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                  <text>Page 10-The Daily Sa1tiuel

Pomen&gt;v-MidclePQrt. Ohio

...--~Local·

news briefs...- - . _S~mmer-like
Continued from page l

EMS has four Mondny rolls
Four calls were answered on . Moi'Klay by Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services units.
Middleport at 5: 14 a.m. was c alled to Route 7 for Florence
Potts who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 5:45p.m., the Pomeroy Fire Department was called to a
_
.
brush fire on Unlori Ave.
Racine was called at 8:56p.m. to Route 338 fpr Zelpha Stewart
to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 11:22 p.m. to Dewitt's
Run . ROad for Lewis Francis, also to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ·

West Virginia ... _c_o_n_un_u_ed_t_ro_m...:p;....a.;;.ge_1_ __
the West VIrginia Education
,o\ssoclallon which represents
about 16,000 of the state' s 21,653
teachers, said her members
. would remain on strike Tuesday.
But neither Meadows nor Bob
Brown, executive director of the
rival West VIrginia Federation of
Teachers which has a botit 3,000
members, would comment on
their meeting with the governor.
Teachers walked out of the
classrooms March 7 and schools
In 38 of West VIrginia's 55
counties canceled at least some
of their classes on Monday.
The WVEA called for the
statewide walkout after charging
Caperton with reneging on an
offer to provide $35 mlllon for a 5 ·
percent -pay raise, provide an
additional $6.5 million to !lie
state's health Insurance ~ro­
gram and add $27 million' In new
taxes on coal operators to help
pay fqr the package.
The state Education Dep~rt­
ment said the strike caused 29
counties to call off all classes
Monday, affecting hundreds or
schools and thousands of students and parents. Partial school
closings were also reported In at
least nine other 'counties, said
spokeswoman Carolyn Spangler.
A state attDrney general's
opinion Issued last week called
the teachers srlke Illegal a'nd
said counties had the right to fire

Middleport

anyone on the picket lines.
Striking educators gathered at
the Capitol for a rally Monday,
. locking hands and singing, "We
Shall Not Be Moved." ·
School boards In at least two
counties ordered that teachers
report back to work or be fired:
Picketing ' was reported In 46
counties, four more than Friday,
as tea~hers largely Ignored &lt;;a- perton's weekend offer of no loss
of pay In return tor an end to the
strike Monday.
,
Counties that kept some or all
of their _schools open called In
administrators and substitutes tD
man the chalkboards.
·
In Issuing his call for Monday's
meeting, Caperton said the two
sides needed to "put aside the
harsh words and miscommunications o( the past weekend and
move on to the.resplutlon of the
present predicament."
Caperton also plans to make' a
major policy address on educa.'.tion Tuesday night. Meadows
sail! she has no Idea what he will
say,
A Jefferson County circuit
judg:e ordered striking teachers
to return to tlie classroom on
Thursday. School officials there
said they expected teachers to•
obey the order. In Greenbrier
County, School Superintendent
Steve -Baldwin told teachers to
return to work Wednesday or be
·
fired.
Continued from page 1

that he Is negotiating for the
purchase of the old Royal Crown
building In the Mill Street area
for recycling only. He said that
he did not anticipate bringing his
trash hauling trucks Into that
a~ea . .
He . also reported that he
e)(pects to start a curbside
recycling pilot program with 20
volunteer custOmers sometime
this spring.
Petition For Annexulon
A petition for annexation of an
area of Ru !land Street Into
Middleport, along With a specific
request for sewer service, was
presented to village couilct!'by a
delegation of rtye residents.
Phyllis Young was spokesman
for the groqp who reside In the
area whiCh Is served by the
Leading Creek Water Conservancy. Those residents do not
have sewer servlcl\.
The petition was signed by 17
residents, "nearly lOOpercent" It
was reported by Mrs. Young,
who favor 'the annexation:- 'all bough Council said that only
eight families are actually
Involved.
The pr~edure for annexation
was discussed with the residents
but Council took no formal action
on the project at last night's
meeting. Pay Raise
Pay raises for village employees were discussed and the
first reading on an ordinance

Ohio Lottery

weather spreads ·to East (:oast

have

overnight after posllng a record and there were scatb!red show ~ Conn. Montepeller, _ VI., was
95 degrees and setting a high tor ers In Mississippi. Early mom- foggy and 36.
the country Monday, but the lng temperatures were 58 In ,
mercuey was rising again early Knoxville, Tenn., 611n JacksonIn the Midwest, Chicago poUce
Tuef(lay. Skies .were par tiy vUie, Fla., 62 In Atlanta and ' said crlmlnalacttvlty was on the
cloudy across Maryland, with Charleston. S.C.. and 72 In ·'rise overnight because of the
warm temperaiures thlil hit 80
slml)ar conditions over Pennsyl- Miami.
vania, West Virginia and south·
Rain, clouds and dense fog degrees on Monda~ .
.ern New Jersey·.
blanketed most of New England,
Hlgb pressure anchored off the as temperatures remained rela" Ever).one's-out on t\le street:
Atlantic coast sent terpper~tures . tlvely high In most sections.
and they remember how much
soaring again In the South, where
Boston was 40 under heavy they don't ilke each -other," said
Raleigh and Durham, N.C., set a
cloud cover and sprinkles, while Jefferson Park District Sgt. Jim
new record of 90 degrees ·.for
dense fog covered Wlndsor .Lock, Roussell.
March 12.
'
Some cloudiness marred the
.
.
NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·1 .. 80
relatively clear skies Tuesday ,

By Ualted Preu'lllleru&amp;loul
SUITIJIIfr-llke warmth chased
away fresh memories of frost
along the Atlantic CoaSt and the
·Midwest Tuesday, bu,t a wet
layer of snow surprised Southern
California and showers greete4 Texas voters headed for .the
poDs.
Following a day In )"hlch at
least 50 cftles set high temperature records, the Natlonal
Weather SerVIce said the mercury would return to t!Je 80s and
90s through much of the East and
Into the deep South . . ·
Baltimore cooled off to the 50s

•

~·

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Hospital news.

---Meigs aru)ouncements _ __

'

'

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WEATHER MAP - lOgb pressure area$ located over Ute
Southwestern and Southeastern porlloas of the cowi&amp;l'y l"'ll bring
a,unny sides and dry condltloas to,thoee areas. Tlu~remaiD4er of the
countey wUJ experience rather imleUl.ed condldoiW aa a siorm
system centered over the Midwest brlnp widespread clou~s
and precipitation to th~ central third of the nallo_n. Thllnd_e ratonns
should redevelop durtnc the day along the Mls&amp;lwalppl and Ohlo 1
Rivers. ( UPI)
..

••

·- ......----Weather-----, Soulb Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Tuesday night.

Correction
'

The Meigs Common Pll~as
Court case of Ronald E.' Joseph,
et al, against James W. Suttle, et
al, was Incorrectly reported In
the Feb. 23 edition of The Dally
SentineL
The case was filed 'by JoSeph
against Suttle ·for a money
judgment and a section of prop-erty. ·According to , the most .
recent court entry In the case, the
defendants have been deprived
the use of the pr.;&gt;perty and
damages'_ to the _defendants are
$480. A surveyor's report defln- ·
log the .boundary line I~ dispute
_lias been accepted by-·the court. .,_.
In addition, the court appointed
surveyor has been ordered to
-provide the court with a written
description of an old road location and the centerline of
easement.
However, the case has not yet
been concluded js earlier
reported,.
·

with a IOlN between 55 ·a nd 60.
Partly ~loudy Wednesday, with
record highs near 80. Chance of
rain Is 20 percent. •. •'
Extended Forecut ·
Thursday .ll!rougb 8u~ay '
A chance of rain Thursday and
Friday, with fair weather Saturday. Highs will be II\ the · 70s
Thursday .arid ranging from the
50s If\ the northern part of the
~late to the 60s In the ,south
Friday and Saturday. Overnight
lows will be In the 50s Thurtday .
morning; the 40s early' Frld!!Y ·
and In the 30s Saturday morning.

l.
'·

.SYOBlltT'$,
GREENHOUSE
Is Nowt Open
' For Busin•s~.
·'
· WHOLESALE
' '
RETAIL ·'·'

Attended funeral

'

Mrs. Neva Radekln Nicholson,
of Rutland, a,tte_nded !he funeral-.
of her cousin, Mrs. Ina Radekln
Sams. of Columbus, on Thursday, March 8. Mrs. Sarns was a
native 9f Columbia Township In
Meigs, County and , had taught in
the former Columbia Consolidated SchoolhDistrlct. She was
80 ·years old and had · been In
falling health for a short lime.
Also while in the Co tum bus
area, Mrs. Nicholson visited her
son,
Ronald Nicholson, of
Hilliard.

WE HAVE••••
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ETC . .

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YEllOWIUSH lOAD,
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ROLL .OVER YOUR-EARNINGSTO A PEOPLES. BANK
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
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·· We C~rge Nci Annual Fee '{o Maintain Y£?ur Self-Directed
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Plea8e Call·Sara Williamson tn otir New Aecourits Department
-· . at (304)'675-1_121 for more information. - ~ . ·

PEOPLES BANK
.. .·9oinmttted To Being The Best
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2 Sac:tion1, 16 P•S.n 2ei Cent1
A Multim_ldio Inc. Nowopepor

Meigs board · adopts
revised drug policies

'

Stocks

•

at

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........ cl. . ._
tontp&amp;. Low In IDI!I Ill. CloDdy
Tlumdq.
In •pper 'l'h.

3743

·
.
.
to-tax lncreases
'.

.

Pick-4

Bush -stil'l opposed

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- "we are willing to talk about lt ."
Ident Bush said Tuesday he was
But Bush made clear that there
heartened by the "very broad
would be . no deficit reduction
proposal" to balance the budget . negoliatlons any tt'me soon.
put forward by the House Ways
Rosteknowskl "made a very
and Means Chairman Da'n -Ros- broad proposal. We've made a
tenkowskl, . D-lll .. but remains
proposal," Bush said. "We'd !Ike
opposed to tax _Increases.
to hear troll! the budget proces~
Bush, In a news confrerence on the hill. Then we'll talk."
called to announce .a new aid
Bush submitted his 1991 budget
package lor Nicaragua and Paless than two months ago and Ills
nama, told reporters · that he unlikely they will have a comprepartiCularly welcomed the tone hensive spending proposal ready
of Rostenko~Yskl's pian' to ellml· before slimmer.
nate the federal -deficit In five
When asked If Fitzwater's
- years because It was presented receptive comments the pre" wlt·hout rancor, without vious day meant he was willing to
rhetoric.' '
negotiate a tax Increase, Bush
Rostenkowskl, head of the tax said, "No, It doesn't."
writing committee In Congress,
But he said he wants a budget
presented his plan in. a long Item deficit agreement and "was ·
on the edltotial pages of The ' being receptive by not knocking
-W~Iilngton Post Sunday, calling
the things we don't like."
for an Increase In taxes, a freeze
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, chairman
In · Social Security benefits and
of
the Senate Finance Commit:
other spending and a rejection of
'
tee,
said Monday he was not
tax cuts, Including Bush's cherIshed plan to reduce the capital encouraged by the White House's
guarded reaction.
gains tax.
·
Bush's spokesman. Marlin , Speaking to reporters In San
Diego, Bentsen, D-Texas, hailed
Fitzwater, s.aid Monday that
·the
Rostenkowskl proposal as a
while tl)e president was opposed'
"
bold"
plan with some "solid
to many elements of the plan,
Ideas.· :
In the same breath, he warned
which · would give all full-lime
' tl:lat "squabbling Isn't over",,on
employees a 25 cent an hour
· Capi\Ol Hill, saying It will take a
Increase was given. Three read- Dally stock. prices
"tough approach" and leader- ·
Ings are required before . the (As of 10: 30 a.m.)
's hip from the Bush administraordinance can be adopted.
tiOn to make It work.
.
Bryc_e and Mark SmUh
It was reported by Mayor Fred of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
·' : 'There's no way you can get·
Hoffman that the cost to the
•llfat 'throllih without a'presldent
village would be approximately Am Electric Power ............. 30~ 'teady to' sit down and go Into the
$15,000 a year.
c;letalls," said Bentsen of Bush,
AT&amp;T ...... ..... ........ ..... :... .... .41')i,
In other action last 'n ight, Ashland Oil ..... :.............. ....34% - whO~!! no nE!W't311es pledge was a
Council passed a resolution op- Bpb Evans ............ ........... ... 12~
corrie~stone of his 1988 presidenposing the rate Increase pro- Charming Shoppe5 ...... ... .. .... .. 9
tial campaign.
posed by Columbia Gas.
Rostenkowski chas tlsed DemoCity Holding Co. .. ... ..... ........ 13
Issue 2 project funding was Federal Mogul.. .. .. ..... ..... .. .. 17~ . crats as weil as Republicans for
discussed and Mayor Hottman ' Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ........ ...... .36% ·play! ng politics with the budget
noted that street Improvement . Heck's .. .. ... ...... .'.... .:... ....... ... 3%
and
urged' compromise
.
projects are low priority In I· Key Centurion ................... -P'l'
District 18. High priority In t.he · Lands' Eli&lt;t.. ......_.... .......... :.18%
district Is being given· to water
Limited Inc . ........................ 39]•
.and sewer projects, and the Mulllri\edla Inc ..... .. .. ........ .. 18~
village Is seeking funding for
Rax Restaurants ................... 2lh
Ve&amp;erans Memort&amp;i
work on the Ohio River bank
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ... ....... 16
Monday admissions - ·carlos
erosion at the sewage lagoons
Shoney's Inc. .:.... .. ..... .. ........ 13
Snowd,en, Pomeroy; Marte. Tho- ·
•,
'
below Hobson.
Star Bank ................ ..... ...... . 19
mas, Pomeroy.
Mayor Hortman was autho- Wendy's Int'l.. ........... :........ .4Y,
.. Moriday discharges - Robert
-.rlzed to sell the old backhoe,now Worthington Ind .......,.,, , .... ... 20% Smith, William Pickens.
that a new one has b!!!n ·purchased. The IT!ayor's report
showed receipts 'of '$5,231.32 In
·. green beans, coleslaw, a roll, pie
Dinner planned
February. It was reported that
or cake and a drink. The prices of Racine
Elementary
School
there has been no response from
PTO
Is
sponsoring
a
ham
and
r
$3.50
for adults and $2.25 for
Pomeroy on the Route 7 business
turkey
children
dinner
this
Sunday
•
.
11 and unde~ Include all
route through the villages ~hlch .
March
18,
at
the
Southern
High
the
menu
Items. Takeout dinners
both villages must approve beSchool
cafeteria.
Serving
will
will
also
be available and confore any further action can be
'
,
talners
will
be provided. Prostart
at
11
_
a.m.
The
menu
will
taken.
.
Include
ham
and
turkey,.mashed
ceeds
irom
the
dinner will be
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk - . potatoes, homemade nOodles: used to purchase school supplies.
Treasurer Jon Buck. and Council
members Gerard, Bob Gilmore, Jack Satterfield, and William
Walters.

Allee Mary Clark, 90, or 95 ,
Custer St., Middleport, died
Monday at the Amerlcar~­
Pomeroy Nursing Center.
Born May 14, 1894 at Hockingport, Mrs. Clark was the daugh- '
ter of William and Emma Snyder ·
Chutes.-She was a retired cook
and was affiliated with the
. Baptist Church. She was also a ·
mem tier of the M,lddleport Amer· ~
Jean Legion Auxiliary, Post 128.
Survivors Include four children, Mabel Wlcklpne, or New
Matamoras, Floyd /Ainslee)
Clark, of Portland, Ore., Paul
(Mary) Clark, of Middleport, and '
-Mildred Milburn, also ot Middleport; two sisters, Hazel
McCloud, Pomeroy; Ruth
Deeter, Marie! ta; one brother,
Tom Chutes; of Arizona; 13
grandchildren and 22 great
grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
ln addition to her' parents, she
was preceded In death by her
husband, John W. Clark, In 1942;
two brothers and five Jlatera.
Services will be Friday, 1 p:m.,
at Ewing Funeral Home, with
Rev. Charlet~ NorriS officiating.
Burial will be at Graham Statton,
W.Va. CalllJII hours at the
funeral home will IJe 7. to 9 on
Wednesday •nd 2to 4 and 7 to9on
Thunday.
·

386

March 14, 1990

ATTENTION
ALUMINUM EMPLOYEES·
·
_ _ Area ·deaths_
· ------ RAVE~SWOOD
.
.
Carlos Snowden
And·Anyone Else.Anti.c lpating A DistributionAlice Clark ·
From A Qualified Retirement Plan. .

Carlos Elsworth Snowden, 73,
of Pomeroy, died Monday afternoon at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born at Rutland on Aug. 31,
1916, Mr. Snowden was the son of
the tall.' Harry Elsworth and
Ethel Dora Stowe Snowden . J1e
was a graduate or Ru !land High
School and had been a member or
the CCC Corps and Rutland Fire
Department: He was a 35-year
mason and a retired welder lroin
the Kaiser Aluminum Corporal ton, Ravenswood, W.Va. '
Suvlvors Include his wife,
Pauline, at home; a, son, Jeff
;Carolyn) Snowden, Rutland; a
daughter, Alberta 1Johnl MontgOITjery, New Marshfield; two
step sons, Lawrence (Carolyn)
Darst of Rutland, and Rex
(Brenda) Darst: of Pomeroy;
two , step· daughters, · Party ·
rPearll Smith, or Pomeroy, and
Ellen (Bob) McClure, of Middleport; three grandchildren; 10
step grandchildren; two brothers, Robert Francis (Judy)
Snowden, Rutland, and Harry
' Everett IMary) Snowden, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was preceded In death by
one · brother, a sister, a granddaughter and a great grandson.
Services will ·be Thursday, 1
p.m., at Rawlings-Coats-Fisher
Funeral Home with Eugene
Underwood officiating. Burial
wlil be In Miles Ct&gt;metery.
Friends may call at the funeral

Daily Npmber

playoff fever

POINT PLEASANT

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NEWBAVBN
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25th

- Ann~rauy

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' 1965.-9JO
IUIIT.AimAL PINALTV
PORIARLY
.
WITHDIIIlWAL .

• · 111118111 ,.o.1.c.' ..

AWAI'Il'B RESPONSE - West Vlfllnla G,v,
' ~aston Caperton unveils his prop08al Jue

Tueaday after tw' daya of talks ·wllh both the
WVEA and West Vlqlnla Federation of Teachers.
(UPI)

C'aperton .awaits-. respons~
·on latest offer to end :strike
-\

CHARLE$TON. W.Va.. lOP!)
- Teac~~ers union , leaders said
they· wollld· reiPIJIId W-eJneildiY'
to Gov. Gaston Caperton'ssev'enjx\ll111· plli11Jfor eridihgAhe stnJie
that has paralYzed schools ·
across the state.
Despite the governor's latest
offer, teachers prepared to push
tlie Walkout Into a sixth day while
. the West VIrginia Education
Assoclatio.n mulled over their
negotiating stance.
Caperton unveiled his proposal
late Tuesday after emerging
from two days of talks with both
the WVEA and the West VIrginia
Federation of Teachers.
His package to break West
VIrginia's first teachers strike
calls for some $20 million In next·
year's budget to raise teachers'
pay, an education summit In May
and a-special legislative session .
this summer to deal with
teachers salaries. But CapertDn
cautioned that the session would
be held only If the state ended the
fiscal year with a surplus. Legislators ended a 60-day
regular session last weekend,
without addressing the teachers'
grievances which led to last
Wednesday's walkout.
Before the 11 ·p.m. announcemen·!, education representative
stalked angrily out or Caperton's
office In a tiff over his timing.
"We're still on strike," vowed
WVEA President Kayetta Meadows, whose group represents
16,000 ,qf the 21,653 teachers.
"! guess I'm a little disappointed," she told · United Press
International. "We spent _two
days In negotiations and were

-han!Jed seven points "' 20 min- · the stale enacted a .recoro tax
utes· to 11-p.m., and were asked to
hike In 1989. He said about- $6
give a response by the Jloltclocl'
mllljon In a~al revenue
news.''
would be needed for every 1
· Meadows said " she -refused· percent ·• across-the-board InCaperton's Invitation to appear crease In pay. ·
at the news brleflpg. She and the
The strike erupted after the
WVFT leader declined to com- WVF;A accused him of f!lneglng
ment until their respective on an offer to provide $35 inllllon
boards · look at It. The WVFT . _for a 5 percent pay raise, put an
represents about 3,000 teachers.
extra $6.5 million In the health
, ''They have been working hard
Insurance program and levy $27
and negotiating In good faith with million In new taxes ori coal
the governor for the last two operators to help pay for the
days," the WVFT spokesman package.
said. ''They didn't receive the
On Tuesday, about . 300
proposal until the last hour. "
teachers, threatened with disTeachers launched the strike missal In Greenbrier County,
March 7 after the union accused were given a reprieve, In a
the governor of backing out of an compromise calllpg tor classed
offer to provide $35 million for a 5 to be dismissed Wednesday, then
percent pay raise, provide an resume the rest of the week with
extra $6.5 million to the sta,te's · available Instructors.
health Insurance program and
In return, the teachers are
levy $27 million In new taxes on obligated to refrain from picketcoal operators to help pay for the Ing, said county Superintendent
package.
Stephen Baldwin.
The two sides squared off more
"We're not going to !Ire anybthan 14 hours over the last two ody. and every teacher In · the
days, trying to hammer out a system will return to wor,k and
compromise.
every school will be open on
"We have reached a clear Monday," Baldwin said.
agreement on the need toes tabState Education Department
llsh along-rangeplanforlmprov- - officials reported Tuesday 25
lng education In W\!st VIrginia," counties had closed school beCaperton said. "And, although . cause of the strike, while 11 had
we have not yet reached a final spot closings and 19 were fully
agreement on returning teachers operational.
to the classrooms, we have
closed the distance between
ourselves and that goal."
Caperton said he could assure
teachers a pay raise only by
raising taxes bu I acknowledged
such a proposal would have little
public support, especially after
By United Preu International
· Ohio continues In thegrlpofthe
warmest 'weather or the decade,
'a nd while most Ohioans are
enjoying the unseasonable
weather, a Nat,lonal Weather
Service
forecaster said there·~ a
A Tuppers Plains man was cited In a car-ti·uck crash Tuesday
dark
side
to lt. ·
at 1: 45 p.m. In Tuppers Plains on S.R. 681 at the junction or S. R.
For
the
third
day In a row, high
7, according to the GaiUa·Melgs Post of the State Highway
temperature
records
were shat·
Patrol.
t
· ·
tered
across
the
Buckeye
State.
Blain Taylor, 77, was c!ted for making an Illegal left tum and
New
highs
were
set-at
eight
of the
driving with an expired registration after hla 1985 Chevrolet
National Weather Service's ·10
Celebrity hit a 1980 Mazda B2000 pickup truck driven by TerriL.
~porting
stations, another was
Nutter, 24, also ot Tuppers Plains.
_
tied
(at
Findlay)
ahd II came
Nutter was heading east on S.R. 681 when she stopped at the
within
1
degree
of
the
record at
jUnction. Taylor, who was driVIng north on S.R. 7, made a lett
Cincinnati:
·turn, but turned the comer sbort,and hit Nutter's truck.
·
- The ·h ighest official reac!ing
a1aln waa In Zanesville, where It
reached 80, 5 clepee1 above the
mark
set 111 1967. There wer:e
. In view of a· strong Interest expres~ed by many reslden.. of
uaofflcial mld-80 readlllll Ia
Melp County, Sheriff James M. Soulaby hu scheduled a
1ome Ohio River countll!ll. ·
meeting to establiSh a Neighborhood Crtme Watcb Prcicram.
"We are JOina to pay for It
Patrolman Dave Wllllama of the Athens Pollee Departmeat
(warmer
than normal ll!mpera·
wiD conduct the ~emlnar scheduil!d for Tuesday, ,.arch 20, at 7
. tul'lll) In the Iolii run," said tew
p.m., in tbe Metp County Common P._aa Courtroom.
' Ramey, bead meteorolo1ilt for
Patrolman William• bas been lnatrumentalln establllbiq lhll
the National Weather Service In
type of program In other areas of Southeastern Ohio and will
Columbus. "It Is almoat a fact
present a sUde show as well u diltrlbute l!.t erature to those
that II iiiOina to get cold a1a1n. ''
ateendblg.
·
'1'hete are notnormalll!mperOnce the program has been atartecl, a member of the Meigs
atures. It brings in the threat of
Continued on pap.12
Continued on pa1e 12

..---LocaJ ·news

Wann weather
is creating

, pro~lems

briefs~

Patrol cites ·Tuppers Plains man

Interest shown in pltm

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proved drug and alcohol treat- t.endent, with the principal to
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
ment facility to be done at the
SenUnel Neww-Staff ·
refer the case to I he pollee or
A revised and more explicit cost and dlscretiom of the parent
sheriff's department for possible
drug and alcohol policy govern- or guardian.
court referral, and the student to
However, failure to enroll In or
Ing students on ·school property
be expelled for the maximum .
to complete the rehabilitation
Including buses and behavior pt
time allowed.
until release from the drug- · As for the provision on counter- all school sponsored activities on
alcohol treatment facUlty shall
or off school grounds was
felt drliji'S In the revised policy
result In expulsion of the student
adopted by the Meigs Local
adopted·Jast night, any student In
School District Board of Educa- for the · maximum number of
violation shall be suspended 10
days allowed by law. It further days on a first offense and shall
tion Tuesday night.
states that a second violation of
The policy deals specifically
be referred to t_h e property
with tl)ree situations - posses- the penalty section of the policy officials for possible court proshall -result In expulsion to I he ceedings. A second violation·
. slon, use or under the influence;
the sale and supplying of chemi- fullest extent of the law.
shall result In expulsion for the
As for the sale or supplying of maximum time allowed, the
cals, drlijls, marijuana or alcodrugs, chemicals, marijuana or policy stales ,
hol; and counterfeit drugs. It also
alcohol the policy states that this
-sets pemiltles for violations.
As to what constitutes countershall also result In a 10 day felt drlijls, Supt. James CarpenUnder the Influence Is defined
suspension following a written ter said that these are things sold ·
In the policy as a · student
recommendation to the superln·
: manifesting signs of chemical
Continued on page 12
use such as staggering, reddenIng eyes, odor of cllemlcals,
nervousness, restlessness, fal ling asleep In class, memory loss,
abusive langu!'ge, or any behavIor not normal for the particular
student.
As for prescription drugs , the
policy designates that use of a
drug authorized by a medical
'
prescription from a licensed
physician shall not be considered
By NANCY YOACHAM
servlce customers who would be
a violation of the rule as long as a
Sentinel
News
Stall
wiOing to participate in a pilot
parent's statement and/or presThe
Importance
of
recycling,
recycling program. If the procription label Is available. both
environmentally
and
flnangram
proves beneficial In MldPenaflies provided lor under
clally,
was
discussed
at
Tuesdleport,
Manley would consider
',the revised policy Include on a
day's meeting of the Meigs expanding the program Into
first offense a suspension by the
County Chamber of Commerce. other areas of Meigs County.
principal of the student lor a
The luncheon meeting was held
Manley explained how he buys
perlod 1of 10-days In compliance
at
tbe
.oen1or
cltlzens~mterln
'
-·~!jYCJabiEl
materials from the
with srude1\t:''du~ process proce.
·
Pomeroy.
genern'publlc
and theW sells to
dures, notification of the-pollee or
·
markets
outside
Meigs &lt;;ounty,
Roger
Manley,
of
Manley's
sheriff's departin~nt for court
Trash
Servlce
and
Manley's
mainly
In
the
Chillicothe
area.
referral, and a. recommendation
Recycling
Center,
Middleport,
He
also
explained
that
· the
from the principal to the superinwas
the
gties
1
speaker
and
market
for
recyclable
materials
,
tendent on the expulsion.
devoted his comments mainly to may change from lime to time,
The policy further provides
recycling. Manley explained his and so he often has stockpiles of
that an expulslonmaybeavolded
commitment to recycling and materials at his location In lower
by the successful completion and
shared Information regarding 'Middleport. In fact, plans are In
after care follow-Up by the
student and parents ~t an ap- proposed state legislation to the works to expand the Middlemandate recycling throughout port business, and perhaps acthe stale.
quire the former R.C. Bottling
" Recycling Is notjustath!J)gof Company building for the recy the future," Manley stiij, "It's or cling and use the current buildtoday." He went on to sllare ing, which was constructed just
current slatls_tlcs that 80 percent last fall, as a warehouue.
of solid waste Is being landfllled,
Also In regard to recycling,
10 percent Is being recycled and businessman Charles Kitchen. of
10percentlnclnerated. "We have Middleport Dairy Queen, told
to change those percentages members of Chamber that he
Holzer Health Plan Inc., a
around," he added, but atknowl· was discarding 21 cubic yards of
- Gallipolis area Health Mainteedged that such changes can't solid waste a week, and after just
nance Organization which oper- take place overnight. "We must talking a few minutes with Mr.
ates as AdvaCare, wUI close May
all be a part of the solution, not Manley, had "figured out how to
1.
just part of the problem," he cut that figure In half." Manley
The announcement was made
said.
offered to asslstother businesses
today by Holzer Clinic Inc. and
Presently, plans are In the In determining how !!est to limit
Central Benefits Mutual Insuworks by Manley to start a the solid waste produced by their
rance Company, who jointly voluntary curb side recycling establishments, noting that "It's
formed AdvaCare In 1986.
program In Middleport. Twenty easy to throw It In the dumpster,
The decision to dissolve the containers have already _been but harder to Write a check for
partnership was made because
ordered for use by 20 of his trash
Continued on page 12
after four years of operation, the
HMO has not attained sufficient
. enrollment to operate cost
efficiently.
Currently, AdvaCare has approximately 3,000 members,
most enrolled through one of 60
employer groups.
"Our concern for AdvaCare
members will continue. ~ said
Dr. J . Craig Strafford, chairman
of Holzer Health Plan. The plan
has made arrangements with
Central Benefits Mutual . Insurance Company to provide !or
continued coverage to the
members.
"Depending upon the type and
size of the group; Central BenefIts will otter a variety of
continued coverage options,"
said Anthony A-. Fata, ·a board
member of Holzer Health Plan
and vtce-prl!lllden~ of Health
Network Programs for Central
Benefits.
·
Details regarding speclflccov·
era1e propoeals are currently
being finalized between the Plan
and the. Ohio and Welt Vlrllnia ·
Department• of llllurance.
Employen who currently ~
vide AdvaCare coverap will be contacted l'elardllll their options wlthla the next few weeu.
Ia addition, A.dva~are
member• will be ~ent lettera tn ·
the near future explatnlq the
EXPIAINI Nn 111111N1188 - Denll llec+m••, el Mlillllle
clo11n1 and ullll'llll them tbat
port, tllllll a few m•t 1 u 'l'lllr18J'a mutlnr e1 lite ......
~erv.lce at Holzer Clinic will be
eo: Cllllllber or Camaaeree to _,.... 1111 - •tru a
unaffec:ted .
A.; 1 " : ' ' . : . ' ; .CamrtiiJ, wllk* II 11 "'•' 111
"Our members can continue to
.,
• gs
II ... fh
... vlllt the clinic and aee the
Widell will . . . ... ..., . . 7 ?II . . .
. phyalclllll they_know and trust,"
,l ldiJI-..., • well M wldl llillatlll , ......,., 'ftl'llall!a
Strafford emphasized.
m_,--vtaJJ concepCa.

Recycliflg topic
of Meigs County
Chamber session

AdvaCare

plan will
end May 1

=-:.
:._
U:.
.,...llatlo.

:1w

.,,,w.,

,,

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Commentary
.The -Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~'b

.

sm~ ~.__~.~~~~

.

ROBERT L. WlNGETr
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper PubliShers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Thev should be 1.. ; than 300
words long. All letters are subject to.editlng and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub· ltshed. Letters slwuld be in·good taste, addressing Issues, not.personalltles.

Mourning the
'Big Grey Dog'
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correapondenl
WASHINGTON - The rich hardly have noticed the Greyhound
strike, which has sharply curtailed Intercity bus servjce.
These days, even many in the middle class disdain buses as an
. acceptable mode of transportation.
It is mostly the poor and the elderly who long for the return of the
Big Grey Pog.
There was a time when all kinds &lt;if folks were happy to leave the
driving to Greyhound - students, servicemen, salesmen and even
entire working-class families, on vacation.
Instead of the frequent flappers who Inhabit today's rundown bus
stations, In the halcyon days the art deco terminals were jammed
with purposeful people buying tickets.
Sure, times were hard then, but a lot of poor kids packed gralldlose
dreams along with them when they left their hometowns aboard
Greyhound buses.
Many a farm boy who could pick and sing a little and dream a lot
arrived in Nashville on a Greyhound bus and headed straight for the
Grand Ole Opry.
J
More than a fe.w prom queens went to Hollywood by bus with stars
in their eyes.
·
Youngsters dreaming of fame In the arts disembarked at New
York's Port Authority Bus Terminal and trod immediately toward
. Greenwich Village on the lower west side of Manhattan.
For Greyhound Lines Inc. , the good times ended with the arrival of
cut-rate airlines. From 1980 to 1986, .Its passenger traffic plunged 55
percent. Routes disappeared. Terminals fell into disrepair.
There was a souring of relations between management and union
drivers, baggage handlers, mechanics,'ticket agents and re-servation
· clerks.
Federal Express and United Parcel Service outstripped Greyhound's slower package-delivery busine-ss.
Greyhound has profited only briefly from airline strikes and
surging air fares. The corporation has gussled up some old terminals
and opened some new ones In recept years, but Greyhound. bas had to
do some bard traveling.
'Still, Greyhound carried 22 mllllon passengers last year and Its
services are crucial to low-.lncome travelers who live In smaller
communities.
The strike cut what ,:lor many small towns was their last
transportation link with the world beyond their rural environs.
It was another hard blow to rural America, where sagging
economies have, driven the young from declining towns. ,Many
oldsters who don't drive consider themselves confined by the bus
strike, which began March'2 and shows no sign of resolution . .
Greyhound drivers earn an average annua~ wage of $24,700.
Skippers who drive airliners across oceans ~an earn quadruple that
amount.
· ·
·
And the pilots can smo)te and drink coffee on the job. Flight
attendants: most of whom still are young and attractive, bring them
lunch. Who knows what else goes on behind closed doors up there In
the cockpit when the plane Is on automatic pilot?
Greyhound bus drivers, on the other hand, have it tougher. They
have to jockey their huge vehicles through city traffic and mountain
passes . Even on expressways, they can't switch on automatic .pllot.
Greyhound contends raises for Its drivers would mean higher fares ..
Perhaps those who leave the driving to them would go along with
higher ticket prices to pay for some deserved raises.

Berry's World

/

tree spiking untU lie became a
most vicious of the strategies. and Instructions on how to ~~
victim of "eco-terrorlsm." WhllethetreelsstUlintheforest, down tiower lines; flatten tires~
Someone who objected to tree the spike !S driven in at an angle burn machinery, ja!Jl locks and
cutting had Imbedded a huge so the head Is hidden In the bark. . set stink bombs. " ... this Is where
steel spike _in the . Jog; that It can shatter a chainsaw on the ecliteur can . have tun,')
'
violently jammed the saw.
impact sending pleces ,of r32or- Foreman wrote.
This kind of "fun" brings the
Now the whole timber Industry sharp stee-l flying.
knows and searching for tree
"The purpose of tree spiking Is radicals into direct confilct with
spikes has become a fact of life In not to hurt anybody, It's to ·keep mlilnstream envirOnmentalists.
lumber mUls.
trees from being cut," says Dave Eco-saboteurs told our reporter
After years of fruitless battles Foreman, co-founder of Earth · Melinda Maas that they think
in court and pleas that fall on First, the most radical arm of the militant tactics will bring
quicker results and that the
deaf ears in Congress, some environmental ·movement:
radical environmentalists are
He published -a book, "Ecoile- mainstream plodders are sellmg
uslng guerrUia warfare to save . fense: A Field Guide to Man- out. The moderates (ear lhat
the woods.
keYl"renchlng," and It Is an . monkey wrenching sets back the
1\fme(l with spikes, bolt cutters underground . best seller. He entire envlronmepfa1
11nd sledgehammers, the grow- borrowed the term "monkeyw- movement.
Congress has helped the
lng militant faction is combing renching'' from the late Edward
the countryside disrupting · · Abbey whose book "The Monkey timber cutters will a law ~sed
tlmber, mining and ranching Wrench Gang," romanticized last year Imposing a. life prison
sentence on the culprit If a tree
operations, all in the name or environmental sabotage.
protecting Mother Earth.
Foreman's book Includes dla- spike kills a logger.
Tree spikes are among the . ·grams for proper tree spiking

nl~

'

1RUtlPS' DtvaRcE? seTTLeNte.NT

•

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Capital . improvements bifl___

J_a'lJ~M_.L_o~ng

s_en___;_.

,In addition to the budget, ev·ery
two years the General Assembly
passes a capital Improvements
bill to held provide necessary
services -l or residents in cities
and towns across the state.
Earlier this week, the governor
unveiled the 1991-92 plan, a
proposal which calls tor spending
$935.7 mUllan over the two-year
period in projects across the
state. Even though the plan
doesn't provide everytl!lng we
might have wanted, In general it
Is a worthwhile proposal that wUI
help In the ongoing effort to
revitalize and rebuUd many of
the cities and towns In our part of
the state.
One of the most Important
. reasons to support the bill Is the
Incentive II provides lor the
construction lndustrv and re-

Iated jobs. A total of $00 mllll~n Is

provided In the current two-year
budget period and another $60
mUllan In the future for constructiOn of three new prisons. !&gt;,. total
of $28.5 mllllon Is allocated In the
current two-year period and
another $15.5 million In future
bienniums for local jails.
Another $19.4 million Is provided
for a new 144-bed facility to
replace the 120 year-old Athens
Mental Health.Center.
This incentive for priSon construction Is essential. Currently,
prisons operated by the state are
151 percent over rated capacity,
and by June of 1991, It Is
estimated that there will be 3,687
more Inmates In the correctional
system than was assumed last
S!Jmmer when we passed the
r

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Once
again, a prestigious gtoup of
health professionals has emphas·
!zed the link between diet and
disease. Even healthy people
should limit their fat Intake to
reduce the risk of heart attacks,
says a tlew report .
That warning from the National Cholesterol Education
Program Is endorsed by 38
organizations, Including federal
agencies and non-government
groups such as the Ametlcan
Medical Association, American
Colle-ge bf Physicians andAmerl·
can Public Health Association.
Last year, th.e Jl!atlonal
Academy of Sciences-National
Research Council Issued a report
on "Diet and Health" that called
for sharply curtailed Intake of
salt, fat and cholesterol, accom-

panted by Increased consumption of complex carbohydrates.
The year before, the surgeon
general Issued a landmark "Report on Nutrition and Health"
that said "there can no longer be
any doubt about the link between
diet and disease," then urged
that the nation's high-fat diets be
1adlcally altered.
"Diseases of dietary excess
and Imbalance ... now accountfor
more than two- thirds of all
deaths In the United States,'' said
that report. "For the two out of
three adult Americans who . do
not smoke and do not drink
excessively, one personal choice
seems to Influence long-term
health prospects more than any
othere - what we eat."
But the" Food and Nutrition
Labeling Group, a coalition at 23

Today in history_.._---.-...;...__ _ _ _ _ _ __
By U!!lted PresslnternatiOD&amp;I
Today Is Wednesday, March 14, the 73rd day of 1990 with 292 to
follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward its neW phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Sal urn.
'rhe evening star is Jupiter.
Those born on thiS date are under the sign of Pisces~ They Include
Thomas· Marshall, vice president under WoodrQW Wilson, In 1854;
railroad engineer Casey Jones in 1864; physicist Albert Einstein In
1879; bandleader Les Brown in 1912 (age 78); cartoonl.st Hank
Ketcham ("Dennis the Menace") In 1920 (age 70); astronaut Frank
Borman In 1928 (age 62); actor Michael Caine and compoaer Quincy
Jones In 1933 (both age 57); comedlau Billy Cryslalln 'l947 (age 43);
and Prince Albert, heir to the throne of Monaco, In 1958 (age 32). ·

---

1990-91 biennial operating
budget. Building large prisons
alone, however, won't sblve the
problem. The capital Improvements blll al~ provides $15
mUllan In needed moooy for
community-based correctional
facllltles, and $5.6 million for
nine temporary housing units.
'l'lle bill also · provides $255
million · for local Infrastructure
Improvements, and a total of
566.1 million for higher education. Whether this money goes to
Ohio University, Hocking Technical Colle-ge, Rio Grande Community College or one-oft he other
fine Institutions of'hlgher learnIng In the state,llls a worthwhile
Investment In our future.
The bllh!ent by the governor to
the 'General Assembly Is a
bipartisan plan _that recognizes

the Importance of spending money In making Ohio,onee again a
preeminent leader In technologl-'
cal innovation. The fact that 59.9·
percent of the money to be spent
In the capital Improvements blll
Is earmarked on higher education shows .that our state's
leaders are making an honest
effort as seeing that our slate's
future Is brighter than our past.
No capital Improvements blll
can provide . money to solve all •
our problems. But the current •
proposal Is a good one, a plari
deserving of quick approvaL
As always, I welcome your •
comments In writing to me, ·
Senator Jan Michael Long; In ·
care of the Statehouse, Columbus,'Ohlo 43215, or by calling me •
at (614) 466-8156.

On this date. in history:
In 1812, the U.S. government authortzed 'issue of America's first
War bonds, to pay for miUtary equipment tor use against the British.
In 1964, Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby was convicted of
murdering Lee Harvey Os)ol'ald, the assassin of President John F.
Kennedy. Ruby was seritenced to death but the conviction was
overturned and he died _of cancer while awaiting a new trial.
In 1985, the United States evacuated American officials from
Lebanon, leaving only a small diplomatic presence In war-torn
Beirut.
In 1989, the Bush administration announced It wlll ban Imports--of
semiautomatic assault rl11es Indefinitely.
A thought tor the day: Albert Einstein wrote In "What I Believe,"
;. ·The most bea_utlful thing we can experience Is the mysterious. It Is
the source of all true art and science. "
·

Robert Walters

health organizations and consumer groups, cities a major
impediment to complying with
· lng Is lllustrated by Its willing~:
those re-commendations: •
ness to allow 2 percent mUk to be.,
"Unfol'lllnately, today' s food
label makes It n~arly Impossible labeled "low fat" -even thougl! ,
the National Heart, Lung and for · consumers to follow that
advice . Only about half of all Blood Institute, a government ,
research agency, says the pro- ;
food labels provide any nutrition
duct
should be avoided by people ;
Information, and even those
attempting
to reduce their fat .
typically omit the cholesterol,
Intake.
saturated fat and fiber content of
That background Is essential to;
the food."
Among the members of that . understanding for recent con, ,
coalition citing "Inadequate and troversy over the American ,
misleading food labeling" are Heart Association's propoaecJ the American College of Physi- "HeartGulde" food labeling pro- '
cians, American Cancer Society, gram. Designed to promote nu- ,
American Diabetes Association, trlllonal awareness, It will deslg, 1 .
American Heart Association, nate foods the AHA deems ·
American Heart Association,( healthy v.;lth a heart-and-check·
American Public Health Associa- mark symbol accompanied by ·
tion and National Parent- the legend·, "tested and
approved."
Teacher Association.
That Initiative has Its share or '
The two federal agencies empoWe'red to regulate food label· problems: The AHA refuses to
ing, the Department of Agrlcul· disclose bow much fat, choles-.
ture and the Fpod and Drug terol and salt will be allowed tn ,
Administration, jointly held pub- foods In recommencla, and It
lic hearings on proposed compre- requites participating manufac. '
hensive changes In 19'18 - but turers to pay fees (from Sll!O,OOO .
abandoned most or their recom- . to $840,000 per product) to
mendations In the wake of fOod finance of AH-''s, testing and
educational programs.
Industry opposition.
But USDA and the FDA were
In . the ensuing years, the
out
or line In crlticlzlllg the' '
Center for Science tn the Public
program
u slmpll.stlc, con11uitng ':
Interest, · a Washington-based
public Interest organization, has and mlaleadlng. (The FDA even' ·•
repeatedly petitioned the FDA to warned of paulble "regulatory ·
action.") U they had flllfllled '
Initiate reforms.
·The FDA ·a Insensitivity to the their respoufbll1tles, no "Heart· '
·
health Implications of food label- Guide" wouJc! be necessary,

.1
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Jack Anderson.
·-a_nd_D_a_le_Va_n_A-----:-tto

Food labels can .be a health hazard

"From now on, let's do . OLD-FASHIONED
acquisition d8111s let's use REAL
MONEY/"

III.. girls Ali•Ohio
basketball team is announced

Innocent
..workers killed_____,..__
.

WASHINGTON - George .
Alexander, a third-generation
mill worker, was just starting his
shift at the Louisiana-Pacific
lumber mill In Cloverdale, Call(., .'
when the log that would alter his
lite rolled down hiS conveyor belt
toward.a high-speed saw he was
working on.
It was May 1987, and Alexander was 23. His job was to split
logs. He was nearly three feet
away when the log hit his saw and
the saw exploded. One half of the
blade stuck in the log. The other
half hit Alexander in the head,
tearing through his safety helmet
and face shield. His face was
slashed from eye to· chin, His
jugular vein was nearly severed.
His teeth were smashed and his
jaw was cut in half..
Alexander had never even
heard of a sabotage tactic called

(

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Paga 3

Divisio~

Paga 2-The o.lly Senlinll
Ponwoy-M!Mapol1. Otlio
Wedi'llldey. M.dl14, 1890

·

~v

The Deily Sentinel

Ohio

.

QUICK PA,SS - Houston Rocketa' center
Akeem Olajuwon (R) sentla' a pass salllng past
Denver Nuggets' _center Joe Barry C~rroU (L)

I'

during .fourth quarter aetlon Tuesd.Q at Denver's
• McNichol's Arena. Denver beat Houaton 11Hl4.
· (UPI)
.
.

NBA playoff- fever ·leaves
Chicago Bulls· five on a rol~

back-to-back 53- and 48-point seniors Debbie Geller of Macon
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) . efforts.
Eastern, Missy Foraker of MorTara Cosby of Springfield Kenton
"She
can
shoot
with
either
ristown Union Local and Holly
Ridge heads up the 1990 UnU~
hand
and
has
great
quickness,"
Rhodes
of Tuscar11was Valley
Press International Division In
saldKentRldgeCoacbEdFoulk,
,and
juniors
Kathy Beaver of Old
girls All-Ohio basketball team . .
Cosby, · a &amp;-foqt-3 junior, the ' "and she Is an excellent Washington Buckeye Tral) and .
Jumper., '
,
Kristina Dupps of Heath, anot~er
only underclassman on the first
Cosby, who already has sur· state tournament team.
team, was selected the player of
passed 1,400 points In her three
the year In ballotjng by Division
COLUMBUS, Ohi O iUPll - The 19ll0
yeaos of varsity competition, Is United ?f'P!I " ln tP rnatlonal Olv isi Qn IJI
Ill coaches from around . the
considered one of the top junior g lfl~ all-Ohlo hask e tbal lte am. with hd.R: ht .
state.
scoring average:
recruits In the nation, with school 'year and
She ,was joined on the All-Ohio
FIRSTTEAM
Tennessee high on her early list
first team by -Connie Allg of
COnnleAllg. Coldwater. ~9. Sen lor. l6.6.
Tara Cosby; Spring,fleld Kenton Rl~g.e•
Coldwater, Kim Eastman of . or potential college-s. •
.
6-3,
Junior. 28.2.
•
·'!'hey
think
she
may
be
the
Richwood North Union, Natalie
Kim Eas tman. R! Chw 0011 North Unloo.
best junior pla;yer In Ohio." said 5-11. Senior. 18.3.
Hill of Chillicothe Unloto and
Natali E" Hill. ChilliCo th e Union~. 5-!,
Foulk, admitting it' would be
Angel Minton or Sllthel·Tate.
s·Mior.
27 ..a .
close between Cosby and DIV·
Cosby, a third team pick a year
Angel Minton , Bettu.li-Tiflu. 6-0. Senior.
ago as a sophomore, .averaged · !sian II player of the year Voiul~ . • 32.1.
SECOND TEAM .
28.3 points and i4 rebounds per
Ward, Garfield Heights Trinity's
.CrtasY Corra . Indian Valley . 5·8, -senior.
game this year In leading K~nton
6-6.star. "At 6-3, Tara may be a 18.0.
'
•
little more mobile.
Ridge to an 18·2 regular season
Stacie EspCfiiitO. Huron, !l-8, Senior. 18.6.
Nikki Green, Br\dgepon . 5-10, Se nl llr.
"She is a team leader, too,"
record.·
.
'
.
9
She also had a learn-leading 90 added Foulk. "Our three seniors 18.7.
AmY Lavengocd. New London. 5- .
steals, while shooting. 62 perc;ent were · the captains. but Tara
sf111of-. 18.8.
Melinda Myers. Elmwood, ~ 8. Jun ior.
from the field and 55 •percent Cosby Is our leader. They (her
teammates-) respect what she 19.9.
from the free throw line. Cosby's
THiRDTEAM '
says or does. They realized we go
top two scoring outputs were
Ka1lw Beaver, Buckeye Trail. 5-8,
Junior. 18.4.·
as Tara Cosby goes .."
Kristina Dupps. Heath, S-11, Junior, 19.1.
Hill, a 5-7 senior, who was
'Missy Foraker, Belmont Un ion. 5-4,
second to Cosl&gt;y In the pl"yer-of- Senior. 20.0
Debbie Getter. Macon Easter n. 5-8,
the- year balloting, was a lour·
SNiof,
18.0.
year starter at Unloto. She
Holly RhOde'i, Tuscarawas Va lk&gt;y, 5·5,
averaged 27.4 points 'per game Senior. 15.7.
SPECIAL MENTION
the past season.
·
ChriS Burch. ~dcrickltJNn : Kl'rry
· Hllf. who already has signed to Cremeans.
Wheelersbu ~ : Sta cy Dawkins
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -The attend Dayton, ·finished her ca- Crooksville; Tracie DeVaull, Uberty
NFL owners approved a package reer With l,j)09 points in helping Union; Bari Porter . Wyomin g; E r l il
Brookfl£'1d: Dan ya Wi lliam s.
lead Unloto to two state·Tourna- Scocda.
to shorten games, awarded PhoCrooksviUe: tom Wtlson. Ga rre-r tsv tll('
enix Super BOwl XXVII In 1993 ment _appearances.
·
Garfield.
HONORABLE MENTION
and set a committee to study
Minton, a 6-loot senior who will
Jill
Bowen, Hannibal Rlvt: r ; Nikki Bolte,
-. expansion and realigpment Tuesattend Cincinnati, averaged 32.~ Rlchmood Dale Southoos t£'rn: Anne
. day at their annual meetings.
points, 19 rebounds and 4.9 Clark. Cha~rln Fall s; Carmen Ellis ,
Ottawa-Glandorf; Julie Fairchild. Rlcttassists per game f!)r Bethel-Tate.
Commissioner Paul Tagliabue
mood DaleSouthea.!i,terh; Carol yn Greene,
suggested tbe owners look at She also shot 84 percent from the Granville;
Lori J ohnson, Ubert~· ; Carla
ways to shorten games, which
tree throw line and 56 percent
Hoft'man. Richwood North Union; Dorl e
JohnsM. Cadiz : Slssv Jacksoo. WPIIsvtlle:
from the field and averaged four
have increased from an averag~
Ketchum, ~ast. Canton. Vlck.v Mahl.
blocked shots per game. Min- Deb
of two qour~ and 57 minutes In
Western Reserve: Lori Montgomery , East
ton's four-year point total was
1978 to a high of 3: 11 last year.
Pales tine: Corby Pucak. Kinsman
Ba.d~er: Jodi Paellt7., Macon Eastern:
The goal is to bring games back
2.258, including 739 the past
Anp:le
-Polla:.k. Wellsville; Holly Porter.
to a .three-hour average.
season.
Wvomlng: Sheila Ro~brook . ilaml(•r
~Jig and Easiman, both se"If we can reverse the time of a
Pil1rtck Henry; _Kir:n Recker, Ot tawa Glandorf: An~le Shardb, Versatllcs; Kim
niors, will be playing In the girls
game and move It back toward
Shellock. Tu!e:arawas Vall£'~ ; JE.&gt;nnifer
three hours, It would be a real
state tournament this week at St . Toby;
LaGrange Keystone; Kathy
John -A,rena.
·
achievement," Tagllabue.sald.
Wheeler, WfleelersburR: Belinda Willard.
The 5-9 · Allg averaged 16.6 Lorain Catholic.
Halftime will ' be s!lartened
Player -of-t he· year-Tan Co~tb~.
from 15 minutes to 12 minutes,
P.,tnts pe~ game In leading Sp.tnlflel~
Kenlm Ridge.
Coldwater to the tournament
and the Competition Committee
Coach-of -the -year - Tim B•t.rKa,
devised changes dealing with th,e
semifinals, while the 5-11 East- Venal II...
game clock In hopes of shaving ·' man, averaged 18.3 ' points per
off five or six additloqal minutes contest.
. .
The Daily Sentinel
a game.
The second team consls ted of
four Seniors and one junior. 5-8
- A team wlll have· 25 seconds
(USPS 141&gt;-tltl
. to snap the ball alter Incomplete ·Melinda Myers of ElmWQO!l. The
A DlvlsiOR of Mdtrnedla, Inc.
passes, Instead of 30. Teams will ·seniOrs,were 5-8 Crissy Carra of
P.ubllshed every afternoon ~· Monday
still have 45 seconds after run- , Jndlan Valley, 5·8 Stacie Esposito
thrwgh Friday. 111 Court Sl. . Po·
of Huron, 5-9 Amy Lavengood of
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
ning plays.
llshing Company /Multlmedla. Inc.,
New
London
and
5-10
Nikki
. .-:- When a player goes out 'of
Pomf'l'oy, Ohio 45769. P~. 992-2156. ~
Green a( Bridgeport.
bounds, the gam~ clock will start
cond cla$S postage paid al Pomeroy.
Ohio.
·
Named to the th lrd team were
,when the ball is spotte&lt;f and the
referee gives his ready signal
Member: United Pr~s International ,
rather than on the snap of the
Inland Daily PressAss&lt;lClatlottand the
Ohlo Newspaper Anoel at 1011. Nat lonal
·ball. This rule does not apply in
. Ad"vertlllnl Representative, Branham
the final two minu te.s of .the first
NeWspaper Sales. 733 Third A~nue.
New York. New York 10017.
half and the last live minutes ot
the game.
.
. · POS1lt1ASTER: Send address changes
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI)
- The above rule also applies
to 'nl• Do1ly Senllnel, U1 0Jur1 St.,
Tim Barga, who guided VerPomeroy, Ohio «17111.
following kickoffs and declined
sailles to an unbeaten 20-0
penalties. Again, they do not
SUJIIICRil'TION RATES
regillar season and a No.1 rating,
By (;arrler or Motor RGute
apply In the final two minutes or
One Week .... ...... .. .... .. .. ...... ......... SUO
the first half and last five · has been selected . the United
One Month .... .. ....... .. ...... ............ $6.11)
Press
International
girls
Div· minutes of the game.
One Year , .. ... . ...... ........ ....... ..... $72.80
Ision III coach of .the year. •
The ready signal usually .ocSINGLE COPY
Barga received eight of 32
PRICE
cur,s when the teams are In their
Daily ,: ....... ..... ....... .............. . 25 Cents
votes cast by Division III coaches ·
huddles, and comes up to ·15
from around the state, with
Sublcrlbf-rs not deslring to pay the carseconds before tile snap.
.
rier may remit in advance direct to
Jackie
Boggs
of
Richwood
North
_T he changes will also make for .
The Dally Sent ~eJ on a 3, 6 or 12 month
Union finishing second with four
.fewer plays In a game. New
basil. CrE'CIIt wUl begivencarrlereach
votes.
·
week.
Orleans President Jim Finks,
A total of 14 coaches received
chairman of the Competition
No subscriptions by mall pennltted In
areas where home carrier :service ls
at
least one vote. Others with
Committee., said a maximum of ·
available.
·
more
than
one
were
John
Hurst
six plays a game will be lost.
or Tuscarawas Valley, Sieve
Mall Sub8crlpt6onN
"We're more concerned about
IMide Melp CouniJ
Laposkl 'of Morristown Union
the quality of plays than the
13 Weoks .................................. $19.24
Local, ,Tim Fllpovic;h of Brooknumber of plays," Finks said.
:i6 Weoks .... :.. ..... ........... ..·......... $37.96
52 Weeks ...... :...... ................. ,... $74.36
field, Cyndy Driggs of Chillicothe ·
Tagliabue said more time will
O.talde Melp Cou•y
Unloto,
Debbie
Gentile
of
Wyombe saved by cutting In and out of
13 Weeks ........ ,................ .. ....... S20JIO
Ing and Rhonda Osterhage of
2&amp; Weeks ... , ......... .. ...... ........ ..... S40.30
TV commercials faster, and
52
Weeks ........... "" .. ................. $'75.40
Ottawa-Glandorf.
hokling networks to scheduled
kickoff' times.
·
•·

.Interesting."
By IAN LOVE
ton!iht's victory."
The Bulls are 40-21 and have .
UPI Sports Writer
The Bulls used a 9-2 run to build
Playoff fever Is having a much the second-best record in the a 104-94 advantage with 5: lll ·
different effect on the Chicago East to the· Detroit Pistons. The
remaining. Craig Hodges cappe!l
Knicks are 39·22, and though still
Bulls and New York Krilcks.
tM surge with his second 3·
J,'he Bulls ani on a roll sending In first pla,ce In the Atlantic
pointer of -the period.
messages to possible playoff Division, have dropped ' nine
1 New York scored the nexteigtn
opponents they must be reckoned straight games to an opponent ·points and cut the deficit to
with come May-. The Knlcks just with a record above .500.
104-102 with 1:46 remaining. The
"That's not good," said ~nicks
took sick.
Bulls went scoreless for 3:48
New York, which has lost four . guard Trent Tucker. "These are
before Bill Cartwright hit a
of six at Madison Square Garden, teams we are going to face in the
jumper with 1:28 remaining for a
playoffs and that gives 'them 106-102 Chicago lead.
drop~ _a 111-1Q8 decision Tuesday night to the Chicago Bulls. confidence when they play us."
Jordan hit a pair of free throws
New Y.ork reduced a 10-point with 1:28 remaining to give
Chicago, whl~h laces Detroit and
Philadelphia over the weekend, fourth-quarter deficit to two Chicago a 6-i&gt;otnt lead. Maurice
postecl Its 12th victory in its last points twice In the !!nail: 46, but Cheeks sank a jumper with 17
the Bulls still managed to post seconds left, .but Jordan ma~e
14 games .
,
)y "This Is a playoff atmos-. the victory.
two more free throws to put
"I thought it got a little close Chicago back up by six )Yith 16
phere," said Bulls guard Michael
Jordat), who finished wit~ 34 down the end because our offense seconds remaining.
points: "It's a greal test'for us, was stagnant," Chicago Coach
·Johnny Newman was then
toward the end of the seaslln you Phil Jackson said. "But overall
11nd his attempt lor a
fouled
we
played
great
defense
and
I
h~ve to think of the home cour~
advantage, so it's going to be thought that was the key to 3-point play . was . tipped In by
Ewing, pulling the Knlcks within
110-108 with 7.8 seconds
remaining.
. Jordan · was f~uled l_m me·
dlately and miSsed the second of
two free throws with 5.9 seconds
' left, giving -the Knlcks one last
chance to tie the score.
Facts and ligures concerning
North Carolina wUI ·be taking
Kikl Vandeweghe, , activated
t)le 52nd NCAA T9urnament:
part In a record 16th consecutive . from the Injured list last Satur·;
,
Event
NCAA Tournament."Georgetown
day, threw thP ball away ad the
·The ·NCAA basketball tourna- has the set:aNHangest current
lnbounds play and Chicago ran
ment, which has become one· of streak at 12 appearances.
the .clock out.
the nation's leading sports ·
Most from one league
Ewing finished with 29 points
eYents~ The tournament will
The Illg Ten Conference set a
and Wilkins 26 for New York.
generate $65.4 million in re-. record by collecting seven berths
Scottie Pippen finished with 17
celpts, of which $39.24 million· in the tournament, making a
and John Paxson with 15 for the
will be paid to the participating potential share of more than $9.16 · Bulls .
teams. An invitation to tlie million. The Big East had a
"We had a good effort from
tournament is estimated to be previous ·. record-tying six everyone." Jordan said. ~'We
·worth $286,500' and the teams members In the tournament.
made a few mistakes down the
a"vancing t&lt;i the. Final Four will
Most from one state
stretch, bu !things worked out all
ta.ke hime at least $1.43 million.
Gallfor'nia, Indiana and· Penright."
,
Sites &amp; dates
nsylvania tied with four teams·
In other games, Cleveland
First- &amp; Second-round ga!Jles:. each. A total of 36 states and the
clipped Philadelphia 119·102, San
~arch 15-17 at Austin, Texas,
Dis trlct of · Columbia are
Antonio stopped Indiana 103-102,
(Midwest); Hartford, Conn., represented.
Boston beat Atlapta 112-100,
' (East); Knoxville, Tenn., (SouBroken streak
Denver dumped Houston 117-114,
t~east) ; and Salt iake City
DePaul had appeared In !lie Phoenix defeated Utah 114-106,
!West). March 16·18 at Atlanta last six NCAA Tournaments, but · Portland , trounced Orlando 1.42(East); Indianapolis, -- Ind., .that streak ended this year. The 117, and Sacramento• overran
(Midwest) ; Long Beach, Calif., Blue Demons were among those
Mlaml121-8'7.
,
!West); and Richmond, Va .. teams considered, ·but an 18-14
Cavaliers 119, Slxers 102
&lt;Southeast); R.I. (Ii;asl); and record was not good enough to
At Richfield, Ohio, ·Mark Price
'E-!lcson, -Ariz. ,(West); Regional 'carry them into the tournament.
scored 30 points and John "Hot
Semifinals and Finals: March
Best winning percentage
Rpd" Williams added 21 points,
22-24 at Dallas, (Midwest) and
UCLA has a· 62-19 tournament
13 rebounds and four blocked
East 'Rut)letford, N.J., (East);
record fbr a .765 winning percimsh9ts for Cleveland. PhiladelMarch 23-25 at New Orleans, tage; Indiana own~ a 39-13 NCAA
phia, which has lost three
(Southeast) and Oakland. Calif.. record (.750).
.
straight, was led by 29 points and
· (West). National Semifinals and , ,' Wo,st winning percentage
10 rebounds from Charles
Final: March · 31-April 2 at
'North Carolina A&amp;T owns tlie
Barkley,,
Denver.
replrd, going to seven tournaSpU1'1103, Pacers102
Entries
ments without winning a game.
At Indianapolis, Rod Strick;There are 64 teams in the field, Of the 230 teams Invited to the land scored 15 points, Including .
· 30 of which won their conferim- previous 51 tournaments, 60 have
the winning free throws with two
ce's automatic bids. The re- yet to win In tournament play . secoods remaining, to lift San
mainder of the field was seleCted " Three o~ those teams are in this
Antonio. Reggie MIUer scored 31
b'y a nine-member committee year's tournament.
points for the Pacers, who
chaired by Big Ten Conference
FlrsHlrrie entrants •
dropped their third straight.
c'&lt;Jmmissloner James ~!any .
Six teams are certain to make
Cellle&amp; 112, Hawks IN'
Other committee members are:
their f-Irst NCAA Tournament
At Allan ta, Kevin McHale
Duke athlettc director Tom But- appearances : Coppin State,
scored 26 pojnts anll Larry Bird
ters; Fresno State athletic direc- Northern Iowa, South Florida, ' add~ 22 Ia gUide the Celdcs.
tor' Gary A. Cunningham; Iowa Southern Mlsslssppi, Texas
Atlanta was paced by Kevin ,
athletic director Bump Elliott;
Southern arid Towson State.
Willis and Spud Webb with 19
Mid-Eastern Athletic ConferFirat and last
points apie-ce.
ence Commissioner l{enneth
Princeton wrapped the up Ivy
Nupsll7, Rockets 114
F'Tee; Dayton athletic director League title with a 73-46 victory
At Denver, Michael Adams
Thomas Fredricks; Vanderbilt over Columbia •about 9: 30 ·EST scored 25 points, Including a
athletic director Roy !&lt;tamer;
March 3 and was the first team to layup with . 7.8 seconds left, to
Calitar.nla· athletic dlrector officially earn a spot In the 1990 give Denver coach Doug J14oe his
David L. Maggard; and· West tournament. Less than 30 min600th career victory. The loss
Virginia athletic director Fred utes later Coppin State won the
snapped Houston's six-game winSchaus.
Mid-Eastern Atlantic Tournaning streak. ·
Most wins
ment to make the field and later
. s.uut..lautot ,
':rliree teams tied for · the 1990 than same nigbt Robert Morris,
At · Salt Lake City; Kevin
niark: . Nevada-Las V.egas the first In In U89, l;lecame the
Johns911 Scored 29 , points ~nd
clalmecf the Big West .Tourna· .Colonial _League's representaEddie JohniOII came off the
ment and the league automatic tive. Texas Southern won the
bench to lead the Suns, wbo bave
berth with Its 29th vlctoey of the a\ltomatlc bertJI from · the
won 15 of their lut 17 gaJIIel.
season. Kansas, a semifinal loser Southwestern Athletic ConferKarl)falone sc0rt4JI' polntlll!ld ·
1n the Big Eight. Tournament. ence Tourname11t five hours John Stockton lltill U and 21
also has 29 wins this season, after the NCAA palrlnp were asslsta tar lheJar;..::rtu.tr
t,a Salle lost just once In 30 .im,nounced, be&amp;tlnll SOulllern .._, 19-game home
.._
'
snapped.
·
·
g~mes.
·.
89.
.
.
.
.
.
frGIII
u.
Trail
11,
'
Moatlo_,.
·
There
are
38
repeater&amp;
from
Kausas State and VIllanova,
of 22
late at•hu·ge entrlea as Shown by last year's fleltl, lncllldllll de- son tied
fending
champion
J'.11clllau
aud
points, lead!In
thelt 11th and 12th seedlngs, each
Flaal Four . tetlllll Duke aud
double figures, to help Po111and
lolt 14 t,lmes ·this season. Kanua
to the rout, Ita allltb atrallbt
Staie bat thP .werst winnlnl Jlllnoll. Regional flnalllta SyraCIIIt, Vlratnla, GeorvetOWll and
vlctoey. Re11le Tbeus had 25
~11taae In-the tOI!rnam.ent at
Nevada·Lu
Vepaare&amp;laoback.
palata and Terry C8tledge had 19
.54i (~'1-U).
F01rteen
of
the
Sweet16
return.
(or
Orlando.
M:tl&amp; co-.eiiUttve appearllllel

NCAA tournament
• facts ·&amp; ·ftgt~res

Phoenix to
host·1'993
Super Bowl

Barga Division

III coach of year

#1 - ........... Lift ..........
Prot•tle• ,._. .. Force
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Five ·Years in a low

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• #1 for the fifth eoMeCUf~e year
. Why Is A. L. Williams winning? Because
we answer the needs 'of tamUies today. With
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1

�Mlrd•14.1990

.P.aa 4 The.Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND •••

1Deboit, Chicago. in 3-3 deadlock
'

,. •

..-.sELECTED· Ohio Valley Foodltlncl has bttn saw•
ing our customers money for 10
ytclrs .· now: ·Since March,. 1980
we've grown' to a family of 6 East·
man's Foodlands with over 300
area ttnployees. During this once in
a lifetime event, our stores in Galli·
'polls, Pt. Pledsant, ·Pomeroy and
Wellston, join in Ohio Valley Food·
land's 1Oth Anniversary Sale

19 80 ·. PRICES!!!
PRICES THEN •••

'

Eastman, .owners of the area Foodland~. •

~---------------------

I '

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET or REGULAR

PEPSI.-COLA
'

8-16

'

oz.

PLUS
DEPOSIT

BOTTLES

ADDITIONAL
17. 1880.

------

THE ABOVE AD REPRESENTS EXCERPTS AND PRICES FROM
OHIO VALLEY FOODLAND'S lARCH 2, 1980 GRAND OPENING
AD. PRICES. ITEMS AND ARRANGEMENTS MAY VARY. ·.

. DEL MONTE ·

TOMATO JUICE
.
46

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LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON

(AN

1 \"l\)1.\ ....

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jl&gt;l 1' 1

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Cottage Cheese

$ 49

PLASTIC
GALLON

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oz.

CTN.

GLENDALE

Pinto Beans

ASSORTED VARimES DUNCAN HINES

Soft Drinks

CAKE MIXES

181f4

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LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON
:~~~~.:..&lt;:200

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ASSORTED COLORS

NORTHERN .BATH TISSUE

•

4 ROLL
PKG.

FOODLAND
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CREAM 112 GAL · $

. : COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) un~er. way Thursday afternoon .. back from last year's title team .
Pickerington and North Canton
with two Division Ill semifinal
· "She (Cassell) Is going to be a
GlenOak both will be dl'fendtng
contest!!. At 2 p.m., It will be bit quicker," said Isler, "but
championships when they meet
Richwood ·North Union · (25-1) Andreas has been assigned to the
Friday afternoon In the glamor . going against Brqoldteld (19·5), other team's. best player, unles.s
game of !be Division I girls state ' fo11Qwed ·a t4 p.m. by Heath (24·2)
It' ~ a 'post ptayer, most of the
high . school tournament
against Coldwater (23·2) .
season a!ld she's done a good
semifinals.
.
Thur$day night's Division II job."
·
• GlenOak, 24·1, Is the defending .• semifinals match Elida (23-2)
As for Shade, whose average Is
big school tournamen\ champ, • against Drl'sden Trl-Valley (25- . 22 points per game, Isler still
while Pickerington, 25-1,' was
1) at 7 p.m. and Garfll'ld Heights hasn't decided who he will assign
ranked No. 1 the entire season In Trinity (23-3), last year's run· defensively to her, although he's
. the United Press International
nerup, against Urbana (22-4) at 9 '' il'anlng to 5-8 J amesetta
· high school board of coaches
p.m.
Holloway.
·
"No matter who we put on her,
· ratings.
The tournament's other two
:- "It's going to be a great · semifinal contests, In Dlvlsl.on Wl''re going to be at a big height
· ' matchup, " says GlenOak Coach
IV, are Friday night. They match disadvantage," said Isler. "We
· · Garylsler,whowlllbebrlnglnga
Middletown Fenwick (23-2)
sel' her (Shade) as a much above
. team to St. John Arena for the
against fonner champ Buckeye average post player. She's very
third consecutive · year. .The Central (24·1) at 7 p.m. and No. 1 strong and very disCiplined. One
of her strengths Is hfr passing. If
· · Golden Eagles lost to Upper · ran.ked Fort Recovery (25·0)
· Arlington In the 1988 title game.
against Berlin Hiland (23-2) ,last' she doesn't have the shot, she
kicks · It back . out. That' s
"We're similar In a lot of year's small school runnerup.
ways," added Isler. "We both
Pickerington boasts two of the discipline."
Isler !eels last year's state
play pressure man-to-man destate's top players In 5·foot·3
tense, we both have balanced senior polnl guard Susie Cassell, tournament experience could
the Division I UPi playl'r or the pay additional dividends this
: scoring for the most part and
time around.
· we've both been tested In big
year, and M1chelll' Shade, a 6-1
games-and come through II."
junior post player.
"We're certainly counting on
that
," he said . "I know howlfl'lt
The Plckerlngton-GienO'a k
"I'm most scared of Cassell,"
th~ first year and how I felt last
contest will be played at 4 p.m.
said Isler. "She's been around a
Friday, With the first Division I · tong time. She' s got a tot of year . You just know what to
semifinal al 2 p. m: matching
experience and a lot of skills to go expect. The crowd noise Is
Rocky Rlvl'r Magnificat, 25-1,
along with it. She's going to be the greater than Its ever been and
you've got to get used to.that It's
key to us staying with them.' '
against ..· Cincinnati Mother of
Mercy, 21-4. Mercy lost to GleIsler plans to put 5·6 Andreas · very difficult to communicate
nOakln last year's championship . Forester on Cassell, who is with your players."
Two other UPI players of the
game.
averaging 18 points per game.
The three-day tournament gets
Forester Is one of three starters year also will be appearing In the
state tournament. ·
Trinity Is led by 6-6 Division II
player of.the y~ar Vonda Ward, a
junior averaging 23 points an!l14
rebounds per game. Fort Rl'COV·
ery also has a junior player ofthl'
yl'ar In 6-1 Lynn Blhn, with a 19
·I
points per game avl'rage.
' TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - ·Ohio · . lla in the freshman of the year
Other AII·Obloans competing
University's Dave Jamer!l(ln,
voting.
Include
Kim Eastman of North
who set a new single-season
Eckert honored
Union
In
Division II and Coldwat·
Mid-American ·Conference scor·
Jenny Eckert of Ball State was , er's Connie Allg and . Krlsdna
lng record the past sl'ason, was : Sl'lected the Mid-American ConDupps of Heath In Division ID.
. named the MAC Player of the ference Player of the Year In
'
: Year Tuesday .
.
women's basketball In the closest
· Jamerson, a 6-5 senior forward
voting In the his tory oftlie award.
- from Stow, Ohio, recelved52ot:i6
Eckert, a ·5.7 senior from
·: first placl' votes. In voting by Huntington, . Ind., edged out
• ml'mbers or the ' MAC Nl'ws
runner-up Sue Nissen, a Central
. Media Associ&amp;tlon and wa·s lis led Michigan junior, and Toledo
In the top three on every ballot.
senior Kelly Savage·. for the
Jamerson scored 874 points,
honor.
: breaking thl' previous record of
Eckert was third In Ihe MAC In
· 844 points set by Bowling Green's scoring the past season, averagHoward Komives during thl' ing 16.7 points a game, second In
. 1963-64 season. He averaged 31.2 assists with 5.4 a game and led
points a game, th!rd In thl' nation
the league In steals with 3.8 a
this season and second best In game .
. MAC history.
.
Shl' also was among the lead- ·
. Jamerson also holds virtually· ers In field goal percentage ( .464)
every MAC record for three- ·and free throw percentage ( .836) .
point shooting. He made 131 of 303
Eckert concluded hl'r career
three-point attempls this season wllli 1,432 points, 471 assists and
and leads the nation with an 319 steals. She ranks 14th on the
avl'rage of 4.7 three·polnters a · MAC career scoring list, flfih In
game. His high the past season assists and' second In steals.
was 14 ln. .one game; an NCAA
Nissen, a 6-0 forward from
record. '
_,
Redford, Mich., led the con.ferJamerson finiShed his OU ence Iii scoring, averaging 17.2
career with 2,336 polnls, second points a gaml' and was third In
· In MAC his lory only to Miami's · rebounding (9.2) .
: aon Harper, who had 2.377.
Savage, from Toledo, finished
• Ball State's Parts McCurdy her career fourth on the all-lime
· flnlshl'd a distant second In the MAC scoring lis I wllh 1,615 points
. player of the year voting and Rl~ and third In career assists with
Blevins of Kent Slale was third.
618. Shl' led the conference each
: Thl' freshman oft he year honor of . the last three yl'ars In
:went to Miami's Craig Michaelis, three-point goals.
'
a 6·6 forward from Toledo, who
· Freshman .of the year honors
· avl'raged 12.8 points a game, lops went to Bowling Green's Lori
among the first-year players.
Albers, a 5·i1 forward from
Michaelis ranked fifth In the Marie Sleln Marlon Local High
MAC In both lhree-polnt field School. Albers . averaged 8,9
goal percl'ntage and three- pqlnls and 6.4 rebounds a game .
'
pointers made per game. He hit for the Falcons. ·
.
56 of 122 for a percentage of .459.
Heldt Blomberg 'of Miami
finished
second In the voting and
_ Central Michigan's .Sander
Central
Michigan's
Carla Sterk
Scoll, who averaged 11.7 points
was
third.
per game, was second lo Mlchae.
.

Eckert win
·honors from MAC

FOR

Kyger Creek Little League

• Sign-ups Cor this year's Kyger out-of-the-park home run), prst
Creek Little League Tourna- no-hitter (a newelove) and most
menl, scheduled for July 20-29, ou!Btalldlng defensive player of
are now being accepted.
. the toUl'aament.
The tournament will be open to · For each homer hit Over the
the flrsl 26 teams submitting fence. players will have tbelr
rosters by th, June 1S deadline. choice of recelvlq 'a new baseNo teams will be taken after that ball or the olle they hit In addition
date. Teams determined by the to a Cree liot dor and ~ drink.
.tournament directors to be tra- All,playerswlllrecelveaCreesoft
· Vetlng teams. aiJ.star teams, drink followlllf their first came.
'11tc .. are not .ellglble. .
-A total ot 425 tourniment
T·Bhlrtl wtn buwarded throueh·
·· Individual awards 'will be out tbe tournament .
rlwn for players on the final four
Any coach lnteresti!d In signing
teams. In addition. othe,f lndlvld· · up a team for tbe IOIInlalnfnt are
ual tropblel wllllaclude honors to contact James Crace Jr. at
for m01t :!lome 1'11111, mOlt hits, (&amp;lt) "'-''158, SIA!'IIe Neville at
ma.t 1trtlceoti11, tint borne run of (306) 1'15-6751 or RObin Phalln at
the 1oumament (a new bat for (6141 992·5'195.

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BEAR HUG? :... Canada Canooks' defenseman
Adrlen Plavslc (15) blinds Whalers' left winger

Yvon Corriveau (20) Tuesday as the two approach
the Canuck's net during first period action. (UPI) :

Entire '90 baseball . season may be canceled :
KISSIMMEE, Fla. &lt;UPI) - . for sale, said there is a " real
Houston Astros' owner John possibility" thl' entire season
McMullen has blastl'd the play- could be canceled because of Ihe
ers' union for Its position In talks stalled negotiations.
to end the baseball lockout,
saying .Club owners have "sur"Thl' reason I'm pessimisti c Is
renderl'd unconditionally" and that I've been In the meetJngs
the union has rejecled' the lrylng to ·get it done, a~d It just
surrender.
'
~
doesn't happen," he said. "I'm
McMullen, who declined ·· eo convinced we're facl'd wl.th a
discuss reports the Astros are up sltuallon where il is old-time

unionism t hat:s dominating In·
stead of lnle lllgence, brains and
understanding.
"They (players' union) seem
incapable of making a dl'al. The;
owners surrendered uncondltlon~
ally, and now lhey refuse tO:
accept the surrender. This Is
nolhlrig more than just powl'r. ,It's just taking and taking and
taking. "

•

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turned In another 19lld performan~ with 32 saves, lacludlllf a
crucial atop on Steve Larmer late
In the third period for Detroit.
With 25 II!COndS left In the
s~JI(I period Barr riDed a
cannonadlllf bias t from the right
faceoff circle as Detroit blitzed
Cloutier with three goals In an
ll·mlnute span to erase 1.0, 2·1
and 3·2 deficits .
Elsewhere In the NHL, New
Jersey topped Minnesota H, St.
Louis clobbered Washington 4-1,
Montreal stopped the NY Island·
ers 4-2,-Edmonton ripped Qul'bec
4·1, and Harlford blal)ked Van·
couver 1·0.
·

Girls siate tourney ·starts .Thursday

WITH PRICES FROM 1980UI
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goalll' Jaques · Cloutier for an
VPISpona Wrtter
apparent game-tylll,ll goal. But
Don't tell Detroit Jacques referee Ron Howrth's whistle
Demers that be lbould be happy blew, nulllfylq the goal and
with bla team's 3-3 tie Tuesday enractng Demers.
night l agalut· the Chicago
The tie pulled the Red Wlll,IIS,
·' Blacllbawka.
.
·
who are 4-1·2 In their last seven,
Not If you wimt to live to see even with the Mlnnnota North
· WedDI!Iday.
·
'
Stars for~ final Norris Division
The IW'Jing Red Wings raiUed play!llf apot.
· from IJifft olll!-goal deflclll to
Wlnle&amp;a In tbelr WISt eight
. torae a tie, but may have had .a
games, the Blackhawks trail
·vlctOI')) taken away by a quick flr,t:Piace St. Louis by five
whlatle. .
· '
· . points. ,• ·
Detroit was trailing 2·1 In the .
Dave Barr scored the gamesecoJld period, when Detroit's tying goal late · In the second
Bernie Fecterko ·poked In a loose
period. alljl added an assist.
puck In the crl'ase past Chicago ltookle pile Tim Chevetdae

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• 8:30-3:00 Monday through Friday and 8:30-12:()() Saturday: In
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at 742-2888.
'

BAN• ONE. ATHENS. "-"lA ,AIITOI' -~ IIAII
AMtna.OIIIO
_,DIC

�Pofr.erov-Milldl~ Ohio

Paga 8-The Daily Sentinel

~.....,...,,..--..,....- . I.

By KEn'll DRVM
UPI Collere BMketllall Wrller

Lionel Simmons of La Salle,
A last-minute attempted bunt s truck out one Tech player and
the third highest scorer In college
by Infielder Jon Gibson pushed let another walk. Taking the loss basketball history, and Gary
the University ' of Rio Grande .for Tech was Harvey . · The Payton of Oregon State, second
Redmen scored on eight hits and
baseball team past West Virginia
on the all·time assist list, TuesTech, 5-4, In the first game of posted three errors, while the day highlighted United Press
Tuesday's doubleheader at Stan- Mountain Lions were held to four International ' s All-America.
-hits and had three errors .
. ley L. Evans Field.
team.
Becker, the junior outfielder
The Redmen then acted on the
. Derrick Coleman of Syracuse,
momentum In the nightcap to from Mlddlepor(, broke open
Larry Johnson of Nevada-Las
things for Rio Grande In the firs't Vegas a·nd Kendall Gill of Illinois
cage the Mountain Lions, 11·1, In
jnning of the second gaine when
rtve litnlngs. The win.boosted Rio
· completed the team chosen. by a
his home run, his only hltdn three . ·national panel of UPI sports
:j;irande's overall record to'8·4.
: • "I'm pretty well satisfied to be times at tiat. yielded three ·runs. writers.
Bissell went two for three and
·8-4 at this point, " Rio Grande
Simmons, Payton·, · Coleman
:coach Dave Oglesby remarked. Jimrilv Kearns was two for ·four and Gtit are seniors -and Johnson
::·we still have a few problems to to lead the Redmen romp, which ·· Is a junior. Simmons and Colesaw the team advance on nine mah moved up from second team
·froli out, but we're in a good
hits and record only one error. a year ago.
:position to win some games and
James
Lewis, a sophbmore outIn contention for the district."
Southeastern Conference stars
':lleTech,
.
which went to 1·6, J !elder from Cincinnati, l)u.nted Alec Kessler of Georgia and
:jumped to a 3-0 lead in the , l !l !be fourth inning to get on base Chris Jackson of Louisiana State
;opener's first Inning on a honie " and drive in a player for the
made the second team, with
•tun by . Martin. It took the Redmen's final run of the game. Dennis Scott of Georgia Tech,
Tech's Taylor,.orie for t~o In
;Redmen another fo~r Innings to
Rumeal Robinson of Michigan
the game, scored the vis !tors'
;recover, bJ!t Mike Coman's fly
and Doug Smith of Missouri.
-: jlallln the rttth sent Brent Bissell only .run on a double.
· , National scoring leader Bo
Rob Kuhn pitched for Rio
. ;across home plate for tbe hosts '
Kimble of Loyola Marymount
&gt;tlrst run of the game.
Grande and held Tech to only two
the third team, which
l: Tech's V9lney hit another llits : He also str11ck out five. ·. heads
Includes Billy Owens of Syra;ilome run In the sixth, but the batters and allowed only three to
·Redmen advanced when· Bob walk. Losing pitcher was cuse, Stephen Scheffler of
Purdue, Anthony Peeler of Mis·
: young's base hit drove In Gibson. Dingess.
sour! ·and Steve Smith of MichiThe Mountain Lions are·sche- gan State. •
;As the seventh opened, Rio
!Grande pitcher Bucky Spindler duled to play at Bristol (Tenn.)
on Friday. Rio Grande enjoys a
1held down Tech's offense, allowbreak untll Saturday, March 24
liilg Rio Grande to catch up oil a
•Coman hit, an RBI by Donnie at 1 p.m. when .!! hosts Findlay In
11811 UPI
;Becker and one hit by Herb a doubleheader. The games will
AU· America Bu•etball Team
Lloriel Simmons\ La Salle ( Philadel:Sharfenaker, which knotted .the represent the start of.Distrlct 22
phia), !oJWard, 6-7, 210, senior.
competition for the Redmen.
•score at 4.
Larry Jo~sm. Nevada-Las Vegas
" We'll know how good we are
•1• Gibson's attempted
•
(Dallas), rorward, 6-7, 235( Junior,
bunt at the when we play the good teams,
Derrick Coleman, Syracuse (Oet i'Oill .
fol:'\4fard-center,
&amp;.10. 230, senior.
•bottom of the inning with bases
like Ohio Dominican, Mount
Kendall Gill, Illinois fMatte s m, Ill. J,
:ioaded flew past the catcher, Vernon Nazarene and Marietta."
~ard, 6-4, 200. senior.
:allowing the Redmen to slip by Oglesby commented. "If we
Gary PaytOJl, Oregon State I Oak land "!,
guard, 6.4, 180, senior.
:for the win.
don't get blown away by them,
Seeoad Team ·
.; ·
ler, who stayed In the we'll know we have a pretty good
Dennis Scott, 6-8 Junior forward, Gfoor·
game, gave up five hits,
club."
gia Tech; Alec Kessler. 6·11 senior

&lt;

...· ..

1

-T he Daily Sentinel

'

Wedn•day. Men:h 14, 1990'
Page 7

By The Bend

UPI names 1989-90 All-America squad

Redmen sweep
Tech in twin bill

. ..

f

Wedn llrt.y', March 14, 1990

The Big Ten, considered the all·tlme leader S~an Dou- named the top ju'nlor coUege
•
stroqestcol)ference this season, glas. Payton averages 26.3 player last year in Odessa, "
hasfourplayersamongthethree points, 8.3 assists and 3.5 steals Texas .
teams.Ail15playersarecompet- and bad a 58-poJntgame.agalns! ' But Johnson lived up.toexpec·
lng In the NCAA Tournament,
Southern Cal. He led Oregon tatlons, averaglng20.9polntsand ·
which starts Thursday.
~ tate to a 22·6 reco~.
· "11.2 rebounds for l)NLV. JJ• was ·
"He's the bestm*y player In named Big West Player 'bl the
Simmons, a 6-foot-7 forward ·
from Philadelphia, Is only the America," Soathern Cal, Coach Year as the Rebels went, 29-5 ·
fifth playe11 to surpass 3,000 GeOrge Raveling Sl'jd. · ''' There overall.
points. He has started all 129 are 10dlfferentwayshecanbeat
LSU's Jackson falls to the
games In his career at La Salle you: with ' his lf!~dershlp, his second teamatterbelqtheflrst
and totaled 3,157 points and 1,407 at tftude, his passing, his defense, freshman to make UPI fli''t ream
rebounds. He Is third on the his rebounding. Nothing bothers · a year ago. The 6-foot sopli!'m~re
all-ttme scoring list behind Pete him on the floor."
averagll! 28.8 po,Ints.
.
1
Maravlch and Freeman WllllColeman, a 6-10 center(_brward
Georgia Tech's Scott, ·11 6-8
ams and Is the only 3,000-polnt from Detroit, is the all-time junior forward, was the top
scorer t9 surpass 1,000 rebounds : scorer and 'rebounder in Syra- player In the Atlantic . Coast
"Years from now, our team cuse history and was named Big Conference. and his 27.6 ave.rage
can say that we coached and
East Player of the Year· this is the league's highest in 15
played with Qne of the great season. Coleman · av~rage8 ·18.1 . seasons.
.
players ln. the history of- the points and 12.2 rebounds for the
Kessler , a 6-11 senior, is . the
game," La Salle Coach William Orangemen, 24-6. ' , .
sport'stop student-athlete 'with a
"Speedy" Morris said. "And I've ' · "One of the marks 9f a good 3.9grade-polntaveragelnmlcronever been around a player so rebo11D.der is his abU!ty to finish
biology. On the court, he aver-.
plays and (Coleman) does· that, " ages 20.5 points and ·10.2 reunselfish and CIU'Ing about ·his
learn. He reflects what every Missouri Coach Norm Stewart bounds l.o r Georgia, which won
coa,ch would want player to be said. "I don't think there is a Jts first SEC title In 57 seasons.
better rebounder In the country
Missouri got 19.4 poilUs and 9
like. He's something special."
that gets tbe fas tbreajc started ofl rebolinds a game !rom SJ11lth, a
Simmons averages 26.2 points
and 1U rebouncl_s this season tot
a rebound than Coleman."
· 6·10 junior, and Mlchigan:s RoGill, one of the country's most .blnson, a 6-2 senior, averages 18.9
the Explorers, 29-1. He is threetime Metro Atlantic Player of the versatile players, led the Big Ten points and also led the }VolveYear.
·
with a 20.4 scoring ·average tn rine8 In ass,tsts a~d steals;
league games. The 6-4 guard '
On the third team, \ Kimble
Payton, a 6-4 guard ·from
Oakland, has 935 career assists.
from Matteson, Ill., al~ had a averages 35.3 points
highteam-high 61 steals for the Illlnl, scoring Loyola Marymoujtt; OwHe needs 25 assists to catch
'.
21-7.
ens averaged 18.4 points and 8.3
" GUlls just something else, a
rebounds for Syracuse; Pll.r due's
human highlight film," Northw- . Scheffler was Big Ten Player of
estern Coach Bill Foster said. ''If the Year and averages 16.5 points
Ho•orable Menuon
his shot isn't hitting, he makes.up and makes 72.9 percent of his
Kenny Andersoo., Georgia Tech; Stacey
for it defensively. He's that kind
shots; Missouri's Peeler hit for
Au2mon. Neyada·Las Vegas; Anthon.'(
of
player.
"
·
17.2
points and had 5.9assists and
Bonner, St . Louts; Jud Buechler. Arizona;
Johnson, a powerful 6-7 forWillie Burton . M(nnesot'! ; Elden Camp5.7 rebounds; and Steve Smith
bell. Cltmsoo; CPi:lrlc Ceballos, Fullerton
ward from Dallas, · entered the
keyed Michigan State's Big Teil
State; · Vernell "Bimbo" Coles . Virginia
season
as
perhaps
the.
mo~t
title
with team,hlgh figures of .
Tech; OaliP Davis, Clemson; Todd Day ,
Arkansas; Hank Gather.s, Loyola ,Maryheralded newcomer after. being
19.7 points and 6.9 rebounds.

.

,

TITJ.~

l

Meigs County 4H News
· The Country Crossroads 4H and project bookS were dlstrlbClub met recently at the home of u led. Menibers selected their
· Ruby Pickens, a!lvlsor, with five . projects .an.d officers 'learned
thetr duties.
members In attendance.
The health and safety officer·
The members approved buygave
a report on the heart.
Ing 4H t-slitrts .for each member

.1. •

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Scoreboard ...
Pro results
·

W~:4d~y'

~-

Sports. Calendar

i. Kan!Ml!l (e-1 ) ........... :...... ......... HH" 'l

Fooehall

i . S.rral'\1~ II) ( 2t-fi) ................... :I-IO -1
7. ~IJ:Ia Te1·h (2-1-1) .......... ... .. ... '!fli 1:1
H, i\rkanSII.l&gt; ( 2~) ... ...... , .............. 21'!219
9. Geortf!'lown t'll-ti ) ................ ...... 26-1 6
10. PUrdUI' !21-7) ................ ......... 2!! S '
II . MIMPM~rt UHI ..... ................ .. :!15 S
1:!. Arlz.ohl (u.i } .... ............ ... . .... .. llili
1:1 . La Salll' ill Ctf·l l ... ... .......... ... 1:11112
I ·I.OII.k~C~HI) .... .......... ........ ......... J3511
13. MIChlpn 1':2-·'i ) ..................... .. 11:1 1-1
16. Loi8Millr (2~t) ....... ,...... .......... -17 !II
17. Ol'mson 123-II) ........... ..... ......... .:JJ u

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Transactions
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NV 'fulw~ - TradNJ mlnor·I,.JiliW
lleLouml hllllt'm~~r~Orlluldo Miller and ("iWth
to Houlll.on lor miJHII'-IUPI' llliorllll ..
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~aa Ant oalo at Del roll
WMI"''ton ill Mllwaulr t&gt;
NPW 'll'orkal Mlnnrilotll
s...au.,. ILl Utu.h
Portbuld Ill Gol~n Slult&gt;
Hou!lll . . Ill Sal'ramt'nlo

.wt:tHin.

·

C'bW'IOIIt• .SI.,_.d l(U&amp;rd Michael
M'IILm,.toa 10-4aye!oli,.t.1."
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NA.TION,\L HOl'Kt:\· l .EM;n;
Tvt•M:Iaa,w Rt.,.;ults .
Mo•n&gt;ld -1, NV b.huuler!i t
st . ...... ,. -1, " -MhinKton I
Edmn•on -1. Qut•lwl' I

114-nwr .\tilvat.-d l't•nler Tim
Krmpton: plu·ed ~uard T.H. Dunn on
l~u~dlloot.
'
. Fooeh..JI
lncll .....polb - Ntunl'dRoii.!W. fllllr ._,. .
IAHIIiKIIIInl public: relallo..., •ll't'titor. ' ·
Ml...a - Sl~d Plan 8 lnoe a&amp;fftt
, ....... blck Tony PaltV,
!'&lt;r.'l' ·ll'h - rr.illmt"d Orl'f{ :Wackrl~
.o~ln•nl'lh 1ulll eo lllltlonlftA: l'tta(•IL
SM Dh•~ ·- Slpll Plan 8 r~ln,; 1
h:u:kTtlomatoSilllll,.riO. v.'ho had bHn with

fhlc•l(O :J, Dt•l Nit :1. OT
N~ Jrrlll')' :t Mln...,_ot;&amp; I

Hartferd 1. v.._.... ._.., I
\\"C'dlifM'*" Gamt.,.

Nl' ·~""'"ILl Toro•o. 7: :J3 p.m .
Lo,; Allllol..._lll Buffllle. ~ : :JSp . m . ·
E4!1ri'lonl. . al llo,...,.MI, ~ : :Up . m .

( 'hlt·a~o.

TbUNI\V (ian~ Be!olton
(blt'IIKft at qu,.br•l·
Sl' l~o~llandl'r11 :d Phlladt•l"p hla
N1•n- ,Jt'r.-y al ( 'al~r)'
DttroH 1U Pllt!IOOI'l(h
V:utt·ou\1•r at St. l.oul,;

HCH:key

\\"lnalft•l

•

PMI. . I'lh - AsMIAftl'd rl,;ltl win,~;
Klcbar4 Zl'millk to Mu,._t'IQn of thf'
lnWrmtle~~&amp;l Hol'key Le~.

st. Loulll - SI-d rllftt Willi

Vve~~

Ht· ~~u: and ll .~l:llpt&gt;d him •• PtoOrlll (Ill.)

of lbt' lnll'r111t lor11l Hockff

I.e~ .

'

Girls pairings
By Unllrd Prt'!ill lnh.• r rut kmal
·Ptr•jt."' fur Ibis "l'Ht's
•lrl!i .'llalt• hll(h M' houl

College scores

hJIIIkd~alllournam~Pnl

AI Ohio Slalr Sl . .JoM Arrna :
DI\'ISION I
( " iftl·lntw.~l MoOI"'r nl M('rt ')" !~1 --IJ \ "l'o .
Rocky Rh•t&gt;r M~trnlfil' IM ! 25-11 . Friday .~
p.m.
Nordll Canton Gfen()ak (~-J.I ! \ ")1,
Pldwrht(ton (2~1 ). A-Ida)'. -1 p.m.
fb..rn . ..Wdp: SIUIIN:.)·. II p.m .

Collt'Kf' BWildbll.ll ·~~~~
NAil\ O.nl*lrNlip.'l
,\t K111ft!ll14 (II)·. Mo .• Mud' 13

F1r!il Round .
llrmin•hllm..Southern 97,

·

OIVISJON II
Elida 1"!3-11 ' v11. Drtsdt•n Tri-\' alh·,_.
( :!$-1 ). ThurN~--.,· . 7 p.m .
G11rfll'ld H,.l~!i TrtnU ," ('.~:'-3 1 \"!1 .

1Mt&gt;. ) 78 :

'
HIIP\IiOfl

Souih l'llrtilni ·SpartaniNI"',I;" Kt, Grn·
f'\'11 ( l"ll. ) H
R' I!!COr.~ln E1A1 rial"' 7S. Phluladtlpblll
Pha.rmat)' M
Pfellf8" tN.r·. • fit Geoi'RP Fo1 cOr.- . J

,

lirluuw IU·f), Thur.ld""·· ! p.m;
fhamptoalolhlp;

~"~ l•htnh,v .

'!p .m .

01\'ISION Ill
Rit·bwood North l " nlon f \!l-11 , ._., _
Breoldlrid f 1.. , 1. Thui'!Odllv .!! p.m .
Huth (U::!I ""· ( "oldwatrr ('! :~'! ),
Thufllll.,.. ~ p.m .
(bampt.eMNp: Saturdq. II a .m.

DIVIS lOS 1\'
Mldclf'low• f'•nwh'k (~3-'! ) ,.,.. Bud•:
l')'f' tt'ntrat cU-I ). f'rldll)·. -;- p.m .
For1 R t' ('O,~ry ( ~l-t ) ""· •·rlln Hlhmd
r"Z3-!). Frida)'. !9 p.m.
fhample.awlp: S ~unl~· . t p.m .

UPI ratings
SEW' \ 'ORK (ll PI) - Thl' R•l t ln.,.d

Prf'IIM llllf'r..tkl... 8o11rtf uf

c..(•Rei'

Top W 1-nllf'V h•WCh.U rallnp, with
fll'tl·plllcr 'f•f'll tuHi r rcoco,. lhrOUIII
M~h

II In

pa,..-IIIJII~ .

total polllfiM

t h•ll oa II potiiiA ler flr!ll pikr, 1-1 for
IW"(,..,, rtc:. ) MIMI lt~~l Wfol.-' 11 1'a11W11-=

Te•

PG'nt"

1. Oklahoma (3-f lltf.-11 ................ DIIt I

Tourney scores
8oj11 Ohio HIJb S~hoollla,.tethlll
By Untied P~•lnleriiUtoral
Tur!MI~ ;Mltruh 13
Tournamnllll•
Dh.,.lonl
AI J\Jtron
_Ci t' Sl.lollt'ph U, Shakpr HI!'! It fot)
11
-'.1 ( ' lllnloa
fit' st I~Mtlus.lil, !Umnp\1lle Sf
A.t Dayloa
HamUton HI . ctn Oai""RIII• M.
fin " '•••rd tf, Day MeadoMo·d~e 55
'
Dlvllllon II
At YoiUip&amp;own
CIIIDton S. .... 511, CulM 53
UtlrtcMlilll' Cla1moJ11 15, Palnet Har.
Vt',)" liJ

,

center. Missouri; Rumee.l Robinsm. 6.2
senior guard, Michigan; Chris Jacksoo..
6·1 sqJhomoll! gqard, Lousiana State.
11ttrd Team
Bill,v Owens.· 6·9 s~h(Jllor{&gt; rocward.
Syracu.!;f; Bo Kimble, 6-5 senior fOrward,
Loyola Marym6unt; StCphen Scherner. 6·9
sen iorccnter , Purdue; Anthony Peeler. 6·4
sqJhornore guard, Missouri; Steve Smith.
6·6 ·junlor guard, Ml.chigan State-.

By JEFF SHA.N
UPI Sports Writer
The National Invitation Tournament, long since relegated to
also,ran status by the 'expanded
NCAA format, opens Wednesday
night with a few angry reams.
The . to.urnament •begins with
Marqll'ette at Penn State. New
Orleans at James Madison and
Tennessee at Memphis. State'.
The 16-game opening round continues with seven games Thursday night and six more Friday
night.
·
However, an NIT bid comes as
a slap in the face 'to some teams .
who believe they are victims of a
· snub · by the NCAA selection ,
committee: DePaul and .South:
' ern Illinois have aired thl!ir
disappointment at being omitted
.from the 64-team NCAA Toutna- .
·, men!, which begins Thursday, .
"I know how these , decislqns
are made, I"ve been In on those·
kind of meetings. it's pollilcs,"
said Southern Illinois Coach Rich
Herrin, 'whose Salukls finished
26-7 and had expected their first
NCAA berth since 1977. "All I
know Is lt''s a snub to our
basketball team ."
·
Inswad, the Salukis will play
host to Wisconsin-Green Bay
Thursday night, with a crowd in
excess of 8,000 expected at the
SIU Arena despite spring break
and the fact Carbondale. Ill., is a
town ·or only' 25,000.
"Pe9ple are buying tickets;"
Southern Illinois spokes111an
Fred· Huff said. "They're not
mad at us, they're mad at the
NCAA."
Herrin said he doesn't know
· whether his players will · play
with any enthusiasm .
"My problem now will be to get
them ready t6 play," Herrin said.
"l think I can, but it won't be

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ooooo.REWARD

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ST. IT. 7
HOBSON, OHIO

CONTACT 992-5965

RACINE t- ~he Southern Locat OA:P~E 453 will meet Wednesday at 7 P·fll· In the high schqol
cafeteria. l
"
'
MIDDLEPORT
-The Middleport Amat~r Gardeners Club
meeting scheduled for Wednesday has been cancelled due to
Lenten services.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wlil meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at the &amp;en lor citizens center
In Pomeroy. Pizza and pop will
tie fum !shell and necklace mak· '
lng suppltd should be brought In
by the members.

St. Patr·lek
Day Sale .
Now Going On I!

POMER()Y - The Pomeroy
Group of A!.A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thuf!lday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred H~t Gwtholic Church.
For mor~ Information call

.

You'll: Save ·25°/o ·OFF
This Week On Any. Item
With A Green Tag!l

.

wnH F•s..•••s1.64

1~5051.

ro•uOY, 0110

"·

.

Pl. 991·1556

'!PRESCRIPTION SHOP

4=-

•I.

-ROCK SPRINGS - The Rpck
Springs Belter Health Club will
meet Thursay at the home of
Dorothy· Jeffers.
" RACINE- The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Th1,1uday, 7: 30 p.m. Refresh·
menta will be served.
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle·
port Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at the Rock
Springs United Me.t!lodist
Church. for husband's night at

6:30p.m.
SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN -There wlll .be
a 'bend are11 gospel sing on
Saturday at 7 p.m. at the New
Haven United Methodist Church.
Featured singers will be the
Redeemers Quartet, the Taylor
Family, and Reflections. The
public II Invited to attend.

SALEM CENTER - The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will hold its regular fun night
activities beginning with a potluck supper at 6:30 tp.m. on
Saturday at the Salem Center
Fire Station. Games . will be
played ·and all members are
urged to attend.

IEPO 1•1111
OWlS

CANS

7-Up and
Dr. Pepper

PRESENTING

Uf!elnsurance
That Pays Off
If You Live or Ole!

$259

W11n some ktnds. .ol hie ms\Jrance.
you woule nave lo d•e before
anyone could rece•ve any benefits .

But not w1th N1tionwlcte's Whole

DR. PEPPER
DIET
DR. ·PEPPER

Lito Pton! ·

Oesigneti lo withstand the lest
of 1ime. U not only provides
maximum hnancial secur~ty lor
your loved ones aHer you're
gone ... 11 also builds up casn.
loan, and paul-up values tnat you.
ttle ins'-!red. can use for rehrement .
bus1ness opponun1hes . hn•nc.ar

emergenc•es, etc .

Call IOdily tor complete dela•IS

79&lt;

about NatiOnwide's Whole Lite
Plan.
·

2 UTER BOTTLES

.......

..CIS
GOODlY

JEFF WAa~llfis'UIAIK.E
...... 1......... .

'149.00

" zaor,-.a7tt

716-•••h

noa

.(I ~~~~~~~~

•191.00 ...

992-6491

.......IT

... 61 ..991·14"

•

Ceffte&amp;Wf.._

OILY.

Olllo

NthOtiW1dl L•'• lnt~.ttAMfl Como..,w
H" ITif' dll ·l ~ C!ilu.;..l1 .. ,. 0h•u

,,

,,

12 PACIC

•11.95 ...

RENT
TO OWN

...

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992-6669
2 71 North Second

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Democratjc Executive
'Committee will meet Thursday;
7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters aan
in Pomeroy.
·
POMEROY The Meigs
County Board of Elections will be
closed Thursday In order for
employees to attend a meeting in
Woodsfield.
POMEROY -The Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the homeof
Iva Powell.

LOW CASH· PllaS

~

Middleport, Ohio
·.&lt;1

. DUPLEX•CHOCOLATE•VANILI.A

SOfA &amp; CUll

\

~JO

•

••

IIIIJI FD.LIJ
5 oz.

Community calendar

POMEROY -The Willing
Workers Class of the Enterprise
United Met~odlst Church will
meet at the home of Agnes Dixon
.o n Wednesday.

'

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f

WE¥NESDAY
POMERoy; - The license
bureau in Pomeroy will be closed
Wednesday and Thursday due to
construction Inside the building.
The bureau will reopen Friday at
'
. i
9a.m.
1

'

"At till W tf till ,_,.,••, . . .ldat"

'SNUGGLE
FABRIC
SOFTENER

project which he Is explaining to juci(Je Larry
Kennedy. '11te fair was held Tuesday evealng at
~etp Junior Hl1h School.

SCIENCE
JUDGING -''When Does a
Solar Cell Generate the Greatest,Amount of Work
Output'' WBI! the title oi Matt Clark's science fair
.
'
t.
.

LEADING TO THE ARREST
AND C.ONVICTION OF
PERSON OR'
. PERSONS. WHO
.
HAVE BEEN VANDALIZING
THE PROPERTY AND.THEFI
OF. PROPERTY·AT
FACEMYER. LUMBER CO.

·..

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

ftl BIICOII I
5 oz.

oz.

·AMC&gt;liNT 01:
WOI~K OUTI&gt;lJT '~

'·

MIDDLEPqRt, OH.

99C :

BIG
96

GI~EATI!ST

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

FISH SQUARE

Cynthia McGulne with her prolect, "Bow Does
Caffeine Affect tbe Humau Body, and the Way It
.W orks."

, WHEN flOES i\
SOI.~\1~ ·(;Ill.
GI:NEIU\ TE THI!

\

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.\1 .tlhefiM

100-meter silver medalist at the
Seoul Olympics, was awarded
"five-figure" damages for unlawful arrest and libel. The
sprinter was arres~d In London
In 1988 on susplcl9n of being in a
stolen car, which was in fact one
of a number of cars lent to
Olympic athletes. A policeman
told a newspaper about the
arrest, which the court said
amounte&lt;! to libel.

Sl

SPEeiAL
OF THE WEEKI
.
.

hrbmoudl U. WM.Jdn• Memorilll '71
SCruhen"'llt HS, Soudl f'tltaiS

•

290 North Second, Middleport, Ohio

'

...:.~---Sports briefs----'
Law
: The North Carolina state Attorfley General's oftice plans to
pppeal a court onler to release a
rontroversial report Into allegations of corruption In the basketl)all program at N.C. State. The
itate believes the report Is
txempt from the public record
·Jaws and the case will appealed ·
lo the state Court of Appeals .. ..
Britain's Linford Christie, the

MAIL•IN RElATE

•

VM " 'ert '7t, Oint*. P111 .. II

SALE PRICE

I

ALL WESTERN BO.OTS

DePaul also expected an
NCAA berth after recovering
from a 3-7 start to finish strongly.
Athletic Director Bill Bradshaw
said leaving the Blue Demons out
of the NCAAs was an over!llght on
the part . or the selection

.,"""'.., u

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811~

*1. 19
LESS •1.00

I

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2'0°/o OFF

easy."

AI Tote•

Wel't GelliW• n .

'

SAYINGS THURSDAY THRU
SATURDAY AT DAN'S

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4514

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commltt.ee.
"Maybe we'll have to re·
evaluaie how we · schedule,"
Bradshaw said. " We.have a very .
difficult schedule because that is
what thE: NCAA .says Is important. We could have scheduled
four or five wins but instead we
went with a more difficult
sChedule."
.
Instead, the Blue Demons are
hom'e against Creighton Friday
nighI.
''It's human error," Bradshaw
said. "It's hard to explain because the decision was made by
nine guys sltj:ing in a room. We
won the big games on the court.
(1\ victory over Notre Darnel
·was a m~st win and we won.
Unfortunately we didn't get in."
Maryland, which Is home
agajnst Massachusetts Thursday
night, will he making Its final
P!JSiseason appearance untfl
1993. The Terrapins are banned
for two years from postseason
play, 'beginning riext season, for
18 rules vio'laUoos uncovered by
the NCAA . .
The field also Includes St.
Lo.uis, last season's NIT runnerup, and Long Be.a ch State, which
was offered a conditional NCAA
berth t.lut lost the Big West
championship game to NevadaLas Vegas.
St. Louis plays host to Kent
State Friday night while. Long
Beach State visits Arizona State.

l•o•

3 PACK

LATEST FASHIONS FOR tHE
ENTIRE FAMILY
.
'

NIT play begins tonight

18oz. BOX

LII.I IAI

I

ALL LEE'S

ca,.noa

tri!l§

JUDGING .,-Larry Kennedy, D.D.S., Middle·
port, aeaied, lierved as one of the judces.for the
Melp dl!nlor
Science (ralr which was held
at the achool. Pictured here Is
Tllellday

20°/o OFF

.......1

aM

.........

All-America Team.

moon!: Gerald Glass. Mississippi; Ore~
·'Boo' ' Harvey, St. John's; Skeeter Henry.
Oklahoma; Tyrone Hill. Xavier !Ohio );
Christian Laettnei', DukC'; Luc LonglE'y,
New Mexiro; T-ravis May s, Texas: Eric
McArthur, Cal-Santa Barbara: Terry
Mills, Michigan; Almzo Mourn ing, Georgetown: Sh~ullle O'j"Jeal. LSU: · Kevin
Pritchard. Kansas; Mark Randall, Kan·
sas; Brian Shorter, Pitt: Chris Smllh .
Connecticut; Kellh Smilh. California ;
Felton S~cr. Louisville: Bryant .Siith,
Virginia; Mark T1Jimoo, ,Georgetown;
Stephen Thcmpson. Syracuse; Shaun
Vandive-r, Colorado; Lo:v Vau~ht. Michl·
~an; Clarence Weatherspoon. Sout_
hern
MississJppJ; Trevor Wilson. UCLA .

were
Leroy and Junior ROse.
The next meeting will be
Satufday at the home of the'
advisor. At this time the
members will break Into groups,
to work on their projects and
demonstraation assignments for.
the year will be given.
Lilian Nakao, reporter. ·

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�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

-People in the news-By WILLIAM C. TROTJ'
Unlled Pret111 IDterna&amp;lonal
WINGER'S WAYS: Debra
Winger Is again 'spending time
with Sen, Rob Kerrey, D-Neb.
The actress, who dated Kef rey
before she married and divorced
Timothy Hutton back. In the days
when Kerrey wa~ governor of
Nebraska, has been Kerrey 's
house guest In · Omaha :for the
past several days, an aide to the
senator said. Winger, who
brought her son, Noah, along
with her, Is a business partner
with Kerrey In the Prairie Life

WednBI;'tiY. March 14. 1990

Pomeroy Middaport.Ohio
really should not go on," the
princess reportedly said. Anne
rode In the 1976 Montreal OlyrnCenter In Omaha and attended a pies, was the 1971 Euro~an
ceremony . at the tltness center Three-Day Event champion and
Saturday night. Kerrey met recently competed In flat and
· Winger In AprU 1983,when she • steeplechase races lnBrltal11and
was filming ''Terms ot Endear· the · United States, She's 111so
ment" In Lincoln. The two were working on a book about her
romantically linked until the fall riding career, due out on her
of 1985. Winger married Hutton birthday and entitled "Me and
In March 1986 and he flied for My Horses." Anne, the mother of
divorce In December 1988.
two, also keeps busy with about
HANGING UP THE ROYAL 500 public engagements each
SPURS: Britain's Princess year. plu~extenslveworkabroad
Anne,· an avid horsewoman, will tor the Save the Children
give up competitive riding when foundation.
she turns 40 In August, according
KATE'S CHOICE: Katharine
to tl)e London·Dally Mall. "I have Hepburn says she accepted the
been advised that people over 40 job of chairwoman of the Art Pro

Choice auction and dinner In New
York . Tuesday night because
abortion ~lghts Is "a cause I
believe ln." Hepburn rounded up.
a glittering committee of show
business, political and social
names . Artists who contributed
paintings and sculptures Include
Roy Lichtenstein, Claes OldenbuJ'I, Jallan Schnabel, Robert
Rauscbenberg, Jenny Holzer and .
many others trom the avantgarde world. The contributed art .
works are expected 1o raise $3
million to $ol million for the cause.
KJMLAND: Actress Kim Ba·
singer told the folks back home In
Georgia that she won't turn the
town Of Braselton Into a theme
park, a Ia Dollywood. Basinger

was honored In Atlanta Monday
as an ouis landing Georgia citizen
and told the crowd or otflelals,
legislators and gawicers at the
secretary of state's office !bat
she still Is working on plans tor a
turn and recording center In
Braselton, which sbe ~ught last
·year tor $20 million. "Excuse me
DoUy Parton, wherever you are,
but this will be no Dolly\1/ood,"
Basinger said, referring to Parton's ,t heme park· at ~geon
Forge, Tenn.
GLIMPSES: BIIUonalre New
· York real estate magnate Barry
Helmaley, 80, Is hospitalized In
stable condition after suffering a
fall Monday. A spokesman says
Helmsley appears to have no

serious medical problems and
has been up and talking. Helmsley was Indicted with his wife,
Leeaa, on tax fraud charges, but
was declared to Incompetent to
stand trial. Leona was convicted
and sentenced to four years In
prison . .. Former heavyweight
champ Muhammad All Is In
Jakarta. Indonesia, for a sports
and music festival. ~I also plans
to give a speech to. thousands ot
.Moslem communities In Jakar,ta
foUowlng a. Friday prayer at the
Istlqlal Mosque, reputedly the
biggest mosque In Southeast
Asia. His agenda also Includes a
trip to orphanages and a meeting ·,
with senior Moslem leaders.

.

ADVERTISED neM POLICY,Each of those advertised

Kroger ·Cefrbrates

items is required to be readily available for sale in
each KrOger Store, except as specifically noutd
in this ad . If we do run out of an ad..,enised item,
we will offer yoU your Choice of a comparab·le
item , when availab4e, reflecting the same savings
Of a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase1
lhe ad'iertised itein at the a~ertised price witliin

30 days. Onty one vendor.,. coupon will be ·

•ccepted per item

purchet~ed .

COPYRIGHT 1990 - THE KROGER CO. IJEMS
AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, MARCH 11,
THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1990, IN
POMEROY, OHIO.
.
WE RESERVE THE . RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

•

Hubhy .has whole new apprec1atton for ·wife, s job
.,_.AD" ' u: lt'si:30UI., your experts _.t oll'c:r -lllvlce.
8d I Cll't slelp. B• dill's not why Din knows I .. wriliq. 8d M n
l'mwritiq.lY4l,OUIObelp111818y both e11C1r fm a J'eiiiiOIIIO·- C&lt;l'i"diM!t JIOU"ID 11Y wife.
CERNE1&gt; IN MASSACHUSEIIS
We bodllllve ruD-Iime jobs, and
DEAlt MASS: l apom wilh Dr.
!MeilpllillyiOdoiDac.,tblalloule- MlryEIIftiB""""", 'I •cllnlbold ........ Toniabt u we WCR: · Cll)llli,Cm•of~IINew
climbllw ~bed. •Y wife nWi71!d YOlk Uni'Velllly. This is wbal Dr.
tbalhe I.tone mwekM!oft.lldly ~Slid:
10-llomtheWISberiOdle~.
-'I'll= arc sev«aa ~for
• ItnewiflhewtlliOdoltfdbeiOUIId - - , wroos, and none are per~ llefOR lbc .rellll'lled. 10 l con- fec:t, ne young mal) CBII have ·
vincecl ber 10 illy m bed and Dip, , dnmalniion (wd!DI the lap laym
and 10011 we -both sDoozing
of skin), 1...- lleamw:nt or the IOluI awoke llilout 12:15. I blew llho lion lllftltioned by hiiiiiiCllla, SWJi·
m!IH .of the clotbel in the caii'CIJIOVII.'I11cc:GIIyourc:omapoa....... I0-10berjobthe~day, . dent - qUOied fm the lllttz seems
10 I ftgwecl fdjult 10111Mn in the excessive. The mediad of mnoval
dlyl:r. Wbcnigottbere,theltyer- llhould be deiennlnlld by the doctor.
full, lllld 111 the clean clotbel The ciiWion WliuJd·be baled on the
t It&lt;. I 1111ra1 10 fold llld UCk llizundloadonoftheiiiiOO,aswdl
w!Cktwear and IOCb 10 !Ute I'OIIIil u thedqJtboftbecolorllion.
for the~ loed. Aim, Ill= waell . Nomaaerwbicb technique is liled.
·.· least 100 pieces to bal1dle .from just thele is llmost cenaln.to be a a-.
· oneload.andfmsuremywiledoellll . P&amp;l.... alllisflcliJI'y(andmuchleu
least roar or live loldtleveryweet.
expensive) BOIUiionmlglubea~
WeU,35111inulealaler,whilelllnd· or liquid 10 cover the tallm. Either
ing on that c:oid cement floor. I had a COYf#lllllk by Lydia O'Leary or Leg
much deepea ipji«illiM fm .wbal and Body Cover by Dermabk:nd are
my wife doelleVerll times a week cxcellftll. Both can. be purcbalcd in
with neWI' acompllinL
. depaab,ICntlllma. ,
I dccidod not 10 liP
DwAu' md a:Mysi~~etllld
tbcie arepoblbly lbouludl lread. with inlaal,tbeleaerfromthe
ofwomenou&amp;thrrtwbowouldfitdlis -.Jer who said be would give anydelcriplion. and fd lilre each one 10 tbinJIO aec "Dear Old Did" dante
·
.
lbinkthisthank-youisfromalf'&amp;ld"ul apin.
mate.-ALUCKYGUY,CANTON.
The lea«, brimming with affcc·
omo
lion, deal:n'becl how "Dad" loved 10
DEARLUCKY:SorrYiblewyour ~ 10 the Victrola music in the
COWl' by prlndng the JWDC of your limgroom. ~when Dad !mil Mom
city, bqt 1 husband who is as 11i1Jifk went out dancing. everyone steppM
. as yoo should aet a liale specw ofttheDID'IIId..OOIIOQndtowakh.
recognition.
·.
Wepewupwllclling"DearYoung
I say younliolb lucky. Hand your Dad."then "Dear Middle-Aged Dad,"
wife the paper, and tell her she's in
"Ilea' Old Dad" dante his,
Am Landen' c:olunm today.
' feet olf, but not wii!' OlD' mother.
Deer Au I ndm: My 1011 had1 . ~ ~ a larific ~ Sbc
large blaclc panther w• 10011 on his rUed us witiiQull nickel • wonh of
upper ann w1a be turned 18 1ut helpfmm ~He wasncv,er
year.ltdidn'tmaur.rtomeonewayor 1 put of our li11ea. nor of Mother's
. the Oilier, because I
it was either. We- ftllllell1!'er him llksomelhing he had wanlcd for a long

:

Fresh
Strawberries

/

.

'~Saturcfay, . March

'17tfi.

and•

Quart

-.
....

knew

Boneless
hicken Breasts
.-

.

the

rr

56-70-Ct.

•I

I:
• ' 31.5-oz.
28-

. lb.
"IIIEW"·
OR

~rito .Lay

,, Ught Snacks ·
J

5.75-7-oz.

II'

6.5-oz.
.LIMIT 1 CAN WITH COUPON &amp; $111.00

REGULAR OR DIET WITH NUTRASWEET

Kroger 1%
Lowfat Milk

12-Paks
llot
lncW.d

Gallon

Big. K
· '/~
'st Not..,
.
.
k
Soft .Dnn s \~-:,(

Ill

I

. I

, Crest
Toothpaste

24-12-oz. Cans

4.6-oz. Tube

~I
of TN

ust. Patrick's Day Goodies"
IN THE DELi-PASTRY SHDPPE

SLICED
$399 .
Deli
Style
Corned Beef..:, lb.,
.
IN THE ME;i\T DEPT .• THORN APPLI

Fresh
Green Cabbage

Diet Coke or
·Cola Classic

39c

12-PIIc 12-oz. Cana

·

c~~;irai~rC~ FLA$229
Bnsket.. ........

CAFFEINE.FREI DtiT COKE, DIET COKE OR
COCA COLA CLASSIC 2-LTR. BTL.. , $1. t9

'lb.
~- .

""'-'

*qri•

or Conlequences

Betweenl.uCrucesandAibuquer·
que.N.M.,Iieaoneoftbemllllpubli·
cized !mil unique heallb n:iOrJI in lbc
UnitrdSIBia.~y.lt-callcd

HotSpinp.ItilnowknownuTrulh

or Ccmequencea. This city has re~--.;,·-~---1

GOOD USED.
WASHERS, DRYERS,,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES
(

"Alcoltolism: How

careea1Hnat7011,
our taa preparenc

• Have comprehensive·tax ·
knowledge
• Receive yearly tax training
• Make tax laws work for you
• Can prepare .,...y state or
local return

Let- •how

7•• how

aaaoh we care •.

0 UNTY

APPLIANCES
627 3rd An., Gallpolls
••• 446·169!
HOURS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

992-6674
618 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OliO

in
news
' u

..

By United Press International

'I I
I
I
I ,
1-'

Shrimp In
The Shell

s...a.

Kdnwa8CiuilldW tedJiefinhis size in the Uniled
pnrht
One of the lint lhinP people~
Dld-a6tbllkluldancer,bulau COOle here ut is, "How did this place
bllll•llllllllfllhw.be-aflop.I pUts name?"
In 19SO,NBC'sRalpb Bdwlrd$. the
think of him wllea I~~~~; old alllila
llllldn&amp; fools of tlllnJeha on 1the producer of the mdio lhow "TrWh or
dance lloor. It's a 61111y lhina. lbcle Conlcquencea." callcd a llllf moct·
dudel arc aeWI'
with~ ing and said. "I wish some IDWJIIn the
wnw.JIIIIIDI*II'OIIIICI.andyou'U~ Unillld SIBia litedounbow ~ mucb
wbal I - · ~ THE ~Y !hat it would be willinJIO ciiiD&amp;e Its
name to Truth or Conlcquenl:ea.' It
LINGERS &lt;1'1 (BROOICLYN)
DEAR BROOKl.YN: Smy about would ~ ICirifiC po!IIOCion for qur
lhelCUIIOia in dill melody. but we lOth anniversary."
The New Mexico Swe Tourist
ipjieelaleyouribllqyouriiOry.
Deer AU l.a!ldtft: In I recent Bumw lcarncd of Mr. EdW8111'S Wdll
oobmn.youWCIIIdlndho&gt;Nthecityin andldayedthenewstotheHotSplnp
NewMeUcolllllllld"1'rWWIorConiC- Olamber r1 Commerce.
.The town's citizens voted over•
qiiiiiiCCI" aot ill - . Of counc
evayone who livea hrrt knoWs~ whelminJ}J to change d!e name to
SUlly butlamsendiacacli&amp;Jpingthat ·"Truth m- Consequences."
Dear ADD Landen: I read in Lanwill~xplain iiiO lhemtofilie World.
.. KATIDUNW.
cet, a British medical journal,.that a
DEAR KATHR.IN: 1banb for 17-year study of 265.000 Jap11 ear
.
sharing. 1 found the history fu!:inal·
ing.andfmi!Jft)myreadcnwilltoo.
Here it is, folks:
Becaue BU Block
· How The Oty Became Trulli

males showed that llla1 who drink
)leer cvmy clay are 12 times likely to JC'CIIIa:S'of the colonlbolc who drink no ak:ohol. Do you
believe it? - lOWA
DEAR IOWA: Llncet nnta riaht
up there with the New Eqllnd Journal of Mcdic:inc for ~eliability. If
I ancct pinled it. I believe it.
.
Gun of die Day (C!edit Walter ·
Greeo, Denver): If all else fails, rtad
the directions.
Alllllcolwl probkrn? iiUMI caft .JOOU
help .)OOUTX/f DT SO/MOM .)OOU /ovt?

Now_(ortheproblem: "Dan" is lOll')'
he had •t OOne. He says it looks cheap
and makes him foellilre a bum. He il
otum~ with that 111100, and it is
makilig hiin milerable.
I cbec:bd with a doCtor who said it
would~ $1,400 to $3,000 to have
the ta11m removed suqi&lt;:ally. He
wiU'IIIid Dan that theR mightbcascar.
Ann. please cbrx:k with one of

Quir~

"LENTEN SI?EC IAL"
,
INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN

inlber•ypllcc.bllbewattoutalol. l':eived more 1lllional publicity from
aD iplfrttid ap dlllllloel sllincd lilre television IIIII mdiott.•ycityofill

time.

·
U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

Pound

my-·

"""*""

"AS ADVERTISED ON TV"

•

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~-.-...--.-.

.,

....

--~

...........

_

Erin go blank
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (Ufi)A New Jersey judge hoping to get
In the ):Dood for St. Patrick's Day
• lost a casse1te o!Irlsh tunes when
, suspicious court officials Xrayed the gift.
Morris County Superior Judge,
John Harper was philosophical
a bout the destruction, which
resulted from increased security
,following last December's liornblng that killed a l,ederal judge In
Alabama.
.
"You ~an'! criticiZe someone ·
for doing their job," he said.
The ju&lt;!ge, an Irish music fan,
' received the cassette along with
a St. Patrick's Day card from an
acquaintance. But court oftlclals
decided to treat the gift package
as a bomb because . It was
elaborately wrapped, had an
out-of-state return address and
.was addressed to a non-exls tent
Judg~ Parker.
The suspicious officials Xrayed the package, erasing th'e
tape.
Sheriff John Fox said the
courthouse has received four
bomb threats · since February.
While expressed regret for
Harper's loss, he said the securIty measures were necessary.
Slow-mollon' pursuit
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, Mo.
tUPI) - Trying to catch a .
criminal suspect on a tractor ·
doesn't exac)ly make for a
high-speed chase, but Sgt. Jerry
· Winters finally got his man.
The slow-motlon pursuit over
more than 8 .miles of .farm roads
and fields started at 1:20 a.m.
'S aturday when Winters tried to
stop a . man who was driving a
tractor on Missouri Highway N,
about 25 miles northeast · of
Kansas City. ·
''lt'sunusual to see a traciorat
that time of the morning on tbe
highway;" Capt. Claude Fine of
the Clay County Sheriffs Dejiart• men t said Tuesday,
Winters tried sirens, lights and
even a roadbloCk, but the man
refused 10 stop and took a turn
IIIIo nearby fields, where Winters
could not foDow In his patrol car.
The lawman then woke up a
. nearby farmer who lent bbn bls
tractor. The slow-moving chale,
In which the vehiCles reached
about ~ mph In the fields, ended
when the runaway driver jumped
off Ills tractor and ran anott-er
half-mlle. Winters cauabt him on
foot, banclcllffed him aJI(I took
him tot"!! Clay County Ja.ll.

\f'

'
.I

"-.'"' . ..

.

10

Recorlli• It,

Ann
Landers
4NN LANPDIS

........... 4 .....
Ti-~Mi,.,. ....

er...... s,_.lf'*

l _____;::::::::::::!J
HowiODta/WilMt,How 10Cmlqwr
II" ~!J!W .)OOU
s-1 II
u/f
.-l,ltMI,btui•u·Mell-

IM .,.,.,_,,

w/opfMdllclted:orrtftHWYDrtkr{or
$3.65 (riDs iiiCIMIKs posiiJie aNI

'-dliAfl ro: A/coMI, clo AIIIIIAII·

tkr1, P.O. Box 11562.

C~UciJ~o,lll.

606114S62. (11tC~.•IId$A.45./

�(

Foreign aid bill hits Congress
NOR'IH BLENHEIM, N.Y.
"We had no Indication that·
(UP I) - Utlllty crews Wednes- · something was wrong," said
day extinguished burning proKatherine Kemper, a spokeswoman for the Texas Eastern
pane and plugged a ruptured gas
piP,!! line that caused a pair of
Products Pipeline Co., which
owns the pipeline.
fiery explosions that leveled half
The blasts left two men dead
of the small t.own of North
Blenheim.
and five other people IJ!jUred.
Twopeopledledandflveothers
VIrginia Noxon, 54, who had a
were Injured when the cloud of
history of heart trouble, began
gas blew up Tuesday morning,
suffering chest pains upon hearlng the explosion. She was In
destroying half of the homes In
town and setting an ·e ntire hill
stable condition at , Cobleskill
ablaze.
Hospital Wednesday morning.
Ten homes were leveled, and
A Schoharie County .$herlf!'s
' spokeswoman said the remainlive others were extensively
lng propane had been burned out
damaged In the community of
of the llne Wednesday and that
about 100. Smoke wafted from
the line was plugged just alter 5
the blackened shells .of burneda.m.
out cars at the side of Westkfil
· Power and telephone service · Road and flames danced from
. was restored to · homes left · trees 60 feet. high. An entire lllll
standing In the village about 30
was engulfed In flames . All that
mUes southwest of Albany and'
was left of one home was a
residents were returning to their
chimney _
Children on a school bus rode
homes after spending the night
with friends, relatives, or In · past the pipeline moments before
hotels.
. It exploded and they saw the pair
The deadly blast about 7:36
of blasts.
.
a.m. Tuesday - which was
Sheriff Harvey Stoddard said
Immediately followed by a sethe bus "was maybe a minute
and a half' • from being at the
cond explosion- apparently was
the result of an undetected leak . center of the Inferno. The rural
community had a sense that the
along a 4,100-mUe liquid propane
pipeline, a twisting and turning ' children were spared by good
timing.
conduit that reaches from Texas
;, to New York state, authorities
''They were between a quarter
said.
and a half mUe away when the
•.
thing went. The kids were saying
'

they could see the fire out the
back window." Stoddard said.
John Barnett, a Texas Eastern
official, said the same pipeline Is
routed through urb~n areas,
where lhe consequences of a
· simUar explosion would have ·
been much worse.
The disaster was the third io
strike Schoharie County Jn just
three years. In AprU 1987, heavy
rains and melting snow combined to flood the valley and
collapse a state Thruway bridge,
killing 10 people. In July 1989, a
tornado roared through the area
and dozens lost their homes. ·
Town Supervisor Robert
Shaffer, father of New York
Secretary of Sl;lte Gall Shaffer.
said he .was heading out to his
barn when he saw a "huge white
cloud of mist 1,000 feet In tile

lated leaking liquid propane
fonned a puddle near the center
of the small village, evaporating
Into a volatile gas cloud that
exploded minutes later. The ..
. flames then raced up a large hill
back to the pipeline and touched
off a second explosion.
Jim Gately, a North Blenheim
resident, nursed minor burns to
his nose and arm and described ·
how the explosion sounded "like
a bomb went ott."
.
"I heard this whoosh and my
clothes were on !Ire. I jumpi!d In
the shower," he said.
Ed Collins, a Publlc Service
Commission spokesman, said the
8-lncb line enters New York' at
the Pennsylvania line south of
Watkins Glen and goes to the rail
yards at Selkirk, some 15 m!les.
south of Albany _ ·
air."
.
Because the pipeline crosses
Shaffer called gas company
state borders, CoUins said fedemergency crews and was re- · eral agencies would Investigate
porting the propane cloud when
the explosion.
· the explosion enveloped the rural .
Richard Smith, 43, of Central
community 40 miles soutl)westof
Bridge died after suffering
Albany In a ball of fire. Then, the
second- and third-degree burns
line went dead.
over 100 percent ·ot his · body. a
· The explosion knocked out all
hospital spolcesman said.
power ·and telephone service at
Robert Hitchcock,- 53, of North
least 6 miles from North Ble~t­
Blenheim was burned over 90
helm. Robert Shaffer Immepercent of his body and died at
state of
diately declared
12: 35 a.m. Wednesday after
emergency and asked Gov. Mabeing flown to the Westchester
rlo Cuomo lor assistance.
County Medical Center In
Texas Eastern officials specuValhalla.

a

;: ~a•·ry retun1s, vows to stay in ·office
.

.

S15·ooo OFF ANY AIOVE
GROUND POOL,. IN STOCK.
24 FOOT ROUND ABOVE $
0
135
GROUND POOL
NOW
·
•

'

· ·POOL992-5724
PEOPLE

253 WEST MAIN

POMEIOY I OHIO

PONDEROSI
STEJ.KBOUSE

r·m-

Call 304 675-4340

Pl. - 36 COUtn

CAUFOINil

MliGARINE-...... 2/59C

OllNGES ........... 3199c

•Ava YAWY-Dn•
MEDI. EGGS ••••• 51,29

12

a. ·

CELEIY •••••• !lllW.•• S1,19

FROZEN

I ElMS

Egg Noodles ...-••••~.~u~•..·S1.39
I&amp;IIQUO

.......
,.
........... '*"'
jowolry . . ....
lir........

..__..~

.

S. c- whit •·
And cnlc for tho
Werlls. Wo care.

01P

LUNCH BREAK - Kathleen Linebaugh and MIU'C Hollander go
lor a lunch hour spin on a paddle boat In WashlnKton·~ Tidal Basin

Fried Chicken •••••••~u~•.. S4.19
Welch's Grape Juice •••il$1.19
,

Pork 'n' Beans .....~~:I••• S1.19
JIFfY COlli
1 '11 O:i: 3/89(
• uff •. M'
Cllf IOY·II-011 WITH IIIIT
Spaghetti Dinner ••~~~::. S2 .~9
~:x Cleanser •• !' .......!!:Ii. ••• 49C
II'S
Rice lrispies •••.-•.,...UII.~. S2.69
looi·Ade·..............il.t\-. 3/69(
Gatoradt ........-••••• Jt.01.•••••• 69C
11011'011 . . . . IUCD
lief &amp; Gravy.·••••••!~~.~~. S1.49

1ft IX................. .
I

UVINOSTON BULK ARDEN SEED
· NOW IN STOCKII

as record high ternperatiU'es blanketed the eastern United States
yesterday. AI the.rear Is the Jefferson Memorial. ( UPI)

,

I .

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The

pushed flag burning Into the overvalued, for purposes of the
not changed since lhe . Texas
national limelight.
First Amendment, the narrow
ruling; meaning that td win the
The high tourt ruled In June category of expressive conduct
case the government must per19891n a Texas case that burning at stake, and undervalued the
suade one member· to change his
the flag as a political prates t Is a compelling· governmental Intervote ,less than a ·year after the
constitutionally · protected fonn . est - ex pres sly Iden tilled by
ruling. .
of free speech. The 5-4 ruling both the Congress and the presiThe new law states, "Whoever
sparked a controversy ·that saw dent- that lies·at the core oft he
knowingly mutilates, defaces,
President B_ush push for an
statute: the preservation of the
physically defiles, bums, mainamendment to the Constitution.
flag as the unique symbol of our
tains on the floor or ground, or
Instead, Congress passed the
nation.
. tramples upon any !lag of the
Flag Protection Act of 1989,
"When revieWed :from the
Unit~~ . States ~hall he fined
although backers of the amendproper constitutional perspec-under this title or Imprisoned for
ment warned a law would not
tive, the Flag Protection Act !Its
not more than one year, or bo.th."
protect the flag.
wli.hln the bounds .of the First
The case puts the Bush adminThat arg ument gained
Amendment."
Istration In the odd position or
strength Feb. 21 when a federal
In last year's case, two of the
defending a law It argued was
judge In Washington state struck
court's most conservative
Inadequate'. Bush and his aides
down the new law In a case that
members, Justices Antonln Sca- ~ aid the only way to effectively
involved an October 1989 protest
lia and Anthony J&lt;ennedy, joined
ban flag burning was a constitu. outside a post office In Seattle. with three of the most liberal to
tional amendment, and after the
that Included flag burning.
rule against the Texas law.
Seattle ruling, several lawmakComing on the heels of Bush's
ers said they would renew that
In Its flllng · Tuesday, ·the
flag-waving presidential cameffort II the high court strikes
government said the flag bUrning
paign and an art display that
down the new flag law.
In Seattle was "expressive con.
urged viewers to stand on the
To amend the Constitution,
duct" normally protected by the
flag, the .ruUng set oft a wave of . two-thirds of both houses of
· First Amendment: Bui they said
p.rotests by politicians eager to .Congress must. approve the lanthat should not ·'doom the act's
align themselves with protecting guage and three-fourths 'of the
constitutionality."
Old Glory.
state legislatures must ratify it.
"In thls.case, the district court
The makeup of the court ,has
.

Veley Driw, Point

Pleaaan~

WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

.

.

.

Adelicious golden-fried Shrimp Dinner' with
potato or fries, garlic toast &amp; Ponderosa's
AII•You•Gan•Eat Grand Buffet."

GIAPEfiUR .... 3/S1,19

OZ.

.

•
•

.,•
.t~ Allies reject ·arms· verification proposal

·

VELVEETl
.
CHEESE •••••••••••••••• S3.59

VIII CAMP

••

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aan "oz.

Bush said Congress could come
up with the $300 million by
making cuts In several Defense
Depattinent accounts and called
on lawmakers to come up with a
package that Includes $500 million In economic assistance to
Panama by April 5.

--

••
•·

~ Supreine Court to reinstate the
, anti-flag burning law enacted
r, last year - a measure passed In
~ anger over a high court ruling but
r struck down last month by a U.S.
: district judge.
The.: Justice Department, In
:
, legal papers flied with the court,
~ urged the justices Tuesday to
• bear and resolve the case. this
~ year. - · meaning it would be
t -heard ·on an emergency basis
~ wlth.-a shortened time for the
, lll!ngof legal arguments. .
•
If the court grants the motion,
: the ·flVernment' suggested the
~ case could be argued Aprll25, the
~ ; lasi.day of oral arguments for tile
t · 1989-i990 term, and .decided bet fore l;l!ecourt's summer recess In
• late June or early July.
:
The court could act on the
~ govef.nment's appeal as 'early_as
', Mo\)!JaY'• Jfbwevert1~ court is:
1 not ~yQu!red tb grant oral argut ments in the ' case and may ·
~ ; summarily rule on the matter In
: a shprt deelslon- possjbly based
' on . the very court ruling that

NO .COUPON NEEDED

YourI fine jawelry isdesit!Mtl to last a lifetimewith tho proper care.
That's why wo oHor a c-ploto range af jaw...y
·
Wo soli, restring,
· doaa, polsh,
ropalr and chMk
foriOOMitOIIOI '
and parts. And

tI.'

~ administration has asked the

HEART TO HEART MEETWG

PRODUCE

There are ma!)y nations
worthy of American foreign aid
on security and humanitarian
grounds. But foreign aid has
never been popular In the United
States, and coming up with the
money Is difficult- a task made
even more difficult iluririg a time
of ~udget deficits and proposed
cuts In domestic programs.

~

:

l THUISDA Y, IWc:H 15-7:00
PUASANT VAI.IIY HOSPIU
DIIINGiloelM
TOPIC: Eat s-t Whtn Eating Out
F.- . ., Woo-tlo.1

DAIRY

Bush announced a $300 mllllon
aid ·paclc.age lor Nicaragua and
the urttng of a trade embargo
ordered In 1985 by President
Ronald Reagan to purilsh the
SandlnlSta government lor Its
alleged subversion In Central
America and ties to the Soviet
Union. The Sandlnlstas were
ousted at the ballot box Feb. 25,
and Bush promised the econom lc
aid to the new government of
Presldent -.e lect Vlo let a
Chamorro:

~ GOvernment takes flag case to Supreme Court

Meat Salad •••••••••••• ~ ....~ ••• 89(
Chopped Ham ••••••••••••~ S1.49
SHIEDDID......Ib. $2;19
Cooked Ham ...... sua1....1b. S1.99

SWID lOSE - I

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Rackley said City Administrator
Carol Thompson wlll continue to
handle most of the district's
day-to-day·operations.
The city Is renovating a small
room In the basement of Barry's
Southeast Washington home as
an office where he plans to spend
more time on personal business.
"My life will be more balanced
now. I must spend more time on
mySelf. my family." he said.
On the question of resigning
now that ~e has been Indicted,
Barry responded: "There Is no ·
serious or logical reason to
resign. A person Is presumed
Innocent until proven guilty."

l..otiery numbers

.'

•NEW LOCATION•

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; ; WASHINGTON (UPI)
about myself as I on~e dtd," he counts.
.
:· : Mayor Marion Barry. In a deeply
said. "(But) I convinced myselll
If convicted of all the charges,
•: ' personal speech before suppordidn't have a reill problem, Barry could face up to 20 years In
:- 'lers and staff, admitted he
because I didn't drink In the prison and fines up to $1.25
-: abused alcohol and prescription
morning before I went to work," million. The Barry administra~· drup but made no men lion of the
said the 54-year-old mayor.
tion Is also the focus of a
: cocaine charges pending against
corruption probe,
"I didn't drink at the middle of
him In federal court.
Barry spokeswoman Lurma
•
day at work, except when. I
the
-Looking fit and rested follow- &gt;
lng seven weeks at two substance went to lunch, maybe. I didn't
abuse centers In Florida and beat my wife as some alcoholics
South Carolina, Barry: made his do. Paid my bUts on time, mostly
first detailed remarks Tuesday on time. Paid my mortgage eacl)
a bout his . troubles and their and every month," Barry said. .
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tues"
Barry also said he had been · day's winning Ohio · Lottery
effect on his personal and poUticalllfe.
· · under a lot of stresS from trying
numbers:
"I'm back. I feel good about to do too mucll, and placing too
PICl{-3
my treatment program. I feel · much pressure on himself.
386.
·"I tried to be the captain of
good about myself, about ·my
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
every ship, on every ship. In
wife and our son," &amp;aid Barry,
$1,280,337.50, with a payoff due of
other words, I thOught I could do .$503,333.50.
who vowed he would not resign
It all, like some of you !lave tried
from the office he has held l9r 12
PICK-4
. 3743.
from time to time . .. to be
years. -,
supermen and women, never to
Barry did not say whether he
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
fall
always to succeed.
would seek a fourth term next
$231,816.00, with a payoU due of
Barry said he w111 a! tend "one
November.
$98,000.00.
or two" public 12-step treatment
"My political organization Is
still Intact, notwithstanding· programs, sucll as Alcoholics
·
Anonymous, each day.
some defections," Barry told the
Sitting just to Bl,lrry's right on
crowd at the Reeves Municipal
the podium was his lawyer,
· Center. "Anita Bonds ... Is still
Kenneth Mundy. who Is defendmy campaign manager and chief
Ing the mayor against three
poUtlcal spokesperson, and wlll
fejony perjury 4lnd five misdeannounce some plans In the very
meanor cocaine possession .
near future."
charges.
Barry has pleaded
Barry used most of a 30-minute
Innocent
to
all counts. The trialls
address to discuss his alcohoHOMEMADE
·
schedu~d to begin June 4 In
lism, and for the llrst time
federal court.
·
revealed he also was addicted to
Barry was arrested Jan. 18ln a
the drugs Valium and Xanax,
ICIIICI
downtown Washington hoiel, reboth anti' s tress medications.
portedly after being videotaped
"I had known "for a long time
smoking crack cocaine, and was
that there was something very
later Indicted on the additional
wrong. I no longer felt as good
DEU MIDI

..

OPEN 6 DAYS 9:00 l.M.-5:00 P.M.

UMffED TIME ONLY

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'

POO.L
PEOPLE

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Nicaragua illd proposal President Bush ol!ered Congress falls
Into a legislative hopper !llled
with many other budget requests
that have the same chronic
_problem - finding the money.
Democrats and RepubliCans
welcomed the president's prpposal of $300 mllllon In aid for
Nicaragua, but cautioned TuesdiiY that appropriating t~e money Is a difficult political
problem. ·
·
Congress already Is struggling
with another !Qrelgn aid request
of $500 million io help Panama
rebulld from a U.S. economic
embargo and Invasion that
toppled Manuel Noriega.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who
l!eads 'the Appropriations subcommittee d~aling with the requests, said the massive federal
· deficit makes It difficult to find
money for foreign aid requests.
'This Is checkbook diplomacy," Leahy said . "There Is not
anything In the balance, Until the
administration has an·s wered the
quesUons , where does the money
come from, and where Is It spent,
I do not Intend to sl'gn a blilnk
check."

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WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ The
: United States. reacting to Euro' pean allled demands , abandoned
: Its original verification proposal
C and offered a softer version to the·
~ Soviets at ,the conventional arms
~ c.o ntrol talks , an admlnistratlo~
• official said.
.
~ The senior offiCial sa id Tues; day that when the talkS resume in
i Vienna later this week the
,. Western arms reduction prop~ osal will be "90-95 percent of the
t way there," and "the ball Is In the
: Soviet court" for completing an
: agreement this year.
• NATO Is proposing that U.S.
~ .and Soviet troop levels 'he cuI to
; 195,000 each in Central Europe
and that NATO and the Warsaw
Pact each reduce arsenals to
5,700 combat aircraft ,- 20,000 ·
·: tanks , 28,000 troop carriers and
: ~4.000 artillery pieces.
..
&gt;'! · The senior Bush admlnlstra.
r· tion .offlclal, who Is familiar with .
!:arms control talks. spoke to
r-reporters about the Conventional
..,,Forces In Europe. or CFE.
r negotlatlons In Vlenn;l on condl·
:; don he not be Identified.
, He said the United States
~· wanted to propose a verification
procedure that , In addition to
on-slle Inspections or declared
areas where the limited weapons
:.,a,re stored, would have Included
!.. on-slle monitoring of treaty~covered weapons production and
• prior notification or the entry or
:::!'exit of weapons Into Europe.
:,; But ihe Western allies soundly
[: rejected these last two Items.•·he

~

•

t

..•...•

said.
•'They like to manufacture and
sell things outside Europe (and l
they felt themselves to be at a
cominerclal.dlsl,ldvantage to the
United States', " the official said
In explaining F.;uropean rejection
of production monitoring."

'
"If KGB agents were watching

their production processes and
reading their manifests ... and
were not at all present In ours ...
they felt ·as If the United States
was pushing them hard to accept
what they regard as an ex tremely onerous and Intrusive
tnfrlngment of the rights of their
manufacturers . and also of a
sense of their national rights.
"The United States Is out of the
Z()ne and this Is a treaty that
deals wltll Europe. But try telling
that to a French helicopter
mimufacturer. ... They were
most Insistent on these points ."
On the second part of prior
notification. the official noted
that some of the Western Euro- ·
pean countries have responslbltl·ttes In AfriCa and elsewhere. .
'Their attitude toward prior
notlflcaflon of exits of treatylimited. equipment !~om the
. continent of Europe w.as, 'Now
you're -going to tell us, -(If course;
· tMnext time your Mannes want
· to take off and go somewhere.'
''That set of proposals went
absolutely nowhere within Europe," ,he said .
The Unlte&lt;l States abandoned
those -and.. js seeking a verlftca-

lion procedure that wlll Include
on-site Inspections of declared
areas where weapons are stored.
challenge on-site Inspections ,
aerial overflights for monitoring
purposes and "some type of
notification" of entry or exit
from the zone.
Most of the verification procedure was proposed at the end of
the last session of talks, he said.
"The rest, the destruction
protocol and reductions articles
and some other verification
materials ought to be tabled ...
right at the beginning of this

round that begins later this
week," he said.
"There are a few gaps In some .
of the verlflcatlo,n and
destruction-related ISsues. But in
ter111s of treaty text and final
proposals, by the beginning of
this coming round, (It) will he
90-95 percent of the way there,"
the official said.
"Beginning about the end ()f
this week -It was true to a great
extent before. but It's true now
almost with respect to everything In the talkS - the ball Is In
t.he Soviet court," he said .

'

HERE'! AtAlE
.FORE" YOU
IN THE

Make Irish Eyes Smile!
.
'

We have terrific St. Paaick's Day cards!

ClAUIFIDADI
I

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O,d, gout

N1ms C,d,,'
C'1d111tloll ~
AIIIIOUIIOI/1111111,

M'J,.,,,,,
"' ' tuob,

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llli .

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. e MCM.ll: Corlton Cordi, 1r1e

(V\\;ff -

St~u.t a3ooks
93 Mil St.
992·6657
~-~----

;.

�\
Pilga 12-The Deily Sa1tinal

r--~~l

news briefs...- -

Continued from page 1
County Sherlfrs J)epartment will conduct regular meetings. All
Interested citizens are u!JM to attend Tuesday's infonnatlon
session. ·
·
·
·

~

EMS has five Tuesday rolls ·

•

Five calls were answered Tuesday by Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services units.
·
At 8:42a.m., Tuppers Plains went to Silver Ridge Road for
Roland Glenn who was tl,lken to Veterans Memorial Hosplial.
Middleport at 11:03 a.m. went to the Overbrook Center for
·
·
Michael Proctor to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 2: 15 p.m. went to Route 143.for David'Cummings
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
'
··
Racine at 2: 18 p.m. transported Ian Wise from Route 338 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
.
·
At 5:42 p.m. , Tuppers Plains went to Route 681 for Charles
Harris to St. Joseph's HospitaL
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·: Re~cl;ng
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Continued from page 1 ·

···--~-:-=---

: the tras h bill at the end of the Haven areas of Mason County,
: month. "
W.Va.
•• Bruce Reed, president of the
Reed also reported that two
Meigs County Chamber of Com- new . businesses are coming to
merce, announced that the · Meigs Coijnty ..;. Ripley's Clo·
·newly-formed . county.-wlde or- thing Outlet, from West Virginia,
: ganlzat iOn Is progressing toward . which will be located In the
~ goals .which have been estabformer Nelson's· Drug Store
lished for the year. Reed an· building on East Main St. In
nounced that Larry Hoffman, of Pomeroy; and theA. L. Williams
Meigs Industries, Syracuse, has Company , a financial service
agreed to serve as a member of organization to be located In
Chamber's executive board and Middleport and managed by
• that -hopefuUy other ·executive Dennis Hockman.
· lloard members from throughout .
Hockman, who at tended yes· the outlying areas of the county terdar's meeting and briefly
· will be announced in the near explained his new business, .also
, future.
'
commended the formation of the
·• Short-term · and iong.'term Meigs County Chamber 9f Com·
, Chamber. commltiees are now merce as "an exceptional Idea:"
• being established with executive
'Reed reported that 86
; board memller Lenny Eliason members have now joined the
; heading the search for an execu. Meigs County Chamber . . The
. tive direct(&gt;r for Chamber; Joe member ship goal Is · 150
: Clark heading business retention members. Charter memberships
• and expansion; Nick Robinson are available through March 31,
· heading research; and .Tom Reed added, with charter memReed heading · the search for
bership plaques available.
office staff. "We need all the help . finally, Bill Nease, who Is
! we can get," said Reeq. Anyone heading the committee for the
:who would like to assist on these annual Chamber Spring Fling
·•or other committees which may ·dinner-dance, announced that.
: be needed are asked' to contact · tickets for the event will be on
Chamber Secretary Sherry Hart. sale soon at $25 per couple. The
' - George Nichols, · of Ma~on , Spring Fling will be held March
W.Va., attended· the most recent 31 at. Royal Oak Resort with a rib
executive board meeting, Reed eye steak dinner and music by
said, and repo~ted that progress the Crossover band. Nease needs
• Is being made on the project to
to know by March 26 the number
establish toll-free telephone ser- of people who will be attending in
vice between the 992 exchange of order to purchase the steaks.
the Pomero y··· Middleport - Also, reserved tables are availa. Syracuse areas and exchanges In ble for groups of five or more
; the Mason-West Columbia-New , couples.

--Area -deaths--George Conroy
Funeral services ior George .
Erroll Conroy Sr., 82, of Long
Bottom, were held Sundl\Y at 2
p.m. at Ewing Funeral with Rev.
' Don Archer offlclatuig. Burial
. was In Ridenour Cemetery at
Chester.
. Mr. Conroy died Friday morn:tng at Veterans Memorial
·
Hospital.
He was preceded In death bv a
sister, Goldie Weber Woite,
whose name was unintentionally
omitted from the original' obituary which was printed in the .
Friday, March 9, edi~lon of The
' Dally Sentinel.

Leif Patterson
Lei! Harlan Patterson , Infant
son of James T. and Vicki C. Wise
Patterson, Route 1 Cheshire,
died Sunday at Charleston Area
Medical Center.
Also surviving are gralldpl/-r·
erits Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wise
of Cheshire and Mrs. and Mrs.
James Patterson of Bidwell;
great-grandparents Mrs . Ella
Mason of Bidwell and Mrs. '
. Goldie Patterson of Gallipolis,
Mr . and· Mrs. Charles Wise of
Middleport and Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Wllllams of Gallipolis .
Services were conducted Wed·
. nesday at Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home, the Rev. Marlon
Williams officiating. Burial followed In Mina Chapel Cemetery.

~Jordan

Zaragoza

Jordali Michael Zaragoza. two. months-old son of Roger · and
Wendy S. , Neal Zaragoza of Point
Pleasant, died Tuesday, March 13,
1990, at Pleasant..VaUey ' Hospital

-

Stocks

'bally stock prices
.(~ ol10: 38 a.m.) ,
....yce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellla A Loewl

·-

emergency room. He was boril Jan.
13; 1990 at ·Pleasant Yaney
Hospital.
•
· ·•
Survivors, in addition to the
· pareniS, are one sister, Kalee R.
Zaragoza, Point Pleasant; palental
grandparents, Victor and Lola
Zaragoza, DallaS, TX; maternal
grandparents, Ronnie and Linda
Neal, West Columbia; .grea1 pater·
nat grandmother, Hope CIIMz, Dallas, TX; great maternal grandfather,
Howard Goodnite, Mason; grea1
~~~~ grandmother, Mary Brad·
ford, Racine, Ohio; great grea1
ma~ grtuldpareniS, Wayne and
Goldie Goodnite, Letan and great
great maternal grandpareniS, Paul
and Edith Roush, Point Pleasant
Graveside service, with the Rev.
George Hoschar officiating, will be
Thursday at I p.m. at Graham
Cemetery.
Visitation will be' roday from
7:30 to 9 p.m ..today at FoglesOng
Funeral Home in Mason.

Carlos Snowden
Masonic services for Carlos E.
Snowden, 73, of Pomeroy, who
died Monday afternoon at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital, wlll be
conducted by the Shade River
Lodge this evening at Fisher
Funeral Home.

(l.m Electric Power ............. 30'1.2
AT&amp;T .... , .. ,.........................41%
Ashland Oil ........................ 34%
Bob Evans ..... ,...... ,.,........... 12'h
Chal'IJiing Shoppes ............ 00.9%
City Holding Co........... 00 .. oooo13
Federal Mogul..oo .... oo .. ooooooool7"
CoodyearT&amp;R .................... 38
Heck's . 00 ......... 0000. , .. .... :00, ..... 3"·
Key Centurion . oooo•,oooooooo:...•. 13% ·
Lands' End................ :........ 18Y..
Umlted Inc . ....................... 39Y,
Multimedia Inc .......... .... 000000 79
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myer. ............ 00 .. 16~ .
Sboney's Inc................. 0000 .. 12~
.star Bank 0000 .. oo .... 00 .............. 19 ,
Welidy'a Int'l.. .........,............ ,~
WorthiJ!iton In.d.. ,...... :........ 20'!4
I

By Uulted Prias IDterualloual
Gusty Winds and thunder:
storms made a second assault
Wednesday on tornado-ravaged
towl)s in the Mltlwes t, where
twls ter s the day before flattened
homes, hurled cats and left two
people dead and hundreds
homeless.
Storm· clouds also circulated
through the southern Plains,
where the National Weather
Service Issued tornado warnings
for Oklahoma and northern
Texas, while a summer like heat
spell entered Its ttilrd day along
the Attanllc Coast.
The 1(J().mlJe.long band of tornadoes danced across central
and eastern Kansas Tuesday,
killing at least two people In
Marlon and Harvey counties,
plowlug through the city of
Hesston and prompting a Nationa I Guard moblllzatlon.
"The ·stre~s. are jtlst littered
with trees and debris, and a
of houses are des· num~r
•.
~

.

·Pomeroy Court news·
The (oUowing lndlvtduals were
fined by Mayor Richard Seyler In
Tuesday night's weekly session
of Pomeroy Court.
Fined were Frank Haggy .
Pomeroy, $375 and costS, for
DUI, and $63 arid .costs, for
driving under suspension; Steve
Quillen, Middleport, $213 and
costs, menacing threats; Robert
Kennedy; Rutland, $213 ·and
costs, trespassing; Jason Hill,
Racine, $163 and costs, for
reckless operation, and $48 lind
costs, for speeding; Charles
McCloud Jr., Mlddlep()rt, $50 and
costs, hanging onto the outside of
a motor vehicle while It was

moving; Thomas J . Richardson,
Pomeroy, $50 and cosis, speedIng; Donna Frank, Pomeroy, $63
and costs, squealing tires; Tl·
inothy Daviqson, Pomeroy, $63
and costs, allowin~: an unlicensed
driver to operate a vehicle.
Bonds were forfeited by Joseph
Ri(e, Middleport, $313, fo r carry-.
lng a concelaed weapon, alsc
$375, for DUI: Jonathan Smith;.
Centerville, ~48, speeding;
Dol)na Clark, Athens, $44, speed·
ing; Dencll Hudson II, Syracuse,
$43, running a stop sign; and
William Ohlinger, Newark, $43,
for an IUegal left t!Jrn.

Middleport Court news
In the.Tuesdayevenlngcourtof
Middleport Mayor Fred · Hof·

:~~ ::;:':t~~::~~l,\~~~~~elted
Forfeltlng bonds were Doreen
Ruth Hadsell, Pomeroy, $460,
DUI and $50, speed ; Tony R.
Moles, So.uth Charleston, W.Va.,
$60, illegal turn; and Tammy
Olakowsk(, Albany, $60, expired
tags.

Fined were . Lecta N. BliSh, ·
Gallipolis, $265 and coyts, reckless operation; Brett Bush,
Po!Jieroy, $65 and costs, disorderly manner; fl.andy D. George,
Rutland, $10 and costs, wrong
way on a one way street, and $100
and costs, driving under suspension; and Cheryl Ferguson, Mid·
dleport, $50 and costs, contempt
of court.

Meigs board.. _c_on_ti_n_ue_d_fr_o_m_;p;_a,;;,ge_1_ _ __
l\lso approved by the board,
as drugs. such as diet pills or any
other pill which Is represented to was a DECA field trip on March
be a drug but Is not.
· 16 and 17 so that.. students can
In other action at the board participate In state.contests, and .
meeting Fred Baloy was hired as the field trip of the Pomeroy
assistant track coach.
,
safety patrol on May · 3-6 to
The Harrisonville balf fields -Washington, D. C.
.
'Vere approved for summer base·
Dock days were approved for
ball use with the specification Juanita Lambert, Linda Morris,
that there will be no alcohol use . and Karen Stanley. The board
on school grounds·. . '
approved a walver of dress code
at the discretion of principals due
to the unseasonably warm
weather and authorized the superintendent to check Into the
An open house for sophomore needs of athletic equipment
students of Meigs, Southern, and reconditioning at both the junior
Eastern High Schools .lnterested and senior lilgh ·schools ~
·
In enrolling In' the vocatiOnal
Financial reports were given ·
program at Meigs next year will by Jane F~y, treasurer. She
be held Thursday and Friday.
explained following a question .
Hours of the open house will be from Jeff Wer.ry, board member,
from 6 to 9.p.l!f. on Thursday and that the $90,000 negative balance
9 a.m. to noon on Fridi!Y .
In the lunch program stems from
The open house Is being held In expe!lditures prior to the 1989-90
conjunction with the parent· school year. Fry noted that this
teacher conferences which will school year the lunch program,
be going on at the same hours . now under a food service comTeachers wili be available to pany ,Is. meeting expenditures.
answer questions.
The hoard moved Into ·execuOn March 20th the. annual tive ·session to discuss personnel
eighth gra«!e open house will be and negotiations.
,
held for students and their
Attending were Supt. James
parents. Fenton Taylor, prlncl· Carpenter, the · treasurer. Jane
pal, describeci this open ho.use as Fry , and board members, Bob
an ,orientation type of meeting Barton, president, Werry, Ro·
and for registration of those bert Snowden, Larry -Rupe, and
coming Into the high school next Richard Vaughan.
fall. It will begin at 7 p.m.

Open house

..

'

A publiC hearing is planned by ·the Ohio Depar~ent of
Transportation (000T) for lie clilvert replacetnellt and road
realignment of ·u. s. Route 33 and State 'Route•l2Un Pomeroy.
The heartna will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday, March 27, In the old
gymnulum at Pomeroy Vllla4C Hall.
·
··
Included In the proJect is construction of a new IDtel'lJI!Ctlon of
U.S. 33andStateRoute 124withturnlanes. Theprojectlengthls
1,:100 feet, or one-quarter of a mUe. ooor anticipates
construction to begin this summer.
Maps, drawings and environmental data will be available to
tbe public for Ylewina at the hevtna. Anyoae wisbfnl to submit
a written statment or exhibit may present It at the hearing or
mall it to Joseph L. Leach, P. E., Deputy Director of the Ohio
~rtment of Transportation, P. 0. Box 658, _Musklngum
Drive, Marietta, Ohio, 45750. The final date for submission of
statmenta will be March 30. ·

14, 1

tornadoes, with serious damage had respouded to the small
to homes and farl'!l buildings .community of Worthington. At
reported In Dubuque, Jones and least 50 peopll! were left homeless In the community, she said.
Davis counties.
Severe thunderstorms alsO
Mary, Lux, a spokeswoman for
the AmeriCan Red Cross In struck In Ok.lahOma early Wee!·
Dubuque, said a res ponse ·team nesday after spawning several
) ornadoes in the central ud
southwest part or the stale tate
Tuesday .
The National Weather Service
liliued tornado · watches and
thunderstorm watches for north
Texas and much of Oklahoma as
the storm front. approached Ar·.
kam~as Wed~!IY·
A wind _gust '?f 70 mph was
reported In Clay County, Texas,
near the Oklahoma border Wed·
nesilay morning amid torrential
rains.
·
State Representative Mary
High pressure kept condiUons
Abel · (D·Athens) hand Senator hot and cfry In the South, where
Jan Michael Long (D· record highs were set Tuesday In
Circleville) announced today Columbia and Charleston, S.C. ·
Pomeroy VIllage in Meigs
County will be recelving·approxl·
ntat~ly $780,000 In Issue II
monies for a. wastewater treat·
Continued from page 1
ment pla'lt.
.
severe weath.e r:" ·
Meigs County Engineer Phlllp
He said It also encoQI'ages
Roberts announced last week plants to come out early and sets
that Pomeroy would be receiving
up for the kill.
the Issue II monies after he them
Ohio State univeslty horticul- ;
attended a Wednesday afternoon lure professor Richard Funt said
meeting In Columbus of the
the buds on apples . trees are
Small Government Commission breaking open in southern Ohio.
for State Issue II. of which be Is a Buds normally open the second
member .
Thl~
Is Pomeroy's second week in April.
grant· ,for treatment plant upgrading. The village was earlier
. awarded approximately $280,000
in Issue II fuiuls for ' the ,first
!!oulh ~enlral Ohio
phase of their upgrading project .
Increasing Cloudiness WednesIssue II bond funds are pro-- day night, with a low between 55
vided through the state legisla· and 60. Mostly cloudy Thursday;
ture to help local. goveriUT'cnts with highs In the upper 70s.
fund Infrastructure maintenance Chance of rain Is 20 jlercent.
Extended Forecast
proJects. The Ohio Public Works
Friday through Sunday
Commlssioll administers ' the
A chance of showers and
funds. State Issue II was ap·
proved by Ohio voters In 1987. thunderstorms Friday, with fair
Additional funding for these weather Saturday and Sunday.
projects came -from the gasoline Highs' will be In the 60s Friday
tax approved J;lY the legislature' and In the 50s Saturday and
last summer, Abel anti Long Sunday ..Overl)lght lows will be In
. the 40s.early Friday aM mainly
explained.
. "I am extremely pleased to see in the 30s Saturday and Sunday
more State Issue U'dollars going mornings. ·
to assist Meigs Coupty with their
.infrastructure needs . Be it roads,
bridges-or sewers, It Is Important
that the state help local govern·
!Jients to upgrade their current
facilitles," said Long.
Abel added, "This 1!\0ney for
Pomeroy is a wonderful addition
to the amounts which · Meigs
County. has already been
awarded In Is~ue II monies . I am
·contlnulrig to support the local
Infrastructure. ne.eds of' Meigs
Col!nty."

Pomeroy
awarded

.,

·DOWNING CHILDS
MU,I.LEN MUSSER

·INSURANCE

111 Stcond St., Pomeroy
YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY ·
SINCE 1868

The quick, easy way to
colorful decoratlnc schemt'!l
without objectionable paint
odors. For all Interior walls.
· Washable.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

~

•iff•oe ot ed for all c•htl ,.,.,,,. double P'•c:e of eel cos1
•') potm· line 1\'" Oftty ~ot~td
·s~ttn_. il nat tiiiiiOftliblt tor ttrouafter first day , IChtc:tt
tor etfOt'l fwll d.., M fi.IM tn ......, . Cell belor• 2 ·0C p . ft\
DUbllCIIIOft 10 mlkeeo,.Rtion
··Ads thM mutt H.-a i" eOYence .,,
C.nf of Tnen1t1
Mapp'l' Adl

•• •h•

·In Mtmorttm
•A ,I,IUitt..,.

'CtPI - Cl•siftid dilpt-v: lu11n•a Cltd ll'ld 1..11 ,OIICft)
will alao appMr '" lht 1'1 Rl . .anl "•elner and th• G811t
poltt ~Iii¥ Tribllne. reaeh1~g Ovtlr 11.()00 riotn11

WEDNEIDAY~APER

THURSDAY PAPER
fiiiDAY PAP£1
lUNDAY PAP.fll

••6- Galltpoh&amp;

112- MiddiiDOr1

175-Pt P1. .18nt

·3 17-Ch•h•re

••'-cn
..
843-Pan..nd

ArlaCodel04

•sa-Leon

Pomeroy

245-Rto Gr•ndt
256-GuV~n D1t1

1571- APDie Growe
773- M•son
882-1'¥tw Haven

wr

2•7-Lecan Fells

...............
SAT: NIGHT
,. .., ....

'll7:7 Bufttlo

617 - Coolville ·

PLa.NG &amp; lilTING
New '-lilttl
161 llerti!S.Inll
........,. Ohie 45768

Get Recalfc Ftst·

Alignment

"Froa Eatlmltoa"

•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work

Pll. 949-2101
or Its. 949·2160

IWN ST., lunAMD

l·lS.'90-tfn

.

ITE~

SOUTHERN. OHIO COAL
COMPANYMEIGS MINE NO. 2
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coot
Compony. Molgo Mlno No.
2, P. 0. So• 480, At,.,o,
Ohio 45701, h• oullmlned
on 'ApPtlcltlon to Revile o
C~l Mining ooid Rodonuo·
tlon Permit num._ocl R·
031111·20 to tho Ohio Do·
P*nment of Notu,.l Ro·
oourcM, Olvlolon of Rool• .
c matlori. the propoMCI cool
• ml~lilg end recllinetlon OP·
· -ion wll be OOnductoclln
,· MelgoCounty,lllemTown·
· ; ool\lp, leotlon 34 111d VInton
County. Wlllwevllo Town·
· lhlp, Section 4,' Tile pro·,. j&gt;oMCI und11ground mining
• area

en001n . . . . . 11.41

, ocreo llld le ID- on tho
. Wllkoevtl'a ~ mlnu• U.S.
y'G.a. , . . -• .,. _,,., .,..
lenolng w..t ~ lf!e Yilt...
of Wlli!MvHie. ond 0. 71
·. mAM Eat of tho VIR11111 of
· WHkeovltlo. Tho oppllcotlon
· , . . _ to npond tho
.,_ fur room ond plter undorground mining. provide
' for pillar iMiiGVII On thoM
. ,,..., and to permit 0 ,...
, for longwel mining.
' Tho IP~Ion le ""file It
• tho olfl- of tho Molgo
County Recorder. Meigo
County Court Hou•. Be·
cond Strwt. Pomeroy, Ohio
43719 ..,d tho VInton
County Recorder, VInton
County Coun Hou•. Moin
Btr-. McArthur, Ohio
4118111 lor public viewing.
, V&lt;(rlttlln oommenti ond/or
roqueoto for on tnfurmlll
co
_. nlerenco moy be oent to
the Olvlolon of Rodematlon
Fountoln Square, 8uldlng
of thlo-

J111eG . SHale.
Vltl,leCf...
. P. 0. OK 371
Roclno. Oh. 4&amp;771
13) 14.l!1. 28. 3tc .

NEW liSTING - RACINE
- Vine Strtft - I floor
frame house, needs. some
work but has a nice 50xl90'
lot wrth all utii~ies on srte.
MAKE OFFER $12,500.00.

11

•

•

EVERY THURSDAY
YFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.
OPEtt 5:00 P.M.
GAMES START 7:00P.M.
NO ONE UNDER 11 YWS
'.
PEl GAME
IONUS GAME IN 4#
AU PAPD .NGO GAMES

sso.oo

..OF STifF.

_____j~==F=IE=E~CO~FF~EE~~
54 MIICelianeoue

This nice I 'h story home features 3·4 bedrooms, modern
krtchen wrth dining bar, all
storms &amp; many 'other lealutes. Includes trailer lot.
Call for an appointment. RE·
DUCEO $24,700.00.

I.El'ART - OWNER. WILL
TAKE PAYOFF - · Nice 2
story ho.me features large
krtch81l, TV room, IarKe liv·
ing room, dining room, 3
bedrooms, I bath, patio and
.2 car garage. Carpeted
tprougho~t. Gas heat -and
hot water heat. $29,900.00.

Slllior Citlz- and

VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS

9CJ2·6873

16141 Hl-6150

FREE ESTIMATES

~':"a r110•

992-2772

20, South 4th St.
. Middltport, Oh.

POMEROY PIKE- Forty-one
acres plus-a 1980 Li~ mobile home. Beautiful view, 2
car garage, pm:h on 3sides, 3
storage buildini\ and barn. 2
~od sized lledrooms, bay.
window, equfped kitchen
Real prjvacy. OWNffi Will
TAK[ OFFER.
RHXJCEO
$32.000.00.
Spi~ entry
home sitting on 1.~ acres. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, car pEl,

POIEIOY -

electric BB. he&amp; Bt.ift·in oven

in krtcheil. $45,000.00.
. H111rr E. Cl~lild
992·6191
.ftM Tr~stell .... ,949-2610
Jo Hill .............. 915-4466
lae Hupp ........... 949-2257
Office..... ........... 992-2259

. ·yoUNG'S

Howard 'L Wrltlsol

CARPENTER SERVICE

ROO'FING

'

-Room Addltlono

-G-Work
-Eieotrloal • Plumbing
·-Con-Work
--Aoolng

lEW _:.. itEPAII
Gutter•
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

-lnt-r • Eottorlor
Pllmlna

(FREE l!STIIIIATEl)

V. C. YOUNG IIi
992-6215

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomerov, Qhio

l-30-19-Z.mo.

'IVe hiiVI o nlco olllj:tlon of . ·
for Enter candy making.

moiM end eoo•801'1• plu1 •n
ex pen l'llff to 1n1wer your

queotlono.
STOP IN AND BUY EARLY FOR
BETTER SELECTION

"FIREWOOD

CONFECnONER'S SUGAR ........~. 2 lbs.

95;&lt;

..

OHIO VALLEY BULK fOODS

l. d
. . 992·69l0
. Wo Acce"'
- - .- · ,..,u,
...,.-

BILL SLACK
·992-2269

a Auction

EVENINGS

Day or Nlflllt
NO SUNDA YCAUS

Iafon 6 p.m. Loon Mo11ogo
'

tlcnl---.

Inter! dreuar. t.a30'1drwaw. 3 pc. blonde bodruoin tU..,
4 pc. OIMM Size bodt.ocon lUIIe, GE -hor and clryw, 1.7
cubic lt. Sun hol!llf, Aillcldln l.mpa atactic, All ~:ll
limp, 3olt lnpa, caalllndlnll Mnglng clwndllie,., brill
..oo.taln, Inn tlghtJne 100•rs. 00111J1 aIll. M'lliW
tlgurtnea, owl ligul(nea, Homo lnllrior, kitctltn tlllnlll, goapllrmrdl,ltom lA .. do IIi ,gagrll,y..t--ma,
. _ , pola, pialio tloble, - . chltiw, .............. outll,
concNit rn piocel. wllh'n Will,,.,. ..,..lllalt, lhovlla, .
rackl, 18ft. extladdlr,mltll ....~ vile,IMniUWIIPI!r, . .
MINMI', 2 Inn Mel oapper wakita, lnut - ; ..._
pie1i1, mulllololltlpot. lnlnpol. , _ !loot N tt 1 ; ,... HP
pool pump, ~lion II ·-.~. ,_.. ,
,

Ali'niiiOiW!: ti'.au.ttU garogo' kept 1o8. chevrolet .

Collbri1V. 2 ct.. hl!rd top, 2.6 f!, I.OOdod. 62,293 act.
12:00NOon

,

AUCIIM.CMIIIIFI&amp;Dar

RICK. PEARSON·
AUCftON· co~
· LUNCH M..uc:IN, WV 773·1715

OWN1 AII
A'ob .... ad
Ctldw'lD

••It»

IE III:CIIII•CIIIIk•LD.

...........,..•.

.

NolA jll NaForAD ltlor~ciiPIIpnrtr
U~•nno"" 1dlnCIIIIe,ICinlll*y,nWIIIVIrlfnll•
I'

11· 11·'8.· 1 mo.

2-2•"90·1 mo.

JIASHEIS-$100 up
DIYUS-$69 up
REFRIGERATORS- $100 up
IIANGIS-Gu·Eioc.-$125
FREElEIS-$125 up
IICIO OVENS-$79 up
Allll0UI1CPI'Ii'llh

SIIVICE .
992-533S or 915-3561
· · - ...... '""' Offlu

4

Gtvuwey ·

2,.,.,.tunlllat'...,.

SUN'S UP TANNING

N•w Lima ld,, lutl•d, Ohio
1 Session ......................................:. S3.50
6 St'ssiOM.......~ ........... ~................. s12.00
12 .Sessions ................................... S20.00
15. Setisioils................................~.. '% 5.00

Holt Chow ' Holt . _ .....
~- RMdy To Clo. ltWI'f.
Ono
old ,lieto • - ..
_ Y*'!r
, ........
3M-e71-DQ
17WM7.

Puppleo
to aood
lloftoo.
INulllul, fluffy. Sillll dog. 1714133.
'

:::=:..j MoCP::~.o. ~

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

HourloM:ottte. 11W4'W11t.

- ....... _.,.
Lost &amp; Found

6

l08T ohlldo pot ....,. ....,.

A Great Combination"Qutility and Reasonobl1 Prices"
WE GO liE EXIIA MILE.... ,
992-6810 .

...oto!ng-.

~toot

304..J'1.410:1 •

.

....

loU. lloinrd. Enghh CIIUrt-.

......._...MAIN-5TREET
PIZZA

.FURNACE
FUIIACE

217 I. Sec. ·'-•Y

Experienced in Typing, Filing.
FULL ftMI ....OYMIId
,,

CALL
992-5519

(614)915·4110

4-16-16- tin

Million OM litnry . . aek llnry t.Bie, two 11130'1 112

IECIPIM..S1 POSRION
· NOW IYAILAILE

lefrigeratlan
Serwlcs
.Raeldontiel &amp;
Commoroial

VIIY IEASONAIU
HAVE IEFEilENaS
AFTD 6 I'.M.

GREG BAILEY

Pll; 949·210
1
•
or ln. 949•2860'

Saturday; March 17
. 10:00 A.M.

miOI.~WIISol~t

Htati"'r Cael..,

painti,..
Lot Ul tlo it for you.

and J CONSTRUCTION

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

moon llbtea, Mit-e DLIJ end uobttte, -1'101 uobttto, 7 pc.
dining raom ~ ~ flrillh, UIIOI) micnlw1lve, mart(o

MEIGS.(OIIIAY

FREE ESTIMATES

Tab the pain out of ·

1121.

CI.EIAIID
RESULTII.

POSill ON
· AVAILABLE IN

CUMAD .
CONTIOL

Poroton Toblw 110t owy
•-tonoto. HomMor. ....,..

· tt2-SUSor.tiS,S561 ·

Help Wentsd

HUMPHREY'S'

IMfiiiOI IXIDIOI'

Call Susan Calltman; 7,42 ...., •

US'IIIIIIS

-

. . UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

'LOTIONS - STICKERS

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At . .10{11111• Prices"

PUBUC
AUCI'ION

992·2198
Middleport,

"UIW IIICOMI ROlli"
1-12-'90-1 mo.

FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

CUSTOM lUll

Public Sale

PAT HILl FOlD

'c

•uc;HT HAULING

n1. w.. k'• St..lai

SER~ICE

We c11n ~ and recore radtaton ant.l
heattr cor". We CCIIII
also acid boil w roll
out redioton. W1 also
repair Gas Tanb.

lEN'S APPLIANCE

"SHRUB &amp; "'EE
TR1M end REMOVAL·

c~ocolat•

8

f-11· ....

90 DAJ WAIIANTY

EYUY SU.NDAY

'

..

PH, 992·3912

AI'PLIANCES

RACINE
GUN CLUB

. LOCATED 14 I&amp;ES SOU1H OF QALLIIOUS, OHIO,
ON RT. 7. WATCH FOR SIQNS.
Ill AND IllS. CALDWEll. HAVE SOLD THEil HOlE AND
WI.L IE SEll 'lATHE FOU.OWIHO:
1118CEUANEOU8: Buthlne to1a. roctcer o.atinor, reclln.-.
IWMirock8r, z.nllh21'oolorTV-conllat,3pc. IIWtg
RKim ouilll
oerne • ..w; 3 pc. lll of OIMM
Arw. Coflooe tlbie lind IIIII .......f'Nnch ct.r. book lhl(f,

DAY AID

949-21:68
2-1-'90-1 mo. pd.

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-1·89-tfli

POMEROY

T-moeh, lr181o•
st..tton . .

Good RotH
T.L.C ..
27 Yro. Exp.
Rot•..tceo

Sttll'h at 1:00 P.M.

·. 5U lAST MAIN

Hom.nte. W11d11t8f.

EUM HOME

INSULATION

GUN SHOOT

'
· Merchllndiae

IIIDDLEI'DRT "" GOOD
STREET - OWNER WANTS
AN OFF£1.1 EEDSTO SEll;

-A

'

BINGO

~TUL

NEW liSTING- POIIEROY
.- I \1 story frame home
w~h vinyl siding. 3 bedrooms, some carpeting and
patio. Nice front porch.
$2Q,OOO.OO.
.

WENDDUmNGS

,

3 Announciementa

THAI
A
ftJD &amp;Ar_fiU

••rt,

0

1-&amp;lo•dfor

H.'90-J mo.

OF
IS ....No,.,tK....

E (II)

I

Ill MIJ I
011.
MRTI AND IEIIVICI ,
For Moot 2 end 4-oyal• •
enol nil
Stock Perta for

NO SUNDAY CAW
4-16-16-tln

J&amp;L
Wltllr Steelll 0•

SALES &amp; SlRVICE

IUSIIISIPit.OIIl

AHADI

ADDENDUM TO PART t.

...._....

...__..,....,,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•Tire Salea
• •.F ront End

12 ...... Sho..... Chlly
Striclltly lllforcld
10·9-Hn

•
DAVE'S
SMALL IIGINE
· IEPAII

_,tli-Lell"

643 - Areltia Otsl ' t•I-~IC!f'll
742 - Rulfind
3?9 - Wi'nut

,·

·Public N.otice

7-11.'19-tfo

•VINYL SIPING
liALUMINUM SIDINQ
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

742-3088

EYDY· .

6:3D PJL

Ma•g• Cou"'Y
Area Code 014

Masor'l Co . WV

GllbaCoumv
A.. a Code 614

UCINI .
FilE DEPT.

3..HSI7

667-3271

Gr...t A. tfowlallcl

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

I

Council ,...,.. the right
:to *"-' or .r.Joc) any and
' Ill billa.
.

SHOES

~'

ADS sure tu
992'·2156

u-•

CH

.

Your Phone
t;AIIIIelllllle Here

LEGAL NOTICE
, Roolno Yltl11111 Clerk will
,_.,. SEALED SID I .untl
4:00 P.M. Monday. Aprl 4,
11190, for e 1984 CASE
; 11808 Conltructlon King
Beckhc&gt;e Serlo! 1111217876,
doolorocl •
proporty
· oild to be oold "A8 IS".
• , Equlpi'IMI'It IIYIIIoblo lor
· ,lntpoclkm tl tho WATER
.au ILDING at the con- of
3rd and VIne StrHto.
· M•rk on envelope ''BIOS •
FOR BACKHOE."

i·t

'

(614)

1·12.'18-tfli

Wo Corry , ...... lutiPII•

Public N otica

.
.POMEROY'S OUAUTY SHOE 8TORE
.
SPECIAUZINO IN SIZE, SERVICE • SELEcnON

e1 . 3Q / doy

Cla&amp;sified paf!e.~ ci&gt;rer I e
.follOicin[li.Plephime exchanf{es.oo '.

- 200P .M . MONDAY
- 2 :00P .M . TUISDA't'
- 2 '00 P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M "t!OAV

t21 21. 28; t31 7. 14. 4tc

'ti

..

ttu ta'~n fUtv ' II MOttll• tdl

' ,IEFORE PUBLICATION ·
OA'f
- , , ,:00 A.M . SATURDAY

CO .... DEADLINE ' . MDNOAY PAPE~
TU.SOAV PAPER

'of . . .-

WE HAVE ••••

. 30

013. 00

1S

318 - VInton

•ctv•n•men1 1)1Kt4 '" Tht,D•!tv' San1.ne1 te•:

. 111-3, Cobnllu.. Ohio 43224

'

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

YMd Sal•

.,.,.. 30dj¥oofthlt111...8

WHOLESALE
RETAIL

. 11.00

15

Monthly

:~··- I .10 ll11cou r:t for ed1 prt.idtn •ctveftce
•
Ml - Grve..W.V 1'-d Fou"cl 1t11 u...., 15 WCifdl will be
run 3 a.,, aw no ctt•o•...
·
·
'

Weather

'

10

n ........, .
,_.,,Ohio

GUN SHOOJ

• U.DO

915·3365

Sand-Stone-Dirt ·

11.

.42
.10
.DB / day

16

15
1S

1

CultOm Bulh
Home•.
Remodeling •
Re!)8ir W9fk

DUMP TRUCK

992·7479

1-11-80-tln

Reit

3
6

l'lrtl

•Mobile Home
Renuota
•Lot Ronuola

915-4422

COibiileftOII
c•na. ·OIM

NE.,WUND
ENTERPRISES

1Moblla Homo

· Ov~r 1 6 Wordl
14 .00 .
.20

Words

R11• .,, t 'o r con•c~,n_,. "'"'· bfOktn uPdtvsw ill bl C:llii'O«&lt;

Warm .•. .

Is Now O_pen
For Business.

YlllOWIUSII lOAD,
uc•. 0110

~. . . . . . . .~R~A~TE~S~. . . .- -

y

·stOBART'S
GREENHOUSE

949·2545 or
949·U42

'

oivs

HO. PAil

•GRAVEL
•UMESTONE
•
•FlU DIRT
•ANYTHING '
AT ALL

13

DOZEI
SITEWORII • ROADS
CLEARING

MOilLE

CMSI&amp;,MO

Number 1 Marketplace

I A.M. until NOON.SATURJ)AY .·

for project ·

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Judy
Sayre, Pomeroy; . Roland ·Glenn,
Reedsville; David Cummings
Pomeroy; Ian Wise, Racine.
Tuesday discharges - Den.llls
Ir\VIn.
·

•CABBAGE
•CAULIFLOWER
•BROCCOLI
•A WIDE VARIETY OF
FOILAGE PLANTS,
ETC.

~rea's

TO I'LACE AN AD ClLJ, 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

$780,000

' 0

I. L HOUON
TIUCIING

Classifie
• .The

The Deily

Ohio

'

Ho8pital news

Public hearing set March 27..

1

troyed," said Charles Dlx. a ham
radio operator who surveyed
damage in Hesston. "I drove by
where lh!ll'C Is a Pizza Hut and a
large convenience store-gas sta·
lion - It was very unusual to see
all those things not there, " he
said. "There are cats that look
like they've been run through a
car crusher. It's just unbelleva·
ble to see something like that."
Streets leading into Hesston
were blocked by authorities, aJI(I
telephones and electricity were
· out. He said generators brought
· Into the •city provided some
power. Ab0ut300 people were left
hOmeless but most found shelter
with friends or relatives. •
• One person was killed whep a
tornado flattened a home in the
town of Burrton,- a !!Out 30 miles
northwes tof Wichita. The twister
then moved on to nearby Hesston, demolishing a truck stop on
Interstate 135.
Northeastern Iowa also was
hammered by .late aftern0011

~

State Sen. Jan Michael Long 12 noon, at VIllage Council
(D-Circlevllle) today annouced a Chambers In the lilllage hall.
Constituent Day scheduled ·1n
Constituent Day Is scheduled
Meigs County for this Saturday, as a means · of meeting with
March 17, at the following residents of the eight counties In
Senator LQng's'17th District on a
locatlqns and times :
continuing
basiS.
.
- Rutland, from 8:30 to 9:30
"I believe that personal cona ni
at Village Council
Chambers in the Rutland Civic tact with constituents Is vital to
serving effectively as State Sena·
Center.
-Pomeroy, from 9:45a.m. to tor of District 17, and look
10:45 a.m., In the basement . forward to meeting wtth resihearing room of the publl&lt;: dents of Meigs County on March
17," stated Senator LQng.
·
librar y.
-Middleport, from 11 a.m. to

.

14,1990

Twisters assault ~idwest again today

Long announces Constituent .Day

"

Wedna1dey, ~

Pom.oy-Midcleport, Ohio

. FUIIACE

.

PARTl&amp;_~~~===VICE

GAl OR ELECTRIC .

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SIIYICI
'

._.,_....,OffiG
..

IVUI'H 1111

Roger Hysell
· Garage
lt. 114, P1 I ty Oltia

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .

UPAIR

.Alit Tr•••leeiH
PH. ftt-5612
992~7121

or

4-25-tltt

LOWEST PIICES
IIGHEST QUALITY .
FREE LOCAL DEUVEIY
POMEROY AND •DDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCAU YOWNED PIZ!A SHOP.
· Pizza-Su~s-.Salads-Daily Specials

.

992·22·28'

mo.

Stop .In ·aftd S..

DALE HILL
AT

LMr Plc...,_Up 0,., lnsua•

- It-.--

lot Mcoonlldo, , . _ 114-141-D11~

0

Loot: --~

llouoh t.aM;
"""
"""
.......
-r ClloehiN
pup. Loot _

_..,

callt14 441 . . .

.

Loot:- ond- .........
Of! lllloll IIIII.

'Q

-

-

to P .-. 114411-

7

YardS.Ie

1122.

'

Gelllpalle
·a VIcinity

=

All Yard-- II,.... too

Ad••- DIAIIIJNI: ... - .

::::.=
":::.........=...
F'*f:lltandoJ-·p.m..........J.

�Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Hom••

42 Mobile

Television
.V iewing

11

11M .YF-'111 ..._, A-1 - ..

11,'111. _ _ . .

---..
-=-.._ad.
........
=r*' Col Lany I.Mir ,,,...

~ \.

C.. P•zwol1 OM.

-

.... ,. . ...._ Mr condMion.

-

Coollh ...... Col 114--~ Of

tor sale

.(2) • •

.

11

---~

lieu"
I I. WI ., lmA "Po II luo .. j for I Will
1

'.~.!.. , ....... ~ ••. " .... ._..._.~

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

(

't::::.

II

!]t',..
'

I

~--·· ........

:1:;..

iliJI WcilldlwiYtlldlt

5URE 1li1N6! NOW AND TI4EN !

WHO CARES?-ml~E A6AIN!

.

=

-•

=iU=LLWlll£:.-:.::-an:

......,. .. -

PIUFU&amp;

.. ttolnlng

lo """""" ...,.

11

Help Winted

31 Homes for 5ale ·.

....,..., In iNdl, oo1eo, oo11eco

AYOH • All ...... Coil llorllyn

••II

W. oro - o olllo - " " "
""'"' oldo trolnlna _ . . , , Do
you hlw. tM eplftt . or Clrfng?

, _ , I lllmlnlitritlon. Tokl
to join tho
pcol •TMII
it bilnoflcl11.
W. ...., 11'1 _......,.,. •yllnt
tthry I 1 -OhOir
..... ........ p ..... For

:il4rllllll

001 lldHJtJorf PiMM

.pcompl
.

DIII. ~T. IRUNTON

·

114-MI-2JU
11-rl

"'':f;•·
. _ 11

.

:1: ~
1
-

.
......., Opporlunlly Emptoyor 11•F.
·
·Wo-: ....
.... dynomlc,
·.

-;,:.:
01

·- •
" •r· Aoelitnot
- " motlvitoa
·lo
lloftlllr,
.. ..._ ..._

I

W•~· -·~1.

lor t!Wintng? Wo • -'"'Y
ol lundlnli- lvallolllo lor
thooo ollgl~
·
lor , _ 10f
tho - Mlna lloteh
»~h.L_'!"" 1
. . ... Cotch

tho .,.rHI

17 Ml

Tolomo.ui

:e:::=.:'0::!-"::::...:.1:.

ace

lla

l'leOUS

:HI(III-.Piquo,Dit411311.
·A - I M I lhlrtoy
:.,.....,30K71o1411.
' I!ARN _ , flloJii,. _ ,

'- ::.'n

-=

llndi;J
it
.· 11
• ~ ••••IIJtt
-. ~
;-

· Coli
·' · -·
- · l'lohlono, o loit

; piiO\I _ . . , .

""';!,~..... •

, ...,_RIDKIN,
. ,PAUL
: IIITCHELL Prod 1C1 1o -king
lui 1o (Porl~lmo) roytlit, to join
"'- 1 1 w •
~;_win
'on-'"
' ~.. • ·
'
thoalaillo I!JIIit- hovo tho
lo 11om In ldvonoo. We

·::::.- ..:::;oct

:ww' '

hourtr mo, n, .,..t ........ &amp; ,.,..
~...._ H JOU hlv• whll tt

- · Colt ~.., - n . ll.m.·
Sp.ot. 110011211-1313.

FR...-II :....~~~·~Holcont,
11111 g • • 0

::,t"
•:,•· :=.:,-'..!!.'.f'.::
- l o n 1o Colu--.-&amp;1
- . Thll

II •

non .-ang

-. 11~701111.
-

Aldo'o, . - fa&lt;
In 1M Welllton .,..,
-ICI
p.,..,.
&lt;:.&gt;-.~ 1al • 3100 for fur-

-col

combine entartoinmenl trivia
with tho luck of thol ~raw.

""

18 Want..., 10 Do

.... - .
Ooo1g01 Pcrilblo Sow Mll·l
Don't haul logo to o oow mU
conLwo'll cOIOitoyoui30W75195t.
Olvo pl1no, org1n ond koyboonl
roooono In my home. To boglnno!W, .odvontocl ond , oaun
81udentli. AI80 tuch chording
ond I!Wno~. J1 lntorHtod;

coll114-112

.

·

H1ul IWIIy' •ny truh, brushb&amp;
unw1nt~ 11em1. Ae.eon 1 Je
!Wtoo. Noaotloblo. Coli onytlme
514-251-8421.
•
IIIII Pouto'o Dor Cora Canlw.
Satl, Jittordab.., chlldciN. M.f
~';Qm. • ln30 P·j;.!r.~ 2~~0.
wei ro, 1 1 f~ 4 ro,.....o

22

......
·
Will llabyalt In 111'1 ' - • , on
llilovllte ' A~nco •
848·
reflr~. 11
Will de houoo crooning , and
eprlng ciNnlng In M110n

cor GI':JI:·
Aoclno. 1 l-14

= =-:.1""'
'

Lo1

32 Mobile H..ornes .
for Slle
14x711117Norrlo.~fuH,bllh,

7p.m.

t..,. 2 -

Onalouo lvlng.
-

opoil-* i t . =

wKhln oily ..._. dlitllit. 11444HJW~Iorlp.m.
0roo1. . living. 1 lnd 2 ladtm Schunz 12lllll wio;.:ndo, """" opo~- II Vllloa!
CIA, bumor, op , _ , Minot
ond
Al•orolao
~~- ......,.
or - - I n IIJjlopaA. '"""
l~lll.-....
till. "'"'""" April 30.
Flrit too to • 1174 Klrllw all. 10x12, kH- qudty. Call 114-1112·7717.

-!HIIIt

hil

~EOH:l.~ui::~:==

. air;
oHIIoncft,
tltllllle CUth. pwnp,
7 acrw ·
kit lnciudod whh 24x24 . bom. ....... 1 1: 2 bod•-• lumlohocl
120,1100. OIO.•II4-1112-12GI Of lpll, S20H21S por month r&gt;IUI
11H11S-3137.
•
;:llllloit Vol=~~
1177 14170 Foitlvol lloblle
lton)o, Lorgo living room, 2 luH
bllho,, CA, mUll 110 movoct. Con

IVI,nl- 1114412171.

·...1111 Cloyton Wlnnor llx'IOLI
bodroomo,
1 · liZ
bllno,
cunolnolbllnclo,
undorponnlng,
t12,'500. 304.e71-7543 or 114- '
441-1111.
·'
1110 Dlotlvlllo 14172, 2 llr, 21uN
bllho, lotol itocllte, ol , _ 1u..
nlon, C.O., dlwl!w.-1 . under pinn~l1t t11811T,
114-441 8202,
vo ,_.go,
IIUit ooll. rod-.
'
CUllom modo Kropf Wllh 1112 ..,...._ LA
CA, dock. lllonlgo lllillcll::f.. P..ti ·
~;- -!'fte HOme Cou • 11 4- ·
For Sale: 121:10 MObile home

1

4100 doyo
ntghto, -

1'011711-11111
... t7M271.

IIE-W ·aOPIKAHN.FU
• ONI~!J! A1WOPT8
"".,
ED~ DAYS 3G4-4171'
4100 - • a 1711-C171.
One lultroam furnllhlcf 1pt,
very c•n •nd nict, Hune, no
poll, IJDI.t7S.t400. ·
1
Ora bodroo10 luml- opl
.,.....,. lor 1 - · no· poco,
rwtiNncl and ..,_11,·304.e75-

.: :111:.:.;,;1·,--.--..,...,.-:---:::Ora llr. unfumlohocl 1p1. Aongo

Aolrltl·

I

-'dod.

~nd

-

-

Wllor,
polcl

o.- ,....... 11~141.

t:.l.

Un In one ancl rwnt 1M alt..
114m 11133 onor

lls.;.e:oo·
.....

45

......

--

"'*~!,.

....
~_

PUIININIII

Pl-. wv.

....ddold lumlohlng. 1/Z ""·

-

..... Pl.

call-1410.

P,!OIIIto, dlnnol·

.......

. Fumllhed
Rooms '

.

!

"·IIOo!'.L· -

''""""· .._

·II

' /

7 ,..,. • ..-. iiian. llru 811. t
e.m... I ~., lun. 12 Noon • I
p.M. 114-4414151.

IJ

-.,.... -·Whl'-o 171,

BUilding
1m Ocdti! Honor 2S t/ZM. duol.
olr _.... ln., ond lnll• I TV ant. PI, PI, extr1
ctoon. Pricod to MH. 11 ......
0141.
IllS Toyall llol« ttonoo, " -

Suppllel

,....," whlll,"" tlolotg.ldr,
171. kolrl~-• 171.
A~.

A--. u-

,

ovo-.

:':;...1110.
11110.

.... - diyot,

•· r

.:r

Wt\NT SCMITHINt;

. ~tAL. SGAf!Y - GIVE !Vtf A .
PAN QUAYLf MAt/C

AtiPA ~fP
·TfLEPtfONf.

'

C&gt;

1. . .,

Nl.t.. lnc

7:30

e(I) (II
Family FIUCI
College ......_

a Ill Em-lnment Tonight

8 (J) Marna' a Famll(__
lllie1121"-rdriQ
80M'A'S•H
liJI Croaaft11

0

7:35 (J)

Nlghl Couft

Benford Arid Son

a •· """"""' t....,. ac,

My•-• A Nebraska police

52 Sporting Goods

"""""'
lumooo, 11~711·111
oood • dMion. $2000.
..
1:~:00.
.
•

56 . . Pets f91'

a.••

AKC A,_'td 'Oochohund. ond

AIIToni•Pupjollo,Purw ......,
114-141-1831.
1180 I I - RX7. tiOO. 114-1112·
.

.,....,

53

Antiques

~,

,;-;._ _,.....,;,;:.;;,;;,;;;__ _
luy "' nil. AlvoriiW Anllquoo,
1124 E. M1Jn • • Pomeroy.
Hou!W: II.T.W. 18:001.10. to 5:00
r ·m·Ha"""W 1:00 to 1.'00 p.m.
. 14
T:Co~ jwlcl. Old fumHon

-

54.

e~a~.oranciSiam

Gomez and Hardball go after
Qomoz 'a ex-girlfriend's

.~i~~E:

c .,

NO
'

t-. Looll • • • a• fwnWaud.
, ... - · · · c.tl
tt•.an.-.•
, .or
Roaenl . ,
·I

Wolo-ftng. '

... ,..,_hlndll8
.._..""
-

iIll Fulghum•• After Din-

Uno••oMIMfllllrne~

M.....,

~

Rodgers was one of
Am~rlea ' s most prolific and
Influential composers. (1:30)

lmprov.nts · '

• or

1· .
n1g111,

SHHHH... ) .

--...

.

Son Poi!Wing, Pointing,

""'" - .

In
Homo,-UIOII.
14110. Toblo wMh e cftolro, - ·

M'!IIC Awarda

w

Simone !ljrees lo go ou1 witll
Dennis. '01.

lltCrookiChaM
·
8:00 8 (II 8 Night Coull Bull

accldeni*IIY shoots himielf In
thol foot with Roz'l gun. Q
• 8 • (I) Do ogle Ho•Hr,
M.O. Doogie 's

MOI\K MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

··

INTEU.EClUAL
L.lt&lt;eME

.

larrY

DOIN&amp; IN TH!e&gt;
IIU301.

·-··

liJI
King Llvtl
0 MOVIE: A Cuualty Of
War (2:00)
·
·
!It Nallwllle Now Country

Nesf'CF

't, $7,100. -

Il-l-ITERATES~

OLS.Aitnell
dcor. .....,
1181 8-10 Chivy I opd. .~.
!IIIO,!WIIY~ 141000 .....,

_

""" .,_, .• ,4-111..21•.

_....,..

F« Soli: 1118 Na-t Sl.,..

I.W.,IIIpd, All Pl. ollolrllo..,.
..,....,
raot, ~.tin! - t. Hltlh mHoo
llulo~-104-112-1447"""'·or 114t-. IIOO.It~llt.
--.·~·­
-7121 ........ Choll Outhrll
' oJo len rl
Ubnl_ry,

.

1

-1.-

Mt
f~ 1 in~ ~~~J~)I)IiL 1 ',

•\ li'·•·SIO(

e

~~

-AWe, Oolllpollo, DH

_.RI«&lt;IINT IEIDED WII I

, _ 1100. Fona llet:a 111
- - Chovyo. lurpt.._
· - Outdo, (1) IOWI7-

Erd.a.10JH..

.

_._INT SEIDED VIlli In

,_ tt•

feniL ll•a•d
Coaual-. Chnya. lu......_
·
Outdo (1) IOWil'111.8-10111.

72 Truckl for Sale
1178 FOfd VI. V., good oondHion. $1400. CIIII1WIN11S.
1171 -

1ft ... lolr cond

aoo. :10447M3'nl.

musiC's hottest staro
fealurld live.

(II 8 Dear J- Kirk Is
forced to tell tile truth about
his my&amp;lerious personal life.

DHio ·
-VIC
80iv1Co1
CNIIIl Ad. pane, eup.
pl-.- Jilek... _.....,... ~

Ou~

\ '
~
Sopllo Tonk Puftllllna 110..&lt;lollllo
441-02M.

lioa OW Anyltt(ng 11u1
College flelkllbe(f

BARNEY

~Joc;:~;:::..::;•n;:.,.;:DH::,1;,:-:::::;;:•s~7..
::121=,·= :

--.--

&amp;LOllY BE II

Triple 0 . ..,_,., , AL I, 1111-;
1011,

- o r o..rng, - · -

Cull"'!'
moldhiao...........
Edword

.....

'ito.,

-Olboon··

-.l&gt;hono104-7~~

I BET THEY 00
CORN ON TH' COB
QVICKER'N ·
A BUZZ SAW!!

l SEE YOU GOT
SOME ·BRAND-NEW
STORE-BOVGHTEN
TEETH, PARSON

wv, .......
~ ~~~-.
V?QOUI • • Ofl

Aoarlng,

--....,...
-----·
- · ,.,. 1-1184.

................
011111f14.41 I

1MS Wllloyo

CollA o!OOP wllh

~a.....,:szd• ·IIM

17W110 . . . 1:10 I'll.

82

Plumbing a
Hilling
Cailor'l -~~~. . .
ondHIIIIng

. Fourlhond Pine

e (II 111 OtraniUm Leap

'

.

Oalf!poUI, Ohio
814 418 3Mii

.

~

BERNICE
BEDEPSOL
'

I
I

&gt;

G=k

.......= . . . . . .

. , . . . , . - --

•

.

llar:ch 11, , .

l

J

You wiN be ext,.,...y .rrectlve In the

=II

"You're not good .-gt~ to tum pro. How
l!bOUI recomlllendlng ltocka lpr a living?"

""*""

,.... ahelld Ill
your IOCIII lnd
IIIIMI1III lllllnll. You've 11'mad a 101
.._ tho 111181 lew,..... llld lhta II tho
~ be put to ~antageouo

-

Sam leapt Into tho life of a

r.;r a.e::v:~.~h

'I

NCIII . . . 10 "1 all IOIJ.!~r 111011

---~~·-··Mo.

hosts !\lis special profiling
Richard ROdgert and Olear
H1mmeralein II, which lalla
1helr story through a ll8llft
of film clips . (R) (1 :44)
(!) •ac1a11aw On: Healing
The Shame Th8l IIndt You
Defines tho problem of
ohlme In our dally 11-.
10:00 (I) 700 Club Willi Pat
llobofbon

HtJUII

I

01I1IUnCIInO talent today " , _ lbllly
to r-oanill I l1llltiW Ifill 'hH --r

Hawn. c.ll1 ..tt M 1114.

Cll Ro dglrt All!l
Hamrnortloln: Sounill 01
A-'Ciil Mutlc Mary Matlin

Wlldool-"
-t
wort&amp;, brick. IMock I i t - , Ire(
oollmll... tD4-7nt1110. . ••

10 holh on I. . _
........... . . . .1. . torlll,- _ 1 ..1,100114:411-1
.
...... . . . . . ., ... ~Gil ...

1178 l'llill . . . . 4 W.D., . -

AN' WE'RE
RARIIII' TO
MAKE
. SOME

CALLI II

:'

Houllng Authortly .. IDDiptlna
-lid - - Oil 11.1 ""' 11711
DOilgo Truok whh- I - ·
OniJ 171Qr 1111111, ... ......
aood-llitlleii.Conlla
ioon on " - • -·
.... lllihld .. " ......... te :
Tho ltouolnc """"""' 404
11., ,..,. n
~. w.
1:10
, . . _ 1f, 1180.
I i ...... 2 . . .rll

Love Robin's sell-eslalm
soars wl:ltln Catherine .gives
Iter a promotion. Q

Ca. RON EVANIIlNTEAP"IIES,

1187 ~ Aonllnloll, s ........
All-Fit
-•
ilidlo,
flbeii'M$ ........
.....,.,.7'110,

_,,.,

are

8:30 8

1m Ford v..,•u ue 1111.

IItie.,.
-.IItie ..............
73 Vana a 4 wo·,

fllhtr

considers giving up his
. mldical_practlca . Q .
ill ·~~~ Jlkl And Tho
FllmOn Jlkl II seriOUaly
wounded when hlt cover is
blown...

. WHATSAN

1187 EXP, PI, outo, AIC, AII·FII
~~~~ •n IMI, ta,200. 3041
.
,,

..... ......

Ill Conv-n With Olnllt

1:05 (J) MOVIE: Big Jake (PO)
(2:00)
uo. •Cl111
a After
• heHe•d
01 Thl
Olives her lite,

.

Cool! Food, o10 North

Wladom (R)
liJI PrlmiNewa
·
0 Mu-, She Wrota A
Utile Night Work

.0 Fourth Annual Soul Train

- l:orpo.-y
wort&amp;, •"""
. DieD,
,... bllllllloa.I14-S-.
Conllt lnolillotlon and !Wpii!W. .
Colllarllll...... 114 44112110
Joo'l TV 8orvloo. IOW7t-1724.
Campllte ..mo. an moet
-ondmodolo. I

"'"':.,:"" mUiiOil p111c1, ....

e

Cll G1111 Pertormance1

' '
Homl
'

1~'·---·laneoUI

s po.

.a

murder.

aD (J) Growing Paino
· . Jason counsels Ben ro resist
thol temptation to clleal. Q

larltOOO. 114-1111~471.

WATEAP
·~·~~~

8 Unaolved

chief is sought lor

(R)C '

3f" Kounlry Air TIOVOI Ttilloi,
Cllon, Fully EquiDDOdo wllh 11!1
.... 11c:441-2701 for
IOOfll............... ,

.n ·

coli
~ .._.lilt.

e CII

AKC Algllllred ..... Pupe,
filii a11 Mot• a .. med, 150 ' 1110 Old8 Cutlue, ....... 1881\
Clldo Oob, 4-door. NIIO _., or
......143lltll0.

Prutuoe.

.

I

7 :05())~ ...........

whlll, ....... 11110. · .......,..
t,. Rl- llil.

-

''

l·/4

a For K1c11' s•k•: Daycar~
Orowa Up . . .
.

1:00 (I) MOVIE: - · Start (2:00)

-HIPPJ
.. Jock
10 cllltooOid
- tho
3-1 fllo ·
Collor?
n
- l i n - - - for ootol

l;'.,.

victim Jeopardizes thol llvH of
Crockett and Tubba. Stereo.
Ill fleet Of VlcleoCounlry
0 Afllloll And Collelo

mlllo, Oil goa. QooJ .....
dllon. 111 ,BOO. 11~411.

(llitwl). $100. 114-1112o147t.

LMII.,.,.._It I a, .....
~""' IU ~ I J

·

Mllrnl VIce

-lft.
VI' Ill
Fumlhn.
tit...........
4 . . - Opon

171.
...
- .Wollllltllo'lfl
m. .a:1. ·w.. ,• 55
...- . .... 211 Inch - ......
m.ao- ............
capp a~te. 171. 31 Inch e11c.

•1121 WhHI Of Fonunt

Il!J'ior~~W!outtBlacl&lt;maM
Q•

tll2.zlill.

going around In Girclll. You'H k -

'-10 ell It 1111...,- wtl llllrraiV·
llyonllltrPPY.
.
. Trying IO patdh up I bro/

Ill •

......

•IIJI!......,.Newt
o Hew Twlltfhl z10:01fi=IE: The HolM
(2:30)

,.... o.....,u•~~~~ow

.On . . .
.11:00~ i n - I Mrs. Kltlg

cooperanve ~..urteta 1ne1 tttev Will fallow t h o - · you.......
..

•r••

112l ••• (J) • • •

(..,11..,._10) You "-the
ability tocray, If you Cllll m to- h, of ·
turnlnO ,.,.,.. 111111 Into cntMJve,
productive ............. Mallo your ...
Ioria~.
•
CAIIII I (,_. 11.,., 8) Olftlri wM1
IPP 111111 rout GGIIIPIF!Iallltlp for 1wo
lntportent ~••• ao• !Odll'· OM, you'llll
people do tltelr lllfllg 111111, two, II
111111' don'1 k - ...... to do, ,.........
vllrt WIJI10 lnlplre lflm.
.

I I I I. I I I I ·1

.. , UNSCRAMBLE FOR
AN SWER
·

NORTH

1-lf.N

+Q109

Over the artificial two-club open· .
••08643
ina. West pre-emptecl with four clubs.
• K J 10 &amp;
Back around 10 South, who now bid
+&amp;
four spades, his long suit. North now i
EAST .
bid five clubs, sbowin&amp; a control and , wEST
+J 53 2
implying decent spade stlpJ!Orl South
.Q92
bid nve diamonds, showing the ace, .K J7
• 73 2
t984
and then, even tbou&amp;h North subsided . +KQ109S75
•• 3 2
with five spades, South conti.nued with
a six-dub cue-bid, suggesting the j)Os·
SOUTH
+AK8 7 ,6 4
sibility of a grand slam. So North
.A5
showed the diamond king, South bid
• AQ6
the heart ace, and North trusted that
+AJ
South's bidding denoted a hand that
would provide an excellent play for all
Vulnerable: North-South
the tricks. South did have just such a
DealercSouth
hand, with one proviso - he needed 10
Well Nor I~ Eaol
play the hand as well as he bid it.
Pass
Pass
Declarer won the ace of clubs and
'Pass
Pass
5+
casually played the ace of spades out
Pass 5+
Pass
of his hand. He of course intended next
Pass
6t
Piss
to ruff a club, then pick up trumps and
Pass 7+
An pass
pitch his losing heart on the lonK
diamond in dummy. But all these
Opening lead: + K
plans went kaput when West showed
out on the spade ace.
· Declarer had no e~cuse for goin!! .. spades in dummy. He can now take:a
set. After West had bid four clubs, _tt finesse against East's jack and still
I ,w~~a~··~~~!~rk;e:ly that he would be void m handle rulfing tbe secood club in dum·
I"
The contract easily makes tf my. And his play will then be consls·
ijrst plays the queen of .lent with his bidding.
·

...

••

"CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JO~ErH
ACROSS 40 Reacted
1 Disney
to an
alarm
deer
6 Tea
clock
9 Sigourney 42 Uproar
Weaver 43 Equeslrian
movie
44 Average
10 Give for
mark
awhile
45 Actor's
12 Musical
go·between
piece
DOWN
· Yest~rdey'e Ans..,tr
lor nine
1 Common · 11 Remove 27 Tammy's
place
14 Kingly
favorite
13 Temper
· 15 Juan's year2 lsolaled
17 Western
make-up
'18 Pirate's
3 North
Indian
29 Old car
libation
Dakota
20 Bran
32 Domicile
18 Caucho
city
source
33 Subway
lare
tree
4 Crazy idea 23 ..._
19 Expand,
5 Barge in · Fence 34 Put forth
as a
8 Cherry
Me In"
36 Learning by
· waistline
slone
24 Bran
memory
21. Part ol
7 ' - party
source
39 "The Bells"
a journey 8 Not
· 2.5 Yell
poet
22 Fruit
rounded 26 Moslem 41 Peruke
drink
231nlorma·
lion
24 Belly
or Pearl
27 Mushroom
28 One ql
.the Cartwrights
29 Joined a
marathon
30 Building
addilion
31 Property
35 -king
36 Mythical
bird
37 Word with
bread

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AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. Jn this sample A is I!Sed
ror the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
•

a-••
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MSA UH

A N .N P U G

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su

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anlgnment ln LynchbOrO. Q

neldlarx;;l:r

so

week and 10 of them have to

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with an Old h.!llh aChool
sweethoart. Q
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ken romance? The Aetro-Grapll Matchmaker can holp you lo understllld wllat
to do to make tho relallonehtp work.
Ml!l $2 to Ma1Chmak.-, P.O. Box
91428. C!MIIId, OH 44101-3428.
.U.I (lllarell 21-April 11) A 1111 of
-IOnl will be tho ~~ ·of the aenaltlve way you hancle a liluaiiOn tocray
-.you "-to e11o01e to Mlllly .,.
other' I
own.
TAUIIUI (April
10) Rltatton•llhlpe wl1h othera lhould 110 """
tmOOittly lor you today, t 1c1 toe once
you becOme lrlvaMd, " wtlarWM your

Make a11$1 l&gt;f 20 things that
make vou WOII!
hoUrs a

BJUDGE

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atli
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ond hllch. In • . - lhopo.
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A street musician, who wasn't very good, passed a
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collect enough , I'll PLAY AGAIN!"
.

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Cll Dogralll High MIChelle
llndl her father impossible to
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four ICfambled words

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WED., MARCH 14 •

75 'Boatl &amp; Moten

.

w: J
( .. .-r\1'6)\

.._~---··10
Dalwt~Nt!t CINo

•

,..,~

FAI.URE IS NOT 1ME

FOI Lt\ZINESS: 11 ZiCL IS
ALSO THE SUCCESS C)F 01HERS. - A• FS

RENARD

'

'

�DOUBLE
'

COUPONS
lh Reserve The Riehl To

·ALL
WEEK ·

l,mit Quantities

STORE HOURS

.

I

Mon.dcry thru Sunday
· 8 ·AM-10' PM

MAXIMUM

298 SECOND ·ST.
POMEROY. OH.
SUN., MAR. ,11 THRU SA'.,

~R.

17I

SEE STOlE
FOR
DRAilS
,;

19~0

}

DR. PEPPE-R
8 Pak 16 Oz. Itt. ltls.

'

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters ••••:.•• 49(
PORK .
'
$269
Cube Steak,•.••••••:.. ·
IEEF · .
:
.
$269
Cube Steak;•••••••:••
LONGHORN COUY

$

9
Chuck Roast ••••• !~. 11

: .·

.

Cheese ••••••• ~ ••••••• !~.

$

$

7566
'
Super I.AJtto

Kicker 680323 .

..

109
$ 9
Sliced Bacon •••• ~2.~1• 11

a1
Yot.40, No.218

.

Copyrightod 1 110

Commissioners • table request to close road
By NANCY YOACIIAM
Senllnel New• Stall 1
A request to close Township
Road 458ln Scipio Township has - .
been tablj!d by the Meigs County
Commissioners. A publk: hearlng on the proposal was held at
Wednesday afternoon's regular
commissioners' meeting.
Present for thepublk: hearing
were Jl.m and Janice Steele,
· owneu of property bordering the
road In · question, and Jim Mil·
llron and RoliertStewart, repres·
enting .the Oblo Department of
· Naturaj Resources, anotller af·
fectedpropertyowner.
Originally, all propertY owners
agreed to the road closure and ·

submitted · documents to the development for Meigs County.
commissioners In supp&lt;irt of the Shields reported that the CDBG
proposed "closure. However, upon app!lcatlon has been_completed
further lnvesllgatlon, another and should be submitted to the
·affected property owner was Ohio· Department of Developdiscovered. Until the property ment this week. .
·
ownercanbelocati!dandpermls·
Shlel.ds explained that depart·
slon for the closure secured !rom ment of development representahim or her, the matter must be tlves have questioned what they
put on hold.
Jeel may be the buying of a
.A $econd public hearing con· 1ranchlse by Hill. However, Hill
cern!ng the loaning of Commun- and Shields pointed out that the
lty Development BIO&lt;:k Grant proposal l$ not. to Pl!rChase a
funds to area businessman Jim franchise, _but to purchase .fixed
Hlll 10 facilitate Hill's purchase as&lt;&gt;ets through a buying co opera·
of Pleaser's Restaurant lnPoJTie· tlve. Although Shields and Hill
roy, was also held Wedn~~ay. feel tile buying cooperative Is
Present with Hill lor the meet.lng explained tn the proposal, they
waS ·Kim Shields, director of Will. be adding addlilomilletters

.
.
~
'
MIUA RECElVES GOVERNOR'S AWARD

.;

FLAV.RITE
o1

HEADs

Sl

·

2 70 M.llk •••••••••••••• $189'
COUNTY ~INE 16 IWS
. . $· . :
9
4
Amer. Cheese ••• ~.~~ 1 ·
PLASTI( GALLON
'

Dog Food •••••••••••••

$

20 LB. BAG

j

MAXWELL HOUSE ·

299 Ice Cream •••••••••••• $2.99
·KEMPS

: .

$

·Instant Coffee •• :.~.

•

99
2

MUWBl HOUSE MASTER BLEND

PILSIURY

COFFEE

CAKE MIXES

:l.,0~

$399

._. Oolr At Powtll's S.. Yllu

GeM S.• .,, 11 tllru Set. Mar. 17

.11.5

oz.

r

'

3r.w•··f$2

••s.ncw,
s.,. v•
...
......At 11 tin S.t
...... 17

·

· 5 QUART PAIL

FRESH .

BAKERY
DONUTS
'

S:l69
· ..

DOZEN

BANQUU

•
'
D1nners ...........oz.. 99&lt;

TV

10-12

"

· J..O IOU

PURE SWEET

SUGAR .
4.0 Ll.
BAG
!.

$119

11e1111 011y At,..... ...,

v•

... s.n...... 11 . . S.t...... 17

-

GALA TOWELS

2/Sl
-t
v•

r.w.n•s •
..... s... ... 11 tin Sit.... 17

. . GeM hly

..

U.S.Q.A. CHOICE

BEEF ROUND
..
STEAK·

some questions with Jenkins and
reiterated their position that the
self-Insurance pool has been a
great savings to Meigs County.
In a related matter, Jenkins
explained that Buckeye Admlnls·
trators Is purchasing a FAX
machine for their own olllce, an!l
that tile selt-lnsurance council
has app~oved the purchase of
fAX machines for any of their
participating counties who would
wish one, In order to tacllltate
communications between Buck·
eye Administrators and tile participating counties. B~ckeye Ad·
mlnlstrators Is paying for their
own machine, but the council will
Continued on page 16

Hocking, JackSon, Meigs and granted through the Ohio EPA.
Vinton Managem~nt District , the Hendlcker said that the district
meeting will provide an oppor: wlll requesr . an extension bl!l
tunlly for the public to make expects to have a ..drafl plan by
June 1990 for review and comcomments and ask questions.
Tile general agenda. Hen· . ment prior to submitting II to tile
drlcker advises, Is to discuss tile Ohio EPA .
exlsllng solid waste system and
As for tile public meeting on
preliminary conclusions regard· March 27, Hendrickson encourlng recycling and compostlng. ages l~terested Individuals to
Those attending will be asked to attend In order to Increase their
participate with comments and level of understanding of the
•
•
questions.
proje~t. A portion or tile meeting
Each district must prepare a will be reserved for quesllons
'
plan to be approved by the Ohio and comments.
Environmental Protection · tn ad.dltion, all policy commitAgency. Tile plin must examine tee meetings are open to the
, exlsllng and project !uture solid public. Ih,ne . llleetj.ngs..., Hel)·
waste""q u.ntllles and· com pall· drlckson said, are held during the
·~
tloti, ali wen as exlsllng and secilnd week of each month at a
A charge of talsltlcatlon and a · projected landfill capacity, she .d.lflerent location each month.
charge of·obstructing an officer explained. and also must evalu· Tile next meeting will be held on
have ~ served on 33-year-old ate methods for Increase\! soljd April 10 at 7 p.m. tn tile Gallla
Freda Buffhigton, of · Route 1, waste reduction, reuse and recy- County Courthouse.
Reedsville, by the Meigs County cling and decreased dependence
SCS Engineers. an environ·
Sheriffs Department.
on landfills.
mental consulting firm, bas been .
She Is to appear ne~t WednesThe district's plan Is to be hired by the District to assist In ·
day In Meigs County Court.
submitted In draft form to till' tile development of the p~ and
Invesllgatlon .Into the inattl'r Ohio EPA by June 24,1990 unless will be attending these me~ngs .
surrounding the charges Is an extension Is requested and
continuing.
Sllerl!f SoulsbY reports thar a
suspect wanted for quesllon!ng .
regarding the' breaking and entering of residences on old Route
33 during the weekend of Feb. 41s
being held In the Giles County
Jail at Pearisburg, Va.
this time of year range from the
By United Press lnternatlon8J
According to the report, David
The mercury began rising mid 40s north ro· the mid 50s .
Shannon Browning, of Beckley,
·
again Tbur~ay morning after s&lt;iuth.
W.Va., tor w)tom a receiving/dis·
It ·was cloudy overnight across
three
consecutive
days
of
record
· posing ot stolen property warObi~ . bu I winds In the 10 mph to 15
high temperatures across Ohio.
rant bas been tiled In Meigs
The National Weather Service mph range kept temperatures
County, was apprehended Mon: predicted that by tile end of the ·'from falling too much. At 4 a.m.
day In Giles County and charged
day records would again be set In readings ranged from 61 degrees
with burglary and grand larceny.
eastern and central parts of the at Toledo to 70 In Cleveland.
When.. Giles County olllclals Buckeye State.
Tile weather service predicted
ran a check on Browning, they
The weather service reported readings In the 70s statewide
learned about the felony warrant
10 records Wednesday across Thursday, but a ·change was on
In Meigs County.
Onto, with high readings of 80 the way .
A fugitive warrant has been degrees In Clnr.lnnatl and Zanes·
The frontal system "that has
llled In VIrginia against Brown· villi'. The Clnc.lnnatl mark of 77 been s.talled In the central Plains
log for being a fugitive from had stood since 1913 and Zanes·
for the last few days began m&lt;~ke
justice from the Staie or Ohio. ville's previous record of 78 was
Its way east. The 'front should
Tile Meigs County Prosecuting setln 1978.
,
reach western Ollto·F rlday morn·
Attorney's office will prepare the
TWo other records thai had · lng and be east or the state by
necessary papers should Brown· stOOd since 1913 also fell Wednessunrise Saturday.
lng refuse to waive extradition.to day with a 79-degree reading In
Tile weather service said rain ·
Ohio when VIrginia ofllclals are Cleveland and a 78-degree readwlll move Into western and
through wl th 111m.
Ing In Dayton.
central Ohio Thursday night .and
. In other matters from the
Other records were ..et in
Friday, wlt-11 thunderstorms
sheriff's department,
Toledo and Youngstown at 79
likely. Precipitation should end
Ronald Lee . Sykes, 49, ol , degrees, Co lt~mbu s at 78 degrees,
In ihe east early Saturday.
Chester, Is being held In the· and Findlay, Mansfield and
Highs are expectPd In tile 60s
Meigs County Jail on two counts Akron at 77 degrees,
· Friday and In the 50s on
of felonious assault foUowtng an
Normal daytime lllglls tor Ohio
Saturday.
Incident at "the Iva Rayburn
residence on Route 2481n Cltester
Township. The Incident occurred
· Tuesday evening. Sykes Is
charged wlih firing a 22revolver
at two Individuals.
. Deborah R. Litchfield, 35, of
A Portland_youth was cited In~ two-car crash Wednesday lit
Syracuse, was arrested In Galli-'
2:10 p.m. In Sutton Township on S.R. 124 at milepost 33,
polls Wednesday evening on a
according to the Gallla·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
bench warrant from Meigs
Shannon L. Cremeans, 17, was cited for not maintaining
County lor falling to comply with
assured clear distance after his 1981 Olds Cutlass had a rear-end
a· court order. Gallipolis Pollee
coUislon with a 1987 Chevrolet Sprlnt11tllien bY Melanie M.
have a warrant against Lllch·
Adams, 17, of Racine . .
field for a bad check. After
· Adams and Cremeans were drMtigeutw~nAdllllllstoPPed
l,,tchfield Is finished In Meigs
tor traffic. Cremeans did not stop In time to avoid hitting
County, Gallipolis will proteCU te
Cremeans' car.
ber on tllelr t:h&amp;rge. She Ia
pra~e~~tly bebll belclln the Meli*
County Jail.
Depullll tDOk a report WednesFour calls for ullltance were anttWered Wednesday by units
day evetllq of a deercar accl·
ot the Metp County Etne~aency Medical Services.
cleat lavolvlq Dalla R. WIIUams,
At 5: O&amp;a.ill., Rutland wu callld toMelpMlne No. 311or John
of 14'Jeil Run "Road. Wllllama
White who was taken to HolZer Medical Center.
wu travellq eut on Route 12f
ScipiO Township Fire Department was called to a brush fire
approjimately tenth mile
on Stanley Road at 6:35 p.rtt .
eta t of Rudaad Wb111 a doe
Pomeroy wu called at 9: 27p.m. to East Main St. for Claude
jumped 11110 the highway In front
Eblin to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
I·
Of bla 1980 OldSmobile Cutlass.
TupjJers· Plains at 11:31 p.rn. went to Route 681 for Mirna
The front end of tile vehk:le
· Walker to St. Joseph's Hospital. ·
sustained heavy damage.

Woman to
appear m
court on .
.tw~~ charges

· • ·;,..Greg Ml~r, Ph.D., Jell, c~nalor. oflbe Floe
· tUid Perfonnlllg Arta Ceoler at lbe Untvenlly ol
•. , Rlo · Grande,'~ceiVed the Gove~nor's Award for

2

claims report of the ~ounty's
liability Insurance over the past
three years. The ligures show
that altogether In the past tllree
years, the 10-county self·
Insurance pool has paid out a bout
$190,000, leaving tile pool with a
$1.2 million reserve, which, ac·
cording to Jenkins, "Is what was
anticipated' ' at this point In time.
Jenkins pointed out ·that the
$1.2 million reserve belongs to
the 10 partlclpat lng counties In
the pool and that If for some
reason, the self-Insurance coun·
ell would dissolve, the reserve
funds would revert back to tile
participating counties.
Tile commiSsioners clarified

A p~bllc meeting to provide an
update on plans for waste dlspo·
sal in the six county Solid Waste
Management District has been
.scheduled lor March 27 at 7 p.m.
at the Wilkesville School.
According to Sara Hendrlcker,
chairmen of the Athens, Gallla,

,, .

·

ol explanation In order to clarlly
the matter to the Stille's
satisfaction.
Shields expects to know soon If
the 1unds necessary for Hill are
to be approved.
·· ·
Hill th·anked the commissioners fo~ their help and support In
his project to purchase the
re$taurant. "You've worked well
wlth-meandl'ingladwecameto
&lt;&gt;ee you when we did," he added.
During yesterday's regular
business session, Joe Jenkins,
represenllng Buckeye Admlnls·
trators and the Buckeye Joint·
-CountySelt-InsuranceCouncll,
presented the commissioners .
\vltll il financial statement and

Public hearing set March 27
on ·solid waste disposal plans

$149

Strawberri.!s•••••!'o.. 7~&lt;

211 C.nto

A Multimedl• Inc. Ntiwap-..er

'

'

HEAD
LETTUC

2 Sectlono; 18 Pog11

Pom&amp;rov-:-Middleport; Ohio. Thuraday, March 16. 1seo

10 OZ. PACKAGE

'

..

'

,

I

.

SUNSHINE BITE-SIZE

•

7·UP or
DR. PEPPER

'

Lew &amp;Oel!P* In mid 1181.
Cbuee ef 1'11111 nur lM
pere"t. :Friday. blgb Delli" Ill.
Chalice ol rain nelll" 100
percent.

~I 5-17·35-39-44

Page4

FRITOS

12 OZ. PKG.

.. .

fifth week

'

.
Wieners ••••••••••••••••

SUP!RIOR

, Daily Numbel'
953
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.~:iUniversity

lbe Arlllln E4jucatlon In a ceremony Wednesday
In Columbill. Seen wllh the awarcl are state· Rep.
Mal')' Abel.and State Se.n. Jan Michael Long.

..

ofRio . Grande's Miller
\ rec_eives ·1990 Governor's Award

•
signed for tile youth'ln the region. Grande. Since then, he has
: ~ tor Arts In Ellucatlon was pres·
"I am primarily Involved In staged numerous plays In the
; : ented to Greg Mlller, Ph:D. ,
theater," ' Mlller said In accept· Fine and Performing Arts Cen·
tng 'tlteaward, "and since theater ter, helping make the campus
. ccoordlnator of the Fine and
·: Perlonnlng Arts Center at the
Is a coUaboratlve effort I have no known as a center for regional
• · University of Rio Grande, In a
right to be standing here alone." theater.
ceremony In the Capital Rotunda
MIUer accep.ted the award, 11e
Miller wrote and directed
. .. Wednesd.ay.
said, on behalf pf those Involved
"They Were Vaudevillians," the
· · Miller,· who has been with the In the theatrical efforts be bas
story of two song and dance men
&gt; university since June 1985, was · spearheaded at Rio Grande since traveling the theater circuit
· · recognized for Ills efforts to 1985.
during tile early part of the .
expand cultural appreclallon In . '·'As one who honestly believes century, tn the spring of 1986. In
110uthern· Ohio through the sev· that the arts · are essenllal to the fall of 1987 his adaptation or
eral plays he has written, co- education, I accept this award," Kermit Daugherty's bestselling
· written or dlrecte(l, and for his Miller said.
1954 novel "Out of' the Red
leadership of the Appalachian
.A 1965 graduate of Jackson Brush" premiered at Rio
Institute for ·lhe Arts.
High SchOol, where he later Grande. and In August 1989,
.The aw&amp;~"d, along With a
taught, Miller became In teres ted "Jesse Stuart Stories," a coDa·
citation from the General Assem· In theater through tlie urging of boratlve eftort between him ..elf,
· · bly, was presented to Miller by hlsspeechteacllerlnhlghsch9ol. ' Jerry Martin and Jay Mullins,
· State Sen. Jan Michael Lotig of After attending Xavier and Ohio also debuted.
, Circleville and Stat~ Rep, Mary universities, . he was Involved
. "Red Brush," In which Miller
Abel of Athens. In presenting the with rhe Gall Ia County Dramatic portrays nartator Bill Brennan,
award, Long and Abel praised· Arts Society and appeared In or has been seen by ~any audiences
directed numerous community In Ohio on a touring basis . :•Jesse
Miller's contribution to expand·
lng cultural horlzon5 In southern theater productions.
St\18rt Stories" . has been pres.
Mlller spent lour years as ented 'to audiences In Ohio,
Oblo.
They particularly praised ' director of the theater depart· Kentucky and Tennes&lt;&gt;ee since
Miller's efforll : In· developing
ment at .Mississippi University Its premiere..

' · The 1990 Governor's Awards

~ji,trl)ca7.7,Ip;aresren;lsons

'

rdee·tuforWmomenptrloortocom!ngtoRio

. In an outreach effort to area
schools, Miller Initiated the Appalachian Institute tor the Arts In
1989. The program attracts professlonals In the arts to Rio
Grande to · conduct workshops . .
demonstrations and perfonnan·
HINCKJ.,EY, Ohio IUPI) reported on March 15, with the ceJ for educators, students and
exception ol198t, when the ugly the public to use the. arts In the
,The buzzards ofHinckley.Ohlo's
version of the swallows of Caplsvultures apparently forgot It was classroom.
·trano, came swooping Into town
a leap year.
In Its first yelll' .. the AlA has
.Thuntday for their annual Ides of
There htis always been specu· featured Julie Taymor, a playw.1!'Iarcb ret~ to their spring
latloa at least 10111e. bu~ds , rlfht, direCtor and maallmaller;
tioost.
. . arrive each year befOre March David Amra~. tbelloted eontemCieveland Metroparks· Capt.
15. I.utz sate! be.didn't slfhtany por.,.AIIIerlcancompaHI'; lad
J .Roger Lutz, In hlll2th year u the buzzards betlre Thunday mom· Ropr Jerarle, 1ft attar, director
.official buzzard spotter, made
lng, ''but of CO\II'&amp;e, I haven't andeducatorlromQ'eatBrltaln.
·the official sighting at 8: 40·a.m. ' been looking up either."
· The AlA hu auracttd fltlanetal
ay 10 a.m., aboul15 buizards had
1'1le Oock Of 75 10 100 birds "wm·· support from auch corporate
.arrived. ·
remain Ia ~noliJey until thee IOurcel U OhiO Bell and Colum·
temperatures tallln October aad bla Ou, with which It pllas to
' The bilzzards, accordllll to
November. TheY go 10111ewhere · con tl a u-e wIt b 1 u In mer .
-~lend, have been returninl to
south, but park officials are not programs.
:Hinckley Lake 15 miles south of · sure whether they spend the '
Miller resides In Rio Grande
; CJ~Janllllnc!! 1818. Every year
Winter In Tennesset, Florida or ·with hla wife, Lee, and their two
_IInce 1957, the return 1111 been
e~el! Mexico.
•
dau1btera, Minda and Amy.

• kJey ·on
·Hme

SCbedU Ie '

'

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