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                  <text>Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

.....-Local news briefs...contlnued from page 1
and .two microphones valued at $300along with a chalnsaw. The
theft Is ~nder .Investigation.

Six Gallians homeless after fire
A family of six was left homeless when !Ire destroyed their
home early Monday morning, according to Gallipolis Fire Chief
Ray Bush.
Gallipolis firemen received the alarm at 3:13a.m. Monday to
the residence of Tim Smith, Rt. 2, Crown City, on Teens Run
Road. The four-room, one-story frame house was engulfed In
flames when the first of 20 men and three pieces of equipment
arrived on the scene.
Bush said an overheated flue Ignited the Interior wall of house
and spread to the ceiling and contents. The loss was estimated
at $6,000 to the house and at $3,800 to the contents.
No one wa s Injured In the fire according to Bush, however, the
family lost everything In the blaze. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two
girls, ages 2 and 12, and two boys, ages 5 and 7.

EMS has 16 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
over the holiday weekend.
On Saturday at 12:49 p.m., Rutland to Vance Road for Beverly
Morgan to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Racine at 8:08p.m. to
Fourth St. for Herbert Shields to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 8:17p.m. to Route 124 for Frank Lemley to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland a.t 10:35 p.m. to Happy Hollow
Road for Leland Haley to Vetefans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 12: 13 a.m., Middleport transwrted Jeff Cundiff to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 12:26 p.m. to Star
Hollow Road for Ronnie Hale to Veterans 1\femorlal Hospital;
At 3:44 p.m.. Hale was flown to St. Mary's Hospital In
Huntington. W.Va.; Pomeroy at 5:13p.m. to Union Ave. for
Mahlon Eblin to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Syracuse at 6:33
p.m.m to Nease Road for Leah Nease to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 7:59p.m. to Happy Hollow Road for Mary
Ertckman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:38
p.m. to Cole St. for PhyUis Blake to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Monday at 9:33a.m .. Racine to Route .124 for Frank Lemley ·
who was treated but not transported; Racine at12:03 p.m. to
Bash an Road for Randy Friend to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 1:07 p.m. , Pomeroy to Flatwoods Road for Mildred
Hawk to O'Bienness Memorlalliospltal; Tuppers Plains at 1:43
p.m. to County Road 28 for Esta While to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Middleport at 6:51 p.m . to Beech St. for Shirley
Frazier to Veter~s Memorial Hospital.

Tuesday, December 27. 1988

Porneeoy-Middleport, Ohio

Funds distributed

------Sen'ices planned---- St6cks
A New Year's Eve Service will
be held at Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church on Saturday
evening from 7: 30 p.m. to 12
midnight. Special pl'('achlng and
singing will be featured.

and Prodigal. Pastor, Rev.
Denver Hill. Invites the public.
Orange Township Volunteer
Fire _Department, Tuppers
Plains, Is sponsoring a dance on
New Year's Eve, from 9 p.m. to 1
a .m . Couples only; $Sin advance
and $10 at the door. Music by Lou
Petrola.

A New Year's Eve Watch
Service will be held at Eagle
Ridge Co!Dmunlty Church start Ing at 8 p.m. on Saturday. There .
wlll be special singing by Dan
Hayman and the Faith TriO,
Veterans Memorial
Jerry and Diane Frederick and
Saturday admissiOns - Herothers. Everyone welcome.
bert Shields, Racine; Carla
Smith, Jackson; Leland Haley,
Ru !land Freewill Baptls t Middleport.
Church will have a New Year's
Saturday discharges - Goldie
Eve Watch Service on Saturday Roberts, Willard Adkins.
from 7 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Sunday admissions - Leah
Pastor Paul Taylor Invites the Nease, Racine.
public.
Sunday discharges - Carol
Phillips, Mildred Stewart, Carla
The Bend Area Gospel New Smith. Mary Rlff)e, Carlos
Year's Eve service wlll be held Lynch.
Saturday· from 7: 30 p.m. to 12
Monday admissions - Darrell
midnight at the Christian Dugan, Racine: Nellie (Esta)
Brethren Church, Mason, W.Va. White, Long Bottom.
Preaching by Rev. Miles Trout . . Monday discharges - Wayne
Singing by the Renecllons Trio Brlcktes, Iva Rayburn.

Hospital news

Daley alock prices
(As of 18:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. . 27
AT&amp;T ................................. 29'&gt;(,
Ashland on ........................33%
Bob Evans ..................... .. ... 15%
Charming Shoppes ..............14%
City Holding Co ................... 31\1,
Federal Mogul .................... .47
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................50%
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion .. .................. 14~
Lands' End ......... .. ............ .. 26%,
Limited Inc .. .. ....................27%
Multimedia Inc ...... .. ...........74 3,.;
Rax Restaurants .................... 3
Ro bblns &amp; Myers ...... .. ..... .... 15
Shoney's Inc ....... .... ....... ..... . 7%
Wendy's Inti .. ...................... 6
Worthln~on lnd ................. 21%

Trustees to meet
Scipio Township Trustees will
have a special end-of-the-year
meeting on Friday at 6 p.m. at
the township building In
Pagevllle.

Marty steps

Meigs County's three local
school districts received
$603,115.84 as their share of the
$195,230,776.86 distribution made
throughout Ohio In the December
State School Foundation subsidy
payment.
Amounts received by the three
districts after deductions for
employees and teachers retirement, Include: Eastern Local,
$125,991.26: Meigs Local,
$337,726.90, and Southern LOcal,
$139,397.68. In addition, the
Meigs County Board of Educa- ·
lion received a direct allotment ·
of $31.068.41.

Ohio Lottery

down as Browns

head coach

Daily Number
992
Pick4

2568

Page 4

•

•
'

Dates changed
for trash pickup

•
•
Vol.

No.183
1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 28, 1988

Due to the holiday season, the
regular trash pickup In Racine
VIllage this week and next week
will be held on Tuesday and
Wednesday both weeks.

K

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (U PI) - Businesses plan to spend a record
$455.96 billion for new plants and
equipment in 1989, 6 . percent
more than In 1988, the Commerce
Department reported
Wednesday.
The department's Census Bureau said the latest s urvey taken
In October and November
showed businesses would spend
$430.17 billion in !988, 10.4 percent more than in 1987.
The $455.96 billion In capita l
spending planned for 1989 and the
anticipated 1988 spending level
wou.fd be successive records,
even when price changes are
factored In, the bureau said. ·
The previous high was $389.67
billion ln 1987, the bureau said, ·
The robust capital spending
_plans reflect businesses' optimIsm abOut the future course of the
economy and intention to increase their capacity to produce
goods or ser vices and employ
workers.
Manufacturing Industries plan
to spend $171.67billlon In 1989,4.3
percent more than In 1988, with
the bulk of that coming from the
factories that produce expen- ·
slve, long-lasting goods such as
metals and motor vehicles.
However, aircraft manufacturer~ plan to spend less on
plailts anq equipment tn 1989, as
do electrical machinery produc"ers. the bureau said.
The largest planned capital

RELAX AND SAVE

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, JANUARY 1, 1989
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES.

--Area deaths--Sandra Norman.
Sandra Kay Norman, 39,
Athens, died Sunday at Ohio
State University Hospitals In
Columbus.
A homemaker, Mrs. Norman
was born In Pomeroy, June 29,
1949, a daughter of the late John
Wtlltam Mulford and Helen L.
Davidson Mulford who resides In
Cheshire. She attended
the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Survlvlng,ln addition to her
mother, are her husband, John
Roy Norman; a daughter, Tomorrow Dawn Norman; a
brother, Randy John Mulford,
Ches hire; a sister, Rita Fields,
Pomeroy; her father-In-law and
mother-In-law, Harold and Juanita Norman, Pomeroy; several
brothers-In-law and sisters-InJaw, and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thur "S'"day
at
the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower · Funeral Home where friends may
call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday. Friends may con-·
tribute to the local Salvation
Army in her memory.

Walter Brown
Walter P. Brown. 71, Reedsville, a former member or the
Eastern Local School District
Board of EducatiOn, died Monday at Enon, Ohio.
Mr . Brown was born Aug. 15,
1917 at Park, Ohio, a son of the
late William and Kathryn Wright
Brown.
He was a retired electrician
from the Eastern Electric Co.,
Mineral Wells, W. Va.,andwasa
32nd degree mason. He was a
member of Shade River Masonic
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM ~nd was a past
master of that organization. He
was a member of the Scottish
Rite, Columbus, and served eight
years as a member of the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education. Mr. Brown
was a member of the International Brotherhood of Electric
Workers, Local 968, Parkersburg. He had served In the United
States Army AJrCorpsandwasa
member of the Long Bottom ;
Christian Church.
·
Surviving are two daughters
and sons-In-law, Melanie and Bill
Thomas, Enon; Linda and Steve
Cowdery, North Dartmouth,
Mass.; a son and daughter-Inlaw, David and Peggy Brown,
Uniontown, Phlo; seven
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Margaret Pickens Brown, twG
brothers and a sister.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with Mr. Philip
Sturm officiating. Masonic rites
will be conducted at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.
Friends may call at the funeral

home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday. Burial will be In
Reedsville Cemetery.

R.G. Greene
MASON - R. G. Greene, 7S,
New Haven, died Friday, Dec. 23,
1988, at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Born July 3, 1913, in MuUcns,
W.Va., the son of Everett and Mar·
gie Moran Greene Sr., he was
president of the New Haven Su·
pennarket and West Virginia
Sausage Co., Inc., and a member of
the First Preysbertian Chwch of
Gallipolis, Ohio.
In addition, he was a member of
the Citizens National Bank and
Pleasant Valley Hospital boards of
directors in Point Pleasant; a former New Haven City Councilman,
and the director of retail operations
for Evans Grocery Co. for many

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Winter ...

Continued from page 1
across northern Minnesota, the
NWS said. On Monday, snow and
tee prompted worried managers
of the MlnneapoUs Metrodome to
heat the domed stadium warmer
than usual to melt accumulated
snow on the roof prior to an NFL
playoff game between the Minnesota VIkings and the Los Angeles'
Rams.
Across Minnesota early Tues- '
day, up to 10 Inches of snow fell at
Thief River Falls and Bemidji,
while up to Slnches was reported
at Alexandria and Park Rapids.
Snow was falling over northern
and central Wisconsin early
Tuesday, w lth freezing rain also
reported from southwest Wisconsin Into the Green Bay area.
Freezln~r rain was peltlna:
northwest Iowa on Tuesday, the
NWS said, as well as lower
Michigan and northern Ohio.

'

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio &lt;UPI)Ohio authorities are baffled by a
Christmas Day roadside shootIng that claimed the life of a
woman on her way home to West
VIrginia.
·- Polfce" sii1d the)' have not been
able to uncover a motive for the
shooting of Leslie · Joann Sharkey, 42, of Detroit. She died
Monday after being shot three
times.
DNectlve Jim Howard of the
Lawrence County, Ohio, Sheriff's
Department said Sharkey was
able to give pollee a detailed
description of the man who shot
her In the neck, shoulder and

hand with a small-caliber
handgun.
Sharkey told pollee she was
driving east on U.S. 52 near
Chesapeake early Sunday when
sll,~ noticed a driver flashing his
headlights a'ncf pulled over to the
roadside..
The man told her sparks were
coming ~om the back of her car.
and said he would call Sharkey's
parents in Huntington, W.Va.
Howard said the man left and
then returned, saying he had
called her parents.
Sharkey continued driving and
the man followed her. She pulled
over again ani! got out of the cq.r,
Howard said, and the assailant
I

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shared equally with his wile Ms,ryann, 62, and
daughters Darlene and Cynthia (right). They are
shown at a news conference Tuesday . (UPI)

Highway killing baffles police

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years.

Survivors include his wife, Lillian R. Greene; a daughter, Karen
Kay Greene, both of the hOIIle; a
son and daul!hter·in-law, James AI·
bert and Billy L. Greene or Beckley, W. Va.; t.hree brothers,
Everette Greene Jr. of MuUens,
William Greene of Owensboro,
Mo., and Charles Gilben Greene of
Myrtle Beach, S. C.; two sisters,
Dorothy Farley and Betty Lester,
both of Mullens, W.Va.; two
grandchildren and one great·
granddaughter.
He was preceeded in death by
two sisters, Thelma Greene and
Mable Black.
Services wiD be Wednesday,
Dec. 28, 1988, at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with Rev. John
Campbell,. Rev. ClifTord West and
Rev. George Weirick officiating.
Burial will follow at Kirldand
Memorial Gardens in Point
PleasanL
· Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 27.
The family requests con·
tributions be made to the Mason
County Heart Fund in care of
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

LUCKY WINNER - John Evancho, 60, of
Waukesha, Wis., gives the approval sign after
winning lhe Dllnois Stale Lotto last Saturday In
the amount of $39,585,968.14. The prize will be

FIRST COME .... FIRST SERVED

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
United States will Impose about
$100 million In trade sanctions
against the European CommunIty In retal Ia IIon for the EC' s
coming ban on U.S. hormonetreated beef, U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeutter said
Tuesday.
The 100 percent tariff on
European beef, pork, tomatoes,
Instant coffee, fruit juice, lowalcohol fermented beverages
and pet food will become effective at12:01 a.m. Jan.1, Yeutter
said.
The tariffs will remainlneffect
as long as U.S. meat trade Is
Interrupted due to the ban,
Yeutter said. The value of the
retaltallon Is about $100 million,
equal to the estimated amount of
lost sales opportunities for U.S.
meat exporters , he said.
President Reagan decided
Dec. 24, 1987, that the Impending

EC ban on beef was an unfair
trade practice and warned the
United States would retaliate If
the ban was Implemented.
The EC delayed the ban for one
year but ultimately decided to go
ahead with It, arguing It Is fair
because European farmers are
already banned from using the
hormones, which allow cattle to
grow fat with less feed.
"I regret that the United States
Is forced to retaliate against the
EC's ban on meat treated by
growth hormones." Yeu Iter said.
"We have tried repeatedly to
bring this issue to a scientific
dispute settlement panel under
the GATT (General Agreement
on Tar riffs and Trade) In order to
have It resolved," he said.
."However, our European counterparts have consistently
blocked 'our efforts ."
The United States hopes to
force the EC to back off the ban

Licenses expire on Saturday

TIMEX
WATCHES

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman reminds village businesses
that all amusement machine licenses expire on Saturday, and
they must be renewed.
License fees are $50 for a juke box, $50 each for the first three
coin-operated amusement machines and $25 each for each
machine after the first three.
Licenses may be purchased at the mayor's office Monday
through Friday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

25o~g

Five fined by Mayor Hoffman
CHI~EZ CURLS • CHEEZ I&gt;IU·'-"1

BITE-SIZE TOIIDLIA CHIP$
. OR NACHO CHIPS

grab bed her.
Sharkey managed to burn the
man on the left side of his face
with a cigarette, and then he shot
her.
Pollee said Sharkey got backtn
her car and drove to a main
highway In Chesapeake, stopping In traffic so someone would
stop and help her. ·
She · was taken to St. Mary's
Hospital In Chesapeake, where
she died Monday prior to
surgery.
Howard said police have not
been able to determine a motive
for the at tack, but It does not
seem to have begun as a robbery
or an assault .

Five are
killed by
speeding
automobile

United States will impose
trade sanctions against EC

,.....Local news bnefs---.

ENTIRE SELECTION
MEN'S - LADIES

2 Sections, 12 Pages
, A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Capital spending to be
up·record 6 % in '89

Plan basketball clinic
A basketball clinic for boys and girls, grades four through
eight , will be held Thursday at Eastern High School with
Charles Riley , Eastern Varsity coach, Instructor. Sign-up Is at 9
a.m. Entry fee Is $5. Bring sacl&lt; lunch or $2 to buy lunch.
Individual competition, with a first place trophy, and second '
and third place ribbons. will be held following lunch.

Clear, co ld tonight. Low in
mid teens. Thursday, sunny,
high In mid 30s.

defendants forfeited bonds and five others were fined tn
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Bernard P. Lavalley, Racine, $250, reckless
operation; Martin S. Lamar, Wintersville, Ga. , $50, stop sign
violation; Hobard Cundiff, Middleport, $50, stop sign violation;
$100, !allure to appear In court; James Fetser, Lafayette, 1na.,
$44, speeding; Julius Preston, Jr., $41, speeding; Robert F.
Lawson, Reedsville, $50, left of center. .
Fined were Connie K. Boston, Po,meroy, $16 a nd cost,
Continued on page 5 '
~

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

!

I

with the tough retaliatory tarriffs, but the EC shows no
Immediate Inclination to bend .
. At a meeting last week, the EC
foreign ministers agreed to counter the expected U.S. retaliation
with additional tarrtffs on lmports of U.S. honey, nuts, dried
fruit and canned corn.
But Willy de Clercq, minister
for external relations , said the
EC was willing to have bilateral
talks on the Issue.
U.S. officials Insist the drugs
used In slaughterhouse feed lots
are safe and argued the ban Is an
unfair trade barrier. An lnternatlonal food code committee has
endorsed the use of five such
growth hormones.
"Despite the EC's claim that
the animal hormone ban Is based
on health concerns, the EC has
yet to present any evidence that
proper application of the growth
producing hormones In question
poses any threat to human
health," Yeutter said.
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration has said dally
production of hormones In humans, even In the most sensitive
segment of the population, Is far
higher than the small amounts
left In the meat of treated
animals, Yeutter said.
Even untreated animals have
hormone levels as high or higher
than treated animals, he satd:
The U.S. action does not apply
to the Import of European anutlal
Intestines, used to make sausage
casln,gs, bec'a use the EC Is not
banning Imports of hormonetreate~ meat used to make pet
foods.

Bomb caused crash
WASHINGTON (UPI) -BritIsh Investigators have determined that Pan Am Flight 103
crashed In Scotland after being
ripped apart by a bomb, administration sources said WedneSday.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPil - A
speeding driver smashed Into a
stopped auto on the city's south
side Tuesday night, killing the
second car's five occupants in a
fiery explosion, pollee said
Wednesday .
A spokesman for the Franklin
County coroner said Identities of
the five were not confirmed,
since the bodies were burned
beyond recognition. Three of
them may have been children.
The driver of the stieedtng car,
Emmett Gabriel, 30, of Columbus, was tn poor condition
Wedn_esday with extensive facial
injuries . A spokeswoman for
Grant Medical Center said he lost
his left eye.
Pollee Capt. John Rockwell
said the incident began shortly
after 6: 30 p.m., when officer
Lolita Perryman spotted Gabriel
drive past her cruiser at an
estimated speed of 80 to 90 mph.
She made au-turn to give chase,
but Gabriel crashed a red ll&amp;.lt
and hit the second car broadside
a few seconds later.
"It just exploded," said Dave
Bolognone, who was In his car on
the other side of the Intersection.
"As soon as It hit the other car,
there was a giant explosion and
everything was spinning. It was
crazy. There was nothing you
could do."
After the collision, Gabriel's
car continued north a short
distance, striking several parked
cars and a ptckuptruckdrlven by
Lindsey Cyrus.
"I saw them coming over the
viaduct and thought, 'He Isn 't
going to stop for that light,"'
Cyrus said . "I slammed on the
brakes."
Cyrus's van was damaged, but
he was not Injured.
After the fire was extln·
gulshed, au thorltles draped a
white sheet over the car's passenger compartment, and the
bodies were not removed for
about two hours. The rest of the
car was 100 feet away from the
passenger compartment, and the
car's battery was knocked about
250 feet.

spending Increase among producers .of more quickly con·
sumed goods Is for paper. Manu facturers of chemicals and food
also plan to Invest more in their
plants In 1989, the bureau said .
Non-manufacturing industries
plan to spend $284.30 billion in
1989 , 7 percent more tha n In 1988,
the bureau said.
The largest increases In spending for equipment were planned
by air and rail transportation
companies, followed by smaller
Increases for c hemical and gas
producers. Mines , utilities and
other transportation companies
plan to spend less on plants and

equipment in 1989 than in 1988,
the bureau said.
Capital spending in the third
quarter ofl988 rose 2.1 percent to
a seasonally adjusted annual
rate oU436.01 billion, following a
3.6 percent increase in the second
quarter. the bureau said. That
was 1 percent less than the
previous survey had projected.
Businesses said they planned
to spend 2.2 percent more Jn the·
fourth quarter of 1988,4.7 percent
more In the first quarter of 1989
and 1.5 percent more in the
second quarter of next year , the
bureau said.
-

FA,A to call for new
rivets in older 727s
CHARLESTON, W.Va .. (UP!)
- Federal aviation offtoials say
a proposal asking airlines to
replace rivets on aging Boeing
727 passenger jets was under
review when a hole was torn open
in one of the jets Monday, and
that the incident has prompted
officials to re-evaluate the
proposal.
Darrell Pederson. an assistant
manager with the Federal Aviation Adminlstraton in Seattle,
said tll~;~g~n~y ls_; ·ve~y close'' to_
Issuing a notice of proposed
rule-making, which leads to an
airwor thiness dlrecUve after a
period of public comment.
He said the proposal, affecting
jets sealed with an outdated

bonding process, will be re-,
evaluated in light of an incidenr
that forced a 22-year-old 727
operated by' Eastern Airlines to
make an unplanned landing
Monday after a 10-by-20-inch hole
ripped open In the fuselage.
The plane, carrying 110 passengers on a flight from Rochester, N.Y ., to Atlanta, landed in
Charleston. No Injuries were
reported.
"We will take another look at
what we had planned on doing in
view offhls sit uation," Pederson
said. ''If the (directive) covers
adequately, then we wtll proceed
with that one. If there's something new here not covered, then
Continued on page 5

BUSH GOES QUAIL HUNTING- President-elect George Bush
and long·tlme friend WIU Farl!lh bunt quail Tuesday on Farish's
"Lazy F" ranch near Berclair, Texas. (UPI)

.
I

'

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTJ;RESTS OF THE MEIG S-MASON AREA
~lb

ts:in~
~v

.

""'"'--''--.-' ........,.o::;:~,_

ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AssoclaUon and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers AssociaUon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed With name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
gpod taste, addressing Issues , not persooalltles.

I

Khomelnl and Ra!sanjanl ar·
en't particular. Their orders for
torture and mass executions
Include men, women and child· ·
ren. The stories ott he women are
particularly horrifying. Often
their only "crime" Is to defy
Khomeinl by appearing In public
unveiled. The paranoid Ayatol·
lab can't afford to lose a!ly
semblance of control over his
ll'OPie - religious, moral or
political.
We have the names of dozens of
women and young girls who have
been executed in the last several
months. We have listened as
women who escaped from Khomelnl's prisons have described
his unique brand of terror. Some
women have been raped as
punishment for violating Khomelnl's standards of modesty.

We don't ·normally turn to pop
Icons for political commentary,
but sing Madonna was on the
mark when she said, "You know
what I wish for the Ayatollah
Khomelnl? I wish he would die
and ·come back as a woman,
under his regime."
This Is what life Is like for
Iranian women:
Khomelnl's fanatical Revoluntionary Guards ''marry'' women
scheduled for execution and rape
them before they die. Even Shiite
mullahs and Iranian officials
engage In this practice.
Kbomeinl makes examples of
women who are it • t Islamic
enough lor his tastes or who side
with opposition groups. Four
women were recently hanged In
public in the city of Amol. No
charges were spectped.

•

...

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor

r

. Mt£L!\\ I

Rafsanjanl and Khomelnlengl·
neered a law last May 14, which ··
says "women who appear un·
veiled ·an the streets and In public
places will be sentenced to 74
lashes." Unveiled or "mal·
veiled" women face harassment,
arrest and torture if they show
more skin than pleases. Khomelnl. RoVing motorcycle gangs
of young men run down women
who do not meet Khomelnl's
·
standard.
The leader of these gangs,
according to our sources, Ia Hadl
Ghaftarl, a parliamentary deputy. He recently spearheaded the
opening of a special prison In
Tehran exclusively for the whipping and torture of women
rounded up by ganp. He tells the
male and female guards that
Khomelni believes "whipping Is
a form of worship."
In one verified case, a 17-year·
old girl was tortured by Ghaffarl
and then given 70 lashes for
''Inappropriate dress."
Don't mlatake these hoodlums
for religious purists. Their prln·
clples have a price. A woman can
buy her way out of prison. If her
crime Is letting a lock of balr slip
out from her head coverJni, the
going rate to be turned loose Is
$125. If the crime Is more aerlous
- wearing· fingernail pollah the bribe Is more than $900.
The bribeS are bargain wben
the punishment Is having acid
thrown In a young girl's face
because she was not . covered
head to toe In black.
Islamic women are 1101 the only
ones who suffer. A recent report
from Iran tellS of a Christian
woman who was arrested and
kept In detention lor several days
because she poked her unveiled
head out of her apartment
window. The woman later com·
mttted suicide because, accord·
lng to the note she left behind, she
could not Jive with the memory of
the guards repeatedly raping
her.

Adoption laws deny father's rights ~~~reet
· Edward McNamara must be stripped him of all rights to a
wondering if he dreamt the last daughter he acknowledged from
20 years.
the moment he learned about
Surely this can't be the country her, the little girl he fought justto
where a steadily growing see for seven years.
number of single mothers have
If you don't recognize McNamproven the paternity of recalcl· ara's name, he Is the California
trant fathers and won supportfor · man whO had a brief affair with
their children. Modern scientific his daughter's mother eight
tests haven't really taken ali the years ago. He didn't learn of the
oomph out of a fellow's "Hey, It pregnancy untO his baby was a
wasn't me, I never met her month old, when the mother told
before. .. "
him over lunch. Unlike a lot of
This can't be the same nation similar scenarios, the mother of
that stepped up child-support McNamara's daughter didn't
enforcement against deadbeat have to prove he was the father;
fathers who don't even want to he wUlingly admitted it. When he
own up to children born In learned the baby's mother
wedlock. There Is no overall planned to put her up for
trend toward making fathers as adoption, he tried to get custody
responsible for the care of their of his child.
children as mothers. He must
have dreamt it.
But his daughter was 5 months
What else could he think? The old when the trial was held, and a
courts of the United States just judge ruled the baby had

''bonded' • with the foster parents
who had cared lor her; The foster
parents wanted to adopt the girl.
The judge ruled It was in her
"best interest." By the time the
California Supreme Court heard
the case, the child had been
adopted.
Along the way, McNamara
gave up hope of custody and tried
for visitation rights. In 1985, a
judge ruled against him and
stripped him of all parental
rights. Early this month, the U.S.
Supreme Court dismissed his
appeal "for want of a properly
presented federal question."
You can't fault the baby's
mother for wanting the best life
she could for her daughter;
perhaps she believed adoption by
another couple, with McNamara
conveniently out of the picture,
was best. And no one can say she
was wrong.

What do you say to a child
whose naturallather wants to see
her so badly he'd spend seven
years In court fighting for the·
privilege, when that child begins
to wonder about her roots? We
thought It was in your . best
Interest to keep your natural
father away from you?
How can we demand parental
responsibility from a father on
one hand- can fairly wring It out
of a man In one court -and beat
him a way from It in another? If
the sltutatlon had been reversed,
If the baby's mother bad named
Ed McNamara In a paternity suit
and Ed had fought It with
everything he had, we'd have
been glad to give him his
parental rights - once a month,
for the next 18 years. .
And II he didn't comply, we'd
put him in jail.

NBA results

"Once upon a time, there was GOOD choles- ·
terol and there was BAD cholesterol.... "

·.-

.

queen's abdlctlon and declared
martial law," notes the book,
"Hawaii Pono," written by Bran·
deis University professor Law·
renee H. Fuchs.
"The United States govern·
ment, through its minister, gave
immediate diplomatic recogni·
tlon to the rebel group; which
then proclaimed the abrogation
of the ... queen and launched the
American flag where the Ha·
wailan pennant had flown," adds
Fuchs' book.
When the news belatedly
reached Washington, President
Grover · Cleveland denounced
"the lawless occupation of Ha·
wail under false pretexts by
United States forces" and called
for the restoration of the Ha·
wailan nation.
Today, almost 96 years afterd
their queen was toppled, Ha·
wail's natives have lost much of
their language, their religion and
other crucial elements of their
culture - but many of those
proud people continue to press
for the restoration of the land and
sell·governance wrongfully
taken from them.
Honolulu magazine calls the
grass roots campaign to reestablish a native Hawaiian
nation "the hottest political Issue
of the 1990s." A recent statewide
conference of activists pro·
claimed political and economic
independence to be native
birthrights.
Obtaining that self·sufllciency
Is easler said than done. Indeed,
a 1921 federal law that deslg·
nated 200,000 acres as Hawaiian
Home Lands to be returned to the
natives has gone largely unen·
forced for almost seven decades.
Moreover, the natives are
subjected to a seemingly endless

'

·-

series of indignities, the most
recent of which Is still unfolding
on the Island of Maul where
excavation Is under way for the
450-room Ritz Carlton Hotel.
In digging to prepare the
foundation, the developers disco·
vered that the site for the $80
million hotel had been a major
native burial ground.

The remains of about 900
natives already have been exhumed and shipped elsewhere and nobody knows how many
more skeletons remain to be
found. What Is certain, however,
Is that hundreds of haole bodies
would never be disinterred to
build another hotel for tourists.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Wednesday, Dec. 28, the 363rd day of 1988 with three• to
follow .
The moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of,the United States, in 1856,
jazz pianist Eari"Fatha" Hines In 1905, and actors Lew Ayres In 1908
(age 80), Martin Milner In 1931 (age 57) and Maggie Smith In 1934 ~age
54).

Collt'p
Named ,Jim Zorn

Bolae !k.atf' -

,..,lerback coach.

NATION..U MSD'fBALL ASSOC.
Eultra Co•r«•Of:

Foetball
Oneland- CoaehMilrlySchoiW.•hel·

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117 .8210
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1 18 .211
Cenlnd DIYialon

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Del•..

111:

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Wn&amp;er• Coaltrnce
Mltlwesl Dlvlslon

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Dall•
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GB

18 • •H1 11 9 .141 I
II 11 .SN I

....

15 12 .111 I
1 It .Ill IIY.
3 ~2 .1,!8 1&lt;1

WOnio

Miami

PaciOc Dlv.. lo n

LA Lakd'l
Photllb
Portluil
Suttlfo

17
15
II
13

Golh 8latl"

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CIM'elud Jl'l', O.leqo It

lll6 !Hipfld.

.......
1

CaiJU"J - Called up wlnlt"r Paul
Kanllrlm frem Salt Lab at)' ol till'
lnter.-t .._. Hockt'y Ll:que.
New ler.,. - Recalled forwards
.lan.e ()IIRII . and Doll&amp; Brown •d
1•Uender Chril Tnrerl trom tJUca of
the A.merfcM Hockt')' I.e IIUf'·

...,..

Amer~an Socetr Ltape lllonl!r Chtick BIUPt NllllpecL

Wlftr Polo
U.S. Watl'l' Polo tum :..... Named Pl'tt'
Sn)'dl'r ol UC.S.,...IIarbara head coach
lor the 11• Worhl Un ..n.tt;y Gam....

Collegtl scores
Te•mamf'flt!
ECAC Hollda,y Ftllli'¥111
Firat Round
~.John' ali-t. Fordham (I!
Ohio Sl. 83, f1erlda 88
Far Wt.At Clu!lk
Firat RouMI
Orf'pn d. Ollcap St . n
Clem.on til, MIMe Ttnn. St . 71
Lobo ID\'ItaHo_.
Ftraa Round
Wakf' Fnr~t 75, Falrlltl.lil

.. aMflk

PII'SIReund
P'luhe 6M. s.•ern Cal 141

LA C11pp!n IN, SeaUit&gt; lot

Goldell Stale Ill, PhUU.Iphh. IU

StrattoN ... Toumam•nt

f1r11 ReuDit

Weee.. ~·~~ Gamfti

Eul

lndlil\l. a&amp;Nf'w.lerlll!'y. 'l':J&amp;p,m.
U

CICI!'llelaad, 7::10 p.m.

Photnlx ac Dttrdl, 7:30p.m.
Sacrameai•MI Ula._l:.p.m.
Pblladf"lpblall LA Lakf•rs, 11:11 p.m.
TIIIUIIIIQ' 'I Game
lfoUilon at Wutllnaton, nlaM
N..w Yorll at Chlcal•· nlpt
Bolton at Dallaa. nllht
MJaml at St&gt;!lldt:, nlclll

I

NUL results

I

lo•lli. Holalra U
PriMdencl' Ill, MaiM 18
Sl. PP'Iers n, Waper ~

.....

S)'raCUIII' IOL Kut«eralll

E. Carothat7, Md. · lalllmoft! Ce. 78
KPntutk)' 81, A.uattn Pu.y T7
MlsiiiMitlppt 83. Sam HouNI:on 13
NC SlatP I$, Mownoul1 10
WNI Vll'llllla •• Marylanclll
MIIIWNI
X.wlfl' (Ohlol IS, Nlaa. . 'fO

Wt•.-Greea a., M, Cohndo Sl. IJ
"-•lhwe:st

Nt\TION.\L HOCKE\' LEAGUE
1'\IMI~t'alln••

W•hlnJlont 1 Plllllld~pNa:t
NY Jtan•ra t N"' .l.r~tr :S.
Mcnlrul a, Lo~ Allpolft'!
Wttdiii!Mit''• Gamt"'
Hardord al
7:31p.m.
Drtf'll .. llit.... 'f:~ p.hl.

CorRIIat SMV, ppl.

TeDM·EI Puotl, S. Car oil• St. liS
Wttl
MonlallaSI. •· cai-Dawta 1:J
Nt'W Orlt'an~ H, Cal St.·F'Uih:•rlon 6&amp;

OOTl

'tu•*·

Mla~ala

II Cfllcare,ll;JS p.m.

St. l.oula II WI&amp;.IK'I· !1: 31 p.m.
Thurtdi\Y'• Gami'JI

lorMite at Qu•~· nl1hl
Phlladdpli ~..a PIIIIIMI rrh. niJtht

San DIP go St. tl . St. f'r•rl.lll CNV I 1!
ganea ca.r. !.&amp;, FrNIIO Sl. •
s. lltall St. II!, ld alto 81
&amp;:an lord II. St. Mtr)''A {Calli. 16-1

Prep scores
GlrbiOhlo Hla:ll School Llill'thotll
Ada S1, Cory R ... .on .tS

Bofilon"l Nl'w J.-rllilt'y , nl~
MoalrNU .C 'l '"lpry, nl11111i
Vanc:ouwr al LOti M,;l'l~. nl~

Transactions

Akr Buchk-t 71. Clf' Eul :u
· t\kr Sl Vl.ce•l-11, Norton !3
Allr HohiWI -141, canal FuN on NW U
fan1011 Gll'nOakln, Mantua Crf'Mtwood

"

Col Harllt') M, Col Mlfftln 8
Drlawart" IK, Buckt'ft&gt; Vall:!

Ba.,owhllll

Drf"!ldf'n tr,.:va~ n. Ucklq Val :1:1
flndlll)' Iii, Lima ShawN'• .fS

LoK An ~~~'tift&lt; - r\«rf't'd 111 tf'rntM with
plkhl'r Dfoa.a. ftllrtt on ll 111118 ('Odrt.L'I

.........

~· llh

1\lhuq..,.qUt' of thf' Padnc CoMI

, . .IIIIPthWI

Clf'Vt•huHI - " ' atvt'd (unMtrd Gary
Vocf'.
co
Portland - o\tihalf'd ~d ,lf&gt;rry

I

~II'IW!IIIi; pi~Kt&gt;d

a-rd

,,.y

SeMIIeraOn&gt;ro•ft.1, .,_,..
til
Co.-.rdla '72. Cal-8 • • Crn IS

SKnun•ulto 11%. PorUand 111

Crai~~:N•uonthf'

lnJ•u•d IIMl.
PhoNb: - Pl•td l!i.tt.rd Dil.n Ma.Hif'

on tiM&gt; lnJun•d liM.

.

Oallo11n1y We.Uand 85. Col W~t&lt;&amp;l
57, fant011 Htrlalt' S:l

G~~~MWQ

Ht&gt; bron Lak.woad I,, BPmlock MIIAtr

.

I

Th" NCAA is considering pe·
naitii's for recruiting violations
by Oklahoma State. It Is ex·
peetdt the Cowboys will be
banh~d from televls ion and bowl
gaq\l.ti: next year.
Slltlnld that happen, Sanders
wol,\1 face a senior season
wttl\d,u I national exposure. Sand·
ers i'tlinost certain)y would be a

Loul"""'• AqulrtaM !II, AuAtlntown -II
Nt&gt;w1U'k ·5'f, CoiBrookhavt'n !'12
Sllflh)' 77, Ll':clnllrln 30
Upptr l'!rloiD Val ~!1, &amp;n LOKIUI -'9

high NFL !irst·round draft cho·
ice If he was available the spring
draft.
However, NFL rule&amp; stipulate
players whose class has not
graduated are not allowed to be
drafted. Thus, if Sanders wants
to be available before his senior
season, he likely would have to
take the NFL to court.
"I realize Its a cold, cruel world
and that 99 percent of the people
who hang around With me do so
becaue I won the Heisman," said
Sanders, who set NCAA records
in his junior season with 2,682
yards rushing and 39
touchdowns.
"I don't think I am ready to
leave college ... I just turned 20
this year. I guess I'm not as
mature as an NFL player.
" I enjoy college football." he
added. '"When you are growing
up you see guys on television who
are playing In a big-time
program.''
No. 12 Oklahoma State is not
expected to learn its fate until
after the Jan. 2 bowl games , and
. Sanders will probably not make
up his mind until after that.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Jerry Berndt , who revived the '
football program at the Unlver·
sityof Pennsylvania before going
· to Rice, Is the latest candidate to
become football coach at
Temple.
Berndt, who coached at Penn
from 1981 to 1985 a.nd turned a
iast·place team into Ivy League
champions, contiued meetings
Tuesday with Temple officials.
Temple Athletic Director Cha·
rles Theokas said Berndt, the
athletic direct or and football
coach at Rice, was one of five or
six candidates to succeed Bruce
Arians, who was dismissed last
month after a 4· 7 season.

"If we can get someone to do
that, and I feel Jerry can, and
also have the relationship with
our community that he has, I
think it would be an asset to all of
us in the city as well as Temple.
He's a very strong candidate in
my mind but we have other
strong candidates- at least five
or six people."
Penn State Assistant Coach
Jerry Sandusky last week decided not to accept the Temple
job.
Theokas has said he has no
timetable for finding a newcoac~
but a prolonged delay could hu ' t
Temple recruiting.

By United Press International
Clutch play by rookie Danny
Manning down the stretch Tues· ,
day night helped the Los Angeles
Clippers erase the memory of a
50-point loss to the Seattle
SuperSonics.
Manning, who had just 3 points
before halftime, scored 12 of his
25 in the final quarter to rally the
Clippers to a 104-100 victory over
. Seattle. The last time the teams
met, the Sonlcs won 154-104.
Manning hit a layup with 11
seconds left for a 102-99 lead and
the Clippers held on to snap a
slx·game losing streak to the
So nics.
Seattle, held without a field
goal for the final 6:42, was led by
Dale Ellis with 24 points and
Xavier McDaniel with 17 off the
bench. Quintin Dailey led Los
Angeles with 26 points.
Benoit Benjamin, who had 15
points 10 rebounds and 4 blocked
shots in 33 minutes as a reserve ,
hit a free throw gave Los Angeles
a 100-99 iead with 48 seconds left
before Manning scored for a
3-point lead.
With four,seconds to play, Ellis
made a free throw and intention·
ally missed the second. However,
the rebound deflected out of
bounds off McDaniel, and Dailey
clinched tile victory with 2 tree
throws. '
Seattle e~tered the final period
with an 80.75 lead as Ellis and
former Clipper Michael Cage
scored 8 points apiece in the third
quarter. The Sontcs led 90-81with
7:561eft, butManning-whotook

just 4 shots in the first half triggered a 13·2 burst that
produced a 94-92 edge with 3:06
left.
Elsewhere, Atlanta edged New
York 128·126, Houston rallied
past Miami 101·93, Cleveland
overpowered Chicago 107-96, Mil·
waukee stomped Indiana 120·107,
Dallas thumped San Antonio
110·101, Denver overwhelmed
Boston 130·109, Golden State
topped Philadelphia 119-112 and
Sacramento nipped Portland 112111.
Cavaliers 107, Bulls 96
At Chicago, Larry Nance
scored eight of his 18 points in the
closing minutes to lead Cleve·
land to its sixtll straight victory.
Mark Price added 17 points,
Craig Ehlo 16 and Ron Harper
and Brad Daugherty 15 each for
Cleveland. Michael Jordan
scored 43 points to lead the Bulls.
Hawks 128, Knlcks 126
At Atlanta, Reggie Theus
scored a season·hlgh 32 points
and Moses Maione and Doml·
nique Wilkins added 30 each to
help the Hawks hold off New
York.
Rockets 101, Heat 93
At Miami, Akeem Olajuwon
scored nine of his 22 points in the
fourth quarter and Otis Thorpe
added 21 points and 12 rebounds
to lead Houston to its sixth
straight victory. Houston over·
came a 50-41 halftime deficit.
Bucks 120, Pacers 107
At Milwaukee, Terrv ,.., •. - ..
mings scored 29 points to fuP.
Bucks in a game marred h··

Lunch lpeclal

.. biNt\IER FOR TWO

11' 1 ITIII II'IZZA
PLUS 2 . 16 oz. Soltdrlnks

$4.99

Lunch

Berndt, with a 6-27 record in
three years at Rice, including
0·11 in 1988, said he is ju st
exploring the possibility of com·
ing to Temple.
"I'm just in the process of
discussing Temple football, but
obviously I have an interes t or I
wouldn't be here," said Berndt,
who attend ed Monday night's
basketball game between Penn
State and Temple.

fight between Indiana's Scott
Skiles and the Bucks' Jay
Humphries, who were ejected.
Larry Krys'tkowiak scored 26
poin ts and Jack Sikma 15 for the
Bucks.
Mavericks 110, Spurs 101
At Dallas, Mark Aguirre
scored 33 points to help send San
Antonio to its 11th loss In 12
games. For Dallas, Rolando
Blackman added 20 points , Roy
Tarpley 14 points and 16 re·
bounds and James Donaldson
blocked the 1,000th shot of his
career as the Mavericks beat the
Spurs for the seventh consec u·
.tive time.
Nuggets 130, Celtics 109
At Denver, Alex E ng lisp
scored 21 of his 37 points in the
second quarter to boost the
Nuggets. Michael Adams had 22
points for Denver and extended
his NBA record to 70 straight
games with a 3·polnt basket. The
victory broke a three-game
Denver losing streak. Kevin
Kevin McHale led Boston with 2.3
points.
Warriors 119, 76ers 112
Kings 112, Blazers 11 I
·,

The Daily Sentinel :
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THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
DECEMBER 29, 30 &amp; 31

"I have a good job and I
haven't set out to accomplish the
work I set o.ut to accomplish
there but Philadelphia is a little
bii of a special place for me and
that accentuates the interest."

q: QJ~C§alt/tjl

The 1988 season mar ked the
first time since 1982 that Rice,
traditionally a weak Southwest
Conference team, did not win a
game. The Owls ' 18-game losing
streak is the longest in NCAA
Division I·A.

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Ontw· t1 AM·' P,M

POl IIIII

A thought for the day : President Woodrow Wilson said, "To
conquer .with arms is to make only a temporary conquest; )oconquer
the world by earning its esteem is to make a .permanent conquest .''

. I

Member: United Press Internallonal,·
Inland Dally Press Association a nd th e

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Clippers edge Sonics; Cavs
down Chicago Bulls, I 07-96 .

is 7-1 .
Souther n next pla ys Friday a t
home against North Gallla in a
makeup contest.
Score by quarters:
,
Soutllern ............ 15 11 15 14-55
Green ................ 10 25 12 11-58
SOUTHERN (6:1) Mu rphy Q.Q.
0, Amos O·O·G, Grindstaff 3·1·0·9,
Taylor 2·1·1·8, Jo hnson 2·2·4,
Deaver 0·0-0, Lavend er 2·0·4,
Baer 0·2·2·8, Burgess 0·0-0,
Shu ler 3-0-6, Maynard 5·6·16.
TOTALS 164·11·55.
GREEN (5$) Vaughters 5·H3 ,
Hart 11-3·25, D. Aslyers 3-2·8, S.
Salyers 3·0·6, Roach 1·2-4 , Willi·
ams 0·0·0, Russell 0·0·0. TOTALS
24·0·10-58.

4·19 from three point range, and
1H2 from the line. Green hit
24-46, was 0-1, and 10·21 at the
line.
Led by Maynard and Shuler,
SHS won the battle of the boards
32·25; Salyers had 9 for Green.
Green had 7 steals, 9 turnover·
s ,and 15 fouls. SHS had 7 steals,
17 turnovers, and 19 louls.
Southern won a close reserve
contest 38-35 led by triple
7·point efforts from Jeremy
Rose, John Hoback, and Doug
Lavender. Ro se and Lavender
manhandled the Inside, while
Hoback led the outside at tack.
Spergln had 11 for Green.
Coach Scott Frederick's crew

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On this date in history:
In 1832, John Calhoun, at odds with President Andrew Jackson,
became the first u.s. vice president to resign.
In 1945, Congress officially reeognlzed the Pledge of Allegiance to
the flag of the United States.
In 1950, advancing Chinese troops crossed the 38th Parallel.
dividing line between North and South Korea, to help the communist
North Koreans fight American-led United Nations forces.
In 1985, warring Lebanese Moslem and Chris tlan leaders signed a
peace agreement backed by Syria.

cond half, but had to play catchup
a nd never really took the bite out
of the Bobcat attack .
SHS trailed 47-41 after three
and pulled to within 52-48 In the
last three minutes, but could get
no closer than the finale at 58-55.
Muc!;l like the SHS team, Green
started three •ophomores and 1
juniors.
Following Brad Maynard's 16
points, Todd Grindstaff had 9,
Taylor 8, Baer 8, Shuler 6, Roy
Johnson 4, and Doug Lavender 4.
Only five Bobcats scored, but
they did the job as Vaughters
added 13, D. Salyers 8, S. Salyers
6, and Roach 4.
SHS hit 16·38 from the field, hit

Lillfirtl' UnUon fl. JohnahiWII N'rldJ{('

Sanders may tum pro if Cowboys are
hit hanl with NCAA penalties next year
SAN DIEGO~ UP!)- Helsman
Trophy winner Barry Sanders
said Monday he would consider
trying to turn pro instead of
returning for his senior season If
'the NCAA heavily sanctions
'Oklahoma State.
"If it was the 'death penalty'
~forbidding a sc,hool I o field a
team) ;hen I would have to
consider it (tUrning' pro), but it
\\&gt;auld have to be something
·~retty severe," Sanders said
after a practice session for
Friday 's Holiday Bowl against
No. 15 Wyoming.
" A majority of the people
around here think I should, but it
Is something I have to decide on
my own. It' s part of being a
man.''

That gave Green a lead it never
relinquished the res tof the game.
The score was 35·26 at the half.
Brad Maynard was the South·
ern workhorse in the comeback
bid, while Taylor and Baer
worked the perimeter. Maynard
used the paint for most of his 16
points and pulled down 12 re
bounds In a good inside game.
Brent Shuler helped open the
lane for Maynard as he had 6
points from Inside.
B, Hart was the man SHS hed to
stop, but had so me trouble
defensively getting the handle on
the elusive Bobcat, who notc hed
a game-}\igh 25 points.
Southern played well the se-

"I've said all along that we're
looking for a qualified football
person, a person who knows the
game and can put an organlza·
tlon together, who knows the big
picture of football," Theokas
said.

Nf"W Mn:k:o M, G. W•blnRton ':1

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O.nwr 1-.II!Hitenltt

a.......

Comrnt.

NYU ID'Witatlo•l
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NYU 71, CoJ..allo CoiL 41

Mltw.ulrlo Ill, lnclaaa 101
Dal- lit, 8M -'ala.klltl

Natives face sad centennial ___R_ob_e_rt_W_al_te_rs
HALEIWA, Hawaii (NEA) The lOOth anniversary of one of
the most pivotal events In Ha·
wail's history Is rapidly approaching, but nobody In the
country is planning a centennial
commemoration.
That is understandable be·
cause the event was among the
tawdriest episodes in the nation's
history - the uniawlul use of
military force to overthrow the
government of a peaceful, sover·
elgn nation.
Hawaii originally was settled
by Polynesians from other Pa·
ciflc Islands. They established an
Independent kingdom long before the first Europeans arrived
in the late 1700s.
By the late 1800s, hoWever,
settlers from this country constl·
tuted a white elite of sugar
growers and merchants who
controlled four·lllths of Hawaii's
arable land, dominated its economy and wielded extraordinary
political Influence.
The Incentives for a grower·
organized military coup d'etat
was provided by an 1891 U.S. law
that offered a subsidy for domes·
tically produced sugar and
Queen Lllluokalani's plans lor a
new constitution that would
grant voting rights to Polynesian
Hawaiians only.
Acting In concert with the U.S.
minister to the Kingdom of
Hawaii - but without the approval of his superiors - the
businessmen arranged for four
shiploads of Navy and Marine
units to come ashore In a show of
force on the Island of Oahu In
January 1893.
The following day, the haoles
(the Hawaiian word for main·
land whites) "seized the govern·
ment building, demanded the

we let down In the second period.
We played pretty well the rest of
the game. I don't think the better
ballelub won tonight, but we'll
stUI have to Jearn to play four
quarters ...
Southern took an . early lead
and held it throughout the first
period which ended at 15-10. Brad
Maynard led the way wlth good
coropllmentjlry efforts from
Andy Baer, Chad 'fay lor and
Todd Grindstaff.
Southern maintained its lead to
the halfway m~rk in the second
stanza, but saw that fade to a
19-19 tie at that polnt .1n the latter
four minutes of the period, SHS
unraveled to be outscored 16·7
the remalner of the frame .

Scoreboard ...

a

",., ,~

Berry's World

-~----· ·

FRANKLIN FURNACE
"Tis better to give than to
receive:•, Is appropriate for this.
holiday season, but It wasn't
what the Southern Tornadoes
had in mind as they stumbled
through the second period enroute to a 58-55 non-league loss to
the Franklin Furnace Green
Bobcats Tuesda y evening in boys
basketball action.
The Tornadoes gave it every·
thing they had, but the black
cloud of the second frame over·
shadowed their overall good
play, dropping the locals to 3·5
overall.
As coach Howle Caldwell put It ,
" It was the same ole story! We
played well the first period, but

Wedner1ay, December 28, 1988

Few conservative
crusaders on Bush team

WASHINGTON- It is still toosoontomakea final judgment, but so
far George Bush's inner circle certainly does not look Uke the high
command of an ideological army committed to a renewed
conservative ·crusade.
Not until the new Cabinet and senior White House staff actually go
lowork after Jan. 20 wllllt be known whether the Bush administration
will set a course as far to the right side of the political road as its
11redecessor.
But of Bush's first seven Cabinet selections, only two- John Tower
at Defense and especially Jack Kemp at Housing and Urban
Development -are likely to be regarded In advance by New Right
conservatives as politically correct and positioned with enough clout
to represent them effectively .
· White House chief of staff.designate John Sununu, the staunchly
conservative governor of New Hampshire , certainly passes
ideological muster, and as the guardian of the Oval Office will be the
main conservative hope to keep Bush in the right lane.
But budget director Richard'Darman and national security adviser
Brent Scowcroft , bo th in big jobs with easy access to the president,
are regarded ·as tinged with "pragmatism," which to ultra·
conservatives borders on the dread · 'L" word.
Further, James Baker at State, Nicholas Brady at Treasury and
Dick Thornburgh at Justice are anything but potential favorites of the
right wing.
. Back in the days when Bush was considered the moderate
Republican alternative to Ronald Reagan, Baker was his campaign
manager. He became a dominant figure in the Reagan Inner circle
and only the countervailing bulk of conservative Edwin Meese at the
White House in 1981-84 kept the ultras from despair .
Brady and Thornburgh are simply regarded as Eastern
establishment figures of the type known to negotiate and even
compromise with liberals .
All of the above jobs are regarded as the heavy hitter spots in an
administration. but in Reagan's Cabinet some of the strongest
conservative Input came from less powerful posts.
But while Education Secretary Lauro Cavazos still is new on the
job, conservatives know already he is. no William Bennett, the
scourge of liberals in the second Reagan term. Robert Mossbacher at
Commerce is an unknown ideololgical quantity, bu the is not known as
a fireball of the right.
Rep. Manuel Lujan at Interior has been a s taunch conservative who
some conservationists compared to James Watt and former Rep. Ed
Derwinski. to lead the new Veterans department , was a GOP
wheelhorse in the House. They could could give the lower end of the
Cabinet table conservative vo ices to back up Kemp and Tower.
One selection, Dr. Louis Sullivan, for Health and Human Services.
got caught in controversy when he was quoted in a newspaper as
supporting a woman 's r ight to end a pregnancy. Bush aides
scrambled to calm anti ·abortion outcries, but It seemed likely that
Sullivan would be one Cabinet member the conservatives would be
watehing with a suspicious eye .
And, of course. some ultra·conser vatives still have ideological
doubts about Bush himself, even through he bent double to gain their
confidence in 1981-88. He certainly didn't continue to do that In his first
key selections and the president-elect may have to get ready for some
thunder from the right.

Green quintet edges Southern cagers, 58-55

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Leader tUrnS On Own people __Jac_k_A_nde_rso_n
WASHINGTON - Since Iran
· and Iraq delclared a truce In
July, the Ayatollah Khomelnihas
turned on his own people to feed
his Insatiable appetite for
savagery.
The Iranian economy Is In
shambles, the people are unhappy and Khomelnl fears a
revaluation. So, with his bench·
man, Speaker of the Parliament
Hashemi Ratsanjanl, he is handling Internal problems the only
way he knows how - terrorism
against his own people.
Our sources intercepted a
highly confidential report from
the Iranian Supreme Judicial
Council to Khometnl. It boasts
that about 12,000 Iranian prison·
ers were executed between the
cease-fire In July and mid·
November.

The Daily Seminei-Page-3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednuc'ay, December 28, 1988

'

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�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 28, 1988

Cleveland coach resigns post
CLEVELAND (UP )) -Clevesentiments.
criticism for his passive play
land Browns Coach Marty Schot·
"Marty w111 conti nue to be my calling.
tenheimer resigned Tuesday,
" Play calling Is overrated,"
friend, and I wish him much
three days after his team was
success in his coaching future," Schotten helmer said."
eliminated In th£&gt; playoffs, behe said.
Schottenhelm er had said he
cause of "irreconcillable difler·
Schotten helmer, 45, was ele- antici pated liD changes In his
ences" with club owner Art
vated from his role as defensive coaching staff. Modell, however,
Modell.
roordina tor to head coach. to said he would dls&lt;'uss the !'1'1\SOn
Sc hottenheimer, who &lt;'Q ached · replace Sam Rutigliano 1! ~1er the with Scbottenheimer an~ •nake
the Browns sint•e mtd-1984 and
Browns went 1·7 to stan t..1e 1984 changes tf necessary.
took tnem ro the playoffs the past
season. The team split its re·
The Browns offense sutfered
four seasons, and Modell issued a mal nin g eight g ames.
through Injuries to quarterbacks
statement on the resignation.
Schottenhelmer, Clevela nd's Ber nie Kosar, Gary Danielson
"The Cleveland Browns and
seventh head coach, ended his and Mike Pagel, with Kosar
Marty Scho t ten heimer have coaching tenure wit h a 44·27 missing six weeks because of an
reached an agreement to an
reco rd in the regular season and albow In jury. Kosar also was
amicable parting of compa ny was .2·4 in the playoffs, including sldeltned for the regular-season
due to a nu mber of trreconcilia·
a 24-23 loss to Houston in the AFC fi nale and playoff game becau se
ble differences regarding the wild-ca rd game last Saturday.
of a knee Injury, leading to
Browns' coaching phllops hies,
The depar ture &lt;&gt;I Lindy Infante speculation offen sive line coac h
particu tar ly the position of offen· to coach Green Bay made Schot· Howard Mudd 's job was in
sive coordinator," the statement tenhelmer decide to assume the jeopardy because of poor pass
read ,
role of offensive coordinator In Protection.
'Schotten heimer said through addition to his coaching 'duties
The status of the Browns'
. team spokesman Kevin Byrne
th is season. The Browns scored assis tant coac hes, Including
tha t his departure was a 304 points during the regular Sc ho t tennelme r's y ounge r
" fr iendly parting of the ways,"
season, 86 fewer than last season brother Kurt, remains uncertain.
Mode ll o ff ered si m ilar
as Schottenheimer came under

Ohio .State
wins 93-68
decision
NEW YORK (UP I) - No. 15
Ohio State deployed a defense to
pressure Florida' s guards. The
Gators' defense did not.
The res ults we r e tha t Florida's
top three guards combined for 14
turnovers while Buckeye poin t
guard and marks man J ay Bur·
son shot and pas sed Ohio State t o
a rou sing victory.
Burson made a school-record
nin~ 3-polnters en route to 37
points Tuesday night and Ohio
Staie flourished behind full -court
defimse to rout Florida 93-681n an
EC AC Ho l id ay F esti val
sem ifinal.
The Buckeyes, 8-2, will play the
winner of a semifinal between St ,
Jo hn's and Fordham in Thurs·
day's fi nal. Florida, 4-6, has los t
five of six and will pa rticipate in
the consolation game.
Burson, a 6-foot senior guard,
co nverte.d nine of 13 3-pointers to
break Ohio State's record of five
set by Dennis Hopson in 1987
against No rthwes tern. In fact ,
the mos t 3-pointers the Buckeyes
ever made as a team In a game
before was eight. Burson, whose
ca reer-high was 38 points earlier
thiS season, left with 5: 39 to play
to· a large Madison Squa r e
Garden ovation.
Florida played mainly zones
and Burson responded by finding ,
the soft spots for long-range
jul]lpers.
'-'They stayed in their zone and
there were openings a t the top of
the key," silid Ohio State forward
Jer ry Fra ncis, who sco red 11
point s. "They didn' t come our
and defend (B urson ) and they
should have." ,
Florida Coach Norm Sloa n sa id
he ·would have loved to do that.
:,1 don't know if there was
anything we co ld have done
di fferently," Sloan said, " Of
course we could have pressed,
but Burson is too quick for
anyone on our tea m to de fend
one-on-o ne. When we zoned, he
ju&amp;t took his ti me.
Burson was 13 of 22 from t h~
field and also dis tributed 8
assists, tops on the ga me.
·'I don't see mysel f as a 3-potnt
shooter," said Burson, who was
seven of 21 on 3-pointers this
season entering the game. "'It
felt good shooting it. It felt li ke
15-footers."
Ohio State, which lost to

•

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RESIGNS CLEVELAND
POST - Marty Scholtenheimer talks with reporters foJ.
lowing his announcement
Tuesday that he resigned as
head coach of the Cleveland
Browns. (UPI)

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Kyger Creek ........ 1 5 373
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Oak Hill .. ............ 4 1 324
Nor th Ga llla .. :..... 3 2 36:i
Sou thern .............. 3 2 339
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GRAJD BUffET""

Florida by 33 points last season, novers in the firs t ha lf, eight
harrassed freshmen point coming in the backcourt, as the
guards Brian Hogan and Jose Buckeyes used a 1·3·1 trap to
Ramos into constant mistakes. rattle Florida's inex per ienced
By the time the second hall was a ball-handler s.
minute old, Florida had turned
" Inexperience, bad decisons
the ball over in its backcourt 10 and good defense by them,"
limes.
Sloan said in ex_pla ining his
Florida entered averaging 18.6 team 's problems.
turnovers per game and co mmit.
The Buckeyes re lied on runs of
ted 25.
5·0 and 6·0 to gain a 20-8 lead 6: 40
"We had a lot of jump steals into the game. The Gat ors did not
and they jus t had problems get within single digits aga in.
getting the ball in, " Francis said.
In a 13-2 tear that gave Ohio
Perry Ca r ter added 14 points State a 44-2llead , Burson scored
for Ohio State and Tony White 11 points and made three 3·
had 13. Dwayne Schintzlus led pointers.
Florida ,with 19 points and
Burson finished the half wi th 22
Dwayne Davis ha d 12.
points, making s ix of eight fr om
Florida crumbled In the fi rst 3- point distance. ,
half beneat h full-court pressure
Schinzius, Florid a's leading
defense, Burson long-range scorer , completed the ha lf with
shooting and Ineffective defen- 10 points, bu 1 Oh to State consive rebound ing. The res ult was a tained the 7-2 junior by providi ng
47-29 Buckeye advantage.
6-8 sophomore Car ter with conThe Gators committed 14 tur- stant help.

''

:11:(~~1

BURSON IS HOT - Ohio State guard Jay Burson leaps above
Dwayne Schinlzlus (left) , Florida' s 7-2 center, as Burson takes the
throw from teammate Tony White In Tuesday night 's game tn the
ECAC Holiday Festival, held In New York's Madison Square
Garden. The Buckeyes won 93-68, ( UPI)

~
i

•

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EMS has four Tuesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Tuesday; Tuppers Plains at10: 46 a.m. to Reedsville for Sandra
Tbompson to St. Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at 11:39 a.m. to
New Uma Road for James Ingels to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Ingels was transpOrted by Lifefi[ght toGrantHospttal
at 2 p.m :; Racine at 12:09 p.m. transported Goldie Lawson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

PAINESVILLE, Ohio (UPI) - A number of Lake County
residents are urging a Painesville Township company to cover
an oil-ftlled pond where Canda geese routinely land .
The l-ake County game warden has already treated about 20
oil-covered geese retrelved from the property of Nacelle Land &amp;
Management Co.
And the Ohio Department of Natural Resouces Is
lnvesttgatin~ whether the oU is endangering the waterfoul.
The pond has been used by the company to settle l;lrine
removed from ou·and gas wells.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A man believed to have assaulted
several women on the city's West Side during the last 18 months
has been charged with three rapes and two burglaries.
Police said they would question Ronnie Shelton, 27, about nine
other rapes that occured in the city's West Park area since July

Gallipolis, Ohio
(Afrou front the Airport)

EUCLID, Ohio (UPI) - A man who allegedly used a fake
submachine gun to rob a McDonald's Restaurant has pleaded
,
innocent to aggravated robbery.
Eudld pollee said the restaurant was closed when Reginald
Frierson of Garfield Heights allegedly entered through a roof
early Monday morning.
Police said he waited until three female employees arrived
shortly before 5 a .m.
, They said Frierson, brandishing a plastic, toy machine gun,
kicked and beat the women and forced them to lie on the floor as
he stole an undetermined amount of money from a safP.

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Continued from page 1

we will have to take some other
action."
The expected directive wtll
affect 727s made with a cold·
bonding process considered
more susceptible to cracking
than newer techniques. In 1971,
the Boeing Co. )Iegan using
heated adheSives to seal pieces of
the fuselage. together.
Pederson said 831 of the older
7'l7s were cold-bonded. The East·
ern jet was No. 242llff a line that
produced 1,831jets between 1964
· and 1984, meaning It would fall
under the group that was cold·
bonded.
But the ruptured section of the
let - a section of fuselage near
the tall - had been replaced
since Boeing delivered the plane
to Eastern In 1966, officials said.
It ' was still unclear Wednesday
how old that particular section
was.
Federal investigators In Cha·
rleston Tuesday Inspected the
hole .In the Eastern 727, and the
airline told its mechanics to
"visually Inspect" Eastern's 17 •
other Boeing 727·100s and Us 94
727·200s, which Is a later model of
the same type of passenger jet,
company spokesman Robin Ma·
tellsald.
The hole, which caused cabin
decompression at 31,000 feet ,
forced an unscheduled landing in
Charleston.
The National Transportation
Safety Board and the FAA were
Investigating the Incident Two
NTSB officials inspected the hole
Tuesday.
· Ted LopatkleWicz, an NTSB
spokesman, said the outer skin of
the aircraft tore open, bending
back a flap of metal, which has

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to John Irwin Kerr, 26,
Pomeroy, and Angela Marie
Fisher, 24, Pomeroy.

•

•

•'

Hospital news
VMI!ran• Memorial
Tuesday admissiOns - James
Preston, Clifton; Goldie Lawson;
Racine; John McKenzie, Pomeroy; Beulah Ransom, Racine;
Rosella Secoy, Syracuse; Dorothy Barrett, Rutland.
Tuesday discharges - Leah
Nease, WUbur Smith, Margaret
O'Donnell. Leland Haley.

By United Press Jnternat ..nal
' A huge storm ripped through
!he nation's m ldsectlon and
spilled Into. the East and South
Wednesday , dumping heavy
snow from Arkansas to Indiana
and rain from Kentucky Into the
Ca rolinas, Al a bam a and ·
Mississippi.
·
Rai n, freezing rai n and snow
fell from Ohio Into western New
York State.
The National Weather Service
said Illinois ·a nd Missouri were
the hardest lilt by overnight
'snows. Forecasters said 7 inches
fell southeast of St. Louis and
from 3 to 7 Inches blanketed parts
of central and southern 111inois.
Five inches of snow fell at
Indianapolis and Terre Haute,
Ind. , and up to 4 Inches covered
Benton and Washington counties
in northwest Arkansas.
In Dayton, Ohio, temperatures
skidded from just above freezing
to the low 20s In a one-hour period
lust after dawn Wednesday,
changing rain and freezing rain
to snow and leaving 2 inches on
the ground by 8: 45 a.m.
Tupelo, Miss., was drenched
by 1.55 inches of rain in the six
hours ending at 7 a.m. EST
Wednesday. Another 1.28 Inches
hit Muscle Shoals, Ala., and
slightly more than 1 inch fell at
Fort Knox, Bowling Green and
·
Hopkinsville, Ky .
Forecasters said the snow and
rain resulted from a cold front
that swept across the middle of
the country and smacked Into
warmer, moist air moving up
from the South.
The weather system caused
severe thunderstorms and torna·
does in Arkansas, Tennessee and
Mississippi, the National
Weather Service said. No malor
damage was caused by the
tornadoes that began touching
down Tuesday afternoon, the
NWS said.
·Tornadoes were reported over

been shipped to the NTSB labora·
tortes In Washington for further
tests.
Lopatktewicz said the plane
will be repaired soon and re·
turned to Eastern's headquar·
ters in Miami, where an NTSB
team will supervise a thorough
Inspection of the aircraft.
He said the crew had problems
pressurizing the plane shortly
alter takeoff, but the problems
appeared to be solved once the
aircraft reached 31,000 feet.
He said it could be several days
before a specific cause Is known.
Boeing spokesman Craig Mar·
tin said it was too soon to tell lithe
7'l7 incident Monday was related
to the airplane's age,
"We don't know 11 1t was a
· fatigue problem or skin damage
from some other cause," he said.
Although there were no reports
of Injuries, officials said. many
passengers complained o!severe
ear aches during the jet' s rapid
descent.
Bobbi Mardis of the FAA's
record center in Oklahoma City
satdtheBoelng727hadmadeflve
other "unscheduled landings" in
the past five years. In that time,
the plane underwent 27 repairs,
In addition to routine
maintenance.
''That Is within the acceptable
parameters for an aircraft of this
type,'' Matell said In response to
questions about the repairs.
The FAA's Pederson said the
proposed airworthiness directive
to be issued soon wtll be similar
to one Issued In OCtober for older
737s after an April 28 incident

License issued
A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald David Icenhower, 26, Castleberry, F1a., and
Teresa Ann Ferrell, 28, Castle)).
erry, F1a.

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Ohio Department ol Insurance
has approved a request by Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Ohio ta
reduce rates for its 70,000elderly
policyholders with Medicare supplementary insurance, it was
announced Tuesday,
The department also approved
a new discount incentive enrol·
lment plan for seniors who will be
newly eligible for Medicare after
the first of the year.
Effective Jan. 1, Medlfil policy·
holders In the Eastern Region
will receive monthly savings of
$7.93 or $15.96 per bi-monthly
premium payment. This would
reduce monthly rates for seniors
with regular option coverage
from $69.74 to $61.81, and from
$86.87 to $78.94 for high option.
"With changes In ·Medicare,
including the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, we
wanted to immediately pass on
savings and benefit changes to
both our long-time and new
over-65 customers," said FeliX

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ol 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. .... ....... 26%
AT&amp;T .. ,. ,..... .. , ..... ,, .. , ...... 28Ys
Ashland 011 ... :........ .. ........ ... 34
Bob Evans ........................ .. 15\'t
Charming Shoppes ....... .. .... .14~
City Holding Co ........... ....... 31 'h
Federal Mogul... ........ ......... 46~
Goodyear T&amp;R .. , .... .... ... .... 50~
Heck's ....... .. ........ .. .. ....... ..... %
Key Centurion ............ .. .... .. . 15
Lands' End .......... .. .... .... ..... 27\'t
Limited Inc .............. .., .. ..... 27\'t
Multimedia Inc . ............... ... 73'!4
Rax Restaurants., ........ .. ..... 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ..... ..... ,14'h
Shoney's Inc .... .. ................ .. 7Ys
Wendy's Intl .... .. .......... ...... , 5'!4
Worthington Ind .,.,, ... .. .... 21%

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

made It out of the canyon and
telephoned lor help.
"It gets real cold In that
canyon," Los Angeles County
fire dispatcher Ken J ury said.
"th~t 's no place to be at night."
In northern California, temper·

"

atures warmed a bit early
Wednesday, melting much ot t he
3· to 8-lnch snowfall that had
startled residents of W1lllts,
Ukiah and Re dding, and enabled
someone to build a snowman on
the Capitol lawn at Sacramento.

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight, clearing and cold with
the low In the m id teens. Light
west winds. Thursday, mostly
sunny with the high 30 to 35.

Extended Forecast
Friday thr ough New Year's Day
A chance of snow F r iday and
Saturday and fair Sunday. Highs
30 to 40. Lows 15 to 25.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12·29-88

~SNOW
FRONTS: . . Wa 'm

GB SHOWERS

-RAIN
"

MJ.::l S:"'OWS ml"li""'1Jr."' te:-:oe ~a~vres

to ·ece:~Je prec:or:a::c'"' 1nc :ca: ~

Cold
. . Static . . OccludeC
A: reas: 5C',=:' a,y s:-;ar::ee a·e a s t:reca.s:
UPI

WEATHER MAP - During early Thursday, snow Is forecas !for
extreme parts of the northern Plains and tile extreme northern
Pacific Coast states, Showers are possible for the south 1\tlantlc
Coast. (UPII

Plan square dance

-

SP£Ct,q HOI.IDA'W SIIOWTUIES

***

531 JACKStlt

PIKE .

The regular Saturday night
square dance will be held New
Year's Eve, starting at 8 p.m .. at
the Rutland American Legion.
Regular admission. Bring your .
own party fa vors.

-----IIAUI
--

RT . l5 WEST

PftDnll44e·4Dt

!!"!.........
..*"!..
ALL . . . . . .. .

mu ..... a

a c

fiUDAY ttuo. nusalt

Plan services
A wat.ch night service will be
held New Year 's Eve at Harri·
sonville Holiness Church, start·
lng at 7:30 p.m. Guest speakers
w111 be Rev . Dewey King and
Rev. Earl Fields. Pas tor David
Ferrell invites everyone.

Federnwlcz, vice president of
corporate development for Blue
Cross.
' 'We'll also be offering two new
statewide policies that will provide some long-term price
breaks for seniors who join our
Blue Cro~s family when they first
became eligible for Medicaresupplementary insurance,
rather than waiting to enroll until
they're older.
"Now when someone becomes
eligible for Medicare, whether at
age 65 or75, that person will know
he or she always will stay at our
lowest-priced rate, providing en·
rollment comes within the first30
days of eligibility for Medicare
as the primary payer," Federowlcz said. "We believe that our
seniors want to plan their golden
years and have choices. Thanks
to this OK by the Department of
Insurance, seniOrs in Ohio will
have more and better health
insurance options tn the new

I

AFTER CHRISTMAS

IN~ENTORY ·CLEARANCE
ALL WOMEN'S

1/2 PRICE
DRESS
SHOES
NATURALIZER, HUSHPUPPY, D. MEYER'S

GROUP

MEN'S SHOES

PRICE

ALL MEN'S DINGO, LAREDO, ACME

WESTERN
BOOTS

year.''
Witll these lower-benefit state·
wide plans, current and new
customers may further reduce
premiums by about $30 a month.
The lower price is possible
because of a $200 deductible
which a senior subscriber would
be required to pay toward the
cost of physician services.
These same poltcies will lea·
ture the new entry-enrollment
discount Incentives based on how
soon a person enrolls after
becoming eligible for Medicare,
rather than how old that person
is.

40°/o OFF

GROUP WOMEN'S

CASUALS
DINGO

~

1/2

PRICE

NATURALIZERS • SELBY

STARTS THURSDAY,DEC. 29 AT 9:00 A.M.

HARTLEY
SHOES
MAn VAN YIANIEN ·OWNER

Divorce granted

~

POMEROY
992-5277

A divorce has been granted In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Rhea J . Bean from
Marvin Bean.

~

Q

00
•'

0

PRICES OOOD

THRU

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

SAT., DEC. 31

627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
'"· 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

DR. JAMES P. CONDE IEGRETFULLY
ANNOUNCES THAT DR. EDWARD ISAACS
WILL NOT IE ASSU.NG HIS .DICAL
PUCTICE AS WAS PREVIOUSLY
ANNOUNCED. PATIENTS DISIIING THEIR
MEDICAL RECORDS TRANSHIRED
SHOULD SIGN A IECOID BLEASE FORM
WITH THE DOCTOR OF THEil CHOICE.
-'

no r th!Ye s t Ar ka n sas, and
touched down near wes t Mqm·
phis and MarlOn In Tennes see,
officials said.
A tornado al so was reported
Tuesday evening at Belzoni,
Miss., causing damage to a car
and a service station and damag·
tng three mobile homes, the
we ather ser vice sa id. Strong
t hunderstorm winds moved
t hrough Mt ntl!r City and Rolling
Fork, gusting up to 81 mph and
damaging several mobile homes.
Thunderstorm winds damaged
a hospital at Wather Valley,
Miss., and caused scattered
damage to homes and trailers In
Anguilla , Coffeevtlle and
Natchez.
Winds· gusted . to 66 mph at
Beaumont, Texas, and numerous
trees and· trailers were reported
damaged near Lake Providence,
La.
Scattered rain !ell Wednesday
morning from southern · New
England to southern Ohio and on
Into Alabama and Mlsslsstppt,
forecasters said. Snow showers,
sleet and freezing rain fell across
the Great Lakes region.
Winds gusted to near 50 mph
Wednesday morning In parts of
Tennessee, North Carolina and
Alabama, and to · 40 mph In
Georgia.
In the West, a new cold front
moved Into southern California
during the night, dropping
temperatures to the freezing
mark, scattering rasin and snow
flurries and forcing homeless
people to seek public shelter tn
Los Angeles.
Five youths who became
trapped by worsening weather
during a hike In a frigid mountain
canyon at the Los Angeles
National Forest were rescued
about 11 p.m. Tuesday.
The five - three yo\lng women
and two young men ranging In
age from 16 to 20 - had become
lost In the dark, but a sixth hiker

Ohio insurance department
approves reduction request

Offtclals said most of the victims were in their 20s and were
alone when !he rapist broke Into their homes.
He was tracked down after a camera took his picture at an
automatic teller machine when he was using a card stolen from
one of his victims, pollee said.

FFA•••

Upper Rt. 7

CONTACT

PASSENGER &amp; LT DUCK-ALL SEASON-MUD &amp; SNOW

Seventeen cases were processed Tuesday night in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler .
Fined were Karren Lemley, Pomeroy, $43 and costs, assured
clear distance; John Davis, Pomeroy, $50 and costs; Brinley
Seth, Pomeroy, $43 and costs, and Terry Car penter, Columbus ,
$47 and costs, all charged with speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Larry Eakins, Racine, $43, illegal
parking; Steve Htll, Pomeroy, $58, speeding; Jeffrey Haning,
Pomeroy, $50, ·no financial responsibility; Charles Snider, Jr.,
Racine, $63, expired plates; Van Evans, Ra~lne, $50, speeding,
and $63, driving under suspensiOn; Gertrude Scarboro,
Middleport, $63, expired plates; Joseph Snyder, Pomeroy, $54, .
speeding; Richard Lambert, Point Pleasant, W. Va., $63,
expired plates; Mark Simpson, Middleport, $63, expired plates;
Eddie J. Lee, Huntington, W. Va., $46, speeding; Afeworkl 0 .
Ktdane, Welsh, W. Va., $47, speeding; Judith Smith, Pomeroy,
$46, speeding.

I

$SAVE DOLLAR$

1

Seyler processes 17 roses

.1987.

''

;;~~ /

Local news briefs...--. Huge stonn rips through nation's midsection

..--Ohio news briefs---..
••'

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- · Middleport, Ohio

Continued fr om page 1
speeding; David P, Smith, Middleport, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Marjorie Stone, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Wayne Williams, Middleport, $25 and costs,
dlj;order[y manner, and Danette L. See, no address recorded,
$200 and costs, shoplifting.

DECEMBER 29th THRU
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31st

4DAYSONLY
'.

Wedna1dey, December 28, 1988

..-11.

-••
'

4

•

PIICES GOOD THIU SAT., DEC. 31-CLOSEDNOON SAT.ANDALLDAY JAN. 2

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE AND
TOP OF THE STAIRS
992·6720

111W.2nd

...

_____

......

--

..

~

--~~

-

PO MElOY

...

~-·~- -·-&gt;•~·

~--··

·-

··---

-

-•

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

EASTMAN'S
..
•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

\'our JadepencJently Owned
Low-Priced Supermarket

Wednesday. December 28._1988

,---------------------------------~

Indiana
wins Liberty
·Bowl contest

OPEN NEW Y.EAR'S EVE
REGULAR HOURS .

OPEN NEW Y.EAR'S ·DAY

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
991
Pick-4
6730
Pick Four
7-11-13-28-31-39

Page 4

8 A.M.-10· P.M.

..

MORE ATHLETES
WnH MENTAL RETARDATION
Redeem your Proctor &amp; Gamble
Special Olympic Coupons Now!
These coupons came in your mail
in the Publisher's Clearing House
Sweepstakes envelop~. for each of
these coupons redeemed in our
store by Sunday, January 22,
1989i P&amp;G will donate 10&lt;, up
to $750,000 to help Special
Olympics.

•

•

Vol.38,

No.164
Copyrighted 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. ·

Sliced Bacon

Heads

Chec:k Our Store for Special
Prices on P&amp;G Products
•

ANY SIZE OR PRICE RANGE •• PICK YOUR HOLIDAY NEEDS ·
TODAY ••• CALL FOR ·DETAILS &amp; ORDERING.

32

Fresh Pork

Picnic
Roast

89(
Ll.

ASST . .,....,..u

oz.

Charm in
Bath Tissue

TENDERSEST SLI

Bone-In Beef

Quarter
Por.k Loins

Round Steak

SYRACUSE BANK ROBBED - Tbe Syracuse
branch of the Home National Bank was robbed
'

Rotky Top

12 Pk. Pop

$249
EA.

ASST. COLORS

Bounty
Paper Towels

late Wednesday afternoon. An armed man
esc&amp;Ped with $1S,DM.

Woman justice 'is sworn in
Wednesday; first female: to
hold Ohio post in 60 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Pro10lslng to hold the door open
for ~ olher··women,
Judge Allee
Roble Resnick of the Sixth
District Court of Appeals In
Lucas County was sworn In
Wednesday as the first female
justice elected to lhe Ohio Su·
preme Court In 60 years. ·
Resnick, 49, will take office
Jan. 2, succeeding Justice Ralph
Locher, who Is retiring after 12
years on the bench.
After being sworn In, Resnick
noted that many people believed
women had achieved equality in
legal circles when Florence Allen

was elected justice or' the Ohio from Attorney General Anthony
Celebrezze Jr. In front of about
Supreme Court In 1922.
But she said "the door closed" 200 well·wishers In the chamber
after Allen was elected to her of the high court. The Bible was
held by her husband, Judge
final term In 1928.
"After 60 years, lhe door Is Melvin Resnick of Lucas County
reopenqd," said Resnick. "You Common Pleas Court.
In the gathering was Justice
can be sure that I will do
everything I can to see that It Resnick's stepson, Ken, a Cincln·
remains open for women and ·nat! attorney. his wlfe and
minorities to be elected to the daughter. Two other stepchild·
· ren were from out of state and
SUpreme Court."
Resnick, who defeated Judge could not attend.
An assistant Lucas County
Joyce George of the Ninth
District Court of Appeals In prosecutor for 11 years, Resnick
Sum!lllt County In the November said she has been the only woman
Continued on page 8
election, took the oath of office

)if

Peanut
Butter
18

oz.

FOODLAND SPIRAL OR
REGULAR

Macaroni &amp; Cheese

FOOD LAND

Margarine
Quarters

FOOD LAND

Broughton

Sherbet

Instant
Crystals

Local, state and federal au·
thorltles are searching today for
an armed man who robbed the
Syracuse branch of the Home
Nallonal Bank around 4:40p.m.
Wednesday.
The thief escaped with $15,056
reports Tom Wolfe, bank
president.
According to Information from
local authorities, only one bank
employee was In the building at
the time of the robbery. Another
bank employee had already left
for the day.
The bank door was locked but
the robber lured the employee
into opening the door on the
pretense of delivering a large
package.
Once Inside the building, the
robber revealed a pistol and told
the employee that he was not
going to hurt her. He told her to
sit In a chair and he taped her
hands and legs. He then went to
the vau It and removed the cash.

1/1

GAL.

Spencer, Reeortler Emmocene Holstein Congo
apd County Couri Judce Patrick O'Brien. In b!'Ck,
Jell to rlgbt, are Commissioners David Kobleatz
and Richard Jones, Prosecuting Attorney Steven
Story, Treasurer Geol'l!e Collbts and Enpneer
PhUip Roberts. A reception loUowed the
ceremony.

OFFICEHOLDERS TAKE OATHS - New
Melp County Common Pleas Judge Fred W.
Crow 10, at left, administers the oatha of office to ·
other Melp County officeholders In a brief
ceremony held Wednesday at the courthouse.
With Judge Crow are, from left to right, In front,
Sheriff James Soulsby, Clerk of Courts Larry

The weekly TV, guide which
nonnally appears every Friday
In Tbe Dally Sentinel and Gallipolis Dally Tribune, will be pulr
llshed In aa early Saturday
hoHday edition of the Sunday
Times-Sentinel this week.

Shooting victim in stable condition
Mrs. Judy Reuter, Middleport, was In stable condition In the
Intensive care unit at Gran I Hospital in Columbus this morning.
Mrs. Reuter was taken to lhe Columbus hospital by Ltfefllght
Wednesday night from Hartinger Park In lower Middleport.
Middleport Pollee who also answered a call to the home
reported that Mrs. Reuter had shot herself with a .32 caliber
revolver. The wound was near the heart, officials said.
The Middleport Emergency Squad responding to the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services dispatcher answered a
call at 8:10p.m. to the Reuter residence at 748 High Sl ., where
they found Mrs. Reuter Inside the home with the gunshotlnjury.
Mrs. Reuter's sonanddaughter·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. WallaceJ .
Reuter, were at the home and told Middleport pollee that Mrs.
Reuter had been depressed and that they had gone to the
residence to take her to visit relatives.
. The emergency services summoned LlfeO!ght which sat
down In Hartinger Park to pick up Mrs. Reuter tor
transportation to the Columbus hospital.

oW£ RESERVE THE RIGHT ro LIMIT ouANTITIES •PRICE&amp; EFFECTIVE wEo ... oEc. 28. , 8es THRU suN .• JAN . , • 1see •USDA Fooo STAMPs AND .Me couPONs ACCEPTED •NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPDORAPHICAL oR PICTORIAL ERRORs

'

nose wheels of the two planes
skidded off snow·covered laxl~
waY.s. But the airport was closed
for one hour while workers
treated the surfaces wllh snow·
and·ice remover. Both planes
were moving slowly toward
terminals when the nose wheels
went Into the mud, an airport
spokesman said.
Winter weather advisories,
which had been In effect for much
of the day, were canceled by

By United Press International
Up to 4 Inches of snow blan~
keted parts of Ohio Wednesday,
crealing sllppery drlv!ng ccindl·
lions In some areas of the state
and causing the nose wheels of
two airplanes to skid off taxiways
at Greater Clnctnnall Airport.
At least one person's death was
attributed to cold weather.
Temperatures, which hit the
day's highs In the 30s In the
morning, fell Into the 20s by
afternoon.
The cold weather was believed
the cause of death of an elderly
Dayton woman whose body found
In a snow·covered field Wednes·
day morning. The Montgomery
County coroner's office says
Ruby Bonnvllle, 80, who had been
reported missing from the
county home, apparently died
from expcisure to lhe cold.
No Injuries were reported al
the Greater pnclnnatl Airport
near Florence, Ky., after the

Local news briefs---.

oz.

--··

25 Cants

NEW IUDGE - Melp Conoly .JuvenUe-Proba&amp;e .Jutlp Robert
Buck admllllatera the oath of office to Fred W. Crow 10, Melp
Couaty'a new common pleu Juqe. Crow took hll oatb on
Wetlneaday, aloq with other Melp County officeholders. Crow
wUI . .urne hla Judicial dulles oa Jan. 1.

previously. A private vehicle had
pulled on the lot and let the man
out Johnson said, but workers
we;e so busy ·at the time they
didn't notice who the driver of the
other vehicle may have been.
Dealer plates were put on the car
and the man left the lot, then
never came back.
After leaving the bank In .the
car from Jim Mink's, the robber
drove to a location on Meigs
County Road 34. Pine Grove
Road, two tenths of a mlle off
State Route 124, where he left the
Mink vehicle and got Into a late
model tan or brown car, also with
dealer plates. Authorities have
not yet located this second
vehicle.
First on the scene after the
robbery was Syracuse Marshal
Jim Connolly. followed by Sheriff
Frank, and later, agents from the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation. London, Ohio, and the
Federal Bureau of loves ligation.
Anyone with Information is
asked to contact the sheriffs
department or the FBI.

Snow covers parts of Ohio;
cold weather blamed in death

Salisbury Trustees to meet
The SallsburyTownsblp Trustees will hold thelrflnal meeting
of 1988 at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Township Hall.
Continued on page 8

mid·afternoon except Northeast
Ohio, when the snow tapered to
flurries. and then ended, allow·
ing the sun to come out In some
areas.
Most parts of Ohio had nearly 3
inches while some areas between
Dayton and Cleveland received
up to 41nches of snow.
The weather caused some
flight delays at Dayton lnterna· tiona! Airport. spokeswoman ·
Sharon Caudill said.

Water shortages
possible in 1989

TV guide to run in
Sunday publication

Tomato Juice

Folger's

12

No money was removed from the
·teller's window.
The man, described as a white
male, 180 to 190 pounds, 40 to 50
years of age, with a smooth
complexion, neatly trimmed
beard and moustache, and wear·
lng glasses, gloves, army trous·
ers and a brown leat.her jacket,
was driving a 1985 Blue Pontiac
Bonneville with dealer plates
from Jim Mink Chevrolet,
Oldsmobile, Gallipolis, when he
fled the bank.
According to Gene Johnson, of
Jim · Mink Chevrolet·Oids, the
·man had been to their lot on Dec.
23checklng out lhe same car. He
told the salesman that he did not
have time to test drive on that
day but that he would be back
because he wanted to show the
car to his wife. He told the
salesman his name was Ted
Anderson.
The man returned 10 the car lot
Wednesday, "during our busies I
time," said Johnson. He asked
for the same salesman and to test
drive the c·a r he had looked at

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer

PARTY TRAYS•••MADE TO ORDER
so• ott Label
~ Dawn
Detergent

2 Sectlono. 12
A Multimedia

29. 1988

Man robs Syracuse
bank of $15,056; clues
sought by authorities

OLE CAROLINA

Limit
2

Clear, cold tonight. Low
near 20. Friday, cloudy, high
In mid 40s. Chance of rain 20
percent.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) State officials have issued a
·'friendly reminder'' to Ohio
communities that they may see
serious waler shortages next
summer If precipitation does not
return to normal levels.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency is urging opera·
tors of public drinking water
systems to revise their . emer·
gency plans, addressing specific
drought·related problems and
responses.
EPA spokesman Allen Franks
said state officials are not
predicting a rerun of last
summer's drought In 1989, but
because of low ground·water
levels "we're not through this
(drought) lhlng yet."
This year, according to stalls·
tics compiled by David Cas hell of
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, was the 11th driest
year statewide In 105 years and
the April through June period
was the driest since 1883. The

previous year, 1987, was the lOth
driest year since 1883 fn Ohio.
•'If we don't get good recharge
(of ground·water systems) this
winter and spring, the ground·
water levels are going to start out .
even lower than they did last
spring and who is io say what will
happen next summer?"
Precipitation Is about 9 per·
cent, or 3.27 Inches, below
normal this year.
The state last week expanded
the number of counties that are :
experiencing a drought. :
Drought, which reflects the mols·
ture content of the soil, continues
to plague southern Ohio but crept
as far north as Stark County last
week, officials said.
Long range forecasts say pre·
clpltatlon statewide could be
sllghtly above normal through
February. but Cashell, a hydrogeologist, said such forecasts are
not entirely reliable. He said It's
too early to tell where ground·
water levels will be next sprlnJ!:.

Bank board continues bailouts
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Fed·
eral regulators hope to rescue 20
more alllng savings and loans
before year's end to take advan·
tage of favorable tax laws that
paved the way tor a $6.8 billion
bailout of six lbsolvent thrifts In
Texas and California.
"We are seeking to maximize
the cost Impact" ot the tax
advantages that expire Dec. 31,
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
Chairman M. Danny Wall said at
a news conference Wednesday.
Wall gathered reporters to
detail a plan by which the
government will pledge $6.8
billion to assist two major
acquisitions of six ii!SOlvent
thrl(ts, He said the agency had

saved 181 ailing Institutions so
far In 1988 and expected to rescue
20 more before midnight
Saturday.
In the deals struck Wednesday.
the Robert M. Bass Group Inc .. of
Fori Worth, Texas, will invest
$500 million over the next three
years to acquire American Sav·
lngs or Stockton. Calif., the
nation's largest foundering
thrift.
The Federal Home Loan Bank
Board will provide a total of $1.7 . ·
billion In financial assistance to
bring to fruition a deal that has
been more than a year In the
making.
.
In the second deal revealed
Continued on page 8

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