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At ·least I-2 killed in
British prison .riots
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the right price
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Owner Lar,Y Simmons, left and general manager Jerry Bibbee, right want you to
., I
LONDON (UPI) - A~thorltles prison's 10 buildings by 11 a.m. · been attacked by other prison·
struggled to regain control Mon· M;tlly prisoners had surrendered . ers, and while r certainly can't
day over a Vlctorlan·era prison to prison authorities but about
confirm any question or anybody ..
whe~e Inmates rioted in protest
140 prisoners had not.
having bee,n kllted, there obof jailhouse conditions.
Despite rain, some prisoners vlously have been a lot of
The Home Office, which over- took up posts on the steeply super-heated rumors flying
·
sees Britain's prison system, pitched prison roof. Many of around.
. would not comment on reports
them wore masks.
"We don' t ·know what we're
from wounded Inmates who were
The riot broke out Sunday In going to find when · we're In
taken from Mant;hester's ·stran- the prison chapel, where .five possession of alt.. the prison,"
geways·Prlson to. hospitals that
guards were overseeing 300 prl- Mellor said. "Whathasbeenlsan
about i2 people had been killed in soners, and qull!ltly spread .orgy of violenc~ and destruction,
.the rioting.
·
through the co~pound as In- which· .cannot be condoned or
More than 50 Inmates and
inates prates ted I allhouse excused ~Y anybody. Prison
gusrds were hurt In skirmishes, conditions.
·
conditions . are really not, It
authorities said. The chapel and
Guards said the action seemed seems to me, an excuse for that
a gymnasium were badly dam·
to have been well planned.
kind of behavtor."
1
aged by fire.
The prison built In 1868 was · Tbe riot came days after the
A prison guard said the jail- desii!JIM for 970 inmates but now . chief inspector of prisons praised
house; 200 miles northwest of houses about 1,600,
., the wo.rk being · carried out at
London, looked "like a bomb
David Mellor, a Home Office ' strangeways. 'l)le report sug.
site."
.._... minister, said details about what gested adjacent limds should be
The British Broadcasting has .gone on Inside the prison .acquired quickly to alleviate
Corp. said authorttles had re- were unclear.
overcrowding at the prison.
"A number of prisoners have·
gained . control of five of· the
•••
own.
We're Opefl Till 8 P.M.. Monday thru Friday,
· 1. Saturday Till 6 P.M.
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PROTEST CONDITONS ...,. ·lnmales of StanKe. ways Prlllon .sit atop th~ roof of tile prison's Chapel
Miller
takes part
in rally
Sunday I~ prolest poor conditions In the facility.
At least 110 people have been Injured. ( tJPI)
Hart .bids for two ·trucks.
accepted by district officials
.
__ . _; ,.....-N.,
\
• Congressman Clarence Miller
(R-OH) joined more than 500
Appalachian coal miners and
their families last week In
ccmdem~·tlle•acld rahal)!lrtlon .
of the · clean air legislation
currently under consideration by
the Congress.
The miners had traveled to
Washington from their home
states of Ohio and West Virginia
to collectively protest the Senate
version of the bill which critics
contend will raise utility niles In
some parts of the country more
than 30 percent and could lead to
the direct loss of more than 5,000
mining jobs.
Congressman Miller, whoSe
southeastern Ohio district Is
heavily dependent on the coal
Industry. said "The restrictl.;te
acid rain langua'ge of this bill in
Its current form; is unfair and
will produce economic chaos
throughout ·much of the
midwest."
He went on to add, "If this
country ls to remain competitive,
and If serious economic dislocation Is to be avoided, this clean
air bill must be cleaned up! '' The
Congressman thank~ the min· .
ers for journ,eylng tg,fN'ashlngton
and said that their presence has
helped to put the human factor
back Into the acla rain equation.
....._:eM
morning by,dls~~lct authorities.
vehicles with $826 for the Ranger ·
~
uaa .. "" ~ •' '. Four local ·restdimts sllb'!lltted; · .
for the F-2511.
1
· mds ttorl-l'Middt~-re•itlenl bids f01; the two vehlcll!s ..:... ' 1984 ''''''t)lj)l!i-''!illlders were Clara W.
,Ford Ranger 4 by 4, and a 1984
Might, Middleport, with $601 for
Ro~rt .Hart for two trucks from
the Ranger and $701 for the
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis- three-quarter ton Ford F -250.
trict
accepted . Monday . Hart was the high bi.d der on both . F"-250; DOrsal Thomas, Cheshire, $68~ for the Ranger only;
and Dwight Milhoan, Pomeroy,
$661.80 forth~ Ranger and $487.50
for the F -250.
·
Hart and Milhoan were present
for the bid openings along with
Glen Crisp, president of Leading
By United Press International
nighttime temperatures hold ' tn Creek Conservancy District;
April showers again prevailed the 30s, but chilly damp weather · Dan Arnold and RobertSnowden,
over much of the Buckeye State With moisture accumulation In members of the district's board
Monday. but Old Man Wlnterwa~ 'livestock housing areas will be of directors; and Carol Russell,
expec~d to return for another
conducive to the development of secretary-treasurer.
s!low Monday night and Tuesday. respiratory problems .
. Prior to opening the bids, Crisp
·
· A cold front swept across Olllo
explained
the district had reHigh pressure moving through
Monday morning and brought the middle Mississippi Valley quested newspaper coverage of
some scattered showers along should bring fair weather to Ohio the openings to dispel rumors
With tt. Skies were ,to. becpme Wednesday, but a brief episOde of · that d'istrlct bidding procedures
variably· cloudy with ·showers showers on Thursday will keep mlghi be questionable. Appar·
redeveloping later · In the field conditions from Improving ently, the distr.lct received an
afternoon.
anonymous letter which quest!·
milch.
After morning highs of 45 to 55,
Highs will be in ' the 'sos oned the tl!tegrlty of the district's
the mercury was lo drop Into the Wednesday and Thursday and In bidding practices and quoted "a
30s and 40s by early evening; with . the 40s Friday. L,Qws wlli be section of code which does . not
brisk west winds of 15 to 25 mph ·mainly in the 30s through Friday . everi pertain to the district, "
making It seem even colder.
Drler1 air over Ohio by mid-. Crisp said.
As colder air fllters into the week wlll be more conducive to
rn regard to the two vehicles
JOINS MINERS - ConKressmua Clarence Miller called for a
state Monday night rain will the aeration of grain bins . awarded Hart, Crisp said the
fair clean air act aa he joined area coal miners who had traveled to
become mixed with or change to Lighter winds Wednesday will district had tried to trade·in lhe
WMhlnpoa to protest the current legislation.
wet snow, with the National prov.lde better c9nd1tons for vehicles, but the trade-4n value
Weather Service saying the grea· orchard spraying or pruning was extremely low "and the
test chance of snow to be In the operations. SoU moisture ~.II dealer didn't really want the
W!!Stern counties.
still be high, leaving the grou'l1d vehicles anyway." After co'nsulttoo soft for most field operations. lng the state auditor's office, the
Overnight lows wjll be In the
Sunshi!le and warmer weather district learned that it desired,
30s, but brisk northwest winds
should promote some develop- the vehiCles could be sold out·
will create wind chill readings In ment of fruit trees and conditions right. However, district authorithe single digits and teens.
will be good for the spring ties felt It would be better tq put
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) was announced Feb. 1, affecting demands by the companies that
The low pressure area .res pon- development of grasses and the· vehicles up for the highest
Burley tobacco grower,s in the' burley growers in Kentucky, farmers produce a · higher per·
slble for our .wet weath.er wm winter wheat during the latter .bid.
eight-state belt say they can · Tennessee, North Carolina, Vir- . centage of their annual quotas.
Jntenslfy and slow down during part ofthe week.
Before -bids were opened, the . produce 240 million pounds more glnla, West Virginia, Indiana,
·
Burley, Kentucky's main cash
the next couple of days. As a
The early morning weather · sealed envelopes, stamped with
tobacco In l990 than they did in .Ml!i.souri and Ohio.
crop, is the main Ingredient In
result , wet snow and rain will map . showed a low pressure the date ·they were received,
1989, even though the official
Most of the Increase In the next cigarettes .
linger in the state through system over southwest Michigan were Individually examined by
federal quota Increase amounted year's product ion potenllat
Some critics of the compal)les'
· Tuesday Until the low moves off jV!th a cold front tritlllng south those attending the meeting. The
to just 2.5 percent.
comes from the past season's confilctlng statements about bur·
" the New England coast. Highs thro11gh western Ohio to Ala· bids were received prior to a
The U.S. Deparlment of Agrl· under·marketlngs, which have . ley supplies worry that the firms
Tuesday Will be In" the upper 30s bama. Hlgh pressure was build· March 30, 4 p.m. deadline,
Qulture official quota increase · been estimated at 160 million · are Increasing the percentage of
and mld-!IOs.
lng into the upper Plaii)S. T.he low
.
·
pounds, the Kentucky Farm Imported burley In their cl,
The wintry conditions will add was to move east across Lake
Bureau said In lts March garette blends.
to the discomfort of ouiside work Erie Monday and Into Pennsylva.·
.
.
publication.
A recent University or Ken;
and speed the chilling of exposed nia Tuesday . The cold front will
.Taken together. the 1990 basic tucl!y study seemed to bear out
CINCINNATI !UP[) - The ·resorts.
·animals. Cold weather stress reach the Atlantic Coast Tuesday
latest Ohio Poll finds a majority
Asked whether they would quota of 602 mlllion pounds and tl)ilse fears, reporting that the
should remain moderate as morning.
·
of Ohioans oppose having a
approve of casino gambling In a last year's substantial carryover level of u;s. burley In American
casino In the state, especially If it'
large city near them, S&.percent base Will give groWers the cigarettes declined In both 1986
were to be located near their
said no. Another 41 J)ercent s.ald capability to produce their Jarg· · and the foUowtng year, register· ·
• .
homes.
they would approve of It and 1 est burley crop since 1982, around lng 27.7 percent In 1987.
· The same study reported that
Fifty-two percent o! registered
percent said they were 740 million pounds.
· The'nation's tobacco compan- burley Imports have held fafi'ly
voters questioned In the UnlverUI\Certaln.
'
ie8
have tossed some cold water steady In recent yean, despite
,
slty
of
Cincinnati
survey
reSpitzer
criticized
how
the
Ohio
The Meigs County Board of ·Elections Is now accepting
on
this
robust scenario, however, dramatiC lncreaJea In the comleased
Monday
said
they
opPosed
Poll
question
had
been
posed.
By
applications for absentee ballots.
by
saying
they plan to buy less pan'les' pure~ of American
a
plan
for
casino
gambling
In
asking
respondents
whether
they
Residents may go to the board office to vote absentee or call ·
burley
next
year. They cite what burley.
Lorain.
Millionaire
Alan
Spitzer
approved
or
disapproved
of
casl·
992-2697 and request that an application be mailed,
·
they
describe
as a one-time
Those Imports, ,whjch remain
wants
to
buUd
a
$400
million
nos
In
Lorain,
the
pollster
sug·
Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:30a.m. to 4:30
Inventory
reduction
as
the
lead
.
near
160 mUIIon polinds, a year,
casino complex In Lorain on the
gested there would ~ more than
p.m. The final day to vote absentee Is Saturday, May 5. The
factor.
seem
to Indicate that U.S. manu.
shores of Lake Erie.
one, he said.
board 9fflce will .be open on the final day for voting fr.om 9 a.m.
hi
reporls
to
the
·USDA,
the
facturers
are now operating with
"It's not casinos," he said.
Forty-five percent of those
to 12 noon.
that require "both U.S,
cigarette
makers
said
they
want
formulas
quesjloned said they approved of
•They need to take the 's' off the
to
buy
395
mllllon
pounds
.
f
rom
and
foreii!JI
burley tobaccO,
the Lorain casino plan and 3
question."
next
year's
crop.
down
from
the
Burley
leaden
bave woriied
percent said they were
Sui'P9ft tor a single-casino
.
'
427
mUUon
pounds
they
wanted
that
the
compaDII!I
mtaht took
undecided.
resort Is much higher tban~r
Two minor accidents were investigated by the Pomeroy
from
the
1989
plantings.
The
7.5
overseas
If
U.S,
arowers
coiiSISt·
· ' Ohio voters niay get to decide
strip casinos such as those In Las
'
Pollee Department over the weekend.
percent
reduction
In
b)lylng
ently
underproduce
quotas.
AI·
in November's general electiOn
Vegas and Atlantic City, Spitzer
On Saturday at the traffic li11ht at the Pomeroy Mason bridge,
intentions
comes
despite
a
short
!Jlouah
underproduction
Is
a.
said.
·
·
whethet Lorain and seven othe1
Continued on page 10
.
crop
last
year
and
repeated
minor
problem
In
Kentucky.
cities can vote to open casino
.
By NANCY YOACRAM
were.
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Local news briefs--
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Ch...ce of ralll§now 88 ·per·
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Two mishaps probed
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~Commentary
Pa••ov-MiM pDrto Ohio
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Po~eroy, Olllo
' DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 'JBE MEIGs-MASON AREA
~lb
ts::m;l:!
qjv
.
r-r>-1'---""T"'r-T"1BI!doo==o
ROBERT L; WJNGJi;1T
Publlaber
.
.
· CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
General Mana&er
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aul8tant Publlaber/Controller
•
A MEMBER of The United Press Internattonill, Iriland Dally Press
Association and tbe 'Amerlcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he leu than300
words long, All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llsbed. Letters should he In good taste, addressing Issues. not personall·
ties .
. ·•
·
Politics re&rs ·ugly
head in legislature
I
..
WASHINGTON - Ailltilamlc
revolution has no room for
religious tolerance. Novelist Sal· mil.n Rusdle discovered that. He
offended blam,' and the Ayatollab Kbomelnl sentenced blm to
death. Khomelnl knew that If he
allowed people like Rushdleto
speak their minds, then everyb-·
ody would follow suit and pretty
soon there would be no Islamic
·
.revolution.
Thegovernmentoflranbascut
a wide swath of religious oppres·
1slon to eliminate any threat to
Islam. And the group that bas
taken the brunt of that oppresslon Is the I;leba's !altb. ··.
Iran's 300,000 Baha'Is are the
country's largest religious ml·
norlty. Their Ideology obliges
them to obey the ·law, avoid
partisan politics and shun vlolence. They bellev!1 In global
harmony and acceptance of an '
religions. In that tolerance lies
the threat.
The government o! Iran Is
convinced the Baha'is are part of
111 Conn Street
ir FRED LIEF
UPI Aullltaat Spolia Editor
DE.NVER .:_Duke Coach Mike
Krzyzewskl Just wants to play a
basketball game and win a .
.national championship. He can't
worry about Armageddon. ·
"I don't look at us as the good
guys and them as the bad gUys,"
he said Sunday. "I respect them
as · a basketball team .and as
people."
.·
Duke, 29-8, plays ·Nevada-Las ·
Veg!ls, 34-5, for the NCAA crown
Monday night (9: 12 EDT) Iii a
game that will have considerably
more to do with man-to-man
defenses than the final confrontation between the forces of goodand evil.
The key ques lions on this njght
will have little · to do with ·
~!me-store sociology o,r pbilOSO:
pblcal meditations:
.
Monday, Aprtl2, 1990
mlran_~&:.....!:t:.=o:~::::...;~:...:::~;.:..;nA~~==-":
Faith still oppressed \
·The Daily Sentinel
By LEE LEONARD
. VPI Stateboqae Reporter ..
COLUMBUS - Most of the ·time, the polltlclans around the
Statehouse treat each other with great ileferen~. referring to one
another as "my esteemed colleague from Hamilton County," and
•'the learned gentieman from Cuyahoga."
Sometimes, however, the niceties are forgotten, especially at
"crunch time," when the lawmakers are trying to end their session
and bills are appearing from thin air and fiytng through at breakneck ,
speed.
·
; Such a time Is now, when the General Assembly Is attempting to
adjourn for election campaigning and politics are being played to the
hUt.
.
There were few learned or esteemed ladles or gentlemen In the
Sell&te last Thursday when Senate Minority Leader ~arry Meshel,
D-Youngstown, arose and proclaimed certain majority Republicans
to be "In bed with'' a major bank and adjudged one of their bits of
legislation to be "chicken sludge."
It seems thatMeshelatil)mpted to set some money free~oney
that has been languishing in trust since 1985, walling until all
depositors and the state of Ohio are reimbursed from that year's
savings and loan debacle.
Only this money just happens to belong to Democratic
officeholders. They had the misfortune of Investing some campaign
money In Home State Savings Ban~ which collapsed five years ago.
At the top ofthe list lsAttor.ney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr., the
Democratic candidate for governor, who certainly could use the
$100,000 that be bas tied up In the thrift.
Smaller .amounts belong to Gov. Richard . Celeste, House
· Democrats and Mesbel himself, as well as Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown, whom the Republicans have targeted for defeat.
Ins lead of trying to, quietly work out a deal with the Republicans
controlling the Senate, Mesbel chose to tree tbe campaign funds by
amending an Innocuous House-passed bill dealing· with corporate
·directors who make loans to shareholders.
·
·His amendment was noisily and unceremoniously defeated by !lie
Republicans, who In no way are going to band George Volnovlch's
opponent $100,000 when they don.'t have to.
The Democrats got their chance to unload on a statewide
Republican candidate when a bill came up altering tbe Ohio Tuition
Trust Authority and ·tightening up procedures.
That's the agency that offers long-term savings programs for
parents to prepare for tbelr children's college education, and one of
the "fathers" of It was Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, the Republican
candidate for attorney general.
.
·
. :
'The · Democrats accused Pfeifer, who Is on tbe Tuition TruSt
Authority, of running a loose ship and of using the agency to promote
bls own candidacy. They were especially annoyed that be has
dlstrlbu led thousands of copies of a glossy brochure entitled "The
The Amertcim public bas been
·
· Pfeifer Tuition Plan'' with b~ picture In lt.
given only a highly sanitized
"Since when do we name a state program after a legislator?"
version ·or the activities and
·
croWed Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo.
views of Nelson Mandela, whom
· Ruvolo and the Democrat.s conveniently forgot that the other half of ·
South African President F.W. de
the O'ITA program belongs to Democratic Rep. Paul Jones of
Klerk recently released from
· Ravenna, 'who Is credited In the lirocbure.
prison. Mandela IS expected to
They also said nothing abo11t the fact that state Treasurer Mary
play a large role In the forthcdmEllen Withrow, a Democrat, I!,Uts out literature advertising a state
. lng negotiations over South Afrllow-Interest farm loan program as "The Withrow Plan of
ca'spolltlcalfulure,andWestern
Agflcultural Linked Deposits."
journalists have been at pains to
depict blm as a sweetly reasonsble old soul, ready to lead bls
peoplll Into a future of peace,
freedom and prosperity.
The facts, however, as provlded by Mandela himself, are
rather different. Moreover, tbere
'
. are alarming Indications tbat
Mandela, who spent the tast'27
years In prison, has a great deal
of catching up to do on what bas
happened In the meantime. Like
a South African Rip V:an Winkle,
be clearly doesn't realize the
extent to which the world bas
chan get\.
First, .!bough, It should be
~
'
.
an lsraellsc()eme to undermine
Islam. For tlie last decade; Iran
has doqe .Its best, or worst, to
wipe-out the Baba'ls.
The · situation bas Improved
somewhat since Khomelnl's
death last yellr, but the Baha'Is
are' stU! treated .like lepers In
Iran. Iran's current president,
Hashemi R.afsanjanl, wants the
Western worldtothlnkhe'sanlce
guy, so be quit executing Baha'Is.
They now baye some new "freedoms." Baha'Is are allowed to
have funerals and bury their
dead In cemeteries.
•· But they stU! are not allowed
places of worship, and they are
regarded as common criminals.
· In February, the Ratsanjanl
government reduced sentences
for many prisoners as a birthday .
gift on the 11th anniversary of the
Islamic revolution. Bl!texcluded
from the pardon were rapists,
drug dealers, spies, armed opposltlon groups and Baha'Is.
We reported earlier on Rafsanjan!' s effort to
up Ir~n· s
.•
,
Image.• Last year, just as the
United Nations was · about to
publish yet another scathing
report on human rights abuses In
Iran, R.atsanjanl Invited U.N.
representatives to visit blscountry. It was a first. All the U.N. ·
human rights report& since the .
rev.olutlon had been done In the
absence of a close-up look.
The U.N. team was led around .
by R.afsanjanl functionaries, who
choreographed the visit to shoW ·
Iran's be~ !face. The result \V&S a
report that downplayed human
rights abuses and largely lgnored the torture and ·murder of
political dissidents.
'EiutonetblngthatlrancOiildn't
whitewash was Its treatment of
the Baha'I community. Special
note was made In the U.N. report
that the Baha'Is stU! suffer attbe
bands of Iran.
The new freedoms magnanlm·
ously granted by Rafsanjani .
focus on bask: needs - money
and food. In the early 191Kls, the
Iran tan government dismissed
more than 10,000 Baha'Is from .
..
· jobs In education and aovern·
ment and 'denied tbem retirement penslona. Rafllllljanl bas'
now decided tQ pay the ~lol)ll. ·
Baha'Is can · now set . food
rationing cards, which had been
denied them. And as of laat Nov.
I, sho~ that had been conlls·
cated . from Baha'Is were returned to them and their business
licenses renewed.
·
Iran· hasn't executed any Baha'Is since December 1988, but
many Baha'Is remain In tranlan
Jalls, source~~ have , told our
associate Scott Sleek. Betweeu
1979 and 1988, 197 ~ha'll were
executed on religious charses. .
' Baha'I students are not al·
lowed ·m Iranian universities.
They can't get passports or exit
permits to travel. ·
. The plight of the .Baha'Is bas
aroused the lntere~~t of C011111'1!11s
and several ·human rlshts
IIJ'OUps. Those groups prodded
the U.N. to pay special atteatlon
to the Baha'Is during the visit of
the human rights observers.
.
William Rusher
monopoly hidustrles Is the poliCy ~
of the ANC, and a change or
modification of our views In this
regard Is Inconceivable."
One would have enjoyed, therefore, being a fiy on the wall when
Mandela bad his recent conference with Soviet Foreign Minis·
ter Sbevardnadze In Windhoek,
Namibia, and was told that the
Soviet government Itself Is preparlag to de-nationalize major
sectors of the Soviet economy.
Of course, these Inconsistencies will probably aU clear up ali
soon as Mandela' s eoUeagues ·
have bad time to brief blm on all ·
that's happened since 1963. But .
bow must Mandela and such ·
fellow bomb-throwers as Walter ·
Slsulu feel, when they hear that
the South Africa they have
labored to bring Into being Is
going to be as good for General
Motors' as It Is for them? .
BORDER
LAMBERTVILLE, N.J . the Ralls-to-Trails conservancy, In Wasblngion now the 188-mUe- servancy describes as 'lAmer!·
(NEA) - The decaying rem- a non-profit organization created
'
nants of an old trestle bridge that In 19M and based·In Washlngion, long John W&Yft!! Pioneer Trail. · ca's skinniest parks" are used ·
once forded the Delaware and D.C.
Among tbe I!Wit heavily used . almost ~ 'mU!Ioll times every
Raritan Canal a few miles so th
"Rall-tr lis
tb
. aretbeWasblnstonloOldDomln· year. They are especially valued
u
a
are more an a . ion Railroad Regional Park In by the residents of urban areas,
- oftbls Cl>mmunlty !~fe among the . 'neat Idea,'" says the conser- the Washington D c suburbs where the availability of ~ea·
1 few reminders of the Belvedere ~ancy, which promotes them as with 1 mDllon . ·~ · annually: tlonal
land Is limited.
.. and Delaware Railroad.
a new system of pathways !bill and the Blirke-Gllman Trail In
· When the natlon~s r~roaa ,
The B&:DRR began Qperatlons can link our nation from coast to Seattle whose '150 000 yearly system peaked In size arOIIIId
In 1855, but abandoped passenger coast, providing unique natural users !~elude Unlv~slty of Wa· 19:11 at approximately 250,QOO.to- ,
and freight service In 1977. The recreational and ... transporta- sblngton, students blcyclb!ll to · 300,000 track mOes, It was tile
ties and track owned by the tion opportunities for all Amerl·
d·f
•1 sea
most extensive In tile world. It ,
defunct regional carrier were cans for generations to come."
anln ~~0:. ~Elroy-sparta bas
steadily shruDk In lllblepromptly removed and resold.
Indeed, the almost 3,130 mil~ irz:a11 b811 od' ed
1
quent
decade~~, however.
.
'.
All that remained appeared to be of trails In former rail corridors bo
~r ~c :" :,O~t:
Every
year;
·the
·
·
Ipteratate
·'
a useless albeit picturesque available for public use stretch
nanza or own
1111
.
rlgbt-of-way on the banks of tbe from California's Monterey Pe- 32-mUeroute. Bed-and-breakfast . COmmerce Commllalon receives ;
Oelaware ruve~.
. njnsula to Malisacblllll!tts' cape lana, restaurants, blcyele repair ; more than 200 petltlona prOpo.- •
·Today, however, the 28.5 miles . Cod. More than ' 250 additional shops and other ente~ earn Ins' the abancloDJIIellt of service •
of former rail bed .have been conversions are now underway.
$.2.S million from tile 50,000 along 3,000 to •.ooo mnes or track. •
Incorporated Into the D&R Canal
States with at least 100 miles of people who use tbe trail every Today, the country'a active rail .'
network II leas than half of Its '
State Park and every Y!!ar serve such trails are Callfornta, Wa- yex':'
a JleiV trail will use oriBina1
size.
·:
tbouaandi of runners, walkers, ~blngion, Iowa, Illlnoi', Mlnne- the former .!.wbt-of-way or the
COnvenlon
of
those
zishta-ot·
:
joggera, bikenllldotheroutdoor sota, Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennayl...
way
Into
tralls
was
endorsed
lily
:
•
entbusl.asta. Altbousb motorized vanla, West VIrginia, and l'efluouri-Kanaaa-Texaa Rail·
· ¥ehlcles are pr'ohlbited, wheel- Vtrgtnlil.
.
road from St. Louis to Jlllferson . COqreu. when It euacted u.
chairs, bicycles and strollers can
The first rail-to-trail Clinver· Clty.ltwlll follow tlleroutetaken lesJalatlon to facilitate the pro- '
be Used by visitors.
slon, In 1968, transformed the by the Lewis and Clu'k t!llJII!dl· ceu. Earlier this year, tile u.s. : •
That traU 1s amo1111 242 aban- Chlcqo, Aurora 1: El&ln Rail· tlon In tbe early 18001 and w111 Supreme Olurt rejected a leral l
do!M!d railroad btdi In 34 states road rlgllt-of-way Into the Illinois provide spectacular view• of tbe challen1e to ralla-to-traUa '
tranlformatlo!ll.
•
,
that have been converted to Prairie Path. 'The )oqest Is the Ml:,.~
.:v~to-Tr lis Co
8
recreational use, accordlnll to 'former Milwaukee Road rail~
·
a
n"
P.&sourt
r
'
"Der /:)order stays der same. Ve chust MOOF
DER SIGN A LITTLE, JA ?"
. .-
''
~
,.
.
•
·•~· - "
••.,.. - --
.
DENVER CUP!) - Brent
Network spokeswoman Susan
Musburger, the . blghest·proflle · Kerr sald _CBS did not plan to·
broadcaster In sports television, handle the annoul)cementln sueh
will not have his contract re- a manner and called It an
newed because of conflicts with ~·.unfortunate circumstance"
CBS over bls role aLthe network. that the news came on the eve of
Word of the unanticipated split the championship gam'e.
_/"Sunday came the clay before
· Shaker called · MuSburger a
{
Musbu_rger was to. handle the "professional" and said be was
play-by,play report of Monday not concerned over bls perfornlght's. National Collegtate'<At;,. J1il!nce Monday night. Shllker
hletlc' ~ssciclatlon~~bamplonshlp'' · ·said It would · .be Mu's burger's
basketball. game between Duke deciSion whether. be addresses
·and Nevada-Las Vegas.
his · departure · during., !he
CBS Spdrts President Neal broadcast.
Pilson said In a two:p.aragFapb
,Musburger phoned · ··a brief
statement from the network's statement to CBS's workroom.In
temporary quarters In Denver Denver. He did· not mention his
·that Jt1onday night's game would confilcts with. the network liut
be Musburger's las I assignment said be ))ad a "llfeat run" with
with CBS:
•
·
CBS and now plans an "extended
Musburger's contract was to vacation." He said he hopes to
expire In a few months. Ted resume broadcasting eventually.
Shaker, executive producer for
CBS chOse not to distribute the
CBS Sports, said renewal negotl· remarks, saying the network
a !Ions had been ·going on "for wanted Musburger to speak for ·
•
some·time. We justdldn'tseeJU to himself.
be on the same page," he said.
Shaker said Musburger and
"Finally It came down to not CBS had disagreements over
renewing at all." ·
money and assignments. MlisMusburger, 50, helped CBS burger Is believed to be the
become· a force In spor~ televl- . second highest paid on-air b~oad·
slon and has anchored most oftbe ·caster at CBS after news anchor
network's major sports br0>1d· ., Dan Rather.
.
casts. But Shaker suggested · Miisburger ·is one of CBS's
Musburger's on-a!~ presence .qo most versatile broadcasters,
longer .. suited the network's b~vlng coVered pro and college
.. needs. "I ~on' I know bow you put. football and basketball, golf and
tennis. He joined CBS In 1975 as
Image IIi &·contract.:· be said.
Shaker said discussion of the host of ''The NFL Today" and Is .
move occu~ after Saturda~ covering his sixth NCAA
night's NCAA coverage. ' Pilson Tournament.
met wltll Todd Musburger, the
However, his exuberance and
broadca~ter's brother and agent.
Shaker said It was Todd Mus·
burger's decision .to announce
the move Immediately If CBS .
'
was not Intent on renewal.
'
'SCO'ITSDALE, Ariz·. (UPI) ~--~----------------.. , Jack NlcklajiS Sunday won his
debut on tb~nlors Tour with a
The Daily Sentinel
4-under-par 68 for a 10-under 206
and four-stroke margin Of vic·
(U81'81tii-HII)
tory over longtime rival Gary
A Dlvlllon of MuKimedlia, Int.
a
Player at The Tradition.'Published every afternocn, Monday
The golfing world ·was not
, througlo Friday, 111 COurt St., Po·
surprised but Nicklaus was.
meroy, Ohio. by the Obto Valley Pub' IIShlng Company/Multimedia. Inc..
He arrived, for the Tradition at
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
Desert
Mountain "playing
cond class postage paid at Pomerqy,
Ohio.
.•
lousy," he said, but some hard
work on the practice tee sends
Member; United Piess Internatlonal,
him to the Masters at Augusla,
Inland Dally Press Auoclattol'!, and t be
Ohio Newspetper Asaoclatlon."NaUonal
Ga.. Thursday tblnkbig "my
Advertising Rer,resentattve: Branham
cball'ces are prejty good."
·
Newspaper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue, .
NN York, New York 10011. ,
. Nicklaus collected $120,000 of
the $800,000 purse and joined
J'OS1MAsTER:' Send addn!sa chill- ' Player,
Arnold Palmer and
.to The Dolly Sentinel, l11 Court ·St.,
Pomeroy, Olllo «i'lal.
George Archer as winners of
their first starts on the Senior
. SUII8CRIPl'ION UTJI8
PGA Tour.
'
lr camor or !hi..- .....
OneWeek ...................................suo
Player shot a 70 to finish at 6
One Month ..................................SUO
under par and claim second for
One Year ........ ........ ......... ~ ·· ·· · ... $72.111
the
aecond time In .the two-year
SINGLE COrY
·
, ·
.
PRI(JI!I
.
.
history of The Tradition.
Dally .... ......... .. ! ........... : .... ... 25 Cento
111!! South ~rtcan wa$ " two
Subocrlborsaotd..ltlrigtoply thecar· ·
abots ahead ot Charles COody,
rl« may remit In advance direct to
who bad a final roundround 68,
The Dally Se•!lllel on a 3, lor 12 moDih
and Bruce Crampton. who finbull. er.ctlt wUIII!!!Pmt<arrlereach
week.
•
1
!shed with an even-par round.
.
No ollblerlpllona by m&U permllecl Ill
areu where llomo carrier III'Vke II
--rlpl-
avaUable.
............
- · - ·- -·. . . - . '""
,, ~.. .....
-. -. ·'f -:• .,......_
I T'"' ~
1' .. .. .
. .....
~.
. . . . .. . . ., ,. ,. _ .
,·
-·llelp<'AmJ . .
13 weekl ........ ...................' ...... !121.!10
'26 Weeltt ....... .. ......................... NO.IO
52 Weeltl, .................................. f!UO
./
'
~
13 Weeki ....... .................., .... ,,,, 1111.:16
26 Weelti ................... :.............. $.TI.IIe
52 Weeki ..............:................... S74.36
'
.~
,y
.
.
.
'
FrankBeard:~69movedblm!nto
a tie at 3-under with Archer, who
shot 71 Sunday.
"I don't have .to worry any
more about ~lng a senior," said
Nlclllaus who dominated the
PGA Tour for more than 20
yeJil's. "I gue!!S tbls deflllltely
auallfl!!ll me."
.
The Tigers took their first lead,
2g.27, wl th seven mlnu tes leJt In
'...
the h~lf on a basket by Jones.
Stanford committed seven tur·
novers and scored only four
points - all on free throws during A seven·minute stretch.
Auburn scored 13 points off
Stanford turnovers In the first
half. · ·
.
Auburn led 41-32 with 1:30 lefl1
·before the Cardinal scored the
"next nine points. ·
Other Tigers In double fl~res
were Cbantel Tremltlere wltb 17,
C.C. Hayden wltb 15 and Evelyn
Thompson with 10.
Tremltlere also was named to
the all-tournament team, along
with Venus Lacy of Louisiana
Tech.
· The 16,595 who watched the
game set a new record fo.r
attendance at a women's championship game, breaking the old
mark of 9,823 set In Austin:
Texas, ln.l987.
.
North sweeps·
All-Star tilts
.
~
.CHAMPIONSJIIP GAME .COACHES - J!'!Dal· Fo!D' coaeb Mike ..
Knyzewsld lrom Duke (L) greets clulmplonshlp game opponent
Jerry Tarkanlan ol UNLV as both coaches passed eacb OCher at a
downtown bole! Sunday . Tarkanlan says both teams are equl and
play a stmllar style of defense. (UPI) .
BRENT MUSBURGER
'
'
.
constant .vtslbltfty , lriita\ed
many critics. Musburger seemed
to be everywhere; and while bls
work was ·dlllgent his .coverage
often bordered,on boosterlsm.
Shake~ said It was "over·
blown" to ,suggest CBS chOse not'
to renew the contract b!!Cause of
media pressure. "But It's Insult- ·
lng to say we don't understand
our own business," he said.
Shaker said the network was ·
troubled by Musburger's work. load. HesaldCBSwlllnotnamea
replacement for Musburger but
wants tp Incorporate Its , other·
announcers Into coverage. "One
thing )Ve're proud of Is our ·
bench," he 5ald.
Kerr said the network In the
1990s did not want a sl·ngle person .
handling most major events and
that Shaker wanted to provide
opportunlJies to showcase other
· CBS Sports talent. such 'as Jim .
Nantz and Greg Gumbel.
·"·
, Nicklaus, who said he had
difficulty dealing with the fact be
turned 50 Jan. 21, said in October ·
he had a goal for the first time In
10 years - to win on both tours.
"It was nice to get the monkey
off my back," be said. ''I put It
there. I've got haW the battle
conquered."
Nicklaus counts six Masters
among his 70 PGA Tour victories
and has finished second four
times In the b4!ltle for the green
coat. ·
"If I'm going to win on the
regular To\11', the Masters Is
easiest for me. It's a course I
know how to play.
"Certainly the swing I'm using
here will work there. I may not
use the same putter or the same
driver.
''This Is a terrific course to
prepare for Augusta. There are a
.lot of similar .conditions. You do
Iiave to throw the ball up In the
air here, like at August@. The
greens here are a little slower."
Nicklaus did not birdie a par·4
hole during the flrit two rounds C!f
the tournament, which was shor'
· tened. to !W holes lrom 72 when
· Thursday's round was rained
out.
Treating the news as a chal·
lellie, be started his final' .round ·
by landing a sand wedge 1-lncb
tron\ the piD on Pte 390-yard,
pai-4 flrit and made a 3 12-foot
putt for birdie. He made tour of
his 'six birdies on par-4s. ,.
'
,.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI).
Toledo Macomber's Donnie
Dobbs scored 20 of bls 26 points In
the second half to lead the North
·.
to an . 89·8~ win over the South
DARLINGTON, S.C. iUPI) ~ field. When thesmokecleared,13 .
Dale · Earnhardt sidestepped cars had crashed. · Earnhardt
sunday at St. John Arena In tile
trouble throughout · sunday's was one of the few who escaped.
Dlvlslon_1-2 game of .t he Ohio
North·South High School Cage .TranSouth 500 and then held off
"I jumped off the banking and
Classl~:.~.
.
· Mark Martin In tile closing laps aimed at a hole and made It
DolJot; a 6-foot-3 forward :who
to . claim his sixth NASCAR through, " Ear nhardt said .
~
played In the shadows of the Winston Cup career victory at.
Driver Nell Bonnett was. the'
Darlington Raceway. ·
. ·only competitor Ia ken· to a lOcal·
great Jimmy Jackson· last year,
brought a 29 . points per game
Earbhardt · qirhljng a Chev- hospital after the accident. The
s~orlng average Into the contest
role!, flnlshedi!!lls t~~n a second Alabama driver was knocked
and showed why he had such a ahead of Martin 'on thf 1.366·mUe unconscious for a brief period
gaudy mark.
·
tracklnaracetbathad10cautlon ·and was taken to McLeod Re- ,
Dobbs, who hit 12 of 20from the flags for 51 of the 36Tlaps.
glonal Medical Center [n Flori'
field andtwo'oftbreefreethrows,
The final caution period began ence. A track spokesman said
put the North ahead to stay 87·86 . onlap361 after Mike Alexander's Bonnett's CATscanw;tsnegatlve
with 39 seconds remaining, then Buick spun off turn four a,nd but he would be held overnight
·fed Terrence Carmlobael of smacked the Inside retaining for observation.
Mansfield Senior tor the clinch· wall. The race restarted with
The second accident that could
have ended Earnhardt's day
lng fastbreak basket with 21 three laps remaining.
"Consistency and good work · came on lap~8when rookie Jack:
seconds to play.
"It means a Jot to me and to
by the guys In the pits won us this Pennington spun off turn four In
Macpmber," Dobbs said of the rae~. We stayed out of trouble front of the leaders. Eal\l)hardt .
most valuable player award and raced the track; " Earnhar,dt went high and bumped R~hard
wblcb he won. "People said 1 . said after winning bls second Petty, willie Morgan ·shepherd,
·couldn't play without Jimmy consecutive . race at Darlington who was second at the time, and
(Jackson) and 1 just wanted to : and his fourth Tr;~nSouth 500.
the third· place Harry Gant dOve
provelcould.
"The car would get IO(lse at low.ShepherdandGantcameout
•'He (Jackson) taught me a Jot limes and It would push at tlmes. ahead ·of E;~rnllardt , but then all
about the mental part of the We just played It cool and drpve a three pltt.ed and Earnbllrdt re·.
game. This year, 1 tried to help safe race."
turned to the track In the lead.
my teammates -because .they
Twice during the_event wrecks
"Track position and the Cchas·
were young. I'm a scorer, 1 knew could have . eliminated Earn· sis) adj~stment we made on that
r could. score."
bardt but .each time the three· stop were the things that gave us
The Nor.th led 18.17 at tbeend of
time series champion survived the race." Earnhardt said. " The .
the first quarter, 42·38 at half·. the Incidents almost unscathed.
last caution (for Alexander's
The first occurred on lap 211 . accident) didn ' t bother us. 1 felt
time ·· and 63-58 after three
·
when leader Ken Schrader and we could beat Mark."
quarters ..
Ernie Irvan, who was at leastlO
~~Ill!!!!But t~e South, led by Middle!·
'!!
ow's Jimmy Ratliff with 18 • iaps down, were racing side-by·.
side through . turn four. The:,:
points, Division I player of the
collided and spun In front of the
year Tyrlce Walker of HainUton
..
with 14 and Andre Williams of
Cincinnati Greenhills wltb 13,
finally tied It at 78-78 with 3: 03 to
play.
· ·
,
. The lead changed bands five _
Urnes ln.the flnal2: 45 of the game
before Dobbs put the · North
ahead to stay.
Strongsville's Tucker Neale
111 Secontl St., Pomeroy '
had 15 points and Carmlchaelll
YOUI INDEPENDENT
for the North, which was outreAGENTS SEIYING
boUnded 55-42. Walker led the
Soutb with 11 rebounds while
KJaytiJS Williams of Kent RooseSINCE 1861
velt bad10 for the North.
.
.
The North also won the Div'
ISion 3·4. game,. finishing with a
20-7 run for a 99-82 victory.·
,.
Th~ winning North bad five
players In double figures, led by
St.,-e Jettingbo!f of Delphos St.
John's·, ·voted the game's most
valuable player, with 18 points
and Bobby Patton of Youngstown
Liberty with 15.
The North took control late· In ·
the second quarter, scoring nine
unanswered polnls to go up 39-30
as Burton Berkshire's Luke
Busby made one of two free
throws with 2:00 left In tbe half.
The North stretched Its lead to
as many as 16 points In the t~lrd
gravy, cole.._, hot ra¥ end IMJtW.
quarter and was up 60-44 before a
llany, no .... IIIU ... •npl Nv-.ge
.
13-2 run by tbe South got tbem to
wllh ~ ..,._,
.
•
within 62-57 with a minute lett In
NOW F~ATURING HOMEM~DE DINN,ER ROLL
the period.
But the North's Steve Franks,
of Tuscarawas . Valley, hit a
3-polnt goal at the buzzer to slve
Pl. fti·S41t
PO 101,
his team a 69-59 advantage at the
........ It I K1nt~ PriM Cllldt.
end of the quarter.
Earnhardt NASCAR winner ·
"Bear' wins first senior meet
America's rail beds wake up_·-~.R=o~be:.:,.::.rt..::~~a~lte~rs
POLISH
.
How well has Duke recover.ed how things can be done boys Is ludicrous."
. "If you look at ou r scores people . climate" 'and nerves. ·Hurley .
from Its draining game with otherwise. .·
The talk; however, turns may not understand that we play • stayed fh beQ Sl!Rda)i and did not
Arkansas? Will UNLV's cracKrzyzewskl says he Is tiring of . deadly earnest when the subject good defense. I think both teams attend the newHonference.
kllng defense' unnerve Duke? Is the Snow White·role. He reminds . Is defellse. Both adhere to man· - will pla)i great defense but I also
Duke did not pracllc;e Sunilay ,
Duke's Bobby Hurley over his that be crtlclzed hls student to-mail alignments. though think !~ will be ·a hlg~·sccirlng choosing ins tead to walk through
lntestlnalwqes?Cal)anyonestop paper this season and charged UNLV reacts quicker to game.
plays on an ou tside ·court.
UNLV's Stacey Augmon? '
·
referees.
switches.
.
Tarkanlan will .go With ~ _ Tl!ls Is the. third time UNLV Is
Duke and UNLV cafry..lmpec"I don't think 'll{e represent aft
"Teams get certain ldentl·
thony and Anderson Hunt In the In the Final Four but the first
ties," Krzyzewskl said. Ours, backcourt, with David Butler time it Is playing for the title.
cable basketball credentials. The that's best," be !IBid.
Blue Devils are playing In their
As for UNLV, the Rebels are gladly, Is mostly <=~fenslve. But flank~:d up front by Augmon and
" I don't. really believe there Is
third straight · Final Four. The branded as desert outlaws. ·The ours Is the most balanced team . All-America Larry Johnson. • · a key,'' Tarkanlan said. "People ..
Rebels · h~ve ·won at least 25 scbooJ, It seems, Is foreverunder · of.fenslvely we've bad.
The ~e!Jels a,re strortg on the say you got to rebound. But what ·
gam!!ll the last eight seasons. Investigation. Hotel bills· go lin"Vegas' Jmage Is running and perimeter . but will need ,. to .If we rebound and then dOn't .
Both are bidding for their first paid. Suspect recruits enro,ll
being loose. But the thing · that . neutralize the l nslde power or' shoot well1 Then whai good Is ·
national title.
Players resist arrest.' Tb~ Impresses me the most Is bow Duke's Christian "Laetmer and that? To wtn we have to play an
Their reputations, however, do . coach's legal bat·tles reach the .bard they play. They play hard .. Alaa Abdelnaby. At guard, Hur· ou ts tand ing" game In several ·
not end there.
·
Supreme Court.
on defense."
ley Is joined by Phil Henderson, .a re as."
Duke· Is a demanding unlver- ·
"We don't feel we're the bad
In the second half of Saturday
whose 28 points .. ted the ·Blue · Duke hulostthreeilmeslntlie
slty awash In tradition. Its boys," he said. ''The way we see nlglit's 90-81 viet~ over Gear- Devils past Arkans~s 97·83.
· champlomhlp gaoie but Hender:
admission slandards are rigor- It, there are · two great teams gla Tech, UNLV held the Yellow
Much wlll depena on Hurley. son says the team Is under no
ous . and Its players are a~tlcu- vyln·g for the national Jackets to 35 percent shooting.
The freshman point guard tern· , burden to finally Win It all.
late. When college basketball .championship.
. "I've always felt the defensive . porarlly left . ~aturday' s game. ·
''lt>Sa different year, a whole
''Both played bard and fought team 1s gotng to w'ln more because of dlarrbea. Krzyzewski · different team," he said. " What
rocks with scandal, Duke lnvarlably Is held up as an example of to get here. That talk about bad ~slstentlY/ ' Tarkanlan said. attributes his condition to flu , we've achieved Is just great ."
CBS, Musburger split
What Nelson -Mandela has ·to learn .
•
'
·. The Daily Sentinel-Page · 3
Pomeroy- Middlepoi'i. Ohio
points with 12:01 left on Evelyn
KNOXViLLE, Tenn. (UP I) 11-.polnt deficit and ~1 turnovers
Stanford Coach Tara VanDer- In the first balf'IO.!mpl'OVe-to32-1 Thompson's two free throws, but
the Tigers .never pulled any
veer IO{)ked at Auburn's p~sure and drop Auburn to 23;7. ·
Stedlng, whose six 3-polnters closer.
defense as an opportunity - a
Julie Zellstra's three-point
three-point opportunity.
gave her 18 points and broke the
play, another ~-point basket by
· Stanford hit a record 11 three- , old record of two set In 1988, was
pointers, Including six by 'Katy named to the illl-toumam!!nl Stedlng and a basket by Henning
StedlM Sunday, to win Its first team. Teammate Jennifer Azzl, . gave Stanford a 12-polnt lead
NCAA women's cbamplonsblp wllo scored 17 points, was named with seven minutes remaining.
The Tigers, who used their
with an 88-81 victory over Au- the most outstanding player of
bum . The Tigers losUorthetblrd the Final Four. Sonja Henning fu)lcourt press to. great advanstraight year It) tbe,.champlonled Stanford with 21 points and . tage In the first half, were unable
sblp.game.
.
.
·
to cause trouble .In the second
Trlsba Stevens 16.
.
·
·
"We · haven't- been pressed ·
"They have so many weapons half.
The· Cardinal committed only
much all season," . VanDerveer that defensively, It created many
problems for us," Ciampi said. two second-half turnovers and
said. "We try to attack the press
"We would concentrate on one, built a rebounding margin of
like It's a three-point
opportunity." ,
and another one would step up. 49-36. Stanford scored-l8 points
·
That's what It takes to win off 19 offensive rebounds, ·
The Cardinal attempted 26
Stanford used a nine-point run
three-·polnters, or' 40 percent of championships."
at the end of the first half to pull
After a 41-41 halftime tie,
their total field goal attempls.
Into a 41·41 tie.
,
"The range of Stanford's three- Auburn opened up a three-point
The Cardinal led 22-11 with 12 .
point shots surprised me," Au- lead before Stedlng's 3-polnter
minutes left In the haif, with the
burn Coach Joe .Ciampi said. touched o(f a nine-point Stanford
"My disbelief was how quickly . run that gave the Cardinal a 52-46. help of five 3-polnt shots.
lead wltb 15: 57 left,
Then Auburn got Its press
they .got their shots off."
untracked
Auburn
cut
Its
deficit
to
four
to .force turnovers.
Stanfont also overcame an
"Er, excuse me, are you waiting for the Soviet threat? Well, they called,
....
and they're definitely nat coming."
·
·
Berry's Worl·d
·'" .
~tanford clair:ns
women's." NCAA .crown
.
..
noted that Mandel a· was one of a ment estimates poSsess balf of
number of South Africans con- the seats on the .executive com·
vlcted of planning and commit- mit tee .oi Mandela' s African
ling acts of violence. Moreover, National Congress.
In so doing he acted In close
In a statement shortly after bls
concert with the outlswed South release, Mandela laid It on the
African Commu!llsl Party. He line: "No dedicated ANC
may be a spokesman for many member will ever beed the call to
South African blacks today break ·with the SACP. ... What ·
(thougbcertalnlypotforall).but man of honor will ever desert a
there Is no point In disregarding lifelong friend at,the ln.slatenceof
these disagreeable facts about a common opponent and still
his past.
·
·
retain a measure of credibility
Of .course, all that was three
among his people?"
decades agQ, and It would be
A similar time-warp hinders
fqrglvabletodlsmlssltas old bat,
Mandela's view of South Africa's
If Mandela bad not reconfirmed ·economic future. Some of the
Its current relevance within days country's biggest buslnessm\!n
of his release from prison.
·
have already held private talks
Forstarters,beevenrefusedto with ANC representatives, lookIs' disavow the use of violence, lng to the establishment of a
though Ibis may be mostly a · prosperous ·capitalist society
debater's position, not Intended . once South Africa's blacks are
for Immediate pracHcal appl!ca- permitted to vote. But Mandela
lion. Mpre startlingly, he reaf- scotched any sucb notion wltbln
firmed his loyalty to his close days of emerging frOf!l prison,,
allies the South African commu- asserting that, "The natlonallzaniS!JI. who the U.S. State Depart- lion of the mines, banks an~
.
Duke fcices .UNLV tonight .for natio~al college' cag~ . 'titl~ .
Pagi 2-The Dilly 81 lliiwil
.. . . . -·-- . .
. ..
~
Monday, April 2, .1 990
•
.
.
DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
.
MEIGstoum
TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL
. . . ~~~=-~~ 0~:...
(lOW'S
~·
s'•3.-stts
Y USIAUIAI1
a
�•
Page .. 4 . The Daily SentinSI
r
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
:1
Reds edge Tig~rs; u~ps return to. work
.
.
.
.
By DAViDENGELDRUM ·
· . · Ul'I Sports Writer
Despite the return of umpires
.to · work, the dispute that kept
them out of games until Sunday
poin(s toward the deterio,ratlng
relatlonshipj)etweenownersand
umplr\'S.
For almost two weeks, the
umpiJ;es I! ave boycotted . the
Graj)efruit and Cactus Le,ague
.' contests, p~otesting ,the owneors'
'
Monday, April 2, 1990
-·- •
'
.
.
.
, .
an experienced-umpire. .
. ptiched the .first four lnnlngs·ror
surrendering four runs iu · the
"Not to be too quick, " he sald ... the wih. Clncliutati Manager Lou
-first inning.
"You have to loolt at the plays, Piniella said Brownfrigwould be · At-. Fort Laudenlale, Fla.,
ta~e y_our' tlme. ThB1, I assume Is the Oi>ening Day pitcher In · Darren '.Jteect hit two home ruris,
the · same thing a· hilter would Houston next Monday.
Including -a two-run shot , · aU
·have to do;''
·
J .
-, "-' Bradenton, Fla.; Mark · Dav(\.Righetti sparklngtheMets.
Will there be .enough time, Ryal 's two-run, eighth-Inning
Yankees starter Andy Hawkins
enough ·s pring games for the si ngle rallied the Pirates over the
allowed two runs over five
ympires to prepare properJy?
Cardinals. Left-bander Bob Pat·
Innings. New York starter and
''Two played games would be terson shut ollt St. Louis for two
winner' Frank Viola burled five .
preferable; l'IJI ·going to have " Innings to earn the victory. Loser
innings,- permitting two runs ()D.•
. one:'' :he said•. "'w?uld . rather ....\')Jlke.Perez gave up four. runs.
· fivAeth. 1 ~ '· ·ndo,.F•ia.· ,·.Gre·g Gagn-e
0 ,..
·· declslon·· tQ r~schedule the .b'ase· --:-ha.ve ·two or · thr~e ;"
·, ,
·. ·. At Vero Bea~h , -Fla., WUH~ .·
· ball season witHouJ first consult··
Sunday, the· umRires· rotated Randolph's tYing twO-run homer
hit t\\!O home runs arid a triple to·
ing the Major 1.-eague Umpires bases between innings, trying to and Jose Gonzalez' speed lifted
powe~ the Twins to a split-squad
Associatiori.
·
gef experience at as many the Dodj!ers over the Yankees.
victoryo.v erRoyals. JohnCandePinch runner. Gonza.lez scored . '-!aria (lotthe victory for·the Twins ·
' ~I don't thin!>.· there's · been positions as-Msslbi11; . ·
. much . tapjlort ~etween t he Um·
In gaffies · .Sunday, ·Bus ton . the winning r.un with .one out in . · an~ GaJ;Y · Wayne picked up the · ·
pire Association and t he edged Toronto 3·2, Cincinnati ·· the bdttoin ·of the ninth off loser' · save. Der'aCiarktooktheiossfor
owners, ". Riehle Phillips, the defeated' Detroit 4·2, Pittsburgh John Habyan. New York scored Kansas City. The Royals' Mike
Executive Director of the Associ· • overcame St. Louis 8·7, Los three runs in four innings off Los Macfarlane hit a three-run
atlon, said in a television Angeles nipped the split·squad · Angeles left-bander Fernando homer.
inter','lew.
New York Yankees 4-3, Montreal
Valenzuela, two on a homerun by
· At Plant City, Fla .. Jim Eisen. ~·1 think the owners were trounced Atlanta 8-l, the split Wayne Tolleson. Before the reich hit a grand slam ·and Bo
seoding a message .to the um- New York Mets squads got by a
game, the Dodgers announced Jackson smashed a three-run
pires and the umpires were Yankees -side 5·2and beat ~aitlt))e trade . or first baseman- homer as theRoyalsdnibbedthe
sending a message back: 'We're more 7-3, Mlnliespta and Kans;~s
outfielder · Franklin Stubbs ' to Twins 13-21n a splii-squad game.
· City spllt ,twosplii·squad gaines
Houston for left·hander Terry - Ricl!ard Dotson, whogaveuptwo
not going to roil over."'
;,ii.t" ,·
So with the openers approach· 7-6 and ., 1n, Texas nipped . the
Wells,
runs on !we hits In five innings,
. .INFIELQ HIT - Phillles' center fiel.der Sll Campusano outruns
lng April 9, the ' umpires bided · Chicago White Sox 3-2, PhiladeiAt WeSt Palin BEil!ch, Fla., picked up the victory.. .
.
his batting helmet to fb'st base as he arrives S&Jely on aa infield hit
their time to prove they are not to · phia humbled Houston 12-0, the .. rookie Deiino DeShields re~ched · M Port Charlotte, Fla., Pete
Sunday. Covering first for the AStros is first base!III!D Harry
be taken for gran ted.
Chicago Cubs and San Francisco · base . five times on two singles Incaviglia doul:lled lri an eighth·
Spilman. ( UPI)
.
"It was a point that had t'o be split two .games 2·1 and 5·3, San
and three walks, stole two base.s Inning run off White Sox ace
proven," J\merlcan ~et~gue um· . ~lego outscored Seattle 5-3,
and scored . twice, helping the reliever Bobby Thigpen after
ptre Larry Barnett said. "I think . Cleveland swept two split-squad
Expos defeat the Braves. Left- Texas reliever ~enny Rog~rs · split-squad games against the Indians P.ounded out.nlne runs In
we proved lt. We are a part oft he games fro~ Oakland 15-7 and 8-4,. bander Zane Smith pitched five
pitched the top of the Inning to lift Giants. Opening night starter the ·fourth off losing Athletics
game; we're not the game. The and California· rna11led M,liwauInnings, ailqwing one hit and one the Rangers;
G1·eg Mac,ldux pitched lour lilt- pitcher Bob Welch. Kevin Ward
players are the game, so to . kee 12·4·. .
.
"'·· ,
walk to gain the vlct 0ry. AtlanAt Miami, Kevin McReynolds less · Innings for Chicago, Jeff hit a three-run·homer and Terry
ta'-s Pete Srrilth took the loss after . hi~ a towering, three-run home Brantley took the loss for the Steln.bach a two-run shot for the
speak, bill we are ·a part of the .: .. At· Wtl)ter' Haven, Fla,, Kevin
.. game. . When you :change the ROilllne hit a grail(! slilm 111 the
·
run, off former teammate John Giants.
A's. .
·
schedule · the way they ' ve · ,first Inning off loser Alex San•
· • · Mitchell to lift a'split Mets squad
At-Sco'ttsdale, Ariz.; MattWiill·
· At Tucson, Ariz., Dlon James
h """ th
hed 1 I t u t' "hez and •he Red Sox held on to
over' the Orioles. Mets ·star'ter ams hit an RBI double and added and Joey. Belle ·drove in three
defeat . the
Jays, Mike .
' Dwight . GOOden
four a · sing[e, continuing his · hot nms each to push Cleveland past
precious to umpires."
Greenwell, had '' three .hits · for :..
.1-nningsandgaveupthreehitsbut . hitting (12 for his last )6 and a oakland. James tripled home
Having made their point, the · Boston.
,.
struggled With his control, walk- . spring training average of .538)
two .runs In the first Inning
, umpires returned with only eight
At Plant City., F.la·, . Eric Davis ·
ing five batte'rs.
. .
. · ·· · In the Giants' victory . Outfielder against loser Joe Sluraski . . AI
days remaining. befOre the first lashed arup·scorihg singie -ili the .u·
At Clearwater; Fla .• Marvin Kevin . Bass and catcher .Terry Nipper, a spring training invitee,
pitch of the 199o campaign and ihlrd, s,en<jlng the Reds .to thl!lr
Freeman too)l . a . glant .step ·Kennedy of the Gl;ints had to ~worked the first three innings for
·· toward ·. llUlklng the Plilllies' · • leave )he game. Bass pulled his the victory. He allowed one run .
they, like the players, n~ ' to . follrt11 straight triumph. : De·
s"arpen their skUls.
troll's. runs came l.n the. second . w
· •m n
.
roster by pitching three strong right hamstring and Kennedy on four hits, a long home run to
"Timing;" Barnett explained, Inning on a two-run homer by
..
Innings in a shutout victory over . strained his left quadrlcep.
Ozzle Canseco; Jose's twin
lsallthatrernainstoimprove!or Chet Lemon. Tom Browning
the Astro5. Chuck Malone was
At Yuma, Ariz., right-hander brother.
•·
TH.E WOODLANDS, Texas
equally impressive for the Phil· Andy Benes scattered six hits
At Chandler, Ariz., the 'Angels
{UPI) - Tony Sills figured he :. lies, pitching three scoreless over five innings as the Padres
took advantage of a 17-hit atta~k
would go home and play golf with · Innings. Astros starter Jim De· defeated the Mariners for
and five Milwaukee errors to
his buddies next week. Instead; · shales took ttie loss. ·
sweep of their four-game exhlblpound the Brewers 12-4. The
he'll ~eat the Masters.
At Mesa, Ariz., Rick Wrona tlon series. Star tel'. Erik Hansen victory went to Bert Blyleven,
Sills won his first PGA event
squeezed home .the winning run took the lo.ss. .
.
who allowed four hits over four
with a su!lden-death playoff
in the bo'ttom.of (he ,nlnth lhillng
At Phoenl)!:; Joel Skinner hit a
shutoutinnings:. Milwaukee third
victory, over ·Gil Morgan sunday
to make a winner of chbs reliever · grand siam home·run-and Denny
baseman Paul Molitor sprained
in the $1 million Independent ·Mitch Williams In one o( two Gonzalez a three-run triple as the
his right thumb.
·
Insurance ·Age.n t Open, earning
,
· ·· · · · ·
·
·· · ·
him . a trtp to ' Augusta for the
Masters.
'•rhis is Incredible,'' he said.
"I'm in shock right now, I wasn't
thinking about winning but to
finish strong. Winning just
happens. You can't (orce it. !was
fortunate."
·
Sills and Moo:an finishfill regu·
Ia !ion .play tied at 12-uni!er-par
. 204.
On the first playoff hole; the
'par-4, 430-yard No: 10, Margin;
missed a 5.foot putt for par. Sills,
'who was in his .first playoff, sank
a short ·putt for . par and the
$180,000 first-place ' pril:l!, The .
prize money was his largest
paycheck · and more than he
earned In six of his seven years
on the Tour.
·
'
''The last few weeks I've
played well, but I've found a way '
to mess it up," said Sills, 34, of
Los Angeles. "I was trying to .
stay r~iaxed. It's unusual to win ·
at 12 under when the leaders start
out at 11-under."
·
The playoff marked'·the fourth
1MEIGS Marauder heavyWeight Aaron Sheets parti~lpated In the'
time. in five. years that the IIAO
North-S.outh All Star WrestUng Toumanient held last week at
has been . d.ecided in sudden
Nelsonville·York High School: Athletes were cho$en by coaches'
death, The tournament was a · ·
vole from the 17 partlclpatll)g schools withln.a fifty mile radius of
54-hole event alter Friday's
Nelaonvllle. Among the wrestlers making up the North and South
round was wiped out by rain.
All Stars were 15 district quaiUiei's, 11 distlrct wrestlers placing
Sills ' best previous finish this
fifth or higher, and one state champion. ,Aaron-helped the south
year was seventh place at the Los
team to a 35-12 victory over the north squad by pinning Corey
Angeles Open. His best career ·
McDonald of Nelsoavllle. Sheets only a junior finished the year
finish
was a· tie for second at the
wlth· a·Jecord of 3$-2.
1986 Phoenix Open.
. .
'
'
.,
~s l!l~"';,'if-d:y~ wh~c~ ~;: :r~
- alii~.·
pit~liect
s. ···u. ·S.··.)·.·8·..
·e·
j
'
j
.
Sh .grade
'
·Results
NA.TIONAL
San ·Dtep vs. Calllor•a. IU Pldm
Spi'lnp, Calif., 4: OS p.m.
.
.
FINAL
IIOCKE\'
L~rdale.
SI'ANDINGS
",1
Aci~UnK Dlll'lslon
Y·BollioD ............ ,
,·
u
101
!
x·llultalo ., ........u r. II as
• ·M• .. rtal ...... .fl ~ II 83
x-Hard~nl ....... 311 3:J 8 H5
«turbec' ............ U 61 7 31
Ca.mlitell (:onlerehce. · Norrill Dll'llllon
\\' L T PI!! .
y-{;hlcuro .... :..... :U1'1 fl II.R
•oS't. 1Aul1 ....... 37 34 It 83
x-TorotMo ........ 38 311 .e 110
I ·MIII.ettlla ..... 31 .W -t 76
Jh.otrolt ............ 211 311 H ')0
·
Smylhe Dlvbdon
J ·Calpry ....... A2 23 15 Ill
·x-F..dme .. on ..... 31 2H H 90
,;.-Winni~J ...... S1 St 11
11:1
x-Lo81\alltles ... U 31 7 75
V.aeouwr ....... :tl "1 U , It
x·dlnc:Hd P..JOII brr11l
y-el ....laed dl\'llktlllltle
2111 23:!
281 2-111
~~ 233
2'15 till
2311 .J07
': us
t~-&
293 'Z78
337 ~5H
Ztl .. 211
~II 32t
3-tli ~5
915 :!R~
Zllll :lHI
33fl 337
2U :till
'~ BaAketbaU
NBA
·are honored.
.
,
No JAmql !11Chedulf'd
..
· &wll~
.
Indianapolis
-
U. S .
Oper
Ch~plo-lps.
Boxlnc
PUadelphla - Fl'anWe
The siXth · grade basketball
team at Salem Center was
honored recently with a banquet.
The team finished with a record
of)3-l and. a league champion·
ship, ·they also took the Meigs
Local Elementary Tournament
Sixth Grade Championship .
These titles are . the first for
Salem Center· since . the school
was built tn i948,
·
. Coaches Frank Ebersbach and
Dennis McKinney presented
each player with a. trophy and
team j ac ket. T eam members are
Bryan Colwell, Mike Jarvi~.
Ryan Cr 1sp, J e H Fi tzwater,
·
J a ke
Gannaway, DaVid Stewart, Eddie Sheppard, and Gary Canter·
bury. The players presented the '
coaches with a team plaque and
an ·autographed · basketball.
C:oaches Mc~ll\My · and Ji]bersbachpresented,the principal of the
schOol Chuck Holliday wilh the
tournament trop
' phy· .
cheerleader advisor Cindy
Allen "resented
trophies and
l"
jackets to cheerl!aelers Angie
Hale, Sabrina Dress, Angie Bar·
- r ett and Chrissy Wright. .The
Cheerleaders al~o presen~ _
a
plaque· to theb' advisor.
The banquet was held at the
Salem Center Firehouse
Mltth~l vL
Kf'nt Hardee, II, junior UP!welatu.
~nep Ba.tketball
Duke Y1.N~ada-LuVep.t~o,
Den~-
NCAA Meli'1 Dlvllion I lour.,..ettt
ChampltJIJh'lp Game, I p.m.
Hodey•
~10.. .
•
No ~huoff c~es Khedttll!d
~C~P.r
·.
MIS&.
Na pmeA .ichedu .. d
_
T~••
""""'"'· FlL -""·'"'The 0.1ano19
mu.h:
Rl• •• , • ..,lro, "'"'" _ IIIOMOO
&..,,.. Open
·
Pon•al
- AH,tll
Ill<•
n1•••
u.....
s.c.-FA;....
¥amlly
c l"'l'""• · '
......11
ExhiiiiUGII
.... Toroll:•l'&. 8&. IAala,alSI.retermura:,
na .• :a: It p.m.
LO• .411~et VI • .-\lila&., al WI!!*' I Palm
P1a., 1:1& p.m.
F1a., 1:30 p.m.
GF GA
Mondq Sperta Calendu
~~&.--.
ch~pions
Baltimore''"'· New York (,\L), ~Fort
LEAGUE
Waleli Conlerenr.t>
PatrlckiMvblie11
W' L T Pb. OF GA
y·NX R11.11~11 .lli 31 13 II$ n o ..
• :New Jerl'le')' ,.J'l 3f S IU 21 5
. x·W-l ... M1 ... 31 33 I . 13 1111 ~7$
'll·NYll ...trK' ,.,3~ II 13 til 211M
. ~ti.Dflh ....... 3t -II " 7t 3111 3st
Pllll. .dpllla .... 30 3! II 71 %H ttl
•
r
a
Scoreboard
...
.
. .
J
"-ee•
f1a., I: II p.m.
.
.........
.;;.tr.....- ".,"'
.
Bueball
·
. Mol&re:.l n. New l'orll' (NLI. at Port
St. IAiele, n&., l:'DI p.m. '
Plttl!bll11• ~ PhiJatlelpJila. 11.1 Cle:u ·
water, f11., J :ts p.m. •
Clncla•U\111. lloatoa. .. WlnicrHav~n.
. Fla., l:tlt.m.
Detroit n.Mia...(lla,atOrkndo. li'la.,
I: If p.m.
..
Hollllt_OII Wll, Ku . . City, al
Qty, I'lL, l:a p.m.
•
1'nu VL Ollie ... (,\L), a18aluotll,
--- .
••••• . ·
Teuorl"', Colo. - v.s. ll>eeol)le
- Skll.lil (."hampionlblpa
.,, ..,..,... - Trad.. lall ...., ..,.... .
. ~·..':!."',. 1' ""'"''" '" ...... Ter.,
T•"""• - OpU•ne• , ..... • Ale•
......... s;; ........... ,...,.,.... ,.,
s......... .......
Leque (AAA ) and Clle herlbnd)o KIIDIT '
lo Knmllle •• "''
' " 1• Car kit Diu .to m11....-1eape
. utdter
.,..,...,..,.,..,r., Ru••••
,.mpln ' " ..·..
•·
Bu....
NBA
·
-s.,...... a.lden8<ol• ....,.
8u J'raiMHca n. Oewlud, at Tuc·
.... Arll .. 1:11 p.m.
Ollcap (NL, •s. MllwaukH, at ·.
O._.er, .Vk .. J:N p.m.
OlliiUid n . le•tle, .. TII!IMIIf, Aria., .
11e1"' v,• .., .... Mil_..,, ......
~:n..~:i:.:~•--rame tor ~Je~~Arate
J :llp.m.
w..,. • .,,~ ·~.. ~...,..,,_,...
.,•••._N....!':'::::. ........,1.,.,
L----~-------------_....,
.
~
·.
___. . ., ·
'
. ··. -
'·•
Bow.soon they
forget.
Monday, Apri 2, 1990
.
Page 6
·~,;;_;_~~~~~----"':"~..;-:,_~.;,;;:.,:;.~7.;....;.....:.,~~--....,:-~~;_~!'""'----::---:-:--~-....--;-t:ha;v:e~a~mo=n;,u:me::;n;tal::;-;prob~~~:em:':in~v:o~lv;,.~;::iZ::ii::ii::i:=:::ii~;;;lC .,. .
LegalizatiOn Ofdrugs
will n·ot
.
solve problems
..
-·
o··u'·ston:.'
•
By Tbe ·Bend
'
1
'The Daily Sentinel
Dear Aaa .LaDders: Of all the
screwball, asinine, muddle·heade4,
half-baked leaers I have seen from ·
' your co~ts. the ~ ~ ·
San Jose lldvocaung the' legalization
· ·of drugs takes the cake.
Let us consider the ramif~ealions
of siach.a decisi911.
.Drugs would become much cheaper
.;8lleastone-f1fththecOSL Then five
times as many peoplecouldand 'NOIIl!1
buy them. We would then have five
times as many addicts. This means
Instead of only 100,000 addicted
babieS being born to addicted mothers eaeh year, we would have h8lf a
million.
After the addiciS gouheir legal fiX, .
they wailld then gQ out and steal,
mug ,and murder to
more, from
iUegal sources. This IS what happenecl when heroin was legalized in
Great Britain.
· · We would immediately need
sevenil. tiriles the present number oC
Me1p JuaJor High, ~nd Meigs High School. · police offiCers, judges, physicians,
l>lctured are students at Siallsbury Elementary,
psychiatrists, nurses, . ho.sp•~ls,
Cand.a ce Gofl, James Bllllngsley, Myca Haynes,
nursing homes,
IDSbtUbOIIS,
and · Adarn Jenkins. Gllllam's programs were
jails
and
prisons,
to
round
up, conal,
funded by the Meigs Local Drug Free Grant
store,
warehouse,
wBICh
over,
treat,
.Program.
·
process, arrest and incarcerate the increasing number of lawbreakers,
zombies and dope-heads.
.
In addition to all this, we wQUid
se.t
. DRUG FREE GRANT PROGRAM - Dan
Gilliam, ~nter, Cincinnati, recently presen!ed a
program: of music, humor, group . participation
and . personal. sharing using guitar, drum.
machine, and harmonica. He communicated the
daagers and . conseguences of drug and alcohol
· ·abuse: .He perfonned at BrQ:dbury, Salisbury,
mental
..Rutland
.
. Church of Christ holds
recent Friendship Night activity
Friendship Night was held
recentlj(at theJlutiandChurchof
Christ with ·Kathy Stewart in
charge of the program.
. A fellowship dinner preceded
the ·program which was emceed
by Donna Davidson. Isadora
Willlams read the "Friendship
Poem,". Jilne Wise sa ng a solo,
"It Took a Mlraci~' ' and Suzy
Carpenter ·had the reading •'May·
-You Have" af(er whicltdl!ffodlls ·
were given to each one present.
·Joan May presented the video
titled "Three Days," which told
of the' death of Christ on the cross
until his resilrrectlon on Easter
. morning which· cllmaxect with
solo by Janet Bolin titiwd "He
Arose." ·
·
• The congregation sane "What
a FriEind We Have In Jesus" with
the closing prayer by the.minis·
ter, Eilgerie Underwood.
·
Attending were Lillie and Sammle Robinson, Edith Lambert,
Judy and Robert Snowden, Bob
Musser, Jane Wise, Donna Davldson •. Pearle Canaday, Vickie
Kennedy, Anna Elizabeth
Turner, Binda -' Diehl, Jestle
Molden, Neva Nich61son, Joe and
Jariet Bolin,.Norman and Allegra
Will, Kathy and Jim 13111Stewart,
Terry Powell, Joan and Bruce
May, Craig and Krystal Bolin
and children, Brenda Bolin and
children, Eugene, Ruth, and
Virginia Underwood, Suzy Carpenter, .Isadora W.llllams, Vona
Gillenwater and Carl Hysell . .
··
. · ..
~~~~~~~~r~~~~:
Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1989.1A.. A.n...,t:'l"
.!.
.-
~
Tim., Syndh..,. and
explode it. - M.W. IN CIELINA,
Cn-.tOI'I! Syndi""•"
OHIO
· DEAR CELINA: Thank you for
your letter. Read on:
··
::
10 rcvene
Dear Aaa Landt.S: I have been are mal!ing, if you want to see
foUowing with interest YOI!l' readeis' marijuana .and cocaine use among
'letters on drug legalization. I have high school students rise to the level
concluded that legalization would be of those now using alcohol, go
a disaster. If we made drup c~. ahead and legalize drugs. When you
legal and readily available, drug use legalize soniething, YOII are' saying
would surely escalate.
it is OK.
~galization advocates say drug
American education h3s enough
useiSamatterofpersonalc~ICe. But troubles. Do we want 10 broaden the
what-about the IOO,OOJ bab1es ~ availabilityandiegalizetheconsumpeachy~tocrack-addlctedmothers. · lion - of substanCes that make our
TheSe m~ants are ravag~ by cocame students less auentive, less compe·
before bulb. What Choice d1d they .. ·teDt and less energetic? Every survey
have?
· ,
1 have seen i.ndicates th81 the vast
An4 what ab.out htgh sc~ool rna' rity of Americans don't want ii.
st~deniS? Acconl;mg to the Nauonal - __ ~INCERELY, WILLIAM 1.
High School Scmor Survey, ~ver60 BENNETI, DIRECTOR, OFFICE
~e~t of h1gh school semo~ ilre OFNATIONALDRUGCONTROL
~~galcohol81least~amonth . POLICY, WASHING10N, D.C.
11us .IS bad news. But manjuana and
· DEAR Wll.LIAM BENNETI: My
cocame use ~ not nearly so preva- mind is made up. I'm wilh you.
ienL Accordmg ':0 the~ s~y.
Do you hovt questions about sa,
18 percent .~f h1gh school seniOrs but no ont to talk to? Ann Lalldtrs'
smoke manjuana at least once a . /xiQklet, "Stx and tht Tttn·Ager: is
mon!h~ and less
4 pen;ent use frarrk and to the point. Stnd a self·
COCI!I~· The trulh IS that the current addressed, long, busil1tss·sizt: tnvt·
pohc1~s of en~orcement and lo~andacMcJ.:ormnneyorderfor
educa~areworking.C~umpuon $3.65 (this inc/ulks postage and
of .man~uana and cocame amon~ luurdlillg) to:· Tuns, c/o Ann Lmr.
sed1ors IS roughly half what rt was "ders: P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 111.
only a few years ago.
60611.0562. (/nCanada,~nd$4.45.)
'
lh:an
The Fftst Baptist Church of . ~vening, AprilS ai 7 p.m. at the Easter' story from -thetriumphai
Middleport will be performing an church loeated at Sixth and . entry through the resurrection of
Easter cantata titled " Lift High Palmer streets In Middleport.
Jesus .and features songs from
the Cross" on Psalm Sunday
The cantata portrays the previous cantatas inthepastand
songs written for Sandi Patti and
Steve Green. Danna Grueser
coordi.na ted the narration an~
Sharon Hawley is the char
· (Reg. u ·.S. Patent orr.)
liked the campus because lids
director.
.
. By .\)olted Pres• International
"swaying palm trees" remlnde
.Pastor Jim Seddorr will' serve·
· ~udents spoof campus
hlm of home.
as the narrator-<~nd various choir
with Noriega plan
."I want to work with the youth
members have speaking, parts.
MIAMI (UP!) - A student of the University of Miami," the
Chris Rouse is the pianist and
newspaper scored an April former dictator was quoted as
Heien Fields is the organist for
Fools' scoop ·W~th a prank story saying. ·
the cantata. Lighting and sound "',
saying Manuel Noriega had been .. "This is a proud moment for
effects . will be used In the
freed from prison under a work· . the University of Miami," unl·
crucifixion scene and a cross will ·.
SHANE MILHOAN
release plan and would teach versity Pres}dent Edward T.
be centered at the front of the :
"Geography of Coca-Growing Foote was quoted as saying. ·
church.
·
•
Regions" at !he University o!
.In truth, Noriega remained In
Performing solos will be Mike ,
Miami.
custody near Miami awaiting
Shuler,
Danny White, Donna
Rhett and Carla Milhoan ·are
"A lot of people thought It was . trial on federal cocaine traffickGrinste'ad,
Sam Cowan and Tra·
announcing the birth Of a son,
real," said Tom Higgens, editor lng and racketeering charges,
cey,
and
Donna·
Grueser. Sharon
Shane Allen, on Feb. 13 at Holzer of Tile Miami Hurricane. "Even
Hawley
and
Mike
Shuler will
MediCal Center.
Landmark sign
administrators. Students were
perform
a
duet
a.nd
a woman's
He. weighed seven pounds and . threatening to drop out of the
says HA'LLYWOOD
trio
consisting
of
Helen
Fields,
15 ounces and was 21 inci1t!l> long. university."
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -April
Cathy
'Riggs,
and
Melan:le
Marbuilding of a monument to black
_ Christopher · Broyles, Gallla
Maternal grandparents are
The headline In Friday's Issue, Fools' D~y pranksters altered
shall will sing.
Academy High School, ~as the revolutionary veterans. This · 'Mr. and Mrs. Jack King, Rock
the last published before April the famous Hollywood . sign to
The cantata also features a
monument will be on the Mall in Springs Road, .Pomeroy.
winner of the oration contest at
Foqls' Day, said, ''University read HA'LLYWOOD, but nature
male
quartet consisting of RayEwings Chapter of the Sons of the Washington, D.C.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. arranges work·reiease pian, bested the jokers by obscuring
mond
Fields, Billy Marshall,
The chapter unanimously authAmerican Revolution meeting
and Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, Fiat- frees Panama's ousted leader."
the modified landmark with a
Mike Shuler, and Danny White.
held recently at the Meigs County orized a donation to the marker woods Road, Pomeroy.
.,
The phony report said Noriega heavy blanket of fog.
Other members singing are
and a letter to the 'edltor urging
l'rluseum.
. Rhonda · Tyo, Debbie Dingey,
After dinner, the chapter and other groups to help.
Cortna Barnltz, Beulah White,
The centennial video of the
Its guests enjoyed the annual
Carolyn Davis and Eric White,
SAR
haS
been
released.
The
competition of the Douglass G.
The public I~ invited to attend.
chapter
voted
to
buy
a
copy
for
High Historical Oration Contest
Alfred United Methodist guests of Mr. and Mrs . Warren
sponsored by the National So, p~esentation tp ,other groups.
Van Meter.
·
•,Church will host Cluster Services
. ciety of the Sons of the American .. Plans are ,beiJig made to mark
Mr .. and ·Mrs. Dave Williams,
on sunday at 7: 30 p.m. Florence
RevolUtiOn. The . cont&l(t is de- rf;'volutionary· veterans' graves,
Belpre, and Aaron Wiiiianis,
~nn Spencer will lead t~e sersigned for sophomores,, jul)iors, . one at Chester and the other !n
·. , vice. Easter Sunrise Service will Athens, were Sunday dinner
Washington County.
and seniors In high schooL
be 6:30 a.m. Easter ' morning. · guesis of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
,The chapter discussed the
·, The topic ·had to do with the
Marilyn Robinson and · Ruth Henderson on March 18. Aaron is
FOR ElSTER
American Revolution and tile recent ruling by a u .s , District .
2lfora
two·
month
leaving
Match
Brooks
will
be
leaders.
Easter
Meigs County Marvels
Liliei, M111111, Tulips,
levancy of that topic to today's Court sayl!lg· that flag antibreakfast . will follow and the study • trip in Austria and Ger·
The
Meigs
County
Marvels
4-H
desecration
laws
are
unconstituHyacinths, Hydr•1•a•,
.. vents. Broyles's speech dis·
many. There he win be part of a
public' Is Invited to attend.
Clu6 met March 12 at the
ussed the comparison of Tho- tional. The SAR supports a
group of Ohio University stuMaxine
Goeglein,
secretary
of
Caladimas Paine to Andrei Sakharov. cons)ltuti6nal amendment to Mlddieport Library with two . the Meigs Co-operative Parish, dents who wlll ·be finishing their
ALSO: Complete line of
advisors and 14 members In
He rec~ived a $125 cash award stop flag desecration.
German studies.,
.
.
presented
a
plaque
for
O\ltstandv
...t ..ltandleM.. '
The next meeting will be held attendance.
a'nd a plaque for his prize. He will
ing
service
to
Thelina
Henderson
Mrs.
Wilber
Parker
at
tended
Project selection. W~jS · dis·
. Plants, lloolllh11 .....
. cpmpete. in the state finals In late April 26 at the Meigs County
at Alfred wors~lp services on the Children's Choir Festival at
cussed
and
new-members
were
Museum. The speaker will be the
foil• llantlntl ...., ..
April ln,C:Ieveiand.
the Racine United Methodist
March 18.
' ·
; A presentation was made by recipiel!t of the SAR Law En -' welcomed.
Church and :visited Irefle Parker
fruit
and Flowerhltl TrHt,
Mrs.
Goeglein
gave
the
history
A demonstratioh on "How to
Chapter' President Keith A~hiey forcement Medal, which Will be
and
Mildred.
·
Caid,weii
at
of
the
parish,
which
was
formed
Shrubs, l•aleci• and
Give a Demonstration" · was ·
on the support of thf! SAR for the ·presented that evening.
Syracuse.
in
1971.
Present
pr
jects
include
0
Rhododondront
presented by Donia Crane.
food and clothing banks, radio
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
At the March 24 meeting,
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
program, .contact and chlldren:s Floyd Avis and Bob were Mr.. and
officers were . elected and
SYUC:USI. OHIO
Mrs. Tom Avis, Jonathan and
members received their project · choir. Dorothy Jeffers and Cha· Meghan, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe
992-5776
rles Goegleln weretpeCiaiguests
books.
0
an
Dell
9·11· Sun. 1-11
Poole,
all
local;
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
ai the presentation.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Chris
Wren
and
Larry
Spencer,
Racine.
port Garden tlub . 'wm meet
MONDAY
·
Hilltop 4fl Club, ·
family, Sabina, ·were recent
The Hilltop 4-H Club met
SYRACUSE · - The Sutton Monday, 7:30p.m. at the Middleport Presbyterian (:burch. Mrs. March 13 at the ,Pentecostal
Townshl~ Tru~tees Will meet
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. In the Ronald Reynolds will be hostess. Assembly with two advisors and
' 'T~e Family Herb Garden'' will 15 members attending. Business
Syracuse Municipal building.
Ellen' Rife lost the most weight
be prese~ted by ~rs . . William ~ items discussed Included the
PUASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
and
Judy Eblin was the ruhner up
'
· · ·
constitution and by . laws, a
POMEROY - The Meigs Lo· . Morris.
in the Monday class of Slinder·
. cal Band Boosters will meet
· ·rund·raiser, and who would give
elili held at Five Points.
POMEROY - There will be a demonstrations.
I
J\1onday l!'t ·. 7. p.m. in the high '
.In the Tuesday night class -at
.'
·
rummage.·
sale.
at
·
the
First
schopl band room. ·
'· . ·
Joshua.-Roush gave a rabbit ' Mason, Kim·Varian lost the most
Baptist Church in Pomeroy on demonstration. The next meet·
weight' and the runner up was a
; CHESHIRE - "Women Alive" Monday, Tuesdl!Y, and Wednes- ing is April 12.
tie between Roxam1 Barton and
day.
·
II
will meet Monifay at 7 p.m . at the
Kathy Honaker.
Kyger Creek · Clubhouse. The
New members are being ac·
Country Crossroad 4H Club
TUESDAY
Gingles will give a slide presen tacepted and the classes are under
The Country Crossroads 4-H
MIDDI$PORTThe
Middlelion on their trtp to the Holy
the direction of JoAnn Newsome.
ClubmetMarch17 at the home of
Land. Refreshments will be port Lodge F and AM will meet Ruby . Pickens, advisor. Six
Tuesday, 7 p.m. Inspection will
served.
be Friday at 6: 30 p.m. with a members and two advisors at·
tended the meeting .
. LETART - .The Letart Trus- dinner. There will be work In the
The Meigs County Bi!ef Cat tie
I .
The members discussed a
feliowcraft degree. Practice for
tees ·will ·meet at the office
lodge officers wllll!e Su!iday at 2 de$1gn. for theft club t-shftts and Association is sponsoring a beef
biJII~irlg on Monday at 7 p.m.
the possibility of asking someone meettng on Thu.r sday at the
,p.m.
'
to come for a talk on fire safety. Harley Rice farm .on Towna~lp
:coLUMBIA ,. TO,WNSHIP ~Road 313 (Rice Run .Road),
Columbia · Township Trustees . MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- The m""bers broke Into groups Tuppers Plains.
· ·
Port Art! Council will meet aad ·worked on . theft project
wllt'meet Monday, 7:30 .p.m. at
There
will
be
presentations
on
books.
Leroy
Landers
a
ave
a
.Tuesday at 7 p.m. at its new
the fire station. ·
·
hi
tensile
fencing,
cost
comparisafety
report.
,
·.
location, North Second beSide
son and grazing management . .
Refreshments were served tiy
Johnson's Vart~ty .
Displays will he. on fencing and
' LETART FALLS- The Letart
Julie Nakao and Leroy Landers.
beef equipment.
·
·
Falls PTO wlll .meet Monday, 7 . ' POMEROY - The Ladies At the Saturday meeting,
r . I 1 - ..,, IIIIICII, TV'S, PLOOI COYDIIII
,
Displays
caa
be
viewed
from
p.m. at the school. Ali parents
Auxlltary Fraternal Order of members viewed a aUde set on
4-8 p.m. and the liteetlng will
. are urged to attend.
Eag)l!s wlil meet 'TufS11ay at 8 · how to give a demonstration and
·
start at 6: 30 p.m. Refreshments
p.m. Members are to bring .a · they ' also worked on thl!lr
will
be served.
MIDDLEPORTMiddleprojects.
'
.
. .
.
~vered "dish for the potluck.
a
I
Middleport church StftS Easter cantqta
Quirks in the news...
Milhoan. birth
Ewin~
Chapter,. SAR
selects speech ·wtnn~r
Meigs
Alfred area news notes
-County
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRUI8 SEASON!
4-H hews
' '
Cqmrriunity Calendar
.
Slinderella meets
It's no easy task to erase
the the blight of drug
abuse. Education is vital,
but it must be backed by
·· a community-wide ·
message that drug abuse is
· unacceptable.
ing morality and ethics. Csn you
imagine a civilize(! government
becominganaccompiiceinthecrimc
·or deslroying its own citizens?
Fortunately, there are
anti-drug efforts going on
·. in ,every town. Do .your
part to help 5ave lives. Get
involved.
-----------------4
JOHN A. WADE, MD., .Inc.:
EAR, NOSE & THROAT .·
GENERAL ·ALLERRGIST
WE HA~E HEARiNG AIDS" -~
(304) 675-1244
'·
'l
..
Beef meeting 'on tap
. A Pu,blic ·. service.Message
Brought To YoU
~
:uy••
.
. l
·THE DAILY-·-SENT'INEL .
.
"
.OPEN TONIGHT
'TIL 8:00 P.M.
.· l
lflf/N"~Oif I
DOw•• ,._,, o•o
992·3671
the
II
....
'I
�..
•.
Page-6.:....The Daily Sent~al
•
of
.
..Free sugartests planned
. A free finger s tick blood sugar testing program ls being
offered by the Meigs County Helath· Department, Norma
Torres, nursing dlrector,·annol,inced today,
.
·.
Appointments for the free test may be made. by calling the
department at 992·6626. Dates for the.free ~estare Aprll12 and
April 13 from 8 a.m . to 1~ a.m . .with ~2 appointments being
. .
·
. . .
. accepted for each day .
Totres stated ihat the program Is hot for known diabetics who,
do their own testing to determi!IC s~gar leveL )Us set up to test
residents who.do not know whether they·have a sugar prQ~lem.
,.
.
I(
'
Six die on Ohio roads
By United Press lnterna~loRal
Dally l!lock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Jryce and Mark Smith
of Bluqt, Eillll lc1Loewl ·
Ani Electrte Power ............. 3Q%
AT&T ., ....•... :..~ ............ :..... .41%
Ashland 011 .. , ....... , .............36%
Bob Evans ............. ,............ 12~
Charming Shoppes ..... ..... ..... 9%
City Holding Co ................. .13'n
Federal Mogul .. ,....... :..... ..... 17~
GOodyear T&R ........ ...........35%
Heck's ...... .... :: ............... .. , ... 2%
Key Centurion ... ......... :.......14% .
Lands~ End •... ~ .... ...1 ••••••••••••• 19%
Limited Inc .......... , .. ........... 40%
Multimedia Inc ........... .... ,... 78l4· ·.
Rax Restaurants ........; ....... :. 2% .
Robbins & Myers ........ ........ 15'n
Shoney's .Inc... :.................... 12%
Star Blink ..... ......... ,...... :-:·.... 19~
Wendy's Int'l ..... ........... ....... 4%
Worthington Ind .... , .... ,........ 21%
No one wins Super
CO P.UTER
SPIN . BALANCE ·'-"FOR 3 • GET 4,.
.
-,
'
I
. CLEVELAND (UP!) :... No big
winners· In Saturday· night's
Super Lotto game pushed the
I~~Ckpot for WednesdAy night to
$6 million, Ohio Lottery officials .
said Sunday. .
. ·
None of the $3,604,933 worth of
tickets had the numbers 1, 8, 12,
20, 26, and37. But 139of them had
five of those numbers, making
the tickets .worth Sl,OOO, Another
5,587 had four of the numbers,
each worth 175,
·
In the Kicker pardon, there_
was one tl¢ket ·.with the number
. 497383, and It's worth $100,000.
· Ol!t of the $675,783 worth of .
tickets, LOttery officials . said
four of them !Jad the first five
nllltlbers, good for $5,000 each; 60
· had the fltst fuor for $1,000; 632
had the first t~e for $100, and
6,122 had the first two for .$10.
.
.
~quads hav~· busy weekend .
'
.
685. .:-'
'
Auxiliary to meet
.
.
The Ladles Auxiliary VFW
Post ,9053, Tuppers Plains, wlli
meet Thursday at 7:30 ' p,. m.
Election of officers will be.held.
Artists to be at church
. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Everly,
Michigan; ~and artists, will beat
the . Calvary Pilgrtm Chapel on
Wednesday at 7:20 p.in. The
~reb Is . located on Route 143.
Rev . VIctor Roush. ,invites the
public.
- Council lo meet
The Racine ·VIllage Co11ncti
wtu meet tonlgJit (Monday) at 7
.- p.m. at the Star ~Ill Park.
Games party .
.
: The XI' Gamma Mu Chapter,
. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
. sponsor a games party on Thui's·
d~ at 7: 30' p.m. at the old
American legion hall In Middle·
port. The party is ()pen .t o all
groups of Beta Sigma Phi.
·
Middleport Arts CouncU
• •· ·
A bunny making class wm ·be
sponsored by the Middleport Arts
Council beginning Thursday.at 7
p.m.
The class Is being taught by
Susan I;laker and more lnforma·
.lion may be obtained by calling
992,· 7733, 992-2675, or 992-5983 In
the evenings. The fee for the
class Is $20.
LUBE,. OIL & FllTER
CHANGE
Another class offered-wilL be
sweatshirt painting. This class
wlli be held April 19. The ·
. instructor wlll be Marilyn Meier
. and the cost wlll be $18. Deadline
. for registration for the sweat:
shirt painting class .will be April
. ' , .• .
. 12.
, The classes will be ta~ght tn'
the Middleport Arts Council
Chambers at .137 North Second
Ave. next to Johnson's Variety .
Store. ·.
.
·
·
...... ·llkll will ...
r•
by 1he Ba-d of
County Commliolonero. Cou!l Hou-. Pomeroy, Ohio 41711 unll
noon on Aprl 20, 1180 •d
the bide wll ... 0 .........d
...... 81oucl 111 1:!I! p.m. ,on
the 20111 deY of April, 1880
. .d • •. ......... .
' the bide wllbe , ........ •d
o...,ld on 1he IMI Wedn.O.
. dAly of' uc!h month fot 1111
furnlelllng of bll...,liiou, ,.-.
......, for the Mllll County
~ghwJiy: Dip bua;t. Eallm8IM C~UM~illoo of lqilld
Mligo
.........
Nil...... ·-·
m....,. 80!1.000
plfonl for
1he - · Pt ijJIIIo . . 10 be
i'lllumld 011 bid Ianni .,.,.
ptlld by .... Mllll County
Engtn..,. llld moy be obUinld through 1he Enai-
,_.,ottae,
. .
~ HlilllleiMI, C....
ao.rd of Molgi County
• Commie.,_,
14) 2. I, 21c
·
Public N...1,...
ua ~
r
bldo.
·BERNAfiD B. HU!IST
DIRECTOR
MARCH 21; APRIL 2
AGGREGATE
S.olod · bide VENDORS:
will be re·
celvod tiv the Boord. of ·
County Commloalon,
wo, Court Hou•. Pom11oy,
Ohio 46711 umM noori on
20, 1 990 11nd the bido
be open.,. ond reid
llloud ot 1 p.m. on the 20th
doy of AprU, 1880, lcir 1he
turnlohWig of 111 kinde ond
• • of -aarJIIIIII lhel may .
be roquired by the Meig~
Countv Hlghwoy Qeport·
m11nt. Propoul11roto be,..
h~=================r1
K·and J CONSTRUCTION
Melg~
1urnldonbldformtauppliod
by the vondor• . end will be
openld on . the ""'" end
GHG ~lAlLEY
-·
•-~
l'!lftll, - • mfto.
- Hltoll, 44611- Ext.
Ftl, .... ....,, a.&...
~
.
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING
"POSTAL JOBS•
IIIII rl $1U1Mr. ,_ !..,.. onrl
II9PIIC011on In-Ion Cell
(211) ,DW1117, nt. 1M7. I A.M.
to IP.Il (CST) 7 dlye.
......--......
AVON • .All .....
Ceil -,..
EARNIIONEYI:IIdlnt . . . .l
!'l!rll!l'
yr. ._.... polontlol,'
....... (f)
101M.
~ombinatifin''QUaI'1ty and. RIGSanuu
-'-1 I priCIS
· ".
. A GriQt
-«'1111 hL y • .
WE
GO TIE Em•:~~·~~,;
992-6110
IIi========::!========~
Iloilo
ploce for
opacified,
bid · mey
Speciflca·
be ob·
tolnld through the Engi·
1 Office.
:
Mory Hobltetter, Clerk
Boerd of Meigo County
(41 2 1 9, 2tc
.
::.:--=
...... ...-...~
s ."M...
•
Help Wanted
SUN'S UP TANNING
Now Lima ld., luH•d, .Ohio
tommitslonefa
.and VInton Countiel. l;)y
.
The Director ruarve~ ·t he
right to rejoc:t any and aft
bido.
BERNARD B. HURST
DIRECTOR
.
t3) 28; (4) 2, 2tc
SJ. 3.85 .
• . !~~~~~es ligbt
.•
• Please call for
appointment ·
•,
With•this coupon
®
.,
EAGLE
SMALL ·ENGINE
CENTER
TIRE -ROTATION
'& PRESSURE CHECK
'
.·.
USED .OWIIS
NIW YAIDMA• & 1~n1~oj
'
.
,!
. noaum
c""'' . •c
,· Gettop ti.re mileage"with tqp tire care. Ou.r tire rota·
,~tion and inflation chec~ will help your tires wear longer
, and more. evenly . Rot.a tion .is pa(tici,Jiarly importanJ for ..
.
. {
ftont wheel drive. vehicles and some all season radials . .
~
·
'
s.rw~ce
lyaa Parts ond Sen·lce,l
Mow•o. llldlro, Chain
s...............
'
. With this cou
t
PAT HILU FOlD
949-2969
Middleport, Ohio
141 2. 9; 2tc
COUNTRY
MOBILE .
HOME PARI
co~~1~~JgRs
' ~-
O.NROE'SHOCKS
MONROE
SJ
MATIC
.HEAVY
·· Installed DUTY
AMERICA'S
BEST SEL[ING .
....
SHOCK
PRONTO
I
·
F1t' Most Popular cars
~gw
'
S4910
AS
Catd of Thanks
f
With ,this coupon
,.
•
.
Wtth rn;s .c,; oupon
We wo.u ld like
to thank
everyone who
was there for us
when we lost
our son.
, Jeremy, March
22. 1990.
·, There's no way
we can name
everyone. there
were so many.
Again, thank
, you, .everyone.
:Kenny and Carol
·
Guinther
Joe 8t Janice
Glenn
..•
STATE Of OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbuo, Ohio
Morc:h 1 e, 1990
Conlrlct Sill-.
Legol Copy No. 90·318
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Soiled propoute wHt be
raceived 11 tho office of the
'
I
duri~g
•Mobile Home
Rentllls
• . •Lot R. en~.1 1
•
992·74 9
lt. 33 Nerth of
p
Iii
Ollllroy•
o
o·
r;::::=::='=·l:2::'fl8.=tf=n~
.· FURJ4ACE
FURNACE
--·r-
Happy Ads
DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAIR
·'
l_... ot Yllley i.unil.r
............... Olo.
,_RTS AND SERVICE ..
For Molt 2 and 4-cyclo
•nt: tor .
' l•e IO 8~·
We WOIIkl
pre11 our deepeltgrat·
· ~ ilude to 1he following
support
Perta
FURNACE
Stock
1
· Homlllle,WoedMier,
Tocumaoh, Brlgga •
• .
Stratton.·
!MNOrli tor lhlir meny
et:t1 of .ktndn- end
Call Charlie or Worthy For Service Appointments
•Mobile Home
Director
of the Olllo Dopert·
mem
otTranoporutlon;
Cof·
l.!.'!"bu~, Ohio, untl 10:00 A.
Stondord Time.
Tuo•dl,y, AprH 10,1990, tor
lmprovementeln:
Athono. O.fllo, Hocking. .
Mel11,
Monroe. Morgen,
Noble, Vinton ond Wuhlng.
PARTS AND SERVICE
ton Countleo; Ohio, on he·
ALL MAKES
tlon ATH 33·0.00 on United
GAS OR ELECTRIC
l!lteo Route 33 In Atf)eno
County 1111d other !ltrlouo
KEN'S . APPUANCE
routeo ond Mctlono '"
Athone, Glllll.. ,Hocking. ·
.SERVICE
Mo111. Monroe, Morpn,
992·5335 .. 915-3561
Noble. Vinton ond Wuhlng.
Across friNw Poet Office
ton Countlu. by furnlolllng
and ln. .lllng raleld pev•
217 E.
·mam morker m-rillo. · · ~::;::::;::::;:;::=!!!i
Protect Longtll: 0.00 fMI I'
or 0.00 mile: Work length:
Vorlouo
fill
or varloui
Pevem.,l
Width:
voriM.mHe:.
"The c~a~. oet lor -..pt•
tion of thlo Work ahltl be 11
111 forth In the ljjdcllilg pro-
SER~ICE
We can r~ ainl re·
tore radiators and
heater corts. We can
.also add boil and rod
out rllliaton. ~e Cillo
repair Gal T.U.
HOURS: M· F 9· 7
Sot. 9·&: ·ctooed Sun .
Public N~lce
,·
• .Avall()bte in Sizes to
.
NOTICE TO . .'
BITUMINOUS VENDORS:
- · Olid
pr""'!"Y . ~
mlltong
.
Poul E. Kfo111, Secretory
(3) 2!; 14) 2. 13. 17 4tc
•
11
GallipoliS
I VICinity
Public NotiCe
...... INTENANCE
FREE. BATTERIES
Public Notice
on
NOTICE TO
Services
• Chassis lubrication ,
and oil chai"'Qe
.
5 YEAR
clived
~
,
\
will
.Meigs announcemen,ts._....;.....o._
ond wHt toe coiloldorld on
the lieoio ollhe toto!.
·: ,Po~.··
•
..
Sonlh Centra&.Ohio
dec as tonal wet snow or rain
Monday .night, with a low In the
mid 30s. Chance of preclpltatlol) · .
Is '80 percent, Wet snow or naln
likely Tuesday, with highs lh the
lower 40s. Chan11e of preclplta·
tlon Is 70 percent.
·
· Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday,
with a chance of rain on Thurs-.
day. Highs will be In the 50s
Wednesday and Thursday, and in
the. 40s Friday. Overnight lows
will be mainly In the 30s through
the period.
·
· !,
..d Bovingo Cornpony, 211
Wool" SicDnd Strut .....
rnoroy, Ohio, oc~.,C:: ~
II¥'-' m. ~d
..
cloy of Aprl, 11180. 11 3:00 p.
.m. lor 1he PIIIPMI of IIICIIng
·dl;-.tora Md 1he l - I o n
of ouch otlw bulirMU• moy
Eech bidder ohelt be r•
quirld to fit, with hl1 bid a
c:t!rllflld chiCk or ·-Ill_. a
check lor ·on emoum equot
to five per cont of hie bid. but
In no event mora then fifty
thou11nd doHera. or a bond
lor ioii P• Cent of hlo bid:
poyoble to thl Director.
Bldderi mu• IPPIY, on the
proper lormo. tor queiilicatlon It leiot 11n doyo prior to
tho dMe ut for opelng bide
l~ "occordlnce with Chopter
J521 Ohio RIIVIold CC)de.
Plonl end apeciticetlon•
ere on tile in the Deportment·
of Trenopol1alion end tho offlee of the Dlolrlct Deputy
Director.
The Oirectpr resorvea the
rigbl to reject o~y and all
Not~tce- · B"sil1ess
_P...,..ub_llc.....
i• E~ch bhldw ohail be r•
"q uire~~ to fife with hio ·bid I
:,corliflt!d check or ... hi.:.
•check tvr en amoum equot
.to fiile p., cant of hie bid. but
1. in no· event mora t~n fifty ·
; 'lhouund doilero. or ,, bond
·•..for ten per cont of hli bid,
·PIIyoble to the Director.
, Bldderunuotapply, on tha
_t -proper form .a. for qualific•
. ~tion ~ leut ten day• prior to
•the diiiMttor opening blclo
< ~~ accordanCe With Chipt• ·
• 6626 Ohio Revia8d Code.
· ·"' Plan• · and Specification•
... on file In the oe.,.rtmonl
.• of Trenoportatlon end the office of the Dlitrict Deputy
Director.
·
. 2-WHEEL FRONT DISC :' Install new front · brake pads and grease seals
• Re'u;jace lr9rit rotors • Rep.ack front wheel .bearings ·• ' Inspect ·
calipers · and. hydraulic svste~ • Add lluid ldoes "not iN:Iude rear
wheels) •
.
·
.
·
·
.·
' . .
4 · WHEEL DRUM : Install new b~ake lin1ng, all ,four wheels • Ne!'J front
Qrease-·seals • Resurface drUms • Repack frOnt b88rings • lnspecf
hydraulic syste·m • Add fluid
·
.
,
t::\
.S
Hospital news
Mrs. F1o Strickland, of Pomeroy,
Helen Lyons
Mrs. Jeanne Hines Lletwiler, of
· .Well-known Meigs County rest· Columbus, and Dr. Mary Phyllis
dent and former business .. Whitcomb, Detroit, Ml~h .; . a .
.' woman, Helen Zweifel Lyons, 95, ·good friend, Paul Ray Reibel, of
;of Sprl11g Ave., Pomeroy, died Reynoldsburg; and many other
Sunday at . Veterans Memorial · relatives .and fr;iends.
· ,' •
:Hospital following an ~xtended
·Besides her parent~. she was
Illness.
.
· .
preeeded In death by her busMrs. I,yons .was born Sept. 19, band, Nyman Zweifel; and a
1894 at Pometoy to the l<ite Henry sister and · brother-In-law Hen··
and Jljary Ann Hines Stralle.: She .. rletta a~ Earl Jenkins, ' ,
was the owner of the Meigs,
Services wlll be' Wednesday, 2
Bendvue, Liberty and Temple p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home, .
Theaters lri the Pomeroy- , with Rev. Paul · V6ss, of the
Middleport area,· and was ·a Church of God, GaiUpolls, a.nd
member· of Pomeroy's Trinliy Rev· Roland Wildman, of the
Congregational Church~ the Trinity Congregational Church,
Order of Eastern Star. Chapter Pomeroy, both officiating. •An
186; and the Order of the White · Eastern S~ service
held
Shrine o{ Jerusalem, Chapter 14, 7: 30p.m. Tuesday. Calllnghours
·
at the funeral home wlil be 2 to 4
Galllpolls.
Survivors Include first cousins, · p.m. aJtd 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday'.
of
CO ...... Inc. ,...,.
the otllcie ·of Form••
PubliC Notice
po;ai.··
: mowing, Phue '>. II. Worl<
'· Longth: &1.88 mil11.
"'Tbe date eet for camPI•
' tion of thla work ohoil be ..
tet lorth in the bidding pro·
With this c·oupon ,
Your Choice
PICK·3 • ticket sales .totaled
$1,529,041;50;-wtth a payoff due .of
$384,738.50. ' .
Weather ·
Notice
_f
arnount bid.
,•
Port•1thru I
. 1-'~., -~.,....,=~-• A!hano, ..Hocking. Maigo
~ and VInton Coumleo, Ohio.
'-'l" on varlou• routu and Me·
. • tiona, lht VIII -a e.of AI bony.
~~ i n Athena, Hock~ftg. .Meig~ ·
• and Vl"ton Counlieo, by
•mowing, Philo I. . Work
Length: 111.88 mil•.
. . Parte 9 thru 18
., Ath'"'· Hocking. Moiga
and Vinton Countieo, Ohio,
· .'.;on ~•riou1 rout11 and 18C- ·
., t iOno, 1he VIII-so of Alblny,
,;in Athlno, Hoclcing. Meigo
~···· -~.,
..
,....,.....___
Nalloe
are off•ed • one contr1ct
~·
· '
Most US cars & some imports
~
'
. BRAKE SERV,JCE
I
.
PICK-4
Squads. of' the Meigs County
. On Sunday at 12:47 a .m. the ·
7920;
J;:mergency,Sei'vlce an.s wered 12 · Pomeroy unit was ' cat!l!d to
call& for ·assistance over the
Pomeroy village hall for Becky . PICK·4 ticket sales totaleil
Davidson who was taken to $298,898, · .~lth a payoff due of
weekend.
.
.
On Saturday at 2: 02 a .m. 'the
Veterans, ,at 5:30a.m. the Syra· $138,200.
" . . su~~er Lolto
· Middleport . unit ·w~nt. to River·
cuse ·unit went to Water St. for
l, 1!. 12,•2Q, 26, and 37.
side Apartments for Joseph
Jane Teaford who was taken to
Super Lotio ticket sales totaled
Wilson who was transported to
ijolzer; 'a t. 7:58a.m. the Middle- ·
Pleasant Vailey.Hospltal; at 7:44 . (logt \mit transported Mary Long $3,603,,33. • ... ''
Klc.k er
a.m. the Racine unittOOk Charles. from her Beech Street residence
497383.
Bissell from his Bashan home to
to Holzer; and at 10:34 a.m. the
Kicker ticket sales totalfd
St. Joseph Hospital In ,Parkers·
Tuppers 'Plains squad tQOk
burg: and· at . 8: 34 a ,m. the
Wayne Brlckles from Main St. to $675,783,
'"' r
,
Pomeroy unit took Ivan Eblin . Veterans.
from his MechaniC Street home
At 1:29 p.m. tlie Porn~ unit
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
was called ·,a· Osborne St. for
At 11: 11 a.m. the ·Reedsville · Kenneth .Kleln who was taken t.o
'
, Vetrans Memorial
tinlt was called to the Reedsville , Veterans, · at 2:06: p.m. the
saturday Admissions: Gall .
residence of Collin Chevalier who TUppers Plains squad transwas taker! to Camden Clark ported Roland Glenn from Silver Miller., Mlddlepori.
Discharges: None:
Hospital In Parkersburg; at .5: 53 · Ridge to Veterans and at 4:45
Sunday Admissions:· Helen
p.m. the Middleport squad went p.m. the Middleport unit went to
to Beech Street for ·Peggy Eilts Page ·St. for Kenneth Hartley
Wl.ll, Chester; Roland Glenn,
Reedsville.
.I'
who . was .taken to Veterans · who was taken to Veterans.
·
Memorial Hospital. ·
ptscl!arges: None.
-~·· Area . deaths.._
. __
~·
With
LOUery ·numbers
•
.
Balam;ed wheels smooth
. ,ydur ride,
help promote long, even
tread wear.
Lotto''jackp()t
land, and' a .pedestrian, victim of
a hit-and-run accident In Trum·
bull CountY, died Saturday.That
pedestrian remi!lned unidentl·
fled late Sunday. ·
·,
VIctims InclUded;
Friday alght
. Cleveland: Geraldine Flowers,
38, Shaker Heights, and M. Umar
Abdullah, 42, Cleveland, killed In
two-car crash on ·a aeveland
street.
Three people, Including two
Saturday
'19-year-old men, were killed
Warren: unidentified 'pedes·
early Sunday morning when trlan killed when struck by w
· their speedlllli car collided with vehiCle tn Trumbull CQunty.
another on · a Parma street.
Sunday
.
PoUce said they had checked the
Parma: Mark M. Bischof, 19,
· car driven by Mark Bischof of Seven ·Hills, his passenger, Rl·
Seyen .Hills I!S going 116 miles an cbard Novotny, 19, .parma; and
'hour. Bischof, his passenger and James M. Han!l&n, 44, Middle·
the driver of the other car were burg Heights, kUled when' Bl: , cU: yEL!\ND (UPH ;__ Satur·
. k!lle(!.
. ..
schof's speeding car crossed the day's . winning Ohio Lottery
Two people died Friday night · center llne In Parma and hit numbers:
· In one acCident, also Jn Cleve· Hannan's vehicle.
.. PICK-3·
At least six people, three ·of
them ln 'onecrasb, were 'kllled in
traffic accidents In Ohio since ·
Friday evening, the Ohio. High· .
way Patrol said late Sunday.
The count showed two deaths
Friday night, one Saturday, and
three Sunday.
. .
.
The three accidents were re·
portd from northeastern .Ohio. ·
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF pHtO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
~
Colllmbuo. Ohio
· "'
Morch 111, 1110
:.. :'
Contract 881•
'
"
legol C<lpy No. 10-320
~ UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
k
s..Jid propoulo '""' .toe
. l:, r~vod 11 the ofll.. of the
•, Director of 1he Ohio D - ·
" ' ment of Tronopol1alioil, Col·
,: umbuo. Ohio, unti 10:00A.
·" M.. Ohio ltanclord Time,
:;. Tueodly, AprH 10, 1980. tor
.. improvem~1 In: .
·
•...Parta1 thru 1&.1ncluaivo
'
'·~
"•
The D,uiy Sentinel- Page 7 _
Ohio
Publ~
.--Local news briefs... -~,-. Stocks
Continued from page 1 ·
.
· pollee lnvestlgate<l an accident tnvolvln.g nettiier damages rior
· Injuries. A.cardrtven by Christopherllal!ntng, Bradbury Road,
Middleport, was struct;: In the rear by a car driven by Donna
Oldaker,.Hartfor.d, W. Va .. Oidal!:er contendedthat the Hanning
car rolled back Into the front her car, while Ha11nlng said the
Oldaker car moved forward when the llgl!t changed striking the .
I · rear of hts car. There were no citations.
..
, .. ·
The second accjdent Investigated by.pollee over the weekend ·
occurred Sunday at the l!ltersectlon of Ch~ter Road and Nye
. Ave. Beverly Dowell, Racine, was' stopped at the Intersection
when her vehiCle was struck II) the rear by a car driV!!n by Judy
· A11$pach, Middleport. Anspach told wuee that her gas pedal
stUck and she was unable to get her car stopped.
.·
There was.ltght damage to the left relr of the Dowell vehjcle,
. and light d;unage to the passenger side and front ott he A!lspach
cat. Anspach was cited for failure to control, and Dowell for no·
. financial ~·ponsli)Uity .
·
2. 1990
Monday; April 2, 1910
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
PH. 992•3922
992-2196
,
1·13-tfc
EUM HOME
*SHRUB & TR
Tl:tiM and R!=·
MOVAL ·,
looM & loanl Pw
Senior Cltlz- and
llancllcaptll4
. ~ood Rolli .
· T.L.C ..
'·27Yro. Exp.
Rofer... ceo
*LIGHT HAULING
.
RUTLAND
SALES and
SERVICE .
iowdone:
GUN SHOOT
RACINE .
Fill··"·
..............
!and Willing Wclfklre,
•nie Alfred CommunNlkunj Sheh
"ilnd Nu,.. of 3 · N
'hy, Dr.
;of Cemftri'Cierk ..o•
pitll, Rev ..C.rroll McCauley, F,.nclll Flor-
,lat.
~~~
. FuiiWal
, Home, end Nllghbort.
Frlende 1111d I'IIMivel.
The Femlly Of
ArtburL. S
-
Happy &oth
Birthday!
Happy 2nd
Annlvar..ryl
EftiY·
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.·
flttllrY . . .
12 .....
Stncktly~!~~Otoly
knlv-,wife,_,
aune. ruMing
butt.,.
. - , pocllel
1144~
21f0.
-·ian.
QUIIta
.
t!N 1MO quliiL IMrt
Colh Pold. Col II~ or
114112Mit. '
I -IY
a.
n ., 1111UIID
.,4.
-•lng.
011141 on hour, 114-44NIII.
~
Ponable
lOw IIIII.
_I..,..
Don, heul lop 10 1 -
;;:.,~·n
-to
·-For-
111111
rn-ilrl, lt431H407, . . - . . . . . . . . .
qulrtuOftiW.
.
..-.... ..............
- . -.,.....
......
1'111111'1 Dey CoN Cont..
I a.m. • B:SO p.r11. AaM 216-10.
--~~-
WIH lllllplt In my - , ..,.,
1'111'11,.., or WI rtaMI. Nave
R•Jfw;M II 114 1tl 1101 nil
lor....,,
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESnMATES.
•Oil Change Lube
•Braka Work
1I:';~~~.-::=~::-;.;
'
·N.
Houll ctoonlna • ., -Galltpolte
Employment Serv•ces
NEW- REPAIR
•Tire Sales
•Front End
Allgnmel'(t
'Will ... lllb¥llltloil .. '"' .......
nw Ja:t nn ~- • • •11!110-IIM-
.-. .
._,
7 .. Yard Sail
'
. Rog•r Hy,ell
Garage .
1
Rt. 124, P-IJ Ohio
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR . I1 .
Alto TrlatMIIIIot
PH. 992·5612
or
··
cLiaaiHo
N~WUND
EN111PIISES
DUMP TRUCK
Slnd·Stone·Dirt
(614, ' 667~3171
GI'GIIt A.
·
21
Buslneu .
Opportunity
· ,
IIIOIIcaJ
.
..
·-lor
........... - . - ...
--..--·
-·.............. .... ,..
I
be , ••••• wllh .. Iph,.. .......
nNOI'«•-~
~::" ~"""
,
4-25-tfn
DOZER
SITJWOII • lOADS
Gilllpolls ·
a VIcinity
01110 'MLLEY PUIILIIt . . CQ.
992~1121
tfle
.
~1132.
ROOFING
Hlnea1 and deadl of 011r
·Rev. Don ,8r ' Sandra
,Arch•. St. P1111l UMC
-·
.......
long
hair,·
whH•
wfth- browndoa.
ADioaii;
Fouild oil Thlnl A-UI. lt4-
Jo... Uttlao. .,..,.,
t-.
or net ,,_._..,
Howard L Writ....
742-3018
IUUf
Lost & Found
. Iotter,
- · In"""
Oolilpolll,
114-441-
EVENINGS ·
3·21·'90-tfil
Old -
Found: 111111- oloiod -
BILL S~ACK
992·2269
''LOW tiiCOIII NOliE"
·~711f.
6
*FIREWOOD
209 South 4th St•
Middleport, Oh.
W.IOh iloa, 1 yeor old, tlonnon
~~~....... • COlli mlnol, -
_J&L
INSULAnON
.,..,; ....,•• _o• .
. VIfYLSIDING
VINYL RIPllCUINT ·
WINDOWS
FREE E&nMATES
992·2772
aiole, J All II
·PJt, ._ Point Pit
m ......... ·
aoo 1111n 11., Pt. Pit., wv auo:
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Peg a
-
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8-- The Daily Sentinel
PcJi Est.Jte
--
~--
--
~
I
LAFF-A-DAY
51
Houtehold
Gckxls
54 Mlicei..1110U8
MlrchllnciJ•
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Ydll W AIQl'ra4,1~~oN
.
....••
Television
v
aF f«SfweAR IS NO\ Jt)ST AMAT"f~~
<l= 1"~6 ···
The Deily Sentinei-Pigl 9 . .-.
.
Pon•oy- MidclepOit. Ohio
Monday, April'2, 1990 ;
P01111r0Y-Midclaport. Ohio
,.
.-.
~~
..
.
...•
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•
I:OOic":... And
)
. ·'
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•
_eC2l ••geCJJ .III
eaeNewe
••
<Il Wild AIMriOII Wltnen the
dogwOod and the
.
rhodod1udron burst Into
CllReecllngAelnbowQ
STILL HAVE A.SORE
THROAT. J.WH, BILL?
QQQ$
. e a:D Andy Qolftllh
--- -- ·
I
'I - ' I I' I I-e
I I
_._~.- ...J.i-J..-'· ~ fessors car. Hread: 'Show me .
.----------=:r~- a iHe long student and I'll show
R A I L 'A D
youareal ------ nut!'
-
· tDChWtlnc-.. .
8:05 (I) 1111\llfly llllbllllla
8:30 e (2) - 13 NBC Nlgllllr Neww
L..
e Cll ABC Newa Q
(!) Body EleCtriC
·
8
J.J·· - .~~·· .
C2l PM Megulnl
\
.
0 Ml8ml Ylce
<
• Mutlc Row VIdeo
1D Abbolt A Coatello
7:06()) JetllnOnl
7:30 (2) Family Fltid
e a EnterWinmlnl Tonight
Cll Mama'• Family
Ill .leoperdyl Q
e
e
• •c
.
.
1:00 (Jl MOVIE: W- Union
(2:001
G C2l 1BJ My Two Dedt Joey
/
and Michael lllrow a aaael
party for the Judal. Q
(JJ NCAA l'lnel f"our
Hlghligll111989: Michigan,
Seton Hall, Duke & IAinols (T)
De e (I) MOVIE: '11111
L.att Fling' ABC Mond8V
Nlgllt Movie (2:00) D
<Il Cll A118ntlc Rwlin Sea
a~ atmosphere unite to
form a global weather
· · Is
e OJ 'illor Did Major
machine.
••
!Ill
. ....~ :
on stand-by for a secret
missiOn tnlo Central America.
•4,
...~·
~ ~ ~- Jiamp Sv.et In the
process of clearlng Hanson,
Booker ts forced to resign .
(R)!;!
OPflmeNewl
0 Murder, She Wrote
121 Futiny Bualnnl With
CIWUI Cllalllll Country
music allrs are trlcl<ed.
· 0 MOVIE: Creelor (Rl (2:00)
1:06
MoVIE: Ollally.(PG) (2:00)
. 1:30 (J) 1BJ Hogan Family
q .
Mark flunks his driver's
· · exam when he craihes the
.,....
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(JJ
CROSSWORD
ACROSS
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cuckoo
e.g.
· WHI\(:K!!
l=r::r'zONewa
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10:30(]) Motarwe1k lllwltlated
• CIOOk CIIIIM
11:00 (J) ICnola l.andlnll Q
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llff:-i==B
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KIAIP
11188: K111111,
A!'Jona
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TNGY
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· REMAIN ~ NOtHING MORE IS NEEDED
ntAN TO 11IINK rr bONE. - GRAaAN .
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0v,.. 1110 bot lOng F
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Yll._ • . ,•• 'CIIPII •••••• FOR A ntll',«i TO
. 'IW-IIIIIIIrlllllllllllnd
K- _c..oll l!lgll llahoal. Coli
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~ 2:00 (Jl MCMe: WMIIn! union
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(2:00)
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One letter slands for another. In this 111111pl• A 1.1 uaed
. .........,
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sl111le letters,
"
apostl ophes, the length 1nd f01'1111Uoo of the words are 111 ·'·
....;
hlnls. Each day the code leiters 1re different.
....,.. ...,...... .
•
CIIYnOQU01E
.
,.
!D . . . . . . . .
jl
-
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.....
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFILLOW
'.:..:::r-.On.... .
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Jul:ltlu
, Duke l
)~
....
11:30ern e~e~~orca...on
=:::::
35 Enfold
37 Bare
38 Poker
term
39 Beatty. '
irr 'Reds"
41 Last
. Spanish
queen ·
42 Crow's cry
..
43 African
beast
44 Brat45 Retaliate
ID Comllcly Tonlflhl
•
.
lJAILY CRYPTOQUO'I'ES-Here's bow lo_work II:
aJI::r"•
tiJ
Vice
.-,
. .... .
city .
(!)Ita•_....
BEDEOSOL
..
.... )
•..,;r
t Enclotlure
2 Syrian
IBJNiwl
())lana
'TOIIIIIII
BERNICE
'If '
~"").
DOWN ·.
eC2l • • eCJJ a
aoepe~
. ,r .
..
Rice
10:06 (I) MOVI£: Crllll (2:00)
·a
•• Jtl
38 Spire
ornament
.37 Dlsleature
40 Play by
Elmer
woi1d. (0:30)
·
Q • • (I) Kopplt Report
,.
....
widely
and humoroua aporllng
events !rom around the
,.
... ,;1
_site
5 Neckwear
10 Peet1ass
12 Glistened
13 Butt In;
intrude .
15 Dutch ·
commune
18 Golf club
LJah* ... Olllpoltt .
..
'
4 Black
wedding
•.
• )t'
·3 Message
1 Biblical
two ~lly sport~ guesta
Nch - k •• wall aa unique
NJt
IS OUT OF
J•'
:;
...•-.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Hoat Jim Valvano ln)ervtawa
wnei-
..
..,...
•·=
HER
'
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5 Pallid
8 Andress film
e
7 Fuel
dating, brings back the ghost
8 Formerly
of her tate hUsband. Q '
9 Head (Fr.)
C2l Ill MOVIE: 'Pollow
YONI HHrl' NBC Mondlly
11 Lura
Night AI Tile Movlel (2:00)
14 Perfectly
~ Top Rank lloxlnt 10th
18 Piece of lurf
Annivarnry Specill
19 Secret
25 Up (comb.
(!) (I) Tile Priii~IFC1, Tile
part
or
lalenl
form)
PNu And Tile People This
program IS an hlltorlc.
20 Russian 26 Feral
17 Sheller
first-time meelinQ of len
18
Actress
river
abode
former presldenilel press ,,
Canova, 21 Samuel's 28 Fa&
secretaries inc:ludlng Pl.,.
Salinger, George Reedy and.
20 Picture
mentor
30 Cried
Bill Moyer~
•
23 Prod
22 Coller,
32 Fr_
all ·
Iaiii....
· 27 Popeye's ·
33 Belgian
• (J]) AHen Nlllon S~n ;.
girlfriend 24 Table
river
tn the crossfire when the
28 French
scrap
34 Salt tree
pollee evidence !Ilea are
raided. Q
author
Ol Larry King Uvel
29 Boy (Sp.)
0 PllrM Tlml "-tllntl
30
Lusty
18J NMh'IIINI Now Country
music's hottest stars are
31 English _
featured IIVI.
river
10:00 (Jl 700 ClUb With Pel .
33
Steer
R.,.,.._
1 DIDNT I<NOIN HE HAD
IEK-ICH A DE L.ICA'TI: S'TOY<AQ-i •
-~·
·-
1:00.
WHAT CO 'YOU
THit-IKOF HER~
• 1'.
•x•
.1
examiner's car. (!II I;!
I H~R 'YOU'VE GiPT 1
A NEW TEOACHER.
..
. ··,
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Gary RobiDIOD of Lafayette, catlfar· · • Q
. ...
tlt!OIZ
nla, miMd u- two IDcredlenll alee- t Q 1 3
' ~.
.
.AQU
ly 10 make faur beartaln today'• deal. •110 a s
It was normal 10 open wltb four
IOOTII
beariiiD lblnlseat after two pau.. U ·
tbe blgb cards were equally apUt
.AitHHZ
among tbe other tmle· banda, Nartb
tJU
sboald bold eaOu&b 10 Ql&ke the play
for pme reasonable, 111111 blddill& it
VIIIDerable: Neither
~:
IIIUIMICiilltely sbul tbe OJIPCI-11 ouL
Dealer': North
West led tbe lack of clalll, which de'
clarer dlleted Ia dummy. A club was s-tll
Welt
Nora
.•···~"'
•"i'
cootlliued, ud Ellt played tbe ~.
P.' •(
nlffed. Declarilr played ac:e of bearll, 4 •
All .,...
tbea a low,JP8C(e. \\lelt took tbe ace
IIIUIMICiilltely, tbeD llwitelled 10 a low
0pen1Dc lead: • J
"'
· dlal!!lll!d. Declartr pla=IIW fnllll
;!.:
dummy; East woo the
and played 1------'--------1 "' ·
back a spade to Gary
'a kin&·
"•··
Gary DOW played a 1rump 10 dummy aer or UftlliUd tbe d!aJJ!!J!!d qaeeil, Ia ... :
and tbeD led tbe tiDe. of clubl. Ellt wblda declarer wwld pltdl tbe ~ ;:
played tbe ace, rllffed by declarer. No- club f..- dl!mmY 111111 make tbe 1a1t.• ·~
tlce tbel tbe job of auardln& tbe club two trlckl wltb tbe - 111111 jack of .., '·
11111 bad now been transferred 10 W.t, dlamolldl.
: ·;.
who beld tbe club 10 aad who a11o beld
Altbou&lllt II true tbel tbe defald; .:;.:,
dlamood queet1. Tbe trump1 were en eouldllaft avoided tJie.fiDaiiGIIIII now led out, one by oae. Allbe fiDilb JIOII':e=~redltto Gary Jtohl l" .::1.
poor West bid 10 either atve up tbe 10 lor
tbe ~ 11De of
of clubs, llllkin& dwnmy's ~ a will- play.
'
..... •.
' (JJ 1'11!11 Follr SpeNI
· 111 C Clly Uz'a lura of
MORK MEEKLE 'AND ~'!;:..!:!,..,~~!.!....--.:--...,--, . - - - - - - - - - ,
...
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~
•x tn
BASI'
... uz
A good declarer bu 10 kDow tbe ·
rlgbt pia
_ ys. Ill addltloa, be frequeotly · -drr
needs tbe defeoden' belp 10 aucceed. • A J t 1 4
W
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. ..
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.....
NOiml
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.18175
tAU
By James Jaeolly
1D Night Court Q
.,,•
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. _BRIDOI
7:35 ()) Sllnlord And Son 1
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Servtces
rrrr1
.
.
NewtHour
~ eG 18JWhMIOI
~~~ C[ZE{fc.
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Camp ....· "'· chuckl• quotid.
by filling ,In the milling -d•
SCIAM-LIT$ ANSWHS
", .,"
· F{lmoiJS- Basin- Watill'- ~x -BOTTOM
'•
· A ~worker arrived one morning red eyed and weary.
. .,.~'
He sighed, "Infant care is rQUIIh on a new father. I have
. :··
to ieamfrom thei:IOTTOM upl;..""- - - - - - " _ ; . . - - - , . ~·
e
aJ)CrosafiN
.
1
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(JJ llpolttCenWr Speclll
.
g 8
(I) CUMI!t AHtlr
<Il (I) MIICNell LI\'Nf ·
up TttE
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'
yov develop lrom np No. 3 below.
combine errtertlliniMIIIIriVIa
wllh the luck of the drlw.
tD Htngln' In
6:35 ()) !Indy Olltfllh
I
7:00 (Jl SclhiCIOW A Mia. Klllg
i
...·•·
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Cll s-2·1 Conlllct Q
0 eCCIISHIWIQ
• a:D Tine'• Comptliy
• Top C8rd Contntants
,A.~~.Q..~
-.::..~-~- ~~- "· )L, .
LID A..Y
lsawacuteplayonwordl l
-1---rils-=_"1•:..1;:.:_:.!1~ .:. on the bumper sticker of a pro-
aJ1 Warld fC~Ur
, . t1J He•MIIn
i
•
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bloom. Cl
I • Inc.
,
'
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'
�.
IW18-1~The Daily
.
Monday. April2, 198Q
Sentinel
Ohiu Lottery
UNLV .rips
-Duke for
NCAA title ·
90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE
IF:;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~==:::::.: '"""!l- ~- 1 REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING
ooOR'WITH THE
ATRIUM OOPRI
.ROLLED.ROOFING
.arlen ·Brown ·Willie $
.1Q99
•Bilek oG11111 & White
.
ia~' awhole
~alhe
beatJty of uy home.
c-tn today -let
uo help you choote
the idea that'a rlahl
foryourho~.
6'0 X 6'8•
INCLUDES SCREEN
Atll HARDWARE
BVYNDW-
-
,
~82+~~J-~-~-~-~~~~~~L . . . ;_$9 .99
ROOF COATING.........s GAL ••~:..
S9 .99
1r
.
~
~
~
!1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~·~~
~
~····•·
•
WITH 4112 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG
.
26''x8' ...................~ ...............................~ ........ •5.11
26''x1 o··...................................................-..... '6.39
26''x12' .............................;............ ~........... •·7 .67
26''x1·4' ........:................................. ~ ........_.... sa.90
'
. $11 •35'
26 X 16'.· '!·····.················~········~·················
0
11
Ia. II Roofing Felt ·
.bl ....:~nr:::=:,.
8 II
,,
WORK PRODUCT&
LIIDICIPE
ftMBIRI
lACI
'
~'
UIIII'LII
DD BARIS
8' X8'............................S450
8' x1o·. . . . . . . . . :. . .ssso
11111 11011
j
WRJf.l
omr
BARB
•aa•ROLL
~-
Universal Rundle 7ulllats 8' xI' lecllons
'
JlOU.
1 PIECE..............WHJTE ............s189.95
2 PIECE..............WHITE... ......)259.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND- s
49.95
5 PIECE TUB SURROUND s
2 TRAYS..........................-' ............. 56.95
Shadow Box
Panea
AIDERSII .WINDOWS
,.abla..~!-~~~..:848
Tough, lig.,_ght aa· panels (38' c:o.or)n - r 1o lnotal. Wide
aida laps add exira olnlngth, keep out lhe aleman Ia. All erduoiva
leakpmof cltaln chonnel ·~· onug, 't0181111et1ight anum drr.
'
draft hw inleriort.
I ,
\
.
38" x-8 .......•.••.••..'12
38" X 10:.............'15
38" X 12.....;........'18
38"x 14..............'21
3&" X 16••••••••••••••*"
•
. . .:'I
38" x 18•.....·.........*27 .
38" X 20•..•.•••••.•. ~*30
3S"x22..............'33
38"·x 24 ..............*36
PRISIDRITRIIfiDLDMBIR
----------~~j-111 I IY~t 2 PC.
Price Includes
Screens
PROPIII ftiRCB Krr
,,.
Includes 14.1 oz.
disposable p10pana
luel cylinder. (761Bi ·
Ao
P'••tured
In:
ID
0
'
'I
·--;~
~-~
·24 carbide Teeth
·Cuts Smoother and
Faster than Ordinary
Carbide
·
u.•
.~~.·a~
.
.
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Clean air bill,
fund-raisers top
Busft's agenda
'
0
•
Commission · ordered~
to transfer
$26 million iri ·'s tudent 'loan"·reserves
'
0
Week-of-the-Child is
being observed locally
Four area
students are
mistrial narrowly averted
•
211 C.nto
trator John Anderson Is cur· mtnder to residents that the
By NANCY YOACHAM
village wlll participate In Clean
rently preparing a list of needed
Sentinel News Staff
Up Rural Ohio Week, a program
Pomeroy Village Council has street signs.
being sponsored by the Meigs
Council approved a second
decided that guard rallls particuCounty
Litter Control Program
llirly needed along a section of reading of a proposed ordinance
lhe
week
of April 23-28. On
East Main St . from H & R Block to give village · employees a 25
'tuesday
of
thai . week, April 24,
cent per htiur pay raise.
to J & R Sports Shop.
county
litter
program employees
It was reported that the vll·
During Monday night 's regular
be
ln
·Pomeroy
to assist. In
will
meettng, council approved a Jage's share of fines and fees
clean-up
activitieS.
Pomeroy
motlon·to Install guard rail along collected d!lring March amounts .
wUl
'provi,
q
e
the
truck
for
hauling
this section, pending the appro- IO $3,529.
and
the
county
program
will
pay
A bl·monthly report of pollee
val ofthevlllagefbiancecommlt·
landfill
fees
for
the
one
day
.
tee: Although a local company department activities Indicates a
Meigs
County
Lifter
Conlrol
will
total of $1,428 collected from
has given council an Installation
be doing the same thing ln other
vlllage parking meters during
· price, lt will be up to the finance
vlllages
of the county on the other
the two-month period.
•
committee to decide If the village
days
during
clean up week.
Finally, council Issued a recan afford the expense and If so,
work out a payment plan with the
company.
In regard to a proposed Pomeroy zoning ordinance, Councilmali Larry Wehrung reported an
cost estimates for the
engineer's
preseated
Hart
with
her
plaque.
Also'
presented
HART RECEIVES CHAMBER AWARD prepar.
a
tion
of 10 village maps.
plaques'
of
appreciation
Satlll'day
evening
were
Melp County Chamber of Commerce Secretary
Council however, Including Wehbuslnesaman Len~;JY Eliason, for his work last
Sherrt Hart was surprised at Saturday night's
.
rung,
felt the propose~ cost of
_
year
In
both
tl!_e
former
Middleport
and
Pomeroy
annual 'chamber-sponsored dinner-dance to re·
$800,
which
Includes purchase ot
Chambers
of
Commerce,
.
and
to
Rlepenhoff
celve.a plaque In appreciation of her dedication to
a
speci<il
computer program
Dlslrlbulinl!,
Jackson,
.
for
their
commitment
to
her-job and the or1anlzatlon. "Sherrl has always
which
the
engineering firm
Meigs
County.
'
·
·
gone above and beyond the call of duty," stated
CINCINNATI (UPl) - WlniJ:
president" planned to plug the
would
need
for
the projecl , ls
Pomeroy Chamber President Bruce Reed, who
lng
up
a
two-day,
four·state
trip,
legislation
his administration
more than the vlllage · wl~ hes to
helped
to
shape
by planting a lree
President
Bush
focused
on
clean
·
spend at this time.
air legislation and fund-raising
at a ceremony ln tndlanapoUs.
Council approved an expendiAlso on the president's agenda
efforts to bolster the Republican
ture of $289 for '\'eat her stripping
was an Indianapolis fund-raiser
Party now preparln~ for.national
for ·garage doors at the village
for Sen. D~;~n Coats, R-In~., where ·
·
and local elections.
garage. Council •at an earlier
party officials hoped to raise
With the Senate scheduled to
meet111g approved an. expen!)l·
'
"·
....
$400,000, and a fund-raiser In
vote on the massive clean air bill
ture for the · projec~ and re:
Tuesday night, the self·
Detroit lor the Mlclilgan GOP, an
CiNCINNA'J'I ' (UPI ) - A fed- whether to appeal to the Supreme
funds under any reasonable queslfd price 'estimates. BankS
proclaimed
''environmental
·
Continued on page 10
er"al appeals-court ruled Monday
Court. ;rwenty-two state commisdefinition of that term," Judge Construction•. Pomeroy, submit the Ohio Student Loan Commls· sions liave gone to court ·1n an
Nathaniel Jones said · In the ted the $289 esumate.
slon must transfer $26 million ln
A resident of upper Pomeroy
attempt .to halt the transfers.
court 's ruling. "Itis the admlnisstudent loan reserves to the
toward
Ml!iersvllle has reTwo years ago , the commistraior of the funds which flow In
.
.
federal government.
sion refused an order from
quested,
through <':ounellman
and out of Ohio as part of" the .
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Secretary of Education Lauro
federal Guaranteed Student Blll Young, that street signs for
Appeals overruled a lower court
Cavazos. to turn over what he
East Main Sl. be Installed ln that
Loan Prograni.
decision thai said the transfer det.e rfnined to be excess re·
section of the village. Mayor
The appeals court said Cava·
demanded by the Department of serves. Cavazos withheld relm·
Seyler
Indicated !his would not be
zos's order to turn over excess
some good old-fashioned " fun
The Week of the Young Child,
Education was unconstitutional.
bursement of $26 million In fees
a
problem
since Vlllag€Admlnlsreserves wouldn't dalnage the
April 2-8, ls a nationai celebra- things" are also being held.
James Biddle, executive dlrec.
to get the money the state
state fund economically.
Locawly, a Make It-Take It
. 'tion he)d eacli year to focus
tor of the commission, said ·commission refused to release.
The Deparlment of Education
Fair
wlll be held Saturday, from
attentlon on the needs of young
''The OSLC does not own the subsidizes a fund thecommls~lon
agency officials are considering
10:30
a.m. to 12: 30 p ~m., at St.
children
and
.
their
families
'
uses to guarantee ldw,lnteres.t
through public lnformatlonactlv· Peter's EpisCopal Church, 541
education loans.
Second Ave., Galllpolls. Chlldre.11
lttes. According to the National
Po~dexter
The federal government pays
Association for the Education of or all ages who at lend the falrwlll
administrative
fees
and
relmbu
~
meet
ventriloquist, play wllh.
Young Children (NAEYC J, "a
WAsHINGTON (UPI) - i\ mistrial was narrowly averted
sements
fOr
loan
defaults.
The
clowns,
and of course, make
commltnient to Improving oppor·
Tuesday In the lran·Conlra trial of John Poindexter after two
'
stu·
commission
buys
defaulted
Four· area students will be
tunltleS available to this nation's · some crafts to take home. The
members of the Jury were contacted by the press.
dent loans and recovers payment
young children will be made only Make lt-Take It Fair ls sponrecognized al their respective
· The judge presiding over the case ordered the jury
for them. It keeps 30 percent and 1 school awards programs for · lf citizens are challenged to sored by thedaycarecentersand
sequestered and said angrUy that the attempts to contact·
gives
the rest to the federal• academic excellence In the areas
preschoolS of Gallipolis, Middlebecome Involved."
jurors, who began deliberating Monday, might be considered an
agency.
The funct has b'een
of malhemallcs, science a,nd
NAEYC, In conjunction "1th port, Pomeroy and Cheshire.
obstruction of justice.
,
Independent of the state since
Specifically for Meigs County
computer science in conjunction
local affiliate groups, such as the
"l'lllhlnk about that," Greene said. "This almost created a
1967.:
with the
Tandy Technology
Southern Ohio Association for the preschoolers, the Gingerbread
mistrial."
- The commission has consl- Scholars Program.
House Preschool In Mlddle,POrt
Education of Young Children,
AI a hasllly called hearing, Greeae announced that two jurors
derecrnrt nlng its operation Into a
wlll be hosting a clown show 011
The
students
represent
the
top
sponsors
the
Week
ox
the
Young
had been contacted Monday lll&ht by two women ldenllfyln1
private business, citing the lriss
Tuesday (today), with children
two percent of each particlpallng cnud.
themselves as reporters. Questioned In court; both jurors said
of the surplus It needs to buy
from the Carleton School Prehigh school's senior class for
they huq up their telephcmes and did not di&CII88 the cue.
ThroughOut the counlry during school, Head Start and Tiny Tech
defaulled loans and the' loss of
overall
academic
excellence
Greene said, "I have decided .I will sequester lhe jury. I have
Investment earnings. As a prl·
based on their work ln grades 9 this special week, children, their as guests. ·
tried to avoid that. rm very sorry to have to do this, !lot the
parents, and early childhood
vate business, the federal goThroughout the week In the
,.
.
through 11. .
Irresponsible behavior of the press leaves me no choice."
educators,
are condl!ctlng actlvl·
. vernment could not seize com·
l\11d41eport·Pomeroy
area, resiReceiving
the
recognition
in
Gree11e said, "I certainly don't want to liave a mlstrlat"
mission reserves.
this area were Shawn '1:.. Bush . ties to enhance public awareneSs · dents Should also be on the alert
and Greta L. Riffle, Eastern of the needs, rights and abilities . for examples of preschool art
work to be exhibited at dlffer.ent
Local .High School, and Emily of preschoolers.
Along with the aerious emphaplaces throughoul the 1two
Bumgardner and Lana Arthur,
sis of the·week-long celebration, c~§lnltles.
Con tlnued on page 10
~-~--"-~
By United Press International
Luckily, the ground has 40s, 10 to 15 degrees below
The clock may have taken a
warmed consld'erably over the normal for this time of year.
jump forward a few nights ago,
last few weeks and little It any of
The situation will Improve
but the weather took a giant ·s tep
the snow should accumulate. slightly Tuesday night and Wed·
backward TUesday morning,
What may ' have been a 1· or nesday: with the precipitation
with snow -falling across much of
2-lnch snowfall in the east during ending from west to east.
Ohio.
After lows of around 30 Tuesthe winter moq,ths was expected
Temperatures at mid-morntng
to only produce a · dusting on
day night, highs Wednesday will
were generally ·near freezh\g,
grassy surfaces Tuesday. '
reach . the mld-40s to mld·50s
and the National Weather Ser·
. TIJe weather was expecte~ to under partly cloudy skies. But . · .
vice said the unseasonably cold
the rain Is to return ·Thursday
change little during the daylight
weather will continue through at
hours, with high temperatures
anq Friday, before skies finally
least the end of the week. .
reaching onlY the upper 30s to low . clear Saturday. Highs will be In
the low 40s to low 50s Thursday
and only In the 40s Friday and
Saturday . Lows will be ln the 30s
Thursday and Friday and only In
• the upper 20s Saturday.
'
SPIDCI LUMBER
I(
.
•
1TRAY_ .......- ...............................
36" SHOWER...........................~19.99
32" SHOWER ..............-199.99
.-
•COPPIIlWOcm
.3" x 5"-x 8' HIGH QUALITY
1 Section, 10
._AMu-•
Councn·· says guard
rail needed on section
of·East Main Street
· SQ.
•OUUIII WBU&
. . . . . ...
•
•
•
•
1990
iddleport, Ohio, Tuu(jay.
20 Year Warranty
· 67
.
12
26
: " X ' ...............:....:..................... $7.
24' ROOF 7101111
· ·vol.40. No.229
.
II
.
0 G 81 8
26''x8' .....
$5.11 .
•
·
.
I~==;=~·;
.
;·~C.~~·-~~UN~~
§~~-~O~WJ;N=====~26'' 10' .......... ............ .'........... •6.39
X
each
$49·95sa.
IIIIILII
ULIIIIIED
·
COIRDUIED
.~
Waatara Pre-Cut
CIIOOie From Charcoal Blend,
illata Blend, Wtather8d Wood
Blind, 811111 Sienna Blend
•
•
1990
0
ANDIAVB
•30 YEAR WARRANTY
Low tonl1hl near 30. 8ullll)'
. We~ay. rup near 11.
Page 3
•
·
$2495
.SOLI) IIIASIIIORTICE
ty.tem of Idea• for
.
Pick-4
6661
•
ALUMINUM FIBERGLASS
•• • 5•
ROOF COATING ....~.~..
·AU. WOOD
-ENEIIOY EFfiCIENT
.JIEADY·TQ.INITAU.
.t.OCK INCI.UilED '
The Atrium Door
'
Daily Number
192
0
recogn~
a
Weather takes giant· step backward
--Local news briefs ____,
Meigs
jobless rate .at 9.4 percent
.
'
.
Meigs County's unemployment rate for the - month of
February stood at 9.4 percent, according ·to a report from the Ohio B11reau of Employment Service~~ Issued today.
The labor iori:e stood at 7,800 with 7,100 being employed. The
rate of unemployment was down one full percentage point over
the January figure and well below the February 1989 figure
which as 10.0. '
"DELIVERY AVAILABLE".
NOT RESPONIIILI I'OR TYPOQRAPtiCAL
·Subsidy funds distributed
The total amount of basic and transportation allowances
coming to Meigs County through the State School Foundation
Subsidy Plan was $788,720.96, according to a report (rom State
·Continued on page 10
\
Sunshine developln& from the ,
west across the alate Wednesday, and the moderating temper·
atures, may push averaee soli
temperatures above the 50·
degree mark. ):.l)lhter winds ·will
contribute to better conditions
for exposed llvtlitock and the dry
air will be· favorable for the
aeration of erato blna or houaJng
areas where moisture has
accumulated.
.
· The showers Thursday and
Friday will k~ soU moiSture
adequate for aood d~loprnen1
of grasses and winter wheat. ·
0
I\~
,
-
~~~~~~..,..
~
...,...
.... frleDda~.,
tip •
pnclamadoa deelarlal April 1-8 • die Week of
tile Yo_, Qltll. A mabt , niOiv• ol &be
pnelamNIH Ill to .._
&Ill& ,.... c111J4rea,
,.,.........oi.Gelal or--* tta&-. wW"acb
tllelr lal ~atlal." WWI tile .....,... are,J tor, ..
IIIGIIIY....... c dt .l nu,el
8HM funltaDI, lllll••p..t. u11
,..._
ud NJcid WilMa. •f die C.IJMII lcltnl
PreRIIool, s:rn-. Tlllr Teeb, Ml~•,,..., IIIMI
llelp CoutUJ Belli BUrt .... pnvllle pn~ellool
e4uca&loa pfOII'AIU for artaJollllpten.
0
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
04. April
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
April 2, 1990
lyons
straile
zweifwl