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                  <text>' Febrwrf 18. 1990

~~=~~~~~~D~-8~~Su~~~~-~TI~•~~~S.~n~t~in~M~====~~==:dp~~~m~•:ov~-;M~~~4~~~-~~~rt~G~~~~~-~~ono-~-~~P~a.:·n~t~A~n~s:-~~~W~.~V~•·~==~==========~~====~~~==~===

Industrial production
doWn during January
By VI!IICENT DEL GRID ICE
.
VPI a...... Writer
WASHINGTON - Industrial
production dipped by 1.2 percent . .
in January with . autQmotlve
plants produ~ing fewer cars and
trucks and power plants produc·
ing less electricity during a
warm spell, the government said

Fr.f.~!Y·decrease

fell about 10 percentage poinls as
lmRasonably warm temperatures in January displaced especially cold weather during December," the Fed said.
In its industrial production
report, the Fed said utility ouput
plunged by 10.7 percent, while

OSU upsets .
sixth-ranked
..

forms of painting and bere works on one that will
be used for display on ihe front of her school.
(.Times.Sentlnel photo)

TRADmONII- FJien Saundel'!l will be oae of
35 lutruct01'8 at FJlen's Academy of the .Arts In
Sprln&amp; Valley Plaza. She will be teaching all

Underwood receives .
child :care credential
BIDWELL
Orlena Under·
wood of Bidwell, has been
awarded a Child Development
Associate (CDA) Credential in
recognition of outstanding work
with young children.
The credential was awarded by
the Council for Early Childhood

()RLENA UNDERWOOD

Professional Recognition In Wac
shington, D.C., which represents
the early childhood profession
through Its affiliation with the
National Association for the
Education of Young Children.
Ms. Underwood ts an assistant
teaclier with Gallla-Melgs Head
Start. The local Head Start
program Is funded 'through the .
U.S. Department of Health and
. Human Services and operates
locaHy under the auspices of
Woodland Centers, Inc.
CDA Is the only major national
effort to improve child care tiy
evaluating and recognizing the
skills of Individuals providing
care. Although the first creden·
tlal was awarded just 12 years
ago, over 33 states already.
Include CDA in child care licensing regulations. Others .a re considering similar action.
Child care staff and parents
wanting information on CDA
should write: The Council for
Early Childhood Professional
Recognition, 1718 Connecticut
Avenue N.W., Suite 500, Washing·
ton, DC, 20009, or phone 202-2659090 or 800-424'4310.

New arts
academy to
open Feb. 23
By ~E ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- In an attempt
to preserve traditional aris,
Ellen Saunders of Gallipolis Is
opening a place where people can
learn more about passing on
their heritage.
Ellen's Academy for th.e Arts
will open Feb. 23 with a reception ·
lor area residents to visit the
facility In the Spring Valley
Plaza, and the open house will ·
continue through that Sunday .
Saunders said there will be 77
class offerings weekly, and .h as
hired 35 instructors for various
areas.

•

a1
. Vol.40, No.188

Saunders said she doesn't
be live In paying a lot of money to
find out if you like something, so,
the Investments wlll be small,
depending on the class.

Shopon North Second Ave. Several yean ap tile
buDding on that lot which housed Empire
Fumlture was destroyed by fire.

•.

CINCINNATI (UPll -A statewide survl'y released , Monday
finds the early leader In' the race
to be Ohio's next governor is
fqrmer Cleveland Mayor George
Volnovich.
The Ohio Poll, conducted by
the University of Cincinnati's
·Institute for Polley Research,
gives the Republican Voinovlch ·
48 percent, to 35 percent for his
Dell!ocratic rl~al, Ohio Attorney

mayor of Cleveland before step·
ping down last fall. Celebrezze is
finishing his second term as
attorney general an\1 previously
served as secretary of state· and
in the state .Senate.
Both candidates are·unopposed
in their respective party primar·
les May 8 and ' will rrieet In the
general election Nov. 6.
In an Ohio Poll last October
bef!l~ It w.alb~the ,

Til?nrst head-to'head survey
by the Ohio Po U on the possible
outcome In November's election
also finds tha.t 17 percent of
~espondents favored other candidates or· would not choose.
Poll director AI Tuchfarber
said most of respondents did not
have strong opinion~ of the
candidates so early in the
campaign.
The reason given most Ire:
quently for supporting Volnovich
· was his good performance as
mayor of Cleveland, while thl'
reason mentioned mostfor favor·
lng Celebrezze Is that he's a
·Democrat, Tuchfarber said.
Voinovich served two terms as

brezze led Voinovlch by a ratio of
43 percent to 40 percent.
At the time, Voino,ich was
being challenged for the Republi·
Celebrezze 'dom!Jiated among
can nomtnatlqn by Hamilton
black voters, with a 73 percent
County Commissioner RQbert
share, compared with Voino:
Taft II. Taft was forced out of the
vich's 9 percent.
race last week by GOP leaders,
Few voters mentioned abor·
who persuaded him to seek the
lion as a primary reason for
party's nomination for secretary
supporting either candidate.
of state .
Celebrezze's decision last fall to
· In the recent poll, a telephone
change from anti-abortlon to
survey of 544 registered voters · pro·choice was not mentioned by
Feb. 2 through Feb. l2 . Voinovich
voters as a reason for making
led Celebrezze in ali sections of
their choice.
the state · except central and
Both candidates had high
southeast Ohio, where Cele .. name recognition, 94 percent for
brezze led 43 percent to 41 Voinovich and 93 percent for
percent.
Celebrezze.

who.

"~·- .... ~I A~lllAAII "Jeh'197a..,....,.~ty . nom1ne94 ;1W!i~·

Future appears bright for canola

Celebrezze's ·a retread

on

Start the 1990s Off the Right Foot
COME.SHOP WITH US
NEW 2 5 HP SHENNIU TRACTOR

.

S575
IN &amp; 9N FORDS ......,......,..
·........ S625
NAA &amp; 600 FORDS ............
100 FORDS•••• ~ •••••• ~ ••••••• ·~···················· S650

· . CARTER
TRACTOI SALES

S$995.

Jim's Farm Equipment Center

Voinovich

Celeste," said the former Cleve- knows more about the problems ·
land mayor. "How can anyone
than a big city mayor," he said.
that's ··part and parcel of the
"I've had IT)Y nose rubbed In
problem be a part of the every problem that you can
solution?"
. Imagine."
Voinovich was lnd,uced to
Vo lnovlch has virtual iy locked
makE&gt; comparisons of himsl'lf up thl' Republican nomination
with the Democratic attorney
for governor now that Hamilton
general despite his Insistence County Commissioner Robert
that he will conduct a positive Taft II has been convinced to run
campaign for governor.'
for secretary of state.
Voinovich has been shown In
Voinovich cited his 10 years'
experience as mayor and said independent surveys to be about
Celebrezze is "just the law 13 percentage points ahead ·of
Celebrezze, , but he said . he is
director for the state of Ohio."
"There isn't anybody that about $2 million behind In raising
money.
.
"We're going to try and see if
we can't catch up in that area, "
he said.
Votnovich said it would be
impossible for Celebrezze to
clean up the state goverrunent.
"The same ones that are there
By LEE ANN WELCH
according to ODOT. Construcare
the ones that are helping
tion will be mainly away from the
, OVP New1 Staff
· Tony," he said. "When he gets
'Bids will be advertised for two existing highway .
there his hands are going to be
The only expected Interrupphases of thl' U.S. Route 35 .
tied."
tions will beat the State Route 160
relocation project In Gallia
Voinovich said Democratic
County on Feb. 26.
•
.where the existing highway conState Chairman James Ruvolo
Work on the sections at the two nects to the proposed highway, · "has been using the state of Ohio
ends of the relocation will be and some to cars traveling State as a punching 'bag for
advertised In the Feb. 26 edition Route 325.
patronage."
of the Gallipolis Tribune and
A total of 2. 76 miles will be
'
March 4 IssUe of the Sunday constructed from Centerville to
Times-Sentinel.
Rio Grande; 4.5 mUes will be
Sen.
to mal(e
Bid openings will be 10 a.m. on built from Rodney-Bidwell Road
March 231n the office of the Ohio to Rio Grande, and three fil)lll
announcement Tuesday
Department of. Transportation section Is 5.6 mites stl'et.c hfni
J)lrector Bernard Hurst.
from Rodney-BidweJIRoadtothe
State Senator Jan Michael
.. The total projeci ' Is in three exlating four-laae at State Route
Long (D-Circlevllle) ' wilt be
phases, according to ODOT off!· 160.
aonouncing his re-election cam·
cials, spanning nearly 13 miles of
Work for the project actually
paign for the 17th State 8ellate
Gallla County .with four-lane began in the early 1970's. The
Seat on Tuesday, at 1:30 p.m.,flt
location public hearing was May · the Meigs Public Library in
hiJhway.
While ail three phases will be 1, 1970 and the design hearing
Pomeroy.
Senator Long will be Introconstructed simulaneousiy, only . was condilcted'Dec. 13, 1972.
Announcement of the $61.2
duced by Sue Mallon.
advertlsementa for the firtt and
Tile public is invited ·to attend.
last secilons are being published m filion fl!nding for the project
wu made by Celelte Oct. 23 in
Senator Long will be available
now.
The project Is expected to be Cohunbus, before making ·at trip
for qllestlons and comment•
completed in 2\2 years, and little to GaiUpolli the follOWing day to
Immediately followtnr his ·
disruption to traffic ill expected, meet with local officials.
announcement.

CLEVELAND, Va. !UPI)
"more than I thought.' ' The
s tarted making plans for the
Striking miners voted Monday on union compromised on sweeping
return to a normal paycheck.
a compromise-filled pact with work rule changes - including
" I think I'll take my family out
the Pittston Coal Group and unprecedented rotating shifts to dinner, and take them on a
predicted the contract would and In return, Pittston agreed to
vacation this year," Gibbs said .
pass by a large margin and end a keep the health care benefits
Even though less than. 2,000
10-week walkout that caused available at Other union mines.
miners are on strike. union
thousands of arrests and millions
Pittston wanted rotating slll!ts
officials estimate about 4,000wlll
of dollars in fines. ·
,., ,
so It could operate mtnes .around
be eligible to vote Monday
"I'd say 1eu pass 2·to-1 here On the clock, seven days a week,
because laid-off miners in good
VIrginia )," said striker Jack although no actual mining wlil be
standing with the union are
Jones of Coeburn shorlly after he allowed on the Sunday day shift . covered by rehiring clauses in
voted.
·
.
Odom said it wiii help the
the contract.
"I believe it'll be ratified, " company meet spot market for Odom said the new rotating
chimed in Paul Fleming, a miner eign sales; Pittston Is the largest
schedule would Increase union
from Hanging Rock. "There's a . U.S. exporter of metallurgical
employment by 30 percent befew things in It we don' t like but coal to Japan.
cause a fourth shift will be
you can't get everything. It's
Strikers said they had heard
needed. If the contract Is ap·
something we can live with."
grumbling about a plan to keep
proved, a return to normal
The dlspu te - more over on the replacement miners production will take several days
scheduling. · job .security and "scabs" to the strikers - who
at least because of safety inspechealth care than wages - In· have been working at mines., tions and refresher courses for
volved some 1,700 Vitginia, West opeped since the strike started.
the strikers.
VIrginia and Kentucky miners while a handful of strikers
The bitter dispute saw numer·
represented by the United Mine . convicted of violent crimes must ous confrontations between strlk·
Workers.
go to arbitration to find out If they
ers, replacements and a small
Union of!tclals heard grum- will be rehired.
army of state troopers. There
blings from Kentucky miners
Despite those provisions of the
were 2.400 arrests In civil disobethat they did not like the idea that contract, electrician James dience protests designed to block
13 fellow miners could be fired Gibbs Is so confident the contract
Pittston shipments. and 71 Injurfor alleged strike-related vio- will be ratified, ending a. strike
Ies allegedly related to unionlence and that some planned to that began Aprll5, he has already
orchestrated .violence.
vote no In solidarity with their
comrades.
Jones said some VIrginia min·
ers were not happy about the
plight of those 13 miners either,
b\lt added they have faith the
, ui\iori will wq_r)&lt; jd. Jl.ro ect tJlW
jobs when the .
'goes ' to
the snowbelt counties.
By VnMed PreAs International
arbitration. There aren't enough
The Scioto River continues in
Typical mid-February condl·
Kentllcky miners "to make a
flood
stage in parts of central and
tions
are
In
store
for
Ohio
over
dt!(erence In the vote," Jqnes
Ohio. but a furtlier rise
southern
the
next
couple
of
days.
said.
In
the
river
is no longer likely
At
dawn
today,
·it
was·sunny,
A tentative agreement was
until
significant
precipitation
and
the
clear
skies
are
to
remain
announced on New Year's Day,
..
returns.
through
Tuesday
over
most
of
the
but translating general bargain·
Highs
Tuesday
will
be
mainly
lng table agreements into spe- state. Temperatures at sunrise
cific contract language proved were In the upjJer 20s to low 30s, between 30 and 40. Looking ahead
and today's highs were expected through Friday, It will be fair
an arduous task.
to be in the mld-30s In the· . Wednesday and Thursday, with a
Miners who adopted camounorthwest to near 50 in the chance of 'showers Friday. Highs
!lagefatigues as a strike uniform
will be in the 40s Wednesday and
extreme
southern counties.
have appeared weary of the
44
to 55 Thursday and Friday .
The
colder
air
will
continue
to
financially draining and some·
Lows
will be In the 30s Wednesflow
Into
the
state
tonight
as
times violent strike, and have
day
and
3!&gt; to 40 Thursday and
clear
skies
and
lighter
winds
·predicted the pact represents
Friday.
allow
the
maximum
cooling
to
enough union victories to ensure
On \111' early morning weather
occur. This wiii cause temperaratification.
rriap,
a cold front was along the
tures
to
drop
to
the
teens
Voting Is scheduled for 8 a.m.
Ohio
River
In southeast Ohio and
Tuesstatewide,
Temperatures
to5 p.m. Mondaybutnototalsare
Is
to
continue
moving east. Large
day
should
remain
mostly
In
the
expected before tuesday. Pitt·
high
pressure
was centered over
30s.
ston Coal Group President Ml·
the
high
Plains
and was building
With
the
cold
air
flowing
over
chael Odom Is 'withholding any
southeast
toward
Ohio. By dawn
'
the
relatively
warm
Lake
Erie
detailed comment until after the
high
pressure will
Tuesday,
this
watprs,
northeast
Ohio
will
likely
vo.te.
see lake-effect flurries and be centered over Illinois and will
AV.lrglnla striker, Randy Hall,
squalls tonight and Tuesday. dominate most of the eastern half
said the contract gives the union
Accumulations are possible in of I he nation.

case

'•

i.ons

'

VALENmfB QVII:EN CROWNED - Alllle
Malael . . crowneol Valentine Queea i&amp; a u.ee
•tal~ Sa&amp;lria, nJPt at Soutben Rtrb Scllool.

...... q _ _ _ _ ___::___

,,

•

Typical inid-February weather
eipe~1~4 jor Ohio tiJ:is week

Rt•.35 bid openings
scheduled March 23

PRE~SEASON , SPECIALS

SPECIAL!

Ce!e··

Voinovich was ahead 56 percent to 34 percent· in northeast
Ohio, which includes his hometown of Cleveland. He also led 43
percent to 35 percent in southw·
est Ohio, the home turf of his
lieutenant governor running
mate, Rep. Michael DeWi.ne of
Cedarville.
.
Both candidates ~ared well In
their own political parties, but
Voi!Wvi~.~- ~at &lt;;:ew~ .al- '
mo.st :!-tjiil 41,11llllli .. . . . . .ilts
who described them~elves as
independents.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPil Republican gubernatorial candl·
date George Voinovlch said Monday his Democratic opponent, .
Anthony. Celebrezze, is nothing
more than a retread of Gov.
Ric pard ·Celeste and would be a
tool of special interests If elected.
Voinovich met with reporters
and fired what appeared to be the
first shot of a long general
election campaign by branding
Cell'br~ze as part of a "getalong, go-along syndr.ome" at the
Statehouse.
"We don't need a retread of

Fruit ..•

COMPLETE WINTER OVERHAUL·

2&amp; C.nta

A Multimedia Inc. N8WIPIIP.r

.Coal miners expect to
end 1.0 -month strike

Voinovich leads statewide poll

~-

1 SoC.ion, 10 PogH

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 19, 1990

; coepehled 1810

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Mitch Meado~
hu ander COMIJ'ue&amp;lon a new two story building
Ia downtown Mlddi!Qiort. The new bulldhig will
occupy the vacant loi adjacent'to the Prescription

Among. the offerings are ali
forms of painting, dolimaklng,
woodworking, computer design,
knitting, cross stitch, · afghan
making, Amerian and Indian
Ohio Valley Pullllllhla&amp; Co. Leave your name,
style jewelry, herbs, paper cut·
MYSTERY FARM- Thill week's myatery farm,
By Gall DeGarmo
insects and diseases .and brows·
address, and telephone number with your guess.
tlrlg, drawing, wheatweavlng,
featured by the Melp SoU and Water Conserva·
Earth Team Volunteer
ing destroys yo~ng trees by
No telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
leatherwork, pretty punch,- hatlion Dlsb1~t Is . located somewhere In Meigs
girdling and physical
entries
should be turned Into the newspaper office
boxes and fans, photography.
GALLIPOLIS - Everywhere deformation.
County. Indl~lduats wishing to participate In ~e •
by
4
p.m.
each Wednesday,. In the case of a tie, the ,
chair caning, quilting, tatting,
we look and read today there
weekly contest m!\Y do s,o by guessing the farm s
You, as the woodland owner,
winner
will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a
.
cloth baskets, some glasswork,
owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to The
seems to be an Interest and should take measures to protect
farm will be featured by lhe GaiDa
Meigs
County
dried llowers, rug hooping. ceDally Sentinel or The Gallipolis Dally Tribune and
concern about our natural re· your woodland from fire. UnforSoU and Water Conservation District.
ramics, , t-shlrt painting, can·
you niay be the winner of a $5 cash award from the
aou~es. And rightly so. Those of
tunately, In our part of the dlewlcking, macrame, rug braid·
us wbo own private woodlands country, most of the forest fires
ing and crochet, ·
have at our disposal an Imme- we experience are caused by
"I want to see the crafts of the
diate opportunity to use good man, whether directly or ·lndi·
•
past saved," Saunders said.
forestry and cons(/rvation practi· rectly. Therefore, It Is important
· canola oil will probably increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
· Many young people didn't grow
ces that· wnt greatly affect our that everyone observe the forest up with the kinds of family Ohio farmers are cashing in on when manufacturers respond to
lives In many ways. With 53% of fire laws as recommended by the
involvement she did, and Saund· · consumer demand for low-fat consumer concerns and start to
· Gallta Coilnty considered fore- Ohio Department of Natural
foods by leading the nation hi phase outolls ltlgh In saturated
sted, ills necessary for all of us to Resources. During the sprtng ers said It's a shame that some
fats .
canola production.
be practicing good forest fire season (the months of youths doll't have grandparents
"Something will have to fill the
Unlike many cooking oils, oil
or aunts· to teach them the
management.
March, AprU and May) and traditional arts.
gap,"
she says. "The trick·will be
· made from canota seeds is low in
Good forest management beg- during the , fall fire season (the
saturated fat. Saturated fat tends to meet the new demand with a
The open house will be Feb. 23
ins with a detailed look at what months of October and Noto Increase C·holesteroi level~ in steady supply.''
and
24from
10a.m.
to8p.m.,and
.
you own. The tree species, vember) they advise no open
Walter Schmidt, northwest dis·
the blood, which may increase
on
Sunday,
Feb.
25
from
1
to
6
stocking (size of trees and the burning from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
the risk of heart disease. Fond trlct agronomist for the Ohio
p.m.
·number of trees per acre) , Some localities are enacting
manufacturers need alternative Cooperative Extension Ser\1ce,
eondltlon, the slope and aspect of e'&gt;:en st~icter regulations than
·ous such as canoia to meet says Ohio farmers are already
the land are only a few of all the these to outdoor and/or open
reaping the benefits of canola.
demand .
pieCes of Information that are burning.
There Is statewide interest In
"Canol&amp; oil Is high In mono·
necessacy.
In your management plan, If
the
crop, Schmidt says. In 1988,
unsaturated fat," Lydia Medel·
The establishment of a forest your woodland Is a sufficient
Continued from D-1
Ohio
harvested about 2,500 acres
ros, !Dod and nutrition specialist
man!lgement pian for your piece size, you can plan firebreaks. A
at Ohio State University, says. of canota . .This year Ohio has
of property then is formulated by firebreak is merely a strip of · we were offering this one again
·.,some researchers think mono- 15,000 acres for harvest. "That
putting this information t01;ether open land ,that has been cleared this year.
unsaturates may even· lower makes us the number-one prowith what you as the property of flammable material, with an
The two groundcovers are
ducer In the nation," he says.
blood cholesterol levels.''
owner want from your woodland. average width of 8 feet, to break myrtle and crownvetch. Ever· Canoia is grown during the
·Denise King, nutrlt.ion special·
Thll could range from dl'siring a up large tracts of timber Into greens include White and Scotch
ist at Ohio State, says most winter, so It fits well with winter
continuous Income by way of smaller blocks. The firebreak
Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce and
people don't know that vegetable wheat production, Schmidt sayS.
.harvesting timber or firewood or under normal burning conditions
Norway Spr~e. and a shrub
oUs contain satura~ed fat. Canoia It can be planted In early
Christmas trees to establishing Is used to control the spread of a
Mugho Pirie. The hybrid popular
oil contains only 6 percent September and is harveSted with
and maintaining viable wildlife fire by simply being a break In Is our hardwood.
saturated fat. making It the a combine about the same time
habitat to. Improving the wa- . the flammable matertal. Under
For more Information and a . lowest among vegetable oils. In . early winter wheat matures .
tershed to simple aesthetics and . severe conditions, such as fire description sheet, please contact
comparison, coconut oil contains
the enjoyment of a gond hike with high winds, the fire could be our office at 529 Jackson Pike, . 92 percent saturated fat.
around the property. Most people expected to jump the firebreak.
Room 308C or call 446-8687.
Medeiros
IIDd they want some combination However, if there are breaks
Of all of theR objectives and good · located well ahead of the spread
forest management can provide oJ t~e fire 't han the firebreak can
all of them.
be use.d as a safe boundary for the
Forest management also in· start of a backfire.
Another section of your man·
valves commitment and.responllblllty. Once you ·have your agement pian can provide the
manaeement plan established best possible lay out of a road
Handle yeur small farming and gardening with
you should be committed to system . This is another lmpor·
ease. A new Shenniu 2/26 diesel tractor at·
.following through with the lmme· tant part of fire protection In that
'
taches to any 3/P hitch equipment.
diate recommendations and the a good, well-maintained road
...~!
system
makes
your
woodland
loiiJ raDJe plans. You need to be
responsible for the protection of accessible to fire-fighters should
l $7995.00 VALUE
NOW ONLY
your woodland. Don't allow cat· there ever be a danger of fire
FULL UNE OF PAm a• SERVICE
tie to J1'11Z9 to your woodland. from a neighboring property.
1here Is very ilttie beneficial Many times access roads serve a
We have a fuR lnt of ling Iutter Equipment• .
toraee for cattle In a woodland dual purpose. They can also
lOt to mention the damage cattle serve as a firebreak.
With a management plan de.
un do to the woodland Itself.
signed
especially for your propGraziDJ can cauae soU compacerty
and
your needs and a
tion rnulting In water run off and
SR 35 W.- GAWPOLiS; OHIO
e'Oiion and Interfere with proper wllltngness to folipw through
2204 EAn• AYHIUE
446-9777 01 446-2414
root at»orptlon, the elimination with the plan; your woodland can
be all you would like It to tie. And
of tbe underatory (young aeeGAWPOUS, OH.
We. have salvage .parte for eome older model
dllql), boot damage to tree maybe even more.
·farm tractors.
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bllttllaiJowiDg entry of damaging

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ll-14-22-31-40-44
Kicker 868836

tram• m•g,

Forestnaan~enaent

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Classes. will be for beginners,
with some intermediates and
advanced, she said. The courses
will not require a lot of monetary .
investment, either. Class fees
are $7 per lesson, and materials .
used, which can he as little as $3.

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recerti•fj Cation,
testing
8}a1e d

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put down 0.9 percent in January,
according to a monthly report by
I
. the Federal Reserve System.
"We can't blame all the factors
Two sessions ar e planned for
By Edward M. Vollbom
on what goes on with the weather
people
needing to .h ave their
County Extenslo11 Agent,
·
and In the au to industry," said
cards renewed. Those. sessions
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
·Aliel{ Sinal, chief econom~
will be Thursday, February 22 at
the Boston Co. , from his office in
·
1 p.m. or Monday, February 26 at
New York.
GALLIPOLIS -Private pest!· . 7 p.m. at the University of Rio
Overall production was flat, clde applicator training, recerti· .Grande. Two remaining sessions
"showing an industrial sector flcatlon and testing will be are planned lor people who what
that Is not If OWing ... and led to.a cOnducted · over the next few to become . certified as private
very slow start and a very weak days. A couple yeats ago, methyl pesticide applicators for the first
start" for the new year, Sinai
bromide, a pesticide used in the .time. Those ·sessions are Thurssaid.
preparation of tobacco plant day, February 22 at ·7 p.m. or
In another report, the Fed said
beds became r.estricted. Some Friday, February 23, at 1 p.m. at
the utlltzatlon of manufacturing,
other products such as "Lasso" the University of Rio Grande. All
mining and utilities fell to 81.9
and "Biadex" commonly used In testing for private applicators
pertent ·or- capacity In January
who want certtltcation for the
from 83.1 percent in December, . row crop production have been first time and those who want to
with auto plants at the lowest designated as restricted use. add categories will b'e conducted
Recently, the EPA announced
operating levels since the 1982
by · the Ohio Department .of .
~he 11pproval of an atrazine
recession.
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on Montlay, Febrll·
Agriculture
management . program. One of
"Vehicle manufacturers exary
26
from
1·7
p.m. (arrive by 6
tended their holiday shutdowns ·the provisions Is that Atrazlne be p.m.) at . the University, of Rio
given a restricted use classificato reduce excess inventorieS,"
tion beginning In the "1991" use Grande. All sessions will be held
the report said.
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season. For these reasons, the In room 138 of the Davids
As with industrial production,
Technology Building on the Unlthe weather during the warmest Private Pesticide Application ' verslty of R)o Grande·Campus. If
Certification Program ·has be·
January on record was also a
come more important in the last 1 you have you questions, please
factor.
call (446-7007).
"Utilization at power plants · couple years.

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Michigan

the · total output of durable
conswner goodS. which are made
to last three or more years, fell
by 6.8 percent.
f h
h ld
In the category o ouae 0
g.oods. however, ap~!ianc3 •
scored a rebo.~d after sign ·
cant cutbacks in November and
!;Jecember, the Fed sat d.

producti~n Farm flashes
follows a 0.2 increase In DePriVa(e ~8t•ICI•de
cember, with manU!acturingout·
in

Ohio Lottery

11M-·-.... -_......,.

lleclltr Ev...,llle 1111 Vrt1 nnw Cllu., '""' 1111
Cllad.,_....,
Se.,..en wu made IIJ allldea&amp; vt&amp;e.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS ·OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher

CHARLENE QOEFL.CH
Geural Jl(anqer

PAT WHITEHEAb "
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press lnlernatlonal. !nlaftd Dally Press
Association and th~ American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing 'and must be signed with
name, address and telephone nurriber. No unsigned letterS will be pubilshed . l,etters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

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Ohio Politics

Anti-protest ·bill
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angers actiVIsts
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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - The fur Is going to fly In the Ohio Senate Energy ,
Environment and Natural Resources Committee before that panel Is
thrqugh with debating the merits of a blll to silenCE' protesters against
the sale of animal furs.
The bill Is sponsored by the chairman·oUhe committee, Sen. Gary
Suhadolnlk, R-Parrna flelghts, on behalf of merchants, furriers and
trappers who say the demonstrators a~e ruining their businesses.
The animal rights demonstrators park themselves outside major
department stores and fur shops.- Sometimes they try to block
entrances; other Urnes they may spit on women wearing fur coats or
yell, "Murderer! " or vulgarities at them.
Suhadoinik doesn't believe ordinary laws ' against disorderly
conduct or public nuisances cover such activities, and his bill would
establish a new crime of intimidating fur sales, with a. maximum
30-day'jail sentence and maximum S250 fine.
He likens it to Ohio's ethnic lntlinldation law. which imposes special
penalties for making racial or ethnic slurs or taking action in a
neighborhood to intimidate a family because of Its race or herital!e.
Tom Addis, a veteran lobbyist for Ohio sportsmen, believes the
animal rights activists struck our on banning the leghold trap in 1977,
so they are working on "Plan B."
·Robin Russell. execu live director of Protect Our Earth's Treasures
in Columbus, says his group and others are speaking out "for the
animals who suffer at human hands, yet have no voice."
"When voices were raised to extend compassion to children, their
suffering and pain ended in the factory," said Russell, adding that if
demonstrators can discourage fur sales their mission will be
accomplished.
Suhadoinik's bill Is aimed at the questionable tactics used by the
anti-fur demonstrators.
Mark Bordas of the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants, which
includes department stores and furriers. likens the situation to ·
antj-smoking, which Is· 'socially unacceptable but we don't see bands
of anti-smokers grabbing their packs of cigarettes and smashing
them into the ground."
· Suhadolnik says a peaceful protest would not be prevented by his
bill, but Russell believes otherwise. ·
The bill prohibits any false statements on signs or literature at the
demonstration site. It also forbids any derogatory signs or objects,
such as a maimed mink carcass, to be placed near a fine stole at the
store.
Russell believes this is an abridgement of freedom of speech, and
he and fellow protesters are showing up at the committee hearings
with cloths strips over their mouths.
They may have to take them off when they speak ln opposition to
Suhadolnlk' s b\11 next week.
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Berry's World
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Monday.

feblurl19. 1890

P8Iestinia0 state is 'inevitable'
Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

lll ·Co•rt Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

cs:m~

2-Tiw Dally Sa .....
Pomlloy-Mhld'aport. Ohio ·

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"To borrow s.phr~JN from the American preslcMrlt, the psrty IIJ In DEEP ~0001"

Today in history
By Unlled Preea IDierllllltloliaJ
Today Is Monday, Feb. 19, the 50th day of l990 with 315 to follow .
Today Is Pres lden t' s Day.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, VPIIUS, Mars and Saturn.
The t!Venlng &amp;tar Is Jupiter.
·
Thole oorll on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They include
British actor David GarrlciJ, In 1717, actress Merle Oberon in 1911,
bandleader Ste Kenton In 1912, jockey Eddie Arcaro In 1916, novelist
Car1011 McCuDers In 1917, actor Lee Marvin In 1924, singer Wtlllam
:•smoJrey" Robl1110n In 1940 (age 50), and Brlt41n's Prince Andrew In
1960 (af(! 30).
.

On thll date In history:
In 1878, Tbomu Edison patented the first gramophone.
In 1922, vaudeville star Ed Wynn became the first big name In show
buslllf1Ss to sip for a reaular radio show.
In 1!H5, U.S. Marines landed on the Island of Iwo Jirna, opening one
ot the bloodiest battles In the Pacltlc -durtng World War Two.

WASHINGTON - A pivotal
bolster State Department efforts
report commissioned by the
to get the Israeli government to
Pentagon and the State Depart- be more flexible In negotiations
Issue of Israeli-Arab peace talks whether · or not there is a
ment has advised the Bush
with Palestinians.
- the question of whether Israel Palestinian state. The process or
administration that a Pales.tiA hlgh·level State Department can share the region with an
'getting there' Is critical, for It
nlan sta.te 0 n the West Bank is
source told us that about 75 official Pillestinlan state. ·
will c)laracterlze the relation"Inevitable."
·
percent of the U.S. Intelligence
The United States officially' ships between the Jewish and
· The report was written by the
analysts In that department,' the opposes the creation of a Palest!·
Palestinian states - as well as
Central Intelligence Agency ' s
CIA and the Penta~r:on share the nlan state, unless such a state between Israel and the Arab
top Middle East expert. Graham
views expressed In the report,....
emerges' from Middle East peace world - for a long tlnie to come.
simply called the " Fuller ReFuller, who star ted his research
negotiations with the blesslpgs of
port'' by administration
whlle , lie was . still with the
Israel. •
"If the way to the Palestinian
government. Fuller serv~d as · officials.
Israelis now too worried about
state is long, brutal, bloody and
vice chairman i:lf the CIA's
Fuller started hls. landmark
Its security to give that blessing.
filled with rancor , In a process In
National Intelligence c~uncll .
study at the CIA and finished It The well-regarded Fuller diswhich Israel has not taken the
for his new employer, the ·JtAND
The strong conclusion in the
putes such thinking as· shortleadership but rather Is .viewed
·report, and the credentials.of Its corporation, This prestigious Ca- sighted. In the long term , he
as having gone down In defeat,
lifornia think tank has contracts
author, have spooked ardent
believes, the Middle East needs a
the psychological relationship of
. supporters of Israel In the for a lar~e number of top-secret · solution that breaks the prothe two states will be ugly and
government studies.
. administration. They are churnlonged cycle or violence . .
will perhaps contain the seeds of
ing. out other studies to remind
Fuller's report is not classiFuller acknowledges that Is- future conntct. For Israel's relafied, but was distributed to a
Bush that any movement toward
rael's security and its vuinerabil·
tionship with the Arab world as
a . Palestinian state threatens
lirhlted audience primarily at the · ity to terrorism must be reasona- · well, Ills Important that the birth
Israel's security.
Pentagon and Sta_te Department.
bly addressed. wl)ile w~)&lt;lng out of a new state not be perceived as
In spite of the opposition, the
A State. Department source .t he creation · of a ·~ile511nlan
an Arab victory born of force and
report has pecorne a key refersaid the Fuller report was the state.
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violence. for this might encourence work in the U.S. Intelllgence most reputable study tq come out
He writes: ' "The question is · age further attempts to use force
community and Is being used to in the last decade on the cl!ntrlfl more complex than simply
against the Israeli state ."

Monday, Febru.-y 19, 1990

The Deily Sentinei-·PIPe!MIIIl&amp;l-3

Poma'oy Middlaport. Ohio .

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Meigs .girls,
boys cage teams post-season play against ·nfS
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· Both the Melis Maraudeh
girls and boys teams will open
tourtlalllent 'play this week and
both of the Marauderettes and
Mar.auders' ' will be plilyinr
former ·Southeastern Ohio
Leag;ue rival Jackson.
The girls will open play ton~ht
at Oak Hill ,(,hile the bo'ys begin ·
Tuesj:laay itlght at Rto G'tande.
Co~ch Roger Foster' s Lady ,
Marauders are )5-5 on the year
a!'il .are the. secohd-seE:ded team
· ·bentnd Gallipolis:
, .
Because tY(o team&amp; will ,a dvance to district play from lhls ·
years sectlonals, the' Marauders
and' Blue Angels will not have to
· play each other to advance to the
dls trlct.

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the·Lady Marauders will play

and offense. At center will be as the Blue Angles take on
Jackson, 5·10 at the time of the Kelly Smtih (14.2 pts a game). ' McDermott Northwest at 6: 30.
Smith Is one or the premier post The Meigs-Jackson game will ret
drawlnr•· Jackson defeated
players .in the area. ·Kelly needs. under way around 8 wtth the
Wellston in opening round play,
to stay out of foul trouble If the winners of both ganmes advanc·
61-44.
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Lady .Marauders are to be lng to district play at Chllllcothe. .
Foster said th!lt Jackson likes
Caoch Rusty • Boo.k man will
succestul. Both Taylor and Smith
to get the ball inside and that
h.ave missed action thiS year send his. Marauders to war with
Meigs will have to make the
because of Illness or Injuries but the Ironmen ~n Tuesday ntgh( at
Irongir!S put the ball up from
outside. ·
. are healthy now. At ihe toward · 7 at the UntversllyofRloOranae.
Meigs is 3-1'7 on the year and is
, Slarljlrs for the will be sopho- , positions are sophomore Tl'icla
·
corning
off Its two best perforBaer
j9.1
pts
a
game)
and
senior
,
more Kim Hanning , at point
mances
of the year fQilowlng .ad
Shannon Newsome .
guard. Hannlltg, who Is averag56-53
loss
to Alexandet at Alb!lny
Ing around 4 points a game. Is
Baer ·is becorrilng a force on the and a 66-56 upset wln over
coming around afler a bout with
boards and has been one of the Federal Hooking a week ago
the flu late In the season. At the
other guard will be junior spark- 'top, players on the t.eam .all year , Friday at Federal Hocking.
Jackson Is 3-17 on the year, but
along with Newsome, · who Is
plug Jennifer Taylor j9.4 pts: a
Coach Bookman said that the
game). Taylor seems to be all scoring 5.3 points a game.
GaiUpolis will play first game Ironrnen are' much better than
over the place both on derenae

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will get the nod In the underthe record Indicates.
neath. Humphreys (6 pis ) will
The Marauders must control
play defense with the best of
the game's tempo and rebound.
them and l~ not afraid to )lit the
The Ironrnen are a little ta\ler
floor for the loose balls .
than MHS.
Van Meter ·(6 pts) has been
The Marauders will start Jurired-hot lately scorir.g at a clip or
lor Jason Wri_ght at point guard.
16 points a game the las t !our
Wright (4 pts. a game) is coming
off a season high 11 point games. L. J . Mltc)l will come off
the bench for Meigs. Mitch
performance In the wln over
(9pts. l a 6-3 sophomore has been
Federal Hooking. Cary Betzing
slowed by the flu bug ihe past
(9pts) andRobble'Fields (lOpts)
will be at the wings . Betzlng a · month . Mitch had a streak of19,
IS, 25, and 18 points In consecusenior and Fields a junior are t)le
tive games this year before the
outside threats for Meigs, but
flu
bug hit hlfTI.
they are not ·afraid to go In the
Winner
of Tuesday night's '
paint and mtx It up with the blg
men. Jay Humphreys a 6·1 senior game will advance to the cham·
and Mike Van Meter a 6- ~ junior · pionshlp game on Friday Feb. 23:
at 6:30.

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·FIRST PLACE SYRACUsE RAIDERS - The
SyracuM! Ral,d ers sixth grade basketball team
recently took first plilce In the. Eastern Athletic
Boosters Annual 5th and lth Grade Basketball
Tournament. Syracuse defeated LIIUe Hocking,
Pomeroy and-Portland to wtn 'tbe championship.
~earn members are (llo r): Beth Hill, manager.

· Second row·Paul Chapman, Jay McKelvey, Kevin
Deemer, and Robby Crow, Third row· Bob Crow
coach, Ryan lliU, Jay Day, Cass Cleland and
Marvin Me Kelvey coach. Medals were awarded
to Cass Cleland for scoring the most p0tnts and
making the most foul shots In the championship
game.
·

PORTLAND PIRATES FINISH SECOND The Portland Pirates sixth grade basketball learn
recently took aecond place In the Eastern Athletic
Boosters Aitnaal lith and 6th Grade Basketball
Tournament. Porllaad defeated Coolville and
Tuppers Plalas before losln~~; to Syracuse In the

finals. Team members are (I lor): Macy Rees hall
boy. Second Row· Spike Rizer, Gabe Smtih, C. j, '
Harris, Gre1 Me Kinney, and Shawn Dalley.
Third Row-Ryan Evans assistant coach, Ja&amp;OI\ ;
Fitch, Jamie Evans, Chris ProHitl, John Harmon,
Jeremy Black ahd Jonathan Rees ~oach.

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WID

Rio Grande ·holds off .BJufftoll for 9.3··72. non-league

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Seat belts .in buses. makes sense .Sarah Overstreet
If you rock y.our crying baby In
your lap while in a moving car,
instead of lettlrig hlm squall his
lungs out in hls car seat, you can
get a stiff fine.
.
Ditto, If you let your 4-year-old
stand on the hump in the back
seat and look out the windshield
like he wants to. Recognizing the
danger auto accidents pose to
unrestrained children, we've
enacted laws to protect them
from other cars and parents too
stupid to belt them In unless
coerced.
But put that kid In a school bus
where. he can roll around like a
pea in a boxcar, and suddenly he
doesn't need a seat belt. Does
that strike you as odd?
It certainly does Dorothy
Dunn. In a 1987 Kansas bus
accident, her daughter Lori, then
In kindergarten, was thrown over
the bus driver and Into the
dashboard. Doctors used 200
sUches to close her facial wounds
and re-attach her nose. And she
may need more plastic surgery
when ~he gets older.
.

In a recent school bus crash in
Mehlvllle, Mo., 21 elementaryschool students were hurt when
their bus overturned. One child
lost an arm when, after having
been thrown across the bus, her
arm went through a window arid
was crushed by the weight of the
vehicle. Doctors say virtually all
the children's Injuries could have
been prevented if they'd been
wearing seat belts.
Now with all thOse new seatbelt laws and the wealth Of
information provided to · us by
those two crash-test dummies
who regularly get themselves
torn limb from limb, a reasona ble person might expect that
we'd be bolting tielts Into those
buses as fast as we could. So why
aren't we?
.
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The first reason Is fairly
simple: Seat belts cost money.
Industry estimates run from
about $2,000 to $4.000 per 6S.seat
bus. although Parkway, Mo.,
equipped theirsfo~$830each. But
how many kids are hurt In

school-bus accidents every year, mated that If all school buses
anyway? Almost 10,500. Of those were equipped with them, "they
injuries, 480 of them were se- may only save one life and
rious. and 12 children were several dozen injuries a year."
killed.
What's left to the parents of
The second reason why seat children who ride school buses is
belts haven't become mandatory either to believe the Canadian
in school busses Is that such .a study and National Research
small amount of research has Council recommendations or to
been done on the subject (Those wonder about the wisdom of
dummies ricochet around cars. letting their kids get on board and
not buses.) A Canadian study take their chances without belts.
using mannequins concluded If they tend to worry, they're not
that in school-bus accidents, alone: The American Medical
children in seat belts would Association, the American
suffer injuries worse than those · Academy of Pediatrics and the
NOT in belts. However, critics of American College of,Emergency·
the study say Its results are Physicians all, support seat belts
unreliable because sensors were in school buses.
only put on the mannequins'
Some people will argue that
foreheads and chests - those even If school buses are equipped
that new around the bus and with seat belts, kids won't stay tn
landed on their necks did not 'ern, and bus drivers can1 make
register any injury.
'ern. Perhaps the timid school
The National Research Council districts could do what mine did
then conducted a study and did when I was riding buses: ~ake
not recommend mandatory res- behavior a condition of riding.
traints. While noting that seat You don't buckle up, you let Dad
belts improve safety, they esti- and Mom figure out how to get
you to school.
,
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How protesters really get lheir kicks
It was the an.ti-fur protesters there's more going on here than
that started, me thinking. Here meets the eye. A good many of
were these people whO appar- these anti-fur protesters I beentiy have nothing betler to do. lleve, are simply working off
th.an go around splashing red their aggressions under the guise
paint Olll:ltatlon blood) onexpen- of
high-minded objection to
stve fur coats, allegedly as a cruelty to animals. In some
protest ag· 1 t th
lt
e crue Y o1 cases, their hostility may focus
a ns
trapping and killing the animals specifically - 0 n people stylish
.
enough, and rich enough; to wear
that provide the .fur.
There was something so savmink or sable. In others, the
age about the form or their hidden anger and resentment
protest that It seemed dlspropormay be aimed · at the whole
tlonat!!, som~how, to their al·
human race, and the fur-wearers
leged aim. I s all very well to are simply unlucky enough to
DP"""" th
f
bnal' fu
....- e uae 0 an an
• r
provide a ·cunning excuse for Its
In Cl?fillng, but that clearly expression.
dGelln t Justify the vandalism
.
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Involved In ruiDing a fur coat.
Once I had reached that
~oreover, reports l,ndlcated that conclusion · about the anti-fur
I!Onteprotesters (lncludtna~e protesters, however, a further
who stopped ,s hort ~f throwing subversive thought eros~ my
paint on other peoples clothing)
mind. Is It posalble that other
Wl!l'e wearing leather jaCkets protest movements - and there
aDd leather shoes - rather areazllllonotthem these days.:..
are masking the same or similar
Inconsistently, one would think.
So, I have concluded that aggressive Impulses?

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·Take the great legions of the
anti-smokers. Now, I will be the
firsttoconcedethat smoking can
be offensive to non-smokers. I
think the drive to Isolate and If
possible eliminate smokers from
human societyhasgoneabsurdly
1ar, b ut there Is the nub of a
perfectly good point there.
But no one who watches tbe
behavior of many (not' all) who
object to smoking can doubt that
there Is an element of aggression ·
In their attitude.
·
Years· ago, before New York
City mandated separate areas in
restuarants for smokers and
non-smokerS, lilt up a .stogie at
the end of a meal. A women 20
feet away thereupon loudly · In·
structed her walter, "I won't
have my entree unt!l that man
has finished bts cigar." Naturally, I crept out at once. And you
can't tell me that woman didn't
feel a pleasurable lrtsion of
power, It positively radiated

William Rushe'r
from her.
Fo:r more outdoorsy types,
there's always Greenpeace . .Sign
onto the campaign to Save The
Whales, and you may actually
get a chance to go bucket lng
around some Japanese whaling
vessel in a small boat, while the
world's press records your
da[~n!it these cases, the ~ret
pleasure derived !'rom harming
or at least embarraulng rich
women or pot-bellied clrarsmokers or giant corporations Is
multiplied many time by the
sheer vlrtuousness of the CIUie
allegedly being served. Defendtng little furry ~hlngJ. or the ·
pristine wllderllels, or fresh air,
has tt all over demanding lower
taxes or protesting the draft. The
former are such seernlnlly dlsln·
terested acts. The secrets sadlat
can lay on the lash In the hlrb ,
name of public virtue.

' J3lulftoq. flushed, by an eight.
point victory over Wilmington
eal'lle~ in t~e ·week llnc! ,Jio.Ses.,..
ing District 22's ,t op free-thrpw ·
shooter ,tn gua,rd ]odd K~hre~ •.
gave the University of Rio
Grande men's basketball team a
run'for Its money'; but found Itself
contlnualiy in·piirsuit of a lead. '
"That's sort of been our
problem this season," Beavers
Coach' Guy Neal said. "I thought
we J?layed excellent ball except
for ' a ' couple of two-to-three .
minute bteakdowns, and ' then
we'd have to fight tO get back into
the game."
·
Bluffton railted time · and
again, but fell 93-72 • to the
· Redrnen at Lyne Center Satur~
day on -ty;~ '19-point pedorrnan- 1
ces from '·Jeff Brown and Mark
Erslan. The wln Improved Rio
G,r,ande's · record • to 14-15 and
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Bluffton .went'lo 5-19. ,
"I think Blufftbn did an excel·
lent'job agairu;t us, and I really
liked the way )"e ., handled the
ball," Redmen Coach John La·
whorn remarked. ' "We ,were
much more solid ' tlefensivelv

than we have been, and that ·
really plea,sed me." ,\ ·~ .
' The, Beavers·, led by forward
Mike Evans' 2S.polnt nlght,led at
10:. 1~ In tl)e first half when,Fred
Moore slipped in two (20-19).
Evans netted two more 22 se.
conds later for a 22-19 advantage.
Moore's foul on Darius Williams in the quarter -court at 9:28
sent Williams. to the free throw ·
line, wl)ere he sank two shots.
Brown, Rio Grande's top rebounder who snatched three in
this game, fired the balltn to get .
.the Redrnen ahead 23-22. .
The half continued in this vein,
with the Beavers trailing by iour
(37-33) at 3:10. At that point, the
Redinen exploded , for eight a
b:isket by John Larnbcke and two
treys from Erslan and Brad
Schubert to bui!d a 12-polntlead
at the intermission.
Bluffton worked at closing the
gap and carne the closest at 8:32
when guard Daryl Dowdy hit a
three-pointer to make It 68·63.
Rio Grande's defense heid, utilizIng Bluffton's total of 14 turnov·

ers to bulldanotherdouble-flgure
cushion and post its largest lead,
91-69, with 1:·29 remaining. {
· "I have a grea~ deal o( respect
for· this program. · I . think this
team is explosive and anyone
who plays them will have to take
care that they don · ~ go on runs,"
Neal silid of the Redrnen. "I think
our kids played hard and competed hard and executed welL"
Contributing strong floor performances for t.he Redrnen were
Gary Harrison and Tr.oy Donald·
so(!. Although held to five points,
Harrison caught eight rebounds
and 10 assists while Donaldson's
Inside play and five boards kept
the Beavers outside the gates .
The defense worked on Kehres,
who was held to seven points
(five at the loulline) but chipped
in slx assists . .
Schubert, who reeorded 28
points over Cedarville last week.
had 18 points against the Beavers, ending his week's output at
46. Do'Wdy and Mike Ernst had 14
each .for the visitors .
·
The tightness of the_garne·was,
reflected in the shooting. Rio
Grande san)&lt; 32 of 62 field goal
· attempts (52 percent) and Bluf·
fton recol'ded 51 percent f25-49).
At the line. the Redmen were 90

percent (19-21) and BluUton.
noted for its prowess on foul
shooting; connected on 16of20for
80 percent. The h,osts outbo~rded
the Beavers ·30-25 and held their
turnovers to five.
The Redmen will be at ·Ohio
· Dominican Wednesday at 7: 30
p.m .. while Blulfton hosts Central State Tuesday.
In other Dtstrlct22 scores from
Saturday, Tiffin outlasted Cedarville, 84-80; Defiance sank Ohio
Dominican, 120-85; Findlay
slipped past Walsh, .92-85; C.en-

•

f

"

tral State triumped ove~ Dyke,
101-77; and Wilmington buried
Lake Erie, 93-72. ' , . ·
·
Box score:
:. 1.t .1 \~·~ ;
RIO GRANDE (93) - Gary
.Harrison. 1-1-0-5; Mark Erslan,
1-5-1-19; Brad Schubert, 3·3-3-18;
Jeff Brown, 6-1-4-19; Troy Donaldson, 4-1-9; John Larnbcke,
3-4-10; Darius Williams, 2·4-8;
Joe Edwards, 1' 1·3. TOT~LS
22-10-19-93.
.
BLUFFfON (72) - Daryl
Dowdy, 0-4·2·14; Mike Errist,
3·2·P4; Todd Kehres, 1-5-7;

Miller beats KCHS
"in sectional finals

Kyger Creek (32) - Shaver
By DAVE HARRIS
1-1-2-7,
Skidmore 1-0·3-5, Ra·
OvP CorreApondent
gland
2-0·5-9
, Bush 0-0-1-1. BradThe Miller ,F alcons outscored
bury
1-0-0·2,
Cindlesberger 1-0-2Kyger Creek 37-15 in the second
4,
Swisher
1-0·2·4. Totals half to defeat the Bobcats 58-32
and win the title game of tlie 7-1-15-32
girls' Divisional IV sectional
·tournament Saturday night at
'
:' · ,
Meigs High School.
The Falcons will advance to
district play this Saturday night !
at' Waverly against the Coal
Grove winner. Game time is 7-: 30
The Bobcats played tough with ,
'
~·
! ,.
{ •
..
the top-seeded Falcons In the .,~·
NEW YORK (UPIJ - James
his heavyweight title against
(.Final 1989-9d(
beginning. Behind the scoring of 1 ·
"Buster." Douglas Su,nday said
Evandet Holyfield in september,
(Regular Season)
LesUe Lytle and Janice Hanning 1
he wlll make t!!e·l,lrst defense of f!laking· Mike Tyson walt a year ·.
(All G!lmes)
whoscored1lfirstquarterpoints , .
·· ·
for a rematch.
"..
TEAM
W L P OP the Falcons were able to hold a '
'
Speaking
from
hls
manager
.,
,
..
..
..
17
3 1461 1171 13-7. lead at the end of the first
Wellston
The Daily Sentinel
John Johnson's Columbus, Ohio,
.Miller ..... :.. ... .. 14 61277 . 1458 · quarter.
'
home, Douglas' anjl Johnson said
Belpre .... ...... ... 12 8 1442 1078
(USPS l~HIII
In the second period the
tbey have made a deal to light
~ Olvlsion of M•IUmedta. Inc.
Alexander ...... 12 8 1273 1197 Falcons jumped out to a 19-10
Holyfield In Las Vegas, Nev .
Trtmble .......... ll 9 1219 1198 lead put Kyger came scratching P
Pub]~hed everv. afternoon. Moftdav Tbat
came as news to Holyfield's
Vinton County .11 , 9 1276 1195 back and puUed wlthln 21-17 at
through F,tld.V. Ill Court St .. · PO·
mero,v. ,Oh.lo.
the Ohio Valley Pubpromoter Dan Duva. however,
Fed-Hocking .. , 9 11 1366 1329 the half.
ll$hlng Company i' Multlmedla. Inc..
who said nothing has been agreed
Meigs ............ . 3 17 1091 · 1452
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156, Se·
upon.
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Nels-York ...... . 2 18 1076 1431
In the third quarter the physiOhio.
"I'm willing to accept the
Saturday night's result:
cal play of the Falcons and
challenge and be a true charriVInton County 62 Trimble 61 behlcda tough pressing defense
Member : Un ited Prf'Ss InternatiOna L
.Inland Dally Press Association and the
plon," Douglas said on NBC:'s
(makeup)
Miller started to pull away
Ohio' Newspaper Association. NatiOnal
."Sports
'Update."
"I'll
fight
the
Tuesday's
games:
holding a 35-21lead heading into
Advertising Reprt"Sentat lve .. Branham
· No. 1 contender. and that's all I
Jackson vs. Meigs a:t Rio the final eight minute~.
New spaper Sal f.'S , 733 Third Avenue.
·New York. New York 10017.
can do."
·
.
Grande, 7 p.m.
The Falcons continued the
VInton
County
vs.
Sheridan,
at
fourth
quarter with the tough,
When told Holyfield .h ad been
'pQsTh!AST)i:R:,' Send' adj!re!s ;~~han..O
to The Dallv" Senhnet. U1 COurt sf...
defense
and the Bobcats were
CrooksVIlle,
7:30
p.rn
,
..
Installed a 2·1 favorite by Las
Pomerqv. Otllo 65769.
Nelsonvllte-York
'
vs.
Alex·
unable
to
hit a field goal .tn the
Vegas sppr\5 book~. Douglas
ander,
at
Athens,
6:
3()
p.m.
ml8cR;-niO~ ft'.tta. ~
quarter
and
Miller outscon!d
said, '•'I don't put any stock In the
By c:;aro;~ .. or~~~~~"': Boote ,
Federal
Hocking
vs.
Belpre,
at
Kyger
23-8
to
pull
away for the
odds.:, I k~tow how I !eel and the
Ont Week .•.. ......1... .. ~.'o
IJ.4t) f
Athens,
8
p.m.
victory.
·
·
. oukic&gt;me wlll be another shocker' .
One Month ..... :....... ....... / ..,;:....... 16.10.
\)lie Year ........................ ,, ...... $72.80
Friday'• 1ames:
Miller pla,c ed four players In
then." .
.
,
' SINGLE COPY ,,.
'
Fairland vs. Jackson-Meigs double flgilres with Leslie Lytle
There were no oCids posted on
~ Pad'
winner at Rio Grande, 6: 30 p.m. and Jocly Altier each scoring 13,.
the Feb. 10 Douglas-Tyson bout
Dally ·· ·: ...... .... ........ :.... .. .... ~·· 25 Cen!s
'
GaiUpolts vs. Wellston at Rio Cheryl .J)oclaon and Jancte Han·
111; Tole;yo, blcault Tyson was
Subscribers ;ot d•ttlqt o PIIY'tt~Kar~
Grande,
8: 15 p.m.
·
ntng eacb ICOred 10.
such an overwhelming favorite .
.rter mav molt In 'lctvanoe dl~ to.
For Kyger Creek Yon Ragland
Balurday'••-:
·:"
.Tbe Daiif lielllill,ll oa a 3. 6 or lllmontb , Howt!Ver, DoiJIIaa knocked out
Warren
Local
vs,.
VInton
led
the way with nine, and Bobble
basis. CMt~•tU.btfven~taQ
· Tyson In the lOth ~ In one of
week. -7
.. '
County·Sherldan
.
wtnner,
at
Jean
Shaver added ilt!VPII before
· the biggest upsets· In sports
, No sublcrlplioiUI by mall permltled In
Crooksville,
6:30
p.m.
fouling
out early In the fo\lrth.
history.
.
,
arell where
Ml'\l'lcflil
Crooklvllle
vs.
Nelsonvll•
quarter.
·
· '
·
Johnlcm said Klq' 1 attempt to
'
:
"
. ·' :
1 av~lla~e.
York-Alexander
winner,
a\
qureerlllltall
,
dell)' Doualaa the title becauae of
Moll SUbocriJtlo•
·
Athens, 6: 30 p.m.
Miller ................ 13 8 14 23-58
·
a
10111'40uat
knockdown
contrib1~
Jutde Melp t:oua&amp;r ~ .~
Ross-Southeastern vs. Belpre- , Kyger Ci'eek, ....... 7 10 7 8-32
uted lo his decision to fight
13 Woeko .... ,.......... ......... .......... 119.24
Federal Hocking winner, at . Miller (II) - Lytle 6-0-1-13,
311 Weeks ..... .. .......... .......: ........ . 137.116 ,1 Holyfield next. King and Ty!M!n
12 Ween .... ....... ......... ,........... ... $1U6
Athens, 8 p.m.
Hanning 4-0-2-10, Dodson 2.0-6-10,
claimed Douglas 'should have
·.
Ooolllolo Melp o..atJ
Feb.
:n
rame:
Wright
1.0.0.2, Pompey 3-().().6,
Ween ............ , ............... ... 120.10
been OINilte'd out when ~ went
Weeki ... .... .. .. .,,,~ · .. .:~ ....-........ 118.10
Miller
vs.
Trimble,
at
Meigs,
Compston
1·0.0.2, Altier 4·0-!H3,
doWn at th~ end of the elrhth
Weeks ........... ..... .. .'.............. ,f!IUO
7:30p.m.
f'ues 0.0·2·2. Totala -. ~1+1ws
round,
v'
1
~) ' ' '

.

Holyfi~ld
ne_xi_;, rys9~ . camp i~ upset

Douglas to fight

br

.

.

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

hr ('.........

i

•

TVC standinars

!TWO

'

Mike Evans, 10-5-25; .Mike .Min·.
nlg, 3-2·8; FrE'Ii Moore, 2-0·4 .
TOTALS 19-6·16-72.
.
. Hal ttl me score - Rio Grande
45, Bluffton 33.

SPR INfi VALlEY CINEMA
446 4574

7:00 I t :OO
~ILY

Uf l suil*rt~tu

1:00 l J: OO
-.no l' t

"--·
··ra

.I

BE1 TE
M I D ~E il

c:~
....
~

.......... u ,..;.., •••, ••
1110 1(!1 lt'.. l l l

9 :10PM DAllY
"' ' 511

•n•n

DOUBII.I
I
I'

�·~

Peg a 4-The Daily Sentinel

POI1l8'oy Middleport. Ohio

Pom.-oy-Midtlaport. Ohio

Monday, Februa'y 19, 1990

The Daily Sentinel-Peg• 6

clutch tip-in,
--With Jacksons
.

O~io State .records 64-61 triumph over · No.6
By GENE CADDES

UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! )
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers Is
running out of words to describe
freshman forward J im Jackson. .
' 'What more can you say about
Jim Jackson," Ayers asked after
the 6-6 Jackson put a lid on Ohio
~rt~'s 64-61 win over 6th-ranked
c lgan Sunday afternoon with
a ,tip-In of Mark Baker's missed
free throw With 13 seconds to play
In their nationally televised '
game.
" He' s a great player,' : added ·
Ayers. " He made a great tip·In of
that missed free throw and he

. came from the second spot. You three-pointer with three seconds
'
just don't teach those. !)!pes of remaining. It missed and was :f~ls~~e stage for the dramatic
things. ·
rebounded by teammate · Loy
Ohio State led 6i-56 after
"J immy just anticipates very Vaught, who 4rlbbled out and Jamaal Brown's three-pointer at
well. Nobody, as a freshman; fired up another unsuccessful the 1: 23 mark. Robinson, who led
thinks as well as he does .".
three-pointer at the buzzer.
both teams In scoring with 24
·
" I thought our guys gave a points, followed With a threeBaker, , the Ohio State point great effort today," said Ayers. pointer and Vaught a basket to tie
guard, had given the Buckeyes a
''Jim (Jackson) has a lot of 11 t 61 61 1 h 26
62-611ead by making the first of God-given ablllty and he works · ·v:ugh;, h:~ver~=J~P:~:~
his one-and-one free throw sltua- · hard at the game. He just took throw that would have put the
tlon, but with st11114 seconds to
over'when we ha~ to get It done." Wolverines ahead.
play and Rumeal Robinson on the
It was five ·consecUtive points
Jackson was Ohio State's leadnoor. the Wolverines' chances to
by Jackson that brought Ohio Jng scorer with 16 points and
win were good. Jackson 's tlp:ln
State from a 55-53 deficit to a Brown· had '15, his high for the
changed that.
·
58-55 lead with 2:34 to play and season.
·
After a Michigan time out·,
·
·
Robinson got off a desperation

·
C

BROWN FOULED - Michigan fronlman Terry Mills (right)
fouls Ohio St1tle's Jamaal Brown (30) as Brown attempts to shoot
• early In the first half of Sunday's game at St. John's Arena In
Columbus, as Wolverines Mike GrHII11 and Rumeal Roblllion and
Buckeye Perry Carter lq!lk on. The Buckeye&amp; won 64-61. (UPI)

By BOB' KEIM
··
UPI SP!'!"ia Writer ·
DAYTONA .BEACH, · Fla .
(UPI) -They spent the first i.OO
miles of the Daytona 500 filming
a movie.
Th:!y should have just filmed
the finish.
.
.The final moe of Sunday's raee
featurea an lncredlbie·. turn of
events normally foun~J only · In
Hollywood scripts. Vet~rari Dale

"'

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271 HI

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Lo• An.,tell 4, Queber 1
Su .. ay Refn•h
PhU.th... ~la J, NY hMder11 %

·'

Ear'Dhardt, who Ied 155 of the 200
laps, went Into turn three on the
final lap leading three other
drivers who knew they had no
shot at passing him.
But when Earnhardt ran over
some debris, his right rear tire
slarted to go down, his car
bobbled and went high on the
tral!k, and Derrlke Cope suddenly found himself In the lead a
moe from the finish line. Cope's

Antpl~.

Cal~y,

Bellf'l'~ Sll. MIY'KIIfttta -Ill

&amp;rlln Hiland 77, DaJton 71

RuUalul WlnNIPf'"· nlstll
PWiadei,Wilal Pll&amp;.bv rrh. nllht

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NATION"-L 8,\SKETIALL ASSK.
~alaarda,y RH... tl
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· O.ltwt Itt. N t'W Jt&gt;rW)' 117

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Pllll..flpllla II Utili,

t:. p.m.

....111. •IIJIIl

MntUe 1111 O..U... •IIIIi
WMIII ... e.IIM.... atlfll
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New .Jtr.,- .............. IIPI
HO. . OII&amp; Ml-.ea. .....
lA LUen II l u Aat. . .. 11~

......
r•••ta. 11a111
lA C11ppr.-. .. 8&amp;munelto, IIIPI

.

'

·
·
(UPI)
Ivan : ·
Lendi, the world's· ·top ranked ·:
piayeF', ·d~eated nin Mayotte In :
.a tournamentflnai for the second
straight week, disposing him 6-3, ·
6-0 Sunday In $1.2 m!Ujon Sky· Dome
W o r 'I&lt;l · . TennIs
To11rnament.
Lenql, ~hQ slllpped .Mayotte In
straight sets last weekend . In
MHan, Italy . .notched h.ls third
title of the year. He earned
$167,500 and vaulted over the $16
million mark In career wlrinlngs.
Lendi Is 17-0 Hfetlme agal)ist , •
Mayotte.
Mayotte, the world's 12th
ranked player, has been thoroughly dominated. by Lendi his
enure career. In ·tb,elr 17 meet- ·~
lngs to date, Lend! has won 42 Of •:
the 47 sets played ' between the ·:

two.

..

Nfttlll' l II, 011 •

I

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aa. '"'-....._...

.
'I N.,'"II
ftCft _,. ND (-ll.t*ll Lata, LUeCMh
Cle VIlla .Upla tl, Wlddl8e •

'

''

•

•
•

'

.'

'.

..

Desplte . his h'lstory , against
Mayotte, Lend! took nothln,g for
granted.
·
"You saw on Friday (.when he
fought off seven match points
agal'nst Kevin Curren) what can
happen If YOI! don't play your own .
game and someone''else does,"
Lendl said. "In any in~tc~ you, .
play anyone can win. You always ··
need more practlc~."
'
·

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FUTURE
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'

.'

L endl. Cla. l,ffls
•

COPE UPSET WINNER- Derrtke Cope of SPanaway, Wash., Is
lifted onto tbe shoulders of hill crew In the victory laae after
winning Sunday'• Daytoaa 11410. Cope drove a Chevrolet to upset
Dale Earahardt, who blew a lire on the lastlap ofthe 200-Jap"race

Mf'C-~1'111. Sprtllllfleld NE I'll

. . . .., Gamn

MI ... •• ...,.,...., 7: •

Girard Allllaee Sl, JIDw .... Cbr 16
KamiN• . . . . 11. Oa MIHIIer II (ot)
lleMHIUtlp It, J•.-thln AJ..- U
Uma Slutwae' '71, C.l. .aaer 71
Loudonville 15, Gallon Nonllmor !t

Mland E •• II-)' Fatrllw• sa
New &amp;llex~lte II, Uplift' ~IMo ValiS
Oak Harbor 7.r., Pell .. fS
OberlnFII·t'lait. . . . ,IJ)'rlaOpenDoor

O.UU at CtPWIMII, I:Jip.m.J
Houtl011al Clllt!qo, I:. p.m.
8atramNie at L.4. Olpprra. l p.m."

I

Ft .Je1111111 •· P•dlra·OIIboall!

nemtnr o-,

Ptll... Miphla 11e. P•rtiUd lt9

·I

,

E an .. u. a..- Fo,._ •
Fl .... 11. 01' w Ttelllt ..

)lacl..n PlaiM 71. 1AIIIoniS
Manlllleld Qlr ». Cfur-rbul'l U
M••olacbon fl.
(kJ')
M•mte 71. Bryaa t'2

SII .. ~U" R~ulh

Relllltho
n,.totw,.
M'IIMIIIIOn Ill. I • • - 57
Chlup Ill , Mllw. . be AA
LA J,.Urn lit. a..toll 110
PIIOt'llh: Ill. GeW~n SCalf' liS

!

'

IUulfton 73. C.r)··Ra•·.. ~ 0 ( .. )
Brookvllll' ••· Vwtalltes $II
Camhrldll' 12,81 Clal1'8"1~87
farrolhonll, GarawQ •
fol.-\eadQ, Otlawa Hlllllt
ColllriiP lit, IJcl!ln&amp; VailS
f.el Ubrrly Oar~· a a Chr u
(A)I 0.8111._. 51. Tolllf-VIIrlull

Md'omb .. .._ PMrltk lknry -1!

Vtah 110. Sarramet~to llf

Ml nlftM Its. -'lknta 18

.y··'

B4'XIey n , Groveport 82

~:=:~~~":·!:lmEU

Chlu.ro Ill st.
nllthl
Edmonloli at \' ancou\'fl'; ni!N

u.

W~-lllnAtoa H

Ayf'nvllle te, Mlllft- C-11 y i iJ

niKfll

•'

HalfUme sc~re , - F~!lnnont
.state 4~•.Rio Grande :til. ,

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALlERRGIS1 ·
"WE HA~E HEARINO AIDS"

SMurdJQ' , FPb. 11

AlltMrpst, IJ.-olnvtew h

N"' Jrr• ' al N\' Ranl!ier!tt1 : 3$p.m .·
Morlrtal at Df'trett, 7:&amp;1 p.m.
'l'llellll19 GamH

Bo!Jton at

PLE~SANT

. Boys Ohio IBAfl Sclloot Baa~ball

1: 0$ p.m .

LEADING .THE CHAllENGE
NATIONAL.FFA.WEEK
FEB. ·17-24
.

.

'.

JOHN A. WADE, MD., Inc.:

Prep scores .
Avon Lake IlK.

Chevtolet held ofrTerry Labonte
and BUI EIUott to make the 32nd
running of stock' car racing's
biggest and richest race· the' first
victory of his 72-race career.
"Earnhardt was dOtnlnant aU
day long, " said Cope , 31·. a native
of Spanaway, Wash. "There was
no way I was going to get him. I
was just trying to hold off Terrv
Labonte."
·
Instead, he registered one of
the mostshocklng victories In the .
hlstory o( the race. DillY three
other driver~ - Tim; Lund In
1963, Marlo Andrettlln 1967 and
Pete Hamnton In 1970 - have
notched their first career Winston Cup wins at the Da)(tona 500.
Cope Is a relative newcomer to
NASCAR, but his crew chief is
veteran Buddy .Parrott and his
engines come · from Rick Hen•
drlck's shop In Charlotte, N.C.
Labonte finished second in an
Oldsmobile, followed by Elliot! In
a Foro , Ricky Rudd In ·a '
Chevrolet, EarnhardtlnaChevy,
and Bobby HHUn Jr. in a Buick.'
"I was justslttlng there,'' said
Earnhardt, a three· lime Winston
Cup champion. •'Denike wins
the race, but we beat them ·au
day. They didn't outrun us. they
Just Iilcked Into it." ·
The race took 3 hours and 59
seconds and Cope's average
speed was 165.761 mph. Cope,
who had never. finished higher
than sixth or won more than
$16,775, earned $188,150. ·
J,,

Nf'Af TOUnH.'y ( IIMI!&lt;~ )

MO .. IQ' Gamf'!l

Willlhl.,-lon at Lo11

Butlf:r

Xa\·ler at (}(ltrolt
SC;\ C Toumey (!lf'mlfiMil')
FRIDA.\' , FEB t3
OAf Tou.--)· (semlflnal tt t
SATURDAY, FEI 2-1
Ohio Slat Purdu~&gt;
Ohio t at Kl'ftt St
BO•·InA G.-..en at E~uk&gt;rn Mlch
Miami at Tolf' do
ClnclnMIJal Tu ..nf'
Clt!¥elu4 St ac WHirr n Dllnel"
Day lOll Ill O..tmlt
Akron ill Wrlrhl: St
Xavier 111 But~r
\' oua~lown Slat LJ ~rty IVai
"-"'hla ad a1 Kcnlut•ky \\"t&gt;8il!ya q
Mr Vernon Nu.arf'ne at f e darvllk&gt;
Ohio DemoNt' Ill ILl Centru.l si
\\"aiNh ur Rln Grande
l' ~ana at Tlflin
llulft on Ill Df'-fluc.•e .
Sh awnt&gt;t• Slul Dykt•
Flndhty at \\"llmlnpo~
Lal!e Erie at Malo ...
· 0,\C Toumey (fi .. IK)

Cllk' llfll, Pllllbllfl h -1
WlnBPf'll. Cal181.)' I
Hartford 1. Buffalo ..
EdmOIIIIon 3. Mlnnnota :l
. . ,..loit7, \lanco u~r %

'-'

aytona··.500 . ·~!~:;~,2~~~~~it~;~:~~~ :·

Nii&amp;Wnf't' Slat FlrMias
Malo... ai Grow Cll v
Ohio A.lhlellc Ciulfereot-e Tny
:Wulctla·Hiram "1nner at Hf'l~herJ
Ohio Northern at Muutnplm
.lohn Carroii-Mo.al Union wlantr at
Olll'rbeln
.
(;ap liM I at ~ld¥&gt;·i•U' allatc••
THl'RSDAY. "FEB !2
find n11UIILI SouthHn Mla!ll11111pp1
A~ bland at So.U.f'rn lri•ana

P_..rtck Dlvl'Oion

·~

.•

D· .

Scoreboard ...
Tt!.m
R' L T Pt .o~.
N\' bllutdrn ... 211 t7 fi 112
N1' Ru~r.o _,, 2$ tl .10 811
Pllhhl"'(h ••.•. .• %7 :!II 5. 59
New Jent)' ..... !3 '!1. ·j
57
WMhlnJ(on --- -%8 31 4 36
PhUadtl .... a .... 24 :!!1 . II 3fi
'
Adllmli n.vls~n

·'

.

attack that saw the Redwomen
fleidgoalattempts. Fredrlckand an 18-11 record and 'a~ait' a
trail by five at the half. · ·. ·
Kerr! Kidwell had five boards potential palrlDg In the DistriCt
However, Fairmont starters
apiece to 'ld the offense.
.22 Playoffs. Falnnont ' S!ate
Lisa Monteleone, Lori Smith and
The Lady Falcons connected · Improved Its record to 15-11. ·
Sheila Fansler overcame a high
on 26 of 65.fleid goal attemptS for Box ~core:
.
:1
turno~r rate for their team (30) · 41 pe,rcent andwere25of39at the
FAIRMONT. STATE ('):~) and, ra!Ued the Lady Falcons on
foul line for 64.1 percent. Rio Lisa' Monteleo'ne, 4-13·21; Laurie
with double-figure scoring. Mon-' · . Grande was a Bowed only 1.1 Herrington~ H·0-11; Sebrlna'Wilteleone scored 13 of her 21 points
attempts on free throws_ all in . ·son, 1-1-3; Lori Smith, 6-6-18;
on foul shots.
.
the second half _ and was Jod!Wood,1-0-2; KrlsMay,4,1-9;
successful on five for 45.4 per- Sheila Fansler. 5-4-14. TOTALS
Ann Barn liz, who had 16 paints,
cent. Rio Grande had 36 rebounds 25-1-25-78.
·
.
.,
snatched 11 rebounds to aid the
to Fairmont's 48 and held us
RIO GRANDE (72) ,••: 'Jennl
Red women offense, which adturnovers to 15. Smith had 10 Couch, 4-0-8; Cindy l'tidg~IIY ,
vanced on a 41.7 percent per!or- boards and ,Monteleone 10.
1·0·2: Debbie Fredrick. 12·3•27;
mance from the field on 34 of 84
The Redwomen finished with
Kerr! • Kldw~?ll, S' 0-10; MIJ!dy
Montgomery; 0-1,0-3; ,Ann Bar- ,'

~~ : captures

NATIONAL HOCKEY. LEAGUE
" 'aim Conferencl'

The Joss dr~pped the lVolverines to 19-5 overall and 9-4 In the
Big Ten, a game and a half
behind league-leading Purdue at
10-2 and a game,In back of second
place Michigan State at 10-3.
'·we played hi! rd. but we didn't
play With. tthe degree of lntelUgence It tak~ to win on the road
against a gooil team," said
Fisher . ."It was a game we had an,
opponunlty to win but dldn'J."
.The ·victory, Ohio State's Sf·.
cond in a r.ow, lifted the Buckeyes:
to 13-10 overaU and 7-6 Jn Big Ten
play.

" Jackson showed his mettle
down the stretch, " said Michigan
coach Steve Fisher. "He made
the big buket and put In the
missed free throw. We still had a
chance for a three at the end.
Rumeai missed a good shot . It
wasn't to be."
Michigan lost both starting
center ·Terry Mills and backup
Eric Riley to personal fouls and
Fisher said that hurt the Wolve- ·
rlnes down the stretch.
" Fouls are a partofthegame,"
said Fisher. "You have to play
With whom you've got. "

Redwomen fall 78-72 in final tilt of season . -~ .:

·nebbte Fredrick poured In 27
points and l!dded n!Jle assiSts to
keep thf: University of Rio
Grande women close on the heels
of Fairmont State (W.Va.)
'Saturday. .
~But the Lady Falcons, shooting
peavlly from the free throw line,
hung on for a 78-72 defeat of the
RedwomenlnRioGrande'sreguIar season finale.
Fredrick, a 5·6 freshman guard
from South Charleston, Ohio,
who now leads - the team In
· pe~·lfame ,scoring average (13.7
points), spearheaded a balanced

Pro results

Michiglm

.Jiow$119

'

-··

PAT -HILL FORD
THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUBLI$H A COMMEMORATIVE
ISSUE. OF THE . VILLAGE
OF.
.
POMEROY'S ·150 YEARS OF
INCORPORATION ON
THURSDAY, APIIL 26~ 1t9o.·

992-2196

RESERVE ·YOUI AD SPACE TODAY-

992-2121'

992~2156

.·

ASI FOR ·
.IAN IILUNIS orI DAVE HAIIIS
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-STATE FARM INSURANCE
MIKE SWIGER

.K&amp;C JEWELERS .
. 992-3785

POMEROY, OHIO

•

POMEROYI OHIO

' . 992~6455
POMEROY,·OIJIO

'l

· ·CHRYSLER-PL YMOUTH·DODGE

992-6421

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT~

992~2635

·VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
,Q~O

992-2104

POMIROY .FLOWER SHOP .

992-6454

..•
•
••
•'

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ERAL. HOME

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PAT HILL

'

FRUTH PHARMACY .
EWING

'

992-6611

9.92-6685

.

992-6491

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO..

PLEASERS
992·2057 . .

POME~Y,

SWISHER LOHSE PHARMACY
POMEROY,

992-2955

MORRIS EQU.IPMENT.

'\'

•

OHIO

OHIO

.....

.RUTLAND,
742-2455
~----..-----~~~

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

01110

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The Daily Sentinel~'

'By The Bend

'

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'
-~ -

Menu set

.

Monday. Februr{ 19, 1990 ~ .
Page . 8 l

OES meeting conducted

The lunch menu for the East·
ern Local School District has
been annnounced for the week of
Feb.l9.
.
Monday:. plzzaburger, corn,
applesauce, and mplk.
'Tuesday: chili with crackers,
peanut butter sandwich, vegeta·
bles and dip, fruit, and milk.
Wednesday: cheeseburger.
baked beans, fruit, cookie, and
milk.
Thursday: taco salad with corn
~hips, peas, fruit , and milk.
Friday: fish. french fries ,
fruit, and milk.

. 'li

l
l

•!

The charter was draped In
memory Mabel Sherman, grand
matron, and there was a moment
· of silent prayer when the Harrk
sonvllle Order o'f ·the Eastern
'-. Star met . at the Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge Jor Its regular
·· February meeting.
The meeting was cOnducted by
Golda Reed, worthy matron, and
Robert Reed, . worthy patron,
with 36 In attencl-ance.
· It was noted that the 50th
weddipg annlversar,y of Zlba and
Sylvia Midkiff . will be held
Sunday at the senior· citizens
. center In Pomeroy and that tile

couple lias requested that girts be
omitted.
.
·•
Blrtlldays observed were. Ha·
rold Rice and Larry Well.
\ It was announced that Amber . ·
Warner Is In lntenslr,e. care at :
Veterans Memorial Hospital.· .'
.
The . group decided that tile i
Sunshine Collection will be do·
nated to the he·art fund . There · .
was also a collection taken for the '·
cancer society. · ·
·· 1
• Harold Rice ·ga)le tile blessing
before the group entered the dining area were refreshments
were ~rved by ihay commnte·e..
Jane Wise, Gracie Wilson, ~~d !
Golda Reed.
•·

I

J

,J
1·

Busy Bee c4!-ss meeting held
STUDENT EMPWYEES -Patti Hetzer, middle, and Todd Price, tar rJght, students of the.
Meigs High School Occupational Work Experience Program, ,are pictUI'ed ·here working at
their Job site ·a t Pleaser's Restaurant with
associate manager Patty White looking on.' Other

employt:r&amp; are Fisher Big WbeeJ, Excei»Jor Salt,
Jim Cobll, Hubbard's GreenhoWM!, Subway ,l)alry
Valley, Wendy's of Athens, Sears, _Big Bend
Food land, ,Krogers, Meigs lndu&amp;trles, Andersons,
and Domino's Pizza:

Community . Lerit~n servi&lt;Ze
· The theme for this year's
mid-week Lenten worship servl·
ces. to be held on· Thursday
evenings at 7: 30 p.m. at all
Pomeroy Churches, is "I Saw

JEANETTE GRATE

Grate wins ·
.
art pnze

.

Jesus ."

The International Art Instruc·
tlon School has awarded
9eannette Grate with a monetary
prize In the school's annual
com pet ltlon.
Grate's work, entitled " Bios·
somlng' · was selected from
hundreds of entries received
from every state, the provinces
of Canada, and many foreign
. countries.
Winners' entries will be pub·
llshed In the AprU Issue of
Dlustrator Magazine.
Officials from the school cdn·
giatulated Grate on her efforts
and thanked her for helping
make the annual competition a
success . .
She Is the wife of David Grate.
The couple resides In Racine.

The services will begin March
1 at the Rock Springs Methodist
Church with Pastor Glen
McClung telling of " Peter."
The Marc h 8 service will be at
the Pomeroy Southern Baptist
Church with Qastor Wllliam
Hoback preaching about "King

slated~

'.

·Alfred area happenings

•

~

&gt;

People in the

neWs~ •.;;..;;.;._Quirks

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

in the news---

· lm,ets••••rltatealaakillfrom prince," aald PhUip Mackie, the
prince's press adviser.
Prlace Cllar•
ST. TROPE&amp; QADE: The tan baa taded for Krilll :u-r,
VERO
BEACH,
Fla.
WPil
the California model with the dazzlln&amp; St . Tropez tan In those .
As MOO spectators looked on,
Prince Charles cast formality
Bain de Solei! .suntan lotion commercials. Now . becallle of
biologist
Jim FOwler of the "Wild
aside
at
the
Windsor
Polo
Club
warnings about how the sun can damage skin&gt; Ziemer 1.1' a
Kingdom"
television pr01fam·
field, granting a .royal k,\ss to an
careful tanner who uses Ievell~ sun block on her body and 25 on
Introduced
the
prince .to .some
Impetuous
Briton
and
clean
lng
her face. " On my first assignment Uor Baln de Sole!l) I was
rare
animals,
lncludlne
Ivanhoe
up after an aardvark that dug its
handed a tube, sent to.the beach and told to turn black," Ziemer
thl!'
aardvark,
wbo
Immediately
claws Into the polo field.
says In People magazine. "I thoughtlt was eorgeous . .But now I
The 40-year . old future king began clawing the polo t!eld.
look at people who bake like that and t!Jink, 'Eek. ' It's so
made his third annual appear·
unattractive." Ziemer has been doing ~e commercials for 10
Charles and Geoffrey Kent, a
ance
Sunday at the Rolex-Prlnce
years but says her skin doesn'tsbow any,d amage from exposure
pf
Wa.
l
es
Polo
Tournament.
His
·
longtime
Cflend who founded the
to the ·sun.
.
.
Friends
of.
appearance
prompted
An
Ita
, Co~~~ervatlon group
TRt!JIP '11DBITS: Ivana's Army Is a big one. The New York
with
his
wife
Jorle Buller Kent,
Littler,
a
45-year-okl
.British
Dally News conducted a caiJ.ln poU to determine who l)ad more
hurriedly
native
who
now
lives
In
Miami,
to
repaired
the fl~id for
. support- Donald or Ivana Trump- and the JUted Mrs. Trump
·
the
tournament
.
f
lnala
.
·
run
out
onto
ihe
polo
field
and
bad 82 percent backing, compared to 18 for the ti!Uionalre
steal
a
kiss
on
the
cheek
from
the
businessman ... Dould denies there will be an Immediate
obliging prince.
.
reconciliation but says It's always possible down ihe road
A
Rolex
spokesman
said the
someday .. . TrUillP also complains that virtually everythllli
1\'0m,n, who was escorted off the
· reported about the split has . been ·Inaccurate and 'unfair.
.;
field . by sec!lrity officers, was
·However, News columnist Liz Smltb says that 'T rump
Beginning k11-rate classes will
embarrassed by her Impetuous·
reportedly was tickled py a huge New York Post head)ine in,
be
offered at the Coolville Eleness
and
left
before
the
match
which aspiring actress Marla Maples was quoting as saying·
mentary
School on Wednesday at
began.
Trump had given her ihe " liest sex I've ever had" .. ..Ivana took
7
p.m.
"She's
done
this
before.
She
Call Mick How~ll at
· the three Trump children to their .Fiorlda mansion for the
992-i839
or Tim Jenkins at
was
carrying
a
Union
Jack
and
a
weekend to get.away from ihe .uproar. ·
·
,.
'- rose, she t,rled to · give to the 992-9920 for lnfof!llatlon.

a, Ualted p,_ lllter~

..

Karate· cla.r.res ,

t

church addition were discussed. {
"For the Glory or God" was the
·
Attending were Dorothy . !
title . or devotions by freda
Evaps,
Elizabeth Searles, Gwln·
Edwards at the February meet·
nle
WhHe.
Beulah White, Eliza· '
lng· of the Busy Bee Class. of the
beth
Slaven,
Lillian Demosky, ·
First Baptist Church In Middle·
Ruth
Ebers
bach,
.Betty Denny • •·,
port held at Mrs: Edwards'
Pooch
Brewer,
Betty
Gll.)\ey, 1
home.
Freda
Edwards,
and
.
a
guest, i··
J. Pooch Brewer presided at the
Rev.
Jim
Seddon.
l·
meeting and roll call was an&amp;·•
Refreshments
were
served
,by
....
wered w!tll members quoting a
. the hostl!ss to.all In attendance. .,
· Bible verse.
The group meets on the third ·'·- .
Reports of the ill were given
·
Thursday
of every month.
f.
and fundralsers fo~ the new

Chester Garden .Club meets
The February meeting of tile
Chester Garden Club was lleld at
the home of Clarice Krautter
with Virg!nla Chadwell as co·
hostess.
·
Roll call was answered w!tth
members sharing a memory of
the' Souih.
·.
·
Edna Wood gave devotions and
the theme was "Love.·· Poems
read were ·"Friends," "In Honor
uf Friendship," · 'What Is Love?''
Dorothy Karr presided at the
meeting In which it was decided
that Edna Wood would be respon·
sible for the Sunshine for Jose·

'

All persons Interested In join·
lng a County choir to ,present
"The Crucifixion" are to meet
Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. at tile
Trinity Congregational Church ·
In Pomeroy. The cantata will be
presented on Palm Sunday afier· •
noon. An offering will be received
with proceeds to go to the Meigs
Count)' Ministerial ,\Ssoclattot\.

Hysell to
graduate·

'

POLtCI~S

"'" 3 dart t; at no ch•we
" Pncv ot .t(1 lot .illl cap•t•lleuurs '' douhltl

cl~totl•iJd

.u!VtHhscnlt...tl ,,l ..c,!tl •n lhtr Dmly" St ! lll&lt;n~ I~!Jt
t:l'fll
l: l oi!~ Siflt.-i.l thSpi&lt;IV 8usutl!lo5.Ciud tltlfl it.1Jill.not tC:Ulil ,
• '.w•fl oii!.U ·~ppmtf U\ lhc Pt Plc.;l6;itlnt Aew~tcr otlltlthllr G&lt;~lh '
' PtllttiO ;uly , fr • lHI~Ut.' IU.t(; h ii iUDVIIP 18,000-hunMhi
~~.
',

THURSDAY PAPER
~HIOA't PAPER
SUNO"Y PAPER

3
. 6 ..
10

DAY BEFORE PU6LICATIQN
11 00 A M1 SATURDA't
2 00 PM - MONDAY ~.
2 .00 PM TUfSOA~
~ •
2 .00 P ,M WE I)JIE
:V'
.,
1
2 .00 PM THli~D Y
...~

.20

$4.00

t&amp;.po

.30

.42
.60
.06/ day

$9.00 '.

4

&amp;13.00

U .30 t d,ay ·

lor e.ch d .. u ,..,.,. ~lh

~nnnun cemen t s

Ov,r 15 Words

Rate

R•t.,aro hu ~;un•cuiNe·,uns.

brollenupd~s.wtll

,

bech•gM
·

I, C•d ol lhiMl\'
2 In Memorv '
J Apnouc: ~tmenl ,
4

31
3'2

1 l'•d Satelpa•d 111 ;.niYilncttJ
8 Public Sale &amp; A&amp;~c:ttOn
9 Wll'ltllll .IG Bu.,

f:lt.i•. \ 11'1•1&lt;1
,)+

Un.~.~i:fi,•d flfi!W ·'

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I'OI 'I'r

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Jo,llmflilll{ tdi·,hmll' f•xclwll/{1'·' ·"
Gallt;t Counly
: Antitl Code 11~

446
367
388
245 ~

A!lrugs Counly ·
· Area Codt 614

GBIIrpoht

Mu&lt;mCo , WV
Area Cude 304
',-

992 MtddiiPOrl
•
Porftltl'oy
Vinton
"915 Ch•ter
Ria Gr.Rclt
843 Pont.nd
251 Gupn D1st, 2~7 Lat•r1 hilt
•
643 Arebit Oitt . 141 A•orie
. 379 WMnut ·
, 742 Aull.,d
"~
''
'
•
·•67 Coalwttle
~h•htto

6 7-i.
4,ft8

.

ne ·

.

r v II,•;:'\

1 1 Hlflu Want ud
12 · S•l~lfltiOn Wanted
l l lntunmce
14 8u&amp;inau Triltrlu•!t
15&gt; Sthools &amp; lnsuuctmn
16 Radto, tV &amp; CB Rup.au
17 Mtst:ellant!(l;t ls
18 Womllld fo Ou

PI Ph1•ant
leon
A,.ite Gto'tlt=

773 1 M .. on
882 _ New 11tven

"1 1

8usu1•1. Opporlun.t y

22 Mon., to lo•n

895 Letart
"937 aUt.t ..

23

,

'

.
.
.
Southern Power director of General Marketing
·~

•

.

&amp;
GOWEN ACHIEVERS - Crenson Prall,
Customer
Services;
C.
Ronnie
Carmichael,
senior
seated left, of Sha~e, and Rosetta "Tunle"
M"CS . representative, Ga'lllpolls; Steven E.
Redovlan, of Poll)eroy, area winners In Columbus··
·
Pollug,
MACS representative, Wellston office;
Southern Power Company's 1989 "Golden Oppor·
Michael
Hololaepfel, Athens Dlvilllou manager of
tunlty" marketing campalp, hold bags of "gold''
Columbus
Southern Power; Don M. Hibbard,
that represent their achievements. Standing, ·
IIIIJCS Albe•· Dlvilllon represel)tatlve and
· from left, are David H. Crabtree, Columbus
Howard .E. Stevens, Atheu III6CS manager,

FeOowship held

r'

61

J6

Praf .. llonel ServttM

R~al

63
64

Es1a1t1 Wanlcd

48
49

Tt~n~ or1~1ion

Hu"•• t.. l'ent
Mobtl• "omes lm Rtj1it
farms tor Rami '
AINrtm ...t tor Aen1
FurR~ahed Roort'l!i
Space fo r Rtnl
Wan1ed 10 Rem

71

Equ,pmurtt tor RtJnl
for l !P.Mt:

79

Sill~

C.rn•puf~~o

&amp; Mot or

Hnn u!'~

Services

51

Houtehot d Goods

53
54
55
56

Anhqutn
Mtsc Mercha,.d•se
Bu tldtng Supplt ts
P•ts tor $tie
MuSI~; .. Instrwnent $
Flutll &amp; ve~t~tilbi .HS
fot Saltt or Trade

~2 ~ Sp ortmg Goods ,

58
&amp;9

Autos lor

•

"/ 2 Trm:ks lor Sale
73 Vftnt S. 4 Wo ·!l
74 Mot orcyc lus
.
75 8lloiiS &amp; M otor s tur s,,, ~
'1 6 Aut u P.illfh &amp; ACt:e5SOI I ~
11 Autu R cp .. H
78 Cittllptn!t Equtpmt'nl

Merchandise

57

l1111Cs.toc k
Ha'll &amp; Gram ..._,

65 Svl!d &amp; Fcrllhlt'r

11116111
42
43
I 44·
45
46
47

farnt Eq1npmunt

62 Wa111 11d t o Buv

81

Hom.: lnl ptO.,tt me-rlh

82 Plum bmg &amp; Httatmq
BJ
84
85
86
87·

f .-c watu111

Et ec'U•cal &amp;

Rt!hog~all d u

Grmt!fal Hauhn!l
Mobtl~~r H umu R t~ tJ &lt;ut
UpMolt h!i'!l

FURNACE
'FURNACE
FUINACE

PARTS .ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

992-5335 or 915-3561

Across from Post Offlco

217 E.

otlce

...,k,.

L-hltatYI6y L.....
t,.Clll.

T

'

INSURANCE
111 S.Contl St., Pomt~ciy "

·"

YOUIIIIDEPEIIDINT·,
AGENtS SE.VING

••

JI'ARTI ANO ,SEIIVICE
For.Mou 2 and 4-C'Iclt

enain•

St... l't!'tl for
Homollte, Weed-.

TocumNII,

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

..

'

YOUNG'S

-Room Addltio..

-a.-Work

• Plumbing·

$325

whiP,••'"*'-· ohlalltn

.. .. .

•

l

Y•stA.AIT

FOIIIIOJ, 011.
. ............... _, frW Chick•

PH. ttt.JUI .

PHOTOGRAPHERS HOUIS:-11 A.M.

.

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ADLL

CIOWfS

3rd StrNt, Racine, Oh.

1-1·19-1 mo.

USED APPUANCES
toDAY

WAII~Y

.IIASHERS-SIQO up
DRYU$-$69 up
I£FIIGWTOR5-SIOO up
IANGIS-Gn-Etoc.-$125 vp
FIEIZ£15op

ms

ltCRO ovus-m up

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
FNIII Post OHkt
PCIMIIOY, OliO

,A crDII

I0/30(n tfn

'

• •

'

SAT: MilT

lt. 124( ,......., Ollie

AUTO &amp; .TRUCK .
· REPAIR

All• Tt~~•l•tl••..
. PH. 992·561~
or 992·7121
•VINYL IIDING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271
Gr011t A..........

7-11·'19-dn

F•tery cfitb
.
12 ......... Dolly

INTEIIOR EI1DIOR

"LIGHT H.A UUNO

tpke tht pain out of

· ~nllng.
Ltl us do it for Y"·
VERY UASONAILI
MAVEIUEHNaS

"FIREWOOD

BIU SLACK

ana • P.M.

992-2269

(614)985-4118

EVENINGS
..,..,.,.

hfort6' p.OLLtawtllfllflll
11·1~··• ·~

.c·.;o.~. PLACE:.

m 1 p~M.
..
. •'

,

Middleport
Ohio
,
. I ,
~~ , 4,

PHOTOS IY IOI.Y PG11111fS

I

~; I

ROOFING

,,

--·· · .....'*"',.......
-.............'" .
" · tlilftlu• ~... ·

Wtm~rtiNtirondre·

lh -

DJttftiiJUtd

OliO P-A wt

cacm.r ca.ntng
Jlalntlftl

FREE EITIMATU

949

' , ·. · ·

••

I

•.

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

..........

............60

.....ItA,

•UMEITON~

... .

. •FlU OURT
•ANYTHING

· AT ALL

•

lf!t · - - · . .

....S.TIIIIn.

'

.

PAT IIU POU

'

M ldd..port,

,

1182·21

~

~
~ ·

mo.

lewnLWrlt-'

OIL

• tf

l

• FREE ESTIMATES

CO..AIY

Slriclilly Enm.-

c

PAINUNG &amp; CO. ,

· MOVAL

,

-'CO.
.... uiMt

LIIIDA'S

"SHAUB 8&amp; TREE
TRIM end AE'·

-~~SIDING

6:SO .P.M.

NOiice

Vaughan's Cardinal Ma:tket
·

~

-~
'
.'

SITEWORK - 'ROADS '
CLEARING ,,
'

:tuis,,·Feb~ ~2o. ·

. , ..... · - Clltlyl

.,.,, ,... ....,, ... rolillld butter.
lorly, 110 ...........CIIpt ........
w.... 8lkllloMi prloee.
.

949-2493

Jlll"""'foN ,

Fo111Hy

ONLY
IS.-vedld with

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE

•IILOWN ,Ill

One Special Per

•

Hysell
Garage

......
.....
,. .......
...:::. ·• .,.. .........

GUN SIOOT

No Agi Umit ·
Umlt 1 Per Ptnon

,DATE:
.

Y. C. YOUNG In
992·6215

IN UVING COLOR

.

ROSES'
EXCAYAnNG
&amp; TRUCKING

.

.....---~~~
DOZER

SINCE 1161
..

.,

Token

•

PH. 992-3922

PHOTO. SPECIA·l ~ i
811'0
FREE ·.
Single or Oro.- ·

Brit~*

St..Uan.

. •cscnm
..

•

liEN'S APPLIANCE •
SERVICE

''

Tile Rutland Flremens Auxll· · The Racine AmeriCan Legion
lary m..ctna ICheduled tor Wed· Auxllllry will meet Thursday at
nllday has been reschedUled ror 7 p.m. ~~ ihe post home to vote oq
lfrla state.
..
Feli. :18.

&amp;.Livestock

H umuli h11 Sal11
M o l.ule Homos tot Sll l~
Fct,nu lor s ..r.~
·

Jl
J J Bu11"8'1ili Bu•ld • nu~
J!) toh &amp; AtHtige

G•we.wav ·;

5 Hippy Ads
' 6 , Lost •nd fuurld

. '

Far m Sup plies

Real Estate

41

.,,,etr ot if d coli

' 7 puml .. fH t lyflll unty ltU!d
, ,... .
•
· Smtltnt!l ts not fttiPQnslbt~ fUt tnrtH!O 11hm ftr.SI' ,,., . !Check
1
fm t!ff015hfll d~ itd IIIIl S Ill p•pt:rl Call ht!fMe'f0Qp 111
d&lt;fW ;alh:• ~·-•bluHIItOtt 10 rnaltH r:nrrtrelic'tn '
"Ads lh.C rnust bt: pil&lt;d '" itldvancc au: '
Ho~fi.,V Ad,.
Colfd ot Th ,tllk s
· h • MmttUrt.tr;,
Yowd Sal!.~

COPY DEADliN E
MONOAV PAPER
JU£SDAV PAPER
WlONtSDAY PAPtA

'W ords
15
. 1·5
15
16
16'

Monttilv

•Atb Oltls.tdt! Mctys. Gallla o, Mnun cuuntui!li IIIU!&gt;I bt: pre
JI L+• ct
'
"Rec;t.- " s 50 dt~count •tor lidS p~~td 111 ~.ancc '
•frr..~ ;ads.
Gt'tlt':OIW.IIY and Found ads. undt... 1~ word$ Wtll bu

•A

,

Days

CAIPEIITP SEIVICE

Auxiliaty, to meet

Meeting rescheduled

raPS o~n ~ouse condueted

RODNEY C. HYSELL

Meeting changed

Cra show .r/at ed

•

County Choit: ·
open for members'!ip : MU,LEfl MQSSEI

A fellowship di11ner was held
recenuy ·at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ social room. The
valentine theme was carried out
In the decorations and the program.· Betty Spencer was in
charge of the dinner.
The group played games, sang
"sweetheart" songs, and Trudy
Andrews read a . love poem.
Moving to the S!'lictuary, ·the
group had Bible stud:f and a
prayer circle and the men sang,
"In the Garden" accol1)panled
by Chrll Alkire and Frances
EskeW at the plano.
· '

GEORGE, Wash. IUPI) George's birthday festivities
Heavy snow that turned some of Monday.
the state's roadways Into skating
· "Even If H snows, we won't
rinks won't prevent the citizens cancel, " vowed organizer Carol
of George, Wash .. frOm\'flebrat · Michael. " We' re used to snow ." '
lng the birthday of their preslden·
Monday is the "Presidents'
tlal namesake, by George.
Day'' pollday marking th e bi rth·
The annual celebration in days of George Washington, born
George, halfway between Seatti~ Feb . 22, 1732; and Abraham
and Spokane, Is marked at the Lincoln. born Feb. 12, 1809.
George Community Hall with a
,/#
190-pound birthday cake. boo.ths
1~
featuring crafts and baked
WELLSTON - The second
goods, games for children and ann.ual show and sale will beileld
raffles.
on ·saturday. May 12, from. 10
But a storm that dumped up to a.m . to 5 p.m. ItwUI be held at St.
10 Inches of snow on Seattle over Peter and Paul Parish Hall,
the weekend, causing numerous Pennsylvania and Third Streets,
accidents and forcing au tho rilles · Wellston, Ohio.
to close some Icy roadwa ys, .
A large variety of items wUI be
. threatened to put a ,d amper on availa ble: Co untry eralts ,
painted woodcrafts, st uffed · animals, ceramics. oil paintings, .
baskets, potporrl. cornhusk
dolls, soap, etc .
·
The Leading . Creek ·Conser·
Food will be prepared by the
vancy District's monthly meet·
women of the.parish . All exhlbl·
lng sclleduled for Wednesday,
tors are by Invitation only .
·• ·
has been rescheduled for Feb. 28
For addltlpnal ·Information., · ,.~ .
at 9 a .m.
call (614) 384-3911.
'.'

l

TO PlACE AN AD &lt;All 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M; to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATU~D~Y • .·
HOSED SUNDAY' ••
.

------..l.ot
'
. . DCJW•G CHILD$· ~:.

a

"

• The ·Area's Number 1 Marketplace

: t·o~•..;-;";..;
·· ---··-·,.,
-

Rodney C. I;Iysell,. son Of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Hysel), ·pome·
roy. will graduate May 18 from
Texas State Technical Institute,
Waco, Texas.
A graduate of Pomeroy High
School in 1967. he entered TSTI to
get a degree In plant engineering
In 1988. He has carried a 3.8 grade
point averagt' since he has been
In school and will graduate wflh a
bachelor associate applied
science degree.
Hysell and his wife, June, '
formerly of Portsmouth, have a
son, Timmy, 12. Following his
graduation, he and his family
will move to Reno, Nevada where
he has accept.e d employment
with The Sands and the Golden
Nugget Hotels and Casinos as
chief faclllty engineer.
Hysell has maintained busy
schedule while In school. He has
carried 22 to '26 credit hours a
quarter, Is class president of the
Plant Engineering Technology
College, Is president of the
school's chapter of the American
Institute of Plant Engineers, and
Is' a member or the American
SoCiety of Heating, Refrlgzrat ing
alld Air Conditioning Engtn~rs.
Inc. Another organization he
belongs to Is the Society of
Manufacturing Engineers and tts
sifter organization, tile COmpu·
~ and automated Systems
Ailoclatton.
.,

Snow or no,' birthday bash a go

""••

· Church wltll•PastQrDonald !',lea·
dows preaching about Pilate.
Trinity Congregational Church
The flna I Lenten service.wlll be
held Aptll 5 at the Pomeroy
will be the settil)g for the March
all local; Sara Josephine L~mb,
Funeral services for James
United Methodist Church· with
15 service In which Pastor
Toledo;
Audrey Jean Spencer,
Kelly,
82,
who
died
Feb.
2
at
Katherine Riley will tell of Pastor Lamar. O'Bryant telling
Columbus;
Mildred · and Olan
Amerlcare Nursing Center, were
"Judas."
of the "Soldier at the Cross."
Holter,
Mansfield;
and Mr. and
lleld at the Leavitt Funeral Home
Pastor Laura Leach will con·
The public. is invited and
Mrs.
Richard
Spencer,
Tuppers ·'
duct the service at the Pomeroy ' encouraged to attend these · In Belpre on Feb. 5 with burial at
Willow .Island, w. v. He Is sur· • Plains.
Church of the Nazarene where
services.
·
Edith Harper visited with Mr.
vlved by his wife; Eva, and five
she will tell about tile "Maid by
The offerings will be used to
and
· Mrs . .Clair Follrod and
children. Local relatives Include
. help the work of the Meigs
the Fire. "
att~rided Sunday School and
Imogt'ne and Lester Keaton, and
County Ministerial Association.
The March 29 meeting wlll be
worship
sen1ces at the Alfred
Robert
and
Pat
Keaton,
Bobby,
held at the St . Paul Lutheran
Church. They also enjoyed a trip
Matthew, .and Kevin.
to the Grand Central Mall. Mrs .
Arthur Spencer is a patient as
Is recuperating {rom hlp
Harper
St. Joseph's Hospital In Parkers·
surgery.
burg, W.Va. Visiting him re· •
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hender·
cently were Mr. and Mrs. Keith
son
visited Mr. and Mrs . Bill
Weber and -Mike, Mr. and Mrs,
plllne Hill, . vice president ·of the
to put up housed for them !his
Wood, Zanesville.
Sammie Brown: Aaron and Alex,
club.
· ' i
· spring. She stated that ihe birds
. For the' first Pl!-rt of the " also ·like gourd ·houses and slle
program Ji&gt;at Holter read a
displayed one that she liad madec
paper, ~·Hc&gt;n~y, I Love You'' that Martin boxess must be ready for :
During the open house of Ohio ". lmed to a recordl'!ll of :'OQh:t GO ~~·
was written by VIrginia Chad· the birds by March 15. They
TOPS
570 held recently the group
Breaking My Hearf' and.·, ,Limg "1.,
· well. The paper addressed the should be on poles with no trees
welcomed seven new members Haired Lover from Liverpool.". .,
many Interesting things about or buildings w!tllln 40 feet. They
and
one previous member was
Another game played In wlllch .,
. honey. and that each person uses shouid also be placed In the
reinstated.
word
recognition with the words ~·
one pound. of honey each year. It center of the largest opening In a
Lennie
Aleslllre,
leader,
wei·
heart
or love were used was won ,;'
also noted· that Utah is the · yard.
corned
the
group
and
gave
a
by
Suzie
Dreyhel,
"Beehive State.' '
Twelve members and two
background
history
of
the
group.
Ten
members
read poems ,.
For the second part of the guests, Denise Mora and Cathy
also
led
the
prayer
and
about
TOPS
and
Julia Hysell ''
She
program, Dorothy Karr dis· Carleton, attending the meetioi.
pledge.
·
announced
·
that
the
best loser
cussed "Purple Martin." She is
Following the meeting refresh·
, Norma Torres ·won the. door . was Suzie Dreyllel, and \he ~
Interested
In Martins and
'
. plans ments were served.
prize. a potted plimt. The heart
rupner up wasOla Sinclair. The '
•
contest winners were Virginia
best pre-teen loser was Kristin ·: ·
Dean and Brenda· Temp)eton.
Torres anQ tilE! r,unne}' "P .Wjl~, .
Kristin Torfes was the preteen . Krlsti ~arner.
.
: ,·
winner.
. The' fruit basket was won by '!
Entertainment was provided Virginia' SriJith and refreshments i
by TOPS members Peggy Vlnjng' '' were served.•
;·
and Shirley Wolfe who pantom·
·
.t
Herod."

f*'-'Y 19, 1990

MondiiJ',

Hornet, .

Aemodelnt •

.,

........ w...
9lS·Sl6S

'

�.'
Page

8-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

JOT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Lan, Wrtpt

Pomaoy- Midcl1part, Ohio

19,1990

Monday, Flbru.-y 19, 1990

Poma-oy-llo1idcleport,. Ohio

l AAII

...,.

Viewing

" " Owue:M 1/ltoft. 1 OWL. a .•
•• - · .,• . 114'44t- ,

f

•

1114 ...... '-110, N, PI, AIC,~

-r

.a - Clly,

AI. 7, II.DDD. -.19M
11-1'
aflwh.m.
.

·- . . .

Fnoo """'
11oc11.....
112 g'::'d
......
Oicl,.-

.Point

-~3.

OUioldo !"'! to

114..12 iiiMIII.

gin ...y. Coli

Port Ooldon Rotrlovor, pon lrllh
· 3 yr. old - l e. good
wllh lllda. 114-417. . ..

Found:. Port IIOoglo dog, .,_,

"' . . .. ,., ..... ·· - · · ~ . ............... ,!11 ....... .........

"WI.tat t.his country needs is a

Chuoch. 814-31'1·le05.

. dollar that · will buy fifty
I'Pnts' worth of groceries."
·

Loot: WhHo FODIMII Scleool
~.GI-Inl.'-- .... ol
FcKirth Avo. klr g-.

114-.14W371, 141

1116.

t=========,;:=:;;=.::;:::::::::==~
11

11

Help Wanted

g:;::.ON~~~= ·U.S. CHARGE
Ext. y. REGARDLESS

Dolllll. Ill -

4M2.

Eom 1300 to $500 por -lng 8aoko 11 homo. Coli
ltl-471'7440 Ext. 3111

7

Econo l.ocfoo occl!lllno .,..

pllcotlona tar -lght olllft ..
- n d o - clllfll: llondoy ..
Tuoolloy Ilona 7a.m ... p.m.
·

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

Eo-

"'A"'LL"'v'-"w....,.,s.::-:-loa-::11,-uot..,:,ao-=P•..,Id"'lrl,.,

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Wanted to Buy
lube for ....,

troughl, 114 311 8210 bltwMn
5lfp.m.
Junk
-

c.,.

wtth or without
Coli Lerry u..iy 114-

381.. 3113.

Low g111M otok • -

Wontod- AN-' Ful flmo for
Spoclol CoN Unit lor 11·7 Shift.
Ook H. Conununlly - 1
- --polllw.,.. bonoiiiL Wo ollor ollllowt1111 klr - - . 11·7 o1e11t ond
Spoclel Co"' Unft; olio olflrl'19
11., on bon.._ O.H.CJI.C. Iii
orid E.O.E. Contoot 8/ll~oy

~u~,~~~or of Nunlng
Situation
wanted

an . ..

--.y,non-omoliot. :I04-

Vlrglnlo, 304-1T.H1711.
ceram~

o-

toaa. •110

por thouund. Dolvo..Oto Ohio

Patlll Co. F'Oinetoy, OH.

Qulftl
Pro 11140 quiRO'. Any conclftlon.
Cool! Pold. Colll14~·1117 or
lt4.at2-2411 .

.... and number.
I'IIIAT·TIIIE lnvonloty tokoni In
the o.llpolta or Pomero, .,..
• -· l'lexlblo cloy "-&gt;. No
-redo, No up.
COr · Col I.C.C. Dopl.
1.-.717-1015 llo.m.•

--rr.

t-eGN42-

Wontod boby litter tar 4
Cfl-n, ..._100 roqulrwd, 3
or 4 -... 304tl2•2111,
momlngo or
-nlngo

12

Q8.1- after 7:00 pm IMv.

GUAFWITEED.
OF CREDIT

AATINO. CALL NOWI
1017 EXT.IJ2524.

liobyalttor In my homo
Leon/AI. Q trM. three

Deriel"'ctt make• tM dtterwnce.
llconood Oh!!z_ '!_ontuclly, Will

3 okl

:117·71M.
-

Ride PHraon Auction Conlpur
now booking Jldlone, u:·

9

w-

1or _ . tlmo
mbtj. Efty -.11 11 homo.
No a p o - . - . con t ·
7 71 Ext. sz; I DfOin 24
I -hoon, t-7
Including lundoy.
Loolcq tor rw~ all:llt adult,
- . ,,.. to ~ Mbyollllng.
Floxlblo cloy ollllt - . . 114-

=

.Advlnco. DEo\OUHE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly beton tM ad ts to run.
Sundoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frtdoy. Mondor od~lon • 2:00
p.m. Soturdor.

Wanted
VISMIASTEFJCARD.

Loot: block, ~. ond whMo ....
hoall puppy. Around Touo
Ad. ireo. ltW85-3tt7.

Yard Sale

Wll do blbvaltllng In my home.

Mon. thru

F~. Diyo

only. COli

114412.-.

18

-h.

go-

1117.
Houl o~ ony

t,..h, bruohc~

u_,..od llama.

R._.._

,..... - • • Coli onyllmo

)

Poulo'o Dor eo.. Contor.
S.tl, affan:lable, chltdcanl.....,
1 Lm.• I:SO p.ne. 21t-1D.

AVON I All AINI I Shl~oy
Spooro, 304-175-11211. · ·
.
AVON • All - - , COli lllrllyn
WMnr 301 a.2MS.

_., · ~., echoo[' t'---'na
u:r...,....
a I me. 14 ~4t 1224.

.,......

·

::::;"':bn.l.~--=..~
21113orlowellotolll'W210.

Booutlclon nooclod. lluot hove

llonagor'a

L - . Soft SUnoollorio looutr Shop, Autllnd,
, Otfl14·742-2334.
COMPARISON
SHC)pPERS
NEEDED lor notlonol oleopplng
flrm: 1 - 1 - port~lmo . .
•'-..nmonto; no·-. aoloo, no In~-nto. Coli , .... , .. "'II,
-•
'

EARN IIONEY Rolidlng Baokol

~

naY

homo on
hllvllle
·
Exporl..-,
and A:i...l i Dll 114 441 •11.
Will Mbyoll In

eo.. -lar

to
pnMdlt eo. tlllllng. t4uoltlon,
pNII .tatlona, ltC. In an OUII
Dllllnt ' 111ft~. Ol,lllfftCIUOUI:
llaehelor'a ~. adwanced
. ~I'M tw•fel 1iMI. E:.pert.uce
doilrod.
llond - . . . "'
2/23/ID .10: F.A.C.T.S. Rt. 2 lox
273-A, Bklwail, 011 481111.
11/FIH, EDE.
AloohalmNg

I

ltWIJMUt.

HllpWinted

3111...
2 bedroam holM tor
_.,

un~lohed

-ori71-Jqt.
,.. _ I

,.,., .::., -.:
llool,

4114, 41od.

8:00~===--~

fill'

e&lt;JJ

f

opl,

,.,..J

(J)

~

·

r.1ercl1and1Se

Lo.

TECH-

Sout_,.m

Ohio
Phlll'lln Group Proollco II
-111"11 on Uftro-jlound TochnDiagl•t, fonNil nlll~al
tochlialogy trolnl"' or 1 yr. ozp.

:...-~~~· Po'!:·

_..,..to:
Clink:, Por·
-~~~~ Dopl. P.O. Boz 344, Qal.
potMivo.

In . wrltl"'

llpollo 011 45131. Equol O]&gt;por-

tunlly Employor.

s .

, . . GIIC, lx4,

01n
fumlth
' II nt-IY,.,.'!Hh
long tonn
IMM.
I11 441 ·.
Rlnt or-= Eu,.kl s.;. 4br

Gooc:ls

LAYN!'II'LIANnuAI!
- · , 112 IIMho..Jalllllmo. ""- ond cllolro prtood .... ro(d. 11,._...-4...,. I
UIS to QN. Ta- • ., onc1 up
to $121. Hldt 1 bld1
to
'
$IN. Aool .... IZIS to 1271.
42 Mobile Hom..,
I.e- $21 lo
DlfOr Ran.t .
$101 ond up to 14... Wooll
toblo ·w-8 cholro Ull to me.
11x70 wltle OJIPOndo, * 1 t 112· Dooko 1115 up to
Hut- · 114 441 48:.14.
$400 l up, bUnk beda oomp'ttJ
1m--· Kl~~~~
with
IZIS onc1 up 'to
~-i...
-Mo
lnol-:
~. &lt;.'NIIr, Stovo, $318. Iooby !ltD - llolria, VInyl
nlng, - or boX opringo lull ot Porcfi I . hi . Mm bUilding. $78, llnn ' $8a, ........ .... 1m • u.,, 101111 neo. 4 .
M,SDD. It .......Uta.
1
d-chootlftCMi'&gt;bllllo
2 Md100111 troller lor 111)1, IiilO 1,1, 110g&amp;m. h b v - llol•.J, lor - ·
75- . . I 141. Bod hnoeo 121,
tD71.
aus1u na a 1111111 $10. Good Uleetlon of l:ltdrNIII
'For Aont: 2br, .trollor In city. 114- ..
tt.,
mlilll
cablnlla.
·
I
htadbn• $SO and up to ...
homoo lor ule bf - · 10 up ..... ae oallh ~ttt1 apo
.-creel~. 3m~ out luJovtllo
Coli 114-112·747'1. . ' .
Rd. Opon t AJI. to 5 P.M. Mon.
Nlco 2br, 2 both, APJ;i~e..,oo lhN Sot. '&gt;11114-4-22.
lumloMd, o.... · S c -. • , ....
441-1~ If no 1n•r IMW 2 pc Eorty ~n 1M"' 100111
7~1hoold,1
mm~··~·~•!:.
' ---~-- "'""'
choir, SOW75-7111.
•

.,21.

-fl-

'*

•m.

.44

-nina 1r1

61 Finn Equli)ment

lronoo II, · XLT, low ·
mlloogo, oolt !14-446-

H·--AII-IInl&gt;rva
a. ..a.

'&gt;hroi.J- I Toytor, ltWU.
lor
11
wtnt-,,
VII!
good - . 2111,orlf4ota 2214.
111.. - · - - · 114-171,2111,, 114-11'1-

~-

.I]]) ThtH'I Compiny
I!JI H..,..n

7:00 Cll lcarecrow 1 Mra. King

111,000- mlloo, lt,DDD. 1(14-

i

17U370.

_...

KX .t21 dirt blko. Nowl!Otono"

75- Bollts &amp; Motors
for Sale.

tm

,.0 CHILf)~tN

'

ft. Storcroft Tri-HuiJ'
· 125 HP, Evlnrudo Engine,
oompllle tap, new upholetMy.
Colll14-281·1311oft01' 7:00p.m.

Building

1br, ,.., -blll'lllng ftfOI)Ioco,

Supplln

11

~~ ~
UJ)

Clmpaf'111t
MotorHomes 1

3741. 11WIII-tt03. '

~~
/.· ..

MF you TO
EMp'T'Y you~

~"

i
~

Q

,_,_,r,..,.,......,,

w.

p.m.

Go~

I

..:::ntt -

,.., "=

":!hi, ,, ......

••bn••IDI,

t- good-·1171

-oil

bur-,....

O:.;J:'::'1EU.:
'*":':

louona

otlflar,
. . . . . lnd AIC COinpiiiiCr,
..... 114-441-81177.

Al.JJ(J!;r EIJERI(\lME A
fO.til(IHJ RU.l':&gt; FOR .
()'FICE: 11-\ESC. l)ltr5. ..

Services

1111111, _ ,

Home •

81 ,

hllohblck New carburltor, bat·~

UnoondMionot llfotlme guoronrun• tM. LOC81 ,.. .ln-. furid.ud. 1
g ...~ , _ porto, 1100.. Froo ootl-01. Coli oallocl 1•
111112 3 - · newtl- 1300. 114-237-0481, doy 01' night.
114 ~- lllill.
R.,_
8Uimenf '
WolotprOOJJng.
.
.
•
111111 vw - · 5 opood, ., . .5.
1171 El Cimino, Y8, outo. ·eomploto oorvlco on moot
11211. tim lulcll Grond Sport,. make• end modlle. Joa'li TV
...._ tmc-n.. 4 _.t. va. Sorvlao, 304"75-1724.

, .., ChoVat,

4cr1. .11011,

Iift - k fh!llll Ulftltod, axe

.....

1114 · c.a~au c..,. lraughem.
Oioool. Cloon. Ill or poy all.
114 448 2301afterlpm.

In ZlnMh 11rv1C1na llltloil
«Mhlr lenlndo. oallo, ,..., ,

. ' 3D4.f7$.
. '
- · hilly ..........

1114 · Corio, ,.- ........
oond.,
...........
. ._.

-~~. JD4-171.7111.
1114 Pol'lloo - . good oond,

a.-.

- · 1or
wtll oo11 ""
12,110.10U71-1177.

1..7 Flo"' GT. Flllbook, VI,

!h-:f:T.

THE SCHOOL

:J;l::;;'ll10.
' ....

pllntl"'",

Coo-.
•
~ lor oollualor
plorna.

111-- cn:l=:

---.......

..--.....14 .......

tllla. ......

.-

topo, M, ..,..... -

'

II])

..........

I'LL NIIJIR
TOTE SAMANTHY'S
BOOKS HOME FROM
SCHOOL AG'IN !!

I BET HER

ND, MA'AM II

CAUGHT YOU !!

TH' ONE THAT
CAUGHT ME WAS

BDYFRIEND

or

m-·~
CD
Mulk:el Llgecy Of
RDind HI

.

.

{':1(7
\

BERNICE

•

85 General Hauling

a:z.111· IIIII clty. I1WIT•1'J'Io.
'llllllar - . . .

e

.

Loll o1-:::r.lhlnga Wtn lie brawtna In
lhl~
,bulmuchofWhltwllfbe
- ' " a wt11 be going on behind !Ita
r&lt;or1unately, .._ 1f111C11 wtla118 ~your fawr.

:usA M. KOCH, M.S.
- Lansed Clinlcll AuclokJ&amp;ist
CJ
Z

i(114) 446-7&amp;19 or (614) 992·2104

ti .F. .,olii
......................
'."'"'...., .."". ·* ''*
......... .. ., ...........
l!f!. .... •
iii:.

J::e.

IIIII

'

trulk,

role In a new allcom. Q
.I]]) N- Twilight z11]) Evening Newt1
1D Newo
10:30 (l)lllck . . . . In Ooblt
91 eiiJ Doctor, Doctor
Mike and Oiordro date unowora lhltlhair
PI"'*' art marrlld. 1;1

.

· . Dtpendlble Hariq Aid Silas &amp; Servi,o l
Hearln&amp; Ewlllltlona
. For All Aps

~~11l..Up~ery
..,...,(fllJ .... - - •
_,_14~
Tht
·lrl IOM11-4114
tumllwo ·~
l'.t:':LC:
!!oint

•

e 1121 C...rt Michael
gives Slepl18nlo a starring ·

iiJl

BEDEOSOlo

AtJeor

•'I •

Robcrteon

~.

OCIWIIMrdll

111011. 4 11M-f71.1711. '

IUIIIIIII.

MARY IITNII

.•
AIC ' oncl ·,,

~
111:1' I ;. .... IIIUf

Llny King U..l

c

· · - · . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1..-__..
. . . . . ,·

Rllla;ltlll

,,

Iiiii NIIIWI!Ie Now
1:30 ill Collego Blllkall*l
illl •
11e11gntng wJulla haa a hard time ooplng
with gelling Oldar. Q
10:00 Cll 700 Club With Pot

~

--lon,IIIW7&amp;-tnu.

now ·continued a club. When ScJ,apiro :
won the ace, he assumed that West had ·
started with four clubs. That meant ·
that he.needed an extra entry to dum- .
my to set up the last club. So he played
a low spade and inserted dummy's .
seven-spot. The rest was easy: ruff a
club, a second spade to dummy's 10 ~
ruff another club. A heart to the ace-now let him shed the losing diamond ·
and score up the slam.

1!)1 Primo Tme Wredlng

'•

,- .............

, GoRipollo, 01i1o

Ia tingly ducked the opening lead. West

•10 Allen Notion George
experienoao lilt joya ond
dlscomlorta Of pregnancy.

oncl Hilling

114 4412Crool'• ~

Opening lead: + K

Murphy and Corky go
·undercover as hookera. Q

J

CI'MII Ad. Parta, ~ ~

FOUIIhondPino

Pass
Pass

agenCies.

'

Clflor'o Plumblr!!J

East
Pass
All pass

Wen

9l e111 · rp11y 11n1wn

o'

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By James Jacoby

e

EVERY DA.Y.

I.UNCM 'T'DD'Y:i

- - · 011 ·~7..121...

82

+7

+AI

Of MIIIIChuNIII CPI 2 Of
31' AIC Mlnlllflea (2:00)
til CD Eyoa On Tho Prtao II
Black activism Ia met with a
violent rila[se from. lew

r:z·.

,.....,
............
'L i t

~

l-UNCH

lolvlco, •

1 - ·-CLT.W ........ I~ .,.•mll1bn, IMiolr. •·
- . r w d - - o , P W.,
IIDL, ~ Conlrof, llr oan-

-

Top Cool! pold. Old luneltlft
cuboordo, · • quiNo,
-..,
top~ ontl,. coli -121142711, or
S04.azs.e&amp;M,

6CHOQ...

-!18·

au~

tAKQJ9 62
'P K Q 5

Baiting
the trap

Soya' NIC Mondlt_Nlgllt At
Tha Movlel (2:00) !;I
II all
(J) 'Tha KetoleiiYa

I'M ~lNG lV et.JIL.D
UPAN IMMUNITY.

I HAVE'lf'HE

·; OlD YQ.J HAVE

24M.

Bow-Voc

SOUTH

'

e

=::,'"up, ol!d dollollr. st4- ,
~~~
~':,'::'
311 , • ., 1:00 p.m.

';I •nt I muDh 'h•pn thin Ira Will loki trado, Or
.12,000. i14-44M781!
- · .JUI WIIM;
Plano •4
8oMoo,
IOM'JWIII
•

Estate

ic.-IChall
9:00 Cll 1111 MOVIE: 'Hilty

WINTRHOP~·~--------~--~---,

MORK

- -Ohio~114-446... wv .'
S04.a71-Hal

Dowlo

A 10 5 I

Is loroed Into hiring another.

Aon'o TV llllvlco, _... ..... '

RI!IIIY or Clblo tool
wo!lo -plolod oima
~ one( ..,loo,
llk102.

t

ihandicapped
• 1121 CityemplOyee
Liz loses a
and

pw.tt~nM.

Polntltla, lntorlor ond oxtorlor,
,.. ........... , :IQ4.87S..2111.
:t

+9 6

8 K92

8:05 tD MOVIE: Tha Dirty Do.,.n
(3:00)
.
8:30 8 (JJ IB Hogon Fomlly
Mark resents ghostwriting
Willie's love letters to Cora.

WATEAPAOOFJNO

PSG. t14-l48 U!l.

+K Q 10 8

lPG) (2:00)

BASEMENT

tooy, ..Ufll .. ..... Aaldng

"9 6 3 2

1D MOVIE: 81111Mn Condlea

1mprav1ments

1110 Cllovotto 4 apd, 4 cyt, 4 dr.

JACOBY

IIJ ,.,._.....
1!J1 Murillf, lha Wroto
Murder. She Spoke
a a.- anet 111110n

CO 'aJ I&lt;EAUZE 'TWIT

1171 - - Contwy ..... !MOl
FranJeJ!n A¥•·· Pol,.. P.,...nt.

ns.

Ill Moneytlno

i

••

Z·lt·to

EAST
+5 3
'PJ10874

WEST
t84

As we grow older, we cannot run as
or jump as far as we used to, but
II]) Cro11flre
we may still play bridge well. For ex·
1D Night Court
ample, Boris Schapiro, who turned 80
7:35 (I) Sonford And Son
last August, recently competed in the
prestigious London Sunday Times in·
8:00 Cll MOVIE: Tha Guntlghtor
(2:00)
vitatlonal tournament. As befits a
8 .&lt;JI IB ALF ALF Insists
bridge personage renowned the world
thai Willie take him on a
over for ~ years. Boris remembers
treasure hunt In Death Valley.
many deals that can stir the imagina·
lion.
Look at today's, bearing in mind
all m(J) MocOyvar Mac
that
the
two-spade openiqg was strong
is lad into a confusing
and
forcing.
·
maelstrom of murdar ana
When Boris jumflOII to four spades.
extortion. !;!
til CD Tha Mlrecll Plonot A
North rashly bid six, and West had an
profile on the Impact humans
easy lead of the king of clubs. At first
have had on Earth
glance it would seem that the best
thro~jghout histOf}'. 1J
chance for declarer would be to take
9l •Ill MI)Ot DIKI'The
the ace of clubs and peel off the ace of
Major ,organizes a camping
.
hearts and seven spade tricks. hoping
~ to bring tha family closer.
for a revoke. But Boris Schapiro was
quick to lay a trap for West.
He11'"'1unhesi·
ii I]]) 21 Jump &amp;net
•
Hanson and Penllall travel to
South Fiorlda In P\lfS'Iit ·OI a
bomblr. Cl

3 ,_, lurnlollad opt Controlly Hou11hold ~
llelnt1111n01:
loaotod, Mwly d-tod 1}"g•, Roofing, -hopolr, lldlntl,
odd lobi.
I ponall119, utiiHIIili fiiiiGo no
polo. 1210 mo. NO Oop., 114- ootlmolll. 114-571-21120, ......
IIMII44,51DTitln1Avo.
UHoh.

V.~IM

I

~

C0Mp,A,Ny fbLIC'( ..
~~'
:r' L.&amp;. tiAVf TO ~

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce1110rle1

79

I Frurts It

Jhlbllny Ifill, PD•roJ,

:

Chnrolll t20Q. J04..175-3073. r ~

lpoaMI'114MI1431,
·--· 2
~~.

.
orat
·Veterans . . .rial Hospital

.~'I"

.

;:;""'=~:-::.....
::::-:~:--=-=
..-,-;Fol=d-:f;:t=n.;

··y......-

- J

~ 5o~~Y, tT~

441-242401.-271-0271.

2br, apl. lurnlohod, llop. roq'd.
e,t_4_3_aa.,.l1_2.,.1.,.
. ..,.,..--...,.-~
2br, ..,lumlohtid, corpotod. No
polo. :rl2 Thlnl Avo. 114-441-

JAMES

0 M..ml Vlco Crockett and
Tubbs put the brakes on a
rolling railroad bordello.
Stereo.
Iiiii VlcMoCountry
@ Abbott And Cootollo
7:05 (I) JoHoraona
.
'
7:30 • (JJ Family Feud
ill College Bllaketbllll
.D II En!Ortalnmont Tonight
II (J) I'Mmo'o Fomly
9l e111 1111 J-ntrl Q
el!ll M'A 'fi'H

11111 Ford, I cyl, outo PS, PI, ,
LW!f1 _wRh t o - oncl bOd II nor, 1
44,ouu mllll, do,...d, good I~·
111. :104471-3073.
'

. . . IIlii ~
Folh loolia; 11

. 417 SICOJid Avetut. . . 1213
i Glllpolls..clhio 45631 '

"---

po&amp;~T· .

Soplk: Tonk Pui!IDing ""~Gollle
PIANOCAAE
C.: RON EVANI ENTEAP•ISES,
1117
-~
,
tunod port
~ l!llno lunf!illl oan M tuellnJI clloh. llack ~ Sltvw, II·

az

1'\Gft.

llfwlrlldo llo~no, AI. 7, Gal-'
llpollo. ,.,_from K-Mort, 114-

76

m ,_

Re~l

.nn.

ApA~TMtNT
fO~ /tff'o/T

IUD· 114SC1. 114-441-GCit •
lta4-

Fortune !;I

•I]]) Night Court Q

FRANK AND ERNES-=T---,.-----:--....;...,----' ___

NORTH
tiO 7
\lA
tQ J 8 63 .
tJ75 32

-IIHollr
ali •111 0 Whall Of

.1115 Y.mtht VZ, 210, ~
cond, runa well, 1800. ,,,....

ft,IDD. ~ta.

opaod:J':1' 214831.
blcYcie, iod. good

Wealth - Imply - Plush - Guitar - USE IT
. Granny always said that country folk weren't blessed
with any more common sense than city folk, they just
tend to USE IT.

BlUDGE

D a e (J) Cunent Alf1olr
til CD MecNell Lei!,.,

2113.

w-,

3ohaJoe,

(JJ PM Moopzlne

(J) SportiCenter

1115 Hondt 250 Ellt• 250, 3,311
mlloo, IIDD.. IIko ,_, !IOW7Io

1117 Yomahl 3501 4
$11110, 304-171-211 • •
tiNI CR250 Honda, oxc oond,

oondftlon
mlxod hay.
wot.
11 .21 por . , .. 1,,._

•

1:35 (fi Andy Grttft1h

1171 310 .lOoP, 4
wheeiW, a"'omltlc, hMVy -duty.

1. . v.-111. ,.,_, muot _ , ...... bot1oiY.. ....'It,IDD 0 .1 .0.114-:14&amp;'8a7.

- ---------I --

· SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

II Top c.nt
1D Hangln' In

1531.

.

Apartment
for-Rent .

lfll. 2 br., , """'· prlvoto Kl"' olzio • • Md klr oole.
tnOIOIIII petlo. aolil to IZIO.GoodCond. l t W - 7.
g - r • - ' oleopplng conrw,
..tw,
_ .... _.. ..._,. ....... - · Dining Room Toblo,
PfOIIIIId. Ulllm&amp; .. ..-· .11 ... wllli
4-·
114-31NII07.
iiM1 ~ 211
,
Uvlni A-. Sot: Couch, cleol~
coffH llbte, 2 .... llblla. Oil
lam,_. 1210. 114-~11 1121

.

9l eCC18NeWIQ

tilt

Pollod .

Aoglol-

1 bod_.,, 2 t/4 mlloo 'out Sond
Hll
"'fflgorotor ond 01ovo
fum
, lie, 3CM.e71-4023.

31

Complete the dtuckle quoted
by filling in the missing wOtdt
you de... elop from step No. 3 below .

a e (J) AIC -•1;1
(!)Body !lec1rlc
.

304t1S-.MI2.

UfJ
I u lull at. 5
......,. 114 ... 1011. .

"*

~

· --l-.1.
· .....J
L.-L......JL......J;;..

(!) :t-2·1 ~ Q

LIYMtOCk

lumlohod, Ill utNHIIil pofd, In•
eluding 01blo. ldool
ono por·
eon, J:oet:er'• Mobile Horne
Porll, 114-441-110:1.

I
J--,·,r-i,iJ&amp;..:,,r-:ri...:..:TI O

0

11200. 114-441-GCitl.

=

. Sign over bananas in·· produce department of loca.l groc·
----~-~·_..:•:.., ery store: "Please don't sepa' R A T T WH
rate us. We ---- •· logelher."
1r..!

!It (2) IB NIC Nightly Newa
11) lportiLook

114-441-2177.

3.,0 4 - 1

wme-

1:30

~;:~~~Ae;;.rc~ha};n~d-;111;:;;;;;;
I0no ,... u'
, -· wJeh ·~m;.;20.;;·_..----:--Dllo ployor klr
- . .... _ _...._. 74
MOtorcyCiel

!!!!·

0r-l:...PriE..;.1 . ., .,.,._~.
t-n:,~..:
. . . . .

dOYes. Q
CD ...- One TV 1;1
.I]]). Andy 011111111
i1J World TDCIIIY
OJem
1D Chartea In Cllarge
1:01 CD Bllverty Hlllblllel

d«lp.m ~

I

I I' I I

Schollatlc Spofta

the habits of plgeont and

-.m...,.. a

,......,.,..., _.

wolld"'
oouplo, quiet 1:,":::- ___H_O_U_II_ho_l_d__ 54 Mlac.llaniOUS
no .,..,, ret, eecurlty
, 51

.

ULTRA~~

•

6 ALL E

Amerloll
.
til Wild Amlllcll Examine

73 Yens &amp; 4 WD'S

~-1'

3

ea~l1l a ec

a-·

2111114.

ForL....

;'

ilundry _· ,_., ,.,......

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PICKENS FUANilURE
NowAJood
lljeolll ..... .,~-hold lurnlohlng. 112 mL ·
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1 onc1 2 Md...,..; lumlohocl Clll304-f75.1 450. ·
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OHIO VALLEY·PUBLISHING CO.
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thraugh lho- until you hlvo F u -·
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lob'a Llwn C.re, graaa outt~,
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car care ,_.. and ... •1*'111
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write
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Socurttv RlpOI1oiS2 l!enhotton U.R Troo Sonrloo. T"''f''ng,
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Wo'H como to raul 304-175-

Employment Services
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l!en:orvllle
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ontrlde. 811 441 ton.
Lll..,..e Mil, 114 441 • m
l.al&amp;l..,...., 2.1 mlloo out- Country Mobile " - """ .
Plooaont off AI. on Hick· R~ U, North Dl -roy.
ooy ChofiOI Rd., wolir aval-.
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,., ·-In

The Deily Sentinii-Page 9

'

to be much lUckier In partnorohlp ...~
rangemenlltoday than you will be In
lltuatlona whore you go ltlllone. Seek
strong lilt..
LIIRA (lopl. 2I-OoL 23) What- you
do todty, you aro lkely to do qutte well.
Vou alaohlveono!horblg pluogolng lor .
you: You're a stronger I I - then 1
atlfter,
TAUIIUI (Aprtl••or •1 V-ble SCOIII'IOC0at.l4 flos . II)Sorreethl~ , l
' krn~OIIe~ge ' con bl occjulnod todfiY by In wlelcle you'rl ~lly lnvohled
b11ng 1 gooc1 111111111' ond 1 k - ob- . havegreotw c h - l o r IUCCIII Mh II
· Wha1 you 1twn you will liter bl r~IHct a bit. Tllll II on oxcellont
ablo to uoe to ach- unlquo day lor you to · moka rovllklnl lnd
ldvontegol.
· ldlualmente.
,
. . . (..., 11..... •1 Joinl ven- IAGITTAIIIUI CIIOW. II 0aa 111
lu- look exoopiiOnllly PIOICijllng lor
lillY bl going baltWr fclr V0U I*•
you toclfiY, ... 111'1y • you ... 1lld In
title limO ..... Jhay lor
with on lndlvlctull who 11 lmoglnollve •
a. ma~ulond
ond - - . ..
I
good~·
CAIICifl
11....., II) You have
a .... ., You
WhllhlalcaltoiUCCIIdtoday,bulunNlllhl
llftl todlly IIIII
._ IGmiOIII gota behl'l!' you ond . rnlglll 1101 be exiiGitll whll you 8111*11·
' at-youablglhove,yourillgtilnoiUII •eel. IIOIUIU., dore't let lldl uplll you,
your lliloniiiO your blot edvlnllga. It bM"NMJhaywtiiiWn 011110 botltalllpveola which ligna oro romontlcally perfeet lor you. Mall$2toMatchmaker, clo
this.......,_, P.O. Bo• 9128, Clevefond, OH 4410 .1-3428.
Alltll Cllienm 21·A... 11) You'll perform 11 your bell todaY when confronted by challerige Ot preaaure. lnateoct of
!hale llctora oubciUing you, they wtll
1tlmulote your dlllr1111 to toiCCied.

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11:00 Cll Hlrdclatll .And
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11:01 (J) MOYII: 11ta Dirty ~
Neat I'll It a C2:00l
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11J Mloml Vloa An ex-Nazi,
now living In M..ml, II about
to bl tried lor war crlmn.

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don'IINnll........,., Pill~ · lor ~~="' look
on- ~lllllty yau
1M 001-u.eg
lJCIUr IIIPI I llltw. V&amp; II good ,· oo.JFJCIIIII
• YOUIIOiillds wtll bl · ... ~ell lntiiii*IPftlllhlltlma
:t':"' l;}lllii'..,.Knftwllftto
f11epor110tllle 10 !Ita -'lurtl youf Wllllwtllbelnaplllllontoachtnaeyour,
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SOME PEOPlE UHE

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Wjjlllf ns PAnts. - .IAPANESE I'ROV!RIJ

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I'Jpt 1G-The Deily Sentinel

Pomaoy-MidtJeport. Ohio

EMS ·has 16 weekend calLS
SlxteeD calls for assistance ,
_.. auwered over the weekend
by 11111ts ol the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services. Eight ol the
calla were.on Saturday and eight
ODSuaday.
5aturday at 3:25a.m., Rutland
went to Star Hall Road lor
Jolumy Brown who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 3: 46 a.m. was
called to Jones Road for Robbie
Evans who was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Rutland Fire Department and
EMS unit were called to ;;~ ·
sttiJcture . fire at the Priddy
residence on Happy Hollow Road
at 5:21 a.m. Fireman Jeff Jones
was taken from the scene to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
with a minor eye Injury.
Middleport went at 1:41 p.m. to
RailrOad St. for Shane Engle tci
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
5:44 p.m., Middleport went to
Page St. for Clarence Thomas to
Veter&lt;~ns Memorial Hospital ant:!
at 6: 1~ p.m., to Cheshire for
Janet Mitchell to Veterans Mem·
orlal HospitaL At · 7; 56 p.m.,
. Middleport "'as called to High St.
for Remalee Franckowiak to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Syracuse went to DuskY St. at

9:37 p.m. lor Mark Duerr who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 4:38 a .m. Sunday, Racine
was called to Route 124 tor
Christine Pullins who was
treated but not transported.
Pomeroy at 6: ~ a.m. went to
Lincoln Hill for Angela Fields to
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
·
At 7:14 a.m., Middleport Fire
Department was called to . a
chimney fire at the McKinney
residence on Sycamore St. The
fire was out when nremen
arrived.
At 9: 36 a .m ., Pomeroy went to
New Hope Road lor Otis C;~sto to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Middleport at 11:20 a.m. was
calle!l to Mill St. for Mae
Lightfoot who was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL ·
Racine at . 1! 44. p.m. went to
Bigley Ridge Road at Long
Bottom for Martin Nesselroad
who was dead on arrivaL ,
Racine at 5:42p.m. was called
. to Trouble Creek Road for James
Hlnck!y to Holzer , Medlca4
Center.
Rutland was called· to Meigs
Mine No. 31 for James Reed to
. O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-· Martin Nesselroad
Martin Peter Nesselroad, 88, of
51809 Bigley Ridge Road, Long
Bottom. died at his residence
S~nday afternoon.
Born In Sherman, W. Va .. he
was the son of the late Peter and
Margaret Fortner Nesselroad.
He was retired from the Magnolia 011 Co., Pampa, Texas,
construction crew, and was a
member of the Our Lady of
Loretto Catholic Church;
Tuppers Plains.
.
He Is survived by his wife,
Margaret Rose ·Foster Nessel·
road, one brother, Charles Nes·
·selroad, Sclo, Ohio; one sister,
Melissa Holtzman, of near Sale"'; one step-daughter, Margaret Cauthorn, Reedsville; two
step-granddaughters, Alison
Cau thorn·Krelss, Reedsville,
and Abigail Cauthorn, Delaware.
· Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his first
wile, Agnes McGinty Nesselroad. three brothers and six
sisters also preceded him In
death.
, Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at lp.m. at the Whlte
Funeral Home In Coolville, with
the Rev. Fr. Frank Patala
officiating. Burial will be In Our
Lady of Loretto, Cemetery, Long
Bottom. Frlenda may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. Tues·
day with rosary servl,ces at 7
p.m. Tuesday.

CHfford Plantz

\

,.

VeMru1Memortal
, Saturday admissions - Leona
]Crautter, Pomeroy.
' • Saturday dllchargeS' -:- John
Sill.
Sunday admlallona - None.
Sultllay discharges - None.

'• .

~

support Sunday for a reunified
Germany being part of NATO,
despite Gorbachev's top adviser
saying Saturday that the Soviet
Union woUld object.
West . Gennany, which has
pushed reunification, has ruled
out basing NATO troops on what
Is now East Germany, but the
Soviet Union says this concession
Is Inadequate.
"Tnere will be a Jot or discus·
slon between now and the event,':
Bush said.
. ','We've got our position supporting (WestGerman) Chancel·
lor (Helmut) Kohl. We know ·
what Kohl's position Is. We' re
going. to stay with lt."

Weather

'

Pick 3

105
Pick 4

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Janet G. Mitchell, 52, of Route
1, Cheshire, died Saturday at her
residence following an extended
illness.
··
'
Born on May 7, 1937, In Gallla
County, she was the daughter of
VIctor Dent and Sapho Miles
Dent.
She was a member of the Little
Kyger Methodist Church.
· Survivors Include her husband,
Vernon Mitchell, Cheshire; her
mother, Sapho Dent 1 Gallipolis;
two brothers, Winfred L. Dent,
Middleport, and Benny S. Dent,
Pomeroy, and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded In death by ·
her father.
Funeral services wiiJ be held
Tuedsay at 1 ·p.m. at. the Ewing
Funeral .Home. The Rev. Leslie
Hayman will officiate and burial
will be ·In Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Frlenqs may call at the funeral
home Monday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

Name omitted
The name of Jull Hayman, a
third grader at the Riverview
Elementary School, wu imlntentionally omlttad fr!llll a llltina of
studentS making the honor roll
for the last sill weeka' grading
.period.
'

- -..L- - - - - - - - - - · - -(

- - ----

Low loDiebt In mid 1101.
Mostly sunny Wednesday.
Bleb near ~-

11

Low

....... '*IU"

-----~----~3·K~·~"~·~-·:~··;~u:~.:·~"~'·•~;·~~·~~"~·~·~~~··~"'~·:·~··------------.-.....,.,..'....',

KINNEY

Congoleum
·Vinyl .
Floor Covering

Wallpaper

20°/o

39°/o

OFF
SELECTED STYLES

•

OFF
lOO'S OF PATTERNS .

Vo1.4D, l\lo.199

. :..f:&gt;fiY~iphtod 1890

.1

A Multimedia Inc. New111aper

.

Pomeroy Couneil OKS $1,045,972.budget
py NANCY YOACHAM

for the clerk-treasprer position fees; $3,154 for the recreation
program; $32,000 for debt ser·
was $11,8:J(l .
Seatlnel News Stall
The
street
department
re·
vice; $23,094 for guaranty meter.
Pomeroy Village Council ap· .
celved $116.565, with $75,000 of
In other matters, a $2,501!
proved a $1,045,972 budget for
that amount tor salaries and
annual pay raise was approved
1990when lt metMqndayevenlng
Wilges, and ·another $20,000 for · for the village administrator's
in regular session wlth Council·
employee benefits. s1o:ooo was
position, Tetroactlve from Jan. 1.
man Larry Wehrung presiding
designated for street cleaning, Pay raises are also being consl· .
due to the absence of Mayor
snow and Ice removal, bringing . dered for other employees, possl·
Richard Seyler. Among . the
total costs related to the street bly to be based upon some sort of
budgetary Items approved was a
department
and transportation merit system. Tile village fl·
general fund total of $303,576.
to
$126,565.
nance committee has scheduled
Funds comprising the general
The
·water
department
will
·
a
meeting this comlngMonday to
fund include $175,000 for the
receive
$108,000
tQ
Include
$65,000
discuss
additional employee
pollee department for salaries
raises.
for
salaries
and
wages.
$16,000
and wages, employee benefits
Representatives of· the Ohio
for benefits and $7,000 · for.
and other expenses.
workers compensation. $90,000 Department of Natural ResourA total of $77,026 was approved
was set asideforotheroperatlons ces · are to be In Pomeroy today
for . general government ex·
(Tuesday) to meet with VIllage
penses Including salaries. benef· , and maintenance making a total
Administrator John Anderson ·
of $198,000 In that department.
Its an.d other operating expenses
and view some areas ·in the
Tota~ amount approved · for
for the administrative positions
.
village
where suspected mine
needs
was
$20,000.
cemetery
under jurisdiction of the mayor.
Other
budgetary
Items
include
ls causing serious prob·
drainage
Council salaries amounted IJ)
!ems.
Anderson
Is hopeful that
$69,497
for
the
fire
fund:
891,626
$3,600 and $5,000 was earmarked
some
of
the
problem
areas will be ·
for
basic
utilities;
$15,000
for
·
for legal needs.
county auditor's and treasurer's approved for ODNR funding to
The total amount established

.make needed repairs. Anders()n designate thE' river side of the St. which arc extremely close to
expects to know more about Pomeroy's lower par king lot as the river ., Council has discussed
outside funding possibilities af· permit only parking. The signs the matter In th e past. Councilter the meeting.
should be instalied within the man Lar r~· Wehrun g Is to check
In a related matter. Anderson next week.
Into costs to purc hase and insta ll
said that holes In village streets
Councilman Bill Young re- rai l.
cannot be properly repaired at
ported hP has found an Ohio
Councilman Tom Wer ry sug'
this time due to the weather. He company which manu! act ures gested .that Council cons ider
said the village wlll again be able vintage era street lighting, but he approving a fire arms ·safety
to purchase hot mix In a few
has not yet received cost estl· ' course for village taw enforceweeks which Is the needed repal r mates. Council hopes to replace ment personnel. Werry said that
material. The street department lighting in the downtown sections
the policemen should have periohas already used all the cold mix of the village with old-fashioned dic refresher courses and that
material it had, and can not get
lights .
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
any more at this time, he added.
Young also reported tl!at play· Investigation IBCJ) will provide
At his request, Council au tho·
!.'round equipment for the vll· such courses at minimal costs.
' rlzed Anderson to prepare spec I· !age's three parks 1Monkey Run,
Council Instructed Werry to
flcations and advertise for a new · Mechanic St . and Naylor's Run\
check into the ac tual costs and
truck for the water depar"tment.
are being built by the vocational
report Qack.
Anderson reported that the water
department at Melg~ High. A
Werry was also instructed to
department will ·continue Its
sizable donation !rom the Meigs
look into the costs o! an above
on-going program of line replace·
County Motorcycle Club Is pay- ground gasoline tan k for villa ge
ment this year, as budgetary
ing for the equipment.
departments . Council believes
appropriations and the weather
Councilman Bruce · Reed re- having its own tank Instead of
allow.
vived the Idea that Council purchasing gasoline from a rea
.. It was reported that signs have
should consider installing guard stations could le ad to a fin ancial
arrived which will be used to
rail along certain areas of Main savings for the village. .

Miners await results .of voie

FURNITURE, AP_.UANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COVERING
106 EASY MAIN

1 Sect6on, 10 Pagn 26 Centl

Pomeroy-M,Iddlepoit, Ohio." Tueaday, February 20, 1990

'

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Page4

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nesday at 7:15p.m. at the Trinity
Congregational Church In Pomeroy. The c\ntata will be pres·
ented Palm Sunday afternoon.
.An offering will be received with
proceeds to go to the Meigs
Cotinty Ministerial Association. ·
Spaghetti dinner
The Southern Boosters will
have a spaghet~ dinner on
Wednesday from 4:30-6:30 p.n\.
Following the dinner there will
be an alumni basketball game.
Auxiliary to meet
The . Women's Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
meet Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m. In the
conference. room. The hostesses
will be Cariie Kennedy and Mary
Belle Frecker.

Lott~ry

6703

WEATHER MAP - HIJh presaure extendlilll over lhe Weaterli :: ·
and Northern United States wiD ehle that area lola ol AllllllbiDe and : • .
· mUd temperatures. Shone thuadentonna will occur alone the :;
Gulf Coast. Very ~latry weather with locally heavy snowfall and :.
gusty win~ Ia expe(lled over tile Central Rockies with some of the ;:.
snowtallspreadlnc eastward Into The Plain&amp;. (UPJ)
··;

South Central Oblo
Clear Monday night, with a low
near 20. Mostly sunny Tuesday.
with highs between 40 and 45.
Extended Forecast
Wedn~ay througll Friday
Fair Wednesday arid Thurs·
day, with a chance of showers on
Friday. Highs will be In the 40s
Wednesday and mainly between
45 and 55 Thursday and Friday.
Overnight lows will be in the 20s
early Wednesday, and between
35 and 40 Thursday and Friday
mornings.
·

Meip girls .
eliminated by
Jackson live

POMIIOY, 0110

DANTE. Va. (UP!) - Rankand·
file voting on whether to ratify a
proposed contract and end a bitter,
I 0-l)lOnth strike against Piuston
Coal Group enQed late Monday
with union miners waiting until
Tuesday moriling to learn the
results.
United Mine WOtkers officials
were e~ting vote tallies as late
as midni&amp;Jlt, and so decided not to
issue results until 9 am. EST
Tuesday in Casllcwood. The results
will be anltOUJICed, at a district
-unkiti Office in. CastlewOod,
4-.,.
"W&amp; ~ ·aJIIJOSI •I h iiiiJIIIfli· t
·reC:kiin We: can wait anothtr rew
hOlliS,"'said Paul Flet~~ing or Hang·

va.

, ..

50%

'

Rock.

"I think it'll pass, but I think it's
going to be closer than they say it
is," said striker Benny Neal, who
predicted only 60 percent approval.
"It was tough deciding. There was
good parts in this contract, and
there was bad parts in this contract
and a man 's just got to decide
whether he can live with it"
Most miners remained confident
that th~ contract would be approved. James Gibbs of Bristol said
his 16-person local unit voted 15·1
to ~cept. An election overseer, Bo
Willis, said about 200 ~rs had
'bocn.· tluou31! the Dante - polling
place by 1190n and that he had
heard only five or. six negative
comments.
·
"I believe it'H be ratified," Flem·
ing said. "There's a few things 'in it
we don't like but you can't gel
everything. It's something we can
live with."

mgThe turnout in most Virginia
locals was heavy, with about 80
percent voting in Dante.
Most strikers intervic'Y{ed Monday expressed concern aliout por·
lions of the contract, but they- said
they expected the voting would end .
the dispute that has resulted in
' llllft lhan S64 million in contemptDeadline for filing petitions of
of-court fines against the UMW and candidacy or resolutions to place
iis lop officials and nearly 3,000 ar· tax Issues on the May Primary
rests, moslly civil disobedience. ballot Is Thursday at 4 p.m.l!t'the
.Meigs County Board of
· Though most minets seemed to · Elections.
expect ihe contract to pass, some
Candidates whose names will
were skeptical.
appear on the May Primary

Mitchell

DAYTON. Ohio tUPI) -The allegedly kept hidden from Con·
B-2 Stealth bomber program,
gress. Critics who were Inter·
managed at WrJghi·Patterson viewed also questioned the need
Alr Force Base, Is facing continu- for a fleet of the radar-evading
Ing criticism over cost overruns bombers 'In an era of reduced
and flaw designs.
tensions with the Sovle! Union.
The Dayton Dally News reDlngell said the General Ac·
porll!d .Monday that Rep. John
counting
Oltlce has found •'slg·
DJngell, D·Mich., who Is chalt·
nlficant
cost,
schedule and permali of a congressional oversight
formance
problems"
In the
and lnveatlgat!ons panel, Is urg·
bomber program, which Is man·
Jng President Bush to scale back
aged by the Aeronautical Sys·
the Stealth program. ·
terns Division at Wright.
In a four-page letter to Bush
Patterson.
The letter urged cuts
obtained by the. newspaper, Din·
of
SlO
billion
to $20 billion In the
aellsald tbe B·2 Is one of several
Pentagon's
latest
request for
expenalve weapons system the .
hales.
·
weapons
pure
· Pen~gon Is buying before knowLast week, an ASD spokesman
, 111g how weJJit will work.
at
Wright-Patterson acknowl· '
Meanwhile, a segment .on
'CBS's "60 Mfnutes" Sunday edged that sttiJctural wea'nllht pointed to Stealth cost knesses have been found that win
overruns the Air Force has require that modifications be
made to every plane.

&lt;t·

•

NATIGNAL WU.ntlll POMCUTTO 1 All liT~

_ _....__Meigs.announcements..._..____

Meeting date changed .
The, Leading Creek Conservancy District's monthly meet·
lng scheduled for Wednesday has
been rescheduled for Feb. 28 at 9
Gladys Cuclder
a.m.
Karate classes
Gladys Cuckler, 95, of 225 East
Beginning Karate classes will
Second St., Pomeroy, died Sunbe held at the Coolville Elemen·
day at Amerlcare-Pomeroy
tary' School on Wednesday at 7
Nursing Center.
p.m. For Information contact
Born on March 5, 1895 at
Mlck
Howell at 992-6839 or Tim
·Darwin, she was the daughter of
Jenkins
at 992-'-9920.
W. L. Whaley and Mary Patton' .
Meetln g rescheduled
. Whaley. She .was a housewife and
The Rutland Firemen's Auxll·
former seamstress at the Brooke
lary meeting for Wednesday has
Shoe Co.
been rescheduled for Feb. 28.
She Is survived by a .step·
County cbolr
.,..daughter, Evelyn Bryan, Po·
All people Interested in jolntng
whattan Point; five grandchild·
a County choir to present "The
ren, several nieces and nephews,
Crucifixion" $hould meet Wed·
and two slsters-ln·law, Grace
Whaley, Pomeroy, and Edith
Whaley. AtHens.
Besides her parents she was
preceded In death by her hus·
band, Howard Cuckler In· 1956,
four brothers, Otis, Welby, Dale
and Tracy Whaley, and a sister,
Vllla Carl.
She was a former member ot
the Daughters of the American
. Revolqtion, Pythlan Sisters, and
.·
Magnolia Club.
'
' Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Ewing Funeral Home. The Rev.
William Mlddleswarth will off!·
elate and burial w.lll be In
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral hOme 4 to
8 p.m. Tuesday.

Cuts urged .in program

:Hospital news

KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine
(UPI) -President Bush says he
may Invite to bls seaside home
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba·
chev, with whom he Is now at
odds over the. possible reunlflca·
lion of Germany.
"I think he'd like It up here,"
Bush said during a brisk Sunday
s troli along Goose Rocks Beach,
during which he also touched
upon their differences ..
Asked If he planned to have
Gorbachev as a New England
guest, the president, who returns
to Washington Monday ending a
three-day weekend, told repor·
ters, ' 'lfwe can do II."
Gorbachev Is expected to be In
Washington this June for . a
superpower arms · summit, although an exact date has not yet
been set.
There has been speculation
that Gorbachev n\lj;ht be Invited
by Bush to the tiny fishing and
tourist village of Kennebunkport
shortly before or after the
summit.
The chance of such an Invitation is taking on growing slgn!fl·
cance In light of fast-paced
development over the possible
reunification Of East and West
Germany.
The president reiterated his

Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
may caJJ at the funeral home
from 6 to 8 p.m, Tuesday.

J~et

Clifford Plantz, 67, of Middleport, died early this morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital (ol·
lowing an extended Illness.
Born at Spring Hill, W.Va., he
was the son of Everett E. and
Nancy J. Hill Plantz, of Winter
Springs, Fla., who survive. Mr.
Plantz had worked · for the
Sylvania Corporation In Columbus where he was a gla&amp;s
. polisher. He had also been an
· active member of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Plantz Is survived by his wife,
Allee Plantz, Middleport; two
• sisters, Norma Mulford, or
Tempe, Az., and Garnet George,
of Maitland, Fla. ; a brother,
Ernest Plantz, of Gales Ferry,
Conn.; and several nieces an
nephews.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wed·
. nesday at . Rawlings-Coats·
Fisher Funeral Home with Rev.
Paul Taylor officiating. Burial
will be In the Gravel Hill

Bwh firm on-reunification

''

Ohio

UMW official John Cox said
non-union replacement miners who
have been maintainil;l$ Pittston
production at about a thrrd of nor-.
mal capacity apparently believe the&gt;
dispute is over because many
packed up over the weekend and
left.
Some , UMW miners said they
were unhappy that, under the new
agreement, tile company may put
them on rotating schedules and
work them .on Sunday. Many
miners have worked the same shift
for decades and none ever h~
worked Sundays.
.
Others said the union should
l!ave done more for 13 Kentucky
strikers who are suspended for aJ.
le~ed illeAA! · strike activity, men
who wiU have to go'to arbitration if
they want to win the right to return
to work.

Deadline for filing petitions Thursday

PAPEil
IGWILI

ror

64t

•

. ATLAN1'18 CREW ...:.. The crew of the space
shuttle Atlantis Ia ilhoWII In this oltldal portrait
releued by NASA. The crew, which lst!Cheduted
to be launched on a secret DODmlaslonThunday,
pcJIIed In front ottbe shuttle DltiCovery on pad 39-A
prior to a recent mission. Atlaatls will be launched

••••
IWRCOLOI

CAI.E
LOTION

37'

1''
PRINTS

ballot have until Monday at 4
p.m. to submit a picture and
background materi al to the edi·
torlal department or The Da!l';
Sentinel for publication co nsider•
atlon. After that such material
will be accepted by the advzrtls·
Ing de par tmen t.

Substances biggest cancer risk in
food according .to federal officials.

from pad 38-A. Left to r•ht are Pierre Tbuot,

m!Mion specialist; .John Casper, pilot; .John
Creighton. commander; Mike Mullane, mllleton
speclall&amp;t and David Hllmers; mlllelon speclall&amp;t.
(UPI)

.

'

Five charg~s filed by Pomeroy
police· after altercation downtown

AYI

2 ...NII
FOR'H
PU:I 01' 1.

An alterc~tlon at 112 Maple St.•
Pomeroy, early Tuesday mqrntng resulted In one man being
taken to the emer,gency room for
treatment , damage to a struc·
ture. and five charges being fl\ed
by Pomeroy pollee.
According to Pomeroy Chief of
Pollee Gerald Rought, the Inc!·
dent took place at 12:03 a.m. at ·
the residence of Sharon Johnson
and.remains under lnvesdgatlon.
In the scuffle, Russell A.
Robinson, 32, of Middleport, was
wounded In thechestwlth a sharp
object. the pollee chle! said,
although II has not yet been
determined hOw the Injury OC·
curred' or with what. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was treated
and released.
He Is now confined to the Meigs
County Jail being held on charges
of DUI, destruction of property,
· fictitious plates, no lns11rance,
and falll!fe to control.
Chief Rought said thllt appa~·
ently Robinson went Inside the .
house and was ordered out. The
fight started . Inside and then
moved outside with RoblhJon
later getting Into hi&amp; car. He lost
control of the vehicle, pollee

reported, and It w~nt into an
awning pole at the Johnsott
resident. There was minor dam·
age to the pole, medium damage
to. the vehicle, according to '
Rought.
,
On the scene with Pomeroy
pollee were deputies of the Meigs

County Sheriff's Department and
Middleport pollee officers,
Others at the house besides
Johnson were Junior Wynt and
Jim Harris, the chief reported.
Chief Rought reports that the
incid'e nt rem11lns under
Investigation.

Moore foupd ·guilty
.

on two .drUg charges
Harrisonville '.. area resident
Carl Edward Moore, 46,1s lOdged
In theMelgsCountyJallwherehe
awaits sentencing after being
found guilty on two 'drug-related
charges by a Melp Common
Pleas Court Jury of 12. Moore's ·
trial began Tht,~nday morning
and continued through Friday
afternoon when the Jury left tbe
courtroorp to 'begin dellbera·
lions. It took less thaa one hour
for the jury to ·return with a
verdict.
Moore •. who was Indicted on
two countl by • t;letgs Grand
Jury, was found illllty of cultivation of marijuana, as originally

charged In the Indictment. The
second count of the original
Indictment was for pouesalng
more than three limes the bulk
amount of rparljuana, with the•
buik amount being ~ grams.
However, the jury found Moore
gull!y of posJe&amp;slng the bulk
amount, but 1m than tbree lima
the bulk amount, w'*h wu a
lesiMII' Included cbarge Ia the
orJiiJtal felony count.
Law enforcement official•
from the Melp Co1111ty Sheriffs
Department a~d the Ohio Bureau
ot Criminal Investlaatlon (BCI)
tesdfled that charre~~ .aralnst
Con.tinued on page 10

NEW ORLEANS tUPH About 99 percent or the cancer
risk posed by fdod comes from
natural substances rather than
pes ticlde residues and other
man-made contaminants, fed·
era! offlclals said.
Robert Scheupleln, a toxlcol· ·
ogy expert with the Food. and
Drug Administration, estimated
that, overall, about7.7percentof
the 500,000 annual cancer deaths
In the United States are linked to
exposllre to carcinogens found In
food.
Most of the cancer'·causlllg
dietary material lles In 'ltradl·
tlonai'' food prepared In ordinary
ways, not from additives, pest!·
clde reSidues or fungal contaml·
nation that have worried many
consumers. Scl!eupleln aald.
In astudypresentedMondayat
. a meeting of the Atnerlcan
Association for Advancement of
Science, the FDA olllclal esU·
mated that traditional food accounts for 98.8 percent of the
food-related cancer risk, splcea
make up about 0.98 percent,
other additives 0.2 percent. pesti·
cldea 0.01 percent; animal druga
0.01 percent, food pfi!P&amp;ratlon
such as broUing or pickling O.ot
percent, and muahroorn and
other tungal toxin• 0.0001
· ,percent.
.
Dr, Frank Young, former FDA
commilaloner and now deputy
asslltant health aec:recary, said
·be COIICIIrred wit~ tile ae~ral
conclusions of t~Jat report.
Young said be tlllaka. the
reuon so much ' atteaUoa has
focused on .artificial contaml·
nanta, like Alar on apples, II that
often "outrageous claims drive ·

out less !Jamboyant concerns.''
like whether hlgh·fat diets In·
crease the risk of breast cancer.
Scheuplein said 1,1t least 100 to
1:JO of the estimated 100,000
naturally occurlng compounds In
food have been shown to cause
cancer In laboratory animals. ·

"And It seems lnevlta·bte that
many more (·compounds and
their metabolized byproducts )"
will eventually be shown to be
animal carcinogens," he said .
Some consumer activists have
argue!! that humans are proba·
Continued on page 10

-Rep. Fruk Pallolle, D-N.I.,IIID about

liNt lln&amp;.''W..........," award wlaDen duriDra Modqooaf. .ce • Clpltal miL Pallo!!e and t...-ee eavlroamenlal
. P'OIIPI an-ed llle award• to muatactaren, urrtn• l~em to
JoiD the JIHa raovemea&amp; b)' whlldrawlnr what they
deem "wutet.l aad tllllle(le8ltiT packaglq. (UPI)

·· -- ·--,-. ·-----,-----~------:-------

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