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                  <text>!»- The Sunday Times.Senlinel, Sun&lt;I"Y· MH!'l'h 27. 1977
t'or Rent
SLEEPING room$ for rent , Goll io
Hotel
OFFICE space, downtown, 514 Se
tond Ave 446,()()08,

STORE BUILDING IN HENDERSON
W. Vo

FIRST

Ph. 446-9662.

FLOOR

Television log for easy viewing·

Auto Sales

BRADBURY

fFF .

APT . 729 2nd Ave., Adults only no pets , Oep. Req ., Ph.
446-0957.
BRADBURY ~ENTAL ,: 4 Room cot-

toga , w rt h both and scree"ed In

po rch. Adults only . no peb,
Dep . Req ., Ph . &lt;446-0957,
TWO Bedroom, mobile home , fur ni shed , $125 mo . plus utilities
Neighborhood
Rd .
Ph .
446-4757.

Nl:WGMC
l ruck ~@Odqvorter s
1970VW
.
1974 ', 1 CMCP1ckup

1973 •, 1 (hev . PU
1974 ', 1 GMC Pickup
1973 ' , Che..-. P1ckup
1974 ', T. GMC PU
f(H5 Ford Mu stang II
1972 ' , T Che~· pkk.up
1- 1975 three-fou rth T Chcv PU
1974 •, r. Chev . PU
19721hree-fourth T. Chell . PU
1973 EIComino with top
1973 GMC Astra w -oir , slidi ng 5th
\-Vheel
1974 'r T. FordPU
1971 I, T. GMC PU
1972 Pinto
1972 • 1 TGMCPU

Bulo vtile Rd . Prefer m iddle ag-

1976 CAMARO 305. 2 barrel!
automatic . silver wifh red
pu1stnFing . Still under warranTy . Col 99'1-57f.fl .

' 1

TO N f1.ickup , new !ires ,

1974 CHEVY CORVETTE , 350 4 harrell . 29 .000 miles. sil..-er wi th
Dlack leather in ter ior. power
siitdows , lodory a·ir condition ing
AM ·FM
radio . T- top ,
telescop iC and till steerjng
wheel , new set of Michelin
rodiol tires w ith less than 500
m1els . Phone 742 -2025 oher 5
p.rn or 742-2211 before 5 p .m.
ond osk for Do..-id .

-

1974

GMC

Pickup .

Phone

'1'11·J188.

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE .

p .b .. ps,
OuadJolrock . Good tir es.
Ph one {304) 877 - 23~0.

1972

VEGA ,

S800.

Phone

949-2307.

of Discovery. 8; Ja"mes Robison Presents 10; Rex

Hurnbard 13; Open Bible 15 .
9:oo-Robert Schuller 4 : Oral Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Better Way IS;
Mister Rogers 20.
9: 3G-What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10;· Jim Franklin 13; This Is The Life 15; Sesame St.

1972 DODGE Charge1 . air , V-8
automatic. power disc. brakes.
power s t.eering , rear defros ter.
rear speak er, buc ke t seal , e nd
co nsole'. rollt wheels , steel
belted radials·. ..-myl rool ,
$1850 . Phone992 -51o9 .

1961 FAlCON SPORT COUPE',
good cond. Ph. 446-3375 after 6
. p .m .
•

1976 PONTIAC Trans Am . 1973
Chevy Pickup with topper . Ph .
304 ~'881 - 1346 .

.

09 MERCURY 2 Dr ., auto .. di sc
brakes . Ph . 446·2878
(A.D.
Qeville , 1973
1971
Plymouth Fury Ill. 1973 Chevy .
Truck CustOm 10, 1972 Bronco
Four Wheel Dri..-e . Ph .
446-9818.

Ph 41116·3870

lil..e new , ~Je ry , very good
cond ., Phone 4"46-9523 or
446· 1-443

68 El Camino , 327 4 spd .. Mech .
sound . Ph . 446 -0231.

Pil72 FORD Ra nche ro . loaded
$1995 . , 1966 VW_Beetle , $625 ..
Both with e.tro tires . Ph .
446-7440.

13; Focus on ColumbUs 4.

12: oo-News Conference-44: Issues &amp; Answers 6; Face
· the Nation 8; Evangellslic Outreach 13; Soundstage
20.
...
12: 3o-Meet the Press 3,15; Directions 6: Cham .•,..
plonshi p Fishl ~g 9;- The ISsue 10;. Lower Llghthou'"
13.
.
1:OQ--Telathon Continues 3; Movie "Si lent Night,
.Bloody Night" 4; ; AmeriCa's Black Foru"! 6;

1977 DODGE VAN , Pori. Cust .,
a ss ume payments . Ph . 256-1295 •
aher 5.
1970 PlY . VALIA NT DUSTER. 340 4
spd .. new t ires ond rim . low
nitleage plus elc. , be st offe r .
call 388-9835.

$A ,QOO

firm . 1966 Dodge Van . $250 .
1955 Har ley Da vidson Trllee .

$750. Ph . 446·8510

1974 CHE VElt E. Malibu Cla s'iic .
PS , PB , AC. tilt wheel. swivel
bu cket $eo ts , auto. on floor .
con'iole . 29 .900 octuol miles,
burg undy with white vinyl top
Reo I sharp, $3200 . Ph . 446-2342
ask for Debbie , 8 a.m. to 5 p .m .
after 5:30 ca ll388-8502.

1971 CHEVELlE MAliBU . 307. 3
spd .. 2 dr. Ph. 446-3732.

1974 HONDA CB 200. wrecked ,
sell lor parts . Phone 446 ·3732 .
1974 MU STANG II MACH I, good
con d. Coli before 6 p .m.
675-3375. ask lor Rick .

1968 Chr ysler , good cond. $600.
Ph . 446-4426.

1974 PIN TO RUANABOUT , Four
speed . one owne r , Exc. cond .,
Must sell $1758. Call 675· 1607
after 4:30.

1972 PINTO RU NABOUl , exc.
cond . 01,. In! 50,000 miles ,
$1250 . Ph . 446 7904.

1973 OlDS DElTA 88 . PS ,PB, o i1
cond .. AM ·FM rod1 o, good
Ph .
446 ·1 703 or
con d .,
446-1522

Iron side 13.
12 :oo-ABC News 6; Hawa ii Five·O 10.
12:30--ABC News 13.
1:30o&lt;'Peylon Place 4.
MONDAY, MARCHl!, 1977

11 :3Q-Anlmals, Animals, Animals 6; Tesllmony Time

ht. 286.

65 FORD ', T. Pick.up , ex c. con d ..
low mileage . Ph . 446-6611 .

9 N FORD TRACTOR. 1967 GMC
Truck , 10 spd. , electr ic motor .
Hi ft . t ruc k bed . Ph. 367-7533.

6:GO-:-Sunrlse Semester 10.

Issues &amp; Answers 13; Wrestling 15; Nova 20; In-

OncJ;! Upon a Classic 33 .

2:30--Movle " Bride of the Gorilla" 4; Internal
Revenue Service 1!:1.

3:oo-Publlc Polley Forums 15; Third Testament 33 .
3:3G-Boxlng 6,13.
4: oo-Telethon.Contlnues 3; Movie "River of Mystery"
4; Golf a,10; Music City Special 15; Anyone for

SUNDAY CROSSWORD
PUZZLER
BUNDA Y.MwA 11, zg11
ACROSS

1 Em"• ¥11KH"
70utofdlte

711hMtafgllla
77 Grttk ..,..,.
78 SymbOl tor nttan
71Hrtlll

137HH..ntybodltl
131 Journay
141 Pronoun
142Woodltlvtlltl

11French•rtlct.

11 hlm1n

20 Sne~tl

.cltvtty
1115 4noor•-voat
hair nm

27Tticlullc•
111Poet
H FIHtdlmentll
H F1m111 dMr
31 Prtnt1r'1
102 Mound
Mr~ne
denty
IMIIUrt
104 Stparatt
21 Writing.,.,,...
84 ~11n1
1411Pttnllh for
34 Coneec~ta
tO&amp; Pot1eem1 n
ment
85 Grw•lttter
"thrH" .
38 Ar1bl1~ chief·
(ltlng
22118
87 Tt'lrH-tlllt ftll 148 EncountertG ·
taln
101 Unllnltrntlng
23 Path ofNrth
89 Aclntal¥llubt· 1 152 ElrtPI goddlaa
38Cyblc metera
per1ona
lboul thlaun
IInce
1~3 TPitng doni
40 Mtbrtw month 108 Ptlchtrl
24 Plfllll
90 Strl~l oul
1 155 W11r..1
421rtlti1H
110 PIQI
25 Mln'l niCkMme 112 Form
· 1157 Ptrlodt ol Um1 44 V~l
11 1 ChlfiCierllliCI
215 Alttrnoon per~4 Time long etnce 1 151 Sun god
&amp;B Dtcllrtd
112 Loved one
1111
Pill
180 Mor1y1
&amp;8 Unk)(tk
11 .. Buy biCk
28 Mllrtl)l"tltnl
Q! E.IIPtrl
1 &amp;2 Frtgrlnl
Btemlth
1 1 8 Mlli'a nlch1m1
30 Otpand1 on
Ill HINHII
fOOIItock
~- 150 Conllm(M:)t
117 lubrltllll
32 Cyprtnold tt1h
97 Kicked
184 4non
51 Symbol for
1 1II Jog
33 Bcold
99 OPinwork ltbrlc 1II Pttcllul
tlllurlum
121 Otmlge
35 Rlv1r In AlriC:I
100 Gr11t bultlrd 118 Lilli II ·
63 81 IWW of
122 SPHCt'l
37 Stc:ludld
101 ,llmbi
169 Hlr¥..11
55 NOll of ICIIt
123 R-clllltr•d
vtlleyl
102 Dlrtlcult
170 look lb.edl"t
58 Wllhlrtd
nur11 Wbbr.l
31Abouncl
103,1rtnt {colloq.) 161 NtWIII
58 Rill
125C!vllln)ury
40 BtVIfiOI
I OS EngriVII wllft
9/'llrt
1 27 .... , •• nickname
4tAtlllt(tbbr.)
IC!d
62GIIDforbftalt'l 121Procluctd
43Dtl~ntte
107El!ll
e5AIIO
129C•IIIng
•s E"«:oun11r1
10Q Prtflx: wrong
DOWN
88 Story
130 All
47 Aupua (lbbr .) 110 Evtrgrllfl trHI
8i Color
131 Spoors
&amp;I Arome.
111 Walk on
I Brlage
70 BIII'IO(I'I 1111
133 Confl1gration
•ea~gtn ·
113Pirtatnlngtotnt 2Tinut
72Dulrrtll
138Ptrformlr· 1152 Dtfrlud
dtwn
·
3 Printer 's
73 ElrlhQulkll
138 Flaltlah
s• Bt•mlrcftea 1 14 Ou•rr•t
m1uure
75 OpenWOfk labric140 C1ng•
158 M11t1
·
1 15 COmPIII point
ol P1rtorm
78 Ar1i11'1 bo1rd 1-43 Alllrnallng cur 57 OU·Ctrrylng
11 e Vtnlurieomt
5 Allltutt
77 Mur11
rent ltbbr.l
.vt'llll
117 NIIIVt meltl
8 Killed
79 Lflkl tt'lrcug, . 144 Alii bird
59 RIOt
118 To aotk fltx
7 P11nl11imo
80 Almlll'\tlelertCI 1 48 lrlllll
81 Grlt~llt~l
120 o·relk letter
ltbbr .)
82 Frolic
U8 Girl' a rtlmt '
82 EQUII
121 AI thla pl1ce
8 Prllll 'l VIII83 Fcundtllon
1 50 GOCidellof dlt·
83 Rly1r lt!ande
122 cun ar1Wer
ment
e• Shut a noltlly
cord
841.111n conjunc· 1231nlttl .
9 S()w
151 DIDIOrrtiCY
tlon
124 Frutt ctkt
tO C1plt1t ot
66 tn mi.lt lc, ftlgh '1 53 Sn1k•
81 Con)unotton
126 Schoolbook
Or1gon
18 EltclrllltcfPirl l· 154 Plncft
87 Man'l nlekn1m1 128 Burn wlth hot
11 Roman otttctala
ell
158 Wllgt'lt ollndll
•a
Mountlln like
will&lt;
12 Ccn)unc"llcn
1!I Dlpoal1
g
89Ccmmunton
l"l""hldl
891111an'l nttmt
130 Enrol l
13 Tr1nagreu
u u. o
J 4 Encour1g1
pltlt
t 83 Sttlmahlp
[tbbr .J
71 ThoM holding
I 32 Top of t'Ouat
15 Dltltnee run·
90 Apolhtclry 'a
llbbr.)
otlk:t
134 Frock
"'"
w1tght (pi.J
1es Note of ec::ate
72 Bllmlah
13!5 Mlgh
16 Pigpena
91 WllrCI
187 ComDIII DOinl
1• NHda
136 Article
t 7 Bitter vetch
93 Lowering villi

12 J~Mtetlftl
11 "lo'*"'ln"

Bt Edlblt-Med
82 S..1ontng
83 Lur1

·

6:15-f'arm Report 13.
.
6: 2Q-Not For. Women Only 13.
· 6:3Q-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sun rise Semes ter a;
&gt;./Aedlx 10.
6 : 5~ood Morning , West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; .Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3Q-Schoolles 10.
7: 45-Sesame St. 33.
8:00--Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.1 0.
8:3G-Big Val ley 6.
· 9:oo-A.M: 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; Andy Griffith a:
Mi ke Douglas 10.
9:3Q-Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration B.
IO :OG-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Double Dare

fin ity Factory 33.
1:3G-Aware 6; Sportsman's Friend 13; Zoom 33.
I :45-NBA Basketball 8,10.
l :oo-Superstars 6,13: Insight 15; Classk Theatre 20;

76 Cobro Jl , V-6 , aut o. on flo or,
bu clo.et seats , Am . FM stereo
tape , $4900 . Ph . 446 -3180.

1969 O LDS CUTLASS, air cond. ,
low mile~ very ~ l eon , 109 il, 2nd
Ave . Coli Mon .-Fr i. 446-1642,

Then There Were None" 8; Face the Nation 10;

Hen ry M ahan 13; Once Upon a Classic 20.

1971 FORD GALAXIE 500; 4 Dr .
HT. A ir, radial tires, PS, om
rad io 895. Ph . 446-3237 alter 5
pm .

.

20; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
8:QO--Movie " Filght lo Holocaust" 3, 4,15; SIK Mlllion
Dollar Man 6,13; Rhoda a, 10; Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 20,33.
8:3G-Phyllls 8,10.
9:oo-Swltch 8,10; Masterp iece Thealre 20,33.
America 20.
ll ;oo-News 3,4,8,10, 13,1); FBI 6; Capitol Beat 33;
Opening Soon at a Theater Near You 20.
11: 15-CBS News a,10; Music Hall Am~rica 15.
ll:JQ-Star Trek 3; Movie "Mirage" 4; Movie "And

10 :3G-Garner Ted Armstrong 4; Jimmy Swaggart 6;
Robert Schuller 8; The World Tomorrow 13; Zoom
20.
n :oo-Doctors on Call 4; Re• Humbard 8.15; Rev .

1970 KARMEN GHIA, good cond ,
Ph. 446-1542.

1977 .VEGA HATCHBACK , 4 spd .,
good
gas mileage , . Ph .

367-754a.

51'0 33.

7: 3Q-Antlq~es

IO :·oo-Telethon Continues 3; Church Serv ice 4: Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8: Movie " Madame
Curie" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Robert Schuller 15.

72 GRANO TORINO 351 . engine. 2
bbl. 58,000 miles. good cond .,

1975 JEEP RENEGADE ,

Hogan's Heroes 10; Parent to Parent 13; Li1tle

Mermaid 15; Sesame St. 20; Wall Street Week Jl.
6:30--News 6; NBC News 4,15; 30-Minutes 8; World
Press 33; $25.000 Pyram id 10; N0wsrnakers '77 13.
7:oo-World of Disney 3,4,15; Hardy Boys 6,13; 60·
Minutes 8,10; Crockett's Vl,tory Garden 20; Sludlo

a:oo-Day of Discovery 4; Communique 6: Church
Service 10; Happiness Is 13; Sesame St. 10.
a:3Q-Yours for the Asking 4; Gospel Caravan 6; Day

1974 MUSTANG II , Mach L Ask for
Ri clo. at (304 ) 675-3375 before 6 · 1973 FORD LTD, PS, PB, AUTO.
Good tires . air , $lb(Xl.OO Ph .
p.m . Good c.o nd ition , must selL
245 -5864.
J
197~ DODGE DART, 318 engine,
1970
PLY
Duster,
6
ely
,
3 s.pd ..
automafit;, 1 owne r. 50 .000
~500 .. 3 bike mo tor9cle tra iler
m1les . good conditio n, $1300,
$50 ., Ph .. 675·2943 after 5 pm .
Phone 742-2446:
1972 DODGE Dart . 318 engine
automatic , 1 owner , 50 000
miles. good condition , $1300.
Phone 742-2446

5:oo-Easter Is 15; The Way II Was 33. ~
5;3Q-FIInts1ones 15; Agronsky at Large20; Consumer
Survival Kit 33.
6:oo-News ~ ; Andy Grlfllfh 6; ; Andy Williams 8;

20.

1971- AMC MATADO R, p.s .. p.b.. 1970 PLY. DU STER , 340, 4 speed·, 4
bbl. , low mileage, "plus ex tros ,
V-8 automa tic , new battery,
con be seen at 825 3rd A..-e . or
and front hres . Makes good ·
coi1388-8BJ5 .
work.
cor . $550 . Phone
949 -2660,
1972 MERCURY MON TEGO. t ires
good co ndition. Coll992 -3994.

Documentary Showcase 20 ; ·Montcige. 33 .

7: 55-Biack Cameo 4.

"6-1532

Au to Sales

4:3G-Wide World of Sports 6,13; Waliy's Workshop 15;

Thinking in Black 8; Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13 .
7:3Q-Your Health ' ' Bullwlnkle 6; Porky Pig 10;
Amazing Grace Bible Class 13.

133 Pine St.

ed co uple . Ph . 446-2871 .

Tennyson? 20; Americana 33.

Forums 10; Newsmaker ' 77 13.
7:oo-Telethon Coptlnues 3; Tennessee Tuxedo 6;

SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC.

HOUSE . 5 rooms with back on

1964

SUNDAY, MARCH l7, 1977
6:oo-Thl s Is The Life 10.
6:3G-Jerry Falwell•; Talking Hands B; Publ ic Polley

1

I 43 Ptrfcwma
tc&amp; lrulllaUO·

•a

eo

''

Admiral.

DUPLEX

Electronic
Cooking Centen
Admiral,

with us!
PlANNING APillA PARTY

~ll
• Freezers
• Stereos
• Dlshwashe.s

PHONE
THE AU NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
- Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
our delicious subs while you
sip your fa¥orite suds.
· Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

- Tn,

. MAINTAINS LEAD
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
s. C. (UP! ) - Tom Watson
maintained his · Jead but
Danny Edwards, who started

tne day one stroke behind,
began to fade in early third·
round play Saturday of the
$225,000 Heritage . Golf
Classic.

EEL
rrmrn
RRmJRE

·The longer you own it,
the more you like it.

BAKER FURNITURE

)

....!b&lt;'t .-

SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Spain (UP!) - Spanish
authorities said today incredlbl~ confusion surrounded the site
of history's worst aviation disaster but that the Panam flight
recorder indicated a Panam 747 turned into the path of a Dutch
KLM 747 roaring down the runway at 1B6 miles per. boor foi
takeoff.
The Spanish Air Ministry reported that 599 persons were
ldlled in the crash that was so 'fiery the asphalt nmway melted
as fuel aboard'U!e two jwnbos exploded in a serie~~ of blasts
that scattered bits of wreckage for a quarter of a mile.
The U.S. Embassy also reported 599 persons killed including
350 Americans and aU 249 persons aboard the KLM Charter
fly!ng tourists to the Canary Isla~Panam had put the figure
at about 575. The previous worst disaster was the crash of a
Turkish Airways DCIO near Paris on March 3, 1974, when ~

Dinah 13.
4: 15-Little Rascals 4.
4:3G-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,8;
Emergency One! 6; Fllntstones 15.
s:oo-Btg Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:JQ-Adam -124; News6; Elec. Co. 2o.J3; Adam ~ 12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Q-NBC News3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowl ing for
Dollars 6: News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15 ; Characteristics of Learning Disabilities 20;
Know Your Schools 33.
7:3Q-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search of 4;
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeii.Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville on the Road 15 .
a:oo-NCAA Basketball 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 6,13;
Jeffersons 8, 10; Microbes &amp; Men 20,33.
8:3Q-Bustlng Loose 8,10.
9:0o-Perry Como 6,13; Maude 8,10; Palllsers 20,33.
9:3G-AII's Fair 8, 10.
10 :oo-Movle "All the Fighter" 3,4,15; Oscar Awards
6, 13; CBS News Special 8,10; News 20; Soundstage
33.
.
I0:3G-Farm Digest 20.
·
11 :OQ-News 3,4,8, 10,15.. Monly Python's Flying Circus
20; Black Journal 33 .
ll:JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Koiak 8; Mary Hartman
10; ABC News 33.
12:0G-Movle "The Quiller Memorandum" 10; Janaki
33.
12 :3G-News 6,13.
12 :4G-Movle "To Commit a Murder" 8.

persons died.
HospitalB in Santa Cruz said they had treatejl 89 survivors,
all aboard the Panam plane that had taken off from los
Angeles oil a charter flight for Las Palmas where the Ameri·
can vacationers were 1o ·have boarded a ship for a Mediterranean cruise. Hospitals said 12 persons were treated and
released and 77 were still hospitalized.
Airport officials said they had recovered U!e Hight record
from the wreckage of the Panam jumbo, The sq.called "black
box" records cooversations between the pilot and the air
controller's office and Is useful in investigations of fatal
crashes because it also records altitudes and-speeds.
The SpaniBh news agency Cifra said that a replay of the tape
of contacts between the control tower and the two airplanes
showed that the Panam captain was given orders to stand by

oo the taxiway. But the pilot apparently mistook the runway
Pansm spokesman said. their 747 was hit broadside by the
for the taxiway , Cifra said,
speeding KLM plane as the Panam plane was taxiing to ita
A Panam spokesman in New York expressed skepticism takeoff point. BoUJ planes had been diverted 1o Santa Cruz
over the Cifra report. He said it just was not possible to sift when a bomb explosion in a florists shop at Las Palmastorced
through the mass of information in a Hight recorder ir) s~ch a closing of that airport in these Spanish islands off the
short time and that the technical means of doing so were not Mor&lt;iccan coast.
available at Tenerife airport.
Antonio Cubillo, the Algiers-based chief of the Canary Island
The Cifra report was not confirmed by authorities .and the Liberation movement, claimed responsibility for the Las
captain of the Panam plane was quoted by Cifra as blaming Palmas explosion and said his Marxist, separatist movement
groWJd fog for the collision. It quoted Capt. VictorS. Grubba, of would continue its war against Spain WJtil Spain gave the
Centerport, N.Y., as saying that his plane was moving slowly Canary Islands independence.
in U!e fog when it was hit by a Dutch KLM 747 late Sunday
A Spsnish government source said "incredible confusion"
afternoon.
was surroundipg U!e disaster site . One reason was that Santa
"We did not see anything until it happened," Grubbs was Cruz airport, the only one in Tenerife island, has been closed
quoted as sayiJI_s.
(Continued on page 8)

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVII NO. 242

for boy escapees

said, uwe ' have immecJtate
job openings in several of our
programs and we will be glad
.to discuss Air Force opportunities with anyone ir)terested." The team wOl be at
the Honday .Inn , intersection
of Route 7 and Interstate 77
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Saturday, April 2.

l

'
THE INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR of Thinking Day
was carried out in costuming worn at right by these troop
representatives, LariSsa long and Melinda Mankin,
Chester Brownie and Juniors. Tahiti: Sherri Bell. !IJ!cino
Juniors, Spain; Debby Werry, Pomeroy, Juniors, Hawail,
and Patty'M~Salerrteenter-Brownie&gt;s ;China, l~t to
right.

HEIRLOO

. I' , -

ABOVE, MELODY WEST, front, of' Racine Junior
Troop 1137, came costwned as a buU to represent Spain.
Others left to right are Terri Combs of the Rutland Troop,
Gennany; Kathy Pickens, Syracuse Brownies; Holland,
and Kenda Rizer, Racine Brownies, Switzerland. With the
scouts are Mrs. Pat Thoma, sezyice unit director, and
Mrs. Becky Mankin, right, Thinking Day chairman.

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••
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Fumiture Dept.
3rd Floor·

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

By United Press International
BROOK PARK, OHIO - SAFETY FORCES and Service
department.employes voted over the week~nd to accept new
contracts, ending strikes thaJ had restricted city services,
municipal spokesmen said. Safety forces members, wbo
walked out last Monday morning, were back at work today
following a 55-2 vote to accept a new one-year contract
JrOviding a $1,350 raise, paid overtime, health henefits and
training bonuses. .
:&gt;ervtce depsrtment workers, wbo began their strike
March 10, accepted a package giving 56-cent.an.Oour raises
this year and next and tromptly hauled away 10 truckloads of
refuse piled up at a temporary dump at the service garage.
Regular pickup serVice was scheduled to resume today. .

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SALE

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&lt;·. ;·, : ·. ·..'

Thinking was about others
,,

By Charlene Hoeflich
CHESTER - International Thinking
!Joy was celebrate(! by the Meigs County
Girl Scouts Sunday at the elementary school
here.
Mrs. Becky Mankin· was chairman for
the celebration which featured scouts in
cxrstuming of several countries pre&amp;enting
songs, games and dances of the land each
·
represented.
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Meigs Girl Scouts unit
service chairman, welcomed the scouts and
about 100 parents and friends. Mrs. Jane
Wise was at the piano for the ceremonial
opening whidl included the Girl Scout
pledge and promise presented by the

Syracuse Juniors , and group singing of
"God Ble\ss America."
Mrs. Mankin was mi stress of
ceremonies with the Pomeroy Juniors
~esenting Hawaii, the Salisbury Brownies,
Rhodesia; the Racine Juniors, Spain; the
Rutland Brownies, Germany; the Chester
BroWnies and Juniors, Tahiti; the Syracuse
Brownies and Juniors, Holland; and the
Salem Center Brownies, China.
For the finale the girls sang, "Make
New Friends," "The Brownie Smile Song,''
and "Yankee Doodle ." ' The Syracuse
Juniors retired the colors.
Foods from the various countries were
served following the program.

.
Bleeding statue, miracles, inspire

Episcopal bishop to revqke license
CITY COUNCIL WILL be presented

CLEVELAND legislation tonight requiring all homeowners in the city to
install smoke detectors or face fines and possibly jail.
Democratic Councibnen D~vid Collier of Ward 17 and
Bilsil M. Russo of Ward 19 say the proposed ordinance would
give homeowners WJtil July I, 1978, to install the devices,
which Russo says cost from $20 to $30. "I think that most
people would probably be more than glad to comply
vohmtarily anwway," Russo said. "Having a law will just spur
them on a little."

•.

EDDY!tl'ONE, Pa. (UPI)
The Rev. Chester
Olszewski says his role in the
discovery of a bleeding statue
in his church and miracles in
his parish is the real reaB&lt;m
the Pennsylvania Episcopal
Diocese revoked his Ucense.
The diocese's official
· BRAZZAVILLE, CONGO - A CONGOLESE MIUt:ARY rea110n for its action was the
court today sentenced [our persons, including a former unauthorized ceremonies
Jremler kl Ufe imprisonment as the result of the assassination Olszewski performed.
of President Marien Ngouabi, officials announced. The
milltary government renewed warnings against any attempt
'-Ain.i n. a
by "agitators to trollt by _the present situation to create hatred
u-......,-e
and divlaion and promote disorders."
Brazzaville Was cairn although a dusk-to-dawn curfew was
enforced. Officials said life sentences were given former
Prime Minister Pascal I.Jssouba, fermer Coagolese Workers' .
party official Claude Ernest NdaUa, Antoine Mayltoukou and
·Rubin Moogala, who were not otherwise Identified. Ai.J. were
New officers and the ad·
convicted of compllctty in the slaying of Ngouabi.
visors ol the Meigs Chapter,
F'Uture·Farmers of America,
BEIRtrr, lEBANON - OVER RJGHI'IST objectioTI8, the &lt;ttended the district officers
cabinet \Oday ·appointed Col. Victore Kliouri as the new lraining session March 21 at
ciXnmander of the Lebanese army. Rightists in east Beirut the Washington County Joint
went oo strike today to protest the JrOposed changes in the
army high conunand hours after a maaaive bomb blast Vocatlonai College, Gar;·
destroyed the home of Foreign and Defense Minister Fuad &amp;Ill day, ~esident; Patty
Byer, vice ll'esident; Steve
Blllroa.
, Kno\11'1, 47, commander of the Lebanese army;a armored Kinsel, treasurer and Lee
divlalon8 was appointed by President Elias Sarkla with the l~wls, 'student advisor,
approvill of the Lebanese Cabinet. Khouri replaces Gen. learned responsibilities of
offices . Everett
Hanna Said, a right!Jt and a known aupporter of the "Lebanese their
ltlicomb
and Allan Holter,
Front" - an alliance ofi!Uljor·right-wtngpollticalfactlons.
are faculty advisor.
T~ ~ new executive com· ·
mittee
met March 24 to plan
ENVELOPII:S WANTED
the 1il77-78 term activities.
Students of the Meigs .mere they will be picked up The chapter's fifth annual
l'.bunty schools are asked to by a reJresentative of the ptrt~~t&lt;~tudent banquet will
return their "Send. a Mouse to Meigs Un~ of the American · IE held at 7 p.m. on AJril 5
CoUege" envelopes to their . Cancer Society late in the with Sue Clark, U!e state
respecti..., !lchoolB this w~k week.
sentinel, a,tspeaker.

FFA

session held
at college

Olszewski claims he has a
bleeding ststue in St. Luke 's
church in this southeaBtern
Pennsylvania community
and that there have been
"miraculous" visions and
occurrences in the parish in
recent montha.
The Right Rev. Lyman C.
OgUby, bishop of the
PeiU!Sylvania diocese, late
last
wceek
revok.ed,
Olszewski's license. He said
the disciplinary action was
taken because Olszewski per·
formed "unauU!orized ri\!!s
and ceremonies in public
worship."
The 33-year-old ex-marine
says he and his parishioners .
will oppose the decision.
''We'll have to be removed
bodily," · Olszewski said.
"They'll have to bring in the·
pollee with clubs and dogs."
The Buffalo, N,Y. native,

said he and his parishioners
do not want a schism. "We
just want the bishop to accept
what Is occurring here at St.
Luke's," Olszewski said.
The controversy over the
siH:alled bleeding statue
developed when it was
discovered in late 1975 in the
home of a parishioner, Mrs.
Anne Poore. Mrs. Poore and
others claimed they saw
blood appear on U!e hands
and feet of the statue of
Christ,
A few months later,
Olszewski had the statue
placed on the altar at St.
Luke's where he says it still
bleeds periodically.. He also
cllijfns parishioners have
been cured of crippling
illnesses during church services.
In addition, he says parish·
(Continued on page 8)

A shotgun, tape player,
automobile, CB radios, even
two cast iron dinner bells,
figured in thefts reported to
Meigs County Sher~f James
J. Proffitt over the weekend.
An all·points bulletin Is out
!Dr two boys believed to have
ltolen the car.
The auto ta ken right out of
the yani of John Tillis, RD 4,
Reedsville, early Sunday
rooming, apparently figured
in the escape of the juveniles
from the Fairfield School for
Boys.
One
theft
occurred
Saturday, March 19, but was
oot reported WJtil March 25.
Otarles Morton Butcher, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, said a 12 gauge
automatic shotgun and an
eight track tape player were
ltolen from his residence.
Glenn Baker, RD, Reeds·
ville (Success Road ) told the
sheriff's department
Saturday that sometime
Friday night two cast iron
dinner bells were stolen from
his property.
The stolen car switch
report began Sunday at 3:30
am. when John Tillis, Rt. I,
Reedsville, reported that his
stepdaughter's 1971 Ford ·
Mustang had "just been .
!tolen ."
Tiltis said he heard a noise,
went out to investigate, and
discovered the car missing.
Tillis started south in his car
in search of it and found a
1970 Ford car sit ling along SR
7 on Massar Hm a short
&lt;istance from his horne.
The car's engine was
warm; its gas tank . empty.
The vehicle had been "hot·

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it near the Tillis residence, in
turn taking the Tillis vehicle.
Th e escapees are from
Lawrence and Montgomery
&lt;XJunties.
In the abandooed car from
Rockbridge deputies .found a
J. C..Penney CB Radio that
appeared to have been ripped
from a car. Later Sunday
morning Russell Shields,
Tuppers Plains, called to
advise that during the early
morning hours someone had
tried to steal his car, had
~ied off the ignition switch
cxrver and removed a J. C.
Penney CB Radio. The serial
numbers matched the CB
found in the abandoned auto.
The department also
received a tall from Roland

Torrence, Tuppers

Plain~,

that someone had tried to
!teal his car during the night
mtl that the swttch had been
lroken. An all·points bulletin
has been issued for the stolen
car and escapees from FSB.
At 4 a.m. Sunday, the
sheriff's department in·
'"stigated a traffic accident
thatoccurredonSR 7northof
Pomeroy.
Richard L.
Hunter,
Columbus, told deputies he
was traveling south when an
mldentified vehicle traveling··
mrlh crowded him off the
mad causing him to hit a
Ltilily pole. There was heavy
damage to the ca r. There
were no injuries and no
ar!'est .

MINES CLOSED
Members of lbe United Mlne Workers union struck the
No. 3 mine of the Soutbem Ohio Coal Co. In Meigs County
late Sunday and banda of roving pickets eiosed tbe firm's
· No. I an1 No. Z mine early tOOay.
The reason for the strike al the No. 3 mine was not
Immediately determined.
1be strike and piekellng has forced 1,500 minen off the
job. ·
A meeting was scheduled for IOOay between UMW
offtelalll an1 represeolallves of th~ coal company.

:~;~~~~~~~~~ ~:~~j~~i~~r~~~~~t;j~~:frj;j~~~~r:~:r~t:~/~~:~:~:~I~~~~ t:~~~:j~j;~~j;j:~:~:j:~:~~j:~:~~I~~t~~~~~~~~~~~:~ ~ :~ ~ ~ ~

Court to rule
on NiXon tapes

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Supreme Court today agreed
to decide whether tapes of Richard Nixon's conversations,
It was learned later in the used to help convict his closest White House illdes of Watergate
rooming that the 1970 Ford offenses, may be publicly distributed.
The justices will hear argwnents next fall or winter on the
oot of gas had been stolen
·wring the night in Rock· former president's objections to further publicizing of the
bridge, Ohio, Hocking recordings played to the jury during the 1974 trial. The issue
Qrunty, sometime alter 8 wlli be decided later by written opinion.
p.m.
In t~e interim, / in played at cocktail parties and
Sunday morning the
in satiric productions."
lberiffs office learned from accordance with a d~on
But the appeals court said,
the Security office at Fair· by the U.S. Court of Appesls "The embarrassment Mr.
field School for Boys, Lan· in Washington, arrangements Nixon anticipates Is largely
caster, that two juveniles had have been in JI'Ogress mass that which results whenever
escaped Saturday, the last marketing of the tapes misconduct or questionable
trace of them . in the Rock· pending conclusion of the conduct is exposed."
lawsult.
!ridge area.
The material does not
U.S. District Judge John
It was theorized that the
encompass
all that was
ffiCapees look the car at Sirica had barred dlstribulioo subpoenaed from the White
the
Watergate
Rockbridge, then abandoned until.
defendants had exhausted House at the time of the trial
- only what was heard in the
their appeals,
But the appeals court ruled courtroom.
Texts are available in
this was not serious enough
bookstores
t~roughout the
Rain ending early tonight and noted U!at none of the
country.
Other
cooversations
md clearing, lows tonight defendants th~lves had
remain
conlictentiill.
around 55. Partly sunny and objected.
Slrica was told the National
Nixon contended his
warm Tuesday, highs 75 to 80.
Archives
could distribute the
Otances of rain M per cent personal privacy .was
tapes
to
the
Jllblic for 75 to
&lt;Brly tonight, decreasing to invaded by placing the tapes
$4
per
one.Jtour
cassette reel
in lll'ivate hands "to be
·:!l per cent Tuesday.
or $5 kl $5.75 per ooe-hour
tape reel.
wired.''

Weather

sa.

District 17 la-wyers hosted- in Pomeroy Saturday 1,,ti?f:@:~:t~''ttnt:~::~: : : : t: : i:
Welcome was extended by
Meigs Probate and Juvenile
Judge Manning Webster,
!l'esident of the locill bar
association, w~en District 17
ri the Ohio Bar Alisociation
met Saturday al the Meigs
Inn .
·
During the afternoon
session ,IW!ich began at 3
p.m ., Neil DOion, Logan,
district rxecutive ·rommitteeman, .ll'talded. Be~r

jamin Suffron, Columbus,
addressed the attorneys and
' elhibited new legal forms for
· t11e irt probate cxrurts. The
new forms are standardized
to be used throughout the
~ie and are designed to
simplify probate court
li'OCedW'es.
·Robert A. Manning,
Qrlumbus. director of tne
Jllblic affairs of the state

asso~iation,
spoke on
legislation, specifically of
laws pending in the
legislature that may affect
the judicial system or the
ll'actice of la·w. During the
business session Gary Frye of
Marietta was named new
ertecutive cxrmmltteeman.
A 6:30 p.m. din her
(X'eet:ded the evening session
when Jamllle Jamaro.

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PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Search pressed

Air Force has job openings

LBERFELDS

enttne

MONDAY,1 MARCH 28, 1977

1: ()G....-Tomorrow 3,4; Ironside 13.

COLUMBUS - A special
team of Air Force recruiters
from Detachment 514, here,
will be in Marietta April 2 to
interview persons interested
In any of several Air Force
programs.
Detachrilent Commander,
Major William D. Sheppard,

•

at y

e

2:oo-News 13.

R~gular
Your assurance of quality. From
inside, out - only the finest
materials are used.

Panam 147's wrong turn blamed or
599 deaths, including 350 Americans

Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Satan's Harvest" 10;

Upcoming
(Continued from page D·2)
year in per capilli beef
supply.
Later, as cattlemen began
to rebuild ll!eir herds, the
price advance presumably
would halt, but changes
would be comparatively
gentle.
In " Alternative B Drought Persists," Nix said
changes would be more
dramatic, With gr112ing ·poor,
grain crops low and fOQd
prices·high, cattlemen would
step ijp liquids lion of their
herds.
This would hold down the
pace of price · increases
tllrough 1977 and part of 1978,
but after that the sharp drop
in the available beef supply
would touch off sharp and
dramatic price increases for
both cattle and beef.

...

8.10; Mike Dougla~ 13.
10:3Q-Holl ywood Squares 3,4,15; Pr1ce·ts Righi 8,10.
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Morn ing Show 13;
ll lec. Co. 20.
11 :3Q-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,1 5: Happy Days 6,q;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 : 5~ B S News a; Ms. FIKlt 10.
12 :oo-News 3,4,6, 10; SeconH Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
12 :30--Lovers &amp; Friends 3,1 5; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search, for Tomorrow 8,10.
~:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; ihe Resile .. 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3G-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Famlll' Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns B.lO. •
2:oo-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4;15; One Life lo Live 6,13; Gui ding
Light 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family a, 10;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
·
3: 15-General Hospital 6,13.
3:3o-Mafch Game 8,10: Lilias Y&lt;!ga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;

·~

I

Toledo, president of the O~io
!late Bar Assn., spoke !ising
the topic , "The Lawyer on
Trial" taking up problems
relating to the legal
Jrofessional such as advertising. The district is
rna de up of the bar
associations of At~ens ,
Hocking, Meigs, Mo~gan ,
Noble and Was~ingt on
Counties.

EXTENDED OliTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of sbowers
··:wedne~~day . Fair Thursday
and Friday. Turning ~ler
with highs Wedaesday In
tbe 70s and low 80s, coolin1
by Friday to blgbs In the
upper40sand IowSO.. Lowo
in the mid aDd upper 2k.

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2- The Dati) Sent mel, Mtddlcp"'l Pomt•t oy 0 Monda\ Matdt28

1- The Dally Sentmel Mllldleport Pome• o) 0 Monday MH Ich 28 1977

I~"

·Let's talk ~out our teens

Soviets in
nasty mood
MOSCOW (UP! ) - Sovtet
leader Leonid I Brezhnev
opened talks With Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance today
and Immediately raised the
exploSive 1ssue of the Carter
Administration s human
rights pohcy
Brezhnev and Fore1gn
Minister Andre• Gromyko
held nearly three hol!I"S of
talks With Vance m a Kremlin
conference room overlooking
Red Square

FolloW!Dg the talks, the
Tass news agency Sllld the
two Sides exchanged v1ews oo
'fundamental questions of
Sovlet·Amencan relations
"At the same time an
appropr~ate appraiSal was
given of those moments m
U S pohcy, which do not
square WJ\h the prmc1ples of
equality, non-mterference m
the mternal affairS of each
other and mutual benefit,
Without the observance of
wh1ch the constructive
development of relations
between the two countr~es IS
1mposs1ble ' the press
agency sa1d
The statement was a clear
reference to the Carter Admlmstratlon s pohcy of
support for human nghts
At a news conference
Sunday, Vance told newsmen
that he did not ID\end to raise
the ISSUe at the talks but was
prepared to explam that
Carter did not seek to SIDgle
out any mdiv1duiil nation on
human r~ghts
Brezhnev used virtually the
same words about the Carter
administration m a speech
last week, but h1s warnmg to
Vance placed the human
nghts questiOn on the
bargamiDg table alongside
such key 1ssues as the
strateg1c arms llm1tatwn
talks

' Despite the unplic1t threat,
the Soviet leadership
remained outwardly cordial,
both at the talks and at a
luncheon for Vance hosted by
Gromyko at a guest house m
the Lenin Hills overlooking
Moscow Vance and Gromylro
chatted anunatedly for 10
minutes wh1le American
Journalists watched
V1ktor Sukhodrev,
Brezhnev ' s
personal
mterpreter, told a Western
reporter folloW!Dg the talks
that the fll'st session "went
very well"
Brezhnev
was
accomparued by Gromyko
Sov1et Ambassador to
Washington Anatoly
DobryniD, Deputy Fore1gn
Minister Georg~ Kormenko
and Oleg Sokolov, a Sov1et
official m charge of U S SoVIet relations

the scho~l dropout

DAVID EHRMAN, head of the piBDO department at Liberty BaptJBt C&lt;Jllege m Lynch
burg, Va presented a short sermnar to area mus1c teachers and students at Riverby m
GallipoliS Saturday morDIDg Anative of Lawrence C&lt;Junty, Ehrman also gave a free public
concert at Rlverby Saturday evenmg and Will g1ve the program at the Tn-County
Community Concert Association's membership dnve kickoff dmner this evenmg at the R1o
Grande C&lt;Jllege cafetena

Hearings open on DES drug
DETROIT (UPI) - For
more than 15 years, a
synthebc estrogen called
DES was Widely prescnbed
for pregnant women to
prevent miscarnages
Now thell' daughters are
sufferiDg from cancer and
vagmal abnormahbes
allegedly caused by the drug
Hearmgs begin today m
Wayne C&lt;lunty CirCUit C&lt;Jurt
to determme if 184 Michigan
women whose mothers used
DES can sue drug firms that
distnbuted DES
An attorney for the women
Lawrence Charfoos clauned
the DES case was the
b1ggest scandal smce
thalidormde "
'It hasn't gotten the

attention and the difference IB
you can t show a p1cllll'e of
1t," he satd "If we coqld
show a photo of what IB
happeDIDg, the whole country
would be up m arms '
Charfoos Sllld all of the
women underwent surgery
for removal of cancerous or
precancerous leSions He sa1d
some had part or all of thfll'
female reproductive organs
removed
DES was Widely prescribed
between 1947 and 1964 as an
a1d
m
preventing
rmscamages Researchers
estunated 11 may have been
used by 500,000 to 2 million
pregnant women
In the late 1960s,
researchers found (emale

offsprmg of women who took
DES were develop10g
abnormal glands ID theuvagmas and cancer or precancerous lesiOns of the

1ts chermcal or generic name
by many drug compames and
was never marketed under a
brand name
The drug also has been
used by non.pregnant women
to treat breast cancer,
suppress lactation and to
counter postmenopausal
problems and as a ''morning
after contracepbve It lB
st1ll marketed for some those
uses
The drug had been used to
Bid growth of beef cattle but
was banned by the
government for use m
livestock The government
also ordered that warnings be
giVen to women who take 11 as
a contraceptive

cerVIx
The lawsmt clauns that the
drug IDdustry as a whole
shared ~ JOIDt responsibility
for the daOIBge that DES has
caused
Attorneys for the 16 drug
comparues named 10 the smt
- mcluding Ell Lily and
Upjohn - sa1d they would
seek d1sm1Bsalm cases where
the women caMot Identify
the prescription drug or the
manufacturer mvolved m
theu- claun
The synthetic hormone was
manufactured and sold under

,

Last week we touched on what m1ght
be done to prevent a youngster droppmg
out of school This week's dL'ICUSSIQD wtll
be on measures to he taken after 11 has
happened ThL'I office has a special Interest m the subject because a high per·
centage of teens who get mto senous
trouble with the law are dropouts
For the parent who has himself gone
on through college, the thought of h1gh
school dropollt IB mromprehens1ble Even
to the parent who was a dropout 10 hiB own
time 1\ is hard ln understand, because he,
more than anyone, knows what a long·
rnn ge mistake Is being made
What goes through the teen s mmd
when he beoomes a dropout ' Is he con·
cemed With what it will mean to hun later,
how much it will cost hun m unearned
mcome, the effects tt Will have on his
future farmly' ObviOusly he thmks only of
himself and what else could be expected
d hun at thiS stage 10 emotional development he IS taking a seemmgly !mal, easy
way out of what appears to him as a lot of
senseless hard work
Qmck, nnmedlate countermeasures
are needed Some found to be helpful are
- Arrange with a young college
tudent - one who IS havmg to work to
help ptt hunself through school - to talk
to your dropout about why he IS puttmg
forth all the effort tt obvously takes
- Determme what your youngster
likes fo do best , and try to \le 11 m with a
career later Example he hkes building
model aJrplanes, and this mtght lead to
becommg an aeronatu1cal engmeer, but
certamly not with less than a college
educa\lon Show h1m how Without proper
formal education, he cannot do the thjngs
he most enjOys and Will have to forego
them m favor of work he won t hke to do
JUSt to make enough mcome to survive
Pomt out the alternative occupations,
using those you know would be most
repulsive to hun
-If he IB InVOlVed With 8 gll'l he cares
for, discuss the possibilities of later
rna mage, how due to hiS lack of educatmn
sbe will always have to work to help
!Mpport theu- famUy And, that she Will
most likely have more educa\lon than he
and probably as a result earn more money
than per husband aD theu- hves Make him
crmge at the thought work on his ego
- If there IS a fanuly church bond

arrange for hun to have a talk with your
mmister Evan a ffilDISter unfamiliar wtlh
the famUy or this situation would he more
than wUiing to help In J;OUnsel
- Prearrange a talk with an em,Rloyment counselor, preferably one
ronnected With a pr1vate employment
agency Pay for the time taken 1f
necessary, for having the differences 10
job ava•lablli\les explamed by a
professional Will carry considerable
weight with your teen
uwuy the dropout needS a drastic
awak8Ung to the path he has chosen, and
lb IS unlikely the parent, at this stage, can
get hun out d hL'l rut without outs1de help
Don~ be emoorrassed to ask, as any adult
knows the severity of your plight, once
apprised , and most are anxious to help a
youngster
Change thmgs - drastically - .!IIJjl6"
from the fonner routmes, developmg an
atmosphere of senous IDient 10 the home
Keep up a constant barrage of words of
mcouragemmt about returmng to school
Slowing you fully expect hun to do It Be
kind gentle and f~rm'
If the dropout has a part tune job do
not allow it to be turned mto full tune
employment U he dr1ves the family car,
reduce the OCcaSIOns ol thiS pnvUege
walking g1ves more tune to think If he has
his own car, which you bought for hun,
IOSist that It be stored In the garage unused
111til the school return matter IB settled
Parents attemptmg to get a teen back
m school will llve in an unpleasant home
atmosphere w1th temper flare-ups ,
arguments and often outr~ght rebelliOn
Hold your ground and take comfort ID
knoWing that once you've accomplished
your goal, the tem will soon see that Insistence was justif•ed
Th1s department believes In the
benefits only a good educatiOn can
proVIde, and we'll help ID any way possible
to get a teen back In school Education to
1mst people IS the bas1c founda\lon for
satls!ymg lifestyle and what else could
oontnbute more to achlevtng personal
goals'
Next week Vandalism
Material contributed by Middleport
Pollee Ch1ef J J Cremeans and sponsored
by Headquarters Tavern North Second
Ave Middleport

Phoenix accountant, about to talk, murdered Atomic policy line coming
Investigative Reporters
and Editors Inc
Distributed by
United Press International
Once troubled by what he
called
the great land
hustle,' accountant Edward
Lazm: agreed to giVe state's
ev1dence to a grand JUry
In February, 1975, on the
eve of his cntlcal testunony,
Lazar drove to work m
downtown Phoemx and
parked m an underground
garage
HlB killer met hun there
and shot hun f1ve times
Con man Anthony Serra,
servmg 8-10 years at the
An zona State Pnson for
mortgage fraud reported for
work last Jan 3 at the prJBOn
s1gn shop
Two hours later, fellow
IIUTlates stabbed Serra 18
times and heat him on the
head
Four months before, Serra
had been quoted as saymg m
an interVIew that he knew
where miSSmg land fraud
documents were h1dden
There followed, Serra
complaiDed m a letter to hiS
lawyer, a "flood of threats on
my life '
Edward Lazar and Anthony
Serra had at least three
th10gs m common
- They knew how Ned
Warren operated
- They were talking about
It

- They were murdered
It was Serra, ID fact, who
first told police that Warren
was the ' godfather ' of the
llll.rizona tand fraud mdustry
-.varren, who has so far
thwarted AriZOna attempts to
put hun m Jail, has lost two
other former close asSOCIBtes
m the past four years
One comm1tted su1c1de,
leavmg Warren as the
executor of hiB estate The
other died ID an 81l'Piane
crash, his IDSUrance gomg to
a company controlled by
Warren
Pohce
beheve
a
professional assassm
executed Lazar No arrests
have been made The state
pr1son warden believes Serra
was the v1chm of a
planned" murder Four m
mates have been charged
Lazar had been a top
Warren a1de and was deep
1DS1de the Warren empll'e U
he didn't know all of the
secrets, he had to know
enough
It was no secret that
Warren s tenacious pursuer,
Detective Lonzo McCracken,
was questwnmg Lazar But
Lazar apparently had told
Warren he would mvoke the
Fifth Amendment, he would
not disclose to authorities
what he knew McCracken,
however, persuaded Lazar to
tell h1s tale to a grand Jury
under a mantle of lllllllumty

HEALTH

for hunself
Lazars dJBenchantment
With Warren could be traced
to a 1973 memo Lazar wrote
to Warren and Manny Smger
fellow
officials
at
Consohdated Acceptance
C&lt;Jrp , a key Warren land
company
The quality of our sales
has deteriOrated badly smce
Verde Lakes The quahty at
ChiDo is less than Verde and
the quahty at Castle (Lakes )
IB even lesser (SIC)
I do not
IDtend to I!Brliclpate m "the
Great Land Hustle" and If we
caMot return our busmess to
the quality that 11 was when
we started, I would not Wish
to contmue,' Lazar wrote
By early 1975 Lazar had
deCided to make a break from
Warren He began tellmg
what he knew about
corruptiOn and land fraud
On Jan 9 1975, Lazar told a
grand JUry of Warren s
mvolvement m payoffs to
former Anzona Real Estate
C&lt;Jmrmss10ner J Fred Talley
and of a 'loan" made to
James K1effer one of
Talley's mvest1gators Lazar
had much more to tell, hut his
appearance was surpnsmgly
curtailed that day
Lazar was to return to giVe
more tesbmony to a new
grand JUry the follo11mg
month The mght before hiS
death, IRE reporters have
learned the 40 year old

•

Lazar received a phone call
at home H1s wife, hearmg
Lazar s s1de of the
conversation, desc r~bed 1t as
weu-d " havmg something
to do about busmess for a
client
Lazar assured the caller
that he would get to work
around mne the next
mornmg He did and the
killer was 1\altmg
He shot Lazar once m the
head and four tunes m the
chest w1th a 22 p1stol, leavmg
the body 1n a kneehng
pos1t10n m a second level
stau-well
Warren conceded m an
mterv1ew w1th IRE that
Lazar had promised he would
plead the Fifth Amendment
before the grand JUry
Warren sa1d he was shocked
and surpnsed when he
learned Lazar was talking
Although he mststed he had
nothmg to do w1th the Lazar
murder, Warren conceded he
must be considered a suspect
until the k1ller 1s found
- Serra, the second former
Warren assoc1ate to be mur
dered, talked not to a grand
Jury but to Richard Frost
who ,. wrttmg a book about
land fraud
Serra was convicted of 11
counts of fraud stemrmng
from the operatwns of Great
Southwest Land and Cattle
Co , a land f1rm pohce beheve
to have been l'Ontrolled by

Tone abdominal muscles

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence E

Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Havmg re cently undergone
surgery to repair bllateralm
gumal hermas, I am trymg to
fmd me to some book or pamphlet'
DEAR READER - Yes,
you need the same exercJBes
mo:.t people need to avoid a
"bay wiDdow " The problem
IS based on alxlormnal obesitY
and loss of muscle tone, I am
sending you The Health Lel
ter DUI\lber 3-7, G1rth Con·
trol Avoiding The Btg Middle It Will g1ve you mstruc
!tons on exercises that you
can use
At the begmmng you should
s1mply learn to contract your
abdommal muscles You can
lle down on your baek and
suck m your slum &lt;ch
.nuscles and tense them "
this po.s1tion Learn the feel of
your abdummal muscles'
ttghtemng You C"dn relax
them and then hr, hh•n them
agatn By ~" Jll, tins

.

I

repeatedly you can beg,\, to
butld up their tone
Don t overdo 1t at lu-st or
you will have sore belly
muscles I would suggest no
more than 10 contractiOns at
a tune to start wtth and no
more than one such exercise
pennd a day Uillll you are
sure you are not gmng to have
sore muscles Then you can
progress on to other exerciSes
outlmed m "l'he Heailh Letter
Others who want this m
formallon can send 50 t-ents
Wllh a long stamped, self ad
dressed envelope for 1t Just
w11te to me m care of th1s
DCW;j!tper, P 0 Bux 1551
Radl'"o C1ty Station New
York NY 10019
S1t-u~~ a~d vanous • pes of
lc1 hfts 1 •1h help There IS a
, oF diS&amp;greemenl between

hermas You \\ 1ll need leg

lifts he1e And I would sug
gcst that you voluntattl) con
tract your abdomtna l
muscles each tune you hft the
legs to be su1 e the ab9ommal
muscles i:tre dmng t1w work
and not some othCJ muscle
group
DEAR DR LAM B- I have
two pre school clnldren who
a1 e taken care of by a wmnan
while f work She WO '
recentlyoperated on for an 111
testmal blockage Durmg the
opcrdt!OO It wa$ dt ~COVered
that she has a twnm 111 het
pancreas whtch lui ned out to
be mr.~hgn.mt She 1s em rent
ly takmg medtcatwn and
1etutns to the hospital fot
utdmt1un tr e t:~tmcnts She
doesn t know how lung sh~

wtllltve
She w•nl1&gt; to 1ctnrn to
Sllllple s•t·up for the IJesl babysit for my cluldren I m
resulll; One !lung IS cet taut 1\ulldCllllg If the!e IS ,my
s1mple Sit ups wtll nul help r la n~c r to my clu lrh en 1f she
your lowt:r Gti.xiUlncn much dot s 5cVI riil yet~r s i:tgu she
the area where you lw•J your l~J i;lll OPlf iil l •ll lw kill
.. ~'" Its Ull hoW t o

I

du

C\ CII D

cctnce r and was g1ven a d ean
lllll of health fm that
DEAR READER - I sym
patluze wtth yolll concern as
a good mother There IS no
danger lo your children !J om
the lady scant-er at all - tl ts
not contagtous - or from he1
l1 eei lments

People who have cu ncet
somellmes have more problenJS than JUst copmg w1th
then Illness They may have
to cope Wllh miSillfOI1lla(IOn
and pi eJUdices of even lhm
loved ones It may tnletfete
wtth then employment Tilts
IS, mdeed unf01 l unate It IS
good for everyone to be" pt &lt;&gt;

ducllve and an nnp01 tant
pa rt uf soctety - u re~ pl&gt;c tl vc

of the money mvulved If a
pe rson needs ri
Nul only wtll the lady s
CO il( ~I r! Ul

be

.1

J.Huh!t: tll f01

Yt&lt;UJ dnld ten uul) ou may be
d!)lllg hc1 I g t CtJt SCI\ I(:C hy
1 1d!JHI ~ her l o ft:cl Wd tllt rl
\cult d rmd to b.. d li M ful
!! If ! ll hl I

fstlf

Il l\

Warrell
Formerly sales manager of
Great Southwest, Serra had
been ID )all about a year when
he talked with Frost last
August
Accordmg to Frost, Serra
clauned he knew of records
hidden m 1970 that would
unpllcate Warren and "lead
all the way to the White
House Frost sa1d Serra was
willmg to say where the
documents were
Whatever knowledge Serra
had of m1ssmg documents
died with hun m January He
was one of five mOIBtes who
have been stabbed to death m
the state pnson m the past
two years and he IS among 13
persons who have been mur·
dered or mel questionable
deaths after mvolvement
w1th orgamzed crune or land
fraud m Arizona Warren has
sa1d he never hll'ed Serra and
considered hun a crook '
In March 1973 William
Steuer 54, board chatrOIBn of
a fraud-ndden land company,
filled the tank of h1s
Continental Mark IV With 18
ga llons of gasolme and drove
to hiS home 10 Phoerux
He pulled mto the garage,
closed the door and left the
motor runnmg He was found
dead m the car that
afternoon An mquest ruled
the death accidental, pollee
say 11 was a suicide
Steuer a longtime Warren
associate had listed Warren
as executor of hiS will nearly
a year before - at about the
same time he, for
unexplamed reasons, had
g&lt;ven all of the stock he
owned 1n hiS own land
company back to the
company
Warren told IRE there was
no money m Steuer's estate
S1x months before his friend's
death Warren asserted, he
had warned
Steuer's
assoc1ates that Steuer was
crackmg up and was su1adal
The
fourth
Warren
assoc1ate to d1e unexpectedly
was Leonard Hoffman, 'SI·
year-old pres1dent of tt.e
Prescott Valley Inc , a land
company
Hoffman was m a hurry to
get to Los Angeles on a
January afternoon ID 1973
Despite forecasts of poor
weather Hoffman, a business
assocl8te and the CIK!Ipany's
new pilot left PhoeniX ID
Prescott Valley's newly ac·
qull'ed twm-engme Cessna
rhey d1ed a few hours later
when the plane mmed mto
a mountam 23 m1Ies
northeast of Palm Sprmgs,
Calif Federal 1Dvest1gators
blamed the crash on pilot
error Prescott Valley,
benef1c1ary of Hoffman's ID·
surance collected $600,000
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter Withm the
next few days will lS8Ue a
policy statement on uraruum
and plutopmm and make
deCISions on several poSSible
arms sales abroad, according
t.b his spokesman
,
White• • • HbV!l! • 'Ptels:Secretary J ody Powell alao
suggested that the Carter
administration will not soften
1ts stand on human fights even at the expense of
progress ID preliminary arms
talks with the Soviet Uruon
Carter and his family re·
turned to the While House
late Sunday afternoon after
his second weekend at the
Camp David presidential
retreat in the Catoctin
Mountain Park
While he was enjoying
bicycle rides With hiS wife ID
the bright chill of the Ughtly
guarded camp, Powell la1d
out a heavy agenda for the
next few days
He sa1d there was "not
really" a moratorium on U.S
arms sales abroad, as was
reported durmg the weekend
'The President baa, as he
indicated
duf!ng
the
campaign and earlier In the
administration, asked that he
personally have the chance to
rev1ew any major arms sales

Defore they are m fa~\ , Carter would tske a more
consumated," Powell sa1d moderate tone on human
"There are a number of rights if necessary to achelve
such proposals which are progress in the arms
either on his desk or about to negotiations With the Soviet
be on his desk and he will Umon
be makmg deCJBlOns and
'I don t believe the
forwarding those Aecl4i011~ fWlm~an peo~le would
wlthm the relatively /!Mr. support a foreign policy
fullll'e," he said
' ' Whici\ tiaslcally said we muat
Carter "lB concerned about muzzle the conscience of this
the proliferation of anns, country ID order to deal with
nuclear and conventional, some other country," he
and the thrust for violence replied
and confrontation that col!)d,
~ 1
draw major Po1"er~ intQ ,.
elF.UU
0
Afnca or South America,"
Powell said "Because of
that, be IB making this review
0
personally "
Powell spoke on a
televtslon Interview (CBS.
TV's Face the Nation)
Afterward, he told reporters
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Carter will issue soon a policy
Six
yeal'l1 ago Leslie Van
stateinent oo plutonium and
Houten
waa asked at her trial
uranium
if
she
was
sorry she had taken
Energy adviser James
part
ln
the blood bath
SchleBIOger sa1d during the
murders
committed by
weekend the administration
Cl)arles
Manson's
"girls "
opposes development of
"What
Is
sorry'"
she
snee·
plutomum fuel systems on
red
'
It's
a
four
letter
word
"
grounds that plutonium is a
Her
bead
shaved
bald,
an
key Ingredient In nuclear
weapons Schlesinger said "X" cut ID her forehead with
Carter favors construction of a bobby p1D, the high school
more conventional uranium homecomq queen defied the
jurors to giVe her the death
reactors
penalty
for the knife murders
Powell waa asked whether
of Leno and Rosemary
LaBianca They did
Miss Van Houten, now 'll,
goes on trial again today on
the same charges The
appeals courts granted her a
second time around becauae
her lawyer disappeared and was later found dead In
More than 40 such the mountains- near the end
poiaonings occurred during of the 197~71 trial.
The California Supreme
that time, 11 of them fatal
C&lt;Jurt
subsequently ouUawed
Numerous relatives and
the
death
penalty in the state
friends of the defeOO&amp;nta,
and
Miss
Van Houten has
many from the Pbllliplnes,
spent
the
Ume
In ~n with
were oo hand for the trial and
two
other
of
Man!on
'a female
sat through almost four
followers
-Susan
Atklnl
and
weeks of painstaking jury~
Patricia
Krenwinkel
selection
/
The ca.se was muddled lay
the reported cmfesslon of
'
another nurae but attorneys
did not believe the ccnfeuloo
TIIEDALYSENTIN£1.
Issue could lead to a
DEVOTED TOniE
dlamlual of the charges
INTEREBrOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA.
against the defendanbi
CIIESTDIL. TANNEHILL
Federal authorities were
ROBERTHOEFUCH
waiting for University of
CltyF.diW.
Mlchlpn olllclala to .Uow
PubiL'lhed dally ext.-ept Saturdly
by TI~ Oh1o Vldley Publishing Como
FBI agenbi to review the
11ny l1l C()UI1 St Pomeroy Ohio
Jlllychlatrlc records of Betty
45769 BllSlncss Offke Phone WJ.
2156 EdJturud Phone 912-2157
Jakbn, a former nl8ht nur•
f)e{_'&lt;lnd ct.a putltawe p~~ld •l
at the VA hospital, who kllled
Pmne1 oy Ohio
heraeU Feb 3
NaUoJWI IKivertillng reprwnWHrd GrUtalh Con'lpllny JnMn Jakim, who had ctativeBottmelle
and G11llagher Div
terminal cancer, reportedly 757 Thard Ave New Yurk N y
11101
7
admiUed reaponslblllty lor
Sublicnptiun rute.v Delivered by
the poisonings to her carrn~r
where avallllble 75 t.'t!llLI per
paychlatrilt The govermnent IMlk By Mot!ll' Route where carrier
»t.'I'Vke not IIVIIillble One month
received pennllllionlnrm her $J
~ By 1riadl b1 OWu and W V11
wldoww to reriew the mental ~ Ye.11r 122 00 Sll munllw
$()
Three lnOIIlhll not
recorda lui week and $11
Ekwhere f28 00 YNr Sil monthl
IOUI'cel lllid the unltenity
til 60 Three mun11111 n $0
prll'f! include• Slinday
prollably 110uld banor hla Sula,·ipUvn
Tilnei-&amp;nU11el
waiver

'R , ;. :

van H

uten

begiilll111g
• •

Mystery of motive will
he unfolded in trial
DETROIT (UPI) - With
jury selection over, no one
has yet provided a motive ki
explam why two nurses
allegedly poisoned nine
patients at a Veterans
Administration Hospital with
a powerful muscle relaxant
That mystery could be
aolved today as prosecutors
present their opening
arguments at the trial of
Fllplna Narciso, 30, and
Leonora Perez, 32.
So far~e goverrunent Haa
made no mentloo of the
rnc(lve, though speculation
has centered on a poalble
protest of inadequate stafllng
at the hospital
Ten women and m men
have been selected to hear
the ca.se - 12 jurors and four
alternates U S District
Court Judge Philip Pratt
dismi11ed
dozens
of
prospective jurors for each
one selected
The two nlll'lell are chlrged
with poisoning nine ,.lientl
at the Am Arbor VA holpltal
with the miiiCie reluant
Pavulon during July and
August of If/&amp; Two of the
,.tlenbi died of breathing
failures caused by the drug

f

-.-...

,-------------,
l Pro !Yankees

Latin edges Mifflin 69-65
for Ctass AA cage crown

to pay
lSt~~~~.~.gs: Lyle $400,000
By Unrted Press lnt e rMIIon~l

Ea stern Conference
Allant1c D r\ IS on
W L Pet
GB
Ph taoelph a 41 78 616
Roston
l9 ll 5?1 6 I 7

I

NV Kn c k s
Ru ff &lt;J o

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Jene
Davis and his Columbus
Linden McKinley team made
believers out of a lot of people
Sallll'day
DavJB kept saymg Linden
would win the Class AAA
state ba s ketball
champ1onslup But, since that
meant beating Barberton,
considered by some the
greatest high school team m
the state's history, not too
many people took h1m
senously
After all, Barberton was
the defending champion had
won SliD a row gmng mto the

tiUe game, and had three all
Olnoans to back up Its claun
as the No I team
'Nobody would beheve
me," a calm DaviB told
reporters after the Panthers'
80-74 wm over the Magics "I
expected to wm the game all
along f don't know what else
to say We JUSt went out and
did what I expected us to do
The other two titles went to
Cleveland Cathedral Latin,
which edged Columbus
Mlfflm 69-65 m the AA fmals,
and Fort U&gt;ram1e, a 63-50
WIDDer over Mansfield St
Peter s m Class A

LaUn, m Winning Its fll'st
state title, had 1ts own Todd
Penn m 6-foot all-Ohio guard
Bob Lowrie, a unanunous
choice
as
the
AA
tournament' s MVP
Lowrie tossed m 2t pamts
and put on a dazzling display
of passmg and dnbbling to
spark the Lions
With h1s team trailing 115-M,
U&gt;wr1e hit a long JUmper to
put the Lions ahead, 'stole the •
ball to set up a basket by
Mike Harris, and after a free
throw by C&lt;Jlm Irish made 1\
69-1l5, put on a diBplay of
fancy dr1bblmg to nm 33
crucJal seconds off the clock
"I don't know what we

Today's

&lt;.___

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

ATLANTA (UPI) -Any actor will tell you the worst poSSible
mistake he can make IB stayiDg on too long AI McGUU'e
agrees As one of the most successful college basketball
coaChes ID the country he feels he's part of show husmess, too
So regardless of whether or not hiS underdog Marquette
Warr~ors beat North Carolina s more talented Tar Heels for
the NCAA champ1ooship here tomght, he's gettmg off the
stage, leavmg basketball for good to take a desk JOb ID pnvate
industry after 20 years of coaching
AI McGuire IB relatively young yet only 47, and w•th the
sharply-boned, almost professwnal4lke Hall' he has for the
dramatic, he could if he wanted turn his gomg away mto
another Camille, clutchmg one hand to hiB heart and another to
his head before departing He ISO t domg that What he s domg
IB leavmg the center stage to his players IDStead because he
believes 1t's !hell' show not h•s
Sometimes he gets earned away m spite of hunseU as be d1d
after last Sallll'day's semifiDaiiD which hiS team knocked off
gallant little Umvers1ty of North CarolmaCharlotte, 51-49, on
Jerome Whitehead's heart-6\opper nght at the fmal buzzer
First McGull'e made sure Whitehead's shot had beaten the
horn He then walked across the court m front of where the
depressed Carolina rooters were ••tling and Hashed them the
two-fmger victory s•gn /
"That was obnonous fPme to g1ve the VIctory Sign to the
Charlotte fans because they had enough heartache " he said,
after he had time to think abOut 11 ' But that's part of my
sandpaper '
His players h2ve seen that side of McGull'e
"Sometimes you waMa fight him and sometunes you wauna
hug him," lfS one of his speedy, hustling guards he s so proud
of, Jun r '" of Jersey CitY,1 N J "The one thing all of us
respect
t4~1!!' hun 'IS' ius 'honeli!f H~'~'a truthful man
Conslde
JS weU iie•s tlioughlfw 'ln tne utile things 1
remember "''" k1d we had at M~rquette last year He came
from another country and he was blind When he was m hiS
own country he used to go to the soccer games because even
though he coulcn't see, he enjoyed hearmg the roar of the
crowd Coach fOWld out he wanted to go to our basketball
games ao he w~~ !0;.\l)~__a\!llett~ offu:ll and got him tickets I
know II sounds 'W&lt;e oruy" Ilttle~mg. but 1t's typical of hun
Basketball IBll 't the only thiDg ID his life He doesn't try to
make 11 the only thing ID ours He s always trying to teach us
things besides bas~ etball I honestly love him So do the other
guys I'm gonna m.lb... hun "
It ISll't surpriSing to hear one of his players talk that way
about the hyper-active, motorcycle-riding McGull'e because
Dean Snuth, the extraordinarly eff1c1ent North Carolina
coach, alao has a slilcere affection for him
"AI McGuu-e has been so great to basketball Smith sa1d
Sunday "He has meant so much to the game and to the
coaches We wish hun well I love my players more than I do
AI, or else I'd want hun to win It "
A native New Yorker, McGull'e played for the Knicks a
couple of years w1th his brother, Dick, and then went mto
coaching In 13 years at Marquette and seven before that at
Belmont Abbey, his teams show a 403-144 record Although he
has led Marquette to 11 straight post-6eason tournaments,
none of his teams ever has been able to win the NCAA title
Naturally, he'd like to wiD 11 torught
"For the players, not for myself," he insists, and the way he
says It, you can tell he means 11 despite the fact he admits he
has "con" ID him "lfit'scon, Its leg~t because It's me "
Aak AI McGuire why he's quitting and he says
"Because It's over I know 1t's over It's time It has nothing
to do with bitterness or anything like that I've had my run I
think I mdlked it within reason "
AI McGuire gives you that light little laugh when he says
that He grows serious, though, when he says hiB team must
stop North Carolina's Incomparable Phil Ford to wiD 'I keep
telling our playerS-doo't get at each other, only give compll·
menls to one other, doo 't crack and everythmg will turn out all
right "
To beat Marquette, Smith says, his team will have to slow
down the teinpo North Carolina adjusts remarkably well hut
Marquette doesn't look as U It's going to crack The Warriors
have taken it upon themselves tAl send their coach out into the
business world a WIMer, and I have to take a ticket on them

with us!
PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
-Enjoy three mes of your favonte
PllliS

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s1p your favonte suds
£at In Or Carry Oot
Phone
"2 6304

United Press Ioteroatlooal
"We've been playmg under
adverSity all year," Detrmt
Pistons' Coach Herb Brown
was saying 'And we're just
gomg to have to continue to
do so "
The latest problem for
DetrOit agam concerned
Marvm Barnes the most
trouble-plagued PL'Iton m a
most troubling year for the
team
Barnes suffered a poSSible
fracture of the fourth
metacarpal ID hiS left hand
Sunday after helpmg DetrOit
heat the Houston Rockets 111&gt;100 Sunday mght
The sometimes bnlhant
forward, who sa1d last week
h1s unpendmg pnson
sentence 1s we1ghmg heavily
on h1s mlDd, exploded for 16
of his 20 poiDts m the third
penod Barnes outburst
helped Detroit increase a 5952 halftime lead to an 87 74
bulge after three quarters
agalDSt the team w1th the
second best record m the
league
Elsewhere, 1! was New
Orleans 119 Indiana 118 ID
double overtime, the New
York Knlcks 109 WashiDgton
95, Philadelphia 128 PorUand
116, Denver m Golden State

109, San Antomo 139 Kansas
City 129, Boston 114 the New
York Nets 109, DetrOit 115
Houston 100, ChiCago 95
Cleveland 90 Los Angeles 92
Buffalo 89 and PhoeniX 121
Seattle lOll
Jazz 119, Pacers 118
Nate Wilhams came off the
bench to score seven po1Dts ID
the

second

overtime,

mchidiDg the wlDDmg free
throww1th 26 seconds to play
Jim• McElroy scored a
career-b1gh 37 poiDts to lead
the Jazz to Its fifth straight
VIctory Pete Marav1ch, the
NBA s leading scorer, had 29
B1lly Kmght got 30 for
lndiBDa
Knlcks 109, Bullets 95
Earl Monroe scored 31
pomts to help the Kn1cks keep
!hell' slun playoff hopea alive
Lonnie Shelton added 17 and
Phil Jackson 14 for New
York, which trails Boston by
f1ve games In the loss column
With JUSt seven to play Elvm
llayes had 23 to lead the
Bullets, who had a four-game
wlDDmg streak snapped
16ers 128, Trail Blazers 116
Julius Ervmg's 26 poiDts
and George McGmms ' 22
guided the 76ers to theuelghth VICtory m the last 10
games Portland's Maurice
Lucas led all scorers w1th 30
poiDts
Nuggets 115, Warriors 109
Jun Pr1ce's hook shot w1th
28
seconds left broke a 109--109
Umted Press lnternattonal
tie and put the Nuggets on top
G1rls
Dhto Htgh School
for good Rick Barry paced
Reglona I To.urnament
the Wamors w1th 26 poiDts
Resu tts
Spurs
139, Kings 129
Class AAA
Larry Kenon scored 43
(At Dayton)
Sprmgfteld
North
56 pOints, 33 of them m the
Hamlilon Taf1 42
(At N&lt;H"walkl
Toledo Central C~tholtc 62

Girls results

!Vedtna tl6

!At WesterVIlle I
Columbus Walnut Ridge 61
Zanesv lie 32
(At Canton)

Alentor

wood 51
~

53 Cleveland Colltn

Class AA
(At Daylon)

459
378

11 1 7
17 1 7

J

11 NY Net s 109
Ph Jia 128 Portlan d 116
NY Kn c k ~ 109 wa sh ng ton 95
New Orleans 119 lnd ana 118
12ots)
Sa n An ton o 139 Kan Crt yo 129
Denver 115 Go den State 109
De troi1 115 Houston 00
Ch ca &lt;TO 95 Clevel and 90
Los Ange les 92 Bu ff alo 89
PhOen x 121 sea11 e 100
Mond ay s Ga m es
( No games scheduled)
Tuesdays Gam es
Bost on a t Cleve an d
NY Nets at New Or le an s
w ash nglon a t San Anton o
Ph!ladelph a at Ch cago
NY Kn cks a l Kan sas C ly
Pt oen x at M lwaukec
Bos ton

compUmg

second half and grabbed 20
rebound s to pace San
Antomo Ron Boone had 32 to
top the Kings, who dropped a
haUi(ame behind Chicago m
the fight for the fmal playoff
spot m the Midwest DIVIBIOn
Celtlcs 114, Nets 109
Jo Jo Wh1te scored 24 pomts
and had e~ght assists to spark
Boston Dave Cowens added
21 pomts and John Ha1hcek
Ill New York's Mike Bantom
topped all Sl'Orers w1th 31 and
Bubbles Hawk1ns got 22
Bulls 95, Cavaliers 90
Norm Van Lier scored a
season-high ?:/ pomls to help
Chicago wm 1ts e1ght strmght
game and 15th m the last 16
The VICtory alSo gave the
Bulls a half i(ame lead on
Kansas City m the race for
the last playoff spot 1n the
Midwest DIVISion
Lakers 95, Braves 1111
Cazz1e Russell scored 22
pomts as Los Angeles moved
to w1thm one v1ctory of
clmchmg the PaCifiCDIVISIOD
title Kareem Abdui-Jabbar
added 15 poiDts to spark the
Lakers to theJr 33rd VICtory at
home m 37 games Randy
Smith led Buffalo w1th 36
pomts
Suns 121, SuperSonics 100
Ron Lee scored a career
high 33 pomts and Paul
Westphal had 29 to hand
Seattle a maJor setback m 1ts
battle wtth Chicago and
Kansas City for the
reOIBIDIDg Western C&lt;lnfer
ence playoff spot Bob
Wilkerson Tom Burleson and
Willie Norwood had 15 point&amp;
each for the Somes

7.-8 record and

i

Nor ns 0 • s ro n
W L T Ph GF G A
,.; Montr ea 58 8 1 'n 37 1 16/
P tlsburgh 32 32 3 77 'l2 9 2J J
Los Angeles 31 31 4 76 718 2?7
Wash ngln 'n 40 ld 58 710 290
Det r o!
1651 9 J l 176797
Ada m s Dt \! ISton
W L T Pt s G F GA
Bulla o
J7 2J 7 101 290 211
Bo ston
46 71 B 100 796 730
Toronto
33 31 13 79 793 ')7d
Cleve land
74 40 12 60 729 774
x Clmched d1v s•on t •lle
Saturd ay s R e, olt s
NY Island er s 5 St LOV!S 7
Ph!ladelph a 9 Van couv er 3
Mon t real 4 De t ro t 0
Ch cag o 7 M nne sota 7
Boston 7 To r onto 5
A tlanta 2 Colorado 1
Lo s Ange l es 6 Bu ff alo 4
Sunday s Resu lts
N Y I s l a n de r s~ C cveland J
Mont rea l 6 Detr o t 0
Ch ca go 5 NY Ranq er s J
Wa sh ngton 7 Toronto J
Boston J P ttsbu rgh D
Monday s Game
S1 Lou sat M nn esota
I NO games scheduled )
Tuesda ys Games
NY: l.s l a~:~der s at Ph Ia
De troh a t Wilsh rng on
Cle ve ~ a nd a t M mnesot&lt;~
L os Angeles at Van couver
WHA Standtng s
By Umted Press International
Ea st
W L T Pi s GF GA
Qu ebec
dS 30 2 97 33 8 27 9
C nc nnat
38 35 3 79 336 283
nd anap s 35 35 7 77 759 287
New Eng lnd 32 39 6 70 759 275
B r m nQhn 31 43 3 65 27J '289
x M nncso l 19 18 5 d3 136 129
w est
W L T Pts GF GA
Houston
46 27 6 98 299 116
w nn peg 43 29 7 88 341 263
SanD ega
37 3d d 78 759 26.!.
Edmonton 31 42 3 65 218 791
Ca lgary29 .tl 5 63 224 270
Phoen •
77 J S 4 58 262 359
)( Team diSba nded
Saturday s Re sults
lndtanapolrs 4 N ew Eng land 7
Cmc nna h 6 Quebec .t
San 0 ego 4 Ca lgar y 2
Sunday s Res ul1 s
N ew England 5 Edmon l on 2
W nn1 peg S Houston 3
B rm ngha m 7 l nd anapo l 1s 3
Quebec d e rn e nnat 0
Ca lqa r y 5 Ph oen x 4
Monday s Gam es
( N o games scheduled)
Tuesday s Gam es
C nc nna t at B rm mqha m
Hou ston at Wmn peg
Phoen x a t Calgary
N ew Enq tand al San D eqo

Sometimes the life she li'Ves 1s
so sweet something deep
1DS1de says, hey, relaX enJOY
It So she lets herself be
pressed and she loses once ID
awhile But only when she
does It to herself
.,.
"The only one who ,. goiDg
to stop Chris Evert 1s Chm
Evert, sa1d Krist1en Shaw,
ChriS tour roommate and
best fr1end

PAPER UPS PRICE
AKRON,Oh10 (UP!) - The
cost of the Akron Beacon
Journal's Sunday edition will
go up 15 cents thJB conung
Sunday
The newpaper sa1d rJBIDg
costs of producmg a
Fmall nternattona I
newspaper forced 1! to rmse
Hockev League
the pnce from 35 to 50 cents
Umted Press International
There will be no mcrease m
N&lt;H"th
w I I pis gf ga
the pnce of the daily paper
Sag lfiOW 40 27 II 91 338 292
which sells for 15 cents
Kala maz oo
J8 27 13 89 325 290
Flont
35 33 10 80 342 306
MJ skegon
Saturdays ResuHs
31 36 II 73 294 322
For t Wa yne 9 Da y ton 3
Port Hur on
Kalam azoo 6 Muskeg on 5
27 43 8 62 268 328
Colu mbus 5 Port Huron 5
South
Sag maw 4 Flm t 4
w I I pis gf ga
Sundays Results
Toledo 40 31 7 87 321 317
Fort Wayne 5 Colum bus 4
Dayton 35 38 5 75 304 312
Dayton 7 Port Huron I
Ft Wa yn e
Sag rnaw 7 Fltnl 2
32 J6 10 74 301 311
Toledo 7 Kala ma zoo 4
Regula r season ends

career, asked for an ~mount
between his on gmal demand
of $500,008 and the Yankees
preVIous offer of $330 000
Stembrenner agreed
Elsewhere m the camps,
Atlanta relief pitcher Mike
Marsh~ll aIso OIBde his lu-st
appearance of the sprmg, but
)'lelded three runs and ftve
hits m two mmngs•in the
Braves'~ 10-iMmg trmmph
over the New York Mets
Marshall was a late arrtval
m the Atlanta camp because
of a legal hassle mvolvtng the
use of the Michigan State
Umvers1ty campus Marshall
defended himself 10 a
February trml which resulted
m a hung JUry
Brooks Robmson h1t a
grand slam home run m the
h fth mnmg to he lp the
Baltimore Onoles to a I~
VIctory over the Texas
Range rs
Nonrosler
outfielder Randy Elhot
continued h1s ouistanding hit
ltng w1th four hits ID fo ur at
bats, mcluding a triple and
two home ri1DS to spark the
San FranascoGtants to a 12-9
wm over the San Dtego
Padres Elliot, who miSsed
last season w1th a shoulder
separation scored fo ur runs
and drove ID three He IB 23
for 35 m the sprmg a 661
battmg average •
Dtck Allen s failure to tag
first hase on a routme ground
out allowed the Milwaukee
Brewers to score all theuruns 10 the seventh 1nnmg and
beat the Oakland A's 5-l
Denn) Doyle had three hits,
mcludmg two doubles and
knocked m [our runs to lead
Ute Boston Red Sox to a llh1
b lllmph over the Minnesota
I WlnS

Girls state meet
starts on Friday
m LUMBUS (UPI) -De ,
fendmg champiOns and No I
ranked
teams
were
conspicuous h&gt; !herr absence
Sunday when the coaches of
next week end's second
annual Gll'ls State Basketball
rournament sem1fmah sts
gathered
Sunda)
m
C&lt;Jlumbus
Two defendmg champ10ns,
C&lt;Jlumbus Hartley m Class
AA and Frankfort Adena m
Class A fell by the ways1de m
Saturday s regwnal fmals,
Hartley losmg 59-42 to
Warsaw RIVer V1ew and
Adena, the top..-linked Aclub
droppmg a 47-37 dec1s1on to
Arcanum
Earlier, Toledo Woodward
the defending AAA winner,
and top ranked •earn'
C&lt;Jlumbus Watterson m AAA
and Ontano m AA were
elimmated
TI1at leaves the three titles,
which will be dec1ded starting
with Friday's semifmals, up
for grabs
In fa ct, only one team
which made it to the semJB
last year- Lancaster Fisher
Catholic- will be returrung
The A semifmal games,
scheduled for 9 30 a m and
II 30 a m Fr1day morrung

match Mansfield St Peter s
(14-li) Lancaster Fisher (2114) m the lu-st game and
Arca nu m 116-0 ) agamst
Delphos St John s m the
second

The
afternoon
AA
sem1fm als has Sp rmgf1eld
Northwestern ( 16 I) gomg
aga ins t
Pe mb e r VI lle
Eastwood (16-3) at 2 30 and
Campbell Memonal (18-6)
play mg River V1ew (2tHI) m
the 4 30 game
The Class AAA games at
7 30 and 9 30 p m p1t
Columbus Walnut Ridge (171) and Toledo Ce ntral
Cathohc (21-U ) m the fu-st
game and Sprmgf1eld North
(23-0) and Mentor (19-4 ) m
lite rughtcap
Seven of the 12-team fteld
fm1shed among the top ten m
the firs t Umted Press
International Board of
C&lt;Jaches g1rls ratings three
in Class AAA and two each m
AA and A
Toledo Central Cathohc
Sprmgf1eld North and Walnut
Ridge fmished three, four and
f1ve ID the big school votmg,
River V1ew was second and
Campbell Memor18l tenth m
AA, and St John's second and
Fisher Catholi c tenth m A

Co lumbus

28 35 IS 71 294 309

Cash

BILL FLETCHER

A top corn y •eld means grea t er retums for y ou
OEK A LB X L 72b •s bred l or top co rn y telds When
you pi c k up a qual1ty ear of tht s corn h ybnd It s

149
South Thtrd Street
Mtddleporl
PH 992 7tSS

like havmg cash ln y ou r hand Order yours today

"State Farm has LIFE insurance tool
CaD me for details."

"""
Like a good neighbor
State Farm 1s there

a

2 26 ERA to a three-year
pact for an estimated
$400,000
The AL champions also
gave outf1t!lder Roy White a
three-year contract for an
estunated $375 000, reducmg
the number of unsigned
players on the Ya nkee's
roste r to ftve White a 33year~ld swttch-:l:utting left
£telder With a 274 lifetnne
battmg average htt 286 last
... ..-~ "''"' :a t 11 PnvP r
Hou slon "'" ' G o d en 5 t~ e
season W1th 14 homers 65
Se alfl (&gt; at Los A ng eles
RBI and 31 stolen bases
Butt a lo
at
Por 111 nd The Yankees shU wtthout
NHL Stand ngs
contracts are flr st baseman
By Un1ted Pr ess lntcrn at.onal
ChriS Chambhss pltcher
Cam pbell Conference
Pa t nck Dr \ rs an
Dock Ellis out£1elders Oscar
w L T Pi s G F GA Gamble and Gene Locklear
Ph lad elph 46 16 14 106 310 705
NY l standr s J6 19 1110d 279 183 and shortstop Marty Perez
AI ani a
3l Jl 11 77 252 254
It reportedly took a phone
NY Ranqer s 28 35 1A 70 265798 call from Yankee ov. ner
Sm yth e D1\! 1S10n
w L T Pi s G F GA George Stembrenner asking
~~ 11 ~~~ 0s
~~ ~&amp; 1 ~~ ~ 3 ~ ~~~ Lyle to settle the matter to
V[lncouver ?&lt;l d 11 60 213 287 resolve the dispute The 32-M nn esota 20 37 18 58 213 290 year-(lld lefthander who ha ,
Co lor ado 19 44 14 51 21 1 29 1
Wales c onfer ence
a 2 49 ERA for hiS mne year

Evert pockets
another $50,000

NEW YORK (UP,l ) - ChrJB
Evert sometimes fighls bore
Dayton
dom ID tenms the way Bill
(At BoeltngGreenl
Tilden used to, the way B11lle
Eastwood 41 Avon 36
lA I Canton)
Jean King d1d, the way
Campbell Memorr al 65 Muhammad Ah does m
Na varre Fa•rless 41
boxmg, the way all
!At Westervolk!)
champiOns
occass10nally do
Warsaw Rtver Vie w 59
Columbus Harlley 42
when there's no one to really
Class A
challenge them and another
(At Dayton)
Arcanum
47 Frankford VIctory IB well, JUSt another
VICtory
Adena 37
They let themselves be
(AI BowlmgGreenl
Delphos Sarnt John 79 New ta~en to the edge of defeat,
Rtegel 31
then pull back at the last
A(At Delaware)
Lancaster FISher Catholic 66 poSSible moment
Ev~ let Bntish upstart
Zane Trace 50
IAI Wooster 1
Sue Barker have her dream
Mansfreld St Peters 40 for a set Sunday then sent her
Rocky Rlver Lutheran W 3S
crashmg down to reality to
WID her fourth Vll'glnia Slims
Boys
Champ10nsh1p U , 6-1, 6-1
DhtoHtghSchoof
Evert, who won her second
Basketball Tournament
Wunbledon and U S Open
Resuns
Cia ss AAA Ftnals
Championships last year, reColumbus Lrndeo McKtnl ey ceived a check for $50,000 to
W Barberton 74
lriDg her earnmgs ID the
Class AA Fonals
Cle Cathedral Latin 69 three months of Slims
Columbus Mrfflln 65
competition to $174,500
Class A Ftna k
"It's tough to get psyched
F&lt;H"t Loramie 62 Mansfield
up
too percent day after
Sf Peter s so
day, Evert said II the
crowd said nothing, I would
!lave been bored They
State pairings
encouraged us to pial better
tennis "
There is no one m Chris'
for girl cagers
class anywhere In women's
tennis, now tllat Evonne
Umted Press International
Goolagong
has given up the
Parrlngsfor theGrr ls Slate
High School Basketball game for awhile In favor of
Champlonshtps
motherhood and King IS
Frtday
waveriDg between reUrement
Class A
and
coming back from knee
Mansheld St Peler s (1451
liS Lancaster Fisher !20 41
surgery And there are few
9 30 am
people anywhere In the worl~
Arcanum (16,()) vs Delphos of sports who are more astute
51 John s 11 30 a m
In the business of marketing
Class AA
themselves
Spr ingfield No-thwestern
(16 l) vs
Pembervolle
Chris Evert, 22-years-&lt;~ld
Eastwood (16 3) 2 JO p m has bectme more than a
Campbell Memonal (18 6)
liS Rrver Vrew (20 OJ
4 JO tennis player She 18 a model,
de&amp;gner of sports clothes,
pm
ClassAAA
endorser of shampoos and
Columbus Walnut Ridge
(17 I I vs Toledo Central makeup She Ia attended by
handoome, wealthy men like
Catholoc (21 01 7 JO p m
Springfield North (23 0) vs actor Burt Reynolds, whom
IVenlor I 1?4 I 9 :ll p m
she calls a ' speaal fr~end "
Northwestern 57
Jefferson ~5

Spr mgfleld

40
46

NY N o&lt;s
"
SJ ' " " • '
for that
Centr~l D· ~ • s on
'If anything, 1t was my
W L Pet
GB
&lt;16 JY 613
fault , S31d Smith I d1dn t Houston
Wash ngtor
.&lt;~3 31 581 'J 1
The veteran relief pJtcher,
explain the Situation well san
An ton o
41
J ~"'
11
ClevF&gt;Ianu
39 35 557 6 1
reportedly seekl!lg a $500,000
enough
Or eans 32 42 437 13
salary for three. years,
MIF FLIN WI - Tay lor 8 ANew
tlan ta
'!.9 J6 387 17
f
d t
1
14 4) 20 Mr llon 1 14 91 8
Wes tern Conferenc e
re USe
0 p ay In any
Walker 4 (1 7) 9 Hovvarct4 (0
M•dwes t o \ s to n
exhibuon games wtthout a
O) 8 Newby 0 1[), I) 0 Smdh 6
w
L Pet
G B conlract and sa1d he wanted
45 '/9 608
ISS ) 17 R Crall 0 II 21 I Oenvf"r
" Jl soo 3 ,
to be traded tf he didn t s1gn
Granger 1 (O O) ? Tota ls 25 oer,o 1
co ca qo
J9 lS m
6
Gabe Paul, the Yankee
11 5 261 6S
39 36 5 10 6
c ty
prestdent,
satd he was tired of
CATH EDRA L LATIN IS9) Kansas
lnd•ana
37 43 tJ'l 7 13
- Harrts6 (0 1) 12 lnsh4 (1
M lwaukee
n
49 lSS 19
Lyles
'
bullThe last
21 9 Morr s 4 (2 3) 10
PaCtflc
o
~ s•on
meetmg
betwee
Lyle
and
Stnckland 2 ( 1 2) 5 Lowne 9
•
W L Pet
GB
Paul was two weeks ago and
13 4) 21 Tyes 4 10 UJ 8 Whrte Los Ange les 48 77 6d0
2 10 01 4 Totals 31 (7 121 69 Portldnd
43 J J 566 s
no fu ture meetJngs were
Go ld en State
41 34 547
7
planned
Score by quar t er s
Sea lll e
37 38 tt9J 1
Miff l in
17 16 19 lJ ll'i
Phoen x
29 45 391 1e ~
So It came as something of
Cathedra l Lat n
Saturd ays Hl'suns
S d
h th
a surprise un ay " en e
72 " 15 18-69 was~ung ton 98 N y. It n cks 97
Fouled ou t - Tyes Total
Cleve land 99 A tlanta 9d
Yankees announced they had
louis - Mll f l1n 11 Calhedrr~l
M !waukee 128 Delre t 108
Sl gned L;le, who led the
Hous l on 107 K an C ty 97
Lil hn ?1 A - I 1 469
Los Angele~ 109 Phoen x 102
Amerlca n League wtth 23
sundays Ga.m ~s
saves la.st season whtle

Pistons fight adversity

Sport Parade

-

would have done Without Bob
Lowrie," sa1d Latm Coach
Don Gacey When we need a
basket, he gets 11 for us
"There were only two ways
we weregomg to go late ID the
game • sa1d Gacey Clear 11
out for Lowr1e and let hun go
one on one or get ll mto
(Karl) MorriB When the
game gets light, you have to
go to your best '
Mifflin C&lt;Jach John SI'ilith ,
who saw hL'I club hold a threepoiDt lead with 3 43 to play
and then score only a pau- of
free throws after that sa1d
his team lacked the diSClplme
11 needed m the closmg
mmutes and blamed himself

34

1a

By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
The negotiations between
Sparky Lyle and the New
York Yankees had grown
b1tter lll the last few weeks

.....

A

DEP

Stat e Farm
Lif e Insurance Com
pa nv
Ho m e

Bloom •n g

' I

B

GERAlD I

&amp;~N

Rt 2, Letart, W

'

304-882-3144

�•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Madtllcjxwt~ Pmllt'nty. U.. M u1 ula~. Mal'dl :m. l 'lil

GM goes diesel
.
acceleration that is anything
but quick.
"The
knocking
is
ooticeable on startup and

DETROIT {UP! )
General Motors plans to
introduce diesel engines for
passenger cars this fall in a
move it says can improve fuel
economy by as moe!) as 33
per cent:
GM plans to install the
diesel engines in about 50,000
Oldsmobile 98 and 88 models
and in some 50,000 GMC and
Chevrtllet light-duty trucks.
Newsmen who have driven
a 1977-model Oldsmobile
equipped with proiotypes of
the 350 cubic Inch diesel
engine have ooticed most of
the shortcomings of the
engine without spark plugs ooise, an ob,xious odor and

BOSTON (UPI ) -Veteran
center Jean Ratelle proved to
be the most popular Bruins
player Sunday, receiving
three separate awards before
Boston's
game
with
Pittsburgh.
The 36-year-old Ratelle,
who came to Boston in late
1975 in the trade that sent Phil
Esposito to the New York
Rangers, received the
Elizabeth C. Dufresne
trophy. Boston sports writers
give the award annually "to
the Boston player who has
been most outstanding in
home games . ~~
RateUe, Boston's leading
S&lt;:Orer with 88 points going
into the game, shared the
Gallery Gods award with
defenseman Gary Doak. The
honor is given to the favorite
players of the fans sitting in
Boston Garden's second
balcony.

idle," one oewsman said.
Another noted that the
"c lack-cla c k sound
traditionally produced by the
diesel had been softened to a
more subdued rap-rap

sound."
Oldsmobile won't be the
first automaker offering a
diesel passenger car in he

u.s.

Both Mercedes Benz and
Peugeot have been in the U.S.
market for years with diesel
engines and Volkswagen
plans to introduce its dieselpowered subcompact Rabbit
this swmner at a price no
more than $300 higher than
conventional models.
Oldsmobile would not
discuss the price of its
optional diesel engine.
Paul Mutty, senior diesel

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Cin·
cinnati middleweight Roy
Dale scored his 21st victory in
29 bouts Saturday, a
unanimous decision over
fifth-ranked Monty Beatham,
gained with an array of
stinging right hands against
the British Commonwealth
champion.
Beatham was the agressor
much of the way, but in tbe
fifth round unranked Dale
knocked him to the canvass
and changed the entire tempo
of the bout.
Beatham was upset in his
first professional fight in the
United States.

'

engineer for Oldsmobile,
claims the Oids 88 with a
diesel engine will be.rated at
29 miles per galion on the
highway with a coml!ined
city-highway rating of
between 23 and 24 m.p.g. - a
onHilird
improvement over
.
th ~ 18 m.p.g. combined rating
for the 1977 model equipped
with a 350 cubic inch V~
engine.
The Oldsmobile 350 v~ an optional engine - has
been in ·such high demand
that GM and Oldsmobile have
gotten into legal trouble
trying to meet orders.
Oldsmoble began installing
Chevrolet-built 350 engines in
Delta 88 models in place of
the regular Rocket V~.
Illinois, Rhode Island and
Kentucky have filed suit
charging GM and Oldsmobile
with deceptive advertising
and Kentucky has demanded
that GM refund the purchase .
price to Delta 88 buyers or
give the buyers neW cars.
CAR BURNED
HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) Police were investigating the
burning of a car owned by
jailed union leader Jesse
McVey. The car was
destroyed by fire early
Sunday.
McVey, president of the
United · Brotherhood of
Carpenters and Joiners
Union, was sentenced last
week. to a 15-day sentence
after he and seven others
were convicted of contempt
· of court after allegedly
violating a court order issued
in connection with the union's
strike at two plants of the
Pease Co.

Meigs 4-H Club News
t' IR~'T U.S. WIN
HILTON
HF.AIJ
ISLAND , S. C. iUPI ) Altoough' he won 1185.000
last year and has 26 cal'l'&lt;r
virtor lrs . Au s tralian
Graham Marsh was Uttle
Known kl u, s. golf fame. ·
Aft.r aU , aU thoSP vir·
· tories Wf'rc overseas and
Marsh was just another
first-year pia yer on tbe
PGA
Tour.
All !bat changed Sunday
when Marsh took a onestr'6ke vletory over Tom
Watson In the $225,000
Heritage Golf Classic,
coDectlng $45,000 for his

first-ever

American vic-

tory.

Brandewie is

MVP in A play
COLUMBUS (UP! )_ Fort
Loramie's 6-4 senior forward
Doug Brandewie was voted
the most valuable player in
theClassAStateTournament
and was the .ooly unanmious
selection to the United Press
I n t e r n a t i on a I
A11 ·
Tournament team.
Brandewie received 31 of 34
votes cast by writers and
sportscasters covering the
tournament. and was joined
on the all-tournament team
by his teammate Toni
Steinke, Jeff Schuler of Ross
Southeastern and Mike
Demyan and Leo Brown of
Mansfield St. Peter's.
Brandewie scored 51 points
in Fort Loramie's two
tournament games,. including
24 in the final victory over
Mansfield St. Peter's.

NFL looking ahead, at last
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) For the first time in five
years the National Football
League - and tlie players,
too, for that matter - are
free of outside problems, and
as the league's club
presidents start weeklong
meetings
today
Commissioner Pete RozeUe
. sees a bright future for the
sport.

''Weare in a position now,''
Roze lie said, ''to make
concrete plans for the next
five years. All the litigation
· and other problems are
behind us, so this year's
meetings will be different
than any other we have had in
recent years."

wiU receive serious attention problems ahead of us such as which is our primary
this week, but picking the the 16-4 and the playoffs. function. And I think we {:an
dates for the college draft will Actually
they
seem take solid steps -in that
have to await a judge's Inconsequential compared to direction by setting up
approval, expected in April, what we have been through in intelligent scheduling
of the agreement recently recent years.
patterns the fans can
reached by the NFL Players · "Now, for the first time in a understand.
ASsociation and the NFL long time, we can go back to
"Despite all our problems,
Management Council.
concentrating on providing I'm told we had dramatic
"I see a stability in the the public entertainment ratings figures on television
league now that wasn't there
for the 1976 season although
before," Rozelle said. ~'Con­
all the figures aren't in. I
sequently, I'm optimistic we
think this tells us the interest
can solve some of the
is there, and it's up to us to do
all that we can to justify it."
Under the new agreement
between the players and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bob management, forced by
Lowrie, Cleveland Cathedral . recent court orders, the so·
Latin's ball-handling wizard called Rozelle Rule has been
was the IDianimous choice as done away with. Under the
tbe most valuable player of rule, the commissioner tried
the Class AA Boys Stare High to compensate the club which
had lost a player who had
Basketball Tournament.
Lowrie, who scored 21 played out his option and
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - points and had numerous signed with another club.
Champ Summers singled, assists in the Lions' 69435 win
went to second on a sacrifice, over Columbus Mifflin In
and came home on rookie Saturday n ight's
Ray Knight's single with one championship game, was
out in the lOth inning to give also a unanimous seiectioq to
the Cincinnati Reds a 4-3 win the United Press Internation·
over the New York Yankees al AU-Tournament team.
Sunday.
Also selected unarninously
A •~ll-out crowd of 6,861 to the ream was Ottawa
·- ·•td out to see the Reds Glandorf's Ken Pothast,
pick up right where they left while other team members
off last fall \"hen they swept were Karl Morris of
four.games from the Yanks in Cathedral Latin and Chris
Ad'"lrwl
the World Series.
Taylor and Bruce Howard of
The Reds first three runs Mifflin.
came off ex-teammate Don
Gullett, who signed with tbe
Yanks after playing out his
option. The young lefty gave
up a run in the second inning
and two more in the fourth on
a walk to Bob Bailey, a triple
by Ed Armbrister, and single
by pitcher Pat Zachry.
Zachry, who has been both·
ered by a stiff elbow, was
making only his second
DUPLEX
appearance of the spring and
was hit for three Yankee runs As an lndepend'mTr' in su rance
agency , our
in fiVe innings.
.
_ ,..
Knight's game winning primary f Unct ion is to
vid e poli c ie s whi ch
blow came off Dick Tidrow. pro
aflord financ ial protec tion

Reds edge

wwrieMVP
in AA play

Yanks 4-3

In the planning, and high on
the list as the meetings
opened, was what is being
referred to around here as the
16-4 plan. That is a proposal
to reduce the exhibition
games by two to four while
Increasing the regular season
games from 14 to 16.
Rozelle seems highly in
favor of the plan, and in
talking about it on the eve of
the meetings he indicated,
"It 's probably the way to go."
However, Rozelle said
there might be so me
problems involving overlap
with baseball, especially in
cities where NFL teams and
a baseball club share the
same stadium.
"In tlle Iii-game regular
season
.
' " he said
.
' "the first
two teams of the previous
year in a division would play
75 per cent of their games
against the same teams. The
same would be true of tbe
third and fourth·place teams.
This way we woilldn 't have a
case as in 1916 when a team
like the NeW York Giants,
which finished down the line
the year before, wound up
playing the toughest schedule
in the league.
"Personally, I llke the idea
of a !~arne season, but we
are going to have to look a bit
closer before we decide on
anything. It seems like it's
the way to go because over
the long run scheduling would
he fairer for everyooe."
A new playoff format also

in lOth

PREVENTION

IS THE

BEST POLICY

Ad_,,..,,

in case of loss.

In 1963, a federal court jury
convicted BUlle Sol Estes oo
four counts of mail fraud and
ooe of conspiracy after he
was charged with swindling
finance companies in
morQjage deals involving $24.

million.

The
Meigs
l'ounty
Slepherd' Club, organizing
in January at the Extension
Office with 1 ~ me mbersjresent, voted dues for the
;'ear of 15 to be paid on or
!&gt;!fore tho weigh-in date of
May 28.
An Ove r-Ail Cha mpion
Slowmanship Class wm be
added to th e Sheep Show th is
year al th e fair with the
Gra nd Champion of each
class in competition for the
award . A Flock Class also
Will be added, consi sting of
me ram of any age, me ewe
two years or over, on e ewe
one year and under two.
Members chose their project
looks for the year. At their
Februar y meeting members
finished rule s for the club and
worked on selection oi their
rna rket lambs. They set the
&lt;Eadiine for joining the club
on March 23. Projects books
were passed out and then the
members' feed rations were
discussed.
John Rice, County Extension Agent, Agriculture,
talked on the proper traits to
look for in selecting a proper

DA. RONALD F. RIVIERE
OR. A. J_SUEHLI- OR . K. H. CHU""G - \
DR. VI CTORY. LlANO - DR , G. J . STOMI ... UQH

One or two day
full denture service 1
partial dentures

jJ'oject books after which
Dmnis Thornton gave a talk
on the parts d a hog. The next
meeting will be held April 5 at
the Millers. The hosts will
give a demonstration. Unda Smith.
THE FIVE POINT Star
llitchers J.L .'s 4·H Club met
March 21 at the horne of Pat
Holter with 12 meml&gt;!rs and 3
advisors in attendance. The
members voted that dues
. would he $1 .50 for the year to
be paid before the first
meeting in June. • The
members also decided to
bave a bake sale and to
participate in the Variety
Slow to be held at Chester in
. the near future . Initiation of
&lt;ificers was held and refresh-

9995

·•11 Average Antenna is S20, This Radio Costs
The Realis tiC R TRC-468 mob1le Only S79.96
1

11

CB IS only 1 .x5 .1x7 ' 0:·
PLL CICC Uil . no crystals lo buy
Squelch. ANL. l1ghl ed c hann e l
cl1a l. mod ula tiOn 1nd1ca 1o r.

I IIUI , ,.,., , ' ndil~ ·

w. fl!.l 'rt

~

1'199·5

CB rad io w1th PL. L. li gh ted
S 1RF me te r. ove r-s 1z€ c ha nn el
d ra l. LED tra nsmi t.mod ul atlon
lamp , an d ANL SWit Cil

2 1: 152 4

Bu.sahe N1dwls.

Mulclt.•n , ~r. and Mr:-.. Ed

Marga1·ct Etlwanls, (;l ies
Sm ith, Bt.·Htrkl' Snutll, C&lt;Jrl

Nt'lsun. Mr. and Mrs. C::rrl
Hysell. lh·ra J . Snuwden, Mr.

were presented tu the t•uuple. ·

and Mrs. Lloyd Gri mm , .J r.,
Mrs. Bruer M(:Jy, Mrs. Jessre

LAFF. A. DAY Mtgl! l. Da\'ld Might. Purl

Mrs. Marga ret Edwards pnr
vided the decorated rake.
Fluwers were senl by B.eula h
Grate, Vivian Coy, and Mae '
Smith. ,
Calling during the day
were Alien Grueser, Mr. anti
Mrs. Wade Tom, Athens;
Randy Houdashelt, Juan Cor·
der, Mr. and Mrs. David
Grues er , Sandi Tayl ot',
Poo,neroy; Ada Van Meter,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs .

VHn

B r.rrg Var1
Bt• ula h Gra 1P,

Ml'ter.

Ml'lcr,

Charles H. Grucser.

l ·c.ut n!Juti"IIS r1f $25 t(J tht•
Sn lltll Fuml ;md $20
to the SenJOr Citlt.l..:J!s \H'H'

Nee;J, Not Looks, Is the Question

lx·nt·diC'lHJ/1. Smetll ~ulU p111~
!lh&lt;IJX.' of a l'I'USS were

~ ' lrn ~ trrw

Dear Helen :
At 24~ I'm in perfect health, except a doctor told me I rnad~: HI lh~ Thurstlay 111 ght
needed glasses, part-time. I almost died, as I'd 'always hoped tncclmg uf the W1Jil1t.:n \
I'd never have that problem.
ll&lt;&gt;sw.;i/:jtton uf the Mrddlqilll't
Last night, much to my surprise, my husband said f loqk F rr sl Unrtcd Pi·t.• sll\'te r ra rr
sexy in glasses ,and asked me to start wearing them aU the Church.
·
.
'
tim e.

Should I tell him I just don't feel pretty as a four-eyes, or
wear them tp please him ? - K. L.
•

111 lilt:

•

MR . FLUGG

presented lo lht.• women.
Hdreshmcnts were served

by tiroup II.

by Jon Peterson

Mrs. lll' lcn Sautr presrtlcd
i:lt the m~cll ng wlul'h upciwd
will1 " WhC:! l . a Fncnd We
Ha ve in.Jt!sus" ~IIH1 dt·votll lllS

Dear K.:
by Mrs. Kalhryn MIIIL·r m·
You're confusing the issue: corrective glasses aren't worn titled ··CoJrunitJneut '' wJLil
STICKERS ON SALE
for looks but for need, and if the doctor says you don'l need sc n pturc frum St. I .uktt . Mr~.
11'~ THE BE5T 1
them constantly, for heaven 's sake, don't become dependent P'ayc Wollacc dcd1 eatcti llw
Motorists can begin ' on them.
CAN to... ! RAN
sewing C~ssigmnen t uf the
purchasing stickers for their
A.wway, it 's nice your husband is supportive. Some people AsS&lt;K." iatiuii, pc::trt uf willcll
license plates Friday.
still chant tbe "glasses - no passes" ditty.- H.
OUT OF PAl NT,
will go fol' OVCI'Sei:.IS !ll iSSiUII S.
Charles Sl.anlt!y, Ml::I SOII, W. "I'd like lo repor t an ac·
Passenger car owners
+++
The prayer for mi~slnns wa s
Va.
.
cidenl. my toupee fell into the whose last names begin with Dear Helen :
given by Mrs. Miller.
Teresa Van Meler, Mr. and paper shredder!"
letters YA" thrvugh "K" can
I'm glad ":YOU believe "swinging" isn 't as prevalent as a
Announced were April 1
purchase their stickers few unsubstantiated reports claim. I'm a believer in "to each membership d(J y, wtwn nc~'&gt;·
during April and must have hls own," but I'd hate it if mate-&lt;~wapping became so prevalent members will be lake1: mtu
them displayed on their it would be accepted as the social thing.
lhe church; Apri l 7, MauouJy
plates by the end of the
, ,Tell me, how many letters did you receive on the subject - Thurs(lav Cmnmur1ion ,l.)l! r·
monfll.
"in favor" letters, I mean. INTERESTED vice al i p.m.; Apnl U, Com·
Passenger car owners NONPARTICIPATOR
munily Good Frido y Service
whose last names begin with
i:!t tin~ Milltl lepurt United
letters "L" through "Z" can Dear Non :
Polly Cramer
Presbyterian Church, 7: :!0
purchase their stickers in
Exactly four, and would you believe' - three of them all p.m. Apr·ii 10, E•ster ser·
May and those must be pro-&lt;~winging, came from my home town ; little ' old vices ; and Apnl 21. spnng
displayed on the plates by the conservative Sacramento, California'
Presbyterian in Colur nbus.
end of May. The stickers will
U the world overflows with mate..wappers, as a few
The aunuCII muthrrDEAR POLLY- Can you water . Do test in an in· cost $10.50, or $15 .50 in researchers suggest, well - maybe they're just too busy to daughter ban4uCl was on·
advise me of a good way to conspicuous spot first. Or you counties where tbe $5 pig- write.
noun eeti fur Moy 10.
Here's a letter from one who is no longer quite so busy:
dean the inside gl ass might try sponging with cold gyback tax is in effect.
Mrs . Marcella CukJHWI
on
my
range
oven water and then rub with the
+++
had charge of the prugram
Dear Helen:
door' I have tri ed a . suds from a detergent and
entilled .. A Service of C:om·
My wife and I had been married about a year when we rnitmenl. " Tlwre was ;1
nurnber of commercial water mixture. This is no
realized we had made a mistake. There was no love in our responsive a hymn i:ind the
glass clea ning products but sure cure because of the
relationship, just the awakening of sex .
nothing will remove .t he possibility lhat the blood ·
So we subscribed to a national publication lor swingers.
baked-on grease. I will watch might have penetrated into
Our first contacts were very successful and we were
for answers. - MILDRED. the leather, but it might be
enthralled. Over a three-year period we "enjoyed" everything
DEAR MILDRED - One worth a try .
from threesomes, foursomes, to orgies.lt was a great reaching
Have you thought of having
dealer in ranges suggests
experience.
vinegar and water for such the purse dyed' I recently t.
Finally the maturity we laced came to us, and we got a nocleaning. A couple of others had some leather shoes dyed
fault
divorce. Several years later I found a woman with whon;
recommend that non - that came out most
I
could
share a total relationship of mind and.body. We hav.
abrasive bar cleaner thal satisfactorily. Some even buy
enjoyed.
seven years of monogamous marriage and today,
·
many uses on windows and kits and dye leather them·
we're
st1ll
honeymooning. Our partnership is built on love and
that makes a powder on the selves. But be sure you
trust,
and
our
sex life is fantastic, I'm sure in part because the
glass and can be washed off. change the color to one as
three
to
four
hundred women I was formerly involved with
Both say it does not scratch dark as the spots. - POLLY .
taught
me
so
much.
and has worked successfully
DEAR POLLY - When our
I
would
not
encourage or discourage "anyone about
on stoves that have been lire house was carpeted recently
swinging
it's
living
out sexual fantasies - but you don't need
damaged. - POLLY.
ther.e was some carpet left
it,
if
you
have
the
right
mate.- BEEN THERE, CAME BACK
DEAR POLLY - I recently over. I cut these scraps into
KAMELA BARRETT
The ELLIPSE l
•
purchased a natural leather good size triangles, squares
H1950W
handbag that is spotted with and circles and gave them to
blood that seeped through the my little brother to play with.
Simulated grained
package when I was carrying He makes trees, houses and
American Walnut
fresh beef. The blood drippe~ even animals with the dif·
cab inet . Picture
through to the leather so I ferent shapes and he spends
ODNR's
Forestry
Division
in
Kamela Barrett, burn on
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Control. Automat ic
would like to know how to hours thinking up different
order
to
help
prevent
,
detect
Feb.
29,
1
976,
celebrated
her
Department
of
Na
tural
Fine-tun
ing Control.
remove these stains as the pictures he can make.
and
suppress
wildfires
on
firs!
birthday
on
Feb.
28
at
Resources'
(ODNR
)
Division
purse is a light tan color. Any
This Pointer is for working
Illuminated Channel
suggestions will be greatly people. When I started the hume of her parent.,;, Mr. of Forestry is urging Ohioans public and private lands in a
Numbers. P\Ovision
• appreciated. - DEBBIE.
working I used the smallest and Mrs. Rubert Lee Barrett, to practice extreme caution 32-county area.
Counties
in
lhe
Forest
Fire
for cable or master
and observe the forest fire
DEAR DEBBIE - There check I would receive as a Roseville.
Protection
District
that
are
She
has
a
.siste
r,
Cassan·
protection
Ia
ws
before
antenna connection .
must necessarily be a, lo.t of. bas~ for .my budget. When I
most
susceptible
to
fires
are:
dra,
six,
Kamela
's
grand·
burning
leaves,
trash
or
other
"ifs" in any answer to your · have a larger check I con·
VHF and UHF
·Athens, Belmont, Carroll,
problem. If the purse is a tinue to follow the same pa1·ents are 'l\lr: mod Mrs. material outdoors.
Antennas .
"This spring is especially Cosbocton, Gallia. Guernsey,
synthetic leather that has a. budget so I always have some Charles ·Barrell of Rullaml.
Harrison,
Hocking,
Holmes,
REG. $549.95
finish on it, such stains might extra money on hand after anti Mrs. Richaru Lucas uf hazardous due to the lack of Jackson, Jeffer so n ,
H os~v ilie . She is a great·
rainlaU
and
the
dryer
than
be wiped off with a cloth everything is taken care of
1 WEEK ONLY
Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe,
dipped in a mi•ture of and my family really ap- grandchild of Mr. anti Mrs. nonnal ground conditions," Morgan, Muskingum, Noble,
C..ri Harlicy of Roseville and said Ernest Gebhart Chief of
household ammonia and preciates this.
Pike,
Sciot o,
Perry,
the Forestry Division.
This Pointer is for those Mrs. Roy Lucas, Za nesville.
Tuscarawas,
Vinton
and
Gebhart said counties in
with a bit of electrical HOopen
Washington.
Eastern and Southern por·
knowledge. When throwing
Also included in the District
lions
of the state are most
out old appliances, I keep the
• EVG-Eiectronic Video Guard Tun ing System
are
portions of: Adams.
susceptible to forest and
cords and plugs if they are in
grass fires because of the Ashland, Fairfield, Highland,
• One-knob VHF and UHF Chann el Select ion
good condition, buy another
area's dense forests and Knox, Licking, Lucas,
plug for the other end and put
Richland and Ross counties.
vegetation.
• 100% Solid - State Chassis
it on. This saves buying ex11
For more information
Decomliuns allhc wedding · 0hioans who own land or
tension cords and is good to
reside in the Forest Fire concerning prevention or
• POWER SENTRY Voltage Regulating System
use when just a short cord is reccp.tiun honoring Mary .
forest and grass fires, contact
Ruth
and
Douglas
P.
Becker,
Protection
District
are
not
needed . Do be sure you know
MONDAY
D.V.M. were unintentionally permitted · to bum before 4 the local district forestry
what
you are doing . - umitteti
OFFICERS to be elected
frurri the Sunday ac- p.m. and must obtain a office or the Division of ·
when ·oh-Kan Coin Club JANICE.
count of lheir wedding:
permit before starting a fire Forestry, Ohio Department
Polly will send you one of
meets at 7:30 Monday, in
Mrs. Helen Sauer handled outdoof'!l during March, April of Natural Resources,
social rooms of Columbus and her "peachy" thank-you the planning and d~corations or May," Gebhart said . Fountain Square, Columbus
uthem Ohio Electric Co., cards, ideal for framinr or for lhe reception. The bride's "Burning permits may be 43224 or phone (614 ) 466-7842.
Middleport. Out-of-town coin placing in your family t&lt;oble was draped in white obtained from a local fire
&lt;k!alers wiD be present to buy, scrapbook, if she uses your anti caught at the edges with warden."
sell or trade collector items favorite Pointer, Peeve or yellow sweetheart ruses. ll
Gebhart said the Division is
a1d a 494ot coin auction will Problem ,in her column . fealureti the four-tiered cake working to inform landfollow meeting; refresh· Write's Polly's Pointers in which was heart shaped and owners .who own property in
NOW YOU KNOW
ments. Interested area care of this newspaper ..
The
Canary Islands were
triuuneti wil11 gold rusebuds the District but reside
residents invited._
oot
named
after canaries. but
Middleport, 0.
and topped wilh · wedding elsewhere of the forest fire
N. 2nd Ave.
after
the
wild
dogs !canis in
bells
and
doves
·
encircled
protection
laws.
RUTLAND Garden Club, ASSAULT DEADLY
with yelluw sweetheart ro;'!ls.
The Forest Fire Protection Latin ) who overran the .•
home of Mrs. R. S. Vale with
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio
lhree-tiranch District is administered by islands.
Mrs. Fverett Colwell, co· {UP!) - Hughie Hunt, 29, Two
candelabra
with
while t&lt;opet·s
hostess, 7:30 Monday night. Cleveland Heights, died
completed
the
table
appoint·
Mrs. Harry Williamson to Saturday night at Huron
of
cryst&lt;oi
anti
silver.
menls
·demonstrate macrame Road Hospital, according to
White wedding bells tied
hangers for flower con· police, who said he had been
with
satin bows were used
tainers. Floral macrame assaulted last Aug. 27 at E.
throu ~huut the o·eception
hangers to be exhibited. Star 133rd St. and Fifth Ave.
roono and over the gift table.
Garden Club members to be
An autopsy was to be
guests.
performed.
BEND OF' the River
Garden Club, 7:30 Monday at
the home of Mrs. Ben
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Philson. Mrs. Andrew Cross
to discuss potting plants. The U.S. Racquetball
, Arrangement .of the month Association· and the National
.
'
- will · be " Suddenly It's Racquetball Club, the
Mr. and Mrs. WOliam Fred
dominant forces and main Smith, Sr. of Middleport have
Spring."
sanctioning organizations for returned from a 6,000 mile
TUESDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 235 the sport, have signed a five· trip west.
Chester-Tuppers Plains, year agreement for exclusive . The couple vistted Mrs.
Tuesday 7 p.m. at scout hall representation by the Smith's sister, Mrs. Helen
in Chester. Buffet style International Merchandising Graley, at Las Vegas, Nev.
dinner.
Corp.
and a niece, Mrs. Dee An·
IMC is a division of &lt;Erson at Tucson, Ariz. She
. EVANGELIST Driunrnond
Thorn, · speaker at Chester International Management had not seen Mrs. Anderson
Church of God, Tuesday 7:30 Group, Cleveland, the world's lor 35 years.
largest sports management
p.m. Public Invited.
Among the places they
whkh said visited were a miss!O'n in Old
POMEROY Chamber of company,
•
Commerce Tuesday, noon at Saturday the agreement Tucson erected in 1797 and
encompasses consulting, the Hoover Darn between
the Meigs Inn.
merchandising, television Nevada and Arizona. They
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic rights representation and also visited a friend in Bul)·
Boosters Thursday at the · fiim sllle~.
head rhy, Ariz.
high school at 7:30p.m. Final .
plans for the baskotball . .illiii
banquet will be made.
SUTTON Township
Trustees special meeting
'lFFICE
to 5 !CLOSE
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the
AT NOON ON TI-'URS.l-EAST CQURT
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Purpose to review truck bids.

POLLY"$ POINTERS

Social
Calendar

1'3'.995

•11 Average Antenna is S20, This Radio Costs .
·
Onlv S119.96
Rea li Stic's mobi le TR C- 452
Ove r-s rze l1 g hl ed S / RF
meier . Ill um in ate d
21 . 152 1
c hann e l dra l. ANL . PA .

All new 1977

NO REDUCTION IN POWER OR MODULATION!
GO "40" AND GET AWAY FROM THE CROWDS
1

37'' COWL MOUNT
Reg
Mo un ts on
surf aces
s la nt e d
:. 2 1·92S ul to 35"

!

11 95

fi

lt

RealiStic TRC-424 with all th e ' if Average Antenna
ex tra s' LE D d ig it al 40-c hanne l is $20, This Radio
readout. R F garn . PLL .
Costs Only S149.96
squ
e
lc
h.
ANL.
nose
blanke
r
JustA Few
Of The Many
and de lt a· tun e and PA
switches.
S i R F mete r with
Archer t.Ff! Antennas
moou1at1 o n tnd1cator. ·
21-1522

16995

In Our 1C Sale!

(Off•~ fKpiros 4!251771
1

I
l

''

I

"DISGUISED"
CB·AM -FM
j

42" FIBERGLASS
TRUNK-GRIP

TWIN TRUCKERS
MIRROR MOUNT

102" FIBERGLASS
,,
BUMPER
MOUNT
l,.
1

GUTTER
CLAMP

. ,

~

Reg.

,

1895
21 -930

Easy
ca r-to-ca r
transfe r

Re pl aces
a ut o's
ant e nna .

21Re95
21 ·926

'
l
.rR
''l

I

22~~27

Reg.

3495

Dual c hams
.

\....
Unde r-das h. CFl
s lides on/ off.

~

EXTENSION . ·
CB SPEAK

CB POWE:R SUPPLY

1Q95 ~~t~l 1095 .
2 ·549
21 ·538
J:J·

22·124

t

Mounts on floor
tran s mission hump

In sta ll s e as ily.
Weat he rprool

Converls 120 VAC to
13.8 VDC .

SHACKS 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE WITHIN 1%OF OUR LOW 1975 PRICES

TANO\ COHPOH ATIO~ COMI-'A t&lt;O V

PR• CES MAY IIAAV Af

II~OIVIOUAl

106

Barber shopping? Don't go roaming..
Let your fingers do .the combing.

yellow pages

M&lt;hl '' ""' • ,, ,~ 0 · • ~••ftl}lr

• I " kloo

sn ~c ~ 0. ~ ,.,~

..__ l oll tho~ ••• "
•• , ........... . ....... hOO&lt;I

'··MA

Caution urged

INGELS FURNITURE

western trip

SHOP THE SHACK R' FOR OUR EXCLUSIVE 1BUDGET·PRICED CB ACCESSORIES!

~-\9;,~36

lf':~!?a~~ORATOR COMPACT TV

Hekn Sauer
plans reception

Smith enjoy

21 ·942
S upe rior
coverage .
Stainless
ste e l.
adju stable
trp rods .

No- ho le mount t , with
for ce nter/s 1de ~ prote ctive
@
vrnyl covers
of trun k.
.
f ~ ~ Gult e r clip

CB SLIDE MOUNT BRACKETS

II

(11~111

Come in today for an exciting demonstration . .
of Zenith's best pictli~ ~er i9~1[~1or TV!

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
Pom,erov

Wi-Ui~.JW:;un .

house. Their tia u ~hler. Mrs.
Barbar/:j Vi:ln Meter . hustcd
the ceiebo·atiun.
Gilts, canis and flowers

_;:~.jj

' II Average Antenna is S20,This Radio Costs
Only S99 .96
Rea l1strc TRC- 467 mo bil e
'·
.

9'12-2143

101

anniversary with an upen

r".

2t · t520

INS.

RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Liv ingston Ave., Columbus
Weekdays 8:30A .M. to 6; 30 P.M.

·r;,yhtr, Mr . aud Mr:-.. Hu:-.h'r
Hi:t!'l'l'l!. t:r)'Sta l Bousll . \ 1r .
ami Mrs. Clair Tii)'lor .• Jcslu·

Mr~.

Gruescr rcn•nth

First birthday
is cekbrated

Electronic
Coolcing Center~

• Fteezers

celebrated t,hei1· 45th wedd ing

Mrs. ' LltlYll Dugan. Nt'Vh'
Kt.'IHJI:.'dy . :vlr. an&lt;l Mrs.
Ilctrvey Erit.'winc, Etll lh

RUTLAND - Mr. anti
Richal'd

Presbyterian women make
donations at recent meeting

~ · ~·~

Reg. .

Prevention saves life, limb
and property .... and helps
control insuran ce costs and
premfums.

Open house-fetes Grue§ers

·~

. Reg.

fire from starting , that
hom e burglary from being
committed .

When losses do occur, our
policy holders can count on
protec.tiol') and servi ce in
time ol need . But we still
say -- prevention is the
b€st policy .

f )J

..

a- The Daily Senlinel. Mitltileport. Pun ll'ruy. o.. Mt•n•IH;. M:11 , •1 ~». 1!Iii

Use vinegar on glass oven. door

DALE C. WARNER

l u/, •. ' ·"'"

worked on their

But, we al so ha ve a vital
interest in lo ss protection ,
as should our clients. We
encourage care, caution
and
safety .. ... preventive
measures which can keep
that car accident from

• Stereos
• ·Dishwashers

r,. T•mW""'" : . \- " 1-1

rn~mbers

happening , that building

DENTURES- DENTISTRY

' Y ou .,, -~""

mark c1 lamb - ltodr.•v
'lripp.
l'HE FI NE SWINE Clu b
met March 15 at the Ex·
tensio n Off ice with 12'
members present with their
advisors, Bill and Minnie
Tho rnton. Th ey discussed
lfling plastic to mark pigs
shown at the lair·. AU hogs
shown must be sold. The club

ments were served.
'I'OLEOO, Ohio (UP! ) The next meeting will be The Soviet Union continued
Monday evenin g, March 28 at its domination of the World
the home of Mrs. Holter. At C u P
Wr e s I 1 i n g
this urnc u1c m'f!l bers will Championships &amp;mday by
make up a dance for the · defeating the United Stares,
Variety Slow and discu&amp;• 8.2, to win their fifth
further money-making ideas. championship in a row .
- Carolyn Bowen .
The Russians have won
THE SUNBEAMS 4-H Club every tournament since the
met on March 18 at the htme series began in 1973.
ri Joyce Ritchie with two
The USSR . finished the
adv isors and nin~ members • tournarneDt With six points,
a tending.
the U.S., finishe_d second with
Off ice rs el ected were 4, Japan was third With 2 and
Barbara Douglas, president ; Canada failed to score.
Brenda
Boy les ,
vi ce
In the only other match
presid ent; Judy Perry, Sunday , Japan defeated
se creta ry; Beth Ritchie, Canada, 7-3.
treasurer ; Connie SWut,
news reporter; Paula Lije
and
Velv et
Thomas,
recreation leaders; Sherri
· Myers, health chairman, and
CONROE, Tex. (UP! ) 'lricia Sams, safety chair·
Vet
er an Pancho Gonzales "
man. Refreshments were
\von
his first masters
·
served by Mrs. Ritchi e. of
the
year
title
Connie Stout.
Sunday, defeating Hugh
Stewart, IH, 6-1, to win the
Almaden World Invitational
A thought for the day ; Seenior tennis championship.
English novelist Jane Austen
In the doubles finals, Gon·
said : "A lady's imagination zales teamed with Rex
is very rapid; it jum!l' from fludway to defeat Torbin •
admiration to lo~, from love Ulrich a 1 S.•' . uavidson, •
to matrimony in a moment." I, 6-2.

.,
'

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Munday, Mardl 28, 19'11

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 WUL\b: 1&gt;1 Undc1

C..II
100

1 th&amp;)

2days

C1wr~;tt·

I.Sil

lda)'lt

. I Iii

6 Uays

JOO

"'

100
1!.0!5

J.i6

Each word over tht: llllnlll!wn 15
J.S ~ eenLs pt'r ~~o·u•d per da~:
Ath fUiliiUIJ{ utlll'l
n I:OI!Sa'\lll\'t'

wurt.l.'s

u...

l'llal~t.'d

daps Will bi!

nne.

otl the 1 Lla}

In memory, C01rtl uC Thanks and
Olutuary: 6 t'l'llLs per word, sa 00
llUillJllUIII. Cash UL adv1mre

Mvblle Homot Silles and Ycm.J SOlie~
cue al·eepllltl only "lth cash wall

order . ~ l'('lll dwr.:l' for atls t·an•yUl~

Box Num~• · In Ca rt' of 1 ht· St&gt;n-

tmt'l

Tht' Pul)lt!iffi!r l'I!Se i'VC5 Lht• ti~ hl
to 1.-'ilit or re}al &lt;Ill)' a~ Jt&gt;eml'l.l o~
Jedlonlll Till' Pu[)kshcl wtllnul IN
~puns1ble

fur trkJL"t' tlnm one n•rur-

lt'i. IU1~1110il .

Phune !l')'l-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
'

MoJt da)

Noon on Salurtill.y

Buy, Sell or Trade Through The
I
f"or i'iale, Rent or Trade

Nolioe•

-

·-

YES. WE have Sheets . $2.00 lb.
Also Ann •v@.rsory Sole, Mon .
_ day, 28th thru April 4th .
LOANS AVAILABLE, Bus iness and
form , $20,000 up. Contact Mr
__Gray ( 216)845·~EASTER BAZAAR , April 1
and 2, Thrift Shop , craft
items ,
bake
sale
and
Vegetable soup . MEIGS CO .

HUMANE SOC IETY .

Tucsda\'
thr11 F!tliay
~P . M .

tl1c day ~fo re pulllicalwn
.Sw1d~)

&lt;PM

F'ritla~

aflemoon

WANT
ADS

Bernice Bede Osol
ARIES (Maroh 21 · April 19) II
anythmg co mes up early In the
day where you can turn a profit.
Jym p on 1t. It may not be
~l i able 1f you procrastinate.
TAURUS (April 20·May 201
War~

on proj ects that spur your

enthus 1asm today Your mner
self IS try 1ng to tell you that's
where th e action is

GEMINI (May 21-Junt 20) A
pleasant surprise 1s In store for
you today A favor you did
will ingly and fo rgot may be
re paid on a far larger scale

CANCER '. lunt 21-July 22) This
1s a day' '1 en it pays to mix wl1h
the group . Something luck y
could happen tf you're where the
crowd 15

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) For best
results , be 11e ry secrettve 1f
you 're workmg on somethrng btg
today Con fide 1n no one unless
they're directly Involved

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Seek
out new Interests today to buoy
your hopes and exci te your imagmatlan. A good t1me to strl~e
out on uncllarted paths.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) You're
a sha de or two tu c~ 1er than your
com pet itors today , so think
" win " Tile right atl tlude is
necessary for victory

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Early m the day you're at your
best In bargalnmg sltualions If
you have tough negotlatmg to
do, put It on the agenda.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) If you volunteer your services
and sktlls to ttlose who need
them , thts could tu rn out to be a
11ery profitable day for you

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11)
Accept any Invitations to an
event at which you cou ld meet
an Important person You could
win an tnfluential new ally.

-~-

-

-

in Portland Phone 843·2581
-~---~--

PISCES (Foil. 20-March 201 You
make a good ImpresSion today,
so go where you can be seen
Those ot the oppos.ne sex are
especially attracted to you

M•re.!, ::_., 1977
Before d isposing of som81hlng
that has already given you a
good return . look more closely at
tl thts ye ar. New profits are
posstble lrom old resources.

Notice is hereby given that
on April 6, 1977, a t 11 · 00 A . M .
a public sale will be held at
Pomeroy ' Motor Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sel l tor
cash
the
toliow tng
colla teral ,to wit 1976 Buick
Regal
Ser1al
No .
4l57C6H209978 ,
said
col la te ral be in g held to
secure an obl igation arising
Lrlder a reta11 installment
security agreement held by
Genera l Motors Acceptance
Corpora ti on
as secured
party S&amp;id publtc sale Is to be
condl.lc led according to the
laws of the State of Ohio .
General Motors Acceptance
Corporation reserves the
right to bid at this sale
The colleteral Is presently
stored and may be seen at
Pomeroy Motor Company ,
Pom eroy , Ot1io
GENERAL MOTORS

ACCEPTANCE COR·
PO RATION
(3J '28. 1tc

. t - Volum• 5./

11AN IIIJRDERED
CLEVELAND . (UPI)

lAreiiiO ElliJ, 211, addreu
la'lknown, wu lhot and killed

~-

----

FAWN &amp; WHITE Miniature '
mixed t erri~r FOUND Male .
Contact
Me1gs
County
Humane Society to cla tm ,

992 -2639 .

---------·--

1973 DART SW INGER , 318
automattc, 2 door Phone 247 ·
2155

COINS. CURRENCV , tokens. old
pocket watches and chams .
silver and gold . We need 1964
and older sil.,.er coins Buy, sell ,
or trade' Call Roge r Wamsley ,

742-2331.
WANTED, CHIPWOOD . Poles.
moxTmum d1ometer • 10 Inches
on largest end . $8 per ton ,
bundles slabs S6 per ton .
Delivered to Oh io Pallet Com
pony, Rf . 2. Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 992·268 9
CASH I I I for junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. WRECKER SER ·
VICE• Pkone 742·2081
OLD FURNITURE . ice bo)Ces brass
beds , etc .,
complete
households. Wnte M 0 . Miller ,
Rt • . Pomeroy, Oh1o or co li

28, the 87111 day o1 1m wltll

STRAWBERRIES 1n basket s and
flats , now beanng pansies
cabbage, lettuce,
brocco li
couiTflower, Brussels Sprouts ,
on1ons Cleland Forms and
Greenhouse .
Gerold1ne
Cleland
HOUSETRAILER WHEElS and t~res ,
24 1nch boy 's bike , ( .5 Homel1te
cham sow. two 2 wheeled
tro ller fromes , firewood , baby
swTng·o·mottc, 2 ft h•gtl truck
topper. smoll
refngergtor .
Phone 992·5947 ,
-~

9'12-771/J.

WANTED TO
m1n 1oture

BUT' female
Poodle
Call

985-4Ill.

.~-~~--~-

____

REGENCV 16 Channel H!·Lo poiTce
scanner , 10 crys tals , $150

Phone 992 7748.
~-~~-

lor wuhlng cloatlles."
· In
1939,
Madrid
lllli'I'OIIdered to the nat!onalllt
forces of Generallaalmo
FrancL•co Franco In the

Spanilh Civil War.
In 11142, Brltilh forces led

Slturday nlcht ~ an by "commandos" raided
wgwnont at E. 1011111 St. IJ1d Nazi-occupied St. Nazalre,
Oltend Ave., acw dine to Franee, and blew up harbor
homicide detecUvu, who lnlltallaUona In one of the
said Ellla,... doed ... arrival mCi8t daring feata of World
at Mt. Sinal Hospital.
War II.

Stree t, Middleport , Oh 1o
March 29th and 30th 10 o m
till 4 p.m. Men 's, women 's,
good clothing , olher us&amp;ful·
items

~~~~~~-~~

:x- -:~

RISING ST~R Kennel Boordin",
lndoor·Outdoor runs, grooming
all br..ds, clean JQnltary
tocllittes . Cheshire Phone (61_.)
~7 - 0292 .

- ··-- ,.

-

HOOF HOLLOW. Bu)', sell, trade
or troln horses RUTH REEVES,
tro1ntr._Phone {614) 698-3290 .•
POODlE GROOMING , reosonoble
rates . Coli for oppt . 742·3162.
Ei.. GUSH SPRINGER Spaniels
Pups, AKC liver and white, 5
weeks old, f1eld trial bred,
Champion bloodlines . Col/ Jim
Butchef , 2.ol?·2206 . or992 5426.

p . ~.,

C.rpet-Lino.. Tilt
Phone Mike Young •t
992-2206 or 992-7630

Concrete

DAVID BRICKLES

992-3288
1975 JEEP CHEROKEE. p.b.. ps.

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio4S7"

General Contracting

refrigeroto r- free:~er ,
AdmTrallmper~ol Oupl~x . $375 .

20 CU. FT

Coll992-3373.

FOR S~LE ·-

New Co-Op water sof.
teners, model VC -SVI .
Only 1279.95
1 Good Used Poulan Chain

SSS

Save SSO .OO on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator.
1 Good Used McCullough
Ct'lain Saw ••• •••• ••••• S95
1 Good used _.0, Hotpolnt
Range•••• ... •• •• •••• $100
Now in stock, complete ltne
of bulk garden seeds and
onion sets .

Poineroy Landmark

Jack w. Caney, Mgr
Phone 99'2-2181

STARCRAFT, Mini motors,
20 an4:! 22 ft Travel Fold ·
downs, $1,850 up , 23 tt Travel
Star S C , $.4,1 99 . we sell
servtce and quality . New and
used camp con lev Starcratt
Sates, Rt 62 N PL Pleasant

130 . Phone (614 ) 378 6311 .

BUL TACO

Frontera, SBOO . Two bike
motorcycle trailer , S75 . Call

softener, Model UC-XVI .
·Now Only•279.95
Let us test your water
Free.

Pom~

Landmark

I; JackPhone
w. C.rsey. Mgr.
992-2111

style home.
excellent
lo::atlon in Pomeroy, very
nice kik"'en, living room,

dining room, 2balhs, ullllty
1.r1d basement. Plus two
rental
apts..
ONLY
Sl4,000.00.
NEW LISTING - , 4
bedrooms. kllchen, balh,
utll lly, yard . A GOOD
BUY . ONLY $7,225.00.
NEW HOME - 1 acre, 3
bedrooms, ullllty, nice

APPROXIMATELY 7 ot 8 acres
wooded lond m Rock Springs
Phone992·2789.
2 STORV

kitchen , carpeting, car ·
port, in good locaf to n.
fuel oil lurnace,

F.A.

1 acre,

modern kitchen, carpeting,
panelling, really neal .
$16,500.00.
NEW KITCHEN - The
kitchen in this 12 room
home is' unbelleveable,

formal dining, large living,
lhls you musl see.
$20,000.00.
OLD HOME - Live In or
rent, lhis 2 bedroom house
"' a large lot Is only
$4,800.00.
ACERAGE - We have
several parcels for home

slles, call today .
NEEDS REPAIR have a

few___. houses

We
that

reed pajJlt· ·and fi .ed up,
Investment pofenllal, call
t!lday.
.
IF YOU REALLY WANT
TO
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY
CALL
TODAY. We have buyers
for

farms

and

newer

homes.
HENRY E. CLELAND ·
BROKER
Hank Cleland Associate
992-l259, 992-2568

. I

'

.o1

4-10 l mo. 1

ELWOOD 80WERS REPAIR
Sweepers, toasters , lfOns , all
small appliances. Lawn mower
next to State Hl"hway Garage
on Route 7. 1f':hore (61•J 985.
3825.
\~

WILl do roofing , construclion ,
plumb1ng and healing No 10b
too Iorge or too smell. Phone

742 ·2348.
CARPENTER . flooring , ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992·275q .

and three. fourth acres ins1de
city lim tts. New Siding and
storm windows . 3 acres fenced
for smoll po5ture. $18,500.
Phone 992-7352 .

MOBILE Home Repair. Elec .,
plumbing ond heating. Phone

992-5858
ELECTRONIC T.V . CLINIC New
T.V . shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
Servtce coli , $5.95 Color, B &amp; W
antenna sys tems stereos , etc.
572 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992·6306. Carry In and
save money .

ed . Coll992-7454.

$19,500. Phone 992·5947.
3 BEDROOMS home, all elec. , I
both , ulil1ty room by kitchen .
liS x 115 lot , I cor garage in
Rutland . Phone 742·2869.

GEORGE H08STETTER , Jr. Reel
Estatlt- Broker , Pomeroy, 01-uo.
RACINE · 2.46 acres . 3
bedrooms, living room , kif·
chen , bath , carpeting ,
draperies , fuel oil heat, centro!
air
co nditioning ,
stove,
refrigerator,
hookup for
wos~er and dryer, front porch,
on Tuppers Plains·Chester
water system . Approximately
'h mile from Ratine. Phone
9:.oi9·2589 Priced $15,900. Hilton
Wolfe, S~on . :,.,.---c-cc---

HOWERV AND MARTIN Ex·
cavatlng , septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel, blacktop
pov1ng , Rt U3. Phone 1 (614)

698-7331 .
EXCAVATING, Backhoes, Dozer,
trencher, Low Boy , dump truck,
trucks, septic systems . B11l
Pullins. Phone 992·2.ol78 day or
night.
JACt&lt;'S BEE SUPPliES Reedsv11le,
Ohio. Bee supplies and equip·
ment . Phone (61.ol) 378-6357 .

1975 25ft. CAVELCADE trailer, air
conditioned and several other
extras m good cond1tlon. Colt
oiler 6 P·'Jl · 992-5394,

5 ROOMS, BATH. ulllllles. double
coc goroge on lorgelol in Dan· .e
ville on S.R. 325. Phone •
NEW 3 bedroom house. 2 balks,
742·3017.
.•
all alec , 1 acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phone 992· GEORGE H08STETTER . Reol ·•
7481.
Estore Broker. Pomeroy, Ohio. ·•
CHESTER - 3 ceres lond, 3 •
SMALL form for sale. IO'Y. down ,
bedroom house, 2 bo1h•, 11and- •
owner financed. Monroe Coun ·
up shower , stocm doors ond le
ty, W Va . Phone (30~ ) 772windows , woll to woll
3102 oc (364) 772-3227.
.......-.

COMMERCIAL

-~

BRICK

•QJI0 2
.Q7

carpeting , refrigerator and •
sto ... e . 2 outbuilding•. Plenty of

e

!.•'

Insole,
Minersville
1 and

Priced for quick
se ... en·tenth acres with fruit
frtll . Good rental r,roperty.
blso 1poce for trol•r. Coli

- ---:--.

~

G~~L3·~~

.

======""i''-'===-'""'-~~~~~~--'

LITTLII:

Not The Imitators"

"

2·23·1 mo.
•.
'--------..~·
PROFESSIONAL
"
•
PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

.'

KEN GROVER

'

OH, M'f

'TRAMP? HE'S
MAtotlU TilE
GRADE ALL
A:t6Hl--

''.,
•
•
•

PHOTOGRAPHY
(6t4) '85-4155

'

M~ NAME: Rl "'H T.
I

=:
e

I~

o II

o

.• •

•

TEAFORD

Just because
he has a book
ot.rtdoe~n't

a
•

write!

porches. patio and 3 c~~tr

rural

-Loa&lt;!"!-IS

water,

septic tank and
~lvacy . $12,500.
2
MIDDLEPORT

A.SIN6L.S'CN:THAT

baths,

RUSH Mf3rf-

II:IOt-.tTMAKE DAISY NNE
""""""!" LikE' A DISHRAG'?

~droom

frame home, 2
garage on corner

level lot. Want $12,000.
2 BUILDING 'LOTS - AI

(?i2-WHYDID AH
MARRY DAISY

Rock Sprfngs • .rura I water

•

CRVPTOQUOTES
... ON MY WAY TO A
HOLLYWOOD PREMIERE
•.• WI'TH ONE OF THE
HOTTEE&gt;T NEW

,.'

•

• •

~~

VYBHM

H.Eti L.ANf/.Ef/ HfM8ElF

VYBHM

AJOB!r--,.--,

ACTRESH·S
AROUND!

JSEW

Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10

1:0G-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13 ; News 8;
Young &amp; the Rstless 10; Not For WomenOnly 15.
1:3()-.Daysof Our Lrves 3,4,15, Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2·0G-Doctors 3,4,15, $20,000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2 3Cl-One Life To Live 6, 13.
3·0G-Anothr World 3,4,15; All In The Fam ily 8,10;
Consumer Sur~1val Kit 20

3· 15----General Hospital 6,13.
3 3()-.Match Game 8,10
4 : 0~Mrster Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4, Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8, Movie
" Sergeant Deadhead " 10; Dinah 13.
• ·1 5----Ltttle Rascals 4.
4 .3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; ;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
15.
5·0G-Big alley 3; My hree Sons 4,; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 , Star Trek 15.
S:3().....Adam-12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8;
6o0G-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6:3()-.NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 6,10; Vegetable Soup 20 ; :;udlo See 33
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3, To Til the Truth 4; Bow'lng for
Dollars 6, News 10; To Tell tne Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Cooking wltc. a Conllnenta l Flavor 20.;
American Issues Forum 33.

7:3()-.Hollywood Squares 3,4;, Let's Deal With It 6;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; In The ,Know 10;
Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor Society 15.
8:0G-Hall of Fame 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Who's
Who 6, 10; National Geographic 20,33.
8:3()-.Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:0G-Eight 15 Enough 6,13, MASH 8,10; In Search of
the Real America 33; Oasis In Space 20
9 :3D-'-Movie " Dead of Nlght" 3,4, 15; Anyone for

ITBHETR

Tenny son? 20 ; Oasis in Space 33.

1.oo-- Tomorrow 3,4.

1' 1()-.News 13.

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
IDur ordinary words.

I SAYGSI
I I D H_I. . . .I
•""•~-·-

HP

H T T.

OBNSEB

IHEXB

RSF

TBP

IRATOQRJ
.

:
LN

LP

RSF

B X BE R
NHTT .

,

e :
e •

• . ",

••••· ,:'

..

10 ·oo-Famtly 6,13 ; Mitzi Gaynor 8, 10; News 20; Incredible Bread Machine 33.
10 ·3()-.Biack Journa l 20
li :OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeii ·Lehrer Report
33.
11·3()-.Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Outrage" 6, 13;
MacMillan &amp; Wile 8; Mary Hariman 10; Practical
Dermatology 33.
12· 00-Movle "The Bedlord Incident" 10.
12 3()-.Janakl 33 .

II

I ) I
I. (

I YIBOSH
I
V1
"-.A

1

V &lt;q

Now arrange the circled letters to

"-J ~e~.:\'~~~~~v~n~";,"C:O~ssug·

XI I X]

n..\.-"-' . - S T L ~ B E

...
~
·• '

J B D WB T T
G S T U B V Prlntthe sui'prlse answer here: [
Yesterday 1 Cryptoquole; THERE ARE SEVERAL WAYS IN
(Answers lomorrow)
WHICH TO-'APPORTION THE FAMILY INCOME, AIL OF
, Jumbles: OXIDE IRATE FLORAL SICKEN
THEM UNSATISFACTQRY. - ROBERT BENCHLEY
Saturdays Answer· Maybe "riled" at having nothing
to do-AN "IDLER"
, BARNEY

I

•

*~

HOW MAN'i
M5E50JD

.I !•

••
4

• -· · · · · · · ,
LAND
RUT . FURNITURE
.

'IOU STEAL

-.

•

••
AKNOLD GRAtE

HE CALLED EARLIER •
()AID NOT TO WORRY!

'L

12: 3()-.Loers &amp; Friends 3, 15, Ryan ' s Hope 6,13 ; Bob

N Y 10019)

length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letLers are different.

WINNIE

only S1B,OOO.
SITE LOCATORS
DROP IN WHERE YOU
CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE. G. BRUCE
AND
HELEN
L.
ASSOCIATES.

.,..
· •..

7:05----Porky Pig 10
7o3o-Schoolies 10.
B:OG-Howdy Doody 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
ST 33.
8o3().....6ig Valley 6.
9 OG-A.M. 3; Phil Donah ue 4,15, Andy Griffith 8; Mike
Douglas 10
8:3().....
9 3()-.Cross-Wits 3; Edge ol Nighl6; Concentration 8
10 :0()-.Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Dinah 6; Double Dare
8.10; Mike Douglas 13
10:3()-.Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15, Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :0G-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Morning Show 13.
11 :3()-.Shoot lor the Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
love of Lile 8, 10; Sesame ST.20
11 o55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxtt 10
12: 0G-News 3,4,6, 10; SEcond Chance 13; Name Thai

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to. "Win
at Bridge," c l o this
newspaper, P 0 . Box 489,
Radio Ctfy Station, New York,

apostrophes, the

Sunrise

6:45----Mornlng Report 3
6:5()-.Good Morn ing , West V ~rgln la 13.
6:55----Good Morning , Trl State 13.
oo-Today 3,4, 15, CBS News 8; Chuck White REports 10

I MILOS J
One letter simply sta nds for another. In this sample A is
I- I- V~-J
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, otr. Single letters,

•

type home, lots of closets,
gas forced air furnace,
disposal! and corner lot for

• . .• • • • •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

deity
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~Here's how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR
Ia L 0 N G F E L L ()' w

basemer11 and level corner

lal, l'h balhs for $24,000.
MIDDLE PORT - Car·
poled 4 bedroom ranch

6: 3G-Teacher's Classroom 4; News 6;
Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.

A Rhode Island reader
wants to know the
significance of South 's double
m the sequence . two spades
by South (forcing ) - pass ~
two notrump - four hearts ~
double.
South is sayi ng that he
thinks he can score more
pomts by defending against
four hearts doubled than by
trying for game.

39Y~ic

2

available. $5,000.
JUST LISTED
4
bedroom li-ick home, large
dining,
living
wllh
fireplace . Ullllly room, lull

Close Sat. At P,M,
5
•

Ha! You think
Td read slop
like that?

garage wllh storage. All for
Sl5,000
JUST LISTED - 45 acres
of woods, good old 2

FRIDAY TIL 5

~..

mean he can

••

RUTLAND - Nice older
home In good shape wllh 3
bedrooms, equipped kll ·
ellen, full basemen!, coal
furnace, double garage and
nrce lol. $36,000.
JUST LISTED - Nice old
Irick 3 bedroom home with
modern kitchen, bath,
clning wilh fireplace, 2

Mon., Tues ., Wed.
8:00 ti15: 00
Thursday 8 tii.Noon

..

'~~

"

Coll992-7461.

trailer.

Pa,ss

6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6: 15----Farm Report 13.
6:2()-.Not for Women Only 13.

~e w~dltUbt

HOMESITES for sale, 1 acre ond
up Middleport , near Rutland.

bedroom

Pass

64

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
10 Mystery
I Throb
Writers
award
5 Harvests
10 "Pygm.alion" 41 Crystal
playwright
gazer
11 Accuse;
words
attribute
DOWN
13 Prong
I F:all flower
14 Like women
2 Work pants
of the East
fabric
Yesterday's Answer
15 Chang's
3
12 Whirled;
%4 Ball of fun
twin
surged
25 Ashen
16 "Leave - to
4 She sheep
16 Cordage
Z1 Calling
Heaven"
5 Mexican
29 - cum
painter
fiber .
17 Was m fronl
19 Infenor..
laude
18 Highwayman's 6 Abrasive
to a maJor 30 Fatuous;
business
1 Bee (comb.
leaguer
silly
20 Prefix for
22
Inner
31
Ms.
form)
cycle or
8
Exerted
Hebrides
Dickinson
center
influence
island
36 Excavate
21 Arizona
(
2
wds.)
23
Wound
37 Capuchin
city
9
Tower
slightly
monkey
22 Jobless
23 Embrace
25 PrO!IOUDCied ;;;-t--t--t-26 uor·aon or
Buzzi
• 21 Argot
28 Airplane ,
formation
(abbr.)
29 Febrile
disease
32 Melody
33 Anagram
of era
34 Motel
of eld
35 Snow
vehicle
37 Unforeseen "-;-+-+~m
problem
"
38 Malbin or
ro+-1~-t--1
Stritch

tJA~ , He. ~~V~R EiETS

BRADFORD, Auc.t1oneer, Com·
plete Service Phone 9.ol9·2.ol87
or 949-2000. Rocine . Ohio Crill
Bradford.

VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Streel
Pom~roy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

Pass
Pass

TUESDAY, MAR&lt;H 29, 1977

~

•
••

Chester, Ohio
10-17·1mo(Pd)

South

Oswald " Last week we dis·
cussed some problems of
Blackwood bidders . Th1s week
we ought to discuss when to
invite or b1d a slam without
usmg Blackwood on the way
up."
Jim . "Today 's North hand
is a good example. North
should jump right to SIK
spades '" response to his
partner's one-spade opemng.
If South is looking at three

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

II.IIIMU.! • • • • • • •

· ·•
• •

949·25631or onlormollo~- __ :
3 BEDROOM HOUSE lor oolo near
Eoorern High School. Full boso· :
mont. 2 firepla
car goroge,
fomoly e 742-2211 .
room
ce.
Phone
•85.3fi61

~==~~~L-&amp;j~--~~~~::~~~~~~

''The Originators

ilonvenient
IJU!I'
I'f n~~Snn;J
:1
Shopping
Hour

:;~~. ··;.~~~/";Jsr::r
~~~~~ :• ·•e·
Wolle
. Solesmon . Phone

Nl~i~g:~~~~HOME

~~

J.

Wen Nor•h East

aces and the king of spades ,
thiS jump to SIX won't keep
South from bidd ing seven . It is
eas~ to construct a North
hand w1th two aces and a cou·
pie of small hearts where six
won't make . It is just as easy
to figure out a North hand
wtth one ace , where the slam
may be a lay down."
Oswald : "The great advantage of this type of bid is that
it tells the defenders nothing
about your hand . Thus w..st
has a natural diamond lead
against the slam. He makes 1t
and South rattles off thirteen
tricks while a heart lead
would have beaten the hand.

Opening lead ~ K •

REMODEliNG , .Piumb1ng, healing
and oil types of general repo1r .
SEWING MACHINE Repa 1rs. ser·
Work guaranteed 20 years e-x
vtce all makes, 992-228.ol . The
perience. Phone 992· 2409.
Fabnr St'top , Pomer oy .
Authorized S1nger Sole.s ond
Servic&amp; . We 5harpen Scissors,

Moddleporl . Phone 992-3.457
HOUSE, 6 ROOMS, end bolh , 6

6 1/r acres , garden spot , ~ome
posture, firewood with wood·
burn1ng 5fove, fuel oil heat ,
outbuildings 2 bedroom house,
near hospital and town .

•

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
997-2206 or 992-7630

R uttand, Ohio 4.S77S
Ph . {&amp;14) 74'2 -24 09
We Delive.1'2 22 ·4 mos

7 ROOM HOUSE , new carpet,
roof, insulation owner Finane·

.105
SOUTH (01
• A K 10 B2
• J 10

... "fl-115 MENACE THIIIT I
SEE AHEAD, COUlD VERY
WELL CHOI ~p US DEAD!

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Located in Lan!jsville
Box 28-A

Bedrm . brick home tn

• 9
•AK87 52
+9763

North-5outh vulnerable

Young's Carpeting

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

985-4112

BU IL 01 NG in downtown
FIREWOOD, lOCUST flosts and Pomeroy , Ohio . Presentfy
rented w i th Income over
dogs. Phone 742·2323
ss,ooo per year Two rental~
~--··
2 VR OLD Regtstered Tennessee doWnsta ,rs and one upst.-.irs .
Walking mare, $250. Phone- Has unfinlshed . ap~rtment
up stairs Entire upsta.rs can
742·3150'
easily be made into 3
_.SS CRAGAR wheels .Sl25 Phone apartments . w .air condition
ups t~l rs
3 separate water,
(I&gt; I~) 667·31&gt;53.
oas and electric meters can
1972 FORO ECONOliNE 100 Von . be tlnanc;ed 100 percent to
reliabl e perty Contact Paul
Phone992·6137.
Si!Tion or GUidO Girol&amp;ml to
185 SUZUKI19?4 ,·3000 total miles . secur~· an appointment.
re&lt;ent a.,.erhaul , e.11 tros Phone Priced upon Inspection of ·
pro~.-ty only
after 4 p m 992· 76B5 .

-·---

·

"'6 3
.Q96
+AK8 54

•JS2

Superior
Steam Extraction

NEW 3 bedroom house, bulif· m EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work · dump trucks
kitchen , both ond '/, , Phone
gnd lo· boys for hir8 : will ht~ul
742-2306 or contact M1IO B. Hut·
fill dirt , to so tl, lim&amp;stone and
chison , Rutland , Ohio.
grovel Call Bob or Roger JefFOR SALE . All elec . nearly new
fers , day phone 992-7089:,
home 1n Rutland area . Base·
night phone 992·3525 or 992
men t, 3 bedrooms ofloched
5232.
garage.
$29 .900
Phon e
EXCAVATING. do~ er , backhoe
742·2531.
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot3 BEDROOM ranch , 1% baths. 1
field. Back Hoe Service ,
acre , ·all elec. f inished garage
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742·2008
Fully carpeted . Five Points
oreo . $30 000. Phone 992 2928 SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sanitation , 992 ·395.t.
.after 5 p.m.

MAIN
POMEROY. O.
NEW LISTING- Southern

$30,000.00.
NEW FURNACE -

AUEYOOP

EAST

Free Estimates

ANY PlliCH
ANY SIZE

Commercial property oppro.11, 17
acres . level land , located at
Tuppen Plain s on Oh1o, Route
7 Phone {614) 667·6304

'1'12·3367.

-

P~ t92-l9'll

COAL, lime5lone, and calc1um
chlo r1de and calcium brine for
dust co ntrol and spec tal mixing
salt for formers . Mom Street,
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 9'12·

KAWASAKI 175 Enduro.
In good shape,
SJSO or best offer. Phone

742-2187.

WEST

No Sunday Calls Pr.ue
3$11$1 ,mo.

lARRZ.~~'~DER

3-11 -1 mo. pd .
Phone ._....__ _ _ _ _ _ _._..J

Man~ e)Ctros

METAL t&lt;ITCHEN cab1nets, green ,
Phone
exceHenf cond 1tion

28

·-

l'REE OF l'l-IORNS l'H,l;T MADE
PAUSE!, WAS REALLY BAD,
BUT HAD NO .JAWS!

1: 00-Tomorrow 3,4, Ironside 13.
2: 00-News 13.

Quick 'n dirty does it

.AK9843

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

GUTTUS.AWNINGS

Free Estimates Ph. 992-7119

tires .

old . Phone 843 2353.

250CC

Ft11nclnaArailable

Blown lnld Wollt l AHICs
STORM
W111110WS &amp; OOORS
IEPLAU.ENT
WINDOWS
!WMINUM
SIDING-SOffm

---~- ~=----:

1972

1976

lho -~~~ H•lll

Blown
Insulation Services

Patios,

Sidewalks ,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling .

1972 DODGE Dart 318 engine
outomoftc, 1 owner, 50,000
m1les good condTI Ton, $1300.
Phone 742-2446.
19'74 GMC:::.;P:Ci'-:
ck~u~p-.-;:P;-ho~n-e

CALVES , ONE week to 10 months

1971 HONDA 350. Good condi·
tion , crgsh bar . and sissy bt~r .
Coli George Grote , 7•2·2103 .

HAVE TO 5AV1 .

.43

Bissell Siding Co.

FREE ESTIMATES

Kitchen Cabinets, Roofing,

1972 DODGE DART , 318 engine,
oulomotic , 1 owner, 50,000
m1le~ good cond1t1on, $1300.
Phone 742·2446

Phone (304) 677·2340.
VEGA . $800.
949-2307

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

ON WITH WHAT I

,.'

Rick ot (3().4 ) 675·33?5 before 6
_P m-~ood condTITon, m~:~~

M

IIIJIIt

,.....,

1974 MUSTANG II. Mach I. Ask for

Good

BRIDGE

UNDE1&lt;51COCIDl') PE~FECTLYL .. ANP NOW
IF 'IOU' I&lt;:E READ'I TO
Ll5TEN ·· MAY I GET

5TRAIG HT·· l'l,l
MAKING NO
OEAL$ WITH
'IOU O R YOUR
&gt;JIECE OR.

Vinyl and aluminum
siding, storm win dows and insulation.
Ca II Prolessiona Is

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

2·23·1 mo.

$1,000 down, coli (304) 772
3102 oc (304)772·3227

P IGS ,
TOP
Quality ,
castrated, rron shot, wormed,
IF VOU hove o service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell sonieth•ng ,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster wllh o Sentinel Wont Ad .

,... tllo

Installation, samples
brought to your home
with no charge.

atiilirm~
=
-========
-

Saw .

-to

Free Estimates

949-2660

Quodrotrack .

, - - - - , ju~H GST THIS

BUT YOU 'RE WA$tiN6
'lOU R BI&lt;:EATI'I:

ANVONE!

Radiator .....---..
Se"'lce

Pomeroy, 0.

SINGER GOlDEN Touch N Sew
3891
does 11 all• Z1g·Zogs, ses on
APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
Nobll Summit Road
kmt . outomotic buttofiholer
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
Rl. 1
makes de5igns and many other
WILKESVILLE . (614)669·3785 .
Middleporl, 0.
feat ures
Just like new
992-5724
Or1gtnal price $549 95 Must FULLER Brush Produ cts lor sole .
Complete
Sales and
sell only $129.95. Cosh or
Phone992·3410.
. terms . Cof1 992·5146 .
--';;:-="-----:-:-~....,-~
Service and Supplies.
_
-CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
3-14-1 mo.
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
tro ller . $4.50. Phone (614) 698Barko loader Model 6170
3290.
~~~- -::-::--Series 608(, Franklin Model " 130B Morbork 636 Deborker STEREO , NEW AM·FM stereo
~
s·n 627 · Contact Denms Smurr
radiO comb•no lion $1 ~9 . 95 or
COUNTRYlarmlond with seclud·
Phone {614) 838·53.oiS,
eos~ terms Coll992-3965
eel woods . wafer and good oc·
cess in Monroe County, W. Va

278 lc! follow.
992 37 46.
Co11992-2156.
The moon Ia between its .
SALE , Drive o little , save o
first quarter and full phase. PORCH
lui Storts Fndoy Come to Don·
NHD A
The mcmlng star Ia Mars.
, lie Turn right at s•gn, come
The evening lllal'll are Merpproxlmotelv V... mile. D&amp;pres·
WATER SDF1ENER 7
sian bOttles , pocket knives.
cury, Venua, JuJtter 8Jid
clothes for entire fomily ,
Sltum.
Let Pomeroy L•ndmark
assorted glassware. Phone
Tbooe born ... thl8 date are
soften &amp; condition your
742 2481
under the sign of Aries.
water and a Co-op water
GARAGE SALE, Rear 188 Walnut
American blndleader Paul

Route 3,

1964 '/ , TON ptckup, new tire&amp; ,
good condi fton . Coli 992·3994

" - --

ME UNTIL 'IOU 'VE HEARD
MY ANNQUNCEI,\ENT:

Ju~ranteed

-

1976 HONDA 750 1700 miles , etC ·
cellent condition . Phone
__!!5·391!_~fter !P~_.:_~-

SMAll HOUSE TRAILER, in good
conditton . Call or see Carl Mor·
ris , Rutland , 742-293_?_. -;~;­

--------The Almanac
Unlted Preu Jaternatloaal
Today Ia M...day, March

- ~3_·711~· ~-- -~~-~-

OK AY, A LY WARD ~~

K.INPI..Y PON 'T INTERRUPT

All work

Young's Carpeting

V·B automotic, new bottery .
ond front tires. Makes good
work
cor . $550
Phone

- SHAt&lt;ESPEARE BASS Boot 1.oi',
19:76 Mercury 20 h .p. wi th elec·
tnc start 1976 tilt frailer , plus
other extras. $1695 Phone
~-9:92·31 2~R•ffl.!::.,_ __ _
FISHER WOOD Burning stove5 and
form lumber. PHONE Focemyer
and Salmons lumber Co , Inc
Rt. 7 Middleport , Ohto (614)

CAPT_AIN ElASY

same -dey,

•QJ754

1976 CAMARO 305, 2 barrel!
outomotic, sil.,.er w1th red
pinstriFing . Still under worron·
t., _c~~-992· 5709.
-~

1971 AM'C MATADOR. p s .

1)¥ Von Schnldar
dtY-Ioarn malhod.
NorriUIS.Nofilu.
No odor. Use the

NORTH

POMEROY, OHIO

1914 PLYMOUTH DU STER
or will take an older car on
trade of it. Phone 99 2·7797 .

Know Your Schools 33.
7.3().....Thai Good Ole Na shville Music 3; In Search of 4 ;
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MaoNeii-Lehrer

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626
3-16·1 mo.

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-6250

POM!~?!vE~?!~.~. CO. ~
Iii'

-

DISCARDED CAR Batteries
Lownmowers, fillers , etc
Phone7.t2·307.ol

Whiteman wu born March
28, 1110.
(Art you tn Aries? Bemlctl
On thl8 day In hlatory:
0401 h•• writttn a special Astra·
In
1797, Nathaniel Brlgp
G.tiDh t.•tt•r for you. For your
Will
awwded
a petent for the
op~ Hnd ~0 cents and 11 self·
lint
walhlnc
machine. He
• rtJHd, •tamped envelope to
.aauo.. Ot•f'rt, P.O Box 4t'9, called It an "Improvement
llali!O Cllr Sttffon, Now York,
"t '( 100ft . Bt IUfB to . k for

·--~-

OWN YOUR own bu smess . Work
for yourself . Set yo ur own
hours . Rewords are there for
the 10k1ng Coli Mr Adams MERRI ·MAC hos opening for Party
Pion
Supervisors
and
(304) 3.42-8161.
Demonstrators 1n your oreo
Htghes t
commiss1on .
no
Notice of Appointment
del1very
or
collecting .
Case No . 22,075
Demonstrate lop quol1ty toys
Estate of J1mes Ray H1tl ,
and g•fts Coil collect to Ann
Dece1sed.
Bo)Cfer (3 19) 556·8881 or wnte
Not ice Is hereby given tha t
MERRI
·MAC , 801 Jackson,
David L . H tll , of Box 134 ,
Dubuque, Iowa 52001
Racine, Oh 1o , hes been du!y
appointed Administrator of EXPERIENCED BODYMAN needed
the Estate of James Ray HliL
for Hysell's Used Cars . Contoct
deceased , tate of Letart
Harold Hysell , after 5 p m
TQwnship , Me i gs County,
7·2-3154
Ohio .
Cred1tors are required to
fil e their clai ms with sa td
fiduc•ar'i '\ wtlhin
three
months.
Dated this i Jrd day of CASH po1d for oil make' and
March 1977 .
model$ of mobile homes .
Manning D . Webster, Judge
Phone oreo code 61 ·H23·9531 ,
Coortof Common Pll!as,
Probate Division TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro ·
(31 28 ; 141 , , 11, 31c
ducts . Top price for stand1ng
sawtimber . Coli Kent Hanby ,
1·446·8570.

CERN.

RATES

S695

Sons 15; CharacterlsJicsof Learn ing Disabil ities 20;

yoJ:M:w~tllf

QtESHIRE
ASHlAND

Reporl20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville on lhe Road 15.
B:OG-NCAA Baskelball a.~ . 15; Brady Bunch 6, lJ;
Jetfersons 8, 10; Microbes &amp; Men 20,33 .
8.3()-.B usti ng ~oose 8,10 .
9.0G-Perry Como 6,13, Maude 8,10; Palllsers 20.33.
9 3()-.AII's Fair 8,10.
10:0G-Movle " All the Fighter " 3, • .15; Oscar Awards
6,13; CBS News Speclal 8,10; New1 20; Soundstage
33.
10:3()-.Farm Digest 20
ll :OG-News 3,4,8, 10, 15, Monty Python's Flying Ci rcus
20; Black Journal 33.
11:3()-.Johnny .Carson 3,4, 15; Koiok 8; Mary Hariman
10; ABC News 33.
12: 0G-Movle " The Oulller Memorandum" 10; Janak!
33.
12 ·3()-.News 6,13
12: 40-Movie "To Commtt a Murder" 8.

MONDAY, MARCH28, 1977
5:0G-Big Valley 3; My Three So ns ~' "rady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5.3o-Adam ·124; News6; Elec Co 20,33; Adam -1213.
6oOG-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6.3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20
7:00... Truth or Co"s 3; To Telllhe Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three

•

AT

REASONABLE

FARM ON river, 51 ac res . 7 rooms
and both Phone 992-5908 .

FREE INSPECTION for ter m1tes! RED &amp; WHITE Beagle on Rose
Any smgle dwell1ng res1dence
Volley Hill in Mmersvdle.
treated for termTtes , $109
Femole red eyes , nome Wh1t1e,
Soutt'tern Pest Control. Racine
Childs pet . Phone Jerry
Ohio. Phone 9-49-2803 or
Grueser 9:.ol9:·2805 . Rewor d to
949·2786.
any one
knowing the
whereabouts of th is dog

Notice of Public Sale
TO WHOM IT MAY CON·

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER

3·2? -1 mo.

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork , Rt.
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Large lots with concrete pol lOS .
s1dewolks, runner s and off
~ I reel parking _ Phone_992· 747~

12 x 60 WITH 20 x 8 room , Total
Upho l ster~ng
drapes
alec ot Tuppe" Plo tns. For rent
reasonoble . 572 South Th1rd
or sole Phone667·3305.
A ve.. Middleport. Phone
x 6orRAILER-o~ 2~cres, spr~ng
9'12-6306 .
water Of! '1afuro l gt1s . S5900.
PIANO TUNING, lane Don1els 12
Phone 992·3955
yegrs of
service . Phone
Mob11e- H;;;-on- 1 ocre of
9'12·2082 .
land with 26 sq . h. block
WILL TRIM or cut trees or shrub·
build i ngotDe.~~ ter. Drilled well .
_b_ery. Phone 949 2545..;,·~-,--~­
c loS~t io m m~:- . Phone 7.oi2·2509.
FREE INSPECTION for te rmTiesl
Any smgle dwelt1ng res1dence
treated for termites $109
Souft't~t r n Pest Con trol, Racine
LOST LEWELLYN BIRD dog. while
Ohio . Phone 9.49·2803 or
w1th brown spots over one ey€1

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Foll. 11)
Even thou gh you may have to
put yourself out a btl to please
your lamtly today . tl will be worth
11. All w111 be appreciative.

$895

Air, V-a, automatic , power steering and brakes, radio.

543.4.

~----

ASTRO•GRAPH

Automatic
Transmission Service

3 AND .o1 RM. furn 1shed and unfurnished opts. Phone 992-

SEWING - AL TERA TIONS o

SERVICE S'l" A TION for lease Smo II
tnvestment requ~red . Must be
aggressive and desire to work
with people . Phone (304)
342·81'61 for details

FREE WBE JOB

GUARANTEED

~

1971 BELAIR 4 DOOR

SWAIN'S
PARTS • LABOR

local I owner car .

1972 VEGA 2 DOOR

i2xso

in the

1975 FORD TORINO
$2195
4 dr ., dark green finish, black vinyl lrlm, 351 v .8,
automatic, P. steering &amp; brakes, wheel covers, ~radlo,

Will do odd jobs , roofmg, pain ·
fTng, gutter work Phone 992·
7409 .

949·2786.

,_

4 cylinder, automatic, radio .

12

VALUES
GET
STAR
BILLING

QUALITY

-

FURN1St1ED APT. for rent . Phone
992·3975or992·2571 .
ONE BEDROOM unfur opt oil
elec . Phone 992·5742 ofter 5
p m.

Television log for easy ..viewing

2 SIGNS

~

ANY DOGS found chos1ng cottle
on my form in Greot Bend will
De shot
Doris Jackson

'

Pomeroy 1 Business Services
or Motor Co.~--------------------~~

NOTICE , Pr ort's Meot Mid
(Pleasanton Meat Processing ,
lru; ,) Cu,lom sloughtvring, and
processing Reto1l , wholesale
No oppolnment necessary Coli
(61.ol) 593·8655, ~ours , 9.00 till Wanh!d-loJtent
6 00 7 Pomeroy Rood Athvns,
Oh .
WANTED TO rent wtlh possible
opt1on to buy· 50 to 200 acres
GUN SHOOT· at the Racine GJ'n
secluded land, some tillable
Club ev&amp;ry Sunday , 1 pm
wtlh mhobitoble house. Colum·
Assorted meats
bta, Sc1p10, Bedford, or Rutland
RACINE FIRE Oept will ho ve o
Towmh tps
Write
To n y
Gun Shoot every Saturdoy n1ght
Russego 1331 Mead.ow Rood,
6 p. m. at the 1r building m
Columbus , Ohio 43212
Bo~hon , Ohio.
CO RN or Soybean ground In
Will CARE for elderly lady '"
Rutland or Middleport area , 5
p ri.,. gte
home
Lo ca l
_oc~~ ond_up . Phone 992·2703
references . Phone 667 -3305.
~

Want Ads

•

DICKTRA~

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

FOR SAlE or Tr od e for other pro·
perty. Three nver loti, Water
Street , Syracuse. $5500 Phone
992·58 U

~

Sentin~l

7-The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomernv, 0 .. Mondoy, Mard128 . IIJ77

t

r

,e
,
. .•.;

RUTLAND··· '

• • • • • • • • • •.• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

I.ASTC{EAR,
MILO?

HOW .\\ANti
THE !.{EAR
BEFORE THAT?

HOWAI300T
THE 'lEAR
BEFORE TfiAT?

I HAVEN'T BEEN
ALIVE T14AT LONG! ·

AF.ORE I TELL
'IE 'TH' BODACIOUS
GOSSIP, LOWEEZY··
ARE ~E PLUMB
SHORE SNU!'FI/'S
SOUND ASLEEP 7

I'LL

PAW-- TATER JEST

SOON BUSTED A JUG OF
FIND
OUT

'lORE CORN
SQUEEZIN'S

HE'S DEAD
TOTH'

WORLD

•

.

~~,

�8- The DailySenth&gt;d, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. M_arch28. 1!177
E-RC'AU.EDTWICE
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Syracuse at4 :51-p.m.
Hotzer Medical Center
Saturday for Kathy Adkins,
(Discharges, March !5)
~&gt;ho was ill. She was taken to
Ferd BalL Carla Bays,
Holzer Medical Centlll'. At Jessie
Bowman, Dlnna
7:15 a.m . Monday, the squad
Olatman,
Marilyn D. Crowe,
l'OW wen t to Mechanic . St., Co ra Dewitt,
Michelle
Pomeroy, for Pauline Ferencz , Kimball Ferris,
Derenberger who was taken Edith Greer, David Gross,
By JX'MEs HIWRE111
to
Veterans Memorial Her liert Henderson, Wilma
WASHINGTON (UP!) al where she was Hosdlar, EJS:e Lakin, Janine
Hospit
The United States had a
treated and released.
Larch, Jodi Mannering, Mrs.
record trade deficit' for the
second straight 'month in
Terry
McGuire and son,
TAKENTOVMH
Februar~ as imports exWilliam
Norris, Mark
The P&lt;Ineroy Emergency
ceeded exp 0 rts by $1.87 Squad "'swered a call at 1:15 Phillips, Eloise·Riggs, Cheryl
billion, the Commerce p.m. Sunday to Mechanic St., Robie, Mrs. Lewis Sayre and
Deparlplent said today.
for Terry Dermberger who daughter, Julia Shaver,
Exports last month totaled was ilL He was taken to Robert Stevens, Hazel
~ - 8 billion, age 2 per cent
Veterans Memorial Hospital Taylor. Mrs. Rendall Walker
from January's depressed Where he was admitted.
and daughter, Mrs. Robert
level. But imports were $11.67
Wells and daughter, Velma
IJ'lSPECTION SET
Young.
Iilli on, the highest amount of
The annual inspection of
foreign goods ever purchased
(Births, March 25)
Mr. and Mrs. ROger Jarvis,
in one month by the United Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
\\ill be held at 7:30 p.m. daughter, Ewington; Mr. and
&amp;ates.
Tbe previous largest trade Thursday at the Masonic Mrs. Gary Perkins, danghter,
deficit - $1.67 billion - was Temple. All Master Masons Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Fry, daughter, New
in January when the nation are invited.
Haven, W. V&lt;11.; Mr. and Mrs.
was .suffering from the ef- ROCKY TOURS
Gary Doddard, daughter,
fects of severe cold weather,
DAMASCUS, Syria (UPI)
causing plant shutdowns and - Former Vice President Buffalo, W. Va.; Mr. and
transportation problema.
Ne!Bon Rockefeller arrived Mrs. Thomas Kibble ,
The nation has recorded Sunday for a two-day private · daughter, Pomlll'oy; Mr. and
trade deficits every month visit to Syria during which he Mrs.
John
Robinson,
S:nce May, 1976, the Com· is scheduled to meet daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,
W, Va.
merce Department said. President Hafez Assad.
February was the third
(Discharges, March 26)
Rockfeller has already
ruccessive month that im- visited Egypt, Jordan and
Drema Aeiker, Mrs. Carlos
ports have exceeded $11 Israel during his current Ayala and daughter, William
lillion.
Bcwman, Betty Clark,
Middle East tour.
Phyllis Glon, Eric Creel,
Joan Cutlip, Richard Davis,
Hobart Dewees, Edna
Deweese, Floyd Exline, Mrs.
Mark Fosttll' and son, Wade
PL~CE
Fox, Nora Han!fr, Arda
lbwe, Leah Johnson, Aris
Langdon, Emily Leach,
Harvey Lea!liond, Wesfey
Meeks, Louise Morris,
Elizabeth Nelson, Mrs. Roger
Ramsey and son, Flain
Ratliff, Juanita Sprouse,
John steele, Jr ., Mrs. John
Upton and son, Esta Welch.
(Bh1h, March 26)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Channell, son, J-ackson.
(Discharges, March %7)
Mildred Arnold, Mrs.
Michael Bailey and son,
Margaret Bartelson, Ruth
Bell, -Paul Bradbury, John
Carr, Mary. Easter, Matthew
Visit Our Salad Bar
Felesky, Mrs. David FoUl
Cream Baked Turkey
and
son, Ernestine Gillenover Biscuit
water·, Mrs. James Kuhn and
Vegetable
o;m, Zelia Pullin, Lois Riffle,
Hot Rolls
Gerald Ring, Perry Sayre,
Plus Tax
Coffee, Tea or Milk
&amp;., Minnie stapleton, Estil
sturgil!, Mrs. Larry Wright
and dauehter.

"' Reconl deficit

HOSPITAL NEWS

in February is

•
Seoond W

THE INN
Tuesday Night Special

992-3629

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-6304

~~~===P=IZ=Z=A=SHACK

(Birtha, Marc~ 271

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Layne, daughter, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Nichols, daughter, ·Jackson.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Phone 992-6304::l!

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People
At Farmers Bank

'

PI.F.ASANTVAU.EY
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Luke Coffee , daughter,
V'mton ; Mrs. Edward Crum,
Mason ; Grace Russell,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. John Bartell,
West Columbia; Rebecca
Kinder, Gallipolis; Mrs. Fred
Lamb, Crown City; Mrs.
Richard Elliott, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Anth~y Platzer, Point
Pleasant: Romeo Staats,
Ripley ; Birdie Blain,
Gallipolis Ferry; Steven
Norville, Point Pleasant;
Amy Dawn Bates, Southside;
Cecil Sines, Point Pleasant;
Clarence Castle, Point
Pleasant; Udia Evans, Leon;
Mrs. Charles Duncan,
Southside; Herbert Halstead,
Leon; Amanda Murray,
Middleport; Joseph Hughes,
Poca; Jesse Stanley, Point
Pleasant, and Courtney
Watson, Point Pleasant.

and Tim Sayre followed with Weaver, Jack Smith, and Rick
two hits each.
Buzzard aU with one base
Wahama
had
ten
base
knock each. Tim Thompson's
The Wahama White Falcons
knocks
in
the
opener
with
two
triple
in the opening frame •
gained a doubleheader split in
of
those
going
for
extra
vases.
was
the
lone extra base_hit for
their season opener Saturday
Thompson
blasted
a
two
run
the
White
Falcons.
afternoon at Belpre, by taking
toe first game, 6-D and
double in the seventh and - Wahama" 1~ scheduled to
DukeSmithbeltedasolohome return to acbon today when
dropping the night cap, 7-3.
run leading off the final' they · enlertaln the Me1gs
Jell Collier, 6'0'' junior
frame.
Marauders in a 4: game
r---------~---------------- I
Thompson scored the locals Tuesday brings Parkersburg
1 first run of tlfll season in the Catholic to Mason with
I
1
1 -third inning after reachin~ Hannan-Trace visiting the '
1
1
.
·l&gt;ase on an error. Seconds Bend Area school on
1
later the big catcher rode Wednesday.
MARY H. RADCLIFFE
Rev. Albert Hill , and a sister, home on Davis' RBI single to
123 4567 R H E
-SYRAC\)SE - Mllry H. Edna Paynter .
give
Collier
all
he
needed.
The
Radcliffe, 78, Syracuse, died
She is survived by her
Sundav at Marietta Ntemorial husband, Ralph ; one-brother, Bend Area nine went on to add WAHAMll"
f-bspital.
Ira Hill. Rockledge, Fla.; another tally in the fourth and
0 I 0 I 0 0 4 6 10 0
Mrs. Rlldctifle was the three nieces and seven four m~re in the seventh to
daug~ter Of the late Eliza W. nephews. She attended the
BELPRE
a~d Clara Morris Hll i. She Middleport MethoQist insure the victory.
0 0 00 000 0 42
was also preceded in dee~1h by Olurch.
In the nightcap Belpre
two brothers , W~llace and
fl..fleral services will be rallied for five third inning ERRORS-DeVore 2 Sacrlfflce
reid Wednesday at l p.m. at runs for a 7-3 win and a split on • Riggs 2BH • Bierhower, ·
Ewing Chapel with lhe Rev.
Veterans Mem•rlal HospHal
Thompson HR ·D. Smith RBI·
·Robert Bumgarner . of · the twin bill.
Saturday Admissions flclatlng . BtKial will be in ... Wahama had the base!&gt;' Thompson .2, Davis, Gold·
Greenwood
Cemetery. loaded no less than three sberry, Colller, D. Smith,
Eliza Birch, Racine; Glenna
little, Middleport ; George Edna Wilcoxen, William Friends may call at the times in the game but failed to Winning Pitcher • Collier
. fun.eral home at 7 this
Foss, Athens; Edna Russell, 9;eele.
eve~ing.
come up with the big hit.
Loser • Gates.
Sunday
Admissions
-Fred
Rutland ; Terry Rowley,
Rick
Buzzard
started
on·
toe
SECOND GAME
Middleport ; Mabel Swan, Shain , Racine; Pauline
.
mo!IDd
before
giving
way
to
I 2 3 4567 R H E
Langsville; Effie Watson, Brewer, Reedsville; Helen
MARY
WOODWARD
T
Th
d
F
h
WAHAMA
Mary Beth Wobdward, 36, om
ompson an
res •
Coolville; Doyle Ord, Mason; Preston , Cheshire; Terry
'&lt;laughter
of
the
late
Capt.
man
Vince
Weaver.
Buzzard
20 00I 00373
Deren
berger,
Pomeroy
;
Daniel Talbott, Portland.
Edward
Woodward
and
Viola
was
tagged
with
the
loss.
BELPRE
Linda
Toban,
~meroy;
Saturday Discharges 1 15000X78 2
Daniel Dennis, Martha Mary Edwards, Middleport; Woodward, died Saturday in _Randy Sizemore and Tony
Ft. Thomas, Ky. following a Blake carried the big bats for
Mary
Eblin,
Pomeroy.
Johnson, Helen Hersman,
lengthy illness.
Sunday Discharge
FIXleral services will he the Ea~les with two hits each. ERRORS · Bierhower 2 J.
Dana Howett, Adrienne
1-eld
in Ft. Thomas at 10 a.m. Both of Sizemore's safeties Smith, Buzzard, 2. Sacrifice .
Margaret
Bissell.
French, Frankie Stafford,
Tuesday. BlKial will he at
tf
·
\'~\!IIston , Ohio. Friends may . wen or extra bases With a Riggs 2BH • T. Blake,
Sizemore 3 BH Sizemore,
call at the Dabbling Funeral triple and a double.
'i:e~t;-...- ;~;n-i~ ~cl.;;;;~.-The; ~;u;;;
f-bm e in Ft. Thomas from 9 Duke Smith collected two of Thompson Winning Pitcher •
less than 300 worda long (or be subject to reduction hy 1 a.m. until 10 a.m. Tuesday. Wahama's seven total hits Bierbower Losing Pitcher
the editor) and ~uot be signed with the signee's ad- 1
followed by Davis, Thompson, Buzzard (&lt;l-1 )
MILDRED BAKER
dress. Names may be wllhbeld ·upon poblicatlon. I Mildred Baker, 77, a
However, on request, names wlU be discl06ed. Letters I resident of Vinton , died
U'lexpectedly at her home
should be In good taste, addressing !~sues, not' per·
Saturday evening.
sonalltles.
1
She was born Jc&lt;1e 23, 1900,
(Continued from page I ) ·
I in VInton, daughter of the late
Cush and Cora Wile a~ Strong .
I
St-e married Clark (Bar- because of the heavy diunage caused to the runway by the
I ney ! Baker . He preceded her
collision and subsequent fire.
I in death .
Air minister General Carlos Franco arrived at Santa Cruz by
I One sister survives, Mrs. helicopter. But a U.S. embassy team ofeight sent to assist with
1 Nola Parker, Columbus. One arrangements f&lt;r the survivors and the dead had to land in Las
I nephew and three nieces
Palmas on Gran Canarias island and embark on alive-hour
surviVe, a1ong With several
ferry ride,
·
cousins.
One
brother
No door s_lamrned in her face
.p-eceded her in death·.
Clfra said operations were "normal" at Santa Cruz's Los
, She was a member of the
Rodeos airport until shortly before the accident, despite
Dear Sir:
Vinton United · Methodist
I would like to answer Mr. Hubbard's letter about the Owrch and' of the ladies Ul)usually heavy traffic caused by the cloaure of Las Palmas
airport.
Meigs County Welfare Dept. For several yea_rs I've been going wscs.
Fooeral services will be . Thecrashoccurredabout4:40p.m. (11:40a.m. EST Sunday),
there and I have never had the door siarrqned in my face. The t-eld 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
girls, Ann, Dean, Jane, Barbara, Margie, Marilyn, Lucille and /W:.Coy -Moore Funeral Home Shortly before the ground colllalon thick ground fOg moved
Effie have always been polite and courteous. Sure, sometimes wi_lh Rev . .John Bryant Qf· ~ross Los Rode~!$ airport ·wl¥!re' the. two Jumbos, both
you have to wait -because of papers not filled out right, or not ficiatinQ ~ Btkial will" ' be rln diverted to Santa &lt;'l~W&gt;frtilli' llall 'Palllias, were waiting for
Memoriai 'Park .
permission to takeoiHOl'the hopto Las•Palmas eo miles away.
the-fight receipts. These girls are understaffed, overworked Vinton
Friends may call from 7-9
Spanish air safety has been a controversial issue since last
and probably underpaid. Instead of complaints, they should be this evenl1'9 at the funeral
year when air controllers staged a montba-long go.&amp;ow work·
congratuU!ted for the fine work they do. No one in need, if they h:&gt;me.
lot'ules strike to protest what they said was ~!dated
can help 11, IS turned away .. Keep up the good work, girls. equipment.
·
Mrs. William Fink, 249 North 3rd Ave., Middleport. _
Arthur Hess, 39, of Phoenix, Ariz., one of the survivors, aald
about 30 secmllat lfll!t'~ct the' Pariamq umbo exploded,
We, our brothers' keeper
trappblg him aild·hl,.rUt/Milcy Kay 11D&lt;lhMorward first claS.
(eoritlmioo'!rom~pa'ie
•
•
section .
· , 1•
Dear Sir:
"We were trapped for three .to five minUtes, but it seemed
Well, I guess the cold weather is over. What a great,relief! loners have seen unexplained
There is an organization that carried on during the bad times sights - including visions of like six months," he said. "There was so much black smoke
and reached out ilnd helped others less fortunate. I mean the the host suspended fu the air you couldn't see your hand in front of your face, then the front
and of Mary, St. Michael the part of the plane fell off and we wer.eable to get out."
Senior Citizens' &lt;rganization.
Hess said he jumped to the' 81'ound( then 'Ilia. wife wbo was
You can visit the center and you will see meals being served, Archangel and Jesus.
A spokesman for the critically injured, leepedJnto his· lirmrJ, ,
'
lonely people playing cards, square dancing, quilting, doing
"A lot of the people in 11\e'flrst cta!ls sectidn got out and one of
crafts aod arts, people singing and laughing, cheering up each diocese said Olszewski lost
other. And If you go behind the scenes you fmd that hot meals his license because he the stewardesses pulled the captain free," he said.
Hess said the jumbo had just started to taxi when the KLM
were delivered in zero yeather to many elderly people who violated church regulations
were not able to come out. T~ bus brought many to tbeir hy conducting the Maas in plane slanuned into Its side.
"It seemed to hit rlght.beldnd first class," he said. "It must
doctors ana many a poor old person was delivered coal or other Latin and by improperly
giving out Communion,
have been the KLM wing that hit us."
hare necessities. All ages were helped.
The priest conceded the
One of the survivors, a :Ill-year-old girl from Los Angeles who
1 visited the Senior Citizens . Center recently in another
ritual
violations probably had aaked that ber name be withheld said the collision iiccurred
·county and state. I discovered that Meigs County did more
than anyone else. This we should he proud of. They reach out something to do wlth the without warning.
"I felt a PrJ!88ure and heard the sound of the crash and things
for many people who need help to obtain various services, revocation of his-license.
''The Epslcopal Church has werefaWngon top of me," she said. "We were up front next to
Although they have friends, I'm sure they need more.
a tremendous hang-up about an escape hatch and the collision was behind us. ·•
Contribute to this project. It is worthwhile.
All the survivors staggered from the Darning wreckage
Remember, that wrinkled, gray-haired old man or woman anything that smells 'of
'
that is helped could be your mother or father, or perhaps some Roman (Cathollc) ritwil," Spaniarda at the airport rushed out to help.
The girl said her father will ldlled in the crash, but she and
day, you! We are our brothers' keeper. - Thelma Berry, Olszewski said. "It leaves a
bad taste in their mouth."
her mother were able to reach safety,
Middleport.

of

---

We Invite you to use ttils preferred service with no
s.:rvlce char~e 7 All tho~e 65 years ahd over are
welcome to open an account any time. Stoo In and
see us now.

.......

~

Farmers Bank
POMEROY; OHIO

S40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each DtPOSitot
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporitlon

~ ··········~·······~···~····
I

(

.•

Area Death S

.

-;;;-:

Panam 747's wrong

Ble~ .
1,

A vacant house on Dark
lbllow expected to be razed
was destroyed by fire at 2
am. Sunday. The house was
completely engulfed In
fl~mes
when Pomeroy
firemen arrived and the
firemen only stood by to keep
the fire from spreading.
The house was owned by
Lorenzo Davis, Pomeroy,
ll!lo placed no value on the
structure. At 10 :40 a.m.
Sunday, the Pomeroy Fire
Department went to the
HarrisonviDe Road to extinguish a brush fire.

Free Checking Account For You ·

righthander pleked up his first
varsity \\in iri the opener by
shutting ·out the Eagles
through four innings of work.
Tim Davis was the leading
hitter for the Falcons in the
fjrst game with three singles
in four tries. Tim Thompson

BVGARYCLARK

I

Vacant house of
no value bums

Because We furnish A

Falcons Split

. BAZAAR OOMING UP
The Meigs County Humane
Society will sponsor Its an·
nual Easter a&gt;zaar on Friday
md Satuiday at the Thrift
Shop, located across East
Second St. from the Pomeroy
Post Office. Craft items,
laked Jfoods and vegetable
s;,up will be available.

MEIGS THEATRE
'

CLOSED fOR .

VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENI~G DATE

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
DRESS UP YOUR WINDOWS

New selections of curtains and
drapes in the Home Furnishings
Department.
Sheers in white .and beautiful solid
colors. tape cods.with v81ances to match.
New draperies in all the popular lenghts
- Priscilla curtains.
Tailored curtains • window shades ·
venetian blinds. ·
Plus a compleh! selection of Kersch
traverse rods ·curtain rods · sash rods ·
"drapery hooks. .
You'll want to stop in on the first floor
and see what's new lor Spring and
Summer 1977.

HOME FURNISHINGS • FIRST FLOOR

E[BERfE.LDS IN POMEROY

Ohio Power to
use more coal ·
mined· in Ohio
l,ANCASI'ER, Ohio (UP!) -The Ohio Power Co. can use
more high-tiulfur coal mined In Ohio and still meet air pollution
regulations, Quinton Stultz, a spokesman for the American
Electric Power Co., said Monday.
Stultz said Arrlerlc8J! Electric, which owns Ohio Power,
plans to "phase out" its use of ouk&gt;f-titate coal at .three of Its
Ohio power plants.
'lbe move might not mean an increase in Uie utility's
.purchases, however, since most of the utility's coal comes
from the Southern Ohio Coal Co., a wholly-&lt;Jwned subiidiary of
Ohio Power.
The utility had been im· power plants.
porting aboul3 million tons of
Several years ago, officials
low-sulfur, coal a year from of the AEP system decided to
Colorado and Utah for its import more low-sulfur coal
Gavin, Kyger River and rather than install pollutionCardinal power plants. Most control equipment on its
plants in Ohio cannot burn c~isting plants.
high-Sulfur coal and still meet
AI · Ohio
Power's
the
federal pollution Mus~ingum plant, the utility
regulations.
'
currently "blenda" high-and
Stultz said proposed sulfur low-sulfur coals to meet air
dioxide regulations would pollution regulations.
allow high-sulfur coal to be
Most of the coal Ohio
burned at the plants and the Power uses at Gavin and
utility would "diver!" its Muskingum comes from the
purchases of low-5ulfur coal -,0 uthern Ohio Coal Co. ,
to other plants within the which operates mines near
utility system.
the power plant sites and
The proposed regulations transports the coal by conare
currently
being veyors.
challenged in a suit before the .;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::
5th U. S. Circuit Court of
EXTEND. ED OUTLOOK
Appeals in Cincinnati.
Thursday through
" If
surfur
dioxide
Saturday,
a chance of
regulations do stand, we will
showers
Thursday
and fair
be able to utilize more local
Friday
and
Saturday,
high-sulfur coals and look
towaFd phasing out western Highs Thursday and
low-sulfur coal over a period Saturday will be between
55 and tiS but In the 50s
of years," said Stultz.
Ohio Power buys more coal Friday. Lows will be in the
in Ohio than any other utility; lOs or upper 30s Thursday
some 20 million tons a year. and In the 30s Friday and
Its purchases are handled by Saturday.
the AEP system, which ,:,:,:::,:,:::::::::::·:-:·:::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::·:-:-:::-:-:-:
recently moved its coal
NOW YOU KNOW
procurement offices \ rrom The Academy Award
New York to Lancaster.
reportedly· got its nickname
AEP has co.ntracts with HQscar" when an academy
several western Uniled member, on first seeing the
States fuel suppliers to golden statuette, exlaimed,
provide about 250,000 tons of "It looks just like my Uncle
low-sulfur coal a year to Ohio Oscar!"

r?r4it T 111 a
1' •ll
:1~~;~~1&gt;~~~~
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY
Retired Senior Volunteer Program (at
1

Sunday afternoon served refreshments to guests at the open house hosted by the Meigs
_ · of the Ame_rican Cancer Society at the Meigs Inn. Purpose of the open house was to
inform the pubhc of the programa of the local unit. Free deasert and coffee were served
from I to 4 p.m. by Mrs. Dorothy Will, Mrs. Eva Dessauer and Mrs. Bernadine Meier (1--r).

EASTER LAMBS DECQRATEO the registration table (above) for Sunday 's open house
staged by the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society. At the registration table is
Edward King, a member of the local unit's hoard.

~l!News •· •.•zn Brzefs(~

.....

By United Press lntel'llational
WASHINGTON - TWO FEDERAL AGENCIES will
award $10 mjllion dur~.thl1 pext year ID help homeowners
anlfootel.fJio!el operators Irislall'solar hot water helitef's and
cut ~el bills. Officials OJ:pect the new program to give tbe
fledgling solar manufacturing and installation industry a boost
and encourage private purchase of the quipment,
The government wlU pay ahollt ball the cost of sunpowered water heating equipment for some 10,000 homes in 10
Atlantic states wbere fuel costs are high, and half the total
installation costs for an unknown number of hotels and motels
nationwide.
DETROIT - PRESIDENT CARTER WU.L have a tongh
time selling energy conservation measures unless he can
convince Americans that the shortage is .real, United Auto
Workers Vice President Douglas A. Fraser says. Fraser, who
will become the nCJttpresident of the 1.4 rnillion-membe1&gt; UAW
in May, also said it will be hard to get Americans to give up
large cars, which have been in the greatest demand since the
1977-model year began.
"OUr members are so suspicious of the oil companies and
· anyone involved in the energy business that they do not believe
there Is an energy shortage," Fraser aaid in an interview
Monday . "I suspect what is true among oor members is true
among the American people in general."
Fraser, who said be was "apprehensive" of the Carter
energy plan to be announced April 20, said the President ''has ·
to assure the American people that he knows of his own
knowledge where the gas and oil are.and how muCh there is.':
CINCINNATI - THE HEALTH of Cincinnatlans was not
jeopardized by recent spllls of carbon tetrachloride into the
Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, the FMC Corp. maintained in
another full;&gt;age advertlaernent in city newspapers.
...FMC Corp., after securing the best medical evidence
ayallable from experts on this subject, can teU you that the
various ·amouniB of carbon tel found in the r!VI!rs were not
dangerous to your health," the ads in Monday's Cincinnati
Enquirer and Cincinnati Post stated, The FMC plant in .
Charlestoo, W. Va., has come under fire from various
Cincinnati officials for discharges of carbon let into tbe
Kanawha River, a tributary of the Ohio River, the source of
Cincinnati's pulillc watlll'.
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE ASSASSINATION
Conunlttee today prepared Its case for survival, procbllming
new-found unity among its members and fresh but
uncorroborated lnfonnation on tbe ldlllngs of John F, KeMedy
and Martin Luther King Jr,
The House Rule&amp; Committee approved a resolution 9 to 4
Monday to continue the panel for the rest of this .Congress
beyond Its scheduled Mar¢! 31 tennlnation date. 'lbe House iB
expected to take It up Wednesday, Earlier Monday; the
committee issued Its first report of the year, claiming "new
leads" in the King ldlllng and indications the Warren
Commlaslon waa wrong in at least one aspect of its inquiry into
the Kennedy murdtll'.

TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

~paniar

'iif::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:::·::::~·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::;~;~~~~

enttne

at y

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 243

•

•

By ARTHUR HERMAN
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Spain (UP! )- A U.S. Air
Force plane arrived here today to begin evacuation of scores of
Americans injured in the ground crash of jumbo jets that killed
nearly 600 persons but U.S. officials said Spanish authorities
did ·not want to let the patients leave.
"The injured are eager to go home, but Spanish medical
authorities refuse to release them," said James Slaton, a
member of a team from the U.S. Embaasy in Madrid that flew
hereto assist in the evacuation ofthe injured.
A Spanish doctor at the general hospital said he S.w no
reason why the patients--11 of them in critical conditionshould be taken away.
"We can glvetbemas goode are as anyone else," he said.
At Los Rodeos airport, where 576 persons died and 68 were
injured Sunday in history's worst air disaster, a U.S. Air Force
C!30 cargo plane aTrived to ferry the injured to tbe nearby
airport of Las Palmas where a Cl41 fitted out as a flying
hospital is standing by to fly the injured to the Brook Army
Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.
The U.S. plane was the first fixed-wing aircraft to land at Los
Rodeos airport since the collision between a Pan American 747
and a KLM 747which destroyed a large stretch of the runway.

s

••

The C130 landed on a taxiway at 12::i0 p.m. (7::i0a.m. EST).
One of the hospitalized survivers, Mario Tyzbin, of Laguna
Hill, Calif., said : "I would like to leave right now . I cannot wait
to go home."
Tyzbin, who lost his wife Irene in the crash, was blasted from
the plane and injured his back as he landed on the runway.
Many of the survivors suffered severe burns.
-There was a!Bo mounting. ill feeling among Pan American
and U.S. officials over Spanish announcements abiolving airport control officials of any blame in the disaster.
The air ministry said early tOOay that "failure · of the
communications of the control tower or its personnel can be
discounted" in the accident. It made the statemenl as the
investigation was just about to get underway.
Los Rodeos airport has had five crashes with a total of 251
dead since 1965! not counting Sunday's disaster. Early exp!Jlnations by offiCials appear to indicate that the Jumbo collisiOn
might have been caused by a IDISunderstanding in communications between the pllots and the control tower.
A senior Pan_ American official helping in the investigation
sa1d the Spanish statement waa "entirely prematll!'e and
uncalled for."
'
"It normally takes 60 to 90 days to fiX the blame " he said
'

e

...

3:15 p.m. on April 25.
missioners on April 11. ·
Several clearing house .. Blakeslee was authorized
review items were approved to make a preliminary apincluding an application for piication for 701 planning
$58,000 by the Youngstown funds if he decides upon a
Community Action Agency suitable project which would
for the purpose of collecting be advantageous to carry out.'
input from other community A request wsa presented
action groups; $371 ,000 · of from an Ohio firm on the
which Meigs would receive availability of land possibly
about $27,000 in bimefits in an for a shopping center in
area plan for aging filed by Meigs County- and after a
Buckeye Hills-Hocking discussion it was agreed to
Valley Regional Planning advise the firm that land is
Commission, and $952,000, a available.
State of Ohio application, for
A public finance meeting
funds to be used in working was announced for April21 at
out an energy conservation
program.
A report was given to the ·
Capital Improvements
Project by James M. Jennings, Columbus ·consultant,
who said that information on
a survey published in the
Daily Sentinel last week is
Middleport Village Council
being collected. He urged
Monday
night added its
persons to send in the survey
support
to
a proposal to
form which will help deter·
establish
a
State Highway
mine the priority for over 60
Patrol
Post
in
Meigs County.
projects. He said that an
Meeting
in
regular
session,
outline of the firial
council
president
Marvin
capabilities report may be
Kelly
said
he
had
received
a
available for the next
from
Don
Mullen,
letter
meeting .
, It was reported that a firm Middleport , Democrat
has applied for a new cer- political ieader, stating that
tificate of need to construct a possibilities exist for the
nursing h,ome in Pomeroy establishment of such a post.
and that representatives of Council felt th•t the post
the firm are expected lo meet would strengthen community
with the county com· law enforcement. Mayor
f .•

William R. Haley, a presidential appointee and a leading
member of the National Transportation Safety Board said be
"would not want to pass judgment" on the Spanish statement.
"Their rules and procedures are not the same as ours,"
Haley added.
Privately , other U.S. officials were critical of the Spanish
statement.
Haley said his team of investigators has been interviewing
the surviving members of tpe Pan American plane, among .
them its captain.
The team bas a!Bo taken a close look at tbe runway ,and has
access to control tower tapes of recorded communications and
the recovered cockpit tape of the KLM jet, he sa\d.
Haley said the Pan American 747s flight data recorder has
been found , but its cockpit voice recorder was still missing.
At the Social Security hospital, Isobel Monda of La Mesa,
Calli. said she had a broken foot and hand "and something is
wrong with my chest and back.'' Her husband Anthony Monda
said they were getting "the best care but of course we would
prefer to go home."
_.
. .
... The smoking wreckage of the two Boe1pg 747s still httered
the scarred runway tOOay"as Spanish air officials and Pan
American airlines denied responsibility for the fiery crash and
· KLM said it would await official findings before commenting.
The scorched tail of the KLM plane was the only part left
standing. Two sheared 1\ings and a pile of ashes marked the
remains of the Pan Am airliner. Clothes, tennis shoes and
magazines littered the runway.
Dozens of investigators descended on the small holiday
island 200 miles off the coast of Morocco to try to determine
(Continued on page 121

the Salisbury Elementary
School at 7:30 p.m. and an
industrial development
seminar was announced for
March 31 at the Ohio
University Inn at Athens. The
seminar will be from 9:15
a.m. to 4 p.m. C. E. Blakeslee
will aI!end.
Boyd Ruth exhibited maps
on proposed road projects
and explained studies that the
soil and water district makes
on land involved such as
'slopes, soil types, land use,
types of farms, etc. His
(Continued on page 12)

- -

Juvenile taken
·in stolen car
'

-

One of the juvenile
Meigs County Sheriff
escapees from the Fairfield James J. Proffitt reported
School for Boys has been the car and one of the
apprehended and a car stolen escapees was found Monday
from the front yard of John at 8:15p.m. on Jacksonville
Tillis Sunday morning has Road in Clark County, Ohio_.
!Een recovered, the Meigs The auto, occupied by the
Qmnty Sheriffs Department youth , was out of gasoline but
said today.
otherwise' operable. The
' escapee was released to FSB.
Sheriff Prorntt said charges
will be filed ag ain&amp; the 17
year old youth in Meigs
'County Juvenile Court. The
!Econd escapee, apparently
from Lawrence County, has
not been apprehended.
Sheriff Proffitt also
pool, $500, and streets, $3,703. reported that his department
Clerk-Treasurer Gene is investigating the theft of a
Grate read a letter from 10 speed Huffy bicycle, red in
Ashland Oil giving prices for color, taken within the last
gasoline, e~cluding taxes. two days from the residence
The new prices per gallon are (/. Mrs. Jean Nicinsky, Rt. I
regular 42.7 cents; 46.2 Rutland. Anyone h~ving any
premium and 44.7 unleaded. information or seeing the
Grate also reported that Ray licycle is asked to call the
Frazier, living in the !ileriff's office.
Columbus are~, has been Joe Bolin, Rt . I, Rutland
granted a workman's com· who reported earlier last
pensation claim of $56 a week that he had a Civil War
week. Frasier received a muzzle loader rifle stolen
back injury w11ile working for from his residence, has inthe village some years ago. lbnned the S\erirrs office
At the request of Coun· that he found the .gun, un·
cilman Dewey Horton, damaged, on his front porch
council approved the filming BBrly Sunday morning.
of a council meeting by
Buckeye Hills Career Center
in the near future. Ho~on
also inquired as to labor
which might be available for
The Public Utilities
sidewalk repair if the
homeowners provided Commission of Ohio will
conduct a public hearing at
materials.
SuchJ~hor is not available 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the
at the present time, Mayor Pomeroy Council Cb$mbers
Hoffman said. The group also · at the request of Portland
discussed a slip in the Page subscribers of The General
Telephone Co. of Ohio for
St. area near Grant St.
extended
area serfice beAttending the meeting were
tween
843
numbers and the
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk
98S
numbers
of the west•rn
Grate; Councilmen Kelly.
Iteserve
Telephone
Co.
Horton, George Meinhart,
Some
163
subicribers
are
William Walters, Allen Lee
involved,
it
is
reported.
King and Carl Horky.

Patrol post in Middleport
possible council informed
Fred Hofftilan said that he
had written a letter in support
of the post and council agreed
to send a letter to Mullen in
support of the project.
Council approved the three
readings of an ordinance
outlining a• plan_for the expenditure of federal revenue
· sharing funds. The break·
down of the total of $11,203
includes: tennis court, $5,000;
water conditioning materials,
$1,000; fire department ,
equipment, $1,000; swimming
'

Co.al companies go out of state for engineers
COLUMBUS (UP!)- OHio Houae Speaker Ve~ G. Riffe
Jr,, 0-New Bos\On, hu accused the .Ohio Board of Regents for
faWng to help solve the state's energy criala and said coal
companies have to go out of llate to find mining enclneers.
Rllfe said Ohio lllould rely 011 more coal and leu on oU and
natunl pa and believes Ollio'a colli!Kfl llJl!l universities can
provide the soluUona to the state's fuel energy ahorlages in
their reeearch laboratories.
Rllfe, in a recent letter to Regenta Chairman Marvin L.
Warner, which wila revealed today, said Ohio hu the bralh
power and research faclllties to help alleviate the stale's
energy problema.
"Yet we don't have enough, We don't have· a program ln
mlniDII' engineering, and we have a shorillge ol trained
uliltanll," Rille said.
Ohio's Energy and Resource Development Agency admitted

•

InJure

0

··I. . £. or ·r ural sewag
· e u. n-•1t s
RU- e S
f
•
d
•
.
b
I
W ill e C ari Ie ill- COunty
Confusion on acreage
required for installing septic
tanks at new homes outside of
villages was aired when the
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission met
Monday afternoon at - the
Farmers Bank Building.
It was reported that several
years ago the county com·
missioners had passed subdivision regulations which
cover the installation of
septic tanks and the amount
of ground required upon the
recommendations of the
planning commission.
However, yesterday
questions were raised as to
whether one acre should be
the required land· for one
d;welling using a steptic tank,
and if variances were allowed
in some instances. It was
pointed out that the
requirement was not In effect
when new homes were built in
Tuppers Plains which has
created a problem in that
area.
It was agreed that C. E.
Blakeslee, executive director
of the commission, and Boyd
Ruth of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District,
will work out some specific
· answers. They will contact
the county health depart·
ment, the prosecuting at·
torney, and other sources to
prepare a report for the next
meeting which was set for

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Riffe waa correct when he complained Ohio's coal companies
must turn to othefstates to hire mining engineering graduates.
"It is _my ~nderstanding that to increase coal production,
Ohio will need about 100 mining engineers a year. Today they
have to be found from West \flrginla, Pennsylvania or
Colorado," Riffe said.
Aspokesman for the energy agency said, however, the state
more urgently needs mining· technicians and that tw~year
college programs in St. Clairsville, Rio Grande and J':lelsonville
caMot meet the demands:
'
Riffe criticized the Regents for failq to hoed his remarks in
early January when he addressed the Ohio House calling for
Ohio to have its own energy policy,
..
·
"It seems to me that the Board of Regents sholild examine
what Ohio's institutions of higher learing !p'e dofng to help us

.

•
•

••

develop an energy policy fgr Ohio," Riffe said.
"Under .the Regents' leadership, an inventory of existing
programs, people and facilities must take place. We must
harness our educational institutions' capabilities and steer
them into a sensible, useful and efficient energy policy role,"
he said.
·
'
Riffe urged Warner to "make this a mattlll' of priority, TeU
us wbat we need that we can't find on our campuses. Above all,
help us get the benefit of what we bave.''
Warner aald the Regents would "cooperate in building a
sensible energy policy for Ohio."
Warner said he would request Regents' Chancellor James A.
Norton to enlist the help of the Legislative Service Comml!llon
for researching what other states are doing to promote
scientific and_research development In energy fielda.

Hearing set

&gt;It ,.

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