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11-The Dilly $1 ~lei

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Panaov Mlddaport. Ohio

Principal .verbally accused.. ~

Continued trom page t

:en""'' M, Hopn uld EEO a!"'

that they had never lntellded to
close
allboueh they knew
that aaticlpated bllciJI!I cull
would be a problem.
Ho~. both Hogan and
Meadowa dllalfeed with Ed·
warda and Gloeckner In regard to
bow the Information bad been
presented to EEO. Said Mea·
dows, "EEO Is brought together
and we get statements that say
this. Then In another meeting
we're told this. We can' t tell It
two different ways In two differ·
ent places."
Edwards did agree that he had
delayed mailing out lay off
notlcea at the request of Hogan.
"And the picture has changed,"
be said. "The worst case scenario Is not going to happen."
Before closing the open session, Edwards el!plallled In detall
tbe financial situation of ,l.T.P.A.
with regard to payroll, operating
el!peDIN!S, etc.
The m~lng ended with the
executive JN!SSicin that resulted In
the three Jay offs.

He also addecllllat EEO feel$

:twO aatelllat c4flceiiD Pomeroy
· eo~ wu also recommended

·b y Edwards. EEO Committee
]IMII)bera oppoled the Jay offs
tlecau• It appeared to them that
ilo CODIIderatlon was given to
'per-.ael ~enlorlty, and tbat If
lay offl were approved as recom·
tneDcled, all minorities would be
:etlmlnated .from J.T.P.A . payOnly the positions of book·
-aeepu and a few training posl·Ilona were io bave been lett on·
j,ayroll, HO,an explained. Employees In some of these positions
llad fewer years experience with
the . pJ'OtP'am than those ~lng
1&amp;rgeted for lay off, he said.
- As a result of their Feb. 8
lneetlng, the EEO Committee
t;;ameupwltbseveralrecommendatlons which were presented to
tile full board last night. The
recommendations were ex·
'plaiDed by Rev. Don Meadows, a
· ~elgs County member of EEO.
Among EEO's recommendations
was a proposal to review the Jay
Qff policy of C.A.A.
: Rev. Meadows ~tated that
EEO finds the lay off policy "too
'!ague" and allowing "too much
leeway to someone to hand pick
who they want to work." The
poUcy needs to be more specific
In defining how persons should be
considered for layotffs, Meadows
said. Therefore, EEO recom·
mended the governing board
orderarevlewotthelayoffpollcy
of the agency and report back to
next full meeting of the board. ·
Director Edwards said he did
aot oppose a review and possible
change In policy, but assured
Meadows and other EEO
members at the meeting that the
policy Is legal as written.
"Legality. Is one tblng," said
·Meadows. "I'm sure It's legal
and valkl. But fairness Is another
'tblng."
The review.of the poUcy by the
EEO Committee, which will then
report back to the next full
meeting, was approved.
· In regard to the allegedly
•
,proposed closing of satellite
offices, Hogan said that EEO
.opposed such closings "because
·Ji would be a ,.,.
'""'
. at dlsservl~ to
·Ole people we're supposed to
help." Hogan said tbat EEO
would rather ~nslder alterna·
·11. ve changes to k1eep the satellite

roll.

~!flees open.

v. Ftlbrully 14, 1~

· Ohio .Lottery

Viqpnia

Continued from paae 1

the board. Followlqtbal orlat- soDVIlle lacldent I bat tbe' prlncl· her son t~ school. Board member
na1 coniplalnt wblcb Included DOt pal was putlln&amp; children UDder 1.any Rupe uured her tbat abe
baw been aaotber COOIIdel'allon
onlY the principal but a teacber tile delle. The board president didn't jlave to be afraid for her
ot J.T.P.A. Director Gloeckner
at the ~hOOI. the board did resPODded "Yes, were bad been · 1011 for a couple of·teaaocla. He
before the list of employees
cbange Its aludent dl5clpUne told lllat this bad llappelled at explabied tbat while It Is diUklll~
taraeted for Jay off was
poUcy.
·
.
HarrlsoDVIlle. Ya, we were to dllm!IS an~ ,the firs~·~
prepared.
Mrs.
Moodlspaugb
aalced
the
,
a~e of that." .
.
baa at readY been taken to
From comments ma~by Rev.
,
board
·
membe!'s
If
they
were
She
then
aslled
wby
tben
were
's traighten ou.t the prol)lems.
Meadows, there bave apparently
aware
at
tbe
time
of
ttie
Harrl·
parenll
not
advised
of
what
wu
"He' 1 been told not to ~ lila!
In the not too dlstaat pUt been
bappenJna.
·The
onlY
tblnga
we
apln
aD4 he knows how ~ere
grevlence procedure• flied
heard
about
were
at
Harrison·
tile
seco.
nd.$leP W..Tbe pro~;e~.~ Is
wltbln the agency which sugville,
Rutlaod
wu
never
menti·
·
In
action,
and you ilave the wprd
gested that dlscrlnilnatlon. may
oned
toourknowledge,"sbesald,
of
the
board
here that If be does .
have been practiced over a
,
wltb
Barton
commentiJII
tbat
anything
.ll.ke·
tlllll aPlil, .~the
period ot time within J.T.P.A.
Aline Weavet
"you
mlgbt
be
corri!ct."
·,
second
steP
wUJ,
~ taken, and
Meadows went on to say that
Again
Batton
aslced
about
the
that
Is
anotber
step , tpward
EEO wu DOl saying tbat the
Aline Weaver, 75, Racine; (!Jed
date
that
the
cblld
was
put
under
·
dismissal.
J.T .P.A. director bad acted dlsWednesday morning at Veterans the desk, wltb the board. pres!.
crlmlnatorlly In the pUt. "built
Memorial Hospital.
· dent explaining again that ~lf _II
The board president . again
does not look very affirmatively
·Mrs. Weaver was theda~bter was after the discipline bad oeen railed 'tile question of timing of
wben you proniote a minority to a
of the Jaie Earl and Jennie meted out to McCall, It was tbe ·rncldent - addresslna
111pervlsory capacity one month,
Hellman Holter. She was a
dll'ferent ·t han If the Incident Mrs.bMoodlapaugh with the
aod twomcin~s. Jater, dfopthem
h•lrdresser.
happened after" that. Mrs. MOO: · question, "Why would he get so
off the payroll alimg wltb other
She Is survived by a brother dlspaugh coiinler!!d lllat she did upset about tbls -now, wey now,
minorities."
and sister-In-law, Olan and
t h ...........,
IY that's what concerns me.!' BarDOl knowwben I a,.....-~. on
ton agamltitei:ltbaltbetnforma·
Other questions from EEO
Mll!lrl!d Hoi ter, Mansfle!4, and
thalli happened.
. were brought to. the floor,lnclud·
several nieces and nephews.
Going back to tbe night the lion be:IIAa Is that this happened
lng why EEO was notlnformed of
In addition to her parents she
youngster told bla par.entl about sometime ago. - ' ·
eatller Jay offs, aDd why EEO
wu preceded In death by her
being put under the deslt, Mrs. . Bo~d ~em~ Rul\2 th~m,
was not apprlaed In full detail of
husband;J.W. "l:loone" Weaver,
Moodlspaugh said that when her ·c alled fo~ an Jnvesttg•llon to see
J.T.P.A:'s gloomy financial al;~nd a brother, Paul Holter.
son beard them calling Hysell, ·. If anyd;llqg b(UI happen~ since
tuatlon earUer than two days
Services will be Saturday, 2
the )uvenUe officer, he became the Harr)Unvi!Je lncJl¥nt, tbe
p.m. at the Ewing funeral Home
before the proposed second
hysterical and locked hl~lf }n. reprlmajld at tbat time "and !be
round of .Jay offs.
VeteraDt Memorial
with Charles Norris officiating.
the
bathroom.
ChaRS£ II)•dl~lpUn! pol!,o/t. · :{ .
In, aaawer to tb-.quesUons,lt ..,-Tuesday adinl&amp;slons- Charles - Burial will be In Greenwood
She laid that . Adam said ~
·Superlntendeiu CarPenter Said
seemed that Edwards had called Cundiff, Middleport.
Cemetery.
"was
really
In
trouble
now
that
be bad talked to . the ,
In EEO IMicause he felt he should
Tuesday discharges - John
Friends may call at the funeral
h«ause
be
had
told
us
and
,now
secretary
and toblm (apparenUy. •
apprise thell1 of the situation, not McKenzie, Ann Williams.
home on. Fr,lday from 7-11 p.m.
we
were
telling
someone
else."
referring
to the principal, and
because be was actually required
She
asked
him
why
be
tb011gbt
he
,
tbey
botb
had
said this ''has not .
to by policy. EEO Is supposed to
In
trouble
and
sb.
e
quoted
occurred
·
since
the dlsclp)lpE;
was
monitor hlrlngs and firings, and ·
him
as
saying
'.'I
wasn't
supposed
'
policy
was
adopted
,b y. the boilfd'~
apparently the proposed Jay offs
Continued from page 1
to tell you and dad what after the Harrisonville l~ldent.
were "out of the norm," accord·
happened."
We~ bave alreadY · reprimanded
Jag to Edwards, because of the
Jim Vanamaa. spoke to the was for a more fair policy on
Another person at the meeting the principal for whatever hap- ,
circumstances of the situation.
)loard on the subsdtule pay lor , fighting on school .ptopetly: He
confirmed that putting children pened before then,''
.' · .
E"'O 1hen.
d ·
""
requeste a reeva·
bus drivers and requested tliat eontended that ·his son fought
under
the
desk
for
punishment
'
Despite
the
supertotendent
and
luatlon of those who have been
be
paid
the
same
subsdtutes
back
when
he
was
"punched"
by
has
been
golng
'on
under
this
hoard
members'
contendon
that
.
targe~ for ·lay off, at which
amount as a beginning regular another student. The .Principal
principal for some time. She said •'nothing like this ·Is happening
ti ·
Ed
c1s tte ted to
:driver.
me, · war
a mp
agreed that was what. happened
that her child Is now In junior ' this year", the parents Insisted 1
clarity some matters.
ThP. salary of board members · but con!ended she was a biding by
high school and knew of sllCh that teachers should be con"We won't have to layoff In the
wu
an
Issue
with
Rupe
propos~
school
poUcy
when
she
assigned
Incidents. At least one other tacted to see If this Is stlll going
numbers recently discussed, .. he
lrw
that
the
payment
per
meeting
detention.
person
In the crowd attending on.
explained. "And let me put to·
be
dropped
from
$80
to
S60
a
other
action,
the
board
In
qld the same thing.
.
Board meinbel' Bob Snowden '
rest any thoughts of closing the
meeting since there1are now two adopted a statement to modify
Mr. and Mrs. Moodlspaugh said that be had · also .checked
satellite offices." Edwards went
regularly scheduled meetings board policy concerning tbe use asked for some report on what with the school and had been
on to say that, the orlglDal Jay off
each
month. The vote was Rupe of drugs and alcohol. First time
"punishment ·Mr. McCall ·re- • assured ·that · &amp;11Ch punJ,9bment
1 d the
II
f
proposa an
· sugges on
and .Vaughan, "yes",, an&lt;l offenders, the new policy states, celved for the problems at was not ·hap"penllig this school
closing offices "was the worst
Snowden and Barton, "no".
will be given automatic tO-day · Harrisonville."
year, 1989-90.
'
case scenario If we did not get
Appeals on two expulsions was suspension and mandatory coun·
Barton said that the board
"It may well 'have happened
1 fund " A
t1y
held In execudve session and sellng ·with a . minimum of 10 couldn't go into that. "You don't ./ last year. but no one I questioned
certa n ·
s.
pparen ' necessary fundlq came tbtough
there was a hearing In open session Including the parents, aat know what you are dealing with would say It Is happening Ibis
".as late as 11:29 Tuesday mornsession
on a detention matter. their expense. The board with the when you deal· with unions. It's year. I bad been told It happened
lag" which would eltmtoate the
Appearing
In open session was new policy also reserved the not easy," be com"!ented.
the ·yearr before - )letore th·e
eed 10 1 0 u
n ·
ay
as many em·
tbe junior high principal who right to" expel automatically
Supt Carpenter Inserted t!1at Harrlionvllle lnclden_t occurred ;
ployees as had been suggested.
assigned the detention and anyone who Is selling or supply· "the punishment given was the - buti'vecometotheconcluslon
Both Edwards and Gloeckner
Danny Dodson, one oft be parents lng lltegal substances. The new punishment recommended , by , ihat It bas atoPp.ed. There ,Is no
ld lllal th
h d
t t
of
the two boys Involved In a fight policy will take effect once It hils our legal ro,unsel:"
sa
ey • mean
Indication that ' Mr. McCall Is ,
portray the lnformahon given on school property.
been
approved
by
the
school's
M!;'l.
Moocllspaugh
sal4
that
doing
~ that'. -iurrently ,"..Sn9w,den ~
earlier In the month to EEO as
Dodllon's
request
to
the
board
abe
worrlea
every
day
abe
sends
said.
, · · ·
. .. "
attorueY.
·
the "wont case scenario" and

North Carolina

Meigs residents...

1963

Super IAIJto

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p·
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Area deaths

Hospital news

Piek 3
599
PIClk 4

&amp;lip&amp; past

omc..

:'1111 mel tile ciOIIq ot J.T.P .A.'s the 15ylqottotmtnorltleubould
· ·tlld Galllpollll, which according

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·Vol.40. No.181
Capjolghied 1990

£

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Parkei'Sb.Bg fil"m hired for feasibility study
firm · was also considered, but
By NANCY YOACHAM
Swisher decided upon 1:\urgess
Senllnel Newa S&amp;aff
Nlple due to the !act that the
an!l
Upon recommendation ot Ml· ·
firm
has In the past worked
cbael Swisher, director of the
successfully
with other· Meigs
Meigs County Department o!
County agencies . .
Human . Services, the Meigs
The . feasibility study ~Is the
"Ciillllty Commissioners ap·
result of a directive from the
·proved hiring of the firm, Bur·
district director of the Ohio
gess and .Niple; Parkersburg,
Ilj!partment of Human Services.
W.Va., to complele a feasibility
study of the possible . need for · Cosl5 for tbe study are totally
reimbursable by the state.
additional office space for HuIn the feasibility study, an ·
man Services. Cost of the study Is
architect
will be evaluating pres·
not 'to exceed $3,500.
.
en
I
office
needs of the depart·
The commissioners · approved
ment,
as
well
as future needs
the hiring ot Burgess and Nlple at
over the next 10 years. T!ie
their regular Wednesd-y meetarchitect will review ca5e load
Ing. A few weeks ago they
growth at the deparlmen t and
authorized Swisher to · being
certain economic Indicators
Interviewing architects tor the
within the counfy. Based upon
project: Another architectural

flndlqs of tne . architect, ·a celved a resolution from Scipio
determination will be made as to Township Trustees and a signed
whether or not current office petition .f rom two affected prop·
accommodations meet the needs
erty owners requesting the clos·
of the department.
lng of Township Road 458,
, Currenyy, t~ .department. ~Graham Road . A third property
owner, the Ohio Department of
leases a main building on Race
St. In Middleport, and three other
Natural Resources, Division of
office spaces on Second Ave..
Forestry, has submitted a letter
also In Middleport.
· stating they are also In ·a ccor·
In anotner matter related to ·dance with the proposed road
the Department of Human Servl· closing. Based· upon these docu ·
ces, the commissioners met with · ments, the commissioners have
a Middleport couple who were
Initiated steps to close the road. A
publiC hearing on the proposal
questlonlng their allotment of
lias been scheduled for March 14.
funds from Human Services. The
. commissioners made ca.l!S to the 1 p.m., In the commissioners'
agency on behalfof the couple. A oftlce at the courthouse, with
special meeting between the
publiC viewing of the road to take
couple and thelrcaseworkerwas
place 10 a.m. the same day ~
arranged.
.
The commissioners have reMeigs County Treasurer

Dozens of pow~r outages were
By Unllecl Prell International
·. A winter storm that ·.cllated reported overnight, and scores of
'northern Ohio with Ice Wednes· schools canceled Thursday
day continued' Thursday morn· classes.
About 50,000 customers of the
lng, but rising temperatures
prompted the Nailonill Weather . Cleveland Electric Illuminating
Co. lost their power late WednesService to Issue a flood watch.
Rain fell over all of the day : but a CEI spokesman sald
nearly all were restored by early
Buckeye State Wednesday, with
·
freezing rain alld slf~£1 coating Thursday.
Power
was
out
on the cam·
roads In the northern half of t)le
puses
of
Kenyon
College In
state, north of Interstate 70.

.

Sheriff stlll looking
fo~ una~c,ounted
funds
.
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AT PAT.HILL. FORD·
1990 RANGER.

·1990 TEMPO

1990 ESCORT

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SIONS BJU. - Prealdent Bulb chats wltb S\!(:retary of State
James Baker (L) after tile president signed a biP authorizing
enteJ'Iency aid lo Panama Wednesday. Busb left early this
morn1D1 Ill attendtbe drug summit In Carta1ena, Columbia. See
atoey on paJE lZ. (UPl).

!Woyer .asks for lielp
.'in. solvb,tg problems

•

$AVE.S2l7000
•

Wlltn You Buy Preferred Equlpmellt Package
320A Spedat Value Package
1-lpeed TreMniiMion

Wide VInyl Body Bide Molding
AM/FMI-

-nnt8CIOIMI
Power l'-lng
los... VIItWI,_.
f t - Window l)efroeter
lnat""""'tlillon Group
Dlgltlil Cloak/ a-head
Console
Ughl/a-rtty Group
Duel Electric Mirrors
Luaury WhMI c-•
1.11. Efl4 cyl. I!II9IM
AM/FMC.-

Sticbr Prb
Package Dit1aunt

$9545.00
677.00
493.00

Pat Hill Diuount

Cash llacl&lt;

SAVE S3l53.00

·'

1000.00

$7375.00

Doliverod Prkt
(Tar &amp; Title F1ts Not lndiiiWI

When You Buy Preferred Eqlllpment Package
2261 Special Value Package EquipMtnt:
Air Concltlonlng
Power Door Locka
Duel Eleatrlcl Control
MlrroN

TlltWII.a
PolyU.tWh...
R- Wlllclow Defra.ter
Ughl Group

lpMd Control
Power Window•
AM/FM CMIIIIOI
Optional Equlpm•n:

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Auto. TNna.

'

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When You .IItty Preferred Equlp111tnf Package 164 ·
With Ma1t'ual Tr...lllis•lon
··
PACKAGE EQUIPMENT:
XLTTrlm
P211 IIHI OWL TlrM

Podtage DilaHmt
Pat HID Discount
Cath llacl&lt;

SJ3,059.00
17 37.00
677.00
750.00

Dtli••• l'rict $9 89s·.oo
(Tu &amp; ntlt

Not lnciHtil)

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Deluu Tut- Pllnt

Sticbt Prb

,._,., . . . .lng

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Chr-Re•lteplum...,
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lllcllng R- Window

THhomc..t Abnlnum Wh....

OPTIONAL EQUIPMENt:

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· Pat Ill DloiMitt

2.8V·Ieng!M

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Sticbr , _

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'-$99'J'QO

Dellwirllll'rlct

IT• &amp; l'ltle !!it'hldaii!l) .' .

tt.ndtne Pllak~ge

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PAl Hill FO Di I

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Mlddltp6rtj.Ohio· .

461 South Third

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992·2196
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George Collins sul;lmltted to the
commissioners an estimate of
$1,000,000 as the aggregate
amount of public monies that
mlght be available for deposit as
active funds during the next two years. Active funds are monies
that are drawn from all the time,
such as checking accounts.
At Collins' request, the ' com·
missioners passed a resolution to
begin taking applications from
area banks to act as depositories
lor the county's active funds.
Current agreements · with area
banks will exppre on March 31,
In · other matters, 11 was an·
nounced that a multi-county
meeting ·with Ohio Public De·
fender Randall Dana has been
tentatlvelysetfor5p.ni.,,Feb. 27,
at Chillicothe. The meeting Is

being held so that Dana may
explain a proposed plan .yhlch
could save the counties money In
assigned counsel fees to represenl lndlgent clients.
···
··
..
It was also announced that the
Meigs County Park Commission
Is sponsoring a meeting on Feb.
21, at 7:30 p.m., at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy, In
which Donald Schmidt, of the
Oh lo Parks and Recreation Assnelation with be the speaker. The
comm lssloners and other area
governmental authorities are
being Invited.
Finally, a request from Meigs
. Probate Court for the addition of
a budgetary line Item for lndlgent Guardianship was
approved. ·

Flood watch .issued for northern Ohio

°

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2 Soe~lons, 1 6 PogH 2 5 j:en10
A Multimiillie·inc. Nowopo""r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; February 15. 1990

°

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Low toal1ht In mid 4011.
Cbuce of rain 100 percent.
Friday, high neat 80. Cbance
of rain 80
·

S.lS.l6-29-30-4I
Kicker 471460

Increased oy 6M percent .
. By Wire, !$taff Report.
The chl!!l justice said Ohio's
. COLUMBUS (UPI) ,- Chief
, Jusdce Thomas Mo~ of the" judges and courts are attempting
to modernize their rules and '
Ohio Supreme Court urged the
adapt to the changing times. But
Ohio General Assembly In a
historic address W~esday 1o he said the Legislature must
provide proper · penalties and
· reforll) the juven)l~ justice· sysfurnish
adequate prison space.
tem, solve tbe Jail space crisis
"The first priority Is the
and reducie the scourge of drugs
lnOblo: I .
•
juvenile justice system/' said
Moyer. "AIIhoilgb I personally
.• In a ~'Slat!! of the Judiciary"
believe that educl!tlon and expeadiSresa, believed to be the first of
rience will ultlmat~ly be the
Its kind lnOblo, Moyertoldajoint
long-term answer (to the drug
. Jegjalatlve seselon he wants ·the
problem,. we must deal swiftly,
judiciary and d;le Legislature to
declllvely ·and crel!tlvely with
work hand-In-hand on the probevery
juvenile offender, from the .
lems · without compromising
flrst·tlme user to the hlgh·llvlng
their llldependence.
trafficker," said Moyer.
Galua County Common Pleu
Judge Donald Andrew Cox atThe chief justice said juvenile
judJI!I want broader authority
tended the speech at Moyer's
over adultl In the lives of young
lnvltatlo!l yesterday, and said
,the · Chief Jusdce'a commenta
drV, offeadera.
'1inp you to explore all of the
.were well recleved by the Jealslature and tbe judiciary.
·
alterllatlvl!tl available In the
rehabilitation of all .juvenne
Moyer outlined the court's
history, Cox aald, their accompabllaers. reau,lleas of their
ability to pay," lie aald. "Stalls·
llstuneqll over the put three
I
tiCI and (:OIMIOII lelllll! tell Ul
.years.
• ·Of particular Interest to Cox tbat· a flnt-. or MeOnd·tlme
juwnne abllaer of drup will
were Moyer's commenll on
gradute from the juWDDe jua·
eombattlna c1rue abulll! and tbe
lema It pments to today's tlee system to the acllllt juatlee
J)'ltem.
.
ay1tem If be or abe 'II men!ly
warebouted
wltb aerloua
IIIII 'll'lm JtatiiUcs, Moyer ·
offenclerl.
Ioiii tile lawmakers · 60 to 90
'11, 1111111 be obVious to 118 all
pillliDt at the juwnlle or domesthat cannot be
tic relatlo01 cues Involve a ., that a
served becau. there II no room
auiMtance abuse problem, and
.tbat ·111 the Jut two years, In tbe jall or prison, or uenlellce .
Continued on paae 3
·
· clrul·l'llated juvenile cua have

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,. Melg1 .. SHe~IW" JilmJ M. ·kin, Texas Road, Pomeroy, was
traeilng west on Flatwoods Road
Soulsby Is requesting that any
around
7 p.m. when she struck
Meigs Junior High student's
and
killed
a deer that ran Into the
parents who may have noticed
path
of
her
1988 Buick. Damage
their child with excess money or·
was
listed
as
heavy to the front of
unexplained newly purchased
Mankin's
vehicle.
Items, talk to their child to
A report of criminal damaging
ascertain If the money · might
have been given tbem by another · at the Meigs County Fair· ·
ground's horse barn on Tuesday
student.
·
Sheriff Soulsby reports that the night Is also under lnvestlgatloh.
Ralph Calvert reporled to
money was part of $9,000 taken
from a Bailey Run Road res!· ail thorltles that some time Tues·
dence In December. Approxl· day evening, a plastic tarpputup
mately $3,500 has not ,yet been as a windshield had been cut In
several places. Calvert also
accounted for.
Two 13-year·old juveniles will reported that the !Ires ani! seat
appear In Meigs Juvenile Court on. a racing bike (used In horse
next week In connection with the racing) were also slashed.
Anyone having seeing' any
missing , money. One of the
acllviiY.
In' the area Is asked to
juveniles has admitted giving
contact
the
sheriff's office.
money to various students, but
are
also Investigating
Deputies
does not remember all of them.
a
report
of
a
theft
'of. batteries
Public cooperation In thts
from
a
bulldozer
and
a loader.
matter will be appreciated. An
The vehicles were located on
effort Is being made to recover as
Depot St. at Rutland. Bob Ball, of
much of the money as possible.
Assistance from parents will . Ball Run Road, reported the theft
ease the parental responsibility occurred some time Monday .
VIcky Peckham, Wells Road,
In the matter, Soulsby said.
A motor vehiCle accident Wed· Middleport, reportell that around
nesday evening on Flatwoods 1 p.m. Tuesday, an unknown
Road was Investigated by the vehicle came onto her property
and struck the corner of her car
sheriff's department.
According to Information from . port. The matter Is being
Sheriff Soulsby, Rebecca Man· Investigated.

Miller to fde for re-election

the state lhrough Thursday
night. The rain was expected to
saturate already moist ground
and some areas may see flooqlng
as early as the afternoon.
Rainfall across the state
through Wednesday morning
was generally between one·
quarier and three-quarters of an
Inch during, but at Versailles In
west central Ohio more than 1 ¥..
Inches fell.
Southerly winds were to continue to warm the state Thursday, with temperatures topping
out In the the 60s In the south to
the mld-40s lntqe ,northwest.
The front was expected to stall
at Lake Erie 'J'hursday and a cold
front rn!lvlng out of the Plains
states ThurSday night will bring
another roun~ of heavy rain and
thunderstorms to Ohio through
· Contlnu~d 011 page 3

Scholl promoted.by patrol
Trooper Jeflr!!Y L. Scholl of the
Athens post of the State ijlghway
Patrol was promoted thiS week to
the rank of Sergeant by Col.
Thomas
W . Rice,
superlhtendent.
Sgt. Scholl Is the son of retired ·
Highway Parol Lt. Bruce R. and
Faye C. Scholl, who reside In
Cbllllc9the. and the grandson of
Mrs . Frances Scholl of Pomeroy.
Sgt. Scholl was r~asslgned to
the Eaton post where he will
serve as assistant post commander.&gt;He joined the patrol hi
1980and has served at theAth'ens
post smce that time. lie was
chosen PQSt Trooper of the Year
In 1986.
The sergeanf graduated from ·.
Untoto High School and attended
Ohio University. He and hls ,wlfe,
P11mela, live In Athens with their
daughters, Mollie and Megan.

JEFTREY SCHOLL

Local news(briefs----......
Celebration
Ball tickets available
.
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Tickets for the 1990's Celebration Ball to be held Feb. 231n the
ballroom at Ohio University's Baker Center are aval.l able
Tenth · Congesslonal District closely reflects the needs and
locallY from Gerald Powell. ;\dvance tickets are being sold for
Representative Clarence Miller concerns of the constituents he
$10 per person or $17 per couple. Tlcketswlll be $15 and $25 at the
of Lancaster will flie his petitions represents. Miller pledges to
door.
to run for re-election Friday with continue to provide active and
Communlverslty, Ohio University's CO!ltlnulng education
the Fairfield County Board of resjlonslble representation. He
program, Is sponsoring the event which wlll be held ~rom 8 p·.m .
Elections, a ·spokesman said views the Issues· of the environ· ·
to midnight and will feature the Gentlemen III, a popular dance
ment, education, long-term
today.
band from Huntington, W.Va.
Miller, a member of the health care, the antl·drug effort,
Prizes will be awarded during the eveninghand a
Important U.S. House of Repre· and the reassessment and realJo.
photographer w1'u also be on hand.
.
sentatlves Appropriations Com· cation of budget ouUays· lor
,Powell, a professional dance Instructor, wllllead line dances
mlttee, hu represented the 12· defense, as the main Issues of the
and mixers throughout the evening.
.
county lOth District In upcoming
Table reservations may ~ made for groups of 8 to 10.
Washlngton for thl! paat 23 years
·-Advance tickets for the ball may also be purchased at the
.and Is In the tdp 10 percent of the .
-office of Continuing Education, located In the basement of
435 member bouse In terms of
: "Memorial Auditorium on the 0 . U. campus, or by telephone,
seniOrity.
·
1-800-336-5699.
'
The Lancuter lawmaker en·
tered congress at the same time
as President George Bush and
servedasabOUJecolleaaueofthe
A section of road at Stale Route 124 and Dewitt's Run Road In
·president's In the' 90th and 91st
the 1-&lt;&gt;111 Bottom area has bee~closeddueto theamount ralntall
concresaes.
In past few days, according to a spokesperson from the state
Citing his close asaocla lion
highway department In Marl~tta.
,
"
with tbe president . and the
The recent rains caused a portion of the road to flood, and the
aatl8factlon tbat cornet fi'om
rqad bas ~ closed aliice Sunday.
'
belq actively hivolved wltb a
It was reported~~ an emergency contract bid wlll be let for
new admlnlltratlon, Miller Is
tbe repair of tbe area.
bop!JII to continue bl5 aervlce In
new
Waalllnlton for another two-year
. '
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term.
John D. Riebel, Meigs County Superintendent of Scbaala, wta
Tbe · congresaman expre11ed
a nve year conlrlct at his curretlt utary wbetl the Mill
plana to run an · aareutve
Local Board of Educatlnn met Tuesday nlabt In 1M - - ,
re-election cllllpalp bhed oa
board offtces.
.
bl&amp; record of aervlce to tile people
.
·
Continued
on
paae
3
,
r:J. the lOth District. Polntina to
CIABBNCII:
E.
MILU!:B
bll voting record aa one that

Section of road underwater

Riebel receives

itwn

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Gambler and Oh1o Wesleyan In
Delaware, forcing the postpone· '
ment of two basketball games .
Denison returns to Kenyon and
Wittenberg goes • back to Ohio
wesleY&amp;!! Thursday night to
make up those games .
In Marlon County, the Ice
broke limbs and knocked tree~
down along Ohio 203 between
Marlon and Prospect.
With the rising temperatures
- mid-morning readings were
mostly In the mld·30s In the
northern counties and higher to
the south - the ·threat of Icing
bad ended.
But the NWS posted a flood
watch .f or all but the southeast
cprner 0t the state tl!rough
Friday inornlng.
Widespread rain, with some
heavy, rain and thuf1dershowers .
possible, was expected acr!lls .

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contract

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Com~entary
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1U Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio .
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~lb
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!Slm~ F ' T ' - ' '--r• ......ado=
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~v

ROBERT 1,.. WINGE'iT
Publisher
,

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General ,...arer

PAT WHITEHEAD ·
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
A MEMBER of T)le United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words' long. All letters are subje.:t to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues notpersonall·

ties.

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WASHINGTON - Alaskan
timber companies are engaged
In a frenzied campaign to pre, serve a blatantly wasteful fed, era! subsidy - $40 million a year
to P/OW roads through a national
forest for tree cutters.
In 1980, Col\lP'ess declared a
large (!aft of the Tongass National Forest In Alaska to be a
wilderness area. At the same
time, and without mu·ch fore. sight, Congress ordered the U.S.
For!!sl Service to spend at least
$40 ·million a year making sure ·
that the rest of the Tongass ·
Forest Is stlll accessible to

timber companies. Much or the
federal money has been spent on
building access roads. The $40
million has to be spent each year
no matter what the demand for
,
timber.
SeJI. Tim Wirth, D·Colo., has
Introduced a bill to put some
common sense Into the subsidyeliq!lnate the dollar quota and
give Congress control over how
much IS spent each year dependIng on the need.
It makes sense. But the timber
companies are reacting like
babies deprived of · the bottle.
Without the money; they say,

By I.EON DANIEl.
UPI Chief CorresJHindenl
wASHINGTON - Andy Rooney; that curmudgeonly commentator
for CBS News, Is not a racist. Take Walter Cronkite's word for it.
According· to the former CBS News anchor revered as "Uncle
Walter," Rooney Is " an Independent thinker and a courageous social

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they may have to close up shop letters they writ~ to Congress to ~
and leave the southeast Alaska plead for the contillued subsidy.
Some Alaska Pulp workers told
economy In shambles.
Alaska Pulp Corp. and Louts!· our assoclate-8cottSleek they are
ana Pacific have used the federal suspicious of the campaign. :
subsidy to gain a strong.foothold Although the company says the •
employees can write II!IYthlng :
In the region's Umber 'market.
they want, the letters mi!St ~ l
Now they're fighting to keep lt.
!-'art of the .strategy Is to given · to management In un- l
1,
sealed envelopes.
,present a united front to Con·
gress. Alaska P,ulp, with the help ' An Alaska· Pulp spokesman .
t~ld us that th.e company lsn:t :
of a lobbyist, launched a letter·
writing campalgri · to senatots. . censoring th~ letters, t1ut simply
wants ·to mak,e sure lhe notes
But not all of the letters come
haven't fallen out of the enveWith DO slrln~s attached. Alaska
lopet Some workers aren't so · :
.Pulp employees .have been offered a free lunch for every two
sure.
•'
The letter-writing campaign ;
has aggravated Alaskan· timber · •
workers 'who rely on the compan- :·
tes for their jobs, but who don't
trust those companies. It was
only a few )!ears ago that Alaskil
Pulp was engaged In a bitter ;
labor dispute with Its workers. ,
Congress even Investigated the •
•
company ·for firing one of Its , .
employees after he tes'tlfled •
'
before Congress a txiu t problems '
at a pulp mill. Muchofthat lllwlll : ·
remains, and some dissidents ; ·
are afraid to speak their minds. ·
. The Umber companies would •
like · Congress to think .that big :
business arid small-town AmerIca are living ·tn harmO!lY In
Alaska, and that all hard,feellngs
have been put ~side In a united
campaign to preserve the Ton·
gass subsidy.
But the Tongass timber subsidy Is hard to justify on any
terms. Not only Is It a ~asie of
money In years when demand for ,
timber Is low, but It threatens the
environment ofthe forestto build ' '
roads that are not needed.
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Uh,liuh.

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Rooney Insists he was misquoted In a gay publication, thusly :
."I've believe!! all along that most people are born with equal
lntelllgence, but blacks have watered down thelr ·genes because the
less intelligent ones are the ones that have the most children. They
drop out of school ear!y, do drugs and get pregnant."
Denying Rooney the benefit of any possible doubt, CBS News
Thursday suspended him for three months without pay and left his ·
future at the network uncertain.
David Burke, president of the network's news division,. evidently
acted In response to complaints that Rooney had made remarks
offensive to homosexuals, as well as blacks.
Rooney was already in trouble with gay organizations for
suggesting In a December television special that "homosexual ·
unions" are "known· to -lead quite often to premature death. "
"I am not a racist," maintained Rooney, the 71-year-old TV
essayist for ''60 Minutes' ' and newspaper co1u111nist, explaining that
.
.
he accepted the suspension "rather than to permanently end my
career at CBS. "
·
Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the NAACP, characterized
Rooney's remarks, as reported In the Advocate, a national gay
newspaper, as "IIHnformed and racist."
.
,
MEDFORD, Ore. (NEA) -~
Oriented computer data bases
eve.Y year
'R
.
5ays the .
Karin Schwartz, assistant director of the of the Gay and Lesbian
Although almost all of the bustDMA.
·
cO,mlce
pears, a varlllly _grown •
and
home
shopping
Cl!ble
televiAlliance Agajnst Defamation, said, "We're pleased that CBS has
ness of the Bear Creek Corp. Is . sion stations · as well . as In
The array of merch.andise
only ln ,southwestern Oregon·and ..·
taken the allegations of Rooney's bigotry seriously," but she
conducted from this small city of catalogs.
.
· .
offered Includes ,e very lmaglna.·
southern 'France.' Marketed a.i
wondered "why CBS didn't act definitively when the allegation was
abo11t 40,000 people, the value of
Direct
marketing
dates
back
to
ble
type
'
of
computer,
cooking,
,
Ro)'al Riviera Pears, ·they a!le
only, homophobia."
Its yearly sales now approaches , 1744, when Benjamin Franklin camping, automotive, elec· · the centerpiece of , glf\ fruttl ·
Cronkite, a member of the CBS board of directors, was q\JICk to
$100 million.
.
published a catalog offering · Ironic, photographic and garden·
b4skets and bOxes.
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•
, defend the colleague he said he had known "for almost half a
The explanation for that appar· almost 600 bi:ioks for sale. Today, lng "'equlpment as well as a
,
.One
l'mportant
unresolyed
·
•..
century."
eqt disparity: Bear Creek Is a
an estimated, 7,000 ~o 8,QPP s~lngly unllmlted~varlety of ·. luue f~ the ~ ....lta .,
''His ·more outrageous cOmments are bound to offend one element
leading participant In one of the companies dlstrttfute' i4' bllllo~ clothing, footwear, jewelry, vi·
treatment of . sales taxes, 1m:'·'
or another of the population from time to time,~· Cronkite said, "but
fastest growing sectors of the catalogs every year· to almost 90 . tamlns, sporting goods, books . posed •by· 45 ·; states ' at rates ...
any suggestion that such a rare voice should be silenced Indicates a ' nation:s economy - 'the "direct
. generally ranging_:·from '3 'to 7 :
million,shoppers.
'
· and games.
dangerous weakness In our pluralistic, democratic society&gt;
. marketing" lndustzy that boasts
Food
offerings
Include
live
percent. A' 196't U.S. Supreme : .:
According
to
the
New
York·
. Burke, In a statement evidently prepared to cover his and the
a . customer base across the based Direct Marketing Associa- lobsters and prime steaks, janis
Court decision held tliat direct ·
network's posterior, said, "! have made It clear that CBS News
country and throughout the
mall firms did not hav,e to collect ·"
tion, the Industry accounts for and jellies, herbs .and spices,
cannot tolerate such remarks or anything that approximates such
world.
and
nuts;'
c~ki!S•
and
.
sale~
taxes In states where !hey •, c ·
cheeses,
about 20 percent of all the
comments, since they In no WaY reflect the views of this
Direct marketing long was. country's annual retail sales arid cookies. Esoteric Items Include. had no physical presence.
,
organization." '
known as direct mall, but.today
live Christmas ·. trees:"'aviator,
Typifying the confuslbn, sales · ·
enjoys
yearly
gross
revenues
of
Uh huh.
al~ost all of the major compan-'
$25 billion to $40 billion.
jackets, crystal pet food dishes, : taxes are c~Jiected, dy QJie ~ar "
Burke, con~l)ulng :tn that unctuous vein, said Rooney "has
les In t.he business have Installed
microscopes, ·unlfotms and
Creek subsidiary (Harry and. -:
Notlong
ago,
the
catalogs
were
expressed his diSmay that the values of CBS News have been called
toll-free ' '800'' telephone
by
their
recippaperwelgh(s;
',.
·
,
David) on goods ~hipped to;." •
often
classified
into question and offers his deepest apologies to any In our society who
numbers . that encourage poten- Ients as "Junk mall." But t)le
In
Me!lford;
.Bear
er~ek em·
states,
but by another ('Jackson · .
were given offense.' '
ttaJ.&amp;stomers to call rather than , recent rapid Increase In the ploys 3,000 people at the height o,f , ,and Perkins) on Items :$eDt to ( ·
The va,lued Opinion of the esteemed Uncle Walter notwithstanding, • · write.
only five states.
.:~; number of women In the work Its selling season, .the weeks
It Is quite possible that Rooney .:.. In an unlaped telephQne
Moreover, direct market lng force has left many families with Immediately before Christmas.
Legislation 'pending ln Con- · ,;,
conversation with a reporter -uttered a racist remark.
also encompasses new technolo·
only
limited
time
to
shop
In
The
product
line
of
Its
newest
g~ess wou14.. ellmjliate . \liOR • ·
So far, the evidence Is InsuffiCient to convict Rooney of bigotry., but
gtes that allow products to be
stores.
. operation, Orchids Only, Is ap·
dls~rltles and the. unfair advan-·
it is reasonable to suspect that he, like all of the rest of us, Is flawed.
offered through consumer·
The portion of the country's parent from its.name. Jac~on &amp; . tage direct marta!ting flrmiadults who shopped by mall or Perklns sells garden· supplies, :c enjoy over local stores..It would
. telephone was below one-quarter plants, bulbs, shrubs apd trees
ex~mpt small direct malt.flrjn&amp; •
as recently as, 1983 but grew but specializes In rose bushes.
(those with annual sales of less· •.
Best known, however, Is Harry
than $12.5 million), but would ·, •
phenomenally In the mld·1980s
and has exceeded one-half In and- David, whose specialty Is
belatedly close a tax.loophote"tor
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customers· '!llarger companies,

Soaring catalog

sal~

.

raise tax iss.u es ·. .·.
s~ce 198~,

:~

,obert W.at~rs

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Letters ·to the editor
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"Bugs being wo~ked out of project
•

with every varmlt In the State.
Dear Editor:
Given time and political tinker· Personally, I think It's a waste of
lng, all Improbable situations . money securing the mint. Who
would want to steal It? I expect
become possible.
·
The bugs are now being worked. the problem will come In trying
out of a hush-hush project that to give It away.
If this mint Is as Impregnable
will put a rainbow 'round your
shoulders. Yes, boys and girls, as our auto bodies, a crazed
It's pastel money that will change butterfly could penetrate II.
your purse Into a chamber of These things are always my Idea
and I get what .I want Right?
horrors.
Thelastcar1boughtlsaprime
I have felt comfortable looking
example
of this . It came loaded
upon the countenimces of our .
all
standard
equipment at no
presidents and, I inust confess,
extra
charge,
ha-ha.
And It was
have grown accustomed to their
faces. Now, I fear, these august precisely what ·1 wanted. But
gentlemen will be ashamed to take Into account that I was
appear In public.
· under the Influence of sauerkraut
when asked. Snlftlng cabbage
Can you Imagine peering fur·
tlvely Into your billfold and ' can lead to complications.
Themotorofthlscarlmention
seeing George Washington's face
had·
been replaced with bear
looking like a lobster In heat?
which they say :1 had
p()wer,
· Honest Abe, who could not tell a
lie, his lace a sickly green, as If asked for or, If 1 hadn't, would
have gotten anyhow, since li was
he had eaten a mess of bad fish. I
can't stand It! Tlllnk of Alex standard equipment. To compllHamllton, first major-domo of cate matters still 'fl.irther, this
the treasury, crouching there was a live bear. For thls·prlnclple
to work we needed other standwith a blue-and-green profile.
ard Items In the form of a
Oh, Alex, why didn't you opt for
the beads as legal tender? Were catapult, a strong elastic unblllcal and a large can of lard with
you only stringing us along?
which to grease the bear. We're
From my posalbly reliable
speaklngofcutting-edpteehriolsource (an ex-U.S. Congressogy here - stile of the art.
man) I have learned that a
Now picture thls - a catapult
mlghtS' windowless tortress,
attached to the hood, the bear
heavily guarded, baa been as·aembled near Austin, Texas. 1 sitting In the catapult with the
umbilical attached to the bear
p1ay be mlltaken about AUitln,
and
the .eat, Moving parta must
tNt It'• down there where they
always
be greued, and believe
. keep all the Jack-rabbits and
me
that
bear wlll be moving.
.... brulll.
Aa tbe . bear Ia ftull( forward
·' I _ . ODiy of what I )!now.
For tWeaty months .I crawled and the elJ~tic IIJbtena, the car
moves forward. Then the bear
over the hills and dales of Texas,
snap!l back and 1s fired aJaln. We
becoming first-name friendly
face one maJor problem. The
)\

bear tends to get grouchy, and
wouldn't you If your skin were
wearing thin? It Is advisable to
recognize this problem early, for
reasons too apparent to dwell on.
An obvious recall of the bear Is In
· order. Either give him tougher
·skin or a better disposition.
The directions that came with
the car were rather vague Japanes~ Is like a foreign language: · Translated, It said
"When passengers of the foot
heave In sight, tootle the horn.
· Trumpet him melodiously at
first, but lf·he still obstacles your
passage when tootle him with
vigor."
·
I suppose we. will survive this
leap forward. We recovered from .
the . great gold theft by the
Government In the thirties. Since
then we have run the gamut of
currency revisions untn today 11
IS totally controlled. Gold was a '
' deterrent to promiscuous prlntIngot money, so It had togo. Gold
had value, currency does not.
The full faith and credit of the ·
U.S. lies lnltsabllltytotaxus. we
are the only thing worth owning.
All these political Irritants
have been put aside since my
lifetime membership In the
"Never Vote for President Again
. Forever" club.
.
I mllbt vote tor MarJaret
. 1batcber' Or "AftUa tlie ]JI!II, ,; aa
oae ·co!UJ~mlat dellcate)y put lt,lf
abe woullt agree to cudclli! ·to
colonlel a1a1n. But only If 1he
~ darta and IIIIIOIIer avalla·
tile Ia the ~be. · '
·I
·
Floyd Clark ,
,
' 650t NJ: 9111
Portland, Oregon 97211

L.

'

'

To keep or spend divident?
'
· The chairman of the, House taxes bas really been about all
Budget Committee Is exposing along. Contrary to Its formal
the hypocriSy of Ills colleagues'
portrayal, · the debate has not ·
plo.u s concern,, for the federal
been about finding a way to
deficit. Let's listen:
.
reduce the deficit - for the
:·The)lberals want to use (the simple reason that man'y people ·
so-called peace dividend) to fund
pushing for higher taxes have
new illltlatlves, and conserva- little Intention of deploying the
tives see It as an excuse to cut revenue to offset the debt. The
taxes further," says Leon Pa- · debate has actually. cortcerned
netta, D-&lt;:;Bllf. "Members see It the s~ of government.' Should It
as a pot of gold, butthat' sjustnot grow or not?
the case under any scenario."
In· theory, a tax Increase could
No, It Is not the case. But what be used to trim --tht: deficit. So
If It were? What If a peace , could a peace dividend. But thai
dividend of tens of billions of simply Isn't likely In the present
dollars were available tomorrow Congress, controlled as It Is by a
through radical cuts to the party committed to expanding
military? ~anetta , has admitted domestic programs and thus
that Congress would probably ·enlarging Its. base of Indebted ,
spend the money, not use It to constituencies. ,
·• .
'
reduce the deficit. And he Is
Public opinion certainly Isn't
undoubtedly right. Lawmakers behind the urge to spend. For
by the dozen have discovered a
most middle-Income Americans,
suddenly pressing need to boost tax41s of· all kinds coniUIIIe more
~pending on education, roads and
than a third of their Income
bridges, mass. transit, day care
already. A number of states
foreign aid, housing, and health raised taxes last year and many
care tor the uninsured.
others, particularly In the NorAll of whiCh ra!ses the provocathea&amp; t, 11re under pressure to do .
tive question: If members of so again In 1990. In the past.few
Congress have no Intention of weeks alone, a payroU tax hike
devoting a· peace dividend tO hit every working American.
shrink the deftclt• why should we
Yet people tell poUsten over
~lleve them when they promlae
and over that they don't..want
to use a tax hike to reduce thelt taxes raised. In a recent
government borrowing? The Wall Street Journal, DIBC ilurauwer, ofcourse,lawe•houldn't vey, for example, 88 percent of
believe them. If they ralle taxea
voters favored keeping taxes
they'll merely accelerate federai
about whel'!! they are br even
spendiDJ and the .deficit will cuttlnJ them, whlle only 12
remain at Ita present level.
, percent tbought maybe taxes
If nothing elle, the hunt for a sbould 10 up.
peace ·dividend has revealed
The public also knows what it
. what the old l;lebate over raising
wants . done _with any peace

..

Vincent

CarroU

dlvld'e nd, ~nd ' It Isn't what
Democratic pooh' bahs want ·to ,
hear. Fully 80 percent of voters
prefer any Windfall be used to
~duce the .def(ctt or trim taxes. •
If ~ ml!j(l~lty In Congress !}as ttl '••
way, of fOUrse, voters would
Instead b'f,! ~addlecJ botll with . '·
hlgher'\axes IIJ!d large deficits: · ·
. Only Geo~~e Busll,and hi$ "no ·. "
new taxes" pledge- c·an loU thls · •
perverse outcome. If tll!! presl· •
dent ~ants to ... m~ntaln bis
curl'flnt poputarlty,l\1)'11 stan(!~
his pledge through the rest of hta'
term. Not only !~ . It w!lat people :
want; It IS al&amp;Q' the right t1$J·to
do.
, .1 ,
,•·
r

..
..
,......,..--:----£-:.,........-BEnry's Wo~ld
f•

~

,

!

&amp;.b
~·

'·

..

" ... 11ft/ .... ~ AI'MWAL

.I

'!" - ·

The Daily Se•tir•M-P-u• 3

Pomeror Midclaport, Ohio

news briefs...~-, Ohio Sup~me Court flies. in Gallia case
I

_ continued from pa1e 1
Tile Ohio School Board&amp; Alloelalloll aprlni co-nee was ·
amtouaced for ltlateh 13 at AtheDll ud to allllw members to
attend the re~~U~ar March meeting of the board will be held at 9
p.m. tllat ·night.
•
· ·
The board · approved a $10,000 life Insurance fQI' eliJible .
employees and approved a transfer of funds to cover the cost•
Johanna Shuler waa hlre4 as a substitute teacher aide and
during the meeting the 'ABE budget was revtied.
·
During the meeting the board dlacullled the need to appoint a
business advisory council. Tbe treasurer's report was approved
~ were bills fPr, payment.
Present at ihe meeting were Supt. Reibel, H11rold Roush,
president; Otis Smith, vloe president; RObert Burdette and Bill
Qulcl&lt;eL
·. .
· , ..
··

Pomaiov Miltlaputo Ohio •
Thufsdev, ~ 11~ 1980. &lt;

1
money
Alaskian timber .concerns
want
'
1
Jack Anderson and Dale ·Vein Atta. !.
·or else
'

Uncle Walter ·says
R~n~y's no racist

critic." . . ' ··

~-.Local

Page ~-The D~ Sa 1tlnel •

·•

.

n....ct.v. F*'-Y 11, 1880 .

{

Th.e ·Daily Sentinel
•

.,

.

'

..•

Smitte presen~ board proposal
1

ooJ.ilMBIJS. Olllo (UPI\ -

ness as Southeastern Electrical '
Th' piito Supreme Court ruled Construct ton.
Wednesday the director of the
The Van Hooses were charged
Ohio Department .of Industrial with underpaying six employ~
Relation~ can enforce prevailing
while working on . t)le Bidwell-,
wageclalmsonbehalfofworkers Porter Elementary Sc,hool prowho do not pursue their own Ject for the Gallla County .B oard
·
of Education.
claims.
Justice Herbert Brown. writThree of the worker&amp; took no
(Dg for the majority, said em- action, and three assigned their
•ployees working on publiC pro- claims to the department:
,,
The trial court held the depar.t·
)eels and not receiVIng the
prevall!llgwagecanelthersueon ment had no authority to act "on
· thefr own behalf or assign their behalf of the workers who did not
claims for the dePIIrtment to assign their claims, and an
pursile.
,.
·
~
appellate court agreed.
If workers do neither, the
In reversing the lower courts ,
director may. pursue their claim Brown admitted the Jaw.Jnvolved.
.was 'amblguous but said It Is the
for them, said Brown.
The case Involved an tnvestiga- court's duty · to carry out the
tion by Industrial Relations Dl· Intent of thel.eg!Siature.
·
'"Clearly," he said, "the legis·
rect(lr James Harris of Paul and .
Teresta Van Hoose; doing l;lusl- lattve intent Is to enforce claims
•

BOb Smttte of the Harrisonville community was among the
many parents to 11'1eet with tl)e Meigs Local School Dlstrlcl' ·
Board of Education Tuesday to dlscuas the proposed bond Issue.
At thllt meetln¥ the ~d decided notl!l put the bond Issue for
'"schj)ol Co'\IOllda~on alld co~II'Udlon · or two ell!lllentar~
schools on the May Prlmtl')l ballot In VIew of· the ~~e~atlve
re&amp;ponte to the survey whleb ·went out to all fel(llered voters of
the district.
· ·, . · . · • .
· , .,.
Smltte pfQposed .to the ·b!;lard. l'l!llovatloll aiulnpansl!ln of
exiSting schools, and to supsiOrt hla ~ tbld of the 1.3 ·
mllllon projecl which hat! been IJOnei&gt;neornmunttyelementary
· schools In the. VInton CountY School ~)'Item.. To 'upport hiS
prqpoeal, • Sml~te (!!splayed posters of "before and after''
plct'lirel of the work which was done In ·those schools!
an unidentified ~ontrol tower
By Vnlted Pret~~lnternatlonal
Als&lt;raUhat meeting Jason Nottingham Was accepted as a
tuition ~tudnt !IJid the boa.rd approved a service ~tract to · I · Wlnter'.s ·worst whipped the supervisor.
nation's midsection ThurSday,
At Midway· airport, visibility
. 'tutor a student.
·
·
~ .
up
air
traffic,
clogging
ty\ilg
was
cut to virtually zero most of
Tbe boljl'd'took ·no action on accepting an· Alexander stUdent
roads
and
knocking
out
power,
the
night,
forcing the cancellaInto, the severe behavior handicapped class at Rutlaqd.
while
a
blast
of
frigid
air
chilled
of
all
Incoming
flights. Very
tion
1
• ''
', •
'
•
the Pacific Coast . and · snow little activity was expected there
~MS
covered much of NeW England.
untU morning, Howard added.
was
buried
under
7
Chicago
High winds and fre'ezlng ralnln
't
.
· ·Meigs Emergency Medical Services responded on WednesInches of snow, foUowecl by a
Central Illinois caused widely
day to three·calls for assistance.
,
·
me.ssy mlxtu~ of rain and sleet, scattered power outages.
At 8:49 p.m., Rutland was called to Salem Center for Julia
and suburb'an Glenview received
Sam Poe, a spokesman for
Johnson who was taken to Holzei' Medical Center. Rutland was
12 Inches of snow, the National
Central llltnots Public Service
called at 8:.57 p.m. to Route 124 tof'BIII Willford who was (8(cen to
· Weather Service said. ·
'
Co., said outages were reported
Veterans Memorial Hospital. . •
, ·
,
.·
The WIJ\dy City had all its salt
In several cities, Including PawRacine was called to Elm St. for Vicki Boso ~I 10: 43 p.m. J3oso
trucks, snow plows and even
nee, Virden, Pleasant Plains,
·was taken to VeterB?s V~orlal Hospital.
, .
. ,.
garbage trucks - a total of 500
Petersburg, Pal!ton, Newman
pieces of equipment - running
and Tuscola. ·
'
along main traffic arteries
Freezing rain tormented the
Contlnued
rrom page
1_
~J
.•••,......,...._
. - · """' _
_;__
_ ; ._ _ through the night, said Streets northern half of Ohio, snapping
and SanlU!tlon spokeswoman
power Jines, knocking out power
Svare.
Kirsten
In several areas and forcing tile
that Is shortened to make room chlel)ustlce.
are
In
·
Phase
Three,"
"We
postponement of basketball
for a new Inmate does very little,
Moyer said Ohio courts are
Svare
said
early
Thursday.
games at Kenyon College and
If anything, to deter crime. In busier and more productive than
"This
,
Is
when
we
call
on
other
·
Ohlo.Wesleyan.
,
·
soq~e counties, convicted crlml· · at anytime In history, handling
agencies
to
assiSt
us
."
In
'
Matton
County,
the
ice
nals . literally laugh at the law more than 3 mllllon cases Downtown· Chicago hotels of·
broke limbs and· knocked trees
because they know they will not '' more than are filed In all federal
fered
up
lo$
0
percent
discounts
down along . Ohio Rou 1e ~3
be· incarcerated.
• · co.irts In one year.
·
for
conventlon-goers
who
could
between Marlon and Prospect. ·
"Ladles and gentlemen, there
'He said mos't states have
not
gel
flights
out
of
,p'Hare
Frigid air brought near-record
should be no safe harbors for · fo.rinal reciprocal arrangements
International
and
Midway
·lows
to much oflhe PacifiC COast,
dr.~ abuser!! 11nd traffickers In
·between their Supreme Court
.
'
I
a
rports.
,
.
..
•
•
,
and high winds knockllll bver big
1
OlfTo, We ·In· the Judiciary stand . . and Legislature for the court to
The
wea~er
sllut
do\rn
operarigs In the Tejon Pass near Los
ready toasslstyoulr)approprlate Initiate or respond to requests for
tions
at
both
airports
late
Angeles, where the Highway
ways as · you move drug abuse new judgeships.
.WI'dnesday
..
Patrol
escorted trdflc along the
· Ohio does not have such a
legislation , to adop!lon In both
O'Ha're was closed between
slippery
hlghWa¥ '
,
houses." ·
.
·
' system, but Moyer said he hopes
7:30
·
and
'
9:30
p.m.
after
a
For Its part, Moyer said the to offer a proposal In that area.
judiciary wUJ be providing spe·
Moyer also said the Supreme- Zurlch·bolll,)d American Airlines
clalized sub$tance abuse train· Court may need to ask for more · jet slid off the only open runway
while taxiing·, ' said 'Lisa Howard,
lng for juvenile courtjudge~. a¢ ', money to Implement modern
spokeswoman for the city's De·
pei'80DDI!I; ~ovldll\g' more d~ ·Court technology for the delivery
partment of Aviation.
talliill s~IICll) te!IOI'tllla :Of of 'Judklat services. He said Ohio
No Injuries were reported
drllj{ cases; ~nd;, em!llo~ng c~ · \1'111 host tlie n1ltlon's first stateamong
t'ie 144 passengers'
mapagement technlq\1115, \ncluil• . wide court technology confer·
abOard
thf(ijet,
which slid Into a
. ·
Ing lllllilstrates · to conduct I!~· · . ~ace ill Nove111ber ..
mud
and
snow
b\lnk. The' pas, ratgnmentll, pretrial conferen'Moyer said Oblo ts' among tbe
sengers
Yf.!.re
evacuated
and
.ces and bond hearings to relieve nation's leaders In · resolving
bl!sed
to
a
terminal.
ay
11
p.m:.
· judges.
. ·'
··
: disputes In ways alter\natlve to
the airport had opened up two
"I will be !lssem!lllng a team of · trials, and ht Septem,ber will hold
runwaysjuslfordepartures, said
retired and ·st,ttlpg judges ·who the first statewide bar-bench
'
.,
wllllle assi111Jed'to'asslst 1!1 areas '•!. conference for lawyers and
where the . pressure on· court Jud~es . to . discuss . 'tssues of
dockets Is the greatest," said the · common Interest. ·
. Soulll C~l!tral Ohio
Rain, possiblY heavy at times ,
and a chance ot thunderstorms
Thursday night, with a low
between 45 and.:&gt;&lt;J. ,Chance of rain
Is near 1oq percent. Rain, possibly heavy, ~ and a chance of
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (UP!) . ages of 18 and 24, Dr. Fletcher
thunderstorms.•Friday morning,
Ohio H~alth Director Ronald · said recent Increases In sexually
becoming wtll'dy and partly
Fletcher, noting a 70 percent .. transmitted dlseasE!S are
clou&lt;IY
during lhe aiternooh, with
,
Increase In syphUUs cases and '" unacceptable.;•
.
highs,
near
to.
Chance
of
ralnls
80
nearly a 35 percent rise In
"With syphlllls up 70 percent
percent.
'
chlamydia ·and gonorrhea In the and gonorrhea and chlamydia up
Extended
Forecast
past year, called Wednesday for .· al!nost35percentduringthepasf
Salurday through Monday
a . riew campaign to halt the ' year, we have to utilize every
Fair weat)ler each. day, with
spre,ad of sexually transmitted avallalile resourceor-facepotenIn the 30s Satllrday, ra1!ghighs
dlsease.
·
!Ially disastrous consequences,"
lng
from
the mid 30s to the mid
Ca!Ung for a united effort to said Fletcher .
40s
Sunday
, and In the 40s·
reduce rate:; or Infection, partlcu- . ''Th~ Increases are unaccepMonday.
Overnight
to.,'. will
larly among people between .the table," he said. "If .HIV (AIDS)
range
from'
the
teens
to
ille mid
finds Its way Into these same
20s
Saturday
mornlng,'·ln
the 20s
routes of Infection, .we might be
early
Sunday,
and
ranging
from
In danger of losing an entire
the
mid
20s
to
the
mid
:JJs
Monday
generation."
'. '
mOrning. ·
Dally stock prices
Fletcher called for a partner(As of 10:30 a.J11.)
ship of families, organlzatloils
Bryn and .Mark SmHh
and Individuals using all availaThe Daily Sentinel
ble means to educate sexually ,
of BJunt; EIIII &amp; Loewl
.active young people about how to
'
(USI'S ltt-IHitl) •
A~ Electric''P ower .. :.......... 30')1 ' prevent the spread of these
A Dlvlalon ol M. .lmedla.lp&lt;.
AT&amp;T .......... ::..................... 39¥. diseases. ·,
•~ !· ~ ol
Published every afternoon , Monday
Ashland OII ....... ; ........ .. o.....36~
"Weneedthehelpandcoopera- .
through Frld,y, 11) Court Sl., PoBoll'Evans ................... : ...... 12')1 ' tlon of, · families, schoqls, · ' . meroy, Ohto, ~y the Ohio Valley Publishing CompanytMIIltlmedla, Inc..
Charming ShopJM!S .... ,..... ..... 9~ . ch~hes and: community-based
rPomeroy, Ohio t571l9, Ph . 992-2156. s..
Clly .Hol~lng C,o ... ... .... ., ...... 14~
groups to Inform and educate'
rond class postage pitd at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
Federal Mogul ......... :.... .. .... 117~ young people about the risks ot
GoOdyear T&amp;R ...... .. :.......... 34Y.i sexual·actlvlty," he said.
Member: Untted Prets International,
Heck's ...... ..... ............ , ......... 2Y,i
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Key 'Centurion ............. :...... 13~ , . oSpl
DeWS
Ailverllltng Representative. Branham
Lands' End ............. ~ .......... 17%
veter~alllemoi1al
Newspioper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
.New York, New York 10017.
Llmlted,ln c.,. .............. ,........ 35 . ., ' wednes,day admissions
Multlmed 1a ,nc...................80% ' James ' Bentz, Syracuse; Mar·
l'OS'!MASTER: Sond addro&amp;s changES
Rax Restaurants .................. .'.2
eal'l!t PriddY, Pomeroy; ,Vera
to The Dally Sentinel, ·m Court St ..
Pomeroy, &lt;Jilo 45719.
RobblDI I: Myers ....... ...... , .. 15~ Beegle, · Racine; william Wll·
Shoney'sinc .. ...... ... ; ............ 11
Uord, l,Jiddleport.
,
su.sa&amp;IPI'ION KATII'.II
sw Bank ... ....................... : 18~
Wea.day dlschllrJes- Cha..... B:r Carrier or MM• Ro•te
One Wtek., ................................. ll.IO
Wendy'sintl ..............;....... ,.. 4% rles Cundiff.
()De lldata ....................... l ........ J6.10
\\,'orthlngton Ind ..................20% I 1__
an. Year ............................... 172.80

Winter stonn
punishes Illinois

l

I

;

.

tor ptevalllng wage violations,
even where the affected worker
falls to act." ·
Concun'lng were Chief Justice
Thoptas Moyer and Justices

Allee Resnlclt. Craig Wrl1ht,
Andy Douglas and A. W)Wam
.·
Sweeney.
· Justice Robert · Holmes con·
curred In judgment only .

NADONI.l WEAlHEft ,ORECAIT TO 1 All liT l-1-

WEATHER MAP - A major winter slortn continues lo develop
and 'trek acrOM the Midwest, Great Lakes, and Ohio Valley
•Jireadlnl moderate lo heavy snows across the 'region aloog with
areu of lreezlng drizzle. Heavy thunderstorms 'a re posalble from
the Mld-Mlulsslppl Valley lo the T~nnesse · Valley through Friday
moraln1. mgh pressure and cool wealher will dominate the
weather tn the Southwe$1 . while very warm conditions can be
expected Iii the Siiitheast. Aiiollier etorm system Is inovtng Into
the Paclftc Northwest brtncilll rain and snowshowers to
WUblnp,.., Oregon, Idaho, lmd Montana.
);
.

•

has th;ree Wednesday calls

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•
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Continued from page 1

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Marrlap llcenli!S have been
illued In Melp Probate Court to
Frldlly momillg.
Jon Dale Jacoba, 49, and Carolyn
:Hllhs Friday will range trom Sue Cllllums, 46, . both of Chenear60 In the eastern part of tlu! shlrei_ D4frell Dllwaln Boyce, 26,
ltate to around ~ In the nortb.w· and Norma Jean Lupardla, 22.
est. Saturday, SuJI(Iay and MQD· both of RaveniWIIOd, W.Va.
day ~II be fair, with a gradual ' £;,.±~ ....... ·
warmbli trend. Hlpa will be In ~ WYOI'Cle
the 30a Saturday, the mld-301 to
mld-40a SUnday and In the 401
A divorce action bas been fl1N
Mo..ay. LoWI wUlbeiD the teena ill MeiJt COmmOn Pleaa COurtlly
to· ndll-:lla Satutday, In the 20a Junafl E. Malloy, Pom61:py, • .,
Sunday alld the mld-20a t!l aplnat Michael H. Malloy, Pft· ,•
mld-1101 Monday. '
aacolll,

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D!IIIY ...... ,. ..................... ,.... , 21 Cettto
lubacrtboro not deolrlnl Ia.., tbeoor·
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The Dally Sontlnol on • a11ctr12.liUIL Cl'edlt will betilveaoll'l'hr-b

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�••
Ohio

NBA action

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI) -

Reule Miller and Mark PriCe
staged a long-range shootout
Wednesday night In what turned
out to be about as exciting as the
finish.
" .
Miller of the Indiana Pacers
leads the NBA In threi!-polnters,
and Cleveland's Price .leads In
'·

Miller, who led all scorers with
43. points, was three of four from
long range, whi!P. PriCe, who tied
his career high of 37 points, was
five of sev'en. But Indiana
emerged the victor, '133-131 In
overtime, for Its fourth straight
win. Miller scored the Pacers' ·
last nine. points.
"The only thing you can do Is
match him at the other end "
in\llana coach Dick Versace said
of ·Price. "Reggie was magnlfl· '
cent in matching him basket for
basket."
There were 17 three-point field .·
gbals In the game, with the Cavs
tying a team recoi:d with 10. .
The 6-7 Miller, who played 45
minutes, took all but three of the
· Pacers' shots In overdme. In the .

fourtll quarter and overtime, he indiana had a 116-1131ead with 15
accounted for 16 points, ,
seconds'to go.
'The guy's a scoring maCleveland called a lime·out to
chine," Said Cleveland guard ~~ up a three-point play, but
Steve Kerr.
John Williams mtssed a reverse
The Cavaliers made their first layup. After lndtana lost the ball
seven shots In overtime, with· on a turnover; Price nailed · a
their only miss of the session three pointer with 4.1 seconds len
coming when Price a three-point to send the game Into overtime.
.attempt In the closing second.
But In·the overtime, Cleveland
"We only missed one shot and · held a 127-121 lead when Miller
• •
still lost," Kerr'Sald. 'That tells went to work,
Price miSsed a running three'
vou our defense wasn't ·very
~ .,.
point attempt with two seconds
. ., .
. Miller got help .from Detlef. left.
''It was a game we should have
Schremp(, who scored 12 of his 19
had," Cleveland coaclt Lenny
points In the fourth period.
"I'm just glad we won," Miller
said. ''This Is not a personal dueL
U I score 14 points and we win,
I'm happy."
Indiana lead 101-91 with 8: 21
. left In regulation. Kerr hit two
three-pointers, and price and
Craig Ehlo hit their long shots as
Cleveland outscored Indiana 19-4
In just 3: 37 and had al10-1051ead.
. But the Cleveland offense
broke down and scored only three
points . In the next f: 40 and

.

WllkeDil said. "We worked hard .
.enough to get lt. It's lulfortunate
we couldn't stop them' at the
end.''

The C~valters could have tied
'the Atlanta Hawks for the eighth
and tina! playoff spot In the
Eastern Conference. Instead,
they now trail Atlanta by one
·g ame and Indiana; which occupies the seventh spot, by 4~ .
games ..
'They dominated the game for
3~ quarters, but we had It pulled
out," Kerr said. "It would have
been an Inspiring win, b\1 t then
we let them of( the hook."

Fehrcal~ _ new

pitch
an attack on salaries

,•

.;·•

Selig of Milwaukee, Jerry Reins·
NEW YOJUf •(UPil - UniOn
•
·
dorf of the White Sox and .carl
chief
Don
Fehr-chllled
hope
for
a.
j
CRillTJ'Y HAS BIG NIGHT- VIrginia's John Crblty (22} goes
quick · ·s ettlement In baseball's
Pohlad of Minnesota.
•
•
one way, and Nor&amp;h Carolna's Kenny H·arris (4) goes ~other,
by
Fe hr met with Tim Belcher,
labor
dispute
Wednesday
•• wblle the ball lakes a different direction during first-half action In
Jeff
Ballard, Phil Bradley, Scott
saying
the
owners'
lates't
pitch
•
•• Wedneaday night's ACC t~arne In Charlottesville; Va. Crotty sunk
amounts to a bid to roll back Sanderson, Ricky Horton and
27 points to lead the IJost Cavaliers to an 81·80 victory. (UPI)
salaries.
Paul Molitor.
Both sides spent.Wednesday In ·
Talks began Nov. 28 and have
Internal meetings, with batgaln·
stalled on the Issue of revenue
sharing, • which owners have
lng scheduled to resume Thursday, the day when spring_train·
proposed as a means to "cost
lng was supposed to open.
certainty." Owners are locking
training camps until they reach
Fehr said ihe owners' pitch
Includes a ~our-year deal with a
at least the outline of .an
two-year re-open clause, a pro·
agreement.
gresslve. minimum salary, a cap
Clubs say they would need at
By TOM WITHERS
Marymount outran Pepperdlne on arbltr_atlon . awards, no pay· least three days to open sprhlg
UPI Sports Writer
131-116.
.
training once the l~kout ends.
At Durhamm, N.c.,· Freshman for-performance clau_se, a study
Whe.t her you like It, or think
of revenue sharing and no change One general manager said Wed; that It's . too easy, there. Is no
Billy McCaffrfi!Y ·making his first ' In free agency or the benefit plan.
nesday he wciuld want from 7-10 ·
· denying that ·no rule change has
'The difficulty Is that there's days before . his club began
collegiate start, scored 21 points
had more of an Impact on college
to lead the Blue !Jevlls. Duke • not much In It to Interest _playing exhibitions.
·
• basketball than the threebeat East Carolina for the 18th players," F~hr said. "It clearlY'
· Fehr said the own,ers have ·
pointer.
·
straight time and t.mproved to . would roll back salaries. You're suggested a series of progressive
Now four years old, the three- 21-4 overall. McCaffrey started . back tQ the ·same argbment: do
mlnum salaries 'for players with
pointer has become both friend
In place of ~tarter Phil Renderyou want to have ·salary caps?
under six years In the big league.
and foe to teams across the son, who suffered a sprained
They S&lt;IY yes, we.say no."
. A rookie would receive no less
country. Case and point, Wednes·
ankle Monday·
.
. . Commtssloqer Fay Vincent than $75,000, a . second-year
day night when · teams from
Reserve Brian Davis had 16
has attended the last two bar: player $125,000, and a third-year
, Annapolis, Md. to Fort Worth,
points and Christian Laettner
galnlilg sessions and made a man $200;000.
; Tex. were launclilng shots from
series or suggestions, .which on
added 15 for Du~J.e. Reed Lose led
Management has al$o sug, beyond the 19 foot, 9 Inch arc.
thePirates with 14 points.
TUesday led to hope of dialogue: gested a capof75per cent on any ·.
At Charlottesville, Va., the
At Norman, Okla., Tony Mar-. Felir, ·however, said he sees • raise a player could receive In
, VIrginia Cavaliers. attempted a · tin scored allll of his points In the
problems,
arbitration·, Fehr said.,
.
1 school-record 32 treys with John second ·half to spark the Sooners,
•'They are turning back the
Owners entered the talks prop· ,
Crotty making 7 as the Cavaliers. Martin, who played·less than two
cloek on salary arbitratiOn," he osln,g p~y-fo~·performance as a
· edged North Carolina 81-80 tn' an · minutes In the first half, scored
said. "They made the same way of paying players with less
Atlantlc·Coast-Conference game.
sev~n points In a 9-2 run In the
propOsal 'fn 1985 except those than six years oi serYl~; ·:
The Cavaliers Improved to 15-7 . second half which expanded a, 'c aps were hlgher:"
.
By suggesting a study of
' · overall and 4-61n the ACC. Crotty . 48-45 . lead to 57-47 With . Din!! • ,, "i';JY basic reactiOn Is, to the revenue sharing, owners brought
• ·• ; was'nl just shooting the lights minutes to go. Skeeter Henry anti "extent we c_a n move away frOQ! back the memory of a dlsas trous .
out, adding eight assls ts and nine Smokey McCovery added 16
revenue sharing that has to be tactic nine years ago. In 1980,
rebounds. Kenny TUrner added . points each for Oklahoma, which
beneficial," he ' added. "It Is baseball negotiators agreed to
19 points and 9 rebounds, Bryant Improved to 18-3 overall and 6-2., extraordinarily difficult to go to play the season and defer an
Stith added 14 and Anthony In t)le Big Eight. Kansas State,
players . and say because they Issue. Their decision allowed the
, Oliver had 11 for the Cavaliers.
14·11 a~d 4-5, was led by Steve
(owners)'have more re\tenue, we 1980 campaign to proceed with·
·
North Carolina, which dropped Henson s 21 points.
.
. should have restrictions."
out blemish, but triggered a
' to 17-9 and 6-4, received 22 points
At Champaign, Ill., Kendall
Owners have slgQed a Pl!lr of 50-day walkout the foUowing
, !rom Rick Fox and 6 !rom Kevin Gill scored 25 points t~ help the
network television deals that will year.
, Madden. Scott Williams chipped Fighting ntlnl handle the Wild· ' net them $1.1 billion over the next
Th~ disagreed over compen- ,
In with 14 and Huber,i Davis. had cats. Reserve Andy Kaufman
four years.
-~
sation, s!&gt;fclflcally, how clubs ·
' •.. 13.
had 17 points and Ervin Small
· ManagementnegotlatorCh k would be compensated for losing
•; '
At Annapolis, Md. , Ken Aikin· · added16 for Illinois, which lmO'Connor conferred by teleph~~e tree agents. On May 23, with a
: •: son set a school record with eight proved to 18-5 overall and 8-5 In
with members of the . Player strike looming, union hhd' Mar·
, .~· three-pointers and finished with
the Big 10. Walker Lamb lotte
Relations Committee. It Includes . vtn Miller and owners' represen,~:'a 38potntstoguldeRichmond to a
paced Northwestern with 20
owners Fred Wilpon of the Mets, tative Ray Grebey agreed to set
;•- - 79-70 victory over Navt in a
. Fred Kuhlmann of St. Louts, up a committee to study
pomts.
·- :colonial Athletic Association
John McMullen of Houston, Bud compensation.
: game.
· Atkinson sank 12 of 15 shots ·
·: from the field for Richmond, 16-8
: · overall and 8-3 In the conference.
: · Scott Stapleton added 18 points,
:- 10 rebounds and seven assists.
At Fott Worth, Texas, Sopho·
; more guard Michael Strickland
· : scored .21 pollits, all on three' : polntefs to equal a Southwest
·' :&lt; conference record and Texas
;:= 'Christian made nine free throws
."'. In the final two minutes In an
:;: : s1-79 upset of No.8 Arkansas.
:--;· :.· The Horned Frogs held off a
.-;.. . -late rally to hand the Razor_; backs, who had won 17 straight,
their second straight loss. The
Razorbacks, 20-4 overall,
'
.
dropped an 82· 77 decision to
Baylor last Saturday. Arkansas
which a week ago looked !Ike a
6 aP.ecl tranamiuion
lock to win the SWC now hold only
a one-game lead over Texa_s and
2.6 liter. 4 cylinder
•
.
Houston.
accent stripes
Strickland made four threepointers In the first half f-s TCU
·deluxe wheel covers
built a 39-33 advantjlge at
power steering
• halftime.
;. . At East Rutherford, N.J .. BOo
~: : Harvey nailed a 'three' at the
•: : buuer toforceovertlmeand then
Your Net
:;~ · scored 13 of hill career-high 40
- - points In the exira session to lead
St . John's to a 90-81 victory over
. Seton Hall.
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty,
No.6 Duke blasted East Carolina
. 84-51, No. 10 Oklahoma pas ted
Kansas Statee 85-69, No. 17
Illinois downed Northwestern
Ta &amp; Title btr1
; 88-75 and No. 20 Loyola· ·
0

and Save! ·

1990 OLDSMOBILE
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Sports briefs
Bullet ball
•
Utah
forward Eric
•
Lecluier Ill remaining hom!! from
the Jazz road trip to Phoenix and
SaD Alltoalo to recover tr.orn a
sprained .ankle.

reserve

'l

GENE

CIIY.•US.·IIO

1616 ...... be., I •11•lls
. (61.,....,.,, .
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'.

'

.

MILLER DRIVES - Jndlalia's Regie Miller, Wtth ball, goes
around Cleveland's ·Craig Elllo for two points during Wednesday
night's NBA J!'&amp;me at Rlehfleld, Ohio. MIUer BCored t3 polnlaln the
Pacen' 131-131 overllme victory over the Cavaliers. ( UPI)

..

J

•

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By United Preu Jaternatlonal
•
Grande Is 40.6 percent (351·863)
If Ohio University's Dave
and Is 70.1 per~ent from the free · Jamerson never sees Bowling
throw line, canning 3R of 533 Green's ••scramble' ' defense
attempts to date.
again, It would b!? too soon.
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn · Jamerson, the Mid-American
Is · expected to continue with
Conference's leading scorer with
Harrison and Erslan as guards,
an average of 31.3 poln ts per
with Scliubert and Brown at the
game, scored a season low 13
forward positions. Against Ce- · Wednf$day night agalns t the
darville. Schubert hit 28 points,
Falcons, hitting. just live of 20
Brown 24 and Harrison 21.
·
field goal attempts.
At thl! post will either be
With their main man missing,
freshman Troy Donaldson · or
the Bobcats dropped a · 75-60
senior John Lambcke. Lambcke,
decision In Athens.
whO satoutsevenofRioGrande's
"We were going to scramble,"
28 games due,to an ·ankle Injury,
said BG coach Jim Larranaga,
scored 10 points over the )\ellow
" which Is our press·ure defense,
Jackets.
. &lt;
man-to:man, with a lot of trap·
Neal Is exilected to go with
ping. We tried to take them out of
Todd .Kehres,-a 5-9 senior, at one
their normal rhythm.
forward. Kehres was also ranked
"We felt we could force the
lOth In fr~ throw percentage by
tempo a little and create some
the' NAJA this weeil at 90.1
turnovers ," added Larranaga.
(73-81), with Mille Evans (6-4,
The strategy worked as Ol!
sophomore, 12.6 points, 4.2 recommitted 11 first halt turnovl!fS
bounds) at the other offensive
and shot just 36.1 ~rcent (26 of
slot.
72) from the field .f or the game, ·
Guarding against the Redmen
compared with 54.5 percent (24of
will be Daryl Dowdy (6-0, senior) 44) for BG. ·
·
· and Mike Ernst, another 6-0
"Give Bowling Green credit,"
~nlor averaBing 10 points ~
s.a ld OU's Larry Hunter. " They
game prior to the Wilmington
had an excellent game plan. It
contest. At center will be Mike
was up-tempo. They were real
Minnig. a 6-4 freshman bringing focused and played the better
down 5.2 rebounds a game. ·
game.
Among their wins, the Beavers '
"Dave Jamerson dldn' t have a
scored the'tr larll~St margin In a
typical game," added Hunter,
69'32 rout of Indiana-Kokomo.
"and they (BG ) deserve the
.The team's closest loss was 58-51 credit for that, too."
to Urbana early In the season.
OU trailed 41-29 at halftime,
but opened the second half with a
19-7 run to deadlock It at 48-48.

After a brief M-53 Bobcat lead,
BG ran off 11 unanswered.polnts
to go back In front 64-54 . .
The Falcons then made 13 of 14
tree throws the (Ina! 3: 22 of the
contest, Including eight In a row
by Clinton Venable, to Ice the
VICtOry. . .
Joe Moore scored 21 points,
hitting eight of nine from the field
and allflve of his free throws, and
Billy' Johnson a!lded 18. OU was
led by Chad Gill and Nate Craig,
each with 15 points.
· In other MAC action Wednes;
day night, Ball State stretched Its
league lead to two fu 11 games
over Kent State and Miami,
embarr!lsslng the Golden
Flashes 77-50 at Muncie, Jnd.,
Central Michigan downed Toledo
60-45 and Eastern Michigan beat
Western Michigan 63-53. Miami
was Idle.
Ball State, behind Chandler
Thompson's 21 points, raced out
to a·15-11ead against Toledo and
· never trailed. The Cardinals led
. 30-18 at halft1111e.
The Cardinals. who led by as
many as 30 points the second
lialf, also got 13 points from
Emanuel Cross. Ric Blevins led
Kent with 17..
At Mount Pleasani. Mich.,
Sander Scott Scored 17 points and
Dennis Kann In leading Central
Michigan to victory over Toledo.
Central Michigan broke a 36-36
tie with nine unanswered points
for a 45-36 lead , with . 10: 24
· remaining.' ·
Toledo Bobby Taylor with 14

Fairmont Stat~ (W.Va.), a forward, brings 5.5 rebounds to
team the University of Rio the game and a scoring average
Grande women's basketball ·of 6.6 points.
Barnltz, who has started al128
team met during Its scrimmage
perlnd, will represent the last of Rio Grande's games at the
hurrah for the ~edwomen as the pol; I, brings 13.2 points a game to
season cpmes to an · end· the Redworrien effort,
·
Saturday.
Fairmont, a WVIAC team
•
The Rio ladles· will play the under tile stewardship of Jim
Lady Falcons on the· road at 5:15 Brinkman, Is 14·11 after defeat p.m. From there, theRedwomen tng Waynesburg (Pa.), 86-73,
(18-10) are expected to compete Monday night. The game saw
In 'the District 22 Playoffs, with Impressive double figure scoring
the opponent to be announced from two of Brinkman's starters,
later.
·
Lori Smith, who had 31, and Lisa
Rio Grande last played Tues- Monteleone with 27.
day \lgalnst-dlstr.tct powerhouse
Smith, a 5-9· senior, Is credited
Cen~ral State, losing to the Lady
with 15.3 points and 6.3 boards a
Marauders 75-53. , The gaJTle game for the J:..ady Falcops and Is ·
placed starting Rio Grande point expected to start against Rio
guard Debbie Fredrick, who led Grande at small forward. Monte·
wi(l! 16 points; to the top of the . : leone; a 5-8 junior, leads the team
per-game scoring average with with 15.6 markers a game and 9
13,3, while lending 4. 7 assists and rebounds and will probably start
3.9 rebounds per outing to · the as power forWard.
offense.
Brln~man said his other starShootl!ig guard Jennl Couch Is ters InclUde polilt guard Jodi
now averaging 6.6 points and Wood (5·5, freshman, 4.6 points,
tr~lllng Fredrick In assists with
4.7 assists) and Sebrlna Wilson
3.4 a game.
(5-7, junior, 8.2 points, 4.2 assists) at shooting guard. Taking
: Rio Grande Coach Doug Foote the post Is Sheila Fanst~. a 5-9
will probably start Kerrl Kidwell sophomore averaging 8.4 points
at ·smallforward with an average and 7.3 rebounds . .
or' 7. 7 points and 6 rebounds per
The Redwomen met Fairmont
game. ·The 5-11 freshman from In a scrimmage· last November ·
Hamersville, Ohio, is currently . and tied, whlcl! Brinkman felt
second In high rebounding behind was "a good experience. It was
center Ann Barnitt, who Is close all the way , bull was happy
providing 6.7 boards a game. with the way our younger players
Kathy Snyder, the starting power oertormed." ·

l.endl, Gilbert advance
TORONTO (UP!) ..., Ivan
Lend!, ,requesdng an afternoon
match . so he could attend a
hockey game at night, Wednes·
day downed Jimmy Brown 7-5,
6-1 to advance to the third round
of ·the $1.2 million Sky Dome
.
World Touma~nt.
No. 2 Brad GilBert had an even
easter time, eliminating Aus·
tria's Alex Antonltsch 6-3, 6-3 on
center court.
John McEnroe, the tournament's third seed and world's
fourth ranked player, defeated
Paul Chamberlin 6·3, '6·3 in the
featurred evening match as the
top six seeded players all ad·
vanced to the third round.
No. 4 Aaron Krlcksteln of
· Grosse Point, Mich., beat Tom
Nljssen of Sweden 6-2, 6-2; No. 5
Jay Berger of Weston, Fla.,
defeated Ramesh Krishnan of
India 7-6 (7-3), 6-3; and sixth
seeded Tim Mayotte of Bra:denton, Fla .. needed three sets to
diiJIOse . of Jim Pugh or Rancho

Palos Verdes, Calif., 7-5, 5·7, 6-3.
Among the seeded losers was
No. 7 Andres Gomez of Ecuador,
who dropped a tough 3,6, 6-1, 4-6
declslon to Czechoslovakian Petr
Korda and No. 9 Jim Courier of
Dade City, -Fla., who was upset
by Canada's Grant Connell 6-3,
7-5.
. 'L end I ,has had great success In
Canada. He' s won record six
Canadian · Opens and as the
match aga1nst !'lrown wore on he
started looking more and more at
home.
''The conditions here are so
much different than usual that It ·
took a while to get used to It,"
Lend! said. ·"You have to expect
that when you come ·In to play a
first-round match, so the first set
didn't conern me."
After taking 'the opening set
7-5, Lendl breezed Into the third
round by overpowering his
24-year-old opponent from
Largo, Fla.

_

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!lropped a 66-56 d(!CI&amp;Ion at
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Cardinals Of at least a share of
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points and Joel Guth with 10.
Otterbein grabbed sole possession of the Ohio Athletic Conference lead Wednesday night with
an 80-57 win over Marietta, while
prevto•11.1 ,co-leader MusklniJIIm

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Bowling Green hands Ohio· 75-60 loss

Redwomen, Fairmont
face weekend clash

i; ·

·1s SAhE

Ranked third In the nation this
weeli; In team scoring offense
(101.7 points per game), the
University of Rio Grande men's
basketball team Is. home Satur·
day when it plays Bluffton at 7: 30
p.m.
. NAJA statistics on last week's
performances among member
schoolll saw the Redmen trail
first place David Upscomb
(Tenn. ), which had 111.2 a game,
· and Paul Quinn (Texas) at 105.2.
In additiOn, the team Is 14th In
team scoring margin (85.8 per
11ame) . The NAJA placed start·
lng point gua~il Gary H1!1'riSQn
sixth lnoverall assists at 8.6 per
•_.. . . game. Harriaon has led tbli! team
;3· : In assl4ts all season.
; !'
The Redrten bring a . 13-15
'
overall record Into Lyne Center
:, after TUesday'-s 118-108 loss to
·Cedarville, w)llch droppi!d Rio
Grande's Mld·Ohlo Conference
standing to 4-6. Blufftoills4-18 on
the season and was looking to
• brlrig'a win Into Rio Grande after
playlq Wilmington. Wednesday
·:: night. In their last ·game, . the
'• . Beavers of first-year Coach Guy
' · Neal lost to Findlay, 80-64, on
: '- Saturd!IY.
' • '
,.
The Redmen are now averagIng 101.9 points and ·35.5 rebounds ·
::: . per game, along 1.\:lth an oyerall
, ; · field goal percentage of 48.6
;&gt;.: · (1065-2191)., on three-point field
goals, a speCialty of s.tarters
· Harrison. Brat~ Schubert, Jeff
Brown and ·Mark Erslan , Rio

The Dally Sa•ti•II-Palll 5

By holding Jamerson to 13 points,

to ·play Rio Saturday

:1:

Virginia Cavaliers
outlasts Tar .Heels

.

Stn•ggl~r,tg Bluffton

'· '

_Pacers edge c·~vs 133-131 in oyertirne _

accuracy.

Pomeroy-Midcleport, .Ohio

15.1990

POMEROY, OIUO-

�Paa I

6-The Daily Sentinel

l'luldlly. FebnaY 16. 1990

Pormroy Middleport. Ohio

.

·'Thulldllv, '*'-Y 16, 1880

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·Eastem needs win over Oak Hill to capt\lre SVAC title ·
I'

8¥ G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP lltaJf Writer
With ·SOuthern's 8849 victory
over SYilUIIes Valley Saturday
night Ia the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference's flnal makeup game or the 5!!ason, the
league's eight teams are finally
evea With the board · at 13
frat91'DltY contests each. Now the
cbamptonshlp· race comes down
to one simple e~~ent.
EuiJlrn needs a victory oyer
Oalt: Htll Friday night, regardless
ot .wbat So"uth!!l'n does 'against
sy'111111es Valley at Ald. to captlll'e t~ league title: However. If ·
Doua Hale's Oaks eat their
Wbi!atles as an appetizer to
Popeye's spinach and upset the
Eaalel; all the Tornadoes have to
do II keep the oddsmakers happy
8Jicl ;_knock orr Ute VIkings to
share the title with the Eagles.
The first thing the Eagles must ·
do Is to continue their cross-court
·passing attack that should
s~ad out the Oaks' defense and
Induce them to commit frustration fouls should the Eagles fall to
break away from their defense
long enough to get Inside and
score on layups .
True. the Eagles' three-polrlt
shooting tandem of sen for guards
Kenny Caldwell (22 treys) and
Shaun Savoy . (15) can't exactly·
·hold a candle to Oak Hill forward ·
Shane Maynard, whd leads the

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league In trlfectas with 44 but · lana than the 3-!or-17 per!or· ' season game tor Southwestern
Eastern has shown tlmeand'tlme mance they had last Saturday seniors Brad Bryant, Jesse and
againthatltsdee'p threatscanhe night, as Vikings Paul Hayes, John Ehman , and Joe
' dangerous when necessary.
Shawn Mootz and Chad Renfroe Hammond.
In the low post, Eagle center can shoot from beyond the arc
Wlldcai•Biibcats
Mike Frost stands an Inch ta!Jilr and put Racine In jeopardy. But
"Oh, Lord, how long Is this
than 6-4 postman C!)ad Smith, 'the since junior forward Andy Baer, going t~ last?"
That s the quesdon that has
tal test Oak In the south Jackson who has 18 of the Tornadoes' 56
.Jorest, and Frost has the advan- ' three-pointers, doesn 't have to.. undoubtedly ' entered Kyger
tage of experience (he started , carry the weight or his tea.m's Cree,k head coach Larry Mark· this season and last) . To his long-range shooting (teammates hams mind at least once during
credit ~lth, who 1s playing' . Todd Grindstaff, Chris Murphy the Bobcats' current 11-garne
center-on a regu'iar basts for the and·Chad Taylor among others
dro;JUght. And his answer may
· first time (on occ;u;lon he shifted· can also shoot 'rrom that dis: · very well' be at least one more
from forward tocenterbeh111d6-8 · lance} Southern can play the game, as the Bobc.a ts host
shot-blocker Jedd .Rawlins last' shell . game with its deep-strike Hannan Trace. .
·
year), has learned the position capability.
.
As the Wlldcats have trouble
and made lt' his own.
The season finale will be the maintaining any kind of streakSmith's wingspan Is nearly the last home game for V'lking winning or otherwise, the tradlsame as Frost's, an(j hehas ,the veterans Paul Hayes, Danny tlonwlllrematnlntact,atleastln
muscle to control the boards ·at Justice Shawn Mootz and Kevin this game. Trace has lost Its last
both ends. However,. controlling· Nichola's.
two games and lsnrt likely to lose
. the boards won't mean !;OUCh 'if
HlghlancJin.,Pirates
.
Its third straight, given tbe
the Eagles can approximate,' If
Will this be a battle of toree- · Wildcats' roller-coaster track
not surpass, the 47.4% shoodng · point shooters?
from the floor ·they had In last
In this season finale for both
week's 19-polnt victory over the teams, II could very well turn Into
Oaks.
an exhibition ot strength and
(i\11 games)
This wlll be the last gall)e for touch by three of the league's
TEAM
W L
PF . PA
sen lors Kenny Caldwell, Scott ·. finest deep-strike artists- North
Easterr\
..........
14
5
1400
1346
Fitch, Mike Frost and Shaun · Gallla's Brian. Stout and Chris
North
Gallla
...
13
6
'
1383
1221
Savoy.
Tackett, and Southwestern's
Southern
........
:11
8
(
1339
1178
Tornadoes-VIkings ·
John Ehman, ·who roinb!ned
Sou !bern must take Symrnes l!!!Ve 117 bul!'s eyes !rom beyond . Hannan Trace 9 10 1119 1119
Valley seriously.
the arc. Stout has only two treys· S-Valley .... ,.... 8 10 1127 1166
. Even though the Vikings have , fewer than league 1e11der Shane Southwe.s tern . .. 7 12 1365 1350
Oak Hlll ...... .. . 4 15 ll19 1328
dropped fou-r of their last five . Maynard of Oak Hill.
games, the Tornadoes wlll need .. '.
Thlswlllbethelasthomegame Kyger Creek ... 1 18 1054 1458
to shoot bet.ter irom three-point · for center D.J. Hammel, North's
(SVAC games)
·
·
only senior, and the last regular·
W

L

Eastern .. ........ 12 . 1
Southern ......... 11 2
North Gallla ... 10 3
Hannan .Trace · 6 7
S-Valley :........ 5 8
Southwestern .. 4 9
Oak Hlll ... .. .... 4 9
Kyger Creek.. . 0 13
TOTALS ........... 52 52

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record.
·
,•
the top of the conference, and
However, the Bobcats can take appropriately enough, ' these
some Inspiration !rom the !act teamsw!llputthelr12-1records
that Ironton St. Joe ended Its on the line In their respective
71-game losing streak by beating games to dec!cfe the reserve
Ohio Valley Chris dan Tuesday · championship.
•
night, proving that even.cbronlc
Gregg Deel's ~ldshlpmen and
bad habits can be broken.
Ronnie QuU!en s Whirlwinds
Thlswlllbethelasthomegame
have split their season series
tor seniors Chris Clagg, John while laying waste to the rest of
Sipple and ~rnest VUianueva.
their league foes .
Mldaloijlnea, Wblrlwllldl
If \lOth teams win, they share
batcle for -rve title
. the title. The team that wins
The yOIIngbloods ,on North
needs a loss-by the other team to
Gallla and Southern s reserve
stake an exclusive claim to the
squads have d.nce again risen to
title.

Florida braces·for baseball· lockout

, THin
r

and save.

I. Tt._VIIIare (II) (10-8).

{'If' " ' " . -. . . -

Le ........... o,e.

MalorladMrS.ecerLeape

No ..... sc.....)lttl
·
eallll

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This week's games
· ~W.;k's

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Ohio Collele lukdbaiiSchedute
B)l Urttted Pras ..ter ... IO•l
'l11URSDAY, FEll IS
Ohio 81

at Wtllco-Mhl

·

MempllhJ st at Clachnall
CJew:llltd Stat fJa later aM'-..

.

f'O~est

SI . Lou·~-

-~matt,
...HOjle:U
Ill..... ·~'

8o••ern Ud I&amp; 1111 W.r lllll 1M

Norflern Keat\1!.,_ at J\.tlln

Balll!llale 71,'1le• sw.&amp;e 10

Ceat,.t Stat Trafta)'l\'ant. (Ky)

BlUffton II, Wllmlilll•ll
llowll., G'"' 11. Oil .. U. 11
C.,Mtelllpn •· l'oleM fli
.,MalldiiPftiM
Cue Rrserw 8&amp; Ollerlln70
Cf!alral Mo. II, NE Mo. 57
c . Mlclllau •· Te~llo -t1
DtP•w•. Mdeno~~ 57
J)eiiMu 1'7, n ....,. •

FRIDAY, FI!:B II

Dyke •

om·
$ATURIMY, FEB 11

c.,...

'

BaliSt at Toldo
CeaiMI Mlda at Bowll•~ Grrtll
M~11111 at keal 8t
•
Olllo U111W Ill Euler• Mh:h
Wetlerallllleil ai Youaptewo It
. . . .t'l'n Utah 9t all Akr._
Vlrtlala Teelll .. ClnelnnUI

..

DIMe lA, HMdaJI ,.

.
E . Mfclll... II, W. Mlchl..-a U
F'rufiiii!IJ... Mo.IIMIHWI

• , ,...... 01 .a Cle..elud St •
. Evaas~llle a1

st. Lo• at

lhly,IOn

Held!lhi!rrll,llalllwi•W•II•cetl, OT
JUram N, Mo. . Ualen RJ
Dllnotl M. Nqr1bwestera11
IIIII. Soa•r-•1 ll, OaldMd Cll)' 11'
,Joha Car Nil K. Ollie Norillerrt N
lbl.m..,. 71. AJbloalf
· Mo. S.111bera1t, aa.. RoO. $4
Mo. Wt'lller t ,o NE Mlsooari 13
N~...._, .. Wet...-yu lit, Dua II
Not~ Dame 11, Mar.:-R 'H
Oklahoma 111. Ku . . sa u
Otllllhoma Slale la, Nelft".• 14
Otlert.fiA II, IIM1eltll 11'
SE MI1R011rl M. PUL Stale 1J
, Sf;. fnllelllll, ...... TMh If.
WoOikr 1'1. Allel(hell,. If

X.Jrler

Reld!lberlal M•sldnpm
MarleUe ai Oltlo Norllern
CapllaiiiiMI

u....

Balilwln-Wallac:e Ill Otf.Ubelrt
lllnm at Jo• carroll
Wo.....- Itt OberHa
KenJO• at Ollto· W'fAie)'an
Denhton at Earlham lind )
, Cut IIHt-rw Ill WII~Mber•
Ttlla at Cedar\'llle
Deflut!e at Ohio Deml•c:an

•

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Bhdfl• at Rio Graade

WUHIII

n ...,.

BeUumhMJ(Ily) at "-hland

O,ke at ce.. NI sa
Lake- Erk&gt; Ill Wllmln!llon

w...

Ill alto "l'-1, llo'-e Stale 55
Lo)'ola·M&amp;rymlllllll: Iii, 'l"epper-dl•
Ill
VC Sui&amp; Cra'JS, Domledc .. ;i
WIIUtr ta. c.t. Tech -II

Ponland liZ. lA LaWs I!M, :!OT

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TIIUrMIIIY

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LA L11ker1

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Almost 2 out of every 10
teenagers use drugs or alcohol on
a daily bas-is. Reduce the .c hance
· of your children becoming
a~other statistic by educating
them at an early ~ge about the
dangers of ~ddicti,on. Ignorance .
aboutaddiction is dangerous.
·
Your children need to
kNOw about drugs.

'

Hail-.

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Dr. Daniel
.
R. Trent
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hllll_! FOil CQMfOII'I

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Ap'poii\tments
·a nd Walk:.ins
W~lcome
.
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Office Staff: ·

UIJIIIPICI

' Willi. qitrnlan lnterlor ~ M~nlS·
tet Wolfgang Schaeuble said fn
Hamburg that there witl• "very
· probebly" ·be .a united Cierman
OIYJIIplc team In the 1992Gallll!l.
•Tlie Interior Mlilllter laid West
Germany wu wtlllq to cilntrlbute aufll'lally 10 the · un~~~&amp;
proem of E1111t •nd Wes.l Ger· , ,
man Spot'ts.

.

Lisa Thorn-e, LPN
'

Gail Hoveatter
Linda 'Irent
'·

138 Main St., New Haven, WV + (304). 882-3134
L......:'•,.._;;_•::.__:F:.:&lt;!~rmer=::t.ly_:Bend:.::;.:..:.:Are:.=.a.::.M:.::edi::
. :::cll::...:Cel)..:.:.:.&gt;te:.r_ _-:-- 1

.·' '

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·Low Sale Pri'ls!
•

CHECK US OUT!!

..

.

...10 THIS ...

.,

...10THIS!

:--•
•

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ENJOr' 1to1 1..1' In cuull comtmporsty .tyhng In 1ua1.1~ pkl.t11Mn; raom lui•
ni!UR thaiiM!u'" inl'lcMt..., "ToUchMollon" pulh-b..tO'I rsclinlng actkln . e.cn
plt&lt;:e It clftigned 10 ll.llly ..clioe {II the touctl of a b!Jtton)......, wMn placed lllctlea
lromswsP. Etch ill~ ~lfrld an&lt;thndMpfy plddld --~
tufttd p~ltlw ~*:liS, and tclft.- OYel'liN pillOW 111m1. ll'aiNW!g room IUrf!itUN you 'I
tnjoy lor 'fHI'II. COINI Nl Wllld we mHnl

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Wallpaper
Sale

. '··
'

...,. '

...

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30°/o
OFF
Hugh Selection of
Patterns to Make ·
Your Home
Beautiful.
PLAIDS, PRINTS,
STRIPES &amp; MORE!

Congoleum
Super
Scuff-Tuff Sale

Most Are
Pre-Pasted and
. Washabl•

If you'N tired ofthlt oid floor. now'o the perfect limo lo ""''-it
with an easy-care. SCUFF~Tufp- no· WIJl vinyl floor from
Congot.,m.
Right now you con uV. 20% on beiUtlful, high-glou vinyl floor~,
from our CongoiMJm Eot....,, Contennlol. Rofloctiqn, Triumph ond
Highlight eottoctlono .
Each of thoooltoorlfeotureo 1 CUFF-TUFF waorlayer.thllt virtuolty
ellminatll tcuffing from tnellkert end r,unnlng ahoel. And each comn
in a Mlectlon of color~ to metch every home.50 HURRY IN TODAY AND SAVEl

lET All EARLY
START Oil SPRIIIO
FIX•UPII

Sale!!

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EVERYTHING COOKS BE'I"I'ER
ON A ROPER RANGE

30" PORCELAIN OVENS
ELECTRIC t·~ ~~~~ s.. AS CAS!'

l

GAS

• Puree lam 911-·en

sc,.,.ned ......
backguard
Solid oven door
• Thfft' 6'" and on"
M":--urfacc clemen1s

Porcelain oven
· Screened meral backauard
w/chrorne frame
Solid ov•n door

• One O\it-n rack

REG. '319

• Slorage, drawer

lEG. 1359

YOUI CHOICE

-

S29900
-

NOTHING K£EPS IT COOL
LJ~E A ROPER REFRIGERATOR
· 14 CU. FT•

·r - ,

.

"

-

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j-

ROPER: HIG.H QUALITY,~IGH VALUE

•14.0 cu. ft. no-froot
•T•tured dooro
•Two Ice cube troy•
1

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•Th-gb-out.

, '
·I

!·

lip-proof OhetvM

oTwtn attde-out
orllf*o

! .._,._.-.
'
I

o()pttonol l M -

(IZOO.ITMI

....
'•

REG.

$559
NOW

................ $4 99:
eDaor .,.._

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BUILT IN DISHWASHER

NO FIOST

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Family Practice

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

-4: ' •

BERKLI\f"

' '
1111 -.~

Tennis
Boris Becker advanced to the
ihlrd round of the $600,000 Belgian Indoor ChampionShips with
a 7-6 (7·3), 6-2 victory over·Karel
Novacek of C~echoslovakta ....
. Ivan Lendl. requesting an afternoon match so he could attend
hockey game at ·night, downed
Jimmy Brown 7-5,6-1 to advance
IIJ the third round of the $1.2
million SkyDome World Tournament. Also advancing were No. 2
Brad Cillllert, No. 4 Aaron Krlcks teln, No.· 5 Jay Ber11er, and
Canada's Grant Cornell, who
upset No. 9 Jim Courier. ·...
·Billie Je'an King, 46, who
played In the !Jrst-ever Vlralnla
Slims tournament In 19701 will
play doubles .'With 13'year-old
Jennifer Cap!'latl when Caprlatl
makes her professional debut at
tbe VIrginia Slims of Florida at
Boca Raton, Manlh ~11.

Page

!11th, followed by · Beachwood, , !:
Richmond Dale Southeastern. "!&lt;
Houston. East Canton and newco- -'
·mer Geo~etown.

ooss, dropping one notch to
fourth.
The rest of the Division III list
consisted or Burton Berkshire In

Unbeaten Ontario (17-0)
moved Into third place this week
with 249 points, with St. Henry
(16·11. aflt&gt;r suffering Its first

Sports briefs

.,
I

8Jmmett Valli, GaiHa sw .u

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Fru•l"'lmOrefllli.a. ... Tracen
Fnanllfort .WMI IS, Llllll- W•ter•

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Caldwell1'1, Froailer U

a .. a..,. o., •· o. s.v. au ~.au

'

The Daily 'Sentinel
'

DlvltktaiD
lndl111 Valley •• ,JeiiiJ Olennfl
Wull (IH II, IUIIsbore It
.
bMsloniV

••

A. Public
Service
Me~sage _ Brought ·
··"·
.
Y ou By....
.. To _
'

W•dllleltq,
14
(b..,ltaMa)

SprhiK 8 II, 8prtn1 N U .
sttuha•le . . a Claln"'lle 14
Dhlsttlllll
"leunller St • •lift tl
~tmbfe h, NeiiOilVtllf'oYork U

~ Sa('raml'nto, 10: !1 p.m .
Frlcley GameK
SuUie &amp;t Philadelphi a
Dfnw.r at Cll.tourJ\Uanba .a Cleveland
Miami at f.hleaa•
lndiMa at Mtnr~Hola
u •• a&amp; 8u .....,_.
Go~ll !liMe AI Phoenlll
M' IIIINn~&amp;ort at L-"(llpiiPf'N
llo""- al l"ortiiUid

I·

Ne~ville- York

"'

"'b.

Glrll Ohio HlpSclaool . .lletlaell

New \'ork au ~oa!lton. 8:11p.m.
W_.lnlf,on .a Golclf-nst•te, II: SO p.m .

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Toumey.scores

Gamet~

Orlllnllo ai J\U!IM&amp;. i : JI p.m .

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pinned all 5 of his opponents.
Sheets owns a 28-0 record this
year.
.
Eric Heck also a junior placed
first In the 112 class' Heck has
wres tied all year In the 119-poUild
. class was ab1e to get his welgbt
· down and compete In the ·lowerweight class for the TVC.
Junior Burt Kennedy placed
second In the 189 class and Geoff
·Cogar placed third at 171. .
Other Marauders wh(l placed
Jeremy Heck (125) , Joe
were
l
McElroy (130) -and Scb&amp;t Barton
',file Melp Marauders finished
(135) all !lnllhed In fourth place.
In folll'tll place followed by
· Meigs Will wrestle In tbe
F~
ud Trimble.
Sectional
Tournament at Warren
Metp W.., leque chamLocal
High
School on Saturday,
plo-..WtJtileeta. ·
.
Felrurary
~4.
~. a IIHYyweiJbt junior,
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Tn• ,.,SMUU

Stallk' Ml N~w.JerHey , 7: 3Gp.m.

briefs

••
Hockey
Associates of .Buffalo Sabres
winger Alexander Mogllny, who
recently mlssed,a game because
of a fear of flying, are· seeking to
have the former Soviet ,star
traded, according to the Buttalo
News. The newspaper said SOI.lr. ces Indicated Mogllny Is Interested In playing with the New
York Rangers . ... Alling Toronto
Maple Leafs owner Harold Bal-.
lard was declared mentally Incompetent by ·a judge Tuesday ,
touching off a legal wrangle over
control of his personal affairs
and $100 million empire.
·
Hone Racing
· Two harness driver-trainers
died In a !rattle accident on the
New Jefsey Turnpike whlle returning home from the Meadowlands In East Rutherford, N.J.,
the track said. Robbie Rankin,
31, and Ricky Laframboise, 26,
were killed at 4:03 a.m. EST
Wednesday, according to a New
Jersey State Pollee Report.

Ho•o• 't. Tnu Tecll1'1, OT
.... "Ok ...om. liS, K. . . S&amp;a&amp;e •
.Okltlllom~St. ItS. Ntlnlka If.
,
Sai~ E;_ft.,..'IIIJ, T.naa We~leyan r:
KU JU. ,WIIU 'lll

1!8

, GENE CADDES
'UPJ&amp;peo18 Writer
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -' A ·
single point separates Columbus
Wehrle and New Madison Trl·
VIllage In Division IV as the
United Press International Ohio
Hlgb School Board of Coaches
boys basketball ratings head Into
the final week.
· Wehrle, the two-time defend·
lng state champ, held a 210-209
lead this week over 't he Patriots;
who wound up their regular
season with 11 perfect 20·0 record.
Wehrle; 16-.3 with one game
remaining, received 10 first ,
place -votes from the small school
coaclies while Trl-VIllage got 11:
Van Buren was third among
the small schools with 184 points,
with Springfield Catholic fourth
and Tuscarawas Catholic fifth.
Rounding out the list were
Vanlue,, Berlin Hiland , Miller'
CltY i ' Cedarville and
Waynesfield-Goshen, making Its
first top ten appearance.
Divis !on IV was by far the
closest or the four races. wltn
Toledo Scott In Dlvlsloni, KetterIng Alter In Division · II and
Youngstown LIIJerty In Division
I~. maintaining solid leads over
their nearest cqmpetltlon.
Scott, 18-1, received 24 of 32
first plaoovotes In Division I and
held a 309-274 point margin over
unbeaten Beavercreek (18-0),
which ailvanced one position Into ·
the the runnerup spilt this week.
The Beavers a\tracted flv~ first
place votes.
Canton McKinley 117·1), second to Scott the first five weeks
of the voting, sUpped to third with
258 points and a single first place
vote, followed by Westerville
South In fourth with 163 and
Sandusky fifth with 133, both up
one spot tr,om the previous week.
Man.Cield Senior advanced
!rom ninth, to sixth, followed bY.
Newark, Mount Vernon, Strongsville and· Toledo St. Francis, a
7.3-48 loser . to Toledo St. John's
last Thursday night. St. Fran'cls
was fourth last week.
Alter, 17-1, picked up 23 of 34
first place votes In Dlv!slon II
and led runnerup Hillsboro (19'0)
by a 319-286 margin. Tlie Indians
received six' first place votes . ·
Third In Dlylslon II was Canfield with three· firsts. and 236
points, followed In order by North
Bend Taylor, Painesville Harvey, West .Geauga, Steubenville,
Fostoria, Bellevue and
Portsmouth.
Liberty (16·0) held the largest
margin of the four leaders with a
329-277 bulge over Orrville (18-1).
The Leopards also had a 29-2
advantage In first place votes .

s~

J.,

NATIONAL 1.\SKETBA.LL ~!I)('
Wl'dMidlQ' lletJtili"
('tllca~

_

. Bq1Dr1'j,Rioe•

SUNDAY, FEB 18
Mlctltpn .a1. O...htost

·-

, Bj'DAVE HARRIS
captured the
team cbamplonshlp and Buckeye
coach· Tom Me Glaughlin took
hOme coach of the year honors
while l'tJelgs' Aaro11 Sheets was
named the Mo11 Valuable
Wre~tler ln . this year's TVC
wJ'I!ItUn&amp; meet, held last week In
Nelloaville.
Ftallhlng second to the host
Buckeyes was Belpre, followeed
by VInton Col!nty.

,.

Toi'O'Iio -.SI.IMitM• N.... Am eric•
...... Ch . . . . . . ,.
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each •.

PhOPnb: ll.f, Utah liS

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Dale... - ...... VIral• 81.... of

Dllcap

•*·

....,.. ISS. Clt&gt;Veland 131, OT
Mla. .!Ma tl, CharletW' &amp;I
Mltwulee 1!1', Dener m·
BoMon Jltl. 8M MtDillo Ill

Sheets named MVP
wrestler TVC,. in meet

. . a. .......... ..

Seea ... k!a: I I_: DelphoM Sl. --lolln'li Zl:
12. (Uel Aatwerp aatl Upper Scioto
VaUcy. I" each: If. . Mallllfleld St. Pe&amp;er 'N
11': l$ . .uhlahula~. ,Jo ...'!il5: II.Cclawy
Cl'ahtew II: 17. (Ue)• GUM MUll
Gilmour J\t! . .my , Uddand ud llot-Brach: 20. Ult) Fl'emo•SI • .J01tph
and South Charlnton Soutlleaatern. 7

OriMd• lB.

PLACE IN TOURNAMENT - Marauder wrestlers who placed
Ia ·lui week's TVC wrestling tournament Ia Nellloaville ~ from
left to r1111t are Eric Heck, lint pJace !a lhe 112 class; Coach Kevla
Sheppard, Geoff Cogar third In 171; Burt Kennedy second In 188 ·
aad Aar0118hedll, flrslln tile heavyweight division and the TVC 's
Mott Valuable Wrestler. ·

~

.o ...... %10

Philadelphia Jt2. New Jer!lf)l 11:1

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1. v..-.c llJ Ut..J&gt;U
1. 'SHin Rllelld (15-211'11
II. Miller CltJ ( lt-31-t i
t. Cdal'Yille·( 11-.1)44

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Whef:.._ I; Jt. Ulel Ulu1chntne
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8prtitfleht (II 11; II. Wlwtle llbwl'f IS;
17 . ...... Della I ; 18. Plt,ln Cll)' ~-h•
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971 853

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tl ; HI. ILe,ac ....... Ill II. 11•~1...
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-'I'AMPA, Fla. (UP I) - The lty," said Howard Def':reltas,
Similarly, Plant city could lose
spring tra ining lockout that
baseball manager on staff of the · $155,000 used to balance the city's
n~
threatens to keep Grapefruit St. Peter~burg Chamber of Com· $2!j3,1m 'stadium budget It the
League- ~ore~rds blank the
merce. ''You can't get the kind of C!nc!Matl Reds are sidelined.
992-2124
·~v:.::.·~r:.next six weeks represents $300 advertising that goes out every
Local merchants and city
·······-~
mU!Ion ~lap In Florida's eco- ·day trom writers covering the officials are bracing for lefln
nomic face.
· camps. It· doesn't matter what times !! the lockout extends Into
(Reserves)
ITEM·: DINNII
Last year's exhibition games
the stories say. The cities !ake March: . ·
,
I
• .
. : I LAlli 16" 5 111M PillA I
TEAM
W 'L PF PA
the attitude of P.T. Barnum "We're hoping the fact that the
drew 1,345,243 spectators to 17
I With ,,,.,..,;, s-.......... I
I
Southern
.........
12
1
661
455
spr!J!g·tr•lnlng parks across the
just s!iell my name right."
commissioner (Fay Vincent) has
I
A
I - . Oftieft allll G,_ ,....,, I
North
Gallla
...
12
1
644
472
state: West Palm Beach serves
.The New York Yankees, who lnjectedhlmself!ntothenegotla·
PlUS 4-16 OL .SOFMNIIS :
as home lo I!Oth the- Montreal began training at Fort Lauder- .. ttons might bring some agree- Oak Hlll .. . .. .. .. 8 5 612 540, .
Hannan
Trace
·
7
6
556
502
Expos and Atlanta Braves. .
dale 'in 1962, have depos!ted $35 .ment," DeFrfltas .said. "It's
: Additional Item 86C Each :
$999
:·
S-Valley ......... 7 6 556 · 528
The df!1;:1slon by major-league, mllllon to · Broward County •· really been distressing to a lot of
I
I
I
-o~rs to close _
c amps )!ecau.s e of coffers. each year, and. another people who plan their vacl\tlons , Southwestern ., . 3 10 502 609
E~stern .......... 2 11
475
646
a protra~ contract dispute $3[i mUUon to Palm Beach arounli seeing . their favorite
Kyger Creek·... 1 12 ·357 611
with the Players As'st:IC@tlon County.
·
·
. team play In Florida.
·
I
®
I
I
TOTALS
..........52 52 ' 4$63 43,63
hurts Florida's tourist economy
A 1987 economic study showed
"We're very· saddened that
I •wild• Qlllooo.onq.,.......,, Nar....a-1n-~~~- II JIOII•o.rtoeoc.onq-011¥ Hal_ . ." -or,.- I
baseball clubs hi Florida spend spring training may not ~able
during the peak season for
11 l'*·
Pneee Pl\l'lll' "IWV c~ PM -'11"'""''
""'·'"'&lt;ft0""...,
"""· " ' - ' o-. .... , u - I
Friday's slate
.
~ ~ ~.,. ~lnl1eel to tnSWe Ule ,fin¥1 1'11011e101t.
~- •1111110 10 eM¥N s-.~~n~- 1
visitors. Hotel owners; rental car $11.9 mllllon on food, transporta- ·to proceed as normal. Baseball's
na. Oil! 011wtnU1'1'11 11'1111 120.0 0. OIK .dnYelt •~•
I ,.,_CIWI dnvert catrw . . . lfl.n ~moo. Our ~~~- .,.
Hanqan
Trace
at
Kyger
Creek
ag~nc!es, shopkeepers, concestion and housing. Fans spend $3.4 been so Important to St . PetersI , 01 '**'~!of ,_ -.-...
,"'
..a I
I
Southwestern at North Gallla
slons personnel . and baseball mUllon at the ballpark anq $283 burg ever since the St. Louis
Oak Hill at Eastern
'Jtoll\4r,larHIIIJI'IOIH 10, llflllllill .... tlll't'Wt(l , ,' IIJMI OofiiJftOit&gt;otu, o"C.
aflcloft!ldOs ate lamenting basemllllon away from the stad!ilm. . Browns ·came ·here In 1914.
at
Symmes
Valley
Southern
ball's 'sixth shutdown In the last . The prospect of a lockout has ' There's' a lot of history here."
~years.
notkeptGrapefrwtLeaguefans
. . .1111111111111111111111111.11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111. .11111111. .1111. .111111111111111111111111~111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111. .1111.1~~
' :Our business won't croak, but
from the ticket boo.t h. In Du'
' .
we're sure · going to lose the
nedln, spring home of the Togravy," said Joe Brennan, owner
ron to Blue Jays, ticket sales are
of the Avis franchise In Vera
running even · with last year's
rate. Sales fqr Texas Rangers
Beach. Brennan·estlmates players and coaches alone from the
games at 6,026-seat· Charlotte
Los Angeles Dodgers usuaily
County Stadium In Port Charrent30carsfor six weeks at a cost
lotte are ahead of 1989.
of more !him $25,000.
·
Wlthoutthe command of "Play
Besides direct economic lmBall." cities wlll suffer the most.
pact, . the lockout w!ll serve to
In Winter Haveri, home of tile
deprive Florida communltles-oL Boston Red Sox, a lockout would
~·;·
the publiC rehitlons beneflts'that
cbst the city $200,000 In ma.lil!e•
. '·
accompany a sprlng-tralnlng
nance costs and lost revenues at
.' .
camp dateline.
Chain O'Lakes Park. The-team's
"Every year, the 17 Florida
lease does not obligate the Red
cities housing teams reap a
Sox to pay anything If the
veritable barvest In free public- · tacllltles ~re unused.

a

..

L 8eiiV8ftreelk (I) ( 11-f) ~ ............... 174.
~
MeKide)- (I) (11-t) ~----- ... 158

I

Call Domino's Pizzo•

.......

OOWMal"
(VPI) - Tlllo
wed'•llallt...,. Wfrlll&amp;illal Okla
liMN .,
........ nt ..plwllll,.,lleentH
............ rMI ..... Jilfft.....:
'
·
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·I
• I

995 763
966 825
780 747
765 892
893 , 905
8o7 932
730 1010
69!7 6112'7

UPI court
ratings head
into .last week

,, I

SVAC standings

TEAM

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Dlltv Se 1tinel

The

J

• 24" undcrcounter
diohwllher
• Seven.c;ydc selcolion
• Two Willi Jeoielo
• Sllippld widlpilllll far
elmond, wltite, bladt
'

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8 The Dlliv Sa

•tii•el

Pomaov-Midilapon. Ohio

..

,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio travel officials were so
anxious to market the Buckeye
State to tour operators that they
once offered them free reglstralion to a travel show.
But In the five-year history of
the Ohio Travel Showcase, the
word has m(\ved through the
travel Industry that Ohio Is the
place to be, and tour operators no
longer have to be coaxed to the
show.
'
The more than 200 tour operators, Including some of the
largest in the country, visiting
the fifth annual showcase this
weekend In Cleveland Is twice the
number that at~nded last year's
snow in Cincinnati, said Marilyn
Tomasi, Ohio's travel director.
Showcase was designed as a
way to acquaint Ohio's tour
operators with what Ohio attrac-·.
lions had to offer.
"It werit so well. Tour operators got travel Information on
Ohio and ·booked trips, ·and the
attractions got . business," said .
Tomasi.
The next year. state travel
officials decided to Invite tour
o!ierators from neighboring
state~ . But the problem was - ·
selling them on booking tours to
Ohio,
''They had the feeling of 'Why
visit O~lo? ' ," said Tim Moore,
public ' Information spokesman
for the Ohio Office of Travel and
Tourism.
"We got agresslve," Tomasi

OP THE WEEK :_·The
l11alor Wgb School ·
atud•t recopbed for her academic
good classroom
·.~partlelp.tloa aad coaduct, Is Crylltal Doaobue.
sludent of Mrs,
• leiDJie Bowea, Crystal was selected fromlbe ~adlag and spelllnl
• claas for lblll week's award.
·

.

In the Tuesday evening court of
, Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler,
:11 Individuals forfeited bonds
· and five were fined.
: -Forfeiting bonds were Robert
:Taylor, Racine Route, $48,
~ speed; Bruce Blackston, Pome;roy Route, $48, speed; Georgia
:Rupe, Columbus, $41, speed;
-Beverly Crouch, Racine, $43,
stop sign vlollltion; James C
Michael, Pomeroy moved to
Parkersburg, W.Va., $63, failure
to control; Kathleen Compton,
Rutland, $54, speed; William
· Roush, Letart, ,W.Va., $47,
: speed; James Buckley, ·Repub·
; llc, $48, sJ)eed; June 'Wllklnson,
· Letart, W.Va:, $43, speed; Kat: hleen Fryar, Syracuse, $63, ex. plred vehicle registration; Lynn
: Michele Sayre, Westerville. $47,
: speed.
·
· . Fined were James Bentz, Ra·
: cine Route. $53 and costs, traffic
: light violation; Edwin D. Ash, .
. ·Racine Route, $53 and costs,
:speed; Dwayne Qualls, Pome: roy, $63 and co sis, dlsordetly
:conduct; Tammy Bush, Pome-

Gommwrucya~~r~~~----~----------------~------------------,.
Fire Station. A JJOiluCk dinner .

'Ohio travel showcase has come~ a lOng_way ·

IDJCNT

:·-----Mayor's

Pomaov-Middapon, Ohio

lhndlt. F.llnMry 11, 1810

Court-~~

roy, $47 and costs, speed; Penny
Riggsby. Columbus, $263 and
costs, leaving the scene of an
accident, $43 and costs. left of
·center, and $50 and costs, no
Insurance.
•·
In the Middleport court or
Mayor Fred Hoffn)an, two people
forfel~d bonds and six were

nned.

said. "We offered to refUnd their ·
registration fee if tbey stayed
throughout the show, and hotels
offered complimentary rooms."
But no more. The program has
been a success, with more motor
bus tours coming to·Ohlo. ln 1984,
the motor bus tours meant $45
million In business for the Buc~eye State, while last year, they
brought $120 million to Ohio,
Tomasi said. ·
Tour operators are coming
frem as far away as California,
Alabama, New York, ·and Onta·
rio for this year's show, Tomasi
said. Wblle many ofthe bookings
will be for · desl!natlon tours,
some are stopovers, she said . .
"Liina, Ohio, Is eight hours
from Ontario," sbe said. "Eight ·
liours on a bus and they're ready .
to stop. These tour oper(ltors will
be looking for competitive
lodging.
. "Tour operators from Cailfor•
nta are planning a cross country
trip and they want to know what
Ohio has to offer,," she said.
"These . buses need gasoline;
the people need lodging and food.
They pay admission to · attrac·
tioils and they shop like crazy,"
Tomasi said.
Figures show that about ·80 ·
percent of the bus tours carry .
senior citizens, but Tomas j said
one tour operator coming from
Pennsylvania books trips .only
for th" handicapped.
More than 180 Ohio exhibitors
will set up bootlis In the.Cleve·

land Co~tventlo~ C~nter this
weekend to talk 'to tour opera·
tors,andTomaslsays"wehavea
.waiting list of exhibitors."
Exhibitors · represent hotels
and motels, Individuals attrac·
!Ions and visitors and convention
bureaus.
Small places - the 'Mom and

RUTLAND -There will be Rev. Earl Fields Invites the
sweetheart daace on Friday public.
MIDDLEPORT - Tbe Melp
from 9 p.lfl. to mldnlaht at the
ROCK SPRINGS - The Mid·
JunJDr Hllb School buketball
DANVILLE .:...weekend youth
aad wrettllq baaquet will be dleport Child Conservation American Lerton Hall In Rurevival
will be held at t.he •
lield at 6:30p.m Tburdaay at the l,.eque will meet Thursday at 7 . tland. The admission Is $2slngle,
Danville
Holiness
Chapel Friday
and $3 couple. The public Is
llchool. The Athletic Department p.m. at lhe·home·of Peg Harris.
.
through
Sunday
at
7 p.m. ·nightly
Invited to attend.
Will provide the.meat and bevei'·
wlth
the
Rev.
Rob
Hartman.
Rev .
St'RACUSE - The Syracuse
ap, aad players .a re to take other
Rick
Maloyed
Jnvptes
the
public.
CHESHIRE -There will be a
VIllage CouDCII will meet In
food u •-'aned.
.
conlin \led session on Thursday at free clothlna day on Friday at the
POMEROY
- The Meigs
RACINE - The Howard's 7 p.m. at the munlcl}llil building. Galli~ Metp Community Action
Democratic
. Executive
County
·
Agency from 9 a .m·. to noon at the
Stars Will' meet Thursday even'
.
Committee
will
meet
Friday at
, FRIDAY
old high schoOl building In
Ing at the Racine Muonlc
7:30
p.m.
at
the
Carpehters
Hall
MIDDLEPORT - The Evan- Cheshire.
Temple at 7: 30 pcm. Wives are
In Pomeroy .
Invited and refreshments will be geline Chapter No. 172, Order of
-There
HARRISONVILLE
the Eastern Star will have a
served. •
SATURDAY
chicken nacidle dinner on Friday will be'a revlval'-at the Harr)son·
.
PORTLAND
~The Freedom
. POMEROY - The l&lt;l GaiiUlla from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the ville Holiness Chapel on Friday,.·
Gospel
Mission
Church,
BashanEpsilon Chapter, Beta Slpna Phi Middleport Mason!~ Temple. Saturday and Sunday at 7:30
-Stiversvllle
Road
in
Portland,
Sorority, will meet on the upper The S3 menu will inClude chicken p.m . nightly, Rev. Robert W,
will have a hymn sing . on
Poll)eroy parking lot at 6 p.m: on noodles, green beans. rolls, Wilson will be the evangelist and
Saturday
at 7 p.m. l;luss and the
Thursday to 10. to' Sebastlans for . cherry pie, coffee or tea.
the Valentlne Dinner. Bring
Watkins orders and money, and
necklaces that' are completed.

Pop'

of the tOIII'IIt attractions set up alonplde the major
attra~tlona such as theme parks .
and Jandmarkl.
"II helpa them break In to the
travel field because they often
don't have the resources to
attend national shows," said
Tomasi.

Your Hea~quartera for •••

' ~~o-

DRY CL~ANING AND
PARCEL POST PICKUP!
· Just Two Of The Many
Reasons to Shop With
Us.~••

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group ol A.A. and·Al-Anon will
meet Thursd!lY at the Sacred
Heart Catholic 'church at. 7 p.m.
Call 1-800.,.-333&lt;-5051 for
Information.

il

aunois
and aows
.. 992-5177
220 Ea•t Main St., Pomeroy .

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Chamber. or Commerce
will meet12 noon Thursday In the
Ubrary. at Meigs High School.
State Sen·. ,Jan Mlcltael Long.
D-Chllllcothe, will . be the
speaker. Chamber members and
those interes~d in Joining
Chamber are urged to attend and
should call the Chamber office,
992-5005, to make reservations .

Forfeiting bonds· were Kevin'
D. Greene, New· Haven, W.Va.,
$110, disorderly conduct; Leroy
Perine, Marietta, $210 FRA
suspenslol).
,.
Fined were Penny J, Riggs by,
Columbus, $425 and costs plus.
three days Jail, -DWI; Robert A.
Matthews, St. Albans, W.Va ..
$425 and costs plus three days
' jail, DWI; Robert C. Peters,
Galloway, $10 fine only, Illegal
tags; Mike Manley, Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly
manner; Gert Wise, Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly
manner; and David E. Watkins,
Rutland, $100 and costs, leaving
the scene of an accident.

.·

ONLY AT ·
TOM PEDEN'S

RACINE -There will be a
regular 'm eeting of
Racine
·A merican Legion Post 602 on
Thur5!1ay at 7:30 p,m. Dues are
to paid and refreshments will be

~

-NO MONEY DOWN!* :

Snide.nts to
collecr items
'
Academic Boos•
The '·Eu~rn

ters will , sponsor a fundralslng
auction on March 4 atl: 30 p.m. at
the highschoot
.
Jp preparation for this auct)on
the students, as well as some
parents, will be going door to
door In corder to collect Items ·
from those who wish to donate for
the&gt;aucllon. ·
The AcademiC Boosters will
again be )lponsorlng a math fair
fcir ·the district as well as two
e~enlngs per week or tutoring. In ..
order to fund these programs the
·group must ·have various fund
raisers.and this auction Is one of
,
those fundralsers.
Anyone wishing to ll(}nate
Items should contact Eastern
'High School.
•

: ~9 arrests made in January
gated 10 accidents, Issued 372
parking tickets, and collected
$863 from parking meter collections, and $96 from merchant
pollee collections.
.

,I

.

' .

CLEVELAND ( UPI) - No big
winner In Wednesda},l. night's
Super Lotto drawing means a $10
mUllon jackpot · for Saturday
night.
• OhiO Lottery officials said
Thursday that $4,244,837 worth or
tickets were sold for the game,
-but none had the numbers 5, 15,
.16, 29, 30, and 41. However, 125
came close,.havlng five of the six
numbers, giving their holders
$~.000. Another 5,943 had four of

'

In St()£k!

the · numbers, making them
worth $75.
In the Kicker game, the comb I·
nation of 471460 produced one
winner. The ticket . Is worth
$100,000.
Three more had the first five
numbers, good for $5,00Q; 64 the
first four for $1,000; 643 tHe first
three for $100 an&lt;) 6,500 the first
two for $10,
Lottery officials said $721,346
·worth of Kicker tickets were
sold.

.

'

I

Secretary of State Sherrod
will corlduct swearing·in
· ceremonies for election board
.members from a 13 county area
at9.a.m. on Feb. 23at the Holiday·
Jnn In Lancu ter.
; Counties parUCIJiating in the
.· ceremony Include Athens, ·Fair·
·.field, Highland, Hocking, Jack·
. 'son, Knox. Meigs, Muskmgum,
·Perry, Plckaway, Plke,ltciss and
. VInton.
· , ·The Holiday Inn Is located at
1858 North Memorial Driv.e in
·Lancaster.
~Brown

..

'Fire report
The Middleport Fire Department answered a total of 57 calls
during the month of January
IDCludlna five fire and rescue and
52 Emergency Medical Service,
Jeff Darst, fire chief reported,

t

§mil® JPrrn©®cdl~ .

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16,999- 35,999.
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Lottery numbers

• Astro Vans

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• Po.wer Seats

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• Raised Roof Vans (That Will Fit In 7' Garage)
• Standard Vans
• ColorTVs

• Power Tri-Fold Beds
• Coolers
• Radar Detectors
• Quality Luxury Price, We've Got Them Allll

• VIdeo Cassette Players

$17,999

While Hoaoe groom

Name omitted
The name of Usa Stet hem was
unintentionally omitted from an
honor roll · listing of !lith grade
.students freim the Chester Elementary School.

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LE

SpcdGI NNI W., B•N At Jlfason FurllftNN, Baw B•d "TTN Flu" And
So B., OUr U.fl1' S•a.• Baportf NfiW W.'N ~of~ SOIIIda.... Ahut Jtf
AI I PNC!I W'PilGIPf

ALL PRICES
LISTED
EFFECTIVE
11rin1 Thla Ad Into.Our Store And Receive
. The Addltl•nal Llded Dlacounts Off
Our Already Low Sale Pric:es!
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Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
res poDded to five calls on Tuesday.
At 2; 22 a.m. the Pomeroy unit wu called to the sheriffs
department for Tom Stevers. who was treated but not ·
transported.
The Middleport unit, at 8: 14 a.m. went to Stonewtiod
Apartments for Mary Gilkey who was taken to Veterans
Memol1al Hoapltal. .
' .
'
Tile Middleport Fire Department, at 5:05p.m., reaponded to.a
eall at Fruth' a parking lot for an auto fire. The owner of the
wldele II tmknown -at this time.
AI tl: 03 p.m. the Tuppers Plains unit went to Sumner Road for .
Michele Bowers wha was transported to Veterans.
Tile final call for aaalatance came at 11:52 p.m. when the
Middleport unit wu called to Overbrooll Cea'ler for Mary Durst
wbo taken to Veterans.

"eel

$12,988

EMS receives five rolls Tuesday
.

•

Weekend revjval at the Harrl·
1onv111e Holiness Chapel will be
hl!ld Friday through Sunday at
7:30 p.m. nl&amp;htly featuring Dis·
trict 18 auperlntendent Rey.
Robert W. Wilson.
·
· Rev . .Earl' Fields Invites the
public.
'
Executive committee to
Tbe Melp County Democratic
Ex~tlve CQminlttee will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at tl)e
carpenler's hall on Main Street .
DIIIICII l8i llr.rell-10
Tbe spl'lna kickoff • dinner
dance of tbe Jaymar Golf Club
will b eheld on March 10 at the
Senior Clttzeni centllr . .There
Mil be a 'IOCial hour fr.om 6-7 ·
p.llli,d,lnnerfrom 7-lp.m. aada . •
dallet! from 8-11 p.m. Muilc will
be by Glen Aldon of WMPO and
wllllllelude big bands of !be 30'a
anct 40's. Colt Ia S2ll per coupld ·
bel $13 for tllngles. Relervatlona
be made by Match 5 with
Bob Freed. Norma CUater, 9r
Velma Rue.

Grover Cleveland was the only
pnsldeat to be married .in the White
II_.. Wilen elected, he was a bache. tar. On June 2, 1186, he lllUTied
Fnnees Folsom at a ceremony that
taot II'- In the esecutlve manlllon,
IIOiel The Kids' World Almanac.

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Leque to meet
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet at 7 p:m. ·
on Tl\ursda:,&gt; at :the home of Peg
Hari1s,
· ·
Saalletballtoul'll.ament
The So~thern Boosters ave .
sponsoring ar;lndependent mens
basketball tournament on March •
. 3 an.d · 4, First place will be
awarded .12 trophies plus .{\
sponsors trophy. The entry fee Is
$100 per ~am. For 1110re lnfor'ma ·
tlon, contact D11ve Grindstaff at
949-2025. •
•
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•
Offices cloaed
The Leading Creek ConSer·
vancy District's Office will be
Closed MoQiiay In observance or
Presldenl',s Day .
Council to. meet
The Syracuse Village Council
will meet 1J1 pontlnued session on
Thursday•, at ·7 p.m: at the
municipal building:
Revlvala Jluaed
The "Danyllle Holiness Chapel
will have, we~ke.nd youth revival
Friday through Sunday at 7 p.m.
ntabtly featuring .Rev. Rob
Hartman.
Rev. Rick Maioyed Invites the
~Nbllc.
.

• Leather Seats

·• G-20 Vans·(Full Size)

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wed·
nesday's winning Ohio Lot~ry
numbers:
PICK-3
599.
PICK-3 1tklket sales totaled
$1,335,486.50, with a payoff \Jue of
$336,677.50.
PICK-4
. 7963.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$254,547.50, with a payoff due of
$117,700.
.
Super Lotio
5, 15, 16, 29, 30, and 41.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$4,244,837.
.
Kicker
471460.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$721,346.

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Announcements

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Installation set

vans

. S() ~£tJnver-si()n

,Lotto jackpot jumps to $10 million

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:: Sixty-nine arrests were made
' during January, according to th~
·report of .the Middleport Pol!ce
·Department.
· The department also lnves ti·

Southern Hilla SiDJer&amp; will lead
the slnatna. The public Is invited will be served-at 6:30 p.m. All
to atllend.
· members are Invited to ·a ttend.
.
POMEROY -The Belles and
HENDERSON - The Gallla
Beau~
Dance Club Is sponsoring
Twirlers Square Dance Club will
an
open
dance on Saturday at the
hold a dance on Saturday from
Senior
Citizen
Center ldPOmeroy
8-11 p.m, at the Henderson
fromS-li
p.m.
Thecallerwlllbe
Community Center In HenderBllly
Gene
Evans
and th~ dance
son, W.Va. The caller will be
Is
open
to
all
western
square
John Waugh and the danc.e Is
dancers. Refreshments wlll be ·
open to all square dancers .
served.
RUTLAND - There will be a
SUNDAY
round and slow dance on Satur·
CARPENTER -There will .be
day at the Ell DeniSon Posi 4~7 in
a hymn sing at the Mt: Union
Rutland from 8 to midnight. The
Baptist Church on Sunday at 7
public Is Invited to attend .
p.m, Singers will be Jan La·
vender
and Kathy McDaniel and
SALEM CENTER -The Star
the
Gabriel
Quartet. Pastor Joe
Grange will meet Saturday ai
N.
Sayre
Invites
the public.
6:30 p.m. at the Salem Center

"

" RUTLAND ' L An Organlza·
Ilona! meeting. of the Rutland
Baseball LeaJUe, will be held at
6:30p.m Thutsday at the Ruiland
American Legion hall on Beech
Grove Road. Anyone lntereslf!d
In the suinmer league for Ru ·
tiand should attend.
·

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served.

Tllt.I8IDAY

1990 GEO PRISM
4uto., air COildilbif'41.-18- engine

.0e11veracr
Loicled With txtrul

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�Ohio.
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SlindereUa meets

Valentine party held at chtirch

1S
Bridget Johnson celebrated Reed Koenig, areal · arand·
her eighth birthday recently with mother, Edith Webb, David and
a party at ,Pieaser's R.estaurant.· SheBa ScOtt, Jaille and Isaac
. Attending ihe party were Sla· Davia alld Doug, and Paula,
cey Brewer; Asblee Vaughn, Mindy, and Matthew !son. ·
Renee Stewart, Betltany and
1Heatber Boyles, Max and Mar jo·
rte Bratton, Chris Gllli'ey, Brooks
. Johnsop. her parents, Skipp and
Tbe Trinity Church of Porn~
Pam Johnson, Patrtna Fltzslm· l"l&gt;Y will have a " soup by theq~art
mons, and grandmother, Beulah sale" on Feb. 23.·
Homemade vegetable soup
J o hn son.
,
.. ~
She also had a slumber party and chicken noodle soup w111 ...,
wltll several friends spending the available. Thesoupw!ll sellfor$2
night. •
•'
per quart. .
Sending cards and gifts were
Orders can be callea ln to the
Brandy Tobin, ·Ashley. Burton,. following numbers, 992·!l480, 992·
grandparent~. ElmQ and Susaq 3222, or 992·3777 by Feb .. 20.
Webb, &amp;randfather, l{enry John·
Soup maY be picked up on Feb.
son Edith Lee Nelson and Noka 23 or by making other arrangeNe~sorne; wilbur, Ailee .11nd ' ments for the 'pick up.

Louise Chaffee lost the most
weight In the Monday class of
Sllnderella held at Five Points.
. There was a tie for runner up
between Debbie Halley, Cindy
Lambert, and Mary Browning.

..

Soup saw

In the Tliesday class at Mason,
Mary O'Brien reached her goal
weight and was accepted Into the
Slim·n·Trim prograll).
·
There was a tleformostwelght
lost between Vents Roush and
Betty Burton. Beth Foreman was
the runner up.
New members are ·now being
accepted Into the clas5es .

A valentine party was held
recently at the Forest . Run
Methodist Church for the junior
and senior · hlgh c lasses and
friends.
Refreshments consisted of· Ia·
cos, potato chip~ cookies and
pop. A birthday cake was pres·
en ted to John . Chaney as a
surprise on his 15th l;llrthday.
' Games were played and the
evening was captured on video
·
tape by Don Harris.
Attending were Chr is Hamm,

~Peopfe in the news

Technology StoresM

EAGLE EXPRESS WINNER - MarDyn Kibble, left, an eighth
grader at Easlern High School ,was the grand prize winner of two
.tickets to an Ohio Unlverslfy basketliall game from the Eagle
Express Store a1 the school. Prese11tlng the tickets's Toby Curds
who works hi the store. ·

Beat of the Bend,

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' -8lx
SWEETIIEART QUEEN CANDIDATES
Eaatera Hlp Scbool1enlon are rnnnlag for this .
year'e V alenll!le's D10ce "Sweetheart' Queea"
tit~. The queen will be crowned at haU time
cerem11nles . ·at lbe . Friday basketball rame

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By BOB HOEFLICH
Ave., Clearlake, . California,
You might have known that 95422.
Lionel Cilrtwrlght Is scheduled to
be the co· host on
Congratulations to Shelly Du·
Hee Haw ' s
Bose of Middleport.
March 13 show .
Shelly has been named to the
· However, did.
1990 Royal Court of Beta Sigma
you know Lionel
Phi Sorority and Is jllc:lured with
Is the grandson
. other members of the court In the
of Mrs. · Bertha
current edition of The Torch of
Johns!ln, Route
Beta Sigma Phi, the sorority's
1, Racine? Undoubtedly, Mrs. ·magazine. '
Johnson ls a very proud ·
grandmother.
The drugs are out there and
addicts have to have the big
Avice R. Frecker, for many
bucks to support the habit. The
years a Racine resident, cur· · worse the h~blt and the 11eed for a
rently Is making her home at
fix Increases the daring of the
Mayfair VIllage.
1
addict.
Mrs. Frecker writes notes of
' 1&gt;1. former resident of Meigs
encouragement to everyone she County recently was struck by ' I
knows who Is .Ill. She and her
the fender of an automobile at the
daughter, 'Janice Ro11sh Briggs,. · Eastle.nd Mall parking lot. In the
are well aware. of how 'much· excitement, a seeond young man
thOse notes and cards can mean
got out of the car which struck
during a time of Illness.
her and took her pocketbook Her address ls JOll Hayden
unfortu11ately containing several ·
Road, Apt. 309, Colllffibus, Ohio
hundred dollars. The car then
42325.
swiftly left the scene of the
.......
illcldellt. Ills reported that the
Sybil Ebersbach ' says that l11cldent was the second one of Its
many residents do Inquire about kind on the Eastern lot .that
Marglierlte Meyer Who operated part! cular week. Our former
Marguerite' s Shoe . Store In resident suffered minor bruises
Pomeroy for many years.
as a result of the accident - at .
Marguerite keeps plugging least she wasn 't seriously
along and m11tked another birth· lnjilred.
·
·
day annlversa.r y on Feb. 8. She
-------~resides at 137 Brevort · Ave., ' And - according to recent
Columbus, 43214. By the way,
national reports, sOIDe of the
Marguerite's sister, Clara Grlf·
drivers of the large trucks and
flth, also a former Pomeroy semis are Into the drug scene. ·
resident, Is notdolngwelland lsa
And they scared you before you
patient at Riverside Methodist knew that?
With the drug
Hospital In Columbus: at the · problem such as It Is, don't you
present time.
wonder just how man)' vehicles
you're encountering on the high·
Hope you genealogiSts are on
ways . with drugged drivers?
your toes.
Hold that thought and .j ust tcy to.
Mrs. EdithE . Douglas Is trying
keep smUing.
to locate Information on her
family history and has. two
ancestors who died ln .. Meigs
County. They are Anthony Haley
'who died on Aug. 8,.1842, and his
wife, Mary Dennison Haley, who
died Aug. 6 or 7, 1842. Mrs.
Doug)as suspects they could
have been Involved In some type
of accident since their deaths
were so close together.
· Anyone liavlnghany lnforma·
tlon Is requested to get In touch
with Mrs. Douglas ~~ 15880 42nd

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PAICESAPPlYATIIIATICIPATINO
ESANDDEALEIIS • ,
•

By WILLIAJ\'1 c. TRO'IT
weapons charges, already has
United Preaa Jnternallonal
received calls from groups Inter·
JAMES M. POimi
HOPE'S PHANTOM: "Phan· ested In having hlm work for
. tom ot the Opera" star Michael them . Among them are radio
c a f0 rd finds himself In a lot of s tations In Columbia, Char les ton
r w
and North Au1111sta that want
Jlm and Terri Powell. Noble
unc~aracterlstlc rol~~· In Satur· . Brown as a dlsc jockey and
Summit Road, Middleport, are
day s NBC special Bob ~ope. Benedict College ln Columbia,
announcing the - bl rth of a son,
Lampoons Show Business. ~e which wants Brown to work In Us
James Morgan, on Jan : 27. ,
plays Batman opposite Hope s music department. Brown will be
The Infant weighed seven
Joker In one sklt and In another banned from any out-of·state
pounds
and was 19 and one half
he sings a rap version of the
Inches long. ·
.
nightly news. "Standing there emplpymeht... and will be re·
Grandparents are David a nd
dressed as Batman was not a qulred to spend his nights at a
·
·
..
' work·release center. But Brown · Shirley Bumgardner, Middle·
nah1ral . experience, the ~?nY· won't' be going Into the program
port, and Jeri'y and Margaret
wlnni'lg Englishman .said. Bob lmmedl tel because there ls a
Powell, Racine. .
a Y
looked good, anyway. It was
Great grandmother· ls Eileen
enormous tun doing lt." "Phad· waiting llst at all the work·
Bowers,
and great great grand·
tom" still ls playing to sold·out release centers.
mother
Is
Helen Mlller.
audiences In Los Angeles and
GLIMPSES: Dr. Elizabeth
There
are
two other children at
Feb. 22 will mark CraWford ' s :. Morgan , who spent 25 nfonths ln
home,
Bridget
and Jacob.
1 OOOth performance as the Phan· jail on a civil contempt charge,
t~m. "Yes, I'mheginnlngtogetlt , spoke Wednesday to legislators
li;ht " he joked about the role
In Allnapolls, Md ., In support of
AIEl OSTOMY ASSOCIAnON
~OIIncllng a little like Hope: legislation that would .. put a
MEEnNG SUNDAY,
"Afte'r twoweeksofworklngwlth one· year cap on such sentences.
FEIIUAIY
11th. 2:30 P.M.
'Bob Hope l'mbeglnnlngtocome Morgan was jailed because she
· · · '
.
,,
·
would not reveal where her
P.V.H. COMIINITY ROOM
out with one-liners.
·
daughter was ·hld.lng from Mor· ·
ToPic "Pr•nntlon of H.art
TRUMP NOTES: Donald ' gan's husband, whO she feared
. · Dls.ast"
Trump on his estranged wlfe, as
ld ole t th child
· quoted ln the New York Dally wou · m 5
e
·
News Wednesday : "Ivana
· doesn't want the money . She
wants Donald. Slie totally loves·
me. I think she Is !antas tic. I'm
not saying, either, that some·
thing doesn't happen where we
don't get back together" .. .
Actress·model Marla Maples, 26,
reported to be " the other
woman" In the Trump split, is
from tiny Tunnel Hlll, Ga., and
starred ln basketball at her hlgh
school. She once dated New York
Giants punter Sean Landeta .. .
Author·Norman King Is fllriou~ly
writing an extra chapter fqr his
upcoming book "Ivana Trump:
· A Very Unau thorlzed Blo·
grapby.' ' The Carrol &amp; Graf
publishing house had long ago·
scheduled the book ·for publica·
Great designs
lion ln July and Intends to meet
from
yesteryear'
the date as soon as Klng updates
make a came·
.hls work with Iv'ana.' s separation
from her billionaire husband . .
back in the allnew·look of .
MAYOR'S TV JOB; There are
certain perk~ tb,a t go with being
Varsity end
mayor· of. New York. David
Memory.
OON7WAm
Dinkins, who succeeded Eci ·
Koch, will make 'a ca,meo appear·
I'IIICEGOOQTHIOUGHMAY31, '1990.
ance as himself soon on a new
ABC series called "H.E.L.P,"
OFFERED EXCLUSIVElY BY
which stands for "Harlem East·
side Lifesaving Program." The
show, which will be about a
special New York Clty emer·
C ~@'illlfl~~
gency unit comvosed of flreflgh·
Y·A· L·A·D+U·M
ters, pollee and·paramedlcs, will
replace the revival of "Mission
Impossible," which Is going on
hiatus on Feb. 24.
BROWN ON THE TOWN:
South Carolina corrections offl·
clals tiave ~cteared the way for
soul singer James Brown to
participate In a work·release,
program. Brown, who Is serving
a slx·year prison sentence In
Columbia for falling to stop for
pollee, aggravated assault and

Dear Ann Landers: As the well
spouse of a chronicaily)ll husb;md, I
am angered by the' leuer from your
friend and former Colleague. He loves
car\ng for his disabled spouse 24 bOuts

'doesn't care ·u it ts·daY or night. He
answers in monosyllablesornotatall.
He shows Ito emotion «Pteept anger
when he has b'Oublc 'with ~iS ,talking
books. (I forgot to ICII you that !)e 1s
a·dayandsays24hoursisnoteno'~gh,. ,legally blind.) I .haven't even 111enI would like 10 know what I1C docs tioned se~. llecause that ended with
for her:Does hedniin her catheter bag Jhe oiiset oflhe.disease, and I've for·
twice a day, clean it when it leaks, goucnwhatitis.
.
·.
changeiteveryeighttolOdays?Does · Does your friend and former col·
he bathe her in bed, as best he .can. teague .have help, or is he doing it
bcclluse it'ssodifficultto gcither into a wane? Mostol'the care-givers I know
bath or shower? Does he have to dr\:ss · do it alone because home healtll care
her, diaper her,lift her from the bed tO · is ICrribly e~pensive and not covered
the wheelchair to the electric lounge by Medicare or private insurance.
chair and do the same at night? Does
Ireadthebook "Mainstay" by Mag·
he feed her and get no resjlonse as to gie Strong (publisher: Little, Brown)
whether it's tasty, hOI, cold, salty, raw andcomacted the author. I then slllrted,
orfiledible?DOesshesaytbankyou?I asjiJ)JlOrtgrili!phereintown,andfive
could goon and on, because I'd like to to~en of usgettogelhereverynionth
know what that wonderful man is to enjoy our triumphs and share our
dealing wfth. ·
.
. tragedies. Yoilr friend SuggesiS that
L3!11 the principal care-giver of a the couple go everywhere together,
55·eyear-old Conner pilot. Bob .was· including support $fOUPS. My buslucky. He flew for United Airlines, band leaves 9'e hoUse only for medi·
and their insurance and health cover- · cal treatment and is confused in
age policy is ICrrific. Bob was stricken croWds. Would your friend have me
with multiple sclerosis and is now stay home too?
totally disabled. His fOur daughters
I was asked to serve on the board of
do not remember how tall he is or thenewly-fonned Well Spouse Foun·
what his laugh sounded like. He has dation. This gave me an ·opponuriily·
given up all decisi~n-.~ alcing ,and
..

In«. located In the .previous
Elberfeld Annex, at 114 12 E .
Main St . ln Pomeroy .
The. Meigs Jaycees are a.
leadership training.organization
o'peil to. people of the age 2HO.
Interested Individuals who would
like to join should contact Vic
Gaul at 992·3403 or Brian Cont;le
ilt 992·7114.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
''1989. Lo.- Anjii'IN
Timll'll Syndl Nl• •nd

· c ...... ..;. S~Miulf'

~ .

1----~~=!::::::~:J
~

10 spend a weekend with other well
spousesfromallovertheUnitedSiaiCS.
1 now know that I am not alone and
that there are others who arc .much
worse off.
·
The panqf your fonnercolleague's
letter that sto(&gt;ped me cold was when
he said he so enjoyed his disabled
wife's company that 24 hours was
"not enough." Let me ICll you, Ann,
24 hours is more than enough. Please
encouragcotberwell spouses w~o may
not feel as blessed as your fnend 10
read "Mainstay" and have them contactthe WeiiSpouseFoundation,P.O.
Box 58022, Pittsburg~, Pa. 15209.
· Yes, Ann, you may use my name.--~
MIOOETUXll..!-,GENEVA,N.Y.
DEAR MIDGE: your letter cOUld
have been written only l!y someone
who is living through the e~perience.
You 'really laid it on the line, and I
thank you. Our telephone conversa·
tion was just like your letter •. realis·
tic, n()whining, simply addressing the
prob)ems.
.
Hundreds of weD spouses wrote to

and

HIGHSCHOOL

CLASS RINGS

R. JOHNS, LTD.

Now ·1n ·Progress....

:·~~~;!w~:,~~:
lheir

,, \,,

'

tackle
Herculean jobs day after
Day Festlval, which features the day with not a shred of self-pity. I
'
Rocky Mountain Oyster Feed.
know you don't want to hear thiS, b'!t
Tow.tolk to lay down razors,
Friend sald the party bas you ~ heroes, each and every OQII.
aw1lt •oysters'
,. become Increasingly popular,
EAGLE, ) daho (UPI) - The last · year drawing sllme 2,000 All Clll say is God bless you, IJI(I
city councn has declared that all people for the feast on 2,000 may' He give y,ou the Sllengtb to
carryt.on. ... "'"'
'" able bodied residents" should
of beef
'
lay down' their razors startlng
March lto participate In a beard·
growing contest to celebrate the
state's centennial.
-i
But It's only after the lOl·day
whisker race Is over June 9 that
Eagle's 2,600 residents show
their true colors, diving Into the
local delicacy known as "Rocky
Mountain Oysters," or bull's
',
testlcles.
¥ayor Steve - Guerber said
Wednesday the city will bei!D
Is sWag cltat·lonsln mid· March to
· clean,shaven residents Without a .
' 'shaving permit," ·acconilq to
the city o::ounciJ. resollitiof1. The,
suggested fine will 'lle -· the
· same price as ·a ,s havlq ·permlt.
'
· Coates! categories wl!llnclude .
'
the longest beafd, grayest beArd,
reddest beard, most ~lstln·
gu~bed beard, besl }'resident'
Harrison look-a·llke beard, ' the
.'
seroUa,lest beard and the molt
unllsual beard. Wlnnen In eu~ , ·
catelfOry will receive a . ,
~.
.
-~~
Daa Friend. a member of the
I ~I!ICIII~= 10:tO •·• • 4.'00 ,.,..

RECLINERS BY

ane

r

ATTENtiON

\,ill\itecl .
. 1il'll• Only\

OHIO MEDICARD ~t..ld G.ENERAL
RELIEF CARD HOLDERS:
-

· · We ·Are Authorized to
Fill Y.our P-reicrlptions ·
.For All Eligible Drugs.

ACTION RECLINERS
Prices

.Mo•t MejOr

.... -. · Credit
C..-da
W
I
_
• come

·~

·)

'

.

Star~ing At

$399

Britt AFried, Shrt T~• Oe1tl

.

·f!'le

I

.

'

Buy nowt 1164-2825

Reg. 24.116

•

.,

· ftiUIReg.
;,-.,.sus 27183~ 12•8,~
Tont/pi,dHt dlallnQ

· Walkie

,,

By United Press lnternallonal

,I

"Hold". ~~373

40-Ch. CB

'

'

Quirks, .i,n t he news.

10-Channel Table
Scanner Radio

E

Deb Gilson, area one vice
membership and a discussion
president, Steve Gilson, !!Xecu· was held on upcoming events and
tlve assistant to the· president, · coinmunlty Improvements. '
and J,.arry Malcolm, dls,trlct ~2
The regional bowling to11rna·
dlre&gt;tor:we!'llthe gues! speakers
ment was announced for Feb. 25
at the recent ' meet.lng; 'of. \he , at Marietta. ''
Meigs County Jaycees.
'
Futu~e meetings will be held
Twenty new members , sworn ' lhe first and third Saturdays of
In by Mrs. Gll'son,' signed for .... each month at the jaycee build·

Book a .'Mainstay'
for the :well spous~

..

''·

M

11 was noted that Robert were Nancy Morris, Barbara
Barbara Fry announced that
·
Burdette
ls tbe reclplenl of a 55 Fry, and Helen Blackston, and
entry blanks are available for the
year seal from the National Kathryn Miller.
grange contests at the recent
Grange.
A quiz on food for thought was
meeting of the Rock Springs
Communications were re· conducted· by Janice Weber and
Grange.
·
celved from . the National she also read "How'·s Your Food
Mrs. Fry also gave tips on car
Grange, the Stahl fami!Y for and Farm I.Q." Linda Broderick·
safety. exercise, and the han·
flowers sent to them. An lnvlta· read "Be My Valentine." and a
',
dllng of hamburger.
. It was noted thai the saving of • tlon was read from the Hemlock film · was · shown on polson
.
eyeglasses conilnues to ·be· a 'Grange requesting that the group ,.problems.
attend a dinner and meeting on . The song "LOves Old Sweet
project for .the CWA.
·
March 17.
Song" closed the .meeting and
Opal Grueser gave a report on
Pat
·Holter
presented
the
pro·
~
refreshments were served by
several items of legislation.
gram
"From
Mouths
of
Little
!llan~y
Morris and Linda
The charter was draped In
Sprouts." Others taking part • Broderick.
memory of John Stab~.

..'

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--------

c

ROck Springs .Grange meets

Meigs County·]aycees hear officers

___ ____

_ c

behr- Oak Hill and Easteri C10dldates are,
flnt row, ·Raelynn Dai.Iy, Amber Sh9rt, ant;!
Cry111l Kaylor. Second row, Beth .\rbaugh and
Debbie Brooks. Absent. from the photo Is Tara
Morris.
'. ·

.

Willi AdiDter
Kit and iWo· ·-'
Recharg.nble
Blllarlel

.
Powell birth

·America's

One proud grandma

Amee Mills, Amy Moore, Jenny
Varney, 1\:{lltt Ridenour, Brldeet
Varney, Renee Russell, Steve
Caruthers, Don Harris, Mary
Changey, Rhonda Spaun, John
Chaney, Ronnie Spaun, Sarah
Harris, Jason Ervin, Amber ·
Lyons, Kelly Ervin, and Andrea
Roc!chold.
· Hostesses for the evening were
Jane Harris, Marcia Ar nold, and
Mary Belle Warner. Jennifer
Arnold and Amber Findley
headed up the entertainment.

'

t..

0,. Dally ... s
.... &amp; '"·.

cub

mebt, aakl

l!e· hOpe~ ·tile lletl1l .

Eagle Volunteer
Fire
Depart•
growing
eon~ ,will
·~
~'Yell ..
more people .~ the ~·cte Fua

.

lt;~jl~';=~~i!~~'"~·~·~;-~•
•·-

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�•

12-The Daily Senti•tl

Bush travels to .drug sutmnit in Colombia
amid tight security
.

.·

BARRANQUILLA , Colombia
(UPI) - Under extraordinarily
tight security, President Bush
arrived In Colombia Thursday to
meet with three South American
leaders and explore ways to stem
the now of Illegal drugs to the
•· United States.
Bush, accompanied by top
aides, made no publ)c statement
upon hls arrival. He greeted
dlgtljtarles · and Immediately
boatlled a U.S. helicopter to
travel to the summit site about60
miles awa y In Cartagena,
Colombia.
'
Bush, who has expresSed full
confidence In the security mea·
sures for the one-day, four-nation
summit, departed Andrews Air
Force Base before dawn Thursday aboard Air Force One.
The preside nt, who ate dinner
Wednesday night at hls favorite
. Chinese restaurant, spent the
nlght at the base aboard Air
Force One.
Theotherleadersattendingthe
summit are Colombian Pres!dent Virgilio Barco, Bollvlan

President Jaime paz · Zamora
and Peruvian President Alan
Garcia.
Bush was accompanied · by
administration drug policy .advlser WIWam Bennett, Secretary
of State James Baker, national
, security adviser Brent Scowcroft
and White House chlel of starr
John Sununil.
VIce President Dan Quayle
. remained In Washington.
Thesummltwlllbrlng together
the le;~ders of the world's biggest
cocaine-producing nations..:.. Colombla, Peru and Bollvla - alid .
the world's biggest cocaine con-·
sumlng nation, the United States
- for united action.
· The leaders are expected to
sign a previously drafted "documen! of agreements' • and, according to White House aides, ·
will pledge to work to replace the
multibillion-dollar South Amerlcan drug trade with legal commerce, expanding law eilforcement and reducing the demand
for drugs .
''This Is an Important meet·

.

.

iJII," said Bush. " My discussions Marines 1s orr Cartagena mu1 tlo01, which have been preulng
with the three presidents is
5,000 Colombian troopalllaJ'dllll for more favorable U.S. trade
aimed at further atrenJtbenlnll
the area around Casa de Huet- pollc:iel for coffee. flower and
our mutual cooperation, at dis·
pedes, the· coral stone muston fruit exports.
ruptlng the lnternstlonal now of
.o\JIOther topic likely to ~rise Is
and complex where the meetings
drugs, and at demonstrating the
U.S.
military asliltaiKII! In South
will be held.
.
·
United Stalel' firm commitment
From the start, Bush plans to America, aow limited to p~vld·
and partnership.
admit freely the United States Is lng trallllng and equlpment.. ' 'Toj~ether," he added, " we· a major _drug abuslna nation.
Lut month, the admlnlstra·
will be able to take a major step
''The p~ldent will reiterate tlon lndeftnltely placed on bQld a
· toward the goal of eradicating right up tr011tthat we have a drUg propoeal to plaell a naval task
the drug problem."
problem In the United States. We force off Colombia after comThe trip has the JlPtentlal to be · are a major user, and we want to plaints In South America that II
the most dangerous of Bush's
help solve this problem," said would amount to "a blqckade. "
13-month presi~III)CY. Reports White House press ·s ecretary
Scowcroft, Bush's national se·
eurlty adviser, said th¢ task
have surfaced th11t drug cartels Marlin Fitzwater.
have placed a bounty on his head
Also expected to be discussed force would merely erect a
and have obtained anti-aircraft are non-enforcement goals to "radar net" to detect smugglers
mtsslles to down Air Force One.
replace tields of coca -the main and maintained, ... It's an Idea we
Bush hilS had to defend his
Ingredient . In . cocaine - with · think has merit."
decision to take the malniy others crops. Bush· said the
· NBC News repOrted Wednessymbolic journey, Insisting It Is
United .State~ "stands ready to day that U.S. cargop!anesand up
not mach!slmci that motivates
assist" and will spend $2.2 billion· to-160 troops have been spotted
him, but a strong desire to help In the next tiveiyears to help the "eep 1118lde Colombia dul'lng the
Barco In hls· coura1eous stand An_deiln countries In their agri- past' month, apparently setting
against the drug klnaplns. ,
up land·based radar stations.
cultural transition.
Security will be Incredibly
Officials said the figure could · NBC also reported U.S. A)r
tight as measures are In place .to Increase, depending on · new Force AWAC radar planes have
seal.off the slimmit site. A U.S. demands In the drug war and been operating from Pu·e rto
naval task force with armed requests .from the Andean na- . Rico, which, the network reported

..

~. ~ 1&amp;, 18s0 ·

FellrulrY 1&amp;, 1880

lh.ndly,

hu becomeuimportant staging
area for American military units
asligned tD new drug patrols In '
the Caribbean.
But Fltzwa~r, notil)g the Latin
American sensitivities, &amp;tr'!!aaed,
•We will offer no help that II not
wanted," and wd Bush will walt
for the South Americans to even
rillse the subject · of military
assls tance.
·
Tile Medellin cartel, a large
and powerful drug consortium In
Colombia, has ravaged the coun,tr;Y, with. Violence against public
oHiclala since Barco cracked
down on them .. But In recent
w~b. they have made peace
civertureli to'.avoid extradition to
the Unlt,d States.
;. Rep. Cl)arles Rangel, D·N.Y.,
chairman· of the House Select
Committee on ·Narcotlcs ·Abuse
and-Control, wished Bush "Gods·
peed," and said tb"l! sumnilt will
be a . key toward escalating the
drug war.
"We are on a rollin Colombia,"
Rangel said, adding that Barco
·'has the cartel on the run." ··

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - · The it takes a nuinber offactors about
race of criminals does,not appear the Individual criminal and their
to Influence whether they are crime into consideration.
sent
to prison . or how long a
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Unseasonably warm weather ,
sentence
they receive, a study of
The three-year study Involved
caused housing starts to rocket by a · record 29.6 percent in
'•
California
·convicts
concluded
·
11,553
criminal defendants who
'
January, recovering from a 6.9 percent sllde durhig ·
Thursday.
.
were
convicted
In Calfornla ·In
December's deep freeze, the Commerce Departinent said
Thursday.
·
Researchers at the Rand Corp.
1980 of assault, robbery , bo rIn Santa Monica, Calif., said their glaty, theft, forgery • or drug
The
1,625,000
privately
owned
housing
units
started
In
(
study was the largest and "most crmes.
January compared to 1,254,000 starts In December- the largest
•..
•
credible"
of Its kind and It
When the researchers took a
gain
since
the
government
started
tracking
Musing
starts
in
•
contradicted previous findings
variety of factors Into consldera- ·
1959, and ,the best since 2P percent in July 1982.
by the group.
tlon, such as the severity of the
"Unusually warm weather contributed to the Increase," the
' 1'he oldest question In criml·
crime committed and thedefenddepartment's Census Bureau said In Its monthly report.
naljustice Is whether or not race
ant's·prevlous record, their race
''January 1990ranks as the nation'swarmestJanuaryonrecord
•
affects
who
goes
to
prison,"
said
did
not appear to significantly
following the fourth coldest December since 1895."
•
Joan
Petersllia,
who
led
tqe
new
influence
whether they were sent
Single-family housing starts hit 1.137,000, a 24.9 percent surge
·:•. over
study,
which
was
published
In
the
to
prison
or
for how long.
December's 911,000, and the biggest increase since a 26
journal
Science.
·
"Personally I was surprised In
percent jump In March 1979, the Commerce Department said.
,;•
'1 think It Is very good news In
Construction of bulld!~gs with five or more units also
the sense that equitable sentencrocketed, with a 51 percentlncrease, or 434.000 starts lnJanuray
•.'•
Ing
seems to be more prevalent
compared
to
288,000
In
December,
the
best
since
a
56
percent
.,, . jump In January 1985.
today," said Peterslllil, dlreclor
•
of Rand's criminal justice pro· All the statistics are seasQnally adjusted to reflect such
•
gram and president of the
•••
critical factors as the weather.
•
I'
American Society of
Building
permits
also
jumped
In
January,
1,743,000
vl!rsu5
••
Criminology,
·
1,376,000 In December, a 26.7 percent Increase, and the highest.
~
Previous
.
studies
have
prosince 30 percent In June 1980, the Commerce Departinent said.
••
duced conflicting results on
Authorizations for buildings with five or more units leaped·91
·
whether a black defendant was
percent,
with
651,000
approvals
In
January
compared
to
341',000
•.. . in December, the department reported. . · · ' ·
·
inor~ likely than a white defend·
·.·
ant to receive a harsh sentence,
By region, private housing starts in January:
which would help explain why
-Northeast: 194,000, a 38.6 percent Increase over 140,000 In
blacks are very overrepresented
December.
., ....
-:=--in U.s. prisons.
-Midwest: 388,000, a 42.7 pefcent increase over 272,000 in·
December.
But PetersUia;whose previous
~-studies
have indicated blacks
.,. · · -South : 532,000, an increase of 24.6 percent over 427,000 in
. :::=~ ...- ·
December.
may be more likely than whites
•
to receive harsh sentences, said
-West 511,000, an increase. of 23.1 percent over 415,000 ·in
'43'1"
December.
her new study Is more reliable
'SAVE S60
than previous research because

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. tourist and art colony of Laguna
(UP!) - Hu~ of cleanup Beach, Coast Guard spokesman
workera shivered through a long Tim Rowe said.
night In bitterly ·COld temperaBut tide pooll teeming with
tures as they mopped, raked and
marine llfl! were not 'lmmeshoveled up what officials said diately threatened, he said.
was·the laat or the on that spilled
Rough seas forced a ftotilta of
last week tram a ruptured
oD·s!dmmlng boats to suspend
tanker.
their efforts Wednesday, but
An arctic Storm packing bitter future Skimming may be \IDfte"
gale.force winds Wednesday · 'cessary, officials said, because
drove .the bulk of the remaining . the only visible oU In the water
ollfroma3!N,OOO-gallonsplllonto late Wednesday was a nearly
nearly 25 miles of beach.
transparent sheen considered
·The worst of the damage '.'skimless," Coast Guard Petty
occurred at Bolsa Chlca and Officer Dennis Hall said.
., ·
Huntington Beach and along a
" Most of the Ollis hugging the
stretch of Newport Beach, where· · coastline and the skimmers can't
for the first lime balls of ally tar get close enough," he said.
and foaii'!Y mQusse sullied secOn tbe beaches, strong wt.nds
tlons of the Balboa Peninsula, an
plagued cleanup workers
upscale en~: lave and popular through the day, and the yellow·
tourist destination, and Corona sUckered crews shivered In wind
. del Mar just to the south.
chills that made II feel like
Small 't ar balls began washing temperatures were In the. teens .
asho~ Wednesda)l'night along a
More than 1,100 workers used
2-mlle stretch of coast from
rakes, shovels and absorbent
Corona del · Mar to the famed
towels to clean up some of the

.

.

..'·

•
·.

•

.·.

area's moet popular surfing
beaches fouled In the aftermath
of the spill, which happened Feb.
7 when the tanker American
Trader sliced open Its single bull
with Its own anchor while moor·
lng at an offshore Unloading
facility.
"It has a lava flow appearance
or a mixture of aU and water, and
In some places It is61nches thick,
and In other places II is a fbam,"
Newport Beacb Pollee Lt. Tim ·
Newman said after surveying
sands darkened by the oil.
Despite progress · In the clea·
nup effort, many continued to
express outrage over the worst
sputln Call(ornla slpce 1969.
1 "It's gob\g to talte at least a .
•decade for the ec.osystem to
recover from this toxic Insult.
This Is a dlsas.ter." said Bob
Skulnlck of the environmentalist
group AJ;Derlcan Oceans Cam·
palgn. "You cari't clean up an oll
spill, you · can only prevent
them .''

•

While the study was · only
conducted In Calfornla, Petersl·
lla ·said she thought It probably
reflected the situation In other
studies where sentencing. guidelines are In place.
Adjoa Alyetoro, a staff attor·
ney at the American Civil LIQE!r. ties Union National Prison Project, said one s~udy could not
dispute the findings of many
previous ones that produced
conftietlng results.
· "There are studies that have
been done In VJrginla, In Georgia
and in Al!ISka and other states
that have Indicated that race Is a
factor," said Alyetoro. "This Is
just one study In one state."

TO PLACE A" AO CAll 992·21 Sb
MONDAY-thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. uiltil NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY
POLICIE:S
' Ath ' nutsKlc Mt;t~s . Gallta or Masun ouuntres mu st bt: prt!
paut
'Ruc~11 S !»0 dr•count lor ad\ pilltd m &lt;H"'ancc .
... rtttt adi • Gtveuw11y and Found 11ds undtlf 15 wonls wrll be
run 3 ct._ » at no ch•ge .
,

. 15
15
16
15
15

1
3
6
10
MonUtly

tm t!lfUFI first d., ad wns 111 fi;IJlurt C:rll bc1Uill 2 00

dar atwr publtcauon to n1ak tt co rrecttUit
'Ads that must bu patd 111 advo.ncl! Mt!
Caul nl Thll!lks
H CI ~~Y Atb.
Yiud Saltts
I t1 McnlOIIillll

Rates are l01 t:omacuttvft runs . btokenupd.,s will be ChlfgiiKI

!'or eKh d..- u sep.uare ~s .

' DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
.
11 00 A.M SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
2 ,00,P M MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2 .00 f' M TUESDAY
'
WEONfSDAV PAPER
2 00 PM . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2:00 P lo4 THURSDAY
tHIUAY, PAPER
2 00 PM . FRIDAY
SU'WDAY PAPER

COPY DEADliNE

154~100

No.w S44900

&lt;' 01 '1'1' f /11•

HomU5 tor S•le

32

33

Mobllu Honlltl tor S ltlt:
Farms lor S•le
8utlness Burldmgs
lois &amp; Acreage

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6
7

Happy .Ads
lOll and Found
Yard S1lclpard '" adYancl!)

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Publu; S-'1t. Auc:110ri

3I
35
36

...
JBB

245
256
643
379

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'
Mi'•un Co , WV
Ate 11 Code 304

r,1e•gs. County
Area CIMte 614

992 M•ckU..,ort

Galhpolts

Pom~~toy

.Vinton.

Rio Gr1nde
Guv•n 'Otat
Arabi• Oist.

W.llnul

985.
843
247
949
702
667

Ch•ler
Ponland
t.e11r1 f;alls.
Rar;tne
Rutl.,d
COolvtlle

OF. STifF :

992-2156

6 1 Farm Equtprnunl
Wt~~tled to Buv

6 2,
63

Li'ol l! IIOCk

64

Hay &amp; Grain

W.nh~ d

65 Sued 6

Hon•• tor Renl

42

Mobil e Homes ~or Ren1

7 1 Autos lor Siiltt
12 Truck s tor Sal11

45

Furntstted Roont»

46
47
48
49

Sp•ce for Ae111
W.nhrd to R11tnt
Eqtupment tor Runt
Forlease

73 Vllns&amp;4WO ' s
74 MotorcycltA
1&amp; Boilts &amp; Moton l o r S&lt;~ltl
76 Aut o Pouts &amp; AC CUS10Clftus.;
77 Aut o Ropau
78 Ctuuptng Eq,11pm~11
79 Carnperi It Motur Homu11

Merchandise

Services

51 Household Good s
62 .. Sporting Goods
81

53 Ant•que1

'

21
22
21

Protes11onal S.ttt 11o c~

H orne ln, provmntinl s

82 Plumbmg I

54 M l• c . Mercha nd •Stl
55 Bwtding Supplu•
58 Pills tor Sale
57 Mu .+callnttrumtrntli
58 ffu•b &amp; Vegtt~o.bl-.
59 For Sale Of Tt ach t

Butmlllii Oppmtunlly
Monuv lo Loan

ftlrllhl l! l

Trans orlation

41

43 F,m"s tor R11nl
44 Apartmenl lor Runt

'"""
Ma1on

S82 New ,H•vt~n
895 letiirt
9J7 Bufl•o

Re.al Eslel•

w .... le..lo Buv

675 Pt Plua~anl
458
576 Appl11 Grove
773

8ARAIE-Rl

I;Qillll.

11. tilrlp W~ntttd
12 S•tu1hon Wanted
tl
lnaur.anc~:~:
14 8ui mou Trounu111
1 ~ S~;hools &amp; lnstwc tmn
16 Radto, TV &amp; CO Rcpatr
17 Mtr.t:ttllan~us
18 Wan111d To Do

followill~ f I'II'JIIllllll' t•xdwn~l'.• ...

J67 Ch•huO

.

31

E111 pl oy 111 ent
SerVIces

Calha County
Area Code 614

AHADI'
OF cAsH
'IS BEllER
THAI A

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1v es lock

3 Annoucefnunts
4 Givt.W•Y

9

(.'/(ls.~ifit•d I'"~'' ·'

'

Real Esl ale

C1rd ot lh;10b
lri Milmor.,

1
2

p Ill

wtll 01lsu .tp~eilf 111 the Pt PhHisam Re!IISh:r and thu Galh
pulls Dmlv .Tubuntt. much1i1~1 ovm 18.000 hunun•

Reg.

Announceme11s

Ov.,r 15 Words
' Rate
.20
$4.00
.30
$6 .00
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.06/ day
$; 30 / day

Words

Days

rai n jackets, boots and plastic
bags .
But the spill was hurting other
area bu .s lnesses . Whalewatching boats, chartered wed·
ding yachts artd fishing boat sand
landlords who rent beach houa··
lng to tourists all reporlled
drastic dropofts .

experts said sensitive wetlands
that are home to hundreds or
thousands of birds have been
spared.
Seven dead, oily seals have
been found, but authorities have
-yet to determine If the deaths
were related to the splll.
"I'm not pleased with the
damage that has been done. but
I'in p_leased not more damage
has been done," State Depart·
ment of Fish and Game Warden
Reed Smith said.
The 20-year -o ld, 80,000-tpn
American Trader remained
docked at Long Beach Harbor,
where It was unloading the
remainder of Its 19-mllllon gallon
cargo. When the oil Is dr!llned,
two temporary patches In the
hull will be examined and the
ship taken to a large~ dry dock
lor repairs.
The cleanup contractor had
spent about $850,000 at local
businesses on equipment and
supplies, InclUding thousands of

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

"P11cu nl ad lor all capll;l llelU:tr s 15 doublu pu ct1 ol ad co5t
"7 '"m1t lntlf ly~U t•nly u$tKI
'
'
"Sunlntt~ ''not responsiblin tor mror!i aftttt hr sl tli:ft [Check

·A t;liltilitltud o ntvt~rltStJmt:nl plio~:t~tl w 1 he D iuly Stmtuwl(ea
cupt
dassth od thspl.ty. BusHtt.'SS Ca rrl .uulk~ Jal nolu:I!S)

·.·:

The Daily Sentinei-PIIge 13

Charles Webster, crllls man·
ager for British · Petroleum
America, which leased the
tanker Involved In the spill; said
the amount of oil skimmlid was
roughly four times the average
for spllls, which Is about 11
percent.
BP salil the cleanup Is costing
roughly 8750,000 a day ·and that
costs had reached at least $4
mUUoil so far, cash paid out while
BP acts as agentfor the tanker's
owner, American Trading Trans· .
jlortatlon Co. otNew Yark, which
has accepted liability ·for the
accident.
Both BP and Coast . Guard
officials were uncertain when the
entire cleanup woul&lt;! be completed and beaches and harbors
reopened.
··
Sl~e the American Trader
ripped open Its forward, dumpIng 394,000 gallons of Alaska
crude, at least 150 birds have
been killed by the splll and more
than 300 Injured . . But wildlife

•

Classi 18

'•

part becau~ I was responsible
for five years of earlier work that
reached the opposite conclusion .
This contradicts my own wor[!. I
was a haril case to sell these
findings to. But over a two- or
three-year period .. . I was
convinced that In today's court
sy·s tem ra~e Is not having an
impact," she said. "This Is ,lh4i!
..largest and most credible study
of Its kind."
" Petersllla said the findings
may · reflect the· adoption by
'many states of sentencing guidelines that to a large extent do
away with an Individual judge's
discretion and therefore the
Impact of their racial prejudices.

'

Ohio

Virtually all spilled oil has hit California shoreline

·e r--:H-:-o-u-s-=in· -g-s-ta_i.....'l...:.s---. Race does not impact prison senten~es: study.
.·. rocket 29.6%
I.

Poniii'OV-I\I!iddllpon,

85 Gunt!ral H.au11111J
86 Mobtht Hume fh:pa ir
8 7 Upholr.ltny

.-__··-·-----

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

--

·-~New way to gauge ozone hole impact
:; : NEW ORLEANS (UP!) ... Sclentis ts reported Thursday
they have developed better tools
to gauge the Impact or' the
- depletion of Earth's protective
ozone layer on living creatures .
Two research teams said they
. • .)lave found methods to directly
measure the amount of danger; ous ultraviolet light reaching
: marine life at various ocean
, depths.
~ Lack of a good measuring
: technique has hampered efforts
• to judge how marine mlcroorga: n isms are affected by the UV
• • light Increase caused by the
; recent development of an ozone .
: "hole" over Antarctica. Micros. coplc life In Antarctic waters
: play an Important role In !he food
: chain for fish, seals .and other
"' creatures ar.ound the globe.
' Scientists have linked deple. ; lion of Earth's upper ozone layer
• to chlorofluorocarbons released
: by industrial refrigerants and
: solvents once common In house·
• hold aerosols.
: In the upper atmosphere,
: ozone gas Is beneficial fo humans
• arid other forms of life by
: shielding Earth from the sun's
; UV radiation, which can damage
. genetic material. At ground
: level, ozone Is a major campo: nent of· smog and can cause
. respiratory distress.
In studies presented at an ·
,. Amerlc·an Geopbyslcal Union
• meeting, researchers from Oak
: Ridge National Laboratory In
' Tennessee and University of
: California-San Francisco out• lined two different approaches to
; dlrectl,y measuring ilitenslty of
· biologically harmful UV light.
: The technique developed by
UCSF's Deneb Karentz uses a
mutant bacteria strain · that Is
·unable to repair the darna1e UV ·
; light 'Inflicts on Its deoxyrlbonu.cJelc ackS, or DNA, the genetic
"material that carries the blue. print for life.
·
; The abiUty to repair DNA
~ varleJ widely from organism to
organiSm - a situation that,
alona with weather-dependent
•arlaUonsln,UV light, has made
'It difficult to 1et standard mea,
· surelllftts of the ozone hole's
Impact oe Antarctic life.
·
Tile UCSF method Involves
packlq mutant bacteria Into
clnr piiiUc bap, and submers·
Ill&amp; tlleln II VlrloUI oet!IUI '
depdll."'111e percentage of ·dead
· ;bacteria In each bag relative to a

· OF FIDUCIARY
On Follnotlly 7. 11110. •
the Mofp County
Court, Colo No. 281121, ·

Pro_,.:

Guy E. Huntior, Mofn " - .
flutr.nd. Ohio 411778, ~ •
Df •
tho eototo of Tho...., Belloy

oppointed Adml_,.,or

ELECTRIC ot GAS

S44 9

fOR Ofii.YI

Huntar.lll, dec••ed.t.te of
121 Union A -. Po,..

~
··:=:c:--··--·----·-SAVE

control bag kept In the dark gives the Oakridge lab have
a simple measure of the amount · developed a l)'lonitor similar In
of biologically harmful UV light principle to the UC!Jf
at that depth.
technique, but cllffe~t hi
. This "provides an estimate of details.
.
the maximum damage that can
The Oakridge approach takes
take place as a result of the UV "naked" DNA, removed from
light," Karentz said. "The ozone the protection and repair benef·
hole allows more 1.1V light to its of a surrounding cell, and
reach Earth's surface, but until encases It In a -c lear quartz
now we didn't have aliy Indica· container. When lowered Into
tlon how: much of that light water, · the device measures
actually went into the water."
biologically harmful uv light by
For the past four years, a hole looking at the linking rate of
has appeared in the ozone layer certain DNA base units - a rate
over Antarctica during the re· that Guclnskl said Is· directly
glon's spring. At that time, the proportional to the Intensity of
water Is 50 clear that a person UV radiation.
,.
-c an see up to 100 feet below the
DNA damage can Increase the
surface and microorganisms like risk of some cancers and ' If
bacteria' and phytoplankton are damage occurs In reproductive
at their peak.
celts, it _can cause birth defects.
"I think this Is exciting stuff,"
"This (new method) Is imporHerman Guctnsld, a researcher
tant because we really need a ·
with NSI Technologies Service · conclusive way .to show that the
Inc. in Corvallis, Ore., said of thinning of the ozone layer really
Karentz's work.
produces biological changes on
Guclnskl and James Regan of
the.surface of Earth.

.

REG. 1699''

S60

• ~~-- Gb Out St........
• CoYnd SIOrlftllllhel

·~~~A~~ ~-~

SS39

CATNAPI'ER

Extra hlth Me* whh
plulh comfort! Av. •••

cushkm. eorner teattonll

--..... . .

SCMWIGEI

SOFA &amp; lOYESEAT

Umlted To

111 35 5118

.,..-'~6
-~. .:::;;.'"ii.:;ONLY.•~. ·:·"!-,""·~"/i:'~l;l;a:•·~~~:=r~tw:~~o=~
1199.99

r&lt;turn on

lhe I

PUICMSI ·
EniOJ 4 ran mled.romantk: nllhtt

1

s·

~

. , . . . . . . I~ j~WChiM

1

DIAMOND RING
ONLY

$89999

Florida or Bahamas

_

Roger. Marjorie.

NEWUND
ENTERPRISES

BIG SUEEN
NOW

$1788

DUMP TRUCK

Sll)d·Stone-Dirt

1614) 667-3271

In Memoriam
We mi.. you

.

40"

-~~P¥Jiotome ..

nf Ollly

SITEWORK • ~OA~S
CLEARING

family membero

2

-CAN

lntopoccommoctattonolnF...port.

A opecloi thMikt to
tho Racine EmtiO'goncy
Squod ond to Rov. Ken·

Pouilno ond all othor

BE OUR Gl}EST" t~~;;.
~ Enjoy a fabulous [;

'1!-- . BAHAMAS

•:1-

DOZER

neth · ._kor for hit
comforting wordo ..

M llzo VIIIIIQ Ctm"'dot

----------t
....
___
.
,
.
.
.
.....
.
.
(AlA' (lUSTER
S.!.":"!·-=.::..-=::-..:.:::::;:.
ONL

COLD

S299

•

ert, vlslto ond preyort.

.r 1399 .........
' ..... __
....""'!'............
....... llwo!JIII.
... btniW

.... .

10~~6~:\~c&gt;~~E, ·

on thi1 your
birthday, Feb. 115.
You t.ft ue to go to.
H•ven eeven

SWIIIMING POOL

EI!YIAVAGANZA
Ha1 tht cold ~titer
· got you down?
TIINK SUMMER!

Act

..... • • .• 119

Jewelry Sales
Goad For

tt.ll '

.'

SHOP

anti rt•

PAl HILL fOlD
812·2111
Middleport,

MEDICAL WOIATOIY TECHNICIAN
,Full Time polltlon Ia anllable for a Medlael
Laboratory TeoMiolan. to work •rotltlng
lhlfU (all lhlfttl. Requl.-.e· Jnclependent

WOitler with a.pabllltlelln 81 .,.., of ollnl·

u•.

Cecilia
Labor•tory lupervlaor
Yetarlnl M•tiOI'Iel ' Hoepltel
·

1111 I. Mawnorlal DIM,
POIIlii'OY, OH. 411711

*SHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
~OVAL ·

*LIGHT HAULING

*FIREWOOD

BILL .SLACI
992-2269
EVENINGS

4·1-lt-do

R. L HOLLON

TRUCKING
c•STB, 0110
~GRAVEL

··LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

915-4422

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobiio Home
Perto

•Mobile Homo

•!.« Rantala

992-7479
It, 3J llorth of

,_ray, Ohio

1·12-'U-tln

EXCAVATING
&amp; TIUCIING
TO~ . SOl~

FOR SALE
'949-2493

irtl Street,

.'

(8141111·2104, Ext•llon 2115

101

lAONE

L-tell at V6y L.-r
. 'tn lid··· I '· 011.

analn•

.Rentata

.

DAVE'S .
SMALL ENGINE
IEPlll
PARTS AND SERVICE
. For. Moot 2 ll)d 4-cyclo

011.
110.

Help wantiCI

PIM18 Oontect:

'

SE~IOI

........... anti
out r.tlllfers. We •
repalt Gas r.a .

W!! an loved you
vaty much.
Nans, Henry.
Marcella, Carla •nd

calleboretory. Exilellent fringe beMfltl.

.,

7· llo'H-Ifn

an radlatan
heater Clt'tl. ••

v•rs ago June.

11

Grc.tA.N•wkMd

We can repair

6randchlldrsn

CAPS
11 CIPS

.

U)VESEAT

MARIE THEISS
with to thonk everyone
for their help during the
lou of our loved one.
Tho 1111rdo, food, flow-

•Red Tag Side Items Do Not Apply
"---~'-"-'

11Hper.

UG•
11,13

Tho Family Of

OR

with o.te lnctlner •nd

;.:.£_ E·'"

Selection

QUEEN

•

PAI 't

large

I

1 Card' of Thllnks

•FREE DELIVERY
•CREDIT TERMS
•SERVICE DEPT.
•90 DAY TERMS

. • UUI CU. Ft.Volume .

"FLU &amp; COLD HLIEF CENTER"

Ji

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

-~

' ..

Frost Free Refrigerator

I

COATED ASPIAIH

~-

While-Westinghouse

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
MIDD~EPOU, OHIO
.
....

-- --

Robert E. luck.
ProllattJuclae
Lono K. ruo......... Cr.rtt
(2) 15, 22; (31 1 3tc

,

MUCH IS $ DAYS
5 NIGHTS IN FLORIDA
WORTH? ·

SlEEPER

--~-·- ·

...

rQY, Ohio 41711!1.

....
~.__
....,,
~-·
.. _,M
-~
"'""''

NOW S499'S
'

Robert E. Buck,
Problto Judgo
Lono K. Nouolrood, Clorll
(2) 15, 22; (3) 1 3tc

-.......--....................·--···
__·
·..."""'-"""""""'
. ...

. ...............
_...........

·~"&lt;•-

ONlY

He~••nu

83 E~tciNaltng
.
84 El ectttelll It Rt~fugtKIIIIOn

. ·

Stock l'orti for
Homoilto. Woodlltor;
·Tocurnooh. lrlggs&amp;
Btootton.

Howtri L· Writ....
PlUMBING &amp;
Niw Loaltlott

NEW- lEPAII

· SALES &amp; SEIYICE

... Downspouts

Wo CooTy Flohlng.SuppUa

Your Phone
C.bto Bliio Here
IIUSIIISS PHONE

tfl-6550

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

2-l.'lt).j ...

Rog~r _
Hysell

Garage

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
r-or Ohio
AUTO &amp;TRUCK . . HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
"At a-anJ~II• Prien"
REPAIR
lt.

1~4.

~~..

,,••••,..1..

PH. H2·5612
or 992-7121
4:-2~tfn

GUN SHOOT

uc•• ·

, FIIIDD'i.

Ia.... ~. .

EYDY .

sAT. •a•

PH. 949-2101
... .... 949·2160
Dey • Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

FURNACE .

GUN 51001
IYIIY
SUNDAY
.
.

f'ARTI AND SIRVICE

9-6-ft.lfn

Gutter Cleaning

1-ll· 'lt-111

FUIIIACE

Jlaotory Choked ·
'. 12 Geu111 Only ·

Gutters

PHONE

PH. 992·3922

GUI 'CLUI
St.-tl •t hOI,...

ROOFING

161 North Second
Mlddltport, Ohio 45760

MDCI

ALLMAICU
GAl OW tll.ICTRIC

6:30P.M.
F•ttn .....

I!

=tty~::..,

•

�...
16, 1880

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY
=if,........

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

... ?

4

m:t·..
1171 11 ; •

--

Nt.o.P.o.-...

=·~ola

1101.

elevision ·
Viewing

~

~-

•

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···-·Roe-

1 - c=:o,toll 14XII,

-liM

I

-

.......... -

IJIN7IM, .... • •

P'bil .. ~ .

1

141. 114-

1:00

1. . - . ..... 71,1011 ....

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. .

.(J) • • • ())

.

.....

Lost a Found

.......,. . Or·-:
.
.
.
:
.
.
- ,.,•• "' ""'

to Stacy when in Charge of
the alation. !;!
()) lquwe OM TV E;1
• till AndY Qrlflilll

W~T

...;;.w

'

SChemtr lirNka his promise

I MEAN;

.. ·n ·

1117 _ , 1-10, pkiiiUp. 114o

112 Cllllllam ,...,, - . :2004
bar

COULO BE
WORSE
TliAN .
liiA'T?

.

IIJ WOfld toay

. '

=

I!)Jem

54 lllec:ellaiiiCIUS
lltrchancllle

i:i'~ac
N1w1 E;l .
l:.ctrtc

Alnp ... -

P'

()) 3-2·1 Cont8Ct "

1171 GIIC, 4114, I ~fi:;
...... aood.
11
.
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1m ~ IDDII~IIe, 4x4,
~ laalotlbl,....,. Md. ,._.
~~~. 12,100 • 11...-r·

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iplbcwl

I!) "-"Mtn .

Klna-·--·-

=

1114.

Porltillllllahled """'
...
liolloofylloftw..
LiiWo
147.150

41 HouiiS for Rlnt

•- -

Ewa~ngo:

oa-

-m.

luraiue, · d --·~
al!llhlng.
10%
an
hoovy and . Corllalt
olol- Sam
•-•lllo'o,
1
""""'· Tndop
1111, At. 21,
-lot, Ero,
wv.
-..7:00
lun. Union Iii
be llfllll, polfttc.l .......I'll
oppolnl- :104'

42 Mobile Homn

111001

torRent

• Ponlol, Doytm.: 114-

~07,
IIC)4,o

opleo!l. Duol

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to
,.... 1Wo- ·
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14-.zll7.

dop. Nq'd.l14-441r42Z2.

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-

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1!!, In Alo Orondo, 814l•tMI.
' '
Aont ot _., Eutwka I ot 4br
- . 1 112 Mille. IZM/mO.

t_..
. ,

.

"':·,:':'.1

81..__

I

:=._:oo.

Junk . ..,. wlh or wtt- . Coli llny Uvoty t14o
3111UJ.
..................... loal. $1150
PI'~. lloHnrocflo Ohio
P.llt Co. Pon'NN oy, OH.

1Wo _ , 1onno1a 110. •nd
~GW71-4111 .,_r·e:oo.

PI-Largo -

-

-.114-24W417•.

e ())

5124.

-

Transportal 1011

MO. 71 ,......,.
......... tor Sale

·1 8VfFALO
S Mi. .. ·

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-

•

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7.

11,1000.1.0.114-

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...... MilO. 11~1-G01f.

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10 , . . Clrpll ...:.
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low Driol&amp; Mallor.t II. 'IN. rt4-

-7444.

Ernp loyme nl Serv 1ce s

.

11 , H1lp Wanted

Apartment

A¥1111 I All A - I lilllrtoy

torRent

.,..., 11044178-1421.

.

CouniJ ............
.-lpplliiloie,
T.V. Inc.
1111. -ODin
I o.m. to I p.m. llon.411. d14o
441·11111!.. 127 lrd. ....
~~~. Ul'l

1m 17 ft.

-ilft

Trf.HuN

-.1HHP,Ivkaudl .........

oon P'T11 top, na ~·
Cotl1....,1111 -7:00p.m.
Atwenld1 .......... M. 7, o....
llpolia, • . . _ - Kolltrt, 114448-2424, 1~4.

Qal.

CounMk&gt;r to
JWGUWc CoUnllllng. educeUon,
~

•

pi Ill ntltiorW. IIC.

(2:00)
1:05 CD MOVIE: leal 01 Eden
(2:00)
Different Wortd
1:30

In 1ft out

potltnl ....,.. Ot "'loltlona:

lac'IIDr... ~ • ..tnna1d

._...
PI*'"·
bperlenc•
_
. . . . . ._
by

For "' ...... 21 ft.
Yelle ION Qunplr. ',CU tpiiCI
ldtahM Mil blllw. .n, ~ 1.
f1100.Wbl_bar _ _ ,

2/ZMI lo: I'.A.C. T.!l At. 2 lo•
~ EOE.
· - · oH 48814.
IIM'/11;

-.114-7-11.

,,

ServiCrs

the hllblts ot pigeons and

·-1-

- ~ioclrlcel

• Plumbing

.'

Plint'

a
.

'

eE~ Wf! PAO:ESO,

1111 • g :a:end Son Oanfel

CF IDENTIFICATION."

8 Budweiser Prllenlt:

suspects that a young girl '
has been lnlacted with AIDS.

PL.E:.Aee f!!ltlON eow: earr

L8rry Klng UVII

I!)

•Front End
Algnment
•Oil Change &amp; lube

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'.

Tllurad8y Niglll F1gilta
a1 N11hvtiie Now

. l

. ,.. '

1:30

,.

. •Brake Work
· i·IS-'90-tfn

..

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PIZZA
LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
Fl££ LOCAL DELIVERY
POMEROY AND ..DOLEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNm PIZZA SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-2228 2+'90-l mo.

- . . . ...... -

In .........
f11,100,

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represents a battered wHe
ainst t&gt;er husband. E;1
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I 00N:T WANT
NOBODY BUT YOU
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1111 •

a 1111011 L8ndlng

Greg Is rushed to the

hoapllai jn crlttcal condition

alter being shot. Q
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10:30(!)MIMiipiUI TiiMh

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controverslll documentary

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about Guy Falcon. E;1

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NDIDDY II

RJ•n•• Dirt
eiDl c:-*" Tonight
(!)

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11:00(1) H~ And

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'*""'*'·

.PNdiCtiQnt today 11Y '!'1i1inv Sl.25

i2 .Ucensed Clinical Audiolo&amp;ist

Allro-Grltl)h, Clo IIIII

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, a.llipolis..otio 45631 · .
= I
or
':vtterans llemorial Host~ital
,lllulbtrry ltps, POIMIOf,.

Orand Carol Anne
learns abOut Tom's
Rabertaon

....

-·:IOpn.

Television Listenin1 Devices
, Dependable Heari511 Aid Slles &amp; Sl:vii~
H•rinl EVIIualions For All Aaes .

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
1 417 Second An:l:e, llol 1213

e Ill a

12-year-oid son . Dylan. E;1
10:00 (I) 700 Club Wl1h Pat

MAIN SY,, IU1LAND

mo.

ChiMI Frasier

own apartment building. C

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IFRE~STIMATEliJ

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'

742-3088

- Concr.to Work. •
-Roollng .
Exterior

a

triali to prove he can be a
bad bOy like Sam. £;1
(I) Cob:.g, Bltkettilll
g 8 • til Young RICiel'l
BuCk fans In love with the
bank owner's beautiful
daughter. 1:;1
.
(!) (!) Myateryl Poirot
discovers a murder in hi's

''

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hurry up,. I have aomething to
'tell you and ll's -···-·!"

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN ' SQUARES
UNSCRAMIILE. lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

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a1 CllunllllttMllti:Uon
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ALlAN\', OHIO: lit. 10 a I.A. 143
HENOIIIION. WV.: lit. 31 A4 tolhleraEqulpnwnt
NIWHOUIII:
POMEROY: I t .nl.·7 p.m. 7 Deyo
ALIANY: 10 a.m. ·l p.m. I Deyo, Ciaaeci Iunday
HEN~ION: 10 e.m.•l p.m. I Oayo, Cloaecb lun.·Mon.

P.AYIIIIQ A8 OF TODAY. JAN. 30, 1880
•
11 Copper 70C per lb.;
Clllll Dry Altnnlnum C.na, 31C per 111.

WIIUY ALL NOll PIIUIOIIa ICRAP, IAfTEIIIEI,
ITA1111111. TltAIIIIMIIIIO'!I. ALTIIINATOIII, ETC.

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wben the ltinr; Is In dummy. )'CJ!! c~n •~" 'f'
gain by disrupting opposing communi'::" ~
cations and may occasloaally receive ~:·
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bas the singleton ace.
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llttendance
25 Amounl to .
28 Table
fragment
27 Suds
30 Golf acore
31 Youlh
32 Nole
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33 Style
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31Mine
entrance
38Not a 101.11
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AXYDUAAXR

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One letter llandl for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, Xfer the twO O'a, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
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SCIAM.~m ANSWIIS
a - •~
Physic - Cleric- Round - Flaxen - EXCUSE·
Politician to judge, "Vel, Your Horior. I was speeding,
but I am a Congressman.• Judge to politician, "lgnor·
ance is no EXCUSE."
, ·

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Allllllo H8li .

today, the lUCkier you'll get, 10
dOII'bbe llr.llld to put out miXImum If·

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(olulr 2J..Aug. 121 TIM harder you ·

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' II IIIII tim1 IbM you may 1'111111. Fortu- you don't IMI _..., or your lnvoMIII'IMc" lin · ntlllll too
to too1f upon
llmblbo•
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lnacrlpllon
My Way• , 31 Great deed
4 Pedestal 39 Prtvale
part
or evil
BSian
DOWN
Kenton's
1 Twist, e.g.
group
2 Regarding
t Legal . 3 Dental
,Judgment
degree
11 "Theml"
4 VIc of
mrinslers
song
12 Roulle
5 "And- 10 Dral(i a
25 Wine
to anger
we gol"
conclusion 28 Ritzy
.14 Acad.
8 LemlfiQI1·13 Cognomen 29 Evaluate
15 Plaything
Danson 15 Lug
31 "VIclory"
11 Time frame film ·
11 Atomicheroine
17 Peralsl
7 MIHtary 21 EnYJJII!rale 34 - Howard
11 Wheel part directive 22 Waller
35 Hoosier wil
20 Tiny bll
·
21 Tennis

dovee. C
1211 Croo~ I. Chase

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CARPENTER SERVICE .

.

mII!Hk Ptlviewe Ooea

9:00 G (])

RUTLAND TIRE
SAUS and
SERVICE

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disaalers." sklhed the hus·
band, ·tet me ffnlsh my dinner."
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. '

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YOUNG'S

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"Before yOIJ tell me lhl day'l

DE YL T

by THOMA$ JOSEPH
ACROSS ' · 31 Coin

Whitley Ia charmed by Julian;
the' leader of a student
bOycott. Q

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Pro 1140 quilt. 14NJ oiiUIMion.
Caoh Pllicl. can 114.flll 1887 or
11W12M11.

,. ...

RAHBO

. South had a lot of holes in bis hand,
·even after North had supported
spades. South was aggressive to go .all
the war to four spades, but any sort of
I!) Miem Vice Crockett
. inYltatloa would "-ve· gotten him to
·. inv'aaligatea a dating sarvlce
game. The success of the contract dewhose clients are dying.·
pended upon not losing three diamond
Stereo,
tricks, and the opening lead of the dla·
Ql VlcleoCountry
1D Abbot And Costello
mond queen olfertll 11ood chaacet1.
How then did declarer manage,to lose
,' 7:05 CD J•Heraoni
lour
tricks? South made the natural
r:aoe&lt;Jl ,..,..u, Feud
play o! covering lbe diamoad queen
.
ge·l-lnment Tonight
with dummy's king.. East won the ace
D ()) Mema't FamHy
and
returned the five-spot, and West
az e .:.operc~y: 1:;1
(JD ftliA•-s•H
look the jack and played a third dia·
IIJC-.firl
mond, ruffed by East. The defenders
\D lllgltt Court
later took a heart trick.
Declarer's hasty play to trick one
7:35 CD Ianford And Son
was wrong. Since the lead of the queen
'1:00 (I) MOVIE: Kentucky (2:00)
proml&amp;eS the jack, playing low from
G (J) ·a Colby Show C
D &lt;D ' e (I) F~r Da.,!ing
dummy c;an hardly ever do harm. Oo
Myallrill A blind man tries
rare occasions West may be leading
to blaCkmail a wealthy
from Q-1 in diamonds, but in that
parlshiQner. C
event nothing will prevent the defend·
(!) ()) Thla Old Hou" The
en from taking three quick tricks. II is
barn nears completion as
"
alsO true that WHt could be leading
wi~lne floo.ring is. laid. E;1
from
Q·J doubleton, bul it is much
illl 1121 • Houra E;1 .
more likely that West is leading from
1D MOVII: lumm.,
Alntal (POi (2:00)
. a live- or six-card diamond suit. Even
11J PriiiiiNIWI
if West is leading a singleton diamond
I!J Murder, Shl Wrote No
queen, it is better to play low from
Laughing Matter
dummy, since subsequently the heart
1211 Church' BtrHI Station .
queen may ~Jec;?.me ;iwinner, allowing
1D MOVIE: lbadl Runn., (R)

'

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; ~·India (UPJ) .;_ .
.
ben Thul'$day recovered
1111 C:OC:kptt voice and data
~~ ot the Indian Alrllnes
. ....-.. that crashed In the
IIOIItllern city of Bangalore, kll·
80 people and injuring 56
g:t ua, an airport otfl~lal said.
Tbe official 'said the battered
''black box," which contains
.se,.tls ot the night and niay help
llivetUgators determine the
~uae ot the crasli, was found in
~ . charred ·wreckage by a
.· ll!ill'Ch team from Bangalore's
Ftre Service.
Me!lnwhlle, the government

1110

find 'black box' :recorder Ui plane wreckage·

appolrited a commission to deter·
mine the cause ot Wednesday's
crash ot flight JC605 that OC·
curred moments before the plane
was to land at the Bangalore
airport, 1,0!5 miles south of New
Delhi, said N.S. Mohan Rao, the
airline's regtonlll director for
.south India.
Eighty-nine people were kUled
In the crash and 57 others were
injured. The death•toll increased
to 90 Thursday following the
death of one ot the Injured
passengers overnight.
Another official .said a high

OSUtops

court judge wou141 head the
Inquiry commission and that a
report would likely be completed
in about six months. ·
A four-man team of experts led
by Jean-Pierre Sawat · from the
Airbus Industrle Consortium in
Tolouse, France, arrived in Ban·
galore Thursday to assist the
inquiry, said A.K. Stvanadan,
chief public relations manager
for Indian Airllnes.
·They wlll be examlrilng all
aspects leading to the Incident, "
Slvanadan said . .
The Indian union mlrilster for

civil aviation. Arlf Mohammed e\1dence," Rao nld.
News nporta nld the delay wu
Khan, said the government was
·He said relatives of tile crash ~ to unipecltled tecbnlca•
prepared to shut down alr servi· victims, who arrived In two problema.
~ In some .areas If necessary, groups by a special plane tram
OHiclala ··nld the ajrcratt
saying there would be no com· Bombay, helped hospital off!· caUJbl tire before it touched
Promise on safety, the Press clals Identity at least 25 bodies down, but witnesses said IIIey
•T rust of India reported.
that were removed from the nw the landlag wbeels strike an
The minister made the remark wreckage site.
·
embankment near lbe airport,
during a visit t~ &amp;i.ngalore' s
"Only 25 bodies have been, catch fire and then cra1h.
Victoria Hospital( where rela· identified," said Rao. "Most of
A U.S. cltlzeft identified as R.
tives complained about safety the other dead were charred . Hagger was 11niong those kuied
aspects of the aircraft.
,
beyond recognltlo~"· ·
.
in the crash, thePresaTrusUald.
, At th~ crash site, pollee· stood
In some Instances, more than
One Americ!lll survivor, Cha·
guard while workers sifted , one family claimed the same rlea Mancosky; said that he and
.through the debris. : ·
victim, so otflctals ol'dered four otl!er passenger$ beard a "loud
''Th~ entire area of the wreck·
dentists to·use dental record&amp; to boomlng noise" betore ' betne
age was cordoned off to protect
help identity the bodies. ·
enveloped In a "ball of flame,"
'
Offjclals .said that 19 . Of the accordlilg to the Press 'Trust.
identified bodies were handed Mancosky .tQid the news agency '
over .to their families and were he managed to escape through a
rear door. ,
.
'
rate assets and mismanagement many people wanted gun per- flown to Bombay around noon.
in The Car Store Inc.
A mass funeral for the unlden· ,
Members of an Indian tamlly
mits," Nolley said. "Business'·
titled
bodies
was
scheduled
for
.
from
Bedford, Mass., who were
Becom later was accused of
men were coming tn llere, scared
defying a court order not to
Sunday
a(ternoon.
returning
to their hometown of
for their lives."
'
harass the Forgeys.
-ll Seven survivors with serious
Bangalore
for a visit, survived '
Nolley said Becom insisted the
burns were transferred to St. the cralh, according to a report
Becom was in a Chillicothe, lpcldent occurred because he
John '·s Hospital, · a private In the Hindu·, a New Delhi
Ohio, )all Thursday awaiting feared for his life and the safety
church-run Institution, where '' newspa~r . .
arraignment, pollee said.
of his family in connection with
more sophisticated faclUUes ' The report .s aid that Prabha
Shelbyville Pollee Chief Ro· some business dealings,,, .b ut
,
were.
avallil,ble to treat . burn and Rama.sw•mY Sridhar Srld·
bert Nolley sa.ld Becom's dlsap· would not r.e veal details lie had
cases,
Rao said.
haran ani! their chlidren, Vilas·
pearance caused a local uproar discuSsed with Berom.
Theother49survlvorswereout
and
Vlkrain, w~re sitting near ,
and dozens of rumors that sent
· "If that's true, then I'd have to
of
danger,
and
half
of
them
had
the
emergency
exit. 'TIM! tamlly
pollee chasing after possible say he had· a Jegltjmaie reason
been treated and discharged, escallfl) 'through the exit,
leads in the case.
for leaving," the pollee chief
Rao said.
'
·
steppedontothewtngandtbento
The suspected abduction also said. "If it's not true, then
The flight from Bombay to the ground, the new~paper said.
had other effects.
somebody ought to pay for this
Madura! via Bangalore departed
The tamlly escaped with only
"You wouldn't believe how entire investigation."
about an bout behind schedule. minor Injuries, the report said.

for 12th Win

'
•'

•'

ebroary

'

J•

Vol.40, No.197
c
1990

This Annual Event Will Save Yop ·T housands! · ~·
Burr~ In ~oda~. For, Best
And ·a u,e. Savl•l•!
.
..

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Febr~ary "i&amp;. 19~0

EllCE

'

CARTAGENA, Colombia
(UPI) - President Bush and
three South American heads of
state signed an unprecedented
agreement to battle drug traf·
tickers; with the United States
acknowledging its responsibility
to provide economic alternatives
to the lucrative narcotics trade.
, The one-day ,SUI)IIl)it Thursday
, at a well-protected presidential
. gUest house til Car,tagEiha.'Bay did
not produce specl!lt: responses
from Bush· to Colombian eco·
'
nomic concerns, .nor ba.rd figures
on the amount of aid the Bush
administration was willing to
GREE'nNGS- state ·
olm lnehael Loq, · 11118 at ',aterday's , lnllfal meet1n1 of the
commit.
'
D.Chllllcotlle, ~ rl1ht, Metp Couty Chamber
COIUity·wtde Chamber OJ'I&amp;nlzatloa. The meeting
But it did bring together the
Prell~ ;Bruce Reed, center, alld ~ck Owen,
wu held In the cafe,t erla at Mel_p Hlp School.
leaders of the three countries
secre&amp;-,-:Ueuurer of Chamber, exehan1e p-eet· .
that produce virtually all of the
world's cocaine with Bush,
whose nation u~s about. 80
percent of· the lllegal white
powder.
In· a )Qlrit communl(jue ending
. the summit, Bush recognized the
United States . musl} redUQe its
. hunger for cocaine as it instructs
South American ' natiOns to cut
State Sen. Jan Michael Long,
role in gaining the 'a ttention of "to ride a new crest' of opportun·
production.
D-Chllllcothe, ljrged an audience
slate leaders, LOng salcl. Also, tty," Long commen~. In ridlrig
The "Declaration ·llf Carta·
of abd1~of70 people at Thursday 's
legislators , who have joined ' to- this new crest, u .wtll be neces·
gena" stressed an understanding
gether calllng themselves ·the ~ry to ~"Identity' the positive
first 1,11eet1ng·of tbe;Metgs County
that the · tight 'against lllegal
Chamber of Commerce,to "seek
Appalachian Delegation have aspects olrthe co,unty and trans·
drugs would be carrll!(l out not
out opportunities and work toalso helped attract at tentlon to late those po!ilttve aspects into only on the mllltary front bu talso
get()er ' to brlnJ· new jobs and· Southeastern Ohio and all of action." 'T he most important with economic programs.
aspect lD, the ~o 110 ty 1s hul'l&amp;ll·
"An increase. in, trade . and
,fesources:•• 1 ~~~~ , the· senator, · ptlvate lnvestJnenl'ls' essential to
~;., .,, 1 ··!'' "'· · • A:ssem~y, this "'PPallltlitan · ,wbtch"fransl8'ti!s·• lh'to:a atr!lng tacllltate sustalne&lt;l' ·economic
•• J:.QIII call!!~~ yesterday1s lnltlal · Delega,tlon oOfgllliitors dllcuss work etlllc. But, he · cautioned,
growth and .to hel,P. ottset the
meetllla 1 ot the. newly-formed
the· riletters ani! forni a position in,embers of ihe new Chamber
economiC dlskications resulting
COIJtll)r·Wide ·o~ga11tzation "1be · prl&lt;?r to any full assembly meet· will have 'to "rid themselVes of . from 'any effective prl)gram
· beglailjng of a )ruly united e(fort ' lng, Long explained. One r~ent · any lnteynal competitiveness" ' agal~st Illicit drugs," the com·
to . brlnl! econOfnlc development ·· success of the Appalachian Dele- and a&lt;19i&gt;t .the bellef that "what' . munlque sal,d .
. .
and 'reco"ery•qo Melp County.
.tattoo was to save the Ohio benefllume wlll benefit all."
, The South American nations
A i:Oun~·wlde Chambe~ will &lt;Valley Area Libraries program, ' . Ghamlil!r members wlll have
bowed fo U.S. pressure fpr more
proVIc!e means "to advance the
Long said. The Delegation has to "be- .bold" in approaches to
mllltary involvement In the drug
also been successful in directing brinjt.opportunltles to the county.
lhterests ·of the county and
~~ht, saying their arme.~ forces
communities within the county,"
' 'large chunks of highway dollars "And don't be bashful in telllng
may also participate along
'· he added.
· to Southeastern Ohio." Also, said your elected officials what you
wl,',h pollee.
,The senator said he believes . Long, "in the past two years we need . .We , have to have a · For the first time. it has been
that Meigs County and Soutl!east- have been able to secure visits of par,tnershlp," he stated.
acknowledged that drug traffic~·
ern Ohio are "as viable a part of State Development Director
Long wished the new Chamber
lng is an economtc·aspect of o~r
Ohio as any other region" and
David Baker' ' to the area sd he the ·"best or tuck" and encour·
nations and the' struggle against
t!tat tn.,the..pas.t,ll)r.ee .years, ''t.he can see the needs of the aFea on a . aged 'members• not to become
drug trafficking implies corp pen·
,eyes o! the state house have . flr~t hand l;l~sls.
discouraged. "No marriage is
satlon for the overall dtsturl;lan·
tunied to Soutjteastern Ohio. •'
''The time is rlg\lt for Meigs fr~e ot dispute, but those who
TheGovernor'sOfflceofAppa· County," through the newly· , work at their , unlo.n wlll
~cbla has played an Important
formed county-wide Chamber,
Continued on page 5

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I )rug summit leads
to joint·
·
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battle
..
.

~-c;.t~~ .~~::~~~ ~~~~~ fr:.:e~~ ·

'

Low tODicht In mid Z8s.
Cbaace of rain 28 perctlnt.
Saturday, partyly cloudy,
blt:b In mid :llho.

••

•

to

gets look at .

•

•

-·

•

Sen. Long ,calls for

·Roekefeller
· BENNETTSVILLE, S.C.
(lJPI) - Mllllonatl'e Sen. Jay
ROCir!::feller went to look at how
the other half lives Thursday,
leadlne a federal panel stui:lylng
the pllgbtof poor black chlldren
in the rural South.
~ckefeller, l&gt;·W.Va., chair·
man of the congressional Corrimlaslon 011 Children traveled to
Bennettsville near the North
Carolina line where 48 percent of
·tt.t 9,000 citizens are black and
one in three tamUles is poor.
"By the year 2000, one out of
three school-age children will be
from minorities," said Rockefeller, heir to a vast famlly '
, fortune. "As a nation we need to
. Increase not only our awareness
of, but our ability to respond to
the multiple ethnic and cultural
populations • throughout
· America."
The 36-member bipartisan
commission was created by
Coneress to develop a national
pollcy on chlklren, including
recommendations to improve the
health· and well-being of the
nation's youngsters and to en·
halice the capabllltles offam Utes
to care for and nurture children.
The commission is made up of
members of Congress, health
experts, chlld advocates, bust·
, nenleaders and media personal·
Idea, Including actor BUJ Cosby.
The group must submit its
recom,mendations to Congress
and the president by March 1991.
J\t least one member of the
conutiiAion blames Congress
And the White Houae for creating
some of the problema children
..r.ce by dlamantllng many of tbe
natlon'a social programs during
lhe Re•n years. .
· "Children's lnues have been
on the back burner for the past
· decide, "IBid Cheri Hayes, exec·
· lltive director ilf the Children'•
Dlfnle Fund. ''There haVe been
dlatrelllna declines . In child
' .Jievelpment as a result of the lack
of attmUoa to cblldren'•llsuea.·
. •'WIIat we IBW was a decade
lftoae tbere was total lack of
cobca u," she nld. "That Telulled In lack of Immunization,
lllcreued rates of poverty
em 111 :youar famllles and a host
01 Oilier problema that directly
Jm..ct on.children." .

••• •

antastte
•

708

9%0

.

called the store the next day and
talked to manager Paul Fair,
telling him his abductors were
demanding a $1 mllllon ransom
or they would "silt his throat."
Becom told the FBI and state
pollee Wednesday he feared for
his life. Authorities said they
were investigating Becom's fi.
nanclal troub.tes connected with
a Muncie car lot he co-owned. A
court case is pending in a
Delaware County court in which
Becom sued co-owners Scott
Forgey, James Forgey, Sally
Forgey an&lt;) Sarah Forgey, claim·
lng mlsapproprlatlon of corpo·

Pick 3
Pick 4

:Shelbyville businessman found safe in Ohk/

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -Fed·
era! authorities are investigating
the posslbllty that Sliell!yville
businessman Wllllam "Don" Be·
-com staged his own abduction
· after he was found living in a
Columbus, Ohio, motel
Wednesday.
Becom, 39, was taken into
cusiOdy and was charged with
maklng a false statement stem·
ming from a phOne cau he mad~
claiming be had 'been kidnapped
for Sl million ransom and was In
danger of having his throat slit.
. Becom insisted after his arrest
~hat he was kidnapped from his
atore, Becom's Warehouse, on
Jan. 10, but managed to escape
his abductors and, tearlrig for his
life, Qed to Columbus.
Authorities also are looking
into why Beeom' s wtte, Terri,
offered a $10,000 reward two
weeks ago after she learned ori
Ja11. 22. that her husband was
S.ate, according tQ documents
filed In U.S. Dis trlct Court at
Indlanapolls by , FBI Special
Agent Jack Stohlman.
. FBI and Indiana State Pollee
arrested Becom In the apartment
near Ohio State University Wed·
nesday. Becom, who was renting
the residence under the name of
P . Ray Jarvis, was .traced there
a.tter pollee were allowed to
mon!tor one of his wife's phone
cil!Js, the court affidavit said.
Authorities had been led to
deduce that Becom was the ,
victim of a robbery -abduction
, scheme. About 45 minutes after
.talking to his Wife Jan. 10 about
11: 30 p.m. from his store, a
Shelbyville patrolman found the
baclc door open to the buslriess.
• Di'opa of blood were found on
the floor and $1,000 cash had been
taken from two safes. Becom's
eyeglasses were left in the store. ·
BecOm's car was later found In
a commuter parking lot about
two mllell away .
·
The atndavlt said that Becom

Ohio Lottery

.
.
W1800nsm

'

fro! wlthou,t such a review a~d ch~r~ed companies Is a subject
approval by the board wlll not be of &amp;erJQus concern: to the Legis Ia·
able to tap the resources oUhe ture," satd' Levey.
target company for three years!
Meanwhile, the House' has sent
Aronoff said the bfll Is a to the senate a resolution setting
response to the "takeover mania
up a (ask foree to study the
grlpplrig this country."
problem of zebra mussels in
"Financial plays on important Lake Erie.
cqlllpanles in Ohio and through·
Rep. Suzanne Bergansky, D·
out' the country have impaired Belttord Heights, said , the mus·
operating efficiency all.d job . sels m11ltiply so rapidly thet they
stablllty because of the debt load are t)lreatenlng the fish popula·
heaped on th~ companies In tlon, encrusting water intake
takeovers," said Aronoff. "We pipes, break the aquatic food
need more tools to preserve chain, cause water safety buoys
normal business o&amp;ieratlons to to sink, and impart a foul smell to
protect shareholders and em· the water, ·
,
,
,
' ployees and other'Constituencles
The t&amp;Sk· force ,Is to conduct a
of th.e corporation." ,
three: year study on bow to
· 'Ohlo needs to serve notice on · ~ontrol or ellmiJiate the mussels
cor[Xirate raiders that ihe flnan · an\1 prevent their spreail to other
clal and job Integrity of Ohio bodies of water. t ·
The House also "as sent to the
Senate Jegtslauon -requlring certain state employees, on a
two-year trial basil, to use
Harold D. Grimm of Racine to the report, had been contacted ethanol blend fuel In their state
died Thursday evening at his by Earl Grimm, Columbus, who vehicles.
•
·
home' of an apparent suicide.. had tried to contact his father by
The
trial
will
be
done
by
ac;cordlng to a report from the telephone and when he did not get eertaln employees of the Ohio
Meigs County Sheriff's an answer contacted Mr. and Environmental Protection
Mrs. Roush. They went to the
DepartJnen t. "
'
Agency, the Ohio DepartJnent ot
The Emergency Medical Ser. residence; uaed their key, ,and Agriculture and theO~Io Dep~rt·
vice' was ·advl~d and the Racine found Mr. Grimm, it was
m,ent ot Natural ReloUJ'!B.
1 unit ' was
cllspatched to the reported.
The fuel, which, ~ corn
The body was removed by
Grimm residence at 5: 58 p;m.
products,
ill an alternative to
, Also on the scene .-ere Shertrr s EWing Funeral Home. ,
guo~ . In motor
expenslye
Other actlvUles reported by
Inveatigator Robert Beegle and
vehicles.
·
Mella County Coroner Dr. Dou· the Sheriff James Soulsby in·
Also
aent
to
tbe
Senate
by
.the
gJaS Hdliter. wllo ruled that the . elude the ·arreet of 47-year·old Houae wu a biD ~nnlttlng
"4(!atll was by ~lf·lntllcted gun· Jam&amp;~ w.. Johnlon and 26-year- scbool boarda to waive tuition tor
old Jama E. Jolullon, Pomeroy,
sbot wolllld to the head.
any blgb achool iinlot whole
' ;~was ~potted by the'Sherltf'' on· bench. war ran II, trom the
family
111CIYI!I out of tbe acbool
deputy that Grimm had been Melp County CQurt char&amp;iaa
dlstrlet:
'
' .
tolllld by hla IIIIer and brother· failure to comply wltb a court · Tile Jloule bai
adjiiW'IIed
untO
'
111:uaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harold ordl!r. They are contined .to the 1 p.m. JlllltTuetclay. The Senate
Megls County Jan pendllll hear·
will bave ' ilo ,rollcall votes next
Contlriiaed on page II
'mr, a~d ~ra. ~oush,
acco~lng
.
.
. Wllltk;
' ·
UPI Statebouae Reporter
COLUMBUS- State senators
are conslderlrig a blll aimed at '
protecting Ohio chartered corpo'·
rations from sel(·d.e al)ng arising ·
from the financing and change of
control asscx;iated with corpo·
rate takeovers.
The blll, sponsored by Sen,
Barry Levey, R-Mlddletown, on
behalf of Senate President Stan·
ley Aronoff, R·Clnclnnatt, is
aimed at protecting Federated
Department . Stores, l,ncludlng
F&amp;R Lazarus, which are owned
by the Ca.mpe,au· Corp. that took
Federated into bankruptcy. ,
The blll permits a company's
directors to rev,ew tbe potential
Impact of a proposed control bid.
Bidders seeking to acquire con·
·

Man.'s death .ruled suicide .

~"' ·'

..

.•

Motorcycle
passenger
is injured

DEAL - President Bush (L) shakes hands
with Peruylan President Alan Garcia !'fler signing the anti-drug '
summit cl081ng slalement Thursday. (UPI)
ces and disorders that · this
struggle might produce In our
economy, " Peruvian President
Alan Garcia said at a joint news
conference.
But host President Vlrglllo
Barco came away with no
concrete assurancea from .Bush
acJdresslrig several Colombian
econdmlc concerns:TheY include
the expor~j~lton of , Colombian
coffee without an International
pact that expired last year and
threatened u.s. trade sanctions
against flower exporters for
dumplrig their product o.n the
u:s. market.
Barco also had sought a
program to supp&lt;)rt the Colom·
blan economy while the nation
wages the costly war on the
violent cocaine cartels.
A joint communique signed by
Bush and Barco promised only
that the administration would
study each of the issues .
U.S. Secretary of Sta~e James

Baker signed a "Memorandum
of Understanding" with Bolivia
to co ntrol the export ol arms that
end up In cocaine traffickers'
hands. An agreement with Peru
promised to exchange financial
records to suppress money
laundering and confirmed a
commitment to an extriicJltlon
ti"el\ty.
.
•
,No such agreements were ,
signed wlth Colombll!.
Bollvan President Jaime Paz
Zamora also hailed the change in
tone of the drug battle.
"In Cartagena, we have begun
a type of perestroika," Paz
Zamora said, borrowing Soviet.
President Mikhail Gorbachev's
term for economic and social
restructuring. "I feel all of us
have changed. "
Garcia said the summit
marked a new era In Latin
American relations wtth the
United States, saying U.S. oflt.
·
Continued on page 5

Leach outlines plans·
for highway projects

The State's plans for necessary
Leach was not sure If the
improvements near lhe lntersec· emergency declaration has .been
A motorcyle passenger was
lion of Routes 124 and 33 at officially declared, but reported
injured in an accident at 5:20
Pomeroy were explained to those that the required public hearing
p.m. Thursday on CR. 34, 1.5 at Thursday's meeting of the on the project wm be held in April
miles north ot SR. 124, in Sutton
Meigs County Chamber of Com· with construction to replace the ..
Township, according to the . merce by Joseph Leach; deputy deteriorating culvert lo take
Gallla·Melgs Post of the State director of the Ohio Department place In mid-summer. He said it
Highway Patrol.
ot Transportation's Dpstrlct 10 Is hoped that details can be
Brenda Mayes, 27, Mason, W.
Office, Marietta.
worked out whereby construcVa., suffered minor injuries. She
ODOT became aware last year tion to improve the intersection
was taken to Veterans Memorial
that an old stone culvert under· of Routes 124 and 33 can take
Hospital where she was treated
neath 124 had partially collapsed place at the same time.
.
and released.
and plans to repair the culvert
!-each als'o reported that ODOT
Troopers said Mayes was a
and improve the nearby inter sec· prOjects are in the works "west
passenger on a 1973' Harley
tlon were anticipated for 1991. and east ol Pomeroy." In partie·
Davidson Sporter motorycle rid·
However, a recentalipwhlch was \dar. he mentioned a landslide
den by Gregory A. Fields, 30,
the result of further deterioration situation along 124 In · eastern
Hartford, W. Va. The motorcycle
of the culvert has forcedODOT to Meigs Countyi the replacing of
slld under the front of a 1982 Ford
expedite project plans .
guard rail and resurfacing of
pickup truck driven by Rodney
Leach told the groUp that he Route ·7 at Five Points; and aiso
Nelgler, 34, Racine. Damage,was , ·'went to Columbus last week for joint tepalr ·a nd overlay of the •
minor 10 the truck; moderate .to
emergency declaration" to expe· Route 7 bypass at a cost of $1.5 ·
the motorcycle. The accident is
dlte plans.
Continued on page 5.
s!U'l under investigation.
Kevin Knapp, 23, Pomeroy,
•
was cited for !allure to maintain
control after an accident at 10:30
p.m. Thursday on SR. 124, at
Melp County has been granted
projects. The Ohio Public Works ,
Minersville HlU, 0.4 of a mUeea'st over $425,000 in State Issue II
Commission administers the :
of mUepost 23.
montes, according to an an·
funds. Slate Iasue II was ap. ·
Troopers said Knapp lost COD·
no1111cement today by State Rep.
proved by .Ohio voters in 1981. :
trol of his 1984 Chevro~ plcli:up M@I'Y Abel, (0-Atheu) · and
Additional funding tor the pro- ;
truck. The vehicle went off the State Sen, Jan Michael Long.
jects came from the gasoline tu •
road. striking a u ditty poll!
(D-Clrclevllle).
approved by the legislature last :
owned by Ohio Power Comp;.ny.
The co110ty has
awarded
summer.
.
Damage was moderate., No one
funding for several 'important
Said Rep, Abel, "These Issue II ·
was injured.'
·
·· '
tntraatructure projects, they monies wlll provide assiStance ;
The patrol investigated ' report.
for ourlocal townsl)lp and county .
another Metis County acetdent
Thll Includes road resurfacing gbvernment.s. Maintenance of '
at-9:25a.m. Thuraday on SR. 681,
around the county, Mill Street roadll, bi'ldges, water systems, ;
in Olive Township, 0.4 of a mOe
reconstruction in Middleport, and other infrastructures Is a ·
west of mnepost 25. No one wis
watl!r tank Improvements on coatly necessity. ·I am pleased ·
Injured.
Cherry Street1 New Highland that the state Ia able to Provide .
Troopers said a 1979'chevrotet'
Drive in Pomeroy; Seventh this type of monetary support tor ·
Blizer driven by Martin D.
:
Street aurface drainage and Melg County."
Carter, 24, NeJ10nvUie, went ott
pavtna In Syracuse, and street
Sen. Lone •lso expressed the
the road, striking an embal\.11·
improvements In Racine VIllage. importance of thll fundlng. "The '
ment. Damap wu heavy. No
Iuue II bond fundi are pro- ·types of projects this money ··
one was Injured.
vided thro\1111 lhe •tate le&amp;lsla· finances are thole that are vital
The !Nitro! cited Carter for
ture to help local aowrnmenta to the.evl!ryday operation of local
failure to !1'lllntaln control. .
fund lntraatructure lnalntenance .go~rnm~nt," a.ald Sen. Lona. .

Meigs receives grant 'funds

been

.

[

.......

··· -

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.l ··----.. ~·

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