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                  <text>Paga D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

Medl 4.

Poma'Oy-Midclepott-Gellpolil, Ohio Punt P1111111t. W.Va.

Tree ...

'

1110 ~

_.....,..eo_n_tin_uect....:..:tr:..;om:.:;
· .:..;D:-..·:..I_ _ _..;.·_..:..._ _

plant II another Important decl·
slon. Tile Information tbat II uiled
to make that selection would
Include climate, slope, expoaure,
sol~ aoU mollture, exlltln&amp; vegetation .a nd the landowner's objec·
tlves. In eeneral terms, conifers
would be more sqcceslful than
bardwoodlll\ worn-out fields and
pastures; Ill iandy, bllmed-over
and eroded a~; or .Ill shallow,
heavy or cloddy aoUa.
Hardwoodl tend to irow better
In deep rather looae, crumbly aoll
which provides plenty of room
for root development. Often on
poor sites conlfen are planted
f!rst, wblch over time belpa the
sollllhprove and tileD hardwoodl
can be grown on the site. Moat

Ohio

College ·
case player

tbe control of c:ompltattve veae-Z
tatlon
(releUIJII) . For COIIIPJeti:
trees, espect&amp;ny the valuable
detalll
and toalp·up. contaet the:'
hardwoodl found ln lbla area,
county
ASCS otllce. · ,
,.
Dee!~ conalderable moisture on
For
free
ualltaace
with
lllllec:t·
:
well-drained aoll. !t II allo not
1111
wblcll
apeclea,
wllere
to
pltn.t:;
uncommon to plant a milllure of
and 11ow to order from tbe state&gt;
species toaether on cine site.
nursery contact tile service fore- .
"oat o! the species tile average
srer
for ~ county.
· .,.
landowner would like to plant can
·
Plaatlnl
trees
provldei
many;
obtained from tile state nuraery.
Alao, coat·lharJna II available . different benefits bealdel mak·-:
lng \lnproductlve land productlve,for landowners Ill Olllo 11\tereited
agaln. Alk any one who hasr
In tree planting. Tile AJrtcultural
plaJUed ~. and tbln .,UV
· Stabllzatlon and Coue:vatlon
Service (ASCS) hu two coat· prObably be a different comblna- ~
tlon of reasons to plallt from e~h~
sharJna progra1111 a landowner
one.
So, regardlell of the reaaonr'
may . participate ln If be/abe
to
plant
trees, now II the tltne t!f.:
meets the requirements. Costmake
the
_declllona and plani Joz
allarlng II •vallable tor tile
be.
ready
to plant trees n~xt -:
purcbue.lablpptq bd llantlltniJ
spriJI&amp;.
• :
of tbe trees, 111e preparatiOn Ud

~ttery

Pick 3

933

dies

Pick 4

5086
Super Lotto
.. 4-5-32-33-34-40
Kicker 979506

Page4

•

'

e

1 Section. 10 Pagoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, Mar~h 5. 1990

FARM BUREAU, MEMBERSHIP COMMIT·
TEE - The Membership Committee o! the Gallla
County i'arm Bureau met recently to organize the
1890 campaign. . Bene!lts ol Farm Bureau
membership . were reviewed and discussed.
Committee members were glven ·materlal to. use
Ill.contacting _prospective members and encourag·
lng present members to renew. ln 1989, Gallla
· County had 385 farm 'Bureau members. Glenn
Graham, membership chairman, reports « new
members · to date. M&lt;lre new members are
anticipated. Individuals .should contact the Farm

Sprin".

•

Bureau o!ftce at 1·1100-333-1944 for additional
ln!onnatlon. Farm BIU'eau represents eveeyone
who lives In rural Oblo, whether they are Iannen
or Just rural rea !dent&amp; Pictured above, !Irs&amp; row,
left to right are: Sbeale Burnett, Iackie Graham,
]\ernlce Wood, Merle Howard, Sandr.Jl Erb, VIckie
Powell, Joyce Shong aud Mary Withee. Second
Row, WUIIam Fadely, Glean Graham, Paul
Butler, Hermau Wood, lim Howard, Bob Powell,
Larry Shong and Charles · WUIIee. Abient from
photo - Kay Michaels and John lacbon.

Continued from D-1 ,

di!Ctlon __could acco mplisl1 those
additional pounds.
Animal scientists have also
said thateach 3 week delay In a
cow rebreedlng will reduce calf
weaning weight by 40 pounds. An
excellent computer program is
available at the County Extension Office (446-7007) to calculate
the nutritional needs for your
beef cows.
A cow that is severely e nergy
short can have major problem
when suddenly fed an lnc&lt;"eased
amount of protein. Almost without' exception corn is the l e;~ st
expensive source of energy_ The
computer program requires only
some baste information such as:
cow weight; s(age of reproduction; milking ability and hay
quality. Lab analysis for the hay
Increase accuracy but table
value estimates have bee n used
successfully. The computer program Is a free service of the
Extension Service.
A lot of educational actlvltles
have been conducted over the
past couple months. We have had
, excellent attendance. · Farmers
are really Interested In staying
on the cu tUng edge oftechnology.
Several farmers recently at·
tended classes to retain or gain
cert!llcatlon as private pesticide
applicators . Som e 20 new
farmers took the testing for
certification this past Monda'y.
This should bring to over 200
farmers certified in Gaiila
County. We will be planning
another training-testing session
In a few weeks. Cat! if you would
like to take part In this session.
The final session of the four- .
part winter meeting series sponsored by the Gall!a County
Cattlemen's Association and the
Extension Service will be held at
· 7:30p.m. on Monday , March 5at
the Columbus Souther n Power
Building meeting room. Re-

source person for the evening
will be Elizabeth Harsh, managIng editor tor the Ohld Cattlemen's magazine. A special activIty will be the crowning of the
Gallla Couniy Queen of Beef.
Other topics of Interest will
lnclud.e hlghllghtlng the Ohio
Beef Expo to be held In Columbus
on March 15-18. You need not be a
local Cattlemen's Association
member to attend the Monday
meeting. Everyone Is welcome.
Mark your calendar for the annual tobacco producer meetIng at Hannan Trace HighSchool
on Tuesday, March 20 at 7:30
p.m. Complete details wlll be out
in a few days. The prtlnary
resource person will be Dr.
Phillip Hunter, Director 'of the

University of Tennessee Tobacco
Research facility at Greenville,
Tennes~;ee .
.

MYSTI!:RY FARM - Tbla week'• III)'Mery
farm, femured by the Melp Soli · aud Water
Co~~~ervatloa District, Is located 11011Mwllere Ia
Melp County. Individual• wllblng to participate
Jn ihe weekly contest may do so b)' -peulng tile
!arm'sowner.luatmall, ordropoffyour gueu to
the Ga!UpoUa Dally Tribune, -821i Third Ave.,
GaiUpoUa, Ohio, 41631, or tile Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, .4J789,and you may win

MILK REPLACERS

SURVIV,I!'B CRASH ' - Current Southern
ToJ'IIBdo baakelball star Brad Maynard, Syra·
Clltle, escaped polllible death In a devutallng
cruh ou County Road 35 early Saturday morniDg.
Maynard approached a curve then slid on a tbln
coatlas of Ice and 10111 control, -causing his 11190
Ford Thunderbird Sports Coupe to become
airborne, where It hit two Walnut trees with _tile
root of the car. Upon bnpact, Maynard, who was
weJ!rliag his seaibelt, was thrown from the vehicle
thi'IDJII tllealllll'OOf and lan.ded on his! eel some20
feet a,..ay, Glaa• waa l!llbedded In tile bark ofthe
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ST. RT. 124 .· · THREE MLES OFF
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Stoll Houll: illondlr-lllUI'dly, 8:30 ~.m.-1:00 p.m. ·
Clo11 •

Noon on Tllurlday
7of141ff

bold tbls time." Tile tremendous Impact of the

cruh ripped loose one of the attachment polllts of
the safely belt, caulling '' to come loose and expel
Maynard from the vehicle. The stlll buckled
.seaibelt was latact on the Door of the car with the
roof 'smashed fiat against the seal. Maynard
luckilY escaped with only some abrutons and
bruises, and acquired ' tO stltcllea In bls scalp.
Maynard w]1o was bleeding ran nearly two miles
ior help aud taken to the hospital via pdvate
velllcle. Maynard should be able to play , In
Southern's Division IV District tournament game
We--,4~ a* . til.e ,Co. nvocallon Center at Ohio

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.
By N:ANCY YOACHAM
CJe to eScape serious Injury and
Sentinel News Stall
the truck continued "on across
The Meigs Gallla Post, State Route 124 and rammed the power
pole. If the power pole had not
Highway Patrol · and Meigs
been there, the truck would have
County Sher!f!'s Department
were called to Mlnersvi'lle gone Into the river, Trussell
shortly before 7: 30 this morning speculates, since there Is no
when a pickup truck struck and guard rail along the road at that
snapped a power pole along the point. Norton was slightly Inriver on ~oute 124.
jured In · his jump, Trussell
Although the patrol · officially reported, and there was heavy
investigated the Incident, no damage to the vehicle.
'
Information was available Iron\ · · Approximately 1,100 Ohio
the patrol prior to The Dally Power Company customers beSendnel's 11 a.m. deadline.
tween the Ashland Bulk-Plant at
However, according to Meigs Minersville and Racine were
Deputy Ralph Trussell, whO was without electricity lor some time
also on the scene, Todd Nogton. as a result of the accident Power
had to be restored in a piecemeal
the driver of the truck,' was
coming down Welshtown Hill manner to the affected custoRoad when his brakes failed.
mers, reported Ron Ash, manNor,ton jumped from the vehi- ager of Ohio Power's Pomeroy

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TOLEDO. Ohio IUPI) - A·
farm labor union, citing an
example set by the city's black
community , said it will issue a
challenge to Toledo institutions
to take specific actions In support
of the ci t y's Hispanic '
community. ·

.•

.. ~

Cleveland bus workers· say
Greyhounds are·llot safe ·
CLEVELAND ('UP!) ·.,.. Striking. Greyhound Lines, Inc.
workers In Cleveland have accused the company of ))lacing
Inexperienced "scab" drivers
behind the wheel, putting both
pickets and passengers In
jeOpardy.
The three-day-old strike affectIng more than 9,000 Amalgam. a, ted Council of Greyhound Local
Union employees and tho\lsands
of ' travelers nat.lonwlde, has
alreadY cl_a imed one life. The
strike was called early Friday
· morning after negotiations In
Scotts&lt;lale, Ariz. broke down. No
new talks are planned.
Striking bus driver Robert
Waterhouse, 59, was crushed to
death ag~lnst a wall In Redding,
Gal!f. Saturday as a temporary
driver tried to maneuver the bus
around a pickup truck. Two
pickets In· New York were arrested for throwing rocks at a
bus, while a substitute driver In
Indiana reported being fired on.
').'wo Locall043 members Sunday warmed their hands over a
makeshift fire In (ront of the
Greyhound bus terminal on 13th
Street, complained about low pay
alftl bene!lts· and worried a b&lt;iut
the threat of more violence.

Inside , the nearly . deserted
_lobby, - about a dozen weary
travelers cooled their heels walt·
Jng lor drivers. Most were told
there would be a ''slight delay of
about an hour."
James Ondtejcak, a 37-year
striking maintenance mechanic
said, "I'll tell you the truth. I'm
kind of scared - especially since
that guy In Redding got killed."
Ondrejcak reported that earlier that afternoon a "scab"
·driver pulled Into the exit
driveway . ·
·
· "He was confused, " Ondrejcak
claimed. "He didn't know what
he was doing."
'- Mathew Peoples, an 11-year
Greyhound driver said he took an
eight-week driving course be!ore
he was allowed to -get behilid the
wheel.
'"It' s just not safe, now,"
Peoples said. Greyhound has
imported drivers from California
with only six days training, he
said.
Peoples makes $6.50 an hour as
an on-call driver and gets' an
extra 30centsa mlle. Before 1987,
drivers were getting 37 .5 cents
per mile, he said.
. Ondrejcak said he ma~es $9.75

The vehicle that was driven by
the suspect wanted for questionIng In last week's killing of the
young woman .on State Route 32
in Jackson County, has been
recovered In Meigs County .
According to Meigs Sheriff
James ~~ Solllsby , the vehlc)e
was recovered Saturday In Salem Township. !I had been placed
inside a locked barn near the
·Meigs-VInton County line. The
locll had !Jeen broken from the
hasp and then just hung back in
place, Soulsby reports. The vehicle has been Impounded by the
Jackson Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol. which is handling the
Investigation.
.
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
thaf deputies took a nu!Jlber of
accident reports &lt;j/et . the
weekend.
On Sunday morning ·at 7: 15
a.m., Raymond E . Manley , Mi~­
dleport. was . traveling east on
Route 124 near the Intersection of
Route 325 ,when he went off the .

an hour. Salary and penef!ts
were cut in 1987 when Fred
Currey took over as Greyhound
··
chairman, he said .
Local 1043 president Charles
·Flanagan claimed reported Incidents of union violence were
"plants" - tactics by management to make the union look bad
and sway public opinion,
"Our argument Is wlth the
company ... for blatantly run·
ning over one of our members
with a bus," Flanagan said. ···we
are not going to do Infantile
PLEASANT HILL, Ohio (UP!)
things like that. We are trying to
- A big unknown among the
retain o~r dignity and our jobs."
Local 1043 members Guy Se- splintered Republican Party In
· the 8th Congressional District Is
llnka and Richard Mason were
whether Rep. Donald "Buz"
. struck by buses in .separate
Lukens
· can revive his election
· incidents Friday while picketing,
campaign after being convicted
Flanagan said. Both were taken
.on a misdemeanor sex c)\arge.
to a hospital, and treated' and
"There's no quit In the guy .
released for a knee and back
He's not giving up," said Don
Injury, he said.
The company Is underplaying Birge!, Butler County Rep\lbllthe delays and the number of can chairman.
"! know Buz, and he can be a
-available drivers,
Flanagan
competitor," Birge! said. "I've
claimed.
"The'truth Is, (passengers) go talked to many people who say
tl)ey, wlll vote for him. They like
when they can find a driver," he
the way he's voted, and that's
said. Cleveland Greyhound has
·10 to 15 substitute drivers to more Important to them than
anything else. There are a lot of
replace 130 regular drivers, he
closet Lukens supporters."
said.
Lukens has !lied for re-election
In an ef!ort to buy time while he
apJlt'als his conviction for having
sex with a 16-year-okl Columbus
girl In November 1988.
Lukens' support among conof. the economy, " and Is not
stituents belles·opllllon polls and
necessarily a reDection of how
conventional wisdom, which sugvoters perceive Bush's abilities
gest he cannot survive the
wltb tbe economy.
political fallout from the trial.
"The president's high rating on
"People expect their congresshandllllg domesdc Issues other
men to be good role model," said
than the economy suggest that
Shelby Warren, prlnclpal of tile
political analysts are not correct
Newton Local School. " I think
In usumtng tllat voters are
what he did Is a real Issue wlth
unea.sy wlth the way domestic ·the people bere. They look upon a
Issues are being l1andled," · he
congrealllllan as a person they
laid.
.
reallY look up to."
·
Tbe preslden~ scored highly In
The stiffest contender lor Luk·
forelen affairs, a rating Tuch- .ena' 8tb District seat Ia fellow
rarber attributed to tile success- Republican Thpmu Klnduesa,
lui overthrow of Manuel Noriega
the former COJ!Ifeiii'IWI tram
In Panama.
MlddleiOWD wllo cave up Ills seat
Tile Olllo PoJi Is conducWcS for
Ill ·1986 to rWI unauccealful!y
Tile Claclnnall Post, Tbe Dayton
aplnat Sen. Jolin Glenn. PoDs
Dally News and WKRC.TV.
show Klndnesa has • solkllead In
Tbe ran.dom teii!IJhode survey
the race.
ot 802 reatatered voters wu he~
Kllldneaa, meanwhile, Is deFeb. 2·12. Tbe poll hu a margin
tendiJ11 hlrnaelt aplnat attack&amp;
o! error of plus or minus 4 by state Rep. ,John Boehner ot
percenta1e points for tile l'verall Weal Cheater, who Is calling for
.sample and WOI!ld be somewhat
new, blood In Congress. Bolehner
lareer for subgroups.
trails botll Kindness and Lukens
In tbe district.

CINCINNATI (UP!)
blacks. President Bush's perfor·
Ohioans surveyed in a recent poll - mance In of!lce Is rated posl·
give broad support to President tlvely. By contrast, President
Bush's jQb performance, but are Reagan seldom had maJority
less enthusiastic about Vice approval from Demcorats In
President Dan Quayle.
Ohio and never approached ma·
The Ohio Poll, rele~~sed Mon- jorlty approval among blllcks."
day, shows 74 percent of respondAm9ng Democrats, 62 percent
e11ts approving of Bush's job apprated of 1 Bush's perfor·
performance, 20 percent dlsap· mance; amqng blacks, he had 58
proving and 6 percent neutral or percent support.
with no opllllon.
But the vice president fares
• AI Tuchfarber, director of the less well, wltb45 percent approv·
Uutverslty of Cincinnati' s Instl- .Inti o! Quayle' a Job performance,
tute for Polich Research, said the 24 percent di$Bpprovt~g . and 31
president wins a majority of percent lleutral or . with no
support In all major demogra- oplnloJI.
·
·
plltc and polltlcal .groups l_n the . Dipping below a 50 percent
.Btate.
approval ratlntl can be a .,_d alp
Bush's rating Is only slightly for a politician, leadlnJ Tuchbelow the m•rk he received In farber to predict tllat Buill mJ&amp;ht
Septelnber of Jut year. •nd Is replace Quayle on the 1892 ticket
above hll ratlllg last April; · ' · lfhlspopularltydoean'tlncreaae.
"The president's t:iaae of supBuabrecelvedbllloweatraUnl
jJortls surpriSingly broad at tills . on hll han.dlln&amp; of tile economy,
polat In hll tetm," TUchtarber but Tuchfarber said that may be
said.
related to the relative weakness
. · "Even among Democrats and
I,
_.,_.. __

.....

·-'"

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·- --- ...

office. As of 11 a.m., Ash was
hopeful that all customers were
goll\g to be restored In a short
period of time.
The sheriff's department and .
Pomeroy Pollee detoured traffic
until the accident scene could be
cleared.
Another accident took place at
the scene of the first acclden1 and
was lnves tlgated · by Deputy
Trussell. A Pomeroy lire truck,
driven by 'Fireman Brent Zirkle,
was preparing . to leave and
backed int.o the car of Assistant
Pomeroy Fire Chief Jeff Shank.
There was no damage to the fire
truck but there was moderate
damage to Shank's car. Shank
was not In the vehicle at tile time
the accident occurred. No citat Ions were Issued.

Murder -suspe-ct's vehicle
-recovered in M e~igs . County
' the
' '
roadway on the right and,over
embankment. His vehicle. a 1987
Ford station wagon, came to rest
in a field and ' was lightly
damaged . Manley was transporkd by. Rutland E1\1S to
Veterans MemoPial Hospital for
treatmen t. ·
·
·
A!! 7 p.m,"'Saturday, Leigh A.
Myers, of Langsville, was travel·
tng east on ~oute 124 In Rutland
Township when she struck a deer
that ran into. tbe path of her 1988
Ford. There was moderate damage to the vehicle.
Also around 7 p.m . Saturday,
William H. Coleman, of Reeds·
ville, was traveling north on
ROute 7 when several deer
crossed the road In front of him.
Coleman applied -his brakes, th·e
vehicle skidded off 'lhe road on
the left and he struck one or two
of the deer before hitting the
embankment. His 1988 Nlssan
truck was moderately damaged.
Shortly after midnight on Sa1 ·
urday morning, Kevin White was

driving north on Hill 'Road in'
Letart Township when he also
st~uck a deer that ran lnt.o the;
path of his 1984 Chevrolet truck.
T)lere was light damage to the'
front end of the truck.
The first accident Investigated
by the sherlfi'~ department over
the weekend occurred around
7:45p.m. Friday. Sheri L. Young, ·
o! Pine Grove Road, Racine, was
traveling east In her 1989 Chevrolet when she was unablfil to st.op
and collided with a deer that had
jumped Into the roadway . There
was moderatz damage to her
vehicle.
There we~ no lnjuri~s In any of
the deer-vehicle accidents.
Also over the weekend, depu- .
ties arrested J. F. Young, of '
Gallipolis; Gary R. Cooper.
Portland; and Robert B. Drain, of Belpre, for driving under the
Influence. The men are scheduled io appear this week In ~
Meigs County Court.

..

Lukens' standing in race not. cle~
"Overcoming name Identification_ and trying to deliver a
message In this district Is very
difficult,"· Boehner said.
After his 1986 defeat, Kindness
remained in Washington, where
he opened a government affairs
consulting flrin. Boehner points .
out that Kindness did not vole at
all in 1988.
"Tom represents everything
wrong with Washington: revolv·
ing · door and an Inside-thebeltWay mentality," Boehner
.
said.
Some Republicans said

-

·J

'

Boehner's attacks may weaken.. .;
Kindness and boost Lukens'
chances ..
On Friday, Kindness repeated
his call lor Lukens to withdraw
his candidacy petitions and not
seek re-election this year. Kindness said voters had suffered
enough.
"A cloud of disappointment ,
embarrassment and anger hovers over the people of our area
because of the extremely negative publicity surrounding you
over the past year," Kindness
said.

'

Local news briefs-..
'

Two'injured in two-car crash

Ohioans approve of Bush's effort

- ,

25 C.nto

A Mukimedlo lno. N-opopor

POwer·is disrupted
after truck ·hits pole .

-

a $5 CMII prize from tbe Ohio Valle)' PulllllldJig
Co. Leave your aame, addr-Qa aad telejllloae ~
· number with your card or leiter. No teleplloae -;:
c.a lls wiD be accepted. All contest entries lhould ;
be turned Ia &amp;o tile newspaper oHIC!l by 4 p.m. each ~
Wedneeday. In cue of a tie, tile winDer will be ~
chosen by lottery. Next week, a GaiDa County ;
· !arm wiD be femured by tile Gallla SoD aad Water -·
,· .·
·
.-. :;
Conservailon District.

Milk Formulo I Milk Formula II
KLOD AD LIB Formula
Lambo Milk Roplocar

Part!J cloudy tonJPt. Low
In mid so.. Cloudy TueMay.
1::::~~~~ 110. Cbi!IICeolrala*'

··

Two Rutland residents were Injured In a two-car crash
Saturday at 7:16p.m. at the junction of State Routes 7 and 124,
according to the Gallla·Metgs Post of the State Hlghw;~y Patrol.
Lewis E. Kennedy, 64, and hlspassenger,AllceR. Kennedy,
58, were taken by tile Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Lewis Kennedy was treated and released for· neck
strain, and Allee R. Kennedy was treated and released for a
back Injury. Neither was wearing a seat belt.
.
·
· ,
Lewis Kennedy, driving a 1984 Ford Tempo, was travelll\g
nor til and waiting to turn le!t.at the junction when a 1980 Pontiac
LeMans driven by RlchardL. Chapell, 25, of S.R . 143, Pomeroy,
hit the Tempo lrom behind.
Chapell was cited tor not malntalnlng assured clear distance
and not wearing a seat belt. Lewis Kennedy was cited for not
wearlne a seat belt. • .

Pomeroy police probe vandalism
Vandalllm at lbe Excelllor ServiCe Siailon on Eui M•ln St.
In Pomeroy Saturday nfCht Ia UDder laves Illation by Pomeroy
Pollee.
.
.,_c~~lllJ .to. Cbtef '!! Pollee Gerald Roqht, rocks were
~own lhtOIIIIi lbli..(ptif lfl ,.llldowa andd· tile window In the
door of 1M bulldfnl sometime Hlween 9 and 10 p.m. after the
station bad cloaed.
: Kettll Kline, alation mana,., reported the Incident to pollee
early Monday mo"'tar. 'lbe vaudala entered tbe bulldtaa,
accorctlnr to Chlefi\OIIIbt, butlheonJy thln&amp;mllalqwu a few
dollars from the cub register. Keith Kline, station maqa,
reported tile Incident to pollee.
·
.
Continued on pare 10

....L_------------------~~----~------~i ·

1

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/

Porneloy- Midthport. Ohio

Mandly, Mild• &amp;. 1980

Commentary

P gs 2- TM Dalvls 61191
Punwo;p u
Cillo

•·•pA

Morula;, Milch 15, 1980

Idea to help farmers squashed

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON ARE/\
~·

~mil:! I"'T"'-&lt;0'-...,...,.......,.c:f,=
'qlv

· ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHAaLENE HOEEUCH
•
General Mana&amp;'er

Publisher

•

·

111 Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

1

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlaber/ ControUer
A MEMBER of The Unltl!d Press International, Inland Dally Press
· Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

.

.

LETTERS OF OPINlON ore welcome. They should be' less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wlth
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste , addresslnglssues, not personall·
· ties.
·

...

Mottl tries to override
.veto on lethal injection
By LEE LEoNAaD
.
tJPI St~ebouse ReporterCOLUMBUS- State Rep. ·Ronald MotU, D·Parma, Is at It again,
battling the odds on a controversial issue In the state Legislature.
Mottl, the "father" oft he state lottery 17years ago, is now trying to
override a gubernatorial veto of his bill providing for lethal Injection
as an alternative means of execution' in capital murder cases.
He achieved a House override last week by an overwhelming
p~argln. but that was easy b&lt;?Cause ihe House Is str~ngly In favor of
the death penalty. Moreover, he wa&amp; able to " sneak up" on Gov.
Richa rd Celeste, who was not prepared for the challenge.
The governor told reporters l}e didn't find out about the attack on
his veto untll about an hour before It happened. ·
·
Now the red flags are up; Celeste won't be surprised in the Senate
and can be expected to work hard to sustain his ve)o, made last ,July.
He told reporters Friday that he will talk personally to as many
senators as possible.
The vote in the Senate was much closer- 19-12 - and it takes 20
votes to override a veto In that chamber. Mottl wlllhavetohold all the
votes he hat! last June and pick up one more, perhaps a senator who
.
·
was absent that day. ·
Evf n with Celeste working the other side; it would be foolhardy to
bet against Mottl. In the early 1970s his proposal to create a state
lottery was beaten twice In each chamber before finally succeeding.
The House had scarcely adjourned last week before Mottl was over
in the Senate setting up his battle plan and buttonholing senators.
Mottl' s neighbor, Sen. Gary Suhadolnik. 'R ·Parma Heights, also Is
no stranger to controversy.
· Suhadolnlk got himself some adverse ·publicity in 1988 when he
catered to the was(e disposal industry · in fashioning legislation to
. clean up Ohio.
More recently, Suhadolnlk has sided with furriers , department
store owners and trappers who want to tone down demonstrations
against the sale of fur coats in Ohio.
Suhadolnik found him$!!l!il\ the eye oflhe storm again last week. He
got some unexpected flak, even from members of his own caucus, as
: he presented a House-passed bill dealing with taxes on boats and
: outboard motors.
·
• Intervening In behalf of Ohio's boat dealers. Suhadolnik explained
that other states allow the value of a trade-in to be deducted before
boat buyers are taxed.on their new purchase. He asked that Ohioans
be allowed the same break.
Bu! normally.mild·mannered Sen. Charles Horn, l;t·Dayton, said he ·
found it '.'outrageous" that wealthy boat owners should be on the
receiving end of yet another tax break " when we're not offering one to
those who need It most - the working poor."
Horn's attempt to get the same tax break on automobile trade-ins
was Ignored by his Senate colleagues.
·

Berry's World·

•

..

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

the blll makes no dlltlnctlon
WASHINGTON - The 1990
Farm. Blllls the equivalent of an
between farmers !1111klng a profit
oil check and a fill-up for federal
and farmers tblt .are hurting.
agricultural programs. But Rep.
Nor does It diSCriminate between committee, don' t tak~ kindly to "welfare." But Armey thlnkl It
Dick Armey, R·Texas, has some- . · family farms and corporate having a non-member dabble in .would save up to $8 billion In
thing more along the lines of a
bookkeeping and paper shuUIIng
giants.
thPil' business. And 1\rmey has
major engine overhaul In mind.
C!Oill.
.
Armey's propotallll tocutback crOIIed that line.
He also wants to repeal' all '
Armey IJias proPosed wl)at he
subsidies to farmers who have
'But Armey, who bu a P.h.D.ln
calls the "'Fair Flllr Subsidy Act"
sales of more than $!100,000 a year economics, Is deter mined to be marketlne orders that set up
to take well· to-do farmers off the
or who m~e profits of more than hi!Fd. "We have In Coops the' protected agriculture markets
and prohibit farmers from ael·
government payroll: It's an idea
$100,000 a year. That would hit committee mystique · that It a
worth l!Uttlng on the table to
ling their goods In some states . ..
the big farming corporations the member of Congress Is not on a
hardest.
·
Critics of Armey'a current
discuss. Unfortunately, Armey
specific committee, . then they
Isn't on the House Agriculture
In 1988,• the 'A griculture De- can't take part In the formation
proposal say be Is overstating the
Committee, where such a bill
partment reported, $1.65 billion of legislation per taining to Issues abuse- of federal farm support
would originate. A,nd tl!e · In subsidies went to farmers with assigned to that particular com· paymel)ts and that the $5QO,OOO
farmers.· · fr!EindS who make up
limit on total sales would· leave
after-tax Incomes of $100,000 or mlttee," Armey told our assothat committee aren't about to
more. Only about 9 percent of ciate Tim Warner. " When the many farmers Ineligible for the
let an upstart economist mow
farmers are In that tax bracket,
committee becomes the special federal subsidies that they u$1! to
Armey tole! us.
·
their hay.
,
'
Interest; then someone must . pay !heir bills.
The 1985 ,Farm Sill began the
Others say Armey IS simply a
challenge that power structure."
farm subsidies thatArmeywants
This may not be Armey's last
pawn· of the Heritage founda·
Until Ar!fley came along, the
. to trim. That bill promises up to debate over the (arm bill prom·
lunge at farm legislation. Also o'n
iton~ a conse..Vatlve Washlngton
$50,000 a year In a goverlllllent !sed to be mundane - the same his agenda Is shirting the bureau· ·· thinK tank that advocates severe
handout to justabout any f;umer' old arguments perpetuating the . cracy for paying farm subSidies government spending C\lta. · ·
smart enough to fill out the forms
same old problems. Just getting out of the Agriculture Depart·
But, says Armey, "U I'm
·and obey the rules. The object IS Armey' s bill on the docket will
carrying the ball for anybody,
ment and Into the federal agen·
to compensate farmers when .heat things up. The members of cles that hancile welfare pro- It's for my grandchildren and
they must sell their produce 1 the House Agriculture Commit·
thoae . grandchlldreo of other
grama. Farmers wouldn't relish
below federal target prices. But tee, just like any congressional
having their "subsidies" called · Americans."

i't''$ eiTHeR
' it-1 'T~e.

CoMeDY

THe

gJt

Ho~tKoR:

SecT;o,.a.

.

"Aren't there ANY small cars thHe days that
don't look like JELLYBEANS?"

·Today in history
By United Prenlnlernallonal
Today is Moriday, March 5, the 64th day of 1990 with 301 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward tun.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn ..
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on thiS date are under the slgn of P!Jces. they include
Flemish mapmaker Gerbardus Mercator In 1512; Antoine Cadillac,
founder Cif Detroit, In 1658; poet Lucy Larcom In 18llt; litiiOgrapher
James ives, partnl!r of Nathaniel Currier, In 1824; autbor Frank
Norrillln 1870; actors·Rex Har.-Ison In 19M (age 82) and Je,~k C.sldy
In 1927; and actress Samantha Eggar In 1939 (age 51).

--·

On this date in history:
. .
. In 1770, Brltlllh troops killed five colonials in the ICH':alled "Boston
Musacre." one of the events that led to the American RevolutiOn.
In 1933, In German electloQS, Adolf Hitler's NIIZI Party won nearly
half the ~eats In the Relchstag, the German parU.ment.
In 111113. the Soviet Union announced tblt dictator Joaef Stalin had .
died at aJe 73.
.
In 19M. the Standard 011 Co. of callloi'JIIa, al10 known 11 Chevron,
bOugbt Gulf Coi'JI. for more than $13 biUion In the largest business
1n
history.

mercer u.s.

i

.~
.)

.

Wellston eliQUnat.e d from District .II boys tounley, 70~58
ATHENS - In the Dlvisl!ln 11
Dl.s1rlctquarterflnal toumarMDt
at Ohio University's ConvocaUoll
Cenller Saturday night, the Portl&gt;
mouth Trojans edged New Lex·
lngton 58-57, Fairland defeated
Sheridan . 75-65, Greentleld
McClain elimlnatec! West Union
58-4.7, and South POint sent tbe.
Wellliton Golden· Rockets to the
sldellnes 'by a 70.51acore.
The tour·wlnnera wiU pare off
th ft.Weekendforlwoberthslnthe
Ohio University RegiOnal tour·
ney on March 13.
PortsmouthwillfaceFalrland
at 7 p.m. Friday In the upper
bracket while Greenfield clashes
with South Polnt In the 9 p.m.,·
·
nightcap.
Portllmoudlll New Lexlnpon 57
" The Clnderalla New Lexlngtoll
Pantl\ers ~appeared to have their .
second big upset In live days as

1M led tile Trojans ,tor m~ of

mOves Into the semi-final s with a
theconteatbdftamlltwdlaYUP
21J.2 record.
s11ot In tbe final. two secopds
The TJ:6Jans were led by
pnllel'lllld Ute Trcija111'~ abaky
Darryl Unlit' s 15· points while
victory.
.
, Todd Fox swished t8 for the
PHS bid taken a 58-57lellltwl\ll losers.
·18 leC!ODda rematQ!q when New
PHS hit 25 of 58 attempts for
Lex worked the ball up floor ant\ 43.1 percent, made eight of 18, at
called tlnle with just six seconds
the line, and clallllejl 33 reremaining.
boundl. New Lex · shot ·15.7
The lnbounds pass .went to percent on 21 of 46, had 14 of 20
·Luke Patlersiln, a 6-5sophomore, · treebles, a nd also c lea~ 33
who worked undeJ;'Death the
bounds.
·basket, put up .a sort lay up
..
~attempt that rolled across the
Score by flU&amp;rtert~=
,_•
.
·backoftherim, an(l_droppedlnto ~NewLexlngton .. 2112 iO 14--57
the bands of Portsmouth's Lou Po ~t.smouth ....... 15 -17 11 15- 58
Barries as the horn sounded.
.
On Tuesday New Lexington
. Fairland 73 Sherl~all 81
had eliminated heavily 'favored
In the second contest the
Athens by a ~9-56 score In the Dragons fell beh!nd by quarter
Crooksville sectional tourna· scores of 19·16 and 36·31, but
ment, but closed the season with outscored . the Ge nerals 44-29 In
an 11·11 mark. Portsmouth the second half · to win going

a way,.
the SecOnd hall. shot 54 percent
The Gener als were forced
from the field (23 of 45), a nd
outside by the Fairland defen se
made 10 ofl6 free throws to m ove
and fired 24' three point at temP.ts,
Into the semi-finals with a n 18·5
but made only seve n.
record.
..
F airland used t he free throw In
·Guard Kyle Cam eron staged a
the four th period to keep the ' s hooting exhibit io n as he conGenerals at bay, and fi nished
nected on 10 of 19, Including three
with 19 of 21 at the line in running
of three on the trlfectas, a nd
their record to 15-7.
converted five ol seven free
Guard Steve Pay led Fai rland
throws to finish with 28 points in
with 20 points while Nath.a n
leading the Tigers . Guar d Ashley
Hughes added 17 points and
Rannells added 10 and cente r
claimed 11 rebounds.
Marcus Coleman fin ished with 10
Sheridan bowed out at 14 -~ and
poin ts and nine rebounds.
was led by Troy Dupler s 22
West Union goes to the side·
points with Mike King adding 14.
lines with an 18-5 reco rd and was
Score by q11811ers:
led by Eric Courtright's 14
Sheridan .. ; ...._. .... l9 17 17 12- 65
points.
F airland ......... .. 16 15 20 24-75
Score by quarters:
Wes t Union ........ 12 18. 8 9-47
Greenfield 39 West Union 47
Greenfield .... ., ... 17 10 15 17-59
Coach Rick Van Maire's Tig·
·ers outscored West UnJon32·17 in

South Point '111 Welllloa 118
South Po int dominated the
inside game as they 6utrebounded Wellston 45·29 with the
6-4 towers, Randall Pennington
and Mark Perkey each clearing
10 rebounds and accounting fo r 40
points between them.
Pennington fi.nlshed with 24
points and Perkey 16 as " Huck' s
Hounds " broke (rom a 29·23
hallli me lead Into a 20 point lead.
late In the third quar ter:
Se nior Chris Graham made
live three po iJlter s and en route ttr,
a 21 poin t effor t for the Golden
Rockets with junior Scott Lackey
addi ng 13 as Wellston finishes
wit h an 18·4 recor d.
South Point a dva nces to the
semi-fi nals with a n 18·5 mark.
Score by· quarters:
South Point ........ 13 16 18 23-70
Wellston ............ 9 14 7 28-58

•
towm
m
89-87
S~acuse holds off-. Georg~town
rally
..
•

.

and will play Michigan State in
The West Coast Confere nce figures a!{North Carolina sj)oiled
more than It was the offic ials' · lour seconds left a nd hit both
By TOM WITiiERS
the Big Ten finale next Sunday.
shots to give Georgetown an81-79
cancelled Sunday's games and Duke's hopes lor a share of the
fault. I probably let my competi·
tJPISporil Writer
Mi chigan, which received 30 ·
a nnounced there would · be no Atlantic Coas t Confere nc e
A record Carrier Dome.crowd live juices overflow," admitted .lead In regulation.
points fr om Terry Mills. fell to
tournament games Monday regular-season Iitle. Duke's loss
·watched Syracuse earn a share' Thompson. "I made a mistake
gives Clemson the championship 20-7, 10·6.
night.
Sam J e ffer son then fouled
of the Big East title and the top and that's it ."
At Champaign , Ill., Kendall
• In Top Twenty action, No. 4 and the top seed in the ACC
Thomvson threw his !rade- Owens at half court with one
seed In the conference tourna·
Gill
scored 25 points a nd the
Duke
was
upended
by
North
tournament.
North
Carolina
im·
mark
white
towel
and
waved
at
.
second
left
and
the
6·9
sophomore
ment with a victory over GeorgeF
ighting
Iliinl made 13 threeCarolina
89·75,
No.
10
Purdue
proved
to
19·11
overaii
and
8-6
1n
3~.015
as
he'left
the
,
h!t
both
free
tl:lrows
to
send
the
the
crowd
of
town Sunday, but Hoyas coach
pointers
in the . rout of the
nipped
No.
8
Michigan
73-71
and
ACC.
Duke
fell
!o
23·7,
9·5.
the
game Into overtime tied 81·81.
John Thompson wasn't among floor .
Andy Kaufmann had
Hawkeyes.
At
Wes
t
Lafayette
Ind
.,
J
immy
No.
·
'17
Illinois
crushed
Iowa
Coleman. a senior playing his
Bryant scored 25 points and
the assembled.
21
point
s
and
Ervin Small added
118-85.
Oliver
sunk
a
16-foot
jumper
with
Derrick Coleman scored 27 final home game, made his had nine assists for {;eorgetown,
19
lor
Illinois.
Illinois improved
In
a
late
game,
No.
14
La
Salle
to
pull
the
two
seconds
left
points and Blliy Owens added 23 second free throw and then made while Mark Tlilmon added 19
to
20-7,
10-7.
Iowa
slipped to 12-15,
to lead No, 9 Syracuse to an 89-87 five of the six t~chn!cals. ·The · .points and seven rebound s'. . 01'· · played Siena In the semifinals of Boliermak~r s within a hail-game
4-13.
Troy
Sklrine
r led Iowa with
the Metro Atlantic Athletic Con- of Michiga n State in.the Big Ten.
·victory over No. 5 Georgetown In Oqtngemen maintained posses· kembe Mutombo had 19 points, 12
17
points
a
n~
Les
Jepsen and
Purdue. 21·6 and 13·4, received 26
ference Champlon ~hips .
overtime, giving the Orange men slon and BillY Owens promptly rebounds a nd five bl ocked shots,
added
15
each.
Rodell
Davis
At Chapel Hlil, N.C., King Rice points from .s te phen Sc heffler
the No. 1 seed In this week 's Big drllled a tl)ree-polnter to give freshman guard Michael Edled five Tar Heels ' in double
Syracuse a 'lO'point play and ·a wards scored 18 points .
East tournament In New York.
40·36
lead.
.
It
is
the
first
t.Ime
Syracuse.
&gt;ThompsOn was assessed three
Sports b r i e f s - - - - - - - - - - - - And if that wasn't enough, the which cr ushed Georgetown 95· 76
technical fouls for- arguing a foul
call late in the first ball and was Hoyas turned the bail · over on at the Capital Center Jan. 27. has
and Peter Fonseca of Canada
cause Saturday's play was
Auto Racing
ejected.
· '
their next possession and Ste· beaten the Hoyas twice in the
was third In 2: 12:07. Julie Is·
Austrian Ferdl Hlnterleitner, rained out. Woosna m fini shed at
Will! the Hoyas leadl.ng 36-33 phen'' Thompson Went in for a regular season.
phording. a two- time Columbus
winner of the 1988 New Zealand 6-under 210, two strokes bette r
Elsewhere Sunday , Hank
with 2:14 remaining In the first dunk to put the Orangemen up
World Championship Rally. died than playing partner Miguel Marathon winner from Clncln·
Gathers of Loyola Matymouitt
half. Hoya guard Dwayne Bryant 45·36 with 1: 32 'to go:
nat!, bested a weak women's
Sunday from head wounds suf· Martin of Spain .... Taiwanese Lu
"It definitely was il swing, btit collapsed during thefitst hail of a
was. whistled ' for a foul on
fe red when he was struck by a We n Ter, despite a l -over 73, held . field, finishing in a course-record
Coleman . Coleman made the we were In the game'," Syracuse semifinal game In the West Coast
2: 32:25. •· ... Wanda Panfil of
Vienna tram , Austrian Televi· on to win the $150,000 -Thailand
first of his two free throws bu I coach Jim Boehelm . ·:r ve Conference tournament at Los . sion said. Hinterlellner, 35, was Open by one shot. J.,u' ..had' a
Poland won the N'agoya !Japan)
Thompson was stlii irate. He · · wa'nted to do that a fewj.lmes. but Angete.s and was rushed t o a · hit Thursday while attempting to 72-hole total of 12-under 276 at the
International Women's Mara·
drew- the first technical (or I always stop alter two hospital. Mome nts after dunking
·
cross a street and brought to the Royal Thai Army G~\1 1~011 fSe to , , thon i ~ 2: 31 .()i .
(technicals) ."
on a spectacular alley.-oop play
'
abusive language and then rehospital in critical condition, edge Danny Mijovi ~ or 9ilad ~ ' e•
Owens . sank two· free thr pws ag~ inst Portland, Gather s trotceived two and an autom_attc •
and Park Nam sin''of Korea. '
Tennis
ORF said.
ejection from the officials for with one second left to put the ted to mid court put his hands on
Mljovlc-closed with a 71 and Park
Top-seeded Brad Gilbert won
Baseball
leaving 'the coach' s box and, game . into overtime and added his knees, then crumbled to the
The Chicago White Sox have had 70. ....Aiko Takasu of Japan
the $500,000 World Tennis Tour·
four points In the extra period to floor.
walking on the court to protest.
Invited veteran Ieft·hander Jerry shot · a par-75 to hold off Patti
nament with a 6·1, 6·3 victory
His right arm was pirined
"It was probably my fault give Syracuse (22·5, 12·4) a share
Reuss to report to their training Rizzo and win the $333,300 Daikin i over Sweden's seventh-seeded
of the conference title with No. 6 underneath his body as he
camp In Sarosota, Fla. ,.. 1nd work Orchid Ladles Golf Tout namenl
Jonas Sve nsson at Rotterdam,
'
Connecticut. Syra~use draws the convulsed. The crowd of about
out with their Vancouver minor In Okinawa. Takas u finished with
the,Netherlands . Playing his first
top· tournamen t seed by a tie- 4,000 at Gerste n Pavilion sat in
a 12-under 213. Rizzo shot a
.
league team.
final of the year, Gilbe rt , the
breaker.
stunned silence.
'
69
to
close
with
a
214.
third
-round
wor ld 's No. 4 ranked playe r. wa s
Golf
to~eys
Alonzo Mourning missed a
Gathers, 23, who led the nation
Marathon
in excellent form a nd allowed
tan Woosmlm of Wales won the
jump shot as time ran out to leave in . scoring and rebounding last
$660,000 Mediterranean Open in
Pedro Ortiz of Colombia , se- Svensson little opportunity to g e ~
Georgetown
~ (22·5, 1 ~·5) In third
year, was taken outside \he gyin. Mdrbelia ,, Spa!n,atter shooting a
WAlLE~ . Hawp ii (UP!) into the match.
cond
a year ago. outdueled
aetlrWjel ~Iiiii thtdllial iwo place tn · the final confer ence on a stretcher, ,1nd . param~lcs
final roum~ 2-over 74 In 'strong Poland's Antoni Niemczak in the
..
admini'ste red emergency tr eathllles ··suriday fot a one-stroke standings. •
winds. The tournament was final mile and won the Los .
Mourning, who was held to 10 · ment that included electroshock.
. victory at the $500,000 Women's
shortened to three rounds· be· ~ngeles Maratho·n . Jn 2: 11:54 .
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
K¢'mper Open, her second LPGA points and one rebound:-'wa s Loyola teammate and boyhood
Nlemczak was second in 2: 12:05
·io
ihe
basket
with
frie
nd
Bo
Kimble
stood
by
him.'
fouled
driving
446 4514
•. --victory Is as ffi'!nY weekS.
.
; 'This Is my , 20th win, and It
i
;.·
:1
feels upbellevalile," exclaimed
Daniel,- who captured her 19th
ROCKINGHAM , N.C. (UPI) title at the Hawaiian Ladies OiJen
.
Kyle
Petty dominated the
on Oahu a week earUer.
Good wrench 500 Sunday at North
·' Daniel, .who began the day two
Carolina Motor Speedway to
-shots , off the lead, · n~~d a
·claim his third NASCAR Winston
2-under-par 69 at the 6,139-yard
Cup career victory and a bonus
Wailea Blue course on the Island
111 Second St., Pomeroy .
exceeding $220,000.
'or Maul to ,finish with a 72-hole
By winning the pole position lor
YOUR INDEPENDENt
seore oft-under 283.
,
the race and the event at the
;·. Laura Davies and Rosi~ Jones
AGENTS SERVING
1.017-mlle track. Petty coUected
,tied for second at 284 .
the Unocal 76 Challenge bonus
MEIGS COUNTY
• The victory was worth $75,000
which
had.
n
't
been
won
In
a
.year.
'for Daniel, bringing her two·.
SINCE 1868
.E ach time the bonus . went
i"'eek total to $127,500.'
unclaimed, $7,600 was added t.o
. Jones and Davies each birdied ·
the total. When the bon1,1s wa s
the 18th bole to lie for second and
added to the $74,050 race purse,
piCk up $40,000 each.
·
Petty couected $294,450.
, Davies had the best opportun·
"I didn't mean for today 's race
lty ot all the challengers, but
to be entertainment. I meant lor
misread the 17th green and
it to be domination; " said Petty,
!~tree-putted for a bogey to take
who led 432 of the 492 laps. ' 'When
herself out of contention. ·
you have a car itke this (that
, . Two-time defending Ch8f!lPioa:1
works so well) , all you have to do
J(!ng, who was seeking to become
'
is sit In it and then turn the
lhe ~lrst woman . since Kathy
steering wheel left."
Wh'•pvorth in 19j)8-70 to win the
The win was Petty's first since
&amp;arne event three consecutive
the 1987 Coca-Cola 600 at Charyears, carded to a 77 on Sunday
lqtte Motor S~way. and the
.for a 298· total. .
first for Sabco Racing. Owned by
Charlotte businessman Felix Sa·
bates. the victory for Sabco came
' Tbe Daily Sentinel
In the team's 22nd race. The team
competed
in only 19 events last
(VSPS 145-HII
A Dlvlllon ol Muttlm81a.lnc.
year, which was Its first season.
"I'd like to say we had good
PubH,shed every afternom. ~nday
luck but It was a lot of hard
through Friday. Ill Court St., Po·
mero.v. Ohio, by lhe Ohio ~alley Pub·
work," said crew chief Gary
Ushing Compam11 Mulllm001a, tnc..
Nelson, whose last win came In
Pomerov. Ohio 45769. Ph. 9!!2-2156. Se·
cond cliss poslage paid at Pomeroy',
1986 a~ Dover , Del.. with Geof!
Ohio.
Bodine at the wheel. "It ail came
together and Kyle just drove a
~ Member: United Press ln~enatlonal.
heck of a race. It was about one
~a:t~~~!~:t~~~~'!:~~~~~r
and a halt year's worth· of hard
Advertl&amp;ln(( tpmentattve. Branham·
. Newopsper Salee. 733 Third Avenue .
work."
· New York, New York 10011.
\
· Petty, driving a Pontiac, fin·
!shed. almost a full lap ahead of
~ POS'IMASTER: Sead addreSs chan'ges
· to 1be Dilly SentllleL · Ul Olurt St..
Bodine, who was only 1.2 seconds
. !'t&gt;me&lt;OJ'. Ohio-·
away from being lapped by the
''.
lead car.
8VIISCIIIPTIQN ~TIIS
. BJCUrl,..•·-or._le
Third went to Ken Schrader In
One Weel&lt;.. .................................11.40
a
Chevrolet,
wblle SterUng Mar·
f One Moalh ................................ .$6,10
lin
took
fourtli
in an Oldsmobile,
J;)ne Year ~ ...... .................. """'" ST2.80
1
both
one
lap
down.
Rusty Wal·
,1
, IJNOLB COPY .
I'IIICE
.
• lace finished fifth In a Pontiac,
I Dally ...................... .... .... ..... Zil Cfnl.
two laps off the pace. ·
'•
fiSubserlbers not d•trlng to pay tlwcar·
retty'l toughest c!lallengers
tier may ·remit Ill advanee dltec:t 10
~ere Walla~ and ~cky ~JUdd,
~ 1bellall)l llonllleloaa 3. 6or 12 mottltl ,
•
•. 1 ballS. Credll will bolllvett eiiiTior neh
but Walla~e·s PonUac deveii!P\!d
'
Weki .
' probJeml ahortly after the first
AD DEADUNE TUESDAY, MAICH 13, 1990.
100 laps. The defending Winlton
N!Liubo&lt;riptiona by .mall permtttod Ia
~ llriU Where holllt carrier lln'let li
CliP champion led. twice for 28
avellllblr. '
laps h\ the lint 107butnever was
'
I
MIIJ S.bocrllllo•
a factcr aptn.
·
blldellolp C..•r
"' After Wallace fell out, Rudd's
113 Weeka... ............................ ... $19.24
CRASHES
TBBOUGH
·
SyrapiM
stephen
TbomJIIIOB
Chevrolet was the only car that
· 26 Wel!kl ............................... ... l37.86
craallel IUoQII &amp;be GeorJetoWII deleaae , offered b)' Dlkllllbe
· 52W..U ... ,............. .............. ... f71.3$
could keep pace with Petty, but
ASK FOR BRIAN BILLINGS
Kideml!e lllld Anthoaf Allen til &amp;be aecond half of 8anday's 1111
Clti81J
Rudd's
car
began
leaking
fluid
• 13 Wol!kl. l,.............. .............. ... 110.80•
· f:lla&amp; coat.t under the Carrier Dome In !lyracuae, N.Y. T~ boat
OR DAVE HARRIS
116 W..U ............. .... ......... ........ 110.30
and evelltually a cracked on pan
·sa w..u ............,...,.............,...rruo
Or11'P!ften won St-87 In overtime. (t!PI)
,·
eliminated him from the event.

Danielsweeps.
·

..

The pack ~roes in on
The jungle drums are throbbing along the Potomac these
winter evenings, and their mes·
sage Is unmistakable: "Sununu
must go ... Sununu must go ...
Suminu must go .. ."
If you have watc bed the
Washington media and their .
liberal cronies on Capitol Hill
over any length of time, you will
have noticed that certain tech·
nlques are used over •artci over
again. In attacking a president,
for example, they don't at first go ·
after the man himself.
Instead, one high admlnlstra·
lion offiCial at a time Is singled
out - much as a hyena pack wUI
focus on one zebra In a herd. The
victim Is then cut down by a
series of·sharp, slashing attacks.
When It can no long run or resist,
the pack closes In for the kUI.
In the Carter administration,
congressional liberals and the
medica decided to teach Jimmy
who was boss by deil troylng his
close friend and budget director,

Bert Lance. Lance was duly
hounded out of office )&gt;y a series
of allegations concerning his
handling of certain bank transac·
lions back In Georgi\. He was
subsequently acquitted or' all
such charges by a jury of his
peers, but Washington scarcely
noticed.
In the Reagan admlnlstratloli,
which was twice as long as .
Carter's and far more than twice
as obnoxious In the eyes of the
liberal media, a .,vhole series of
administration officials got the
same treatment. Secretary of
Labor Ray Donovan was forced
out by allegations of which, like
Lance, a jury subsequently ac·
quitted him; but he too was
destroyed as a public official.
National Security Council Director Richard Allen was smeared
so effectively that he had to step
down, even though every single
one of the news sources that had
blackened hls~ine retracted
their statemen
d apologized.
It was Ed M
, however -

Sunu~u._w_iu_Uim-:---Rus_he_r

counselor to the president and ·observers · had predicted
subsequently attorney general ~ wouldn't last long In Washington,
whom the media and the congres· swiftly consolidated his position
as the president's right-hand
slonal liberals longed most fer·
man, and showed great skU! tit
vently to destroy. For Meese was
a true-believing . conservative dodging the rocks and assorted ·
and ·much too close to Mr.
offal tossed at him by the press.
Reagan for tl:le liberals' comfort. After several .months, It moved
Unfortunately for them, · two disceinsolately on to White House
successive special prosecutors counsel . Boyden Gray and other
possibilities.
found no reason to Indict him.
· When the Bush administration
Don' I be deceived by the
op:,ened 13 months ago, it seemed specifics ot the accusation. The
• obvlmis that .thP first victim of ·c11Use Of environmentaliSm has
this tested technique would be as little to do with what Is
White HouSe chief of staff J:ohn actually going on n4!re as the
Sununu, the roly·poly former opening of that McDonald's In
governor of Ne.w Hampshire. For . Moscow. The point Is that John
Sunqmr. like Meese, Is an authen· Sununu has been marked for
tic conservative, and his power· slaughter, and from now on the
ful position ,made It Inevitable accusations wUI rain down on his
that hi~ views would be head unceasingly.
lnfiuential.
·
. Sununu Is a reD:~arkably
It was almost eerie to watch
shrewd and able man, and 1111,
the Washington press corps, like boss, George Bush, Is wise In the'
some blind octopus, probing ~ays of Washington and Joy&amp;j to.
Sununu with Its tentacles, a fault. So It's far too soon to
searching for a vulnerable spot. count Sununu out. But tl)e hyenas
·
Luckily Sununu, whom many have made their chojce.

When·you hear the beep, read
.

.

The Daily Sentinel- Page · 3

Oh, boy, the little red light's
blinking; I've got a call!
This Is my first step Into the
world of phone answering rna·
chines, and I am as enthralled
with modern technology now as I
was In 1900. That was the year I)IY
Aunt Dorothy aent us a tape
recorder, just slightly smaller
than our kitchen sink, so we could
exchange famlly "voice !etten."
Full ot anticipation, I rewind the
"Incoming message" tape on my
newly borrowed machine, and
walt.
\'That's the RUDEST tone I've ·
ever beard! " I bear my fi'lend's
recorded voice opine. "And,
what kind or ~ge Is that?
can't you think of . anything
warmer than, 'IU, thll II Sarab.
Please leave your messaae after
the

toneT"'

.

Well, to be truthful, i can. But
I've suffered . through so many
Interminable anawerlng·
machine me111Je5 that 1 thougbt
I wu doing my callera a favor by
JettlnJ rllbt dOWD to bullaeta.
TakemytrleadPat,fort!lWilple.
You can almoat .ee her slttlllg

't

there, record button on, trying
desperately to sound In control of
her machine, rather than the
other way around.
. Click. "Uh ... hi, this II Pat ."
Her voice Is hushed, as If paying
· respects at the mortuary. The
lnfiectlona have no life In them,
but herunapoken message comes
through loud an~ clear:
"Uh - I can't come to the
phone rllbt now (I know this II
just a stupid machine and what's
mpre, I bate Ita gull! ) , but If
you'll 11!1\ve your name (And If
you thlnki'mJolngtotalkllkel'd
talk to a real person, you're
crazy. This II embarraulng
enoqh 81 It II!), I'll call ,you
baCk."
. Only aUabtly tess tedious are
the folltl who can't think of
anythlnJ or1J1na1 to ..Y, so they
read the speech that comes wttll
!lie OIIIWel'l!ll machine - all Of
lt, verbatim. I don't need to bear
Don'• recorded votce tell me that
be and Sbeda are away rtom the
pbone.rllbt now; I could tall that
when I bftrd the cliCk, and Don'a
recorded voiCe, · whlcb 1011ndl

..

like he's talklne Into his Ther·
mos. I don't need him 'to tell me
that If I'll leave my message
after the tone, he'll get right back
to me. Isn't that why be bu an
answering machine, so he can
call me back later? I don't need
'him to then remind me to walt
untU I hear thetone before I leave
my me11age. I heard him the
,'i:'
first time.
Of course, some of thcil. cute
answers people pllt on their
machines are pretty fuljlly. But
they always make me feel like I
sbould say something tunny
back, wbl~h leaves me at a
decided dlladvantage. After all,
the meanae-leaver bu been
working on this hysterical gem
for some time, perhaps even
recruiting a Beatlel recordiDJor
IOUIId-effects record, and you're
auppoled to come up With a bit of
Witty repartEe on a moment' •
noUI:e. Tbat'a a 1ame for frlendl
Uke Joan Riven and David
Brenner, not me and mille.
My fi'lend IIIJPited I do what
he does: Jult refllll! to ha&lt;re an
IIIIIWeJ'Ing ma~blne. period. "No
'

.' .

t~is:
. Sarah Overstreet:

Petty wins

.
DOWNING CHILDS.
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE...

SPRING INTO
ACTION!

NOW IS THE TIME TO SEE HOW
OUR CAR WEATHERED
THROUGH WINTER.

·.

Spring Car Care Edition
Wednesday, March ·21, 1990
'Reserve Your Ad Space Tpday

992-2156

'. 0.-.. . .

\.

.. .

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

.

-..

.

-

.......

�-- - -~~---

Page 4-The Deily Sentinel

.....

~

..

. -·

-- ·-

-·-,--

-

Ponwoy-MHr.IJpllft. Ohio

-- ----- --

By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Wrller
LOS ANGELES j UP!) -Hank
Gathers, one of the nation's top
collegiate basketball players but
a young man with a history of
heart problems. collapsed in
convulsions during a game In the
West Coast Conference tourna·
ment and died at a hospital
without regaining consciousness.
Moments .after dunking on a
spectacular alley-oop play' to
give Loyola Marymount a 25·13
lead over Portland, the 6-7
Gathers trotted to mldcourt, put
his hands on his knees and then
crumbled to the rioor with 13: 34
left In the first half Sund~ty
evening.
•
The crowd of about 4,000 at
Loyola's Gersten Pavilion,
.cheering wildly after Gathers'
dunk, was stunned Into silence as
he writhed on the floor.
Gathers was quickly sur·
rounded·by three physicians and
his sobbing rnother, Luc!Ue, who
screamed for help and slammed
her fist on the hardwood .
. Gathers, 23, who had a history
of Irregular heartbeat, was taken
outside the gym on a stretcher,
and . paramedics administered
emergency treatment that In~
dud~ cardiac electroshock.
Loyola teammate and boyhood
friend Bo Kimble was at his side.
After about 20 minutes, :Gath·
ers was placed In an ambulance
and taken to Daniel Freeman
Marina Hospital where he died at
6; 55 p.m.; said Loyola athletic
director Brian Quinn.
"We tried resuscitating him
for over an hour and we were
unable to generate any activity,"
said cardiologist Dr. Mason
Weiss, adding that an autopsy
would be performed.
Weiss said Gathers suffered a
syncopal event, or loss of con·
sclouspess due to an Interruption .

ofblood now to the brain. He
fainted last Pecember during a
game against UC Santa Barbara,
an episode that had been deter. mined to be caused by a heart
arrythmia or Irregular beat,
Weiss said . G.a thers was
"treated medically and released
to participate In all athletic
events" and missed only two
·
games.
· Both teams left the court after·
the Incident, which occurred at
5: 15 p.m. Four hours later,
conference officials announced
the rest of the tournament would
be canceled.
Loyola, which finished with the
best record In the regular season, ·
was gJven the right to accept the
automatic bid to the NCAA ·
tournament that normally goes
with wlnnlpg the wee event.
The Lions were to hold a team
meeting Monday to decide If they
would play In the NCAAs. Should
they not accept, regular~season
runnerup Pepperdlne would get
the bid.
An Imposing physical specimen, the: 210-pound Gathers was
one of the finest players In
college. He was the nation's sixth
leading scorer, averaging 29
points a.nd·10.8 rebounds a game.
A senior, Gathers was the most
prolific scorer In Loyola Mary:
mount and wee history and was
expected to be a high National
Basketball Association draft
choice.
A native of Philadelphia, Gatb·
ers last year became only the
second player In NCAA history
after Xavier McDaniel to lead
the nation~ in both scoring j32.7).
and rebounding (13.7).
''It's a tremendous loss for our
university," said Quinn. "He was
an outstanding young rpan, an
athlete and human being. We'll
all miss him. He's done so many
good things for us. We're all

Scoreboard ...
Tourney scores
lloJI Ohio RIPSellaol . . lletball .

a, ua~tl Prea•ta~«at..,_.
S•MIIQ'. Marcil s

To•rMment
Dl¥11atn .J
Akr E 'l'f, Wadl•ortlll3
C.. M~IU•trr n, Cu Tim ken 54
D• Oall Hllll 14, Ml . .etowa 411
ae 81 Jo• ... Geana 47
Cle 8t ••••~~~ ,-f, Me•• S8
Dq DMIIbar IU, ft'anldln I!
Day Metllowdale f1, W C11rroll1en n
~lllke N II, Oe Celllnw• M
· ltb"rla 1L Lak~INIII 17
Ham lit• til. Oxford Talawaa4a1'5
~l'llla8oadwtew U. LU..-&amp;Gd.SI Ed

a

P•rna llelr NU... u, Ml.rk n

..... II.SprlllaSit

SATUKDA\', March 10

Mlnnrt:ota a1 Ohio Slat e

MAC !ilemlfinalfi

Ball SUt..Ot.' wl•ner Yl' Bowllq; r.reea
E&amp;ll&amp;ern Mlctdpn wlnnrr

Miami-Toledo wlnnrr "" Keol St·Central

Mlchlpn wlnlll!r

MCC F1rllll1

S~~~'i ~::~H

II

Pro results
NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC.

s.iurdl,)' Re.ull ~

-'"'IPf 114, Atlanta 101

Nf!W Vorlllll, M:n....., We Its

Deawr tM. Dalau 81

Palra.d 71, 811«1... IS

Grealifllll H, ••• Uolon n
Newt. Falla 7a. Corilud l.alln~w 67
OIIMitd f'allalt, 01'! CenlraJ 'C ath ~.J
r ... 11, Mt chtew -M ·

r.,.

Po ........tll Sl, Nl'W Lnln~on 57

s..• Pollll 71, Wei..OD 18

Tallmadp ..,_ GrftftllbMJI Greea 44

· Dh'IMn Ill

Utr.ll lit. Su

1\111_..

tA
PortiiiACIIII, S~eaUir Ill"
Su nd 11oV RH IIIII 11
Cllleap na. ..w. 1u .•
l"hOl'ab: Jill; lll"Yelud "'
Ddrok 111. IJidl- 101
LA LakMlllU, Mln!IP!Ia&amp;f !I
Mandl)' Ga~

LACJip... r•al Phllad.elphla. , :3Gp.m.

Allr Ct V 81, RlllnuUI U

Btaeh-oed IZ. Wlckllfh! iU
Bl'rllllllilr'l' 14, Gat.,. Mil !Ill Rawklo• .til
IIMm-CarNIIIII, Rlclrf'4all' 'II i3ot)

Oberla M. Blk!k Rl"~ f!

.

8ock)l Rh'n- H. (..._lllastalion f4l
S,.ta Hlllfll•lll
Acadmiy U
UUu II, f'rderll:ldOW"a I~
W Salftn NW' II. Mr MucJwtl'r 5i

"·Col

Dlvllllktn rv

&lt;;an " 'lnchfltltB ». Worth Chr II
Col -~~ ft, E llllox 51
IU*on 0... •. Curat1o1a Val Ctlr 1111
McDoMidtl. M. .Hoed U
Rlctunond Hhl a, BrWol n
S.athrrn IAut S!, LonllhiWII .U

HI~ &amp;bool Rui.Hhllll
M~ll

,

LA Cllpper11 111, ...... 181
Sacratneato IN, Ch arhl~ IU
WMidJII&amp;oBU!, OrMtlo .1111, 2 OT· .
RoniHlll, Gohlra Stat• IH

Dl_.... SE 74, l.atne i3

Slll: urdiQ',

.

N"N

Col H•llf7 II, llellih U

Girl8 Olllo

EMII!rn Mlth.l,.., t

M.CC Ttlunaey Semtfiiii.IM

(Of)

!low U. Warrta R..-dlo U
v............. n. Tretw001171
Dh•IIIOall
Can F•ll• Nw U, MIDBn 32

\Ia

p.m.

S

Toumamenl

DlvMktn I
Btl' avercrf"d U . Cln Oak Hll .. f~

8o•tlman se. Ken1 n
Br•••ld. 11, Elrria 51
Can Glr.Oak ""'·Call M cKinlf') ole
C1n WIUrow H. aa NMI' -17
Cln Mercy ~7. \' andalla Blltll'r 41
Day Dunbar n. aaftoa ~ranON li
Le~ Ul, l'llmhrW.t- -11
·
Plckl'rlnr;to.tS. Galtm~~Q H't!ttiMdU
IW&lt;.-kr Ri"'rr MaaaiDelll II. " 'SUakf'
liS
T•l ~D U, Syl Soulh\l..._. .U loll
Tol C..nlral ~~- Tlfnn Columhlan :u
DlviNioall
n••lr4d 51 , • · Brandl u

a. ... .,ton.U. Girard :IS

Drfldf'l'l Trl \ 'allry 5$. M;ay~WUie H

Elidl 76. (('II• 31
•Jf'ffrr110n An-illl, ('le Vlllll An.t'la 56
Leal!! \tllf' U , Co paey 3.1
Oak Harbor SM. " 'll.. rd St

Slltl'llmento at Ntw .l'f't!lll')', 1: 3ll p .m .

~··• at Mh•t. 1:30 p.m.
Hou.llllonat Su AntOIIIo; X; 30p.m.
Ch IY'Iollf&gt; II Gol*n State, 10: SCI p.m.
Ttae-'..,- Gall'lf'fll
Portland Ill New \'orll:, nllhl;

Ulah at Orlando, al!lhl
Plla.llb: at ,\lluta, oiJkl
Sacramento a1 Dfl roll , niP!;

W•hln..onatlndlau, nllht
Chlcqo al MllwauiiP•. ni-"'
LA Laker111U Rouao .. nl~t
0..-loUf' al Denwor, nip;
Clf'\·elud at Mf'allle, nl_.
· NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGCE
Salurda,.v Re&gt;111it Jo!
Bo~ton t. ('hlcqo 3
1_,1ale !I, Qu r be•· l, Utt

Hartford 1. !\"\' RanJI'"rll -1

Pet role 3, Torollllo ~ . ·
Minrrl'iol:a 3, Moalrt'ai ~
Edmorton 3, Phlladf"'pllta. 3
Cat )l;lol')' .i, \' &amp;ncOII\1'r I
Sl . IAuM 3, SV Manclrr" ~

So.a.- R"'llih1
. W'-"IDiton.J, J'\ie.• .Jer~~ey :\
BaAton -1, Dt.:aa:o 1
" '.... pe.l. Lo!i Aliptl'JI ~

llltlfalo I, Cluehl'l.! 3
Pllllllllllh il, MI•IIPAo&amp;a I
I. V .ncoltVfr 3
Mo .. IQ', Gamt'lt
Df't~ a1 Nl' Banlll!rA. 0:35p.m.
Lo.. AnptNal Cal pry, t:3S p.m.

f"ArM•••

'l'uf'AIIQ' Gal'nf'!l

Bollfo••t Philadelphia. nllthi
H:t.rtfonl at NY l!!olartdPu, nlahl
Buffalo at " 'IUihlqton. nlpt
Sl. Loul11at Nil'.- _,f'l'lf'J, nii(IM
Pltb,t,.flh a1 Edm811lon. nl~

Parnw. Pa ... 15. Avon L..e $4
Dlvlaloalb

Akron Sl \ "oo. lt!'oAdrldl(f' n
~Grllil,llll'i lir)' .GN'Il
Brooldleld 1'1, lllapta FaiJ.oo 44

A\'on38.

College scores
Collep ... ~ball Ret~dtl
TooiWDIDI'!III•

Coldwalr.r • · Onawa-GtuutorliO
frooD'Witlf' H. K't~menbul'l 54
Doylttllawa

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Ornille ._.

E Va•lon II, E PaleMIIH' U
G~aOA 111. Ore ~rich -11
Hulbtl, Ul!r11)'1JDion~7
~ Union II, 8Hfti-CarND38
Resl!So udte.urnM, lrMtr!MWTn

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lJpptr Sandlllllt)' M, llllron n
Jt, Tlllky \'alley n

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lll'rl• Hll•d 7t, C'altlftll 11
Bwkf)'e Cellini ·17, M•lllellll Peift'l

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r.,etw w. •enville »
Fort aer.wrr It, ~De!er\tllf' ta
t'Hil ...rt ,w,.. It, Fraak F\lrGrHa

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Frt'fM• .loe II, llanfla Northll!l'n 5I
Ganw., M. Mia.
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UlllfiJ ..._II, NertnriOII 18

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Qunerft••

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Pn•lbl•lll. GHfle Wulllln~ton 'I:
lluillfl't~llt, Rh_.e lat...~ 11
M
Temple 11,
C.loiUI AlbleUt .beeclatlon

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St-mlft•l•

IUdlllnood II, Aln«ku . , toT
l•nw- Mall!• ll8. Georp- M•• 71
Eul Coul Colll4ft11C!f'

Semtn•b

TOWIOD It 81, IJrlt ..ware '11
Ldlp 'II, a.ckwll n
Ml'lro .\Uulh: Atllllllle Coolmn~

Sl'mtn.rs

La 8 ..1f IN. Sl,_ M

Ml....n v.u.r C...tii"NC,

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Tran8aetions

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Martina captures Virginia Slims

LoulsvUle i20-3J vs Oak Harbor t22·1l.

Wednesday. n: 1:» p.m.
·
Parma Padua 117-71 vs Elida 121-2 \,
Wednesday, 8 p.m.

FJnal:

1: .l) p.m,
At Lancatter

~turday,

Dresden Tri-Vallf'Y f23-l l vs Marlon

Rlwr Valley 121·31, Wednesday, 6: 15p.m.
New Lexlhgton 116-7) ~vs Galllpolls
(}~-41, WE'dn~&lt;la~· ..S

p.m .
.
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Final: Satuzday. 1: :JI p.m .
At Xeola
Urbana j 204 1 vs.Harl)lltm Badin 1204 ),
Wedn~sday 6: l:'i p.m.
Ashville Teayt; Valley 119-41 vs Goshen
C2J.1), Wednesc:la~· 8 p.m .
Final ~.

Saturday, 7: 30p.m.
DMStON Ill
AIAitlauee
East Cantoo (22-2~ vs Akrm St.
Vincent-St. Mary 110-13). Tuesday, 6: 15
p.m.
.
Doylestown Chippewa 122·1) vs BrQOkfleld 117·51 , Tuesday, 8 p.m.
,
Final: Friday . 7:30p.m .
•
. At Bucyrus
Uppeor Sandusky 116-81 v.s Genoa i20-31 .
Tuesday, 6: 15p.m.
Avon !20-3) Vs Coklwatl"'r (21-2), TuPs·

day,8o30p.m .

•

Final : Frklay, 7:30p.m.

At Lancuter
, West MuskinRUm tlS-101 vs Heath
422·21 , Tuesday, 6: 15p.m .
Rlchmood Dale South&lt;e.stern 121·31 vs

Crooksville !12·111. Tuesday, 8 p.m.
Final: Frlda,y, 7:30p.m.
At Val\d&amp;llll Buder
Springfield Kentm Ridge • 120-21 vs
Cincinnati Wyanlng \23-0), Tuesday, 6:15
p.m.
RJchwood North Union 123-1) vs Zanesfield BenJamin Logan (19-41, Tuesday. 8
p.m . .
Final: Fr,iday, 7:30p.m.
DIVISION IV
At Parma Nonnand:y
Fremoor st . JO!ieph 116-8) VS BUckeye
Central (22-1), Thurllday, 6: 15 p.m . ·

·Clites Mills Gil moor Aca(lemy (17--7) vs
.McDonald !2~) . Thursday, 8 p.m.
Final : Saturday, 7: JO p.m.
Elida

"t

Fort Recovery (23-0) vs Liberty Ben too

!22·21. Thursday, 6:15p.m.
Gorhani Fayette (22-1). vs Kal kla 121-2) ,
Thursday, 8 p .m.
Final: Satunlay, 7: 30p.m .

AI Byea.tt le Meado-ootr.
. Sugarcreek Ciaraway (19-41 vs Berlin

Hiland !21-21, Thursday, 6: 15p.m.
Frankfort Adena !23·1 1 vs Worthlngtm
Christian {23-l),Thunday, 8 p.m .
Ftnal: Sahinl•y, 7: :Kl P·n'l:· ,

"' Vudallo Butler
Madera (19-4) ••Medtanlabull! Cl:!-9i,
Thunday, 6:15p.m.
Middletown Fenwtdc C21·21 vs South
Ch~rleltm Southeutern !24~). Thursday,
8p:m.
Final: Satunlay, 1: 30 p.m.

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (UP!)
-Top-seeded Martina Navratllova overcame a sand storm .to
contln!le her .dominance over
Helena Sukova of Czechoslova·
kla, ~nn!ng her third sUccessive
title of the year with 'a 6-2, 5-7;..6-1
victory Sunday at the $350,000
VIrginia Slims of Indian Wells.
Although It was Navratllova 's 14th straight victory without a
loss this year, the world'.s No. 2
player had her streak of consecutive straight-set victories halted
at 13 . . The 33-year old veteran
Improved her lifetime record to
23-4 against Sukova, ranked No.
10 In the world. The victory was
Navratilova's 149th title and was .
worth $70,00().
"'I've played In all kln~s of

-botl

........, . . . 'ft'an•ttkl ..

Dte.,. (.U.)- llt'led fllelter.leri'J
.. . . . . ..,.... ....,.lmiUtump

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Attention
Meigs
. ~((UJ . c~.u--ty .
~~~~a Bus1nessesl

Coach Kent Wolfe's New Knoxvllle Rangers claimed the Dlv·
lslon IV 'Sectlonal.champlonshlp
Friday night wltha66-55winover ·
Spenc.e rvllle, earning a berth In
the District at St. H~nry's
against Lima Central Cathol!c on
Wednesday. Wolfe's team Is now
15-7 In his first year ilS l)ead
me'}tor.
·

Souihem to
play W ednes«f.~y
The Southern ·Tornadoe'S w!U
meet New Boston In the se.cond
game or first round play l.n the ~.
Division IV District Tournament
at Ohio Unlverslty~s Convocation
Center, beginning at 8: 15 p.ni.
Wednesdlly .. Portsmouth East
meets . Latham Western In the
firs 1game of the nlght,.beglnning
at 6: 30; .
The two winners w!U meet In
the D!strlet floats ·Saturday,
March 10 at 3 p.m. ..
See tomorrow's Dally Sentinel ~
for a complete pre-game report:

JOHN A. WADE, MD.1 Inc.: .
PLEASANT VAUIY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLEIIGIST
"WE.HA~E HEARMI AIDS"
(304) 675-1244
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SYRACUSE - The Sutton
, Township Trustees will meet
' Mond&lt;!y, 7: 30:,p.1fl. at the Syra·
;cuse Municipal Building.
; lWTLAND -Meigs Area Hoi!·
:ness Association will hold Indoor
!camp, Monday through Sunday
. with .services nightly at 7 p.m.
, and 6 p.m, on Sunday . .Spedal
•speaker is Rev. Gene Grate and
' song evangelist Is ' 'The Dum·
lrfls' 'from Tennessee. The public
is Invited to attend.

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FOREST RUN -Forest Run
Methodist Church will have a
rummage sale.Monday, 9&gt;a.m. to
3 p.in. and TUesday ,' 9 a.m. to
·noon.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
-The Board of Trustees of
Columbia Township wlll meet
-Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the fire
,Sta\!On.
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POMEROY - The Meigs Lo·
'cal Band Boosters will meet
.Monday, 7 p.m. in the band room.

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Long Bottom news· notes

SYRACUSE -'The Syracuse
Youth ·. League will . have an
organlzationili meeting on Tues·
day at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
Elementary School.

Big Wheel horiors ~ts employee

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Big Wheel for four years. Accord·
Bob Johnson was chosen assoiilg to Quick, Johnson exempll·
ciate of the store for Feliruary at
fles an above standard level of
the Pomeroy Big Wheel. He
job performance, and maintains
works In the housewear
· good ~us tamer service skills and
department:'
a positive attltvde toward the
The announcement was made
company.
by Blll . Quick, store manager,
Johnson was chosen as one of
who presented Johnson with the
the
associates from over- 4,000
award. In addition, his mime wlll
employees
In the New Castle, Pa.
be added io the associate of the
based discount department store
' store plaque In the store.
chain.
·
· Johnson has been employed at

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BOSS MUSEUM WILL· NoT RE-OPEN: The two men who ·
claim to have the world's largest collection of publicly
displayed Bruce Sprlnp~n memorabllia are putting the
' collectiOI} \IP fl;!r sale. Stephen Bumball and Bill Smith say they
' have to rnove ihe Asbury Park, N.J., Rock 'n' Roll Museum out
•
• · of landma'r.k house In the City and theycan'tfind a new place to
display the collection, which lncl~des rare recordings, photos
•r
and posters about the'Jersey ~bore music scene and Its leading .
• star. They say 35,000 fans vlslted ,the museum between July 4, . ·
1986, and November 1988. but the biggest day was when
Springsteen· himself caine to visit. "Having him stop by to see
.,wh.at we bad 'n the museum and what we were all about mad!! ·
•' everything won!lwhll~." Smith sal\!. Smith 11nd Bumball •ay
their colleciiOII' li no~ belilg appraised and they hope to sell it
Intact to someono will display II.

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992-2156

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NOTICE 10 ALL
MASONS

BOBIORNSoN

SIAIT YOUR TAll NOW
'U .tt.d -Openhlgs

....,..

'IIW BILlS

You, 11... ~.
· 0101 PIICIS-CA&amp;l TillY

rnA'S. aa
s•AI
... ,,..DESIGNS
.
Wah- High Scltool

Melgo Co. u ......., OardMa
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lit.~
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OH. 41711
1114) IIJ:7440

Pom-.

My M11onlc Eligibility

C~aat1

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. ADDR£S$....;;_
~E----------~-------------------' . _,;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
_____
IRMCII OF S£1VIC£ - - - - - - - - - SERVIC£ $£11AL NO. - - - - - - - - - - - - AG''---

T£UPIIOII£ 110,_ _ _..:,.....;...__ _ _ __..;._ _ _ __

MASQN-773·5352

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&lt;.

Lester Moreno Perez, wearing
a navy blue wetsult, was picked
up by a Bahamian freighter after
Shelly DuBose was honored
~ a 60-mlle trip that he began
Thursday night and finished · recently by members of the X!
around noon FrldflY, about 30 Gamma Epsilon .C hapter, Beta
· miles from Key West, the Coast Sigma Ph! Sorority, for being
selected as this year's valentine
Guard said.
"He's a wild man." said Coast girl.
Members traveled to Seba s~
Guard PettY Officer Richard
tlan's
in Parkersburg, W.Va. for
Rodriguez. "He jumped on his
their
annual valentine dinner
board when he thought the winds
where
Mrs. DuBose was pres·
were best. By God, he was right. "
ented
a
gift and a pin., It was
Moreno Perez, a windsurfing
instructor, said he studied )he noted that she was selected from
wind patterns from Cuba to the hundreds of Beta Sigma Phi's
Keys and U appeared he,.. as on from all over the world to ~ a:
course to land at Marathon In me member of this year's valentine:
middle Keys. ,'
· court. Her picture appeared ~in·
He was picked up from the the sorority's internallonal,publlfreighter by the Coa• t Guard and catlon, "The Torch. "
Mrs. DuBose Is an honors
taken to Key West.
·
student
majoring ln ~education at
The Korean~speaking crew of
She resides In
Ohio
University.
the freighter had trouble explain·
Middleport
with
her husband,,
lng to the Coast G~ard what
happened so Moreno Perez got on · Richard, who Is the associate:
the radio and talked to a ministe r of the . Middleporr
Church of Christ. :1er mother,'
Spanish-speaking officer.
"He said, . 'No problem . I'm lVJrs. Creda Thompson, Is a·
just windsurfing, going to see my member of a Beta Sigma Phi'
family In Mfaml, "' ROdriguez Sorority Chapter In Kenai,
Alaska.
said.

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NEIL'S WO~~; Playwright Nell Slmo•' ~~;dmits that. he
draws on his owlt life for Ideas but says his. "Bnptoa Beach"
tr!logy and his newest work, "Jake's Women," shouldn't. be
taken as pure autobiographies. "I've felt that for, the last 15
years and t!fl.ren befOn!, t~t whatever I write happened to me in
the JII!St, or Is happening noworw!U happen but It's not literal,"
Slmo~ said In San Diego, where preview pertorma!lces of '
"Jake's Women" are under way. "I cllange It to tell the stc:icy."
Having said that, "Jake's Women" Is about a writer and the
way he Interacts with the wives, glrlfl:lends and chUdren of his
past. Simon, 6'2, Is a remarried writer with tbree daughters but
says hil slmUarltl~ w!tb ' Jake end there. .' 'Its an a btl tract
pa,b ttlng," he said. Tbe new comedy officially 9pens March 8 at
tht! Old Globe Theatre in San lllego.
GEEil LOVEf: Maybe all the talk about singer Plnfa .Udal
being Involved With Arlealll a.JI will die down now that she's
been seen With actor
of ABC's "FuU Houae." "I
don't want to make too MUCh out of It,'' Abdu~ who took Stamos
to theGrammyeeremony, told People magazine. "lt'sbeenjult
a couple of dates. 'nlat's lt." Stamos iaY• the two have some
thingS In co~on. ''We both go to b.t early and we both have
horrible aiJeralel, '' he said. "I1hink we d~overed we're both a
coupli! of geella. ~· IB the meutlme, Abdul has been looklnl for
movie toles aDd may be getting cl011e.
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Sorority
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figure Is not as shocking as
seeing some of Freddy's other
mile bits of magic, but you must
realbe that the formula Is
starting to show Us age and even
the boogeyman must think of •
retirement. Face It, when you
start gejt!ngtowhereyoucansee
the bullet coming even the thrUI
·of a gun battle loses Its edge and
you start watching the clock
expectantly. Don't think that I
am tired of the dasterdly dark
deed doer who has taken the
nation by storm, but his future
looks dim unless the next film
returns to the style. and clnem
notre that made the first one so
much fun.
To recap; "Star _Trek V The
Final Frontier" not Is only takes
us back to what we expect a
science fiction wonderland to be,
It wins us back with magic and
style. Some violence, but see it
anyway.
"Nightmare On Elm Street
Five The Dream Child" however
Is showing Its age and tiredness
but Is stU! worth watching.
VIolence, . objectionable !an·
guage and graphic Imagery are
there. Fot the die hard Freddy
kend with the Larkins' have been Krueger fan largely.
Until next month, when we w!ll
Mrs. Wilma Wamsley and Mrs.
Betty Loudin and Shannon, see the best and the worst of the
video world .
Ctieshire.
Mrs. Lila Ridenour and Mrs.
Sharon Fitzpatrick, Lancaster.
attended a hair show In Marietta
on Monday.
Callers at the Paul Hauber
home have been Dorhman Reed
and Lavina Brannon, Reedsville,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hili, Mansfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Young have .
returned from a weeks stay in
Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wells lett.
for Florida over th e weekend for · ·
a shorthvacaUon. .
·
Carroll and Luc!Ue Kimes are
announcing the birth of a grand·
daughter; Angelia J.,arie. She is
the daughter of Becky and Keith
Hastings, Nelsonville.
To place news noted. contact
Melody Roberts. P .O. Box 7,
SHELLY DUBOSE
Long Bottom, or call, 985•4275.

Cuban teen surfs to freedom

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attend and bring • ..covered dish
(or the potluck.

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DREYFUSS A HIT: They like Richard DreyfuBS In
Wolfeboro: N.H. About 100 residents of the tiny_town showed up
Friday when town . selectmen . and Chamber of. Commerce
members presented Dreyfuss with a key to the city and a
mat.ching pen set after he finished shooting some skat lng scenes
with Holly Hu'a ter .for a romantic comedy called "Once

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~ p.m. All members are urged to

In'· a busy February, two long his cause. And then, things go
awaited aeq~la make their defrom bad to worse 1\Rd the finest
but in tblll column. One takes yoii, ship In the neet goes beyond the
where no man hal gone before
galaxy aJ!d finds that every good
and the other takes you where no
quest Is never as easy ,as It
· one really wants to go at all.
seems.
"Star Trek V The Final Front·
Spectacular special effects and
ler" Is the continuing vpyage of
a well done script combine to
the Intrepid crew of the USS
turn the fifth mbvle In the series,
Enterprise and a film that
Into one of the best. If you haven't
tackles a touchy philosophical
seen It, do , and If you have, see !I
·q uestion: Is there a God and how
again as a special · treat f~r
yourself.
.
·
do we find him?
' Mister Spock It seenis has a
The bad boy of Dreaml~nd is
half-brother named Sybok who back and nightmares wUI never
takes hostages from the Terran, be the same again. "Nightmare
.1\omulan and Kllngon races In a
On Elm Street Five The Dream
plan to capture a · Federation Child" picks up where the last
Starshlp •to help him In his quest. . film left off as Allee, the Dream
Kirk and his crew are epjoylng !\{aster, finds that the evll ghost
their shore leave on the planet . qf Freddy Krueger Is using the
Earth wh!le Scott tries to put the dreams of her unborn child to
new Enterprise together but attack her and her frlerids.
when the call comes In the heroic
'111e rum has Its good moments
adventurers take off. ·
when It shows tlie characteristic
Upon arrival, the mystery Inventiveness that was so prom!·
deepens as they learn.that Syb&lt;ik nent in the earlier ones. Granted
had done more then take ~has·
that even the riovelty of seeing a
tages, he has converted them to boy changl)d Into a comic strip

By MELODY' ROBERTS
Floyd Ridenour, son of Mr. and
. Mrs. Keith Ridenour, has re·
turned home on 10 days leave
MIDDLEPORT- The~Mlddle·
before being transferred to Bil·
port Garden Club will meet
axle, Miss. Ridenour completed
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
his basic Air Force training in
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Mrs . William Morris. Hostesses
Texas.
Local Board of Education wlll
wlll be Mrs. Morris and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Tom Hayman
meet In special session on Tues·
David Bowen. Program w!U be
will be grandparents again this
by Mrs. Paul Haptoristall. Arran- . day at 6:15p.m. In the high school
year. Their daughter, Beth, Is
cafeteria to deal with personnel
gement by Mrs. G.E. Schaek~l.
married to Ron Murphy and they
matters . .
have two children, Santana
LETART TOWNSHIP -The .
Marie, and Brick Alan. They.
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MIDDLEPORT '-There . will
Letart Township Trustees will
reside In Torch. ·
be
a regular · meeting of the
meet Monday. 6 p.m. a.t the office
Middleport Lodge No. 363 F. and
Judy Holter is In Rhodes Hall,
building.
AM on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
University Hospital. In Columbus for tests. She received a
RACINE -Racine Village · ·Plans will be made for lodge
inspection on April 6. Inspection
kidney transplant last year .
Council will meet Monday, 7 p.m .
wlll be in the fellowcraft degree
Cards may be sent to her at the
at the Star Mlll Park.
and refreshments will be served.
hospp!tal.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Salisbury
TUEsDAY .
POMEROY -The fund raising
and children. Ga!Upolls, spent
RACINE-The Southern Local
and
publicity
committees
of
the
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
School Dlstr.l ct Chapter I ProPomeroy
Sesquicentennial
ComLarkins. Spending a recent weegram wll he sponsoring a NewsTuesday
7
p.m.
milt!'£'
wm
·meett
paper in EducatiOn Workshop ttl
tie held at the Southern High at the St. Paul Lutheran Church
In PomP.roy.
School c~feterla on . Tuesday
from 6-8 p.m.
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~ WED!Io'ESDAY
KEY WEST, Fla. (UP!) - A
17-year-old
Cuban rode a wind·
POMEROY
The
Meigs
POMEROY -The LadlesAux·
County
Salon
8
and
40
No.
710
wlll
surfing
board
on a 16-hour
illary of the Fraternal Order of
meet
Wednesday
1
p.m.
at·
the
journey
to
freedom
.
Eagles 2171 wlll meet Tuesday. 7
home Iva Powell in Pomeroy.

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
FRIENDS OF GUNTER: Bill Cosby and Sammy Davl~ Jr.
are taking care of the funeral expenses for Cornell Gunter, the
singer from the '50s group The Coa&amp;ters, who was foond shot to
·' death In his car jn Las Vegas last week. Gunter left llttie money
behind and his friends announced Friday that two blg·tiame
entertainers would pay for Monday's funeral in Los Angelesiliil~
wished to remain anonymous. But on Saturday ·cosby, whd'ls ·
appearing at the Las Vegas Hilton, told a Vegas oldies radio ..
station. KRRI·FM. that he and Davis, who Is hospitalized with ·
throat' cancer, were starting the funeral fund "as a gesture of
friendship and respect for Cornell Gunter and In recognition C)! ·
-his talent ana contrlbu lions In the field of music and
1 entertainment:'.Pollce still have no motive in the siaylng 'and
. nO One haS been arrested.
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CHESHIRE -Wgmen Alive .
wlll meet Monday, 7 p.l)1. at the ·
Kyger Creek Club!muse. Speaker ·
wlll be Cathy.Howard . There will
be a quilting demonstration and
-refreshments will be served.

Peop,le in .tf.?e news··
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RESERVE YOUR ID SPACE TODAY ,.,;:.

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the educatloa aecesiiU')' to attain this pal. ·crow
was part or !UI o11-ge1Bg career educatloa pJ'Oo
gram held at the scbool o~ Friday aflemoons.

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MONDAY
:. REEDSVILLE - The Olive
·Township Trustees will meet
, Monday, 6: 30 p.m. at the Reeds·
,ville Fire. House ..

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ASI FOR
BRIAN BILLINGS or DAVE HAIIIS

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Community calendar

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THE DAILY .SENTINEL WILL
PUBLISH A COMMEM~ORATIVE
ISSUE OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY'S 150 YEARS OF
INCORPORATION
ON
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THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1990.

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CAREER EDUCATION - Caraoa Crow, a local attoraey, spoke to the studeau at Salisbury
Elementary School receatly about his career and

12 of 34 shooting, Including only~
two or eight . three-pointers;;
atte!Dpted.
·'
:
·East Tennessee trailed 15•14·
with 13: 54 left on the first· half:
clock, before going on a 13·~ run~ .·
for a 27-17 advantage with 10:~1~
to go. The Bucs closed the haU'
with another 13·2 at 4: 35, sparked~
by three three-pointer~.
: ~
In the liecpnd hall; Appalach-~
ian State pulled to within 10·,
points, .80-70, with 3:48 left, but •
could get no closer. .
'
Appalachian State was paced'
by forward Broderick Parker~
with 23 points. Ben Miller and •
Rodney Peel chipped In 15 points
each, while Steve Spurlock added.
13 points for the Mountaineers. :
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Monday. March 6, 1990
Page 6

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fl~~ Mountaineers ~truggled on~

Knoxville wins

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weither, · but never in a sand·
storm. It became an adventure,"
said. Navratilova. "The condl·
!Ions out 'there wjjre wicked. It
dldn~ I affect my . vision, but
there's still some In my mouth,"
she joked. .
'
NavratUova' of Aspen, Colo.,
easily captured the opening set
combining her aggressive brand
of P.lay. with an . effective lef·
tha,nded serve and volf&amp;y game to
win In just 'rl minutes.
She appeared to be In control
while building a 5-1 lead. Navratllova held a match point at 30-40
against the6-foot-2 Suktiva; How ever, the Czechoslovak erased,it
and went on to level the match
winning the next four games.

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The Daily Sentinel

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1

Bird fails r,n clutch ·situation
after 71 foul shots in a row

AI WlltorA

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·VideoView... _. .....;.By;....J~eff_H_ilte_~,.:;...ry_ _ _ __

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8.01 ..... 11...... ..

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....... c.llttl* C.... T•....,niDAf, MAIICIIt

grateful to have been friends
with blm."
'
In Alban . N.Y., theiSeathalso
greatly affected live La Salle
'players who were boyhood
friends of Gathers ,.. Lionel
Simmons, Randy WoOds, Keith
Morris, Doug Overton &lt;1nd Bob
Johnson.
The players were told during
the second half of the Explorers'
10&amp;-90 Metro Allan tic Athletic
Conference Toumamttnt victory
over Siena and several were
unable to continue.
"Our kids are very, very close
to him," La Salle coach Speedy
Morris said. " Lionel and him
were Uke brothers. They were
told In the later part ·of the game
that he had passed away. AI·
Wesl Caul Confereace ~emUJaal toai'IJ8!MDI
STAR PLAYER COMFoRTED
Loyola
though 3,000 l'l)lles apart, these
ganJ9
In Loe ,Uplo1!8. G&amp;ilhen died at • hnpl&amp;al
Maeynloanl'a
Bank
Gallhen,
the
nalloa'a
sixth·
klds ·are very close.
wllbOal
teJalalag COIIICIOiiiDeu. (UPI)
leiuuag
.COrer,
Is
comforled
'hy
fellow
pla:ren
"They're having a cry right
alter
collapsing
J,D
coavulslons
darlag
SuDday's
now," ' Morris said. ''They're
great kids and their .feelings and
•
u
emotions are pouring out." ,
In Philadelphia, Temple Unl·
verslty coach John Chaney also
broke down in tears after his
team's Atlantic 10 Tournament
victory over Duquesne.
"We fight and fuss about
athletes all around the COUI!tcy,
and when everything Is said and
'·
.
Boston, however, carne back to
Chicago, which scor!!9 40 first·
By United Press International
done; Hank Gathers reminds me
qllllrter poll'ts, won Its elj:hlh take a 71-70 edge. The Bulls took.
Larry Bird, who made 71
·so much of what life Is all about,"
consecu!lve· free throws earlier straight game, the Bulls' longest the lead for good at 109-107 on ·
Chaney said. "The kid Is a·soldler
winning streak since.the 1983·84 Horace Grant's layup with l: 40.
this season, failed to deliver In a
for a lot of kids. To hear that just
·
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crucial situation Sunday against season. Tl)e Bulls were paced by remaining.
devastated me. How unfair IUs.
Michael ·Jordan W[th,36 points.
·, ''It was a shootout, gUnfire'
Somewhere Hank has a smile. He . the Chicago. BuiJS.
.
Pippen niade. one· of two free
versus gunfire," Jordan saJd. ·
'!'he league's .leading freewas where he wanted to be."
throws With 10:2 seconds left, and
Bird finished with 38 ·points to
1tirow shooter missed the second
of three free throws with 11.6 Craig Hodges added two more lead the Celtlcs, and Robert
Girls pairings
PM!sh contributed 18 points and.
S!!COnds remaining, allowing the free throws with five-tenths of a
By United PresalllteroaUoaal
Bulls to past a 118·114 triumph second remaining io eqd· the 18 · rebounds. Rookie Michael
Pairings for this week's girlS state high
Celtlcs' . four-game winning Smith added 16 points . .Pippen
over the Boston Celtlcs.
school regional basketball
streak~
.
added'22 plants for Chicago. ~
"It was absolutely beyond
twrnamrnts:
Chicago
played
without
start·
In other NBA games Sunday, ·
belief that Bird would miss,"
DMSIONI
At Parma Nonnandy
lng
center
Blll
Cartwright,
sidePhoenix defeated Cleveland 1bsBulls Coach PhU Jackson said.
Rocky River Magnificat (23·1) vs
,
lined
with
back
spasms
for
the
96,
Detrvlt dumped Indiana 111·
the
Ce!tlcs
trailing
115·
With
Cleveland Kennedy (23-01. Wednesday,
6:15p.m.
112, Bird missed a three-point ninth straight game. The Bulls, 105 and !he LA Lakers thrasheil.
SOlon (20-31 va To1edo Notre Dame
115·96.
attempt, . but was fouled by who are 8-11n his absence, took a 'Minnesota
,
i2I.J). Wedneoday, 8 p.m. •
14-polnt
(ead
In
the
first
half.
SCottie
Pippen.
The
Chicago
Final; Saturday, 1: :It p:rn.
forward was also whistled for a
AtMuslll•
North Cantm Gleq()(lk 122-ll vs Brunstechnical.
wick 122·2), WOOnesday, 6: 15, p.m. ;Bird, who entered the game
.Boardman 1194') vs Barbertoo (19-5),
Wednesday, 8 p.m.
with a .934 free-throw llj1rcen·
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Final : saturday,·! : Xt p.m.
shooting, the Bucs jumped to a
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (UPil tage,
converted
the
technical,
1
At MoiUII Vera.
51-32 halftime lead and never
.Center
Greg
Dennis
scored
24
but missed the first of two ,tree
Lopn 122·11 vs Reynoldsburg 117·7),
looked back.
po(nts
and
grabbe!l
12
rebounds
WednOsday, 6: 1~ p.m.
throws. In .FebrQary, Bird was
•
Plckertngtoo 123-]) vs TOledo Central
to lead East Tennessee St~te to a
East Tennessee point guard.;
closing In on Calvin Murphy's
Catholic (18-5). Wednesday, 8 p.m .
96-75 win over Appalachian State
Keith Jennings, 11amed the mosr,
NBA . record of 78 straight free
Final: SatunJay, l: 30 p.m .
Sunday night, the'second straight . valuable player, scored 12 of his•
At Voadolta Butler
throWs but had: the streak
·oayton Dunbar (18-6' vs Beavercreek
Southern Conference champion·
16 points in the first half. ' :.:
stopped at flouston.
C23-li,Wed.,.sday, 6: 15p.m.
~
for
the
Buccaneers.
.
ship
Guard MaJor Geer scored allll~
"He's the guy I'd want on t.he
Qnclnnatt WlthrCM' j 2J.l l vs Clndnnati
East
Tennessee,
27·6.
wori
an
Mother of Mercy {18-41. Wednesday, 8
of
his pobts In the first half,::
line," Boston's John Bagley said.
p.m.
au'
t
omatrc
.
bid
io
the
J"CAA
Including
three of three three4
Dennis Johnson and Reggie
Final ; Saturday. 1: 30 p.m.
tournament
with
the
win.
Appalpointers.
Alvin
West added 15· .
Lewis each also missed a free
DIVISION II
achian
State
fell
to
19-11
and
8-6
points and Calvin Tallvrd added;
A&amp; 8t11W
throw In the final 1:14. Lewis'
Jefferson Area 123-0) vs Garfield
witll· the loss.
,
.
11 for the Buccaneers.
~
miss,
like
Bird'
s,
could
have
tied
Heights Trtnlry (21-3), Wednesday, 6: 15
·
Sparked
by
hot,
long-range
East
Tennessee
made
six
of
•
the
score.
·
p.m.
seven three-pointers In the firs '
Canneld 12,-0t vs Warrer. ChamplOn
~23-1 l, Wednesday, 8 p.m .
half and 19 of 33 shots from the"
Final: Saturd&amp;)', 1: Xtp.m.

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:oy The Bend

ETSU claims Southern title

lli: Up.m .
Ball $tale \IS O"l_o UnlverMir, 7 p.m.
NCAA: "-"ery n WlUtnbafl, S:U p.m.
Bowl-r GrHn

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MoncMy, Mud• •• 1110

Hank Gathers collapses on
court; dies later ~ hospital

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6-The Daily Sentinel

Mondlv. Men:h 1. 1980

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

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Space telescope
set for launch

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MUW sponsors essay contest

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olflc~ers

at that same location. (UPI)

Selma's 'Bloody Sund'a y' march recalle.d
less children run down by men on for a Confederate general jn the
SELMA, Ala . ( UPI) - "Old
horses. '' ·
Civil War.
;
soldiers In t)1e struggle for civil
On
Sunday
Jesse
Jackson
and
Lewis, who was himself beaten
rights returned to a city that
unconscious by lawmen that day, other prominent civil rights
became a symbol of their moverecalled the events of 25 years leaders led the trek across the
ment,. marking · the "Bloody
ago as he spoke at Sunday Infamous bridge, where smoke
Sunday" confrontation 25 years
services at Brown Chapel AME bombs were .used as symbolic
ago that spurred passage of the
Church, the staging ground for tear gas to remind marchers of
1965 voting rights act.
the march.
what happened there 25 years
They came from throughout
·
Lewis, the son of an Alabama ago. '
the nation for Sunday's silver
sharecropper, spoke movingly of
Lewis, speaking to a crowd· at
anniversary re-enactment of the
attack that marred the selma-to- ' the days of segregation through· the Brown Chapel, described a
out the Deep South.
confrontation with Dallas County
Montgomery march.
..
"It
was
a
closed
society,"
he
Sheriff Jim Clark, a legendary
~ The assault on abOut 600 civil
said. " I found no!/llngbutclosed segregationist, on "Bloody
rights marchers by Alabama
doors .,,
Sunday."
state troopers and a mounted
Lewis said Ciarkcalledhlm an
Pc&gt;sse hastened the adoption of
the voting rights act , what many
The Rev. Martin Luther King ·"outside agitator." Lewis said he
responded, "l may be an aglta·
Americans view as the 20th Jr., who led the 1965 movement
tor, · but I'm not an outsider,"
century's most important social for voting rights In Selma,
legislaflon.
·happened nqt to be In town on · ref~rlng to his Alabama roots:
Lel\'ls's stemwltldlng sermon
• "Many of us were hurt ihat. · Sunday, March 7, when ! the
day," said Rep. John Lewis, marchers were attacked o'n the
touched on the fact thl!t more
D -Ga. " I saw women and help- Edmund Pettus Bridge, named· than 3,000
. residents ' of Selma.

were arrested In the struggle for
civil rights. During the movement. Lewis .was arrested -more
than 40 times.
The congregation joined hands
and swayed while singing the
anthem of the civil rights movement, "We Shall Overcome."
Those words are being sung
again In Selma,. a central Ala·
bama town of 27,000where blacks
are demonstrating again, this
time for what theycall"justlce In
educl!tion." They contend the
white-dominated school. board's
refusal to extend the cont~act of
Selma's first black school superIntendent was racially based.
The dispute led to closure of the
schools for flve .days last month
and prompted ofllcl~ls to call in
National Guard military police to
maintain order.

made at home or at school and
POMEROY - , Mar.b Is
Wolrlen'a JIWI!ury Molllb Pd the students' Jll,mes, grade, school,
home addreanild phone number
Ml~eport ~om,roy Area
sbould be placed on the back
~r
II ollbe Alllerlean Aaaocla·
"upper
lett-hand corner of the
) tloo · Of 1 Unlftlwty Women Is
po~ter
.
·
· sjlOIIS!ll'lq a .... ter and fi!..Y
. contest reaardbll the role tbat
Judging criteria lor the posters
womea have played In A.lilerlcan will Include lDfonnatlon given,
and expression of Ideas, 50
hiltory.
'
Partjcl~t• must lie students
points; art, design, and lettering,
In grades t1u:ee thtOtlflb eight at a
40 points; and construction, 10 ·
school in Melp County and the points.
entry categorifl! are · graac;s
Essays must be 100-500 words
three and four, grades five and ln.lengtl), hand1Vrilten, and refer·
six, 111\d grades seven and eight. en.ces used In preparing the
· March 12-lli the entry d!!adline essays must be clte&lt;l . All fact\181~and all entries should be turned statements or quotes m_ust be
In to the teacher. Each school ' referenced, and failure to do so
dislrlct 111tould. turn In entries to will result In dlsquallflcatlon.
Entran Is should list the title of
tbe Co11nty School Board Office
by March i3. Winners will be
notified by mall.
&lt;
Stuaents . should select a ·
., RONAIJ) B. DENNY
woman Iii hlsloO'·as the basis lor
Alr Force Senior Airman Rothelr-enli'y jn either contest. ·
nald B. Denny has arrived for
All posters must be no smaller · duty at KeeSler AI; Force Base,
than ei&amp;ht and one ball by 11 Mlss.
.
Inches and no larger tl!'an 14 by 22 ,
He Is ·a .c ab\e 11nd antenna .
lnches.-,Thi!y niaY )&gt;e produced · systems htstallatton mainteusing medi)JJll but t)te use o( nance specialist with the 1839th
copyrighted characters t such as Engln·e erlng Installation
Alf or Garfield • will not be Squadron.
acceptedt The posters may be
Denny Is the son of Eafl and

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ·Installation In Discovery's cargo
bay March 28.
(UPI) - The shuttle Atlantis's
Liftoff of the 35th llluttle
II)'IOOth CaiUornta landing sets
m
lsslon, tbe thll'd of liiDe plannedthe stage for .next month's
for
1990, ls .set for 9:21 a.m. EDT
long-awaited launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, a revolu- on Apr!ll2, thelllllth an!Jlvet'III'Y
tionary Instrument that will of the ftrst shuttle fll&amp;ht and the
a11ow astronomers to look 29th year to tbe day alnc:e
f,nber bacilln Illite and deeper cosmonaut Yurl Caprin became the llr$t buman In space.
Into ·apace than ever befofl!.
Once In operation . above
Atlantis and Its flve -m'an, allmDitarycrewgllded to a picture- E!irth's obtlc:llrlng ltmospbere;'
the Hubble Space Tele&amp;Cope'a IN
perfect touclldoWn at 1: 01! p.m.
~ ·Inch mirror, !be amootheat
EST Sunday on a dry iakebed
ever
made, will al-low aatrcmofi!DWay at Edwards , Air Force
mers
to peer
tlmes•deeper
Base, Calif., to . close out a
Into
the
cosmos
and
wltb 10 tlmell
. lucCeasfui 4 %-day mUltary
more
clartty
than
ever before,
mlalon.
allowing
utronomers
to gain
T)le astronauts are believed to
unprecedented·
lllllghts
1
1\to the
have left behind 1!1 orbit a 19-tOI!
· photo-reconnaissance satelllte forces thatlorged the universe.
Discovery astronaut ·Kathryn
capable to taking' super-sharp
• pictures of any target In the SuUlvan said the ielescope Will
world between 62 degrees north open so many new vistas that
and south latltllde, which In- astronomers will have to strugcludes · vlrtual.ly every major . gle just to figure out the right
Industrial and population cent!!r qtle$ tions to ask, much less come
up with tbe right answers.
In the Soviet Unloh. ,
· 'I'hls.would be like standing on
Navy Capt John "J .O."
Creighton, .the commander, co- · the top of Mount Everest in a
pilot John Casper, a 46-Y,ear-ok! dense log, just you and me, and
Air Force colonel, Marine Lt. we look around and all we can see
· Col. David Hlimers, 40, Alr Force Is each other, three rocks and a
Col. Richard "Mike" Mullane, little bit of snow and we live lor
44, and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Pierre weeks thinking that's all there Is
Thuot, 34, flew back to their In the universe," she said.
"And then the fog llrts! And
homes In ffouston late Sunday
you suddenly see all sorts of
after brlel _m~lcal exams.
"We had a ·g reat time. It was a people and creatures aild envir- ·
terrific flight," Creighton said onments .. .. that exist In the
before leaving forTel&lt;as. "!think universe that you were totally
we accompllshed something that unaware of. That, In a sense~ Is
· was Important to the country, we what the telescope ·represents.''
Originally schedul'ed Jpr
had a good, time doing It, and the
space shuttle performed launch In August 19'86, the $~.5
billion telescope was grounded
superbly.'.'
Atlantis appeared to have by the Challenger disaster. Now,
sailed through 'its ground·. alter · a frustrating · four-year
shaking launch last Wednesday delay, the glant ' lnstrument I~
ami re-entry Sunday In excellent finally ready to begin Its path- •
condition - the only obvious finding work on the high Iron tier.
problem was a minor leak In the
HST and Its five Instruments.
ship's hydraulic system- clear- · will allow astronomers to study
lng _the way for NASA to launch stars and galaxies up to 14 billion
the $1.5 billion Hubble Space ilght years away, that Is, the
Telescope aboad the shuttle unlmaglpable distance llgllt
Discovery next month
travels In 14 billion years at a
The first step on the telescope's speed of 186,000 miles per second.
At that distance, astronomers
long road to orbit was.. on tap
Monday at t·he Kennedy. Space expect to view gaiaxles that were
Center where engineers stood by formed shortly after the big bang
to tow Discovery from Its hangar explosion that is thought IQ have
to the nearby Vehicle Assembly created the cosmos some 15 ·
Bulldlng for attachment to a pair billion years ago.
of solid-fuel booSters and an
"We can do'lO to30t)mes better
external fuel tank.
than any telescope on the ground
If all goes well, the assembled In terms of the clarity -of the ·
space vehicle will be hauled to photographs." said Edward.
launch pad 39B on March 16.
W~ller, NASA's cblef asuy~
The 43-foot Hubble Space Tele- mer. "In terms of sensltlvlty;;\ve
scope- HST -is scheduled to be can observe objects 50 to 100
taken to the launch pad's ultra- times fainter than any telescope
clean "white room" March 26 for ' on the ground that exists today."

their essay on a rover page, and
Include their name, grade,'
school, home address, and telep()one number.
Essays wtll be judged on
accuracy, creativity. and
conciseness.
A first, second and third place
winner will be selected lor each
grade division ot each school.
They will receive a certificate of
recognition from AAUW.
The .county wtde first and
second place winner In each
grade category will re.celve a
.framed., certificate and rosette.
1'heY will also be Invited to attend
the March 27 meeting of AAUW
to receive their awards . ·
·•

By Vatted PNIII la&amp;eraatlooal
It's T ml!t.us six weeks and
counting at Kings Ialand where
work Is going full speed ahead on
a 11,ew ride that wlll allow the
passeneer to manuever the space
pod Into dlffereatfllght patterns .
Officials at Kings Island say
the Fllgllt Commander will be
ready tor lift off April 14when the
park opens for weekends.
Meanwhlle, at the other end of
the s-tate, ground will be broken
next week · for more than SI
million In expansion at the Soak
City water p;~rk at Cedar Point.
Flight Commander Is just one
new attraction to greet visitors at
Kings Island this summer. More
tl!an $1 mllllon In .additions to

St., Middleport, Ohio.
The alrmari Is a 1984 graduate
of Meigs High School, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
TERENCE D. LEE
Air Force Staff Sgt . Terence D .
Lee has arrived for duty itt
Bergstrom Air Force Base ,
Texas.
He · Is a production control

Engineering Squadron.
· Lee Is the son of Janice L.
Danner of Racine, Ohio.
His wlfe, ~lr Force Staff Sgt.
Bonnie Travis, Is the daughter of
Mercedes Travis of 6809 Workman Road, Von Ormy, Texas.
The sergeant graduated In 1977
from Meigs High School, Pomeroy·, Ohio.

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.,O . P.lACE Aft AD hu 992-2156 ,
1
3
6

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'RccUNt! $ 50 dl\COUnl for lidS piild Ill OlldvOIIICll

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lnnertubes down a 700-loot twist·
lng channel of water.
ConstructiOn began last October alter the park closed to~ the
1989 season, ·and Dave Pock e.
director of operatiOns at the
park, says the work Is on
schedule, despite the harsh
winter.
Kings Island wlll ' be open
weekends !rom April 14 until It
begins dally operations May 25.
At Cedar Polnt, ·work begins
nex t week for a children's play •
area and a gently moving river
pool tobebulltwtthinSoak City, a
water park that features lOwater
slides. ·
The children's play area Tadpole .Town - will be a
5,000:square foot wading pool
with a sllde, water curtains, pipe
falls and observation deck. Pull
rings and wheels will open water
jets that will spray .water In a ·
variety of configurations. •
''Tadpole Town Is designee! to
be a special place lor children,"
said Jack Faifas, director of park
operations at Cedar Poin t,
"Adults · will only be admitted if
they are accOmpanied by a
child."

'P11cu ol &lt;td lof t~M Cil,Hiall~l•rS'+i double pnct' ol ad cost
"1 pnml lme ly~u unly used
'St1'1l1111~ lti not rl:!spons•ble tor t!nor• athrr tu s lliHY (Chcdl
lor vuurs Ius I dtr;' ad runs 111 p;lpur) Call lwtore 2 00 p m
d_. attm pubhcalltOn tO makt! correcttem
• 'Ads that lntlll be pa1d on adv i nct: Urt!
·
lu Mumouar~i•

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. MONDAY PAPEf\
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0Nf.SDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIUAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

5

Happy Ads

Galli a Count r
A'r ea Code-61 4

7

V•d Sale (pard 1n advan«:l!l

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Pubtlc Sale &amp; Aucttan

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Budding Supplits
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Musu;:.t Instrument s
fru11.1 &amp; Vegv'llbl-.
For S•le or Tr11d11,

Mtscellan~u •

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52 -

Ch•~er

Ponland
let1r1 falls
Raane
RuiiMd

Pt . Plv•anl
looon
Apple Grove
21

luttllq

2·J

22

63

l1Vt!110ck

64

Hay

65

S t~ ed

lor Rent '

53
&amp;4
55
56

Busin•s Opportunity
Monti\' to lo•n
Prola11onal Sunm:~

!)7

58
59

&amp; Fertth111r

73 Vans&amp;4WO ' s
74 MotOfcyclcs
7.5 Boals &amp; Moton tor S~tlt:
76 Aulo POKh &amp; A cce~~souus"
7-7 Auto Rep om
78 Camp•ng Equ•IJnn'"t
79. Campen. &amp; Motor Homes

Serv1ces
81 Homeln•pruvument s
8 2 Plumbmg • H11•mu
8 3 E 10.e iNilhn!l
84 Elecuu: at &amp; R4$h19ttuillon

s..

Gunt~tal

85

Hauhny

86 "Mobile Hume Repa11
8 7 Upholstery

Coohnlle

UIDA'S
PAINII!IG &amp; CO.

'
'

'

INIEIIOI EXIDIOI

Business Services

'

l. Gram

71 Auloi for Salv
7 2 lnlekl t or Sui o

Mer clia ndise

.~ ~· .lihfihiifill

Maaon
NeW Haven
lelarl

Wanted to Buy

Trans orlalton

41

17

458
576
773
882
896
937

F111rm Equ•pmun1

62

l;iijdfijll

Area Cude 304

675

61

Bulldmg~

Busmen

Maaun Co, WV

MiddlftJOrt

s.-~

to•

loti &amp; Acretge
Rul Es111e Wanted

Count¥

Pomeroy

985
843
247
949
742
667

Homus lor Sale

32

Code 614

Me•~

Supplies
&amp; Llveslock

31

HelD Wanlod
S1tua11on Wan1ed
13 ln1urance
14 Bu'11neu Trauung ·
15 Schools a. lnstructmn
16 Radto, TV &amp; CB Rep'au

.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
i. 00 P !Pt1 MONPA Y
2 .00 PM TUESDAY
2.00 P M WEONESOAV

o .v..way

11
12

followilll{ lt•ll'llhom• l'xc-luml{t'.~-... ·

Vard Sillus

"A clae;:a.•llvd advt!Jhlt:nlunt vlo~t.:clllll lht!' D4nlv S1!11hn~ (u
cttiJI
~~;l,.slil!tud dls.,.;ly. Bus:int.!is: Cae_d wut h--tlill not1cesl
w•ll o~lsit iiiJP!!at 111 the PI PltJ;.san\ R~jl!ilur illl&lt;f lha Giillf
tnihs Oou!y TntHun!, •ca i: l1111~1 ovur 18.000 hOIIU!5 .. :'
'
COPY OEAOLINf.

4

9

C/msi/ic•cl llflJW -~ c'llt'l'r I 1!1•

lhp1Jy Ad~

..

Cud ot Th..,k$
In Memory
Annoucem4tnh

Employment
St:rv tce s

.

~

1
2
3

F &lt;~r111

Real Eslale

6 Loll and Found

•

•fuir. ads
Gtveaw't and Found.adi·IUMhw 16wonk w11l bt:
ru11 3 diWts at nu ctt•ye.
,

C:;1rd ol Th ;l!'lks

15

Announcements

Alites arc tOr conteruiNe runs. brokH~ upd-.swdl be cha~ged
lor each d-.. as S8f1araU! ads

'A1b out~c roAUI{Iio, Gahul or Masun counll8s must b11 Pill
p ..d

'

15
16
16
16

10
Monthlv

POliCik.S

011~r 15 Words
Rate
. 20
$4.00
.30
$6.00
.42
69.00
.60
-$13.00
.05 t dav
. S1 .30 / day

Words

Days

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. u.ntil NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

Tolci tho pain ou1

if

plinll,..
Lot 111 do it for you.
VEIY IIASONAill
HAVE amiiiNas

ana • P.M.

'

.

1614)915-4110

....... P.'"- ~ ........

11·11-'11-1 mo.

KLUB

I' o

20'/o OFF ON AU
GOlF EQUI'MENT

''

''
II

•l'ngr.. ing.'Trophleo.
Plaqu!lt • Bods• ·
,••ll •New·Orip•
oCiubo.Short·

I!
'

I'

· enecr·
•Pet t.D.

1

*SHRUB 8c TREE
·TRIM and, REMOVAL · .

CUSTOM IUilT

H-S &amp; GARAGES

*FIREWOOD

"At lta_.lt Prices"

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949·2160

IBILL SLACK
99.2·2269
EVENINGS

. Togl

TEAFORD

46317 SciMII

BISSELL
BUILDERS

tLIGH't HAULING

load

Day til' Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

GUN SHOOT

SER~ICE

IACIIIE
FilE DE".

We can re~r and rt·
tort radtaton and
htotw Ctll'tl. We can
aha acid boil and rod
repair Gas Tris.

PAT HILL FOlD
Middleport, Ohio

1·13-tfc

BISSELL

EYERY·

SIDING CO.

Wllfet Stttlll 0•
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPUa.NT

27 Yro.1!11J1.
lloleo.._

2~

SoUttt

•'

•

992-2772'

·'!.OW -1·f2-'I0-1
- . ....... .

985-3365

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949·2160

36629 517
POMIIOY, 01110

NO SIIIIDU CAllS
4-16-86-tfft

2-1-'90-1 ....

LOWEST PRICES
. IIGIIST QUALITY
FIH LOCAl DELIVERY
POMEIOY AND _,DLEPOIT'S ONLY
LOCALlY OWNED PIZZI SHOP.

FREE ESTIMATES

4th St.
Mltlcll1par,t, 011.

•

···-hilt

"Free Eotimeteo"

PIZZA

WINDOWS

992·6873

Custom Built
Homes.
Remodeling 8c
Repair Work

STREET

INSULATION
T.L.!:.

CHEml, OHIO

lallhan iuldi111

J&amp;L
G-Rata

·-CONSTRUCDON

INSULATION

focttry cllakt
12 Ga. . stoot...,. Only
Stric.tly lnfor..J
·
· 10·9-tfn

992-2198

ERWIN

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

•ILOWN IN

SAT. NIGHT ,
6:30 P.M. ·

radiators. Wt also

out

4-16-16-tfn

l

.

WaterWorks will be ready lor the
mid-April opening.
Flight Commander allows riders to maneuver their lnd lvidual
capsules by uslng a joystick. By
executing commands, .riders
cause the capsule to dive, climb,
or roi1360-degrees, making each
two-minute ride unique to the
pilot
Prior to boarding the capsules,
passengers enter• an undergroul'ld "briefing room" where
they learn how to operate the
ride. Passengers board the capsules and rise 60 teet lnto"the air
before they do their own
manuevers.
This 52 million ride, which can
accomodate SW people an hour.
was designed and manufactured
by Intamln Inc. of Zurich,
Switzerland.
"This ride Is an excellent
compliment to our existing
thrills and appeals to both teens
and adults, " said Reggie White. head, director of marketing at
the park In southwestern Ohio.
New to WaterWorks this
summer.wlll be a giant lnnerllibe
ad!lltlon called Rushing River.
Five passengers ride In 8-foot

• The-Area's Number 1 Marketplace

NEW YORK (UPI) - The proposal from tl)e perspective of
American Express company the firm's public common stocksaid Sunday. it will buy all the holders, American Express said.
The committee bas, retained ,
publically held shares of Its
Dillon
Read &amp; Co.cand a law firm
broker;tile firm:: Shearson Leh·
to .aid In Its deliberations and •
man.lifutton Inc.
Thl!'lmove Is a complete turna· expects to reach a detfrimlna- l
round for American Express, Uon soon, Amertcan Express :
,
which for months has been said.
· 'I'he proposal Is a strong :
seek)ng to reduce Its 68 percent .
stake In the Wall Street invest- expression of the A,merlcan Ex- ; 1
press commitment tp SLH.' : said : •
ment bank's common shares.
Howard
Clark, Shearson's pres!' ! 1
Shearson said American Ex'
press plans to acquire the out- dent and CEO.
American Express had been : '
standing Shearson shares
through a tax-free merger of an seeking to reduce Its l)oldlngs In : ·
American · Express subsidiary Shearson- because the -Invest- :
· ment bank's worsening financial •
Into the brokerage firm.
position has been a drain on .:
Unde~ the· proposed deal, each
•
share of Shearson common stock American Express' .earnings.
By purchasing the outstanding
will be exchanged for .426 of a
share of American Express com- shares and making Shearson a ••
privately held firm, Alnerlcan ;
mon stock, Shearson said.
The.-exchange ratio was to be Express would likely make it
easier to sell off unprofitable ,
based on the r.espectlve closing
divisions or any other assets It •
prices of the two companies'
finds
undesirable. .
:
common stock on the New York
The
move
to
'buy
up
the
!
Stock Exchange on Friday,
remaining Shearson shares !
Shearson said.
•·
Shearson's board of directors comesweeksaf~erthecollap~of i
has formed an Independent spe- Drexel Burnham Lambert last · ;.
.,.
,clal committee to consider the month.

f

7

.

In the service......·--Betty-----------------..
L. Denny of 738 S. Fourth technician with the 67th Civil

American Expre·ss
to buy .up Shearson_

j

'

Amusement parks gearing up

.

.

The Dilly Sl ltieall Png

'

seven

Brldrc~ yeste1rday, 25 years after they were turned back ln·a violent ·

!

Panaov Midclapcwt, Ohio

1

MARCH REMEMBERED - The Rev. Jesse Jackson, center,
marches arm-In-arm with Congressmaa-John Lewis and hundreds
~I other civil rights. leaders across the famous Edmund Pettus

...•.

'

STARTERI.

·'Kttn

Howard L Wrltasal

CIEsrD, OliO

NEW- IEPAII

ROOFING

•GRAVEL

Gutters

•LIMESTONE

Downapouts

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

· Pina-Subs-_s,lads-Daily Specials
992-2228

£TC .

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Gutter Cl81ining · ·
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4422

949-2168

1·11·110-lfn

·

2-1·'90-imo. pd.

I

ON STRIKE - Members ol the Hotel Workers Union picket in
front of the Sheraton Moana Hotel in Walklki on Saturday. Some

7,1100 workers at 11 hotels wenliln strike when contract Ialka broke
down early Saturday mornlag. (UPI)
·
•

Report: FBI sus}lenc;ls agent

1UISDAY
IIIGHT
SPICIAL

NEW YORK (UP!) - A
Few details of the Investigation ·
decorated Miami -FBI counterin- were available and an FBI
telligence agent Was suspended
spokesman In Washington would
and lost his security clearance as
only confirm that Matta, &lt;18, had
a result of a three-year Investigabeen placed on Indefinite admltiOn Involving allegations of
nls1l'atlve leave, refusing to say
lipylng lor Cuba, a published
Why.
report said Monday .
•'We have nothing to say on the
· 'I'he New York Times reported
matter, the sp1;k'e8man, Robert .
that many ol the agent's col·
Davenport, told the newspaper.
.
'
.
leagues · ha~ rallied to his
'
defense, saylfli 1¥1 appears to be ·
But the Cuban-American
1 victim of retaliation bec·ause of
agent's lawyer, Hugo Rodriguez,
bls crucial role In a landmark
told the newspaper Matta has
cll.scrlmlllation suit against the
been repeatedly questioned by
FBI by Hispanic eJl1ployees.
the FBI about the posslblllty of
contacts several years ago with
The Times, ~ltlng government
Cuban Intelligence agents.
officials and friends ol the
Rodriguez told the Times his
15-year FBI veteran, Fernando
client's securtty cleara,n ce was
Matta, reported that the lnvestJlifted several days after his
gaUon haasparlced a bitter battle
suspension a bout a month ago.
within the bul'l!au. ,. ,

''

'

•

KINNEY .,
Congoleum.
Vinyl
· ~allpdper
Floor Covering_·

MOtiLE .
HOMIPAU

1 ·•

'"'

..

,.·

•Mobile HOJIII
' Pafta .
•MobUe Home

••

,.,

OFF

SEUCIED..STYLES

OFF
10J'S ~F PAMRNS

•

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

'. 991-7479
lt. II llartll ef

c

'
1

•I.Gt Rantala

. •ow

AT

PAT HILL

•Tire .....

, .. s. ,....

•011 Chanp • Lube
,•Brake Work

' .

: -Ex,.ilnced

. YOUNG'S

GRCWB

Garage

-ft-.W..IDM.

... 114, Pt

:~

•,

'

.....- .

- .·-·

•
I

.

'

..

-

.,

Pll.

9-&amp;·lt-tfn

.'

'

\\ .

• &lt; •

'

CA..INJII SERVICE

•., ow.

-Guttlr ....

~&amp; laTIMATUI

-- ,,......e~••

Factory Cholcacl
12 Oaup Only
.

7-11-'K-tln

-II•Mrllll·~·
-C•s•w.r.
AUTO &amp; TRUCK . . .-11...-.o
-t...............
REPAIR

SHrtsllt hot P.M.

'

(614) 667-3271
G.-t A. llawland

s..I P !/'arebw

Roger Hynll

EYIIY s.NY

FULL

117 L
.

mo.

·RAGlE'
GUNSIOOI
•

'

992-5335 .- tls.!S61

._........... llff*

'80-1

t-11-'10-tfn

DUMP TRUCK
Sand·Stone.-Dirt

SEIYICI

c • •,...,

992-6421

IUIN ST., 111U.

NE._WLAND
ENTEIPRISES

lEN'S . APPUAIICE

DODGE

Alignment

SITEWORK • ~OAOS
ClEARING

ALL MAKES
GAS OR l!LECTR IC

YMOIITII

eftant End

DOZER

FUINACE
FU.lCE
ruaua
PARTS AND SERVICE

Stop In and Ste

DALE HILL

742-3011

R-1•

POSITION •
·AVAUIU IJI

20°/o :30°/o

'

f

,.

·RUTLAND TilE
SALES and
SOVICE

f'

J

'

.;..,'"

,_,..,-

Y.tY._..

PH. 992·1612
or 992-7121

992·6!15

"'

.

'

�'

f\181

8-The Dllily Sentinel

...........
_,
__
. . . ,. -= ""' ,_

eon.
.....

tlllooii!Ol.- .. llwl

----P.O. .._ 1011,
41111.

•me r ,

OM

-~- .... --.Ed.

Glveeway

4

--7-olclmt
at.-.
•

Pomfwoy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY
7

t

(

.~

.32 Moblllltomll
. ··Jor~

44

.

.. ...

~ .,

u

.

~

' ~ ,. i'

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IJ

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•

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--.- .•
3o4 Ill

1 . ...... 1

_ ......,1..-1430.
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No.

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SMO.

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

7I,..,

ox

rild
...... J04.I7NI4I.

--

SF~ OUR BASEeALL 'TEAM
LAST 'fEAR. CIIARLIE MOWN .. ,

...

·
, .

ACCORDIN6 TO "'I;;ESE F16URE5,
OUR TEAM WILL BE EVEN
WORSE nl15 '(EAR TIIAN

TIIE5E ARE Tile STATISTICS

1.,. - ·- b nr .... ,.;
..........
-kii.TII. ........ .....

IT

.... 1-4~11+-71.
1. . -

F-1r0, .... , ..

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I

AJC,

I:OI(J) . ..,..., I'S 8ta

1

___ ....,. ...-. ,. .......--·. . . .

,.

45 · Fumllh

'

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Rooms

nentals

,_

..... , . .

__ . .
'

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I FUIIIIITUIII, II

Ollwr .... Grill......',.,.. Urrd

.,......,

......... ·- - . w
.. .
.

I= •

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Olftllltton.

·pyc

- • I-~
I04si7I-IIFI;
IFoo
Flldri...
11:»4:30.
.
lnllwtrt

~

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.......

-.,_,lrt.
~:PuPPJ. Gnoylrhltrn,
· ~~ck

. . . . ==-

blut

Grow,,....,,.._

'1

lor

pi .... ....... .1111 ......
Pllno lOt-.
....·
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ll,e:~

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1:".r:f' =·::..:. ~;
~

...... .....i 11

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.

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....... ' - · 2
~
- - - . ,_....

rrtlo, r1r,

IIJ
illlllnlf VIce CrOclcett ''"'
for • womtn, not knOwing
ahe'l a double 1Q1111. (A)

-.ooo -:

. •Stereo.

Far IIWDIW lntoun•tlan or lo_ ~
- - 114
Prul
rl ,... Drlhi
,.,...,._
Ut :DU
'
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Sup~;IIC·

IIIVIItt~•ecalllCot~Jiilly

44t-7710. .

,

o ....... 1m
81 Fann Equlpmlnt

1 1o

7:05 (I) ...,.,...••
7:30.(2) ,....., l'eud
• • ln.......IIMntTonlgtal

. '

a.v,, 4JI.S

I belarta.

I=..:

JtopaniJII;I

D Nlthl Coull
7:31 (I) llntonl And Son '
1:00 (]) MOVIE: Lat TNIII Hltnl
(2:00)

• (2) Ill Mi Two Datil Joey
alma to prove 1 polm to
·
NIColt wtlln he II )ailed for

t'.: _-Pocn•or.
.. ),..0

.' .,

.!7::·

Oullta

:

'

.

=.,.

Employment Serv 1ces
'

'

.

Wlrte&lt;111

liP 171ori1+11F.f2DI.

• Clluooh - - ltllltln
D 1111 CUIIby Aw.nl1 A
look btlck at the 1889 Cuba

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

8.'111 (!) Poo • toll 01 ONet llllrlrt
' (Pit 01 2)
1:30e(2) Ill Ho(llll l'llllllr A ,

,
'

•'

mutiny takes l)laelll llooey
Burger w11en M1r1&lt; Ia left In
charge. Q
• Cnlolll ChaM
1:00 e (2) 8 MOVIE; '11n Min'
NIC MondiY Night AI Till
Movlll (2:00)
(J)Colletlllleilc. . . .

•
81

Improvements

=

lor .....
IMZ.

\.

c.n - · 11+

Gt»

, 11+446-1542,

WHEtle I'/W.,

6TAY TUNE:q FOR

l"liaAL.WA~

THE~lHER

lldnsport;;IIOII

THtoee ~t;tie.·~e.

-·,,._..,_ .

Mllml'a black communlly

="m:I :~;:;:._T.IIOO..,.,
1

,xp~oc~n

Murphy lind lhemHIVII
ltrMdld 1Dgllll6t In • 110111
lnd

room. a .liD COIIIQIIellcllbll

IIJ Larry King LIYel

1M1

Cllowtlo,

MIT
~

- ,_,
portr.
fM2
t .........
.....

9 P1lme Tltnl WII II 4
a1 Nllllvlll Now Counll'y

4 opel.,

HOW WAS

..,.., .~

YORE TRIP .TO
LAS VEGAS,

WILFERT? .

Erm ~ ,. 1100 prr R ad'=.:.. looka at holM. Calt
111-4ns7440 &amp;11. 1301.
lilY WDrttl Enc nant Pari Q.

I

DH Ill MADE

MEA ·MINT
'MtJNIY,
SNUFFY!!

CALEB'S
OL' PICKUP
CONKED OUT
IN MISSOURY
AN'·· ·, .

WE-UNS

IIIOIIIC'I - I U i r l l f t

NIVIIIGOT

feallnd ....

lllllglltol Dlnn•y
1:301111 •1121 D11l~nlnl W - ·'

THAR!!

When Suzanne • pig ""''
awey lhe twn1 her -rollon
to Anthony. (A)
10:00 12) 7GO Clull Willi 1'81

' ..

_..., p - rl Crll
tar he feu ,,..lon. so• ••• 0110
&amp;:rn n1

1;1

II ~ 11110

•

....._ 'tar team.

&gt;

Ill •1121 lllallafl Mlchlll
re111Z1t how hl1 dlclelolol

114 · · - -

8Dilen '

11i:oaCD MOVli;·. . . Of ltltaln
(G) 12:46)

THE

1--1--1---Lin DIIUIIL Col8 of atna. Corpol,
Aaljlng

112,10011-11041
'
1• DoooMr 14171. t llr, a lull

' ' ''

IorlN,- _..., •• -

.....

nlure. CA. ..., ......

ISA
AD

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

..

.

10:30 CD lfll On Till PitH II
Mlaml'l black community
••~ In riOting. !;II
a•IDIIIIItiNUpolt
- not hlovlng • chid 1111
Lamlllrta villi 1 fiC'1IIIIy cliniC.

141'
I I'Cllll '"'.~.I,C!;I'!·
Puce&amp;Of.
11~-.- 1"'
trr 1 :00 p.m.

i ... ....., Cline

·I

.......
1::=:-....
·=··

'

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1111
-~.. rrrr"t..~!·
·•I ""·

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..... h1111 .. an lat. llftonl
. , + 7 - dryr; 11+741s
llt4MIIIIIJL

(1 :00)

wo• IMN.KIIIt

I&lt;~~•• •(I) a ••
0 ..

- '\

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"·

"·

.'

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26 Grain

35 llalian
28 CoHon
river
cloth
3730 German
Karenlna
dislrlct
38 Mythical
32 Oak tree ' snowman
33 Swedish . 39 Cheese
rock
41 ·group
Aykroyd
34 Gla•
42 • ....:. a
vessel
Camera•

.,

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

• . ,I
I .

I
•

-~

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a sort
31 Commerce
33 One of ·
Frank's ·
· wives
38 Scull's
propellant
37 Yes
40 Stupid
43 Trite
44 Christmas

·,

.-

., .
. •'

I

1 Spofe
2 SuppllcSt.e
3 Encourage

I!VItllng ......

'

, • I

DowN

could allect Illite Stephenle.

"-'hrndllilr
!Q II ,Ohio

'I

::

45 Going solo
·48 Maul

Will

Hair ~ nud1 d. rM'It: your
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1mFon1 liZton lnldi.ICfl.l
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(!) lfll On The PitH II

lilt Dodgr 911J11Jr,•l =

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Including KrleUYarnaguchl,
Katherine HHiey, PIUI Wylie
and Barbara Unclerhlll. Ttped
11 Hervlrd'a Brigllt Hoclley

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71 . Aulol for 91111 '

a

Top ameteur naure llcatera,

MIR AND
e.TUFFY.

PYFC'SI AFTI5R

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one

8on'1 Pnlmill' AIIC Mottdly
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.

ACROSS
1 Potato
5 Shade
of brown
IIJ)W .
10 Fielder's 7 ~atch
mishap
8 This,
12 Lariat's
nd
toJose _
.
I ,Take five ·
13, eMembe
rs 11 Take back'
of Baden· 14 Table Hem
Powell's 18 Ptefre's
org.
heactwear
15 Change 11
of ·.
colors
a suit
11 - .Tech 20 Dlcli's Wife '
17 Lace
21 Macao
18 Storage
money
bundles· 22 • _
20 Exclusive
LIHie
license
Indians"
23 Poker
Conjunction
24
holddlnglf 25 Under .
27 War o
the
28 Fearless
weather

w-

1-~~s··~

Serv1ces

4 Four ·
quarters ·
(abbr.)
5 Sam, for

Moumlng Among The

c'o:il:..,~=.:.. .~~!

Biili-w.i

by . THOMAS JOSEPH

0 ~ilnsaNiwi
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· 9 Muldlf, 1111

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Deller: Nortll

aow .,_. ~ take tile

CROSSWORD

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Traae the OOUI'II

01 the Colorado ,AI- from
the Rockies 10 1111 sea. !;I
lilY G!Wm CNIICioi
Little Rock Crusade

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· vw-able: Nellber

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lady archHOIOQiat enlllll
MK to llll'ch for legendlry

L&lt;iiw. ~ ook f110
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to Ohio
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matUd f ' - aplalt '111111'1 10 of dl·
....,
Well N- Eort
amondll aud make 1111 eontnet wltllan
s•
,_
_.trick wltllatlt- &amp;Mia&amp; tile club
s NT AU ,_
' ' - · ADd dat .... llaft blppened If Well illd not - l b e jack of
OpelllDc '-!: • Q
'
dlamoadl? Decllrer woa1d of COtu'le
.,. · { ,
blw pllyetl low from dummy, aJ1!1 ilroblobly play low f,_
lit : '•;
ftultlllaw Ilion out. 9o declar, J laad 1notber tmaU dlamoDd Ia blio 1111111
!Me two more diiD!CIIId and wwld t1111a eee 1111 way diu' tii
·,
tbea be woa1d ~·try tile ' ONIIIeq..uy,. d!•mcwde
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filM-. Welt would 'wlil and - ·
Soutb bad pmbllil ibl 1111 , . . .
Uaue bearta. E-tuaUy declarer · 'll'llllld bold a di•II'IP'd IIIII bu f"'\iy'
ww~c~ rau ~~cor~ .., - tr~ct. tt • • tile aee . . . ba 11111 ~~~ne ..u.np.
wroac fer '111111 to - · lleel:ul Ill IUt were a ~ &amp;&amp;nlll nt .
CQUJd utlc:ipate that clecllrer -~~~ .IIW
be' fiDe, btlffM
apponeata -.Jd be eatitJed to Dow·
abOullt.
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(0:30)

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lllll But Ill llrld&amp;e ,... ...... tilllk
twice befan·JetUIII ,oar reO
nile
JOII! play. Loot at~ tlilllle!' erealed
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on the trigger

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The dociOI' announced proudly, "We'Ve all COIIIUited
and we all agree that you are atlong enough 10 SEE .

the lucie 01 the dri)Y. .
D Hanglft' In
1:35 (!) A!ICir ~
7:00 ~
Mra. King

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for the three L'1, X fcJr the two O'a, ete. Slnlle letteia, ,
apwbupiNI, the IIICih and formatiOn of the.wonll are all ·
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10--The n.a.. SMJtlnel

Moudlly, Mac•• I. 111()

I

---Local news briefs..·. ----.
Co!!ilnued ~om page ·1

9hio expects springllke weather late ·hi week

Bands t presen concert

By Ullltetl P,.. gterutiHaJ
TonJiht and Tuesday there will
t
' . 0
Snowandwlnierweatherearly ' be a cbanc:e of Oun'lea ·OVer
• .
lnthe\veekwlllgtvewaytomore northern Ohio wh~ the rest of
TheEasternlllghSchOi)i'JazzandConcertBandswlllpresent
sprlngllke weather across Ohio the state will be partly: cloudy .
a eoncert In the high school gymnasium at 7:30p.m. tomorrow
later Ia the week.
Lows tonight will be-21'lln the
evening (Tuesday) ·
.
The Buckeye State this inorn- north to the low 301 tn the Sliuth.
Included In the program will )le the concert band's
lng was slttlng .on the southern
HlihsTuesdaywlllbelnthe30s
competition music for district ratings. The eonceri bane! will
elld :or a rn8tslve Arctic high In the north, In the 4011 In the
travel to Newark this Saturday tor the competition.
pressure system, with a weak · c;entral counties and In the 50s tn
Music for their part ol the program Is " Allied Honor March,' '
warm front stl'l!tched across the south.
central Ohio. , The · conditions
Looking ahead through Frtby Karl King; "Landmark Overture," by Jim Andy Caudlll;
and "Ifa,.licta," by James Swearingen.
helped cause some overnight day,ltwlllbedryWednesdayand
Also n the program Is the jazz band perfon'nlng selections
snowfall.ln the northern counties, Thursday, with a chance of
with abOut 2 Inches falling In showers Friday. Highs each day
made Qnious by the "big bailds.'.' of the past, starting with
" Back ~reet &gt;Biues'.' bY, Count Ba!.le. Also on the prpgrarn wlll
Cleveland.
will be 1n the 40111n the nortli and
be Benny Goodman's "Stompln' at· the Savoy" . and Tommy
In the south, It was 'cloudy and · 1n the 50s to low 60s In the SO\Ith.
Dorsey's " Opus One."
·
·· ·
considerably warmer, a condl· Lows will be In the 20s to low.30s
The concer!ls free ami t~P~.l!:: 1!,£9,.fdl~lly tn~.,. . ._. .. ._tlon eJ~pected to ,pr.ev'all.lhl:oll$'h,..; ~Wednesclay..,,Jn the 30s -Tilu~
.
'lnost ol the week.
· .
· · and In the rnld-30s to mid~s
~k
·
Northern Ohio's temperatures Friday.
.
8 8V..
W~
C8 8 were only to "reach Into the low
0\lthe early morning weather
30s todaY, while. It will' expected map, high pressure was centered
Seventeen calls were answered · 7. Stella Coleman was trans- to be In the low 50s In the southern north of Lake Superior and
over the weekend by units of the
ported from the scene to Vete- · counties.
extended across northern Ohio. A
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
rans Memorial Hospital by the ·
cal Services. Twelve of the calls Tuppers Plains unit. Pomeroy
were on Saturday and five on
EMS was called to the scene for
Sunday.
W!Uiam Colem!ln, also taken to
Saturday at 1:03 a.m., Porn~
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Weeilead revival
Ttult eea to meet ·
roy was call~ to. the sheriff's ·. ·Middleport EMS and Fire
There · will · be a weekend
The Scipio Towli$hlp Trustees
of{lce for Bruce Gheon and
Department wete called to an
revival
Friday through Sunday
will meet Wednesday, 6 p.m. at
Denise Withrow who were auto accident at the IntersectiOn
the township building In at the Harrisonville Holiness
treated but not transported.
of Routes 124 and 7 .at 7: 22 p.m. Pagevllle,
Chapel.
Middleport at 4:.50 a.m. was. Saturday. Allee and Lewis Revival
The guest speaker will be Rev.
,
called to the Overbrook Center
Kennedy were tra.nsported from
There will be a revival at the J. Stevan Manley, general
for ·Georgia Watson who was
the. scene to Veterans Memorial Victory Baptist Church Thurs- superintendent.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Services are at 7:30 p.m.
day through Sunday at 7 p.m.
Hospital.
At 8: 43 p.m.,· Pomeroy transnightly and Rev. Earl Fields
nightly.
AtlO: 54 a.m. , Pomeroy went to
ported Tammy Ww!klns from the
The guest speaker will be Dr. · Invites the public.
Route 143 for Walter Blazer to sheriff's office to Veterans Mem, . .
Larry Emery. James E. Keesee, Seeldag ua_llonns
Veterans Memorial Hospital. '
orial HospitaL
'
Anyone
with
boy
scout
or cl!:\1
pastor, Invites the public.
Tuppers Plains at 11: 36 a.m.
Mlildleport at 9:45 p.m. was
scout
.
uniforms
lnterestei!
' ln
Rerballlrls to meet
went to Route 681 for John Hawk
donating
them
may
do
so
to
the
·
called to MillS!. for Phyllis Blake
The River Valley Herbalists
Jr. who was treated but .not
who was taken to Veterans
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the ·Rutland Boy Scout and Cub Scout
transported.
. · Memorial Hosplta:L
home or Rose Marie Dubltes, 125 Troop.
Middleport at 11:55 a.m. tranpSunday at 12: 14 a.m. , Tuppers
Lynn Cltcle In Ripley, W.Va. Classes to begiD
sorted Mamie Stephens from · Plains went to Route 248 .for
A new series of round dance
Local members are to meet at
Pearl St. to Veterans Memorial · Nellie Connolly who was taken to
Shopey's )n Ripley and go In Instruction classes will begin at
Hospital.
Camden-Clark Memorl'al
the MiiklleportAmerlcan Legion ·
groups at 6: 30 p.m.
Hospital.
At 1: lB_p.m .. Rutland EMS and
hall, Fourth St., Middleport.
Booeten meetlnc
fire department was called to a
'Glen
Anders will be the InstrucRutland at 7:35a.m. was called
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
to Meigs Mine No. 1 for Rayrnol)d
brush fire on the Pat O'Brien
tor
for
the classes which are open
will meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
property on Hysell Ruri, Road. At
Manley who was taken to Veteor singles. Tbe basic
to
couples
at the high school. ·
2:27 p.m. , Rutland Fire Depart· rans Memorlai·.Hospltal.
Introduction
classes will be of·
Cheerleadlq.cllalc
ment was called to a brushfire on
At 8: 53 a.m., Pomeroy was
fered
from
.
7
to 8 p.m. and the
Elementary cheerleadlng
the Andy · Dorsci l property on called.OakSt. for George Molden
clinic for the Eastern Local . advanced Classes from 8 to 9: 30
it 'Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Titus Road.
School District will be Saturday p.m. Anyone Interested In enrol·
Olive Township Fire Depart''·Middl~rt at 6:40p.m. trans·
sponsored by the athletic ling may call Mary Skinner,
mentwent to Forest Run Road·at pox'\idl cliPellne Mills from VU·
992-2500.
boosters.
3:30 .p.m. for a brush flte on .Uib · ligi!''' I' Manor ·Apartments · to .
There ts' a $5 sign up fee and To meet Suaday
.
Jerry St. Clair property.
,
Hollier Medical Cente.r
lunch will be $2. Awards will be
The OH·KAN Chapter of the
' At 8:4~ •, )i. m ., Pomeroy was
Tuppers Plains EMS and fire
given.
·
Plo~r Rlvermen will meet
department, and Chester .Fire called'', to Brick St. for Paul
Contact 949-2603 or.667-6269 for Sunday at 2 p,pt. In the meeting
Department , were called ar'7:•2'1 Sfelrinieti$r.. 'tq Veterans Mem- ' lnfonnatlon.
room of the Point Pleasant
_ oS'Uitat · , · ·
p.m. toanautoaccldentonRo\lte &amp;rlaf'H
Free
clothiq
day
·
Library, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ·
"1
'"( "/(It'
There will be a free clothing All fanner and present men and
day on Thursday .from 9 a.m. to women who have worked on the
noon at the old ltlgh school river, and their spouses, are
building In Cheshlte sponsored Invited. A program will be
by the Meigs Gallla Comrltunlty featured and !(gilt refreshments
PhyUis Blake
Margeiit
Priddy . .
. '
Action Ager\~y .
· . will be served.
Phyllis Jean Blake, 54, of · : S'i~~ril survivors of Margar~t
Falrlane Drive, Mtddleport,~dled ' ,~I7.Abeth,f,lfe Priddy. 79, Hysell
wm'
Saturday . at Veterans Meqtgria~A 'Rll~ijojl\li Pomeroy, who died
·
··'
.
Hospital follpwfng an extended ~ Frfda:\1 morning at Holzer Medl·
CLEVELAND 1UPI) _ One
Lottery officials said $690,967
Illness:
.
cal Center, were omitted from
L
h
ld
tl
k
t
worthofllcketsweresoldforthat
1
0
Born. on Jan. 21.1936,at Rav.'e n.·1
li:oll,,ltllar.y'.w. hlch w•• pr,i"te.dIn Super otto Payer
sa c e
..
.
""' "'
with thesamenumbersaschosen
portion of tl\e game, with seven
Va., she was the daughter of the .the&lt;Suilday Times-Sentinel.
In Saturday night's drawing,
having tlie first five numbers,
latz John Sidney Southetn arid " 'ln 'addition to those listed are
h
k t
th $3
good for $5,000 each. Another 63
11c e wor
Lula Ethel Hess Southern. She four. d. au~ters-ln-law,
Mary
·
making
t
at
.
million
·
have the flr•t four for $1,000; 630
worked as a cook and was a
Priddy ,111! · rgla; Ruth Priddy,
Th ·tl k t h tl\ · be 4
have the first three for $100,· and
member of the American Legtok ,...littandl ''Ho'_pe Priddy, Georgia·,
at c e as e num rs •
5 32 33 34 and 40
6,134 have the first two for $10.
"
Auxiliary, Feel)ey-Bennett Post · 'lillti1Jintif1'Prlddy, Pomeroy; and
'The h~ld~r can r'edeem It at a
128, Middleport.
~
five ' Sllns:ln-law, Roy Newell,
She Is survived by a daughter,
Ml(iilli!port; Ronnie Rife. ~ Al· lottecyofflceandbecomeel(glble
Tammy (Tom) Quillen, and a
bariy
' ·.• •Ch·a rtes ·Buckley, Miners- for S150•000 a year for. 20 years,
before taxes. ·
·
Veterans Memorial
son, John, Middleport; a brother,
ville; and David Jeffers, Middle. Ohio Lottery o'flclals said
Salurday
admissions ·'
John (Mary) Southern. Syraport; and Ross (Bud) St.e wart, Sunday ·that out of the $3,696,708
None.
·
cuse, a sister Frances (Frank)
Pomeroy. ·
worth of tickets sold, 97 tickets
, Saturday dl~ehar1es - Bea·
Trlplztt, Raven, Va.. and a
Also surviving are· five !)roth- have five of the numbers for
trice Rinehart, Richard
brother, Bob (Carol) Southern, ers, Raymond Fife, Cheshire; $l,()()!J each, while another 4,442
Thornton.
Middleport.
and Lewis, Roscoe, and Clarence have follr. of the six nur:nbers, for
Sunday admlllslons - Della
Fife, ,all of ·Middleport; four $75 each.
Besides her parents she was
Coleman, Reedsville; William
preceded In death by a sister.
sisters, Evelyn Matthews, CheThe Kicker game produced the
Coleman, Reedsville; Shirley
.
shire; Katherine Russell. Mason. number 979 506, and there is one
Murial Asbury. ·
Willis, Syracuse.
,
Funeral"'servlces wlll be held at
W.Va. ; Doris Cooke, Point Plea- ticket with that combination. It's
Sunday
dl~ebarcea
-none.
1 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
sant, W. Va .~ and Erma Je·an, • wor.ih s1oo,OOO.
Funeral Home. The Rev. Glen
Pennsylvannla.
McMlllan will olflclate and burial will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. friends may call at
the fUneral home from 3 to 9 p:m . . •
today (Monday.)
,. Dally stock prices
ol. (As ollt: 30 a.m. )
-~ce and Mark SmHb ,.
Francis Andrew . -~- . .?W Blunt,~~~~~~~- ~·:: ..

Squa· d h e }7
' . . .,. ,. ·.. en·d

'

warm front was acra.s .ceotral
Ohio. The hlib preSiure will

Ohio l..9ttery

College
basketllall

Piek 3

roundUp

move alowlyeastand beceniered
north of Lake Oa~o

950
Pi~4

,HATION.t,L WIATHIR PORICAST To 7 All lilT :1+80
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· Copyrighted 1980' .

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Meigs Common Pleas Court

run·"g ticket

t
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•

Hospital news

'

'

•

Meigs County Jail. Bond was
continued and McCloud was
released from cus.tody pending
his transport to Orient on March
19.
'
· In other court matters, Flor-'
shell'l) Shoe Co., Chicago, m., has;
flied suit against Van Vranken
Inc., doing business as Hartley-

~::~~. s~~~:~ge~i). ~~~~ :

roy, and Matthew C. ·van
Vranken, Pomeroy, et . al, for
$3,686.09.
Another judgment action has·
'been filed by James F. Hysel~
Middleport, and Patricia . A.
Hysell, Middleport. against Ro_bert E. Miller, Rutland. '

ATTENTION

.

One player has

The Meigs County Health Departme~t
would like to issue the followiqg advi·
so.ry to any person(s) who may be
planning to purchase real estate in
Meigs Co;:.oty on which to build a
home or install a mobile home. Before any purchasing of such property,
the prospective buyers should check
with the County Health Department to
ascertain if the property is served by a
sanitary ,sewerage system, and if not,
whethe.- ,the property can be approved .·
for the installation of a private home
sewage disposal system. _

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RAVENSWOOD ALUMINUM EMPLOYEES:

. . ... ~

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·~:.t:

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Francis H. Andrew: 86, •1.ong..;1 ,Am Sectrt.fiitow~ri:~iff! " ' "'30Y, •
Bottom, died Satuday at Vete- : AT&amp;.~...... ~.~ .... .,, .~ ..... .. .. ... 40Y,
rans Memorlal Hospital follow- . Ashliltd}).lt';, ... :.p.;i;·'j.~:::.""35~
lng a brief Illness.
Bo~·...... r•fft.t, ...... ... 12!4
Born on Jan. 9, 1904 at Charm!l)g Shoptll!s·.. ..... :...... . 9%
Pittsburgh, Pa. he was !lie son of · 'il,t;r;ff ).1 1.,Co. •·•~'" """ " '14%
the late Frank Andrew and Mary Federal Mogul. ............. ; .. .... 18
Ellen Butler Andrew. He was a Goodyear l'&amp;l'l ., .. ....... : .. .. .. .. 34
farmer, and a member of the Heck'$ ......... .... .. ...... ..... .........3
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. . Key Centurion .......... .... ... .. .13Y,
He Is survived by a son Frank Lands' End .. .... ,.................. 18%
(Tammy 1 Andrew of ' Saudi, Limited Inc. ....... .:....... .. .. ...36)'•
Arabia; three daughters. ·Mary -Multfmedia Irie............... .... 76~
Ellen Andrew, Pittsburg, Pa., Rax Restaurants .. .......... .. .... 2%
Teresa Collins, Marietta, and -.Robbini.&amp;.M;vers ................ 15l;i
Catherine (Wayne) · Salkowltz
Shoney'' s Inc . .. :.... ........ .... .... 11
Raleigh. N.C.; three grandchild: Star Bank ....................... .... lB)i.
ren, Brian Collins, Long Bottom, Wendy's Int'l .... .. ....... ......... .4%
Angela Collins, Dily\On. and
Worthlngton·Ind ......... :........ 20%
Derrlck Andrew Salkowitz, Ra(Umlted I!Jc. Ill ex dividend
leigh, N. C.; a sl~ter, Mary
loclay.)
,
Wippel, Lancaster, Pa., ·and a
,,
·sister-In-law, Mary Andrews;

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Lo:S:'~to~~

parents, he was

SefJb divOfte · ·'·

preceded In death l!Y his wife,
A dlv·o rce
· action has been filed
ellle Mackin Andrew, three
brothers, Charles, John and inMelpComtnonPieasCourtby
Paul. And two sisters, Elizabeth Un Renee Capehart, Middleport, against Gerald Lewis Arm·
. and Ella.
Funeralserviceswlllbeheldat
stron1 Jr., Ia care of Lagene
10 a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred fcArmstrolll. Middleport.
Heart Catboltc Church. Pome- ---..;,..
, -· ... "· ....._.
roy. The Rev. Robert BOrer wll.l ' · ' · ·•· · · •· ·· '
officiate and burial will be In Our . I811Ued licenee
Lady of Loretta CathoUc Ceme- · '
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tery, Long Bottom. Fritn$ may · A mUTiage license has been
call at the. fUneral borne, 2 to 4 . ~S.UI!II!I Me~E~~·erProbl ~
and 1 to 9 p.m. bilih today and COUrt to rm... ...,ne a .....
Tuesday. Rosary lervlces will be - .s,. and Cyatllla Joan RlclWds,
held at' 7 p.m. on Tuesday. _ .....2t.."J!!I.
tii~J'!Ild\l(~!l0rt;
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Certlft.ed Public Accountant

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Certlft.ed Publlc .Accountant

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•DALLAS KAYSER
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Attomey

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Will Ariswer Your·Question$ On ESOPs, Rollover'S,.
. ·· ... ·IRAs and ReiCJted Tax COnsiderations
n

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TUESDAY, MARCH 6 - 7:00 P.M.
at

PLES.
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2212 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasamt
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NO ADMISSION FEE - EVERYONE IS WELcOME!
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The Flotal Bouquet, along '• with
an . adj!&gt;ining building .fonnerly
housing an army Sulprus business,
was ~ned by fire Sunday after·
noon m the Town of Mason.
·
ACCO(dil!i 'P' fire deparllnent
" .p(figals, the ~ - ,Fire Dqlar\·,
.••-r1 '!'~~~ ..fit'; .ca~r ·at...,.P:~·
•
pro
Jy 1'p.m. New Haven and
Mitldlepon depantilents joined in'·
the offon to assist in extinguishing
the blaze. '
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The building is owited by David
Rhodes, Zephyr Hills, Fla. Owner
of the Oo\vet shop contents is Bar-

bara Vllli'r1eter'of Gallipolis.
According 1o . Mason Fire C!tief
RosS ltoush. the blaze began in a
middle wldroom · at the ftower
shop. Roush staled each time
firemen felt the .blaze was almost
under control, paint cans contai.ned
in the building e~ploded, causing
the fire to bunt, oqce again.
Roush also noted that the older
building had been remodeled ·
sev~ limes, with many layers of
roofing civerlappi!)g, making ·.it
difficult to extillguish. the fire bet·
ween the layen. .
Witnesses at the scene described
a loud explosion·as
first sign of
trouble.
•·
·
''I heard the front window blow
· out," .said Carlottia Boyer, an
SUITS UP FOR FiRE ..._ M.:..Wn Votunroer Fireman Dllnn'le
employee ' Of Vaughn's Cardinal,
Fowler, left, and Scott Casto are shown as they "suit up" to go Into
IOCICd across from the flower
the bumlng Floral Bouquet Sunday afternoon In Mlison. (OVP
shQp.
photo by Mindy Kerns).
·
''Charlie Reed was parked outside the store, and I thought he hit a
car. One ·of the picture. windows
.
Charlie and I anct Reed were just · 1!11flic NQund the area.
blew out and glass went clear into
leaving
the
~
store,
and
were
·
The
cause
of
the
blaze
is
un·
tlie middle of the road," Boyer conthe first to notice the blaze. Janet detennined, but acconling to Marty
tinued.
Y~er of the Mason department, 11
"I called the fire dejlartment. Reed said her husband had just p,ut
the truCk into gear, when the winis suD under invesliption. .
~ was so much smoke," she
dow blew ouL She ·staled she went
The total damage esaimatc is aPcoocluded.
proximately $35,000. Eight ttucks
Becky Pearson, who lives next back into 'the store 10 get someone
door to the shop, said. "I . h~ a 10 call the fire depanmc;nt, before from the Mason, New Haven, and
bi!itg while I was in the kitchen. I she and her husband, a member of . Middleport departments were the
the_!ire deparllnent. begait directing
thought there was a wreck.''
scecte. There were no in.iuries.

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. St~te .proVides mo·re.funds

•SARA WILLIAMSON
Customer 'Service, Peoples Bank
'

Mason· firtns . . gutted by fire·..

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for Home
By,LEE J.Ei)NARD
UPI Statehol!le Reporter
. COLU¥!:1US - pesplte nagging misgivings on the part or
some,. llie state Controliing
l;loard, celebrated the fifth ann!·.
yersary. of the Horne State
Savings Bank collapse Monday
by, releasing· anQther S30!J,OOO, to
contlpue pro,secutlng those
rea~lb!e.
,
Release of the money from .the
state's emergency fund brings to
$5.9 million the amount the state
has spent on prosecuting thrift
officials and government watch·
dogs over the d~bacle ;which
began five yeao ago thls ·week.
,Ohio Attorney General An·
tb!lny Celebrezze ~uested ·the
money to pay special prosecutor
Law~nce Kane.Jr. of Cincinnati,
whom he appointed In 1985 under
authority granted by the Ceneral

S~ate

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prosecution ;.

Assembly.
"The question Is, do we keep a
commitment that the Legtsla·
lure made to see this through to
the end," Celebrezze told the
board.
The failure pt a Florida securities firm on March 4, 198S, took
Home, .S~ate, a heavy Investor.
down five days later to the t11ne of
$144 million, and threatened
other state-charterec!, privately
lnaured S&amp;l..s. Gov. Richard
Celeste closed 70 of·thel'l). It took
three months to 1et the mess
stralghteped out and·I!Dme never
·
reopened.
Celebrezze said Kane did an
"outstanding'' job In getting nine
convictions or guilty pleas "from
nine Individuals who orchestrated the m~t complex white
co,Uar crime ever committed In
~ the history of Ohio."

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.FIND YOUR BEST lNVES'flV/ENT OPTION!
. . •DENNIS BRUMFIELD
.
•JIM ROSSI ··

FLOWER SHOP; GUTTED
The
Bo11quet, along with an adjoining build! formerly
housing an army surplus store•. were gutted by

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ATTENTION

Stocks

By NANCY YOACRAM .·
Se_n ua,l News Staff
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler gave an update at Monday ·
night's meeting of · 'Pomeroy
Vlllage Council on upcoming
plans by the Ohio Department of
Transportation to repair the
culv'ert at the upper end of the
vUiage near the White House
Bar, and also plans by ODOT to
construct a new section of
highway at the Intersection of
Routes 124 and 33. Just last week,
the mayor reported that a large
. crane was used to lift out large
stumps and other debris clogging
the cu !vert. ·
Once cleared of debris, a
bundle of pipes was Installed to
the river. By Installing the pipes,
even If the culvert continues to
cave-In, creek water will continue to flow through the pipes
and tl!ereby eliminate a chance
of water backing up before
fire In Mason Sunday afternoon. Flremen troin ·. permanent repairs to the culvert
mason, new Raven and Middleport fought the
can be made.
blaze, which caused an estlmaled SM,OOO damare.
ODOT hopes· to construct the
. (OVP pho!o by Mindy Kerns)
'
new road at the 5!1rne time the
culvert is permanently repaired.
Mayor Seyler has seen prellrnl·
nary plans for tlte proposed
roadway and reported that he Is
pleased With what he has seen
·
thus far.
The mayor expects It may he
August before any construction
can begin.
ln another matter related to
... roadways, C.ouncllrnan Bill
Youlli reQuested that -Ppmeroy
. · vmarte provide a backhoe and
operator when the SoU Conservation 8ervice goes to Wyllls Hlllln
Pomeroy to determine If under.ground spr111gs are causing a
slippage problem with the Wyllis
Hill road. Yo\lllg reported that
. Mike Duhl, of SCS, Is willing to
arrange for . eli~lneers tO check
out the slip and !~ate the source

Soatll Central Oblo
Partly cloudy Monday ·nlght,
with a low between 30 and 35.
Variable cloudiness Tuesday.
with highs near~.Chanceofraln
Is 20 percent.
Ohio extended forecast
Wedaesday through Friday
. Fair Wednesday and Thurs-

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1 Section, 10 Pag•

\IJ

25 Centa

A Muhlmedla Inc. Nowopap"'

··· -Pomeroy Co11ncil gets
update on cUlvert job

'

: ,:· .! l ' : ·:·t : .: ! : ·- :~ ·.: : .~ . : • . : · . .... 1" +'

Christopher C. Cole has been
arraigned In Meigs Common
Pleas Court on an Indictment
charging him with unlawful
possession of a dangerou~ ordnance. Cole pleaded Innocent to
the charge. Discovery Wl\S or- ·
dered and a jury trial set for•
Apr1119. Bond was set at $10,000 .
with 10 percent In cash allowed lo
secure Cole's release from
custody.
In· another criminal matter.
Sam McCloud entered a votun·
tary plea of guilty to a charge of
vandalism. McCloud was sent- '
enced to six months at t11e Orient
Correctional Center with credit
for 58 days already served .ln the

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.• Tuesday, Mar.ch 6, 1990

Meigs announcements

--Area': deitlls--

Partly cloudy toallb&amp;. lAw
near 18. Moally cloudy 'Wed-nesday. HIJb In mid tOs.
Chance of rain 30 perceat.

Two of those Individuals, how ever, have had their eonvlctlons
reversed - Marvin Warner, the
fanner owner of Home StatE', and
David Schiebel, a one. time pres!·
deitt of the thrift. ·'
Celebrezze said Kane has a
good chance of reinstating the
convictions before the Ohio Su preme Court II the state eontlnues to finance the legal
operation. ,
"We're on our last lew! of
appeals," · said Celt!breue. "I
lee! that we're reaching the end
otthe road."
•
"What's he (Kane! doiae In the
last three months?" asked Rep.
Robert Neutey, R·LaUI'II, a
member oft he board. "How long
are we going to keep pouring
money Into this?"
.
• Celebrezze said Kane hal been
Continued on page 10

of the water. If ne.!ded heavy
equipment can· be provided by
the village. Also, the village must
secure permission from affected
property owners before SCS can
begin the project. There would be
no cost to the village for the
assistance of SCS. Young will
speak to ttie property owners and
themayoragreedtoallowtheuse
of the needed equipment.
Counctlrnember Betty Baron· lck . suggested that the village
conduct a ·spring Trash Pick-Up
for residents. "We're asking

people to clean up tl)l!lr propert!es arid I think we should help a
I IItle," she said. AlthOugh her
suggestion met with the approval
of the mayor and fellow councll·
members, nothing de.finlte was
decided since the trash pick-up
would mean quite a cost to the
village In the way of landfill fees
etc.
· "'-l '
In another matter relate&lt;N,o
clean-up around homes, Mayor
Seyler said he would like to see an
ordinance passed to force people
Continued on page 10

Warmer weather
continues in Ohio
'

By United Press International
Sunshine returned to Ohio's
skies this ' morning, and warmer
temperatures . are not too far
behind.
Light flurries were reported
across the northern counties
during the nlghl. -but most of the
state had dry weather . A cold
front had pushed south of Ohio
this morning and with high
pressure building from the north
there should be· sunshine In Ohio
today.
Temperatures early this moring were In the20s to lowe30s. The
highs foday {Of northern Ohio
. were to be a carbon copy of
Monday 's highs, but for southern
Ohio, it was to _be about 15
degrees cooler than Monday's
high of 62 In Cincinnati.
. ·However temperaJ.ures are
slated to warm ba~k Into the
nild-50s to mid-60s by the begin·
nlng of the weekend.
Tonight and Wednesday will be

partly cloudy and there Is a slight
chance of showers In the southwest Wednesday. Lows tonight will
be near 15 In the northwest to
near 30 Jn the south. Highs
wednesday will be In the 30s and
40s again.
. Looking ahead througq Saturday, there will be a chance of rain
Thursday· and Friday and It will
be dry Saturday . Highs will be In
the 50s Thursday and Friday and
In the mid-50s to mid-60s Saturday . Lows will be In the mld-20s
to rnld-30s Thursday, In the 30s
Friday and In the 40s Saturday.
. On the early morl)ing weather
map. a cold fron~extended !rom
northern VIrginia to the Ohio
River to a low In Colorado. ijigh
pressure centered near James
Bay. Canada, extended to Ohio.
Th!:' cold front will move slowly
south through Wednesday while
the low moves Utile. The high will
drift east and-be centered over
upstat.e New York by Wednesday
evening.

.

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First-class postage stamps
may· be increased _to 30 cents
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
Vincent Sombrotto, president
can get In this country, or any
of the National Association of
other country for 30 cen(s."
tJnlted States Postal SerVice,
lacing losses of up to $1.6 billion Letter Carriers, said .even lt the
Assistant Posnnaster General
this year, appeared ready to cost of mailing a letter Increases
Deborah Bowker said the rate
announce plans· to hike postal to 30 cents. Americans will gel
hike would mean the average
rates Including the price of a better postal service for their
household would spend about $10
flrst-~lass stanipfrom 25cents to money th~n that provided In more for postage each year.
30 cents. .
other countries.
The rate Increase request has
The Postal Service Board of
"For 25 cents - or even 30 prompted new calls for a privati- ·
Governors was scheduled to cents-youcanwalkdowntothe za,tlon of th'e Postal Service, an
meet on Tuesday afternoon. corner. drop a letter In a metal
Idea advoca~ed by such censerwhen 11 was expected to an - mailbox, al)d within a few days It vative orgamzatlons as the Herll ·
nounce the overall proposal arrives at the home of a friend,
age Foundation and the Cato
calllng ·for an average 19 percent relative or business associate . lnstltute.
prlcl! Increase tor all classes of hundreds or even thousands of
. Som~rotto argued such a mo,ve
mall.
miles away, " said Sornbrotto. would be the biggest sham ever
If released · by the governing · "Tell me what other serVIce you put on the American people." .
board, the plan would still 'need
final approval from the Postal
Rate Commission. If approved
by the commission, U WOL\Id
become :the 15th rate cliange
since the 2-cent stamp became
~ompulsory In 188.5.
A Long Bottom area youtll was Injured In a one-car crash
·The commission has 10 months
Monday
at 10:46 p.m. at Chester on S.R. 248, just east of the
to reach a decision.
junction
of S.R. 7, according to the GaUia-Melgs Post of the
The Postal Service has said It
State
Highway
Patrol.
would like the new rate structure
Edna
Dr(ggs,l6,
Rt.l,.Long Bottom, was taken by the Meigs
to take effect !n February 1991.
County EMS to St . Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va ..
The last Increase was March
where she was treated and released for a cut to the forehead.
1988 when the price of a first· ·
Driggs, driving a 1978 Ford Mustang, went off the right side of
class stalftp jumped from 22
tile road .a nd Into a dltc h h!!fore continuing on and bitting a tree,
cents to 25 cents .
a fence, a u ttllty pole.and a gas meter - In that order.
.
.Pos.tal offiCials said rates must
No citation was Issued In that crash .
be "perlodleally a\ljusted,''
A Pomeroy youth was cited ln 'Ji one·ur crash Monday at 9:45
. The Postal Servl~ underwent
a.m.
In Sutton Toivn$hlp on C.R. 34, 1.3 miles west of S.R. 124:
a corporate-like reorganization
Amber
L. Well, 13, ot34832 S.R: 7, Pomeroy, was cited for not
In 1980 and now functions as an
driver's ll¢e~ · after ner 1981' Dodge Ornnl hit an
having
a
lndepeatlentgovernmentagency
emba11kment.
,
supported , by the sale of Its
Well was traveling west ,when she lost control of the car Iii a
service, not federal tax reveaue.
.left-hand curve and wentoffthe right side of the road, hitting an·
Although It reported a $404
embankment.
.
·
mlllion surplus for the first
•
qilarter of 1990, the Postal
~nee,
Service said Increased benellta
and was'la alld the assumption
'
trom the federal. government of
The Meigs County Cbambef of Commerce will sponsor a
spring banquet and 4aDce party on Saturday, March 31, at
110111e retiree health and coat-of, Royal ·Oak Resort.
.
llvllll packaps ~create a loss
The banquet Is sc~uled to begin with a social hour at 6 p.m.
In fiscal 1990 of between $1.4
with a steak dlnuet to be lerVed at 7 p.m. The dance will be held
biWon ud $1.1 biiHon.
.
from 8:30p.m tp,mldnlght with a mix of music performed by the
In addition to rate hikes, the
Band Crossover.
plan calls for dilcouata tor bar
Ticket priCes an! S25 a couple and $15 for singles and are
codes for first· aad . thln2-claas
available
from Meigs County Chamber Board members Ron
POitaie. Ellprell Mall and aome
Ash,
Lenny
Eliason, Mike Gerlach, Bruce Reed, Mary Powell,
priority mall. Insurance cover·
Continued on page 10 .
·
.
11ee on C.O.D. and Insured mali
would jump from S50&lt;i to $600.

l.ocal new.s

briefs~
. ___,

Long Bottom youth hurt in crash

Chamber plan., ·

banquet

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