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w. V•.

Ohio Paint Phu•nt

21. 1990

Marauders ·
lose makeup
tilt, .94·69

Congress must rewrite farm .
policy ·during next jew .monthS
·BJ CIIAJU.BII ' · ABBOTT
resources.
While there Is dlsagreemeai on
UPI hrm 1!'.411111'
"Tbe farm bill needs to bal· environmental tssues. there Is a . ·
WASHINGTON - Coagress ance the Interests ot farmers and general consensus on Capitol HIU
took a dramatic step In 19111when conswtlers,'' says Ellen Ha~ .
and among farm groups to
It told farmers to control erD&amp;ioD leader ot Public Voice tor Food
continue the direction of the 19115
as a condition for getting crop andHealthPoUcy .
law, whichtriedtolncreaseU.S.
subsidies. Public concern over
Some farm leaders, however, competitiveness ln. the world
. food safety and cluimlcal re- tend to view outsiders as hostile market while protecting farm ·
sidues may put more restrictions Intruders who do not recognize
Income.
on the agenda this year.
the sategu11rds farmers already
In his first major policy speech
During the. next · several employ or who want to imp081! of this year, President Bush said
• months Congress must rewrite unrealistic standards.
he wanted "market-oriented "
U.S. farm policy, a task that
Tile 1985 farm law forged the farm pollcles that allOw produc·
often turns Into a complicated ftrst major link between farm
ers more flextblllly to decide
what to grow. " Agriculture se.,
ordeal. This time, lawmakers l)rogr11ms · and environmental
h11ve to renew the feder11l safety goals. It said l11rmers would lose
cretary Clayton Yeutter was
net tor farmers while taking federal· benefits if they failed to
expect~ In E"arly February } P
environmental :c oncerns Into ac· practice'· conserv11tton or If they
provide the details of how to ·
count ,- and dO It at lower cdst converted wetlands or highly
achieve those goals . •
than current t•w.
·
.
~rodlble land to cropland.
;Farmers have compfl!lned that
II will be the first comprehen·)
they are locked Into growing the
slve overhaul of •far[D .'policy ·
There have been sunesttons same crops - at the highest
MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
a$&amp; cash prize from the OhiO.Valle)' Pabllalllnl
since
1985.
.
•.
•
for
·•.Congress • to 'Implement jloaslble yields - because they ,
farm, featured b)' the Melp SoU &amp;ad Water
Co. Leave your name, addrella and telepbone
Events
such
as
last
year's
Al;ufifrther
safeguards · 11galnst would lose ellbiUty tor farm
number with your card or Je&amp;ter . . No telephone
ee-rvatloa Dlalrlct, Is located somewhere In
scare have. focused attention 'on grou1¥tjv11ter conta:mtn,atlon by benefits If they exper!rtlent wltb
. Melp Coualy. lndlvldl!ala wishing to participate
calls will ·be 1\CCepted. All conlellt.enlrles lbould
farming practices and the·use of farm chemicals. Lawm11kers . other croPII.
·Ia the wee!IJY contest may do so by guessing the
he tumed In to the newspaper office by t p.m. each
agrlculturlllcbemlcaJ~. Theagrl· ' also 'are looking at pi-opoSills to
A landmark· National Refarm's OWller. Just mall, or drop off your guess lo
WedJiesday. In case of a lie, the wlnaer will be
cultural community ·still ts cop- revantp limits on residues In search Council report made tM.
chosen by lottery; Next week, a Gal Da Co(lnly
the Gallpolla Dati)' Tribune, 823 Third Ave.,
·· food . .•The White House has same point last year In atgulng.
farm will be featured by the GaiDa SoU and Water, lng· with the fallout. " i.
Gallpolls, Ohio, t5831, or the Dall)' Sentinel, 111
. " It's about food and pestlcfdes proposed 'a sqrnewliat flexible farm program rules prevent
Ceurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win
Conservation District.
·
and related to that, farm,lng "negligiJ)lt! ris)t" standard. En· farmers ' from adopting alterna·
practices, which bas merged Into ·vtronmentalists !avo~ a standard live agriculture techniques, such
overall environmental ,coni:erns of a one In 1 mUllan risk of c11ncer : as crop rotations· or less use of
about agriculture," a spokesman over a llfPtlme.
chemicals.
for one farm organization said
recently In ,describing . the. lm·
pact.
"It was akin to on.e
GALLIPOLIS - 'The Gallla able through Gates McDonald
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UJiii) snowball
that was thrown and
County Farm Bureau member- Company with basic information Food prices outpaced lnfldtion In
gr~w
Into
· · 11 very larg ~·.
ship call!palgn Is In full swing. 'and consultlon available at no 1989.
.
. '
snowman
..
"
.
. ,
. For the next few weeks, thE' cost
Allan l..i,nes; agrlculiural econConsumer
11nd
environmental
·
membership committee will be
Discounts on automobile and omist at Ohio State University,
have·expressed
an
inli~D·
.
groups
· working to secure new members : property Insurance t!)rough Na· · says grocery prices rose 6
lion
to
try
to
shat)e
the
new
farm
and remind current members to
tionwh!e Insurance Company Is percent, . the largest Increase
policy law so thai It 'responds to
pay their dues. .
·
available for Farm Bur!'au slnce .1981. General inflation rose
their concerns about food safety
Glenn Graham, membership members. C&lt;Jverage when oper· · about 5 percent durimr the vear.
and protection of natural
chairman, reports that new atlng farm equipment Is par t of
members are joining because of the ml'mbersl)lp package in·
: the many benefits IIVailable to eluded when a member joins, as
·
members.
Is the Property Protection Re·
Benefits Introduced In the past ward Program which offers a
J~~mi'S E . Wltherel~ Jr., Phylll.S lyn Boggess to.Timothy Frazier,
few years Include savings up to $500 reward to anyone witnessing
J.
Witherell to James E. Witherell · Caroline Frazier, Parcels, Ml·
50% at 20/ 20 Vision Centers. a felony on a member's property.
Sr.,
Helen F. Wttbeiell, L325 A. ,
nersvllle.
Discounts on the Balkamp line of
For more Information, call the
Margaret Belle Weber, Roger
Salisbury.
parts are IIVaJlable at NAPA Farm Bure11u office at N!00-333All at prlj:ea so low vo,u won'f believe your..,e yesl
'
Paul
Phillips,
Diana
F.
Phil·
C.
Welsll. Ruth Welsh, John M.
dealers. Travel services through
1944, or membership chairman
Ups to /&lt;1\Jerta Robertson, Lots
Welsh, Anna M. Welsh to James
New 2· Pc.
the Member Travel Plan provide
Glenn Grah11m at 446-1148. ·
31,
34,
38,
ScipiO.
Keesee
,
Linda
KE"esee,
Parcels,
special rates for members.
Early American
. Other members of Board of
Ken Trak aka Ken Trak Gas &amp;
Rutland.
.
Feld Drug Company provides
'I'r11stees are Paul Butler, Vickie
liv. Rm. Suitt
Oil to LE'nvlllel R. Harman, Ma· ., Leona~d E . Dalley, Jr. to Ken·
excellent servlcek and prices on
Powell, Shenle Burnette, John
bel J. Harman, RIW Interest, · neth Kerns, Deloris Kerns, Par·
prescription and non .
Carmichael, Bill Fadely, Jeff
Rutland.
eel, Lebanon.
·
prescription drugs, plus other
Halley, Merle Howard, and John
RobertS.
Montgomery,
Aretta
.'
Edna
Coo!)!!r,
dec''d.;
by Atty.,
health care Items. Help with
Jackson.
M.
Montgomery
to
Jay
Hall,
Jr.
,
tJomer
E
.
Cooper
dec'
d.,
A!fida·
Worker's Compensation Is availvld, Salisbury.
· Lillian Marlene Hall, Pt. Lot, Le·
tart.
Edna CoOper, dec'd., to Jeffrey;
r;t
Continued from D·1
Robert Russell, dec' d., to Doris B. Shanlt; Wanda Fay Shank, SaJ.
----------:.---~ , E. Barlow, Richard L. Russell, lsbury.
·
"'
federal and state regulations are causing many of ·them
Maurice G. Russell; Kathryn L. r Brenda Sue Vickers. Robert
wblch discourage people from (volunteer technicians) to give
Evans, WU!Iam H. Russell. Jack
Dale Vickers to Tommy Potts,
up their services to our communi· · R. Russell, Alicia A. Bellant, cert.
becoming or continuing as emerParcels, Salem.
gency medical technicians 1~ · ties," which· "creates a danger·
Albert H. Ottenweller to .Ohio
of Ttans. , Salisbury. ·
ous situation for rural resl·
m11ny rural communllies.
Doris E. Barlow, eta!., Richard
Bell Telephone Co., Ease., Salls·
"Increased hours of training dents," the delegates said.
L. Russell. ellll., Neva F. Russell,
bury.
eta!.·, !ofaurice G. Russell, eta!.,
Fred . M~ Priddy,
Barbara
Freda
G.
Russell,
eta!.;
William
H.
Priddy
to
United
States
of
'Continued tr.om D·1
Russell, eta!. , Marlap R. Russell,
America, 3 A., Rutland .
.. Phillip F . Will, dec' d ., to Mary
eta!., Jack R. Russell, eta!., Alicia
try Is parUy to blame for the Immediate danger. She said,
A · Bellant, eta!., J&lt;alhryn L.
W'. Kilpatrick, Atfldavlt , Ches-·
Increase.
Eva'ns, eta!. . Glenn E . Evans, etal.
t er.
however, that the General As·
Initial claims In December sembly may have to be asked for
to KathrynL. Evans; Glenn E .
Norman M. Hysell, dec'd. , to
rD&amp;e by a whopping 230 percent In
a supplementat appropriation to
Evans, Parcels. Salisbury.
·Dora F. Hysell, Affidavit. Ches·
Lorain. Toledo had 8,t00 more furnish between 1()0 and 200
ter.
, James Drew Webster; 'Betty
ftrst-tlme clatins than the year employees to handle the in·
Jane Webster, Jed J. Webster to
Oris L: Frederick, ·dec' d., .tobefore to lead the list.
creased claims.
Betty Mae Morton, Junior Ed·
Jean L. Frecterjck, ·Affidavit,
Other clUes where Initial
ward Preston, Pt. Lot, Pomeroy . ctiester.
. ' ·
·
OBES has 1,S83 employees In
claimS more than· doubled were lts·fleld offices, less than h11lfthe
Richard B . Payne, ,.Sherry L.
,Oris L. Frederick, dec'd. , to
Bucyrus, Manstleld, Defiance, number It had In 1984.
. Pay,ne to Eugene Triplett, Karen
Jean L . . Frederick, Affi&lt;Javlt.
Lancaster, Canton, BellefonR.
Triplett.
5
A.,
Sutton.
.
·Chester,
· ·'
S11unders said the federal go·
taine and Ottawa County. Sou· vernment, which provides all of
Gl11n L. Hensler, . dec 'd., to
Addle W. Norris, C11rroll R ..
theastern and central Ol!io were· OBES funding, Is sitting on $100
Eula B. Hensler, Affidavit, Sut·
Nor~ls to Carroll R. Norris, Ad'
the most stable, according to the mntion Which ltshould distribute
ton.
die W. Norris, 15 A., Syracuse.
OBES.
Margie makeman Babcock, C.
Nora D. Cassady · to Mark
among the states' unemploysaunders said the unemploy. ment agencies. She could not say
Boyd, Tammy Boyd, .87 A., 01· .Christopher Bsbcock, Bonnie Bla·
ment compensation trust 'und
how mucllls owed to Ohio.
l"e.
keman, Deborah Blakeman to A.
bas $727 million and Is not In
Paul W. Mayo, Jacquelyn Mayo .Lewis Schabow• J 0 hn w. Schabow,
to ·Randall E. Zeisler, Katherine · Parcels, Sallsbulj~tpio.
M. Zeisler, 1.005 A., Columbia.
. R. Lewis Schabow. Nancy L.
Schab&lt;iw to John w. Schabow,
' William Dennis Grimm. Jean
Lynn Enney Grtinm to Wayne · Carolyn A. Schabow. Parcels,
James Grimm, rarcel, RUtland.
Salisbury/Scipio.
',
CHICAGO !UPil - Retail In December, rectangular baler s
Bury! E . White, Evelyn H.
Marilyn S. Hubbell to John W.
sales of farm tractors were lower up · 31.8 percent and forage
White to Gary E . White, Cather·
Schabow, Carolyn A. Schabow,
In December compared with the harvesters up 68.6 !)!!rcent com- lne C. White, 80 A., Rutland. .
Parcels, Salisbury/Scipio.
same month one year earlier and pared with December 1988.
Charles A. Boggess, !lr .. Eve.
were down slightlY ·ror the entire
For the entir e year. self·
year. · the Equipment Manufac· propelled combine sales were 52
turers Institute said Friday.
percent higher than 1988, balers
up 24.2 percent and forage
Total sales .o f two-wheel and
harves ters up 16.5 percent.
four-wheel-drive tractors were
The Chicago-based lnstllute
down 1.7 percent In December
represents more than 175 rnanu·
and slightlY lower for all of 1989. facturers ol farm and specialized
Retail sales of self-propelled . indu s trial and construction
combines were up 100.6 percent
equipment.·

Fann Bilreau membership
campaign now in full swing·

$19995

rarmers...

...

ln ..:t:nl... -------:------

,. Buy a spa
that won't soak · ou
~ on .electric bil s.

Fann tractor sales down last month

.

'

ROBERT M. ROLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC

'

Portable Hot Spring Spas are insulated with
heavy-duty foam from top lO bouom. So no matter
.. how cold the weather, you can soak in a hot,
bubbling spa at any time. But, you won't be soaked
with lre.avy-duty electric bills.

)

'
'
FORMER PA11ENTS OF DR AARON BOONSUE AND)
(
NEW PAnE~ WELCOME

I

•-

..

•

e·

ar

t

Vol.40, No.'1 71

1110

,,

{. b..
·
,
.
..,
'

r

~

. ....
•

'

• available wtle:=ttl~lel';.:we~
· ~=;=;.;re~tu;m or 'no(

ii

(FORMERLY POINl' PI.&amp;ASANl' MEDICAL CEmi!:R)

~

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.

TANKER OVER'n.JRNS
Pomeroy Fire
Department must ge&amp;along temporarDy without a
tanker truck. The department's newest tanker

A jury of 12 found David M.
Persons, 27, of West Columbia,
W.Va., innocent of a charge of
escape following a two-day trial
In Meigs Common Pleas Court.
The trial began Thursday and
ended late Friday afternoon
when the jury returned its
verdict of lnnocept.
Persons was Indicted In Meigs
County in March 1989. However.
the . Incident which led to the
Indictment occurredDec.1.1987 .
According to Information tt:om
the court, Persons was arrested
on Nov. 30, 1987 by Pomeroy
Pollee on several traffic viola·
lions. He was placed In custody at
the Meigs County Jail.
After It was discovered thai an

Pomeroy ,Fire Department's
lfas on Its way to a
Jlre e~~rly Saturday
mamlng when the driver lost
control and turned the tanker on
It~ sl~e In a dltcll o_n Union Ave.
Flre!IP Keith.. Hagen was
drtvi~Jg the tanker In answer to a
7:29a.m. call to the }l:evln Knapp
_ - re.&amp;t4el!te on Wolf Pen Road.
t~nk~r (fuck
stru~llll!

N

C5o4) 67s-s67s

...37 S . . •;

--- -··

..

-.:u.---

NlllloY,

.

~ :eou,a~y .,~lfl!-8

Depart:ment and Ohio .State Pa·
trol1 were
called
to . the accident
•
•
scene.
The patrol Investigated tpe
Incident and reports that Fire-

Actress

man Keith Hagen, 18, was · · Pomeroy Po~ce assjsted with
headed over. Union Ave. toward traffic control whtle Manley's
Route 7 when. 'he (()st control, Wrecking up righted the vehicle
went ott .the right side of the and towed It back to the fire
. roadway, struck a pole .and department. Damages. to the
turned the tanker on Its side In truck are to be estimated later
the dltc.h .
today and a decision made as to
Hagen and Todd Smith, a repairs.
junior fireman who was a pas·
Due to . Saturday's accident,
senger,. were taken.;tQc,Yet.e rans PomerpY E'lr.e Department must
I MeiiJOI'l&amp;l ~spital Wlhn• ,llle.Y .~PQI'AI'J'f a,et•.aM~na• IWlthout
were treated for minOr Injuries any tanker truck. The dejlart·
and released.
. . me~t's secjond tanker was al·
Fireman Bob Jeffers, who was ready out of ·commission for
riding In the crew cab which Is repairs when Saturday 's accl·
located about the ' middle of the dent occurred.
No citations were Issued .
truck, was not Injured.

Barbar~

SANTA MONICA , Calif. (UPI)
- Bartiara Stanwyck, an orphan
who became a Hollywood legend
In a 60-year career that Included
four Oscar nominations and a
pair of television Emmys, was
remembered as a "wonderful
dame" and a monument In the
entertainment Industry.
Stanwyck died Saturday evenIng at St. Johns Hospital, where
she had been for several weeks
because ot reactions · to medication taken for back problems : She
was 82.
Called by some !he best actress

Stanwyck, 82, dies

family In the Old West In "Th~
Big Valley, " and In the 1983
mlnl·series "The Thorn Birds"
with Richard Chamberlain. In
1985, she starred In the weekly
television show, ''The Colby s."
•'She was a human being with a
great sense of humor and a
The Academy of Motion Pic·
tures Arts and Sciences gave her ·rantastlc actress. I think the
a special Oscar In 1982 honoring Industry has lost something very
her distinguished career. The grellt when they lost her ... said
American Film Institute also Dorothy La~our . "&amp;he was Hoi·
gave her Its lifetime achieve: . lywood. She was a great, great
mentaward.
11ctre8s and she would appreciate
this: 'She was a wonderful
She won two Emmy Awards, as
·the matrla.rch of an .lnfiuential dame." '
never to win an Oscar, slle made
88 ·movies and was nominated
four times. for "Stella'Dallas"lil
1937, "Ball of Fire'" In 1942,
" Double Indemnity" In 1944 and
"Sorry, Wrqng Number" In 19t8.

Ohio lws six J:tighway deaths over weekend
' .
BJ United Preas International

'

was County on the same day :
The victims:

Two double-fatality accidents
boosted Ohio's weekend tratflc
death toll to six, the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported
Mpnday.
A, patrol spokeswoman sale)
there were four deaths Sunday
and two Saturd11y . The count
began 111 6 p.m. Friday and ended
at midnight Sunday.
·
TWo teenagers died and at
least two otherS were Injured
Sunday when two cars collided on
Mansfield street, and two Colum~
btana County 111en lostthelr lives
when their pickup tru.ck
slammed Into a van In Tuscara-

Sunda)'

accident on a Franklin County
road.
:
Friday night
None ..

old traffic charge from the Ohio
Highway Patrol was already
pending against Persons, he was
taken to Meigs County Court on
Dec. 1 on th.e old charge. Since
the new charges fell under the
jurisdiction of Pomeroy Mayor's
Court, th,e county court had no
authority to hold Persons on the
new charges .
Alter appearing before Judge
Patrlck ·o :Brten on tile old case.
Persons paid his fine and left the
courthouse. SincE' he was brought
to thE' court house In custody and
was already under arrest for the
new charges. Persons was
chargl'd With escape when au ·
thorltles ·discovered he had left

TOLEDO. Ohio (UPI) - Sen.
. Lee Fisher, D-Sha!ter. Heights, is
making drug dealers, toxic pellu·
ters , con artists and state corruption the focus of·hls campaign for
tile Democratic nomination for
staie attorney general.
Fisher kicked off his campaign
Monday In Toledo, a Democratic
stronghold where he hopes to
. build name r!'cogn Ilion leading
up to the -n.m;,.rj!.tlc
M
r---. ,, .nrlmary
'"'~
~
... In1.'
lly. . .
The senator also pla~ned stops
In Columbus'and Cleveland later
In the day and expects to visit 20
Ohio cities during the next 10
days.
''Today I've goi some bad news
for drug dealers, toxic poilu tors
and thoSe who rip off Ohio's
consumers," Fisher told a group
of 60 Democrats, Including most
of the area' s elected o(flclals, at a
news conference at Toledo's
Government Center.
Flsber has spent nine years In
the Ohio General ~ ~ mbly fight·
lng for the protection of Children,
eihntc groups and crime VIctims.
He Is knoWlJ for his work on a bill
tllat requires drivers to plac'e
children In car seats.
"I worked with famUy doctors
across our state to write and pass
Ohio's clllld sat.;:ty seat law,"
Fisher said. ,
Fisher Is seeking the Demoera tiC nomination to s uccl!ell
Attorney Gener11l Apthony Celebrezze Jr., who Is running for
governor.
He called himself a friend of.
. Celebrezze and p~ged to con·

tlnue Celebrezze's work, while
adv11nctng . his own causes If
elected.
"It's definitely a plus being
Tony Celebrezze' s friend and I'm
proud oi It," Fisher said after his
speech. " But I Intend to go even
further than Tony."
.
Another focus will' be to work
for passage of ethics laws. to
empower the attorney general to
l'O:I Wh!1n, aj"ftlona of corruption surf11ce against state offl·
clals or members of the General
Asembly.
Fisher acknowledged ~Iter his

· By United Press International
New Englanders dug out Mon·
day from the first "nor'easter"
of the decade; which dumped
betWl:&gt;en t to 10 Inches of snow
across the region, while snow
coated the Cascades In Washing·
ton and sunshine settll'd over
Californt11.
After the kind of weekend
winter resort operators dream
of, the snow kept falling In
Vermont and New Hampshire,
piling up on ski slopes and
covering the bare spots left by a
January thaw.
Treacherous road conditions
were reported throughout the
region, especially In Connectl·
cut, Rhode Island and parts of

.....,_...;.Local news. briefs---.
Announce W:IC pifkup dates ·

o•o

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speech there have been a1legations of corruption against Democratic officeholders, but said he
does not !'xpect It to become a n
Issue·. Fisher said his plan calls
for taking an active approach
before ques Uons of his stance can
be raised.
" It doesn't matter who's In
otfice. The bottom line Is govern·
ment corruption ls an _lssue.PW.(I.JtL~~~! ,that no!, onl,y are
y(IJ.i ~ii'lli:'!lvls l:rlor only are you
someone WhO ,cares l!i)oUt the
issue, but 'you 're honest beyond
reproach," Fisher said.

New England digs out
of 10-incli snowfall .

Yost 'r esidence .
damaged by b~

Driver cited after accident

the building .
Accor din g to a llega tions
cha rged during the trial by Meigs
Prosecu tor Steven Story, Per ·
sons knew he was under arres t
and In custody on the new
Pomer oy chargE's . According to
Story, ·Persons took advantage of
an oppOrtunit y to get away.
P e rson s. r epresente d by
Pomeroy Attorney D. Michael
Mullen and Gallipolis Attorney
Jame~ Bennett, claimed that the
Incident was a mistakE'; that he
thought he was free to leave after
he paid his fine on thE' old charge.
The jury agreed with Per sons
and found him Innocent of
escape .

State attorney general candidate
Sen. ·Fisher targets drug dealers

.Mansfield: Michael L. Cline,
19, Shelby, and Allen R. Kibler,
15, Mansfield, killed In a two-car
coHislon on a cit}' s tree!.
. New Philadelphia: Jerry L.
Marshall, 31, Columbiana, and
David C. Lee, 27, E11st Liverpool, ·
killed In the collision of a pickup
The Charles Yost residence on
truck and a van on U.S: 36 hi Oak Grove .' Road near Racine
Tuscarawas County.
was heavily dam~~ged by fire
Saturday
Saturday afternoon. Racine Fire
Heath: ·Lelta J. ~alai, 48,
Department ·was called to the
Alexander, killed In a two-car two-and-one-half story home at
accident on a city .street.
3:29p.m . ..
Columbus: Christine Kuhn, 20,
According to Fire Chief Hank
Columbus, kUled in a two-cir Johnson, tbe tlrst noor of the
.home sustained heavy damage . •
The fire, which was electrical In
origin and began either at an
electric heater or fio1'e5cent ltg)lt
In a first .floor bathroom, wu
confined main!)' tothefintfloor,
Johnson said. Tbere· was smoke ·
and water da,m age to the upper
'
Next month's WlC coupon pickup datee will be Jan-. 29 and 30
h6UJe.
and Feb. 1 and 2, each day frcm 9 to 11 a :m. and 1 to 3 p.m., the
-B alhan Fire Department wu ·
Melp Count)' Health ~partment hal anaounced. Makeup
called at 3: S3 p.m. to asillst
date• are .Feb. 5, 12, and 20 a~ the same hours.
Racine.
· ·
Immunization shots are available at the health department
There were no Injuries. MoneFe~. 13 and 27, 9 to lla.m: and 1 to 3 p.m . •
tary 10811!1 were not determined,
Johnlon reported. ·
' ·
Earlier Saturday, at 7;29a.m:,
Pom~oy Fire Department was
·called to a minor fire at the Wolf
Jamee Durst, Middleport, was charged with !allure' to
m&amp;lntaln assured clear diltance follOW! Ill an accident ori West
Pen Road trailer borne of Kevtn
Knapp. Th~ fire w-. Jnalde • wall
Main Street at 8 p.m. Saturd&amp;)' .
·
..
Accordllll to Pomeroy pollee. Durst struck the rear of a truck ·
where a fire box booked to the
cbi!Jiney behind a woodbumer. r
driven by Robert Hlckel, Letart, W. Va. as It waa atopped In
There was no lnaurance, Fire
preparation for makfnl a left hand turn. ·
'
.
There wia Jlgbt dalllate to the tear of the Hickel truck, and
Chief Danny Zirkle reported, but
damages to the home' were
liiavy damaae to the front of the Dunt vehicle.
.,
'
.
minor .

HOME SPAS

.614-tiS..JIOS·

.

was damaaed l!aturd&amp;)' momlng In an accldeat on
.Union Ave. The department's other lanker was
alread)' out of commlllloa for repairs.

Pomeroy tanker .~ck~ 'l1Jrns
over on side enNJute to· fire

'.'THE PRICE WILL MAKE
YOU RELAX TOO"'!!

2STII • .JDI'BaiON AVENUE
PODI'I Pl&amp;AUNT

A Multimedio Inc.

JUry·finds Persons
~ocent
of
charge
.

~ .~~:

~ .

'

.Hot Spring Spa®

• nbcastlneeaed-all fees can ~withheld from
your d'll:tk
'

2 Secti0nl.12 Pou• 26 C.e nta

Po,eroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Janu•rv 22. 1990

·u.. ·.

&gt;

• receiVe your refund anticipation loan in a matter
of dayS

Clear tonJcbl. Low near 38.
Sunil)' TuesdaJ. JUgh near 58.

Kicker

.

Living Room ·Suites in Stock

--

Piek '3
730
Piek ...
94.13
Super Lotto
17-41-29-28-34-9

Food prices
exceed iDflation

Meigs County land .transfers

·--·-··..

Oltio Lottery

i
.
AN EN.tOVABLE AFTBBNOON- Tbe Melp

ual of tbe AmerlcM Cancer lleelel)' lteld a wiDe
ud c..._ tu1111 after~• ·oa llaadar at lfle
-loreltiHMea&amp;eriDPoiiHII'OJ'.,\p............,
t1 people atllldecl tile event Ia wblcli cloll' prllell
· were' w011 b)' Rev. William Mlddleawarth, Pat

•

Massachu setts where fre ezing
drizzle coated slushy roadway s
with a thin layer of Ice .
AI least three people &lt;!led In
weather-related accidents, In·
eluding a little girl killed when
her sled was htt by a car.
Boston and parts of Rhpde
Island , clobbered over the weekend by a savage snow storm fed
by cold·air currents from Canada
and known as a "nor'easter ," got
a dusting of l!ght snow as
residents shoveled out driveways
and sidewalks.
·
Light snow also fell in parts of
Maine, . wh ere the mercury
dropped to the single digits and
below zero In the far north.
Continued on pagE' 12

�•
•

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.Commentary.
.

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The Daily
.

--

Sent~nel

lll Court Street

•

•

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i .

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Pea 2-The Dllt Is ......
Pcln..OV M k' I J to ...,
MOI. .V• ....,.Y 22. 1880

·,

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...........

. Expo~ safe .sex.not Jack
tooAnderson
·sue~':!
A•1a •
arid .
·

. ·.

~

Earn

Taft fires opening salvo
in Ohio governor's race

What . the Democrats don't discuss

.

· ., William Ru.Sher

tbe

Berry~s World ~

Send~g . lJ.
'

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' .
"/At me put you on 'hold' for a nunute, E/JNn.
John Is wallrlng out on me. "

,

· Today in· history
, B;r Y•lted ..,_111-.uo-1
Today Ia Monday, Jan. 221 tbe 221111 day of 1990 with 343 to follow.
Tilt 1110011 Ia WUioi, mDIIlDII toward Its new phase.
Tile moriiiJIIatara are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Tile I'Veailllltlr Ia Jupltar,
·
·
~ borl oa tbll elate are under the slin of Aquarl\18. They include
Rallall Czar Ivan. tile Third, known as Ivan the Great, In lftll;
Eqlllh pbiJolapiier Dlld atatet~man Franclll Bacon In 1561; •French
~~ Alldre Ampere 1111775; Britlah poet LOrd Georle Byron In
1788: D. W. Grlfft,tb, director of silent films, In 1875·
---~-

.J

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S. women into combat
Sarah Overstreet

The women's movement has . have to fight If we do go to war. If
Earlier this -month White
tackled a multitude of Issues, but I don't want to serve In any
House spokesman Marlin Fltz;
the entire Issue .of women In capacity, I don't h.ave to.· But
water gave a thrlllln&amp; acco\lnl of
combat
Is one we've been tlppy- according to U.S: law·, my test period. That government's
American women soldiers bat· '
toebig
around
for a long time. peacetime rights cannot be dim- : most recent response to the Issue
tUng Panamanian 101dlers In a
. The right ~o fl&amp;ht, be Injured or be Inished because of this wartlple has been to announce that none of
fierce, three-hour fight.
killed: ·Ia not exactly one we're lrieqtiity. This Is equality?
Fitzwater later reported that
. the women Involved In tbe ,
eall!f to win for ourselves or the
There are those who believe Panama shoot-out would be
the actiOn bad actually luted
women we love. The women's that because we are women we decorated with the C!ombat
only 10 llllnutes. But ·w!JIIe
Fitzwater may b8ve mlaflrecl .. movement emphasized gaining should be' protected from com- badge, because they "didn't have
positive rlihta we'd.been denied bat, and even from the dntft that a eombat role." However, 011r
: when shooting off about tbe
·women• a exploits, he did bi'Jnl to - equal pay, equal opportunity, men must register for. They 11ve men who were engqed In
an equal allot at success. Equal two reasons: First, we women s)lootiJJI and bellll shot at In
the forefroat a .IUbject We'W
opportunity
to go Into combat have to take care of tlie children;
given short lbr~ for a long time. ·
Panama will receive combat
wu never on the front lln.es.
· and second, we don't "havewbat bac!geJ,
Womet1 are not- allowed to
l don't wut to 10 Into combat, It takl!ll" for combat.
NIW In combat roles In the
Almost 50 year• have pUled .
In response to our servlcewo- since Women' • Alrforce Service
Jrmed forces. From till murky ·elttier. But neltber do I think I
ibould be exempt from the 'm en's role In the Panama lnva· Pllol.l feriied planea to EIIJ'DIM
BCClOIInta of the Dec. 20 fight, It
retpollllblllties ·men must u- · slon,· Rep. Pat Schroeder; D· dui'loi' World War 11. Althouih
appears the 011\:Y reason lbese
women NW combat Ia that · •ume when It . comes to the Colo., says she will Introduce many WASPs were InJured and
' defeme of our country. Most of leillllallon this seaston to allow . 39 died durin&amp; their Rl'VIce, ,they
hliber·llpl thouibt there were
the men 11m jilose to hDVe no Army women to enlel', all mil- received ao Yl!ler8111' benlata
J'anamanlan 101dlen prtMnt at
greatl!r thlrat.,r war than I do, ItarY specialties, Including tboae untU 19'19, and then only after a
. the guard-dog kennel tlle WOJ11t!n
·but they're the ones who may Involving combat, tor a four-year lengthy battle:
were sent to secure.

u,s.

no

•I

Tomadoes_improve to

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WASHINGTON - LAst June; • The bJrth control and safe sex
·
.
Poll!eroy, Olllo
unbeknownst
to
the
taxpayers,
PI'OII'Bm,
Ia
lust
a
dllef\!et
blip
on
DEVO'J'tD TO THE INTERI!ST8 OF THE MEIG!I-MASON AREA
tbe U.S. government lost 750,000 the federal budget. Few taxpay:
'~lb
condoms at sea.
en realize they spend about $60
authorities kept a c6ndom sblp$334 million of that has been
The
rubbers
were
last
seen
million
a
year
op18
varieties,·
twO
ment
In
Customs
for
more
than
a
·
spent on contraceptive devices.
Bm~ ~
~c::::l;­
aboard
a
sblp
salllng
toward
s-Izes
ancf:flve
colors'ot
condoms,
year
and
then
confiscated
It
as
The audltfound the program In
· ~v
Zambia as part of ihe American • six brandS of birth control pills,
contraband.
'
,
disarray and badly In need of
. ROBERT L . WlNGE'IT
crusade for safe sex around the vaginal foams and Intrauterine
In' Mexico, 1.6 million condoms
simplification. The condoms are
Publisher
world.
.
. · devices. This year the U.S.
ailil 3.6 million cycles of pills s)llpped directly to foreign go.
But when the slip pulled Into · · govj!rnment will disperse a re· ·. val11ed at $1 million were des·
vernments or through lntermePAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tanzanla, the condoms were not cord 800 million condoms,
troyed because their shelf ·life
diaries such as the International
AMI81anl Publlsher/Conlro~!'l'
General Manarer
on boar\!. Investigators tracked -enough to outfit one In three men
expired. In .Bangladesh, another
Planned Parenthood FederatiOn.
•
$305,788 worth of contraceptives
The General Services Admlnla·
the crate to · Durban, South on the planet.
Africa, where It had been un·
Playing safe-sex a~ocate for
w~re destroyed for the same
tratloil has been actlng~e
'
loaded
with
other
.
cargo
and
the
world
Is
not
as
easy
as
reason.
Last
year,
5.5
million
·.purchasing.
agent for I
ro·•
a~:~elloed
to
a
·South
African
standing
on
a
street
corner
and
condoms
bought
for
Bangladesh
gram,
but
now
wants
a
6
t
LETTERS OF OPINION .re weleome. They llbould be Ieos than aM ·
were destroyed because they
fee lor Its services. Tbelu
or
business shark.
handing out condoms. Our'B.ssowonto lear. AU lettero ar.e ouhject to .e cllttnrud must be olped with
11,111110, addreoo and telephone nu,..ber. No unalped le«enwUI be pu~
It wasn' ttheflrstblunderlrithe
elate Jim Lynch has learned that ' failed tests. •
.:
general's audit suggested rf ttlng
II•-· LeUerollbOuld be to pod lute, addresolll&amp;lssues, not penoull· ·
International contraceptive tile headquarters staff for the
The federal auditors ,found
out the GSA as mlddleJ11!1 _!,;
liM. '
trade. A!ldltors for the Agency
Is made up ol only three shoddy storage techniques ·
, J
for International Development ·
pie who are swamped ti:'ylng . storing condoms under a leaking
What about the array of si:U!s
Inspector general's offlce 'dlscot • act as traffic controliers ·lor · roof In Thailand and under a bot
and colors? The audit. rev~led
· vei'ed that. In the past nine years coiidoina going to 82 countr~s.'
tin roof In Costa Rica;
that AID buys · two stzel of
the federal .eontraceptlve ProOccasiQnally there is a sUp-ul!.
' Since 1979, the Agency . for
condoms. And the auditors Were
curement Pro)ect has lost wore One shipment of 12,000 condoms 'Internatlo)llll .Development :·has
clearly at a loss to explain ·the
than $2 million worth of .birth to St. Vlncentln the Westlpdles Is committed ·about $2.2 billion to · need for . f(ve colors. "Unless
control
devices and drugs and still MIA. Another shipment of support worldwide popu1ation
there Is a clear justification,"
By LEE LEONARD
had
had
to
·
destroy
at
least
·•
10,000
IUDs
ordered
by
Pakistan
control
efforts
and
prevent
sexuthey
said, :··AID should purchase
. •
UPI StatebOuae Reporter
.
another
$2
million
worth.
ended
up
In
Calcutta.
Brazilian'
ally
transmitted
diseases.
About
·
only
one
size and one·color."
COLUMBUS- There's an old political rule that Republicans like to
1
' •'
brandish when they're attacked by a member of their own party. It's .
the 11th commandment: '!Thou shall not sj:&gt;eak Ill of another
'RI:publlcan." •
,Rober't. Taft ll. a. Republican candidate for governor from
anclnnati, broke that commandment last week In an attempt to
solidify hl.f own candidacy.
·
Taft said his Republican opponent, George Volnovlch, has no
credibility on the Issue of taxes; he as much as accused the former
aevelarid mayor of lying.
· .
··
·
'Spe;clflcally, the Hamilton County commissioner said Volnovlch
had sought a clty,lncome tax Increase In 1984 when he had promised
not to three years before'; had backed the state Income tax hike In 1983
and opposed Its repeal; and had suggested raising federal taxes to
balance the b~dget .
Taft said this Is not the kind of candidate for governor Republicans
want If they are going to at tack the "tax happy" Democratic
government or the past seven years.
"When George Bush says, 'No new taxes.' you know he means It,"
-said Taft. "When George Volnovlch says, 'No new taxes,' hold onto
your wallet."
With that, Taft flied his nominating pell~loils for governor and
reiterated lor the u~pteenth time that he's In the race to stay. Then he
went to a meeting with RepUblican State Chalnnan Robert Bennett,
who has been hoping for months tllat Taft would do the 'party a favor
and run for secretary of state or auditor.
There are strong suspicions th"at Tafl'flled his petitions and trashed
Volnovlch so Bennett wouldn't be able to talk him out of running for .
governor.
.
.
· Bennett claimed neither tha.t Issue nor Taft's attack on Volnovlch
came 11p during their private meeting; that the entire !10 minutes was
spent showing Taft GOP poll.results.
·
The results, said Bennett, showed both Taft and Volnovlch beating
Democratic Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr. In the
governor's race. He declined to'elaborate.
·
· . ·
"Absolutely not," said Bennett when asked !the tried to convince
Taft te run for ·a lower office.
And what about breaking the 11th commandment? Was ·T aft's
attack a low blow? ''Tbat might be considered a little borderline.''
said Bennett. ''I've talked to both of them and said negativ~
campaigning Is not going to be acceptable to the party chairman .or
the state committee. 1'11;.1 going to monitor them and see that there's ·
no hltdng below the belt." ·
.
. There was evidence that Bennett agreed with the Volnovlch camp
that "panic Is setting ln. They've lost their grip ·on the Rep1Jbllcan
\•
primary," said Curt Steiner, the media spokesman for the Volnovlch
'
•
c_ampalgn.
.
,
- Actually, Taft's uncharacteristic outburst may be )ust the tonic
&lt;!:onservilllves need. Th11s .f ar, the Volnovlch team has Jured
'
· the Januazy)~~ ol!J.~rper's · tr:om highways and llrldges to ·we can win with.")
observers to sleep by selling the Impression !hat their candidate has
Magazine contalns' a-'lil.sctnating · education and pork. But they are
The subject of taxes produced
already run away and hid !rom any opposition.
discussion
among
seven
·prom!·
longer
perceived
as
the
party
this
hilarious' exchange:
·no
Maybe Taft can make a contest out of It after all.
nent
Democrats
trying
,
"
to
dis·
of national strategy . " In
Hilt: Let's try another tough a good word for the Republicans:
Bennett still coolly Insists that things will work out. While denying
cover
a
promising
message
for
Barber's
formulation,
Demo·
one.
What's the new Democratic They have been winning, he
that he plans to try to .~tract,Taft from the governor's race, he said
the
race
In
1992."
crats
play
"to
their
separate
.
message
on taxes?
argued, "because they believed
·:rm going, to continue to provide him with Information and talk to
The seven were: Bruce Balr
parts- blacks, Hispanics, gays,
Burris: No taxes.
lp something. We don't believe.
btrn."
'
bitt, t(le .tonner Arizona gover- .radicals, women, conservation-Frank: Reallocate resources
We think they!re wrong, but they
; Is It too l(lle aiter Taft's kamikaze mission last. week? Bennett
nor
who
was
arguably
tile
tallest
lsts.
Republicans
point
to
the
from
the
mlllla.ry
.
·
believe."
poln!s.out that a candidate may withdraw nominating petitions until
of the "seven dwarfs" In the race
.
Reich: That's the cowflrd's
Allin all, a splendid sampling
whole."
early 1n March.
,
·
for
1988
presidential
nomina·
Townsend,
who
displayed
way
out....
of
what Is going on these days Iii
. In politics, strange things can happen. A feliow named George Bush
tion;
Ben)
am
In Barber, a profesthroughout an Impressive gift for
Babbitt: Didn't San Francisco some of the Democratic Party's
once referred to Ronald Reagan's "voodooeco·nm:nlcs" and ended up
sor of philosophy at Rutge~s;
realism, suggested however that · ·Impose a tax surcharge for
shr!lwder heads. And that m8kes
·
on the ll.cket with him.
California Congresswoman Barthere are various specific Issues · eart~quake relief?
aJJ the more fasclnl!ting a little
bara Boxer, who represents the
discovery of mine.
on which the Democrats don't do. . Townsend: Yes.
two ends of the GOlden Gate
J3abbltt: Does -that ,suggest
The transcript Is approxlterribly well: "In · Maryland,
Bridge; Roland Burris, a veteran
more college-age black men are anything to you?
mately 7,000 words long. It
black politico who Is now compIn )all than In school. So you can
Frank: Yes. If we have .a discusses the HUD, Pentagon,
troller of' Illinois; Massachusetts
pretend race1and crime Isn't an national earthquake we can raise Wall Street a11d S&amp;L scandals,
Congressman Barney Frapk,
Issue, or you can acknowledge taxes.
·
racism, crime, budgets, taxes,
who - well, -you know; Robert
that people have something to
There was a good deal ol Japan, military expenditures,
Reich, professor of political
fear."
gloomy realism on·display. Balr
savings, the " peace dividend, "
economy at Harvard;· and Kat·
bitt thought "we must admit that ·: scholarships, ''kids," poverty,
hleen Kennedy Townsend ,
Burris, however, lnstsi.id that much of the wellare state has
the environment, the deficit,
"the problem Is the black vote" been an utter failure." Fr11,nk,
: RFK's daughter, who ran unsuchousing, consumerism, space,
- which, considering that the too, · warned that "Democrats
cessfully .-for ·a· Marylilnd con·
technology. risk-taking, educagressiOnal seat In 1911j;. Jack Hilt, Dem9(!rats regularly w111 up- have to admit a mistake. ,._. We
liOn, the . elderly, the middle
a senior editor of Harper• s, . wa~d of.90 percent of the ,.bla~k (must stop being afraid to say)
class, the underclass, workplace
vote, surely ' must retire · the that people who hit other people democracy, unemployment, go.
served as jnoderator.
There was a certalll amount of Ove~k!ll Cup for good. (Not that over the head - no m,a tter ·what . vernment IneffiCiency, empow. alt!'eernent. Babbitt pointed out Boxer disagreed. - When re- thelr childhood was like - are erment, school drop-outs, drugs,
· tht the Democrata streslipartlc· minded that many recent Demo- rotten people who o;&gt;ugh\ to be fear and'hope. . ,
ular Issues, whereas "the presld· cratic victories were won with locked up.' ' Townsend com· ·
Bl!t nowhere, even once In the
"35 percent of the.white vote and plalnedthat"everytlmeyoulook whole transcript, does the word
~ Is about larger ·.tllernes."
Reich put It more pithily: The 95 perceJ~t ofthe black vote," she at corru{ltlon there's a ~mocrat
"family" I!Ppe!ll'. Republicans,
Democrats deliver "everythln&amp; snapped, "So belt: It's a coalition Involved.'' Barller even ventured
relax.

·.·

Trace 61-50 loss Saturday

'

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.

8-1

mSVAC acuon

shots, cutting Racine's l~d to
By G. SPI:NCEit OSBORNE
44-35.. But 31 secopds later
OVP .S&amp;af. WrMer
Southern forward ·Roy Lee Bal·
Sou.thern's Tornadoes
ley got Inside and hit a layup ·to
wrapped up Its season series with
rival Hannan Trace by knocking give the visitors a 46-35 advan·
of! the holt Wildcats 61-50 Satu- tage. After that, Hannan Trace
would outscore Southern 13-5 In
day nl1ht.
the next 5:07, while the Torna·
"Our klda were aggressive,
does
sank one lou! shotoutol live
and I wu pleased with their
tries
at. the line In that time. ,
effort. but even thooghwegotour
a 6-0 )unlOr forward, was
Cornell,
share ol euy ahots, we missed a
by
Shuler, and went to the .
fouled
lot of them," said Wildcat head
coach Mille Jenkins, whose cag- line lor the one-and-one. Cornell
ersfeU to 7-8overalland4-61n the cashed In on both chances, and
SVAC, "However, If we give the Southern's margin was down to ,
kind of effort we did tonight, we' II three at 51-48.
Southern then drove the ball
be a fine team by the end of the
hard
downcourt, thinning HT' s :
season," he added.
defense
enough to allow senior ;
The boys from the bend found It
postman
1'\rad Maynard, who led .
difficult · to get Into the paint
with 23 pOints. room to
all
scorers
against the Wildcats' 2-3 zone In
layups In less ·
hit
three
straight
. the e~rly 1olng, so the Tornadoes
than
45
seconds
to seal the
put junior forward Andy Baer to
Tornadoes'
victory.
work !rom the perimeter. Baer. a
In the reserve game, Southern
5·9 junior, connected for all but
fought
ol! a tough Hannan Trace
four of his 21 points from areas
squad to remain unbeaten In the
close to the an;, ll!cludlng a
TQES PASS - Soutbera peiCmaD Br.. M.,.... (411 tails a .
MAYNARD SCORES - Southern center Brad Mlaynard (fl)
three-point bomb that was conference with a 41·36 win. Billy
pus fr.m a teammate u Baaua Trace
Blaek cl_.
drlvs tn.lde to .core oil thlll IQup In the final minute. of
launched beyond the halfcourt Davis led the Whirlwinds with
In from beldnd to de(ead 011 f;lle play. MQIIIII'd, who -red llhortly
Sallll'llay's 1une agaiMt Hunan 'J'race In Mercenllle, Maynard
line", at a point along the sideline nine points, while Trace's Brian
IICllftd a game-hlp 23 points to help push tile Tornadoes to a 81-50
· after taking.tilill paas, lilt three laya)lll Ia le!la t111111 tlaeeoada to
even with the foul nne In front of Unroe led all &amp;Corers with 13.
aeal tbe Tornadoes' •1-10 trlumpll. (OVP plloto by G. Spencer
victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
,
Southern (8.5, 8·1). which
the Hannan Trace bleachers with
moved
up in the standings to a
Osborne) .
,
.
.
·
one secopd left In the third
full
game
behind front-runnet
quarter. When the shot, dell·
Eastern,
wlll
remaln -,ldle until
vered ..tith a minimal arch. found
Friday,
when
the Tornadoes _
the space Inside the rim.. the
entertain
North
Gallla. Hannan
entire audience, Wildcat and
.
'
'
Trace
will
also
play
Its next game
DAVE HARRIS
lead to 9 (20-11) with 54 seconds
In the second half every time
Belpre reserves to 13pointsln.the · Tornado . fans alike, cheered
at
home
on
Friday
-against
Oak
Tim Baker, Ryan McConkey
remaining. But McGreg9r hit a the Marauders would climb back second hall enroute to a 57-36 Baer's accomplishment.
In the. second qliBrter, South· Hill.
and Chris McCregor combined
ttiree pointer and the Ea&amp;les Into the game Baker or McGrevictory over the Little Eagles.
ern,
which could get no farther Score by quarters
cashed 'In· on two technical foul gor would fire away from three Terry McGuire led three Ma·
for 71 points Saturday night In
Southern ............ 13 16 15 17-61
.· leading tl)e Belpre Golden Eashots to give the home team a · point range or McConkey would
rauders In double figures with 15, ahead than three points In the Hannan Trace .... 1114 8 17-50
James Howerton added 13 and opening act, posted a pair ol
25-1llead the end Of the quarter. hltfrom lnthepalnttobulldtothe
SOUTHERN (61)- Maynard
r1
dded 11
·
gles to a 94·69 victory over the
eight-point leads, courtesy or a
Meigs Marauders In a TVC
Beipre Increased Its lead to lead.
Trevor Har son a
·
7·0-9·23;
Bser 4-3-4-21; Grindstaff
28-11 before the Marauders
Tim Baker took the game's
The Marauders will travel to pair of one-lind-ones by Baer at
3·0·2-8;
Bailey 2·0·0·4: Shuler
5: 19 mark and a: layup by
co~~':~:~ ~~:tan outslandlng started to come back. After Jay scoring honors with 28 points, Nelsonville-York Tuesday night the
1·0·1-3;
Murphy
0-0·2·2. TOTALS
sho,t Baker hit 3 from three point to play the Buckeye~. Meigs junior RUard Todd Grindstaff at
Humphreys hit a follow-up
career high 25 po Int performance
.
2
th
d h B k 50 •3 De
17-3-18-'1
'
bl' Marauder sophomore L. J.
In the paint and Mitch cash¢&lt;! In range and he was 11 ofl from e
defeate t e uc s ... on c. the 2: f7 mark. But )unlor guard - From
the Door - 20-49 (40.8%)
Eric
Lloyd
added
eight
of
.his'
·
on one of two free throws to cut foul line: Cl!rls McGr.e gor added 12 for Its only win of the season.
Beyond the arc - HO (40%) ·
·Mitch. ' ·
f
the Belpre lead 29·14, Betzlng 1111 '23 !ricludlng 4 3-polnters, while Meigs will return home to host team-hllh 14 points to the Wild·
·
1
1
AI the line - 18·27 (66.7'11.)
The Golden Eag es ca!Yle ou o
J
Gold R k t 0
the blocks fast, building a 20·7 consecutive 'three ·polnte~s to Ryan McConkey had 20. ason the Wellston
en oc e s ~ cats' llgresslve, turnover·
Rebounds - 42 (Maynard 18)
oriented defense In that frame,
lead with just over a minute and a
make It 29·20, .but :that was as Gandej! also' was _' In !louble Friday night.
. ·
Steals'7
which ~lped the Galltans hold
half : remaining ' In the first
close as the Marauders would.&amp;el · figures for. Belpre with 12.
Score by quarters:
Turnovers
- 20
"'' M
' lk V
as the Eagles wentlnto the locker
For the Marauders 6-3 sopho- Meigs ........... .. .. ....... 11 31 50 69 their RUe&amp;ts to a four-point lead at
Fouls -19
quarter. Buckets u,
.
e
.
an
d
2546 71 94 the half.
Meter arid Cary'Betzlng cut the
roomwltha46-3lleadatthehalf. · moreL.J.Mitchhadanoutstan · Belpre .................... .
HANNAN TRACE (50)
The Guyan five closed the lead
·
lng game with 25 points. Cary
MEIGS - Robbie Fields, 5-0.0·
Lloyd
5-0-4-14; Rankin 4-0-3-11;
to 29-27 w)len junior center Craig
shUJ'D'Iil.
M,U'~·.
Betzlng scored 18 Including 3
10. Ryan Lemley 0-G-0·0, Richard
Bevan
1-1·4-9; Cornell 2-0-4-8;
-ee~
buckets from 3 point range. Peyton 0-0-0-0, Cary Betzlng Rankin. who fl.nlshed with 11
Boothe
3-0·0-6; Blacl&lt; 1·0·0-2.
'Robbie Fields added 10.
4·3·1-18, Jason Wright 0-0-0-0, points, got a layup nine seconds
TOTALS18·1-U-50
'
the third quarter. Forty-two
Belprehlt32of62trorhth~fleld I.;.J.Mitchl0'0·5-25,JayHumph· Into
At
the
15-21
nu'i!
1
lor 52 percentand went totlle line reys 2-0-1-5, Mike Van Meter seconds later Tornado forward
29 times hitting 23 good f~r 79. 3-0-0-6, Trevor Harrison 2-0·0·4. Brent Shuler connected on a
]'Aelgs
head
football
coach
' Mike Staggs has been named
short jumper from the left wing,
Belpre grabbed·29 rebounds with TOTAUU6·3-7-88.
,
'
Trllll8actions
his only basket from the field tl)at
McConkey
getdngll.
BELPRE
Tim
Baker
4·11·28,
to the Marshall Unlverslty' s
Meigs hlt29 of57lrom th~tloor Russ Jacobs 0·0·2·2, Ryan night, to &amp;lve f!4clne a 31-27lead.
!indiO' s,~.tna.nto•
AU-Decade Team of the 1980s
Then lO MCondl later, R!Uikln
.for
a
warm
51
percent,
and
7
of
16
McConlley
7-0-6-20,
Jason
Gao·
by tile Hllntlnltoa Herald-Dis·
took 1 pass from teammate
PIIU.dd .... a- &amp;eln•d ,_,.Cor.)'
from the.llnefor44. The Maraud· dee 6-0-6.-12, Brad Mc;Gre10r,
patch. ·
Gal- 1ftfor cwm••• •f hM tl-410' ,
ers tifabbed 23 missed shots with 2-0-0-4, Chris MacGregor H~3-,23, Riehle Cornell and scored on a
'C N&amp;rada.
:rhe 25-member team \vas
Betz!ngleadlng Ute way with 8.
Matt Wilcoxen 0·1·1-4, Shane layup to cut the T~rnadoes' lead
c.~..
" Cle....- UaMtiMf - NMIIft. Ku
selected bY a vote of the sports
In the reserve game Coach · WllsQn 1·0-0-2. TOTALS h-~13- to 31-21. Southern called time
RdeW ef Ar ............ c.«: ..
department of the Huntington
shortly aner that.
Rlck Ash and crew held the M .
• paper. The Marshall football ·
"No defense whatsoever ... no
•· team went 57·56-3 In the 1980s for
hustle, just let It slide. I think you
SPRING VAlli! CIN£ MA
their first· -winning 10-year span
can play .)ust a little bit better,"
· since the 1940s. •. ·
,
4~6 4'!24
shouted Southern skipper Howle
Staggs was a 6-3, 233-pound
Caldwell to fils team as they
. guard for -the Herd under Coach .
assembled on the bench. Appar·
· Sonny Randle. Mike started
ently
his words were just what
,) "
three years for the green and
the doctor ordered, as Southern
white after transferring · from
STAGGS HONORED
outscored the.lr hosts 11-4 In the
' · Eastern Kenlucky. Mike was
Melp MU'auder Head J!'oot·
quarter's last 5:33. Both of
selected All Southern Conference
b"'l Coach Mike Sta1p wu
Trace'• baskets In that time
. recentlY named to tile Mlll'' l n 1982, hIs brother Dan also
frame came from junior forward
shall Unlvenlty All-Decade
. played on the offensive line for
Todd Boothe.
Team by the 11unllnpon
Marsha\ I.
As the crowd quieted down
Mll&lt;e was a 1978 graduate of
Herald-Dispatch. stagp In
after buzzing over Baer's unex· • Ga!Ua Academy and was named
-his first ye• u the Marauder
pected fortune, Rankin was
· coaclr led hill team to a 5-5
.,.:; All fOhlo, All Dlstlrct and All
fouled and was sent to the line for
mark, and a 5-3 record Ia tbe
" SEOAL his senior yea~:. As a
the one-and-one 27 seconds Into
TVC goOd enough for a third
~ Junior he was named All SEOAL
the final act. Rankin sank both
place finish.
·
.~ and second team AU District.
.

pard,_

Meigs drops 94-69 batt'le to Belpre. five .

.Mik·
.' e·_

named_ to'
All.-Decade Team of th,e 808

tme -

__..

;

·Eastern girls

win----

= The Eastern Eaglet!Els rplled performance of 16 points and 8
. to a 59-52 SVAC girls victory over rebounds, hitting 8-10 from the
the , Southwester I) 1 Lady High· field. Behind Metzger was TabbY
landers to avenae an earlier 47-44 Phillips with an equally lmpres·
• loss recently In girls' hlih school slve effort of 14, Stephanie Otto9,
Suzanne Clay 7, JimJJY Roush 5,
• basketball actton.
, Michelle Metzger led the Leigh Anne Redovlan 4 and Lee
·
: )VInners with a great ovverall Gillilan 3.
For Southwestern, Usa Hall
again had another outslnndlng
The Daily Sentinel
game with a game-hlih 24 points
and 10 rebounds, while Heather
(USPS lfll-"')
Bond added 13 (6·7from the field)
A DMoloa ol Mllltlmedla. lac.
,.
Amy Metzler 7, Dreama Gilbert
Publlahed overy llfternoon, Monday . · 5, and Chrlllty Lewis 3.
through Friday. lll CO.rt St., PoTlie second quarter broke a
mer&lt;&gt;Y. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Put&gt;
ltshlng Compaay /Mulllm.tta, Jnt.,
10-10 ·ue as EHS raced to a 31-24
Pom.,.oy. Ohio 4~71111. Ph. st2-215i. 5e·
halftime advanlaie behind the 11
cond ctus postage paid at Pomeroy,
point char1e of Metzger. Clay
Olllo.
had lour points In "the drive.
Member; Unlled PreoslDternat~.
Hall became the SWHS main·
lol~nd Dally Pren AIIIICiattonallll the
stay 'In ~ ~eq~~Dd half as she
Oldo Newspo~t.,.,_ llallooal
Advertlollll
1ft, Braalwn
tallied 2D leeond ha(f points.
Nfw$0Per Sa •· 733 Third AYI!IIue,
Eastern hit 'if of61and 5of 16 at
NeW Yorll. New York 111011.
the line. while SWHS hit 6 of 40
I'IJII'BIAST£R• !load
ch....
and '1f of 23.
to 1be Dallv seiiiiii.i: Ill OJwt St.,

acldr•

Pamera&amp;'. ailo ""'·

:C.'!":=. , SHS frosh l01e
OneWHIL .......... , ....................... $1.411

;;;=!Y. . . .

one Year ..

S7UJ

=-=:;:~::: ::!':!;'..:
Tile Soutbera Frelbllllll Tor-

One Montb .... :........ ....................M.III •
•

tile SHs wlndl, &amp;T..O

DiUy .... ................................. :IIi Oint a

!Qt ltlned

!lublcrlbennot,..trt.atoMoar·
rl• may Ill IMIV101 IO

llereln ftaetat.

=

TbtDally-IIIIOHI.IIII' - •
Crtdit '"11 llo IIV• carrie' eodl

No ou~- by

maD pennllted In

--.rtpl-

are11 wh•e home carrier aervtee II
available.

lllllllollelpc-,

13 Weelcl.... .... .. ... . .. . .. .. .. .......... llt.:lt
:11 Weelcl .................., ............... t3'1.11
S2WHIII ..................... ... , .. ....... $'N.II

Or'

'f

.....

CtUir

IJW.......,............................... ao.IO

•w..a
................................. IIOJO
51 w, ............:........................ rnuo

lo•lberll lid at

the balf ll)r

25-24. but the Laacen came on

ltl'olll In the· ilecond half to
oulleont Southem by 8 and 10
ahead for the win.
Mila! Evan• led Southern In
ICOrlJII with 14 points and Nick
Adamswltb?. TbeLancerswere
It!~~ In ICOJ1fti by Chris VIney's 20
polnll, foUowe dby Myron Hart
wltlll~
.
. . . . . II now 8-3 and plays
Melp Mond•y.
·
'

..•.
•

_,...I

JTWo

DOUBU. !
I
l

, FIELDS SHOOTS JUMPER- Melp Bobble Fleldl (M) lil.e6b
jumper to_,. two ot .bll 10 po,!Jita ap!Mt Belpre In a TVC ·
malleup llarilwDOd came SatwdiQI n~. the Eacles won, lUI.
BHS defeDder Ill
Rtlu JacoM (It).
'
'·
•
I
'
,.

MEIGS COUN~Y
,JAYCEES ·

.MEMBERSHIP _NITE
WED.SDAY, JAN. 24,1H0-7:00 P.IL
at ·~••port Anterlc• Llllon .
. ... 4th .Street, .
~

FeatutWI SpeGker: Mike Halrii
. VICE PIESIDENT:._UNITED STiTES JAYCHS
ALsO IN AnENDANCESTA~ .&amp; LOCAL QFFICEIS
COIIACtt VIC GAUL-992·1..03 :·
•ai-COIIDI-"1·711 ..
'·

,

'

.'
' '

..

.-.. -' ,. ,._,__,_ · - . '... ··--=·

�..
~~

' f...

4 The Daily Santlnel

.......

-

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~.~22.1910

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All••• .., mal"all

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........011 .11. Old w... , 18

Mo... Ver••N...._.If, llrll. . '71

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c.&amp; ..l"'lllt. (Pa.J 7'7, JVP 1t
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Car• lie Mt;la.lll, lJ. 01 Chle.,e11
CCNY 111, rrau '71
Cit M"'Nlft 114 NewMn 11
CliMe')' 'II, liiiP&amp;ewa II

o...._.

,,a..,.....

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... IIIAN--Cal ... ot . . IMI- Tecla 71

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

Clar .... " · Alfred n (JOT)
Colt., 11', Mua.-8Mio. .1
Co..Ublt 71, Gecnill!ll...-a II
Cor.el '71, Col.nbla II
Dea.ware IN. Lellllp 11

a.tk .... 11. ...... t'l

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8odl
II, Ne~-Omalla u
S.•lle•t Mo. 11, II•, w.er au
8oa.l!l'l Dl. 1'1,
II
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8W Mll . .rt81.lJ, Val,.,.al•o M
81 . . . ., ..... ,\q......

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Delaware Valley 87, 8•..-a..•AI
Drnel 17, •ck.HIIII
E. eoaa. 7!. eo ... C.Il u

Emwytt, . . . . . . ,.
FAM 11. Mlllllellb6 1 iJ
P•nlll.n II, M~~tlat&amp;u 81
PruiiUIIIMarlllllall ·1$, lhlhleab, rJtl'
Fn.niii!I•Pie"C•14.1rtdc!plll't 1r

Tlffla II, DtftMee 8J (ot )
R'. DUMII It, I . Wabalh 11,. Allder.oa II
W•h ttl. Lake Brie' II
\\'ftbnlll.ter 71, llarii..Sic:Me .,.
Whea&amp;oa Coli. U, cat61 ap 1&amp;
WMIIH Coli. Ill, CArlup 11

Gaa•a S1. Oarlon St
Ge•va 71, Wabnl.._ St

-.

Glu.NSt. 1t, Rulleri'NewarUI
Bartford 411, Mid• tl
•••u81, BUs 14 tOT )
l&amp;lro.ca 'Jt, Oarbo11,.
lame. Ma. .Ga 1&amp;. NM'ySZ

1.

rttt.bu 11h ts. Setoo Hall a

l'ell'i Park 14, Pitt lhdlonl II
f"ot.dam St. 88, On•Ma S&amp;ale U

· l'r0¥1*-:e 11, S,.raeu • II
Qlllul,._.17, St. Michael'• 11
RIB 1t, R.-.ontlt
s..... .,. 81 . .... St . .lolpelil ..

w........-.........,«onll

Wrlclll St. Ill. U.S. IAI1 113
X.avler (OIIlo) IS. St. Lo\M 'It

.'itourlt•••.,,

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A.iftl'll!l . 11, Ala b.,.. 96. 11
-"..... IN. Tau .UM 84
Arllu. ..IJUir lied' Ill, Ge-o-'a Sl. •

.

'

BQier II, Texu Teth •

...

New Mex.leb 8t. 1$, FIIUertooSI. 58 .
8MU SIIOTI
SW Tnu 8&amp;. IIZ.Steplfti F . .\ulttn '71
Te•a..O.att. tl, Western Carca. It · ·
Tau 117. &amp;t.ode ..land AI
Teua Cln•tlu •· lloaltult
Ter~ . P•Amer.ll, At liM . . St. It
Te~~.8 . "-tonlott. •.-dl•81mmo•81

40T)

Teau &amp;Hiler• 87, Gr&amp;mbllllf II

.Mwlm Ill, Sto•WIIII
Sl. ••"flll!re II. lllt1qwae II
81. Pludl (Pa.) a , FDlllf
st. ........ IS. ...... Coll •
Sl. a.ae II, Soutlla~~~ploa 15

Arllcl• 11. OkkiMma 14
Bakfl"'llleld St . •• Cal Poly Pomu• lf

Sll""'' tt.cllll, 8111pprtth .. 811 . •

TemP'eH.M••c-...es•
Tvw.on 81. N. L&amp;f-ret:lr IJ

,...,
•• ,n. w...,.•• •
Unlen II Elmlra 31

Urlln1111 11, POIJ Ma...._ It

UUca 81, Fre•nl• 1t
Vll-.nova fl. St . .I•IIPfb'• (Pa.) tt
Wl,}"lftiMUJ Its,

" '·

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st. Vl~~:rnt 88

•8. Pltchhln'f St. 81
~f'll' En &amp;land Itt, EulernNaerene

Widmer 8f, Sprtn~ Garde• IS
\tUIJam• 'JS, Amhenl•
Weal Vlrllnla 117, Georre W•hlnPon

.

Yale U, lrawa S!

.....

YoriltPa.) II, Vorlr. (N.Y.) 48

AJ41er.,..••d*•ll. WHdlq81
Alabama·lllrm. u..s... AlabMna 11
-'rll'o• St. U , MIMtl (PIL)I8
Albion~ II. VullertiiH71
Bapllt . . . . . . . 7t .
Beth••Coolmut
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Ceatft! H, Fllfle •
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CalllMe-LA t41, a.....-. H
Col. . . &amp;e. 17, Utall: Sl
Idaho M, N. AriiiO• It

Lo)lell Mar)moaat Ill, PGrUand Ill
Mellllau IS. Weller St. !J
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Nf\'a•.. aeao 111. E . WMIIII~~ton 110
COTI
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Orepn Tec:ll N, U ..eld 70
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Pllclftc 11, s .. lo• st. 'll
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Su Ber ...,., ao 81. 71, Menlo II
s.-~ut~ . .
Calln1Df ••
Saa FrMeiiCIO 71', S•' Die.. 11
StaaiiNI1tl, USC II
TQu·EI Pata 11, 8• Dlf'p st. Q
W'Mimcult 11, Cal. lap Itt tl_

n.

Prep soores

a

Co.-ontla 11, M~al•• U
eo~Gnt Jt;t. a..-tott-wv. 11
CGp•• 81. H. florida A.A;M 81 (zal'l
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hiiMIII. Vlral*lllll&amp;uy 71

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MII.Uippl,a.ll, PlortQ 7J
Mo lllevallo II. MIN ...Me IIIII• met')' 1t
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Nordlwr~Wra La. IJI, Nti. . TaM &amp;t.

The University of Rio Grande
women's basketb~ll te.a m posted
two weekend victories at home
by defeating District 22 opponents Lake Erie and Malone. The
Redwomen Improved their record to 13-7 and are 1-1 in the
Mid-Ohio Conference as they
face their next MOC loe, Mount
Vernon Nazarene, at Lyne Center at 5:15 p.m . Tuesday.

boards.
Angle Kane led Lake Erie's
scoring with 11 points. Julie
Staska had five rebounds.
The Redwomen connected on
38 of 97 field goal attempts for
45.1 percent, while the Storm
sank 16 of 57 tries for 28 percent.
From the foul line, the hosts-were
15 of 30 (50 percent) and Lake
Erie was 31.2 percent (5-\6). The
Rio ladles -outrebounded Lake
· Rio Grande 98, Lake Erie 37
Erie 33-28, and held their 1turnovFive Redwomen players
ers to .17. Lake Erie ha(l 34
scored In double figures Sunday
turnovers.
.1
to swamp Lake Erie's Storm,
The Storm, now 5-16, plays
98-37. The key, Coach Doug Foote Gannon (Pa. l at home Tuesday.
felt, was a renewed consistency.
Box score:
·•we didn 't concentrate on our
RIO GRANDE- (98) - Marlo
shots very well, but at the same
Kistler, 4-1-9; Jennl Couch, 3-1·0·
lime we played pretty cons!st7; Cindy Ridgeway, 2-2-6; ,Pebble
'ently,'" he said. "Kathy Snyder
Fredrick, 4-0-8; Kerr! Kidwell,
came back and did a great job, J-2- 8; Mindy Montgomery, 2·4·0and Mindy Montgomery Is flat
16; Ann Barriltz; 2-6-10; Angle
out on fire. Kerrl Kidwell has
Packard, 5-1-11; Amy Snyder,
played very hard for us In the last 1·1-3; Renee Ward , ~ -2-0-10;
two weeks. I don't know If I've
Kath:,&lt; Snyder, 4-2-10. TOTALS
.. ,
ever had a more balanced 31-7-15-98. .
team.··
LAKE ERm (37) - Debbie
Montgomery, · the team's top · French, 2·0-4; Stacie Ch'a pman,
3-point field goal shooter, fired In
1-0-2; Aime McKeon, 3-0-6; Angle
16 points and nine rebounds to
Kane, 5·J.l1 ; Tatlana Lechow- ·
lead her teammates In routing
ick. 3-3-9; Julie Staska, 2-1-5.
the Storm. With contributions- TOTALS 16-5-S'l.
from nearly the entire bench, the
Halftime score: RloGrande45,
Redwomen were ahead 43-9 with
Lake Erie 17.
5: 15 left and never looked back.
Debbie Fredrick recorded 10
Rio Grande 89, Malone 75

Darren LeBrun tied Oak Hill
center Chad Smith for game
honors with 22 points-to help pace
Minford's Falcons to · a ~-58
victory over host CYak Hill Saturday night.
The Falcons went Into the
second quarter wlth a five-point
lead and capitalized on the Oaks'
second-quarter scoring problems to go ahead by .14 at
halftime.
,
·
Heading Into the fourth quarter, Minford inflated its cushion
to 18, but prime lime was when ..
the Oaks' offense came to Ute, as
they outscored their guests 26-15
In the last, elght ·minutes. With

.
ra1 .. C.llep II, Sa.-u•h
at.te U
Klcllme.. 'll. NC·MIIIII . . . . . .
Salem-Tellcyo IS, Gln.Uie II

Samfonl It, Mercer n
So11ll car••• H. Florlllal!ll. 11
Soall ~ar•ll• 81. II, M.. E. SileR 71
Soallera 'J'l, jadoollfll. U
SOalleta Mila. Ill, IW Lo.. al- JM
(OTI
SIOIQ' Brook II u,t&amp;IJ 1'1
St. Be..td '71, St. M..,.•, N
· TennN•r Trclll U • .\list• Pear II
Va. Commo•eii!Mh II,

01• o...-..

'

WhAropSI, Da.-l.on41
Ml-1
Allr• Kl, WatHa Mlth. 11

Smith's . offen5e, Maynard's 11
points and a 10-point contribution
from "freshman gtiar~ Benjt
L~wts, the Hill cut the Falcons'
lead to a single-digit margin,
where It eventually stayed.
'

l

Also helping to keep the FaJ.
cons airborne In this affair were
Aaron Kainer (15 points) and
Eric Pinson (10).
Oak Hill, 3-lJ overall, w!H host
McDermott Northwest on Tuesday before returning to SVAC
,action on Friday against Hannan
Trace In Mercerville. . '
Score by quarters
Minford ............. 17 14 120 15~
pak Hill ............. .12 5 16 26-58

•

F.M..,.

lntlleJM.r..u-Ma~ra

t:apbi ....... CUNIIN

Rio GnHe N

Cf!ahal Mid. 7t, . . .u . . Gre• Sl
C.111ral M•..n t1. •-11.1:11 ft

CUe lleMrw II. Qle... M
Qk... a.tt.v •...-..... ..
ere~
11

..... sa. a......

DariN •· eru..Uie a

:::-,:~...:=~--.
.....
.,.w... r.-• ·

Ealllfra DL II, QeVelaMI • • 14
Elmllll'lt 14, Aap .......

T)Lemieux
shines
in
Sunday's
NUL
All-Star
.
lilt
.
.
. I
Mil_.

EYultl M.
V.aiiJ II
Fo .... - I I... Hda11

'

Malone, down 23 points at the
halt, rallied In the second .period
Saturday with effective reboundIng and tough quarter-court play,
but the Redwomen held their
ground and posted an 89-75
victory.
"Rio just shot the lights out In
the second half, and we came
back to, outscoJ:e them by nine.
(43-34). That was the differ·
ence," Malone Coach Barbara
Easllck said, ''We had to get In
there and work for 11: The press
hurt and gave us a hard time In
getting inside, and. we made
some lundamentai errors."
Fredrick led the Rio Grande
offense with 20 po'ints to jump out
to a 20-poln! advantage !30-10) ·
after the first 10 minutes. A trio of
Montgomery 3-polnters and
another trlfecta shot by Ward
helped the hosts build the lead as
Malone struggled against Rio
Grande's defensive shield and Its
own poor shooting.
'
Malone' Usa Javersak, Mindy
Marshall and Laurie Hanson
broke through to cut tlie lead toll
(78-67) In the halfs final quarter.
A series of trips to the foul line
and another Montgomery 3-po\nt
shot helped keep ftto Grande
ahead.
Barnltz contributed 16 points
and elp;ht rebounds, while Kid-

MINFORD (88) · .,. LeBrun
11·0·0·22; Kainer 6-1·0·15; . Pinson
3-0·4·10; Kennedy 3-0-1-7; Johnson 2-0-2-6; Corlell1•0·0·2; Scarfplii1-0-0-2; Lobo 0-0-1-1; Thacker
0-0·1·1. TOTALS- Z'H·Ntl
Field goals - 28-56 (50'!1 )
Free tbrows - 9-18 (50o/,,)
Rebounds - 34 ·
Tumovers -9
OAK HILL (58) - Smltb
10.0-2-22; Maynard 3-1-2-11; Lewis 0-3-1-10; Haines 1-0-4-6; Potter 2-0-2-6; Morgan 0-0-3-3. TOTALS - 18·4-lf-58 .
Field pals - 20-48 (41.7%)
Free lbi'H's- 14-17 (82.4%)
Reboadl - 29 (Smith 121
Tumovera - 21

f

Senior lro11tman Shannon Bear. Tuesday night to begin a threeled all scorers with 20 poUlts to game home stand before returnhelp push Portsmouth East to a lpg to SVAC action on Friday
78-37 victory over Kygei: 'Creek against Eastern.
Saturday night In Sc!otoville,
Score by quarters '
.
The Tartans opened up a Kyger Creek ....... 10 10 5 12-37
17-polntlead at the end oft he llrst Port. East ......... 27 19 10 22-78
quarter and never looked-back as
EAST (78) - Bear 10-0-0-20;
they sent the Bobcats, 1-13 Abrams 7-0-4-18; MQnroe 6·2·0·
overall, to their fifth · straight 18; Wright 7-0-0-14; Gilmpp 2-0-0- ·
loss.
'
4; Jennings 2·0-0-4. TOTALS The Bobcats were led by senior 34-2-4·78
l
center John Sipple, who scored 15
. Fouhhol8- 4-11 (36.4%)
points.
.
. KYGER CREEK
Sipp~
Kyger Creek will host Wahama

"-' ...•1t. Kaluna1t0 '73
Aile.-)' tt.
t1'
.....t..w.n.ce., M..tnla'H
II&amp;III&amp;U.•II, To~Nt N
l!ktiMI II. Grac•ll (OT)

PmSBURGH fUPI) - With
his four-goal perfonnance In the
All-Star Game, 1\'farlo Lemieux
could only realize- not surpass
- expectations.
Lemieux scored a hattrlck on
three shell tn the first period
Sunday and added a third-period
goal to send the Wales Confereoce to a 12-7 triumph over the
Campbell Confereoce In the
hla'helt·ICOring All-Star Game In
NHL biB tory.
The accompllshmenta, how·
ever, were just about what
Lemieux assumed was exjlected
from the host team star, Wales
captain and leading recipient In
fan voting In 1 rare tum for the

-n.

.
Portsmouth East beats KCHS 78-37

" 'aiern Jb. 71, NC..c::'llarllae 71
Weuern Va. Tech Ill, ••tteldt1
M'ft!W'rn VL M.'e~~leyu II, CohmWa
llnlon8!
\\'IDtM Sl. II. llotntl4l St. II

C.._",., t1,

all playerJin rebolllldlq with 13.
Donaidloa ICOred 111 pollltl and
contributed 10 reboundl.
In addition to Ieadlq the
Cedarville ICOrlng, Minto also
scored the moat Individual reboundl at
Mark ,Combl
poured In 17 points and five
rebounds, Fruk Back bad 18
points, Todd Pennlnaton ·and
Matt Hickman had 12 each and
Dominic McKinley scored 11.
McKinley also snatched stx rebounds and Pennington added
nine assists.
.
Cedarvale It'd In overall field
goal · shooting, slnkbig 43 ol · 72
attempts for 60 percent, compared to Rio Grande's 43 percent .
(30·87) . At the toulllne, the hosts
~ank 20 of 29 tries for 69 percent
and Ct'darvtlle canned stx olll
for 55 percent. The Redmen
outboarded the Yellow Jackl!ts,
41-36, and held their turnovers to
seven. Cedarville lost the ball17
times.
.Due to the recent University of
Rio Grande decision to rule
forw!lrd Tony Ewing acadell)lc ally !~eligible, the Rtidmen
'have IQtlelted slli games they
won In which Ewing plliyed, This
leaves Rio Grande's record as ol
today at 5-1~ overall. Its standing
In the MOC is 1-3.
Cedarville Improves to 15-6 and
2-1. In other conference games
Saturday, Mount Vernon Nazarene defeated Urbana, 90-79,
while Tiffin slid past non-MOC

Minford defeats Oak ·Hill 66-58 ·

"

..

Erslan.~tepped to the free throW .
line and successfuUy C!lnned a
total o~ three shots. Each time,
howev~r, the Yellow ·Jackets
penetrated and scored.
Rio prande was ahead In tbe
first ~alf by the slimmest of
marglils - 21-19 at 10:54 on an
Erstar\ field goal; 25-23 at 9:04 on
a Gary Harrison basket; 27-23 at
8: 35 9n two polllts by Par ius
Wlllia'ms; 29-28 at 7: 49, courtesy.
of a: 1Troy Donaldson bucket;
31-30 .at 6: 27 on a Williams field
, goal; ' &lt;!nd 33-32 at 5: 43, again by
Wllll~ms,
·
,
Erslan's 3-pointer at · 3:27
sllcejl the lead to one (40-39), but
four consecutive , tiaskets by
Minto handed the Yellow Jackets
their largest lead of the half
(48-39 ) with 1:12 left. CedarYille
held a !our-point advantage at
the lntermtsston.
'''I wasn't disappointed In our
effort I felt !Lwas very good,"
Lawhorn said about the Redmen,
who continued to threaten Cedarville. throughout and held the
Yellow Jackets' second period
margin to 10. "We just had atough time 'guarding them," hi!'
·added.
Lawhorn drew balanced scorIng from the players, with Erslan
adding five rebounds and five
assists to the g11me. Harrison
netted 16 points and 11 assists,
while Brad Schubert added 15
markers and five boards. Jeff
Brown fired In 12 points but led

NHL on national television.
"Tberewasa lotolpressureon
me, ol course," Lemieux said
with a wry smile. "A lot of people
were expectlnf me to win the
MVP, at least."
.
His response was to ~ecome
the first plliyer In NHL·hiBtory to ·
record 811 All-Star hat trick In the
first period- bls R!COnd Ali·Star
Game hat Irick In three yean.
Llllt D18lly of IJJe AIJ.Siara,
Lelllteux lAid he .... was consctoua ol the All-star Game's
llrsl national, non-eable televi·
ston appearuce beln&amp; lloce 1980.
"I wanted to lhow a Jot of
people I was 1 good hockey
player," Lemlellx aald.

•

•

·•

.

•

An All-Star every year since
his rookie appearance In 1985,
Lemieux ran his career All-Star
totafs to nine goals, five assists
and 14 points. His goal total is one
shOrt of the All-Star career
record held by Wayne Gretzk)'
and Gordie Howe. LemieUx said
had he rellllzed the single-game
total only tied Gretzky's recoid,
he mltrbl have shot 1D1tead of
puled on a couple third· period
playa that were too unaelflab.
Gretzky, the Campbell starter
whose line was matched against
Lemieux's, was' shut out on the
game. _
.
.
Lemieux nee4ed all of. 21
seconds to reward NHL fans for_

7-0-H5; Hall 2-0-2-6; S~lsher
2-0-2-6; Denney 1-0-2-4; Bradbury
1-0-0-2; Polcyn 0-0-2-2; Slone
0-0·2-2. TOTALS - 13-f.lJ-3'7
Foulllbota -11-17 (64.7%)
c!

•

••

I

.,

Prescription
.:~. Shop

SOUTHERN

."F,-All

BOYS

Jan. 26-North Gallia-Home
Jan.27 -Ravenswood-Home

y,,

!

. ,,.,,,,,,, 1114 ,,,,,,

-·

Nffit, Su Ut"

GIRLS
Jan. 25-North Gallia-Away
Jan. 29:-:-Wattrford-Away

''

',' '

_

___;___;----~-BOYS
MEIGS HIGH S.CHOOL
1989·90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home

Dec . .1-Miller ...... ,......... .. ........... Away
8- Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-Y'ork ......:.... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ..:..-................. Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co ..................... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre ....................... ;... Away
Dec. 29~Logan ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller .... :...................... Home
Jan. 16-¥',ren .......................... Away
)an. 19-lttmbje ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................:.. Home .
Jan. 30-Vinton Co...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............... ............. Away ·
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
·Feb. 9-Federaj Hock!ng ....... :....... Away
' Dec~

•

:

•

'S CHEDULE---------

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOl
1989-SO BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Miller ............................. Away
Nov. 24-Federaj Hocking ............ Home
ftov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .......... .. ...... Away
Dec. 5-Kypr 'Creek ..................... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec ..15-Southe[n ....................... Away
Dei:. 16-Symmes 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 .... ,...................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ........................ Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill .. :...................... Home

-----------------GIRLS

.

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19B9-90 GIRL9 BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Soutllern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-lliller ................................ Home
Dec. 2-Eastern ...................... ~ .......... Away
Dec. 7- Trimble"""'"""·"""' .-.......... ~. Home
Dec. 11...:.Nelsonville·York .................. Away
.Dec. ••-Wellston ............................ Home
D'ec. 18-Vinton Co ............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpree .............................. Home
Jan. 4!...Aiexander .............................. Away
Jan. 8-Federal flocking ..................... Away
.Jan. 11-lllller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern .... :... ............ ........... Home
Jan. 18-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Nelsonville-York ................... Home
Jan. 5-WIIIston ................, .............. Home
Jan.- 29-Vinton Co........................... Home
feb. 1-Belpre ................................... Away
Feb. 5-Aitxander ............................ , Home
Feb. 8-Fedtrel Hocking .................... Home
Feb. 10-Southern ................ ,.... ,...... Home

•

'

'

'

STOREWIDE

Ja·naary Sale! I

giving him the most votes the
past two years with a wrapa·
round giial.
I

CURIOS.
SEATA.
LOVESEATS.
BEDROOMS. SYLVANIA TV'S: TABLES.
LAMPS. DINING ROOMS.
:.D I\D,

'

.•
,,

I

'

•

'SOUTHERN HIG"! ~CI:IQOL
1989·90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hinnan Trace ..................... Home
Dec. 2-Meigs .................................. Home
Dec. 4--Kyger CreeL ....................... ~ Away
Dec. &amp;-Trimble ................................. Away
Dec. ?-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11'-Soutllern ............................ Home
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Dec. 16-Federal H~king ................... Away
Dec. 21-0ak Hill ... :......................... Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace .................. ....... Away
Jan. 10-Trimble ................. ,............. Home
Jan. 11-North Galli a........................ Home
Jan. 15-Meias .................................. Away
Jan. 18-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Fideral Hocking .................. Home
hn. 25-Kypr Creek ........................ Home
Feb. 1-Southtrn ................. ~ ... ;......... Away
Feb. 5-0ak Hill ................................ Away '
Feb. 8-Symmes Valley ,.................... Home.t

.

'

Nov. 25-Soutbwestern ................. Home
_ Nov. 28-Kyger Creek.. ................. Away
Dec. 1-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia ..... :......... ..... Away
Dec. 8-:-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. IS-Eastern ........... ;............ Home
Dec. ·16-Eastern Pike .................. at O.U.
Dec. 22-;-Symmes Valley........... ,:. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ......... ..... :.. Away
Dec. 29-Athens ............. ~ ........... Home
Jan. 5-0ak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. 6-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

:.
'

'

''·
''

SCHEDULE~----------~--

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989·90 GIRLS BAS~ETBALL

·,

..

,J

•

,_Jan. 25..:....Kyger Cretk--:Home
Feb~ 1.-Southern.-A~ay ·

••'

ANDERSON'S .·

*

1

.

Mon.·Thu,._ I A.M-·1 1 P.M.
Fti. a I&amp; I
2 P.M.
P.M.

GIRLS

•

A Leadersbip Training
OrpniZatioQ

BOYS

Jan. 27 -Miller-Home

1990
mE JAYCEES!!

t

'

Dining • Cafi'Y 0 ut •
Drlve-Thru

Jan. 26-Kygar Creek-Away

AND

JAYCEE WEEKJANUARY 21-27,

MEIGS

•.

BOYS

MEANING

... /roftiiN .Jape Cmd

· ·*
''*

EASTERN

mAT FAITH
IN ,GOD
GIVES·

LIFE.

Ftlt1lr-.:
'!I'Grllt .........,
•t,.a lllf 011 Cnlluant
* Stuffed Biked Potltoes
TacCI S.ltda
'" -! ice Cre~m

Jan. 22 -NelsoJ'!ville-Home
Jan. 25-Wellston-Away
. Jan. 29-Vintan Co.-Home

We Believe ...

TO HUMAN

--

-LUIKH&amp; . .R

•

,GIRLS.
......,

'

well led all players on the boards
with 'n. For Malone, Javersak
netted l6 points and 11 rebounds.
The Redwomen advanced on 34
of 58 attempts from the lleld and
sank 15 of 21 tries from the foul
line for 66 percent. Malone shot42
percent on field goals (27·64) and
was 75 percent on free throws
(21-28). Rio Grande recorded 37
rebounds to Malone's 34.
Malone went to 6-13 overall and
hosts Ohio Dominican Tuesday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (89) - Marlo
Kistler, 2·0-4; Jennl Couch, J.-0-6;
Debbie Fredrick, 7-6-20; Kerr!
' Kidwell, 3-1-7; Mindy Montgomery, 2·5-0-19; Cindy Ridgeway,
2·1-5; Ann ·aarnitz, 5:.6-16; -Angle .
Packard, 2-0-4; Renee Ward,
1-1-0-5; Kathy Snyder, 1·1-3.
TOTALS 28+15-81. '
MALONE . (75) - Jenntler
Neuhart, 0-1-1; Kim. Ohurcll,
·1-0-2; Madelyn Turner, 4·0-8;
Lori Melendez, 448; Theresa
Bowlin, 1-2-4; Sarah Nichols,
1-0-2; Laurie Hanson, 4-4-12;
· !VJ!ridy Marshall, 4-3-11; Debbie
Urdiales, 0-7-7: Lisa .J aversak, ·
8·0·16. TOTALS 27·%1·75. '''
Halftime score: RloGrande·ss,
Malone 32. '

PURPOSE

Daitv Sentlnei-Pagr 5

Jan. 23-Ntlsonvlllt-Away
Jan. 26-Wtllstii-:-Homt
Jan. 27..:....Yintad Co.-Home

..

REDMEN NOTES: Winner of
Ohio Valley Bank's fifth annual
hoop shoot at halltlmt! was Jay ·
Jarvis, 10 Evans Hetgllts, GaiU·
PQUs, teacher at the Q))Jo Valley
Chtlstlan·School. Jarvis won$500
and was the sixth ticket called ...
Flrstllcket called by OVB's Bill
Gray was held by ex-Redman
Ron Rlttlnger, the 1988 Mld-9hlo
Conference Player' oflhe Year ...
The last time' Cedarville won at
Rio Grande was Feb. 17, 1987.
The score was 78;76, with Joe
Verhoff posting 29 points for the
Redn\en.
· ·

The

·THIS
EEK'S
lA ES

opponent Def1ance 91·83.
TM Redmen wiD boat Ohio
Dominican Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
lor Ga!Ua County New Car
!
Dealers AI.OCtatlon Nlpt. Tbe · '
Yellow Jackets best Wallb
Tuesday .
llex1e0re:
•'
RIO GRANDE (M) - Gary
•
Harrison, 6-4-16; Mark Erslan,
'
2-7·6-31; Brad Schubert, "'3-4·1~;
Jeff Brown, 0-3·3·12; Troy Donaldson, 4-2-10: John Lambcke,
0-1-1: Darius Wtlliams, J.-1-0-9 .
TOTALS 11-lt-10-H,
. CEDARVILLE (81) - Mark
• Combs, 3·3·2-17; Todd Penning·
ton, 3-2-0·12; Frank Back, S.0-16; .
Matt Hickman, 5·2-12;. David
•.
Barnes, 2-0-4; Michael ·Minto,
12-1·25; Dominic McKinley, 5-1·
11, TOTALS 38-S-f.f7.
'
••,,
Halftime score: Cedarville 48,
Rio Grande 44.
'

Redwomen win two ·.w eekend .cage games

'Mia.. Va11q St. ltl, Prairie VIew H
Mu.,.., St. •· Ml ddle Tenn. Sl. 71 '
RI~Ce II,

'

The Redmen IVere to see the
lead five times In the first halt
and not · at all In the seconil,
at though the opportunity came
maddeningly close when the
hosts trailed twlce by a single
point. Each time (16- 75 at 6:16
and 82.·81 at 5:01) came after

R'I..S. Oil,.. 11, Wt.-PM"Iallle II
WI..WIIIIrw•er 11. WI•La CrOMt 11
R'la-W ..... &amp;ter 11, Wla-La CrONe '7t
'''IUe-.,.. If. R'oM&amp;er Sfl ,

SleM 13, FaJrDeld Sl
St•

you."

· WII-Gree• . . . . . N'. 1-a Sl
MI-Pia&amp;&amp;evUie ltl. WI!Hitout 1t
Wh-.. wr F&amp;tll 'll, WI..O.b...lll Sl

Ke• C..1e II. L•er..Cam6!n 71

Klap fN,Y.l U, Nyacll at
La Salle A4. 1101)' Q-.,..11 '
Lebuoa Vlllle)' IS, Geci,U.rJr It
LKhblvtft M, F.dl*r•TI'
...,... 1'2, Rolttol1 Morril II
M.rllmac 81. Beall!)' •
M:euiM II, m-.beHOWII 81
Mlllernllle II. Mu .. leJII41
Mo.noue 1J. LRJ M
Mora.-lu •· Dltld.-n M
,
Mt. St. Mar:r't11,SI, f'rU('il (N.\'.
Nf!W Hampilllre 71, Venno• 'll fOT)
N!N PUtz I!. Pl&amp;lllbuiJ st. ft (IOTJ
P~11nll, C.lpte N
."
.

Accurl!_te shooting by Cedar·
ville and ·a 25-point performance
by center Michael Minto lifted
· the Yellow Jackets to a 97-94
Mid-Ohio Conference victory
over Rio Grande at Lyne Center
Saturday during Ohio Valley
Bank Night.
.
' Rio Grande's Mark Erslan
netted a career tilgh of 31 points
to lead all scorers. The &amp;-3
sophomore from West Alexandria, Ohio, scored 21 of his total
points on ~ven 3-point field
goals.
"I feel It was just an Intense
game, right from the start,"
Cedarvllle mentor Don ·Callan
commented. "Nothing, nobody
was relaxed. I kept hoping we .
could last as long as we did, and
we certainly were fortunate to
get the ball inside as much as we
did."
" We didn 't shoot It v.e ry well,"
Redmen skipper John Lawhorn
remarked. "Defensively, we had
a hard time matching It up with
their people, which Is something
we'll have to correct. Cedarville
Is the kind of a ·tea_m that can
present · a . lot of problems 'for

Wlll&amp;m P•. . n. Uplll!'r Iowa II

olalllua 11, Delaware Valley IT

"'etlldl~

-

N_,.... ,., eo.,. ...._ (la~&amp;.J ••.
Norll C.lnl a, lllll.. a11
Ntrlnr... l~ G .a .,w. a..,~sut
U•hM•1 11. w..-e IMM• 11
011 .. UaMrllty '71, EMWJIIIICII. U
Olli6o W•le:Ju II, Obel'la M
Ollila•..., II. It, Notnab 11
Pita• Staie'11. W. . tlln1'1 (MJ

. . . . . 1111. Wat O•k-r 1t

fiirow tu, u, Plilel n

.

· GruiiV...,II,.IIIIII • •
' .......... N. ......... ,.

Pomerot· Mldclaport. Ohio

.'

-·~-.

Yellow Jack-;ts outlast Redmen, 97-94
College 800I'e8

RIOt•'! ,.,. .-...., 22.1980

•

'

SOUTHERN ·HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 20-Meigs ................................ Home
Nov. 27-Kyaer Creek.. ...................... Home
Nov. 30-0ak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-North Gallia ......................... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ....................... Home
Dei:. 11-Eastern ................................Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ...................... Away
Dec. 18-Waterfortl .......................... Home
Dec . 21-Symmes Valley ... :................ Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away
Jan. 4-0ak HilL ............................ .. Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......... :............... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ....................... Away
Jan. 20..:.Netsonville York. ................. Hott~e
Ja. 25-No~h Gallia ........................... Awey
Jan. 29-Waterford ...... ,..................... Away
Feb. 1-Eastern .............. :................. Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valley ................. N·Home
Feb. 8-Southwe'stern .................. "";~ Home
. Feb. 10-Mei~s .................................. Away

.'

''!O.PLES,

BANK

YHt , . . , , , w
.•i

.

...
'
•

'

-d.-. a.-on. w. v•.

,

M!MIER FDIC

77J-U14
2:112 ~CIII Ave.

1'1:• ...... w. v•.
. . ,.. 1121

,.,_lt.-t.lll- " - · W. lie.
·'
1112·411 :SII
.

'.

'

�•

. Plio• 8-The Daly Sentinel

..

The . Daily Sentinel

-~- . 8y The·Bend
1

·--

· DENVER
•

.

'

•

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISI~NA
SUPERDOME

N1tional Football
Conference Champions

Ja-nu~ry

"Your Good
Neighbo-r"
J&gt; M£M8ER 'f.D.I.C.
Second St., Moson, W.

Va.

773-5514 '
Sth Ave. New Haren, W; Va.

Mike Haley • Ow•er

Pomeroy, Ohio

VALLEY
LUMBE·R

VIDEO

55 5 .Park Street
MiddlepOI't,
Ohio

992-6,611

Just fill out the entry blank, clip it out, and
t~ke it to .;11ly of the below m~chants f~r a
chance to win $50! AI you have t6 do is
predict the correct final score of Super •owl
XXIV and the $50 is all'. yours.. · -· i ·
ENTER AS MANY nMES AS · · '
YOU WANT!
Do not pr:tdict the winning team,
just the final score.
FOR EXAMPLE, ~ to 3
The Sentinel will take all correct entries and
select the .winner by random drawing. Pri'11
awarded by The Daily Sentinel.
NO PURCHASE NJCESSARY

OVER 4,000
MOVIES TO
CHOOSE FROM
HOURS:
Monday thi'u Saturday
10 A.M.· 9 P.M.
Sunday 1 A.M.:B P.M.

VIDEO TOUCH
992-5209

NIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY
992-2342
See .Us For All
Your Insurance

Needs

'"You Don't Buy
A Policy, You
Hire An Agent,"
•LIFE •AUTO •HOME
•FARM eiUSINESS
•BOATS •BONDS.
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•HOSPITALIZATION

ROWER~
Insurance Services

'

992-6687
214 East Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

~·

992-2054
342 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis

336-2691

"2 Registered
Pharmacists
To Serve You"
·'

'

Opon Till 9:00
1

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FOOD SHOP
AND

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820 EAST MAIN

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991·S•I1

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Ml.l&amp;lll art, Ollie

PAT HILL

FORD .

461 3rd AYE.

MIIDUPORT
992-2196

PAT HILL
CHRYSLER
·'LYMOUTH-.

DODGE

Address: - - - - - -

''

212 East Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

•.•.,.,

992-21-21
Dlplty aud Service

DIBCJOI

services
for all
.
your banking .and borrowing
needs.
'

'

'

.---People in the news
By WU.LIAM C. TROTr
United Press International

IAIIIC ONE COfiiPOfiiATtON
Ohio
Memblr FDIC

Ill

PONTIAC
BUICK ta
GMC
'el
TRUCK
For All Your

T~a~spif}~~~:•ds 5"...

1: .

''We'v~ Got- The Keys To
A Heuer Deal"

INC.

399 SO. lHIID

MIDDLEPOD

992-2174
500 EAST MAIN I
POMEROY OliO I

I

I
I

FARMERS

BANI
&amp; SAYiftGS CO• .
POMEROY, OHIO
882-2138
. 882-2137
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
1811-331&amp;
887-3101

Alwayo 0//erU., Pre-/1/eed
Counoell111 and .4rnmpmenro

Ill .....o

Eighteen
thousand
people .
who Care

Fo

EWING '
-FU'NERAL
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271 Nomt SECOND
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

SMITH-NELSON
'
.MOTORS

992-6421

Ph. N o . : - - - - - -

101

FLOSS

. 992'-6669

"

Established 1913 .

DMC E"'!''IDIIY

Fernwood. ·Garden
Club meeting .held

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

~mbua.

H

69&lt; .

•IEDSIOE COMMODES
•CARDS and GIFTS

An Attlll* of

1
.
:
'·L,....---------..1
·------------------------------Jewelers
of
Integrity .

•WALKERS •WHEELCHAIRS

786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio

SWEEPSTAKES .

P.M. on January 26,
I pr141kt tho·flnalscore
1990. Employ•• of
will be:
_I this newipaper and
TO
the participating
1 businesses a.re not .N•me: - . , - - - - - - 1 eligible. Enter jas often

Service

•Monthly Sal• Speclll•
•Shop !'1 !iome Catale)g .
.
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992-64'11

I~------------------------------,
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1990 SUPER
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Every Night

Sunday 11 to I

••
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off at any of the participating ·
businesses.
1-SubmiHICI hfo~e 5:00

•Low Preecrlptlon Prices
•PhOto Flnlthlng&gt;oFne Delivery
•Replacement Contact Len•

,,,,

ENTER-an• WIN! -

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•

Pomeroy

On January 28, Super Bowl XXIV wiil'be
played in .New. OriiCI!ns, Louisiana. The out· ·
come of the game will be determined on the
field, . but YOU may 'have something at
~stake, tool
·

992-3462 ·

111 last Second St.

11 3 Court St.

IN CASH!

TOUCH
• 2 lOCAtiONS •

•GASOLINE
•BEER and
WINE CARRYOUT
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Repair

•Engraving

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POMEROY, OHIO ·

DOWNING
CHILDS
MULLEN
MUSSER·
INSURANCE

•Jewelry

~----~------------------~' -·-----,

1 7 Cole Str11t

Jackson Are. Pt. Pleasanl, W.Va.
675-1121

•Watch Repair · ,

. ...

-· -

·•

-

.

For All Vou.r 1
Bedding Needsl .. ,
See A Perfect
Sleeper
'

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FURNITURE, APPUANCES,
TV's; FLOOR COVERING

...

992-3671

• •

106 EAST MAIN
PO.IOY,OHIO

MEMIER FDIC

'---------'

sh~wer

Layette

given

, .Mrs. Larry' (Amanda Cozart) to attend were Thelma W))lte,
Young was honored with a baby . Mary Holter, Betty Dill. Sharon
shower recently at the hOme of Folmer, and Cathy Scarberry
Roberta Dill.
and daughter, Gina .
Games were play~d with prizes
. going 10 Jan Andtews, Michelle
Young, and Brenda Jones.
The door prize was won by Jan
Andrews.
Those present for. the ocasslon
were Juanita Harmon and
daughters Cindy • A;ngel, and
Sarah,, BJ'llnda Jones and daugh·
ter , Denessa; Ellen Rite. Jan
Andrews and daughter, Court·
ney, Jewell Jol!nson, Violet
Werry • Debbie Young and daugh·
ter, Michelle, Becky Pearson,
Margaret Tuttle, Linda Foster
and daughter; Mpssy, Helen .
Young, Roberta Dill and children
Angle, Tanyw, and Riehle.
Those sending gins but unable

ReedsviUe UMW
meets recently

The January meeting of the
Reedsville United M ethodist
Women was held rece!llly l·n the
•
church basement
Forty-four shut-In calls were
reported and a yard and bake
sale was planned for AprU 3.
Attending were Grace Weber,
Mamie Buckley, Patty Henderson, Joan Lawrence, Nancy
Buckley, Pearl Osborne, and
Frances Reed.

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

Reedsville happenings·
.
.

Your. Profel!liOnal Full

~·

992-3761

*.

Service Jewelers

.

Sorority chapter·meefs

Jewelry Store ·

You May Win

..

~-

TWIN CITY
MACHINE &amp; WELDING

882-2136

Clark's

28, 1990

ENTER TODAY Al THESE
PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES

Machine &amp; Welding
WELDING • SUPPLIES
FABRICATION
COMLETE MACHINE
SHOP SERVICE
RADIATOR REPAIR
and REPLACEMENT

American FootJitll
Conference ~hampions

· _ Sunday, ·

TWIN
CITY

BANK Iii

·
.
Pollee Department
parents not be home," Rought
Officer Stacy and Deputy
Chief Rought presented a brief said, " have an alternate number Sm)th then !lqer printed .many
talk on child safety In the village, that can be reached."
otthe children at the seminar In a
stressing to cblldren to never get
. For children who might be out . Child Registry Program Book,
Into a car with astranger, and If a walking or riding a bike after donated · by the Meigs County '
· stranger approaches, to yell or' dark, Rought reminded them .t o Juvenile Court. The finger printrun for help. Ro1.1ght encouraged be sure and wear the proper lng porllon of the seminar was
younpters that In a case like attire so that on·comlng !rattle co-sponsored by the Fraternal
Order of Eagles Aerie 2171 and
this, to look for a pollee officer will be sure to see them.
on
the
Farmers Bank and Savings
Chief
Ronaht
touched
because "the:y are alwayi there
'""
safety
of
guns,
sheils,
wires
and
Company,
.
to help." He encouraeed children
111any
·other
objects
that
can
be
To
complete
a requirement for
to be 1"1!ady to tell a policeman or
If
not
stored
and
a
badge,
Chief
Rought superhazardous,
ot!ler · helper their name, ad·
handled
properJy.
.
vised
six
scouts
(~ars)
doing a
dress, telephOne number· and
/
He
also
touched
some
on
the
plaster
cast
of
a
footprint
parents' names, aDd to·be able to
The Fraternal· Order of Pollee
dial the phone. "Should your Importance of saying "NO" to
dr!JgS and the effects which plan to sponsor several addl·
dr!Jgs can have on the body. A tlonal finger printing sessions In
I
dr1.1g · M
question-answer sessonon
. ld dl eport an d P omeroy.
abuse
followed.
Times,
dates and locations of the
.i
·~~ '
. .
.
Deputy
Thomas
·.
·
additional
sessions have not been
Meigs
County
Sheila · Harris and Paula · lion will · be June i-3 at the ·
Smith,
also
Introduced
by
Officer
decided
at
this time but parents
Hayrtes presented a·. cultural Stouffer Central Plaza Hotel In
Stacy,
gave
a
br~f
talk
on
!Inger
lntere!ited
In
.having their childreporl on Women Entertainers at Dayton. RegiS Ira lion deadline to
the I;ecent meeting of the XI · attend Is May 14 wlih a fee of $85. printing tor Identification ren finger· printed should watch
the newspaper for ·detalls.
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
The next meeting will be held purposes.
Sigma Pbl Sorority held 111 Royal at the home of Debbie Miller on
Oak Resort.
Feb. 6 at 7 p.m. It will be the
In · their report Harr,ls and · "Hearts. and Hands" gift
Haynes noted the oppdrtunltles excltange.
·
'
.
.
.
tor women Increased wltb the
It was noted that the scclal
Mr. and Mrs. Rallegh Hetzer, ' at Belpre. Other guests were Mr.
20th century.
.
committee will purchase necesAkron,
recently visited with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dietz l!nd Katy,
The group participated In the sary paper Items tor meetings
and
Mr~.
Frank Blse. ·
Cl&gt;lumbus; and Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Jeopardy game with the catego- . starting the 1990-91 year.
Mrs.
Lona
Chevalier
has
reLong, Belpre.
·
. ,,
rles being Women of the Sliver · · ' Hoste&amp;llf!S tor the evening were ·
turned
home
after
being
a
patient
Sarah
Frydman,
Evanston;
Jli,
screen, Women of Television, Carolyn Collins and Sheila Harat
'St.
Joseph's
HospitaL
has
returned
to
·her
home
after
and Comediennes..
· ·rts. Hostesses for the next
Mr. and · Mrs. Frank Blse VIsiting wjth her grandpareQts, ·
meeting will be Sandy Iannarelll
VIsited
with George Blse, a Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
It was announced that conven· and Debbie Miller .
patient at Riverside Hospital In
Recent visitors ofMr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens were Mr. and
• Columbus.
' Mr. and Mrs. Ernest White- Mrs. Bill Meredith and grandhead attended . the birthday daughter, Terry.ofBeverly; Mr.
'
' "
dlnner "for their granddaughler, and Mrs. Denver Weber and
Lisa Hensch, at the home of her granddaughters, Morgan and
parents, Mr. and ·Mrs. Walt · .Erin; Mark Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Hen~h and Jordan, at Canal
Ernest Whitehead and grand·
daughter.'.Sarah Frydman,
Mr.
F u Iton.
.
.
Tillie Cullison presented a Year. " Slie used Psalm 119as the
Mr, and Mrs . .Lyle Balderson and Mrs. Roger Meredith, and
VIdeo, ''Basic .Flower Arrang-· · b&lt;~Sls and closed with the song visited with Mrs. l{athrY'\ Dietz Mrs. Lyle Balderson.
'
1
'
.•'
,,
lng" ~t.therece,nJmeeth!go~ _ the . poem '" Thy Word . ts . Like a ,
Fernwood GB!'den Club held at Garden Lord.' •
·
the home of Suzanne Warner on , Mem~rs responded to rou·call
Wolf Pen Road.
by telling of their 1990 resoliilloris
The video demonstrated the tor their gardens.
baste· tools needed which are
The bulb orders were disfloral tape, pliers, a knife, ruler, cussed and , some members
stlckuin, picks, moss, and foam. placed , thett· orders. Also, the .
Cullison showed liow to make two club will send their 1990 donation ·
·
arrangements, . one horizontal to the Amerltlora fund.
and . one ~ouplng using four
Members discussed the Garbaslc 'steps. The steps are line, denersDayOuttorAull\lstwhlch
which ~!1\flllf.. width; 'focal, will be at ~ar.
'·
\)r&amp;tes , f"'l ~~Wpt ' !&gt;I , lntereat;
. The next meeting_will be Feb.
secondary, a point smaller than · 20 at 1 p,m. at' the home of Ida
the focal ~ llnd .!Iller, to fill In the Murphy with a · program on
spaces.
. . •
. .
herbs.
The hostess served refresh- ,
The meeting was conducted by ments to those mentioned and to
Ida Murphy alid devotions were KathrYJ) Johnson, Thelma Giles,
given by Marjorie Purtell who Helen Eblin, Evelyn 'Oioma, and
used '"God's Word for the New Wllovene Bailey.
·

Over a hundred parents and
cub scouts attencle:d the Jan, 8
!Inger printing ldentl!lcatlon seminar wh lch was sponsored ·by
the Fraternal Order of Pollee
·Lodge 95 and P()meroy Cub Scout
Pack 249. The seminar was held
at Pomeroy Elementary School
and . 53 children were flqer
printed during the after school
.
. 1 •
session. .
Ot!lcer James Stacy of the
Pomeroy Pollee Department and
a member of the f'raterruil Or~r
of Pollee. Introduced Chief Ge·
raid E. RoURht bf the Pom!!roy

'

•

PEOPLES

Fingerprinting ·condu~ed for area students

B.RONC05
.
I

Monday, Janu.y 22, 199o ~
Page 7

..

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SAN
FRANCI·SCO
49ers

•

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I

)

WEDDING BARR BELLS: Roseanne Barr and Tom Arnold
wasted no time. They were married Saturday ·In her Los
Angeles home, Just a few days after Barr's divorce from BUI
Pentland became final and less than a week after Arnold was
releaseq from treatment for a cocaine problem. The ceremony
and reception at Barr's home were at~nded by abouUOtrlends ;
relatives and cast members of Barr's hit show, "Roseanne." ·
•:For.the fl~st time In our lives, we feel truly happy and are both ·
eager to learn' and enjoy llvhig our lives day to day.'" the
newlyweds said In a statement. Barr, who often complains
.about being' harassed by the media, allowed the wedding to be
fOVered exclusively by Life m•gazlne.
•
·
RUG THESE PEOPLE: Barbara Bush's motherly manner ·
makes her the most hukgable person In the country, aceordlng
to the people who proclaimed Sunday National Hugging Day .
Kevin Zabol"lll)' of Delrolt, who began -the Jan. 21.huggtng day
. tra41tlon five ]~ears 'ago. said the first lady was a unanimous
choice for the list of hugeable celebrities; followed by Bill
Collby, talk showboat Ataenlo Hall, Cher and Tom Selleek. '"She
Is so down·t!H!arth," Zaborney said . of Bush. •'Since she
radiates the genuine Image of a motherly person, almost
anyone would feel at ease with this hueeable quality." Cher was
something of a s11rpr~for the top five. "Obviously, a lot of men
nominated her," Zaborney said. "But that's not why she made
lhe list. Being comfortable with her freedom lobe herself and .
her zest lor life' encourages an Inner glow to come forth from her
- enabling llr huggable quality to shine."
HELP FROM AN UNLIKELY SOURCE: Drew Barl')'lllore
turned to rock musician David Crosby and his wife, .Jan Dance,
to help her kick her drinking and dr1.1g problems. Six months
after lea:yln~ a tre41tment program, Barrymore,'14; one of.the
the child stars of "E.T.," had !al~n back Into her bad habits 11nd
cut her wrists In a suicide atlempt. After another stay In a
rehabllltallon center, she spent three ·months with Crosby,
wbose own cocaine addiction landed him In a Texas prison
betoll! he wentstralght. "I would DOl want to presume to try a'nd
supplant her parents," Cr~by told reople m&amp;Jazl~. "but she
nee:4ed ·t o be around people that were committed to sobriety
and, God knows, Jan and I are. We put a lot of eneray Into
staying straight."'.
·
BElTON TREASURY: "Treasure Island" carne to Chadds
Ford, Pa. , last week. Cbarlto. Ration and his son, Fruer, ·
Ytilted artlsll ·Aitdrew and Iamie WJidt there for a private
vtew!Dt of tbe neW version of '!Treuure Island" thaf stare
Charlton u Loq John Sllwr and wu directed by Fraser for the·
· Turne~ BroadcuJ!ne System. The Hestollll ·alao visited the
Brandywine River Museum, which Is CUrrelltiY exlllblttna
patriarch N.C. Wyeth's lllustratlona for the B•lnn J.o...
Stev- tal~ ot a pirate's lslabd and two otlaer Sti!W!IIa.'
' '
novels.
MU. ~y 11PBAU our: lunea Earl BQ's wlfecoademna
the Ku Klux Klan for holdiJIII march l!llbebalfofberl!;;ad
In Lawrencebure, Te1111. , pn Jan. 13. Alii&amp; !u ..,.
,a
freelance artist In Na1bvllle, Tenn., who belieVes her husband
didn't kW Martin Lallier 1111111r. In Merilpltl81n llMill, say• the
white supremaey march waa an edoraement of murder. "TIM!
periOD wba lllot Martin Luther King Jr. committed an act of
cowardice,' • Mn. Ray said.

. . .. ~· ..~

ONLY
!Dining 1 - Onl'l

S.Ned with whipped pot8toee. chicken

gr1vv. colo olew. hot roll end !&gt;utter.
Sori'Y. no 1ubotltutea except -erago
with 1ddltiontl prlcel . .

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

CIOW'S FlMilY RESTAURANT

PH. 992·S.S2

.

POMEIOY, ON. ·

Feoturing I!Mitucky FriH · Clllcke11 .·

DOUBLE .
PRINTS
EVERYDAY 1

2 PIINIS FOI rHI .
PIICI OF GNI 1 ·
fUIING WN1i FILM ro Ul

~a, no • •~~e FaM .

.
REGULAI OR IUPil

390UMCIIOX

STAYFREE
.

TIDE

MAXIPADS '
30'1

IIVIIYIIAY IIIICOUNr .
PIICIJ.H

HALLS

24 OUNCI

COUGH·
DROPS

.PLAX

U OUIICI

DOVE
IVIIDAY a•CDUIIT
fiiCIUt

·•

.\

'.... . '

,._ ' l
"

.,~

....... ...

~··-

.. __..._ .
I

•

�...

•

~·
I

Mar:ltl

Pon•uv-Midlleport. Ohio

8-The 08ity,Sentinel

lcles to the 22 mUllan older
persons between the ages of 65
and 79."
.1
The report examined the least
.expensive plans !$sued by nine •
leading Insurers - American.
Express, AARPPrudentlal,
Aetna, Bankers Life, CNA, J ohn
Hancok. Mutual of Omaha,
Transport Ute and Travelers ·that met minimum criteria.
The criteria Included a dally
benefit of at least $80 a day with
Inflation protection or of $ll0 a
day without Inflation protection.
''
The annual premiums for the
· poilcles averaged $1,255 when
bought at age 65, $1,808 at age 70',
$2,879 at age 75 and $3,860 at age
79, the study said.
"An elderly couple, where the
husband Is 7:i. and the wife Is 69,
would have to pay $307 every
month In premiums If they
bought policies on top of their
·oth.e r out,of-poc'ket health ex- ·
penses," Pollock said.
States where the smallest
percentag~ .of older people would
be able to afford Jong·te~n~
policies - meaning they would
have to spend less than 10 percent
of their Income and annultized
assets ..._ were Mlsslsslppl (7.4
percent), West VIrginia ' (7.4
percent), Tennessee (10.4 per·
cent), ' Alabama (10.8 percent)
IUegal abortions. The memort&amp;t . wu .ereeted Sunday near the
ABOR'DON MEMORIAL- Sheri O'Dell, of'l'akoma Par~ Md.,
and Pennsylvania (12.4 percent),
Capitol
as a couater·protest to loday's annual "March for Ute"
a National Orcaallatlon for Women vice prealdent, places wreaths
the report said.
. ·from NOW chapters on a memorial to women wbo bave died durl~g
spons0red by abortion opponents. (UPI)
The highest percentage of
older people would be able to
afford such · policies lri 1\)aska
Famllgles U.S.A. said most (24.3 ·percent), ' Nevada (23.2
Insurers will not sell poUcles to percent), Hawaii (22.1 percent),
O'Connor, In a statement
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lead- ·poUtlcal setbacks in the past year on the anniversary of the
people age80 and older, but"are Montana (21.9 percent) and
marking
the Roe vs. Wade
ers of the drive to ban a bortlon year, and supporters of abortlo.n Jan. 22,1973,rullng, was the first
110~ aggressively marketing pol· Wyoming (21.2 percent).
urged large turnouts at rallies rights did not. Intend to let test of the struggling anti· anniversary, also suggested that
opposing the Sup-:eme Court Monday's anniversary · pass abortion movement In the after- the bishops ~ longtime oppo·
decision that 17 years ago legal· unobserved.
math of a series of political nents of abortion - might mount
!zed most abortions. ·
The National Organization for defeats since Jqly when the an attack on the terms In whlc;h
In a letter Suriday to pastors.ln Women said It would construct a Supreme Court gaVe states wider the debate over legal abortion
hiS archdiocese, Cardinal James memorial for women who died latitude In testrlcttng abortions ... has been carried cin In the past
Hickey of Washington, D.C., beCauseoflllegalabortlons.Kate
Althpugh the deciSion was a, two decades, In particular the
)
said, "We ~ must 'demonstrate Mlchelman, execullve director major victory for abortion oppo- language of "choice."
A
"Today, 'choice' has become
"It takes an. average of sev~n great poUtlcal strength In order of the National Abortion Rights . nents, II also breathed new life the message Qf al!ortlon advo.f WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
group of research universities yejlrs to earn a doctorate degree . . to protect unborn babies and to Action League, was , to brief ancf militancy Into the movement .cates,. a message that often
'&lt;'f. Issued Jl policy statement urging ·The Increased number of Ph.D.s stern' the tide of ·pro-a bortlon member~ of· tinigress on the ' , to keep abor~on legal. Tha,l avoid~ the use of the 'abortion'
mania sweeping the country."
political outlook of, the ·situation. movement won k~y poll \I cal
~· prompt federal action to prevent . the nation wlll require should be
·
Hickey
said,
"With
this
reality
The Planned Parenthood ·Fed- victories lit Florida, VIrginia and much less 'killing' to ex plain
entering graduate school now," "
• an Impending shortage of Ph.D.
what Is lnvolv~d •. thus even
In
mind,
I
ask
that
do
all
that
you
,
.
eratlon of America asked suppor: New Jersey .
the report said.
paduata that threatens both
further
camouflaging reality,"
''Aitho\lih the recent Supreme
'fhe statement said three fac· can to Involve as many of your ters to flood the White House with
business and higher education.
he
said.
.
telephon~ calls In support of ~our! .. . 'decision created more
\·
"Starling In a bout. 1970, the . tors are preventing universities parl!lhoners as possible." .
"And
yet
under
t~e
guise of
Rickey's archdloces~ was the · mal!ltalning legal abortiqn,· and freedom for the states to limit '
' 10vetnment s)larpty ·reduced Its from meeting the Increasing
'freedom
of
choice'
abortion
' commitments. to .the support of demand for doctorate recipients; site of the annual Match for Life, some Republican supporters of abortion, II also galvanized those advocates . clamor . fo.r more,"
doctoral students on tlie gounds a declining number of Ph.D.s the largest oi .a liolt' of rallies legal ·abortion sal&lt;t'they would who are pro-abortion," Hickey O'Connor said. '.'More destructhat freely functioning la\Xlr earned by.U.S. citizens, underre- across the nation Monday .'pro- . picket the Republican National said .
testing the 1973 Roe Vs. Wade Committee's headquarters:
Cardinal John O'Connor of tion. More hurt. More kiiUng to
markets would produce the ap- presentatlon of non-Asian minor' dec.lslon
.
.
Tens
of
thousands
of
"Our
party
should
·
not
be
New
York, head of the National be allowed. I don't use the word
propriate supply," Association of Illes and women and the deterio•protesters
were
expected
to
leading
the
charge
to
repeal
a
Coriterence
of Catholic BishOps 'kUling' to Inflame, but simply to
ration of the academic research
American Universities Prest·
demonstrate.
President
Bush
woman's
fundamental
right
.to
Comn;tlttee
for
Pro·Life Actlvl· explain what Is real. The landent Robert Rosenzweig wrote In environment.
privacy,"
sajd
Eileen·
Green, .ties, urged, Catholics across the guage of 'choice,' appealing to
The report said the federal planned to address jhe Washing·
the preface of the report released
·coordinator of 'the National Cap!- nation to 'take an active and many Americans, hides the real·
government. showed It could ton rally by telep,hone. · ·
Sunday. '
.
The oppc)nents'of legal abortion tal Area RepubliCan$ for Choice. visible part'' in weekend anti- lty · of what . the choice Is all
· '1'he result can now be seen," . Increase the number of Ph.D.s have
about."
been stung by a series or
The March f()r Life, held each abortion activities.
after the 1957 launch of sputnik.
~,
·Rosenzweig said. "We find our\ selves with actual shortages of Additional funding for exlsllng
Ph.D.s ln'flelds where competl- federal programs would result In
•. lion for their services Is already a repeat ·performance in the
)'• great and with impending shar- 1990s, It said.
Among the report's recom· , WASHINGTON (UPI) - In- 1988 and 53.1 percent In 1987. · organized demons'tratlon In the · students Interest In business
I&gt;· tages of greater magnitude and
mendations
are Increasing aid creasing numbers of coUege
Student support for raising year before college jumped to careers declined. After rising for
breadth as we move into the next
for
·
fellowships
and
research
treslimen support Jegal abortion taxes to reduce the federal deficit 36.7 percent. higher than In the 15 years to a high of 24.6 percent
.,..,, century."
~~;_
The report said colleges and positions In federal agencies, and stricter environmental laws rose to 28.8 percent, compared late 1960s. The percentage who In 1987, 23.~ percent of freshmen
expanding Incentives for minori- but their views oncrime and drug with 22.8 percent In 1985. The said there was a very good In 1988 and 21.8 percent last year
·~ universities face shortages of
· ,. doctoral graduates In the eompu- ties and women to earn Ph. D.s uiie are becoming more conser· 'j,ercentage favoring Increased chance they would protest In aspired to business careers.
1
ter sciences, engineering, mathe- and Increasing f\lndlng for,. uni- vatlve, a national survey , defense s~ndlng fell to 24.5 college hit an all-time high of 6.3
· · showed.
·
matics and business - In large versity researi:h.
percent, compared with 38.8 percent, up from 4.7 percent In
The' report also proposed a · The poll released Sunday of percent In 1982.
'.
part because they can get Iuera1967.
IIG IUDS &amp; IAIIIS PIOGIAII
prQIITam of undergraduate loan . more !barr 200,000 freshmen In
tlve jobs In private Industry.
The percentage saying that
1UISDAY,
23
But the students took more their major goals Included In·
• Because of • an expected In· forgiveness for students who 1989 by the American Council on
6:3D
P.M.
crease both lri the number of pursue doctoral degrl!ell, noting Educallon also found a growing conservative positions on crime fluencl~ the political structure
PLEASAIIT YllLEY IIOSPRAL
students and of faculty retire- that many students do not go on tendency toward political actl·. · ·· and the use of drugs and alcohol. also reached a record high of 19.9
COUUNRY 1001
ments, a shortage ot Ph.D.s In to graduate school because they vism and a decline !n the number Only 21.3 percent opposed · the percent.
.
·
6,
7
5-4340
Fe.: MartlnllhnMiiWI
the arts and sciences wllldevelop leave college In debt and mus I go of freshmen Interested In bust- death . penalty,_ for example,
For the second straight year,
.
ness careers. ·
..
C9~pared with 23 percent In 1988
l
In the academic world by the to wQrk.
~
The AAU represents 56 major
The number of students saying and 57 ,6 percent 'In 1971.
year 2000. the report said. '
research universities, and the they had earned varsity letters in
In a question asked for the first
.'
,,
report
was
prepared
by
represports
reached
an
alltime
high,
time
In 1989, 78.2 percent of
:t ' Business will suffer next, tbe
sentatives
of
such
schools
as
while fewer freshmen reported students endorsed greater ef·
report said, and there will be.a
shortage of 7,500doctoral gradu- Yale, the M43sachusetts Insti- doing outside reading or visiting.' forts by the government to
ates In the natural sciences and tute of Technology and the art gallerys or museums.
control haqdguns.
" ·
.,'
engineering each year by the· Urillll!!'slty of California at · One dramatic finding of the ''· The · percentage of students
Berke(~.
survey was an Increase In who wanted marijuana legalized
early part of the next century.
· support for legal aborllon. Sup- fell to an all-time low of 16;~ .
port had remained · stable be- percent, down from 52.9 percent
tween 53 percent and 59 percent In 1977. The percentage agreeing
since 1977, but It jumped from 57 that employers should be able to
. percent In 1988 \O 64.7 percent Ill require drug testing for em1989.
.
, , · .,
ployees and job appUcants rose
"An
abrupt
change
In
student
from
71 percent In 1988 Ia 77.8
NEW YORK ·(UPI) - Pres!· Mich., the chairman of the House
attitudes
of
this
magnitude
In
percentlas
t year. .
dent Bush Is wllUng to accept a Committee on Government ()pi:~·
just
one
year
Is
most
unusual,"
Some
60.3
per~ent of the
vote In COngress to make the allons, plans to Introduce a bill In
said
Alexander
Astin,
a
UCLA
freshmen
said
they
drank beer,
Environmental Protection the House this week to create a
·
education
professor
who
d·
l
rected
·
down
from
65.3
percent
In 1988 .
"• lb. • burger topped wlll'l
Agency a cabinet position, after cabinet post to deal With the
grlllect poa1r0m1: swlu cheeae,
the
24th
.annual
survey.
"It
may
and
75.2
pei'ce~tt
In
1981.
The
opposing such a move when he environment, the p~per said.
teltUce, tomato l our .lamoua
well reflect the students' growing percentage who ·Said they drank ·
was running for office, the New
MoGyver sauce In o g~lled
York Times reported Mo,llllay.
, Conyers said by elevating the concern about' the current Su· wlneor'alcoholfellto60.7percent
18tome aeed bun.
from 66.7 percent In 1988, and the
Bush, whO said during the . EPA to a cabinet post, It would preme Court's position."
For the fifth consecutive year, percentage who reported t\lklng
campaign he wanted to be the strengthenandbalancetheagen• "environmental
president," also cy's relationship witb the presl· concern about the environment tranquilizers hit an all·tlme low
11ld he did not want to add an . dent and with other federal grew, with 86.3 percent saying of 1.7 percent, compared with 9.9
691 West Main
I~ elivironment post to the Cabinet · agencies, and would gtvelt better the federal government Is no!' percent In 1967,
Pomeroy, Ohio
''While student attitudes seem
becauae he wanted to tCeep It to a . standing with foreign ministers, . doing enough to control pollution,
compared with 83.9 percent In to be·moving In a 'conservative' . ·
manageable size, the paper said. the Tlmea said.
direction on the Issues of drugs ·
Tllere are 14 Cabinet pasta now.
Democratic leaders In both the ~988 and 80.9 percent In 1987.
Support for national, health and crime, their views on other
But admlnlstr,atlon officials House and the Senate belle\le ·
said Bulh now appreclatt;t more there Is enough support to pass care rose to 75.8 percent ·from Issues are changing In a decld·
.. tbe need for a global response to the ,meuure, which would ~ 60.5 percent three years before, · edly 'liberal' direction," Astin .
·
.:;· environmental problems, the co-sponsored by leg!slatora from . while support for laws banntag· said.
hom01exual
beliavlllr
fell
to
45.4
-The
share
of
frealimen
who
•·• · deep Impact EPA prOifama both' partlea, accordiJii to th~
percentln
1111Hrllll141
pei'centln
sa(lf
they
took
part·
In
· an
have on national life and the Times,
.
'
'
'
'
I
Wlltlll'le purchO.. of a POatraml
'publiC's Increased concern pver
Burger,
Large.French Fr~ and
The
EPA'
was
created
In
1970.
'
~
eilvtroamental lasuea, the Times
Lorge Drink.
by
President
~hard
Nixon
and
II!d.
I
carrll!l out environmental sta· ·
One coupon per CUIIOmer, per I
Bulh bu been criticized for his tulel enacted by Congreu, but
.
vial!. Not valid wtll'l any Olher
failure to take speedy action on beciUII! It 18 an , Independent
. dtacounll. Good tllru 2·21·90
tile .u.atr&lt;iua oU spill from the · iaeacy, It bu a lower standl111
1
.
l)aall Valdez In AtuJta '1 Prince · than cabinet depai'UDenta.
Quotlq admlnlltratlon oft!·
WIIUam Sound, bu.t he hu alto
-Aml4:00
P.M.
bela applauded for his proposal clala wbo ~anonymity,
•
.
lbe
'l1mel
tepCii
lied
that
Bulla.bu
to •IJ'IIIItbeD the clean air bill
IIIII 1111 appolntmeat of career . met lritii'ReUiyandlaldhewould
Slaw
i envtromnelltalllt WiWam Reilly DOt objeet to • IJIOYe, If there
.
were
I!Dough
support
th,
.,lhdoW.....
Good tlru 2·21-!ICI
to bead the EPA.
Rep. John Conyers Jr., D· Coqress.

.

..

Abortion·focus of _decision's. anniversary

:. Research universities
' warn of Ph.D. shortage
.

-'·-~

;v

. "

,

TOJ't.CE AH AP ULL 992·2156
~. thrO PIIDAY I Ui. to S •I'.M.
,, ·.. 1/ l:M. 11ntil NOON SATuRDAY
, " •: CLOSED SiiNDA Y
POUCI£S t:

.

.

JOHN .A. WADE, MD., Inc.:
.

PLUSM'I YAlliY .SPitAL ,

1

EAI~ '.NOSE ·&amp; JI.IOA1

------------~~

. G-AL ALLIJIOIS1
''WEIAft,MIIIAIIS"
(304) 675· f244

I

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2 PIECE

CIRCIEN DINNER

.... ee:.

$229,;

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15
Rat" are tor c:on•eu1~eruns. broken upd ... swill bech•ged

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for e'ach d-v n separate ads.

"7 pOiflt linu I'IP• otliY uted .
'
· •Senfln .. is not r~p'onsibf" !Gr euou after lin' dlf( . !Check
tor errors firsl d-v ad runs m paperl . Catt before 2 :00p.m ,
diJY atter pubhc.toion to make cor~ee1ioh. 'l'
"A.ds th,at

Happy Ada

In Memoriam

Yard Sala

followinf{ Jef('phone exchang('S ...

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' M•son Co·.. WV
Area Code 30•

Mei.Couni'JI "
.Area Code t14

311 - Vinton
·t
245 - fllio Grende

992 - M-.,o.t
Pomoroy
985 - Ch••r
143 - Poniond

251-Gwv-n Dill.

247 - Le'l-' F•lla

676 - Appte Gfo\ole
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895 - leta't
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l 387 - Ch•hifo

e43- Arabie Oist.
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7 ·- Y•d

S•lelp~~id

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~2 -Me!INie Hom .. tor $ale

e1-

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617 - Coolv~le

11 - Helo Wlnt..:l'
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13 - lnurance
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64- HI'JI • Gr•in
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56- BYilding Suppli•

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..

G-'li• County
Atn Cod• 614

1- C...d ot 1'henk1
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5 - Happy Ada
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E11111111 y1111: nl

Clas.~ifiNI ·paf{('S ('lll'('r 1 h(•

.. A d~slf•.ct adv,e niae.ment placed in The Daity Senti~ Ill (811 ·
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r." ,.

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Wohll

.. 16 '
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16

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• Prtc~ o1 ad lor •11 cap;&amp;alleller.s ts double price o~ ad COli.

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G•veaway and Found •ds under 15 words will be
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PASTRAMI

..

P"!----------.-.

.

r

Report; Bush will~ to
accept EPA Catibtet seat

home."
said.
· ·, ..
Mosaics of gold and precious. . She dated ex-convicts and had . "
stones, marble and great works them promoted to top ministry · ..
o( art decorated vast rooms . jobs If she considered them good .-·
.•,
They ate the finest Imported lovers.
foods from elegant ch~ with
Officially, Nlcu was the minll· '·.
solid sll¥er utensils. There was a ter for youth and Communist - ·
p•rk with swans, a· movie Party boss In Slblu, 150 mller :
theater, a covered sWimming northw~t of Bucharest, where. ·: ·
pool and a Japanese garden.
fighting between $1!C11rlty pollee ·. •·
About 800 servants cared for and pr&lt;Hiemocracy forces w11s
them, Including hairdressers, · heaviest.
cooks and permanent medical
But the press alleged his true
staff.
talent was as a playboy . ·
-,.
For the common folk In RomaHe could drink two !&gt;ottles of
nla , having enough food to feed . vodka In a night·Of gambling at a .. •
one's famUy . was considered a seaside resort, Adevarul said. He
luxury, the n.e wspaper. noted.
lived In what would have been the ,._.
Adevarul said that during the apartments of four famllles, and
. family's brief stays at the plctu- had a private cook and solid
resque .lakeside resort Snagov, · silver cutlery brought ln.
,•,
neat Bucharest, they ordered
Nlcu cheated to get his wings In
that the "cock · must' not crow, the air force, the newspapers
dogs mull not bark and church said. H~ failed to get his tllgh( . .,
bells mull not ring."
rating but secured the rank .: .
Elena .always referred to the anyway because of his father's
locals' as "worms" In conversa- position, the newspapers said.
lion with officials. Meanwhile,
A prosecutor said Nlcu was
shelnsltedon thebestforherself. nearly Illiterate.
.
· Elena's last birthday was
Reports about Nlcolae Ceau- ...:: .
lavish.'
sescu are more onerous. One ~ •.
Orchids were flown In from newspaper said he had transfu· ·, ,.
Thailand to decorate her table, slons of chlldrens' blood, believ- ,,
set with three kinds of caviar, lng · they would he.lp him stay..:.~
meats, fish, cheeses, q~all and I young.
. ·,frog legs.
Although she looked dowdy In
pictures, pollee found her closet
Using the Classifieds
stuffed \VIth hundteds of dresses,
Is as Easy as . ..
furs and shoes, Including a pair of
dlamo!MI-encrusted heels by designer Charles Jourdan.
Whenever her daughter would
run away from , home, Elena
ordered a nationwide search,
mpblllzlng the militia and secret
pollee, said Free Youth, an
independent dally.
The newspaper said Zola fell in
love often, and her escorts
Included government ministers·
and bartenders.
"When she saw a handsome
mail she wouldn'tlet him go until
sbe had hooked him," the paper

• The Arec.'s Number 1 Marketplace

.

"N.

'·

BUCHAREST, Romania her comfort," he said. "She fl!sl
(UP!) - The son of fallen wanted to drl.nk coffee and
dictator Nlcolae Ceausescu calls srnoke."
. • himself king of the Inmates and
Her wishes were dented, f{obu
his sex~razed sister staged a , said,
·
"luxury strike" to show her
When the Imported Kent cl·
~lssatlsfaction with the service
garettel Zola brought to prison
jail guards provided.
were gone, she was allowed \O
Wltb the relish Of a Lolicion smoke only . harsll . domestic
tabloid, the newly freed Roman· ·brilnlls, whlch 'smelllikeburning
tan press reveals the 1\ltest Industrial-waste. So coveted are
scandals about what Is left of the Kents that they are traded like
former first family .
currency In Romania.
''!&gt;he was told that she Is living
Nlcu Ceausescu Is the selfprofessed " chief of those who In the same conditions · the
bave been arrested," Adevarul . Romanlan people used to live
newspaper QUQ.ted general pro- ln."
,
'
The Ceausescu children's prlsecutor Gheorghe Robu as
son antics are the latest on a long
saying.
Robu was asked by the leading list of the family's sins - their .
lndependen t dally wheth;er the greed, cruelty and !ll!rverslty that is being printed In lndependname had any significance.
''No. It's only an· attitude of a ent newspapers.
foxy guy, It seems that Is a role
Even• their nicknames· are
' tbat he likes v~ry much." . , · published . In whispered conV,erNlcu, 40, his younger sister, sa lions Nlcolae ·Ceausescu has
Zola, and their adopted brother, long been known as "the condUc·
Valentin, are In custody pending tor," his wife as "the.lady"_oi-ln
sarcastic reference to her qqestrials on unspecified charges.
Their parents were executed tionable credentials as a chemist
Dec. 25 on convlclloi!S ·or geno- "th~ great academic." Nlcti Is
cide, cor-:opllon and ·antis tate "the li)Ue prince."
. Free Romania newspaper Y(aS
crimes.
Nlcu, Zola and )jalentln Ceau- lncen~d that on Roman~'s
sescu will not have to "pay for lndepe'ld.ence day; Aug. 23, the
their crimes with their lives Ce!'usescus feasted from a table
capital punishment dJed with heavy with , the fare of ' a
gourmet's dreams, w!llle or'dl·,
their parents.
., They may be condemned, nary people had to walt In l911g
hoWE!ver, io a life of hard labor. A .tines just to buy a scrap of fatty
.
.
·1·
writer In Free Romania news- meat.
, pa~r suggested ·'they atone tor
The provisional government,
the privileges they enjOyed dur· the National Salvation Front,
lng their father's · 24 years as said the Ceausesclis ·had ~1
Communist Party leader by palaces and 20 hunting
being forCed to live In an average chateaus..
'
Adevar111 de's crlbed their
· Romanian apartment and walt In
summer residence Neptune on
line for butter.
·
Zola, portrayed In the press as ihe Black Sea coast as "a
a high-living, hard-drinking falrytale palace" more fitting for
nymphomaniac, bristled at the· an Onassls or a J . Paul Getty
than the leader of a socialist
austerity of jail aQd staged a
relic.
"luxur)"strlke," Robu said. ·
"A palace . In ·. which even
· "In the very first days, she
Rockefeller
would bave felt ·at
made 11lot of demands rel{ardlrig

'

Freshmen views mix liberal, consenrative

.

chlldren Uved it up whlle
people s~ffered, Romanian press reports--~

MOSCOW (UPI) - Azerb11ljan18 draped black flap on their
houses Mllnclay B!ld prepared tor a public fuDeral a! thlllll! kUied
In the Soviet army'l! weekend storm!Df o( Baku, reporll from
the Azerbaijani capttallll!id.
· Although the ma.u civil mourning and public l:Blrlal
tec.bnlcally defies a state of emergency's ban on meednp,
• Soviet soldiers kept off the s treet•IUid were not visible Mo~ay,
one of the three days of mourning declared In Baku, telepbone
calls from Baku said.
·
Nationalists have c4)1ed for a general strike to last until the
Sovjet force now nlllllberlllg 24,000 soldiers,' Interior mlniii:O'
troops, raervtats and sailors leava Azerbaijan.
·
''We are golil&amp; to atrlk.e until the Sovjet army leaves," Elmira
. Akhmedova, I! journalist working with Azerbaijan's ministry of
culture, said In a call from Baku. '1'he Russlau will find here a
dead city. If ·they say work - we will say no until they leave.
That Is w)\at a dead city mean~." ..
'
Baku's m!Utary commander Lt. Gen·. Vladlrillr l&gt;ubenuk
reported tqe .s&lt;:elle aa quiet overlilght Sunday, Radio MosCow
said. The radio reported the situation ill Baku "as slightly
better."
Soviet ~oops stonned Baku In a bid to quash the wont ethnic
violence fn a two-year dispute between Moslem Azerbaijanis
and Christian Armenians. Fighting erupted In Februaty 1988
between the two republics over thl! disputed enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh. The dl.pute hai claii!R!d more !ban 300
lives, Including at least 150 since the Popular Front called for
ren~wed pogroms Jan. 13.
Dubenuk, meanwhile, revised the number of casualties from
Saturday's entry of the Soviet army Into Baku, saying Sunday 83
people were killed, Including 14 military people and family
members at barracks In Baku, Radio Moscow said.
. The official 11ews agency Tass said 57 civilians were killed and
500 were wounded Saturday.
'
"Black ·flags have been hoisted on many houses ,tn the
Azerba~an capital since the , !'lorn!ng," -Tass said. 'The
republiC's government has declared a three-day mourning.
a vic funer4) tltes are scheduled for mid-day Monday."
In an urgent and separate dispatch, Tass said the Azerbaijan
Popui~Jr Fro11t was contln~lng . to call. for assaults on ethnic
Armenians and .that 1\Ilmenlans 'had attacked an 'Azer~ljanf
.village ·near t:'lagorii9'Karabakh, leaving 12 dead. , 1
..
An announcer on SoViet television said, "We have not
experienced such days since World War IL" and l)dded tbat the
Armenlan·Azerbaljanl strife eclipSed the Cher110byl nuclear
acclde'lt In 1986 as a Soviet tragedy. The announcer then read a
Tass dispatch denying claims by the Azerbaijani front that
Invading Sovlel soldiers kUJed women and cllllclren,
So vleet soldiers, who stonned Into the Azerbaijani capital of
Baku Saturday to end a waye of PQII'OIIII agllinst Armenians,
patrolled streets Sunday and only scattered gunfire by snipers
was lleard, Radio Moscow said.
Despite tbelr control of the capital of 1.8 mUUon people, the
Soviet force ln_.Azerbaljan of some 24,000 soldiers, reservists,
' sallots and' lnttrlor',mjnlsJry -troops have yei to pacify the
mutinous republic:
·
'

·~

The Dttlly •• .... , ••• . ••:•

ce&amp;usescu~

plan
for mass funer,al

.

•

Pomao)f'-Midd'apcw;. Ohio •

~zerbtJijanis

. Elderly cannot afford
nursing home insuranct::

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Insu·
ranee pollcles cover !ng long·
.' tft"m nurstilg home care cost too
- ~ · much for the · overwhelming
1 majority of older Americans, a
l . report released Monday by an
~ advocacy grOup for the elder Jy
said.
The FamUitls U.S.A. Foundailon study said 84 . percent of
Americans !ige .65 to. 79 . would
have to spend more than 10
percent of their annual income lO
pay the average premiums. for
basic policies.
." Private Insurance that
•f tlalms to protect Older Amerl·
caDS from the high cost of
~
Jlurslnlf horn~!; Is Itself so expen·: slve that only·the richest elderly
•· · can affOrd the premiums," said
Ron Pollack, the group's execu' live director. ·
•
'1'he fact Is that grandma
,
can't afford long-term care lnsu,, ranee," he· said.
,
The group said It hoped Its
'·
study would Influence the bipartisan Pepper Commission on com' prehenslve health care that Is
scheduled to report In March on
how to pay for long-term care,
which' cost the nation an estl' . mated $56 billion In 1987, or 11 ·
percent of America's total health
bill.
.
•
;~
Private ltlsurers only began to
1
sell COVJ!rage for long-term care
..,
In · recent Ytars, but, some 1.3
million pollcle,s had been Issued
as of June.

v•....., Z2. 1110

lltw lOarlillt:
, •• Nerth S.Ctltlll

Millolltp 1, Olio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wo Corry Flohlng luppll•

Pay Yollr Phone
C.ble Billa Here
' IUSIIISl , _ ,
16141 H2·6UO
,IESIDINa PliONI
16141 992-7754

Cerd of i1Wnk1

..v

T1it flallly "' lev.
hul E. Taylor aid
~ like to taU this opportunity to think all the
many churclles and

people for their prayws
llld love ·and concem
for him. ~ these
JI1IIIY . . . duritw
IIICI since the open
hllrt IUIIIIJ. HI is
slowly on tilt 111111dllld
words Clllll8t . . . .
Ills &amp;tllillldllllll •
foriiCI!IIIdMfYOJII
• of you. Molt of all, •
lord - fit til ~­
him with us for a while
yet.
lay God bless you

all:
The Paul and Atltnt
Taylor fi•IIJ IJid
church.

IISSILL
IUILDEIS

•

15

CUSTOM IUI.T
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

••.,...

HappyAda

"At ltuHtlllllt Prlal''

., .... ,

I'H. 9•9·1101

Rhe• l•n, lt:a time
flit' Ul to AY

TheA

-d•"HIPPY
in a

~.,.

.,........,,_... ...,.
.ver..

'=. ...,..
,"' ..... .....

·, llldiday"

In

_,

good wiM.

the • .,..,. to

..........

. come. count "' •

In your 01- u
MChdlyendl.

ltrilll

now· RhM

"HIIIft

llrlh·

...,.. frolfl your

Mt..,U.

NO SUNDAY CAUS

Garage

II. 124, Par•rty Ohio

AUTO &amp;'TRUCK
REPAIR
Alae TtiiiMIIIIII
PH. 992-5612
or 992·7111

A-I

.

~

Nipt

Roger Hysell

pcsallttl"

.,..IItie far •

~Nito•l

Llll•lhlry 'feohillllln aa -~~~ rotating

lhlftw ..CIIl thlftwJ. Requirtt Independent
wolker with cepabiHtlealn elllrHI of cllnl·
ql laboratory. boe"'"' fringe benet!~.
PIMiil COIItiCt:
Ceoelte
LebofltOt'y luperv~r
Veterana Memorllll H01pltal

u•.

111 L Mtaan.t Drive
...,,• .,, OH.....,..
.
1114} 112·2\04, Ext-ion 216

EOE

BISSELL
SIDING co~

...._ ....

"FrM Estifnltel''

CIMSI&amp;. OliO
•CIRAYI!L'
•UMEITONE

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING

AT ALL

"•

.

'

.'

.fj

1'1. ····1101

., .... ····1160
110 SNAYCAIIS

~--..:o•

_ . . LAtCUIRY 11CIItiCJp
llert ·

•VINYL IIDING
•ALUMINUM IIDING
•ILOWNJN
!NWLATION

Ill

••

�Ohio

1110

Television
Viewing

trr. old-a- 011, ..

-----2
:1n.-:.. . .
_,. ..... - -..
............
Col lp..&amp;IU tWOI17.
_

ERJTUS

......... _ . ...... In

• .,.". • an...,....._

DWuwsahtf•....,
10U71-1"NI,

._.holt,

FilE&amp; P1J11P1D • Hall -

:.-.";1;.~

-.m.,

before I

PI'· aul~

.....

10 14 3 0
0 0

•

Lolt &amp; Found

~=~~"':"~'VI'tiir
AI. 141 onc1 con 1111, 11

7Ut, Gone

O

•

,.(i, I

Hllihllghta Pittsburgh vs l.os
Angeles Rams
CD Wild ,.,meriCa Examine
America's most common
feline , The Bobcat. Q .
(!) Square One TV Q
• @ Anclr Grtlfllh
~ World Todey
~ Charteo In Charge t;1
9Jem
6:05 1]) Beverly Hlllbilliea

Lool:· ~ -

.... dono, hoH
oennan 4epiNM'cl.
blueilh ~~
With
·
·
-...
A , _ 10 lho .....10S
"' ......
Hu 1 chain Collar on, 114-441a

·6:30 8

1014,

.~-rB~Li-A::..;.:.A~Sr.·~~
L.

Il

K E L C HE

•

Bodr

CD
Electric
(!) 3·24 Contact Q
@I Ill il2l CBS Nlwo Q
1D liD Thoee's Companr
(B) My World And Welcome
To II
'
9 Ha·Man
®Top C.rd
6:35 (]J Andy Griffllh
7:00 &lt;D Sca,.crow &amp; Mrs. King

97 IIICH STim, MIDDIIPOIT, OliO

located

l'llr• lleclet lllow Super AIMrica llut
te

"'d••••"

Tropllllt

wllh fltuno; bo • ..,.,..,..,.,

I

c:::::=;:.."%=.::

HUUIIS: Mon.-Fri. 12:00 IO i; p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m. 10 12 noon

for

-

-

mollnled ond aan -

7:35 1]) Sanford And Son
8:00 Ill MOVIE: Pony E1pre11
(2:00j
D (]) iiJI ALF ALF iS
inspired when Lynn 's art
teacher praises his palnling.

f'A"!

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SPECIAl ACCOUNTS FOR
. . NON-PROFIT GROUPS .

~Crossfire
~ Night Court

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L__:':o•:·:•N:r:o:•~·~~~n:OII::_:c~a~u~~~~.l..::::..J C::':..~~= ~':;
mo.

Television Listenin&amp;
. Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servi~

Hearing Evaluations For All A&amp;es

~ .LISA M. KOCH,

M.S. .

J willing 1o

trn111 twtaeen

~

Cl (J) 171h A1111ual
...
· Anierlcan Mullc Awardo
Gloria Esttlan. Stevie
,
Wonder, The Judd s and Alice
Cooper are hoses tor lhe
17th.annual American Music .
Awards , live from the Shrine
AuditOrium in l.os Angeles, ,.

Ull-

:=-r-=:-~
-~~~~ IIIII Ballll!faY hounl . .

lolle

I

ld.-~

~=·:t. :-,..:.a-~

Soul-

of
Ohio, Sit
Rlohlond lvonuo, Alhone, Cillo
4!!!'1~ ., ........., 31, 11110.

CA.Q
'
CD (1) The Ml1acle Planel

IUI:IUP.

~

, (6141 446·7&amp;19 or (614) 992·2104
.
417 Second ANile. Box 1213
- ·
z Gallipolis, Olio 45631 '
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
,Mulberry Hcts, Pomeroy,

·-

ZIOtfor

Aohton largo
mobiiO -

water, JMic•

bul~

lola,

pormlllocf. public

~.

1teo 1at1

wllh
- · · · Clyde
aow..,,mer
Jr. 30441'1-2331.

seoap~na

-

with cooldng.

1m Tr ,h.-. Cemper, so tt.
wllh
- 7. lip 0111. 13100. ,,._._
.,....-- ' 'f

Aloa trallor opooo. All hool!oi!P0•11• 2:00 IL"'·• 3.04-773-

-·

lloaonWV.

.

,;

41 Houses tor Rent

"
'
IS

PAYADOUAR

,,

RACINE
'GUN CLUB

GUN. SHOOT
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-6-89-tfn

949-2493
3rd Str11t, lacina, Oh.'

SER~ICE

We can repair and rt·
CDI't radiators
and
IMDtll' cores. We
also acid bail and rild
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT 111,1 FORD
992-2196

~IT.

0

•
• •

DOZER
SITEWORII - ROADS
CLEARING

liD Allen .._lion As
Halloween approaches , a
serial killer is sealklng
Newcomers. (Rl t;1
il2l Larry King Uvel
lllll2i MOVIE: 'Cocoon' CIS
Movie Special (PG13j (2:00)

HAPPY

VIS/TIN' DAY,

Nallhvllla Now
9:30(!) College hak-11
' ·
10:00 (J) 700 Club With pat
llobertaon
CD Newawetch
(!)Gordon Palka: Momenll
Wllliout Proper N - 1 A
•COllection of Parks ' prize
winning photographs Is featured, along with news
and documentary fOOtage
tracing major events during {
his life . t;1
· ·
ID liD New Twllltht ;!one
~ Eveni'!i Newt

In Mlddleput, Oh.
PARTS AND SERVICE .
Fo1 Moot2 end 4 -cyde

enain•

Slocll Parto for
Homollto, Woedufer,
T"""moah, Brtggo •
Seronon.

.

.

WIIOOWS
FREE EmMATES

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

7-l ..'H'Iift

.

........---~
- ••t - Eleelrlcll &amp;

~lon

INSULAnO

DUMP TRUCK

Sand·StonesDirt
(6141 667·1271

~NIWIQ

J&amp;L

=

. .......
....... ur_,...
......

........

. VI,IY SIDING
VINYL IIPUCIIDT

~

SV.'a"'=

1 ·lJ.'It- I •o.

... - .:Ji ... " '

15

IDM78o11'W.

15 Genaral HluUng

::-.=.--..~-·

992·2772 .

JIJ.,.aliaL

.,,

....

.......

•
t,

BERNICE
BEDE E&gt;SOJ,.
•

.a----···

. .

; .• ,

,-:":~ ·
-~

.

_., Wllich ligna are romanlleallr per.
about a atluallon lhal lhould be re10:20 I]) MOVIE: Mr. Majeltyk (PG)
f..,.foryou. MaiiS2IOM81Chmakar,c/o
- l n. a logical fallhlon . Do~ 't let
(2 :15j
lhll , _ paper, P.O . .Box 91428 Cleveyour felllnga get youupllght.
lond. OH 44101-34211.
'
¥11100 lAIII· 11-lept. :121 Your luclg· ' 10:30 C7.) Amarlcln Experience
Rools Of Resistance (Rj C
I'IIC:II (Felt. Ill " ell :10) Avokl . ment pertMIIng to people not be up to
•liD
Crtrnewatch Tonight
groupe or cllqueo lodoy lhal contain
par today llld tllere'o 11 chance
-~
do nol make your fell
could place your 1111h In a penon
wale cone. lnatacl, hang ltOUnd wllh
W9ft't mtUIIfe up to 11.
11:00 (J) Hardc111te And
. MoCormtck (A)
· Pill wfiO ere truly your lrienda.
~ (lept. a.oct. :111 Unfclrlu•oa1a• (f) (i) • (I) @) .IIJ
: · ~• (11111111 tt-Aplll11) Don't blame
lr. y o u - rely too haavtly upon
GNewo
..,_~~oo,. · or I l l - · today If era lodoy, eapecl~lly ·fn gelttng lhelr
oupport to ~ you fulflll 1111 ambltloua :
• .illl ArHnto Hall
lhlnga you go 811ar . . ....-able. II' a
II)) Moneyllne
not lhtlr feull N your llq)IICtallonl .,..
objetitlve. Be p....., lo do It on your

. •on stage

woo

CMd ~ PD!IIIbllllla

,_.,-

;

. .,

-o~..o

i

® My WOIId And Wllconoe

TA...... (Aplll. ,. I Ill) You'l'e..U. • 8C
(Ool M Nov. 21) Be
llod to your own opinion, IIIII don't be ' CIUIIoue tod8y In lmportent
10 un!lftllllng or lnflellbll toct.y 1f1a1 ,, IIIII NqUIN communlc8tlon. If
. you lhu1 your llllndiO 1111 ...... Of Olh-1 llldllla•4. you oould makl a big
. - ThiN llllwllya room to IMm.
; tlke~whal you write or llh8l you

I IMir .,..._.,You oould • IIIIYI
'
In !lie }'Ill' llheld frllndl will be 001'1- ' - - "'Y pow•IW ulll• pnt 1 IAGIYTAMII (1111¥, 21 ~ 11)11e
c1u111 for ,_ oppor1unlllel. a- of lncllndone IDIIIIY nl. I you'l'l 1101-·
\IOIItr. but IIIIo be r n lie
yow bill and IIIIID nllrelllatn lhllcy· CINiul. youmfllhlmtkefiiiMbedeltcl-1 '
C0U1111n11 your IMIIrlll 111111fnpo
Clfe . . from ..........,.. INICie ' 11oM
whtl'e exptlidllur8l . . 1 .•
IIIey b I me IIIJIIa You C111
"'-....wlio ... you.
' 001-iiecl.
..... tlllnpup Iller ....

,

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.
.

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tlilm ....
a' "'*'"t:.:::"' mar
lhlp •••111
lhllllml, be
tro lbl doMe llie
whtl'e
your IIMpl.
tliDraualilr
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no.re

·~ Mlllallillll• lnltlniiY ,... ~ ,.., llifY be too ~~~~
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1611 at
lint.~
to :
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'

'
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•H•·-~· ·

Ton

OMiamiVICt
•

Roger . . . .

LIIIIIY

comedlalll Wfllilma &amp; RN.

cr;;:· ....

11:30. '!f!!oniJIIIIIIIow

.HIIItrwt ..... ,·

••• •·•• '-•, •• ••-••--

11 Aclress
Kare11
13 Poelical
arlverb
14 Gain
16 Asian
· river
' 17 Calillree
1!! Fonner
G.l .
20 Term ol
endear·
menI
2t Boundary
22 Facililale

.A

tA9543 \

.QJ 1087

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South ·
-

Norll!

Pus

1•

2•
Pass
All pass

.Opel)ing lead: • 2

· ---------......1

L.:...

my's specie king. Now when be plays
ace and a cllamond, he is well placed to
win ~ bis baQd wl)atever major suil is
returioed, ruff a diamond with the club
return to his hand with the relllllinlnlllllljor-sult ace and ruff one
more dlamoad will! ,the ace of clubl.
Since bill orl&amp;ln!ll club hOlding ia still
Intact. he can now fcm;e oul ,tbe king of
clubs and make the remai!WII trickl.
J.. is so often the cue, a trick wu,la.t
by careless play at trick ODe.

moe,

'

21
22

23
24
25

27

Veaterday'a Al'!ewer
Chinese 29 Will
dynasly 30 Poel
Trident , · 31 Muses.
e.g.
by number
Copycat 32 French
Nalive
season
Daisy's 37 Greek
masler
Ieite•
Scary
39 Pious
ulterance
(Ita!.)

car
?.8 Window
sec lion
27 Declare
verbolen
· . 28 Shrewmouse
29 Darn ill
33 "Chances

'

''

'

34 Spal
35 Morse code
sound
36 Lover boy
38 Express
opinions
40 Barllone
Gobbi

•

IMil, V CR YPT()QUl1r1!21 ·Here'11 how to ...·ork It:
AXYDLBAAXR
I!JLONGFEI.LOW

'

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the w!)nl~ Rrt&gt; ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQOOTE
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9:00 U c2J \H) MOVIE: 'The Delle
Force' NBC Monell~ Night At
The Movlea (2:001 Q
CD (J) Eyoa On 1'IMi Prl&amp;a ·1.1
Martin Lulher King, Jr . helps
Chicago civil rights leaders. •

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ENTEIPIISES

MOVIE: 'Cocoon' CBS
Movie SpeclaliPG13) (2:301

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Middleport,

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·42 Summit
43 Speck
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7 Corner
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10 For each
12 Saltpeter
15 Molecule
18 Cry of joy

a sexlel

8:30 G (]) \H) Hogan Family
David , Sandy and the boys
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EXCAVATING
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In rubber bridge, there is little dif.
ference between malting 10 tricks and
malting 11. Bpt In duplicate, a dedar·
er would not want to make four clubs,
if other three-club declarers are malt·
ing live. Today's declarer played sloppily, malting only 10 tricks.
Declarer won tbe ace of spades, and
played ace and a small diamond. Eut
woo the king and relurned a heart.
South won the ace, then ruffed a dia·
monel with the nine of clubl. Nezt
came the spade king and a spade ruff.
Another diamond.,vas ruffed with the
club ace. That made declarer's last eli'
aiiiGIICI a wiQDer, provided trumps
could'be picked up. SO declarer played
a club ~ bis queen. w.t won the king
blil'tlien played the heart king. Declarer luid to ruff, and West now bad a long
trump. SOuth could casb his remaining
high clubl, but West took the last trick
by rljfflng South's diamond nine:
. · Declarer can conaerve hla lr4111p01'·
latl911 by ducltiiiJ the lint diamond,
but lf he doeS not care to rlslt either
opponent holding a singleton diamond,
he should win the first trick with dum-

7 Hall

aboard the. Mississippi
Queen with Tanya Tucker,
Lyle Lovett, Libby Hurley , &amp;
comedians Williams &amp; flee.
8:05 (]J MOVIE: The Mechanic
(PG) (2:15j
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PrtmeNewo
Graham Cn1ude
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(2:00)
9 Murder, She Wrole
® Roger Miller Special
Roger Miller hosts this

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(Pt 2 Of 6) The heat wllhin
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the lace of the globe. C
@I PI"' Of The Decade '
With War111r Wolf Warner "
Wolf chronicles the decades
best, worst and" funniest
momenls In sports. (2:00) Q
811ID 21 Jump B-t
Hanson and Penhall uncover
an illegal gambling r ing . (Rj

;x Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

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7:30 U (]) FemUr Feud
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PLASTIC, COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
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you develop from step No. 3 below.

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Fortune C
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- The woman explained why she boarded'the plane wilh
a lamp shade on her head, "II would be smashed in lhe
suitcase and wouldn't fit under my seat, so I decided lo
WEAR IT!"

C2l PM Magazine
(!) SportaCenler
(i) Cl (I) Current Affair
CD (!) MecNeii .Lehrer

HIS
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·Business Services

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richer they
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GERMAN PROVERB

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�f:'laa 12-lbe Deily Sentinel

22. 1890

Monday, J..-y

--Area deaths--

NetV England. •• _Conlinued from page 1

Paul Peters, May 4, 1935 at
Creola , Ohio, and he survives
Jennie D. Tipton, 89, of 2496 with four children, Fredrick L.
Walnut St., Hurricane W.Va., Peters of Jackson, Beverly
formerly of Cheshire. d ied Sun· Mynster of Columbus, Emilie ,
day at Amerlcare-Putnam Nurs- Wells of Zanesville and Connie
Palmer .of Vinton; one brother
lllg Care Center In Hurricane,
Worlh H. Harder of Amlin, Ohio;
W.Va.
; Born Jun.e 7, 1900 In Gallla one sister, Mrs. Clifton (Minnie)
l::ounty, she was a daughter of the Spll'es, Sr. of Wellston; eleven
late Everett and Mary· Hoffman grandchildren; and one great· .
grandchild.
Swisher.
·
,
She was preceded In death by
She was a member of the First
five
brolhers, Orville, Keith ,
C!turch of the Nazarene In
Karl, Robert and Wayne Harder.
~urrlcl\De .
·
Funeral services will be con·
· .Married to George /'i.. Tipton,
he preceded her In death on April ducted 11 a.m. Wednesday at
~5, 1973. She was also preceded In , McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
death. by a sister, Bessie Ashley . Vinton, with High Priest ,James
: .Surviving are two netces, Betty · Cummings oftlclatlng.
Burial will be In the Radcliff
$now of Shade, Ohio and DoCemetery,
r&lt;irthy McGuftln of Middleport.
Friends ll)ay call the funeral
: Services ,will be conducted 2
p.'m., Tuesday, Crl'meens Fun- home from 2 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
The Wilkesville Chapter 207
e(al Chapel, the Rev. Andrew J .
OES
will hold an OES service
Parsons and Rev. Allen Shor·
Tuesday-at
8p.m.
~ridge will officiate. Burial follows In Gravel H!li Cemetery in
Cheshire.
Friends may eall at the chapel
ionlght, .7 to 9.
·
·
Dally stock pric~
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Shirley P~ers
Bryce and Mark Smltb
· Shirley Hazel Harder . Peters, of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
81, Wilkesville, died Saturday at
Am Electric Power ............. 31 ~
her residence.
: She was a teacher In the AT&amp;T ..................... ............
Wilkesville Township School Sys- Ashland Oil ........................38%
tem, and a member of the Bob Evans ................. :........ 13%
Reorganized Church of Jesus Charming Shoppes .......... ..... 9%
X:hrist of Latter Day Saints, City Holding Co. .... ............. 14%
Federal Mogul .... .. .. .......... .. 20%
~ellston Branch.
• She was also a 50-y!'ar member Goodyear T&amp;R ...................38%
and past matron, OES 207, Heck's ............. .. .................. 3%
Wilkesville; a charter member , Key Centurion ............ ....... .13%
and 5o-year member, Pythtan Lands' End ...... ... ........ .. ... .. .. l8
Sisters 591, Wilkesville; a Limited Inc ........................3,5%
Multimedia Inc..... , ............. 87%
inember of the Past Chiefs Club;
}Vilkesvllle and
charter Rax Restaurants .. ................ !%
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ....... ... 16
member of Wilkes Grange 2716.
: She was born July 3, 1908, Shoney 's lne....................... 10% ·
!)ret on, Ohio, daughtl'r of the late Star Bank ...... .......... .. ........ .20%
Herbert H. and Emma Fitzpa- Wendy's lntl..... .. ................. 4%
trick Harder. She married Harry Worthington Ind .................. 21%

Clouds and light snow spread
over over ~rts of the upper
Great Lakes and upper Mlssls·
sippi valley.
' Snow spreading across nor- .
theast Minnesota tapered to
flurries early Monday, with 1 to2
Inches talll~ trom International
Falls to Dululh, the National
}\leather Service said.
Temperatures In Illinois
ranged from the mid 40s at
Carbondale and Belleville to the
freezing mark at Chicago and 41
at East St. Louis.
In the West, snow tell In
Washington state' s Cascade
Range, ' wllh as mucli as a half
foot e11pected through Monday
momlrtg, the weather service
said.

~ennie D. Tipton

Stocks .

41'*

a

Weather
South Central Ohio
Clear Monday night, with a low
near 30. Mostly sunny Tuesday,
with highs near 50.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday ·
A chance of rain or snow
Wednesday and Thursday, with
fair weather Fr.lday. Highs will
be In the 40s Wednesday and
Thursday, and lri the 30s on
Friday. · Overnight lows w!ll
range from 25 to 35 through the
period.

Hospital news

Meigs squads have 16 weekend ... jJ,

A Paeltlc cold front was
moving acrou the Clscadl!s
during the momtne and snow
was ex~ .throuarh the day.
Rain also ·threatened Oregon
alter a \""ltend of fair skies.
Sunny skies prevailed In Call·
fornla. lotild Sanfa Ana wlndl
with gusta to 35 mph boolled
temperatures Into tbe low.70s In
the Lo&amp; Anreles butn.
Under a weak hlgh-p.resture
system, residents of the s'outhw·
estern slates enjoyed mild winter
weather and sunny skies Sunday.
Some mld·leVelcloudSco~red
Texas' lower Rio Grande valley
and the mlddle Gulf Coast plains.
Sunday's high temperature In
Texas wa,s n degc ees at Beeville,
while the low was 12 at Dalhart,
In the northwest panhandle.
Extensive snow cover In New
Mexico kept atternoon temperatures . trom warming much
across the northern two thirds of
the state. Sunday's lows varied
!rom minus 10 degrees at Angel
Fire. N.M. to 26 at Roswell.

Ohio Lo~tery

Sixteen 'calls were aDJwered
over tbe weela!nd by ulilta of the
MelD County Emqency Medl·
cal Service~. Twelve of the cal Is
were on Saturday; four on
Sunday.
At 12:30 a.m. Satilrday, Mid·
dleportWIS called toRallroa!!St.
for Stacy Smith who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 3:44 a.m. transported Gary Acree trom Meigs
Mine No. 31 to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 4:.45 a .m., Pomeroy. transp_o rted Bavld Watkins from the
pollee department to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 7:29a.m ., the Pomeroy Fire
Department was called to a
structure fire at the Kevin Knapp
residence on Wolf Pen Road.
At 7:41 a.m., Pomeroy was
called to a motor vehicle accl·
dent on UniOn ,Ave. Keith Hagen
and Todd Smith were taken from

.On dean's list
Christina R. Kaylor, Reedsville, was ,one of 1,380 students at
Wright State University who

earnedD~an'sListhon,orsduring

the ·fall1989 quarter,
To make the list students must
have taken 12 or more credit
hours and achieved at least a 3.4
grade point average. Kaylor was
Included on the high honors list
which designates those students
receiving a 3.6 to 3. 79 averag~ for
the quarter.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Eliza·
beth Mourning, Middleport; Ar·
tl)ur Barr, .'Middleport; . Edgar ·
Pat.rece Circle, Racine, has
Brew err, Portland; · Clifford
been
named· to the Morehead..
Plantz, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Char- State University Dean's list for
the 1989 fall semester. To be
lotte Conley.
Sunday admissions - Pansy named to the list a student must
be enrolled on a fuU-tlme basis
Laudermllt, Racine.
Sunday discharges - Linda and achlev~ at least a 3.4 grade
point average on a 4. scale.
Persons.

the scene to Veterans )lfemortal
Ho1pltal. Bob' Jetter• retuiii!CI
treatment.
Middleport at 10: 28 a.m. wu
called to Beech St. for Robbie
Clonch who was· treated but not
transported. At 2: 55 p.m:, Mid·
dleport transporjfct' Arthur Barr
trom the Overbrook Center to
Veterans Memorial Ho1pltal.
At 3: 29 p.m., Racine Fire
Department was called· to a
structure tire at the ~ost residence on Oak Grove Road.
Bashan Fire Department was
called at 3: 53p.m. tb assist.
At .5: 17 p.m., Racine transported Edgar Brewer frQIIl
Brewer Road t_o Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 7:07p.m. went to
West Main St. for Tammy Holley
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 9: 06 p.m.. Rutland was
called to Route 143 for Shirley
Might to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday at 3: 13 a .Jll., Racine
went to Reedsville for William
~ive
Congrove , to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
Two Meigs .County residents,
Middleport at 5: 55 a :m. was
Sonia Circle a11d MlcheleShowal· · called to -Park St. · !or Jerry
ter, have earned diplomas after Armstrong to Veterans Memorcompleting their studies at Sou- Ial Hospital. ·
theastern Business College In
At 12: 38 p.m., Pomeroy transGa!Hpolls.
ported Robert Bailey from Scout
Sonia Circle received a medl· Camp Road to Veterans Mell!orcal office secretarial diploma, a tal Hospital. At 2: 50 p.m., Pome15 month program designed to roy was called to the Arbaugh
train students for entry-level Addition tor Iva Jacksom who
medical secretarial positions. was taken to St. Joseph's
She Is the former Sonia White and Hospital.
·
resides with her husband and
Meiss .annCHincements
fllmUy at Long Bottom.
Earning a se¢retarlal diploma
was Mlchlile Showalter of Shade. . Meetlnl place chanled
· The soup supper for members
She Is married tQ tbe Tim
Showalter and Is the daughter of of the · Preceptor · Beta . Bela
George and Sharon Folmer, Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, which will be held Thul'!lday,
Pomeroy.
The graduates will participate has been cbanged from the Grace
In a formal graduation ceremony Episcopal Church parish house
to the home o! Donna Jones.
to be held In March.
•

..... past

Pick 3
452
Pick 4
9832

Villanova

Low In mid .._ Clumee of .
rain 10 pere~at. Wet!Haday,
hlp Ia mid 488. Chuee of rain
28 pereent.

•

•

a1

anners

Meigs r-eSidents .
diplomas ,

, Sy NANCY YOACJIAM
!lell'are syslll!lll. The develapers
SetltiMI N-• !Mall
hope to be.ll• ae!Hng ·~ spring
The Meigs County .RetiOUI
and purchase -flnaDCiftl' may 1M'
Planning Cominllslon has apworked out throulh the develproved plans for · the Robia's
oper, If desired, he added.
Crest Subdivision, IIHr Racl~~e,
HmftVer, bfofore the first lot
contingent upon approval by the
can be ,_old, the fln1l stamp of
Melp County Health Departapproval from the planning comment and 'County Enrlneer.
mission Ia nece11ary, and that
The planntna commission met
will CGme only alter Jon Jacobs,
Monday at the Farmers Bank or the health' department, apand Savinp Company, at wlllch
proves tile p1a111.
time the subdlvlllon was exJacobs reported at Monday's
plalned and the group voted to
meet1111 that the subdivision Is a
. approve the plans .
good overall project and ' he will
B.r uce Teaford, of Teatonl
ctve his approval _"with two
Realty, Pomeroy, repre~ent1111
res trlctlons.'
developers Richard and Sherry·
On~ ·restriction Is that lots
Payne, of Engle'Nood, Jl'la;; . ex- cannot 1M' further subdivided.
plalned the subdlvlllon plans. "Although the lots are large
The Paynes were also repressize," Jacobs said, "some will
only accept one sewa1e syateni."
ented by Gene Triplett, of Trl·
plett Engineering Services, and The oilier restriction Is that due
D. Michael Mullen, attorney.
to the soU conditions of the
The subdlvlllon Ia located 1111 property, sellers and agents
the former Jividen Far111 •
111ult require potential purchastween RaCine and Syrac:uae. Tile era to meet with health departlots, which Teaford nys will sell rnent officials at' the lot before
PLANS OUTLINED - Brllee Tea!ortl, Malldln1, of Tealonl'
In an "affordable prJce ranee."
filial purchase "to ascertain the
· Realty, Pomeroy, ex pial• plaQI for the pi'opoeed Robin's Crest · are laid out In "tlve acre-plus · · type of ·seware system needed."
tracts." Once a lot Ia sold, It will ·
Some lots "will only accept an
Siabdlvlaion, near Radne, at .Monday'~ meettn1 of tbe Melp
be up to the, purchuer to bulk! a
aeration system," Jacobs ex-.
County Regloaal Planning CommiUion. Tile plan nine commlsllon
Is headed by President Fred Hoffman, 11ealed.
home and Install an Individual
plallled, addllll that he "can11ot

approve the plans without these Once the. right-of-way Issue Is
.restrictions. People will have to seitied, Roberts Is to lnspeci'the
kpow, what kind of sewage road and give his oklly to any
system they need and where they changes that might have been
ll)ust place the system before
made as a result of the court 's
they buy property. I'm sure we ' decision. Eventually, the devel ~
can work these matters out," he opers hope to turn the road over
added. "The lots look good."
lo Sutton Township for malnte·
County Engineer Phutp Ro· nance. " The trustees have lndl·
berts, who must also approve the cated their wiiUngness to accept
plans prior to official approval by
the road,: ' Teaford sat d.
the planning commission, likeWater to the subdivision was
wise praised thl' layout of the also questioned with Teaford
subdivision, but questione4 a
reporting that t he Tuppers ·
righ!-of-way dispute through the Plains-Chester Water District
subdivision from Route 124 to w!ll be laying a lour-Inch line ·to
County Road 34 (Pine Grove the .subdivision ·With a pumping
Road) .
station and possibly a holding
As explained by Mullen, the . tank.
right-of-way Issue Is being reTeaford assured the planning
solved In the court system and commission that the developers
does not affect the progress oft he and their agents are tryi ng to
subdtvlslon since the developers comply' with ''what ever they are
have a right-of-way In and out to being asked to do.···
Route 124. A limestone road
The foUowlng other business
through the property has already matters were also conducted by
been built and If the court should the planning commission .
decide against the Paynes,
-Reports were presented by
MuUen and Triplett were agreea-· · Mary Powell, of the Meigs
ble with Roberts'·suggestlon that County Park District ; Ron Ash,
turnarounds be placed In stra· of Ohio Power Company; Leesa
tegl~ locations to accommodate
Murphey.. of Murphl'y Asso·
future needs of school buses, etc.
Continued on page, 10
.

•

Council opposes ·school closing
WE
. .CLOSED OUR GALLIPOLIS LOCATION ·&amp;
'

ALL THE INVENTORY TO
1

OVED

.

DDLEPORT.

more

'

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.

WE GUARANTEE TO HAVE THE BEST PRICES ON ALL HOME FURNISHINGS:
LIVING ROOM • BEDROOM • DINING ROOM • RECLINERS • MAJOR HOME
APPLIANCES • TV'S· • VCR'S • STEREO SYSTEMS!
'

'

'

•

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SLEEPER QUDII SIU

27" IEMOTE
STiiEO .

WAS 14H.OO

Last session

'
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TQUCH CONTROL
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CASIS

INVEST·IN
THE BEST

.-........ .,.,...........
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•
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IOOIIU. Mil. 31, 1991
01 w ILI _
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BUILDING PROPOSAL EXPLAINED - Supt. Jamea Carpenter apoke to more tllan 5I parents and teachel'!l at the Pomeroy
Elementary PTO Monday &amp;llh&amp;oonceralngthe Melp Local School
Dll1rlcl's proposal for lhe co•tructloa of two buildings, either k .
lhrou1h 8 or k lhrourh 8, and how It would be finance~. Pictured
wtlh Carpenter are the otflcers of the PTO, lett to ~llht, Susie
Abbott, president, Debbie Davis, treasurer, and Lisa , Rousll,
secretary.

on elementary ·c_onsolidation

su.m.ooo

OFF IIG
SCREEN
31'-', 35",
40" &amp; 46"

'

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Celebrezie miffed at advisor

SAVE '400.00

...

By JULIE E. DDJ.OI~
L. Story thanking council ' for cerned about tills amenclrnat one volt!ll aplnst it.
SentiDel New• Staff
again appointing him to .erve aa because It could, lle felt, at a later
"I think this council should ~~~ legal counael for the village.
time po~slbly run late
The rate of the chatres was
"'on .~rd saytrg .that_ we oppose
~yot.. H~~qni!l. reported on 11'\0~ tha!' '¥ prevtously_ d~g, . 'oJ1ctna11Y. set at $.'50
month.
tllli::'¢lbs1J11 Clt ..p.y,.. ~ehlllll ln . - 1~ Jan: 15 meet!~ heJII...&amp;t!M ,. 114te4Mpa.IIIQII!li.. , - . ,Sil1ce that time
·
Mlddl~t. " l atated Paul ~' , village hail teaahltila' the grant · l •1 woillcl jllat like
t.:Y' u,'i for l!ie VIllage
rard, Middleport VIllage council made to Middleport to Improve · stated Ma:v.or Hoffman. He went
have risen 30 percent.
member, during Monday night's the levee. Approxll'!lateiY. '20 on to say ''If It doeln't work out
Horton surgested that the
council ~eetlng.
people attended the meeting and we can back up and change lt."
buslnesii!S, Domino's and SubGerard ·&amp;statement was deal- Mayor Hottman reported that Bob Gilmore, council membfor,
way, pay S50 per month. from
lng with the recent proposal by Gene Triplett, a local englneer,ls noted that council abould support Jan. 1, 1988 throurh Aug. 31, 1989
. the Meigs Local School District preparing the preliminary sche- a recommendation of the mayor. ucl trom Sept. 1 throllgh present
to construct two new buildings In malic design. Mayor Hoffman If he feels It Is necessary. "It n
p.y $15 per montll. It was noted
the Meigs District which would also stated that everyone at the needtoestabl!lhapayscalelet's that the businesses have paid
close all other elementary meeting agreed the Improve- do 11. So what," Gilmore stated.
from January throurb August,
schools In the district.
ments to the levee would conirol The matter was voted on with and only owe for the last four
Gerard, who attende!l an lnfor- the erosion on the riverside, · five voting yesand cine volinc no: moaths of lHII aad January of
matlonal meeting on Jan. 11 at widen the entrance, and repair
Another amendment to,the INIY 1"'. It waa voted una111mously
the Meigs Junior High School, ' the hole In the launching .11rea.
ordinance called tor the chaq- that tile 11e~r rate be changed
Horton stated tllat the area lng of the rateofpayofthewater trom $511 to $65 per month .
went on the say that othl'r people
In the VIllage did not want to see where the levee Is located Is the
and sewage assistant trom $G per
. In final discussion at last
the schools .closed.
best site because It can be used hour to $G.69 per hour.
ntaht's meeting, · Gilmore reTo this Dewey Horton, council whether the water Is high or low,
Allo discussed at last nliht's ported on work that ileeds to be
president, stated . "there's no- and that boaters can head meeting wu the rate of pay for done to a section of street on
thing wrong with havl~)!' a school directly Into the current when · sewer charges at the Domlno's · General Hartinger Blvd., by the
In your neighborhood.
launching. He also stated that the and Subway property owned ~ Blue Tartan. Gilmore stated that
A motion was made and voted main purpose of the Improve- W!Uiam Hapton1tall. An a~ water waa ltaadlnclll that area
unanimously by the six council ments Is to satisfy the boaters.
ment waa signed by Pomeroy about elpt Inches deep and did
Mayor Hottman requested an
Vlllap Couacll and seat back to not seem to be dralnlne cormembers that the Middleport
VIUage Council opposes the clos- amendment to a pay ordinance Middleport VUiare Council Ia rectly. Mayor Hoffman stated
lng of any school in Middleport. for workers who clean the village which It stated that payment for that the matter will be checked.
the sewer charaes would come
Others atll!lldlllf tbe meeting
The second reading of an offices from $125 per month to $5
ordinance providing for the an- per hour. This request was made
trom HaptoDJtall. Wben vodftl :were Jon Buck, clerk-treuurer,
nexatlon _of acreage below the because the water department
whether or not to accept this and councilmen William Wal·
Mldd~eportcorporatiQniimlts to 'wantstohlresomeoneaddltlonal
agreement, five council ters, James Clatworthy, and
Story s Run Road on the river .to clean that office and there was
members voted to accept It aad Jack Satterfield.
side ol Route 7 was given and no set pay scale other than the
Middleport Mayor Fred:!loffman $125 ,per month. Mayor Hoffman
staled· that there would be one tell that this additional worker
more reading before the annexa- would orily work six to eight
lion was submitted to the Secre- hours per week and this rate of$5
.tary of State.
per hour would establish that
off In December. If tbat four
By CJIABLENJ: •OEFUCR
Mayor Hoffman read a letter worker's pay scale.
SntiMI Newa l&amp;afl
mllll Ia renewed by the voters received from Attorney Steven
Gerard stated he was conAn opportunity to meet tbe
which will show no Increase In
educational needl of t• stu41eata . tile amount of taxei currently
In the Metas Local School Dis:
bellll paid - and an additional
trict at a .,nee which the 1.:15 mlllll Is puiii!CI, maldilc .a
taxpayers can afford wu the
total of 5.25 mills, there would be
way Supt. James Carpea!M'
pnerated a grand total of
. CLEVELAND (UPI) ,- An· tin would stay oh as media summed up hla talk In support ilt
over tile iiroP&lt;-ed 23
:thony Celebtezze' s campaign adviser and campaign strategy consoUdating the seven elemea)'t!ar period of the bond ls111e. .
adviser, Gerald Austin, caught consultant.
· .
tary schools and perhaps t•
The tour mUll which would 1M'
some heat from the attorney
Stratford Shields, poHtlcal dl· junlilr hleh Into two , new
renewed would tenerate $9.7
l!enerat for , remarks Auslin rector for , the O)llo Republican build I~.
mUllon with the additional };25
made about the Catholic Church. Party. took the opportunity MonSupt. Carpenter pre11111ted I•
mill bond lsaue ..,IDII~ In the
- Celebrezze, who Is running tor day to tire a shot at the formatioh on the Board of Educabalanee or the anliclpated cost of
·governor, said In a letter to the Democratic Cl!ndldate.
tion's bulldJnc propo111 to tile coutructlnc two elementary
~dltor published In the The
Shteldl said: "It Celebrezze more than 50 parea ta ucl
sclleoll.
Qeveland Plain Dealer Monday ~aid that Austin Ia no longer his te11chers attendtna the Pomeroy
Should the decision be to go for
he was "extremely offended" by media advller, he might show PTO meeting Mollday Dlaht.' It
two schools, kln•ercarten
remarks Austin made during a . some backbone. Whether or not wu · the laat of ellbt Informatllroqh etchth cracle, then a 2.5
Dec. 15 speech In Columbus.
he _(Aulin) Is not the spokesman, tional ·meetlllp In tile achooll. .
111UI levy would be required In
• · In trying to · ·explain why he II clearly the per10n who
A survey will p out 111 all addltloft to the 4 mw renewal,
Celebrezze shifted his stance crafta the messaee. It he doesn't rerJ,Itered taxpayers In the dll- CarJIIIIIer uld, to generate
from antl-abortiOnto pro-choice, speak for the campaiJll, why_Is· trtct next week aa the natatep In Sl5,312,000, tile aatlclpated cost
Ausdn said: "He (Celebrezze) he the chief atrateglat?"
determllllna die public' a support of cou~IIIC two ~hooll fo
d~lt with the mythl you grow up
''This Ia another example of for the procram. bdore any lllclude both elemtatary and
with In the Cathollc Church and 'tony Celebrezt.e' I Wj!aknesiiS I
declalon Ia made OD puttlDI the jualor bllb scllool s~ts.
the myths the pro-life movement public official and a caadldate," bond tuue oa tbe,ballot.
AceoniiDC to the aupet1atelld·
propagandlzei. Hethouehtabout Sbleidlaald. "Tony Celebrezze Ia
DRerillnc
111e U.lll or act- e~~t, tile 4lla1rlet currently hu
It and moved pro-choice."
trylq to cover up the role of · drtiiiDa tile
aa.out 1a e~ Ink lllroulb
Jerry Auatln, the 111111! way he the aup.-llr*rdaat calllid It a
8, ... a • t 1'1110 Ia II tllrourll I.
"aolllftllfiiOI1tUilty."
The attorney pneral has been trteCI to cover up (GoveriiDI')
SUpt. Carta• eltetl .-uaal
criticized by some members of Celet:ie' I ICaNI•II Jn office."
He ........ to till ....
~or-:e:;::·•r*"
WbtJe worldlla on C.lebieza'• tmallaiiUIIa mur..fiWIIIDII . . . . .,
••
8 lallo
the Catbollc cleriY for IWitcblq
•tate' a edu·
aids on the Volatl~. oontrover· 1978 can:palp for IIICNtery of wauW be nqlllred to nv- till . . .,..._ w1t1:
atate, Ataatlp IIUHCI · Cel• cotlalrutloa of lwolla" ..uoa 11111'11: 1118.
alai abortion Iaiiie.
'Debbie Vlvolo, spokelwomaJL ilrsa'l pbyllcal ·~ to bu1kllap.
tliel.teiiJOiqto
AI he explained, tile four IIIIU l'lllllllw lllltrlel1 to ~'do more In
for.Celeblnzecampalf11118ld ' !bat of a ''hit man for tbe Mafia··
·
tiLe way-of I!Matlq''IILChllllnc
the attorney reneral wu uJIRI and a "thur."
bolide.! ~· wblellwu
Auatln.
on
Monday
cquld
not
1M'
over ~e remarka about ''myths
taken oa to co•tnact tlie Melp tntual!ncalatelllley PI'OJI'IIft for
. Hlp School bulldJnc will 1M' paid beflJre and after achool,. 111ore
.a nd Cathollclll!i," but that Aus· reached to~ comment.

pre-school programs, a talented stud ents and another 15.
and gifted program, along with
As for location of the proposed
classes for special education two new buildings , whether k
Including ones for children with through 6 or k through 8, the
severe behavior problems , proposal Is for one In the vicinity
mulU-handlcapped, the deaf and of the high school or .the Salisbury
Elementary School and the other
blind, the visually Impaired.
Carpenter noted that the diS·
near Rutland.
trlct now participates In countyTaxpayer Cost
wide· classes for students with
· As for actual cost to the 1
behavior problems and multi·
taxpayers, Supt. Carpenter gave
handicapped but for other speseveral Illustrations·. He said that
clal educat!Qnal programs, must on a $60,000 market value home
send students out of the county, assessed at 35 percent of that
sometimes out of the state. He
value for taxation purposes, with
said that eventually the state will
the current 10 Percent rollback,
"expect us to have these
the Increase In taxes for the 1.25'
, ourselves."
mUls would be $22.50. That would
Math and computer labs are be an Increase over the 4 mills
golnr to be necesnry, the . currently being paid on the high
superintendent IBid, and then school bonded Indebtedness
went on to point out that there Is which will automatically go off .
no space to take care of these tax duplicates In December.
programs in the.schools.
He turthef pointed out that the ,
Population shifts and loa In · average property tax assess- .
tl:e district ~ about 800 children ·. ment for a typical hom-: In Meigs ·
since 1967 - have created County Ia 112.~ which would
problems, aecordln&amp; to Carpen- meaa an tncreue In taxes ot
ter. He utd that In ~adbury, S1U6ayear. ThlaagalnwOOidbe
Harrllolivllle and 9aledl achoola, an lncreue over·. the 4 mills
!ben! are ... s thaa 130 kids -In · currently belftl pt~ld which will
each buildlila with one only expire In December.
liilvtq 11' klda. In aaother
Carpenter llreiiii!CI that tbe
bulldtne In the dlatrlcl tbere are 'dlatrk:t hal an oblliatton to meet
370 ltudtata. OperatJne all the tbe education need&amp; Of the
bulldtltllls flnalldallnetflclent,
students, to "live them the same
Carpeilll!r ~ald.
educational opportunities aa kids
He noted that the varied pupll In the auburbl."
enrol!ment al10 creates a wide
'We can make our scllooll.wbat .
ranee of studenJ-teacher ratio . we want them to be, we can etve ,
with bne flr5t grade bavlng 29
Continued on paee 10 ·

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