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                  <text>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

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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

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.

Cheese ••••••• ~ ••••••• !~.

$

$

7566
'
Super I.AJtto

Kicker 680323 .

..

109
$ 9
Sliced Bacon •••• ~2.~1• 11

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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

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·

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.

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'

3r.w•··f$2

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s.,. v•
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...... 17

·

· 5 QUART PAIL

FRESH .

BAKERY
DONUTS
'

S:l69
· ..

DOZEN

BANQUU

•
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D1nners ...........oz.. 99&lt;

TV

10-12

"

· J..O IOU

PURE SWEET

SUGAR .
4.0 Ll.
BAG
!.

$119

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

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GALA TOWELS

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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

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HEAD
LETTUC

2 Sectlono; 18 Pog11

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

10 OZ. PACKAGE

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SUNSHINE BITE-SIZE

•

7·UP or
DR. PEPPER

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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.

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fifth week

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.
Wieners ••••••••••••••••

SUP!RIOR

, Daily Numbel'
953
Pick-4 .

2 UTER BOTTLES

·
8
Rump Roast ••••••:;. . 1 .9
SUP~RI_OR FRANKIE
,.
.. $
·.
USDA CHOKE toNElESS BE~F ROU,ND .

now in

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\ DIET OR REGULAR

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Ohio Lottery

10 COUPONS
.

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USDA CHOICE BONEUSS BEE~

·lockout

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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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More records fall as
high readings contiriue

Local news briefs-......

Patrol cites Portland youth

EMS has four Wednesday mlls

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Corn •nentary
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~rb.

lSI~ r"T'&gt;.....L-..,.., ........... c:t •..,.
~...

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CBAR~NE HOJ',:FLICB

ROBERT l- WINGETT

Publisher

Geaeral Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaelslant PubUsher/ControHer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AsSQC!atlon and the Am..-lcan Newspape!' Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ~re welcpme. They should be leu than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be ln good taste, addressing Issues; not personall- .
ties.

A problem .that
cannot be solved

I •

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP I) - Probably since the beginning of the
republic, certainly since the advent or telev!s,lon, the party lhat does
not reside in the White House has found it difficult to get Its message
across,
This Is. true even when, as now, the out party, namely the .
Democrats, · control Congress, · which constitutionally Is an equal
partner !ri the nation's government. '
·
Speaker Thorrias Foley and Senate Democratic leader George
Mitchell are the highest elected members of the out party but, equal
or not, they cannot match President Bush when they seek toenunclale
their party's position.
Like many predecessors trapped by the same problem, Foley and
Mitchell will try almost anything, old or new - their latest venture
being a joint news conference that flopped.
The news conference, partly spurred by television demands for
more access, failed because Foley and Mitchell had nothing to
announce and their answers. were recycled news. No news does not
· get you on television.
'
House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt did makes news
recently, . proposing U.S. aid for the' Soviet Union, a dramatic
suggestion that was given a good deal of attention. But Gephardt was
not speaking lor his party members, many of whom thought the Idea
off base.
·
· ·
Moreover, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater quickly cut
him down by asking, "Can you believe he wants to raise taxes on the
American people to give money to the Soviet Union?"
Several factors work against the out party·ever finding way to
even come close to the White House In reaching the American public.
First and foremost, Bush Is the president and no one else is. He can
get almost au tomatlc network coverage just by asking. No one else, at
least In this country, can do that.
Second, the system works against the oul party. Although Foley
and Mitchell are lhe leaders of the Democratic Party, they do not
speak for Congress, partially inhabilated by Republicans. They do
not even speak for all Democrats whose views cover the waterfront on
many Issues. ·
·
Third, neither Foley nor Mitchell, although able and even
articulate, are the type of charismatic men whO can captivate an
audience. Neither can Bush, but it doesn't matter ,_ he's president.
Fourth, the Democrats do not have a titular leader, an elder sage, a .
former president, a national figure of great stature who !s known and
has standing With the American public. •
·
· T•t role Is sometimes filled by the most recent presidential
candTdate - . . but not a . humiliated Michael Dukakis. His
running-mate, Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, could fill the role , but has
shown no great desire to do so eJ!cept in the very narrow confines of
his Senate duties. ·
After being removed by the voters and then shunned by his own
party, Jimmy Carter Is making a remarkable comeback, bu 1 he
seems to·be limiting himself to foreign affairs.
Since it's Impossible for the out party to achieve parity of eJi:posure .
with the president, Democrats can only hope ihey win the White
House - sometime.
·
And for Republicans who might enjoy gloating over the problem
plaguing 'the Democrats, they should not forget they have had and
probably wlll again have the exact same problem.

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the FAA llllly deserve the bam·
merlng II Is gettlni over poor
monitoring otalr safety and pilot
training. Government ,auditors
have complained that planes .
such as the G:IV llr(:!tooco•tly to
be used as air taxis,, f!llpec:lally
when they are needed for trainlngandespeclahywhencommerdal air travel would be cheaper.
The FAA has a staff of
Inspectors who are sup\Josed to
be trained on the type qt aircraft
used by the pilots they test, and
tbe Inspectors have to take
periodic retreaber courses.
But federal investigators have
discovered tbat tbe Inspectors
were being granted waivers on
those refresher courses, in part
because there. weren't enough
' planes available for training.
The FAA has promised to quit
granting the waivers, but the
waste of money using training
planes to .chauffeur dignitaries
goes on.
Our sources have raised partie·

to have shared such sentiments
all along. History will record
otherwise.
For hard-line rhetoric, though,
no one will .top the throng· that
greeted Secretary ot State James
Baker pn his recent trip to
Bulgaria. About 1,000 people met
him outside Sofia' s Sheraton,
chanting "No money (or commies" and "ByP.. twe. commies."
You'd have thought Baker had
been transported to a rally of the
Young Americans for Freedom
- a rally complele even with
rah-rah · signs reading "VIva
U.S.A."
sOviet ·visitOrs, too, have been
busy embarrassing thoe U.S.
elites·who've SJleD! -years lectur·
ing Americans abbut our "mlsconeept!ons" of the enemy.
Take Boris Notkln, host of a
popular Soviet TV show calle4
"Good Evening Moscow" and
professor at the University of
Moscow.In a recent talk at Regis
College In Denver, Notkin upset
faculty members with his lucid
discussion of his country and
America . .
One fellow, ~ndoubtedly all
·America-basher of high stand·
lng, .. remark!!(~ In Qnger that ,
Notkln's · Impressions didn't
''SQ\lnd like the America I live ln.
You make it sound like a much
more efficient, pleasant· place."
Otbers were distressed to bear
Notkln Insist that tough words
such as Reagan's "evil empire"
speech had nothing to do with
prolonging the Cold War.'
Notkln wouldn't · say it, but
Reagan's language probably
shortened the Cold War by
impressing upon the Soviets the
depth of our resolve. As the
British writer Peregrine Warsthorne has put It: "Wars, even
cold wars, are not won by

I

limo ~

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

~y.,

'

''Just try to remember you are NOT ALONE in
feeling guilty about NOT PLOSS/NGI"
J

2ND. STREET

•

•
•

KELLYSMlTH

I•

..Uian&amp;a

Dec roll

'

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lurtea •rllllldre IS. Obt!rlin .-1

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!it Htnry 12. BtUhrook 5t

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.
I ar•uu•ao.

JENNIFER TAYLOR

HOCKE\' LEAGt.;E

"'e-...., Rn•t•
Rupr•ll. Toi'Hlo t

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•· Tllal"'llll.qGame.
NYhAIIIItenldPitUadei,Wa. , :SS p.m.

'•
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! ·Col Hartley 71, Spi.ra HI-nd ill
,

CARY BETZING

CONTACT 992•5965

Lo111 An pie~~ I, .fflla 5, OT
EdlntHilDn s. Me •rtll a, llf'

l"oiutp Lltwtfl8. SUMIJ \ ' AIW)' M

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O.ner at DaHaN, alp.
Mlaml at Phuenb. , nipl
•••an a1 LA. OIIIPC!rtt. nlpe
Chra.tt. Ill Portla.d. al&amp;hl

DMSIOS Ill

"... AJr.r §t Ylnunt J4, Ontario 5t

. ·· ST. -IT. 7
HOBS,ON, QHIO

1naana, atalll
a1 Chlcqo, •llhl

NATIO~A.L

' AI C..10n

LEADING TO TH~ ARREST
AND CONVICTION OF
P·ERSON OR PERSONS WHO
HAVE BEEN VANDALIZING
THE PROPERTY AND THEFT
OF PROPERTY AT
FACEMYEa LUMBER CO.

fri~Gamtll

1\1 Akr•
911, Alo:roet Garll"d 5I
AI C11.n1on
Canton MciO•tey 15, E Uvt&gt;r pool !J
DIVJSIOS II
.\t Da)'r&amp;n
Day C~lonPI M'hlte 1111, IKeUerlnll' A.IIC"r

, WhiiiiPI!I M Boatoa. '1:21 p.m.
. Qka,;aatQaebec, 7:Up.lll.
l;)l'lruk al Pltlllball'l\. 7: a1 p.m.
\'iftrou·wr~SI . 1Auiiii,K:35p.m.
New ,Jetlley at Calpry, 1: 35 p.m.
·FrldQ Gamf'
Toronlo .at Bulllllo. nlf'hl

CGUelf~luketball Rctouh!i

Thuf!MI., Sportl'i Calmdl&amp;r

Football
Fb. - NFL - ·r.n meelin~
1-.
•
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" Pta• Vt&gt;dra, F1a. - RS mUiion
Ptayero; 0.-.mp&amp;e ... p
. 'I'Wiu)ll. Arlie . -1311,1.Ch·~ltH LPGA

NAIA Champlo•ldf*
.\t KaniiA Cit)'. Mo., MMR'h H
Flr!illoud
n:Pt'-ln.llllllpalh~ at Sl.-.. HelaN,.
(MictL) Kt

Gearxd_.n (K)'.) II. Loulalua Col·

. 'he!OOII Open

leiP' 'D

Soccer
Ml.Sl..
Cl!!-vt&gt;:'Ud at Wh:hita, K: 15 p.m .

Ce t~tnt..l

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llailllelhall

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OIAam •• a wecelll 11-411,)' cofiract
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ScKl.e er lft;•ratlo•·' - Slped
' ina.lll., Pul faii!Ciwrt . .~ foNar~
Erk W)llal .. tl MIID•I team.

ousted from toomey
fKAN:s.&lt;I:S CITY, Mo. (UPI) The Pioneers went abead 75-72
IMar•,!n• Malone scored a
wtthc6:061eft, but Marvin Malone
[l &lt;jltrrna.ment·~llgh 38 polnls Wed·
hit a pair of .3-polnt· goals
pes.aay n lght as Columbia Coi- reg,1ln the lead for Columbia at
l held· off a second-half . 78-75. '
I
14th-seeded Malone
The Plon~ers tied It at 80·80
~Ohio) fQr a 93-88 win In
before . Marvin ' Malone's !l!t'h
round play of the NAIA 3-polnter of the game put Colum- ·
tournament.
bia ahead to stay 83·80. Malone
30-.7, built a 21-polnt College got back to ss:ss with 31
In the first half and· led 53-37 seconds lefl.
balftlme. Malone went on a
Marvin Malone hit two free
run to start the second half.
throws nine seconds later .to
clinch the victory.
Kyle Thoma added 19 points
Sports brief!!
and Stacy Batson 12 for ColumAuto Racing
bia, which had 11 3-polnt field
~-o,ur-unte
Indianapolis .500
goals.
Phil Gehardt had 23 points,
~~~':i~~~ Al Unser and Roberto
t;
who finished second to
Todd Rowe had 21 arid ' Keilh
'"MM. In
have entered· th~ , Troyer added 15 for M'alone, 25-9.
race as members of Patrick \ The victo~y sent Cqlumbia Into
of Indianapolis. Speedsecond-round play Thursday at 8
officials said the entries
p.tri, ' against the winner of
llirlin" to 35the number of entries
Wednesday ,night's game be'ec,eiv&lt;~d so far. The deadlinE' Is
, tween Oral Roberts (Okla.), 34-5,
and an_d Tpe King 's College
Badminton
(N;Y. l. 27·5.'
All the men's seeds progressed
the second round of lhe Al'l
The Daily Sentinel
badminton chamIii~~:~~~~~!Open
in · straight sets at
!USPS 145-tltJ
~emD,leyArena In Lo'ndon. Joint
A
Division of MuiUmedla. lllc.
seed Zhao Jlanhua of China
Malaysian Foo Kok Keong,
PubliShed every afternoon, .Monc;lly
thrwgh Friday. 111 Coun St., Po·
second seed, needed only 34
meroy. Ohio, by tht Ohio Valley Pub·
.,
...
u,
•
~•
and
27
minutes
to
defeal
11
llshlna Company/Multlnledla, Inc.,
opening round opponents.
Pomeroy. onto 457119. Ph . 992-215e. ~!!;·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
.
Baseball .
Ohio.·
r
bomb squad was
Member : United Press lnrernatloftal ,
p.!!~:~n;to Mickey Mantle's Res·
Inland DaUy Press Au«latlon and t hP
fa
and Sport$ Bar In ManOblo New ..-per Asaoclat lon. National
tan afler It received a bOmb
AdverHtlnl Represen1at1ve. Branham
NowiPIIP~ Sales, 733 Third A_,.,
tnr,PAtfOUOWed by the delivery Of
Now Yon, N~&gt;W York 10017.
¥.
package. The package was
'POS'I1oiA9TER: Snd · - chan(IN
apart by a robot and
10' Th• ~ SenUnel. ll1 Court Sl..
[~~~~~~~h~~a~~rmless. ... Atlanta
Pomoroy. Ohio C!'Htll.
II
league left ·bander
SUIIICIIIPTlON U'l'lis
Baltimore Orlo~ rlghtIIJ Cor- or lllet..-1'2~~~d Ben McDonald were
One Week ............................ ,.. ., ..$1.40
Ik
the top two prospects by
One Mon1h .................................$6.10
Qne Year ................................ ,172.80
!Q;aseball America.
.•
81NOLII COPY (
BaSketball
PRICII:
Detroit Pistons trainer could
!lolly .............. :.................... 15CeDia
charges for sending emer, Subocrtbera 101 dfllrlllJioPI3' tbtcar·
1
gelcy medical workers on a
1 i111' may 1'!IIDh Ill ldvag• ~ to
'lbe DoUy !llalllla em U ,l,..IIIMdi
":.~~ebeart attack ~ull to The .
bUlL Credit Will bellvnc.,..._b
during a team practice
week. Mike Abclenou.- appllr·
No aubo&lt;rlptlona by mall pmnHIOd In
· wan ted to c beck ibe rear. . Wilen hornt carrier ..rv1ce II
av&amp;Uable.
~pollle Ume of the local rescue
after the death of college
~~~~all star Hank Gathers . ...
-lletpC...oiJ
u wl!ob'.................................. m.:w
~ bas reached a" agree21iW....................................... IIUII
with PIA Radio Sports to
52W.......... .. .... ....................... I7U6
CoaoiJ
l~~::!J~: l'IBA Radio Network, · 13 WHIIIOitaldelllelp
.. :.......... ..................... ~.ao · ,
Ik
national radio cover26 w.........................,.... ......... StO.:JO
of the league atardng in the
5211'......... ............................. 175...
19911-91 seastan.

9~~

ro

CHAIRS!

*'SOLID COLORS

Texas, occupies th1rd place with
M56 pins . he coUected his first
career victory three weeks ago.
Frank Ellenburg of Mesa,
Ariz., made the biggest move of
the day soaring from 38th to
fourth place. He felled 5,357 pins .
Seeking his fourth lour title,
Ron Palombi Jr. of Erie, Pa ..
~ lings to the No. 5 spot with 5,353
pins. ·
Tlte starting field of 315 is now
c\lt to Bl for eight more games
Thursday. From there, 24 survf·
vors will advance to the matchplay portion of the event which
winds up Friday night. Satur$54,000.
.day's winner earns
.

Sl 00000 REWARD'

'

•

S.W.JeriiP)'ae Ph• delphia, ai«N
Boii&amp;H at Orllnth. nllht

.....

_......,.........

I

8

;

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Tom
Crites of Tampa, Fla., lightened
h!s grip on the top spot Wednesday night after three rounds of
the·Professional Bowlers Association $280,000 Society Bank National Championship.
The flve·tlme tltllst scattered
5,689 plris for his 24games to open
a 226 pin lead over local favorite
Don Genalo of Perrysburg, Ohio.
A former Rookie of the Year .
Crites, captured his first crown
here In 1986. With a win here he
can join Randy Pedersen as the
only ones to win tournaments ill
each of the last five years.
Robert Lawrence of Austin,

Houlllloo M 8a&lt;nmento1 11:38 p.m,

Cln GrHnNiblll'J, llnlt&gt;y 114 4&lt;M )

Bean Bag Chalill Featuring
Support: Double ZIP·
per: Jean 1YPe Lock Seam Double Stitched With Nylon
lbn:ad. Five Solid Colora Plus WVU and Ohio State.

]·

"•.• •

' '11 .

Crites leads ·PBA tourney

PoniMII .. G'!. .n !kate, 11:31 p.m.

lbp Scllool. B.. k~hall

DMSIONJ

r.

1tto by N!A . Inc.

I

.

Se.Ute- at Utall, 1: • p.m.

By Unltd P~" lnlfl'Jillllo_,
Wednetld_,.·, Marth I.
TGumamtnhl

~

·'39•95

&lt;;)a;,
._&amp;Nt '
10

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NN1'... 1&amp;M:I . . . e&amp;a.l .. m.

Tourney scores

,

/

(

!rom Alexander, Kelly Smith and
Jennifer Taylor of Meigs, Angie
Fain and Melody Graves of
Vinton County. and Leslie Lytle
.of Mlller.
~
Honorable Mention selections
·were Jody Altier of Mlller, Misty
Pancake o! Nelsonvllle-York,
Teresa Fouts and Charlotte Jenkins of Trimble, and Michele ·
Sims of Wellston.
Smith and Taylor, both juniors
for the Marauders, missed a
couple of games each due to
Injuries. Smith, a (\-0 center,
averaged 14 points a contest,
while Taylor, a 5-6 guard, averaged 9.5 points a game.

Scoreboard.~.

·1

~ow

New Shipment ..Just Arrived!·

BEAN

•

George Gossinan was named the
coach of the year. Gossman led
his team to a 15-7 record overall
and 11·5 In the league.
Jfonorabte Mention picks were
Benjt Dixon of o\lexa11der, Tim
Baker of Belpre, Cary Setzlng ol
Meigs, Tom Fulk ot Miller, Jason
Caudlll of .Vinton County and
Mike Potts of Wellston.
Betzing, a 6·0 senior lor Meigs,
led the Marauders In scoring
with around 10 points a contest. ·

Scott L~~;~:~
Trimble
I
two players on
first team, they were Scott
fl.u!llck and ' Ryan McClelland.
AIJ.T-VC Glrll
League Champion Federal
named to the first team
lw•&gt;rP Dan Burke of Alexander, · Hocking took home the two top
McConkey of Belpre, Brian awards In the Ali-TVC Girls team
I"''Piter,son of Federal Hocking, picked by the league coac-hes .
Doughty of Miller and ·Jay
Junior Stacie Glass was named
. the Most Valuable Player and
1!"~1lm~r of Vinton Coun!y.
Holbert of Trimble was Kim Chadwell, wbo led the Lady
to a 19·1 record, was
I~~~~~~a.n Honorary First Team ·sLancens
elected the league's coach of the
·: :
Holbert missed most of
year.
·
season w!th a broken foot.
Joining
Glass
on
the
first
team
Doughty, a ~.4 senior center ,
were
teammate
Christy
Tate,
named the leagues Most
Vallualble Player, while his coach Missy James and Heather South

Vincent Carrollt

'

'

By DAVE HARRIS
lf.~~~ft:. champion wensson
IP
three players on the first
while runnerup Miller took
l ~on1e the top IndiVIdual awards
the 1989-90 . boys Ali-TVC
1pal;ketball team.
Wellston players named .to the
team by the league co{lches
1w1ere ct1rts Graham, Rob Hardee

.
,
.
I
.
ambivalence or halfheartedness,
.
'I
.
,.
and the left a!' best was halfYes,
let's
·
give
the
knee-jerk
hearted and ambivalent about
anti-communists th'e ir du~. The :
the Cold War... " .
·
.
world
Is lrceer, thanks to their :
So why did the Soviets raise the
grit.
white• flag? ·

.

Berry s World

ellston· dominates ·TYC n..eam Team;
aylor, Smith make girls' First Team ·

'

.
.
.
use of tile G-IV. It Is equipped training iJDot the only function of
with advanced computerized the p~e. .
control! known as glass cockpit
In June, It carried Sen. Frank
tecl!npJogy, now being u~ In a
Lautenberg, D-N.J., Rep. Bill
growing number of commercial , Cljnger, R·Pa., Clinger's wife '
Jet•. AndnotenoughFAAinspec- and several congressional
tors are trained on those staffers to '!be Parts Air Show.
control&amp;.
In May, Skinner took Rep.
The G-IV has other features
Hank Brown, D-Colo., to Denver
that make II attractive transpor· so tbey could look at an airport .
t.atlon - plush carpeting, lounge project.
chairs, private telephones, a bar,
Lalit summer, Skinner took
a stereo and a television with Reps. William Lehman, D·Fia.,
VCR. The Transportation DeDaniel Akaka, D·Hawall. George
partmeat claims the. Jet was
Miller, D..Callt., and Marty
deslgne4 tor corporate comforts Russo, D·DI., to London to study
andthefrlllsweretbrownlnfree airport security. Wives and ··
to . the g O'V ern men t by staffers also went along.
.
Gliltstn!am.
Don't look for a,ny congres-"
. The department . bought . the slonal committee to crack down ·'
G-IV from Gultstream last '. oii Skinner's joy rides. 'The '
spring, telling Congress that. 11 Transportation Department pur.
was needed for training and , chased the G·IV with thelblesslng
shuttling t·nvestlgators to crash of committees chaired by Leh-•
sites.
.
man and Lautenberg whO have
Records obtained by our assoboth enjqyed Skinner's friendly

The Deily Sa11tinei-Paga 3

Ohio

boys' Honorable Mention

T'hurHaY. Mar_ah 11. 1980 '

It's time f.;~~onc~idklnW;r;i~~hoi~t
&amp;.ast
,.

Forgive my gloating, but revenge Is an underrated pleasure.
Hard-line anti-communiSts have
endured years of unrelenting
scorn from a majority of Intellectuals, and so !tis high · time to ·
settle accounts.
The gloating Is not just over the
historic vote In Nicaragua, In
which communists again proved
they cannot win a free election. It
!s also generated by the cborus of
liberated voices from the East·
ern bloc. Have you noticed how
many of them, on the subject of
the Cold War, sound as If they
were addressing a Goldwater
rally circa 1964?
I
Just a few years ago, anyone
who clatmep the Soviet union
had bl!f!n a historic "source of
nightmares," and who unabashedly described the United
States. as a "defender of freedom," would have been ridiculed
as .crude and simplistic. Only a
fellow steeped In anti-communist
cant could possibly suggest that
the Soviet Union "was a country
that r)ghtly gave people nightmares because no one knew what
would occur to It~ rulers next and
what country they would decide
to conquer."
·And· yet a well-known world
figure has now spoken those
words and escaped with his
reputation Intact. More than'
that, he's received a standing
ovation from Congress for his
speech. I'm refer.rlng to Vaclav
Havel, of course, Czechostova·
klan president, playwright, Intellectual and former prisoner of
conscience.
Many In Havel's congressional
audience would have gagged had
the same lines been uttered (as
they were, In effect, many times)
by 'the likes of Ronald Reagan.
Now these people are pretending

Merch 16, 1990

Pege-2-The Dellv Sailinal
Porriaov · Ml!lldfeport. Ohio 1

A thought 'tor the day : Andrew Jackson, general and president ,
often said. •·one man with courage makes a majorit y."

. -

, I
'

FAA trainirig ·plane used as luxury
WASHINGTON- Transport&amp;·
lion Secretary Samuel Skinner
prefers his personal transporta·
tlon to be !lr~t class. The
Transportation Department has
a luxuriOUJi Gulfstream G·IV jet
that' Skinner uses as if It were the
famliy car.
.
·.
.'l'he G-IV, registered · to the
Federal Aviation Administration, Is supposee to be used
primarily for training government tllght safety Inspectors and
to carry federal ac.cldent Investigators to crash sites. But FAA
records show Skinner uses the
plane frequently to squire around
bureaucrats, members of Con·
gress an!I their spouses on sue b
urgent business as trips to the
Parts Air Show.
At the same lime, the FAA
inspectors who are supposed to
test commercial pilots are being
allow~d to delay their refresher
courses because there aren't
enough planes for training.
The case of theG-IV shows that

,.

'

•

OllilkarState
10W30 Motor Oil

99
24
WolfHOCIO.
eras

Quaker State
10W40 or 5W30

Motor Oil

u..••

-l .~mh.--

1 ~~~~

--

AC't)BICO &gt;

011 FlltBIS
l.ml2

99
44
Wolf
easyflt

eras

99
16
Russell

Ultra Tech

Fan .

1499 .

=ce
·f\OC)rMa\S

5'9
.
The Wax Shop
super GlaZe
'M'$1 ·016

..

I

�.•

...•

.. .

•

ftsiJI

4- The Daily Sentinel

Thurlday. March 1&amp;. 1890

Pomeroy- Midcleport, Ohio

~.

•

NHL roundup

Spring training lockout in fifth week; no progress m sight
NEW YORK IUPI) - The
suggesting a secret ba llot among " They requested greater protec·
spring training lockout passed Its
pl;~yers as a way to end the
ton on waivers for young players ,
28th day Wednesday with some · dispute. Kauffman also brought we gave · them that. They re·
gallows humor from the union, up th at Issue.
quested an Increase In the major
more propaganda from ma11age" I really feel If a vote ·was . league minimum salary from
· t to S90 ,000. •·
taken by the players, .You'd find a $68 .ooo·, an d wewen
ment, and progress from ne liher
side.
·
ma jority of them would like to
The owners also agreed to a
Two days before the expected
play baseball," he said.
roster Increase until the National
announcement of regular -season
F ehr said he talked twice by League adds ex!lllnslon , teams
postponements, union chief Don phone with owners ·negotiator and offereil to Increase pension
Fehr was asked Wednesday C~_uck O'Connor, and received benefits from $34 million to $50
evening what J:Qmes nexl.
some langua ge on collusion pro- million, Kauffman said.
"I assume dinner," he said.
tec tl o n a nd t h e s tud y
" Nowyoumlghtask,whydon't
Kansas City Roya ls co-owner commission.
the owners give ln·to two or three
Ewing Kauffman became the
No ta lks have taken place since years' players arbltaUon? There
fourih owner In three days to March 7, when th e sll!es E}X· comes a time wheri you c;~nnot
defend management's position. changed compromise proposals .keep giving and · g!vlng and
U the union holds Its demand fo r on the Issue of salary arbitration. glvlhg, " he said.
second-year arbit ration, the sea- Owners stressed money and
The dispute has ~ II but wiped
son should be canceled, Kaufperfor mance In their proposal, out the Grapefruit and Cactus
fman said . ·,
while player s concentrated· on League schedules, ·and some
' 'If I'm running the organlza·
service time.
teams have already slated
lion, which I' m not, if! had tl\e 26
Kauffman said at a news minor-league games for parks
votes, they'd be o.ut all year," he conference at Royals· Stadium wnere spring training contests
tha t the de finition of l~bor normally would be played.
said.
''They weren' t done for us, "
Houston 's John McMullen. the negotiations is give'-and-take,
New York Yankees' George and the owner s have heeded " said Mike Soltys, ESPN's man·
Steinbrenner, and Texas' George . m~ n y of th!" players ' demands . · ager of programming tnforma,
'The umon requested greater tion. "It's not likely that we will
W. Bush have spoken on the
la&lt;;kout In recent days, with Bush lr.ee agent mobilit y, WE' gave do Triple A games, but lt Is a
them that. " Kauffman . said .
·

. NCAA
.

cage tournament

·o hio State, Louisville among
tea~s in first-round pl~y

•

By..United Press International
A fever known · to drive nor- .
mally r'nlld -manner~d people in· .
sane for three weeks infects the
nation Thursday.
It's brought on by the start of
the NCAA basketball tournament and, as usual. there are
several questions to be pondered
before the fever culminates In a
Rocky Mountalnhlghat the Final
Four In Denver.
Some of the questions that will
be answered Thursday Include:
Is there more to Idaho than
potatoes?
Can plow horses compete wlth
rpce horses for best In show?
If It beats Oklahoma , will
someo~~~: write a song \!boUt
Towson~tate ? ·
Why Is the Big Ten Conference
like the NHL?
Louisville will find out about '
Idaho and what the Cardinals
learn may be more than they
want to know. Louisville won 26
games d'\rlng the regular sea·
son. but Idaho won 25 ·while
winning the Big :&gt;ky Conference.
"What do I know about
Idaho? " said one LouisVille
player. "I know they grow
potatoes there but I don 't mean
that as a knock on their team ."
The Louisville-Idaho game will
be one of four centes ts scheduJed
i or the West bracket at Salt Lake
City. In the other Thursday
games, Nevada-Las Vegas
meets Arkansas-Little Reick,
Ohio State faces Providence and
Oregon State takes on Ball State.
Louisville Is one or the more

balanced offensive teams In the
couniry with five players averag·
trig in double figures. But the
Cardinals will find ihe Vandals to
be a tenacious defensive team
that limited opponents to 45
percent shooting and 64.8 points
per game. The Vandals also had
277 steals this season and forced
opponents Into 561 turnovers.
The Cardinals may find the
Vandals dlfflcu•lt to play against
but the frustrations will be no
greater than those encountered
by Arkansas In Its game against
Princeton. The racing Razor·
backs will have their patlen·c e
tested against the plodding Tlg·
ers, who play textbook basket·
ball the way 1t was written when
Dr. James Naismith was the
author.
l
Princeton came within an
eyelash of pull1ng off perhaps the
bigges t upset. In NCAA history
last year when it took George·
town to th£ wire, .before losing
50·49. .
I
.
"Tt will be their patience
against o'ur greed," admits Ar·
kansa s coach Nolan Richardson.
· 'We know they 'll pass It 12 times
befo re they shoot il. "
Princeton-Arkansas Is one of
four g~es scheduled for the
Midwest bracket at Austin.
Texas. Also on the- blll Is
Oklahoma-Towson State. North
Carolina-Southwest Missouri
State a nd Illinois- Dayton.
Even before It takes the court ,
Towson State has assumed the
role of America's darling. That's
how it is when an underdog ·no

posslbUity."
ESPN has already lost six of lts
scheduled 10 spring .training
games and will likely lose some
regular-season games Friday
when Commissioner Fay VIncent
announces the fate of Opening
Day .

Canadiens, Oilers battl~ to 3-3 deadlock Wednesday

director Bob Agnew said.
Fehl· said arbitrator George
Nlcolau said he would rule
" promptly" on the union'' request to have S5U million l.n
collusion damages placed In
escrow, so owners cannot use It to
fund the lockout.

San F..ranclsco radio statio
KNBR, which had scheduled 17
Giants broadcasts this spring,
will start replaying tape!! of at
least five Giant games to fill the
void.
''We're going through baseball
withdrawal," KNBR prop-am

BJ DEAN IICJIABNEB
•
VI'IBporW Writer
• Glean Anderson was not satls·
, (led despite scoring the goal that
lilted 'the Edmonton Oilers to a
. 3-3 tie with the Canadlens In
Mont~al Wednesday Qlght. · He
' thought bls team should have
• won the game.
''With all that pressure we
were p_uttlng on (Montreal goalie·
~atrlck) Roy, we could have won
this hockey game," Anderson

La Salle's Sinunons named
UPI Player of the ·Year
By JOE CJALINI
UPI Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA !UP!)- La
Salle forward Lionel Simmons,
the thlnt-leallng scorer In NCAA
history and one of only five
players to record more than 3,000
points, Wednesday was named
United Press lnternaHonal' s col·
lege basketball Player of the
Year.
The 6.·7 senior from Philadelphia averaged 26.2 points a game
this season and led La Salle to a
29-1 record; the best mark In

school history. The Explorers
earned their third consecutive
berth In the NCAA Tournament
and play South'e rn Mississippi
Thursday In the first round.
Simmons, selected the nation's
top player by a nationwide ·panel
of sports writers, has scored 787
points this season, giving him
3,157ln his career. He trails only
Freeman Williams of. Portland
State (3,249) and Pete Matavlch
of Louisiana State (3,667).
Simmons Is the second La Salle
player to 'wln Player of th~· Year

•

honors, the other being Tom Gala
In 1955.
' 'We' re In a·low-proflle league
but what he's done against
non-conference teams haS just
been outstanding," La Salle
coach Speedy Morris said of
Simmons. ''We've won five tour·
naments In the last three years ·
and he has been the most
valuable player In all of .them. To
get 3,000 points the way he has
gotten them Is noihlng short of
Incredible."
Continued on page 5

By United Press International
flrst -roun~ games are completed
Freshman DeRon Hayes hit before learning which teams
two baskets late In the game they wlllplay In the second round
Wednesday, breaking a tie and next Monday or Tuesday.
leading Penn State to a ' 57-~
Other first -round games
victory over Marquette . In a Tl)ursday Include: Southern at
bigger than a cocker spaniel
flrshround , National .Invitation· ·
takes on one cifthe nation's power · Tournament game in University Fordham, Massachusetts at ·Ma·
ryland, Baylor at Mississippi
brokers, which this year Is No. 1
Park, Pa.
State,
Louisiana Tech at Vander·
ranked Oklahoma.
Wlih the score tied 52-52, Hayes bllt. Tulsa at Oklahoma State,
Towson State, located In Tow·
sank a 15-foot jump shot·atid then Wisconsin-Green Bay at South·
son, Md. , is In the tournament
scored on a layup to give the ern Illinois and Stanford at
because It won tqe East Coast
Nlttany Lions the ·lead for good.
Hawaii.
Conference, whlc!t Is not tt be
Trailing 51-45, Penn State !led
In other fli:-st-round games
confused with East Coast At·
the sco,r e on two Ed Fogelllayups Wednesday, New Orleans dehletlc Conference or mentioned
and a three-pointer by · James . feated James Madison 78-74 and
In the same breath with the Big
Barnes, who led the Lions with 15 Tennessee held off Memphis
East Conference.
pQints. Marquette had taken the State'73-71.
,
Although this Is Towson State's
lead on the strength or a 9-2 run
At
Harrisonburg,
Va., Willie
first appearance ever In the
midway through the second half. Richardson and Tony Harris ·
NCAA Tournament, two players
Marquette used a 22·6 first-half sank three foul shots In the final
have participated in ihe tournaspree to build a 28-17lead. But the 44 seconds, helping New Orleans
ment before - Kurk Lee with
Lions were able to battle back to over James Madison.
Western Kentucky and Kelly
wtihln 32-31 at halftime.
,Tank Collins led New Orleans,
Williamson wtth Xavier. Lee led
Tony Smith had 23 points to 20·10. with 18 points. Steve Hood
the team In scoring this year with
lead Marquette, which finished
led James Madison wl t h 19
a 25.8 points per game average
at 15·14. Fogell had 13 points and points.
and· Wllllamsqn averaged 11.1.
. eight rebounds lor Penn State.
A Harris dunk with 1:45 left
Oklahoma enters the tourna·
which won its 15ih straight hOme gave New Orleans ·a 74·70 lead.
ment with a seven-game winning
game.
Hood's layup with 1:27 remain·
streak, including consecutive
Penn State, 22·8, along with ing brought the Dukes, 20-11. to
victories over top-rated Missouri
other opening-round winners,
and Kansas. The key to beating will have to walt ' un.til all within 74-72. Richardson sank the
.,
the Sooners is forcing them into a
halfcourt game, which makes
them Impatient.
An Interesting sidelight to
Thursday's action will be to see
how many Big Ten teams ad·
vance to ihe second round. The
Big Ten had a record seven
teams Invited (only the NHL
qualifies more) to the tourna·
ment and four of them will be In
action Thursday . .
Besides Illinois and Ohio State.
Michigan State, t!te top seed in
the Southeast, meets Murray
State at Knoxville, Tenn., and
Indiana faces California in the
East at Hartford, Conn.

.•

....,,
~'

front end of one-and-one freethrow . situation to give , the
Privateers a 75-72 lead. Afte~
Barry Brown made two free
.throws for James Madison, Harris 'hit two free throws to give
New Orleans a 77-74 lead.
New Orleans raced ou't to a
38-22 lead by hitting 18 of Its first
22 shots.
At Memphis, Tenn., Freshman
Allan Houston scored 20 points to
lead Tennessee to the victory
over Memphis State. Houston
helped the Volunteers, coached
by his father. Wade, avenge a
91-72 loss to the Tigers earlier In
. the season. In' ihat game Tennessee committed 39 turnovers.
The Volunteers, 16-13, showed
much more poise Wednescjay .
night, building a 10-polnt lead
early In ihe second hall and then
holding qff the Tigers.
Besides Houston, Ronnie
Reese added 14 points and Greg
Bell had 11 for Tennessee. Elliot
Perry led Memphis State, '18-12,
with 18 points, whlie Cheyenne
"Gibscn had 15. The loss was,only
the second at home for the Tigers
In 17 games thl~ season.

:·····

MAKE$ SAVE- Toronto goalie Allan Besler
( rltrht) reaches up to make the save on a sllot on
the goal!?' New York Ranger Mike Gartner In the

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COLUMBUS, OHio IUPII
she's just a junior. "
Her defensive Intensity Is just 19.0.
Jackie Hannm, McDonald. 5-8, J unior.
"She Is a very lnten~. aggres- part of the Fort Recovery style of
Lynn Blhn, the heart of Fort
18.5.
Nicole Uke, Holgate, s-2. J u nior. 23.7.
Recovery's unbeaten and No. 1 sive player," said McClung, who play .
Leigh
Ann Miller, Sugarcreek Gar away,
ranked team, hea!ls up tl;le 1990. shared ~oach of the year honors
"We've seen It hap!Jfn a lot of ~9 . Senior.
21 .1.
·
United Press lnternatlon~l girls · with Kirk Martin of South Cha· times," said McClung. "We've
Margie Singer. Caldwell, 6-0, Senior.
21.6.
DivisiOn IV all-Ohio basketball
rleston Southeastern. "She dOes had some. bad offensive games,
Second Team
a very good job on defense, just but our defense has kept us in the
team .
JuDe CoM, An t werp. 5-8, Senior, 20:.'i.
Symmes . Valley's . Brook.e
dominates ihe paint. She has a lot game . Our kids 'Work hard on
Colleen Cramer. Norwalk St . P !iul. 5-6.
Senior. 18.0.
of speed and handles the ball defense. "
~mlth was the only SVAC player
laura FerA'Json, South CharleStoo Soumentioned, making the 1990
well.''
· The 5-foot-2 Like was tpe top
theastern, ~11. Junior. 13.5.
Blhn Is the lone un(\erclassman scorer on the Division IV first
Honorable Mention squad.
JuUe Gerber. BerUn Hiland.. 5-6. Senior.
.
In Fort Recovery's starting II· . team, averaging. 23.7 points per 15.2.
Blhn, a 6-foot-1 junior, was
Horner. Lima Perry . 5-8. Junior,
neup, but McClung notes she is game. The . 5-foot-~ Hannon aver· 20 Linda
.$eJected the small school player
. ~.
still a co-captain.
aged 18.5 points per contest In
;'of the year In balloting by
Tlllrd T...,;
Heather Butler. Ll~rty - ~nton . 5-10.
" Division IV cQaches from around
leading McDonald to an un17.4.
:•. the state.
··
''That says something about ' beaten ·regular season and Senior,
· Kim Halterman. DE'Graff Riversid e, 6-0.
Z; Joining her on the all-Ohio first the way her teammates feel Miller, a 5-foot-9 senior, 21.1 for Senior. 16.0.
kim Headings. Milford Center Fa irf, team were Jackie Hannon of about her." said McClung.
.
Garaway.
banks, 5·10, Senior. 17.1.
Singer, a 6-foot senior, led
f'. McDonald and Nicole Like of ·
Her biggest asset?
L,vnnetre Roeth, Covln~on . 5-6. SQphok Holliate both juniors. and seniors
"Just the way she plays the Caldwell to a 19·1 regular season, more.
20.1.
averaging 21 points and 12
~ Leigh Ann Miller of Sugarcreek
game," says McClung. "~he Is a
Leslle StechschUI1e. Kalida. 5-10, Senior.
rebounds per game. She shot 60 ]j,]. _
'. Garaway and Margie !Singer of very hard practice player, very
Spedai Mention
~- Caldwell.
·
percent from the field ·and 70 ·
Intense. She Works very hard on
Tammy Crwn . Buckeye Central; Jenny
.~ • l31hn, who will be In action In
from the free throw line.
basketball during the oft-season.
Hicks. Uppt'r Scioto Valley : Kathy Len: · this week's state tournament, She 'plays all the time."
Named to the second team nartz, Fort Re(,"Over y; Chris Olex. Mans·
fletd St . Peter' s ; Beth Hunzlkt!r, Roc kford
~ averaged 19 points and nine
were · 5-foot-8 Julie Cook of ParkWay;
Otlensl\iely, Blhn "!aces a lot
Laura Schli'K'lzer , Delphos
Antwerp, 5-foot -6 Colleen Cra- Je!lersoo; Jill Schneider. Frt'mcn1 S1.
.: rebounds a game for co-coach of of double team," said McClung,
:• the year Diane McClung, who "but she works very hard to get
mer of Norwalk St. Paul and Joseph.
Ho•orable Mention '
t: .says " the best part about her Is th!O! ball and has good hands."
5-foot -6 Julie Gerber of Berlin
Abby Andf'rson, Caldwell: Heather
Hiland. all seniors, and 5-foot-11 Bennett. · Frankfort Adena ; Shelly
junior Laura Ferguson of South Bowsher: Hicksville-; Alison Dllloo. MansSt. Peter's : Jocelyn Dunn, Berlin
Charleston Southeastern and 5- fl't'ld
Hiland; Melannle Grat z, Upper Scioto
foot-8 Linda Horner of Lima
Vallev: Dena HoU!Ieholder, DeGraff Riv erside: Sharoo Hornak. Burton Berkshire ;
Perry.
Kortdtrax, Delphos Jeff«son;
The third team consisted of · Chervl
Dawn Kirkpatrick. Cardlngt(ll; Jenny
Heat))er Butler of Liberty·
Koth, MadE"ira; Lissa LatIna . .Richmmd
Helgtus: Kathy Long, Mlddl~own Fen·
Benton, Kim Halterman of Demeeting, a 1011r of the hotel wtll Graff Riverside, Kim Headings · wick; Jeanne Missler, Norwalk St . Paul;
Marshall University ba~eball
DeniSe Meyer. Fort Lcramle; Kim ~ortl ·
be available.
coach Howard McCann wlll ad·
of Milford Center Fairbanks and
mer. ZanesVille RaEcrans: Cindy OlberdReservations will be taken
dress the · Melgs-Gallla-Mason
Ing. Spencerville; Stepbanle Petho. BelLesUe
Stechschulte
of
Kalida,
all
until tonight and are avallable to seniors, and Lynette Roeth of lalre St. John's : Stacy Ritter, Houston;
. Marshall Athletic Club meeting
Becky . Scblellz, Russia; Brooke Sml1h,
MGM m~mbers and guests. The Covington, a sophomore.
Friday night at ihe Lowe Hotel In
Symmes Val)ey; Heather Tucci. Malve-rn;
cost Is $8.50 per person. Reserva"Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Pam Vllk, McDonald; Barb Wank, Nl"W
tions may be made by contacting
McCann, who begins a new
Rt'ltelCOLUMEiUS, O~io IUPI\ - The 1990
PI_,.r of the year: Lynn Blhn, Fort
. ; chapter in Marshall baseball Terry Chapman at (304) 773·5830 'I United Press lntern~tlonal Division IV ' Recovtry.
·glrlsall-Ohlobaskelballteam, wiTh height,
or
Lovea
Lee
Minton
at
(304)
. following. the 23-year reign of
Coadl• of tbe year: Ki rk Martin. South
school year and scoring avera~:e:
Charlestm Southeastern. and Diane
FlniT...,..
, skipper Jack Cook, who retired 675-2175.
McClung, Fort Rerovtlr y.
Lynn Blhn. Fort Recovery, 6-1. JuniOr.
,last year, spent eight years as an
assistant coach at the University
of Georgia before coming to
• Marshall.
·
The 1978 graduate of Mlssl$·
sippi State University werit on to'
Louisiana State University,
where he was a graduate assist.
ant coach wl)ile enrolled In a
1 Protection Placed In Force
master's program In educational .
• S92.3 billion In 19118
• administration, which he com·
• More than the #2 and #3
pleted In 1911!. Following his ·
companies combined ,
second collegiate graduation, he
• ,#1 for the -fifth oonsecutiVe year
was an assistant coach at Rollins.
College at Winter Park, Ga. until
Why Is A. L. Williams winning? Because
1982.
we answer the needs of families today. With
Hors d'oeuvres and a flowing
"Buy Term and Invest the Difference," we ..
green refreshment will be served
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And they keep m$klng us number one. Again
1
; . COLUMBUS, Ohio (Ul&gt;J) and again and again.
~
; Diane McClun11 of Fort Recovery
• and Kirk Marlin !lf Soutli Cha' rleston Southeastern were se: lected as tile United Press
: International girls Division IV
614-H2·7066
•
co-coaches of the year.
· 1 McClung and Martin, who both
657 High Strttt, ......,,,,Ohio
· led their respective teams to
unbeaten 20..0 regular season
records, deadlocked at 11 votes ·
each In balloting by .Division IV
coaches around the slate.
II was the flnt such hOnor for
.
II I'HIMIRICAt:cMt~Ntny
bOth McClung and Martin.
Rep e~endnJ
McDonald's Barry Clule flnlilled Ulll:d Ia tile blillotlnl with ·
· flw votes and was the only other
;-cb.wttl more than one.

MnJCO •

ATHENS, OHIO
;

•

....:C'alle· ·

~

.

..

•

lifted In · a r~und at 1:25 ol
overtime to lead Los Aft&amp;elel.
Doug Badger put Buffalo abead
at 3: 05 of the third period, but
seven minutes later Marty
McSorley tied the score off a pan
from Wayne Gretzky .'

···------continued from page 4

That's because Simmons
rarely scored much d~rtng routs.
He hadonlyonegamcln Which he
scored as many as 40 points ln hls
four years.
Instead of fattening hts aver·
· age against weak opponents,
Simmons has been consisten t, .
scoring his 20 to 30 points against
virtually every team on the
·
·
schedule.
"Anytime we needed a basket
late in a. game,. he's the guy we
went to," Morris said. "He'S'a 50
percent shooter and he's come
through for us every time. There
are very few people you can say
that about. " ·
Simmons entered this season
with 2,370 points, and. the question was only when, not whether,
be would pass 3,000. It happened
Feb. 22 when he hit a free throw
In the first half of a 100-60 romp ·
over Manhattan.
He needed only three points
entering the game to reach the
milestone, but it took him 7 ·
minutes, 16 seconds of playing
time to do so.
' 'It was an anxious moment for
me," he said . "I don 't think I was
ever so· nervous In a basketball
game. I know it's a great
achievement but me, being only
21, I'm still a little naive about It .
My mind 's really not set on lt . I'm
sure that when I hang up the
sneakers somewhere up the
road. i'll r.eaUze what I've done. ·

;: McCann to speak at Marshall
:·Athletic Club meeting Friday ·

al75
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Rangers, who lost defenseman
Brian Leetch for the rest of the
season with a broken ankle.
Daniel Marois and Ed Olczyk
scored Toronto's only goals.
·
Klnp 6, Sabres 5 (OT)
AI Buffalo, I':I.Y., Bob Kudelskl

I "•

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his 31st goal of the season.
"It Is flnetoget a win In QuebeC
oti Tuesday and a tie here, bUt on
this overall road trip we are still
under .500 (1·2·1)," Anderson
said.
The tie allowed second'place·
Edmonton to move within three
points of tlrst·place Calgary In
the Smythe Divis !on.
"I tl\lnk that was one or
toughtest tests I have had all
year, " R,oY said. "I'd like to get

Vikings' Smith is named UPI Honorable Mention

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that IYinl p i by Anderson back
again. I would play It differently.
''The011ersarefast. Thlsls the
type q1game I need to get ready
for the playoffs."
It Ander110n and the Oilers
were disappointed with the draw,
the Canadlens saw It differently.
•'It was a big point for us, '' said
Shayne Corson of Montreal, who
scored' the game-winning goal
against the · Islanders Tuesday .
"We took three points In back-to-·
. back games with our wtn over tlie
Jslanders on Tuesday. N~w we
have four games without a loss."
Corson broke a 2.2 tie at 8: 16 or
the .second period, ·getting his
30th goal of the season on a
rebound.
·
Claude Lemieux made the
score Hl at 8:05 of the first
period. ·A . power-play goal · lit
10: 35 by Mats Naslund gave
Montreal · a 2..0 lead. It was
Naslund' 1 2Qth goal of the season.
Jarri·Kurrl collected his 32nd
goal, a 55-foot1 blast that eluded
Roy, at 18:20 to cut Edmonton's
deficit to 2-1.
· ·
·
The Oilers tied the score 2-2 at
6: 30 of tlie middle session. Craig
Simpson took a pass at the side of
the net from Esa Ttkkanen and
deflected It Into the Montreal
goal.
''My goal In tile second period
Is a hard orie to defend against,"
Simpson said. "The goalie Is over
to one side and Tlkkanen made
the perfect pass to me and I just
steered It ln. "
Elsewhere In the NHL, New
York overpowered Toronto Ma·
pie 8·2 and Los Angeles edged
Buffalo 6-5 In overtime.
'
Rucen 8, Maple Lea&amp; 2
At Toronto, Brian Mullen and
first period of Wednesday night's game In
John Ogrodnlck each scored two
goals to lead the Rangers. The
Toronto. However, the Rangers came back to win
victory was costly for the
8·2. (UPI)

said.
The Oilers unleashed a barrage at Roy, but the goaltender
was up to the challenge, making
39 saves.
Anderson scored the tying goal
while Montreal was a man short
at 8:08 of the third period. The
Edmonton right winger broke In
from the blue line and skated In
front of the Montreal net. He
drew Roy toone side and then put
the puck Into the far corner for

Penn State beats Marquette 57-54

LooK WHAT YouR MAZDA
DEALER HAs FoR You Now!

d

'

11Ldl11, 1890

When I'm a little older, I' ll'
probably -appreciate It more." ·
Simmons had a chance to
become the first college player to
score 3,000 points and grab 1,500
rebounds , but he has so far fallen
short on the boards , heading Into
the NCAA Tournament with
1.407.
'
. •
If the Explorers me.ke a
postseason r un lie might atill
achieve that goal and could also
move Into second place on ihe
all-time scoring list .
Those · s tatistics , however,
mean less to ·Simmons than an•
NCAA victory. The Explorers,
with Simmons, are 0-2 In the
NCAA Tou rnament; a trend he
expects to cha nge this season .

.

.

AMERICAN FAMILY UFE
LONG TEIM CAIE NURSING HOME PLAN
COYIIAGI INCLU.DIS:
~ SkiHICI Nunln1 facility
hitarmocllate Nunlng FaciUty
Custo•al Care facility
Bigiblt perlalls must.bt bet•- .
55·14 ytan of age.
·

PIOTICT YOUI SAYINGS,
ASSOS AND IIIYISTMIII'IS
Fill' dtlails and a fr11 tslimate
call Htrman Lynch AIC
b14·992 -3225 after 6:00 P.M.
.

�l .
Pome~ov-Midrleport.

Thurlday. M.ch 16. 1990

OhiP

~--.. __,..

Rio~s track teams at starting gate·
"fairly strong In all events,"
With approximately 40athletes another All-American ranking to
Willey ~id. The coach views the
committed to spring season, the her laurels.
high jump, hurdles and relay as
men's and women's outdoor
Tbe 1990 campaign opens for
successful events for the men, as
track teams at the University of Rio Grande on Saturday at the
'tMy were in 1989, while Travis
Rio Grande enter competition ·. Early Blr~Relaysin~untlngton.
Rambo (sophomore, Columbiwllh a combination of youth and W.Va.
·
ana~ is back to lend t&gt;xpertlse In
talent.
the discus and shot events.
·
"It's exciting for us." Coach
A successful ·recruiting year
the
nine
competitive
Among
Bob Willey remarked. ' 'The for WJIJey brought many fresh
events scheduled for the teams,
men's team, I think, will provide faces to tbe track and field
two will be at borne. A meet
for an in teres dng confj!rence program, some of whOm shone
between Rio Grande, ·More ~lead
meet now that Malone is out of
Jndlvldually during cross counState
(Ky .) and an as-yet unan·
the MOC. On the district level,
try In the f~ll and dutlng lnd90r
nounced
team Is set!orSaturday,
however, it will be a dogfight
track season. Among the recruits
April?,
and
.the Mid-Ohio Conferbeeause there are some good
were two additions , to the
ence
champions
wlll be con·
athletes In our district this year."
women's team, fonner high
In 1989, thl!men'sandwpmen's .school .state. champ)On of Renee ducted on Stanley L. Evans Field
on Saturday, April 14.
.
teams each placed third In the
Peck (freshman, Baltimore,
"If
we
can
keep
them
all
conference and were each fourth
Ohio) , and Boon te Evans (freshhealthy
that
will
be
a
key
io
our
on the district level. The sea~on
man, Kingston). ·Both are dissuccess'," Willey sale!. "As I've
ended on a bright note when
tance runners.
told some of my clas~~CS, you can
senior Mary Dowler competed at
Willey said the strength of the
have the bftt quarterback in the
the NAIA Track Nationals In
women's program will be in the
nation but If he's Injured, he's
California and placed among the
middle distance and distance
not the best anymore . .
top 251ndlstance running, adding
events. There are also two long
I
IINIVEIISrrY OF IUD Glt4NDE
and. triple jumpers who will
- - Spor18 brief1-- make a difference, bitt Willey Dole -TRACK IICB~ULELocattoo
feels the team COI!Id be stronger · Mareh· t7-Early Bh11 Relays ....... ..... ,. A
Honors
Marcb 24-Musklngwn IavltatloJ:~al ... ... A ·
with more parti~lpation.
. GMrgia Tech guard Kenny
Mar&lt;h 31-otterbeln ln\lllatlonal ....,.... A
Anderson was the ovf,!rwhelming · "Other areas are weak; and we April 7-Rio Grande Invltat lonal. ... ....,.. H
definitely need some help there, •. A~rtl H-MOC ChampiDilslllps ... .... .... .. H
choice for Atlantic Coast ConferAprtl20-21-j\!I·Ohlo Championships .• .. A
ence' rookie of the year. Anderson · Willey said.
Aprti28-Distrlct 2~ Champton;htps ..... A
The men's team will be more · May
5-'l'wii(Jht tnvttatlonaL ........... .. A
received 89 of the 91 votes cast by
well-balanced and should be May 12-BiliY Hays Invitational ........... A
members of the Atlantic Coast
Sports Writers•Association.
SkUng
Swiss skier Karl Alplger had
the tastes t time in two practice
runs for the World Cup downhill
set for Thursday at Are, Sweden.
Alplger zipped down the 3,230·
, mPter course on which he has
Umited Deltw~P'Y Aree
excelled in five World Cup
--~-----~~-,------.-~-TiYcllr'liiW-LiiGi-j
victories, in 1 mihute, 54:28
I
PEPPERONI l'tZU FEAST I
seconds In the morning practice
1 Wh~ Pepporo.nl. Sou•eo. Mulh· ' I
$899
I
run .... Carole Merle· of France,
I roomo.Onlon.,dQr_Pep,.... ·I
·•
·1
recovering from a knee injury,
I PLUS 4-16-0Z. SO" DIINIIS
I
s.._. Ptno for '4.00 Men I
registered her fourth consecutive World Cup victory by beat ·
ing 17-year-old Norwegian Julie
I -·
------I
I
Lunde Hansen in the final giant
:--:..:::.::.:.~~=::.
1-.....................................
,....... ... ... ...._,
, ,~ .....•...
,... 'I
I
.
.
.
......
....,,
slalom of the season at Klovsjo,
-- .... f'l'!l'" ,._., .. .,..._ .. ,....,_.
II
I
Sweden.

.

''

•

GRABS REBOUND - Philadelphia forward
Charles Barkley (right) grabs'the rebOund just
before L.A. Laker center Vlade Dlvac gets !he ball

NBA roundup

' in the first half of Wednesday niiht's NBA contest
IIi Phlladelphlil. Barkley scored a giunl!"blgh 35
points to lead the 76ers to a 116-110 victory. (UPI.)

.

Sixers beat Lakers 116-ll 0
• By United Press International

! Los Angeles Lakers coach Pat
Riley, who knows a good team
·when he sees one, offered high
praise to the Philadelphia 76ers
~ednesday night.
· The Sixers moved within a
game of the idle New York
~nicks i!l' the Atlantic Dlvison,
posting a 116-110 victory over the
Lakers. •
: •'Tonight we caught a good
(earn that's on its · way to
becoming a great team," said
,:tlley, who led the Lakers to the·
NBA Final eight times in the
)980s.
: Charles Barkley led P"hiladel·
phla with 35 points, bu 1 it was the
l:ontrlbution of Johnny Dawkins
that allowed Philadelphia to
. break a 10-game losing skien
)lgainst the Lakers. The last time
theSJxers beat the Lakers.was in
~984.

' Dawkins matched his career
high with 30 points, converting 13
of 19 shots from the field, and
)landed out ·a game-high 10
assists.
; "I played a iot more aggres~ively 1 " Dawkins· said. "I made
up my mind before the game to
ito the things I'm good at and find
the basket. Fortunately, it fell for
me tonight."
.
; The Lakers. who had a fouri!ame winning streak broken,
received 34 points from Magic
;Johnson and 28 from 3ames
Worthy. :rheir 20-11 mad record
ls still the best in the NBA.
' With the 76ers holding a 111·108
advantage, Dawkins came up
empty from the free-throw · nne
With 23.5 seconds to go. But
Johnson missed a shot at the
other end, Dawkins grabbed the
tebound, .was fouled and sank ·
two from the line for a 113-108
lead.
• "There was never a doubt
about the second two~" Dawkins
~aid. "I was very disappointed
ihat I missed the first two but
iortunateiy I had a ~econd
~hance. Rarely do you l(et that
· •
opportunity. " .
: Barkley then stole the lnI&gt;Ounds pass and was fouled after
making a basket . He completed
. fhe three-point play to seal the
¥Jctory.
' Hersev Hawkins. who had 24
points, sank two"from th~ (ree:
throw line for a 111·1061ead with
29.1 seconds to go ,.and Johnson
5cored 'on a drive to cut the
advantage to 111-108.

SPRING
446

VA~~ r v

4~:~

"The only thing I can say is we
had our chance and didn't
convert," Johnson said. "When
you are on the road, you have to·
convert. We were right there but
they ,made the one or, two plays
that won the game."
.
Philadelphia's Rick Mal!orn·
fell late In the game and suf{ered
a bruise of the sciatic nerve in his
back, which left him without
feellrig in one of his legs. He Is
expected to miss three to five
days.
In other games, Dallas
dumped Boston 113-102, Seattle
edged 0harlotte 103-100, Phoenix
routed Denver 138-108and Miami
outlasted the L.A. CllpP.ers 113108 In overtime.
; :(
.
Mavericks 113, Celtlcs 10%
At Dallas, Sam·Perkins Sf.o red
30 pain Is and Roy Tarpley added
25 points and 13 rebounds IQ lead
Dallas. Boston had a streak of
!pur-straight road victories
stopped. Kevin McHale led the
Celtics with 30_ points and 11
rebounds.
SuperSonics 103, Hornets 100
At Seat tie, guarcl Jim Farmer
scored an career-high 26-polnts,
including 18 in the decisive
second half, and Seclale Threatt
added 21 to lead the Sonics .
Charlotte's Kelly Tripucka 1~
ali scorers with 27 points, butt he
Hornets lost their seventh
straight".
Suns 138, Nuggets 108
At Phoenix. Tom .Chambers
'scored 31 points and Kevin
Johnson had 29 to lead the Suns to
their seventh straight victory
and tpeir 18th straight ~t home.
· Michael Adams and Walter Davis Jed Denver with 16 apiece.
· Heat 113, Clippers 108 (OT)
At Los Angeles, rookie Sherman Douglas scored nine of hls
career,hlgh 33 poin)s in overtime
to help Miami snap a nine-game
road losing streak. The Heat
Mve now defeated the Clippers
five consecutive times dating
back to last season. Glen Rice
added 24 points for Miami, which
has only six road vJctories this

--Sports

DEUYEIS
FREE.

:

~=~ ~ :~'l.~l

··

:

S99'

:

----·----~·----

season. Danny Manning led the
Clippers with,28 points.

'
.
· tlllllnessea and homeowners In damage, authorities said.
In a band from Joliet to central Mis.Ourl Cleaned up
A violent cloudburst touched
CbampaiiJL
·
Tbunclay after a tornado appar· down shortly before 6:05. p.m.
The National Weather Service ently . touched down east of Wednesday some 5 miles east of
Issued fiaa~ flood watches for
Columbia In Boone County caus- Columbia on Interstate 70, dam·
parts of Dlllloll where, showers 1ng an· estimated S100,0oo In aging a shOp that sells animal
were movlni in from Iowa and
J
Ml.ssourl.
8
8
Dennis Her\ll!y · a state Trans·
l'e
portatlon Department official,
The baianci Iii all funds of
l!aiance of m.657.02. The pollee
said the Des Plaines ancl Fox Middleport VIllage at the end of · fund showed disbursements of
rivers were both a half-loot ·or February was $216,269.52, ac$14,484.37 and the Income tax
more above flood stage.
. cording · to .Jon Buck, clerk- disbursemenls of $2125.03.
"The bank Is fuU In a lot. of
·
Other funds . with receipts,
A
bl
lnlall ould treasurer. . .
tbelrbankl.~lnwasreportedln ,.u~tJ. nY g,n
c
' tn tliegeneralfundtherewere . ~isbursements and balances at
nortberil ancl cent'ral Illinois and
ca~ll! problems, Hervey said.
receipts ·of $21,696.54, disbursethe end of the month, listed
·m ents of S10.616.M leaving a
respectively ,were as follows:
Street maintenance, $5,337 ,82,
$6,224.24, $238.93.
Mli!l-golf, no receipts, $339.87
disbursements, $60t!.41, deficit
Soutb Ceatral Oblo
balance.
Occasional Irain and a chance
Fire equipment, $75, $1531.07
of thunderstorms Thursday · with $1687.26 deficit balance.
night, With a ' )OW in the mid 50s,
Fire truck, $66,897.57 balance,
Chance of rain Is near 100
with no receipt, 110 expenditures.
percent. Rain continuing and a
Economic development,
I
chance of thunderstorms Frid!IY,
S1380,03. s772.50,.ssu2.2Q.
·
with highs near65. Cbanceorraln
.'
.Pub'llc transportation,
Is near 100 Pf.rcent,
·
·
$48,272.50, $12,598.47' $21,102.01.
. Exteniled Foreeut
Water system Improvement.
. Saturday thr011gh Monday
$00,736.4:1 balance. no receipts,
A chance of rain Saturday and
no disbursements.
Monday, with fair weather on
Water, $15,269.76; $12,508.92,
Sunday. Hlg~ will be In the 50s
$16,350.18.
Saturday, rlngtng ·from the mid
Sanitary sewer. $12,325.27,
40s to tile loki 50s Sunday and
$9,736.87,
$7,636.18.
'WEATHER MAP - Storm)' weather movealllto the Mlnllalppl ·
from
the
upper
30s
to
the
upper
pool, no recipets,
Swimming
Valley and Great Lakes area llhead of a slow movlnJ cold front.
40s
Monday,,
Overnight·
lows
will
$1,060)5,
with
deficit balance of
Tbe UIIIMi.._bly warm wea&amp;her COI!IiDiieli over the Eul Coaalal
range from the mid 30s to the mid
$1,349.45.
area. lklany and mild cOIIj!llio• continue lor tbe Southwest. Streng
40s early Saturday, in the 30s
Cemetery, $1,370.03. $1,549.81,
guilty wJiada move I~ the Northern ud Ceiltra! Pial•. Tex_u and
Sunday
morning,
and
ranging
.
deficit
balance, $487.82.
Ok!&amp;_boma will tiDally 1011e the s&amp;qrmy weather and. enjoy some .
from the upper 20s to the·mlddle
Wa(er
. meter funds, $668;
slllitohlne on Th\lrsday. Hot and humid over .the Florida Pen~s~a.
30s early Monday.
'
$005.42. $16,&amp;n.23.

Br Ulllletl p,_ lllterWJoul
Harllb rain, violent wiD!! gullS
and flooding 'l'hunday kept the
Midwest reellllg as • residents
cleaned up !run extensive tornado damage, and a wave of
UDJe.-able heat and humidity
showed no signs of letting up in
the East.
'
Showers moved into Illinois
early Thursday, threatening to
send· many of the state's already
bu...eonln"' rivers spntlng over
·•

CALL
992-2124

__ _____

•

Clerk trea urer'

on

A threl!"day teleconferenc~ on owners of small and medium"Waste Reduction Assessment sized businesses, environmental
and Technology Transfer," managers,.·cily and cc;&gt;unty offigeared for waste generator.s and cials. educators and interested
policy makers, is . set at the citizens. ·
Speakers include Gerald Kotas
University ·of Rio. Grande ~ext .
week.
·
of the ·lf.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of ReThe teleconference, originatIng . .from the University of search and Development, and
Tennes!;ee, will link 20 states Roger Schecter, director of the ·
National Roundtable of State'
through television, telephone and
FAX machine for interactive Waste Reduction Programs. '
Lunch hours will be devoted to
discussion and question and
answj!r sessions. The program state and local issues, featuring
will be held in Lecture Room 115 addresses. by Ohio Gov. Richar!l
In Woocf Hall on the Rio Grande
Celeste and local officials.
The Rio Grande presentation
campus .
of
the teleconference is .sponThe prOI(ram is set for March
19, 20 and 21 from 11:30 a.m. to 4 sored by the Ohio TeChnology
Transfer Organizat.lon. The reg·
p.m. each day.
"Waste Reduction Assessment istralion fee is $75. Interested
and Technology Transfer". will parties may register by calling ·
offer Information and str,tegy tQ Il-800-222·36:JJ; extension 31$.
.

~~,

CLEVELAND iUPII - The 680323. Eleven tickets were sold
Super Lotto jackpot for Saturday with five of six numllers for$5,000
·wm reach at least $13 million, an each.
Ohio Lolterv Commission spoThere wer 87 tickets sold with
kesman said Thursday.
fouF of six Kicker numbers for
· No one got all six numbers In $1,000 each.
Wednesday's Super Lotto drawIng. The winning numbers were
8, 15, 17, 35, 39 and 44.
There were 277 tickets sold
. . .
with five of six numbers for 51;000 .·· CCEV·E LAN!j !UP!) - Wed·
each. There ·were 8,282 ticket~
nesday's winning Ohio Lottery
with fpur of .the six winning
numbers:
numbers !or $75 dollars apiece.,
· PICK·3
There was one big-winner in the
953.
Kicker game, winning $100,000.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
The
. wlnnihg num~rs were · $1,371,570.00. with a payoff due of

.·

•

PenSum Protector IRA
at BANK ONE.
'

If you're retiring, changing jobs, or.
recetving an early distribution of your
pension, you can invest in a high-yield
Pension Protector IRA at
BANK ONE and keep
your funds tax-deferred
until you withdraw them .
at retirement.
The interest you earn
really adds up fast and
retnember-tt's only tax·
able when }00 withdraw it.
Don't wait to take
advantage of this special
rate ... because Federal
regula~ions give you only

brief~--

Bo,.tng
Cuban boxers will be excluded
from a boxing tournamen( In
Prague this spring. According to
the official Czechoslovak news
a~ncy CTK, the · boxers are
barred from the competition,
•'becauSe., they are feared by
'tl!eb' opponents, who do their
besl to avoid them." ·•

60 days to reinvest your pension funds in
a BANK ONE Pension Protector IRA .

or they're automatically considered
taxable income.
One more thing. Every .
Pension Protector IRA
comes with something
else extra .. ' a qualified
BANK ONE customer service representative who
can answer all your questions about this important
financial decision.
Stop by and see us "
today about a Pension
.Protector IRA.

Mini!IIWII

r.INHM
'

PcJmeroy
992·2133

Rutland
742-2888

.

·
'

Coolville
667-3115

BANCONEBROKF.RAGE
Brian Roloeon, 1·800·874·1536

·-

• 1

\

.

Sooltolllllol,...., ......., wilhd,....l. 11-.•llject to chi..,. All_. yield

•

y

\

•

Middleport pollee reported 66
.arrests during February with 11
accidents being lnves.tlgated.
, Merchant pollee collections totaled $141 for the month, with
: parking ineter collections total: ing $660: There was a total of 401
' parking tickets writ.ten.

;Property
.; transfers
'

.&lt;

'•

'

515000 OFF ANY AIOYE
GROUND
- POOL, IN. STOCK.
24 FOOT ROUND ABOVE
$
GROUND POOL
• NOW

.
3
50
1·

OPEN 6 DAYS 9:00 A.M.-5:00P.M.
•NEW LOCATION•

POOL992-5724
PEOPLE
POMEROYI OHIO

253 WE$T MAIN

BERKUNE•
SPACE·SAVING WALLAWAYe

NUCH~MGriOII®
I

·'

FURNITURE

Fully reClines wllen placed as close os 3" from a wall!

I~J

BERKLINEe

Ul::iH'oonle

,.•

Now-an unusullly fin~ combination ol fl.nctional styli~g .
quality woritmanship, and value price in this space-sav•no
Wtllaway' Li¥-hi-Aoomf Collection! Plumply pildded back
and Hat c:ushionl give you just·enough bounce ao you settle
clown gently and never strikl boftom. bclusrve "TouchMol.lon"
rrleChanltm provides effortleis glide iniO full recline poliiiDn
at tht mtl'e touch Of a button. Midi by Berkline · -specialists
in motiOn flJrnitu,._lnOihtf rtuon lor you to be proud 10 own
thit ettrlordlnary grouping!

*EASY

FIN~NCING

.,
·~

AVAILABLE
'·

TOUCH-MOTION•
WALLNNAY"

RECUNER

STOBART'S
GRI.ROUSE
Is' low Open
Fora.........

Carl A. TCJIIIII, Letart.
· Allee Waple and CllntOD Walpe, 111J6 A., to Carl A. YOIUII,

.

.

GIMYieve if. Swartl:, lot 325,
to a-•ett ,Gilmore allil ~e
GllJilan, Pollllroy VUiap,
IJoao'd E. _ . , , parfel, to

TOUCH-MOnON•
WAW.WNI"

IOVESEAT ·

•to DAY~

f

SAME, AS

:

CASH

•
I

,,
USEO•
LAYAWAY
PLAN.

'

JUST ARRIVED ....
Larp shipment of quality .......... .
.Sofas, LoveHab and lecliners. hautif..

new fabrics. Stop In and chiCle
low salt pricn.

WAUAWA.r S,OFA

LIST CALL-..
FOR THIS SALE .

WlLLPARER

•CAUUFLOWER

··r··.

.FREE
·;IMIIifA, lfftiuas, tf1, fttGI COVIIYIIG. DEUYEIY

FOILAOE PLANTS.

ETC. '

fti·J671
.
DOWNTOWN Pa.IOY, ·01110

ll'ft OM1IIfl1d

APP1101nte

.

\

n.

•IN STOCK
eft W$1.
' eGIIAT
PAnUN SBICl'IOII ~ .
'

.· .• ,IKIf ·.

VARIE'rY OF

· S·~.1i~·Eita
dec't, IIYillec.,

CONGOLEUM
VINYL LINOLEUM

,.

.CAIIAG'W ·.
·~

••t ow

OFF
.
. $549
MARCH17.~1=·~0~~~-----S-~~~~~--M-.~~~==:-~

•••

Robert M..8clrberry and Cathy

·~

I

'

The Middleport Fire Depart·
ment answered a total of 61 calls
during February including eight
fire and rescues and 53 emer·
. ;'
• gen~)' medlc!ll sliUI\tlOnS, aC•
: ' Robert Dotson ' .a nd Mlldrecl;' co~lng to a report from Jeff
~ Dotson, loll, to George Hensley,
Darst, fire chief.
•Orange. '
Robert G. Vandemark, lot 19
and part lot. 22, to Elizabeth Ann
Webster, Rutland.
Joseph Youn&amp;, Jr. and Rowena
E. Young, parcels, to Sammy L.
Darst and Sherry Darst, Salem.
VIllage of Middleport, Ohio, pt.
, Jots 25 &amp; 26,.to Mitchell Meadows
and Debra K. Meadows, Middle' port VIllage.
• VIrgil H. Hart, dec'd, cert. ot
W~OLE8ALE
~ trans, to Helen E. Hart, Salem.
· Gudtum . E. Schaekl!l; parcel;
RE1'AIL .
•
' to Edward A. Scllaekel and
'Patricia A. Schaekel, Chester.
HAVE~
' Mary E. Y®J~~, dec.'d afftlt. lo

c-plled Br. ~
, Emmopne Rollteln CODp'
·Reelpnler, Melp Couaty, Ohio ·

;1AWt,

•'

Fire report released .
•.

'RUfllld~.

'

POOL
PEOPLE
.

PICK-4

'I

. 7566.
•
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$267,452.50, with a payoff due of
$76,000.00.
Super Lotio .
8.15,17.35,39,44. .
' lUcker
680323.
.
Su_per Lotto ticket sales totaled
$5,827,533.00.
.
Kfcker ticket sales totaled
$919,761.

•t'tlOO A, to Gladys · Barur,

(

'

$383,662~00.

Police report relea~~ed ·

~

.
oompaltdbr-ndiftldoill'.

;

. Lottery ~unibe~

WI

BANK ONE. A THEN$, NA I A I'ART OF THE CARING TEAM
Alhtnl, Ohio · Momber FDIC
.

Ieased

"It . tore up some hollieS ancl
several trailers, downed 10me
power lines," said Deputy Pat
Bowers or the Dallas County
Sherllrs Office.
·
Two men were hospitalized af
Jefferson Regional Medical Cen·
ter in Pine Bluff, Ark., and thl'e'l
children were treated for minor
Injuries, Bowers said.

•

Saturday's jackPot to hit $13 million

· 0/J!n a high-yiekl

report

trailers and a nearby automobile
auction.
_
Initial reports of damage apptoached $100.000, said Carl
Antlml, a pollee dispatcher.
Showers ancl thunderstorms
that soaked Texas moved Into
Arkansas Wednesday night,
spawning a tornado in Fordyce
that Injured five people and
caused property damage, offl·
cials sat d .

. . . . .R

. T~leconference
.waste ;·
issues set at KG next week

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our

11te .belly Sa tdnel Paga 7

.Weather

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Mildap111.. Ohio

Pomaot

To111adoes ftoods cause ;heavy ~age in .Midwest states

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
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in · the news---.

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Thurldav.

CB1.1181NG SPEED: Tom CruiSe took his latest movie role too

far alld tt cost him $125·. Cruise was lined after gelling caught

drlvlnali&amp;mph Ina ~mP!1 zon~o·n Match 21nDarUngton, N.C.,
wbere he Is playing a ra-ce car driver In !he movie "Days of
ThUIIder:• at Darlington Raceway. The fine would"have been
wane had oot Judge Du Cauaey reduced the speed Ina count to
the-.lesaer charge of careless operation o! • vehicle, But
Darl.lnaton Mayor Rellllle WU'd says city of!lclals had even
dlscusaed dropping the charge al)Ogether but were concerned
about poulb~ adver~~e publicity. Court officials say plea
bargains on speedlna tickets and other miMi' traffic counts are
COnunoJI throughout the state.
·
~Y'S MAJUtiAGE: Mudy Smith, trie young wife o!
Ront111 Stone BtU W;rm1111, 53, denies "there Is trouble In
paradlle. "I loved him when we got married (nine months ago)
and I love blm now," says Smtih, 19. "AIL·thts divorce talk Is
rubbish. "The divorce talk comes .from the London tabloids but
Smith IQ!IIsts ber only problem Is her health. She's been
suffering frmn a yeast Infection that has caused her to Jose
weight and made her allergic "to everything from perfume to
tobacco," she said. ''No marriage In which the husband Is away
as mucb as Bill and the wife Is Ill, can be entirely happy. But as
far as I can be, I am happUy married. As for splitting up, that's
just not true." Wyman also scdffs at the reports. "These rumors
are rubbish and based on misinformation. Mandy and I are very
happy and my wish Is to see her left alone to get well," he said.
ROYAl. NIGJIT OtJT: Prince 1\ndrew and his wife, the ·
fol')'llerllarah Ferguaori, had what may be ihe!r last evening out
together before their second child Is born. Andr~w, a naval
officer who was In London on 48-hour ·leave .. took her to their
favorite dining club, Hariy's Bar In the West End, Monday
night. Andrew's ship, the .Campbelltown, just returned to·
Britain after an exercise and Is scheduled to remain In home
waters untU July, which means he will be a fast drive away at
the Royal Navy base at Portland, Dorset, when Sarah Is
admitted to the Portland Hospital In London. The baby Is due
next week and bookmakers are offering 5-4 odds that It wlll be a
sister for Princess Bea and eve.n money on a boy. The favorite
name for a girl Is Charlotte at 6-1 and lor a prince, David at5·1.
LAWYER JOKES: Imprisoned evangelist Jim Bakker ts
keeping In touch with the outside world. Bakker, who Is serving
45.years In a·federal prison In Rochester, Minn. , for defrauding
his flock, called his attorney, Jim Toms of Hendersonville. N.C.,
las I weeII to share some humor. •'He asked me If I knew what
they call 20,000 lawyers at the bottom of the sea," Toms said.
"Then he told' me the answer- 'A good start.' That shows he;a t
least ts.ln good •pirlt~." Bakker also had hls·brother, Norman,
deliver a single red rose with a card to the burned-out five -story
home he lived In during his PTL Ministry heyday. The house,
which had been sold to a New Jersey man. burned lastweekand
aulhoritles say arson Is a posslblllty. "But one thing's for sure,''
an arson Investigator said. "Bakker's alibi Is solid."
GLIMPSES: Actoi'Gary Busey has flied for-divorce from his
wife Of 18 years, Judy. The couple has a son, Jake, 18, and have
been separated since. May 1988. Busey:s attorney , Norman
~Hn. says the actor has completely recovered from the 1988
motorcycle accident that required brain surgery .•. Sammy
Davt. Jr. is at hOnie In Beverly . Hills after being released
Tuesday •from Cedars-Sinal Hospital, where he, underwent
several weeks of chemotherapy for a recurrence of throat
. cancer. Spokeswoman Susan Reynolds Says Davis will
concentrate on resting and building hts strength.·"1:1e's feeling
stronger and his spirits are up and he continues to fight," she
said. "He fared well with the treatment and did not suffer too
many side effects."
··

Cholesterol screeni~g
to be hekl March 23
..

the

FIRST PlACE WINNER -Brenda Templeton was named
flnt place wluer lD Dlvlll~ I of Ohio TOPS No. 17t:Sbe lost 17 and. ·
tbree quarter (IOilllds and was pre-&amp;ecl • conar;e and moaetary
11ft lit a dinner held Tuesday evealng at tbe Carpenter's Hallin
PoiiW'Oy.

. NEW MEMBERS - :,O~m lhle, center, aad B!!ney Weill, !1glll, '
were IDIItalled as aew members of the Melp CowiiJ' IIOU'd of
Elecllons by Secretary of State Sherrod Brown. Eacb boU'd of
elections In lbe state of Oblo Is comprised of"lwo democrats and two
republic IIIII servtnr; four year terms. ·

VMH Auxiliary
group meets .

Community calendar

Appreciation dinner

Lee McComas, retired Chris·
tlan leader and educator, will be
Mary Bell Frecker, Louise honored Sunday with a service of
played and all 'members· are
THURSDAY
Be,a rhs, and Carrie Kennedy . appreciation at !he Heath United
POMEROY - The XI Gamma urged to attend.
were hostesses for the recent Methodist Church In Middleport
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph! ·
meeting
of the Women's Auxll·
RUTLAND -Sign up for the
Sororlty'wm meet Thursday af6
at. 2 p.m.
. .
·
Division winners, Jean Wright, ·. She also conducted a a program
lary
·
at
Veterans Memorial , There · will be a ·profP-am,
p.m. at the senior citizens center Rutland Basebilll League will be ·
Hospital. ·
Norma Torres, Darlene Buckley, on calories and a qutz with Cindy
,
· ·
, refreshments, . and ' a card
Iii Pomeroy. Pizza and pop will held Saturday 9 a.m!' to 1 p.m. at
TIDB Geary, and Brenda Tern- Faulk as the winner.
Dr.
Mark
BroWrl
was
the
guest
be furnished and necklace mak. the Rutland Civic Cznter. All
shower.
pleton were honored Tuesday
Mary Martin t!lanked · the
speaker and plans were made for
lng supplies should be brought In coaches are encouraged to
. evening when Ohio TOPS 570 met group' for birthday remembran:
attend.
·
a bake sale on Apr.Jl 13 In the
by the members.
at the Carpenters Hall In ces and other members thanked
lobby of the hospital. Plans for a
Pomeroy.
their secret · pals for
rummage sale on May 3-5 were
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
HENDERSON -;. :rhe Gallla
The division winners were ·remembrances,·
also discussed.
Group of A.A. and Al-Anon will Twirlers Scjuare Dance Club will
The Ohio Valley Church o! God,
The best loser was Juanita
• presented corsages and moneThe next ineet!ng w!tl be held
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the . hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
Route 50 E .. will have revival
tary gifts.
Humphrey and the runner up was
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. p.m. at the Henderson Commun- Tuesday at 1: ~ p.m. In .the
March 21-25 at 7:~ p.m.
Lennie Bell Aleshire, leadel', Vlrgmia Dean. The best·pret!)en
conference room of the hospital. ' nightly. The evangelist will be
For more Information call Ity Center ·In Henderson, W.Va.
opened the meeting in Mtual!stlc
loser was Amy Smith and the
A silent auction will be held and• Joe Be~~Sley. The public Is Invited
1-800-333-5051.
The caller will be Ed.Clark and
fornl. and welcomed two new runneF up was Crystal S.mtth.
members
are·to bring a salad for
lhe. dance ls .open to all western
to attend.
mem~rs and . one reinstated
·The surprlse ·g!ft was .won by
refreshments.
.
POMEROY · ..,-The Meigs square dancers ,
-~ll)ber. · .
.,,
VIrginia Dean and the fruit· County Democratic Executive ,
,
I
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•'
}&gt;'ggy VlnJng, asslstan~ · basket was won . by Diane' Committee wiU meet Thursd.ay,
POMEROY -Signup for
,l eader, conducted a . program Herdnian.
·
•
7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall Pomeroy Youth Lea~Ne, t-ball .·
''Keeping In Shape.'' Taking part .
Anyone Interested in walking ts
In Pomeroy.
to pony league, wtU be held
The Meigs County CooperatiVe
were Trlna Faulk, "Lose or .encouraged tonieetTuesdayat4
Saturday from 10 a.m to 2 ·p.m.
Par!sb will be tak tng •garden
: Gain;"· Wanda Faulk," '.'Donut
p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall In
POMEROY The Meigs at the P.omeroy Elementary
An evening at the movies was applications Marcli . 20-22 and·
· Hole;" Cindy Faulk, "Success."
Pomeroy. Weigh-In will be at 5 CountyBoardofEiectlonswillbe · School. The ·'fee Is $11. Birth
enjoyed recently by members of March 27-29 from 9: 30 a.m. to
p.m. and the meeting wUI be at 6 closed Thursday In order lor certificates must be prpvtded for
, Mrs. VIning · read ''Oh Dear,
the XI Gamma Mu Chapter. Beta 12: 30 p.m.
• TOPS Club," "Keeping In
p.m.
employees to attend a meeting In those signing up.
.
·
Sigma Ph! Sororit-y before "their •
• Shape," and "Nobody But You."
Woodsfield.
meeting at . Pizza Hut In .
Gall! polls.
'SUNDAY ,\.
Kay Adkins, president, re, ·
MIDDLEPORT .,.:there will .
RACINE - Any youngsters,
minded members that officers
be an abul'dant living seminar
would be elected at · the next · ,Interested !" -playing summer
Sunday through Wednesday at
7
; C::roup llofthe.Fir.s t Presbyter· · A letter was read from the Cow
Jv~u~S:!~ ~t p.m. at thehomeof the Bradford Churcli" of Christ. · tneetlng.
softball and baseball In Racine ·
:
; l!'n ~pre~, 'PI~·recently at the ~reek; Indian .Creek; Boo.nv!l}e; ~
Shel111 HarMs . thanked the - should sign up this Saturday,
Dean '· Mills ·wm speak each
and Lucky Fork. Ky ..congrega·
ROCK SPRINGS _ The Rock evel)hig. at 7: 3lJ p.m.
• home of Dorothy Morris; ·
members · who participated In from 10 a.m. to 12 , noqn; or
•
l
Katherine Brown presided at lions thanking Jhe ii;OUP .for the
Springs. Better Health Club will
selling Watkins products to beTuesday, March 20, from 5:30 to
the meeting In w~tch she read.an help given at Christmas.
' meet .Thursay at the home of
nefit
the
1991
International
7:30
p.m.; or Saturday, March
MIDDLEPORT -There will
article entitled Love For Thy
Betsy HorkY gave the book
Dorolhy Jeffers
summer
Special
Olympics
31,
from
10 a.m; to 12 noon. Sign
be a servtc.e of apprecl!ltlon for
NeighborlstheBastsforPeach." study entitled "To Be or Not to
·
Games
and
Carleton
School.
up
w!ll
be at the Southern
Lee McComas on Sunday at the .
The opening prayer was given Be.''
RAe
"
Kindergarten
building. A birth
The
next
meeting
will
be
held
byVebna Rue.
Katherine Brown closed with
INE-TheRaclneAmerl· Heath United Methodlst'Church
at the· home of A.r... Knight with certificate and S~O , registration
be a
Katherine Miller gave the roll prayer.
can Legion Post 602 will meet In Middleport. There
Paula Haynes and Johnanna
fee are required for each
program, refreshments, and a
Mrs. Morris served salad . . ~~~~!ri ~
Refresh· card shower.
.call and copected for dues.
Shuler as hostesses.
youngster.
'
Devotions were given by ' sandwiches and coffee t~
.Vebna Rue entitled, "Knowtng members attending and one
MIDDLEPORT_ The Mtddle~:.~~es" taken from "The!!@. ' guest, Irene Bailey. ·· ·
port Child Conservation League
' .
will meet Thursday at the Rock ,
Springs United. Methodist
husband's night at
.. : . Brian Young, fifth grader, won
Joshua Wandling, Devin Curf.
·
: the spell!ng bee at HarMsonv!ile
man, Jared Six, Stacy Cotterill,
SATURDAY
: Elementary. He Is the son of
Stephan!e ,Co_tterlll, Leura Arlx,
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
·Bobby and Nancy Young, King
Jesse Dtllon, all fifth graders.
Tuppers Plains VFW Pos.t 9053
: Ridge Road, Pomeroy. He
Tabllha Swe.arlngen, Steven and auxiliary wUI have a spagh·
. apelled the work baseless and
Vaqce, Dljlnna ·Carman, and etll dinner Saturday at 4 p m at
: basketball to win the bee.
Travis Gilmore, all sixth the post home;' Prlce·ls $3.'50.for ·
: The runner up was Matthew
graders.
adults and ·S1.50 for children 12
Durham, fifth grader .. son of
and under. Menu tsY&amp;paghettl.
•• Theron 11nd Sharon Durham.
meat sauce, garlic bread, tossed
J
salad, dessert, tea .o r coffee. The
1 Vance Road, Pomeroy·
, Other finalists were Alan Lee.
public Is Invited.
,, Jt&gt;remy Lowe, Joseph D'Augus0
,,
.
; ttno, Devon McMurray, M!cllelle
Jon D. · Jacobs, R.S. of the
NEW HAVEN -'-There wlll be
~ Reeves, Kevin Nee!, Scott Dod·
a bend area gospel sing on
:; son. Jason Carman. Jerrod·. Meigs County Health Depart- Satllrday at 7 p.m. at the New
Cl
·ment, has announced that the H
u 1 d Method1st ro.,.hurch.
~ ark, Jessica Wheeler, Cormey
Ohio Department of Health, In
. aven n te
Featured singers will be the
• Haley, Ezra. Thobaben. Rusty
: Haning. Angela M~Grath. Jesse
~onjunctlon with the Center for Redeemers Quartet, the Taylor
Disease Control of Atlanta, Ga. Is Family, and Reflections. The
: .Wood, and Kelly Dalton, all
· ·fourth graders.
conducting a telephont&gt;surveyon public Is lnvtte.d to attend.
•
·
nutrition, eating habits. and
',
cancer.
SALEM CENTER - The Star .
Some 'people In . the Metgs Grap.ge and Star Junior Grange
County area may be contacted will hold Its regular fun night
The fil'll tuxuoylldln Iince 195210 be riMI8d Motor 7l8nd magazine's
'
. c.r or the Year. Standard 111111ns lnctucte:
.
for this Information. The caller activities beginning with a po• 5.0-tlttr V-ll engine
should identify themselves, and . tluck supper at 6: 30 p.m. on
' .
o Etectrunic fuel Mljlctloi 1
give a telephone numljer' . lor · Saturday . at the Salem Center
• Speed ••lilt~ poWer llletrlng
verification purposes.
•
Fire Statt~m. .Games wll! be
. • l'oMr windows 111111 loctcs
Jacobs states that only lnfor·
• AuiOmlltc climate control
.1
matlon.pertatnlng to eating hab• Drivlr-elde and right front pasae/,ger air beg Su-n'-1 Reslraint
Its, nutrttlon, and cancer should
~.
\
be given. He also stated that
• And morel
.[
Information such as times of
The Ladles Auxiliary Frater·
work, travel, Or Other ln!orma- nal Order of Eagles 2171 wtll
t!on that wou·ld reveal an absence meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. All
Stock No. 449
trom home should not be given.
members are urged to attend.

TOPS ,meets in Meigs

...

Revival

Sorority ch~pter
meeting held

Applications caken

\ Gro~p . 2 meeting held. ·, s:;~~EH~~~-l~~L~~~~~~~

Sign up set

1

1

will

:r!'.;:r,-

.. · pe
. tng
. . Bee Winne
, . n . ed
;5 . 11 . ' .. . ' r am f~~~~or

MOTORTRENO'

Phone surtJe11
beino conduct,ed

..

SEAN RILEY

Riley b~rth .

i

'

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Riley are
uJIOIIIIclq the.blrlh of thetrflrst
· elllld, Sean Patrick Marshall on
. hb.' • In Charleston, w. v ·a.
1'1111 lllfdt weighed six pounds
.. . M-he ball ounces, and
.... 21111obet long.
'
.,.. " I Ml grudparents are
: ~' Mn. Robert . Mills,
: ~lrandparentJareMr.
•IIIII ... Jolarah&amp;ll Riley, Mason,

:w.va.

·

• MrMfllll .great grandmother
:'lllfattle Flleher, Pomeroy.
•

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t

THE HIRING OF
BEAUTICIAN

MartUfacll.nr'l SUggested

AetcJII Prloe............................ ;.....'29JJlO.(Xr
T~e Dllcount....................1 -4.axl.OO
Total Delt.wad Pdc::....................'2S.S10.00'

Bet.t y Van •t•r
IIOW tt•t APPOIR"DIS
fOI ..-aYCAU. 741·2134 POl AIPOIITMINT '

,_If ·

son s•u1101 TANNING
111 IIAUIY SALON
CORNER OFCOLLIOE.A LONG STREET
. RUTI.AND, OHIO
'
.• ~ ..

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... --

.. .... M

--'•'"--- -~-·-d~ ~...:..

l..JillrtJel:tc support
group meets

Racine
church to host .rally
.
'

Dr. Jay .Sheridan, a local .
.opthalmolog!st, gave an !nforma· ·
t!ve presentation on d!abet.!c
retinopathy at the monthly meet·
lng of tbe Diabetic SuppartGroup
held In the French 5® room at
Holler Medical Center.
Slides were used as Dr. Sheri·
dan explained what diabetic
retinopathy Is, how It Is detected
and treated, and how loss of
·'
vision can be prevented.
The next meeting will be held
Aptll12 \'lith Barbara Wiseman,
a · clinical psychologist, as the .
featured speaker. Her topic will
be diabetes and emotional
health .
The support meeting~ are open
to anyone who has diabetes or
who Is Interested In knowing ·
more about dli!betes. More Information may be obtained by
contacting Dottle Esque, R.N., at
446-5246.

F

ROCK SPRINGS - The ROck
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday 1 March 15, at .the
home of Dorothy Jeffers. Nancy
Grueser will presen I the program. The contest will be by
Frances Goegleln..

'
Universal Pictures, which paid

an estimated .$10.000 dollars to
move ~ky to the Spec;trum;
will also foot the btll for moving
the· statue back to the Art
Museum.
·
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Oblo waite for tbe buzZards

~ · HINCKLEY, Ohio (UPil
Like the swallows of Capistrano
Jhat fatthfuUy ~urn to the aame
Callfomla monastery each year,
the buzzards of Hl~kley wing
their . way back to their Ohio
roost.
The buzzards, atj:Ordlng to
legend, 'have been returntnc to
.Hinckley Lake,. about 15 miles
Iouth of Cleveland, •lnce 18)9.
Every year II~ 1911'7, t~ return
has been reported on ·Marc)l15,
with the exception of 191M, when
the UJ1Y .vuttl!re• apparently
IOJ'IIOt It wu.a leap ,ear.
·
Cl"eland Metroparkl Capt.
Ropr Lutz, In bll12th year ulhe
offiCIAl~ apotter, said that
to 1111 klloWied&amp;e tbe mild winter
weather bu DOl throwll off !he
blrdtl' aelledukl. ·•
'1 biiVI! not apot~ one yet,"
Lutz said Wf"ruhy. '11ut of
courae, I haven't been Jooldngup
,e ltller."
Lutz l8ld he would ~ at
'm nckley Lake · at' 6:30 a.m.

~.

•\ J

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PRIS(RIPTION
SHOP
lUDDUPOU, OH.
·,

Emerson
Shintom
'
Multi
Te(h
s,ott

Gold star
Samsung
Sounde$ign
Zenith

bid.
"I think they have rio ~holce
but to allow the frogs," the
jubilee's publicist Jewel Lucken
said Wednesday. "They have no
rule except a minimum size of 4
Inches. There Is no maximum
size.
·"Mr. Koffman 'w as here and he
feels that he has some of his
smaller frogs that will fit on the
8-lnch pad. If this Is true, we have
no choice but to let him jump
those frogs.''

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

HoME ·ENTERTAINMENT (ENTER'
POMEROY, OHIO

391 WEST MAIN STREET

992-3524

DDNESS

SPRING FEVER

CASH &amp; CARRY SALE .

.'

3·
Days

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

$229
4 ·DRAWER

Only

'

CHEST
1/2 PRICE S34 97
REG.

Fri·day
Saturday

S69~95

WITH MlniESS SO
STAOING AT $99.00 sn

~unday
14 CU •.FT.

FRO$! FREE

Refrigerators

~-...!.

S399

COUNTRY BLUE

DINETTE SET

Liberty Table, 6 Arrow Back
Chairs w/matching Hutch

$49900

COFFEE

11 OIIILYI

REG; 11200.00

&amp;

END TABLES

$49 95

SET

lEG. S99

VAUGHAN BASSER

SLEEPER SOFA

St•.Patrlek ·
·. . Day.Sale
Now Oolnl On II
You'll Save 25°/o OFF
This Week On ·Any.Item
·
.
,...
.With ·A Green Tagll

.be conducted by Rev. Wendell :
Metty, assisted by Debra Hand·
klns. He Is the paster of the
Montgomery Community Baptist Church· .o! Cincinnati. Ms. •
H~ndklns Is 'the associate pastor
there. The workshop will emphasize how lay people can
discover and use their spiritual
gifts.
The public Is Invited to atten&lt;!.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

Giant frogs wekome at annual jump

s.eedlings iivailable

Including
Wilson
Goode,
say RllckYMay,or
belongs
at the
museum because the statue Is. a
symbol of Philadelphia's spirit.

The Racine BapTist Church will
host the spring rally of the Rio
Grande Baptist Association· on
Saturday.
·
Registration wtll begin at S
a.m. and there will be a covered
dish 1u11cheon at 11:45 a.m. The
meeting will conclude at 2: 30
p.m.
•
The theme for the workshop
format will be "Equipping the
Lally for the Ministry" and wltl

Meeting slated ·

Q,ui.~,~~ ~~ -Jh~. i!~s · ·: . , ,

.

"'

Vermont Marktns was honored
recently with a blrlhday party
given. by her daughter and
son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. John A.
Dean. ·
·· Also celebrating a blrtliday
· was Mrs. Marktns great grand·
son, James Dean.
Qthers enjoying a blrlhday
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rled, Rodney Rled, David Rled,
VIrginia Smith, Joshua and Mica
Dawn, aH o! Pataskala; Junior
Smalley, Anglea Jones, Weirton,
W.Va.; Donna Young and Tome. klo. Susie Riffle anci Adam, Mr.
and Mrs:Btll Spaun, Shanon and
Julia,- all of Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean, Jeremy,
James and Sarah, Mr. and Mrs.
John Dean, Wolf Pen Road; and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mllrkins,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey, Athens; and Harold Well,
Bidwell.
'FoUowlng .dlnner tile bfrlhday
gifts were oJ,ened and cake and
• Ice ,cream were enjoyed by those
attending.
Calling from Pataskala In tqe
afternoon were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Terrell.

ANGELS CAMP. Calif. ~UPI)
- Africa's Goliath frogs, 10·
pound monsters capable of soar·
lng a whopjJtng 40 fe~t. are
welcome at the Calaveras
· County Jumping Frog Jubilee If
they can leapfrog state Import
regulations, organl2ers said ,
"If ·they can sit on the (jump·
lng) 'pad, let 'em come," Ike
Moore, senior member of the
Calaveras County Fair· Board,
said during a two·hour meeting
Wednesday over whether the.
huge foreigners should be al·
lowed to COJ:Dpete In the annual
contest.
·
The nine-member board voted
unanimously \O allow theGollath
frogs de!!plte fears · that they
might ruin the 64-year-old competition, whlc.h was Inspired by~
Mark Twain short story of 1865,
by eAting other amphibians and
possibly Injuring spectators.
Chairman . Will Fullaway
promptly telephoned Importer
Andy Koffman of Seattle to
Inform him · of the decision.
Koffman still must gain permission from state au lhorltles, who
are worried about the possible
impact on the environment If any
of the 3-foot frogs escape.
-Kotnnan 1 had mlted Anaels
Camp
In Callfof11la's·' ht.ltorlc
,Roc,IQ'beldilliaek'toartmUellm Thursday, b~,t seeing the birds ,
Molher
Lode gold rush country
' PHILADELPHIA ·IUPI) . - · could be difficult ,because 'of.· the ·
earljer
this
month and liked What
The 'ctty'·s much-maligned . threa.t" Of rain . .
"Roeky" statue Is going ltome to
"It sure does make It tougher. · he saw. He promised to return
·the Philadelphia Art Museum
I'll say that much,'' Lutz said. "It ' with 2() or 30 giant frogs lor the
May 17-20 competition, dependjust · two weeks after It W!IS
makeslthardertospotthem.But
Ing on possible· state Import
\lprooted and sent back to grace we'll be there.''
res trlctlons.
.
!he entrance o! the Spectrum
jl'he flock of 75 to 100 birds will
"You
will
see
me
at
Calave·
sports arena.
,
remain In Hinckley until the
ras," he promised. "I'm quite
'· The 8 ',2-foot bronze·Jikeness of ·temperatures fall In October and
suJ;e
of that.'' · •
Sylvester Stallone as movie
November. They go somewhere
The
board voted to allow the
bOxer Rocky Balboa. has gone
south, but park. officials are not
Goliath frogs alter Lew Davis,
~ack• and forth between the
sure whether they ~pend the
mU&amp;el!m and the arena since the
winter In ·Tennessee, Florida or chief biologist for the state Food
and Agriculture Commission disllrnlng o( "Rocky III" In 1982.
even Mex!to.
.,
cussed at length what was known
,l But the city's fairmount Park · . The birds return 1.0 the same
,commission voted Wedn!!Sday to spot eac.h year to Jay their eggs about the btg hoppers. · · ·
The frpgs have no teeth and·are
rrtPRockyoutfrom In front of the, where, they · lhemselves were
not
toxic, Davis said. But th,ey
ISpectAJ!ll and send It back .to the
hatchl!d, naturists say.
are
big
and las~ and Include fish
useum, w.here · critics ·have
In their diet. However, It Is not
nickered about . Its lack or'
likely thilt they would pose a
listie value. ·
··
serious· environmental hazard If
In the meantime. the Phtladel· •
·
'
bhla Art Commission will decide · ThurSday Is the final qay to som~ escaped Into California's
on a permanent home for the
order· and pay for tree seedlings waterways.
8tatue, possibly within the next 9o available from the Meigs SoH and
But, "We c3me to . the same
..days.
Water Con~rvallon District La- conclusion, ·that there ·was no
' The statue was removed from
dies Auxiliary·
·
danger from the hyacinth. Boy.
the museum steps March 't after
Varieties still available In· were we wrong," Davis said of
elude scotch pine, white dog- the plant, a varletycifwh!ch clogs
., t he recent flbnlng of "Rocky V"
wood, :white birch, Iliac.. crown
and returnee! to the S!!~!ctrum. . ·vetch, : and pachysandra . . All waterways.
where!thad~nfornearlyelght · oilier varieties are sold out.
· ; 9ontest promotersareoptlmls·
tic;. and local, business ·P!!Oilie ·
•years.
.t. •· •
"
.
: Critics have ilald the stat'ue Is
More Information may be d rirmed ttie · group Let: Every
bad sculpture and unworthy of a ' · obtained by callln,g the office at Amphibian J'artlclpjite - or
992 -6647.
place at the art museum. Others,
· LEAP - to suppOrt Koflm&amp;iJ's

.

Auxilitlry meets

birthday
•
is celebrated

• By WILLIAM c: TRO'l'l' ·.
Unl&amp;ecl Preu lnteruttoul

. .. .
M~ 11$, 1990

PlgJ 8

A low cost cholesterol ~reen·
Ing wtll be held March 23 from 9 l~el ts 200 that' the food eaten
should be cha'!lled and · that
a.m. to noon lind 1·3 p.m. at,the person should be . retested In
Meigs County Health
three months. It the level ts
Department.
·
200-23!1
It Is considered borderline
The "llngerstick" screening
high. II It Is 240or above there Is a
will be conduct~!&lt;! and the cost Is high rlsh of heart disease. . ·
$5 per test. Only total blood
Due to cost containments, the
cholesterol will be determined. · department can only perform 60
. According to Nomia Torres.
tests during the Screening day.
nursing· director for the heallh
The
Meigs County Health Dedepartment, Meigs County and
. partment Is In the process or
nationwide statistics show that
purchasing the cholesterol
heart and hearHelated condl·
screening machine and hopes to
t1ons are the maJor causes of offer retesting on an on going
death. More than one half of all ·
!;lasts. Because ofJhls the departAmericans have blood .choles· ment requests that,appotntments
terollev"els htgh enough to be at ·
only be made If a $Creenlng has
risk for heart disease.
never been done before.
Appointments ml!y be made by
The American Heart Assocla. . calllng 992·6626 between the
tlon recommends being screened hours of 9-11 a:m; and 1·3 p.m.
for cholesterol. They say If the Monday through Friday.

The

Ohio

. S299

11NYI

Hours Extended til 8 P.M. Friday &amp; Saturday
Sunday
No4»n·
til 5 P.M.
·· ·
•
.
.
'

.

' .

•liNT TO OWN
efiiiNCING IVIILAIU

· .61C-446-3151

LOTS OF UNADVERTISED.SPECIALS!J

• •

�10-lhe Daily Sentinel ·

Pon•ov

Lambada hits Broadway,
NEW YORK (UPI) - From . club spokesman Steve Gold . " We
Broacl.way to Hollywood,_ the
give free dance lessons so people
lambada dance craze is sweepwill feel a little more comfortable
Ing 't he country, inspiring films,
trying It out on the floor. It
fashions , records, videos, disco
doesn't seem to be difficult to
dance evenings, and dance studio
learn lor most people.
•.
classes.
.
" But it's very exhlbltlon!stlc
"Oba Oba," a Brazilian musiand may not be lor everyone,':
cal review featuring ihe lamGold added. "When it comes to
bada, will. ope,n at the Marquis
dancing, . Americans are very,
Theater on Broadway Thursday
very shy."
for a six-week engagement, and
The seeming success of the
the first two American feature
"forbidden dance" - SO·Called
films spawnf!f;l by the dance
because It was bani'IEid brietlyln
Import from Brazil will be
Rio ~e Janeiro as too sugges1;lve·
released In theaters across the
- Is marked by pelvic contact.
nation on Frl4aY.
and thlgh·and-leg Interplay. It
"Exotic! . Torrid! Sclntlllatgot its commercial start In
lilg!" are the adjectives appUed
France when Kaoma, a record·
to the lambada In "Oba Oba"
lng and dance group With links to
ads. summing' up most AmeriBrazil, recorded a single, "Lamcans perception of the first dance
bada," last year.
since the twiSt to pique the
"Lambada''was used Ina soda
curiosity of the mitlon. Actually1 commercial on French television
the lambada Is no naughtier than
last summer and the rest is
a torchy tango an(! Its '.'dirty
history. The recording sold 1.8·
dancing" reputation Is mostly
million units in France alone and
hype.
2.2 million in the rest of Europe.
. The lambada swiveled Into the More than 500,000 recors have
American consciousness around . been sold, mostly to the Hispanic
· Christmas ;md became a house- market, since it was released in
hold word in less than two the United States early this year.
The music has a pulsating beat
months. thanks to television
exposure and steamy marketing.
resembling a · mtx of rumba,
Whether or not it will catch on as salsa and reggae and seems to .
strongly as the twist did In the have originated with musicians
early 1960s remains to be seen.
in northeastern Brazil. It was
Certainly there's been nothing matched up to movements from
like it since Chubby Checker traditional ferro and caxlmbo
launched the twist at New York's dances and popularized In the
Peppermint Lo.unge 30 years swinging city of Salvador Bahia.
ago. The Palladium club on
American TV picked up demManhattan's 14th Street has been onstrations of the dance in Paris ·
the proving grbund for the .. clubs and it soon spread to the
lambada · an&lt;!
has. (ts own Palladium and Sounds of Brazil
Lambada Dance Troupe that is ·• clubs in New York .a nd Spice in
booking exhibition dates at other Hollywood, Where young film
East Coast clubs.
executives. "discovered" it.
"We kicked off Friday lamThe movie Industry reacted
bada evenings Jan. 12 and they with alacrity. Warner Bros. and
have almost doubled our Friday Columbia · Pictures Friday will
night attendance to 2,500;" said release lllms exploiting the

Self-l?elp groups aid
your recovery efforts
Laaden: May I respond to the mother who worts full.
lillle and then goes home to IIIOihcr
fu)l-lime job·· cooking. Cleaning and
taking care of lhe children? She lito
loots after her retired parents 8lld
lllkniued sheepishly, ·rm. 45 pounds
Dear

ADD

overweight. but ru do somctbing
about it eveniually." .
·
If she and bc:r husband both wodc
fuU-rime, the, responsibililics of lhe
house IIICI children; llllltering, eiC.,
should be cijvided S0-50. I also suggestacleaningwoman, Someone who
comes in once a week can be a lifesavennd well wonh the money.
I happen to be a single parent with
two children. Two self-help groups
saved my life. Many of thCsc groups
· have a philosophy bucd on the 12.·
Stql recovery prognm of Alcoholics
Anonymous. This formula his proven
to be enormously successful, which
is why it jj UICd 10 oflell.
IbelongtoOYC:rart.nAnonymous.
I have rnainllincd a (I().pound weight
loss for two )lelltS. Recovery is based
on the 12 stepS, die support of the fel•
lowship and lhe CPIIICiousness of a.
higher power. This ~ not be any

specific religious figure. Each person can loot to his or her own.
Through o-ters Anonymous, I
am learning 10 meet life's challenges,
and I no longer ..esthetize myself
with food.
I al!Jo suggest that Ibis woman try

the~ters

dance novelty.' "Lambada" Is
Warner-Canon Pictures's film
and Colum'bla-21st Century's Is
" The Forbidden Dance. " ·
According to Variety, the show
business weekly, five more lambada films are In various stages
of development Including an
Inevitable sequel, "Forbidden
Dance II, " from Columbia .
Instruction tapes will soon b~
available In video stores or those
interested in learning can gQ to
such dance' stud.ios as Fred
Astaire and·Arthur Murray for a
" lambatomy.;' Other lambada
records are belrig rushed to
record ~hopg inCluding "Lam·
bada Brazil" from Polygram,
. touted as "genuine lambada
music hoi from Brazil, not
Paris."
Macy's 34th Street windows In ·
New York are featuring lambada
fashions this week. These consist
of fltrty, flared short .s kirts in
. lioral patterns worn with a .
modified bra top in bright solid
colors for women and loose floral
trousers 1\'0tn w'lth pastel shirts
or T·shlrts for men.
Macy's offers dance instruc·
lion In its "La La Lambada
Shop" twice &lt;1 day.
"Hundreds of people have
come in to have a go at it," said a
Macy spokesman. ''I don't know
II It 's going to catch on · but
everyone ·is having a lot of fun."
Meanwhile, lambada's success
in Europe and the United States
has roused new interest in .Its
native . Brazil where recording
artists Beto Barbosa and Allplo
Martins reportedly have sold ,.
more than a million lambada
recordS-each.
,
Lambada Is so popular with
Brasllelros that It was danced in
the streets during Rio's recent
carnival, usually an all-samba
event.

'I1!e concept of people with common p!Oblems getting !OiCihec.is
wonderful. So many of us tend to
think that we are the only ones who
are suffering, and it is good to blow
that we aren't weak or crazy and that
we aren't alone. Please; Arin, keep
telling your· readers about these

groups. I lelmed about them from
·your column. -· GRATEFUL IN

CLEVELAND
•
DEAR CLEVELAND: Yourleau
is sure 10 help i great many people. It
has also provided Ill iljipolllmity 10
elaborate on one of my favorite sub-

"1989. LoR A.n.,.hw
Tlmf'll !WnciiNit' and

f..ftoa1cb S"yndinlrO

Gambler's Anonymous is an organization that burescued thousands
of people from this addictive, destructive illness. There is jllso NarcoticsAnonymous--thenamespesks
for itself - as well as Sexaholics
. Anonymous; The list in our office is
a long one, and the letters of thanks
from!Qderswhohavercclaimedlhcir
livesasarcsultofjoininglhesegroups
are the best part of lhis job.
If you are having a problem· with
children, parents, family, &amp;iends or
wi.lh . yourself, thele is probably a
sell-help group for you. Check your
tcleplionc directory. If ·thel\1 is no
listi"'l. you can obtain information.
and refcnal to a group closest to )'011
by writing 1(1 the National Self-Help

jects.
Ican'tsayenoughaboutthegroups
!bat operate on the theory that people . Clearinghouse,25W.43rt!SL,Room
who share the same problem can get 620,New York,N.Y. 10036. (Piealc
srrength from one another. A perfect send a seU-addresaed, stamped enveexample is Compassionate Frien&lt;k,
lope.) . .
.
. .
an organization for pareniS who have
Drwgs are evetyw~re. They're
lost a child to death. Well--ing easy ltJ get, easy 10 JUe twl tw11
friends and relatives can try 10 coo- easier to gel hooked 011./f yowlttM

sole die dislrausht couple, but only

individuals who have lived through
ibis shauering CllpcriencCimow what
it's like. :when they show up at a ·
meetingandsaytothenewmemben,
"Look, we lived through it, and you
. wiD, too." they give strength and
Co-Dependents Anonymous. In ibis confidence that isn't available anygroup. we learn which responsibili- where else·.

qustio/IS abow drugs, you~tetdA/111
l..allders' bo«&lt;et, 'TM Lt1wdow11 011
Dope." Selld a self-odtlressed, lollf,
bllliMss-siu e11~lope tutd a cited:
or lltOMy order for $3.65 (tlis ill·
cl!IMs posrare twl 11011dli111) to:
Lowdi1wll, c/oAMLattders,P.O. Boz
11562, Chicora. Ill. 60611-0562. (/11
CIJIIIJIJ4. send $4.45.)

Do/e goes after child labor violators
WASHINGTON iUPII ...., La"Now, we are looking · at then we can go for a higher line,"
bor Secretary Elizabeth Dole regulatory changes, which would Dole said. "II the violations have.
said Thursday '' thf cop is on the enable us to fine not only $1,000 occurred over a long ·period of
beat" to crack .down on child
per violation, but also per work· time we can get a higher fine. So
abuse in the labor market.
. week,'' she added.
there are ways to maximize what
'"The idea is to Indicate to
we
have now."
''If there are re(leat offenders,
everyone, businesses. everyone
across the country, that the cop is
on the beat and that we are not
going to permit the abuse of our
children. whether it's because of
grf'ed or whetl!er it's because of
ignorance of the Jaw," Dole said
on the NBC "Today" program . .
Dole said "there are a number
'ot violations" Of child labor laws,
Start a tradition,ot your own with this fabulous collection of
adding, "I think that we may see
untraditional spectator~ . New-fashioned shapes and upmore violations."
io-the-minute details make theS!! the spectators to keep
In a preview of actions to be
announce!! at a news conference,
botheyesontHisseason! _ln Black and White.
Doll' said her department intends
to mount a campaign to educate ·
employers on the labor laws, but
~•o•talgla
it is also seeking to Increase lines
and change regulations.
"Also, we have cracked down
nY Dill PAll Of COMIII
on this area,'' Dole said. "We
SIIOU IY lltf&amp;ll PIICI .
IIID IICIIW ....
have certainly been doing more
HCOIDPAII
01
investigations over recent years
A
1'111111
and that's tu111ing up more·
vlo.latlolis, of course, but I think
we can expect to see more and
that's why we are goll!g to be
very much at work on this, and
, , the cop will be on the beat."
•
· She said pending legl.llatlon
would increase fines.
''Wbat we have done already II
to try to maximize our fine
structure and we have increased
It to the point that the range will
N . 2nd AVf
Mlddl•port
be an Increase of anywhere from
992 6827
ill percent to 300 percent," Dole
.said. ··
•

'•

$3495

--.-part;.

'I' ·,..a·

bcJ,iJ21jt !,oust

,.

SHOE PLACE

IMen's prison to be for women ;l
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -An . !~male convict admissions In
female inmates,'' Wilton sa~.
overcrowded prlsbn system bas 1989, 20 · percent of the 1,833
' 'Whlle we bave pl'oVfded a
forced the Ohio Department of f~le admi5sions.
solution to our lrrimedlate pJ'Ob.
Rehabilitation and Correction to
The 500-bed ,medium-security
lem, we w,IH continue to addresa
convert a Cleveland facility for Grafton Correctional Institution
and be concerned aboutsy~mlc
crowding."
men to handle women.
In Lorain County will continue to
Department Director George proVIde the northern part of the.
AdmiJstoriS to Ohio's pnsona n
Wilson said Wednesday the 350· · state wi.th beds lor male offend1989 wu ~percent higher than't
bed Northept Pre-Release Cen- ers._ 'The Lorain Correctional
was in 1988. The 21 co~tlonil
ter near downtown Cleveland Institution, a 750-bed, closelact)lties are operating at 1!10
will be converted into a correc, security prison for men; Is to
percent of deslp capaciiY.
':
tiona! Institution lor women. ·
open late tl!ls year.
Tht;! Ohio General ~mb(31
"Covertlng the Northei!St PreWilson said that converting the ,au thorlzed tile ~onstructlon of 13
Release Center will provldf! us Cleveland faclUty will provide · prisons and a Cotl'l!ftiolll! Medl·
With a temporary solution to a only Immediate, short-term
cal Center In 19~. · ~illatlo'n
crowding emergency caused by relief.
projecttoM ·flldlcltte that .everi
rapid and record growth In the
' 'The departmentls stllllac!ng after the consti'\jctton program is
state's female Inmate popula- the problems of system-wide completed In 1992, the system
tlon,'' Wilson said. "The number crowding at a time whel) .we are will be over capacity by more
of female inmates in Ohio has seeing , substantial Increases in
than 11,000 l11J11ates. ·
·
jumped dramatically from about the Intake of both male and
I.
580 wqmen 10 years ago to more
than f,973 today ."
The Increase represents a
···~'
·'
more than 240percent lncrl!asetn
the state's female convict popu·
lation since 1979.
· Approxl!Dately 1,592 of the
women are housed at tl!e Ohio ·
Jleformatory for Womeri fit Ma- .
rysvllle, the state's largest cor·
rectlonal facility · for females.
That facility Is designed lor
nearly 900. ..
"Housing almost 1,600 women
in a facility designed to hold
almost 900 is straining our
resources conslderabiy,'' said
Warden Harrison Morris. "We
are employing every acceptable ·
remedy to stretch our space·..
However, immediate relief is
needed."
.
The Franklin Pre·ReleaseCen-:
ter in Columbus that was de;
signed for men opened in 1988 ·to
house women,
SIZES 2T-7
Prison officials at Marysville
have put double bunks In areas
designed for single beds and
converted recreation -space to
sleep(Jig areas to accomodate the
Increasing numbers of women
inmates .
Converting the Cleveland facility will 'begin Monday ·and wlll
992~5177
take nine weeks. The institution
220 UST MAIN
will continue as a pre-release ·•
center, providing re-entry pro·
POMEROY, ~HIO·
grams for female Inmates who
are close to their release dates.
The conversion wlll also pro·
vide the state's first bedS for
female convicts In northern Ohio,
alloWing women offenders from
that area to be closer to their
homes and families. Cuyahoga
County had the largest number of

, USX joins Japanese

AZTEC Coallnl Co., in reference '·
to the products all-zinc techno!·
ogy , a tvrltten statement said.

PrM'SBURGH IUPI)- About
100 people will be employed In a
new l&amp;lvanlzed sheet plan\ to be
built in northwest Ohio through a
)oint pa'ternship between USX
Corp. and a Japanese firm,
company officials announced
Wednesday night .
USX and Kobe Steel Limited of
Tokyo will build a $200 million
plant on a site near t-elpsic, Ohio,
ol!lclals said. The plant will be
part of .a new company called

I

~

...

Spokesmen said the joint ven-

ture is an " effective way of
responding to the rapidly ex·
pandlng market for coated
corroslon-reslstan t s teet. "
· The state-ol·the-ar t plant will
be designed by a joint team of
experts from the U.S. Steel
division of USX and Kobe Steel.

Attention
Meigs
· ~((UJ County
~ ~ 0 Businesses!

~i.?lqq .

'ST.
PATRICK'S
DA1·SALE!~

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

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
ONLY
NEW SP.RING BOYS·

SHIRTS·
. &amp; PANTS

20°/o OFF '

RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE TODAY -

992-2156

'

ANN I,.ANOERS

lives.

The Deily Sentinel-Page 11

Buttons &amp; ~Bows

Ann
·Landers

ties are ours and which responsibili- ·
tieS belong to others. For the flflll
time in my life, I am lelming to take
Clre of myself and IIOlfeel guilty for
aUowing others 10 mBIIliF their owu

111undav. Milch 11. 188Q

Mldclaporto Ohio

ASK FOR
BRIAN BILLINGS or DAVE HARRIS
-'
SPRlNG BREAK - Kid Lightning, a contestant In a belly·flop
contest . displays hla winning . lonn as be . dives toward the
. swimming )1001 Weclnepday In Daytoa4 Beacb, Fla. The contest
· was part of ~prlng Break 1990 festlvllles. (UPI)

~u ......•
•'

irl

orn:ia A.G.. urg~s
~~· ti6~rti9.;,. pill : ·.

·.\~;~!,~~;~s (UPI) :... cau:

weeks after conception by block'P~f:;~o~~~-:~
general said a : 'i ng the.' hormone progesterone
t'\
sial Frencli.made am), thereby preventing a lertll·
pill should be made !zed egg from becoming 1mto American women If planted In the uterus.
l".':~";:;:,,~ It is sale, saying the . A recent study publiShed In the
should be made on New England Journal of Medlrju!dl•~al, not polltical, grounds.
cine said tesiS on more than 2,000
State Attorney General John French women showed the drug
de 1&lt;amp propo~d Wednes· to ·have mtntmai side effects and
that the abortlon·lnduclng produced compllcations no mote
486 be tested in state, frequently than surgical abor·
l'i~~~r:~t~i:;~ldand if found .to be tlon. The California Medical ·
.ii
be made legal In
Association endorsed clinical
~allfclril.l\1. · Approval In Cal !for·
testing of ihe drug· last week.
the federal
Susan Carpenter-McMillan,
Administration to head of the Right to Life League
testin1; of the drug, he . of Southern California, said Van
de Kamp's announcement was
~ .de Kamp, . ~ Roman
''a poll tical tactic'' and 'that her
~:~~i~r~De:mocratlc ca~dldat~ group would boycott any ·comill
who supports aocJr· panies that distribute the drug In
·On privacy grounds the United States. While drug·
personal opposition, companies have the right to test
state Department or potential products, she · said,
aealtlt Se•rvlces has the authority "they don't have the right to test
b~gln testing )he drug on
a way of killing people. "
Of' clinical researchers or
Marie ' Bass of the Reproduc-.
firms:
live Health Technologies Project
nn, 1v , one company, Roussel• · in Washington praised the move,
manu- and said she hoped it would help
the drug, ·which Is. put pressure on Roussel Uclaf to . ·
R~~~:o ~ tri France and Is belns seek approval of the drug
·~
in other European coim· throughout the United Sta_tes.
The drug has a 96 percent
''We think the more everybody
does the'better," Bass said. "It's
~u&lt;~ce:ss rate and Is considered-In
as safe as surgical a good tblng lor public officials to
be speaking out like thiS ,"
Although French antl·abortlon
"If iurther testing conllrms and religious groups vigorously
RU 486ls safe and effective, opposed the drug when It was
women of America should , !irst made available In 1988, the
. access to U on the same government eventually ordered
~er·ms as me women of Western · the .company to reintroduce it on
· ,., Van de Kamp told a ( the market.
"It they are to
But the prospect of a similar
denied equal access, thai backlash and threats of boycotts
should be made . on by anti-abortion groups in the
~~~~~~~.merit and not politic Ill United States have made Roussel
b
"
Ucla! and many American pharThe drug induces a spontane· maceutlcal firms reluptant to
miscarriage In the first .seell approval of the drug here.

1

•

FULL
•

EA. PC•

· 'k ·

'&lt;"

OUEEN
SET

SprlngAJre

'

.

New Spring Marehan~l••
, :: ·Arrl~lng Dally
·
.
,..

WE RENT TUUDOS

.FOI 101H MIN &amp; IOYS

BAHI
CLOTHIERS
.
............
.
.

OP819&amp;30.JIOOIIOI..SAT.

SPIING-0-PEDIC MAXIMA
TWit REG.
SALE
EA. PC. I 5159JCI
FW

REG.

EA. PC. 521410
QUEEN

REG.

SET

554900

~4\:::1

$13450

SPRING·O-PEDIC ELEGANCE
FULL u. Pc.
SALE .

SALE

IIIG. •214.50

SALE

QUEEN SET

$11450
546900

STORE HOURS
Monct.v:
9:3'0-8:00
Tuelday-S.turday
f»:30-6 :00

•I
I

.......00

S24450
SALE

$56ft0 .

FlEE
DEUVEIY

�•

PCII1*oy-MWMIIKiit. Ohio

Report says agent duped by Cu~

Public N Ollct

.

~
·~IVS

'8 A,M. until NOON SATURDAY

3

1'6

6

15
15
15

y .

50 dtscount tor ads Pllld '" 1ctvan ce
- Giveaway and Found "'' und• t ~ word• will be

•1
run

.

.

"

Over 15 Wordl
.
.20
. . 30
. 89.00
.42 .
113.00
•.60
.a 1 .30 1dav " .05 / llay

'

C/as.~ified pa~es COI'&lt;'r

diJt'~ •' no ch•g•

•
•p.,.,_ ot.., tor all cepllall•teft •• double D'ICI! ot ao c:oll

•'7 palri1 .. newpe only weed
•&amp;•ln.t i1 nat re&amp;PO"'Ible for errorsatltr hr1t ar,o !Ctltc:t.
tot enors ltflt d..- ad runt on paper .. CaU b flfo r•.2 ·00 p m
·~ 1her DUitlt ;MIOft 10 mlllt COfflt:IIDft

•Adl lhl'

murt bt Dl•d •n advance ere
C.rd of Tnenk•

' Mappy Ads

I ~ Memor111m

Yero S1111

COPY O~AOLINE MONDAY PAPE~
WEDNESDAY PAPER
TI&lt;URIOAY PAPER

-

2 '00 P.M MONOAV

-

2 :00P .M 'TUIESOAV

FRIDAY PAPER

- 2 '00 P.M. W!DN!SDAV
- 2 ,00 P.M THURSDAY

lUNDAY PAPER

"- 2 ·00 P.M FRIDAY

Moog• Cou. nt v

Muon Co . WV

Aru Code 614

Arn

44t-Gallti)Ohs

9112 - MuDdtaJOF1

318 - ~tnton

24&amp;- ·Rto Grlr'IOe

256-Guvan D•st
' 64 3 -f Arabta Otll
3?9 .....:. Wain ~Jl

I 52-Sporllng Goods
'. 53-AnltQIJU
I S'- - M11i: M~rchtndtse
55-Butid•n~ Supph•

I 56-Pets to r' Sllf'

67~..:..P.t

'

I mptovnu:nt

•

Pltlll"'

458- Lton

PomtfO¥
843 - Pon~and

247-l..lltlr1 Fillt
94&amp; - •hc;li'lt
1 .. ;:-Auuand

896 -LIIIfl

'

937 - &amp;uftliO

Eifi? ,..... Coolll~le

SUN'S UP TANNING

New Lima Rd., Rutland, Ohio
1 Session ........................~ ............... S3.50

Form Suppltes
&amp; LtVt!sluck

Servtces
, - lieiP VV1n1eo
WM'ItC

6 Sessions •••.•.••••• ~••~ ••••••.••••••••••.•••• S12.00 .
12 Sessions................................... '20.00
1S Stssions ..............................~ .....S25.00

I &amp; 1-farm EQu•pmen•
6~ - Winted

to

Bu~

1 63 - L•veuoek
64-kav &amp; Gra• r1
• 65- Seed &amp; F@Phl•ttl

FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

HALF
PRICE I

24 -Mon~ 10 L.Oi n
23 - PJot.Jron•t Servrce• ,

1

I

Handheld
Cellular
Telephone .

a.

to• S.l e "

Buno· n~s

Cal Susan Colentan, 7

S•t~

HUCK'S CAR WASH

510'/t 21111 St. Middllpart
For Appt, Call ·
992·6717 Home ar

7S - C.amt:lln~ EQ~ou11ment
7S.- Campers &amp; Motor Homes

•

ACreq,,.

I;IQU@lll

JO'S

IS NOW' OPEN
FOR BUSINESS.

IN STOCK: .C.m.,. P.....
Bodl •C.m-v Flowef:
V•• •Ciw ltrd
•Cern... llrd a.thl
•Foumeln Bird . .hs • Jllua

Itt'•

. e, . · 11om• lmpro•"'-".
! 82 - PiumDin{l &amp; Huung
83-h.CIVIHng

001&lt;, F -. A.,... and

I 84 ..:- Eiec:nrcfl&amp; Retr9et1t10n

. 85 - Gener•• Mlullng
! 86-Mobile 11om• Reo•"

.... Month.

Reg.

*

919.00

HALF PRICEI

calls wherever
there's cellular
seNice! 1117·1050

Stereo Satellite TV System

==-a::
99.,.
I
laO,..,-.

Aequlrn char;lng etand,

plus AC acs.pter or

mobile mountl"'9 kit

=AI

More than 200 channels available!
118-2507125081250912510

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March I. 1990, in tt.
Melga County
Prcibete
Coun, Cue No. 21152,
Marilyn !'· Newm111, 7900
Wyondol M•rlon Rood, Gal·
ion, Ohio 44813 wu •P·
polnlod E-utor of lhe 01·
tote of Paul Orr. tloce•od.
IIIII of Route 1, Long lot·
tom, Melp County, Ohio,
4.&amp;743.
Roben E, Buck,
. .
Probote Judge
lAne K. NHoelroad. Cl•k
131 15, 22, 28, ;ttc

P.M. All bl* will be opened
IJid reod oloud on the 2nd
cloy of Ap•N. 1990 11 nine
o'clock 19:001 A.M . ot the
office of IAedlng C - Con·
aorvancy Dlatrlct. The 8 .... rd
......,. I~ right IO IIOCIIPI
or rejoctolly and/orell bl•.
(3) 15. 22. 29 3tc

~--...-----1

12911

Low AI t11Porllonth• Reg. 111.15
Detects X. K bands. N22·1825

Othw V•d OmM'Witl

Buy From Ue A !!.eve!

-~~~~

Public Notice

Public Notice

Save '70

Fast 24-Pin Printer

Save '150

49900

Low All20 Pot llonth•

Reg. 141.00

PusH feed. 270 cps.

· .PC·Coinpatlble

*28·~8

Speed·Dial

HALF
PRICEI

4911

..........

t2t-t511

·1Hm-Fone11

SPECIAL
; PURCHASEI

33"'0H

S.V.IIftO

2911

1491..!
lleg.251.115

..........

Lighted keypad,

Entertainment
Pick. $129.85
value. *25·1340
Eduaatlott Pack.
$114.85 value.

· 20·number mtmory. ,White,
.
*43•51!1 . Almond,
*43·582'
TonalpU!IIt d!alllll

u

302 Engine
Automltic .Tr11n1mi11ion .
'1 984 Ford Renger Pickup
4x42.8 Utre
Y·l.,glne!Cromlllkowni
Automatic Trenamluion
velllciM Clll be In·
'IIIMCIId ott the ollice. Mon·
t1rt through Frldoy ·from
B:iO A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
~ wll be eold • II; where
' AH-IMI: E,Mblh. muot be
,filedetlheofllceolt..odlng
Crak Co.....,ancy Dtatrlct
·by Iiiii 30th dey of Morch.
1990, !IV four o'clock 14:001

SPECIAL P!URCHASII r..tlnet·
Mount AnllnM. .121·tOOII,lUI
.

· Software 3·Packs

69!h '

PUILtC NOTICE
IMdln~ C - Conaer·
""'cy•d bidlrlct•1w11•111 ocolli~·
-loao11d at 34411 Corn Hoi,
1- Roed, Ruli111d, Ohio,
45771. lor Mle of tho lol·
,_lng lwo Vllhld•.
1984 Ford
8tvlnlde
Plck
4 x"J'F. 2 • 0 IRed)

40-Channal Moblle·ca

Speaker With
15" Woofer .

#25·1341

n.-

LowAit11

.. t

teldy:5~ m~

PUBi.tc NOTICE

t

a
•,

ltld everyone for
..• their .,.,... In the
loll of eMir loved
OM. Thenka to
every- for the
food, n-re •nd
cercll and to all who
'!, helped In lilY WilY·

The

CO!Ir·~

Lomhd at v.., l ~"
Itt 'I "h••;t, Olt.

•

PIIIRTI AND SERVICE
For Moet 2 and 4 -cycte
enat••
Stock l&gt;eno lor
Homilite, WHdeetar.
Tocumllh, Brlgga t!o .

l'ratton.

t--------"""'1
11--------.
.
.
J&amp;l
'-21·19-tfn

INSULATION
.l..tr Spteltl 01
·VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
·

WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992 .2 77 2

mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION.

BISSEL~

...........

SIDING CO.
"FrM Eatlmat81"

NOSUIIDAYCAUS

BINGO

DAVE'S
SMAll ENGINE
REPAIR

PH. 992·3922

or Res. ,9•9·2160

femlly of
with • ti!Mk ••ch

992·2198
Middleport.

PH. 9•9·!101

carc1 ot ThankS
GEORGE E.
CONROY SR.

PIT HILL FORD

The program
Golllo·Molga
C.A.A.
JTPA
i1 committed
10 equal opponunh._ for ell 111
oppllcanla, pertlclponta ond
employ- In etllacete of h1
operoliono: and wh... deft·
cl•cl•erenottdtcitokuf·
firmetive 1ction to 'corr.ikt
auch deflcl.,clea. In odi'll·
tion, it ia our policy 1o ,..
cruit, hire and promotoln ell
job cl•alllcotlona without
regood to race, color, rell·
glon, · natlonol origin, IHcept wh. . ' " 11 bone
fide occupellonol qulliillc•·
tionl . age, politico! alfllle·
lion or · bellefl, hendlcop
)provided phyaicallimltellon
doll nol prev•l job perfor·
m~~nce). or cltb:enlhip.
D.evld E. Gloecknor. JTPA
Diroctorwillhevelheoverell
r~~ponelbllity of admlntator·
ing the progrem. If I • progrom penlclpent or eppll·
cent IHta he/lhe hll been ·
dlecrimlneled 1111olnlt In em·
pl..,menl, -lng employ.
ment .,d/or lnllnlng with
IIIII agency, he! .... lhould
immediMHiy contoCI Devld
E. Gloeckn•. 11141 387·
7342/192· 1129 to pur..,.
the
dlecrlmlnetlon

range, 4. twlletet.
140·4032

SER~ICE
We can repair and racore radiatars and
hlatlr cares. We can
·~ bail net od
also act•
' a
r
out rltliatari. We also
• Ga T ..t..
repmr 1 Gnu,

Public N otlce

~llontll·

. Our basil DIQitat '

l

..

. . Off . .

""·,

Juat ·~· thlnll85·810

fomlfy of profeulonols

,

·

v-, Drive, Poillt PINHitt. W'/25560 (304) 8~

ltmiiOI IITIIIOI

·'I
'

Expen..... ........ 2, 156.56
Other Foir
Expen-.... ...... 7.601 .59
Othor Mltcell oneouo
Expen- ... ,...... 1,288 . 76

Total Diab~rile·

""ttnt.._ ..... ,.. 111 .8?'&gt; liO
Exc•sof Ca•h

Raceipts over C••h Olsbunementl .... 10, 1 6 2 . 79
CuhB1i111ce
12/ 1/ 88 ....... .. 5.829.87
CUhBIIIIIce
11 / 30/ 89 ... .... 16.992 .66
STATE AND LOCAL
. GRANT FUND
RECEIPTS:
Stitt ond Locot Qovl .
Support ... ...... 48,416.97
Totol
Recolpto, ........ 48 ,416 ..97
DISBURSEMENTS:
Debt
.
StFI!iCI .... .... ,.46,940 .03
Total [)ia·
buraemento .... 45,940.03
Exce11 of ca·s h Receipts

'

SeniOr F.ir

·

EKpen101 ..........1,689.21
Open ·ctaee
Expene• .... ...... 3.1125.81
Junior Fair
Expenaes .......... 7,1101 .Ill
Other Misc.

•

ExponeN .... ... .. .1 ,218. 71 •
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS .. .... .. 157.711.13 .
Exc . of Caah Rcpta.
over Cash Dia-

buraemenu .... 10,638.73
Cash Balance
·
·
12/ 1 / 88 ...... .. .... 5,82t:!l7
Cash Balance
.
1 1/ 30/ 89 ... ..... 11,468 ..10
Thia is an Unaudited FInanCial StatemlltJ1t.

{31 15, 1tc

lot

90 DAY W...ANTY
..ASHER$-$100 up

It fw

VIIY IIASONAIII

UN'S APPUANCE

Af1116 ....

992-5335 or 91S-3U1

(61.)915··110

Acr- F.- Post Office
POIIEIOY, OHIO
10/30/'19 tin

SEIYICE

uvr a~~~~as

....... ,.... ""........
11-11·'18-1 .....

RACINE.
'GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

20% OFF ON ALL
GOLF EQUIPMENT

DRYER$-SS9 up
·
REFRIGEIIATOR$-$100 up
IIAIIGB-IIH·Eiec.-$125 up
FREfZEI$-$125 up
IICIO OVEN$-$79 up

..........
tie
yeu.

01

, KOUNTRY KLUB

USED APPUANCES

FREE ESTIMATES
Tab lite jlliol eul ef

HUMPHREY'S CLIMATE
CONtROL

"SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·

MOVAL ·

Heating, CooHngr
lefrlttration
Sen ice

"LIGHT HAULINq

"FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK

. Re8ldentlal 8o.
Commercial

992-2269
EVENINGS

•Engraving. Trophies,
Ploqu11 t!o Bodg01

~~GS:fo•n.

EVERY SUNDAY

enod
•Pet 1.0.
Toga

·

Starts, at 1:00 .P.M.
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

JOHN TEAFORD
46317 Scout Camp Road

Chester, Ohio

9-6·89-Hn

2·1 '90-1 1!10.

992-5519

2'2-'90·1 mo. d.

4-16-U.tltl

EVERY THUISDA Y
VFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.

Good Ret•
T.L.C .
27 Vro. Exp.
Reter-'-

992·6173s·

209 South 4th. t.
Ml.leport,

Oh.

"lOW •cOMIIIOIII"
l ·12·'10-1

mo.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

laiiMRiuldlnt

EYEIY
SAt. NIGHt

...

6:30 ....

'•"""
12 Ga.
Strkktly

. Only

•Tire &amp;alee
•Front End
Algnment

SSO.OO PBGa.
lOIIlS GMEIN 41

AU ~&amp;Pf,JIIINGO 8AIIIS

•OIIChenge.Lube

fBCOffEE

...... Waft&amp; '

•

reg..._.

Ful 1lme 1101111oan far
meclloel
tsclmlclen on rotltlng lhifte. Requires In·
dependent W«tca with aeplbllltles In all
- • of allnlcel llbaratory. E1101hnt fringe
beneftta,
PlteM contttet:
Ctaelle Lllte, Laboratory Supervilor
YIWIIII Memorial Ha1pltal
111 E. MIIIIIOriii .Drlvs

l'omeloy, 01110"41718

·.

Phone •14-112•1104, Ellt. 2111 '

iew..tLWrllenl

·IOOfiiG
-·All

Y. C. Youtll II
992-62 s.

Alto Tr••••l11lt1

PH. 992~5682
or 992·712.1

Acrou Frolli Pott Office

:r17

r. s.c. ,_.,

4'25·tln

11/13/'89 ffn

PAT HILL

DALE HILL
~

AI

Pricas"

or IlL 949·2160

.117 E. S.C. P-•Y

Day ar Night

acr- ..... P.et OHio

CHIYSLEI·Pl YMOUIH
DODGE

s. 'fl!ird, lllddleport

992-6421

NO SUNDAY CALLS

POIIIIIOY, OliO

1 ·!:==;::;;~3~/6:/:'90:/:d~o

·

:z..ze ·so.1 me.

4-16-16-Hn

ERWIN
CONmUCIION

STREET
PIZZA

01110

Announcements

2 femele full blaolted ....,
Co!!IH. Good wHh chi""""- ,.0
good homo. 114-ti2·71ZI.

Fluffy 8ontor Colllll ' ,........_ 4
mete, 1 femt~ll. &amp;1 4-ta.a&amp;ll.
Olvoaway to good ' - , Half
Chow, &amp; Half Sh~ ~
Malo, 2yra ot~. Exc. watch dOll
&amp; aood wlchll_dran, 11WIT781 5" 101 . m.~10p.m.
Hall Chow &amp; Hall tloagll Pup.
Diu, Roady To Qo. 114,111'·

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

36629 517

,· Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
9412-2228 2· 1-'90· 1

, ........ , OHIO
'·
mo.

Glvaaway

4

LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
FREE lOCAL DELIVERY

915 • 3365

Outtara
DowntpOUtl
Gutter Cleaning

Pillnti

FAIIIITI:tTEI

949-Jftl

2-I·'IOol ...

One )'t'lr old Beag~ 10 1 nl•
country home, 304-171-2341 or

DOZER

175-1147.

SITEWORK • ~ADS

PuppiH to . aood Boaul!tut, t!utfy. Sinon dot· 17WI33.

CLEARING

NE..,WLAND
ENTEIPRISES

:h::l:rd:
lfot~~..r aom:=
Hound/Cot! II. 11~1St.
6

DUMP TRUCK
Send-Stone-Dirt

992-2156

(61.) 667-'3271
Grant A. M8wt.MI

.7·11-'lt-tltl

coumY

IIOIIU
HO.PAII
•Mobile Home

Pltrte

........

•MolllleHome

•Lot lllfltlltl

·..~::-=.•

ef
'• ... .,, Ollie

1·11-'. .tftt

'

IBICAL LMauTORY 1ICIIICIAN

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
,

~188.

Jtl-3018

NO ONI UNDER II YLUS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR

••-•It
PH. 9·9-2801

"AI

992·5335 or 915·3561

2·6-'90-1

Rl. 124, P....,oy Ohio

CUSTOM .IUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

KEN'S APPUINCE
SERVICE
.

· .....:"" •

FURNACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

Stop In and See

Hontel,
Remodeling 8t
Repair Work

SEIYICE

GAIJIS 5T AIT 7:00 PJL

It

FURNACE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Custom Built

IUILAID IIIE
SAUSand

OPEN 5:00 PJL

ALL MADS
Bring In Or Wt
Pick Up.

Roger Hytell
. Garage

FURNACE

992-5335 or 915-3561

CALL

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

CHES1Dr

111111 ST.,

fllJ
PLEASANT VALLEY . HOSPITAL
V1 The

UNDA'S ·
PAINIIN~ &amp; (0.

4·'-l•llol

.• Jlllt 11h" Wide,
Wolghl 28 Ouncee
e 'llllt Up to 1'1•
Houre Per Charge
Make and take

Mini ~dar Detector

87 - UPI'!OISUfr ~

SHOP

SYilCUSE, OliiO
(AIIev• Phia Shepl

992-62~~.~.~r..o.

Servtce:;
I

Low AIIZO

.....

72 -: lrwcka to r S111 e

36-Ae .. E.st•t• W1nteC

•'

Junior F1ir

]1.-MOIOt CVCie!

33-,.lrms tor Slit' .

li ·· Lou

7, - Autos tor

· 75 - Bo•u ~Motors tof S11e
, 76-Auto P•ru &amp; Aeuuon•
f ?i' ~~ Aut o Ae'""

31 - Momn tt:Jr Sate ·

3'- Bus•ness

""""* ...........

2,989.05
Debt Senlica ..... 82.179.23
Senior Folr
Expen............. 5.689 . 26
OpenCIMo
Expen-........ .. 3,11211.8&amp;

1 7J .:.. v•n• &amp; 4 we $

Real Estale
32 - Mobrl~home~

LOTIONS - STICKERS

Transportation

z1-Dus•neu Opponun.t~·

TANDY® .
1000 HX

wll ollet "" - . •• ....
frollt of the Coun
hou• In .,..,• ..,, ftlolgo
County, Ohio, on the 1e.h
dll\'of Aprtt, 1tl0, 8t 10:00
o'olook A.M. 1M folowlng
Public Notice
lendl •nd .. to·
wit:
.
lttu.t.d In 1he VIII... of
MEIG8 COUNTY
' - • · County of Molgo AGRICULTURAL SOC I ETV
•d 1 - of Ohio:
FINANCIAL REPORT
ltlnt Lots Noe. Four 14),
For The Yeer Ending
Flw 1&amp;1. end llx Ill In
November 30, 1989
Aoldltloll to ..,. wOPERATING FUND
-.. of tlyNGu-. In Sutton
Townehlp. Melgo County, CAIH RECEIPTS:
Adonlaolono-Genl&lt;ol
Ohio.
Public ...... ...... 50,312.25
DEED REFERENCE: Yo·
Prlvifume 304, 1'111" 107, Mlllp
F -............... 17,914.83
County,DMd " - ' •·
S.IM
by Folr
hid peroel
IIPIM'IInd . loord
... ............ 2,386. 25
II 11t:300.00.
· Riclng F- ond
Tarme of .... , Cah. .
Char.,. .. .... ... 11 ,680.00
Reo!- aonnot be aold
for loioo lh., two-third of the ................. ...... 31,600.00
Rentllll , '., .... .. ,, ....6.&amp;68.DO
epproleed v•tuo.
Mleooll.,eoua
J•m• M. Souleby.
Reaelpta ... ...... .. 1,658.16
Sharlll of
Meigo County, Ohio Tote1C11h
llecetpu ....... 12t ,989.29
131 t I, 22, 21, 3tc

w•

·

576-AIIpla GrQIIt
?7:;t - Mtt0fl
882 - fliltw tt1v1n

91 &amp;- Ct~ .. ter

1 ...

Contractuol

Over Cuh Dlo·
buraom11111 ......... 471.14
C11h Bol111ce
.
11 / 30/ 89 ........... ..471.14
TOTALS
.
RECEIPTS:
Operotlng ·
Fundi .. ........ 121 .111.2~
Sllto ond Locet ·
Grant Funcl ..... 48,411.17
TOTAL CASH
RECEIPTS .... 111,405.28
DISBURSEMENTS:
8oneflto1Emptoyer' e 1
Shora)........ ....·...1 ,401 .77
Supptlea and
Materiala ... ............. 94.4e
C~:u~traet'ual
.
Sorvicea ......... .. 2.tii.QI
Debt
Service .... .. .. 121, t 19.28

! 57 -- Mu••cellnnrumlnt•

.; 58--fru•ts &amp; vegttlbl•
l 59 ..... Fo r Sal e or Trade
I

9 - Went.., to BuY .

ode

304

eppolnted

OUirllc of the - - of Virgil
V.
lrown,
lettPo·
of
33211
U. I.·
Rt ·
. 33,
rneroy, Ohio 45719. ·
R~E. Buck,
Probate .Judge
IA~o K. NMIIIirood, Clerlt
131 1, 8. 15, 3tc

CASH OISIURSEMENTS:
1811efhl !Employer' o
lhere ....... ........ 6,401 . 77
luppt. . .,d
-lolo ........ ........ ..94 .46

Business Services

Merctlamtt~v
I 5, - t1ou••nold Go~ ·

8-Pubhc Sale·&amp; A.. c,..,,

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'

•
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Gall••
oun1 '1
ANI CoOt 614

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
- 11 :00 A. .M SATURDAY

TUESOA't' PAPER

the

(oilotrin1f telephone exchan,es ...

361 - Ch•l'\nt

"A e1111ff•ed a~ertiHm..-.t plec.cl '" Tne Datlv Sent'"• ''" ·
eep1 - ct••litld dtlplt'y . lusm•s Cerd and_ltgll Mttctt l
Will 1110 IPPIIr tn tPie Pt Pl . . ant Rt91tttr anctltut Gall•
110111 Daily Tribune. reectung OYer 18 . 00~ hori'le•

6- f11PP'I Ao ~o
6-.Lott ene1 FounC

Shuttle.'r9llout delayed .

I

Mo~thly

·~~~:;',*

the Bayside Expo Center. The ~how, which runs
until Sunday, covers fo!lr acres of floor ~ace, and
Includes 1,500 varieties of plants· which produces
two mUiion blossoms."(UPI)
·

Officials havt' said the reclimb aboard Discovery Thurs·
day lor tht' final hours of the trenchment program would con·
tlnue for at least another year.
mock countdown, a standard
exercise to give the as tronauts · But this month, one of the
and enginee rs a final chance to nation's biggest banks, tht' Indus·
trial and Commercial Bank of
practice.launch-day procedures.
China,
announced $510 million In
A fo rmal flight readiness re· .
riew
loans
to Industry In big
· view to assess launch prcict'ssl ng
cities.
is scheduled for March 30 and 31,
Several other loosenlngs of
and if all goes well the $2 billion
credit have also been announcoo
orbiter will bias t off at 9: 21 a.m.
T)]ursday, Aprll12, to kick off t.he · . to prop up ialterlng CHinese
ventures with other countries,
year's third shuttlt' llig)]t.
The highlight of the mission and the government has agreed
will come the day . a ftt'r liftoff to purchast' much of a backlog of
when Haw ley . operating Discov- motor vehicles from the coun·
try's joint venture fa ctories.
er y's 50-foot robot arm, plans to
launch the telescope from the
The official · Xinhua news
shu ttle' s cargo bay .
Tht' telescopl:' · is expected to agency reported the new loans In
revo lutionize optical astronomy tht' first half of ·the year will be
and ·help scientists learn m o re targeted at boosting production
about the conditions tha t ex is ted In 234 large and mt'dlum-slze,
in the universe sho rtly after tht' government-selected e nter ·
big bang explosion believed to prises, at agriculture and at
h,a ve given birth to the cosmos capital construction projects.·
Industrial output In the first ·
somt' 15 billion years·ago.
It also may be a ble to find
two months of 1990 dipped 0.9
direct ev idence of planets cir· percent from the same period
cling other stars and it Is last year, after growing just 0.7
expected to provide routine percent In the final quarter of
Voyager-class photos of Jupiter 1989.
and Saturn.
Along with the credit mea·
Launch originally was sc he- sures, the ChIna Dally said a
dult'd for October 1986, but the consumption tax Imposed on
Challe nger shuttle disa ster sales of domestically made color
grounded the American manned television sets would be trimmed
space program and put the flight · in a bid to cut backlogged
on hold unti l now .
inventories.

10

Rete
14.00
111.00

•'*

China .eases austerity program

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
1UPU . The shuttle Discovery 's
trip to the la unch pad for bias toff
April 12 to launch the Hubblt',
Space Telescope was delayt'd at
I;east12 hours Thursday because
of concern a bout the ship's nose
J'andlng gear, officials said.
NASA spokesman George
Diller said the decision to delay
r611out was made after e ngi neers
·discovered slightly "worn " nuts
used to secure axle seals on the
nose landing gear of the shuttles
Columbia and Atlantis.
Launch dirt'ctor Robert Sieck
tht'n delayep Discovery's rollout
to launch pad 39B until tt'chnl·
clans can evaluate the problem .
"What they' re doing is a risk
analysis tp find out what t hat
erosion means." Diller sa id.
"We're not sure we ha ve a
problt'm yt't. We just observed
something that' s not standard."
Discove r y's six-hour 4.2-mlle
trip from NASA's giant rockt't
assembly building to the pad had
been scheduled to begin at 7: 30
a.m. but II was ·delayed to no
earlier than 7:30 p.m.
NASA s pokeswoman Lisa Ma- ·
lone said Wednesday engineers
have four full days of " co ntin·
gency " time · in Dlscovt'ry's
launch processing scht'dul!! to
bandit' unexpectt'd problt'ms and
still make the April 12 la unch
datE'.
But if actua l rl:'pairs are
ordered for Discovery's nose
wheel svs tem, the shuttle would
have to first be removt'd, or
•·destacked," from Its ex tetnal
tank. which would put the Aprll
12 date in doubt.
" Tht'Y can't get to the nose
wheel unless they destack the
orbiter, " Diller said. "But they
don't know that tht'y have a
problem serious enough to war·
rant doing so met hing that
drastic."
,
Ass~mlng no major change to
the launch processing scht'dule.
the Hubble Space Telescope Is
sc ht'duled to be moved to tht'
launch pad MoJ!day for'lnstalla·
tlon In Discovery's 60·1oot cargo
bay.
Shuttle commander Loren
Shriver, co-pUot Charles Bolden
and astronauts Steven Hawley ,
Bruce McCandless and Kathryn
Slllllvan plan to fly to· the
KennedY Spac:e Center Monday
from Houston to participate In a
dl'Us-relll!arsal countdown and
to review emergency
pi'IICecures .
·
, Wearing bright-ora nge space·
stilts, all five are scheduled to
.

Words
16

Aai •
tor eonwc:\Jtwe '""'· bfokel'\ upo ... s'will beeft•tlld
inr '"r:h """' e1 MD•rate .cl io

2-ln Memon
3-Annoucement s
•-GtvUWh

BEIJING iUP I) China Daily newspaper.
percent.
made its strongest indication yet
The government Imposed · a
Tht' central bank governor, Ll
that it was easing a government light austerity program, includ· Gulxlan, also said credit would
austerity program, deciding to lng a sharp restriction on credi t,
trim interest rates and " boost in late 1988' to rein In record be Ioosenoo In the first half or the
year, although the ·year's total
lending in the first half of the · inflation and stem breakneck credit targt't would not be
year to stimulate sagging indus- grow th In the economy, res \[Its of changed.
·
tria l growth, the of!icial press a decade of. free-market ecomonetary
policy will
"Tight
· reported Thursday .
. .nomic reforms.
cofitlnue, but with added flexlbll·
The actions were announced by
Inflation has fallen from a peak .lty," the China Dally sald. The
the People's Bank of China, the of 30 perce nt to 6percent, but the government remains concerned
central bank, just a feW days credit squeeze has resulted In a
that easier credit could feed
before next week's annual ses· sh a rp Indu stria l s lowdown . ·inflation.
sian of the nominal Parliament, Many factories have been Idled
The movt's were the strongest
the National People' s Congress, a nd unem ployment has risen to
wht're the economy will be a an official rate of 4 percent, signals so far that the govern·
ment Is easing the austerity
major topic of discussion.
a ltho~h It is actually higher.
program to keep the lid on public
"A reduction In Interest rates
The central bank announce- discontent. Officials are known
was vlt&lt;il at this time If the slide m ent said Interest rates on
to fear that rising unemployment
in industrial growth, which has commercial loans would be cut
could lead to civil unres t In
markee\ the beginning of the by 1.26 percentage poll)ts from China's crowdro c!tles.
year. was to be brought under March 21. Tht' avt'rage rate now '
control, " said the official China on a 12-month loan .is 11.34
"At present, the overwhelming
thing ls ~tablllty;" the China
Daily reported. "Without eco·
nomic stability, many social and
economic problems will follow."

Judlm-.......,.

upon •
......... IMIIItC•eNo.
I ..CY·II In Court. I

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 997·21 S6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

NOTICE OF • ·
AI'I'OINTMENT OF
FIDUCIAllY
On,.... ....., 23, 1180. 1•
llle -~~County I'IDbiiO
Court. C..e No. 21130.
Nollie
a-. 11n1 u.
I . R - 33, Pom....,, Ohio

VIator R. c-. end Luno 1'.
Cou.wo. '" .... o.t.n-.. 41711. -

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

1 - C~rd

SPRINGTIME - Elizl\beth Gutlerson, 6, of
Boslon, is surrouni!ed by colorful blossoms as she ·
smells a tulip at the Massachusetts Horticultural
•Society's 1990 Spring Flower Show Wednesday at ·

NooeMMC8IfOIL.UMM
Carroll. • ,._Ill, .....

•

.

· Public Notice

'
NOTICE OP IALI
. , virtue of .. Onlor of
........ _ofthec-.
" ' - Coun of Mllgo
Countyo, Ohio, In 1M- of

Classifie

MIAMI (U:PI) _;An FBI agent
ROdriguez maintains the FBI they said.
.
suspended six weeki ago has · suspended Mata in retallatiOtlfor
The sources saiJI Mata trusted
been under Investigation for his involvement In a successful his Informants too much, faUina
three years because some of tht' 1988 d!Jtrlrnblatlon tult against to applY all the tests to determine
spies he recruited wert' double the agency.
their reliability, then l'ftlatlng
agents working tor Fidel Castro,
FBI Director WIIUam Sessions efforts by others to do so.
The ' Miami HPrald reported has stronlllY denied th•t. Tbe
"A number or th~ cases be bad
Thursday.
Herald sources said-Mala came were compromised," one agent
The newspaper, quoting unl· under Investigation long before said. "ltwasanlncrediblelackof'
dentlflt'd current and former tht' lawsuit was 'an Issue.
judgment . He did get too cl01e to
federal officials and FBI agents,
According to the newspaper · those assets, those sources, I
said the Investigation had unco· account, in the early 19!lls Mata think he was kind of lulled Into a .
vered no evidence that Special was involved tn recruiting ·spies sense of . false security . . He
Agent Fernando Mata was In- 'Who had lnfotmatlon about the . thought he knew more than
valved In espionage against the Cuban government. But Castro's ' people who would have been
Ul)ltt'd States. But Mala may General lnielllgence Directomore objective. "
.
have · acted Improperly in pro- rate, known by Its Spanish
. The·allegations surfaced after._
tectlng his Informants from FBI Initials DGI, learned of Mata,'s an Informant told the FBI that .
scrutiny, the newspaper said .
recruiting effort and fed double Mata himself had.been the target
Mata, 48, who received the agents lrito his network, the of the DGfs own recruiting
attorney general's award In 1983 sources said.
efforts. The Cuban a,ency has
tor his work In · thl! fo reign
"The Cubans ht'ard he was made repeated attempts to percounter-intelligence section of recruiting double agents and suade ·FBI agents to become
the FBI's Miami office, has been tht'y targeted him as a dupe," Informants for the Cubans, the
placed on administrative leavt' The H~rald quoted one form er sources said.
• ·
.
The informant's allegations
with. pay and had his security official as saying.
clearance revoked.
By Itself, knowingly or un· were never substantiated bu t
The FBI, citing "privacy con· knowingly recruiting double Mata's -Involvement with the
slderatlons: ·: refused to C\lscuss agents would not raise questions · Cuban spies· spurred a lengthy . ·
the c~se. Mala's attorney, Hugo about the agent's Integrity, The . " damage assessment" to revlf1W
· Rodriguez , sald neither he nor Herald sources said. But Mala what the Cubans may hal(e
Mata had been gl":en details wen t' furtht'r , working around · gaint'd by the association and
about the· investigation or the FBI controls forferretlngout bad what U.S. Interests may have
reason for the suspension.
Information and double agents, been affected.

'

The Daily 5entine!-Pege 13

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 143
ALlAN\', OHIO: Rl. 80. S.R. 143
HENDEIIION, WV. : Rt. 38 Adj. IO Sldtrl Equipment
NI!W HOURI :
POMEIIOY: I e.ln.· 7 p .m. 7 DIIYI
AL8ANY: 10 o.m. · l p.m. I Daya. CtOMCI lundey
HENDEIIION : 1h.m.•Sp.m.IIOayo,CioMCIIun.· Man.
. PAYING AI OF TODAY, MAR. 13. 1890
111 c;opper I&amp;C I * lb.; ·

Cleltl Ol'f Aluminum Cena, .SIC I* lb.

·

114 882-&amp;114

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

1-u-·oo-""

915-4412

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•REMODELING
•GARAGES
•GENERAL CONTRACTING
A Gnat CMinatioti"Wty tniii ~so11 ..l1 Prices'~

WI GO , . IITIA . ._M
H2-6110
POFIPOY, o•o
I

•

.

J.S. .0.1

_,.

Lodv Plcllad·Up Qrwy . . . . . .

at llaDonatda, ,.._ 114-441-ot12.
.
Loll&lt; -~~ ._...

l~

""" IIIII 11111!1 pup, Loat- eq 11ot111t l.oiiooL
- - II . . . . . .o111111H4M4u
Loat: -

.,

11-

arxlwttlle-... •
llh.

!i!?LII .liM.

A - to P - · - " ' - '
IIIU.

WIIUY ALL NON FERROUI ICR.V, IA1TER!ES.
, ITAIITIRI, TRAIIIIitiii!CJMa, ALTIRNATORI. lTC.

. . ..IAIUY

•FILL diRT

pu,_

on1ca.- ••· .,.,
=~-....,.~
tw

OPPm 3 LOCAnU.S TO SDYI YOU-.

1IICIIIIG

· •UMIITONE

_ .. w.-,.-.......,4.

-tty at SOntlnat 011to1. ·
•LOIT ~nato- dotL land'. .
Road vicinity, ~75;1m.
,
LOIT: - Small
~
,..,..
~ atfootNIL
Loiil ·

r

I alltl J CONSTIUCTION.

eGRA'VIL

Found at PomatDy - . . - .
Pill' of ...... .,. QIIOIM IIi

-------...:.'-------"11
TII-COU.TY IECYCUNG
"'-

I. L 101.101

.....

Lost &amp; Found

'

7

Ylrdllle

..

�•

•

•

Pega 14-The

1990 .•
•

March 1

Sentinel
•

o.lllpolls
&amp;VIcinity

" .••.flint.wr

LAFF·A-DAY

11

m'N'

Houlellolcl .

73 v.n.UWD'I

GOods

for

~.

Pt. PINUnt
" &amp; VIcinity

1 1 1 1

....._ ckletllng, IMhagany t able
wllh- oorvOd cholro.

&gt;

..
,.

CD ~Time ll8tlori Q

no11o1n-.

ellll A
OriHith
ow_,

Public Sale
&amp; AuC11on

Lan-

- ,\ucllon
lorvloo, 11 ""
........_
retetwnc•,

..d ond llcndod In .W ill V!~
tlnlo ond Ohio, -2~7.

0 Ch8tlea In Chttge
1:01 (I) . ...., H I - I
1:20 I]) llquare On TV Q

VNPERSTANP
'I'OIJR NOT
Wt.NTIN'TO

1:30. (f) 18 NIC NIOMIJ -

llt_~-·Q

DISCUSS IT..

.

.

IIJJem

J·l$

ICAN

I'VE OFTEN WONOERED.WI-I'(

'I'OU DECIDED TO BECOME 'A ·
CAcTUS WI-lEN 'fOU MIG~ T
AAVE 5EEN AN OAAN6E TREE.:
• """' 1·, "'"' ' -~·"'~' ~ ..........

• 1'• 1c-p.ny
-Q
IIIJ llllHe·lhn

·~

•

a Top C.rd Conlestahta

Wanted to Buy

9

'•

18-

v....17.
15,
11,
1:00
All.Rolnlloroh
conoole.

8

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1

~
IAII, - 'Ave_
· Tlturo,
Fri.
2221 ...,.,...,
n~ln ar

combine entertainment lrivla ·

with ll1e luck oltha draw.
0 Hangln' In
1:31 (I) Andy Griffith

7:00

I WAIN

Employment

AUCTION I fURNITURE. 12
Olive !II., Olltlpollo. ' Utod
tumlluro,
:
:
.
rlllorn
I
Wortbool&amp;lt
IH.

S~?tvices

m
...... -,-....a.-

Help Wanted

11

Sorvlco

Ropr-othro

It

•n

kn~

organized, Hlf-mot:IVMed
. dl&lt;kluol
lntorlllod

ln-

· beneficial. W.

hll'ltl

.121.
2211. "" good ·-

rMde.ta opportunity for a well

In

1111 Oloyton Wlnnor

sur~*"

financial eervlcee, (conaumer loanl, home equity lln11,

..IM.

....,..

1~~L.3

.........
.12,500.

• office ldmlnlltrlltlon). Tfie auo~•tul candlct.le mwt entoY
cMI..nging WOI'tl;, ;: II II

~75-714l1
'

'

• Itt'

r

prompt

COl lldll'ltlon- ~-

_ , oorvlco-.

..... JOHN T. IRUNTDll

... ........_ms ·
lloM'rt

J

I

"i.;:f;:'·

Sliv,.I.-Piou
Oollpolto, 0H 4M31
Equo1 Opportunity Employer IIF.
Wonlod: Atg.-.o, dyno:':i

r.pr.-=·..:.~~t 'e"'rr·
Ill .... IT...... II

-"lono In Oolllpoh W.lahl

---5.
AVON • All

f
!

lrMI,

Ooll llorllyn

- r d Ubnlry II&gt; now _ .
tint oppllcotloilo .., on odun
_..,Iori&lt; oubolnlllo. ~ be
IVII..ba. cMfl, ..,.,..lnge, WMk•
ondl ond l1olldoyo.
Quollllcotlono: IIIII - · be In
reuon.~blll aoDII halh. com·
puter ••perlince or wlliing to
loom lho - • • · Coil !Of on
oppol-.lt.....,.._AEAD.
EARN IIONEV Roocllnt .lookll
S30,01101yr. , , _ . IIOiontlol.
Dololle. (1)1111M17- Ext. Y·

·~1~~·~·--~~~~~~

' Full-time Oonlll . ._lnl,
R-pllonlll for Doctor'o olflc:o
In ootumbuo. Yory good - ·
tunlty lor , . . - -119

roloc•ion lo ootu..-.

OA

· o-. Thle 1o • non .omoklnt
•ntco. e1 ... IIG-71105.
Homo Hoolth Aldo'o, nlodld fol
cue In thl Wen.ton am,

·, _ _.., - . 1 Poroon·

ne1 Pool, 1400 IM 3100 for fur..
thor ...-~on.

Job Hunllnt7 I 11&lt;111? Wo
lo:oln pec&gt;1110 lor jobl 11 Aulo

M•ch•nlaa,

Aeeo unllng/Co mpull n 11

!lpoclollolo, Corpooll.... co..
rMtolagiU•, EttctrklaM, Food
servk:e Work.,., Eteetronlca

Qn:gee

~.
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•udlnfa. Aleo IMch chordlna

;:,:;;;:...,Rd.7-

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1171 T..,.,.. Oolloo GT, 5 opd.,
AO. I14 Ul 1111.

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and l':::oJ: If lnleratH,

GfrTINCS .' tb FJtr~T
JAS'E, ·lliT IT i

'

'

1177 - ·
loll •' ·
Cantllned,
...
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full bllh
I lftr!llng, _ _ , . . 114- :
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,

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olr-Nwl~ondi!M '

~Jl~g'~Totr:.JE

•m DodgO 11onoy 2111211. duot

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..-..&amp;TVdPS, PI,ellra :
-

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fold-··

· , _ IO , . . .

1

742~'110.

M...,..,

Giii.Ent-lnment Tonl9hl

a(()
Family
all ec 18 JeopardJI Q
maD M"A"S"H
IIJl c-.11..
0 Night Court

OIJ-Jame•c
QJ Cotbf
,. c
•

Myttllllt A con man lakes
ott with money reservecl lor
an orPhanage. 1;1

CD When W'a w.,. Young

Thil program evol&lt;es the
nostalgia of lila child star
era: also interviews with .
Jackie Cooper. Mlclcey
Rooney, Spanky McFarland
and Roddy McDowall. (2:00)

1110 TOyalo Clllel__ ~ oxc.
oond.,, ftdory . -...root, air, a , n. CMtPint llalltf. AO, '
'awnlnt. tumool, 11100 firm. 114-441-MH.
dnton. •IIOC!O· ef-1-742-2412. ,
1ft1 Oldo Dono 11 • dr.. 1t71 1:-:011.
Lornono . P""'loc Sport, -

con-;

gPublicSIUika,
Rattle lnd Roll
television twists and

tlr•, ........, ...........

pelnt,

shouts, shakoo, rantes and
rolls in an aft·atar salute to
the music olthe 1950&amp; and

"

11l80s. (2:251

liM~:~,

Home

81 .

(2:Q0)
11)1 'P1Pr1ihmi.....
i Nteawt
11J Murder, ... Wrote Mr.
PelttOY'I VacatiOn ,
·
8 Rick Net-: lt'l AH Rlglll
Now A poignl!lt lOOk .b ick II
the superstar's life, featutes
clips 1tom Thl Ozzle And
Harriet Show. and Nelson's

46 Splice tor Rent
SPECIAL PURCHASE. Ftctclry
dl- 10 yow lol. LIIIITED CJI!.
FER. 3 bedroom, 1411711 homo·
Smell - n 111rmon1 110
poymonlo of •141.'111 Aiiii' 1125.

c.ll1...,.1'21' 1041

1 - - t o r -· .100 por
room, AI ...,... II :cludrd Call
l.oflyollo-. 114-iltl-4222.
Ocluntry -

~~-

L.o!Ol~

... porto, . . . . Coli ,

-

:q, Nc!rth

Poll!,

of -iDy.

own candid thoughts and
stories.
0 MOVII!!: Tile· Naked Face

11-7471.

35 LotS,&amp; ACflllgt

(f)

• • • (J) ,_DoWling

l

Hout oWIIy ony lroo!!, bnrohb&amp;
unw.ntld fterM. , "euon1 le
fi1M. · ~- Celli any'llme

(R) (2:00)
1:05 (I) MOVIE: Brannigan (PG)
(2:00)

Mill• Paula'• Day Care Cent•.
soli, oflordoblo, chlklcllro. 11-F
I 1.m. w 5:30 p.m. AQN 2 '\ii•10.
Beta,., 1tt1r
Drop-Ins
Wltci:Hnl. 814-t4&amp;--8224.

1:30 • Cll

et4-2~:n .

.moor:

AttiNd peraon will mow lewna
In Racine erea. 814-MS.2503.

OT, 11,000
oltor llp.m.

IOL.olo lnd

or-on t
R•ybum A•cl

Will l&gt;obyoH In my homtr
Bulovllle Rood. · ErDOrlonco I
,.,.rene•. 81~&amp;4e48. .

1
oprlng cloonlnt In
County area'1, :Jer4.882·31'33.

Will da hDUM cleanlnl. ~

._.,ktr
polntlnt. RotoNncoo tumlohod.

wm

da

lnt•r~

6144~.

1

mow-··
.

Wllllila 10 Work! Will
do odil Jobe, et 4 441 3181.

watlf",
poVod reod, r0110111111t lltlrlellono. 304~3. No olntleo
wkltlroller8ploo01.

1111ry olllf IOf
toddler 8ftd new born, need

bualnea with pHple you

Lowly
Unlumlohod
hllrloric .,_..,.......
II id Indue
n,

Lololocroot•. 2.1 ftiiiH, Rl. 2,

......... -........-. 4p.m
ll7l/lilo. ....._ not: II eluded, lilt t,..., WliMo P1no IIIII Nor·

Hickory

Mq'd. 114 .441 4421.

IYIIIIIH,

Ch-

Rd.,

-

tt4.....a274~

en•.

nofiolo.doPool•-

•

Q.J, Whitl fld., 2 IIC,... -

F1nancial

Real Estate
. wantld

3 lo 5 IC-

wlgood

51
bulldl'lf

HOUMhold
· Goods

lila on ruNI or etiy • • within
5 mllll rodluo R1.110 I II. 114-

Business
Opponunlty

PliO. 114-14114... ollor

woy ...,.__ ""' dig or 1 w111.
l'hiimoo Thoo
hom
Good
8hoDitltd
Olturch,

F.,.,-

,.._,....,._,,

1.

Uood

_

..
Aullom:alilo eouncl l»ath. tx·
Otl- -ion ond vorltly of
lpmwd, IIOod

" ••mlllrlc ..

In·

to I l l - Onbeuah.
W-Ind
VlniOn
,...._ Gallp -aile, Ohio 412
41131.

1 • Hondo, 0tv1c Sl, $3700.

tl-•

·1~3114.

lfmllod
-'ThuN, IoL

12811; 1115 Ohrir Novo, 5opd,

fU!tor .

.._.,

......

u1 im,

_.,.....

t2411; 1115' Dodgo ....... Aulo,

-k-=

taHI; John'• Auto r

.......r jllono tunl"'" con be

~

6 fftUCh dlFF-Ihan
· .1111 Plono lorvtco,

30U71-S13J Wlllol: ·
2321, ··~ W.nl; 114 441 4110,
Folh lookl; 114-112....7, IIIII

...-... ,

Ko-.

Holldoy Inn,
1ft7
Sllyliowk; 1111
Buick
1115 Looor,
114
311 P'.
.

F-11111 Suppltr&lt;·;

.1 • 8-10 CltoYy 1. oDd. otr,
rollyt=~
14,000-.
..,._
..
21•.

,'J

know,

L1Vt1

-ion.

now etoi-I4W203.-ngo.
4 - · 11100
010.

......

')tw.J

to a bMII stagecoach.
robbery maa~ac:re . Q
i1J1 e!D IIIINI Son Daniel's

lncerlor pilnttna. lor . ,.. ... :·

call

Clpt.

8t11mer ,

CIMnera. au Ul 1104 or 304- •

I7Wa.

.

:

commitment to Nina
culminates in a proposal. Q

Ron.. TV ltrYIOI, I~ I ~latlztna :
In
ZOnnh - ......
-"
' moil ,
aiMr'...._
_...,._

11)1 Llny King

Golf Ill Round pl~y from

Ponte Vedra, FL (TJ

'

, . . ClmtrO,

. .. .......

. .IM. I1tt•IOM.

.

·

Folrlole:I_N_ _
8.W., llopd, A01 PI, -ilo o..,.

e

Oaar~ C... Rd. PMa. • • .;

pllto, ......... ond doll... , ........

IIO.:':
;,
. , ,.

lopllo Tonk Pu.....
CO. AON EV~ INTIRP

::Joc~kll~"iii,~0Hii;;;l~-;;;fij7..fl'2'~iiiij;
a. Hord d1 111. 1, - .

Trfplo

ton. wv...................
Flooring, ·J.tlouu • •
IJCIUI,. - - . OOionlill Olk

Cullt..............
.-....

:.

~

or ,.
or ,1

•= -

OOYEIINIIENT IEIZED Yohl In

from f100. Forda. 11M I t
Oorwtloo. Clltvyo.

Homu for Sale

luywo Clulclo (II ~ ,
Elf. i'10111.
'
-

72 Trucks for Sal..

:IOM7WI32.

82

TH' flfiiiN
tJIIIHIIIY

Q
1dNidea
a elhl(J)la~rt.
,......,..,,,.
uve
' WMytllfyl Ellneclict Farley
is a tyrant who has 'built-up

HERSELF!! ,.....,,_,

OUitOin :,

Plumbing &amp;

his business. Q
'
Ill etD O.nny wants to

star_marriedtoVII. C

. eiiD -

:j..

18Naw•

~

(2:30)

10:301]) Let'allock Tonight .

Co......
...
ond~
··

'

,_.,"""
!:!P ......

'

1111, Otllo

'

.

.

=--..~:.:~flllow
a0n
•• 11:00W ....

.

'

thll •::· ptov!ded lll.ol the upecll are
cWIIY lined. Be mindful of Clltllll.
LIIM (llpl. 21 Daf.211 You arastHIIn '
a lavctl till INncllltrllld, parllcularly
In
.
WIWI you~ I

or explltlle.

If
. ..,,..... ltay In

_,..,.,King

· iw •a e(J) iiJI eQ

·3
·=-

~ ~"""*}i§!.
:a•
.

---ln-.

ClturoiiiWII . . .
Ca Jg TQIIIgllt

:u=lllow

Polw..,.•••
.......

.9 2

tKJ97 2
South didn't believe in scientific bid· +9 876
+u
ding. When North jumped to three
SOUTH
hearts as a forcing raise showing 13-t5
.AQ
'
points in support. South Just bid the
' .: '
.AI08 53
slam. Not for him to Worry that the de• 63
fenders might be able to quickly take
+AQI03
the first two diamond tricks. Luckily
I·
Vulnerable: East-West ·
North had the ril!ht cards, but there
Dealer: South' · '
were choices as tile play developed.,
DeClarer won the Ill o( clubs in his
W011
North
hand and played a heart to the king.
Pass
3•
·When West played the jack. South re·
All
pass
membered reading somewhere that
this was likely to be a singleton. So he .
Opening lead: + 9
finessed the 10 on the way back. West
took the queen and later East made L.:..___;__________....:...,______.
the diamond king to set the contract.
South should do better. After win· see what would ~appen If West showed
ning dummy's king of hearts. llefort out on the· second heart. Declarer
deciding the best play in trumps , de· would cash the spade ace, co to tbe
clarer should try the spade finesse. jack of clubs and ruff a spatle. Then be
That will win. He now has a sure-fire would play out the hish clubs and
play to guarantee the slam: Play the eventually throw East in with the.
ace of hearts. As it happens, that drops heart winner to .force a lead into dum- ·
..
. the queen and makes the_____
contract.
But. my's A·Q of diamonds.
...,..

.

.·

CROSSWORD

-·

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 English
1 Garbage
title
44 Nevada
boat
5 -of
city
slate
DOWN
9 Dismal
1 Throw off
abode
2 Punctua·
11 Sharpen
lion mar~
12 Cause joy
3 Egg-shaped
13 Fed the
4 Moist
Yeatertlay '1 An~twer
kitty
5 Ladd 's
mosl
15 Spot
16 Cargo
famous 20 Piece of 30 English
muffin
marble
weigh!
role
181ime
6 Sweet · 23 Pop
31 Scollish
period
heart
24 Com .
title
pacted
32 He hit
19 Cozy-up
7 The
755'
21 Like
meantime in ranks,
as soldiers
home runs
sashimi
8 Gentry
22 Conducted 10 Hesler's 25 In proper· 36 Roman
lion (Lal.)
Emperor
23 One kind ol
wa~
26 Adjective 38 - de
language
scarlet
plume •
for Abe
24 Mast
14 Break .
21 - skirt 40 "Hannah
26 Asylum
ol day
28 Gardner's
ar:td 27 Dagwood's 17 tool
Sisters·
buddy
Faithlul
28carrier
·29 Spanish

',.
'·
...

..
,.

J

gold

'

.,
'

.

30 Musical

.

33 Nebraska's
governor
34 Passing
mark
35 Chinese
dynasty
37 Instrument
for 30 .,
across
39 Allot·
ment
41 English
school
42Cholr
voice

'•

.A,

'

•

"

...

OAILY CRYPTOQUOI ES- lleft'a how to won It:

....
•,

,

.....

'

One letter stands Cor anotller, In this sample A is Uled

"·
•

apostropllei, the leflllllanil hu•.Uan af the 1111 dure all
hints. Each day the
ill'ecllfferent. .

,,••

Cor the three

L's, X Cor tile two O's, etc. Sinlle letters,

code...._

can Hl•ucn t

Llncl•llriiL t badru• ..._
lUI

EAST
.KJ 10 3

WEST

.9765
.QJ
• 10 54

,.

1·11

f17.-. -727-1111.

Ill
011111

•

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFf!LLOW

VtteAI'OIIIIne
· hOtal MCUrlty job It more
than jult routine. (Pt 1 012) .

I

wllh CIA.
loiiDilo,ln114
-~. 11

r-

10:05 (I) MOYIE: The Quiet Man

BERNICE
BEDE OSOI:.
ronchon2 _ _ ..,...

Twilight

. ll)llvantng -

~~Hut;:.;::.ln;;:,g~-~

114441--

-In

IF IT AIN'T

SHE'S OUT
YONDER IN
TH'GARDEN
PATCH

but·•ulltril
- - -oondllloft.
7. HighMDDO.
,.
30447N447--.... ... 114- Qwlw.........74MOO.
:f
441-7121 ... lor Chell OUIItrlo '
olo . I
d lltll..,'lll l.llnrY. Wll ... .. ldndo ~ "
141 - A.., Oolllpollo, OH
-.-~
..., .....
'IO+nMIIO. •
41111.

.100=.'----------

ar

. . . .. , . . Now Country
rituslc:a hotteatttara are
tellured live.
1:30 (2) QJ Orend Carol Anne
and Wayne try 10 aeliver a
piano to Carnegie Hall. Q
(J) College laalc...,_A
'10:00 ill 700 Club Wltlt I'll
RObe• ill QJ L.A. Law McKenzte
drops a bombshell that

llolory ......... loot ....... ";

-· .
-··•nii.-. . . -...... . '
......
..... .,.. "

Llvlol

11J Ptayera Cllamplonlhlp

;:::&amp; 101OhioNjlolta:
wv ~.
11 4-441-. :'
2414.

e (() Young Riders

Ike McSwain Is sole witness .

~-.tl!!:~-~c:--:::--:--:-- :.
ama ....vaa s.ntoe, ;

1 - Ford Tompo QLS. Atmoot

Rrr!Jic.

8 8

............ pllhd- ciiY. ,:
- - ond ............ ..

PF·7111rio"!' lrlo plono
h 3 ,_
wllh - -1100.114
Ul MH.

r•••Hen otMr thin tlmMy 1nd NOT to •ncl IIIDniY
through t11o moll until you hovo
n•uatNfa. 304•2·3503.
in~figll.ci the oftlftni.
POSTAL SERVICE Jobo. Bolory .
STRIKE IT RICHI
.
to tuK. Nollonwklt. Entry lovll WITH SOUO STATE VIDEO
....lonl. Coli (1) IOU87- BOWLING. A SPARE TillE· ALL
Ext.145a.
CASH BUSINESS. 1-741Jollo. !llort It .• 11.411hr. 4
For ourrr I oppllcMion Info. col! 7 cloY! ILOI.·IOp.m. 1-21-7:net, Ext. 101. . ·
Real Esl'lle

31

••mol•.
IIRall.

'
1 • Plylnauth Horizon, Auto,

-

,.

HeM I IN4d
llliiMnMoe: !;
f1oo11nt, nw/Npllr, lldi"',J
- · · ·etW71-21120,
_
...!it•. odd
Ioiii.
ook
tor

1111 Ford · 4 CVI .• otondlfd 111111. Good .~ion.­
- r. etwtl2-3111.

'Hrfouo gultortol,
Jofi _..,. lnoiNCtor, 114-

lndlvlduol

-on.-- ··-·
-:

For - . 1100 II!· wltor tonk.
!IIIII -~~~ :141 pump.
300 ft. - · et4-tl2o627S. '

4411~.

'INOnOEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING 00.
rocommondo tho! you do

11

goodrn..

For

hlldlng
oho
1-rlclod).
.10,11110'. 114-245-tSIS.

36
2
1

M1,1sloal
Oull- liuln roclftt ao Oort. e
IIIJI ... Toc-h lllll"!,e,. n~no _ _..::ln:.::lt::.:..:ru:;:m:.::•:.:m.:.:•:__
1

.

w-

a

OlflaNnt
Whilley sadly celebrates her
2111 birthday alone. Q
·
I:OOeill QJ Chelno Sam and
tho gang try to outamartllleir
rivals. Gary·a Old Tavern. Q

tAQB

+KH

.

7:36 (I) IInford And Son
1:00 (f) MOVIE: The True Story

·-.. ~"' T':" ...V£5 ~ ~ 15

1118
- - Low !
m1111;T~o
111ty on _.. Good con- •
dnlon. •n;sao.ll~ • u11.
l

Oldo Dolo,..-. 1150- or 1 1 1 1 both torltOOO. 114-112-2471. ' compor. LIM MW. f2000, t14-

~$

:111111

A-,

Seen~., wanted, ba ~:~ldEr•rlno
ond ~ I ....... h!ilhiJ
-vof&lt;id
woll
I
mUll.
, _ Iiild
nl lhlo
Vo~
1oy n,..l OUIIII, .Rt. 2 Oollpollo
F""' noxt 10 14 Lumber Co.

cor, con

1110 Oldo Cut-....... 1111

Antlqup

.=' .TtfOUd/'IT' l

7:30eCil.Femllr Feud'

4412.

Mill,

Don'f houl 1of1 to 1 mill
eoll, we'HcOmo to yeul ~751117.
Olvo plono, organ ofld.koybolrd
loiOOM In my - . To boaln-

. OAbbotAnciC.m.llo
7:05 (I) Jeff........

S.ll-11

·• K 7 6 4

· ll~ James Jacoby

Ia ..II 01 VldeoCountry

llh ~

Se1 v•ccs

S.w

Portabll

Tochnldono,
1.-lrtol
llolnl...- W -, NurM
·IIIOchlnloiO, Porologole,
- o n c i W -. Aealo1« now for . . . _ belllnnlng
lloodt a , 1111. Con Tri.{:ounty
'iacollonll Aduft Cor&lt;or II 1·
1110437-. A vorioly of fun.
ding oouron to P"Y lor trolnlnt
111 ovolloblo lorlh- lllgllllo.

- -crnal

llochlnt,

0cnc111on. •e1'--'4241 •

-IOnlbonoflto, - ••llllnt
- n - ...w
you q..llty. Oon 01- Lito I
- r &lt;. 1 - " 1 5 1 o r 757-271i7.
'

El A T,.. S..VIoo, Topplnt,
lrtmmlnt, ohru~L•-~ troo
-.or. Prunlnt ....,.... et4448 14.1

'

•-ont

441-0177.

HEALTH IHSURANoE • wtth lmllotlonl In 4nd

to: Nulrlllon - 1 . 511 'Hifh
Plquo, 0H 45351.
AVON I All ...... I Shlrtoy

.

'

NORTH

•su

Shoppmg
for a guarantee

Tubbs Ignores CrockeH's
advice and poses as a .
convict. Stereo.

ond hnch. In
lillpli. ,
- · Coli oftor ·5:00p.m. tl4- ,
1124211.
I

1m Llllono Stotton
Wqon, Vol, AJO, rodlo, mony
new parta. goo&amp;l ..ta 011r, 114-

-~~~

18 wanted to. Do

St-.

Nm•-

Dollilt.

53

.campers &amp;

~~~

- . . , Unl I -

-

71 Autos for Sale

BRIDGE

.1121 18 Wheel Of

IIJ Molie¥11118
11J Mllmf Ylca A vengei\JI

Transport Jt ron

1177 llogol, toO!! -

Stucco - Henna - Peony - ~asel- NONSENSE
Make a list of 20 things lhat make you work 90 hours
a week and 10 of them have lobe
,.._N_O
_N
_s_e_N_s_e_._ _ __ ___,

.o;':~t Court Q

Acc8180r1ea

1175 21ft, Holldly .... Ll

Pets for Sale

56

=-a.::. ..:•:..

'

~

,.

AutoPariS&amp;

---wllh-. ~

52 Sporting Goods

17. Miscellaneous

La. Ollnlc. eo- orltnltd. lnCDIM. ntavtlllllll Send reeume

Spooro, ~1421 1

l

=""'

...75-401111.

..-

76

Motor Homes

lod. 1 - HORSE ILDOS. 114332..741.
Wonlod In lho Town al 11M OUIIom modo Klopf Hnen, a ~ H · Willet and home wftl'l IX12 e~ulrd LR.
OA, docll, -..lrUIIdlntt. Pork
Lono
llolle HOiM Ocuof. 114' " '· IIUII
' to
Wula
w.tw be
rwlecate. WNI liCit • .upwv...,. 441-1013.
to Town Emplowa• Wlty negcrlloblo. oond ...umo
to: Town of ~l lor
217, -Ho..n, WY, 25-.

-

Building
Supplies

unLITV
BLDG.
SPECIAL:
3011401110' 111110' olldlng

f.':rform

We ott.r an •"-rectlve ~
llarttna •llry I 1 com
olvt Tlonttlto pocklgo.
or

.... In """"" ..,,..,, . , _
IHI.

lllocll. brick, -otc. Cloudo
"'"""· Win·
...,_
-,_llnllll,
1-. Hlo Orondo, OH Col 114:MU121.
'

bod~
1
112
eurtolntllilindo, u,n.,..,,..,...,nnlnt,

In "'*ll

cornmunlcotlono oldlla, I
Mve the llblllty to abeorb aNI
eppty .com ....... telv• tNinlng
Pftll,.rM to
oucCMafuUy In creel , ..,... COIIec·
llono, I -lnlllrollon. Tokl
thle opponuniiY to join lho
ptol
'aflll Mllll M bfl•llcl•l.

--.. - . . =

can ottor e:ao Pll

-

55

. dev.. oplng 1 CllrHr In conlnaur~hce

LlvlnCI -

- • ftuiOh

.. ...... - b e
II-' OCIIIII1,100i-s.tl fDr
•

HOY tor -

3 -1'1.

SCitAIMITS ANSWUS

IJl Cclo 111 ...k.-.n
D 18 e (J) Curr.nt Alialr
CD Ill MacNeil LAhrer
Nawl"-

Hay &amp; Grain

64

II/ lee.~ I Mro. King
i (J) PM Mllgazlne .

''If

-

·=----=.:.::u:.:

Q VTZN

•.:.; ·:"§ttl: 73 vans • 4 WD's
.....
.. .......
.... oeo.~
-lllJUI

. . . - " '· ....-7171,
114-44f-1110.
11rtoe rtt" nd I
I

.....-.-.. . full·-.. =

~-ew

3044711-1774. -

1111...., ................ _
Rlploy ~

,aRI.

- . WY.
Lh :IIGW7W44T.
I II
-.
.
.-

...

t3
•'Why don't~ taaQh me.decent trlcka io I
i:an get on 'Letterman'?"

,

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

r

XTAWQETX

IAJ

., Ill
nt lid. PlloniiOt - 1174.

UviiiOCk

"*--~·-old
.,.., .....
,.m. '
.

=-~~~~"t

a

,__..,... , II l i • l e ....... tho Dlttr '
Tl1llune. 114 •• 1111.

ill

M.idt!l
.....
\

•
I

TZVNB

'

ZVT

'

N8 fPVE
HZL

FT

HTNTSVA

• Satan,

•

DWQaNTX.

•

1. ~......,•• C.ull c•••• 11IE 11IIEF IS IOIIRY
; HE. TO 1£ HANGED,~ mAT HE IS ATl • . · . SOURCE'OBtaJR£
·
,
~

lltiiOIJviUrtOf- ..1

7

,,•

NBZN

AS

,.... E'zusots£

$1 I 'o1J.M

1114.,... ..... - .....
.........................

.................. 11-· -

NBT

:tzr v.n.

1MI lttJ:nauth

HTE

lno \(

�•

'

•• - .:C::on::.:IID=ued::..::.fr.::om::.:....!:pa::l::ge:..:.1_ _

........ ·"- lllae:bllles for the
~COIIIIdesaatongas the
U ..... lpee · to provide a .
P E3
•ee contract. ThP com·
nth '-ra 'aareei! to tile pur·
i:!tsu of tile FAX machine by the ·
IIJ ell. Colt for maintenance
llabact will be blUed to the
,._ty as part of the county's
"Pllr payment to the self-In·

a

*

s=epooL

·

'" Also dllrllla yesterday's regu·.
Jar b•..tness meeting, Bruce

'l'Hford alld Dale Taylor, of
Teaford Realty, explained that
tbe commissioners' offer of
for ' .. lot between the
eaurthlluse and Pomeroy Ma·
· -~Je. building has been
teldd by the lodge. . The
~lllsoners said they could
11111 Increase their offer but would
. atOt'be wUUng to consider. the
J)llrchaaa In the future at the
lJI'Iee they've already named.
~ Tbe commlssloDers received a
letter from Common Pleas Judge
Fred Crow lll concerning pay·
ment to the secretary of state for
;juror notification service. ·
~ As explaliled bY the judge,
.there are 13,900 registered voters
In the county. Ai jury selection
·times, every fifth voter whose
;name 'is puUed -a t random Is
placed on a list of prospective
Jurors. ·In the past, the Meigs
&lt;ounty Clerk of Courts' office has
'&lt;

au.5GO

_,;__.. ___ Meiss ~ouncements-_..;.._ _

••

.:)amt!S Stephenson
~

:: James Burnell ii!tephenson, 71.
::Delaware, died Feb. 8 at River·
; side Methodist Hospital in

osu lop8

I

Vet1iu111-w .
had to devote much thne In
Duee 811iurdQ.
certificate and registration fee of· Ba&amp;IIM AIUtallo meet . .
.
Wednesday
·adinllslons . preparing this list and notifying
Put on your dancing Jlloes aiid $10 Is required tor each c'blld. ·
The Rudand Alumni Alsocla·
Zana Calner. Pomeroy.
the prospective jurors. For $270
come to Saturday night's Saint 8pag11Mil tf!mer
·
lion offiC'erl wtllmeet Monday at
Weclau~ydlscbarges- Judy
from the jury commission
Patrick's Day Dance at I~
Tbe Tuppers Plains VFW Post 8 p.m. at dlehomeRichardRupe.
Sayre, Floyd Weber, Ann
count. the secretary of state's
Royal Oak R~ort. Thl! dance, 9013 and auxiliary will bave a . Wright Street, ·Pomeroy.
.
WID lams.
office will handle the notlflcallori
from 8. to 11 p.m., Is being . spaghetti. dlnDer Swturday at 4
The alumni banquet will be
process.
spOnsored by the Royal Oak p.m. at the post home. Price Is May 26 at 6:30 p.m. and the
Th~ commissioners approved
Dance Club. Music will be $3.&amp;0 for 8duits alld $1.50 for theme II "Nifty Flftlea .''
.
the request for the state ~rvice .
provided by the ·Centleinen Ill. children 12 aiiCI upder. Menu is
Reaervattona will be $10 per
A request for the transfer of a
Admission IS $15 per couple and spaghetti. meat sauce, garUc periOD. ' 'l'llole, unable to at~nd
Built by
Plwnb, till . . . ...
C1·Clliquor license, for beer and
memberships to the dance club bread, tossed salad, dessert, tea . are asked to pay $1 tor duel.
.
of
Bottles,'
located
Ia Brltilll Colllm·
wine carry-out only, has been · will also be sold at the door. By or coffee. T-Ile public Is Invited.
Anyone wishing to help with
bla
wu
~oiiZ
..........
submitted to the commissioners.
joining the clt!b, members are Evenl Sll&amp;arday
.
the banquet Is welcome fo attend ... medlelne ucl lleir baUlea
•.ae- .
owner of the permit, Robert
entillwd to attend three dances a
. Overbrook Center will cele- the meeting.
to
Tbe
Kidl'
World
A'"''"ac.
,_
Allen, of Ridgeview Carry-Out,
year, · and possibly a tot~rth brate St. Patrtck's Day with a Word of Faith ~val
It
wu
compleWd
Ia ll'/l.
·
State Route 681, In Scipio Town·
dance, depending upon the famUy day "spud hug" on
There will be 11 revival at the
ship, wishes to transfer license
number of memberships sold. . Saturday from 1: 30-3: 30 p.m. Word of Faith Church In Slivers·
ownership to James and Early
Membership in Jlle club Is a big Irish plano music will be pro- ville beginning tonight· at 7: 30
"If K's not broke, don't nx H" Is
Hjl). Any . comments regarding . savings over paying each time at vlded by Mary Lucas and friends • p.m. David Carpenter, Belle· aooclldvtcl. If you do·try to, a prothe proposed transfer lliUSt be
the door, club officers polht out.
and family of the residents are vllle, ·w .va.'; will speak. Pastor "-ionalwlllbealongll'tonlyto"xH
submitted to the commissioners · Slpap Sll&amp;arday
Invited to attend.
Cary Holter Invites the public.
properly.
by April .4. The· request for
Slgnup for summer league
transfer must be In thz hands of · softball and baseball -In Racine
the Ohio Department of Liquor will be this Saturday from lOa.m.
Control by AprU 11.
·
to 12 noon at the Southern .
In more routine matters, the Kindergarten bqildlng. Addl·
commissioners approved the tiohal slgnup days will be Tues·
Satrw•y
(SEt OF 4)
,.
bond of Barbara 'Riggs as ll
day, March 201from 5: 30 to 7:30
deputy clerk of Meigs County p.m., and Saturday, March 31,
Court, and approved a request from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, also at
from Clerk of Courts Larry Southern Kindergarten. A birth
Spencer to attend the annual .
meeting of the Ohio Clerk of
Courts Association, to be held
next week In Columbus, and also
Marriage licenses have been
to pay Spencer's dues to the·s tale
Issued
In Meigs Probate Court to
association.
Theodore Carl Fisher, 33, and
N;J.Dcy Wallace Woolard, 26, both
of Pomeroy; Brian Eric Our·
. ham, 18, Pomeroy, and Rebecca
Renee WI~. 16, Rutland; Billy
. :t
II. 141 OFF II. 7 Ill CEIITENAIIY . • •
George
Scarbro~gh, 19, and
Church, where family suggests
Bobbie Jo Blessing, 18, both' of
contrtbutlons to be made.
~
Shade.
·

Ohio Lottery

•

Providence
mNCAA
play
..

ac-

•
----~------------"

Daily Number
305
Pick-4

3478

Page 3

aeo:r.

.•

continc

e

2 Sectiono, 14

·

I ·

i

'

WIT" ANY

W.Va. court
upholds back
t() work ·order -~

II
I

~HASE

licenses issued

II

·VI'RA .FURNITURE I
'

'

j.

Borina M.. Exline, 78, Eliza·
beth, W.Va. , ·died Wedensday at
:.... Born Oct. 7, 1918 In Pomeroy, Pleasant Vailey Hospital follow·
he had lived In Delaware since 1ng a n extended Illness ,,
September of 1947. He was a
Born June 9, 1911 in Wlrr
araduate of Ohio University, the County, W.Va., . she was the
J
d
'OberUne Graduate School of
:'lbeology, and Bexley HaliDlvln· daughter of the late ohn an
Regina Hamrick Leep. She was a
lty School, Gambier.
homemaker and longtime
· He . served as minister of the member of the Beulah Hill·
:First Baptist Church in Dela· . HUIIlble Presbyterian Church.
Sh 1 rvt db 'I d
h
:ware from 1947-87.
· ~ He 'was on the board of
e s su ve Y• ve aug ·
:d•-tors of. th.e D.elaware S•""""h ~,ers, Kathleen Becker. Omaha,
u=
.....
Neb.; Charolette Rowe, Ft. ·
·:a11d Hearing Center, .and was - Lauderdale, Fla.; Anna Morgan,
•president of the board oftrustees Elizabeth, W.Va.; Shirley Jolin·
:ot the Delaware County District son, Reedsville; anq.Linda Blb;Ubrary. '
bee, Belpre; one sister, Kathleen
• He was associated with the
d ld
. :olito Camp Farthest Out; a Bailey, Akron; 14 gran chi ren,
·
one step grandclilld, eight great
•non·denominational retreat grandchildren! and three step
:·movement, and served lour great grandchildren.
,
;years as Its state chah:man.
She was preceded in death by
• He ·wu ordained Into the her husband, Solomon Brent
at the Pomeroy Baptls~ Exline on July 26, 19~; and one .
~Chun:b.
·
d Le
· Survtvon lncl~e . his· · wife, brother' Rolan
ep,
.,Sopllllt •auwiez s•~lienson;
Services will be held 5at~y.
·-..
u · a.m . at the Busch F.uneral
'tluw-. JamesM.,t:lelaware;. .Home in Elizabeth, W.va: with
Ted. of lndlanapoUs, lDd,; and; the Rev. Ezra Higgins offk:lat·
Robert, Of Columbus; alld three lng. BurlillWlll be In the Knight's .
trandc:hlldren.
' ·
of Pythlas Cemetery in
. . He was precededHln deaMth by Elizabeth . .
his pareats, James · and_ yra
Friends may call at the funeral
·Stephenson, Pomeroy.
·
home after 7 p.m. on Thursday,
A memorial service was held all day Friday, and until services
feb. 11 at ' the First Baptist on Saturday .
~Columbus.

-.. , .....

w

~. AT

•••

CAR BASHERS HONOQD - Awards were preseqted .
on..~ af&amp;ef-n to participant&amp; In a recent '•car Basil'' held at
t'lellier's Restaurant and co-spollliOI'eci by Meigs Industries, tbe
Eulen Hlp Sop..,more «;tass acd the Commit'!!•. for the
AdvaneemeDI of Career Education In Soathen Lo~il School
District. Cltlry Wood, .at rllf!l, of M.elp Industries, pNI!ented to
·. Pomeroy ball-swomaa SallY Lambert, a$10 savlnp tiond wb~b
· · Lambert won In oae of many drawlnp beld throagblllil the Bu!" A
' tnpbJ teSoalllerllaa themostbonoretlac;bool (withHblilbee) was
preeealed . to Soathear teacher and . l!lember of lite , career

DYER 8Z,DDD.DOD:

:ministry

y

DrCUBTOIJ . ·

'
I
'

Sale Priced:

$16,999.• $35,999!.
'

•AitroVana

Celeste inks watercraft bill

van. (Full Size) · '
• Railed RoofVIUUI (That \fW Fit In T GaraP.).

• G-20

I

:~!:'t!~.Vana

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Gov. Richard Celeste signed a
major revision in Ohio's water·

. craft law, Wednesday raising the
penalty for reckless operation of
a boat and au thorlzlng "'ater·
craft officers to enforce the
state's drug laws on lakes and
livers.
The governor a! so signed a bUI,
Dai)J ltotk pricel
effective Immediately, permit·
(-of li:M Lm.) .
ling public utlllty commission
lllpe ud Mark 8mllh
Inspectors to detain truck drivers
ollllanl, Ell.. A Loewl
•·
suspected of using drug$ or
alcohol for the Ohio Highway
Am Electrtc Power .... ......... 30% Patrol.
·· AT6T ................... ........ ... ...41'h
· Albland on .................. ,.....34\lo ·
Another bill signed by the
Bob Evans ..... t ...... .......... ..... 13
· cliariniDK Shoppes ................. 9 governor exempts the trade-in
allowance on a new boat or
City Holding Co................ ,.. 13
outboard
motor from the state
Federal MogUI .............. ...... 17~
sales
tax.
However,
sales of used
Goodyear.T&amp;R .................. .37l&lt;'o
.
bOats
by
individuals
will be
Heck's ................................. 3¥,
subject
to
the
sales
tax
In the
Key Centurion .. .. ............. .. .13l&lt;'o
·
furure.
J,anck' End: .................. :.... .lB'l&lt;'o
Llmlfed.,Inc ......................... 40
The hew watercraft l.aw, which
Multimedia Inc.................... 78
takes
effect June 13, raises the
Rax Restaurants.............. ... . 2~
penalty
for reckless operation of
RQbbiDI &amp; Myers .......... ... ... 16*
.
a
boat
from a $100 fine to a
.SIIODey's Inc.......... ....... ., .... 12*
maximum
30-day jail term and a
Star Bank ................. , ......... 19\lo
$250 fine.
maximum
Wendy's lnt'l ...: .................. .4~
· WortbiDgton Ind.................. 20~
It also permits officers to
. (I a ds' Elldlnc., forutb quarter, ..... Sl, n,e 81 centa a ab~ dispose of junk boats and out·
board motors .
)

Stocks

l

··

,

~ POwer Seat.
• PowerTrl·FoldBede

• coc.1er8

.

• Radar Detector&amp;
• QualltyLwr:uryPrlc~j. We've Got Them Alii!!

• ~deo Cauette PlayeN

~----·--------------------------~~----~-~------·--·--··--·--·--·---~---r·"-··-~'--·~-·--------·--·--··--·--·-~ -~
BRAND NEW 1990
I
BRAND NEW 1990'

GRAND AM

\

All' New 1990

CHEVROLET C-1500 PICKUPS

pqntiac

Wei_ ~!

'· GfJnd Prixs
Discounted
..'

$3,000!!!

' $9 999De8YIM
1989

' 1989 .
1·.

1989 CADILLAC BROIJGHAM
Laadld wifl1 ,i..allllal

.'

..........

1989

BUICK REGAL .

~

19eQ P&lt;)tfflAC
BONNEVILLE

..LeSABRE

Loldld with txlrlll

~

RGASBORD

888

$11,988

SAMDAY, IIAICH 17, 1990
11:00 A.M.-1:00 , ...

. $8,777
19118 ~ QfWI) AM

CHEVROLET
LUIINA .

_,$399

..: ·-,·--------·-1

Aulo..li'caodlloi*"' tl-lllgN

DII•A'

LOidld with UIIWI

t

•

""

.

~

kend. In most places perlgps of
rain are expected from today
right into Saturday.
There also·was to be at least a
small chance for thunderstorms
today. In the easterri counties the
rain on tap for tonight . and
tomorrow . could be .hea.vy at
times .
With the wet weather comes
lower temperatures - the low to
mld·60s today. In the 40s tonight
and In the 50s Saturday - but
they still will be above normal in
most places. Normal highs this
time of year are from the mkHOs
to.mid·Sos and lows are from the
mld·20s to mld·30s·.
Looking allead through· Tues·
day, there Is a .chance of rain or
snow Sunday and Monday, while
Tuesday should be fair. Highs
wlll be inas tly· In the 40s Sunday
and Tuesday and in. the 30s
Monday. LOws wlll be in .the' 30s
Sunday and in the 20s Mo.nday
and Tuesday.
The early morning weather
map showed a cold front over
Ohio and a second cold front
forming over the Plains. The first
front wlli not mov~ much and was
expected to gradually dissipate
today. The second front ·Is fore·
cast to· cross Ohio tonight and
then become nearly stationary
.; just to the east of the state.

•••

A Portland woman was cited In a one-truck crash Thursday at
8:30p.m. on T.R. 135..8 of a mlle.north of S.R. 124, a~cordlng to
.the Ga!Ua·Melgs Post of .the State HighWay Patrol.
Jacqueline A. Ginther, -33, and her paesenger, Er,lca R,.
Ginther. 13, also of.Pprtland, were taken by the Melgs_County
E1,{S to Veterans Memorial Hospital. JacqueUne-Gtn,tlier was
· !rea ted and rejeased for a possible fractured riband lacerations
to thl' lip and chin, while Erica Ginther was treated and released
for concussion and scrapes.
~
.
The elder Glnthl!r, driving a 1985 F'ord F-150 '*kup, was
traveling north when she'illld off t)le right &amp;l!le of the road and
struck a terlce o~ by Pa"l Sel\Bl'11 of Sellars -Ridge Road,
· Portland.
.
'
·
,,1;. Jacqueline G!nlher was charged with Dwt a~d cited for
rlrlvll!g without 11 seat belt.
·

a

•

Dllverlcl*

BJ_pialte~ ~~;lpternatlonal
·,prtto~ ·sfrlpg . of record·
bteaklng hlgh temperature readings Is over, and the Buckeye
Stale ' ~ould even see soine snow
by early )lext week.•
Eight of the National Weather
Service's 10 reporUng stations in .
Ohio set high . temperature re·
cords Thursday, with 80 degree
readings In Cleveland and Zanes·
.- '1lle leading the -way . It was the
-fourth stralg~t day of record
1\lghs, the longest consecutive
string eve~ lor ·the month, of
March. '
Rain fell over piucn of, ,Ohio
overnight and much more rain Is
on tap for the next sev11ral days,
as well as considerably cooler
temperatures.
.,
'
The advance of the. ra.l n was
slow, and liS dawn approached
the easternmost counties still
!lad dry weather. The western
parts of the state received some
fairly significant amounts of
water from the. precipitation.
The heaviest rain was In Pan·
dora, Pumam CoQnty, , where
exactly a hall-Inch fell from
evening until midnight. · • ·

.Patrol cites Portkmd fuoman

Alao., li CIIOiditiDUilg

ST. PATRICK'S DAY SPECIAL

to Ohio~

: Loeal news briefs-....,
11111

~--·--··---·

retu~tts

· The weJ weather that developed over the B11ckeye Slate
during' the night wiU .continue
unabated for much of the wee

LOADED 11tH EXTRAII

MOM PERRY'S

10~488
$
.
DIIIW

Patr begin ser.vi.Rg ~ntences
. Depudes of the ·Meigs County Shertff's ,D epartment
tranaportell tWO prlspners 'to the Orient Recepdoil Cl!nter to
begin m\11111 aentencet recently lmpoaed by the Meigs County
CUurt of Common Pleas.
.
· .
·
I,J!cordlng to the report, the two transported were•Bufo~
5mallwood. "wl!O wu convicted .of cultivation, and Samuel
• McCloud. convicted tor vatadallsm.
OD Tlrunllay 1eYpinl, clepu• tooli ·a report of'a hitsklp
accldellt that occurred ln·IAtart Falls. According to the report.
·
Conttnllfd ·oa· page 12
·

"WHERE THE DRIVE IS WORTH 1'8E

DIFFERENCE" ·

+

304·273·90JI
•

•

··r. '•ether a.ta

UWBISWGOI,WV.

•.. ..,......._

_. . .

-·-----·"---·---· --~~~ -~-­
..

•

I

•

•

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (UP!)
The West Virginia Supreme
Court Friday declared the state's
teacher strike me.gal by uphold·
lng a ruling requiring Jeff~rson
County teachers to return . to
work Immediately.
The ruling '·follows an emer·
gency hearing Thursday In wh lc h
the Jefferson County Education
Assocatlon asked the court to lift
the order, arguing that state laws
do riot prohibit teachers'
walkouts.
A lawyer for the Jefferson
County teachers said the court's
ruling representated a "bad day
for West Virginia."
· In a five-page opinion Issued
Friday. the high court unanim·;
ously ruled teachers can be
forced back to work because they
are violating the terms or their
·committee, Janice Curry. A t1'opby to Eastern lor b~lng the most •
contracts.
al)used school (wllh 28 basha) we•\ ~Eastern Sophomore Dann:~;
"We are not aware of any
Short. Whaley's Auto, ~arwln, donated the two vehicles which
court, which, In the absence of
were used In the fund-raising Bub. Throughout the day, anyQne
some specific statute, has held
who wanted could pay S1 to take a hit- either an "honored hit" on
that teachers who are present.ly
a favorite school or an "abused hll" on a rival school. Also, area
under
contract could nor be
companies and builnes!Jel "l!ld" for abused bits on the school or
enjoined !rom.engaglng Ina work
schools of tbelr clioloe, or "ple.ed" for bo110red hils on the school
stoppage or _strike for higher
or scboolll oi theJr chok:e. l"lann!.are .In the worQ for another Car
wages," said Jusdce T1homas
Bash later In the Je&amp;r.
·
Mlller, In wrtting for the court.
.)'ustice Thomas McHugh,
whose wife is a teacher, dlsqilali·
·
• fled himself from the case.
The oplnton Is seen 1\S a
springboard for other county
boards of education to seej(courr
action to force strike teachers to
return to the cl~ssroom next
week .
-

~----- ------------~----·----'

Bonna Exline

26 Canto

AMutt~ia

r:==--------IICOUP~Nl----------~--~
1 ~·!:~
Free Set· _of Glasses

~....--Area ·d eaths--

I

1990 .
•

Mlrch

Ohio

a

· "BasiCally ~e·re going to have
to read the opinlon .and the order
or the court 'and see what
directions, if any. they give,"
said teachers' lawyer Larry
Schultz. "We have the duty to
advise (teachers) to obey lawful
injuctlons anil we most assuredly
wlll do that. .
"I've never believed this was a

question !o.r the courts." Schultz :
said. " Our laws and· the way we
handle our poll tical process lit :
West Virginia requires us to go·: ·
through this blzzare negotlating::
process in plibilc with the gover···
nor arid the legislature every-:
time the-legislature meets.
·.
"Instead of a two-person game :
of poll!lcal .hot potato, now it's :
going to be a three-person gam&lt;&gt;:
- the governor, the legislature
and the courts," Schlutz said.
West VIrginia schools were
closed Friday for a .two day .
cooling-off period Imposed ear· :
lier In the week bY state schools ·
Superintendent Hank .Marockie :
The state's first teachers strike ·
started March 7. when the West ·
Virginia Educa!lon Association '
charged that Gov. Casto11 Caper·
ron broke a promise to deliver
reachers a 5 percent pay raise
aw! to fully health Insurance and
retirement benefits. The WVEA
represents 16,000 .or West Vlrgl·
nia ·s 21,653 teachers. The rival
3,000-member West Virginia
Federation of Teachers joined
the walkout.
Thousands of teacher~ .boycot·.
ted schools this week, virtually
paralyzing most of the publiC
school system.
--Teitc~s ln"Grearbi&gt;lti Cvanty
agreed to return totheciassroom .
Monday because o( a local flting
threat, and the county's board
agreed to back the teachers' call
lor a special legislative session to
deal with education issues.
. Thursday ni;iht the Legislature
approved .a 3.ii percent pay raise
lor teacbers and 2 percent for
school service personnel, effective July 1, when the new fiscal
year begins:·
· Across the bOrder, the Giles
County, Va. , sc hool system
agreed to take West .:VIrginia
students whose parents are frus·
trated by the strike.

Brachman proposes
limit on spending
SIGiNS,OF SPIIUI'iiG - 1Not· yc¢; bul Edith Klier's peach tree
cloesn'l know lhat! The lree Is In fuU bloom and· can be seen on
Lincoln Heights Road. (By the way, Spring begins on March 20.
'

February wholesale
prices said stable
WASHINGTON tUPil - Pri· von Dongen. of the National
ces stab!Uzed at the wholesale Association of WholesaJer ·
levelln February, due to declln· Distributors . "After January's
tng energy ~o.sts, alter climbing number this Is welc:Ome news. "
1.8 percent In January, the Labor
"It's not a courageous predlc·
Department reported Friday .
lion to suggest we'll l\ave · a
unseasonably warm winter continuation of what we've seen
.weather In much of the' country for the balance of the year." von
l!elped push ttie often volatile Dongen said.
.
• energy prices doWn 5 percent,
During February, the costs for
1 th
finished consumer goods deafter a 13.6 percent ga n e ciin-~ ·o.2 percent after 'rising 2.5
month before, while food prtces
""
rose at-a slower •rate', according percent the month before. Prices
to the department's Pr6ducer for Intermediate goods rose 1.4
Price Indelt.
percent from year·ago levels
Excluding food and energy . while crude material ' prices
prices,- producer pr~s moved gained 5.6 percent.
.,
h
th
With much of the nation
up 0.4 percenl during t e man . . enjoying unseasonably warm
Eeonomlsts welcomed the re·
-port u an , Indication &lt;that lhe weather, home heating oil prices
FOWih of infiatioll on tl;e whole· fell 30.2 percent, the)owest level
sale level · has been tamed. at since 111st August. Gasoline prl·
leasttemporarlly. .
ces moved down 2.3,percent after
"The acceleration Is ·curbed rising 16.7 percent the month
but tntaldon Itself Is not," said before. Natural gas costs posted
Cynthia t,atta, an economist at a •marginal gain after rising 3.2
Data Resourcea -Inc., In Lexlng· percent In January.
ton, M..s. ''It cleerly Is not
Also In the energy sector,
getdng any
but the Fed diesel toe! and kerosene prices
·haan't made any beadway dropped more than 25 perce_nt
ettber." ·
'during the month w!llle llquefl~
During the past 12 months, natural gas prices dropped about
Inflation at the \vholitsa1e·level 15 percent after riling nearlY 50
hu risen 5.1 percent, witb food percent the month befOJ:e.
··
1 1n 6 1
1 d
Food cqs IB at the producer
. prices ga n g · percen an
level rose 0.9 percent In Febru.
energy costa rising 11.7 percent, ary after riling 2.1 percent the
the department's Bureau of month before. Prices for eggs
Labor Statlsdc:a said. ·
"We have a relatively low but dropped 24 percent during the
stU! troublesome rate of inflation month, nearly offsetting advan·
In the economy," a~ Dirk ~\ ces over the past 6 months.

.The Ohio House, before joining
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) -An
the
Senate In weekend adjourn·
Ohio Senate task force on cam·
ment.
passed 89-1 a blll regulat·
palgn !lnance reform was asked
ing
the
disposal of construction
Thursday . ,to · consider a pilot
and
demolition
debris.
project limiting spendi~ ro
Brachman
referred
to a series
$500,000 for each candidate In the
of newspaper articles claiming
state treas)lrer's race this year.
that Treasurer Mary Ellen With·
The proposal was offered by
Judllh Brachman. the Republi· row, her Democratic opponent.
can candidate for state treas· : steered Investments of treasury
urer, who said it would help money to lavor~d fin.a nclallnstl·
restore confidence In the treasur· tutlons which then contributed to'
her re-election campaign, some·
er's office and provide a stepping
thing
the treasurer has·denled.
stone to future money iimita!lons
Continued on page 10
In otlier contests.

worse,

----~~~-------~-----------~~--~----~--------- -~----~--~'--------~--~--------.

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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35553">
              <text>March 15, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2841">
      <name>exline</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6670">
      <name>leep</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="617">
      <name>stephenson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
