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•
D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

PomtWoy

.

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

M.-ch 18, 1910

Pleasant. W.Va.

Meigs County
agents comer

'89 disaster ·payments -:an .:~
they be deferted to 1990 e : '

ly·,Joba Rice
cows. If they are sub!ertUe or
status may return as much u $10·.
sterUe the problem may go
to $13 per cow per year·. •
POMEROY - The Internal
undet~ted untO mu ch damage
Identification of superior bulll.;
Revj.'nue Service · has lsst~ed
through examination for breed- ~
guidance to farmers who re- has been done.
Some bulls that were exposed
lng soundness can significantly .
.celved payments In 1989 under
to December's extremely cold contribute to overall lifetime .\;
the Dlaster Assistance Act of
fertility or the cow herd.
· ,;
1989. These payments may qual- w~ather suffered frostbite of the
scrotum. Frostbite can decrease
Minimum Wage to Change - .:
Ity for the special tax treattneft
fertUlty for variable periods of The " Federal Mlnumum Wage" ~~
afforded other crop Insurance
time up to 90 days. A breeding wllluseto$3.80perhour e!fect1Ve ;proceeds received by farmers.soundness examination ' by a AprU 1,1990. Therull!sofwbether_; ·
' Under federaUax law, farmers
veterinarian cail identity bUUs or not employers are subject to +
who receive Insurance proceeds
for crop damage due _to fiood s, with Impaired fertility. Those minimum wage have no t.-;:
droughts, or.other natural'lllsas· 'bulls can then be replaced or changedcurrentiy, themlnbnum '7
retested before breeding season wage for farm workers Is $3.35 1..
ters or due to the Inability tt:1 plant
begins Studies have shown that per hour. This will Increase to·t.
crops becau.e of these event~
.
using
bulls of excellent fer tUity $3.80 per hour on AprU 1, 1990 and ;,
may quality to report this tncome
.as
opposed
to bulls of unknown to $4.25 per hour on April!, 1991. ··
In the year Jafter receipt. Sl~.ce
farmers o(ten repot t the Income
'J
from crop sales In the year alter
,.,
. _·_ __:C::::o:::n:::t1:::n;ue::::.d:....::fr..::o::m:;.D::.;
·l;__ _....,__-:-_ __._
the crops were harvested, this
J
porvlslon allows farmers whose
ern Business College for the past fllgh School and Cabell County I
crops·· are destroyed· to avoid
nine years. Prior 10 her employ- vocational Center In Huntington.
ment at SBC, Ms. Whittington
Ms. Whittington resides. on Rt. •
reportlpg two years' Income ·In
the same year.
worked four yea~s In the College 2 Point Pleasant and Is the ·
In ·order to quality for the
of Liberal Arts at Marshall · d'aughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer ~
. especial treatment, the farmer
University and taught adult . Whittington.
•·
must use the_ cash methOd of . education classes at West
accounting and must establish ·•-vi¥11-..1
· that the proceedS !rom thesaleof
·
the destri!Yed crops woullf nor- · · ' ~~
mally have been reported In a · [.;7
year following the destrucfton.
\_,
The guldanee recog~~lzes that.
payments made by the federal'
· \ . .·
government for crop damage
)
serve the same purpose to a
,.
recipient as Insurance proceeds
;
and should be taxed In a similar '
manner. The IRS said the favorable tax treatment of federal
payments properly Implements
the, intent of Congress In origi· nally enacting the crop Insurance .
provision: ·
Breeding Soundness
Examinations-Breeding season Is s!lll some
h.
tlrrte away lor most beef herds,
. NAMED DIRECTOR - Teres• Whltllnltoa hu been .....-&amp;oa
but now Is stlll a good time to
director's paslllon at Southeastern Business CoUege Ill Galllpollll.
examine your herd bulls for
Ms. Whllllolton Is CODJII'alulated by Bob Shirey, prnldeat of the ;
breeding soundness. Surveys
Shirey
Corp.
have shown that · a random

Ohio Lottery

Baseball

D.U)· Number
245
Pkk-4
6121

Lockout
comes to end

Lotto: 12, 29, 31,

37, 38,39
Kieker: 7471

Page 4 ·

Toalallt,

•••w

lllletr .

malalr eariJ. lAw Ia tile mW
*l!l. Noratwladllel8lhlllt
mpb. Clluc:e of •
perceat. Tueada)', mMtlJ.
sunny. lOth Ia the mid

*·

•
Vot.40. No.215

1 Sedlon. 10 Peg•

Pomeroy....:Middleport. Ohio, Monday, March 19, 1990

Copyrighlld 1110

25 Conte

A Muldmldle Inc. - -

~

eresa ...._

MYSTERY FARM - Tbls week's mystery
farm, featured by the Melp Soil _and Water
Co-rvatloa District, Is located 10mewhere In
Melp County. Individuals wishing 111 !;!!U'tlclpate
In lbe weekly conletlt may do so by pes!llng the
farm's owner. lust mal~ or drop offi'our guess to
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, · 825 Third Ave.,
Gallpolla, Ohio, 454131, or the Datly)Seallnel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy; Ohio,
. 4576B,and you may wtn

Farm Flashes

a $5 cash prize irom the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
numher wllb your card or Jetter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All \!ODiesl enlrlet should
be turned In to lbe newspaper office by 4 p.m •.each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, lbe wlaaer ~II be
chosen by lottery. Next week; a Gallla County
farm will be featured by the Gallla SoU aad Water
Co~U~ervatlon DIStrict.

.
Dr. Hunter to address
area tobaccomen Tuesday

FARM FLASHES
BY EDWARD M. VOLLBORN,

nounced on February 1 by U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture, Clay. ton Yeutter . Some local quota
numbers wlll also be explained.
·Refreshments will 'be served
courtesy of the Gallla County
Pr.lde In Tobacco Association. As
with tradition, the Hannan Trace
FFA and their advisor Mr. Tom
Pope will be the host for this
evening.' Lei's fill the gym!
Applications are being taken
· for the 1990 Phillip Morris
Outstanding Young Tobacco
.Farmer . program. Young
Farmers must be under "the age
of 35 at the beginning of · the
current year. At least75 percent
of their total income should come
from farming ·and they must be
actively engaged In tobacco
production . . Call the qallla
County Extension Office for
application forms. County entr ies are dqe at the County
Extension Office by Wednesday,
March 28. An out-of-county judge

will evaluate application forms
to name.
Applications are being taken
GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday ,
for the 1990 Ph!Uip Morris
March 20. starting at 7;30 p.m.,
Outs.tandlng Young Tobacco
wUI be the annual Gallla County
Farmer; program. Young
Tobacco . Producer Meeting at
Farmers must be the age of 35.at
Hannan Trace High School.
the beginning of the current year.
Dr. Phillip Hunter. University
At least 75 percent of their total
of 'I'ennessee-Tobacco ExperiIncome should came from farmment Statton Manager will be the
Ing and they must be actively
1111est apeaker. Dr. Hunter manengaged in tobacco production.
ages the Greenevllle station
Chllthe Gallla County Extension
where the variety Tennessee 86
OfflcP for application forms .
was recently developed.
County entries are due at the
His presentation will be prlmCounty Extension Office by Wedar Uy about tobacco production
nesday, March 28. An out-ofpractices Including: sucker concounty judge wUl evaluate applitrol options, vaJlety selection for
cation forms to name a. county
top grade, labor saving Ideas and
winner. Our nomination to the
other timely Information. The
state contest on due Aprn 1. 'This
Gallla County Pride In Tobacco
recognition program has some
Association. In cooperation with
really nice trlp!i and cash prizes.
the Gallla County Extension
There have been reports of cow
Office will give a short slide
deaths due to hypomagnesmla or
presentation on the 1990 Burley
"grass tetany". HypomagnesTobacco Program that was anmla Is caused by a lowering of
blood levels of magnesium and Is
often associated with cows or
sheep consuming lush . spring
grass, especially fertUlzed pastures or winter wheat pastures.
Early symptoms are usually
muscular weakness, followed by
uncoordlnatlon which progresses·
untn the cow can no longer rise.
Often cows · are .found dead
without observation of slgM.
While problems wlthhypilmagneseinla·llre 11nllsual this early In
the year, continued warm
whether could accelerate onset
of spring grazing. .It Is not too
early to make plans to supple- .
ment cows with magnesium.
This Is most easily done . by
adding magnesium oxide to a
mineral mix -and offering It
free-choice to cows. The goaJ.ls to
provide 60 grams (2 ounces) of
magnesium oxide per-head perFOSTER CONGRATULATED - Ohio Director of Avi'culture,
day
for cattle and one- third
Steve Mallrer, left, CODJII'atulates Joe Fosler, right, on his
ounce
per-head per-day . for
appointment to the Ohio Beef Council Operating Gommltlee.
sheep. This supplementatiOn
should continue throughout .the -.
spring until tile lush growth of
Two new members were ap- grass Is past. Some farms with
GALLIPOLIS- The Ohio Beef
Council plays an Important role pointed recently. One of those · historical problems, supplement
was Joe Foster, a cow/ calf magnesium oxide throughout the
In the beef Indus try.
year. Conditions will vary from
The council Is responsible for producer In Gallla County.
farm to farm. Contact your
of
the
Ohio
Beef
A
top
priority
beef promotion Including televiv e t e r lna.r tan for spe cific
Council
Is
to
keep
producers
sion advertisements and working
·
recommendations.
Informed
on
how
their
checkoff
wltb educators, health profesar
e
being
spent.
dollars
sionals, food service personnel,
and retailers to promote beef.
· They provide materials and
posters to help educate about
early fan·ptng techniques and
raising cattle. The council also
has a heart/ health care video
about how beef fits Into a healthy
BEfiR BY DESIGN
diet.
Another lmpor\llnt aspect of
HI-EFFICIENCY
the Ohio Beef Council Is the
Operating Committee. The Committee consists of 15 members In
··Ohio.

Foster named to committee

lf"tt!DTUrD•If

••• tn 'n~nlrtlt

HEAT PUMPS

For Mobile &amp; Manufactured Homes

•lnlerthlfm 1o found in cww •0% of
ell • - mobile Md mMufiC·
IU&lt;Id hOf!'ll bult todll'f.

•The . - P.C.S.D. Helt Pumpfll.. tur11: 100% 2-yr. pel1o e'ld
lobar werNnty; 100% 1-yr.
!*II end tebor Well Wily 011 lhl
comp,.-.. ouldoor molorand

roverolng velv!i. dlllanld and
engln-ed to m mod" lete l'tD dllliilerthli'm. Colemen &amp; Mllerfu,_,
•Low . . . fbwncino il available

•Free Eetlmetll

Call I ·100-172-5967
or (614) 446-9416
Over I~ Yean E11perlen~e .

QIJ

sampling of bulls usually reveal
10 percent or more wltli some
degree of unsoundness. This
becomes especially Important
for many ·ohio herds using . a
single sire.
A bull of subnormal fertility
can cause an extend~ calving
season and low conception rates
even lfhe Is not sterne. Multiple
sires are not' foolproof Insurance
as some bulls -establish dominance and inay breed most of the.

IIIA...G/COOUIIG . ·

0'" .

S.Selftfffll•l'll• ~~··· ............
~ lnlel'thenn, Co.l eman .t MOler F...tiwy Partl .t Senlee

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) - Tbe Ohio House of
Representatives will vote Tuesday on legislation
giving Cuyahoga County the authority 10 enact.
neW taxes on alcohol · and cigarettes to help
finance· a proposed $344 million stadium In
. Cleveland.'
.
· The Idea of voter-approved "sin" taxes for a
stadium was taclced onto a simple Senate-passed
bill requiring that figures uied In the state Income ·
tax tables be rounded off to whole dollars.
The bill Is expected to . pass, and Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl, said he
personally favors It when It returns to the Senate
for concurrence In the change.
·The House reconvenes at 1l a .m. Tuesday and
the Senate at1 :30 p.m.
· The proposed tax blll, If approved by the .
General Assembly, signed by Gov. Richard

.
Celeste and enacted by local voters, would raise
about$155 mUUon toward' the cost ofthe stadium.
Local voters would be able to tax liquor sold In
state stores, as well as beer, wine and mixed
beverages sold In carryouts and supermarkets.
Alcoholic beverages sold In taverns and restaurants may already be taxed.
The House also Is expected to vote later In the
week on legislation calling for the refinancing of a
31-story, $150 million office building In downtown
Columbus housing the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Com~nsat19n and
the Ohio Industrial
Commission.
The agellcles currently rent the building from
the workers ' Insurance fund for $25 million a year.
paid lor by assessments on employers. Sponsors
claim that leasing the building over 20 years with
an option to purchase will b~ a · cheaper
arrangement.
..

The House Is expected Tuesday to concur In
minor Senate changes to a $945 million capital ·
construction appropriation for 1991-92 and for,;
ward It to Gov. Richard Celeste for signature.
.T he bill contains $566 mllllon worth of projects
for state university campuses, and almost hall the
projects Involve· maintenance and renovation
rather than new construction.
A $138 million supplemental budget, which will
make up a projected S92 million shortfall In
Medicaid funds, Is scheduled for a Wednesday
hearing In the House Finance Committee and
could reach the floor the following day. It cleared
the Senate last week.
New child support guidelines required by the
Supreme Court have passed the House and are
scheduled for a Wednesday hearing In the Senate
Judiciary Commlltet'. The federal government
has Insisted that Ohio have the new rules In place

A Vinton Coun)Y man charged gauge shotgun he used to fatally
In the Feb. 28 shotgun slaying of wound himself.
his former girlfriend died Saturday In Grant Medical Center,
He shot himself after a threeaccordlDg the March 19 Colum- · hour standoff with troopers and
bus Dis patch.
of!lcers from the Vinton and ·
Richard Butcher, 33, of Wilkes- Jackson County Sheriffs departville, died at 9:45p.m. in Grant's ments. Officers surrounded the
Intensive care unit, a · hospital Wilkesville farmhouse of
spokesman said Sunday . He had Butcher's mother, Dorothy, alter
· been undergoing treatment since Butcher took refuge In ~ secondshooting hlmse)f In the stomach floor bedroom early March 8.
A relative nodfled troopers of
with a shotgun March 8.
The State .Highway Patrol had Butchers' whereabout after
charged Butcher with one count Butcher .threatened suicide. Ourof aggravated murder wllh a . lng the selge that followed ,
firearm specification In the slay- Butcher threatened to klll
Ing of Melinda Johnson, 24, of himself.
Oak Hill. Troopers said they
Jackson County Sheriff Edgar
believe Butcher shot Johnson .Rayburn tossed a tear gas
with the same single-shot. 12· canister through the open bed·

Ask a neighbor, then call me.

·BANKRUPTCY.
614-221-0118

Ave. I Stolt St.

AnORNEY~AT-LAW

PAST .• EGENTS - A hllhH&amp;hl of Frfda,y'~
Chlll'ter Day Lllacheoa of the Ret . . lollllthaa
Melli! Chapter of the Dauahtera of the American
ltevolulloa was the recopltlon of .put regents.

Gallipolis. Oh.
Phone 446·4290
Homo 446-4511

336 S. High St., Colutnbus, OH.

LOCAL CONSULTAOON
llfiiGHT,Iilul1EN LAW OFfKES,
POMEIOY, 992-2090

nut.,,,.

.A

P-or with

INIUUM ~~

AnOINEY D. AIOIAEL MilLEN

State Fll'm Mutual
Au-lnlutMCOC9"'1*'Y
HOmo Office, BloomlnQton. lllinOia

BJ Valted Press International
shoutil mostly end overnight, and Tuesday, with highs In the upper
Old Man Winter apparently Is sunny conditions should develop 30s to mkHOs, but more seasona·
determined to make up for a
Thutsday.
ble temperatures will then .
weak 1990 showing on the las t!ull .
return.
day before spring officially
Spring arrives officially at 4: 19 · Wednesday will see highs In the
arrives.
.
p.m. Tuesday., when the sun upper 40s to low 50s under sunny
Snow was falllng at dawn today crosses the equator on a north· skies. There will be a chance of
over most of the Buckeye State,
erly journey that ends on the first rain Thursday and Friday. with
with some southern and east day of summer, June 21. On the hlgbs around 50 Thursday and
central cOunties expected to get first day of spring, the length of from the mid-50s to inld-60s
as 'm uch as 3 Inches before the the day Is roughly equal to the Friday. Lows will be ln the 20s
storm passed ,
lengtl! of the night , but the day Wednesday and from 35 to 40
A snow advisory was In effect
appears to be longer.
Thursday and Friday.
lor the morning In the southwest
That 's because the atmosThe early morning weather
and lor all day for the south pheric retraction makes it ap- map showed a cold front over
central and east central regions. pear the sun rises before It eastern Ohio and a low pressure
with motoristS advised to watch actually comes over the horizon. center over West Vlfglnla. Both
lor sUppery roads·.
· ·
making the day longer by a few these systems are l!xpected to
Precipitation was expected to minutes.
slOwly move to the east coast by
taper off In western Ohio as the
The final day of winter was to early Tuesday morning. A region
day wore on, and the western · see chilly temperatures. with of high pressure that was over
counties should have clear skies highs In themld-30s tolow40sand the Great Plains early today
tonight and Tuesday. Over the overnight lows In the low 20s. The should move to the Appalachians
rest of the state, precipitation wintry temperatures will linger by late Tuesday.

""FINAL FOUR"'
IN THE 1990
NCAA BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT AND
SMITH BUICK PONTIAC. INC.
WILL GIVE YOU•••

s1oooo

Celeste announces highway projects

e,,

N•·GI,IIIe.,/
No
Ot~1/

· According to Information· received this 'm orning, Governqr
Richard Celeste has approved
lll8.1 million In highway funds for
the completion of U. s. Route 50
In Athens County. The office of
State Rep. Mary Ab£&gt;1 iDAthens) contacted The Dally
Se!ltlnel this morning to report
the governor 1s funding approval.
Abel is extremely happy about
the governor's funding comm!t·

-RULES:(1) Uee newepaper coupon
(2) Mell or drop off your coupon to 1911
Ealtam Ave.
(3) AI entry forma mus1 be received before

.

(4) In caM of a tie we will use total cham pi·
. Onlhip ICOre
'
(6) One entry per pe;aon

--------------------------------------------~I
II) _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(2) _ _ _ _:___ __

. CHAMPIONSHIP
TOTAl SCORE --:...__,..__,.._"--Namt _ ______;:.,.....____;_

(3)---,-------'------

141 ....--- - - - - - -

Put' reaeata who were pre.oeat' for the meetlag
lnclade, from left, Befty MIIbou, Rae Beyaolda
Cwllo Ill currently let'vlag a aecond tenn as
reaeat),luae Allhte)', Pat Ingles, Mary Kay Yost,
Morla.b FQster and Phyllis Skinner.

Winter going out with a .· bang

PICK THE

3120/90'

room door alter negotiations
with Butcher failed. About two
minutes later, Butcher shot
himself.
He had been In hiding, at one
point In Columbus. since the
shotgun slaying of his former
girlfriend on the berm of Rt. 32.
Johnson had Jumped or been
pushed !rom a car and was
talking to two truckers. who had
stopped to help her when she was
shot In the face. A man !ired a
shotgun from his car window as
he passed by, the truckers said.
· Larry Johnson of Oak Hill,
father of the slain woman, said
Butcher had threatened to kill
her when the couple broke up
about a year ago. She had two
children. 5 and 2.

CAROtL .SfiOWDEN
Corner of Third

L.W. CENNAMO

In

by Aprll1.
The House PubliC Utilities Committee has
scheduled a hearing · Tuesday afternoon for
legislation establishing " lifeline'·' telephone rates
for low-Income families .
The House Commerce and Labor Committee
wUl hear Initial testimony Wednesday morning on
a Senate-passed bill l{overnlng demonstrations
against re tail products.
·
The blll originally was Intended to curb violent
protests against fur coats. but It was broadened In
the Senate to Include all consumer goods.
Sen. Gary Suhadolnlk. R-Pal'l!la Heights. the
chief sponsor, said he will try to reinsert a
provision calling fo r a criminal pen;~lty for ·
cqnsplring to disrupt a retail business with a
demonstration against a product. That provisibn
· wa:s knocked out In the Senate.

Suspect in killing dies of wound

Paying more
than you need
to for car
·
insurance?

A~~~ --~-------

r~-

.

.

I
II
I

I
I

I

~---·--~-~---------------~----·-------------~

.

.
ClU'I'D 8PEUER - Bry·
- L (...) Carter epeakfa&amp; at
1 I II I pnpllll aboat 1...
....
tlfvlll~. . .
V.I. Farm 1111, and u
itJwa vlw of the farm price

cE· .

Ohio House to vote
on
'sin
tax'
legislation
.

tment for Route 50 because
completion of this route "will be
good for e&lt;;'Onomlc development
throughout Southeastern Ohio,"
she stresses.
And even though the stardng
dat e&lt; for the lour separate
pro jt'cts which comprise the
total $58.1 million package, are In
1993 and 1995. Abel feels tbls "Is
still only a short time away.

"I'm very happy to see this
money coming Into our rel{lon.
It's · something we've . worked
hard to get and I'm pleased to
announce the awarding of these
monies for Southeastern Ohio,"
she says.
There Is also money reportedly
going toJ&gt;Ike County to complete
the Appalachian Highway, although the amount of funding
was unavailable at press time.

Protesters arrested' at abortion clinic
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPil Flfty·slx anti-abortion protesters
arrested durin!! the weekend
remained In the Franklin County
jail Sunday on~harges stemming
from a "reacue operation" at a
downtown clinic, official~ said.,
The defendants, most ch!l~
with dllonlerly conduct and a
few wllb mil dng arrest, were
amcma 123 people arrested Satur·
day u thl!)' blQCked the entrance
totliJFou...-·swomen'sHealth

"We read them t.bewarnlngs and
they cleared the door at that
time."

Kalght, supervisor of lhlt Franklin County Municipal Court.
"Ever.ythlng wu very peaceful," she uld SUnday. "The
dleorderlles
that came
through didn't offer a lot of
resl8taDCe or anything."
Katght uld 55 of tho11e arrested
had been releued with a

· The demonatratton drew actlvll ta from acrou the state and,
accordlq to ar1'81t records,
SOllie people from Weet Virginia,
Indiana and PellltiYIVBIIIa.
The 11'1'11111 ·for dllorderly
conduct at the Founder'• cllalc IUlftiiiOJII,
The ot1ten remaiJted 111 tbe
began early SaturdQ and coD·
tlnued for about three ltoun, FranlcUn CoUnty JaB. Bond tor
Matltl llkl About 100 offtcerl ObiO 1'811deall wa• Itt at • ·
were called to tlte dlllk: and They htll to pay 1ft to pt out of
rerulaed uatU tbe IJOCitesteralefl Jail, aald Torn McFertn, deputy
clerk,
atDOOD.
Tttere wu no viOleace at eltber
Sit- Doll Tltomu ..,. 56
remaiDid jJIIed at mltl-momlna
clinic, bJ uld.
'
.Calm aiiO prevailed dlirlng the Sunday.
booklq of 1111pects, uld Linda ·
(Ctildk .I d Otl Pap It)

eeaeer:

Aaotlter prOteet at Capital
Care Women's Center went with·
out ar1'8111 whelt tlte actlvflta
IIIII1IWd hill tltedoorot tile clinic.
llld Lt. WWiam Mattei of the
Columbus Pollee Pepartment.

Olldooll.

An appeal to residents ttl stop
Illegal dumping In the county was
Issued this morning by Kenny
Wiggins of the Meigs County
Litter Control office.
Wiggins said that the discard· ·
lng of major appllsnces such as
refrigerators, washers, stoves,
dryers, and dishwashers along
the country and township road·
ways Is creating a serious
problem.
''This dumping Is illegal ·and

Teachers end historic walkout
CHARLESTON. W.Va. !UPil
- Teachers agreed to leave the
picket lines and return to classrooms Monday, but union leaders
quesdoned the authority of a
court order that ended West
VIrginia's first statewide walkout by educators.
Striking educators met across
the state Sunday and agreed to
heed ~he call of the state's two
education groups to end the
11-day strike.
''Everyone will be ret urnlng to
work," said Bob Brown, executive director of the West VIrginia
Federation of Teachers, which,
represents 3,00o of the siate's
21.653 teachers.
ThE'WVFTand the larger West
VIrginia Education Association
announced a settlement Saturday, epdlng a strike that flared
March 7 when the WVEA accused Gov. Gaston Caperton of
backing out of a pledge to deliver
a 5 percent JH!Y raise. .
Brown said he heard 'from
teachers In 20 counties Sunday
night, and without excepdon, the
strikers voted to return to the
classrooms. The WVFr leader
said "there's no quesdon" the
brief strike served a useful
purpose.
'1 don't think, ever again, that
any politicians will take teachers
for granted, or not take ~~erloualy
our reeotve and commitment to
Improve education," Brown aald
Sunday nlgbt.
Kanawha County Circuit
Judge Joba Hey on Friday
ordered teaehen &amp;ei'OII tbeetate
to rettira to work, eDillltl' the
walltilut tltat dlarupled 11:bool for
3411,000 ltudllltllll .. eotllltleJ.
Browlt erltlctlld lley'a tnlllr·
fl!reDCe, IIYIIII tllllt aiiDwi.Da
jllll. . to llllilr tbt field ot labor
aeaouatloaa "II daqeroua."

Bniwn llld 1111 orallllratton

wiD .u. to bJve Hey'a onltr
•truck clowll at lite ltearlni at 10
a.m. Tuesday.
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causes big problems for . all
Pomeroy. They will be picked up
communities as well as being
there and recycled, Wiggins said.
very expensive If you are arThis Is for appliances only. It
rested and cited to court. "
was emphasized, and the Utter
commented Wiggins.
control director urged residents
He said that lor a limited time to take advantage of the opportunity to dispose of such .Items
h~ agency has worked out an
·
arrangement with a recycling · now .
:·we 'appreciate your working
operation whereby 'such Items
can be brought to an area with our program til doing your
adjacent to the Meigs County
part to keep Meigs County 'Clean
Litter ·Control office at Union and Beautiful,' Wiggins
Avenue and State Route 7 near concluded.

"It's our esdmatlon at this
hour tha 1 we likely will go to seek
to dissolve the statewide Injunction, " Brown said. " We are still
talking with our attorneys. We
have said all alol)g that when the
judicial system gets Involved
with labor management disputes
there Is always the danger of
precedents. "

Brown acknolwledged that Impending court action Influenced
the settlement.
Attorney General Roger Tomkins declared the strike Illegal,
and Caperton &lt;s uggested last
week he would seek replacements if teachers prolonged lt.
The walkout paralyzed schools In
(Coatlllued On Paae It)

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/C ommentary
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DEVOTED TO~ INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

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l!m~ r"T"1-...L--r•rrw.c:::l•-

""'v .

ROBERT L WINGETT

CHARU:Nf; HOEFLICH
General Muqer

Pullllaller

PAT WIIJTEHEAD

ANialaat PubU.her/CoplroUer

"

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

AssociatiOn and the American NewspaPf!" Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be l..s than 300
words lo~g. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
· na'l'e, pd\lress and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub·
:\:.~·Letters should be In lJ()Od taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

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Celebrezze campaign
.tries to move
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By LEE LEONARD
1JPI Stlltehoue Reporter
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COLUMBUS- If you look carefully, you can see the gubernatorial
campaign of Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze starting to
change direction. Cynics would say the campaign Is going from
backward to forward.
'·
·r:.ast week, Celebrezze fired his campaign manager lind longtime
lrlend;•Ira Forman, and brought In what the RepubUcans called two
''attack dogs."
Donald Sweitzer and l;'eter HarriS are Washington consultants who
have worked tor Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohlo, and succeeded
with past campaigns In Ohio.
Sweitzer, who has run three presidential campaigns In Ohio, wlll be
the campaign director. Harris, who managed Metzenbaum's 1988
re-election campaign, will do the advertising media.
Harris should be especially familiar with Celebrezze's opponent.
former Cleveland Mayor George Volnovlch; who ran unsuccessfully
against Metzenbaum In 1988.
·
Sweitzer and Harris will attempt to get Celebrezze ou tof his current
defensive crouch and Into an offensive mode.
The attorney general has ~n kept busy fending off bombs from
the Volnovlch camp, which says he has · ~n unethical In his
fund-raising and bas stood Idly by for eight years while the Celeste
administration committed all sorts of misdeeds.
This·Will change In three ways: first, Celebrezze already has begun
to distance himself from Gov. Richard Celeste In his comments ·
•
•
saying It s time to look forward. ''I'm running on my record, not on
Dick Celeste's," he said In a speech last week.
Second, Sweitzer and Harris will try to create an Image of what they
see as the."true Tony''- "solid, hard-working, honest, a famUy man
who Is strong for law and order and for the average working pei)ple."
They will try to write the Issues In the campaign- Celebrezze's
accompUshments In the areas of consumer and environmental
protection, and fighting crime and drugs. They hope this wlll take the
spotlight away from the Celeste administration and Celebrezze's
attachment to it.
Third. the "attack •dogs" will be trying to put Volnovlch on the
defensive. They feel he has gotten a relatively free ride on his record
as mayor of Cleveland, since he Is credited with turning the city
around.
.
"He hasn't been all that great," said Harris. "We're going to
correct the record about George. We need to be sure his whole record
Is· out there.: '
·Look. for some Investigative reports soon about misadventures In
the city administration while Volnovlch was mayor.

Republicans were not idle last week, either. They assembled a
campaign finance reform package tor their candidate for state
treasurer, Judith Brachman, .to promote.
Conveniently, she had a forum at the Republican-controlled Ohio
Senate task force on campaign finance reform.
Brachman proposed a "pilot" program Involving only the
treasurer's campaign, limiting overall spending to $500,000 with half
of thai' public money.
A limitation would seem to putBrachman at a disadvantage. As an
outsider, she will have to show a lot of television ads to get her name
and message known.
.
But Democratic Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow might also suffer.
She already has raised more than the maximum amount allowed
under Brachman' s proposal. Withrow, through a spokeswoman, gave
the plan a chlllv reception.
.

Berry's World
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1..1

Br . . S BAaNIII
UP1 ......."1rrller

THE &lt;.HOLESTEROL. WAANI~
'IOU HA'IE iHE RIGHT TO
~EMAII't IN~IFFE~E"'T·

AN'ITHIN~

'10\l EA1'1NIAY

Be HELt:&gt; AGfo.\NST YOU •.•
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BefOre l.oyola MarymOUDt look tile court to
meet the deleadlq na11olial cbmnplou, L-M

Jack Anderson and Dale· VanAtt~

Robin Tallon, D.S. C .. appear to
have the fire In their stomachs to
·lind out whether the plane was
broqhl down by terrolsts or jUII glance.
Ice on the wings, as the official
The FBI Is the most suspicious
Une goes.
mute, fkeeplng secret 200 or ·tile
The answer may now be lett ot
247 pages of Its accident report. It
a small team or lnestigators from
now appears that FBI will not
the General Accounting Office,
even tell the GAO what Is on those
which has been asalgned to lind
pages. The FBI has Informed
out how well the Pentagon, FBI
GAO Investigators that they can
and National Transportation
look at some of the report I! they
Safety Board handled the acciagree not to use It in their
dent Investigation. Rep. John
findings.
Conyers, D-Mich., order the GAO
When Congress gets the GAO
lnvestl&amp;allon.
report at the end or this month,
So far, all the federal agencies
the lawmakers will have to
that have dabbled In the Gander
decide whether or not the Gander ·
case claim they . were only
crash deserves more
marginally Involved in the accl· , lnvesUgatlon.
dent Investigation that ws
As we have already reported,
headed up by Canadians. U.S.
there Is strong evidence to
officials have treated this disas- . bolster the theon that the plane ..
ter as If It was only worth a quick : was blown out of the sky by

t

terrorists. ~ filght was carry- .
Ina AmeriCan soldiers home
from their peacekeeping dillies
. In the Middle East. The Incident
happened at the height of Presl·
dent Reaean' s arms -forhostages deal with Iran.
For starters, four or the nine
members of the Canadian Avta·
tlon Safely Board concluded In
1988 that the plane exploded
because ''fire broke out on board
while the aircraft wu In ftlgbt,
possibly due to a detonatiollln the.
cargo department."
There Ia also growing attention
being given to repOrts that six
coftln·slzed boxes were loaded ·
onto the plane when It left Cairo.
A fomier Pentagon .lnveostlgator
told us that he hu reason to
believe the boxes may have
carried bodies or American bos·
tages and soldiers who died In a ·
stlll·secret rescue mission In
Lebanon.
The · C~!.Dadian government Is
resisting pressure to hold a
coroner's Inquest Jnto the deaths.
A group calling ltselt "Famntes
for tbe Truth About Gander"
says that Newfoundland law
required Canadian medical exa·
miners to Inspect the bodies at
· the crash site before they ,w ere
t11rned over to the U.S. AI my. But
that dldnt happen.
·
Last Dec.12, our associate Jim
Lynch watched as •hout 100
!amUy members of the vlctbns
huddled together In the cold for a
memorial service at AriiNton
National Cemetery' outside Wa·
shlngton. The event marked the
, fourth annlveriU')' of the crash.
For these people, standing
among the plain, white. tombstones, the wounds ar.e"slow to
be~. In part because '\bey feel
their government has . lied to
tb'em abOut what · really.
happened.

coach Paul ~ettbe.d told bls te~ to plaY,
"Bombll Away."
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Tbe LlonJ c;ompUed, leeVIJII Michigan .shell··
shoeked and vlctlma ol the peatest o(fenatve ·
expalan In thj! hii!IQI'y of the NCAA toi.trna111f!nt.
. ·Willi Jeff Fryer •trlklnJ lor 11 tllree-poblteri jll.lt oae or muy recorda . Sunclay - Loyola
Marymount walloped the No. 15 Wo~ne5
149..115 at Long !'INch Arenll; In ·Lbq&gt; Beach,
Calif., toadvancetothelrflrr.t-everSweetSixteen
appearuce. ,
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"We 11!8~ ciur IUY8 at the start to play
· ~
bombl·aw'ay,' ' West!IM!Isald. ••we tOld tbiem to
let It fly.
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"ltblnlt.you saw ourfiiS~IYIII!muwesee
It every day ·:.. The playen are free. to ~ It go.
Gu)'s like JeftFryer,kl!le to do lt.lt's fun, it~a not
work."
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llldeed. tbe Uo111, !15-5; m4decbild'a playoflhe
Big Ten power boa~- TM)' attat.~ tile tourna·
ment record formllltpoillta ·aDdscoredmorethal!
any opp4nent . had .In 82 years of Mlcblgan
basketball.
· .
"They ma,d e I'IBA thrft.polnters, theY made
them with people Oil • thi!P\r with peoplj! . not
guarding them," Wolverlnell coach Steve Fisher
said. 'Tb~ ·were ti'IIIY sensational. ·
·
''They are ;'very. much. focused on moving
forward lq the: rotii'IUiment, a,f.well u any team
I've ever ieen. " &lt;
·
. Loyola, tbe lltll iee41~ the West Region,' will
meet' Alabama Frl!ia~ ;nlll'ht, In the re~nal
semlftaals 'at Oakland~ CaUl. '
'
David ~noll scored 20'polnts and teamed With
R!\bl!rt Hor~ to trtgpr a U.O, r.un''mklway
thrO\Iih the second . haU . to SJ;~&amp;rk the Crimson
Tide.
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''Th.e way Loyol&amp; '1s PlAY.In&amp; r~~f now I don't
thlnkeve!lthe,L·akerscouldiri8tcbu!lwlththem,."
AriZona's Lute Olson sal(j.; .
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·Bo Kimble or the Lions,.the No.1 scorer In the
nation,' COIItrlbuted 3'7 points· despite hitting just
one thref'Polnter: · .
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Michigan; which became the 17th straight teim
since the 1973 UCLA Bruins: to fall to repeat lls
NCAA championship, flnllhed 23-8.
was

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Fisher's first In eight tournament games.
·Loyola, playing only Its second game since the
death of star Hank Gathers, topped the previous
tournatnenti'ecordof127polntssetbyWesthead's
alma mater, St. JnOAnh's rPa.l. against Utah In
· 1961. That game wenttour over times.
· The previous mark tor point$ against Mlch1gan
was 119, accomplished b)' Utah In 1969.
Demetrius Calip's two foul shots had Michigan
within 84-76 with 13: 18· left, but Loyola - once
again fueled by Its fuUcourt press - reeled off
nine unanswered points.
. Klinble dunked to start a three-point play - .
drawing Mike Griffin's fifth foul - and Per
Stumer· atruck for a corner three-pointer
follciwtne a ftve-second vlolstlon for a 95-76 bulge.
wltb ll:55left.
When Fryer drove for a )eft-handed hook, the
. lead '!VatlOQ-79 witb.ll minutes le~ . and Michigan
was never again close. ·
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· .Fryer's binge ot long-range bas"ets topped the
previous record of 10 set by Fniddle Banks of
Nevada-Las Vegas In 1987 against Indiana.
Loyola bit 21 three-pointers In 40 tries, two more
tournament marks.
"It's a great feeling," said Fryer, who made IS
of 20 fleld·goal atterQpts. 'ncludlng 11 of 15 from
long range. "I know I'm going to get my shots
throueh the now oflhe offense -It's just a matter
of me hitting tht:m."
Terrell Lowery added 23 points while Stumer
had 21 for the nation's top scoring team. F:ryer's
outburst was a season-high and one shy of his
career-mark.
Terry Mill$ and Rumeal Robinson scored 23
points for Michigan. which finished w{th a
season-high 27 turnovers.
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In the 's econd game, Horry. held scoreless to
that point, nailed two three-.p olnters In the 14·0
burst as the No . 19 Crimson Tide, 26-18, advanced
to the Sweet Sixteen for the fQurth time II'! six
years.
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Ben.olt added 13 rebounds to 'key a 40-27
advimtage under the boards for the winners .
''They are so big," he said of the Wildcats.
"Mainly It was desire. When you .think about II.
size doesn't matter. It's who wants It the most."
Second· seeded Arizona, which struggled to beat
- South Florida In the first round, failed in Its bid to
advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the third straight

Moving America_---:---:----__,...,...::c:..::..on:..:.:...-=cla=r-=ence.;.:.
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Last week, after 117 hearings
In 48 cities, U.S. Secretan of
Transportation, Samuel Skinner,
and President Bush jointly un·
veiled the Administration's long
·awaited master plan tor upgrad·
lng .o ur country's deteriorating
transportation systems. Entitled
"Moving America," it was met
with a chorus of comments both
critical and complimentary.
The thrust of the former was
that the main thing this plan
"moves" is the responsibility for
· funding the upgrading !rom the
federal to the state and municl·
pal levels of government. The ·
thrust of the latter was that the
plan will require no new federal
taxes to implement, while putling forth a comprehensive blueprint for bringing our sagging
transportation -infrastructure
abreat of our country's current
needs and expectations.
Like any proposal put out In
Washington. the stance of those
taking sides Is often dictated by
the "ox factor." Th011e getting
gored scream the loudest. In that
one of the main planks of this new
proposal Is the call tor Increased
user fees !or.airports, waterways
and hlgh'!'ays, such groups as the
Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association and the Highway,, Users
Federation, predictably 'Panned
the plan, labeling it "more of a
tax policy than a transpartatlon .

Such congestion Is costing
policy."
.
urban area drivers hundreds of
Generally, however, most
dollars a year In elltra costs for
viewed It in the context in which
fuel and maintenance, ,;)DDt. tO
It was pres~ated, that being as a
mention the errv.lronmn'i al
broad and general plan tor the
dqwnside to such backups.
•
future, as a b)ueprlnt for chart·
While Secretary Skinner ack·
lng the renewal for our country's
owledges that stgnlftcant probtransportation systems, not as a
lems exist In all sectors of the
legislative proposal that dictates
nation's transportation network,
chapter and verse as to bow this
he
Identifies auto congestion as
renewal will be attained:
the
country's number one, longNo one can debate the magnl·
-term priority. As a result, the
tu.d e of the problem this plan
propses to address. Various · emphasis of the. Department's
master plan, the first such
studies have estimated the cost
national transportatlqn strategy,
of · briDging our transportation
I might add, to be propoled since
infrastructure up to standard at
the late 70's, Is 'clearly on the
over $3 trUllon (yes, I said
motor vfhlcl~t, mode or travel.
trUIIon).
In summary, the plan addresA recent Transportation Desess the major ·modes In the
partment report Indicated that
following manner:
roughly 11 percent of our nation's
Aviation- It calls for recover·
1.2 mUilon miles of principal
highways - the 30 percent of our lng a high proportion of costs
from users, and would allow local
nation's highways that handle 87
airports to Impose paSsenger
percent of all vehicle traffic -Is
facility charges. It also calls for
detlc!ent.
These bleak figures are sure to comple(llig the National Airs·
get a lot more discouraging if pace System, a series or projects
swift attention Isn't paid to our aimed at modernizing .the na·
nation's crumbling highways.
tlon's air ti'atfic control syslem.
MUll Transit - It would
Demographic analysts tell us
that over 40 percent of the reduce federal operating assist·
current American workforce ance and lnctease the state and
drives from a suburban home to local share of federally backed
mass transit projects.
their place of employment, mak·
'Ratiroau - It w&lt;nild end
ing the reality of grid lock on the
Federal subsidies tor Amtrak
highways these workers travel a
while working to find private
dally nightmare.

funding !or this system.
Maritime - It call tor a
. reellamlnatlon or' the country's
Internationally.
·
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Hl.,._r• - ·The plan calla for
Increasing the state and local
share of federal aid projects and
would give these units of govern. ment greater · latitude In estab. llsblng tool roads. It would also
allow greater fiexlblllty In the
use of the hlgbway trust fund In
financing transit projects and ·
WO\IId make a sound .Infrastructure management pragram a
condition tor federal ald. On the
subject of transportlne hazard·
ous materials, It would extend
federal regulations to Intrastate
shipments as well.
Allin all, I feel the Administration's plan .to "Move America"
and restore our nation's major
transportation systems Is a real!·
slUe propo~l given the present
budge\ constraints we face here
In itself Is not enough.
·
For a plan to become policy It
will take legislation, and for such
leglsltlon to become law t1 will
require the support of
MajorIty Leadership or ·congress, ·a
Ledershlp whlcb unfortunately
seems bent on rebuUdlng Amerl·
ca's Infrastructure on the back of
Un~le Sam an the federal
treas.
.ury. rather than at the expense of
Its party's major constituency, '
the urban dweller.

qa~ .. w&amp;t.•;
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tl) 1~byN£A lr.c.

"Excuse me/Is there any new.skinny in there
about Donald snd MsriB?' ~ ·

season.

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Jud Buechler, Arizona's leading aeilrer, was
limited to two flelcl goals and alx points. Brian
WIUiams, who bad a career-bleb 28 points aga'lnst
South Florida; was blanked.
· -Freshman Ed Stokes led No. i2 Arizona with 17
1.
points.
Eiateru Bepnal
UCLA 71, llaii.U 70 ....: At Atlanta, freshman
Tracy Murray sank two free throws with nine
seconds remalnlne and UCLA advanced to the
regional semifinals tor the first lime since 1980
with the victory over fllth-ra'nked Kansas. The
Bruins, 22-10, move on to East Rutherford, N.J.,
tor a Thursday matchup against No. 14 Duke.

Rick Calloway milled a 15-foola' In the final

secondl for Kauu wltb Trevor WI lion draped all
over him as tbe lleCiOIId M!ded Jaylulwlrl flalalled
30-~ 8IICI fell to0.8lltetlmeagalnat UCLA.All four

Bill Eleht reprvsentatlve. ·were eliminated ovtr
the weellelld, with Kansas State 8IICI Ml.-rl
loslilg Friday Blld lotHanked OklahOma dropping
a '19-77 decision to North Carolina Saturday.
D11ke 'II, St. olohn'• 71- Robert Brielle)' made a
tie-breaking ._yup With U secondl remalnlna and
the Blue Devils held St. John's Without a field aoaJ
tor the tiDal 6: 33 In advancing to the NCAA East
Regional semifinals. The thlrd·le!iled 811111
Devils, 26-8, ralUed from a 88-81 detlelt and
advance to meet UCLA. Duke hu advanced to the
final 16 five consecu live seasons and ba1 earned
t!U'ee Final Four bertbs In the past four yean.
Brickey tied hll season hl&amp;b Wit~ 22 pol~tl, and
·.
.. , (See NCAA oa Pap •) , ~·· 1

NBA roundup

C~valiers top Magic 120.103
from the field, for 63-percent, In
By United P.res• International
the period.
Without Brad Daugherty,
Built was a 16·2 run in the third
Mark Price and Larry Nance, the
Cleveland Cavaliers were unable period that ruined any Orlando
to defeat 'the expansion Orlando cQmeback hOpes ~nd eventually
Magic when ilie two teams met led to the Magic's 16 loss In 17
games. In that five-minute •
earlier this season.
Sunday night In Orlando that · stretch, John Williams and
trio teamed 'for 64 points - 54 Daugherty accounted for eight
!rom Daugherty and Price- and points apiece as the Cavs' cuthe Cavaliers cruised to a 120-103 shion swelled to 85·62 with 3:02
victory over Orlando and kept remaining In the quarter.
Orlando, on the strength of
their playoff hopes alive In the
rookies' Nick Anderson and
Eastern Conference.
This version of the Cavaliers Morlon Wiley, mounted a charge
closely resembled the 1988·89 to cut Ihe le11d to 11 polntsear~vln
team that won 57 games and the the fourth period. Wiley hit a pair
Central Dlvslon title before bow- of three-pointers, the last coming
Ing t9 Chicago In the tlrst round of with 9:44 left that sliced the lead
to 96-85.
the playoffs.
But Craig Ehlo countered with
While winning their tilth
straight and extending Orlando's a lhree-polnter and Orlando
losing streak to ~ season-high could g~t no closer than 12 points
nine games, the Cavs shot well the rest of the way ~
Daugherty had a game-high 29
(53.4 percentl and repeatedly
took advantage of the Magic's points, and Williams · finished
with 22 for the Cavs.
lack of defense.
· "I think we're playing the best · "We ran Into a team that's
basketball that we have played playing very good basketball
all season rlgl)t now," said Price, right now. They've basically got
who scored 25 points and dished their club back together after the
out a game· high nine assists. :"I I Ronl Harper trade, and the
think our defense Is the reason 1early-.s easonl Injuries," Orwe're playing like a different lando coach Matt Guokas said.
"They
to bl&gt; getting Into
team. We're finally coming
peak form and beat a lot of good
together .."
Two separate stretches spelled teams this past week, Including
the Lakers and 76ers."
. conquest for Cleveland:
Elsewhere In tbe NBA, Detroit
The first run came In the !Ina!
2:55 of the second quarter, with stomped Dallas 114-84. Portland
Orlando ahead 49-45. Daugherty pasted Houston 109·96, Boston
and Price
run that downed New Jersey 122-106,
Seattle topped Golden State
led loa
121-116, Denver
Mlnne·
Cleveland bit 12

flrat haH of Sundey's NCAA tournamenlcame at
..... Beach, Calif. The Uona went on 10 register a

1_.111 kaocllout agalast the defending national
) lbamplon Wolverines. (UPI)

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·~4ld!en~ dowD Nomiques 8-3

the

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year and finished ~ 7.
The Tide, ~eve~~tll hi the nation In ICOring
defense, held the Wildcats- averaging almost SO
points a game - to their lowest point total this

seem

can .get untracklid Oil thil ·next

By IQIIN '8WBNIION

UPI ..orta Wrl&amp;er
four-game road trip because we
When· ibe lli!aiion liepn, . tile· are· plltylne much tietter now."

Montreil Canadien• were~ team . · Montreal certainly Impressed
with 1111 qu.ttona to an-r. Nordlques coach Michel
Desplie maktnt It to the Stanley Bergeron.
Cup finals, 't he Canadien&amp; lost
'"'Oe .Canad!ens look !Ike a
depth and experience In the team that wants to move up
orr-.ea&amp;on and had·to forge a new higher In the standings " Ber·
Identity..
geron Nld·.
· '
But the team 't hat whipPed
,
.
conference 'rlvala Quebec Sun·
Ellewhere 1n the NHL, Pitts·
day nlgbt 8-3 on the atrenitb elf a
burgh and tbe N.Y. Islanders
slx-1(081 ' b.ari'aRe · In the 'first
slqlted 10 a 2·2 tie, Philadelphia
periOd thinks It has found Its bluted Los Angeles H. Bill!alo
Sianley CliP touch.
·
edged Winnipeg 4·3 In OT. the
Rua Courinall key~ the first'·
N.Y. Ran&amp;ers beat Vancouver
perind scoring outburst with a
5-2, Hartford topped Edmonton
pair of goah, and Pelr Svoboda 3-1 and Washington nipped Minhad four aulats.
nesota 4-3.
·
"We !l(e comtnglO,ether at the ·
blaaden Penpln•
right time," said Courtnall, "and . At Un)Dndale. N.Y., Brent
we tire playllll Wiler dtfellSutter ·and ~uble McDonough
~lvely. We luive four IOlld 1._.: ICOrN first-period goals and the
and I think J !lave l!ftnlbootlftg Ialilndera held on ror the tie. The
the puck a lot better Dftlttbe l.llst Pellalllns remained two points
2il games. I plill)r 'IIIII With Cartlo allead or tlie Jalanderl In third
(Guy CarlxiMI!au) and Mille p~ac:e In the Patrick Division.
'( McPheei. ; I ' llf'l llso 1kailq
· · , n,aw 7, ...._. t
bel~ndj ~.}clan. de! what 11
M. Plllladelpllla,' Rim Sutter
... u...
ICOftd two eoal• and tile P1yers
. Moatrlal 1ac1eaMd lti 11111e- llrolre open a 3-3 tie with four
fealed .fiJNic to .alx &amp;8111111 Its tblnl-perlod goals. The i&lt;ings,
lon,.tof ·tJw•.....,'.hltlllrd·
wbo clltlcbed .a playoff i!!erth
ptaee caapJiwr eii)W a polllt Saturday, played wttllout Wayne
behlll!l the Bl!ffalo Saini and , ' Gntzlly wbo l1lffered . a IIJ'Oln
moved to wfthtn ttx JIOiata or the lnjuey
Saturday'• win In
flnt-plactt Boaton Bndns In the · Bolton.
Mama OlvllloL
.
e.• .... I ... I
''We· etllt ~ fl&amp;ht on our
At Butfalo.J'~.Y., Pbll Hollaley
llandl to flntm aeccnid In the ICONd IIIII Mea 1111 p l of the'
ltudlqil," said C8l1iG ... • . . . .:.1aiQtMrtlmel01110ve
"We neN ll!at lane-lee adva- · S.dfalo wltbla flw polnll ol tile,
14ae If,.~ toplly ltdlt10• ~
llrtdn~. 'nle
lbeflrltnMII!doftlllplaya(l'l. Wa pme was tile ' Jetl' tourtblulvea't Plltlll W.U oa 111e road
atrallbt M!'dlllf c.oo~~t~e~t:
IIIII at IIMM we llave. tile beet .
'•••• I, Culldla I :
record .In tile leque. I tblnJc we
At New York, the · Ran&amp;er•

z,

•
J

WASHINGTON - The Inquiry
Into tbe worst peacetime mil·
ltary dlsas ter In American his·
tory must be settled, Either the
duct tape will be pried from the
Ups of those In government who
hold this secret, or the Issue will
be forever consigned to sUence.
It has been more thilD; tour
years since the Dec. 12, 1985,
crash of a military transport
plane In Gander, Newloundland,
which· killed 248 AmeriCan soldl·
er1. A shroud of secrecy has kept
the Canadian and U.S. governments from disclosing all they
know about the tragedy.
Despite tbe fact that more than
100 members of Congress signed
a petition t.o the White House last
November asking tor.the Invest!·
gation to be reopened, no hear·
lngs have been scheduled, Only a
tew lawmakers, such as Rep,

Sundayu~

Michigan, Georgetown,, Kansas fall in

Gander crash tmdiDgs need disclose4
.

111 Cauri Shftt
Pomeroy, 0111o

awl PEp 3

NCAA tolirnclment action

'-11• 2-l'he c.-, s ••
Pon•oy-MI:U p 111to Ohio
Monday, MM:h 18, 1180

'

The Daily Sentinel

'The Dllv 81

PoiTMOf MIHap~ Ohio

ex

dl.!'lq

z

scored two goals less than five
minutes Into the game, and got a
pair or goals from their checking
line. Mike Gartner scored his
40th or the season, the sixth time
In his career he has scored at
least ' 40.' Gartner now has six
goals In the six games .he's
played with the Rangers.
Whalen 3, Ollers1
At Edmonton. Alberta, strong
goaltendln"g by Peter Sldorklewlcz and third-period goals by
Dean Evason and Jody · Hull
carried Hartford. Sldorklewlcz
blanked Edmonton on seven
power J)\ays.
Capitals 4, North Stan 3
AI Bloomington, . Minn .. DOn
Beaupre mac;le 33 saves and Dina
Clccare!U scored a goal and set
up two more. Beapure and
Clccare!U were traded from
Minnesota In separate (leals last
year. The victory, coupled with
the Islanders' tie, gave the .
Capitals sole poasesslon of fourth
place in the Patrick Olvlson.

·-· ;-'

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a

TM
·oally Sentinel
. ' .. .
(IJIPII-1

·

A 01¥11111111 W , L d• lac.
I

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Nollllled
every . - . llolldly '
....... ~. 111 CWI II., 1'111...,_, 0!110, Ill' lilt Ololo VIII., Plllb-

,•

EHLO DRIVES - Clevelud Cavallen pull Craie Die (S)
drives by Orlaado.'1 len Tlamer In tile ·nrat quarter of llaadq11
NBA 1ame Ia Orlando. The Cavalieri woa ~lN.

Coni-JM·•-..
a ...me. ..

llllllna OldoG'IW.
Pomeroy.

Inc..

cOIId CIISI pootaft paid II .....tat.
Olllo.
..
.

a..-: Uatltd Preo• lat.-t-.

tiiiUII Dollyl'raoA-.... aodt~
Olllo
!Cft"""i~laoL
NMwrtllilllr
mlll'tallw,--.a
NtwJt&gt;lpor
.. '131 'l'lllnl " - ·
New
Yorll.- York IGD11.

'

POII'IMAI'I'ER:
- U1 a.ut
..._ II.,
to
'l1le Dollr _....,

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

......,.,,a.~o-.

..

arllllnW•-·-

OneWtok.... ...: ..........................aM

S15000 OFF ANY AildVE ·
! QIOUIID POOL, •
S1QCL ,'.

::_::,: : : ' ~

':0. S1350 ·

10

....

0 . . - b ....................................
Oat Year ................................. 1'11.11
IIINOU COPI'

.I

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Dilly ........ ........................ ,j,. CJellil

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Bell*

sola 103-98, and Charlotte bested
the L.A. Clippers 108-97.
Plat8as 114, Maverlclrl 8t
At Auburn Hilla, Mich., Bill .
Laimbeer and James Edward•
led seven Detroit players In
dguble figures with 16 points each
and the Pistons gained their 11th
straight Win. The Pistons, who
have won 24 of their last 25
games, ran .up a 19 point lead In
the first half and coasted to. the
win. Lalmbeer also grabbed ·13
rebounds and John Salley, Vlnrile
Johnson and Gerald Henderson
finished with 13. Points each. Sam
Perkins led tb~ Mavericks with
18, ali In the first half.
Tratl Bluera lH, Roeket1 18
At Portland, Ore., Clyde
Drexler scored 21 points and
16-0 spurt in the third quarter
helped Portland extend Its winning streak to nine games. Terry
Porter added 17 points and 11
assistl and Jerome Kersey had
13 points tor the Trail Blazers.
Akeem Olajuwon had 28 points
and 15 ret.&gt;unds for Houston.
. BoeiOa lH, New Ieney lH
· At Boston, Larry Blrl! had his
seventh triple-double of'the season with 29 points, I8 rebounds
and 11 assists topacetheCeltlcs.
New Jersey bas dropped llx In a
row overall and 20 straight on the
road. Kevin Mc~ale had 25 points
and Reggie Lewis added 22 for
the Celtlcs, who moved to within
one game of first place In ihe
Atlantic Division. Den nil Hopson
led the Nets with 19 points.
Sana lJI, WIU'rlOra Ill
At Oakland, Calli., Dale Ellis
scored 30 po!Dtl ott the bench to
pace the Warriors. EIU., plilylne
In his flltb eame since miJalng 27
with broken ribs, made 11 or 16
shots from the field. Derrick
McKey had 20 points and ·11
rebounds and Sedale Threatt had
20 points for Seattle. Chrl&amp; MuUin
led . the Warrloril with 28 points
and Mitch Richmond had 26.
Nuueta IU, Tbnbenrlllv• .18
At Denver, Michael Adams
had 14 of his 2I po\lltSin the fourth
quarter as the Denver Nuggets
held off Minnesota. Tod M11rphy
tied the game, 98-98, for Ml.nnesota with 72 seconds left' but
Denver's Danny Schayes made
two free throws and Adams
added another tu seal the win.
Alex EngliSh led Denver with 29 '
points and Fat Lever had 22, nine
rebounds and six assists. Tony
Campbell led Mlnnesota.wltb 22
points.
'
Hornets 108, Cllppera 17
At Los Angeles • . Randolph
Keys scored 13 fourth quarter
points and Charlotte gained only i
their se'COnc;l road wln.of the year.
The win broke a 13-game road •
losing streak. Kelly Trlpucka led
. Charlotte Wl,tb 30 points and
Armon Gilliam added 22. Charles
Smltb led the Clippers with 24
points.
·

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PCJOL"I·S7tt
PI.OPLE
ISIWU11AIM

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-

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Mandly, u.ch 19, 1990

}

'

HE MIGII'l' PLAY FOR US - Tbai'e wbat
Atlaala Braves coacb Bebby VIlle seems to be
lelllnr manar;er Run Nixon as he points out a
pl'OIIpect at tbe Braves• minor league training

camp In West Palm Beach, Fla. The tiprlnr
tralnln1 lockout wu ended after a marathon
session early Mondl~J momlnr. ( UPI)

Capriati advances; Noah upset
'

ByLES KJOS
eight of her nine pro matches.
UPI Sporlll Writer
Fendlck of Sacramento. Calif.,
MIAMI !UPI) - . Thirteen· . llad played aggressively, fre·
Yl!8~·olcl Jennifer Capr!at! adquently going to the net.
vanced tb the fourth round of !he
"She was really attacking. She
Lipton International Players
made those great forehand shots.
Champ!onsiJips Sunday when
She had a lot of power, and she
Patty Fend!ck twisted her right
~as serving good, " Cavr!fti
knee and retired with a 4·2lead·Jn
said .
the first set.
"I:m really sorry. I never want
to win like that, '' Caprlatl said.
' 'She was playing great too. I feel
sorry for her." .
In the blgges t upset of the third
day of the 10-day, $2.55 million
event, Australian Mark Kr'atzBy United Press lnlernallonal
man defeated ninth-seeded YanNEW YORK !UPII - A
nlck Noah of France, 6-4, 2·6, 7·6
chronology of key events In the
(8-G ). In another men's match,
history of major-league baseAndre Agassl; making a comeball's labor negotiations:
back after a dlsmall989, downed
Kelly Jones of San Di!!go, 6-2, 6-2'.
July 1, 1966 - Marvin Miller
The tov three men's seeds, Ivan
takes office as executive director
of the Players Association.
Lend!, Boris Becker and Stefan
Edbetg did not play.
Gabriela Sabatini, the
May23,1980-Shortlybefore5
women,'s top seed, deteated
a.m .• negotl,tors avert a strike
Maya ·Kidowakl, 6'2, j;-3. Third- ' bY reaching jl 4-year deal. They
seed~'&lt;! Monica Seles defeated
put off the comven~atlon Issue
Laura Laplo!Italy, G-1, 6-1. No.2
andcreateaJointStudyComm!lseed Zlna Garrison was el!ml·
tee to make recommendations.
nat~ Saturday. · ·
. .
Feb. 19, 1981 -Major-league
Fendlck. 24, hit a ba'c khand
owners, under terms of the Basic
apprQach shot In · her sevenih· Agreement. unllaterally Jmple·
game with Capr!ai! and said her
mentthelrproposalonacompensatlon system for free agen(s.
knee locked. Caprlatl hit a lob
over her head and all Fend!ck
Feb. 25, 1981 - Execu live
could dl) was limp to the baseline
Board of tlie Players Association
votes unanimously to strike May ·
. and. collapse. ·
"I expected my knee to go back
29 in tJte absence of an agreement
In place because I have loose
on free,agent compensation.
knees 'and II sometimes will
May 28, 1981 - Players and
au tomatlcally go back In place;"
owners extend 'deadline to June 1.
Fendlck said.
National Labor Relations Board·
Ten minutes of on-court treatpetitions for an injunction that
ment was not enoug!J and she had
would, rescind the owners' comto end the match after an
pensatlon proposal.
lnipresslve early performance
,June 10. 1981 - Federal Judge
that may have had Capriatl In
FJenry Werker , denieS the
trouble.
·
NLRB's request for an lnjunc·
DoctorS said the extent of · tlon. Players Association calls
Fendlck's Injury \vas not known fdr a walkout before games or
and she would be examined June 12.
,Ju'ne 12, 1981 - At 12:30 a.m.
further Monday .
EDT, Miller leaves the·evening
Fendlck, seeded 31st in the
tournament.jumped loa 3·0 lead,
bargaining session and. says,
''The strtke·ls on."
winning the third game on an
unforced error by Caprlatl. Ca·
July 30, 1981 ·- The longest
prlatl held service. but Fendlck walkout i.n ·Amertcan sports
made 11.4-1 with her only ace of hlstorv, lasting '49 days, ends
the match.
·when 'both sides agree 'to a pool ·
At that point. Caprlatl ~p - concept for compensation for
peared to be starting a move. She premier free,agents.
'
won the sixth game, holding - Aug. 9, 1981 - 'A belated
service at love. and the lob that · All-Star Game In Cleveland opended the match was her sixth ens what Is the major leagUes '
straight point.
only split season.
·
"I, got off a little slow in the
Aug. 6, 1985 - Players .shlke
game before I started picking It over issues of arbitration, .tree
up. 1 won the service game and agency and b~neflts.
·
.
thought, 'Maybe I'll sJart playing
Aug. 7, 1985- Strike Is settled,
better now,"' sajd Capri;~tl. the with games resuming the mixt
teen sensation who has now won day. ·

Spring training lock~ut·· ends;
.
' ..
.season to start iJ .week , .late
.

.

'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Wblle
molt fans were asleep dreaming
of summers past, thoae that Wl!fe
awake early Monday tno1111111 to
hear that bueball had returned
were planning their next move.
"Good. Great. I'm going to buy
my tickets tomorrow," said
Donny, a security euard at the
Helmsley Hotel, ~here CommJs.
stoner Fay VIncent announced
around 1 a ,m. Monday that the
32-dq long spring training lock·
out was over. '~I love baseball."
VIncent emerged from a mara·
t.hon meeting at 1: 18 a.m. and
said that major league team
owners and the players' union
agreed In principle to end the
lockout and start the 1990 season
a week late.
·Vincent said the 1990 season

~

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Scoreboard ...
NN ......, : ... Jt Sl tl 11 ..
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WE DID IT! - Xavier
lroalman Tyrone Hill (left),
who mlalllell earlier waa a
loal-out victim In Sund-.y's
NCAA to1mamen1 rame
aplut Geerretown, hup
lle8d coach Pete Gillen In
celebrallon ollbe Mullketee1a'
7Hl upeet trlamph ever tbe
Hoyu In tile HC:Ond-round
coaleat In lndlaaapoUa. (UPI)

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.MULLEN·MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 .Second St,. P11111roy

YOUI IIDIPINHII1''
AGEIIIS SllV•G .

Me ..., .........
Pldll.dflpllla 8lt Nf'W ·hr~ey, '1":30 p.m.

MIIGSCOUm
SINCE 1161

' ...... at AI...... 'I':Mp.lll,

8.aeru~nto al Utala, t: • •· rn.
s.. AN. . . at PlleNil, 1: ~ p.M.

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W•lll ...aMCiilcap
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Deti'CIIIaiMllwu .....

1UUDAY ..

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PoJtlu•at
LA. Olpper1 Ml ~•wr
Ctlarlelte at LA Lak1n
Ml-.111.81bei1111Hsa.le
su Alll-.atlt-attiP

liGHT

N•TION.U. BOCII£1' LEAOIIE

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PalrklDirillt•
Te...
• · L T PIL or oA.
NY ~~ao,.;. ... N a II M W 141
'
.

JOHN A. WADE, ··~; Inc.:

ONLY

PUASAIIT vaun IIOSPIIAL

' llll:ftiiUQURVE-~e

""•Ceprlailnt_a_toPIIta,
Fettllell . . . . . tlllelr ....l\1 llll&amp;ell 18 tile Upton Te1111ll
. Tic a wt Ia &amp;er lllleape, Fla.,_ IJ.Jelll' old C~prtaU wH
. . . Pelllllcll hriiiH.IIer rlpt ._.willie lloldlq a f.!_lead I• tbe

· ftnlllll. 'VPII

Community calendar
'

MONDAY
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Alumni Association olf!cers will
be Monday 8 p.m. at the home of
_Richard Rupe, Wright Street,
Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Glub will meet 1 p.m. at,
Marlon McCarley's·home.

JTPA olfice In Pomeroy:'
WEDNESDAYc
MEIGS -The Ohio Valley
Church of God, Route 50 East '
will hold a revival Wednesday
through Sunday at 7: 30 nightly.
The evangelist will · be Joe
Beasley.

REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
High School Winter Sports -Ban·
POMEROY - The Ladles quet Will be held March 2l'at 6: 30
A11xlllary Fraternal Order of p.m. at the high school. Each
Eagles 2171 will Meet Tuesday at family Is to bring one meat, one
vegetable and a salad or dessert
7p.m. . ,
dish. '!'able service and drinks
MIDDLEPOR', . ~Group 2 of · w!ll be1provided . .
the -Middleport Presbyterian .
Church will meet at the home of
SYRACUSE -The Third WedElizabeth Burkett on Tuesday at
nesday Homemakers of Syra:
cuse
meet Wednesday at 10
7:30p.m.
a.m. at the municipal building.
. POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Members are to bring n~essary
Sesquicentennial Committee will
items for stuffed toys.
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
',•

. --- ..

least 95 percent of carriers.
COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPII Researchers have discovered the
The te~t "Is bett~r than nf?l
gene-responsible for cystic fibro- knowing, which Is the boat we
sis and a new test gives prosvec- were In before," she said. "It was
t!ve parents advance warning on Russian ~oulette."
But. she added, "With the other
whether their children would be
30 per.cent, It gets real "Icky. It
likely to gel the ·disease.
But some people who are gives them a non-answer."
ge!)~tlcally at risk for being
cystic fibrosis carriers say they
:are hestltaii!IR at . the idea of
being streeiled for ·11.
.I
' "What' happen~ It
do test
positive?'· said Tim Derickson,
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO,
29, who .lias a sister who has the Calif. iUPII -Theannual,ret\lrn
disease and·hlmself has a two-In- · or the migratory swallows to
three. chance of carry!n~ the. Mission San Juan Capistrano will
gene.
..
., ·,
be marked Monday. by the
"I don't believe in4bortion . but customary ringing of the :ZOO.
·I'd hate to havl' a ' kltl with CF, year-old church bells.
because I know w)lat it's like,"
In the city wherfi: It Is a
the Westenille man said. ·
misdemeanor to destroy a swalFor · tl)e last five fri9nths . · Iow 's nest, the return of the
Chll!lren' s Hospital In Columbus brown-lind-white birds Is celehas offered a test that detects brated with Fiesta de las Golonminute aberrations in lengthy dr!nas, or Fesdval of the Swal·
·strands of deoxyribonucleic acid, lows, that traditionally coincides
whiCh carries the genetic with the reast of Si. Joseph on
·Information.
March 19.
Although many birds return ·
'The test Is not 100 percent
accurate. It wlllldenlify about 79 from their winter horne In Goya,
,percent to 75 · percent of ~stlc Argentina, before or alter the
fibrosis carriers. Six to 12 cou- . saint's feast &lt;lay, the mission
bells are rung to, slpal their
pies have u!!dergone testing at
official
homecoming wllh tbe
Children's for the gene. said Dr.
sighting
of
the firsI swallow of the
Judith Weslman, a clinical genet·
day
.
.
The
mlsllon'a, 94-year-old
Ieist. Most had slbllnp with
Paul Arbllo, Is
groundakeeper,
evstic fibrosis.
the
ortlclal
blrdwatdler
and
"Tbe dlleue occurs about once
. in every 2;000 whiTe births and · bellrlnger.
once In every 17,000blackblrths,
· B~t for the first time In the
, Westman said. · About one In
mission's:
214-yelir history, the
every 25 people carries the gene.
·
ewallowa'
return
tiiUl be markl!d
For a child .to acquire cystic
by
controversy:
'Hulldredl of
·f lbrmls, both parents must carry
descendantl
of
tbe
Juiiii!DO Indithe gene. abe said.
.
ans,
who
built
th4raclobt
million
Alltlblotlcaand better nutrition
bave glwn clllldren with cystic under the aUIIJilces of Splnllh
ilbrolll better, healthier Uvea Jes\llt Juillpero Serra, plan I!
tban 20 yean ago, but moat atill IJHtt(UI march ancl-'t.ln dllrtq
tbe' hellht of thl! day's feetltMee .
do not live beyond their 201.
O.vlcl Belardes, cbalrmaa Ill
Tbe fallure rate of the screen·
tile
Juaneao tribe of. Southern
1111 baa r. . ethical 111111!1 for
1 laid iaeal Indians
California,
111111e people, Westmaa said.
iome say tes tina should not be have 1f0W11 conce111ed wltb the
cornmon until 'It can IJlcll up at , 41mlnllblq role tbelr tribe plays

EAR, NOSE &amp; IROAT
GENERAL ALLE.GIST
"IE HAfEIIURIII AIDS•
(304) 675·1144

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.
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~~nVOIIIII wllh
1ua•.
ohlall.n
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and loufter,

$32-.J .

lorry. , . ...._ . Jpl bet••••

-:

Willi . . .lluclll p; h I

NOW FIATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL
.

..

FAMll
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.
.
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P•lw' 1 lanlt*J PrW.=a I
•

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'
i

"One moment Is all it takes for
an acclden!al poisoning .to OCC\Ir
to a young child," said Norma
Torres, nursing director of the
Meigs County Health
Department.
In response io the serious
nature of this problem, this week
has been designated Polson
. Prevention Week In Ohio to raise
the public awareness of ways to
· prevent childhood poiSOning.
Ms. Torres reported that unintentional poisoning Is the flflh
leading cause of·accldental death
to children 1·:15 years of age,
"Children under the age of five
are thl! most frequent victims of
unintentional po!Sonl!lgs in the
horne." stild Ms. Torres, Last
year approximately 62 percent of
all hotllne calls to Ohio's polson
control centers Involved children
under six years of age. she
stated.
·'
'

•

'

Parents are urgl1d to always
follow these basic guidelines to
prevent poisonings, jc.eep medl·
cines and household chemicals
out of the reach of young ,
children; use medications with
safety closures because they
have shown to be effective In
.vreventlng childhood polsonlngs; and always have a one
ounce bottle of syrup of lpeeac on
hand In the event an unlntentlonal poisoning should occur In
your home. Only use syrup of
Ipecac under the advice of the
polson center.
Grandparents an,d other care·
givers should also polson proof
their homes. even If small
children do not live there. Recent
studies have indicated that over
20 percent of oral vrescrlptlon
drll!is ingested by children under
age five belonged to someon_e
who did not live with the child.

.

Ms. Torres recommended the • front of children, since youngsfoUowlng guidelines to prevent ters tend to Imitate adults.
accidental home poisonings.
Refer to medicine as medicine
Keep all household chemical and NOT candy.
products and medicines out of
Clean outthemedlc!necablnet
reach and out of sight of youngs· periodically and safely dispose of
ters..lmd locked up when not In un-needed medicines when thz
use. Medicines on kitchen coun· Illness for which they were
iers are very accessible to young prescribed Is over.
clllldren.
·
Finally, use safety packaging
Never let these products and
properly. Close· the cc ntalner
medicines out ofyourslg~t. when
securely after use.
they are in use.
If a poisoning Incident occurs
Store all medicines separately
In your home, Immediately call
from household vrooucts, and
you regional poiSOn control cen·
store all ho\ISehold chemical
ter for Instructions on how to
products away from food.
treat the poisoned victim. Keep
Keep items In their original
the phone number on your phone
containers.
for a handy re(erence. Children's
Before usln~t.lt&gt;avetheorlglnal
Hospital is 1-80().282-KIDS and
labels on ali vroducts, and read · ask tor the emergency room.
the label.
Further Information may be
Always leaye the light on when
obtained by contacting the Meigs
giving or taking medicines.
County Hl!alth Department at
Avoid ,taking medl~lnes In
992-6626.

·Quirks in the news __....;.,__________
saying how great It Is," he said .
Callen IIUIP up 141,010 Bozo for each call placed. Tile .tickets !or several years at Oakland
Haskell admitted to placing a
University In suburban Detroit .
tickets
are free but the S3 charge helped
bet
or t.wo using the computer's
Compuiers. In e·rrect, learn to
CHICAGO t.UPl) - Anxious make. the sveclal 900 telephope
advice,
saying only that he did •
read, so they are able to scan
parents snapped up 140,000 number available.
"all
riRht.
"
texts and viace the data con·
tickets for the •'The Bozo Show"
Other proceeds would go to the
about
possible commerAsked
tal ned In them In their Illes, read
in less than six hours when the Off The Street Club, a youth
cial
applications,
he said, "We're
check's and perform other slmshow took reservations during organization dedicated to prelooking
Into
that
right now. lt'.s
the weejc.end for the first time in venting children
beco!ftlng . liar function~.
sort
of
premature,
"
'
While that may soun~ like a far
10 years.
Involved In gangs and drugs.
cry from picking · winners In
"We haven't taken requests
Those callers wbo dialed and
horse races;· Haskell said the· KJar oil he cotton Iaiii ..
since 1980," Tom Leach, man- dialed. to no avail· will have tci
SPENCER. W.Va. !UPII
taSks
"use · the same basic
ager of planning and administra- . walt a few more years to try
With
Easter less than a month
technique." The idea Is to "·have
tion for WGN·TV, said Saturday. \ again. Leach said ticket requests
off,
two
women in nearby Walton
the computer learn the rules
He said the telephone sales would not be taken again until the
Insist
they
have spotted a "man·
automatically by examples of
went smoothly. · "If they got mid 1990s.
sized"
rabbit,
and authorities
what has hapvened In the past."
through, there should have been
have
launched
an
unsuccessru 1
The reading comp\lter. for
no walt."
Computer procr•m picks' the
sea'rch
for
the
lilng·slze
example. "figures ou! the ,rules
The show, ' featuring the poales
,
cottontail.
todlstlngulsh between an 'a' .and
orange-haired, floppy-footed
DETROIT 4 UPI) - An j!ngi·
Roane County . Chief Devuty
'b' and so forth.'' For racing. the
clown, has been a mainstay 11n neerlng professor says he hilS
Russell Goodwin said one woman
Chicago television since 1961. It developed a computer program computer learns "the jll!ference
informed
him she had been
between
hOrses
that
have
won
is carried nationwide on cable With enough horse sense to
the
big bunny for near~v
seeing
and not won.''
,
systems &lt;~nd Is seen In an conslstentiy pick winners at a
eight
months.
Haskell receives computerized
es tlmated . 20 million homes san Francisco-area race track.
"She said she knew if she wea
data from a Lexington, Ky ., flr11)
around the world.
· Dick Haskell, who went to his
only one who called, we'd
·the
and feeds it !~to his versonal
"After not accepting ticket first horse race less than a year
she was crazy," the deputy
"fhlnk
computer.
requests lor 10 years, we' revery ago, said a friend's suggestion
said.
"So
she got a l)eighbor who
"The computer lhen sifts
excited to have had the opportun- prompted him , !O apply his
said
she
saw it, too, and she
through all the characteristics or
Ity to get Bozo tickets back out knowledge of computers to pickcalled
us."
the horse, bloodlines, speed,
Into the hands of the public," Ing the pOnies. It •ppeared that
Goodwin felt obligated to check
rider, track length etc., then
Leach said.
"the data analysts Involved ..ofout
ihe reports, but suggested
separates the past winner&amp; from
About 35.000 callers - 7,000 an fered a test that would &amp;e both fun
someone
might have vut on a
losers. then creates the rules that
hour - got through on the busy. and challenging," he said.
and
hovped around one
costume
·
phone lines, Leach said.
Haskell said he has been were present when the horses
of
the
women's
houses as a
Callers were limited to four
working on computer learning won.' '
prank
.
Golden Gate Fields Park near
tickets each and were charged $3
Tbe first woman who reporfed
San Francisco was selected
the
gigantic rabbit _wanted to
because Haskell has a son living
If she could shoot It. ,
know
In the area and Detroit tracks
"I told her she'd better not do
were not running when the
lhat,"
Goodwin said:
experiment began.
Goodwin
is not dismissing the
in the preservation of their They typically d41't II) and out.the
Haskell Is somewhat guarded
reports,
but
acknowledged that
ancestral land.
highest reaches or the church In
In discussing his track record
no
others
have
been made.
the early momlnf and early
with the program. Only .vreliml·
.
.
·'I
guess
you
eould
say we can' t
nary Information Is available
About 300;-Juanenos currently evenlng.make
hide
nor
hare
out
of this,"
and more res dng Is , necessary
llve In sout!l Orange County,
Mission . Spok!!5man Brian
he
sajd.
•'before we want to go on record
direct descendants of the Mcinerney said officials ·would
I
hundredsoflndlanswhobulltthe . not !nte~ with the \ndl8ns'
mission during the same years demonstration, also to Include
the Revolutionary War was being tradltlorul'l music and dance .
"In their tourist promotions,
waged a continent away.
"People need to know ow: they're always talld11g about
feelings," Belardes said. "lt tradition' and heritage, but
doesn't do any good to save the they're letting away frqm II,"
miSsion If they don't take care of Belardes said. "They're catering
'
the people who built it."
to the rich newcomers blat they
The demonstration will coin·
can't forget who we are and what
clde with the Swallows Day · we have done. OUr ances.,rs
festivities that are expected 19 , literally gave their lives for this
attract thousands of spectators. . mlstlion."
Last year, 10,000 people crowded
He said mission officials reIn to the ·mission's tiny 0 pen·alr cently sold seVeral acres In
courtyard to see the blrda.
downtown San Juan Capistrano
.
'
Over the put two centuries, . lhat were part of the original
thousands of awalloWI have Juaneno Indian pueblo. In addl·
nested aJid railed their youq 'n tlon, the Juaneno graveyard
the cracks and crevices of the operated,by tbecburch Ia near1111
mission's Old Stooe Church.
CJipaCI!Y and no new property Is
belbg lOIIgb!.

rrom

I

The swallows have returned

we

.lSI 11

LAOIIIfPn .................. • .-IN tt\t
-a-a ',IIJ s

O.k:ap.Jt-&amp;,

BLUE AND GOLD BANQUET - Salllbury P•ck U6 held Ita
Blue and Gold Banquet recently at tbe Rock Sprlnp Church. A
. Mardi Gru theme woui carried out and foUowlngthl! banquet each
·cub eceut den perfonned a sldt. Tbe highlight of the evening wu a
marte show by Rev. Don Meadows of tbe Pome~oy United
Methodist Chureb.

I

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I'

Cystic fibrosis_test
raises ethical issues

CamJhU Cellferl'lk'r
Noi'I'IIIDiw•le•
'l'eiRI
· " ' L T Ph. GF ~A
II;, a..-. ......1... H D
I Ill nt 1ft
Qk.............. Jt II I 11 . . ftt

·

Poison Control Week being observed)ocally

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.,

·offentel. In May 1979, he was sentenced to four years In priiOD
for maatermlndlng a scheme that netted seven defendalltl
thousands of dollars In student loans and grants. New Jeney
state pollee records also show 1977 convictions for credit card
theft and receiving stolen property: Fa rid hal flied suit a1alnst
Murphy , claiming he gave the comedian a manuscript In 1M
· that was later used as a rough draft of " Harlem Nltbts."
TRUMP'S HOST: Former professional f09tball player
Jimmy Celllo will be the host of the new syndiCated tellvlllon
game show bearing the name of Donald Trump. Cefalo, who
beCaMe an NBC sportscaster after ending his Cl.l'eel' with the
Miami Dolphins, says the show, ·'Trump Card." Is a crou
between Bl ngo and "JeOpardy ." Si1&lt; showsa day will be t•l'e4 at
.the Trump Castle casino in Atlantic . City, N.J ., and most
contestants will be drawn !rom the East Coast. Cefalo sayJ he' ll
draw on his experience as a jock and ·an NBC sport•
· ..correspondent In hosting the,show.
· .
FAMOUS Fl,.OOR: Country music fans may be able to let a
piece of the Opry soon. Grand Ole Opry otflclals are thlnldng
aboul seiUng pieces of a 16-year-old maple floor as mementoes.
''Knowing theOpryfans and the market, they'll probably go for
somewhere between $5 and· S10,' · said Opry spokes11181i lenJ
Strobel. During the years the maple floor was on the llqe,
scores of country greats apveared on It, as well u noiH:OIIIItry
acts like Elvis Coate!.,, B.B. KID&amp;' and Richard Nix•. The ftnor
was replaced with beech planks from Denmarl!, becausethl!okl
floor bad cushions beneath to accomodate dancers and It was
unsuitable for heavy rolling TV cameras.

'

Chronology of ·baseball
history of labor talks ·

SA~IONAL

"

Wlllla-.

LOOK AT OLIVIER: Doulll llpolo, biographer of Allnd
Hltellceck, Tennessee
Lotte Letlfl and Preeton
Sture-. hu signed wltb Harper a Row towrttea bookaboutthe
late Lurence Olivier. The book, "Enchantment: ~ ute of
LaurenceOilvier, "Is dueoutln0ctoberl991andreportec:llywlll
have lots of Information from associate&amp; and friends about
Olivier's decllnlq ~th In his latter yean. Other key toplca
will be OUvler's stormy marriage to ·Vl¥1en Lelp and his
friendships and rivalries with.MU'IJa llloiii'Oe, Kirk Oo11Jiu,
But Lancaster, Charlton Heston, Michael Caine and Dllllln
IWfmaa.
.
TATUM'S JQ!:TURN: Tuum O'Neal II getting back Into the
.movie business. She will be In New York In May to start work on
"Utile Noises,": her first movie since she took a l!iatul'toJI!arry
tennis star Jolul MeEraroe 'and to raise their two children. In
·"Little Noises." ,O'Neal stars as a woman who comes to tbe
attention of an offbeat youni man, played bY ~pia Gtove,r of
"Till! River' a Edge."
,
·
.
MVRPIIY'S .ACCUSER HAS RECORD: A Montclair. N.J.,
man who has acculed comedian Eddie Mu..,., of stealing his
screenplay for the movie "Harlem Nights," hai r,a .criminal
record for thett,lraud and drug possession. But Halla FU'Id, rT.
an .alde to. a Newark, N.J ., city counclbDan, says he Is an
"example of reformation." He told the Newark Star-Ledger
that "the man you refer to does not exist. 1 have rlllen above my
put to emerge as an example to young people. My life IS an apen
book." Tbe newspaper found that Farld, wl)o changed his name
from Darryl Anderson, wu convicted In 1972 and 1973 of drug
' .

~

Ala a AbdeinabY added 17 points. Boo Harvey, who
22·8, adva·nced io meet-sixth-ranked Sytacuse Ina
scored 14 of his 17 points after Intermission for the
Southeast region.. semltiJ18l game Frlday'!n New
Redmen, missed a 12-foot jumper wlih 14 seconds
Orleans.
Her only loss was .to Sabatini In
remaining and Brickey added two·free throws for
..
.Midwesl BepoDal
•
the finals of the Virginia Slims of
the final margin. St. John's finished the season,
Texu '73, Purdue ~2- At lnd!anapolls, Travis
Florida last week.
24·10.
Mays made.two free throws wi.tb seven secoJ!Cis
Sabatini, top seed In the
,
Soutbel!lt RertonaJ
remaining and Guillermo. Myers blocked . a
absence of No. 1 Steff! Graf and
Syracuse 83, Vlrr;lala 81 - At Richmond, Va .. ·
last-leeond shot, giving the J;.onghoms the upset
No: 2 Martina Navratllova, said
Derrick Coleman scored 19 points and block~!&lt;~ a
of No. 10 Purdue. The Longhorns, 23-8, advanced
she had never played Kldowakl
shot with 2 seconds left to preserve the
to the Midwest regional semifinals Thursday In
before and was surprised.
'orangemen's'vlctory. No. 6 Syracuse advanced to
Dallas while Purdue fln)lhed the year 22·8.
the region's semifinals where they wjll face the
Purdue center Stephen Scheffler sank two shots
winner of Sunday's Minnesota-Northern Iowa
fr011) the .line with 1: 46 remaining to pull,Purd11e
game. Vlrgillla rallied from a 15-polnt second half
ahead 72-71. Mays lost th~ balloutofbou!!ds onthe
deficit and. held ihe Orangemen to just two fi~ld
next Texas possession but To.ny Jones mLSsed a ,
ihree-pointer anq Jimmy Ol!ver fouled Mays tor
goals over· the final 12:53. After Billy Owens
missed the front end of a one-and-one with 14
the winning free throws. Jones drove Into the lane
seconds left, senior forward Coleman, the Big
forPurdue'sflnal shot, buttheattemptwasllatted ·
'
East
Player
of
the
Year,
swatted
Bryant
Stith's
away
by 6-8 Myers. Joey Wright scored 20 points
Nov. 28, 1989 - Negotiations
and
the
ball
bounced
toward
and
Lance
Blanks added 19 for the Longhorns.
6-foot
Jumver
begin toward new labor pact.
time
exvtred.
Syracuse,
26-6,
also
Scheffler,
the
. nation's most accuratf shooter.
mldcourt
as
Dec. 31, 1989- Labor contract
10
rebounds
and
nine
assists
from
entering
the
game,
missed 10 o_t 1~ shots from the
received
expires.
·
.
Coleman,
and
Owens'
had
16
points.
The
loss
field,
.flalshlq
.with
18 points ~ his worst
Jan. 9, 1990- Player Relations
marked
the
end
of
Virginia
coach
Terry
f{olland's
·perfonnance
since
thl!
second
game of:tbfleason.
Committee sends leiters to clubs
16-year
tenure
with
the
Cavaliers,
during.
which
He.
finished
hiS
career
at
68.6
percent, breliklq
telling them not to oven camps
he posted a 326-173 record. HoDimd will now take .. · . the' .NCAA career mark ot 67.8. percent. set bY
until further notice.
over as athletic director at his alma, mater,
Oregon State's Steve Johns.IJ!I . . ·.. · · ·.,· ·
Feb.' 7 - Talks are recessed
Davidson.
. .
.
., ·.
• . ' Xavier 74, Geo~Jelown 71 - [lerek St,ron~
until Ji'eb. 12, three days before
Ml1111eeola ·81, Northern low11 18 -:- Senior
scored 19 points an~' pulled do1,1111 13 ·rel;lounds,
the scheduied start of spring .
forward
Willie
Burton
scored
a
career·h'!l'h.
36.
spa~kiilg Xavier...(~). to, an . ~pset of the No. 9
training.
points
and
•made
five
free
,throws
In
the
flnal43
Hoyas
.. Xavler's- .Jamal Walker,' who scored 15
' Feb. 9 - . OWners meet In
seconds,
helping
Minnesota
return
to
the
final
points,
sank two tree throws with 23 seconds
Chicago and reafflrin their posi·
ro;nd
of
sixteen
for
the
second
straight
year.
remain!pj:
for the llnal points. Georgetown's
tlon to lock O\lt players unless
coUected
12
rebounds
for
the
Mark
rtjlmon
missed a three-point shot and
Burton,
who
also
there Is progress In negotiations.
Golden
Gophers,
shot
13-of-17
from
the
field.
David
Edwards
missed two free tbrows In the
Feb, 15 - Lockout officially
Senior
center
Jason
Reese
led
tl)e
Panth.
e
rs
with
final
eight
secoiJI!s
to seal the victory, as the
begins.
29 points and 10 rebounds, while Troy Mullenbui'IC
Hoyas ended their season wlt)l a 24·7 mark. Alonzo
. March 19- Lockout ends arter
added 20 points. Northern lowa turned in a
Mourning finished with 15 polntHnd 10 reboun&lt;ls
32 days with Opening Day scheshocking, upset victory Friday over Missouri and . for Georgetown while Dlkembe Mot umbo llad
dllled to begin a week late on
finished tlleteaaon with a 21-9 rerord. Minnesota, · coUeeted nine points and 13 rebounds.
·
Aprl19.
'

. ........... st •

Pe1/f:..~news

'

Uly WIWa1111 wu Initiated Into
Birthdays fo r the mlmth were
the order of tbe Harrttonvllle Pauline Atkins, Rosalie Story,
Cllpeter Order of thl! Eastern Donald Brlcklei. and. Lola
Star when ihe group met for Its • Wyant.
March meeting wltb Golda Reed,
Bob ·Reed gave the blesslnR
Wot'tlly matron, and Bob Reed. before refreslunents were served
worthy patron, In chaJ'Ie.
by that committee, Mr. and Mrs.
The. worthy matron welcomed J)oug Bishop, Mrs. Frances AI·
the new member and Charle$ klre, and Mrs. Glen Kennedy .
1
Kl .. P1 IDled the Bible toller..

NCAA tournament
.. ~ . (contlnuedfr?m.
P~ge~J ·
.
.
'

B)' U•l&amp;@f PN'IIa ..._ ...._.

Harrisonville OES meets

,,

will begin on AprU 9, and thal'at · fut:url!, ' ' Vlilcent aald during a
leut 158 regular-season games · 20-mlilute news collference that
will be acheduled. The commJs.. ' ended bueball's . second-lo~t
s.loner ·said doubleheaders and
work stoppage.
make-up games could provide a . ' )\.s news ~hat an a,reement ·
full162-game season.
·
, was , Imminent leaked , to the
"I'm happy they '~e startl'n'g . media, tansgitheredoutilklethe
right now ," said Mike Cohen of
commissioner's off!ce on· Park
Manhattan. "I'm looking for- ·' Avenue In Manhattan to awalt
ward to players warming·' up,
the news that there would be
hitting In the batting cage;
baseball.
''
·
stretching on the field and
··
,ettln1 ready to go. "
While John Ha~n of New
"I have .a very pleasant duty,
Jersey was serenadlq the press
and It Is simply to announce that
corps on a trumpet with a
tonight an agreement In prtnclrendition of ''Take Me OUt, to the
pie has bfeni:I!ached between the
Bailg'ame," Nick Poletls ¢auld
Players Association· and the
hardly watt to !~'!! 501'"! actio~.
Player Relatlollli Committee :.... ' . "As long as they' play . ball,
the owners assocatlon - and the
that's all that countll," said
labor agreement In baseball w!li
Polet'ls. ''They're' three weeks
behind 'a lready ."
be executed In the very, near

Pomeroy-Mkldlaport. Ohio

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER ·Of 'COMMERC.J
.

Spring Banquet
Oinner &amp; Dance .

SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1990
IOtAL OAI BSOn
Dlllll (Steak)
SOCIAL HOUI
. 7P.&amp;
6P.&amp;·7 PlL -

.,

OPEN TONIGHT

TIL 8: 00 P.M.

f1tt,.,~~ I

•

- - ..APPIIAIICIS, n'S, ~· covma
,......
.._
..._..,, . Nrpn.-

DAICI 1~1 P&amp;·12
ADI'SSION
tts,OI PD COIPII SU.OO
W1L IISIIVIIAaiS POl I 0 1 - C.....
BSIWI'IIMI- W • •11 IUCI 16, ,1 M

..

,,.~.,~

fOI . ... . .11101 ttl·l·l
••

�The

•

Ohio

Daily Sentinel
... .

s Services

Classifie

Mondlry, M.-ch 18, 1890

PaG• 8

7

DOZa
SITEWOII • ~ADS

• The Area'·s Number 1 Marketplace .
•

D1y1 .
1
3

~TUIDAY

Rill
.••.oo

15

t13 .00

ts
15

•

._.,It

11 - HouMhald Goo•
12-1.......
U - Amiqueo

&amp; - HQ~py

14- Mitc . Merchendite
15- lullllng lupph•

Whit~

_ George White: an assistant
•shift Operat·lng engineer at Phil·
· lip Sporn Electric Company,
·retired Feb. 1 after 42 years of
_service. ·
..
. This set 1 record, according to
:"Company officials. of only eight
hours of missed work. ·
White began his career ln'l947

:as a boll~r maintalnance helper
at the Ohio Power Plant In Philo.
·He then transferred to the Phillip

SpOrn Plant in 1960: .He was
promoted to as5l$tant ilhlft oper·
aling engineer In 1984.
He Is a WorldWarii. U.S. Navy
Veteran. a member of ·lhe Hemlock Grove Church~ Christ. and
the Hemlock Grange;
He and his wife, Jessie. reside
on Rock Springs Road. They are
the parents of George White Jr.•
Pickerington; James Curtls.
Reynoldsburg; and Joy' Keshav.
Stilwell. Kan.
·

BOSTON (UP!) - FBI and
:Interpol agents were investlgat·
'IJig 't he theft of "hundreds of mlll10114. of doUars" worth of art
trCJii1 a Boston museum, while
.experts speculated a sophlstl·
·cated collector ·may b.ave com·
'mlnlloned the heist.
Thieves poling as poUce overpowt&gt;red rnaseum pants early_
Sunday and stole 12 palntlnp,
drawings and etehlup by such
·masters as Rembrodt, Vermeer. Manet, aDd Dee• from
the Isabella Sle'IVart Cartlner
Museum, au tllorlUa ..14.
Pollc:e estlnlaled the value ol
tbe stollll worb •• mew t~an
t110 mlllloli, lllit tile . .et value
wu uetr~ala beealllle the m~~~e­
um'a colllctloa cUDOI be Mid,

Mid Kartllful. tilt
aettaa nntor.

-·1

"Bat neaaeully..,....,. are
wurlh 111111111 edl ol mlllloal ol
ditlllln." lbe laid. ·~le arn't buytna Rendlilildta every
day, 10 It's wry Unl to Pill a
val• on tile palatlap."

.' .

247 - let•rt Fells

812-New Hlvtn

In a trlbilte to the
regents, explallll!li that 35 women
have' served in that c·a paclty .for
tl)e Return :Jonathan· Meigs ·
Chapter since the local group
was chartered In 1~.
In addlllort to the local awards
and presenlations, the Return
Joizednathhan 'Me1gs CDhAaRpter recolzag.
1 1
n
t e nat ona
organ ·
tlon which this year Is celebratlng Its lOOth · anniversary of
Service to the na11on.

.

941 - lhc:ine
742 - Rutltnd
ti? - Coo\vUie

31 """ Ho'T'I• fot Sale
:U- Mobile Homts •or Sale
J;!-flarmt tor Sale

67! - Pt. Pleatant

•58-Loon

3•- ••""•• Buildings '
31 ·- L..ots &amp; Acrtegt.
31- Re .. Estete Wanted.

773 - Mt~on

bl.

Cruisers
meet
•

~y-laws were voted oa and
pas!ed at the recent meeting of

C, i I VI~SIIJI.K
l1 &amp;2 6364 -

the Bli·Biend crutsers Car Club
held at Pleaser's Restaurant.
The acqulring .. of t-shirts or
hats with the club name was
discussed.
A cruise In Is being planned lor
late AprU and a car show Is belai
planned for Heritage Weekend of
lbe Pomeroy Sesquicentennial.

ferm Equ ipment
Wonltd 10 lu~
.Livellock
Htv • Grtin

Tr ~nsp11rl Jl111n
71 - Autos for $_.,

72- Trueka far Sal t
73- v.,. • 4 wo·,
74- Motorcvc••
75- lottt 6 Motors for Sale
78- Auto P~tll a •ce•IOf'i•
77··Auto A-.,alr
78 - Ctmping Equ/jlment
79 - Camp•s a. Mo1or Homes

41 - HOUHI tor Rent
42- MobiltHomes for Rent

46 - Sp•c• for Rent

47 - Wanttd to Rent
•&amp; - Equigmern for Rtnt
k·9 - Forle•e

81 - -Homalmpto'IMmMt•
82 - Piumtting • .,._lling

83-bcata•ing
Eieetric-' Ia A•frlgeration

1" 1&amp; 1187 -

General Hauling
Mobiie Home Re9ai.t
Upholat•v

aallstaace to tile Cbapler. ReyuOida recoaalled
Murphey and staff dlreeto~ of Overbrook at the
Chapter's AJuiaal Charter Day Luncheon held
Frlcb$ at Overbrook.
I
,

appropriate ihdentlficaUon.

·

The Fire Department wishes to tba!ik everyone

for their donation by ll'YIDI a compUiilentary
certfficate tor an 8 x lOeolor poi b alt to be taken
at the Pomeroy nr, Departmeat huqcttng.
•
Your support and pneroalty 11 aP&amp;lftClated by

'

Bashan 1Ad_
ies Auxilidry'meets
. .

..

)

.

4-1&amp;:16-Hn

4-16-16-nn

GUN SHOOT

INIItiOI IXTIIIOI

RACINE
FilE DEPT.

, ... tlce ,.. " ' ~·

lcnha•luldlnt

palatlftl.

The Illness or Pearline Lee was
noted.
The group will serve an auction
on April 7 at !he Hysell residence
on Eagle Ridge.

EYEIY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

lot ,. do it lor pu.
VDY IEASONAIIE
HAVE llfEHNaS ·
AnD 6 P.M.

AT

Cut~tom

Built
Home a,
Remodeling 8t
Repair Work

•••••u•a
-

I' ..,_,

.... t l l o r _ , _

--..,..n.,- , - -

lnlortlodoptlott doohcL HoppiiJ

tlnll alaltJ -..-.
_..,.. llio... IO lltt!l tllolr
_- ond....
____
..be-·
lionto1 oltlllil.
....m.cl,

lL.
c/0 Peine ... ~ ~·ll!!!t
-.,v .... Point P' .I'(, .....
21110

1 opr1oo1 P -, ntlll, Rt. I
310, Gol"pollo F*!!J, I
-

.......

PAT. HILL

YMOUTH

oul

llod,_

ldlftoe.

Rldgt,

1 -..lttt ctld opolled- mull,
I _., fY!t~xc - h ltltd.d..
poe~~torr.

441-:1324.

.....sn-:zuo "'

11._

985~3365

._, ...,.,..
EUM HOME

STREET
PIZZA

S.alar (111-1-

lOWEST PIKES
IIGHEST QUAliTY
FlEE lOCAl D£liYEIY

OoodRotot
T.L.C.
27Yro. bp.
Roforolh:eo

POMEROY, AND MIDDlEPORT'S ONlY
· lOCAU:Y OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

· Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

ALL--· Muot .. P•id..,
Allow- IIUDLIHI: J:CII ~

992-6873
2., Solltli 4th St.
.MWdllpOI't. Oh. '

, 992•2228.

"&amp;OW

p. . . ........ ,.

COUN11Y

MOIIU

New Uma Rd., lutl•d, Ohio .
1 Session ........................................ S3.50
6 Sessions ••••••••~........................... S12.00
12 Susions•...•,..........................~•. '20.00
. 15 S.uions................................... $2 5.00
FIRST VISIT. FREE - P0$$111 YMOl.~

HOME PARK
•Mobile Homo
Pone
•Mobile Home
•Lot Rentala

992-7479

,_.,,Ollie.

Public Notice

EVElY SUNDAY

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

U.

Starts at 1:00 PJl.
Factory c;hoked
12 Gauga Only
9-6·89-ttn

KOUNTRY KLUB
20% OFF ON All
GOLF

SALES IEP

1·12-'M-tfn

USED APPLIANCES

JO'S GIFI SHOP

Roger Hysell

(Aio...ePin•a.,J

Garage

SRACISI, .,.,

.. DAY WAIIAim

IS flOW OPEN
FOR BUSINESS.

lt. 124, """'"' Ollie

RICiPYIONIST

rto• AVAI,AIU

.... ·....u
.....,...

. ~,-rienced in Typi•• FiHng.
.

.992-2156

..:-=:;;....-..&amp;I
l

•

· o..:

Buy From Uo &amp; Son!

992-5926

INSULATION
Wilier Sp..lel Oa

_ Raliclentlal &amp;

992-2772 ..

Cot1t Pold. Cell 114 Ia 9517 w
11~-112-2411.

Employment Serv1ces

H!!IP Wlntecl

11

- Room Addltiono
· - Guttii'Work
- EitctriCII • Plumbing

.. -Roofing

to: Nutrllon -~~. 111 High 11-. Pique, OH 41US. '.

-Con~eWork

-lnl~tior

• Extwior
Plfnting

V. C. YOUNG m

CALL

M~714 olw 1:811 P·"'·

W.nl_,: ' - ' nlus, __ ,.P!!"~t
.-.won•bl•.
-hlahtY
... Allletnot ..........
1ttio I l l -· a T-.ibl
11011111an1 1n a•••: ,Rn :S.kllll
~ Clinic. Cortoi.::: .ltt-

(FREE ESTIMATE&amp;)

Commercial

FREE ESTIMATES

4-25-tfn

CAIIPENTEI SEIVICE

HMtiftt, Coollfti,
Refrlgera•ion
.
Service

VINYl SIDING
YIN Yl IE PLACEMENT
WINDOWS

PH. 992-5682
·or 992-7121

YOUNG'S

· CONTROL

a-rto-- .,...._ I14-

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .. ""'* oort w•h or · -IM-f:IOI.
· Col LMty u.otr ' 814REPAIR ·
Dulllo
,
Alee Tre~till11lea , . 1140 qullto.
Anr · -lott.

311511010.

HUMPHREY'S
.CLIMATE

J&amp;L

992·6215

P01111rey, Ohio

1·30-'lt-2 110.

ioward L Writ-'·

ROOFING

NEW- IEPAII
Public Notice

1

NOTICE TO IIDDERI
AUTO PURCHASE
MEIOI COUNTY
D!I'AIITM!NT OF
HUMAN S!IIVICEI

moun~e~~

_ _..ltlt.

-

A-IAII_I_ey

----lptoro, MW?I-1421.

, _ • "" · - Colt ...,.,.,

Gutters
Down1pout1
Gutter Cleaning ·
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

DAVE'S
. SIIALL ENGINE
IEPAII

I~-"'

FUINACE

., ,_., L....,
Oil.

FUINACE
PARTt'!~~~~VICE
ALLMAKEI
GAl 011 ElECTRIC

ON'S . APPUAIKI

. SbYKI

an.,_,.....,..

"J.SJU • 915·3561

949-2161
2·1·'10-1 110.

1171.

&amp;eaied bldt wit be ••

toy tho Mllgt County
8oard of CommiiiiDIWI in

cou.....................

MEIGS

Public Sale
· &amp;Auction

s

·.. '

their efllw loo8tod In 11M

•

•C..,II'II lird lmhl

•Foufllaln lltd latltl • Plua
Froga.. Angtla and
Oth• Ywd OrnMnWa

3-5-'10-1110.

ul••

AYAIUILEIN
•

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

LOTIONS - STICKERS
CaD Susan ColeiiiCIII,

lt. " ....... of

lA ClNE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

*LIGHT HAULING

•

..

Pomeroy, .

SUN'S UP TANNING

V•• ec,., Bird llthl

*S.HRUB 8t TRE~
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·

1111 cloy trora.. tho ed· it lo run. '

. ,._
ldMiott
•. 2:00• uo
p.m.
L--------:----.:.2·;.:.1·..:'90-;:;..;.,1m;.;:;•;;.·....IJ ,.....,_
, odtllott

eo... •Cemlterr Flower

volvt ...;.,oting ·, ..oiling
*FIREWOOD .
mol•iol from two ••-· Up
be lflected.
1:'n,o~1 ,7;.-;;iri•;gwlli
11
matorJ.I wRI be
opreod OYII' 1 fllllrldedatrip
mine o"•
•·~ tnd 1'- fllnlized.
ooeded. ond muldlecL Thio
project il 100% ledorolly
funded. .
:1NO OF NO IIFNIFICANT 1311il. lie
•·IMPACT for en .,vironmen·
: 1al ••H~mtnl Which con~
. cerno en obondoned mined
11 ·Help
tend rodomotion project in
•cht Stott of Ohio. The Stott
of Ohio hoepreperedondlhe
Office ·of Burfoce Mining
• Rod-ion end Enlolc:ei m.,t, Unllld Stotll Depan.
, men1 of tho lntorior, hoo
Expanding product' line- HYDROTEX
· _ _.,. tho .,vironrn..tol
a
mutti·mDIIon dollar National Lubrica~ ---for thlo project
tion Co. 1ileking additional
P,er·
! which "'" """"itted by tho
Stott 111. epptlcotlon 1o1 Tltlt
sonnel -to cell on Commercilil &amp; Agri·
' IV ftn8ncfll Mliltnce in re·
cultural, accounts In' Gellia. &amp; Meiga
• ctoimlng ond rtOioring lond
; 1nd wat• r11oun:ee ldvlf·
counti11 end surrounding area. If you
• ooty effected by peot mining .
succeu - are eggreulve il.nd
iA complote copy of tho onv 1- desire
self motivated. We have High Commit- ·
, ronmental . . .lftlent i1
oveilablt """' tho Ohio Dt·
sions &amp; Bonuses. Product Tr11ining. No
•ponmonf of Noturol r•
Over-night travel.
·
' oourc11. Divitton of Rod•
motion. 1.1 11 Fountoln
/ · Cell 1-B00-999-4712
.. Squort Couri. luldlng H-2,
tor en IntervieW.
CO!umbue. Ohio 43224.
The llltd1lc project inHYDROTEX
. ctu- irl - ICIIon II the
·'
Auther- AML Project In
Rutlond Townahlp, Molgt
County, Ohio. Work will in·

..

DALE HILL

CHISTD, OHIO

IN STOCK' oComont .....h

OFFICIAL NOTICE

ASIFOI
IIIII IIWIGS ., DAVE .I A•s

3 AnnouiiCMIIIIh

Stop In and See

11-11·"•· 1 mo.

PutiUinlto Tille IV of tho
Surfoc:e Mining Control ond
Rod-ion Act of 1977,
11M
30
C 1201et
· ·
Ohio -DtpllriiMnl
otoeq..
Noturol
Rnouret. Divioion of Rod•
•motion. hlroby giv11 notice
of the ovoilobility ot 1 FIND-

992-21'
56
'

A Great (on~bination"Quolity. oncl leasonoble Prices"
WI GO 1HI EmA MILE.....
992·6810
OHIO

ElWIN
CON$11UCIION

12 Ga11g1 ShoftuM o.Jy
. Stridctly E.....cad

ltflto 6 p.111. LoaroMn...

You'll Come Up .Aces With
The .Classifieds .,

USEIYE YO. AD SPACE TODAY-

•B111ke Wark
MAIN ST., IU1WID

foti"'Y rhokt

1614)9·5·4110

THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUIUSH A COMEMOUTIYE
ISSUE OF THE Vlu.AGE OF
PO-lOY'S 150 YEAU OF. ,.
IN~OIPOIATION .ON
II
THil$DAY, APRIL 26, 1990• ..

· Alignment
•Oil Change • Lube .

Rontalo

FREE ESTIMATES

Pub!ic N Dlice

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

Prices"

NO SUNDAY CALLS

PAINtiNG &amp;·CO.

the firehouse. The price wlll be
$4.50 for al!ulls and $2 for
children under 12.

~((JJl C.~unty
~ ~ =tJuJ;, Q .Bus111essesl
~{f (q~t
- . .:

f

·

l~le

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160'
Day ar Night

UNDA'S ·

,.

••

"At

NO SUNDAY CAliS

M~igs

••king

CUSTOM hiT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-21Ct1
or liS. 949·2160

At_tention ·

SUPPORT
mE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENT .
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department is
sponsoring a fund raising program to raise
nec(!ssary funds for needed equipment.
•
Selected indlvlduals rep~tlng Pomeroy Vol~
·unteer Ftre Department wm be contactllig
homes within the fire district during the next few
weeks,
for a donation of $15.00. Theile In·
dlviduals wm be gOing door to dOC»' and wUl have

BISSELL
BUILDEIS

... ._Wit

• J$y Melody Roberts
· Mrs. Terri Shlpkowskl will .be.
Spendlllg Saturday · with Mrs. , traveling with them.
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Eaton
Ada Bls.sell and· Ken were Mr.
and Mrs . Tom Greuneveld and . ate Sunday dinner :ovlth Mr. and
Tommy, Wqrthlngt.on. They tra- Mrs. ·Charles' Price.
veled Ia Parkersburg. W.Va . to
Hank· Holter and Judy were
eat at Shoneys.
·
visitors of Edith Sisson,
They also took Mae McPeek Pomeroy.
,
Mrs. Wilma Wamsley visited a
with them. The Greunevelds
were vtslllng area people before week with Mr. and l'o!frs. Dorset
goln!l on' vacation In Hawaii. Larkins.

Anr&gt;ou ncr me nh

G!UG IAIUY

POMEIOY OliO

St~rv1r:1~s

"Free Estim.tea"

Long Bottom n~ws notes

I and J CONSTRUCTION

66 - Steel &amp; Ftrt ilit tr

'BISSELl .
'SIDING CO.

Officer's were elected at the
recent meeting of the Bashan
Ladies Aulilllary. Officers will
remain the same as last year.
Becky Pullins presided at the
meeting and the treasurer's
report was given by Lou Pitzer.
The smorgasboard dinner will
be held April21 from 5-8 p.m. at

IUTUND niE
SAUS and
SEIVICE
JU.JOII
•Tire Sale•

Fo~r1rr S ilflllllf•s

•V INYL S IO!NG
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

TIIANKSGIVEN-Raeae,.oldl.receateftlle
Hetiii'D le•,h•n MelpCIIIIpter of llleDaupters
of tile ~erlcaa Revolutloa, p~ts Mark
Murplley,admlalatra&amp;oroftlleOverbroolo:Center,
~ .wltla a Utlt.eo o1 appnelallft for ·

7-11-'lt-111

•Fiont End

Business Services

--

G....t A. lhirl••

366i9:SI7

115-Letart
. 9~7-lluffllo

Oet Ruailtc fatt

I" ..

..

171 - Apple Grove

FslaiP.

43- Farms lor Rent

tbe Pomeroy Volunteer Flte Depirtment
board, oftlcenaDd
bten.
.

(

992 - Middlepon
Pomlf'DV
9'8 -.-Ct'lftter
843 - Pona.nd

'

Re~1

"'- Apartment for Rent
46 - Furnistled Rooms

.

. '
Tile two 111a1e llllevea pged,
maeed w
handcuffed two
I'IA{dl all4 atole the worn
shortly after 1 a.m., Haaa ..ld.

446 - Csllipolis
367 - Ct-t•hire

379 - Wtlnut

STUDENT OF THE REX- Mlchtille Ward, center, received
the atHeal of Ute week award for math and hellavlor at Melp ·
Junior Wp. Preseatlag her award Is Mary lo Wooten, left,
•tudeat leaeller, aad Uncia
Leaf.
'

'tWhoever-, has It at this moment now haa one of the great
private eoUectlona of . 17thcentury Dlitelt paintings- abloJutely •llllplr of~." ..ld,
Frvhlb RobiDIOn, a1 expert In
Q\1~ paiJ!UIIP aJ!d dln!ctor of
tile Muleum of Art II the Rhode
Jslalld Scbool of Deslp.
TIM! .-orkf "are 10 coherent
. . ·of ..:11 lfalpri. . lmpara-, ·~ he ..ld.

A•u Code 614

643 - Ar•bi • Oi• t

Attending were Margaret Amberger. Goldie Frederick. Pauline Ridenour, Charlotte Grant,
Mary K. Holter. Erma~Cieland.
Faye Kirkhart. Esth ,Smith,
Laura Mae Nice, Lor Damewood. Cora Beegle. Ethel Orr.
lnzy Newell, Marc I~ Keller,
Elizabeth Hayes, Jean Frederlck; Vlrglnla Lee, Thelma White.
Opal Hollon, Betty Roush. and a
gues 1. Sandra White.

Experts cal lei! the theft among
the worst in decades in the United
States, possibly ·the most lucrative crime ever verified In the
country's history. Art experts
suggested the thieves may have
been recruited by a private
coUector knowledgeable enough
to select a coherent group or
pieces.
. '

21 - lutin•• Oppottynil;y
22-MOntV IG L.oan
23 - Prot•llonel s.,v1c•

Muon Co . WV
~'" Code. 30'

Mt1gt

246 - Aio Gianct.•
_251 - Guvan Dist .

· " Beauty of Spring.· :
Refreshments were served bv
thi! hostesses and games were
conducted by Marcia Keller and
Laura Mae Nice.
· Door prizes were won by Lora
Damewood and Betty Roush.

;FBI: Interpol investigate
:~ajor Boston a~ theft

corer the .

Ga lli• County

388 - Vinton

Past Councilors meet

. ·VIrginia Lee was ·Initiated into
the Past Councilors· Club of
iChester Councll323 Daughters of
•America wheft that group met
recently with Opal Hollon and
£ora Beegle as hostesses.
Opal Hollon presided at the
"meeting and she also read the 121
:Psalm. The Lord's Prayer and
:pled~e· to the flag were given in
o~~nlson. • RoO call was answered
'With members naming something green about their home.
· Thelma White read the min.utes of the February meeting and
•Betty Roush gave the treasurer's
-report.
·
: Erma Cleland read a IJO('m
about St. Patrick's Day. and
Ethel Orr read a poem about the

2 :00P.M . TUfSOAV

Anu Code 6U

v.,...

&amp;9- For Selt or Trlde

11 - Help Wen1tc1
12 - Situation Wanted
13 - lnturance
1 4...:. 8ul•n•• Trtinlng
15 - Schoala &amp; In at ruction
11- RNto, TV. Cl Repatr
17- Mitctllaneoua
I 1 - ,Wenlelt To Do

.fo llou-in~ telephone exchange~ ...

.
the Chapler"s Good Cltlzen$hlp Ames Cllapter, Athel)s County.
Committee to be submitted for · Anna Proffitt, of the Colonel
judging ai the state level.
Charles Li!wis · Chapter, was
Winners of the Annual DAR· recognized as being National
History Es- Vice-President of Defense.
Others. recognlzi!d duiing the
say
mentary fifth
Charter Day program were
Harris. daughter of Jeff ~iil&gt;t--.. Mark Murphey,admlnlstratorof
DeborahhHarris, Portland, writ- the Overbrook Center. who In
ing about Elias Howe, and
turn acknowledged his staff
Tuppers Plains Elementary directors; and also past regents
sixth grader Brian J. Hoffman,
of the Return Jonathan Meigs
son of Terry and Janet Hoffman, . Chapter, which included the
Long Bottom. writing about
following WQmen.
· Samuel Colt. Both youngsters
Margaret Dutton, regent from
read their winning essays at the
1954 to 1956; · Phyllis Skinner,
luncheon.
1965-67; Moriah Foster, 1971-73; •, ·
Other special guests at FriLucllleSmllh,1973-75; MaryLew
day's luncheon Included sister
Johnson, 1975-17; Eleanor Elch,
1977-79; Mary Kay Yost. 1979-81;
members from the Colonel Charles Lewis Chapter of the DaughPat Ingles, 1981-83; June Ashley ,
tersoftheArnerlcanRevolutlon. · 1983-85; Rae Reynolds, 1985-87;
Mason County, W.Va.; the
Betty Milhoan. 1987.89. Reynolds
French Colony Chapter. Gallla
Is currently serving her second
County; and the Nappy Lee
term as rege'nt. Not all of the
WO!"en ~uld be present at the '

lu:::o~ora.

.

CountY'

11- Frulla.

:;p~ Vlf'f!;

- 2'00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2·00 P.M. THURSDAY
- 2 -bO ·P.M fAIDA't'

Cla.~sified pa~es

'

retiring from Sporn

. -

s...

57 - Mueicaf Instruments

f rrqJirrvrrlt'll'

- 11 ,0DAI\I. IATUROAV
- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
. FRIDA¥ PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

11- Pttt tor

•••nee)

a

OAV IEFOJIE PUBl!CATION

MONDAY PAPE~
TUEIDAY PAPER

rec,ognized by DAR c.hapter,
Several
throughout Meigs
were honored
by the Return
: Chapter or the
American Revolullon,
the
• local DAR Chapter met Friday
· for 'their Charter Day Luncheon.
' The luncheon was held at the
l.--{":e~po~ Center in Middleport.
winners ofDAR'sannual
Essay Contest
Beegle, daughter
and Barbara Beegle,
t~i~~ Racine area, representlng
Ill
High School; Kathy !hie,
' daughter of Charies and Donna
. .. Ihle, of the Racine area, fepres- .
: entlng Southern High School;
and Amy Jo Murphy, daughter!){
• Robert and Slna Murphy, or the
ReedsvUie area, representing
Eastern High SchooL All three
girls are seniors at their respec• live schools.
··: Beegle's essay was selected by

-

'

Ads

. 8 - Went4d to luy

"•.ant ,...,.,_,

COtt-Y DEADLINE - .

0- ·

1 - Lo•l and Fownd
7- Y•d Stria fpltd •n
1 - Pu~ Sale
Awc:t ian

cept - ciMtified ditpley, lu•if'•• Cttd tn.d legll not•eet)
will tllo IPP•• in th'e Pl .
tnd the Gtlhpottt Oet~v Tribune. ,.aching owrr11.000 home~

·'

..01/ doy

3 - An~oucementt

•&amp; c:l•t•fied .chaniMment pltc:td '" TheDaily'lent~nll ,.. .

w-. -

(6141 667-3271 •

.10

11 .30 / doy

•-G.,•••v

•Ads thll "''"' IN _.d '" edvance .e
Caui of Th.,.U
In MamDr._,

their wlniDc esaya Ia tllil year's American
Blnloty eoatelt. Wl&amp;ll tile JOIIIIPien are Rae
Reynolds, ehapler repat, at· left, and Eileen
Baelo:, chairman of tile American History Essay
Commltlee.

.42

19.00

1- Card ot Th~nkt
2- ln Memory

for anOt"t fitoat d., ad '""'' tn p - -1. Call e.etora 2:00 D m
dw ah• public•'-" tO mae COtrectiOn

AMERICAN HISTORY WRITERS- Pordaad
Elemea&amp;.ry flftll p-ader Wllery Rant., and
Tuppers Plal111 Elemenlar)' alx&amp;lt I!Bder Brian J.
Boffmu, were hoaored at Frld8Y'S Charter Day
Luaclleon of Ute Beton Jonathan Melp Claapter
of tile Danchlera of tile American Revolulr on, for

DUMP TRUCK
. Sand -Stone-Dirt

fnr ear.e. 111W -.;::;;:..:•:::••:_
·--------

run 3
.no eh•t•
.,...Ice of M fOI' all c•i\ee l.nert ,. douDI.- ~flee at ad cast
• 7 potnt Una type an~ uted
·S..,tinlf il not rnponaible for erron tfllf ftr11 d~ !Check

.

II Woroll
.20 .
.30

Rat• ar• for con•cutive runs, _.,, oken updJIV swill bech•glld

•Rec.tw.e
••courM for ... P&lt;~illf"" advance
•fNia Mil - Qi.,.,w-. allld found adl und• 1 I words wilt ba

Melia' Ce!,RIQ- . Good, •
Cltllelllldp ',wfaaera II this yHI"a· ·a.alhal .
PAR IPM?Wd' euay · ooalest are, 'lr,.n left,,'
Baleen Hlp Selaool senior Amy 1e lllupiJJ,.
Sli.ldbeta Hlp aenlor Ka&amp;ly lllle udllelp Hlp
8etalor Melule Be811e. Tile YOUI

'

•e.oo

t&amp;

Monthly

..-. • .10

Ov~r

Word&amp;
1&amp;

. 10

GOOD CI'DZENS -

NI._WLAND
ENTEIPIISES

RATES

TO PLA(E AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru FIIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

I A.M. until NOON

CUlliNG

........ 0¥. OIIJo 41711 Untl
12-Dntlle2lllldevof
MINII. 1110Mtdet t:lil P.
M. - " " ' 1ly the Citric of
llld ...rd Mtd (Old otoucl
for the puroh•eot a v.. for
the Melgt County Deportof H......, .....looo.
lpeolllaetlllnl
for ..tOld
v.. _ ... ..,• ..,.
_

.........
......."' ............ -...
.....,_... ...., .....
11M Cllrtl Of ... loft Of
......CountyC..,.'IUIJr

_...._
l:lo A.M.

Mtll 4110 P.M ..

I. L HOLLON
TIUCIING
C.STD, OliO
. •GRAVEL '
•UMESTONE
•FILL OIRT
•ANYTHING '
· ATALL

•ciOWAYI

OVIIBPAII

'1 11

••••

•

Tile ............. ......
the rlllhl to ..... lilY
•d II 1116 111111/or woopt
•• loott 11111 for 11M har '' •

._,

~ .~,.f:'l.: .

lrhlt It In Or We
.
Plclc Up.
IENr,s

915·4422
,.,,. . .tin
PullllcNotice

t111t " tau 11t ..., or •

...,,... kMWIIIL

AI

. . .
. . . . . . . . . .. . . , a

MelldaVIIIrlllllltMIO¥,... Caw•hfl n•r• .,.

'" ....... w I ttl4 fraon

atut w..t1

~- . 1111111!1.... Clarll
.'
.. - - Coullll'f IMrd
of
.....
c-on~o

(:1)12. 11 Ztll
\

I

�Moray, M:Mdl,_19, 1980

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

m

51 ' Houl IIIOicl
Ooodt

_,_ .............
-

~

I!VENINO

..

____
.
. . ., . .
......·=,..._

-

1 - YEI Fha

Itt 1._ 1'lt.

.-.1--11- ·
Illite
-..........
• ,.,. -.,.. ',
_..,.,
....,...
·•

Tcop
Cloh poW. Cld - twl . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

,_

.. ·:

.........

104123 tilt.

if!tlnlng

A&amp;OUT SC~L, ANP ABOUT

'

LIFE AND ABOUT EVEMli1N6 •.

Olympic NaliofW Park. Q

WORRVIN6 TJ.IAT TilE MOON~

WELL, EITI-IER ...

.
..~-r'
1' I'r-s-r"~"HI"!
1 1. o:

through WUhinglon 'a

ALL IIIISMT LON6 I KEPT

I DIDN'T .SLEEP

601N6 TO FALL ON N« IIEAD.•

,..,~D~R-:0-:B~E:-:-R-.

_;=.. . . c....

1:30;::::;Ighlly ......

- :OICillewarl) l•tlllu

·

.·

•

~~rt:~: ~~..:h:~~

yO\l dwolo!&gt; lrom otop No. 3 below.

·,

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THfSf SQUARES

~u~=-Q

· Mtrc;hllndl•

'
I
'
·
,
·
I I I I r •
"=:!

L......t..--1.'--.&amp;.
.......___,"'

IIJW_T_r

54· Mltcellal'IIOUa

Have you ~~~~er notk;ecl that
the people who have the gill~
gab ·neverknowwhento -· "

.:.;,A

(J)IquaraOMTVQ .
eo ,,_, Ortlftlh

•

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

IIONSF-. A .-y ol fun.

I CoiiLDKT SLEEP LAST
NlillT .. I KEPT WORR'I'IN6

'

'

'

1

Amertoe
l!l Wild Alllellcll Marty lrllcl

1K llolla t~r:: 1.'111.- . , ,.,
.......

IUM:Waf,

,_Coli~

'

MUPJY

(JJ lcholllllk: lpon

tl,lll. 111MJ7'

-

Antlquet

Aild
e •Qe Cll Gil
eDeNewa . '

• (J)

=-.

..........

Lo. - -

""""'!!'*'~- ~
· i~w~..;-;
....ii..~...;~.ii;;.;;Ani~.iklc!ij;;·.;;:._
llllrtg.
Wolor, 11:14 E. Mtiln SL-. _...,_
M.T.W. 10:00 un. ta 1:00
4 a 1~· Hou•:
p.m.~lundoY 1:00 to I:GO ...,.,

~·-··rtm.~
••
_- _lor _.....- .
ding

Choir,

53

= ,_:...r--:-·

Aldoa. ....- . PIIIL!Oiit,

ltp '; wilt: . T..a.r,

....
Condktllift. ,,........,.,,
--~~--

Ono llr,

Malnt- ................

e:oo==:•·

52 Sporting Goode
-

..•

NYPO. LE

a

tum.,..

lnduolrlll

I. I' I I I· I I
I
I 1 I C-1

. ..l o r - a ............
~
fUmlture. 11...._

One 111 dro•
ipt.
UpoCIIN. kiNI lor ........
No~ ..- - .......
SOW75-11181 .

I

-...

Television
Viewing

M tt tSM Furniture. CMoll: w

..,.,.

b...

T-"nloWae.

71 VMIU..,._

......- . WQ,

- - polcl.
171:MS1.

Job . _ . 1 - . 111111'1 w.
fl'lin ........ lor )alae • ~0
M a o h 1 n I o I· ,
Acc:ountlnJICo~put lng
llpac._, .,.,......_ Coirnllal ; 'r , Ileal~ food
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Ill bo;i•

'N' CAIILYI.Be 'r 1A11J WaiP!

The Drt; 81 lltillel P111 I

. Poniaoy-Mkldhport. Ohio

Monel J', M8n:h 19. 1990

(J):I-II-1~Q

Ill eDCUN.w.Q
1
Mkldlt aged

iedY to ... In wlib

ping

....... lady, ..... Me•tk

and

eoo!&lt;!ll- lie'"- ,..

toddiorond_....,._
othJr tMn t.mltr

,...,all

_.m.

hiring -

of

3 pc, K - _ ~1

Real Estate

our lull
OX·

Hl~ng

.......-No
_ no
aline
·_
no _
lflriuo,

Cou'*Y Mobile Home PMtt.
Far Sola In YIUage of Yl"'on Lal;
wfth ·~~~~ ' Mel ...... ....
- · $3,1011.114--1.

31 Ho11111 for Salt

• .,.. Cam- ... lnln. - ·
ling ""' 11,- .... monlh lor
t~t
lhlt are qua'IW.
hntllo ·oftw
10
ctav-.

3 IR Sp~Jl lwei. LA, FR, fP, DR, Far ..... . , ow-: 1U
Kllohen.l AJ~~tlanoa• UR, t 112 - d - - . with ..
bothl 0.. MOat • Cant. Air fn.
- · rlaiU. ln Wllkalvllle
~ Yllloy.
- · ao7 Oall Dolvo Towntlalp, "nton Couniy, Oltlo.
114,1011. 114-oM&amp;- No llrUCIIIrel on preml
Fer

MIMgerlll poeiiGn an"·He
-bo1a110oi9-Have-.
trjii!OpaltaiiOn.

ifii""

only.
POSTAL SERVICE ..-_ Salary
tci MSK. Nallonwldoo. Entr)' lo¥11

Wird kMpl~ 10 PA lox 221,
3 bo•-11 loaillht282 Amhoni;Oitlo_, ,
.
Mul....._ A... CloM lo . La1 tor aala In - ' - - . CaU
....- : · · ...
.........
1

Cill :104-871.1721, lol_lnt..,..., 10:00 All to
4:00PM. -~and n.May

-

cr.'~~

mall

- - C.l ., .... tt27, TIMe.
1:00p.m.

.

Poatal -aiDtllk:Oiion
- """ • 111
.4111ir.
ForInfo. caa

7 _~

,.,. lnlonMtlon -

.can. ... or. ,.._
., -room.

.,_ (1)a05-817-ICIOO ldoll114-11&amp;-4111.

...._.or·. - ................
tor a......,., ..
......~10p.m.

2111, ExL 101.

1-21~·

S.ll Avonl OWn UM, Mil ta

or11..aem.

11~31

"""

I;""';~a~•ra;~·;·;;;o;;;~iiiiet;

=

LDia end .aruge nellabte for

,...
. ...R•ybum R•d.

conMNCHDn
Rural ....,,

I 'ldiOOifltl. ~deck. 171 paftd
na•anlllll NaCric8outh ......,.... Mlddt:pon (noar Lloow. ·
7N251. No ... _
~~- Hlgll).ttt.- a14- - - .......
mllao, Rl. :z,
.......h .. liala_ga_ Hlallory
Rd., ....,.

Fl=

In lUi b I JIMI.a.,
lllr, _ wlih CIA. Gilt
CIL
khODII, In nloe ~ bortJ 111.

tt4 Ill MU,Itt

In -

u::....- ..........
-

n, -

11

74'11.

o1 ,_,.,,,
-Call

Gllll.

.........
1724.
O.J. Wldlt

Ad.:~

bullolna

2

1410. Table with I ohall8 - ·
, ....al). s1ao. e1...-.:.Mn. ·

1lpaot: AddiOon Bulavtill
Ad. - · Tnlitr ·PartL 114.,._.215.

49

•

For l8888

&amp; LIV!

..

In 111nlon on
116111, lalgllol,

...

.

-.,~,..,

'

2 or I
radacanttcl. Nice, on U~n
. -OW- t14olll2-

211r, 23 Plno

S~

. , _ $2ILIL

......
c.a-. tm -

Organilatlon
.......
punctual, lind ablo Ia ao
pall ot 1 INm roquiNd: pr- a

and

32 -Mobile Homes
for Sale

ono-yaar
coonmMmont
to 10150 two .... ....,. mobile
poaltlon: ......... - . . ........ ... ...... :1104-1"/14134,
with per~ wfth mental rltlfo
dll""' end devslopmentll CU. 1174 K l - . 1011:1, ldlchln
alolll- 0; .. . , -.
BaillY:
-T .... ........
p,.....,...,"~
............. E x - ILDIOIIancH
air; NIUIIie dlili.
lot In.......
lllicklila.
8tnd
lMolM
.....
loam.
to ClaDlla ...,, lucUye $20,500. 080.- 114 llla-DJI
or

Cooniluftlir

Sar&gt;l :=~.P.O. Boa

104, ' Jaclaon. Ui"' 41140.
OMdl• tor 11 : r • ne; ~-&amp;
10.
......
~~

...,_.a........ ..... ,.,........ .
E:u...,sr.

Wonltd In the Twn al -

. ;. : : --..

~=~

1o Town Er:nplo)UI . ...., ,..
gD411Me ,..... ..... ,...,.
ro: Town o1 Box

1117,--.wv.":i:'i
Wll ....,.. In "' 87WID.

12

-

114 IB53S37.
1177 14ll70 ftloiona
Homo, Largo IIVI!It - · 2 lvl
IMthl.,
mowc1. Call

CA.,..,.,..

evonlnga. a1~'11:

1171 14x711 , . - , 211r, 1
Mlh, wJdouble ltnb. •• helll
II .. _
Nll'ig, ·~ .......
_"'

....,_, lor9t- w

'

.::::ud5Canl-

lotdroom toottor, Ollllpolll

'*:J..:.4o'l'tl,

lxtn
211r, unlur·
.........
• Lot, - t d 1
mila lrOni Hal- Hcapltol,
12101mo. 11 .....2300.
11Hon, WY, 1 t d ""' 1ur.
- inlier l!lllh - - a
dryw,llrconc1,104-n:J-1711.

or -

Mob11a lor 114-lt2·74l'IL.

-

43 Fanns tor Rent

...._ llacllnooo 1221 to P71.
Lampo 121 to 1121. Dlnolltt
lfDI and up lo Mts. Wood
toblo 1M! · - ms to $1111.
DtoQ I1U up to U71. HulcioM
MOO I up, .bunlo _,ploio
wtth matt. . . tal •nd up ta

·--

Ubooty. ~

dillon.,_-. _,c~ryor,

,.,.

•• ~,.- ....... In "" ......

1tx3t'

ttnce ...... ' -

Apartment
for Rent

To ...,

-..a:-

&amp;... .....-..::;..
-.1aa.

•. . ,_ -

....... -

216-10.

ealaoci. Drop-lnl
11t •• IDt.

::11~~::t':.:::

1•nn

-t

. 114- EBTATI!L. IISI IUktwl Plu
lrono t t - W.lk 10 II

: 1IXIO homo.
lrlrf•1"1MNiot
;;:;.~.. _..toyaul1044'11o It
of town. AIIO' • howl
. . '"" Lot, In iiit"-""U..ln_Md_lhalllw.
111,-.
11t
t'
•
IIIII'
, . . .J..til,
.,.,....
Con -• . ..,- .__
..........
....... . 1:10 , .... -

Ill~

...... :rr •

Unl&lt;iuo--.-......
'

Size 7, ROM IICIUinDI, OM of
kind In thit ...... 11t ... 1101,

heed.,.

good,

wioofior,
- · loth
11~1117.

lion

WHII'E'IIo1ETAL ~

Ron All~ 1210 · ~eoonc~ Ave,
a.tllpoll, OH 11t !I tl t••
---~~-.-bo

. - frM IIOndlna_ ot tlntplaco
- - $1,100;-Salllor $800.
S:IH In .......,. ca,ton, 11._
1511.

' - ••ao; 10 dllh •
make 1 offer, Delbert ~llher1
~

A-nco'o ' Camor or

..

,

::-..=

had .. ...,....
- .. - .
-h. 114:111 - AKC Rtailltrtd Coeur Spanltl
Pupo, Slice• aaanod a - ·
1110 -h. ~ .-or ...11
'• will hold tiM Eaiar.
114-3M 1110.

s:-

DOUILI -11 TACK 11101'.
ploto

c-

"'"'""' . .. . . . . . . up. 4-H
·
- 111% .... -bollo,hiiLViOaMd
,~

~.

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

Dlta
~tr Fudrl"l\.
, ....................... ""' ilnl,
ohocatlma IMCI clelw•r a.n
..,..,. 114 ~II DI:D

lf..d

Dnlgoo••rnd Caft"'Y - -

iloHoe,..uoao:hlloiOidld lvrnlohl... 112 mi.
Jerotc:ho Rd. Pt. PI_., WY,
CIU304-171-14&amp;0.

Pe.... n.
and
Himalayan · aaow _,.,, l14ttl 3111 after 7

RENT TO OWN

p.m.
Flail Tank, 2413 .....,_ Avo.
~nt PIMIInt, 304"'71-2013, 10
up 114.11 and 10 gal

Top Qua lily Brand Namtt ·
Uvlna roam autt• l1~k.,

·rr::;::r ell;..":,'.;

.......

coonfllaio $tUIWII., low -plaioM3.2S.
cuh
~loao
avallablo.
YI'Ra "For ..
. 1a AKC A..__,
...... _
•
1414
1'- ~

btdo,

-=

. SWAIN

AUCTION I

FURNITURE.

Groom and Supply Shop Ptt
GroominG. A l l - All II-Ilona Pii F:ooo1 , Dotior. .luila

a

1

•

III-Io

huich m. UUtna room
e u l t , - - · onif tabla
f125. All ......, cond, 304-IJI.
2211.
.-

otlt4oHlH4l'l.

·

-nlom ...., s ,..

Ont

'a: II '
PIM a . Ra, 11w, ·UIO.
Ulllfti. .... 11t .... .,. ...,

,..,,..... ._. 141

tH1

-......aN711. \

Ua_.,~110
...............,. .

0 MUlder, 8lle W!"''e The
Last Flight Of The Dixie

·
- Llal
11011 tumllhtd.
flrlt
lltln .....
.... Clll
oo11ect 1·
11WS7-. dtly .. .......•

...........
!!0!111!

Damill

...........

at au'CII . _ l1atlon
1D MOV1Io 8outll Paoclllc

Trai(1 :00T
.
1:01 Cll MOVII: Niall Ptelna
llitller (Ill (2:00)

r.~· 'H":C.$1~:...:.,

..:-:::tn\:::
-. ..t---.

· M,IIL'l_~~:.
1 •HIIWJ
7X11
QiDUIOICI
•
Wl'l
CJutr UvltiJDII Tnllllr, 17,100;
Many .....,.
In oiook II

c-.

1:30eW ra Hollen F.mlly
Sandy wr118al'rincipal
Graham a letter and
~~-her job. D
al e!D City Mna·l:laria II

1104 CMuy
101- .too'alV ........ ,_.,..,724.
1422.
Coonpllio on 1104 Clorytlor Fifth
11.000 ...... _.. oand, 114-, .... iihold
_ _,
~

1114

A-. -...............

held hostall! by Penny's new
boyfriend . 1;11
at Crook a Cline
t :OO W 18 'Phantom Of The
Opere IPI 2 Of 2)' NBC
Mcnt1eJ Hight AI The
MoYin (2:00) D
(!I Collage let'ketbltl
• ill e Cll 4111 Annual

Roofing. MW1r 1 I, ~~ .
l r , ....,.111.,., odd - · '•
Clcni, ...•
~ma~• . 114-37t41110, lilt lor •

Otdl

CUtiiOM
-..ghan.
DIHII,10 · 101
... t18ntlt- waonnty.l14o

-·

e

lntWiar plinling, lor .... - . •
1111101Aftor3:P,M.
llmllt . ... -~ . . . .,
!HI Dadlt ~ 1.1. Tioot:o, Clllntr-. t1 t 441 ti04 or 304-

41,211 - . _.. oand, .,...
1f1·7011thrllp.m.

&lt;:fiVE IT ,A SHOT•. •
'IOU MlaH'I" UK&amp;:

17W211.

Amartcan ~ Awlfde A
gallery of oornic lumlnariel
gather at Loa Angeles'

~~e1u:re..

··=

Shrine Expotltlon Han to
recognize the nation's

1018 tully •
- : a, l!onlwllatata
wo1g1o10 wlduall. 11l4'11-2170.

lunnlet1 pertonnera. Q

Ill

•1'!1·

~-~TempoGLS.­

now condMion.
4 ,- ........
· 111410
oao.
11-I-UOS
..... Sola: 1881 Chevy Cloftll,

-~-·~· . "'"
OOYIRIIMENT
IIIZED - from ttoo. Forda. ... at d11.

llumr-

I
.
~
ZZ" Btl Poapoilod, 31M 41 111•
;;
....
:::'-="=:'~.,..
-c:::.:..
~lvtr Traotor, HSOLivo,- hnl
- · .... oond,
power, ••
hydiolll, .... k · - ..,.
- · 2 boll-, 1-4• S' palM
hltal:, I' '~-· I
11

--

CMuyo.

hounwife trie1 to ptiSSutl
oOvert!Mtl Into putting Gut of
FYI. Q
ei!D AHan . . . - oaorue
and Slkn lnvesllgeta the
murder of a famoua human
doCtor. (II) Q

BARNEY
TATIR ·

INHD••INHD
BVSTEDMY
GRANDMAW'S

'

THROWED IT
AT Mill

TEAPOT?

17 -

Pia

....,....

....... Guidi (1) - Ia( ..10111.
.

aiid .......,.

Astro-draptt poedk:tlona · tddly. MaN
SUS to Altro-Graph, c/othla - . p i per, P.O. Box 111428, c-lnd, OH
4&lt;1 101-3428. Be aura to state your zoell·

l ol.- ••• .,...

f

IC lign.

I

Alllll llliiiNIII1·Aprll11) It mlgllt be
will to
tOday any big dill&amp;
1n which you're pn~untly irWoiYed. Be

,_.....,a

...,. ~My ectua11y uw 1M po~Mtlal you
. . _ thlm to uw.
·
TAUIIIII c.t• M 1., Theroed to
·HIIIIIII PI*' with good lnltntlone,
and llllrW'a a dllnca you llliaht add

Mil=

V1100 (Aug. 11-a.,t. Zl) Don't grab
the managerial rllgns from the hands ol

e

..... .,...... . , &amp;oon.ae
Ilk you )olillp 111111 out

--IIIN~.Dowhatyou

you....,

eR...,

..

1• ttlt:!llltPGtlarOIIW'I.Evwi-H
,you•
,. _._
a._

_- llllillll. but ll*ik t'liGI bllvN llilik· '
i f l - cloil't up . . IIIII.
lngan.a II edfiMII•co ........ ·CIVNCGNI ....
11) Don,:
Ill da a
'*"'all on Olf*e IDdiY
CA PI' .,._ II._ lit ,...._._ .,eu~~ape to co- • • . " - I l l . . _

••11.

,.

"*"'• ...,

you

tlllti(lllaro:•:ledtodlr ...... jOUrdtl . . tllk 1M1' IIIM4M10
,... 11 : !l•iid _ . COI!Irftute to , _ •l:uck llltl:athu Mil •:ollat a
,_,,,_ • 0S111 . . . . . . ,.,.. . . IL. . IIILI...IUf
.
p Ill W. Ill I 7) . , _ .... lfiP II
. . , .. . . . c-, • fl&amp; . , O.t*ifl
10 •ol:lfaut
I
. up to jOUr - llloi:UO •+ c:UII lia
LIUMr.....
O•tlllifM;,:rJ 1 nplfol"' ..,1111 far ,eu ....

.. . . . . . . . . . .
tlllnllllil ..... lia

1 but

mlgllltfilnltrou'rlllit'*-.
tuallly,

!.

---

-----·--(

- ·- . I

'

--~

you ...., ......

~·

' You'f ...... rdLir

,..,.up.

lillll CU

You ........... . , ... , Ill

lnac-'

e

1

1

.....

••..-- ~

eewz.... .........

UIIO

8

0

I ft '1¥1$1 t
01~

.7

tK~

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
W..t

Notll:

Put
Put
p..

INT
It

4.

Openlnc lead: • Q

llj

•

CROSSWORD

'•.

by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Attended
1 Tree
or fruit
5 Insect
I Chinese
2 "love• In
port
Messina
10 Fanatical
3 Testing
12 City
lime
In N.Y.
4 Watch
13 Becharm
5 Graham
15 Pay dirt
or lome
11 Briny deep 8 Zola 1'1QVel
17 Greek
letter
18 Robert

7 Defunct
basketbal
league
Guillaume 8 Way
role
back then
20 Shool
11 later
skyward
years
21 Vetch seed 14 less
22 Over·
common
Whelming . 18 Classlly
23 Declaim
111 Fry quickly

20 Flselle

30Unearthly

rock

23 Phase
31"M"A'S'H~
24 MDotn
role
flaln on 33Myth.
Ny - •
moth 2S Had on
er
27 ·1&lt;11s ol 31Prompt

the -

37llfe
(prel.)

Woman·

25 Dilute
28 27th
president
27 Fly alone .
28 Art (Hal.)
29 Be partial
32 Needleftsh
33 Falsehood
34 · - culpa"

. 35 Elclted
37NBA
. star

38 Musical

genus
40Giveheed
41 European
river

another today unleal you're ateolulely
certain you ctn do a better job. II you
foul up, It could be very ambari'Miing.
LIBIIA llapl. ZI-OaL 21) Don't be ....
time. g
!lm. . . 'today by people who llelm
eo....., .. ltlow
the trapplnga of power. Thla GOUld be
111 011 .....
julia big facade whlcllnaecllellly pull · n:ao~taa - • I Mia. King
you ln.aaubllrlllnl poaltlon.
ICOII 10 I,.._ M Na1. 21) \II""ICI"'"W"'-"' ,
(J) • •
C1J ill
t•latlltl/. your motto far todly lnlglll[.
·
0
Nan
·
be, "Don'tdonow-tyouc:anputoll!
. (J)Im' tPTanigllt
untM later." Unlottunlttlj, till latar to ,
Ill Ne•a•lllda
w1a11111
rnlglil be'*'-"*'·
you tlilnll.
GJ
'tAl ...... lllaw. 2111ea 11)'
0
YlaeCrackettand
Wlllni gam~···
001-11111 tocllar
rullbll*e u _...
,,_ ...., be nll'gated 10 U. role ol
~IW'Itlaln Columllll.

.•

SOUTII
tA JIOI71
.AKU

10

-·

iIIJIIftllintiNewa
llll New Twl1lght z-

Q)Newa
10:01 Cll MOVII: A Of
Dalln (2:00)
10::10111 eO Hie a - Doug
and 11agg11 mn1 - h
other's paranto far the first

.'

.KJtU

back to 1:11 band and rllff 11M last l:el:rt .
anyway. In lact, best ,..,. il for de- •
clarer to wli: the first l:eart 11111110 to :
dummy willa the club ace to lead up to ~
bil other blgb heart. Tbllp- declar•
Declarer's play was lnexcuable. He er some extra play in t1:oae iattaaca :
can gaiD notlainl by nfflng tbe third w1:en 'Weal II leading from a liz-card .
beart with tbe apade nine rather than suit IUid Eut baa oaly a liDileton ·
·
tbe kiD&amp;, liMe hil plaa Is to ruff a club l:eart.

38Dolphin
genus

decldn to becoma I prielt.

aoaa In the coming ,...._ Send far your

·''

only two spades. However, Nortla had
an ace u well u a prime card In
trumpa, so be wu tappy 10 acc:ept tbe
1ame invitation. He was.not so tappy
with tbe play of _tbe band.
Declarer won tbe · kina of bearts,
took tbe ate and ruffed a heart with
tbe nine of ipadea. East overruffed
with tbe queen IIIII Ied back a trump.
Declarer took tbat with the ace ln lila
liaad and raa four more hlp trumpa.
Eventually be got to 'dummy with tbe
club ace IIIII Ied a diamond to tbe king.
West took the A-Q of diamondS and an·
oilier beart trick, and that was down

• e!D Newll8rl 0eorge

A-atllrtllft

weu

=1ondl-

an aHtlr. Q

10:00 ()) 700 Club Willi Pat

IIJIJIIill

,.. Cal 114-ID-7717.
.

0 , _ Time Wraetllng
ill Nai!Mtle Now Country

Billa having

· 11.-.
Cant01 k Itt.
~

0....., Klrig Uvel

mulic'a hottlet atarlara
flltured live.
1D MOVII!: The Tuln Kid
(I :00)
1:30. eiD Dllelgnlng .w Char- II COIHillOad that

""·'-=::-=-:--:

Plllnt ICealola -

MOVIE: The Retum

a eo • .,.., IINwn A

111!1-.
CUnlvaiof,

1.::==:..:.:-.:.:..:=..=;:_-

(!)

Of Merlin ...... (2:00)

J.D. llai"'Y llao, 2 arnt1Y
- · 1 lllr
10 N.H.
-·
·D1U1iJ.D.
Tractot,
J.D.
l'IIOO
Cam
4 1ct:om
1141U1141.

.

Hanson and Penhall
encounter a 1S.year-old girl ·
hiding her litter. Q
DPNneNawa

II VI-

=-----

I

~ JJl ~ Jump StrHI

...... brtolllnd,_.IOlitodly.
11i11ca prllllila. you cat)not.
.

~, :.:=...~

•

CihoulliO. IJC, good """"
ruM -IIDOII. Net ,wbu ta,

--------~--~~ ·
81
Home'
+
~

BEDEOSOL

114 1111117.

ION.

*·

GL

BERNICE

UIH•r ttoakt•...... ....,._,

..

T~ Clllae_~

cone~.. ftnaa.
llolory
-·
fiiGIL
11U.IIR.

lvlnl ·llcl- 113!0 ......

~---------"---..;...;.;.;;__ _....;~ ·
Uoal
Oil
n-._
1111-.
WY.
~.
SNAFU..... Bnrce Betrtde
~~

Co11114 Ul 21a1.11lN.

...... Ma..cl

!liD

secret

mlslion into C.ntral America.

=t.
....... ........
~"""~"~·-;;;;•;;-.:;;;;;;;=~;;;;;
::':'t.=
:~~ :Wo~. ':' a'""=" ~~
-o,poporo.COIII14-IIH - I l l ""'::~do~ I as
Wtlob. ~-· 111 111
-

w- •

;,;;t'b:.ita. I1~1H.

i7p.fn~·-'M;;:iW;i!~;:
-~- . . Ouallir Orull
• ....._ 1 ond z -

77ARLI.III447W1

lo go

..,..nlat Pupplaoti, -

- -..
Val. _
....
k""'l~-,
',,Wanntd
... 11''....
441-3177 llor2:p.m.

Otlvolli, Oalllpolla.- I Uaed

~-~- - -

~r

on atend-by lor 1

Av.nue_._ _IDrtnll lpnle•: 411
UIMr Til. W T-.., t4IO;
ld $1115; 11' I ow - i '

lall: 1 - 7X11
Onnnnk .ftlny ..., l_
t v..
-lx11 -G· M,IOO;.
1111'
•k Llio .......

tile

Ill e!D MajOr Did Major Is

OUifll tfll. W..em teddiM

•Ia.

Naw.\Jatd

past._!;!

lnGiiah- and.-ao

Plow,
400 011.
NkTanfr, 20ft..Poiz UnBatgla lor
Fo'ofto 11u111or
good ....... dogL 114-74Z.ZS2t, lolldlr, N.H. . IIIIIUN ipreaMr,

PICKEN&amp; FURNITURE

MacQyver

l!lllllum Of The Wotvn Q

rf:l

AKC a....w- - . . .
,.,.,.. 1 --~

OE 18f!lglltiior, llonond, 4 110
old, ... Oond, 3114-112-3422.
OQOD
USED APPUANCES
WOIIhtll, dryan, rw~­
rwngao. SUaal ADiilllncol,
llppar Rlvtr Ra. Bttltlo
C&lt;oai _._ Calll1~73111.

=·".::~

obitua~

(!) Natute The Irish
coun~slde is haunted by

'C'"::

.. Oltlllll Apart"**- 1 IR,

•,••
...
=
;;
"-'-"':--::::-"~

~....-=,.....,,...,.,,.....,,.
.

_.. -

=J:::..~-v.

strikes K riCh when his name
mistekenlieppears In the

Stradivarius . C

12111.

=::::..:..~:L'1':r"' =·~=:..="'good =·=:::,::~~-:~

1

hll T - - T-'ng, CUolont ·to12 Kropl
~
LR, ~~~~~;;;;;:;;;:;;:~
IIAitnFUL APARTIIENTS .AT
CA, ..... - • Pttli IUDOET PRtCES AT JAaCION

aDon'f11#1 Ponrth ....... _

""'

MacGyver muat help a violin
vinuoao recover his lost

.....
- .t -. ....

s-. ,_

-·~
·
-ooncl,
' 10. 114 -

t30 and up to • •·
10 dl:p ...,. u oaah with apenidlt. s mi..... lulavlill
lid, Opan t A.M. lo I P.M. Mon,
lhou Sal. Callltf-441-0322.
1 Gila Alif'RI:'I, ..5 to eta;

=t ";~,aPt."i,':,_'"':":'$ """"

2

..... E:'•4 II. Hl7, ••' '.

=~~-=

,•••,. lnlllalo

lldon &amp; ""\~• .' " • c..
24hra: 1 0.

-··

,. . 14or72, zw,lluli
d
tmmidlattly.
Ddd
bothl,total ........ al-fuo.
iaoo-.Cil.111
•
Po~ - . AIIIIIY at landy'o nli..., ·CA, I I rook - , EOII
, Aoolo- or odl14-112-7411:1.
114441.•
1
4 room opanmanto lor rinl. IJn.

. . ltll

:nodal......,._ Huao
11001. In r' du tlecll.

llftovort•

F
""'"'"' • ~' m - ...,._,
7a.M.
·- -sun.
MOIL12lhN
....- •1
• 1• p.m.,
Noon
p.m. lloH-111.

44

7:31 Cll Sanlanl And Son
1:00 ()) MOVIE: My Pal Qua (2:00)
• (J) r8 My T- Dada Joey

SWIMMINO POOLS tl1._ -

1311. Iooby $110 - ~ngl
lull or m
,•flrmboiltat,
ariil $18. a.-

-

e

114·742·21Gori1H4NU7.

18 ·w.nteet 10 Do

'

......... 104-tJI.

lawn ZIOZ.

p.m.

•-Ill' -· ••·

a1
-.-abon-td.boollall
ft1,300, wiLl ..u lor ·~ 1npotChUntl,
1
:o:'
.
I
Mao,
141
.
4.4::.1..:..
CI1..:11:.;_'- - - ,-'1..,-..,.--

-tHO

SituatiOn
Wtntld

z

D Night Court

_.

ttotl

abotlt Cetting IO game? Bear in
mind tbat North was not really ralsiDg
spades but merely showinl prefer·
. eace. U North bad a minimum respoaR l!l'lth hil alret~~th in miaor-auit
junk cards ( q - IIIII jllcu), Soulb
mlpt very well wlsb be tad atopped In

•o
M'..·s"H
OCJonfft

•

llafriglraiot,
m
l.o
- al:il:n
- hal·
.....
lanil,
- . ,_......,

220. Coli SOWl'l-4012 aKar I

FiftY, :1114-171-3211.

t&gt;UpLt)C?

.., ,

Gill •

Solu and chtiloo priced lrono
$311 10 $1115. TabiH Sao and up
to e121. Hide 1 blda PIG ta

...,._,"!!.

for Rent

.

OOP

Rend 1. Pltooh '81. Kanauga, 011, 55
Building
:'1.::4~-4::•:.:~:.:4:..:73::..-::--:-:..,.--:1 or s bod- homo,
Supplln
b I I Mnl, 10!11" '!.")!!_ bldg &amp;
COUCh, eMir, cott. tabll, for
- L o t . ......... _ ,,
Nit,
good
cond,
111
Ill
1121
BlOCk, brick, Dlpao, win- I£!V
104-1JI.3010or171-3431.
a ,.. 1u1:
aftar 3:30p.m.
·
MnLala, ILC. ClaUde WlnThrM badroom houle for aall.
---t-a
1- Rio Glllllllo, 011. Call 114- truak
11 a I I 1 Ill tn ltOCk. 11+
....... II., lluillnd. .13 Lot.
24U121.
114Ill IHI ()pan M-~ lUI.•
S17,4GO.I14-7G~, e a.m. 1o 1 p.m. Mon.-BM. 11'- 56 ....ta for Sale
llp.....................
.
a1 3rd. A... Gal: .;:.,....,.-:..:,•:.;;_.,;.;.;.,;.;;..;...,........, ,_ _ _ _ _ T
Twa 'or lhrM ~••1oom. New Unlvrnlahtd :zllr, lvlly caopoltd,
AKC tt-·wt ~ hayloiiiO. JOOf, ...., FldiCOrated. n~= no pail, 322 Tlllld ,..., 114-oM&amp;- llpolla,""
_
.... _ , .
:1741, ltWII-1~.
~
a ,..,.., 1110 u
For
SaiO,
WhllliOOI
-illr
CC!I'
d
.,
1
Rat Tlflriar Ptopploo, P...
· IIIXw, boll euehnt oand, ....
·H;Ma.I1W12·IISI.
42 Mobile Hornet
112 loll heavy duly, $2111L,run on I14-24H831,
~211.

::._~ft.:rp.m~·

r ·

•u

Slol!l'

e Cll Mama•a Fllllllty
Ill eo•• Jaopanlyt Q

' '

EAST
tQU

Do you wonder wby South was

Gat~ Tonlgllt

I _.,. -JIHIH 114- .

t:-i

-n

~n

tAIOU

By Jamn Jacoby

cache of cocaine. Stereo. ·
at .... Of VldaoCountry
1D Attolt- C:O.. 7:06 Cll Jattaraona
7::10 e (J) Faii!IY Fauci

cu:".t. 1211. both
-

.......771 ..........

='1'.::-:.u.·~ :~. r:.T.·~,z\~~;""~
m • sns. • . - ~

and goad drlotna
,..,..,
....
IOIMtURieatlaft

· Halilllr . . .,I., llh .

.., ....... In ., • ··~ ........ .
Coli . . . I:OOp.m. 114- '

.... roq'd. 1u 44esus.

1br ...... nice ~hbOtttccll,
nao- dat!OIII, I -nco,
N&lt;l'd, Aprt~ S, • Calla..,llp.oo. I14-3J1.214Z. .
1 lw, ......_ "'• •••· carport
pluo 2 eat.::,~
lloi•
llpolllll
CIA, gu lvrnee., CIIJ WltK no pat ..

IIJ MoneJIIna
11J Mleml VIet A colorful old
· cun gets hOld ol a huge

IF pGN,A~P ANP IVANA "'•
"'
JlliAtc up~ WILL -THf
-\ ..Tft~P to wE~$ GO

•u
+71411

The right
sequence

WhMI Of

'-11·11

tK5

------- ~ - ·

~~CouttQ

-

1111 •

~~~a..:.:, :l~ ~~~-btdoooon, oaowiJ ounao,
. rnallll
cablnllo, Uoilaht , _ _, ell. autamallo

o.,-11, 114-1714400.

-....-.--·

,. • tD •

____ _..,.

41 Hou881 for Rent
1111. .

~

NawaHour

Campara&amp; ·
MOtorHomn

,... $m II Ut&gt;, King $350. 4
- -·" '· Gun Cablnllo
1,8,11011.... - -.....
t3S • ML Bod l n - as,

Renlals

1144-.

hour......,. 1111 tlltd.

M- IIIII. Wo
.. ,...
114-aH

~.lock

pro•'

Rnl Estate '
51 Houtehold
Wanted
Goods
s·:.o
sWigood building
· LAYNE'S FURNITURE
she \Oft ru,.l or ctly wattf' within

In Gollltulo, Plain but parloO!I
• ,... tccllhn. AIM! •IMI
OoUniiY Mine, 1fb: I w • • IIICI

-

(J)Colilga llaka1llall
• • eCilC-Aitalr
Ill C!llo'ecllall Lallnr

bondall.

36

:JRt;,_,
~"'=-. ':"::..
--.,11'12.:11:WM na.1.

. 3:»1:10p.M.,· Molli_ ~~~Ill a utr
-'&lt;td; ...~ oil; ..
otatl
·~·; ... -

tNinlcl,

F.~rm Supp11o-.

,;..;.,,...,.,=,...,=-~-=­
POR LEASE: 'tWo -nd-fi- .
~ .....,, apl. Stov•
ond taiolgaoalol. Ho pata.
Dlil&lt;&gt;lft li&gt;d otlwoo CLL ,._
qulowd. (filS par monlh, · lind....wo1 ~$Zia
..,
ldodl.
Colt
, ,.· ,.,•,
~.,... •
11
1
11 ""'"1 " 114... 41-2321.

aad1d
(-riclad).

...

lor.Tllll

NORTH

BIUDGI

iwPMMegaaiM

78 Auto Plitt ·a
Accessorllt

$10,10d: 114-:.145 till•

-

CL
"::",......=:. '"
~ - .: 1:1.7:4ILIII,

_

~terM

Wantacl: Pnap irty 6ft O.IUa or
...... CountY wAh .......

Ho4 I T"fTl IIF for I OGMU":::

,_..,.

14-.af-

S mlloo rtdl.. Rl.1ao 1131. lt4ue 1134.
W.o1:td io buy. Oldor hoono wlih
40 · - or ·--. Ollllpoilao
~y ~ County. 114-

,_

.....,

:ova - ·
plold, - ·
Homo, .-.

..-!:iT,l:u

- -.-. $1.ao
..... - lund
..
Gil·
you ...,.
ltdll14olll2-7110.

WANTED:

Aspire- Gouge .,. Witch- Unused -PUSHED OUT
"Wow you're a skydiver!" the boy beamed. Red faced '·
1 answerad, "Actually all five Iimas I was PUSHED
OUT.'

ID llllngln' In
1:31 Cll Alldr lliltfttll
7:00 ()) lo8recrow a Mra. King

.
...- ......-.
-loft

,.,r, ...............

......... IOWINI03.
~

SCI'M LITS ANSWIIS

with the lUCk ol the draw.

oulfod. P.O. lal 414,flleuant, WY :11110.
NMd n
Ionll ltlby eltler lor

-

.'

• t01 TlwH 1 Comp•nr
II) He-Man
Ill Top Cenl Conleetanto
combine en-inment tri'lle

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AFFAIRS, H0WEVD I.ITil.E, AlE I•ORIANT 10
HIMSELf, - SAMUEL IOHHIOf4

,.

I

�.... 10-lhe Daly Sentinel

Mor"·d ,. lbdl 18. 1810

.Flood waters recede in parts of South
Br Ulllted Preu btenaUoal

Tile South bellan drying out
early Monday· fo Dowlng a weekend or torrential rains and
flooding that !ll!nt thousands
scrambling for shelter, while a
cold front swept Into the mid·
Atlantic states and wet snow fell
In the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
said flood waters were receding
In parts of . the Deep South that
were deluged by the heavy rain
being blamed lor at least 11
deaths. River levels In some
areas were nearing their peak.
The Pea River crested In
Elba, Ala., SUnday morning but
officials said It likely would be
several days before most of the
3,000 evacuees would be able to
return. Water reached the
rooftops of some buildings at
the height of the flondlng.
Flond water-s were still rising
Monday along the Alabama
River In Montgomery and Selma.
At least 500 people have been
evacuated from Montgomery;
Autauga and Elmore counties,
and the river was expected to
crest Monday In Montgomery.
The flondlng across the south·
ern part of the Alabama was
blamed for eight deaths, result·
lng from two accidents In which
motorists bypassed barricades
and had their cars swept Into
··• floocled creeks.
North Georgia was mopping up
from the second flondlng rain·
storm In a month. The Chatta·
)loochee River crested Saturday
at Its highest level In « years,
flondlng homes In several parts
of the metropolitan Atlanta area,
closing roads and forcing the city
to dump untreated sewage into
the river.
More than 60 families were
evacuated from threatened
homes. The storm was being
blamed lor three deaths, all in
traffic accidents on rain-slick
roads.
Rivers across the Florida
Panhandle overran their banks
Sunday, forcing residents in
several counties to seek shelter
on higher gwund. Between 800
and 1,000 reslilents were ordered
to evacuate low-lying areas near
Caryvi!Je because of rising wa·
,ters along the Choctawhatchee
River, officials said.
·
Residents In 12 neighboring
counties were warned to prepare
for the same as Georgia and
Alabama llondwaters flowed
downstream. swelling Florida

Hospital news

Teachers ... ccrrerr • ,.,_...,. •&gt;

46 co de tor ,..,.,. than a week
ua
·-·,
rivers.
8CI'OIS the Panbandle, the NWS
light rain cowred much of andprumptedac:ompletecloltng
The river In Caryville stond at · said.
northern Arkansas. Most of Loul· by the atate aebooll auperlnlendeat last~ and l'rlday u
14 feet 6 IDChel late Sullday, or
u,llt rain was falling over stana was under cloudy skies.
an official cooH•a off period.
about2 ~teet above flond level;
parts of southern Oklahoma. and
Teachers Ia - r a l coundes
officials .said. The river was
had
been wll'IIICI thet they faced
expected·. to crest at 23 feet
dlsmlsaal
by Jtaylaa off the job.
sometime Tuesday.
NATKIIW. WIA"!MIII FOIIICAST TO 7 All liT WHO
The
walkout
. bad been setded
County commissioners mer In
before
Saturday
on the localleirel
. special session and voted to
In some countlell, Including Jack·
di;!Ciare a lilcal state of emer·
son and Greenbrier.
gency and . evacuate residents
An agreement calls for House
along the rain-swollen water·
Speaker Cbuck Chambers and
way, said Richard Morgan. a
Senate President keith Burdette .
spokesman lor the Florida Dlv·
to start work Immediately with
lslon of Emergency Services.
education leaders on a longterm
A cold front moving toward the
plan to enhance teacher pay and
· South early Monday spread
benefits.
cloudiness over much of the
Chambers and Burdette said
. region and brought the chance of
they
would recommend a special
showers. but not the
legislative
session once the pack·
driving rains that caused the
age was complete.
flondlng, forecasters said.
The WVEA, which represents
Tempetat ures turned brisk.
16,000 teachers, led the walkout
ranging from 49 In Jacksonville•.
after accusing Caperton of renegFla., to521n Knoxville. Tenn., 54
Ing on a plan to provide · $35
In Charleston, S.C., 56 in Atlanta
million for a 5 percent pay raise
and 70 in Miami.
and an extra $6.5 mllllori for
The recQrd·settlng , warmth
MAP - .A piea&amp;ul weather palera will prevail over moat
heal tli insurance.
that spread · throughout New
EdUCilliOD Department figures
of
tbe
Ualled
!Ma&amp;ellaa
Sprln&amp;
malu!llla
arrival
Tuesday
location
England lor much of th.e weekend
showed
at
4:
U
EST.
The
onbr
exceplloa
will
be
found
over
14.746 public school
afternoon
. was gO!JI! Monday morning, with
teachers
had honored · picket
porlloas
of
New
En&amp;land
a&amp;he
Mid
Atlantic.
·
.
temperatures dipping lnl!l the30s
at
some
point during the
lines
under clear skies in most areas.
238,000
of the state's
strike.
Some
Scattered showers moved out
340,000 students were not report·
of the region late Sunday, and
- Extended forecast
Soutll Ceatral Ohio
lng to scbool.
.
some snow was possible Monday
Fair
Wednesday.
Chance
of
Tonight, snow likely. mainly
Chambers said negotiations
night as a low-pressure system
rain
Thursday
and
Friday.
Highs
early. Low In the mid 20s. North
developed along the East Coast.
winds less than 10 mph. Chance , In the upper 40s or '!the 50s
Cloudy skies covered the Mid·
of .snow 60 percent. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, and
die Atlantic states, wh~re
mostly sunny. High In the mid from the mid 50s to the mid 60s
temperatures ranged In the 20s
Friday. Lows In the 20s Wednes·
40s.
(Contlaued From Pace 1)
and 3Qs from New Jersey to
day and from 35 to 40 Thursday
Maryland. West VIrginia reand Friday.
No particular group was In
ported scattered light rain and
'-mtarge of the dlnlc demonstrasnow.
tion, said Mary Ann Mosack,
An approaching cold front
for the '• anti··
spokeswoman
threatened to bring snow back to
abortion
group
Operation
A.
"II~
d
lford,
Rutland;
and
four
grand·
•
Pennsylvania and Maryland,
Will •am
Rescue.
I
1.0r
children,
Josh.
Jamltha.
CI!S·
where temperatures reached re"What's s)gnlltcant Is that
· sady and Austln.
cord highs last week.
WllllamA. Willford, 56,of36790 ·. Mr. Willford served with the
children
are killed In this abor·
rn the Midwest, scattered snow
State Route 124, Rutland, died u.s. Army In the Korean Con·
mill."
she said ou tslde the
lion
and rain was reported ln"l!Unols.
Sunday at Veterans Memorial filet. He was a member of the Ell
Founder's
clinic.
Michigan and Indiana, making
Hospital following ·a n extended Denison Post 467. American
''The attitude of Operation
roads slick and driving dl!tlcult
Illness.
.
Legion
the
Meigs
Athletic
Boos·
Rescue
Is not to be punitive
In some areas. Wet snow fell over
Born on Sept. 27, 1933 at . ters, a'tormer Rutland firemen.
toward
the
pollee officers." MoOhio and Kentucky, while skies
Marietta, he was the son of and a member of the Laborers
sack said. "Our Intent Is notto be·
were clear to partly cloudy over
Bernice Burke WIUford, Middle- Local 83, Portsmouih.
arrested, but II we have to rtsk
Wisconsin.
·
Funeral services will be held at
port, and the late · Herbert
arrest.
It Is something we are
Temperatures In the Midwest
Willford.
1
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
Ewing
willing
to
accept."
ranged from 12 In Wausau. Wis.,
Besides his mother he Is Funeral Home. Bt~d Herdman
nouglas
Sapp, a leader of the
to 28 degrees at Chicago, and 36
survived by his wi(e, Cbarlotte will olllclaie and burial wUI be ln
rescue
operation,
said last week
' at Joplin, Mo.
Willford, Rutland;, three sons, Riverview Cemetery. Friends
the
group
plans
demonstrations
A cold front was moving
Ray (Kimberly) Wlllford, Ru· may call at the funeral home 2 to at two more Ohio clinics this
southward across Texas early
!land; Van (VIckie) WiUiord, ~ and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the year. He did noi disclose the
Monday. Cold rushed .Into the
Crown City; Mike (Cheryl) WI!· , funeral holne.
·
locatloils.
state behind the front, sending
the mercury Into the 30s and 405

more

------Weather----,---

Protesters...

--...Area .deaths-..........
w
··

Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, will meet .
Tuesday. 7: 30 p.m.. at the lodge
hall. The Charter will be draped
In memory of Nettle Hayes.
Members are asked to· wear
White. Quarterly birthdays will
be observed and potluck refresh·
ments will be serilt!d.

.

EMS responds to 12 calls
ix&gt;uce

department "to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 2: 46 p.m .• Syracuse went to
College Road lor Elizabeth
Bright to. Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 3: 04 p.m. was
called to Forest Run Road for
George Folmer Sr. w)lo was
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 6:23 p.m., Middleport went
to the Stonewond Apartments for
Allee Plants to Veterans MemorIal' Hospital.
·
Pomeroy at ~: 40 p.m. was
called to the sheriff sdepartment
lor James Hayl!tl to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy Fire Department at
8: lf p.m: was called to a minor
structure tire at the Doug Burns'
'residence on Ebenezer Street.
Rutland at 8:23p.m. was called
to M~lgs Mine No. 31for Grover
Workman to Holzer Medical
Center.

__ Announcements.__
Dance &amp;o he held
·Or theCbesterTownshlpTrustees
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
on ~a)' at 7:30p.m. at the
Dance Club will havz a round and town hall.
square dance on Friday from 8-11
Music wlll be by the Happy Colllervancy dlalrlcl to meet
Hollow Boys from Athens. Ad·
The Leading Creek Consermission Is S2 and those attending , vancy District will hold its
are to bring snacks for the snack monthly meeting on Wednesday
table. The caller will be Jim at 9 a .m.
Carnahan.
RabN&amp;meeelq
Famll)o propam .
The Southeastern Ohio Rabbit
The Modern Woodxen Youth
Breeden 'Auoclatlon will meet
Club 7230 will sponsor a family Tuesdat at 7; 30 p.m. at the Melga
pJ'OIII"am on Friday at 7 p.m.
, Co,unty Extension O~l Anyone
Members will diiCuss the lmpor·
Interested In ralalng rabbits Is .
tance of their families and
Invited to attend. The meeting Is
certpflcates will be presented to openejl to the public. ·
· the families. Mualc 'will be
&lt;
: : , provided by Denver Rice.

p.m.

IMfeedoa

1'he Bedford Townahlp HlatorJ.
cal Society will be there to
dllcUII blaUII'y.
Refrellullftlla will be lei'Wd·
by tile youdl. 1'he public Is Invited
to atllltd.

a.

In lr trtr • a.me.t
'l1lere will be a special meeting

court procHdlnp,

"I suapect tllat wlMa tbe COI!11
actions came. lthlak laaJJs r Of
both unloDI felt tbey ftl'e ibout
to barrel over a cliff with tbe1r
members," Chambers raid.
··we felt It wasjuat a matter of
eoverybody beln(r unwllllq to
make that final plqe. And
trankly.rthlnkthedeciJioaofthe&lt;
courts made tile WVEA and
others realize there lulotat risk
In co"ntlnutag the strike."

Hobbs promoted ··

Spring, Summer

Daily· Number

car care
issue included

060
Pick-4

1721

.

Vot.40, No.219

.

Cop\f&lt;lghted 1180

David A. Hobbs, son of Jimmie
L. ancl· Evelyn L. Hobbs, of ...,
Dexler. has ~n promoted to ·
Specialist 4.
, ·
SP4 Hobbs Is currently as·
signed with D Co. 317 Eugr. BD., .
at Camp Eschbom, In Eshliom,
Germany. He works as a .power
gen.e ratton equlp'ment
repalrmwn.
'
Hobbs, who attended Meigs , ,,
High School Is married to the
former Mary E. Brainard, .
daughter of Una Mae Brainard,·
Middleport.

Stocks·
Dally stock JRicea
&lt;As or 1e:ao a.m.&gt; .
Beyce and Mark SmKh
of Blunt, Ellis Loewi
.
Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ............................... ..41'llo
Ashland Oil ...... ,.: ............ ~ .. ;36
Bob Evans .......................... 12~
Charming Shoppes ............... 9%
City Holding Co ........... ........ 13
Federal Mogul. ...................18%
Goodyear Toll:R .................. .37%
Heck's ......... :....................... 3%
Key Centurion ..... .......... ,.... 13~
Lands' End .. ,; ............. ........ 18~
Limited rr.c. ····· .......... ...... 40%
Multimedia Inc............. c••••• BOY,
Rax Restaurants .................. 2% ··
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... :....... 16 ·
Shoney's lnc . ........ ........ ..... .12¥,
Star Bank ......... ................... 19
Wendy's Int'l ............. , ......... 4%
Worthington Ind .. ............... :21% '

.r.
'

The Evan~~tllae Chapter No.
172 Order ol tile E ..tern Star will
have Ita annual IDipedloa on
Thursday at.7: 30p.m.Jnapectlne
ofllcer will be Deputy Grand
Matron Juae lleott. Home cltapter JI'Ud orpnllt II Beatrice
Kulia. All member&amp; are U!'led to
attend.

Ton~Pt, elearla&amp; wltll a low
28 to 2$. Ll&amp;ht lVindl. Wednesday, lncreulag clotldll and
warmer with a hlgb 5110 5$,

•
..

..
..
.' . '·
'
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, March 20, 1990

.

.

1 Section, 10 Pogn

-

26 Cento

• -· A Multlmodlo Inc. Newopoper
~

'

Waste district .chairman responds tO veto
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SenHnel News Staff
Last week's action by Mlddl.eport VIllage
.Council to veto both a resolutlonrestrlctlngwhere
local haulers can dump trash and the surcharge
on landfill dumping fees, brought a response from
Sarah Hendrlcker, chairman of the AGHJMV
Solid Waste Management Polley Committee
-today. ·
.
Hendricker, in a letter to The Dally Sentinel,
charges that the action by Middleport Council
"lmplles that the legislation curre.ntly pending In
the Ohio .Legislature would strip the solid waste
cjlstrlcts of local control over t!le planning

J)rocess.·:

Her legislation ·reference was to a blll
Introduced last month by Rep. Mary Abel,
ID·Athens), which would require that the
management plan and accompanying surcharges
be approved only by the commissioners of the
counties In the district, and the councils in the
,. ~argest municipalities of the counties in the
dis trlct by a majority.
Currently such decisions must be approved by
the county commissioners in all of the counties In
the district and by the councils of the la·rgest

municipality in each participating county.
Since the bill takes approval from "all'.' to a
"majority", Middleport VIllage Council contends
tiJat passage of Abel's bill would diminish local
(county and municipality) authority over
decisions.
Action to exercise Its veto power at this time on
both the surcharge and . the dumping location
restriction was taken by Middleport VIllage
Coul)cll at Its meeting la~t week after a discussion
on the diminishing effect of local control If the
Abel bUlls passed.
Hendricker, in her letter, states that "If the
district Is unable to agree on a draft plan during
the legally allotted time under H:B. 592. then the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency will
develop. a -plan for our 'd istrict. We thus lose our
local (district.) control over decisions regarding
the contents of the plan."
·
She ·further pointed out that the pending
legislation was Introduced at the urging of the
solid waste district and that lt was '·'overwhelmlngly" approved by the District's Polley
Committee.
Middleport VIllage Council, however, in the
action taken at the March 12 meeting was not

making reference to control by the multi-county
district as lhe Issue of "local control", but to
control maintained by the counties and the ,
municipalities within the district.
The village's major concern as expressed by
rouncllmen at that meeting was about the
restriction In the management plan which would
require haulers to use the district landflll.
In Meigs County, most haulers now dump just
across the river In Mason County. Being required
to use the district facility would· mean that they
would probably have to travel many more miles
and pay large surcharges on the tipping fees.
In her letter to this newspaper, the policy
committee chairman continued:
·
"It Is h.lghly unlikely that ·all members of the
District's policy committee and the legislative
.a uthorities of all the poUtlcal subdivlsions 'in the .
six counties are golngtoagreeoneveryltem In the
plan.
"Compromise will be essential In framing a
plan that Is relevant to the needs of our District.
Even with compromise and majority rule within
the committee Itself, there Is still the possibility
that a very small minority of the population within
the District will scuttle the process by vetoing the

Southern Board
•
All principals In the Southern
Local School District had their
contracts renewed for three year
terms at Monday night's meeting
of the Southern Local School
Board of Education.
Renewed were the contracts of
James Adams. Southern High
ScbOOI principal, and teaching
principals, Jennings Beegit&gt;,
Southern Junior High; Robert
Beegle, Mickey Kucsma, James
Lawrence and Roger Roush ,
elementary school principals.
·The board hired Charles A.
Riley u a' s"uli&amp;tll'lteleaCher and ·
accepted the resignation of Darla
Kennedy as a subs tltute tel!cher.
Mileage payment was approved for Rebecca South to

PRICES GOOD
MONDAY, MAR.tt
THAUSUNDAY
MAACH25,1t80

plan.
"The District will have expended several
hundred thousand dollars and have little or
nothing to show for its efforts. The State
Legislature intended for us to act as a district to
solve a regional problem. ·we must put aside
particular interests in order to come up with a
waste management plan that will work for all of
us.
"It should also be pointed out that failure to
ratify the surcharge fees will result In the county
taxpayers paying to subsidize the private haulers.
Regardless of whether there is a fee or not, the
District Is obl~ated to pay lor a management
plan, whether that plan ls done by us as a district
or for us by the EPA.
"There will also be on-going costs associated
with lmplemerning the plan and those expenses
must be met. Should the Pt-rsons who generate or
Import the waste pay a proportionate share of the
cost of disposal, or shduld our local taxpayers foot
the entire bill? I don't know of any county In our
district that has enough money to meet all Its
other service obligations. let alone the cost of
subsiding solid waste management," Hendrlcker
concluded.

appr~es

transport her daughter to the
Gingerbread House ln Middle·
port for the remainder of the
school year.
Receipt of $24,165 in lottery
monies was reported at the
meeting. The board also agree to
furnish lunches to lhe Carleton
School lor the remainder of the
school year .
It was noted that Maine South·
shore Construction, Inc. has
offered to come Into the district
· to look over storage tanks containing diesel fuel, fuel oil and
gasoline ·a nd to make recommen·
datlons and cost estimates on
what has to be done to bring the
storage facilities Into ccom-

contracts

pllance with I he law.
Arrangements were made to
purchase a new school bus.
Approved at the meeting was a
resolution to accept amounts and
rates as determined by the
budget commission and to authorize I he necessary tax levies and
certify them to lhe county
auditor. This action is a prcltml·
nary to putting a school tax levy
on tlje ballot, possibly In the fall.
Wttendlng lht&gt; meeting were
Charles Norris, president;
Denny Evans. vice president:
Susie Grueser .and Scott WOlfe,
board members, Dennie Hill,
t.reasurer, and Bobby Ord, superIntendent.

Pomeroy to .update wastewater
,plant; council names ·architect

UMIII

Sports banquet

·

metlt · · - · - t ,. bllt that
--talkl Lpeelled up after Frlt!IY'•

Chester Council to meet

•
VMII
Saturday·admtsslons - ·James
Werry Yr .• Racine; Ancll .Bur·
bridge, Albany; William (Foster) Wells, Tuppers Plains.
Saturday discharges - None.
Sullday admissions - Henry
Carsey, Middleport; Ha!Ue Zer· ·
The 1989-90 sports banquet will
kle, Middleport.
Sunday discharges - Marie be held at Rutland Elementary
on Tuesday at 6: 30 p.m.
Thomas. James Werry Sr.

Meigs Emergency Medical
Services responded to 12 calls
over the weekend; four on
Saturday. and eight on Sunday.
At 12:57 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy went to Mulberry Ave. tor
Eloise Adams who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 2:25p.m. was called
to Route 684 tor Ancll Burbridge
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 6: 05 p.m.. Mlddleporl was
cal~ to Story's Run Road for
Myrtle Fife to ijolzer Medical
Center.
Pomeroy at 8: 53 p.m. transported Hoster Wells from an auto
accident on ROute 7 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 2:07 a.m .., Middleport went to County Road 5 lor
Henry Carsey who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 10:37 a.m. transPOrted Lona Riffle from the

had aone oa witb teacilerl "for
le'leral days be~ tbe uttJe.

Ohio Lottery

WEREIPIVITI4l-

TOUIITQUAN1!TIU

By NANCY YOACHAM
SenUnel News Staff
LAST RESORT' WIUI!un Sweeney, Chief Justice
J. Moyer
The
·Initial step In updating
Mfmbers·of lhe ·Ohlo Supreme Court will be In
and J~ce Robert E. Hobnes; standln&amp; are, from
Pomeroy
Village's wastewater
GaiHpoUs on WednesCiay, Aprll18 for a one-day
left, Ju ces Craig Wright, Allee Roble Resnick,
treatment
plant took place Mon·
high court session In Gallla County Common
Andy uglas artd Herbert R. Brown.
day
night
when
Pomeroy Village
Pleas Court. Sealed are, from left, JusHce A.
Council approved a resolution to
enter into a contract with Bur·
gess and Nlp!e Ltd., Parkers·
burg, w.va .. forengtneerlngand
architectural plans on the pro·
Advanced seating tickets for doubt that tne weapon. allegedly. lord is appealing a Civil Service ject. Contract costs are not to
the viewing of the proceedings of used in the Incident was operable
Commission ruling supporting exceed $8,500.
·
the Ohio Supreme Court visit on
or could be made operable.
his dismissal as a Portsmouth
Council approved last night's
April 18 are now available
-stale vs. Jerry Whor141n, 9: 35 pollee officer in 1984.
resolutlom based upon a report
through the Gallia Countv Com·
a.m. - Whorton, convicted on
-Herman G. GrOSllman, et.
from VIllage Administrator John
nion Pleas Court.
·
two counts of aggravated al., vs. HawkesHospllal of Mount Anderson that the Stale of Ohio
The Supreme Court will be
robbery with a firearms specifl·
Carmel, 11:20 a.m. - The court has committed approximately
reviewing· the appeals of five
cation, Is appealing the firearm
will consider an appellate court $1.2 million In Issue II funds to ·
cases. three civil and twQ crlml·
con.victlon. Whorton's attorney
reversal of a trial court finding ' the Pomeroy project. It is necesnat. A brief description of each
claims the prosecution could not
for the hospital. absolving it of a sary for the village to upgrade
case and the scheduled lime to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt
negligence allegation by Gross- the wastewater treatment plant
l?egin ls listed below.
.
thar.rhe firearm was operable or
man, a former patient.
by expanding the plant's capac·
-state vs. David Parker, 9 could have been made operable·.
All advanced seating is guatty before the Ohio Envlronmen;
a.m. ~Highland· County Prosec-Fraternal Order of PoHce,
ranteed, with a limited number tal Association will .approve
utor Rocky Coss is appealing an Ohio Labor Council Inc., vs. lhe
available. In the event that all extension of sewage lines to
appellate court ruling which
City of Hillsboro, 10: 05 a.m. reserved seats are filled, viewing unsewered areas. of the village,
threw our a firearms specifica·
The FOP Is appealing a common ' of the proceedings can be seen on for example, Monkey Run.
tlon against Parker, who was
pleas decision favoring Hlllsbo·
live television In the Probate
Although Council several
convicted of aggrav.ated robbery to's payment of overtime for
Courtroom.
months ago Instructed Anderson
and rape.' The appellate court hours work~ by pollee dis·
Tickets may be obtained by
to prepare the necessary forms
ruled that the prosecution l)ad
patcl!er Betty Griffith in 1985."
contacting Thelma Elliott at the
not proven beyond a reasonable
-Gary Bashford vs. theCIIyol
Common Pleas Court. 4461612.
Portsmouth, 10:45 a.m, - Bash·

Court·· visit tickets available

Council estimated what the
to .obtain Issue II funds for the
treatment plant, Mayor Richard · resulting monthly increase lo
Seyler last nlght •questloned the sewage customers might be, and
wisdom · of acc~ptlqg the funds . determined that the increase to
and entering Into the engineering customers would be minimal
compared to the money that the
contract for project designs.
Mayor Seyler · believes thai state grant will save the village
In the long run. If Pomeroy does
Pomeroy has more serious probnot go ahead with the treatment
lems than Its treatment plarit,
such as poor water quality, the plant update. It's likely that
need for additional wells, and OEPA will Initiate a law sull
recurring water leaks on the against the village to force the
lines. Seyler feels the treatment upgrading (which Is necessary
plant update "is the last thing we before new customers can be
need. Why update a sewage plan I added to the system) and evlmtu·
ally force the addition of the
that"s noi polluting?"
unsewered
areas, such a forced
He also feels that the resulting
increase in sewage rates to Issue would likely be at the t\)tal
Pomeroy residents (.which wlll expense of the village, although
be necessary to cover the 10 Mayor Seyler doubts whether or
percent match which the village not OEPA would Ioree the village
must come up with In order to ·into a situation that it could not
receive the Issue II monies l may . possibly afford.
Councilmembers however,
he more than some residents on
feel
It Is In the·besrlnterest of the
fixed Incomes can afford.
village
to accept the Issue II
Council wlll have to borrow the
10 percent match of about funding, .and move forward as
$120,000 from a lending facility , quickly as possible with updating
but Anderson believes the village the treatment plant.
As explained by Anderson,
will he able to secure a low
Conun'ued on page 10
interest rate.

'

Waste commission warned .nuclear
dump sel~ction may be delayed

Controlling Board .approves
..em·.ploy·ees'. mental health plan .;;;!~!~=~a~~~~~:: ~~~:t~~=
BLOOMINGToN.Minn. (UPl)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPll - .
Assured that the state will save
money In the long run, the state
· Controlling Board Monday ap- ·
proved a $6.9 million one-year
contract with a California firm to
manage Its state employees'
Insurance program lor mentai
health and drug and alcohOl
abuse care.
.
The board also, approved nine
~mergency school loans, bring· •
lng to 45 the number of districts
that have borrowed money this
IChool year the highest
aumber since 1982.
. American Blodyne Inc., San
· Francisco, won the contract for
manaelng the health care plan
. for mental health and drug and
alcohol abuse aad assuming all
costs for patient care, which will
be contracted out to various

providers.
·
employees. .
·
Scott Solsman, benefits admln·
About 5,000 state employees or
lstrator lor the Ohio Department
their families mel!lbers use these
Of Administrative Services, said . types of services each year. said ,
American BIOdyne. wl)h an Ohio Salsman, and In 1988 the cost or
office In Cleveland, offered su· mental health services alone was .
perlot service to two other estimated at $7.6 million.
bidders.
Solsman said the company
Solsman said the company would pay lor training seminars
would be able to save the state for participating mental health
between U mDllon and SU •. profesaloula to give cost effecmUllon during the life of the · tlve service and that costs would
contract, and $6 million to $9 betrlmmedbyeltmlnatlngholpl·
mUllon a year II allowed to
tallzatlon In favor or outpatient
continue during two more option service.
. ·
.
yean.
Sen. William Bowen, D·
Scott ·Fruchter of Costelfex, a
ClnciiUiatl, one of the opponents
Cleveland consu!Ung ,f irm, said
of the contract, said he· was
under Its current open ·en~ol- ·concerned about the quality of
lment plan the state would spend
care for the employees, and the
$11 million to $12 mllUon In 1991 lack of choice they would have.In
for mental health and drug and who treats them.
alcohol abuse services for Its
Contlr)ued on page 10

Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Commission Mollday that final
selection for a site for a nuclear
waste dump In Michigan could he
delayed for years.
Bob Knoblauch, Riga Town·
ship supervisor, told the panel an
llldeflnlte delay In site selection
Is pol&amp;lble II state officials
continue to IJIIIOre their own
site-selection criteria. .
Riga TOWDihlp In southeast
Michigan's Ll!nawee Couaty Is
the prime rite llllder consldera·
!loa fora dump that would haadle
low·level radioactive waste from
Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana,
Wlrconsla, Iowa, Ohio aDd
Missouri.
Knoblauch urged Midwest
commluloners and the lr
member stales "to take strong
and quick action, to tile full

extent of their authority. to
assure that the host state main·
talns compliance wlth Its own
announced policies, procedures
and criteria, . as well as the
applicable law."
,
.
. Riga Township officials have
sued the state over the dump
Issue. The suit claims, among
other things, that Riga Town·
ship's high water table and
proximity to the densely populated Toledo, Ohio, area should
rule It out as a site for the dump.
Knoblauch charged that t}\e
Mlchlpn Low-Level Radioactive Waste Aulborlty, which lr
rerponalble for plclclq a site, has
admitted It did not consider tile
major _poplliatlon centers south
of Rip Township In Ohio when
Identifying the area as a posalble
site for the dump.
"A review of the facta will
clearly Indicate deficiencies and
errors In the host state's pro-

cess," he said.
Last week the seven-~tate
commission asked a federal
judge to allow It to become a
defendant In a sutl Ohio's Lucas
County has flied against the
Michigan waste authority over
the proposed , locatjon of the
dump In Riga Township.
The cbmmlsslon said It flied Its
modon Ia U.S. District Court In
Toledo as a way to "promote an
equitable and swlfl resolution to
tht! matter." '·
Tbe request flied by the Mldw·
est compact said tlwaeency may
not ''enttrely embrace the actioa
of the Michigan defendants nor
entirely oppose the efforta of the
Ohio plalntlffs."
.. the Mldwes t compact hu been
at odds with Mlcblpn officials
over money the authority Mid It
muat have to continue the lite
selection process.

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