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a-The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Jan. 14, 1980

'Meaningful action' sought
by U. S. after Soviet veto
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The
United States called on other U.N.
members to join it in " meaningful"
action against Iran after. the second
Soviet veto in a week killed a
Security Counci l resolution
authorizing sanctions until the
American hostages are released.
But Iran's foreign minister said the
hostages would be kept until the
· shah Is returned, even if this took
''forever.''

" ... We urge all other members of
the United Nations to join with us in
the application of meaningful
against the continued
holding of the hostages in defiance of
international law," U.S. Ambasaador Donald McHenry told the
council after the veto Sunday night
nullilled a 111-2 vote in favor of collective punitive action. "Only thus will
we demonstrate to Irlm that their
lawless actions are viewed with
disfavor by all nations." ""
The council in a resolution Dec. 31
cslled on Iran to free the hostages
and said if they were not released by
Jan. 7, it would "adopt effective
measures." McHenry said this was
a "binding obligation" to adopt sanctions which the Soviet veto th-

measures

Rebels
(Continued from page I)
demn the action taken by the
U.S.S.R."
The Soviet military action has
been condemned throughout the
Moslem world, but Iran's
revolutionary leader, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeinl, has not commented on it. The Soviet Union on
Sunday vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for sanctions
against Iran because of its holding of
the American hostages.

warted, and "the membership of the
' United Nations at large remains
obliged ... to take effective measures
consistent with the U.N. Charter to
carry out that resolution."
The Soviet Union abstained on the
first resolution, adopted by a vote of
11~ . McHenry said the Soviet veto
on the sanctions resolution was "an
act of political expediency designed
to buy Iranian silence on
Afghanistan and Soviet advantage in
the area.''
On Jan. 7, the Soviet Union cast its
first veto of the new year against a
council resolution protesting the
Russian military intervention in
Afghanistan.
·Among steps against Iran being
considered by the United States is a
naval blockade to enforce economic
sanctions and a reduction of.Western
diplomats in Tehran, U.S. officials in
Washington reported. Deputy
Secretary of State Warren
Christopher will discuss this with
America's allies in Europe this week
as he tries to line up allied action on
Afghanistan.
But Iranian Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said if the
United States continues to "play
politics" with the embassy impasse,
the hostages will remain in cal&gt;"
tivity. He told a Tehran news conference shortly before the U.N. vote
that his govenunent was prepared to
wait " more or less forever" for the
extradition of ousted Shah MQham·
mad Reza Pahlavi, as demanded by
the students who seized the U.S. Em·
bassy in Tehran and the approximately 50 hostages Nov. 4.
Ghotbzadeh said unless the U.N.
approves Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheirn's proposal for a commission to investigate the shah's
alleged crimes, "I see no solution to
the problem." But he said the com·
mission 's recommendations would

Area deaths
JACK SHARPNACK
Jack Sharpnack, 80, 510 Meadows
Boulevard, Columbus, fonnerly of
Racine, died Sunday at Riverside
Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Sharpnack was a retired employe of the State of Ohio, Division of
tbe Aid for the Aged. He was a son of
tbe late Hiram E. and Maggie
Hayman Sharpnack and was also
. preceded in death by two sisters,
Beatrice and Sarah.
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth;
three daughters, Evelyn Baker,
Kathryn Spires and Marabelle Sharpnack, all of Columbus; two sons,
Jack Sharpnack, Jr., Columbus, and
William 'Sharpnack, Peru, Ind.; five
grandchildren, Cathy Sue Chamberlain, Marysville; Jackie Sharpnack, Columbus; Jennifer Sharpnack, Patricia Sharpnack and Beth
Sharpnack, all of Peru, Ind., and a
great-grand- daughter, Laura
Michelle Chamberlain, Marysville.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Fllneral Home with the Rev.
Freeland Norris and the Rev. Don
Walker officiating. Burial will be in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime on Tuesday and until time
of the Wednesday service.

KITIYBAU.

Kitty Ball, Chesapeake, W. Va.,
died Monday at . Charleston
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Ball Is survived by her
husband, Rayburn Ball; daughter
and son-in-law, Cheryl and Keith
Johnson, Chesapeake; three grandhildren; four sisters, Mrs. GWinnie
White, Middleport; Mrs. Jessie
Cooper, Mrs. Pat Rumbaugh and
Mrs. Joe cq Leah Mullins, Winterford, W. Va.; three brothers, Bill
Cottrell, Chesapeake; Jacxk Cottrell, Marmet, W.Va., and C. J. Cottrell, Drennen, W. Va., and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services are being completed by Johnson Funeral Home,
Marmet.
FLOYD M. CUTRIGIIT
Floyd M. Cutright, 92, Rt. I, Lltile
Hocking, died Sunday at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, following a brief illness.
Mr. Cutright was born at Alton, W.
Va., the son of the late Nonnan and
Izetta Hunt Cortright. He was also
. preceded in death by one son, Paul
Parker Cutright, who was lost at sea
during World War II, and two
sisters.
He was a member. of United
Brethren Church, Alton, a former

II

••••
••••
••••
••••
••••
••••

The 10 council members voting for
the measure were the United States,
Britain, France, Portugal, Jamaica,
Norway, Zambia, Tunisia, Niger
and the Philippines.

Funeral services for Mrs. Gertrude Butler of Findlay were held
Friday at the RuUand First Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Butler, who spent most of her
life in RuUand, has been residing
with her son, Cecil, in Findlay for
the past several years.
She was a member of the First
Baptist Church and the American
Legion Auxiliary 263. The Auxiliary
members conducted a short service
during the funeral with Mrs. Allen
Hampton, Mrs . . Arnold Richards,
Mrs. Ernest Bowles, and Mrs.
William Winston taking part. Mrs.
Eva Price gave a tribute to Mrs.
Butler and the obituary was read by
Mrs. Marcia Dennison. Music was
furnished by Mrs. Price; Mrs.
Richards and Mrs. Hampton with
Mrs. Herpel Saunders as.pian.ist.
The Rev. John King, pastor, gave
the euology and also presided at the
service assisted by the Rev. Mr.
Smith, pastor of the AME Church in
Findlay. Burial was in Miles
Cemetery.
Here from out-of-town for the services were Mrs. Butler's son, Cecil~
and his wife, her grandsons, Edward, James and Merdith, and several great-grandchildren, all of
Findlay; Mrs. Clara Warner, Mrs.
Evelyn Warner, Miss Leola Price,
Roger Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Percy
King, and Mrs. Doris Erwin, Colwnbus; Mrs. Lena Price, Washington,
D. C.; Mrs. Eva Price, Chillicothe.
Coming fnm Athens were Mrs.
SaundersJa.John Warner, and Ms.
Frances Wbhlngton. A dinner was
ser:ved to the family at the church bv
Mrs. Helen Combs, Mrs. Hariett
Warner, and Mrs. Dorothy Gore.
member of the Odd Fellows Lodge,
was a millwright at Firestone Tire
and Rubber Co., Akom, former
owner and operator of a service
station in Lltile Hocking.
He is survived by his wife, Rose
Byrd Cutright; one daughter-in-law
Winifred Cutright, Atlantic City, N:
J.; one granddaughter, Paula
Monreale, Lynwood, N. J. ; three
great grandchildren; one niece,
Madge Spam, St. Albans, and one
~phew, Darrell Carpenter, Whittier, Calif.
Funeral services will be held Wednesd!ly at 11 a .m. at the White
Funeral Home In Coolville with the
Rev. Wesley Thatcher officiating.
Burial will be in Newbury Cemetery,
Little Hocking. Friends may call at
the funeral home after noon
Tuesday.

We will not be open
Monday, January 21, 1980
in obselYance of
Martin luther King Day.

.Farnters
Bank
Member FDI C

Revolutionary Council said in a
statement issued after a three-hour
meeting Monday night. "They have
used this against our revolution and
we are going to expel all American
correspondents effective Immediately."
There were reports that the
estimated 100 Americans would be
given a few days to leave, but the
director of the Ministry of National
Guidance, which· accredits reporters, said he could say nothing until
he studied the expulsion order further.
The Revolutionary Council's
spokesman, Oil Minister Ali Akbar

•

at

Funeral services told

The Farmers Bank
pays high inte:t;est
•
on saVIngs accounts.

POMEROY, OHIO

'

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - The
Sadegh's orders, received v.erIranian government, which has or- bally by a reporter for The
dered an American reporters to
Associated Press at the Ministry of
leave Iran, today gave them until
National Guidance, are the result of
Friday midnight to obey the direc- a decision taken jointly by the ruling
tive.
Revolutionary Cowlcil and Cabinet
The aMOWlcement, made by the
ministers on Monday.
director of the foreign press, Sadegh
On Monday night, the government
Abolghassem, said that . with ordered all American reporters out
AmeriCIIIl reporters out of the coun- of the country, accusing them of
try there will be less emphasis on the .biased reporting. But it said French,
American hostages held at the U.S. British and West Gennan jourEmbassy since Nov. 4 by Islamic nalists could stay for the time being.
miUtants demanding the return of
"The foreign (American) jourthe ousted shah.
nalists have been misusing our kind
"I think It will he good forlran, the cooperation and freedom ·we have
United States and the hostages,': . given them," Iran's ruling
said the foreign press chief.

not be binding on Iran, and the
hostage's rele·ase would be
"simultaneous" with the shah's
return.
On Friday and Saturday the
lranisiJ!I got the Security Council to
delay action on the U.S. request for
sanctions by indicating iheir government was prepared to negotiate. But
after Waldheim talked with Ghotlr
zadeh by telephone Sunday seeking
clarification, he said "a gap still
exists between the Iranian and U.S.
positions."

;:==============================:::::::::::::::::-j
Add it up.
53.6

American reporters given Friday deadline

I

(USPS 145-960)

Squads kept busy
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to the Wolfpen Road
at 7: 38 p.m. Sunday for Herman
Warner who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was admitted.
At 10:45 p.m. Saturday, the
Pomeroy Fire Department was
called to Columbia Township where
there was a fire in the attic of the
Sam Darst home. The fire was extinguished when the department
arrived.
At 6:03p.m. Saturday, the squad
was called to Dark Hollow for
William Wise who was ill. He was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to village hallat5:54
a.m. Monday for Mildred Ziegler,
South Third Ave. Ill, Mrs. Ziegler
was taken to village hall where the
squad transferred her to the,
emergency vehicle. She was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hos'pital.

LANCE ON TRIAL
ATLANTA (AP) - Former U.S.
Budget Director Bert Lance, once
One of President Carter's ciosl!lll advisers, goes oo trial today 011
cbargl!li tbal be and lbree 11811ociate8
misused
mlllloo iD bank hmdB to
belp themselves, their familles 111111
frieoda.
Lance says the cbarges are
."totally ridlcalous." U coovlcted oa
all couolli, he face~ up to 95 yean In
prlsoo.
Oo the eve of the trial, Lance's at- ·
tomeya cootlnued their battle to
overturu tbe Indictment, rl•lmlog
the graod jury was IDfloeiJCed by
news reporlll based on lean from
federal proseeuton.

no

MEETS TIIURSDAY
The Magnolia Club . will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Doris Grueser. Margaret Rose is the
assisting hosteas. Erna Jesse will
have devotions and Kathryn Miller
will be in charge of the program.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Sunday Admissions-Harold Little,
Pomeroy; Opal Hollon, Chester;
Benny Lyons, Pomeroy; Charles
Payne; Middleport; Carolyn
Lawrence, Belpre; Bonnie Fisher,
Racine; Gertrude, Pelligrino, Middleport; Gloria Kapteina, Colwnbus;
Christine Kirkpatrick,
Pomeroy; Herman Warner,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Michael Hubbard.
Saturday Admissions-Ida Dudding, Middleport; David Jenkins,
Middleport; Tamara Mossman,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges-Betty Reed,
Elmer Messford; Minnie Riggs,
Mary Smith, Noell Dawson.

Five couples

end

By The Auoclated Press
The U.N. General Assembly called
for the withdrawal of all foreign
troops from Afghanistan by a vote of
104-18 but the Soviet occupation of
the Central Aslan coantry was expected to continue indefinitely, until
the Moslem rebellion there is under
control and the communist government Is safe.
The resolution adopted Monday af.
ter four days of debate did not name
the Soviet Union specifically. But it
said the assembly "strongly
deplores" military ·intervention in
Afghanistan, urged the "inunediate, .
unconditional and total" withdrawal .
of all foreign troops and cslled on the
Security Council "to consider wa)'ll
and means to implement" that withdrawal.
U.N. observers said It was
unlikely the issue would be raised in
the council again because tbe .
Soviets vetoed a slmllar resolution
there Jan. 7. There Is no veto In the
assembly, but It can take no punitive
action to enforce its resolutions. •
However, most Moslem and Third
~·~rl~,-~t!ons voted for the
and thlil conalltuted a
stunniJ11! rebuke to the Soviet Union.

.

~'

marriage~

Five divorces have been granted :
and two others dissolved in Melp :
County Common Pleas Court.
•
Granted divorces were Betty Per- .
sons from Denvet Persons, Barban!
A. Smith from Harold E. Smith, and .
Kelly Mullins from Allee M. Mullins, .
all on charges of gross neglect and ;
extreme cruelty; Ray B. Wofford •
from Jennette B. Wolford, gross :
neglect and wilful absence; carol
Hubbard !rem James Hubbard on :
charges of gross neglect of duty.
Marriages dissolved were Keith :
D. Phalin and Annett Phalln;'·
Richard Liter and Pamela Liter,

..

ASK TO WED
,7
A marriage license was illllued to.. •
Donnie Wayne Barringer, "19,Rt. 1,:
Reedsville and Kathy Ann Whitlatch, 18, Rt.l, Reedsville.

re:w,...n,

ELBERFELD$

EURE

Ind. (AP) -

Four members of an Evansville
family were found shot to death
after apparently coming home
and dlacoverlng burglars, state
police said.
Investigators said all four were
~coats, and the motor was
running in the family car, which
was·found iD the driveway to the
home in this Ohio river city.
Police identified the victlmB as
Patrick Gilligan, 30; his wife,
Theresa, 30; their daughter, Lisa,
5, and son, Gregory, 4.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGESJAN.ll
Roy Berger, Victoria Collins,
Esther
Marion
Ebersbech,
Donald Dixon,
Gardener,
Dorothy
Gee,
Larry Grant Jr., Mrs. Robert Hall
and son, Nancy Hamm, Shawn Harmon, Mrs. Robert Hudson and son,
Mrs. Harley Jenkins and daughter,
Betty Kalinowski, Tiffany King,
Phyllis Loveday, Janis Looman,
Audrey Martin, Edward McFall,
Mrs. Roger Mullins and son, Pearl
Norris, Leo Pierson, Eddy Rusaell,
Bertha Saargent, Lewis Scarberry,
Thelma Shaw, Pamela Snyder, Ruth
Souders, Michael Wilfong Jr.,
Thomas Young.
BffiTHB JAN.ll
Mr. and Mrs. Casey Jones, son, Pl.
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Jame8
Snodgrass, daughter, Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs. Michae!' · Mitchell,
daughter, Gallipolis.
DISCHARGES JAN. U
Mary Baldwin, Alec Blair, Gloria
~rpenter, Avonelle Cobb, Leland
Dalton, Colleen Davis, Mrs. David
Downing and daughter, Ellja Estep,
Jerisa Rise, Robert Hill, Kathy
Himelrick, Billy Holland, Linda McComas, Wanda Miller, Curtis Remy,
Doris Riclunond, Larry Stevens,
Billy Tackett, Leslie Ward, Daniel
Wellman, Kenneth Willis.
BIRTHB JAN. U
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fowler,
dl!ughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Vickers, son, \'(ellston.
DISCHARGES JAN. 13
Pauline Brewer, Londell
Bro"\Vnlng, Dare! Cochran, Mrs
Michael Coughenour an!l son, Mark
Dillenger Jr., Elaine Felsher, Stacy
Hall, Mrs. James Hill and son, Eva
Howard, Melissa Johnson, Ciemniie
Lawson, 'Michael Reitmire, Mrs.&gt;
Samuel Spears and daugllter, Allen
.Stover, Jjlmes Swann, James
Weyersmiller.

Plan approved
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)A propoeed bargaining plan for
tbe Bituminous Coal Operators
Association's 1981 negotlati01111
with the United Woe Workers
wuapproved Monday by a committee Ill Washington, D.C., a
BCOA spokesman said.
The BCOA Ia the bargaining
arm for a majority of the nation's
coal operators.

gets out the
deep-down dirt .
empties Into top of
clog-resistant disposable
duot bag, falls to bottom
In a ssparate compartment.

Coffee dropping
Wholesale · coffee prices bave
drojJped for the second lime since
last fall as the price of unroaated
beans purchued by processors
continues to decline.
Ten cents-a-pound wholesale
reducti01111 in gr:ound coffee
prices were announced by
General Foods Corp., maker of
the top-selling Maxwell House;
Proc;ter x Gllll!ble Co., which
makes No, 2-railked Folger's;
and Hills Brothen, wbolle brand·
Ia tbe No. kanked seller.

DIII·A·Nip• control
Ia easy to reach,
adJusts front end of
cleaner for beet
overall performance.

iranalma arrested

.

\

'

.Now

f}n/g
.

•a••s .

ELBE FELDS IN·.POMEROY. ~i· .

AKRON, Oblo (AP) - An 118yetMid Akron Wlllll8D Ia free on
bond aftet beinC charged with
fehln10111 assault' In the wounding
of her grandlon, pollee said.
'Pollee · alle&amp;ed thai Major
,Shelly, 38, was shot Ill the
stomaflj after he ealled hla gran-

llmother - Anna Lee $healy an inlullln&amp; Dime.
Mrs. ShealY appeared Monday

'Model
14HA

Includes ''24.95 att.aohmelltt.
.. ·
.

•

)

'

Wore

~·

Municipal Judge

Robert H. Colopy, telling tbe
I•Jie (her gran"daon) had

.judge,
110

liulinesa" ~what he dk,l.

Secretary-General Kurt Waldheinn
declared: "The real value of such a
decision is the moral value, because
It Is an appeal to the international
community.''
"Thls Is the strongest action in the
United Natioi)S in 2S years againat
the Soviet Union," said r oputy U.S.
Ambassador William Vanden
Heuvel.
"It ls an overwhelming vote, unex·
pectedly strong, from all quarters,
and I think it reflected the almost
practical W18nimlty of the Third
World countries, first of all in
recognlzlng the Soviet aggression
for what it Is and secondly in condemning it."
Speaker after speaker condemned
the Soviet intervention as "naked
aggression." Only the Soviet Union's
close friends voted against the
resolution. Eighteen members of the
152-nation assembly abstained, and
12 either were not present or did not
participate.
Although Cuba, the nominal head
of the non-allgned movement, supported the Russians, only eight of
tbe other 91 members of the non~-movement went along with
this, While 57 voted for the
resolution, 17 abstained and nine did
not participate.
An estimated 100,000 Soviet troops
poured into Afghanistan to insure
the. success of a coup Dec. 'l1 that
eliminated Ptesident Hafizullah
Amln and put Babrak Karma!, a
man more to the Kremlin's Uklng,in
power and to reinforce !be Afghan
army in putting down tbe Moslem
revolt that broke out after the communists first took over the country
iii Aprill978.
Western diplomats in Kabul, the
Afghan capital, reported that the
Soviets have been largely succesaful
in putting the lid on tbe rebellion,
and one said that fighting had stopped "almost everywhere."
Other sources said the ·Soviets
)1Vere continuing to encounter rebel
resistance in Badakhshan province,
in northeast Afghanistan, and In
Paktia, aoutheaat mKabul near the
Pakistani border. But on Monday,
hundreds of Soviet army trucks
rolled northward through
Baclakhshan after delivering supplies, and the convoy was guarded
· by only one armored trvop carrier
for every two or three dozen trucks.
The diplomatic sources said the '
Soviets also were in control of the
l)lghway from Heral, the principal
city of western Afghanistan 60 miles
from the Iranian border, to the
southwest province of Kandahar.
They said about 12,000 Ruaaian
troops were statiOned in Herat. .
Meanwhll~, the U.S. govenunent
kept up its campaign to get Its allies
to join It In retaliatory acliqn against
the Ruaalana. Deputy Secretary of
State Warren" ~her, after
meeting with officials in London and
Rome, was meeting in Brusaels
today with the North Atlantic Council, and Cuwnon Market ministers
were 81so dilcuaalng collective action at a meeting In Brussels,
Chrlatoplier told reporten in London that sentiment in favor of
boycotting the SIUQIIIel' Olympics In
MOIICOit Ia· "spreading around the
world." But .Chriatopher's British
counterpart, Douglas Hurd, told the
Houae of Commons a boycott cr
moving the Olympics to imotber alte
"Ia not a 11111~ for the govenuneni
but for sporting avthorlties and the

alhletell tbemlelves."
Lord Xlllanin, the Irlah pfestdenl
of !he Jnternational Oi1r!IPic .ec.n.
mittee, reltarated that the Olynlptcs ·
would be held aa plalll\8d in the
Soviet capital.
. ·
~·w~ do not go back: on our"w9rd,"
he aald. "In any cue, it would be.
ph)'llcslly ilnpo84ible to move the
G8111N ellewhere. We bave an
igr. .tt with MOIICOW, and we~
boundbyll."
.

'"

only the rest of the world but indeed
their own people from knowing the
disastrous impa•;t upon Iran of the
taking and conUIIued holding of the
American citizens."
Meanwhile, Los Angeles radio
reporter Alex Paen reported the
students at the Embassy told him
spy trials for the hostages will begin
as soon as Khomeinl gives the word.
Paen said they told him the
ayatollah agreed to the trials in principle "since the Iranian people want
them tried."
Paen also said the students would
allow the captives to hear a recorded
broadcast of the Super Bowl football
game Sunday.

enttne

•
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1980

Occupation continues
despite U.N. request

the Marauders, 511-52. Looking on jU'e the White
Falcons' Tim Roush (22) and Meigs' David KeMedy
(31) and Chris Judge (21).

lfiGH STEPPER - Rick Barnitz (14) begina a
high step following a rebound in Saturday's action between Wahama and Meigs. Wahama held on to defeat

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 191

Moinfar, said French, British and
publicity about the ethnic minorities
West Gennan reporters were being
challenging Ayatollah Ruhollah
allowed to remain for the time being
Khomeini 's authority and demanbut he added : " We give them a
ding autonomous home rule. But
others thought the regime might be
strong warning that if they send
anything but the truth about the · trying to improve chances for the
release of the American hostages by
news they will be expelled as well."
· The expulsion order follows a long
curtailing the extensive TV
series of public accusations that
coverage and other publicity given
American reporters were sending
the students holding them captive.
out biased and incorrect reports and
Today was the hostages' 73rd day
the eviction previously of 23 Western
of captivity.
reporters whose reporting or reports
In Washington, White House press
secretary Jody Powell said the exappeating in their publications
angered the revolutionary regime.
pulsloo "would seem to be a comSome observers viewed the eiment upon the desire rJ. the
authorities in Iran to prevent noc
pulsion as an attempt to reduce

Raises approved too

Council adopts
•
•
approprzatzons
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Adoption oi a 1980 budget
providing for expenditures exceeding one million dollars, final action for employe salary increases
and planning for investment of inactive funds were among the
numerous actions Monday night
when Middleport Village Council
held Its first session of the new year.
Council gave unanimous approval
to the 1980 budget which provides for
expenditures of $1,'l79,906.68 in 1980.
While the budget figure is high,
Mayor Fred Hoffman pointed out
that of the total $518,300 will be in
HUD lunda for the extension of
sewage facilities.
Council gave final approval to a
· pay raise ordinance for village employes. The ordinsnce is retroactive
to the first of this year and provides
increases ranging from seven
through 13 percent for employes
with the higher percentage going to ·
employes with longer service.

Mayor Hoffman reported that a
letter of credit had been received
from HUD granting the village
$518,318 for the extension of sewage
facilities in lower Middleport. Tom
Anderson, chainnan of the Middleport Board of Public Affairs, and
Buck, the clerk-treasurer of the
village, were authorized to request
money as needed-for the project.
Engineering phases of the project
have been underway. An ordinance
was passed establishing a HUD fund
at the Central Trust Co.
A contract with Cheshire Township for fire protection was renewed.
The township will pay a flat rate of
$ll50 plus $3500 on the new fire
truck.
Council discussed a complaint
voiced by Councilmlm Kelly on the
loading of school buses on S. Third
Ave., nesr the Meigs Junior High
School.
•
Kelly said buses in that location,
rather than at the back of the
INVESTMENT OUTLINE
building, are being loaded in the fiow
Harry Evans, meeting with coun- of traffic and parents are concerned
cil, ouUined aspects of his new in- about safety.
vestment company.
ATTEND FIRST MEETING-Three reelected Middleport officials at·
However, Councilmen Dewey Hor·
tended their first regular councll meeting of 1980 Monday night along with
After the discussion, council ton, Charles Mullen and Allen Lee
a new clerk-treasurer. The group includes seated, I tor, Carl Horky and
agreed to enter into a contract for
King expressed the belief that the
'William Waltera; reelected councll members, and standing, I to r, Jon
Evans to advise the body on the in- South Third St,.,tlll'ding area is safer
Buck, new clerk-treasurer appointed recently to replace Gene Grate, and
vestment of inactive funds. No in· than the loading which was done
·
Mayor Fre!l Hoffman.
vestments are to be of over a six previously at the back of the school.
A letter on the matter was read
month period with the exception
from Principal John Mora who
possibly of small amOWtts of tbe
cemetery fund. How investments stated that complaints should be addressed to the school.
are to be made are to be under the
complete
control
of
council.
He indicated that the district will
train Sunday. The accident forced
MILLFIELD, Ohio (AP) - The
purchase
flashing lights to place at
Clerk·
TreaSurer
Jon
Buck
read
Ohio Envirorunental Protection the evacuation of hundreds of
letters from Ashland Oil armouncing
the loading location if tt.e village will
Agency IS taking water samples southeastern Ohio residents. All but
a
six
cent
increase
per
gallon
on
all
install
and maintain them.
today from the wells supplying five families had returned to their
grades
of
gas
and
a
letter
from
It
was
agreed that complaints be
residents near the chemical spill homes by Monday night.
Columbia Gas of Ohio armouncing a
addressed
to the district's board of
The 68-unit train, which derailed
caused by a freight train derallinent ·
23 cent per 1,000 cubic feet of gas in·
educstion
and
then if a solution is not
nesr Ohio 13 about 10 miles north of
Sunday.
crease as of the Feb. 8 billing in acreached
the
complaints
should come
Marilyn Heasley of the state EPA Athens, was carrying toluene
cordance
with
the
fuel
adjustment
to
the
village.
·
said It would take 48 to 72 hours for dilsocyanate, a highly toxic flamclause.
AUDIORJZATION
GIVEN
investigators to detennlne the effect mable chemclal also called TDI. The
Council approved the report rJ. .
Mayor Hoffman was authorized to
the spill has had on the water. She substance is used to manufacture
Mayor Hoffman for December
file
an application for the Rural
said neutralization of the chemical plastics and vinyls.
showing receipts of $l'l70.50 in fines
Conununlty Fire Protection Funds
Clean-up ·operations were ex- and fees and $100 in merchant pollee
spill is continuing today.
again this year in the amount of
Meanwhlle, ol.flclals are still at- pected to be completed sometime collections for a total of $1370.50.
$4,000.
tempting to pinpoint the csuse of the Tuesday. Ohio Environmental
Attorney Bernard Fultz was
The funds was given on a 50-50
dersilment of 17 csrs of the Conrail Protection Agency spokesman Allan
named law director of the village for
(Continued on page 8)
Franks said the chemcial "can be
1980 and Councilman Marvin Kelly
neulrailzed fairly easlly"by using
.
was reelected council president fot
rubbing alcohol, a type of ammonia
the year. Carl Horky was named to
and water.
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
represent council on the village
A quantity of TDI spilled into the
University called a press conference
planning commission.
septic system of a nearby home and
all :30 p.m. EST today and a school
NOTES SOLD
Into Sunday Creek, a tributary of the
source sald It was to announce the Hocking
Notes
totaling
$90,000 at seven perRiver. Tile Chauncey and
resignation of the Bobcats' basketcent loterest were sold to the Central
Athe111 water systems were shut for Trust Co. The sale will provide lunball Coach Dale Bandy.
a
few hours after tbe dersilment, but
Bandy, In his sixth year of
resumed
operations ea'rly Sunday da for the purchase of a new fire
coaching his alma mater, had
truck for the fire department.
afternoon.
guided Ohio to only three victories in
Mayor Hoffman reported that the .
A small amOWtt of propylene Meigs County Health Department
13 games this season. His
glycol alcohol, which is used in food
resignation Is expected to be efhas set up a meeting to discuss a rat
additives, seeped out oJ a second problem reported in the village. A
fective at the end of the current camcar. But according to EPA official $1,000 budget was approved for the.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparpaign,
Kevin Zumbro; who was on the new Fair Housing Board.
tment transported Paul David MitBandy, asked today If he planned
scene,llcausednoproblems.
chell, ~e. to the Ohio Penal
to resigned, said, "No comment."
The train was traveling from
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::;:::::::::::::: Medical and Reception Center,
Fuold McElhaney, Ohio's
'
Columbus, to begin serving his senalhlelic director, W8l not Im- Dickenson, W.Va., to Columbus.
J1JVENILES
CAPTURED
tence imposed in Conunon Pleas ·
~tely available for comment.
Two Atheu area juveoOes were Court.
Bandy, who captained tbe BOO.
IU'relted. Tllesday and charged by
Mitchell plead guilty on a bill of incsts' lint Mid-American Conference
the
Gallla-Melgs
Post,
Hlgbway
fonnation
to charges of breaking
basketball champion in 1980, has a
witb
theft.
"'•lrvl,
and
entering
Tom Rue Motors, the
Career record of 64-81. His team Is
Aceordl.ae
to
a
sllltemeot
rtleased
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle
last In the IesfUe this season with an
today, the Gallla-Melge Post was ad- and theft of gasoline fnm LandA Gallipolis woman, Sharon L.
Hstart.
viHd at ! p.m. yl!llerday by tbe mark.
Kuhn, AKA Sharon L. Roush, has enMullll
Ceuoty Sllerlft'1 departmeol
Judge John C. Bacon, following a
tered guilty pleas in Meigs County
tbala
plcbp
truck wu craulog the pre-aentence Investigation, sen,
Common Pleas Court to charges of
snver Bridle Into Gdla Ceuoty In • tenced Mitchell to serve six months
passing bad checks.
•
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows in the
reekletJ1111111111er.
to five years on each, sentences to
Charges stemmed fnm an 111mid to upper 80s. Mostly cloudy
Followinl parsult, Tnoper Demdl run concurrently.
cident In March, 19'18, and in Novem~ter 1tGpped tbe vehicle near the
Wednesday. High!l In the mid 50s. . ber, 11178.
The department Ia Investigating
Highway
Patrol Post oa U.S. 31.
· The Chance o( pieclpltation Is near
Judge John C. Bacon ordered sen-.
the theft of $10 taken SUnday from a
Cbarged wltb theft were operator
zero tonight and 10 percent Wedtencing be deferred until a prejukebox at Deem's Restaurant in
neSday.
Mlellael E. Riley, li, Rte. Z, Athe01,
sentence
investigative
report
is
Racine.
,,,.,
and paueliger Everett FOII!ei-, 14,
. completed.
. .
· Monday tWening the departmen~
Plallll. Tbe vehicle IDvolved
. · SQuAD iltJ\'1 ·.
. According to Prosecuting At· Tbe
was notified by Wanda Swearingen;
wu alle1edly stolen
Eleanor,
Rl. 1, Rutland, that IIOIIleOIIe had
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad torney Fred W. Crow Dl, each of the
W.Va.
answered a call to 109 Locust St., at charges J.s a felony of the fourth
been ill their piclrup truck and had
Tbe jnvealles are curreotl)' Ia..
3:64 ·~.m. Monday fill" Paul Burns degree, wherein the matimwn
cut tbe - t cover and poull;lly atwho' hld falleli. He waa taken to penalty could be 2-5 years and a fine carcerated Ia tbe"G dla Ceuty Jail. tempted to steal a CB radio. The lnof up to $2,500 on each count.
Veterans MemorlallJOtllpital.
cideJ)t ~Investigation.

Water samples tested

Bandy resigning

Mitchell

taken to

Columbus

·Gallipolis woman
enters guilty plea

Weather

from

J·

I

�S-'lbeDail)'Seatlnel, l.'~.ddleport..PCIOII!roy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15,1_,
2 _ The Daily Sentmel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 •Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1980

F01Zr woim!ST!II~::rE:LfG\'2A!-.A

ETTA

.

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~UU~t

WASHINGTON (APl - President
Carter is warning that normal trade
with . the Soviet Union will not
reswne soon "under even the best of
circumstances," as his administration steps up a campaign of
reprisals that could lead to a boycott
of the Moscow Olympics.
Strongly defending his handling of
the crises in Mghanislan and Iran,
Carter declared Sunday night that
" political considerat'ions and
economic profit" must be set aside
in responding to the threats they
pose.
The White House press office
followed up those comments by

"Take that back, bring me a detenteburger, pass the catch up ... and hold the
SALT.''
barely held together by a shared
religion. It is a military dictatorship,
almost as erratic and fanatically
Islamic as the Iran of the ayatollah
and as incapable of effectively absorbing quantities of modern .arms
as was that of the shah.
More, the strongest reaction to
such arms almost certainly would
Donald F. Graff
come not from the Soviets in
Afghanistan but from Pakistan's
other neighbor, which also may well
hold the real key to the situation. Ac·
tive Indian opposition, if it develops,
to the expanding Soviet empire will
Western maneuvers' to isolate the
be much more meaningful than that
Look at it this way.
Soviet
Union
in
the
United
Nations
of
Pakistan.
What the State Department, the
and
to
persuade
the
bulk
of
the
Third
Whet
of the entire region.
P.L.O., Ramsey Clark, the U. N.
Worldmost
especially
the
Islamic
Gandhi is no loving friend
Indira
Security Council and Secretary portion
of
it
to
unite
in
condemnaof the West in general and the United
General Kurt Waldheim have not
tion may succeed, to the long-term
States in particular. But neither is
been able to do the Kremlin may be
detriment of Kremlin policies and
she securely in the Soviet pocket, as
accomplishing with the invasion of
interests.
often pictured in a West re.bulfed by
Afghanistan - hastening the release
But no one realistically expects her policies and repelled by the ex·
of the Tehran hostages.
this to move a single tank out of
cesses of her last goverrunent. How
Worldwide publicity has been the
Afghanistan now. Unless Afghan
she shapes Indian policy now will be
primary purpose of the ~mbassy ocguerrillas should against aU odds
determined by what she perceives
cupation since day one. And as long
work a miracle and themselves ex- as the greater threat: Soviet
as Iran remained the primary world
pel the intruders, the Kremlin will strength in Afghanistan oc a
crisis, that was assured.
he
entrenched where czar and com- strengthened Pakistan that is
But now that Afghanistan. I$ premissar
have wanted to be for more
unlikely to be much of a threat to the
empti ng worldwide headlines,
than
a
century
in
control
of
the
Red Army but could be to the Indian.
Tehran becomes a different story·. It
high heartland of Central Asia and
In such a situation, the crucial
is lower on the front page, or even in·
only a few hundred miles from ice- question for the United States
side, a difference that for Tehran's
free southern seas.
becomes not whether to support
publicity specialists means less
As a consequence, Afghanistan
Pakistan but how much support can .
return for the effort in prolonging
itself is almost old news by now.
be extended without alienating In·
the embassy occupation.
Concern focuses on the lands im· dia. In the long run there is much
And therein may lie the eventual
mediately beyond. And under the less to be gained in propping up one
resolution of at least the hostage
circumstances, even if it weren't more unpopular and unreliable
aspect of the confrontation with Iran
logical it would be inevitable that the military autocracy than in develop- diminished attention from the outKremlin's foremost opponent should ing a cooperative relationship with a
•ide world may increase pressures
now be moving to bolster an exposed functioning, if flawed, democracy
from within to release the captives
Pakistan.
that also happens to be the region's
and have done with the impasse.
But
there
could
be
peril
for
the
dominant power.
So much for the possibility of good
United
States
in
doing
so.
After
35
Afghanistan, Pakistan, India. Plus
news. Otherwise, the Afghan crisis
years of independence, Pakistan has chaotic Iran. Not one problem but
would appear to offer nothing but
failed to create a nation out of an an- four, all wrapped up in one crisis.
bad for the immediate future.
tagonistic patchwork of peoples
A situation if there ever was one
The carefully orchestrated
requiring finely calibrated moves.
And with the potential, should they
1 prove the wrong ones, of changing
I
I setback into dlsastiir.
I

COMMENTARY

jj)j;

Beyond Afghanistan

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Sentinel
Editorial

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Today in history

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•

·C
. apitol Ideas
•

That seemed to take care of sled·
: WASHING TON (AP) - Sledders
ding
problem. But what a bout the
~Y soon be able to swish downhill
elephants?
through the snow at the Capitol
The same set of rules that lians
Without risking incarceration. But
sledding
alllo makes it illegal for
41ephants, kiddie cars and
anyone
to
walk, lead or ride "any
Onauthorized funeral processions
sheep,
swine,
cattle, horse, mule,
must still keep their distance.
goat, elephant, duck, goose or other
: It's currently a misdemeanor
undomesticated ani,mal or insect or
crime - a violation of the United
reptile" onto the Capitol grounds.
~tales Capitol T~affic RegulationsDogs can be walked in the vicinity
1o "coast or slide on a sled" within
of
the Capitol - but only on leash
lhe Capitol grounds.
"not
exceeding four feet in length,"
; Seven-year~ld Jay Maguire found
the
rule
book states.
this out the hard way on a recent
Farm
equipment is also banned snowY day when he and a group of
the
result
of an amendment quickly
trlends sledding on the slope behind
added
to
the rules last February
She Senate wing were stopped by
when
protesting
farmers were in
Capitol police.
·
town.
: Jay's angered father, Rep. An"No · funeral procession, unless
ttrew Maguire, D-N.J. , responded as
specifically permitted to do so by the
lawmakers often do when in a tight
Capitol Police Board, can be driven
spot. He threatened to file a bill.
over any street or roadway in the
;. The Maguire Act would overturn
area,"
the regulations also state.
$1Je anti-sledding rule.
The
Maguires weren't the only
• But House Speaker Thomas P.
ones
to
run afoul of the rules and
l&gt;'Neill~ a member of the board that
regulations
for the Capitol grounds.
}fl'ites such rules, intervened and
Not
long
ago,
several aides to Rep.
Jirgued for retention of the rule.
Bob
Carr,
D-Mich.,
were tossing a
•· O'Neill · reportedly assured
Frisbee
on
the
Capitol
lawn when
:Maguire that, if he agreed ~otto purstopped
by
an
officer
..
,
)lue his legislation, the subject would
"How petty can we get?" Carr
-be brougjjt up the next time the
demanded in a letter to O'Neill. But
:board - on which Vice President
to no avail. After all, Carr was
)\'alter F . Mondale also sits reminded, Section 1Q4, clearly
)heets.
states
:
1 · "The speaker is trying to work it ·
"No
perSon or persons shall use
:Out with maybe an alternate site for
any
portion
of tile Capitol Grounds,
:Sledding in the Capitol area," said
including
steps,
terraces and cour'P'Neill (llde Gary Hymel. Magmre
tyards,
as
a
playground."
11
ijlreed to give ita try.

'

Upset mindetL-Georgia · Tech.
.
wins theory, loses contest

Normal trade not resuming,
Oly~pic boycott possible

N ·'E .A . 30

Today is Thesday, Jan. 15, the 15th
day rl. !981l. There are 351 days left in
the year.
Today 's highlight in history:
On Jan . 15, 1929, civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr., was born in
Atlanta.
On this date:
In 1535, King Henry VIII asswned
the title "Supreme Head of the Church" in England.
In 192:2, the Irish Free State was
established.
In 1929, the United States foined
other nations in renouncing war as a
means of settling international
disputes.
In 1973, President Richard Nixon
ordered a halt to all offensive
military operations in North Vietnam.
In 1978, in Tehran, President Carter met with the shah cl Iran.
Ten years ago, more than a dorzen
school districts in five southern
states had just over two weeks to
desegregate under a new Supreme
Court ruling.
Five years ago, President Gemld
Ford said the state of the union · ~s
not good." He urged an economic
stimulus package and energy Independence program.
One year ago, O!icago was trying
to dig out from under two feet of
snow dumped by a blizzard that took
dooens of lives.
Today 's birthdays: Chuck Berry is
54.

Thought· for today: There is no
pillow so soft as a clear conscience
- French proverb.

Ten years ago, the international
effort to fly food and medicine to
Biafra after its surrender to
Nigeria's central govenunent was
stalled because of a lack nf approval
from Nigerian offiriAis .

Busi)Iess
•
mirror
NEW YORK (AP) ..- · What is a
"small business"?
It's as good a time as any to ask
the question, because delegates to
the White House Conference on
Small Business right now are
seeking more official recognition for
this vital element of economic
society.
Ask, but do not expect a clarifying
definition.
Expect instead, that some people
will deem a business small when it
has no more than three or five employees, while others will squeeze in·
to the category businesses em·
ploying thousands of workers.
Milton Stewart, who headed the
SmaU Business Association
(private) before he became chief advocate for tile Small Business Administration (public), was asked the
question several years ago. He' pon·
de red.
The definition is vague, he conceded, after several moments of
reflection. But, he concluded, many
people consider it to include any
company that isn't one of the 1,000
largest industrial concerns.
By that definition, a company can
employ thousands of workers, and
have sales far in excess of $50
million and assets of $100 million or
more. It can be the biggest company
in the community, in the county.
In preparing for the conference
this week, 57 regional meetings were
held in the past year.
Arthur Levitt, chairman of the
American Stock Exchange who is
also chairman of the commission
that helped organize the conference,
said he expected some Amex companies to attend this week's main
event.
Small busines groups call attention to the special problems of
small business by saying that
there's a difference between Smith's
Machine Shop and General Motors.
You can't treat them the same, they
say.
The Small Business Administration works with fairly broad
boundaries. At latest count (1975) it
lists 13.9 million U.S. businesses. Exclusion of farms reduces the tolal to
10.7 million; exclusion. rl. big
businesses drops It to 10.4 million, or
96.7 percent of nonfarm businesses.
Despite being eliminated in one
count, fanns are relisted in another
count of small businesses. Of the
more than 3 million U.S. farms, 99
percent are considered small
businesses in the SBA sununaries.
With aU but a small percentage of
6usinesses and farms considered
small, the category becomes so all·
embracing that It tends to lose some
of its significance.
In fact, it might even be argued
that there are more differences
within the small business category
than there are between it and big
business. Earnings, ownership,
assets, employees and goalll are in
themselves categories that make
them different.
Arid yet, one of the almost con·
stant themes of small business
movements is that of unity, commonly expressed, as it was in
preparing for the White Rouse con·
ference, as the necessity of speaking
with one voice.

111E DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS 115-Hill

~~ ...:.~ ....:..

..._

releasing a statement today that accused the Soviets of opposing intehtational efforts to resolve the
Iranian crisis through peaceful
means while "seeking to crush the
independence of Afghanistan
through military force."
"Like the presence of Soviet tanks
in the streets of Kabul," the
statement said, "the Soviet veto
(Sunday) of the United Nations
Security Council resolution on Iran
exposes, for aU of the people of the
world to see, the Soviet Union's
disregard for international law .and
the world's machinery for peace.
"Their veto is an act of political
cynicism. It offends the conscience
of aU who honor freedom and who
seek to strengthen the grip of law
over lawlessness, of peace over
strife - in this crisis and for the
future," the statement said.
Earlier, a White House official
said Carter "cannot support U.S.
participation in the Moscow Olympics if Soviet troops are still in
Afghanistan."
The president Sunday dispatched
Deputy Secretary of State Warren
Christopher to Europe to consult
with U.S. allies about a possible
Olympic boycott and joint military
and economic aid to Pakistan, which
borders Afghanistan.
Carter tentatively has approved
$400 million in U.S. aid to Pakistan
beginning immediately, if Congress
consents, the administration said.
All the weapons would be "defensive" and warplanes would be
exluded in deference to India's .concern about strengthening Pakistan,
its neighbor and long-time antagonist.
The administration's thrust Sun·
day also included a renewed threat
to Iran. Defense Secretary Harold
Brown indicated a naval blockade of
Iran is being considered to counter

its holding of 50 U.S. hostages.
"Specifically, we cannot rule. .out
the option of cutting off Iraruan.liDports by one means or another,".he
said about a possible blockade.
Such a blockade, however, Is .considered a long-range contingency.
Brown, who just completed lalks
with Chinese leaders in Peking, !IBid
he expects continued cooperation .
with the Chinese in response to the
Soviets.
Carter, addressing the White
House conference on small businlli!S,
denounced the Soviet .Union's
"massive invasion of the snuill,
nonaligned country of Afghanistan"
and asked Americans to ''stand with

By Tile Alloclated l'nll

by Carry O'Brien.
'lbe theory made perfect And they got their chance for vic.and tbe play - . d the perfect
tory after Rorton'alayup, when Norcbolce for lllll'8llked Georgia Tecb.
th carolina's Rich Yonakor was
'Trailing nlnth-rariked North
unable to Inbound the bljll before
Carolina 54-63 with llix aecondll to go,
five seconds elapsed. Then came
tbe Yellow Jackets dealgned a play • three tlmeoull, which led to the play
to move tbe bill to the left side ol tbe
that narrowly went awry.
·court, then lllllld It lllllde for a abortGeorgia Tech Is t-10 overall. North
range shot.
Carolina, which got 11 pointa each
"'lbat'a uactly what happened,"
from Wood and Mike O'Koren, is 9-3
aald forward Lenny Horton.
overall and 3-21n the ACC.
. Everything worked perfectly, ex·
Two other teams ranked in The
cept Horton's jump shot rimmed the
Aasoclated Preu Top Twenty
'buket and bounced away ...along
played Monday night. Tenth-ranked
lwitb Georgia Tech's hope ol an upSt. Jolm's, N.Y. blasted Joseph's,
jlel 'lbe Tar Reels' AI Wood collecPa., 7245 and 12th-ranked VIrginia
ted the rebound and the final instant
bested VIrginia Tech 6$-58.
apired u North Cero1ina escaped
St. Jolin's got 17 polnta from fluan upset Monday nlgbl
stricken Reggie Carter and 16 from
"I juat abould bave made that,"
substll!lte Defid Russell to paste St.
'IDOIIIed Horlcll, wbose layup bad: Joeeph's. The Redmen ran away
pulled Georgia Tech within a point.
with It when a 14-point surge late in
"'lbere'a no excuse for that,"
the first half boosted their lead to 24'lbe Yellow JIICketl, wbo sought
9.
their first AtlanUc Coast Conference
St. Joseph's ran off nine con·
trtwnpb after six IOIIRS, trailed by
aecutlve poin~ to pull within 33-24
11 polnta In the second half. They in- early in the second half, but Carter .
ched closer on a gam&amp;-blgb 22 points
collected 15 second-balf pointa to
by Brook Steppe, 13 by Horton and 10
help put the game away.
St. John's, which Improved ita.
'record to 12.-1 witb Ill loth conaecutlve victory, saw Ita lead
burgeon to BO-a with four minutes
remaining. St. Joseph's, 7~. got 15
pointa from Bryan Warrtck and 13

me."
"In reaching my decision to act, I
had to face some tough choices," he
said. "There are many risks. There
are economic costs. We are sharing
those costs, so the burden will .net
fall only on you or on ~rican. far­
mers or any other paJ;'ticular.
group."
_~ ·
Hill remarks were greeted .with
scattered applause.
. ,. .
Several of Carter's rivalll fo.r . the
presidency have sharply criticized
his decision to embargo 17 million
tons of grain to the Soviet 'IJ.nion,
saytog U.S. farmers will·suffer inore
than the Russians.
However, Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland predicted meat · sh~r­
tgages in the Soviet Union as a result
of the U.S. embargo.
The fate of the summer OIYII)pics
appeared uncertain Sunda'y , as
Christopher flew to Europe.
·
After a stop in London, he ,.ivas
heading for Rome, Paris and Bonn
to meet with European leaders.
Then he will go to Brussels for a
session of the North Atlantic Council, where allied govenunents will
consider possible retaliation against
the Soviets.

Knight, Hume
Reds' MVP's

CAPITAL
More confident campaigners
tii.;

especially . sine~
Kenn;;i'y' c&amp;xh: ·
By Robert J. WagiD!m
palgn
haS
been
having
troUble getWASHINGTON (NEA)
ting
off
the
ground
IIi
the
SOqth: The .
Euphoria is about the best way to
Kennedy
people
admit
this
and they,
describe the mood these days
too,
are
looking
for
"moral
vicaround the White House and Carter·
1
tories."
~
·
··
·
Mondale campaign headquarters.
This
b,rings
the
~ampaign
.
~
ll·
The most ·commonly heard reason
linois,
which
both
sides
believe
will
for the very toothy smiles, say the
be the key to who gets the party nod.
president's supporters, is that the
The Kennedy camp says that wi.th
campaign of Sen. Edward M. KenMayor Jane Byrne's endorsement
nedy is ready to "self-destruct."
and the 'cook County machine,itorkWhile this may be a bit premature,
ing for it, Illinois will go fo(Kento say the least, it is clear President
nedy. ·
·
Carter has been politically reborn by
The
Carter
crowd,
though,
is talk·
events in Iran and by the Bay
-mg
upset
and
a
poll
rele&amp;sed
Stater's faltering start. The Carter
January 2 backs up this ~: The·
people, in fact, say they know exactpoll, ci&gt;nunissioned by WB.~M:TV,
ly how their man will "drive Ken·
showed
Carter witlum astotmdi!ig 69
nedy from the campaign."
percent as opposed to' Kenil~·s
The president's bandwagon, they
equaljy astounding 18 percent,.: · ·· '
insist, will begin to · roll in Iowa.
That Isn't the whole . ston:.
Carter's people publicly will say on·
however.
With the support ot,M!\yor
ly that they "hope to do well" in the
Byrne
and
the Cook County machine
January 21 caucuses there. After aU,
(lite
same
machine thai ,B}.w~ys
they say, Kennedy has both ex-Sen.
manage4
to
pull
votes out of !\ bat Dick Clark and the popular current
Is
that
graveyard?
- · wi)en
or
Iowa attorney general, Tom Iller,
Richard
Daley
ran
the
sl)ow),
criss-crossing the state for him.
. Teddy only managed
'
'
hapless
lo win
Also, they add, he has the backing of
the support of 15 percent _.4f the'
organized labOr.
·
registered Democrats; Carter, ·~p­
Privately, however, the Carter
ported by the powerlul anti-Byrne_
people believe they have a superior
faction, garnered 73 percent, wfth·t2
organization at work in Iowa, in·
percent undecided.
.''' .:
eluding 20 . full-time field ·workers
UnUI
the
)ioll
.
was
re~eased;
and organizations in each of the
Carter's campaigners had talked
state's 2,500 precincts. Based on
about
the president winW!g big
their experience there in 1976, they
enough
downstate to rrlore·; than
·feel they know the state well and
up
for Kennedy's cook.t':f?uilty,
make
how the caucus system works. In
majority with'- a narrow ~~t vic:-;
Iowa, it is not so much how popular a
tory resulting.
· · ·
candidate is, but how well that can·
Carter's people say this wth _do It,
didate can get his or her supporters
As they qow plot It, even If Kennedy
out to the local caucus.
wins big in New Y~r!f: 'Penn:In Carter's favor, they say, is the
time of day the caucuses will· be - sylvania, Connecticut ~d W!Scon-·.
sin, the president will )llive .eti~h,
held. Much of Kennedy's strength is
delegates for a f~ or·~Je!!o#.tiiillot'
among the elderly_ and organized
convention victory: That 4!, If "Ken·
labor. Much of Iowa's union folk
nedy stays in the race after~· a
work in two- and three-shift plants
and the elderly don't go out much at. heavy trpuncing In Illinois. ,. '' .' · 1
'""'re a,.;. 'on"' 'two '"'~-s tbat ·
night. That.means a big nwnber CJ!.
-~-- ' , - ''V ., ,. "l"'!';ql'tlll
eould mess up lhll! scerilltio, ~~·;
Kennedy supporters won't vote.
as Carter's advisers ~~ it( ~~··tum
And, wi.th the poll4, now showing the
for the worse 'In' the Ir1111' 1i&lt;iii~ge
two candidates even, Carter's supsituation; and an 'indeclsl.ve" tJ:s.
porters are quietly, talking about a
""' :'of
response. to the SoVIet 18keover
clearwln.
.
1
Afghanistan.
. •
• • {j" '
. I'
Then comes New 'Hampshire. A
month ago, It was pegged as a K~nnedy landslide; Carter's people, In
,.
' •.,,,. ,.," ... ,
fact, ati11 say Kennedy will tro~
SCO'lT
. w·.;;~n 1
their man. Privately, however, their
,.....,.,...
poi1s show a far closer result in the
,~OMO'J'ED , ~ .,1\
~
offing and they now are setting up
riORTH CH.\RLEsTof.i. S. C. "'l
the media to call any kind of narrow
Scott A. Warn4!r; JOn 0c Mr. and Mrs1
Kennedy win a "moral victory" for
Ted A. Wa,rn~r rl. Rout_!l:~ Pomero~y:,
Carter. If they can hold Kennedy to
has been promofed In ·we U. S.
less than 55 percent of the vote\ in .... Force to the rank olfa~ firs.
New, Hampshire; that will be just' · class.
! ' ~;, .·~
~
,
fine .
·
·
. Almlan Warner,jll'fn el
e
'l1i.e campaign's nelrt stqp will be . avionic. ~u!IJIIII!M··;~ ··~. 1
in what the president's people caU · • CbarlestpnAI~Fdrce~·.; •1•1
"Carter Country. "-They see big wi.ns
The airman 14 II J9'/lj .
~~
· in Florida,.Alaban,lf and Arltansas;
MelgsHI~hSChool, Rovll
~ -~
'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Relief ace
Tom Hume and third bueman Ray
Knight were ')!lined top pitcher and
m081 valuable player, respectively,
Ill the Cincinnati Reds today by tbe
city's cbaptar ol tbe Baaeball.
Wrlten Association ol America.
Hume'a surpislng CCIOII!baclt last
IMIIIIIOII lmpreued tbe writers who
aald, "The best way to describe Tom
Hume used to be 'meek, mild manner and wears spectacles.'
· "But last aeaaon he rewrote the
boot oo bi!JVMl!f by becoming tbe ace
ol tbe &lt;!lncmnati Reds bullpen and
winner of the 1979 Johnny Vander
MeerAward."
The 11-yeaNild rlgbtbander began .
the -.on In the starting rotatloo,.
bu1lt wam't unUI he was moved to
tbe bullpen in mid-May that he excelled.
During a lltretch from Aug. 1
tlll'llugb Aug. 30, he pitched 21 inningl without allowing a nm.
Following tbe All Star break, he
recorded 15 saves, four victories and
a U4 ERA In 28 relief appearances.
A&amp; a relief pitcller last seaaon,:
Burne made ~appearances wttb 17
saves, five victories 111\1 a 2.02 ERA..
Overall, 88 both a starter and
reUever, he finished ~th a 2.76 ERA
to rank aecond only to Houlton's
J.R. Richard, 2.71, In the Natlllllll
League. •
'
Hume beat out Tim Seaver in
what was a two-player race for tbe
Vender Meer Award. Doug Balr wu
the 19'/hriJIDer.
Knight, who overcame .the early
pi'I!IUI'e ol replacing Pete Rolle at
third base, was named recipient ol
tbe Ernie Iccbardl A~ symbollc ol the writers' 1!1011 valuable
player award.
Knight surpriled no me with his
defensive ability last 1e18011, but
IIIIo came oil to hit .318, third in the
Natlllllll League behind St. Louis'
Keith Hernandez and Philadelphia's
Rolle. Rolle woo tbe 1&amp;'18 award whUe
still witb the Reds.
•
_Knight, rr, played in 1lo gamea
deaplta injuries to bls ankle, wrilt,
calf, band, anD and knee. Rill teammaw called bim "BattleiiCIII'
Galactica."
Knight also drvve In 79 runs,
clelplta bitting llixth In the batting
order for moet ol the aeaaon. He also
had nine game-winning RBis.

NEW YORK (AP) - 1be April 9
opening of the baseball season may
be delayed If the sport's players and
owners can not agree to a new
collective bargaining agreement,
according to a published report.
The New York 'I'Inle8, in its
Tuesday editions, quotes players
IIIIIOCiatloo director Marvin Miller
88 saying, "There Is ample time to
reach an agreement, and I hope we
do. But they (the owners) stall and
stall and stall.
"The present time Is being wasted
in an attempt tO get the players in a
poeltion where the owners could say,
'We need more time,' and get the
players to begin the season that
way," Miller continued. "I don't
think tbe players will buy that."
Miller told Ttmes baseball writer
Murray ChaBS at least six weeks ol
negotiating time remains before the
players would consider a strike.
'lbe barJaining agreement expired Dec. 31, and the sides bave
held seven negotiating lleSIIions since. But Miller said 'Monday, "We
still have no response to our
proposals. We askelj them today
when It might be, and they said they
didn't know ...
Further talks are scheduled Wednesday and Thursday, the story
said.
I Miller saJd he WBll making the
remarks because he had read articles quoting players, agenta and
baseball management personnel 88
saying they foresaw no problem in
getting the season started.

-

Top twenty
By The Assocl•ted Pass
The Top Twenty teams In The
Associated Press college basketball
poll, with first-place votes In paren·
th...,s, rec~rds and total points.
Polntsbasedon20·19·18·17-16·15
- 1•. 13 - 12 . 11. 10 - 9 . 8 - 7 . 6 . 5 . • . 3
. 2 - 1:
(51) (12-0) 1,189
1. DePaul
(11 -1) 1,116
2. Ohio State
(5) (14-0) 1,091
3. Syracuse
( 15-1)
959
4. Ori!Qon St.
(12 -2)
8ol6
5. Duke
(13·3)
7S2
6. Kentucky
(12 -2)
743
7. Louisville
(9-2)
667
8. Notre Dame
(8·3)
636
9. N. Carolina
(11 ·1)
630
10. St. John's, N.Y.
(10·3)
598
11. Purdue
(12-2)
.184
12. VIrginia
(11 ·2)
470
13. Iowa
(9-3)
358
14. LOUISiana St.
(12·2)
326
15. Missouri
(Hl 291
16. N. carolina St.
(11·2)
276
17. Clemson
(12·3)
265
18. Brigham Young
(9·4)
189
19. Indiana
(11-3)
156
20. Tennessee

w

BOXING CARD SUTF!D
&amp;omg Jll"(llll'Un II acbeduled at
tbe lArry Morrison Gym at Meigs
HlghSeboolJan. 26 at 7:30p.m.
'lbe )JI'OIIralll tiponlored by tbe
Melp Jaycees Is apected to be a
b!g event witb boling cluba frml '
Melp and nelgbborlng coun~
taking plrl wttb youtltul figbters
between tbe agel ollG-25 yeara old.
More than 311 tropbiell bave been
purebued for tbe event. Tropbles
Frankincense was popular with
will be giVIIII to tbe winner !_II each
the ancient Rlmans. They used It in
bout, plul tine ~
reUgio1111 ceremonies and burned It
~ell are to be awarded ea 'fi;ell• ·
In funeral pyres. The Rmum writer
medillklnl to be gi'vtll to each youth · , Pliny the Elder reported that a
taking plrl in tbe Jll'OIII'IIIl.
. whole year's production of Arabian
RJni ~ ticlteta are 111 aale frml frankincense was used at the
Ja~
General ad- .. - cremation cl Poppaea, wife or'tbe
miMIM and .li&amp;udent ticll:etl will be
Emperor Nero.
on sale on tbe a-~

'I"D."'"-

ii

•

Baseball opener
could be delayed

INVESTMENT
TROuBLED· BY ALWYBAS£MENT OR
am WAlLS CALi. lHE PROFESSIONAL
·.Call Toll Free lM0-35..,.919
f .

'

'

-

' ."

·-

'

•..

•

Southern varsity players

. from Utke Griffin.

Virginia's Cavaliers pulled Jlway

aa7-foot~ freshman Ralph Sampson

amused 21 rebounds - just three
less than Virginia Tech's total - and'
blocked eight shots whUe junior Jeff
Lamp collected 24 points.
· The Cavallers, 13-2, registered
their fifth consecutive triumph and
seventh in their last 10 meeting~~
with Virginia Tech, 9-3.
Tech led 44-42 with 11: 25
. remaining but went the next 6.:32
without a field goal. The Gobblers
managed a 52-52 tie, but Virginia got
five consecutive points from Les
Henson and pulled away from there.
Dale Solomon led Tech-Wllli"16
points, two more than Sampson had
for Virginia.
MeanwhUe, Arkansas-Pine Bluff
beat Tougaloo 24-21 and Abilene
Chrtstlan beat Sam Houston State
41-39 in two low-scoring contests.

Paul Cardone
5-11, Jr. F

Kent Wolfe
~Soph.G

Bryan Wolfe
~.Jr. F

Rams work to stop Steelers
.,
ANGELES (AP) - The Los
Angeles Rams, "strsngers" in a
strsnge land, begin in earnest today
what would at first glance. seem to
be a monwnental task - to prevent
the Pittsburgh Steelers from winning a fourth Super Bowl.
To many visitors to this sunny
clime of culta, gurus and unlnlilblted
dress, it Is indeed a strange land,
this megalopolis called Los Angeles
and the Rams feel like strangers.
The National Football League's
1979 season was the Rams' last in
Los Angeles's Memorial Coliseum.
In 1980 they'll call Anaheim
Stadium, about 35 miles southeast,
their home.
They were booed loud and often by
their disgruntled fans who, having
suffered through countless seasons
which ended one or two games short
ol a Super Bowl berth, saw their
heroes as deserters. And 1979 was
hardly an overwhelming season f&lt;r
Los Angeles. The Rams staggered to
a 9-7 record and the National Conference's West championship before
finally reaching the pinnacle with
playoff victories over Dallas and
Tampa Bay.
··
Yet the Rams are outsiders - in
LOS

Monday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST
American U. 82, William and
Mary 72
•
'Bucknell73, Dre. .l6-4
Delaware Val. 82, Muhlenberg 70
Duquesne 103, Holy Cross 88
Fairfield 101, Montclair St. 72
Gettysburg 74, Lehigh 59
Hofstra 93, Bridgeport7B
N.J. Tech63. Ramapo 59
Northeastern 68 Tufts 65
Penn St. 85, Delaware 53
Rider 89, East Stroudsburg 60
Robert Morris 67, St. Francis, Pa .
57
St. John's N.Y . 72, St. Joseph's Pa .
55
SOUTH
Alcorn St. 106, Southern 90
Citadel 54. Appalachian St. 53
Delta St. 65. Troy 58
Florida St. 82, S.C. ·Aiken 69
Jacksonville 72, N.C. ·Charlotte 68,
ot
Jacksonville St. 83, Miss. College

76

James Madison 63, E . Carolina 52
Marshall67, E. Tennessee St. 62
McNeese St. 59, NW Louisiana ...S
Mercer 92, Ga. Southern 70
Miss. Valley 69, Te•as Southern 65
Murray St. 78, Samford 62
N. Carolina 54, Georgia Tech 53
N. Carolina ·Asheville 76, Lenoir
Rhyne69
s. Carolina St. 64, N .C. ·
Wilmington 61

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR
INSURANCE
STORE

more than one way.
They will be wearing their road
unifonns next Sunday in the Rose
Bowl in nearby Pasadena, the setting for the Super Bowl, ~ause this
is the American Conference's year
to play the role of host team.
And, like oioneers circling the

wagons to fend off attackers, ·the
Rams are drawing closer together to

ward off what they perceive to be unwarranted assaults by sports
writers, including some from the
Los Angeles area.
"I thought we'd get more respect
after those games (against the

Pro standings
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Boston
Portland at Philadelphia

National

Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L . Pet.
Baston
32 11 .744
Phila .
32 11 .744
Washington
20 21 .488
New York
22 25 .468
New Jersey
18 27 .400
Centra I Division
Atlanta
28 18 .609
San Ant.
23 23 .500
Houston
22 22 .500
Indiana
20 25 .444
Cleveland
19 27 .413
Detroit
11 36 .239
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Kan. City
29 19 .604
Milwaukee
26 21 .553
Denver
16 31 .340
Chicago
14 29 .326
Utah
13 33 .283
Pacific Division
Seattle
33 13 .717
LosAng.
31 15 .674
Phoeni•
28 17 .622
San Diego
26 23 .53 1
Portland
24 24 .500
Golden st.
14 Jl .311

Denver at Indiana

GB
11
12
15

5
5
7'12
9
17

2'12
12112
12'12
15
2
4'12
81/2
10
18'12

Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Cleveland at New York
Seattle at Washington
New Jersey at San Antonio
Kansas City at Chicago
Phoenix at Denver
Utah at Los Angeles

s. Mississippi 72, Arkansas St . 53
Tenn . Chattanooga 84, W. Carol ina
71

Tennessee St. 92, Tenn. Martin 72
VIrginia 65, Virginia Tech 58
W. Virginia Tech 73, Fairmoht 52
MIDWEST
Ball St. Valparaiso 56
Cent. Missouri 87, NE Missouri '!9
Indiana St. 79, Drake 69
Moorhead St. 74, Jamestown 67
Northern Ill. 71, Towson St . 56
NW Missouri 71, SW Missouri 62
Oral Roberts 109, N . Dakota St . 102
SOUTHWEST
Abilene Christian 41, Sam Houston
St. 39
E. Te•as St. 70, Texas A and 165
Henderson St. 70, Ark . Tech 56
Howard Payne 91. Southwest
Texas St . 74

Kansas City at Mi Iwaukee
New Jersey at Houston
Phoenix at Utah
Los Angeles at Golden State
Atlanta at San Diego
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pis GF
Phila.
27 3 11 65 172
NY Rangers
20 17 8 48 173
NY Islanders
17 17 6 40 138
Atlanta
16 20 5 37 136
Washington
11 24 6 28 127
Smythe Division
Chicago
17 14 12 46 122
St. LOUiS
17 19 7 41 136
Vancouver
15 22 7 37 139
Winnipeg
13 26 5 31 116
Colorado
12 25 5 29 138
Edmonton
10 22 9 29 139
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
28 12 3 59 164
Boston
23 12 6 52 155
Minnesota
21 10 8 50 167
Toronto
18 19 4 40 150
Quebec
17 19 6 40 132
· Norris Division
Montreal
22 16 6 50 164
LosAng .
20 l4 8.48 181
Pittsburgh
17 14 11 45 146
Detroit
14 20 7 35 135
Hartford
10 20 10 30 128
Monday' s Games
Montreal], Atlanta 3
Colorado6, NY Rangers6, t ie
Tuesday's Games
WinniP&lt;9 at NY 1slanders
Washington at Philadelphia
Minnesota at St . Lou is
.
Wednesday's Games
Winnipeg at NY Rangers
Edmonton at Washington
Colorado at Detroit
Toronto at Pittsburgh
Boston at Quebec
St. Louis at Minnesota
Montreat at Chicago
Atllmta at Vancouver
Buffalo at Los Angeles .

GA
125
162
132
147
156
125
142
151
169
165
179
118

120
119

158
145
147
161
1«
141
152

Cowboys and Buccaneers) but we
haven't," said Doug France, an ~­
fensive tackle. "They act like we're
not supposed to be in the Super BowL
And some of the local writers - just
a couple - who were against us have
jumped back on the boat."
Dissatisfaction has been ex·
pressed by Coach Ray Malavaal 88
welL "I'd call it inaccurate journalism," he said of som~ of the
stories about his Rams. "They (the
writers) don't know what's going on.
We both have good teams and winning records and deserve to be
here."
.
France said the mood has been
such that a few of the Rams have
even thought of boycotting the hUDdreds of sports writers massing here
to cover this annual spectacle. It is
highly unlikely, though, that any
boycott will occur. The NFL simply&gt;
won't permit it. "It is the Rams'
responsibility to cooperate with the
news media and if they don't, we will\
see that they do," Don WeiBs, the
NFL's executive director (Commissioner Pete Rozelle's right-hand
· man) said wh~n the boycott rumble
first surfaced.
The Steelers, 11-point favorites,
were very low key when they
arrived here Monday. "Just another
game," defensive back 'Mel Blount
shrugged when he and his teammates deplaned.
Some of them bave expressed the
opinion that perhaps the NFL's top
two teams aren't in the Super Bowl.
"I'm disappointed the Cowboys
lost," Steelers defensive tackle Joe
Greene said back when the Cowboys
were eliminated. "We're the best
and we want to play against the
best."
The Steelers, of now, are the best
- or so the record books say. No
other team has ever won three Super:
Bowls. Only the Steelers, Green Bay
Packers and Miami Dolphins
managed to win successive Super
Bowls but no team has ever done
that twice.
But then, no team which went into
the Super Bowl as a double-digit
favorite came out a winner - :
Baltimore losing to the New York
Jets and Minnesota losing to the
KansaS' City Chiefs.

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double-check everything.
I shoulda come here
last vear."

TREgrt .
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Some insurance agents offer the policies of a single insurance
company. And lhal's okay. Every good insurance company
offers policies th~t provirle excellent benefils 10 many people.

I

But here al The lnsutance S1ore we offer more.
We are indefl('ndfflt agents. That means "'are free to review
and recommend the policies, cov~rage and services of
many leading companies .. . like The Conlinental Insurance
Companies; for example. So you have a better
chance to get 1he insurance prolection that exactly fits
your special requiremenls.

sure we thoroughly
your tax
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double-chec~ every return for accuracy.

· And you can depend on our "follow-Through Crew" for
conscientious service ·when· you need it. ·

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1\.

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••

,,' '

�S-'lbeDail)'Seatlnel, l.'~.ddleport..PCIOII!roy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15,1_,
2 _ The Daily Sentmel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 •Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1980

F01Zr woim!ST!II~::rE:LfG\'2A!-.A

ETTA

.

.

~UU~t

WASHINGTON (APl - President
Carter is warning that normal trade
with . the Soviet Union will not
reswne soon "under even the best of
circumstances," as his administration steps up a campaign of
reprisals that could lead to a boycott
of the Moscow Olympics.
Strongly defending his handling of
the crises in Mghanislan and Iran,
Carter declared Sunday night that
" political considerat'ions and
economic profit" must be set aside
in responding to the threats they
pose.
The White House press office
followed up those comments by

"Take that back, bring me a detenteburger, pass the catch up ... and hold the
SALT.''
barely held together by a shared
religion. It is a military dictatorship,
almost as erratic and fanatically
Islamic as the Iran of the ayatollah
and as incapable of effectively absorbing quantities of modern .arms
as was that of the shah.
More, the strongest reaction to
such arms almost certainly would
Donald F. Graff
come not from the Soviets in
Afghanistan but from Pakistan's
other neighbor, which also may well
hold the real key to the situation. Ac·
tive Indian opposition, if it develops,
to the expanding Soviet empire will
Western maneuvers' to isolate the
be much more meaningful than that
Look at it this way.
Soviet
Union
in
the
United
Nations
of
Pakistan.
What the State Department, the
and
to
persuade
the
bulk
of
the
Third
Whet
of the entire region.
P.L.O., Ramsey Clark, the U. N.
Worldmost
especially
the
Islamic
Gandhi is no loving friend
Indira
Security Council and Secretary portion
of
it
to
unite
in
condemnaof the West in general and the United
General Kurt Waldheim have not
tion may succeed, to the long-term
States in particular. But neither is
been able to do the Kremlin may be
detriment of Kremlin policies and
she securely in the Soviet pocket, as
accomplishing with the invasion of
interests.
often pictured in a West re.bulfed by
Afghanistan - hastening the release
But no one realistically expects her policies and repelled by the ex·
of the Tehran hostages.
this to move a single tank out of
cesses of her last goverrunent. How
Worldwide publicity has been the
Afghanistan now. Unless Afghan
she shapes Indian policy now will be
primary purpose of the ~mbassy ocguerrillas should against aU odds
determined by what she perceives
cupation since day one. And as long
work a miracle and themselves ex- as the greater threat: Soviet
as Iran remained the primary world
pel the intruders, the Kremlin will strength in Afghanistan oc a
crisis, that was assured.
he
entrenched where czar and com- strengthened Pakistan that is
But now that Afghanistan. I$ premissar
have wanted to be for more
unlikely to be much of a threat to the
empti ng worldwide headlines,
than
a
century
in
control
of
the
Red Army but could be to the Indian.
Tehran becomes a different story·. It
high heartland of Central Asia and
In such a situation, the crucial
is lower on the front page, or even in·
only a few hundred miles from ice- question for the United States
side, a difference that for Tehran's
free southern seas.
becomes not whether to support
publicity specialists means less
As a consequence, Afghanistan
Pakistan but how much support can .
return for the effort in prolonging
itself is almost old news by now.
be extended without alienating In·
the embassy occupation.
Concern focuses on the lands im· dia. In the long run there is much
And therein may lie the eventual
mediately beyond. And under the less to be gained in propping up one
resolution of at least the hostage
circumstances, even if it weren't more unpopular and unreliable
aspect of the confrontation with Iran
logical it would be inevitable that the military autocracy than in develop- diminished attention from the outKremlin's foremost opponent should ing a cooperative relationship with a
•ide world may increase pressures
now be moving to bolster an exposed functioning, if flawed, democracy
from within to release the captives
Pakistan.
that also happens to be the region's
and have done with the impasse.
But
there
could
be
peril
for
the
dominant power.
So much for the possibility of good
United
States
in
doing
so.
After
35
Afghanistan, Pakistan, India. Plus
news. Otherwise, the Afghan crisis
years of independence, Pakistan has chaotic Iran. Not one problem but
would appear to offer nothing but
failed to create a nation out of an an- four, all wrapped up in one crisis.
bad for the immediate future.
tagonistic patchwork of peoples
A situation if there ever was one
The carefully orchestrated
requiring finely calibrated moves.
And with the potential, should they
1 prove the wrong ones, of changing
I
I setback into dlsastiir.
I

COMMENTARY

jj)j;

Beyond Afghanistan

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1

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1
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Sentinel
Editorial

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Today in history

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--------------------------------

•

·C
. apitol Ideas
•

That seemed to take care of sled·
: WASHING TON (AP) - Sledders
ding
problem. But what a bout the
~Y soon be able to swish downhill
elephants?
through the snow at the Capitol
The same set of rules that lians
Without risking incarceration. But
sledding
alllo makes it illegal for
41ephants, kiddie cars and
anyone
to
walk, lead or ride "any
Onauthorized funeral processions
sheep,
swine,
cattle, horse, mule,
must still keep their distance.
goat, elephant, duck, goose or other
: It's currently a misdemeanor
undomesticated ani,mal or insect or
crime - a violation of the United
reptile" onto the Capitol grounds.
~tales Capitol T~affic RegulationsDogs can be walked in the vicinity
1o "coast or slide on a sled" within
of
the Capitol - but only on leash
lhe Capitol grounds.
"not
exceeding four feet in length,"
; Seven-year~ld Jay Maguire found
the
rule
book states.
this out the hard way on a recent
Farm
equipment is also banned snowY day when he and a group of
the
result
of an amendment quickly
trlends sledding on the slope behind
added
to
the rules last February
She Senate wing were stopped by
when
protesting
farmers were in
Capitol police.
·
town.
: Jay's angered father, Rep. An"No · funeral procession, unless
ttrew Maguire, D-N.J. , responded as
specifically permitted to do so by the
lawmakers often do when in a tight
Capitol Police Board, can be driven
spot. He threatened to file a bill.
over any street or roadway in the
;. The Maguire Act would overturn
area,"
the regulations also state.
$1Je anti-sledding rule.
The
Maguires weren't the only
• But House Speaker Thomas P.
ones
to
run afoul of the rules and
l&gt;'Neill~ a member of the board that
regulations
for the Capitol grounds.
}fl'ites such rules, intervened and
Not
long
ago,
several aides to Rep.
Jirgued for retention of the rule.
Bob
Carr,
D-Mich.,
were tossing a
•· O'Neill · reportedly assured
Frisbee
on
the
Capitol
lawn when
:Maguire that, if he agreed ~otto purstopped
by
an
officer
..
,
)lue his legislation, the subject would
"How petty can we get?" Carr
-be brougjjt up the next time the
demanded in a letter to O'Neill. But
:board - on which Vice President
to no avail. After all, Carr was
)\'alter F . Mondale also sits reminded, Section 1Q4, clearly
)heets.
states
:
1 · "The speaker is trying to work it ·
"No
perSon or persons shall use
:Out with maybe an alternate site for
any
portion
of tile Capitol Grounds,
:Sledding in the Capitol area," said
including
steps,
terraces and cour'P'Neill (llde Gary Hymel. Magmre
tyards,
as
a
playground."
11
ijlreed to give ita try.

'

Upset mindetL-Georgia · Tech.
.
wins theory, loses contest

Normal trade not resuming,
Oly~pic boycott possible

N ·'E .A . 30

Today is Thesday, Jan. 15, the 15th
day rl. !981l. There are 351 days left in
the year.
Today 's highlight in history:
On Jan . 15, 1929, civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr., was born in
Atlanta.
On this date:
In 1535, King Henry VIII asswned
the title "Supreme Head of the Church" in England.
In 192:2, the Irish Free State was
established.
In 1929, the United States foined
other nations in renouncing war as a
means of settling international
disputes.
In 1973, President Richard Nixon
ordered a halt to all offensive
military operations in North Vietnam.
In 1978, in Tehran, President Carter met with the shah cl Iran.
Ten years ago, more than a dorzen
school districts in five southern
states had just over two weeks to
desegregate under a new Supreme
Court ruling.
Five years ago, President Gemld
Ford said the state of the union · ~s
not good." He urged an economic
stimulus package and energy Independence program.
One year ago, O!icago was trying
to dig out from under two feet of
snow dumped by a blizzard that took
dooens of lives.
Today 's birthdays: Chuck Berry is
54.

Thought· for today: There is no
pillow so soft as a clear conscience
- French proverb.

Ten years ago, the international
effort to fly food and medicine to
Biafra after its surrender to
Nigeria's central govenunent was
stalled because of a lack nf approval
from Nigerian offiriAis .

Busi)Iess
•
mirror
NEW YORK (AP) ..- · What is a
"small business"?
It's as good a time as any to ask
the question, because delegates to
the White House Conference on
Small Business right now are
seeking more official recognition for
this vital element of economic
society.
Ask, but do not expect a clarifying
definition.
Expect instead, that some people
will deem a business small when it
has no more than three or five employees, while others will squeeze in·
to the category businesses em·
ploying thousands of workers.
Milton Stewart, who headed the
SmaU Business Association
(private) before he became chief advocate for tile Small Business Administration (public), was asked the
question several years ago. He' pon·
de red.
The definition is vague, he conceded, after several moments of
reflection. But, he concluded, many
people consider it to include any
company that isn't one of the 1,000
largest industrial concerns.
By that definition, a company can
employ thousands of workers, and
have sales far in excess of $50
million and assets of $100 million or
more. It can be the biggest company
in the community, in the county.
In preparing for the conference
this week, 57 regional meetings were
held in the past year.
Arthur Levitt, chairman of the
American Stock Exchange who is
also chairman of the commission
that helped organize the conference,
said he expected some Amex companies to attend this week's main
event.
Small busines groups call attention to the special problems of
small business by saying that
there's a difference between Smith's
Machine Shop and General Motors.
You can't treat them the same, they
say.
The Small Business Administration works with fairly broad
boundaries. At latest count (1975) it
lists 13.9 million U.S. businesses. Exclusion of farms reduces the tolal to
10.7 million; exclusion. rl. big
businesses drops It to 10.4 million, or
96.7 percent of nonfarm businesses.
Despite being eliminated in one
count, fanns are relisted in another
count of small businesses. Of the
more than 3 million U.S. farms, 99
percent are considered small
businesses in the SBA sununaries.
With aU but a small percentage of
6usinesses and farms considered
small, the category becomes so all·
embracing that It tends to lose some
of its significance.
In fact, it might even be argued
that there are more differences
within the small business category
than there are between it and big
business. Earnings, ownership,
assets, employees and goalll are in
themselves categories that make
them different.
Arid yet, one of the almost con·
stant themes of small business
movements is that of unity, commonly expressed, as it was in
preparing for the White Rouse con·
ference, as the necessity of speaking
with one voice.

111E DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS 115-Hill

~~ ...:.~ ....:..

..._

releasing a statement today that accused the Soviets of opposing intehtational efforts to resolve the
Iranian crisis through peaceful
means while "seeking to crush the
independence of Afghanistan
through military force."
"Like the presence of Soviet tanks
in the streets of Kabul," the
statement said, "the Soviet veto
(Sunday) of the United Nations
Security Council resolution on Iran
exposes, for aU of the people of the
world to see, the Soviet Union's
disregard for international law .and
the world's machinery for peace.
"Their veto is an act of political
cynicism. It offends the conscience
of aU who honor freedom and who
seek to strengthen the grip of law
over lawlessness, of peace over
strife - in this crisis and for the
future," the statement said.
Earlier, a White House official
said Carter "cannot support U.S.
participation in the Moscow Olympics if Soviet troops are still in
Afghanistan."
The president Sunday dispatched
Deputy Secretary of State Warren
Christopher to Europe to consult
with U.S. allies about a possible
Olympic boycott and joint military
and economic aid to Pakistan, which
borders Afghanistan.
Carter tentatively has approved
$400 million in U.S. aid to Pakistan
beginning immediately, if Congress
consents, the administration said.
All the weapons would be "defensive" and warplanes would be
exluded in deference to India's .concern about strengthening Pakistan,
its neighbor and long-time antagonist.
The administration's thrust Sun·
day also included a renewed threat
to Iran. Defense Secretary Harold
Brown indicated a naval blockade of
Iran is being considered to counter

its holding of 50 U.S. hostages.
"Specifically, we cannot rule. .out
the option of cutting off Iraruan.liDports by one means or another,".he
said about a possible blockade.
Such a blockade, however, Is .considered a long-range contingency.
Brown, who just completed lalks
with Chinese leaders in Peking, !IBid
he expects continued cooperation .
with the Chinese in response to the
Soviets.
Carter, addressing the White
House conference on small businlli!S,
denounced the Soviet .Union's
"massive invasion of the snuill,
nonaligned country of Afghanistan"
and asked Americans to ''stand with

By Tile Alloclated l'nll

by Carry O'Brien.
'lbe theory made perfect And they got their chance for vic.and tbe play - . d the perfect
tory after Rorton'alayup, when Norcbolce for lllll'8llked Georgia Tecb.
th carolina's Rich Yonakor was
'Trailing nlnth-rariked North
unable to Inbound the bljll before
Carolina 54-63 with llix aecondll to go,
five seconds elapsed. Then came
tbe Yellow Jackets dealgned a play • three tlmeoull, which led to the play
to move tbe bill to the left side ol tbe
that narrowly went awry.
·court, then lllllld It lllllde for a abortGeorgia Tech Is t-10 overall. North
range shot.
Carolina, which got 11 pointa each
"'lbat'a uactly what happened,"
from Wood and Mike O'Koren, is 9-3
aald forward Lenny Horton.
overall and 3-21n the ACC.
. Everything worked perfectly, ex·
Two other teams ranked in The
cept Horton's jump shot rimmed the
Aasoclated Preu Top Twenty
'buket and bounced away ...along
played Monday night. Tenth-ranked
lwitb Georgia Tech's hope ol an upSt. Jolm's, N.Y. blasted Joseph's,
jlel 'lbe Tar Reels' AI Wood collecPa., 7245 and 12th-ranked VIrginia
ted the rebound and the final instant
bested VIrginia Tech 6$-58.
apired u North Cero1ina escaped
St. Jolin's got 17 polnta from fluan upset Monday nlgbl
stricken Reggie Carter and 16 from
"I juat abould bave made that,"
substll!lte Defid Russell to paste St.
'IDOIIIed Horlcll, wbose layup bad: Joeeph's. The Redmen ran away
pulled Georgia Tech within a point.
with It when a 14-point surge late in
"'lbere'a no excuse for that,"
the first half boosted their lead to 24'lbe Yellow JIICketl, wbo sought
9.
their first AtlanUc Coast Conference
St. Joseph's ran off nine con·
trtwnpb after six IOIIRS, trailed by
aecutlve poin~ to pull within 33-24
11 polnta In the second half. They in- early in the second half, but Carter .
ched closer on a gam&amp;-blgb 22 points
collected 15 second-balf pointa to
by Brook Steppe, 13 by Horton and 10
help put the game away.
St. John's, which Improved ita.
'record to 12.-1 witb Ill loth conaecutlve victory, saw Ita lead
burgeon to BO-a with four minutes
remaining. St. Joseph's, 7~. got 15
pointa from Bryan Warrtck and 13

me."
"In reaching my decision to act, I
had to face some tough choices," he
said. "There are many risks. There
are economic costs. We are sharing
those costs, so the burden will .net
fall only on you or on ~rican. far­
mers or any other paJ;'ticular.
group."
_~ ·
Hill remarks were greeted .with
scattered applause.
. ,. .
Several of Carter's rivalll fo.r . the
presidency have sharply criticized
his decision to embargo 17 million
tons of grain to the Soviet 'IJ.nion,
saytog U.S. farmers will·suffer inore
than the Russians.
However, Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland predicted meat · sh~r­
tgages in the Soviet Union as a result
of the U.S. embargo.
The fate of the summer OIYII)pics
appeared uncertain Sunda'y , as
Christopher flew to Europe.
·
After a stop in London, he ,.ivas
heading for Rome, Paris and Bonn
to meet with European leaders.
Then he will go to Brussels for a
session of the North Atlantic Council, where allied govenunents will
consider possible retaliation against
the Soviets.

Knight, Hume
Reds' MVP's

CAPITAL
More confident campaigners
tii.;

especially . sine~
Kenn;;i'y' c&amp;xh: ·
By Robert J. WagiD!m
palgn
haS
been
having
troUble getWASHINGTON (NEA)
ting
off
the
ground
IIi
the
SOqth: The .
Euphoria is about the best way to
Kennedy
people
admit
this
and they,
describe the mood these days
too,
are
looking
for
"moral
vicaround the White House and Carter·
1
tories."
~
·
··
·
Mondale campaign headquarters.
This
b,rings
the
~ampaign
.
~
ll·
The most ·commonly heard reason
linois,
which
both
sides
believe
will
for the very toothy smiles, say the
be the key to who gets the party nod.
president's supporters, is that the
The Kennedy camp says that wi.th
campaign of Sen. Edward M. KenMayor Jane Byrne's endorsement
nedy is ready to "self-destruct."
and the 'cook County machine,itorkWhile this may be a bit premature,
ing for it, Illinois will go fo(Kento say the least, it is clear President
nedy. ·
·
Carter has been politically reborn by
The
Carter
crowd,
though,
is talk·
events in Iran and by the Bay
-mg
upset
and
a
poll
rele&amp;sed
Stater's faltering start. The Carter
January 2 backs up this ~: The·
people, in fact, say they know exactpoll, ci&gt;nunissioned by WB.~M:TV,
ly how their man will "drive Ken·
showed
Carter witlum astotmdi!ig 69
nedy from the campaign."
percent as opposed to' Kenil~·s
The president's bandwagon, they
equaljy astounding 18 percent,.: · ·· '
insist, will begin to · roll in Iowa.
That Isn't the whole . ston:.
Carter's people publicly will say on·
however.
With the support ot,M!\yor
ly that they "hope to do well" in the
Byrne
and
the Cook County machine
January 21 caucuses there. After aU,
(lite
same
machine thai ,B}.w~ys
they say, Kennedy has both ex-Sen.
manage4
to
pull
votes out of !\ bat Dick Clark and the popular current
Is
that
graveyard?
- · wi)en
or
Iowa attorney general, Tom Iller,
Richard
Daley
ran
the
sl)ow),
criss-crossing the state for him.
. Teddy only managed
'
'
hapless
lo win
Also, they add, he has the backing of
the support of 15 percent _.4f the'
organized labOr.
·
registered Democrats; Carter, ·~p­
Privately, however, the Carter
ported by the powerlul anti-Byrne_
people believe they have a superior
faction, garnered 73 percent, wfth·t2
organization at work in Iowa, in·
percent undecided.
.''' .:
eluding 20 . full-time field ·workers
UnUI
the
)ioll
.
was
re~eased;
and organizations in each of the
Carter's campaigners had talked
state's 2,500 precincts. Based on
about
the president winW!g big
their experience there in 1976, they
enough
downstate to rrlore·; than
·feel they know the state well and
up
for Kennedy's cook.t':f?uilty,
make
how the caucus system works. In
majority with'- a narrow ~~t vic:-;
Iowa, it is not so much how popular a
tory resulting.
· · ·
candidate is, but how well that can·
Carter's people say this wth _do It,
didate can get his or her supporters
As they qow plot It, even If Kennedy
out to the local caucus.
wins big in New Y~r!f: 'Penn:In Carter's favor, they say, is the
time of day the caucuses will· be - sylvania, Connecticut ~d W!Scon-·.
sin, the president will )llive .eti~h,
held. Much of Kennedy's strength is
delegates for a f~ or·~Je!!o#.tiiillot'
among the elderly_ and organized
convention victory: That 4!, If "Ken·
labor. Much of Iowa's union folk
nedy stays in the race after~· a
work in two- and three-shift plants
and the elderly don't go out much at. heavy trpuncing In Illinois. ,. '' .' · 1
'""'re a,.;. 'on"' 'two '"'~-s tbat ·
night. That.means a big nwnber CJ!.
-~-- ' , - ''V ., ,. "l"'!';ql'tlll
eould mess up lhll! scerilltio, ~~·;
Kennedy supporters won't vote.
as Carter's advisers ~~ it( ~~··tum
And, wi.th the poll4, now showing the
for the worse 'In' the Ir1111' 1i&lt;iii~ge
two candidates even, Carter's supsituation; and an 'indeclsl.ve" tJ:s.
porters are quietly, talking about a
""' :'of
response. to the SoVIet 18keover
clearwln.
.
1
Afghanistan.
. •
• • {j" '
. I'
Then comes New 'Hampshire. A
month ago, It was pegged as a K~nnedy landslide; Carter's people, In
,.
' •.,,,. ,.," ... ,
fact, ati11 say Kennedy will tro~
SCO'lT
. w·.;;~n 1
their man. Privately, however, their
,.....,.,...
poi1s show a far closer result in the
,~OMO'J'ED , ~ .,1\
~
offing and they now are setting up
riORTH CH.\RLEsTof.i. S. C. "'l
the media to call any kind of narrow
Scott A. Warn4!r; JOn 0c Mr. and Mrs1
Kennedy win a "moral victory" for
Ted A. Wa,rn~r rl. Rout_!l:~ Pomero~y:,
Carter. If they can hold Kennedy to
has been promofed In ·we U. S.
less than 55 percent of the vote\ in .... Force to the rank olfa~ firs.
New, Hampshire; that will be just' · class.
! ' ~;, .·~
~
,
fine .
·
·
. Almlan Warner,jll'fn el
e
'l1i.e campaign's nelrt stqp will be . avionic. ~u!IJIIII!M··;~ ··~. 1
in what the president's people caU · • CbarlestpnAI~Fdrce~·.; •1•1
"Carter Country. "-They see big wi.ns
The airman 14 II J9'/lj .
~~
· in Florida,.Alaban,lf and Arltansas;
MelgsHI~hSChool, Rovll
~ -~
'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Relief ace
Tom Hume and third bueman Ray
Knight were ')!lined top pitcher and
m081 valuable player, respectively,
Ill the Cincinnati Reds today by tbe
city's cbaptar ol tbe Baaeball.
Wrlten Association ol America.
Hume'a surpislng CCIOII!baclt last
IMIIIIIOII lmpreued tbe writers who
aald, "The best way to describe Tom
Hume used to be 'meek, mild manner and wears spectacles.'
· "But last aeaaon he rewrote the
boot oo bi!JVMl!f by becoming tbe ace
ol tbe &lt;!lncmnati Reds bullpen and
winner of the 1979 Johnny Vander
MeerAward."
The 11-yeaNild rlgbtbander began .
the -.on In the starting rotatloo,.
bu1lt wam't unUI he was moved to
tbe bullpen in mid-May that he excelled.
During a lltretch from Aug. 1
tlll'llugb Aug. 30, he pitched 21 inningl without allowing a nm.
Following tbe All Star break, he
recorded 15 saves, four victories and
a U4 ERA In 28 relief appearances.
A&amp; a relief pitcller last seaaon,:
Burne made ~appearances wttb 17
saves, five victories 111\1 a 2.02 ERA..
Overall, 88 both a starter and
reUever, he finished ~th a 2.76 ERA
to rank aecond only to Houlton's
J.R. Richard, 2.71, In the Natlllllll
League. •
'
Hume beat out Tim Seaver in
what was a two-player race for tbe
Vender Meer Award. Doug Balr wu
the 19'/hriJIDer.
Knight, who overcame .the early
pi'I!IUI'e ol replacing Pete Rolle at
third base, was named recipient ol
tbe Ernie Iccbardl A~ symbollc ol the writers' 1!1011 valuable
player award.
Knight surpriled no me with his
defensive ability last 1e18011, but
IIIIo came oil to hit .318, third in the
Natlllllll League behind St. Louis'
Keith Hernandez and Philadelphia's
Rolle. Rolle woo tbe 1&amp;'18 award whUe
still witb the Reds.
•
_Knight, rr, played in 1lo gamea
deaplta injuries to bls ankle, wrilt,
calf, band, anD and knee. Rill teammaw called bim "BattleiiCIII'
Galactica."
Knight also drvve In 79 runs,
clelplta bitting llixth In the batting
order for moet ol the aeaaon. He also
had nine game-winning RBis.

NEW YORK (AP) - 1be April 9
opening of the baseball season may
be delayed If the sport's players and
owners can not agree to a new
collective bargaining agreement,
according to a published report.
The New York 'I'Inle8, in its
Tuesday editions, quotes players
IIIIIOCiatloo director Marvin Miller
88 saying, "There Is ample time to
reach an agreement, and I hope we
do. But they (the owners) stall and
stall and stall.
"The present time Is being wasted
in an attempt tO get the players in a
poeltion where the owners could say,
'We need more time,' and get the
players to begin the season that
way," Miller continued. "I don't
think tbe players will buy that."
Miller told Ttmes baseball writer
Murray ChaBS at least six weeks ol
negotiating time remains before the
players would consider a strike.
'lbe barJaining agreement expired Dec. 31, and the sides bave
held seven negotiating lleSIIions since. But Miller said 'Monday, "We
still have no response to our
proposals. We askelj them today
when It might be, and they said they
didn't know ...
Further talks are scheduled Wednesday and Thursday, the story
said.
I Miller saJd he WBll making the
remarks because he had read articles quoting players, agenta and
baseball management personnel 88
saying they foresaw no problem in
getting the season started.

-

Top twenty
By The Assocl•ted Pass
The Top Twenty teams In The
Associated Press college basketball
poll, with first-place votes In paren·
th...,s, rec~rds and total points.
Polntsbasedon20·19·18·17-16·15
- 1•. 13 - 12 . 11. 10 - 9 . 8 - 7 . 6 . 5 . • . 3
. 2 - 1:
(51) (12-0) 1,189
1. DePaul
(11 -1) 1,116
2. Ohio State
(5) (14-0) 1,091
3. Syracuse
( 15-1)
959
4. Ori!Qon St.
(12 -2)
8ol6
5. Duke
(13·3)
7S2
6. Kentucky
(12 -2)
743
7. Louisville
(9-2)
667
8. Notre Dame
(8·3)
636
9. N. Carolina
(11 ·1)
630
10. St. John's, N.Y.
(10·3)
598
11. Purdue
(12-2)
.184
12. VIrginia
(11 ·2)
470
13. Iowa
(9-3)
358
14. LOUISiana St.
(12·2)
326
15. Missouri
(Hl 291
16. N. carolina St.
(11·2)
276
17. Clemson
(12·3)
265
18. Brigham Young
(9·4)
189
19. Indiana
(11-3)
156
20. Tennessee

w

BOXING CARD SUTF!D
&amp;omg Jll"(llll'Un II acbeduled at
tbe lArry Morrison Gym at Meigs
HlghSeboolJan. 26 at 7:30p.m.
'lbe )JI'OIIralll tiponlored by tbe
Melp Jaycees Is apected to be a
b!g event witb boling cluba frml '
Melp and nelgbborlng coun~
taking plrl wttb youtltul figbters
between tbe agel ollG-25 yeara old.
More than 311 tropbiell bave been
purebued for tbe event. Tropbles
Frankincense was popular with
will be giVIIII to tbe winner !_II each
the ancient Rlmans. They used It in
bout, plul tine ~
reUgio1111 ceremonies and burned It
~ell are to be awarded ea 'fi;ell• ·
In funeral pyres. The Rmum writer
medillklnl to be gi'vtll to each youth · , Pliny the Elder reported that a
taking plrl in tbe Jll'OIII'IIIl.
. whole year's production of Arabian
RJni ~ ticlteta are 111 aale frml frankincense was used at the
Ja~
General ad- .. - cremation cl Poppaea, wife or'tbe
miMIM and .li&amp;udent ticll:etl will be
Emperor Nero.
on sale on tbe a-~

'I"D."'"-

ii

•

Baseball opener
could be delayed

INVESTMENT
TROuBLED· BY ALWYBAS£MENT OR
am WAlLS CALi. lHE PROFESSIONAL
·.Call Toll Free lM0-35..,.919
f .

'

'

-

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•..

•

Southern varsity players

. from Utke Griffin.

Virginia's Cavaliers pulled Jlway

aa7-foot~ freshman Ralph Sampson

amused 21 rebounds - just three
less than Virginia Tech's total - and'
blocked eight shots whUe junior Jeff
Lamp collected 24 points.
· The Cavallers, 13-2, registered
their fifth consecutive triumph and
seventh in their last 10 meeting~~
with Virginia Tech, 9-3.
Tech led 44-42 with 11: 25
. remaining but went the next 6.:32
without a field goal. The Gobblers
managed a 52-52 tie, but Virginia got
five consecutive points from Les
Henson and pulled away from there.
Dale Solomon led Tech-Wllli"16
points, two more than Sampson had
for Virginia.
MeanwhUe, Arkansas-Pine Bluff
beat Tougaloo 24-21 and Abilene
Chrtstlan beat Sam Houston State
41-39 in two low-scoring contests.

Paul Cardone
5-11, Jr. F

Kent Wolfe
~Soph.G

Bryan Wolfe
~.Jr. F

Rams work to stop Steelers
.,
ANGELES (AP) - The Los
Angeles Rams, "strsngers" in a
strsnge land, begin in earnest today
what would at first glance. seem to
be a monwnental task - to prevent
the Pittsburgh Steelers from winning a fourth Super Bowl.
To many visitors to this sunny
clime of culta, gurus and unlnlilblted
dress, it Is indeed a strange land,
this megalopolis called Los Angeles
and the Rams feel like strangers.
The National Football League's
1979 season was the Rams' last in
Los Angeles's Memorial Coliseum.
In 1980 they'll call Anaheim
Stadium, about 35 miles southeast,
their home.
They were booed loud and often by
their disgruntled fans who, having
suffered through countless seasons
which ended one or two games short
ol a Super Bowl berth, saw their
heroes as deserters. And 1979 was
hardly an overwhelming season f&lt;r
Los Angeles. The Rams staggered to
a 9-7 record and the National Conference's West championship before
finally reaching the pinnacle with
playoff victories over Dallas and
Tampa Bay.
··
Yet the Rams are outsiders - in
LOS

Monday's College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press
EAST
American U. 82, William and
Mary 72
•
'Bucknell73, Dre. .l6-4
Delaware Val. 82, Muhlenberg 70
Duquesne 103, Holy Cross 88
Fairfield 101, Montclair St. 72
Gettysburg 74, Lehigh 59
Hofstra 93, Bridgeport7B
N.J. Tech63. Ramapo 59
Northeastern 68 Tufts 65
Penn St. 85, Delaware 53
Rider 89, East Stroudsburg 60
Robert Morris 67, St. Francis, Pa .
57
St. John's N.Y . 72, St. Joseph's Pa .
55
SOUTH
Alcorn St. 106, Southern 90
Citadel 54. Appalachian St. 53
Delta St. 65. Troy 58
Florida St. 82, S.C. ·Aiken 69
Jacksonville 72, N.C. ·Charlotte 68,
ot
Jacksonville St. 83, Miss. College

76

James Madison 63, E . Carolina 52
Marshall67, E. Tennessee St. 62
McNeese St. 59, NW Louisiana ...S
Mercer 92, Ga. Southern 70
Miss. Valley 69, Te•as Southern 65
Murray St. 78, Samford 62
N. Carolina 54, Georgia Tech 53
N. Carolina ·Asheville 76, Lenoir
Rhyne69
s. Carolina St. 64, N .C. ·
Wilmington 61

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR
INSURANCE
STORE

more than one way.
They will be wearing their road
unifonns next Sunday in the Rose
Bowl in nearby Pasadena, the setting for the Super Bowl, ~ause this
is the American Conference's year
to play the role of host team.
And, like oioneers circling the

wagons to fend off attackers, ·the
Rams are drawing closer together to

ward off what they perceive to be unwarranted assaults by sports
writers, including some from the
Los Angeles area.
"I thought we'd get more respect
after those games (against the

Pro standings
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Boston
Portland at Philadelphia

National

Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L . Pet.
Baston
32 11 .744
Phila .
32 11 .744
Washington
20 21 .488
New York
22 25 .468
New Jersey
18 27 .400
Centra I Division
Atlanta
28 18 .609
San Ant.
23 23 .500
Houston
22 22 .500
Indiana
20 25 .444
Cleveland
19 27 .413
Detroit
11 36 .239
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Kan. City
29 19 .604
Milwaukee
26 21 .553
Denver
16 31 .340
Chicago
14 29 .326
Utah
13 33 .283
Pacific Division
Seattle
33 13 .717
LosAng.
31 15 .674
Phoeni•
28 17 .622
San Diego
26 23 .53 1
Portland
24 24 .500
Golden st.
14 Jl .311

Denver at Indiana

GB
11
12
15

5
5
7'12
9
17

2'12
12112
12'12
15
2
4'12
81/2
10
18'12

Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Cleveland at New York
Seattle at Washington
New Jersey at San Antonio
Kansas City at Chicago
Phoenix at Denver
Utah at Los Angeles

s. Mississippi 72, Arkansas St . 53
Tenn . Chattanooga 84, W. Carol ina
71

Tennessee St. 92, Tenn. Martin 72
VIrginia 65, Virginia Tech 58
W. Virginia Tech 73, Fairmoht 52
MIDWEST
Ball St. Valparaiso 56
Cent. Missouri 87, NE Missouri '!9
Indiana St. 79, Drake 69
Moorhead St. 74, Jamestown 67
Northern Ill. 71, Towson St . 56
NW Missouri 71, SW Missouri 62
Oral Roberts 109, N . Dakota St . 102
SOUTHWEST
Abilene Christian 41, Sam Houston
St. 39
E. Te•as St. 70, Texas A and 165
Henderson St. 70, Ark . Tech 56
Howard Payne 91. Southwest
Texas St . 74

Kansas City at Mi Iwaukee
New Jersey at Houston
Phoenix at Utah
Los Angeles at Golden State
Atlanta at San Diego
National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pis GF
Phila.
27 3 11 65 172
NY Rangers
20 17 8 48 173
NY Islanders
17 17 6 40 138
Atlanta
16 20 5 37 136
Washington
11 24 6 28 127
Smythe Division
Chicago
17 14 12 46 122
St. LOUiS
17 19 7 41 136
Vancouver
15 22 7 37 139
Winnipeg
13 26 5 31 116
Colorado
12 25 5 29 138
Edmonton
10 22 9 29 139
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
28 12 3 59 164
Boston
23 12 6 52 155
Minnesota
21 10 8 50 167
Toronto
18 19 4 40 150
Quebec
17 19 6 40 132
· Norris Division
Montreal
22 16 6 50 164
LosAng .
20 l4 8.48 181
Pittsburgh
17 14 11 45 146
Detroit
14 20 7 35 135
Hartford
10 20 10 30 128
Monday' s Games
Montreal], Atlanta 3
Colorado6, NY Rangers6, t ie
Tuesday's Games
WinniP&lt;9 at NY 1slanders
Washington at Philadelphia
Minnesota at St . Lou is
.
Wednesday's Games
Winnipeg at NY Rangers
Edmonton at Washington
Colorado at Detroit
Toronto at Pittsburgh
Boston at Quebec
St. Louis at Minnesota
Montreat at Chicago
Atllmta at Vancouver
Buffalo at Los Angeles .

GA
125
162
132
147
156
125
142
151
169
165
179
118

120
119

158
145
147
161
1«
141
152

Cowboys and Buccaneers) but we
haven't," said Doug France, an ~­
fensive tackle. "They act like we're
not supposed to be in the Super BowL
And some of the local writers - just
a couple - who were against us have
jumped back on the boat."
Dissatisfaction has been ex·
pressed by Coach Ray Malavaal 88
welL "I'd call it inaccurate journalism," he said of som~ of the
stories about his Rams. "They (the
writers) don't know what's going on.
We both have good teams and winning records and deserve to be
here."
.
France said the mood has been
such that a few of the Rams have
even thought of boycotting the hUDdreds of sports writers massing here
to cover this annual spectacle. It is
highly unlikely, though, that any
boycott will occur. The NFL simply&gt;
won't permit it. "It is the Rams'
responsibility to cooperate with the
news media and if they don't, we will\
see that they do," Don WeiBs, the
NFL's executive director (Commissioner Pete Rozelle's right-hand
· man) said wh~n the boycott rumble
first surfaced.
The Steelers, 11-point favorites,
were very low key when they
arrived here Monday. "Just another
game," defensive back 'Mel Blount
shrugged when he and his teammates deplaned.
Some of them bave expressed the
opinion that perhaps the NFL's top
two teams aren't in the Super Bowl.
"I'm disappointed the Cowboys
lost," Steelers defensive tackle Joe
Greene said back when the Cowboys
were eliminated. "We're the best
and we want to play against the
best."
The Steelers, of now, are the best
- or so the record books say. No
other team has ever won three Super:
Bowls. Only the Steelers, Green Bay
Packers and Miami Dolphins
managed to win successive Super
Bowls but no team has ever done
that twice.
But then, no team which went into
the Super Bowl as a double-digit
favorite came out a winner - :
Baltimore losing to the New York
Jets and Minnesota losing to the
KansaS' City Chiefs.

"My old tax service didn't.
double-check everything.
I shoulda come here
last vear."

TREgrt .
cHOICE

Some insurance agents offer the policies of a single insurance
company. And lhal's okay. Every good insurance company
offers policies th~t provirle excellent benefils 10 many people.

I

But here al The lnsutance S1ore we offer more.
We are indefl('ndfflt agents. That means "'are free to review
and recommend the policies, cov~rage and services of
many leading companies .. . like The Conlinental Insurance
Companies; for example. So you have a better
chance to get 1he insurance prolection that exactly fits
your special requiremenls.

sure we thoroughly
your tax
situation before we prepare your return. And then we
double-chec~ every return for accuracy.

· And you can depend on our "follow-Through Crew" for
conscientious service ·when· you need it. ·

H&amp;RBLOCit

1\.

e::v·

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE .
618 E' . MAIN ST.
POMEROY, C.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO '
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
9-5 SATURDAY
PHONE 992·3795

2N.D &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M.·SP.M.
PHONE 773-9121

'

Appointment Available But Not Ntctss•ry

••

,,' '

�4- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pomerov. 0 .• Tuesday, Jan. 15,1980

DA V meets, sees historical slides

Health Review
By Rober1 G. Stockmal,
D.O.,Pb.D.
.Uaistant Professor
ol Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty College
of Oateopathlc Medicine
BODY AND PUBUC UCE
(Editor's note: While Dr. Lamar
Miller is on vacation, Dr. Robert
Stockmal will continue as guest
columnist. l
QUESTION: I had read your
reeent article about head lice and I
wondered if it is passlble for the
head louse to invade other areas of
to·e body, and in particular the
groin?
ANSWER: In general the answer
Is no. The head louse is largely
restricted to hair covered portions of
the head and neck areas. There are,
however, two other types of hwnan
lice - the body louse and the pubic
louse.
The body louse is usually fouod in
the clothing of infested individuals
where it resides and lays its eggs
(often called "nits"). It moves to the
: body surface to feed on the blood of
: the host.
: Pubic lice are so named for their
· association with pubic hair.
However, unlike head lice, they also
commonly infest other hairy parts of
· the body·- in this case the ann pits
· and eyebrows.
: Also called the crab louse because

. . .. . .
'

·· ·· - ···-- ~· - ·

Slides on historical piaces were
shown and family . keepsakes were
displayed at the Friday meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of .
the Daughters of the Anoerican
Revolution held in the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co.
The slides, shown by Jon
Karschnik, were among those
presented recently by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. and prepared
by Don and Tricia Adeleta.
Members of the DAR brought old
photograph albums, Items of
clothing, gold jewelry, china and
books for display at the meeting.
Mrs. Gene Yost, regent, and Mrs.

its appearance resembles that of a
crab, the pubic louse ls smaller and
less active than the head louse. It is
usually transmitted during sexual
intercourse by the transfer of adults
or nits. Less frequently, pubic lice
can be acquired through contaminated toilet seats, bedding or
clothing.
· Treatment of this condition is
similar to that for head lice in that
insecticide shampoo (Kwell- 1 percent Lindane) may be used to kill
both the adult and the nit. An
examining physician should always
consider the passibility that a
patient with pubic lice might have a
venereal disease (V.D.) at the same ·
time. The incidence of crab lice, it
should be stresSed, has risen along
with the increase in sexual per·rnissiveness and promiscuity.
QUESTION : What will happen to
a person who has lice ·for a long
period of time and doesn't get it
treated?
ANSWER: Constant scratching
may cause changes in skin
coloration and texture. Also, secondary infections- including boils and
pustular (pus-filled)) eczema- have
been reported. Theae infections can,
in turn, produce hair loss. Body lice
are sometimes transmitters d.
serious infectious diseases such as
typhus, louse-borne relapsing fever
and trench fever.

Helen Help
US, , , lly H..I•·n H•Hto-1

THE THIRD WEDNESDAY
. Homemakers Club will meet at 10
a.m Wednesday at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. The group will
be m11king cushions; bring polyester
material, needle and thread.

--

The Gallipolis Christian Church

on successive Thursdays beginning
DEAR HELEN: ,.
January 31 and ending February 21.
Your marriagesJvey·tnsjJires me
The purpose of the Mini-Bible Into Write. I feel that .marriage, like stitute is to establish interest In
the large family, is on the way out. night classes In adult ChriBtlan
Perhaps "New Literature" did it:
Educational Studies on a pennanent
Equality sounds like a nice Idea but basis. U interest is established, night
no ship ultimately can have two classes will be offered on college
equal captains. - RON
level credit or on a non-credit basis.
DEAR RON :
Though being promoted by the
Many businesses have two equal Gallipolis ChriBtian Church the Inpartners. Good marriages work the stitute, when established, wj)l be an
same way, and, believe me, friend, independent Bible Institute offering
they aren't going out of style! Not coUege level courses or noo-credit
according to over 90 percent of courses for public enrollment.
respondents to my recent marriage
The courses are offered in hope
survey, and I'd say they're pretty the public will seek higher education
typical of people as a whole. -H.
in scriptural knowledge.
There will be a tuitional lee to
DEAR HELEN:
defray expenses; however,
You asked to hear friXIl live- enrollment will n,ot be dependent
togethers who had married finally, upon tuitional charges.
and how did it tum out•
Courses being offered January 31
Gary and I lived together for a •: through February 21 are: The
year and a half belate we got mar- '' Cluistian Family, Journey Through
ried a little more than three years the Old Testament, Evangelism
ago. I was concerned about all the Methods, and Discovering GO&lt;j's
things I read oo housemates Will For Your Life. For more lnseparating once they married - and
fonnation call Denny Coburn, 446I tried to figure out why. The mar- 1863 or 446-7318.
riage style we came up with is 'far
from traditional: but has kept our
relationship very alive and very
good.
Most importantly, we recognize
that we are both individuals and
both adults. We each have our own
friends and a lot of our own activities
(in addition to our careers), but stili
do a lot together, by choice,. Our
checking accoWJts are his, mine,
and ours. We are each other's best
friends. We share housework, paying biils, and cooking. We don't stay
~
r
together because we have to but
because we want to: we know what a
good thing we've got. We don't tell ;'
each other what to do or where to go .f
because we're both adults and we
care enough to trust.
Don't get me wrong: we had to
work at developing this relationship.
We found the pressures of the wedding itself, and the expectations that
people put on us (often unintenAmber Thomas
tionally) very difficult. We resist
them. Our union is much the same as
the one we developed while living
together, except the little extra commitment seems to make it a little
The first birthday of Amber
easier to be open with one another,
Thomas was observed recently at
without fear of eventually being
the home of her parents, Jim and
betrayed.
Darla Thomas, Syracuse.
I totaUy agree that traditional
Relatives of the family were Inmarriage is often not as enticing as
vited to the Thomas home for the
the freedom of living together. But I
celebration. Refreshments were
think a lot of those freedoms can served after Amber received her
and should included in any
gifts. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
marriage that's going to survive and
Jim Thomas, Sr., John Thomas, Dot
grow todily. :.... MARRIED, FREE
Neutzling, Pam Crow and Meredith,
AND HAPPY
Isabel Winebrenner, Louise ThompDEARMF ANDH: i"'
som, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Taylor, Mr.
Thanks! My doublfiil "modem''
and Mrs. Dale Saunders, Lisa and
readers needed that. - fL
Ashlee, and the....hosts.

Twins celebrate birthday

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Jwrior High Athletic
Boosters Tuesday 7:30p.m. at junior
high. All parents of athletes and
t:hecrleaders are urged to attend.
. RACINE LODGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday. Work in the entered ap~Jrellice degree.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST UNITED
Presbyterian Church Group II,
home of Mrs. Carl Horky, 7:30 Tuesday night. Mrs. · Richard Karr,
COhostess. Plans for the year to be
lilade.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 RAM Wednesday. Work in mark master and
past master degrees.

Mini-Bible
Institute
slated to begin
will conduct a Mini-Bible Institute

RANDY SCOTI' and Ricky Joe, Jr., twin sons of Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Smith.

r---s~dai-Calendar

Adonation of $100 was made to the
projector IWJd of the Homebuilders
Class when the Philathea Women

Smith, and Mrs. Debbie Smith

Davidson, and their grandmothers,
Mrs. Bess Hendricks and Mrs. June
Smith.
Unable to attend but sending gifts
and best wishes were Charlie and
Terri Smith, Brenda Robbins, Kim
Smith, Roger Carpenter and sons,
Roger, Jr. and Greg, Larry Hendricks, Barb and Kenny Hoffman
and Bobby, Circleville, Arthur
Tobin, Thomas Tobin, U. S. Navy,
Mare Island, Calif.; and Robert
Yobin, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and
their paternal great-grandmother,
Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson, Columbus.

Including Anoerica. She noted the
changes as a result of the spread of
socialism in education, rellglon, and
the work ethic bringing about a nation of people which look to ~
government for every need.
Mias Lucille Smith thanked the
menmers for cards and ~r
remembrances during her illness.
She announced American History
Month to be observed at the
February meeting at the home of
Mrs. James Brewington. There will
be a sOent auction.
A salad course was served.
Hostesses were Mrs. Robert Ashley,
Mn. Lawrence Smith, Mias Eleanor
Smith, Miss Lucille Smith,:and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher.

'ti .,
~~~

RECOGNmON GIVEN
Recognition lor weight loss was
given at the Slinderella Diet classes
held last week to Rae Young and
Linda Clark of the Mason Monday
night class, Virginia Johnson and
Darlene Gagnon·of the Mason Tuesday morning class, and Peggy Lewis
and Eloise Smith of the Tuesday
night Middleport class. Information
on classes may be obtained from Jo
Ann Newsome, 992-3382.

~

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OPEN EVENINGS. BY APPOINT~ENT _ONLY!' !
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One of the best ways to 8&amp;'Jure the
failure of any idea is to misdefine it
and, when the mlsdeflnltion of the
idea collapses, to throw out the idea
entirely. In many ways that is what
has happened with the Idea of deinstitutionalization. It has become
common that the term "deinstitutionalization" has been used to
refer to such things as the wholesale
movement of groups of people from
large state-operated Institutions to
smaller institutions or to nursing
homes. When , after such a move, the
people who are moved fail to
progress,
then
"de in stitutionalization" will be dubbed a
failure. This article is a discussion of
the large scope of the tenn "delnstitutionalization" and is intended to
help avoid such an easy conclusim.

,------------L-- - - - - - - - - - -

U. S. GRADE "A SMALL

BARRELHEAD

"Ask about our Classic Portrait'•"'

'

behaviors or mannerisms which
they have learned may be deeply
Ingrained. Ways of living which are
cOmmonly accepted at the institution (e.g., frequently and loudly
talking to one's self) are not commonly tolerated in the larger commwrity. With this fact In mind we
must add that deinstltutlonallzation
also (in addition to a physical
movement) means the establishment, In the new envlrorunent, of
procedures which ensure that the
transfer of inatitutional culturepatterns does not take place.
Delnstltutionalization, therefore,
implies service practices which
assure the exchange of segregatedclosed settings for integrated~pen
conunwrity settings where residents
can have significant contact with
typical and valued people. It in.plies
movement from places where
everything Is " don' for" people to
places where people do things for
theniselves. And from places where
the rhythms of life are chooen by administrators or staff members to
'Places where people choose their
own dally, weekly, or annual activities. Deinstitutionallzation is,
then, a process and a set of supports
which make It easter for people to go
through what must be a radical
change In their lives.

I

SAUSAGE

Now Contains Add'l 5 X7 + 5 wallets

f,

strong dependency and that unusual

BUCKET
STEAKS

SUPERIOR
WIENERS
BOB EVANS

-

,'

mendation Medal here at Hickam
Air Force Base.
The Air Force Commendation
Medal is awarded to those individuals who demonstrate outstanding achievement or
meritorious service In the performance of their duties on behalf of
the Air Force.
The alnnan Is a 1m graduate of
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.

2-Poses, 24 Color Prints,
New Bigger Package!

"

Mon., Tues., Wea., t-roaav &amp; :.at.
8: JO to 5: oo Thursday till12 Nooo

MARK GILKEY
RECEIVES MEDAL
HONOLULU - Alnnan First
Cl8s.s Mark A. Gilkey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Gilkey of 1284 Powell
St., Middleport, has been decorated
with the U. S. Air Force Com-

WE HAVE

Le1 us seek 1oge1her 1ha1 same il·g· ~· o gu
. Ide through the darkness and
fears of a New Year and New Det e and let us share 1he message of
Joy and .Hope 1o !hose who do nOT ave 1ha1 ilgh1 to guide them . Yes i
Jesu s Chri st is s11 ll 1he light of 1his world! !
·

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

·

Mr. and~. Wllljam J. Roush are
announcing .the birth of a son, Collin
Clay, Jan. 6 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed eight
po!)ods, eight ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jesae Lake, West Jefferson, an~ the paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Nannie Fox, New Hayen.
Paternal great-grandmother Is Mrs.
Hazel Roush, New Haven. Mr. and
Mrs. Roush have two other children,
Terri and Crockett.

WED.-SUN. JAN. 16-JAN. 20

We at 1he Meigs Tire Center wish 1o join you In 1hanklng God for 1ha1
true ligh1 which shines as brightly today as It did from 1hat Bethlehem

Manger . .·

Birth announced

about deinstitutlonalization, he may
interpret the term to mean an Inere~ · in the number of noisy,
"weird," people who will overrun
his neighborhood, engage In bizarre
acts, and cause his property values
to decline. We should not be surprised at the multiple, and widely
different, interpretations attached
to a single term because we know
that the way people use and Interpret language is very often a
great revealer of their unconscious
assumptions about other
(presumably devalued) people.
For the purpose of this article, we
need to propose a definition of deinstitutlonalization on which we can
agree. To do this, we need to understand what an "Institution" is.
An Institution is aQY group residence
larger than a large family where the
controls over the lives of residents
clearly exceed those of most
families In society. According to this
definition, lnstltuti~
'
places
where people live an
which
are characterized by
and by an
uncharacteristic amo~ of control
over the lives of the people who live
there.
Deinstitutionalization may be
defined as the movement of a person
or persons from an Institution to a
place that is not an institution. This
kind of movement is vastly i:llfferent
from the simple depopulation of
state faclllti~s as dein·
stitutionalization lhvolves the exchange of one culture for another. It
involves the movement of persons
friXIl a highly-structured, highlycontrolled and very secure environment to a variety of environments characterized by openness, integration, and reasonable
risk .
The simple physical movement of
people from one place to another is
insufficient to guarantee that this
change of cultures takes place. U
people have lived in Institutions for a
significant period of time, It is likely
they will have learn~ habits of a

1111 II 11111111111111111'1 II 11111111111111111111111111

._____ The Saving Place----

SHOP

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRISTATE. AREA

things to different people, depending
upon the situation-In-life from which
those people speak. For example,
when the administrators of large,
old-style state instl!¥tloits for people
who are retarded talk .about delnstllutlonallzaion, they probably
mean some kind of process of
reducing the number of peopfe who
are Uvlng In the facilities for 'which
they are responalble. On the other
hand, when the resident of a quiet
conservative neighborhood hears

· ~

-.-.....

Almost 2,000 year.s ago Wise Men from
1he Eas1 began a long ;ourney to find
the " Hope " of a world without Hope .
The light of His star led them on 1heir
dark. and perilous journey to find the
Chris! Child . The true ligh1 of 1his
world .

MASON FURNITURE

Thomas.

BETWEEN 8:30AM &amp; 5 PM

;

Bed39.

Mrs. Allen Eichinger was program lesder with Miss Grace campbell presenting a piano prelude.
Members sang "Breathe · on Me,
Breath of God" followed by scripture from Psalm 96 read by Mrs.
Eichinger. The cal! to prayer and
self-denial service was conducted
using the theme "Life Divine". Mrs.
Eichinger read a meditation on the
new year calling It a time for
renewal through goals and self·
improvement.
Offering envelopes and prayer
carda were distributed. Several
other mf4!tations were read and the
service closed with the offering beIng taken and the group reading in
unison from the prayer carda. A
prayer circle was held and
refreshments served by Mrs. Marjorie Reuter and Mrs. Clara

CALL 9'2·2156

oo

VIRGIL GLAZE
HOSPITALIZED
Virgil Glaze of Middleport, a patient at the Veterans Hospital In
Dayton, has been moved to Ward 10,

tiVes for the new year was held al
the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the Pomeroy
·· Church.
Mrs. Robert McGee, president,
proposed the goal setting and the
. suggestions Included a special activity of service to another organization, more visitation with shutins, a
membership drive, and a special
·holiday project for a church&lt;
. oriented group.
A prayer, "Thank You Lord" and
· a meditation' "Lolli and Found", by
Mrs. McGee opened the meeting. It
.was noted that in the spring, Mrs.
·Thelma Dill will lead a Bible study
In cormection with the School of Ml&amp;slons. The group agreed to pay
mileage for any district officer or
'other guest coming to speak or visit
with the UMW. Fifty shutln visits
were reported.

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED I'N THE
POMEROY AND
-MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Birthday noted

•

V. discussion on goals and objec-

ATTENTION:

.

mental Disabilities to provide services and currently serves· approzimately 80 Individuals who are
developmentally_ diaabled. The
agency would like to ezplaln "delnstitutionalization."
"Delnstltutionallzatlon" is a term
which ls widely used In human
sevices today - particularly In services to Individuals who are mentally retarded or with other developmental disabilities and to Individuals who have mental disorders. As with many other hwnan
services terms (e.g., nonnalizatlon,
integration, etc.), the term "delnstitutionalization" has gained wide
use without significant attention
being paid by the users to the
meaning of the term.
Thus, delnatltutionalization undoubtedly means many different

· Goals, objectives discussed
.by Pomeroy UMW recently

ON DEAN'S LISI'
Tarni Fugate of Mason County has
been named to the Dean's List at
Fainnont State College for the first ·
semester, according to offices of
academic affairs.

~.

TIIURSDAY
MAGNOUA CLUll Thursday 7:30
p.m. at home of Doris Grueser.
Margaret Rose assistant hostess.
Erna Jesse in charge of devotions
and Kathryn Miller in charge of
program.

By Carol Kealrlll
Buckeye Community Senfces
GALUPOUS - Buckeye Community Service is a private, nonprofit agency which was Incorporated In June o11m to develop
residential services for adults and
children who are developmentally
dlaabled. The agency selected eight
counties Bll Its service area :
Hocking, Athens, Meigs, VInton,
G&amp;Wa, Jackson, Pike and Ross.
B. C.S. has established a model
foater care project (small resldelltial alternatives) and the following
group homes: Jackson Group Home,
Jackson; Pike Group Home,
Waverly; Logan Men's Home,
Logan; Logan Women's Home,
Logan; Transitional Facility,
Gallipolis.
B.C.S. contracts with the Division
of Mental Retardation and Develop-

presented a gift.
Others attending were Mrs. Nora
Rice, Mts. Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Ger·
trude Miller, Mn. Frances Roush,
Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs. Nina
Bland, Mrs. Louise McElhinny, Mrs.
Luia Mae Qulvey, Mrs. Evelyn Murray, 'Mrs. Martha Childs, Mn. Eula
Roush, Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Kathryn Erwin, Mrs. Ella Mae
Daugherty and a guest, Mrs.
Eleanor Lohse.

met Thunday at the Middleport
Church of Cluist for a luncheon.
Hostesses for the luncheon were
Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Margaret
Lallance, Mrs. Margaret Butcher,
and Mrs. Margaret Jones. Mrs. Debbie Melton had the blessing.
Mrs. Kathy Erwin presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Forie Cole and
Mrs. Dorolby Roach giving the officen' reports. Reported ill were
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Jennifer
McKinley, Lester Bailey, Mike
Gerlach and his family, Flo
Grueser, Don Erwin, Clyda
Allensworth, Levina Ebersbach, and
Bessie Ashley.
Rita Olierholzer of the Columbia
Gas of Ohio, was gueat speaker. She
showed a fllm on energy, energy
saving tips and menWI. She WBll

.

'De institutionalization ' explained by group

-

Patrick Lochary, chaplain, opened
the meeting In ritualistic form. Mrs.
YOIIt gave the president general's
message from the DAR magazine.
It was reported that Return
Jonathan Meigs and Nabby Lee
Ames Chapters will have charge of
the memorial service at the spring
conference to be held in Columbus in
March. All DAR members at the
conference will be invited to the
governor's mansion for a program
during the conference.
Mrs. Emerson Jones gave the national defeaae report. She discussed
the dangen facing America from
the socialist Idealism Which began in
England in the 1800's and has made
a journey Into all areas of the world

Homebuilders Class donates $100

COMPLETES
BASIC
TRAINING - Pvt. EJ.Z· Edward
Adam!i, son of Mr. and Mn.
Melvlll Drake, Loug Bottom and
Wayne Adams, Belpre, recently
completed his basic training and
his AIT In heavy equlpmeol
mechanlCil al Ft. Jackson, S. C.
He spent Christmas and New
Year'• with his famUy before
go,tng to Ft. ROey, Kaoss.

--

Ricky and Randy Smith, twin sons
tJl Rick and Terri Smith, celebrated
their first birthdays on Dec. 22 at the
home of their parents in Middleport.
A clown cake inscribed "Happy
· Birthday, Ricky and Randy," was
served with ice cream, Kooi-Aid,
tookies, pbtato chips, and oranges.
Games were played with prizes goIng to everyone. Kelly Smith won the
grand prize.
Attending the party were Mrs.
Kathy Wilfong and children, Missy
IIJid Mikey, Terri and Bubby Currence, Donna Robbins, Mrs. Lucy
Hendricks; their aunts,ts', Tina
Hendricks, Kelly, Tina and Cindy

5-,The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15, 19110

RC

OR

DIET RITE
SUPER MARKET - OPEN·~IU ·9 TO lO .P.M.
· . SUNDAY . 1'0 lG
We

food :&gt;tamps- we

lflllllll11111

COLA
8 PAK 16 Oi$1 Qf
· BTLS.

Plus Tax &amp; ·Dept. .

·

�4- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePOrt-Pomerov. 0 .• Tuesday, Jan. 15,1980

DA V meets, sees historical slides

Health Review
By Rober1 G. Stockmal,
D.O.,Pb.D.
.Uaistant Professor
ol Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty College
of Oateopathlc Medicine
BODY AND PUBUC UCE
(Editor's note: While Dr. Lamar
Miller is on vacation, Dr. Robert
Stockmal will continue as guest
columnist. l
QUESTION: I had read your
reeent article about head lice and I
wondered if it is passlble for the
head louse to invade other areas of
to·e body, and in particular the
groin?
ANSWER: In general the answer
Is no. The head louse is largely
restricted to hair covered portions of
the head and neck areas. There are,
however, two other types of hwnan
lice - the body louse and the pubic
louse.
The body louse is usually fouod in
the clothing of infested individuals
where it resides and lays its eggs
(often called "nits"). It moves to the
: body surface to feed on the blood of
: the host.
: Pubic lice are so named for their
· association with pubic hair.
However, unlike head lice, they also
commonly infest other hairy parts of
· the body·- in this case the ann pits
· and eyebrows.
: Also called the crab louse because

. . .. . .
'

·· ·· - ···-- ~· - ·

Slides on historical piaces were
shown and family . keepsakes were
displayed at the Friday meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of .
the Daughters of the Anoerican
Revolution held in the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co.
The slides, shown by Jon
Karschnik, were among those
presented recently by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. and prepared
by Don and Tricia Adeleta.
Members of the DAR brought old
photograph albums, Items of
clothing, gold jewelry, china and
books for display at the meeting.
Mrs. Gene Yost, regent, and Mrs.

its appearance resembles that of a
crab, the pubic louse ls smaller and
less active than the head louse. It is
usually transmitted during sexual
intercourse by the transfer of adults
or nits. Less frequently, pubic lice
can be acquired through contaminated toilet seats, bedding or
clothing.
· Treatment of this condition is
similar to that for head lice in that
insecticide shampoo (Kwell- 1 percent Lindane) may be used to kill
both the adult and the nit. An
examining physician should always
consider the passibility that a
patient with pubic lice might have a
venereal disease (V.D.) at the same ·
time. The incidence of crab lice, it
should be stresSed, has risen along
with the increase in sexual per·rnissiveness and promiscuity.
QUESTION : What will happen to
a person who has lice ·for a long
period of time and doesn't get it
treated?
ANSWER: Constant scratching
may cause changes in skin
coloration and texture. Also, secondary infections- including boils and
pustular (pus-filled)) eczema- have
been reported. Theae infections can,
in turn, produce hair loss. Body lice
are sometimes transmitters d.
serious infectious diseases such as
typhus, louse-borne relapsing fever
and trench fever.

Helen Help
US, , , lly H..I•·n H•Hto-1

THE THIRD WEDNESDAY
. Homemakers Club will meet at 10
a.m Wednesday at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. The group will
be m11king cushions; bring polyester
material, needle and thread.

--

The Gallipolis Christian Church

on successive Thursdays beginning
DEAR HELEN: ,.
January 31 and ending February 21.
Your marriagesJvey·tnsjJires me
The purpose of the Mini-Bible Into Write. I feel that .marriage, like stitute is to establish interest In
the large family, is on the way out. night classes In adult ChriBtlan
Perhaps "New Literature" did it:
Educational Studies on a pennanent
Equality sounds like a nice Idea but basis. U interest is established, night
no ship ultimately can have two classes will be offered on college
equal captains. - RON
level credit or on a non-credit basis.
DEAR RON :
Though being promoted by the
Many businesses have two equal Gallipolis ChriBtian Church the Inpartners. Good marriages work the stitute, when established, wj)l be an
same way, and, believe me, friend, independent Bible Institute offering
they aren't going out of style! Not coUege level courses or noo-credit
according to over 90 percent of courses for public enrollment.
respondents to my recent marriage
The courses are offered in hope
survey, and I'd say they're pretty the public will seek higher education
typical of people as a whole. -H.
in scriptural knowledge.
There will be a tuitional lee to
DEAR HELEN:
defray expenses; however,
You asked to hear friXIl live- enrollment will n,ot be dependent
togethers who had married finally, upon tuitional charges.
and how did it tum out•
Courses being offered January 31
Gary and I lived together for a •: through February 21 are: The
year and a half belate we got mar- '' Cluistian Family, Journey Through
ried a little more than three years the Old Testament, Evangelism
ago. I was concerned about all the Methods, and Discovering GO&lt;j's
things I read oo housemates Will For Your Life. For more lnseparating once they married - and
fonnation call Denny Coburn, 446I tried to figure out why. The mar- 1863 or 446-7318.
riage style we came up with is 'far
from traditional: but has kept our
relationship very alive and very
good.
Most importantly, we recognize
that we are both individuals and
both adults. We each have our own
friends and a lot of our own activities
(in addition to our careers), but stili
do a lot together, by choice,. Our
checking accoWJts are his, mine,
and ours. We are each other's best
friends. We share housework, paying biils, and cooking. We don't stay
~
r
together because we have to but
because we want to: we know what a
good thing we've got. We don't tell ;'
each other what to do or where to go .f
because we're both adults and we
care enough to trust.
Don't get me wrong: we had to
work at developing this relationship.
We found the pressures of the wedding itself, and the expectations that
people put on us (often unintenAmber Thomas
tionally) very difficult. We resist
them. Our union is much the same as
the one we developed while living
together, except the little extra commitment seems to make it a little
The first birthday of Amber
easier to be open with one another,
Thomas was observed recently at
without fear of eventually being
the home of her parents, Jim and
betrayed.
Darla Thomas, Syracuse.
I totaUy agree that traditional
Relatives of the family were Inmarriage is often not as enticing as
vited to the Thomas home for the
the freedom of living together. But I
celebration. Refreshments were
think a lot of those freedoms can served after Amber received her
and should included in any
gifts. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
marriage that's going to survive and
Jim Thomas, Sr., John Thomas, Dot
grow todily. :.... MARRIED, FREE
Neutzling, Pam Crow and Meredith,
AND HAPPY
Isabel Winebrenner, Louise ThompDEARMF ANDH: i"'
som, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Taylor, Mr.
Thanks! My doublfiil "modem''
and Mrs. Dale Saunders, Lisa and
readers needed that. - fL
Ashlee, and the....hosts.

Twins celebrate birthday

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Jwrior High Athletic
Boosters Tuesday 7:30p.m. at junior
high. All parents of athletes and
t:hecrleaders are urged to attend.
. RACINE LODGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday. Work in the entered ap~Jrellice degree.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST UNITED
Presbyterian Church Group II,
home of Mrs. Carl Horky, 7:30 Tuesday night. Mrs. · Richard Karr,
COhostess. Plans for the year to be
lilade.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 RAM Wednesday. Work in mark master and
past master degrees.

Mini-Bible
Institute
slated to begin
will conduct a Mini-Bible Institute

RANDY SCOTI' and Ricky Joe, Jr., twin sons of Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Smith.

r---s~dai-Calendar

Adonation of $100 was made to the
projector IWJd of the Homebuilders
Class when the Philathea Women

Smith, and Mrs. Debbie Smith

Davidson, and their grandmothers,
Mrs. Bess Hendricks and Mrs. June
Smith.
Unable to attend but sending gifts
and best wishes were Charlie and
Terri Smith, Brenda Robbins, Kim
Smith, Roger Carpenter and sons,
Roger, Jr. and Greg, Larry Hendricks, Barb and Kenny Hoffman
and Bobby, Circleville, Arthur
Tobin, Thomas Tobin, U. S. Navy,
Mare Island, Calif.; and Robert
Yobin, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and
their paternal great-grandmother,
Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson, Columbus.

Including Anoerica. She noted the
changes as a result of the spread of
socialism in education, rellglon, and
the work ethic bringing about a nation of people which look to ~
government for every need.
Mias Lucille Smith thanked the
menmers for cards and ~r
remembrances during her illness.
She announced American History
Month to be observed at the
February meeting at the home of
Mrs. James Brewington. There will
be a sOent auction.
A salad course was served.
Hostesses were Mrs. Robert Ashley,
Mn. Lawrence Smith, Mias Eleanor
Smith, Miss Lucille Smith,:and Mrs.
Clinton Fisher.

'ti .,
~~~

RECOGNmON GIVEN
Recognition lor weight loss was
given at the Slinderella Diet classes
held last week to Rae Young and
Linda Clark of the Mason Monday
night class, Virginia Johnson and
Darlene Gagnon·of the Mason Tuesday morning class, and Peggy Lewis
and Eloise Smith of the Tuesday
night Middleport class. Information
on classes may be obtained from Jo
Ann Newsome, 992-3382.

~

.

OPEN EVENINGS. BY APPOINT~ENT _ONLY!' !
·
Mason, W.Va.

?.73·5592
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Due: $12.00
4-color charms .
24 prints just ~

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FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

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;

One of the best ways to 8&amp;'Jure the
failure of any idea is to misdefine it
and, when the mlsdeflnltion of the
idea collapses, to throw out the idea
entirely. In many ways that is what
has happened with the Idea of deinstitutionalization. It has become
common that the term "deinstitutionalization" has been used to
refer to such things as the wholesale
movement of groups of people from
large state-operated Institutions to
smaller institutions or to nursing
homes. When , after such a move, the
people who are moved fail to
progress,
then
"de in stitutionalization" will be dubbed a
failure. This article is a discussion of
the large scope of the tenn "delnstitutionalization" and is intended to
help avoid such an easy conclusim.

,------------L-- - - - - - - - - - -

U. S. GRADE "A SMALL

BARRELHEAD

"Ask about our Classic Portrait'•"'

'

behaviors or mannerisms which
they have learned may be deeply
Ingrained. Ways of living which are
cOmmonly accepted at the institution (e.g., frequently and loudly
talking to one's self) are not commonly tolerated in the larger commwrity. With this fact In mind we
must add that deinstltutlonallzation
also (in addition to a physical
movement) means the establishment, In the new envlrorunent, of
procedures which ensure that the
transfer of inatitutional culturepatterns does not take place.
Delnstltutionalization, therefore,
implies service practices which
assure the exchange of segregatedclosed settings for integrated~pen
conunwrity settings where residents
can have significant contact with
typical and valued people. It in.plies
movement from places where
everything Is " don' for" people to
places where people do things for
theniselves. And from places where
the rhythms of life are chooen by administrators or staff members to
'Places where people choose their
own dally, weekly, or annual activities. Deinstitutionallzation is,
then, a process and a set of supports
which make It easter for people to go
through what must be a radical
change In their lives.

I

SAUSAGE

Now Contains Add'l 5 X7 + 5 wallets

f,

strong dependency and that unusual

BUCKET
STEAKS

SUPERIOR
WIENERS
BOB EVANS

-

,'

mendation Medal here at Hickam
Air Force Base.
The Air Force Commendation
Medal is awarded to those individuals who demonstrate outstanding achievement or
meritorious service In the performance of their duties on behalf of
the Air Force.
The alnnan Is a 1m graduate of
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.

2-Poses, 24 Color Prints,
New Bigger Package!

"

Mon., Tues., Wea., t-roaav &amp; :.at.
8: JO to 5: oo Thursday till12 Nooo

MARK GILKEY
RECEIVES MEDAL
HONOLULU - Alnnan First
Cl8s.s Mark A. Gilkey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Gilkey of 1284 Powell
St., Middleport, has been decorated
with the U. S. Air Force Com-

WE HAVE

Le1 us seek 1oge1her 1ha1 same il·g· ~· o gu
. Ide through the darkness and
fears of a New Year and New Det e and let us share 1he message of
Joy and .Hope 1o !hose who do nOT ave 1ha1 ilgh1 to guide them . Yes i
Jesu s Chri st is s11 ll 1he light of 1his world! !
·

MASON FURNITURE
Herman Grate

·

Mr. and~. Wllljam J. Roush are
announcing .the birth of a son, Collin
Clay, Jan. 6 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed eight
po!)ods, eight ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jesae Lake, West Jefferson, an~ the paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Nannie Fox, New Hayen.
Paternal great-grandmother Is Mrs.
Hazel Roush, New Haven. Mr. and
Mrs. Roush have two other children,
Terri and Crockett.

WED.-SUN. JAN. 16-JAN. 20

We at 1he Meigs Tire Center wish 1o join you In 1hanklng God for 1ha1
true ligh1 which shines as brightly today as It did from 1hat Bethlehem

Manger . .·

Birth announced

about deinstitutlonalization, he may
interpret the term to mean an Inere~ · in the number of noisy,
"weird," people who will overrun
his neighborhood, engage In bizarre
acts, and cause his property values
to decline. We should not be surprised at the multiple, and widely
different, interpretations attached
to a single term because we know
that the way people use and Interpret language is very often a
great revealer of their unconscious
assumptions about other
(presumably devalued) people.
For the purpose of this article, we
need to propose a definition of deinstitutlonalization on which we can
agree. To do this, we need to understand what an "Institution" is.
An Institution is aQY group residence
larger than a large family where the
controls over the lives of residents
clearly exceed those of most
families In society. According to this
definition, lnstltuti~
'
places
where people live an
which
are characterized by
and by an
uncharacteristic amo~ of control
over the lives of the people who live
there.
Deinstitutionalization may be
defined as the movement of a person
or persons from an Institution to a
place that is not an institution. This
kind of movement is vastly i:llfferent
from the simple depopulation of
state faclllti~s as dein·
stitutionalization lhvolves the exchange of one culture for another. It
involves the movement of persons
friXIl a highly-structured, highlycontrolled and very secure environment to a variety of environments characterized by openness, integration, and reasonable
risk .
The simple physical movement of
people from one place to another is
insufficient to guarantee that this
change of cultures takes place. U
people have lived in Institutions for a
significant period of time, It is likely
they will have learn~ habits of a

1111 II 11111111111111111'1 II 11111111111111111111111111

._____ The Saving Place----

SHOP

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRISTATE. AREA

things to different people, depending
upon the situation-In-life from which
those people speak. For example,
when the administrators of large,
old-style state instl!¥tloits for people
who are retarded talk .about delnstllutlonallzaion, they probably
mean some kind of process of
reducing the number of peopfe who
are Uvlng In the facilities for 'which
they are responalble. On the other
hand, when the resident of a quiet
conservative neighborhood hears

· ~

-.-.....

Almost 2,000 year.s ago Wise Men from
1he Eas1 began a long ;ourney to find
the " Hope " of a world without Hope .
The light of His star led them on 1heir
dark. and perilous journey to find the
Chris! Child . The true ligh1 of 1his
world .

MASON FURNITURE

Thomas.

BETWEEN 8:30AM &amp; 5 PM

;

Bed39.

Mrs. Allen Eichinger was program lesder with Miss Grace campbell presenting a piano prelude.
Members sang "Breathe · on Me,
Breath of God" followed by scripture from Psalm 96 read by Mrs.
Eichinger. The cal! to prayer and
self-denial service was conducted
using the theme "Life Divine". Mrs.
Eichinger read a meditation on the
new year calling It a time for
renewal through goals and self·
improvement.
Offering envelopes and prayer
carda were distributed. Several
other mf4!tations were read and the
service closed with the offering beIng taken and the group reading in
unison from the prayer carda. A
prayer circle was held and
refreshments served by Mrs. Marjorie Reuter and Mrs. Clara

CALL 9'2·2156

oo

VIRGIL GLAZE
HOSPITALIZED
Virgil Glaze of Middleport, a patient at the Veterans Hospital In
Dayton, has been moved to Ward 10,

tiVes for the new year was held al
the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the Pomeroy
·· Church.
Mrs. Robert McGee, president,
proposed the goal setting and the
. suggestions Included a special activity of service to another organization, more visitation with shutins, a
membership drive, and a special
·holiday project for a church&lt;
. oriented group.
A prayer, "Thank You Lord" and
· a meditation' "Lolli and Found", by
Mrs. McGee opened the meeting. It
.was noted that in the spring, Mrs.
·Thelma Dill will lead a Bible study
In cormection with the School of Ml&amp;slons. The group agreed to pay
mileage for any district officer or
'other guest coming to speak or visit
with the UMW. Fifty shutln visits
were reported.

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED I'N THE
POMEROY AND
-MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Birthday noted

•

V. discussion on goals and objec-

ATTENTION:

.

mental Disabilities to provide services and currently serves· approzimately 80 Individuals who are
developmentally_ diaabled. The
agency would like to ezplaln "delnstitutionalization."
"Delnstltutionallzatlon" is a term
which ls widely used In human
sevices today - particularly In services to Individuals who are mentally retarded or with other developmental disabilities and to Individuals who have mental disorders. As with many other hwnan
services terms (e.g., nonnalizatlon,
integration, etc.), the term "delnstitutionalization" has gained wide
use without significant attention
being paid by the users to the
meaning of the term.
Thus, delnatltutionalization undoubtedly means many different

· Goals, objectives discussed
.by Pomeroy UMW recently

ON DEAN'S LISI'
Tarni Fugate of Mason County has
been named to the Dean's List at
Fainnont State College for the first ·
semester, according to offices of
academic affairs.

~.

TIIURSDAY
MAGNOUA CLUll Thursday 7:30
p.m. at home of Doris Grueser.
Margaret Rose assistant hostess.
Erna Jesse in charge of devotions
and Kathryn Miller in charge of
program.

By Carol Kealrlll
Buckeye Community Senfces
GALUPOUS - Buckeye Community Service is a private, nonprofit agency which was Incorporated In June o11m to develop
residential services for adults and
children who are developmentally
dlaabled. The agency selected eight
counties Bll Its service area :
Hocking, Athens, Meigs, VInton,
G&amp;Wa, Jackson, Pike and Ross.
B. C.S. has established a model
foater care project (small resldelltial alternatives) and the following
group homes: Jackson Group Home,
Jackson; Pike Group Home,
Waverly; Logan Men's Home,
Logan; Logan Women's Home,
Logan; Transitional Facility,
Gallipolis.
B.C.S. contracts with the Division
of Mental Retardation and Develop-

presented a gift.
Others attending were Mrs. Nora
Rice, Mts. Rose Reynolds, Mrs. Ger·
trude Miller, Mn. Frances Roush,
Mrs. Clara Conroy, Mrs. Nina
Bland, Mrs. Louise McElhinny, Mrs.
Luia Mae Qulvey, Mrs. Evelyn Murray, 'Mrs. Martha Childs, Mn. Eula
Roush, Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Kathryn Erwin, Mrs. Ella Mae
Daugherty and a guest, Mrs.
Eleanor Lohse.

met Thunday at the Middleport
Church of Cluist for a luncheon.
Hostesses for the luncheon were
Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Margaret
Lallance, Mrs. Margaret Butcher,
and Mrs. Margaret Jones. Mrs. Debbie Melton had the blessing.
Mrs. Kathy Erwin presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Forie Cole and
Mrs. Dorolby Roach giving the officen' reports. Reported ill were
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Jennifer
McKinley, Lester Bailey, Mike
Gerlach and his family, Flo
Grueser, Don Erwin, Clyda
Allensworth, Levina Ebersbach, and
Bessie Ashley.
Rita Olierholzer of the Columbia
Gas of Ohio, was gueat speaker. She
showed a fllm on energy, energy
saving tips and menWI. She WBll

.

'De institutionalization ' explained by group

-

Patrick Lochary, chaplain, opened
the meeting In ritualistic form. Mrs.
YOIIt gave the president general's
message from the DAR magazine.
It was reported that Return
Jonathan Meigs and Nabby Lee
Ames Chapters will have charge of
the memorial service at the spring
conference to be held in Columbus in
March. All DAR members at the
conference will be invited to the
governor's mansion for a program
during the conference.
Mrs. Emerson Jones gave the national defeaae report. She discussed
the dangen facing America from
the socialist Idealism Which began in
England in the 1800's and has made
a journey Into all areas of the world

Homebuilders Class donates $100

COMPLETES
BASIC
TRAINING - Pvt. EJ.Z· Edward
Adam!i, son of Mr. and Mn.
Melvlll Drake, Loug Bottom and
Wayne Adams, Belpre, recently
completed his basic training and
his AIT In heavy equlpmeol
mechanlCil al Ft. Jackson, S. C.
He spent Christmas and New
Year'• with his famUy before
go,tng to Ft. ROey, Kaoss.

--

Ricky and Randy Smith, twin sons
tJl Rick and Terri Smith, celebrated
their first birthdays on Dec. 22 at the
home of their parents in Middleport.
A clown cake inscribed "Happy
· Birthday, Ricky and Randy," was
served with ice cream, Kooi-Aid,
tookies, pbtato chips, and oranges.
Games were played with prizes goIng to everyone. Kelly Smith won the
grand prize.
Attending the party were Mrs.
Kathy Wilfong and children, Missy
IIJid Mikey, Terri and Bubby Currence, Donna Robbins, Mrs. Lucy
Hendricks; their aunts,ts', Tina
Hendricks, Kelly, Tina and Cindy

5-,The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15, 19110

RC

OR

DIET RITE
SUPER MARKET - OPEN·~IU ·9 TO lO .P.M.
· . SUNDAY . 1'0 lG
We

food :&gt;tamps- we

lflllllll11111

COLA
8 PAK 16 Oi$1 Qf
· BTLS.

Plus Tax &amp; ·Dept. .

·

�•
. 8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15, 19110

Your Best Buys Are }"' o und in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wedneeday, Jan. 16

..

WANT AD
CHARGES

Bernice Bede Osol_.

I day
2days
3days

10 Wordl or Under
CUll
lllartl•

1.00

1.2:5;

1.50

U O!

1.e.J

6da,..

3.00

z.=:
3.1l.

Each word over the minlmum
,15 wlrtbl is 4 cent.. per word ptr
day . AdJ rmning othe~than con..
secutlve days will be charged at,

January 18, 1980
Be led by youl highest 1deals and
go after your dreams. because
this com1ng year Lady Luck will
support anyth1ng on wh1ch she
puts her stamp of approval
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. t9)
You 're espec1ally lucky today
w1th tll ing s .,au personally
super\'lse or manage You won 't
' .'A 1traid to be aggressive and
•..; show ot hers the way . Find
ou t more of wllat 11es shead for
you in the year fo ll owing your
birthd ay by send ing lor you r
copy of AstroMGraph Leller Mall
$1 for each to Ast ro-Graph, Box
48~. Radio City Stat ion. N Y.
10019. Be sure to specify b1rth
date.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You 're qwte mtultl\'e today 1n
mak ing changes to attain what
yo~.- desire Trust your JUdgment .
It won 't lead you astray .
PISCES (Feb. 2()..M• rch 20)
Fnene;ls will go out ol their way
toclay to help you m what you are
try1 ng to accomplish Thei r
as3istance will prove lucky for
you.
AF'IIES (M arch 21 .. Apr il 19} Th1s
should be a very fortu nate day
for you worl&lt;. or careerw1se
There h&gt; an abundance ol opportunity abou t you that could bring
advancement or added mcome
TAURUS (April 2().May 20) Persons w1th whom you come 1n
contact today will be ex tremely
respons1ve to your charm in g and
gallant ways. as well as the high
i n tegr~t y you reflect
GEMINI (M•Y 21 -Juna 20) It' s
not tust business as usual lor you
today. The time Is 'ripe to brin g
into being something important
for whic h you 've been hoping
C ANCER (Jun• 21 .. July 22 )
Today ts a day wt'len cooper alton
is at your beck and call . and oth ers are willing to give you even
more than you asked lor.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Direct
your energtes wisely tod ay. That
which you put your hand to will
yield largerMthan-normal returns.
Go after the biggies.
VIRGO (AuQ . 23·Sapt. 22) II
you 're looking for romance you
have an exce llent chan ce of finding it today. You ' re highly
appealing to the opposite sex.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Now IS
!he time lo lie down any situaUons that mtght ha\le been tough
for you to conclude 1n the past.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You
could receive some good news
lhal will inspire you to taK e a
bOlder course of actton today.
Th1s will benefit you and a close

the l day rate.
In mOrnoey. C&lt;lnl of 1'1lanlr.
and Obituary: 6 cent.!!l per word,
$3.00 minimum. Cub in ad ..
vance.
Mobile Hmle sales and Yard,
sales are accepted only w1ttt
cash with order. 25 cent charge'
for 8dB carrying Bo.: Number 1Q

Care of The Sentinel.

The Publisher reaerves

uJ

right l.n edit or reject any ads
deem ed obj ectional.
Thei
Publisher wtU not be respanslble
for more than one incorrect if' ~
sertioo.

Phone 11!12-2116

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVER,.ISING
DEADUNES .
Monday
Noon Ort Saturday
Tu..W.y
tl1ru Frtdliy
4P.M.
tbe day before publication

Sundliy
tP.M.
J;Tiday afternoon

- - - - - --""
Lost and Found
REWARD to person retur·
ning or giving information
leading to return of purse
lost in vicinity of 2nd St. or
Powell's
Super Vatu ,
Pomeroy . No questions
asked. Pur se contained
glasses, keys and personal
papers.
Keep money,
collect additional reward.
Call collect. 992·2588.

associate.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)
Both recognition and material
benefit s could be yours today lor
your excellent perl ormancf . You
won 't be gett1ng anythmg you
don 't deser\'e .
!NE'f\'Sf'Af'Efl ENTE APAISE ASSN )

LEGAL NOTICE
The State Prime Sponsor
Council will hold a meeting
on January 23, 1980, ot 9:30
A.M. at the Christopher Inn
located at 300 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Oh io.
( I) IS, lie

Russia had the largest
nwnber of movie houses in
the world in 1975 - 145,600,
according to the latest data
in the United Nations'
Statisticill Year book. In the
same year, Italy had
12,471, the United States
11,250, France 5,5a and the
United Kingdom I ,525.

ORDINANCE
NO. 1087·79
An
Ordinance
to
ESTABLISH A STREET
LEVY
FUND
AND
STREET LIGHT FUND
WITHIN THE VILLAGE
TREASURY.
Be It ordained by tile
Council ot the Village of
Middleport as follows :
Sec . l . That Village Coun ·
cil hereby establish a
Street Levy Fund within
the Vi IICige Treasury .
SEC . II . That one half
(II&gt;J of the present 3 mill
Current Expense Levy
shall be deposited to the
credit of the Street Levy
Fund and expended only
for Street Resurfacing and
related expenses.
SEC. Ill. That Village
Council hereby establish a
Street Light Fund with in
the Village Treasury .
SEC . IV. That one half
( 1hl of the present 3 Mill
Current Expense Levy
shall be deposited to the
credit of the Street Light
Fund and expended for
Street Lighting obligations .
Sec. v. Th1s Ordinance
shall take effect and be in
force from and after
November 12, 1979.
Passed the 12th day of
November 1979.
Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
M. L. Kelly
President of
Counc il
(1 2) 4, 11 , 21c

Property
Transfers
Clifford Hall, Beulah M . Hall to
Phillip Fisher , Doris Ann Fisher.
parcels, Lebanon.
Allen L. King, Kay L. King to
Harley E. McDonald, lots, Middleport.
Clifford Jacobs, Mildred Jacobs,
Tina Jacobs to Hugh A. Mitchell,
parcels, Salisbury.
·· Clarence W. Barnett, Georgia
Barnett to Ubery Oil and Gas Corp.,

right of Wllf, Olive.
Richard Spencer, F lorence Spen·
cer to libery Oil and Gas Corp.,
right of way, Olive-Orange.
James W. Oveny, aec. to Jlionna
P . Overly , Cert. of Trans., Rutland.
•
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty A. Hutchlsoo, a ka Betty Ann Hutchison to
Harold C. Roush, Sue Ann Roush
1.07 acre~ , RuUand.
'
James P . Coode, Rhonda T . Coode
to Dr. James L . Conde, Inc., Lots
Middleport.
·
'
Brian 0 . Mullen, D . Michael
Mullen to David Dale price, Mary
Virginia Price, Parcei , Salisbury.
Lee C. Smith to Thmela K. Bradtoni, fonnerly Tamela K . Smith, I
Lots 45, 47, New Portland.
Wllliam Mowery to Agne s
Mowery, 1.7 A., Salisbury.
Leroy L. Mile~, Phyllis Miles,
Charles W. Miles, Mary J. Miles,
Ruby Maore, John Moore to Howard
L. Wr!tesel, Betty S. Wrltesel, 50

Acres, SUttqn.
Reed Jeffers, Helen Jeffers, Gene
Jeffe,rs, Martha Jeffers to Gary D.
Mosler, Janelle Mosier, Parcels,

Scipio.

E;ula L. Price, Leslie M . Prl~ to
Leslie M. Price, Eula L. Price, lot,
Pomeroy.

·:

Cal'!! o f T ha n k s

Hei ~ Wanted

THE FAM ILY of An gie
(Granny) Brunty exte nds
si ncere tha n'ks to re lat iv es,
fr iends and neig hbors, who
expressed their sympathy
wi th fl owers, food, m oney
and cards dur ing th is t1·m e
of toss. Specia l tha nks to
Vete r a n s
M e mor ia l
Hospital , Dr . Rldgeway
and staff for their car e,
a lso to Ew ings Funer al
Hom e, Re v. F r ee l and
Nor r is, Florence Ada ms
and Ma r jorie Grimm for
the ~ omf o rtin g memo r ial
service.

CARRIERS NEE DE 0 in
M id dl epo rt and
t he
Pom eroy areas. Ca ll the
Dai ly Senti nel between 8:30
and 5:00p.m .• m -2156.

Notices
GUN SHOOT EV E RY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTO RY·
CHOK E ONL Y. RAC I NE
GUN CL UB.
GUN SHOOT . Ra eine
Volunteer F ir e De pt .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p .m.
At their buildingin Bash an .
Factory choke guns only
GUN SHOOT every Sund ay
12 :00. Factory choke on ly.
Corn Hollow Gun Cl ub,
Rutland. Proceeds dona ted
to Boy Scout Troop 249.
ATT E NTION:
II M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) W ill
pay cash or certified chec k
for antiques and coli ec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. AI so,
guns, pocket watc hes and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVE R
COINS DATED 1964 0 R
EARLIER
(AN y
AMOUNT). DON'T LOS E
MONEY, SIMPLY PIC K
UP THE PHONE AN D
DIAL
614 · 992 · 511 3 ,
BROWN'S .
INCOME TAX SERVIC E .
Quarterly, Federal and all
state income tax repor ts·
will be prepared by appointmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cl iff
Rd .• Pomeroy .
1 PAY highest pri c es
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, et c.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mlddl,eport.
2ND SEMESTER class es
in ballet, tap and jazz now
open. Classes offered are
pre-school, ballet, ta p,
jazz, and 'adult exercise
jazz classes. Call Shlrle y
Carpenter, carpenter 's
Dance Studio, 949·27 10
before January 30th.
INCOME TAX servic e,
Federal and State. Wallac e
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
7228.

.

New 1980 Golf club grips.
Rubber, leather. Standard
oversized, undersized or
arthritic . 55.50 installed
John Teaford , 614·985·3961

CAKE DECORATIN G
classes beginning soon
Call now to registe r .
Carousel Confectionery
Middleport. 992·6342.

.

BAKER'S BUSY Be e
Ceramics, Tuppers Plains
Open Jan. 15 and will be
open TueSday and Thur .
sday 10 a.m. -3 p.m ., 7 p.m .
10 p.m . Reservations not
needed . Call 667·3252 for in .
formation. Pauline Baker .

HOM E
A DDRESS ERS
wonted . $500 per week
possible. No exper ience
requ ired . A.S. D., PO'
p r aw er 1.40069, Dall as, TX
75214.

Wanted to Bu~
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on Iargest
end . $12 p·er ton. Bu ndled
slab. SlOper ton . Dell vered
to Oh io Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
Pomer&lt;&gt;y m -2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., com plete
households. Write M.D.
Miller . Rt. 4, Pomero y or
call992·7760.
ANTIQU E S,
F UR ·
NITURE ; glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, M iddleport, OH . 992·
3161.
.,
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wed ding
bands. diamonds. Gol d or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasvre chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.
MARTIN' S APPRAIS AL.
Stop, think., are vou about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in bu ylng
and selling. Will oppr aise
new, used or antique furniture. One piece or com ·
plete household . Gold ,
silver and other old co ins,
china, glass, old toys, doils,
i ron banks, tools, anti que
clothing. razors, pocket
knives and other old ite ms .
Call 992·6370.
WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver co ins,
silverware. other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and anti que
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household . Call
m -6370 .
LIMITED TIME ON
Yellow brass, 30c lb., i
batteries $3 ea., No. 1
No. 2 coper, 60c and 70c
Radiators, 40c lb. Ci
aluminum 20c lb. 2 fl. sh
iron, $1.75 hd. Stove cast
hd. Motors cast $3.25
Long iron $1.25 hd. Ride
Salvoge, SR 124, Pomer
992·5468 .

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl ish
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698· 3290 . Bording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15. 50 .
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kenn el .
Boarding . Call367:0292.
POODLE GROOMIN G.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220
HILLCREST KENNE LS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
Indoor-outdoor faciliti es;
Also
AKC
register ed
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

F or Ren t
COUNTRY MOBILE. Home
Park, Rou te 33, nor th of
Pomeroy. L.rge lots.Coll l
992·7479.
3 AND 4 RM f ur nished ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.

LOST: envelope containin g
large sum of money on
Kroger's Parking Lot. 1I
found, cal1992·5596 .
LOST : female tiger cat i n
Racine area . Child 's pet
Reward . Caii949·249S.
BILLFOLD LOST Frida y
on street in Pomeroy . con
ta i ning large sum oI
money . 843·2472.
LOST OR STOLEN : Thu r . '
Sday, l male Walker coo n
hound, Rutland area . White
with small black spots on
right side. Tan head with
spotted ear. Tallooed SWM '
right ear, 5 digit number
left ear. Second time dog
has been taken in 4 months
All information kept con .
fi.dential. Call 742·2214 or
992·3023.

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plu s
some great gifts as a Sen
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right eway and get on
the eligibilitY list at 992
2156 or 992·2137.
RETAIL CLERK . Seeking
aggressive sales perSon to
assist customers. Must be
willing to work Frldoy
evenings. General dulles
include stocking. pricing •
merchandising, etc. Must
complete application at
Moore's. An l!&lt;lUal op .
portunity employer.

.

OPENING for pari-time
Home Repair Worker .
Muilt be skilledln cor·
pentry, plumbing, electrlcl
work and all around small
repairs.
Applications
available at the Meigs c o.
Senior Citizens Center . The
Meigs county Council on
Aging Is on equol op·
portunity employer.
·

Auto Sales
1974 Plymouth Scam p,
custom interior, 6 cy 1.,
auto., $1800 or trade. 742·
2451 .
1975 AMC Pacer . Good condillon. No rust. $1700. 742·
2957 .
1977 FIAT X19. Very Iow
mileage. Call Gary, 949·
2210 before 3 p.m.
19788 FORD '12 ton pick up
super cab with top per:
Good
condition .
Lo w
mileage. $4500. 949·2042.
1979 OLDS Dlesel98 Rege n·
cy 4 door sedan, A.c.,
cruise control, atl the eX·
tras, looks and runs li ke
new. 30 mpg. Will take
trades. 949·2763.
1974 MUSTANG Ghia, low
mileage . New tires. $1650 . 6
cyl., auto., 949·2042 .
1973 CHEVY PICKU P,
auto .
Contact
Eld on
Walburn. 380 s. 3rd st.,
Middleport. 992 ·2805.
1977 INTERNATIONA L
cab-over 350 tractor. 1978
lnleroationol cab-over KT·
450 . 247·3051 or 247·2063.

For Rent
TWO BEDROOM .l2x6o 1n
Syracuse. Carpeted, fu r·
ntshed. Woter paid. 1 chi Id
accepted. $·160 0 month plu s
security. Phone 992·1897.
ROOM AND BOARD, lau n··
dry·. Elderly or worklng
men . 992--6022 .
ONE BEDROOM house
adults only . m .-2598, .

'

TWO BEDROOM house
unfurnished. 992·3090.

WANTED :
Babysmer .
Rutland, one child . 57 a RESTER' S osslstant for
day. Phone 742·2878 -a fter ·senior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Call992-7787.
2:30 p,. m.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON
Vinyl &amp;

TWO BE DROOM tr ai ler .
Adults only 992·3324.
For Sal e
COAL , L IM ES TON E,
sa nd, grav el , c al cium
chlor ide, fertilize r , dog
food, and all types of sail.
Exce lsior Salt Wor ks, Inc..
E. Ma in St., Pom eroy. 992·
3891.

APPLE S- ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.
CUR E D
reasonably
25.U.

fi r ewood ,
priced . 742·

HAY FOR SALE . $1 per
bale, 80c by truckload .
Delivery can be arranged .
843·2795.

HAY and corn for sale.
Robert Dorst, Tuppers
Plains, OH . 614·667·3966.
ONE 8 II. flourescent light
with 2 tubes. l gun rack,
holds 4· 5 rifles or shotguns
with shelves that wi 11 hold
300 ·400 boxes of am ·
munition . Two
.f · ft .
flourescent lights with 2
tubes each, like new. m 3061 .
LADIES 13·14 maternity
clothes. Frigidaire jet ac·
tion washer, needs timer,
$35. 992· 7102.

Quality construction at
rusonable rates .
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block work
Concrete Finishi ng

• Replacement Win ·
dows
Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Guaranteed Wor k

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts.
Free
Estimates. All iwork
guaranteed . 20 years ex·
perience. Call Athens,
collect. Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins 1
797·2745 .

•New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·4-(Pd .)

one letter to MCh square. to form
. lour ordinary words .

j
r

JIM WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

Roger Hysell

Garage
mile off Rt~ 7 by-pass
on St. Rl. 124 toward
Rutland.
Jl~~

Let Us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

1

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30-tfc

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call992·2852
or 992-7235
12·13-pd.

992·2259
RACINE Recently
remodeled 1'12 story
frame with 2 bedroomS,
dining room , living
room , and kitchen. Full
basement, and 2 possible rooms upstairs.
Really nice. $25,00Q.OO.
RENTAl; PROPERTY
- 1 bedroom frame with
full basement. Make an
offer.
START A FUTURE!
NOW - with this nice
home In Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement,
ond a double lot. VA ap·
proved . .Excellent condi ·
lion. 526,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beaullful 2 story
home. 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, central air, ond a
full usuable basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted. $40,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge living room
with fireplace, new kif·
chen, 3 bedrooms. part
basement and 6 l!ICr es. •
$24,500.00.
BUSINESS
OP ·
PORTUNITY
nice
clean business with ex·
cellenl track record.
"The Kiddie Shop" In·
eludes all 1!&lt;1Uipmenl
necessory. come In for
details.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautflul home In excellent condition, appx .
2,600 sq. ft. of liVIng
.sp~ce, 2 story frame, ~
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
familY room. rec. room,
den, .large living rOom,
dining,. break. nook,
modern bu 111·1n kit.,
cfnlral air &amp; ·heat; tree
hbuse,
storage ,
$59,500.00.
.
REALTOR
Henry.E. Clela!ld, Jr.
. 992'6191
ASSOCIATES . .
. RotJr &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussei1949· 2UO
OFFICE PHONE
992·22S9

T UESDAY.J ANUARY 15,1910
6:3&lt;&gt;-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13:
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
llob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20 ;
Wi ld Wild World of Animals 33 .
7 0&lt;&gt;---Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; New lywed Game 6; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 33; News 10:
Children of the Thir d Wor ld 13;

CEPEN ~ - rJ
[J I . --

Love Amer ican Style 15; Sanfor d
&amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.

IJOOUSY
I
I I I KJ
~e 1N 6 MUTE HIMSE'L F•• I THINK
BUT 8LAZE5o!
CHRIS. CAME' TO FEEL •• WELL,
WH AT HAPpE'NEP
SO RT OF LI KE' A BROTHEil.
ALL TH05o E MONTHS
TO ALL WI LD Cll:I!!ATU R.ES!
IN THE W OOD5o ~ DID
ANIMALS FEEO TH IS
LITTL E KID AIJD HE LP
Hll,\ 5-URVIV!H!

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Other limes by aptlOint·
ment.
107 Sycamore IRur

Pomerey, O.

7:3&lt;&gt;-Holl ywood Squares 3: Baxter s
6; Joker 's Wi ld 8: Dick Cavett
33; Hol lywood Squar es 10; Sha
Na Na 13; Abb ott &amp; Costello 15;
All In The Famil y 17; Mac Neil ·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:0&lt;&gt;---Misadventures of Sheri ff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Days 6, 13 ; Wh ite
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20,33; M ov ie
" The Gr ea t Bank Robbery 17 .
8:3&lt;&gt;---0ne In A M ill ion 6, 13; 9: 0&lt;&gt;--Movle "Power " 3, 15; Th ree's
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Five.o'
8,10; Tr ibute to Ma r t in Luther
King Jr. 20.:;3.
9: 3&lt;&gt;-Taxl 6,1 3; 10:0&lt;&gt;-Hart to Hart
6,13 ; Paris 8,10; Search fo r the
Nil e 17; News 20; City Notebook
33.
10:3&lt;&gt;---0ver Easy 20; Ano ther Vo ice
33.
11: 00-New s 3.6.8. 10.13.15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Carry On Laughing 33.
11 :3Q-Tonight 3, 15 ; Mov ie " Li ke
Normal People" 6.13; Barnaby
Jones 8; AB C News 33; M ovie
" Anzlo" 10; Movie " A New Kind

WHAT THeY SEL.DOM
AR:E ON aA131e 5.

t
KJ I j

POPPYt:;O C:K!

THAT TI 6E' ~ IS ONE'
WILO C ~ E ATUR E TOO
MANY•• WITHOUT ADD;N e TH AT NITWIT
~OY TO OU I&gt;.

\NABYRD

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug-

gested by the abQve ea ~oo n

PR O EJ~.EM S !

l I ) - [ I l X ]"

Print answer here: " (

CAL L ·992· 7544

(Answers tomorrow)

. I Jumbles: FLUKE

Yes!e rday s

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

BAGGY DITHER CRAYON
crooked p o li tic i a n s k ep i th eir
golten gains-AT CJTY " HAUL "

Answ er .

Where t h e

11 1-

Jumble Book No. t .t, containing 110 puul.., la awallablalort1 .75poatpald
lrom Jumbla,clothls n•wapaper, Box 34. NOfWood, N.J. D7848 .1ncfuM your
nama, addreas, zip code and make check• payabla1o New.paparboolta.

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work, walkl and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Ratts

T uesday, J an. 15

LOSER

~T 1$ TIP 'ttJtJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CH TO

RACINE, O.
949·2748 or
992-7314
12-28-pd.

HE-~ ~1..!&amp;1\1~, ~f\.J01.l,A,IJT,

11-l~ OL.D

BRIDGE

Di&lt;G~ABI.~ I 86L.L.IGEORE~T

M;t&gt;..l-.1 .. .

AIJD AlJTMOI.li~TIC..

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
0

i

H. L WHITESEL

of Love" 17 .

'

,•Qa

All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
.cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
11·14-mo.

HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner : 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground .
Located 2'h miles from
Mine No. 2. 992·2145 for In·
formation .

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14)(65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale l2x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12)(55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12X52, 2 bedr.
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 30H7S·«24.

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel . Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

5Olo

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE , ATHENS.
614·592·3051 .
FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992·7559.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 room~ bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
avollable. Locoled approx .
7 m lies from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

tQ863 2
tQ9 ,

NEVER MET HIM
PERSONALL'1. BUT
JUDGING FROM H15
@i&gt;JJ$~.)MEN- HE'G A BAD

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 11h ba1hs, garage .
College Rd .. Syracuse . Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

~:.' 44 ACResv~~~~
Samt .
Rt. 124.
BUILDING

&gt;on

NICE building lots on CR
32, Eastern School District,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rl. 7. Priced on In·
specllon . 949·2763 for
showing.

LOTS Country, in town, on
Uat; line, woods,
clearect' ond on road
frontage • .
CALL 992 · 3325 or
992-3176 FOR A LOCA·
TION. FREE NEW
CALENDARS.

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. Can be par·
tially financed . Call GuidO
Girolaml, m -5786, 1G-6. No
realtors.
•

Housing
Headquarters

"·AND YOU WELL-A BAD CUSTDMER l'iiTH
HANDED READ'i CAGH ··· TH AT MAKEG
HIM A GOOO
ANNIE
OVER TO
'I'KNOW?

CUGTOMER ...

NO-WE HAVE MORE
IMPORTANT THINGG
TO DO. SAM GTOAT
WILL TURN HIM OVER
TO THE POLICE .

31;,. YR. OLD RANCH HOME - Just 4 miles from
Pomeroy . Quiet country llvl'ng In this beoullful 3
bedroom, two bath wllh centro! heot ond olr concll ·
lion. over 3 ocres of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just 544,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 7 rooms. 3 or 4 bedrooms. l'h both, garage.
$27,000.
ROCK SPRINGS - 2 ~droom and both, fully equipped kllchen, near (\1\eiOs High School, fully furniSh·
' ed. $25,000.
.
.
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnoce. $17,500.

RUTLAND - One bedroom down. two upstairs. on
, large corner 101. Just needs o lillie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Wes t

•

"

I, . •

0

~

'

10

,

,

I NT

Pass
Pass

4•
Pass

South
1•

+

Pass

/NEWSPA PER fo~N TEHPRI 5\~ ASSN l

(For a copy o f J ACOBY
MODERN, send $ 1 to. Win at
Bridge. " care o f fhis newspaper, P.O. Box 489. Rad•o Ci ty

S ta twn , N e w

York.

WaH;! We'l.l

not~ouch

his

tail!

It miqht

break the poor
little thinq's
spirit~

and

PIANO TUNING. Lone
Daniels. New phOne num·
~&gt;er. 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

'

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St . Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.

·· l

OON'T

REMEMBER
SlDNIN6 UP

YOUR
MEAAORY'S NOT
AS 60017 AS IT

BUT WHA T
YOUR

A~OUT

ARTHRITIS?

USED ID5E .

FOI&lt; HUSTLE
LESSONS!

ARNOLD AND DICK'S
Mechanic work. Open 9·5,
m -7768.

W 1LL DO odds and endS, ·
paneling, floor tHe, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992·6338. .
HOUSECLEANING on a
regular basis, 1 day per
week. References. Phone
949·2655.
W1LL CARE for the elderly '
In our home, trained and '
experienced. Phone m- ,
7314.

IEEHEE HE.E
r:.

'IO'RE A REAL
CORKER TATER

LITTLE CORKER AN'
BIG UNCORKER

CARPENTRY
WORK. :
Floors, ceilings, paneling,
992·275'1.

Stupid of

me to

thinltr
of it!

ACROSS
1 Top COII\bat
pilot
4 "Oh, I

40 Giant among
Giants

DOWN

1 Hwnb1e
- cook. ,
2 Extremely
awkward
7 Oompetent
3 Slippery
BEI customer
12 Manhandfe
4 Think
13 Actor
highly of
14 Doctrine
5 Ascend
15 Clangor
S Issue
16 Biblical
weapons
king
7 Surrounded
17 ·Pie or
by
pudding, e.g.
9 Old theater
19 Half
feature
a score
10 Forsake
20 Eli's
alma mater 11 Ulster color
21 " Lulu "
composer
22 Barter
24 Fry lightly
25 American
Beauty
26 Esau' s
27 " - little
teapot ... "
28TVterm
31German
name prefix
32 Excited
33 "There Again"
34 Saved wed·
dlng costs
, 36 Indian city
37 Prepared
to take off
36 Molt
39Snoop

I

Yesterday's Allswer
15 Stet no more 24 Hot 18 Marquis
26 Tacky
28 College
de 21 Actress,
yell
Barbara 29 Heron
22 Hot plat30 Gun charge
ter holder
35 Card spot
23 George
36 Kyushu
Eliot novel
volcano

b-+-+--+-

1 1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
Glveaw1y

•

.
----------~~~+

.

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

~OU 'RE GOING TO ~AVE

YMZ

TO GO OUT, AND f.IUNT
FOR t{OUR. OWN FOOD...

RY

'

,

.HUMANE
SOCIIETY. ·;
Adopt a . ltointltl( ·"'· i
Healthy, lhoti, wormed. ,
Donallons required. 992-:j
• · noon · 7 p.m.
,

'

work It:

One lel ter ~imply ' stands for another. In this sample A is
used for \he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ar e all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•

loveable shepheoid ;
Two beagle typea, ,
and fe~ales•. 992· :·,

to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

FLUFFY eared' shtpherd ,
type male, black and
brown. Blue tick hOund;.:
· mol~ . HumaneSOclfltV,992·•

-...,..--

N .Y .

100 19.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning:
Steam cleoned . Free
estimate.
Reosonoble
rates. Scotchguord. m6309 or 742·2348.

.

.

tricks
The biddmg started the
sa me wa y at the other table.
but Brachm an, si tting Soulh ,
did not hid three hearts. Belladonna. sitt in g West. bid three
spades whi ch beca me the
fina l l:ontract.
Pitta la. sittin g East . pl ayed
it well. but the defense was
accurate and he went down
two.

3.

The 96 boa rd fin als or the
recent world championship
foll owed a series of qualify 1ng
matches to eliminate four of
the si x teams. Ital y fini shed
first and car ri ed a 37 IMP
lead against Amer ica.
Bra chman and Passe II were

ELWOOD . BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, Irons, oll smoll
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highwoy
Garage on Route 7, 91153825.

: - - --

1:{){)-Tomorrow 3; New s 15;
1: 45---News 13 ; 1: So- News 17.
1: 55-Movie " Conquest of Coc hise"

~

Five Afghan type PIIPPtea. ,
Humone Society, 992·62*1. . ;

.

Pass

Eas t
Pass
2
Obi.

By Oswald Ja c o~y
and Alan Sontag

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 94'1·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

5 ACRES 0~ LAND on Hysell Run, beautifUl
building lot. $7,000.
.

Bill Childs, Branch Mir., Home 992·2449 ·
Rodney l)pwning, Broker,·Home 992-3731

North
Pass

Opening lead:+ 3

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool klls. Do-lt-yourself or ·
lei us install for you. D.
Bumgordner Soles, Inc.
992·5724.

6260.•

(ALL 992-2342

tKB

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : North

SYRACUSE -;- 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.

MIDDLEPORT - Building lot on S. Second, 63'&gt;&lt;53'.
$&lt;1,500._'.
.
.

t64

.J916 5!

IN · .
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been can· ·
celled?
.L ost
your :
operator's license? Phone .
992-2143. '

-MIDDLEPORT - Two bedrOOm brick only 1 block
from center ol. town. Low ulllllles. A bargain ot
$12,500.

EAST

tQJ912
• A K 10 4 2
• 10

tA i\5
4A3

Services Offered

REAL ESTA

WEST

t6 53
• ---• J 9 74
tK J I08 7Z

SOUTH

SEWING
MACHI'NE .:
Repairs,
service. oil
makes. 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and service. we shorpen
Scissors.

WAL~
PAPERING
palnllng, 742·2328.

11 ;

1\;0RTH

Business Services

216 E . 5eCDfld Sh'eel
COUNTRY SE I III'IUA real live stocked fish
pond . Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12'x50' . Gas furnace,
patio, shade trees, rural
water and all furniture
on Staet Rl . Only
$12,000.
DUPLEX POSSIBLE9 rooms, 1112 baths, 4 or 5
bedrooms, natural gas
heat and room for a
wood burner in the large
family room, 2 car
garoge with storage on
good corner lot near
schools.. Asking only
$15,000.
OWN A BUSINESS All stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartment
with bath and extra lot
on State Rt. 124. Only
$27,500.
BRICK RANCH - 3
nice bedrooms, 2 baths,
large living, dining,
covered patio, 2 car
garage, all this on the
river.

the l east experienced or the
three Am er ica n pairs. but
Captain Theus decid ed to have
them play the first two 16
board segments to lea ve his
veter ans rea dy for th e last 64 .
On the first 16 Soloway and
Go ldm an played opposit e
them. The Italians pl ayed
very well and although the
Ameri ca ns played well also.
the Italian lead was up to 43
by the end of t he sess ion.
The bidding by Garr ozzo.
South . and L ar ia. North. is
shown 1n the box wi th Gold m an doubling. The four heart
contract is not unreasonable.
but t he 5-0 trump brea k made
1t Imposs ib le. Actu all y. Ga r rozzo slipped in th e pia y and
managed to go down th ree

t A 10 4

Mobile Homes- Sale

60xl2 Kirkwood. Total elec·
lrlc. ll/2 baths. 3 bedrooms.
l2x16 bedroom added on.
Partially
furnished .
washer and dryer and air
conditioning .
Storage
building. Porches and un.derpinning. New carpet.
Lot In Letart Falls, OH,
close to river. 247·3895.

Tough qualifying matches

ROOFING

Real Estate for Sale

Headquarter•
Appliances .
'Safes ·" Service.

BY OWNER, house in
Pomeroy. Large living
room, dining room, built· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lots of carpet and paneling.
FA gas heat, full baement
Price up 30's. One-third
acre lot close to hospital
and school. taii992·S917 for
appointment.

1

-

ELECTRIC

Real Estate for Sale

·:

0

12:4G-Movie " Alfred the Great" 8;

GE~ERAL

Mgr.
: Phone 992·2111

LBjYBUL

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.

12·7· 1 mo.

and

POMEROY
LANDMAR"K
Jack w. Carsey

Television
Viewing

unscramble these four Jumbles .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
FHeral Housinl I
Veterans Admin. LOIM.

Free Estimiltes
After S P.M . 992· 5547
12·13·2 mo . pd .

10·19-1 mo.

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
-- buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
GOOD MIXED hay, $1
bale . · Raymond Cotterill,
Harrisonvile, 742·2082.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

.Alum i num Siding
elnsolalion
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows

-------------------,

APPLES
CIDE R
HON E Y . Fitzpatr ic k Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesv i lle, 669·
3785.

MALE SABLE and wh ite
full blooded collie . 1 ye ar
old. $35 . 992-7102 .

Lost and Found

DICK TR,ACY ·

~~~~~CH~~~~CHCHDCIC~CMCHDCICMI~CMCHICMIMI~~~~~~

Business Services

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBoblee

~ ~~~ ·.e.

~

.

ASTRO•GRAPH

1ffi'1f\'Mt ~'if

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15,1980

GR

TJ0.A

SZVYMC

i

.

~;.i,!~ -

MYN
NY

.,'

EN

YSVGCZX

E V V.
E VV

NY

MYN

ER
NY

SZ VYM C
NY

'I:'MZRZVI .

C QEOGEM
_: SEVNEREQ
Yesterday'~ Crypioquote• LOVE IS THE WISDOM OF THE
FOOL AND THE FOLLY OF THE WISE .-8AMUEL JOHNSON
rt\

ltiO' Kino ,F••tur•t Sync!lctt•, Inc.
I

17; 3: 25-M ov ie " Eight Iron
Men " 17 ; 5: 15- Love, Ameri can
Style 17.
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 16,1980
5: 45-Farm Report 13; Wor ld at
L arg e 17 ; 5:5o-PTL Club 13.
6 :OQ-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15 .
6:3o-Christopher Closeup 10; News
17 : 6·45-Morn ing Report 3;
6: 50- Good
Morning
Wes t
Virgin ia 13; 6: 55-News 13.
I :OQ-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Am eri ca 6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morn ing . 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges' Litlle Rascals 17: 7:15A.M . Weather 33.
7:3G-Family Aff air 10; Fr ee styl e
33; 7:55-C huc k White Reports
10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10 ; Family
Altair 17 . Sesame St. 33 .
8:3G-Romper Room 17; 9:0G-Bob
Braun 3; Big Va lley 6; Porky Pig
8: One Day At A Time 10; Phil
Donahue 13,15 ; Lucy Show 17 .
9:3o- Bob Newhart 8; Lov e of Life
10; Green Acres 17 .
10:0&lt;&gt;---C ard Sharks 3,15 ; Edge of
Nigh t 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Mov iP
"The Story on Page One" 17.
10 : 30- Ho l lywood ~quares 3. 15 ;
$20.000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whewl 8,10.
10 :55- CBS News 8; House Cal l 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8, 10.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortun e 3, 15 :
Fami ly Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
10.33.
•
12 :00- New scenter
3;
News
6,8,1 0,1 3; Chain Reaction 15.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Health Field 15;
Movie " All Hands on Deck " 17;
E lee. Co. 20.33.
1: 00-Days of Our Lives 3,15, All My
Ch i ldren 6.13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
· ~: 3o-As The World Turn s 8,10;
1:0&lt;&gt;---Doctors 3,15; One l;. ife to
Live 6.13 ; 2: 25-Ne·Ns 17 .
1:3G-Another World 3, 15; Guid ing '
Light 8,10; Gigglesnorl Hotel 17 .
3:0&lt;&gt;---General Hospital 6.13 ; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Soundstage 20.
3:3G-One Day At A Time 8; Jo ker 's
Wild 10 ; Flintslones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6: Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St. 20,33 .
Gomer Pyl e lO ; Real McCoy s 13 ;
Spectreman 17.
4: 3G-Lone Ranger 3; Petti coat
Junction 8; Brady Bun ch 10 ;
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
Gilligan 's Is. 17 .
5: 00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Roger s
20,33.
5:3G-MASH 3: News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; E lee. Co . 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-New s 3,8,10 ,13 ,1 5; AB C News
6 ; Carol Burnett 17 ; 3-2-l Contact
20,33.
6:3G-N I&gt;C News 3.15; ABC News 13;
Carol Bvrnett 6; CBS News 8.10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Al egre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:0&lt;&gt;---Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; News
.. lO; Love Ameri can Style 15:
~antord &amp; son 17: Olck Cavett 20 .
7: 30- Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6·: Joker's Wild 8;
Di.ck Cavett ,33 ; The Judge 10;
Wild Kingdom I S; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil -Lehr er
Report 20 ; Eight Is Enough 6 ;
Young Mav erick 10 ; True
Position 8; Great Performances
20.33 ; Movie " Mi ster Rogerts"
17 .
.
9 :00- Dilf'rent
Strokes
3,15 ;
Charlie' s Angels 6; M 0vle " If
Thlrigs Wer e Different " 8,10;
World 20,33.
9:3Q-Hello, Larry 3,15; Charlie' s
Angels 13 .
.
10:oo-Best of Saturday Night Live
3.15; Vegas 6,13 : 'News 20 ; Aloha,
Bruyeres 33.
10 :3G-NBA Basketball 17; Over
Easy 20.
11 : 00- News ·3, 6,8,10,1 3,15 : Dick
Cavett 20: Wodehouse Playhouse
33.
11 :3o-Tonlght3,1S: Love Boat6,13;
Mary Hartman 8; Movie " Key
Largo" 10; ABC News 33 .
12: oo.-Movle " Snowbeast" 8;
. i2 : 40~ Baretta 6, 13; 12 : 45:t.omorrow 3; , News 15 .
1
1: 50- News 13 ; 2: 45- N fl w• 17 r 1'
2 :5o-Movie "Man In the t&gt;Ark" ·•1
·17 ; 4: 2G-Movl e " Odongo" 17.,
•

I

·

�•
. 8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15, 19110

Your Best Buys Are }"' o und in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wedneeday, Jan. 16

..

WANT AD
CHARGES

Bernice Bede Osol_.

I day
2days
3days

10 Wordl or Under
CUll
lllartl•

1.00

1.2:5;

1.50

U O!

1.e.J

6da,..

3.00

z.=:
3.1l.

Each word over the minlmum
,15 wlrtbl is 4 cent.. per word ptr
day . AdJ rmning othe~than con..
secutlve days will be charged at,

January 18, 1980
Be led by youl highest 1deals and
go after your dreams. because
this com1ng year Lady Luck will
support anyth1ng on wh1ch she
puts her stamp of approval
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. t9)
You 're espec1ally lucky today
w1th tll ing s .,au personally
super\'lse or manage You won 't
' .'A 1traid to be aggressive and
•..; show ot hers the way . Find
ou t more of wllat 11es shead for
you in the year fo ll owing your
birthd ay by send ing lor you r
copy of AstroMGraph Leller Mall
$1 for each to Ast ro-Graph, Box
48~. Radio City Stat ion. N Y.
10019. Be sure to specify b1rth
date.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You 're qwte mtultl\'e today 1n
mak ing changes to attain what
yo~.- desire Trust your JUdgment .
It won 't lead you astray .
PISCES (Feb. 2()..M• rch 20)
Fnene;ls will go out ol their way
toclay to help you m what you are
try1 ng to accomplish Thei r
as3istance will prove lucky for
you.
AF'IIES (M arch 21 .. Apr il 19} Th1s
should be a very fortu nate day
for you worl&lt;. or careerw1se
There h&gt; an abundance ol opportunity abou t you that could bring
advancement or added mcome
TAURUS (April 2().May 20) Persons w1th whom you come 1n
contact today will be ex tremely
respons1ve to your charm in g and
gallant ways. as well as the high
i n tegr~t y you reflect
GEMINI (M•Y 21 -Juna 20) It' s
not tust business as usual lor you
today. The time Is 'ripe to brin g
into being something important
for whic h you 've been hoping
C ANCER (Jun• 21 .. July 22 )
Today ts a day wt'len cooper alton
is at your beck and call . and oth ers are willing to give you even
more than you asked lor.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Direct
your energtes wisely tod ay. That
which you put your hand to will
yield largerMthan-normal returns.
Go after the biggies.
VIRGO (AuQ . 23·Sapt. 22) II
you 're looking for romance you
have an exce llent chan ce of finding it today. You ' re highly
appealing to the opposite sex.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Now IS
!he time lo lie down any situaUons that mtght ha\le been tough
for you to conclude 1n the past.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You
could receive some good news
lhal will inspire you to taK e a
bOlder course of actton today.
Th1s will benefit you and a close

the l day rate.
In mOrnoey. C&lt;lnl of 1'1lanlr.
and Obituary: 6 cent.!!l per word,
$3.00 minimum. Cub in ad ..
vance.
Mobile Hmle sales and Yard,
sales are accepted only w1ttt
cash with order. 25 cent charge'
for 8dB carrying Bo.: Number 1Q

Care of The Sentinel.

The Publisher reaerves

uJ

right l.n edit or reject any ads
deem ed obj ectional.
Thei
Publisher wtU not be respanslble
for more than one incorrect if' ~
sertioo.

Phone 11!12-2116

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVER,.ISING
DEADUNES .
Monday
Noon Ort Saturday
Tu..W.y
tl1ru Frtdliy
4P.M.
tbe day before publication

Sundliy
tP.M.
J;Tiday afternoon

- - - - - --""
Lost and Found
REWARD to person retur·
ning or giving information
leading to return of purse
lost in vicinity of 2nd St. or
Powell's
Super Vatu ,
Pomeroy . No questions
asked. Pur se contained
glasses, keys and personal
papers.
Keep money,
collect additional reward.
Call collect. 992·2588.

associate.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)
Both recognition and material
benefit s could be yours today lor
your excellent perl ormancf . You
won 't be gett1ng anythmg you
don 't deser\'e .
!NE'f\'Sf'Af'Efl ENTE APAISE ASSN )

LEGAL NOTICE
The State Prime Sponsor
Council will hold a meeting
on January 23, 1980, ot 9:30
A.M. at the Christopher Inn
located at 300 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Oh io.
( I) IS, lie

Russia had the largest
nwnber of movie houses in
the world in 1975 - 145,600,
according to the latest data
in the United Nations'
Statisticill Year book. In the
same year, Italy had
12,471, the United States
11,250, France 5,5a and the
United Kingdom I ,525.

ORDINANCE
NO. 1087·79
An
Ordinance
to
ESTABLISH A STREET
LEVY
FUND
AND
STREET LIGHT FUND
WITHIN THE VILLAGE
TREASURY.
Be It ordained by tile
Council ot the Village of
Middleport as follows :
Sec . l . That Village Coun ·
cil hereby establish a
Street Levy Fund within
the Vi IICige Treasury .
SEC . II . That one half
(II&gt;J of the present 3 mill
Current Expense Levy
shall be deposited to the
credit of the Street Levy
Fund and expended only
for Street Resurfacing and
related expenses.
SEC. Ill. That Village
Council hereby establish a
Street Light Fund with in
the Village Treasury .
SEC . IV. That one half
( 1hl of the present 3 Mill
Current Expense Levy
shall be deposited to the
credit of the Street Light
Fund and expended for
Street Lighting obligations .
Sec. v. Th1s Ordinance
shall take effect and be in
force from and after
November 12, 1979.
Passed the 12th day of
November 1979.
Attest : Gene Grate
Clerk
M. L. Kelly
President of
Counc il
(1 2) 4, 11 , 21c

Property
Transfers
Clifford Hall, Beulah M . Hall to
Phillip Fisher , Doris Ann Fisher.
parcels, Lebanon.
Allen L. King, Kay L. King to
Harley E. McDonald, lots, Middleport.
Clifford Jacobs, Mildred Jacobs,
Tina Jacobs to Hugh A. Mitchell,
parcels, Salisbury.
·· Clarence W. Barnett, Georgia
Barnett to Ubery Oil and Gas Corp.,

right of Wllf, Olive.
Richard Spencer, F lorence Spen·
cer to libery Oil and Gas Corp.,
right of way, Olive-Orange.
James W. Oveny, aec. to Jlionna
P . Overly , Cert. of Trans., Rutland.
•
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty A. Hutchlsoo, a ka Betty Ann Hutchison to
Harold C. Roush, Sue Ann Roush
1.07 acre~ , RuUand.
'
James P . Coode, Rhonda T . Coode
to Dr. James L . Conde, Inc., Lots
Middleport.
·
'
Brian 0 . Mullen, D . Michael
Mullen to David Dale price, Mary
Virginia Price, Parcei , Salisbury.
Lee C. Smith to Thmela K. Bradtoni, fonnerly Tamela K . Smith, I
Lots 45, 47, New Portland.
Wllliam Mowery to Agne s
Mowery, 1.7 A., Salisbury.
Leroy L. Mile~, Phyllis Miles,
Charles W. Miles, Mary J. Miles,
Ruby Maore, John Moore to Howard
L. Wr!tesel, Betty S. Wrltesel, 50

Acres, SUttqn.
Reed Jeffers, Helen Jeffers, Gene
Jeffe,rs, Martha Jeffers to Gary D.
Mosler, Janelle Mosier, Parcels,

Scipio.

E;ula L. Price, Leslie M . Prl~ to
Leslie M. Price, Eula L. Price, lot,
Pomeroy.

·:

Cal'!! o f T ha n k s

Hei ~ Wanted

THE FAM ILY of An gie
(Granny) Brunty exte nds
si ncere tha n'ks to re lat iv es,
fr iends and neig hbors, who
expressed their sympathy
wi th fl owers, food, m oney
and cards dur ing th is t1·m e
of toss. Specia l tha nks to
Vete r a n s
M e mor ia l
Hospital , Dr . Rldgeway
and staff for their car e,
a lso to Ew ings Funer al
Hom e, Re v. F r ee l and
Nor r is, Florence Ada ms
and Ma r jorie Grimm for
the ~ omf o rtin g memo r ial
service.

CARRIERS NEE DE 0 in
M id dl epo rt and
t he
Pom eroy areas. Ca ll the
Dai ly Senti nel between 8:30
and 5:00p.m .• m -2156.

Notices
GUN SHOOT EV E RY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTO RY·
CHOK E ONL Y. RAC I NE
GUN CL UB.
GUN SHOOT . Ra eine
Volunteer F ir e De pt .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p .m.
At their buildingin Bash an .
Factory choke guns only
GUN SHOOT every Sund ay
12 :00. Factory choke on ly.
Corn Hollow Gun Cl ub,
Rutland. Proceeds dona ted
to Boy Scout Troop 249.
ATT E NTION:
II M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) W ill
pay cash or certified chec k
for antiques and coli ec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. AI so,
guns, pocket watc hes and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVE R
COINS DATED 1964 0 R
EARLIER
(AN y
AMOUNT). DON'T LOS E
MONEY, SIMPLY PIC K
UP THE PHONE AN D
DIAL
614 · 992 · 511 3 ,
BROWN'S .
INCOME TAX SERVIC E .
Quarterly, Federal and all
state income tax repor ts·
will be prepared by appointmenl. 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cl iff
Rd .• Pomeroy .
1 PAY highest pri c es
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, et c.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mlddl,eport.
2ND SEMESTER class es
in ballet, tap and jazz now
open. Classes offered are
pre-school, ballet, ta p,
jazz, and 'adult exercise
jazz classes. Call Shlrle y
Carpenter, carpenter 's
Dance Studio, 949·27 10
before January 30th.
INCOME TAX servic e,
Federal and State. Wallac e
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
7228.

.

New 1980 Golf club grips.
Rubber, leather. Standard
oversized, undersized or
arthritic . 55.50 installed
John Teaford , 614·985·3961

CAKE DECORATIN G
classes beginning soon
Call now to registe r .
Carousel Confectionery
Middleport. 992·6342.

.

BAKER'S BUSY Be e
Ceramics, Tuppers Plains
Open Jan. 15 and will be
open TueSday and Thur .
sday 10 a.m. -3 p.m ., 7 p.m .
10 p.m . Reservations not
needed . Call 667·3252 for in .
formation. Pauline Baker .

HOM E
A DDRESS ERS
wonted . $500 per week
possible. No exper ience
requ ired . A.S. D., PO'
p r aw er 1.40069, Dall as, TX
75214.

Wanted to Bu~
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on Iargest
end . $12 p·er ton. Bu ndled
slab. SlOper ton . Dell vered
to Oh io Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
Pomer&lt;&gt;y m -2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., com plete
households. Write M.D.
Miller . Rt. 4, Pomero y or
call992·7760.
ANTIQU E S,
F UR ·
NITURE ; glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, M iddleport, OH . 992·
3161.
.,
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wed ding
bands. diamonds. Gol d or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasvre chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.
MARTIN' S APPRAIS AL.
Stop, think., are vou about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in bu ylng
and selling. Will oppr aise
new, used or antique furniture. One piece or com ·
plete household . Gold ,
silver and other old co ins,
china, glass, old toys, doils,
i ron banks, tools, anti que
clothing. razors, pocket
knives and other old ite ms .
Call 992·6370.
WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver co ins,
silverware. other gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and anti que
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household . Call
m -6370 .
LIMITED TIME ON
Yellow brass, 30c lb., i
batteries $3 ea., No. 1
No. 2 coper, 60c and 70c
Radiators, 40c lb. Ci
aluminum 20c lb. 2 fl. sh
iron, $1.75 hd. Stove cast
hd. Motors cast $3.25
Long iron $1.25 hd. Ride
Salvoge, SR 124, Pomer
992·5468 .

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl ish
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698· 3290 . Bording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15. 50 .
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kenn el .
Boarding . Call367:0292.
POODLE GROOMIN G.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220
HILLCREST KENNE LS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
Indoor-outdoor faciliti es;
Also
AKC
register ed
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

F or Ren t
COUNTRY MOBILE. Home
Park, Rou te 33, nor th of
Pomeroy. L.rge lots.Coll l
992·7479.
3 AND 4 RM f ur nished ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.

LOST: envelope containin g
large sum of money on
Kroger's Parking Lot. 1I
found, cal1992·5596 .
LOST : female tiger cat i n
Racine area . Child 's pet
Reward . Caii949·249S.
BILLFOLD LOST Frida y
on street in Pomeroy . con
ta i ning large sum oI
money . 843·2472.
LOST OR STOLEN : Thu r . '
Sday, l male Walker coo n
hound, Rutland area . White
with small black spots on
right side. Tan head with
spotted ear. Tallooed SWM '
right ear, 5 digit number
left ear. Second time dog
has been taken in 4 months
All information kept con .
fi.dential. Call 742·2214 or
992·3023.

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plu s
some great gifts as a Sen
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right eway and get on
the eligibilitY list at 992
2156 or 992·2137.
RETAIL CLERK . Seeking
aggressive sales perSon to
assist customers. Must be
willing to work Frldoy
evenings. General dulles
include stocking. pricing •
merchandising, etc. Must
complete application at
Moore's. An l!&lt;lUal op .
portunity employer.

.

OPENING for pari-time
Home Repair Worker .
Muilt be skilledln cor·
pentry, plumbing, electrlcl
work and all around small
repairs.
Applications
available at the Meigs c o.
Senior Citizens Center . The
Meigs county Council on
Aging Is on equol op·
portunity employer.
·

Auto Sales
1974 Plymouth Scam p,
custom interior, 6 cy 1.,
auto., $1800 or trade. 742·
2451 .
1975 AMC Pacer . Good condillon. No rust. $1700. 742·
2957 .
1977 FIAT X19. Very Iow
mileage. Call Gary, 949·
2210 before 3 p.m.
19788 FORD '12 ton pick up
super cab with top per:
Good
condition .
Lo w
mileage. $4500. 949·2042.
1979 OLDS Dlesel98 Rege n·
cy 4 door sedan, A.c.,
cruise control, atl the eX·
tras, looks and runs li ke
new. 30 mpg. Will take
trades. 949·2763.
1974 MUSTANG Ghia, low
mileage . New tires. $1650 . 6
cyl., auto., 949·2042 .
1973 CHEVY PICKU P,
auto .
Contact
Eld on
Walburn. 380 s. 3rd st.,
Middleport. 992 ·2805.
1977 INTERNATIONA L
cab-over 350 tractor. 1978
lnleroationol cab-over KT·
450 . 247·3051 or 247·2063.

For Rent
TWO BEDROOM .l2x6o 1n
Syracuse. Carpeted, fu r·
ntshed. Woter paid. 1 chi Id
accepted. $·160 0 month plu s
security. Phone 992·1897.
ROOM AND BOARD, lau n··
dry·. Elderly or worklng
men . 992--6022 .
ONE BEDROOM house
adults only . m .-2598, .

'

TWO BEDROOM house
unfurnished. 992·3090.

WANTED :
Babysmer .
Rutland, one child . 57 a RESTER' S osslstant for
day. Phone 742·2878 -a fter ·senior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Call992-7787.
2:30 p,. m.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON
Vinyl &amp;

TWO BE DROOM tr ai ler .
Adults only 992·3324.
For Sal e
COAL , L IM ES TON E,
sa nd, grav el , c al cium
chlor ide, fertilize r , dog
food, and all types of sail.
Exce lsior Salt Wor ks, Inc..
E. Ma in St., Pom eroy. 992·
3891.

APPLE S- ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.
CUR E D
reasonably
25.U.

fi r ewood ,
priced . 742·

HAY FOR SALE . $1 per
bale, 80c by truckload .
Delivery can be arranged .
843·2795.

HAY and corn for sale.
Robert Dorst, Tuppers
Plains, OH . 614·667·3966.
ONE 8 II. flourescent light
with 2 tubes. l gun rack,
holds 4· 5 rifles or shotguns
with shelves that wi 11 hold
300 ·400 boxes of am ·
munition . Two
.f · ft .
flourescent lights with 2
tubes each, like new. m 3061 .
LADIES 13·14 maternity
clothes. Frigidaire jet ac·
tion washer, needs timer,
$35. 992· 7102.

Quality construction at
rusonable rates .
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block work
Concrete Finishi ng

• Replacement Win ·
dows
Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Guaranteed Wor k

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts.
Free
Estimates. All iwork
guaranteed . 20 years ex·
perience. Call Athens,
collect. Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins 1
797·2745 .

•New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·4-(Pd .)

one letter to MCh square. to form
. lour ordinary words .

j
r

JIM WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

Roger Hysell

Garage
mile off Rt~ 7 by-pass
on St. Rl. 124 toward
Rutland.
Jl~~

Let Us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

1

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30-tfc

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call992·2852
or 992-7235
12·13-pd.

992·2259
RACINE Recently
remodeled 1'12 story
frame with 2 bedroomS,
dining room , living
room , and kitchen. Full
basement, and 2 possible rooms upstairs.
Really nice. $25,00Q.OO.
RENTAl; PROPERTY
- 1 bedroom frame with
full basement. Make an
offer.
START A FUTURE!
NOW - with this nice
home In Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement,
ond a double lot. VA ap·
proved . .Excellent condi ·
lion. 526,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beaullful 2 story
home. 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, central air, ond a
full usuable basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted. $40,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge living room
with fireplace, new kif·
chen, 3 bedrooms. part
basement and 6 l!ICr es. •
$24,500.00.
BUSINESS
OP ·
PORTUNITY
nice
clean business with ex·
cellenl track record.
"The Kiddie Shop" In·
eludes all 1!&lt;1Uipmenl
necessory. come In for
details.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Beautflul home In excellent condition, appx .
2,600 sq. ft. of liVIng
.sp~ce, 2 story frame, ~
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
familY room. rec. room,
den, .large living rOom,
dining,. break. nook,
modern bu 111·1n kit.,
cfnlral air &amp; ·heat; tree
hbuse,
storage ,
$59,500.00.
.
REALTOR
Henry.E. Clela!ld, Jr.
. 992'6191
ASSOCIATES . .
. RotJr &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussei1949· 2UO
OFFICE PHONE
992·22S9

T UESDAY.J ANUARY 15,1910
6:3&lt;&gt;-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13:
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
llob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20 ;
Wi ld Wild World of Animals 33 .
7 0&lt;&gt;---Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; New lywed Game 6; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 33; News 10:
Children of the Thir d Wor ld 13;

CEPEN ~ - rJ
[J I . --

Love Amer ican Style 15; Sanfor d
&amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.

IJOOUSY
I
I I I KJ
~e 1N 6 MUTE HIMSE'L F•• I THINK
BUT 8LAZE5o!
CHRIS. CAME' TO FEEL •• WELL,
WH AT HAPpE'NEP
SO RT OF LI KE' A BROTHEil.
ALL TH05o E MONTHS
TO ALL WI LD Cll:I!!ATU R.ES!
IN THE W OOD5o ~ DID
ANIMALS FEEO TH IS
LITTL E KID AIJD HE LP
Hll,\ 5-URVIV!H!

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Other limes by aptlOint·
ment.
107 Sycamore IRur

Pomerey, O.

7:3&lt;&gt;-Holl ywood Squares 3: Baxter s
6; Joker 's Wi ld 8: Dick Cavett
33; Hol lywood Squar es 10; Sha
Na Na 13; Abb ott &amp; Costello 15;
All In The Famil y 17; Mac Neil ·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:0&lt;&gt;---Misadventures of Sheri ff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Days 6, 13 ; Wh ite
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20,33; M ov ie
" The Gr ea t Bank Robbery 17 .
8:3&lt;&gt;---0ne In A M ill ion 6, 13; 9: 0&lt;&gt;--Movle "Power " 3, 15; Th ree's
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Five.o'
8,10; Tr ibute to Ma r t in Luther
King Jr. 20.:;3.
9: 3&lt;&gt;-Taxl 6,1 3; 10:0&lt;&gt;-Hart to Hart
6,13 ; Paris 8,10; Search fo r the
Nil e 17; News 20; City Notebook
33.
10:3&lt;&gt;---0ver Easy 20; Ano ther Vo ice
33.
11: 00-New s 3.6.8. 10.13.15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Carry On Laughing 33.
11 :3Q-Tonight 3, 15 ; Mov ie " Li ke
Normal People" 6.13; Barnaby
Jones 8; AB C News 33; M ovie
" Anzlo" 10; Movie " A New Kind

WHAT THeY SEL.DOM
AR:E ON aA131e 5.

t
KJ I j

POPPYt:;O C:K!

THAT TI 6E' ~ IS ONE'
WILO C ~ E ATUR E TOO
MANY•• WITHOUT ADD;N e TH AT NITWIT
~OY TO OU I&gt;.

\NABYRD

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug-

gested by the abQve ea ~oo n

PR O EJ~.EM S !

l I ) - [ I l X ]"

Print answer here: " (

CAL L ·992· 7544

(Answers tomorrow)

. I Jumbles: FLUKE

Yes!e rday s

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

BAGGY DITHER CRAYON
crooked p o li tic i a n s k ep i th eir
golten gains-AT CJTY " HAUL "

Answ er .

Where t h e

11 1-

Jumble Book No. t .t, containing 110 puul.., la awallablalort1 .75poatpald
lrom Jumbla,clothls n•wapaper, Box 34. NOfWood, N.J. D7848 .1ncfuM your
nama, addreas, zip code and make check• payabla1o New.paparboolta.

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work, walkl and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Ratts

T uesday, J an. 15

LOSER

~T 1$ TIP 'ttJtJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CH TO

RACINE, O.
949·2748 or
992-7314
12-28-pd.

HE-~ ~1..!&amp;1\1~, ~f\.J01.l,A,IJT,

11-l~ OL.D

BRIDGE

Di&lt;G~ABI.~ I 86L.L.IGEORE~T

M;t&gt;..l-.1 .. .

AIJD AlJTMOI.li~TIC..

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
0

i

H. L WHITESEL

of Love" 17 .

'

,•Qa

All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
.cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
11·14-mo.

HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner : 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground .
Located 2'h miles from
Mine No. 2. 992·2145 for In·
formation .

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14)(65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale l2x63 with ex·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12)(55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12X52, 2 bedr.
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 30H7S·«24.

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel . Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

5Olo

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING·VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE , ATHENS.
614·592·3051 .
FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992·7559.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 room~ bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
avollable. Locoled approx .
7 m lies from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

tQ863 2
tQ9 ,

NEVER MET HIM
PERSONALL'1. BUT
JUDGING FROM H15
@i&gt;JJ$~.)MEN- HE'G A BAD

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 11h ba1hs, garage .
College Rd .. Syracuse . Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

~:.' 44 ACResv~~~~
Samt .
Rt. 124.
BUILDING

&gt;on

NICE building lots on CR
32, Eastern School District,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rl. 7. Priced on In·
specllon . 949·2763 for
showing.

LOTS Country, in town, on
Uat; line, woods,
clearect' ond on road
frontage • .
CALL 992 · 3325 or
992-3176 FOR A LOCA·
TION. FREE NEW
CALENDARS.

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot. Can be par·
tially financed . Call GuidO
Girolaml, m -5786, 1G-6. No
realtors.
•

Housing
Headquarters

"·AND YOU WELL-A BAD CUSTDMER l'iiTH
HANDED READ'i CAGH ··· TH AT MAKEG
HIM A GOOO
ANNIE
OVER TO
'I'KNOW?

CUGTOMER ...

NO-WE HAVE MORE
IMPORTANT THINGG
TO DO. SAM GTOAT
WILL TURN HIM OVER
TO THE POLICE .

31;,. YR. OLD RANCH HOME - Just 4 miles from
Pomeroy . Quiet country llvl'ng In this beoullful 3
bedroom, two bath wllh centro! heot ond olr concll ·
lion. over 3 ocres of flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just 544,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot. 7 rooms. 3 or 4 bedrooms. l'h both, garage.
$27,000.
ROCK SPRINGS - 2 ~droom and both, fully equipped kllchen, near (\1\eiOs High School, fully furniSh·
' ed. $25,000.
.
.
POMEROY - Lincoln Hts. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnoce. $17,500.

RUTLAND - One bedroom down. two upstairs. on
, large corner 101. Just needs o lillie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Wes t

•

"

I, . •

0

~

'

10

,

,

I NT

Pass
Pass

4•
Pass

South
1•

+

Pass

/NEWSPA PER fo~N TEHPRI 5\~ ASSN l

(For a copy o f J ACOBY
MODERN, send $ 1 to. Win at
Bridge. " care o f fhis newspaper, P.O. Box 489. Rad•o Ci ty

S ta twn , N e w

York.

WaH;! We'l.l

not~ouch

his

tail!

It miqht

break the poor
little thinq's
spirit~

and

PIANO TUNING. Lone
Daniels. New phOne num·
~&gt;er. 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

'

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St . Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.

·· l

OON'T

REMEMBER
SlDNIN6 UP

YOUR
MEAAORY'S NOT
AS 60017 AS IT

BUT WHA T
YOUR

A~OUT

ARTHRITIS?

USED ID5E .

FOI&lt; HUSTLE
LESSONS!

ARNOLD AND DICK'S
Mechanic work. Open 9·5,
m -7768.

W 1LL DO odds and endS, ·
paneling, floor tHe, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992·6338. .
HOUSECLEANING on a
regular basis, 1 day per
week. References. Phone
949·2655.
W1LL CARE for the elderly '
In our home, trained and '
experienced. Phone m- ,
7314.

IEEHEE HE.E
r:.

'IO'RE A REAL
CORKER TATER

LITTLE CORKER AN'
BIG UNCORKER

CARPENTRY
WORK. :
Floors, ceilings, paneling,
992·275'1.

Stupid of

me to

thinltr
of it!

ACROSS
1 Top COII\bat
pilot
4 "Oh, I

40 Giant among
Giants

DOWN

1 Hwnb1e
- cook. ,
2 Extremely
awkward
7 Oompetent
3 Slippery
BEI customer
12 Manhandfe
4 Think
13 Actor
highly of
14 Doctrine
5 Ascend
15 Clangor
S Issue
16 Biblical
weapons
king
7 Surrounded
17 ·Pie or
by
pudding, e.g.
9 Old theater
19 Half
feature
a score
10 Forsake
20 Eli's
alma mater 11 Ulster color
21 " Lulu "
composer
22 Barter
24 Fry lightly
25 American
Beauty
26 Esau' s
27 " - little
teapot ... "
28TVterm
31German
name prefix
32 Excited
33 "There Again"
34 Saved wed·
dlng costs
, 36 Indian city
37 Prepared
to take off
36 Molt
39Snoop

I

Yesterday's Allswer
15 Stet no more 24 Hot 18 Marquis
26 Tacky
28 College
de 21 Actress,
yell
Barbara 29 Heron
22 Hot plat30 Gun charge
ter holder
35 Card spot
23 George
36 Kyushu
Eliot novel
volcano

b-+-+--+-

1 1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
Glveaw1y

•

.
----------~~~+

.

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

~OU 'RE GOING TO ~AVE

YMZ

TO GO OUT, AND f.IUNT
FOR t{OUR. OWN FOOD...

RY

'

,

.HUMANE
SOCIIETY. ·;
Adopt a . ltointltl( ·"'· i
Healthy, lhoti, wormed. ,
Donallons required. 992-:j
• · noon · 7 p.m.
,

'

work It:

One lel ter ~imply ' stands for another. In this sample A is
used for \he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ar e all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•

loveable shepheoid ;
Two beagle typea, ,
and fe~ales•. 992· :·,

to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

FLUFFY eared' shtpherd ,
type male, black and
brown. Blue tick hOund;.:
· mol~ . HumaneSOclfltV,992·•

-...,..--

N .Y .

100 19.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning:
Steam cleoned . Free
estimate.
Reosonoble
rates. Scotchguord. m6309 or 742·2348.

.

.

tricks
The biddmg started the
sa me wa y at the other table.
but Brachm an, si tting Soulh ,
did not hid three hearts. Belladonna. sitt in g West. bid three
spades whi ch beca me the
fina l l:ontract.
Pitta la. sittin g East . pl ayed
it well. but the defense was
accurate and he went down
two.

3.

The 96 boa rd fin als or the
recent world championship
foll owed a series of qualify 1ng
matches to eliminate four of
the si x teams. Ital y fini shed
first and car ri ed a 37 IMP
lead against Amer ica.
Bra chman and Passe II were

ELWOOD . BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, Irons, oll smoll
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highwoy
Garage on Route 7, 91153825.

: - - --

1:{){)-Tomorrow 3; New s 15;
1: 45---News 13 ; 1: So- News 17.
1: 55-Movie " Conquest of Coc hise"

~

Five Afghan type PIIPPtea. ,
Humone Society, 992·62*1. . ;

.

Pass

Eas t
Pass
2
Obi.

By Oswald Ja c o~y
and Alan Sontag

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 94'1·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

5 ACRES 0~ LAND on Hysell Run, beautifUl
building lot. $7,000.
.

Bill Childs, Branch Mir., Home 992·2449 ·
Rodney l)pwning, Broker,·Home 992-3731

North
Pass

Opening lead:+ 3

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool klls. Do-lt-yourself or ·
lei us install for you. D.
Bumgordner Soles, Inc.
992·5724.

6260.•

(ALL 992-2342

tKB

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : North

SYRACUSE -;- 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.

MIDDLEPORT - Building lot on S. Second, 63'&gt;&lt;53'.
$&lt;1,500._'.
.
.

t64

.J916 5!

IN · .
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been can· ·
celled?
.L ost
your :
operator's license? Phone .
992-2143. '

-MIDDLEPORT - Two bedrOOm brick only 1 block
from center ol. town. Low ulllllles. A bargain ot
$12,500.

EAST

tQJ912
• A K 10 4 2
• 10

tA i\5
4A3

Services Offered

REAL ESTA

WEST

t6 53
• ---• J 9 74
tK J I08 7Z

SOUTH

SEWING
MACHI'NE .:
Repairs,
service. oil
makes. 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and service. we shorpen
Scissors.

WAL~
PAPERING
palnllng, 742·2328.

11 ;

1\;0RTH

Business Services

216 E . 5eCDfld Sh'eel
COUNTRY SE I III'IUA real live stocked fish
pond . Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12'x50' . Gas furnace,
patio, shade trees, rural
water and all furniture
on Staet Rl . Only
$12,000.
DUPLEX POSSIBLE9 rooms, 1112 baths, 4 or 5
bedrooms, natural gas
heat and room for a
wood burner in the large
family room, 2 car
garoge with storage on
good corner lot near
schools.. Asking only
$15,000.
OWN A BUSINESS All stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartment
with bath and extra lot
on State Rt. 124. Only
$27,500.
BRICK RANCH - 3
nice bedrooms, 2 baths,
large living, dining,
covered patio, 2 car
garage, all this on the
river.

the l east experienced or the
three Am er ica n pairs. but
Captain Theus decid ed to have
them play the first two 16
board segments to lea ve his
veter ans rea dy for th e last 64 .
On the first 16 Soloway and
Go ldm an played opposit e
them. The Italians pl ayed
very well and although the
Ameri ca ns played well also.
the Italian lead was up to 43
by the end of t he sess ion.
The bidding by Garr ozzo.
South . and L ar ia. North. is
shown 1n the box wi th Gold m an doubling. The four heart
contract is not unreasonable.
but t he 5-0 trump brea k made
1t Imposs ib le. Actu all y. Ga r rozzo slipped in th e pia y and
managed to go down th ree

t A 10 4

Mobile Homes- Sale

60xl2 Kirkwood. Total elec·
lrlc. ll/2 baths. 3 bedrooms.
l2x16 bedroom added on.
Partially
furnished .
washer and dryer and air
conditioning .
Storage
building. Porches and un.derpinning. New carpet.
Lot In Letart Falls, OH,
close to river. 247·3895.

Tough qualifying matches

ROOFING

Real Estate for Sale

Headquarter•
Appliances .
'Safes ·" Service.

BY OWNER, house in
Pomeroy. Large living
room, dining room, built· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lots of carpet and paneling.
FA gas heat, full baement
Price up 30's. One-third
acre lot close to hospital
and school. taii992·S917 for
appointment.

1

-

ELECTRIC

Real Estate for Sale

·:

0

12:4G-Movie " Alfred the Great" 8;

GE~ERAL

Mgr.
: Phone 992·2111

LBjYBUL

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.

12·7· 1 mo.

and

POMEROY
LANDMAR"K
Jack w. Carsey

Television
Viewing

unscramble these four Jumbles .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
FHeral Housinl I
Veterans Admin. LOIM.

Free Estimiltes
After S P.M . 992· 5547
12·13·2 mo . pd .

10·19-1 mo.

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
-- buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
GOOD MIXED hay, $1
bale . · Raymond Cotterill,
Harrisonvile, 742·2082.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

.Alum i num Siding
elnsolalion
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows

-------------------,

APPLES
CIDE R
HON E Y . Fitzpatr ic k Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesv i lle, 669·
3785.

MALE SABLE and wh ite
full blooded collie . 1 ye ar
old. $35 . 992-7102 .

Lost and Found

DICK TR,ACY ·

~~~~~CH~~~~CHCHDCIC~CMCHDCICMI~CMCHICMIMI~~~~~~

Business Services

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBoblee

~ ~~~ ·.e.

~

.

ASTRO•GRAPH

1ffi'1f\'Mt ~'if

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 15,1980

GR

TJ0.A

SZVYMC

i

.

~;.i,!~ -

MYN
NY

.,'

EN

YSVGCZX

E V V.
E VV

NY

MYN

ER
NY

SZ VYM C
NY

'I:'MZRZVI .

C QEOGEM
_: SEVNEREQ
Yesterday'~ Crypioquote• LOVE IS THE WISDOM OF THE
FOOL AND THE FOLLY OF THE WISE .-8AMUEL JOHNSON
rt\

ltiO' Kino ,F••tur•t Sync!lctt•, Inc.
I

17; 3: 25-M ov ie " Eight Iron
Men " 17 ; 5: 15- Love, Ameri can
Style 17.
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 16,1980
5: 45-Farm Report 13; Wor ld at
L arg e 17 ; 5:5o-PTL Club 13.
6 :OQ-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15 .
6:3o-Christopher Closeup 10; News
17 : 6·45-Morn ing Report 3;
6: 50- Good
Morning
Wes t
Virgin ia 13; 6: 55-News 13.
I :OQ-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Am eri ca 6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morn ing . 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges' Litlle Rascals 17: 7:15A.M . Weather 33.
7:3G-Family Aff air 10; Fr ee styl e
33; 7:55-C huc k White Reports
10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10 ; Family
Altair 17 . Sesame St. 33 .
8:3G-Romper Room 17; 9:0G-Bob
Braun 3; Big Va lley 6; Porky Pig
8: One Day At A Time 10; Phil
Donahue 13,15 ; Lucy Show 17 .
9:3o- Bob Newhart 8; Lov e of Life
10; Green Acres 17 .
10:0&lt;&gt;---C ard Sharks 3,15 ; Edge of
Nigh t 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Mov iP
"The Story on Page One" 17.
10 : 30- Ho l lywood ~quares 3. 15 ;
$20.000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whewl 8,10.
10 :55- CBS News 8; House Cal l 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8, 10.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortun e 3, 15 :
Fami ly Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
10.33.
•
12 :00- New scenter
3;
News
6,8,1 0,1 3; Chain Reaction 15.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Health Field 15;
Movie " All Hands on Deck " 17;
E lee. Co. 20.33.
1: 00-Days of Our Lives 3,15, All My
Ch i ldren 6.13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
· ~: 3o-As The World Turn s 8,10;
1:0&lt;&gt;---Doctors 3,15; One l;. ife to
Live 6.13 ; 2: 25-Ne·Ns 17 .
1:3G-Another World 3, 15; Guid ing '
Light 8,10; Gigglesnorl Hotel 17 .
3:0&lt;&gt;---General Hospital 6.13 ; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Soundstage 20.
3:3G-One Day At A Time 8; Jo ker 's
Wild 10 ; Flintslones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6: Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St. 20,33 .
Gomer Pyl e lO ; Real McCoy s 13 ;
Spectreman 17.
4: 3G-Lone Ranger 3; Petti coat
Junction 8; Brady Bun ch 10 ;
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
Gilligan 's Is. 17 .
5: 00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Roger s
20,33.
5:3G-MASH 3: News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; E lee. Co . 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-New s 3,8,10 ,13 ,1 5; AB C News
6 ; Carol Burnett 17 ; 3-2-l Contact
20,33.
6:3G-N I&gt;C News 3.15; ABC News 13;
Carol Bvrnett 6; CBS News 8.10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Al egre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:0&lt;&gt;---Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; News
.. lO; Love Ameri can Style 15:
~antord &amp; son 17: Olck Cavett 20 .
7: 30- Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6·: Joker's Wild 8;
Di.ck Cavett ,33 ; The Judge 10;
Wild Kingdom I S; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil -Lehr er
Report 20 ; Eight Is Enough 6 ;
Young Mav erick 10 ; True
Position 8; Great Performances
20.33 ; Movie " Mi ster Rogerts"
17 .
.
9 :00- Dilf'rent
Strokes
3,15 ;
Charlie' s Angels 6; M 0vle " If
Thlrigs Wer e Different " 8,10;
World 20,33.
9:3Q-Hello, Larry 3,15; Charlie' s
Angels 13 .
.
10:oo-Best of Saturday Night Live
3.15; Vegas 6,13 : 'News 20 ; Aloha,
Bruyeres 33.
10 :3G-NBA Basketball 17; Over
Easy 20.
11 : 00- News ·3, 6,8,10,1 3,15 : Dick
Cavett 20: Wodehouse Playhouse
33.
11 :3o-Tonlght3,1S: Love Boat6,13;
Mary Hartman 8; Movie " Key
Largo" 10; ABC News 33 .
12: oo.-Movle " Snowbeast" 8;
. i2 : 40~ Baretta 6, 13; 12 : 45:t.omorrow 3; , News 15 .
1
1: 50- News 13 ; 2: 45- N fl w• 17 r 1'
2 :5o-Movie "Man In the t&gt;Ark" ·•1
·17 ; 4: 2G-Movl e " Odongo" 17.,
•

I

·

�..
1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 1~, 1980

,

.

• •

Washington County has major oil, gas boon\
MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) - The
signs of a major oil and gas boom
are everywhere in Washington
County and the increased drUllng is
having a major Impact in the area.

Washington leads Ohio's other If/
coWJties in the number of drilling
permits issued by the Ohio Division
of Oil and Gas.
·
David Edgar, supervisor of oil and

'

"

'I

'

~ .

gas inspections in southeastern .
Ohio, said more than 700 permits
were issued between January and
Octooor 1979. Applications increased
as the end of the year approached,
he added.
Compared with the 666 wells
drilled in Oklahoma last October,
the 192 in Washington Cowlty for the
same month may not look like much.
Estimates are, however, that $300
million worth of oil and gas ex- ,
ploration will occur between 1979
and 1981.
Edgar said 1980 wW be bigger than
last year.
C.W. Riggs ol St. Marys. W.Va.,
which does more drilling in the county than any other company, figures

'

able to be self-eufflcient In gaa t toc8i producers said.
that about 2,700 wells will be drilled
production becalllll tl the large! "
Remvval of controla meant that
by the end of 1981.
amount«~ there.
"
Mpre than 000 persons In the'coun- · producers could sell their oil for
But
Rlgp
said
CUmmlnga'
resporr::;:
$32.50
per
barrel
rather
than
at
ty work full time at jobs directly
se Is typical tl the Industry's at-: ;
related to oil drilling. Another 250 · prices ranging from about $3 to $13
as
in
several
years
before.
Illude toward oil and gal production.-• ·
work part-time, according to a local
While
proftls
from
oil
offer
the
Rlgg.nald he wss told that Quaker! _
producer's statistics.
largest
Incentive
to
producers,
the
_
State
was going to Blwt Its refinery.•The county currently Is producing
natural
gu
that
accompanies
It
alao
In
1948
because the local oil flekll ~
between 2,000 and 2,500 barrels of oll
entices
them.
bad
been
depleted.
per day, according to Carl Heinrich,
Heinrich
estimated
that
the
coun"A
lot
of
people said there wasn~l ~
vice president of Southeastern Ohio
ty
is
producing
between
15
and
20
enough
oil
here,"
Heinrich added. :.
Oil and Gas Association and a partcubic
feet
of
nstural
gas
per
day.
•
ner of Riggs.
·
Uofortunately,
many
of
the
new
At $32.50 per barrel, the oil is worwells are capped lilnce producers
th $65,000 to $60,000 a day - or $23
can't
find a market for the gal.
million to $30 mllllon a year.
other
gu Is burned off and some is
One of the major sparks fOI' the
illegally
vented, wasting the 118tural
surge was the decontrol of domestic
resource
and polluting the air,
oil prices at the beginning of 1979,
Edgar said.
Let's talk value.
In an effort to sell their gal, C. W.
Riggs and L&amp;M Operating Inc. of
~,;anton, the county's two largest
As a local insurance
producers, have joined in conagency, we c~n help you
struction ol a $2.7 mllllon gal
find the best value for
pipeline from the nearby Reno area
your insurance dollars.
to the Monroe Cowlty line, where It
wW tie In with the Colwnbla Gas
And, we'll show you how
'Co.'s massive system.
to make sure your covThe line Is expected to be comerage stays current with
1 pleted by the end of January. Riggs
your home's rising value.
speculates it will lead to a tripling of
oil production and a five-fold Increase In his company's gas producwords and then get up and leave,
tion.
The oil produced In Waahlngton
while those who are drinking just
listen to the beat of the music," he
County Is sweet crude, meaning It
has no sulfur content, Heinrich said.
said.
Besides playing in his band and
And it's superior to the product that
Bill QuiCkel
being a full-time student at OU,
America was gettiRg from Iran, he
"Ac:ross
from the
Markham also works on weekends
added.
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy"
at the Ohio Youth Commission
BW Taft, assistant plant manager
992-6677
at the Quaker State Refinery In St.
trying to get young adults off drugs
and afcohol. He uses his ·own street
Mary's W.Va., one of the major
experience of being on drugs for 12
buyers of the oil, said the oil Is the
years and the videotape equipment
best In the world.
FEDERAL
from OU to help him In his work.
The question of just bow much oil
KEMPER
"I give them a break from the
is in Waahlngton County remains
INSURANCE
open to debate.
usual movies and lectures,"
The president tl River Gas Co.,
COMPANY
Markham said, "I shoot them doing
soclo-dramas in front of the
the biggest customer of the county's
videocamera and play it back to
natural gas, said local ga1 has never
them. They will remember the exbeen enough to support the needa of
all the company's customers.
perience."
Markham himself was referred to
He said he doubts Ohio ever will be .
BVR by Conrad'Foss ol the Residential Treabnent Program (RTP) in
Athens. RTP is a -detoxification
facWty and was an alternative to jail
for Markham. He said RTP helps addicts and alcoholics confront themselves and realize that they haye a
problem.
Markham said he went to BFR
because "I had a void in my life to

Home ·

Insurance

Pomeroy native,
ex-addict wins
video art award

BABY CONTEST WINNER - Tiffany Lynn Barber, Reedsville,
being held by her mother, Mrs. Danny Michael Barber, is winner of The
Daily Sentinel's annual first baby of the year contest.

Tiffany Lynn Barber
baby contest winner
Many Lynn Barber is the winner
tl The Dally Sentinel's annual first
baby of the year contest.
Tiffany, daughter of Vickie Lee
and Danny Michael Barber of Reedsville, was born at 4:45a.m. on Jan.
1 at Camde~ Hospital in
Parkersburg, W. Va, She weighed
!lilt pounds, 12 ounces.
Grilndmothers are Mrs. Pauline
Barber, Reedsville, aild Mrs. Betty
Pierce, of near Parkersburg.
As first baby of the new year, Tiffany and her parents will receive gifts from 32 Big Bend merchants who
took part in the contest.
Providing gifts for Meigs County's
first baby of the new year and her
parents will be Mark V Super
Market, The Fabric Shop, Crow' s
Family Restaurant, Racine Home

National Bank, Waid Cross and
Sons, K. and C. Jewelers, Heritage
House of Shoes, Francis Florist,
Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
Vaughan's Cardinal, Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy, Pomeroy National
Bank, Central T1118t Co., Elberfelds
in Pomeroy, Racine Food Market,
Western Auto, Middleport; Pomeroy
Wine Store, Landmark, Powell's
Super Valu, The Meigs Inn, Lou's
Ashland Service, The Kiddie Sboppe, Hartley Shoes, Moore's Store,
Kroger's, Pomeroy, Village Pharmacy, The Sewing Center and
Marguerite Shoes.

CBICKEN AND HAM

fire department.
The mayor also announced that
the Middleport Board of Public Af.
fairs has voted to pay $1,000 on the
monthly utility bills on village hall.
The 'action Is retroactive to 1974
which means that the board will pay
$5,000 at this time and then will pay
the $1,000 annually.
The bid of John Gibson, Athens, on
a new truck for the street department was accepted at a price of
$16,500.
Councilman Mullen said that he had
inspected the truck and it Is a good
buy. CoWJcU members commented
that the town has been lucky, so far,
this winter in the mild weaUier and a
heavy duty ~ck has not been
needed frequently to control the Ice
and snow on roads. Acceptance of
the bid is contingent upon working
out a plan with the Central Trust Co.
for filiancing the truck.
Council discussed limited parking
near the Middleport Public Library,
a local payment location for cable
TV, parking problems, alleys
needing more lighting or repairs,
and the traffic now in the town.

DINNER PLANNED
The auxiliary of the Racine Fire
Deparbnent will hold a baked
chicken and ham dinner at the fire
bouse on Sunday, Jan. 20, beginning
at11a.m.
Dinners are $3 for adults and $2.50
for children. Dessert will be extra.
'lbe menu Includes chicken or ham,
potatoes, homemade noodles, green
beans, cole slaw, hot rolls, coffee or
punch.
ATrEND FUNERAL

Relatives here to attend the
fwleral services for Mrs. Carmon
Evans on Jan. 4 were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneih Cole and daughter, Kelly,
tl Bellville; Mrs. Janice Cole
Trainer, McArthur; Mrs. Mary Cole
Adldns, West Portsmouth; Edward
C. Evans, Jr., Sima Valley, Calif.;
Ronald Lee Evans, Columbus, and
John J. Evans; Jackson, Tenn.

VETERANSMEMORIAL .
Admltted-8usle Holley, Middleport; Keith Musser, Pomeroy ;
Donna Williams, Pomeroy; Carol
Triplett, Portland; Charlene Wears,
Pomeroy; Donald Allen, Jr.,
Racine; Ralph Radcliffe, Syracuse.
Discharged-Carl Rairden.

JUVENILE OOURT
Three juveniles were fined when
they appeared before Judge Robert
E. Buck on traffic charges.

Fined were Joe Jeffers, 17, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, $2$ and costs, no
operalor's license; Arthur Toban,
17, Middleport, $10 and costs,
pulilng on a double yellow line; Jeff
Smith, 16, Pomeroy, $11 and costs,

speed.

.

SQVADCAIJ.ED

The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to2t1 N. Front st., at ll:17 p.m.
MlindaY' for 1Hucb RowleY who was
taken to Veterans Memcrlnl

Halpltal.

Council •••
(Continued from page 1)
basis and would provide such things
as hose, radios and nozzles for the

Winning the 1979 Athens Video
Festival's video art award at Ohio
University (OU) in Athens was one
of the highlights in the life of Mark
Markham since he kicked the drug
habit about four years ago.
Markham, a native of Pomeroy,
and a client of the RSC Bureau of
Vocational Rehabilitation (BVR), Is
a senior at OU. It was his videotape
entry, "College, Corpses and
Chevrolets,'' that won the award for
him against heavy competition from
around the country.
According to Markham, the tape Is
basically a fast collage or montage
of fixed Images in which be shows
how drugs, particularly alcohol, are
the "opium of the masses," because
of their availability~ The tope's
musical score Is by his own band, the
"Bogus Brothers." The music Is
what he calls "rehab rock," and It is
aimed at drug and alcohol usei'S.
CurrenUy, Markham and his band
play at various nightclubs and bars
around Ohio. It Is, however, hard for
him to get places to play because of
the theme of his music and the
audience at which it Is primarily
aimed.
"People high on drugs listen to the

Coun~y

Court

Eight defendants were fined and
!lilt others forfeited bonds in Mell!ll

County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Kniglt
were Deborah Corbitt, Pomeroy,
William Yales, Cheshire, Herbert L.
Grate Rutland and William Cogar,
Minersville, $1~ and costs each,.
speeding; Michael Rossiter, N.
Lawrence, Ohio, $150 and costs, hunting deer with gun during special
primitive season after filing deer
lfeense indee~ season, $150,
engaged in hWlting while carrying anot~er's license, . '50;
Vernon Maxey, Reedsville, $10 and
costs, assured clear distance;
Douglas 0 . Clonch, Gallipolis, $50
and costs, no operators license;
Richard WWiamson, Jr., Lancaster,
$150 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,

DWI.
Forfeiting bonds were David
Weber, Reedsville, Richard B.
Hayman, Rt. I, Long Bottom1
William D. Morey, Parkersburg,
Michael A. Reneman. Fairmont, W.
Va., and Phil A. Carter, Jacksonville, $35.50 each, speeding; PhiWp
Lacomb, Tuppers Plains, $60.50,
speeding.
THREE GAMES SLATED
Three SVAC teams will see action

tonight In non-league battles.
Games scheduled find Hannan, W.
Va. villlting Kyger Creek, Eastern of
Pike County at Southwestern, and
Wahama at Hannan Trace ..

A NEW CARl
IN lHE PALM OF MY HAND!

He said this void was created
when he got off drugs and no longer
bad to search for drugs, buy them,
use them and go back to searching
for them again.
"It was a vicious cycle,"
Markham said.
Markham hopes to graduate from
OU this spring with a 3.5 degree in
general studies, with efforts focused
on photography, psychology and
phil~ophy, he hopes to go on to
graduate school and then Into a job
where he can help others get off
drugs and alcohol. But the completion of school and a job wW not
mean he Is fully rehabilitated, at
least not to him.
"I am constantly being
rehabilitated," Markham said.
Markham hopes the publicity of
his experiences over the past couple
of years will encourage others to
come to BVR for help.
"If I can help just one more person, it will be worth it.''
- Story from Ohio RebabWtation
Services Commission.

Hearing Aid Specialist

I

·BEL TONE Consultant Who Will be AI:
MEIGS INN-Pomeroy, OhioThunday,J•_n. l5,9a.m. to 12noon

Anyone wno nas trouble hearing IS welcome to n.ave a hearing test us. lng modern electronic equipment to determine II his 10$S Is one which
may be helped . Some of the causes of hearing loss will be .•xplalned
and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.

We Also -S ervice •nd Repair All Makts.of Ho~rlng Aids.
BIHerles And Supplies For All Makes For Sole.
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992'3629

•

POINT OF CONTENTION
The money offered would bave paid outstanding bills amounting to about
$1241 and would have paid $1,000 for contract services of personnel helping

with the band such a flag corps supervisor.
The point of contention was a $3500 note which the band boosters have with
the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. The original note was for $1500 two years
ago and had been paid down to $3500 in two years. The money was originally
borrowed for instruments, Mrs. Goeglein stated. She indicated she felt the
board should also pay off that note for the band boosters.
Board Member Robert Snowden sald he felt that the recommendation of
the superintendent did not give the band boosters equal money and he spoke
on the dedication of volWJteer workers in groups working for the good of the
school districts.
Board Member Larry Powell also indicated that the two groups in question
had suffered financially because the football schedule was not played and he
agreed that the board should help.
Supt. Gleason said that proportionately his recommendation provided
about equal help for both groups and he again stressed that organizations of
the district must reflect enthusiastic leadership and make an effort to get the
distri.ct going rather than to dwell on the past when the football games were
not help due to the teachers' strike last fall. He said he thought his recommendations were fair to both booster groups.
Ed Kitchen, one of the number of parents and teachers attending last
night's meeting, expressed an opinion that booster groups in the district had
been great assets to the board over the past years in providl'i\g for a large
number of items for programs taking burdens away from the bo.ud.

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL. XXVIII

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 192

PRESENTED HISTORY BOOK - Officers of the
Salisbury PTO Monday night presented John Usle,
principal, with a Meigs County History Book. The
Salisbury PTO is the only PTO in the county to pur-

cllalje one of the books-it was reported. Left to right are
Paulette Harrison, treasurer, Jenny Warth, secretary,
John Lisle, principal, Susie Pullins, president, who
presented the book and Yvonne Young, vice president.

.
promotion

.

.

successful

Levy rejected
Open M-W, 9 tll3, Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9 til12,
-~riday 9 til3 &amp; 5 tl7

''The Frlendlv lank"

tHE CEN'IRAL TRUST COMPANY

Iii __

Middleport, 0.

r

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

,,, ..

ELBERFELD$-

I.DNDON (AP) - The price of
gold rocketed up more than $50
an ounce on European bullion
markets today and nearly $80 in
Hong Kong to reach new all-time
peaks well above $700 an ounce.
The metal hit a high ol $744.52
an ounce in Hong Kong after
surging past $700 for the first
time to reach $715 Tuesday in
New York. It closed in Hong Kong
today at f/33.36 but opened In
London at a median price of $740,
up $56.50 from tuesday's closing
price of $683.50.

BLANKETS
OFF

Jewels stolen
ROME (AP) - Two daring
thieves In 11lrporl uniforms used a

20% OFF
Big seii!Ction of sizes In single and dual
control models. Stop In, we'JI help yoCI .
with vour selection.

. WEST uNION, Ohio (AP) Voters In the Ohio Valley Local
School District on Tuesday
defeated a proposed 3.1-mlll
operating levy by !;letter than a 21margin in a special election, the
Adams County Board of Elections said.
The board said 2,785 votes were
cast against the levy compared to
1,242 for the measure.
School Superintendent Donald
Dowdy said funds from the levy
would have been used to increase
teacher salaries and make
capital improvements.

Gold soars again

JANUARY SALEI

20%

~Otristmas

..

FINANCING TERMS ARRANGED FOR YOUR BUDGET.

:~

.,

·-· ---,

..

HOME FURNISHINGS-1-ST FLOOR

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1980

Oak Hill policeman killed

,.

GET ntE FAMILY THAT SECOND CAR.

"We're asking for help now", Kitchen .commented.
Band pirector Randy Hunt stated that the boosters could pay off the bank
note. However, he remarked that seniors already "had l,ost hall of it" this
year and if the boosters had to pay off the bank note tliat meant seniors
would "lose it aU".
LOW MORALE
Hunt said that morale is the lowest that he has seen it in the five years he
has been in the district. He indicated that he would like to have funds to take
seniors on a short trip or make some gesture to compensate the band members for what they have lost. He mentioned also that the band banquet, an
annual event, might also have to "go" this year.
A motion to accept the recommendations of Supt. Gleason died for the lack
of a se.cond and the matter was tabled for further study.
SALARIF.S QUESTIONED
Snowden, a new member on the board, questioned the board and Supt.
Gleason on administrative salary increases, including principals, given in
mid-December.
Supt. Gleason said salary changes were carried out on an index and that
principals' salaries were equalized so that transfers could be made from
building to building without salary changes.
Snowden commented that in previous years when he was serving on the
board, an agreement was made between the board and principals on the in(Continued on page 12)

Suspect nabbed at roadblock

.'

ELECTRIC BLANKETS
INCLUDED

Mr. H. W. Mattingly

BY BOB HOEFLICH
RecOIJ¥Ilendations to provide financial help for the Meigs Local Band
Boosters and the Meigs Local Athletic Boosters, bothoof which became indebted due to the failure to the football season to materialize last fail, were
tabled when the Meigs Local Board of Education met in regular session at
the junior high school, Middleport, Tuesday night.
Supt. David L. Gleason said that a committee composed of administrators
and representatives of the two groupa had met to discuss the indebtedn..., of
the organizations. He recommended that the board allocate $6942 to the
athletic boosters which, he said, would need $14,000 by fall and about $2241 to
the band boosters.
Gleason said that Charles Hamilton, president of the athletic boosters, had
indicated the payment of $6942 in bills would be .helpful and that he thought
his organization could handle the rest of the financial problems. He stated
that the athletic group has several projects planned to raise money.
However, the problem of the band boosters led to tabling the recommendations.
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein, president of that organization, said she was not
satisfied with the offer of approximately $2241.

fill."

Entire stock of blankets Included In
this special sale. Twin and full bed
sizes, solid colors and paHerns.
Ac:ry I ics
thermals and novelty
blankets. Buy now, for yourself, tor
gifts.

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By

.

DAVIS®ICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY

REGULAR PRICES

HEARING TESTS SET
For Meigs County, Ohio

Meigs
Local
Board
tables
recommendations
.

two-way radio to halt a Swlssair
jetliner about to . take off from
Rome's Leonardo da VInci Air·
port, opened Its cargo Compartment and stole a pouch containing jewels worth $3.6 mllllon
~Y, pollee reported.
Pollee sald the robbers drove a
small Flat truck marked "A. R."
for . the Airport of Rome and
ri!lloed the pilot from the truck to
halt his takeoff for an urgent
check' of lealtlng fuel. 'l'hey then
sped to the plane, opened the
eario hold and stole the jewel
pouch.
'

1
·

Jinna Arnott, secretary for the
Pomeroy Chamber ·of Commerce,
gave a report on the success of the
Gold Star Christmas promotion at
Tuesday's cha-mber luncheon
meeting.
Mrs. Arnott reported the
promotion was successful.
Twenty-four merchants participated and all but 10 gift certificates have been picked up, she
reported.
Mrs. Arnott also said that the
·majority of the people were pleased
with givmg awa:,&lt; more small gifts
rather than one large prize.
Christmas lights have been taken
down and stored and the proceeds
from the Christmas promotion will
be used to help on the expenses of the
new stage, Mrs. Amott commented.
John Anderson, presiding in the
absence of Paul Simon, announced
the signing of a contract with
"Flying W" to provide rides at this
year's Big Bend Regatta. The contract was finalized during a recent
convention in Columbus. Anderson,
Simon and Wallace Bradford attended that event.
Anderson said that In order to get
better quality rides it was necessary
to cb&amp;nge the dBtes of the Regatta.
The Regatta will be held the last
week in June beginning on the 26th.
Anderson also said plans are underway to get more people involved
in Regatta work in order for the
event to run more smoothly.
Sympathy cards were signed and
will be mailed to the families of the
late N. W. Compton and William
Mayer.
Attending were Anderson, Mrs.
Amott, Kyle Allen, Scott Lucas, Joe
Young, Phil Kelly, Blll Grueser,
Jack Carsey, Dale Warner, Steve
Story and Pat Story.
::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;: ;:::~:~;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

. EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday througb Sunday: Mild
wit&amp; a cbance of rain Friday aod
Saturday. Fair Sunday. ,Hlp.
from the mid ttl to lbe mid 50&amp;
Friday and In lbe 51111 Saturday
Bud Swulay. Lowl tbrougb t&amp;e
period from llle mld 3011 to the low

, ,,tos.
, , ,,. ·w :iii;;=:=: =:=
: :::::
MosUy Cloudy tonight. I .ows
. around 50. qou!)y Thursday with
rain likely In tlie afternoon. Highs in
the fllld 50111. The chance.of rain ill 20
. ~nt tonight and 80 pe~cent Thur· ·
sday.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::

CARRIERS NEEDED
Pomeroy youngsters have an
opportuDity to re£elve valuable
experience In the business world,
earn good money and some great
prizes.

How? By becoming a paper
carrier. There are currently
vacancies for three girls aud boys
to begin work on routes.
All those Interested are asked
to call The SenUnel at 9n-2156 or
992-2157 or drop by the office at
111 Court St., Pomeroy, for complete details.

OAK HILL, Ohio (AP) - A man
who was captured when . police
halted an auto chase with gunfire at
a roadblock was in jail today in connection with the slaying of an Oak
Hill policeman.
Officer David Alcox, 26, a threeyear veteran of the Oak Hill force,
was found dead of gunshot woWJds
Tuesday night.
Alcox was found dead in the front
seat of his cruiser, which was
parked in the center of Oak Hill on
Ohio 93, said a police official from a
neighboring communitv.
Dwight Fillinger, who lives on a
parallel street across from Ohio 93
and about 300 yarda away, said he
heard shots and saw a car speed
away.
Fillinger said he was out in his
yard feeding his dogs when he heard

• •
commission

to the

cruiser and found the patrolman
lying outside with the right front
door open and the radio microphone
dangling out of the car.
The patrolman had been shot
three times in the face.
Fillinger said he picked up the
microphone and radioed to police
headquarters that an officer had
been shot. Within minutes other
police and the Oak Hill unit of the
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service arrived on the
scene but folind the officer already
dead.
Police inunediately put out an
alert for the vehicle they believed
the assailant was driving.
Sixty police officers from area law
enforcement agencies participated
in roadblocks along Ohio 93.

Khomeini forces
execute officers

By The Associated Press
Firing squads have executed a
number of Iranian army officers for
plotting to overthrow Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomelni's revolutionary
regime, the usually reliable Kuwait
newspaper AI Rai AI Am reported
today.
In another development, Iran's
Foreign
Ministry denied a report
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
that U.N. Secretary.{;eneral Kurt
Waldheim would be acceptable as a
negotiator in the h~tage crisis,
callng it "an absolute lie," according to Tehran radio in a broadcast monitored In London.
Quoting unidentified diplomatic
sources,
the Kuwait paper .published
Rich Jones was reelected
in
the
Persian
Gull oil sheikdom said
president of the Meigs County Board
the
officers
involvt!d in the coup
all
of Commissioners which met for its
plot
had"
been
arrested and were
organizational session this week.
executed
secretly
to .avoid adverse
Henry Wells was reelected vice
publicity
for
the
revolutionary
president, and Mary Hobstetter was
regime.
reappointed board clerk.
No confinnation of the report was
James Cornell was named couravailable,
and sources in Tehran,
thouse custodian and Charles Hysell
the
Iranian
capital, said they had
was appointed dog warden with
heard
nothing
about such a plot.
Everett Holmes being appointed ·
The
report
said the plot was
apiary inspector. Named to serve on
discovered
accidentally
when some
the community improvement corof
the
Iranian
regime's
poration were Richard E . Jones,
revolutionary
liuards
stopped
and
Pomeroy; Bernard · Fultz, Midsearched
the
car
of
one
of
the
ofdleport; Howard Frank, Racine;
ficers
at
a
roadblock.
Katie Crow, Syracuse; E. F.RobinThe paper said the plotters were
son, Pomeroy, and Vernon Weber,
Rutland.

Jones heads

the shots. He said he ran

all medium-ranking army officers
who planned to seize control of
Tehran, the Iranian capitol, and
then lay siege to the holy city of
Qom, Khoemini's headquarters 100
miles to the south.
The plotters expected other opponents of Khomeini and supporters
of the deposed shah to join them after they launched their coup, the
report said.
An ABC News report, now deni~d
in Tehran, said that Khomeini was
willing to accept Waldheini as an intermediary wilh the United States
even though he refused to receive
him in Iran earlier this month.
Quoting U.N. sources in New
York, ABC News reported Tuesday
night that the Iranian Foreign
Ministry sent a message to its U.N.
ambassadDl', Mansour Farhang,
(Continued (m page 12)

Patrol reports
353 DWI cases

Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth, commander, Gallia-Meigs Post, Ohio
State Highway Patrol, reported
today the local post made 353 driving
while Intoxicated (DWI) arrests in
Postal jeep recovered
the two counties during the past 12
months.
near Cheshire by OSP
"Tbat's an all-time record for this
post," Commander Wigglesworth
A U.S. Postal Jeep allegedly stolen said. Last year, the post recorded
J . S. Lamp, Coolville, bas been from Parkersburg was re£overed
276 DWis In the Gallia-Melgs area.
reelected president of the Tri County early today by the GaJila-Meigs
Other figures released by the comBank.
mander
found the patrol making
Post, Highway Patrol, following an
Other officers named during the accident during which the operator 4,553 arrests during 1979. Patrolmen
annual stockholders meeting were of the vehicle was Injured.
issued motorists 4,939 warnings for
Kenneth W. Stealey, executive vicedefective vehicles, and assisted 4,617
The patrol reporia the jeep was
president and cashier ; D. ' K. discovered wrecked just north of motorists who were' stranded or
Grabam, Carl E. Smith and Jack E. Cheshire near the Gallla County line needed help in some way.
White, vice-presidents; Maxine at approximately 2:50 this morning.
In GaWa County, 1,071 mishaps
Rader and Hazel Westfall, a~istant
Apprehended was William N. were probed by the patrol. Meigs
cashiers, Dixie So.vel, comtroller Miller, 18, Washington, W.Va. Miller recorded 479 accidents last year.
and CeclliaMurphy, bookkeeper. . was transported to Holzer Medical
llje patrol probed six fataUty
Stockholders reelected Lamp Center where he was admitted for mishaps in which seven persons
chairman of the board. Directors treatment of multiple lacerations, were killed in Gallla. No fatality acchosen for 1980 were Grallam, , contusions and abrasions. All of this cidents were Investigated In Meigs.
Smith, Stealey and White.
~
Gallia recorded 398 accldenls in
morning, no charges had been filed
. It was reported that a $4 per share against Miller,
whicll 567 persons were injured.
dividend had been paid - to
The · U.S. Postal Service vehicle Meigs reported 108 wrecks in which
.stockholders.
was allegedly stolen from a !Wing 161 persons were injured.
station in Parkersburg where It had
Patrolmen made 75 case investigations
on state property
been
parked
awal~
repalrs.-There
BURLEY DEcLINES · .·
during
the
past
year.
was
no
mail
In
the
jeep.
It
was
the
:RIPLtY, Ohio (AP) -Prices con·
second
stolen·
vehicle
to
be.
The
Gallla-Meigs
post has 13
tlillled to decline, along with the
by
Ute
Gallla-Meigs
Post
unlfonned
officers
and
four dispatrecovered
general marke~ Tuesday a\ the Ohio
c~Mlrs .
.
in
the
pasttwo
days.
.
'
·
burley toblicco market. .

'I'd say Dave apparently had the
subject out of the car and In the back
of the cruiser" before he was shot,
said Jackson police Sgt. Gregg
Kiefer.
The Jackson County Sheriff's
Department said Alcox stopped a
car in connection with a speeding
violation at abo1.1t 8 p.m. When Alcox
radioed his department with
driver's license information, he was
told to detain a man who was in the
car because the man was wanted in
connection with a parole violation.
Kiefer said he thought Alcox made
a "routine stop" and radioed
headquarters for a license check.
"About five minutes later, he was
found dead, '' the sergeant said.
Police from Jackson, Scioto,
Gallia and Lawrence counties and
the Highway Patrol were alerted
following the shooting.
The sheriff's department said that
a state trooper spotted the vehicle
which was allegedly stopped by
Alcox about an hour later and that it
was foWJd three miles from the site
of the shooting.
The patrolman chased the vehicle
southward on Ohio 93. The chase ended at about 9:30p.m. when the car
attempted to run a three-vehicle
roadblock in Lawrence CoWJty.
After it smashed into the cars
blocking the road, deputies shot out
the front and rear windows of the
vehicle. Its driver suffered minor in-juries, officials said.
The slain officer's .38-caliber
pistol and ticket book were found in
the damaged car, said a Lawrence
County sheriff's deputy. Also found
in the car was a .22-&lt;!aliber weapon.
Police said they believe Alcox was
killed with a .22-&lt;!aliber gun.
No charges have been filed against the 31-year-old Jackson area
resident who was captured in the
chase.
Oak Hill police would not discuss
the shooting Tuesday night. The
Highway Patrol also refused to give
information about the shooting or
the chase.
Jackson County deputy sheriffs
took Uoyd Brofford, 31, of Oak Hill,
into custody in connection with the
shooting. Chief Deputy Edgar
Hayburn said that Brafford would be
charged before noon today.

Lamp reelected
bank president

w

BEADS COMMITTEE
Pomeroy Attorney I. Canon
Crow ill beadlag a COIJimlllee to
adJnlnlster a coDege scbolanhlp .
program befllg set up In MeJp .
County by Dr. Edward w. W.
Lewis, former ~lddl6port ·
resident, now living lo ltenaiker,
N. H. The suhlltantlal program
will honor Attoriley Fred
Crow, the late Dr. R. ~ Boice
aod the late Art "Pappy" Lewll,
Serving, on the coiiiiJilllee 11M
will be Tbeodot:e T. Reed, Jr.,~
Fre4erlct J. Crow, DI, ad Mark
Lewis, 8 SOD of Dr. Lewis.

w.

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