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, OHIO

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Corner of Oener~l H8rtlnger Parkway end

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CoUege

Ohio Lottery

champs

Daily Number

crowned

PtMStteet

358
Pick 4

TELEPHONEi,lll-3471

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9284

OPEN 7 DAViS A WEEK
8 A.M.-10 P.M.

·

:Su1per Lotto
-29-42

We ~cept Food Slimp~&amp; W.I.C. Coupona

Rain tonight. Low In mid
30s. Rain likely Friday. Highs
In low 40~.

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Pomeroy

Caprrtemed 1988

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enttne
2 Section1. 14 PegH 25 Cenll
A Multimedia lf'!C. Newapaper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March. 3, 1988

Ohio OKs solid waste dispoSal revision bill

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By NANCY YOACBAM
we should be Involved now,
unless we're asked by township
Sentinel staff Writer
Orange Township Trustees say residents."
they have not been asked by
Robinson said the only comresidents of their township to ments he's heard about developbecome Involved In the pursuit of lng a new sewage system propfunding for a se~Yage disposal osal for Tuppers Plains came
sys~ for Tuppers Plains, and
from Jacobs, and that no one
that they should not be Involved from Tuppers Plains has said
14nleas uked.by the residents.
.anything to him !!bout such a

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CQmmtuloners
by
Wilbur Robinson, Orange
trustee.
·At last week's commissioners
meeting, Olive Township Trustees Paul Life and Joe Lantz
reported to the commissioners on
a recent meeting at the Meigs
County Health Department. The
meeting was called by Jon
Jacobs, of the health depart·
ment, and Included Orange and
Olive trustees, County Develop·men! Director Kim Shields and
representatives of Engineering
Associates, Wooster. Discussed
was the Environmental Protectlon Agency ban on building In
Tuppers Plains and the need to
alleviate sewage problems In the
community, which are the cause
for the ban.
Olive trustees told thecommlssloners last week that they were
willing to become Involved 111 the
project, only If the commissioners would also become Involved.
The commissioners said they
were'willing to do whatever they
. could !O help, and to Instruct Kim
Shields to assist In seeking out
possible funding sources, as long .
as they were asked to do. so by ·
both Olive and Orange Trustees.
The commissioners said they
were reluctaht to become Involved In the project without the
request of the trustees and the
PeoPle of the area, since they
- already spent over $60,000_ In
·engineering fees to develop a
proposed sewage system that
would satisfy EPA, and then
yeats trying to secure the fundIng, finalize the plans and and get
the construction started, only to
have the project turned down by
Tuppers Plains residents.
Olive trustess presented their
letter to the commissioners .a t
last week's meeting.

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Assorted·Varieties

RC, Diet Rite
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not
asking the
to do
anything at this time, "but we'll
be .back (to speak with the
commissioners) If asked by the
people. The bottom line for us
(the trustees)," he added, "Is
what ihe people want."
Kim Shields told the commls- .
stoners later In the meeting that
the tone of.meetlng at the healih
department was that the problem of enforcing sewage disposal
guidelines In Tuppers Plains falls
under the jurisdiction o! the
health department. Because of
this, Jacobs has taken Into
consideration an ·alternative e'nglneerlng design which calls for
grlnder,pumps and a centralized
sewage system, which might In
the long run, be a highly cost
effective system for Tuppers
Plains. Shields said It was his
understanding that Jacobs
started with the trustees because ·
they are the elected officials for
the townships, and If they (the
trustees) were favorably dis·
posed toward the project, the.
next step would be a public
meeting.
At ·this point, said Shields,
there Is nothing to lose by looking
Into funding possibilities. "But If
_folks In Tuppers Plains aren't

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stoners,
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the commissioners' degree
Involvement In the situatiQn.
The commissioners entered
Into a contract with Burgess &amp;
Nlple, Ltd., Parkersburg, W.Va., .
for architectural services and ·
other related services needed to
prepare an estimate of costs to
put a new roof, downs pouting and
gutters on the county courthouse.
Bill Dlttoe, of the Parkersburg
firm, gave the commissioners a
ball park figure of $75;000 or less,
Including his company's fee, to
repair the roof of the historic
building.
The roof has been plagued with
leaks for several years, and the
commissioners have been setting
aside money for the past two or so
years to replace the roof.
Documents necessary to bid
the project may be expected
around tl,le~nd of March, Dlttoe
said.
State. Issue II funding was also
discussed briefly by the commissioners and County · Engineer
Philip Roberts. Methods of fairly
disbursing Issue II funds to
Ohio's counties are still under
consideration by legislators.

Hunting bill sent to House

SIGNAL'! - Melp High Senior Electronics
students, Jerry Grueser, Scott Geyer and Charles
· Cleland, under the supervision of Senior Instructor Dale Harrison are shown checking signals
through an AM·FM receiver. Grueser Is a student

Road temporarily
closed to traffic
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts reported this morning
that Chester Township Road 83,
Skinner Road, Is temporarily
closed to traffic. Roberts said the
county highway department Is
replacing a wooden deck bridge
on the road wllh a steel deck, and
that materials .for the deck ran
short !)n Wednesday afternoon.
Worl!en relumed to the highway
garll«e for the needed materials,
but rain late Wednesday after·
noon hampered completion of the
p~oject and the road h!'od jle be
clo~~ed. Roberts expects the road ·
will be reopened sometime to-

COLUMBUS,' Ohio (t;PI) -A nip off .three of the 10 acres and
bill that. would allow Sunday destroy the crop," he said.
hunting of fox and groundhog In "Farmers 111 my area would
Ohio won &lt;IPProvalln the Senate welcome hunters to come out and
Wednesday, 27-5, and was sent to · ellml01ite these critters."
the House.
· ·
Gaeth admitted the Sunday
·Sponsor Sen. Ben Gaeth,
hunting would draw opposition,
Defiance, said that since the red but orily Sens. Eugene Bra.nstooi,
fox was put on the Department of D-Ullea, and Richard Schafrath,
Natural Resources list of pro- R-Loud2nvllle, spoke for ·the
tected game, It could only be opposition. .
day. ·'
hunted on commercial game
"I don't oppose the game
presel'l(es. He said the bill would preserves, but I oppose open
give the working person another ht.mtlng on Sunday, the one day
But Orange trustees did not day to hunt and 11 would provide
request the lnvolvment of the additional Income for the game for peace and Sl)fety of the family
when we're trying to promote
commissioners and are not sure preserves.
·
family togetherness," saki SchaCOLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) their (the trustees) Involvement
Gaeth also said farmers would
frath. "It'll be bad If rou can't let · The Ohio Senate gave unanimous
Is necessary at this time. .
welcome hunters for croundhog.
your kids go out wlth.out worry- approval Wednesday to a bill that
"We weren't Involved before,"
"In two weeks, gtoundbogs can
1
Ing abOut their dodging bullets. would aliow parents to set aside.
said RobiiiiOn, 'and wedon'Ueel go throu11h a sovbean field, and
And you know not all hunters are money regularly In a tuition trust
good shooters."
fund so tbere would be money for
Branslool also objected to the their children's college
Suaday bunting saying that education.
A motion to dismiss a class lnjunctton be Issued enjoining the . farmers and landowers are lookThe biU, · sponsored by Sen .
action suit flied In the Melp defenclallll from enforcing the Jq for reUOIII to close their Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyru.s, was
County Common Pleas Court . Atten4ance·Make Up policy lands to bunters.
approved 32-0 and was sent to the
Joining Branalool and Scba- House.
aaalnlt the Attendance-Malle Up Issued after the recent ·teachers'
·
fratb In votlnJ aplut the bUI · "Parents could set aside a
PoUcy Of tbe Melp Local Scbool atrlke In the dlltrlct.
District . hu beell flied In the. ' 'lbe dllmlllalaction IIIII nine were Sena. Linda Fumey, D- small amount of money from the
ltellll of defense atatiq reuons Toledo;
Paul Pfeifer, R· time a cbUd ll .bom and by the
court.
The OriJinal action flied by the suit should be dlan!l4eed and Bucyrua, and Michael White, Ume the cblld Is 16, there would
flied with the dllmllsal request II D.Cieveland.
Wesley Max Whitlatch, et al,
be e110111b to pay for a four-year
aaalnlt tbe Melp Local School · a JenlthY brief cltiq declllona In . l:be bUialao prohibita the uae of education," Pfeifer said .
Dlatrlct ao.rd of Education IJid . otllercourtcuee whlcballqedly "i«'!i·terraiD veblcleiiD tjle t a • . •'For a child liarD tocla)', If
Dtatitct SUperintendent pan £. •bllllt lela! reu1111a wby the of pme anlmaiJ and Jnere- coati rile the way lbey have
Morrll ulll ·that a temporary claaa actton suit should be f - for conimerclal fllblnJ bafa, ltl colllp education would
Injunction and a permanent dlmlued.
Uoeues. '
tll0.800," be said. ·

R·

Deli ·pizzas
(CHEESE &amp; PEPPEIONI
12 INCH

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waste disposal . district , if a
landfill Is needed and is In the
public Interest.
Rep. John Boehner, R-West
Chester, an opponent, said the
bill caters to environmental and
citizen groups, and to the "bureaucrats" at the EPA. "We live
In the real world and we need a
real solution, " he said.
Boehner said the legislation
does nothing to solve the landfill
problem but creates disincentives for private Industry to
collect and haul trash. ''The
result will be a . significant
Increase In the cost of garbage
collection without Improving the
situation," he said .
·'The cost to the consumer will
double or triple for garbage
pickup, " agreed/ Rep. James
Buchy, R-Greenvllle. "We need
to allow people to go back to
incinerators. We've got people Jn
the rural areas throwing garbage
In the streets because they cari't
use the landfills."

behind the project, then It won't
fly," he commented.
Shields alSo shared his concerns that If Tuppers Plains
hasn't tried to alleviate Its ·
sewage problems by 1991, when
EPA has geared up to go after
unsewered areas around the
state, grant money may no
longer be available.
•, SI!ICe o.-ange.

File motion to dismiss suit

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mlttee wrestled with the terms of · leaks.
hauling trash from as far away
the bill for weeks, balanclng .the
Fifty-one landfills "grahdfa· as the East Coast and dumping it
thered" Into the permit system in Ohio.
Interests of environmentalists,
The solid waste disposal dis·
concerned citizens, the Ohio for tl]e last 20years would have to
EPA, local governments ; trash apply for new perm! Is within 18 trlcts would keep 75 percent of
haulers and landfill owners.
months . The EPA would be able the fee revenues, with the rest
Secrest said 15 counties have
to close unqualified ones, subject going to the Ohio EPA for
no available landfills and 50 to local variances If there were a cleanup of unneeded or abancounties have landfill capacity lack of space for waste disposal. doned landfills and hazardous
which will last less than five
The bill sets a fee schedule lor waste.
years.
trash dumping, with local disThe bill requires the EPA to
The bill provides for local tricts charging up to $1.50 a ton make recommendations I" one
for local .&gt;yaste, up to $3 a ton lor year lor the · disposal of used
wast~ dlspos{ll districts, either
single-county or joint districts, to Ohio garbage brought in from tires, a common eyesore ln.Ohio,
make long-range plans for siting outside the county or district , and and ash frcim municipal
landfills and for alternative up to $4.50 a ton ·for out-of-state .Incinerators :
It also provides for background
methods of handling solid waste,
garbage.
"
Including re-use and recycling.
· Rep. Daniel Troy. D· investigations of landfill owners
Willowick, who chaired a com- In response to the attorney
.It also requires the Ohio EPA
to write specifications for thE' mittee to study Ohio lan&lt;:lfills, · general's ·office, which disclosed
construction and operation of
told his colleagues that landfills that the owner of a landfill near
landfills. and to enforce those
In nearby states charge $60 to $80 Steubenville had connections
with organized crime.
a ton to receive waste.
specifications to prevent toxic
There would be a moratorium
Currently, Ohio landfill opera·
tor.s set their own lees, and on new landfills, a Ithough excepeastern · Ohio residents have tions could be made by the EPA
complained that companies are .with the permission of the local

Senate approves
tuition fund blll ·

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landfill near Amanda, Ohio.
Rep. Steven Williams, RLancaster, whose district In·
eludes· Amanda, told his col·
leagiles trucks are already
''rolling through downtown Lan·
caster" with some of the out-of·
state wastes.
"This Is a serious problem,"
said Wllllanis, asking for a
favorable vote on the bill, which
Is supported by the administration ot Gov. Richard Celeste.
Opponents complained the
measure would raise garbage
· collecjloil fees ani! give the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency too much power without
. Improving. the situation.
"Oh Ia Is ciri the verge of a
serious crisis," said Rep. Joseph
Secrest, D-Senecavllle, whose
Energy and Environment Com-

Orange Twp. residents have
not·asked ·for sewer funding ·

Cardinal
White Bread

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110'
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II

Boneless Charcoal
Steak .

By LEE LEONA-RD
UPI sta&amp;ehoose Reporter
,COLUMBUS, Ohio (uP!)
Amid reports thaI a huge ship·
ment of 'incinerator ash m·ay be
on Its way from Philadelphia to
central Ohio, the Ohio House has
~ a deterrent to out-ofstate trash .
.Passed Wednesday, 87-7, .and
forwarded to the Senate was a
major overhaul of the state's
solid waste disposal law which
dlicolrages Imported garbage
·and , provides for long-range .
planning of how local governments may deal with trash. ·
· A Liberian ship containing
15,000 tons of ash Is docked at
Lewes, Del., awaiting tests In
Philadelphia for the toxicity of Its
cargo. Plans call for the. ash, If It
Is non-toxic, to be shipped to a

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·from Southern High School; Geyer, from Meigs
High School, and Cleland, a student from Eastern
Hlgb School, representing all three high schools In
the Meigs Yocalional Educational Planning
District. (See additional picture and story on page

7).

Ohio legislators check
health-fitness displays
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) how many calories you need to
Legislators got the wheels mov- maintain an Ideal body weight,"
Ing Wednesday, with physiology
she said.
students standing right beside
The computer printout could
them to make sure they dldn 't do
also determine the amount of
too much huffing and puffing.
protein, fats, · carbohydrates,
Many legislators, lobbyists
cholesterol, sodium, potassium.
and legislative· staff members
vitamins and minerals were
took advantange of an· eight·
contained In that 24-hour diet. It
station health and fitness display
also graded thedletona scale o(l
set up by the Ohio Association of
to 10, with 10 being a perfect diet,
Health, Physical Education, Re- and lesser numbers signifying
creation and Dance on Leglsla·
the severity ol changes thai
live Fitness Day.
needed made.
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' 'The group wanted to do
something at the state level,"
said Dr. Tim Kirby, head of the
exercise physiology laboratory
at Ohio State University.
Soulb Ceniral Ohio
"Other state~ are doing similar
Occasional rain today, with
programs," said Kirby.
highs In the upper 40s. OccaInstead .of Inviting legislative sional rain tonight, with a low In
personnel to go through the
the mid 30s. Rain likely Friday,
sophisticated program at the
with highs In the low 40s.
. laboratory at OSU,l&lt;Jrby and the
The probability of precipita.. exercise physiology students
tion Is nearolOO percent today, SO
brought much of their program
percent tonight and 70 percent
to the Statehouse.
Friday .
·
Legislators hail been given a
Winds will be from the norchart wbere they could list what theast at 10 to 20 mph today and
they ate during a 24-hour' period.
from the .nortbeast near 10 mph
They were encouraged to fill this
tonight.
·
In specifically, paying attending
Extended Foreeaal
to exact amounts and brand
Sll&amp;urday throu111 Mt~nclay ·
names.
Generally fair through the
Annette Brown, a reJistered
period. Highs will range from 35
dietitian and craduate student In
to 45 Saturday, climbing Into tbe
exercise physloloay, ran tile 40s Sunday and ranging from 45
chart tbroUJh the computer tbe
to 115 Monday. OverniJht 10\\?
J!«SSn's nutrltlonallteedt.
, will be In the 20a early S&amp;turday
. "We flpre In your hei.Jbt,
and raliJ(ng from tbe mJQ :ZO. to
wei.Jbt and activity level and
the mid 30s Sunday alld r.tonoay
then the computer can . - a mOI'IIIqa.

Weather

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ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Publisher

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PAT WHITEHEAD
Aullllalll Publlllber/Conlroller

P.ge 2-The DIIJiiY Sentinel
Ponl8rOV-Midclaport. Ohio
. Thldday. March 3,1 988

Playing .hid&amp;and-seek ·with cocaine

Daily Sentinel

111 c;:ourt street
PomOlroy, Oblo
D~OTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF'TRI'l MEIGS-MASON AREA

.

BOB HOEFLICH
Ge-n eral Manqer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
•' Association
and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

••

WASHINGTON- How would
1 you sneak 75,000 ldloJ of cocaine
Into the counpoy? The task sounds
harder than It Is. Drug smugglers
manage to do It every year. Tl)e
tough job lles)W!th the people who
try to stop the avalanche.
A task force of Pentagon
experts recently analyzed the
means and methQds being used to
detect Illegal drugs and appar·
ently found the task so monumen·
tal that they couldn't describe It
In mere words. So they resorted
to hypothetical numbers. The
numbers show )ust how easy It Is
to break the law and how hard It

Is to enforce !t.
The Pentagon ·looked at the
typical size of cocaine shipments
that have been seized and specu·
lated how many trips It would
lake· 'to bring lp, ·by various
means of transit, the 75,000 kUos
of cocaine consumed In the
United States each year. They
speculated that the cocaine CQUld
enter the country hidden on:
-250 of the 150,000 private
airplane flights Into the United
States each year (with each or
the 250 planes carrying 300
kilos) ;
-375 of the 131,000 non-

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbo.uld be less than 300 words
tong. Alllettefsaresubject ,to editing and must be signed with name, add.J:'es!!i and
telEphone number. No unsigned letters: will be pUblished. Letters should be In
• good ta•te: · a~ressln&amp; lssuest n.ot personalities.
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:Letters
to the editor
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Ohio

Let them know how ·w e feel!

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· Dear Sir:
, In December of last year, the
· U.S. and U.S.S.R. reached ail
: historic agreement that p_rovldes
; for the elimination of an enUre
·• class of nuclear weapons. The
:: IJI!F Treaty, as It Is called, would
· only reduce the nuclear arsenals
: of the two countries by about 4%.
·: While that Is a very small
;. percentage of our total nuclear
·: forces , It Is a very _large first step
• In the right direction of making
· our world safter from the risk of
nuclear war. There are very
rigid verl!lca!ton procedures
; that have been built-In the treaty
;. to en~ure that neither side cheats
-: In the redl,lctlon .process.
· In March the U.S. Senate will
·: be voting for or against ratlflca·
· tlon of the INF Treaty. It takes a
; y ote or two-thirds oft he Senate to
·• i.atlfy the agreement.· I am
:• Writing this letter to ask all

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Wrestling
matches .post~ned

~- Today in history

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BOLlAND. OIIID (UPI}- Tldl week•a'
0111.. Ill.. ICIMNtl wrnUI-c rall~p,
twnpllrtl by Dl~~:k a ..wr, IIHI'CIIary·
t,.M.-er of Uw Ollie RIP 8c:Mol
WreltU.. COACl,._ .\Mociat.... aM
~ed br tJPI (firM place vok!J I•
.......ellel): '

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U aluw..cll St. Edwa ... llS)

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t.leiH .

IN

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II

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~. . . . . . . . . , \l

7-1
71
tl,

-Come

Dul

With
U1/

Ford Tempo
Plymouth Horizon
Chrysler Lebaron
Dodge Shadow
Plymouth Reliant
. Dodge D60 Pickup
Mini
Home '

60
60
60
60
''60
48
24

9.26
9.26
9.25
9.25
8.9
10.25
12

187.81
146.05
202.43
2P2.43
186.29
178.25
236.30

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87
87
87
87
· 87

The wrestling matches sehe·
du.ied for March' ll at Rio Grande
College/Community College's
Lyne Center have .b een postponed untU further notice, a
spokesman for the Rio Grande
Athletic Boosters Club
announced.
The matches, which were to]
feature Texas -wrestling champions Bobby Ful,on and Tommy
Rogers, were ~lated as fund·
raiser for the lioosters club.

his

Berry's: World

TheteamenterlngLyneCentel' Ustsfor scoring (19.1 per game)
Ray Singleton, who has started
Given honorable mention statonlght to oppose the Rio Grande and 3-polnt field goal percentage as a forward for the Redmen.
tus by the MOC were Singleton
Redmen In the first round of llle (46), while teammate Chuck ' was cited tor scoring (16.5 per and Kearns. Rlttlnger receive)!
District 22 play.offs Is making Its Lewis was also·cited for scoring game), rebounding (5.9) and
the J. Albert Turner Award.
first appearance In post-season (12.4) and assists (7.6) . Harris field goal percentage (57.8) . .deslgnatlng him as the MOC !s
action In several years.
was also named to the All• Guard Jim Kearns made the lists player of the year for this pa$J
urbana's Blue . Knights fin· District team Monday.
season. Hewasalsonamedtothe
1 .•r •coring (13.3 per game) and
lshed the 1987·88campalgn with a
For Rio Grande, R!ttlnger was :;.point field goal percentage AU-District team Monday .
:
13-17 slate, Its best showing since _n amed to the lists for rebounding
(42). Guard Anthony Rljymore
Tickets for the 7: 30 game ~re ~4
1980-81 when It posted an 18·13 (7.5); field goal percentage (60.3)
was credited for assists (4.2 per · lor adults, $2 for stud~nts and ~2
record.
·
and fr~ throw percentage (76.5). game).
lor Rio Grande students.
90 72
A
victory
Ohio [roiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
Dominican
last over
Saturday
snapped a 7-game losing streak
for the Blue Knights, who still
qualified for the playoffs, finish·
lng eighth In the district. urbana
Is under the stewardship of
second-year coach Bob Ronal
and will benefit from the expe- rlence of three of jts players who
were honored earlier this week.
Brett Baker, the 6-6 forward
for Urbana who was named to the
Mid-Ohio Conference second
team and All-District team, ·
pumped In 28 points against ODC
last. weekend, topping off a
season that saw him named MOC
Player of the Week for the final
week of conference play.
1987 DODGE OMNI9.250fo·60 MO. *125.17 MO.
Baker, a junior from Eaton, Is
expected !o start as a fol'Ward
against the Redmen along with
leading shooter Anthony Harris,
36
194.15
placed highly In the. MOC's final
83
Chev. Scottsdale Pickup
10.26
statistics for the regular season.
48
106.71
84
Ford Escort Wagon
10.26
He was credited with averaging
48
-203.74 ••
20.2 points j&gt;er game_,placing him
86
Ply"louth Voyager - silver
10.25
seCond In scoring behind Rio
48
178.25
Cht'ysler Lebaron GTS.
86
10.25
Grande's Ron Rlttlnger (22.4 per
48
241.96
game) .
86
Plymouth Voyager - bh..e
10.26
In addition, Baker was named
54
208.63
G.M.C. Jimmy
86
10.25
to the lists for rebounding (7.4per
60
186.29
87
game), . field goal percentage
Plymouth Sundance
8.9
(57.7) and free throw percentage
60
186.29 ••
87
Dodge Lancer
8.9
(90-l) . Harris was named to the

f•''•

.

Keep the census honest_'--::-------'--_R_ob_e_rt_~_a_lt......er_._s

Urbna -in first post-season ·meet tn years

Msroh
-, Serfni•-

p~ilit ___v,_·nc_en_t_Ca~rro_ll

:Arms control:
. A man's -world

..- - · ~-

n

IHMttn: h ................1;
II. 1hlt ,....._.It; II. Y..-.... II;

annually (with a mere 34.3 kiloS:
hidden In each).
,·
:
As difficult as It Is to spot drugs;
on people and In their luggase•
the greatest dete~tlon chal·:
lenges; according to the report,: ;
"are the large cargo containers, '
In which the majority of al~
lmports .are now shipped."
•
"Unlike railroad cars, to.{
Instance, there Is at present no,
acceptedmeansforrapldly-on
automatically - Identifying thE!
owner, tlie shipper or the origin
of the container. There Is also ncl
adequate means for ~annlng th!l
contents or even · Identifying
Inner compartments·;"
;
What the drug enforcement
officers need are systems fon•
monitoring and sampling th~
contents of those cargo contain'
ers, the report said. ··
·
The experts concluded: ;
"Means for sorting these Illicit
needles from these legitimate.
haystacks - without Interrupt'
lng the essential !low of com:
merce - presents a majoi
challenge (or the technological
community."
Footnote: It Is just as hard tQ
spot Illicit drug money leavlni!
the United States as I~ Is to detecl
the narcotlct comlng,ln, accord'
lng to the task Ioree. "Drui!
money could leave the country as
one dollar In ever $2,500 amoag
the $1 trillion of International
· wire transfers every business
day -:•

..

~

a.eu •r~c~~~

.

concerned citizens to contact
your Senator and encourage him
to vote for the Treaty In Its
present form. President Elsen·
hower once sa:ld that someday
· the poeple of the world would
want peace so much, that the
governments would have to allow
them to have it. This Is an
opportunity for we the people. to
stand up and be counted, as those
who favor peace. ·
You can contact your Senators
by writing them at the following
adaress: The Honorable John
Glenn (Metzenbaum, Byrd,
Rockefeller, etc.), U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C. 20510.
Let's let them know that we
. On the road to Super Tuesday, lng number or'"global studies" returned·, this time under the
feel that It Is time to give peace a
. right or Pat Robertson. I'd as
·
GOP
moderates and the Chris- programs.
,
' _b anner of Pat Robertson.
chance.
.
\
readily vote for. Ed Asner a~
tian .right find themselves talking
Now watch network television
What do "those people" want? · Robertson, .who tends to embod)l
Sincerely,
Admittedly, a few ofthem want
Roger L. Grace . past each other In mutual and count the number of times
the uglier tendencies of
bewilderment.
evangelical, fundamentalist or something that must never be: a
Racine, Ohio
movement.
I
"What do those people want," merely devout Christians are "Christian nation" that Is both
He has said, for example, tha\
blurted an exasperated George portrayed as anything but b!- overbearing at home and jlngols·
Christians make the best patriot~
Bush staffer the other day, goted bumpkins or buffoons.
tic abroad, and hence suffocating
and that only the devout should
oblivious to the cultural battle
Finally, review press reports to those who fall to share the
hold office. Meanwhile, his eco;
raging before his eyes.
of disputes over whether contro· vision.
nomic theories descend Into the
. Since few commentators seem verslal books should be put on · • But the religious right would no
bizarre and he repeats dubious(
eager to make the case for "those school library shelves. Do .the doubt also appreciate something
Inflammatory
anecdotes about
pedple," let me have a go at II. reports acknowledge that any less than total victory, Including
drug
use,
AIDS
and other social
That Bush partisan might find parent, as a taxpayer, naturally a reprieve from the assault on
By DANNA WALKER
problems.
this hard to believe, but the · has the right to applaud or.o bject their lifestyle and faith by
. WASHINGTON (liP!) -The Committee for National Security and
But If Robertson himself Is
Ch.rlstlan right fee ls bel!la· to !the sorts of books a school academic and media elites. For
, Women for a Meaningful Summit sponsored speakers and gave a
beyond
the- political pale, hi~
guered, too., ror ,20 ye!U'S 'Of -purchases? .,The selecJ!on mqst that matter, they'd enjoy a halt to
• breakfast for women reporters assigned. to cover the INf Treat¥
campaign taps Into· genuine
more, Its values hS:ve been under be •made by ·someone, after all. . tlu! hypoerlfly that accuses them
&gt; .process through the Senate, which was to begin In a few days. I went,
social grievances that deserve a
siege
In the schools, the media More probably, such disputes are of seeking to legislate morality Is
:. )\lith reservations.
·
hearing.
!
and the courts.
treated as mere attempts at legislated all the time, by liberals
-:-; For one thing, I knew there would be no breakfast for male INF
America's opinion-makers and ·
Consider how Christianity is· "censorship."
and conservatives alike.
:- reporters. That, presumably, was either because the men wouldn't
political elites ·a re usually the
·
treated
In most popular textThe Christian right Is the one
What are affirmative action
: dare to keep women out or they alre:~dy knew everything about arms
first to decry cultural Imperial ~
books. Not only Is Its historical. element In the 1980 Reagan and forced busing, for example,
-; controL
Ism when Its victims reside In the
role often minimized, lt Is some- coa,litlon that failed to cash In If not governmental attempts to
:•. Based on that premise, I didn 't wantto be accused of discrimination
Third · World. Where Is slmllaf.
times even Ignored.
politically. Budget-cutting and a shape society according to a
. ; myself and I didn't want to admit my Ignorance by showing up.
understanding, let alone symOr consider the condescending defense buildup never topped Its particular moral vision?
. ·. 1 also didn 't want to admit I looked forward to trading Information
pathy, for victims of culturai
manner In which Western culture agenda- and so Its troops have
Don't misunderstand: I hold no
:- Jn a safe women-only environment. But I did, it was, and I got useful
Imperialism here at home?
'
Itself Is presented In an lncreas·
· facts, gUidance and quotes for a pre-hearing weekend· story .
general bftef for the Christian
'· ~ There Is also something else disturbing about my Initial reluctance
;: l o attend: It's what Betty Frledan noted In recent IntervieWs on the
: 20th anniversary of her landmark book "The Feminine Mystique.' '
:.: Ifs riot professional in this era to be a feminist..
.
1'
•. Feminists are those strident females who blame everything on
are
blacks,
Hispanics,
Aslsans
sate
for
any
undercount.
"We
fact,
there
.Is
no
way
to
art!flt
WASHlNGTON
(NEA)Poor
, discrimination against women when everyone knows women In the
and members of other minority don't play with the numbers, ..
clally come up .with a· complett
blacks living In urban ghettos
: l980s have equality In all .things , and if they don't , It must be because
says
Rober!
Ortner,
under
groups
who
often
are
concenand
accurate count.
j
don't have an easy life, but there
&gt; Jhey haven't reached for it. demanded it, taken it.
secretary
for·
e
conomlc
affairs
.In
trated
In
the
country's
largest
Moreover,
there
Is
no
reliable
are limits to what government
·• •. Not In arms control. they don't.
the Commerce Department, the
statistical technique to COIJipen~
should do for them - and cities.
; . The Senate hearings on the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty
Census
Bureau's
parent
The
Census
Bureau
acknowl·
sate for the Inclusion of llleagaJ
"adjusting" the census to com• have passed their third week now . The Senate Foreign Relations
edges
the
problem.
It
believes
organlza
tlon.
.
aliens In the census. The Census
pensate
for
those
who
evade
the
· Committee and Senate Armed Services Committee have heard from
1980
count
missed
1.4
percent
Ortner
properly
notes
that
the
Bureau estimates that slightly
official
count
Is
not
a
legitimate
;.!lozens of official government and ex-government witnesses.
even
of
the
nation's
population.
Mowell
-intentioned
adjust·
more then 2 million aliens who
function.
•· Two were women - totaL There was No. 1 Republican Female
ments
would
"raise
suspicions
In
reover,
the
agency
estimates
shouldn't
have been counted
At
stake
Is
nothing
less
than
the
. Jearie Kirkpatrick, former U.N. ambassador, who seemed
that
the
"differential
underthe
public
mind
about
the
rella·
were.
Integrity
of
the
decennial
census
Ill-prepared and uninterested. and Roxanne Ridgeway from the Stale
Finally , allowing well •
of population, the off!clai count of count" included about 6 percent b!llty and Integrity of the census
• Department , whose testimony I missed.
and
of
of
all
blacks
and
Hispanics
but
the
federal
statistical
Intentioned
adjustments of the
the
.
citizenry
that
determines
Blink and you 'miss half the women witnesses.
system."
only
about
0.5
percent
of
all
figures
now
Increases the possl·
everything
from
the
apportion·
In Foreign Rela tions. there have been several female "outside"
whites.
Proponents
of
an
adjustment
bUlly
of
politically
motivated
ment tJf seats In the House of
witnesses. those from peace groups. public interest groups, citizen
Politicians
from
the
country's
argue
that
sophisticated
statistimanipulation later. : ·Adjust·
Representatives to the allocation
·
.
groups and the like.
ment may create more problem$
of more than $30 billion In federal major metropolitan areas, con· cal techniques would allow scienAnn Cahn, director of the Committee for National Security, was
one . Unfortunately for her, sh·e appearf!!! as part of a panel that · grants to state and local cerned about the loss of House tific revisions that would accu- than It solves," notes Ortner. ·
seats and federal funds, have rately reflect the size and
governments.
The solution to the problem lies
Included Edward Teller. " father" of the hydrogen bomb. After her
composition
of
pressed
for
some
form
of
statist!·
the
population.
·
Although
the
Census
Bureau
In
:striving to ensure that the
opening statement, she wasn't asked one question by a committee
But
Census
Bureau
cal
adjustment
to
C!)mpensate
professionmakes
Its
best
effort
to
Include
census
process Is an open and
· member (18 men and one woman) In three hours of testimony.
lor
the
undercount.
als
have
proposed
no
fewer
than
the
entire
population,
partlclpa·
.
available
,as possible so that the
"It Is lonely_," said Maureen King, executive director of Mothers
A civil suit flied by the city and
two
dozen
different
formulas
to
lion
Is
voluntary.
Those
deter·
maximum
number of people an:
• Embracing Nuclear Disarmament (MEND). "It's not a field In which
state of New York seeking to adjust the figures. All presumamined,
for
var.tous
reasons,
to
counted
but not In rej isgerlng
women have been traditionally interested."
require the federal government bly are reliable, but all would
evade
the
count
can
do
so.
numbers
of account for those
the
So, why not? Two women friends of mine swear they have done
to recalculate the results of the
produce
disparate
results.
In
to
participate.
unwilling
That
Includes
those
who
• nothing to encourage this, but their young sons show an .Intense, ·
wrongly fear that enumeration 1980 census was resolved latelast
seemingly innate. fascination with planes and trucks. Are missiles
w!ll lead to disclosure of their year when a , federal judge
~ and tanks far behind?
·
·
.
violation of welfare program rebuffed attempts to change the
• In the INF hearings last week, an army general stood In front of a
·
regulations, housing codes ·or totals.
• crowded· Senate hearing room and · held up green plastic missile
By
that
time, however, an
immigration laws. In addltton,
• models pulled by green plastic trucks. They were helpfu l in
emotlo:tal
debate
was underway
among those Inadvertently un• visualizing how the weapons will be destroyed under the treaty's
regarding
the
procedures
to be
dercounted are the homeless and
· provisions; they really were.
followed
In
the
1990
census.
translen Is .
But it's true too thai my friends ' sons would )lave loved to have
The Census Bureau already
As a result, many of those
· found those official u .S. Army-issue play nukes under the Christmas
has
announced that It will not ·
excluded from the census totals
• tree.
adjust the 1990 figures to compen·
• Whether it Is innate or not, these boys will probably have a head
1
: start should they ever be called on to cover future hearings on future
; superpower arms treaties.
• The JNF Treaty will be ancient history by then. and they will
Jean Harlow in 1911; Lee Radzlw!ll, sister of Jacqueline Kennedy
; already know ·what we have yet to find out - whether eliminating
Onass!s, In 1933 (age 55); and football player Herschel,Walker, the"
·· shorter and medium-range missiles from the face of the earth will
1982 Reisman Trophy winner, h'l 1962 (age 26).
•: lead to real reductions In more Important strategic weapo!IS, whether
:·· it will strengthen or weaken NATO, whether Europe will overcome Us
On this date In history:
·
· · conventional weapons inferiority or whether, as some conservatives .
In
1879,
attorney
Belva
Ann
Lockwood
became
the
first
woman
to
: charge. the treaty Is a bit ot sleight of hand by an Ingenious Soviet PR
practice
before
the
U.S.
Supreme
Court.
: man who wears the right suits.
·
In 1931, "The Star Spangled Banner" was designated by an act of
Congress as the national anthem of the United States.
In 1974, a Turkish jetliner crashed near Paris, killing 345 people.
In 1985, British coal miners end~ tbelr yearlong strike, the longest
and costliest labor dispute In Brltlsb history.
By United Presa International
,
In 198&amp;, the President's Commission on Organized Crime, e{ld!ng a
• Today Is Thursday, March 3, the 63rd day o! 1988 with 303 to follow.
32-month lnvesttaatlon, called for drug testing of most worklni
The moon Is full.
Americans, Including all federal employees.
• The mornjng stars are Mercury , Mars and Saturn.
In 1987, President Reagan nominated FBI Director William
· : The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Webster to head the CIA, one day after acting CIA Director Robert
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Gates 'withdrew his own challenged nomination. That same day,
~
·: English poet Edmund Waller In 1606; Industrialist George Pullman,
actor Danny !&lt;aye died at age 74.
. ·
"I'm
be{Jinnlfl(l
lo
worry about you and t/J/1
:; Inventor of the railway sleeping car, In 1831; telephone Inventor
'COCOONING' bus/,.,,"
:·-Alexander Graham Bell In 1847; U.S. Army Gen. Matthew Ridgway In
A thoughtfor the day: Mary McCarthy wrote, "The happyendlni Is
•: 1885 (aee 93); Hollywood !ash!Q~ designer Ad'r!an In 1903; movie star . our national belief. "

Christian right has a

.,.

,~-..._

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
commercial ships and boats that
annually dock In the Unlled
States each year (with each o!
the 375 carrying 200 kilos)·
-1,103 of 415,000 annual'cargo
aircraft arrivals '( each carrying
68 kilos);
-30,000 of the 34 million airline
passengers (each carrying only
2.5 kilos);
-122 o! the 3 million ship cargo
conta.lners (with each
smuggler's container carrying
615 kilos) ; or
-2,185 of the 88.6 million cars
Imported to the United States

The

'J

II

U

Il.ane~M~•.IHtpltB;

.......... . _ . lt.ctt.)a ......~a..
leow ud Xe.U II: . 11. (t... ) ltlui1
UwrpMII Mill lile . .r 11; U . F•1rllf'1d 1.
•. NHdli c........ WI' ..

......

Dl'llkkt•ll

......... O.utl(l!)

Ulftllteln'tlle( 1)
1.Aki"MSIVI.-riltf1) .
~.Twillllttii'J Cltambtrlln

. ....••
tn

81

"

.'

. De8aleti{ I)
S.C.IInbtl•
IU
I.Leltuoa
~1
l.Futori&amp;
n
1.R•wnu loutMut
H
I.Rouful
II
IMtParkGnhun
!I
(&amp;leo) . . . . l•keJI! .
•
. ,~.. IM! II . Olm-.ed F&amp;lh 't'J: 13.
No,. · Dlnwled •U: 14~ (lie) Allro•
Cow IItty. ~t~e•• Hlpblad allll.llwtc.._
die Cl.,mollt ~; 11. V•Wert 11; Ill.
Falnietr Part. II; II. (Iii!) Wll:iul uad

s...........

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ni

.........
117

......

••••
'

Ex-Pirate pitcher' featUred
·.a. t baseball
card show
.

'

SUPREME-

,

· PARKERSBURG , W.VA. - . fans from nobn to a p.m . A card
Forrner Pittsburgh Pirate relief ' auction will be held ai 3:30p.m. ·
pitcher Dave Giusti will be the
Admission is $1.25 lor adults and
featured guest at the seventh
$.75 for chUdren younger than 16
annual Parkersburg Basebalf
years old.' For more Information,
Card Show on Satur(lay, March
call (304) 428-3544 or (304)
12, at the Parkersburg HoUday
423-5559.
Inn, at the junction of 1-77 and

u.s. 50.-

The Daily Sentinel·

. Giusti , a natlv~ of Syracuse,
N.Y., received his master's de(IJ&amp;Nl-1
·A Dh1oloaor MuJIIE..Ia, lac.
. gree from Syracuse University,
where_ he played · baseball and
!'Ubi._ every afternOM, · Monday
basketball. He was captain of the
th,...... Friday, u~ . eourt st., !'!&gt;·
m""', Ohio, by the' Ohio Valley Pub1961 Orangemen baseball team
Uihlair ~Jf:•ltlmeolla. loe.,
fhat finished third ln the College
P!&gt;meroy, oblo c
• 1'11. 912-21116. SeWorld Series.
cond claas pooltp paid at Pllmeroy,
Oblo.
·
-He began playing professional
baseball In 1961 with the Houslon
Member: United Pt-eotlnl!!ra.alloaal,
lnlaad Dolly Prtu ~ .... and tile
Colt .45s farm system. Four
Oblo
Nftlpa~latloll. Nattonat
years later, the' .45s, now the
Ad&gt;w!IIIDI
taUve, ar.-m
·Houston As.tros , took him on as a
-.........
111 'l1drd " -· ·
-Hew
-.-or~~. New..ilott•?starting pitcher, where he re-.
malned until being traded to the
POS'I'MA8'IU:
-*"cbaDIIo
to 'noe DallY w
,m eo.n
St..
St. Louis Cardinals-In 1969. He
Pomeroy, Oh}o • · ; '
was a starter and reliever tbere
untlltnovlng on to the Pirates In ·
RJIICBIPIIOIUIATD
., Contor" . . . . . . . .
1970. He was a relief pitcher for , .
One Woolt ............................ .,,...
,the Pirates until 1977, when he
One- ...........:....... ,. ........ ,..
played for the Oakland A's and
&lt;&gt;r., Y81lr ...........!'''"''"''"''\ ..... It
the Chicago · Cubll to end his
career.
Dally ................................... ! 211 Ceata
During bla seven YHf.S In
Plttaburah, OluU piaked ap ·
saves Ill all ~ Pltlk~
· the NatlD1181 Lelpe ~ld ­
. 1171 en rouletC! the Buca' Wlllllllla
the 1971 World Series. GuiiU
saved the flrat World s.J•
pme played at nflbt. 1111 five
wlu and 30 savea earned 111111 the

!!
aoour , .

1971 Rebet Pitcher ot the Year
award. In his 14 Ytllfl Ia the
majora, he WDil 101)
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Plga 4-.-The Deily Sentinel

Thanday, March 3, 1988 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~

Thanday, March 3, 1988

Tar Heels, Wildcats, SMU captt••·e titles
ByCOUUNSYEARWOOD
Arkansas must win Its final two
UPI SJ!Orls Writer
games - at Houston 'fhursday
TWo of the nation 's premier
nlg_!lt and at Texas Tech Sunday
pl'&lt;)grams joined an unlikely
afternoon - to tle the Mustangs.
school as conference champions
"Arkansas . has a couple of
Wednesday night as ti\e college
tough ballgames left," Bliss said.
basketball regular season nears
"They are a very, very tough
a close.
basketball team and very capa·
Southern Methodist routed
ble of tying us. But I really don't
Texas Christian 87-54 to gain at
care because I can't control
least a tie for. the Southwest
that. ''
Conference title for the first time
At Atlanta, J.R. Reldscored24
In 16 years. Me;1nwhile, peren·
points to send No. 6 North
nlally powerful North Carolina
Carolina to a 97-80 victory over
and Kentucky earned league
No. 15 Georgia Tech, snapping
championships, with the Tar
the Yellow Jackets' seven-game
Heels winning the Atlantic Coast
winning streak.
,.Conference outright and Ken·
"I was afraid the bubble was
lucky claiming at lea,st a share of going to . burst, and it certainly
the Southeastern Confer.ence.
did, " Georgia Tech Coach Bobby
At Dallas, Carlton McKinney
Cremins said, ''North Carolina Is
and Eric Longino helped break a great team."
the gam-e open late In the first
"When we don 't shoot well (46
half In SMU's 87·54 victory over percent from the field I, that puts
'l'exas Christian.
a lot of pressure on us defen·
''There .Is nothing I've wanted
slvely. You have to · give North
rpore for my team than tor them Carolina a lot of credit. They
to be Southwest Conference were playing for the ACC cham·
champions," SMU Coach Dave plonshlp. They came out and Just
Bliss saldbeat us."
"There are a lot of neat things
At Lexington. Ky., Ed Da·
about being In the NCAA Tourna'
vender collected 20 points and 8
ment and a lot of neat things. assists to h;ad No. 8 Kentucky to
about being on national televi- an 80-72 victory over Georgia.
sion. But winning the conference
Kentucky Improved to 21·5
championship is something that overall and 11-5 In the SEC and
happens over two months."
. could capture the school's 37th
·SMU finished the conference conference title outright with a
season 12-4 and 23·6 overall.
victory over Mississippi Satur·

day. The Bulldogs, 15-14and 7·10,
droppea their eighth straight
SEC road game.
In other games Involving
ranked teams, No. 1 Temple
defeated St. Joseph's 75•62, Seton
HallupsetNo.5Plttsburgh83·79,
Clemson shocked No. 9 Duke
99-97 and Florida belted No . 18
Vanderbilt 81-65.
At . Philadelphia, 'f reshman
Mark Macon scored a season·
high 35 points to allow Temple"to
finish the season undefeated In
the conference at 18·0 and 26-1
overall.
At Pittsburgh, .Mark Bryant
collected 23 points and 13 re- ·
bourids, and Ramon Ramos
added 19 points to guide Seton
Hall to Its !11th straight victory.
The Pirates, 20-10 overall and 8-7
in the Bl East, have beaten Pitt

'sAT

Hann~.

twice this season as they make a
bid to reach ·the NCAA Tourna·
ment. The Panthers, 2.1·5 and
11-4; play at Syracuse Sunday ina
showdown for the conference
regular-season titl.e.
At Clemson, S.C., Dale Davis
scored 25 points to enable Clem·
son to send Duke to Its third
straight loss. The Blue, Devils
dropped to 20·6 overall and S.5 In
the ACC. Clemson Is 13-13 and
3·10.
At Gainesville, Fla., sopho· ,
more Dwayne Schlntzlus scored ,
a career·hlgh 28·pohJ,ts to embar-•'
rass newly crowned SEC Player'~
of the Year \VIII Perdue and •
· spar.k Florida to an 81-,65 victory
against Vanderbilt. The Gators
Improved to 20·9 overall and 10-6
In the SEC : The Commodores fell
to 18·8 and '10·7.

9.25°/o

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•

ONE WAY
THERE'S NO
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Reds open spring season
against Blue Jays Friday

'·

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Rain forces postponement of tilt
TUCSON. Ariz. ilJPI)- Rainy
weather forced the cancellation
Wednesday of a intra squad game
scheduled by the Cleveland
Indians.
Manager Doc Edwards said
not playing the game was a

Prep scores
St!h rln~

7:1, Lowf'llvlllf• U
Shady~ld1• 9'l, Free port Lakrl;md 117

Ohio Hirb Scho&lt;ll
8y

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PreM!i ln..,rnatlnna l
WedM!Miay, l"lhn.:h2
To urft.ll.menl R e~m/111

Dlvl!!lon I
Dfolaware 71, Duhlln
Plckerln~ton

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Dl\'llllon II
Cln Fnrt&gt;l'l l Park 45, St ljari!'GrahMm :B
Kl'\IA•rlnll: Altt•r 3.1, l ''cMt&gt;rn Brown 21
MifJtdo.,.:hroo k -a, l"hllo M
Be;~~ ley 51, Hehrun Lallf'wood :1:1
TeayA Val rtt Ut.klnlli \ ' !Lilli
Utk·a 5H, Sparta HIJ:hland 39
Dlv\Hton Ill
Fedl!rMI HocklnK 5.1 , Oak H\11 40

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Nortll Adam8 17, llemlork Mllk&gt;r -til

disappointment.
"We'd like to see how some
pitchers are doing before the
Cactus League season starts
(Saturday against vislt.lng San
Franciscol ," said Edwards .
"That's the whole purpose of
lntrasquad games at the point in
spring training."
While the field at HI Corbett
Field became Increasingly soggy
with the steady rain, Edwards
conducted meetings Inside . the
,
clubhouse.
Thursday' s intrasquad game
wlli feature John Farrell. Jack ·
O'Connor, Mark Huismann and
Steve Crawford against Greg
Swindell, Mike Poehl, Rich Yett
and Bill Caudill.
·
In Saturday's e,:hibitlon opener, Farrell, Poehl, Crawford ·
and O'Connor will face the
Giants' Mike Krukow , Don Robinson, Terry Mu !holland and
Craig Lefferts.

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',

1poll
Division
I team.
was the first
title for
the It
defending
big
school .tournament champs of
Ironically
Coach Mike
another
bunch'Haley,
of Wolverines
and '
also led by a pair of outstanding
perfonners- 6-foot Mark Baker
and 6-foot·8 Mike Haley Jr.
Dunbar, which wound up a 11·1
regular season two weeks ago,
got 23 of 29 first place votes for a ·
284"25.1 margin over unbeaten
Lorain Admiral King , the No. 2
Division I team the final five
weeks of the voting. King re·
celved the other 6 first place
v.otes. Canton McKinley. 19·1.
finished third with 234 points.
Youngstown Liberty was the
state's only unbj!aten Division II
boys team and was the coaches'
choice as No. 1 by a 259-243
margin over Portsmouth. Lib·
erty also held an 18·8 edge in first
place votes over the Trojans. who
lost only to Russell, Ky., In a 19·1
season.
In Division III, Hamilton
Badin, which took over the top
spot just three weeks ago, wound
up first. The Rams, 20·0, received
18 of 26 first place votes and 213
poll points to be~t out Columbus
Academy, 19·0, In the closest of
the four races. Academy had 3
firsts and 230 points.
Wheelersburg, another un·
beaten team at 20-0, moved into
' third tl\e last week with 185,
dropping · Haviland Wayne
Trace. .19-1, to fourth. Wayne
Trace led DiviSion III the first
five weeks before losing Its only
game to Holgate.
· Rounding out the Division m
top lOwereAndoverPymatuning
Valley In fifth, followed by
Springfield Catholic, ~pple
Creek Waynedale, ·· Bloom· '
Carroll, Oberlin and Ottawa·
Glandorf.
Wooster, Toledo Macomber
and · Cincinnati Woodward re·
malned In their same fourth, fifth
and sixth spo~s In the final.
Division.! ratings, followed by a
. rare 3·way tie for seventh among
Barberton , Cleveland St. Joseph
. and Westerville North. The lOth
place team was Middletown.
· WIUard, a 3·tlme former poll
champ, wound up third In Dlv·

•

SVAC standings

·-

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
!·Southern ........ 19 3
!·Hannan Trace 18 · 4
Oak Hill ........... 17 4
North Gallla .....11 11

P
1875
1686
1426
1~6

OP
1364
1437
1277
1608

K)'aer creet .... : 8 ta t307 tals

Eutern ............ 7 13 1381 1491

VALVOU

GENERAL BATTERY

C/JI/IIORAT/011

•

Trace, Southern clash m tilt

Sy!IIIMI Valley 5 17 1318 1677
90uthwatern .... 2 19 1185 1541
1..11u In tourmanent

' .......,•• pme:

JffR- Tl'ace va. Racine South.., Co11t:acat11111 (:eater In
At~, 1:30 p.m.
'

•

defense to make shooting dlffl· , Rankin as forwards aild Rick :
SV AC archrivals Hannan defenses to work.·
cult for Hannan Trace. Poor Swain in the post. Southern coach
Trace and Racine Southern will
Both teams pleased their fans. shooting was responsible for the Howle Caldwell Is likely to have
battle at the Convocation Center with victories at home In their' · Wildcats' losing to the Racine Kenny Turley opposite Swain In •
In Athens Friday, at 6: 30 p.m., two meetings this year. This
the paint , Dave Amburgey and .':
five bY 41 points on Feb. 12.
for the right to play In the Athens rubber match of t~e expanded
·Dave
McMillan at the forwards . •
Jenkins Is likely to start Mark
district final.
three-game series, which will be
Jenkins and Richard Stitt as and Jeff Caldwell and Shannon •
The wlr\ner w)ll play the decided on neutr!ll ground, will guards. Chris Petro and Scott Riffle at the guards.
,
winner of the Beaver Eastern- determine who has bragging
Leesburg Fairfield game, which rights ln the SV AC for next
will follow at 8: 15 p.m.
season.
In their sectional tournament
Wlldc~t coac~ Mike Jenkins
title win.s, Hannan Trace rteedl!d Indicated during the tournament
hardwood miracles from Rick that "my kids are more patient In
Swain, Grady Johnson and Mark shooting than they were earlier
Jenkins to slip past Franklin In the season-"· Patience will be
Furnac'l Green 70·68 In overtime Indeed a virtue for the Wildcats,
last ~rlday In Chesape11ke, while a&amp; the Tornadoes will use an
Southern overcame a 38-36 half- aggreS~Ive and opportunistic detime deilclt to beat North Gallla fense to put pressure on the
71·58 in regulation at Meigs High Galllans.
School.
The boys from the bend will
Both teams are probably using have to avoid gettlng themselves
court·lengih mirrors during In foul trouble, something that
practices, as both teams are · cost · them ~ victory In Mercer·
likely to put their well-known ville on December 18 .. They will
iast-break offenses and pressure have play tight, man,to-man

I

Tales of the hardwood

l(ANNAN TRACE WILDCATS
Tornadoes 104 . Symmes Valley
•
HTHS
Opponent 44
HTHS 86 ....... Ironton St . Joe 51 Tornadoes 90R'vllle Eastern
HTHS 92.-.. ......... , .. Falrland 69 51
HTHS 56 ...... , ......... 0ak Hlll74 Tornadoes 94 ......... Oak Hlll62
HTHS· 7J _.. ,_ ..... Kyger Creek 47 Torn•does 77 Hannan Trace 85
lslon · II behind Liberty and
By GENE CADDES
Portsmouth. The Crimson · HTHS . 92 ............ Patriot SW 57 Tornadoes 74 Kyger Cree . k 43
UFI Sport&amp; Writer .
Flashes led the list lhe first three HTHS 83 ...... R'ville Eastern 62 Tornadoes 60 Indian Valley So.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (t;PI) .
ll'i'HS 85 .... Racine .Southern 77 62
·
weeks.
For the fourth consecutive year, .
Rounding out the Division II HTHS 101 ... Symmes Valley 71 . Tornadoes 88 .......R'dale SE 68
Columbus· Wehrie ·has been se·
lected the top small school boys ·top 10 were Thornville Sheridan HTHS 58 .... .... .. North Gallfa 60 Tornadoes 93 ... . Patriot SW 44
basketball team In the state by In fourth. followed in order by HTHS 73.. .......... Patriot SW 65 Tornadoes 93 ... North Gallla 62
the United Press International Bexley, Steubenville, Warren HTHS 60 .......... North Gallla 56 Tornadoes 104. Symmes Valley
Ohio High SchoQl Board of Champion, Mansfield Malabar, HTHS 51 ....... ......... Oak Hill 57 58
Leavittsburg LaBrae and Belle- iiTHS 72 .......... Kyger Creek 70 Tornadoes 76R'vllle Eastern
Coaches.
The Wolverines, coached by fontaine, the ex·a ct order of the HTHS 80 ,_, ........ Patriot SW 74 45
HTHS 65 .......... ...... Fairland 45 Tornadoes 53 ... Kyger Creek 51
Chuck Kemper and led by 6·foot·7 previous week.
HTHS 11..: .. Symmes Valley 61 Tornadoes 117. Hemlock Miller
Eastern.
20-0,
was
.the
Beaver
Lawrence Funderburke and 6·
HTHS 95 ....... Ironton St. Joe 47 86
No_
3
team
In
the
final
Division
I
foot-3 Lonnie Jones, finished .the
HTHS
94.. .... R'vllle Eastern 93 Tornadoes 76 ......... Oak Hill 74
regular season with ' an 18·2 voting, advancing one spot ahd
HTHS
74..' Racine Southern 115 . Tornadoes 80 .Federal Hocking
record, · the losses a pair of knocking Fort Loramie, the
HTHS
75 .......... North Gallia 64 43
2·polnters during a holiday tour- defending small school tournaTorn~does 115Hannan Trace
nament In Raleigh, N.C., back in ment champ, down to fourth with
Tournament
play
74
Its 1S.2 record.
December.
.
Opponent Tornadoes 79. R'wood (W_Va.l
Cleveland Heights Lutheran HTHS
· Wehrle was the choice of 19.of
HTHS
82
............
Patriot
SW 54 89
.
the 25 Division IV coaches who East and Mineral Ridge, both
HTHS
70-..
-..
.......
F.F.Green
68 To rna doe~ 81 .... . Patriot SW 71
voted the eighth and final week of 20-0, were fifth and sixth, with
the balloting, picking .up 236 of a Kallda seventh at 19-1.
SOUTHERN TORNADOES
To11rnament play
Rounding out the list of IV
possible 250 IK&gt;ints, to 214 and 3
Tornadoes
Opponent
TORNADOES
Opponent
firsts for runnerup Indian,Valley teams were Pitsburgh Franklin
Tornadoes
Tornadoes
68
G,allla
88
...
Kyger
Creek. 61
South, 20·0. The Wolverines led Monroe In eighth, followed by
Academy
67
Tornadoes
71
...
North
Gallla
58
Mansfield St : Peter's and Ottawa
the ratings for all eight weeks.
Tornadoes
94
...
North
Gall
Ia
66
'
·Dayton Dunbar, another wire- Hills.
to-wire leader, reigned as the No.

1VSURA CE

' PLANT CITY , Fla. (t;PI) The club probably will renew
Cincinnati General Manager at the last figures offered .
Murray Cook said outfielder Leo
Several players' took batting
Garcia came to terms with the practice for the first time In the
Reds Wednesday arid that the new stadium to get ready for
team today likely would renew
Friday's exhibition opener
the contracts of unsigned out· against Toronto. A number of
fielder Kai Daniels and pitchers
balls were hit out of the park,
Jiise Rl jo and Rob Murphy .
including one by Danit&gt;ls which
Cook had made Wednesday as cleared .a covered batting cage
the deadline for renewal but· beyond the right field fence .
decided to give the three players
The club said all reserved seats
until Wednesday .night and said
have been sold for · the home
the renewal process would take opener Friday against Toronto.
place this morning.
Pitcher Guy Hoffman missed
Wednesday's practice because of
· " I hope we don 't have to do the flu , and pitcher Pat Perry did
· that, but we are pretty well not throw because of stiffness in
negotia ted out." Cook said.
his neck and upper back.

GRADY JOHNSON

RICK SWAIN

Wehrle wins .
fourth straight
small school
UPI poll .c rown

DAVIS-QUICKEL

LOOKS FOR TEAMMATE - Loyol11 of Chlc11go's N11te Brooks
looks lor someone to pass the ball to as.he runs Into stiff opposl!lon
In the lonn of St. Louis University's Tony Brown under the Loyola
h;&gt;Skel of Wednesday night's game. (UPI)

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Pometov Mir'deport. Ohio

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~ The

By The Bend

•

Daily Sentinel
Thursday, March 3, 1988
· Page-7

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Over 95,()00 Books-By-Mall ca- brary of Ohio, confirmed that the Libr ary. will chair the Personnel
talogs will be mailed to rur&lt;ll State Library woUld be receiving Committee. Other members of
residents In the Spring and a redl.lctlon In 1988 funds from the the committee Include Barbara
Summer of 1988. At Its monthly U. S. Library Service and Con· Martindale, Plckawey County
meeting., Thursday, February 18, structlon Act, Title 1, by approxi- public library, and Rox ie Under··
the Ohio Valley Area .Libraries mately '2%. However, the State . wood, Jackson Public Library.
,(OVAL) Board of Trustees ap- Library Board had ye! to make a James Knight, ·Athens Couniy
. proved contracting with the decision on how the reduction Public Library, . will chair the
Carpenter Lithographing Com- will be Implemented on the state Finance Commit tee . Othe r
pany of Springfield to produce level. OVAL can expect to know members Include Wanda Eblin,
the catalogs for $14,905.
the Impact to Its program by Meigs County Public Library,
The quotes for producing the April. Any reduction will be and JoAnne Ridenour, Lawrence
catalog ranged !rom $39,062 from Implemented July 1, 1988.
County Public Library .. Frederic
Roberts In Ironton to $15,822 from
The "1988 OVAL Directors · Good, Hocking County Public
Carpenter. The mimber of catal- Salary and Benefits . Survey" Library, will chair the Building
ogs to be printed was reduced to 'report was distributed to the Committee. Emelyne Ely Reed;
meet the budget figure of $15.000. Board. The first survey was Ross County Public Library, will
Shirley Mills Fischer, OVAL complied In ·1987. The report also serve on the committee. :
Director, reported that while the provides tbe OVAL member
Established In 1973 as the first
work could be competitively 11brarles with comparison data In state-funded regional public li;
placed with an Ohio firm, she was s~ttlng salaries when hiring new brary system In Ohio, todaj.
•
•'
unable ·to obtain lower quotes directors and /or when preparing OVAL administers through loc;al
•
from firms within the OVAL budgets for 1989.
public libraries a variety ot
ten-county region.
Sajarles and benefits have programs designed to lmprov~·
.,'
Linda' Coleman, Administra- Improved since the Increased and extend services to local
tive Assistant to !he Director and funding for public libraries be· residents. OVAL Is made up of
the Clerk/Treasurer, was Intro- gan In 1986. Current salaries paid ·· public llbrarles In the counties of
••
•.
duced -to the Board members. to directors within the OVAL Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Law:
•
Coierran joined the OVAL staff In area range · from $13,905 to_ renee, .Meigs, Ptckaway,. Pike,
J anuaty, 1988, filling a position $36,738. Populations served . Ross, Scioto, and Vt'l!ton. The :
· READING - .Junior Electronic Stlldeatll,
combination
1111 a
.
previously held by Betty Salts- range from 11,584 to 64,545. OVAL Board of Trustees, whlcli ·
• • James Sauvage and Decker Cillhnns, are shown
their work II\ electronics at Meigs High School.
'
man and Barbara Stephenson. Library operating
Superlvlslng tbe reading, center, Is Instructor
budgets range conslsts of one trustee from each :
taking ,l"iadlngs In 'a resistive network demonBoth Fischer and Regina Ghear- from $67,748 to $961,375. Benefits member public ·library board; :
.
Gary Walker.
tng, Clerk/ Treasurer, expressed vary considerably from library determines pollcy, controls fi: to the Board their appreciation to library.
nances, and makes final decision :
for the expertise and professionBoard President, Harold B. on what services will be offered: ·
..
alism Coleman brings to her Oloper. announced his commit- Wanda Eblin represents the :
;
Tying ,Jn well with today's and systems, and the developIn addition. to _one and one half
position In supporting their work. tee appointments for 191!8. Jay Meigs County Public Library In :
hours of related instruction.
• fastest growing flj!ld of employ- ment of the necessary manlpula·
Ted Despres, liaison to the Brushart, Scioto County Public Pomeroy.
·
The course Is open to students,
, ment - electronics - Is the tlve and analytical skills and
OVAL Board for the State Llnot only of Meigs Hl~h School,
•: communications electronics safety habits required · In the
but those of Eastern 11nd South·
~: course offered as a part ·of the field .
Students are • encouraged to
ern High Schools who have
. ~' vocational training.. at Meigs
develop the attitudes , work hab·
completed the sophomore year.
' \ High School.
boOks wm suggest you separate . come up with a weekly estimate. :
By Cindy S. Oliveri
::! The two year program Is .,Its, technical- knowledge, applt; :Students should (]ave ave,rage
·your at home food costs and away
County Exlenslon A1ent
ability In basic mathematics and
intended to provide students ··cation lor the 'c are of tools and
Clothing: Most of us do not go :
.
from home food costs as you out and buy clothing Items eacb ·
equipment, and sklll that wilL
the Interest and desire to learn
'~ througti classroom and laboradetermine your fOOd and bever- week. But we do have regular :
the field of electronics. Consi·
tot'y experiences, the necessary enable them to advance In the
A real_ challenging part of age expenses.
j ·knowledge and skills r,equired for electronl.c Industry according to dered helpful courSes are induscosts as stockings, seasonal ·
Household Costs: These In, purchases, etc. The clothing :
trial arts, general . sclence..and balancing the family budget Is to
,.. successful entry level employ· their abilities . The goals of the
estimate· the weekly llvlng ex- elude b111s for .gas heat or category of your- budget should :
program ·are accomplished by , rna them a tics .
:: ment In the field .of electornlcs.
penses for your family. This . cooking, electricity, fuel oil, Include an estimate of the c!O:. ·
It
has
'
been
estimated
that
group
""d
lndlvlduallhs.tructlon,
-• .The emphasis Is on each
week
"In the Spotllght'' takes a water, phone, laundry (Include thing purchases you make forth(' :
employment
~nd
_
practical
In
the
electronics
demonstrations,
• student obtaining a thorough
look
at
this third aspect of cqsts of detergent .. laundromat, year 'divided by 52.
· field through the year of 2000 will
; knowledge of basic electronic application.
.
dry cleaning, etc.), and may also
designing
a family budget.
be Increasing from 72 percent to
There Is a continuous three
• . principles and theory , the appllGrooming and Medicines : ·
Did you ever start out the day Include other costs such as These Items can take a bigger ·
97 percent.
';· calion of- this theory to the hour block of time In shop or
with five or ten doJiars In your kerosene for heating, wood, etc.
laboratory experience each day
~· various components, circuitry,
chunk out of our budget than we .
To determine the weekly-costs might Imagine. Include groom:- pocket, and at the end of the dayreach In and wonder where the · of uti)ltles such as gas, electric, lng Items such as shampoo,
money went? This lsi part:of the · ..,pl)one , etc. Which are usuaJJy makeup, perfumes, over the
challenge In comln'g up with billed on' a monthly basis take a counter drugs such as aspirins,
weekly living expenses. Most o! look at your last month's bill !or cold . remedies and per scription
us do not keep tr-ack of day to day each of these Items. First ask drugs In this category. Again try
costs such as food, both at home yourself was this a typical to come up with a weekly
and away from home, transpor- month? If so, divide the blll total estimate.
tation, etc. It Is Important by the number of days In the
Personal Allowances : Does
however to come up with an month to come up with a dally each member of your family get
estimate for these expenses If cost. Take this times seven to a certain amount of pocket
you are serious about a family come up with a weekly cost. If money each week lor personal
budget.
your last month's bill wasn't needs? This might Include adult
Weekly expenses can be di- typical go back a few months and
member and children of the
vided Into seven general catego- perhaps take an average of family. A personal allowance
ries: food and beverages, house- several months.
column Includes these weekly
Transportation: This category expenses.
hold costs, transportation,
recreation and entertainment, Includes the weekly cost lor
Other: Are there other weekly
clothing, grooming and medt· expenses needed to operate your expenses your family has? If so.
cines, personal allowances and vehicles. Remembe'r that be sure to write them down.
others as needed. Be sure to monthly payments If a vehicle
Once you have listed all of the
Include expenditures by each was purchased with credit are weekly expenses In each catemember of the family as you Included In the fixed .expenses gory, total them up. It you are
work on this section of the part of the budget, so they do not
working on a weekly budget, till ~
budget. Let's takeacloserlookat need to ·be written In this section.
Is the figure you will use. If you
. each of these categories. For You, can separate these expenses
are working on a monthly basis,
each of them come up with a · Into three categories; gas, up·
take the total and multiply It
weekly figure.
keep and maintenance. Upkeep
limes 52 (weeks per year). Then
Food and Beverage: This cate· refers to tires, shock absorbers,
divide by 12 to get a monthly
gory Includes fOOd and beverages spark plugs and other Items lhllt
figure.
; ! CIRCLE ROUND - Fourth, fifth and alxtlt square dancing and folk dancing. Gerald PoweU
that are eaten at home and away are purchases on an Irregular
: , graders at Portland Elementary School_ are
of Pomeroy teaches the hour-long classes tWice a
from home. As you are determin- basis. Try 'to deter!lllne a weekly
"
•·· learning to .. swtng· their partners, do-al·do,
week. The boy~ and girls really seem to enjoy the · Ing your food 11111 at !he grocery amount that would be accurate
~ allemande and promenade home. As part of their · dancing, although many of the boys wouldn't
store, do not Include anything for this category. Malntenacne
•, physical education actlvllles, the students are
admit to The Dally Sentinel that they were having
except food and products used In can Include oil changes, car
- . , now mid-way through an el1ht-week program on
fun.
the preparation or service of food washes, antifreeze, etc. Again
(such as waxed paper, cooking try to determine a weekly
:-: Beat of the bend
spra?'s, etc.) . Household clean- amount that would be adequate.
Work In Meigs County has been
Ing supplies, detergents, ci- Remember It Is better to overes·
Included In the latest contracts· garettes, etc. are often pur- timate rather ·than underestiawarded by theObloDepartment
chased at the grocery store and mate expenses. '
of Transportation.
Recreation, Entertainment:
may give a false reading of your
Twenty-two contracts were
fOOd costs If they are Included In Does your family enjoy movies,
awarded recently by the depart·
this category. FOOd away from VCR rentals, skiing, or other
ment op 22 highway department . home Includes school lunches, forms of recreation? These exprojects.
meals eaten out such as lunches penses belong In the recr-eation
The Meigs County project will
for working. family members (If and entertainment category. Try
:~
By BOB HOEFLICH
Tuesday will really ~an open be · replacement 9! the State
. (6141 992-6606
purchased at a restaurant), · to thlnkk of aU the typical
··l Dr. Hugh H. Davis, W. Main house night at Meigs High School Route 124' bridge over Leading dinners
expenses
for
your
family
and
out,
etc
.
Most
·
budget
Pomeroy , will bespeaking on with two events scheduled , Prin· Creek, 1.64 miles east_to of State
1-st.,
'"A Collector's Odyssey" at 3:30 cipal Fenton Taylor reports.
Route 325. The contract was
t~.m. on Friday. March 11, In the
At 7 p.m .. there wtll be an open awarded to the W. J. Selden·
{lfrlends of the Library Room In house for parents of eighth
· o;Alden Library on 1fl.e Ohio · graders of the district. Counse- sticker Co. o! Reynoldsburg with
a bid of $583,178.93. The scheUnlverslly Campus.
lors will be on · hand to discuss duled. completion date of the
. ./ Dr. Davl$ Is a native of class selection, graduation re·
' P omeroy and an Ohio University qulrements and other perltltent project Is Oct. 15, 1988.
'alumnus. He retired from Le- . Information concerning M!elgs
by the time you read this·
t Moyne College as emeritus pro- High School curriculum and youI hope
are In seventh heaven after
f,f essor of classics.
policies and there a tour of the having clipped of! that
lot During World War II, he building wiD be Included. .
$21,000,000 In the lottery. If not,
ervo!d with the U. S. :A.rmed
Alsoat7 on Tuesday, there will better luck next time. Meantime,
orces In Italy and asse!llbled a be an open bouse In the vocamall but noteworthy collection 1tional areas of Meigs High. These you·can't take It wllh you so keep
·
cf rare books and other mate- Include business and office edu- smiling'.
:}tals. Sele~ted Items from his cation, alflculture, weldlq, ele:~ollectlon wtll be on display cronlcs, costmetotgy, work pro:Ciuring his talk.
grams and auto mecbanlca.
.• Dr. Davis earned hiS master's , All qUHtlona will be answered
,. rom Ilndlana Unlverally and bls and tllere will be llandl-on
· octora._ fl:om the l.lnlveralt)? of demoalttiltiO!I$. Cowlselora wll
'
.
nciMIU, ~ tluabt at Ford- be avalllb.. for ~JIIllltatlclll alld
FLORIST
am before Jolntna the LeMoyne a tour of the elltlre bulldtna•
liege atatf In 1953. He chaired lncludlnl academic are11 wtll be
Mtlgt CountY'• Ol'd ut Flor-.
e colleae'a classics department offered. Tbla open bouse II for
352 L Main St. F11 a .,, Oh.
~from 19511 to 19'15.
both parents and students of not
I'll. 992-2644
'' Dr. Davis' talk II spo1110red by only Meigs High School but also
1
f e Friends of theLibraryofOhlo E ..1et11 and Southern High
"Ojlen Imitated - Ne1!er
"nlverslty and Ia dpen to the Scbooll.
bile.
•
'
'

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SYLVANIA

1:00 Ale price
-1.00 mlr'a .-te

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store hours 11:00 a.m. to 8:00p.m. Monday through
Friday, 9:00a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Satur«UUy,
10:00 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m. Sunday. ·
,
Sale prlcealn err.ct March 3.through Milch 1,

•nd

'

'

1•.

Pylon
.
Wiper Blades .each
and Refills .P•"·

OPTOMETRY
SERVICES ON
PREMISES

t onecror' s Odyssey
~spe*er ·will be Davis

-Americare-Pomeroy
. Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center

~

~

..

Gallloolis

209 Upper hlver Road

(614) 446 4103

The balanced budget

.,,

.

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~

�'-a•

llu.nday, March 3, 1988

PorMtoy Middleport, Ohio

8-The Daily Sa ttinel

Community calendar
i

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Mlddlel&gt;ort Literary Club will meet on
:Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home
-of Mrs. George Hackett Jr. "The
l::all" by Jolin Hersey wlll be
.:reviewed by Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
~

: POMEROY - Pomeroy Ma'sonlc Lodge wlll meet at 7: 30
~.m. Wednesday at the Middle·
llOrt temple with work to be In the
-feilowcraft degree and all mas::ter masons are Invited.

SYRACt:SE - A public soup
supper, featuring soup, sand·
wlfhes and pte, will be served
beginning at 4 p.m. Friday at the
Asbury Methodist Church In
Syracuse.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Inspection will
be held TUesday evening. Dinner
at 6: 30 followed by the lodge
meeting at 7: 30.
,

---

I

RuTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet
Friday, 6:30 p.m., at the fire
station.
·

,
THURSDAY
; MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
'Chapter I72, Order of Eastern
.:Star, Middleport, wlll meet 7: 30
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town.:p.m. Thursday. Officers .are to ship Trustees will meet Friday,
··wear chapter dresses.
6: .10 p.m .. at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
·,..
'• RUTLAND - Rutland Base·:ball League will hold an organ!·
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
):a tiona I meeting Thursday, 7 County Pomona Grange will
-p.m., · at the .. Rutland Civic . meet Friday, 7:30 p.m., at the
:center. All coaches, officers and Rock Springs Grange Hall. Co~rents are asked to attend. New
lumbia Grange will serve re·
;-officers will be elected .
freshments. National Sewing
Contest will be judged.
.
':- FOREST RuN - -Foresl Run
:~Methodist church Is having a
SATURDAY
:rummage sale on Thursday and
POMEROY - The annual Cub
·Friday In the basement of the Scout Pinewood Derby of the
: church. Hours will be 9 to 3 each MGM district will be held Saturday al Royal Oak Resort. Regis: day .
tration. 12 noon with fee of $1.
POMEROY - The Meigs Races to begin at 1 p.m. Pack 246.
·· county Bass Anglers Club will of Salisbury Is hosting I he derby.
~meet 7 p.m. Thursday at the
:Pomeroy united Methodist
SATURDAY
;Church.
·
RUTLAND - A gospel sing
will be held Saturday, starting at
~ RuTLAND Rutland Fire 7 p.m .. at the Rutland Church of
·Department's annual turkey God. Everyone welcome.
: dinner will be held Thursday at
· the Rutland Elementary School.
PORTLAND - A hymn sing
:Serving will start at 5 p.m. will be held Sal urday , starting at
:Advance tickets for . $4 ·are 7:30 p.m. ,•at the Hazel Church
·available from any fireman . between Portland and Long
·" Everyone .welcome.
Botlom. Everyone welcome.

·-

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&lt;

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
: Department's annual turkey
· dinner Is tonight, Thursday, al
. Rutland Elemenlary. Serving
:starts at 5 p.m.
POMEROY -Salisbury Town ship Trustees will meet tonight, 7
; p.m.. at the township hall on
, Rock Springs Road.
~

POMEROY - Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Pa·
\lent Services offices will be
closed Friday for staff meeting.
Offices will reopen on Monday at
: 8:30a.m.
:·
"
:
:

CHESTER - Reading primetime, a part of Right to Read
Week activities at the Chester
Elementary School, will be held
Friday night 6 to 8: 40 p.m.

: , PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town: ship Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
: 'Friday at the Pagevllle Township Building ..

SALEM CENTE R - Star
Grange and Junior Grange will
meet Saturday, 8 p.m., at the
Star Grange Hall on County Road
1 near Salem Cente r. A soup
supper will follow the meeting.
Members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Registration for the 1988 Middleport
Youth League summer ball season will be held at the Middleport
VIllage Hall on .Saturday from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. Fee Is $9 for each
child registered. A birth certlfl·
cate will be needed for any child
who did not participate in last
year 's league.
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonvllle Lodge 411 will meel
Saturay, 7:.10 p.m .. at the temple.
All masons welcome.
MONDAY
CHESTER- Chester PTO will
meet Monday night at 7 p.m at
the Chester Elementary School. .

Aches and pains? Long
lived people don't notice
Dear Ann Landers: I have
three questions that have always
puzzled ·me. Can your experts
help? Here goes:
Is It possible for someone to
live to the ripe age of 90 or 100
without ever have been sick?
: Often when these people are
· Interviewed they say something
· like. "I was never sick a day In
. iny life," or " I've never had so
: · much as a headache or a cold."
": Are they fibbing, or are they
: : just thinking In terms of major
• . hospital visits? I have never
: known anyone who has never
~ · been sick.
: And speaking of colds, Is It
: : possible to have a slight cold? All
. · my colds have been horrible,
; : juicy affairs, yet I hear people
. : say they have a "little" cold.
: . And finally, why Is It that some
, ,: days a person wakes up feeling
· • blue even whep things are going
· : well? Other times, a person
; : might wake up feeling "up" and
• happy though things are not
' : particularly great. What's at
· work here? Does It have some. thing to do with tbe stage of sleep
;: we wake up In, or the kind of
•· ctrea~ we had, or other factors
.;: such as \he blOQ!Iaugar level?
· , : I hope these questions don't
sound foolish. Give It your best
' '. f

.,

shot , Annie. -INTRIGUED IN
NORFOLK, VA.·
•
DEAR NORFOLK : Most
likely, those 90· and 100-year-olds
you read a bout In the paper who
claim they've never been sick a
day In their lives actUally believe
it beca.use they have never had
an Incapacitating Illness.
Also, people experience dis·
_comfort differently. Some lndl·
vlduals will
a mild head·
ache,
stomachache

The Daily Sentinel Paga 9

Pomeroy-Mkklaport, Ohio

I':lsane man ·shoots down ·crowd in ralnpage, four injured

Meigs Library .lines... Grammys: Surprises and 'Oooh, Michael!'

· By Ruua Powen
· In your child's name.can build.
In a card carrying country. one
It you haven't been to the 11·
that's tree for life, among all the brary In a while, this campaign
cards we carry In our wallets, period Is a good opportunity to
only one gets more valuable the check out the children's section
greater the use. Only one of them and see what's available In print,
b a credit card without charge, In audio and In video materials.
and only one Is available to the
For children. as well as tor
youngest child ill your home.
parents, the library card should
That card Is !rom the library. be a passport to a world of fancy,
The month of March, the Meigs fun and Information tor l(ears to
County Public Library Is start- come. Looked at another way,
Ing a campaign to encourage you It's an entertainment and educato come alone or With your child . lion credit 'card that pays you
to get a library card In the young- and your children, Instead or the
ster's name.
other way around.
A library card Is the greatest
The best gift you'll ever give
gilt you '11 ever give your child. your child Is nearby. It's free.
And we believe it. It you've been It's guaranteed for a lifetime of
getting books lor your kids on learning and enjoyment. All you
your own card, consider the have to do Is use lt.
sense of pride that having a card

Tht.nday, March 3, 1988

I

NEW YORK (UPI) - In a
night of serious shutouts, longtlme rock 'n' roller Little Rl·
chard summ~ up the surprise
victories In the 30th annual
Grammy Awards with two words
of condolence for the big loser:
"Oooh, Michael! ".
In one of the biggest I!Pse'ts In
Grammy history, Michael Jacksari's "Bad" album- the biggest
selling record or the . year failed to capture one major
award, falling victim to Irish
rock band U~ , Smokey Robinson
and Sting along the way.
The only trophy "Bad" . took'
home was lor best engineered
recotdlng, a non-televised
award.
U2 rolled over Jackson and .
captured album of the year lor '
"The Joshua Tree," which also
garnered a Grammy earlier In
the evening tor best rock pertorrriance by a duo or group with
vocal.
Jackson lost to Robinson In the
category of best R&amp;B vocal-male
with Robinson taking the honors
for his single "Just to See Her."
He forced a small smile when the
camera turned on him as Robinson's name was announced.
Sting won the award tor best
pop vocal pertormance lor the
single "Bring on the Night,"
beating out a ' bevy of heavy
contenders - Jackson, Bruce
Springsteen. Elton John and AI
Jarreau .
. Little Richard, who tore up the
audience with his antics In
presenting the award for best
new artist, commented on the
Jackson shutout after the show.
"I'm shocked. I'm stunned,"
he said. "I think a lot of people
are. Oooh. Michael! "
Springsteen walked ·off with a
singular honor, as best rock
vocal performance-solo for the
"TUnnel of Love" album.
' Jackson's losses were a far cry
from his earlier Grammy successes In 1980 and 1984. The 1980
album "Off the Wall" sold · 7
million copies and won a
Grammy. In 1984, the •phenomena I album "Thriller," had an
unprecedented seven singles In
the Top 10 music charts, sold
more than 25 million copies and
won several Grammys.
.Paul Simon's single "Graceland" was named record of the
year. Simon's album of the same
name took the Grammy for
album of the year last year, but
due to a complicated set or rules
on what dates records must be
r~leased to qualify forGrammys
In a certain year, the single was
eligible this year.
One Grammy winner who did
not seem surprised with his
victory over Jackson was Narada Michael Walden who bested
Jackson and Quincy Jones In the
producer of the year category.
Walden won for his work on the
Whitney Houston album,
. "Whitney."
"I 'm not surprised," Walden
said backstage after picking up
his trophy, "because I think the
world wants to see qew faces.
Qulricy has won so many awards.
He came over to me· privately
and told me that he'd voted for
me."
In accepting their awards, U2

ran the gamut !rom amusing
thank-yous_ - naming Bob Dylan, Walt Disney, Pee Wee
Herman an!! Fawn Hall among
others - to a heartfelt recognilion of South African activist
Desmond TUtu and some observatlons on the meaning of their
music.
"This Is all very appreciated,"
said the group's spokesman.
"It'shard 'whenthere's50mllllon
people or so (watching) not to
take~ opportunity to talk about
South Africa and so. ... We set out ·
to make soul music. It has
nothing to do with being black or
white. It 's a decision to reveal
and not conceal.
"Without II, people like Prince
. would be nothing more than a
song and dance man-, 'and he's '
more than that. .Bruce · Springsteen would benothlngmorethan
a great storyteller and he's much
more than that. Without It u2
certalnly _wouldn:t be here and I
wouldn't want to be anywhere
but New York City tonight."
What made U2's accomplishment even more Impressive Is
that no album-oriented hard rock

_

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

LISTENING - Bono, lead singer of the Irish
rock group U2, listens to the sweet sound of
. success from one of the two Grammy Award.~ tile

ON 1111 "T' • ...uPOIT

group won Wednesday for Best Rock G.roup and
Album of the Year for'thelr album, "The Joshua
Tree." UPI

HOW .T O
RETIRE ON
$50 A MONTH.
"

branch when a bullet pierced the critical condition with wounds to
window and hit the mirror behind the stomach and chest.
Elton· Watson, 16, of Midland,
him.
who
was shot while sitting In h!s
"He look at me. llooked at him,
car,
was treated for a wound to .
an'd I started running back.
the
calf
and released .
wards," said Ed Jay, who had
Two
pollee
officers shot Dun·
been orosslng the street for his
can alter he Ignored their orders
morntng cup of coffee.
The wounded Included 16-year- to freeze and began firing at
old Toni Longoria, who ts seven them, auth&lt;i'rlties said.
"He was trying to reload one
months pregnant . She was In
satisfactory condition wl.th and fire the other one ·at the
officers. The officers returned
wounded thigh .
Pedestrian Illan Nlaves, 18, fire," pollee Sgt. Paul Buske
.
_
was In satisfactory condition said.
"He
was
calm
In
demeanor,"
with a WO\Ind to the right leg.
Motorist Deborah Reyes, 29, who pollee Lt. Albert Ortiz said. "His
was shot as she tried to run from · actions were deliberate and not
a car stuck In traffic, was In hurried ."

started. "He acted normal.
There was no conversation. I
have no idea what set him of!."
Witnesses said crowds of pe·
destrlans and motorists caught
In downtown traffic scattered as
the gunman, wearing a long coat,
emerged !rom the taxi and
calmly began firing both wea·
pons as he walked down the
street.
" Everyone In front of him was
running, trying to find someplace
to hide. And a lot of pe6ple were
running behind him to find out
what was going on," said Darryl
Cook, 23, who was standing Inside
a Southwest ·Beauty College

Visa available
Soviet ·Union
SAN MATEO, Calif. (uPI) ~
The credit card, the plastic
symbol of capitalism and consumerism, will soon be available In
the Soviet union.
Visa International sal~ Wed·
nesday that Its credit card will
become the first to be Issued by a
Soviet organization to citizens
and foreign residents of toe
Soviet Union.
Intourist, the Soviet agency
that coordinates travel throughout the Soviet union, will begin
Issuing the Visa cards later this
year.
Visa International is the parent
of VIsa u .S:A. lnc.,o!SanMateo, .
the nation's largest credit card
company with 106 million U.S.
card holders.
Worldwide, Visa has 163 mil·
lion cardholders, who charged
more than $161 billion In purchases last year.
"This Is a new concept to them.

By KENNETH R. BAZINET
·
. AMHERST Mass (UP!) The occupatl~n of a ·Hampshire
College building by students
protesting racism !las ended with
an agreement to Improve minortty programs at the school, but
·students and supporters say the
light against . racism will
·continue.
• · "I have to say, ourentl're group
l 1'is extremely pleased," said An·
) ta Fearman, a freshman froll!
~s Angeles and one of the
!•protesters who ended their eight: ~ay occupation' of the Dakin
, Master's House on Wednesday. ·
:•"It must be .-ecognlzed things ·
·4lon't end here. We have to
l:contlnu~? the fight." ·
·
' • The demonstration concluded
t}arter the administration agreed
~to hire a dean for multi-cultural
affairs, to designate space at the
'•Dakin Master's House for a
·~student mlnqrlty ,affairs center ,.
''and to draft a campus racial
arassment policy.
I The six-page pact was signed
before 200students ouisldeDakin '
~aster's House by eight or' the
.!Original 50 minority protesters

••

'

._._

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SAN ANTONIO (UP! ) - An
_Insane g,unrilan told Investigators his desire for publicity led
him to lire two .357 Magnum
· revolvers Into panicked crowds
on downtown streets, wounding
four people before he was shot by
pollee.
"He wasn't aiming at people.
He was just shooting them
down," witness Todd Tarboe
~ald. "He went on a rampage."
Marvin Duncan, 56, was hospltalized .wlth a bullet wound to the thigh after Wednesday's shootIng spree that began five bl~ks
b·om the Alamo.
Duncan was charged with six
counts of
I

murder under the Texas serial when he was released.
.crimes law lor shooting the four
"He Is a diagnosed paranoid
people and firing at two otflcers. schizophrenic, and when he gels
Bond was set at $1.5 million. · ·
off his medication, apparently he
Pollee Chief Bill Gibson said does strange things to people,"
the only explanation Duncan . said attorney Steve Hilbig, who
gave for his actions was that "he prosecuted. Duncan In the grocwanted to gain some attention." ery store shooting. "You have·a
As Duncan was being taken lot of people who run through the
away by pollee after the shoot- criminal justice system who are
Ing, he told n~porters , "Every· . like this guy. His situation Is not
. where I go, everyone Is trying to unique."
Duncan began firing shots out
get me In trouble."
.
Court records show Duncan the window from the back seat of
was judged Insane In 1981 after he a taxicab that had picked blm up
was charged with attempted at his home on the city's west
murder In the ShOOting of a side, pollee said. ·
•'He told me to bring him down
grocery store clerk. The charge
was dismissed imd he . was to the Alamo," said cab driver
committed to San Antonio State Frank Esquivel, who stopped
Hospltal. Authorities did not say and ran away ~hen the shooting

~~...

"

Kenneth (R) on math ~nblems oullllde lne Board
of Educatloa bu,ldlng WedDeallay. Botb of the
boys attend Cleveland Scbool of Scleace. UPI

They're pretty excited about the

possibilities," said Visa spokes·
man Dan Brigham. "Way down
the road, It's a very, very

Stude~ts end Hampshire occupatio~ ~~i~:::,::::~~a:::::::

ANN LAN'DE&amp;Se

toothache while others will take
to their beds.
Yes, It Is possible to have a
slight cold. Actually some folks
are able to prevent a cold from
becoming full-blown by taking a
.hefty dose of Vitamin C, drinking
a lot offrultjulce~ and hottea and
getting a good day's rest. The
"slight cold" was the beginning
of a bad cold that was nipped In
the bud. ,
·
·
As lor why some people wake
up feeling lousy when life Is great
and greet the morning feeling
terrific when life Is awful: It
could be a matter of Indigestion,
blood sugar, a good or bad dream
or some chemistry of the brain
that we know very little about.
Ain't life

By RENEE HAINES

Q\JIZZING STUDENTS- On the '7til day of the
sirlke Cleveland t_eacher- Gene Tracy quizzes
studenll- Erik Goodrun (C) and his brother

'

Ann
Landers

band has ever won a lirammy, a
Other televised awards Indramatic example ot under-. eluded Whitney Houston for best
ground rock muscling Its way pop vocal performance-female
Into the mainstream.
for her song, which was the
"We want to thank. college s how's opening production.
radio, " the spokesman s'ald af- number, "I Want to pance W!,ih,~terward. "God knows 1where Somebody;••
.
··
we'd be without them ."
Also cinching the top awards
Little Rlchard, · presenting the that were televised were "A
award for best new artist, Night at the Met" for best
engaged In some good-natured comedy album by Robin Wllllrlbblng by refusing to name the · · ams; "Les Mlserables" for best ·
winner lmmedlaately. ·
musical cast show album;
· "Th,e winner Is me," he said "Sojllewhere . Out There" for
several times. " I am the archl· song of the year; "Horowitz In
teet of rock 'n' roll. You ain't Moscow" for best classical alnever given me a Grammy."
bum; "Forever ' and Ever,
Finally, he announced Jody Amen" "for best country song; •
Watley as the winner.
and "Marsalis Standard Time Comedian Billy Crystal. the Volume I" by Wynton Marsalis
show's host for the second year In tor best jazz Instrumental
a row 1 kept the show moving at a · per!ormance-group.
brisk clip and commented on the
Before the telecast, a series of
fact that the show had moved to non-televised awards were presNew York's Radio City Music · ented In a variety of categories
Hall from Los Angeles, where the Including ,blues, .gospel, latin, .
telecast had originated since reggae, and polka music.
.
1981.
Some winners In the non"11'~ a historic building In New
televised awards Included AreYork," he said. " It's the only ·tha Franklin. Itzhak Perlman,
building Donald Trump doesn't Frank Zappa, Randy Travis, Bill
own."
Withers, Julio Iglesias and
Wayne Shorter.
··

~fJudge

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IRA At Age 65
Assuming An Average Yield Of 8.25%

MONTHLY BEGINNING
INVESTMENT ATAGE35

BEGINNING
AT AGE 25

$78,411
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$156,822

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$375,394

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f~ ·NEW YORK (UPI) - Pana• :rna's ousted president pressed
~ :his campaign to force Gen.
~ Manuel Antonio Noriega from
! i&gt;ower by freezing Panamanian
:Ss5ets around the world, winning
:·acourtordertohold$10mllllonln.
-~·a New York. bank.
•. A federal judge Issued a
h emporAry restraining order
•·\vednesday blocking the Repub'
Nallonal Bank of New York
;&lt;'bank from transferring the $10
In Republic of Panama'

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funds to' control of Noriega.
·
The·action resulted !rom a suit
filed ., in u.S. District Court In
Manhattan against the bank by
Juan Sosa, Panall\anlan ambas·
sador to the United States, a
supporter- of ousted President
Eric Arturo Delvalle.
In Panama City , President
Manuel Solis Palma, the Noriega
ally named to replace Delvalle,
said Panama will take "whatever measures" are needed to
stop Delvalle's move to control
Panamanian as~ts abroad and
' It "Inexcusably meddling

In our Internal affairs."
·
Sosa said the new Panamanl;m
governmentlntended to transfer
the $10 million at the start of
business Wednesday. The
transfer would have allowed
~orlega and his regime to
dissipate, convert or steal the
funds or retransfer them beyond
the reach of this court," the'.sult
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Judge Lloyd McMahon Issued
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runny,

wllo occupied the building, col- of about a dozen white ~tudents lion of more than 260 million.
lege President Adele Simmons whO held nlghtlr vigils outside
Charl~s T. Russell, VIsa InterNOW
3
and other administration Dakin Master's House In support nationals president, said Intourofficials.
of the occupation, which started , 1st's plan "reflects the clear
"I thlrtk (-the agreement) Is a Feb. 23. Many of the students Interest of the (Soviet Union) ...
very strong statement of com- gathered around a-burning bar- to develop International business
mitment on the part of students rei each night, while others relationships."
Ragular &amp; Kings......!'"""'""""''""'"' 031 .Carton
and the Institution," Simmons huddled Inside 'makeshift tents
VIsa cards wlllllkely be Issued
said, standing outside the build· outside the building.
only to an elite corps of govern71 Carton
100' s ••.••••.•.••.•...•...............................
l!lg that serves as a dormitory
O.ne of the. supporters, sopho- ment officials, lndustryleaders
PLUS FREE SPUDS MACKENZIE BIC UGHTER
and Third World center. "The more Erin Player of Salt Lake and sports figures who are
Institution Is the winner."
City, said , she has witnessed already permitted to travel out·
Details of the agreement re· racist acts like a cross-burning In side of the Soviet Union. .
quire that tile inultl-cultural her hometown, but never ex·
Visa cards are already acOFFER GOOD
affairs dean will be a current peeled to have to worry about · cepted at some 500 locations In
faculty member and serve for such prejudice on campus.
the Soviet union, but · the new
Pharmacy
THROUGH
two years starting July 1. The
"I thought Hampshire was a lntourlst-lssued care! would be
Kll'nneth McCullough. A .Ph .
ChMiel Riffle. R Ph
pact also stipulated that students utopian place, but I guess there Is the first to be offered by a Soviet
Ro nald Hanin!J, R Ph
of the Underrepresented Cui· some subtle racism here," organization.
M o n rhru Sat . 8:00 A M. to 9 PM
MARCH 7, ·
tui-es. the group 'whlch occupied Player said.
·
Visa Is also looking Into the
Sundav 10:00 AM ' to 4 OOP M
PRESCFUPTIONS
PH
9
92·
2955
Dakin Master's House, will reThere are about 100 minority possibility of providing card
Fr iendly Servk:11
Pomero'f. Oh .
celve at least $4,500 In annual students at Hampshire, a liberal holders with ~ccess to cash by
f M11in
'.
Open N iqhUtil\9
funding and 25 percent of the arts college attended by 1,100 . means of VIsa s automated teller
college's annual library budget students.
n0twork.
will be used to procure Third
The Hampshire College occu- fp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~
World media materials , and patlon occurred six days after
publications.'
minority studo:mts at the unlverFinally, students Involved in slty of Massachusetts occupied a
theprotestwlllnotbedlsclpllned · campus building for six days to
by school officials for their protest a racial attack on two
protest actions, according to the blacks who were walking on
8 '·
agreement.
campus wlih a white woman.
•
Fearman praised a core group

blocks transfering of funds _

·

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AIETAMINOPHEN.

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10-The o.ily Sentinel

Shultz resumes peace- shut~le,
By JIM ANDERSON
BRUSSELS, Belgl~m (UP!) Secretary of State George Shultz,
res uming his Middle East peace
shuttle today , rejected the possibility of talks with the PLO while
it _refu ses to recognize Israel, but
he said he would like " more
broad and bette r·· dialogue with
Palestinians.
,
Shultz. at thecloseoftheNATO

,

summit, repeated the u .S. policy
of refusing contact with the
Palestine Llber~tton Organlzalion as long as the PLO refuses to
recognize Israel's right to exist
and falls to approve u .N. Resolulion 242, which sets out terms tor
·a Middle East peace settlement.
The secretary, speaking at a
news conference,·sald the united
States wants "to see a more
broad and better dialol(lle' ·with
,

TO RETURN - President Reasan tells reporters that he has
directed Secretary of State George Shultz to return to the Middle
East for another attempt at bridging Arab-Israeli differences on a
peace settlement. Reagan and Shultz were attending a NATO
summit Wednes![ay. UPI/ REUTER

.the Palestinian IJCOPle "and will
work for it." But he said he did
not. "see any way" to !It a
meeting with Palestinians into
his schedule during thts · return
trip to the Middle East.
Shultz, who was headed from
Brussels to London before returning to the Middle East, Is
searching for an elusive formula
that will bring Arabs and Israelis
into direct negotiations as early
1 as next month.
In an Interview with ABC
News, conducted several pours
before Shultz flew to London,
national security adviser Colli\
Powell declined to ·c omment on
wh~tt might result from the
mission.
· "We're not looking for a grand,
public gesture." Powell said.
, "He's looking for . common
ground among all the players
that would serve as a basts for
whatever the next step might
be."·
President Reagan aimounced
Wednesday that Shultz, who had
just finished five days of shuttllng between Israel, Egypt,

'

rejec~s

possible ·PLO talks

thing that everybody he. has
talked to agrees on- but he has
totlnd the blend of s~pstance and
procedure to bring them together
to negotiate it.
The next stage of the process
takes place In about two weeks
whenShamtr travels to Washing·
ton March 16 for another set of .
talks with Shultz and Reagan.
·Palestinian and Israeli groups
In Israel and the occupied West
Bank anp Gaza Strip announced ·
plans for rn&lt;~sslve demonstratlons to coincide with Shultz's
visit. Israeli security, which was
heavy In the past week, Is
e11pected to be stepped up.
Shultz's Immediate aim Is the
launching of formal negotiations
next month under the guidance of
the lJnlted States and the Soviet
Union. The participants would be
Israel, Jordan, Egypt and-Palestinian representatives.
In Shultz's view, the negotialions would lead to an "Interim
arrangement" that would be a ·
plan for limited Palestinian
self-rule In the occupied lands
that would run for thr~e years-

an outgrowth of the 1978 Camp
David accords, the foundation
for the . 1979 Egyptian-Israeli
peace treaty.
At the end of three years , the
Palestinians then would choose
theformoffinalgovernancethey
prefer, lncludingposstbleconfed·
eratlon with Jordan. Israel se- '
!zed the west Bank trom Jordan,
Gaza from Egypt.
·
Israel has made tt clear it
would not accept an Independent
Palestinian state that- could be a
launching pad for aggression by
the Arab states.
Shultz has told reporters tl)at
his talks thus far showed that ail
sides are viewing the disputed
Issues with new seriousness.
The chief benefit of his talks, he
said, has been to force Middle .
East leaders to "go back ·to their
constituencies" and ask them to
come up with positions that
might be acceptable to other
parties In the negotiations.
Left unsettled Is · whether
Shullz will meet with Palestinian
leaders In the Middle East. One
proposed meeting Friday In Arab

The source said Syrian intelli·
gence officers, Including Talleh,
met with Schray's captors three
BEIR UT, Lebanon iliPI)
days
ago to arrange the release.
Wes t German Ralph Schray was
"The release, which was supfreed by his abductors early
po&amp;ed to take place earlier. was
today and handed over to Syrian
delayed
due to a dispute between
troops deployed to keep peace In
the
kidnappers,
some of whom
the tumultuous· capital but Bonn
denied a deal was made to did not want to yield to Syrian
pressure," he said.
release the hostage.
Schray's Lebanese wife, Rana
Th e c land es tine group
Strugg lers fo r Freedom, which Munla, left her west Beirut
residence at noon today and
c laim e d res ponsibility for
Schray 's January abduction, headed ·to the Syrian capital to
sa id in a stateme nt Wednesday it meet her husband. Munla was
would re lease the hostage as part accompanied by Schray's uncle
of a dea l that would lead to George Abu Nassar and met with
freedom for two Le banese broth- the chief of Syrian Intelligence in
ers sus pected of tE'rrorism and Beirut. Col. Ali Hammoud, before driving to Damascus.
jailed in Wes t Germany.
" All Hammoud told me very
In Bonn , a spokes man for Wes t
Germa n Forei gn Minister Hans- good news, but I will not believe
he is being released until I see.
Dietrich Ge nscher said Genscher
him with my eyes ... . I am going
thanked Sy ria for helping gain
Sc)lray 's freedom and asked now to Damascus 10 bring him
Damascus to work fort he release back home." said, Munla. · 27,
of a nothe r Germa n kidnapped in who looked relaxed and happy ,
The abductors had warned
Beirut 14 months ago.
West
Ge rmany against pressurBut a Wes t Ge rman justice
ing
them
, saying that woulll
offi cia l sa id no dea l had been
endanger the life of Rudolf
m ade and there w a s no connec Cordes, a West German chemition betwee n Sc hray's freedom
a nd a ny poss ible release of cal executive held by the same
suspected ter roris ts Mohammad group since Jan. 17, 1987.
The West Germans has reAli Ha madi a nd Abba s Ali
jected a li.S. request to extradite
Ha mad!.
Mohammad All Hamad! in conSc hray, 31. an engineer whose
nection with the 1985 hijacking of
m ot her is Lebanese and father is
a
TWA airliner and the murder of
Germa n. was kidna pped Jan. 27
·
passenger
Robe rt Stethe m , a
in wes t Be irut by gunmen bet;.S.
Navy
diver.
But they have
lieved to be associates of Abdel
promised to try him on hijacking
Hadi Ha madi. security chief of
the pro-Ira nian Hez bollah group and murder charges .
Abbas Ali Hamad! is being
a nd the e lder broth er of the two
tried on charges of complicity in
men ja iled in Wes t Germany.
last year·s kidnapping of Cordes
His a bduct ion was seen . as a
and
another West German,
challe nge to the Syrians. who had
Alfred
Schmidt , a biotechniclan
deployed 7, 000 troops in Moslem
who
was
released · Sept. 7 amid
wes t Bei rut in a n attempt to
reports
West
Germany paid a
maintain peace.
huge
ransom
.
The two we re
The Chr istian Voice of Lekidnapped
apparently
in a bid to
ba non radio ·quoted witnesses as
pressure
Bonn
to
release
Mosaying Sc hray was delivered
hammad All Hamad!.
overnight to Mus tafa Diranl , the
"Mediation by friends in Syria,
recently dismissed securfly chief
of the Shiite Amal militia, In · especially (Syrian) President
pre pa ra tion for his release.
, Hafez Assad, gave a new 'chance
The radio said the pro-Iranian ·for another round of negotiations
Dirani the n contacted the Syri- and for settling the case. of
Schray In the next few hours if all
ans to arrange Schray's release.
commitments are fulfilled, " the
Le banese security sources said
statement
released · Wednesday
Schray was driven In a car of the
said.
pro-Iranian Hezbollah to a Sy"The · release of the Hamad!
rian checkpoint early today near
brothers
who are still .ln jallln
Beirut's southern suburbs and
Germ;my shOuld be the second
handed over to troops .manning
Initiative" after the release of
the roadblock:
Schray, the statement said.'
Syrian Intelligence chief, Col.
The release of Schray reduced
Amlr Talleh, then drove the
to 20 the number of foreigners
clean-shaven Schray to the eastheld hostage In Lebanon. They
. ern · town of Anj ar, halfway
include nine Americans and
between Beirut and Damascus,
three Britons, Including Church
where the West German was
of
England hostage negotiator
questioned about his abductors.
Terry
Waite who disappeared
A Syrian security source said
more
than
a year ago.
Schray, wno appeared weak and
Two Scandanavlan u.N. relief
shaken by his ordeal, was taken
workers held hostage tor 26 days
to Da,mascus and handed aver to
were released Tuesday after
West German o!!lclalsy.
~ .
I

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pom.roy
YOUI INDEPENDENT
. AGENTS SIIVING.
MEIGS coum
SINCE 1161

~~~~-----'---;,_-------------~~==========~

Jordan,
London,
be goingSyria
back and
"because
"It'swould
clear ..
ali countries in the region believe
It is useful for the United States
to remain engaged In this
process."
According to the schedule put
out by American officials, Shultz
will retrace his route earlier. In
the week- first flying to London
to talk to King Hussein of Jordan,
who Is undergoing dental surgery
in Britain.
Shultz then flies back to Israel
late today In preparation for
. talks with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamit and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres - a shuttle
within a city since the two Israeli
politicians differ on everything In
the U.S. initiative, Including the
baste negotiating conditions.
The secretary of state then
trayels on to Damascus lor
another talk with syrian President Hafez Assad. and to Cairo
for a meeting with President
Hosnl Mubarak, beforereturnhig
to Washington early Saturday.
Shultz says that the goal Is a
comprehensive peace - some·

f
•

•

.

their captors, a previously unknown group called the Revolutionary Cells, said in a statement
the two men had been Interrogated and found "innocent."
The kidnappers of Jan Stening
of Sweden and William Jorgensen of Norway did not specify
any charges against the aid
workers who were abducted last
month while driving along a
coastal highway on the outskirts
of Sidon , 24 miles south of Beirut.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
.
on Februory 26, 19BB. in
tho Melgo County Probata
Court, C01o No. 26115, Rulttta A. Roberto, 38013
Long Hollow Rood. Porn-'
eroy, Ohio, 46719, wao appointed Executrix of the ••·
lata of Adrian R. Roberta
Sr., docooNd,loto of 31013
Long Hollow Rood, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45789.
Robert E. Buck,

ProHte Judge
Lana K. N-l•oed, Cfo..
(3) 3, 10, 17, 3tc

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE io hereby given
that on Wedneodoy. Morch
9. 1988, at 10:00 o.m., 1
public oalto will bo held at
THE FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS CO., 211 Woot

Second, Pomeroy, Ohio. to
oell for caoh the following
colletenll:
867 VCR Tapoo (wiM not bo
sold oaparotely
1680 CtoorCooeo
3 VCR Machines
1 13" Color TV
2 4xB lighted olgno
The Fermera Benk and
Sovingo Compony, Pornoroy, Ohlo,'
the right
to bid ot thlo ..le, ond to

'""rv"

withdraw the above colll·
terol priOf to Olio. Further,
The Farmer• Benk end a.v.
lngo Compony tooerveo the
right to reject eny or oil bldo
oubmittld.
Furthot, the oboVtl colla·
torol will bo oold In the condition it lo in with no ••·
preiiMd or implied wemntleo given.

(3) 3, 4, 8, 3tc

l-:====~=="::-=--1

Business ,Services
BISSELL
BUIL~ERS

,

Campers, RVs,
O{ Mobile
Home Lot
Rentals
992-5623
POMEIOlfg~:I10mo.

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At lta1oe bl1 Prlc•"

Pl. 949-2101

.'

or ln. 949-2160
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAU$
4-16-1&amp;-tfn

·, · .•

J&amp;L .
INSULAnON

•VINYL SIDING ,
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

t

$1.00
6 for $45

I

CluM rhortt11- $5.00
New Grips SUO
S.W• a..... $10.00
lo*-"oiT...... . t

'
.,'

_J PI•••.fl.M -

.

•

H-'11-

•
•
•
•

88

Homo 45.78

lncludel Antenna And All Hardware!
2 Sllndolf llaullllan • 41·Foot Graund Wire
4" wan Mottnta • 50-Foot folm Twin l.elld
&amp;·foot S1eel Mat • Antenna Dlschlrtl8 Unit
Graund Rod • Four 3'12" Wood Screws

'0

~l~•uu , #

for coneuhlng Mrvlcet r•·

lotecl to the preporotlon of
document&amp; for en Urban De·
velopment octlon Grent pro·
ject in the downtown buli·
n - dlotrict of tho Vltfoge of
Middleport.
Servlceo wil~ include, but

Wide-Swept

ao• Ellmente
for

Mulmum

Pickup

ant not limited to, the fi:tl·
towln.;::mo: '
1.
aration and completion Of an envlronmentlll
review.
2 . l'raflllrotlon end ••ocutlon of fogolly binding docu·
mento between tho doveiOflllr, vibga, Dept. of Houo- •
lng ond Urbon Development, ond·ony other entitltoo

Mul not Included ,

See the clear picture and color your TV set was meant
to deliver! Attaches to your stereo for improved FM reception, too. Gold·aiodized finish fights COtTOSion. Factory preassembled. Buy ycwrs fodayll15-1711
"

.

:

-rv3.,....,.ration and ••ecu·

.-

Video Multiplying System
Lets You "Share" Your VCR ·
By Archer

lion of ony Oilier documents
. n_...ry tor ehelmpianlen·
tatlon of thio prolect.
Succeoefuf bidder muot bo
•n Equof Employment Op- .
portunlty Employer, willch
prohlbiU d!ocrimlnMion bo. cauoe of ....,•• oroed. color.

TC-1001 by Radio Shack

25tro Off

5915_

39985
Reg. 499.95

Reg. 79.95

Ellmlnlt• the NHd to Buy 1 VCR for Every TV
Whal a value! Now you can watch your VCR on
any TV in your home. Even use VCR's remote control from any room. Expandable anytime.l15-1953

Low AI UO Por Month •

Comb IIHer increases picture clarity and
purity. MTS stereo and SAP add a new dimension to TV b.I'OIIdcasts. Scan memory,
1~h. cable-compatible tuner. 116-251

Deluxe.
Antenna Rotor
Signal Amplifier
A Better Picture

public interest exists, a pub·

any peraon may obtain notice of further actiont. end

5

By Archer ,

lasham Building

EYIRY .
SAT. NIGHT

6:30P.M.

FactOJy Cholet
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-tln

lmm MOVIfS &amp; SUDES to

.. -._RTlJ........
VHS TAPE

~~~

I !lidos ... to

446-7390

The opportunity to buy a
clean, well equipped; established busines. Only needs
younger owners.

AFTER 6 P.M. CAU
949-2324 or 949-3034
Help Wanted

'

PARniME LPN'S

3:00-11:30 A.M.
11 :00 P.M.-7:30 A.M.
75 BED ICF/LONG-TERM
CARE FACILITY

looking for a few good nurM~ to join our ·
dedioatlld lltllff who ant committed to providIng quality ::... If you feel you lhare this dedi·
·Clition end comn~tbiiaet to quality geriatric
care llf'!d teem' WOlfe. pin• call or ~:
Patty Conard, R.N., D.O.N.
for an interview. WEW wage acela and
excellent banefh peckaga.
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Box A. Main St.
Coolville, Ohio 46723

Down-extra

·

Antenne

kupid't N..t and Connections
Oetlng Senile. of Huntington
joins mg.th• lhHing profHM.
For infotm ..ion wri.. : Kupid"a
Ntlt, P.O. Box 1511. kuntori,

Ohio 4&amp;838.

MARINES: We'N looking for 1
t.w good men. For more infor·
m~~tion, cell SeraNnt Mike A ben
et lo.t--420-eof a collect.

Attention Electroull custam••·
Frank Fultz 11 now your euthoriud fectory ..,.. end sMVtce

For ....W:. can
304·137-2272 onytlmo.

...,._nu~.

4

Giveaway

Y.t German St..ph•d • ,h L..b.111 lhotl. To gOod home In

Pupp&amp;. to glvllaWIIy to good

homo. Coli 814-448·37117.

FuH blooded Kloh Dog. Good
with lddo. Coli 814-379-2771.
Two femlll pup1. 8 weeki old.
Yi LM and Engll1h Satter. Give
.way to tJOOd home. 814-192-

7118.

ANd 12, 31881 T•••• Rd .• 2
mlln off Rt. 7, •bave Chttter.
Tuttle RHidence.

Glg.ntic Garage Sale', Merdl 5
lilt), 11h · miiN out Broad Run
Rd. from Phillip Sporn Plent. yOu
Mml It we probebly gat It! Rein
or Shine.

.......
ao .,.
dill...~-·
flnll 111to111
of

doll",......A:olalflllo
.....
netk ledlliil
p11 t. ;tAISsl

882·22158 '
.8-1 Mon.-Fri.
8-3 Saturdeya

TONY8.
Mom,

I'

-

417 Second A-. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mull)erry Hgts, Pomeroy,

13

1 1 Help Wanted

6182.

FecMrellllt'.

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE.JO~S.

1 8 Wanted to Do

lnhlriUince Aur:tion. M.,ch I,
1188, 10:00 am. Putnam
County Courthou11. Winfl-'d.

W.Va. Tannacaahorchecllwilh
proper 10. Cantaat AI Whittington, 304·176·2873.

Wanted To Buy

We pay calh for IMe model clean
Chev . ·Okleln~;.

Bill Gene Johnaon

at•-44a-3e72

TOP CASH paid lor '83 model
and newer ulld c... Smiltl
lulcii.-PontliC,

1911

Ealtem

8 lost and Found

Avo., O.lflpoilo. Coli 814-448-,
2282.

lOST: Pure-Ired black Gerinan
Shepherd dog. In Rt. ISII
Rpdnay area. Call 114·44l·

Complete houllholdt of tumi·
tuN • antiqun. AN wood a
CHI hHtwe. Swain' a Furniture
• Auction, Third • Oltva,

7100.

FOUND: Large bl..:k rebbh in
vicinity f PI111 H
~- 81 4
"
a
ut. - 11

4411·7117.
FOUNO: Poodlt-Whito with
blac:ll.epotl. VIcinity of Northup

• Rt. 771. eon 814·448-01118.
FOUND: &amp;moll dog in -.ya1
Golf c-. Coli 11 4·4411·
ZIH.

113,660 to 169,480, IMME·

OIATE ·Openlnga, C.ll 1-311733·1013 EJd. F 2718.'
Ttii·I·Merktting- Ledle1 to
make epp«MntiMntl for Ohio

Velley Memory Gard.ne, 1-1
~nlnga,
t3.10 1 hr. plut

lt4-448-3161.

Want to buy: UHd fumltur. and
antlqutt. Will buy lftttN hOUMhold fumilhlng. M1rtln Wid•

moy01, 814-241-6112.

I:-::-:-:-::----:--Woukt ... to buy jUnk c.1,

c;:c"~.~;;r:~ 8r:;ot~~"::

2423.

tnt- ., ..torior Plllnllnt. za
yra exper•tee. trw Nllmate.
phone 304-876-6907.

bonu1. Call10 AM•1 PM only for

P.t time in 1tore merchandiHr.
Cell eolleet. Ptnte Shephtfd.

AurCNI, IL 10142.

ftlldiiWI

21

Busineas
Oppo~unity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

lNG CO. NCOmmencla that you
do bu1inlt1 with people you
OET PAID for rtRing bookal
1100.00 per thlo. Wrlto: PASE· · know. and NOT to 1end mo,.ey

33J, 111 S . Uncolnway, N.

~king for part-time INCiing to
full time by tuptmer. Oood pay
and good condlrionl. Mu1t be
bondable. See T"" Rlppeth 11
the Spot FrM Car W•h on
Jadi:IOII Pike- Fri., M1r. 4
between 11 AM-1 PM.

Motvr Route Garri• nNdld.
Bondeble. • gOOd tranlpor:tll•

tlon . Crown City/Galllpolll
aNa. C.ll Jean Miller 304-821·
2830.

through the maH until you
invwtig~ed the oHiring.

Stlrtlf' Gen.,.tor repelr ettop,
Own• retiring. For intor. cell
814-211-1143·--·. of.

101 6 PM

del, ling. . . Of' aCCJIIIHiH ......

Need baby1ltt11 In my home:

!rom 111. to 110, -

C1rpent1r1: •t-et&amp; per hour
Mpandlng on 1ldll1; wHIIng to
n~loo.ta. Call anytima lift., I

PM· 814·246·6177.

o.vs• houravarln. Transporlll·

-lty -

tlon n..ded. Cell 11 4·441·

210
""'""" 2100-- 'ft7,100 to
129,900, 1_....,, tnlning.

Information llnHdld tara book.
Anyona vlatlmlzed by profM·
alonal pereon . C1ll The

fblturw. alrf. .. grand opening.
ate. Can o~ 11 ~8yll. Mr.

Part-dme truclldeMwry Wlnted.

Sidney tet2tl81·1381.

23

Profeulonal
Service•

Knowl.clge of Mtigt, Athen1,
JlckiDn, • Lawrtnee C~ndM
~'""-

tar oppt.

Col 814-448-4t01

FREE Plooo of J-:.V to flflt

Furniture Nflnishing and Npalr.
quality work and re11cMble

814-441-2111.

7991.

A~-

Cell

rat•. frM 11tlm.....

for

c/OO.NipailoDoltyT-.121
Thlnl Avo., ae111po11o. Ohio
411831 .
'

114·

-

· Coill14-742-

llt•.JI f sl.il''

ao...,.mont

Bite 3 IR.

Jobo. e1 8,04oeii.UO -·Now hlrilla. Your
• - 1-801-U7-- lid. R-

1-114-111·7311.

2 IR. hOmO. '16 .... lot. Allv l r l l cabinet•.
y- -..~
doorl,
Acrau

nNw

wart~.

Jewelry, 10\'1.'

llld-FTII!dPT-.C.M
todorf t'l11..........
-bt.l·1tzi.Z41n.

c-

O.ltlpolll - . .,. Rt. 7. eon
814-211·UU.

-·---- 1------Col

....... P'omirc;y····..--··
Middleport

Get ..... for . . - . boollol

Coli.,.........

r- ...,_ IM&lt;IIt on

n 1 . - onrl up. C.H

lam I Dlllnt' "*""· In IMMM

AVON - AI - · Col .....,..
-ICM-112·2MI.

I I u · Ill Awn.

VOUf .l ot.

1101 " " - - llat.

Jolr 11M
1·11--·H11 Ext f11U
for
Info, l4 Hll.

1 1 . Help Wanted

31 · Homaa for Sale
4 IR., ti,...,IICI, fuNballmlftt. 3
mi. 10. ot Oa'f::e· e21.800.
Coli Doys-114-1111 ......
6:00- 441-1244.

~

..... nt,1411 to 111.•1 , .

• VIcinity

3M ~ I71-

Ill per10n al the
Medlcaf Plaaa-203 Jacknn
PlQ.. Glillpalla, 1-4:30.

Pon·dme MLT for FuM .......
Lab.

gold,--.
.
....,._old
. T"C.:.::

nonnoily prlood

7841.

R._.h.,.· 1·800·248-3882.

•.

G-.

s_,.,.,_lonlot o,.

Yard Sale

-doyo.

Own your OWII .,...,.. or lhoe
atore, choo .. from Jeanaportawear, ladle•. men's,
chl-·-lty. lo.......
petite, dMCI llf•lerobic:. brl-

tom.trk: office. ltulinlll..,_
tk»n and e•plilftCI ,.qu6red.
Sond ._.....to: Iori Cia 131.

7

tt.ve

Add aolor analyale. lrend
name.: Lll Clallrame. Heallhtea.
Cit aut. Lee. It Michele. FONnl:a,
BUill• loy, u.l, Comp-.,
HI•. ()rganloolly
Lucia.
over 200b othera. or't13.1tone.
prloe dellg,., multi II• pricing
dilf;OUnt or temlty lhol etore•
R-1 priGeo ..,-blefortap

1o people to Nil

!!l! !t!'. I

'

Hou• Clunlng. tall 114-4410416. .

eppolntment-11 •-ua. 31115.

Auror.. IL 10142.

uMd can.
Jim Mink

Insurance

can us for your mobi.. holM
lnlurance : Millar lneurence.
304-882-2148. Alao : auto,
home, llfe. huhh.

10010, 181 S . Uncolnway, N.
Wedemeyer'• Auction SeMc•
.willble .. your eonvenianu
and loColtions. Merlin Wed•
mevet Auction..,. 114-241·

. . . .lluoliL

fiM

I&gt;

z

Uoo.oo per I'AII
1111. 111 I. Un lens;. N.

~"MOMY
Ctltll' ,.,......
For

Hooth.

'

~ Ucensed Clinical Audiologist
::1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

e:~tp .. will train. t12 p·hr. • ytl.
Write: PASE GRAPHOLOGY •

·•~u•••••••••u•••••••••••••• • •••

&amp;.ov., Coline (rootl)

'

! USA M. KOCH. M.S.

HANDWRITING ANALYST. No.

Over 1 00 Properties
For Sale- Call Today

-..,..

'

' Television
Devices
~lntic:l
Dependallle Hearing Aid Sales &amp; "'
CJ H8arina Evaluations For AU Ages

404·998-9948

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Aolor Tume Antennll

n•YIU e

~

NOW HIRINO . Your Area.

·······p'fPieiiiiiiiit......
l!a Vicinity
.. -- ...............-·--- .. --------

9

Sman cMMnt block building to
bo tom - ·- 114-911-3621
-I:OOp.m .

~

----·-

... ......

'•

GOV'E R N MENT JO 88.
t11,040 - *59,230/yr. Now

Mtrch 4th and 15th on County

8

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

mull. 115-1225

· or lea'le h

4-1~-'Bti- lc

Your 1r11. 10&amp;-1871000 Ext. R-10188 for current

&amp; VIcinity

=~

lltw- 9 ~&amp;·6 p.111.

hlring.

, ...... GiiiiTpoiTi..........

atatiOntll Fill malt

614-742-2617

. Pomeroy, Ohio

Fu• E••IPIItllf
Parte &amp; Serillu
1-3-'1&amp; tft

Tum Knob
To Point

a Lock8 II In 1'*1

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314

F•m Equipment
Doaler
·

1-814-887-3156

Excellent.lor "Fringe"
Rlceptlon Area
Mast-mounted amp
b008t8 signal, not in·
terlerence. Adjust·
able gain, FilA trap.
115-1108

WANT TO IUT IIIKIID 01
IUifl CAIS 0111ltKIS
-filE ISRUIISFor .., ef tlooto Mnicoo ••

,!Froe Eotlmotaoi

Authorizod John Dooro,
Now Holland, lush Hog

Middleport
8:, Vicinity

\'115.

or c:~~·~M~~S

Real Estate

3485

I

7:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M. SHIFT .

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY.

.w-.~erv~ce

oJunk Yonl Bull-

- PlUmbing 1nd electrieel
work

614-662-3121

3 Announcement•

FILL TIME &amp; PAll IIIII lN SUPERVISOIS

Another New ·
Me111bttr Of The

EXCAYAftNG

•Dour • lllrak- Work
•WIU Do Houllng With
Dump Truck

-Conc:rele work

GUYSVIllE, OHIO

... :_. .. P.oiriero·v ..........

Allllll uIll: I ~ II II~ Ills

RACINE

Happy Ads

Big Four-0 Club.

TVWithFM
Stereo &amp; Headphones

992-2725

Businas1
Opportunity

11

TIIPU P

- Roofing end gutter work

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

WALK-INS WELCOME
2-5-'11 I mo.

FIRE DEPT.

.'

· 6-17-lfc

- Addont eM remodeling

SALES &amp; SEIYICE

992•2198

Ohio

RESTAURANT FOR SALE

· Sollio Dif Company, St.
Rt. 7 11 St. Rt. 881, Tupflllfl Ploino. Ohio, Elfoctivo
Dote 02-21-BB. Application
No(oJ. 0853009999 0001.
(31 3, 1tc

H-.

Public Notice

Middloport,

counrty tprol..,od!. Coli 8t4448-H08 aflor 6 PM .

Finalluuence of notice of
reglatradon:

pooelo oncl to wolve ony lnfo"""fltloo or lnoguforilleo
in the propooite received.
Vltlogo of Mlddt.port. Ohio
Fl'od
Moyor
(31 3 . 1 2tc

o.

PAT HILL FORD

169 N. 2nd An.

1... Otherwiu provided in
notioea of particular actions.
ell communlcationa ahail be
nnt to: Hooring
Clto,.,
OEPA, P. 0. Box1049, Columbuo. Oh .. •3268-0149,
PH. (11141 481-21 Ul. Conoult ORC Chop. 3746 and
OAC Chepo. 3746·47 and
3741-6 to:r requirements.

·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BOGGS ·

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. VWe can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. VWe also
repair Gas Tanks.

BEAUTY SALON·

2·25.'17-1 mo.

IMidtdoNII inform1tion. Un-

RADIATOR
SERVICE

and Kay at

CHESTEI, OHIO

21

PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

YOUNG'S

10-9-tfn

2·25·'17-1 ....

with the sty.lists Mary, Naomi, Jone,

GUN SHOOT

991-2156

Al•o Trll••l~tlo•

Come In - Lots of

t-2l-'11'ft•

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

fcftn V011 wallet
with-a want f\d

for FREE
lird loth - N~
Purc~se Necessory

16'14) 667-6695

RIIIDINCI PI!ONI

Day or billing

R~gist1r

FREE ESTIMATES

IUSIN!SS PMONI.

985-3365

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

LOW PIKES

New

Ohio

Rt•. 124, Po-or

SYIACUSE, OHIO
NEW STOlE-NEW STOCK

IACINE, OHIO

orloavo_,..

Pickup • Delivery ,

t6141 992-6SSO

or 949·2161

ployer.
The Owner "'erv•• the
right to rtioct any or oil pro·

..

A lARGE SELECTION OF
' FABRICS

l n 811tfl

lie meeting may bo held. Ao
to any actlo.n, Including re·
celpt of verified comptoilllo,

mi••

KAY'S

949~2263

RACINE ·
GUN CLUB

jult may
e Mia'
Ph. 1-992-3S27tr1·164-4233

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Cu1tom Home
Building, Room
. Additions,. .
Remodeling &amp;
Repairs, Roofs, ,
Baths, Kitchens

1:00 P.M.

·

Grace, Donna, Angela

Gutttli'S
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE E;STIMATES

1

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...
Advertloe todoy In
Wheeler Du•r. or you

Relldentl•l •
Commerclel FUrniture
AutomOtive &amp; M•rine
Dr•periel • Comica

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billo Here

nadonel origin, ••· age,
hendlcap. pollticei effiHotlon
or bollofa. Tile Vl!foge of
Mldd~ lo en Equol Empfoymlllt 0pportU11tiV Em-

Cut '100

Rettvling • Reupholttering

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Writanl

JO'S Gin SHOP
SprirltJ w S:e-

for

10-8-lfc

The originei"Buy, Sell.

161 Norlh Secind
Middltf'!ll'l, Ohio 45760

1 1-3-tfn

I

ONLY

A

I

Public Notice

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Tred• Meguine for cars,
trucka. boatl, cyol•, RYI

Re-acquaint yourself

PlUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
New location:

NEW- IEPAIR

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Propo.. to will bo recolved
at I~ Middleport moyor'o
office, 237 Aoco St., Mlddltopon. Ohio 41760 until
3:00P.M. Man:h 21, 198B

Or Stop ly 'The Store
0:: New u. leatl out
of hllaad
•

ROOFING

r...

It, 2, Coolwlle
Servlag Meigs "
Athena Counties

More.

742-2421

[mtt:~~

IUIIOUGH'S cuno
UPIIOLSTIIY

16141 992-7754

Howard L

JOHN nAFOID

Chtdw, Ohie '

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New rtams:
Flohing Supplleo, Guno.
Archery. ond Much

88111AI COII1UCTOIS

Ei91ewlllt

PHOTO ADS SEW
Promieri:eg

1110.

SIEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

915-4141

lESSONS

·,'

2-5-'11

,

..

992-3410

Roger Hysell'
Garage

'

PH. 992-2772

_.. .......

Ref•tnC8f1

DENNY CONGO
WILL HA~L
JUST CALL!

JAMES KEESEE

REMODELING.
, REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

Mekeo

1-28-'88-tfn

flEE ESliMATES

•ROOFING

1122/11/Hn

Middleport, Ohio

2-2t-'87-1 mo.

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADOITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
915-356l

319 So. 2nd Ave.

•Replacement Windowa

1

•Rangel •Freezers
· •Rofrigltl'atora
"Mutt .. . ............

Doora

•N- Roofing

MARCUM
CONTIACIING 1

•W11her1 •Dryltl'l

IOUNTRY ~~:

•S~onn

•Storm Wlndowo

T. 0. Stewart
or Ill Stewart

NO $UNDAT

992-6282

•lnaulation

c•

or lts. 1949·2160

DEAD 01 AUVE

We Service All

VINYl &amp;
AlUMifUM SIDING

''Free.Eitimatea''

WANTED

l

. INSULAnON

New H - lullt

PH. 949•2101

CARTER'S
. PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

J&amp;L BLO.WN

BROWN'S
TRAILER PARK

2-S-'11 1oo.

Reg. &amp;eporate

PHONE 992-2156

'

PH. 992·2772

3985

.

1

FR.EE ESTIMATES

By Archer"

11

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•FURNACES
•AIR CO~DITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

SuperColor Antenna Package

~nei-Pege

The

The Daily Sentinel

HUnNG&amp;
COOUNG

.

Public Notice

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

•

East Jerusalem did not take '
place, although Shultz showed up •
and appealed to the Palestinians
to join in the negotiating process.
It was the first time a U.S.
secretary of state ever made an . ,
official appearance In E~st Jer·
usalem, ~hlch Israel annexed
shortly after its capture from
Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War.
, Shvl!z said he preferred speaking directly with the Palestinians
but that he has been receiving
Information about the Palestintan position from the Arab
leaders with whom he has been

Hostage released to ·Syrian troops,
Bonn denies ·d eal with abductorsBy NADIM LADKI

March 3, 1988

'Tluedey, March 3. 1988

toM. Join tile AfMr N Ill ...
~

_a,..~·.

IGD 14181tl.

·

1·

S,lljJ.eom . _ wiU .....

DoM.
,...., '*"'............
In

7 7 *.auao.
c.unt. --·
OF
~ -.
eo1 114h

-.azoe.

-------·
...........
=- .........
a

1 t com .._.2011 et...

.,-

-- u1.ooo.

l ,t•cc41~1

,.. .:.•rllt
~.I Ji'tl

..

Oil

~..fll

Coli

..

-'

'

�"

12-lhe

31

Sentinel
51

HouHhold BOOcle

2------------ ..

loll,----

'*''

•••

a

l n l o l r . - - _ . r d. t.M

IMJ'1. 2414 Mt. Vlf'ftOft A'llle. PI;.
pt, 304-171-1774.

your heart

N~oon , .... - .... c -

~~a:.t;E; desires.

remember, your
--112-3412.
... Aldtord. - heart detests cholesterol,
u 1...n.. 2 -..Nod..... cigarettes and alcohol."
egt.
Ll... 1480.00
clfttllfkeplec•.
llr cond; ..........
gar·
or Iiiii. 304-lll-ltll.

32

for Rent ·

Mobile Home•
for Sale

Nice 2 b!Miroom lpt. In Middlepori. t\81 par monlh. Dtpooh
end
requlrwd. Dey

14•70 with 7•24 oopondo, 3
applience~

BIIJ ., 1'h bltN,
I 0.10

mobllo homo, 1111
Mo-. 2 IR. t t - . Col
114-ZH-1248.

----·d-.·-·

· · - · Colll14-742·3033.

--hot . . .

1184 10•10 "Trail• with CIPL Mia. New fur-tully
carpeted. fwnllhed. poroh and
wtlllelauu awc:li... l ....... .-.

- · A- 1:00 114-NZ·
71 oz. l\oi-N2:1072 ....,-.
1112 Monolon. 14•70. 3 room, 2 lull - . .-buildInto - 1 ........... ond
- - - ..... undoq&gt;l_g_
Sot up on lol In Middle-

roducod. CoN 114H2-IISI oftor 1:00.
pori. Prico

AIIDDitil=, need to ... 111•

14•70 8 u!lz, 3 bedroom. 2

beth. EJccelltnt condttion. ••
rioul lnqulriol only. 114-948-

3 bedroom- chlklren a pea
w.loome. Kylfr Cf'Mil Schools
Molropol- Houolng opprovod.
1171 por monlh. Coli 84·446·

2 ' IR. -

homo 1\olly fur·

3 IR .. Nlcelol. UOOomo. Oop.• rof. r1rqulrod. Coli 11•·448·
0382 . .

1117· CIIIY'Oft mobile home

2 bedroom, fumiah~ . · extra
ciHn. 1 chlkt. no ~tl. N•w
Hovon. 304-882-2481.

wtth wuher a dryer. Teke o....,

1117. 14dO, 2 bod.....,., n;

bltht. tocal .a.ctric. GriMier
lAna, C.mp Coni.,-. Point Pt. .

lint. w.v•.

1181 mobUe home 14x70. 2

bodroomo. 304-891· 3182 on..
1:00.

.....

2 bedroom, 12xeo Mobile
Home. Recine ern: 114-192·

.._h

Ac-· A..oll Hollow Rd.

31.4

Apptok. 20 ••. -

-

foir condhlon. worklllop, pond.
nz.ooo. o..- w111 holp fi-

nance. C1ll .tt11 I PM -114381-1704.

42 acre fllftft. I room • b.th.
Bulkllng. Rur.. water. Well •
Tobeeco bMe. Ntlf Eurekl.

na.ooo . Coli 1-713-3703124.

- 34

Busineas
Building•

, rooma. centll 11; cond. city
WlltM', minimum 1 v•• 1. .1.
t410.00 per month. ~llilablt
M•rch 1. celt 304-175-1998.

BUSINESS SLOG.
fOR SALE OR LEASE
AP!Iro•. 2,400 11q fl. 1\111 ....._
ment, 1506 ~n Blvd .,
Bob lowlo, 304-671- I 431.

41

Nicely 1\ornlshed smoll houoo.

AduHt only. Ref. required. No

- Col614-441-0338.

3 IR. houHfOINntorrentwlth
option

Nlcoly lurnlohod omol houoo.
AduH.. Ref. • dep. No pete.
Weter lumllhed. 11115 per

monlh. Coli 114·448·2143.
VerynlC.l IR .• 1'hbetha,rench
.eyle ttom•. In Crown City.,...
1210 • ' mo. Call efter 4

PM-114-211-1881.

Com- furnlohod 3 8R.
Swlmnling pool. 1111Uite

dtlh. Femit¥ room. ~ltheotTII.

Mlec. Merchandl••

11·1eth r::o:•neiiPICI.
...- -

-ti.H oo
IIIIoetz.ll
ond

-

8 EAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES · AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 631 Jo~n
Pike from 1183 e mo. Weill to
thop end rhovin. li4·448- .
2 8Ft 4 'Y:I miln from

Gel!lpolit. Stove, refrig. • weter

furnished . No PHI· 1216e mo.

Colll\4-441-8038.

Sp.ce tor· tmell trllll ..... All
hook·upa. C.ble. Also efficiency
roomt, air end cable. r..on.

w .vo. Coll304-n3·1111 .

Wedding Oret~-·M

12. ·Newr UMCI. Trltlw Lot

For lease

M!! r c11" 11111 s1:
61

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCnON • fURNITURE 82
Olivo 8t .. Golllpollo,
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- Ull:
Uvlng room aultH- •199-•sn.
BUnk beds with bedding- •1n.

Fulls~ mattrea • foundetlon
surtlng- 199 . Rtcllnen
atarting- 191.
USED· lleda. dfft..,., bedroom

suit••· 1198 · 1289. D11k1.

114-441-4921.

of uled fumltun.

•

NEW- WMtem boob· 130.
Workboote •1a &amp; up. IStHI •

soft tool. Coli 614-446-3111.

Co..... Appllonce, Inc. Good

Nice 1 BR . lpt . neer HMC.
Stove, retrlg. Ia dre,.a. C.H

114-446-4782.

uHd

epplien~

1nd TV ..,,,

Open lAM to IPM . .Mon thru

Sot. 114-441-1199, 627 3rd.
Aw. Oellipolis. OH .

Brooktlde Apertmenu: located
off Bulovlllo Rd.· 1 BR . opociouo
apartment. with modem kitchen
and ~-er- dryer hooll.upe. cabl• telwielon nai ..ble. Cell

-,.,

U8.81.
.
1B·Color 'pedloltl ~~..ell.II, 2tor.ttoo.
11-Whlto otooi. .......
••1.81 - - 2 far e1 00· oolor
17.1.81oooh.
17-Whlrlpoof .tu'ba·

IWIMMING POOLS • t988 ·
ORDER NOW· PAY LATER .
Hugo 31 ' ovol pool wllh-.
fenH • fllllr. lnateltadon •

-o dol0846.

elltl'.rog. f\UI:
po.1-- -11-1
111
. 1·
1 - . ""'
- o •r

Fliewood mixed hllrdwood. Av·
pick-up lood·UI, you
houl. 131
locol. Col

DOlor.

11-artgld ond Olltlquo 11&lt;•nd ..._
....., """ . . . .
- f -. S-10'11.
20-2 .... - · • off whlto
- - poinl· t4.~......

......

Cooll Food ltoro- Nhondllng pro mill for oorly

aen~~t..,. •kwto with blood
mMI, nttrate of tod1, M%
nl.,..., • robbll• dog ropollont.
Col 614·388·1611 for 1oto111
prich.

pl. ttlu--

21-1
- - -· tzO.N.

2Z·K·Lu•-ltrlclcl~t~. ft.

ctn.-11.10.

23-lproay coatad 11•11

Sun . •
1182.

.c loiOtond-ohOfvlng.lnolo

711%.

'

24·Waod,

--

.

-

' ll~uillnum

1nd

lrinrf dod windows. llowol.
· lloyoJ, ICooomont). IOoublo· ·
hung), Seve et wh..a-le and

Wed. Col 11•·241·

21·"'1 TtmP.Irld thermel

Wedding dr•••· TH·Iength
dreae. Glke topper. · 001'11111 a
boutoiwlieret, Melding mutlc. •
reception ~tione. Call 114-

- - Gl... ,...... 13h71.21.1&amp;1. 134•71UI.OOi.l47x71-148.00i. fun
-lota-U.OO po.pc. - ·
21·21"
thonnol
1
o-111.11.
2 for t\21.00.
27·72 .. Welnut aterter
ldtchon· lncludlna 12· 1 l''woll.
11-72"-1, 11-'U" pc. 10p~

0,:':.!1.:

448·9116.
JVC- 4 hood Vf!S-VCR · S t -.
1226. Coli 614-441-2212.

41 watt stereo-compll'tt with
reelewr. tape, tum111bt.. .,eek- · 1111.11.
en, • ceblnlt. *450. Cal
28,2 1111. po11 K·w• w1111o

614-441-2212.

mo.,_.
••·••·
21-Pino LouwNd lnt-

lhuttera. Below Wholeaele
prl-.
..
,30· I pc. polo lomorl oolor

com..-.
rog.-t2tl.ll,now
1121.11.
.

nr.=

~von Stein•: 1871 thru 1181,
Ill tlx onty "1240. Copllf 3M

31-ln•for
flnilltod ond u
lin•e21.81 MCh.

doolt top, n1. Coli 614-4414818.

pollOI - .... 71.11
ond18l.lluCtt.
33-AI . _ of ond
window trim. flnithecl end un·
llnlthld. Plutlc end wood·
.1.00 \o 13.00 II'·Pc·
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
Oltlo
114-314-3141

Mixed hitrd wood IIebe. 112per
bundle. Containing epprox. 1'1.t
ton. FOI. Ohio Pellet Co.

. li!l-.

Pomojoy, Ohio. 614-912·11411 .

Flr.wood ~r ·Ute. •31 • loed.
Will dollwr. 614-843·1410.

614-742-2421.

doon,

. Cholco

32·E-- In-

1971 City trlaxte elumlnum
dump tn~ller . 32 foot boa.
114.000. Oood cond. C.M 114·
446-1379.

·leFor Sale; MIIOn.d hardwood.
HEAP No. 7047 rtglitered.
OeHftrtld or pick-up. Phone

2 IR . unfurni.Md. 1 mh•218
off At. 7 . t200 rwnt. tt 150 dep.

Rill. M - oouploo. Ono cllild.
C o U \ 4 . - -3 badroom houM for rent In
S , _. 614-U2-7881I :OO.

fl...,.

2 btdroom houM itt
Pcwi..Oif.
1•1 Ddlltd.

Mu'"'cal

--up GM torq-. Guo,....

lnatn1ment1

......... C.UI14·371-2220or'
304-171·4230.
:

.Peti for Sjile

Groom ond s..p,ty Sltoti·Pet

'

CJrooming. All breeda ... AII

otytoo. lomo Pot FOOd Ooolor.
Julio w - Ph. 614-4411-0231.

Soimor s ...phono. 1271. Hlto·
chlloombO•. 171, S~n.

Oregonwynd Can., Kennel.
CFA Hlmolrtyon, "-ion ond
51..._ k -. AKC Chow
pupploo. Coli 114·441-3144

Boo&lt;nbo•.•2o.~coiOCUja

..... 1110, .... lebo,
UO, CooioSK-1 "-ylloird,IIO,
Quear211nchT.V. *110,s-.
8 lnlck ptepr, Cartrkltl end
corrfor •eo. mbor, e35. Nogotl·
oblo. Colll14·149· 2711.

efler 7PM .

Rogl \lrod ltlttell mole Cockor
• - · 1 - - old. e11. Col
114-317-0241-4 PM,

18715 lnternetlonel II pea·
aenpr .chool·churc:h bue. C.n
be converted to cemper. v.,.,
good condition. Stenderct tran•.
AIH MHing church tam;. Allr.lng

Now

lllllng ~ for Eo-

- lllondo,
-Yti
Womtod
• - luff
...•rtod.
chockod. UOQoooh. Col 114311-1810.
,,

polco 11100. Coli _614·192·
3187.

''*'

Lira• 12
cotorfvl
Col[ 114-4411-1607.

58 8t

o_,.

R.._

COdtorlponlolmolo
pup. lhototnortocl onrlworrned.
Colli, no c - . Co11114-U22807.

3117.

One end two·bedroom epertmenta for ...... Stove end
relrtltntor fumllhed. UOO •

122 per month. Referencea
ond d09&lt;&gt;1it roqulred. CoH 114441-4248, 441-4421 ar 4412321.

Furololoo&lt;torUI!fumlollod. 614H2·1723- 1:00.
2 L J wme. TV room, hltt
b
u..m, ,...... INiclc yard,
loe llou, 1:00 pm.

ule. Cell

TH01.16HH

rult
Venatablll

1177 Comoro. V-8. ou\o. trona.,
N. Pl. Coil 114-4411-1111.
efterl PM· 441·1244.

wv•

· 304-171-4182.

For S1le

73.-

or Trade

ttii2CitirwyCiftHor. Auto .. olr.

n

so-p, C.ll\4-448·1100.

19M Hondo V-30 - Col
oftor 4 p.m. 304·171-h42

11e1 -..4apd.IIIO. Col
11,._211·1212 or 216·1731.

Far lolo otT- 71 CllwYVon
tt.2oo.oo. '77 M - t111.oo
por\1 or oN, 304-171·
2117, .

Rood Hotitorpfnol Drug c!Nioro'

Auto Repelr,

.

1111 Moneyflnl
• 01 illl Wheel of Fortu111

iii) ChMII

'

Jlm'o ,.._. Auta SttrVIoo,
Ripley, Woot
_ Vlrvlnlo. 8110G1oli1-:

1.1 Ill ~11111111'':,

,\ IIJ .. I d

Government Home~ from I 1. CU
np81rf, Dollnquont to• p&lt;Oporty,
RcpYI tliOnl. Cell 1·101·117.:

51

Farm Equipment

__,....,_____

1113 Cutlo11 • - - Now

CIIOII. SONS
U.S. 31 W.._ , _ Ohio.
114-211·8411.

power
a. ·
brell.11
end
· - wtndu Air-, .dft.
ateerlng . . •3100. 114·192·

lulhllot-·--0..
40--\o-from

1 1 1 3 - Ph-. 4 cyl .. 4
holoft'tri. ....,.
lnoldt ond .... Coli 114· 992·
11831 - · 1:00 pm.
11 . . Dalto II ftoyoll-hom.
Ex laiC oondttion. All •power.
~·· ...... 114-112·1137
" 11., 4 ' 00·
1184 Chevy Cltotlon. 4·door
-bock. PI, PB, A'T, A-C,
AM-FM. Crul•, Tltt. Col 114112·7112 .-&amp;:00 pm. _

HOt.

• ao•pl• line of new • ultd
equiprMnt, l.Mv... NleatkM In
8 . ~.

Ohio.

.

fl•llleorTrade: I HPTroyBuUt
tlltr, H - modol. 1110. A· I
oiiOf&gt;f. CoN 114-318-1111.

------hog.
d- - . .

•ueo. PM~
1 - . Ull.

2 row MF com
- · UIO. Owner wll fl·
- Col 114·211·1122.

FRANK AND ERNEST --

79 Motora Homes
lo Campers

~

~-·--·

Wanted to Buy

1912 M • - · 1102 onglno

.....-. c.n

304-171-7741

Now buying lhlll com or ,.,
com. Cell forlltMtquoUa. River
City form Supply, 114·4412181.

-1:00pm.

Wont IO buy, V - Locuot
~304-6711-2130.

boforo&amp;:oo.-e:oo304-6711112o. _

1187 Grond Morqulo 1.1, loodod.
bought . - . mult ecartfloe. eel
304·1711-1110 tlllt for FNCI

'*'

1977 Volltlw eon Deah1t, 4
epMd, 4 oyl, ofto:Dnroot. IIPOftY

Llveltock

ol•.

fully """"'" " ' cond.
Coll\4-. .2·1140.haor,,

. ... .

11-lo It, lruCfl compor for llio&gt;'
Good oondltlon. .Attltlng noor
Co1111.1 4·U2-2211 I :OO.i

Reglu,red 0U8fter Horu :.
...... M- from 1210 to
•1000. Reel a led I yr. old
1 ..11on ·lhown &amp; ~ In
_ ...... ,._... - Col
114-281·1122.

1182 Otdt
thlelttle ~.,
lo -.12.110.00 :304·678·
2113 or 171·1711a.

Horoo tor oolo. CoM 114·371·
2411 .
.

12.1110.00. 304-171-2113 or
1711-1711.

00111 lor Nle. ToogtJnburg
Nann._ end Klda. Okllr Rttocle

1181 Mercury Zephyr, ••c con d.
/11£, AT, Pl. Pll, ~ lo Nil,

.,
. ..-~'-:-;--:-----~·.,...;
·.
Home
'

vqlunteers must rescue him.

1111 PrtmeNewe

I!JI MOVIE: '1111 Legacy !AI
(1:.0)
.(I) MOVIE: Mall Appeal
ii&gt;G) (1 :40) Q
1:05 (lJ MOVIE: Action In tht
North Allanite (NR) (2:07)

c......w.; 80flilc! Ton'lot- I :;:..:..~.:.v-~;;:;

liON IVANS !
R' ·
PAISE&amp;. - · Ohio. II.._;
2811-8130.
• '

ohap.

Roofing. ~dell ag. eddtdona,

e

I

- 1. drv-11. polltllnqt. •
plumbing. Call Qory 614-l•IB·
1842,
:1, 4 , I
'

.

e

•

· MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
DID Ya..J KNOW 'ft:)L.J
HADA 6ALD6FOT;
NASlV=!'-

DON'r 'rOU 11-&lt;IN!&lt;: 'IOLJ'~
PRE:TTY 'rOLJNiS-10 HAVE
A ML D SFOr~

TKATW/JSMY
BEST HA-T I

11711H 1700, 31Zq.. lapd.
· 2 IPd- reor, 11.100. olr
- - PS, goocl 10.ZO ti&lt;M.
Nlae truck. 1171 Dodgo '14
lllck·up, 311 ang., 4 opd .. now
11.... Vory goocl Cond. Coli
114-2111-1141.
.

Condillonod nrnolhy or mlud
hay lar - · Coli oftor I PM.
114-4411-3811.

Urvo '""'"" hoy broloo for 10lo,
etl. Colll14·il2·7277.

Tnrcll P - For Solo: 318
Dtulol Dolsol -lno. F......
til,_ Clb. I drw • wh ...,.
10:20. mttc:. Cummine
Coli 614-4411-7172.

"'*'·

Mlood Hor • ""'nd broloo. 110 o
-CoN 114·448·1030.

II•.~~~~;;;~;;~;:;is.
for oolo. CoN 114-448-

1171 OMC 2 ton ttuck. 1174
C'-'1 -1-lo ton. Colla- 6
PM-114-441-3243.
11a1 -

pialt·up. I opd.,

AM-PM.C.a. Atldng t4400.

Good,._ hoy tor oolo, U.OO
304-171·2111._
-

CoR 114·211-12112 or 211117311.
•

E•.-....c•d ,........o.atnt

'

.··

·e

1

IE! 0ry won..._
.... 1n.
honglng. llnllhlng, ond - l r
work. m•• MIUnga· look ltki
now with ...- . SOo(.
1711-11417.
.

82

television drama in the

United States through the
!"&amp;sent. C
11J1 !.any i(ing Llvel
1:30 (2) illl Night Court A tipsy
Chris1ine nearly lnclles a riot
in a male Slrlp bar. (R)
10:00 I]) Stralgh1 Tall&lt;
(J) illl L.A. Lllw A tom
Kelsay takas an unpopular
stand on a delicate childbirth
Issue.
_
(J) Tlte llrlln e~amlnes
physlolqgical factors which
affect the process of
memory. (1 :ooJ C .
91
01 Knoll landing
Olivia bec:Qmes atlraC1ed 10 a
young henchman for an
underwOrld figure. Q
® ®Niwl
Ollftfllng(I) Pa"'"'n
10:30 I]) Great A1111rtcan Ou1doore

e

''
rwfarwnoea, queltty wort. Interior, - · luturlng, llioni
IML bn n••ta. fr" Mflmltel
o.1 11304·111-7413,
•

e

AN'JE5T HOW
YE AIMIN' TO
DO THAT?

Plumbing
8t Heeting ·

CART!ft'B PWMIJIIG
AND HIAnNO
,
\ c ... Fourlh ond •
- - Oltlo ' '
•
Phone 114-141-3181 or ~4- '
441-4477
..
t

I BROUGHT MY
RABBIT'S FOOT,
MY HOSS ·SHOE,
AN' MY FOUR· LEAF
CL.OYER

YOU
FERGOT

ONE
THING ! 1

e

(0:30)

®

19111 Chevy 8-10 tnrc1t . _ ,, 10,000 ....., - - 4
cyt.. 4 opoOd ...-.OM

-r"'·

Furnlthed tfflctncy aplftment.
Cwpet throughout. Privett •
qui.,, llngte worldng ,.,.,n
onty. Cell 114-441-4607 or

"'8"'4-,., "'E"'I,...IC-tt,;.,..ltl-1""1---..,- {

8i

• (I)

U700. 114-IIJ, ISIS.

1111 Ford _,......,, 11,000

•.-rt-

_II....,,AM·PII'·= ....
pormli~o.

--

4 cv1. 1o1to 304:171-1110.

Newty d~led= Off etrMt
perking. Far more infor. cd

_d..,..

114·446·0111, I AM · 4:30PM

-

........ -.""""

(JJlloep

11:30ern !Ill TOfligllt 111ow
(!) lp I IICintll (L)

I®ern.

Cltllrt

~Nightlln;Q

fum""..t 1pt. -nlce locatfon In
city. All utilltlll furnithed. Mutt
h... rol. &amp; clop. Colll\4-448·

4111.

e Ill 'NIIMIINI' Cll Late

f~ANUTS
J.IOPE 60T IN
MV EI{ES!

Mobi.. H o - .

-_--·-I

Clllf.4.Mio7471.

0

Complete the chuckle ~uoted

you

d eveloP from ste p No. J below.

by fdl1n g in the missing wo rds

I I lrHEI

UNSCRAMBLE ~ETTE RS TO
GET AN SWER . . .
•

-

•

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·- ~

Aviary - Plume - Snack - Effete - SELECTIVE
If YO,!J are able to look back on your life and feel no regrets
you have a great gilt or SELECTIVE memory.
'
.
- -·- - ~ -

-·-

BRIDGE

NORTH
• .9 8

Today's band ill not particularly fan·
cy, but it provides an excellent example of how good technique can translate IDto tricks and therefore into
points. _In a team-of-four match, the final contract wu two spades at both
tables, and the openiDg lead was !he
club king. At table one, declarer South
self-destructed. He won dummy's club
ace and played a trump back toward
hill queen. West won the king and returned the jack. When West regained
the lead with tbe club queen, be pulled
all of declarer's trumps and ran the
remaining clubs. Declarer made only
five tricks - one trump, two hearts,
one diamond and the club ace. That
wu down three vulnerable, minus 300
points.
At the second table, declarer was
patient. He dtlcked the first trick and
.won the club continuation. Next be led
dummy's heart jack, covered by the
king and won by his ace. Then came a
diamond, won by East, who erred by
trying to give
a heart ruff. (A
trump back would have been better.)
Declarer took the heart queen, cashed
a diamond and ruffed a club. Only then
did he play a third heart. West could
not cope with the power of dummy's
trumps. If be ruffed high, South would
wiD any continuation and lead his last
heart. The defenders could not take
.
\

wm

S-S-11

"J%

tKQ8642
+A II S

•s

WEST

EAST

.KJ 1076
"6 4
t10 5 !
+KQ81

"K10983
+AJ9
+J 10 7 6
SOUTH
+AQ512
"AQ75
t73
+5.2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Well

Norlll

Eaol

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening l ead: • K

L-----------_J
more than three spade tricks, the diamond ace and one club trick. That was
plus 110, for a swing of 410 total
points. Such results demonstrate that
innocuous part,score hands can be al,
most as important as games and
slams.

A~_. .. .,tet.J

t,;;;f) WW v~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
'37 Marilyn
1 Bad Ems,
Horne, e.g.
e.g.
38 Open -4 Fo· both · Policy
39 Dock,
sexes
workers'
8 Closed
9 Manifest
grp.
11 A Red ·
DOWN
1 Fleece

Rose

12 Types
2 Execute
14 "Jiis wife
3 The cat
could that 13 Canyon
no lean"
the canary
mouth
15 Skin
4 Logical
Hi Vinous
5 Pizzeria
18 Equal
problem
: need
21 Ship post
Ul EI!YPtlan
deity
6 Smooth
22 Bison
17 Pay a visit
(poet.)
23 Typog19 Corsica
7 Caine
rapher's
neighbor
film
concern
(abbr.)
8 Hastened 24 Lateral,
20 Tepee
10 Pa.c_.t;..,.......,.21 VHS rival
.,..
22 • ..,eating
her curds
and--"
23 Punctil,
ious
24 Break- .
water
25 Latvian
26 Dolt
27Take
illegally
SO Darn
31 Brewer's
need
32 N,Z.
parrot
33 Vibrated

The one
front
28 Lasso
29 Arum plant
31 Prohibit
34 Ipanema
locale,
for short
35 IndoChinese

the palate

35 PrevarIcator

36 Hack,~n;ey~ie~d~==~~jfe;;,:;-ro
DAILY(;

AXYD .L BAAXR
la .L ONGFELLOW
- One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
binta. Each day the code lett.en are different.
CR'YPTOQUOTE
3-3
I

,filllh1 A bltl8rld wile wftll

QI,.OMO'K

UWFUNK

KiriiWood ~ help
Ill Mr..... I'.L lly 11'i

Y P M W

0 R o- M N

eaJTIII

FLV

v s0

U Q

D U M Q N

COVIr

EUCOK

QLO

VQLOMK

11:00

Q v

' ·,

- - No oily

I

.

"

-

PR IN T NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

e

F PI&lt; L

for Rent ·

17 ·uPf;iitirY

I I' I I

posed to read - the -

,_,_ to go Jliprolchea

n 1M. fh. 17,

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

'

P.r.

Mlignilln,
Gil One
IIJ lporll TOfligllt

101 111 tOU.

...... -

.

• m1.ove c.r.--tton

'

- Coli 114-441-1210.

e

(J)81gn0fl

aotl, t710. 00. 10•·171·
3'711.
.

Deluxe two Mdroom • .ctUipped
ll.llchen. bcell~~nt locetlon .
Ref.,.,.oe- lee. diPOift:. No

Hogan'• "-'"•

0 lloMtrlll,.

'IICIIwrfliWuphtflloii.V·8,i

.......

a Vlelon1

10:110 (lJ MOVIE: The Shooting (G)
(1 :22)
11:001]) W1lhlngt011 for JtiUI
• (2) (i) • (J) ill&gt; • 01
liiJNiwl
(!) NCAA l'lnll Four
lllgh1lghte 1974: North
ClrOIII'tl Sllta, Marquene,
UCLA, 1nd K1111aaa

Retrlg.atlon

1971 Ford holf - tMic 30Z v-1 .....,, e1eo.oo.
Phone 304·171-'1111. .

446-2102.

Vok:ae

Dramatizations of Crane's
life In the Caribbean, New
York and Ohio. CNR) Q

'\

Included. t400. Call 114· 441·
4222 between 9·1.

e (2)

1111 Day by DIY Kete
and Brian disagree on the
1eachi.ng curriculum of the
day care.
(i) II (J) Sied!ll Hamrnerl
Georgous widow has an auto
fixation and several dead
~usbands . (R) Q
1:00 I]) 7GO Club
(2) illl Chllr'e Evan
Drake promotes Sam to
executive status, which
throws Sam a curve.
(!) Cot. l'bal
Cil
(J) MOVIE: 'llut
'llluncler' AIC '111111'1111~
Night MOvte (Fil (1 :48)
(J) Myateryllnspecl9r orse
is called when a church
· warden-Is found murdered.
llll e 01 Simon and Simon
A.J. and Rick Investigate the
dealings of a friend's
crooked brother.
® Televlalon Prima tlnie
1:30

304·171-1217.

8t Grain

D (J) Tlte LIIAouchl
Democratic C.mpalgn·Pald
political announcement
(J) The Wut ollhl
lmaglnetlon Look al modem
visions of the Southwasl
lhrough the works of the
Taos.
llll • 01 Tour of Duty When
Pvt. Taylor is held captive.

IRJC
® CJovemor Celelle

-171-

Tn1cka for Sale

iii

lmp~OVe!l'llf'!tS '~:

1 n1 Mon\1 Corio. ·v -I outo.
Pl. cnaiH. 11H. Air, l'llce car,

72

e

(ZJ WKAP In Cincinnati
7:35 (lJ Sanford and Son
1:00 I]) Hen Town One Ball ·
• (2) 1111 Tlte Colby Show

ALLEY. OOP

81

o...._...

1...... Rod Hono. Coiii14-U2·
3111.

~~~1rr.r'ayl Q

MI.&gt;"TAfcE - • .t.
Hl~cP A t..AwY~R!

1 -Cltrrllor Cordobo~noi
elent Jix. muM ... to
ete,

1114·441-4711.

H11y

ANP NOTHING
guT THE- T~UTti " ?
TtiE~~ MU5T t~ SOME

1 - cor, '171.00. 304·171·
2183 or 171-1711.

11 ,11~.00. phone
2113 or 171·17118.

64

TIWTH

1971 Pontiac 1t1Uon wegon,
oond, tiOO.OO. 304·1711·
,987.
Nbulldeble, bOdy end lntwlor

63

1971 11 ft . W I - irovol'
troll.- w~owrtlftg, dttol wftoolo!

1911 Orond AM LE. Pl. PB. AC.
tilt. AM·FM cp g tl8. deley
..._.. hoo opoolol LE 1 . - .
1 1.eoo mlltl. exc cond. lilting
11.200.00. 304·111·\MI of.
... 4:00pm.

100 Ford form t r - . 1181
Dltkun plalurp for porto, form lrqulprnont. 3041171-2328 '!" 176·2 -.

82

;p.:;;;::-l~~~=TH::E-::'t=~-:T:-:ti,~TH=~~IN:-.H~O-Lf:--,

- I1

1171 Ponlloc Orond Ptla. 2
· .- - - - 1 1 4 · H 2 ·
31a1

tiO O..ld ........ ........
13 310
-271 ..
'
'
13210. 200 ....... - -··
will.
ftnonce.
CoN1211.
114211-1122.

7:05 (lJ Andy OrHIIth
7:30 (2) til HollywOOd
Square1
Ill (J) Judge
·
llll Wheel ot Fortune Q
1!11 Crooaflro

e

8000 Eltt. OH-1101 for cu"""'
ropollot.

M'A~$'H

.(I)

Ina In Hontt. .perta end ~ce.

c.,.,-· jolonoo repo'd. Sur· .... 1171. ,...,.. 13041 372-piU.. Your ArM. Bu.,.n Oulde. 1167. Nino 1o flye, ·
•

111101·117-EKI.
8·1801 •
'
.

15

L.--l..--l..--~---~---.J.--J.

e

Wordod V-8 onglno for 117tiJooptrucl&lt;. coR304-171-743..
On• 8 ft truck "Nd"
ttoo.oo. Utility 1rohr •" ..,...1
t300.oo. 304·1711-3163 oftor
4:30 pm.
'\ ·~

,.., Old• c - . Good oond.
octutl rnlloo. 134110.
loedod. CoN 114-448-42aa:

L U C A DA

J----r;r-r---r.-,r---r--1.

•ea

J

I

r~---:-"':':'-:--:--:--:----, friend replied , "you 're .not sup-

!121 cat Nlwl

(II •

_ _ _ _ _ lo
tiOO.OO
3 roomo ond -

42

-t-1--,r-O..;.yK,.:A.:....;.N.;_:E;.....-ll ; " Why does the Statue of Liber·
1
-I". I. I. :: so-bright
ty hold a torch?" asked the nol.
fellow. " Becauae," his

~ ~llc~~~~eppy,Days

·Q5
••
_., ~

(f])llodyi- OIInolde Polttk:e
® WKAP In Clnclnn.tt
(I) Too Clooe lorComton
, 1:35 (lJ Cer'al lurnott
7:00 I]) Rlltnlnaton SIHie
Dreams of Steele
8 (2) PM Meg.lzl111
(!) Col. l'baH
til E-lnlllllll Tonlgh1
.. (J) People'• Court
(J) (f)) MlcNIII/ Lelnf
New1Hour (1 :00)
llll Newo

104-171-4211.

....... J'J I

I

.......... a .....,.•.,
Super llowl ollpono Trlvill
())
eCIJ AIC Newt~
(!) Nlghtlr IUIII'IIIII Report

11~;t.

1111.

-

.1.----------...,...----IR .• 2. bath•. All utllltl•

~g

cond .• tiiOO. C.K 114-441-

F

,_-

69

1971 Orand
Prix. good
fZS00.
1H21ulckRoool.mlrit

Alii T - P\1111: 1 milo, 1
-o. N - . . _ , c.n· --foiooio.lllgb.o...
114-448-Mu.
c:ane14·371-2711.

1 BR. epertment whh stove &amp;
refrtg. No pet1. C.ll 114· 441·

MV PAReNT~

oond" ·l·~~~~~:~~~
4opoociDoCiolo

1Zo\rlnoAiwtraaul\or.ttiO.OO
flrm.304-ll2·2131.

Horett lot 111• llenderdlmd
•nd r.,....... Wellllfl. c.•

66

614·446· 1932.

-

&gt;IOTHING TO WO!tRY
A&amp;OUT. OOMAR. '&gt;OU'Rf
AN AMfRIGAIO. -

I_ I

.

il='2 Rainbow Q
~ =::: otl:•Y

1!1-N'T THAT WHAT .--~------.

-rtvoto310Turbo,2whotl

llbtra- _1.,. plumbing-'

finenclng ·•'ldllble. 1·100·341·

441-06&amp;6.

Aemurent for I••• or rent on
Eaattm AW. For more inform.
col1304-343-1611 .

-

. 1 4·Color commodel•41.11. White commodll·

MobMt Home.

2-10 tpd, men8 "b111••· 1111.1 new.
Alto bedroom Nt. Cell 114-

wringer w..h... , e com pt.,. line

11 Court St.· 2 Bedroom. 2
blthe, llhchM h.lrnlsh.ct, w/ w
carpet, t325 • mo. plue utilltiw.
No petl, depoeit • ref. C.l

•
_12·-1.. 41"x2'2" both

-

'IOU' V~ GO'f'

ludgOI T - 1 ._ •

Downtown ground flpor
ment. 4 rma .• beth • bel;fment.

2740.

or

7479.

114·446-0338.

Ctll 8 '1 4-..... 4101 or 371-

1

onr1-

to buy, on 141 . 1310 o

mo. Dep. • ref. required. Cell
304-171-IIOI·dl\'l. 114-.,.8IZID-IV!In. • WHII.anda.

~·

New completely furnlahed
lpirtment &amp; mobile home In
city. Adulta onty. Parking. C.H

114·441-0390.

Homes for Rent

Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Antill treilers. Call 114-882·

17&amp;-1104.

Modetn One lA. apertment. C.H

Hr!nlals

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork,

49 ·

2 1ft apta . • em .... kitchen·
appl. furnished, W•lher· Drv-r
hook-up, ww cetpet, newly
pelnled, deck. Regency, Inc.
ApU. Call 304-6715· 7738 or

Nl~

e1.111-.
tO·-•IAM-IIMollna
oo1t
ond blrcb- tti.H
to11J.R-.
·

• """"" 304-&amp;ll·

Meynerdt' Quilt lhop-Jtcbon
Pille, We~t . of Rodney. Febric by
the yord. Dulling - b y lho
~eg . Qultfng fremee • l'lcke.
Houn· 10 AM • 5 PM • CloMd·

~0

I'

NA

I IL 0I 0 Ic Rll I ~

.

(J) Dr. Who: A111Ck of ale

UNCI- Stertlng It 111:.
- •
......_
~-rubulle
"'
..... .......,._ kill fo&lt;

penallng '.4x4xe..:e7.11. tnd

304-671-1071.

2518. E.O.H.

Mini-Ftrm lor 1..... 14 1crt1,
amatl blrn. pond, on• mh plu1
tram downtown. 2 or 3 bed-

Space for Rent _

TreHer Iota. Rt. 1 Locuat Roed.
beck of I( &amp; K Mobl&amp;e Hom••·

Apartment
for Rent

He• fUo Grandt. Pond. bM'nt,

good home. Cell 6U·· 245·
9178.

46

304-671 -3073 .

3 btdroom mobile homt, blth
end he". private lot, 304-176-

44

bedroom tumtlhed

Spadout mobile home lOti for
rent. Femlty Pride Mobile Home
P•rk. Oellipolia Ferrv. w. ve.

3 bedroom. fumiihecl. wether·
drjor, olr. 0221. pluo
•nd udlitiM. 114-992-7479.

Farms for Sale

30 aare t.m: Moldy tillllble.

Two 1ncl

l ~~~~c~o~ll~304~·~67~1~-3~~~-

11 II or 175· 1731.

33

-

2 Mdroom fumlah.d 1pt, utili·

tloopolcl,m....,_ondd090oit.
304-812-2111 .

For SMt or Rent· 2 BR .• 1 z.eO
Mobile Home. 1200 1 mo. Call

...C.-

'ei.Noitttlt.
I·AUtlbt-

614·448·1111.

looch s....._ M i d -. Ohio,

Urvo 2 IR. - l o Homo. 11-lo
bodlo. dining roorn, po-.y
fl!m-. u - ftt. 1. 1221 •
mo. CIM 114· 245·181 1.

Pt: ,.....nt.ndGallipo-

~=.:.Looll

'

r

AL M I
I

1:30~~ 1111 NIC Nightly New1

1 - M - nNill
ltrlok
01
unflnlohod panollnJ 14o4xl-

CoH 114-448-8210

llo. 114-448-1221 .

No peta, Aer.• cee a deDoeit
roqulrod. Coll\4-4411-3171 .

3001.

- poy-. 304-&amp;711-2108.

~~.r:'oh~ ~

New etflolenoy .,.rt:IMnt whh
well to well c•pet end appliatn·
c.., Ntlt IChoolt In Galflpolll.

h~.

I:OO~~zy Uku Fox Road to

~~r9i.iicif~~1'::~:;::;::;::::;::;:=:1·
• - ....... - oldlna- 57
..
71 Auto'1 For -Sale
-upto _ _..,. c..., • ....., .

oolor-t\9 ....

APARTMENTS, mobllo hom ...

mn.d. lui~ Aw. w... end
poW. t221. Adoilll only.

114-441-1341 oftor I PM.

14ol0, .......lllloly 1\omilhed

.,. .... ·

a..nd MW

r~~--~---z·_ b.lciroOm 1pt. In ly,.cu• for
2 • 3 BR. motMithomllforrent. ,.nt. ElcllttypNI..,.ed. RtMonl·
Coiii14-448-0IZ7 oftor 2 PM. blo ront. 1"·112-2749.

Auto P11rt1
Acceaeorlea

QRoorronge '"""' of the
four scrambled words be·
low to for m fou r simple woods

I

EVENING

I

7 · 7111•4d preflnlohad

=·or "

1 I·JohNOn•t

8t

~ful

-ed ond unfuml..,ed. 1200.1221. por IIIOIIth. Uti- 1\or·
nlolled. Coii614-H2·1724.

1200 por monlh. Colli\ 4-4481478.

••to.

~~.

_.

LMng room oullo etoo.oo. coli
304·8711-2711.
'
69 For Sale or Trede

64

76 ,

..-calt .WbN&amp;Iedm
.........._
•••
20 ra Jtl

miN.

·

•~ til D(J) 91 e01

told-

111-tiU.N.
f3·Chlno ·ond
- _
round
OndOVIII......,
_
_

1 bedroom epartmentl. Fur·

1 Z.IO. 2 JR., unfurnl-. HoH
mllopoOIHollor--.
Col 114-448-4319 or 304171·1710. thiO· In C-1,.,

"-""'-·-·now• • .....••

'IU1Z':x72''·2 far ee.oo.
1-No.J ...· - inl v •c ld IIOin. ft.

Collohon'o UNd Tiro lllop. o1,000-.ol-12,13. 14, 11.
11, 11.&amp;. I mlloo out Rt. 218.
Colll\4-211·1211.

H2-2101.

4824.

-0171. · - · Coli 114-441-

hot . . . . .....

••r.•ow
614-U2·2381 , Woollondoi14-

· 2 rnlloofoom,_,_DfD,
•ret.
1300o mo. Colll14-4411-

CornpiMely furnlthed. Extrt

70•14. EKC- high lrHo

fur·
· l'lly only Ono utility. AI

-

12d0 Eloano, 1171 Z IR., goo

~~~~--~~---~
1874 . Holly Pork. 3 bod-.

____ ...i:

........,

-------...:::....= 1411•4 br CLAY R. POLLAN------------

o

M THURS.. MARCH 3 •

I

..... -.

ForS•IeorTr•de. 71ChevyVen
t;;::;;;;;,~;;~::::l";;::;;::::;::===:i
11 •200 ·00- ' 77 Monzo _ne.oo
42 Mobile Homee
44 Apertment

for Rent

61LL. .

':!~:t~' S@ttJllA-~t.trs~ :::: "'

Television
V
- Iewtng
e

~tJf '(;10 WITH

'

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.

Daily Sentinel- Page----' 13
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14 Ml8C. Merchendl•

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LAFF•A·DAY

Homea for Sale

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TllOUBLBSOJifE TO 0'111ERS, BUT A TORMENT '1'0
'ftiEMSELVES.-- WJWAM PENN

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14-The o.ily Sautinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-----LocaJ bne
• {:8.·-~~-...;.• ~ea deaI h S
Pomeroy man aited by patrol

!.
'

A Pomeroy ·man was cited In a one-vehicle accident
Wednesday, at 12:05 p.m., In Salisbury Township' on County
Road 20, aboutaquarterofa mllewestofS.R. 7,accordlngtothe
GaWa-Mel&amp;s Post of the ·State Highway Patrol.
Mark Elliott, 19, was cited for driving without a seat belt after
his 1977 Jeep CJ-5 went off the left side of .the road and hit a
JUilrdrall. He was drlvfng east at the time.
·
.

·Arnott named spelling champ
Jason Arnott, an eighth grader, w~s named champlo~ speller
of the Southern Junior High School, and will repfl,!sent the
school at tlie Meigs County Spell!ng Bee on March 9 at Eastern
High School.
Arnott was named champion at the school bee held this
wceek. Jason Is the son of William and. Stephanie Arnott,
Syracuse. First runner-up was S~ane Circle, also an eighth
grader and Wendy Harmon was second runner -up and seventh
grade champion.

Thursday, March 3, 1988 .

Roeemary While

·day morning at Veterans Memor-

~~rvlces

are being arranged at
""
lal Hospital following an ex- · the Rawlings-Coat-Blower Fun- -

Rosemary P . White,

II~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;~;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:~er;a~I~H~o;m~e~l~n~M~I~d~dl~e~por~t.~;;-~St.,
tended Jllness .

Church
notices

ELBERFELDS-WEEKEND SAVINGS
CHECK OUT THE NEW .
SPRING FASHIONS

One player has winning tieket
CLEVELAND iUPI) - One
Ohio Super Lotio player is
eligible to cllilm a $21 million
jackpot after picking all six
winning nu.m bers In Wednesday
night 's drawing.

,,
1

Vo~31. No.20B ·.
htod 1988

c

Sale
Spring

BRA

Handbags

SAl.£
.

bras. Choose
d Super Spo~
nd white.
Fuller Figure,. ~~tiV lined , in be•ge a
. tt cup or lg
aC? ze• 32 A to 440.._ .
•••• sa.L£
" 57.1

a·

s ..

. G $CJ.00 BIA5 ••••••••••• SAL£ $8,•38
II • 510.50 1115••••••••••••• SAL£ $CJ.1I
I£G. 511.50 BIAS •••••••••••••
. 1£G. .
.
'

The name of the player will be
anno\lnced after the winning
ticket Is validated by lottery
officials, a lottery commission
spokesman said today. The win·
nlng numbers were 1. 27., 29, 39, 42
and 44.

Annual meet Friday
The annual meeting of the
Buckeye Joint -County Se lfInsurance Council will be held at
10:30 a.m. Friday ai the Athens
County Home in Athens.
Board lo meet
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Ret a rdation Developmental Disabilities will ·
. meet at 7 p.m. Monday. The
meeting has been rescheduled
from March 14 so that board
members can attend a SOardmanship Symposium on that
date.

SALE! FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA1

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

.KNIT SHIRTS-Our new spring and summer selection - sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL
alld 3XL, plus tall aizes. Solid
colors and patterns.

Men's $6,95 Shirts ......... S5.91
Man's 512.95 Shirts ..... s11.01
Men's 514.95 Shirts ..... Sl2.71
Men's 519.95 Shirts .... .S16.96

·· Hospital news

FRIDAY·&amp;·
SATURDAY SAtE!._
'

JACKETS

UV. RM. SUITE
lag. 1339.9s

$199 95
SA¥1'140

Our new selectio.n
· for spring and summer. Sizes S, M, L,
XL plus big sizes.
You'll like the new
looks and the special
sale prices.

519.95
522.95
524 •.95
539.9.5

By DAVID VESEY
VPI Buldness WJ:tter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
economy created 530,000 new
Jobs In February to drive down
unemployment 0.1 percentage
point to 5. 7 percent, the lowest
level since 1979, the Labor
Department sa!d today.
Most of the new jobs were In
services Industries, especially
health, . business, retail and .
. who,lesale trade.
,
Total · clvlllan employment
rose by 280,000 to 114.4 million,
according to the department's ·
Bureau of Labor Statistics. The
jobless rate, which was 5.8 ·

percent last month, has fallen 0.3
percentage point since October
and was nearly a full point lower
than a year ago.
The 5.7 percent rate ·ln February was the lowest since a 5. 7
percent rate In July 1979, the
department said.
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
There was little change lit the
jobless rate In February lor adult
men at 4.9 percent, adult women
at 5.2 percent, teenagers at 15.4
percent, whites al4.8 percent and
blacks at 12.6 percent. unemployment among · Hispanic
workers jumped to 8.3 percent

from 7.2 percent In January, the
department said.
The 6. 9 million Americans
unemployed last month was Ultle
changed from January. The
median duration of unemployment was 6.4 weeks, also unchanged from January but
slightly lower than a year earlier . The proportion ofthe popula·
lion with jobs was at a record 62.2
percent In February.
The large gain . In non'
agricultural payroll employment
ot 530.000 In February followed a
smaller Increase ot 175,000 the
month before. Construction employment saw gains while the

Spring
a·louse SpeCial

I

KNIT SHIRTS
Our new selection for spring and
summer. Sizes 8 through 20. ·
Take advantage of an early se·
lection and· save. this weekend.

_Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

57.95 Shirts ........ S6.76
59,95 Shirts ........ 58.46
512.95 Shirts .... s11.01
518.95 Shirts .... S16.11

'

JACKETS .................... 516.96
JACKETS .................... 519.51
JACKETS ...............,•••• 521.21
JACKETS ••••••;...........~. 533.96

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
The ·possibility of obtaining
village owned cable service.
·deslill proble111s on the marina,
possible annexation, an ordl·
nance on house numbering and
advertising for a pool manager
and !He guards were some of the
subjects discussed when Syracuse VIllage Council met In
regular session Thursday night.
Jack Williams, councilman,
told council of his meeting with
· ~L~dleROrt ~unc!l-,!n ;regard to
obtallllng vllliige operated cable
service. W!Uiams explained that
he and Kenneth Buckley, councilman, met, with Middleport Council and discussed the lss11e since
Middleport Is trying to obtain
their own cable system .
Williams explained that small
towns are going to have to come
up with revenue to continue
village operations. "We · are
trying to operate on a shoestring
and
we have been fortunate In
'
said. Seventy.tlve percent of the Pl'l!)ect Ill to be
EBOSJON PROBLEM TO BE OORRECl'EDreceiving
grants lor tlie village
paid from the SoU ConserYatlon Service's ·
!Melp Co1J11IY IDghway · Superintendent Ted
as well as the fire department",
Waner and County Engineer ~hiUp Robertalo!lk .Resource ConserYatlon and Developm~at ProWilliams said.
gram through Buckeye RIDs-Hocking Valley
over a portion of Leading Creek bordering County
Williams went on to explain
' ~ 10 Dext,er. The creek Is to be altered later ·Regional Developmen~ Dlatrlcl. The remalnlnl25 that the village could offer
percent match will be provide throu1h IDidnd
IIIII, ,.aar 1o ~~~-- room to widen the road and
customers much better service.
service,
aa hauUng stone and other
~ llllplal, pardfiUJ, Eroalon of the crt;ek bank h~ materla\s,such
Williams will head the project
from the county highway department.
1~lllutallatlon 'of guardralllmpo&amp;alble without
and he Intends to Investigate
Starting date for the project baa not ~e set Roberts
' widenln1 the road;.Paperwork to bid the project,
other
systems operating much
said.
·
1 es~ at $30,080,'1&amp; almost comple~ Roberts
the same as Syracuse and
Middleport Will operate II a cable
system tor the villages can be
obtained.
Meeting with council was Phil
Roberts, county engineer who Is
,,'
doing the engineering work on
The face v~lue of the Macy's providing for the reimbursement
TO~ONTO (UPI) - Raider
the
marina, who explained that
$6.7
billion,
but
of
the
expenses
of
a
so-called
·
deal
was
about
~Obert Campeau says his latest
basically
the problems faced In
arbitrageurs
said
Its
blended
white
knight
would
not
necessarc
b0$tlle offer for Federated De·
completing
the marina are the
value
ranged
between
$67
a
lly
be
unlawfuL"
partment Stores Inc. Is worth
changes
that
the Ohio Depart$6
billion,
and
$70
Macy's
would
riot
comment.
share,
or
about
abOut $68.50 a share, or $6.2
ment
oi-Recreation
keep making.
Arbitrageurs - who seek. to
~IUion, and . he warned rival a share, or $6.3 billion.
One
or
the
changes
for
Instance Is
Campeau amended his exist- · make money In a takeover
bidder R.H. Macy &amp; Co. he would
ODR
wants
to
Increase
the size of
lng tender of $66·a share, or S5.9 situation by buying shares at
not surrender.
The Campeau Corp. chairman billion. His new bid offered $75 a below the price they think
1sald Thursday he Is confident of
share for 70.5 million shares. ultimately will be offered That
would be followed by a speculated Campeau could
success In his 6-week-old quest.
merger
' paying $44 each for sweeten his bid possibly to $69.50
·, He slammed Macy's over soremaining
shares.
a share, apparently based on a
called breakup provisions of Its
Campeau
spokeswoman
said
Federated statement W~nes­
A
definitive agreement to acquire
there
are
about
.
90.8
million
day.
Federated said Campeau's
' Federated of Cincinnati, parent
shares
on
a
fully
advisers
recommended he offer
Federated
..of Bloomingdale's and Abraham
'. ·
· , $6 9. 50 u n de r' certaIn
&amp; Straus, In 11 cash-and· diluted basis. •
Campeau also said In a state- clrcumstahces.
securities deal.
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UPI) But Campeau said, "Our offer The chalrmari of a House sub·
! "We're not giving up the ment Its previously announced
fight," the developer said II) a sources of financing still were Is $68.50 ... our bid Is on the · committee studying whl:'ther to
telephone Interview. "We're available 81Jd It was d!scusslng table."
repeal tl}e state's . mandatory
with commElrclal banks· terms of . 1 Arbitrageurs, predicting the seat belt law Is hoping lor a
very
conflden
t."
1
Campeau later warned Macy's a margin credli facility for the light was far from over, said
calmer atmosphere next week to
Macy's was under pressure to continue a hearing on the
balance of the t!nanclng.
t In a letter the breakup fees were
Campeau said In his letter he disclose details to pack up the proposal.
f unlawfUl.
·
·
Atbltraaeurs awaited develop- would mount "a vjgorous legal alleged value of Its deaL ·
Rep. .Robert E. Hagan, D·
"Everybody would tender to . Madison, chairman of the sub- .
mellta In the costly fight for challenge" to the "blatantly
America's filth-largest retailer. unlawful" breakup fees. He was Campeau If It comes down to It,''
committee of the House High·
expecting the bidding war with referring to provisions that one trader said, adding Campeau ways and Safety Committee,
Macy's to escalate. Ar least tw~ would see Federated pay up to first would be forced to lnvali· abruptly adjourned Thursday's
traders said they leaned toward · $45 million In Macy's expenses If date .Federated's "polson-pill" hearlna after a dispute with the
the deal is busted.
antltakeover defense In court.
·
Campeau's cash bid.
bill's sponsor Rep. Richard
Increase
the
"I'm '· expecting Macy's to Rench, R·Milan, over the presCampeau
would
Analylta were reluctant to,
pndlct wllether Campeau, which back end of his deal by $2.20 pj!r come back and JJuatity how their ence ot pbototrraphera and conacquired Allied Stores Corp. of remaining share It those IE!!!s are otter'a better, Ulan $69.50 all trol o1 the lileetlng.
New York for ~.5 billion In 1986, killed to bring the bid, he said, to ~h." lie ..liS. ''It ain't ~r. so
And when th.e audience showed
there's no reason to ·do anylhtna Its dlsaaUI1action with testimor !\lacy's, seeklni to torm a abOut $68.50 a share.
"It's 10 llllfalr wbat they have rllbt aow. We bave two people ony, Hapa tbreatened to have
....... empire that ~
a
doae," he said In tile lntei'VIew. llabtiJW over ~ ua more the aergeaat-at-arma remove
IDNYftal
''rller'll never 'lulaeld. The maney,''·
·
,
·
them.
, cOurts wiD turn tlll!m down.''
Ca!!~paBU made hll flrat bid
Only two wltn!!Sika had testi·
Proteuor 8arvey Goldlclllinld ' JH. J&amp;.. at .., a allare, or --~ fled with aevera.J otbera waitln&amp;
at tile Columbia UnMralty bWIOn. Tbe offer wu plllled up Ia the --capac~ IUCIIeace
Sclioot ot Law said •'oae WOUld unUI be forced Fedentecuo the WileD Hlpn ad)oQnlld tba beer·
have · to
· the contnetllll btiraaiDtna ~ w1tll the prom· 1ntr about an boar aflier It batran.
O:~::!:~~c~:ire, butlfMacy'a In ot . . a ahare, or 16.1 blllloll,
IJapJi ..11 be wu tr)Uatopt
a1
&amp;taten1811ta are In a friendly dee!.
I 1'00111 Bad time ,ICMdllie for
vslue, ou
a
Maoy'a stepped Ill MOIIday aa · MXt 'ftell to naume tballllrlq.
"I'm ID communlcaUoD with

'*

1-2 Pc. Living Room Suitt-Likt Ntwl
1-0ccasional Uving Rm. Chair-lib Ntwl
1-Stt lox Springs &amp; Mattress
1-Bookcase Headboard w/footboard

The average workweek for all
production or non -supervisory
workers on private payrolls
lncrased 0.2 hour last month to
34.9 hours. The manufacturing
workweek, however, declined 0. 2
hour lo 40.9 hours while factory
overtime fell OJ hour to 3.8 hours.
Average hourly earnings fell
0.2 percent In February while
average weekly earnings rose 0.4
percent,duetothelncreaselnthe
workweek.
Without seasonal adjustment,
average hourly earnings were .
down $.01 to $9.17 and average
weekly earnings rose $.58 ·to
$316.37, the department said.

the ramp to 30 feet.
and ,go over the applications on
Roberts stated that with the April 4, at 7 p.m .
grant funds and the village
In other business Ernie Slsslon
matching funds tliey will be able suggested that all council
to financially put In the parking members meet and tour the park
. lot and the ramp but will not have to see what Is needed to up-grade
·enough money to put In docking the park In order to get · work
facilities.
started before the baseball seaR&lt;1berts explained that he and son gets underway. Council will
Robert Wingett, project engi- meet at the park Tuesday, March
neer, will meet with representa· 8, at 6 p.m.
lives of ODR In Columbus along ·
Jim Hill, councilman , reported
with Joyln BOster,. State Repre- that. the parade to kick-oft the
sentative and Jan Long, State baseball season will be held May
Senator. "to work out the design 14. Hill stated tliata, o;qunty band
problim1s. ticcc:iralng to Roberts and possibly a second band,
the marina must be completed along with a gospel group have
this summer.
agreed they will take part In the
Council In discussing utilities ceiebratlon.'It has been Indicated
being offered to residents outside there 'will be floats taking part In
the village noted that significant the parade.
Increases must be considered to
It was noted that donations for
maintain service unless the prop- the park area are needed. Donaerty outside the village Is an- tions may be sent to Janice
nexed. Council Intends to give the Lawson, clerk-treasurer. .
·
matter and lndepth study.
Mayor Eber Pickens reported
The ordinance commtttee Is to that burning permits must be
meet prior to the next regular obtained by residents If they
meeting of council to draw up an Intend to bu rn. Also, permits are
ordinance that will require resl· good for Of!IY one week and
dents to place their assigned burning can be done only after 4
house numbers on their property. p.m. Pickens noted that new
Meet)ng wl th council was permits are being drawn up with
Roger Michael, project engineer · some changes In the wording.
for house numbering, In regard
Pollee chief jJm Connolly
to some minor problems. Ml· reported that stop signs are need
chael noted that the directories at Ash and Carleton, May and
for the village have not been Carleton, Dusky Street from
printed and II anyone has any Seventh and Hubbard and !Porn ·
questions or·comments or spell- the ballpark parking lot · to
Ing corrections to please contact Bridgeman.
Janice Lawson by March 10 In
Connolly also stated that reorder to get the directories duced speed signs are also
printed. Michael stated that net!!led and no soliciting signs.
Information In the directories .. A letter was reclved from the
will explain how house numbers Meigs County Litter Control
were assigned.
asking the village to again take
Council will be advertising for part In Clean up Ohio Week from
a pool manager and life guards. · April 23 -,30.
•
Applications must be In by April
Council was notified by the
1. The pool committee will meet
Continued for page 12

State _will resume hearing on
repeal of Ohio's seat belt law

l

USED FURNITURE ·

department said.
Much of employment growth In
the past year has been In the
executive, administrative and
managerial occupations, which
accounted for more than a third
of the 3 mii!IOJ!·job growth In total
civilian employment.
Construction jobs rose by
105,000 In February following a
sharp downturn In January.
Manufacturing Jobs shaded up
slightly lor the second straight
month, but manufacturing payrolls have added 400,000 jobs
since June, the department said.
Mining employment was un•
changed In February.

Syracuse Council discusses
.vill~e owned cable sen-ice

oNLY

BOYS' SHORT .SLEEVED

number of manufacturing jobs
Increased a little.'
But services' employment -"up 200,000 - was booming, the
department said.
Health-related jobs rose by
60,000, business services gained
55,000, jobs In ,retail trade
jum(led by 110,000 while
wholesale trade made a .smaller
contribution to payrolls.
Employment. in finance, lnsu·
rance and real estate changed
relatively little, although a
10,000-job decline In finance
provides the first tangible lm·
pact on payrolls since the Oc·
tober stock market collapse, the

Campeau says he. won't surrender

MEN'S LIGHT
WEIGHT

'2 Sections, 18 P8gea 26 Cents
A Multimedia 'Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, March 4, 1988

-

SPECIAL-SAl&amp;!

Free clothing day
Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency freeclothing 'd aywlll
be held Friday, from 9 a.m. to 12
noon, at the old high school
building in Cheshire.

N£W 2 PC.

:s.

REG. S7 .00 H4NDIAGS ............SALE 9 8
REG. S11.~0 HANDIAGS .......... SALE 9.38
REG. S14.00 HANDIAGS ........SALE 511.88
REG. 519.00 HANDBAGS .....-.SALE S16.18

Reg. 514.00 Blouses ..... Sll .B9
Reg. 518,00 Blouses ..... 515.29
Reg. 524.00 Blouses ..... S20.~"

Board meets Saturday
A special organizational meet·
ing of Meigs County BOard of
Elections will he held · at the
board· office on Saturday at 10
a .m.

Veterans Memorial
· Tuesday Admissions - Dennis
McKinney, Rutland: Patricia
Hill, Middleport; Virginia Burris , Pomeroy; Rosemary White,
Middleport; Harold Darst,
Rutland.
Tuesday Discharges -Mandy
Powell, Ida Pooler, Dixie Slawter, Amanda Hawk, Frank Clark,
·Katherine Oliver. Linda White,
Darrell Dugan.

Treat yourself to a new hand~ag. Styles include,
Acid wash denims. clutches with sh9ulder straps.
college oversized clutches and hornbeck Croco
"Mini" shoulder bags.

Save on our new spring
blouses. You'lllike the new
styles and pretty spring
colors. Sizes 32 to 46.

Trustees meet Monday :..
Columbia Township Trustees
will meet Monday, 7: 30p.m., at
the fire station.

''·

Nation's unemployment rate .at 10-year·low·

'

CARNIVAL.

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
between 1 25 and 30. Partly
cloudy Sllturday.
·

.
enttne
.

at y

tt

-----Announcements.---..;....ReYIYal starts tonight
•
The Rev. Sue Denning of
Parkersburg, W. Va., will be
evangelist for revival services
which start at7: 30 this evening at
the ReedsviUe u nlted Methodist
Churcll. .
_,I
The services will run througq
Sunday and will feature special
vocal music. Singing at tonight's
-service will be Jan Lavendar and
Kathy McDaniel and music on
Saturday night will be . by the
Harvest ·Trio. At 6 p.m. on
Saturday, a fellowship dinner
will be held preceding the revival
service.

D8ily Number
982
Pick4
.9336

Page4

EMS has 1.8 calls Tuesday · .
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 18 calls
on Tuesda'y; Middleport at 3: 24a.m. to Page St. for Patricia H11l
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:43 a.m.
transported Edna Haning to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 10: 20 a.m. to Dewitt's ~un for Irene '1\'IUord to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland Fire DePIIrtment at
10:33 a.m. to' a brush fire on the Kenneth Snyder orooertv nn
County Road 10 at Langsvlle; Salem Township Fire Depart·
ment was called at 10:42 a.n\. to aslst Rutland; Rutland
at lU: &gt;2 a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 lor George Kennedy to Holzer
Medical Center; Middleport at 11:01 a.m. to North Second Ave.
for Pleasant Ellis to-Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at ·
12: 09 p.m. treated Mark Elliot at the scene of an accident on
County Road 20· Middleport at 12:17 p.m. to High St. for
Rosemary White to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 12: 28 p.m. to the Arbaugh Addition lor Isaac Jackson
to St. Joseph's Hospital; Llfefllght at 1:40 p.m. transported
Pleasant Ellis from Veterans Memorial Hospital to Grant
Hospital, Columbus; ..RuUand at 1:59 p.m. to Vance Road lor
Harold Darst to Veterans Memorial Hospital; · Syracuse Fire
Department at 2: 40 p.m . to a brush fire on the VIrgil Teaford
property on Route 124; Tuppers Plains at 5: 54 p.m. to the
Arbaugh Addition for Mary Jo Reed to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7:21p.m. to207 Butternut Ave. for Derek Clark to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;; Middleport at 7:55 p.m. to
Williams St. for Judy Laudermllt to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 11:45 p.m. to Bailey Run Road for Eldon
Morris to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11: 47 p.m. to
New Lima ROad lor Jackie Searles to Holzer Medical Center.

Ohio Lottery

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~=~OiltH~ .

(Rep.

Man:~ Gutluie,

cllalrmaJI.

of the main committee, " Hagan
use It as a way to express his
said. I want toglvehlm the option
feelings," Hagan said.
and whatever needs to be done to
"That was Interpreted by more
make sure the same thing doesn't
than just me to be more than a
happen next week."
thinly veiled threat and should
Hagan had Interrupted lead-off not be Ignored."
witness Highway Safety Director ·
Hagan said some added securWilliam Denlhan to complain Ity was present for the hearing
about the presence of two televl"as a precautionary ·m easure."
s!QII cameramen. Hagan menti· ·
The writer of the letter was In
oned there was a note that
the audience, Hagan said.
photographs would not ,be al·
"They (security) pointed hiJ11 .
-lowed, but Rench said It wasn't
out · to me," he said. "They
sliJ!ed.
.
determined he shouldn't be
During testimony of the second
restricted.
.
.
wilnesa, James Alexander . of
"Although I did not "let It
Newark, the audience made a
Intimidate me, I did not lose any
lew guffaws and waved their sleep over It," he sa ld.
hands to Indicate their disagree. .
"The reason !suggested It (!,he
ment with a statement.
aeraeant-at-arms action) Is you
'1 will have no more emotional could lel.those things (audience
outburstl from the audience,"
reaction I get out of control," he
Hagan said. "If thll conUnues, said. "Their action Is Qlore '
I'll have the sergeant-at-arms therapy fo~ them than lor the
remove you."
purpose or a hearing."
Haaan Aid afterwards It Is a
In bla testimony, Alexander
little unuaual for the aeraeant-at·
claimed tJ¥! mandatoey seat belt
arms to be In a committee law WU pernment lnlniSIOI\.
lleaJ:Inc, but said he felt It was
''I believe the seat belt law Ia
relative for Thunday'a hearltli. · the m01t (iJiored law since ·
'1 bad noeMid a letter two or Problllltlon," Alexander
three 1&amp;)'1 qo !bet a IIWI was testlflecl.
trOlntr
.117·maanum and

to.,..._

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