.
-uolly. To I l l - u to • tfllon 10 tho ~ - ·
luyw
lor-....

•W.

ploioonl ' -

•m.llui-

d,__ '"·

*nrdat~Gand•lo•

10...,.
- - I..
wtlh ....
....., oroctl.
mi.- O&lt;Otlu1nlllo
lid. Qpon I A.M. lo I P.M. lion,
lhiU 1111. Call at444B-0322.

t

"·-·

r.1rm

:-.

.

t.~· ···',t'Jl

•

aa,oao

__ .,.._.,.,_
....-.,_a-,-· a-...,

, . - - CIYia st.

-:1

GT, roollgroy

IIllO,

orutoa eonlrol.

, _ M, 17,100. -I

114111" '

. . . ---llil.-

Btlpply.lt1111

___!. _....

_._1__..._

-

e.

---ploi
.
-VIC -, ;'

am

tro. 1100. . Fona.

•a•t

Chewy-.
IUrptuo.
,.,...
Cluldo,
11)101-111'-

bt.l-10111.
OOVIRNIIINT IIIZID Ylldd11
,.,. 1100. For*. •• Dl dll

___ (1,_....

Col · - ·

Chewy-.

........

llf.l-10111.
.........:1. . . . . . . . . . .~~.
•••
- · - ...... Lilodotl.
T.,._,.,,ll4-44t-1114.

Devlo
01 ~~ CrMk Rd. ....,.. . . .
ond doll. . •· 114-

=:r.'""'

t~-r~=
Jaa' u.OH 1.....,.7...._

--= -.-. ....
"""" G. lloodaaecl1 til. t, •
t~

wv• ......,.

Flooring.

,.
•

&lt;

i

etDMo . , . , , . . _
Murphy II lurid iniD -.g I

BARNEY

cameo rOll on a FYI blled

MAW II TH'

PARSON'S WIFE IS
COMIN' oveR
TH' RID6E!!

THANKY FER
WARNIN' ME,

HONEYPOT

-lola.

--

..,
"""It,. "'"k • ·-· - .''
---~
Plumbing •
Heating

.Archer

2111 Alwll-. . . The
enduring lolk trto gltllerllo
cetobral8 1llelr . , . _ ,
wtfl Nltdfltanl of :11 Ill Cl
like If I Hid a H - _,
BIDwln' 1n lite Wind. (R)

marl&lt;etplace
45Vehlde
41"-

''

37Moray

•

.Morality

43Greek

.

'

'

.

.

.

.,· ~ ~

prove !MY can camp1111 will
men.r;l
' 11:00 (J) 7110 Club Willi ....
Rlt.:.:: Mud And

.

31-12

:

f1111111 Rllllnl Fram Ai•llltr~. ·

A:IYDLBAA:IR

CA(T)

•,.....
e0

.

.

34AIIaa

Nathu. . Now Counliy
mullc'l hottat IIMI are
tuturldhe.
'
MOVII: Polt Of Footy
'"*-11:00)

•1heeSugarbekare
Ill DDeonlltiiiiiRIIII•• WI •r n
Ht OU11o

by IInce Beattie

.

fellow

(1:501

. SNAFUe

'

32Nice

s.r.o.

. (!) Lou ......

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

'

Lowe

••m ,_,...,. Af111..,.•
r

.1

· IILONGFELLOW

NlotiN1t Mlc:lllel
. . . jCIIJ

hit~

One letter .,.,or anather. In this sample A is used
for the lhree L'1, X for the two O's, Etc. Sin&amp;le letters,
~the re.t1r and fcnnaUon of the WOlds are all
hlnta. Eedldaythlnde lettenaredllfmnt. ·

alounlle .......

10 -

i'l::ar::rz......

dint- · - ... ,., fDjtrolnlng
EARN IIONIY -lng

Sha

llghll Ilia way beCk frOm 1lle
-~~~ of death.
C
@ Lally ICing u..t

a

_7
...
......-tor,_ .........
-,-yo- -

e
•

~~-~'"'"' i
82

·THAT 61VES ME
TIME TO SLIP ON
A FRASH APERN

comecly. (R) ~
(1]1 Atten Ndon

0 Mna Tlnta Wu P I

~--

••

01 The IIIIJidl Ita&amp; 81 I'
NIC . . - , N111111 At The

Motldl' NWtt Movie (2:110)

or lllldaa d
V..,.OWI piMII or ~

al 1111* a

ai Crook 6 CheH .
8:00 e (I) Qt MOVIE: 'Tile Cna

•
• • Cll
"ritaP8fl
·"
..,...,,
Pllce,
2' AIC

nhnlill Olk or r1

Wll •

of youth center fundi.

HoutiiOn, rx m

.

-:J: .,,, .
::'f.- and oorvlco.

_ . . , ....

~-oH

Supemallonafa, From

Real Estate

2 bodn10m INtlor tar~
;g;r."
(lolal lor .....

/

information about Ken'a

~,OO)Q
(j)
. . . .. . . .

Mechanic•,
Accountlng/C oft!pUIIng

Spoclollala, ca_,t~r~, C...
,.,..ologfola, Eloctr1clano, Food
sorvlce wort&lt;oro, ~onlao
Tochnlclono, w~Molnl-nco
---.
Akloo.
,..,.1!111111.
SeefiUrilland W11d1rt . .......,
,., now lor c.._. Lllalmlng
Mon:h 20, 1110. Call T~ntr
- - Adu~
Contor 11 f.
~ nrloty of fur&gt;.

10 60-I(X)L.,

..,.,... 111011 •'

'

flun---

aAI-A'\I\1, PICI&lt;LE5AND
~etVoMI..LON WHIP.

AND 'TI-leY \\ONDER
WHY r HATE1060

Aon'l TV ltMol. 1•u111111na ••

11414.
flol"'7 or oololo laol *Ming.

72 Truck• tor Slle

- . 1 112 batho, 3311/m0.
Voncffng flouta, l.oool. ... tloop. roq'd. 114-441o4222.
l r o l - . High lrofllc location.
... choop, 'qulok. , __ 1Wo
ba .......
2 llcrioy
·~·
llelrigolalor
ond liON.
IIIHII3.
John
Hunnol, 111 1112oondlllon.
3027.

MASHEiD~

•DDllanoa ..,.,..._ wv
114-1'N4311 Ohio 114-4*

--........

~lrne -

SEe M&lt;a E!ATti"'C!i' MY
FA'-ORirtO#.NDWICH ...

••

171421111.
In -

,.......

AT LWN0-4 ~ 'tt:ll.iLL.

. polntlna. lor lroo ... ' •
... Copt. .... _
'·
114 441 1104 or 104- •

-

tinlole

,.....,

lor a biology exam and
ICorft en ~. C
1111 e111 crty\tz teak•

moo.

==--~

2011 .Ill · - -

~~og~n

01

Willie finally - · to atudy

1141·-··
11171DCP, PI, auto, /1/C, AM-I'II

Fann Equlplllefit

Dille ,_. Cot; f.._ P11d1

,,30 • w e

- · 4 oYf,, .......
oondMion, .,..

dMI - · -

h

DOWN
1 Illinois birth·
place oiW.J . .
Bryan
2 Fruit
3 Trite
4 Aust. bird
5 Cilizen
Kane's sled
8 - ol
Damocles
7 Chance
28 Droop
38 Oscar
11 Zsa Zsa's 8 Chopper 27 Pedro's
or Tony
-.ter
9 Pierre's sea uncle
· 39 Catchall 18 Bobble 10 Time to
28- Annie ol ' abbr.
18 A Blanc
remember
"Oklahoma· 40 Singing
19 Place · 17 Clothes
29 One place
syHable
lor
size (abbr.)
lor Babes · 41 Make •
a table
20 Yugoslav 31 Regret .
music
24 Haul
21 Anger
33 Tropical
without
211reland
22 Racket
lizard
words
28 See 1
23 Terminus 34 Over
42 "Rocks"
across 24 Told
35 ''M.A.S.H." 44 Eur.
H Tendency tall tales
.locale
·country
30Ranking
officer's
assistant
31 Actor

M0¥11!: 0.1 . . . . . . . .

(1 :00)
1:116 ()) MOVIE; In The The Night (2:151

lp.rn.

,. ~;1lpp\1P"

ACROSS
1 Solemn
8 Debase
11 Texas
landmark
12 Floor
p()lillher
13 Charles
Schulz
characler
14 Muaic
form

• Cltutclt 8lrHt llalllll

Cuiol-

CASH IUIINEU. 1-.7.... Ronl or lole: Euroloa 3 or 4"'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

. llocly Polillc

~ 2
COUnty Sonlor Cantor, lo• 7ft, I&lt;IW- ,.,._ ftltllltl!l-.
-oy,
4&amp;711. 114-112- ~t ft. ~D2111 .
--::-::-=I
.- ....o.n.WIIPicw-. ln1lrlor,
ojlonool 1:00, Mollh 20. .....

CROSSWORD

HCUritY firm and local
o1clt-lttda ... blamed tor
break-tnt. (R) Stereo. C
0 PtlnwNaaa
OM.a...,, ... .,.The

...

oh ''"" ......
_..... Jill ......
""'"". to4
-·
301-17MIII
- ·.
2121. IHI w.rdi 11 Ut 4110.
Faith loolali 11t Ill •17, Mill

et.ebelngthesame,playlngupacleto • ·
the queen at the third trlek would sue- .
ceed In making three no-trump when- .
ever East beld the king of spades and
two other apades.

'

;.~~':.~~A

P1ANOCAR&amp;

"""""' f!lltnO tUIIf!loo -

·=
.
.
.
.
=· r• ..I': 61
llorolt
"";

-t.

1111 e111 The Malor gets I

.

.K4
U&amp;U

-t I . . . . , . . _

That's a~ percent play, and a much
better shot than hoping the spade king
will be witb East or the jack of spades
wiD drop doubleton. BUt mind you, the
c:orrect play Is dietated by the level of

jazz pianist Nat King Cole
who found tame as a ·~~nger
with hie unique 1ty1e. (1 :001

·!·'/ -

.98

tile belrt king. lie ttllould look the contract. Suppose South was as ·
(111' tbe belt....;,.... of cetU.C the 1.deli- bigb u · three no-trufllp. Boca- be.
tloaal ae kd lrldl;. 'l'ltat - ' d be in now would need three more tricks, be
the elub 111it. By I.U.C up to the Q-J -ld have lo go after spades aad
of elul• twic.-e, declarer will make his . hope 'that he would be able 1o aet ap
contract whenever at least one of the the spades aad also a club trlek before.
two hip club honon is held by
West could run his hearts. Everytblag

01 Nlttule (1 ;30)
.
(!) The UniOfJeltabll Mitt
ICing Cole Thla special
chronicles the lite otlhe lata

SP.IVICP'&gt;

EAST

, .KJ5
.JI0763

W -

thugs. (R) Q
m c;ttiMrll Magic: 1maaee

·'

I WEST

SGutla botched the hand nicely. Since 1-·-----------------~
~rt~.
lle 11M lilt ~ Ill the bag alter

w~e

Cllurch,

OrMMIJ:;

GNiglltc-t

MICGyver muat match
····Cil~
with a band ollntemational

Dig lrooo, Whho Pfno ond Nor..,
ston-. You c11g or t .._
ThOinoo Troo Farm .., _ 11om
For S.lo: , Uood , . , _..
Aud-lc _,1111 - h , II·
oollont corootkion ond nrloly of
audionlotrlo oqulpmMI, good
oondlllon. Send wrt1ten mqulrtea to Mllcolm
W-•1111 Co~, 412 VI
Pllta,OIIflpollo,umo4Mit:

•C£..._., .......,
11
lariA'Iir''
'""' c
Oero..tltw

• • 111111111:- Tonlfit

Anaheim, CA (T)

11" Kaunlly Air Tmtl ll'llfl&lt;l
Clooli, FllftY iEGuiDPiol. wttfl at
IDD
11-. 11~ fDr j

-~--

,_,Feud

()) NCAA Paeulea

Cll Mlcller 111ompaan'• 011
Raed Gnind Prix From ·

triltllr.
AC, •.~
- " ....
lflllon.
I:OW:OO.· - · l i l - - 3 , '

'•.MerchandiM

*'

• we

•l!!fl!1lnll,
a. ••••
,.,_,

t K72

•su

.Kl0872
fiat a difference bet- needing ·: • A9
SOOTH
.
lrldl; and needinl til~ trkts! '
Hll~atb played low from dummy on the .
+AQU
. • Q92
lead. Eat won the klq and re. t AQ5
tuned a heart. Declarer _. In dum+QJS
my and lmmedlltely at~ the
IIDLg 1IIlii in the combilted hands by
Vulnerable: Neither
JeadiJt&amp; a apacle 1o !be queen. West won
Dealer: South
Ute kinl aad played a heart, settinl up ·
W..t · Norlb Eall
1111 suit. Now declarer tried the ace of . Sorollo
1padel, bOllia&amp; tile jack ~d faD. No
I NT ~ AIIpau
Adlluek. lbe deleaden now 111111 two
..... trleb. two dub trieD and t1tree .
Opening lead: 'I 6

yr.,. CnlcQtt
.,...... too hard In IN hunt
tor a cat buralar. S..O.
• IIMtOf'lldaaCn
G Abboa Arid.Cutlla
1:01 ()) ...IIM'IOIII

7:3De&lt;ll

•.us

t .Jl09 '

7:31 ()) ...... , And loll
1:00 (J) MCME: Footy OW. (2:00)
My ,._.,..
Micllael and Joey pi8n a lid
trip and a aurprtae party far
Nicole. C

110 Toyoll llolor - · r.mfloo, $11,100.114
on Ifill.IU
- Uti.
•- •
dillon.

54 Mlscellaneo·ua

::-;:

PA~TY.

ALLEY OOP

....,.. •. vary

polnllngo, ~·- or aniiN - ·
call colloct' 3044ZW271, or
304423-1884.

011.

TtlI IC.ONOIVIY - ... .,;
I'ONALP muMp JUST
IP#VITft&gt; Mf .TO A

s.y.o.r.

.-.-rna.w,_,T¥ont.PIJPI,Hirl

I

'S'M WO(l~lfP AJOUT

a.u.H

NORTH

.1076 3

A modest
goal

~-~01

t17111ocfgo ...... Ill 1121.....

Rocllnor I&lt;ICkor, f111. 114-1112·
1111 .

·

NcwaHour

1m-Hot1C.,--

ZenHh color COhUII T.V., 1225.

BJUXII

m &lt;!l ....,... LeNw

Motor HOIIIII

·TobiH
- fl!lcolf
1211
10lllllt
'"'·
teo ondfrom
up
to 1121. Hldl 1 tlld1 tatO to
IHI. Roclnoro $221 to fl7l.
Lornpo Ul lo f111. ftOI ond up to 1415. Wood
labia w-t chlfll f2l8 to $711.
Doolto f14B up lo
IAOO I up. bunk bedl ODIUP.IIte
wlh mattrtll 1215 ond up IO
$311. _ , bodo tno - - • boir oprl111f1 lull or twin
f!l, flnn .... ariif Ql. - tm • up, 19no .,..,. 4
0un c a '·
•••
10
gun,
-.. • tn: ll4ld 1noIll.
0uaon stzxo m • king .....,.
tiO. Good Mledkwl of tildiOOII\
IUIIM.
Mltll
Dllllnlll,
h

• • eiJiCwoMitAII*

Cempel'l • ·

ru

rna

~e:~c
0

lotllp.OI.

79

s.,.,Jd.floor -Flalrock, 304-i71o4041.
8hoo&gt;honl

51

c...-

Sol

(I) PM II 1

(I) a.:auca••

. $1.B00.114-4* •

. . .. lllouahl lor tructo.
_,, fill f300, fH47N113 ~~

-a.

,.q'd. l111 .. 4t21

I

.

Auto Pan• •

711

AC riding IIWII - r - . . : ,HP, 42
lnoh cUt. I.,.,. ......
good
112-2401.
.nape. $100. 114-1714301; .
COUntry Mobflo Home Pllrk, Cltb wator ........_ Fila
A- 33, · North ' of Ponwroy. , anr bobY bod. $85. u...r .-.
Lolli, rontalo, paota, Mloo. can . at4· IIIN320.,Donna
114 - ••n

...,

=zll'..... -~

,lXPfr

0

cottf1WII'II11o. . 7:111p.01.

· -..... 1111.

Roofi'IS

~"

=-

Hangln' tn

1:31 ()) Andy Oltlft1lt
7:00 IJIIciti'8CIIow I MILKing

Ioro """"' w.oao. c.c IOW?I1701 ol• I:GO I'll or ,_..

,__.,...::;:.::.;:~-:-:~

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lvlnlude

ICIAM Lm ANSW11S
••,
Hoofed- C1w1e - Fome- Liquor- CHOICE
Grandpa soothed the crying lad by saying "Happiness
is not an automatic response, but a c:oniciciJa CHOICE" :

with lite luck of tfMI driW.

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Cllonflo ,PI:: ... f1,0Gti ·:: w111t 111 ... lvlnrudo OUI
.._.. llo4• 8ird T1Rd1ma 1 j
fiiO; For or Trotlo. 114-'

Furnished

45

48

fiord-

Comp,.,. ,.,., chodle qUOII&lt;I
by lilflnv In tho mlalng - d •
you d...,olop lrOno Slap No. 3. below,

..

combine tnterllilnment trivia

Clll - - p JNOd
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like to quote, salcl: 'No
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wise by - . '
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are known lor their lu-'oul

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wtthfn clly dlalricl. 114- . monlh. 114-1112-fiiM.

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4100.doyo 1711-3411 or 171H1tt

POSITION
ANNOUNCEIIEHT
Th•
Unlvar~~lty
of Rio Grande
rmnoune .. 1 n opening tor the
Chair or 1h• GradUate Eclueatlon
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oed ollll ondM In ,.... Ylr·
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Thunderstonns cause flooding, evacuations

EMS has 10 weekend calls

Br V•lled " ' - 18tenailoMI
Thunderstorms across much of
the nation Monday caulll!d flood·
illllthatforcedevacuallonslnthe
nation's midsection and closed
roads In the Southwest, while the ·
mercury soared to springllke
temperatures along the Atlantic
Coast.
.
The National Weather Service
Issued II flash flood watch for the
northern half of Illinois Mouday
as a line of thunderstorms swept
across the. state. Lltchfteld, Ill.,
repOrted 52 mph winds but no
damage or Injuries, and the .
temperature warmed to 64 degrees In Chicago.
More than 200 people were
evacuated from their homes

Ten calls for help were ~a­
wered over the weekeud by units
of the Meigs County Emqency
Medical Services. Four of the
calls were on Saturday and six on
Sunday.
.
At 2: 11 p.m. Saturday, Salem
Township Fire Department was
called to a structure fire at the
Charll!l Jonea residence on
Route 325.
Pomeroy , ·Fire Department
was called to a brush fire at the
Phillip Smith tesldence.on·Route
7 at 3:54 p.m.
·
Racine transported Joyce
Ward from Tanners Run Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
8: 24p.m .
Chester Fire Department was
called to a structure ·fire on
Skinner Run Road at 1:08 p.m.
Sunday at 1:36 a.m., Pomeroy

r

f.;firr-;"A;.:n:ONA=L WEA'IHIR

along the Vermillion River In
east-central Illinois Sunday amid
high waters chumed by heavy
ralnsandthesprlng·llkeweather
front.
Mobile homes floated ott their
moorings and some residents
were threatened with arrest
before agreeing to leave their
homes along the north forkofthe
river. Vermillion County sheriff's deputies said.
A shelter was set up at a nearby
grade school to care for those
flooded out near the villages of
Alvin and Bismarck, offtclals
said.
The weather service, mean·
while, Issued a dense fog advl·
TO 7AM EST

,_,,_eo

WEATHER MAP - Showers and heavy lhuuderslonns will
stretch from the Easter.n Great Lake81nto Eastern Texaaaa a cold
front slowly actvaacea Into llle Mlulallppl River Valley. lOgb
pressure and very warm ·lemperatUI'ell wiD persist over 'tile
Soulileast while the Southwest will experience mUd temperatures
and fair sides. AJi upper level trough over the Northern and Central
'
Rockies will continue to prod11ce a mixture of snow flurries.

------Weather----~
Soalil Ceatral Oblo
Partly cloudy Monday night,
with a low between 55 and 60.
Variable cloodlness Tuesday,
with a chance of showers and
thuuderstorms and highs near 80.
Chance of rain Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecut
Wednesdar lhrourll Frldar
A chance of showers Wednes-

day and Thursday, with fair
weather on Fridi\Y. Highs will be
In the 70s Wednesday, ranging
from 55 to 65 Thursday and from
45 to 55 Friday. Overnight low~
will be between 45 and 55
Wednesday morning, In the 40s
early Thursday and In the the 30s
Frldi\Y morning.

sory .for northern and central
parts of Wlsconslll, where vlslbll·
lty was l'educed to near llll!ro. The
flash flood watch In effect for
northern 1111,11ols alio extended to
southern Wisconsin.
A line of heavy tlluuderstorms
that brought torrential.. rain· to
North Texas Suuday and led to at
least one death.contlnued Mon. .
'day Paul Cooley 13 drowned .
Sunday night afte~ railing Into a
rain-swollen creek In the Denton
County suburb of Trophy Club. ·
A vigorous upper-level storm
system movlq eastward from
New Mexico and clashing with
very molllt unstable air mass
produced storms Monday In
. Oklahoma. Scattered thunder·
storms with very hea"vy rain
covered the northwest third of
Arkansas.
High pressure remained
strong over the South Monday."
extending the fatr and warm ·
weather that generated record
weekend temperatures. Temper·
atures early Mouday ranged
from 62 In Charleston, S.C., to 63
In Atlanta and Knoxville, Tenn.,
60 In Jacksonville, Fla., and 7lln
Miami.
.
Much of New England got an
early taste of ' spring, with
temperatures soaring Into the 60s
near Boston over the. weekend
and Into the 50s · over most
northern sections. .Rain was
expected to make Its way across
the region Monday;
Showers and PIII'Cby fog were
reported In various areas
throughout Pennsylvania, West
VIrginia, Maryland and southern
New Jersey ear.ty Monday. Lows ·
ranged from the.40s to the upper
50s throughout.the Middle Atlantic states.
In the West, scattered showers
fell over most of northern and
central California as the weekend came to an end. Several

~

•

-

•

~

thunderatorms boiled up over the
Central Valley from Marysville
to Stockton. Sierra ski resorts
reported 18 lnchl!l of new snow
from a storm that snarled traffic
over the Sierra Nevada ranae tqr
the third day In a rov;, cloalng
Interatate 80 Intermittently.
Skll!l were partly cloudy. over
macb of Southern Callfomta. A
few showers sprinkled tbemouutalns, and some snow fell above
4,000 feet. Gusty winds up to 40
mph were reported In the moun·
talns and deserts.

Stocks ,.
a

Dai(J IIYck prlcl!l
18:18 a.m.)
Bryce !IDd Mark Smith
of Bluat, Eilts A Loewl

&lt;"-of

Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ........... ;........ . , .......... .41'4
Ashland Oil ........................35'4
Bob Evans ........................ , .12~
Charmlni Shoppes ... , ........... 9~
City Holding Co .......... ......... 13
Fei1eral Mogul. ........... .. ...... 17~
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... , .........35%
Heck's .... :............................ NA
Key Centurion .................... 13~
Lands' End ......................... 18~
Limited Inc......................... 39~
Multimedia Inc.................... 78
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers :............... 15~
Shoney's Inc............. , ......... 12~
Star Bank ........................... 18~
Wendy's Int'l , ...................... 4\i,
Worthington Ind .. ............ , ... 20~

·Seeks divorce

Licenses issued

Timothy Patrick Gillilan, Mid·
dleport, has · ·filed In Meigs
Common Pleas Court for a
divorce from Luanne Gillilan,
Middleport.
A divorce has been grantee! to
Marlsa Ann Gray against Ml·
chael Steph,en Gray.
·

:\.

~·- r

Marriage licenses have been •
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to :_
Bobby Gene Swlaer Jr., 27, and ··
Debra Ann St. Clair, 20, both of ::
Reedsville; . and Leonard Ed-', ,
ward Dalley Jr., 30, and Jennie ·
Sue Burke. 25, both of Reedsville. :

•

DOMINO'S

PIZZA ·
DEUYEIS .

FIEL

CALL
992-2124

Umtt ... O R ~yA,.. ,

r~iiiiiiiijoii-i--,.ra.v&amp;-al•

Hospa"tal neW..
"""'

I

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions_; Robert
,
Smith, Syr11.cuse.
Saturday discharges - Arthur
Roush.
Sunday admissions - None.
Sunday discharges -None.

Fire Department responded to a ~
tree nre at the PhilliP Smith ~
re~ldellce 011 Route 7.
t
Middleport at 1: 51 a .m. was ;'
called to North Secoud Ave. for .,
Ersel Blevins whO refused ·~
treatment.
•
Rlltland Fire Department was ,.
called to a camper trailer fire on ·:
Sl¥!ck Road at 7:02p.m. Owner o( ~:
the trailer was James Shuler.
:.
Middleport was called to Park •.
St for Raymond Little at 10: 50 ,.;
a.~: Little was taken to Veterans :
Memorial Hospital.
:
Syracuse went to Bentz Road at 8: 20 p.m. for Michael Bentz ·;.
who will taken to Holzer Medl.c al ;.
Center.
•!
·Racine at 9: 31p.m. treated but ~
did not transport Melinda Par· "
. · ·!
sons, Portland Road.
•

Ulel 16" I !Ia I'IIU

I

PlUS •-16 OZ. SOfJI

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sa••
Ph••

PIPPIIOM PillA PIAST

Soc..,.

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.

'

Ohio Lottery

goihg ·b ack
to· Oakland ·

Daily Nuinbe..
301
Pick-4

Page4

•
.· Vol.40, No.214
Copyrightod 1890

·

·

·

Middleport CounCil . vetoes dumping proposal

(At hens ' G allla - Hocklng By CIIARLE!'IE H9EFLICH
. Sentinel News Staff
.
Jackson · Melgs-VInton), Solid
· V~o votes on Pl&gt;,th 'a ~solution
Waste Management District
restricting where jocal trash
which places restrictions on
·haulers can : fllsi?Ose. .of solid
where lndepende"t haulers can
. · w-.,te · th~tY c~lle~t and sur- dispose of trash.
charges on landfill dumping fees
AI the S{lme time Middleport
adoplied by the AGHJMV Solid
Council members voted to veto
Wastt Management District
the dumping lee sur~harge which
· were approved l;ty ullalllmol!s · would· go Into the multi-county
vote of_ 1\llddleport VIllage Couri·
Solld Wa~te Management Disell at a meeting Mopday 11lght.
trict operation raising slgnlfl·
, "Opppses strongl:y," were the
~;~ ntly the charge which haulers
words .of Council in a resolution
must pay to dump at the
passed 'at last night's meeting
proposed new district landfill.
regarding the resolutiqn adopted
Action to exercise Its veto
March .8 by.: the AGHJMV
pQwer
on b9 th. the
and,
,.

the dumping location restriction
was taken ;~fter. lt was IK)Inted out
that option might not be availa·
ble long.
Rep. Mary Ab~l (D·Athens)
has Introduced a legislative bill
which, as explained by Councilman Paul Gerard, the village's
. representative on the district
· board, would take away local
control. ·
Tbe consensus oJ Council was
that some local control is essential and that the village' will do
whatever needs to be done to
retain some control rather than
relinquish It all to the Solid Waste

__
--------~·~·"~--~-~--~-~--~--~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~dJ

"

•

'

•

.Grace Anderson

Avril reportedly 'leaves Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
(UPI) - Ousted military dicta·
tor Gen. Prosper AvrU and Ills
famUy left HaiU early Monday
aboard a U.S. mllltary jet and
arrived in Florida, U.S: officials ·
said.
Opposition leaders announced
a woman Supreme Court justice
had been chosen as the country's
new Interim presldent,bu_t said
she had to go Into hiding ..amid
fears of a possible coup attempt.
U.S. Embassy spokeswoman
Susay Clyde said "there was a
request made" for U.S. help In
taking Avril out of the country
but would not say who made the
request.
"He left the country this
morning at about 6:20 on a U.S.
Air Force C-141," she said.
Clyde said U.S. Ambassador to
Haiti Alvin Adams met with
Avril at the International airport
In Port-au-Prince before the
plane left.
Avril's wife, Marle-Ange, his
daughter Carine, his son Philippe
and a servant also were aboard ·
the Hercules aircraft.
In Washlngton, State Depart.
ment spokesman Dave Denny
co,llflrmed AvrU had landed at
Homestead Air Force Base In
Florida but Denny would not say
where Avril would go from there.
Radio reports from Haiti said
Ertha · I'ascal-Troulllot, a Supreme Court justice, had been
named the country's new Interim

president under a plan caiHng for
her to organize elections. .
Opposition leaders announced
Pascai-Troulllot accepted the
position Sunday night, then Immediately went Into hiding amid
rumors of a planned coup at·
tempt. They said they hoped she
would be sworn In later Monday.
The middle-aged judge from
the northern city of Gonalves has
written variOI!S legal articles and
has a reputation for being nonpolitical.
Ear Her, opposition leaders
struggled to find a qualified
candidate wiiUng to be Interim
.president, threatening the lm·
poverlshed Caribbean nation's
chances tor quick transition to a
civilian government.
Supreme Court Vice President
Gabriel Volcy, the first choice of
the 12-party opposition Unity
Assembly, refused Sunday to
accept the Interim presidency,
and some opposition leaders said
he appeared fearful of the
mllitary, which bas never submitted to civilian rule.

Case dismiSsed

THE WINNERS- John Riebel, Meigs County

·-

coordlaa,tor of lbe Meigs ,c ounty program for
talented and gifted students, P,resenled awards to
the winners of Monday night's annual Meigs
County Spelllnl Bee. From left .to right are top
speller Freddie M.tson, an eighth grader from

.·. H~reretiring,~~~~gjobs,or · 60 days to reinvest your_pension funds in
recemng an earlr d1stnbuttort of your a BANK ONE Pension Protector IRA .
pens!on,you can mvest in a high-yield or they're automatically considered
Pensm Protector IRA at ·
'
taxable income.
BANK ONE and keep
One mote thing. Every
your funds tax-deferred
Pension Protector IRA
until )'011 withdraw them
oomes with something
at retirement.
else extra. ;.a qualified
The interest you earn
BANK ONE customer ser·
really adds up fast and
viee representative who
remember-1t's .only ta~·
can answer all your ques· .
alie When }UU Withdraw lt.
tions about this important
Don't wait to take
financial decision.
· advantage of this special
Stop by and see us
rate ... because Federal
today about a Pension
.regulations give yOO only
Protector IRA.

.

pr~pose

•
---

Newark: Wend! R. Bear, 17,
Nashport, In a two-car collision
on a Newark street.

''

WAQt

BANCCIIIEBIOKI!IAGE
Brlln..._, 1-800·874•1536
'

••

Eaton: Michael E. Beal, 18,
Versailles, In a one-car accident
on Ohio 121 In Darke County.
North Olmsted: Barry Howell,
21, SbeHield, when a car
slammed Into ·a group of four
pedestrians walldn&amp; on a North
Olmsted ·street.

. ·Local news briefs·~

r

\. (

IMNK ONE. ATHENS. NAIA PA/fTOI' THI! CAlliNG llrAM
Athena, Ohio
'I

'

· Deputie$ probe B &amp; E

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care. ·

III'MI•r

High; Chester fourth grader eighth · grade, Eastern; Brandi
By NANCY YOACHAM
Kellle Bailey; Riverview sixt h Reeves , .s ixt h grade. Ches ter ;
Sentinel News.,staff
grader
Crystal Morris; Tuppers Misty Francis. sixth grade, Rl·
·
Southern Ju'nlor High eighth
Plains
, fifth grader She.r ry verview; Traci Heines, fifth
grader Freddie Matson correctly
Burke; Meigs Junior High eighth grade. Tuppers Plains; Jennifer
spelled the words genetic and
grader Be~ky Williams; Brad- Carman, eighth gtade. Meigs ;
gentlest to win the Meigs County
bury slxtn grader Chris Chap· April Halley. sixth grade, Brad·
Spelling Bee held Monday nlgllt
man; Harronsvllle fifth grader bury; Matthew Durham, fifth
at Southern High School In
Brian .Lee Young; Middleport · . grade, Ha rrisonville; DaVid
Racine.
Grimm, fourth grade. Mlddl!'·
Runner-up in the annual bee fourth grader Rachel Ashley;
Pomergy fifth grader Tara
port; Jessica McElroy, fifth
was Syracuse Elementary fourth
Grueser; Rutland sixth grader . grade, Pomeroy; Phyllis Clark,
grader Evan Struble.
Vanessa Harless; Salem Center Sixth grade, Rutland; Amy CieBoth Matson and Struble reslxth
grader Bryan Colwell;
land, fifth grade, Salem Center;
ceived trophies and are now
grader
Mlnday
Rana Justis. sixth grade, SalisSalisbury
sixth
eligible to compete In the Tri· :
Patterson; Letart Falls f.lfth .· bury; Sandra Morris, eighth
State Spelling Bee on the campus
·of Marshall University In Hun- grader Vanessa Sh11ter; Por· grade, Southern: Kimberly
tland sixth grader Denise Roush;
Roush. fifth grade, Letart Falls;
.... Ungton, W.Va.-· Matson also reand Racine fifth grader Jesse Jamie Rizer, sixth grade, Por- .
ceived a traveling plaque which
Maynard.
·
tland; Larry Wlllls, fifth grade.
will be displayed at Southern
Alternat!'s from the various. Racine; and Jennifer Lawrence.
Junior High for the next year.
schoolswereAmandaBarrlnger. sixth gr-ade.
Syracuse.
·
Over recent weeks, the sevenI,
.
teen elementary and juniot high
schools throughout Mejgs County's three school districts nave
conducted !heir own spelling
bees, resulting In one champion
and one alternate from each
school. Champions from each
recession," Kellner said. " What
WASHINGTON !UPI) room In the school-level bees
makes It eve11 more alarming are
Another month of sluggish autoreceived a certificate of merit • as .motive s~les caused retail sales
the markets have talked about
did each school champion. The
the need for tighter market s •
10 fall bY 0.9 percent In February
school champions competed In
higher Interest rates.
to $146.5 billion, the Commerce
last night's cqunty-wldecompeti·
"This . report suggests the reDepartment reported Tuesday.
lion at Southern High. ·
cipe
for continued economic
The decline was the biggest
Pronouncer for the Meigs
growth
Is lower Interest rates,"
since a drop of i .3 percen 1 In
he
said.
October.
But Rober,! Dederick. chief
Irwin Kellner, chief economist
Judges for the event were Superfor Manufacturers Hanover ·In economist for Northern Trust In
lntendentDanApUng,ofEastern
New York, said the 0.9 percent Chicago, was much more
decline "shows an underlying optlmltlc.
"It's a strong report," Deder·
weakness In the economy that
ick
said. "There doesn't seem to
should not be Ignored."
lntendent of Schools John Riebel.
be
any
sign that the consumer
If the 6 percent drop · In
Meigs County School Supervisors
believes
there Is going to be a
automotive sales - the biggest
Bill Buckley and John Costanzo
and consequently that
recession,
were also Instrumental In organ· since a 26.5 plunge In January
reduces
the
risks there will be a
1987 - were not figured In, total
.!zing the annual spelling bee. I
•
recession."
.
sales of all other goods to
.In addition to Matson and
Auto dealers have been hard
consumers would have Increased
Struble from Southern Junior
hit with sluggish sales over the
by
only
0.5
percent
In
February,
' High and Syracuse, respectively,
past several months, and they
participating In last night's bee officials said.
turned to rebates and other
were .eighth grader, Charlene . · "It's a sign that we are are 'discounts to clear their lots In
teetering on the edge of a
Dalley, from Eastern Junior
December and January.

Retail sales off 0.9
percent in February

. .egts at1on ~:::~~tc:t~l~t.;E~~:;:

a

I

BANKEONE.

SUIII'Ila)'

. . ean

e

• ALLEDONIA, Ohio jUPI) lng to natural gas and l,ow sulfur
will never be utilized,"
:rhe president of the Ohio Valley coal, regardless of the cost."
Murray said the coal produc·
,Coal Co. s.ays the future of his
. Murray, 50, former president · lng regions of Ohlowlll not be the
mine and other eastern and of North American Coal fol· only areas of the state to pay for
southeastern Ohio mines would lowed hl~fatherlntoeaster~Ohlo the proposed changes.
·
be In Jeopardy under the pro- · coal mines when the Industry
"It Is tragic that, a$ a result of
po,sed Clean Air "-ct.
dominated employment In the this Ill-conceived proposed com·
'The w~.lfare of the peopll' in area, but only
few mines promise legislation, electric
our state, .. Robert Murray said remain. Murray's Ohio Valley
rateswlllbelncreasedl7percent
Monday, simply was ~or a Co&lt;!l 9o, In Alledonia Is l~ated to 39 percent for Ohio hoconcern of the people Involved In .aboul 15 miles southwest of' meowners and Industrial custo·
thes,e t Cl;~an Air Act I Wheeling, W.Va.
mers," Murray said.
negotiations.
Combined with the massive
"These Increased electric
Murray. whose mine employs losses In the steel Injury, few
costs will very adversely affect
400, criticized the Bush admlnls· high-paying Industrial job opporall households, and particularly
!ration and Sens. John Chafee, tunltles remain In the region, but
those persons on fixed Incomes,
R-R.r.. Max Baucus, . D-Mont. : Sen. Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., Is , and wll) eliminate many bpslDavld Durenberger, . R:.Minn., trying top attach an amendment · nesses and jobs In Ohio and In the
and Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., for that would provide special unem·
Ohio Valley, " he said
molding legislation Murray be- ployment benefits for miners
"At tile $;,.me time: the presl·
lleves will destroy the Qhlo coal who lose the!r jobs as a result·of dent's native Texas and another
ln~.ustry If It becomes law.
the· Clean Air Act.
·
regions of the country - except
In order to comply with this
"The use of clean coal techno!nine states - will bear little or
bill, many u(lllties burning Ohio ogy-. In which the Ohio taxpayers
none of the cost of complying
coal must swltc.h thel~fuels from . have Invested $100 million, will
with this proposed acid ~aln
high suj!ulr coal ,to nat ural gas be pre-empted," Murray said.
legislation."
and ·tow sulfur Western coal ln . "And the nation's most abundant
·
19!)~.:· Murray said. " The Pres!- lndlge"ous energy resource
dent s ~~~~ ml'ndates fu!)l switch- base, medium to high sulfur coal,
'-"D
,

70

Coolville
867·3115

to .dump at. the proposed district
landfill, the charge would be
$1,.00. This Increased cost, of
course, would be reflected In
charges which trash -customers
pay , It was pointed out.
Gerard announced that the
next public hearing of the Solid
Waste Management District will
be held at 7 p.m. on March 21 at
McArthur, and he urged attend·
ance at that meeting.
While at the meeting, .Manley
reported t hat his recycling busi·
ness has outgrown his present
building In lower Middleport, and
. Continued on page 10

'Mmmg
.. . • JO
• bS JOOpar
•. .
d'ized
b
·
· . y ;~~~rg~~!~:e~:~u~rn~:
. - d Cl · Air. I I • ·

t/

Jtuthnd
742·2888

Southern Junior High, and runner-up Evan
Struble, a fourth grader from Syracu~~e Elemen·
tary. The county-wide bee was held .t Southern
JUgh Stlhool. ~atson Ill lhe son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Matson, Racine. Struble Ill the son of Mr. .
add Mrs. Michael Struble, Syracul!l!.
'

Su!~!!rlnlendent of ·StJhools, and Kilty Hazier,

PenSion Protector IRA
at BANK ONE.

Tbe Meigs Common Pleas
Court case of the Farmers Bank
and Savings Company against
Mary L. Meredith; et al, has been
dismissed.

Coabocton: Philip A. Haeans,
20, CoahoctCII, In one-vehiCle
accident on Ohio 83 In Coshocton
County.
Sandusky: Lucu Mayer, 5,
Vermilion, when struck by car
atter be daabed onto Oblo 60 In
Erie County.

•

· Opftn a highyield

_Weekend mishaps kill six in Ohio
By U•lted Preulnlernatlonal
Six people, Including three
pedestrians. were killed In accl·
aents on Ohio roadways during
the weekend, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported Monday.
A patrol spokesman said there
were two deaths Sundayf two
Saturdi\Y and two Friday evenIng. Each of the victims died In
single-fatality accidents.
Tbe patrol couuts fatalities
resulting (rom accidents on the
state's public roads each weekeud· between 6 p.m. Friday apd
mldnlgbl Suuday.
Killed were:
Frl4la7 •IIIII
Ketterilll! Cl!ll T. Jeq, 45,
Ketterfnl, when hit by a car as he,
tried to croesa a Kettering street.

'

•

and cost effect" as to whether
that phrase applies to the district
manageme.nt or to the hauler.
It was reported th;lf Gerard
and Jon Jacobs of the Meigs
County Health O!lpartment both
voted against the adoption of the
District's resolution while Ken·
neth Wiggins and Richard Bailey, other Meigs members,
abstained.
Roger Manley of Manley's
Trash. Service whO dumps at .the
Mason County landfill reported
that he is currently paying $12.50
a ton to dump there while If he
were required to pay a surcharge

_Freddie Ma.tso·n ·wins Meigs
County's .1990 Spelling Bee

I

--Area deaths. --

-sum
our

Management District.
')'he .resolu.tlon adopted by the
Waste Management Polley Committee would require that all
"soUd .w11ste generated In the
District, where practicable and
cost effective, remain within the
District." Gerard as the village's
Solid W,aste , Management Dis·
trlct representative. charges
that phrase Is unclear and unfair
and places unreasonable res·
tralnt on small Independent trash
collection services.
The question revolved around
the phrase In the district's
resolution of "where ·pract.lcal

fw '4.io·ll!«e

'

.

1 Section. 10 Pogoo 26 Conti
A Muttimediatnc. Nawtpapar

· ------------------~~~----~~~--~~------------~----------------~--~--~~~----------------------------------------------~----

I

W.Va.; a sister, Mrs. Lula
Rexroad, Dunbar; and six grand- ·
Grace Edington Anderson, 89, children and five great
of 1012 West Vlrglna Ave., grandchildren.
Services will be 11 a .m. TuesDunbar, W.Va., died Saturday at ·
day
at the Keller Funeral Home,
her home after a brief Illness.
1236
Myers Ave., Dunbar, with
A Dunbar resident for 60years,
Rev.
John R. Campbell official·
Mrs. Anderson was a member of
lng.
Burial
will be ln.the Gra11d·
the First Church United Metho·
v.lew
Memorial
Park al Dunbar.
dtst at Dunbar.
may
call
at the funeral
Friends
She Is survived by two daughhome
today
(Monday)
from 2 to4
ters. Mrs. Pauline Horton, of
and.7to9.
Middleport, and Mrs. Phyllis
Atkinson, ot Parkersburg,

·

Pomaroy-Mi,ddleport, Ol'!io, ·Tuesday, March 13, 1990

.

· ·

Parll)' cloud)' t.ntabl. l.Gw
In 581: Partly 1!loudy Wednesday. IDrh near 80. (Jhance of
rain 28 per_cent.

5227

Mem/Hir FDIC

-,
'

· Deputies of the Meigs . County Sherlffos Department are
Investigating the J:lreakln'g and entering ot a trailer on Nelson
Road.
'
According to the report, Steve Russell, Dexlj!r. reported that
1 he left his trailer Saturday evening and returned Suuday
morning to find that the trailer had been entered. The report
went . on ro say that three guns and casl1 were mtaslng, 1The
'lnveltlgat.lon Is continuing.
, ·
.,
Clarence Alberson, Long Bottom.- reported Monday that
, (jurll!g the past two weeks approximately 35 gallons of gasoline
were stoleri.from. his alrplape.
.
·
Sherlff ,James M. Soulsby reports that deputies were called
for a disturbance In Harrisonville. Sheriff Soulsby reported that
Elmer Bowles was arres.ted fqr disorderly conctuctJ He was
·
. .
.
. , .
1 lodged In the co11nty Jan. ,
Continued on page 10

v·lrgtllla
..

teachers still
out on strike
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
'"7 Gov. Gaston Caperton and
teachers union leaders a~ to
meet again 'l)lesday and try to
resolve Welt VIJ'glnJa'a nrat
school strike, which the itate
attorney general has declared
Illegal.
"We want tQ keep this dlicusalon going because we think It's
been worthwhile to thta point,"
Caperton's (&gt;ri!IB secretary, Gor·
don· Morae, said after 'the aover·
nor engaged In seven hours of
talka Monday that broke.up at 11
p.m.
Kayetta Meadows, president of
Continued on page 10 . ~

ec:~~.:CIIA.IIPI

-

'Pdclputa Ia &amp;M
C'A-.&amp;J .8pdHq lee wen tiiICIIool chunplttal, Hated left .. 1'1111&amp; In front,
llrlu Lee YoiiJII, HantaoaYIIJe; Tan G.,..-,
PomerO)'; llrJan Colwell, Salem Center; Kell

uma.J

Battey, Che.ter; Raebel "-hleJ, Middleport;
Vane••• Shuler, Letart Fallll; and ;resae MBJ·
nard, Jtaelne. In back, left to rtaht, are Freddie
.
.
~

• I 11, 1111/ II illlr Rip; a.rtl ClllfiiUIII,
Bnllliiii'JllliWf) llarte, Tuppers Pial•; MIDdy
Pa&amp;tnn., Balillliarr. Van•• Rarleu, Rutland;
Charllllle DIIIIIJ, lEMiera Jutor Rip; Cryalal .
Monll, Bin• lllew; Denlle Ba t,., Po111ud;
Becqo Wllllllll'll, Metp Junter Hlp; and Evan
Struble, Syncuse.

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