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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

A salute
to Pomeroy's

Pick 3
008
Pick 4

I 50th
•

•

FOIALL YOUI
HDDIIG NEEDS SEE U$
TODAY."• .

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. f-11·1 • AI'PlWICIS '

tv'S • ROOI COYDIIIG
tft-1671
IOWMIOWII, ~ lllVY,

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,.

THE
'CENTRAL'
TRUST
C,OMPANY
.
.

"Your Financial. ·
Center" ·
97 NORTH SECOND
MDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6661

INSTAUMENT
lOANS

MEIGS
Voi.&lt;IO. No.tn "

.

EASTERN.
BOYS

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Jan•. 12-North Gallia-Away ·
Jan. 13-Southtrn-Away
IMAIE UPI

GIRLS

. Jan. 10-Yrin~blt-Home
· Jan. 11-North Gal.lia-Home
Jan. ·15-Miigs-Away

SOUTHERN

Fa~furleg .Ktetoekr ;
. ' Ftld Chi•••i
·&lt;•

OATH OF OFFICE ADMINI8TERED- MIQ'or

GIRLS

'Fred Hollman· admla!Mered tile oath of office to
lour Middleport VIllage Council membets MQnday night precedlq the first meetlag of the year.

Jan. 11-Kyger (rHk~Away
Jan. 18-Honnan Tract-Away

.

'

rJcbt u they took tile oath were
J.ack Satterfield, begl1111ln1 bla tblr4 ·.term; Paul
Gerard, biB flnt lull term; Bob Glbnore bta third
luD term, and Dewey Horton, bla fourth fuD term.

·. Pletured left to

--------~------~BOYSSCHED~LE--~-----.. --~~~

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sss:PA~K · S1.
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MIDDLEPORT .

· 992,66H

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL .
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21-Miller ............................ : Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .... , .......•... .. Away·
Dec. 5......,Kyger Creek ...... ~........... :.. Home
Dec. &amp;-.:-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec .. 15.-Southern ......... :..........•.. Away
Dec. 1&amp;:....symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 22-0ak Hill ·········/········· ...... Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2.,..-Federal Hockin{ ............ ,. Away .
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .......... ........ Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia .................. , Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
·Jan.26-Kyaer Creek .............. ~ .. :: .. Away
Jan. 27-Miller .... ,...................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb . 9-Symmes Valley .......... :...... Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

'
786 N. 2nd··
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Middle110
· rt.
992-6491
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pated expenditures Is about In the village.
.
Sentinel News Stall
·
$67,000. higher than the 1989 · Aletter was read from the Ohio
A total of $1,378,709 was ap· appropriation figure whloh·, was Department of Transportation
propria ted for operation of Mid· $1,311,779.
regarding the availability of
dleport village In 1990 In a
The oath of office was given to mass trans!x&gt;rtatlon funds (Blue
resolution passed by Middleport four councilmen, Dewey Horton, Streak Cab) to the village lor this
VIllage Council Monday night at beginning his fourth full term;
year. 'The total Is $106,982 with
Its first session ofthe new year. Jack Satlerfleld, and Boll Gil- $47,356 being In federal funds and
The breakdown on expend!· more their third f4U. terms, ~nd $59,626 In state funds .
lures approved for this year Paul .Gerard, his first full term
Council approved a fire protec·
Include $486,180, general fund · by Mayor Fred Hottman. ·
tlon contract with Salisbury
Including safety fund ;. $106,100,
'H.orton was re-elected presi- Township for$1100, and agreed to
fire truck; $102.810 street malnte· dent of council and was also retain Floyd Brown Associates
nance; $27,200 cemetery; named to serve on the Middleport as water-sewer consultants for
$31 ,2!\0, swimming pool; $202,100 Planning Commission.
the village at $1.000 a month'.""
public transportation, $177,850
During last night's meeting the Mayor Hoffman noted that the
water; $30,000, water system first reading of an ordinance contract can be cancelled on a 60
Improvement; $2,449, sanitary .providing for the an.nexatlon of · day notice In the event the village
sewer escrow; $9,000 meter dep· acreage below the ;Middleport hires a certified systems openi·
oslt; $146,715, sewer; $25,055, fire corporation limits to Story's Run tor .and no longer needs that
equipment, $21,400, economic Road on the river side of Route 7 service !rom an outside agency .
development, and $10,600 mini· was given.
i
·
On recommendation of the
golf.
Given third readings ''and' !3oard of Public Affairs, the
· "The estimated receipts avalla· adopted were two ordlnapces, village approved an Increase In •
llte In 1990, according' to the one set ling mayor's court costs . reconnect charges to $10, and a!)
at $35, and the other establ~hlng Increase In petty cash funds from
approprlatiO[\S Is $1,445,430.
This year's figure of antlcl· fees !or various required permits
Continued on page 5

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hearing on·fire contract· issue.

'

SOUTHERN HIGH $CHQOL

1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL .
Nov. 25-Sauthwestern ................. Home
Nov. 28-Kygar Creek .................... Away
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .... .................... . Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Away ·
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 16-Eastern .Pike ............... :.. at O.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley.: .. :......... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern·................. Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
Jan. 5-0ak. Hill............................ Away
Jan. 6-Gan•pohs ................ ........ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ........... :.... Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia . ~ ................ Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood .................. Home
Feb. 2:-Easterp ........ :.......... ;.... :.; Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hockina.: ............. Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern ................... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley .............. : Away

a

By NANCY YOACIIAM
night's public; hearing that Cle. Department In meeting which
Sentinel News Stall
,land had brought a contract·for they heldc;m Sunday night .
Many ques dons still remain 100 perc'ent of the funding, and
Among reasons given by Jta·
unaqswered a rter Monday that when Instead, a 50 percent cine flrefllen for their rejection
night's public meeting' at Antlq· contracthwtth Racine was of· were that they worked Letart
~y, ~lillll~a reaillen~rt - · fered, he.felt he )lad no au1bolity&lt;.o-TOWDalriit-._:.tlw·~lle of· the
Township, and membe.-s of the to accept the contract without origtnaf levy, ·as well as for ~e
RaCine an&lt;! ' Syracilse Fire De· Instruction from village council renewal, and that they always
partment( met fO ·discus&amp; a and the fire department.
· protected Leiart Township In the
That left Letart Township with yea,rs prior to levy money for
problem that has been brew1n111n
the township since Dec. 29.
a fire protectiOn contract with · "just a few hundred dollars a
After.. an,' h\)ur of dtscuulon, · Syraeuse Fire Department, but year" from the township. When It
residents and members of the · no contract with Racine. When was found out that Letart Town·
fire departments decided to fo.rm . word of this reached, residents of ship would produce big pot of
a commltlee to try to solve the · the township, they became con· money (due to the hydro-elect·
dilemma that began when Letart cerned tor the safety of their rtc plant) "then everyone wanted
Township Trustees signed a fire properties, since Syracuse Fire a piece of the pie," a fireman
protection contract with· Syra· Department Is several ·mnes said.
cuse Instead of Racine. Approxl· farther away than RaCine. They
Letart Township generates apmately 90 . people attended the also became concerned that their proximately $32,000 a year from
meeting which was held at a home ·owner's Insurance rates the one mill fire protection levy.
store In Antiquity.
might Increase due to the ·In·
Racine firemen also pointed
The Letart Township Trustees creased distance between· Syra· out thai they have always ans·
were not In aitendance.
cuse and the township.
" wered the majority of fire calls In
The meeting began with a
Such concerns were expressed Letart Township, with Syracuse
recap by township residents .Bud by to)llnshlp residents at a Jan. 2 being called to assist on just two
Rose and Luda Anderson of organl2atlonal meetihg of the or three occasions In the past·flve
events which led to the public township trustees, which Is now years.
meeting. It was explained that on comprised of Don R. and Harry
Among questions asked last
Dec. 29, Letart Township Trus· Hill, and a new trustee, Dave night by residents was this- "Is
tees Don R. Hill, Harry Hill and Graham, who was elected to his the 50 percent contract with the
trustees and Syracuse binding?"
and Herbert Roush voted un· post In November.
, anlmously to divide revenue
At the Jan. 2 meeting, officials No one ·could answer for sure
generated from the township's of the two fli'e departments since Syracuse has·already lndl·
one mIll fire protectlqn levy on a agreed to meet last Friday night cated they would be willing to
5().50 basis to Racine and Syra· . to try to reach a compromise In
accept ~5 percent of the revenue
cuse Fire Departments, Instead the situation. Any compromise instead of the 50 percenl. '
of 100 percent to Racine as In · that mll!ht be reached by the fire
Also, It was alleged that to sll!il
years past. On the same night, a departments was to have been a five-year contract - which Is
contract to that affect was signed acceptable to the trustees, It was what the township and Syracuse
with Syracuse Mayor Eber reported. However, the· com· Fire Department slgiled - Is
Pickens, who was present at the promise offer from Syracuse Illegal anyway. The alleged
meeting. Picken~ Is also the Fire Department to Racine- a Illegality was not verified, except
65-35 .split of the money, with
that Racine Chief Hank Johnson
Syracuse Fire Chief.
Although Mayor Frahk Cle. Racine Fire Department to re. reported that Racine VIllage and
land of Racine was also at the celve the larger percentage fire department contracts bemeeting, It was reported at last was . rejected by Racine Fire tween Sutton and t::ebanon Town,
ships are for three years. How·
· ·.
ever, someone pointed out that
the township's previous contract
with Racine had' been lor five
years.
Chief Pickens of Syracuse
explained llbat he had been told
five years ago by Letart Trustees
tllat they would divide revenue
with Syracuae the next time the
.lire contract was up, and that
was why he had approached
Letatt Trustees at their regular·
meeting early In December
about dividing the money . He
then return~ to the Dec. 29
end-of-the-year meeting with a
prepared contract In lland.
Chief Jobuon of Racine said
he had not contacted the trutees
'
becau11e It wu the respoDSiblllty ·
of the trultees to secure IJN
protection for the townJhlp, not
the fire departll)ent's
responatblllty.
·
It wu also pointed out by
someone that If Syracu11e Fire
CONDtiCT IIAiiHO - 011 .._.., ....... r I lt'&amp;w ! i, · Departmeat needed fundi, tben
relld..aall'on.. lllto tile ...,. IIIII 'sa a&amp; A•~ te dleog• a
why didn't Syracute VIJiaae pall
their awn levy, u Ract1111 Vlllaae
· prolll-tllalbepa..,...LelariTr I •"'• ebaealt::wtferfbe
did, In adcllUon to paytnr the
pretec.aH wltPI ~rae.• Fire De;Nirtmewl lor 11 pene11t .t
Sutton TOWIIIhlp fire piDtectloD
- • fnm &amp;Ilea blp'l fire pnlslliiN :..,• .. ,.a,._,
• Lltllrt
levy.
Tow 7.1 !nJ BIIWIIJ' Will&amp; ealn!J te tile aiiCiwe J'lre
Bu 1 the main concern of
lllletll, eildQ's meet'sa- aoatt~ln br ........,
realdenll, even thole who' pub- .
. . . lind .... &amp;...,. , .. Wolfe .... Lada (lluc) Alldei-.
Pic&amp;.....: are WoPie aad Alld(Continued on paae 5)

a

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" ---GIRLSSCHEDULE~
· --~----------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-M iller ...:........ :................... Home
Dec. 2-Eastern ................................. Away ·
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. U-Nelsonville·Yoik .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
Dec, 18-Vinton Co............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpree .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aiexander .............................. Away
Jan. 8-tederal Hocking ...... :.............. Away
Jan. 11-Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ............................... Home
Jan. 18-Trimble ....... :........................ Away
Ja ..22~Nelsonville·York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............................... Hoine
Jan. 29-Vinlon Co........................... Home.
Feb. 1-Belpre ............................, .... Away
Feb. 5-Aiexander. ................. ,........ :. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hacking .................... Home
Feb. 10-Southern ............................ Home

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More than 90 on hand for ·
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989~90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec: 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 8- Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ........................ Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co......:.............. Home
Dec. 22-Belpre .... ....................... Away
Dec. 29-Logan ........................... Home
Jan. 5-AI~xander ......................~ Home ·
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking ....... ....... Ho(lle
Jan, 1~-Miller ................. :......... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .................... ...... Away
Jan. 19-Trimble ................ .... ..... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ....... ...... Away .
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home ,
Jan. 30-Vinton Co................ ~ ..... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre .... ;..................... ., Home
Fe~. 3-Athens ··'·....................... . Away
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9. Federal Hocking ............... Away

'.

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Jan. 12-Kyger (l'ftk-Home
Jan. 13-Eastern-Home ·

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A Mul1imedio Inc. N•WIP•P.,

Middleport Council
OKs operating funds

GIRLS

Jan. 8-Fttleral Hocking-Away
Jan. 11-Milltr-Away
Jan. 15-Ealtern-Home

BOYS

99~-3077

21i

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, January 9. 1990

CopyrlqhtH 1180

Low tonl&amp;bt In ;lOs. Chlillc~
of snow 70 percent.. Wednesday, high In upper SOs. Chance
of 1now .. percent.

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at

BOYS

Jan. 9-Federal Hockli.g-Home.
Jan. 12-MIDer -•-•
•
Jan. 13-Wtllston-Away
IMAII UPl

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2340

anniversary
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EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov .. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ..................... Home
Dec . 2-Meigs .................................. Home
Dec. 4.,-Kyger Creek ...................... ..... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble ................................. Away
Dec . 7-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dec. 16-Federal Hocking ..................: Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill ............................. Home
· Jan. 4-Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan. 10-Tri111ble ............................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallia ................. ,...... Home
Jan ..15...-Mei1s .................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20- Federal Hocking ................ ~ . Home
Jan. 25-Kyger Creek ........................ Home
Feb . 1-Southern ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Dak Hill ................................ Away
Feb. 8-Symmes Valley ..................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Meigs ........................... ~ .... Home
Nov. 27-Kner. Creek .. ;..................... Home
Nov. 30-Dak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia ......... ................ Home
· Dec. 1-'-Hannan Trace ..........,............ Home
~c. 11-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ........,. ............ Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ........................... HDme
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
· Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away·
Jan. 4-0ak Hill. :.............................. Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ........ :.............. Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ................ Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ........................... Away
Feb. 1-Easttrn ................................ Home
Feb. 5--'Symmes Valley ..................... Home
Feb. 8-Southwestern ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Mei~s .. ,............................... Away

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SWEARING IN
- New and
re-elected members of Raclae VIllage Couqcll
take their ~hA of office prior to the start pl.
Monday night's meellng of council, the flnt of the
new year. The oath Ia administered by · Mayor
Frank Clela11d, at left, to Carroll Teaford and

Robert Jeerle, retamtnr counclbnen, and lelf
Thornton and Ronald Clark, new counclbnen,
pictured left to rlrht. The other two members of ·
council are Henry Bentz and' Larry Wolfe. ·
Clerk·Treuurer Ia Jane Bee111e.
.I

Columbia G03 to reduce .rates
Columbia 'Gas of Ohio an· ·
nounced today It plans to reduce
rates to customers by about 4
percent. This will average more
than $2 a month for the average
residential customer.
"Despite the record cold
temperatures which have forced
an escalation of prices for other
heating fuels, we are pleased to
once agajn be able to reduce
costs to our customers," said
John M. (Jake) Koebel, Colum·
bla Gas manager at Galllpoijs.
"It's especially gratifying to be
able to Implement these cost
reductions at a time our custer
mers can appreciate It most ~
right In the middle of a very cold
winter."
'

1\~minent

· The reduction will amount to
a bout 20 cents for each 1.000 feet
of gas used by customers. For !he
residential customer In Ohio who
uses 10,000 cubic feet of natural
gas per month on an annual
basis, It will mean a reduction In
the average monthly bill from
$55.61 to $53.65.
The reduction In customer
rates Is a reflection o! lower costs
that Columbia projects It will pay
the next three months lor gas It
buys to serve Its customers.
Those costs, re!)ected In the gas
cost recovery rate (GCR) flied
quarterly with the Public Utili·
ties Commission o! Ohio, account
for approximately sixty percent
of the tolal customer bill. Ga~r

r.

purchase costs are passed on to
customers on a dollar·for-doUar
basis.
•
·
· Koebel said the unusual lncl·
dence of a reduction In winter·
lime gas costs is the result of
Columbia 's relentless and conlln·
uous search !or the most loexpenslve, yet reliable supplies ·
available.
· "It's a combination o! Colum:
bla's dlyersllled supply base and
our dedicated supply planning
people who are committed to
keeping tile costs customers pay
for natural gas at their lowest,"
Koebel said.
If ·approved by the comml.s·
slon,. the reductions will be
rellecled with February cycle
bills.

Racine businessman
Roy Proffitt, .81, ·dies o~- Mon.,ay .
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Prominent Racll!e business- ness over to his grandson In 1973, Florence Palmer Proffitt. He Is
man Roy .E. Proffitt, 81, died Mr. Proffitt devotecl hla time to survived by his wife, Lillian
·unexpectedly' Monday at Vete. . opera tine his other bUsiness of · Mosler Proffitt - ~cine, two
rana Memorial Hospital.
wholesaling easolllle In the area. daUIIhters, Fr'eda Fei"JIIson .nd
In the on and 11as drllllllll
He wu a member of the Ohio Maxlnj! Sellers, botll of Racine,'
bu1lness !or many years, l,fr. Oil and ·Gas Alsocatlon lnd the. , five grandchildren,. 10 !!featProffitt Ia credited with having Ohio Oil and Gu Hall of Fame, grandcblldren, one great-ereat
dtUied more than 700 welts In and was Itated Ia "Wbo's Wbo In grandcblld, and eeveral nl-."
OhiO ud West Vll"llnla from 1936 tbe Midwest."
and nepbewa.
,
when he formed the Roy Proffitt
Mr. Proffitt was a tonner
Bftldel his pa,-ents he was
Dr1lltng Compa~y and drilled hta trustee of Lebanon TOWIIIIIIp, ·'preceded In death by a dauehter;
first well .at Bald Knobs In and a fonner Melp County Betty, three brother•. and a
Lebanon Townablp, to 1973 wllen Commluloner.
grandson. .
the company wu.turlled over to
He wu a member of the
Memortal 11ervlcea will be held
his grandlql!, the late Roser L. Reol"lanlzed Churcb of Jesua at 1 p.m. on Tlluraday at lhe·
Adami •. , ·
Ractne.Portlancl Road Church ot"
.Cbrtat of Latler · Day Jlalall,
Mr. ProlfltteottntothedrUllnll Racine-Portland Road, and a
Jesua ·Cbrllt of Latter Day':
bustneu after workiDJ for a tonner pastor and .elder of that
Saints. Elder Dave MlJIIIII will,
Parklenlburg firm as a tool church.
offlcilte Uld burial ,.will be In
dres.aer and well tender In the·
Born on · AprU 6, 1~ at
Bald Knobl Cemetery. Memorial
early 19:.11.
Ravenswood, W. Va., he was the donal lou may be made to the
Churcll, Danny RoUih. PortlancJ:
After. turning the drUIInJ bus!· . son of the late Albert Proffitt and

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Co•m••entary
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·The Daily Sen tine~- ·
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......._.._..,...,,..;....od,_

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•tOBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher.
PAT WHrrEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer

CHARLENE HOI!:FLICH

Generlil ·Muqer

·

A MEMBER of 'llte Associated Press,ln1111d Dlilly Press~
elation and the American Newspaper Publisher&amp; Association.

thu

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wei&lt;Ome. They should be leso
300
wonls long. All letters are subject to edltlnJ ud muol be slped with
name, addre&amp;8 and telephone number. No uoolped letters wUI be pub- ·
llshed. Letters should be In pod tute, addresslnr Issues, not per10nall·

lies.

·

·

More negative camp~igns?,
By ARN()LD SAWISLAK

UPI Senior EditOr
,
.
WASHINGTON- The 1990 state and congressional campatgns are
being prepared right now and if the political professionals who do this
kind of work have any sense, they will look for some new themes for
their candidates.
As anyone who followed the 1988 campaigns can testify, the
poUttcians just about ran out the string on negative campaigning.
The tur~out for the presidential election fell once more to near 50
percent of the age-eltgillle electorate and post·electlon polls found
much of the publtc was sick to death of hearing the candidates do Uttle
except knock each· other.
·
The few 1989 campaigns weren't much i,mprovement. In New
Jersey, Virginia and Ne.w.York City, caqdldates tor state and local
offices whacked away at e.a~hother through the summer into the (all.
That Is not to say all these campaigns were entirely negative. But
· ~ven when candidates made an effort to present positive propos11ls to
tleal with public Issues, they often were drowned out by tlle clamor of
negative campaigning.
.
Nor is It ltkely that political campaigns can or even should be
completely free of negatives. Those challenging · an incumbent
officeholder or entrenched political party almost have to make the
argument that the public' s business Is being badly managed and that
they can do It better.
But that Is where positive campaigning should come tn. Candidates
who claim the incumbent has squandered tax.funds or blundered tn
operating government programs should be expected to say how they .
would do tlle job right.
·
·
Who should hold candidates to account? First, the print and
broadcast media. In every story we do about one candidate criticizing
another, we should specifically take note of whether tbecrttlctsm was ·
accompanied by proposals to solve the problem.
The catch is that many reporters and editors, especfally In ·the
electronic media, belteve discussions or Issues to be boring and view
the confilct Inherent In n.egatlve campaigning, especially when
personal habits are Involved, to be more Interesting to audiences.
That may be so, bu I WI! In the media also have a responslb1llty that
goes with our consiltutlonaltrnmunlty from government interference
to inform as well as to entertain the public.
Also, the voters themselves can have an Impact here. At candidate
forums , at personal appearances and In call·tn shows, candidates
should ]?e pressed for their positive views on the Issues. People who
contribute money to candidates should make it clear they want
·
positive campaigns.
No one really Is organizing the.ktnd of counterattack on negative
campaigning that tbe proposals above suggest. So·, while reformers
complain. cynics snicker and nothlliJ changes. Unless, of course, uie
~pie, Individually and In groups, are so sick of the situation that
they will refuse to vote for candidates who have nothlhg 10 offer but
criticism of thelroponents. That, at last, would get the attentlonofthe
people who run and ruin political campaigns.
·

Today

mhistory

By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 1990 with 356 to follow.
The•moon is waxing .. moving toward full.
The morning S'ta'rs are Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter'. ·
Those born on this date ar~ under the sign of Capricorn. They
include women's suffrage and peacE' movement leader Carrie
Chapman Call in 1859,; pioneer. psychologist John Watson in 1878;
choreographer George Balanchine in 1904; French novelist Simone
de. J;leauvoir in 1908; Richard Nixon, 37th president of the United
States. in 1913 !a~e 77!; strlp)ease artist Gypsy Rose Lee In 1914;
actor Lee Van Cleel in 1925 (age 65); slnget Joan Baez and actress
Susannah York, both in 1941 !age 491; . and country singer Crystal
Gayle in 1951 1a ~e 391 .

Berry's World

•

WASHINGTON - President
Butb bu a promise to keep. He
proml,led to be I~ "education
president," but to do It, he may
·have to fire his education
, secretary·
Wubtngton insiders speculatl!'
that Education Secretary Lauro
Cavazo~ couid.be one of the first
casualties of the Bush admlnis!ration. His feeble f!t'sl yea~ In
the federal principal s office has
harmed Bush's credibility with
educat~rs.
.
~ush s campaign promises In·
eluded a pledge to wipe out
Illiteracy • expand education programs. and Increase spending.
But so far he has received low
marks. Save for a.t education ·
summll / medla event last
summer, Bush has shown Utile
lnlhtlat 1ve to reform the American
sc oo1 system.
. Many inside the system blame
Cavazos, in part for his lac~! of
leadership. Sources who know
him say he Is earnest, even

Pomeroy, Ohio
~EVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
~~

•

~

l

•

paulollateabout~work.butbe

r

V'ar Lea·sr itf TfiiS CotJ~T~Y,

._
'

•

k A n d erson and Dale Vian Atta·

'

THeY Have·it.J...

·

.

revenge, crushes Seattle; '76ers
top Pacers
.
.

embarrasalni display, and two
daya later coacb John MacLeod
was fired.
A tape of that game was llhown
In the Mavericks locker room
before Monday niJht's game,
Inspiring a stroDJ Dallas effort
that ended a two-eame loai!IJ
streak. Aided by 43 trips to the
.free-throw line, . the Mavericks
crushed Seattle 110-96, and also
satisfYing -was the 1i offensive
rebounds registered by the
winners. ·
"We just allowed them too

much inside," seattle coach -' lost five of seven games. The
Bernie Bickerstaff said. "Dallas · 76ers took advantage of famUlar
had lost two games so that should surroundings to claim ·a 120-116
have made them determined. 1 victory over the Pacers, losers of
look at profeulonal athletes as five In a row. all on tbe road.
beln&amp; determined every time
"The first game back after-a
they walk out on the court.
long trip ts not quite a home
''They didn't need any revenge game," coach Jim Lynam said.
motive against us becaulle they "It's an extension oft he long trip,
are pr01."
especially without that extra day
Philadelphia didn't have such . to play with.
·
'\
a pressing need to make an
"We flew home (Sunday) 'and
impression on Indtana, .but was shotaround (Monday).Itwastbe
·returning home following a .two- same old thing."
.
~eek road trip In which the team
Charles Barkley led Phlladel·

.

LemieuX's goals lift Penguins"to '7-5 win
•

•.

and h.-r&amp;ssment - Including a
By LISA BARRIS
.
UPI Sports Writer
. stick to the face- failed to stop
Lemieux from scoring, referee
It Is often said of Marlo
Lemieux that he carries the Ron Hoggarth succeeded.
With 8:03 n~malnlng In the
Pittsburgh Penguins franchise
on his back. Don't believe It; he ·game, Ho1garth called 12 pecarries Nordlques, Devils and nalty minutes against Lemieux.
most recently, New York Hoggarth called 172 total penalty
Rangers on his back. And arms, ml!tutes, Including 72 at one
, juncture of the second period, .
legs: .. •·
·
.Lemieux sCOred twice tn the
The Penguins may be the only
team in the NHL that doesn't first ·period and twice In the
have ·to resort to jumping and second but was visibly upset
after tbe game and refused to do
draping the scoring star.
Lemieux scored four goals by a television Interview. He had
4: 41 of the second period Monday been hlgb·stlcked In the face In
night to send the Penguins to the second period by Ranger
their third straight triumph and Tomas Sandstrom and left the
fifth In six games, 7·5 over the game at 11:57 of the third period
Rangers.
due to an unsportsmanlike minor
" He did stuff tonight with two and a mlsrot'lduct.
The Ran!ers, who have fallen
or three guys on his back," said
Pittsburgh defenseman Paul Cof· from .the Patrick Division lead
into (lfth, lost their thll'd straight
fey. "He was phenomenal."
W.her~ New York's shadowing · game and are 1·11·.3 In their past
15. Tlte Penguins took over third

~-

aSGliT THe kiNP .oF TeRR~iSM

.

For l;lotb the Dallal Mavericks
and Pblladelphla 76era, 'It wai
payback Hme.
.
The Maverlcka, In particular,
had mayhem on their minds
Monday night wben tbey boiled
the Seattle SuperSonics. When
last they had met, Nov. 2~. th~
Sontcs handed Dallas a 117·70
whipping, the most one-sided
game In the .National Basketball
Association this ~eason.
Dallas falle9 to snare a single
offenslv~· rebOund during that

.. \-

DeaR, .\'/e PoN'T HaV@. To WoRRY
·

place with 41 points, three behind
front -running New Jersey and
one ·behind Philadelphia. Six
points separate 'ttrst and last
place In the division wllh Wa·
shlngton at 40 p.olnts, the
R~ngers 39 and the New York
landers 38: ·
· · .
"That was a ·v ery Important
game tor us, I think we were
ready for them," Lemieux said.
O.bvlously he was, 'running his
h!ague·leadtng scoring: streak to
31 straight games ·wllh an unas·
slsted goal 3: 25 In to the game.
Lemieux scored hls 28th goal of
the season by stripping defense·

Is

man Mark Hardy of the puck and
slipping 11 around outstretched
goaltender Bob Froese.
While Sandstrom ser.ved time
for ht.gh·stlcklngL,emleux at 4:23
of the second, the Plltsburgh
captain scored again, .needing 18
seconds of the pbwer play to send
a slap shot past substitute
goaltender John Vanbtesbrouck
for a 5·2 lead and his 31st goal of
the season.
.
When Plttsburgn's Rob Brown
put the lead at 6·2.- the typically
vocal Madison Square Garden
crowd chanted "Last Place" and
" Refund."

•• • •
•
•0

-

'!~~~u~~..~~~!!~~~~!!!..!!!,cspacce
.
ong. larence Mdler

Space Administration (NASA)
receives about $12 blllton 11nnu·
ally in fed~ral tax dollars. ~lie
this Is less than 1':1: of the tot;tl
federal budget, It Is will a great
deal of money and oftentimes
people wonder what we really get
for that Investment. On the one
hand. we see our rockets take-off
Into space on the evening news
and . see the pictures that our
statellltes and shuttles .send
back.
,
.on the other hand. however,
It shardtoseehowtheserockets
and pictures have m 11ch relevance to our everyday lives. so.
some people can' t help b~twonder 1f our Investment 10
space Is really worth it. How·
ever, the fact of the matter If that
our space programs touch our
everyday lives In some rather
extraordinary ways because
space related technologies have
changed. the way that we .live
~ere on earth.
.
Some of the things that we use
everyday owe their origins to out
conquest of space. When NASA
needed a highly abra.ston _ .

worn by Its astronauts, the
research that produced It deve·
loped technology that ts today
used In the production of scratch·
resistant sunglass lenses.
Today, the technology that
gave us these tools can be found
In many cordless power tools ltke
drills and · hand· held vacuum
cleaners . . Moreover. the lunar
rover vehicle that the astronauts
drove on the moon r.eqlltred
special rubber tires .that pos·
sessed low temperature
pltabllltv.
,
.
Nowadays, the technology that
went Into development of those
tires produces. the all-weather
winter radial ti\~S that are on our
automobtles . Furthermore,
Apollo space suus required a
special Iabrie that is thin and
flexible but at the same time
durable and non-combustible.
Research Into developing this
fabric formed the basis for ihe
development of heavier con.
structlon materials that are now
used to construcl such surfaces
as the roofs of today's gigantic
buUdlngs.
,

has also improved as a Fesult of
space· related technology The
monitoring equipment that iS
used by hospitals today to check
the heart rate and other physlo·
logical signs of patients uses the
5ame technology that was deve·
loped for NASA to monitor the
vital signs of astronauts during
space flight. Likewise, scientists
hold out hope that new .break·
throughs is space medicine will ..
soon help people who suffer !rom
affltcttonssuchasheartdisease
osteoporosis and motion sick:
ness. The plivslcallv disabled
have also benefitted from s .
technology . · The unlstix ~~~~
troller was first develo d for
NASA to
id t 1
pe
vehicle. T:a: t~7s ~;:r r~v\ng .
severe! handtca
ce e ps

still the subject of scientific
research that may one day tell us
more aboul how the. Earth's
continents were . formed, what
happened to the dinosaurs, and ·
the history of the sun.
•
To this day • ascientific expert·
ment placed on the moon by
Apollo II contlnu~s to send back
Information about the drift of
continents on Earth. Moreover,
eachdaysatellltemeasurements
from space give us up to date
Information about envlronmen·
tal events on our planet. This
information is being used to help
us better understand such prob·
lemsasthe"greenhouseeffect".
the decay of the ozone layer, and ·
the erosion of t he world's
acceler~te, brake~sf::'i!~t~ coastlines.
·
mobiles so that the
d 1
. Our coun1ry' has 'unquestlona·
Y can r ve a bly bepef1tte4 a great deal from
cafn"!~~~ti~~e ~~Je~r% ~~ei h
our space programs, and we can
been conducted in 5
a as expect to benefit even more In the
taught us a lot abo t thface r~~ future. Not only do these pro·
u
ngs r g
grams teach us much about the
~~no~o:;~~~~h ~or exa'7p~~ the world we ltve in, but they also
during the Ap~ll:e~~s~l~ns a~~ ~:eke this world a better place to

Ben

INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Eileen, In International Falls
Minn. (UP!) - Bren~o Na· · following his retirement In 1943,
gurskl, . the symbol qf brute guarded Ills ·prlv'~cy and rarely
power on a football field·and one granted Interviews.
.of the NFL's early stars, died of
In recen) years, he underwe nt
natural causes Sunday night. He surgery on both knees and was
was 81.
plagued bY artllrttts. He felt he
Nagurskl had been hospital· hadn't been treated fairly finan·
!zed at Falls Memorial Hospital cially by Halas when he was with
for a week, and had heen living at
the Bears but Insisted , "I've got
an International Falls nursing no regrets."
The Rio Grande Redmen (9·4)
•'There was nothing 1 would
Gary Harrison (19.5 points, 9 home for the past year.
· will be on the prowl for their first assists) and Brad Schubert U5
Known as the the Paul Bunyan change," he said. "I watch a lot
Mid-Ohio Conference victory of points, 3.8 rebounds) are ex· of football, Na~rskl was an ' of modern football and I wonder
the season tonight at 7:30 at
All-America at Minnesota In 1929 if I could be happy playing It
~ted to remain as starting
Mount Vernon Nazarene (11·4).
guards, while Troy ' Donaldson and later a fullback for the NFL's because 1 could play only half the
The Rio men are 0·2 In ~ (8.5 points, 5.1 rebounds) could Chicago Bears. He was a charter
time. .
conference ,p.Jay : They lost 99-95 start again as center If Lambcke .member of the Pro Football Hall
. "And I wonder 'what I'd be
In overtime to Urbana on Dec. ~ replaces Brown.·
·
of Fam·e:
playing. lllked to carry the ball ·
and fell victim to Tiffin, 74·66, ·
Born Bronislaw Nagurski on ' but 1 expect that they 'd end up
The Redmen face dual. scoring
lour days later. The team Is threats In Cougar starters Ron Nov. 3, 1908, in Rainy River,
uslngmethesameway theBears·
coming off an 85-82 loss to Holmes · (6·3, sophomore, · 21.7 Ontario, Nagurski acquired the
used Dick Butkus. I suppose I'd
Waynesburg CPa.) on Saturday.
name Bronko because his first· be able to get along with that,
point~. 6.3 rebound~) at shooting
Jeff Brown, the . &amp;-5 freshman guard and Steve Gregory (6·5, grade teacher In International though. 1 always liked defen se
who has started In 12 of Rio junior, 18 points), the power Falls could not understand the better tllan offense."
Grande's 13 games, underwent a forward. Gregory, an Impact accent of the youngster's Ukran·.
~agurskl wrestled profession·
bout with the flu I&lt;~!it week tha:t player for MVNC since his ian mother. He was .enrolled all}: following his retirement and
prevented him !ron\ competing freshma~ year, scored 43 points · under that name and was known
three Urnes was recognized as
against Waynesburg. His coltllt· Saturday to .lead the Cougars to by It the rest of his life.
champion. He always said he
tlon remained In doubt Monday an 81·77 win over Dyke.
· Nagurskl played fullback and
d d h t 11
f hi Iff
~~~a~l~g~' P :se 0 s e as
an~ Ute:c'oachlng staff Indicated
Coach Bernie Ballklan Is also Iackie for Mlnneso!a ill 1927·29,
the power forward could 'be · expected to start Aaron Reynolds when the Golden Gophers com· ·
Nagursl&lt;t never lei! the NFL In
spelled tonight•by either 9attus (5·9, sophomore.- 10.9 points) as pll~ an 1&amp;·4·2 recot4. Minnesota ~ rushing 'and averaged a mOdest
Williams or·John Lambcke.
point guard, Joe White (6·3, went unbeaten with two ties In 3.4 yards per carry during his
Lambcke, who suffered an · senior, 11.5 points) at small 1927 and had &amp;-2 records in 1928 career. He played In an era of
ankle Injury at Urbana, rejoined
forward and John Church (6·5, and 1929.
190·pound guards and 215-pound ·
the ltneup at Waynesburg and
Nagurskl played fullback In
senior, 1.5 points, 2.1 rebounds)
started during the second half. at the post.
only 10 of his 24 college games.
Lambcke Is averaging 9,7 points
TheRedmen split last season's gaining a total of 558 yards. He
and 5.6 rebounds per game, while games wlth.MVNC. The Cougars played the other 14 games at
Williams Is supplying 8.2
fell, 82· 70, on their own floor early tackle, and In 1929 was named
markers and 3 rebounds. Brown
In the ·conference schedule, but All· America at that position.
is credited with 14.1 poliUs and Is
Minnesota Coach Clarence
later ·edg~ Rio Grande, 99·96, at
Spears
the tea m's tlip rebounder with 9 Lyne Center.
called him "the greatest
'
boards each time out.
·
football player who ever Uved ... '
a man who would have been an
all·tlme Ail-American at any
position he chose to play ."
It was Spears who started tlie .
Paul Bunyan legend when asked
.
'
how h'e discovered Nagurskl.
.
The Mld·Ohlo'Conference sche- (5·4, sophpmore, 7.3 points, 4
"I was on a scouttng mission
dule opens for the University of rebounds), wllh Jean Twehues looking for a kid named Smith,"
Rio Grande women's basketball (5·6, senior, 9.5 points, 2.9 re- Spears said. "I caine across this
team (9·6) today at 5 p.m. when bounds, 4.5 assists) repeating at big kld plowing a field- without
they meet Urbana at Urbana's shooting guard. Kim Fields (5·6, a horse - and asked for dlrec·
University Community Center.
IOJi!homore, 8.6 ·points, 6.3 re· ttons. He pointed the way with the
While not taking the Lady Blue bounds) Is the small forward.
plow ."
Knights (8·4) too lightly, the Rio
That was only the beginning in
In 1988-89, the teams split their
ladles ,have a certalit amount of meetings. The Redwomen lost, an era when athletes like Babe
confidence entering the fray, 68-66, at Urbana, but came b;tcka Ruth, Red Grange, Jack Dempconfidence born out of four few weeks later to win, 80·70, at sey and Bobby Jones were
consecu live wins and consls tent Lyne Center.
painted as bigger than life.
·
playing since mtd·Decembt!r.
Nagurskl, 6·foot·2 and 235
'
A · 98-63 thrashing of 'Notre
pounds. was one of them.
Dame '&lt;Ohio) on Saturday, pre·
"He Is the only back I ever saw·
ceded by a 78·60 victory over·
who ran his own Interference,"
Cumberland (Ky.) on the road,
EARLY W)!:DNJO:IIDAY MIXED
said Steve Owen, longtime coach
•
tl-tf.BI
has helped raised Rio Grande's TEAM
of the New York Giants. "Un·
WINS
stock. Against Notre Dame, slx . Tonys Corry Out .................................. st · doubtedly, the hardest runner to
Redwomen scored in double Mike Sells ..... ...... ..... ....... .. ............ ...... 76
bring down I e\'er saw."
J{ackett'a RooGng .......................... ...... 12
figures.
Fellow Hall of Farner George
Sbamml:'s Carry Out ..................... ..... .st
"We've been fairly consist· F .O.E. 171=.............................. :...... :14 .Halas, owner-coa~h · of tile Bears.
P ry Palace ......................... 48
en t," Red women men tor Dollg Kolill&gt;to
for whom Nagurs'kt played from
TUm lor • Hdlltfl Roollnc-1764.
Foote commented. "With the
~DilDo: F.O.E. 2111.e.
•1930 . ~rough 1937' and again in
11111t lorl-." '!l•n C.roCII·ll32; Shirl&lt;)'
conference .schedule beglnlllnl!. • Slmi!IORI•453;
1943, called Nagurskl "the grea·
Boti Stlvert·511; Po I
It's tlme .to go out ,and play our CaroOIH33.
test all-around football player
•
.
IBP.
Game:
!luu
C.rtCII·212:
Shirl&lt;)'
who
ever Jtved." .
best basketball."
Slmnioni-168; Bub Stlveu-188: Pat
"He had the most incredible
Leading Rio In several depart· car ..... 161.
••••
·
·
strength
I've ever seen," said
menta are sta.rtlng center ~nn
TEAii
.1-S·•
.
·
Beattie
Feathers,
who In 1934
Barnltz and point gua~d Debbie
c
lr
A
Auto
...........................
.,
............
'\1
gained
1,004
yards
rushing with
Fredrick. Barnltz Is acorlng13.8 IIIIIJIUitll'oC.rry Out ............................ e the help of Nagorski's
bloc'king.
lt'l Cbe SERIES ONE
points and 6.3 rebounds a game, Toayo Corry Out ................................... 6
~171 ............................... ............ 2
"He was 10 bll and J!owerful, I
BusiD. . Ptjller•.•
wblle Fredrick 1i netting 11.2 F.O.E.
Hackett • ~ne ................................. 0 don't think he knew liow strong
packqed proteetloa for
markers and . 4. assists per MlkPSella ..... ....................................... 0
Te1m
Iori•: c a A Auto-191111.
he
really
was."
•
recaD ii&amp;GrM, olflea,
outing.
·
.,._ Ottmo: Sllommya Ci.rry OUt.eBO.
Nagunkl, wlio
Also starting are Jennl Couch
. . . ..,.._, Jotut Portet·ll56· Debiclatii'Ciles,
(6.7 points, 2.8 rebounds) at Heno10)'·!1M; Bub Stlvora-!131; Pat CartCII• station and
.............. 8lmpllfted
•.
shooting guard, Kerrl Kidwell 480.
Hlp Game: Jolta Poner-216: Debl •
Ia cOIItlld, ean....Dt
(7.3 points, 5.5 rebounds) as Henoley-181; Bub Sttvero-190; Debt ·
taforma&amp;u4verr
small forward and KathY Snyder Htnll0)'•,179.
• (7 , points, 4.8 rebounds) at the
other forward.
,
.urbana, which finished 13th In
the llistrtct last sea1011, II enJOY·
Jll."9
lnJ one of Its more successful' ·
campaigns ·under Cindy
.
McKil(Jht. Center CIJ!dy Frere
c6-3, aophomore) Is averaelna 18 .
t11dst . . ST.
polnta and 10 rebounds and power
.
.
SISSIIII
6iJO
PGP?.Y
fotWard Sarita Brown (5-11,
1111 1'011 I WVUIIU
sopllomore) Is addiDJ 17.8 polntt
and t rebounds to the team's
7100

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'f"•.

..

One Year .·········· ····· '· ················ $72.80

·110 TIRES

.

'

•

Seattle's Dale Ellis, who was
ej~ted with 36 seconds remain·
lng In the second period by
referee Joey Crawford.
At Orlando, Scott Sklles hll a
3-polnter with 2: 21leftto help the
Magic snap an elght·game losing
streak and complete a sweep of
the NBA cttvi~lon leaders. Reggie
Theus 1M, Orlando with 23 points
and 10 assists and the Magic, In ·
their first year of NBA play, now
.b oast victories against the
Knlcks, Lakets, Spurs and Bults.
The Spurs ente~ed Orlando Ar· · ·
ena.wllh 15 victories In 17 games.
At Milwaukee, Greg ''Cadll·
lac" Anderson scored a season·
high 28 points and Ricky Pierce
added 23 to help the Bucks extend
Charlotte's road losing streak to
13 games without a victory this
season. Mllwauk,e e's bench out·
scored Charlotte's reserves 73·33
as the Bucks won for the eighth
time In their last n.lne games.
At Oakland, rookie guard Tim
Hardaway ·ran up his Clrst
trlple!double and: Mitch Rich·
mood and Chris Mullin chipped
1!1 with 32 and 30 points to lead the
Warriors over Denver. Harda· .
way scored 19 points. had 19
assists and pulled down 10
rebounds.

(USPS 145·1101
A. Dlvlllon ol MultimediA. Inc.

tackles and often was the biggest
man on tile field.
The legend of N.agurskl bore
stories as wonderful as they are
outrageous .
-In a Bears·Redskin s game,
he too k the ball on the 5-yard line ·
and wen! straight ahead. He
knocked down five Reds kins.
caromed off the goal post , 10
yards deep In the end zone and
smashed into the brick wall of
Wrigley Field. ''Boy," he said
when lie returned to the huddle,.
" that last guy hits pretty hard."
- The Plltsburgh Steelers
were headed home from Chicago
after having been manhandied
by Nagurski when their· train
lurched and spilled players Into
the aisles . " My God," yelled
Warren Heller, ''Nagurskl 's got
the train. Run for your lives!"
-"His strength was something
awesome," wrote Grantland
Rice. the dean of American
sports writers. ' .'1 once sa w him
break up a fight by picking up a
210:pound man and carrying him
off the field at arm's length ."
Funeral services are Saturday
at St . Thomas Aquinas Catholic
Church. VIsitation Is Friday at
Green·Larsen Funeral Home.

Urbana first MOC opponent
for improving Redwomen ·

wattenberg

every other modern democracy. decade! Sane people go haywire
Medicine will get better and at the turn of a century. When a · Americans have become middle
better and, as scientists can mtllenlum ends, sane people will· class, progressing In roughly the
measure more things, scarier be predicting the end of the
same !ashton that Italians · and
and scarier.
'
world. It won't end. Even if it ,Poles did earlier tn the century.
The United States will grow by does, It's a safe prediction.
Blacks ~Ulal~o make progress
1~ million people during tl\e · Who'll know?
but perhaps more slowly. Somedecade, our slowest growth· rate
The population explosion will
fashlohed black leaders wUI say
ever. But 18 mtlllon more people clearly be over. Third' World
progress is slow because quota's
, atn'_t chopped liver. They'll need fertUityrates tri t!Jeyear2000wlll
set-asides and reserve dlacrlmt:
some place to live, which wUJ be at 3.l .chlldren per woman and
l'iatlon ha\te been eroded by the
cushion a saggtng new housing plummeting .to~ard the replace·
courts.Anewgenerat!Onofblack
market. (We'll grow by yet ment rate.
,
leaders will wisely tell their
another 14 mJlllon from 2000 to
AS democratic modernism
constituents to stop blaming
2010.)
sweeps the world, Islamic fullda·
everything on someone else and
Japan wDI grow by 5 million mentalllm wUl rage In reactton.
get otnrftb lt.
·
people during the decade; It will Terrorism wUltncrease.
T~e next great economic suhave reachedrough population
Nlcara 1 ua will . be a
perpower-wlllbeindla.
stability, preparing for popula· democr11cy. · ·' ••
.
America wlU co~tinue to have
tion Joa1 In the century to come. ~ere will probably be a major ,most of the best 'universities in
Japan accol'dtngly wUI be on the
slon In the '90s. Something . the world.
·
dOWn slope of hl1tory, mlybe
usually bapperis, and the
ErRllsh wlll ~ .the universal
Europe too, for the same reuon. other bad thlnp, like plagues,
lan@Uage.
·
•
The United States will llave · are worse.
America wUI stU! be, by far,
railed Ita l!!Jal Immigration
A likely candidate for the
the most Important natiOn In the
levels. It wlli be apparent that decade' a dumbest argument will world.
·
Immigration II the m01t potent be that 'the u.s. government Is
Alas, therearesometblngawe
IOIIJ'Ce of our growing economic paralyzed. Hey! It spends 8
don't know.
and poUtlcal muacle. lrrlmoiJ'a· trDIIo~ dollars a year!
·
We don't know wb1cb 'way
lion wDI also be a source of
Polltlcalacandall will proUfer- China will go.
creative turbulence In America.
ate In direct proportion to the .
We don't know wbat will
Poverty In tbe United Statl!ll contiDulDJ growth of public af· happen· in the Soviet Union.
wllliiQ down 11ow1y In tile 19901, falra Journalllm.
Sobering thoueht: The world
just II It did In the 19801.
.
By tbe end of the decade, lt will has never bad a civil war In a
Watch out for the end of the be quite apparent tbat .HIIpantc ~~~~on w(tb nuclear weapou.

phta with ·32 points . and 14
rebounds.
With . eight of their next 12
games at hom!!. the Slxers are
looking to make January a big
month.
.
''This Is the month to make or
break our sea,son," Barkley said.
"We've got to win our home
games. Our season will be
decided by nw.end of Janua.ry."
In other games Monday night,
the Orlando Magic upset the San
Antonio Spurs, 111·102, the Mil·
waukee Bucks beat the Charlotte
Hornets, · 126·113, . the Golden
'State Warriors defeated the
Denver Nuggets, 139·122, and the
Portllind. Trail Blazers earned a
108-96 victory over .the Sacra·
mento Kings.
Dallas led by only five points
early In lhe t)li!JI period before
going on a J7·8 surge with Sam
Perkins scoring 9 of his 17 points
in the quarter. Rolando Black·
man paced Dallas with 21 points
·while Adrian Dantley added 18
and Derek Harper 1p. Seattle was
led by Xavier McDaniel with 19.
The Mavericks .made good on
38 of their 43 free throw attempts ,
including a stretch of 23 cons.ecu ·
t.lve successful foul shots In the
second half.
Dallas also was helped In the
second half by the absence of

Bronko Nagorski dead at 81

Holmes, Gregory pose
scoring threat to Rio

So It's 1990. But what's gol~g to
hap~n by the year 2000? Listen
up; some aspects of the future
may be mildly knowable.
· There will be Several top
American romantic movie stars,
of Asian parentage.
Despite continuing discussion
about how weak the presidency
Is, the. president of the United
~tates, whoever he or she may
be, ,wUI. be very powerful probably as powerful as GeOrge
Bush was when he alpne decided
to tnv~de the sovereign nation of
Panama, whiletheCongre.ssald
yes boss, what a great Idea.
Aunlfle'd'Germanywlllbethe
~opest :r.:!ous countey In Eu· u
cau1e of low fertility
rates It will be los !Jig population
more rapidly tban any country In
Europe. What' 1 the opposite of
lebenaraum, sbrlnkensraum?
Several pre.ldenta of the Unlted State. will haile braned
abouthowthey~ntllec~nJawar.
With the dlaappearance of
communllt dlelatorabtpa, sociallim - no IOII&amp;ft · tlllkable to
tyranny - will aJaln be touted
In trendy salons. It 1tUI won't
work.
· The United States will have a
children's ·allowance, Just like

t

'.

11 lbnpl)' UDable Ill run a federal
J QC
de(lartmeat beeauae be doesn't
Critics of Cavazos say his quiet . now has a panel advls!ng·htm on
have the poUtical lkllls to play
style became a glaring naw sc}loolissues.
the Washington game.
· during the debate OV$' the 1990
·Cavazos and Bush deny any
· He should ·have been foreeducation budget. Democrats tn · plans for change. A spdkesman
warned: Cav!IZQs .got the job , • Congress complained that the for Cavazos told us that the ·
based on politics. Xn late· 1988,
budget was not blg enough, .but secr etary prefers to work
President Reagan recruited Ca·
Cavazos didn't make a fuss.
quietly, behind the scenes, and ·
vaz01, the former president of "He should have been tn there
that )le simply hasn't received as .
Texas Tech University, to re' · fighting, insisting that If Bush. Is
much Ink as Bennett.
place the combatrve and colorful
an education president, he should
Whim Cavazos does speakup, (t
Wtlllam Bennett. It was a
make sure the budget stayseveri ts often to parrot the safe buzz
scheme to bolster Bush's pres!·
with lntlatlon, " one congres· words of the Bush adminlstra·
. delltlal campaign, especially In
slonal aide told our associate
tlon, specifically, the notion of
Texas, and to win support among
Scott Sleek.
"choice" In schooling. . Bush
Hispanic voters. Cavazos was the
Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D· thinks parents should be able to
first Hispanic ever named to the
Callt, thinks Cavazos wlll resign choose which public schools their
.Cabinet.
because he ts being hemmed In chlldren attend. That's a safe
Educatorswereatfirstexclted
by the White House . Cavazos'
Issue because It creates .the
about Cavazos. He was open and
strugele for respect In the White appearance of reform without
Call)l, a refreshing change from
House was obvious e11rly on. Last costing the federal government a
the acerbic Bennett. .Now they
spring, Bush tried to appoint a , dime.
,
'
miss Bennett's , confrontational
spetcal edlicatlon adviser and
But It wtll take more than buzz
style. They say that at least he
Cavazds hit the cel!lng, accord·
words to make an education
kept education . Issue~ in the
lng 10 sources who worked for
president. It may take fresh
headlines.
·
Cavazos .. Bush backed off and blood bring,ing fresh ideas.
,

Demo' eco- polltico-socio forecast

.'

'

By Unlled Pl'l!llllaternUIIIIIal

F;ducation secretary may be replaced

Ill Court Street
~lb

..

Dallas gets

Pege-2-The Dally Sa 11inil
Ponoeloy-Micld'apcrt. Ohio
TuaJCiay. Ja..-.y..9. 1~ ·

600 EAST MAIN

I

POMEROY, OHIO

I

�Paga

4 The Deily Seudnolll

· Tu11[1ey, _,....., 9, 1990

'

'

foul trouble."
gan and Rumeal Robinson could
The triumph gave Knight a · not get off a final shot after
228-86 conference record, lying Cheaney's miss with 6 seconds
the Big Tel! victories record set remaining.
by fonner Purdue coach Ward ·
" It was joyous In the locker
'"Piggy" Lambert. Knight was room," Jones said. "This was a
thoqbt to have set the mark -last big win for us after the loss at
year before further research "Ohio State. I just wanted to show
found 15 ' more victories by some leadership for the team. I
Lambert.
.
··
. went out and played as hard u I
Lyndon Jones, a 6-foot-2 junior could. Coach wanted us to ·go m
· guard averaglng4.8 polnls and17 the boards and that's what I did.
minutes a game this season, Theballjustbouncedmyway.""
scored :10 P.l)lnts In 32 minutes of .
Cheaney. a,lres.hman, added 19
action to lead the Hoosiers. He · points and sl&gt;phomore, Eric And·
IJad only 2 points In Indiana's erson scored 17 for the Hoosiers.
69-67losato0hloStatelastweek. Robinson led Michigan with 21
Indiana took Its first lead at • points while Higgins added 16 for
65-64 with 2: 21 remaining when Michigan, which fell · to 10·2
freshman Calbert Cheaney sank overall by losing Its Big Ten
two free throws. Greg Graham opener.
added two !ree throws with 1:01
In other games Involving Top
to play and 'Jones-sank two more 20 teams, No. 1 Kansas defeated
21 seconds later.
Ne braska 98-93,Nq: 2 Georgetown defeated Pitt 87-71 and No.
Mlchlgan's .S!!an Higgins hit a 13 Louisiana State topped Ten· ·
3-polnt shotrr001the left baseline nessee 100.94.
.
with 35 seconds remaining to pull
. At Lincoln, Neb., Kevin Prlt· ·
Michigan withll! 69-67, but by chard scored 18 of his 2~ points •
then llldlana had IIC!lred 17 and Rick Calloway added -15 of
straight points and · kept the his 21 In the second half night to
Wolverlnesofft!tescoreboardfor ,guide the top-rated J!lyhawks
7:23.
over the•Cornhuskers In the Big
Jones and Cheaney each Eight Conference opener for both
missed free throws In the final teams. T)le Jayhawks Improved
seconds for Indiana, butHIQins to 16-0 and Nebraska dropped to
missed a 3-polnt shot for Michl- 6-6. Ray Richardson led Ne-

,__, I)Cal
•.

.

OUT OF MY WAY- Michlran'sSeanHigglns (L) drivesag~nsl
: l!ldlana's Calbert Cheaney Monday during the first half of their
· Big Ten game at Assembly Hall. (UPI)

UPI ratings

IDdt-tl, Mldllpnl7

MIYKlhaetr II , Ia~ WHf,f)'. . '71
Ro•Hulman •· UIMienwood 41

NEW VORK( VPI ) .:.... TbeUnl&amp;edP~s
lnk!rnMktral Bof,nl ol Coi.cherJ' Top !C!
C:O IIt'. . hNdball ,.a lap, Willi ll,t-

.Ku- t8. Netnsb tl ' ·

M•B.._., CltyltlO, Trnlftlll!e St &amp;
No11bl)llrk IH. Ru• Coli. Of Mia$. t3

p .. ce voteK arMI rUGnb lllr~.bJaa. 11n
parenlfl eKet~, &amp;ot.al polnt11 fhftd on 11

Prlllclpla 19l,llllftola Coli. 18
Quine)' IIi, SE Ml..ourl n
8alm1 iWVa) 78. Ce•tnll 8tfllr 17
S.anfdrd Brown IS. Concordia tO
SW MlaBOurt 77, Wlclilla Statr 51
TIG'IOr II, lndo&amp;lulfii!MI51

polntl' lor fll't( plaee, U ,., ~~eco-.1, etc . )

and Iaiii week'll ru11:1n~r.

TPwn

Po1ftt 11

I. KM•8 IU) IIH) .... ...................
lt. GHrptowa Ill ( Jl.f) _ ............ 582
3. Oklahoma ( lt-1) ...................... ..1!11
.J. MICIUJU (Il-l) ................•.• ••••• 448
S. Ml..ourl f-13-1) ............... ......... AS1
I. Sy nu.'U .. 1lf.J ) - ········ ·-..... ... .... ut
i . IIIIMhJ~ II - 1) ..... ............ ...... ..... 3JI
ll. Nf'\lad~L• VPJM (I) lt-2 ) ...... :11 !

!
3

Tole., 81, Clncl•-· '2Z

s
5
7
1

"•,.ler 111. Loyola (Ill) '7:1

w...

C1d Lulhrran •· . . llutyD.
Cal Narlllrld&amp;r Sl, Colo. Sprinp 37.
MMifr' 1 CoiL Sf, NOI'Iliii'Mt 01. 17

..

!
t . ~rp;la TPch (lo-t) ... ............... 31712
II . l.oWAvlllf' ( 1..2!) . .... . ....... ......... 1-U 111
II . Dub fli-t I .••... ........ ........ .....••ft7 13

Results

12. lnllua (I .. I) .. ...................... . 1111 11
13. Lolll~;iana SC. fl-11 _......... ....... IS.J 11

Glrll Oll&amp;o JU.-hSciMtoiBu..._li"all
ly Ulllled Preu lakor ~atlo-.1
MoiiiiO''• Re.Wt a
Albuy Neua d!r 5%. Nt&lt;llklll York U
Bluttt~rklllll , M'adlworth S7
Bulla1'1llf'lt,Skywe.lt
Buvtr Creek Sl, Trolwood Madlson'n
BrookJyn 5!, ~tnolew tt
• ckeye Souift?reM st. MArUna Ferry

II. Arluut•ll ll-t) _................ .... IIII.J
II. MlnntMota ( 11-1) ..................... ..41 z
li.St. JoM'll lll-2) .... ,....... , ........ ...
z
17. AI"II:OM (II·~) -........... ~., ........... .!1111 ·
18. t!C
Loyola Mu,....,. (I~ ) .... ,...... 14 z ,
II
•
Lt\11-2) ..................... ."......... 12111
:D. Ala bMw. 110-J) ......... ... :............ )! Ill

u

,,

l •lalrul . . d

Ot•ll'rfl;n&gt;c~hinlllvoks : Colaratlostale
IASalltt, Mt&gt;mpbl tiS&amp;ate, MichlpnS&amp;al~·

.

Ch _;..,Ian '71, La8rar

n

ClnC.u•ry ~ M, Bahvla33 ·
CrHIW'ItOd
Ahpdore u

ae.

Nor1h C11.roll•, OrttpJI Slale, Ppnlw:

Sowflwe.~n IAWIIilal., Tn:M, Tnu·

.

El P111o. Vlflh.a, Xavier !OIIIt). ,

'.

Gats Mill! Hawlkln 53, lndeprade•4!

St\TIO~A.L

Henllock Miller II. ltelpn"' H
Jacboa U , VInton Coullly 3S
Lrlp.h: Tl, C.r)' Rauon Jl

BA.SKETBALL AS SOC

M... ., Re~ ... 11
Orilndo Ill. Su Antonio lot
Phllad~pN~tl%t.ln•W llti
Oalbl!i Ill. Sll' lll le !1i
Mlht'IWII:re l!fi, CharlotW Ill
Gol*n State 131, Dnwr IU
Porilllnd lOll, Sacrw m~o 11
o
,
,Tuelld .1if Game.
·" a'lhiRMon at New Vort, 7:31p.m .
ftu!Jton lli Nno•Jtrllf')' . 7: 30p.m .
L,, tllpprruJ: Cii art.tl!r, 7:31p.m.
Sun .llitonlo.t·MJaml, 7: 31p.m.
tlllcqo ac Dfti'Gil , '7; Mp.m .
Sft.M ik' sU Houlllo~t. II: 11 p.m. ./
LA Lakt&gt;l'l lll PhGml.- . 11 ,....YUnnrllllla Ill SalTam~o. ID: 31 p .m.

Ntw&amp;oa Falll Sl, Dlarnollll SE U

Kfdtmolll Hla fl,

, , \\'~·ldJe :!1, 8tNtohboro 53 '
~OUIIfP Un..• l l, YounpCh&amp;nl!f 31

,'

T1lf'IMia.\' 8p0ftll Cal Millar
Baa~tba.ll

SeaiDrs Proft~~~lllonal
Rue hall .btiodllllllon
WM Falm BI!M"b a1 St. P cler!ftJI'It.

1

,

7: 05p.m.
\\11Rr Hann d Fort Myer_,, i : OSp.m.
Bra d~l011at OrlladD. 7:U.p.m .
CoUep
i
Dalllul - NCAA Co n\-eadon
Soc('rr
,
M-.Jor lndo•r Soccer iA'II&amp;UI"
No f{IUn ell !tthtAllt'd

'

College scores

Ttnnl1
Sytlne)', Aulllr&amp;lia - 1175.IJIO mrn'IJ
· New SOadl Wale~ Opl!ll
Sydnf')', AMalnlla - 12!5,100 wonwn's
~f'W Ko ulh WaiN OjtN

Co UPI;f! ~I.-thai I R t5 Wi !'l
E ..t

r\t. .~wn ptl o n II, narli ~~~
l!k&gt;mley Hll. 'l.owl'll f! t iOT )

f'IM rlon !UI, Point P arll73
C'o rrt&gt;ll l~.

Oru~r -II

M'arl'l'n Howland 41. Nlle~~McKialey S5
WIIIHioe $4, Kllht.wn Sl
M'*rford St. Wedfldd 21
WllJnNYIItf St. C.'MYIIIe 41
Welbton It; Trimble 41
WelllaKton 41, Lor llroebl• n
Weii»WI .. 511, Eat Unrpool .J3
, Willi hun H. Gumtntlle Gar 2(1

Wf'dnoid Q G1tmt!J
DPtrok ILl ll010ton
S"'· \ ' orlr. al Ph lla4t'lphia
LA Olpptnal Allanta
Mll~nub "" ld Ch•vel*ld
Cb lcal(o at lftdlan.a
IHn w r ilt t:lah
Orll.n .. at Li\ Lallf'r!i
I&gt;alia.~ al Go ld.-n ~tat t'

l ' /'.;(' Gr.. rnllboro 51

tlorida rUrM 11. Dftlawarl' Nat~ 73
Ot&gt;Ora;dDWn lli, PllhiM.Irrh 71
Locli H 11~f'rt 117. Pill Bradford 7t
)larillt 110, Br oold)' n Co l. ~
Thiel m . Ohio Bel mont 11
l 'rlilnWI 57, Pe!Awar~ \'altey 53
Ullca Col. 105, llnlflamtori 88
"' IU'r~NibuiJ 111, "'" ' U brrt)' 'r7

•

. ....

SENIOR PRiJFIS!Dl\'.U.
BASEB..U.L .-\SS"i
M..dqR"••
81. Pettor.._,..,, W•tPalm lk&gt;acll t
Gold Coull, 8&amp;. Lude I
Fort MJtl'lll!. WlaMr HaY~n!
Orlll'k'kt 8, BratleMoa 1

Melli If¥

........,

Sp;.~Tran•dlo• '

DtlroM - Named lohn F~ .., c hlir-

\ ' air 53, ( :0 J~;at~ U •

maa tm4!f'lt..., Jim CamJ*tll chlllr"TMD

Appalac: hlan Sta.t r At, Wnc Caroll• 78
('am Jfl•ll AI. Davldao n U
l'hrll!topbf'r Nt!W ,.,., 12. Mow• Oltw at
ColumOO ,(o l, Be, Faulkftr,r U, S$

Scllembechler pralllent.
Mln~nt&amp;a - Sl~d o.Wdder Car·
mtlo CUillo. uicher l..taiQ' Weba&amp;l!r
aad .eeo ... ba~eiMII Chip HaliP.

l.S U I I I , Tf'nriPI'I.oif'II'IN
.'Mu!lhall '72, \ 'lrrlllfa MlllarJII
NltV)' 8!. l 1SC ·WIImtnston 5t
RldtiNlrd 10, •Jamt'l' Ma~on d
~oulh"'n 01. 7:. "'~tJorn K.)o . t;
\'a.: Tc:ch 71. , ,._ CO mmonwealth 1111

tOTI

•

.'Midwe~~ i

Brad Ill')' T7 , ' Drahl8

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Horace Stoneham, who shocked ·
the baseball world by moving the
New York Giants to San Fran·
cisco In the late 1950s, died
Monday In a hospital lp Scottsdale, Ariz. He was 86. '
Stoneham had been hospitalIzed since Chrlslmas Day with a
broken hlp suffered In a fall at his ·
home and had been Ill in recent
months, according to T!te San

nd ehJd n:enlve oD'Ioer ai.d Bo

BuiRtball
In II. . - P1..cediUU'd Rld.eyGrf'!n
on tile lnJ•ft!• liM: ac:tl\'llld forward
CaM• Nau.
• Collf'r
lnclana siale- N.artw.d Mllct Calwrt

backfield t'Oal'h.
,JuNata T Name• L..rrr Bock -mu'11

Yolleyball -e oa&lt;~ h.

Marshall, WVU vote to repeal
.'Proposition 42, which stays
DALLAS (UPI) - The follow·
lng Is the roll call vote on NCAA
Convention Proposition 27, which
asked Division I schools repeal
the academic s!a!ldards legislation passed In 1989 known as
Proposition 42.
The motion to repeal failed by a
228-92 count. with five
abstentions.
Voting In favor of repeal were:
Alcorn, American, Appalach·
ian State, Arkansas· Little Rock,
Augusta, Bethune-Cookman, Big
East Conference, Boise State,
Boston .College, Baylor, Cal.
St .-Fresno, Cal. St.-Fullerton,
Cal. St.-Long ·Beach, Central
Michigan, Chicago State, Colo·
rado State, Connecticut, Dartmouth, DePaul; Delaware Sl11te, ·
Detroit, Duquesne,
ECAC, Eastern Washington;
George .Washbtgton, Georgetown, Grambling, Hartford, Ha·
wall. Howard. Illinois·
Champaign, lana, Jackson State,
Kansas, Long Island, LSU, Louisiana Tech, · Maine, Maiabau,
Maryland-Eastern Shol'l!', Miami
(Fla.), Michigan State, MidEastern Athletic Conference,
Mississippi Valley, Monmouth,
Morgan State, Nebraska,
Ne\rada·Reno,

TAX TIP

(

because, while In office, he had
vetoed a bill giving equal opportunity for female athletes.
Panna Lopiano; women's athletics director at the University
or Texas, said earlier Monday
that while 110me of her collegues
. might n.ot show up for the awa~ds
dinner, shedldnotexpect them to
take any other action.
While Introducing Reagan,
master of ceremonies Harry
Reasoner, credited tbe fonner
pre~tdent with "helping to 11et the
atmosphere for what bas hap-_.
pened the last four mont!IJ (In
Eastern Europe)."
·
Reagan received a standing
ovation from the more than 2,000
NCAA 'delegates attending the
awards dinner - both Wbe!l he
first came Into tbe room and
when he received his trophy.
(

Blue Devils split
games with Meigs

New Mexico State, New MexIco, Niagara, Nicholls State,
North Atlantic Conference,
North Carolina A&amp;T, Northeast
Conference, Northeast "Louisiana, Northeastern, Northern
Arizona, Northwestern (La.)
State, Notre Dame, Ohio Valley
Conference. Oklahoma State,
Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, Prairie
View, Providence, Purdue,
Santa Clara, Seton Hall, Siena,
South Carolina Stale, Southern
Conference, Southern Illinois,
Southern-Baton Rouge,
Southwestern Athletic Confer·
enc'e, Southwestern Louisiana,
St. Francis !N.Y.), St. John's, St.
Joseph's (Pa.). St. Peter's, Syra·
cuse, Temple: Tennessee State,
Tennessee-Chattanooga, Texas·
El Paso, Texas Southern, VIllanova, Weal VIrginia, Western
Carolina, Western . Kentucky,
Winthrop and Wisconsin-Green
Bay.
Abstaining were:
Atlantic 10 Conference, Big
Eight Conference, Eas!l!rn llU·
nols, East Tennessee, Gateway
Athletic Conference.
The remainder bttheDlvlsloni
schools voted against repealing
Proposition 42. ·

In 1957 Stoneham and Brooklyn
Dodger owner Walter O'Malley
decided to move .t heir clubs
simultaneously to the West
Coast, O'Malley to Los Angeles,
for the 1958 season. ·
New Yorkers and some baseball .traditionalists were outraged by the moves that brought
big league baseball to the West
Coast, where both owners saw
greener pastures and O'Malley
never ceased to prosper.
The San Franclseo Giants were
a sellout In small Seais Stadium
while Candlestick Park was ·
being bu II t and the crowds
followed Into the new park where
the team won the ·National
League pennant In 1962.
The Giants finished second five
times In the 1970s but fan support
began waning
.
'

Ga!Jia Acad~my junior
high Blue J:&gt;!!vlls spill their
hardwood doubleheader with
Meigs Monday night at Washlngton Elementary.
In the eighth-grade game, the
Marauders won 46-37. Maraud,
ers J. Stanley "and S. Peterson
tied for game honors with 14
points. Ryan Rose led the Blue
Devils. 5·2, with 12 points, and
teammate Dusty Hill followed
with nine points and eight rebounds, while Mike Donnally and
Chris Sommerville scored six
each.
In the seventh-grade game, the
Blue Devils sUpped away with a
36-35 victory. Davis and RoderIck led the Devils w~th nine points
each, while Ev01ns chipped In
with eight. For Meigs, Krawsazer .and · another unknown
teammate led all scorers with 11
points each.
·
The Blue Devils will · go to
Jackson today to face the .
Ironmen.

Cult leader, fami!y
refu$e extradition
"

'

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ing for a gn~at nile,
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THE
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CORN NUTS

BIBLE
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Would appreclaie cai'dl
Raymond Rowe, of the Racine
area, Is hospital~ at Unlver·
· ~~~Y Hospitals; Columbus, where
Ill' Is undergoing leflta. He II a
patient In Room 804 of Rhodes
Jlall. Members of his family ny
be would appreciate card• from
home.
lfeclllllllellfllll
There wlll be a special meeting
of tbe Southern Local School
Board on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
tbe high ICbool.
·
lpe d•• mee&amp;lq
'
Tbe Letart Town1hlp Trustees
will bave' a apaelal meeting on
Wedneday at 7p,m. •t the office
'bulldhtg.
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Middleport,
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PERSON-ALIZED
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SIIOU YOI.IIAIIFIDIW
Olor • .,._ ,.n. t1111 , . . .,... ..
llin.-...ll ...... 1lonfllot.lf.a
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.

'

weather

•

wanted. It was then decided tbat
three people representing the
fire departments (which may
Include a village official since
Pickens Is both mayor and fire
chief In Syracuse). and three
township residents, would meet,
hopefully this week, with the
trustees. Selected to represe.nt
the township were Becky Hall,
Bud Rose and Don Bell.
Another public meeting has
been scheduled for next Monday,
7 p.m.. at the store In Antiquity,
at which time the problem may
or may no·t be resolved.

1985 through 1989, the first five
years of the one mllllevy which
was renewed by voters · In No·
vember. Fire department offl·
c lals neither agreed with nor
ruled out this suggestion, so'
possibly, this will be the answer
that residents are loo.klng for.
Although none or the Letart ·
Trustees attznded tbe meeting,
others who had spoken earlier
with the trustees Indicated they
(the trustees) would be willing to
discuss the matter and try to
work out some sort of compromIse, If that:s what residents

TABLE FULL

PRICED

H08pital

A SPECIAL 6

ONTH

llc!y stated their obJections to the policy ·expires later this year,
trustees' declalon to divide the -The Increase would result belevy money and sign with Syra· cause his home Is farther than six
)
TJ111 calli were answered on Monday by Meigs County · cuse, was whether or not they mileS from the Syracuse Departhave adecwate fire protection at
ment. Hom~ which lie farther
Emeraf!Dcy Medical Services units.
thiS
time.
'1f
my
bouse
catchl!ll
than six miles from the "prlm~ry
Af 12:13 a .m., Racine .took l{jevln Dugan from Raclrie to
fire
tonight,
who's
going
to
responding''
fire department are
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
answer
the
call?
Racine
or
considered to be In a class 10 " no
Oruge Township Fire Department at 5: 18 a.m ..wu called to
Syracuse?" ·
fire protection" area, he said.
. ··
a hay fire on Qentz Cemetery Road.
It was noted that at Ibis point In
Racine !lt .9:"56 a.m. went to Trouble Crei!k Road for Mary .
time, Syracuse has the contract
Many residents seemed to be In
Kearns who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
with Letart Township, and Ra·
favor of working out a division of
At10: 27 a.m. , Rutland transported John Judson from Meigs
..cine, without a. contract,, Is not
levy money based upon the
.Mine No. 2 to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital. ·
obligated
to
go
because
orthe
fire
percentage of times Syracuse
Tqppers Plains at 11:08 a.m. went to Route 681 for Donna
department's
own
Insurance
con'
Fire
Department ()as assisted
. Reed who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital andat12;21p.m. to
cerns.
Although
Racine
firemen
Racine
In Letart Township fr.om
Township Road 404 for VIctor Bahr who was taken to Holzer ·
Indicated If there ,were a. fire
Medical Center.
·
· · ·
·
' .
·
anywhere In Meigs County and
Pomer oy Fire ·nepartmentatl2: 48 p.m. was called to an auto
they were called to assist, they
fire on Smith Road. The vehicle belonged to Robert J.,andaker.
would go. ·
AI 1:41 p.m., Syracuse transported Russell Radcliffe from
Residents who defended the
College St. to Holzer Medical Center.
or the trustees pointed out
actions
Racine at 4! 26 p.m. was called to Valley Bell Road for Roy
that
by
signing with both departProffitt to Veterans Memorial Hospl,tal.
.
·
.
ments,
as the trustees apparSyracuse at 7:17p.m: went to Sixth St. for Emma Chapman to
ently thought they would be able,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
to do, they were doubling fire
,,
protection t.o tbe township.
Conlin~ from p(lge 1
Although the possible Increase
In home owner's Insurance re·
~
. ~ . maillS a factor In the dilemma,
·
$40 to .$70.
year of the tax as more residents . some .residents felt they might
. A report was given by Mayor not now · ..paying ·· the · tax · are not be affected by this for some
Hoffman on the recent meeting enrolled. · ·
time sln~e the Insurance Servlwhlch he and Councilman Gil·
Gerard announced the District ces Office In Columbus, which
more attended In Columbus witli SoUd ·Waste Management meet- determines the fire ratings of
the Ohio Department of Natural lng to be held In · McArtbu.r townships and• municipalities
Resources, Division of Water· tonight which he will be•attend· throughout the state, probably ·
ways. That meeting regarded the lng and discussed the proposed would not be reevaluating the
use of a grant made to Middle- cost of $123 mllllon for the township In the near future.
portio Improve the levee.
construction and maintenance of However, at least one 'Qther
A meeting of area boaters was a regional limdflll.
resident was loki by his Insuset for Monday at 7 p.m. at
He also talked about trash ran.;e agent that If Syracuse Is
Mlddlepogt, VIllage hall. At that . problems In' the village and the • the "prijnary responder" to
time boaters will be Invited to need for a goal this year of ~etart Township, he could look
have Input Into use of the. grant cleaning up some areas In · an for lils l;lltes . to Increase more
monies. Gene Triplett, a local• effort to lmprove.nejghborboods.. than $150 a year when his present .
engineer, Will also be Invited to
Also discus~ .!It \he meeting
attend the m~tlng In prepara· was tl)e ~elgs · Local School
don for the preliminary design Dlstrlet's proposal for buUlll!lg
which, tbe mayor said, will be the two new· schools In the district.
next step In the project.
Several councU members will Dally stol;lk prices
Council voted to .retaln Attar- attend ·an Informational meeting (As of 10:30 a.m.)
ney Steve Story as legal counsel to be held on ~an. 11 at the Meigs Bryce and Mark Smith
to tbe vlllag~. It also voted to hire Junior High School. Meetings are of Blunt, Ellis &amp;o: Loewl
Roger Williams as village re- being held In all areas of the
~atlon. director, a position he school district preliminary to Am Electric Power ............. 31 'Va
$ ~last year, at a salary .of co~uctlng a survey later this AT&amp;T .. ............... :...............45 '%
7,
a y,ar.
.
' , · spMr g. ,
,, ~
·~
Ashland 011 ........................ 38%
Street· and water deparlffi nt
ho aydor s re P.C?rt•ffS6or December Bob Evans .... : ..................... 13%
workers were commended 'lfor s we rece1plsQ ,383 . Attend· · Charming Sho pes
11
their work during December's ' 'tng were Mayor Hdftman, Clerk- ·· Cit H0 ldl cp
.... ........... 15
lnclemen t weather.
Treasurer Jon Buck, and Coun· F dy 1 Mng 1
2. 0.,
It was noted that an Increase of cllmen Horton, Satterfield,
Goeodera Togu&amp;R ......... .. ...... ... ... ;1
12 percent Is expected In Income Gilmore, Wllila(ll Waiters and .
tax revenue during this second James C.latworQty.
· Heck s ............................... .... 4
.
,.
• 't
Key Centurion ....... ....... ......13¥.,
•
Lands' End ......................... 20%
Limited Inc ........................36%
Multimedia Inc............ , ...... 92'%
Rax Restaurants ........ ...... ...... 2 .
Robbins &amp; Myers ........... :.... 15¥.,
Shoney's Inc............. .......... 12%
Star Bank .......... :: ............... 20'%
WendY,'s Inti. ................. ..... .4'% ·
.1 q, ~ ·~.:. ..: '"1
'· '
~
SAN DIEGO (UPI)
A Diego County Sheriffs Depart- Wortlilngtgn J~J1 ..'.. ,............. 23%
EACH
·
religious cult leader and two ment sajd.
(Robblni &amp; · )llyers Inc. Is ex
family members arrested In the·
dlvldebd today)'; .
.
"
ritualistic killings of five people
In his Inter.views with the three
In Ohio refused extradition, fore- Monday, Miller said Lundgren
~ews
lng what could become a three- was quietly adamant In his
month legal struggle to return refusal to waive extradition, and
them for trial.
Damon followed his father's
Veterans Memorial
Jeffrey Lundgren, a 39-year- lead.
Monday· admissions - Paul
old defrocked minister of the
Allee Lundgren appeared wil· .Balle~ , Middleport; Perry
Reorganized Church of Jesus . ling to agree to extradltloll but
Mltc;l), Pome oy ; Ernest
Christ ·of Latter-day Saints, his did not want to counter her
Br,ewer, Racine.
Wife, Allee, 38, and son. Damon, husband.
.
,
Monday discharges - Mary
19, all refu_sed to waive extradl·
"TJ~e elder Lundgren said he , -!ones, l.eOqa Karr.
·
lion Monday and were to be would not sign, and the son said · ' ·
arraigned Tuesday on fugitive - he would do whatever his father
complillnts filed by prosecutors did," Miller said. Allee Lundgren
•·
EACH
In San Diego, .offlt:tals said.
· "was just holding her head. Sbe
South Cenll'al Ohio
The three defendants, booked wanted to sign. She said, ·r don't
Rain changing to snow likely
on Ohio warrants charging them understand why they (Jef!rey Tuesday night, with a low In the
· with mur:der and conspiracy, and Damon) are dotrrg this; we lower 30s. Chance of preclplta·
remained In custody without have to get back to Ohio:'"
, lion Is 70 percent. Partly cloudy
"Perhaps she can convince WedneSday, }Yith a chance of
ball. They were captured Sunday
· when a nationwide search ended them to sign (Tueday mom~)
morning snow and highs In the
at a motel 14 miles north ·or the before the arraignment. If ~e · up~r 30s. Cha nce of snow I.s 40
Mexican border.
does, the judge will give Ohio 10 percent.
·
Extended Forecast
"We,expectto arraign them on days ·to pick them up," Miller
Tuesday. After that, It will take said.
,
Thursday through Saturday
EACH
upto90daystogetthepaperwork
Deputy District Attorney John
A chance for rain Thursday,
from the Ohio governor to our Hewtcker said there was . not ~lth fair \feather Friday and
go,v ernor and from him to us," · much hope that Jeffrey Saturday . Hlghswlllbelnthe40s
detective Rich Miller or tlie San Lundgren would change his Thursday and Friday and In .the
·
30s Saturday. Overnight lows will
mind.
''I wouldn't say this was
be In the 208 Thursday morning,
unexpected.
I caq only surmise
the
30s early Friday, and the 20s
Masonic servi~
that he's quite an authoritative again Sa~urday morning.
figure, and his No. 2 and 3 do not
8et for E. A. Wingett
want to go against him," Hew·
61~
Masonic services for E. A. fcker said.
foreclosure action
(Bud) Wingett who (lied Monday
'
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Diamond Savings and Loan ·
Extended Care Unit, will be held Divorces sought
Co.
, successor In Interest to
T&gt;· ~sday at 7: 30p.m at the Ewing
EACH
Funeral Home. Mr. Wingett was
A divorce action has been filed ·Athens County Savings and Loan
a member of the Harrisonville lnMelgsCoinmonPieasCour,tby · co .. Findlay, has flied a foreclo.
· . sure action against Robert W.
Masonic Lodge·for more than 60
D.
Eakins,
.
.
Pomeroy,
Syracuse; Cheryl A. Crow,
Betty
years. His fumis:al servles will be agalqst Ronald. A. E\Jklns, • Crow,
Zanesville, et al.
held at 2 p.m Wednesday at the
~
In the state's . case against
Racine United Methodist Church .Pomeroy·
their
Marvin
Cremeans, the court has
Filing
for
dissolutions
of
with the Rev. Roger Grace
marriages
are
William
A.·
Nutordered
that Crem!lans be reofficiating. Burial will be In
.
ter.
Reedsville,
and
Terri
L.
leased
from
the Ross Correc·
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Nutter,
Reedsville;
'Margaret
M.
tiona!
Insdtute
to participate In
'. \
Bollinger, Pomeroy, and Delbert the Meigs County Community
H. Bollinger, Pomeroy .
·Corrections Program.

°".................
rear. · ..................... ,.

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Stock$

OF THE WEEK

.Reagan accepts honor from NCAA
.• DALLAS. (UPI) - Former
President Ronald Reagan, InsistIng he was more Interested In
football than his studies In his
college days, Monda:t night re.celved the NCAA's !tlghest
award.
, : Reagan, who played football in
the early 19~s at Eureka College
In Illinois, became the 24th
recipient of the Theodore Roosevelt Award, gl)(en by the national
collegiate organization "to a
dlsdngulshed citizen of national
reputation and oulstandlng accompUshment'' who earnesJ a
varsity letter while In college.
There was no algn during the
award ceremony of any protest
by 110me female members of the
NCAA who IBid earlier they
objected to Reagan being named

Francisco Chrimlcle.
A memorial service was scheduled In Scottsdale Wednesday
morning with ·cremation to fol· '
low, the paper said.
Stoneham Inherited the New
. York Giants In 1936 from his
father Charles, who bought the
club In 1919 In partnership with
famed Giant manager John
McGraw and Judge Francis
McQuade.

tha
(Continued
from pa!re 1)
.
ore
n
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M
news briefs---.
.

The Daily Sentinei- Pitgt

"1990

The Musketeers trailed 42-41 at
halftime, but outsCored the
R11mblers 48·21 In 'the seconp
half. ·
Xavier Improved to 10-1 over·
all, Its best start since 1985 when
the Musketeer-s won the National
Invitation Tournament. They·are
now 2-0 In the Midwestern
Conference. ·
·
Loyola Is 3-8 overall and 0-2 In
the MCC.
Derek Strong ad"ed 20 points
for Xavier and Tyrone Hill
scored 16.

Former Giants own~rStoneham. dies

ElyrtaOpe~~Doorll, 0t)'llh-a;a•81•H

Fe-.. Hoddar57, PomeroyM•Ip41

Pro results

"I thought our kids played Bob Huggins said his defense
hard," Toledo coach Jay Eck allowed easy shots.
.
said. "I'm sure we caught them
"We have to take a lot or.the
when they were a little flat after credit for that," Huggins said,
their big win ovl)r Louisville.' ·
noting that Toledo made 14 shots
Chad Keller ·scored 20 pOints . In the lane r-rea during .the first
and Craig Sutlers 18. both mak· half. "We made them shoot that
lng seven of 10 field goals, In well.
leading the Rockets to the second
Cincinnati, 8-5, was led by
best shooting performance In the Keith Starks with 18 points and
school's history.
Levertls Robinson with 16. Cln·
clnnatl made 30 of 61 shots tor49
Toledo used a 13-1 run at the percent.
.
end of the first half, with seven of
Meanwhile, In Cincinnati Ml-'
the points c6mffig from Keller, to chael Davenpprt scored 26 points
break the game open, 39-26. The In leading . Xavier University to
Rockets then coasted to . the Its lOth straight victory, an 89·73
victory by making 79 percent of win 1 over Loyola of Chicago
their shots In the second half.
..despite a 37-polnt effort by
First-year Cincinnati coach.,.' Loyola' s Keith Galles·.

Pomaov-Midclaport. Ohio

Middl
.. eport ••••-------"''".,.,.----.----

ToledO upsets Cincinnati; Xavier beats Loyola
By United Press International
The Toledo Rockets of the
Mid-American Conference have
a losing record but already qave
victories ' this · sei!Son against
teams from the Southwest Conference, the Big East Conference
and the Metro Conference.
Toledo hosted Cincinnati Monday night, but the Rocke.ts
apparently were not Impressed
by .the fact that the Bearcats
knocked off nationally ranked
Louisville. last Thursday In a
Metro opener.
·Toledo shot 69 percent from the
floor In beating Cincinnati 84-72.
Earlier In the season, the
Rockets, now 5-7', had wins over
Houston and Pittsburgh.

II

•

EMS has 10 Monday oolls .

. braska IA(Ith 18 polntll, Wttb Rich

J&lt;lngaddlngl7. TlleCornhuilcers
led 61-48 with 16: 23 left In the
game . when Kanies \l.ll!d a H -2
run to gei back Into tile 1!11111!·.
At Pittsburgh, Mark Tillmon
scored 20 or his 29 ·points In the
firs\ half to send Georgetown to &lt;
Big East victory over Pltlll·
burgh. Dwayne Bryant added 19,
InCluding .l2 on 3-polnters, and
Alonzo Mourning 15 fo put the
Hoyas at 12.0 overall and 3·0 In
the Big East. The Puthers,
playjng wljhout Injured point
guard Sean Mlller, dropped to 5-8
and 0·3. Each of Geqrgetown's
five .starters made at least ~
percent of his first-half field goal
attempts, and Mourning and
Dlkembe Mutombo were 4 for 4
and 2 for 2 respectively.
At Baton Rouge, La., Chris
Jackson scored 33 points agd
paced a 14-2 run midway through
the second half to lead the Tigers
to . a Sou.theastern Conference
victory. Five other LSU players
scored In double flguf!!S . as tbe
Tigers upped their record fo 9,2 ·
overall and 2-lln the conference.
The ross dropped the Volunteers
to 8-5, 3-1 In the SEC.
.
In a lat.e game, No. 8 Nevada·
Las Vegas played at New""Mexlco
State.

..

Tu11dav• ........, 8. 1990

! oung ln~i&amp;lla five jolts Michigan, 69-67
B)" JIM SLATEa
UPI Sport. Writer
A freshman-dominated Indl·
ana team rill lied from a 20-polnt
deficit to stun No.4 Mlchlgan by
showtngmort!poiselntbestretcb
than a veteran squad with four
starters back from the defending
NC~ championship squad.
The 12tb·ranked Hoosiers
scored 17 straight points In the·
final minutes Monday night for a_
69-67 triumph over the Wolverln~. who fell apart and scored
only 3 points In the final 7: 58.
"We couldn't make a basket
and didn't work hard !tROugh to
get the ball underlieath to get
fouls, " Michigan Coach Steve
Fisher said. "We were not poised
when It mattered. We let one slip
away we should have won."
Indiana, the defending Big Ten
champion, rose to li-1 overall
with their largest rally for
victory In Assembly Hall's IS·
year history. A critical factor
was foul trouble that limited
Michigan's Inside g8me.
"It w.a s a really great effort Ill
the second half," Indiana Coach
. BOb Knight said. ''Once ,people
stopped standing around, we had
some opportunities. We got back
Into It by creating some .oppor·
I unities and denied them oppor·
tunltles by getting them lnnto

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EACH

•

·"Prices· Good Middleport, Ohio Store Only"

•

992-6491
•

786 'North Second,
Middleport,
Ohio

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8~ . 1810

The Daily Sentinel.· .The unique ·language .

By The Bend~

Tu11day. January 9. 1990
Page 6

Club revtews 'Satanic Verses'
'

Rushdie for wrtti!lg the book:
This death sentence sent Rush·
die into hiding. Accorcllng to the
review, he and hli wife had to
move 56 times in four mol!ths
before she left bim. His w~erea·
bouts are cilncealed 'but It l.s .
thought that he is still In living
somewhere in England.
Mrs. Horky pointed out that
this author Is retellll!&amp;' events
chronicled tn , the! Koran, using
names of people and .places In
Islamic. sacred literature. The·
. plot starts 'with two Indians
tumbling through the · air with
debris' of their blown up, hi·
-jacked jet. These two are the' .
only survivors and they land Ol!
English soil. Gabreel Farlshta, '
and Indian movie Idol, w!lo·
acquires a halo, at times believes
himself to be the angel Gabriel.
The other character Is Saladin
Chamcha, who gradually, after ,
the fall, acquires a hairy body, '
horns, a tall, and the part of..
Satan. These two embody good'
versus evil, reality and fantasy.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, vice pres!-'
dent, conducted the business
meeting In the absence of Mrs.
GeOrge Hackett Jr., president. ·
Roll call was answered with..
members naming an Islamic
~stom or law. ··The hostess;
served light refreshments.
:

LAurel Cliff happenings

PARTY TIME daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marcum of VInton, receives
a spelcal visit from S1111ta Claus, aad refresh·

Holiday visitors at the home of few days with his parents Rev ..
Mrs. Ann Mash were Bob, and Mrs. Wllllam Wllliams.
Tammie. Chris. and Bobby,
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Eblin and
Loris, S.C.;, Pat, Sharline, and daughters, Julia and Ashley,
Kelly, Columbus; Dick and were Christmas dlMer guests of · ·.
Sharon Folmer, Becky and : Mr. qnd Mrs. Woodrow Mora.
Jamie Broderick, Shfrley FrazMr. aiid Mrs. PhllhWise, ·
Ier, Middleport; ' susie and McConn~isvllle, and Mr. and
Wayne Pullins, Molly Tobin, Mrs. Cll.!f Jacob~ .were holiday
Travis Curtis, Cindy Klein, Cliff · guests of Rev .. and Mrs. F~Pyd •
and Mildred Jae9bs1;Iva Powell, Shook, Columbus.
·
··.
Marge Fetty, an.d .· Genny
Richard Beach. Sabrina: and
Burdette.
daughter, Brenda, Columbus,
Mlck Buck, Roseville, recently spent a fewdaysvisltlitgMr·. and
called on Mrs. Tina Jacobs.
Mrs. Lawrence Douglas, Mr. and
VIsiting for the holldays with . Mrs. Heqpan Michaels, Mr. ana
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore Mrs. Denvoer Nelson, and Mr. and
were Mrs. Sandy Gilmore, Darby Mrs. Ernest Van Inwagen, as
Dorst, Lisa and Deanna Dorst, well as the Cliff Jacobs family.
Amlin; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Christmas dlMer guests at the
Haggy, Pan! an!! Kim, and Mr. home of .Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
and Mrs. William 'Jacobs and Jac6lts, were Mr. and Mrs.
granddaughter, Tracy :
Ernest Van Iwa'gen, Bradbury:
· Shlrltjy Frazier, M,lddleport; and •
Mr . and Mrs. James Wllliams -Mr. and
Ash, Carrlsa
and son. ot Adrian, Mich. spent a and·Cara,
·

ments served by, from left, Brent Eastman, Joe
Calvert and Henry Thrapp.

.Foodland, 7-up ·entertain kids
hospitalized in · holiday season

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.
Foodland and G &amp; J Pepsi of
landStoreManagerJoeCalvert;
Athens. distributors of 7·up,. had
Ohio Vailey Foodland Manager
their third annual Christmas
Jeff · Hart, and Henry Thrapp,
party for children who were
Area Jl,{anager of G &amp; J Pepsi or
hospitalized on Holzer Medical
Athens, distributors of 7-up. Bill
Center's pediatric unit just beSmeltzer provided the special
fore the holiday.
·
visit from Santa Claus.
Included in the celebration was
a specially baked cake from the
They hosted the party and
Foodland Deli, decorated for the visited the room of each child on
occasion, ice cream, 7-up, a visit pediatrics, serving the refresh·
from Santa Claus, with the red ments, with !\anta greeting each
pack on his back lull of toys for ail · child by name and leaving a girt
the children, and three video- from the big red pack on his back.
cassette tapes to add to the video The children as well as their
library unit.
.
. parents or family members who
Representing Foodland were were visiting them also had the
Brent Eastman, director of pro- opportunity to enjoy the party:
motions for Ohio Valley Super·
N~ncy Casteel, R.N., head
markets, Inc. ; GalllpoUs Food· nurse on· the Pediatric Unit,

expressed ·her appreciation to
this group for their generosity
again · this year. The party was
Initiated in 1987 and was so well
received that Foodland and G&amp;J
Pepsi have made It an annual
event on an evening just before
Christmas.
"These gentlemen from Food·
land and 7-up; take an entire
evening to come to the pediatric
unit, bring the cake, Ice cream
and 7-up, then serve It to each
child. This year having Santa
Claus was an ad!led treat. All or
these. gentlemen volunteer their
personal time at the busiest time
of the year and we want them to
know how grateful we ail are;"
Casteel said.
i

Sorority .chapter ho!Js meeting

Spaghetti

IJands Circle rneets

t

Officers were elected at the• ture verse containing the word the blouse outlet In West Virginia
on Jan. 23.
recent meeting of the Circle or · ''new .''
Lucille Allen had the program ..
For devotions, each one had a
Helping Hands of the Zion
using
poems she had written In
Church of Christ held at the borne part using a devotional message,
the past about womens roles In
poem, or reading.
of Linda Lambert.
The. president thanked all for the church and various
New officers are Lucille Allen,
president; Suzanne WariJer, vice . the help given during the Christ· programs.
Tile next meeting will be held
president; Marjorie Purtell, se- mas season on the church pro·Feb.
I at 1 p.m. at the home of
jects
and
programs.
Plans
were
cretary; and Kathryn Johnson,
Marjorie
Purtell. The scripture
made
treat
residents
at
the
treasurer.
County
Infirmary
during
the
word
wlli
be "nation"· and
The meeting was conducted by
·
Virginia
Wyatt
will have the
valentine
season.
the president and each one
program.
Plans
were
also
made
to
visit
present responded with a scrip-

pa•d

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Family visits
Mrs. Herbert Dixon enter·
tained her famUy on Chrlatmu.
, Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles tSUsll) Mull Jll, Chuck,
Bert, arid Leigh Ann, Pomeroy;
Scott and Laura Pulllnl and Lisa
PuUIJII, Athetll. C.lllllg during
the clay were Roger, Suzy, Jeff,
and MtlaDt. Vlc!torla, Texas.
(

.

. Card at Th.nks

•

• '·Jiappy

In Memoriem

1

.30
.42

16.00
$9 .00

16

BILL SLACK .
992-2269

.20

.60

EVENINGS

Announrrmcnls

1 -Cird Of Th ankl
2-ln Memortt

7- Y•d Saltlptid in' idv1nce1

' &amp;- Public 1•1• r. Auction
9-Wanted lo lu¥

Ads ..,

DAY BEFORE PUIILIC;.TION
..!'1, :00
- 2 :00
· - 2 :00
- · 2 •00
- 2 •00
- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY P.t\PEA
WEQNE~OAY P~PER

THURSDAY PP,PER

, FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~

.~.

53-AntiQues
. 1
54-Misc. Merchtndiu ·
55 - 8u1ld1ng Suppll• .;
51 - Pets tor~~ ..

St~r

bl.,

vr.,t~~

12-Situllion W1nled
13 - lnauranc:e
14 - lusin•• Treming
, 15-Schools&amp;. Instruction
18 - 'hdio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17 - MiSCIIIIOIIOUI
1,8 - Wanled To Oo

446 367 388 245 -

992- Middleport

675-P'I . Ple.. ant
458-Leon
571 - Apple Grove
773 - MIIOA •

Gallipolts
Cheshire
Vinton
Rio Grande

.,.n

2!t6 - ·G ...
Oist.
643 - Arabie Oiat.
379 - Welnut

Pom..-ov

985-Cheater
843- Ponland

Rr.~l

71 '""':' Au1~t tor l•le ...

72 -, Jrucka to; Sale
73 - Vans 6 4 wo ·s

f:st ~le

r. Acreeoe

,

. "At

'

.,.
Ser v11

41 - Houlll for Rent
42 - Mobil f Home&amp; tOr Rent
43 - Farms tor Rent

r ~s

44-Aparunent tor Ren t

' ·~

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3nl Str•t,

.Before those after-holiday b~ls b9g place ~f many, and in most case(! you'll
you "down, paythem offwith a loan
save on interest.
,
from us.
·
·
Stop in tocbay and see one of our loan
You'll find it's easier and more con- officers about a bill~payin' loan you '
venient to 'make a single payment in · can live wi~.
..
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I

Birthday. noted

PEOPLE.S BANK
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{

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·New Raven

Poblt Pleii'Pt
875-1121

882-2135

....ER F.DJ.C.
'
.

Racine.

"Your Good Neighbor"

•

r

Card of n.ntca
11

I would like to thank
the Mlddlepot1 end
Pomeroy Fire De·
pertments,
good
friends end nelgb- ·
bort end anyene
elM who helptlcl st
the dme my " burned. Tllanke eleo
.to those Who Mnt

'
••

Muon
7'13-SS14

gifts.
'
God Blea Evcverll'yYCrcHiftnel

Ph lie Morrla

The Femlly Of

ARTHUR VERNON
NI!AIE
Wllh to - d our
thlnlta to .. Wtlo-

eoldntlto ue tlb ••••

. . . Ill.. . _ _ , _

t.•ab rn4 fad• IIICI

~.!&gt;:=
"*·

of OvaiNI!CIII Ca

v....

MemorW

'Ha apllal llld Ill tilt
frlllldt who ltlld food
end «owaa. W. w1111
IIPidaly totNnll Dr.
Jlmel Wltllerlll llld

Dr. . _ ,

..

Oh.

Hllen N - end
Tile flt'lllly

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S160a.':

Help Wanted

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lt. :13 Marth of
, _ , , , OIH

992-7479

-----

-DUSt

WDCJIII,RS
TO Wilt POCKET
WITH A
'

a dooumentetl .... 2 .,.,.. cHI)IMI
aup~~llleiOn triOII .....ned. Wall! evil•

with

Wister lplll•l Oa
WINDOWS
FREE ESn.MATES

992-277,2

t

recovery. ,,....,_. •utlled ~
counlelor or ellaDtte forlmmetlliatt Glfdfto ..

catron. Muet cllmoNilr* lti'Ofll~· ·.
lliMt to aooountllillty, peer NVIew ..,..
tMII and '!'batenoe altuee recovery. Nqo·

,

..

ISED APPUAIIaS
to

up

IICIO

lEN'S APPliANCE
SilVIa
992-5335 or 915-3561

....... ,,_., ... OHke

FUINACE
FUIIACI

•••c•

PARTS AND SERVICE

ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEiYICE
992-5335 or 915-3561

Acr••
,,_
217 E. Soc

Offlq

UCINE
.G. CLUI
GUN SHOOT
EVDY SUNDAY
Starts at 1:00 P.M.

................ ,2_

'

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

llt¥ietl

.o.,.tla~ll llalrlq Alii Salts &amp; Senial
llttriftl E'fllllli111 For AU lin

I

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
1 Ucned Clnical AIMiola&amp;ist

:i
1

(614)446-1619 Of (614) !112-2104
417 !econd ....... 1213
.WPDiis. Olio 45631 '

Ollt
. Vtttrllll llatlorial Hospitll

; MuiMny Hats. Pomaror.

In raaldwadlllalt8..,..,.. WOdilllln•

. , E.

REPAIR -

12·13-'tf.l ~-

.

tlable Mlary range dependent on experl·
a - and aducadon. PJ·a,. raapond to IAI·
lay Plclceling, M.H.I.A., C.A.C., Dlrectot
of O!*adona with NtUmt, cOver lett• end .
tine p!Ofe•Drlllcefl;ra-lto P. 0. Jo•
724, AtMM, OH ....701.114·114-3li11 .

lt. 124, '-iey

AD

OHIO PAWT
COMPANY

CUNICIAN - .Plrt•tlme polldon "evallable-~
with 1 flexible echedule. lndlvldu• who
po111-1 .e Maater•a Degree In Gutdtince'.
and. CounMtlng, Peychology. Social Work

.r

4-25-tfn

WAIIIID

Holiday guests

1 Card of Thanks

PH. 949-2801
or ln. 949-2860

Altt TrtstMI~tles
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

,.......
.
LOGS

...-Judge

L8n1 K. ,._..,Old, Clft
(119. 18; 23, 3tc

Roger Hysell
Garage

"FrN Eltlmlteo"

'· .

Ro~E.~ucll.

16141

Rental•
•Lot RenUIII

"-"•

VINYl SIDING
. VINYl REPlACEMENT .

40237 SR 33. lhado. Ohio

Court, Caoe No. 21461,
Aunde Kloln, 402411 BR 33.
5l1ade, Ohio 4117.7 6. wu

IUSINDS PIIONE
16141 992-6510
nsmam PIIONE

•Mobile Home

J&amp;L
.• SULAfiON

OF FIDUCIARY

.

.

COUNTRY
MOilLE
HOMI .PAII
•Mobile Home

lOSES'
IICAVAnNG
&amp;TIUCIING

949-2493

411778.

Pay Your Phone
Ceble Billa Here

.

Prices"

appointoel kKec:utrlx ot " "
•tlte 'of Wllll1m u.ter

On December 21, 1189,
in the Meigs Coun.t v Proboto

,,

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NOTICE OF

do. . .od, · lato of

SALES &amp; SERVICE
c., Fithlng SuppU•

We

factory rh.. o
12 Gauge ShetguM Ooly
Stri&lt;ktly Enforctd
10·9-tfn

liiTRACr ·THOSE-

Publii: N otice

Hm.

PI..._IG I HEATING
Now l.oaltietl:
161 """' s.c.nct
Mi.lo.oil, OW. 45760

4-11-16-H~

Public Notice

APPOINTMENT

6:30P.M.

..

ow.
AUTO &amp;TRUCK

IISSELl
SIDING
CO.
.... .._. lllilt
NO SUNDAY CAllS '

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE

.

Cup" with Mrs. ~tty Dean as was read. The program closed
pianist.
·
with prayer.
Mrs. May Young presided at
Members were asked to think
about a gift they had · and
the business meeting. with 11
treasured but have nowhere to members present and 72 slck;md·
shut in calls reported. ·
keep it:
The purchase of new carpet for
The story of Ruth an!i Naomr
the Sunday School rooms was
also dlscussect. .
·
The group . will . serve the
canteen
at the 'American Red
Former Meigs Couritlans,
Cross
Bloodmobile
on Feb. 7. A
David and Oiane Circle hosted a
committee
was
appointed
con·
Christmas dinner for his family.
.slstlng
of
Maryllyn
Spencer;
Attending were Miss Evelyn
Bernice Baily, Ruth Karr, and
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Betty Dean .
(Betty) Krider, Mr. and Mrs.
Wendel (Alina) Cleland, all sisters .of Circle, his niece, Linda
Bollner and children, Matt, Mike,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Holliday,
and Amy. Gifts were'excllanaed.
Mr. and Mrs. Wendel Oeland Charleston, W.Va.; Freda Smith,
spent the week lollowlnl Cbrllt· Albany; and John HoWday, 1•
mas at their county bomz In Dexter, attended tbe 90th birth·
day par.ty for Mn. Myrtle Saxton
ftutiand .
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ·Farra of Han ins at the 1..8ncuter Country
COlumbus Were Cblltmaa lllf!lts 'Club on Dec. 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley,
of hll mother, Mrs. Monna
Farra, M, Rac:lne, wbo then EdiBon; Mr. and Mrs. Reece
spent ·New Year'• week· In Prather, and son, Tharon, Wes·
tervllle; and John Holliday,
Columbua with them.
·
Dexter,
were guests of Mrs.
Grea and Yvonne Theodore
and son were holiday guestl of Freda Smllb, Albany, during
her mother, Golda Heiney at ChriStmas.

EVERY
SAT. NICHT

7·11-'89-1111

•VINYL SIDING
•ALt,tMtNUM SIDINQ'
•ILOWN IN .
INSULATION .

lultlliit

4-11-16-Un

..C6"'7 Furnij;hed Rooms
1
41- Spac:e for A tnt
47 - Vt'at~ted to Rent •
48 - Equipment for Rent
48 ·- For L. .u

Oet R11afts Fast

laihaiii

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt
1614) 6'67-3271
Grant A. Newland

'"· 949-2801
ilr .... 949-2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

,

1;tpi1101

NEWUND
ENTIRPRISES

CUSTOM IUI.T
~S &amp; GAIAGES

!

78- Camp•ng Eq7uipment
79- Cempeu &amp; MotOt Hom"

31 - Aell hfllt Wanted

895 - Let•rt
937 - luttllo

Repair

.

IISSILL
IUILDIIS

71-Auto Ptfta &amp; Acc•.Ori•
77 -~ Auto

lrl&amp;go •

StNtton.

Pll.

74 - Motorcyc:l•
75 - Boats &amp; Motars for S.le

33 - Farms for Sale
34-lusirl•• 1 11lldin a• ·

882 - New Haven

247- Let:..-t Falls
949- Rac:ine
742 - Rutland
6fi?.. . :.CoolviUe

TOCUINioh,

·

Tr;msp1 rr I ~linn

31 - Hom• tor S•l•
·
32-Mobilt Homn for Sale

35- Lots

Hometho, W.adeater,

1·1- ,arm Equipment
62 - Wentld to luy
63 - Liveltock
o• - Hay &amp; Grain
65-S.Id • Fartili:er

23 --t Prof•a'oftlll Services

follou:inll re/ephone exc;han[{es ... .
Area Code 614

•o nain•
ltocll: lt•rt• for

/1, I IVI".IIIr:k

21 -B~o~sinlllls 0pporh.tnitv

M11onCo .. WV
Are• Cacse 304 .

PARTS AND SI!RYICE

For Moat 2 and .4-cycte

Farr11 .'illtJIJires

22 - Monev to lo•n

Meigs Counw

In • llhin 1, Oil. .

57 - Music ...lnsuumenls

11 - Help Wanted '

cnt·er the

Gall1a County
Ar. . Code &amp;14

LOiil._.n~L.....­

&amp;8-,ruita. v.....
59.!_ For s•e·or Trade

FlnrlnLial
C/a.~.~ified paf{e.~

••all

frq,lovnlt:nl

cept - cl•sified dis play, Buainelt C1rd and I.Sel notic:esl
will also appear in ttle Pt . Ple•ant Regitter ai'ld the Galli·
polis Daily Tribune, ruching over 18.000 hamn

COPY DEADLINE -

.u:- a,_..,.,, o.....

3 - Annuuc:em.,is
4-GivtiWI't
6 - Happy Ada
&amp;'- LOst 1nd Found

Vard Sal•

DAVI'S
SIIALt. IIIIINE

51-Household Gooch 1

RACINE
FlU DEPT;

CLEAtiNG

4-1·19-lfn

t--.:'":i:'::••:•:•:•..=•=•=M=P•:••:•:•:;;••~·~--------

"A c;;lau•fied 'adver1ilement pl.:ed in The Oa~ty Sentin.- I•"·

'1&gt;1
.~

Chester United Methodist Women meet
"Call to Prayer and Self
Denial" was the title of the
program presented by Mrs.
Kathryn Windon at the Jan. 4
meeting of the Chester United
Methodist Women.
A total of $947,838.27 was the
offering of the call to prayer and
self denial last year.
. The call to prayer and self
denial is an annual event for
United Methodist Women. It may
be scheduled any tlmedl!ring the
year, bu I most local units observe It during January. The call
Is an opport\!lllty to study, pray,
afld reflect on a theme that deal.s
wilh an issue of special concern ,
to women and ,children.
The scriPture reading was
taken trom·Luke 10; 30-37:The
group sang tbe ·bymn "Fill My

.

........

·l&gt;

' ·'

Wo,rds. '

.

t4.00

;

*FIREWOOD .

t13 .00
15
.05 / doy
t1 .30 / doy
15
Aat•.r• tor con•clltf\'IJuns. broken updiVtWill be ck.,ged

M'~igs ; 'G•IIi• or M1s0n 'counti• must be p',!l·

""'•

:~

·~

Monthly

•
.•,.

~

R•t•

15
15

6'

"Sentinel is not responsible for •ronlllfteo" firll d., . lCt'ledl
lor erro~s lint, dJY ad t~o~nt in Pllp9r). Call Miore Z :OO p, r.h.,
diV after pubhc:at•on to m8k'etonection.
"Ads that mutt b~ JMid In achlanc.•e

OR THIS.

Words

Days
I
. 3

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
• A.M. until NQON 'S'A TuRD AY

, *LIGI:tJ HAULING

GUN SHOOT

SITEWORK • ROADS

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10

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rook
Springs Grange will rrieet Thurs·
day at 7; 30 p.m. at the Grange
Hall.

THIS•••.

'

· • The Area's
Number 1 Marketplace
.
s 0\l,r 16
TO PLACE ~N AD CALl. 992'-2.156

"Frae ads - GIYttiWI'f' and Found 1d1 under 15 Words will be
run 3 d.,.s 11 no ch•ge.
"Price of~ for aU capitll l•cten it dou~e price of 1d colt
•7 point line type only ·uaect.
·

.

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
T,_IM and REMOVAL

,

"Receive 5.50 dittount for ads paid in 1dvance.

YOUR-MONTHLY BILLS
.
CAN LOOK UKE
from left, Henry' Thrapp; Brent Eastman; Joe
Calvert and Jeff Hart.

.

.

THURSDAY
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP ·-The
Bedforct ·Township .Trustees will
meet Thursday ai 5; 30 p.m at the ,
·
•
town ball.

Services

Classifie

•

POiChMEROY -The Ohio Eta ::&lt;
, Ph
apter, Beta Sigma Phi . ...,
SOrority will meet Tuesday at 7 ,:.1
p.m. at' the Grice Episcopal
•
Church.
"

Stephanie Ash,
Is the first
the "Student of the
Week" award lj
High School. The reeognlllon
program, Initiated by
Debbie Brennuii, will be carried
out lor the remainder of this scbool year with selection to be made
by respective leachers.based on academic ••xcellence In a apeclfle
subject along with appr(lprlale classroom m,havlor.

Help~ng

Christmas- visits

- ·The Syracuse

at the grade school.

~Sh1111non

VIDEO . GIFT - Nancy Casteel, RN, head
pediatric nurse, receive&amp; three videotapes lor the
, unit library from area businessmen, pictured

J~cUSE

Olurch carols
Several mem~s of the Mt.

Ti'OPS meets

TUESDAY
RACINE -The Racine Lodge
.No. 4~1 F and I&lt;M will have a
reliUlaF meeting on Tuesday at
7.:.J01 p.m. All masons are wei·
co~-~o attend.
'

PTOtWIIl meet Tuesday at 7 p.m .

..AI£red· happenmgs
· ··

Ann
Landers
.••.,.!.. .........
Tl_,..
__

7

The Deily

Holiday celebration ·

&amp;lendar

&lt;I"

'

Dear Aaa • mil••: That little
It you print this letter, 1 would
Allred · sund&gt;y school· ' thew,andKevln.
Mbrlah . Church of God went
game your readers bave been ·prefer thai you not use my name
mC!IIIbers enjoyeo Chrlltmas
Nellie Parker, Martha, Joe, Chrlst:rnaJcaroiiJIIIonChrlltmu
playlnl (fladlnl cltlei!Uid states becauae r don't want telephone
treats from the Sunday IChOol
and WlllPooleattendedahoUday eve in· the I:.etart Falla and
.\NN LANDIIlll
with the moat letters) Is really ealll trom stranaei-a. You know,
and clas1 teachers on ~- 24. . .dinner ..at the home of Mr. and Racine area. The IJ'OUP wu welL
unfair.
·
.
Aim, there are a lot of pei:uUar
'Lloyd DIIUn~r. superintendent.
Mrs . Howard Parker on Dec. 31. received in the bomes of several
c...... ~...,f'....
The cltlellocated in Muaacbu· folks out there. - Butavflle,
Wlllls Parker, Parkersburg , shut ins.
received a eitt from the Sunday
setts, New Hampshire and North Ala.
~~""!'-~~~::::====t school.
W.Va., gave thanks before the
'l'he church's annual Christ·
and Scuth carolina have a
De• Ra.U: There iure are.
came .trom .Rachel Lewis, Blu- ·
Mr. and Mn. Delbert Stearns
meal. Others present were Irene mas plays were presented on
. dis tinct advantase becauie those
"Ted IB Tac:ema" 'IVJ'Itea:
etleld Sta(e Collqe, West Virril· . ·spent Christmas weaken&lt;! with
Park.e r, Syracuse: Home Parker Dec. 20 to a lar1e gatherinl of
states have 11 o~ more letters. How's thla for an unusual name nia (33letters).
.
their daushter, AprU and her
and Suzy Carpenter , ;Rutland;
people , congrl!gatlon and
Utah, Ohio and Iowa don't stand a! a clty?Truthorc;onsequences,
I
don't
know
about
you,
but
I
'm
family
in
Fairborn.
Sarah
Mahlman,
Stiversville;visitors
.
a chance. The same goes tor N.M . (Population 5,219.) When I J!Unchy from this nutty contest.
.Mr,. and Mrs. Floyd Avis and Tina Parker, Shelly, Niltki, and
The Ladies Mlnlstr~J DepartIdaho and Maine.
.
found It I cracked up. ·
No'\1(, let's 1et back • lo the . Bob had Christmas dinner with Brooke, 'Eden Ridge; Aaron mentheld their yearly Christmas
The next ttme you plan 19 have
Dear Ted: ll would be nice if · ~~Usirieu. otthe diY· •· ·
Mr. i.nd Mn. Larry Spencer and Parker, Columbus; Bryan · dinner on Dec. ·12·•with poems
a contest I hope you wlll think of someone wbo lives lp that town
D" yo11 h®i 11 ...,01 """ aboitr •ex, · Mike of Racine.
Parker, · Parkersburg, W.Va.; being read and songs led by
one whfi!re everybody gets ' an · would be good enough to tell us b.. r no one ypu con rolk ? Ann
Nina
Robinson
s~nt
Christ·
Tom
Hysell, Middleport;. and Mildred Williams, pianist.
10
eyen break. - Mallen Cl&amp;y how It got Its name.
mas with ber• grancldaushter, Janice and Robert Parker,
. Reader
,
·
And this, dear readers, comes Lantk"' booklci•. "Su and rhe
'l'een,er,•
i•
fraiLII
•nd
·•~&gt;
.rho
Sherry
Shean and family' in Marietta.
Dear Muon CltJ': I dltln' t think from l'~mer, Aluka; . Talking
point.
Serut
a
••lf-addreued.
long,
Marietta.
. ·Christmas guests of Mr. and
lip the cpntest. A reader did. ' aboutcltlel,haveyoueverheard
b'!•ine.,.Ji,.e en..,lopi. and ;, check
Membc!rs
of
the
church
.
and
- Mrs. Lester Keaton were Mr. and
From the looks of the mall an of a place called "Don't H!Uidle ·
Celebrating Christmas eve
or money ortkr f~r 13.65 10 Teen.
community
attending
the
wed·
Mrs. Jim Kelly, local ; Mr. and
awful lot or folks liked it. The the Bobcats Without Gloves,
with
M.r. and Mrs. Roy Holter
c/o Ann Lande,., P.O. Box 11562.
ding of Lee Ann Robinson and Mrs. Bob Keaton, BobbY, Mat ·
responses have taken an odd Texas ...?
were
Mr.
and Mrs. Rich Munafo,
Klrk' Fick on Dec. 27. at the St . thew, and Kevin, Chester . .
• ··
At this momentl have received Chlcoso. m. 60611-0562,
turn. Read this:
Paul United Methodist Church in
Sari catdweilspentChrlstmas Brian and Jennifer Fox; Middle·
Dear Aan Landen: I like 'to 48 letters. and c1rds ·Informing·
town; Mr. and Mrs. Alan Holter,
Tuppers Plains.
· with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ewing,
count ·things. It has beenk a methattheplacewiththelongest
Ben and Ross , Pomeroy; Mr . and
The
Henderson
family
visited
Beth,
Kim,andBenny,Pomeroy
.
Two•new members were wei·
hobbY of mine for many years. name (accol;'dlilg to the World .
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Greg Davis, Terisa and
corned
at the recent meeting of .their mother, O!Re Henderson, in
May I share some Interesting Book Encyclopedia) ,Is a vUiage
Rach, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
the
Extended
Care
Unit
at
Arthur
Spencer were Keith,
. facts with your readers?
In Wales, Great Britain. Are you Ohio TOPS 570 ,, held . ~~ the Veterans . Memorial Hospital. Brenda, and
Ed Holter, Alyssa and Kelsey, ·
Mike
Weber,
The word "Lord" appears In ready? Llanraltpwllgwynggyl· coonbunters lodge, .at the Present were Mr. and Mrs. Loretta, ·sammie, Aaron, and
Pomeroy: and·Ada Holter .
the New Testament 7, 736 times. · igogerychwyrndrobwllllantysUio · fairgrounds .
Clarence
Henderson.
Mr.
and
Alex
Brown,
ail
local;
Mrs.
· Lennie AI eshire, leader,
One of the shortest wol;'ds in the · ·IOJOgocb. It means "Church of
Mrs. Sherman Henderson, Mr. Connie Ballard and sons, Brian,
Bible is "a." It appears 53,877 Stll!lt Mary In a 'hollow of white opened the meeting with prayer
and Mrs·. Harold Lee Henderson, Chad,. and Jason, Chesterville.
times.
.hazel, near to a rapid whirlpool and pledge and Amy l Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Carleton FoUrod,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Weber,
The word "and" appears in the and Saint TysUio's Church oHhe collected !or the flower fund.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
Amos,
Sharon
.
Tuppers
Plains, were Chrlstlnas
l:lible 46,277 times.
red cave." The first of the 48 VI,rginla Dean, treasurer, gave Gilloughy, and Susan Pullins. euests or Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Helping to make Christmas
the monthly report.
.
bright
for Dorothy Roller were
Weber and Mike.
Bonnie Johnston won tile fruit The also visited Edith Harper.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Richard Roller.
basket and surprise girt .
. . Mr. and Mrs : Joe Poole and
Lora.
Brad,
Belpre; Mr. and
. A cultural report on ' 'Making . an article about Christmas from
Will, and Nellie Parker attended
Doris Bailey, weight recorder,
Mrs.
Michael
Gress, Chris and
ChriStmas Last All Year Round" the magazine, "Ideals. "
. reported that tlte yearly repons a holiday party at the home of
Jenna,
Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs.
dinner
by Linda Bates was presented at · Kay Atkins presided at the · had been completed and mailed Mr. and Mrs. Gary Michael on
Pat
Gress,
Benjamin
and Jothe recent meeting of the' Xi · meeting in which Charlotte H~n­ in. She notet! "that the best loser Dec. 26. Others present were Kim
seph,
Columbus;
Mr.
and
Mrs .
Th~ Middleport Order of the
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta .nlnl(remindedmembers that the was Phylis Dreyhlll and the · and Matth~w Michael, · Willie
·
Kenneth
Cale,
Middleport;
MarSigma Phi SOrority held at 'the next meeting would be "Fun and runners up Were VIrginia Smith · Frecker, Louise Michael, all , Eastern Star will have ·a spagh- cia and Jessica · Cale, Middlehome of A.R. Knight with 16 'Game$ Night" at Royal Oak and Bonnie Johnston.
local; and Cora and Samuel etti dinner on Friday from 11 port; Mr. an&lt;! Mrs. Brian Conde,
a.m. to 7 p.m. The menu includes
.members present.
, .Resort beginning at 7 p.m.
The leader thanked the group . Michael, Stiversvllle.
spaghetti,
frech bread, jello, Middleport; Andrew and Mason;·
In her .rejmrt, Ms. Bates noted Me~bers are to bring their for flowers cards and gifts she
Christmas guests of Mr. and
coffee, Qr tea for $2.75. Dinners· Mr. and Mrs. Ray Andrews,
the need to remember the !lllder- favorite 111mes.
received during her IUness. She Mrs. Les~r Keaton were Mr. and
will be available for eat In .or Chester; Kathryn Crow, Syra·
privileged and less fortunate
Hostesses lor the evening were also read a poem, ' 'TOPS Coun· Mrs. 'James Kelly, am! Mr. and
cuse; and Sara Dawn and Dick
carry
out . .
people throughout the year, not Sandy · Hanning and Janet try Store."
Mrs. Bob Keaton, Bobby, MalOwens , Middleport.
just at Christmas . She also read Peavley. . .

•

Mrs. cart Horky reviewed the . in1947.
-In her review, Mrs. Horky
book "Satanic Verses" bY Sal·
man Rushdle at the recent noted that . this' book was remeeting 6!'the Middleport Liter- garded .by Moslems as being
ary Club held • at her borne. highly blasphemous, and that
Rushdle is an Indian born writer Iran's late Ayatollah Khomelni '"
who was born in Bombay, India pronounced a death- s.entence on

;

Ohio

HUURI: Mon.·fri. 12:00 to I p.m.

•• •..an011 cau. ftt.Jitt
.
11· 14-11-1 ....

'•

�'

Page- S-. The Daily Sentinel

Ponfaoy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-OAY

Annou ll~emenl&gt;

Tu11tlay. January 9, ·1990

KIT 'N" CARLYLE® b~ I..arr, ·Wright

ReniJis

LOANS

LCW1S.

:=:z::
c.......

DEBT

frOM tiOI. ,...... lk:ucst

CONSOLIDATION. Alia , _
eordt. Bod crocll, _ . , ,
low lnclaml no .,.....,.., Fr..
oppllcollono, 1-...2-1111 24
h ot.n day.

-.

M

Clw¥p. ........ ~.
·--(11-- .
bl.

TUES.. JAN. 9

.,lltll.

'

Giveaway

4

Televi8ion
· Viewing

r'"MLL,IF IT~ IQ' NliOII ~1\t.lb,
V!AW'S ~..;__....A.-:

,.Do ..... . . . . . . . .

3 Announcements
, SIGNATURE

Autol tor Sale

71

'c

1:00

i.=::··
..,eiJI......

1112 GIIC Hlah lllorrL Auto.,

0

afr. Pl. PI, eftraiM bl.lfn,_,.,

VI: - arlt4-7424114.

114-742·17111

o .

11114 Cllt¥y . , . plell- ....
Autamat6c trlnWI' ' an, PI,

•

"

Pl. air . aand., bUcklt •••·
13- .. ottor, 11,.._.
i2'ii .... 4p.111.

0

0

0

... o

0

•

0

•

0

. Q

"

0
0

0

•
' (I

"'
0

'

0

0
0

,..., ·llrctllonl
conclltlan.
11000
undor
-.
114-112- tVIfllnp,
lt4.e4t-2110 flortlml.

0

0

•

0

&amp;~~c.MOI
(IJ WOt1d Todly
Ill Chlotles In a..,..

I..----,-..;__-.,.-----,

,.•

Homea lor Sale

31

7 . · Yard $ale

ALL Yard Solo lluot lo Pold In
Advance. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Phone oollclloro -dod, lui~
lhl day botore tlla ad lo to run. time &amp; JMirt..tlme, 11 t ue :111~
Sunday odltlan • 2:00 p.m. SotoO Rop-mllk and let ereom 2Frtdoy. Mondoy odhion • 2:00 5 ,.. oxporloneo In graeory IIIII
p.m. Saturday.
frOzon Notional
eompony. Exctllonl bonltllt.

. 9 Wanted to Buy

Junk cars wllh ·or without
ml)to,., Call Lllrry Llvlly 814-

-lrN.

Competftlwe

Nllry

CC.IIIM!Ir-

..,,.a.
wllh ··~rt.nce. lend
reoumt to .P.O. Boo 214, .._

PI-nt. WV 21510. E.O.o.
lloerollry!Aooootlonlol, noodod
OUIHs
tor laurlet lnformotlon o1tloo,
Pro 11140 qulno. Any condition. Nnd rHume 10 Box ell loX
cash Pold. Coli 8t4.0U·5657 or 023, ~ Gollltiotll Dolly Trlbu~
1
114-6e2·2481 .
825 Third Avo. Golllpollo, ""
451131 .
388.0303.

br.-go-"
an opprax.12 ocreo,
outbulldlngo,

$31,000. 11it-317-'r217.

...utlfut otory ""'- In
P-ray.
ntlghborhoad
~
1In112
•·th
Th
.., ·
-nowly
0.
don,
lull booornont,
Nmodolod. Tao many things to
1111. A bargain at w,ooo. lt4-

11

DEPUTY DIRECTOR POSITION.
Tho loord ot Aleoh'!'1 Drug .U.
diction .11111 Mtnltl· -~~~~ llorvk:M of Oaltit.Jeckaon-lllfG•
COuntJH lo ltlklng I cltpuly
dlroetor. Dutloo wlll lntludt:
manhorlng end lmp!emonlltlan
of contrac:l agency MrS 1H

end ntlo XX Mntroets; toe,_
nlc.l aulat1nce · to oontniCt
1gencl•• In thllr pr11peratlon of
UiiHiod Flnonalll llonogtmonl
Plano; -nllmplorMntotlon ol
quality anuranct acUviUMi and
monogomont IUPpclfl lor tho
Bamf and lli•IICY Mono~".:"'
lntarmotlon
Con
M.
mllll...-•
1
·
·
•
dogioo
and rtlonnt 11porloneo In tho
f'-ldll of humtn HrVIMI, ......
tol-h, "'""'"' rolordollon or
drug and olcahol Mrvietl.
Paohlon II cllolltlod • '• MinIll Hoolh Admlnlltrtdar I with I
NllfY , _ from $28,481 to
$34,510. .Ouoi!Hod oot&gt;lklnt•

:If•-·

.,. ubd to •ubn\ft their

,...,... to:

Dr. ltop.
kino,
Glllla-.locklon-lllkls
-nl ..
Drua AddJO.
tion end llontol Hollth S.rvic!~ 1
P. 0 . Ia&lt; 514, Glltlpollo, un
45131. Appllcltlon doodUno:
January 21 , 1HO.
AVON I All Ar..o · I Shlrtl)'
Sporua, 304-871-1421.

*-·

Attontl9n RN'sl Are you tli'od at
tht 101110 day to dar lllohod
routine? Do you tool that no ono
opproellln ·your hord - ?
Are you looklng tDr rncq oppart~o~nhl•
tar Cl,_r lldv.,..
eomont? It you ••worod yoolo
any of the 8bo'tl queetioM, we
oro lntoroolld In you! Sconlc
Hilla Nuralna Ctntor Ia now oftaring ooeltlilg now - ..• ond
bonolhol It lntortllod, pllo10
. _ to Ieonie Hilla It 531
Buekrldgo Rood, Gallipolis, OH
to apply.
aotwoltlor Wonlod: 4, 5 yr. old.
My home, 7a.mAp.m~, 114-317·
0101 304.e711-tl40.

-.1

EARN IIONEV R10dlng
S:IO,OOC!Iyr lncomo t&gt;Ottntlol.
Dololll. (11 -7-eOOO Ellt. ,V·
10111.
EARN IIONEV ·typlng It homo.
$30,000 y .. r lncom. patantl1l.
Dolollo, (11 1100-117-eoe!O Ext. 1110111.

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

T...ctar1 T...u.r Drtver tor klcal

- - wHh dump truckt. 11100-181-1211.

URGENTLY
NEED OEPIEif.
OAILE PEIISON to wart!
without ouporvllio!l lor TUM
oil ea. In Cl.illlo ..... Wt train.
Wrlto H.R. Dlcklroan, PN.!:,
SWEPCOtx BOX 111005, n
WOIITH,
75111.

1

11112.

tar rono.

Cl- .

Some

1ptanment1

ovollobll tor nan-liondlcoppod,
nor&gt;&lt;llublld Pt...,. btlwoon
tho ogoo at 40 ond 12, Eauol
Houolng Opportunity. :i0447111179. ,
-.~
EA"'un"""'FU::"::-L""'AP=ART=II=E:::NTS:=--:;AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!... &amp;31 J - Plkl
1tam ltlliUmo. Wlllt to I
-.Colllt4-441-2111. EIIH.
I t - llkldlropart, Ohio.
1 and 2 bodroom lumlohorl
""'"
oioa 1 ,..,. oftleloney.
ut•• prold, ..-.... ...

nlohorl opo~mont, ..,. por
monll!; Comor Steand I Pfno,
Golllpotlt. ono bedroom. Wltor,
. . . . I Nll'lgorotor prollldod.
No polo. Dopailt and rollnNqulrod._lt4-446-424t, &amp;14-4414421, &amp;14-448-2321.
Far LooM: Stcond · untur·
nllhod oportmont, 1250 por
month. .()vorlaoklng eMy peril,
Golllpollo. 1Wo - - · • · Cl.io,
otovo I retrlgorltor provldod.
No polo. Dopatlland rollnncM
requlrod. 114-444241, I t 44211, &amp;14-441-2321.

_ , 12xl0 mobllt - ·
condltlOn. Wooklnd nlallll Of\IY. Far
nnty rwmadtlld on 1.1 ION: lot
Sand rnurno to ... Cli oa, 01o at edge of town. Alao • llouM

Fum- oHicloncy, 1175,
utiiHIIO pold, 701 Fourth Avo.,
CI.illlpolll, 114 441 1411 oftor

Eom 1300-3100 por ....,
roodlng - ·
II 15ft.
· Coli 1·
111-'73-7440
&amp;111.
Ex_,. W•aoo tar - · umo
-bly.
EMy at homo.
No oxporlono• noodod. Coli t·
104.e4t-ms E111. 5214. Opon 24
-.~no~uc~~ng

SUnday.

FI'M ColaCII~I Flrtll I~ to
lllgn up tO'aoU Avon. Got Avon
.. -.114-fi2·1110.

11t

bod, - - I ehlk.
· · Good eand., clf)'or.l14-44t-t7.01.

7p.tn

t-

o,::::r

,,.,.

7:00

(J)~

!51

Household

a.-

Antlquea

~ ar ottl. Ant~
p
• 1•
,_, -··~

e!it

-·

=

":/:,room,

Cl,.

•-do

Point-- hll 8oddllo IIIII

200ecrMoflr. . tor•all,ftlu.l
bo to otrlp out, YOI\OIN to
chip wood, · .llo- CO. WV,

••

...,

=.t::

21 11. Croollr oklo tor ,.~or, frMI frM 2'h ~
old, llkl now MOO; -trle
rongo• ,..,. old, 1t00.30U7113411.
.
lkl

Condltlanod •-·- 1 "math
100 lb. bollo ;.;;:;, In ,.;m, It~
P"!.bllo. Dollvory ovtlllblo. lt42411110oftor 5 p.m.
.

IANDSAWS,

Toblo

.u~m

-.

Jolnloro, lhopn,
1.11'-!, .Sanders, lluot COl._
t.o, unll P r - lluo IUdgo
:IIIIWIIMI3I.
For ....: Flrauuaad~ HEAP
lceootod. .,..
182-3711or 114-7424421.
...... digital. Ualllod ...
olgn. S200 ooeh. ..,_..
2125.
.
Killt '":""h~-"""!"'~.In~
ooriCI., w -•· 11 ~'
lloto,- I
link, I ...,
It
1217.

11- . . . - . 110. 11,....

w-.llilnd:,.,_

111111.

1 -andS dllfiiOnd .,_

::i- ~- ...
pgomoo.
•

Supplies
lloek, brtek, ...,.. -~Unttll, alt. •CioiNIO wtn•.......... 011 Col 114-..
---.
:MU121.

Nit. I Una. 114 -

D o g - ..., ._

com,

""'lor

.. .

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

76

.fTOP
(t.EFi(l~ING. TO CONG{tf.$.&gt;
J.S A ' ''rot.ITIG~L.
IF

''

tolo. &amp;14-742~083.
HIY, ilrgo
bo!oo Itt.,
.,...71-2377.
.

rou""

.

=. ,\'::."11 ~-~vt

h

1171 Movorlek. Goad motor a
· - - 114 215 1121.
1171 4114 ~ Rom Chtrgor•

1~::tm1 ..•1~.~

1171 Fard IIUotll!ll, N, good

oond., 1710; 11444111111.

'

1 112

.

e (J) The Wonder y..,.
· Wayne go.. hie drivor's

1:30 lll

(2:00) Q

• (J) Roi8111M Becky
and her glrttrland gat drunk
and try to cover~ up . Q

t,,' (J)

CD

Services

•

••

e,mbe'

'

•'·
...,

(RI (2:00)

: 9:30 (J) CoH1g1 .....etllaH
' (I)
(J) Coach Hayden's
ongoing l8ud With Judy
Watltinl tlll&lt;es a tum tor the

e

••

·-··~

ablurd. Q

Elliol' l

'·

(!). Loula llukeyaar'l 1110
Rukey&amp;er lookl ahead to
1110 With top flgurn in
bu11nen. government and
communications.

•

•llll New TwHight z IIJ Evening ~awl

'•

· IS SNUFFY

HOME,

MIZ SMIF?

(J))Nawo
10:05 (!) MOviE: lronolde (2:00)

NOPE-·PAW TOOK
TATER OFF TO
SEE TH' WORLD

10:30 CD EJ•

On The Prtza:
America's Civil Rlghta ·Y Mra
Examine the ;oeky coune of .
echool c!Hegregltion in the
South . D
·

'

•'

O.vla
S.W..Vao
Swvlee,
G - Crook Rd. Porto, oup114plloo, Dlckup, and

.On ....

18[)) CllmaWatt:h Tonitjhl

doll..,.

11:00 CD Hardt:eotle And
McCormltlll (R)

'

.•.

•

.·~'

Heating

ASTRO-GRAPH
•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL ·

I7WIU.

veals wf11Ch ligna are rom" ntleall)' per.
feet lor you. Mall $2to Matchmlll&lt;er, c/o
this
P .O . Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
AQUARIUS (.lin.. 20-Feb. 111 Do-11youraalf projects could tum out to be
rather cbotl)' today In both time and
money · 11 you . _ expertlee In that
'fjl1lch you atllftlpt to do.
PliCa (Pill. II Ma..-10) Don'tlorOI
yGUrMif Into tctlvttles wtth othera todoy
HYou you .,, not warmly wtl·
comed by 1\WJOM lnvOI..cl. ln-d
op1ncf time with pele who ~ ep..

·-•paper,

dloiOUOii- Tlll&lt;l- to piM .

IGN---...ALL
CAIH .... _ . . • ')rima

Lac ....... ,.....,f:tl

'

'

.

lll • (JJ ill

·=

(IJMoneJIIM
I1J Fllber McGee And llolly
l!ll ...1111 VIce
• Chlnll - - llltton '
11 :3D eiJI liS Tonight llh4w

the

OP TNIIIO'o '· . .

(J)

II)Nawo
.[)) ArMnto IIIII

could have trouble makll!g Oeclalons,
evon-ola-nalllre. Yourlnde-•Mwtll be~ to alack of IIIith In

your own judgment.

LaO

(.ltllf a

At• Ill Think carelull)'
belora ,.quilling lavora lrom lrlenda
today, b1Ca11M 11 could put them In an
tmllltt ualng 1101111Gn Mthey . . unllble to woljll~ w1111 your eltl*llllona.

VIIGO (AIIg. a 1111 '81 aa extra
mindful of your behavior In eOcllll MltlnQIIodal'. Wyou Mndte youraelf .,_~
ly.lt cauld l.v. .. ~ that wtl

be diiiiGull to ......
· LIIIIA I.... II OoL II) AU ~ wtl
prtelateyou.
Alllll (lllnll :11-Apltl 11) Thll mtght be on your 10111r w11en1 your II
not be.,.., produCitw day for you r:IW- OOIICII ned R your 8lldlenoe might not
Ing to lndlnadona .to n.rt tltlno* Oflln be IOII4IIv peaked with aclrnlrM. Don't

aus~nesa·

- ~- -----~--~--~---'------

-

:W. ---~.

GET AN$Wfl

........

.

~ -~
ICOIIPID OIL ...,... 81 In clllot!l' 1to111 w1111
toellty try not to corIWtltt...,.an•WII lla._v_
tilly , _ taplclt....., • lnllr• ~ ..
tlleYI ftftt ID 1111

--:e~'

•r.:t=:J
1:;::,

I llh4w

A ......
• Wntny

12:00L::C::,..., .
-~~onlght
...... -- ...
1a I.~......
Alllr """
,.
ill,. Nati Mila . . , _
Kll Jalln. Dae
• fll ucu• Now
·12:M(JJ ~ ._.

••••nt•a•:

Tile mt •• c.. (2:00)
11:10~~ ,-,
Will

LIIa:'fll

5

•*10:.,~30)
.._c.

1100 (I) llull 1.1;1111...,.

r r r·r I' r I' 1
I 1111111
.

,_,

. Chllllfi?U-GirMdllllll

NORTH

John Zilic, manager of a Houston
bridge club, played the South band
well at ?aat November's Dallas region·
al tournament. West opened with a
Flannery two-diamond bid, showin.g
four spades, live hearts and a minimum in high cards. North bravely
overcalled two no-trump with only 15
high-card points. Perhaps South
should have jumped right to four
spades, but he got there anyhow when
North J&gt;\'fSisted with three no-trump.
West · OJ&gt;\'ned the club ace and
switched to the diamond lour. Zillc
won the · ace. Apparently West had
started with a singleton ace of clubs.
Even If declarer played a spade to
dummy's eight, cashed the kin,; of
spades, played A·K of hearts and
ruffed ' heart, and then played ace of
spades,: the contract would fail . The
dele- would come to a club, the
spade queen and two diamond tricks.
(West would ruff in as soon as Sou!Jt
led the club queen.)
·.
The solutloa to making the contract was based on tbe informative
two-diamond opening. U West beld
live hearts. they should include the QJ So declarer played a low hear!.
When West followed low, b~ put In
dummy's 10. He now played K-A of
spa,des, followed by A-K of ·hearts,

.

l·I· M

.KB
'AK IOB 2 .
+J6
.KJI05

EAST

WEST
.Q 5 12
.QJ7 51
.K 71

t7

.-

'9

+Qi098 3

.,.

+A .

.986432 '

SOUTH

.AJI096 .3
+A 52

,.

+Q7

Vulnerable: EaSt·West
Dealer: West
Saatb

Weot

3•
1•

2 •·
2 NT
Pass
3 NT
All pass .

Nortb

Elill

Pa..
Pass

•Flannery convention

.

Opening lead:

+A
'

'

throwing a diamond. and then played ··
the eight of hearts, throwing his other · diamond. West won the trick and led a
diamond. Declarer ruffed ,and led t1le
spade jack. West could take the spade
-·queen, but that was all. Zilic was able
to regain the lead to draw trumps and
make his contract.

CROSSWORD

~ b~

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 "The -George

41 Entrance
42 8Udge1
llem
43 An English

Apley"

5 Biblical

queen

mounlaln
DOWN ·
8 Role mOdel 1 Mellie
. 10 ~onestoga
measure
2Worshlp
11 Jug
3 Jack
12 Luanda
Benny
Is lis
fllm
capllal
4 Ron 14- long
5 Kll;l's
15 Garter
keeper
or Mermaid 8 - on
11- .
(goad)
Buntllne
7 Good
17 Early auto
fellow
18 King (Sp.) 8 Absent
18 Scoundrel
from work
20 Critic,
10 DecHned
Aex22 Ramble
23 "Citizen
•

.

'

•

13 Snake

"

27Cookery
15 Anger
lerm
21 Odlsl's
28Wee one
adverb
30Wet
22 Deer .
32 Misguided
23 Mulgrew 331nthe
and
know
Jackson 38 Swo(d's
24 The 'Red
conqueror
Baron,
38 Dentist's . ·
group
for.one

~.

•,

.'
'

.

'• .

.' ..

1

.

' .•

.

21 Hebrew
measure

...

28 British
river ·
27 Measure
28- for tat
30 Chairman

!...•

,

...
•·' '
....

'

31 - moda
34Consume

•: '

I

35 UllC(JnSCIOUS~rJ-+31 Unused

37 Lay olfl

3t Amonasro's
daughter
40 Carrying
weighI

'

.

.

'

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOJI!S- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

W:301

(I'G)

&lt;

·UNSCIAMilf lfTTfiS 10

~Front ~

I 11:001
.....,. ... Allar

''He must not have learned much. That 's
the ugliest picture frame I've ever seen .··

•.

(J)c;w
P.ealdent

ttla

'

.

· Moner Guida Louis

~

,

bOM. I;I

CD-Ii

:
,

Rotory or eoblo toot drUIInt.
wtlll • - ' " 4 o d - deY.
Pumf.:LM •nd ..vice, 304ltl
.

Co•or'o Plumbing
end Hooting
fourthoMPino
Gtlllpolll, Ohio
114-148-3115

,

10:00 (I) CBN 'Tatathan
(I) • (J) tltlrty-thlng A
temporary llhlk!IUP at the
. agency makes .Michael

appliance l'llplll,.. WV
304.e71-23tl Ohio .,..._
2454 .

Plumbing &amp;

' ,

eNnhv.. Now

Home
Improvements

S.pllc Tonk Pumolng 11101..Cl.illll
Co. liON EVANS ~N1ERP"ISU,
JacUon, OH 1.eoo-137.e121.

Q

(IJ Loiroy King Uval
0 MOYIE: Stone Cold Dead

I

ll.llment

ces Tueacl8r Movta

(PG131 (2:00)

, ,,

~

82

,_rtcen EapaMnca

91 eO MOVIE: 'Loi

.....
.

!MI.o:IM.·

(!)

A biller -~~ erupll

.;

Opportunity

r

Ucensa and has to ChluHeur
Kevin around. (R) Q
1ZD Weekday
l:oo eiJI e·~~oug wua: The
c:aon-a Story (Pt 3 01 3)'
NIC Movta 01 tile Weak

·~

80IM

RM. Run.

\II a

concerning the bulldlnQ ot •

'1 TV Sorvlet, opoellllzlna
aood 111'11, IIWW......... new lion
In
Zonhh
oloo ..,.lcil "'I lliOtl
ilull nhouot AII/FIIIel-tt. other brands.
HoUII 01h, ateo ·
Muotolll. siiiillt4-245-IIM, ..

117401dllncbl..

Ol Mlltlock MaUock
returns to c:olleae to deland
a coed framed for murder. p
(Jl Who'• The Bon?

R - ( 2:00)

FRIUDS ""- ~"&lt; 66::D.!~~
10 ~ L tnl'f UtE TAAi
1&lt;:11-iD 'Cf' ~SY ~ ...

1m Cutll•. dlplndoblo cor,

241112J

e (I)

1:05 (!) MOVIE: PerrY Ma-

IT'S IJKE P t::m.l.l"TI-IO.T W

FOlly Tree Trimming Olump
reonovll, Clll304-475-t'bt.

Autos lor Sale

71

~(2 : 00)

dam In Yosemite . (t :00) Q

v..

.

(J))N8Aieolletbell
7:35 (!) Ianford And Sen
1:00 (I) MOVIE: Money From

Weave ATangled Web
e Church SlrHI Sletion

.•

Set of 8, 321 Mock plstone •nd
rod•. S75. lt4-NS-1242 ••k·
on do ar oftor 5:00p.m. wlllk· ·
dayo.
onglno, runo g,..t, frM
tronomlsolon, noodl wort&lt;. For
Sroll or tredo. 12 opd. blko, $25.
lt4-251-t73i.

WollrpniCitlng.

Q

0 Mu-. She Wrote

Mml·tlr.., new Urn.

R~.,.

Ol JHDwdyl

ill .IIJ RaKue: 911 A
high echool telcher saves
students lrom i lab
.
explotllon. C
.
.[)) MOVII!!: Roturn From
Wltl:h Mountain (GI(2:00)
01 , ............

.1
,
,

BASEMENT
Lorto II&gt;Und ...... of hoy lor
' WATERPROOFING
0111, '15
t10h,
doUvory
Uncondhlonal lifetime gu•,.,..
ovolilbll. 01,....1052.
too. l.oell retoren- tumllhod.
F,.. ntlmatn. Call eolleet 1lt4~37.o411, day or . night.

Transportation

(IJ CnoaoflN

·ei!J

(!) Nova Nova reports on
1.00 year old legacy ot
mining pollijtion. Q .
'

POOR BOY TIRES, .304-175·
3331, front end alignment
$11.111 4,000 goad uood u... ,

81

a (J) Matna'l Famtty
181lll M•A•s•H

the

I

I'IIINT NIMEifD lfTTERS
IN TH!$! SCK/AIE$

BRIDGE

· (fi

'

p.m.

FlflJilCIJI

~u'P

\

1112 Chlvrotot I h Flolllldo
truck hod, no ruot, MOO. 304111-2111.

$81.00 ton. Your
- k l....u ohor II, Long lot·
·-Ohio 114--3511.

zx.

..... 114tt•••• ... 7

*'·

Aff'~!GIATE IT

14.10

1171 Trine AM, Texu oar, no
rutl, llolory 4 tronomll- · •• . - . ....-~241.
1171 Dollae pickup. 150, Stll,
·auto. 1m El Camino. 3_!;!1, olr,
ltillo. 1111 Camaro, ~. •
..... 114-11:2-1114.
'
• lor 1m, ao
outo ,lrono, Unttd
wtn~~-~-oftor
4:30
Pll
-

_,..._CIIaw_

Wllllkl .... "' tldorly In homo. 114 IS2

u•

•r

.

1111 c:av-. ...... In - · ...
otlllnl llod¥. Tnlno, but no ·
... 111
Ill. Ul141.
linn
'h•,
0111.·
• - .11101or.
I14-SIIIIOJ.
DNasmeJiild QltlwJ' .c.nn.L 1111 ,~, ~ .... 1171
..........
IIIII
a Cllluaolat ......
Y4 161. »t-

IIIII
odulIIIII
··· AIOO
chordlng
tranopoolo
..1
Wln1-'od,l14-1112-

21

old. ....

OnMnl

aao4

:a.

•!f..* f::

ding

.. 77N3GO.

, hunclrldj

Pl-.

c:c.eMr lponlol II! rrl

=:::.= .,

ay

304-877.e341.

511 Peta for Sale

Wll
do throUgh
bobyolll....
"" - Hlvo·
lntonll
4 y.....
.
. , good - - · 114-4410107on,.-.

&amp; Grain

H

" -· 4000 S.IH at Hoy, ._

SNAFU\&amp;' by Bruce Beattie.

Wll cltln ao.c building l l r 1 b o - • · buy ild' oerop
Iron. ........711.

LlveS1ock

lid .t w reg'od Ouortor NorM
...,. 1175, 2 Jf· old rog'od
Ouortor IIIJ 1100. fll2
nog"od. 0uMo &amp;fldlng,
- - ohUd.ao,- wforn P1HrouN """" D S.rr
~... l1iiilo....... ot.h lra
to lhooill from. 114 218 t'"

..
,..;"iiiO.
~··~~::::::::::::::.+:~::.-.::·~-------+~~~R~I~~~~~~~-~-~::ung~S~175~
.Building
~~711-~~21~1~4~.--55

~

5204. --.-.

Tack.~.

now, $750. it4-3~.

------- . WOlJLP

ASYLuM':· i~Nif .;.

1117 11oc11111 DokOII, 4x4, Rod,
oxc. c;an~~ .. llt50.1t4-318-117t.
1117 S.tO, 4xt, 311,000 mlltt,
ono - r , e1womt bor,
bodllnor, olllre ohorp, worronty,
17901). 014-416-1751.

' "laao:"=

113

54 Mlse&amp;llan&amp;OUS
Merchandise

llllp, ....... - -·

· .I Tfflt4fc ou~ COL~lAGU~

Fard 01- lroetar,. With
'fOr Sale
· ...,
MmiiiHIUnl . plaWI.
dlteo 4 - ni&gt;'tlll pllntor,
'· 14 ft. lllhlng balt~lvtloNIO.
'
401 JO w/JD loldor,
llvo wtl~ 2lr ~
UfY ·-..,
'
lt4.Z14-15;12.
11 ,200. 304-1 3335.
i
Jlm'o , _ Equl-111, Sll. 35, 1D72 ;7 ft. Storcroft ' Trt.Hull ,_.
Woot Cl.iiiiiiOIII, 1!4-441-lim; loot. 128 HP, Evlnrudo ·Engine, ,. •
-lart ..,. 6 uuil tonn comploto lop, now uphololory.
·t...taro 1 lm...__.O. a~, Colllt4-211·t3thftor 7:00p.m. ~,•
,....,_,
-•·
loll, lrodt, I:OG.e:OO - y o , Out Boonllltroury llotor. I HP.
SoL. Noon.
Good ... ~ $100. 114-112·

-~~·

Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITUIIIL
ScfH ond eholro priCod , _
1315 to 1815. T-110 ond up
lo $125. Hkteabldt . _ 10
IllS. I l K - IZIS to 1371.
l.ompo 121 lo 1125. - . .
StOI ontl up to Mit. Wood
llbll w.e eholro 1211 to ma.
Dttl&lt;ol145up to sm.·Ho•ellao
$400 &amp; ..,. bUnk bide'*' plltl
whh. l'lllltrell btl ontl. up to
$3H. boby bodo 1110 - or box oprlngo lull a r PI, firm 115, oriCI 181.
.... $271 • UJI, King ~. 4
_ . , - 111. Guri,Coblnllo
I, I, I 10 QIOI. -131 I 141. Bod ·1n- $21,
Qt.n SIU 131 I ldng 150. Qood Hltellan ol,liicjouftH,
IMIIII
eoblntto;
hoodbaonlo 130 IIIII up to lit.
80 daodyoerod
...,.lt 3umlcooutoh lwuhllh.~
~v
.
•
Ylllo
thru 't.."c:.fi~4 ~~: ~~.

till&amp; Dodo• carovon, 15115;
1111 Fard "Window Von, SUN;
1111 Fard Cofworolon Yo!!!
45 000 mlltt vory nlco, 1Doo
erOneo II XLT,110.
155P Wlolr, 1111
Motaro,
114 4111815
114-1-1 •

0 Or&amp;

·

(I) 1-tnmenl Tonight

CONGRES.SIONAl
OFFICES

•

I'm fascinated With lhlnae I don' understand and Since
~'s .pienty I don' undefslaiid, I lead a -r BUSY LIFE.

.

0 Miami VIce
• VkMoCounlry
7:05 (!) .ieflarionl
7:30 eiJI l!ll ,.. ...tty Feud
(J) College laolcetbaH

•

C.omple.•• .the . c"uckle . Quolod

by filling in the mining wOf'dl

E~-Field - 8risk - Doobly.:. BuSYLIFE

Ill Abbott And C:O.tallo

ttll · - II, V.e, &amp; opl. wfth
o-drtva, a,ooo mlllo. 11000. .
114-148-7720.

I'.

SCUM LITS ANSWERS

iT~~Q .·.

,....._ 11100. 114-1114510.

INKPAN

L...L-L.....L....JI--..L....J you develop from step No. 3 below .

lUI Wl1esl Of

!Ill

l'iao
~~·,r~&gt;~:':o.:!.~c=

08t8

(!) MacNeil l,eilrar

-·Hour
·= '

:\"a

1000

e (J) CurnnUflalr

.!.

is stranger than fiction,"
said the young delinquent, but
~s not as-."

1,..__,:.1'~1.,.;7~~...::.;.1.:.:.,1,---1
ft
•
• V

W8cncrop 6 loh. King

I(J)PMMII"inl

·

410 """n Detro Soekhoo, good
lt4-44HIM4.7
. rc:::y::;c;..le;::s::-:=
,c::4:-::-Mo:=.t:.;o~
141 Ford troetor wfth F,_,_fn tiiD KX250, f2300. Exc. cand.
S3150, Ford Jublloo woh 5t4-31W571 .
lllftl 1 dloc buoh hoa, I eu~
1 1 -134M. &amp;14-211-11122.
75 B
&amp;M t

- • · oomplttt tVIWtl,, ~
eaot cuh prieta ...lllbll. VI'Ro
Fumhwo. At. 14~."'- llpon
7 dayo a - .
lhru Iii. I
a.m. - 1 p.m., lkln. 12 •I
p.m. 114-448-3151. •
SWAIN
AUCTION 1 FURNfTURE. S2
Oliva St., Golllpollo. I Uood
lumhure, hootoro,_ !foltorn I
Work boott. 114-4. . .10.

53

11:11:

w

-

111 Fatm Equipment

lt4
•
Top Cooh pold. Old tumftlft
oUboordo,
qulfta,
orfonlll,
polntlngo, toyo, ar ront1n1 all 304G1 3271, ar
~ ·-~~

Merchandtse

Earn 1300 - S500 Plr -k,

-lng Boakl 11 ho.,.. cau t etl-'73-7440 Ext. ll-303.

YUIIht M lvotom, ~~ . 2
_...... 1 lloniOf ...--.

-

.
a...._ Hvlng. t 11111 2 room oportmento It VIIlloand
Alia- In lllkldlddlleoport.[I!HIPf..n
ltM. - · th-h lloroh tt.
Filii _,.h rent lrM to who .,.uly. Coli f14-112-7717.
EOH.
lllcldlopart. 1 bodroOrn .... 1121
month pluo utllllloo. 114-11235 Loti &amp; Acreage
Wanted
7511 lftlr .......
Caro lor otdorty. Proctlclllluroo 4 112 .._ llolt..., lind. 11000. lladom tbr, -!lk&gt;Wn. ..,.. 2 -lng moel*le eoblnot
on coli. Roooanoblo priCit. 114- CIOh Of lind contract. 114-742· polod, aamploto ..chon, Ins::'~~h
112~101.
2050.
. .,18tlld,alroond., 114-448-0131.
~·· 12 ....., 3 mlloo on
Drvor llarvtlt gold Ill, dr)'llr
4
15
SChOOlS &amp;
Sandhill R -, .,.II pond, :::....""
.':~.:i;j Wfilrlpool avoeo~- I?.'!JI ~~~
Instruction
17114111 ollor4:00 p.m.
molntolnod Including l'tlnl. NO whlll 175, •••- ""rt
--.;.;:::=~==---1 Aotltan 11_
~
1115, woohor IDI. IL Ukl now
RE-TRAIN NOW!
• ....::!:
_,....., polo. l14-182·2107.
1150, wuhor W . . - whho
!IOUTHEASTEIIN
BUSINESS IIObllt · - - porm
• ....- . Nletly lurnllhod tmOII 'houM. IN, tloetrlo ron.. 30• ovocodo
COLLEGE, 521 Joekoon Plko. wotor, prlcM i'odueod, • • ~· Ctolli to now ohapplng Otntor. IN, oloelrle range 20" S75, ~
eon 114-4-317. Rtg. No. 11o
~~~;Gi
lultoblo .., 1 or 2 ,.,_,.. 1111- ,..... 20" 171,gu ronge
,
\1:.:;·1:;:055=1·;.______
•
·
•
44f.0131.
.
whlto
ralrlgorolar
ut.
IL
•
.:::
Loll FO&lt; Solo. Oo!Npollo Fm
· , ~- to. lu
lum.
rotrlgoroiO&lt; 2 dr.
1121,
'18 . Wanted to Do
11.- Public wo•·•· -· •
·• m. or un ·•ot• In ,.,........ Sklgr.:Jft:loaapportono ·
-·
w
.!'.~- 114-182ol5304 ar
G-..!IIolntono- I -Ira,
ppor ·tloetrlc, I&gt;IUmblng I eolpllfltry.
~&amp;1~4~3~17~~77~·~·~~~~
'
~
.. ,.. Pouto'o Doy care Contor.
Solo, oHordoblo, Clllldolrl. 11-f.
I o.m. - 5:30 p.m. Alloo 211-10.
lotare, oftor oehool: Drap-lno
wolc-. 11• Ul S224.

·;!.,

182-6:111.

:::""..i;,i l:O,!'::tl: ~~~.

q-.--2511.

...
· ldool
tar ano
,.,.
oanand
otortlng
II 1171.
&amp;1 .....
2101,..

bu'::7. ..

ro~r~ge.ra~..- . Skip Awl•
Uppor Alvor Rei. ...Ide llanO
Croolllolol. Colll1 .....7311.

--= _

_.lngo.

Plw tar uta. Aoldng 1200.&amp;14-

APPUANCEI

49
F L
u.~o~p
·=~OIWIL.
_
·:.,.--..:...;:o~r
,;;:
·
.:;ea;;;se::.;.
.
·
•••
..... lllnntt·
1
::- . · - - - -_,...,
Par looM: Soaond ~ 8unlur- ~~ ohtlro p.-,l
:-.-1 .....~

-h

Fumllhod 3 r - IIIII both,
h30 tniuor with t - oddltlon, . prlwte, . prelor llnglo
1100.81,....14N-3p.m. . worldngporoan,non-,no
poll, :IICIWll-2111.
Flro Nmogod traitor :IOW7II- Fum- .
tltlctlner
1075.
....,_..., ....-... klpl,

Golll- Dolly Trtbunt 821 . on lhil lot, In nood at ropoln.
Third Avonut, Goltlpollo, OH
I.IYt In ont and rent tht - ·
45131.
su,aoo. eu 441 ens Will boby oK in my horno, ••- 4p.m.
portoncoil lnd eon g h l o - 1 lull or port tlmo With 33 Fanns fOr Sale
tlu blo houri, .....,.bll rotoo,
111.7, 10 mL South Galli,...., 41+
_ , oehool end hotpitol, eerw. houM-nnd
...tr,
175~734.
•
tot, Sti,IOO ut1o, 114117-4220.
12
Situation

444-1077, lfmMod
llon-Thurs, Sol

carf:m:in ~~:...=.~1 ~:t':J b1 ,~~1na .~Jna
2 bodr-• op1o.

abled.,

. 11~
'""·
1812 H.mlttan Houoo, 24&lt;118,
110,000; 111111 , _ 24d2,
111,000. Konougo M - Homo
S.IH, Konougi, OH 11,....

-·

·USED

=· =:

Jaft W.rneler lrwlrucloi', .I 14-

R
33, North of - r a y.
I
L"!'1 ront111,. porto, Nita. Coli
&amp;t...,e2.
7479
Tlldng llpjlllclllano lor .oHict
PICKENSI'URNnuM
.. 1p1rtmonts. -":,=ng.
nil.
111
brtclultl, all around Jorrleho Rd. Pt. Plouont, WV;
- · P"o- ponung. Ottlco up Cotl304-175-1480. .
to t,440 o~ft.JNartl! ond town.
Coli 304.e7 - 7 .
RENTTO OWN

:::
211tc!raom
Apl.
1200 por manlh,
1110
clopallt,
304.e75-31100.

Far
· 10.50,
:lbr,114-441-~~
ho-,- portly
tumlohorl,
0114 oftor 4p.m.

W.nlod: Plrt~lmo bortondlr tar
1oe01 P!'lnl• club. Exc. w.tdng

Country llo~· Homo

2 30

:::::.

MOn......

GOOD

Musical
Instruments

57

I Lm. to I p.rn.
14441-tlf!1.127 !lrd. A... Cl.ilNpollo, ut1

w.-. dfYorl,
46 Space for Rent
•--. -

.at.="";-•='.:::.::P.;.;.:.""~=--=
_bf:;:

lltd-"":!'

~.~Jo=~r,~~

..

wv.

up, odull only. No pitt.
~ -• -lrlo ~· 114 4111127

tllet-d

t0ll50 2 br.trollor end lot In Rut· .
lind. $7000. 61 4-:117·'7217.
tm moblto- 2 br., l14-44tlo7101. ·

HousehOld
Gooda

51

liM- n10mo . .h oaaldng.
Aloo trollor a poco.- All - Coli "oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-77311111, 11ooan

~~ llrvo kltehon, wuh-dry

3381 01114-112polio.
to
Ml~'!ttor lp.m.4 a-r
oto101
•
ohopplng
""!l:
for, wotor, ao-C. tro--tot'~
brlek, pravldod. S215/mo.
II &amp;14, •IIIII
•• ""'"'• 441.0211.
·
·
..,.go, tlraDIIOa, llneOd yonl,
lolt of ilorlgo, - - 4 rOom oportmont tar rent In
11/2ll. I110IIIgO. 104-875-18011 or Pamtt OJ. $325 P1r manlh. All
17114512.
ulllllloo pold. l14-tt2-t.
· - - - w i t h ta Apartment• tor rent. Twin
.._of lind.- nlct ... _ Rlvoro Towor Houolng tor ,,..
WllllorM10cl, eiiii14-742-Mf.
El...y, Hondlcoppod IIIII -

tor sa1e

Help Wanted

·

Apartment
lor Rent

-

~ ~lilly 121 s.
2ni1 Avo.,
ltjiOrl. Col Don 21 W. IQII. 2 br., 1 both, prlvott
llullln 01

Furnlahed
Rooms

Hotel. 114 4481580

l82-2154.
l~ck wMh :1-IA, 2 LR, DR-K- mt EOH.

32 Mobile Homes
Employment Services

44

n10m, 2110 IIIPII Ava;
75-41114. 1

SCewart.
Owner, Opentara, whh TriUIM
or tractor trailer mutt bt trarn.d
1 control tlow tor loul conlrocl.
work. HIOO 1M 1215. ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

!'!!4!;!-2;!51~1!;5:!;11~.·----~

=!:,

trot IIIIW.

45

"'!141=·7..:.
471:.:;...
Trllltr for Rent: 2br, AI. 211.

J bodlaom · tlnlshod
- W i l t ! 4th bedroom lnd

3

1885 AttrO Convftlcm vena,
very aoac1 eonc111an, au opllonL
114 ~ 1311 •
·
1111 Fard
4•4 trucll. 311

-=-- - · - ,.-,.,. ~::r.:.tor~""'•,=..~ c::~ =z..J'f.~~·l.::-.. g;,::

~,'l:." 1o .... 11.000. ., ....

N• company In area ntldll
Tap llonogoment I Slllo Rop,
$25,000 to 175,000 por yoor.
Polontlot oomlngo. 814-4412901 lor opl., Uk lor llr.

Mobile homel for u1e or Nnt.
CoMI14-182-mv.
Nloo 2 ar. lumllhod ,,.,..,,
It 314 Porell. St., Kanougo. 114-

s..

2 - - · I church, Vlnlan
LOst : New Lltdy'a ellv., color
Pulslr Wrist Watch 5olt in or
noor C.otrol Truot Perking Lot,
or Altay, 014-146-0tll,

151'4.

I

J...-..1..--1.

1:35 (!) Aftdy Ortlflth'

,.._,.,.,,No
2213.
polo. lt4-MII- 1I --========::;=::::=======:;:=======~~ 107&amp;
tt1104WL
CJI tfroo
loop, onnow
Hurrleono
Lovl 1opil
llobllo homo tor ront, call 11411o11, gaocloolld loop, 304-475-

441-11501 tor mono lnlor. .tlan.

L..· ..1.• .....J.-

11J l'lllller llclles And Melly
l!llH.-....
1ZD Topc.nt

0

Vans &amp; 4 WO'S

73

I

PRACE
1-~1:.-·.:.;,1~~~....:.:,...1-1 ,., "Truth

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CD

Real Eslate

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(I)
~ t990 by NE• 1n c

I

1:05 ci&gt; aeveri; HlltiiiiiiM

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Wfi\1N5R! .

b•-.

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1:30~111 ~ NIC Nlgl1lly Newe

0

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.
.

3

l oarro- letters of tho
four acrambltd -cb ;,..
low to form lour ol mpll wordo

, . lwamllcano SeiiiOII
Premlere~R) .
(!) Math
Hour
ellll An&lt;IY

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1111 .... truok Iorita
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The Deily Sentinei- Paga 9
tAU

• EVENING

72 Truckalor Sale

Fumlohod,

..

Qh.io ...

floi'Moy-Midllaport.

9,1990

...•

'One letler standi for l!Jiother. In this sample .A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
epoilti ophes, the lenlth and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.

'•

'

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"~

CRYPTOQOOTE

1-t
IMTMCZ
YGCC

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GQSPTGSQ

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HUMAN RACE~
· CHOICE: WORK OR· DAY·

FACED wmt A CR

TIME TB.EVISION. -SOURCE UNKNOW,..

•.

•

\

�'

·Fiego 1o-The Daily Sei1tinel

Tun tilly.

Pon•ov Midd'eport. Ohio ·

t

Victory Baptist Church· has holi~ay. play

:People in.the. news .

~ 8,

1180

Holiday vi.rits

'

Salute

Holiday gu.eats at tbe hOme or
Ada Bissell and· son, Ken!IMh, ·
Ilea llabD In the video, has ·
" Tell It Again, Grandpa!" w'-s· Keeper, Shepherds, Wise Men, Joseph.
Long Bottom, were Mr. and Mrs.
Acting as shepherds were Tom Groeneveld and TOmmy,
reworked Moua&amp;ala' s "Missis- the title of the Christmas play
and a choir of angels, they
sippi Queen" to mock fallen presented by the Victory Baptist recreate wbat happened almost Brian Young, TOJTII)IY Roush, Worthlngton; Mr. •nd Mrs. Mark
and J .C. Buzzard. Dustin Zirkle, Miller, Eddie Haymaa, Wnter2000 years ago.
evangelist Jim Bakker (video to Church In Middleport.
Tbose acting In the play and the• Joe Cornell, and Cody Smllh ' v!Ue; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bissell;
The play portrayed both the
follow) and he also will have
parts they played are as follows, served as k!nis.
renditions of' the Rolliar I!&amp; ones' present ; lime as well as a
Michelle and Michael Patrick,
Accompanying on the plano Pomeroy; Mae McPeek. and .
John Harrison, granCipa; Phyllis
"Under My Thumb, " . Cheap recreation of the past. In the
. Trick's " Gonna Raise Hell" and . play, Grandpa, Christian man, Hudnall, grandma ; Jennifer Cor- was Heidi Smith.
Steve · and Judy ·Holter, Long
The play was directed by
nell, Kelly; Ashley Smith, Suzie;
Elvis Prsley's " Are )'ou Lone- explains the obvious me40lng of
Boltom.
•,
Joshua HarriS, Kevin; and J .D·. Angela Hall and Ailgle McClure,
some Tonight." The musicians· Christmas with scripture, along
Keesee, T()m.
, with. the opening .given by Cody
.playlng on ihe · album Include with hts better half,.grandma, a
Smith, Joshua AshleY , David
Christian
woman
at
his
side.
Portraylng:angels
were'
Trlsh
Mountain's ~Be West, Eddie
McClure, Andy Hysell, and
There
are
grandchildren
In
the
Roush
,
Julie
Young,
Jennifer
Moaey , Dweezll Zappa and
members of Boa Jovl, Wblles· household visiting and they be- .. .Ashley, Tangy Laudermlll, and Brooke Venoy.
A duet, ''Mary's Little Lamb' '
nake and P0118on. In addition, come Intrigued by grandpa's Melissa Young. The p;~rt of f11ary
was
performed by Mr. and Mr s.
Klnison has plans to tour the knowledge of the l;llrth of Jesus. was played by Kimberly Cornell,
Randy
Smith ..
Along with Mary, ,Joseph, the inn and Donald Laudermllt played
country.

'

Dance set ·
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
sponsor and round and
!!quare dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. Music will be provided .
· by True Country Ramblers. T.he ·
public II Invited to attend and,
ldmJialon Is $2. Those attendt~
are to·brlna snacks for the snack
table.
:.

wlll ·

Ohio Lottery

'

Pick3

P~e:rOy's

;

ll:r WILLIAM C. TROTI'
\laW Preta laleru&amp;looal
WOODY ON WOODY: Woody
:AIIell says he was amazed by the
;JJilmber of people who took Issue
with him over an article he wrote
for Tbe New York Times last
year In which he criticized Israel
1or being too harsh IIi combatting
lbe Palestinian uprising. In the
ll!tesnssue of Tlkkun. a Jewish
Interest ·magazine, Allen wrote
an article titled "Reflections of a
Second-rate Mind" In which he
said he Is convinced of the
correctness of his feelings . •'•1
have· frequently been accused of
belni a self.)Jatlng Jew, " Allen
says, "and while It's true I am
Jewtsh and I don't like mysel!
very much, It's notbecauseo!my
Persuasion."
NORIEGA'S LAWYER: Put·
tlng together a defense for
Muuel Norle1a hasn't been the
only problem facing Miami lawyer Frank Rubino lately . The city
has been trying to boot Rubino
out of his Coconut Grove law
office because It's located In a
residential .area where offices
are not allowed. Rubino's request for a · change In the zoning
laws was scheduled to go before
city officials Monday night. Long
before Noriega was sent to
Miami to stand trial on cocaine
tra!!lcklng charges, , Coconut
. Grove residents complained that
they didn't want Rubino's criminal clientele coming to their
neighborhood: Rubino told board ·
members that If his rezoning
request is defeated, he might ·
have to conVert the office Into a .
home. "Their worst fears could
come ' true, " · Rubino said. ".J
could move ln."
· AGONY OF DEFEAT: Zlnko
Bop&amp;aj, the Yugoslavian skller
seen taking that nasty !all off li
ski Jump on the "ABC's Wide
World of Sports" lrrtro, helped
Induct the man who rriade him:
famous Into the TV Academy
Hall of Fame Sunday night. It
was Rooae ArledJe, · now presldimt of ABC News, who chose!
Bogataj's fall to symbolize the
agony of defeat. "I would rather •
have been the thrill of victory," !
Bogata) said through translator
Jim McKay at the Los Angeles
ceremony. Also Inducted In the
hall were Perry Como, Barbara
Wallen, "60 Minutes" producer
Doa Hewitt, ''Sesame Street"
creator Jou Ganz Cooney and
actor Carron O'Connor. Como
took s()me kidding from Mliton
Berle about his lald-baek style
and even joined In by calling
blniself a "sleeper" among oddsmakers for his Induction Into the
Hall of Fame.. Tbe show will air
Jan. 24 over the Fox BroadcastIng network.
.
DOMESTIC LIFE AT TilE
MOVIES: "War o( the Roses,"
the Michael · Douglas-Kathleen
Turner movie a bout an espe·
clally ugly divorce, was Just
another day at' the office for
"palimony" lawyer Marvin Mit·
!lbeJ.o•. "lt might be fantasy for
many movie-goers but as a
Hollywood divorce attorney; It's
inore reality for ml)," he said.
. CHARLES LIKES WEE- ·
TABIX: Weetablx, the British
breakfasl cereal, now has Prince
. Charles's good housekeeping
!ieal of approval. Charles has
llisued the ·cereal one of his
personal "warrants," which
means It can promote Itself as
being certified by the royal
family after having supplied the
famlly for at least three years.
Just how much Weetablx does
Charles eat and at what time of
day? With or without sugar or
$orne of that dried fruit on top?
Nobody's talking. "A firm can't '
give :fOU that kind of Information.
It's between the firm and the
royal household/" a Buckingham .
Palace spokeswoman said.•
"They can' t give you any lnfor- !
matlon at , all." Weetablx, the '.
largest cereal producer In Great
J)rltaln, made It onto the queen ·
mother's warrant list In 1973 and
the queen gave It her seal of
approval two years· later. The
. , la~f list brings the total of•
Charles' warrants to 108, compared to more than 700 granted
by Qaeen Elizabeth, 222 by the
queen mother· and 45 by Prince
PhUip.
. ·· SAM'S BACK: Comedian Sam
IU..... has a new album coming
out next month and It will mix his
hlgh·volume standup act with
rock 'n' roD. Klntson, who recorded a version of the '60s hit
''Wild 'l'!llng" that featured Jes·

,I

I 50th

-

.

•
anniversary

a

772
Pick 4- •.
9763

•

•

al
Vo1.40, r,lo. 170
Copyrlglned 19110

Low lonlJhl tn mid 30..
Thursday , cloudy, windy.
HIJh In mid 4118.

2 Sictlono, 14 Pog" 26 Cento

Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio; Wednesday. January 10. 1990

A Multim·e dial·nc. New..,..,er

Roush to head Meigs
• •
•
,conu.....,...-ntsstoners agam
•

·L ESS"
• XLT Lariat Tdm
•Bit. Low Mnt. Mirrors
• HandUng Pkg. .
•Headliner and lnaulaHon Pkg.
·light and Convenlerq Group
•AM/FM Cg111He
•Spud Contlol
om Wheel
• All Concltlon
•Deluxe Algerlt WhMls.
• Sliding Rear Window
• Tqchometer
•And Much M0191

•XLT Lariat Trim

STOCK NO. 212

• Bit. LoW Mnt. Mirrors

•Hancllng Pkg.
.
• Heo lluer and Insulation Pkg~
•Ughl and Convenience Group
•AM/FM C~uatle
•Splld Conlrol
•llltWhlll
•A'I Condlllon
•Deluxe Argent Wheels
•4.D. Sllvlc:e Pkg. .
•And Much Morel

STOCK NO. 328

Cult -.leader, .famlly·arraigned,

.WAS 1 1

'AEROSTAR

·RAIDER XLT 4X2

•XLT Tdm

.

I

•OWLTINI

STOCK NO. 311

•XLT Equipment Qroup
•Power Slnrlilg

•Chrome ~~mpers·
•AM/FM C1111•n.
•IAl/IIJ Cloth Bench
•Silcllng hal Window
•Tachometer

•CCilt Alllnlnwn ~
•lrt. Low Mnt. Mlnan
•Air Condition -

•lociYIIde t.ioldlngl
•And t.tor.l

Manning Roush will again provement Corporation were glonal Board of Trustees .
serve as president and David
As' mandated, Commission
Paul Patterson, representing Ru Koblentz as vice president of the
Presldenl
Manning Roush, ProUand; Frank Cleland, representnile Judge Robert
bale-Juve
Ing Racine; Kathryn Crow, SyraMeigs County Board of CommisBuck
and
Auditor
William Wicksioners. The commissioners secuse ; Richard 'Follrod,
lected Roush and Koblentz dur- Pomeroy; and Bernard Fultz, line were appointed to the Public
As s istanc e . E xamin i ng
Ing Monday's organizational
Middleport.
Members to the Meigs County Committee.
meeting for 1900.
.
David Koblentz was appointed
Appointed as . clerk .t or the Tuberculosis Board of Trustees
for 1990 wlll be Rev. William as th e county's voting member
board and Cominunlty Development Block Grant administrator Mlddleswarth, Pomeroy; Jane on the Buckeye Joint-County
Walton, Pomeroy; Dr. Larry Self-Insurance Council and on
was Mary Hobstetler.
The commissioners have es- Kennedy, Middleport;. Paul Pat- the self-Insurance council's set- .
tablished Wednesday, 1 p.m. , In . terson, Rutland; Michael Stru- tlement committee, with Manble. Syracuse; Jeanetle Law- ning Roush as alternate to both
their office In the courthouse, for
rence, Racine; Lloyd Blackwood groups.
their regular weekly meetings .
and Donna Nelson, each represThe following other appolnl · Working hours for those county
offices under control of the enting Chester, Olive and Orange ments were also made by, the
commiSsioners were established Townships; James Hill and Joan board on Monday.
- Linda Benlz, as clerk of
as 8:30 to 4:30 for the commls- Wolle, each representing Sutton,
for arralpmenl 'l'llesd!Q'. Tbe three were fo~ In
ACCUSED ctiLT LEADERS ARRAIGNED Lebanon
and
Letarl
Townships;
~loners,
the
plat
map,
the
luberMeigs
County Court.
a N!Ulooal City, Ca., hotel, just north of Cbe
Allee, Damoa, ud Jeffery ._.adgren, acCIUied In
Charles
Riffle
and
Harold
Rice,
-Jennifer
Jewell, as deputy
culosls
clinic,
county
court,
litter
Mexican border, when arresled by lederal acents
llle rellllou cult I&lt;WIDp of a Klrtlu'il, Ohio,
each
representing
Salisbury,
Sa-.
clerk
of
Meigs
County Court.
control
and
the
counly
developSuaday wl&amp;b a )ar1e cache of weaporis. (UPI)
IIIIIID:r of 5, appelll' In San Dle110 Municipal Court
lem
and
Rutland
Townships;
·
-Wayne
Roseberry.
as dog
ment officeS.
Reappointed to . terms on the Helen Swartz, representing Bed' warden.
-John Stahl, as c our those
Meigs County Regional Plannltlg ford, Scipio and Columbia
Townships .
custodian.
Commission were Theron JohnAppointed as the TB board 's
-Homer Smith. as courthouse
son and Eleanor Thomas . A third
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A his three fugitives .have been daughters, Trlna, 13, Rebecca, 9, appointment, to fill the unex - consultant was Orion Roush. janitor.
Appointed as the TB board' s
•· - Everett Holmes. of Glouster,
religious cult leader and his wife
arraigned and It will be up to him and Karen, 5. ·
pired term of Herbert (Pele)
representative to the Southeast- as apiary Inspector.
and 80!1 were arraigned Tuesday
to Initiate proceedings," HewThe Lundgren family
Shields, who resigned, will be
ern Ohio Lung Association was
The appointment of persons to
on, fugitive charges and once lcker said.
captured Sunday at a motel In made later.
faye
Wallace
with
Mike
Struble
take
recognizance bonds for
Reappointed
to
terms
with
the
more refused to · agree to be
The Lundgrens had been the National City, 14 miles north of
appointed to the SEOLA 's Re- county courl was tabled unlll
extradltedtoOhlowheretheyare
target of a nationwide manhunt the Mexican border. Three other · Meigs County Communlly ImWednesday's regular meeting.
accused of killing five followers . hiunched after the bodies of five Lundgren children were placed
Jeffrey Lundgren; 39', a ~emel)lbers of Jeffrey Lundgren's In protective custody. Four wea·
ftocked mlnl!iter of tile Reorgansplinter sect were unearthed on a pons were found at the botel and a
farm lle~! . Kir,tland, Ohio, ":here cacheofweaponswlth. upt~l,OOO
!Zed Church o( Jesus Christ Qf
_, ..
,.
,4_~1Q' ~~n~; his wife .. ~- .~he·grqup.fl*d earl_le,r -ll\lf4. , . . rounds o~ atnmunl.tloll waul!illed
f./.
~··
'•
~
~
·'
be
fflQ!IiWH
ll-l!le.fOs.
. ,.
ljccum)llal!An.•
·
·~
-,
'
·
B)-' \Jailed ......Jalei.~iial
,l'?i
&gt;.-1"-.o ~l!ll~ ~I .:;;.,i~~Tlwa lilllildwere IIU1&amp;1..,...11 :~.'~"- ' ir ,l;l! 1,(: "\!ls'1!'~-p
LookJng
.,
ali'~ad
lhrough·
Sunit was to be a day of changeable
~ . i'alaritd QJI.fuflll CC!m· " l:i!nnis Avelry, ,9, hls·W!Te, lcic~r ren~by lhe family.
With the. approach of the chilly
day,
there
Is
a
chance
of
snow
weather for the Buckeye Stale.
plalnll&lt; tiled by S8J! Diego . Cheryl, ...s2, and , their three
, .
· .
Wolf ·Moon, Ohio's weather has
Friday· and Saturday, and fair
In the northeast rain mixed
·
"""
·
'
prosec\ltors. · .
turned Sharply nastier.
-sunday
. Highs will be In the
The thi'ee defendants, booked
The moon turns tun Thursday, with snow. was to·change to all
mld-20s
lhrough the period and
snow d~rlng the morning before
as fugitives on Ohio warrants
with Indian legend saying the
lows
In
the
20s Friday and 15 to 20
It ended In the afternoon. Accumcharging lhl!m wltb mqrder and
Wolf Moon Is one of the year's
ulations of 1 Inch or !ess were Saturday and Sunday.
conap!l;aCY,, r,malnld ·lncustody
coldest. And while Ohio won't see
The early morning weather
expected. In the southern and
wl.t hout llall pending a Feb. 8
temperatures as cold as the
map
Wednesday showed a low
western counties, It was to
extradition review hearing.
bitter pre-Christmas weather,
pressure
area over southeast
become partly sunny later In the .
The .Lundgrens appeared In
the wind will ma,k e · It
Ontario
and
a cold front from the
qolil't shackled ,together with
COLUMBUS, Ohio ,( UPI) nounceme11t at a meeting of the uncomfortable.
day .
.
·
aiea
to
Wisconsin.
Both these
For Wednesday nighl and
handcuffs and waist chains. State Sen. Paul Pfel!er will Franklin County Republican
Temperatures at mid-morning
weather
systems
will
be over the
Thursday the sky cover Is apt to
JeflreyLundgrenlookedstralght annoi\DCe Wednesday he is rein- Committee Wednesday evening. were In the low to mld-30s across
Atlantic
by
dawn
Thursday
. The
be quite variable. The southern
ahead wblle Allee kept her head oVIng himself from consideration The comJTIIttee Is expected ·to Ihe state, wllh a brisk west wind
latest
weather
map
also
showed
·tor governor and wlll seek the lssueatop-heavyendorsementof sending . wlnd-chlll readings
lowered. ·
· '
counties are likely to remain dry,
Damon, who was placed be- . Republican nomination for at tQr- former Cleveland Mayor George down to belween 9 and 15
but In the north rain or snow will a warm front over the north
be possible overnight and llkeiy Plains and a cold front ove r the
nyeel\ his parents, held hands ney general, a source familiar Volnovlch for .the GOP nomina· degrees.
·
Rockies. The warm front was
with Ills mother during the, with his campaign said Tuesday. tion for governor.
Thursday .
. 'Rain began falling Tuesday
expected
lo cross Ohio WednesLows Wednesday 'n ight were
prlJCi!edlnp.
Meanwhile, In Cardington,
The Franklin County party night and It changed to snow In
day
night.
The cold fronl should ·
Meanwhile, two other suspects Morrow Courlly Treasurer Ran- endorsement would be a strong the north ·as dawn approached. · expected to be In the upper 20s to
traverse
the
· Buckeye State
fow 30s, with wind gusts sending
ln. the slay!ng'of the Dennis .Avery dall Weber announced he will i-un Pl\ls lor ·Volnovlc~'s campaign Luckily, the temperatures were
Thursday.
the effective readings considerafamUy remained al large· Tues- · for the Republican nomination against Hamilton Counly Com- hovering enough above the freez ·
bly lower. Highs Thursday wlll
day. Federal agents were con- for state auditor.
misslonet'RobertTaftll, his only lng mark to prevent any
centratJng their search In
Pfeifer, 41, R-Bucyrus, t he announced GOP opponent.
Southern California.
~publican nominee for Senate
Volnovlch was endorsed TuesDeputy . san Diego County In 1982, never announced for day night by the Knox County
Dlsb'lct Attorney John Hewlcl\er governor but held out hope he R,epubllcan Central Committee..
said Ohio prosecutors are ex- could pull together the money Previously, he and running mate
seeln~ the weapon.
REVERE, Mass. (UP!) - FBI dumped the gun and his sister-Inpeeled to obtain a warrant from and support to enter the race. He "Mike DeWine were endorsed by forensics experts wlll examine a · law's Guccl bag on Instructions
The FBI also was examining
California Gov. George Deukn\e- could not.
GOP .o rganizations In Ashtabula, nlckel:plated revolver found In a
from his brother the night of the Stuart's suicide note, and pollee
jlanlnthenext30days. TheFeb.
Weber, 35, has twice been Medina, Belmont and Scioto river near Boston to determine slaying.
divers said they would return to
,
8 hearing will focus on the status elected treasurer of Morrow counties . ·
Divers
found
the
gun
afle
r
lhe Pines River near Boston
whether Charles Stuart used the
of that warrant.
Counly. He Is the first RepubllPfeifer, who finished a weak gun to klll his pregnant wife and John McMahon, a friend of Wednesday 10 search for a gold
11 the Lundgren&amp; persist In , can to announce In opposition to · third In the 1986 Republican wound himself In a staged
Malthew Stuart who helped watch and other jewelry also
fighting extradition, ' they may
Auditor Thomas Ferguson, who primary for governor, Is shown robbery.
dump lhe evidence In the river, allegedly thrown ln the river.
not be returned to Ohio unlll
said · last week he will seek In polls with a "hug~·' lead In the
Pollee said the gun " appears"
The .38-callber revolver, disco- re-created how he lossed the gun
April.
·
.
re-election rather than running GOP attorney general sweep- vered Tuesday morning by a . In the water, the Boston Herald to be the one reported missing
"1'11 be In contact with the
for the DemOCI'.a tlc nomination stakes, accordlnw · to hlil pollee diver In the Pines River In
from the Kakas &amp; Sons fur salon
~ aid Wednesday .
county prosecutor Iii Lake
for governor. ·
campaign.
"It certainly does look promiS- In Boston' s fashionable Back Bay
Revere, was flown to an FBI
Counly; Ohloandadvlsehtmthat
,Pfeifer will make his an,
Ing as the gun that was allegedly district. Stuart managed the
forensics laboratory In Washinglhrown
Into the river on the night store. and apparentiy stole ·the
ton to confirm whether It was the
In
question,"
Flanagan said after
Continued on page 5
weapon thai killed Carol Sluarl.
Pollee now believe j'drs, Sluart
30,
was killed by her husband In
'
an on-board solid-fuel rocket precisely timed rocket firings , order to coUect life Insurance CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
policies reportedly worth more
(UPI) - The- Columbia astro- . Ignited to. begl1,1 •th¢ relay sta- Including one early Wednesday,
than
Columbia
will
end
up
Just
35
feet
$660,000.
.tion's
journey
to
Its
!Ina!
orbit
nautslaunchedaNavycommunl·
Tbe
husband, who was se:
22,300
miles
above
the
equator,
from
the
30-fool-long
satellite
cations.satellite Wednesday, dlsFriday
so
Dunbar,
using
the
rlously
wounded In the Oct. 23
but the successful completion of
palchlng tile relay sta!lon like a
One driver complained of an Injury 'In a two-oar cillllslon al
the "burn" was not Immediately shultle's fragile robot arm, can shooting, . threw himself off a
giant Frisbee, and cloaed In on a
7: ta a.m. Tuesday on US 33, In Bedford Twp. , 3.2 mDes south of
bridge Thursday and drowned In
pull the LDEF Into the s~lp' s
conflrrried by NASA.
falling science satellite for a
the Meigs-Athens counly nne, . accordl!lg to the Melgs-Gallla
Boston Harbor as pollc\! sought to
With Syncom launched, . lhe payloat;l bay fo~ return to Earth.
space rescue Friday. ,
·
Post, State Highway Patrol.
·
·
"i •think we're In excellent arrest him following revelations
astronauts preased on with a
As the smooth-sailing CohJ~­
Tbe patrol reported tllat Angela Boyd , 21, PomerQY, lost
made by his youngest brother the
bla app,roached,.the equator east busy·schedule of experiments, all shape for a Friday meeting,"
·control of her .1981 Plymouth Turlsmo and collided head-on with
said
flight
!)lrector
Ro,
b
erl
&lt;::as·
night before. ·
the
whlle
continuing
l.
o
close
In
on
of Africa, astroitaut David Low
a 1988 lnteruational truck driven by Ronald L. Bullock, 52,
Suffolk County District Attorlaunched the Syncom F5~atelllte another aatelllle lhey hope to tie. "The vehicle's In good shape,
MIIUI~ld, Ohio. Damage wu heavy to the car; moderate to the
ney Newman Flanagan said the
the lra)ectorles are allllnlng up"
'
at 8: 19 a .m. EST by pressing rendezvous wltll Friday.
truck.
·
and Isaac Newton "would have · weapon "Is a very Important
· Low, 33, and hla c~ates .''arm'' and ''fire'' swl~hesln tile
Boyd complained of a minor ~nJury and was taken to Veterans
very happy" with the
plec;e of evidence that corroboshuttle's cockpit after a series of commandet Daniel · Branden- .
Memorial Hospital.
•
rates the IStlmOny of wll·
checks to make sure lhe costly stela, 46, co-pilot James Wether- shuttle's perform!Uice.
Tbe paiJ'Ol cited Boyd for talllll't! lo maintain control. .
neeses ... ltlle' Matthew. Stuart,"
Columbia 1.s scheduled lo glide
spacecraft · waa ~eady for bee, 37, Bonnie Dunbu, tO, and
Another one-car accident occurred at 6 a.m. Tuesday on US
to'
a
night
landing
Jan.
19
at
tbe
dead supect's brother.
Marilla
Ivins,
38
were
departure.
33, In Bedford Twp., 1.8 miles aouth qftheMelgs-Athenscounty ,
FI-aan said a grand Jury
On. Low's command, powerful ·launched Tu•ay on a 10-day Ed'lfardJ Air Force Baae, Calif.,
line, where a 191N Pcird Tempo driven by' Uoyd $. Jordan, 25,
lnvesllptlng
the crime will
to
cl~
out
the
~
shuttle
fll&amp;bt
to
deploy
Syncom
and
to
aprtnga pushed agalllflt one side
· Zaaeavllle, went ott the road, striking an emb~ent.
reconvene Friday to bear teatimof the 15,28&amp;-pound ~atelllte, reacue the Lolli Duration li:xpo- m118lon, tbe fll'lt of 10 plallned
Damage wu moderate. No one . was lbJured. Tbere was no
ony
In the case. The graild Jury
for
1990
and
tbe
most
ambitious
aure
Facility,
an
11-ton
science
forciJii It out of Columbia' a cargo
citation.
.
was expected to hear a transcript
bay l,Ur.e a slowly spinning pac(lage that Is falling back to to d.a " In the poat-Cllallenpr
The patrol Investigated a oae-vehlcle accident at 7:15 a .m .
of a telephone conversation from
era. ·
Earth.
Frlabee.
Tuesday on SR. 1)1, In Sutton Twp. , 0.2, west of mllepolt 24.
the Revere Fire Department,
LDEF wu launched In 191N to
As of early Tuesday, "LDEF"
'·'And Houaton, we bad a good ·
Troopers l&amp;ld Donald F. Hendricks, 30, Syracuse,lpst control on
where Stuart' a brother Michael
(pronounced EL' -deaf) was 206 ex~ a variety qf materials to
~IQY," Low radioed m118lon
the Ice ud his 1.-nl Ford truck went ott tbe road, striking a
works, that revealed that at least
control u tbe sAtelllte, carried miles up and barreling along at the. radiation, vacuum and
utility pole. There wu hellvy dUTII.Je to the truck; no damage
four of his slbllnp knew about
Into orbit on Ill llde aboard some 17,200 mph; about 1,110 temperature extremes of apace
to the pole. No oae wUIDjured. No one waa cited.
Charles Stuart's Involvement In
Columbls. alowly rolled away · miles ahead of Columbia with the to help enatneers learn more
Another Meigs county accident occurred at 9 a.m. Tuelday on
the crime before Matthew went
about how to build Ionier-llved
shuttle closing In at a rate of
Into apace.
.
·
SR. 681, In Olive Twp., 0.2 eaat of mllepoet 14. Troopers IBid
to pollee. .
spacecraft. Th~ satelllle also Is
Forty-!lw mlnulft later, wltb miles per orbit.
(Continued •n page 5)
'
·
Matthew Stuart told pollee he
If aU goea well with • series of
COntinued on page 5
'the abuttle a·satedlatabce aw~y,

'DEALER~TAINS~BATEoTAX, TillEEXTRA

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Pfeifer to .drop out
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Experts·examine gun ·in ·Stuart case

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