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14-The Daily Sentinel

Baseball
playen offer

2

Report says U. S. population passeS quarte~ ·billion mark: :-~~--

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. WASHINGTON (UPI) - With
tbe aatlon's population growing
by one person every 14 seconds,
Census Bureau demograp)lers
esUmated the United States has
hit the quarter·bllllon mark of 250
mUIIon people.
The esdmate Tuesday came
three· weeks before . the na(lon
takes part tn "the big count," or
the A.pr111 once-a -decade census.
Bureau otftctals said they can
make a more accurate estimate
of when the population passed the
250 mtlllon milestone"after the
results of the decennial census
are known.

A population total of 250 million
people would reprasent a 10.4
percent Increase ovel" the 1980
count of 226,545,805. The nation
totaled 200 mUllan on Nov. 20,
1967, officials said.

Accordlll&amp;" to tilt demo·
grapbers, tile utlon Ia growtna
by about 6,300 people dally, with
some 4,400 comlnJ frcrn a sur·
plus of blrtbl - 10,600 dally over deatba - .6,200 - and an
averaae of 2,000 new lmmlarants
. ,
The first.census In 1790 counted aday.
feWer than 4 mUllan people. By
Census detJioeraphers said the
1880, tl)e pOpulation had reached
net gain of one perso11 every 14
5!J mUIIon and by 1915 the nation's . seconds Is baud on · one ll!rth
population totaled lOOmllllon; In every eight seconds, one death
1949, 11 hit the 150 million mark.
·every 14 secondl, one Immigrant
Census. projections Indicate entering the country every 35
that the pOpulation' could reach seconds and one persojlleavlna '
the 300 -million mark In about 30 every three minutes.
years.
The 250 million people make

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tbe lJalted Stttel tbe. world's
tourdl11101t populous utlon - a
rankin&amp; It 11M beld for many
decades. !'latfciM with tarpr
populatlona lllclude Obllla, with
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billion people, Inclla, 833
m Wlon, and tile Soviet Union, 289
mUllan people.
Just tralUng the United States
are lndonesla, with 188 mllUon
people, Brazil. 151 mUilon pea-

Oliio TUrnpike·study
CoLUMBUS. Ohio (UPJ) Ohio Senate ~ Houle leaders.
-TIInday appointed a apeclal
blpartlsa!l JlUW !i!'·mmit11ee to
resolve a sfal•ate· om, the
future of tbe Obto Turnpike.
'I'I!e 10-member ~nunlttee, .to
be headed by Rep. Marc Guthrie,
0-Newark, was
R:~Signed to

pill', hjU, 1211

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·•eicll Ntaerla
apd
with ~ m

Rewldll!i Clift

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th~ 241-mile east·
weat ton raad will operate after
Its debt Is retired In 1992.
The Senate a40pted a bill 111
April 1989 retalnlllg tons and
expanding the pOWers of the Ohio
Turnpike Coll,.lmlsslon, but that
btU has been blocked In the
House.
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Piek-4
3128
' .
Super Lotto
15-17-22-23-24 43
Kicker 541829 ·

tbl! top ·lfl niatt

papuloua coliatrlet. Ia !Wdltu,
~tb 110 mUUon people,, :
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. Rep. Frederick ~. ·o.
Monroevllle, has repeatedly
called for the conunlllloa to be
aboUshed and tbe ~ to be
operated by the Oh~ IlepU't·
men! of Transpol'tatloq,.wblcb Ia
IIi charge of all other . alate
highways.
'.

Copyrighted 1990

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
first pl)ase · of that · project.
Sentinel News Staff
' Roberts said that consultants.a re ·
Pomeroy Vlllage was granted now In the process of completing
an additional $792.733 In Issue 2 · plans on thi! upgrading project.
Rutland VIllage had applied
monies · for sewage treatment .·
plant upgrading at a meetlng for .. a. grant · of $837,000 for
Wednesday afternoon of the '· ·_ con~tructoln of a treatm~nt plant
Small Government CommiSsion ·an'il collection system for the
.held In Columllus.
..
village but that project was not
Meigs County Engineer Phll tllnded, Roberts.reportell.
He explained that Rutland's
Roberts, a member of the com·
mllisl~n. madr the grant an·
project Is a new cine and the
noi!Jlcementthls morning. · .
commission Is limited to only ·
He noted that It Is Pomeroy's $600,000 total for new projects
second· grant for sewage treat·
this year. He wen ton to state that
ment plant upgrading. The vii·
the total for new projects next
!age had earlier been .awarded
year Is expected to double.
approximately. $280,000 for , the
The commission, according to
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&lt;Ne r1'' rtJn out of an adver.t1sed 1tem. we will offttr ~ vou your choice ol a
&lt;: nm 1lar aW• 11en• .· whtt,; ava,lable~- re flec ting rtte same savmgs .Qt a rain check
wh11'i h w dl cn t1t le ..,.ou to uur r.h asi! the advert ised ~t~m at the advertised price ~­
lf\j llhln 30 rfd¥t:o Qnlv u "e ven\"lo r cou pon ol'llill be accepted per rtem purchased

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granted by the Commission celved from the total of $120
money to take care an Ohio River
as · Roberts . explained, million received from the sale of
since,
bank erosion · problem at the
money for s treets ·has a low Issue 2 bonds.
sell'age lagoons was not acted on
Other proj\-'cts in District 18
priority by the Dis trlct which Is
by the Commission sln~e It Is
funded
In addition to Pomeroy
rating sewer and water projects
considered an emergency
Chesterh.IIJ.
$431,640 and
were
higher at this time.
project,
·
·Bethesda,
$500,000,
with Bealls·
He noted that the decision on · Last month five projects In
ville
being
awarded
a zero
Meigs County were awarded
funding that project, since It Is
Issue· 2 monies of approximately percent interest loan on a 20 year
classified as an emergency, wlll
$420,000,
designated primarily basis of $112,203.
be made by the Randall Howard,
Melgfi County Commissioner
·
for
road,
street and bridge
director of the Ohio Public Works
Richard
Jones Is a member of the
projects
in
vlJlage$
along
with
Commission. A meeting with
district
Integrating committee
one
project
In
Pomeroy
for
w.ater
Howard. Is being planned by
Issue
2 funding program
on
the
tank
repair.
Engineer Roberts and Middle·
In
cooperation with
and
works
Small
Government
Com·
The
port Mayor Fred Hoffman.
he
Small
Government
t
mission
yesterday
allocated
to
Middleport's application for
Commission.
projects the $12 mlllion !t restreet project funding was not

·.First public hearing is held
on ·purchase of rest_a-urant
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the Meigs engineer, Is sending a
letter to District 18 of which
Rutland Is a part, te111ng It that
Rutland rated high llnd IS a vital
project Iii the eyes of commission
members and the EnVlronmen·
tal Protection Agency, afid re·
commending that Rutland vn:
!age reapply In 1991.
Roberts further said that In
checking with the EPA the
commission was advised that the
village wlll not be ready to start
on the. sewage system project
until next year anyway.
Roberts said that Middleport's
application for some emergency ·

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&lt;tv.ut abll! for ~ale m ecich Kr Oger Store , e~~:cept as sPecificallv noled in t~is ad. If

Low Prices.
And More.

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•ovERfiSEO ITEM POUCY··Eac t1 o t 1hese ad ... ertised 1tems IS required.' lo be readily

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\0 LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SQLO TO
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COPYRIGHT 1990 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICE$ GOOD SUNDAY,
MARCH 4. THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1990, IN POMEROY. OHIO
,

2 Sectiona, 16 Pages 25 Cents
A Muhimedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio.-fhursday; March a. 1990

Pomeroy iS awarded second Issue II grant

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Low tolllgllt !a mid 401.
Chance of ra1n near 100
percent. Partly cloudy Friday. Hlp Ia mid lOs. Chance
of raJa 110 per(;ent.

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·Yol.40, No.21t

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
DEALERS

Lottery

Daily Number
229

altemative

.
. Jlllilll.

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committee appointed Tuesday

decide ·._

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By JULIE ltiLLON
Block Grant revolving loan fund, The lodge's offer of$22,500for the
also through the D~partment of. two lots was declined but after
Sentinel News Staff
The first of two public hearings Development. Other monies wlJI some discussion an offer was
was held at Wednesday's regular come from l;:conomlc Develop· made by the commissioners" of
meeting . of the Meigs County ment Admlriistratlon (EDAl re' $12,500 for the vacant lot closest
to the courthouse and a right -of·.
Commissioners regarding I he volving loan fund money .
Shields stated that the neces· way next fo that property which
purchase of Pleaser's Restau ·
·
rapt in Pomeroy by Jim Hll) of saty. grant. application form had adj"otns the courthouse.
Syracuse. If the purchase· goes beeri completed and that the · Teaford stated he would pres·
through, 14 additional jobs could project proposal and· all other ent the offer to the lodge
be created at the popular area necessary paperwork should be , . members and report back to the .
restaurant. Presently there are ready by n.ext Thursday to commissioners on Wednesday.
In another matter, It was noted
26 full-time jobs at Pleasers.
submll'to the state.
Hill has been manager of the
When asked by Commissioner that the specifications for a new
· restaurant since 1981 and Is also Richard Jones how long It would computer system In Meigs
president of Syracuse Village take before something was heard County Court were completed
council. At the ttme the .estab- from the state, . Shields stated and that bids wlJI be iet {or the
felt word should be proj~ct. Tile new system will be
llshmenf Is purchased. Hlll will that
also do renovaHon work. He received by the first part of April. set up so that !!necessary it could
hopes to add .a sola,ri~m dining _•.••JP.n~ j!qdei!Jh\lt .!le felt very . b!! expanded at a later date. •
FlilallY, Metes CountySher)ff
area that coujd pffi\ll.!l~ .seil!fllg . cO.ll)fQrta~le.,l~ proect would go
James
. M. :§OulsW·· presenbid 'lo
for approximately '75. Tlils ar'ea thro11gh and {hat ''the commts1
the
commissioners
a plan 'for
·could al5&lt;1 be' used as a meeting slonfi!rS endorse Jim Hill's pro·
place fcir various civic and ject whole heartedly and will renovation worli at the sheriff's
community groups. HIJI noted make the necessary recommen· office. Sheriff Souls by stated that
that If all goes ,as planned he dations to carry It through." He the work was necessary because
would like to develop the estab- went on to say that the commls· · of safety factors. He went on to
lishment Into a full service sioners "want to try to work with· say t~at the work Involves no
restaurant, which would add the , you (Hill) in every way we CliD -" , m,.jor const~uctton, only · cos·
rV · to.urnameni. The To1:11adoes will baUie 14 new jobs.
SOVTBERN f~s had lots to cheer about In Oblo
.
In other matters, Bruce Tea- metlc renovation.
Leesburg-Fairfield for a berth In the regional
,1Jalvenlty's Convocation Center WedDesday
Durtngthepubllchearlng,Kim ford. or Teaford Realty, was .. Jones stated -that the work
tournament at OU Saturday, beginning at 3 p.m . . Shields, Meigs County Director present at the meeting to present could be justified but that he felt
nlaltlas lh!l Tornadoes disposed of the New Boston
Tigers, 'J7-84,1n semi-final play of the 1990 District ·
(Sentinel photo by ScoU Wolfe)
of Development, presented to the to the board. on behalf of the the sheriff's department should
commissioners a cost anaylsis or Pomeroy Masonic Temple, an get another bid on the job. He
what monies would be ·needed offer to buy the Pomeroy -Lodge went' on to say if the bid could be
and from where those monies
No. 164 F &amp; AM properties tl\at kept under $10,000 that work
when ready .
would come.
are adjacent to the courthouse. could
The total budget for the project
Is $157,810. Of that total, $'78,875
will hopefully come from the
0 1( l'O tJ 1't'(
Ohio Department of Develop·
ment and $47,000 wlll come from
By SCOTT WOLFE
lion Center to claim · the first ' Furnace Green at 1 p.m.
the . Community Development
: Sentinel Correspondent
round of the DivisiOn IV District
Southern, now 15-8, meets Ports·
, After rocketing to a 22-4 first
seml·flnal game over ~ew Bos·
mouth Ea·s·t, 19·3. ·
period lead and near-perfect first
ton Glenwood, 77-64 .
Portsmouth East edged Lees·
half; the Southern Tornadoes
Southern now advances to the
burg Fairfield, · 57-55 In tlie
capl(allzed on clu'tch free throw district finals to be played this
preliminary Wednesday .
s)lootlng to escape by the skin of Saturday. March 10 at 3 p.m., the
Leading Southern In scoring
their teeth here Wedn.esday even. secon(j ga!lle of another high
with . his second consecutive
\n2 atOhio University's Convoca- · school doubleheader; which pits
Contlnued'on page 3
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Eastern-Pike against Franklin
'
Meigs .County · Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reports that deputies
Investigated a three-car accident
Wednesday evening on Route 124
at Well's Run.
According to the report, the
accident occurred shortly- after
6:30 p.m.- A northbound vehicle
driven by Donald Jordan, Bel·
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) propr,lation for 1991-92 sped out of of Representatives.
pre. andownedby,DavldWatson,
Gov. Richard Celeste's $945 committee Wednesday for a . The House Finance Committee
Coolville, went over the hlll crest
million capital construction ap· Thursday vote' In the Ohlo"House gave the giant bonded spending
and struck a pickup truck that
.
.
measure 21·3 approval a little
was .stopped northbound In the
more than 24 hours after Its
southbound-lane.
Introduction.
· The stopped pickup truck was
Meanwhile, 'the Senate un·
owned by James Suttle, Perry
antmously approved a bill requlr·
Run. The Suttle vehicle went left
'IF· YOU CAN .
TIDS...' • Ma,son County teachers set up
and struck a parked car owned
lng that the state sales tax be
pickets at tile mtrao~ to scllool racllltles tills monlna, jolma 11 ot11er
collected on out-of-state catalog
by Robert Gary Holter, Long
West
Vlralnla counties m a sll:lke
bJPer waga •ld more beaellll.
Bottom.
By LEE ANN WELCH
thereafter 1. she heard. a ."thump sales and on home shopping
Teadler
WOllam
McWharter
Is
a11tnm
C!OM!Ic!e the wcatloaal CeDter
television merchandise.
Accordong to slatements, Sut·
OVP News Staff
against the houll4l."
and
Point
l'leiSIDt
Jtmlor
Hlp
Scllool
tills •III'IIIDI wltllllll lip
And the Celeste administration
tie had been stopped along the
A Gallipolis man was kllled
A .second sister went outside
wbicb
states
"Ir
you
WI
read
tills...
Tllabk
i poar tac:ller. Sapport
highway looking at a sUp that had
Wednesday night when he )Vas and found Galllan• upright, presented to the Senate Finance
us.''
,
occurred. His vehicle got stuck In
crushed between his truck and crushed between 'the truck and Committee a $140 mUllan supple·
menial appropriation ~o cover a ·. the soft berm. His wife bad been
home, according to the Gallla house .
Medicaid
funding shortfall and
notified to bring the pickUp truck
County Sheriff's Deplirtmenl.
Deputies surmise the truck
rearrange
other
deficiencies
pull out the car.
to
. Kelly W. Galllan, 25, of Route 3 jumped gear, traveled down the
c
from
the
bildget
passed
last
~(alter
stopped ancl parked his
Box 116, GaiHpoUs, died at Holzer driveway and plilned Galllan. He .
vehicle to help. They had just
Medical Center after the 8: 30 was taken to Holzer Medical June.
Virgin~n
.
The
capital
1m
provements
bill,
pulled tbe car out of the soft spot
accident In 1'Vhlch hla truck rolled Center, where he died:
when Jordan came ovi!r tbe
A West VlrJinla man was ·lnjun!d In a motorcycle crash
down lhl! driveway, plnnlna hlm
Galllan, a c'orrectlons officer assembled on a blpartinn"basls
hlllcrelt and struck !he stopped
aaalnat the house. lOCated on at lhe Southen Oblo ~rrectlonal by tbe administration and legis·
Wednesday at 7: 15 p:m. In Racine on S.R. 124, acaordlll&amp; to the
truck In the rear, knockinJlt Into
State ·Rou~ ~; · approximately Facility at Lucasville, Is sur- latlve leaders during the past two
Gallla·Melgs Poat of tile State IJiihway Patrol.
months,
conlalnslll86
mllUon
for
Holter's
parked vehicle. Jordan
Robert K. Wisnewski, 32, ot Rave,.wood, was taken by
one mile west of Haskins Road. vived by hla parentl, Ruasell K.
told au lhorltles ht wu blinded by
ambulance to' Veteraaa Memorial Hospital, wbere l)e was
j The cause of death Is listed. as and Jackie Dodson of Route 8, construction at coUege and unl·
.
·
car Ugh~.
admitted for obllervallon·a ftersufferlna a possible head Injury .
1massive head Injuries.
·
-GafUpolls. He Is also survived by verslty campusetl.
·
Thel'e waa moderate damage
The
1tate
Office
of
Blldget
and
i Accordlll&amp; to the . deputy's a fiance, Lora Masters Boaess
At last report he WL, listed In stable COndition.
to Holter'a 11184 Buick, Moderate
Mllnqement Rid U22·mUllpn Is
· 'report, Ga)Uan was working on
Wlsnewakl, rldlnll a 1982 Honda Goldwing, was travellnJ east
of Ga,IUpolls, a· brother and f0\11'
Intended for upkeep ot exls dng
to heavy damaae waa listed to
tbe Chevy pickup true~ earller In
when he went off the rtaht side of the road, overturnlna his
alsters. •
,
Watson's 1~'17 Ford truck, which
Funaral iefvtces will be .con· fac!Utlea.
mott!fCYcle In the pi'QCess. Tbouab he was th~own frcrn \he
tbeday.
Few
changes
were
accepted
to
was driven by Holter. and heavy
· His famUy was preparing to 10 ducted Saturday at.11 ii.m. In
motorcycle, he was. weirtu bb helmet tbi'OUIIhout the ltt~~ldent .
out•fC)r the evening, and a alsler Wffils Funeral ilom~ bY pastor the original version. Bowling damage to Suttle'• 1979 Ford
He was chargee! with PWl ani! cited for ral)ure to control.
Green
State
Unlvenlty
·was
truck.
SUttle's
au1Dmoblle
was
·
· Continued on paae 16
told tbe lber!ff'r department the DenD&gt;' Coburn.
·
not damapd.
VIctim weat outside, and· •oortly
Continued on page 16

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Maxwell House .
Ground·Coffee
31-~
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Frozen Young
Turkey Breast

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LIMIT 2 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

' "LENTEN SPECIA~" .
INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN

a.JI.Ct.

RED OR

Saaltest
Skim

Shrimp In ,·,
The ShaH·· •·

Pound

Thompson White
Seedless Grapes

Gallein

.· .

Pound

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. 4-R.oll

\.!!!)

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Healthy Choice_:·
. • 'Dinnan . .
1li-11.1&amp;-oz. ' '

f•
FIIOZEN KAOOEII POT PIES 7·0Z.

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K.ROGER QIIAt)E A LA"GE EGGS DOZ•.. ti.IXI

Tills . ~ .
T~ank 0

PoOR

. Tl nrrfi.R ·.

S_upporl lb. ·

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Galli:pOlis· man .dies
·after freak accident:

ror

LoCal :news briefs--

West

• "AI UJQIE .. lV"
FROZEN · ·

Bath Tissue 9

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White Cloud

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·capital.c()nstru~tioh bill
speeds·· -toward hoilse vote

Pound

250-SHEETS PER ROLL2·PlY.

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Deputies
probe auto
accident ·

U.S . GRADE A 14·7-LB . AVG .}

Select Pack
Chicken

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Southern gains IV District
title game with 77-64 -win

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U.S. GRADE A IS-DRUMSTICK-S,
6-THIGHS &amp; S-WINGS) ROCKINGHAM

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·M &amp; M. Mars
. Shlgle Cudy Ban
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DEVOTED TO_~E INTERESTS OF THE MQGS.MASON &amp;REA

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ROBERT L. WlNGE'lT
Publisher·

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Daily.Sentinel .

OhiO
Thursday. March 8. 1910
!.-

' CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·' General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
.
Assistant Publisher/Controller ' ·
A MEMBER of 1be United Press Internatlonitl, Inl!ind Oauy Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should beln good taste, addressing Issues. not personalt-

tles.

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Media circus ·
in ·New Zealand
~
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON - I've been a reporter lor going on 34· years, but
sometimes I think covering the news Is no work for a grown-up.
Much of the media's production Is relentlessly trivl!illn order to
satisfy our demand for gossip, which as news Is mighty thin gruel but
probably harmless.
Watching and reading all about Donald and Ivana Trump dumping
on each other is amusing- or per-haps bemusing~ if riot uplifting, ..
But the videotape: from New ;i!:ealanci of ,televiSion crews and
reporters chasing frightened Hilary Foretlch, the 7-year-old at the.
hear t of America's most rancorous custody war, !·urns my stomach.
I admit to having performed occasionally In the center ring of
media circuses, but the press shenanigans in Christchurch shame our
craft.
·
The question of whether the chlld was sexually abused by her father
must be left to the courts.
We've had a surfeit of coverage of the hatred her parents have
displayed publicly toward each other In a seemingly endless war In
which the first casualty was Hilary.
·
In her brown blazer and blue-bowed bat, tlie American chlld looks
·much like the New Zealand girls In her private school. Butfor the past
31 months, Hilary has been on the run, In hiding while on a 15.000-mlle
odyssey with her. elderly grandparents.
. Dr: EliZabeth Morgan se,c retly sent Hilary abroad and spent 25
months in jail rather than disclose herwhereabouts,lnslstlngshewas
·protectln~~; her daughter from ·nr, Erl~ Foret!Ch, the divorced
husband Morgan claims regularly abused their child sexually . .
Foretich, 47, an · oral surgeon, furiously denies the allegation,
contending that Morgan, 4.2. a plastic surgeon, Is mentally 111.
Meantime. Hilary lives In a Christchurch motel, where TV crews
and reporters swarm each morning and afternoon as her grandfather
takes her to and from school.
In Washington, scene of the first battles In the custody war,
standard fare on the evening news is videotape of the frightened child
runn(ng from the cameras.
.
Brian Craig, a Christchurch child ' psychologist~· called the press
.exposure "an unwarranted IntrusiOn on a small girl'~ · privacy ."
-Other New Zealanders were closer to the mark In dubbing It a bloody.
outrage.
.
1 was driVing through central Florida in 1982 when I heard on the
car radio that a Tampa-bound Air Florida Boeing 737 crashed In a
·
heavy snow storm shortly after takeoff from Washington.
Since I knew many of the relatives of the 78 victims would go.to the
Tampa Airport for lnformatlo~ about their loved ones, I turned the
car around and drove fast toward there.
By ihe time I arriVed at the airport, local TV crews were jamming
microphones into the faces of stunned and grieving relatives of
victims, demanding to know how they felt.
1 am pleased to admit that I did not on that occil,sion ask anyone,
"How do you fee I?"
·
.
1 did phone my pal Orval Jackson, the UP! bureau manager In
Tampa, and give hiin a rundown on the scene at the alrPQrt. Then I
went looking lor the' bar.
·
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SJoa~

wASHINGTON , - A . dose 1
tn the
friend Qf t;;eQrae Bush was ·ar.1, Bush put
-~~n a sleazy Washington, D.
Job as general counsel at USIA
C., prostitution stink In 1988. Less
and tben as congressional liaison
than a year later, he was given a
for the agency. He lasted for tour
key government position and se- year$, under USIA head Charles
curity clearance.
Wick. Wick . didn't think Sloat
Until Fb. '2 of this yar, Jonwas· suited for USIA, so he gave
athan (Jack) Sloat was:a special
him six months to find another
asslsllln\ to Brl!Ce Gelb,. the di- ·Job. Sloat didn't. so Wick gave
rector of the U. !'\. Informallon him another six months, and .
Agency. Gelb kept Sloat on the then another six months. Fljob with a security clearljnce nally, Wick simply let 111m go.
even after he learned about
Sloat, a lawyer, found 'Work at
Sloat's arrest for ''soliciting for the Washington Area Tennis Palewd and Immoral purposes." trons FoundatiOn. At least that
Gelb confided to friends that be . was who h~ listed .as ·his em·
needed Sloat for his "social .con- ployer on the nlgbt of his arrest
nections" and as a pipeline to on · sexual solicitation charges,
Bush. ·
·
March 29, 1988.
The president also knew about
Confidential pollee flies In
the arrest, but did not ask Sloatto Washington, D. C., .say that Sloat
resign.
was arrested by a policewoman
Sloat and Bush go back a long posing as. a prostitute. The poway .. They were cqntemporarles Ucewoman·, Karen Moss, and her·
at Yale, and soccer teammates. partner, Mark Gilkey, reported
Sloat became ap ardent Bush . that Sloat of·fered Moss $15 to
backer and . fund ralsfr during ' perform a sex act In his car.
the 1980 presidential campaign.
Sloat's guilt or Innocence was
Bush stayed at Sloat's hOme dur- never determined. He took a
Ing campaign visits to Washing- route offered to first-offenders ton. The two play tennis to· , doing communitY service In ex-

e:!";'9s

111 Coon Street
Pomeroy, Olllo

~lb.

2~The

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USIA official's ·past ·.ca~ches up with ·him

Th·e Da~ly Sentinel
Bm~ I""'T"'1.....a.....-r•r"'T"'C3c::l•~

Paga

~omeroy-Midcle~

•.

•

ih!nclay, M.-ch 8, 1910

~

Jack Anderson and Dale . Jlan. Atta

·
change for having the charges
Agency did a backgr.ound.check,
dropped. Sloat completed 40
the arrest was found. then the
hO!IJ'II of community service work
USIA began Its own lnvestlga·
In Washington and the charge
lion. ·
was dismissed.
• A knOwl~geable source told
·He told us the whole thing .w as
us Sloat then called Bush at his
a misunderstanding. He said he
Kennebunkport, Maine, borne
stopped to ask the wo1lllin for dl·
and told him about the arrest.
rectlons to a gas station and she
Sloat refused to tell us what Iranmust have misunderstood him.
spired In that conversation, but
In their banter, Sloat told us, he he kept his Job and was ·event·
mayhavetoldherto"stopglvlng
ually cleared to read no higher
me a snow Job," and she may
than "top secret" materials.
have mistaken that ·for sollcltaAccording tQ one IntelligenCe
tion for 1- sex act.
source, the CIA was "In . a
. Sloat thought the embarrqss- ·dither". Sloat Is a married, lolng Incident was behind him , ctaily prominent, wealthy man.
when Busb was elected president
That makes him a target for enand appointed him to head the
trapment by the KGB or other ·
USIA transition team. Then
hostU!! agents wbo.catcb people
Sloat was made a special assist- .tn compromising positions and
ant to the new , USIA director,
then threaten' to expose them .
Gelb; e,t a salary of' $63,900. .
We started asking USIA offl,
Gelb tried to get Sloat "Top Seclals about the Sloat case In Decret CC)deword" security clear- • cember . .When they were reluct·
ance so he could read the Naant to discuss It on the record, we
tiona! Intelligence Dally, whlc:h. sent a written list of questions on
goes only to the president and
Jan. 30. Two days later, Sloat' s ·
less than 100 top federal officials.
at USIA was terWhen the

a l-loRse Desic;NeP BY·

a HoRse. De.SiGNeD sv

a CQM

THe 5U~ l'feocess

''

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.

By United Pre8s International
Today Is Thursday, March B. the 67th day or 1990with 298tofoUow.
.
.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full .
The morning ,stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.ln 1841; American
printer and type designer Frederic William Goudy in 1865; $cottlsh
children's writer Kenneth Grahame, author of "The Wind In the
Willows." In 1859; German nuclear chemist Otto Hahn, discoverer of
· · nuclear fission, In 1879; actress-dancer Cyd Charlsse in 1921 (age 69);
actress Lynn Red grave in 1943 (age 47) and &amp;Ongwrlter Carole Bayer
Sager In 1947 (agE! 43).
·
•'·

Berry's World

Don Gibson was · assessed a
. Continued from page one
explosive game was the multi- technical foul.
Southern marched on trom
talented Andy Baer, who tossed
there to lead 42-18 af the half.
In a game high 35 points. Baer's
Despite the· one slow streak,
versatility allOwed blm to zip the
three-pointer, hit the key Interior ; SHS hit 11 of 22 In the first half
from the floor for 50 percent.
Jumpers, and beat the Tlaers to
Baer
was 5-'T.
the hoopwlthhls speed on tbefast
break.
Southern's first half ~xpe­
Baer hlt·Sof 12 for the game for rlence was realized by · the
a libt 67 percent, also hlttln~ 10-13 forementloned "near-perfect"
play, Including sharp d!!fense
from the line. ·
'
Next In llnewlth a fine game of wjth the . necessary jump-.
sWitc.hes and help from the .weak
Ills Qwn was senior Chad Taylor,
who netted 12 points Including. side. .Southern conjlnued this
several key buckets that rallied fashion early'!n the third frame '
Southern to an Insurmountable to bolster Its lead to60-33, but the
first quarter, TOdd Grindstaff hit tide quickly changed.
Southern slacked up on defor 11 points and another steady
offensive game, while Brad May- fense, didn't get backside help,
nard, playing' with ten stitches in and NB,saw the open door. Much
his head and ' several bruises cre&lt;jlt shOuld be given to the NB
from a car accident, canned 9 crew for never having given up.
Joshh Howard and Jason
points and shared rebounding
Truitt
led the comeback bid, with
honors With Brent Shuler with 8
Howard
tossing In two very-long
each.
Shuler added two points to he three-pointers, and another one
and Mayrtard's domination of the , came from ¥Ike Kenney.
At one point with 1:42 lett tile
boards,·
score was 68-59, but SHS el&lt;celled
Chris Murphy notched four
at the line and got a key lay-up
, with ,a perfect 2-for-2 night,
Jermey Rose had 3·, and John from Andy Baer along the way.
SHS was outscored 29-17 in the
Hoback 1.
final round and had visions of a
New Boston was led by Josh
fl11lsh as the great
nightmarish
Howard 's 17 points, followe dby
passes
they
made
In the first half
Jason Truitt with 16, Jon Gose
were
now
falling
short
and being
and tVJike Kenney with 9 each and
stolen.
'
Todd Grant with 8.
Coach Howle Caldwell said, " I
The game, played before 2100
thQught in the first hal( we were
fans (lw9-game ,total) looked to
be.an all-out blowout as Souther n very quick and played exceptl.onc
played near-flawless In the first. ally well. I was please with the
quaner and much of the first · way we came out and took It to
half. . The · 'demons 't hat have · them. We got everyone inVolved
In the offense and we played well
haunted Southern several other
defensively
. It's been our history
times 't his season, though had
to
get
a
big
lead and squander It,
Coach Howle Caldwell franti·
and
that
happens
by not doing the
cally wiping his brow In the
things that got you the lead.' ·
waning minutes as New Boston
" We had everything covered
transformed a 29 point lead to 9
the first half, but really let down
with under three minutes to play.
defensively hi the second half.
Clutch f~ee throw shooting
We're not a team that relies bn
down the stretch saved the game
great shooting, we have to
for Southern as they hit 13 of 181n
seratch
and claw for everything ·
the final quarter, Including 5-6 by
we dldn 't work for the
we
get
and
·1Andy Baer, 3-4 by J eremy Rose, ·
shot
we
.
wanted
In the second
one llY John Hoback and the
remainder from Chad Taylor and . half.! praise the kids though for
Brad Maynard. Maynard was 5-6 . doing what they had to do gQing
down the stretch to win the game.
at the line 'for the evenlnll.
We played a great of first half as
The good sld.e of Dr. Jeckyland
anyone could expect! ''
Mr, Hyd~ basketball from th~
For the gal)le Southern hit 18of
Tornadoes shown brightly In the
first half as Southern shot at !I 75 · 37 for 49 percent. and 4 or 11 from
three point land. overall hitting
percent shooting cllp with few
turnovers and missed opportuni- 29 of 40 at the line for 73 percent.
NB hit 22 of 43 for 51 percent. ·
ties. that allowed them to charge
3-14
from the perimeter. and
to a 21-2 spread, before NB could
10-16 at the llne.
finally get untracked. NB called
Southern won the rebounding
time-outs at 12-2, 19-2, and 28·4,.
war 35-28, led by Shuler and
using three
their four time
Mayqard, Inc. with 8 each, while
outs early In the first 10 minutes
Baer notched 7. Gose and Truitt
of play.
had 10 and 8 respectively .
Led by Baer, the Southern
SHS had ' 20 steals (Baer
Charges, marchzd methodically
lll&lt;e clockwork through the 5,Taylor 8), had 19 turnovers, 5
assists, 1 charge, and 14fouls. NB
stunned NB defense, who obhad 6 steals, 26 turnovers ; 2
viously experienced some tight·
assists, and 24 personals.
ness In their .first visit to the
Score by quarters:
convo.
Maynard and Shuler began an Southern .. .... ..... . 22 20 18 17-77
New Boston ....... 4 14 17 29-64
early domination of the boards,
SOUTHERN (77) - Murphy
while Baer, Taylor. Grindstaff,
and Maynard took turns on the 2-0-4, Baer 11-3-10-35, Kincaid
scorlng merry-go-round. SHS 0-0-0, Grindstaff 4-3-11 , Taylor ·
also forced 7 first quarter turnov- 2-1·7·12, Hoback 0-1-1, Bailey
0-0-0,' Burgess 0-0-0, Codner 0·0·0,
ers, some on steals by Grindstaff,
'Rose
0-3-3; Shuler 1-0·2, Bradley ·
Taylor, and Baer that led.to three
.point p~:\1&amp; on the fas t·break and Maynrad 2-5-9 ..TOTALS ZH-29·
ensuing· fouls,leajlng them to ;1 77.
NEW BOSTON - Howard
22-4 first -period score.
In the second quarter Southern 6-2-3-17. Grant 4-0-8, Kenney
continued to dominate, but went · 4-l-0-9,Truitt 6-0-4-16,Porter 0-0,
sour when at 32-6, NB began a · O,Dillow 1-0-2,Risher 1-l -3,Riggs
TOTALS
12-2 run, that put the score at 0-0-0, Gose 3-3-9.
34-16 at which time NB Coach 25-3-11-64.

o!

~JeJN "'iO
~S·~ ·

1990:. The year of the underdog 2~;:~~Miller
a professional Institution likeeasily bog down the transition
1990 Is starting out to be ·"the box; yes, the election was montwise free from political redress.
process as well.
Year of the Underdog." First tored by large delegations of Internatlonal
observers,
who
a!In
pracllcal
terms,
virtually
It Is with these concerns In
,James "Buser" -Douglas. a .heretomost
to
the
man,
concluded
that
the
entire
·
Nicaraguan
govern·
mind
that I have to take excepfore unheralded · heavyweight
the
election
was
free
of
fraud
and
men!
·Is
presently
composed
of
lion
to
Mr. Ortega and Mrs. Cha·
from Columbus dffE;ats te reigning
other
forms
of
political
manlpusoldiers·
and
clvll
servants
who
morro's
recent calls for the
undef~ated • heavyweight chamto
the
San·
Contras
In
Honduras and rural
latlon;
yes,
outgoing
President
owe
their
positions
plOI\ of the wor!J;!, Mike Tyson, pulDaniel
Ortega
h&amp;S
acknowledged
.
dlnistas.
It
was
against
this
Nicaragua
to lay down their
ling off what most sportswriters
that.
he
will
abide
by
the
el,
e
ctlon
backdrop
of
entrenched'
'
loyallsts
arms
11nd
return
.to Managua.
are calllrig the biggest upset In
take
part
In
the
that
Daniel
Ortega
remarked
to
Lay
down
their
arms,
yes ... re- .
results
and
wlll
boxing ,hlsto!1'; then this past
In
turn
to
Managua,
no,
not
untO the
orderly
transition
of
power
to
the
a
gathering
of
his
supporters
week. the world witnessed what
the Y;ake of his defeat that the
new government o!flclally lllki!S
has to rank as
of the top pollt~ new government; and lastly yes,
even
the
Soviet
Union,
the
one
Sandlnlstas
would
continue
to
·
power on April 25.
cal upsets .of all-times, when the
nation
most
singularly
responsl"govern
from
below."
·
ruling Sandlnlslll Party in NicaTo dlsbanti and return at this
PersonallY,, I hope that Mr. Orragua was decisively defeated by ble for transforming tl)e San·
time would only serve to heighten
Popular
Army
Into
one
of
tega~
s
remarks
were
simply
dlnlsta
a . coalition front called the Na·
within Nicathe most potent mllltary forces
made In an effort to reaassure . Internal tensions
tiona! Opposition Union.
ragua,
as
strong
adversarta!'reelIn
that
region
of
the
world,
has
and
quell
the
concerns
of
his
disAmerican political observers
lngs remain between the Contras
haven't seen anything like It acknowledged a willingness to appointed supporters that they
and the Santll111stas. 'l'he threat of
the
new
stU!
have
a
meaningful
role
to
work
with
and
support
s !nee 1948, when Harry Truman
retaliation
at the hands of the
government
of
Mrs.
Chamorro.
play
In
the
conduct
of
their
counwent to bed the loser only to
Sandinlstas
remains very real for
But all of these pqsltlve points
try's affairs, and not as a cha'Iawakt e next m?rnlng to find that
the
Contras
and In my judernent
ll!nge to his successor's ability .to
he had pulled off.one of the gre- aslde, unless the Sandlnlsta suptheir return at this juncture would
govern. · Unfortunat~ly the natest comebacks In the history of porters of defeated Da'l,lel Orbe premature.
tega
willingly
accept
the
new
go.
tional
assembly,
thereby
making
.
U.S. presidential politics.
Just as they layed a significant
vernment
as
the
legitimate
go·
It
"&lt;II'tually
impossible
for.
her
to
·
Unlike American politics horole
In getting the Sandlnlstas to
vernment
of
Nicaragua,
events
ma"ke
any
necessary
changes
In
wever, where the results of such
agree
.to &lt;!pen elections In the
In
that
couritry
could
heat
up
contlte
country's
constitution
to
an election are readily a~cepted .
.
first
place,
by remaining in place
slderably
In
the
months
ahead.
.
further
sbore
·up
the
democratic
by all parties concerned, the fiIn
their
rural
encampments they
As
the
Nicaraguan
Constltuprocess
by
which
she
was
elected
nal outcome lh .Nicaragua, while
c~n continue to play a role In see-·
.
tion
1s·
now
written,
provisions
and
.
by
which
she
plans
to
gowidely applauded, has .yet to be
lng tht the Sandlnlstas donlt deprotect current civil servants vern.
•
determined.
fault on their promise to honor
If the Sandlnistas wish, they
Yes,. Mrs. Chamarro's Na· from being fired for political rea·
the outcome of the February 25
sons.
It
also
establishes
the
can
make
It
extremely
difficult
tiona! Opposition Union overwelection.
Sandlnlsta
Popular
Army
as
the
for
t~e
newly
elected
opposition
helmingly de~eated the ruling
Sandlnlsta party at the ballot "military arm ofthe people," as to govern ... lf they wish, they can

one

Today in history

Southern wins 77-64;
in District IV finals.

•

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~ • .../3th
'

C&gt; 1110 .. HtA. 1111:.

"S."" of' story. ThB poor sre getting poorer
snti the rich are genlng richer - sxcspt for
DONALD TRUMP. "
.I

'

to our courts; free
speech Includes the right to burna
nag, beg in a subway and,.now, to
pour fake blood on ·a public statue.
I happen to agree with the first
two of those decisions. But the
· third one. Is downright bizarre.
Perhapa you hadn'teven heard
of Ibis new rlgl\t of free speech. It
wucont;elvedlnDenvernotlong
ago when a Judge threW out a
cue agalnat Indian activist Russell Means, whom officials had
CbariJed.wltb defacing astatue of
Cbrlstopber Columbus. Means
CCIDI~s Colum1Jus a "genocldal murderer," and so he dumped fake blood and mutilated In·
dlan baby dolla on the statue last
year to protest the Columbus
Day holtdlly.
· The Judge who absolved Means
obviously baCi taken the Supreme ·
Court's nag-burning decision
very much · to beart. Un!ortun·
ately, she eq!Jrely missed a vital
1.

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PF
1577
1666
1512
1406
1496
1232
1279
1161

Cobb's
STOCK

-

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PRICE

MODEl

MAKE

YEAR

,,

'

TERM

PAYMENT

DODGE

LANCER

'5295

Wellnesd&amp;Y's final
At Ohio University - Racine
Southern 77, New Boston 64
Saturday's game
·
Raclne Southern vs. Lees)lurg
Fairfield at Ohio University, 3
,
p.m.

10091

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Wrestling tou~ey ·ft
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41

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio High School Athlellc
Association announced Wednesday there will be no public sale of
tickets for this weekend's 53rd
high school wres Ding tournament at the Cincinnati Gardens.
The OHSAA said the approxl. mately 11,000 seats for ali ses- '
slons already have been sold.
· The wrestling tournament was
moved from Ohio State's St. John
Arena, Its usual site. to the
Gardens this year because of
Ohio State's Big Ten ·basketball
game Sa.turday afternoon
against Mlmesota.

Sports briefs

Ohio.

.

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Br c.rr. or llol• llotilo .

m.eo

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IINOU: COI'Y
PRICE

C.Uy .............. ..................... 25

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. •P-.IIM!IItl Figured with Down Plty-nt or Trtlde Equity of 211% of hiHna Price.

...

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m.l...4
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36

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C.nto

' luboeribarlaold•lrii!Jtopay lheear·
rlar
ltmll Ill ldvaaoo direct to
· TIM
'lftttuJohUorl2moalh

.,.. -

•

T1

Member: United Prest lnternallonat,
IDiancl O.tly Preoa Au.,la!lon and the
Oldo New,._p.,. Alloctatton. N~!lonal
Advertt.lngll.epl'ftentailn, Branbam
...p... Sal-. 73.1 Third """"""·
Now York, New York10017.

••

-

as

Publlahed •vory ol!onlom, Monday
lhrOUJb Friday, ll1 Court St., Pom..-oy, Ohio, b)i the Ollto Valley Pub·
Ushlng Company! MuUtmedla Inc..
Pumoroy, .Ohlo 457119, Ph. 992-2\Si. Second claio tiOIIal• paid at Pomeroy,

BURG£88 DRIVEl- IQtllln'._llevla ...... drlv•lllllde
for a lapp with New Boe&amp;ollllt' ,• .,,_Tralttabowaoa left.
8H8 lldvuced to tile District JV·n.h wltll a 77-et victory. (Scott
wou,e pllotol' .

PICK-A-CAR
PICK-A-PAYMENT
SALE!!!

856A

bold - still Ia toumey

A DIYlaloo ollllllllm.-a, Inc.

•

BAER HAS BIG NIGHT - Southern's Andy Baer taiUed 35
points to lead Southern put New Boston, 77-t4, In district tourney
play at Athens Wednetlday.

JiDl .

PA
1504
u2o
1367
1373
1492
1297
1557 ·
1622

tV8P814MII) .

as

or

(AIIgani•)
T£AM
, W .L ·
Eastern ..... :..... 15 6
SouCIIera ... ,....._15 8
North Gallla ... 13 8
Hannan Trace' 12 11
Southwestel'JI. . 8 13
5-Valley :........ 8 13
Oak filii .....:... 5 17
Kyger Creek .. !' ·1 20

The Daily Sentinel

VinCent'·Carroll

distinction: ThestatueofColum- a federal jud-ge really said when
bus was not Means' personal he ruled not long ago that New vlor and threatened assault. ·
property. It was not his draft .York could not ban panhandling
•"Begging Is not .political ·
card or his American Oag. It be- In Its subways. Such was the out- speech.' • Of copr:se It Isn't, and It
longed to taxpayers, and they cry, however, thilt. you would probably wasn't the sort of thing
.were the ones who had to pay to have thought Judge Led nard tbe Founders meant to protect
clean It up.
Sand had legalized spouse-beat- wh'en they wrote . the First
What's more, a: heavy burden lng.
Amendment.
of.proof rests on those who seek
Begging Is not always weiIt's a little late, however, toreto expand the shle)d of free come speech, of (:9urse, espe- turn , to original Intent In freespeech to cover physical beha· . clally when the fellow wltb his speechlaw.Amerlcanstodaynot
vlor. I've never· understood, for hand out Is
big .as Grizzly only have the ~lght to say
example, how some absolutlsis Adams, stinks like asewer and Is virtually anything they want, but
cdnclude that nude dancing falls dressed to resemble a Salvation . they clearly ·value tl!at freedo,m.
under the First Amendment. Nor Army ·garment ra~k. But then u we're ,going to revert to tradiam I entirely comfortable wltb lots of speech that rains llpqn ,us tlonal notions of tree speech, at
some.o f the reasoning behind last Is unwelcome, Including Just the iiery least we'll bave to roll
year's defense of nag-burning.
about everything that' passes back the protectlona of commerNot that cranks should be thrOIIIJh the Ups of politicians.
clal expre11!on that have develstopped from burning their naas.
That hasn't fazed the critics, oped durlng the past quarter cenThey should be able to truh their though, mo$1 of whose objections tury.
furniture and cut up their art col- ·fall into two categories:
The meaalniJ of the First
lectlons, too. But applying the
•"Beggars In larae cUtes toAmendment bu clearly IP'DWD
First Amendment to such beha- day don't ·Just ask for mo~;
durlq the past two centum.
vlor Is a difficult stretch.
they Intimidate." Well, •orne do
that we can even be proud. But
Begging, on the other hand, Is and some don't. And for those
surely f~ speech; even
t)lll
undeniably speech - which Is all · who do, there are stU! laws on the late date, does not Include the
,,.
boOks aaatnat menaci!IIJ beha· . right to deface public property.

SVAC.stan~

Riding
Champion rider VIrginia Leng
was. ordered to defend her title at
the Badminton trials In Britain In
May. That Is 11 weeks before she
Is to defelld her world title. Leng
was hQplng to rest her bay
gelding, Master Craftsman, for
the world event In
Stockholm.

. FI!~e s~ch taken o~e step too far
Accortiln~

MAYNARD SCORES - Southern's Bradley (tl) lays Ia two
pcilnts with Toraado ace ADdy Baer looking on on rlgbt. SHS won,
77-t4 over the New Bo.lon Tlgen.

J

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I
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Jim Cobb
308 EAST MAIN

.

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.

,,
,.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6614
•
•

I•

�;!lua:t ;....... i. 1110

1110

76ers take over top spot in
East;· I .akers romp over ·foe
bench to score 6 points durtne a
New York, which has 1011 six of
fourth-quarter
aurge for tilt
. UPIIp nla Wrtler
its last 10, recelved26polnts from
Clippers.
The
Nets
were .led .bY
Now · that PhlladelJIIlla ilu, Johnny Newman, 23 from Gerald
Purvis
Short
with
25
poillts.
reacllld the top of tbe AtlanUc WUkins and 20 from Patrie~
Bel!t
111,
.....,
ltl
Division, exuberant Slxera for· Ewing.
At
Miami,
rookie
Scott
Hafb:er
"They played like a first-place
ward Cbar1el Barkley 1i calling
scored 10 of his 14 polnll in the
for his team . tO maintain team," New York Coach Phil
rtrst live minutes of the foUrth ·
·perspective.
Jackson said. ''We wanted to
quarter to.seal the Heat trtumph.
Philadelphia defeated the New . compete and we llaven't been
Miami was led bY Rony Selkaly
York Knlcb 11U·93 Wednesday doing that IJ!tely. They had the
with af points and 21 rebounds ..
tonight."
hunger
· n~ht to move put the i&lt;ntcks
"A game like t~is could be a · Reggie Theus scored 31 points for
. Into first place by a halt-game.
Orlando.
., The triumph was Philadelphia's turning point for Ph Illy," Wilkills
Lakera 108, Maverlcka 81
third In tour meeUngs and moved said. •'They've got over this
At
Dallas, James Worthy
theS!xers lntoflrstplacethlslate hump and now tliey can go on to
24 points and hit a 3-poillt
scored
In a season for the first time since beat some very competitive
shot
with
4: ~remaining to balta
• the 1982-83 championship teams and that Is scary."
Dallas
comeback
bid. Los !\II·
campaign. .
Elsewhere, Phoenix nipped
geles' Magic Johnson scored 21
' 'We're glad to be In flrstptace Washington 113-111, Portland
points, including 4 3-polnt sl:otl.
but we don't want to get too high polinded Boston 130·117, the LA
The MaveriCks were· led by
or too low," said Barkley., who Clippers nipped New Jersey
Derek Harper with 24 points. · •
had ,15 pOints, 12 rebounds and 11 119-115, Miaml dumped Orlando
Deaver 86, Ml-ota 71
assists.
"We've
got
a
long
way
to
122·10~.
the
LA
Lakers
defeated
loose ball to the third quarter of the Trallblazen'
DIVE FOR BALL - PoJ11&amp;11d'a (30) Terry
go.:'
,
A.
t
Minneapolis, Danny
103-91,
Denver
beat
~In·
'Dallas
.Porter (L) and Celdc'a Rep Lewis dive for a
·130·117 wlo Wednesday~ BotliQn Gartleo. (VPI) ,
Schayes
scored 24 pillnts anjl
nesota
86-73.
·
.. 'l'he Slxer~ scored the. last 15
Walter
Davis
clime off the bench
points of the first quarter to take
Suna U3, BulleU! 111 ·
to
add
lS
to
help
Denver win Its
AI Landover, Md. , Kevin John·
li 31-14 lead at the end of the
fourth
straight.
Denver
tied a
period. Her&amp;eY Hawkins, wll!r son tipped in his own miss with
franchise
record
bY
holding
2. 7 seconds left to lead Phoenix.
finished with 26 poln)S, scored f2
NEW YORK (UPI) - The were ,"slim to none. "
· Surrounded by players In a In the period and 5 in the 15-0 run.
Minnesota to 73 points.
Bernard King hit a pair of foul
•'If those two supposi lions hold,
show of solidarity and with. his ,
Players Association, In an over"I like the way we're playing shots with 22.6 seconds left to tie
ture that could rescue Opening then I guess the prospects for a
voice tight with emoUO!J, Fehr rlgbt now but the k~ is to keep It
the score atll1!111. Johnson then
Day or put the season on the lockout of some length are pretty
said the proposal represented I~ going," said Philadelphia ·Coach
drove the lane before grabbing
· brink of cataclysm, of(ered Wed· good," O'Connor said.
only way he could think · of to Jim Lynam.
Bueball
·
his own rebound and banking his
The spring training lockout
Owners insls t that only players
: nesday to compromise on the key
prevent a prolonged lockout.
shot into the basket.
The Sixers exteneded the lead
cost the Toronto Blue Jays nearly
Issue of S&lt;llary arbitration.
with three years of service he
''What we have said I~ this Is to 25 points In the second quarter
Blazers 130, Celdea 117
$700,000
Wednesday when the
Under terms of the proposal eligible, while the union, until its the best shot we can give It, ... and never let the Kntcks closer
At Boston, Clyde Drexler, who
club
was
.forced to cancel two
announced early Thursday, Day latest propOsal, wanted the re- Fehr said. "This Is the bes 1 we
had his string of 183 consecutive.
.than 12 points the rest of the way.
eli:hlbltion
games at the
March
22 of the lockout, pl&lt;~yers in the quirement reduc.ed to'two years.
can do, and moreover, it is
double-digit games snapped,.
"When you're playing a team
· Both sides offered compromise . eminently fair. ·Nobody gets like thlt, It's nice to get a spurt,"
SkyDome.
The
SkYDome
5eats .
disputed category would be
scored seasoit-hlgh 39 points, and
ranked by total Major League solutions on Wednesday; but the everything, and everybody gets Hawkins said. ''Everybody ex··
53,000
and
the
March
16
and
17
added 12 assists and 11 rebounds
dates
against
the
Cardinals
were
~ service, witl!the. top half eligible
owners' was based upon money
half.
.
lor Portland. Boston was paced
peeled. It to go down to the wire
and performance while thl! playexpected to be near sellouts . ...
ior arbitration and the bottom
Fehr also said, If the proposal and ' so did we. Bu\ we played
by Larry Blrd's 2.2 points.
Matt Williams, the third baseers submitted a plan based on Is not accepted, "Don Fe hr is ou I good defense, they didn't hitthelr
half not.
Clippers 119, Nets 115
man who sparked the Giants
Union chief Don Fehr said the service lime.
of Ideas. I don't know where we shots and we were able to hold on
At East Rutherford, N.J .,
Opening Day is scheduled for go from here."
during
last year's pennant drive,
players have gone as far as they
to the big lead."
rookie Jeff Martin came off the
signed a $190,000 for this season,
April 2 and only an agreement
can to resolve negotiations that
"Players made the most reasothis week could save that date. nable move they coul«l make, "
nearly a' $100,000 raise over last
began In November. Ghuck o·c.
year's salary. Williams, sent to
With the .latest proposal on the said Oakland rlght·bander Scott .
onnor, who rf1presents the
table, a great deal more could be Sanderson. "We·split everything
the minors In May and recalled in
owne rs, said he felt the chances
at stake,
July, ripped 18 homers and 50
of it being accepted in thatform
right In half. lt's a legl1imate
RBI
in the last third of the year.
compromise.
...
The
Yankees renewed the.
"We as 'players came Into
contracts of pitcher Chuck Cary .T
tonight with.the thought in mind
.a nd -outfielder Luis Polonla.
of .closl?,lg this agree717ent 1and
Basl:elba!l
going to spring training. We gave
J.R. Reid of Charlotte and
Gym-IllS
it our absolute best shot. If this
ftlladelpllla - MeDo . . d's Intern~ ·
Tourney scores
Manute Bol of Golden State were
isn't accepted, then I feel sad·
· 110_. Mixed Pairs
fined
!or fighting in Monday
Hoek~
dened for the Industry of
8o)'8 Ohio Hlp Sc:hoel luletiball
·We._J!f., MarTh 1
•·
NID..
game. Reid was tined
night's
baseball."
auu.r., Ill Boston. 7: J$ p.m.
To•namnt
$2,500
tor
Initiating the fight, and
NY'
Ran~Prs
at
PbuideiJIIII-.
1:31
p.m.
IM\IlsiDn I
. O'Connor sal~ he would pres81. Lo.r1a1 Detroit, 7:31p. m.
Clf' St Joe 8!. &amp;Ualte N U
$3,000 lor pushing
Bot
was
fined
ent the proposal to the Player
To,... al Rartf•l'lllt 7: II p.m .
Lo~lniUq$1. Elydafl
N\'
ltlaaders
at
New
Jerlf)',
7:41p.m.
Reid and throwing punches.
Olwls 60all
Relations Committee, and perSkUn1
Caat~•u. Glnrd 81 (4atl
Do1sled
to
other
clubs,
later
haps
·
Slowe,
Vt
.
-NCAA
Ch.-npktMhlpa
Ketl Aller 81; Spl1a1 Sbawaee 5% .
Two women led the tleld
Olm.td Falls 'U, Panna Padua U
Thursday
.
MISL
.
Salem n. You a.,.e~a u
one-third of the way through the
No aama scheduled
"We urge t he717 to think very
W Muldll(pltn 81, Tonm&amp;o 4t
1,161-mlle
ldltarod Sled Dog
Tflnlill
·
Dlwlllktn Ill
,
long and ve~y hard," Fehr said. r
~a Rahlft, Pia.- 'UM,Iot Vlrdnla
~rlllt.IJ. a.df•rd Chuel51
Race
In
·
Alasks.
Dee •Dee JonSlims of ,florida
"I think we have made an
E P.._._, 70, E Caa5on 18
lallan
Weill,
Calif.
II
million
rowe held a slight edge over
Houlll;on 71. Georr.twalt
effOrt on ·our side," O'Connor
New ~Week ChAmp.... Cup
OtJer.Un t!; Rocky River tt
ihree-tlme champ Susan Butcher
said. ''I believe the union' has
OrnUetl, Doyles~Mrnlf
when·
the.two wome11 pulled into
Sandy V.. koy 15. Peterllhu ri SprlnJI5
made an ·effort on their side to
IM\'h~ktniV
Nikolai
before dawn Wednesday.
TI'IU18actions
bridge this gap. But we're still
Rolpte 13. Edon 5I
Running
an hour behind them
KalWa Ill, Sandask;y M•)· -Jt
far apart."
" 'elh!May Sptm•'ll'all•ctJa•
KlrU.nd tl ..\8ht.a _,.., .lot.. U
were
Rick
Swenson, the race's
Earlier in the day, the owners.
Uma CC St NN' ltnontlle 51
Baltimore - Sl.-d pllcher. Grera
only
four-lime
winner, and two
POI't!l E 11, Lui&amp;IJIIII"f Falr11f!ld 15
Ottu•I•I·)'far conln.ct.
offered their own attempt to
Rac::lee Soultlera1'7, New •RIOn 5t
other
top
Alaska
mushers, Lavon
. t.o• A.~ 1!1• - ~ped llllflel*" Mlllt
bridge the gap on players with
Rlchmtlll Htt. 18. Gilt Mil Gllmeur Iii
Sbarpeuon aDd palwr Zak 8tii.-JI to
Barve
and
Jerry
Austin.
Vanlw II , ArllD&amp;ton 51 ( ot)
l·,rar colllnct-.
two to three years of service.
MlniiP!Iota - Plat!'d . .tfl.-dtl' AIOIDO
This proposal would place $4
Glrlll Ohio HIK' Sc llool Bullrtball
Powtll on nlnrs.
By l!nltrd Pre~~a .. t.rrauo ...
LEGAL NOTICE .
NN \'ork(AL•- RelltWed e.•rac:ca
million Into a pool and would be
M'e-.cl~ . Mardll 7
of pltcherCIII•clt c ar,. andouHielderl.uls
dlstrlbu ted to players based on
Tournament
The Public Utilities ComP'QioaiL
IMYiiiiGal
!M. lAID - NamedBrw:eS..tfermlnor
their
performance.
·
.
mission of Ohio has set
At FM'm&amp;
leape plkhl., h.tructor.
Roe IUv Maplllul 51, ae Ku~dy sa
Players dismissed the prop·
Su Fr•dHo - 81 pdthlrd hlll!ma•
for
public hearing Case
SOlon St, Tol Notre DamE" 3t
Malt Wlllluns, ca&amp;cher IUrt Mu,..rlnl
osal and . countered with their
At -Mu.Uion
No. 91)..()1 ~EL·EFC, to
IIIII hdlelller M!kr Bt-njamln to l·,eiU',
N Can GII!IIOak 11, Brunawlck ts
own, producing what O'Connor
Cfl.r&amp;d ..
8arbft'IOa1t, Boardman 53
review
the fuel procureTeu.i - ~\creed to WrDII with pkher•
called "shoe~" on th!! part of
TEUFEL WORKS OUT- New York Meta'inftelderTimTeufel
AI MGunt Vll"rncu'
Kenll)' Rop~s and D•rel Merteldl,
ment
practices and
Lopn 55-. He,. ...... ,. Sf
some owners.
hillel..,. ~~ C..lb. . . ud ciiCW
llftaleg wel1bt1 ala locall)'lllu be keepeln shape while awaiting
Plclterlnsten U. Tol Ceal CMh i&amp;
Clullll KH!Utl!r on l · ~ar colllnd~a;
policies of Ohio Power
"They had been through the
tetlolullon of the dispute between players aod owners Wednesday.
.uv.......
reaewed ooalncts of pllcltwi I••
Day O.llber • · BeiiiW!rCI'Hk 511 (Sol)
Company.
the operation
IU'ttld and ILevln Brown for ltll.
(UPI)
session this morning where we
Ch11 Mercy u, aa Wlt ...ow .fS
TorCHIIloSlped
plk:.ller Davl4 Well•
of ils Electric Fuel Comhad a rather lengthy debate as to
•
Dtvllr.. n
Mid cakher Ores MJers fer lllle ltM
AI sa ..
or
not
we could cross the
whether
llt'&amp;Hn: rt-Wed c.•n.da tf •ce•
ponent,
and related matGarfldHtmTrlaa, Jeffer•n Aruu
-.ueman Nifloa Urt..., sllo..W., I.AIIII
line
and
say
to
the
clubs,
'That
Ch ampiGn H. c ..aetd"
ters. This hearing is
Soje, olllfldderN .1'11-.r Felli u• •en
AI Wl ...rd
Muao:z, aNI ptkher Aid S.-rb•.
which you believe you achieved
scheduled to begin at
LoulawU~ t'i, OU Huber"'
Boxing ·
Bukelball
runs must now take place ThursIn 1985 was gotng·to be returned
Elida 15, Puma r..- 11
Miami - Sl ped forward·.:~Pn&amp;er ollm
1:30 p.m., on March 12,
Vlrglll Hill willdefendhlsWBA day before the final downhill can
AI LutMW
Rowlnljld,
In the way o! a $4 million ~nus,'"
Drii!Miea Tr._V., 1'7, Rlwer Vallt)' 4K
1990 at City Council
light heavyweight title against be staged. The !inals are to be
NB,\ - FlnNI Goldfon SU&amp;e centn
O'Connor said.
1'-i"' tm:lnAI•• II, Gallpollfl h
Manute llollUM and O.•lotW fo.....-lll'd
Tyrone
Frazier
April'.
29
in
Las
At Xeata
Chambers,
218 Cleveland
held In Sweden In eight days,
.J.R. Reldl%.5111 for npu•~·
The union said that Tim
Urh- 71, Hamill.. &amp;a•n II tot l
Vegas,
Nev.
Hill,
27-0
with
17
·
Collese
.
Avenue, S.W., Canton,
making further schedule alteraTuya Vat.,y 17, W*J'nNI!dd-Gtt•he-n
Bel.c her and JeH Ballard, ·. two
S..allr)r Named Dlek lllleu
••
u
knockouts,
hopes
a
victory
will
tion
difficult
since
there
are
six
Ohio
44702.
women's JM:dtball coa.:h. '
pitchers who ex~rlenced star
W' Mulllldltlfl'lm ~I. TONnlll4!
Gleavtne - Namd Bleb Rodrlpea
lead to a matchup against women's events to be run.
Dlvllton III
1989 seasons but who are · not
football.:ttach.
All interested parties will
•
Bertii!Ve Is, Bedford Chuttl Sl
Thomas Hearns later this year.
Soccer
San DtesoStaie - Exkndedb•kdball
eligible for arbitration, would not
E PaleMIIIW 111 E Canton lij
b
.
e
given
an
opportunity
coath Jim .....,e•rr• oaiiiiNCt I·
The Cleveland Crunch of the
even make It under the union's
..."".. ,., ~-· l'l
Honors
)'ear lhrqh 1...11 w••
O~a II. RoekJ River •
to be heard. Further InforMISL traded rookie forward
'hill - Jli~Uned lUck Dleaan F\IU·
·
proposed gUidelines.
OrnlleM, O.yi!N..,_n II
Doug Smith, the Missouri cen'nme
Alhlet~ Director.
mation may be Oblalned
s....,. vane~ IS, rml'lbu~ Sprlnr u
Paul . Wright to the San Diego
"I know how I feel n9t being
Wes&amp;ern Ke••Q- BulldbaUct~eb
ter whose late-season charge
Division IV
by contacting the ComSackers for veteran forward
Mu my .v..r• l't~~~ll-4able to arbitration alter the t~o
HolpJelt Ed0 ~t51
carried the Tigers to the 'league
'·
FoOib•
.
Kalida 81\, Sa11dll~ Mary 4'
....
Kuwait
defeated
Zoran
Karle
mission
at 180 East
years
I've
had,"
Belcher
said.
"I
Cl~~~elniiMI 1Uft!4 Daaa Blllllf!' &amp;II
Iitle, was named Big Eight
JUrtla11d ~' · ..\.!!~Qbula ,Jolin t3
q..,.lerback
~eh.
Qatar
2-0
to
win
the
Gulf
Cup
a
Un. CC ~ . Nrw Kllon.11W 51
wanted to do all that I could to see Player of the 'Year .... Princeton
Broad St.. Columbus.
DeiHl: - Sl.-4 Plu B lree armt
Rldllnond Hl11 18, Gal Mil Gilmour t l
seventh time.
that
defi!'Miw
...
Mark
Dlltcke~~~~.
that
didn't
happen
to
players
Ohio 43266-0573.
center
Kit
Mueller
won
Ivy
VMIIH' II , ,\tJinKton S' (ol )
GrHII~ -81pe4PI•8trt!earHI
in
the
future."
League
Player
of
the
Year
trrli end WIIUam Rarrll.
htlha11h - Named Dfo•llllil Crtcllarl
"I feel like the loss of dollars,
honors . ... Lightwelghtcham'pton
KaehadU!I'S ClOillh.
I)
having
the
ab111ty
to
arbitrate
not
Pernell Whitaker was voted
M•W•at0n-11..-4Pian81reeapnt
Pro results
r•nlnr hack .J....- WI .... aM delenafter the two godd years I've had,
Boxer
of the Year. Michael
llllve b~~~ek Brad Edwar•: alped lrer
NATIONAL IIOCKE\' LEI\GU E
ts an enormous enough loss to
Carbajal
was named Prospect o!
a(elll
wtdt&gt;
l'tffi\'er
CIIIM1M
Lotkttt
.
Wednet!dQ Re~~~1llhl
Rock f)·
fight to see that it doesn't happen
th~ Year, George Benton Trainer
" 'lnnlpel&amp;, Qarbec :J
Lo11 '""-11!11!1 - All-•~• die retlrf"" 1
Mlnllfl'IM $, Otlcaa;o .J
to tile Tim Belchers and Jeff o! the Year and Emmanuel
ment of •eletu~e0UIIIIIIIar'r7 Beelt..
Cal pry i, PIJtllllurrh 3
St.
LoU.AA•.-••t-mMTom
Ballards of the future I' ' .
•
Morireal S, Lo" Anpti!A 2:
Steward Manager of the Year.
1111ty to Ptorla of tiN! lnw•Uon~l
Tbllnd1JGIIma
Ballard
went
18-8
with
a
M3
~
&amp;llalo at lotion. 7: :15 p.m.
The i:ew Reeboke Reverse Jam basketball shoe
To,...o - 51ped •efenem• Tom
SkUng
·ERA. He owns· two years and 3Q
NY RMtrrS at Plllladelplia. '7::n p.m.
brw!t'lle m11111·,e• co•rae:t .
·
gives you the lightweight cushioning or
Gusty
winds
off
a
fjord
forced
s.e ...
days of service lime. Belcher,
St . Loull at DelrGM, 7: II p.m .
Hexaute~
material In
Cl~u• (M'ISL) - Tt'a41ed forward
Torolllo 11 Hartford. 7: 11p.m.
15-12, led the majors with eight' cancellation of two practice runs
P•l
WrtaW
..
Su
Dlep
hr
farnrd
the
heel
and
forefoot.
,
NV b'-"lera lit Ntw .lt'l'..,., 1: t1 p.m.
for a women'·s World Cup down·
Zll'l.n Karle.
shutouts. He has two years and 32
For
maximum
Game~~
Tea•
hill scheduled for Friday In
QwbecatW-*1 ... 4Hl.8~ 11p.m .
,days in the big leagues .
'
protection without added
lJII'A - NunH Aar• llrlr.k*ln hi
Ed....-..aaWI••pea.t:ap.m.
Stranda, Norway. Two training
U.A. Da.-11 C.p leam, NPIKI., Wre
weight.
On the parquet
C&amp;lpry at v.-.""''•II: P p.m.
Ao-'·
or down at the
SATMJNAL aAIUTB~L MtDC.
playground, you'D leave
WHIInll... G..nm•
tbe competition going ill
Portt.M! 1•1 . . . . . 1111
College 8001'e8
J..ACII,..,.tlt.Nnler_,lll
circles.

IIJWfLOVJ:

II
I

CLEV'tLAND IUPl) -A civic · :ror its linP8ct 111 a major
economiC develojllnel?t. ...
.. .
or1alllzaUon supporting .con·
structlon of a baseball stadium· .
The poll., ·conducted by Dec!·
· ·sports arena com~lex in downstop; Research Corp., showed that
J ow-n Cleveland says a poD shows
more than 50 percent would vote
to approve tile so-called aln tax
county voters would approve a
tax to pay much of ·the cost.
and also showed most people
~ Richard Shatten, director of believe downtown Cleveland ts
Cleveland Tomorrow; said a
on the upswing.
lelephOIII! ·poD of 600 Cuyahoga
County commissioners have
County voters showed a proposed
said they would not place such a
tax on wine. beer and cigarettes tax proposal on .the May. ballot
lii'Ould receive narrow voter
before Thursday's deadline, but
P!Pproval.
there has been some discussion ·
about a possible deadline .
Details o!the survey, however,
extension.
·
have not yet been released. '
"In general, we've found that · Commissioner Mary . Boyle
·. people are · optimistic about
said. poll confirms her belief the
Cleveland,'' Shatten said Tues•
residents of Cuyahoga County
. day. ''People are in favor of this
should have the opportunity to .
·
.

Loyola Marymount accepts bid

J

.........,

Sports briefs

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. (UPI)

-r- It's January in March for

......

.........

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DeiNII .. Nett~ 1~_,.1: •11·"'·
.,...1:111111 •••-. T: • p.m.
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................ ,:.,....
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IJI&amp;II II 1111-•e. t f.m.

o.wt- -... at t.t. ......., It: Jl p.m.
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llpuolllllilof

V...... 71.NertM......

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WAC:

Mr Pe~ .. I•
I pp_

1!111, ....

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Notet: 01~a ·

'

.21f N,
SECOND

.992-5627

..

I.

agent he has nQt Identified and
New Jersey businessman Robert
Kramer.
A man who claimed he was
Shackleford's teammate in 1987
told ABC News Shackleford , now
with the New Jersey Nets, paid
him and two other players to
shave points so gamblers could

t

.

FEAST YOUR.
EYESON .
THESE SAVINGS.

''

·-

'""'·

IT'S TIME .FOR DOMINO'S PIZZA:

.....""922-2U4 Goli;pol;.446-4040

.

FdtESmEJNN

.... IMCIIIISE

$999

topf11AI5

pilus tor

69C pe !QPPII1&amp; per r:um .

......

_..,,,_ _... :r.;..,,.,.. ,_ . ,____ 9" •-·•··"' i

.... --

to-out• ~ ·-· ~·--

m

OUI IIIW LAIGI
I'IPPIIOIII P,IIU fEAST

· SPECIAL

$499

$899

Receive • mHium one topping Orifinel
8trlt pine Md two oolat fot onlr u .eer
Valid 11 am to 1 m dilly .

_,. ___

SocoM Phzo fw '4.00 ....

....

...................... .-. ........ ......
-• ·• ·•~--. ....,-•..._,.._ o,. ......,w.,wol
....,
..... o.-,-n..,-•,._.,

.. --- ?.&gt; -""'"''

- · ... - - ... .......... _ _ _ , ... ~ ...... c-- .. _
t~oooo·. -· -

Pilla

- - - - .,.... ...................... , .. ..&lt;"ll .... _~_

IVD\'DAY

.... .- w....

~

only 99C per top'""' Pfl

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

-·-~--

Or~ ltyle Ch. . .
112.111 A&amp;htlll nal ltlPPI'I15

Aec.ift 1W0 1•..

....·...,..· w·,.,...,.,,...,...... .. ,.,.........,.... ~..... ,~.. .....,,..,. "'

i

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S12"

Rec:eWe two R*lum a..... pita••·
OtJtinll Pen ltyltfor onty 11.111 AdellllOnll

p.m.

•

LAIGI OIIGIIIAL
c•SI PilUS FOI

IMIIII 01 PU PIIW roa

p.m.

~ r,.,..., , ...c ,. ..,_.,

~~-

~

~

ersar
20°/o to 70°/o on

STOREWIDE

•TRADITIONAL SOFA In •
' Upl~ol~tter·y by:
.Fine
•LA-Z-BOY
•BARCLAY
•TEMPLE
•FAIRFIELD
DIASnCALlY IEDUCEDI

rk. Perfect fer

DPIJ

KG. Sl99.00

maun, lllu• &amp; 1te11• tattfamily room;
· CLOSEOUT
·

$44900

•CONTEMPORARY SOFA and LOVESEAT
Mutral t-1.

lEG. *1021.00

SALE

•TRADITIONAL SOFA
. faltrlc.

itt

$7 9 900

with dark hl1hlllllll ..ahl

lEG. 1799.00

SALE

$38800

•CONTEMPORARY PUB STYLE LOVESEAT
·

lEG. S4J9.00

·

$29900
NOW
. ·

•CAiiY
OUI BUY ONE
GET ONE FIR RECLINER SALE
•NEW SIIIPMEIIT OF .
LA·Z·BOY &amp; LANI ACnON

OCCASIONAL CHAIRS

CASH &amp; CARRY
•STURDY OAK BUNK BED

RECLINERS

lEG. 1445.00

SALE

$19900

•MOHOGANY VANin
ROCKER
·RECLINERS
01

WALL
SAYERS

$299°0

I

lAs SIM-I

lEG. *691.00
'

•LAMP TABLE
lit. 1169.00 .

lEG. $149.00

SAYI SO"'fe

·

lOW

.

29 500

$29900

SALE

$

6800

SALE

$6800

•BRASS .BAKERS lACK
lEG. 17'9.00

•1 OIILY iAICLAY WALL SAVEl
IECUIIII. Ylllll OF *599., .

SALE

•MAGAZINE LAMP TABLE

SAlE

$3800

•TAPESTRY FOOT STOOL
lEG. 139.00

SAlE

LOW OR HIGH-BACK
CANE CHAIRS

$199

lEG. '319

.._a·Z·Boy Swivel Rocker

:;~;,

SAVE 60'1.

•Contemporary
'Fairfiald Chair

$1900 •nt
HG

SAVE 60.,_

$1 59
$.3

1 9

'

S!t.lldii=:Jtlll •.

I

............. (al.ll"-ela

,..,...,oama

Local bowling

iti
... . . . . . . . . . . . . :. . . . . .

To...-,

' Mltmt Ill. Orl1. .1 IM
Duwr 11. Ml_.ola 1J
lA La11en Ill, D1U11 II

'17ommy Aimour ,m. winner of
the Phoenix Open. .
Stranae had hoped to play at
Phoenix ·.this ~ear, but came
down With tile flu on the way out
\Ye&amp;l and returned home to
Virginia.
·. ,
He had already been to Austra·
Ita. once at the time, finishing
second In a toW,ulment. He
returned to Australia with his
wife and two 10171 after recoverli:g trom the nu and ti~ for last
In a lucrative four-mao skins
game and llnlabed ninth In the
Australian Masteri, which was
won bY NOI'II?all. '
Strange said !Pe went to Austra·
lla because be •nd his family
enjoyed It a~ bicau1e It was· a
'·'gOOd arrangement tlnanclally
for me."
·

I

CeUep a..~~~ttlll &amp;ellA•

PbtrlllliiS. W...llllot~~lll

of North Carolina system said
.academiC poUctes were "bent"
to accommodate basketball players ·and because they believe
Valvano does not monitor players cloeely enough.
· The book "Peraonal Fouls" bY
Peter Golen bock alleged positive
dr171 tesll were hidden and
grades were changed at NCSU to
help basketball players ma~ntain
eliglbiUty.
·
.. An tnvesUgatlon by the UNC
system foupd nQ evidence to
substantiate those al~ga:tions,
but It found etaht NCAA viola,
tlons, Including players selling
game shQe$ a~d compUmentary
game tickets. The NCAA placed
the. unlverslty,on probation and
banned any NCAA post-season
play this season.
.
·
'
. N.C. State plays Georgia Tech
Friday n!ght In the opening round·'
of the Atlantic Coast Conference
Valvano is ex 'vote on the proposal. But she still ·· Tournament.
pected to coach.
Most recently, former WQif·
needs support from . one of the
pack
eager Cbarles Shackleford ·
·
other · two commissioners admitted he accepted more than ..
Timothy Hagan or VIrgil Brown
.:.. and they both generally vote
.
the same way.
"I think the people" pf this
county should have an opportun·
...................... 7
lty to decide this.' ' Boyle said.
"The voters un~erstand the
NIGHTLYENTERTAINMEN1
issues and should bave a'l oppor;
MARCH 11TH· 11111
tunlty to decide. ... I think my
coUeagues are fine leaders and
Thursday· "Ridhouse"
will also come to thiS conclusion.
·
Starting at I
Hagan and Brown w~ not
available for comment.
Thomas Cllema, the former.Ftld~y • D.J. Randy SmHh · .
Public Utilities Commission of
Starting._, 1
Ohio chairman working on the
project for Gov: Richard Celeste,
Saturday • D.J. Randy Smith
said hewasencouragedaboutthe
Stlrtlng at I p.m.
11
po· · think this Is a very positive
poU," Chema said. ''This may be
Sunday _. Paul Dolfflnger
an Indication that the public
sector approved of this proJect
Starting Ill p.m.
arid that a sin tax Is feasible:"
for being Involved In a major
NCAA violation or 11 convicted of
a felony.
U released for any other
reuon, Valv•no gela ~.000
from NCSU. The clause alao says
II VaiV8DO leaves before the end
of
contract, he pays ~.000
to e university.
After the 1983 seaJon In which
NCSU won the NCAA Tourna,
rnent, the university •nd Valvan(l
&amp;lined a 10-year contract that
n~ automatically rolls over to
becom~ ,a five-year contr11cl at
the end of each season. Valvano
IS paid $106,000 an!7Ually by the
liiPiverslty.
Faculty and students want
Valvan·o removed as coaoh be~ause a report bY the University

Multi-color Fabric

. two-time U.S. Open \Ylnner Cur.
, tis Strange, who is joining the
PGA tour for the flrat lime this
' year at the Honda Classic.
Strange played the Touma·
ment of Champions, the first
~vent of the.year, ·and then spent
most of his time playing In
Australia.
"I think everybody expected
me to come back with an
Australian accent," he Joked.
· Another newcomer in the field
' at the $1 mWlon event to be
: played over the Tournament
·Players Club Course at Eagle
' Trace Is 16,year-okl Cb~ Couch,
who may be the younaest player
· ever to plAy In a PGA event.
Records on a~e~ are not kept,
• bu I PGA offlclall , nld Ibey
: eilnnot remember anyone else
: that young playing In a tour
' event. ·
Couch, a junior at • Fort
: Lauderdale area high school,
TBAII
POINTB
: shot a &amp;·under-pat 65 Monday to
SlwmnY'tcarry out .............................
, become one of four golfers·.In a · ToiY'otar.,. 0Ut... ..............................42
FO£ 21TL .. :............... ............... .... .......:III
:2115-man quallfytni lteld to make
M!ke So7ll ................................ ...........:It
the _lWman field at the Ho!7da
CIA Auto ....
:~t
llacke?tl Ro
....... ,........ ,..... ...........:It
Clasalc.
SER
- ~-1 Larry Duion
· Alio entered are Mark Calea- 531.HIGH
BUblk!m't479; ~Women) Deb?Hono·
vec:chla and Tlri: Simpson, both
lOll
- Metli Lorry Duaon
of Wllo.m la.t a four-way playoff 192.llll.ill
r.r.,.G
110: ~Womoal Deb?
·to Gree Norman in the Doni
t car-111
•
IEIIIIS-.JIU.
' Open at Miami Jut weeiC. Norman and P•ul Aztnaer, the other
~
playeft J18rtlclpant, ?U'I! lll,lpplna
lie Honda.
-Ilia-din&amp; ebamplon BlaiDe
Meeelllater and Joey Sindelar,
Wllo won In 19811, are here, •loa&amp;
' with J'l1id COtaplll?, wbo WilD at
l.Da An&amp;elel and led for twl'
. ~at llor..; PGAebamplOD
,Payne Stewart; and· ~~ RO·bi!rt Gamet:, winner • of . the
:TIIcson Open thiS year; and .

Fr...,

nlldeiiiMalll, New YorUJ

"
·
·
LOS ANGELES (UPI~ -Doc·
statement _In ·response to ques·
tors who treated Hank Gathers
lions about the player's care.
denied wrongdoing In the baiket·
. ''The rumors and speculations
ball star's death while Loyola surrounding Hank Gathers'
Marymount players voted to death are. as disturbing to us as
accept a bid to compete In the they muat be to his familY. his
NCAA Tournament.
friends and the generaLpuhlic,"
·, ':\be Lps Angeles 'l:lmes, quot~ the Sll!~ement said.
, toe an un~med cardiologist
"Aitlioqahfylldlsclosureo!the
· tilmlliar with t!le case, reported details sutroundll!i IllS med~al
· Wed!lesday . that Gathers was evaluat~n and therapy would .
.told not to play again after a Dec. · serve to end this ongoing specula·
9 fainting spell. The newspaper tion, we are lnescapal!IY bound
P!J,so said Gathers, who collapsed .bY the strict confidentiality of his
on the court and died last Sunday . . medical records. His family has
nlgtit, had missed a . scheduled not given us permission to
weekly treadmill test and is release any Information, and
.II!Specled not to have taken . ht~· untU s.u ch permission is proheart medicine.
·
vided, further details cannot be,
' Coach Paul Westhead andjthe released," It said.
players met Wednesday after·
."We feel, however that we cap;
noon utl decided til accept the comment on: the foUowtng:
, · NCAA·bid the team gained when
"Neither the ultimate circumWest Coast Conference officials stances surrounding hiS untortu·
c.anceled ihe postseason tourna· nate death nor the ca11ses thereof
ment after Gatliers ·died, The have been defined .at this time.
Lions were declared chamvtons We are , hopeful the. au topsy
liecause they were runaway results will serve to shed some
winners of the regular season.
~ht In that regard," the state·
The team practiced lightly and ment said.
aald It would travel to Philadel:
. Los Angeles County Coroner's
phla Sunday for Gathers' funeral officials said an a)? topsy. was
·on Monday.
performed Mo!!day but deferred
. Various reports ~ave questi· · announcing the .c ause of death
ont!d the .speed of treatment pending evaluation of toxtcologtliven Gathers after he c611apsed cal and tissue tests. Spokesman
ciuring a WCC tournament game Bob Dambacller said the results
at .Loyola;s · Gersten Gym l!Dd
"won't be ready for. a~ lejlst a
whether doctors warned him not week."
to play at ail.
Gathers, the 11th-leadin~
Dr. Michael Mellman, who ' scorer in major college history, _
treated Gatllers after the taint· was a 6-foot-7, 210-pounder WhQ
tngspell.andDr. Vernon Hattori,
had just turned 23. He ,wa.s a
' a cardiologist who had been ·near-certain NBA first-round
seeing Gatllers, issued a joint draft cl:oice.

Strange joins:PGA tou~

The Right Stuff.

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

RALEIGH. N.C. (UPI) General's office to belp with tile
Norlb CaroUoa State Uolverslty negotlaUons, said Jobn D. Slm·
ret:um• contract taiU with m001 IU, adm11?11tratlve depul)&gt;
'embattled bul!etball ~eh Jim atate attorney general. Simmons
Valvano aulsted bY a ~uo::ed said a deputy. attorney aeneral
neaouator and the offtees of the ·will attend F'rlday'a nieeuna.
state Attorney Genenl.
. ,...DIIil?l rec:atly neaotlated
Leaden of the Wolfpack Club the end -to a 19-year lawault filed
said the boa.ter organization against the atate of Norlb Carol·
would not take part ill any ilia bY black aariCultural exten·
~ttlement with Valvano. The · s!OUII!IIIIwboclaimedthestafe
Wolfpack Club •areed two years c!Uerlmll:ated aa•tnst them.
a10 to put 150,000 annually il:to •
Tbe Pm'llllna' belief .among
fui:d and then gt~ the money to . the membe:'ahlp of the Wolfpack
· Valvano 11fter five years.
, Club is for the etoup not. \o get
Raleigh lawyer Howard Maninvolved Ia any settlement with
,nlllg, '75, will meet with the Valvano, said K.M. "Charlie"
, lilliverstty's Board of Governors ~ryant, the ~h:b's executive
· Friday. The closed-door meeting director.
· will be the first between the
o\1 Issue Is the buyout elause In
· 'board and M•nDlng.
Valvano's contract'. Tile clause
The board asked the Attorney
says Valvano can be fired only

controlaame scores and wln·bets
placed with booklet and legal
betting outlets.
New Jersey au thortties have
dropped their lnvesdg,llon into
the claims due to a lack or
evidence. The State Bureau of
Investlgatlon has started an
o!!lclal investigation Into the
allegations In North Carolina.

$65,000 in eash transfers from an

Poll shows support for ~tadiu~. ~ax

Sports brief8

1

The Deily Santir•81-Pagl &amp;

North.CarOibta State hi• es ilegot~ator

Players offer · compromise ··

......

Pomatt ;MidciiPGI1&lt; Ohio

9TH ·

WITII CAKE &amp; COFFE..:!
HOIIS DAllY

•FlEE DEUYIIY

•

o•
USY
CIDIT

MOll. &amp; fll.
9 TO 8

VISA
MASTERCARD
DISCOVER.

OR lSI

• to s

Salts and
Service with
Low, ·low

'filii I OU¥1

446-3045

...

,,~

�•,

Peg a· 8 The Qllilv Sentinel

Pomauy-Middlap0rt, Ohio .

Plan '8' more ~xpensive seepnd time around for Browns
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - This
time around, . the Cleveland
Browns are being much more
selective In their p1,1rsult of Plan
B free llgents. ·
Part of the reason Is that there
are fewer youlli players avalla·
ble this year compared to last
year, when the Browns signed l4
Plan B players, Including Robert
Banks, Tom Gibson, Ted Banker,
Bryan Wagner and.AI Baker.
The main reason, however, Is
money . Signing a Plan B free
agent or any note. costs up to four
times as much as last year,
mainly due to the . success or
teams like Green Bay and the
Browns that went heavy Into the
market In 1989.
. Cleveland signed center Mike
Baab to a two-year deal Tuesday,
and Ernie Accorsl, executive
vice president for football opera·
tlons, said the club llkelywlllslgn
three or four more players.
" I doubt If .we' ll sign much
more than five," Accorsl said.
''The prices are re.lllly much
different than they were a year

ago.' I'd say the players whO are
them," Accorsl said. It's obvious
Wednesday that tliht end Ron
just moving to move, who went
Mlddlleton had been offered .a
we were looklpg for an offensive
for practically nothing, $5,000 to
$115,000 signing bOnus by the
lineman, esllentlally a center,
10,000 (last year), are going for
Washington Redskins.
and we had .been 'Interested In
$40,000-$45,000, and players who
One reason the BroWns signed
any one of three or four; but
went for anywhere from $20,000
Baab was because Bill Lewis, a
finally we just decided that we
to $40,000 are going for $80,000 to
center left unprotected by the· wanted to get thll done and
$100,000."
L.A. Raiders and coveted by
decided that Mike Baab was the
"Cleveland,
wanted
a
$300,000
right answer for us. ~ · .
Qne good example of the
signing·
bonus.
Accorsl said the Browns hope
Inflation In Plan B players Is
This · year, many of the top
to complete their slgnlngs Within
running back Keith Jones, who
players are waiting and com par·
a week. The club also Is close to
was signed by the Browns last
lng offers, Instead of justtaking
signing a few ~layers who are
year. Cleveland gave Jones a
.
the
first
good
contract
that
.
,
straight free agents, Accorsl
·. $20,000 signing bonus and a
comes
their
w;~y.
said.
Sljlary of $125,000 or $130,000,
"You almost have to pressure ·
By signing Baab, the Browns
Accorsl said. The Browns did not
protect Jones this year and he
· signed a two-year deal with
Da!Jas worth more than $800,000,
Accorsl said.
Jones gained 160 yards on 43
carries last year and also was a
key special teams performer. ·
I
· "It's Incredible," Accorsl said.
"We had another one of our
players that's already been ofSANDWICHES, SHAKES, ICE CREAM,
fered over $100,000 that we had
YOGURT. ETC. •
signed for nothing. "
He did not specify the player,
Open Daily 10:30 a.m.-9:00p.m.
but there were published reports .

got a veteran· leader. and any
other players slped by the club
likely will poaaess the same
qualities.
"What we need here are some
guys like ,what 'the (Phlladel·
phla) 76ers did with RICk Ma•
horn," Accorsl said. ''What he's
done to stabilize that te!lm, and ·

Nothing JtoiM this
c.pttl [Not . • .....

bleach or sunlight)

Micldltport,' o~.

' POMEROY . - The UMWA
Supporters ·Gr(lutt will meet
Thursday,' 6 p.m. at, Pleaser's'
Restaurant In Middleport.

Reg. 2511.95
Digital ready.

s• ·mid·

range, 4" tweeter.
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ltOCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange wlll meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the grange hall.

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With CM-~ Color Monitor
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'

Whh, 143-581.,
Almond, 143-582

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

POMEROY , -The Jay Mar
Golf Club Is spQnsorlng a dinner .
dl!llce on Saturday at 7 p.m. at
tbe senior citizens center in
· Pomeroy. Music ll(lll be provided
by Glen Aldon of WMPO .

"',. M;
1111

· WILKESVILLE -Members of
the Wilkes Granae will sponsor a
shiorgasbord dinner on Saturday
at the Pythlan ~all.inWilkesvllle
frQITI 4-7 p.m. The price Is S5 for
adults and $2.50 for children. ·

100-Watt Stereo Receiver
IIWI110

BURLINGHAM- The Modern
Woodmen 0f America Camp 7230
IS having a. J)otluck and famUy
activity night on SaturdaY, at 6: 30
p.in. at themod!!rnwoodmenhall
hi Burlingham.

Low"' 111,., -·
_ _ _ ...._1[11111111

--~~~~· .....

- ·.... Ill. _ _ _ ......... '11111 1131·3004

~'='
.....

"""...

,j

FUll,. EA. P(.

SALE-SALE-SALE
. OPEN STOCK .

SINGlE, DOllE or'lJIIILE DIESSEIS, CHESJS, .• Ds, NIGHl STANDS, HUTCHES
It's All 01 SALE This Monthl
.. ..
.
'

ROPER LAUNDRY SPECIA~

,._

•4 Cycle
•3 Temps

I

•I

VITAMIM C

"

·- - ....

-

'

SUNDAY ,
I'OMEROY - Pomeroy firemen will have a e~ and rib
bll'beque SUitday at the· ftre.
hOUI&amp; with aervllli to begm at 11
a.m.
•

~-·

.

~4

AMin ·
'BILLFOLDS

cu. n. FROST FREE $

.

.·

DINING
ROOM SALE.

SAVE On Our Quality
Dining Table and Chair
Sets, China Cabinets; and
Buffets and Hutches. We
Have 3 Piece Sets, 5 Piece
Sets, and 7 Piece Sets.:

ss••

Stop .ir\ and See Our
New Line of Solid Oak
Country Cupboards,
Chinas, Dry Sinks and

.

400fo OFF

$1495

AI AtiYtrtiHd on IV

...

Tables.

ALL ARE ON SALE NOW!.
.,_

WALLPAPER
SALE·.

OFFERS ·
GOOD .
Clo. . . 111111&amp; If..,.,,

Mt...
- ............ .

_..........

- · llwu 1M. 1:00 o.m. 10 1:00

p.m.

· luftdor 10:00 a.m. 10,4:06 p.m. .

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

Pll . .tU-H81

,_..,,oN.

tHOUGH
•

MOIDAY,
UICH 12,
1990
.

'

499

· Refrlttrttor Speeltl. ·
.
,·
BUILT
IN DISHWASHER,
...... Scile $~"JJ,,u
.
.
.
.
.
•oPER 30" ELECTRIC RANGE........ Sale .299
ROPER MICROWAVE OVEN ............ Sale S144
.
ROPER 30" GAS RANGE ............... Sale S299

472 CAPSILES

ONLY

....

-

Cal-Ban 3,000

Mill'S I WO.N'S

.......

.

$ 169

.

.

.NOTHING KEEPS.
IT COOL LIKE A ROPER
.REFIUGERATOR

100'5

ONLY

$3.'7-9

-....

· EDIA SIIDIGTH ·

·.~~2 PRICE

-ICIIIPTIONI

$299

CAPLDS .

--

...

•large Capacity
•4 Cycle
•4 Temps ·

TYLENOL

lyNARRIMbE
ALL SillS
ALL SIIIIIG1HS

.

AUTOMATIC.WASHER

ELECTRIC DRYER

3 3(.

sus .

.

FURNITURE MAPLE or OAK FINISH

CREAM EGGS

:~~·

._;.I
IPfi.IU!.Ifl

~- ··

QUliN SlT

~-----------------------------'

..

REEDSVILLE- There will be
an . elementary cbeerlelldlnlt .
clinic for· all interested at East·
ern ~ill School on Saturday
beg!DDIDI at 8: 30 a.m. apoiiiOI'ed
liy ~ Atblet!c botlstera. Sign up
tee II S5 ud lunch II $2. Awards
11(111 bz 111ven and pareota may
pick up tbelr children llt' 3 Jl:m.
-'m

: "Tile Glblon Gjrl," by illustrator
CUries Dol GIIIIOD, DIIde ber first
j~ppnranee ,100 ~n 110. In .Life
.
. '

lA. P(.

FRIDAY
POMEROY -There will be a •. .-111!1111!11.,
, _____...,____~11!11-~-volunteers tea at Amerlcare on
Friday at 3:30 p.m. for current'
volunteers and for all those
ln~rested In volunteer work.
POMEROY - The Census
Bureau will be conducting tests
for those Interested In working
far · the bureau Qn Friday.at the
Meigs County Public Library.
FROM
Test times will be 9: 30 a.m. and
1:30 p.m. For·more Information
contact the library. Two forms of
Identification are necessary to
take the test.
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Senior Cntzens Dance Club will
r
have a dance Friday from 8-11
· .RUSE'S
RUSSELL STOYER
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
Music will be provided by the
Happy Hollow Boys, Athens. The
public Is invited and those
at~ndlng are to bring snacks for
ONLY
the snack table. Admission Is $2.
ONLY
SATURDAY
. POMEROY -The Meigs
County Litter ,Prevention and
Recycling Program will halre a
RUSSELL STOVER 12
· recycle day on Saturday from 9
ll.m. to noon at the Kroger
REG.
·Parking Lot. Glass shoul!l be
ONLY
Sfparated by color with lids
removed, and newspapers
should be tied In bundles or In
P~~per bags.

2 7(

DISCOVEI WHYff I
PEOPLUAY,
f

$163
$2 1'4 '$535
!WIN.

.

'-''-' ·
. ·
•
·
who went to .the funeral home on
' It was amiounced that district
practice wpll be held Sunday. 1 the death of Nettle Hayes.
Rally will be at the Senior
p.m. at theSeniorCitlzensCenter
Citizens
Center on March 17 and
In Pomeroy, at t~~e recent meetIng of the Chester Councq 3~3 all D of A groups are welc&lt;ime.
The. past councilors club will
Da1,1ghters of America.
.Bulah Maxey presided at the meet at the lodge bali on
meeting which opened with the Wednet!day at 7:30p.m .
singing ef the first stanza of the . The .meeting closed In regular
"Star Sp~ngled Banner." The form and Emra ,Cleland read
"Friends."
Lord's Prayer was g!veh and
_ Attending. were Alta Ballard,
Matthew 23: 1-3 was read.
It ~as reported that Be a.Moyer JoAnn Baum, Margaret Am· Is Ill and' the death of Nettle · berger, Thelma White. Sandy
Hayes and Paul Orr were noted: White, Mae McPeek, Iva·Powell, .
The reinstatement of Marjorie · Kathryn Baum, Faye Kirkhart,
Betty . Young, Bulah Maxey ,
Fetty was balloted· ah!l It was
Goldie
Frederick, .Everett
noted that the next meeting will
Grant,
Ada
Bissell, Marcia
be the observance of birthdays
Keller,
Mary
·Holter, Betty
with a potluck · and •·other ·
Roush,
Cha.rto'
t
te
Grant, Ooris
refreshments.
.
Grueser,
Virginia
Lee, Emra
Also at the next meeting tlie
Cleland,
Opal
Hollon,
Esther
group will drape the charter for ·
Smith,
Ellzabetl)
Hayes,
and
. Nettle Hayes.
·
Dorothy
Ritchie.
Erma Cleland thanked those

JELLY BEANS

pri&lt;o requ;,o, .......
ond
mininl.lln IIMcl comtnMn•IC 'lltttllllthorilld Slw:l. comor. Pri&lt;o
Stt

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• .,. 170

PRICEI

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By Micronla

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h
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QUIEN SET

·Pre-Easter
.
Savings .

built In-just power up and run. Includes Pendhal
DeskMate 2"' lor writing, filing, ~et!ping a budget and .
mucH more. 125•1053
.
·

Voice-Actuat8cl
Cassette

.

CHESTER -The Shade River
Lodge will have Its regulllr ·
meeting Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
All master masons are InVIted to
att,end:

IS

get berth. in

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio ('UPI)
: - Winners of the Remington
; Park Derby and the Ohio Derby
: will receive a fees-paid starting
: IM!rth in the $1 million Super
· Derby in September at Louisiana
: Downs, it was announced
;Tuesday .
· The Super Derby., first run In
: 1980, has grown to become one of
.: the top stakes · events In the
• nation. It wiilcostat least$13,850 .
: to nominate and start a 3-year. old In the Sept. 23 running. ·
; The arrangement was 1an. nounced by Edward DeBartolo,
:chairman and chief executive
·officer of the DeBarolo Corp.,
~wner of the tracks where the
. three races are run.
;: The $250,()()().guaranteed Re·
· mington ·Park Derby wiil be ·run
:March 17. Nlnety,seven 3-year. oids were nominated for that
:race at Remington park ip
:oklahOma.
~ The $300,()()().gu11ranteed .Ohio
. Derby, first run In 1876, attracts
;some of the top 3-year-olds In the
·country to Thistledown Race
:Track near .Cleveland. Nomna·
: lions for this s~mmer' s running
' close May 19.

POMEROY -The Preceptor
Beta Beta &lt;;:hapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet Thursday,
6 p.m. at the · Grac.e Episcopal
Church.
,
'

Our Lowest Price Ever!

10 Yr.
Warrlmty

·&lt;·)~

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be revival Thursday through
Sunday at the Victory Baptist
Chun;h at 7 p.m.' nightly. Guest
speaker Is Dr. 'Larry Emery. ··
Pastor ·James E . Keesee invites
· the.public. ·

. .

Supreme Ultra

Boolltl, presldeat of Lopn Monument ·CQ. after completlag !l
seminar by tbe·Rock of Ages CQrporatlon of Barre, Vennont held
In COlumbo&amp;. Purpot~e. of'tbe semlaar was to broaden skDla Ia
faniUy pla.nnbt1 and selection. Sixty memorial co1J!11!14!lon from
Oblo, West VIrginia, Michigan and Kentucky attended the
seminar. .Locan Monument Ill the Soutbeulern Ohio's largest
. monument com(141ly wltb oHices In LoJan, Pomeroy, Vinton,
Wellston, and Clrclevllle. It dates back. to 1890. , ..

-F~W · clothing

C~mmunltyActlonAgency.

992-7021 .

Technology StoraSM

...., Ao $11 Por Month•

Ki!D Buu, Vinton, was

~led her cerUflcatlon In memorial co-lbttr by DoD W.

d!IY, Thursday, 9 a.m. 'to noon, ·
old high school building, Cheshire, sponsored by Meigs Gallla

INGELS CARPET STORE

America's

::::·149!!

1 Yr.
Warrmrty

''

Lat us mab tha difference

St, Rt. 124 Toward Rutland, Ohio 1 Miie Off Rt. 7

Winners to

.

.
· CHE;S}URE

K.tiftOK t
·
· March
Home Furnlahing
~ Sale! ! I
Premier C.omfort

POMEROY. -,-The . Pom~roy
Chapters of A.A. and Al-Anon
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Sacred · Heart Catholic Church.
For more ln1ormatlon call
1--800--333--5051.

A trackless, carpet that it .
made with 42 ounces of:face yarn
for that rich, expensive lopk!

175
N. 2nd An.
' ,,

,lh&amp;nday; Madi 8, 118o

SERTA

PREIIENTI!:D CERTIFICATION -

992-2414

P,iach TWd" By Realislic

'·'

RUTLAND -Meigs Area Holi.- ness Association will hold Indoor
&lt;;limp, · ·through Sunday ·with
services ntglltly at 7 p.m: and 6
p.m. on Sunday. Special speaker
ill Gev. Gene Grate a~td sollg
.evangelist Is ·~The Dumtres"
from Tennessee. The. publiC Is
inVIte&lt;! to attend.
'

FADING , ..

DELITE

.

~

,..~7

TII1Jit8DA'Y
POMEROY -There Will be a
weekend revival at the Faith
Tabernacle Church -on Batley's
Run Road with David Wedlund;
Columbus, as ellangallst. The
revival runs through Sunday and
services start at 7 p.m. nlghlly.
Emmett Rawson, pastor, Invites
the public: .
·

STAINS .

BREAKFAST"'"'""'"" S3.99 LUNCH &amp; DINNER .... S4.99 .

.'

.

calendar

CRUSHING

HOUR$: 7:00 A.M :-9;00 p.M.
Hot Food Bar &amp; Full Salad ·Bar
All You Can Eat For Only One Price
Plus Drink (Free· Refills)

Speaker With
15" Woofer

Jbe Dena

.

Community

Guaranteed
Against:
MAmNG

•

I

,.

.

;The Daily Se.
n
tinel
.

.-

FINALLyI THE CARPET
YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING
FORI!
..' ---.

MARTY'S BUFFET HQ~E-C~OKED FOOD

until midway through the sixth
Inning, when he was spelled by
Bucky Spindler.
The Redmen are scheduled to
play at West Virginia State at 2
p.m. Friday, while Marsh11,li (3·0) Is at Eastern Tennessee
State on Saturday.

~Y
.

:

take that te~~m to another level.
They were In the middle of the ·
pack and noW they're challeng- .
lng for first place.
.
"What he's given that team Is
what a guy like MllceBaabwilldo
and there's a couple other guys
we'd like to get Qf .that nature,
too.''

DAIRY DELITE

drop twinbill
;.to Marshall, 7-3, 9-3

: The University of Rio Grande
:baseball team dropped Its season
·opener Wednesday at Stanley L.
·Evans Field as Marshall Unlver·
slty swept a doubleheader on a
series of late jnning runs.
. The Herd posted a 7·3 win in the .
.opening game and slipped past a
·mid-game Rio Grande lead In the
nightcap for a 9-3 victory.
Herb Sharfenaker's RBI on a
base hit early In .the first game
,put Rio Grande on the score·
·board, but a drought ensued for
:the hosts until Jon Gibson's base ·
'hit In the sixth inning allowed
·Sharfenaker and Donnie Becker
:to dash home. Mike Coman had
:two of Rio Grande's total of five
·hits.
; Tufry Gould led' the way for
:Marshall with three of Its 12 hits,
·including · a home run, . while
:David Plepenbrink recorded a
:)iouble and another homer to put
-the Herd ahead. David McA:~nallen ha(! two hits for the hosts,
:who are guided by first-Year
:coach Howard M~!Cann.
. Taking the win on the mound
:was Keith Throckmorton, while
·Mike Voorheis pitched six In·
:n!)lgs for Rio Grande until he was
;i"elleved by Rob Kuhn.
~ The Redmen battled back In
.-the second contest, hokllng a 3·2
;advantage at the top of the sixth
·Inning with the bases loaded by
:Marshall. A crucial home run
;sent the Herd off base and across
·home plate for a three-run lead
:tbe Redmen were unable to
·overcome.
: Rio Grande, which had rout
:hits, first scored after Com11n
·andDarrell Marcum walked,and
:ctbson recorded ·a base hit RBI.
:The hosts' final run came on
·another base hit, courtesy of
;Donnie Becker.
: For the visitors, David Plepen·
·brink posted three hits and a
:home run, John Plepenbrink had
:two hits and a homer and James
·Clark wes two for tliree. The
:Herd had nine hits apd Bill Craig
;was credited with the win. Andy
· Bulach pltcl)ed for Rio Grande

.

Newly Remodeled And
Now Inside Booths

~Redmen

.

'

STORE HOURS
Monday
9:30-8:00
Tueedey-Saturdey
9:30-!J:OO

'·

30°/o OFF

HURRYI
SALE ENDS
MARCH 19, 1990

. .l(lv-~~~~ t .

FUiiill, 'lPPUIIICIS, tvis, PLOOI COVI.-

"24671

DOWidOWI POMDOY, OliO
·'

11 ISW

a..

(

�The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomelov Midci8POI1. Ohio

Jury r~jects suit against tobacco company

Fire·auxiliary project discuSsed .

BOSTON IUPI) -

blrtb Ill b• son.
.
Playground Improvements at cleaa the'meettq room.· .
. Light refreshments were
the Rutland Firemen's Park with
Plans were made for a kitchen
served by . Margaret Edwards.
fuads donated by the Meigs shower oa March 21 and anyoae
Tbe travellq priZe provided by
County Motorcyclls\S were dis· who has anything to give may
cussed dlll'lna a recent meeting call 742-2103 and arrangements . Donna Wllllamlon was won by
Katby Molden.
,
of the Rutland Firemen's Ladles wUI be made to pick up
AIIJ!)IIary at the ball.
contrlbutloas.
. f1aal plans fo~ the project will A donkey basketball game was
..
be"mide at·II· combined lneetlrie planned wtth further announceRejotcl)lg
Life
Chl'lltlan
School
of. tbe auldllary member.- and ment to be made later. Plans
now
has
brochures
and
manuals
firemen, It wa.s reported.
.
were made 'to provide ~ and .
lor the 1990-91 ·school year
A thank you I!Ote was read for . beVerages for firemen after
available.
1\ compltte outline of
the breakfast served to the fires . Upcoming projects and
the
school's
educational profiremen at a recent fire. 10m- activities were discussed wjth
gram,
regui!ltiOJill,
tultlo!l and
berly wmtord·than~ted the group · Joan Stewart asslgnlq special
book
fees
.for
,
ki!ldergarten
, lor flowers sent to her recentlY. A committeeS.
through eighth grade. !II'&amp; ,!Jt·
work session was , se~ up for . A money tree was presented to
eluded
In . the Information.
. March 21 at 6: 30 p.m. to ·sprtq Kimberly Willford on the recent
Anyone Interes ted may o!ltaln a
school brochure and manual by
Wflting ot calling Ute scttool at
333 North Second Ave.; ,,JoAnn
Pangto, ·administrator.
Officers )!(ere elected at the .asked ·tl!e merribers. to g\~ 'h er
Tuesday meeting of Ohio TOPS th 1
be shl
be
570 held at the Carpenters Hallin
e r mem · r P nom ts. ·
At the next meeting the group
Pomeroy·
will honor the four division
'
Elected were Lennie Aleshire, winners. ·
Mike and Tania Nessel road are
leader; Peggy VIning, assistant
·Area RecoiDitton Day will be announcing the birth of a da!lllll'
leader; Suzie Dreybel, secre- · · heldAprll28andallKOPSwlllbe ter, Coree Rae, on Feb. · 27 · at
· tilry; Ola St Clair, assistant· honored. Charms wtll also be on ·. j:;rant Hospital In Columbus. .
secretary; and VIrginia Dean. sale tor $2: ·
.
·
· ·
The Infant weighed eight
pounds and eight ounces. and ·
treasurer.
•
.
It was noted that Peggy Vlnl1tg
was 2llnches long. ,
Lennie Aleshire opened ttte Is 111. A cai'd was read from Pearl
Maternal . grandparents are
meeting wtth prayer and pledge Knapp thanking the club • for
and welcomed one guest. Sbe
d
d
·
h d th of
Tim and Lana Bichsel, Hillsboro.
~ :u~~J~yers on t ~ ea
also sang ·a solo on weight loss.
Paternal · grandparents . are
George
and.· Le!IB Nesselroad,
The montl)ly treasurer's re'
Tbe best loser was Carol Ault
Pomeroy.
,
port was given by Vlrglnll!- Dean · and the runner up was Kathy
Great grandmother Is Kathryn
and monthly flower fun!i .was McDaniel. The fruit basket and
Bichsel. Great grandfather Is
collected.
surprise gl1t were won by Bryllda
·
Doris Bailey, weight recorder. Faulk.
~n Schrlener,

Brochures. ready· ·

mRs meeting held, .

Nesselroad birth

""II

THE CQOIUES ARE HERE! - Joyce Sisson,
Melp County cookl~ chalrmaa ovenees the
unloadlnl of 1,322 cases of Girl Scout Cookies
dellvere4 to her home Ia Syracuse Wl!daesday
afternoon. The cookies were stacked In the Sisson
carage
unW cookie chalrmea from •the .various
.

troops could pick them up. This week scouts
begin the delivery ol the 15,86&amp;.boxes of cookies ·
ordered by Melp residents. Profits from the
annual ·sale eo toward 841vanclng scout1n1
procrams In the. Black Diamond Girl Scout
Council wltb .a porlion staying In the local troop
treasury for special projects.

Harrisonville tlappenings
Mt. and Mrs. Ro)lnle Wl)t·and

sons, Brad an\) Bart, Lancas te.r;
Mrs. Shirley Stanley .and son,
Mark. Gary, James and John,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Orville
Phillips.
Thirty eight persons. had their
blood pressure checked at the
February blood pressure· clinic
sponsored by the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens. The nex t' clinic
will be held Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs . Duane Stanley,

'

~-

jr)n;;;;;!/i;ilf//l!n 111 1t!utr; ./{jJJ ;j/)j'

...

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~ole urged to intercede in Greyhound strike

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Christopher R. Roush, a fifth Haynes, Laurie Blank~mshlpl MI.!
grader at Sallsb\lry Elementary. chael Leifheit, fourth grade; ~1m 1
has moved one step closer ·to Peavley, Chris Roush, filth
wtnnlng a $25,000collegescholar- grade; Dorothy Leifheit and
ship from National Geographic Travis Curtis, sixth grade.
The class winners ·took a
Society In the N~tional Geography Bee.
written test to · determine the
The school level bee. at which overall winner. Cbrls Roush, son
students answered oral questlqns of Mr. and Mrs. Randy Roush,
on geography, was the first round . came In first with Travlc Curtis,
In the second annual bee that Is son of Albert Curtis, placing
being sponsored by · National second.
Prizes were awarded to the
Geographic World, the Society's
magazine for chlldre~. Amtrak, first and second place wtnners.
and Kudos snack. .
Chris Roush then took a written
1
Class . winners .were . Myca exam which was mailed to the
·s tate and up to 100 of the top
scorers In each state w111 , 6e
eligible to compete In their state
Dennis L. Hockman. has been bee on March 30.
promoted to regional manager
· with tbe A,L
Williams
Organization.
,
•,
' '
Hockman was 'In retail man. Mindy Patterson was the: SailsageiJlenl within the grocery
bury Elementary spelUng bee
Industry before joining · A.L.
winner.
Sbe Ia the daughter of
WJUtams In July of 19811. He and
Bobby Pattar~on.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
bls family, Terl, Dawn, and
Runner
up
wu Rana ,.uatls,
Aal'on live In Middleport, where
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
his office Is lo.Cated at 657 High
Lan4aker.
· ·
Street. '·
Mlndl:y ud Rana are sixth
A.t.. WJUtams, based In Dugra4e atu11111ts of Ed Bartela. ·
luth, Ga. Is an International
The unual spelUne bee w111 be
marketing organization special.
h
eld
Monday at SouUtern High
Izing In the sale of term InsuSchool
at 7 p.m. Tbe Jlllbllc II
rance and other fllllinclal proInvited
to
attend.
ducts and service.

Hockman promoted

'Bee winner

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• Coolers
• Radar Detectors
• •
• Quality Lu.xury Price: We've Got Them Alii I

• ~ndard Vans
• ColorTVs

Roush step closer
to geography pr ~ ·I ·

PtJindexter jury ··selected; North first witness
was .'·-

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Tile lawyer representing tbe Kotler, Eric Nissen, said he was . warned nicotine Is as addictive
tobacco company, Andrew Lane, surprised by tbe verdict and
as heroin and cocalae.
liWildt aeata.t a . ctearette
urged jurors, to "resist any Insisted George Kotler was lgnorKotler's wife said her husband
lll8ker abe blamed for the death
temptation to read history ant of the daneers of cigarettes
regularly smoked while watchof ber lweband 1111ld she expects ' backwards."
when be began smoking In 1942 at
lng sports on televlsloa and
other widows to "come foJWard
Lane said ·George Kotler was the age of 11.
reading several newspapers
and challenge the tobacco
"It's just more oflhe same- a
each day . Sbe gave an emotional
not addicted to niCOtine and could
glanta."
have quit "when the4nformatlon tale of power and money. These account of her husband's final
A. U.S. District Court Jury was known. .. • .George Kotler . are the kililq fields of America days, .hooked to an oxygen· tank
deliberated less than two hours
paid not the ·slightest bit of .. . To IIY George Kotler knew as
and so weak that It hurt him to.
Wednesday before, rejecting
have tbe family cat climb onto
atteilllon until be was ready." · mueh as American Tobacco Is
·Joanne Kotler's claims that the
his lap.
.
But Kotler said the jury's wrong," Nissen said.
American 'l:obacco. Co. was decision would not weaken her
Nissen said be was confident a
But she also admitted during
liable for ber husband George's ·resolve.
dltferent jury In another trial cross examination that she had
1986 death from jung cancer at
"I still believe In tbe case we would eventually rule In favor of never .objected to her husband's
the age of 55.
.brought," she said . . "1 still , a ptalntlfl in the fulllre.
smoking - except for asking
. While l!l'llOklng ·has been subbelieve that there will be other:, ' Nls~~enand.lngebadso\lght"at him noftosmoke In bedrooms
ject to more government regulawidows w~to must come forward· leut a few mllUon dollars" In , :- until ntDe years alter the
tion lately, no plaintiff has yet
and challenge the tobacco giants. damages aeaiDSt American 'To- .. surgeon general's first warning
successfully sued a tobacco ~in­
~ ·
I only hope that' future genera- bacco, tirgulilg the .. company In 1966.
pany In federal court for damtionswlllnothavetosul!erasmy· failed to publicly disclose lnforThe jury began Its deilberaages due to a cancer death.
husband did.
mation available about the carci- lions at 2 p.m. Wedrlesday and
&gt; · "In spite of today's decision, I
nogenlc ef:tecls of cigarettes returned with Its · verdict less
spll feel that .my husband's
. "I'm still ~ng to absorb ·~efore Congress began requiring . than two hours later. , ·
generation of smokers was coneverything. We're speaking for a · a warning label In 1966.
Only four previous cases of
sciously nilsled about tbe
lot of good people - .a lot of gciod .·. Lawyers for tlie tobacco com- smokers sulng 'tobacco compan·
dugers of smoking, " Kotler . people we've lost," she sa1d.
pany maintained that Kotler on ·les have gone to federal' court. ·
said.
Her attoraey, Garry Inge, told several occasions trJed to quit
In one of the cases, a federl!,l
Kotler claimed her husband
the eight-member jury during smoking, but always returned to
jury In New Jersey two years ago
developed · cancer 'because for
closing arguments Wednesday . the habit.
ordered a tobaeco company,
more than two decades he that American Tobacco and · During the ttial, Kotler 's lawy- · Ligget( Group Inc., .iO. P.ay
s.moked · the non-filtered Pall other manufacturers "exiJen- · ers argued that George Kotler $4Q!l,OOO · to Antonio Cipollone.
M11ll cigarettes' made by Ameri- mented on an eatlre generation bad tried to quit sinokjng after . whostl wife, Rose, died of lung
cim Tobacco, · a . subsidiary of ·of Americans" .by refusing to receiving a warning from a
cancer In· ·1984 at age 58 a!t~r
American Brands Inc. He started voluntarily disclose health risks . doctor In 1975, but could nQt. As smoking cl!:arettes for 42 years.
smoking cigarettes hi 1942 and prior to a 1964 . U.S. surgeon part· of their strategy, they B\11 a new trial was ot&lt;iered In
general's I:&amp;POrt cataloging the brought to tbe stsnd one of the - 't hat• case earlier this . year
dl~ not stop until he was dlag·
nosed as having lung cancer in
health risks of smoking.
editors. of the surgeon ·general's bec~use of legal errors by the
1984.
Another lawyer representing landmark 1988 report that
trial court.
•

.WASHINGTON (U}&gt;I) - A
"finding" when the · scandal
DurlngNorth's1989trlal,assotrial and todlscussthecasewith
jury has been seated for the · became public. b~ause It would elate "special prosecutor John · no one.
Iran-Contra ti1al'"of Conner mi.be poUtlcally embarrassing to . Keker accused him of'lylng a )lout
The.Jurors are a diverse group
tiona! · &amp;ecurlt:\!' 'advll'er . John
former President · Ronald . a cash box. North ' said ·It
two men serVed in 'tlie Arrriy
Poindexter, I!Rd the · jud~e In the ·.: Reagan.
bolted to his 'closet floor and he · during VIetnam, two .men ·. are
case has' ruleq thlit ' prosecutors
Poindexter also seeks to limit emptied his pocket change Into
pursuing higher education, one
c~ ·~p.ll Oliver Norlbas !he first
North's testimony about a brief- the box every. night.
woman reads Gothic romance
..
lng of key coilgressmen that ·
It eventually amounted to
novels "to escape" and another
wltljess
. .Openingsll!fements;.;ereset to withheld critical facts about $15,000, including an .' Insurance
woman ask~d the judge If slie
~n Tliursday In U.S. 'Disb'lct
covert aid to the U.S.-backed settlement, North testified at the
could read during the trlaj. She
COlli'! · after· which · No~th was · Contra ,rebels llJ l)licaragua.' The .time.
was lold she could not.
.
scbedllled to take the • stand.
meeting. Is Important because
North said at ·his trial that he
Poindexter was Reagan's na-·
There · were .Indications Nor!h' s
Poindexter Is accused of ob- dipped Into the $15,00o from the
Ilona! Security adviser and
te5dinony would .last' several
structlng the congressional In- cash box to buy a car and a horse . North's boss on the National
days. · .
vestlgatlon of the scandal.
for his daughter, a notion that
Security Council staff.
· .Seyel'ai .'hours before the jury
Greene said he would rule on Keker r idiculed, arguing the
He faces five felony charges, :
wa, empaneled '!ly U.S. Dlsb'ict those Issues Thursday .
money came from Pf?flts out of . Including accusations he ob, .
JudgeHarold,GreeneonWedhesThe legal battle Involves· a · secret arm sales to·Iran. ·
structed congresslonallnqulrl~s
· day, Greene revealed that Poln- dispute • over whether North ' s ·· · North was convicted of oband made fal~· statements to
deXter's lawyers had filed two knowledge on ibese key matters structlng · a· congressional InCongress stemming .from its ··
~aJ,~ motions Involving. North . . comes from Poindexter's testlniqulry, destroying government
lnvestlgatln of the Iran-Contra
!he gung-ho Marine lieutenant · ony to Congress In the summer of documents and accepting an
affair.
colonel: convfcted
three 1987 - given under a grant of
Illegal gilt. a security' fence for
The scandal, which marred.
cbafl!es In the Ir!ln' Contra • Immunity, meaning It cannot be · his home. He has appealed the
Reagan's second term, Involved .
sc,alldal. · ·
.
used ag111nst him at this trial.
conviction.
'lte secret sale of weapons to Iran
: :rhe .ft:r st, . whlch .Greene de· Poindexter's lawyer, Richard
Yet except for !lie fence, North
In an effort to win freedom Cor
nled, asked that Nortli not be Beckler, filed th'e motions under was acquitted on other· charges
U.S. hostages In Lebaj)on and the
allow~ to testify against Poln- ' seal and objected to their public · he personally profited from his
diversion of money from · the
deilter becau5e North allegedly release. 'But Greene, reacting to Iran-Contra dealings, and he bas
weapons sal!!&amp; to aid the Contril_
co~ltted ' perjury during his .. media protests citing freedom of · not - n chat:aed with IYI_ng ·· rebels In Nicaragua.' Congrea•
owtt'lru·Cc!lltra ease. ,.
. the press, ordered the motions durjng his trial.
c
had ba!Jl\ed such military assist•.
The second sought to limit unsealed.
..
It took only three days to seat
ance at the time.
·
North's testimony about the
In the effort to block North's the jury of seven worn en and flv,e .. Polpdexter, 53, Is. the highest, November 1986 ·destructlon of a testimony, Poindexter's lawyer
men, compared with the two • ·ranking administration official
secret ~985 pre,!'l.dentlal author!· argued that "the.government"W!!eks It took to select the panel
Indicted in the scandal. He
zatlon explicitly describing the In this case the special Iran- for North's Iran-Contra trlallast
reslgn~d bls,Whlte House postln
Iran Initiative as an arms-for- Contra prosecutors - had said
year. ·
November 1986 when the scandal
hostages deal.
North's testimony In his own
Before sending the jurors . was exposed, aild later . retired
:· Poindexter told Congress that defense was "In some respects
home, Greene warned them to
fromtheNavyattheranko!rear
he ripped up the presidential unreliable." .
·
avoid all press accounts of the. admiral.

ONLY AT
TOM 'P.. EDEN'S

Denny re-enlists
· Air Force Senior Airman Ro- and two childreJJ, Brittany and
. nald B. Denny has re-enljsted for Andrew live In Biloxi, Miss .
four years In the U .~. Air Force. where Denny Is stationed at .
Denny is a cable and' antenna . Keesler Air Foroce Base.
systems Installation mainteHe Is a 1984 graduate of Meig~
nance specialist with the 1~9th High School and Is the son of Earl
Engineering Installation and Betty L. Denny. ana grand·
Squadron.
son of L1111an Demosky, all of
He joined· the military on Oct. Middleport.
. 31, 1985, He. and his wife. Bonnie,

..

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local, and Mr. and Mrs. Williams
·. Scott, Nelsonville, vlSited .a day,
with Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Townsend, · Westerville. ·Mrs.
Townsend had returned from St.
Annis Hospital In Westervllle:and
in December from Cleveland ·
Clinic.
·
Mr. and Mrs. 'non Cotterfn
visited her brother, Waiter
, Birchfield, In a Beckley, W.va.
.hospital.

A woman

wl)q kilt her multlmllllon-doUar

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·Final Safan Oafs!

1989 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

1989 BUICK

By VALERIE KUKLENSKI
A memorial was ·held for . hound was in 1983 and lasted 48
a year. of asking for w;ge hikes
United Press International
thai could be financed only
Waterhouse, 59, Wednesday. days. Greyhound was sold In 1987
A number of senators have
wllh nearly 5{)0 mourners- half . to a group of Dallas-based . through ll" .fare Increase. Each
urged Labor Secretary Elizabeth · of them striking drivers wearing Investors headed by Fred G. · side has accused the ·other of
Dole to Intercede in the contract
their uniforms and black arm, Currey.
dlstorling its positions. ·
dispute ~tweep striking Greybands - marching two miles In · Late last ' year Greyhound
The letter to Dole was signed
hound bus drivers and the owners
Redding. · Drivers ,.across the offered the union a new contract
by Sens. Howard Metzenbaum,
of the nation's largest Intercity . nation observed five mlnute.s oL that Included what the company
D-Ohio. Tom · Harkhi, D-lowa,
'
bus line:
silence in memory or · described as a 6.9 percent InFrank Lautenberg, D·N.J ., Alan
."We urge you to take an active
Cranston, D·Callf. , JJJhn Heinz,
Waterhouse.
crease- In wages and benefits in
rqle In seeking to resolve this
R-Penn., AIConse D'Amato, R·
the first year or the three-year
dispute on an expedited basis,"
N.,Y., Edward Kennedy, DGreyhound's chief negotiator, contract. The union rejected that
tbe.group of 11 senators said In a
Mass.,
Brock Adams. D-Wash .,
offer
but
has
refused
to
disclose
Anthony P. Lannle, . said the
letter to Dille, the nation's top
Paul
Simon
D-Ill., ·Jay Rockeits
demands.
company has no.more t(}olfer,the
transportation official. "Your
D-W.Va.
, arid James Jeffeller
,
The company has accused .
union and the . Amalgamated
timely lnter.ventlon 'could avert
fords,
R·VI.
Council of Greyho\111~ Unions drivers, who now average$24,700
major disruptions of Interstate 'should understand that' the comCOIJlmerce' ·thai threaten the
pany has !ll~ady ''offered e...&amp;ry
safety of the traveling public."
single red cent. that lt' cl!n afford·
.The letter was sent to Dole as
topay."
·
..
Greyhound said It doubts resumIng talks with the union repres"No new talks .. . are scheduled
. entlng striking drivers would
because we hilve not received a
prove fruitful while the drivers
req ues I Cor talks that would be
refuse to budge on their
19" COLOR
frultfu I at this time, given the
demands.
present attitude of the council,"
The strike began March 2,
Lannle said.
25"
when many of Greyhound's 9,000
Lannle said union president
union drivers. baggage handlers,
CONSOLE
Edward Strait requested an
mechanics, • ticket agents and '"off· the-record " meeting · with
reservation clerks wall!.ed orr the company negotlator.s, but Strait
job after flye days of Intense. had no new pr.oposals to make.
WIITf
talks lri fb,oenlx failed.to yield a
WESTINGHOUSE
WIITE·
.new three- :Year contract.
'"Instead, he. eng~ged In a
· WASHER &amp;
. Greyhound carried 22 million rambling &lt;;onversation that was
WEmNGHOUSE
pa~;senger~ last year, and Is
nothing more than a rehash of
DRYER
REFRIGERATOR
partlculary cr·uclal to low- Issues discussed at the negotlal·
Income travelers wllo live . In lng table and a repeated demand
·s maller communities.
GAS 0!'
that the company raise Its wage
:'The lmportanc.e. of this ser· for drivers," Lannle said.
RECTRIC
vice c&lt;~nnot be overestimated,''
Greyhound, based In Dallas,
RECUNERS
EARLY
RANGE
!lie senators said, noting that the has obtained court orders In at
bus line Is also.a majot carrier of least 11 cities, Including Los
AMEIIKAN
emergency medical supplies Angeles, Chicago and Phlladel·
SOFA or
throughout the country.
phla, limiting the activities of
.
. I
.
SLEEPER
•
pickets at terminals and bus
,yards.
:r~~ co~.vany responljed to ,the
crisis by lllrfng replacement
The last strike against Greydrivers, but the senators Joined
the union In questioning "the
3PC. SET
safety of this makeshift
a..t.,.Uen :
UV. ROOM
approach." .
'
''There are serlo~. queatlo~
TAILES
abOut the training and previous
EA. K. IIIS-IIATCH
driving records of th-.ereplacemltnt drivers," they wrote, citing
an accident last, weekend In
. Redding, Calif,~ where a striking
etpployee, ·Robert , Waterhouse,
.IIILIPOIII
Hl-!611
was struck and killed by a bus
·---426·1111
driven by !I replacement driver.

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07

INGELS FUIIDUI &amp; JEWILIY

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�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

ThUrsday, MII'Ch i, 1810

·. Pomeroy-Midclaport; Ohio

Selfish grandma denying you a simple pleasure
. .
Delli' Aoa Landen: I was very

·.

being extremely selfish by denying
you the pleasure of doing something
nice fQr her.
Buy the plane ticket and the ticket
to the Boston P~. Give them to her,
along with this column, and tell her 10
drop me a postcard from Boston.
Dear AnnLaaders:IjUSiretumed
·from the hospital, where! visiled two
friends .who were in a bad accident.
Thank God !hey will both recover,
but it's gOing to be a long time before
they can resume normal living.
I just remembered something that I
· clipped 9Ut of.your column a while
back. I reread it a few minutes ago.
Please" .Ann, run it again. It might
save me a few more trips to the hos:pital. •• MR. X. IN PETOSKEY,

close to my grandmother in my
younger years. She was a major in·
fluence in my life, motivated me rp
go to college, and helped me financially when she was able.
Grandma is quile old now, but she
'is still in fairly good health and active. That dear woman lives on such
a small pension, I don't know how
she makes it.
My problem is that Grandma refuses to take anything from me, not
money, not a plane ticket to visit, not
even a binhday present I have given
up trying to pay her heating biUs or
buy her groceries. She is fiercely
independent, and I reSpect that
Her fondest wish is to hear the
Boston Pops Orchestra in person. She MICH.
is saving pennies for it and refuses to
DEAR PET: Thanks for asking.
let me help. I don'tlmow what to do. Here it is. With pleasure. ·
·
I am in a position to give her anything A Word To The Wise
slle wants or needs without depriving
Ifeveryonewhodrivesacarwould
myself or my family. MY wife says lie a month in bed,
this is Grandma's way of keeping me
With broken bonesandstitched·up
a child, so I will continue to need her. wounds, ,
·
It would give meso much pleasure
And fraCtures of the head.
to be able to give something back to
And there endure the agonies that
this woman who )las sacrificed so many people do,
· .
.
much for me. Any ideas? •• FRUSThey'd never need preach safeiy
TRATED IN OMAHA
any more to me or you.
DEAR OMAHA: . I admire
If everyone could stand ~side the
Gr.incjma's independence, but what bed of some close friend and
she doesn't understand is that she is
Hear the doctor say "No hope" just

before the end,
.
And see him there unconscious,
never.knowing what took place,
The law and rules ofuaffic I'm sure
we'd all embiace. ·
"
. If everyone could meet the wife
and childreh left behind,
And Slep into the darkened home
where once the sunlight shined,
•.

And look. upon. the vacan1 chair.,
A great crusade f.or safety would
where Da4dy used to sit,
suddenly advance.
I'm sure some reckless drivers
Is life passing you by? Want to
would be forced to think a bit.
improve ydur social skills? Write for
If everyone who takes the wheel AM Ltllukrs' ntw booklet, "How to
would say a little prayer,
Makt Friends and Stop Being
And keep in mind th'Ose in the car Lonely.· Sendaseif-addressed.long,
depending on his care,
busiMss-size envelope and a check
And make a vow and pledge him· or money ordtr for $4.15 (this inself to never take a chance,
. eludes postage and handling) to :

People in the · n-~s'By WILUAM c. TROTT &gt; .
United Pres• Jnternatioaal · ;
.
WILLIE AND THE TIRE FIRE: WIBle Nelaon has a new ' ·
cause - . the ~lctlms of a tire fire In canada. ,Nelson has five ,
sh,ows scheduled this month In Qnl!lflo· anil a p()r.tton of the
p~eeds from them will go towarjl the envl~onlneni,ai relief
fund. set up to help residents of the rural community of
HagersviUe recover fro"" a fire fhat burned .12 mUJion tires over
a three-week period. Nelson, who Is touring with Rielly Van
' Shelton and George Fox, a Canadian country star and cattle
l rancher, has helped raise millions of dollars for farmers with
the Farm Aid concerts. " f;armtng plays a big part In the
economy of the area and when Wlllle Nelson and the other
ar-tists were rriade aware of the sltuallonthey were very anxious
to help.'' said concert promoter Joe Oweu. .
'
ITALIANS' NIGHT OUT: Two of the country's most famous
Italian-Americans - Lee lacocca and FJ:U~k Sinatra- were at
the White House Tuesday night for the state dinner In honor of
· Italian Prime Minister GluUo Andreotti. · The ' Chrysler
chairman was With his fiancee, DarrtenEarle, a[1dSlnatra, who
was Identified .on the offlc.lal guest list as "Francis Albert
Sinatra, president, Sinatra Enterprises," escorted . his Wife,
Barbara. Also attending were Elliabetb Taylor, who was In ·
·. Washington to campaign for AIDS research, and Edward. J.
deBartolo Jr., owner of the Super Bowl champion San Francisco
49ers.
MCFERRIN LEADS THE ORCHESTRA: Bobby McFerriJI
usually makes his own sound eHects but on Sunday he will have
the San Francisco Symphony to back him up. The
Grammy·wlnnlng singer will conduct Beethoven's Symphony
·. No. 7 and also will perform hli "headTales," a composition for
voice arid cello, with the celebrated cellist Yc.-Yo Ma. The
program also features McFerrin' s new 10·voice a cappella
ensemble, Volcestra·.
.·
. .
' HIGH COST ·OF ENBRTAINMENT: The age of tile $100
Broadway ticket Is coming. British showman Cameron
·Mackintosh plsns to charge that much for front mezzanine seats
and $60 for orchestra seats when he br lngs his hit London
musical, " Miss Saigon," 't o the Broadway Theater In March
1991. Mackintosh says the high price Is needed because 11 will
· cost a record $10 mUUon to redesign the show for Broadway. It
, also wlll allow the show to gross $750,000 a week with a weekly
operating profit of $250,000 and pay oU Its Investors In 35 to 40
weeks. The current top ~eat price on Broadway iJ $60 for
"Jerome Robbins' Broadway." "Miss 5atgon" was Written by
the same team that created "Les Mlserab[es." The comPoser Is
CJ•de-Miehel 8cbollbeq and the tyl'lclsf .Is Alain Boub!O,
WOJ;'klng with Tony·awlll'd winning ,Mnerlcan •lYricist Richard
·
· ,
Maltby Jr.
GLIIIIPSE8: Guitarist 81evle Ray Vauatwn and his brother ,
ll!llmle Vaughan of the Fa...llu 'l'!t•nclerblrdl are finally
aolng to make an album tQgether. They eo I,DIQ the allldto next
week with NUl ~ N producer. The llrOthera waat the
album to be something different so no memben of- the
1bunderblrds or Stevie Ray's baud, Doallle TrOIIIIIe, will be on
the record ... Someone asked divorce laW)'Il' llanlllllholl-.
. who he he tho~~~rht would win 'the batfle oCtile.,_,., '1 won't
predict who' a aolni !o win," Mltchellll! 881d, "but J'U predict
no won't lo11e- the lawywera" ... Oountry-pop llnpr -.T.
Qll.. Will appear on u epllode of tbe TV,Western aertea
.''Patldlae" u a woman oblesled with ftncllng the Army
~esert.er who ldlled her - ·

(

t

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'

Caring for

.....

c-.. s,........

.,

Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box.
11562, Chicago ,Ill. 60611-0562.'(/n
Canada, send SS.OS.)

i

8 A.M. TIL ·8 P.M.
ONLY!
..,.

r

DOORS OPEN PROMPTLY
I

AT 8 A.M.

The Daily Surtlnoll Pag1 11

.

cr~ck

babies may cost bUlions-

another Slli billion, t he report
and Philadelphia .
WASHINGTON (UPI) To
provide
hospital
delivery
suggests
.
. .Health and Human Services
and
perinatal
care
and
foster
50 percent to 75 percent .
About
· Deparlment officials estimated
II will coat S5 billion aanualty to care tbrOUih age 5 for the 8,974 of crack babies go home wlt)l a
bablet would cos I $500 mUiton,
mother or relative, usually a
provide the 100,000 " crack ba·
tile report said. Another S1.5 maternal grandmother and
bles" born each year with
billion would have to be spent to
hardly ever a father , the study
hOIIpltal lei'VIces and foster care
provide t~ children with the
said. Offtclals estimate 30 per·
through age· 5.
cent to 50 percent of cr ack babies
A' report released by llHS developmental, educational and
are put Into foster care or ,other
Inspector General Richard Kus- addltloaal health services tb~y
need before age 5, It said. .
.serow suggested Wednesday that
settings . Hardly any cr ack ba·
Kusaerow said It could be
bles are adopted.
.
the cost could reach $20 billion a
projected that the annual cost of
year If au babies exposed to
The siudy said the a verage
providing hospital and f!lster
cocaine In the womb were given
crack mother Is In her 20s or 30s
care for all U.S. crack babies
the th care they need after
and has between two and four
·
would
be
about
S5
bllllon.
The
·
other children.
· leaving the hospital and the help
..
other
ser~ces
would
accoun!
for
neceilsary to. prepare them for
school.
,
The cost of caring for the
babies af~r age 5 "will also be
WESTMll.TON, Ohio (UPI)truck, DickerSon said. 1be semi
substantial," the study said. It
AgrlndlngcrasheariyThursday
driver, Joseph Desloover, 58, of.
quoted 'one otllclal as saying,
Walkerton, Ind., was taken by
between a pickup truck and a
.. " Even It we stopped crack use
lr!lctor-trallerrigleftfourpeople · heUcopter to Miami Valley Hos·
right now , we would still be dead.
pltal In Dayton, where he wa.s In
dealing with Its effects In some
Lt. Dan Dickerson of the Ohio
serious condition, a spokeswP:
way for the next 50 to 75 years. Highway Patrol said the occu·
man said.
The ramifications are forever . ...
pants of the pickup truck, two
The accident occurred abOut l
It's a horrible cycle! •'
men,and two women, werekllled
a.m. Just east of West Milton. ·a
The report assessed the Impact
when their vehicle failed to yield
few miles .from where .a chain
of crack.babies on child welfare
at a stop slgnatlddlngs Road and
reaction pileup kllled nine people
systems In 12·cttles and found tlie Ohio 571 and was struck broad·: and Injured 47 In a blinding
extent of the problem actually side by the semi.
snowstorm Feb, 24.
may be 'tmderestimated because
''The crash on the 24th was the
The.names of the victims wer.e
most crack babies Initially apbeing withheld while relatives
most seriOus In thiS area possibly
pear to be healthy .
were notified.
ever, " Dickerson said, :'but the.
In cases · of Identified crack
multiple fatality crash, unfortu The pickup was not equipped
babies, overburdened welfare with seat belts and atleast two of
nately, those are not that
systems "are often unable to the victims were thrown from the
unusual. "
meet their needs" and hospitals
·are beginning to perform welfare
functions In some cities, said the
study titled "Crack Babies."
Federal officials estimate
100,000 babies are bOrn each year
after being exposed to cocaine
used by their mothers. The study
did ndt distinguish between
crack, the smokable coca(ne
derivative, and other forms of
the drug.
·· Family Practice
The report said crack babies
are four times more likely to be
born· premature with low birth·
weights - under 5.5 pounds and 18 percent of them require
Monday, Tuesday,, Thursday and Friday
expensive Intensive care, the
9 a.m. · 5 p.m .
report said.
After leaving the hospital,
Wednesday "
local officials said many crack
9 a.m.- - Noon
babies need special medical help ·
as well as attention for develop·
mental, neurological and emoAppointments and Walk-ins Welcome
tional problems that often do not
begin appearing until age 2 or 3.
Of the cities studied, eight Office Staff:
Miami, Phoenix, Chicago, New
York, Los Angeles, San FranLisa Thorne, LPN
cisco, Tacoma, Wash., and Fort
Wayne, . Ind. - had records on
Gail Hoveatter
crack babies, reporting 8,974 In
1989. The report said that nUmber
Linda Trent
•
1was consistent with the estimate
of 100,000 nationwide.
138 Main St., New Haven, WV
(304) 882-3134
The other four cities studied
are 'the District of Columbia,
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center
Newark, N.J :, Oakland, Caiif.,

Four dead in Miami County crash

FRIDAY,
MARCH· 9

don't llke shots anyway," Echols
said . .
-B11t sl\e and Hampton accepted
the Injections. Inhibited about
baring her posterior', Ecliols said
shet offered only enough bare
bottom to give the man a target.
Abo~¢ two weeks later, he
returned and convinced clerk
Elaine McCommls • he was a
physlclap's nurse's assistant.
She, too, accepted the Injections.
Proctor was placed on three
years probation without a finding
of gull! in 1987 for slmllar
charges.
. Gov'er.nor chooses non-luxury car
HELENA, Mont. (UP!) Trying to put Into practice his
born-agalri preaching of no,fr.llls
government, Gov. Sfan Stephens
has traded in his controversial
1989 Lincoln Town Car for a 1990
Ford Ta!lrus. .
Leasing the new four·door.
mid-size ~dan· wtll cost $2,400 a
year, less than half the cost of
leasing the Llncolri, spokesman
VIctor Bjornberg said TueSday.
The smaller car also will get
. better gas mUeage.
According to administration,
projections, 'Montana faces a
· $1QO mUllon deficit, .and the car
sWitch wur show that the second·
year Republican chief executive
can cut his expenses, Stephens
, aide and .driver Don Ramage
said.

Ann
Landers
. ANN
......LANDUI
......._ _.
,......s,

12 H'OURS
·oNLY!

Quirks in the news
Phony doctor pll8bes B-12
BARTOW, Fla. (UPI) - A
man has · bei!n arrested for
aUegedly posing as a doctor,
' . asking female clerks ata 'conven·
Ience store to b~ nd over and
giving · them vitamin B'12
· Injections.
·
The shots were given to three
clerl!s in a back · office of the
Farm Store In Lakeland where
they worked, according ·to an
arrest affidavit flied by t.he State
Attorney's Office.
: Hurtls Lamar Proctor, 37, was
charged Tuesday with two counts
of practicing medicine without a
Ucense and one count of vt.olati.ng
the nurse.' s practice act.
Prtlctor visited the store Feb.
15 and told the first two clerks he
· was a doctor. The Lakeland man
· convinced them that they looked
· llstless and needed Injections of
: vitamin B·12.
; ' 'We felt like Idiots," one of the
·.clerks, Rachel M. EcholS, said
: after realizing they had been
: duped. . ' 'It could' ve been
· anything. "
; He told . manager Sandra
· Hampton that EcholS, wjlowasat
: the front counter jlolng Pl!IJer·
: work, looked tired and stres~d ,'
Echols !!Bid. ·The' suspect ll,sked
whether, either. woman took vi·
tal1)1ns, and then sugges.ted the
shot$, she·said.
·
"I wasn't so sure about \(,.I

Pomeloy- Mldclaport. Ohio

,

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/

Dr. Daniel .
R. Trent

LANDMARK - The Blue Moon Tavern In
Seatile•s Unlverstly District will have Its fate
· : decided by the Landmarks Preservation Board

whether,or not to proclaim lbe taverna landmark, .
thus protecting It from being torn down for
.redevelop01ent. (tnPI)

~Board · votes

agaipst making ~·
..
~ tavern a cultural landmark
BEIGE . SOFA &amp; CHAIR Coloniai ••• ;~ .............................. REG. $1499.95
OAK FINISH CORNER HUTCH ..................................... REG. S899.95
KING SIZE MAnRESS &amp; FOUNDATION ................. REG. S899.95
PINE FINISH WALL UNIT ............................................. REG. S299.95
OAK FINISH ·TV /VCR CABINET .................................. REli. S54f,95
BEIGE SECTIONAL w/INCLINERS............................ lEG. S1799.95
30" PINE BAR STOOLS................................................ REG. S199.95
DINETTE
TABLE, 4 CHAIRS;.........:............................
.
. ~. REG. S499.95
.
.WING .BACK B~UE RECLINER ................................~..., lEG. 11099.95
RD •.TABLE,, 4 BROWN VINYL SWIVEL CHAIRS ... lEG. S599.95
BLUE QUEEN SLEEP SOFA ......................................... IEG. S1099.95
KING SIZE RECLINER w/LUMBAR .......................... lEG. slo99.95
QUEEN SIZE MATTIESS FOUNDATION ................:.. _.EG. $659.95
· OAK FINISH WALL UNIT .......................................:...... REG. i199.95
MAUIVE ROCKER RECLINER ...........,..:.:........................ IEG. •3.99.95
CHERRY FINISH TV /VCR CABINET-......................... REG •.•599.95
•. CHAIR &amp; onoMAN Beigi/Biue ..............;.............................. S79~~95
GREY &amp; BLACK SO.FA &amp; CHAIR ......................~.......... REG. S999.95
OAK TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS .............:.............................. REG. $2599,95
OAK HALL TREE w/MIRROR ....................................... REG: S449.95
~AK CURIO .•.. ~ ....:.,..................................................... ~ ..•.. REG. $749.95
RUST SWIVEL ROCKER RECUNER .........................'.... REG. 1399.95
SLEEP SOFA QuHn, Whifl w!Pastlls............................ tEG. 51199.95
SOLID CHERRY NIGHT TABLE .................................... lEG. 1278.00
FLEXSTEEL LOVESEAT Blla• &amp; Gr•n .......................... lEG. sn99.95
.OD.DS &amp; ENDS TABLES Oak, Chmy, Glan, Brass ..............................
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•

SEATTLE (UPI) -Landmark
status was denied for the Blue
. Moon Tavern, where prize·
. winning writers and countercul·
· turlsts gulped beer between
,,~gumen~ and scribbled !P'.Bfllll '
In Sariskrlt, making It vulnerable
. ; tO the wrecking ball.
,
. The owners of the fumy beer
· joint have four more years on .a
~ five· year lease at the busy corner
. on the edge of Seattle's Unlverslty District, but the ruling
: Wednesday . by the Landmarks
· Rreservatlon ·Board .means It
: could be torn down for a luxury
apartment development.
A majority of the 11-member
bo¥d would have had to favor
cultural landmark status for the
BlueMoon,- butthevotewassplit
· 4·4,· with three members absent.
Stl,ll, the tavern Is not do,omed.
Its owners said they have ·other
options to pursue·and nearly four
years to save the building.
The debate over whether the
Blue Moon should . be saved has
become a · cultural' face·off between supporters who see the .
tavern as a crucible of lntellec·
tual, artistic and political crea·
tlvlty and detractors who view It
. as a smelly !len of derelicts who
· should live on In legend only.
. Cries of "Save the Blue Moon''
have been rolling In from unex·
' peeled quarters ever since the
. , jeopardy of the tavern 's future
• became public months ago.
New Yorker columnist 'Calvin
TrUlln sent pleas for preserva·
· tlon, So did, beat poet Lawrence
, Ferllnghetti. whose work blazed
a trali fora ge11eratlonofwriters.
Ferllnghetll wrote a letter
sayiJig he compo:ied a poem at a
bacli: table ofthe Blue Moon In the
· 1950s . .His friend, b~at Icon Allen
· Ginsberg, also was a patron. '
StU!, there a,re those who clatni
the tavern's reputation Is over·
nitect. &lt;Jne of 'those Is the Robert
Hannah,' 'who owns the pr.operty.
and ·wants to develop It.
•'I'm angry," he says, " because (the preservationists )
have chosen to fight this out
lhrough the media. For the
landmarks board to cave In to
this media pressure would be a
real detriment to the credlblllty
·they 've buill up. The Blue Moon
·:just Isn't worth it."
: But the list of the famous and
,nearly famous who quaffed
•&lt;!raughts In a blue haze at tire
:mue Moon .Is long, It Includes
·Pulltzer·prlze winning poets
:Theodore Roethke, Carolyn
. :Kizer and Stanley Kunttz and
noVI!llst Tom Robbins, wbo Is
·helping to lead tile tn:eservatloh
:drive. .
Jack Kerouac, who composed
:one of his bookl while working as
:a forest fire watcher In tbe Nqrth
C&amp;lcadel, also 11 said to have
blllied once or twice at the Blue
'Moon, but "that's an unconflrnled atgh!lne," says Walt .
Crowley, il leader of student

dissent at the University of
Washington during the late 1960s..
CrowleY, another leader In 'the
preservationist drive, assembled
facts of the Blue Moon's history,
· to bOlster the group's argument
the bar sjlould be saved · 'tor
reasons of Cl,l!tural slgnlflcance.
"The Blue Moon Is Seattle's
off·center," said Crowley, a
television commentator and
former . staff member of The
Helix, an underground news·
paper during the years of anti·
war tumult at the University of
Washinton. " It Is the counterbal·
ance Intellectually, artlstlcally,
politically and culturally to the :
homogenized, money-driven, es·
tabllshmehtarlan pseudo community. And you need that
counterbalance to keep your
society sane ."
Not so, says The Seattle Times.
which ran an editorial this week
calllng the " The Moon" a place ·
where " would·be Intellectual·
s ... and other assorted hangerson wallow in nostalgia. They
fondly recall thj! days when they .
sat around chugging beer, ·s mok·
ing dope, plotting (evolution and
radiating angst.
"A cultural oasis?' Rubbish .
It's . a dive ," the· newspaper
editorialized. ·
.
·But some of the best of the
citY's' grafltti - $orne of It in .
Greek and Sanskrit- gra~ .th~ :
walls. Bartender Bill Helnlzel·
·man; a playwright, keeps a
dictionary behind the bar to
settle word disputes .
The Blue Moon's nadir came In
the late 1970s, after the counter·
cultural. bloom on ,college cam- .
.

Super Lotto
J•a·c kpot ·,
UDC(aimed

·CLEVELAND (UP!) - For
the first time 1'n five drawings,
the $3 mllllon jackpot went
unclaimed In Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednesday nlglit, boost·
lng' the top prize to at least $6
mUllan for saturday's game.
A lottery spokesman said
Thurdsay none of the tickets sold
for the midweek drawing lis ted
the six winning numbers -15,17,
22, 23, 24, 43.
'However, 86 players picked..
five of .the six numbe~s to win
$1,000 each, and U69 players
selected four of the numbers to
win .$75 apiece.
In the accompanyine Kicker
game, there was one winner of
the $ioo,ooo grand prtze . The
wlnnlne Kicker combination was

puses had faded and a clientele of
heavy clrug users moved ln. The
trio of new owners ~ Three Fools
Inc. -Include a couple of people
who. were bartenders at the Moon
during the 1960s.
' •
· "They cle11ned It up and
brought the Moori back," says
Crowley.
·

+

'

TO
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'

'

Our Mortgage Loan representative can tell you how to get:
•
•
•
•
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•

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Low down payment for qualified buyers
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Fast approval and closing... usually within two weeks
Personal service

For more information, caU MiUie Midkiff at 992-2133 anytime between
8:30-3:00 Monday through Friday and 8:30-12:00 Saturday. In
Rutlaiul caUJoan May at 742-2888; ·

541829.
0..111111 , .....

l'rellclenl Tbomu .Jeffenan WU ID
eaU•t cook and food ICMli'. Be II
credited wltb lntrodueiJIIIce cream,
waffla and 1pa~tl to America, explalnl The Klcll WOrld Allnanac.

'

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"

••'

•

�••

DefeflSe witnesses:· Hazelwood ·
•
did not appear drunk before sailing ·
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!)
- Exxon Valdez skipper Joseph
Hazelwood did not appear lntoxl·
cated before the Alaskan super·
tanker set sail and slammed Into
Bligh Reef, causing the nation's
worst on splll, two defense.
witnesses said.
. .
After 4 ~ weeks of testimony
by 44 witnesses, the prosecution
. reste(llts case Wednesday with a
final witness who said the CBP'
talnwasdrunkwhenhesalledhls
tanker out or Valdez and still
drunk when It hit the reet.
The defense opened Its case
later In the day, presenting a
witness who testified HB.l:elwood
was In her Valdez shop buying
(lowers dur)ng the time .a prosecutlon witness said the skipper
was In a bar drinking.
·
Two other defense witnesses,
guards at the Valdez on terminal,
said drinking was rampant
among · tanker crewmen but
Hazelwood exhibited no·signs of
Intoxication whea he checked In
at the terminal March 23 to sail
his tanker early March 24.
Th~ two Alyeska Pipeline Ser·
vice Co. guards said drlnklllg
was so common that Intoxicated
crewmen would have to' be
visibly Impaired before they
would be stopped, and even then
they were usually allowed to sail
If other crewmen helped them
aboard.
. Hazelwood; 43, Is charged with
oper&lt;~t!ngthetaiJkerwhilelntoxl·

Bomb threat at
St. Pati over.

•

Subway. derailment ·k ills -three

' me&amp;-'
.....
1W crl•f.CISP,l

•

MoNDAY ttiru FiiDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. utitil NOON SATURDAY
· Cl0$ED SUNDAY

·-

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• ~

POLICtES

I

(1 DAY SERVICE)
NoW

In Siock

Etntt Bltbt
. $#1111111/

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POST PICKU~ AVAILABLE

iei·.

.BUnONS and BOWS.

,·,

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In Mumort.anl

.( ,'/tiN.~i/il'd

SUNDAY PAP£ A

t•• ·

Gallia·Couttty
Ar•a CDdt 614

446

G.tt~pobs

992 MtddiiiPOf1

317 Ch..twt

318 Vtnton
245 Rio Gttnde
261 GuY.,n Diu
643 Ar1biaDis1
379 w-..

I I ;00 A.M SATURDAY
2 00 P.M . MONDAY

TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIOAY
.,

New Haven

21
22
2J

Lelatl

Buff .&amp;a

' ".''"YEti

Roller!, E. luck,
ProbltoJudgo
Let\• K. NM ....ood, Cln

HUMPHIIY'S
CLIMAn
CONTROL

,1:11 .1. I, 111. 31c

-.

•UGHT ·HAULING

In Memory Of

Goldie (Norris)
Story · •

DOZER
SITEWORK • .ROADS
CLEARING

RMidentiallk
Commercial

BILL SLACK

NI._WLAND
.ENTERPRISES

•fiREWOOD

s.r,lce

.DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

CALL

992-2269

992-5589

EVENINGS

G!Wit A. llewllllllll

J&amp;L

I. L 'HOLLON
· TRUCKING

Roger Hysell
. Garage

2-2·'90-1 mo.

77 Auto Rep••
78 Camptng Equtpm'ttl'lt
79 ' Cilml)flts • Motor Hontes

Serv1ces
81

Homalmpto'lttmentli
Plumb•ng &amp; He~1hng
83 r.c .... ating
84 Elec:Utcll &amp; Relugtlf'Mho•,
85 Gt:nwilll ti1ulmy

82

86

Mobll t~ Humc Rt!l)iln

87

Upholsuuv

OUII lhl m•lto of IMklng
!undo 10 ••lot IIIIo bulln••·
lnler•t.d citll:ene and org8nlz.tlono ••• urgod to 8t·
tend this -lng. Wrltt..,

comments

m•v

'

be · ad·

dr•oodto 1M MelgoCounty
Commit
ot 1ha obovo
oddr••· ,
i31S. 11c

lion••

•
erv1ces

•sHRUB &amp;. TREE
TRIM a.nd REMOVAL·

Heatlni. Coollna,
lafrlgeratlolo

'

· 75 lua11 &amp; Motors tor .Sal e
7'6 Auto P11rt1i &amp;. A&lt;=t:•IQI'toti

W1nted ·.to Rent
Equ1pment fo1 Runt
For Lea.e

Merchondt se

Bu1inll• Opportun.tv
Monllif to Loan
Prol•lional Sentict"S

us1ness

,
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71 - Autos lor Saltt
72 Trucks tot Soill e
73 Y~s.4WO 't
74 MoiOtcycl•

· 51 Hou•hold Goods
52 - Sporting Goods
53, Ant.ques
54 · Misc . Merchandise
55 Building Supplit~~ .
56 Pel a lor Sale
57 Musicallnsuurnenu
58 Fruits &amp; Vegt~tabl•
59 For Sale Of Tr•de

•

Aa711,--"""" Ex•
fl"""
of the • - of Virgil
•· lrown. . . _.... l.te of
:131211 U. tl. Rt. 33, Po·
m•oy. Ohio 411788.

'

49

MIICMIII'IIfOUI
W~nted To Do

G,o..,e

Transportation

Hou .. , IDr Rent
Mobile Hom" tor Rent
Farms lor Reni

on Morch 1 4; 1110. o1 1ha
ollloe of the Mell" County
Commlulo-a. Third Floor,
Courlhou•. Pomeroy, ·Ohlo
48711, 8t 1:30 P.M.1odlo·

·"'

March 8.
·Siidi.Y nilld by
.family, frlenda,
ht.Bband, Clarsnoe
and daughter,
Roealie.

OF

IS ...
R..
IIE...R

....

INSULATION

(6141 667·3271

K and J CONSTRUCTION · ·
GIEG BAILEY
' •NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
. •GENERAL CONTRACTING
A Greot Comllination-

"Quolity and Reosonoble Prim"
WE GO THE IIllA MILE.....
992-6110

7-11-'19-Hn

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SHIRLEY S.
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Love,

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the Mell" County Probale

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61 -· F~rm Equtpment
62 WMttd to luy
6 J liYesto&lt;:h
64 Hay &amp; Gtt•n
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NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On FMnery 23, 1110, In

there. About halt otthe barge's 12
tanks were undamaged and
much of Its cargo was considered
salvageable.
Meanwhile, Coast Guard otrl·
clals began their· Investigation
Into' the cause or the huge blast
while New York and New Jersey
environmental agencies were
deciding whether al)y laws have
been violated. .
·
The spill was the laiest of
environmental mishaps to
plague the local waterways since
January. More than 500,000 ga:tlons of oil leaked rroin a pipeline
connecting Bayway With a
Bayonne tank farm at that time;
27,000 gallons spllled last week
while a barge was loading at
Bayway.
·

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MNPnCo., WV
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MONDAY PAPER
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•Ret:.Ntt l .iO dtsc;ount
for •ih ..id tn edvancv.
. ·
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GMt..., •Ad found 8dl under16wordiwtll b~
run J d..,, a'l no chage.
•Puc., of ad to. alt CIIUielldltln '' doublu pnce ol Ml cost
•7 j.M)tnt line av.- only used
'Sttnlinut t1 nolretpontible tor errms11fh" lirsl d., IChedt
for en on. 1.-st dwt ad nms in papttf) . Coilll birfore 2:00 p. n1 .
J d., •Iter pubhcillioft to make correchvn
~Ads .thM' mual be pa•d nl•dvll!ncu .,,,
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Worl!s

01ys
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'-tt•(ll. G•tlie or Meson counll• muSt be P••·

\'

leads to destrucllon of the lm·
mune system and In the past,
some a tfected youngs teres were
forced to .live In sterile, plastic
bubbles to shelter them from
Infectious ·microbes.
. Now, most children with the
disorder either receive weekly
Injections of the missing enzyme
or undergo bone marrow transplants. Neither treatment Is
perfect, and children's lives are
still often cut short by Infections.
No more than 20 children In the
world suffer from .tlie disorder at
any given time. Blaese said .
Anderson and Blaese propose
to use a crippled mouse virus to
Insert the ADA gene Into a type of
white blood cell, called T cells,
that have been removed from the
child's body and then stimulated
to multiply.
Once the new gene Is In place,
. the celll wo111d be returned to the
children ·by blood transfusion,
wbere It Is hopid they would
produce a • ready supply or the
missing enzyme. Because T cells
usually survive no more than a ·
few months, patients would
likely have to receive repeat
Infusions or thl! genetically engineered cells.
Another NIH researcher, Dr.
Steven Rosenberg, 11 currently
transterrlne forelan aeiles Into
humans to track the ertectlveness of an expertmenllll cancer
therapy, but those aenes are aot
11sed fQr treatment. sa· far,
Rosenberg's team has seen no 111
effects from the foreign genes In
· patients..
·

"

•
:

,,

TO PUCE AN AD CAll 992-2156

' •·A.ds out ...c

relurn lo the cathedral after cal acts.
pollee swept through the pews,
Osbourne, known for bll
Weiner said.
occult-oriented s!llge abowa,
later seat a telegram to O'Con·
Durin&amp; a sermon las I Sunday,
O'Connor criticized heavy metal ' nor, protestlna the sermon and
music, &amp;Ingling out heavy metal
ending with the words, "God
rocker Ozzy Osbourne's song
Bless You ."
''Suicide Solution," which he said
O'Connor denounced some
encouraeed young people to klll
heavy metal as "pornoaraphy In
themselves and commit dlaboll·. sound' • and blamed the mualc for
popularlzlna satanic woJrlhllp.

e The Area's Number

18

Gene therapy clears
first hurdle with NIH

BETHESDA, Md.(UPI) -The
first attempt at human gene .
therapy has cleared an lmpor·
tant regulatory hurdle, winning
the unanimous backing of a
National Institutes of Health
safety panel, officials. said
Thursday.
In the first request of Its kind,
NIH researchers W. French
Anderson ·and. Michael Blaese
are seeking permission to use
gene therapy In an effort to treat
children stricken by ·an ex ·
tremely rare Immune disorder.
· Researchers want to correct
the children's Illness, caused by
the failure of a defective gene to
make a vital enzyme, by InsertIng correct copies of the gene Into
their white blood cells. The
project would mark the first time
that doctors have transferred a
gene Into a human In hopes 'of
treating a disease. .
By a unanimous vote, the ~2
members of ~IH's Institutional
Blosafety Committee Wednes'
day approved the project as safe,
an NIH spokesman sal~. The
·research proposal, which was .
submitted In February, still must
clear at least six other govern·
ment review panels.
It the project Is approved, the
first patients could possibly start
receiving gene therapy late this
summer, researchers said.
Tbe disease targeted for ihe
first human gene therapy tr!alls
a severe Immunodeficiency
caused by the lack or an enzyme
called adenosine deamlnase
(ADA) . The enzyme s))ortage

•

O'Connori heavy

Coast Guard cleanup · to last weeks
LINDEN, N.J. (UP!) - Oea· explosions ripped throUgh the
nup
crews expect to be sopping ship, nearly tearing It In half.
three people and Injured 14. Federal authorities
SEARCHES RUBBLE - An Alcohol, Tobacco
Most of the oil was contained
up .more than 100,000 gallons of
are stllllnvesllgatlng lhe cause of lbe explosion.
and Firearms lnvestlga&amp;or aearcbee through lhe
by
booms, and tile Coast (;uard
spilled fuel ollln the Arthur Kill
(UM)
.
rubble of the Crested Butte State Bank Wednes·
late
Wednesday said skimmers
waterway for at least two weeks,
day, which sustained an explosion that killed
recovered
tens of thousands of
but hope the weather helps
gailons
by
late
Wednesday.
dissipate the mess; offiCials said
Coast
Guard,
the lead
The
Thursday.
Lt. Junior Grade , Cedric agency In the cleanup, had only a
Hughes, the U.S. Coast Guard!s rough estimate ·on the size or the
asslstan t pollution response of· 'spill because Investigators did
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) fleer,
said the worst of the spill- not know how much on burned off
e~ly to specula,e." ·
· Pollee · Commissioner Willie
One engineer said a dislodged
precipitated
by a thunderous during the fire.
Williams said between 30 and 50
But Investigators from envlr,
It took rescue crews 4 ~ hours
motor may have ·c aused the
pair of explosions aboard an oil
rescue workers, Including pollee,
onm~ntal
agencies who exam· .
to
pull
all
the
passengers
from
. derailment of a rush -hour subbarge In the walerway between
firefighters and Army, Medical
lned
the
area
believed the spill
,
t
he
train.
.
. way train that killed three people
Staten Island and New Jersey Corpsmen, had t9 "cut sections
did
little
damage.
"People
were
screaming
In
and Injured 152, but 1ederal
of the train apart" to reach those . remained near the barge Itself.
The Coast Guard· Wedrwsday
Investigators said It was unclear' pain," said Lea Greeri, a commu"There weren't many · other
trapped · Inside. The last pas·
night
reopened the Arthur Kill
ter on the train. "We had to walk
why the accident occurred:
senger finally was ex!rlcated 4 \-2 ' .trouble areas besides that, thank
The packed six-car ,. train over people to get out of the
Goo," Hughes said early Thurs- · from the north as far south as
ho11rs after the acclden t.
·
day.
"What remains Is being Pralls Island and from the south
Jumped off the tracks In a tunnel , train."
The train derailed In a tunnel
near the busy 30th Street station ' City transit chief Louis Gam·
about a block west of Phlladel· • vacuumed up. But with, thiS type as far north as 'flirts Point.
EarUer. New Jerst:y Gov , Jim·
bacclnl said three people were
Wednesday morning and offl·
phla' s busy 30th Street Station 111 of .light fuel, the sun as well as
Florio
toured the area, InCluding
In
the
derailment,
which
he
killed
nature play a big part. It'll
cials who organized the rescue
about 8:45a.m.
.the
damaged
Clbro Savannal).
called
"clearly
the
'worst
ace!·
from the bloody scene called It
Dozens of people were trapped disperse with the wind and
"I'm
getting
a bit tired of
dent"
In
the
history
of
the
city's
the city's worst transit accident.
c~rre:nt."
and needed·to be removed by the
coming
out
to
these
things," the
transit
system.
A team of 131nvestlgators with
.Coast Guard spokesman Gene
Jaws of Life hydraulic
governor
said,
as
he
viewed his
The dead were Identified as.
the ' National Transportation
Hoff earlier described the last
Instrument.
second
Arthur
Kill
spill
In less
Denise Devlin, 34, and Gospodln
Safety Board arrived from WaCharles Zimmerman, a pas- part of the cleanup as the
''The
water
can't
than
a
week.
Kancev, 52, both of Philadelphia.
"hardest ... because you're going
shington to Inspect the wreckage,
senger on the train; saw a man
· take lt. The ali can't take It and
NTSB spokesman John Lauber Devlin died of head ln)uiies and
caught by his legs between the after the splotches."
most assuredly the people can't
·neck
and
compression
of
the
"As'
seen
]ust
before
dusk
said. He said It could take a year
train and a pole In the tunnel.
take tt."
.K,ancev
sustained
m\'ltlple
Injur(Wednesday)
there
were
scat·
before a final report Is Issued.
"He was still alive but he was
''What's being done here,
Ies
and
was
asphyxiated.
A
third
Pete Brauner, an engineer ·for
screaming and yelling. He was In tered, broken (patches of oil) and
whether
It's In compliance with
.
woman
whose
leg
was
ampu·
the Southeastern Pennsylvania
a great deal of pain," Zlmmer- very light sheen left In the Arthur
the
law
or
not has to he changed,''
tated was not Identified.
Kill waterway," a statement
Transportallon Authority, said
·man saRI.
.
•
he
added.
"If the laws have to be
, Linda Clossey Connolly, a
the derailment may have been
Zimmerman said the rtrth car ftom the Guard said.
changed,
we'll
change them."
Hughes
said
crews
would
be
caused by a motor beneath one of spokeswoman for Hahnemann
of t,he train was tilted on Its s)de
Firefighters
used water presUnfverslty Hospital, said a
the cars that dislodged and
and the train "had wrapped.ttself Involved In cleanup In the Arthur
sure
to
push
tlte
·c rippled barge
Kill "for at least two weeks." The
woman In her mid-50s who had
dragged along the tracks.
around one of the poles." ·
back to the dock and to hold II
''The engll)e did not come been trapped for two hours died
"It had jumped the tracks and Coast Guard satd· It deployed
Wednesday
more
than
200,000
at
12:04
p.m.
·
completely off, but It was off
)Vas In ·between the tracks
"She had her ·right leg ampuenough ... ' where It would cause
between the east and westbound feet or boom to contain the oll and
tated
at
the
scene.
She
also
had
the wheel!; tojumpoffthetrack,"
lanes. It. was going weMbound protect .Pralls Island - where a
mulllple fractures of the left leg
he said.
and jumped over to the east· bird sanctuary, Is locate(J and chest InJuries," Connolo/. bOund sl~e." he said.
But NTSB spokesman Alan
' Shooters Island, the Rahway
...
Pollack emtJhaslzed. "It's too said.
At least 152 people, Including River, Morses Creek, Old Place
six children. were rushed to nine Creek ·and the Arthur· Kill above
tbe Rahway Rlwer - all cons!.·
hospitals. ¥ost of the hospital·
deted
sensitive areas. ·
lzed received minor cuts and
More
than 100,000 gallons of
bruises or broken legs. Four
fuel
of
a 4.4 million gallon
were In critical condition and one
shipment
were blown off the
man was In guarded c~pdttlon
on
Tuesday when two
barge
with a ·spinal column Injury.

.
NEW YORK (UPI) - All Ule4 exploalv~anlttbll dop to pollee spokesman.
"A mate clller said the cardl·
anOIIYIDOUI clller wbo said be searcb the caver110111 Gothic·
wu enrapcl by Cardinal John style cathedral after the 5 p.m. nal should aot have said anythlnl
O'CoDIIOI''I crltlclml ot heavy telephone threat Wedneaday, but about music or anythlnl else and
metal millie tiU'Htelled to blow ' found nothlne, pollee said.
(said) the cburch will blow up In
up St. Patrtck'a C&amp;tbedral, tore·
:The threat forced pollce to 30 minutes and everyone Ia It
Jna oHiclall to cancel evealne clear the ch11rcb or wonlllpera ' would die/' Weiner said. "He
mus, pollee uld.
for about two holl!'l, a.nd the said be had put a bomb In a paper
Pollee Bomb Squad and Mid· card lull canceled the 5: 31) p.m. ba&amp;laalde the cburcb."
Worsblpera were permitted to
town North Precinct omcera maas,saldotrlcerFredWeiller,a

.

cated, reckless endangerment, town, 10(1- and they atruck up a
negligent discharge or . on and conversation about that area of
criminal mischief. He races up to Lone Island. Credit card records
seven years and three months In Showed Hazelwood was In her
Jail and a $61,000 fine If store. acr()jll the itreet from the
Pipeline Club.
· convicted.
Jurors heard alcohol expert
Shortly after the wreck or the
Exxon Valdez, the state of Richard Prouty, thelastprosecu·
tlon witness, Insist that Hazel·
Alaska forced the on terminal to
crack down on drlllklng by wood waslntoxlcated whether he
showed it or not. He said
crewmen, Including captains.
HB.l:elwood'a blOod-alcohol level
Guard Charles Dudley said a
probably ran,ed trom0.14 to0.17
crewman had to be "pretty .rar
when
his laden tanker smashed
gone"beforehlsdrunkennessled
Into
:Sligh
Reef and spllled nearly
to action. He said negotiating the
11
mllllon
gallons or oil.
gangplank · leading to tankers ,
The
state
legll blood-alcohol
berthed at the tr.rmlnal required
concentration, .skill, even limit tor sobriety Is 0.10. .
The wreck wa8 almost 11 hours
sobriety.
'
Hazelwood apparently had no old when the only blood Sllmple
was ~liken from Hazelwood problel!l going up ihe steep,
Showing a moderate alcohollevel
narrow steps to his tanker as he
of 0.061, within slllte limits - so
and two Exxon shipmates ri&gt;Prouty calculated backwards to
. turned from the Pipeline Club
and a second. bar after drinking extrapolate a blood-alcohol level
of 0.14 ·when . the grounding
from 4 p.m. unttl8 p.m.;
occurred.
·
A prosecution witness said
Defense
lawyers
have ac·
earlY In the trial that she saw
knowledged that Hazelwood
Hazelwood arrive at Pipeline
Club ~,tt 1:45. p.m. and start drank but said he spent less time
drinking, had fewer drinks than
drinking vodka, but a defense
has *n alle&amp;ed and that drinks
witness provided · Hazelwood
Included Moussy, .a beer with
with a partial alibi.
only a trace or alcohol.
Valdez (lower shop owner
· Prosecutors maintain that Ha·
Emny Kaiser said Hazelwood
zelwood's
drinking Impaired his
spent 30 minutes
browsing
Judgment,
· caused blm to leave
between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. and
the bridge to unqualified crew·
wired flowers to his wife. She
men during a dangerous detour
said she remembered.Hazelwood
around Ice and ·thus led to the
because he sent flowers home to
.Huntl.ngton, N.Y . .;,.. her home· .· wreck.

The [)filly Sentinel-Pea• 13

Pon owoy-Middlaport. Ohio

. . . . . ;. 'llado 8, 1810

1180

GUN SHOOT

uc•r

FilE DEPT• .
lo.............

.EYDY· .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 ....

•

•

F•lwydMke
12 S..,.. SINlpa Ollly . •
Slridctly W.CIIII
10-t-tfn

TII·COUNTY RECYCLING

Offiti J lOCAftOIIS 10 SH¥1 YOIPOMEROY;OHIO: Rt. '7. I.R. 143
.
ALBANY, OHIO: R1. 110. a. II. 143

...

HENOERION. WV.: Rt. :18 A4. tollcl8raEq.........rri
NEW HOURI: ·
ALIIANY: 1
HINOERI.ON:
PAYINO
11
Cleen
WililY
ITAIITIII8,

I •. m.-7 p.m.

tiDaoyo,
IDaoyo,

..
~

JAN.

per lb.;
38C per lb.
IATIIIIIU,
ETC.

·MAIN nan ·
PIZZA

I.OWIST PIICIS
11111m CIIIUY
fiB
. LOCAL
. DBIVEIY
PORIIOT - . . . .FOIT"S OII.Y
lOCAllY 0 - PIZZA SlOP.

· Plzza·S.·,II••·Ny S,1d1l1
. MJ.JJJI

�..

1980

LAFF-A-DAY

.... -COn:

t

How to IJicate _your •••••
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72

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0 lour
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M THURS•• MARCH I •

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-ng,IH l4e M77.

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old, good •lclo·dog, doa

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• • ·•II]ICollege

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IIMkllbiH

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Cll Fram 1J.0et To Tile
Rhine With

IIIII Moy.,. A

group of WWII vererans
tatum, with their families, to
the aummer of 1944 to
D,Day and to llle lnvUion of
Nor:ma':;.~ :20)

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

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ms ... 1:00 Pll or .....
II
I

. DoWling

M y . - A parlllli:Mier 18
arrested by 111e FBI lor
ateallng top-JII(:ret data. C ·
(!I M;ar.tyt Prince Paul 01
Mauranla conftdeo In Polrot
thlt hl"a engagad.

a

PrimeNawa

' 101 Murder, lhl Wrote ,
.
BenediCt Arnold Slipped Here
all Church SlrHI Illation
. 12111111111 Eya
1:05 C1J MOVIE: Florida FIIQIIIIO
(2:00)
1:30. (I)
DllfiNnt WCHid
Whltlay beginl her aaarch for
·
amployment alter graduation.

a

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Employm ent SPI'Jices
11 · Help Wanted

-.r.
4111tiL

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carol Anne u ben In an
lnveatlllent &amp;Chime.

HOUIIhold
Goode

HoW littler Loat Ill War
Examine lhr• phi- olllle
war: 111e German blitZkrieG ol

(Z)

35 Lota &amp;Acraege ·

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ltoo 1 =:~:
,

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33

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snta.
une.- IU 111
1214 Dnlp:lno

c:.t-R:ra:e :'::'-·

-

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and
1:00

Poland and France. llle Nul

IF YOu FELLeRS
WANT tO HELP ME
TIDY UP
TH'H9USE

ouloldo
-oil ... 2"" ..,..,

21
.Bullllell
orr~ Rd..-• n u,,
-~Op~~-~-o~-rt1~u~n~-114 ••11274 orl14 • • 1724.
-··

-

illaek on the Soviet UniOn
and thl Garman mlauH of

.. -Ill-.. I 1-

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

111 •••

quloll.

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Mold
1 Eastern
8 Spot
title
11 Safe place 2 Sound
10 Ivy League 3 ShOnl
team
aside
, (abbr.)
4 By means ol
12 Warn
5 Enrollee
13 Change
8 One ol
a suit
·15 Thai
Ye1terday'1 Answer
woman
7 Moray
• 18 Be - ol
8 Board
24 Remove 31 Suffering
18 Female
Amlrak
wool
from ennui
grouse
11 Basler's 25 Extreme 32 Commerce
· 11 MacBeth,
necessity
fright
36 Stratford's
for one
14 Ha'!lng a 26 Advenl
river
21 Juice
thin tone 27 34th St., 37 Heal
22 Mass·. cape17 Hostel
event,
39 Greek
.23 Not severe 20 Tortolse'a .on film
, · letter .
24 Commence rival
211 41 Unit of
27 TV's
23 Sulk
Buddhism
radialion
•
"Two for
the - ·
28 Present
211 Close,
In a way
30 Do wrong
31 Artist's
headwear
33 Jackie's
second

·=Knoll

1

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

-=--

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eor~n·""'*•

.10:M (I) MOVIE: OIIOr ~..,) {2:30) .

.·

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text

· DAILY~YPTOQUOTEs~Here'showtoworklt:

10:30 (J) Mill II
·
eO Cl:ml:uuallll1 Tonlglrl ·

• Oro ....
_11:10;:. .~. Mra, ICing

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BBRNJCE

BEDEOSOL

•=

'

One letter stands rot another. In this sample A is used
ror the lhree L's, X ror the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length end ronnatlon or the words are all

· hints. Each clay the code let~ are different.

CIIYPI'OQOOTE

(BL

KJOI.ILM

, GQ~G'P

"'

CMKG,

HOKW,

. QMOC.IBLM

GQKG'P

K LWG Q.IL H.

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.. PI. .

Can••••
111 IT IS NOT ENOUGH
ITO HAVE A GOOD MIND. THE MAIN ntiNG IS TO .
USE Jr. - DF.SCAR1ES .

11
'

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H.ILHBIN .

Y111• .....

D)ft'IIO~III10 IOCIIt 1111 ~ and

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KLWGQJLH

PAMMG,
SOBAL

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318

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

.

"When you we up. you 11ot1 ' - falgollel!
how much rnoniiY )'OU. lied In your wallet... .

'

shoestring
35Male
animal
38Wanderer
40Yearn
42Compare
43 Strung
along
44 Young
45 Correct

ll, L:eglrl 11.. ~ ·

1:

·'

34-

a

lnny llal dytng altllr ·. 11
alibi him In the cheat to
prollet hlriell. a.
• 0 New Twllllhl

5

by THOMAS JOSEPH

•a •

-WOIOillfl
- njl.-r-..•"J;
loour1r ..... ""'" ............
,..... lloulo.
Looll. ...
HfghiNtftoloootlon.

-

.CROSSWORD

r.epreHnts the owMr of a
· nudist COlony. IR) C
CIJ Prlrrielme U¥e

"!"'

•

•• •

10:00 (J) 700 Club Wllh Pit
Aab1rt1on
..
(2)
LA. LIIW Kuzak

e

+AQ6~3

+Q64

weapona. (1 :20)

I tool
~ - · •ton.lh&amp;l-.
-loiiiDKIII,IIIXllllll,
PAUL
INOTICEI
MITCHELL Po , do« Ia
a'ii OliO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
filii I (Parl:llniol aiJIIIII, to
I
ln-odo thai rou do
OW ...... '-"I W.'N bull
wlh people JOU llMW,
-led and MOT lo oond _
. """
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1 to
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aiJII&amp;!
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In ......
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,... whol "
· Coli Ailll -...rt, l&amp;.m.'

A hOspllat

chai"gea ap:inll Tutu. (R) 1;1
IOIIIiln."' l'lwn-

1 ..... , I:JII p.m. Aooo.2\t:11L

IIMI ,._.., , .. ......._ CurNnl :MMin.

(J) Young Rlderl HICkok
mutt prepare for 1 deadly .

hlabuiiMH. I:jl
.
.
aii·UV Onllllin CruNde

2t, IIIIIIIY In

Clo&amp; . . ~ Rd. 12
-tllllp.m.
'
EARN IICINEY - n g - 1
Eloollonl
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. Ell. y,
4112.
EARN

wltll his other widow. g

e

ahoWoown. c ·

. ., - - Wonted:

r.

.

e:ooew
a Chllfl carta
aQN~a 10 aptn Eddla'seatlte
(J) Myalltrl 8enad1Ct Farley
11 a lyfant who h11 buln,up

Expo- 110111111 bul nor

n1c

.

H·H

: The diamond fit with North turned ·
South aagreaive in the bidding. After ' WEST
EAST
North rebid one no-trump, South • K
+10987
.10 8 7
jumped to three spad~ . That cot him • K Q J 9
• 10 8
to the spade game. He bid It well and t 9 7
+AKJ2
played It badly.
+ 10 9 8 7 ~ 3
Deelarer took the flrsl trick with
SOUTH
dummy's ace of hearts and led the
.AJ6 .. 3 2
spade queen .from dummy. W~t won
•8 3 2
the king ~d quickly cashed two heart
t KJ4 2
tricks. Later East's remaining 10' 9' 8
of spades took the setting trick. What
Vulnerable: North-South
went wron1?
Dealer: North
It was pointless to lead dummy's
queen of spades. U East held the sin, .
Weal
Norllo Eort
Rletoo klnR, it would be played on the
Pass
I+
1quteen. and declarer would later lose
Pasa
Pass I NT
All pall
trump tricks. So a low spade from
Pass
dummy makes sense. Then what hapOpeninRiead: • K
if East plays low? Declarer·
1soow~ ask·bimlelf If he has anything
to pill by putting in the jack. Even if
It bolda, he can only play tbe ace and K,10,9, 8 of trumps, be cannot be pre-- :
Rive up a spade trick afterward. So he vented from taking two tricks. B'!t delhould play the ace.. If nOthing haP.: clarer Is paid an unexpected divtdend
pe•, a
to dummy's queen w1ll when today's layout exists, .with the
Ioree
the kin1, and the jack ·will king singleton. The king falls und~
later
up the last trump. If either the ace and only one trump tnck ts
~de,feroder started wl~h something like lost.

Ill .liZ ... Hilurt 1;1

0

NORTH

·Q~
..H4

•

·'

Uvlnptonl (2:00)

. . . . . lo bur, ..... lo -

1m 2111. Holkllr

a .~eoperdyl ~:;~

•Is di~gnolld
w a Coabr
111ow Theo
aa having

.. ""' 1171~1110,., 1N1

Cliowllalllu
1714'1N•
...

-

1121

1211 Nlgllt Court
!:31 C1J Sanford And Son
1:00 (J) MOVIE: Stanley And

AcceliiM'III

-

•

IQI CIOIIIIN

75 Auto P8rtl &amp;

......

C1J Mame'a Family .

• ® M•A'S*H

· .---------'---:-~

BRIDGE

7:05(J)Jefteraoftl
T::SO (I) Femly Feud

a~~

son learns In history I learned

By Jamet Jacoby

- · . . - · a.-114=441:
44t

He replied, "What !"".&gt;'
in CURRENT events.

101 Miami VICe Crockeit and
Tubbs are enlisted 1o protect
a· poet from a Death Squad.
Srereo.
/
Ill VI~IOCountry (0:30)
1211 AbliOI And ·Cootelto

Wltlo 111 r., l w l - OUI
-Molar arid T• d l -

-

PM Mqaalne

01 r.-ynne

1171 . . . . "II Ill tL Tit ....
!EqUip.
. .- .- 11t ~
ttl Dtlla•lll
...
It ft.

SCRAM LETS ANSWER$
· •·?
Turban - Entry - Punch - Betray - CURRENT
"I realty feel old,' sighed my friend . "Why?" I asked.

-~~Court r:l..,.

1171 17 tt. - · Tri:HIIIt .
.... lUMP, I - ........
wurl' ... , _ ...,....--,.

I

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE l!TTUS
TO GEl ANSWER

ec aWhMIOt

~

.

G Com
plete 1h~ chuckle quoted
by fill ing In lho missing words

.

THESE SQUARES

NewiHOw

11 fl. r t 7 Z - Cnlt Trl:lloul·
I M ..

C111~1..-.IIII-7:0011J11.

7

_

·1

PRINT NUM8Uf0 lETTUS IN

(J) lpofta~r
• • • (J) CuiNIII , ,..,
(Z) (!I Ml!cNeU Lehrer

..... of HI¥. 110. .... 11 . . . 11 ... ·
'

(I)

I I' I I I

Famous quote: "What some
people .mistake .for the high_
cost of every day life, Is really
the cost of -,··· high."

L-.J.-J..-l.,....JL-.L--1 you d8velop fr'Om .step t~o . 3 below.

combine entertainment trivia
wtthllle luck of llle draw.
1211 Hangtn• In
8:31 (I) Andy Ortttllh
7:00 ~ . _ _ _ I Mra. KJng

e

..

I

GADAE

0 AN V 1 E

all Top C:.rd Conresrants

Boats &amp; MoiOfl
rorSate

I( 1 I

F 1L

L-.L.....J.....Ji-...1--1. ~

Ctll ..... Q
IIOIHe:Miin
101
•• Company

How lor - or~.
011 1:00 Pll
IOU"114111
. 75

I ,r I

NETRS
f--r.:....:;-~;.;.,;;.,.-l

(!)mleCfllc
•

Hay&amp; Grain

~mplo -d•.

l
lI I I r .

• ® Andy Orlltllll

- . ......... iiNMe.

..,
To .a
polni - ., ..
. . Nailor
-·
-

Ill lie. .

lho

b.

low 10 form four

I

. Giveaway

11111.

15

,., ,

Television
Viewing
. .

Trucll• for ....

The o.lly Sentinel- Pega

'

C) 1110 by K1ri1 F - tr1 die. .. Inc.

...
\...

•

�~oy

Pega 16-The Daily Sa 1tiWIII

--LOcal news

br~fs· --._,

Warmer temperatures predicted for

Continued !rom page 1

EMS has 5 Wedrresday calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medl&lt;tal Services
a_nswered five calls on Wednesday.
A,t 1: 32 p.m. , Middleport was called to BOne Hollow Road for
Charles McCloud who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Scipio Township Fire Department at 6: 50p.m. responded to a
brush !Ire on Route 681.
·
At 7: 40 p.m .. Racine Fire Department and EMS ·u nit were
called to an auto accident at the Intersection of Route 124 and
Wells Run. Donald Gordon refused treatment at the scene.
Syracuse Fire Department and EMS unit were called at 7: 55
p.m. to an auto accident on Route 124. Rob Wisnewski was t&lt;lken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Racine at 9:12 p.m. was called to Broad St. for Daisy Sayre
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hosplt;~l. Syracuse EMS
assisted Racine.

Thurlday, Mlrch 8, 1990

Middleport, Ohio

By·UDited· Preu blerDM!oaal
Ohio's weather thr01111bFrld~y
Is expected to be rather damp,
with moderating temperatures .
. Clouds gradually thickened
over southwest Ohio as the night
went by, with . akleS In the
northeast counties staying
mostly clear . through ' this
morning.
The clouds were expected to
spread gradually across the state
today, followed by rainfall. By
the time evening comes, rain
should be falling over about the
southwest half of the Buckeye
State.
.
For tonight, rain Is forecast
over virtually all of the state.

There also Is a possibility of
thunderstorms. Showers and
thullderstonns W'lllllnger In the
eastern part ot the state Friday,
l!Ut the western counties should
be partly cloudy with 'only a
.change of sfloweri.' or
thunderstorms. ·

.

.

Early morning •temperatures
In ohio varied a lot, depending on
where cloud cover was trapping
the earth's heat near the ground.
Generally, speaking . predawn
readings were In the 20s In the
north and the 30s In the south.
Temperatures for the next two
days are going to show some ups
ard downs, hut generally' be In a

moderating trend. HI~ were ot
be from the upper 401 to the
mid-50s today and !rom the upper
40slnthenortheasttothemld-60S
In the southwest Friday. To- .
,.!light's ·tows. are expected to '
range !rom the upplr
.to the ·
upper 401.
Looking a~d through the
weekend, there will be a chance
of rain each day , with highs
malnlylnthe60sandlowsmostly
In the 40s.

ao.

Stocks

We've created an. appetite that
will make It Impossible for the
next governor to keep the capital
Improvements · bill under · $1
billion."
Sen. · Richard ·Finan, R;
C!nciMatl, said coliecung the
sales tax on mall order and home
television shopplug sales could
produce an extra $5 mUll!ln a
year for the state.
.
Finan said those sales are
becoming more common arid are
taxed In other states. He said he
anticipates lawsuits, ·but added
that California-'s compliance rate
was 70 percent
· ·

ldentlty
• Cla.rlJ:I'lCatWn
•
'
'·
Richard Lee Butcher of Rock
Springs Road, Pome~oy, Is not ·
the Richard Butcher, . 33, of
Wilkesville, who allegedly shot
Melinda Jol!nson on, Feb. 28 on
State ,Route 32 In Jackson
County. The Pomeroy Butcher
family says there has been some
confusion because of the similarlty of name.

MARIETTA - Governor Rl·
chard F . · Celeste artd the Ohio
Department of Transportation
(0D0T) are looking for prospeclive "parents" willing to adopt
sections of the state's highways.
The new parents would be ·
responsible for keeping ·their
sections of highway lltter'free.
' 'The Adopt-A-Highway program not only gives Ohioans an
Inexpensive means of making a
great contribution to tlielr commun!ty and state, but serves as a
means to further beautify Ohio, "
commented Governor Celeste.
This new progt'am. allows
Ohioans to take responsibility for
picking up litter on two mue·
sections of hlg!Jway for two
years. In return, ODO'I: .provides
on-site signs displaying the name
oftheparticipatingorganizS.tlon. ·
ODOT also provides training
mate~lals, guidance on safety
measures, safety vests and trash
bags.
At the end of the two year
period, each organization will

receive a special certificate of
. appreciation. ' At this time, the
organization may also chooye to
renew the adoption or take
another location.
The goals of Adopt-A-HighwaY
are to bring t6gether organizations to encourage ·a statewide
feeling of unity and · 'generate
· favorable medta coverage to
better educate the public on the
.
problem of Utter.
Volunteer and civic groups are
encouraged to participate )n the
program. 'ro be eligible, It must
be a volunteer effort (not paid),
the group must have llabll!ty
Insurance and all volunteers
must be at least 12 years old .
.Those groups located ' In
ODOT's District . 10 (Athe!ls,
GalHa, flocking, JVIelgs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Vinton and· Washington Counties) who are Inter·
ested In . participating, shouid
contact Karen Pawloski or Ted
Sushka at P.O. Box 658, Musk!ngum Drive, Marietta, Ohio,
4~750.

Ohio Lottery

Latest '

~he early momllla We&amp;ther
map allOWed a IIJp pressure
system over the East Coaat. Thll
syJtem II expected to drift eut
over the next few dqs but will
remain Important , t() . Ohio's 1
weather Into tbe weellftd. A
warm front that went' .. ~ •
·Kentucky to Nebraalla tblamortl'
lng Is prec!lcted
cr01s Olllo
tonight. Thlsfrontwtllhelp~au!IC
.the wet weather 011 tap for· the
Buckeye State in Qle n~ar,f)l~.

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comprormse
bid fails

Daily Number
407
Pick-4

0721

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~ATHER MAP -7 A weakenlDg frontal ay1tem wUI btlng rain
'aDd thundemowers tO the Appalachians and Soatbern Gulf Sta&amp;ea,
while most of New EnctaDd ud Florid!~ wUI be IUDIIY Uld mild.
Hlp pl'l!lsure wUI dominate the &lt;1'!1~· V,.S. with mild ,
temperatures. A PI!Cifle cold frODt wn!. alnwly move. ~,..h the
Rocldea bringing - • !nto Wyamlng and Euten llkol n• Fair;
condltioDS will prevail over much of the Wea~ whl)e l)le No.rthweat
will see some rain aDd snow,
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' Rain and a chance of thunderstorms Thursday night.- with a
low In the inld 408. Chance of rain
Is near 100 percent. Partly cloJldY
Friday, with a chance of showers
and · thunderstorms and highs

Dally stock prices
(Aa of 11:30 a.m.)
Bryce BD~ Mark Smltb
of munt, Elllll &amp;: Loewl

' '

·between 60 and 65. Chance of rain '
Is 50 percent.
:
,. Extended Forecaat .
· . Satutday tbi-turb MollllaY
A ch~ of rain each day, with
highs maln)y In the 60s and :
overnight lows l.n .the 40s.

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port, l~ft, aDd Ken WIJII!IS and Paul Gerard, on
right, discuss their understandings of a resolution

. ATB!T ....... ,.... ...... , ...... ........ 41%
Ashland Oil .. .... ........... ... ....35%
Bob Evans ..... .. , .......... ........ 12'Ji,
Charming Shoppes .... ........... 9%
City Holding Co . .. ...... .. .. .....13\7'
Federal Mogul........ : .. .. : ...... 17%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ., .. .. ....35%'
Heck's ................ .. ... : ......... :.3%
Key Centurion .... .'.. :. :.... .. .... 1.3¥.! ,
• Lands' End ................... .. .... 18%
Limited Inc . ...... :.,:.. ... .... .... 38%
Multimedia Inc ......... .. ... ...... 77
f4x Restaurants ... ............. .... 2
Robbins &amp; Myers .... , ...... ...... l6
Shoney's Inc ........................ 11%
Star Bank .... ... ...:...... ... ...... : .. 19
Wendy's Int'l· ................ ...... .4~
Worthington 1nd...... .... ........ 20'h
(Charming Shoppes' Feb.
sales rose ,10%. IJmlled Inc.'s
Feb. sales rose 2I%)

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nJcbt'l mee$1n1 of tile
AGHJMV SoUd Wlikte M~U~age,neat Polley
Committee to "control the flow" of district soUd.
waste.
?" (
·, ~- · r-

·H~use· approves
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capital . ~ill
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This Wf.S vJewed as Including
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) _
aimed atcurb!ng violent protests
demonstrations at abortion cl!n'
Despite reservations on the part ' against the sale of furs and other
lcs, and . Furney's amendment
of a handful of members, the retail products. ·
.
failed, 15-17, with majority ReThat blll·went to the House, but
Ohio House of Representatives
publicans
~pposlng It grounds
.has given sW!ft approval to a $945 only aft!lr senators watered It
should~
dealt with ina
abortion
ll)llllaa· ~;apltal coDSt~uction a. p· down, heeding warnings that It
proprli.ilon ror-1illl111a,
was' too lteavy:h'lmdf:d,~dcould,
t. Pid!lf!'fl eame l'hli~~·on:An diSCourage • ordinary · usen\bly·
b!;!,
worked out ,In advance . by .. the
86-5 ~te leas than ·~ hours after · and discussion.
.
. ,
'lite bl4· w~ lntl'llduced. The · Tile cente,rplece of debate. was admlnlsu;atlon of Gov. Richard
Celeste and legislative leaders
measlll'e'now goes to the !ltlnate. an· amendment offered by Sen.
!rom both parties, contains $566
where ltlsexpecredtoremalnfor Linda Furney, 0-Toledo, extend!ng the sanctions against vlo·
mlll!on worth of projects for state
·at least a ·week,
college and university
• 1 Before joining the House In
lence to businesses that offer
campuses. .
weekend adjournment, the Se- consumer services as weil as
nate . va.s sed; 2!i-7, legislation tho~ t~at sell products;

·~~·~~i 1n;;;rO~~~e~ts'

Hospital news

Butcher in serious condition

•

Ueenses issued

NetVpaper

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
Marvin Wayne Satterfield, 29,
and Shelly De!lise Clark, 33, both
of Rutland; Denver Russell Persons, 56, Long Bottom, and Mary
Katherine Young, 58, Pomeroy.

workshop held
in schools

Divorces sought

' IT'S FVN -.Jan Fenblllt, a l11'11118r 1teacbernow
employed by.Tbe Coltunlius Dlspatcil to.share tbe
NeWf!PHSr In Edneatloa phlloeopby with
leaeber1 aDd pareata Ia ceatral •d southern
Oblo, sllarea ber bellefa during an evening .

Dl yorce actions have been flied
In Meigs Common Pleas Court by
Bonnie J. Martin, Middleport,
against Franklin A. Martin, APO
San Francisco; Larry Stanley,
Racine, aga:tnst Sandra Jean
Stanley, McKeesport, Pa.
·A divorce has been granted to
the defendant In the case of
Connie Sue Halfhill against Dana
Hershel Halfhill.

Citizens Federal B.ank, Mlam~
Fla., has been awarded a Meigs
Common Pleas Court judgment
of $32,411.03 In a foreclosure
action against WIIUam E. Morris, et al. Foreclosure has also
been ordered by the court.
The matterofthedlssolutlonof ·
the ina~rtage of Stephen R.
.Tatterson, Pomeroy, and Robyn
D. Tatterson, Hartford, w:.v~
baa beeb aulgned to Melga
Probate-JuvenUe Judge Robert
Buck.
.
A restraining order bas been
ordered agalnst·the defendant In
the cue of Len· Renee Capehart
against Gerald Lewis Armstrong

Cholesterol screening anrwunced

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Forfeits bond

Deputies probe theft complaint

In Middleport Mayors Court on
Tuelday, Andy Doczle, Middleport, forfeited. bolld$ of $460 for
our and
for FRA suspen-

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Among several parents 1111d teachers at the
worbbop are, from left to right, 'Kenneth and
Debbie Rizer, · Rhonda D'alley aDd Coralee
Cumm!Jis.

1".fason board's appeal rejected
'

Awarded judgment

•Jon.

By NANCY YOAC8AM
the management plan would be
tage of solid waste generated In'
senllnel Newa Staff
the "best plan that could possibly
the county Is going to a landfill in
"It's got to be tallQred for or
be developed for the district." 11
West Columbia, W.Va.
district, and our district only,"
englneersarenotg!venadequate
In past meetings, .there has
sta\ed Athens Col!llty Commlstime to prepare tne plan, and 1(
been talk ofrestrlctlngtheflowof
sloner Roxanne Groff at Thuts·
review process time Is limited,
solid waste out of the district,:
then the !llstrlct's plan may not , since the district Is not generat-:
day night's meeting of the
AGJ{JMV (Athens, Gallla,. HC)ckbe as good as li should be, she
ing enough money to pay
lng, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
said. She also pointed out that at
expenses.
Counties) District Solid Waste
this time, the district doesn't
One Meigs County hauler lef(
Management Polley Committee.
have the money to pay englheers
the meeting quite upset when It
The meeting was held at the
anyway and so a time extension
became apparent to him that th&amp;
resolution was going to pass. It'
· Meigs . County Senior Citizens • might be to the district's benefit.
.
In regard to engineers' fees,
was pointed outto the gentleman,
Center tn' Pomeroy.
· Groff was commenting ..ln rethere will be no additional cost to
and other small haulers at the.
. sponse to a request from the . thi:' district for' the extension, . 'meeting, that the term "pract!-'
district's engineering firm for
unless tlie scope of the project
cable and cost effective" would·
authorlzlatlon from the policy
would cpange, according to a . allow the district to make excep-'
committee to sumblt to the Ohio
representative of the engineer•' ''lions . and let Meigs Couhty· ·
lng firm who spoke at the
haulers continue their pracilceof·
, Environmental Protection
Agency a request for a six month
meeting.
.
going to West Columbia . But the
A' key factor In the decision of
local h11uler was not convinced·
extension to prepare the dis. (riel's 10-year management
policy committee members to
tills' would be the case when he .
plai\. Engineers were hired, as
authorlze ·the request for exten,
left the meeting.
·
required by stale law, jo prepare slon, was the fact that after April
Of Meigs County's representathe 10-year plan ard sul!mlt-lt to 16, requests forextensiQns will no
tives on the policy committee, :
OEPA by June 24·of.thls year. · ·longer be accepted by the state.
Paul Gerard and Jon Jacobs.
However, . the engineers say
By .mld·May, engineers should
voted against the resolution;
that because of continued
know If the extension has been
while Ken Wiggins and· Richard::
approved by OEPA.
Bailey .abstained from the vote.:.
changes .In state solid waste
·requirements, plan preparation
I.n other business matters, four
The fifth Meigs County commit-·
has been slowed down. And since
resolutions were passed bY the
tee members, Commissioner
OE~A Is, until AprU 16, accept·
policy committee with one In
M11nning Roush, was absent'
from last night's meeting. Wlging, requests for extePslons, the particular £BUSing concern to
-~ngLnlltlfS \'{QJI)d lll!.e to .~u!nnl ·-~lilsh. hauleri- In ,attendance at_. gins Wln.ted out .af!er the. meet. such a request\ ' After :April ' 16, tbif meeting.
.
!ng ' thilt~lhe committee already
requests for extensiOns will not
That·.resolutlon stated that the . ·had enough Yes votes to pass the
longer~ accepted by the state.
"district shall control the flow of
resolution without Meigs County.
. Wiggins also pointed out that It
· Aft~r discussion.- the engl- all soUd waste generated In the
,neers request was approved and district and, where practicable
was his. understanding of the
reso)utlon that the term "practithe policy committee passed a and cos,t effective, shall control
motlon authorizing the engl·
this flow. so that the solid waste ·cable and cost effective" will
neers, on behalf of the poUcy remains within the district."
protect Meigs County haulers
committee, to request a six
Apparently, ·this resolution Is
utilizing West Columbia's.
· month extension from OEPA. the result of Meigs County's
landfill.
However, the ·motion stipulates situation In which a large percenContinued·on page 7
that the engineers will still try to
'
meet,· or come close, to original
managment plan deadlines.
,•
According to a representative
of· the engineering . firm, the
tough draft of the 10-year plan
might still be ready In May to
A Vinton County man cl)arged wi.th killing his former
begin the review process. even
girlfriend
was In serious condition in a Columbus hospital
without an extension.
Friday
suffering
from a self-lnfi!cted shotgun wound .
Groff was In . favor 'ot the
Richard Buthcer, 33, Wilkesville, shot himself afler tear gas
extension ill order to ensure that
was tossed Into a second-floor bedroom of his mother's house,
where he had taken refuge Thursday, said Vinton County
Sherlfflff Delno McClure.
Butcher Is charged with one count of aggravated murder In
the Feb. 28 slaying of Melinda Johnson, 24, of Oak Hili.
About 25 l&lt;~w enforcement officers surrounded .Dorothy
. Butcher's ho~e after authorities were notified that her son was
inside and was .threatening to shoot himself, said Lt. R.L. Klier
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
,
Repeated attempts by his relatives and deputies to talk
In a workshop held Tue.s day
Richard Butcher Into surrende~lng failed. He declared he was
night at Southern High School,
not going to come out and "that we wet~ going to have to go In
parents and teachers from Southand get him," Kl!er said.
ern Local School Dis trlct were
Authorities said Johnson, Butcher's former girlfriend and the
surprised to learn that newspapmother of his two children, either jumPed or was pushed from a
ers can be ~sed to teach much
car and was standing on the berm of Ohio 32 when she was shot
more thl!n just current events.
· In the face .
Jan Fenholt, a former teacher
now employed by The Columbus
Dispatch, had teachers and parents work In gtoups to find Items '
CHARLESTON - The West Virginia Supreme Court
In the newspaper related to
unanimously rejected the Mason County Board of Education's
science, social studies, math and
appeal of an .o rder overturning Its firing of math teacher Bl!l
other subjects, In addition to
Webb,, a GalllpoUs area resident who refused to wear a tte and
subjects you mlght expect, silch
dress pants to class. .
as comprehension, vocabulary,
The 5-0 decision concluded' the controversy that began In the
and other reading related studies
fall of 1968, when· Webb, a teacher at Point Pleasant High
And skills .
School, refused orders to stop wearing jeans and work shirts to
Not only did parents and r
class.
..
;
teachers at the work¥1iop learn a
number of ways In which to
enhance their teaching capabiU1
ties ~ uslag newspapers, they ·
Another low cost cholesterol screening bu been set by the
had lots otlun doing the exercises ..
Meigs County Health Depa_rtment. It will be held on March 23
prelcrlbed by P'enholt. This, In
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, and from 1 to 3 p.m.
turn, told the adults that children
The finger-stick cholesterol screening, will cost $5 and only
would have fun with the same
!otal blood cholesterol will be determined. The testing w!ll be
learn!Dg exercises.
·
performed at the HealJh Departmentlocated on the second floor
'!be "Newspaper ·In Educa·
of the Meigs Multi-purpose building, an'd those participating do
t!Dn" workshop was sponsored . not have to fast for the test.
· by Southei'n District Qlaptl!r I •
Only 60 Jesii will be performed duling the screening day
~·dln,J·~
because of the neeesalty to coataln cOlts, Norma Torres, R. N.,
The N«WIP8S*r In Educatlod
nursing director, annoUIICed.
pfOII'IIm II deslped to help 1
Because of tl!e limited number of testa to be offered, residents
teacher• and! parents develop
are UI'Jed to call for an appolntllient as soon as. poulble at
escttlq ucl cballell&amp;lni ways to
992-6626. Torres Is asking that only those whn have never bad a
use the dally newspaper to teach
cholesterol test or bad a readln&amp; of above 200 participate In the
a variety of subjects and lkllll to
March 23 testing program.
students al any lfld~t!evel.
Jan HIU~ Who lleatll the Chapter I Pl'llll'lln In Southern, Is
hopeful . that parents and
Deputies of the Meigs ·eount)r. Sheriffs Department are
teachers will Implement the use
lnvestlgatlna a report of tbeft of wire from 11 Poles In various
ot II!Mpepwti with students,
area of Sutton Township." n was NPOrted by the Ohio Power
bo~ · at home ilnd 111 •the
·
Continued on
7
·
c:laiaroorils.

Locai ·news briefs-......

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admls.slons
Derma Morrison, Pomeroy;
Floyd Weber, Long Bottom.
Wednesday discharges- Martin Andrew McAngus, Meda
Watkins, Shirley Willis, Randy
Martin. ·
·

.Jr.

26 Conti :

Waste plan extensions
:will not be accepted .
by Ohio after April 16

. DISCUSS . .
' WAS'l'E PlANS '!;' Ropr
Manley, oWIIer of Maale)r's Recycling, Mltldle·

Am Electric Power ...... ...... .30\7

•

2 Stctlono. 18 .
A Mu lllm.cllo

March 9. 1990

·---~-----Weather-...:··:..------­
Soutll CeD't ral Ohio •

Low tonight In mlcl 401.
Pardy cloudy Sa&amp;arday. Hlp
In mid 70s.

to

NAnONAI. WIATHIR FORIC~ST TO 7 AM IBT ~t-t:

Capital.. ,_·c,...o_n_ti_nu-ed_fr'-.om...;·.;..pa...;g...;e_1_ _ _ _ _.....__ Ohio to ·put' sectiom
allowed to move $200,000 of lts$17 Manahan, R·Deflance, another
mUllan outlay from one project to opponent, "and lt;s rapidly beof. highway for adoptio~
another for.planning a classroom coming the curse .of our state. ·
building.
·
'
And Guernsey Countycommlsstoners diverted $50,000 for fair· grounds Improvement out of a
$200,000 appropriation fdt the
county civic center.
"This Is a good bill, .. said Rep.
Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland,
chairman of the House Finance
Committee. " It speaks to what
we are trying to do." He said
heavy emphasis Is given to
science and research buildings
on coUege campuses .
But one of the opponents. Rep.
Joan Lawrence, R-Ga!ena, comp)alned tl!ere were too many
"Inappropriate" projects.
•'The bill is fuU oi projects that
should be funded with local
doUars," she said. "We shouldn't
be spending money on 8 roof for
the courthouse and for somebody
else's lawn."
·
·
"Debt Is the curse of our
country " said Rep. Lawrence
'

Oh~ ·

_ _ _ __.:.c_ _ ........,__

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