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                  <text>Pomeroy-Midllaport. Ohio

· ~Your Financial

;ee.te.r"

THIS
WEEK'·S
OA ES

·. . 97 .JIOITII SECM ·

..: ~IT, OHIO '.
· LOANS ·
'

.

.

511

~ick

Low IOnfCIIt aear N. QuUie4! I
of rain .. percent.
day, hiJh mid .... Chaace of
rain 50 percent;

w•.•·

7674

BOYS

,
1 Section. 1 0 ·Pogn 215 Cento
A Muitimodlo Inc. Nowopop• •

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. January 16, 1$90

'

GIRLS

Jan. 15-Eastern-HoiM
Jan. 11-Trimltlt:-Away
Jan. 22-Ntls·Yorlc-Home

EASTERN
BOYS
Jail. 19-Southwestern-Home .
. Jan. 26-lyger (rHk-AWAY

GIRLS

.$55 PARIC $1.

·.' . MIDDI!J9~ .·;
. iA

4

c-•• ..,,

'"' . ' 992,30l1'
':\

'
Pick 3

•

Jan. 16-Warren-Away
Jan. 19-Tri..W.-Home
J_.. 20-:-BIIpre-:-Away

INSTAUMENT
.f.

Pomeroy .
&amp;esqui- _' .
centeimial

MEIGS

992-6661 .

,,,.,. "'"'"

Ohio .Lottery ·

·. •· 99:2~~41 ,

,..;;

\ ··

Jan. 15-Miigs-Away
Jan. 11-Southwtst..-n-Away
Jan. 20-Fed. locklng-HOiilt

SOUTHERN
BOYS

·Firemen
wUl accept .
65-35. ·split

Jan. 19-llannan.tract-Homt
Jan.20-H. .an-lraca-Away
'

, .... up)

.

Jcln. 26-lllerth Gallla.- loma

GIRLS

Jan. 18-Hannan trace-Away
Jan. 20-Ntlt.-Yorlc-Hctme

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away ·
Dec. I - Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York .;......... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre .,.................... ,.... Away
Dec. 29-Logatf.......•..... :............. Home .
Jan. 5-Aiexander ........... :........... Home ,
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-lliller ........................... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .......................... Away
Jan. 19-Trimbla ................. ........ Home
Jan: 23-Nalsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wallston .: ..................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ............._.. ;...... Away
Feb. 2-Belpra ............................ Home
Feb. 3....:Athens ............................ Away
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............. .. Away

!!AsrERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989· 90 80YS BAS~ETBALL

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
. . 'The proposed , 65:35 split of
Letart Township's revenue from
·a one-mill levy for fire protection
'will apparentlY be accepted by
Racine and Syracuse Fire De·
partments,' with Racine to re. • cetve the.greater percentage ·of
funds .
·
.
This was announced at ~onday
night's public meeting at Antlq· • :
. ulty by Racine Fire Chief Hank
Johnson. Approximately 30 rest·
dents turned out for the second
town ·
as
w~ks ,

Nov. 21-Miller ........:.................... Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking .......,.... Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .................. Away
' Dec. 5-Kyger C~eek". .'.................. Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. 15-'Southeril ...... :................ Away
Dec. 16-Synimes Valley .............. Home
. Dec. 22-0ak Hill ... ; ..................... Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ............... Away
· Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .................. Home
Jan. 12-.North Gallia ................... Away •
Jan,. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
Jan.26-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 27-Miller .... ,...................... H.ome
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ............. :... Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTH.ERN HIG~ !&gt;CI:IQOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-"Southwestern ........ :........ Home
Nov. 211-Kyger Creek .........,......... Aw.Y
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .............. :........... Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Awry
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................: Awry
Dec. 15-Eastirn ........................ 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-Gallipolis................. , ...... Home
Jan . .12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ......... :...... Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia ....:.. .... ....... Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood ..... ............. Home .
Feb, 2-Eastern ....................... :... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 9- Southwestern ................... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

----------------~-GIRLS SCHEDULE~--~----------. MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-lliller ................................ Home
Dec. 2-Eastem .................................Away
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-Yort .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
·Dec. 18-Vinton Co............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpr" .............................. Home
Jan. 4-Aiexander .............................. Away
Jan. 8-flderal Hockina ...................... Away ·
Jan. 11-lliller ................................. ,Away
Jan. 15-Eastem ......................... :..... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Nelsonville-Yort .................., Home
Jan. 5-W.IIston ............................... Home
Jan. 29-Vinton Co........................... Home
Fib. 1-Belpre ................................... Away
Feb. 5-Aiexander ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking .................... Home
Feb. 10-Southem ...,................. ,...... Home

and slip oil Locust Street In the noted that the purchase of the
,Monkf Y Run area. It was noted this property. ;.viii not affect the
that steps' are ~lng taken to par klnl:l are a -'of 'the Pomeroy
remedy the situation.
United Methodist Church.
. Brian Shank, counc il member,
Reed also complimented ·the
also discussed the need to block street department lor Its job of
off an area of Monkey Run where snow removal this winter, adding
the ground has softened. Mayor that he had heard comments
Seyler stated that area would be from several people that felt the
blocked off until spring.
depar tment was doing .a great
Council member Bruce Reed . Job.
reported that several members
Council president Wehrung
of council had met with the brought before the council the
County Commissioners earlier request of Jim Anderson for.
Monda:Y to discuss giving liP a another parl\lng space In front or
section of the village owned right Anderson's adjacent to the al•
of way p~oper ty between the ready existing loading zone. This'
sheriff's department and the old addltlonai space would alloW:
Elberfeld's parking lot. It was Anderson to park the. store's,
voted 'to relinquish the property delivery van parallel to the street
to the·commissioners but It was rather than backing up to the
stipulated that If the purchase of loading elevator or double park ..
the parking lot property from the .ng when deliveries need to be'
Elberfeld , Realty Company made. Mayor Seyler suggested
doesn'tgo through within 90days that ·rather than designating
then the right of way property In ·another space to Anderson, that
qu~s lion would be transferred
he simply ''bag'' the meter when
back to the village. It was also
Continued on page 10 ·

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----------------------BOYSSCHEDULE-----~---~---------­
. MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETSALL

Mayor Seyler stated that the
parking plan will be Implemented on a tttal per.lod and If it
doesn't work out it can be
changed and amended. This plan•
Is Intended to offer an alternative
to people who work In Pomeroy
and need · a place to park
everyday without feeding the
meters every two hours . It Is also
hoped tha t it will "free up" 'the
parking sp~ces on the streets so
shoppers coming Into Pomeroy
will have adequate places to
park.
·
··
· Council voted to raise the rent
of village owned property on
Butlern~t and :artck Streets from
$35 per month to $50 per month
for the trailer lot. This raise will
take effect Feb. 1.
It was also voted that $87,843
will be transferred from the
general fund to thestreetfund for
the operation of that department.
In other matters, council
member Baronlck, discussed the
problem ofthereportedlandsUde

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
· · 1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 27-North Gallia .................. :.... ~ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ................... .':'Home
·Dec, 2-lleias .................................. Home
Dec. 4-Ky&amp;er CreeL ......................... Away
Dec. 6-Trimble ................................. Away
Dec. 7- Southwestern ............,.... ~ ..... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dee. 16- Federal Hocking............... ,... Awey
Dec. 21-0al! Hill :............................ Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan·. 10-Trimble ............................... Home.
Jan .. ll-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-lltils ..... ,............................ Away
Jan. IS-Southwestern ........................ Away
· Jan. 20-Federal Hockin&amp; .................. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ........................ Home
Feb. !-Southern :.............................. Away
Feb. 5-0ak Hill ....... :........................ Away
Feb. 8-Symmu Valley ..................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 Gl RLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20...:11eigs ........ ,....·.............. ~ .... Home
. Nov. 27-Kycer ·CreeL ..................... Home
Nov. 30-0ak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia .. :...................... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ..... ~ ................ Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ......................... ~ .. Home
Dec. 21-Symmes V1lley .................... Away
J1n. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away
J1n. 4-0ak Hill ................................ Home
Jan. 11-Ky&amp;er Creek.. ...................:.,. Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York .................. Home
Ja. 2S-North Glllia.:............ ,............ Away ·
Jan. 29-Witerford ..................:......... Any .
Feb. !-Eastern ....................,........... Homt
Feb. 5-Syn~mes Valley ..................... H01111
Ftb. 1-Southwestem .,..................... Ho•
.Feb. 10-•ei~s.................................... Awry.

trustees gave the
at a
meeting last Wednesday that it
was either 65:35 or nothing.
They'd give It all to Syracuse. So
we went back to our membership
. and they agreed to take the 65
percent," he said.
.
Johnson Indicated tl)at Racine
; ;;· ... :
f)remel) were not satisfied 'flth
the deal but felt they ha,d no
choice but to accept. It Is
Johnson's understanding that
once the proposed 65-35 deal Is
C()VNCIL MEMBERS SWORN-IN - These
official, Racine and Syracuse .
who was al10 elected president, Betty Baroalck,
·Departments will respond Jointly · four Pomeroy council meot!Jers were sworn In for
Tom Werry, and Blll Young. Swearing In the
four year ll!rms at Monday nllbt's meeting of'the
to " all fire-related Ci!lls In Letart
members Is Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
village council. Plctured,l-r, Ia Larry Wehnnlf,
·Township." Racine VIllage SolicItor Bill Porter Is preparing the
three-year contract for Racine
which must then be signed bY the
Letart trustees and representatives of both Racine Village and
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
come from lottery funds . .
Walker while they were outdoing
the flte department. In the mean
Sentinel News Staff
Payment from Title II funds of the Intervention work.
'
time, · before the coptract Is
A general fund operating $402.31 to Carolyn Smith. $418.06
Morgan
Mathews
was
ac·
signed, ·"Letart Township has ·budget for the 1990·91 fisc a! year to Karen Walker, a11d $344.84 to
as a tuition student for the
fire protection;'' , Johnson as· projecting reven11e of $7,520,595 the Meigs Local School District cepted
remainder
of the sChool year .
sured residents.
·
and expenditures of $7,856,600 to pay for substitute teachers
The
grievance
of cooks at tl)e
The 65:35. deal means · that was adopted by the board of was approved by the board. Supt.
lllgh school was dented by a vote .
Racine Fire Department will education of the Meigs Local Carpenter explained that Smith of 3-2. Voting " no" were board
· !rise ·about $11,000 a year during ' School Otstrlctat Monday nlght's· and Walke( had spent several members JeftWerry'and Robert
tl)&amp;'next three years the contract meeting.
-''1'
· ·days going to buildings In the Snowden.
with 'Letart Townsl!lp Is In effect ,
Treasurer Jane Fry' after re- district assisting teachers In
An executive session to discuss
Johnson said. Already, the loss In · porting on the figures to board preparing for Intervention teach- personnel followed the meeting.
revenue · has C9.used the fire members noted that the pro- Ing programs and this was their
Attending were Supt. Carpendfl\atnnent to re-evaluate plans jected budget shows a d~flclt of pay for that .. The money to Meigs ter, Barton, Werry, Snowden,
to purchase 'II new tanker for the $336,005, but that .the district has Local was for hiring substitutes Lar ry Rupp, and Richard
:·· continued
on page 10
a "spending reserve',' on hand of for the classrooms of Smith and Vaughan. ·.
·
1
•
$179,000.
. ~·
It was' also. reported by Fry
that on the revenue side there !sa
projected Increase In state foun. .
dation revenue but no change In
lo.cal tax receipts figured tnto the
budget. ' · ,
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She further noted that accord·.
Frank E. Young, Pomeroy, was cited on three charges by •
lng to the contract with certified
Pomeroy PoUce following an accident on Ch8!1ter Road at 5: 12 .·,
employees, any Increase In founp.m. Mondall.
• ·
dation montes must be figured
· According to the report, Young was parking his car bel)lnd a
Into salary Increases. She said
parked vehicle O)lllled by Teresa s. Riffle, Chester Road,
that the same percentage of
Pomeroy; when the Jnddent occul:red. He told pollee that the
Increase must be applied to
gas feed pn his car stuck. There was modera~damage to both
salaries of certified employees
vehicles, tbe lett back side of the Riffle car-and the front of the
and tb8i has been factored Into
Young vehicle.
,
the andclpatfd expenditures.
Young was Ch8J'ied with failure to control, no operator's ,
Fry also noted. that the bond
license and driving under suspension.
.
retirement fund pays out after
the first half of the next fiscal
year which Is ,In December.
.
Bob Barton, new president of
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will sponsor a single
the board, ~onducted the meeting
elllnlnatlon flttll' and sixth grade basketball tournament, Feb. 3
dunq which the restpatlon of
· and f, at Eastern High SChooL
.
Effie Murphy as a aubltltute
Registration fee Is $20 and advanced registration Is required.
teac._, was accepted. David J .
At the same tllne cheerleadllll competition will be held.
Kaufman, with · degrej! In busl·
Residents may call. Wea Arbaugh at 667-M27 to repter for
ness education, 7-12, wu blred as
either event.
a aubldtute. teacher tor the
·•
remainder of
the 19se:90 lchool
t
' \ ...
year. .,,
·. ·.
-paallcl .a tilt me II r 11J llftp•n lti.n .
Tbe board voted to' renew Its
s~:.g:
~~- contract for servtc:es from the
· Eight calls for assistance were anawered bY ~U~ltaoftbeMelp
PNI*'InJ_,.
................ ...
County E'""ency Medical Service Monday. ·
Educational Media. Resource
............... b
twlllkllet... allll&amp;o
,,
·At 11: U a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to AlnerlcareCenter for the 1!189-90 echool year
report the hll fttlllt ef thela' vellatear ,...._
1
at Sl.90 per pupil for 2495
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Bertha Rlahtboilie wbo WU
I"
Ia contracted . , . .
Towa81alp.
students. The funding for this,
Conttnued on pare 10
r:.
Supt...James Carpenter salcl, will

Meigs board 'adopts budget

...............

.

--Local news briefs-..
Driver cited on three charges

Boosters plan fund raiser ·

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........ • ...... ·.

EMS lias eig~t TUe&amp;day calls

••Letart

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Commentary
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Ql'.h
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qjv ~.......,..,....._'""''"""
.
ROBERT L. WlNGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE'i'TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They ollould be less tUn 300
words long. AU letters are oubjecl te edit lag and mull be signed with
name, 8ddr ... and telepllo'ne nambet'. No Ullllped lelten wUI be pubUs he d. Lellero obouid be In liqod taste, addreoolniJ laoue., no I per&amp;Onall·

·

King shared dream with .us

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lies.

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Porreov Mld:lupo~t. Ohio
Tue•ltaof. Jenuery 18, 1110
1

Meigs girls top EHS.

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LOwered·standards-,.called 'ethics refoisnt'

Ill Court Street
'Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ColltroUer

...
~

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MAllON AREA

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·The .Daily Sentinel
··

Page 2-The Oily Sulinll

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The Daily Sentluei-Ptlge 3

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...;ley

WASH~N- Congress Is. ~ wart lwtw !btl Bush bad
fond
tlxlng things that ain't
over a bal'rel during last· minute
broke. •
.
negotlat4ons. Both ·men _rememJi.. number of perfectly good bered 1111 too' Well what l)ippened questjon of "parliy," Congress ment Ethics to decide who takes
ethics rules have been relaxed by
to former :aouse Speaker Jlin decided to extend the privilege of private travel money and when
Congress, all In the name of
Wright when he failed to win a · ,these privately financed ·vaca- . spouses can go aloni
"uniformity·." The justification
pay raise tor bls colleagues. .
That' s not the only change. Tbe
tlo11s to bureaucrats, rit!ler than .
Is euphemistically known as
Tile compromise struck by give "P the perk themselves.
eilllcs l;1w wUI soon makl'lt legal
"parity" -everybody should'be
Foley and tile White House clears
That probably will contuse the to give your frlendil&lt;" publl~ ·
operating under the same rul~ .
the way for' corP&lt;&gt;ratiOns to PaY people at Housing and Urban servant a "gift" as long as It Isn't
The real story Is that House
the tnvel expenses of govern- Development. Before Secretary valuable. Just what constitutes .
Speaker Tom Foley, D·Wash.,
ment workers and their spoijses Jack Kemp came along to clean "value" has yet to be determined
caved In to White House demands ' when they attend private func·
up HUD, the agency solicited by tb,e Office of Government ,
that government workers and
tlons that are , related to their travel money from the private Ethics. The ethics experts are
members of-Congress should Jive
work, such as conventions or sector. Kemp axed the policy working on regulations to set I!
by the same standards.
corporate meetings where the · after the Office of Government dollar value on gins. Most
bureaucrat Is Invited to give. a Ethics pointed out 11\al HUDwJIS, estimates put the probable limit
But you can bet the lawmakers
speech.
dldn' t raise their own standards
In essence,lettln&amp; private groups .at $3~. · '
· . ·
, .
up to those that govern the
with man~ buy special access to • That wlli be a step up !or
A nuiJ!ber of· !ederal agencies HUD policy makers. Kemp has Agriculture Department em·
bureaucrats. Instead, ·the rules
already permitted the practice of allowed only himself and his top ployees who are not now alloWed
for the bureaucrats have been
corporations paying those ex· aides to travel on t.h e ·private to accept anything more valualoosened, and Congress calls It
penses for the federal worker, dime. · •
"ethics reform."
ble than a cup of coffee.
but, until the Ethics Reform Act, ·
The Ethics Reform Act of 1989,
tt the Ethics ~form Act was
The policy Is even tighter at the
inore accurately known as the only the State Department al· Agriculture Department where really "reform,". then why didn't
pay-raise bill, Includes a pack- lowed the bureaucrat's spouse to only Secretary Clayton Yeutter · Congress raise' the level of
age of trade·offs negotiated by take thO' freebies too ...: and only Is allowed that perk.
conduct . ·to the : hlglies t now
the White House In return for on rare occasions.
Under the new law, It will be up demanded by an ag'ellcy lnsteac1
But congressional spouses en- to the General Services Admlnls·
Bush's backing of the pay hike.
of sinking to a lowe common
joy
·that ·treat, and , faced with a • ..t.r ation and the Office of Govern- denominator?
Sources told bur associate Ste•·

ot.

By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Edllor
WASHINGTON -In those dark days; it seemed there would be no
end to the hattng. ·
Weary reporters covering ~he the 1960s civil rights strpggle went
from one racial battleground to another.
Those of us based in Atlanta, Jhe home of the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. , sought a competitive edge by always trying to book seats on
his' flights Into a11d out of the cjty.
·
King was a busy man but, If we could ma~~agetogeiona plane with
him, he would always respond to our ·q uestions .
II Is not unusual for ·reporters to become disenchanted r~ther
quickly with people t)Jey must cover constantly. For example, It
doesn't take long for reporters covering a candidate to find that his · •
stock speech has become lobotomizlngly boring. ·
King, who spoke often and eloquently of his dream, never bOred us.
Almost all of the reporters trailing King through the South· were
white males. Many of us were southerners who claimeq to know the
territory, but King showed us a South we had never seen.
He did It In black churches where men and women would arrive
frlghiened, A couple of hours later, they would leave proudly,
inspired and emboldened to try to register to vote for the first time.
The civil rights struggle taught some of us reporters that, in
journalism, falrness.ls a more achievable and realistic goal tllan pure
objectivity. We found It easy to dls!lnguish the white hat~ from the
-black hats.
.£;ould there be any doubt that the blacks St!lndlng quietly and with
~tty In line at the courthouse wereilltthesldeoftheangels? Or that
the yahoos with the bullwhips and cattle prods were the bad guys?
On a Sunday l)'lOrnlng, Sept. 1~. 1963, a dynamlt~ bomb exploded a:t
the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church In Birmingham, Ala., blasting
four little girts Into eternity.
·
Of all of the atrocitieS committed against th.e mov@ment, this was
the cross that seemed, to some, h~aylest to beai'. ,
" My God," wept a woman who stood In the rubble. "We're not even
safe In church."
" At times, life Is hard," said King, delivering the eulogy from the
pulpit of that church, "as hard as crucible steel."
,
Jammed 'shoulder to shoulder. at the tuneral 'with mourners and
other reporters, I tried without much success to take notes, but,Jn the
years since, I have never been able to forget the piercing shrieks of
pure grief.
.i
Other nightmarish memories Include the rioting at the University
of Mississippi and the brutal assault by Alabama -troopers on
marchers at Selma, Ala; But there also are some goOd memorieS.
Sitting In small black church~ In the rural South and llsteniJ!g to ·
brave men and women singing the ha1,1nt1ng, upllftlpg words of "We
Shall Overcome" was an honor and a prlvUege, as well as an
unforgetable Civics lesson.
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King was a complex man. He was flawid; as we aU are. Had he not ·
been martyred, he might very well be all controversial now as he was .
In 1989, the Ohio General
In life. He frequentiywas a critic of bothCI!Pitllllsm,aild Imperialism.
Assembly
enacted Senate B11146,
With only the power of moral suasion, King s)lared with America·
which
bec11me
effectiVe January
his dream, and that Is his legacy to uS" a~ I, . . •
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· ~ ·'
1, 1990. This Is a new
designed
.:tci afford protection to Ohio's
,
elderly. In fact, the bill arose out
or' revelations t~at some senior
citizens were being abused, ecocon~rns
nomically and otherwise. by
things that could have been taken
Dear Editor:
Ohio's guardianship Jaws. Thus,
We ate writing this letter away from these very ·I mportant
the new statute makes anumbe~
concerning hot lunches at Ca· students, they all , need hot
o! changes In probate law and
rleton School. This was ·very lunches.
procedures and Implements the
John and Connie Rankin
upsetting news for our student to
most comprehenSive guardian·
lose hot lunches at Carleton. We
P .0. Box 238 ship laws for Ohioans In 36 years.
Tuppers
Plains,
OH 45783
believe there was alot of other
Of course. the law 'goes rriuch
further than protecting Ohio' s
'elderly. but also affects any
_Individual subject to a ~
'
guardla!lshlp.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

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law

Letters to the editor.
Our .

Berry's World

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circumstances of an ·an~d · r;eports with the court and are
Incompetent for whom a guard·
Jibject to periodic review. Pros·
ian Is being so11ght and lnvestlga- . pecl!"e guardians are requir~
tor must file a teport with the . to inform the courfof a criminal
court. The Investigator must
reeord. · .
.
Inform the alleged Incompetent ·
Senate Bill 46 h;1s a wide-range
of his rights, which are tlie rlgh~ - appeal as It responds to problems
associated with the administrato counsel; an expert examtna·
tion, and rlgbt to have a frfend or
tlbrt of guardianship. As a result
family member present. .
.
oftbe ·many due process provilf· a probate court receives · slons Incorporated, those who
Information. of alleged abuse o,r
may l)ecome wards under guard·
fi"'nclal exploitatiOn of' a pers9n lanshlp are offered greater
of advanced age, or Information protecflllns.
of alleged thefts from an estate,
If you have any questions ·
the court Is •authorized to refer concerning Senate Bill 46, do not .
the Information to law enforce'
heslljlte to contact me at (614)
ment autilorltles atld require an i86-8'156 or write: Senator Jan
Investigation on these matters.
Michai!J Long, Statehouse Co;
Guardians must file pe~lodfc· Jumbus, Ohio 43215: . .
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Bush shows thin skin and,zeal for.w6rk
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WASH~NGTON

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C1&gt; 19t0 by NEA, Inc.

"I wish I hsd stuck with it."

TOday in history
BJ U•lecl Fr.- laiet atlo..a
'Joday Ia Tuesday, Jllll. 16, tile 16111 day of l9IIO with 349 to ao.
The moon Ia WIUIIIIJ, movlai toward Ita IUt quarter.
The mornbiJ atara are Mercury, Mara IUid Saturn.
The evenmr stars a~ Venus and Jupiter.
'l'bole born on tbll date are ulldil' tbe alp of CAprtcol'n. They
IDCiude German phUoeopber FraliZ Brenlllllo In 1831; Alldre
Mlcllelln, tile French lndllatrlalllt wllo tint rnau-prodllced rubber
au!GIIIe&amp;llle tlrel, In 1853; Cinatlln poet .Robert Service In 117f·
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SMrnl 8800'1'8 - Holly Smtih of Melp (Ill) llbtiota ball In

Monday'• ~win over Eaalei'IL ERS del81111er Ia 8.
Dan Harrts pbllioll.

TAYLOR FIRES AWAY - Melp' Jennifer Taylor .(U) !Ires
away at the hoop whlth Eastern defenders L. GIIUan, 13, on left and
T. PhiiUpo, 34, on right. MHS won, 63--33.

Otto (If),

Mark Er~lan burled a 3-polnt ,
field goal for Rio Grande more
thana·quarterofthewaylhrough
the SfCOild period at Lyne Center '
Monday to wrest control of the '
game away from Dyke and give
the Redmen tbe momentwn to
defeat the Demons, 89·81.
Defending their home tllrf for
the first time In a month before a
large Foodland Night crowd, the
Redmen drew top scoring perfor·
malices from Gary Harrison,
wlio had : 27 · points, and Brad
Schubert, who poured In 26.
"We played hard, we ran the
break e)ltremely well, Gary
made some good deCisions and·
Brad got ott some great shots,"
Lawhorn said as he ticked off the
factors behind the win.
."Defensively , down the
stretch: w~ held out own. Dyk~,
athletically, Is very good and
their penetration really hurt ·us
for 30 minutes," he added.
A nlp-and·tuck offense marked
the game, whlcll saw the Demons
tn charge for Jess than a minute
when Brian Arth's :J.pointer at
16: 25 broke.a Ue-ilpat !i. Schubert
answered ' wtth his own trlfecta
shot wde;tdlock ·at 9, but Dyke

came back' with a basket to again
lead 11·9.
,
· Schubert's 3•pointer at 15:40
gave Rio Grande only a one· point
lead .I12·1H but It was enough as
the Redmen built their margin to
as much as nine points on three
occasions !luring the half against
a finn Dyke as118ult.
Led· by 20-point performances
from James WIUlams and Frank
Reed, the Demon$ stubbornly
whitt!~ away to trail 50-45 at
1: 43•when John Lambcke fouled
on · Art Russell In the quarter
court. , Officials · also called a
t~hnlcl\1 on .t,.ambcke, allowing
I&gt;ltke, I() slip ahead three points .
With 20 seconds len, officials
then whjstled Darius Williams
tor pushi!lg Louis Taylor and
Taylor sank two free throws to
knot the 'score at 50 as the periOd
closed.
Reed rolied off six points and
James Williams two .to gove
· Dyke the lea(j for !lye minutes as
·the second half opened. but
Schubert, Harrison .and Tr-oy
Donaldson slipped Into shooting
range to traU ~7 ~ )3•46.
..
· Erslan's succ.essiUI outside
shot at 13:08 handed the lead

.Eastern girls drop
two basketball contests

Senate
Bill
No.
46_::__--..,---·
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·
,;___......___;._se_n_
. .J__,.an_._M.,;_
·· L,__o_:;_ng
.
The law changes the legal
definition of an lncompetenr
person by removing references
to advanced age. The previous
law specified (hat persons were
Incompetent If they were lncapa·
ble of taking care of themselv.es
because or advanced age.
Persons being judged Incompetent are assured that they will
come In contact with a court
representative. Formerly, a
court could ~ct upon a gqard!an·
ship application soley upon a
doctor's statement, without the
proposed ward ever , appearing
before the court.
Under the new law, pr-obate
courtS are required to appoint
Investigators to look Into the

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Redrnen· top l).emons

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Robert Wagman

(NEA) - Af, press conferenes. In his first &lt; against him, and a Panamanian
ter only one year In the Oval Of. year In office, George Bush m~ . DeJence Force member killed an
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flee, the president of the Urilted with the press 32 ·times. Some- . American soldier, Bush saw No·
States has revealed more about. times he even dropptld Into the rlega personally thumbing his
'vleileader'strlpto:ijaly . The So·
George Bush the man than hedld White House press room unan· nose at' him.
vlets -suggested Vl~nll or pos·
In all his years of public service, nounced and just asked, "An· : To Bush It h84._become persoslbly Helsinki. However, Bush's
Including eight as vice president. yone gotany questions?"
· . • nal. The.~rnop~ were sent ln.
l!rother \lad f!!Cently . lleen •to
Based on tbeeventsof1989, we
Still, for all his ac·~lblllty;'"!Jowev'er, ·no ~vent during the ·Ma)ta, and loved Ills vlsll. sO on
now know that Bush has bound- Bushhaaproven·tobeextreme))i ·. last year so typifies, Oeorge "his:. brother•s· recommendation
less energy and a zest for hi$ job thin· skinned. He visibly brllitles , 1 Bu~!l:a changes of h.eart a:s ·)he. ·aua~ picked t¥ small Island na·
that has not been. seen In Wash· at criticism and responds , sea-going Malta summti. ~ ·~· •:;. 11011'11nd then came up with the
lngton In many years. We know quickly, and personally to critics.
From the day he ~ook office, . _. duaiJiblp Idea himself.·
that he Is a deeply TJ!Iiglous man
Further. his first year In office . Bush retused co~tant entreaties ' : ., ~st of his stafr-thought the
who Ia deeply devoted to friends siJows that Bush will make policy from Moscow and other Western
idea, wa.s terrible. Bu tin the Bush
and famlly.
changes based on criticism. He · leaders for a quick Initial' meet·
White House, when the boss
Bush, like Jimmy Carter, does entered office determined to
lng with Gorbachev. But after
makes his fl'nal decision, you do
not deleaate·well. Events of the take a walt-and-see attitude to- coming 11nder fire at the eronnot dlsaiP'ee. They did, however, .
last year siJow that Bush often watd Mikhail Gorbachev and omlc summ~t of Western leaders
make arrangements In !'lllllta to ,
acts as his own secretary o! arlns co}ltrol, but criticism
last summer, Bush suddenly revhost sessions on shore In the
state, chief of staff and press se· cause. him to abruptly cllange
ersed himself and sent a handw•
event of weather problems.
cretary. However, unlike Carter, course. Similarly, he changed
rltten notetoGorbachev·requestArid: of course, there were
lng a meeting.
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weather prol!lems.
.
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Bush has a wide circle of frleQds ·his stsnce on aid to Easte~n Eu·
and spends hours every day on ropeandabiUiontmporledauto· . Yet he did so ln 'li/-"!osl comThe flrft session !IOuld· not be
thephonesollcltingldeuandad· matte weapons In the face of a
plete secrecy. Only a tew' .top· heldaboardtheSovletshllllnthe
vice.
public outcry.
,
aldesknewthatameetinglll1989 . harbor. Instead It was held
Above aU he Ia obsessed with
This quality may . have been
was even possible. Days before
a,boa,d a securely docked Soviet
secrecy. In niany ·ways he runs partly responsible tor Bua)l's
the swnmlt was announced, top· , cruJae ;._,ahlp th:&amp;t ·.Gorbachev'•
, the White Houlll! much lUre he ran ll'la.l. deC!alve mOve to date:
level State Department officials , staff w.. uttna aa a h,adttuart•
the CIA: Intormatlon Ia com· seJidlnl ~ Into Pllllama.
were slut telllna reporters.not to • ertr. 'J'bell the wea~bilr WOI'IIelled:
partmentallzecl, alld only thole WileD tile Wblte Houae was slow
upect tile tlrst 8us)I..Gorbachev
. BQfll Soviet and U. S. naval ad- ,
aides wbo ablolately need to to react during til!! Oclablir c:oup . • meeting untll sprbtg 1$90 at the
vJaers a.aectUle two Jeadeft 110t ' ·
know a~ told lll)'tblDa.
attempt In Panarna'-llll bided·
earliest. Defense Secretary . to hold 111 aft.ernoon •aitm aad :
Nonelllel.,, Bulb 11 vastly atvenetlthat allowed Ge'll. MilD;
a!ctiard Cheney fnd CIA ~ec· • dlllner aboard tbi. U. S• ..,, '
more acCI!IIfble tban his prede· • uel Norteaa tQ tempcirarlly re· ' tor WUIIam Webster did not
waa heaviD&amp; Ill tbUtGrm·
cetiOI'.
For ~d Reagan, allln .the upj,er hand - charges Jearn about the meettna until tossed bay. But BUlb would lot
lloldlqa pran ccillference was a that Bush was a "wimp" were
minutes before the public an·
change hll plans. Ia rut, he .
fti8Jor event. All aetlvily In the , beard once again.
' nouncement.
. '.
rW!ed life tad Jt.mtl mak'q U ·1
: White Hou• ll'ound to a halt as · Reportedly, Bush was seething · . Then, too the lllte selection and
baCk to the U.S. alllp and rave up ,
Rloapn wu prepared for !heap: arid looldng for a second chllllce.
the Idea of using shlpa came dl·
both tile afternoolllllld eveb~~~g
proaeblq encounter with the Whl!ll NorJera declined to leave
rectly !rom Busb. Gorbachev . •meetlll8 with Oorbacbev rather
preu.
Panama 111 exchange for tile
had IIIP'eed to meet Buab some-tbllll admit the
abould
In eiJbl years ,Reaaan helcl47 droppbiJ ·of u. s. drug charges
where In Europe duriDa the So·
have been move4 to dry l~lld.
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The Eastern Eaglettes girls game-high honors. Tina Myers
varsity basketball team recently added 12.
: .e
dropped two games to non-lel)gue
For Eastern Suzanned Clay
Trimble, 42-37, and to league foe and Tlffany· Gardner each had 8
Nqrlh Gallia, 49-:-37.
·
·points, Lee' GIIlllan 6, and Ste·
Losing ,to NG by two points In phanle Otta 5.
··
overtime In the !lrst rouild,
North Gallia was 1-2 at' the'llne
Eastern had Its 'sights on a and Eastern 9-i9..
,
victory at home against Coach
North Gallla Is now 3-9 and
Dave Moore's · Lady Pirates; 3-6 In the league; While Eas(ern
however. the Gallia . Countlans drops to 2-9,. 2-7, ' ·
were· · not about to· be.
Ag!llnst Tr!ml/le the . Tomklt·
shipwrecked.
tens rolled to a 22...:15 halftime
North Gallla claimed a 14·12 lead with Eastern still clinging to
lead at the end of the·flrst period, a good chance to come back for a
before edging to a 20-16 lead at win aon Its honje ~uri: Both
the bait." ·
ClubS played an. even · third
Despite being close Eastern frame, 10-10, and EHS cut In
was well on Its way to a horrible clos In tile finale, but fell at the
shooting exhibition by the half· end 42-37.
;· '
lime breakd, shoodng a meager
Trimble was •Jed by Teresa
14.- 67 from the floor for Fouts with l3, Anna Rh;hards
20.8.Norlh Gallla hit 19 of ~1.
had 7; Alicia 'l&lt;lng 7, and Jennifer
·
North GaHJa was led , by the Koons 6.
brUIIant performance of Rita
Eastep! was led by Tiffany
Cordell who"netted 25 points to~ Gardner and Tab!!i&lt; Pllllllps with
9 points eac)J.'Soi«nned Clay had
8, Lee · GIIIUap ~ . and Shelly
Met:z:&amp;er 6. Eastern bit 15 of 49 at
The Daily Sentinel
the lllle and 9-19 .from the
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Gardner had 8
floor.Tiffany
,.
CUIIP8 1&amp;-ltl)
rebounds, ,
.A DlviRoa ol Mlllllmodla. lac.
Seore by quarters:
·
Publl•hecl every allerooM, Monday
Eastern
..........
:
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12
4
11
1~37
thrOUih Friday, Ill Colirt 51 ., Po-·
m~. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Norlb Gallia ........ 14 6 12 19-49
IIAblng Comr:ny t MuUtmda, Inc.,
EASTERN, (3'7) - Mlc!1elle
~m«O!'· Oh o U7419, Ph. 1192-21!1&amp;. Se·
Ml'tzgl'r 2-0-4, Lee Gillilan
cond claso poota1e paid ai Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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3-0-6, ·Karen Morris -0-0-0,
Suzanne Clay 4-0-S,Toby Hill
Member: United Pr8s tntematlonal,
Inland liaUy Pf1!0S Auoclatloa and !lie
0-0-0.,St~phanle
Qtto
011_lo !'lewopa~ A•oclatloft. Notional
1-:3-5,Tiftany:
Gardner
24'-8,
Advertlllltl
~tall..,, Branham
Tabby PhilliPs 1-2-4, Theresa
l'lewopaper
•· 733-11dnl A¥tDue.
!&gt;low York, New York ltl017.
·Lambert 0-0-0. Leigh Ann
. ~edovi8J1 1-0-2, Jenny Roush
POS'NASTEfl,: !lead addr. . ell...,.
to The Dally seatlnet, Ill Courl 51. ,
6-o-o. TOTALS'If-t-1'7.
)lf:ORTi 'GALLIA (fl)-: Mary
~-01'.
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West
1-0-2, Beth Salisbury
'SIJBiaUPTION IIATEI
1-0-2,
Tina Myers 6-0-12,
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a
corrter•-·1
o.e Week
.. .......... ....................... U.«&lt;
Dee
Dee
Dobbins 1-0-2, Rita
O.e Month .............. ,..... ,............ M.lD
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Cordell
12;...1-25.
Suzie Roble
&lt;JIIe Year ...1 •••• •••••• : .......... ... .... ~ l72.a
2-'0-4, Gunllla Petterson
IINOIJ!COPY
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l:-0-2. 'lOTAL8 U-1-fl.

89~8I for

back to Rio Grande (Ei0-58) which
the Redmen took turns In pre·
serving until the end. Still. Dyke·
kept Rio Granlie's highest mar·
gin to.lO (89·79) with 22 seconds
left.
Dyke mentor Sam Cora bl said
the Demons employed a quicker ·
tempo against the Redmen because of their fondness for the
fast break.
"We needed to do a better job of
controlling the break," he said.
"We did a fair job, but not good
enough to win . We played smart
offense and our guards,. who
usually keep us ·tn our games,
really did Jheir job. here."
·In addition to the scoring,
Harrison led the way In assists
with nine, while Jeff Brown and
Darius Williams dominated tne
boards with seven and six,
respec,ilvely . ·.
Spencer Latimer contributed
12 points and eight assists to
Demons' offense.• while James
Williams led all rebounders wltll
eight. ·
· •
·
Connecting on 33 of 70 field goal
.attempts for 47 percent: Dyke
outdistanced Rio Grande's, 42.4
·percent 131:73). The.Demoris also

II th win

netted 10 of 12 tries at the tree
throw line for 83.3 percent,
compared to the Redmen's 72
P.ercent (16·22).. The hosts did
post a slim lead on the boards,
· 33-31, and held their turnovers to
12. Dyke had 16.
In the only other District 22
game played Monday , Mount
. Vernon Nazarene defeated Kenyon, 78-M.
Now 11-5, Rio Grande hosts
Cedarville SaturdaY at 7:30p.m.
for Ohio Valley Bank Night. Dyke
(7-15) ' plays at home Saturday
against Central State.
·
Box sco're:
RIO GRANDE. (89) - Gary
Harrison, 8·2·5-27; Mark Erslan,
1-1·2-7; Brad Schubert, 2-6-4-26;
Jeff Brown-, 1·2·3·11: . Troy Do·
nalds 0 n, 7-1-15; John 'Lambcke,
1-0-2: Darius Williams, 0-1-1.
TOTALS :ZO..ll-16·89.
DYKE (81) - Brian Arth ,
1·3·0·11: Spencer Latimer. 3-1-312: James Williams... 8·4·20;
· Frank Reed. 10-0-20; Art Russell,
1-1·3: David Wolfe, 1·2-4: Gerald
Embry, 1-1-0-5; ·Derrick Hall,
3·0·6. TOTALS 28-H0-81. • :Hll.lftlme ticore: Rio Grande 58,
'Dylie ·OO.

The Meigl Marauders blew
qpen a cloae came In tb_e aecond
half and wen·t on to down the
Eastern ..Eagles 63--33 In a girls
non-league basketball game
Monday night. The' win could
have been costly tor the Maraud·
ers as Kelly Smith the •leading
scorer for the maroon and. gold
went down with what appeared to
be a seriOus ankle Injury battling
for a rebound as the buzzer went
off to end the first quarter.

some with 12. T . Phillips was the
only Eagle In double figures with
12.
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Meigs made It a clelliii!Wei!P by
defeating Eastern In the reserve
game 28-22. Verna Compston led
the · victors with 10 points.
Metzger Jed the way tor ~astern ,
as she tied · Compston with
scoring honors with 10.
Box score:
Eastern .. .. ..... ..... ..... 10 25 31 33
Melgs .......... .. ......... . 20 3~ 48 63

The Marauders jumped out to a
20-10 lead at the end of the first
quarter only to have the Eagles
come back to within one point
midway through ·.,the second
period. The Marauders were able
to get things together and went
Into the locker room with a 31-25
lead at the half.
. The second half was all Meigs
as the Marauders outscored the
Eagles 32-8 to . coast to the
·
victory. ·
The M'arauders wer e led by
' Jennlfe~ Taylor.with a game high
15 points, she was joined In
.double figures by Shannon New-

MEIGS - Smith 3-0-0-6,
Ewing 3-0-1-7, Newsome
5-0-2-12, Hanning 2-0-0-4,
Taylor 6·-i-0-1~. Baer
2-0-4-8, Nelson 1-0-1-3,
King 1:....0-0-2, Haggy
0-0-0-0, Rouse 3-0-0-6.T().
TALS 21-1-8-83.
EASTERN
,
Metzger-2-0-1-5, Glllillan
1-0-0-2, Morris ()...0,...0-0,
Clay 2- 0-2-6, Hill 0-0-0-0,
Otto 2-0-4-8, Phillips
6- 0-0-12, Goiden 0-0-0-0,
Redovlan 0-0-0-0, RoUsh
0-0-0-0. TOTALS
13-0-7-33.

lng one Oof Its best defensive
games .
Southern hit 10 of 39 field goals
for 25 .6 percent, was 8-16 at the··
line for 50, had 18 rebounds , 30
turnovers , and 16 team fouls.
Kyger Creek hit 18 of 40for 32 and
canned 3·14 at the line for 21.4.
The winners had ~6 rebound s,
18 turnovers, and 13 fool s.
Score hy quarters:
Southern: ...... ....... 2 5 9 12-38
Kyger Creek .. :..... S 10 12 9-39
SOUTHERN (28) Mica
Jones 1-2-4,JAne Williams
2-2-6,Trlcla Wolfe 2-4-6,To·
nya Ingels 2-0-4, Jennifer
Cross 2-0-4 , Melanie Lyons
0-0-0,Sarah Duhl J-0-2,MI·
chelle Carauthers 0-0-0. TOTALS 10-8- 28.
KYGER CREEK (39) - Bobble Jean Shaver 4-3-11 , Joy
Skidmore 4-0-8,Yon Ragland
0.,-0-0,Beth Bradbury 4-0-8,
Lisa Swisher 6-0-12 , ·Lucinda
Swisher 0-0-0 . · TOTALS
18-3-39.

NEW YORK IUP!) - Kansas
maintained the No. I ranking for
the second week while four new
college bask~tball teams joined
the Top 20 Monday -In voting
conducted by United Press International's Board of Coaches.
Kansas ' again received strong
support over Georgetown for the
top spot. The Jayhawks, 18-0,
collected 30 of 39 first-place votes
cast and totaled 562 points .
Georgetown, 13-0, received nine
first-place votes and 548· points.
No. 3 Oklahoma, the third ranked
· undefeated team at 12-0, had 488
points.
Voting Is based on 15 points for'
fir st place, 14 for second, etc.
Three coaches did hot vote this
week.
The rest of the Top 20 fea tured:
No. 4 Missouri;, No. 5 Syracuse,
No. 6llllnols, No.7 Michigan , No.
8 Duke, No. 9 Nevada-Las Vegas,
No. 10 Louisville, No. 11 Georgia
Tech, No. 12 Louisiana State, No.
13 Arkansas, No. 141ndlana, No.
15 UCLA, No . 16 Purdue, No. 17
St : John's, No. 18 Xavier !Ohio!,
co-No. 19 La Salle and Michigan

SPRING VAlLEY CINEMA
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446 4524

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SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginning Classes Starting
Tuesday, Jan. 16th at
7:00 P.M. At Carleton
School in Syracuse.
Far Information Coli 992-6139
After ·6:00 P.M:
Or 992·6170 or 992·9920
INSTRUCTORS:
Mick Howell, Black Belt
Tim Jenkins, Black Belt ·

A SPECIAL 6

ONTH C.D.
FROM

CENTRAL-TRUST

''

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~spoJ11

i!Ubocr11101't 1101 dtllrlnll opar tbecar·
rtor _may rentt lit· odYaaco dlreet to

'neiMUySIQttnelona3,1orUmamb
!IIIII. Credit Will be tttvea oarrl• Mob

,....

"
No ~UWr~Pt- b)' maD pormltltdln
1H11 wture bonlf &lt;IITilir II

----

ovlllable.

_

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..... lliHIJ

•w.......................................

S1 W..........Jililj.C'Mlj'"17UI
11 Weeki ................. ;................

tiWttlll... ................................ 30
MWHb ........,.......................... ,40
,

briefs....;.._

Centrat' Trust

· llped•l•l'lll
·Thom111 Guataflon, triple
Olympte clllmp)(m and winner cl
the 1988 World lllld European
ChamplonaiiiPI. fatlhd to quality
for the Europeu SpeedakaUng
Champtonahlpl.' Guataflon baa
been In a afwpp J'eCelltly and
. Sweden •a !)lily place Ill the event
wu 11ve11 to 22-year-old J;&gt;er ·

=

U \VHIII .................................. IIIt.:M
ll'l.ll

It you've been
holding back wait·
lng tot a great rate,
this' Is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This otter from

..

' -Dally ........................ ........... :til Conto

\

is available for.a
limited time only.
For more infor·

mailon contact
your nearest

central Trust otttce
.. alii 8 1)111 446.at02
••••••,, 991-6661

TlfE CENTRAL
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State.
Purdue, which knocked off
Minnesota and Indiana last
week , and Xavier joined the ·,
ranklngs for the first time this
season, while La Salle and
Michigan State returned to the
Top20.
·Dropping out oftheTop 20 were .
Minnesota, Arizona , Loyola Ma·
rymount and Alabama .
Duke and UCLA made the
largest gains of previously
ranked teams . The Blue Devils,
No. 11 last week, benefited from
victories' over Georgia Tech and
Maryland. The Bruins, previously No. 19, scored Pac-10
triumphs over Arizona State and '
Arizona.
·
Michigan slipped three places
after losing to Indiana, but
~ voided a disastrous week by
· sidestepping Minnesota. Despite
the victory over the Wolverines, ·
Indiana fell two places because
of Its loss to Purdue.
Kansas survived Its first week
as the No . 1 teaf!l by scorl.ng Bi g
Eight victories over Nebraska ··
and Oklahoma State and a
non-conference I riumph against
Miami. The Jayhawks face their
s.t ernest test of the season Saturday ~hen they play .a t Missouri.

.

Cillo-·

;
·

Kansas retains top
spot in UPI cage poll

KC downs Southern 'girls ·
In a low-scorll.;g girls high
school basketball . contest .recently at Kyger Creek, the host
Bobcats rolled to an early 18-7
halftime lead, then proceeded on
· to defeat the visiting Southern
Tornadoettes, 39·28.
·
· \ The SVAC basketball contes t
left Southern · 1-10, 1-7, while·
Kyger C~eek Is now 8-4 'and 7-2 .
Senior Trlcla Wolfe helpe(l
keep the 'rornadoettes In the
game with one of her best varsity
scoring outings of 8 points and a
good floor game. Wolfe hit two
field goals and was 4·6 at the line.
Another' senior Jane Ann Willi·
ams tallied 6, while Mica Jones
and Jennifer Cross each had 4
each.
Lisa Swisher paced the Bobklt·
tens with 12 points, while Bobble
Jean Shaver netted ll,Beth Brad· ·
bury 8, and Joy Skidmore 8.
Kyger Creek, still a strong
contender In the SVAC , played
well bu !found that Southern gave
some legitimate resistance, play-

.
:

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4

GRABS REBOUND - Michigan's Terry Mills (52) grabs a
rebound over Illinois guard Stephen Bardo during llrsl-hall actlcin
In Monday night's ·Big Ten ganie at Champaign, OJ. The
Wolverines edged the DUnl7.f-70. (UPI)

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~-----Sports
Golf ·
:PJ'el Norman leads the men's
aolf ratlnp for the .week ending
~·.Jan. . 14 wltb a 17 .57-point aver, ap. Ntc:k FaJ!Io It second wllth
Seve Ball• lira. iJ!lrd.

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Hoddltlll, JIIU• Jl

briefs----

Boun.c
Reno, Nev., will host the 1990
USA-Italy amateur boxlna dual
meet on Feb. 3. Re•o Ia tbe first of
two 1top1 for the Italians, who
wlli box aplnilt 11 different U.S.
team Feb. I In St. ~uts.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . IUPil
- Preacher George Foreman
packed a much bigger wallop
·than former puncher Gerry Cooney Monda~ night in their battle
of aging heavyweights.
Foreman took Cooney's best
shots for little more than a round .
then dumped him twice and
stopped him at 1:57 of the seconcl
round. The victory continued
Foreman's quest to regain the
heavyweight championship past
age 40.
The victory was the most
Impressive of Foreman's 20-bout
comeback, but Cooney offered
far less resistance than champion Mike Tyson would.
"Tyson? I · woujd probably
knock him out quicker, 'because
he wouldn't back away like
. Gerry Cooney," ,Foreman said.
" Foreman would kick the crap
out of Tyson," scream~d Bob ·
Arum, who promoted ¥onday
night's fight and hopes to land
Foreman a shot at Tyson later
this year. Arum's screams fell on
deaf ears and he will probably be
laughed at whenever he brings
. up the subject. But Foreman has
'shrugged off laughter for nearly
three years and has earned.aboul
$2 million In his comeback. His
victorY. over Cooney will probably bring Foreman close to.
double the S5 million promoter
Don King already offered him to
challenge TYson.
Foreman, a 41-year-old Houston minister, Improved his career record to 65-2 with 61
knockouts. Cooney was knocked
back on the •heavyweight scrap
·pile trl faiUns to 28-3 and will .
I!Jcely never flgbt again.
"I just aot caupt with a great,
great abot." Cooney said. "He
caught me with the IIQmbl. He Ia
such a atroq fighter.
"'Thal'l alllhe WI'Qte. i' gave It
a lfl'eat abot and atralghtenedput
some thlnp. J wanted to get In
there and see what I had. II dldn •t
work out~" ·
A lett uppercut In Cooney's
comer atarled the damaee and
Foreman followed wltb two chopping rights tbat hurt Cooney.
Foreman fired IIDOCber right
uppercut and lett hook that sent

of their 10-round Heavywel,;ht fight at Convention
Hall late Monday. Foreman knocked Cooney out
later in the second round.

Cooney sprawling to thE'·canvas
th£&gt; first time With 1: 161cft in the
round. Coom:y was up WhE'n
refere0 Joe Cortez' count hit
four , but was obviouslv dazed.
Foreman walked in and hurt
Cooney with anoth~r left hook
and a right to the head · sc:-nt
Cooney down on his sidfo. Conez
immediately stopP.,d It as Coon0y rolled over on hi's back and
did not move for about · 30
seconds.
"II was a combination of
everything," Foreman said of
the . knockout . · "People have
gotten down on me because I
haven't finished off my oppo·
nents cleanly. I thought I'd come
out throwing punches arid get .It
over with.
·'Normally I tlo not like to hit a
man ~hen he Is too dtizy, but he
was such a devastating puncher I
just could not play around with
him. He would have taken me out
· like I did to him."
Foreman. who won the heavywe'tght title 17 years ago, stopped
his first 18 comeback foes before
Everett Martin ' took him the
· 10-round distance In June.

·

Tyrone Hill scored 20 points to
lead a balanced Xavier attack,
with all five starters hitting In
· double figures. Michael ·Daven·
port added 17, Dwayne Wilson 15,
Jamal Walker 14 and Jamie
Gladden ~0.
Wilson, a freshman making his
first start, ·added 11 rebounds.
· Fourteen players scored for the
Musketeers.

Foreman .stops Cooney i~
second round· with TKO

rtthburxhts.Hotullent:J. _OT
Dlvttdo•l.PI"YOit"
!'la~Urd»)', old . fi

!VII. St. Mill')''!&lt; II'!, Rudtltll'll 7Jol

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Seulh
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t'll w-h•,;ftln-"'·\' ~ !l!i, " '· \ 111"11 nl01 st lUI
flt•m,.en li7. tit•ol'li».St . -Mt

PREACHER SLAMS HARD RIGHT - George.
"The Preacher" Foreman slams a hard right to
the head ol Gerry Cooney during the second round

Flr!ll Round
S•nd-.v, Ore. 31
NY(' Wlld..C•rd IIIPf'
1•.\ Ram11lel , Philadelphia 7
,\F(" WfltK•rd llliiW

Rwol.-thWI
By \ 'nltt'd Prl."!&lt;is hHPr•liolllf

Q~ .

NFL Playofr SdM-dul~

•

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now.''·

.d Orl!t-ndl; nlllht ·

Bra!ltilllon

College scores
Ell... l

,

Fot1 M)ierto~ 111 M'f'!il Plllm Bt-111.·h. 1 : 1~

:t:·.nnmll•d
OtbPrs ro•o·t&gt;I\'IIIIJI \ ' ol:..,.;: "-lahuna.
i\rlzo111 , llrl(hun l'ou111. hlonule
)itidt', Lo)'olu Mllr)mounl, ~lhtryland,
Mlnii'M.IIa, l"t•M" ~l~lt •o !Ualf', Ort• .. n

(' olk•~~:..

lU million

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Sl'ftiOr Prn But•hlill A~!in

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13. Ariuiii"'-S I 1:!--'!J ..... .... ......... : ... Uit 14

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- ·-

- - ·· · - ~ ·

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........

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Community ~r
'

I

'TUES_,AY
POMEROY -The Ladles AuxIliary of the F:raterl!lll Order or
Eagles will have. a catered
Christmas party· and $10 gift
exchanlle at the Tuesday meet·
tng at 7 p.m. The regular meeting
wllllollow at 8 p.m.

In other games involving Ohio
teams, Akron· defeated Wright
State. 80-66. Cleveland State
Coon~y ,.
.1~-year-old from stopped ValJlilralso, 79·65, ,De·
Huntington. N.Y., fought for the troll overwhelmed Youngstown
first time slnce losing a fifth· State, 94-77, Rio Grande edge
round knockout to Michael Dyke, 89-81, and Mount Vernon
Sp'inks June 15, 19871n the same Nazarene topped Kenyon, 78-64.
Convention Center rlng. Cooney
Cleveland Stale, 9·6, went on a
,admitted· the' Spinks loss drove 24-2 tear to close the first halt and
him to drlhk and drugs and he take a 35-23 lead. All five VIking ·
attends Al,cohollc Anonymous. starters were in ciouble figuresme~tlngs.
14 each by Steve Givens, Brian
"You h.ave nothing to be Parker and Kenny Robertson,
ashamed of." Cooney's trainer and 12 apiece by Desmond Porter
Cil Clancy told him as he cut the and William Stanley.
tape off his hands.
Anthony Buford sco~d 25 to
Foreman weighed a rotund '253 . ·lead the University ofiAkron to Its
1-4 while Cooney was a sUm 231 nln\h victory In 14 games. Wrlfht
for the scheduled 10-rounder, State, which dropped to 1 -4,
which was televised on pay-per· scored the first two points of the
view and closed circuit and paid game, but after f\kron quickly
each brawler at least $1 million. · took a lead, the Zips never trailed
Although the fight was often · again.
;,
mocked and called the "'Geezers
at Caesars" lleca11se Caesars
"
Hotel and Casino s!lonsored 'the ·
.1; •• ~··.
bout, Foreman-Cooney drew a
sellout crowd of 12,581.
Cooney, at 6-foot-5, was an Inch
Thoro should bo ll*'iol .., ins...
.nee tor more mmure, ut.r drNtaller than Foreman and more
Ifl.
aggressive In the first round. He
NOI!' thoro II.
nailed Foreman with left hooks to
the: head and boclY but did .no
It' o I toto Auto Componl•' Mtc11t·
lit Auto policy.
'
damage.

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TAX TIP .OF THE WEEK
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Wednesday at 9. a.m. at 34481
Corn Hollow Road In Rutland.

Love - few subjects have This Is the story of John Ripley, Bogle Iookallke and llnds that he
fueled the ImaginatiOn olwrlters played with charm by Bruce must talk St. Peter Into giving
more since the lime of the Greek Grenwood, who Is stuck In the him a second chance to change
.
mURSDAV
pjll!ts and perhaps . even back most lnsne and stupid soap opera by getting Jacky to fl:tarry him.
POMEROY .-The XI Gamma ·· further.
and should have a revolvingdoog
"Another Chance" Is rated R
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Shakespeare made his name a on his bedroom. He sees women and runs 99 minutes. There's
Sorority will have Its card party household word with his use ol as nothlngbuttoysandobjectsto nudity and swearing.
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the thelnsanlllesandpalnsofamour while away a boring alternoon.
"'Night VIsitor" (also rated R
senior citizens center in Pome- and· look at what we find But along comes sweet and and runs 1 hour, 34 minutes) is
, MIDDLEPORT :..&lt;;roup 2 of roy; Members are to bring two ourselves Inundated with.
charming Jacky, played with • one ol those tlllns that seems to
the Middleport · Presbyterian snacks. •
Everywhere you, turn, books even more charm, by Vanessa be constructed along with lines of
Churcli will meet Tuesday at 6: 30
and televisiOn and billboards and Angel who steals his heart In a formula that goes bac)&lt; to the
p.m. . at the home of Mrs.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy even nature Itself extol· the ~cord time.
fable by Aesop about the boy who
Katherine Brown. Faye Wallace chapter of A.A. and AIAnon will sometimes questionable virtues
Even the obligatory knockout cried . "wolf". Billy Cdlton,
will have the book study and meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the of the state of love.
detour In the form of Barbara played by newcomer Derek Ry·
.Martha Anderson will ·have Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
And this time, dear vlodeo- Edwards, an emissary of Satan dall, spies on his next door
devotions.
For Information call phlle, we must contend with the who ts determined to drag our neighbor who also happens to be
WEDNESDAY
1-800-333-:-50~1.
state of gentle lunacy which womanizing hero down to a place a h!loker and sees her murdered
SYRACUSE -The Third Wed·
Kepny Rpgers. says _"will turn where·asbestos underwear Is the by, or all peOple, his history
nesday Homemakers Club. will · POMEROY - The Meigs you around" and Ray Sevens · standard unllorm.
teacher, your basically upstand·
meet at the municipal building on County Democratic Executive clalnis "will beat your brains
Then after Jacky storms out, lng sort.
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Members Committee will · meet Thursday . oui ·"
· Ripley loses his job, his dog dies,
So he and his girlfriend go and
are to bring sweatslilrts, mate- at the Carpenters hail on E . Main
The lighter side of love Is and then just when · you think find the required ex-cop, played
• rial, scissors, etc.
St. In Pomerl)y for Its regular explored In the Republic Pic- things can't get any worse, they by the fabulous Elliot Gould.
meeting and for recommenda·
tures release of "'Another do.
From there It's Billy against the
RUTLAND -There wlll .b e a lions of the appointmeifi to the Chance", due In or about Jan. 30.
'Ripley dies at the hands of a satanic madman who promises
regular lneetlng of the Leading lloard of Elections.
Creek Conservancy District in

•

to do worse than give him an :
incomplete as the hapless teenager must fight off not only a
predictable stogy line but 1errl·
ble acting and dialogue straight
out of the "look, Jane, look"
category.
We flncl ourselves wondering
what we have gotten ourselves
Into by sitting thlrought this
hodgepodge of B movie gore and
Incomprehensible drivel.
I did find ' one thing that
redeemed this movie . It was the ·
eternal murlchln; Michael J. •
Pollard, playing a demented:
hunchmaP who evokes our sym·
palbY while at the ·s ame time
angers us with his underplayed
villain rile. Don't worry, Ml·
chael, we won 't hold ' "Night
visitor" against you.
There is nudity, violence, and swearing along with an over-.
worked plot.
·That's all for thiS month.

MiddlepOrt Garden Club meeting conducted
The January meeting of the

By United Preu International
Xavier University celebrated
Its entry Into United Press
International's national basket; .
ball ranklngs · by thoroughly
'dominating a hapless University
of the District of Columbia
· Monday night.
The Musketeers, who have won
12 ' straight · s.lnce an ·openinggame loss, are ranked 18th in the
latest UPI Coach's Poll. .
Scoring the flrstl2 polntsofthe
game, Xavier held UDC score·
less for the first 3: 40 and cruised
,, to a 110-52 win. '
·
"We were just too big and too
physical for them.'' Xavier
Coach· Pete Gillen said, "I don't
know If we're a Top 20 team, but
• we're playing very well rll!lhl

Tf/ 11 ... !01

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Middleport Garden Club was
held at the home of Mrs. Louis!!
Thompson.
Roli call was answered by
members naming the New Year's Resolution.
A report was given of the
Christmas home decoration contest. .T he winners were Mt. and
Mrs. Robert Fisher, overall
decoration; Mrs. Harry Moore,
religious: and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bradbury, wlridow and
entrance.
Serving as judges for the
contest were Mrs. Harry Leffie,

'

·" llJor . . . ., !k!t'c"' Leo~ ·.

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Xavier
·J'Bth in
·uPI poll

Ne liUllt"' a•heduled

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Tuesday, January 16, 1990
Page - 6

.Ill Mllwaa~tr•. l!:lll p.m.

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Sean Higgins added 16 points for the victory.
At Cincinnati, 1)'rODe HIU '
the Wolverines, 12·2 and 2·1. Loy · Elsewhere In the Top Twenty;
scored 12 of bill pme-biP 20
Vaught had 14 rebound~ .
· . Connecticut aurprlled No. 5 potnls In "the first 10 mlaulef to ·
· Stephen Bardo led the nun I, Syracu~e 70-59; nlnth-ranlred lead the 18th-ranlredMII~·
12-2and2·2,withacan&gt;er-hlgh20 Ne:vada-Las ; Veaaa (lefeated 1'he margin ol vk:tary ivai !he
points and Kendall Gill had 15. . Fresno St. 84-75: No.l8 Xavier of largest In scllool · blltory lor
"You · can't shoot 40 percent Ohio burled tile DistriCt of :xavier, whlcb Improved to 12·1.
and win . You can't beat an .Columbia 110-52; and· eo.':So. i9 ,, UDC, 9-10, Ia playing ·at the
average team shooting 40 per- La Salle downecl'Canlslua 89·77. . DivisiOn I l~el lor only the
cent," Illinois Coach Lou Henson
At Hartlorct, Conn., Taite second year.
said. "Hustle and guts will only George and Chris Smith sCored
At Philadelphia, Lionel Slm·
take us so far. We have to shoot." 17 polilts. apiece and Connecticut m\)ns !!COred 27 points and pulled
Michigan downed the lllint benefited from another poor down 11 rebounds to power the
83·81 In their Final Four game Syracuse shOQtlng performance ,Explorers. Simmons 'Scored
last year when Higgins burled a • to upset the Orangemen. Syra· seven points durin&amp; a 10.0 run
jumper In the final seconds. cuse, 12·2 and 4·2, made just 25 or that extended a 43-42 lead to 53-42
Michigan went on two capture 71 field-goal attempts (35 per- · with 14 minutes to play. Doug
the NCAA title. ·
cent). The Huskies, U·3 and 4-2, Overton added added 21 points
· Higgins had three 3-polnters In led from ·the opening minutes, for La Salle, which Improved to
the first half Monday an!! four for. arid built a 30-i4 lead In tbe first 11-l overall and 2-0 In the·Metro .
the game.
.
half. The Orangcmlan. got no Atlantic Athletic Conference.. .
"I think I shot one of nine here closer than four potnllllhe riiStof Dyall Nixon led Canis Ius., 2·12
last year, andiwantedtoredeem · ·the way. Thevtctorywasl:onnec- and 0-6, With 23 points.
·myself," Hlggtn,; said. "It was · tlcut's fourth straight. In tbe Big
Elsewhere it was : Mas!lac!lu·
like we won the national cham- East. only the secondll!lle In the. setts 82, St. Bonaventure 55:
plonshlp after the game."
league's 11-year exlsteACe that Penn St : 64, Duquesne 56; Clem·
the school has won fourconsecll· son 117, Georgia St .. 59; Rich·
Michigan never · trailed. The tlve conference gami!S. '
monel 51, Wake Fo·rest 49; Vlril·
Wolverines led 37.:!3 at ·halftime ·
At Fresno, Calif., Larr)'Johtl· . nla · Commonwealth 86,"
and Increased their lead to 10 · s0 n scored 2&amp; point.s to lead the Jackso11vllle 81, OT; VIrginia 89,
when Demetrius Calip hit two Runnln' Rebels to the Bill West VIrginia Military 78; Akron 80,
free throws to make It 54-44 with victory. Johnson hit 11 ofl4shots, Wright St. 66; St. Louis 66, Butler
just over 14 nitnutes remaining. Including 7 of 71n theseconcl hall. 64; New Orleans 75, Tulane 59;
Illinois closed the gap to 62-60 He also grabbed nine rebounds. Colorado St. 65, Wyoming 57;
with 7:51 left and drew 'withlng Tod 'Bernard hid Fresno State Long Beach St. 72, New Mexico .
71-70 when Gill hit one of two free . with 27 points. Nevada-Las Ve- St. 56; San Jose St . 66, Fullerton
throws with 33 seconds left, but gas improved foll -3 and 5-l while St. 60; Santa Barbara 91, Utah St.
Vaught hit two free throws and the Bulldogs dropped to 6-8 and 82 and Washington 83, Miami
Rumeal Robinson one to ensure . 1·4.
(Fla .) 67.

By TOM WlmERS
UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er
Whether It Is football or basketball, defense Is the key to winning
in the rugged Big
The
Michigan Wolverines . proved
that Monday night.
The No. 7 Wolverines won for
the first lime at IIJinols ·since
1979. holding the sixth-ranked
Figh!lng llllni to 41 percent
shooting, In a 74·70 . J:lig ten
victory. Michigan endeil Illinois'
28-game home winning streak in
. the first meeting between the two
schools since last year's memor·
able NCAA tournament semlfl·
nal matchup In which the Wolve. rlnes won In the final seconds .
Michigan limited Illinois to 29
of 71 field-goal shooting Monday
and outrebounded the Illinl41·31.
"I told the kids In the 16cker
room, In my eight years at
Michigan, this is the best defense
we have played.'' Wolverines
Coacp Steve Fisher said . "If you
don't defend and rebound, you
can't win.
"Anytime you can go any where on the road and win, it's a
big victory. To come in to a place
like Champaign, IIJinoiS, and
beat this team here, it's very
significant and lmpartant. I'm
glad we don't have to come and
play them again here this year."
Terry Mills scored 18 points
and pulled down 10 rebounds and

..._ !4oc.·cer

'· Illinois I I:!- I I ...........................,:Ui 7
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The Daily Sentinel

VMt·ouwr at N\' IIILiad,•r,., 7: :U p.m.
!\'N' .fft'i'lf'.)' 1U WMIIIIDfl(on. 7: 35p.m .
rhlladl'lplllaat PUW.rwh. 1:$$ p.m .
t'l.t.lpry M K&amp;. Lo .. 11. ll: 35 p.m.
Qu•hfot· IU Wlnnl,.~~:, 11:35 p.m .
O..n* M E41motlloiL 1:.15 p.m .
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1\l ...ea • !4aerun•nlo, II:• p.m.
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Hot:kt&gt;y

lnh•ra&amp;lloun.l Roard "' t 'uadu.,.' Tnp :?II
411114'14' hw.jjj'\tudl ralln~ . wllh · flr!&gt;il JIIa•·•·' No•" andn••·oud:oo; thru'«h.Jan. I~ In
.-n•,.lh•""""'· .. lui p41lnls lhW&gt;~•d on U
polnt .. lur flr:ooll plat ·o•. 1-4 ror _;,.•t-.Jrll, •it·. j
and la...a wt•••k'" ran ~n1111;

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Michigan ends Dlmois'· home wQt ·sireali·
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P•nn!&gt;lt.

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Pomeiroy-Midcl1port. Ohio

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KEU!EY N. f'IFE .
'

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Fife birth

KEU!EY M. HOLTER

Holter
birth
Ed and Jan Holter, Pomeroy, ·

Beat of the Bend

Mrs. Kenneth Wiggins, Mrs. Africa and that they require a covered by a white lace cloth ·
Marge Fetty, Mrs. Iva Powell, mild climate. The author also with silver .candle holders and
and Mrs. Rae Reynolds. At the described methods of how to white candles. The arrangement
conclusion of the judging the . produce these flowers. She noted of the evening was prepared by
group went to Reynolds Daley that she had had some plants for -Mrs. Thompson . It consisted of
cornflowers, dried grasses and
Bar . for refreshments. The 22 years.
judges were presented gilts of
Following the me.eting, a des - wheat stocks in a basket
money, and flowers from the sert course was served to those container.
Guests at the meeting were
Pomeroy Flower Shop.
present by the ho~tess as slstel;l
Mrs
. Mell Redovlan and Mrs.
It was noted that the club had by Mrs. Nancy Cale.
Gene
Leffle.
The refreshment table was
donated a book to the Middleport
Library.
'
For the program Mrs. Rae
Reynolds chose '"Care ol Amaryllis" a book by Aileen Detter
Rodgers. The au thor noted that
By WILLIAM .c. TROTT
.the plants were native of South
Uillled Press lnte~natlonal
FONDA'S SON NABBED: Jane Fonda's 16-year-old was
nabbed spray-painting gang-style graffiti In a Los Angeles
parking lot at 2 a.m. Monday. Troy Hayden was cited for
vandalism and violating a juyenUe curfew and then released
Into the custody of his father, Assemblyman Tom Hayden.
Young H(lyden, who was wearing a Save the ~Y T-shtrt when
he was caught, an.d seven other kids with a bounteous supply ol
spr-ay paint were spotted by California Highway Patrol officers
By the way, theP.T.O. meeting
painting graffiti on a telepholie booth, several posts and a w"ll
at · Pomer~ Elementary has
at the ll'rklng lot. A police spokesman described the gralllll as
been changed to Jan. 22 and at
''logos, obviously gang-type or community names -white gang
'that lime . James Carpenter,
stuff." A llrst offense In such cases requires one or both parents
superintendent of the Meigs
to discuss the matter with pollee and make restitution. Fonda
Local District, ·Will be oo hand to
and Hayden have flied for divorce, although they share cust.ody
discuss the new bl!lldlng proofTroy.
.
gram proposal ..
DOLLY AND CARL: A catfish dinner ·turned Into a new
Two new students teachers on
.project for Dolly Parton and Carl Perkins. Parton was In
are hand at the school for the
Jackson. Tenn., recently for a visit to Perkins' catfish
winter. They are JuDe Copeland
restaurant and the two showed each other some new material
and Krts McGaughy, Ohio Unl·
they were working on. Parton canceled a trip to California,
· verslty students.
returned to Jackson the next day and stayed the weekend .to
write five songs. Now she says she wants Perkins on her next
The Meigs Unit of the Amerl·
album. Perkins sa ld his·wife did the cooking during the weekend
can Cancer Society will be
and Parton appreciated the fare. "Valda fixed some beans and
staging a wine and cheese tas tlng
cornbread and lrled some talers," said Perkins, the man who
event from 2 .to 6 p.m. Sunday at
wrote "Blue Suede Shoes." "And I never saw a mega-starenjoy
the SeniOr Citizens Center on
herself more." Perkins also says he's expecting a call from
Mulberry Ave .. ln Pomeroy.
former Beatie Georre Harrison to go to England lor some
The public Is Invited and dress
recording with Harrison and Jefl Lynne, formerly of the
Is Informal. A door prize will be
Electric Light Orchestra. :
.
.
awarded. There Is no admission
RUSHDIE SPEAKS FROM HIDING: Salman Rushdle has
charge but ·donations will be
been working ·on a children's book while In hiding !rom
accepted.
fundamentalist Moslems who want to kill him because they
. think his last book, ''The Satanic Verses. " blasphemes their
Membership dues of the Meigs
religion. Rushdle hopes to have the book finished in March but
County Pioneer and Historical
there's no telling when he will be able to come out of hiding. "I
Society are payable now for 1990.
can't say I'm working In quite my normal way," Rushdle said
· Regular membership Is S5 and
from his hiding ·place In a tel,ephone Interview with a British
family membetshlps are SlO.
Did you know that from June 1, 1-.;n:;;e.;;w..;;s.:;pa;;:pe:;.;;.;r.;..
to Oct. 31, 1989, the Meigs County
Museum operatl!d by the society
had visitors from 22 states, one
foreign country, Japan, and !rom
25. Ohio cities than 100 miles
away? And during 1989, the
society added to museum display
space by ,expanding Into the
adjoining garage and plans call
for the creation of more exhibit
area In the garage · across the
street !rom the Butternut Ave.
museum. BY the way, the Rev".
William Mlddleswarth and Le•
land and Mike Parker did the
remodeling of the garage adjoin·
lng the museum and bad It ready
so tliat the space could be used
'I• lb.• burger topped wtth
for the Christmas season exhibit.
grlliod poatroml, twits C"-,
It made an attractive room.
tettuce, tomalo l our lamoUI
Membership pays lor the newMcGyver 10uce In o grilled
sletter which Is sent members
1e10rne l8ed bun.
and lree admission when you
visit the museum. It also helps
with the expense of malntalnlnll
the museum. Your membership
691 W1st Main
money can be sent to the society
Pomeroy, Ohio
via P.O. Box145, Pomeroy, 4576!1.

John Lisle, Principal of the
Pomeroy Elementary SChool,
has come forth with an effective
message to parents In the January Issue ol · '1'he Elementary
Link", the school's newspaper.
I hope you have had a chance to
D.ALE, DEREJl TEAFORD
read the article which deals with
peer pressure which John says Is
good to a certain point. John
A birthday party was held on Teafotd.. great grandparents, · recommends that you let you
child be'llke the others as long as
·
Jan. 61n honor of Dale and Derek Bob and Florence Adains.
· Others attending the party It Involves harmless Issues like
Teaford's third blrihday. They
are ·the twin sons of. Dale and were Carol and Joshua Pape, clothing, toys or age-appropriate
Rayl)lond,· Adams, Kenda and movies.
Linda Teaford, Racine.
However, John recommends
A •'Sesame Street·' theme was Kelly Rizer, Doris Adams, and
that
you provide your child with
carried out with a theme cak'e Shirley; Stephanie. Jessica. and
blllty to resist peer pressure
the
a
ancl other refreshments being Lori Say~.
'
when
It Is of a dangerous nature.
· Sending cards and gifts were
served.
.
He
reeommends
bolstertna Attending w~re the twins' . Jim O'Brien, Trisha Wolfe, Den·
·Is
helping
develop sell
that
younger brother, Darin, grand· .nis and Ellie Teaford, and Rex
·
esteem
and
confidence
In your
parents; Larry and Phyllis and Mary O'Brien. the twins
child on the tlome front; monitorO'Brien, and Dale and Wanda other great grandparents.
Ing - that Is .checking out your
child •s friends and eneouraatna
your child to have wholesome
parties In your borne, and listen·
•
lng - that Ia, creatine an
I iake It by this time In most
NeiUe Parker, Russell Archer, atmosphere In which your child
The Alfred United Methodist
can
feel
comfortable
airing
his
Instances you've manaaed to
Church Sunday School elected adults; Kathy Watson and Tim
officers and teachers for 1990. Spencer, secretary and trea&amp;· concerns and tile problema that change the year on your eorrea·
pondence to 1990. And Ju,t think
Teachers lor the classes are urer: Florence Spencer, roll he Is IIICifti:
Doris Dtlllnger, Lori Boyles, call; Tim and Richard Spencer, · That's only ·a nutshell version . with January already half aone
Pam Yost, SUnbeams; Charlotte ushers; Marilyn Robinson, II· . of some of the iood advice ln tbe - spring Ia ~uat around the
' eomer. So do keep ~mUJng.
Van Meter, Eloise Arcber,'prlm- brarll.n; Dorothy cialaway, Ma· article.
rUyn
Robinson,
Thelma
Bendary and busy bee; Gertrude
Robinson, Thelma Henderson. ers. newer eolll!lllttee; . and
WIDing Workers; Uoyd DIIUn· Marilyn Roblnlon and Florence
·
ger, Florence Spencer, young Spencer, song leaders:
Recent vtsllorsofMr. and Mrs.
adults;
Arthur Spencer . Y{ere Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Spencer, Mr. and
Mn. Guy Spencer, and NeiUe
Parker.
Many In the community have
Tbere wUI be a hymn sing on
been
IU with the nu. They Include
Saturday at the Laurel Cllfl Free
Methodlat Church at 7 p.m. The the Avta family, David Watson
&amp;roUP "Fellowlblp" will be tea· lamUy. Mn. Delber\ Stear111,
ture4. Pastor Bill Williams In· Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follred. arul
the lelt Burke family .
·
vttea tbe jlll&amp;)llc.

Teaford twins observe birthday.

Alfred .happenings

Hymn .ring set

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r---People in ,the news__,

A big thanks tq all,!

Dave 'and Rose Fife, Reeds· . are announcing the birth of their
ville, arf'announclng the birth of d~ught!!r, Kelsey Michell~. on
By BOB HOEJIU.CH
a daughter. Kelsey Nicole, on Nov. 24 at O'Bieness Hospital in
Thank you! T)enk you!
Dec. 21 at Holzer Medical Center. Athens.
Hardly had Jl"rlday's edition or
The Infant weighed seven
The Infant weighed seven
The Sentinel hit
pounds and five ounces and was pounds and five ounces and was
the streets llntU
20 Inches long. ·
20 Inches long.
The Fife's also have · a son,
Maternal graftl)paren~ are ,. I was reeei~IU
calls !rom
. Weston Tyler, age two and one Ron' a:nd Shirley Smith, Pomepie who wanted
half.
·
roy. · Maternal great grtlndpar·
to
help a single
Maternal grandparents are ents are Mr. and Mrs. Albert
parent
· and her
Dale and Ann Colburn, Pomeroy. Smith, Pomeroy; and Dale
five children
Maternal great grandparents · Smllh. -Pomeroy.
who were ll)entloned In the
are Ralph and Murl Colburn, Ft.
Paternal grandparents are
Roy and Pat Hol!er, Pomeroy . ·edition.
Myers, Fla.
It's Incredible that so many of
Paternal grandparents . are Paternal great grandmother Is
you were willing to pick up on the
Roscoe . and Betty Fife, Ada Hotter, Pomeroy. ·
problem which, I assume, Is
Mr. and Mrs. Holter have
Middleport. ·
being
worked out through a third
another daughter, Alyssa Elaine.
party . There were offers of food,
clothing, bedding, mattresses
and the Episcopal Churph
Women's organization even
agreed to buy a bed lor.each of
the children. ·
· Your offers were so great. At
this point In time, I' in not exactly
sure that the problems have been
solved - you may or may not be
called upon for your donations. If
' not, hang In there- there will be
another time and God knows you
made the effort.
Thank you.

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.PASTRAMI

$2.29

With the putChaleolaPc I Gilt
Burger, Lorge F1'811Ct1 Ftlel and
Lorge Dltnll.
OneCCIIIPOfii*C~,per

villi. Not vatld wtlh any otfW
dtacouniL lloo.dtllnt Z·ZI-10

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Ami 4:ooP.M.

2 PIECE
CtnCIEN DINNER
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$229

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

T11udlty, Jenuary 11. 1980 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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State of emergency_declared in parts of Azerbaijan, Annenia
MOSCOW (UPl) - A state of
e~Pergency was In e ffect In
sections of Arlllenia and Azerbaijan and Soviet troops and the_
KGB were In the area to combat a
three-day rampage In the city of
Baku that h.as left more than 30
people dead In an ti-Armenlan
violence.
•
The Soviet paruament's decision Monday followed Prime
Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov' s
warning that m!Utary force
would be u~d to prevent civil
war between Christian ArmenIans and Moslem Azerbaijanis
because o( the anti-Armenianrampage.
Atleast34peoplehavediedand .
at least 34 have been hurt in the·
ethnic fighting, Soviet television
said.'The dally newspaper Izvestia said the toll would likely rise
and that clashes took place for a
third successive day Monday ~ ·
It was theworstethnlcvlolence
since Soviet leade~ Mikhail Gor-

bachev came to power nearly
five years ago. The Imposition of
a statf of emergency was the
toughest step his administration
has taken to restore order to the
two soqthern republics since
ethnic clashes erupted there In
February 1988.

!aging and armed attempts to
The emergency order ' also women and chUdren from Baku between the AJlerbaljaniland tile
overthrow Soviet power," the allowed administrative deten- on the western edge of the ArmenlaJia," RyzhkoY told represidium said .
tion of people for up to 30 days Caspian to Krasnovodsk on the porlrl's. "The conflict mual be
The presidium, In a meeting and banned the use 'of copy eastern side ln·Turkmenla, Izves· solved wi.th the help of military
'
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presided over by Gorbachev, machines, telegraphs, radios tla said. It did not say when the JX)Wef. ,; '
Ryzhkov
did
·not
detail
what
evacuation
took
place.
ordered additional forces from and other means · of
"The local au tborttles are addldoaal meuura llemeantby
the army, navy and KGB Into the communication.
helpless,"
wrote Izvestia co~­ tlleworda "mWtarypower."The
region to bolster thousands of
The order attected the 'emporident
Yurt
.Orllk. "Sometlmes anny baa already ~ent reinforceInterior Ministry troops, Tass battled. Nagorno-Karabakh en.
they
do·
not
i!Ven
try to stop the ments to A*rbaiJan, where ·
clave and adjacent parts of
said.
,
extremists as It was In Naktche- troops were flni called out to
· The presidium Imposed a state Azerbaijan. It also affected a
, of emergency on parts of Azer- section or Armenia near the van," where Aierbaljanll bat- keep order following an outbreak
tered down the barbed wire of and-Armenian violence albaijan and Annen Ia and direCted border and the ~rbbljanl reborder with Iran two weeks a:go. most iwo years ago. R)izhkov
authorities to ban all gatherings · gion of the Sovlet-lranlan frontalso said ·a curfeW bad been
'.'Literally~ feet from a poUc:e
and to tighten control of mass Ier, where Azerbaljani11 have
media, prohibit strikes and set gathered recently seeking free station,.two charred corpses had Imposed In southern AzerbaiJan.
Even before tbe·tresh violence,
curfews.
contact with their ethnic been tossed on a garbage heap
at
least 5,000 Interior Ministry
!Ike
horrtble
black
dolls
and
The goverrunent authorized brethren In Iran:
.
and
regu tar ·army troops were
bodies
were
being
bUrned
at
tl!e
authortties to set up document
The presidium acted amid new
keeping
Armeitla1lsand Azerbal·
train
station
square,''
a
correscpeckpolnts ·and contlscate all reports of violence fvom · the
janll
apart
In· the disputed
pondent
for
Tass
said
In
a
weapons, amml!nltlons, explo- - region. The newspaper Izves da
enclave
of
Nagorno-KIII'abakh,
dispatch
from
Baku.
sives and powerful chemicals. It said some 660 Armenians,
Soldiers · were trying to. stem whose disputed status has un·
also authorized troops to conduct mainly women and chUdren, ·
the
ethniC violence without wea- aettled the region tor riear~ two
body searches of those who were evacuated from Baku by
pons In order to limit the number years and set off the ·recent
refuse to surrender their arms boat across the Caspian Sea to
ethnic warta.re.
of casualties, Tass said.
and to resettle endangered rest- the republic of Turkmenia.
More than 200 J!E!Ople have,dled
"The conflict seems to be hard
dents, Tass said.
.
·
The dramatic rescue on "two
to solve but the au thorltles will since the confllor erupted In
ferry boats took the Armenian
not allOw It to become a civil war · February 1988. · :

"Despite · measures ·a lready
taken, the sltuatioh In NagomoKarabakh and around It not only
Is not being nonnaltzed, but
continues to get worse,'' the
parliament's presidium, or exec·
utlve arm, said lri ·a document
~;~~- by the o~flclal Tass news
"Extremist groups are organIzing mass diS\)rders, provoking
strikes, Inflaming ethnic dissension and hostility ,''"the document
said. "They are carrying out
daring criminal acts, mining
roads and bridges; firing on
populated areas, taking
hostages.
"Actions lncl.ude murder, pll-

Campeau sends stor.es
into bankruptcy

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CINCINNATI (UPI) - Campeau Corp:, which went heavily
Into debt to buy Federated and
AU!ed department stores for
$10.2 billion, sent the previously
sound retailers Into bankruptcy
Monday .
Federated and Allied, which
call themselves "Indirect subsidiaries of Campeau," filed for
protection under Chapter 11 of
the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. .
"Federated and Allied are
victims of the current business
climate In the U.S., In which
staggering debts can be amassed
to finance corporate takeovers
and levevaged buyouts,'' said'
Federated Chairman John
Burden. ''Our current situation Is
due to the large .amount of debt
accumulated ·In the acquisitions
of Federated al!d Allied by
Campeau."
·Officials of Campeau, the Canadian real estate developing finn
which was left with an estimated
$7 billion of debt after buying
Federated and Allied, said that
Campeau ltse.lf had advolded
bankruptcy.
"None of Campeau ·Corp., Its
principal U.S. holding subsidiary, ~ampeau Corp. (U:S.)
Inc. or Its subsidiary, Ralphs
drocery Co., has filed Chapter 11
proceedings,'' ~aid Campeau ofthree-day and-Armentsn rampage In the capital of ·Baku baa left
ficials.
"Campeau Corp. expects
more than 30 people dead. The declaration camehoanafterSovlet
to
continue
Its nonnal activities
Prime Minister Nikolai Ryzhkob said mUitary force would have lo
in
Canada.
"
used to preveat civil war between Christian Armenlaas aad
The flUng In the. U.S. BankMusilm AJ~et'baljanls because of anii-Armenlan bloodshed. (UPI)
ruptcy Court In Cincinnati where
Federated ami Allied are headquartered, came after Campeau
failed last week In Its last-ditch
efforts to refinance Its Federated
and Allied debt.
'
Ill, hid a candlelight march In protest the lack of a state hoUday
Campeau bo,uiht Allied In 1987
Chicago Monday night and told honoring King. ·
for $3.6 billion and Federated In
an audience of about 500 college
In Boston, minority activists 1988 for $6.6 billion In deals that
students, "This day should be a llnkep King's fight for racial · burled the retailers under a
aay wher~ we recommit our- , justice with the wrongful blam- mountain of debt . .
selves to finishing his dream."
lng of a black man for a pregnant
Federated and· Allied,' whose
Schools, banks and govern- white woman's murder and be- stores Include what Is· probably
men! offices closed on the na- gan a weeklong boycott of the the most famous department
lion's newest hoUday, first ob- · city's newspapers.
.
store In America, Blool"l)lng·
served nationwide In 1986. This
In Detroit, members of the dale's, pledged It will be "busiyear, the observance fell on Newspaper Guild maintained ness as usual' I for their outlets
King's actual birthday, when he vigils outside the Detroit News des plte bankruptcy.
would have been 61.
and Detroit Free Press buildings
"Our stores wiil ·remain open
But the holiday remained con· to protest the newspapers' ref- and merchandise shlpme11ts will
troverslal, unrecognized by Ariz- usa! to recognize King's birthday continue," s~ld Burden. "As
ona, Montana, Idaho and New as a paid holiday In their Federated and AIUed operate In
Hampshire and generating crlti- contracts.
Chapter 11, for the most part It
clsmofbuslnessesthatrefusedto
In Memphis, Jacqueline will be business as usual."
close In other states.
Smith, ·38, celebrated the second
Federated and Allied said they
"It Is Ironic: that the birthday of · anniversary of her protest out- have negotiated agreements In
one so respected arqund' the side the Lorraine Motel, the site principle to provide for debtor-Inworld Is often seen - he,re In his of King' a assassination. Smith, possession financing. For Federhome - as somehow a holiday who lives In a plastic tent on the ated, the agreement Is · with
.for African-Americans only," sidewalk In front of the motel, Cltlbank as agent for a syndiCate
said Democratic National Chair- was evicted two years ago this of banks for $400 mUllon In
man Ron Brown, the first black week from the motel, the future financing over 12 months, subman to lead a national political home of an $8.8 million national
party. "The birthday of Martin civil rtghts museum.
Luther King Is a day for all
In AJin -Arbor; Mich., Cesar
Americans to pause and re- Chavez, president of the United
member one who g!lve his life for Farm Workers of America
the American Ideal."
urged a University of Mlchiga~
In Phoenjx, 15,000 people raJ- audience to practice the Ideas
· lied at the Arizona Capitol to taught by King.

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PRO.ARMENIAN DEMONSTRATION - Pro-ArmenJ8a demonstrators stage protest outside the Soviet mission olllle United
Nations In New York yesterday, u they voice Uaelr support of
Annenlansln vlolence-ravaced Azerbaijan. In MoiCOwyesterday,
the Soviet parlbnenl declared a state of emergency In
Nasorno-K.arabakh and otluir parts of Azerbaijan where a

Blacks urged. to 'finish dream' of King
'

By JIM BARBER
non-violent philosophy.
United Press Jnternatloftal
"The same song of freedom we
Americans marched, prayed
sang In Binnlngham, Selma and
or simply took the day offto mark
Little Rock Is being sung In cities
a naiional holiday for Martin
around the world," Mrs. King
Luther King Jr., and the slain
sald.
.
·
civil rights leader's son urged • After a prayer service· at the
students to recommit themselves
church where King served as a
to King's dream of racial
co-pastor with his father, thou·
harmony.
·
sands marched down Atlanta's
Across the country Monday,
Peachtree Street In a nationallychurch bells rang, moments of
televised parad.e to celebrate the
silence were observed and the
birthday of · the revered civil
New York Stock Exchange
rights leader, who was assasslstopped trading brlefiy to honpr
nated April 4, 1968, In Memphis,
the memory of . the black
Tenn.
·
. pteacher who marched through
In the wake of recent mall
the South to end segregation,
bombs sent through the Sou.
preaching non - violent !beast, officials took extra secur·
resistance.
lty precautions for the church
.At the Ebenezer Baptist service, forcing the congregation
Church In Atlanta, King's widow,
of 700 to pass through metal
Caretta Scott King, said the detectors. Outside the redpro-democracy uprisings In
bricked church, pollee guarded
Eastern Europe and China were
the streets.
Influenced by her husband's
Klng'sson,MartlnLutherKIIIi
•

Northeastern student
killed near campus
BOSTON (UPl)- Pollee Tuesday were Investigating the beatIng death of a white college
student who was attacked as he
retur:ned to the Northeastern
University campus bo.rderlngtbe
city's .racially tense Roxbury
section. '
· Mark Belmore, 19, of suburban
Walpole, was returning from his
girlfriend's house arqund 12:25
a.m. Monday when . he was
at tacked barely a block from the
Nortbeaatern campus, pollee
said. Belmore was rushed to
Boston City Hospital, where he
died of multiple puncture
wounds, pallce said.
Boston Mayor Raymond
Fl~nn, whoae administration has
been crltlzlzed'tor Ita handling of
a murder cue that drew national
. atleDtlon and Inflamed nclal
· tenllona within his city, traveled
to ,the Belmore family home In
Walpole Monday · evening to
expresa hll condolences to ' the
vic:tlm'l J)BI'ellll.
Belmore'•llocly was not tdentl-

fled for severai"'hours, and his
name was publicly released
nearly 24 hours after the attack.
Pollee spo_k eswoman Jill
Reilly said Investigators were
searching for four black males In
their mid· teens who witnesses
said fied from the scene. The
witnesses heard the vlctllil
screaming for help and Cl\lled
pollee, she said~ ·
Investigators had not established
motive for the attack,
Reilly said, and It was not
whether Belmore had been
robbed.
.
Asked whether the slaying
may have been racially mod- ·
vated, Reilly said, "Undl they
can find a moUveforlheattackat
all, It can't be coutdered
anything.".
The fatal auault came amid
heightened .racial tenlliou In
Boston aparked by the hfably
publicized slaying of Carol
Stuart, the pregnant lawyer who
poUce believe was killed by her
husband In a stqed tobbery.

a

known

approval.

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Is Now .Under Now Ownonhlp· &amp; MGftCH10ft1ont
Fonst Memorial Park 1M. &amp; It's Pr uhllllt, Pat D. looney ·
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ClqliNi/h~d pa/(f'·~ · C'IWI'r

"A cl•ttfred advertisement pieced in Ttl a Oaitv Sentlf'ltl 1.. ·
c...- clus.tied displ..-: Sus"-•• Card and iegal notictsl
, will alto appe• in the Pt . Pl. .arn A•~ster and lht Galli- ,
polis D:eily Tribune. reaching ovet 18.000 hom•- ·

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9·a;m. - 5 p.m ..·
, ,;
·- · Wednesday.
J
· 9 a.m. - Noon
~

An o.-11 of All Fils _. • Conductttl by 1'111u11al Appt.
Yeur (ooperatioli Ian...._. n • &amp;natty AppredaiM

knowledged bY tbe hospital . "
Aoun, who reached a le1al
settlement
with Johns Hopkin~.
"Once healtb care workers
said
he
has
rnet several ·other
perceive that they have a slgnlfl·
health care employees w.ho were
cant risk , then they're going to be
Infected In the workplace but are
asking for things that the CDC
not recognized by the CDC.
and others dOn't want to have
In New York, Dr. Veronica
happen,'' Goslin said. All one
Prego Is suing the Kings County
example, some doctors and
nurses have demanded that all ·Hospital and ·two physicians,
hospitalized patients be tested alleging that she contacted the
AIDS .virus from a ·needle care- ..
tor possible AIDS Infection.
lessly discarded by anothere
· · One study ·has shown that
doctor.
The Information .on the
accidental needle pokes occur
number
of health care workers
more than 2,ooo:umes a day, the
Infected
came
In testimony du r·
Post said. The CDC maintains
Ing the case.
the risk of accidental Infection Is
·Bell said the number of work·
low and can be reduced If
workers take proper precau lions . · related Infections recognized by ·
the.CDC has risen only from 15 to
wh~n exposed to blood or body
19 since June 1988. The agency Is
fiulds.
Investigating abOut two dozen
Critics claim statistics of acother cases, he said: but ''the
cidental Infection among health
Investigations are not complete
workers are artlflcally ·low beand
we have very few data abOut
cause the CDC · uses overly
them
."
stringent criteria to determine
which Infections are workrelated and because Investigators are slow to confirm reported .
Infections.
Mary Browning lost the most
Baltimore · pilyslclan Haclb
weight In the Monday niJhl Five
A.mln- who sued Johns Hopkins
Points class of Sllnd~rella.v
Hospital In 1t!l7, alleglllf he
.
In the Tuesday night Mason
contl'tlcted the ' vlrus In 1983 when
class, the runner up .for most
he cut his.fl111er on a blood~filled
we1ght lost was Beth Foreman,
tube - said his ca,se Is not
New members are now being
Included In the CDC total.
. "I practically had to beg the
accepted Into the classes .
CDC to come and evalUate the
slt!latlon,'' ,\oun told The Post.
"It was monthS and months
In IH8, Rep. Shirley Chisholm, 0before they came. It's still not. N.Y., beeame the first black woman _.
elected to Congress.
·
counted, even after It was ac'
Medicine.

'
1-Card ot Thenks

,42
. .50

*13.00

"P,ice olad tot" aH C"Pilelletters is double price o4·ad con

"Adlthilt m;;~t;f:~:.adVt~ce ·~:PPY ~dt.

.

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,30

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.

Ovtr 1~ W9f!IJ

Rata

n .30tdov · .O.t i/doy
16
Monthly
'
f'lles ..-e fOr con•cutftra run5. IIIIo ken . . d., twill be ct.•etd
for each d., at separate HI-

POliCIES
.
. .
"Ada outside Me1g1. Gallia or Meson count•• must be pre·

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Profouional Pro-PIInning Counseling AYiilablo

.

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.

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.

e the. Ar•a' s N'umber 1 Marketplace

•

Family Practic;e

'

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on

Dr. Daniel
R~ ·T rent

.SPECIAL ~NNOUNCEMENT .
MEIGS CO. MEMORY GARDENS

'

"Federated anctAJJied flied for
Chapter 11 after their boards of
directors determined that sufficient progress !iiward an out-ofcourt restructuring had not \leell
made," .company offlc:lals said. ;.
"The decis ion· to seek Chapter 11 ~~
relief was based on a c;oncluslon :,.
that action was required at th,ls "'
time in order to preserve t"e ·"
"'
operational strength ·and assets ~
of the two department store ;;
companies while the .corporate :::
debt Is restructured." .
·
Burden conceded bankiuptcy · ~,
was "a difficult step for us to :~
take." But, he added, "on b"l··
ance. we believe this was the best ,.
course available til us."
.;
"From an operating perspec- ..
live, we expect this process to ·:
have a positive Impact on our "
business In that.it will allow us to •
operate our department stores In·· :~
a manner that benefits everyone ,&lt;
- and thaI oDCe again allows our '•
retail divisions to 'c oncentnteon
selling merchandise," be said. '
~
· "At · the same time, under ;J .
Chapter 11 proleetipn, corporate . -~
managementwlllhavetheneces- ..
sary time to aggressively ad- ~
dress the problems .that exist at ;:
the Corporate level wjth the ~
burdensome capital structure i
that precipitated today's acllons. ..,
"Our focus frOIJI this moment ;:'
·forward Is on the future - on ';:
doing what needs to be done to -;::
assure that ·we emerge from the •
Chapter 11 reoreanlzatlon pro- ~·
cess with a healthier, sounder
corporate s tructpre that will help
rather than hlider our retail
operations."
.
In sugaes ling to employees
how they explain,binkruptcy to
"family and frlendl," BU:i'den
recommended they compare ·
Campeau's bllllops of doUars of
debt with "a young couple who .
get themselves In financial triiu- . ·ble by laking out too many loans
l
and charging too many pur- - ~
chases on too many credit cards. ' :
·~is yoW., couple can uk 'a ' •
flnancllll counselor to handle
!
. their money and put them
a
~
budR'et so that, eventually, their . ~
deblsaJaln aremanllgealile," !le "
.said. "On a much ~r scale,
this is what the Cb'flpter 11
process Is allabouttor,F~rated '
I
and Allied."
' ... ,...lu ·
"'!;

AIDS-infected health workers ·
·undercounted, t:eport claiming

SAN ANTONIO (UPI) - Preli- elation between · smpklng and · stud)r of blood and artery lamminary rHults trcm a landmark blood vesaelll!stons.
pies taken from 1,200 Arnl!rleana
"I certainly was surprlled at ages 15-:W who dle'll from accldenstudY provlde.J aew evidence
supponinllOW·fat dleta for child- see!ng the correlation with IJIIOk- tal a.n d 'Violent ca-. The
ren aa a WilY to prevent heart 1ng as early as 'age 15,'' McGill, research, sponsored by tlie Naaclmtlrtc director of the Sollthw- tiona! Heart Luna • Blood
dlleaie later In life. researchers
WASHINGTON (UPU - Goest Foulldadon for Biomedical Jnsdtute, 1.t taking place at U
said.
veram•u
ligures on the n11111ber
The American Heart Assocla- Research In San Antonio, said l111tltudonl nationWide.
of American heallll care workers
The prelbnlna.ry flndlnp also Infected with the AIDS vlr111 are
t ton ~endfd over a decade Monday .
McGill said hl.t results supj)ort turned up a correlation be!W'!fn lnaceurate because accld•ntal
a go lhat children Ibn it fat Intake
to no · more than 30 percent of the view that children should be elll'ly &amp;IIIII of atherosclert~~IB expo.ures are "notoriously uncaJorlel. Buterlllcs have argued encou~aged to adopt low-fatdlets and some genetic factors known derreported,'' 'l'he "W ash!naton
there Is no evidence that lower- to prevent heart disease as soon . to be associated with heart
Post said Tuesday.
·.
1ng blood cholesterol levels In
as possible.
·
,
disease, lnfl)rmatlon th!lt may
The neWspaper said the Cen"Children deserve the 10od Qne day be Uled to Identify
children would ~uce their risk
ters for Ptseaae Control In
of heart dlseue wben they grew advice given to adults by the fnfllnts most llltely to develop
At18n~ has documented only 19
heart association 35 years ago," heart disease.
up.
,
cases In the United States and 27
The reSearchers said prelimi- McGill said. "There Is no evl- ·
''These highly susceptive lndlcases worldwide. However, .offinary flll!llngs !rem a study of dence to show that they do not . vlduals could be' ldendfled early
cials tok) l~e newspaJI@r t!)oae
nearly 400 males age~~ 15 to 34 grow and develop as well pn a In tire ana be aclvlsl!d to avoid
numbers. are unreliable.
found high cholesterol · levels fat-modified, low-cholesterol certain habits whlcJi.. would
"We· know t~'re notoriously
were linked to an early sign of diet or that any other diet may be greatly Increase their rill of ·ull!lerreported, '' said Dav~ Bet!,
heart disease,'' McGillaald. But
athei'OISClerosls, lesions In the better." , ·
chief of the CDC's AIDS alltlvlty
The new findings, presented the reseprc!her conCeded , little
inner walls of the blood vessels.
and hospital lnfectlo!l p~orram.
These lesions narrow ,bloQcl ves- Monday at a heart association can ·be· cione nllw to correct such• "Basically, nobody knows how
i
sels and can Interfere with blood meeting, come from an ongoing genetic defects.
many health care workers have
flow and thus cause heart
been Infected on the job."
attacks.
, .
Doctors and nurses who ·conDoc\ors have long known that
tract the virus that • cauies
certain ·risk factors, lnc!'udlng
aqutred Immune deficiency synhigh cholesterol, high blOOd presdrome fear they could 'lose their
sure and·smo_k ill,. ,.reassociate!!
jobs, and hospitals fear patients .
with advanced atherosclerosis
would go .elsewhere If they learn
and heart attack In adults.
a worker is Infected, The Post
f
1 ,
·
said.
"But we haven't had much
evidence linking choiesterol to
SOMERSET, Pa. (UPI)- An
The train was.forc,ed to stop In
But ctltic;s charge the release
the· ·lesions In . blqod vessels
Ohio man hu been charged In . Rockwood where 150 pasaengers
of Inaccurate statistics leads to
assoctatecl with clinical evidence. Somerset CountY with making a were taken to-'a·· local file hall
complacency amon1 ,workers,
of disease (In young people) ...
bomb threat on all Amtrak train wblle pollee and a search .dog
who · may fall to take proper
This fills In the gaps and _Is very
en route from Washington, D.C., , looked for a bomb. Nothlli&amp; was . prec,udons to · ·protect . them·
supportive of that theory," said
to Chicago.
found, and'Stanli!y .was taken off , selves agal~t the human lmmu:
Dr. Henry McGill Jr., one of the
Wllll811l Stanley, 45, of Cor- the- train and to the Somerset ' nodeflclency virus, or HIV,
researcher~ taking part In the
tland, Ohio, was charged With State Hospital for psychllitrtc 1which causes AJDS.
study.
. .
·
making terroristic threats In the evaluation. ·
·
' · ' ·
"There Is a great · deal of
Cholesterol was not the only · saturday ' night Incident, slflte
State pollee sald ·they haye
sensitivity and even politics
heart-threaten~g culprit singled
pollee said Monday.
notified the FBI about the Inc!- behind. the figures," said ,Larry
out In the preliminary analysis.
dent and federal charges could Gosdn, exe!=Utive dlrectclr of the
be filed.
Researchers•also found an as so,
,American Society of. Law and
••.

ject to acceptance' by the
syndicate: ,
·, .
Allied secured an agreement In
principle . from ,Cbemlc(ll Bank
for $300 mllllon.of financing over
15 JllOnths: .. Those dei!IS ar!i'
subject to bankruptcy court

The o.ily Santlnel- Pl:gr 7

Ohio -man charged
in bomb threat

il }· t

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.

Heart study backs low-fat diet for kids

.

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Viewing
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who quollly. Col 11.-7717.

35 Lots &amp; Acr8aga

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.

4112 .,.. ._.. . ..,..._ 15000. Wlf«•e '"· 1 bedroon~IJt tt•
= o r lind eonlroal. 114-742- 7111
oftor
lp.m.
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oF M'f HEART..
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or -::.:,1• W. .Unlon .Ava.,
~

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IIOir Fllhloroo. A Lltdtr
In lhl boluty lnduouy •
rowing ogolnl Wo'ro loolll~
I -~~. 1 II~
~--~ •
_,
llyllol wllo It OillhUoiiOlic •
lovoloworllwll~poo,.._ Woo~
lor evorogo hoUi1J roto, ·
C'.':mo, ":'.::."ionlon. a
._r;j polonUol. 11 you t.vo
whtl M tolcar col Amy, 1.aoo.
1211-4~
, _1

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.458-lat.
.
7 100m houoowhh gorogo, 3 112
acr• ll,.cf.J. •••lllte dlah, clly
water:, 2 1r.1 mU• out Dunhlm
Flood oW Loon llldon Rood,
III,OOO.IIIM 4s.. 1m.

2 bedroom. $100. pluo uUIKia
lnd dopoiR. l14-tl4t-28CJ1.
Nice 2 ••-. cJoH to tCIWII, 2
a.._...
-·
•
oorpol llovo
rolrlgorolor lumllhld, '$111.
304-11'5-21111.
.
42 Mobile Homes

--·now

17 IOriHimbtr, Jllllur.ll"!!,
hoy, IObtoo-mom. COUIG
bt dtvoloptd. 4 -.cmo, 1112
both, trl-llvol brick A·frlmo· .
tor Rent
" - flnlohtd .........,. oncl
lounclry , _ 2 oor doloohtd 1115 Ook Wood, 14xl4, 114-:lllf.
1534, colllllL
31401
1 1 ppolnlmonl _,:. If 1 .....,. 2 Br.l o,oblo, cloan lncl quilt,
Y
-·" · n
bolullul rfvor vlow In Kllllugo.
lod,
~71-2141
uppor "i'Oilrr't MC&gt;IIIIo Homo Pork, t14brrokol.
-1102.
INutltul two etary houal In·
nloo ~hborliood In ,_...,, 2 lr., In Bidwell. l14-44s-l. •
Th- bid-. 1 112 bolhi, z bed100m l - r 1ar ~.:loo
dan. full . blllmtUI, new_tr
llota) tDt IWII 1
75..... doled. Too llllny lhllltl lo 1071.
.
lltl. A bl'lllln 11 128,000. 110.
112-21104.
2br, 121111 IOObllo homo tor Nnl.
l1l-211-17ll.
·
1... Cualom Ill,_, 2br, g11
tor Solo IIJ
2 tumoor, rongo, rolrlg. wo0t.r
. . , . moro or - · .-. 2 botho, dryor, vorv cioocl oond. 14,300.
1 milo rOulh of Rio Orondo on 114-211-1:15£
81. Rl. HI. II 1 24111411,
Fumlohtd 1111 olio. lbr, 1 milo
IDr aolo In - . fn;m clly, on ·llrgo prlvtlt lol,
I200imo: Rtiloroncoo ~~:~~~
17 000 _ 722., 212
"':::'-;' :::-=:;-:~
· ;:c-~ dot!Ooll, 114-4441-2231 II
La! 1471 oq. ft., 3 br, 2181 .
ranali, 2 litlh flml• room
'
~
' Fumtatwd,
3 " •room,
~-. price rtduotd. woohor/dryor. No polo. 114-1141~~Y Mobile Homoo. ll4- 2213..

..P.': R:::r..; \-':".!.'1.!.. :'.!::

4

Giveaway

,.,.. Cola••' Firat I .,_.,.. to
olgn up lo ooll Avon. tlot'Avon
II 0011. 114-HHliO.
n - - Homta tor )u¥ »a
-.~urnlo
... bolng recru"11td
Jw tho Alhono
RogiOi!ll ottlco,
3 IMio pupploo lrM IO I OliJo Do""' mom 01 Youth s....
vicoa. Th- lnl-IOd 1hould
lllxod, -old, 114-317o0271.
contoel .Jolin Hogolly II 1.10Q.
•Gonnln
old - mlxocl,
· Colllo,
ShophOnl,'
114- 22WS74 by 11311110. Wo ano 111
Equol Oppcinunlly Employor.
_ , oftotlp.m.
compony In .,., hcl wnh · molliHo. 114-446- ;op Mo~onl. • Sileo Rop.,
421L
1211,000 to $71,000 por Y-·
IIIIo, Botdor TOI!Ior, I 1110111h Polonllll oarnlnga. 114-441old hOIRh, lnloll.l _, oncl Uvoly, 21011 lor opl., illk klr Mr.
l!ll-or1.
llkea chlldron, --232L
~ dryor tor pML 114-441- AN C.aa Manacler nMdad lor
podlllrlco l
lor homo
ooro """'lng. I mo. lo 1 Yl'·
Homo con NUrrlntl E1porlll!i:t
Lost&amp; Found
-lrod. ploloo oon MIChtnt, II
LOST: Smolllln/WhHo . .1o ,.,. Klmliorly Guallly Clro, II 1 rtoM)'po l!og. Goo"" CIMII, 712-1511.
AddiiOft Aroa. Coil • ......,_ Roaplrol"'Y ,..,.,_ Tocho
t14n4•t eaez.
nlolln, E_.,oocrlii .......
PunctUrl· Blood Go-. Ful~
llino or por1~1mo. 8onc1 ....,.,.
lo P.O. Box 33, Golllpollr, 011
411031 . .
d ......~"";! doL · -W.nlod' p......, lollvoln Chrt.
.,;,.,n ....... ~li ' lion homo lo old In lht crro oil
11 4-21H17S. .
Kl
--~114..0411 . ekiM'I1
- r. Lorgo ....nl.
12
Situation

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7

Wanted
Baby lilt, newbom lo 4yra. I
dop I - k In my - · 171-11211.

15

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Mull 111, nool 4 btdJOOm brick,
lal, llrgo lomlly room,
gongo, llroplooH, lonood yord,
of . " - • · .-umoblo
11/K - - 304-ll'WI05 or
112
.:c•n..,:,::1,..,:
· =:::-;==-:::-;::-;::
NM. -'"' Will 1111 u It, In
Mlddlepor1, 2 Olory. 1-1114-446-

=

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111-4-7441
Eat.II11-30:1.

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1

1 4 41

Buelnaaa

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Real Estate

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Counly· Applllnoo'v Inc. Good
uord oppl~ T. • OOU. Ooon
1 '·'"· •• 1 p.m. - · - · •14441-11'&amp;. 127 3nl. Avo. GoiMpollo,
0000 U9ED APPLIANCES
Wlohlro, clryoro, ri~rongoo. SUIJII
Uppor Rlvor Ad. Boalclt 81one
Croll Mottl. Cllll14-446-7311.

ANI-.

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Mill. aw, 111 • . Lin c ~· lnway.
Neldi-.ILIOM2.
EXP.

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good

Ill. N.
, 114 l11 am:
- - ,_A uotdtract.. 1 ~ IUJ,
lol~ lrtdo I :OO'IiOO • t•oyr,
lal.IIIJ....C....
.J110'a

75

Boats &amp;

Will Gill

MDtora
for Sale

7:30

eO M'A'I'H ·
Ill CrMiflle

I'":Idyl

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!63D~iLiiilvHiu;oc;::k~·r;!'i! ·76 Auto Pans &amp;
Accauol'lal

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=.,.=-=-=~~=~~-=~ ·
.....

Ia a springboard lor jaalouay.

fll!l Nova

Thia program
loOks at shoCking lnltlncea
of pilot negligence.

LID.
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Polnl Pluo -

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. .

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l!lleiJIIIiloetiO' .,, uta

and dellll anulltlons are
~"aantld In eclllallootage.

movo.

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bod, d - - A JOOklno

q . 112 lWenlJ- .... Polid

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8:011 (I) IIOVIE: Living Ploof: ~
Hoonk WIIIIMM Jr. l1ary
(2:00)
1:30
CIJ Tile wonder v..ri
Kevin facea a romantiC

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(I). (J) Aalllft.V

IN MY OPIN ION/
~TV ANO&lt;li&lt;N,)oN ISAN
ANACHROIJIS.V.·.

" ' " drhoe tum .. blo. 14 ~
......... - 1 '1 ... dlgllol
m 1 rt\C ........ Two 110

. 114-74NIIf:

t===::;.

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YAH! YOUR

MOTHEI'! eA'TS

i:&gt;F!'VA OUTOF
THE CAN!

goof. Q
10:00 ()) CIN Tale,_ ,
Cll 1111 Midnight Celler
. JaCk's radio broadcast
reoounta lite San Frenctaco
eartttquUa. Q

e

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BARNEY

her boOk. Q

OH Clll 114141-1121.
IITlUTY ILDG. IPICIAL: :U..'
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OOYIANMENT IEIZED 'NIIDIII
from 1100. fordl. ... lldll
CorwiN. CMvyl. hrH&amp;

Strip, through lrrHII ayeo.
(1:~
.
~Now Twlfltll

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1'1111 Tor*, 1111

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""""Plllll... 104~ 10
... Ill up $14M .... 10 ...

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1C..301I) , _

-Coii1U•112t1.
PURURED IIIERIAN IIIIKY
PUJIIIY. - . lncl IID.11(-144.

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72 Trucka for Bile

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II)IJII On Tile Pilaa I Tile
Tlmll H11 Como • tltW-19115

BEDEOSOL

;i1J 8IIDIIIJIIIO
ArMttlo ttell

lll ...... llcG.. And Molly
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U IN F Z W L F R. N P N A a·
YuiM•••'• ~laea•l•&amp; ORIGINAUIY ·IS ntE
AR'J' OF CON AI.ING YOUR SOURCES. AuntOR lJNI(N()WN

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One Jetter stands for another . In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X ·. for the two O's, etc . Single letlen,
apostrophe~, the lefWth and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letteri are different.
·

...

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AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

STX

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DAILY CRYFI'OQUarES- Here's how to WDrllll:

11:00 ()) Hanliiiato And

.,

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BERNICE ,

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.._

1174 KMIIUl.. ..... 1171
Clonclr
1111~......
loo
. 110,000
- - ~

24 Office
force
25 Clly in
Alghanisl!ln
27 French
painter
28 "- · bleif
29 Rose
essence
34 Son of Bela
35 Fire Fr .)

With
the Wind"
role
30 Pooch
sound
3t Table
scrap
32 Buddhist
Iem pie
33 "Our
Gang"

'

eo Amlrtcan ••••lriiMataa•

GOR4111114UI.

.

z-

==~~ ·
10:01 IIIIOVII: v- CMatln'

I

lloo
oM
H1mt11y11! 11111-. .Chow 111 ttl... ...... 7

....
-..a.Miriedi.AII
,.. , _ Dooi..

spew

o.-ICI "' loOk •• ""
lntillela; "" paleltlnlan
uprlllng dirlc:ted against
lrrllll occupation of till
Wilt Bank 1nd till Gau

- - ........l :r.

-, ,__.

(I). (I) ..,_......• .
Nancy IICII miXed emotiorll
on the .,.. of publiCatiOn of

'

...

DOWN
1 Rental
sign
2 Playing
8 Olvide
marble.
10 Nobleman
3 Constantly 11 Mountain
plagued by
crest
4 N.Z.
15 Shine
parrot
18 lnterprel
5 American 21 Alrlcan
writer
republic
6 Candlenut 22 Vocal
tree
work
7 Inflexible
23 Dowel

13 Public
speaker
t4 Summer
(Fr .)
15 Except
16 Anger
17 Earthly
. 19 Cole
of song
20 Exploit
2t Speck
22Jam
together
23 Curse
24 Lean· to
25 Puncture
28 Foot
member
27 "Gone

ii)NeWIWiitdl
·
(J) A lelrclt F~ ~

......, .....
CioUdO Win-

~~11;:-.m.•-....__

g

(I) • Cl)c- Chrtatino
must really work to get
HSJ(Ie!l'alorgl.-a aller a

Suppllee

·-Rio Orondo,

build ~-

1:30 (JJ CDIIII' a.lkltMII

~)

.Building·

11oo11, brick, Knlolr, -

llqiOMIICe

111•111 MOVIE: 'lome ano
To WitCh Ovor Me' cal
TUMdly Movie (R) (2:00) Q
Ill l.llrry Kllltl Ll'lol
.
i1J Protullallllll'lgu!O
Sketlng U.S. Open
Champlonahlpa, From
OrlandO, FL (Tape Dell)'ld
From o - - 1 8 &amp; 17)
iaNI'h. . Now

Klna--ln-

-

chamber
12 Volcanic

from ....,

allltlr. R)

helped

'

~

"

10 Judge's

Roaeannaa.n't doll with a

ilftori:OO M.

. . . . . . . . . . . . .Dr

Of Tile

A look It lite Underground
R1llroad and'lhe peopll Who

'

ACROSS
38 Small
1 Armored
flower
vehicle
37 South
6 F aslenlng
American
device
wildc!lt
9 Curved 38 Exude
molding
39 Employer

t110 murder of a doctor w!lO

II&gt;IIl

..

by tHOMAS JOSEPH

Nft11 Glllellple lnveltlgatea

poUizllon

~~~-"

CROSSWORD .

.WIIIIIdily

e (J) llllln Tile -

NOiml

tan
•au

w:e:-.r

STX
. 0

r 1 1· I' r I' I' 1

I'

J!:ut.Welt can probably make four
tA87U
spades, but IIIII g difficult to bid on
+K
ooly 22 blp-eard poillta In tbe com·
' '.
biDed banda. Meamrblle North and
EAST
tJtU
SO.tll bave bid to four bearta. South
• ,\152
bad opened 1 wut baad Ia fOIII'th poll·
tQt
tlon. After West, • puaed baad, bad
•An
made 1 takeout double, North bid two
!no-trump u an artlflelal conatructlve
SOUTH
ralle. ·([a tbelr metbodl, a jwnp to
tAl
three bearta would be prHIIIptlve.)
.KQIOH
us
Eut wu unwllllDC to rllk game !ac- '1
+QIU
Ini a preyioully p1aet1 partaer, but be
dla bid three 1p111aa aDd tbea doubled
VuJDerable: Eut·West
four bearta for P""'lllea.
Dealer: West
. Declarer'• play wu sllplbod. South
wm tbe ace of i!piiCiea and led a club. Soa..
N_.. l!ul
PIU PIU
pEut toot tbe - aDd tbea played
beart ace aDd a aecGIId belrt. Declarer
I•
llbl.
nrr s •
PIU 4.
llbl.
'
wm In Ida baad, played queen of clubl PAll pool
aDd ruffed 1 cl1lb, and led a apede.
• orUUcial bOirt nile
Eut cune In with tbe jack and played
I iblrd heart. That pmented SoutJa
Opening lead: t K
from ruffin&amp; 1111 otber 11111ll club, and
Eut·West pl'lllftd 390 points. beat·
In&amp; tbe ..-It at all tbe llbles wbere
Eut·
below
blm from rufl'ft•
apades
eitber
140p!118-level
or 178. In ~~r
.... both of 1111 Utile .._
A simple Utile play bJ South can . clublln dummy, and tbe peulty will ..
tum a bad result Into a near top at ooly be ·100 ~lata. We've wrltlell it be- ..
tournament plaJ. All be bu to do ta Jet lore, but it a lltlll IOOd advice: Plu ,
West will tbe first trick with tbe ·king' your play before pfaylna to tbe. first ·
of spades. Tbe defeaden can no looger trick. not later.
'

. dlfl!mlil. !;I

~'
lw.u
ru

Dllt

I

SC:UM.J.IT$ ANSWIU
I· IS"
Camera- Exlie- Robot- Pledga-: BIG EXAM
A good exampla o1 the power of poSitive th1nk1ng Is
when a storm closes schoOl on the d!ly of • BIG EXAM.·

w•

.._ 1111 .
,
~-,.

•
o .'

n

0 0

~

'"e

i1J Mutdlr, 1M -

Auto. for Sale

·---01-dook.
.,....,

•
• 114-1311711.
se Pels
for Bile ·

.,., 1 ~n h~ NF'~.

0 P;huaNna
dJ MOVII!: Tank (PO) (2:00)

1:00

lllr••••
....-. ...
...... TV; tiO ...........

12 - W[E.f:-

o

~~~VIE: Mr. -(PO)

l'lohor Homo Audio Vldoo ontorIii ~

I

dryrr.l1-1470'1.
PINNnt. 114cta 1111.' .
PICKINS FURNITURI
TIN Townll DUM Aaertmenlt.
Newt' filii
Elogonl Zbr, 2 ,_, 11,11 rq. ft. H o - tuPlmloPihlrtg. 112 ~·
1 112 boll!, CAICH, cllohwoohor, .lorrloho Rd.
- · "'•
clio_., piiJII- ' 2 poole; 0111304-171-1410. .
wllrr, l lnofudtd. 1!11111
Iii $311. ~4-311·7110. &gt; ; .
IIWAIN
Unlwlllol1td lp1. 4 IOOml t. AUCTION a FURNITURE.
btiJ;,~oroiiY loOilod. Rlf A ~lvo Sl., GIINpoUr,- A . _

0

ra n

SOW

Q

7:31(1) lenlord Altd lon
1:00()) MOVIE: Oruma ActMa
Tile lllvtir (2:00)
Cll 01 Mellock Matlock
defends 1 TV produCer,
framed lor murdering 1 talk
show holt Q
.
(I)
!I) WhO'• Tile loll?
Angela's naw rental property

1m n 1. • - 'fri.Hull •
11oo1. 121 HP, Ewlnnodt Englno,
oonti*ll tap, .... ~. \o
Clll.l.-.11111. . 7:00 p.OL

lnOW
-7.

e ill Ill ,....., fiUCI
(I) Calogo 8ullltbi!R
ln!Mtalr'-nt Tanlght
e(I) !I)
,._., ,.....,

W.gon~loyl,
IIIIo,
.....
JP!IOI~· .

· l i n . -·

Oil

0no bedJOOm, . upolllro. NlcL choir. Good aond., -

'O

TOWJIIPOEI
WIIHA
AD·

7:11(1)~1

Equipment

pr-.. . . .

lAW Ill. 317 -

, ilr, • - · JIO, ·~ ..,._ 114-441·1701.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

•

IJRIDQI

Ill Alilloll Altd eo...uo
i1J MIMI! VIer
tiD VldloCoulilry

1112 ....... Corio,- OM ·.....
dera,
new dual .....,.
Wlllldor, In
11100,
IOW7H317.
1m Fotd ,..,_......,

taiO. 11~

-

o ,

0

Fann

71

I"' ........ Sllf..!._...."'l "": cona.
t12&amp; - ""'

441-151

o
•

''&lt;7"-

1117 lllwiMkL KDX-10, lila
- " ~onllllo pJlor, 114-441- ;
1011 IIF - - 4173.
....... ~ ...noporl - . . . . .:
171 M " - dloo, A buoh hoo, 1M tton.- 3110 lour - r·
$!,110. 0wn0r wiN hnoo. 11f; 12.:100. ftrm. 1... Kamtakl 300·;
2111m
·foUr- $1,- 11nr,111-1111:
81

0_,.1 oloelrlo rolrlgon;IOf,
:"~vt~J. •:.rw:...~c:ll
uo. cond. 114-4411-3141.
1:10 I'll lor · Kon...,...
_.,
Duly ..........
-ion -77M117.
Wlohor/Dryor, $110. 1'llo :10 Inch
lloolrlo . . _ 1100. -11. 30 ,_ 1111: PIIIIIOOd, HEAP
vouatwsu~-ed Phonel1 ..
,-,
.. @OEI~"'I'Io
111114711 « 114.742-2431.
-·
...
., .... 11..,: 0""?

d.J;,O:-":''r.:!;

:::==~~~~, ~o~y,• burglar Is going to -

~

WIIHI Of
0 Nli't Court Q

Transportation

-7473.

- h • • • Mlddlopofl, Ohio.
1 onc1 2 bedroom tl;mot;lt 11oo 1 """" olllolonay,
uUtnloO pold, rohoronooa ...
qulrod, 104 IIJ2.2HI. f ·
Fwnlollld Eftlcllnay; 1141,
utKnloo pold, ohorl litlli, 701
Foullh, Golllpollo, 114 411 1411
.... 7p.m.
'

o

&lt;&gt;

0
NO

31 W. opl. 2 br.. 1 both. prlvoto
enc1oa1d petlo. CioN to
grooiry llo- l ohopplngcon·
for,
wllor,
•-,~,"" lrloh
p;o•ldod. ·1211/mo. ..,.. 114441.0Z13.
1
BUunFUJ, APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICII AT JACKSON
EITATES. 131 Joclcall! Pilla
fn;m $1a-_ Wllk .. , ...... a
movloo. Cllll14 111 2111. EOH.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie.
o .0

'10...::",...

Jl3l.

hooclbolrdo no lhd up .to 111.
110
dopOfOdft.
Olmt3II
wlh IP.
pn&gt;vtd
mi.Oloh
OUllulovlllo
Rd. Opon I A.M. IO I P.ll. Mon,
thN s.t. Call t14-44HII!n
AU1o Woohrr'o Ill; Eloctrlc
Dryor't, Sll; · Goo Dryer, Ulla
Now, ..., Eltolrlc !lonat'r, Ill:
oeo Rongo'a, •11: R~«'o

1

_ _Opponu~~,.nJty.;:,__ •

GIT MID FOil TAKING SNAP.

IHOI.

=

11~:"~4~•~·:~,·~~~~~~'~ :z;:.,:•k~.~~·:·:•d:.:b:·"":·~1obi=~·:::•J soc=.~Dop~Roq~·~·4~1;11~4~,.~04~1~1.;J~w~:..~~~':"~.a~to.~.,...;

21

'

0111

II)IIJ MICNII
Newattour

1117 ~~~- ,..,_.. aoo, 4 !
at II' ' ..-~ earid, . ....,..
-.
-v •

;::.,=..."""-121!

boloro 2:30p.m.
2 · - ..,..,
au •
- por - ·
,.._
''
SilO dtpooh, 304-17WOOQ.
2 tledroom aptL for rant. Clrpoled. Nloo -Ina. ~~~':"~~~lllblo. Cil1114-lll-

1173 Cl.,._ 121111, 3br lOIII
oloc. $7950. 1171 DoUohrr,
1ZXIG~tS bolh ucl 14,1150.

OIIO·vAu1='UIIItNG co.
NDDIMIInda lhlt . you do
1M IIJl I wlh ....... rou know,
anc1 · HOI' 'to •nd III!NWr
mall until,., ...,.
· · - I •thO......._,

l.wiiOO·SIOOpor-

T:C.;::'

TOIII-trlc. c.ii~'4 111 1127 =-~ ~-:'a1ion ol

•,..•,.t:~1t01ol;~':i,!""p.lc~:~~

'

.
.
=

111..12

' ·
211r, upolllro, 11ovo , rolrlg.
;::.. o~o:ii:.;.:;,. 2 .=....~ ~~~llot~O:...:J."~ ~~~"?...:-m &amp;:b~
L.rg1 room tddod on. Slir, $5D. roqulrtd. 114-44WMO. 1
Swl-, Llttd A " ' " ' - 314
month 114-1117..72L
·
Third 81. Ko-, Ohio, 114-

_.ra;

7•

Anl""*-

IUJ « Rlv.IM
1114 L Moln llrool, P-IOJ·
M.T.W.10:00o.m.lol:tl0 ,
p.m.. luncloy 1:00 to f:OO p.ro.
2121
.
.
p.icl
1um111n
ou
· qulnr,
arllnlll.
polntlnfl, IOJI~-~ rnllrl 11111o
327S, or

Household
Goode

.!:'a

::.!M
buldlngr.._

IIIHor notdtd Ia&lt; ftroi
Nonh Polnl So- - .
,..,.111ftlr 3:00.

51
·

f."· :"ln.

. ,.a•.. ,•oc-.-:--7.'"-~-:-:,.,.-:;Atduotd- 3br, NIICh, 2 blth 1
flmiiJ room on 1 1«1' lol. S.na
Hill lid. F~ City Mobil•
-..,......___
32 Mobile H O m e •
. for Sale

c:ont•.

.W711-2Ql.

Merchandise

.

i(J) Cll
1'1!1 .....aiM
lpartaCI.(1) e (I) CurNnl Alllllr

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
64 H.ay &amp;' G I
Sofoo ll1d cholro prlcocl fnim
$3&amp;~ 1o SIIIJ. T•- •10 oncl up
APIIfOI, 4000 - o f Hor. 304to •125. Hld1 aluda SUO to
$5111. Rocllnoro 1211 1o 117L
112""7 or 77H3IO.
Lompo 121 1o $121. Dlnonoo
'Conclnlonod mbttd hoy, 100 lb.
'lot ond up lo 141L Wood 54 Mlscellaoaous
- · '$10. Doll Cox, Polrlol,
Uobllo 1\amoo lor iolo "' ronl. llllilo w-1 chilrl 1211 to 17111.
Marchand lea
114-3~ .
Cllll14-112•74l'V.
Dooko ,141 up lo $37L Hul1400 A up, bUnk oomplolo a eubmll'llbll ..... ~~ Good mllod hoy, $1.00 IIIIo,
44 Apanment
wnh monro• I2U 1111!. up to oomp1111 wfth wiring, 4~ IOW'IS-7113.
for Rent
'31L blby $110-- - l o n l l , 1300. Nih, gciild illY lor oalo, :J04.jJ7WII1 or
- - - - - - - - - · -' 71•OrfirmboliIll,
oprlnp lull ·« lwln ooncl, liiM·'IU-:ZUO.
1'7&amp;.4001ai•I:OO.
oriil . . . - .
~~h.:'~~~,: :!:.!~~-~c::..:
lily ... - · 114-742-2013.
1141.
a, a, a 10
monond lhlnl culling hiJ.
...... OliO hoy. •uo poi lllle.
ill&lt; ' lorgo kllchln wllh-clry '031 • 114
·
-._!21,
1
111
18
PlluiiCM",
Cit .... OH. lt ......
hOOicoM ilduno -..:. No polL
ung nmo

=""'.,....,--=------:::-1-•

-rio.

na.;.

a

Instruction
REo-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
ALL Yord 8llot MUll It Ptld In COLLEGE, 121 Jock-. Plkt.
11M*4317 Reg No 11- 1112 Hamlnon Howe, 24x58.
- . DEADLINE: 2:00 p:m. Call
11-10558.
'
·
·
CO,OOO; 1111 F1lrmon1 24x52,
tho dly b t - 1111 td It 1o run. .;.;..;.;..;,;;;,
_______
1
5,000. Kllllugo Mol&gt;llo Homo
lundtY
1:00 p.m.
lor, KlnMigi, 011 114-441Frido¥.· ..... , dion • 2:00 18 Wanted to 00
1112.
p..,.....-y.
.
Solt't L,.., Clro,
culling, I :ldO::=::-:.,::-:o-;;:llor::-::w:::~h::".1:::1111:::..30:::-:,-:::cldll=!on.::,,.
-.
lrl..,..lng, 1100. 114-44&amp;-1411oftlr3p.m.
9 Wanted to Buy
llndoolplng, lrM ttllii11lor,
304-I'IS-2111.
For ...., 121110 mobile llomo, .
Junll """ wlh or whhoul
·
- ' \ ' '"""""'td on 1.1 ocro1o1
Coil Lorry Uvoly ....
DuiiiP Truok HIUII!IIo ~. II OC!go of lown. Aloo 1 ho\101
'wood, a Ollld, Hlul Ill oprtocl, on thO 101, In notd o1 ropolro.
.._A grovol. 114-2111 11214.
Llvo In ono ond '""' 1110 othor,
Pn 1110 qullo.,.,., -ion. - .1 Mllnl- a
$11,100. 114 441 om onor
Cloll Ptld. Col 114 1112 11057 or ·
plumblntl a .. . •
114 •• 2411.
- - clllmo .......... 114- FOr ltlo: 1872 Klrt&lt;wood 12111
MObile - . Mbr, rongo.
WoiUd To Bw: Plno - . Dyer 317.0111,cri14-:J51.1111.
11441&amp;-1117 ...... ,. Poulo
..
Doy
Cora
rofrla. W a 0, pluootumlthlngo,
4p.OL
.
Btlo, oHordtblo, ahll-. J1.F II,OCIO, 0.1.0. 114-441-3211.
- p.m.
2'"
I ,o.m. • 1:""10· MUll Btl· 1111 Cloylon 14d0
=-~=:'4-44H224.D&lt;op.lno 2br, AC llilr11na, '!Yfnlng,' on ron!
Employment Serv1ces
ltd blook In RIO oon Ill
WIR -n.,..
·moved. Frooh Cly lltokr"'fio.
A btMmontO, buJ 01 ocrop I14-44W340.
11
Help Wanted
lion. 114--176&amp;.
Troller tor Solo; 1m Govonor,'
WJI glvti plono In my 1... 70, 3bt, 2 bolh, IIYintl
holM to ~ner-. advenced room, al'plll. 17,100. ltC..381o
and edul ........ AlMa .tiiiCh l834.
choldlngoncl ,,...-""'· If"'" 33 Fanns for Sale
,_..., 114-H2~. ,
Aldo Moohtnlc, ._...,.. ,..
.,nd,"""' htn own k&gt;Oio.ln27 Aero Fon;;: 4ml . ...., town,
IIJ oppolnlmtnl only
llocktop Rd., oohool, mol~

..... -

o:=::

•u~

SchOols &amp;

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

-on ·

\JIJoyoaoiiiM. I10 411 ' 222•
51
HOUMhold
Country Mobllo H - Pork, •_ _ __!:Good=~
· ~·~-AOUII 33. N.th of P'I:N'Mror.
LIQ ,.,..... _.._ ...._ Call
. 114:8~-7479: .-~ .
RENT TO OWN
Top Guollly 8rlncl- .
49
For Laaaa
Llwlntl ....., ...... . . - . .
~~~~:;:-:.:~:-:::-~:-:- owl.tl IOOktr I:Uo...,.., dm;::F L
•--~ ·-·~ lo/4 cholrl 17.""!.':
. l bunk
or : -N
• - - - · COIIIplele $1......., Low
nlohtd oportmonl, 1221 PI' c11h prlcoo ovollllilt. YJ'RI
morilh, Cornir - . J .A Plno, FumMwo.Rl.14J,fmlloo.9Pon
Golllpollo. Ono bod,_.,, - · 7 dip 1 wool&lt;. ,. .... lhru 101. 1
::;.:
r:l::::! il.m. • 1 p.m., ''"'· 12 Noon • 8
-lrod. 111 411 1241, 11 ...,._ p.m. 114-4.46-3151.
44211,114-444-IUI
·
Wolorbtd, 1 au- olzo, lulloiH
For LooM: Sooond
Uilfur. mrH,_ A bol Ulca
nllhld apwtmanl,
par new, FYII aile ...., W n.n..
month. OV.rlooklna c11r fl!lrk, 11H111411.
Golllpollo. Two boci-11. Goo, Wlol~llouoo azou.IJ. licit IIJ
~love l Nlrigarll. P.I'0'4hfld . . .
flOOd oond. 1110, i1
No
......
Dopoilloncl · - " " ' " : : - - dliioiii 111,140. 11~
rociulrod.l11 441 1241, 11...,._
4421, 114 4 II a:JII.
53
Antlquaa .

ow-.

~

....;:.r-:...r-1.-i~~~rri-1 f t Complete tt.o chucklo quolod
V
by filling I!' tht missing word•
1
1
L.....I....,..Ji.-..L.~~-'--'· you develop from tlep No. 3 below.

w

•=

- · oncl w - oro ....,.

Mother of 881111n tHnS: 'We
hide valuables· In the bathwith all my kids th818'1

RUTHOG

Ill Top Canl
1:31 (I) Andy Gr1llltll
7:00 Ice-- ...... King

or,.~·~~~~·-=·~~~~··~·~~~~~~~.;.'~
·~
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;'T=========r:========:-1··~-=-~~·~··
· ~-------Announcements
11
Help Wanted
31 Homes for Sale
· ·~01:,.,bt~;.. •':1~ 1 !:,
46 Space tor Rant
® 1t10 bJ NEA. 1nc .
Cinllrlioo
lmmodlllo
-Inti 3 bedroom ronchor _.IIOd 114.041-1H1.
114-441-7075.
t .room oftloo lor ronl. $100 por ~=~~~~===;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiT;;;;~~;,~~~~~Rooldonlllt
Dooooll, R
o3 Announc:8!119nta
lor 1 po~~lmo LPN or Rtf. $77,000. mUll loll tl7,000, :104- In EHlrrn So- Dlotrlcl. Nlct, '!&gt;Om; All Ulllllloo lncludod. Clll
.~
Moto-""'--

lc-

IIRIIQ

~:-r.:-:.;"r=-r'ir-1

IIJIIe-llan

Holtl. l14-441-1110.
liMping .....,. wnh cooking.
Also lrollor opooo. All hook-llpo.
Co!l oftrr 2:00 p.m., :104-7'13-:::----:---=,.---,,-1 110,1' M-n
:::.,..,~'tr;ct!,~ .;:ovo~ s1lllp1no roomo, $100. Wllh
rolr~. ·a:wm::J:.
· uo dopooK, boonl · uoo. Alto ooro lor ol11
dorly. . R-onol;llo, In Pomeroy.

•

.

- ·~~
:..Q
IJII'IIIIIeriiD~

R-.la&lt;-.-,
monlh.
-.----..,----1 Sto;tlng
ol $120/ftiO. Gtll11
41 Houaaa for Rant
$200imo 1100 dlpool Mill
Crook Ril. Walrr tumitiiOd, 110.
441-2411 1111 1ar Duld.

~ G • L· I E

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EVININCI

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1G-The Daily Sentinel

~~Local

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Coolville woman

hur~

in crash

A Coolville · area ·woman was Injured In a two-car crash
Monday at 5: 15 p.m . In Chester Township at the junction of ·
. County Roads 26 and 25, accordi ng to the Ga!Ua-Melgs Post of
, ~ · the State Highway Patrol.
· Teresa L. Lambert, 19; Rt. 2. Coolville, was taken by
ambulance to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Lambert, driving a 1980 Buick LeSabre, was heading north ori
.,
C.R. 25 when she pulled from a stop sign and hit a 1985 Ford
Tempo driven by Chad A. Cook, 18, of 36436 Old Forest Rd.,
1, Pomeroy . Cook was driving wes t on C.R, 26.
.
Lambert was cited for failure to_yleld.

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;;· ~ · ---Area deaths~•

i~aul Myers
... "

:.~ PaulL. Myers, 75, of Sarasota.

;tl.a., a former Meigs County
§:!dent, died Monday at f
asota hospital.
..:. Born at Rutland on Dec. 29,
he was the son of the late L.
~- and Louise Myers. Besides hi s
:J1U1!nts, he was preceded in
odeath by a sister, Ruth Tinsley,
Sarasota, and a brother, Charles,
:Wilmington.·
• He Is survived by a sister,
l'tfarcla Denison, Rutland , and a
niece, Robeta Alexander. SaraJII)ta, Fla.
:· Burial will be In Sarasota.
•

:ul5,

~Sara

Ann Siders

,; Sarah A. (Stover) Siders, 82, of
Gahanna. Ohio, fonnerly of Mason
County, W.Va., died Monday, Jan.
~5. 1990, died at home foUowing
ID extended illness.
·
:- Born Nov. 28, 1907, in Mason
County, she was preceded in death
11Y hc:l' husliand, Leonard N. Siders,
illl968.
' She was a member of the
(:ounay Fellowship Free Will Bap(ist Church in Gahanna.
.• ·She is survived by three

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la delivery mqst be made.
, Wehrung also discussed the
sidewalk slip on .Uncoln Hill
lqcated In an area below A.R.
Knight's house. Wehrung felt the
$1lp could be fixed by raising up
tJie sldewaJk and placl~~&amp; blocks
llllder It to brace it. He also
dillcussed the area In front of the
· i!sed car lot across 't ram Super
~erlca where Ice builds up,
stilting that the lot must drain to
storm sewe.r .
: The meeting concluded with
!he presentation of a plaque to
~ane Walton, village clerk, who
fvlll officially retire on Jan. 22 .
Reed Wlll was also presented a
jllaque and a gold watch !o"r his
"ark With the village since 1955.

a

Stocks
.- Dall;r slock prices
~AI ol18:30 a.m. )'
JfrJce and Mark Smlth
"'unt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

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;6.rn Electric Power .. .. ......... 31\ii
~Tt.T .... ;.......... , .............. ... 42%
~~land

on ................ ........38-v,,

J39b Evans .......................... 13%
Channing Shoppes ............... 934
City Holding Co. .. .......... ....... 14
"deral Mogul. ................... 20%
GQodyear T&amp;R ........ ...........41'h
Heck's ............... ...... ..... .......
lteY Centurion ......... .. , ........13'h
Lands' End ................ .. ....... 19li!
J,J;mlted Inc . ........ .. .... .. ....... 34'h
Multimedia Inc ....... .. ..........85'h
ltax Restaurants ........... ..... .. 1-v,
Jtobblns &amp; Myers ............... .15'h
liii!OJJeY'&amp; Inc ..... ..... .... ..... ... .10'V8
lltar Bank ..... , .. ......... ........ ..19'\4
Wendy's Inti. ................... , ..
Worthington Ind ............... .. .22%

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Oh~o - Lottery

news briefs...- - , Firemen will accept... _,..eo_nti_nuecl___..tr_om....;pa;_g;_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--;-_ _

Continued from page 1
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital: at 2:07p.m. the Tuppers·
Plains unit went to \he Eden Ridge Road home of Erin Reltmire
and transported him to St. Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg; at
3:15p.m. the Pomer oy unit responded to call o.n State Street aild
took OrvUle HI!! to Veterans Memorial; and at3:46 p.m. the
Syracuse unit transported Doug Enoch to Veterans.
At 5:18p.m. two Pomeroy units were called tothesceneof an
al!tomoblle accl!lent on Flatwoods Road. Chad Cook was taken
from the scene to Veterans Memorial Hospita l for treatment
while Teresa Lambert refused treatment.
At 9:05p.m . the Pomeroy unit went to Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Health Care Center for Alva Newell who was taken to Veterans;
at 9: 42p.m . the Middleport unit was called to Pearl Street.for
Clarabelle Riley who was treated but not transported, and at
10: 32 p.m. the Middleport un it· went to the Pearl Street
resldenceofLincolh Smith who was taken to the Holzer Medical
Cenl!!r.
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Tuu!My; J...,.y 11, 1810

Pomaoy- Middlapot;. Ohio

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• John Stahl, longtime malnte. .Dc:e employee at the Meigs
blllnty Courthouse, Is now con-.
t~ toll45RhodesHatl, Unlverflty Hoapltal, Columbus. He
remalna In Intensive care al·
lboqh hl1 condition Is reported
~be ttablllzed. .
.

daughters, · Hattie Chandler of
Columbus, Bormie Simpkins. of
Kanauga, Ohio, .and Norma Jones
of Pataskala, O()io; . four sons,
Leonard Siders, Jr., of LondOn,
Ohio, the Re:v. Robert Siders of
Gahanna, and Donald Siders and
Aaron Siders, both of Columbus;
two sisters, Massie Parson of Pen'
nsylvania; and Mary Jane Gordon
of. Leon; dne brother, 1ohnnie
Siders of Leon; 22 grandchildren;
and 27 great-grandchildren.
Services will be Thursday, 2 p.m.
al the Raynes Funeral Home with
the Rev. Clovis Vanover. Burial
will be in the LeQn Cemetery.
Frie.nds may call Wednesday, 6
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Meigs among top 10
in slate on primitive · ·
weapons kill of deer
Meigs County registered
among the top 10 In the state In
the number of deer killed with
primitive weapons during the
season, Jan. 4-6, according to a
report !rom the Wildlife Division
ol the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.
·
In the county a total of 121 deer
were checked. Other counties In
the top len were Tuscarawas,
182, Ashtabula, 175, Washington
169, Jefferson; 152, Guerrisey,
141; HarriSO!l, 14Q, Belmont, 138.
Coshocton, 13.2, and Monroe, 128.
In Ohio ·a &lt;total of 4,794 deer
were bagged by hunte•s using
primitive weapons. Spor(Smen
hunted with singleshot muzileloading rilles of .38 calibre or
larger, muzzleloadlng shotguns
using a single ball, longbows, or
crossbows.
The deer longbow and cross·
bow seasons continue through ·
Jan. 31 statewide for deer or
either sex.

department, he added. Firemen
were In the process of preparing
~peclficallons for tile new tanker
"when we got this kick in the
teeth," he said.
The majority or residents
aththe meeting also Indicated'
they were dissatisfied with Ute
arrangement. " Racine's ans·
wered our fire calls for 50 years, "
said one r.esldent. "We don't owe
Syracuse anything."
Said another resident, " We
just assumed our money would
go to Raci ne, just like . we
assumed we could put ourtrust In

our trustees."
Shortly after It became pubilc
knowledge that Letart Trustees
had · signed a contract ·with
Syracuse Flre.Department fOJ50
·percent of the township's levy
money, a petition to reoa.ll two
trustees was circulated. Twentyeight signatures were gathered
on tM petition with "phone calls
from as many more wanting to
sign, " a resident said.
Forty signatures, which ac-

Fog moves into
By United Press lalernatlonal
ThlckenJng clouds fed by Pa·
clflc storms dumped -rain and
snow In the West Tuesday,
whltenlng ski slopes but snarling
tra-ffic, while fog rrioved Into the
nation's midsection and the mlctAtlantlc Coast amid thawing
temperatures.
After a bone-dry December,
the second storm of the new year
was moving Into California, the
National Weather Sl!rvice said,
bringing an 80 percent chance for
showers In the Los Angeles area
Tuesday night.
Scattered light rain and·drizzle
· began falling late Monday afternoon In northern California, with
rain expected to spread over the
region . .
In Nevada, a winter storm
itumpel1'61nches of snow during a
two-hour period Monday In the .
southern Nevada resort area of
Mount Charleston, 40 miles from
Las Vegas. State Highway 157
leading Into the recreational
area from the desert gambling ·
mecca was closed temporarily
while pollee and Nevada High·
way Patrolmen unsnarled traffic ,
jams caused . by disabled vehl·
cles. ·

Weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy Tuesday night,
with a low near 50. Chanceolraln
Is 20 percent. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday. with a chance of
showers and highs between 60
and 65. Chance of rai.n Is 50
percent.
Extended Forecas~
Thursday through Saturday
A chanc~ of showers Thursday
and Saturday, with fair weather
on F r iday. Highs will range from
45 to 55 Thursday , and from 35 to
45 Friday arid Satul-day. Over·ntght lows will be betweell35 and
45 early Thursday and between
25 and 35 Friday and Saturday
mornh\gs.

Turnpike of Ga_
l lipolis
Proudly,
Announces
The
.Return
· of

Bob Ross
Bob Returns To
1,'he 'furnpike Family As
New Car Sales Manager,
Bringing With Him
18 Years Experience
With The Ford Co.

. . .pital news

counts lor 15. percen~ of . the
Alit atandl, the recall petiiiDJt
tOWII.Ihlp'l Valeri ln. the Jut will DO longer be Circulated. .
general electiOn lor IQWI'IIOI', ·
It wu pointed out tbat the
were i-equlred lor the recall ptopoeecU5·35fireeoatradswlth
measure, It wu reported.
~ Racine apd Syracuae are lor
However, when the public three years. "Atleastone~IH
hearings began and the fire -comes u~ for election be!Drt
departments themlelve. bepn then," a resident polated out. ,
trying to compromise, the petl· • 'Let's Just remember tb!!D what
t!on was put on hold.
. •
we've gone thi'Q~Wh now."
Altho~~ah at least two reslde1118
UnleiB aomethln&amp; unforeseen
at Monday 's meeting were 'n happens, · Letart residents are
favor of pursuing the recall assured now of fire protection.
petttlop.' It was finally decided It • Ulrewlle, With the Racine Pewould be wller to walt to make partment categorized as · the
sure the 6}35 contracts are prim&amp;ey responder since they
signed. "SyraC)Ise has a legally will recelve the maJority of
binding colltnct for 50 percent of funding, -residents are · assured .
the pot," a resident said, "and that homeowner's .Insurance
could stU! decide they don't want rates won't Increase. These were
to give up 15 percent."
.•
, the main concerns of towtllhlp .
However, Syracuse Fire Chief reildents.
Eber Pickens said at lui Mon·Some residents are concernell
day 'spub!JcmeetingatAntlqulty hqwever that the ttll&amp;tees mtgbt '
that his departmettt was willing . retaliate against thoae who have
to settle lor. 35 percent. ')Jte publiCly taken a stand agalut
· Syr,a cuse Department was not · them &gt;In this matter, by, for
· represe11ted at last night's example, "refusing to grade my
meeting.
roa~." as a resident pointed out.

.- Bertha Right·
Pomeroy; . Goldie RoLuc!Ue Braley,
Enoch,
Alva Newell,

area.''

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nation's. midsection· .lues

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Pick 4
9274 .
of rain ' " pereenl. Tllunclay,
In low 5411. Chance of rain

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vC.t.40. No. 1 ?~

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2 Soctlono, 14 Peg• 25 Conti
A Multimedio Inc. N-opopor

January 17, 1990

Caperton pledges support for poultry fil'm
. The C!!St is expected to be in the people. This an:a has a lot .0 entice overview, demonstrated the com.
$25-35 miUion range. WLR, Inc., us with."
· pany's chicken process, from · the .
or which Rockingham is a subAory explained that the com- laying of eggs to the packaging of
sidiary, would finance the project pany is still in a sill· to nine-month . the products.
through a combination of cash ftow, decision mating process. Aftt:r
Misner explained the feed mixproposed complex would meet our bank loans and industrial develop- taking apjlroximately a yeat and a ture, temperature controls, and the
corporate objectives to'~ profi- ment bonds.
,
half to be in operation, the earliest market fQCUS!lS, which include
tably while remaining competitive
The new complex would in- the complex would be in opei'ati!)ll Hong Kong.
in our indusay. Tl)is complex cmue RockinBham 's chicken · is in two years.
WLR Foods is. engaged in fully
would place us much closer to production capactty by SO pcn:ent.
"We have been looking at educa- iruegrated turkey and chicken
some of our major markets anct to
"With chicken per capita con- tion, transportation and acces- production, processing, further
the mid-western grilin belt."
sumption predicted to grow from , sibility to the mid-west com belt, processing and marketing. Being
The company is looking for the 67 pounds iit 1989 to 77 pounds by and the availability of labor,'' Flory the eighth largest poulay procesnew complex to produce more than 1995, Rockingham intends to be ·said.
sor/further processor in the United
850,000 chickens a week working positioned. to meet the increasing
However, during the question- States,. WLR Foods reported
~nder a tw&lt;hshift operation. They demand fur chicken," Misner said.
answer period, and after Gov. revenues of $455 million for fiscal
need a IQtal of 337 poulay ·
Still in ihe exploraro,ry process, Caperton had left . .Flory said thai . 1989. Rockingham is ranked 18th
buildings in the specified radius,
. ,
the state was committed to help largest among chicken companies
inclucling the ~ons of Misner saict, "We like West Vtr·
provide better rQ8ds and bridges to in the United States.
hatcheries,
feedmill,
growout ginia. We have eni&lt;&gt;yed working
the area, which received generous · WLR Foods also includes
operations; processing plant, ren- with the state agenctes. We like the
laughter from the audience.
Wampler-Longacrea, Inc.
work ethnics arid we ·enjoy the
dering, storage, and transpOrtation.
Misner, through · slides and an

··Meigs _deputies probe B &amp;-E
A breaking and entering of the
John Marzuchi residence on
Carpenter Hill Road Is under
Investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department:
According to a report received
Tuesday evening by the sheriffs
department, thehomeownerhad
bee!\ away so the breaking and
epterlng was just now discoyered, although It Is believed to
. have happened sometime after
Chris !mas. Several Items are
reported mlsslqg from the home.
A two-velllcle .accident occurred on Monday O!l private
,· ~l;ll!z:ty , In ' ,1b~~£L~ areS:··,

Douglas F. Hensley, or Ch.esteF·,
hill, backed his 1977 Dodge truck
Into the front -of a 1985 Plymouth
owned l)y John Pape Sr . , Bas han
Road. Racine. There was light
damage to Pape's vehicle; no
. damage to Hensley's ..
Sunday at 3 p.m., the depart·
ment. took a report of another
two-vehicle accident In the Ra·
cine area. According to the
report, Sharon Wickersham, of
Route 2, Racine, was . backing
from her garage and did not see
pickup truck operated by Reid
Young pull Into the drive behind
her. ~ sj!g.!!.ac~ up, she struck

the front bumper of Young's
truck. The truck was not damaged. The tall" light on Wickersham's 19~7 Mercury Cougar was
broken. ·
Following his arrest Saturday
night following an accident on
County Road 25 near Meigs High
School, a 17-y,ear·Qid West Vlrgf.
nla juvelllle was .taken to the
Musklngum County Juvenile
Detention Center. He was re•
turned Tuesday morning by·
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell for a
court liearlng.
Following the court hearing,
the juvenile, who walvedextradt., &gt;
tlon, was released to the West
VIrginia State Po.llce. He was
wanted on two charges of auto
theft In Logan County, W.Va .
On Saturday afternoon, deputies arrested 32-year-oid Vicki
Payne on a bad check charge and
palgn, the Republican candidate also a bench warrant from the
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP!) must be able to make the case for Meigs County Court for failure to
Hamilton County Commissioner
the line against new appear In ·colitt: Payne · ·was
holding
Robert Taft II, whom Republican
leaders hoped to steer toward a
ta)&lt;es, " said :Taft. "How can conflnc¥1'to the Meigs County Jail
George Volnovich say 'Read my pending a court llearlng.
. ,
lesser statewide office. entered
lips' afte~ caiUng for these tax
the governor's race Tuesday !lDd
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
· threw the g_a untlet ·a t the feet of
Increases In the past• He can talk that Payne's brother, Br .~nl
his GOP opponent, George
about taxes all he wants, but his Chapman, has been clled to
record . will destroy · his Meigs County Cpurt for hlnde•·
In flames when they arrived. Pomeroy Fire Chief · Voinovtch.
HOME DEsTROYED BY FIRE - The
Taft.
48,
was
joined
by
his
. lng and obstructing an ofllcer by
credibility
.
DanJI)'
Zirkle
reports
no
one
Ia
11ure
what
ciwaed
one..tory frame home of the Marion. Wat1011
lieutenant
governor
running
"Wi;!
cannot
l!l!nd
a
candidate
.
giving ·false Information as to
the
fire
'to
slarlln
the
living
room.
No
one
wu
· lamUy on Old Che~~ler Road. was dl!l troyed late
Into
battle
wtthout
any
weapons,
name and location. Chapman Is
mate,
Franklin
County
Commls·
home at the time. Monetary loii8C!II have not been
Tul!lday manioc by fire. Pomeroy flremea were
stoner Dorothy Teater, In filing
and George Volnovich, unfortu- also to appear In court.
determined. The family lost everything, Zirkle
eallecl to the ~eene at 11:14 a.m., but &amp;be home,
The theft of a Troyblll tiller
nalely, Is a man unarmed," said
nominating
petitions
with
the
reportll,
and
there
wu
no
lnsuruce.
which was owned by Larry -Hudson, was enguBed ,
.
stolen !rom Karen panlels,,Dexoffice of · Secretary or State Taft.
Questloned ci0$Ciy by repor- ter, Is also under Investigation.
Sherrod Brown.·
· He not only created a primary ter&amp; on the Issue, Taft said state Daniels reportP.d that· the Iiller
fight, against the wishes of many revenues are growing by $500 · was stolen within the last month
top 'Republican officials, but he million a year. "I don't see any from an outbuilding near her
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI) I'll be talking a lot about (In makers to make Ohio a leader In
fired
a broadside at Volnovich,
need to raise taxes In the residence.
Reaction to Gov. Richard Ce- campaigning): education, job conflict resolution, care for the
future," he said. But
The 's heriff's department was
foreseeable
leSte's "Let's stick with It" State development, eeonomlc growth addicted and elderly, education saying the former Cleveland
mayor cannot be believed on the he declined to flatly rule out any not! !led Monday that the cross
the state message Tuesday and drugs."
·
and manufacturing and
Issue of taxes and Is an Invitation tax Increase between 1991 and . which had been stolen recently
wai Jow-key, Democrats ,agreeCelehrezze would not say he employment.
1995, when ·he would be governor from ' the Faith Gospel Church,
to
"disaster" for the party .
Ing Ohio Is headed In the right shares the exact same goals for
"II was a wish list with very .
If elected.
·
.• Long Bottom, was recovered
·
"When
George
Bush
says
'No
direction but Republicans saying Ohio as Celeste, but said If few specifics," said Rep. JoAnn
!eels
Monday evenlng. Mr. and Mrs .
Stetner
said
Volnovich
new
taxes.'
you
know
he
means
the governor's goals are not eiected he 'would havetoevaluate Davidson. R·Reynoldsburg. ·"It
that the last two state budgets Chester. Muridry, Reedsville,
It,"
Taft
told
a
press
conference.
specific enough.
each area of concern as he goes was his swan song."
"When George Volnovich says · have Increased by 20 percent found tl!e cross lying, undam"Ohio Is on the move, and the along.
· Citing bills on solid waste
'No new taxes,' hold onto your aplece and •'what we need now Is aged, on the lower edge of the
·.keYls to keep It on the move, "
''Each lea~er puts his or her dl~posal and recycling of trash,
Continued on page 10
Reedsville Cemetery.
wallets."
said Attorney General Anthony own set of goals In place," he House ·Spealter Vernal Riffe Jr.
. "We have anticipated a prim·
Celebrezze, a fellow Democrat said.
said many of the Items Celeste
ary
fight right from the begin·
wbo hopes to SUfCeed Celeste
In his final State of the State discussed are already being
ning,"
said Voinovich. "There's
:next year. "He hit on four_areas address, Celeste challenged law- dealt with by the General
going to be a primary (contest) ."
Assembly:
.
.
"It looks like Taft and Teater ·
The Wheelersburg Democrat :
have lost their grip,' ' said Curt
acknowledged the unemploy·
Steiner, a Voinovlch camplilgn
The Gajlla-Melgs Post of the State' Highway Patrol
ment compensation trust ~und
aide. "W.ben you start the cam·
InveStigated an "Injury" . accident at ·4: 16 p.m. Tuesday In
"needs some work on It," which
palgn with a negative attack,
Meigs
County, on SR. 7, In Salisbury Township, at the
Celeste suggested.
that'i
a
~lgn of panic." ,
Intersection
of CR. 1.
"In 1989 . ... we passed our
Taft
said
tha:t
during
his
tenure
.
Troopers
salci
Kimberly K. Eblin, 17, Rt.1, RutlanCI, driving a
Ct&gt;LUI\fBUS, Ohio CUPil - · Industries.
fourth straight balanced
as
a
countY,
commissioner,
th~
1984
Olds
Omega,
headed east on CR. 5, pulled Into the path of a
Gov. Richard Celeste challenged
And In what appeared to be a budget," the governor told a joint
commission
has
lived
within
Its
1989
Chevrolet
Celebrity,
driven south on SR. ? .by Laura L.
.the Ohio General Assembly Tues- final formal salute to the law- legislative session. "Let's stick
budget rather than Increasing
Sweet,
24,
Clnclrutllti.
There
was heavy damage to both
day to join him In setting the makers, he gave thef!! credit, with it.
the
.sales
or
property
taxes.
The
vehicles.
. "In 1989 ... we enacted compre·
•· ··" stage lor Ohio to lead the nation naming apecllli:: names, for var·
only tax Increases.• he said, were
Eblin, who suffered minor visible Injuries, was taken to
by the end of the century In lous successes of the past.
henslve education reform. Let's
levied
by a vote of the people.
Memorial. Hospital and treated but not admitted .
Veterans
.employment ud production, ed·
"I appreciate the relationship stick with 11.
But
Taft
said
Volnovlch
sup.
The
patrol
cited ~blbt for failure to yield the right or way.
"In 1~ ... we lnltlatec:i essenucation, care lor the elderly and we've enJoyed, when we agreed
ported
a
tax
increase
at
the
local,
till! reform to provide more
addiCted, and conflict resolution. and even when we dl8agreed," be
in'home
•s ervices for our older state or federal level in ".no fewer
· "We're lieaded In · the right said. '
.
than nine Instances aver a
citizens. Let's sUck with it.
direction," Celeste told a joint
The 35-mlnute message, Inter·
period."
five-year
Theft Or ~ .1987 Ford Thunderbird owned ' by ·James Mills,
"In ·1989 ... we created a
seillon of til~ LegWatw:e ill his rupted only 10 times by applauae,
Pomeroy,
remalnl uader investi1at1on by the Pomeroy Pollee
ke acculll!d Voinovtc.h Of twice
cabinet-level voice to tackle the
e{ghth and final "State of the wu rec.lved routinely by tbe
Depal'trlliDI.
•
'
'
tougb cballenge of addiction," · supporting a Cleveland Income
State" addresi. "Let'·s atlck With audience, which for the first time
.
StoiC!il
trellll
the
Mills'
driveway
tit
250
Union
Ave. about 1:30
~
~a~r
sa&gt;'lng
In
;1981
he
would
said Celeste. "Let's stick with
In memory, failed to flll the seat's
It."
.
a.m.
TueldiY,
the
vehicle
was
recovered
a,tl!:
3'1
p.m. lut night
not
aak
for
more
mODC!)':
support·
lt."
Tbe governor recalled . the lor a goveraor's address In the
on
Powelra
Super.Valu
parking
lot:
·
'
·
·
·
1883
lncre~
in
the!
atate
lng
a
"He fared pretty well,'' Senate
challenges that laced him when Hotlll! chamber .
inCOrlle
tax
and
oppo.tq
Ita
Pollee
repoclllthat
the
car
was
spotted
by
a
sheriffs
deputy.
he took oflke In 1983, particuCeliiiU! received a prolonee:ct . President Stanley Aronoff, R·
and calUng for a federal
The engine wuatlll hot when nfflelals arrived on the acen:e. The
larlY a buge state dflflclt, cl01lng s~lna ovat,IOD at the end, but Cincinnati. aald of Celeste's repeal;
c..Ia being checked for fingerprints, police report.
tax
hike
to
IJalallee
the
budpt.
.factories, record unemplb)'llltRI some ·oblervers lhoqht he two-term accompllabmenta.
,
Alao
lrivestWated by Pomeroy pollee Tuesday was an
"Wh-11
Gc!orp
VciiDovlch
rec"From a nat IDDal perspective, he
and a crumbling education tacked Ida custolnal')' oratorical
ognized
that
.theft
Ia
a
u.d
lor
a
·
accident
near tile -Intersection of East Main ind Coun Street&amp;.
ayrhnn.
.
fire. "This tsa't -arUy the was very amart to leave the
· tu lncreue, be' • had the cour·
Clareace f)'IUIII. ftaclae, w• ll'avellng eut In bli truck 011 Eaat
He claimed that b)' using the place for a pip rally,'' aid Sen. people feeUng good."
age
to.
~·k
the
cltlzeaa
for
It,"
Main
when Eatb~lla Powell, Long Bottom, pulled from a
AlthoqbnoUnatherewerefew
"three cardiDal principles" of Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton,
replied
Steiner,
pointing
out
that
parking
place Into the rear pasaenpr llde or the Frank truck.
self·rellance, ·· Innovation and "but lt'1 been llaed lbat way· specifiCS In the lpeeeb, Aronoff
Teater
alto
oppoaecl
repeal
of
the
Thete
wu
moderate damaJe to the truck Uld llabt damaae to
nevertheleaa admitted, "He
cooperation. tile atate estab- before...
state
Jnrome
tax
bike
becau•
thll
Powell
vehiCle
on the driver's aide troalfender. Mrs. Powell
Jisbecl a baiiUicecl blldpt, In·
The IOWrnor aid Ohio' a awlft touched on the a me Issues · 1
abe
feared
a
·
1011
of
local
wu
cited·
for
failure
to yield the rllbt, of way.
·
lttated education refol At and ·recovery wu believed to be out would .have touched on."
gove~nrn,ntmopey.
"He'll be a bard act to follow,"
' Cc'11hlnued on page 10
bretlgbt about a re1urpnce In of lila realm of poulblllty In 1913,
''In a general . election cam·
Contlnlll!d
oa
page
10
till automcl\llle, ateel and other
Continued on Plfe 10

PQE&amp;IDENT'&amp; DAY
I&amp; JANUJ\~QY 18
AT PEOPLE£ ·BANK·
,

Wedne~day.

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

CoPY,rlghted 1110

[.ottery numbers

.

•

at
of the Rijl\ey, W;VB., High School forts and ~ management to
to moet rept 1eutatives from ·the , ~ chu:tens of the highest
Rock:iugluun Poulay; Inc. Joining quality ·then we can't come to this
the 111!8 r'elidenll was West Vtr· area."
· .
ginia Gov. Gaton Caperton.
·
"You are the key to making this
The Vupnii-beaed poulay com- wort. We need to wort ·to show
.JWIY is looking at a possible site in this company lhat we want it here,"
Raveitswood to locate a new Rock· · Caperton said. ''This is a real
~ham Poulll)', Inc.; integntred partnerShip witb muwal benefits.
chicken production complex. This
"I pledge my full support of the
would crste up- to 800. jobs for governor's ofllce and the state's
people in i 35-mi.le nditis.
. · , ecollOOiie cle~~ent . ~ ~
· ''\Ve aJe finding that we are saris- this a real ~~ O!pertOn confying ourselves with Jackson eluded. ,
COIDity," said Douglas L. Aory,
The OOiripany is looking., for
chief oJ)erating officer of WLR families to join the company in

tng 46 degrees: In •Missouri,
Motorists Ignored chalri and dense _log advisory was lifted
Kansas Oty reporte&lt;! 55 degrees
snow-tire . warnings !lnd, at 0ne .after several hours lor northern
and
St. Louis was also warm at
l!oint, as many as 300 vehicles and east-central lndlllna where ..
53.
were stalled along the snow- visibilities had been reducect to
Patchy fog also cOvered east· ·
covered roadway leading Into the less than one-quarter mUe.
ern Pennsylvania, ~New
6,000-foot mountain recreational
Fog was blamed for a ·seven·
vehicle pileup on Interstate 70 Jersey and Delaware ~night,
and ski •rea.
with lows In the upper~ ·
The highway was reopened · near Knightstown, Ind., that
High pressure dominated th~
late Monday with warnings drlv· killed an Indlanilpolls couple Jate
South, glytng the region partly
ers would .b e ticketed for falling Monday. Hancock County sheto obey chain and snow-tire riff's officials said Gerald cloudy' an4 tnUd weather.
Temperatures ranged from 46 .
requirements.
Greene, 62, a!ld his wife, Viola
Greene, 52, died when tlie lead degrees In Jacks.onville, Fla., to
To the north, a Pacific cOld vehicles approached a bank of 51 In Atlanta and 70 In Miami.
front bringing rain swept ashore thick fog and their · drivers
,After a daptp day of flurries
jn Orj!gOn Monday night after a braked too fast, causing the
and drizzle, clouds broke over
cloudy · day with only a · few chain-reaction accident.
NI!W England early Tuesday,
sprinkles.
~nging clear skies In Provl·
In northern nunol$, dense fog
An upper-level disturbance en· creatctd hazardous conditions for dence, where temperatures were
tered Oklahoma, north Texas, motorists In the Cblcago metroIn the mid 30s.
and parts of Arkansas and politan area, reducing visibility
Louisiana Tuesday., bringing a and creljtlng slick .road condl·
chance of Isolated evenbtg showtlons. The temperature held at 39 ·. , . CLEVELAND (UP I) _ Man·
ers and thundershowers .
degrees
and NWS forecasters
day's wlnnlrig Ohio Lottery
A storm centered over the
said a "moist south flow over
numbers·
southwestern United States procold
iround"
caused
the fog to
· PICK-3
duced scattered snow over the develop.
western and northern."m01p1talns.
511.
.
Winter thunders!Qrms devePIC!&lt;-3 ticket sales totaled
of New Mexico while tog · loped early Tuesday In south·
$1,172,862.50, with a payoff due of
shrouded the Texas and Loulsl· central Illinois along a cold front,
$1,450,212.!50.
ana Gult Coast early Tuesday.
causl11g dangerous lightning and
· PICK-4
. Fog also caused problems In some brief heavy ralu. Unsea·
7674.
Illinois and Indiana, while south sonably warm temperaturesc()n·
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
to Missouri skies were clear and tlnued throughOut the state, With
$220,t73, with a payoff due of
temperatures held up Into the Pear~. In wesu;rn llllpols, reach~1.~00.
50s, the weatl)er service said. A
.'

~ · Taft

'

a

rdes petition·for

Ohio governor's race

•

'

We Invite· You To Meet Our New
President (f1 CEO ...

Reactio~ .

JOE ELLiroN

low-key to_Celeste's talk

ot ,

And

·Local news briefs--

•.• ' 11

••

JOin Us In 'J1lankirl8 Our Qelinf18
' . President (f1 CEO :,..

JAME~

.

H.

Gov. Celeste. gives last
'state-of-sttite' message

.

'

LEWI~
.

'

At· An Open House, Thursday, January -18 .
From 7:00 ~ 9:00 p.m.
·In The 'Peoples ·Bank Lobby
Point PleaSant
.Program at 7:00 p.m.
.

I~

.

WELCOME!

MEMBER FDIC

'

.'

Driver injured in mishap

Police· probe theft of automobik

MASON • POINt PLEASANT • NEW HAVEN

(

726

Foods, Inc. "But the most impOr· · l)uildil)g hatcheries, breeOO' Jtouses
rant aspect of aU this is you. If we and pullethouses.. , .
· can't find enough inrerest in a 25- . "What we need to do is expand,"
More than a thousaitd people to' 35-mile rildius • people willing said Dr. Gene Misntt, president of
croWded $ng the wall&amp; and aisles · to put in their time, money, and ef- Rockingham Poultry, Inc., ''This

. 7f:J"

- Charles waY,Findling, and Flo

Pick 3

· MARGARET CALDWELL
OVP News Staff

' ~
:

,,

· [VEQYONE

'
, ...... Memorial

"Are we goillg to stick taptlter U
thlllll like that sbould start to
happen?" Ute resident ukecl.
It wollld appear tbat raldellta·
are going to tr)' to atlck _together
liy continuing their publiC meet·
IIIIJ on a bi-monthly basil.
Committees of re1ldellla WUI.tao
.he lonned to at lind trut•'
· meeibtp as regularly as poul.·
ble, ·wtth those committees to
report back to the . public . •
1
meetbtgs.
The first committee appointed
Monday night IJICiucles Carrie .
·Roush, her daughter-in-law, also
Carrie Ro\1111, and Mae.Durst:
The trustees are alio be Invited
to the. public meetlnp With the ·
first one scheduled for 7 p.m.
Feb. 12, at the D&amp;R Tackle Box.
·"If notllingelse baicomeoutof
all this this," said Gary Jpe
Wolfe, who conducted Monday's
meeting· along with Luda .(Sug)
Anderson, "at ieast the trustees ,
have learned that we're con··
cerned abOut what goes on In our

''

-~

.........

..
l

··-· ·-~

-

...

'

..·~

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