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                  <text>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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•

...

..•

........
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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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••

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CASIS

INVEST·IN
THE BEST

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Quantities
Are Limited,
•
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IOOIIU. Mil. 31, 1991
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INGELS. FURNITURE.&amp; JEWELRY

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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"

'

bel~

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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Commentary
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·The Daily Sentinel
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Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA ·
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
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PAT WJIITEHEAD.
. Aollotalll Publlsbe~/ConfroUer

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

iET'I'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'lbey lhoultl be leoolbaa 300
,..,. .tong. AU tellers are eublect lo ediiiDg ud mullt .be olgaed with
aame, address and telephone number. No alllllgaed tellers wUI be publlobed. Letters ahould be to good lute, addresslnglsoueo, nol peroonall·
tteo.
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·Five senatorsand a -definition

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By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Sealer Editor
WASHINGTON- Webster's New World Dictionary gives thl", first
definition of bribe: '.'Anything, especially money, given or promised
to Induce a person to do something Illegal or wrong."
Fed&lt;!rallaw, as ntight be expected, takes several pages of small
print to define .bribery, but It adds up to the same thing described In
the dictionary's 16 words.
.
Now then. let 11s consider · the case of the. five senators, four
Democrats .and one Republican, who are being Investigated by the
Senate Select Committee on Ethics In connection with a savings and
loan Institution In California lh;lt was seized bY federe L banking
regulators.
·
The Inquiry Involves S~ns. Alan Cranston, D·Callf,, Dennis
o@conclnl, D-Arlz. , John McCain, R·Arlz., Donald Riegle, D·:VIIch.,
and John Glenn, D.()hlo.
It arose from allegations that' they had Improperly Intervened on
behalf of the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association or Irvine, Calif ..
Its -owner, Arizona real estate executive Charles Keating, and
. after
his asstJCiates contributed $1.4 million to campaigns and other causes
· benefiting tbe senators.
·
All live senators deny there was aily co]lllectlon betwee~ the
contributions and their contacts with federal regulators on bei'all of
Lincoln or that they had done anything wrong In trying to help
Keating get h)s "day In rourt" with of!lclals who were about to put
him out of business.
.
. All say they had a legitimate ·Interest In the case, either as
rep~tatlvea of l&lt;eatlng or of Uncoln's customers or as memb:rs
of the Senate committee with jurisdiction In the banking field. They
say Keating had a perfectly legal right to ·ask 'for help dealing witt.
· · federal officials he felt were being arbitrary and that they had the
duty to help him plead his case.
.
Their acCUJers say that explanation, which has been used by
lawmakers In slmUar .circumstances for decades, simply doesn't
wash anymore.
They say the system of permitting lawmakers to accept campaign
contrlllut19ns from. people who expect something I!' return amounts to
bribery no llllltter what It Is called by those wno benefit from II. They
say this bas corrupted the political system to the point that ordinary
citizens no longer have faith In Its capacity to treat rich and poor alike
under the law.
Defenders of the system say two sections of th~ First Amendment
·
protectlt.
First, Amer,lcjllis have a free speech right to express their opinion
by supporting candidates for public office who agree with tbeir views:
Second, they have the right to takethelrcomplalnls or demands to the
governmenJ and Its officials. Ergo, any effort to outl~w the kind of
relationship Keating had with the five sena~ors would be manifestly
unconstitutional.
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Opponents of the system col)Cede the constitutional prol;Jl"'m exists
and offer a solution. They propose to end the. sy~tem of paying for
congressional campaigns with private funds and adopting the same
kind of public financing arrangment now used to pay for presidential
· elections.
This leads to an entirely different debate, which has been going on
for more than a decade. Public financing of congressional campaigns
has been languishing latelS', but the outcome of the Senate Ethics
committee's deliberations In the Keating case li¥'Y give Jt some life.

Today in history
.
By United Preaslnternailonal
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day of 1990 with 342 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase. ·
.The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.

-Berry's World

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M'HIIp(IIIO ONo

Tuulfev,......., 23, 1180

Pork·ba• r~l sJ)ending isJackout
of
oontrol
'Anderson and Dale VanAtta
WASHINa:r&lt;&gt;N- A survey of.· • · TbesecretofWhttten'uuccess
Capitol Hill lnaldera alqlea out II 1111 control of the federal pune
Rep. Jamie Whitten, D·MIIs. , a1 strings. As chairman of the
the pork-barrel king of the House Appropriations CommitHouse:
tee, he handles the money
Tbat was the verdict of con· legislation. Committee members
gressional staffers· whO were have a decided advantage In
boldenoughtoldentltyamember 'obtalnlng funds for the projects
of Congress by ttame. All agreed they favor, the surley found.
that the ·cantankerous, 7?-year- ·
Two · other memberli of that
old Whitten Is "themostertectlve committee, Tom Bevil~ D·Ala.,
member In getting fllnds for and Silvio Conte, R·Mass., were
projects In which he has a runners-up for the pork-barrel
persQnallnterest."
title:
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The survey was conducted by
The starr of Citizens Against
professional pollsters for Cit!- Government Waste Is searching
zensAgalnstGovernmentWaste, the 1990 appropriations bills for
an organization that monitors · pork-barrel prollOsals and so far
fedetal misspending. The polls- has found 363 personal-Interest
ters · talked to . congressional projects that members or Conaides, administrative assistants, gress seek to charge to the
leglsU.tlve directors, press secre- taxpaYers.
.tarles and legislative assistants.
T~ese Include . grants to -reThelr names were confidential, search just about everything
but most of them were still from cranberries a.nd lettuce to
hesitant to single out a specific safflower and broom shakeweed.
m.,mber.
There are proposed projects for

Improvements on rivers, tribu·
tarles, estuarieS and harbors
acroas America from the KlsslnJ·
mee River In Florida to the
Maalaea Small Boat Harbor In
Hawaii. The pork-barrel system ·
results In all taxpayers footing
the bill for local In terest-projecta
so the member of Congress can
take credit.
Those who were Interviewed
by the pollsters agreed that
pork-barrel s_pendlng lnfiates the
federal budget at a time when
Congress Is struggling to bring
the deficit under control. They
estimated the cost for this
uneconomic activity between
$100 million and $5 billion.
Tbe current Congress belongs
to -a generation of political leader
whose g~~ldlng principle has been
to avoid the tough questions and
appease the special Interests.
The blame must be fixed on their-

By TOM WITHERS ·
.UPI 8po111 WrlleP

Irresponsibility, their refllsal to
make decisions that Impose
temporacy pain and their manja
for postponing hard remedies for
looming problems until the next
fellow's term.
'·-·
Worse, they have been generally rewarded by the voters, not
punllhed for their evasion of
duty.
.
Yet the survey found tbatsome
members of Congress are begin·
nlng to face reality and are ready
to Impose spendl.ng discipline on
themselves and their colleagues.
There Is· no better place to
begin than by smashlng-_the pork
barrel.
·
Footnote: Jack Anderson Is
co-chairman of Citizens Against .·
Government waste, an offshoot
of the Grace Commission. Since
It was formed In 1984, CAGW has
Identified $152 billion In waste In
the federal government.

~'0 fRf~ 'lf~A9t..ES. NO fUEl.

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PoiT•ov

. NO SOI'f'..NO MEAT. f0Ur«£EN f€oPL.E

SH~~tNG'' A. !AT~M. ft~E ~AMILa\~S
SAA'-\N6 A K\'Ttt\E~. St\()l)t)Y '-L.OTK~S.
·St\Ol&gt;'\))' St\OES W\o\E~ ¥00 CAN GET it\EM.

.\EN '(fA~ .WA.\-r i'O .!PUY A Cfifl.. .
· ?E,te.E~O\ICA J N\'1 fOOT.
6NE ME /i.. &amp;~'KI
t-AIKAAI L- /

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STEALS BALL .- Geor1etown's David Ed; ' . In Philadelphia. T!le Hoy~ edged VIllanova,
70-69. (UPI)
wardo, 10, has ball stolen from him by VIllanova's
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Chrlll Walker,ll, during Monday night's contest

Bu'\ ~- wu......
i'"lc:E SIX 0~

.&gt;E'l'EN

Meigs .girls ·

v;,._~S ..

Bu~ks,

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Thornburgh tries tO plug news le~WoJ••"
Robe

WASHINGTON (NEA) - De·
termlnedtoldentlfythesourceof
an unauthorized disclosure about
a criminal lnves tlgatl6n lnvolvlog a member of Congress, the
.Justice Department spent
$224,000 on a seven-month-long
probe of that "leak."
A federal grand jury was
Impaneled to Issue possible Indlctments against those who
Improperly revealed ln!ormaUon to CBS about a politically
delicate preliminary lnvestlga·
tlon. It had been alleged that an
employee of Rep. William H.
Gray III, D-Pa., received a .
government salary but per·
formed no work.
Eleven agents of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation were
assigned to the disclosure case.
They Interviewed 30 .,eople,
Including members of Congress,
"confidential sources and ' a
number of news reporters,"
according to Attorney General
Richard Thornburgh.
Lie detector tests were admln·
lstered to 10 •J ustice Department
and FBI employees. Sworn statements were collected ·from 109
people. Thornburgh even &amp;uggested that -subpoenas might be

Issued for journalists' telephone
1
records.
The probe was espeelally lmportant to Thornburgh, because
he has been obsessed with news
media leaks, threatening employees with criminal prosecuUon, drastically curtailing journalists' access to traditional
sources and Inveighing against a
department he says "leaked like
a steve" when he arrived.
But the attorney general re'
cently disclosed that the ambltlous Investigation had been
abandoned because probers had
been "unable to Identity with
certainty the original s&lt;iurce" of
the leak.
Moreover, Thornburgh has
been unable to discover who
leaked Information to journalists
about numerous other probes,
Including ·those Involving State
Department employee Felix
Bloch, Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley and former Rep. Tony
Coelho, D·Callfl
He has succeeded, however, In
antagonizing many longtime Justlce Department employees who
resent the suspicion Thornburgh
has_spawned and view his Insist·
ence that the department "speak

with one voice" as a manlfesta· ·
tlon of an authoritarian
personality.
In addition, he has unnecessarlly alienated reporters who cover
the department .
"To Thornburgh, any Inform~ ;
tlon he doesn't contrails a leak,
says one. Another characterizes
the attorney general as "a
control freak." .
Nobody disputes the lmporlance of maintaining the secrecy
and respecting the se~ltlvlty or
pending criminal Investigations,
but Thornburgh has used that
rationale to justify choking off
the legitimate now , of other
Information.
Last summer, Thornburgh dis·
patched a deputy assistant attarney general to Capitol Hill to cite
a long list oft)le "broad array of
criminal and civil penalties and
administrative sanctions which
can be used to punish employees
found to have made unauthorized
disclosures." ·
.
,
In early 1989, the department s
public affairs office was dec!mated when the ~)umber of
professionals was slashed from
11 to four. 1~ the ensuing year,
some of those experienced In for-

·m!itlon officers who were sum·
ll)arlly dismissed have been
succeeded by far less knowledgeable replacements who have
neither the time .nor the background . to properly assist.
reporters.
"The publl~ can't get the basic
stuff II ought to have to know
what Justice Is doing," says Ron
Ostrow or The Los Angeles
Times, the dean of the press .
corps covering the department.
Shortly after Thornburgh be· came attorney general, O.strow
haq a routine lunch with Francis
,A. Keating . II, then associate
attorney general and_ the third·
ranking official In the department. When Keating returned to
his office, he was ordered by
Thornburgh's most senior aide to
debrief a public Information
officer about what was discussed
during the meal.
.
Ostrow offers an even harsher
analysis of that example of
Thornburgh's fixation with secrecy: ''That sent out a chilling
message to people at that (high)
rank that It would be beiter not to
have any communications with
reporters."

The Daily Sentinel
cUSP8UHIO)
A Dtvlllo• of Multimedia, lac.

Published · every afternoon, Monday
throuah Friday. lll Court St. , Po, meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Comr:ny/ Multlmedla. Inc..
Pomeroy, Oh o 45769 , Ph. 992-2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

.Bush's steam of consciousness Ben Wattenberg .·
News Item: President Bush to
deliver State of the Union ad·
dress·on Jan. 30.
M S
r. peaker, Mr. VIce Pres!dent, My Fellow Citizens:
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hours of recovery, an Infinite.
number of minutes of recovery.
(Hey! Wha1 do you expeCI? Thu i•
on eleCiion year. If we can't pi&lt;:k up
seals will• • •lrong eronomy,

situation In America. 1said' 'This
scouragewllfstap. This scourge,
while stU! terrible, Is now begin·
nlng to stop. (Of couroe. the data
•howed il ..... betiinriinlf 10 IIOp

Ohio.

pay for bigger social welfare
programs. As commander-Jnchief (You heard il, 1fuyri,
commander-in-chief, 1iz or &amp;even
. ,..,., worth!) I do not believe such
a policy would be prudent. (They

Member; United Press International,
Inland Daily Press A11ocl,aUon and the
· Ohio Ne~spaper Assoc_latlon. Natlonal
Advertlllnl Representative, Branham

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

. New York. New York 10017.

W::~ '::~r:!•::;:~c~";~.~.:~"'.:fi ;~:~:~~:!; ;;:~ ~:.;~~~:."~~e: d~~~ ;,a~,k~~~ ~~:c;,~:; 1~ ~~· ~:.~; ::~o::!:~r:f.::a;;

aoid here l•t -..,., /, il aexi.JI? Hah!
,-Should il be my fellow and
felloweue American•? How about
A ""'riarn comrade1P) ·
•

1 am happy to offer you, as
the Coft•tltutlon,
directed ....,
wr
no
InformatiOn regarding the state
of our uniOn.
We live at a momentous time.
(Hu onv pruident et~er . ooid...,
,
don'1 li"' In onomenlau• 11maP
Anyouay, ~uion, .Uion, vltion.
lhey'll•la"'ltter me on vloionlf•l
don't -.....
II'• • momenloa• lime.
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- "Hey. Robert Campeau's got prClh/Pm.&lt;~ MPtt
Griffin's got problem/1. Alsn Bonrl'!l

•1"'

when can ave ever 1U.r1 cat chin• up·
~
lo I he Democrob?)

But, of course, we cannot stand
still. We have mllea to go. (1 ,
wonderwho'osointiiobepre•idenl
1 ·
Donny•1 l"''
·
b hi d
a ter me.
e n me,
on 1he podium.., pre1iden1 of the
Senrne. Nice youns fellow. Bu1 do..
he h.... doe ••uff? He'• B•"in!I

jail (No·" oay thu' •lowly· wait 1or
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applou••·l . Including Man-well
Nor-ree-ay-gah. (Tho&lt; lit de fruit·
aike with the machete. Declorinl!
tllar on uo! Did he believe all thai
d
.
aboul an in ecilive, prepp&amp;e
pre•iden1?) .
I tuff

So I am asking Congress for
additional monies to keep on
beuer.looldhe'llbeonlhelicl&lt;elin winnIng t.he war o n .dru,.... Also
1992, bu1 if I didn't •Y that, he'd be , money to clean up the air, and
;dead meal for three y~,.,_ Foley'•
plant trees, especially In the
boclctherewillthim. SpNI&lt;ero1 11te
...... _.
11e•.k.. under&amp;
'
y..,..,..,.poarpetiiV
.. ...,
Houoe. We came IO c... - ... al
·n-pr-m
will be able to buy
~~w
-.-•
Anyouay,llil:il&lt;"'""lhol;l'msointi
ohotd the'""'" lime. He'• top
their own homes. (I am GJt
to ltelp olt.pe ii,J
d....,.r. Jll'ha1 would Mp[Hn if 1he envlronrnentaiiU; no one It soiiii!IO
Around the wotld, the bell of DemO&lt;l'all 0110r IJOI •marl and be able lo forpl il lltlt year.)
freedom II rlnllna. (Democracy , nominoled tomeone like Foley
We Jive In a momentoua e~a.
liP Mel
on a ro
Elfin of U.S. /11.,.
i"'tead pJ•ufHr-llb•P Toup race, if Foreign and donleatlc llauea are
"'Y• that 1011nd. 11/M a deli
lhihBO didn'IIJO ju" right. Would 1
Intertwined; Some say that be~and..lciL ... ) And at borne, our
have •• dump Denny~)
cause the Soviet empire Is
economy Is booming Into the 9 1
In my lnl!ueural address last
unravellilg, we can make mas·
mUIIQntb consecutive day of a · year, I talked about the dru1
slvecutslnourdefensebudgetto
stunning recovery, 17 billion

war and pea«. DeJen•e
-cuu could be • iJOod i&gt;(.mocral
illue. But they'll ""'"pi.y it. They'll
lf•lintlto..,primarietandbidlooee
who
can cut m..l. Suicidal,lll&lt;e the
Republi(GBI 'uted to be.)
F II
A
•h ted
· e ow mer"'ans, 1 c at
recently with Prelldent Mikhail
Gorbachev.
(I can chat with
onvhodv, an•pla"".
And I do,
'
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Gorho'• """" more pop""'' lhGJt
me. bul lllot'• becau"' he MIY•
Ru11U. d.o..n'l work. Re•-n....,
.....
""P"lar for the .. ,.. r. .on :;.;...,..;..,_lointi.)
MlkabU and 1 ap-eed that tbla
ld be
ld be
wou
a ... wou
a ... a
1)10111entous
era
for
mankind.
And with your help, f•"Amerlclllla, the bell of ~;;.
cOme•

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POSTMASTER: Send adclrEU chan~
to 1be Dolly Sentinel. ill Court St ..
Pom.,.oy, Oldo ~'

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will ring everywhere.
and God bleuyou.

TllanJI you
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No sublcrlptiON bY moD permftted In

l

aras where horne carrier aervlce Ll
available.

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By United Presslnternailonal
Cl.e veland State-!:;outhwes.t
Missouri State basketball games
used to be battles for the league
championship as the two schools
vied ror the right to represent the
Association of Mid-Continent
Universities In the NCAA
tournament.
.
And both Cleveland State ·and
Southwest Missouri have gone on
to record ·upsets against schools
from more widely recognized
conferences.
However ..Cleveland State Is In
the second year of a three-year
NCAA probation for recruiting
violations and Its games do not
count In league standl.ngs, but
·that hasn't prevented close
games between Cleveland State
.
and Southwest Mls.sourl.
Monday night In Springfield,
Mo., William Stanley socred 22
points, Including 5 of 6 free
throws In the final 36 seconds .to
lift Cleveland State to an 89-86
victory over ~outhwest Missouri.

60-59

The Nelsonville-York girls ou_t·
scored Meigs 19-9 In the fourth
quarter but the Marauders were
able to hang on to a 60-59-ylctory. ·
The win was the 11th In 14th tries ·
for the Marauders. Meigs was
playing without the services of
two year starter Jennifer Taylor
who was Ill.
It was a nip and tuck game
most of the way as the Marauders held a 13-lllead at the end ofthe first quarter. Meigs was able
to puUaway .to a 32·28 lead at the
half behind Trlcla Baer's 7
second quarter points.
· In the third quarter the Marauders used balanced scoring to
, pull away to a 51-40 lead heading
Into the final quarter. But the
. Lady Buckeyes came storming
back behind Kehl McDonal.d who
scored 10 fourth quarter points to.
pull within one with 9 seconds
remaining. But McDonald's try
lor her third three pointer of the
period hit high off the glass as the
buzzer sounded and the Marauders escaped with the one point
victory.'
Kelly Smith, wlio returned
after 'mlssslng last Thursday's
loss to Trlmble wllh an ankle
Injury, led the Marauder attack
with 16. Trlcla Baer added 13 and
Kim Hanning scored 12.
Me Donald took the games
scoring honors wlth 25, 18of those
coming -In the second· half. Mlstl
Pancake joined · McDonald In
double figures with 12.

-·==

13 we.u .... ::.~.~~-------~---- !!!•!!
1111 Weeb ......... .................... .... ..... ~
1

112 Weeki ....................... .. ........ . 1'14.36
o..-llolp eo..q.

i' 13 Weeb ........ ............... ........ .DJ.IIO
' M Weeki ...............................: .. 140.30
i, !fJWeekl .. ,............................... m.to

Ronny Thompson dldn' t get his
father's permission dliring the
game, but received his praise
·afterward. '
Trailing by a point In the
game's closing seconds, Georgetown Coach John Thompson
diagrammed a play that he
!bought would bring the third·
ranked Hoyas a victory. Butl\ls
son Ronny, who 'happens to play
forward on his dad's team had
another Idea.
Ronny . Thomspon made an
lnbounds pass to Alonzo Mourn·
lng, who converted It Into an easy
lay-In · and was fouled with 18
seconds to go. The basket stood
as the game-winner as the Hoyas
earned a hard-fought 70-69 vic·
tory over VIllanova In a Big East
game.
"11 was my son's decision,"
Thompson -sale;! of the pass. "He
was talking to me on · the play
since I was standing 'behind him.
I wanted to ,get Mark (Tillmon)
off a double screen and have
Dlkembe (Mutombo) set a down
screen for Alonzo.
.
"Ronny kept saying he was
going to throw It to Alonzo. I said,
'No. Yes. Be careflll.' He made a
good decision."
.T he younger Thompson had
complete confidence In
Mourning.
...
"He has great hands," he said
of Moqrnlng. I knew he'd get the
basket or get fouled . As soon as
he caught the ball, I knew the
game was over."
Not so fast, Ronny .
Lance Miller missed a layup
for the Wlldacats at the other end
but the ball went out of bounds to
VIllanova with five seconds to
play. Mark Tillmon. who led the
Hoyas .with 26 points on 9-of-2&amp;
shooting, then bl.ocked a shot by
Chris Walker. Walker got the ball
back. but his desperation heave

.

~

The Vikings Improved to 10-7 pQints, Including a 3-polnter that
overall, while Southwes 1 Mls· was the Redsklns ' only basket of.
the second overtime.
sour! fell to 11-5.
.
At Akron, Albert Jones. scored
In other games Involving Ohio
22
polntg and Mark Alberts added
team~. Evansville out-lasted Ml·
20
to lead the Zips to their victory:
ami, 84-71. In two overtlmes,
over
U.S . International of San
Akron beat U.S. lnlernational,
·
Diego.
·
92-80, Missouri-Kansas City deKevin
Bradshaw
made 13 of 26
feated Youngstown State, 81·72,
shOts
from
the
field.
lncludhtgl
·Arkansas State edged , Clncln·
nail, 66-65, and Kenyon beat three of seven from 3-polnt.
range, In scoring 38 points for
.
·
Thiel, 83-61 .
In Evansville, lnd,. Brian Hill u.s. International. which fell toscored 26 points and Scott 8-12.
Akron Improved to 11-5.
Shreffier added 25 for Evans·
At Kansas City, Ronnie'
ville, which outscored Mlamll6-3
Schmitz
and Reggler DeGrate,
In the final period to earn the
each
scored'19
points and Darrel:
double-overtime victory .
Colbert
·
added
16 for the 1
The Purple Aces, 1•1·8, a
Missouri-Kansas
City
Kangaroos.
co-leader In the Midwestern
Collegiate Conference, opened In their victory over the Young..
,
the second overtime with a 10-0 stown State Penguins.
The Kangaroos evened their.
run, capped by 4 straight
Shreffier free throws, to take a record at 9·9 while the Penguins .
·
78-681ead with 54 seconds to play. fell io 3-14.
Reggie
Kemp
led
Youngstown
Malt Kramer of Miami, 8·7 and
the Mid-American Conference State with 25 points and Todd
leader. scored a team·hll!h 14 Lark added 16.

Blazer exec.expects Sabonis arrival
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) - A
top Portland Trail Blazer official
said he expects Soviet Arvydas
Sabonls to beglit his National
Basketball Assocl,ation career
nex I season.
Bucky Buckwalter. vice
president-basketball operations
for the Blazers, returned to
(All games)
TEAM
W L' PF PA Portland Friday after a ~-day
Eastern ........ ..... ll 3 1045 999 visit to Spain, where he watched
Southern .... .... ..... 8 5 924 801 ' the 7-foot-.3, 280-pound Sabonls
North Gall Ia ....... 8 6 973 89( play a game for Forwn Fila tel leo
Hannan Trace .. .. 7 8 888 850 of the Spanish pro league.
Buckwalter also spent several
S-Va:fley ............. 5 6 679 702
hours
off the court with the native
Southwestern ..... s' 9 1038 994
Lithuanian,
chosen by Portland
Oak Hlfi ...... ..... . ·3 11 807 991
In
the
first
round
of the i9116 NBA
Kyger Creek .. .... I 13 738 1053
draft.
Buckwal'!er said Monday he Is
(SVAC games)
~
convinced
that Sabonls, who
TEAM
W L PF PA
passed
up
a
chance to play with
Eastern .......... 9 0 674 579
Southern ......... 8 1 698 518 the BIIIZers th's season, Is menNorth Gallla ... 7 3 725 632 tally ready lor the challenge of
S-Valley .. ...... . 4 5 543 587 the world's best basketball
Hannan Trace 4 6 • 592 568 league.
"Arvydas Is going to be In the
Oak Hill ........ . 3 6 538 648
Southwestern .. 3 7 707 . 711
Kyger Creek ... 0 10 526 760
TOTALS ........ 38 38 IIG03 5003

HANNING SHOOTS-' Meigs' Kim Hanning (20) drives In for a
· layup against Nelsonville-York durl~g Monday nlght!s TVC
contest. Buckeye defender Is Kelli McDonald ( :U). Meigs won,
60-59.
Verna Compston led the Marauders reserves to win number
in 12 In 13 tries with a 45-29
victory. Compston scored 16
points to lead the way . C. Warren
led Nelsonville with 12.
Nelsonville .......... .... 11 28 40 59
Melgs·.. .................... l3 32 51 60
MEIGS
. Kelly SQ11th
7-0-2.;_16, Trlcla Baer
4-0-5-13, Shannon Newsome
2-0-4-8 , Kim Hanning
4-0-4-12, Kim Ewing
2-0-0-4, Deanna Haggy
0-0-0-0, Marsha King
0-0 - 0-0 ,. Amy Rouse
2-0-0-4, Missy Nelson
0-0-3-3. TOTALS
21-0-18-80.
NELSONVILLE Barrl
Fuller 1-0-0-2 , Steph
McLaughlin 3-0-2-8, Debra
Blackburn 1-0-1-3, Becky
Rosser 1-0-3-5, Kelll McDo, nald 6-2-7-25, Mlsti Pancake
5.-0-2-12, Marty Foley
:l'-0-0-4. TOTALS
19-2-15-48.

SV AC standings

Sabonls Is averaging 26 points
NBA next season," Buckwalier
said. "HYe wants to be In the , and 13 rebounds a game.
NBA. His main thing Is to go
against the best."
"He has served kind of an
apprenllceshlpln Spain - stepSPRINGVALLEY CINEMA
ping stone was the word he used
446 4114
.
- but I think he's naxlous to get
himself here, and he wishes he
were here right now," the Blazer
official said.
Sa bonis, who helped the Soviet
Union to the gold medal In the
1988 Olympics, has signed a
1-year Contract with the Spanish
team that Is renewable at his
option.
•'There are people who would
like to have him _there again next
year, and I'm sure they'll pres·
sure him," Buckwalter said.
"But there's no question, he
won't be back In Spain.

TAX .TIP OF
THE
WEEK
·
DO YCU UihHDENIS HAW
SOOAl SKIIITY tid l51 •

=
....... ,.. ..

cWtn .. il&amp;lftlln,., ••,
. . . . . . 2 ......

"Public Notice"

lit ...

(Reserves)
TEAM
W- L PF 1.. PA
.Southern.. .. ..... 9 0 458 301
North Gallla ... 9 1 499 376
.Hannan Trace 6 4 436 368
'
•
Oak Hill ....... .. 5 ~ 409 386
s -vauey .... ::.'..4 s . 371 371
Southwestern .. 3 7 383 465
Eastern ..... .. ... 2 7 328 411
·
Kyger Cr~ek ... 0 10 266 472
TOTALS
........ S8 31 1110 3110 '
· TOLEDO, OhiO !UPJ) - Mus· .
'
klngum auard Andy .Moore was ,
Sa&amp;III'!I87'A llnala
picked Sunday as the Ohio
Southern
61, Hannan Trace ~
Athletic Conference Player of the
Portsmouth
East 78, Kyger
Week.
.
Creek 3'1
The 64 sophomore from Mount
Minford 66, Oak Hill 58
Vernon scored 49 points In two
Tu•dq'• eontesa .
games last week. He also had
Wahama
at Kyser Creek
seven rebounds and three
McDermott
Northwest ill Oak
blocked shots. He was 16 or 28
Hill
from the field and lfl of 20 from
Ironton St . Joe at Symmes Valley
the line last week:

II, I"" I-..,..-

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lldal ......,

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t«irlty .............
, _ . ""'" .. .wt1 • • •

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.
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..........,..
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MusL-:............•s Moore
.....roe.... ••
honored by OAC

.. .,.. lint ..1111111 .......

lilt ........ ..,., ; : .""""

1990 IIAIDA

U·SMIAIA

•

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1·111 ,••• Itt I

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points each to lead the Razor·
at the buzzer was off the mark.
backs,
15·2 overall and 7-0 In the
Georgetown, which suffered Its
·Southwest
Conference, over the
only loss to c;:onnecticut last
Cougars.
Arkansas
took an early
week, Improved to 15-1 overall
6-5
lead
and
netver
trailed.
Chris
and 5-lln the Big East.
"We had every opportunity to Morris led Houston, 12-6 and 3-3,
win but they made tbe big shot," with 26 points, maklng,,.9 of 10
VIllanova Coach Rollle Massi· shots.
AI Philadelphia, Lionel Slmmlnosald .
.mons
scored a game-high 34i
VIllanova, 11-9 and 3-4,. got 16
points
and
grabbed 14 rebounds
points from Miller, 13from Chris
to
help
the
ExplOrers
Improve to
Walker and 12 from Woodard.
13-1
and
4-0
In
the
Metro
Atlantic
The Wildcats made only seven of
Athletic
Conference.
La
Salle
has
31 shots from IIIJ! field In the
won
26
of
the
last
27
meetings
second half and 16-of-54 (29.6
between the two schoolS. Kevin
percent) for !he game.
But the Wildcats stayed close Green . led Loyola, 3-13 and 1-5
with a perterlng defense that with 22 Points.
AI Madison, Wis., Patrick
held Mourning In chec~ all night
.Tompkins ·put In an alley-oop
until his last-minute heroics.
lnbounds pass from Kurt Port·
"It was a big shot In that It won mann at the buzzer that gave
the , game bu 1 anybody on the Wisconsin a 77-75 victory over
team was capable of hitting the
Minnesota In a Big Ten game.
shot," said Mourning, who The
Badgers led by as many as 21
scored 19 points made Just4-of;ll points with 12:03 left and sUII
shots from the field. "II was an held a 64-49advantae with 8:52 to
easy shot. The defense concen- go before the Golden Gophers
trated on stopping a 'jumper so I went on a 17·2 run to tie.It at66·66,
was able to spin and turn and get
Willie Burton, who led Minnesota
a layup.''
.
Georgetown shol only 22-for-58 with 24 points. gave the Gopners
a 75· 73 lead with a three-pointer
(37.9 percent) as a team.
. with 1: 13 to go. Danny Jones then
"When our opponent does. not tied It to set up the game-wlner .
shOot well, I give credit to our The
Badgers, 11-7 and 2-4, got 22
defense, •• Thompson said.· points fr~ Willie Simms, Tim
"When we don't shoot well, I give 'Locum had 20 and Jones added
credll to the opponent's 19. Minnesota fell to 12-4 and 3·3 ,
. defense.' '
In other games . It was: Holy
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty, Cross 64 , Lafayette 62; Slippery
No. 5 Nevada-Las Vegas downed Rock 86. lndlami Pa 66; West
Long Beach State 86-77; No. 7 VIrginia 82, St. Josephs (Pa.) 72;Duke demolished William &amp; Auslln Peay 67, Middle Tenn. St .
Mary 109·(6; No. 9 Arkansas 62; Marshall78, Furman 55;, New
busted . Houston 100·89 and La Orleans 77, S. Mississippi 75;
Salle ripped Loyola (Md.) 89-69. North Carolina 73. Wake Forest
At Williamsburg, Va. Phil 61; Old Dominion 94, JacksonHenderson scored 25 points and ville 71; Tulane 82, Nicholls St .
Alaa Abdelnaby addedl8 to 69; W. Kentucky 68, E. Kentucky
power Duke. In a rout of the 66 (20T); Cleveland St. 89, SW
lndlans. The Blue Devils made38 Missouri St. 86; Creighton 68,
of 43 free throws and raised t.helr Indiana St. 66; Marquette 65, St.
record to 14·3. The Indians fell to' Louis 59; Texas 97, Texas Tech
4-12.
77; Colorado St. 60, Air' Force 47
Al Fayattevllle, Ark., Marlo and Wyoming 95, Nebraska 65.
Credit and Ron Huery scored 21

Cleveland State, Akron post wins _.

slip past N·Y

~

-

(

Georgetown edges Vlllanova
70-69 in final 18 seconds

P1111 2-Tiit Dllt Sa 6NI

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The

U1L DIUI, U.

H&amp;RBLOCK
992-6674
611 EASt MAIJI
I;

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Pega 4 The Daily Sentinel

---·...·-- ...... ........ ... ____ __
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&lt;•

Pomeeov Midd'aport. Ohio

&lt;

Giants sign
•'
,;:

,jli~

;~ •

: ·
·-, ·

.
. ' .
. SIS Mn.LION DOLLAR MAN - San Franclllco's WID Clark
shows his pleasure al the announcement of his new ·four-year, $15
mUilon dollar contract Mood~. Signing or the historic contract
makes Clark the highest paid player ever. (UPI)
.

· ··-·-···- -

'

......
.. .... -·· ..

-~ Th.e. Bend

-'--.- ...

Tunday, J.nu8ry.23, 1880

~lark ·to Ia.rg~t

pact -eve..

numbers last seasoa whUe lead- experience. now they are baled
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) .difference."
All-Star first ' baseman Will · The contract calls tor Cluk to Ing the Giants to tlteir first NL. on perfonnance. .BuiL'ally wllat
Clark, coming. off a 111-RBI bepalda$2mlillonsigntngbonus title since the early 19601. He hit Mr. Rosen Is dotni II paytq for
season, was signed Monday by and yearly salaries of $1.75 .333 With 23 homers and drove In perfonnance."
Clark's slplng Is just the latest
the National League cllamplon •· mw.ton for the strike-threatened 111 runs. He also captured the
San Francisco G!aJits to the 1990 season; $3.~ mtiUon tor MVP award In the Nattonal In a jigsaw puzzle Rosen bopes
largest contract In baseball his- 1991; $3.75 million for 1992 and League Champtonahlp Series bY will lead to another leailll!
tory - $15 million spread over $f.~ million In 1993. The latter hitting a pali of homers, drivln1 championship. The Giants' have
signed free agent catcher Gary
·tour years.
ttgure would mal(e- Clark the In el1ht runs and hitting .650.
However,
In
the
World
Series,
Carter and rlghttlelder Kevin
The backend-loaded pact also flrat-ever S4 mUllon-a·season
Clark's bat went cold as . the Bass dur!Jig the offseason and
Includes a no-trade clause that ballplayer.
But Giants President AI Rosen · Gluts tell to their cross-bay llave just Robbie Thompson left
will keep Clark on 'the Giants'
roster through the 1993 season. · - who has opened the club's. rivals, the Oakland Athletics, In In arbitration.
Thompson has asked ,for a
.
"I've been walking around pocketbOoks to resign Mike La- four straight games.
Clark says he Will not feel any salary of $1.35 mUlion tor next
..with a. smile on my race all · Coss, Scott Garrelts, Jose Uribe
morning," said Clark, wbo made and National League MVP Kevtn . added pressure because of the · season while the Gluts have put
In an offer of $900,000.
$1.12 million last season. '.'It was Mitchell to seven figure con- size of the new pact.
"You cu't have more ·pres·
"We have not talked," Rosen
Important to me to have the tracts - says Clark Is worth
sure tllan Game 5 (of the said of Thomp!!On' s demands.
no-trade clause because 1 love every penny.
As for his Immediate tuture, .
the Bay Area. I love .the fans. I
''He plays like a Hall of Farner ·• NLCS) ," he said. "Once the ball
Is
In
the
air,
the-contract
Is
null
Clatk
says lle'll be heading home
want to play here."
and he sho.\lld be paid like one,"
and
void.''
to
New
Orleans to take part In
Cl;~rk llad gone through the
Rosen said. "Will Clark Is the
park
become!
the
seventh
week.
Super
Bowl
tormallty of tiling for arbitration premier player In the _g ame
to
sign
a
contract
for
$3
''I'll
go
to
the
parties," he said.
player
last week,asklng for a. $3 mlllion toda:Y and earns every cent."
mUllan-a-year
or
more
'
a
"But
I
don't
know
about the
contract for the 1990 season. The
Giants manager Roger Craig
figure
1hat
was
unheard
of
even
game.''
Giants had offered to pay $2.3 who was In Reno, Nev., when th~
And who, In Clark's opinion,
mUIIon.
contract was announced said he as late' as last season.
1
"I won't hav~ even imaglft11d a will . win pro football's
"We wanted to sign for either was "not surprised." H~ called
.·
· .
three or tour years, but had to go the money figure "mind bog- contract this large a year ago," championship? .
through tHe motions or fUiJ!g for gllng" but added, "U anybody he said. "But once the $3 milUon · "I'd have to say those guys In
1\rbltrat ion," said sports attor- does, he deserves it. He IS one of mark was broken, It opened . the red and gold," said Clark,
ney Jeft Morad, who along with the best If not the best player In · things up. It's (the large con· referring to the San Francisco
tracts) gone beyond the realm of 49ers. "They've put together an
partner Leigh Steinberg repres- the game."
.
ent Clark. "The key for Will was
Clark put up MVP-category what Is believable. Before In awesome machine.''
baseball contracts were based on
the no-trade clause. It made the

Beat of the Bend

The next ·revolution
By BOB HOEFLICH
.
boxes of products that we buy.
I'm trying to take good care of For some .reason this Is ni!Cj!Smyself so that I'll be on hand tor sary If we llave to take the
th ' e next
products In tor repair. This
Revolu tlon.
seems to be ·a -specialty of the
No, I'm not
house In the lleld of electl"lntcs.
talking sexual,
It's difficult to deal 'with what
Industrial or
having the original box has to do
whatever next
With repair or the product. And
how many years are ·we to keep
Revolution I'm talkln' a bigtbem? . Is th4!Te a statute of
gle - like In 1776.
. llmltatlona? Of course,we all
The next one's going to be a ' ha:ve pien t)i of room to store these
different ball game.. Forget big empty boxes. If this keeps up,
about tossing the British tea Into we Cllll add a room onto our
the drink at Boston Harbor or homes to accommodate the
crossing the Delaware In a boxes.
Be assured - we're
johliboat. We've got really big gonna get this decree changed
stuff.ahead or us.
· Brill' Into tlie bargain we're gonna
Now I hope you can relate to force the creaiors of this policy to
the plan of attack because I will eat the boxes plus all of the
be counting on Y.OU to join me - · styroroam packing. We will try
but do understand that llilsls ton to be humane about this thoughbeing a Captain. Wllat the heck we'll provide a little salt or
perhaps, some mUk and sugar- after all, It Is MY Idea.
Our first major move wlll be whiChever they prefer. We do
directed primarily at the Govern- have to l!eep In mind that', we are
-ment ~t not necessarily exclu· In a gentle America so we'll have
slvely. Yes Sir! We're going to to have a gentle ~volution.
do soroetlilng a bout this mounAs we march on with our
tain or paper work. You know the slingshots and wet noodles, we
Greektsh kind that you have to · aren't going to torget to take a
complete In giant plies In order to · shot at our national ball out
comply- the .tt takes a Plilldel- program to every other nation or
phta lawyer kind of stu!!. We're . the world. 'We're going to .Insist
going to ·get that reduced to one that some'or iliat money that we
single . sheet or there'll be you so generously dole out stays on
the home tront to 'light disease,
·
know what to pay. .
We also are going to go after homelessness and the drug probbig business. We're really gonna lem. Seems like betore we go
sock It to those companies that nobly about saving others - we
assign us .an account number a should save ourselves first. Now
. 'yard long and Insist that we Is that the Law of Self PreservaInclude that number on out !ton or what?
For the grand finale, we'll aim
payment check or communlca' tlon. ·At this point, we can't just at a minority group - now that
. rebel as lndlv14Uals - and not should enhance our Revolution .
Include that number. U we do, We'll' go after the few difficult
: then we face the strong posslbll- cashiers who take our money In
: lty that we won't be credited with stores. We apparently become
• the payment. No - we gotta hivtstble Arter they utter the
· unite - YO!J know, the united we amount we owe. I look for them
stand, divided we !all concept. In to avoid all communication any
• conjunction with that move, day - they'll probably just hold
· we're also going after companies up a sign with the amount on it.
In fairness to those lew un· : that Insist on having names a .
, yard long. 'Qood Heavens! Did friendly soUls, our Declaration of
; these people never hear or . Revolutionaries will contain the
_ writer's cramp? · And don't you statement that none or us expect
· think we should level our forces this minority group to do deep
against the businesses who don't knee bends In awe at our
1 post our- payment· check for presence. However, It would be
several days after they recelv,e refreshing to get just a dash of'
: f!? This makes us late In paying recognition that we're people too.
Sometimes, even a blink of the
• and consequently, they can stick
: an overdue charge: on our next eyes wo11ld be good:
Somewhere along . the line,
payment. Well - we'll get that
perhaps, a store manager or
stopped p.d.q.
And It's only natural that we're oWner will observe the lack . or
' going alter government officials communication or these few
, whose only solution to pr&lt;!blems people with the customer and will
. ts a tax Increase. It never occurs .-provide some corl'('ctlve train·
to tllem, apparently, to adjust •lng. I hope so. because,lf not, In
expenditures to Income - to cut the Big Revolution, these people
gotta go. We'll put Scarlet
. ·the government waste. Naw •' just put another tax Into effect Letters on them - I think S for
; and get more money. Oh, that It silent would be good - and send
them to our Siberia - which
~ were so easy tor usRevolutlonar'
could
very well be Cleveland.
~ les, huh? But not so - we live
There,
they can Uve forever
' 'within - · or do witbout. Cer·
,without saying hi or than!! you.
~ talnly, we do know that It's not a
:.\nd, finally, our Revolution Is
j ·. case or Taxatio,n Without Repres·
entation Representation. going to elevate the status or the ·
• we've got- bleeding seems to be many people who spend their
lives doing for others ....:. and
i the problem.
.
Our next big move as we seek seemingly, get very Uttle .recog·
:
1 ·'to cllange the . system will be
n ltlon or thanks really tor their
; leveled against the· telephone eftorts. We're gonna give these
s,ollcltors who manage to call at people big satin banners to wear
; the mosthlnopportune !lmes sel- across their chests plus big
; ling everything your little heart crowns with little gUstening stars
,. desires. Sure, they're trying to shining at the top. This Is gonna
~ make a llvtng- but they're also cost us big bucks -hey ,let's put
~ Invading our privacy. Our big· In a new tax to cover the cost ' emphasis In this area, of course, but these people truly deserve
~ ·will be the solicitors selling our recognition.
Now I want you to give some
l service ~nlracts. We pay the big
i price for the car and the serious tho!liht to our Revolution
·a ppllance ~ we watched the and remember I'm Counting on
commercials for months about you to take part. II Barbara
~ what great quality these Items hadn't ch~nged her mind abou)
j have - we were Impressed and women In combat we co~ld have
· so we bouaht. Now - someone named ber to lead. our troops.
Insists that we have a service . There will be sign up sheets
, ,c ontract. . Why do we need available In plentyoltlmeforyou
service coqtracts If t~e products to register- maybe at the banks.
Meantime, get your slingshots
are as 'good as theycomnierclals
and pebbles ready.
,
,. say they are?
. ·
By the way, I keep hearing all
• · And, don't look DOll/ but we're
:. going a tier those &lt;;orporate exec· this stuff abo.u t Supei: Bowl. Now ·
;• utlves who have decreed that we· Is that similar to Tidy Bowl? Do
:· 'must save the or'-lnal shipping keeP •mUing.

Missouri takes over top .spot in UPI ratings
UPI ratifiss
NEW YORK (UP I) - TMUn.~dPreu
Board of c'o•ehM' Top 2t
. ceUe'p h•llelball ratii!P, wtltl f~·
pace voce• an4t reMI'd•lbrouihl... ~l ib

DIIMIISI.IJ. Drakell'
Ken,_a liS. Tlllel II
Marquette IS. St. Laabll
Mll ... lt Valier st. larrt.stowe 78

IBt~r.-klllll

parenlllleset~ ,

total PfMnts (b~d on IS
pol'!'~• lor nrlll pla.ce, If lorwcollf, etc.)
ud lut w.ek'• ru kin I(:

Teun

MlaaMart "'•tr:ra81, WllllamleweiiM
Mo-K,an111111 Cl.ty, BI, YoiUiptown Stat.I

11

N. Michlran 75, WR-P• .. Ide 'TO (OT)
N•. llll..t. 10, Loyola (Ill. l II
QuiiiC)' II.Uacoln Iii
,
S6Ma &amp;labia It, Norllweod 85

Polnta

I. Ml•u.ottri (I'H CIHJ .. ................ 1!3 I
%. Kusu (II {lt-1 J . ..... .............. Ui' I
3. GHrwetown (!) ( 1.. 11 _, ........... nJ · t
4. Lo•\'flte 111-2) ....................... !1111
5. UNLV U ) (IW) .................... ... 385 i
1. Olllahoma ll~'l) ......... .............. !llll 3
7. Dulw! IIJ..3) ..... .. ....................... %83 8
tL Mlchlpn fi.J-3) .................... .... 281 7
I. Arkansu(I4-:) ........................ %:11JS

s.. IIIIIHIIII71, CIIIcqe 81 . loll
Sl . Thonwi IS. Macllllllllr M
1

St. M•y'a It CoDCO~Ia(Moorbud) 7t
w. rmao• a. WIIC.'O .. •OB 48
" 'iiM.lo.tJI'tl, MIBIRIII&amp;a 71
Wt.-MIIwaukee 'TI, Wlao• St.. II

Soudlwes&amp;
.............. lit, ....... 81
Arkan•• St. M. Oaela•U II
Tn:aa tl, Texu Ted 17
Teua 8oullerlll5. Mlaa. Valley 8&amp;. 11

It. s,raeu•ll) OH1 ................. na 1
II. Gfllfll;a Tech ( 1!,2) ............ .. \. I'T'T II

It 011-.a (1W~ ... .... ...... ............. 111 I

w...

IJ. (tie) LSU {1!-3:) ............. ......... 1$1 U

Colondo St .•• A.lr FNCe t7
Demlalna 71, ~an .lose Cut-tlM 14
Neud•L• Ve~ II, LoariW.ch St.

ll {I~~ I"Unlue (IS.!) ... ............... 11111

IS. ln•IM I 15-21 ......................... tU 14
IL OrepnState (lf.t).. ...................H z
t'T. s. . ........ f lf..S) ........................111'7
· Ill. La Sal~ ( 1¥-'l) ......... ............... ,.U 11

.

"

Pad ftc O.riiUan 1st, Ar61o• Billie- 11'
"'yomlql5, Nelnl .. 15

lt. Coanedlcut (IJ.3 J,..............:.....41 z
!II. AJab.ma (IJ.I ) ........................ .3'7 1

Results
NATION.tL BASKETB.\.LL AS SO(:
Mo .. It' Rl!l.ll
Phoeal.l: Ill. Or ..IMio Ill
Reulllon Ill, Denter Itt
San AntocMIU.'W:.Wnctonlll
Sacramenlo Ill, LA. Olplll'n lt4
TIIHIIIIJ GIUIIH
A.tllaa• at Cllll'lotte, 'fl• p.m.
Pltoelllsat Nil IIIII, 7:•p.m.
hDadelpllla at Clt'Yelu4. 1: M p.m.

Nortb Carolina. Souhf!Wift'nt.llllll.._:
Tr¥M, l!CL.\., "a~er IDIIIo) ,

College scores

....

Colil!,e Bal.llr!tball IWitM• ,'
~c.omsbu11

M!. ku&amp;llown 18
Bro.kl,.. IS, Dvmllllk•lJ
Caldwell 71, Poat Colle&amp;r 11
Concordla7-l, S . Ramplonlt
Dleldnson H. Ju nl.aa 18 ·
Eul Streud!ibul'l'lll, MIUernllle 18.
FJmlra 76, Bloomneld. 72 (OTI
Gto!'ldiMm ~1. Vll.~o• It
Hoi)' O'mtsl4, LaiQetle 12
La Salle Kt, Loyola i Md.)lt

Lockba"en "'t, Qarlon 17
.~-•thuiM'Iht·lloldo•l5,

Me4ru-

Ever~

lA LUen at Ne. York. B p.m. ·
IJetJ'Oit al C\leqo. B:Mp.ni.
w•
at Datllla.,
p.m.
Houllloaal Utalt,l:30p.m.
M:ln~~~tto&amp;a at GoldeR State, IB: 38 p.m.

.-._.o.

Oran6'1 Ml PhlllldelpiiiLalp.t

Cleveluula&amp; A.tlu•. allfl&amp;

t4. CCNY t1

LA LU.rt'fio allndl ..., niP~
1..\ Cllppn"'ai.Su "-ttHio, nip.
Go I dell Slate at Satftmttnlo, n 1Pf

Mffi:yhui'MI lit, PHWo .... own•:n

S)'ack 8'7, Phlllldelphlallble 17
PrattlnAt. 71 , St. ,f·~··· (N. V. ) II

Mlhnulleea&amp;·Sullle.•IIM

Rldl!r ~8. Cen&amp;nal ConiK'dltut II
Sc ranton Ill , Drrw -12.
Sl . FranciA (Pa.) 110 UMBC'TJ

Sf.

Wale~ 12. Camllbell1, .4.11-8iar Game a&amp;

Phllbu ...ll
Moad• Gamn

W. New Endaad ~8. R.I . Colle1e M
Wf!lliey CoUe&lt;e IS. . Un~:ol11 U. II

No pma tclledltled

....._..,.o.mea
lo!ltoa .. Qlebee.,' 7: a p.m.

"''ell Ch.Nler IS, Ch.ry 78
Wet~tfletd St JH. NlchoiH Ill
"''HI VII'Jinla It, St . .Joaep .. (Pa.) 1'2
S.ulll
Alcem St . AS, .lac!.Mn St. AllOT)

N\' J•IdftraalHartford, i:Sfp.m.
Buflal• at PJIUclelpllia, 'J :JI p.m.

New Ieney at PIUM11k. 1: IS p.m.

AI~ .- Broaddls IU, CbarteAtort-WVa

"'Ap1111ac1Uan Sl. 88, Davld10nM

Wl .... pt(al WMIIIallo&amp; 1:J.Ip.m.
Si. Loa at De&amp; roll, :Jip.m.

Autttln PeiQ' 17, Mhkle Tenn. St. It
Cam,tlell '71, Uhrrty1t
Co.IICCird Kt, Blwflel4 73
Coppin 81. iS. lrtb1111r Coo)ana.n II
Duke IH, William 1: Mary 71
Emory If He nry 12. Olneh \'ajley 5t
l''alnnont lUI, Davhll&amp; Elklmi!S
(iramhllnl )17, Pralrl£' Vlrw M
• M'ar~all 711 , Furman M
Mon&gt;head St. 93, Teae.Mer Sl. IU
Murray Sl . HI , TenN'Naee T•ch 7S
Ntow Orlean11 '77, S. Mltllillllpp6 75
Norfolk st. 76, "''INIIon-Salem Slaae H
Nor1h Caroll• 73. \hke f•m.l i1
Old Domtnlon!9.t, olacluioa¥1Ue 71
Salem-Telkyo ltl. W.Va. 81a.lr tl

Sttua Alabamal5, V L ComoneaU.h It'
Sou.ern Ill. Alabama St. Ill
fte Citadel liB, VMI 'TS
fil!, ~lchoiJB St. •

Tu"'
""
UNC ·..Uhe\'llle 78, Radlol'll 12

W. Kent.-ky If!, E . Kenluellyli (!0'1'1
\\'.Va. Wtllleyan r., WNI Liberti J10
Wettlern faralh• 15, CaM&amp;al Carolina

78
Ml ...etll

.4.kron 112. V .S. lntepatlorillll
Blackburn II, " 'tjliler 14
fll'Yeland St. fit. SW Ml11t011rt 81. M
f..ohmhla Collfo&amp;IP IDI, .4.YU. 18

Crellhton 18, lndlanl81.11

Dldlln...on 117, ,fllml'fllowll n

E. nllnol" Gi, Y.liiJMralso63

•

[YIUIIYiflf' 114, Mbml (Ohio) 11C!OTI
FontboNW 9t, Sanford Brn1181
Fore Hayl'fl Sl . 7'!. M .n ~ st. 51
IP-Inclanapell.11 to, Ferrill Sf;, 74
lnCS.."io•lllf'~l 'H . Ll ndsl')' WIIMn II

'

NV

a•pu II

Edrno.iott, 1: IS p.m.

We..,., a....

1Aa AlllfiM II Ya.e.uwr,lt:JS p.m: '
Buffalo 111 Clllcap, nlahl

Quebec.• Ill Mo•ftal, nlpt

WMhlftlloaiiiNew.Jer~ry,niJbl
Mln•~~oota AI TorHto. nllfl: ·

Glrlfl Ohio HJP Rcllool

S.~Bball

Mordq,.lja, tt

Allr Hoban 'Tt, Root..... Jl
i\leuDder 41, Wei'-IQ tt

Archbold 11, IIINop $1
leM"ercreek •· 0., Palltraon -t'T
IIHin Hll ... 'TI, ....elt.Sclo U

Caldwell I!, Wa&amp;ert.nl -tt
Clump6oa51, •oe~~tleld 41

CrfStwoocl I If WoDIIIrillce n
F&amp;~eUe 51, EurrrHII II
frdrnl Hocklarll. Trimble u •
Fon lea•nptl, P•l•ll..-11
Galllpol• 11.JI¥aer eree11 a
Garfield Hh 41. C.,a...a Hb !II
... hbanl tt. " 'Arn!a Rowlalld 31
LaB rae lt. New to• Falll U
Madbton P1atu Sl, Cf-Mnllle 11
0110\'illr II, Hoi pte tK

Skyw.

st. Fort Frre 41

Sfe.btn\lllfo fl, H•n ..val River ..
Mh'f'thho ro Sll, G.r 1woUavllle Gar 57
U•Jon Loc:aiN, Calh It
Waterloo 57, Dlamold SolldleMlll
M'ellntlk- 7t. Edt.en S.•lh IS
M'lnllham M, Mo&amp;••n! H
l 'ounp UbHtyst, (.ortlahd Lakeview

"

;:sports lottery .sales down
'

: SALEM, Ore. (UPI) - The
. Oregon Lottery's Sports Action
' ~ sales dropped to only $54,908last
: week - the rtrst week with ·only
, pro basketball on the card : continuing the slide that began
. when the regular pro football
·. season ended.
Oregon Lottery Director Jim
Davey said Monday the decline
could reflect anger by some
· bettors that Intercollegiate at. hletics won't get Sp&lt;irts Action
·Income as expected.
: · Because other lottery games
fell short of expected prottts,
about $1.6 · miiUon _In Sports
Action proceeds must go to the
·state's economic development
..: :, fund, as the state law that
:Created the Sports Action game
"dictates.
Davey said the lottery won't ·
llrop wagering on pro basketball
due to Its poor showing. The
National Basketball Asioctation
also has filed a federal lawsuit

S' .

"

N..\TIONAL HoCKEY LE.tGUE
'
Sullii..,.Game ,

Slippery Rock 841, ln•ana Pa II ·
SC. Thomu .4.qW.. tt GIMiboroSt. U
Sa11q.ehanM t%, L)'com1111 M.

s:•

Mllwaullee a1: PortiiUid, ·II: Sl p.m .
" 'dneediQ Gam•
· ~land at BnSDa, at ...

t.:merMn U

NO. 2 Kansas and No. 3
Georgetown each dropped a
place during a week that removed all undefeated teams
from Division I. Kansas did
receive one first-place vote and .·
Georgetown two. No. 10 Syra,
cuse, which tumbled five places,
coUected the other llrst·place
vote.
No. 4 Louisville soared six
places this week, while No. 5
Nevada-Las Vegas climbed four
spOts. No. 6 Oklahoma slipped
three rungs after losing twice.
No. 7 Duke and No. 8 Michigan
exchanged places · ·from last
week, while No. 9 Arkansas
Improved four positions.
· Tl)erestortheTo!&gt;20had: No.
.

United Press International
If the Suns keep burning, they

rebounds.
"Akeem got hot tn ihe second
half," said Denver's Blair Ras-

mussen. "I think he struggled
early."

ONE. 1

!lrold-cGII..-.ge.

competltivlly-priced plan
far retaH stores. offic:ll.
·churchl1. .apanlll8i 111 and
drug BtontL Call' Ill far a
propoaal and quotation.

Will create a three-te&lt;~m race In
the Pacific Division of the NBA.
The Phoenix Suns took their
torrid show to Orlando Monday
night aild emerged with a 126-103
victory over the Magic before a
sellout crowd of 15,077. It was the .
eighth consecutive victory for
H!&gt;spltafization lns1.1r._nce now available not only for
theSunsandgavethem13wlnsln .
214 EAST MAIN
h,ealthy people. but qualifying people with pre-existtheir last 15 outings. ·
.
POMEROY·
ing health conditions. No phyaical exam· or long ·
Phoenix, the hottest team In
health history. Meigs County area enrollment has be992-6687
the NBA during Its streak, now
gun
so:
•.
stands 5-~ games 'behind the
Call Toll Free 1-800-482-8151
dlvtslon leading Los Angeles
Lakers and four games behind
Meigs Local 992-2870
runnerup Portland.
.·
The Houston RoCkets, another
team with an Impressive streak,
registered a 116-104 triumph over
the Denver Nuggets. It was the ,
ninth consecutive vtctory at
home for the Rockets, their
looge51 since they set the fran'
.
chise record or 20 to start the
1985-86 season.
,
In the other games Monday
night, the San Antonio Clippers
'
stretched their home Winning
streak to 16 games by defeating
the Washington Bullets 124-115
and the Sacramento Kings • ·
2 door, tilt; cruise. low mi· Edtllt Bauer Edition
Automatic, tilt, cruise, low
routed the Los Angeles Clippers
leage, 2 to pick from.
Only
3.600
miles.
mileage.
136-104.
. NOW
WAS
Kevin Johnson contributed
WAS
S23,171
game-high totals of 27 points and
S1U19
17 assists for Phoenix, which
stretched a one:poillt rtrst quarter lead to a far more comtortable 66-51 halftime advantage.
Johnson scored 10 points In the
Loaded, reel with Jed leather.
lnternatiOIICII Series
quarter and Dan Majerle and
Automatic and air, 2 to pick
only 26,000 mllea.
Demo. 8.000. mll81. NOW
Tom Chambers combined for 15
from.
,
·
points during the session.
WAS
WAS ·
The Suns hit their first five
S9995
$19,945
field goals attempts of the se~nd
half, Inflating their cushion .to
76-54.
'
Rookie Michael Ansley scored
a season-high 25 points for
Orlando and Terry Catledge
lrofacl Wtlon
Lt. blue with cloth Interior.
added 22.
White with blue leather,
l.olldld, low mila,.
Automatic, air.
Akeem Olajuwon, held to four
loadld.
WAS
points In the first half, still led
WAS
WAS
Sl995
Houston with 24 points arid i4
S26,235
529,941,

Meig$ County Health Insurance
Enrollment·

-~----------A·s·k-fo~r-E~u~g~e~n;e~A;n~•;P;ac~h~--------.1

• C0 bb
J liD

l.!·IIIFiJ
~~:f!::::::t._J

.

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBU.E
CADILLAC-GEO' INC.
'

JANUARY USED
CAR CLEARANCE
..

1989 OLDS
CIERRA 4 DR.

1990 FORD
BRONCO

1990 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

~65 .$17,988
1989 OLDS '
TORONADO

1988 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

NOW
$17,455

1989 CADILLAC
ELDORADO

NOW
$
·
18,788

, 1989 CHEY.
, CAVALIER 4 DR.

NowS8444

Now$7488
'

.

'

CHEY.OLET·OLDSMOIILE
CADIUAC·GEO, INC.

•.J

Twenty Meigs County teenag- ·
ers are enrolled In LEAP Learning, Earning and ParentIng- a statewide program which
encourages"' teenage parents
under the age of 19 who are nn
publ~ assistance to go to school,
Michael Swisher, director, Meigs
County Department of Human
Servtces.
According to Swisher. the
Innovative program, Initiated In
September, 1989, links rewards
and penalties to · school
attendance.

Under the LEA!? program,
teenage parents who have not
· graduated !rom high school are
eligible for a $62 bonus added to
their monthly public .a ssistance
checks as long as ·they meet
school attendance requirements.
Those retuslni to stay In sc.hool
without good cause will have
their monthly checks cut byh$62.
The LEAP program Is targeted
to a group especially vulnerable
to long-term welfare · dependency, ·according to Roland T.
Harlston, .state human servtces
director. "If these young people

"

drop out of school and don't get
an educ atlon now, they will find It
rouah golngtogeta lob that pays
enough tor them to make It on
their own," he said.
The LEAP program Is key
element In Ohio's welfare relorm
program designed to help recipIents make the transition from
dependence to Independence.
Teen parents enrolled tn the
LEAP program are eligible for
subsidized child care and transportation so that they can go to
school.
·
As explained by the state

a

director, this Is a new program
and as with any new program,.
there are challenges to meet and
problems to overcome to make It
success!ul.
About 2,500 teenagers are
enrolled across the state now, but
the figure Is expected to Increase
to abo~t 6,000 belore the school
year Is over.
Teenagers who are eligible to
participate In LEAP sbould contact the Meigs County Depart·
ment of Human Servtces ofll!!e
on Race Street In Middleport.

Middleport literary ,gr.oup conducts meeting
.
Mrs. Roy Holter revlew~.d the
book "City of Joy" by Dominique
Lapierre, a~ the recent meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club
held at the home of Mrs. Chester
Erwin.
In her review Mrs. Holter
stated that the author had togo to
India.In order to tell this saga of a
place called Calcutta. The author

.

had to Immerse himself tor
months In this awesome reality.
He slept In a hovel, came to know
the fascinating culture, spent
days with Mother Teresa, and
alsO the local mafia.
Mrs. Holter went on to say that
the author witnessed births,
deaths;· funerals, and how to
survive on six cents a day. The
book stated that the city was one

of the most populated In the
world where six million people
live out their lives on the streets.
Lapierre's book tells or the'
polish priest Stephan Kovalskl,
and Max , the youqg American
doctor ' who came io ease the
plight of the people. He made
friends with a rickshaw puller
and hlll!s~-~:~~
In tb

of the most properous cities In
Asia, according to the book.
However, 'the wave or destitute
people transformed . It Into an
enormous concentration or
humanity.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, vice president, conducted the meeting In
which roll call was answered
with the members and one guest,
Mrs. Harry Chesher, teiUng of a
time when they felt poor.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess.

Singing
Peggy Yeauger will be singing
at the Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church In Middleport on Satur1
day at 7:30p.m.

jitney supper
A jitney supj,er will be served
for the public on Feb. 3from 5-7
p.m. at the Carleton School In
· Syracuse.
STORY TIME - Lower prlmiii'J llllldeala of
Sala.bui'J Elementary receaUy were able to "ro
back Ia &amp;lme." S&amp;udentt.were reaclatorla of long
ago, shown 1111t1que toys and utenaUs, and were
Involved In ciUeulloDB of wblll happened Ia older

&amp;lmes. Pldured are flrlt pade ltu4leajlll!
left, Michell Mixon, las&amp;ln, Hoechar,
Custer, AprU Blakeallllp, and Yaacey
With sroup leader, Mary Wile.

We Believe ...
111ATTHE
BROTHERHOOD
. Of' MAN

TRANSCENDs

THE
SOVEREIGNTY
OF NATIONS.
... /roflt

lite-

C1rJIJd

JAYCEE WEEKJANUARY 21-27,

1990
STORY TEU.ERS- Adult volunteers from the
Melp_ Senior Cltlsena Center who belped the
lower primary stuclenla ol Sallllbury Elementary
to "ro back In lime" were, from left, front,

Raellael Downie and Mary Wile. Back, Eileen
Buck: aetly FuHz, Dorothy Downie, and Bernice
Carpenter.

Floral Arts Council topic is shell craft

IN STOCI.••NIDI AND
LADY. TOP LINI MEICIA.ISI.
Lower Markup...Means·RHIOnablt Pricesll

UCINE DEPAIIMENI StORE

POMEIOY, OHIO . ··!·

Applicants must be currently
as a registered nurse or
licensed practiCal nurse. The
CO\Ir&amp;e tee of $250 lncludet all
co.sts of materials . and
Ins tructlon.
Registration will be accepted
through Feb. 23. Enrollment Is
limited. Registration Is being
handed by Roberts at O'Bieness,
593-5551.
lic~nsed

20 teens participate,in DHS program ·

"Spring Clothing Arriving"

t-----~----~--------~------~~~~!:
.
.
.
.. ___ _
, ·\

992-8814

O'Ql,epess~Memortal Hospital ' variety or health care delivery Unulng education units will be
In Athens Is offering an educa- systems and are not oriented -available through the course~
tiona! opportunity for nurses who specifically to hospital-based which will be taught by Edna
have not uaed their nursing skUls nursing.
Roberts, R.N. . B.S.. and Mary
The nursing refresher course Kay Kruszewski, R.N., B.S.N .
recently to update those skUis.
A refresher course to reac- will Include 48 bours of lnstrucThe course Is scheduled to
quatnt currently licensed regis- lion In assessment, development begin March 6 and to continue on
tered nurses and' llcenSed.practl- of nursing care plans, and Tuedsay, Wednesday and Thurscal nurses with the general performance of specific akUis. It day mornings frorn8a .m . to noon
practice of nursing. SkUls re- will also Include certification In for four consecutive weeks at
viewed will be appropriate for a basic cardiac Ute support. 'Con- O'Bleness .

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308 MAIN STIEn

0 !{3/epess offering nurse refresher class

1HE JAYCEES®
A l.eadmbip TJBining
Organimtion

a.

r-.....:.~==::;:

Dr. Daniel
·R. Trent
Family Practice

. Community calendar. ·

OWIIIf _ ...................................:....

Jim Cobb

The Daily Sentinel

!'at Hotter made several ar·
Janet Holsinger presented the
rangements
showing hogarth
program, "Shell Crall" at the
curve
and
crescent.
Between the
Jan. meeting ofthe Shade Valley
years
of
1400-1600,
In
Italy, the
Council or Floral Arts held at the
hogarth
curve
was
Introduced.
Chester l:Jnlted Methodist
Mrs. Holter stated that a high
Church.
container
had to be used. She
She showed the group a Christ-·
showed
the
group several con· mas ornament tnade from a shell
tainers.
She
used
Japanese liolly
and a grapevine wreath with
bush,
eucalyptus,
scotch broom,
shells glued on lt. ·Members then
sea
shells
on
stems,
red carnamade wreaths and glued shells,
tions,
and
baby's
breath.
She
flowers, and ribbons on lt.
made
a
crescent
arran1ement
.In
Bobbl Karr r.ead devotions and
a
big
shell
I!Sing
scotch
broom,
roll call was answered with·
·
members
bringing sliells and Japanese holly bush; cbrsythaters
will
meet
Wednesday
at
7
TtlEIIDAY
mums, and pink carnations.
HARTFORD -The GalUa Ma- p.m. at tile hlgll school. All telllng ·where they found them.
Refreshments were served by
parents
are
urged
to
attend.
Beverl)i
Bailey
was
a
guest.
son Meigs Crusade tor Christ will
hostesses, JoAnn Francis and
the
The
group
voted
not
to
pay
dues
• be holding e revival at the
Shena
Taylor.
POMEROY
The
Wildwood
anymore.
• Hartrord Christian Union Church
... . ' ·Garden
Club
Will
meet
Wednes- In Hartford, W.Va. throligh Sun. day wttb services at 7 p.m. day at the home 'of Mr1. DWight
• nightly. There will be 1peclal · Milhoan, Flalwooda RoAd, .for a
• alnp!l'l and speaken nilhtly. noon luncheonandglttexchuge.
• Rev. Clyde V. Henderson, cruTIIUIIIDAY
. sade president, Invites the
'RACINE -TheRaclneAmerl·
: public.
.
can Legion AuxtUary Will meet
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Thursday,
7 p.m., at the lelinn
POMEROY -The Ohio Eta
: Phi Cllatper, Beta Silma Phi llome.
· Sorority, will ll)llt 'l'llelday, 7
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
· p.m., In tile lOMB! room of the
Grace Epilcopal Church In group of A.A. and At-Anon Will
meet Thul'lday, 7 p.m., at the
Pomeroy.
Sacred Hurt Catholic Churcb.
liD SIMI
t4t·tll0
UC., 0.0
For more Information, ca111.SOO:
WBDNEiDAY
MAITERCAAD-VISA-GOLDEN BUCKEYE
RACINE -The Southern Boos· 333-11051.

1987 PONTIAC GRAND AM Loa~~tcl.-.............,...............,;_.. S7 6'r2·,·
1987 CHEV. CELEBRITY EUROSPORT Low miles ........:.. S8499 • I:
· 1987 OLD$ 98 4 DR. One owMr-...............:...~......;............:...... S9995
1987 CHEV. IROC Loadtcl, - owner ................................................ S9 779
1987 CHEV. SPECTRUM 2s.ooo milts ..~..................................... S5995 .
1987 ,.PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE'Auto. cir ............................... S4995
1985 CHEY. ClPRICE Y-1, ...
S5995 I~
1915 FORD CROWN VICTORIA 4 .,_ ___,;.................._ $5718

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1988 (HEY•.
CORSICA 4 DR.

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$21,677

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$10;989

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TVC standings

against the lottery In an ertort to
halt the game.
(All Gamea)
. The LotterY Commission met TEAM
W L P OP
Monday and agreed to guarantee · Miller ............. 10 · 3 884 793
a minimum payout In Sports Wellston ......... 9 3 851 732
- A~tlon of $4 tor players who bet Alexander .. ... . 9 5 904 833
three outcomes and get all or Trimble .......... 8 ~ 815 775
them correct and $8 lor the ''4 of Fed-Hocking... 8 6 1016 986
.4" p~~ pool.
.
Belpre .. .......... 7 6 946 101
Sports Action sales have VInton County. 4 6 6~ 648
dropped since basketball games Nel•York ..: .... 2 11 670 976
joined the ticket In tate DeMeigs ............. i 11 ·. !i46 879
cember. The game averaged · 8aluni1Q''I 1'1!11111:
· $375,000. weekly durlnl the Na- · Alexander 68 Federal Hocking 56
tiona! Football League's regular Belpre 95 Melp 69
season, but sales dropped to · Wheelersbure 61 VInton County
$112,586 In the tint week or NBA 42
play, climbing to $159,317 In the
TueldiQ''~ pma: ,.
second week. Daye said he hopes Alexander at Wellston
having the Super Bowl on this · Mtlp at Nelsonville-York
week's card Will boost sales to at Trimble at F~l!.l Hocking
least $120,000.
Belpre at VInton C:Oulity
"We'd actually surveyed our
FrldiQ''I Janlelll '
lottery players, and about two- . Alexander at Federal Hocking
thirds said they'd play buketball Wellston at,M•lp . ,
- and that haan't happened," Vlnion County at Miller
Davey said.
·
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Trimble at Nelsoiivtlle-York

1989 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

NOW
$19,764

~~642 NOW $9889

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11 Georgta Teclt; No. 12 llllnols;
ranklngs.
,
co-No. 13 Louisiana Staie and
The Big East and Big Ten each
Purdue; No. 15 Indiana; No. 16 · J)laced fou.r teams In the Top 20,
Oregon State;. No. 17 St., John's;· while the Big Eight had three In
No. 18 La $aile; No. 19 Connecti- the ToplO.
cut; and No, 20 Alabama.
This week's top games are
Illinois tumbled six places to slated for Super Bowl Sunday,
suffer the biggest drop of the when Georgia Tech travels to
ranked teams. ConneCticut, one· Duke and UNLV plays Louisiana
of three new teams to crack the . State In Baton Rouge.
Top 20, produced the biggest
surprises of the week.
The Huskies knocked .oft Big
East giants Syracuse and Geargetown to join the rankings for
the first time this season. Oregon
State and Alabama, two teamS'
previously ranked thts season,
also joined t!Je Top 20. UCLA,
Xavter of Ohio . and Michigan
A buline11 iiiiUI'ance PICk·
State dropped out of the
age, that Is. It's SERIES

Su.,s· ~eighth in row, .top Orlando

ll·unran led

OIIIHS receh1ns YolO: A.rl:r;o,.,
Brlp.,.. Yo . .,, Clenwon, Cblondo
~r. EMI Tennrs~rr SWe, Ku-.
state, LoyGia Marym••· MleWaState, Ml nnesoca •. New Mexico stale

NEW YORK ( UPI) - The
Missouri Tigers, among the few
ranked teams to escape the
weekeild unscathed, shot to the
top of the coUege basketball
ratlngs Monday In voting by the
Un,lted PreSs International
Board or Coaches.
·
MisSouri, which defeated prevlously top-ranked Kansas, recelved 37 of 42 possible Urst-place
votes and was the overwhelming
choice or the coaches wltll 623
pOints. .
·
Tile Tigers were the only team
In the top seven that did not lose
Saturday; The collapse of the
other . six teams caused · the
biggest upheav,al In the Top 20
this season.
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¥onday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Wednesday
9 a.ll,l. • Noon

· Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome
Office Staff:
Lisa Thome, LPN
Cail Hoveatter
Linda Thent
138 Main St., New Haven, WV +
formerly

&lt;*&gt; 882·3134 .

Bend Area Medical Ceala

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Paga- 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

The o.lly

. Health
Maintenance
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To lock .UfJ dogs or not
whetJ. strangers are near

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Ann
Landers
4NN U NDI'll8

serieS contmues

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TII•N§r.tlt"Mr.M
Delli' .·Beaden: · I took'· the out all repair perso111 thoroughly
: ".COld Weltber and How It
Miller, a natl'ie of ~llli·
er.-at.. Sy ...th~*
poeltloll ·recently that a dog before we let them Ill the house.
Affects. You" wt1! 1M! tile allbject ton, Ky., graduated from West
should ~ locked up wbe.Q teRalr Tiny stays In the bument.
of the January·Febl'uaey 11!1'11!1 Vtrctnla Unlveistty Ill Morlan·
'
peopJI! ~d aueats are expected
Lottr Be ~ell, Callt: I work for
ofHealthMatn~eeprogram 1 town, W. Va., wftb • BS Ill
no matrer how J t'ntle and - eet the telephOne company. If a
spo111ored jollltJY by Holzer Med- Pharmacy.• Ill
He tbe11 ,.
the dOi may ~~e. I, learaed, that customer· refulleS to secure her
leal Q:nter and Cllnlcr des lined . entered tbe West VIrginia School
out of hell.
dog
oWIIel'S are deep)y dlvlde&lt;\ on ·dog I leave: This Is not my Idea;
for commwl1ty residents who are . of Osteopatlllc Medicine, 111'8 ·
Turner, Ore. : A smooth·
this aubjl!!:l and that ' a IarJe It' s the policy of the phone .
age 55 and over.
•
.d1llltll!i In 1979. He did ·bls
.talking vacuum cleaner sales·
percentage of the rea.d lni public compaiiY- H the woman whcl
, Featpred apeak11r at Thurs· llltel'llllblp !II Memorial Osteopaman conned his. way Into my
knpws a great deal more about wrote Insists on letting a hostUe
day's 1 p.m. prograril at the t~ Hoepltal In York, Pa.,
daughter's
Jiving room a few
dogs than I do, Read on:
dog run loose .In her house she
. Meigs County Senior Citizen 1979-110, followed by his FamUy
months
ago.
He stayed and
l"rom Baltimore: Why don't may never get her phones fixed.
Center will be Dr. David E ; Practice realdl!llcy at Bren~QOCI
stayea
and
talked
and talked,
you consult one of your experts
Chicago: My husband traveled
Miller from . Holzer Clinic' and . HllSpltal, Warrensville Heights; '
refusing
to
take
no
for
an answer .
when you get stuck? It Is oJMous a lot and we lived out In the
Holzer Medical Cenfil_r Depart- Ohio, 1980-81. At that time he lll•o
..
.
No way could she iet rid of the
.~
·' ,;
.
.
that
d 't k
b bout COI!ntry bilt he nevei- worried
.. ment of Emel'gency Medicine. worked .as 'a part time emer.pest.
Finally, " Pepper .'~ her
· dop~~u wci~ld :eoww~~ ~o.;be ' abOut -me when I was alone
' DR. DAVID' E. MilLER
He wm talk about bow you can gency room PIIYIII:Iali at Brent·
poodle,
sensed the problem. He
you've. never bad one, - ~J, l!ecauseourbrlndleboxerwasln
gl;ve your Immune system a hand wood Hospital and at Wooster
walked
over
to the man, Jilted his
more
charge. No one wa~ allowed out
In properly protecting you and
(Ohio)· CommiiiiiJ:Y Hoa.pltal.
clinic In July 1982. He Is Clinic
leg
and
filled
tlie man's shoe. The
Delli' Bait: You're half right. I~ of a car (much·Jess house) untU I
, your body from the ·effects of
He came to ·Holzer Medica)
Associate Profesaor, Family
salesman
·
Immediately
packed
don'tknawmuchaboutdogs but said, "OK. It's a friend" Why
win t er ' s colds , flu and Center In ~las. an emergency
Pr•ctlce, In the College of
up
his
goods
and
left.
(Squish
I did have two dogs, a · IM,xer . haveadoglfyou' regolngtoknew
temperature. ·
room pbyslclah and joined the. Ostropatblc Medlclnfl at Ohio
squish.) No words were spOken
rtamed Lady Presto and a Mexl- . It was locked up? ... •
.
but the guy knew he had
Unlverslty. HebecameaDiplom·
can Chihuahua that weighed
Somervqle, N.J.: One dark and
ate ofthe American Ostropathlc
overstayed
his welcome.
thr.;:e ,pounds. We called hlmBtg. rainy day a salesman appeared
·
Dru~S
are
~vf&gt;rywh er e. T hey're
L OS ANGELES (UPl) ...:. Ger· . Gu· ns- •.., Ro·Ses.
Board of Gener.al Practice In
Shot. ·
·
at the door totally drenched . I
•'
February';'1983.
eOJy to get, ea11y t o u s~ and even
Manha&amp;tan: Don' t back olf 011. was startled to ·see that he had
man duo Mllll VanUU and coun- · MlllL Vanllll, anotlier dance
· Making the arrangements on
ea•ier rogPt hookt•,d on. I/ you h,ave
your
advice to keep dogs locked! opened the locked storm door and
try singer Randy Travls •were act, won lor' tavorlte new popbehalf of the hospital and :the
ques tion.. about d r ugs, you need
up. It cost me and my family a , put one foot Inside. When he
trfple-wlnners as dance music rock .arUs't,' favorite new clinic for this community lnforAnn Landers' booklet, "'Th e Low.
domlnated the , 17th . AI\nual soulrhylhm·and•blues ai'tlst, arid
matlon program is Macy Harri- ;fortune to learn this lesson. Last started · to rattle off a canned
down on Dope. " Send o oelfyear a man came In to·check the .·s~h that made no sense, I
Amerlcan Music Awards.
favorite pop-r~k Slnile,for · ~Girl son, R.N., siaff development
addrcued
, long, buaineU·Iile enve•
eletrlcal wlrlni and "Tiny,'' our, beCame frightened. At that moFive · dance acts - • Janet · You' Know It' s True." " ·.. · , •
coorcjlnator at the hospital, along. 80-pound
lope and a check or m oney orde r f or
Gerrn,an shepherd, took ment my blackdab appeared out
Travis, winner for favorite . with AUce Wamsley, director of
Jackson, Bobby Brown, Paula
$3.65 Jo: Lowdown . c/ o Ann Land·
a
couple
of ch(inks out of his leg of nowhere and was at my side,
Abdul, rapperM.C.IJammerand co.u ntty male vocalist, country" th M 1
c 1 s 1
er i. P.O. Box 11562. Chicoga, W .
and arm. We got sued from bell to barlng"bls teeth and barking like
New Kids On The Block- each 'album tor "Old 8 X 10.'' a~d . Clt~ens~ gs : oun Y, en or
6061 ~ -0562 .
breakfast. Since then we check · crazy. Tbemantookoffllkeabat
~on two a,ward.s Monday night,
.single for "Deeper Than The
'
along
with heavy-metal rockers
Holler.
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PLANNIN G

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NATIONAL

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JAYCEE WEEK ,
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'}}.• V .a fiilli'· , T·. faV.lS
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21-27~1990

JANUARY

MEMBERSHIP NIGHT-WEDNESDAY JANUARY 24, 1990
AT 7:00P.M.

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a war:

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AT THE AMERICAN LEGION .BUILDING ON 4TH STREET~ MIDDLIPOIT,
. OHIO
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. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN JOINING THE MEIGS COUNTY JAYCIES
WE INVITE YOU TO JOIN US.

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We Believe;
That faith in God gives meaning and ·
purpose to human life;
, That the brotherhood of man transcends the sovereignty of nations;
That economic justice can best be
won by free men through free enterprise;
That government should be of laws
rather than of men;
That earth's great treasure lies in human personality;
And that service to humanity is the
best work of life.

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FOR MORE INFORMATION
CONTACT•
VICTOR GAUL
992-3403 or BRIAN CONDE 992-7114
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· REGULAR MEETINGS ARE HELD ON THE SECOND AND- FOUUH SATURDAY
.
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AT 1-1:00 A.M., AT 114 12 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO.
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TO PlAU AN AD (All ~92•21$6
MONDAY- thru FRIDAY 8 A~M. to 5 P.~;,
8 A.M. until N.OO.N S'ATURDA Y, -~ ~ "
tlOSED SUN'DA Y,
. ~ ·,, .

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w•ll alao appe• in the Pt . Ple•ant Re;fater and the Gallt-

polis paily Tribuna, ruchi ng OVet' 18,000 hom•.

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(8

.80
.05/ day

4 - Glv••.V
, .•
5 - H•PP¥ Ads
1 -- Loat and Found ,
7-- V•d SIII,ISU~id in •dv•nce)
B- Publie Sale • AuctiOn

61 6263' 64-

hrm Equipment
Want l d to Buy

llvetlodc
Hav &amp; Grain
65---.- Seed &amp; F8nilizer

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'. ClaN.~cfif'd pag('N ,COVt'r 'th('
~~
&gt;'
• follr,iviii~ tf•l('phon(! ·~•.xchang(•s ...
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Galli• Countv '
Are•Cof•l \ 4

Meip Countv
• AreaCodel14

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M•on Ca .. WV
Ar.. Coda304

Emplttyn•l·nt
SflfVIU')

· 47"T Wented to Rent
,48 - Equipmam fDr Rant
4e - For Lt..
.

i 11 - Halo Wanted
1 2-Sitvatlon Wanted
1 3..!..1nsu;ance
4 4- lulin•t Training

1 1 - Sehoola • lnstri~Ction '
16 - Ral:lio. TV. Cl Repair
11 -:; MiacetiW.eou J . '
11 ~ wantpd To Do

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992 - Middleport . 675 - Pt .•Pi•IUnt .

317;.... CIIr•'*•

Pomeroy
911- Ch'••r

379- WIInut

247949742617-

311- Vinl:on
241- IUo Granct.
256- Gu-,.n Diat.
643 - Alabia Ditt.

1~
' 4~8 - L.eon
-' 576- Apple Grove
773 - MMon
~

14~ - Portfand .

LeterJ Fa11'1
Rnin'
Rut'-td
Cootwille .

Transpurt at1un

41 - tiou•s for Rant
42 - MobileHomn for Rent
43 -' Farmt tor Rent
44- AQaftment tor Ren t
45 - Furnllhed ~Ooms
46- Speca tOr f:i...,t
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71 - Autol tor Sale
72 - Trueks for Sale
73- Van a &amp; 4 WD ' s
74 .. Moto.cycl•
76i&amp; 77781:9 -

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5 1-Houlthold Obodt
5~..- Spolt ... ~

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53,- Antiquas

141- Miac. M•chandise
· 16- Buildiftg lup.,.i• '
• 515- Pe_t, ,to, Sela
..21 .-. ausin.• .• Opportunity '
22 - Mo"-v to La..n
23- Prof•aional Services

882 - N-.w H•en

8H - Letart

937 ·- Bulhlo
·

Boa ta&amp; MoiOfS for Sale
Auto Parts &amp; Acceuori•
Auto Aepelr
Campin; Equipment
Camptrs • Motor Homn

Ser vrces
81 - HomtlmprovemW~t s

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82 - Piumbini • He•ing
83 ·- E.c:.wtting
84 - Eiectricet&amp; Aatrfg•at ton
85 - Gun•4' Hauting ·
86 -Mobile Hom• Rep1ir
87:... Upholstery

67- Mu_.t! lnttruments
58 - Fruitl&amp; Vegllllabl•
59 - For S•le ar Trade
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Smith
Nelson
Motors, Inc.

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME .

INGELS.
FURNITURE
106 NOITI SECOND
MIDDUPOn, OHIO .
992·2635

101 MULBERRY
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2121

SWISHER
LOHSE
PHARMACY

BAUM
LUMBER ·
COMPANY

FRUTHS
PHARMACY
NOI'IH SECOND

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716

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6491

' nalectlont mtY be oppNiod,

• in writing. within 30 don of umbuo. OH. "i:Jiz-ei:o1419
1the dole olthlo notice. to the Ph. 1814) 144-11111. Con·'
' Envifonmentol Board of Rit· a~H ORC Ch"P. 37U ..,d
,vi-. Rm, 300, 231 E. OAC Chopo. 37*·47· end
T-n St., 'Columbuo, Oh .•
~ 43216. Notice of any •PPMI
• II) oil.·be 1lltd wilh Ill• dlreq; tor Within. Jl.cloyo. PropOHd
.octlofto wit~ fine! un·
·t.o o written lldjudlllllt!q~
, hearing requeot "IUbmllted
1!1'ilhln 30 "-• Of the ii~ IU8nctr. dale:f or the director
l r,..lo•lwii!Kiroir• dte PlJOpolod action. AJIY\ peroon
~.may aubmit comment~ end/ or • mHtlng r-rdlng ilny

992-2955
112 EAST IWN
PO. .OY, OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO
992-3301

•

DOWNING
CHILDS
MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 EASY SECOND
POMROY, OHIO

992·2342

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OHIO

THE .
QUAUTY
PRINT
SHOP

PAT HILL

FORD
992-2196
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6472
333 PAGE STR~El
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5432

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PAT HILL
CHRYSLER Pl.YMOUTH

BODY SHOP.
992·3403

992-642.1

K&amp;C
JEWELERS
POMEROY, OHIO
992-3715

204 CONDOR
POMEROY, OHIO

~THE

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

ADOLPH'S

.iuAS lOAD . ·
POMER.OYI OliO
OWIEI: VICT" GAUL .

,DAIRY VALLEY
'·

AT THE END Of
THE POMEROY ·MASON
BRIDGE
POMEROY, OIHO
992-2556

Pleasers

CHARlES H:
KNIGHT

A GREAT PLACE
FOR BR~.KFAST,
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
691 W. IUifUT.

POMROY, 01110
991-2057

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992-6455
992-6454 ·

AnORNEY
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992-2090 .
1OS USJ SICOID
POMROY, OliO

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POMEIOY, OliO

~dralt 1ctibn wtthln 30 dlyil

,of the dete lndl-. "Aclticin", • ueed above do•
1Jot lnolude 1-pt 'II• -~
· •~~ compl•l•t. !f olgnlfl...,t
pubUclnt- ex iota. 1 Pubftc
mfY be held. Ao

.Inti
e.ra

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POMEROY
FLOWER· SHOP

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GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

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VIC'S

MIDDLEPORT, OIHO •
. 992-3345

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VIRGINIA BENTZ
' HENDRICKS ·
wishes to expren
tier heartfelt
, thanks for the
prayers and help
s~e received

·

3741-1 for ._tr_o.
• Flnel&gt; ~ovet · of .,._
.,d • ....,.liOIIIo.....\'
Syroeu• Rooin .. RelioMI
llewer'Diltliot
·
Roi:lne, Oh.
Efflctlve dote; 1 ·08-80 ·
Thlo finet · action not ceded by , ptopoud .action
and lo appuleble to EBR.
Detilll P.lono of oludgo men·
-o.ment plan. For Syr.cu•
.Recine Regionel Sewer Diolrlct.
'
&lt;
(11 23.' 1tC

TOTAL
' MENTS .... ..... ......83,416
Total R-ptoO-/
(Unclor) Oiob .......... 1.110
Fund Cuh Belonce
Jon. 1. '89 .. .... :... 11.012
F - Cuh llolonoe
Public Notice
Dec. 31 .... ......... 12.174
Oepooltory
,
·
Bel once ...............22. 778
FINANCIAL REPORT OF .
T-ury
, · TOWNIHIPB

· • I'Q( Fiollll

v- 1nc11n!l

. Oece.... 11.' , ...
LEBANON TOWNIHII'
COUNTY OF MilOS
"Thlo lo on uMIIIIHf'l'

'

Fin•••

,..pott'
' I!UMMMY OF

1

, C~H·A~CU,

• 1

RECEIPT' AND
EXPEND! UREI

GOVERNMENTAl:

..

: 1o;eoa
22. 778
.........
t~=~=~~~~:
Outnl!ncllng

HERITAGE HOUSE

·PHSCIIPTION

SHOP
992-6669

271 NORTH SECOND
-UPOIT, 0110

- 992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SUGAR RUN
MILLS ·

-lllltl I

110 IIUIIEIRY AYE.
PO-OT, OHIO
992·2115

992-6617
· 214 lAST MAIN
PO.IOT, 01110

~

fi~i\
--.:...:
___
,,

1"' 1'88 ....1···· .. ····· ....7.300
Retlred .......... .... ....... I,OII.
Out. .ncllng ,

icO..IIent ~lllgtt , ~neflte.

Plea~e

"'-

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

•••a

POIIIIOY, OliO
•,

corltec:t:

· Cecell• Llale, labor,tory Superviaor
.. V•ter•ns Mei'IICifial Holpltal

116 E. Memorial Dm.e·
Pomeroy~ QH. '41718
·
16141982·2104, Ext1111ion 216

. ••.. .....

.W. Va,CIIII::11tf,lnc.
P

lll'ltto

Ollie

PH. 9.92-3561

*FIREWOOD
•

BILL SUCk
992-2269
EVENINGS

$1JH~ tell
Buying Hours;
7:30-B:OO

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30·4:00

IU'IIMD ftiE
·s&amp;l.l$ and

H.

992-6611

IIOIIU

••

savta ,.q.-aou ,
,,nr. .....

•

•F!Ont End

Allgl1fl18M

•Qfi,.Chlnge •

•LotRentala

Lube

992·7479

· •I,.UWork

lt.IIIWtllef

•11 Sl., RmAID

, ......,, Oltle

. 1·11-'tt-1111

•FlU. DIRT •
•ANV1'HINO
AT AU.

'
I

..........-... ,_...... ""'

~···-

~

f •

.
PH. 949-2101

•

992-2772
12·13.' 19-1 nt •.
•VINYL SIDING
'
•ALUMINUM &amp;!DING
•BIJ)WN IN
,
, INIULATIGN •

'• BISSElL SIDING·
...._ CO.

....

I

"F...- Eothilat•"

PH. 949~2101 ..
or ln. 949·2160

NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4-15-16-tln

COUll lit

555 PABST.
MIDDUPOn, 'OliO

'

r

•LJGHT HAULING

•

for 1 MtHilcll
to wort! rotallog
lndlpendlnt
In areei ofcllni ·

cal

.

WANTED

YALLiY

~
115 EAST

'

TECHNICIAN

of the deeth of
-~~eon.

.

&amp;UMMAIIYOF
INDI!ITEDNESII

11

during the t!me ·

'

BALANCE ........... 12, 174

•sHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
IIIOVAL
,,

915-4422

Roger :Hysell
_Garage. ·
' lt,,IJ4, It Its; •
r. AUJOinDCK
REPAII .,

Am T•••••nl•i

lasha11 luNIIIg

"At' hatonalllt Pikes"

FREE ESTIMATE$

mo.

RACINE
FilE DEn.

CUSTOM IUIT
NO.S &amp; GARAGES

VINYL SIDING
VINYl REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

1 -11-' 10·1

GUN SHOOT

BISSEU.
BUILDEIS

.....,. .. ,••••• o.

'

.,

$13.00
$1 .30/ doy

s...

J 1 - Homta for
,32 -'MobileHome. for S.l •
33 '- Farm• for Sale
3 ' - BUain•a Buildings .
36 - lotl&amp; Acraaga
36 -·Real Ealllte W..,tad

3 - Annouc!lf'lent a

} propoaed 1ctiona 1nd of

.

I;

' . 4~

FMIIl Supplres
II lrvt:stu .• k

Re.rl I ~Idle

......

1- Catd,ot lhenka
2- ln Memoty

•

.U.I- Gallipolis,

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATioN .
- · 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
z ,oo P.M . MONDAY
.. z ,oo p .M . TUESDAY
- . z ,oo ·P.M . WEDNESDAY
- HO P.M . THURSDAY
, 2 00 P.M . FRIDAY

Anruru nc &lt;~rr1r, n!s

l draft actio.no ere otatod. Fl-

. 992-2174
500 EAST MAIN
POMEROYI OHIO

.

'

u .oo

Ovtr 15 Word'
·~
.20
.30

PUBUC NOTICE
The fallo"ffrig """"' recelv~/pr-ted by the Ohio
. Environmental Protoctlon
Aatlncy (O~PAI loot - · ·
Effectlve ·dot• ·of llnel ••"
tiona and illwinctt detie Of

THIS PAGE SPONS(&gt;RED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES.

[!]

'

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUES'DAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIOAY PAPI:R
SUNDAY PAPER

..

•4.00
U ,OO

9 - Wantad to Buy

'

' A ~l.s,hed actvertiaement placed' in Theo~tY Sentinll (u cept classified displey, Bu1in•.-G.rd and legal tlotic•l

Role

·Retea ere for con•eutive runa. bro ..nupd-.. l will beeh•ged
for each d'f' 'as sep•ete ld1.
·

..

i

,,

'•

• Ads outs•de Me.gs. Qallia or Mason co r,ut1i ..,must be pre·
· Paid
.. ,
•
'Receive 5 .50 di scount tor ads pald in advance. ·
~"
•free ad s
Gh, eawav and found -ads under 15 words will be
run 3 day s at no ch•ge . ..
.
,
*Price of ad tor all capital tetla~s i ~ : doubte pr.ica of a~ ~o t ~ ;
•7 p~N-Iine type only uMd .
·
·
. ,.t .
' *Sentiii'el 11 not ••ponsible for errOfs atter tir l t d.;' . [Chad!.
lo r etrou 'tlnt d., ad runt in paper). Call before 2 ~ 00 p.m.
di!t after p4bl•cation to mak_e corr.ection.
"Adstn.. muat ba paid in ad11ane4t ar•
Cerd of Th_,k; - 1 ' •
Happy Ada "
'•
· ln ' Mamoriam
Yard Sill• ' ·.

THE EIGS COUNTY JA YC!EES NEED · you
TO HELP IN THE CONTINUING GROW~TH
OF MEIGS COUNTY!!

•

'

POLICIES

Wordt
16
16
16
16
. 16

..... "2·5612 '
or 992-7121

or•Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

4-li- i-tln

DAVE'S
SMAll. ENGINE

•

~--~~~~&amp;
.. Ill' ,,rt, 011.

....

I

PAIITS AND BERVIC~
Fot Moot 2 and 4-cycle
Stack """"
for
Homtllte.
WHdHJ.,.,
T-mult.lrlgp6

$ 1 -.

PH. 992·~?~~Jttn

DOZD
SITEWORK • ROADS

· CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTEIPIISES

DUMPTRUCK I
Sand·Stone-Drrt'

(61•1 667·3271

GI'CIItA.

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
· Foctory·.choko
12 Gugt She!..... Only
Slricktly Eoforlld

·

IO·~tln

· SER~ICE

We can r~ and re·
Clll't rllliatora and
hlottr cw... We mn
alao acid bail and rod
out rlllliators. Wt alao
rlplir GGs

Ta••·

PIT Hill FORD

. 992-2198
Middleport,

�•

Pomaoy-MidciiiJIOI't

LAFF -A-DAY

32 Mobile
for Sale .

:1=

mv..ll)'

4
111 S'

-

1 -

44

r

......

1980

.., ..

Ohio

Apar1ment

a:u.DA

for

_.,.:,;;,:..;,Rtnt~--

w £AA Ia

Viewing

Q,l ~ ~ WW~UIIIIN

Old.

D I ad,.,.,...,
-ghCIIato
Good .... OltM;u. ,,
2217.
..

I:OIIi=:;rr

21-0id--.
oorroo
bFo - '
Nlo. I1W7HII7,

.......Clle~

-ro. ""

eCJl

• ••
(J) Iuper IOwl XV IIWtllgllta
OlldMd .. l'hlleciiiPIIIa

• - " ' old "'Ill- EnarFah
llh:phon[, IIIIi .... llihllt,

-.

muu•

30W~ -

Altd

.....

. ~ Lon(IAQo Altd , . ,...,

!' &lt;((1

33 F_
anns for Sale ,

•

111 lc101, 1.1 milo: tolilhol Point P I - on AI. 12 and
Rock C:atlo rosd. 20 CCIOI p:•

s--

'

......

Por - : 1111 T-, -tlrN,
......... " · " ' IUIO,II,JOO.

.,

·-Candas.
,,00. -

~u':11tr'l"'P:."ooo(".:;'i;s~ 1 ~

Coli Pals
.e
Tuaa ar Fd.l:30, 4:30.

-7-Foi•

GOVEIIIIIIIfl' IIIZED

.....
s-.

I WONDER WI-IAT I CAN
DO TO MAKE TI-IAT LITTLE
REIMIAIRED 61RL NOTICE ME ..

M./ll.I(8E IF I ~ALK AROUND
n!E ROOM{:!. BIT,,I'LL SET
SI-IE NOTICES ME NOW,.,
'

~~=Hcu

ESPECIALLV AFTER I GET

11!1

Children exparience the same
gamut emotions as adults
...__.,,_,.,,.__...
, -J,.---J ·
but they cant do anything
r--::-::--~~--, about them becauaa they're

!5t-~l;l

Ml( SLeE\IE CAU6MT 1111
TI-lE PENCIL SIIARPENER ..

...I

1:01 (J) . . illlf FIR

cto.vyo. •

·
- - Qulda, 11)
EIIf.ll:1011t.

~

_,S::...:,A;...:,l.,;O;.....;S::--~1 '

.

V

CJl .. NK Nlgl1lly -

19:~
I! .:O:'tniLo.,·

AdYMICO. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bolon tho ad lo to run,
Sunday - . . . , 2:00 p.m.
Frtdov. llonclay edition
2:00
I

p.m. Saturday.

a

..... -

·-·

Coli Lor:ry

u..r, 114-

-lon

-

con In th:
Old log housc or · bom io motlntodsaand
"""'
a
.
Must
-...'" In Muon _Co. 304-.571- have ,..,_ t....par~~~~ron~·
2540 CMh and ciMn up.
wHIIng to lrawl Waws
.

Quilts

-lon.

PN IMO qulla. Any
Coah POid. CaN 11~:5857 or
,,4,1112-2411.

IITI
- : "·· SmaA lrlina
- ·
N, ' \
302·qlno.
good.
.114-247-2!1111.

HIIOIIO,
·loUIFnaly.
" "''•"'• Wsakday,
and
cr-paaro,

1171 Cha"'' B-r K-4, 4JOI, Nd
I black, auto, - p i taao.

__.,=

-ng
ond IIIIWdaY
.,.
lobo_.....
_ hol!l8
__
lncl dll•

two

114~1.

/

. e&amp;.fGT'f('ICA&amp;.

-

~cl

H~tth

INJTA&amp;.&amp;._fp

pno-

Ia -

AVON • All ••-. Call ll:rilyn
.Woanr304-U2-2145.

-UpoiSOI'NI
4~E~AJL
I

DdVOf wanted

,,

to

dill-

'

••a-

-.r

-~~~

(2:00)

~

e CJl

IIJ) Mlllack Matlock
delends a Fongtime friend
fran)~(~ lor murder. 1;1
Cll eCil Who'• The ....,
Mona rilallzu IIIII her old
flame Is affecting Samantha's
lila. C
,

;;

. (lJ (f) Nova Physicists race
to discover one of the

amellaet ~ In nature. 1;1

1111 e1121-: 111

A
blind man and his dog aava
apartment residents from a

_:F..

VaHav

304-1~

fire. Q
all MOVIE: Eyawlbreu (R)
(2:00)

e

Fa -ng
lncllvtGuaFo Far ..
P
_
izza

,_..lonL

leVel man 1 rwll
Stop In ..., -lon ., ...

Nll&amp;lme to: P. G. a. TO, ..,_
-..tiFt, WY'25104.
.

Top Coall pWd. Old luniltrn

Top llanagltallll.- &amp; ..... Rep..

paint'"""' ~.. - !10MIIfll1.

---"'--

·-

....

712-

qulltt,

Jim.. ~-•nt.BR. ·H,
Welt
, 11H11 1777;

·npe...... •ur.

=::.=••dllac,end
84

Hay

,_-. •us
-

'

Condit. ., I 'Timattlv, IDD lb.
. .,., tu'Jillbfl. 1';4-I4H117.
H:y ... -.Call14 111121531

21

EVElY SUNDAY

Bualneu
apponunlty

Apartment
for Rent

51 · Household
GOOds .

· IN011CEI
VALLEY PUIUSHINCI CO.

Starts at 1:00 P.M.

.~

fnlnt . •100.

lllfHIIL

•Na•h•.. NoW

eveRY TlMe 'IOU BREOo\11·&lt;1:,

"ttLL CAN'T HOlD

811.-I...ION ~6.

~E:\IER,

YOU SJIC'J(' IN

7~

.

't'OLIR

1:30 (J)

...... .,~ea:

eR£A-n-&lt;

RoblrtMn

....,.Dil!•n ...

e CJl 1111 Mltlnlglll Callet

Jack belrtenda a young boy, .

lbandoned ~ 1111 parantw. 1;1
Cll • Cll tllrr101i1lllllnll
Her sister' a Yiln only adds to
the arrasa ol Nancy'a
recuperation. 1;1 .
(!) "-w8tell

"
CfJ 11rna·or aur u- Thla

r 1 rnr:::;a'

Ron'e TV .......,.

In-h--..

;::n::•-' . ,. ,. .

I

................... aaflil, -- ~~

· ONo

:1414.

:J 1.(614)446·7&amp;19
or (614)992-2104
417 Second AYne. lkll 1213

WV :.!
,, .......

'

I WAS JEST FIXIN'
TO DO MY IRONIN'
AN' Hill
COMIS
ILVtNIY II -"-".

.SHE'LL PROS'LY
GOSSIP FER
TWD•THIIf
HDUISII

program examlnn the
confliCt beiW..., the time In
our bodlea and bralna and
the ume on our wrlats;· Also,
how to ediUSI!'"' biological
clocka.
all .... Twllgltt z@lvenlng .....
10:05(1) MOYll:
DaysOI

FDUI

IFrM
LUCKY!!

e

n-

Rotary or oabFo toot clrUFFng.

11001 wor1o oomplalad and
, CCIYfct,

z_ ;Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 '
,

""....,.aa.

Veter1ns
Mulberry

~~~.;:=.;:.:.=.
AMNIC •
• w:- 114•ssa'

,

1m-=w

.,..
,n:r.a:•............
-. .... ..::_ ......
-tlrN.

1-=.-;,. ....... .,. ._,
010. 114-

t1ANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER

llallbll

7

97 IIICH SIIDI, _.liPOII, OliO

LiKahdTine .........w.-...nco•ext
to I" ···111 , .. ,

.._

___

-

l

-

11+441:1'111,

1111,.. .... -

,.

:l ,

10:30 (!) , . _
.
• all CohiMW I h Tonlgltl
.On . . . .

.

'-'a.,.,.

Dnlto CNik
....Vac
- · ·;
lid.
~and dallvwj. 114- '

01a

11:00

-FeQ
82

-

Altd

.~ •

••
(l)lyea On Tire ..U. I Two
Socletlea - 18116-11181 (R) 1;1
eo ArMttlo Hall
0 II a 11••
......

Pluinblng &amp;
Heating

I

ali l'llrllar · · · - Altd Molr
O,......VIoa
• CltuNit ..... ••lin
. 11:30eCJl
(I)

'
-.

i.s=::;::•
eCJl Cll

Tlllll , _ I
Co;
EYAHIIJITI':"Piuo:r}.'
J:c-.,OHt-7-., '

CUlliN

.............,..

Houat, 1 2 a-go,
"'"""' ..... f10,100, .,
epp alntlnlllt. •14-441-4110.

*"""

1ha Clrndor 1111 (2:30) •

lupu••.
I»Dl&amp; ...... llnlnnl.

, . a..

'

BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, GLASS,
PLASTIC. COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM. RAb.IA~RS AND MORE

c-.. lullalball

Cll e&lt;ECoaclr Heyden Is
certain that hi wrn ,_i¥1 an
award from MlnneiOII 51118.
1;1
10:00 ()) 700 Club Wlll1 hi

eorw...

1m "'" ll"!q 4 ""' ...._
•I:L
104 112 2117.
.
tm LTD, oM:, a&amp; oand, MM.
bodr -. No DUIIYI Runo Nil

a: licerised Clinical Audiologist

FOII.OIURO• Ull 992-1194

· WATIIIPIIOOANCI
~~~--·
._
. g .......
iaa.
~ lliwl1
' II. .tumlahaol,
F101 ... Call coiiNI t ' .
114-HT-, •Y or nfihl.
,...
AB .......

. . . . ., 1111 (2:00)

r

~ .LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

HUURS: Ilion.· Fri. 12:00 to II p.m.
S.turday I e.m. to 12 noon

~~~::?~,.

----------J
'}.,
..
MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

Home
Improvements

1171 lulU ,....., 2 tloar, N ..
J0W71:11B oft• , ,.._

Listenin&amp; Devices
Dtl"tndal~le Hearin1 Aid Salts &amp; Servirctl 31 Homes for Sale
Hearinc Evaluations For All Aaes

I

Tuaadar Movie (2:00)1;1

0

11711 lliaola Catlo, OM IICN, ' duar ·
•• - · In..-. [!floc f1100,

Real Estale

SPECIAl ACCOUNTS FOR
· NON.PIOFJT GIO!IPS

q

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

•

'

81 -

eo

(1)11.,......EII. r~-tm.

9·6-89-tfn.

•

11 tocuaed on the famMies
effort to a.k luallce. 1;1
111
MO~E: ...
Pra udly Wa Hall' cat

aeao.

"'311"'7"',_ _ _ _ _ _....;

Chowra. ...._ FIF_. Guida

lnvMIIgalaol th: ollt~ng.

II

tm Traplou\nlo
Campar,
so'"
wlll1
lip out.
~~~

aAiiiieNT

.IZID '¥al I I

more hllrm. 1;1 ·

(() • (I)IIOIIIIHWI In
ROHIMe'l lblanee, Jecl&lt;la
reilly takn chllrgl of the
houM.~
(!)· (f) I'IOIIIIFIWI This special

Campers &amp; :, ·
Motor.Homu
'• .

Serv1ces

c

Night Gillaspie triM to stop
John Sevrance from lnflleling

-..t..O, . . trr..

rt

constantly.

9•iiuaaalfli!W
• Crook. CllaH
1:00 e CJl all In Tl!l Heat 01 The

POOR IDY nRD, 304:17113311 ""' . , _
•till. 4,0oo good ...a " - .

Lont, -

•mumatr OOWIJIIIIIINT

JiMiandl

and NOT
to untU
· ..
_·
t~
th: mall
you
h:"

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

=:..:..-· r:-.

71 Autol for Sale

thllt rou do
bullftiU wtlh p1apl1' you~'

rt a

arnua

Auto Peru &amp; " ·- ,.:

78

... . ,Solo:

Hay

44

...

:::Sins;

~r,-o~,r ~

a Grain

- - ""· -h.
~~~-304boFaa;
,..

Frnconc1al

- · 1:11 HP, ·E -

lrcce'11Df'111

~--o:I-I:DO,

I

e

tm 11 1. lta.....n Trt:HuA

63

-- =-

• Church ...... 8ta11Dn
1:05 Cll Gold on Qlabe Awardl (R)
1:30 (()
Cll Tire Wonder YH,.
A vlrslt tuma lOUr when
Kevin's did and grlndpa

for Sale

-·

...... -.
......11.

owqulrad.-•
•
Klmbortr tluollty ea.., .. ,..

11J Prtme!Mwa
1!11 Hog:rn'a 0 Munier, She Wrota

75 . Boats &amp; Motors.

tflllorl
1 -·-Wide
-~ trcalt, 1:00'1:00 - Y t ,

EARN IIONEY Raadlng ~I
130,000 yr.. iOOICIIdal
D:lslloo. (II - - Eat. Y-

Eoi:n 1300 - 1100 par - k .
R..dlng IIOoka • home. Colli·
515:473'7440 Ext. 8:303.

--····"· .

ouboortlt,

........... ~~~
Cpl., iak ... llr.

Patsntl:l

2101 far

D:lalla. (1) - - Ext. y.
10t81.

I

~

i

4512.
RN Cas: M - rrsaolild Far
p:dlatrlca • far .... nuroo=n10. to 1 yr.

EARN MONEY Rclldlng
$30,000/yr [ncoma iOOionttar.

7:35 (I) Santoni And Son
1:00 (I) MOYIE: Fntrlgua (NR)

WflONG.

U.l. 121.000 to m.ooo par '_YP!'!·

p:ot-11...
Exoallont
" -ron
far
lillrM
or
hou,1w111. Mult hive tnlnl-ftn.
Llrga :l:llon . _ ., plcluop
with oampar lop. , ExoaFFont
a 1ue1 .. ~. c.~
21UIM732.
11:11

.

all ahllto and -Ions.

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poraoy paot tim:, must bo obis

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Rlchllnd A¥- Alhana, Chlo
4p.m.

Employment Servrces

CJl Family Feud

(I) Coli II

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rather lbaD the aceptloo. sad to say.
Tbe iDcoalllteacy carried over Into
tbe .play. Declarer woo the beart lead
In 'lila lwtd aad led the 10 of spacla.
Wbetl Welt played low, South ..-cS
rl&amp;bt to 10 up with the kina. '!'be eon·
tract can now be made by playing ace
ud ndftq a dlamoad. Laler aaolher
dlamoad can be ruffed aad 1 dlamOIId
trick CIY4111
that the lut dlamOIId
ID lbe South
become~ the pmeIOID&amp; trick. Unfortllllllely declarer
wu ID 1 foe. He played 1 club, Ealt
woo the 10 ud returned a heart, won
ID dummy (another error). Now dei clam cubed the diamond ace aad
croaruffed clube ud dlamondl. At
tbe_end, oat of trumpi, be wu left with
. loelnc apade ud twio dlamonda in his
So tbe defenden look tbe lut
.
•three tricks to lie! b1m one trick.
None of Eut'a. blddln« made •~~~e.

t7

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Dealer: South

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;wilb one 11pade, be would have reached·
•two or lbree spades. But wblltr South
got to fourbearla, II wu hadjudlment
to double.

;the

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ltv IHOMAS JOSEPH .
ACROSS 40 Sharp
1 Support 41 Mood
5 Drink 42 Evaluate ·
9 Nevada 43 Spirit
city
lamp
10 Home - DOWN
11 Stare
1 lnvestiin a way gallon
12 Disavow 2 Stately
14 Tree
3 Harry
15 Cagney
Golden 's
8 Nonor Lacey classic
exclusive
16 Celtic . (tQ58)
10 Lying down
deity .
4 "To Heier:,.- 13 Barter
.
17 Samuel's poe1
15 Hipsler
mentor 5 Rested
21 Pay dirt
18'Tiny
8 Distaff
22 Swab ·
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colonist
t9 Novelist 7 .Poetical 24 In demanrl
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style
27 Banal
20Commenl
upon
22 Servanl
23What
boxers do,
at times
25 Formerly
26 Apple
or pear
27 Bugle call
29 Imitate
30 Swiss
canton
31 Hour (II.)
34 Mongrel
35 Blrd's
nest
- 38 Pester
371nduce
39 Mangano

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30 ConlederAie
32 Arrested
33 Guam 's
capital
38 Film
director's
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39 Cl!llgula 's
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penaltla, South bid g•me, ID eff~l • K 8 s
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Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

.,._Local news

Patrol cites Rutland nwn
A Rutland area man was c ited In a car-truck crash Monday at
7: 45a.m. In Rutland Township on C.R. 3, 1.6 miles south of th!l
junction of S.R. 143, acco rding to the GalUa-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
Charle E. Rathburn, 24, Rt.1, Rutland, was cited forf'lllure
to yield after his 1971 Chevrolet Chevelle was hit by a 1982
Chevrolet C-10 pickup truck driven by Larry R. Bond, 29, of
Alba ny.
Bo nd was driv ing south when Rathburn, corning out of a
priva te driveway, pulled into th e path of the tm~ck . Bond was
unable to stop. hit ting the car.

Pomeroy police probes mishap
The Pomeroy PoUce Department Investigated an accident
which occ urreQ Monday at 1:03 p.m. on the Farmer's Bank
·
parking lpl ,
According to the report, Shannon Hlndy, Middleport, was
I raveling north on West Second In her 1985 Mercury when Jane
Banks, 152 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, backed from a parking..
s pace in her 1986 Oldsmobile. Banks failed to see Hlndy and
backed into the back quarter panel of the passenger side.
Hindy 's vehicle sustained light damage, as did Banks vehicle
to th&lt;' passenger side rear.

Last session...

Continued from page 1

our kids the sa me educational
opportunities as anyone else In
Ohio, and we have t)lat opportun·
ily now.' ' the · superintendent
said.
He emphasized that none ofthe
money from the proposed 5.25
mills t4 of which would be a
r~newal 1 for co nsolidating the
elementary schools , or 6.5 mills
for co nsolidating the elementary
and junior high into two buildings, would go lor salaries.
Ques tions
ln a discu.ssio n which followed ,
the question of why not continue
the curre nt 4 mills and remodel
the buildings was asked by one of
the paren ts at tend ing. Carpenter
. explai ned that this doesn't solve
the bigges t problems which is
difference in c las s size, nor does
it address tac k of building space,
nor the maller of the state's
requirements for education reform new state requirements.
"Sure we'll meet the mandated
needs some way , even I! we don't
go into the building program,"
the superintendent said, "but ·
what we have here Is a real
opportunity, the best deal we'll
ever have, because once that
milleage goes off the duplicate
then anyti me it is put up before
the voters then it will be all new
mills. Right now It will be only a
1.25 mll i increase. " .
In response to a question about
addi ng onto the Pomeroy Elementary School, Carpenter cited
the problem of no space, the
water coming out of the hill
behind the sc hool, and the
asbestos in the school which he
said wilt probably have to be
removed sometime.
One paren t ques tloned Supt.
Carpen ter on the unequallzatloh
of classes and proposed redls·
trictlng as a solution instead of a
building program. Carpenter
countered wit h the fact that
redistricllng is not a feasible
solu uon to mos t of the problems.
The questi on of 'an operating
levy to gel mo ney tor computers,
textbooks and supplies was
as ked, · a nd the superintendent
expla ined that 85 percent of all
monies ra ised through an operating levy must go Into salaries and
fringe benefits l eaving lillle for
any th ing else.
The question of busing was
raised and Car penter contended
thai com muting di s ta nc~s would
not be greatly increased since
Har risonville. Salem Center and
Rulland woq id be ing going to the
proposed Rutland location, while
the other students would be going
io the Rock Springs area.
As fo r decrease in teaching
jobs. the superintendent said he
did not foresee any reduction in

the teaching staff, but perhaps In
some uncertified personnel, al·
though he Indicated there might
be added staff, like guidance
counselors In the elementary
schools.
He said . that the birth rates
Indicate that population has
stabilized and he anticipates this
will be reflected in enrollment.
The superintendent Indicate(!
that the more immediate need is
for k through 6 buildings, noting
that a half-million dollars was
spent In remciclellng the junior
high school In recent years.
As for what happens to the
current buildings should the
building proposal go to the voters
and pass. Carpenter said at least
two would revert to the original
land owners, and that the oth·e rs
would be made available to the
public.
Another parent asked the superintendent to give an evaluaHon of the high school consolidation, Rutland, Middleport and
Pomeroy, In the late sixties, and
relate that In educational vaiue
to the proposed elementary
school consolidation. After notIng that he was not In the district
. at that time, he reported that
over 20 percent of the students at
Meigs High took the ATC tests
and came out with an average
score of 21, three points above the
national aver;Ige.
"Our schools are . what we
make them. The American
dream still exists but we can 't
just walt for someone to come
and pick us up. We have to keep
going, to keep moving ahead and
we now have the golden opportunity ," concluded Carpenter.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .......... ... 30 34
AT&amp;T ......... .... .. ..... , .... ........ 40 3,&lt;
Ashland 011 ................ :....... 37%
Bob Evans .................. .. .... .. l314
'Charming Shoppes .. ..... .... .. .. 9%
City Hoidlng.Co . .. .. .. ..... .. .. ..14'h
Federal Mogul... .... ... ....... ... 20'4
Goodyear T &amp;R ...... ........ .. .... 38
Heck's ............. .. .. ...... . , ........ 3'4
Key Centurion ... .... ........ .. .. .13'h
Lands· End ....... .. .. .. .. .. ........ 1TVa
Limited Inc . .... .. .. .... .. .. .... ...34'4
Multimedia Inc..... .. ............ . 85
Rax Restaurants .................. 13,4
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. .'........ 16'4
Shoney's Inc. ....... ............... 10%
Star Bank ....................... ..... 20
Wendy's Inti ... .. ........ .... ....... 4'h
Worthington Ind .... .. .. .... ...... 21 1A.

EaSt shivers.; most .ofriation's
By Uolied Press lolernatlooal
Fog and sub-freezing tempera. lures made roads treacherous In
New England and rain smacked
'o regon's Pacific coast Tuesday,
bu t most or the nation got a break
fr om the January chill and
enjoyed mild, unseasonably
warm weather.
Authorities advised motoris ts
In Rhode Island and Massac hu.setts to use extra .• caution and
said patches of dense fog were
causing poor visibility ..National
Weather Service forecasters also
warned that roads already wet
from heavy rain and snow were
freezing over and becoming
slick.
Temperatures dropped to the
upper 20s in southern New
England and further north, New
Hampshire repor.ted tempera·

Anti-abortion movement
flexes political m~scle

PlannerS.~.·

EMS ha,s eight Monday calls

Eight calls were answered
Monday by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Services.
At 1:12 a .m., Tuppers Plal.ns
went to Roulf 68i for Jenny

Thanks

Bran non who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 2:44 a.m. went to
Route 248 for Opal Eichinger to
St. Joseph's Hospital.
At 7: 17 a.m.,Racinewascalled
to Route · 338 for Oalr Boso to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 8:40 a.m.'
was called to Scout Camp Road
for Robert Bailey who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine at 12:31 p.m. transported Betty Willis from Greenwood Cemetery Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:45 p.m.. Pomeroy transported Ora Sinclair from Sumner
Road to Velerans Memorial
Hospital.
·
Rutland at 4:36p.m. was called
to Woodyard Road ·for Buddy
Kuhn who was taken toO'Bieness
Memorial HospitaL
Middleport at 9: 33 p.m. trans- ·
ported Elsie Forbes from the
Overbrook Center to Veterans
Memorial Hosp!lal.

extem~ed

The Po.meroy Vlllage Hall
Wishes to thank all those who
donated Items for the Marlon
Watson family who lost their
home to fire. The family has
reportedly obtained everything
they needed after the fire.

Hospital news
Veterans Hospital ·
Monday admissions -: Clair
Boso, Portland; Robert Bailey ,
Long Bottom; George Harvey,
Gallipolis ; Ora Sinclair. Pomeroy; Chwd Wise, Middleport;
Carol Wines, Shade.
Monday discharges - Ola St.
Clair, Thomas Turner . '

Accused cult leader's wife ·
pleads innocent to charges
PA INESVl LLE, Ohio (UPI)The wi fe of accused r eligious cult
leader Je ffrey Don Lundgren
pleaded innocent Monday to
charges relating to the slaylngs
of five members of a Kirtland
family.
.
Lake Cou nty Common Pleas
J udge J ames J ackson ordered
Alice Lundgren, 38, who was
retumerl to Ohio on Saturday,
held on $250,000 borid. She was
indicted on fi ve counts each or
consp iracy to commit aggrava ted murder , complicity to
commit aggravated murder and
kidnapping.
On J a n. 3·4, acting on a lip,
Kirtland pollee dug up the bodies
of Dennis Avery., 49 , his wile,
Cheryl, 42,' and their three
children, Trina, 15, Rebecca 13,
and Ka ren, 6, buried on a farm
where members of a cult that
brokP from the ' ReorganiZed
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints lived.
The Lundgrens· and their son,
Damon·, 19, were arrested Jan. ,7
at a motel near San Diego, but
Lundgren and his son- who face
charges of aggravated murder
with death penalty specifications
- are fig hting extradition.
tn ~a n · Ot ego, meanwhile, two

record, " tbe weather 'lervtce
said
The same was true In Arkansas, whel't! temperatures Mon· ,
day ranged from 61 de&amp;t eea :at
Jonesboro to 70 at Texarkana,
readlJtgs 10 to 20 degrees above
normal for this lime of year.
Monday's high temperatures
In Texas were generally In the 60•
and 70s throughout the state. Tbe
highs only reached Into the low
40s In the nortllerl) panhandle,
where snow remained on the
ground.
Oear skies prevaiJI;d over
most of the mid-Atlantic stales,
but parts of New Jersey, and
· Delaware saw some patchy fog
near daybreak. Snow touched
northwestern Pennsylvania, and
eastern· Pfli'IS o! the state ba!l a
.few flurries.

'

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS: "Warm "Cold
. . Static . . Occluded
Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% ot any shaded area is torecas1
to.receive precipitation indicated
UP!

WASHINGTON (UPI) ·Mayor Marion Barry entered a
substance abuse facility In FlorIda, leaving the city In the hands
of an unelected aide who pledged
to provide stability and progress
while the mayor faces federal
drug charges.
• Barry began )11s first full day ·
Tuesday at the Hanley-Hazelden
Center, an In-patient substance
abuse program at St. Mary's
'Hospital In West Palm Beach,
Fla., while the woman who lured
him into an FBI cocaine sting last
Thursday was expected to appear before a federal grand jury
In Washlngton.
Rasheeda Hazel Moore, an ·
ex-convict and longtime friend of
the mayor who was working as
an FBI Informant, was expected
to testily before the grand jury,
The Washington Post reported,
quoting sources familiar with the
Investigation.
Barry entered the 28-day treat·
ment center Monday, seeking to

"begin to heal my body, mind
and soul." A hospital spokeswoman, citing confidentiality Jaws,
refused to reveal if Barry was a
patient, but his attorney said he
would receive treatment for ali
alcohol problem.

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) ~Pres­
lcleDt' Bush said Wednesc;lay that
Mlldlall Gorbac:heV facl!s "an
l•teraal problem of enormous
dlmebaiOns" In Azerbaijan bu I
C:Ould not predict whether the
etlllllc and national unrest threat. eu the Soviet leader's hold on
power.
· At a news conference carrying
MVeral messages for the ConJI'eSI, Bulb also disclosed that he
plans to begin restructuring the
I:J.S. militarY ·wuli this year's
propelled budget anti announced
that he would silppclrt-elevating
tbe Environmental Protection
Nency to Cabinet status.
' But ask.ed first If he was
Coi!Cfl ned about Gorbachev's
fllture beeaUR of the deadly

r

unrest · In the Soviet Baltic
republiC, Bush said, "J.lhlnk the
answer to your question unfolds
every 1 'day . 'We don't really
knoW."

,

"I can't make predictions
about that, bull know that I hope
that he not only survives ~t
stays strong, because I think It Is
In our Interest that perestroika
succeed and go forward,"· the
president said. ,
The comments marked the
first direct word from Bush sin&lt;.'e
Gorbachev ordered Soviet troops
into the troubled republic to quell
the viOlence In a two-year dispute
between Moslem Azerbaijanis
and Christian Armenians. The
conflict, prompting the harshest
meas11res of Gorbachev's leader·

. IIG 111.5 &amp; UIIIS PIOSIAII
YUISIAY, JAN: 23

Flu, Cold &amp;Cough

Medicine

$4.19 .
SALE $379
=~: Sl.i»O
REG.

Sl.OO Refund Offer

Final

See Inside for Details

(ost

$2 79

SUSPECT QtlESTIONED AGAIN lead Wayne
O'JI'atrell, rtc..t. do- the slel'il of his ~vage store In Enterprise,
Ala., for a tii!Cllilild q-JiooiDg Tuesday regarding clues related to
llemblq bleldellta wlllcb killed lwo p~pte. (UP I)

NEW YORK (UPI) - Stock
prices plunged In early tracllnl
Wednesday as the market was
badly shaken by a dlsappolntl~ ,
response to the government s ·'
auction of 40-year )lands to fund
the savings and Joan bailout.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose 14.87 Tuesday,
' was 4owD 61.49 to 2553.83 · at.10
a.m, EST. ..
. :-1
. :In tile ~ Bll841• market, 1,357
·11auea declloed and juat79 gained
among tile' 1,6l50 111ues cr011ing
the New York Stock ExcbanJe
tape. Volwne was very heavy,
amounting to about 39.25 miiUon
alulres during the first30 m~utes
of trading.
·.
Demand for the S5 billion hood
offering 1lY the ResolutioD FundIng Corp. was very weak, making
the rates on them much hlfber
than expected and proVIding yet
another Indication Interest rates
are beaded one way for now·up. The bonds yielded 8.6 percent
and sold tor an average price of
$100.27 tor each $100 ln face
value.
Analysts also said sharp declines In Tokyo and London
helped fuel the ·e arly piuqe.
Stocks plummeted In thin trading
on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Wedneaday ' and the key Nikkel
Average of 225 selected Issues .
dropped 599.04 points to 36,778.98.
In London, stocka were broadly
lower at midday on the London
International stock.exchange.

Meigs ·man convicted
by f~eral gr~d jury ..

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25 Conti

New..,aper

return home" The president,
criticized for his overtures to
China after the bloody crackdown In T!ananmen Square last
year, has maintained that he took
the necessary action by execu ·
tlve o_rder and legislation was not
needed.
Supporters were confident
they could muster the two-thirds
vote necessary In the House
while the outcome of a Senate
vote Is less certain.
''I will not break faith with the
Chinese students here," the
president said." "I've made that
very clear from the beginning . ...
They were safe then and they will
be safe In the future."
Bush, however, vetoed 10 bills
In his first year In office and none
was

.,.,

PRESIDENT GESTURES - Pree.idelli Buall
II!IIIUI'el durtor this morDIDI'a press collfereoce

atllle Wblie Houae. Bulb dlscu811ed a variety of
toplca, locludllll ihe Soviet Union; China, defense
budrelaod Pauma. (UPI)

Educators · fight anti-paddling bill

m,

or

I

...~

States, Bush also took the occaslon to reiterate his reasoning for
the vetoandhls recentcontroverstat overtures to China;
. Oeparllng from his usual rouline of dropping Into the br.Jeflng
room on short notice, the White
House announced late Tuesday
that Bush would hold the session
with reporters to discuss "the
congressional agenda," shortly
after a breakfast strategy meetlng with Vice President Dan
Quayle and Republican senators.
Bush's remarka clearly were
limed to coincide with the House
vote scheduled for later Wednesday on whether to override
Bush's veto of the bill to extend
the visas of more than 33,000
Chl!H!Ie students who rear they
will suffer persecution If

ne

a. ..

992-6669
271 North Second
, · Middleport, Ohio

I

Alaonptlqtbathewlllpropose
hll budget ·to Congress ·Jan. 29,
Busb said !be fliscal blueprint for
the ·first · lime will begin "the
transition to a restructured
mUltary."
'·'I'm proposing a defense
budget that begins the transition
to a restructured inllltary, a new
strategy that Is more flexible and
more geared . to contingencies
outside of Euro~. " he said,
''While continuing to meet our
Inescapable responsibility to
NATO and to maintaining the
global balance .."
And admitting tbat Congress
appeared poised to deal him a
poUtlcal repudiation with the
override of his recent veto of a
' bill to grant sanctuary for
Chllll!le students In the United

, By JZJt LEONARD ·
Edward Helvey ·of the Ohio
UPI 8Weho111e ~rter
Edl!catlon Alsoclatlon, represCOLUMBUS - Educators enting school teachers, said
joined Tuesday to discourage corporal punishment should tall
passage , of leglalatlon bannin·g under "collective bargaining on
COrpQtal punishment (paddling) rights and responsibilities for
In schools, although one repre- maintaining dlsclpUne In the
sentative
of the social service classroom."
·
federal judge and a civil rights seven seareh warranll to serve
ENTERPRISE, Ala. (UPI) community
supported
the
But
Fr.
Alan
Sprenger
of the
· A junk store operator whose lawyer.
In tire area. One was tor O'Fer·
legislation.
Columbu•
diOCese,
representing
"I don't have anything to rell' s Old and New Su!lllus
home and bullneu were combed
They testified In the House the Ohio Alsoctalloil of Ch~ld
Salvage WarehoUM, another wu
for cl"" to a 'series ;of deadly hide," he said.
Children
and Youtl! Committee, Caring Agenclea, aald COl']IOral·
mall bomblnp In ihe South said
FI!II agent Chuck Archer said tor , the downtown ttill err ont
which
has
been airing the matter punlshmen I breecli violence. '
-.was "cooperating'' with lnves- O'Ferrell bad not beell arrealed wbere be . used to operate the
for more than·a year and already . "The primary effect of tbla bill
U,aton bu 1 unhappy to be the "and he Is not in ~stody." Asked butloeas, the thl1:d wu for hla
has approved one bill. The Is not to problblt corporal punllh· .
focus pf tl!e bunt.
11 O'Ferrell was a suspect, he home In nearby New Brockton.
may be ready for a vote ment, but to mtore respoulbll·
secoiul
''I'm not guilty," Robert . saldr "I wouldn't comment that Two'other·warrants wera for .the
lty for discipline to tbe local
nextweek.
·
he Is a suspect, only that he Is one septic tanka.
Wayne O'FerrellsaldTuesday as
school
boards," said Spl'ftllll'.
Samuel
Whitaker
of
the
Ohio
lnvesllgaiOI'I dug up tbe septic of many peop.le being Inter·
On 'l'uelday atterooon, tldln.l
•
'It
gets
the state qut of the
o
n
of
Elementary
Asaciclall,
viewed today, as well as agenll pumllfd out O'Ferrell'a
tanka outside hlltwo-story clapSchool
AdminIstrators,
iald
h1s
business
of
manclatiDI a ~~~
yesterday." · '
septic tank and began dlaJnllt
board boule looktna for evidence
form
of
school
dllc1pllne."
IJ'Oup
.
opposea
Senate
mu
81,
Archer said FBI agents had up with backboel. Later, the
In the ellploelou that ,killed . a
cleared
by the Senate taa t June,
ADolber
bill.
IP~ by the .
group dq up the teptic laDk at
because It would ban corporal committee last Juae but stul:k ·ln
O'Ferrell't salvage warebo~~~e:
t)unlslirnettt
and put the burden Rule~ Committee, keepa padAllied ·what he hoped to find,
on
tile
.local
school dlatrlcts to dUne leJal but fortllda It for
Atelier said, •'Evldellce of a
handicapped children and those
re-estabillh
IL
·
bomblq."
whose parents object. It also
Whlta)cer
said
his
organization
apnt declloed to dllcua
favors current law, which allows . fiubjects any school teacher or
tbe hfO nmatntq uarcb war·
local school districts to be,n the employee to legal action It !hey
Paul A. Duff, 71, of Boule 1, es !afe coDJistlni of over 218 rants. but said llftlll hoped to
abuae the paddling privilege.
have them all _.-vwd by the end· pniC:tlce It they w~h. He said a
Box
Dexter, h.. been con- acres of lands In Meigs County.
Meanwhile, the Senate passed,
Dltlllllar of tbem have done so.
~ by a federal Jury of
United States District Judge of the 48)'. He tlald of the
31·1,
and retlltlled to the HoUle a
''Muy school dlatrlctlt have
c...._ritlitedtotbelP'owlniOr 'J an*s Graham ordered a pre- . warrantl wwnt tor PJupea ty lllat cbog ID ittller to DDt Ule corporal
1 manutiCtlll'lq ol marijuana on sentence report and releaud the O'ForreU diAl DOt OWII.
PIJllllluMllt but Jlpt to ball It, or to
Atillllullllli tDOk O'I'..U Into limpJy
OMan~ paopaty.
de!Elndant until aen~nclq,
.
I hllD.*'It
~eave tbe ide
corpotal
Micfle.t .
United whlcb will be set at a lalllr data. . Ealwl ..... pollee .... - ...... .
to t1te diiCNllon of
Two drlwrl were cited In a
ltatll AtiGrlley for IIW Southern In dddllloD to the forfelturll, •• the HI'~ ........ after P\llllllliiiSI
the teaellln ud adlliiiJIJitNto ~- crull Tunday at 6:15
, llltrlet ol Obla, and Anlbouy J. Out~ Ia subject to maxtmwn tea-lllllllftll-eiiDUe . In lllat school dlltrJct," said.
p.m. 011 T.R. • · 1.1 milel north
tlo.
Cellbr 1 r Jr., Ohio Attorney sen&amp;eQcel of 20 years ID pr.llan • .. tldq~ Ill 11ft
Whl~~ter.
.
·
of
C.Jl 411, accordiq to tbe
QeMraJ.---- today Duffs and Jl,OOO In ft- on two of hiJ abou&amp;~•PoJIL
''Scbllol
ldmlnlltrallii'J
~
Gal
.
.,.._ l'olt ot tbe State
Earllr ' '1'1 11f, O'J'mell
co1191d1DD ora - . counts.
counta of conviction.
teacllln ars In llle belt polltioiJ HIIIJWIII Patlal.
Specllcel~, Dlaff was con·
Atlornlly Crlte11 praJaed the saldltedldnotiiMwthewlll ••
kiClW whether carporal puniiJJ.
Larry r. Jklll]y,tt, ot At~~sa,
Y1,e114 · ol . . .utaetlll'lq 437 join lnvetitigallve efforta of the bouta of the lrily ittm ta IIW to
meat
II
steellar)' In tbelt
Wll
cUsd for taJIIJre to yield after
. . . . . . Dllatll!et'ween Aue. Bureau of· Crlmlllll lnve~tlp· federal ....... ..me a twsw· scbooll," qree4 Stephen Rafbll
1118 Nllllll plclaJp truck,
....
Ul .... 12. ltal. 'lbe tloD,'theObloAttomeyGeneral~t rrter wttlla Ulllquatypbllpstllrll · ol the Oblo AlloclatlOD of SecoD·
OWllld by tlteltlsa•JJIII' Publllb·
Jvr Ill~. folfll'"' to the Offtce and the Meigs County tbat - - said - !lnJrsd to dary School Admla'-tratOrl.
1111 Co. ol AtlleJll. hit alt83 Ford
thebombiiP.
Urallied Siatet two parc:elt of real Sheriffa tlepartment.
.
.
.

er-.

'IESCIIPnON
SHOP
'

~nc.

•

Junk salesman questioned again
·in series of d~adly mail ~bombings

The flu Season Is
Here!!

The Only Flu and Cold Medicine
In a Hot Liquid Drink

ship, bu claimed more than 300
·lives ..
Bush noted that be -bad discussed the situation with Gorbachev at the recent.M11lta swnmlt
meeting and reiterated that the
Soviet leader· "1\81 alway• lndl·
cated a desirl! for peaceflll
change Inside the Soviet Union."
•At the same time, however,
Bush said there wu aome
concern on the part of the United
States that !lie Soviet leader may
have gone too far.
·
"Any time you have a 111e of
force and a toss of life, we are
concerned," l)e told reporters.
"But I don't believe I can jqe
that ques tlon right now . ... He' 1
faced with an ethnic problem
here and an Internal problem of
enormous dimensions."

Stock
•
prrces
plummet

City Administrator Carol
Thompson, whom Barry named
Friday to run the government as
he deals with his complex legal
and personal troubles, met with
the City Council, congressional
leaders and reporters Monday In
an effort to quell fears that
Barry's absence would paralyze
city management.

•

A Muhimedia

pro·.....
m•ses to 8 liift
defense budget
. '

Flo d
Barry enlers treatment center. iri
ri a ·

6130 .... .
PUASAin YAWY IOSPnAL
COIIIIUMIY 10011
675-4340 ,., ... lllf8m......

2 Sectlono. 14 Pagea

•

---__;,--Weather----.....;.;;..;.;.
Friday, with rain or snow mixed
Saturday. Highs will be In the 40s
Thursday, ranging troni lhe mid
40s to the mid 50s Friday and
from the mid 30s to the mid 40s
Saturday. Overnight lows will be
In· the :Kls Thursday and Friday
mornings, and ranging from the
mid 20s to the low 30s early
Saturday.
.
·

•

· Po:nerov-Middl.ort. Ohio, Wednaidey, Jenu.-y 24, 1990
.
.

WEATHER MAP - Dorlog early Wedoeadq rata mixed with
snow Is forecast for the northern Pacific Cout, upper Mlaslllllppi
Valley, upper Great Lakes and ille oorlhero Atluilc Coaai.
Showers and ihunderstonris are forecul for ihe we8tern Gu ..
Coast. Rain Is possible for parts of lhe northern PlaiJIS.

. South Central Ohlo
Cloudy Tuesday night, ·with a
chance of.rain and a low between
35 and 40. Chance of rain Is 50
percent. Becoming partly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs ln the mid
40s. Chance of rain is •20 percent.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through SIUurday
A chance of rain Thursday and

In
....
rain 100 percent.
hiP near 50.
of ·rat n near 100

"

I

!Z!J SNOW

Pirk 3
452
Pidt 4
'9832

at

·.•
Yel.40, No.110
.s=•••ltled 1880

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·24-90

TheraFid·

other co-defendants appeared In
court Monday at an Identity
hearing.
Kathryn Johnson, 36, and Danlel Kraft, 25, were positively
identified In affidavits filed by
Oh lo au tho rilles . The couple
smiled at each other In court
before the hearing but showed
little emotion during the proceeding.
San Diego Municipal Judge
Tl)'nothy Tower set ball for
Johnson at $500,000 on the
grounds that, unll~e Kraft and
the Lundgren men, she has not
been charged with murder but
faces conspiracy charges·.
However, Deputy District At·
torney Dale Marriott said, "I
would expect she would not meet
ball."
An extradition 'status hearing
for Johnson and Kraft was ·
scheduled Feb. 9, the day after
the Lundgrens are scheduled to
appear In cou~t for a status
hearing.
Lake County Prosecutor
Steven LaTourette said he antlcl·
paled an extradition order sJaned
by Gov. Richard Celeate would
be In the hands of California
authorities well In advliJice of the
Feb. 8 hearing.
(

Ohio Lottery

weather is mild

lures In the upper teens with light day. Skies were cloudy In north
snow and fog.
and clear In the south, with
In the West, the Oregon coast temperatures ranging In the 20s
· got the brunt of another storm as and 30s.
a · fast-moving weather front
Hlp pressure provided fair
spread rain from one end of the but chilly weather for most o!the
state to the other · Monday . South, with some fog In Alabama ,
Seaside, Ore., recorded nearlY valleys and lakes. Jacksonville,
an Inch In the 24 hours through 5 Fla., r!!pOrted 41 degreesearly In
p.m., while lnland " areas re- the morning, while Atlanta was
. ,corded mud! lighter amounts. ·
at 45 and Miami at 68.
·
Mild Pacific air also sent
Temperatures warmed up
temperatures warming Into the throughout the Southwest Tues·
mid 40s to mid 50s statewide, day and parts of Oklahoma were
while Brookings. a trildl!tonal averaging around 10 degrees
warm spot on the south coas\, above normal so far In the new
had the statE'' s high at61 degrees. year.
,
In California, dense morning
"If current trends . continue,
fog ~ettled In the southern San thiS month may become one of
Joaquin Valley.
the warmest Januarys on record
Mild January weather con- In Oklahoma. Tljls Is especially
. tinued across the Midwest and remarkable, since It follows one
· upper Great Lakes early Tues: . of , the coldest · Decembers on

WASHINGTON (UP!) -In a
giously schismatic Issue used the
dramati c effort to regain the
Jan. 22 anniversary to press their
momentum on the volatile.abor- case in Washington and across
tion issue, 75,000 marchers took
the &lt;.'olin try.
to the streets of Washlngton and
President Bush, In a brief
vowed to carry the fight to speech over a special· telephone
restrict abortion to more than hook-up, told 35,000 'anll·abortlon
two dozen states In the coming protesters gathered on the Elmonths.
lipse behind· the White House
But supporters of the 1973 Monday that he supported their
Supreme ·Court ·. decision that . cause and that "human life In all
'legalized most abortions said forms must be respected."
they would fight every step of the
"The continuing strong presway to retain a borlion rights, ence of the March ·for ·Life
arguing that the tide of'polllical reminds those of us In de~lslon­
opinion Is with them. ·
maklng capacities In the White
As they have every year since House a~d In the Congress and In
1973, when the Supreme Court's the court that millions of AmerlRoe vs. Wade ruling was an- . cans care fundamentally about
nounce\~ .
both s ides on the this lssue and are committed to
politically divisive and reli- preserving the sanctity of life,"
Bush said.
By mid-afternoon. U.S. Park
PoUce estimated the number of
Continued from page 1
marchers swelled to 75,000.
elates. on the 1990 Meigs County
A few blocks away , however,
Brochure project, which Is being
Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore. , tpld
funded by the planning commis- 75 members of Bush's Rep)lbli·
sion; and John Rice, of the
can party picketing Republican
County Extension Office, regard·
National Committee offices that
lng opportunities for business
he
would press to strip the party
and community growth on the
platform
of its rigid anti-a bortlon
Ohio River.
language.
·
-Revisions of planning com"I
will
do
everything I can to
mission bylaws were approved ,
assure
that
that
plank Is out of .
to become effective in April.
our
platform
forever,
an\! to see
-Elected as planning commistil
at
this
Issue
Is
behind
our party
sion officers for 1990 were Fred
forever." '
Hoffman, president ; Orion
Republicans have been bitterly
Roush, flr.st vice-pres ident; John
divided on.the Js.sue- especially .
Ri&lt;.'e, second vice-president;' Lee
atter losing gubernatorial rac!!s
McComas, secretary; George
in Virglnla and New Jersey to·
Collins, treasurer.,
abortion rights advocates
.
' . ·,
.

-..-

Tuudlly• .-....y 23, 1110

Pomeloy-Midrlaport. Ohio

briefs~--..

.-

bill expanding the. au thor tty of
township pollee officers.
That bill allows the town ship
pollee to enforce speed lim Its and
stop siins on private roads and
driveways In residential areas ..
It also allows them to arres t
speeding and &lt;lrunken drivers on
Interstate highways, but only in
toWnlhips of more than 60,000
population.
Tbat narrowing amendment
was inserted on ,tbe Senate floor
with the cilnsent of the sponsor,
Rep. !.,outs Blessing , R Onclnnatl, who said township
pollee in Colerain Twp. near
Clnctnnatl need the power to
makes arf11ts on lntetsta'te 2'75. '
Tite House wlll have to concur.
In the cbange before the bill goes
tci tile governor.
:J'he Senate also passed, 32-0,
and returned to the House a bill
forbidding dlscrtmlnatlon in hlr·
lng against people over 70 years
old.
Ohio law already prohibits job
dlscrlmlna.llon against people ·
between 40 and 70, which Is the
mandatory retirement age for
public emplOyees.

Patrol cite8
. two driven after crash
.

F-'100 truck driven by Stanley D.
of Albany. The Fercs .
wu owned by Carr ExcavatJna,
Rt. 3. Albany.
Trout Wal driYiq nOI'IIl WileD
Balle)', wbo _ . Nl*•lll I•
went left of cew wbUa ~
OWl' I blllcrast and lilt ~i

Tro¥t. a,

truck.

Traut Wll cttAtld fa,rllCI,tMii!i
a aeat belt.

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