<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11263" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11263?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T18:46:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42230">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/87239175ac7421c18403ca3ca434c905.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e7a0337b94ac6e909325fdfcef9f0744</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35507">
                  <text>Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Plaumt. W. Va. ·

Farm FltJshes

Sheep producer update meeting scheduled
tatlve of Northup King Seed
By EDWAilD VOLLBORN
Company, will be the resource
Celud7 B:x.Cealloa Aceat
person. Other elements of the
Apoeult- Uld CNBD
proJram will be an update on use
GALLIPOLIS - A special
of the SWCD rental no-tillage
Sheep Producer Update meeting
equipment. Contact Glenn Gra·
. will be held Tuesday, Feb. 27 at
ham .at 245-5334 II you have any
7: 30 p.m. This meetlna: Is being
·spoDSOred jolatly by the Buckeye qpestlobs about tbls program.
Thursday, March l, at 7:30
Hllis AdUI\ Education program
and the Extension Service. Tbi p.m. Iii the Senior Citizen Actlv·
meeting wlll .be held at Buckeye lty room the program will
Hills Career Center near Rio address Issues rellillng to the
'
Grande. Resource person will be 1990 Goverrunent Farm Pro· Jim Clay, f:xtenslon Animal grams. Also covered will be
• .
Issues related to the proposed .
'
Sclentls t from OSU.
;
"farm bill" and an overview of
Som41
topics
of
discussion
will
MYSTERY FARM - This week's my•tery . a 15 cull prbe from tile OJiio Vllley Pllblllblnl
commodity price outlook. Mr.
be: update oil current research,
'·
farm, featured by the Galla SOD aad Water
Co. Leave yeur name, addlwa Uld teleJtholle
forage utilization by sbee~, and Bryson (Bud) Carter, Extension
Coaervatlon District, Is located 110mewhere In
number with your card or letter. No telephone
disease
problems such as ovlne . Farm Management Specialist,
Galla coul!ty. Individuals wishing to pardclpate · calli will be accepted. All contest entries llhould
progressive
pneumonia. At the )"'ll lead the discussion. Mr.
be turned'ln lo the newipaper office by 4p.m. each
In lhe weekly contest may do ao by pessln1the
end of the meetlna: there will be D!l~e McKenzie, ex~utlve direcf•m's owner. Just mall, or drop ott your pesa to
Wednellclay. In cue of a tie, the winner wlll ·be
time lor discussion on Items 'of tor ot the local ASCS office will be
choaen by lottery. Next week, a Melp County
the Ga!Upolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
current Interest. No reservations In attendance to answer so~e of
Gallpoua, !)hlo, 45631, or the .Dally Se!lllnel, 111
farm will be featured by the Melp SoD and Water
are necessary· and all sheep the specific questions;
Coll8ervatlon District.
·
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 4S769,and you may win
Attention private pesticide ap·
producers and friends of the
pllcators! Monday, Feb, 26,ls the
lndus!J'Y are welcome.
.
On Wednesday at 7 p.m., an date that the Ohio Department of .
By John C. Rice
ment program developed by / loaded or used within 50 feet of
Agronomy Meeting Is also being Agriculture will administer the
Co. Ext. Agent
planned at Buckeye Hills Career prlv!lte pestldde appUcator test
Clba·Gelgy and the other manuall wells, Including abandoned
AIJ'lculture
facturers of atrazlne. Benefits of wells, drainage wells, and sink Center. Jack Willker, ·. represen- In GaiUa Co4nty. The tes!lngwlll
·
·
the program Include: (1) reduc- holes.
tion In the potential tor exposure
3.
Postemergence application
;
POMEROY - We wlli be
to atrazlne by applicators, (2)
to corn must be made before the
, , holding a Corn and Forage
reduction In the potential lor crop ""aches 121nches In heights.
• " SchoolonTuesday,Feb.27, atthe
occurrence of the herbicide In
4. Maximum application rate
, ·. Meigs County Extension O!!lce.
groundwater and surface water, lor corn Is three pounds of active
. There will be two sessions.
and (3) a general.reductlon In the Ingredient per acre per calendar
~·
: The 1: 30 p.m. session will have
volume of product released Into year. No fall appUcatlons are
Confidential Services:
: · more emphasis on corn silage
the envlrorunent. Revised label· permitted. Applications tor In·
Birth Control
: and altalta and Is geared more
lng will be adopted by September dust.rlal weed control In noncrop
V. D. Screening
. toward dairy producers.
1, 1990, tor atrazlne and all areas may not exceed a maxi. The 7:30 p.m. session will be
Cancer
Screening
. atrazlne-contalnlng. products to mum oi 10 pounds . of active
,, . : emphasizing alfalfa and grasses
Pregnancy Testing
be sold lor the 1991 use season. Ingredient per acre per calendar
and Is geared more toward beef
Revised labeling does not take year .
'
. producers.
affect for atrazlne sold lor use In
Rental spaces are stUJ avalla-·
· Speakers for both progrjlms
Sliding
fit
railt.
No
rlllllld
IM(aiM
f11 incMty to PaY· ·
the 1990 growing season. Key . ble tor cra!ters at the Country
. will be John Underwood, District
label revisions Include:
Craft Fair being held In conjunc· Agronomist; and John Rice,
1. .Restricted use classl11ca· tion with the third annual Spring
County Agricultural Agent.
tlon, and specific protective Dairy Spectacular, AprO 5-7, at
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO .
Everyone Is Invited to attend
clothing requirements tor per- the Ohio State Fairgrounds In
whichever session they prefer.
sons using, mixing, or loading Columbus.
On January 26, 1990, the EPA
POMEROY:
G~WPOLIS:
·Country Craft exhibitors will
atrazlne.
~p,proved an atrazlne manage2~6 E. Main St., 2nd FlOor
414 Second Ave. 2nd Floor
2. Atrazlne may not be mixed· feature hundreds of handmade
992-5912
decorations, wearables ' and
446.0166
· 1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
household accessories such as
a;3o to 5:00 Monday-Friday
wood carvings, baskets, flower . ·
Closid Thwsday .
1:30 to 12 Saturday
'
By Wendell Tope
pended on !Ish from near by arrangements, tole painting and,
Closed Thursday
Raccoon Creek Improvement .streams tor part .of their food of course, cow Items.
AlSO: Jackson, ChlsaJMGkt, Athlns, Clillkothl, logan &amp;M&lt;Arthur
The fair will be held , In the
Committee
supply. Foi!&lt;S would Spe!ld part ot
'1
Gilligan · complex 11t the . Ohio
, ,
GALLIPOLIS - To me the their time, spring, summer and
;~: ·memories ,of the many· pleasant
tall fishing tor Catfish, Carp and State Fairgrounds - 17th
I
• ·- things that occurred In and along an occasslonal Walleye and Avenue exit ott of Route 71 • ~· the shores of many · of our Sauger. They would prepare the along with the commercial exhib- ,streams In our area Raccoon and !Ish by making sausage ln. the Its and a majority of the shOw and
::Symmes Creeks were the most same way they did pork and beef. sale cattle.
Rental space !orcrafters ts$45,
·· enjoyed waters In our area.
During the harvest season
and
Includes an eight-toot table,
As I write I ~m thinking of the
farmers would help each other
swimming pools, fishing · trips cut ··and prepare their hay and two chairs and a parking pass.
The Ohio Spring Dairy Specand winter sports, such as
grain crops lor storage. Because
tacular
Is the largest all-breed
- skating and often times we used a , It was a much slower process, It
dairy
show
In Ohio. It features
:sled with some of ~he older boys
took ever so much more hand
top-quality
shows
and sales lor
· puUing the sled as they skated up
Ia bor than It does today with all
the
five
major
diary
breeds, open
and down the stream.
the power equipment farmers
to
entrants
from
throughout
the
Many times· alter the Ice
have.
United
States
and
Canada.
The
became sale for such advenI ·'s hall always remember the
tures, people from miles around
good: dinner meals we ate at show Is managed by the Oblo
would gather along the shore and
various homes of our neighbors. Purebred Dairy Cattle
•build a roaring lire. With the food
One meal I remember In particu- Association.
The SpectacuiBr ol!lclally opthey brought, we would roast
lar, the housewife and her crew
ham, wieners and any kind of
served smoked Catfish, caught In ens lor craft and ·commercial
meat they had handy, along with
Raccoon Creek. That was the · exhibits at 12:00 noon, Thursday;
marshmallows for an extra
best tasting !Ish I ever ate and I'll AprU 5 and concludee Saturday,
treat. Everyone knew It was time
never forget that wonderful AprU 7 at 2:30p.m. AdmiBSion to
tbe Spectacular aJid the Country
.to go skating alter a hard freeze
fiavot.
Craft
Fair Is free.
In January and February.
Hopelu lly, one day Raccoon
For
more Information about
. For many years before !Ish
Creek can be the source lor
the
Country
Craft Fali', contact
became a comr.~on food In
family gatherings, food supply
JoAnn
Mackay,
(614) 889-3344.
grocery stores, families deand recreation as It once was.

.

.

Meigs· agent's corner

be conducted between the hours
oil p.m. and 7 p.m.ln room138ot
the Davis Technology' Building
on the campus. of the University
of Rl!l Grande. Participants
should . plan to arrive no later
than· 6 p.m. A re-certification
session will also be held Monday
evening at the same location.
Spring planting season Is npi
far away,. Soil testing Is a good
management ald .. Turn around
time from the Wooster lab Is less
than two weeks. Soil test allows
for better decision on rates ot
lime and fertlllzer. II you have
questions or would like help In
pulling the soU samples please
call the Extentlon Otflce. We are
currently running behind sche·
dule on our goal of 500 samples
lor 1990.
·

•Yk•

.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

.
.·

2169

. Vol.40, No.203

Low toaleht near St. ()buee
of rain to perceat. Clo.Sy
Tueaday. IUp. In mid tk.
Chance of rain 50 pereeat.

Super.Lotlo·
2-7-8-3641-44

Kicker 116746

at

•
. I

1 Section, 1 0 Pog11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday. February 26-. ·1990

Copy~1810

28 C.nto

· A Muhlmodio Inc. Nt!w..,ipor

Bright ·skies ·herald return of milder weather
. By United Prea International
' · Bright 'skies across Ohio today
signaled an end tl) the collies t and
snowiest weekend In two months,
a weeke~~~ that saw at least 17
~pie killed and hundreds of
cars lnvo lved In traffic
accidents.
Nine people were killed In a
massive pileup on Interstate 75
north of Qay ton shortly alter the
blizzard slammed Into Ohio late
Saturday afternoon..

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

..

Trooper David Lane ofthe Ohio qua, ·who was the first on the
Highway Patrol said at least 32 Sllene, said the situation was one
vehicles were Involved · in the of total chaos, with thick fire and
. accident, which also Injured at . smoke and ex)lloslons, appar·
least 50 people. The pDeup ently from gasoline tanks.
occured when several vehicles
Dr. Martin Murphy, president
crashed and blocked two north·
of the Hipple Cancer Research
bound lanes of the Interstate.
Center In Kettering, saw the
''Everybody started hitting the
accident while driving In a
brakes all at once,'' he said.
southbound lane of 1-75.
''They just kept banging Into
He said two tractor-trailer rigs
each other.
jackknl1ed across the freeway
Trooper Gary Mitchell ·of PI'
and sandwiched In between their
II

COACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCK.S
BALL CAPS • BAGS
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE

In Wood County, two Akron vehicle accidents In the Cleve:
women whose car was Involved land area, Including a 50-car
In an accident . died alter
pileup at Dead Man's Curve, the
semi-trailer truck coming upon . lake!ront Interchange where I ·90
the accident scene went out of meets. the Shoreway . Other accl· ·
control, striking their stopped dents closed sections of 1-480, I -77
vehicle. A trooper Investigating and 1-271 for a time.
the original accident would have
In northwest Ohio, Seneca
been killed if he hadn't jumped Counly au thorltles lifted a ban on
out of the path of the semi, said travel In the county. On Satur·
Trooper Harold Pennington of day, fans attending u\e Ohio
District 6 headquarters.
Conf~rence women's college bas·
There were numerous multi·
Continued on page 5

a

I

-Custom
. Transfers.
and Lettering-

12IN STOCK!

remains and the cement median
were ·tour or five vehicles that
were entirely charred.
Authorities said the storm also
caused a 57~car accident In
Columbus, tore about half the
roof of a Fairborn auto dealer·
ship and caused scattered power
outages throughout the state.
There ·were so many fenderbenders In Columbus that pollee
stopped taking accident reports
shortly alter noon.

New evidence in war crimes
case could clear Ohio man

THE NEW SYMBOL
FOR QUALITY
IN AMERICA.
FINANCING

.48MONTHS

'

crlbed the evidence against the.
He said he hopes his father 's
CLEVELAND (UP!) - John
Demjanjuk, the retired Clevedefense team will be able to talk man as "overwhelming."
'The primary evidence was
to the woman who Is Jiving In
land area autoworker convicted
the eyewitness testimony," Lad·
Poland, a mile from Trebllnka,
of being sadistic Nazi death
ish said. ''There were eight to 12
where Ivan the Terrible is
camp guard Ivan the Terrible, Is
hopethl a woman can help clear
believed to have tortured and, , survivors who Identified John
Demjanjuk In his visa photo ·he
·
·
his name.
sent thousands of Jews to their
used In gaining residency to the
deaths.
On CBS "60 Minutes" Sunday
Unlted Staes as the guard, Ivan
"(The woman's ·confession)
night Marte Dud ex confessed she
reinforces and proves everything
the Terrible.
was the lover of Ivan the Terrible
"He got 10 years of due process
that what we've been saying the
· . not Demjanjuk, but a man
past 13 years Is the truth," John
In the. Unlled States and Israel.
named Ivan Marczenko.
He didn 't give 10 seconds of c!ue
Demjanjuk has maintained all Jr. said. "He Is not Ivan .the
process to his victims, " Lodlsh
'along he has .been a vlctlln of Terrlble ."
Dem)anjuk who Is nearly 70, said. ·
. mistaken Identity.
has contended a card purported
Israel charged Demjanjuk
The lather of three In April.
to
be
his
Nazi
SS
pass
at
the
crammed
tens of thousands of
1988 beeame the first person
camp
was
a
lake
gas chambers and
prisoners
Into
Trebllnka
death
convicted of war crimes In Israel
provided
by
the
Soviets
In
retalla·
then !Ired up the engines at the
since Ado Jph Eichmann was
tlon for his defection from the Trebllnka death camp In Naziconvicted and hanged In 1962.
Soviet Union durt,ng the war.
occupied Poland. More than
From his prison cell In Israel
But the three-judge panel In 850,000 people, moat of them
Sunday Demjanjuk told WJW-TV
Israel ruled the defense failed to Jews, died at Trebllnka In 1942
by telephone he was pleased with
and 1943.
. prove the Identification card was
the "60 Minutes" report.
While those In the Cleveland
a fake.
"I'm very glad lor that beLuba
Rozsa,
a
member
of
the
area
Ukranlan community have
cause people see that and proba·
Cleveland
Ukranlan
community
rallied
behind his family's effOrts
bly a lot of people now believe
-area causing sUck road conditions. There were no
~SIVE PILEUP - More than 110 vehicles
and
secretery
against
the
Use
of
to
prove
Demjanjuk's Innocence,
me," Demjanjuk said In halting
coOided on 1-87, South oiSar-OJf&amp;Sprk)p, N.Y., · . serious InJuries reported In this chain reaction
In
U.S
Courts
In
Israel remember Nazi
Soviet
Evidence
many
English. "That's what I told
accident. (UPI)
.
Sunday, alter a series of snow storms struck the
said alter Demjanjuk's convlc·
atrocities and are just as con·
them before. That this Is the truth
tlon, "I believe the evidence from
vlnced of Demjanjuk's guilt.
because I'm not the Ivan. "
Demjanjuk faces death by
the Soviet Union was faulty. They
John Demjanjuk Jr. told WJW
hanging .
. he did not know about the "60 like to discredit Ukranlans."
Alter his verdict was read,
However, U.S. Justice DepartMinutes" revelation before It
ment
lawyer
Alvin
Lodlsh
desCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
aired.
·
·
Continued on page 5
called for a 60percentchance of a that exceeded 21.6 mph. violating
(UPI) - The hard-luck crew of
delay. Creighton, his co-pilot and tough, post-Challenger launch
the shuttle Atlantis was
ll!ldellnes.
his flight engineer, meanwhll.e,
grounded a tilth day In a row
Space managers, however, ulwere scheduled to fly back to
Monday with launch on a high·
Hous(9n Monday for practice tlniately waived the rule and
prlorlty mUitary mission desessions in a shuttle simulator . agreed to let Atlantis take off as
COLUMBU.S, Ohio (UPI) -A
"There are a lot of them out apply and go through the prolayed at least 48 hours to
They plan to return to the long as winds were less than 29 .9
state
law
aimed
at
getting
there
who want to work In the cess, but It's just tough to gel
Wednesday because of bad
Kennedy Space Center sometime ~ph, based on an analysts of the
construction
women
In
the
male·domlnated
field, " Fitzgerald
them," Hobbs said. "I'd like to
shuttle's takeoff weight and
weather.
Tuesday for another launch try.
•
•
see
the · ·6.9 percent figure
said.
conti'IICtlon
field
is
falling
short
"We're-disappointed we didn't
As usual with such military other factors.
Columbus
Dis·
of
Its
goal,
the
changed.
Richard
Hobbs,
executive
dl·
It · a craft has 1.8
launch today, but we're con·
Even so, the countdown remissions, the exact launch time
patch
reported
Sunday.
percent
women,
then make the
rector
of
the
Central
Ohio
Assovlnced the launch team ... made
Is· classified - NASA will only mained in ait extended "hold"
goal
2.5
percent;
change the
The In-the-field workforce lor ciated General Contractors, said
the correct deciSion based on the
say liftoff Is planned between because of cloud cover over the
goals to something more
state contractors should be at
the 6.9 percent mandate Is
Information available," Atlantis
mldnlgh( EST .apd 4 a.m. Wed· ship's emergency runway, where
least
6.9
percent
women,
accord·
realistic.''
''unrealistic.
sklppe,r John Creighton said In a
nesday- but the actual takeoff Creighton . and Casper would
lng
to
an
executive
order.
signed
"We
encourage
women
...
to
statement alter climbing out of
time Is thought to be around 12: 50 have had to'attempt a landing In
by Gov. Richard Celeste In 1984.
the $2 billion s)laceplane. "We a.m.
the' event of an· engine failure
But based on figures tiled with
during the first lour minutes of
are looking forward to our next
Division of Equal Employthe
Navy Capt. Creighton, 46, Air !light.
opportunity.' ~
ment
Opportunity, women, on
Force Col. John Casper, 46,
But with Air Force meteoroloFinally, at 2:32 a.m. EST,
'1!ade up only a bout
the
average,
gists calling for an 80 percent co-pilot, Marine Lt. Col. David
launch director Robert Sleek
chance of weather conditions at .Hilmers, 40; the !light engineer, called off the countdown for the 4 percent ·of the In-the-field
workforce of almost 600 OhioAir Force Col. Richard "Mike" day.
launch time Wednesday that
Kenneth Mankin, COndor St., Pomeroy, was cited on lour .
based companies who submitted
would violate tough postMullane, 44, an(j Navy Lt. Cmdr.
"A 2,000-!oot·thlck cloud deck
charges
by Pomeroy Pollee following an accident near the
reports last year.
Challenger safety guidelines,
Pierre Thuot, 34; had been moved into the area at the
Intersection of Spring Ave. and Wyllls Hill, Pom·eroy, early
Creighton and his lour crewscheduled to take off at 12:54 5,000-foot level, violating the
Sunday morning.
·
It the · state barred every
mates face the prospect of yet
a.m. Monday, according to radio visibility rules lor a return to
According
to
pollee,
Mankin
was
traveling
north on Spring
company that failed to meet the
another postponement, which
trafttc monitored by reporters.
launch site abort," said NASA
Ave
at
12:23
a.m.
whim
he
struck
a
parked
truck
owned by Rick
governor's goal, ·lew would be
would tie a shlltl]e record set In
But the shuttle's blacked-out spokesman Hugh Harris.
Pridemore,
Pomeroy.
The
truck
was
pushed
several
feet Into a
left lor state projects.
countdown was ·held up at the
1986.
"Launch director Bob Sleek
brick
wall
owned
by
Hel~n Lyons. There was moderate damage
Only one company, Kirk Wllll'
The weather outlook for a
T·mlnus nine-minute mark beasked the team to provide for ~
to the truck's right fender and left door.
.
ams Co. of Columbus, has been
72-hour-late launch attempt cause of winds at the launch pad
48-hour recycle. .·
The
Mankin
vehicle
was
heavily
damaged
on
the
front
and
left
barred from state contracts
"A minimum of 48 hours Is
the
scene
and
was
side.
Mankin
was
observed
pulling
from
because of falling to reach the 6.9
necessary In order to replenish
·apprehended .by Pomeroy Pollee a short time later. He was
percent goal, said GUbert Price,
the liquid hydrogen and liquid
charged with DWI, leaving the scene of an accident, no
state equal opportunity.
oxygen (ground tanks) as well as
operator's license, and no Insurance coverage.
coordinator.
, ..
give the launch team a well·
Kirk WIUiams sued the · state
~eserved break.''
and obtained a court order
Each daylong launch delay
·allowing It to work lor the state
costs about $250,000 If the at·
George Votnovlch, Republican candidate lor governor of
By United PrMS International
semi-trailer truck sitting In the
while the legality of the goal Is
tempt
Is
called
off
before
the
Ohio,
will be In Meigs County to meet the public on Wednesday
A fiery crash In a blinding snow middle of tile highway .
· spaceship's external !Ink 15 challena:ed.
morning.
Ol!lclala of building trades
$torm along Interstate 75 In Tlpp
•
'I
ran
Into
the
Lincoln
and
the
loaded
with
a
hal!·mnllongaliOns
The chairman of the Votnovlch for Governor campaign In
City killed nine . people and
unions said It Is hard to find
of liquid oxygen and liquid enough qualified women to meet
Llncobl
ran
underneath
,
the
Meigs
County, George COllins, announced today · that the
lnjuied abOut 50 Saturday, a
truck," Feigner said Sunday
hydrogen rocket fuel. If luelln&amp;: the goal.
candidate
will be at St. Paul Lutheran Church, 23l'East Second
· ,
chain reaction accident that
alter staying overnight at Trinity
takes place, the cost of a
St.,
Wednesday,
8 a.m. to 9:15a.m.
But groups trying to place
. veteran Iaw officers described as
postponement goes up to about
, Presbyterian Church In Troy,
The
public
Is
Invited
to meet with the candidate. Coffee and
women In constr.uctlon jObs say
the worst they'd ever seen.
where the Red Cross housed 117 $624,000 per "scrub."
donuls
will
be
served.
plenty of qualified female
Four were believed to be from
people stranded by the storm and
By that reckoning, NASA has workers extat, but finding them
western Ohio, !our from Canada
spent about $2 mliUon so far jobllls tough.
accidents.
·
and one from Tlpp City, accord·
'1 Veered off to the left and trylq to a:et Atlantis and lis crew
. "It's a big dltflcult job, and I
tng to an unconfirmed report.
Into orbit on a classified fll&amp;:bt to don't pretend that It's easy, and f '
then there was a cont!nuous
The home of Rodney Reeves. hiB wife, and three children, was
The death toll (or accidents
deploy what Is believed to be a don't pretend that we're lin·
bombardment of cars lor prOba·
lost
to fire on Saturd•Y.
throua:hout the sta'e atood at 19
bly about 15 or 20 seconds. And $'500 million photo· lsbed," said Price. "But one
The Scipio Towlllblp Fire Department was called to the scene
. Sunday afternoon, ·otrlclala aald.
reconnal11ance spy eateiUte,
·then there wu a very large noise
thing the p i hal done II locus
on State Route 681 at 11:53 a.m. Saturday. The Scipio
Wltnesaes said the chain·
Avlatlon Week &amp; Space Tech· attention on briJIIIIII women Into
like a bomb. It 110unded like a
department
wu called to assist the Albany Fire Department.
reaction .,ueup ln. Miami County
nolo&amp;:Y maa:aztne reported last the skilled trades."
major vehicle just comln&amp;: down
A
spokesman
lor the Scipio Fire l)epartment, Sharon Jewell,
bl!pn about 4ll.m. Saturday In a
month Atlantis will beJaunched
and crunching all the cars in the
"It's
not
difficult
at
all
to
hire
stated
that
the
ortatn
ot tbe !Ire was undetermined at this time.
blllldlng white-out, a complete
on a trajectory carrying It closer ·
center."
women,"
said
Tim
F1U.erald,.
·She
did,
however
state
that It wu her understanding the
loll ot visibility caused by
Larry Zaborowski said the&lt; to the Eastern Seaboard than · general manager ot Ampsco Inc.
Reeves'
had
Insurance
on
the trailer.
blowing snow.
ever before to place the eateiUte In Columbus, a company that
. horror Ill! wltnes&amp;ed was ha;d to
Seven
flre!J&amp;:hters
were
on
the scene lor approximately three
Clordon Feigner of Toledo,
Iii a 127-mDe-hlgh orbit allowing Installs refiecttve highway road
describe. Cars were every where
to lour hours.
.
whOle car was demolished but · and In every posiUon, &amp;()me
It to fiy over every point In- the markers. Women make up about
There
were
no
Injuries
reported ..
escaped Injury, eald a car from a
Soviet Union south of 62'.5 de- 9 percent of Ampsco's work
completely charred and others
rl&amp;:ht·band lane puDed In trqnt or
COntinued on page 5
crews .
Continued on page 5
COntinued on page 5
his vehicle. Feigner eaw a

Shuttle launch postponed .

OR

REBATES TO $1250

1990 BUICK
SKYLARK COUPE

Pick 4

•

. The Raccoon Creek Story•••

· February
Sale Days!

Piek3
932

. Page 4

Com, forage set Tuesday

F11mily Plannhtg
It Makes Sense•••

Ohio Lottery

Oklahoma
·tmocks off
Missouri

.

New law is violated by contractors

OVE~ 75 NEW

·
·
'
:

---Local news briefs-

Discount Prices
Plus Rebates/

Automatic Transmission, Air CondHlonlng,
AMIFM Stereo
·

FEBRUARY SALE PRICES
ON QUALITY
FURNISHINGS FOR
YOUR HOME!!

~--....-'89 CADILLAC ·
SEVILLE
"Low Miles"

,·

9:30-8:00

DeliveryI

Tu11day-Saturday

991-1671

'

LOADED, LOW MILES

•Curios
tOpen Steck led.rooms
•Whirlpool &amp; Ioper
Appliances
•Syhra11la Televisions .
•Hal Trns
•Wallpaper
•Linoleum
•Desks

rliilllill, I""IIICii,

9:30-11:00

-

"LOW MILES"

",

'

Fiery .wreck kills 9,
traffic toll at 19

-

Voinovich to visit Meigs

Fire destrQYS Reeves residence

l(tfel".tQK
.r·
ii's,

STORE HOURS
Monday

SHARP, SPORT PACKAGE,

$22,900

y

•Dining loom
Furniture
•Dinette Sets
tSerta Matt"sses
•Bedroom Suites
eca'rpet &amp; Pad
tlerklne ledlnen
•Sofa, Loveseats
tOccaslo.l T.Wea

'89 BUICK · '89 BUICK
CENTURY REGALS
'

NEW s31,400
ONLY

Driver cited on four charges

(6U) 446-JJIJ

fUIOI COfl&amp;£11

1900 EASTERN AVENUE

-·

"'••

'.

•'

.

GALUPOLISI OHIO

·''

\\

I~

., ..,,

.

·

�t
' f

•

Pomaoy-Mh:ldllpteli'"'., OhiO

•

COmmentary

Redmen lose season's fmale to Walsh

Pta• 2-n. c•r •• •• ,

PomtiOV Mldap wt CMD '
Moncllly. February 28, 1810

'

-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::~--~~--~~----~~--~--~~-~
, ~~·· --~·-' --~--~--~~~------------~------------------- "
r

The Daily Sentinel .
111 Cont Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

.
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA
'

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLE!SE HOEFLICH
General MaliiiJer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslltant Pr bllsber/Controner
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assocl~tlon. ·
LE,T TERS OF OPINION ar e welcome. They should be ll!ls lhan300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·

ttes.

.

The primary was
over before it began
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - A funny tb!Jtg happened on the way to this year's
primary election In Ohio - 11 was ovet before 11 started.
When the dust settled at the deadline for filing nominating petitions
last Thursday, almost all the aspirants for statewide office In both
major polltlcal parties had earned a free ride to their nominations.
The Democratic tandem of Anthony Celebrezze Jr. and Eugene
Bran stool for governor and lleutenant governor bas token opposition
from two other teams on the ballot and two as wrlte·lns.
Of aV the candidates, only state Sen. Lee Fisher of Shaker Heights,
the endorsed Democratic candidate for attorney general, has a fight
on hls bands.
Thls unhealthy situation ls a reflection of changing times. Oddly,
whlle the presidential nominations have been taken out of the
smoke-fllled rooms to be determined by the state primary elections
and by televls ion, Ohio Is going til the reverse direction.
The need for huge campaign bankrolls, and the unwllllngness of
candidates to compete unless guaranteed a victory, served to narrow
the field .
With a great deal at stake (contrOl otthe Apportionment Board and
Its ability to draw legislative.boundaries for the 1990s), the ptJlltlcal
parties wanted to conserve resources for the fall campaign.
The result Is pre·detl!rmtned slates which have already"begun
.
·
·
sniping at eacl;l other.
. Fisher and, bls opponents are likely to occupy the spotlight this
spring, since they have the only real contest.
·
Although Fisher bas been working the longest toward attorney
general, bas raised by far the most money and bas the party
endorsement, the others could make It Interesting.
They are Mahonlng · County 'Prosecutor James Philomena,
Cleveland attorney Charles Brown and Frederick Middleton,.a black
attorney from Flsber's hometown of Shaker Heights.
Clearly, Brown Is playing the old "name game," 'r elying on the
historical popularity of the name "Brown" In statewide elections.
It may still work. Sherrod !3rown has been secretaryofstate for two
terms. Herbert Brown, a former sports writer, got elected to the Ohio
Supreme Court In 1986.
.
There Is ample preceden_t for Fisher to become a victim. In 1970,
Ohio House Minority Leader John McDonald was the party-endorsed
candidate In a four·man field. There was no way he eould lose,
.Insiders thought.
But William Brown, an·unknown attorney from Cadlz,let his name
speak for blm. He beat McDonald easily, went on to be attorney
general for 12 years and came within a whisker of being governor.
Republican State Chairman Robert Bennett told reporters 111 the
end of last week be believed a year ago that Hamuton County
Commissioner Robert Taft II probably would be the GOP's strongest
candidate for governor.
But Bennett said then-Mayor George Volnovlch of Cleveland
rebounded from his dlsas trous 1988loss to Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
D.()hlo, and reactivated his strong grassroots Republican organlza·
tlon In the counties.
By December, the state party knew Volnovlch bad the upper hand
and finally convinced Taft to run for secretary of state.

Letters to the editor
Wants policy changed
Dear Editor:
I am writing this letter to ask
why some hospitals place the
names of people who are admit·
ted and discharged In the paper
and some do not put the names of
people In who are admitted: I feel
this Is not right.
Have people at the hospitals
ever talked to someone and been'
asked about their health and
have to reply "O.K. I just go tout
of the . hospital I was In for a
couple of weeks." It makes you
feel like to fool.
Some people you know as
friends bu taren't In close contact
with that you would like to visit
'because they are In the hospital
or you pick up the paper and read
where they have been In a wreck
but It doesn't have It In there If

they have been admitted.
I know of one lady who Is 74
years old. This lady lives ahme.
She treasures every card she
gets, Christmas, get well, any
kind or cards. Ifeel getting a card
while In tlie hospital Is as
Important as medical treatment,
these go hand In band. I have also
heard people say "Well, I was In
the hospital and dldn'tevan get a
card from so and so."
So I feel people who feel as I do
should write a letter to let It be
known of how they feel towards·
this policy. So just maybe they
will change their policy In
regards to this.
Sincerely
William T. Kimes
Racine.

Today in history

What~s

a poor·M~ist to

WASHINGTON- Tbecbanaes of mC)I'e than a year ..,o as a
In Eastern Bloc polltlcs bave "doctrinaire Marxist who oppitched the terrorist world Into . poses hljacklai, but advocates
an Identity crisis. TerroriSt lead· terrorism within Israel" and Is
ers who once ldentltled them"close to the USSR. "
selves as "Marxists" to get
Hawatmeh' s current aile·
money from tbe Soviets, now glance Is t.o Palestine Liberation
must be more circumspect.
Organtzatlqn leader Yaaslr Ara·
· A case In PQint Is Nayef fat. Hawatmeh, believes that. he
Hawatmeb, a Palestinian terror· and other Palestinians will have
1st who used to wear tbEi Marxist their own state only tbrough a
label. But when we Interviewed ' 'revolution of tile masses," and
him In Damascus, he had he told us that the current
changed· his brand to ln!lfada, or uprising on tile West
"democratic."
Bank, Is Just the revolution that
' The 52·yj!ar·old leader of the the doctor ordered.
Democratic Front for ihe Libera·
Hawatmeh loathes being
lion of Palestine Is slim and soft called a terrorist, probably bespoken. He fashions himself as a cause, as terrorists go, be Is a
sort or thinking-man's terrorist. moderate.
He only picks Ol! Israel. He
doesn't bother Americans. lie
He pointed out that, "The
condemns sloppiness' an(! imne- DFLP was the only party rrorn·
cessary Violence among )!Is fel· the beginning aaatnst hijacking
low terrorists. And be apoio~ planes, against bitting trains,
when his own people get carried against the famous Munich oper·
away.
atlon (at the 1972 Olympics) and
A secret State Department against all such kinds of opera·
report described the Hawatmeb lions. We were the first to

doAndersonandVanAtta.

each operation;"·
denounce the Achille Lauro (ship
The moat recent DFLP opera·
hijacking) operation. and also
tlon took place In 1988, when a
the first to denounce tbe Pan Am
Hawatmeb follower lobbed a
(fijpt 103) operation. This Is well
molotov cocktail at a car carry·
known on the international level.
lng Israeli Industry and Trade
We are against such lndlvldual
Minister Ariel Sharon - an
acta, against Involving people
who have nothing to do With· advocate of force to put down tbe ·
Intifada. Sharon was not hurt.
Middle East problems."
Hawatmeb doesn't do any of
The Pentagon profileofHawat·
the
dirty work hlmsell. He sits In
meb and tbe DFLP cites as their
Damascus
under the protection
most Infamous act, the takeover
of
Syrian
President
Hafez Assad,
of ali Israeli school In Maalot In
but doesn't take orders from his
1974. Some 27 Israelis were killed
host. Assad tried to aet Hawat·
and 134 wounded. Hawatmeh
tneh to denounce Arafat, · but
now says the killing of civilians
was a mistake, done against his . Hawa tmeh resisted. He admitted
to us he has considered moving to
orders. The DFLP tried to seize
200 civilians In the same town Iraq If Assad gets too
five years later.
demanding. .
For a one-time Marxist, Ha·
Still Hawatmeb Insists that hls
watmeh appears to have ca~~~rbt
beef Is with the Israeli military,
not civilians. ·•we always plan to . the democracy bug. HI&amp; ulttmate
goal, he told us; Is a democratic
Implement ~ these operations
Palestinian state, following more
11galnst Israeli soldiers and those
the European parliamentary
Institutions which help or serve
concept than the American
the mllltary occupation," he
model .
said. "But we are unable to
caretuUy control the details of
@ttSOI'--S"rAil·TI'l~M"'

o...ware H. Grow CttyJl
WNtlud II, BrMkbvea •

IDJhnl $1, Col Mlfflt• 47
IAIM M, LMeuler 4t
Lllral• . . .,.,.., $1;- N Ollliltli!. 47
Pldlerln.. on Tt, 0.1 Watter.on 'll
Re•ld-ra. Ill. Newarkll
o
Syf&amp;oullvlew 57, Tol8cott U
Tol ND 41, ToiWbltmer 17
Tal DeVIIhl.. U, Tel Walle tl

Tel111aoomber It 8)'1 NonhYleW 41
W•Jiake1t, Alnilerllll
Weattr.tUe N 11.

Wsler~lleS

II

Dl\'lllaall
Dreldea ,.,., Vallq "'· IV Bel mea •

M.,ntne II, Me.-.twtoklll

Wellll&amp;fr Tl1nJ 41, ,\\lr llellu -II
DlvlllonlU
Bltom Carroll n, WMI Jtflenoa tl

.ekeye.Valler •• Ml Glle.IIS .
Granme 11. OIIIIIUIJ 14

• • 71. aruete. a

BliNn II, Coli• Wsa Rav II
Ubett,J u ....... Woeetlall t1
Udlaaas 14, Palrfleld Unkt1 51
MqMet• U, Woodmere It
Nore v...... M•EIDnS4
Sandiiiii;J M.....,. Jl, EdliN N
Talky Valin 41,111_
. 1• Valley tt
W Mulloldapm II, 8henandoab U
IMvl•lltn IV ·
Ber.e Unk»nU, Luc:Mioer Fllheral
Daa~lle

M. Cenlerbuq: H

ll'rul Fur Gl'f!f!ll U, MIIIH' 41

GaraWa)' II, z .... Ruecran1 II (ta)

'.

Lakelud It, lewett«lo Sl
Mtc..,biNrc M. w UbertJ8alem!l

Newark CMII41, ea-t Wlnche~~kr 45
W~rtlltnafon Chr 1'7, Palrtlanb 42

Pro results
NATIONAL B.UDTBALL .U80C.
s.&amp;unlq . . . . .
'
Walhl.paalU,
IN

om•

.Uianta 114, ........ "

.PIIoenlx Itt,

Sli1U'41.,-' • Oh..
t ..~!lfp a.~biU sco~•
t •t ~· ............. -.~ ....
• .•. •
Feb.U
~r*le, 'IS, Ohio 8118

Republican dilelmna
·WASHINGTON (NEA)- The
Republican Par,ty Is basking In
some unexpectedly good news: A
recent new New YorkTtmes·CBS
Poll shows that, for the first tlli1e .
In more than 40 years, It has
reached parity wlth the
Democrats.
But the GOP Js also learning
that tbll new popularity carries a
price that may be too high for
some traditional Republicans to .
pay.
According to the poll, of the .
1,557 adults Interviewed Iii early
January, 45 percent called them·
selves Democrats or were lean·
lng toward the Democratic Party
while 44 percent said they were
Republicans or were leaning
·toward the Republlcan Party.
According to the poll analysts,
this capped a trend that had been
showing up In Times-CBS polls
throughout 1989. Tabulating the
results or seven of Its national
PQlls, analysts calculated that
Democratic ldentlfcatlon ran
ahead of Republican ldentlflca· ,
lion by only 46 percent to 44
percent. This II In sharp contrast
to the beginning of the decade
when most polls showed Democrats outnumbering Republicans
about 53 percent .to 34 percent.
The biggest growth among

Republicans has come In
younger and mlddle-c1assvoters.
In the latest poll, Republlcans
were ahead of Democrats In
voters under the age of 30 (45
percent to 42 percent) and In
voters 65orolder (45percentto43
percent) and among those mak·
lng Pl,OOO or over (47 percent to
41 percent) and over $50,000 (55
percent to 39 percent).
The last time tbe GOP found
Itself In a position of near parity
was just after World War ll: In
1946, polls showed that 40 percent
of voters considered themselves
Republican while 39 percent said
they were Democrats. That year
the GOP took control of both the
House and Senate.
However, the good news contains some bad news for what
have become bedrock elements
of tbe Republican Party over the.
past 20 years.
During the 1970s, conservative
el~ments bf the GOP wrested
control of the party from moder·
ales and begy promoting a
social conservatism that
matched traditional Republican .
fiscal conservatism.
The early and mld-19808 was
the heyday for these social
conservatives. They elected Ronald Reagari twice, and for four

years - 1982 through 1986 Many younger Republicans do
elected a majority In the Senate.
not necessarily believe that less
More lmPQrlant t,o many, they government reilllatlon Is always
· bad absolute control of the party best, or that federal social :
to the point where the few
programs are wrong, or that all
modera(e Republicans still In tax Increases are bad, or that
office were considered mllltary spendlng should always
mavericks.
·be a top priority.
.The new reality Is that while
Already tliese new Republl·
many of the new. converts to cans are making tbelr presence
Republicanism are fiscal conser·
felt. One example Is In the bitter
vattves, they are actually social race In Texas for the Republican liberals. In fact, ma!IY or these gubernatorial nomination In tbe '
new· Republicans actually come March 13 primary.
from a traditional Democratic
Kent Hance, 43, Is the embodl·
background. They have left the ment of a bedrock RepublicanDemocrats for various reasons·, pro-life, antl·tax and rock-ribbed ·
but they have not left behind all In his conservatism. A former ;
the social Ideas with which they Democratic cougres!jffien who ·
grew up.
. led the 1982 "boll weevil" revl)lt
The most obvious example Is of conservative Southern House ·
the abortion Issue. In 1989, · Democrats to Reagan's side, he
Republlcans lost key gubernator· converted to Republlcanllm and ~
lal contests In VIrginia anil New . has been a major player In Texas
Jersey ~ause their candidates GOP PQlltics. He Is currently '
stuck to strict anti-abortion PQSI· · chairman of the State RaUroad
tlons. Now party leaders are Commlssiori.
frantically trying IO fashl!ln an
Hance was considered the
abortion PQ&amp;Itlon that wm see . odds·on favorite to win the
them through the next several nomination to sueceed GOP Gov.
elections while not Igniting a civll Blll ClementS. But now Hance
war within ·the party.
,
finds himself lagging in the PQils,
Abortion Is not the only Issue running third In a four-man
the Republican Party will have to ·contest. If he loses, It wlll be a ·
debate as It struggles with tbe :shock felt nationally within tbe •
new pluralism within Its tanks. GOP.
I

Why they're ,. hounding Ronald Reagan

Mo•• Vf!rnoo-CeWwUJe.ppd
Lake Erle-~aloae, ppd

st. ppd
1

Champi!:.MIIIp

.

Ohio Women' a Cellqe Bakldball
By Unled Pre. . ln&amp;er..Uioeal

Feb. 24 '

Ml.-nl II. Toledn If
II,)' Wes)eran ft. Aallland 53

Tourname• .
Ohkl Athhlllc C.llffftiiCI!!
Champktnahlp
Heldl!lber181, Capital to

NarUI Cout A&amp;llletk CordHen cf:
CllampktMhlp
WoOllier 71, WIUenbera If

Su ..., •• Collecr
BMIIHb&amp;ll hdlla
•

We.l Vlq;lllla C.nference
Chllnpla..tllp

A.IW.,.•••••
71, Conco.,. '74
Eul
Bo ...n U. •· Maine t:l
FonlhJm Ill, Nl.an 71 ,
, Rolf O'ou II!, eu..-ua 8$
a.... u. C.Udoa 8&amp; 71
La bile 'Jt, st. Peter's II, OT
Mlllen~Uie '71, Gan•al4
SJntOIRII, Pr4W141Mce 81
W. Vll'ld116a "11, Pea• 8&amp;. 71, OT

.....

o.ake 78. Artie• 71
Florida AAM 83, IIHIIuae·Ctolanu 'tt
Georwl• 81, Loul••na St. 81

Viral•• 11, N. Caron• St. 71
MldwNt
•
. . . . 11, a. ..... '1'1
MlcW••-* · n, bldl . . tl
SeuUIWoeAI

Mo .. .,- GAIIIft

Or~~m•• Plrllladelfllll. 7:aep .m .

Miami at Allan ... 1: II p.m.
San Antonio at Sacramento. 10: 3Cl p.m.
'l'ueadQ Gamee
OltrloUe a&amp; Orlando, niJii
Hou•on a1 Dehell, Blpt
New Jer.,- alia•-· nip&amp;
DIIIM .. New Vork, nlpt.
WMWnatonalMia. .ata, niPt
Mllwa~t~llee .II Cllloap, nl1ht
Denwr at Phoet~lx, nl1llt
Suute at LA Clipper~~, nlpil
Uleyel•d at Portland, •I.W
MAoiUR INDOOR SQCCER LEAG UE

'
8at.-d8.1 Result s
Danu 4, De\'eland 3 ·
Kan.a City I, Wlcldla 2
St. LOub 6, San rnep I
Tacoma 1, Balllmore 4

Pistons
triumph,
.

s.•-.vRnult

M'lthtla 4, &amp;an. . Cit)' 2
MendQ GaJM~J
No ramftl ~~thedllled
TueiiCIIQ' GanwH
No lllnf!JI aeheduled
Bolllnt

, ' Fe~erwelshl•
bl &amp;tewood, tall. - Juu Jo• Eltrada
VIL Behi!Jio Ro)M
Wel&amp;erwelaflta
lnllewoad, Calif. - C::arto. Santos VJ&amp;.
. Qulac)' T.,lor
MI..Uewelptla
PMadena, Texaa - Ron CoiiiM "" .'
Reule Miller
, J

.......

U.S .

-

Wan Weill, .::at•. -lSI,. . VII'Jlnla

-au.,.., a.•aa wera.

Memphl.. T•a. -

to.,..mnl

RoUI!rdun,

I!Jt,•t ' Voln

Nttt~eraa. -

,\IN Werelcl h•,....eat

IliUM

NATIONAL HOCII.EV LEAGUE
18aturd., RHulhJ

Girls 8COI'e8
~

•.

Cam~p II. New PkiiHelpllla II
Cln Whllr•l&amp;, OallcAIIef •
"
Cia Mother Meter 11. 0• Vrt'lllhw 18
eot&amp;u• •· O.bll• n . ·

'

s..d., ae...lll

Cllkap •·

r•wetpllla 1

..,,..... Wl•lllpeat
Mtalrell I,IM. LG ... 5, OT
Cal prJ II, l'.llmotlfia• 4

...... o......

....... NY Rupr., 1: II p.m.
MilD IIIII .. q.ebec, 1:11 p.m.

.,_...,Guru.

'l'er-*o AI Va110011wr, II:JI p.m.

-Sports briefs-

Olt ... atWIIW ...oa,alpt
llolfllo .. 81. Lou, •1101
Whtnltel It Mt•-.ea. IIIPI

Patriots may fire Berry after 5-11 year
BOSTON (UPI) ...,. Tbe New
England Patriots, coming off a
lackluster 5-11 season, are poised
to fire coach Raymond Berry and
are looklni at Pittsburgh Steel·
era defensive coach Rod Rua t as
a replacement, published reports
said Monday.
· Berry and General Manager
Patrick Su)llvan were "at loager·
beads" over the head coach's
refusal to hire . offensive and
defenslve .coordlnators and delegate authority to tbem, team
owner Victor Klam told the

Boston Herald and tbe Boston
Globe.
"There's been a pbllosophlcal
split between Jtaymond and Pat
Sullivan," Klam said. ''Ray·
mond won't change his mind and
I know Pat ltn't golq to cbanp
his. The dectaion on wbo collcbes
the team Is Pat's."
•
Sulllvan was on a ski vacation
In ·Colorado over the weekend
and was slated to meet with
Berry on Monday, Klam Kid.

Maurice Cheeks, playing his first
home game for the Knlcks since
they acquired him from san
Antonio for Rod Strickland,
scored 12 points and Gerald
'
Wllklns 10.
Detroit, meanwhlle, had bal·
anced scoring. Bill L,a lmbeer had
16 points, Vinnie Johnson 12,
James Edwards 11 and Dennl&amp;
Rodman 10.
The Pistons, who had an NBA
season-high 13-game winning ;
streak snapped Friday night In
Atlanta, handed New York Its
third borne loss of the season.
New York, 22-3 at home, at·
tracted Its 18th Madison Sqaure
Garden sellout.
In other NBA games Sunday ,
Cleveland blasted Charlotte 102·
86, Chicago nipped New Jersey
107-106 In overtime, Indiana
defeated Portland, 117-112, Dal·
las clipped · Minnesota · 87·82,
Boston pounded Denver 115-107,
Milwaukee topped Miami 113·
108, San Antonio edged the LA
Clippers 107-106. Seattle beat
Golden State 110·102 and Utah
upended the LA Lakers 104·103.
At Richfield, Ohio, Larry
Nance scored 24 points and .Hot
Rod wunams added 18 points and
11 rebounds to lead Cleveland to
Its third straight triumph. The
Hornets are 1·23 on tbe road.
' .

By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
The Ne~ York Knlcks wanted
to send a niessage Sunday to the
Detroit Pistons. They Instead
were banded a stinging rebuke . .
The defending NBA champions
tuncUoned llke a tight unit
Sunday, whlle the Knlcks were
disorganized from the start. The
.result was a 98·87 Detroit victory
In a game between Eastern
Conference' leaders .
Detroit, sparked ·by Joe Dum·
ars' 31 points, placed five scorers
In double flgures ..
The Knlcksare winless in three
games against Detroit, a team
they beat four times last season.
While New York looked upoil this
game as a way to measure up
aggalnst Detroit, the Pistons
approached It as just another
regular-season game In which
they needed to play well.
The Knlcks, as they often have
this season, relied on Patrick
Ewing. He finished with 37
. points, but received little help·.

MondA,)' Sport111 Calendu

other
C4Jiorado Sprlnp, Cblo.
Ch lmp6o .... lpt

98~87

'

WMIII,.P.nt, Del Nit 4
New Jerlr)' I, NV II)Uiderd, II If.:

w...

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

\

'114, LA Lallw1 tiJ

'

Orepb H, S.utber• Cal 7t
llu ilftl .,, Arllo,. 81 . 441

eo•--•

IIIII . . II.Y, PI! b. U

·WUliam Rusher

utah

Oldt.hiM'ftll. 111. 81,
n
Tnu ChriiUu M, Teu. Tecll 88

Ok ..hona 11'7, ll••wt N

(5·11, sophomore, Belpre) and .
Four members of the Unlver·
slty of Rlo Grande women's
forward Kathy Snyder (5·11,
sophomore, Gahanna).
basketball teain were honored by
· Kerr! Kidwell (5·11, freshman ,
Dis trlct 22 and the Mid-Ohio
Hamersville, Ohio), a forward
Conference during the annual
for the ~io ladles, received
coaches' meetlilg Friday.
Ref:lwomen mentor Doug Foote · honorable mention from the
MOC .
.
said the district coaches selected
starting guard Debbie Fredrick
In addition, the seventh-place
Redwomen, · who finished the
(5·6, freshman, South Charles. ton, Ohio) lor the All· District
seasoi118·11 overall and 6·2)n the
conference, were paired off with
team and first team, All· MOC.
Named . to the MOC second
No. 2 seeded Mount St. Joseph In
team 'were center Ann Jilarnltz

Milwaukee lUI, Ml-1108
Saa Mttdo 111, lA Cllpp!!r•llfl
StliiiUe lit, Goldea state lin

New ler.,- 3, Olcap a
Ddrolll, NV blafiWsJ
Wl•pea J, •arlfonll
Mo•real II, Pltt••ulll I
81. IAul• I, Qtaellec I
lol&amp;all S, MI•IIN. . t
V~~~~et~awrl, Lo•AIIplel4

Glrll Ollto Hlp8ct.ol &amp;ua.8ball

chief l!lleclltive.
contras wbile federal funds. were
Unfortunately lor the Demo- banned. But he has firmly denied
crats, no shred of evidence baa that be was aware that PQrtions
ever · been found tbat Reaaan of the arms sale proceeds had
Reqan be required to t.ettlfy on
knew of the dlversion. Tbe first been diverted' to them.
his behalf; the court bu aareed,
·
Investigation of tbe whole affair,
to tbe ••tnt ot ordering tbe
by tbe Tower Commission, proNot once, In all of special former prealdent to auwer quea·
duced none. The second, a : prosecutor Lawrence Walsh's tiona on videotape; and Reqan
'full-scale TV extravaeanza
hu consented to do ao.
far from devastating proaecustaaed by the congreulonal
t!Ons 'o f various alleaed offenders
He baa alto tumed over to 1M
Democrats themtelvell, fared no Involved In the controversy, has
court certain periOIIIl diary
better. The lndepeDdeni re- a single scrap of evidence contra· entries, and tbe court baa found a ~
aearcb ot scorea of avid repar- dlctlni Reqan's uaertloncome
number of tbele conceivably ,
tera, wltb PuUtzer Prlzel daneto ltpt But tbe bope drap bl8
relevant toPolndutar'adetenae,
Ina In their eyes, likewise critics on, like thirsty wanderers
One of them, tbe ludae ....,ted .
reaulted only In failure.
In a desert, tormented by the
IJi a footnote, II au "&amp;mbiJUOUI" .
Rl!qan's position on the luue distant mlraae of an oull.
document wblcb ' 1arauably" In- ,
bas always been perfedly clear.
dicat.et that Reapn wu aware .
Now the last trial - that of the
He hu said repeatedly that he former National SeCurity Coun· . of the dlveralon of fiiDda.
·
was well aware of the sale of ell director, Adm. John Polndex·
There, juat PCllllbly, It tbe
arms to Iran, and turtbermbre ter - Ia approaching, and once
Democrat•' Holy Grall. Tbe ;.
' thaf be knew of -Indeed; that be aaaln hope ll .filckerlng ln the
judp'1 cbaractertzatloll of It '
enc0\11'8fed - private and fo~:­
falll
lpectacularly lbort of any :
bre.,ts of the anti·Reqan for·
, elgn aid for the NJcarlli1IBD . ces. Poindexter bas inlllted that
sucb conclualon..
&gt;

IIMtoa Ill,, Deaver 107

Defiance 81, Bhi'ft• 5I
'nrii•Urba., ppd
·
FlndiQ-WIIm6nl(oa, ppd

TOUI'Mml!ftla

Four Redwomen net coaches'
recognition
..

ln•ana 111. Portlalld liZ
Dallu 8'7, Ml•-ota 82

Willi! 110, HI• Grandi! tO

M•lklnpm 81, Otterbein 511

II

Re~~Jjls

Detrvk 88. New York 87

Wrllllt Sl H. Akra. 77
Xa~ler Ill, lui~r M
1
Uberty (Val 71, VounptownSt 7Z (ot )
Clnelud 8t ts. W Jlllnob II
Ky Wesle)'an ~. tUil.land 71
Drke It, Shaw~tee Sl II

To•ramea&amp;s
Nortta CoM I ..Uhlellc CoDference
0.1111pkn•hlp
WltiCBIM!rs-Wo..ter, ppd to su nd q
OhiO Athletic Conference

Nine consecutive po~sesalons
were all vlsltlna Walsh needed to .
erase a comforts ble lead J))' the
Unlverllty or Rto Grande men's
basketball team Saturday during
O'Dell Lumber NliJ!I and defeat
tbe Redmen, 110.90, . In Rio
Grande's final . regular season
' game.
.
"Several of our guys played
h'a rd," Coach John Lawhorn
commented In a post-gaine Inter·
view as the team ended the
campaign at 15-16. "We bad an
outstanding first ball and just
couldn't shoot It In the second."
''There was a lot for us to gain
.by winning this game," second·
year Cavaliers mentor Dan O'C·
onnor remarked. "In the first
half, Rio Grande did a great job
or execudng the game, which
was helped by the fact they shot
verr well from the perimeter.
•,
Then they just ran out of gas."
The victory boosted Walsh's
record to 20·9. It was Walsh's ·
first win over the Redmen Jn
Lyne Center since Jan, 25, 1983,
when the Cavaliers posted a 61-47
triumph on their way to the
Dls trlct 22 championship.
With ·Jeff Brown and 'Brad
Schubert sboothlg their 3-polnt
field goal attempts wltb deadly
accuracy, Rio Grande crested to
• teammate durln1 Saturday nl&amp;bt's 1arne at Lyne
an early advantage, holding a
HARRISON PASSES- Wllb Walsh Jll&amp;l'd Carl
41·26 margin by 8: 50 In the first
Center. Harrison was held to el1hl polnls In lbe
Ro1ers (14) on his back, Rio Grande guard Gary
half.
Redrnen's 110·90 losa.
Harrison ( 10) paases over Walsb defenders Jason
Playing Its trademark athletic
F~derlck (15) and Charles Glenn ' (33) to a
style, Walsh got back on track at
101.5
8:40 when Charles Glenn. hitting Cavaliers kept up the pressure to and done everything we've asked offense In the nation
on a 3-polnte·r, narrowed the post their highest lead, 102-79, him to do. I'm very proud of points per game.
Due to the blast of winter that
· deficit to 12. Jeff Young, who led with 2: 47 remaining.
hlm."
wracked
the state Saturday, the
the visitors with a game high of29
Brown, the 6·5 starting forward
"I was disappointed In some of
Rio
Grande-Walsh
tilt was the
p~lnts, netted two consecutive
our decisions, obviously," La· from Newark, paced the Red men
. baskets and Elliot DeVan, Jason , wborn remarked. "Walsh's at• with 24 points arid nine rebounds . only MOC contest played. The
while Williams bad 18 points, Tlftln-Urbana, Mount Vernon
Frederick and Carl Rogers each
hletlclsm got to us."
chipped In to put Walsh within
Lawhorn added that while he Schubertl7 and Troy Donaldson Nazarene-Cedarville and Ohio
three (43-40) with 5:40 left.
was unhappy with the defense, he 10. Harrison was credited with· Dominican-Central State games
Successful trips to the foul line
felt the team as a whole had seven assists, bringing his sea· · were postponed.
In District 22 , however, Dyke
by Brown and Gary Harrison
"come a long way and Improved son total to 256 (8.5 per game) .
defeated
Shawnee State, 94-86,
Brown,
the
gave Rlo Grande a six-point
team's
leading
rea lot."
and
Defiance
hurled Bluffton,
cushion, but Walsbcapltallzedon
bounder,
ended
the
campaign
It was also the final game for
85·51.
some Rio Grande foul ~ro)lble
center John Lambcke, the 6·5 with ~50 boards, an average of 8.3
. a'n d netted a 49-48lead at 2:04 on a
' Box score:
senior from Wilmington wh'o per outing.
RIO GRANDE (90) - Gary
Rio Grande shot 43.7 percent
Zedrlc McOonald basket. The
played In 25 games this season
· teams exchanged the lead once
and recorded 10 points over from the floor (31-71) and con- Harrison, 2-4-8; Mark Erslan,
0·1·0·3; Brad Schubert, 1-5·0-17;
each for the next minute, but Walsh, Including his first·ever neeted on 15 of 20 attempts from
Glenn's two points at the foul line 3-polnter. Sldellned for six games the free throw line for 75 percent. Jeff &lt;Brown, 3·4·6·24; Troy Do·
naldson, 4·2·10; John Lambcke,
with 27 ~conds left gave his t~am
due to an ankle Injury at Urbana They· snared 29 rebounds and
3·1-1·10;
Darius Williams, 5·2·2·
a three-marker cushion they
suffered
14
turno~ers
.
The
Cava·
In December, Lambcke .rejolned
18.
TOTALS
18-13-15·90.
built to 57·52 ·as the half ·erided.
Hers
were
58.3
percent
on
field
· the starting lineup Feb. 13 at
WALSH ( 110) - Jeff Young,
. Rio Grande reiallated with a Cedarville. .
goals (42·72) andnetted17of20at
full-court press as the second half
In a ceremony prior to the the line for 85 percent. On the 18·3·2·29; Jason Frederick, 1·3·4·
opened, but a spate of cold gamf, he and his parents, Walter boards, Walsh bad 38 and limited 15; Charles Glenn, 5-3,2·21; Zed·
rlc McDonald, 5·2'12; Corry
shooting and Walsh's strong and Patricia Lambcke, were Its turnovers to nine. Glenn
AppUne, 7·0·14; Carl Rogers,
defense allowed O'Connor's club honored by tlie team and fans.
recorded 10 rebounds.
to outrace the hosts 17-1 by 13:55.
The win Improved Walsh's 1·0·2; Elliot DeVan, 1·0·2; Corey
"It me;mt a lot to me person·
Schubert's trlfeeta shot at ally to have John flnlsh with a Mld-Ohlo Conference standing to Fields, 1-2-4; Greg Gelg, 3·2·8.
TOTALS 33·9·17·110 . .
12: 24 and a bucket by Darius win, but It didn't work :out that 6-5 as the Redmen went to 5-6.
Halftbne score -Walsh 57, Rio
WIUiams at 11: 48 put Rio Grande way," Lawhorn said . "But he's a However, Rio Grande ended with
to within 13 (74-61) , but the young man who has worked bard the third highest team scoring Grande 5Z.

Clnelabd Ill, Olll'lotte 81
ell leap 117, New Jene~ I Of, OT

Day lea 88, Dehvlt8!

OMo Domliillc...ce..nl

Ph~flphla

Sullllllf

.lent St SS, Qhkt \118
BowiiiiC Green II, &amp;a Mlch 10 (ot)
Toletll 85, Ml..a 74
'
Claclanatlll, Tullule 511

I.
.•

Scoreboard ...
Oal~

To the Knights of tbe Rowid
By United Preea lnteraatlonal
Table, It was to transmute base
Today Is Monday, Feb. 26, the 57th day of 1990 with 308 to follow.
metal Into gold. To Ponce de
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
Leon, It was to locate the fabled
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Fountain of Youth.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
The Democrats on Capitol Hill, ·
Those born this day are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
therefore, are not the first
French novelllt and poet Victor Hugo In 1802; American
normally sensible people 1o be
frontiersman William "Buffalo Bill" Cody In 1846; surgeon and
gripped by an uncontroltablt:
cornflakes developer John Kellogg In 1852; actors Jackie Gleuon In
obleulon to accomplish the
'1916, Tony Randall ln 1920 (aae 70) and Betty Hutton In 1921 (aae68);
Impossible. In their cue,' It Is to
rhythm and blues ptanlstAntolne"Fats"Domlnoln 1928 (aae61) and
find evidence that Ronald Rea·
country singer Johnny Cash In 1932 (age 57).
aan knew about tl)e diversion of
the proceeds of tbe Iranian arms
On this date ln history:
sales to tbe Nlcaraauan contras.
ra 1531, an earthquake In Lisbon, Portugal, kRied ail esti~Dated If auch evidence' bad been
20,000 people.
.
·
foulld While Reqan w&amp;. still In
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte and 1,200men left hlsexlle.on the Isle .. tbe Wblte Ho~. be would have
or Elba to start bla l~ay campalp to regain France.
been Impeached and removed,
In 1935, Germany bepll operation of Ita Air Force, the Luftwaffe
becauae 1uch aid wu then Wegal
under Relchmarlball JJAmnann Goerbli.
under the auccesslve Boland
In 1987, tbe Tower Commission declared White House chief of staff amendemeots. Even today, dam·
Donald Regan bad "primary responsibility for tbe chaos" of the
age would be lntllcted on Rea·
Iran-Contra scandal.
_ . •
gan'sreputatlonasalaw&lt;abldlng
'f

SHOT BLOCKED- Walah'a Greg Gel&amp; ( 44) awatsaway a, layup
attempt b)' Rio Grande froatman .John Lambclui (41) durln1
Saturday niJbt's 1ame at Lyne Center, wblcb tbe Cavaliers won
110·80.
'

Toumamenl 1100res ·

~~~~ ·
-~-..;.._,_:._...;_._._R_ob_ert_w;_ag,na_
· --.;n

The o.lly Sa ltirlti-Paga 3

Speedaka&amp;lnl
West German Angela Hauch
won botb 500 meter races to edge
American Bonnie Blair for the
ovt~rall title at the World Sprint
Speedskatina Championships at
Tromaoe, Norway. liaucb also
flnflbed ,HCOnd to Blair In
Sunday's 1,000 mete~ race to win
tbe two-day championship. Blair
failed to overcome aJourtb·place
flnllb IDSaturday'll,OOOmeters.
Hauch finllbed With 188.08 point•
to Blair' I 188.J95. KJ. Tae Bae of
South Korea lYon the men'a title
Without Winning a race. He bad
1M polntl to edge Andrey Bakh·
valov ot the Soviet Union with
15'.20.

·DO-NG
MUWN MUSSER
'

.
.

INSUIANCE
111 s.c••• St., , •••,.,

. YOUI -PIIIDIIII
! , AGIIfS SRVIIG
•asCOUIIY
•cl1161

.,
';

the opening round of the District
Playoffs. The game Is Wednes·
day at 7:30p.m. on the MSJ court
In Cincinnati .
·
Fredrick ended the season
averaging 13.7 points, 4.8 assists
and 4 rebounds per game. She
holds a field goal percentage of
44.5 (158·355) and Is 68.2 percent
on free throws (58·85). Barnltz
closed out the campaign with an
average of 13.3 points .and 7
rebounds, along with a fi.eld goal
percentage or 48.9 (163-333) .
From the line, she connected on
60 of 87 attempts for 68.9 percent.
Snyder possesses a 38.5 per·
cent standing from the field
(72·187) and Is 70.2 percj!nt on
free throws (47·67). She Is averaging 6.6 points and 5.2 boards a
game. Kidwell brings an average
of 7.9 points and 6.2 rebounds to
the game and Is 88 percent (22-25)

-Sports briefsTennis
Boris Becker crushed Ivan
Lendl, 6·1. 6·2, In a duel of the
world's top two players to win the
$1 million Stuttg11rt Classic at
Bonn, West Germany. Becker
took an 8·7 lifetime edge over,
Lendlln their first meeting since
Becker's triumph In the U.S.
Open final last September.
Lend!, ranked No. 1 In the world,
suffered only his second loss of
tbe year .... Martina Navntllova
needed just 50 minutes to trash
Zlna Garrison, 6-1, 6-0,In the final
of the $350,000 Virginia Slims of
. Washington to claim her 148th .
career singles title and her
second In as many tournaments
this year. Navratnova haswon27
of 28 matches against Garrison,
wltb 'the loss comlnfl In the
quartertlnall of tbe 1988 U.S.
. Open.

from the foul line. She has net ted
98 of 213 attempts from the floor .
for 46 percent.
Central State's Trlcla Harris
was named the District Player of
the Year, 1\'lth Cindy McKnight
of Urbana chosen the Dis trlct
and MOC Coach of the Year.
Also named to the All· District
team were Sarita Brown, \Jr·
bana; Suzanne Coyne, Wlbnlngton; Maty M'Bengue, Central
State; Kim Danner, · Shawnee
State; Cindy Frere, Urbana;
Gerrl Crowe, Mount St. Joseph; ,
Tracy Almanson, Tiffin; and
Evelyn Williams , Central State.
Brown was also c bosen the
MOC Player of the Year. Other
members of the coilference first ,
team are Nicolle Bosworth and
Erin Sharrock, both· of Mount
Vernon Nazarene, and Frere.
Also named to the MOC second
team were Mary Tre~sler, Ohio
Dominican; Jill Hanlgofsky,
Walsh; and Jean Twebues, Ur·
bana. Diane Campbell of Walsh
shared honorable mention with
Kidwell.
0

The Daily Sentinel
(V8P81-)
A Dlv ..._ at MaHbn..Ua. ..c.

Publilhed every afternoon. Monday
lhr&amp;i&amp;p Friday, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Oblo. by the Olllo Valley Publilhlna Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119, Ph. 992·2156. Seconcl clus postage ..ld at Pomeroy,

Ohio.
Member : United PresslnternatiOMl,

JnlaDd Dally Press Auo:latloa and the
Ohio Newtpa_per Auoclatloll National

a-

Adverllllnl Repl'fteotatlve, Branham ·
Newopoper Sileo, 733 Tbtrtl AYOftue,
New York, New York t0017.

POS'I'MAS'I'ER: Seod
ch•lll'll
to 'lbe llolly Sentinel, Ul ONrt St.,
Pomeroy, Olllo 45789. ·
8\IIIIICBIPI'ION aATII
Br Comer or Moler .....
ODe Weett .. : .................... , ........... $1.40 ' ·
ODe Mmlth ............ ............. .. .... .. $6.10
ODe Yoar ........................ ......... $'1'1.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Dolly .... ................ ............... 25 C.nto
Su-lbo&lt;o aotdalrlq topoy tile-·
rt• _...,. rtmlt Ia ldvance dlreot to
: Tbe DollY illtltiMI oaaa.•orUIIIOIIIII
• 111111. Cncllt wW boatwae..,.._

......
r

l

'

I

..... =

i 13 Woob ................. ................. E:k
-•llelp

I

:I&amp;'Woob..................................

'•

13 Weeki .................................. . . .

'• uw.......................................
-lhlpC..,

.M

u•

11Wttlltl ................................... .
!11 ................................ .............

l,

'

�Pomaoy-MiUeport. Ohio

Moncllt. fellrully 28, 1880

Mcw.day, Fellnl.-y 28; 1910

Oklahoma defeats top.ranked MDJsouri
11

, Fnnk Dana

Tuetlday at 11 a.m. at the Rock
Br DENNII 0'811BA
·weary Midwest, wlllch bore the
Sprln• Cemetery. The Rev.
(Jailed Presa lalerllll&amp;loilal
brunt of tbe wintry assault over
Frank Nile Dorat, 81, of Vin- John Vance will officiate. There
Arctic weather blamed In at the weekend.
cent, former resJdent . of Loag . are no Ca!Ung houn. Memorial
least 32 deatha &amp;ripped tlle East
Bitter cold and bone-cblllllla
Bottom, died S.turday evening contributions may be made to a
Monday, drlvtna tbermome.t ers nortbwee t wtnda areeted morn·
at tile Camdeu Clark Hospital Ill church of choice.
to the coidea t readlnp In a year lq commu1era In New Eqland, .
Parkerlbura, W. Ya. after an
In parts'of New Enaland, drop- compllcatlna the cleanup from
lenora Davis
extended lllnells.
plllg temperatl!l'el to 20 below up to 10 Inches of weekend anow
Bom In Lona Bottom, he was
zero as far south as West Virginia and ciOIIq . acbaola In many
Lenora M. Davis, 64 , of State
the aonofthe late Peter and Edna
and placlna North Carolina's · areas. Bolton bas bad 16 Inches
Route
Lona Bottom, died
Oaborne Doral Two years ago he
peach crop In perU.
of snow IIIIa month, more than In
moved to VIncent after _having Monday at Veterans Memorial
·Clouds and hJch wind over all of last ~ter.
spent many years In Long Hops!tal.
Florida further delayed a space
Bostonians shivered In 3·
A housewife, she was born on
Bottom.
'
shuttle launch and more light degree air, the coldest there for
He was a retired farmer and Dec. 14, 1925 In Cheater Town·
snow fell on parts of the storm- more than a yea.r, and the wind
carJ)enter and a member of the ship, the daughter of the late
Carpenters - Union, Local 650, · Murl Ta~lo~ and Elizabeth Eisel·
stein Taylor. She was a member
Poineroy.
· Survivors Include his wife, of the Keno .Church·of ChriSt, the
'Soutll Central Oblo
mainly In tile northeastern part
DAVChapter
~Auxiliary, and
Increasing
cloudiness.
Monday
of
the state Wednesday • wltll fair
Mae Stout Dorst, to whom he was
·Post
128,
American
Legion
night, with a chance of snow or
weather Thursday and Friday' .
married 58 years, three daugh·
rain and a low near 30. Chance of
Hllfha will ranee from 25 to 35
ters and sons-In-Jaw, Donna and Auxiliary.
She Is survived by her huspreclpltation ts40percent. VariaWednesday, from tile low 20s tile
Eugene Story, Marysville; hPau '
band,
Kenneth Davis, Long Botfile cloudiness Tuesday, with ·a
low 30s Thursday and from 35 to
. line and Larry Baker. Lona
chance of showers and highs In
45 Friday. OvernJghtlows will be
· Bottom; and Patty and Marvin tom; two daughters, Roma
Marte
Weaver,
New
Haven,
-W.
the
mid
40s.
Chance
of
rain
Ia
50
between 15 and 25 Wednesday
Maseey, Uttle Hocktna; three
Va.
and
Cathy
Darlene
Clifford,
percent.
momtna, between five . and 15grandchildren, Bob Headley.
Cheater;
son,
John
L.
Davis,
Forecast
·early
Thursday and between 15
Extendecl
Lona Bottom: Clair and Justin
address.
unknown;
six
grand·
Wednesday Ulrouah Friday
and 20 Friday rooming.
·story, Marysville; two great-.
A chance of snow flurries
. grandchildren, and special children and a great-grandcltlld;
friends, Rodney and Dorothy · and two sisters, Lenora Cline·
Syracuse, and Hilda Hunt, Lo!lg
, Pierce, Vincent.
Continued from l!llle 1
· ·He was preceded In death by Bottom.
Besides her parents, ~he was
1\is parents, an Infant daughter,
Demjanjuk, then 68 shouted,
and a beirne In the quiet am~ ·
preceded
In death by a son,
' 'I'm an Innocent man! I will
five sisters, two brothers.
affluent suburb of Seven Hills.
Funeral services will be held Roger Dale Davis, and a brother, · appeal and I'm sure I will win."
The Demjanjuk's life changed
Wednesday at 1 p,m at the White Willard Taylor.
Before his arJ'8!11t, Demjanjuk
dramatically after the editor of a
Funeral services will be held
Blower Funeral Home In Cooland hIs family l!ad'been living the
pro-Soviet newspaper In New
Wednesday
at 2 p.m . at the
ville. Evangellat Jim Nealis will
American dream. The Ukraine · Yor.k gave tht: Immigration and
officiate. Burial will be In Sand Ewin~ Funeral Home. Roger• native went to work at a ·Ford
Naturalization Service the
Hill Cemtery. Friends may calL Springs will offlclate _ana burial" plant In Cleveland In 1952, he and
names of 70 suspected. Nazi war
will be In · Meigs Memory .hiS wife Vera had three children
at lbe funeral home after 2 p.m.
crlrfilllals. Demjanjuk's name
Gardens. Friends may call at 11111
Tqesday.
was on that list.
funeral home2 to4 and 7to9p.m.
Tuesday.
Chari~ Ch~tpman
Contlnu!!d from page 1

:us.

---------weather

a

a

TIGHT DEFENSE - Duke's Pbll Henderson
pards
Arizona's Matt Muehleback closely In first half action Sunday.
Arizona won their meeting last year by twopolntsbulthlsyearwas
a Duke win by two polllts, 78·76. (UPI)

Martin wins Pontiac
negotiations
400 . but fined $40 000 _resume today
~

.

,.

·..
.
·.
t:
:·

,.

.·

"
:·

'
-t.

l

'

chUI hit minus 35 degrees; the
Temperatures dipped lrito the
. National Weather Service said. A teens and 20s early Monday In
low of mllluU broke a 62-year-old
parts of the South, and a
record at Hartford's Bradley
hard-freeze warning wu poatl!d
Interlll!tiOnal Airport.
for northern and eastern
ID Raynham, Mass., a 12-yearGeorgia.
old was hospitaliZed In stable
The cold snap threatened 5,000
condition Monday after belllg
acres of North Carolllla peach
!oat In woods near his borne.
trees blooming three weeks early
Greaory Holzworth was found
because ol recent unseasonable
huddled beneath his black La bra·
warmth, said Dennis Werner, a
dor retriever, Shadow.
,
horticulture professor at North
"He - used the dog to stay
Carolina State University.
W$rm," poUce officer Peter
"They're certainly golllg to be .
Aaacker said. "The dog was. on
Injured," Werner said. "It's just ·
top of him. They were all covered
a matter of how much, and will
With lee and they Were all wet." ' th~re be enough flowers left for a .
Bitter cold also chilled the
crop?''
.
.
mid-Atlantic states early Man- · The latest victim of the cold
day, dropping temperatures to 15
was a 35-year·old man who froze
· below zero In parts of Maryland
to death on the front porch of his
and 20 below In western Pennsyl-- home In Greenville. N.C., wbere
van Ia and West Virginia. readings dropped to 15 degrees.

Bright skies... Continued frorr page 1

ketball championship at Heidel·
wears on.
berg College In Tiffin were .
However, . snow will develop
warned they might be subject to - late tonight over the northern ·
-arrest If they attempted to leave . counties, while the southern
the city on county roads. The Red
counties will see a chance of rain,
Cross opened a ·shelter overnight
snow or freezing rain. Snow or
for people 1"hO were stranded.
rain Is likely for the entire state
Meanwhile, early · morning
Tuesday, with highs In the upper
temperatures today were the
30s to mld-40s.
coldest In Ohio since Christmas
Looking ahead through the rest
Eve, ranging from 12 In the
of the week, Wednesday will be
southwest to 4 In Mansfield, 5 In
fair, with a chance of flurries In
Youngstown and Cleveland and 6
the northeast, and Thursday and
In Columbus.
Friday will be fair across the
Beginning today the Buckeye
state. Highs will be 25 to 35
State should see a warming
Wednesday,thelow20stolow30s
trend, A south wind was to help
Thursday and 35 to 45 I"rlday.
boost temperatures to mid·
Lows will be 15 to 25 Wednesday,
Nettie Hayes
highs
In
the
20s
and
5
to 15 Thursday and 15 to 20
afternoon
smoking with small ' fires still a two-car acclden.t ·on U.S. 20 tn ·
Nettie Mae Hayes, 77. Mid- · flaring Inside thern:
mld-30s.
Readlngsweretodropa
Friday.
Ashtabula County.
..._
dlepon, Ohio, died Suilday,
few degrees during the evening,
Hlgway Patrol Trooper Gary
February 25, 1990, at Holzer MediSeeks divorce
then start climbing as the night
Mitchell, the first on the scene,
Saturday
cal Center Hu!ipital.
Mansfield: Nancy )&gt;. Linder,
said It was "just total chaos,"
Born June 4, 1912 at Bucyrus, anct., that thick fire and smoke 48, Avon Lake, killed when the
Crystal D. Richmond. PomeOI,Jio, she was the daughter of Van- prevented rescuers from car she was rldlllg In was
roy, Is seeking a divorce from
nie Allen and Sylvia J:ldith (Davis) approaching.
Involved In a three-vehicle accl·
Larry E . Richmond , Rutland, in
Badgley. She was also preceded in
Severe weather · was also the dent on Interstate 7lln Richland Dally stock prices
the Meigs County Court of
(As of 11:30 a.m.)
deatli by a sister, Sarah Ethel backdrop for a seven-vehicle County. (weather)
Common
Pleas.
Bryce and Mark Smith
Hawk.
accident on Interslate 280 In
Washington Court . House:
Hayes worked at the former
Wood County. Two Akro!l How11rd Bradley Crow, 22, Picke- of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Divorce granted
Temple ·and Meigs Theatres. She women, Erlene Pryer; 41, and rington, killed In a !'fiUltlplewas also a longtime awti1iary
Imogene Atkinson, 42, died when · vehlcle accident on Interstate 71 Am Electric Power ............ .29)/s
A .divorce has been granted In
AT&amp;T .................. , .. .......... .. 38%
member at · Veterana Memorial their vehicle, already stopped by In Fayette County.
the Meigs Court of Common
Asllland Oil ......... ::·............. 35%
Hospital, where she Perfooned ova-· a multi·vechile accident, was
New Philadelphia: Charles L.
Pleas to Betty D. Eaklils from
Bob
Evans
..........................
12'A
10,000 bows of volunteer SClVke. · struck by a semi-trailer truck.
Simpkins, 76, Canton, killed In a
Ronald R. Eakins. She has also
Charming Shoppes ............... 8)/s
She was a member of Daughlm of
An officer Investigating the · three-vehicle accident on Ohio 39
been restored her malden name.
City
Holding
Co
.................
.13'Va
·America Council No. 323, Chester, original crash would h11ve been In Tuscarawas County (weather )
Betty Crouso.
Federal
Mogul..
..
........
........
17?f,
Athens: Phillip B. Riling, 16,
Ohio: •
kUied If he had not jumped out of
Survivin_B are her husband, Ar- the path oft he semi, said Trooper Pomeroy , killed when his car Goodyear T &amp;R ....... .. ..........33\ii
Cancelled
nold W. (Red) Hayes; four sons, Harold Pennlllgton of the District collided with a Department of Heck's ................................. 2Ys
Key Centurion ..................... 13
Robert A. of Alvin, TX, Charles E. 6 headquarters.··
Transportation truck spreading
The petit Jury scheduled for
Lands
' End .............. ..... ...... 17\ii
of Middleport, Wtilter A. of Letart,
Other weekend accidents cinders on Ohio 33 In Athens
Meigs County Court Tuesday
Limited Inc . .. .... .. .... .. .........34 'Va
County.
WV, and William K. .of Dexter, Included:
morning has been canceled.
Multimedia Inc ...................72'h .
Ohio; one step-daughter, Helen L.
Jurors need not report:
.
'
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Pauley of SL Albans, WV; one sis·
· Sunday
Friday nl~t
'
Robbins &amp; Myers , .......... .. ... 15%
Versailles: John A. Trlttschuh,
ter, Thelma F. Roush of Pomeroy;
Lorain: Mary N. Cantrell, 49,
Dissolution sranted
Shoney's Inc . ..................... .lO'h
19 ll8ll(lchildrcn,
12
step . Lorain, killed when struck by a 48, and Terrence Bohman, 29,
Star Bank . .. ............. .......... .l814
. grandclilldren and several great·
truck while crossing a city street. both of Versailles, 'killed when
A diSsoluUon has been granted
Wendy's
Int'1. ...................... 4\ii
grandchildren. .
Ashtabula: Steven Arandell, vehicle failed to stop at railroad
to
Ada Mae McHaffie and George
Worthington Ind .................. 20%
Service will be Wednesday at 1
21, (address unknown), killed In · crossing and pqJied Into path of
w.
McHaffie Jr., In the Meigs
(Wendy's Inc. Is ex dividend
freight train .
. p.m. at FORI~ Funeral Home irt
Court of Common Pleas.
today)
Mason, WV, with the Rev. George

New evidence,...

Baseball

'
'
NEW YORK (UPI)
Bitterpulled
away
from
a
squabbling
whids
swept
tile
city
on
Day
11 of
RICHMOND, Va , (UP!) Dale Ear nhardt and Rusty Wal- · tile spring training lockout SunMark Marlin captured NASlace and finished a little more day ,' syfubOIIzlng the chill that
CAR's $458,000 Pontiac Excitethan · a second ahead of has divided. factions · In the
ment 400 Sunday with just a
Earnhardt.
summer game.
second to spare, but his victory
Martin's
Ford
had
been
one
of
With the first week of the
was tainted when race inspectors
the
faster
cars
on
thetra:ckbutas
exhibition
season virtually lost
fined him $40,000 for using an
the
race
wound
down,
he
had
and
Opening
Day In danger,
Illegal engine part - the largest
been
unable
to
gain
the
lead.
union
and
owners
say 'they will
fine in stock car racing history.
When a spinout brought out the resume talks Monday.
Martin's victory was allowed
caution
flag with 17 laps to go,
Should no peace blossom then,
to stand, but he was docked 46
most
of
the
leaders
headed
for
union
head Don Fehr says he will
champion points and was forced
the
pits
and
four
fresh
tires.
travel
to ' PhoeniX to brief his
to turn over more than two-thirds
Martin's
crew,
however,
deexecutive
board, then perhl!ps
of his winnings. NASCAR Compeclded
on
a
quick
two-tire
stop
and
tour
the
country meeting
. tillon Director Dick Beaty said
got
Martin
·
back
on
the
trac~
players.
·
·
the · victory would not count
ahead
of
the
field.
After
the
green
_
Fehr
said.
tile
union
ha$ protoward the lucrative 'Winner's
flag,
Martin
started
pulling
away
posed
what
he
called
"subs
tan· Circle championship.
and
two
drivers
who
had
led
tlal"
concessions
on
pensions.
Martin had left the R lchmond
International Raceway , still for most of the race, Wallace and But, as of now, no peace seems
thinking his team earnings would Earnhardt, battled for second possible Without an agreement
on arbitration. The union wants
be $59.150 before the result of the place, ,
Earnhardt,
who
had
started
players to become eligible after
post-race Inspection was anlast
In
a
backup
car
after
two
years; manageJilent wants
nounced Sunday night. Martin 's
crashing
in
Saturday's
final
to
retain
the current level of
car owner, engine expert Jack
•
practice
session,
put
the
nose
of
three
years,
Roush, left the track without
"It's gonna be solved bybuttln'
his Chevrolet under the bumper
comment.
of
Wallace's
Pontiac.
By
the
time
heads,"
Mets pltcber David Cone
The engine in Martin's Ford
Wallace
recovered
from
the
said.
"We're
gonna have to go
was . fitted with a 2'h·lnch carthump,
he
had
sllpjled
from
bacit
and
find
outjust
how strong
buretor spacer, although NAS·
second
to
sixth.
the
players'
stand
Is
on
it. And I
CAR allows spacers of no more
Martin
finished
more
than
.a
think
It's
gOnna
be
pretty
strona. ·
than two Inches. Beaty .said hl'
didn't know if the spacer gives second ahead of Earnhardt while We're a pretty strong union. ·
the engine more power, however, pole-sitter Ricky Rudd finished We're gonna find out how strong
one rival team owner said the third. Bill Elliott finished fourth tile owners are, too."
G)ub officials sa~l privately
spacer enables the engine to take in a Ford while Oick Trickle, last
year's
rookie
of
the
year,
finished
spring
training games are lost,
· In more air and thu s generate
fi
fth
in
a
Pontiac.
and
that
fans will enjoy refunds
more horsepower.
Martin
sa
id
his
crew
set
up
his
or
other
options, Including the
NASCAR has long had a policy
car's
chassis
for
maximum
chance
to
exchange tickets for
of leniency In fining Winners who
speed
at
the
expense
of
stability.
future
dates.
fall to pass post-race Inspections.
An organizatiOn calling Itself
Though In 1983 Richard Petty and that it was " no surprise" that
won a race at the Charlotte Motor . he posted the fastestslnglelapof "STRIKE BACK" Is urging
·
baseball fans to write letters
Speedway using Illegal tires and the day - at 120.32 mph.
''The
guys
were
brilliant,"
!IBid
protesting what It Incorrectly
an Illegal engine and was lined
Martin
of
his
crew.
"They
made
·
calls
a strike. TheSportlllgNews
$35,000 - the larges I previous
all
the
right
choices
In
a
split
has
set
up· a phone number to
fine. But· his victory still stands
second."
·
allow
fans
to express opinions.
as one of his record total of 200.
Earnhardt
rnoved
to
the
lead
In
As
for
tile cancellations, a
Martin's team has 30 days to
the
driver's
poin
ts
race
with
340.
spokesman
for CommiSsioner
appeal the action , but under
Rudd
has
335
points,
Elliott
has
Fay
VIncent
said, "My underNASCAR rules rival teams have
330
.
standing
Is
that
It's a clul! by club
no avenue - to have the win
Following Wallace was Mdr·
Issue."
·
disallowed. Martin's car regan
Shepherd's
Ford,
Brett
BoOne
club
official
said regularcorded the fastes t la p of any race
dine's
Buick,
Jimmy
Spencer's
season
ticket
sales
had
slowed In
leader during the 400-lap event.
Pontiac
and
Ken
Schrader's
his
area.
After the race Martin said he
Chevro let. All finished· on the
Whether economic or emu;. could have gone faster.
lead lap.
tlonai pressure will matter re"The car was phenomenal," he
·=
NASCSAR's . all-time vjctOry mains a question. If anyone
•. · said. ·
leader, Petty, hit a wall after 83 needs further hint of how the ~990
•
Martin never led until the final
laps and finished 35th. Harry tal~ might turn out, consider
: · 15 laps when a bit of pit strategy Gant blew an engine after 75laps ·. that negotiators stlll disagree on
1
made him the race leader. He and finished dead last.
'
what happened In the last pact.
Fehr, who was there In 1985,
•
says the deal rested on assumptions that proved untrue.
Owners'
representative Chuck
'
O'Connor says the pact was
•'·
fairly bargalried.
When asked what the players
had received for yleldlna on tile
arbitration Issue, Fehr said,
"Beats me. I have no Idea. And I
think Chuck knows better.
•.
"Chuck lias clients to represent and they've Instructed him to
take certain positions ... If anybody else can figure out what tile
tradeoff was, perhaps they can
tell us."
'
O'Connor replied by citing tile
view of Mllwi!Ukee Brewers
owner Bud Selig, c halrman of the
Player Relatlona Committee dur·
lng the 1985 talka.
''What was ·a greed to In 191!5,"
O'Connor aaya, "was an oVerall
, package of benefits and Improve. menu in the contract and as part
of tile bargain, a year of llaiary
arbitration was give!l up by the
union."
Players atve another reason
••
for wantiJII tile .alveback. Tiley
claim tile financial climate baa
chanpct, with the plllyera de••
DONKEY CAGE ACI'ION- Adoalleybilllledlallpmewu ..... . ! aervtni part of the l)rOtlta.
•' ' recently
Not surprisingly, owners
at Melp Junior mgh Scllool. A larae crowd wu ..
dlsll,ree.
atteadence to aee the Junior High s taff defeat the Melp Ceaeilllll
•
''It 11 a caae of each lllde aotna
•, IICalf lUI. All proeeeds will go wthe Melp Junior mp AtldiUc
back to that baraaln and recap- ·
• ,_..; les• Vall pictured above of the jualor IIJcll 8laff plol.-ed
turtna whllt It would like to have i
above aeet111 to be having some problema rill IIIII donkq.
back," O'CoDIIor said.

.The Daily Sentinei'-Pegl 6

--Area deaths--------- Eastem half of country hit ·by arctic blast

21-4 . overall and 9-3 In the
DoqSmltllledtlle,._..wttll27 America 1111&amp;1'11 Cllrla el~tll
tJPIIp 0118 Wrller
conf~nce.
points and .Utboliy Peeler ICOJ'Id 31 pollltl and
.- • e
KaniBI and M1110~ have
"This Is .one of the greatest
scoredjuaUOon3aUhllootlq. Tlpn to a 51-311ead wltlllT.ao ·
been aettilla moat of the atten·
g11mes ever played In this ar'
ID other Top 20 ~. No. • left.
liOn, butsuddenly tile BtaEtllht's
ena," said Tubbl. •'I felt that
Dulre lbaded Artzcllla 71-16, No. 9
At Provldellce, R.I., Billy
· No. 3 team Is maktna all the . J aclde Jones had a great aarne
Syracuee edaed Providence 93- Oweu scored 33 polllll and
noise.
witli seven blocked shots and 10
89, Georata dllmped No. 13 fueled a 22-4 second-halt l'IUI that
Tile No. 11 Oklahoma Sooaers
rebounds."
Loulllaua State $-1111, No. 14 1tfted Syracu11e to a Btl Eut
claimed their t4th atratallt borne
The Tigers cloaed to within two
l.aSane dropped St. Peter.'a ?t-611 victory. Stephen Thompson
vlctorySundaywitllaconvtncllw
points Ill tile early atages of tile
lnovertlme,andNo.16M1chlpn added 15 polllts for tile Oranae10'7-10 drubblna of the top-ranked
second half, butOklai!Oma beaan
State clipped IDdtana 'IU&amp;.
. men, 20-5 and 10-4. Marty Conlon
M1s10uri Tigers.
a 15-2 run with ·a tllree-polllter
At -D urham, N.C., PhD Hender· scored a eeason·hlah 26 tor
Tile Jopalded victory will un·
from ·Henry and another from
son scored 28 poiDtl, Including a Provldence,l!!-10 and 7-8.
doubteclly -propel another team
Jones seconds later. Jones then
layup after 1 steal wtlh 1:•T left, .
At Jereey City, N.J., Uonel
Into tile top spot In tile polls,
added a baSket and Patterson
to' lift Duke. Henderson's steal Simmou scored 18 points to ·!Itt
poasfbly No. 2 KaniBI. But that
converted a three-point play and
and basket pushed Duke to a 75-72 LaSalle. to Its 17111 stralpt
could be a short-lived reign.
suddenly the Soo)ners were ahead
lead, ~ the senior auard snak victory In a Metro Atlantic
Guess where the Jayhawks play
by 13.
folD' tree throws ~til 22 seconds . Athletic Conference game. Sim·
Tuesday?
·
lett after JUd Buechler had mons stlnds fourth on tile NCAA
The · Sooners welcomed tile
· •Maybe we should shoot all scored tor the Wllclcata. The Blue career scori.na list with 3,0.2
Tigers to Norman, and the Lloyd
three-po_lnters," said Tubbs. •'I
Devils, 23-5, have won D6 straight career polllll, 24 behllld third·
Noble Center Sunday, where
saw where we shot 50 percent at home agalut non-Atlantic place Harry Kelly of Texas
OklahomaCoachBillyTubbshas
(12-of-22) from behllld tbe line
CoUt Conference teams. Brian Southern ..LaSalle Improved to
been known to tum thermostats and ·f orty-something (35-of-8l)_ln
Williams scored 19 poillll to lead 25-1 and 15-0. Tony Walker scored
up over 90 degrees.
·
front of It," he said. ·
Arizona, 19-6.
19 for St. Peter's, 14·13 and 7-9.
Jackie Jones, Damon Patter·
Missouri Coach Norm Stewart
At Athens, Ga., Alec Keasler
At East Lans.lllg. Mich. , Steve
son and William Davis com· said that was tile beginning ofthe scored 30 pollltl to lift Georgia Smith scored 21 polllts and Matt
bl~ for 72 points In courtslde e!ld for the Tigers.
from a 19-polllt second-half de- Stetgenga added 11 to tun Mlcbltemperatures of 100 degrees.
•The first half, I thought the flclt to a victory over LSU and
an State's Bla Ten . wlnnlllg
Jones scored 28 points
game waslnourmode,"hesald.
first place In the Southeastern streak to six. games. The Spar·
grabbed 10 rebounds and blocked
"(But) Jthought when they made Conference. Georaia. 19-6 over- · tans, 22--5 overall and 11·3 In tile
seven shots before an ecstatic
that run and got up by 10 polllts It
all, Improved to 12-4 In tile SEC conference, pulled within onerecord croWd of12,157. Patterson changed."
·
on Neville Austin's free throw half game of league-leader
had M points and Davis scored 20
The loss dropped Missouri .to with five seconds lett. LSU fell ,to Purdue. Indiana fell to 16-8 and
and pulled down 15 rebounds for 11·2 In the Big Eight Conference, . 21-6 and 11-5. Georgia has· never 6-8.
tile Sooners, · who 1111proved to a ll,alf game ahead of Kansas.
won an SEC ti~l'e. LSU All·

BrTOII Wif&amp;cu

Pomeroy-Midd'eport. Ohio ,

D; nry.

Charles William (Bill) Chap·
man, 52, 'o t Harrisonville, died at
his residence early Saturday
evening after a brief Illness. .
Born Feb. 22, 1938 In Meigs
County, he was the son of Einma
· Collins Chapman of Syracuse,
and the late Lyle Chapman. He
served active duty with the 3664
Fourth Ordlance Co. of theWest
VIrginia National Guard during
the Bei'Un Crisis In 1962 at Fort
Polk, La. He had been a 'm ember
of the Carpenters Union since
1960 · 11nd In recent years has
owned and . operated the Chapman Construction Co. He was
". well. known In the area for ' his
work especially at Ohio Unlver. slty, Athens.
~ Besides his mother he Is
· survived by his wife .of 32 years,
Connie Kay Carsey Chapman,
· ; two sons, Lance Elda Chapman,
: and Monte Dale Chapman •. both
at home;·· two brothers, Robert
. and ~dward. Chapman, Syra~; . •two sisters, Mrs. Gene
(Bebea) Odell, and Mrs. Ri&gt;ma
(Jean) Cremeans, both of Ru'
· tland, and two grandc-h ildren.
Services will be held Tuesday
at 1 p.m. at the Rawllngs·CoatsFisher Funeral Home In Middleport with the Rev . Joe Sayre
officiating. Burial will be In Wells
Cemetery In Pageville. There
. are no caJUng hours. Memorial
, contrlbu lions may be made to the
American Cancer Society, Pome·
·. roy Unit, 236 West Second gt.,
Pomeroy .

"lht

COMP~ SEASON The Melp alrll
buketball team recently completed a aucceatul
IM!UOD wltb a 311-U 1- In tile IIOCUonal llnall to
·Jackllon. The Latb' Marauders completed the
season wilb a 15-6 record ~d a third place tlnlallln
lhe Trt-Valley Conference. Pfctured attllllg from

left to
&amp;re-Jenlllfer TQI.,-, De- Baar.•
Kelly·· !Willi, Amr ~. aad Milar Nelloa.
Seeontl row from left to right are-Marsha King, ,
Sllannon Newsome, Kim HS11nlnl, Trlcla Baer,
Kim Ewing and coacb Roger Foster.

Couples clair:ns Los Angeles Open
Couples opened a three-stroke
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Fred
Couples, spectacular a day earadvantagewhenhesankanS.foot
lier, was steady enough Sunday · birdie putt at No. 16 and closed
. to post his first PGA Tour victory with style by slllklng an 18-footer
since 1987.
for birdie at the final hole.
, "I'm thrtlled to death," .Cou"It was too tight," said Couples, a 10-year pro who had won
ples said after he followed a third
round of 62 with a 2-under par 69 three previous times. ''I'm glad
and three-stroke triumph at the
It's over. I felt like I played well
Los Angeles Open. ''I hope I don't
all day. I dldn'tlookgQOdona few
bave to walt another 21·2 years to
shots. I felt a little i!dgy.
•'I was trying to shoot a67 or 68.
go through tlils."
Couples, who had not captured
I wasn't expecting a 62 or 63,
1
a tournament since the 1987
that's for sure."
Mediate, a 5-year pro who has
Byron Nelson Golf Classic, finIshed with an 18-under total of • never won, was satisfied with his
placing.
266. He earned $180,000. '
Gil Morgan shot a 70 to take
"I l5rned that I could do It,"
second place at 269. Rocco
Mediate said. "This Is the best
Mediate's even-par 71 lett him
I've ever played and best I've
tied for third at 270 with Peter
ever scored. If you told me I'd
Jacobsen, who fashioned a 66.
shoot a 14-under when I got here,
"I like to win," Couples said.
I would've laughed."
"Sometimes when I finish In the
Instead, Mediate played
nearly as well as Couples.
TOp 10, I feel like I w11n, but they
don't put your name on a trophy
•'I could tell looking at him, he
for finishing eighth."
didn't play well about three holes
on the back-nllle," Mediate said
Couples, who blistered tile of Couples. "Once he got his par
Riviera Country Club course for
on No.lO. he was a diUerentman.
a record-tying 9-under SatiD'day,
was- tied by Morgan at 16-under
when he made bogey at No. 4 and
Morgan birdied Nos. 1 and 7.
(All Games)
Morgan passed Couples at No.
TEAM
~ W L
P OP
9 when Couples bogeyed, but
Wellston ....... 1 .-18 3 1415 n~
· Couples grabbed the lead back at
Miller ............. 14 6 12TT
No. 11 when he birdied and
Alexander ....... 14 8 1416 1306
Morgan struggled to his first
x-Belpre ......... 12 9 1515 1154
bogey Of the tourney.
Trimble ......... . 11 9 1219 1198
)'dorgan birdied the next hole to
x-VInton ......... 11 10 1330 1265
regain a share of the lead, but tile
X·F·Hocklllg ... 10 .12 1493 14M
two-time winner of the Los
x·Melgs
.......... 4 18 1203 1567
·AngeleS Open fell out of contenx-NeJs.York
.... 2 19 1129 1501
ton at tile par-3 No. l4 when he hit
out of bounds and took doublex..()omplll&amp;ed • .
Sat IJI'IIIQ''s result:
bogey .
Sheridan 75 Warren Local 74
Mediate sUpped to 14-under
Feb.rJgame:
when 'hls second shot at No. 15 hit
Mlllel' VI. Trimble, at Meigs,
a tree and fell straight down.
, 7:30p.m.

He was perfect coming ln."
Mark Calcavecchla, the 1989
Los Angeles Open winner, shot a
65 Sunday and finished 11-under.
Rookie Michael Allen, who led
after the first two rounds, fol·
lowed a third round of 71 with a 70
and ended four days at 10-under.
Many .of · the top players
skipped the last tournament on
the ·West Coast. The tour
switches to Florida next week.

Janet Hinkle

TVC 8lalldilp

.. -

'

!
'

I

I

\

(304) 675·1244
..

-

'

~-

mission ol Ohio has set lor
public hearing Case No.
90-02-EL·EFC, to review
tha fuel procurement' practlces and policlis ol Colum-

fieanl. further inlorrnltion
llllf bl Clbtained by c:onIICUIIg tha CommisSion at

.

tha lbovllddrla. .
THE t'UBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary · E. VlqoriiO,
Sacretaly.

-

'

..

'

'

begin at 10:00 a.m. on ·

a1ven in OjlpOrlunlty to be

Ell, NOSE &amp; THIOAT
GENEIAL ALLEIIGIST.''WIIIAfE HEARINI AIDS"

I

The Public Utitities ·Com-

All interasted parties will be

. PUASANI YAUIY HOSPITAL

I

I

.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., ·l.nc.:.

I

I

.

lliAL IOTICE .

March 28. 1990, II the of·
flees of the PubNc Utilities
Commission, 180 East
. Broad Street, Columbus, •
Ohio 43288-0573.

,___ _ _.......;;,_---..J •.

"

Stocks ·

Hoschar officiating. Burial will 6e
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at

Cheshire, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral

_ _ Local news briefs... _ _
Continued from page 1

home Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9

Patrol cites Reedsville man

p.m.

Shuttle
...
_ Continued from page 1

grees north latlt11de.
Radio traffic between the astronauts and mission control
monitored by reporters Monday
confirmed Atlantis's emergency
overseas landing site Is Zarag·
oza, Spain, which also confirmed
the shuttle will be launched on a
sharply nor' theasterly
. trajectory. 1
Creighton and company originally were seheduled for llftotf
around 1 a.m. EST last Thursday, but the flight was delayed ·
two days In a row when the .
commander fell Ill with flu-like
symptoms.
NASA managers decided last
Friday to pass up an early
morning Sau~rday launch try
because of expected bad
weather, electing to press on
Instead for a predawn Sunday
launch attempt.
The shuttle then was fueled for
flight aJld the countdown ticked
smoothly toward zero, only to be
put on hold at the T -mlllus
31-second mark because of a
faulty ground tracklllg ¢omputer. The fUght was called off for
the day when It became clear tile
computer would . not be opera.tiona! in time.
As usual with such mUitary
shuttle missions, launch preparations have been conducted In
Rev. Bertha JUPthouse official secrecy and the launch
,time was revealed publicly by
The Rev. Bertha E. Rlaht·
NASA only once, when the
house, 76, Long HOIIO\Y Road,
countdown reached tile T-mlllus
Pomeroy, died Saturday at
31-second mark early Sunday at
Americare-Pomeroy Nursb\g
12:55 a.m. ·
.
Center foUowtna an extended • Sources have said the launch
l!liless.
· time moves up a mlnu~ or tWo .
Born on July 4, 1913 at
eacb day the launch Ia delayed.
Hanover, Ind. , abe was tile
daughter of the la~e Albert
Rlabthouee and Mattie Bonnett
Rlgbthouee. Sbe was a Nazarene
minister and acliool teacber. .
She Ia survived by a IIi-other.
Veleru1 Mwawalal
· and alater·ID·Iaw, wuuam and
Saturday
admlsslana- Emest «
Heleu Rlptboule, Pomeroy;
E.
Lyana,
Middleport.
two nlecea, Judy
Hopkins·
Saturday dilcharaea - None.
vOle, Ky.; and Wilma Pack,
Sunday
admlllllona - Frank
Nashvllll, Tenn. tbree areatWallace, Racine.
Dieces, and one ~t-nepllew. .
Sunday diiChargea - NOI\0.
Graveside aervlces Will be held

A Reedsville area man was cited In a car-truck crash Sunday
at 3: 32 In Olive Township on C.R. 46, 3.1 mUes east of S.R. 7,
according to the GaiUa·Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Michael L: Connolly, 25, of S.R. 681; Reedsville, was cited for
failure to control after his 1978 Chevrolet C-10 pickup hit a 1989 .
· '
Olds Cutlass driven by Janet I. Glenn, 22, of Logan.
Glenn was heacllng east when Connolly, driving west; lost
control on an Icy patch and hit Glenn's car.

Janet' Hinkle, 56; of Dublin.
died Saturday unexpectedly
while visiting at the home of
relatives In Florida.
Born In Mejgs County, she was
the daughter of the late Dwight
and Audrey Graves Frost. She
was a ·secretary for Columbia
Gas for nine years, a member of
the Professional Secretaries Association International and the
Middleport Church of ChriSt.
· She Is survived by her hus·
band, Harold Hinkle, a daughter
and son-In-law. Debra and Charles Murray, Alb!lny; a son;
Harold Hinkle, Jr., St'. James
City, Fla.; a sister. Narsa Van
Meter, Clifton, W. Va.; a motherin-law, Regina Swift, Middle. port; a sister-In-law and her
husband, Carol and Harold ·
Wolfe, of Ft. Myers, Fla.; an
aunt, Mabel Walburn of Mlddle_port, and an uncle, 'Ralph
Graves, Pomeroy. .
Funeral services will be held
Th\lrsday at 11 a.m. at the _
Raivllngs·Coats·F.Isher Funeral
Home with AI Hartson ·officialIna. Burial will be In Gravel 'Hill
Cemetery In Cl}eahlre. Friends
· may call at .the funeral home
WedneSday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.in.

Boxing
Heavyweight champion James
"Buster" Douglas will appear In
"Night of 100 Stars III," tile
charity benefit for the Actors'
Fund of America held at Radio
City Music Hallin New York May
5. Douglas joins former heaVy·
weight champions Muhammad
All and Joe Frazier In the boxing
· contingent. Other present and
former athletes who have committed Include Joe DIMaggio,
Hank Aaron, Florence Grlttltll·
Joyner, Phil Simms, Jim Burt
11nd Greg Louganls.

I'•
I

···~----~----------------------------

__

'

_Sports briefs-

bus Southam Power Company, the operation of Its
Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. This~_
hearinQ is scheduled to

~~

Hospital news

rz.ee,

Mobile home destroyed by fire
The trailer home of Darryl and Debbie Smith, which· was
owned by her mother, Rosella Birchfield , of Albany, was
destroyed by fire Sunday morning.
The Columbia Township Fire Department was called to the
· scene at 7:44a.m. The trailer was located on Route 143.
According to Jim Gaston, of the fire department, Smith and
his wife were awakened by a kerosene heater that had caught
fire. Mr. and Mrs. Smith left the trailer at this time. Smith
returned to tile trailer, picked up the kerosene heater to remove
lt. This caused the oU In the h·e aler to splash out on him.
~
Smith ·was treated by first responders and the Rutland "
Emergency Squad. Gaston stated that Smith was badly burned
on his lower body and that •'he did appear to have third degree
bums." Smith was taken by Llfeflight to the burn center at Ohio
State University Hospital where he Is listed In critical condition .
The Albany Fire Department was called to assist and the
Columbia Fire Deparlment had 16 men on tile scene along with
one from the ·Scipio Townsblp Fire Department. The
deparlment was on tile scene for approximately three hours.
There were no other Injuries reported.

EMS has 10 weekend calls

'

Units of ihe Meigs County Emeraency Medical Service
responded to ten calla for assistance over tile weekend.
On SatUrday · at 11: ~ a .m. the Scipio Township Fire
Deparlment was called to· ROute 681 for a trailer fire at the
Rodney Reeves residence.
At 6: ~ p.m. tile Rutland Fire Department was called to
McCumber Road for 11 chimney fire at the Don Price residence.
On Sunday at t: 40 a.m. tile l'Omeroy unit went to Overbrook
Center tor Bollll&amp; Exllllk who Will transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Tbe Columbia Township Fire Department, at 7: t4 a.m., went
to Route tt3on aatructure tire, and at 7: 53a.m, theRutlandunlt
was called to tile ICe~ for Darryl $mltll wbo wu IMq In tile
hOuae. Smith was taken by Lltefllaht to Ohio S(Jite University
Hospital Ill Columbus.
·
.
A.t 11:22 a.m. the Middleport unit responded to a call on
Sycamore St. · for Francis Manley wbo was tlkea to Ho121er
Medical Center, and at 2: 38 p.m. the unit weat to Hlp St. for
Dorotlly Gilmore who was trauported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
•
·
Another Middleport unit, at 2: M p.m. wet to South Second
Ave. tor Janie WarDer who was tlken to llo121er.
At 4: 12 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to Pearl St. for
Betty Bayes who was transported to Pleasant Valley.
. Finally, at .9: 33 p.m. tile Racine ualt responded to a call on
Fourth St. for Rhonda Sharp ~bo was taken to Veteran•.

..

---Meigs announcements----

ll't{]I!:!UI.

Attention
Meigs·
({UJ County
Businesses!

·
-;,;Aio
~y (q
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUBLISH A COMEMORATIVE
ISSUE OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY'S 150 YEARS OF
INCORPORAliON ON
THURSDAY I APRIL 26, 1990.
IISEIYE YOUI AD SPACE TODAY -

992-2156
ASK FOR
IIIli
IILUNGS or DAVE HAIMS
.
.

-

••

p.m . Reservations are appreciated but not -necessary for the
breakfast.
World Day of Prayer
The Meigs County Church
Women United will have World
Day of Prayer on Friday at 1: 30
p.m . at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The thl!me Is
"A Bet~r Tomorrow-Justice
For All." Fourteen women from
eight different church denomln~­
tlons have worked In preparing
this theme.
Club to meet
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday Jit 1 p.m. at
the home of Mrs. Dorothy Smith.

lnlllde yardsale
The Mothers of Twins Club will
have Its annual Inside yardsale
on Saturday from 9. a.m. to 3 p.m .
at tpe· Trinity Church In
Pomeroy.
. Board lo meet
The Meigs County Board of
Elections will meet Thursday at
12: 30 p.m. for an organizational
meeting, validation of petitions,
and regular meeting at the Board
of Elections Office, 108 Meehan·
lcs St. In Pomeroy.
Lenlea breakfast
There will be a Len~n Breakfast and Quiet Hour at theTrllllty
Church on Wednesday at 7: 45

\

�•

•

~By

•

The Daily Senti_nel -

The Bend-

,

Golden Rule
Oass meets

Valentine banquet held at church :,.

A valentlrie banquet was held O'Bryant.
recently at the Fjrst Southerh · A corsage, made by the youth,
Baptist Church In Pomeroy.
wu preMJ~Ied to each of tbe
Tbe event was catered and ladles In att2ndaDCe. Matt O'Bry. hosted by theyouthofthechurch. ant welcomed the 46 attenders,
Those assisting In the eooltlng,
and Dorothy Leifheit &amp;ave the
serving, decorlitlng and entertable grace.,
.
ialnment of the evening were ·
A picture wall ·of 'wedding or
Mark Michael and Joyce O'Bry- dating pictures of · . thOle In
ant, youth leaders; and Dorothy attendance was enjoyed by all.
Leifheit, Susan Page, Mandy
Skits Were presented by .Jeff
Slaven, Emily Johnson, Rebecca Hill, Amy Hill, Mark Michael,
Graham, John Jeffers, e.nd Matt Marty O'Bryant, Matt O'Bryant,

The Golden 1 Rule Sunday
School Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Churc·h met at
Dale's Restaurant In Gallipolis
for Its February meeting.
Following the meal, John Riebel, president, cond1,1cted a short ·
business meeting and read two
readings ''Where There Is Love' '
and "Heart Gilts" both wri t ten
by Helen Steiner Rice.
. Attending were Rev. James
Seddon, Manning and June
Kloes, Ray and Helen Fields,
Randall and Carolyn Davis , John
and Glenna Riebel, Dale Walburn, Coke Ambrose, and Sis
· VanMeter.

Chester Council .D ·of A meets
-

.SWEETHEART QUEEN -Crystal Kaylor was crowned &amp;be 111110
Eastern IDgh School Sweetheart QUeen. Her escort was Dan Tripp.
The crowning took place during halftbne ceremoales of lbe
Eastern-Oak Bill basketball game.
·

.Kaylor named Sweetheart Queen

ADAM W. GEYER

Geyer birth

Phillips, Beth Arbaugh, Matt
Schul. Rae Lynn Dalley. Robin
White, Debbie Brooks, Shawn
Bush, Tara Morris, and Jon
Bissell.
. .
Miss Kaylor was crowned by
the 198S quee.n, Tammy
Leachman.

Willing Workers meet

"Disciples of Jesus'' was the .The group will also be quilting
theme of the program presented during the sale. The youth group
C. Robert and Rebecca Geyer,
when the ,Willing Workers of the will also be selling submarine
Colorado Springs, Colo.. are
St . Paul United Methodist sandwiches during the day.
announcing the birth a son,
Church In Tuppers Plains mellor
A comforter wli!J tied during
Adam Wesley, on Jan . 20 at
Its February meeting.
the day and quilt blocks were cut.
Evans Army Community HospiThere was reading from St.
A potluck dinner was enjoyed
tal In Fort Carson; Colo.
Matthew and the opening prayer and valentines were exchanged,
The Infant weighed eight
was given by Mildred Brooks .
Celebrating anniversary
pounds 11-nd one ounce, and was 20
Other readings were by Doris months were Ev~lyn Spencer,
. and one half Inches long.
Koenig, Louise Chaffee, . Mae Patrica Hall, and Mildred
' Maternal grandparents are
VIneyard, and Evelyn Spencer .
Caldwell.
John and Corrine Ambrose,
Working days toqulltwerealso
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Spencer presided over the
set up.
·Paternal grandparents are
Others attending were Beulah
Bob and Margaret Bishop, Ru- .business meeting and. reports
were given by Mrs. Vineyard and
Maxey, Edna Harmon, and
lland, and the late Carlos E.
Glenna Sanders .
Geyer. Great grandparents are . Mrs. Brooks.
The group voted to have a bake
· The next regular meeting date
Green and.Wanda Kegley, Olive
Saturday
from
S-11
a.m.
sale
on
will be March 13.
Hill, Ky.

Working moms· tell
h&lt;;&gt;w they manager

Ann'
'

Landers
.
ANN LANDERS
.....,....... .....
.\
TlmN Syndlaif' .M

DEAR READERS: A while back, the kids well-trained? Yes. Are we a ·
Crr.Man 8yndlrlll#.
a woman (professional, married with happy family? You bet. How's my
three young children) described her- weight? Don't ask, but I'll do some· J-~--~~;::_::;::::;~
. self as "a female of the '80s.• She said thing about that eventually .
she was bone-weary and felt as if she
Houston: I gave up a lucrative with ·any of the.m. The answer: I
was sinking in quicksand. I said I was career and settled for waitress work learned that less is more.
awestruck at the number of women three evenings a wcek,so I could stay
White Plains, N.Y.: Our lives bewho work at their jobs and go home at home and raise a family. We are came manageable when my husband
to another full-time job and asked, much better off fmancially, because I and I quit smoking, quit .drinking,
"How do you do it?"
no longer weardesignerciGthes, have started to exercise instead of play
Thousands of women dropped their my· liair and nails done downtown. cards and finally woke up to the fact
~omputers, brooms and biscuit batter eatlunch in fancy restaurants or drive
that the friends we were trying to
to tell me how THEY do it. Every a second car that means insurance,
impress weren't worth the effort.
female who is working at a paid job upkeep , parking and garaging. I
and raising a family can learn some- adopted a whole new set of values
Planning a wedding? What's right?
thing from today's column.
.
and put aside pride, envy, competiWhat's
wrong? "The Ann Landers
From Irving, Texas: How did I do tiveness and the need forrecognition.
Guide
for
Brides" wilt relieve your
it? I laid down the law. Everyone in I am truly content being a stay-atanxiety. Send a self-addressed, long,
the house except the baby is respon- · home wife and a nurturing mother.
businus-size
envelope and a check
sible for his or her own territory. (I
Calgary: I'm a divorced father who
or
money
order
for $3.65 (this in·
throw in a liule "corporate" territory, has custody of three children under
ioo.) The 14-year-old daughter, 11 - 14. Here's how I do it All the. chil· c/Ulks postage and i!andling) to:
year-oldson and 9-year-olddaughter dren are in school, so we don't need Brides. c/o Ann Landers, P.O.. Box
\VBSh,_dry, fold and put away their outside help. We plan menus on 11562, Chicago,ll/. 606Jl.0562. (In
,.
. own clothes. I iron. Everyone vacu- Wednesday and do the marketing · Canada, send $4.45.)
ums his or her own room and one Thursday evenings. We buy fruit and
corporate room (living room, dining vegetables in season and do a lot of
room, playroom). My husband does canning and freezing. We don't spend
"St. Patridl's Day"
ihe bathroom. I cook. Kitchen duty is money ·on movies. We rent tapes.
Dinner·Dance
divided among the children. ! pay the The kids get an allowance, out of
· .(Sat.l Mar. 10, 1990
two older ones $1 an hour to super- which they must save something
Pt.........., ..... tlal-1
7:00 , .•• Dlnntn l'rlmt ••
vise the baby' bathe, diaper and feed every week for college. They are fine
1-12 ,.... Danco: o..,11 .llall
her. Is my house spotless? No. Are · students, and I've never had trouble

Betty Young was presented a
past councilor' s card by Erma
Cleland, deputy ·state councilor,
at the recent meeting o.f the
Chester Councll323 Daughters of
America with Beulah Maxey
presiding.
Betty Roush, J.P.C. protem,
·read 10 verses of Chapter 17, St.
Matthew. The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the American fiagwere
,
given In liniBon.
The death of Eva Dessauer's
son, AlbertHendi'lcks, was noted
and II was announced that Inzy
Newell has a new great
grandson.
Balloting was held for a candidate and she will be Initiated at

VAS~ sets

Weight control classes

AUIOMOIILU I FAIM EQUIPMENT
WllleiAI 12:011 Noon
.
1984 OlevvC·20 Cherokee CUllom VDn,loaded. 99 A29
mtl8t.

1978 cttr.t., !leur
1976 CtMvv 3/4 Ton Scot1Jdole, 74.563 oct. miles.

f
.•

'

'

fOI .-st

..

s325

Ill'

RICKPR•BtON
A.VC'IION CO.

WNCH

IIAION, WV

PUBLtCATtOlli
oF NOTICE
;,
ro ALL PERSONS Interootad.l n t h e - o f J hlne H. Klbbl.. .._....
- o f 42201 Kaylor llo.l;
Ro. .vlt.,
Ohio 41772,
Meiga Cout!tY ·
Court. C.e No. 2,111 I. An
appfictllon 11M liMn llltd
ooklng to reiiiiVe tht • from admlnlatntlon, otylng
tlult ttuo - a do not ex·.
ceed t11.000 end lha creel-

Pr......

t~.

Tueodey. Mtrch 13, 111lbt
1:30 o'clock P.M. l'oroona
knowing tiny 11•on whY lhe
oppilctllon ohoukf not be.
9rant8d ohould app..r end
onlorm tha Court. Tha C..,rt
io loctttcl on tha leoond
Floor. Malga County Court
Hou•. s-nd Stroet, Pomeroy, Ohio 411719.
Robert E. luck,

CLawtl 11ttg AniOtllt of Clteok.
..
.Not II IIIII ' II FcO nldlnllor
Praputy
lila • n 1~ lllCIIon lied In 0111o, llnluakY, lllCI w..t
'¥!iglillu " '
'
. . . .llat&amp;
#' D'*I.IWI ill fl

PIL H2·S.tl2
, ..... 1 •• i1Ld1r ,,.... a ••••

--1'.

CONTIIACTORI
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

co-

fverloul IOUtla M4 JICIIDnl
iln Atlwlo,'WIIr, G-1'1·

•Hoaldng. Mefp, Mo-.

Wta:i

Morgen, Nollie, ,.....,, Vln-

•ton Md
~ tiaa, Ohio. llup

. ...fMt
baaed """" tor -

c...n-

, Ntro-

....
-O.OOittt

ltnfllll
:~--·-~mh

, WCIIII ....... • vttlouo feM
' or var1out rilll•

, ........ width. van.
~on t111a tnltGf to

:1-b- eo DINdvlllitlt_etl

·•....,...••••'
Piln
ea

(D....

t-dl..
D... · •dtn•
with ... ...,..
tt•enspu11don Unlfonn fW ..
,_ . , AI l ...... Aof of
· ~ 1117, Md 41 CI'Rl.~ al
CIIIIIIHitrl to ..a w1111
;ooar unc11r c.....,aaa
:of .... Ohio 11........ Co*.

•..,d

l

,30
.42

t13.oo ,.

c1., •• sepMate edt..

' 1. ,.,_ -

Con
htnlll.
-~~····

Dey,.
~~-·
. .t to -,_H '.l.o
llooly _ . OR tilt PIOO

a.

111t111

Lift t1oor. 1 .

Doar; 4 ........ - . •.
Left bn I , I . 1141011; 7 .

1114 ...... .,... '"'*· .
,.....,
w•-. hoN.J
alA IIC I . Door II••
w.totoeo•.._..,_. n•t•u• - ~

A·IIAII'f

Win

--..... -..... r.

TOOl

nn•••

wwtdnt
oNir,lf
Al-to-lnpltM•d
lnt~~l • • Ida.......

...... "' I A.M. leiunlf\1',
Morthl, 1110.

· llldt"'

T-to _ _ ,_1,_

lley, -...,

-'*'tttlle_l,.olint·tttlle--oflrtiYineltlwta.
""-'tet In two , _:
1.1 Ulflltl Mtll/or

I t .m. letUrI, 1110 to 'Itt·

o. -

....
.. ." 411771
JfJ, of
.........
OH
.

,..,. envelope n . . . for
0""" Trucll .._... .
IZ) U. Zl, 'Z7, 3le .
·

..-.~ perta- .......

A 1fl
I

I

I

'

'1'

I

t '

(

c.,.

1
of Thinks
2 - lnMemtMy
.l Annouc..,..nts

f

32 Mobil• Hom" tor Slll11 .
JJ · httnl .......

aw •.,.,

· 4

6 Happy_,,

3I

.

6 LGtt ttnd fuufMI

15
ll

.

7 Y•• •••'IIMi• tn ....,atn:el
I

f ·l l[l' 'I y'I t r, I
\I" \1! r' ',

. ·.

tl

Clas.~ifi«·«.l fUIK«'·' l'lll'l'r tit«'

ju/lowill#

fl''l'flhlllll' I' Xdlrii#I'S.,,

Gallia County .
Area Codel14

1:;
i43
379

13 lnauranc.

Galhpoti• .
Ch•hiro
Vinton
Rio Grende
Gu.,.nDist.
Atabt•Dist

Meigs County
Arn Code 614

MISon Co .. WV
AIU Cude 304
' .

912

'
'
675 Pt Ple•ant

M iddl.port

Porilwoy

916

Portland
Lelan falls

949 R•on•

w......,

742

RutiMd

6&amp; 7

Coolville

773
882

M•son
Now H1ven
115 Letart
· 137 Bufflk» ·

Lots• Acreage
Real E•tMe Wentect

r1 111

Hvu•• liM' "ent

Mobile Homn fvr Rent
Farms tor Rent
Apart~ent for f'ent

71
72

Houi8~0id

21 Bu1in•1 Opportumlv
22 Monev ro loan
23 Pr11f••onal Servicttt

5o7

51
61

I

Ill

~ Autos

~-4

tors ...
Ttuc:t.s !01 Sate
MotOfcycts

.

7f) Bo•t• I. Motors tor Stile 1
76 Auto
Acc•SGf• •t~
77 Auto Repilfr
78 Camping Eq,upn1ent
79 .Campen I. Motor Honnts

p.,.,, •

Good1

62 - Spor-ltngGoodl
53 Antiques
54 . Mite. MerCh..,d•sit

55
56

L1

\ u'

73 v.,,,4wo· .

Men hdnilise
51

46ill Leon
&amp;76 Apple Grove

~Gh•Wf

843
247

'

14 llusin•s Train•ng
15 Schools • lnstmctmn
. 16 Red•o. TV. CB R•pom
17 M•sceUanwus
18 W10t•d To Do

,

61 - F-,,.. ~q\tlltmont

43
44
45 Furnilt.ed Room~&gt; .
4i s..-ce to1 R.nt
47 Wantad to "•"'
41 · E11Uipment for Runt
49 For le,_.

11 .: HelD Wanted
12 Situatton·w.,.t•

1'

62 W1n1et11• luy
13 u.......
14 H., •Gr.tn
&amp;fi • ,s.... Feftll~.,

8usin•slutl~gs

PuWic Sale • Auchtn
Wmt••• luy

J

~ 1I I

•

•, (I , '\ JJ, Io..

31 · Homn tOJ ....

42

..,.prior

The Dlrtctor _,,_ 1IIOo
to roject

ent and

aM

.....

~sHRUi ·a. -TREE

WAITED

OAI

LOW GUDI

SAW LOGS

F'"IIACI

PARTI~ND IER~ICE
ALL MAKEI
O,A S 011 ELECl:IIIC

·-·
RID
DIUV
TO

DN'S . APPUAN.CI

;
·oHIO
·PALLET
COMP' ANY

'SIIVICE
992-5335 If 915-3561
A
f
p Offict

r,-;sI.':'. Vr.'.1Uft..
,

OIL

SHO~T

8 .1 Homeln,pro...ament.s
82 PIUmbll1i &amp; HG••ng
83 EM:1nting
1&lt;1 El~r•cal &amp; RetugtM"IIll ion
15 Gtm•al Haullny
16 Mobllo Hume Repair
8 7 Uphol1tery

Building Suppti•
Pats for Slle
Muei&lt;::lllnstrum4!f'l1s
Frui11 &amp; Yegttt•bl•
for Sale or Tutde

klllllhlltllnt

IEIINAIID I. HURIT
DIIIECTOII
(2) 1I, 21, 2tD

..,., ...

I'UILIC NOTICE
The~~--,;;.,,.-....,.,
lo required .by the Ohio EPA '
10- tfn
to pnwllla thafllllowtngape- '-----..::.;:o::.::.a.
Citl nottflettlon allout tetd .
In drlnfllnt
to of
our
whether or
not tiMI - • .,.aupptytry . .-1111 ...- , .
20% OFF ON All
....... !.... -clord of 10
ptrtt per IIIIHon ,_,_ . .
GOLF EQUIPMENT
..... toed pipet, oOidtr, tnd
•Engravln\ Tr:.hl•.
athar , pll...Wng -wo
"'-'~I
•
1011 oontiiiiiiN!ID *illlllnl
,•,11 •New Gripe
oCtuba lhorttlttr It ....,.. tile w•

'

UIN Sl.,

'----...;;.::.;..:::;;

1-.

TOP SOIL .
FOR SALE
' 949-2493

Scllll

rentl\r compilll with tile

""c.... -...,..,.
no

'

nAFORD

TheoortterfOU,_••our-

0 .010 ppm.-dtrd tor toed
In drlnllng wtter .. ,
The .vttt•• a Wt11r oullillf
Ia tumlahad by Lteillni
Creolo C011• --~~~ Olttllct.
No deltctellli -~~~ of
toed found in tilt t.Nol,

EXCAVATING
&amp; TIUCIIHG .

ofltti.O.
Tap

out whether tllalr
talna un- IIIVelo of
Md It oowhtt to de lllout tt.

•

-con-.-

Y. C, YOUNG HI

Oh.

3rll Slr•t,

Public Natice

PAlliMG I CO.
...... IIIWil
i'IIEE IITIMATII
Tlb fllo . . aut af

,.......
Ami,,...
.

Itt 111 . . It far ,....
YaY IIASOtUIII '
NAVE IIRIINCIS

(6141tiS·4110

laforo 6 p,&amp; le•o.,
.
tl·tl-'

Step 111 CHid S..

min-•
the rlofl of lead
colltllmlnttlon bjo fll,o-g

DALE HIU

, . 'Itt!• ~~- toed In
htl dlrtrlbutlon lrlttth.
- - IIDtlalntha ........
Olilo EPA ...... lotiont ., . lng eoncl-fnrl beloreuafn9
health the watar tor 011111dn1 . or
. to .. drlnldne. Uauolly, Nnnlnt

AT

Couple of rnlnuttt ... clo.
w- t1oet "'" ...., 1n .,.

d-••••

~~

,_,n

thell iaafl Ia 1
_....,11
11
•-

.

.

levalt of • - · There Ia
...
- "parta
a al8ndtnl
of
0.010
par million
jpPIIt). ..... on- hllhh

~ion, U. 1. EPA 1e 1ktly
dlla

•n•lll
.

'* ......,
ttr.·

,,_ftlaa

,To;..,.

of the , . _ of
to 10 '!'fon!l ,.,.

u•-•tre
__,

-•wout~u
tar lilwiot ~ _
lttd. ..... It

lnoontactwlthioieahofdtrlll
the ....., )elntt tor ......l'eopte ahoulil
houN.
·~" ootd-tordrfnldne,
coaldng. tncl - - l i l y tor
proplrlilfl ..~ flmnulrl,
olnaehDt,.,_
,_..., to - - con•mlntttcl wlllll...,.

u•

•VINYL I !DING
•AWMINUM SIDING
•ILOI(IIN IN
INIULA'I'ION

,

st•o co.
=
.
.
.
,
_
.
,_,,thalr_ ............
,...._....,_lltaa ....., ...........
...........
.....
•• - T
••1•
...-111 ......,.

dlla -lat

of tile

cca-a ...._.....,..

IISSELL

............... ., ...... 'lhitto ....... allovatl...... lona
......... 1oM
-...

-

. . . . .aadby .........
..
t t -.r
.:

~ "Free

of tha IIIValro of . . . . . . jli
IL;
"U.I. II'AMHI..._. ... lloiMID-11111\fballileto!
000 ,.., " " " iaafl 111 _..,....,._.IIIIIPINtorl
~
td , . _ " ' lltaitl ... ,
'I - - · oo ,_., IIIII'"""' IIIII Will .. M
!ted In tllttoumM l:ldv ""
-•
otu• ttr'*'lii•TIIIfetllt I'TIY tnal tDft . Moutfi tl
:

""'
...,_...--=~.':';;;:'"'
,..

L•o•••"

110 SU!INY

..•••.

a.na, ....
Cuetom lulh(

·Homea. ,;
Aemoclel"' ·11

.....•,

RepelrWOftl ;

tii·JJU :

'•pel II . . Ill""" -If filii
~ oa:a•nlly••*~~

=.-.:-.. •....

_, , ... 111111111

ir .....

..__,~11,..._ ,,
-

......

' .

""lift . . . . .

tlilr .~111 KIU)II I ...
......................
1:00.....
'

..:..r:r.'C'
.........2.._ ..i!=.=·u.'IP%
...
-:.::::r:,le
lllll···
...
.....
c. n.-.
........................
as to tNI .. , ......,

...
,.JIId
11111011
. . . . . . . . . ..
1ft GIDtliller8tloll "r 811

"Minimum,....-

.-do

far

thft'priiJtot " -..... ,.....

1111. ~ - . l i t • •

•• u. ..

_,.,...~.-toftoraot• ~D.
~_,·...., ........ ~ IM'a
Vlll(:l:lllslfl·
tor llilllllilllrna."
. lOG . ,
j.
Cu•allln IMY -

Ill II; Ill II; 141 II, Ito

••. :to: ..

DUMPTRUCK .
Send-Stone-Din

(6141 6U·3271.

PH. 992·1922

SEINE

Mllldleport,

Gtwlt A.

··t...c.:t!l
....
•"Y•

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

sus•,.
....
luylng Houl"l;

IYDY SUNDAY

Pu11

Ollie

, PH. 992·1561

St.m at 1:00 P.M.

7:30-a:oo
Mon. tllru

'·~Choked
1Z Gauge Only

P:rL

7:30.4:00

t-1-ft..tfn

USD APPIIAIICIS
.U.NG&amp;
Naw ...fllrp
161 lltrtlt 11181111
Mil•

~1rt.- • •1760

. .....

SALES &amp; SIIYICI

91 DAY WAIIIIIIY

••

-'S

lfl

••

lPPIIAIICI
SIIYICI .

........

m.nu.-

MOIIU
HOME PAIK
•Mall lie Home

l'lrta

........
ttl-7479
,, ,.,.

• Mobile Home

..

•Lot 11-1·

... U'ISIIII ..
,,

••lllh-tlywlllla-·
.............
Wlltet 101 .I ..

a.lllttri70I111 ,.,._,

I'WLAND
IIITE.PIISES

· Homtllle, W...._er,
• TecumMh,trfggo.
It litton.

;

COISIIUCliO,.

CLIAIING

I'II.IITI AND IIIIVICE
,or ~ 2 Mtl 4-CfCIIt

H2-Z1H

""'h-....

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

I

PAT.lLfOID

,._ o•eiaellhtor•rlngthe
~- .... "
~-

•

.... -

.

DOZER
SITEWORI • !tOADS

We cu%. IIIII rt·
••
tors alllll
l.atlr '""· We can
.... •ltlllell and rill
Ht rllliatlrl, Wt aht
r.,elrGasT. . .

--.h ,...........

IIIey (U. .

'

·

PH. 949·2101
., .... 949·2160

llVI'S

saaLL •••11
-~~·
lr ••otV..,l
Itt •••• ,.rt, ...

·-

949-2168
_.
• Z-1-'•lao,..

"At l1111n ..l1 Prices"

f92-2228
,.

Gutters

Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

CUSTOM lUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

· Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

992-6215
,_.,!»'\~ 110.

NEW - IEPAII

BISSELL
BUILDERS

LOWEST PIICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
FlEE LOC:AL DEUYEIY
PoMEIOY AND.IIDOLEPOIT'S ONLY
LO&lt;ALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

-lloolng
-lntarlor • E-tor
Peintl
tFII£i11TtMATES!

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

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

4-5-lf.tf11

UNDA'S

......

Clean Dry Aluminum Cana, 38C per lb.

WE BUY ALL NON FERIIOUI ICRAP. BATTERIES.
STARTERS.
ALTEIINATORI. ETC.

,- Eieclrlc.r • P(urnlllne

-t•
•••••1.

.ara,....
, --plant,_..,1111,_

.

EYEIIIIIGS

!i:iij
s:::.
I:": :-: ........
::.'I'!.
-=·
.... !'J':':j_.=
· •:t

..., Niib:aot . . . . . .....
,...... .. tNe ... m1.1
I . . . . . inleitJiltt ....... . .
~,_,

992·2269
.
'

-Gun.Wor~

Alignment
aOU Change • lube

...,..

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 1 • a .R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 10 • l.lt. 143
HENOEIIION, wv~~ ~-:,~·.~0 a; ...... Equipment
,OMEIIOY: 1 a.m .-7 p.m . 7 Dayo
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. I Dovo. Ctoaad
HENDERSON: 10a.m.· l .p.m.&amp;OayLCioaad&amp;
PAYING A&amp; oF TODAY , JAN . 3o. 1
111 Copper 70C per lb.;

CARPENTER SERVICE

•Th lalea
•Fnmf End

.
. 12 .... Slitt..., Otllr
Strldltly lnfercll4

BILL SLA.CI

·

l1w•ll L Wrlt..a ..

OPFIIS J LOCATICIIIS TO SIIVI YOU-.

·~.~~on.l

"FIREWOOD

-RoomAd•tono

Ut-3081 '

EYIIY·
SAT. NIGHT
" 61JO P.M.

•

TII·COUITY RECYCLING

YOUNG'S ,

IUTLAND
SAUS and
SDYICE·

UCINE
Fill DEPT.

·

~LIGHT HAULING

· I -13/18

-

GUN

TRIM ~tild RE·
MOVAL

FURNACE

S160 ..._'_!'_,

rfllt,U
Ohio Dl=~ !If
..... . . . . . . .ltSI ... ... u "":... §'r. . .
~:o·
alllolddtrt thefl ... 11
IIIIIIIJIIhwn I II
'.tt~ ..........f ~ . . . .. .

, The

I

-·

41

tollnowllowtoflnd

Cotumbua. Ohio

' A-., Oefll.. Guarnoty,
' lloaldng. Mal... MoMOe,
Ma191ft. Nollie; ,.....,, Vln' ton Md Wtahintlon Coun•tiaa, Ohio, 011 11 Dtlon ATH·
33-10.40 on U.l. 11- 33
In Athena County tncl-

._of

.zo

t

ou-·

for lmproua,.,.,.aln:

..
'

.
NOTICE TO

Fe~~.:· 1110
IAtlll Copy
,
• No ..10-Zat
1 UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
,
IIIGOOOI(103)
&gt;
FG.QOOF (II)
:
1110-000R (31 1I
. lealtd prapotalo wit be
'I
thtd It ... offt• of tha
:0 1 - of tilt Ohio Dtpert·
·ment of Trenapoctlllun. C•
'tumbua. OIIIQ, 10:00
~ A . M., Ohio lt8ndtnl Time.
Tuetdf\1'. Meroh 13. 1110.

I Willi LD.
. . . atl AnDIIO"D, ID .JIMENr, NIGlRAIL·
• catllor CIIIOlt Wilt a ... ......,. al CMcll

.

tflou•nd doa.ro. ora bond
,., - , . - o f " " 11111.
-life 10 ... Dtreetor.
, . _ -~~"""'·on tile
p r - forme. for quoflft•tlon et lttttto
tlled ... l81toropanlng~
in _ . . , . , . with ChiP*
·1121 Ohio llevtoed Code. ·
PIMa and opedflctllont
111 on fltelo tile D.,.;tment
of Treno; ttt8tlon and tile
office of the Dlttrlat o..,utv
Olnc:tor.

A heerlng on tile r1g1o1
lipplictllon wit ba htld bide.

•

II • CAtll Cl Cl

NOW FEATURING HC*EMADE
DINNER ROLL .
.

:!:'~-.::,:-:::;.~

not be projucl-

tore -

1

~UNDAWUdi

,

2 '00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M THURSDAY
2 IJO PM . FRIDAY

aheaktor•-"'et~uolto

_

,

773-5785

101 epc:h

251

llonofthlaworkohallbelll
t.o_ripOth.•~l~, the -lddlng
..,
ehllt be ,...
qu- to file with hlo Jlid 1
certlfl... ah.... .or -hi•' a

Public Notice

""
,...

I

.....·-=
.

~=~:::~==~;=~====l=~='=ll~s=i=ll~e~s=s~~~=;,e;r~.
;
"=i=c;;e~s;.
.
~~~======:;
fURNACE

!orO.

I'

ti.OO
t9.00

1.

.to
,10
.
· t1 .30i dav , .05/day
Monthly 1
Ratn..-e tOt co.n .. wt!w runs. bfo-.upcllf•will bedl•ted

,381
24&amp;

11 .00 AqM . SATURDAY
2 .00 P.M. MONDAV
2:00PM TUESDAY

THURSDAY PAPER
&gt;HII&gt;&lt;lY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

·,

Mlllll·--·-

'

DAY BEFORE PIJBLI&lt;;ATtON

,

W£0NESOAV PAPER

.!

14ft. All.mtrun Boat. 3ton Soort Brand C8nlrai AI', 2 HP
.AI' Compr8110r, Fc:m8V~Amp.ACW8k*, MacNr-111
TOOit. Pipe \11M, 1/2'DrtiPr•.FfanldlnWood81o'18,N 14
SIMI Olop Sow. Rcllarl for Sow WI, Plon111 Tape
RKordM and IIKelvtr, Some TOOII. Fie Cabinet. loti
ot M1celalleOUI MciiOior W.ICicilwl,

Card aud l.ug• nbt1cesl

w111 ;~lsu appur 111 thv Pt Pluaunt Reu•stttr ttnd thtt G.ah·
pohs Oa•l't' Trl~Jtlllc. fu~ctutl\1 Qvttr 1•.000 hom~

Public Notice

r.ISCEWoNEOUI:

'

·.

,

classlflod)hspl.,. .~llu s lnws

~ .
'Melga County. Ohio
:;- Lent K. N•talroad. Clerk
. C2l 1 Z. 19. 28. 3tc ·

Protect your valuable
home ownership. For
details on Nationwide"se
Mortgoge Dillbility
·
Income Plan, call tCICHy.

Motor recantty rllbUII

•

&amp;or,Y, no t•lt " ' . ,
1pt ho ••11
wlllllddltlonll , . . .

J \

Farmal H Tractor
'
Ranch King 18 HP Rtdng Mower. fell than o ~r old
lntemallonot T.D. 15 Darer
Trailer ·
14ft. utttlfy Trolar 121140 Ofllco Type Trailer. no fttlo.
1963 10ft. Camp Trollw
1962 Now VO!Kif He~a Trallllr lO&gt;ciia
19611 Fan 18 ft. Camp Trailer
Bel Saw Ml Wlth48" htart lllo&lt;lo ond 2641nt. PoWvr Unit

Jcick Fowllr, 1304) 1&gt;75·1625
Groat Food! Groat Mulkl F!lendsi

ONLY

"A tli15Siftod a.tverlisvnt!1Rt' placull m Tht! Da1ly St"m lnl\lt lu
Ct!~JI

••.00

15
15
15
15
1.5

6

'
Ov,r
18 W9r•

llolo

Words

1
3 '

to • all capital leiters 11 doubtu ptfctt ot ~d coli.
"1 ~oint hne typtt onty uud .,
.
"Sent lnd 11 not rnponsibt• for •rors a he~ t•r•t d-w , iChttdl.
lor errors tirat d., ad tuns in papttf) . Call heforel 00 p .m .·
d._- afll;!r pubhcllllon to mlktl &lt;::orrectio"
•
'Ads th•t 11\UII be paid ill Mlli11nt:c ttnr
Card of lhlf)ks
'
H•PP¥ Ad5
h1 Mumori·.n1
Yard Sillt:s

1UESOAV PAPER

Nalionwide'se Mortgage
Oinbility Income Plan is·
desig'ned to take the
·•
worry out of making
mortgage payments
should you or your working spouse become
disabled.

A spot check of 1r.~~~r;~,c~~
airport mana11ers a1

LEGAL NOTa
Oulltotlltlalllofttme... IIIII dlot to ,_.....,.

•

Atlanll!, Baltimore, Bolton. CbJ..
ClliO, Pltlabul'ih and Salt Lake
Cltyaltowed IDconilna O*btaand
&amp;al2 a'geilta hid pot reported any
trouble from anJI'Y w.ould·be
· smokers.
._
"We Mally don't ,Jltlclpate
any problems at all," said NellMonroe, a spokeaman for Delta
Air Unes In Atlanta. "Given the
fact that well ovet 'Ill percent of
our filghts were all:eady nonsmokln&amp;', we're just lolng to
extl!nd what we do now."

ad

. MONOAV PAPER

If you or your working
spouse suddenly became
disabled and either of
your regular paychecks .
stoPi&gt;ed; how long could ·
you meet your monthly
mortgage payments?

.,.....,..or.,......,. ......

J...,
N..rt, 13041 •n ...u
IfNI Durst, 13041 675·241&gt;5

(Ditliltt . . . Otllyl
&amp;.rved with whljoped ~ ohicUn
pwy, cole.._, hot rol 81111 ....-•.

'P• ict~ of

COPY DEAO.LINE

Disabilities bring
uncertainties

D•v•

•
"Ads outside M.Wtp, O.Mi• Of Mnun count•• musl be prit·
p ..d. .
.
.
"Rvc~e ' -&amp;0 dtleounl tOr ads . .,d 1n actll&lt;tnce.
•fiN Mls
GWnw•y •nd Found adl undllf 15 words w•ll bv
mn J d•s ~• nu c:hage.

Pro-Judga

LOCATED 1111LES EAST OF IIPL!Y OFF RT. 117
TO GUNVILLE ROAD TO TIIBBLE ROAD, 1511LES
WEST OF POINT PI FWNT, WV, ON AT. S2TO
TRIBBLE ROAD, I" IlLES OUT TRIIBLF ROAD.
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
lkc.ba
Will . . ....

1 permitted
'
U&amp;htlng up 18 at'lll
on
some domestic fiilbts that Ia-'
longer than siX hilvs, to 1\luka
or flawa.U for Instance•. Chll'!2rt
alld lntl!rnatlonal fil&amp;hts al10 are
no1 1covered by the ,ban, though
airlines may lmpo~ .their own
restrlctlona.
· 1'

a

POUCI~S

presentation of fEleanor' .

SATURDAY,
.
.
MARCH 3t :1990
:IOIOOA.M.

Chlca110'• O'Hare International
Airport on a 11110kelell fillbt
from Houston on S~nday, when
the restrletlou went Into effect.
"I'm now and It's kind of hard
to break 1 habit."
The new federal law extends
~trlctlon&amp; previously on the
bookl, whlcb had J~nked the
smoking sectlona on alldomeatic
fitghts of two houl'$ or less. The·
bali now appllel to all filghta

TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992-2151»
MONDAY thru FIIIDAY I A.M. to ' S P,M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAy·

.

A disability
can hurt •••
m more ways
than one

within the CODtlnelltal United
Stalel and all domestic fillhU of
six hours or less.
,

te oewr tM ftl.ouatnt ,.

A.L

.

Helen Wolf and Lora Damewood were pianists for the · ·
The council practiced p.-esent- · meeting.
lng colors which It will do at th~
Attending were Eyerett (;rant, ,
Spring Rally.
Esther Smith, Elizabeth Hayes;
Betty · Young thanked
Doris Grueser, Ethel Orr, Beulah
members for cards and calling at
Maxey, Erma Cleland, Faye
the tuneral home at the time of Kirkhart, Lora Damewood, Opal
.the death of bet father-In-law,
Hollon, Thelma White, Charlotte
Chester Young.
Grant, Sandra White, Mary K.
· There will be a district practice Holter, Betty Young, Ulllan
at the senior citizens center on
Demosky, Betty Denny,' Inzy
March 11 at 1 p.m. AU members Newell, Marcia Keller, Jean
are urged to attend.
Frederick, Doris Koenig, JoAnn
Erma Cleland read a poem,
Baum, Alta Ballard, Ruth Smith,
"The Little Things."
Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Iva
Refreshments were served and Powell, Brenda Cunningham,
games conducted by the "Good Betty Roush, Helen Wolf, Eva
or Order Committee.''
Robson, Genevieve Ward.

.

.ki c.to, (304) 675-3111

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

'''
'

the Spring Rally on March 17.

·ESIATE AUCTION

smok!D&amp; aiDce I was

,.,.,

ltloar.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

- Peopl~ in the .news-

...S.V.P. bf llir. 3
TKIETSI Mlddltpert, OIL Flow• Shop

A series of six week weight County Health Department at
eontrol classes will be offered SS2-6626.
beginning March 6 and March 7
at 6 p.m.
The classes will be sponsored
!&gt;Y the Meigs County Health
Department and will be o! two
h~s duration. They will Include
I!Utrillon education, stress management, weekly weigh-Ins, relaxation techniques, recipes , diet
recall sheets, exercise techniques, and other phases of ·
weight control.

I

"~'ve beftl

12," said one traveler arrlvtna at

· from Ugbtlq up under n!!W
federal restrletlona. ·
: Airlines employee~ said most
passenaera were pleued to be
breathing smoke-free Jetliner
air, but the prohibition left some
cigarette-dependent travelers a
bit frazzled by the time they
rea~hed their deatlnatlona.

RIO GRANDE - The lite ilnd
that Uvlng In the White House
daytime drama "Days Of Our
times of the woman considered to could !lave an adverse effect on
Llyes," she appeared opposite
be America's most popular First
the Marx Brother~ In "A Night In
her children," Gillman conLady will be examined In the next
Unued. "Yet, sbe falt!tfully filled
Casablanca" and acted on· such
Valley Artists Series offering.
the role of First Lady whi!n It was , network television shows as
, "Eleanor: A Celebration,"
obvious she must."
' 'Ironside," "Daniel Boone" and
starring Toni Gillman, and writGillman, who began acting on
"Tenspeed and Brown Shoe."
len and directed by ber husband,
radio soap operas at age 5 and
She has been to11rlng In "EleaGordon Davis, will be presented
posssesses an Impressive list of
nor: A Celebration' ' since 1S84. t'
., In the ChriBtensen Theatre of the
theatre credits as both an actress
For more Information .a nd
Fine and Performing Arts Center
and director, has also staged
ticket sales, contact the Fine,and .
on Sunday, March 11 at 2:30p.m.
Performing Arts Center at 245-.;r
another one-woman· show, ''The
The one-woman show, called Angel of ijalsled Street," about
5353, extension 364. The toll-free ,
bY one critic a ·"rich gllmP\If! of social reformer 'J.ane AddalllS.
number In Ohio Is 1-800-28!!-7201 \
the woman and the,era," details
Best known for her role In the
_
the life of Eleanor Roosevelt
(1884-1S62), wife of the nation's
32nd President, Franklin D.
Roosevelt A ·noted bumanltar· .
tan, . Mrs. R,ooaevelt's social
By United Press lnteraallonal
running feud . over the role of
concerns, expressed during her
NEW SPIKE LEE MOVIE:
blacks In the entertainment ·
husband's four terms In office,
I ole Lee, sister of movie-maker
business, but Lee says that didn't :
moved to the International stage
Splle Lee, didn't hesitate when It come Into play when he cast
after Worl!l War II when she
came time for her nude scene In Charlie: "He's the best person for •
became Instrumental In the early
her brother's upcoming movie,
the job," Lee said. "Eddie might'
years of the United Nations.
"Mo' ·B etter mues." "When he
be embarrassed when he sees:
said, 'OK, take off your lOp,' I
how good his brother did."
With humor and sorrow, the
just did It," Jole told People
play focuses on Mrs. Roosev~lt's
FLEDGLING DI'S BIG '
magazine. "It's not perverse."
triumphs and failures . Gillman,
CHANCE: ' A 10-year-old blind .
"Mo' Better Blues" also features
who first met Mrs. Roosevelt In
boy will get to fulfill his dream of '
1957, said that because of her
Eddie Murphy's olc)er brother,
being a disc Jockey Wednesday .
"courage, sensitivity and great CharUe, 30, who picked up a few
Joe
Milam of High Point, N.C.,
acting tips ttom his more famo,us
wit - there are many laughs as
will co-host the morning show on .
well as tears In this-play - she brother. "He worked with me,"
station
WMAG with regular Bill '
rose above her personal probCllarlle says. "I was very ... weli,
FJynn,
an
appearance ar.ranged'
lems. I love portraying ller.
I'm not saylngl'mgreat now, but
after
Flynn
heard about how Joe .
. "She was a humble woman
I was terrible." Spike Lee and
put
on
a
make-believe
radio show •
who never wanted to First Lady , Eddie Murphy have had a
at
home.
because she knew In advance
.,

su.oo ,...,...:.Soml---1

; There will be a lim it as to the
number of people whO can be
admitted to the class which will
be beld In the conference room of
. the multi purpOse building on
Tueldays and Wednesdays of
each week.
' The cluses are free to Meigs
County residents and they should
regllter uaoon as possible due to
c1all 1Jze limitations . .
To J'elllter, Meigs County
retldenll should call the Meigs

DorothyLe!IIlelt, and the pas tor. , ..
Keyboard music was provided
by Susan Page and Dorothy ,
Lejlbelt Vocal music was by _
Jeannie Owen. Marty 0' Bryant :
led the group In a sing-a-long;
,
Prizes for longest married
were presented to Thom!lS and
·Frances Hendrix, Ernest and
Sadie Carr and Jack and Janet ~
Needs.
,
· Lamar O'Bryant Is pastpr of :
'
the church.

B)' \Ide. . . . . 1111
*111111
The ''Do ••K*IDI' 'llpa ltaYed
lit and tobaeeHtarwd pusengers on vlttllalty. all U.S.
commercial aJn:raft are !Janned

Z.tu-.,_...,d
.

MMEIT

lights flash on pet'1nanently

Mondey. February'!&amp;, 1890.

. Peg• 6

Crystal Kaylor was crowned
sweetheart queen at Eastern
High School on Feb. 16 during
halftime of the Eastern versus ·
Oak Hill basketball game. Her
escort was Dan ·Tripp.
The sweetheart court and their
escorts were Amber Short, Scott

f

L'-liii----·

---

. ,....1•11•
Pl. Ml·1611
er "I· 11

�,,
8 The Daly Sentinel

Pilgl

Pomaioy-Midrllf)Oit. Ohib

LAFF-A-DAY

4

42 Mobile Homll

51

torRent

Februlry 21,

HouajlhOid

r

...

Television
Viewing

..

"1:

"

•

The Daily Sa 1tinei- Page

Ohio

1880;,

72 Tluckllor Sill

~·

It ,,_,...._ ....... ,,••
1101111or ..... . . . _

•

•

tAMI

M

MON., 1'1!1. 21
CI1 11C1 TV UllirQ ~. " 'lllfoltl. TX

BAGLOM

I I' I .11 I

MNINO

......

0

-

tbr,

......
, __...
.. _
,__ ,

0

~odin._

7

"

Yard Sale ·
'

'

.

. • ., •.• ••; '. . .... ~, .. , ........

~.

.

. Apartment
for Rent

"''"" ••t h .• , •., , .. ,

•

I I' I I

lllyllliglols 1974-NC Sllie,
Marqlllttt, UCLA, 1&lt;anaaa
(lJ AIMrlca The
aristocrats ollhl air are

1-,;;L:..:,.I.:.;R~A.:.....:.Y-11

iiJI World today
IIJ Jam
ID Cllarlaa In a.-

1--+1~~.:.·,.:I;,:_;Irs:.,lll'"i-I G Comp loto

Didji Ever Notice Depart4 I · I I ·~ ment: A neigl!bor will itand at
..._..,.·1
__._--'-"--'-'·_.. ~ your doOr for 20 minutes ber-~~-~~~.."--1 cause . he has no tlma to ----

~:=i.I;IOne TV 1;1
• 0 Att4r ~

1 lr. 1111.. lt'Tthno. Dop. req'ld.
......... 21.
/ I-

I

HE8 CN

1JJ NCAA l'lnal Fow ..

0

9

1:01 w a...otr

I

NAPREC

. ....J.L.....L.l......l.--.1.

111••••

.1.
. ....J

lho . chuckle quolld

by fill;n~ In tho miNing wordo
you develop from step No. 3 below.

1:311. (2J IB NIC HlgMiy Newt

(J) lpartll aak

• • • (I) AIIC Ntwa 1;1
(I) llociJ lleclrle
(J) 1-2·1 CaniMt 1;1

G1

EamPOOtotiGOI*'--at-Coll

Publlc~le

8

lt~n;74411

&amp;Auction

.Tap eM
ID. Hangln' In
·I:U (I) Andy Qrtlfllh

i

Wanted to Buy

9

· ~n harna
114-'""'2136.

Re,.,.nc•

lor

lnlarmation , _, AnJOIMI
wah I Clr~op potlontlllt In
aood oond
oolo coli
3o4-t711-1337orl7!-(507.

~~~;jjj;-'-;;'~;;;i
I
...
....
or
-oro. Coli Lorry Llvllr 114-

.=

3111,1303,
Low grodo ook IIW ' - . 1110

Help Wanted

11

to ' IMm 1nd to •-mo

rooponolbiiHioo, bo 1blo to W«&lt;l
.,.,.. evtnlnp end . . .Unde.

Houro: "-•llllllllr 111-:=.C'
1
, SOrid -unll to
rm,
cia GaiiiJiollo Dlltr T~bu~,
113 Tlllod Avo, Galllpollo, un

-·-31 .

AVON I All Aroll I Shl~oy

""' ~.:-lor
LP.N.
•
lor lUI.
IIG.'IIIt.ur
I addod
l o r - ....... and 0
.....
Ful n.. and Pait '111111
-,_
P IUon
IYIIIoblo,-loiiOIIa!'"'l...,.
with - • d i l l cl -.
el:c. Dlr llhlft """ ott.r
. ooko111f oil ond lllo part limo
::"':ion ftH tho ~ oft.

•••••-torl-·4~.....

'"'

C::,'m.n~o.,r:-

CarMI' Oriented Individual...,..

..... Iaine. eoHeae RIC
,.
Slloloxpootonol Toolplul. Slloiy

comm....,_

p1U1P.O. ~~ 1H, Sind,.......
lo:
lldRII, OM

48114.
c.rmtod -

-~~~
buoy, -

LPN for
oroc11co. Compeii!M _,., ond
lwnotlto. Plooolnt - " ' • con-

dHiono.-"" llon:h 1,111G

to 11o1a1. HOdh Somco, P.O.
lol 71110
.Pomooor, Oh. 114-1112810t.E.•
1.
Choir d l - - · polcl
c11o1r dl-01 DOIIIIon, -~odiiiCh"""
to Tnnllv~
Unlld
n
•--aa

rlinaht~

IOd2 ft,, I

112-,21!11ho, • - -

..,

._.,_

171,000. -

3 tJdoouw.

~

.... Ill

-

,._., lllddlr' 1 I c-r
~· High). ht,IIOO. 114-

-·nd·--

elflcllllf. 4 b••-••, I lUI
-•nt,
IOM711-7324.

104-77M1ts.

.

TECH-

ULTRI.eol=oc..,.
~

.... ,.,

Soultuuuna
I

I

Ohio

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

..

~ on 1.11...- T -

~;=

..

2
~ • ..._-·z:•.···"'
-.
,.IIttY - · now
and port, now - ~ now -

VIIAIIIUTEIICAJ

~

1-

U.S.

=-..=. ~·
bldg,

lOW~

1711-4la
=;-.:::;:-;;==:=:--:::-:~
1..,1- -lllllon, IH-.

12111, , _ Hal -.
- - . oiH -I:OO 104-

auAiwn-&amp;o. ~-==":..:":.:..·--:-c:-:,.-.....,-:oz

REOAADUI8 Of&lt; CA1D1f 1111 ~ 121111 RATIHO. CALL 1M2 - . I br do_,., II - .
1CIII7EXT. !IBM.
- 6 ,.,.., rolllgonU I
-ntod
In 1,_ ~ ~ -~~~
11,000. ell
'uwn ••• ~g~SIIM7S-1'112.
000\.
w~.~· · I ....
ClaM I - and
Point
21111110"' col Wlllo
Wll•
tJon.- 141172, 1 br, 2 1uo1
304
momlngo
7HZ!O.
op1111oo. bo wiling to -.IOialoiiCIIre, aa
Cnofto Poroon wontld tar: roloollo. Will oct • r f4F?Iool ,...., CA, dloh""""- Crullan •nd . . . of floral to Town EmpiOJIII . ..., ... ut*r J!nnlni, 114 ci 1117,
dlltrgM. Retell IXperilnct 1 aotllibta. PIMM .... ,..,,. 114 Utl:aOJ, U.. n
11
1'1""' Cell .tom 11 lho Llfoylllo fo: Town of - - . llaol
Qardoncant.. MonthNFri.llo 217,-Hiven,wv,.Far-:
3.1141111841.
Wanttd:RI' 'II~- . . . ~-:.~:c::~1 -::.::
Al'll Rato Clllld cora ~ -11 '-I .....
an lltil w
--'II
IIW ......_,.
.._......,
_., In 111111 o1
home. ........ " .,.., • 1
• •• • • -·
~'!!!!tr
Live .............
ttla•...-~
.,..,
74411.
to
_ _ , llti t11,1011. 114 tW b
- C a l .............
Don1 mlol . , _ ond llalhor t:tllp.m. 211-111-41a
:;;:::::;:-=::::-=::::-~=
Doy p101Ma. 1111 Avonl Own
Qono'o llololla Homo'o. Guo!1J
Avon .........., llnll .t coet. W.ntld: beb'ellw
IDr
2 · llcyiiM HolMe It r11: n b'r
114-IG-7'110.
In lilY - . I or I ...-,
2
;,~~;Jfr.j;;l
1 INiilk, a on
•
•
....._
:cad
Jat.,t.
IROJPOI-. 7711RI. 2. - l f l ; .
~"#t
oily of Golllpollo,

-•"',e,..

~

-.I

'!Nail••• ••

,_lot.

now"""

1---.
1

=•
-on
=
='

brl._

----. =··oond,

r

lly JameJ Jaetby

When tbe opponents have bid two

":l

lfa:;~·

7~

MQIOI'CyC!H

:'

.,..,1110;,.-,S,_uzu...;ld~NO,.:..Il;.;.O..;.,OOI_,ol,-....

~T "3Eif'IJ?

~~-···

F&amp;

Gro••Q-

~

I\

--.4-.-·-

ffff APPIAfl~

i

fuLLY CLOiflfp,

I

IN f'UJ&amp;.I~

i

•

•

Olf.:

79

Cam118!'8 &amp;
Motor Homea

11" 'l'ol

l:'1tyr.wah1210.ianii.JrJ.;wn
11 ,
•

.

Of -

'

Fumlahecl
Rooms

45

lor

Ront: lllnglo .1 or 2
- - . l t 7... ...,. .... _
~ • up. Ceblo T.V. 114AooiM

81

at Harvard's Bright HOCkey

Dlao ....,., for iulomollllo.
1200. 114-4414111. I
.

_lar ___ .,_,h.

11-. 011111
Hatel.·
114 II
441 Mto.

Kina sa ........
-~:::;
.....u-1

_,__ ... __

II 5'% NOIM Wlttl ~
2:00 p.m., 104-773-

Cal -

•• ...._wv,
46 Space for Rent

~--lor-.ttOOpor

over-protective when

· · Home·•· ·
Improvements

'
If,

BASEMENT

",

..
, ..........
IIIDirpl-··
' :
WATEAPAOOANO

• •·

u-o1111o1111 lllolliM _,.;,
t-. Loolillllw&amp;nDII ~

Elizabeth's romance heals

;·a21

Jump l1rMI
Hanson and Penhal head to
war-ravaged B SalvadOr. 1;1

0 , _.._
11J Munier, 8IMt WIOII Steal

'.

Me A Story
• C1ttn1t ltrMIIbilknl

- -· Coli 1r
··~
,.....
IFF n•ll

hiiO. Ixc. oond. 1141• 173t.

f-

bUll.,

.-., Tonnlng Bod, Ill
ID
tlmli, (Rw.._ 100
111111), t1,700.

""'"IDM7II-444I

ID MOVIE: -.o (PGI3)
(2:00)
1:01 l3l MOVIE: Forced
'TIIftllll,_ (R) (2:00)

11'1'-&gt;~IP')It

• I

I

I'

~ 1r,

e:•e
(2J e !loPn Pamlly
Mark and Wlille buy OaYicl's

( )

old convertible. !;I
G1 e111 City LIZ flnde
llii'H~ aitntelld to a·
councilman she to fighting

or••lll~g~I~17U.

lw i 1 'ton lrucll.
114-4;'Utll.

81 Fann Equipment

· All ·lncludod. Coli .
......,... ..... 114~41 t222.
Country lloloio Homo l'llrlo,

-

n. - , - .of - - " "COl·
~...-"-::.);:
47 Wlntecl to Rent
I hd

OUCII . . . _ Of trlllllr.

' ON iHIS ClA-Y IN HISIOR:'(, IN

1"10 AD, M.APae

1:00

HeRA-L.~ _

INV6NTEDT~.

wllhQ
•eroot•et.e
e
'Too
(2J 1B MOVII:

Yount~

To 11117' NIC

,......4.....,_,,...,_

• • • (I)

MOVII!:

'DII ...... 01 The 1111tiHMitlbibi'

NltC l!c~May NltiM Movie
~,~YM On The Pille II

llldll J I -ion.
Clean, rollaiH 1 -. I
otMW• Rlfu•IIOI liftllllble.
-

114-IG-'1112.

AntldiiCrlmiMIIon

:t:""hls

.... put 10 lhl • .

•Murplly'a
ea Mt
Jlllr
fllna with Jerry

Gold IH- tfll FYI team

stunned. a

Situation

ellll Allil ....... Blkea

recogntzaa tile marking of a
aarlal murderer ho never
caught.C
0 U"Y King 1.1¥11
IIJ ,._ 1'11111 W'N-atlllrlloogoa
....lhvlle Now

Wanted
I WAS TRYIN' TO SEE
WHO'S PARKED
IN FRONT OF
TH' SCHOOLTEACHER'S
HOUSE

wtm'IIIITAL IIITEC'IOIII
Ron A - . 1210 . _ . . .....
Ollllpalla. 0Ht14 441 11•

51

Hooleholcl

GoodI

-·

. . In ...., •oton.

55

by THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Hep one
4 Hep
cullure
7 Senator
from
Kansas
8 Cheese
10 Poe bird
11 Stone's
weight
13 Weslern
Indian
14 Health
resort
1!I Constellation
17 Estate 's

edifice

....... (2:011)0

Win
bollvallll!!f
111 ow
-C.H
·
Mon.dotlllll
Ftl. Diya
onty.
11._ . ... .

CROSSWORD

Monc11r Night At The

JIIOOIIII lave 11.00. I'IDW on
- · 1 - Plllnl. to.lnj
PI I I il, »MJJ.4GGrt.

Of ..... - . bo
-hlatandlnawllroplloa
--t1.tOO:..... tir1100.

'

t:30®Calaga ........
eA crazy
•aDulgllfteWmix ol PIOPie are

'

trappld 111 Suglrtllker·a.Q

(

11~

10:00 ()) 700 Club Willi Pitt
Ralllt1Uft
(l)Neaoastuh

Art...,

Building

(J)
filii • • •

And The .....

· Gl e111 Nalllwl Dick ftMII
hlmNif.ln lhl middle of a
11re111 1111111

..
.

ru"'*·a
eo
NeWNitlht ro ............

19 Card
player's
declaralion
20Houseless land
21 Drawn out
22 vaccine
25 Hive
product
· 28 Catch
27Civii28Bend .
someone's

..........

Uv11eoc1c

'"-'rr$1
=:'

wlltl'llhl Uglltl wtnt
out and lhl mualc 1a11t1c1 al
dey and all night ftwn the
20110 till 5011. 1;1
Dootor, Dootor
Mike II ftrad from from 1111
11101nlng allow.

•·=

1 11.._.

a

l&amp;=•~lta!Tortllhl

All l
elll • •'71.

11:10~&amp;:-::;:•·

(I) •

, .... 27,.'1tl0

DOWN
· 1 Bewitching
group
2 Bar
serving
3 Tautness
4 Nul
5 Harem
room
6 Model
7processing
9 Gomer
Pyle
was one

One letter.standi for another. In this sample A is used
for thl three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the lenlth and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each ~Y the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

'

1·16
•

•

·RFQGYC

FQ

MWL XAQMOXKM

.IXQM.

MWL .IOYCFQL
-

-~ ·''

APM
YN

ALXPMH

YN
FQ

MWL NPMPOL. ·

YTFBLO R. WYT.CLQ
Y..eu' 1'• Caflllqallll I'VE NEVER HAD A

BORING DAY IN MY LIFE. AND ntE LONGER I UVE
THE LESS BORING IT BECOMES. - SAU.Y RAND

"II dkln't "'vttthat many P'-1Hithe kkll
next door tlarted playing baMbaU." .

(

10 Bar
25 Word gains
serving 27 P,ay suit
12 Tart
29 Amalgam .
15 Place lor 30 "Tired"
a flower
cily
18 Skid
31 Hell 's
21 British
Angels,
title
lor one
22 Navigate 32 Hurricane
23 Turkish
center
mount . 37 Understand
24 Obstacle 39 Past

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

MWL

-------------·------

YHteriley'l AniWII'

......

Memphis's aeala SirMt,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

JOSEPH
38 French
river
40 Youngster
41 Awed
42 Color
43 Negalive
prefix

29 Slavery .
33 Bobble·
34Queen
Mary·s
record
35 Actress,

10:01 Ill MOVII: llnelcerl llrllkerl
(1'0)11 :50)
. 10:311 m All Der • All 11g111
Uflltylla of mualclant of

ea

..,

1,

·---

Major becomes

4p.m.

Hlrloquln Rorn1n01 - . _ .11
oeru Noh. 114 ue 0141.

.--·

Kalhlrlne Healey, P11ul Wylie
and Barbara UnderNII. Taped

ollor.:.

~· 3111 "051". Slf114-347·

HP, Toe.- ria1n1. f11!0C1
condMion. 114-148'234J alllr

+2

lUlls, double Is for takeout. Many ex-

canter.
lll ea M.... Dad The

CUll- bull roclng Go Coot. I

I

1MI

,,I'

oiiWw Clmpor, FullY •

':tl&amp;00117.
•. 11000,
. 11

i•ua;llls

.Q107
tK1073

s=.

. Hf.S: llltl tiAVItlti

••'*•.--.

St-. """-·

112 H.P. IIY..

forSale
1:::::======~104
~

-Y

·=.--=

·= '.

IIJII, '

54 MIICellii,.,UI
Merchanflse

r.:;;===::::.:;:::..___

1. . Etoonl 12d0: 2 bldroon&amp;a.
.._ both.
romodolod,

· 111!0. . EloC. ronga. 1D
Inch, .... Will~~ ........

1127- .. .,.

""'.:c':.C l;"::t..au=.

1·-oooo ~ OWNER
IIIUIT RE
CALL 114IIIM711E-

"'C::. &amp;'f
-

In - . .
.--to:
C1lnlo,"""'
!)opt. P.O. Boo M4, 011llpollo 011 - 1. E.-1 OppooIUnllylmplol•·

tt!

hiiYOII gold. !'.!'!'". ~ Filii 'IUk, 1411 .. I
I ...... · - ldroa, 11,100. O.IA
vp
0011.
,' 00 .
autornoUo
-_
· PolnC Pte nf, . . . . . , L. . . 10
hi, IIcu. .·1110.
I. '1121• .
11~
...
,
gol I'll up lt4.U and 10 gol
•
· 1114 Ya- 4ID ,runo oicoi·
r-.. ..... -'- ._,
IIIIi"
.-.
ullil. ooti pi I I . . , .
pollo.I1~73U.
.
1Ut_lo___
l'ull - · ~
........ ......, 10 Airport
Rd, •l-lujl
I WAIN
Pupt,II00-.
11~01.
A 111- of lltlolle.
~~
bolllnd
AUCTlOII • FUAHITURE. ' 12
OIMIL,GIIIIIpollo.-1 Uood
l!ll:lao ........ F"ountaln · -·
I'
Go I • living. 1 and 2 -~ IIIII - f1,110. 101121
dirt lolb.- Dlllono il
lumlt..,., .........
lwn I
'
.,..,
jug.
MI0.11-t-ootf.
~~~~­
..._
and
--- -0.114-4
111.
1
...AI...._
!IIIPP!r AI
. . . . . . . . In Mdlllport. ,_.
:traltn~
In..,...·- . 75 Boats &amp; Molors
,
_
Dlllor.
~'~"· - ,_,.., ,._ 53
Antlquu
-.caaat..--1.
tm Clllvy ~ 400, v.e,
liw
to ::::::--::=:-::=~==::­
, forSele
"""
......,,
Cen
ttc.-.7717.
Buy Of HH. Atv.IM Antlquoa,
EOH.
•
.
1114 E. Main
oftlr, ...... 3420.
1172 17 •. 1'11-HUil
~ 1 a 2 bodo-lumlol&gt;od Houro: II.T.W. 10~Lm.toi:OO
- · 1:U HP, 1 - ......,.,,
~
J•t , _ . , . . . , ,,
1:00 :'" 1:00 ,.....
Cllll,14-al'1,1 11aa. 7:00 p.nl.,
PI
d Vlll~laftr. -.tl11Rlvonddo lhllna, AI. 7,
4100 A - 1171-3111 or 11WI11 T~ 0 = Pilei. Old lumMift
eu
·
qull~ - ·
lpolo,-"""' K-11111,11c;
pa~, IDJII1 or tnllre. Mlllt
4414414, 1-IOJ0.2'7i.O:rH.
' ...
call ccilllat . .,.. 1271, or
104.atwll4.

-· :=.:W231.
_...

aCIInOi ....

.::t..,:f ii'fi41ouni
?:.;!~~
1111~.f.f-~lii~M~11~.==~==,_. ., ~ :;
,..._

......... 81.....

4411 aft• Tp.m.

llonwwto do- olnnlng, 32 Mobile Homes

.... ..,
..

Fllflllollld
Elllliloncf, . 701
- h Utllltla
OllllltiOIIa,
-·
both,
1110.
paid,
11~

31 Hom• for Sale

.--:'::.=~i:;a'·
-~~ -::'o.:"t~llo ~
P
. - h 111o -••
•
"*II
... _......,_ eo... """""and--.
-

lllo Dlraolor of - . , .
Spoaro, ~78-1421.
P I - C... Conlar, Nl
...,_ Pille, Oollillolla. 011
AVON • All ..._ COl lllortlyn - 1 . 11~7112.1.0.1:

- - - -·

Real Es!Jte

3111fr•u

---------1 ~~ -~

""'*-'

NORTH
•Ate42

.
EAST
perts therefore believe thai biddinl ei- ~ 3
+KQJB5
... IHroltbeop-ta'suitashouldsiml •as
.KHS
So
ply be a natiU'al overeaU. it was in • A 9 8 6 2
tQ4
IIJ • - VIce CrOCkett and
today's deal. East. who had passed •
Tubblc.n't arrest murderer
origiaallY, bid two IIIAIIel u a natural i Q II I
blowing lhllr cover.
bid. Sotith now rebid three clubs, end- I
SOUTH
• VldtiCounliY
ill&amp; tbe aucUon.
· j
.ABU
ID -"'- """ Collello
Declarer ,ron the opening lead in .
• J$
7:01 w JalfaNone
dlsc8rdln1 a diamond. He'
+AKJ9H4
. T::IO • (2J Fa:'l!Faud
A-11. of clu~ and then the
jack. Welt lf•bbed tbe ace, ·
Vulnerable: North-South
® Cahge .....,.II
10011 lbe queen of clubs, and tben conDealer: East
••~Tonlgltt
• (J) Malllll'l Pemlly
spades. Eventually, when deNorlll
Ill ea a .Jeoplnlyii;J
played ace and a heart. be had Soelll
• 0 M"A"I"H
.. 1- lbrei heart tricks and so was
1+
Pus 1+
01 Caowfltw
down ooe.
s+
A.ltpaa
ID Night Cou11
Tbe ~eeret of tbe winning play lies
•oatural overcaU
7:36 (1)\llniOrd And Son
iD tile bldcllnl. or laCk thereof. Re1:00 ()) MOVIE: Love Me Tencllr
member that East had passed ori&amp;i- ,
Opening lead: + 10
(2:00)
nally. That Umita tbe strenllb of his
• (2J 1B AIJ' ALF wriiiS a
Unci. He cannot bold lt-Q-.1 of spades,
corpora11on clean-up - .
ace of dlalilollda and kine of hearts.
signed with hla real name. Q ,
wben declarer w1n1 dwn- : II certalu that East carmot alio bold
, • • • (I) ~
·
my's
ace, be should throw a the king of hearts. So, even thoulh
MacOyver rlake a wal8ry
heart·away. He can then play A~K of South would lole a club apd two dia~rave -to battle deep-clubs, u before. But now be should moods, be could still play a beart to
m~'l':':£.. 01
play a low diamond toward dummy's dummy's queen with certainty. Of
Chirp tan• •111ne
klq. Welt will play low, and declarer coune bere the king of diamonds winl
Top amalsur figure llkat.n.
llhould rile quickly with the kinl. U the tbe trick and that lives declarer nine
Including Krlett 'larnaguelll,
king 1ooe11 to the ace with East, tben it triclta and his contract.

-

F
u - Ape. 241
Pille, Oallpollo, 1br, 12110.
~••1•111 Celtory ~.
and · 1U7:-?I-'1 6-o.u-o
'
UIHHiol pd. 11Utl4t11 oftor Rofrlg• ator,
2
dr.
.........'"" ~ Choir 12 bolt
'll&gt;.m. .
.
Rtfrigelllor, 2 :dr. iiw11sw. 11UWMU 7 - . •orllll--.

,

BRIDGE

·
·-··~~ WIMI 01
l'io
eo
IIJI.._,...,.Coul11;1

plo~·

114-'141-1-~-

....... ,..
-a
.
.
- .............._........_.,----·.--111,

.
.,,
.
..,._.
01

2 1'11~-'nme Polo1lonl In Rllllll
SIIOI. Aoqulromonto aro: ,that
mUll bo - b l o , Nko
_,.., _
.. 1 wllllngnoM

. . . QIIC

________~----~"·~- I

(2J I'll! Megulna

Ne IIIOt

ojlpootunllyiaHIIIIIIIIIWI . ICIIon

='---------1

~--._

• • • (J) CurNnl """
(lJ l!llla IIIII Lalnr

w_..,..

lull-..._

ac.- • '*'· King

C!&gt; lpartaC•nter

POSITIQNI
AVAILABLE:
COnSoli •n't71nt tor 14-hour
•-~
' ~LIDO In
-···~·
rr ·~antfll
lplul but
nal I I drwd:
tiChool
d - or
• void
dllvor'o I - ~ to lloFtollll!d.
-.nd Ina., 412
VInton
Pille, GoiltpOjta, 011
48111.
Contori, Inc.,
lo 1 potyeto noorpnolll -'ion
ond
In
octUII

t - n d. DollvoNd"toOhlo omPIOror, Woodtond C.ntn,
~
Inc., clooe noc dloorton- on
Ill Co
· ~- .. ~.
tho boolo o1 IQI, - · CfM11,
. Qulno
.
notlonll -In, - . - . or
Pro 1!140 quiHo. Anr oondHion. typo of lllllllllly.
Ceoh P11d. con 114.-.11157 or Pooltloo• -blo: Full ond
114-612~1.
IMU't lime poeftloM IV?" 3 I for
Uood 11o11Uo 11~ AN ond LPN, Ill lhlfto
0175.
rm" tea •
Ill._..
11 doroln a I!IY ..,...... _ ,
...., • h r Ml · Oft. Nulitnue
blnlftla lnlu'lld PM t .... IIIII
Employment Services b o . . , - wlh' '"ly ol

n·-··-

SCUM Lm ANSWUS
L-&amp;.3
tmpvgn - Franc - Tongs - Waddle - ANTACIDS
My lamily had indu Jged in a multi nation eat feast,
.alter whic;h we had to consume the only American .food
product of the day... ANTACIDS.

~~~~

Ext.-

7:00 ~

attld car. In my home, mUll be
lid
fll'll 01 -•••••• I hill'
...lllng,

•a
Ctll NNI;I
nne•a Company

• 0

'·

~\

\

�Ohio Lottery

Eastena,

Southem · ·

PBIIIDI ftiiYU LUIIIIR

Pkk3

in fmals

3

603
Pick4
6052

'

Partly elolldy tonllht. Low
In mid 20s Cbuee of rain 30
percent. Wedllelday, hlch
near 40 •

•
1 Section, 10 PogM

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, Febrruary 27, 1990
'

SPRUCE LUMBER

90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE

ROLLED ROOFING
, -Green •Brown •While
Q99
•Black oGIIIII &amp; White

$1

2x8
.2x10
2x12

DILVAIIZID

4.27
6.67
8.40

5.12
8.00
10.08

5.97

9.33
11.76

3" x 5" x 8' HIGH QUALITY
LANDSCAPE
. TIMBERS

CORRDUTID

ROOFI

26''x8' ................................~ ........... ss.11
26'' X 10' ·.......................................... *6.39
26'' X 12' .......................................... $7.67
1 ••••••

TOILET BOWL &amp; TANK

$4995

W_HITEONLY ,

•

WOOD BARNS
8'x8~ ...~············~···········s425
a· x 1o·...~·.-.................$525
'

KIGHT To READ WEEK- TheMelp LOcal Schoo!Diatrlcl will
o._erve Blpt-to-Read Week March 5-9. Representatlvll!J from
each dlalrlct were present at Pomeroy Vlllag&lt;: Hall on Monday to

I

officially declare the week. Plct\lfe are, 1-r; back row, Jo Dunn,
'VIcki Haley, Marsha Radabaugh, Elizabeth Story, Janet Hoffman,

PIASE ,DODRS
32" X 6'8"
SIX PANEL

YOVRCBOlCB
·'

36" X 6'8"
SiX PANEL

DOOR WITH THE
ATRIUM DOORI

SCIIDILI.40
. 4"SIWIII
· Dllllt PILE

•AIJ.WOOO
. •EIEIIGY EFFtaEHT
•READY·To.tNITAU.
•SOLil BRASS IIOIITICE

·LOCK INCI t10E11

'11\e Ahlum Door
Ia IICiually • whole ·
of ideal for
, lllhmdas the
beauty of•ny home.
ComeiD todly -let
u1 help yo" moooe
the Idea th.t'uight
for your home.

•JII-

•30 YEAR WARRANTY
Chaose From Charcoal Blend,

Slate Blend, Weathered WOOd
Blend, Burnt Slanna Blend

6'0 X6'8"
INCLUDES SCREEN
AND HARDWARE

BUY NOW
AND SAVE
FROM MANVU' F
Special Offer:

·

ll8l1lh 1- Apfll11, 111G.

pu-

•IP M'l&lt; •WD" •MaK gOWif

PURCHASE$ IIAOII-

•GalEN. Watil •C&amp;WINUT atDfD •COS lEAWOOD

Cu--aFREE-~Ilold"

ALUMINUM FIBERGLASS ·

A-a.ii1Qioii3CIDO!

ROOF COATING .....~.~..$24

cop orllloycon~to
our-oiGol&lt;l"~
3M Tlllnoula'Mt lor l1tM.

our-

PUACHAIE 10 1'0'
Customorl moypun:ll-

95

olllold"3M Tlllnoullll -lor 11.11.
A IOioiiiiVIngo ol$40.001

PURCHASE 2D UOS

c -......... -orOold"

SOLID or PERFORATED

1/2'i X 10' CPVC...................................................,.•1
1·112" x 10' SCHEDULE 'lu...................;............~. -~··~
3" x 10' SCHEDULE 40......,..............................
4" x 10' SCHEDULE

BUilD IACJCBD

CABPftlll
BYBOTITUFP
. . .
SQ. YD.

II111 UUII

Will
'

ROLL

Jon! Jeffers, Kim Oliphant, Paula Chancey, Cindy Allen, Barb
Mathews Crow, and Wend)' Balar. Front row, Middleport Mayor
Fred Hollmaa, Pa&amp; Thoma, representing Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler, and Jim Carpenter, superintendent. Absent a&amp; the time of
the picture was Jeanie Bowen.

¥eigs School District . planning variety
of
.
f!Ctivities for Right-to-Read ·Week March 5-9 J

WITH 4/12 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG

...

By JUL~ DILLON .
. , Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local School District ls,plannlng a wide variety of
activities for Rlg)\l•to-Read
Week which Is March 5-9.
·Activities at the. Bradbury
Elementary School will include a
magician, Marko . the Clown. a
slpgan contest, a game similar to
"Wheel of Fortune" using book
' !jtl@~• . l.l!OOk S!Jle. il movie based
· 9iloi~ ~~leal booll. aJ~d a door
decorating contest. ·
' The. theme at the HarrlsOIIvllle
Elem!!ntary f&gt;chool will Involve
pirates and discovering the treasures of reading and math.
. Students wlll ,be reading all week
and placing the information on a
''coin" to be. displayed In the
hallway all week. Students wl!l
view the move, "Treasure Is·
land" and then have a treasure
.hunt at school: The students will
also be .able to participate In a
book fair . and have sustained
silent reading and math allweek.
.At Middleport Elementary the
week will start' with sustained
silent realllng In a magic cave ·
after the kick off of distributing
magic antenna~ . and a magic
show .by Marko the Clown.
, Teachers will be reading books to
: the students with appropriate
activities with each book. There
will also be a math trivia contest
held throughout the week. A
mystery reader will be selected
each day an\1 students will· be
ilble to guess who the reader was
for a prize. Reading conttacts
and a bOok exchange will be
completed. A plzia will be
awarded to the top ten students
who read the most In grades 1-2
and grades 3-4.
Meigs High School has planned
the following activities, sustained sllen't reading; having
additional newspapers and pa-

- oboolutoly FREEl
A - 1101utol ..9.951

.

~

.

perbacks In the classroom II· · related posters, and solar system
Salisbury Elementary Is going
brary, book displays and talks, trivia. The fourth, fifth, and sixth
back to the dinosaur era with a
bulletin board displays, reading grade students will be reading to •' theme of "Reading Is Dlno-M·
aloud as a starter for reading, a lower grade and completing an
lte." Plans Include a slogan
Newspapers In Education activi- experiment related to the solar
contest, dopr decorating contest,
system.
··
ties, comprehension, careers.
dally silent reading, book swap, a
ads, charts, graphs and cartoons,
Rutland Elementary will be math-a-than, read-a-than
contest or book · give-away,
marching along with reading a
for multiple sclerosis, math
math. These activities will .cendisplays In the library, announceproblems and brain teasers , a
ments on the electronic bulletin
ter around events that take place read and count button day,
board, dally public address an- durtng March. Monday will be brontosaurus blue and white day,
noqncements aboU\ the week an/1
National Athem Day with three best reading a math student, the
.reading facts In the United
members of . tile ·American Le: · menu and honor roll board will be
States.
gioil to present a program on the on the dinosaur theme, and there
· Meigs Junior High plans to .,Amer)can Flag. '1\lesday Is Dr. will be dinosaur puzzles and
have school wide silent reading,
Seuss's birthday and his books booklet~.
classroom bOok displays, slogan. will be read durtng the day. St.
contests, bulletin board displays,
Pat.rlck's Day will be celebrated
reports on famous Ohioans, II· \Wednesday with students wearbrary skills ·lessons, library Ing something green to school.
visits, donated books, News·
Green treats will be given to the
paper In Education activities,
students and a lucky charms
creative writing, announce·
contest will be held'. Spring Is
ments on the school newsletter,
finally here on Thursday with all
and the Meigs Junior High
activities geared to this theme.
spelling bee. The seventh and
Friday is poetry day with March
eighth grade reading classes will · being poetry month. Additional
feature not only reading bu I acUvlt(es Include dally silent
By United Press International
writing and oral work. There will reading worksheets In reading
Morning commuters today had
also be contests and prizes will be
and math and spring science
quite
a dltferen I experience than
awarded.
projects. Older students will be
24
hours
previously, with temper·
Pomeroy Elementary will be · doing reports on Dr. Seuss,
atures
at
dawn In the low and
Francis Scott Kly, Ben Franklin,
"shooting for the stars and
mld-30s,
as
opposed to single·
counting down to reading' ' with a
and St. Patrtck. Students will
digit
readings
and subzero wind·
reading space station that will also be asked to do. some spring
chills Monday morning .
feature two students reading 1 cleaning.
.
Olllo got some rather light
during every minute of the week.
Salem Center Elementary will
precipitation
overnight' and was
Downstairs classes will be dis- be celebrating countries with
to
get
more
of
the same today.
playing hanging stars with book
reading .and math. A door decoDuring
the
.night.
clouds In·
titles in the hallway. ,students rating contest !rom·each country
creased
over
the
Buckeye
State.
wjll be encouraged to bring In
will be held In addition to art
Scattered
rain,
freezing
rain
and
model rockets for the display
projects, displays, a grand pasome
snow
!ell,
mainly
In
the
case In the library. Each day
rade, a gilest speakers from
southern
counties,
but
where
It
facts will be read about the different countries. During the
fell,
precipitation
was
light.
planets of our solar system OVfr
week students wlll study games,
After some morning preclplta·
the Intercom. Other activities
clothes, languages and foods .
tlon
today, dry weather was to
They will be watching rums and
will Include a bookmark contest,
to the western counties
return
a door decorating contest, story- listening to music !ram o.ther
durtng
the
afternoon. The preclp·.
countries. Teachers and students
bOok characters dress up day,
ltatlon
was
to be mostly In the
guess the number of star candy In
will be reading books from
form
of
rain
In tile south. In the
a jar, story starter writing time, • different countries during the
north
It
was
to be mostly snow,
decorating hallways with space
week.
but rain could be mixed ln.
Highs were to range from the
30s In the northwest to near 50 In
the extreme south.
. ' Tonight
expected to bring
partly cloudy weather to O~lo.
The majority of places sl)ould be
dry, Howel(er, flurrtes may appear In the northeast and 'there
will be small chance of evening
rain In the extreme south. Low
temperatures were to be'10 to 15
In the northwest to 25 to 30 In the
extreme south.
On Wednesday the bulk of the
state Is In !or sunny weather, but
the northeast ought to be partly
clolidy with. a sU,h't chance of
flUrries. Hlths will be mostly In
the 30s.
Lookl~~&amp; ahead through Saturday, It will be fair throughout the
· period. Hlghl will be In the 30s
Thursday, 35 to 45 Friday and In
· the 40s Saturday. Lows will be 10
to 2D Thursday and Friday and 25
to 35 Saturday.
.
; A cold. front that went from
· Mkblgan to.Dllnoll on the eai'Jy
morntugweatber map II forecut
' to eroa Oblo today aDd reach the
Eut COpt by evening. A region
ot blab pri!lsure that wu from
southwest, canada to the north
Plains thiJ ·momlng will fonow
CONCD'IIN&amp; PEID'OBM&amp;NOB - Denver 0., lleld at ·Pemerq EJ...eatarr. Pldure wltb bebllld the front. By late Wednesday, the high pressure region
Rice dl-lntH tile art of plaJiac tbe
Rice are llrl -••· Mel.... H - , Ana
oo..nlaa, u aeoordlab llle m•cal lnatnment · Tbompeon, and Sarall Bo~.
should extelld from the East
Cout to the Rockies.
from Baclud, a&amp; IWIH&amp;)''• Girl loout ThiDldac
~
~

State has
light rain
early today

1,

a

3112 " x 15"::-.'••:;:.-:-:...$1~
~-- ron
3112" x23""""'n;..,..$1835 roll
. .... ''11. 65 roll
6" X15" .=.:·.~.~..
.
:":':: . :. ,
''~

.

.
--

.,

f

.

'

-

'

-

&gt;

r

....

"

'

..

~

~-

I
·~-

•

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New&amp; staff
A Middleport Arts Council was
estallllshed and sleps taken to
proceed with two street Improvement projects partially funded
with State Issue 2 montes at
Monday night's meeting of Mid·
dleport VIllage Council. ·.
"Mayor Fred Hoffman was
authorized to proceed wlthsecurlng the bids !or the $35,365 Mill
Street project funded at $31,828
from Issue 2 funds and $3,537 In
local mon11y; and the Beech
Street-Cottage Drive project
funded at $2!1,080 Issue 2 funds,
and $3.120 In local funds.
The mayor reported that tlie.
Mill Street project will Include
sidewalks and curb replacement
as needed !rom South Fourth to
South Second, drainage on South
Third at Mill and the municipal
parking lot and paving as •
needed.
The Beech Street-Cottage
Drive project will consist of
pavlnganddralnagelnthatarea,
the mayor reported.
Establishment of · the non·
proflt Middleport Arts Council
was given full ~1\pport of Council
_foUowtng. a lengthy dlscusslo,n.
and the flrstreadthg was given to
an ordhiance establishing the
Arts Council as an agency of
village government.
The ordinance provides for a
board or directors of seven
members, a fund within the
village treasurer to receive and
· dispense funds; and for the
program to be a cooperative
effort between the board or
directors and the Middleport
recreation director.
Mayor Hoffman appointed to
the board of directors of the
Middleport Arts Coilncll, Sue
Baker, Jeanette Thomas, Shirley
'Quickel, Mary W,lse, Margie
Blake, Nancy Cale, and Marilyn ·
Meter. He also announced a
meeting of th~ Arts Council to be·
held Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Middleport
.
.VIllage Hall.

COMPLETELY ASSEMBLED

~

REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING

·Council to
proceed with
•
street proJects

"

UNIVERSAL RUNDLE
'

.41
5.12
6.83
10.67
13.44

26 C.nto

A Muttlmec;li• Inc. New!lp8p•

.

.

Prior to gtvmg tnettrstreading
to the ordinance, both Bob
Gilmore and Dewey Horton
spoke In support of the Arts
Council and possible funding
from village funds for a specified
period of time.
Both council members descrlbed the function of the new
village group as an agency for
the teaching of dance and performance, and the Instruction of
craft forms and sales
opportunities.
. In discussing funding, the two
proposed village support on the
basts that It will take money to
get the programs started and a
facility rented and renovated. He
also said that It Is necessary to
establish some sort of track
record before the new group will
be able to apply for grants.
Council voted to suppogt the
Middleport Fire Department's
proposal for the purchase of a
aerial ladder truck for the
village.
Mayor Hoffman talked about
the proposal tor the purchase
noting that ·replacement of the
1960 engine With the aerial truck
could possibly change the village
_from a class 6 \O a class five
Insurance rating, reducing raies
to residents. He further noted
that the last fire truck purchased
will be paid off In June .
According to a letter presented
to Council from Jeff Darst, fire
chief, the cost would be between ,
$350,000 and $400,000 to be fl.
nanced over a 10 year period
using fire levy proceeds along
with lire contract funds.
It was reported that a qne 1'1111
levy will be up for renewal In
November and a two mm levy
levy will expire next year.
Renewing both of these fire
levies would mean no Increase In
taxes, aCCQrdlng to Hoffman.
Darst In his letter to Council
·pointed out that the levy reneWals would assure funding of the
purchase .or the aerial ladder
Continued on page 5

new

Supplemental appropriatio~s
l()Qms in State .·L egislature

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) State law,makers will soon be
looking at a $100 million supplemental appropriations bill,
chiefly to make up a shortfall in
state Medicaid funds :
In addition, the state Office of
Budget and Management has
told legislative leaders It will
reduce revenue estimates for
this biennium by about $50
million," primarily because corporation taxes .have not come In
at the anticipated rate .
Lee Walker, d!rector of the
OBM, said the budget "correc·
tlve bill" would be Introduced at
the same time as the capital
construction appropriation,
probably next week.
.The $600 million-plus capital
bill was to have been ready by
this week, but Walker said It may
be delayed another week.
The House Is to reconvene at 1\
a.m. Tuesday, while the Senate
will not be In session until
Wedne5l1ay.
Officials of the Ohio Depart·
ment or Human Services reported earner this month that
Ohio's Medicaid fund races a $288
mWion dettclt, or which $126
mWton Ia &amp;tate money.
Medicaid is the state's program of health care for those
Wllble to afford lt.
Director Roland Hall'llton laid
the departmeat WOUld lllltt
mWion from otber Jli'IIII'AJIII, but
S86 miUlaD muat be appropriated
by the Legjllature to cowr !be
lhortage.
In addition, the Ohio PubliC
Petender's Office aeedl $9 mn. lion tocompletethettscalperlod;
.the Ohio Department of Development needs $10 mUllan and the

uo

Department of Rehabilitation
~nd Correctlqn needs an unspecified amount.
Some of that will be shifted
from oUter programs, Walker
said, addfng that the net amount '
of the supplmental appropriation
will be about $100 million. ·
W~lker said the , projected
revenue shortage could be ellml·
nated by cutting spending.
The House h11s scheduled · a
vote for Tuesday on establishing
a "linked depos't" program to ,.
help finance the construction of
residential facilities 'tor the mentally retarded' and developmentally disabled.
Under a "linked deposit" program already In operation, the
state treasurer's office deposits
up to $100 million In banks which
·agree to make low-Interest loans.
. to farmers while the treasurer
accepts a retumo!upto4percent
below the normal market rate.
Jn other activity this week, the
Senate Ways a ad Means commit.
tee will meet Tuesday afternoon
to work on a bill perrntttlng tbe
coUecllon of state sales tax on
mall orders or television shop·
ping orders.
Sponsors believe the proposal
ciluld net $100 million for the
state.
A House subcommittee on
coUeges and universities will be
lookblg at )eglalatton Wednesday
afteraoon requlriJI&amp; the reportlag of cunpus crime tfatlstlQ to
the Ohio Board of Reaenta.
tbat nme panel allo 'WUI
conalder Senate-palle4
•.
lion creatlllg a new
loltertq near school ·
and dllrupttng school a
,

•

1'--~~-~--------------~-----------=--~~----~--~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="294">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9567">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35509">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35508">
              <text>February 26, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="240">
      <name>chapman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1401">
      <name>dorst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="862">
      <name>frost</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="88">
      <name>hayes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1790">
      <name>hinkle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5622">
      <name>righthouse</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
