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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Hornets

wmm
.

D My Number
608

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Pkk-4

overtime

3230

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btto
1, 6, 8, 18, 39. 43

STORE HOURS ·
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

Vol.40, No.221

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Chuck Roast ...:..... .
BUCKET "BEEF
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GOOD ONLY AT POWHL'S
COUPON" EXPIRES MAR. 24, 1990

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24 PACK .12-0Z. CANS
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Sliced Bacon •••·.~.o:. $119. ·

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Boneless Hams ••• ~·· 51
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COR~. KING - WHOLE 6-8 LB. AVG.

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STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES

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onto the main track. ~Ike katt.
brakj!lilan, of Galloway, threyr
the ·
and locked lt. Lintz
stated
· at
po)nt the .
and ,as the
1wltch,
~~

----------------------·-·--,

$1
·
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9
lunch Meats ••••••••

SUPERIOR ASSORTED
.

"A Conrail 'enltJne de~alled 4t
the switch on Wednesday' after·
· Carpenter, reports tbe
C'o uniy Sheriff's
• ·

99C -

~round \Turkey •• ~•• 99c

.fee increase vet

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Conriill engine derails ·

32 OZ. JAR

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Polley com,mlttee members of
surcbar.tes ' could put lndepend· predtctlon rt!g&amp;rdlng surcharges
the AGH.TMV SQ!ld Waste Man- ent •haulers out of business, . had come true. "There's ilo end
agement·Dtslrlct voted at Wed· especially those · haulers who to this thing," he said, appar·
nesday night's publiC hearing at serve areas of the counties ently"meanlng that II surcharges
McArthur to veto a proposal to . outside of municipalities. 11 such dori'.t provide the, needed revenue
lncrellse district surcharges to • "-ulers were forced to give up to operate the district, then to
landfill du!DpiDg fees. Had the · their conectlon routes, the prob- c~lltlnually Increase the
.proposal not been vetoed, sur· lern of Illegal dumping would surchwrges Is notlheanswer, but
,cbar11es to landfill fees wlthlil the likely result ··
,
Instead may cause more
district would In the next few ~ . However, even without public problems.
")veekl' have raised to $3 for In Input to veto the propollld aut·
Proposed legislation to amend
dlatrlct solid waste,$6forlnstate charlie Increase. It bad appar· the nate solid waste law to
· ·but out of district. and $9 for out . ently been deddild In a ineetlng · remove· veto power frOm the
of state garbage. With the veto,
of the district's board of dlrec- . lariest municipality In each
current district surchargeS of . tors, held earUer W~Y at county ""should be called the
$1.~,$2.M and$3.75wll!remaln
Athens •. to ·veto the ·PfOIIOied ·. Jac~ Bill," Evans said,
In effect.
·
Increase anyway. Tbedeclllonof · . "since it came about because we
Most of the Individuals from the bOard of directors w• based exercised our veto right."
throughout the . slx:COunty dis· uponMiddlepOrtVIllage'svetoof
Although all -policy committee
t.ict oi Athe.ns, GalUs, Hocking, · ~he propoaed Increase at their members agree. that comprom· •.
Jackson, Meigs and . VInton at· · regular meeting on March 12.
tse Is necessary to pass a10-year
tending laat night's hearing,
. As the state's saUd waste law Is solid waste management pliln for
were either Independent trash . written, the largest municipality ille district, as required by state
, .I '
ha11lers or environmentalists.
ln. each county ofthe dll~t bas law, , many do not agree that
Several of those In attendance
veto power. Miildleport Is Meigs remo~al of the veto power _Is
spoke aga:tnsl the proposed sur· County's largest municipality.
necessary to ensure passage of
char~P,! Increase.
This Is the second time a the plan,
.
· Ha~lers who s~ publicly municipality within th~ solid
However, poUcy committee
were agalDSt the surcharge In· waste district haa exerclaed Its · members do not like the Idea of
a&amp; McArthv. Tile Muleys. 8lld
LOCAL CONCERN - Mlddleporllnall baulllr
crease because they felt It would right to veto, with the first time financial responslblity for eper·
many otller lnall llaulera tllr0111boul tile
Roger Manley, at left, and hla · IOR."llslen to
adversely affect their.businesses being early 0n after the district ating the dlst.rlct falling back on
sli:-eouatJ dlollrlct, a&amp;lend diltrlct meetlnp oa a
commenls at lui nlsllt's J1Uhllc hearlns of the
by forcing them to have to raise · was fonned, when \he .City of their home counties If the district
replar jluls.
AGHJMV Sblld Wiulle Manaiem~nt Dlstrlcl. The
customer prices In order to 'cover Jackson -vetoed proposi!d sur· cannot generate enough molll!y
tbe higher fees. ·
charge fees. .
Qn Its o\vn. As required by Jaw, If
'
,. ·
last year when revenue fell short · Covington, Ky·:: which has been
· Ep\llronOineiltallsts · were
JackSon Mayor Tom • E"'ans expenses cannot be met within basis.
Actually, this has already
of the amount needed lo pay lees contracted to develop the 10-year
against the proposed Increase said at last night's meeting' that the district;· then the pltrticlpat·
In
the
district,
with
all
happened
to the engineering firm, scs· management plan. But even
because they agree that higher he was glad to see that Jackson's lng· counties will have to share
six
counties
having
l;leen
billed
Engineers, of Cincinnati and
the expenses on a · per capita
COntinued oh page 9

BEEF

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Pomeroy:. Middleport, Ohio, Thu.,.day,
. ~arch 22. 1990 ·
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Proposed laDdfill tipp·

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' U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF Ll.

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3 LB. OR MORE

CHICKEN

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. .
sUN.~ MAR. 18 THRU SAT.,.MAR. 24~ lCJ90

'.

By Uillled pfe.e lalerUttolllll
the 40~.. ,Clouds were moving
Warm weather was on ~p 'for across the state but W!!r'e ex·
Ohio Thursday, but a return to . pectee! to ,give way '1o some
wlnter·llke temperatures Is sunshine Thursday morning.
ahead for the weekend. .
A concentration of clouds ana
The arrtval of a cold front by rain was over the mid·
evening Will cau~ a shift In the . Mississippi Valley. The clouds
winds to a ·.northwesterly dlrec· were forecast · to move east
ti!nl overnigbt. COld arctic air · toward the'BuckeyeStatelaterln
will then plunge Into Ohio as well the morning. · · .
as the entire region.
On the early morning weather
The cokl air will settle over map, high pressure w•n!ong the
Ohio Friday and remain through · East eoa&amp;tfrom New England to
the weekend, There{s a potential the Florida gulf coast. A broad
for lake effeqt snow In the- are~a of low pressure extended
. from Texas to north of tJie Great
extreme northeast Friday·. ,
But dunns tbe day Thursday. Lakes.
strong ' southwest winds along
Low pressure centers were
with periods of . sunshble ~re ·over northern Texas, IoWa and
expected· to boost temJIIlr~tures just north of Lake Superlor. ' A'
Into the mid 50s · and 61111 by · warm front extended from the
afternoon.
.
Iowa low across Michigan to
'Fhe northern ~OIIQ~eJ; wl.ll be · Pennsylyanla while a cold front
~
·
. dampened som-llat by · a trailed to Colorado.
weather system tracking just to · The Iowa low·was expected to
the north of the state, the merge· with the Canadian low
.National W~ther Service said. .Pear Lake SuperiOr In the afterThechanceofralnwlllbelllghest noon. dragging the cold . front
over th~ northern counties dur- across the Greal Lakes. 'The low
lng the day. .
was expected to head nottheast
: Winds "Weft forecasl 10 In- Into Quebec Thursday ntht.
·creaseduriqtbeday. Southwest
By Frklay morning. the cold
winds were to rite to 15 to 25 mph front shcilald reach froni. NeW ·
statewide, wllll speeds up to 35 Ensland across the Tenbessee
mph expected~ Lake Erie. ·
Valley to Oklahoma, with Arctic
, Early mOI'IIIbla temperatures
high pressure building Into the
were llulte mOd
with
readings
In
plains states durlnJ the day.
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Tickets on sale for· Chamber
.·o f Commerce
dinner,
~nee
.
.
.
Tickets tor the Melp County ·
Chamber of Commerce dinner·
dance 10 be tleld on March 31 al
tbe Royal Oak Resort are now on
sale.
· :
·The steak dlmler will be aerwd
at 7 p.mJ to~ lit a datlee ,
from 8 p.m. ' to mlllti!Chl with
music by crouwer.
During •the evenlg there wiU
be an oppor1WIIty toView IIWMeigs ~ touaty llrochure di!Yeloped by tile Melp COUIIty ·
·Regional Planning Commtalton
and the Meigs County
COmrnlllloaera.
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tiona In the county will be
available W thole attending to
view. ·
··
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Tickets are avallabli! from
Chamber Board members,
Bruce Reed, Lenny l!;lluon, Tom
~.Ron All!. 8111 Ne• • Dave .
Baller, Joe Oark, Mary Powell,
Dtcll Olvelll, Larry Hoffman,
CIJIJ_ck Kttc:btJJ, Dr. Nlclt RobinNl!l Mille GerlaCh, 6r It the
Metal CO,iallt)' Cll8mber office.
'~'~CUts are allo avallable at
Royal Oak, Simon's Plcll·a-Palr,
Mlildleport Department Store,
BUr Clothlen, ~ Jennifer
SJ~eet•-

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A display table will be let up
AddltiDaal ......_ .. t,_ ttl the
·for the brochure exllllllt 'and , · dlliner-duce
!ned
'lUcie&amp; taken from varlouJ locatram the Ch~ber Cllflce•

"M;;''be. .

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JlrW ofllle Pome..O, ,rlunlor GlriReCiut~l'N&lt;DD
. lll!t were kept billy on Wednesday sluffing bap Wlth coupoae for

lbe ulllllll .r.&amp;.lonllow wWell wiD lie lleld aa Metp KlgiiScllooton
:tprll 8 a1 1:30 p.m, Advisor far the II'OIIP Is Jla&amp;lly Pr1ee ud
co-leader Is Kay McEiory.

IAR. 24. 1990

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·Grant ·extension s6ught.by ~o1mnission ·
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· AlthOugh lcical buslnes~an
Roger Davis has requested that
the Ohio Dep!lrtment of Develop·
ment elltend lhe lime perloo In
which grant monies through that

•

agency may be spent to start the
Meigs Manufactured Housing .
company, the extension of time
cannot be considered without
additional lnfor:matlon. Accord- ·

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lng to a •letter ,totheMetgs County
Commissioners, the department
of development needs a revised
':9mmltment of outside funding
o the project, In the fonn of
leiters from prospective money
lenders, as well as a narrative
:summary of projeCt changes
since development funds were
committed over a year a11o.
The original grant agreement
called for the funding to be uled
Within 12 monthS after signing
the agreement. The 12 month
period expired before'C hrlstmas,
1989.
.
Commissioner Richard ' 'Jol)es
dictated a letter to Davis In·
structlng him to send the requlred lnfonnatlon to the state.
Jones also forwarded to ~ills a
copy of the letter wlllch the
commissioners · received from
lbe departtnent of development.
In another matter related to
ll'tnt"moaey,IIU'oush tllt'l drpart·
meat of developmeatj the commlllloners received a etterfrom
Don Poole, of the Tuppers
· PII\111-0U!ster Water District,
•Iiiii for Information on Com·
· lflllaltr Development Block
GriJit fonnula money. · AI ex·
platbed by ~Ill, be'
In·
til lll!ted Cbe tile water dllll'lct's
IIJ:IIrd of cUreeton In a .._.aq
e~rl1er thii month to q!IIY IDr
CDiiG fundi for a water line
allltlilon to the nara-S..te
Rotate Ill area.
Tile commllllonera are ·lltld·
lng a: letter to Poole lnforinlng
bJrn that the appropriate time to
apply for CDBG _ , Ia late

w•

·~..-. tll'b'taUt "•••

}111111111

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I!PJII ltl 1 p u1od. "

Greg Bailey, representing
Home Creek Enterprises. Pomeroy. met with the commissioners
. to dlscu111 a proposed road
closlns In Salisbury Township.
The road In question Is a portion
of old Route 124 which dead ends
In the vicinity of the Full GOspel
Lighthouse Church near Pome·
roy. Bailey Is constructing a
building near the ojd road whl.c h
. he will own, but which Win bouse
the U.S. Soil Conservation Ser:
vice. Bailey hopes to close tbe
portion of t.be road In order to
l;lelter facllltate ' parklng at the
new bulldlft$. If closed, the
portion of road would become the
property of Home Creek ,
. Enterprlles.
Although the commissioners
are In accordance with the
request to~ cl01ure, the matter
was tabled until a meeting at the
site can be arranged with the ·
c;ounty enat- and others.
,
'
Fo~q an opening of bids, :
the comrnluklnera approved .;
four local baab,llome Nadonal, ::
Racine; Central Tr111t. Middle- •
port; Bank 0ae and FllfiMI'I. ,
Bank and 8avinp Comi*!Y-• .
botb . Pomei oy, ~ depooltorles· ,.
for actflle county fundS over the.
next.:two ,..,., to be 111ec1 at u.
dltcretiOfl of tbe COWity :
treuurer.
•
Finally, after meettns with :
Sberllf J - M. Soulaby, the :
commllllollera apeed to pay a •
$182biDior•troftllecounty's
radio tran •••• lilly lllatJH,
' alld abo w : h ti.DIIII!III
lor SlllioaBaiL, JaltiOIIIiU•

P'lll'; aa• ., •r .,,. •
..... ltlli4 l1t' tiJi .....
tlllmiMI'.

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GOOD OILY AT POWELL'S
COUPOII

-

ol nil! II • ,.ree•l
P•ty ciii!Q 1'?1daJ, wit•

IIJP- .,.__ .........

Kieker 942243

Reserve The Right To
tlmit Quantities

atpt, wMII a
C'nre

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�~. M8I'Ch 22. 1990

nlmentacy

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Proposed roc~et ·. test 11JA1kes a stir.

The Daily .Sentinel

.

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTEp TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~ ,.....,__.L..--r"l~c::::l·~
'i;flv .

CHARLENE HOEFLICH ..
Generar Manaier

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PI&amp;

PAT WHITEHEAD

Asslslant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The UnlteQ Pre;s International, Inland Dally Press .
Assoelatton and the Alne"lcan Newspaper Publishers Association.

•

WASHINGTON - Some o1 the
peOple living around the Stennis
Space Center on the Mississippi
Gulf Coast figure · they have
received one favor too many
from Conaress.
Rep. Jaime Whitten, D-Miss.,
Is chairman of the House Appropriations Committee- a position
equivalent to Santa Claus when !t
comes to winning projects for the
folks back home. But Whitten's '
folks back home are In northern
Mississippi. ·He used his clout to
put a $1.2 billion pr()jtt'a!)t to build

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roeket

!spa~ shuttle
'motors In his mental n:se&amp;rch at the Mlsslsdistrict In Yellow Creek, Miss.
. sipPI Sta(e ·university Research •
But the dirty job of testing tile Center, contends that, under the
new motors ended up at llle right condltlona, that plume of
Stennis Space Center ·ln southern exhaust could turn lnto400tons of ""
Mississippi. The testlnr lnyolves· hydrochloric acid which would
laying one o!the solkl-fuel rocket · faiHo tbe earth as acid rain.
boosters on Ita side, Igniting It
That's not southern Mllslsslpand letting It bllrn. ln the pl's Idea of an attractive gift ·
process, the booster spews out from the federal government.
240,00!J pounds of hydrogen chloThe environmental controvride and 37~,000 pounds of alum!- , ·ersy over the proposed tests Is
num oxide.
just the latest In a series of
Robert Esher, head of environ· stumbling blocks •. for the ad·

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Is·. this hoW to
ba18nce
a budget?
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Robert Waw.nan
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2- The Dill¥ II 11111111

Ch~lotte
B7 Vallled Praa lnleriWIDul
Dell Curry bit two long jump
sbotl, one a three-pointer, and
grabbed a key rebound In the
final two minutes of overtime to
propel the Charlotte Hornets to a
115-114 upset of the Phoenbl Suns
. WedDI!Iday night.
Curry's reboundofEddleJohnson's miss with less than two
secoods left sealed· the wtn, only
thethJrdontheroadforC~arlotte
this year.
Curry, who finished with 28
. points, put the Hornet~ ahead
112-109on a long jumper from the
left sldewlth 1:33 remaining.
After Kevin Johnson's slam
dunk of a rebound was waved off
as a loose. ball foul, Curry tossed
In a three-pointer to malle It
115-109 at the one-minute mark.
Eddie Johnson responded with
a three-point goal for Phoenix
with f!0.5 seconds left and Kevin
Johnson sapk two tree throws
with 28.2 seconds remaining to
cut tlie margin to 115-114.
Phoenix got a final chance
getting possession ivlth 9.2 s~
condslettafterapassbyMuggsy
Bogues went off Kelly Trtpucka
out of bounds.

j

"

LETTERS OF OPINION are welc6me. They should be leu !halt 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned J.et.te r s will be pub·
Us bed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues ·not pers&lt;ihall· '

NBA roundup

,.._ov MidrJhplli".; Ohio
ttu.ct.Y. Mach 22ir'IIIO
· fack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta 1

!

vanced solid· fuel rocket booster .
motor tha'l was designed to ,.
enhance shuttle safety after the
Challenger explosion.
NASA · Is buDding the motor
over the objection of Its own ·
Aeronautics Safety Advisory
Panel, which last spring said a ·
llquld-fueli!d motor would be a
better way to go.
Whitten's puJI In Congress Is ·
little help to those near tbe ·
Stennis Space Center who don't
want the tests. Esher at Mllsls· .
sippi State Unlwrslty and others
are demanding that NASA either
Install a scrubber to trap poilU•
tants or test the rockets In a less
sensitive envlronme.nt.
NASA contends t11at the exhaust plume wm~:o high enough
to disperse, and.'the etfects will
be negligible.
Why \S NASA e,yeli considering
the pol.son-belchlqg motors If a
llql,lld -fueled version , Is a
possibility?
Jerry Grey Is with the private
American Insltute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. WE\ asked
him who Is correct In this debate
of liquid vs. solid. He told us the
liquid-fuel motor could be ready
In'the same amount of time It will
take to adequately test an advancep solld·f11e1 motor to make
sure It Is ·safe for use. And the
safety Issue Is ,th!' reason NASA
needs a new solid rocket motor In
the first place.
.
,,
As for cost, the Challenger '
disaster cost the taxpayers $15 ·..
billion, and Grey contends that
accident could have been ·
avoided If NASA had been using a
liquid-fueled motor In the first
place.
·

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Will congtess ' listen to Rep. Dan
Rostenkowskl, one of Its key experts; and decide to balance the
federal budget within !lve years?
· &lt;
•
'
Rostenkowskl, D-Ill. , Is urging Republicans and I;&gt;emocrats to
agree to major spending cuts- something neither partly has so far '
been willing to do.
·
·
"For all the Republican rhetoric, federal sp~ndtniwa.sn' t cut at ·
all In the last 10 years, It was merely rearranged," says .
Rostenkowskl, chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee.
.
.
·
"Here's my challenge," he says: "No smoke and mirrors, no
'feel good' .Promises or slide-by budgeting, no picking ouf one or
two small-potato Items. Just solid proposals -Including some that
I, as a Democrat, traditionally opposed . ..- that produce
,·
substantial, Incontestable savings, calling for modest sacrifices by • Y
nearly every American."
· These are some of the major elements of Rostenkowskl's new
•
plan: ·
··
.
· .
·
.
- Freeze all government spending for on~ year, ln~ludlng
annual cost-of-living adjustments. The only exception would be
'
I
means- test~d entitlement programs ·aimed at the poorest of the
The pagans are maklJ!g a judgment Is In fact' a .value
poor. Savings: $~05 billion over five years. ·
comeback.
After ,centuries of judgement.. .. "
ra&lt;Ucai group that believes In
- Begin to "fundamentally restructure defense spending" as
In one of my favorite exam·
retreat
before
the
worlo;l'
s
great
direct
.action to scuttle policies It
changes In the Soviet Union and Eastern )'uroperesult In reduced
Does this - reasoning sound .
pies, Wilderness magazine pubreligions, the folks who worship familiar? It .should, for It Is an
believes harm the ecosytem.
tensions. The cutback would be 3 percent per year below the rate of
. llshed as article a few years back
Ed Bradley of CBS , recently complaining that European
bubbling brc\oks, bats.' owl.s and extension of an argument .we·~
Inflation. Savings: Si50 billion over five years: · ··
•
'
foxes · are . pulling themselves beard for the pas! 20· ·years, · lnter.vlewed an Ea~th Flrster settlers In America never under. .,-Freeze tax-Indexing for one year. The 1982 tax .codechanges
together f·or a fearsome namely that all .cultures • are
accu~ of conspiring to down · stOOd "the language of , the
Indexed personal deductions and brackets for the effect of Inflation
counterattack. . ·
·~creep." Savings: $50 billion over 5 years.
·
·
equal, and their : differences rJ!Ower lines leading to nuclear Eastern forest," but that In an
As Exhibit ·1 tn \hts· thesis,
- Eliminate the so-called "Income tax bubble. •• As a result of ''·'
apparently less. obtuse era, "ancome down mlltnly to • matter of . facilities In three states. It was a
consider a letter sent to a. taste. Now, ive are ·told, ·lt' Isn't dl.strublng report. Among other cient German law prescribed
tbe 1986 tax changes, high middle-Income taxpayers (Individuals .
things, the Earth Flrster seemed capital punishment for someone.
colleague of mlne\1rho'd written just cultureS that stil11d on '·the
earning $47,000 to $109,1)(_)0 ~nd families earning $78,000 to$185,o00)
to have trouble distlng\\l.shlng who wantonly ~led the bark of ,
a column In which be lnnoeently same moral plane. O:ntfferent
pay a 33 percent rate- but the rate then drops back to 28·percent
asserted,
"It's
'qetter
to
live
two
.
between "crlrpes" · ~galnst .na· aJ,tvlngtree." Whywouldanyon~· ~.
for those with even,hlg!ier Incomes. A millionaire thu' pays a lower
spqcles ilo, too. (Although come
minutes
as
a
human.'
than
1d
ture
- as he causally . defined even mention suo:;h a grotesque
tax rate than someone earning $70,000. Boosting the top rate to a
to think of It, perhaps ·only In
them,
of course- and trad(tlonal sanction, unless the wrlter:s
years
as
a
monkey."
,
uniform 33 percent W!IUid raise an additional $44 billion over five
theory. What with the hum~n
years . .
." Better?" retorted one pagan tendency tOWIJrd exCj!Ss and crimes against property an(! reverence for bark had reached
couple (and not the only Irate violence, we may well ra.t e as an
people.
.
- Increase consumption taxes on gasoline, oil, pollutants,
the point that It competed with
respondents, by·any means). "In Inferior form of life.) ,
This should hardly surprise his reverence for human life?
lj!cohol and tobacco. A moderate Increase In all these taxes could
,.
,what sense? From what or whose
"easily" earn $100 billion over five years.
Is this the babbling o.f a few . those familiar with the sort of
It Is one thing to prize nature
perspective? Cerlalnly not from cra'nks? I don't think so•: In the
rhetoric found all too often even · and pity the suffering of •other
- Reject new tax-cut proJlOsals, Including the proposed cut In
a moral perspective. What other , time leading up to ,the Aspen vote In mainstream lmvironmental · creatures. It Is quite another
capital gains tax rates. Savings: About $60 billion over live years.'
literature. There, enthusiasm for thing to . consider trees and
species wantonly kills Its own, over whether to ban fur ·sales,
The above measures would result In a total savings of about $510
destroys Its environment, etc-.? similar arguments were heard "wilderness valueS" frequently · monkey~ as moral agents equal
billion over five years. In addition, Interest on the national debtFrom a Pb!losophlcal position, all the time. And they seem to veers off Into something til.r more , to ourselves. Modern jlagaqs .a re
now our thltd biggest annual expenditure after the Pentagon and·
(such) human chauvinism can- have found an eq~lly comforta- potent than an unadorned conser- bent upon nothing less .than the
Social Security- would be reduced by $62 billion over five years. ·
not be defended."'
ble niche at the far reaches of the vation ethic. It becomes. an devaluation of human nature
.Based on the Bush adtnlnlstratlon's five-year spendln&amp;
•
Then the paga~ rolled put envlrorimental movement anti-humanist romance, one that and while theirs may
projections, the projected annual deficits between flscal1991 and
be an•
,what they considered their
where reside, for example, holds land sacred precisely to the ancient view; It Is still very much
1995 will total $648 billion, II all of what Rostenkowsklls suggesting
clincher: "What (the columnist)
members of Earth First! , the degree It escapes human touch.
Is lmpleq~ented, he calculates the 1991 deficit would stand.at $106
wrMg.
passes off as an ontological
biiJior\; 'In 199211 would fall to$39 billion; and In 199311 would fall to
$28 billion.
' Finally ,'In flscal1994, where the deficit Is currently projected at · ··
$121 billiOn, Rostenkowskl says his plan would result In $123 billion.
In savings and Increased revenues. In other words, a balanced
budget. In fiscal 1995, the budget would actually show a $34 billion
,-:
surplus.
SEATTLE (NEA) ·- Even
members are primarily retired lnganAIDSpollcy) ; and Indians EqualltyNow.-agroupwlththe
The key to the Rostenkowskl plan: Over the next five years total
after · years of public discussion
em p 1o y e e s of t el.e phon e. can jollY the Voice of Many , acronym of WOMEN.
goverrupent spending m"st n,9t show any new net Increase. Nolie.
about the affliction, AIDS vic·
companlel.
Feathers.
' ·.
Coping with the diversity of
This means that If Congress a.nd the White House want to Increase
tlms
are
often
subjected
to
His
view
was
not
shared
by
Some.
US
West
workers
.
w
ant
cultures
and lifestyles embraced
aid to Poland or Nicaragua, or spend more on AIDS research or the
everything
from
hostility
to
many
other
corporate
executives
similar
organizations
for
eve'
.
by
a
large
work force can be a '[
war on drugs, or to launch a space station, or wha.t ever, they will
ostracism
at
their
workplaces.
In
1987.
Only
six
companies
were
ryone
from
Mormons
to
fat
difficult
and
complex task.- but
either have to make corresponding cuts elsewhere In the budget or
Back
In
the
autumn
of
1987,
such
willing
to
be
associated
with
the
people.
One
,
employ'
e
e
even
progressive
employers
have .dls· ~~
Increase taxes.
antagonism
was
far
more
local
AIDS
walk
then_
although
called
for
the
establishment
of
covered
that
It
provides
rewards ·1
Rostenkowskl understands that some of tlie measures he Is
prevalent.
by last year that number had rW•h•l•t•e-O.;.p.;.p.re_s_s_e_d_M_a..t_e_s_ro_r__t_o_c_o_m..;pa~n-le.,.s_a_n_d_w_or_k.,:e..rs_aJ_Ik...e...,
.
suggesting wUI cause real hardships and call for making sotne
People
with
AIDS
were
rouIncreased
to
34.
politically hard decisions.
'•.
tlnely shunned by their coMany employers across the
For InstanCe, his one-year freeze of federal programs will
·''
. workers a~d sometimes Isolated ' nation still refuse to acknowl·
actu.ally mean cuts In all programs as they struggle against the
••
by their bosses. Senior execu·
edge that AIDS has· any Impact
effects of Inflation. Rostenkowskl' s plan would also mean a freeze
;;
tlves of most corporations chose . on .the workplace. A survey
In the pensions of' retired mtlltary and government workers and no
.'
to IKJ!ore the. problem, hoping conducted by Business Week'
cost·of·llvlng adjustnient for Social Security recipients. ·
that It would somehow disappear • magazine cites hundreds of corStill, RostenkOwskl argues, we simply have 'to get our financial
.•
before they had to deal with it.
poratlons that have llttle. or no
hQuse In order so "we can turn our atten lion from the excesses of
.
.
But ~ndrew V. ' Smith, then
Idea of what to do If a worker Is
the past to the challenges of the future. We have a collective
\
president of the Pacific Northwdiagnosed with the disorder.
responsibility to expand medical care, lnyest more In our children
est
Bell
Telephone
Co.,
says
he
But a· ·growing .1111mber of
and repair our highways, airports and other public faclllltes / '
learned
"several
employees
at
companies
have Initiated pro"Let's get this problem (the dertclt) off the. national agenda so
were
afflicted
and
dying
of
grams
not
only
toaldlhe afflicted
PNB
we can· get on with building our future."
thlsillness." Hedecldedthelssue
but also to deal wlth the unhad to be confronted directly. · foulmed fear and mlslnfonnatlon
•
. At a national public policy
!hat 1\IDS engenders.
. conference In Chlca1o almost 2%
Digital Equlpmeal Corp., for
Dear Editor:
example, has an elaborate edu·
years qo, Smith delivered an
commendabie. Although they
extraordinary speech that recatlonal prOifam. that requires
We wish to extend our thanks to had to travel several miles of
the Scipio Township Volunteer
vealed hill company had !ldopted
all employees to.. participate In
hilly, winding roads to get to our
wbatFire Department for a job well
was
tben
an
unusually
traliilnll
sessions ' where 'tbey
place, a mere 15 minutes elapsed
I
.enll11htened
attitude.
toward
receive
lnformaUaq
tbout the ·
done In putting out the brush fire
fr.om thetlmeihungupthephone
•
on our land In Scipio Township
till their truck came down our
A~~ . .
"
.,. . · medical, social lltld peycbololl· .
tbe evening of March 14, 1990.
Employees affected by AIDS cal aspect&amp; of the aftllctlon.
lane.
Their dedication to helping oth·
are treated with com)IIPIIon and
Smith aharel that vtew "For
Sincerely,
•
ers deserves recognition and Is
~nderstanding," he explained. · many j,eopie, It's very ImPortant
Jeff and Janet Latta
'
much appreciated.
f'urtherrnore, employees who
to remain on the job wllj!n !bey
Route 2, 2950 Deep HoUow
"
Their resPOnse time Is also
refuse to work wltb AIDS pa• ·1:0ntrael thll Ulnea." lie aayi.
Coolville, OH 45723
••
'
tlelltaorbar~~aalhemordlscrlmf·
Indeed,' US West's policy ta
_: •,
l\8le a1alnat thtm lllany.~aY. wUI .. apeeHicall)' tletlilned to nlU'tW'e
be subject to ~pU.. .
· ratber · tlian ostracize AIDS
At the IIIIDI time, PJo!B (now
vlctlml. . .. , ,
, ,'
I
· part ot us W•t, Inc,) demonMoii!Dver the ·~ tell&lt; ·
'
strated Ita ~eat to ''Plio• 'COIJIPaiQo''llla a"p~I­
•••
&lt;
By U•lted l're88 International
•'
'
Seattle ••ll'lnu by beebinln&amp; a lim" policy that illcciiJra&amp;8 the.
~
Today Is Thursday, March 22, the8lstdayof1990wlth 284tofoUow.
corporate ~poaaor of an aanual .tormatiDn ot
orpn•·
!'
The ,noon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
'•
community fund..ralalng Walk
tlollltoiii!I'Wthe~needllof
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
~
conducted by the Northwest
Other workers aucb ... Allan&amp;,
&lt;
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
AI.~ Foundation.
• Hllpank:1, blacks and femal~
.0!
Those born on tbls date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
[ Wal doing What J thOught
, In addltlop, homoMxuaJI have
.
actor Karl Malden In 1913 (age 77), French mime Marcel Marceau In
was rla'ht," 1ay1 ,Smith, now
an opportunity to Join the Ein. "Honey. ya know all the glasses
've "
1923 (age 67), composer Stephen Sondhelm In 1930 (age 60), actor
v
presldent of the Telepholle PJo. , plo)'ee Asaoclatlon for Gays and
'
W!Uism Shatner In 1931 (age ~9), and British composer Andrew Lloyd
misplaced over th'e years?"
neers of America, a natkma,l
Letl!lan1 (wbleh has worked with
'
Webber In 1948 (age 42) .
:•
or,anlzatlon whole 770,000 company executiVes.In formula!·

!
l

f,o~tations . ct.nfront AIDS ·.

.

records 115-114.overtime victory over Pho.enix
Eddie Johnson's. jumper !rem
for a 118-108 overtime loss to
the right corner bounced high off
Phoenix In January.
the rJin and Curry Jl'&amp;bbed lt.
The game was close all the
Armon Gtll.lam, traded by · way. Phoenix's largest margin
Pboenbi: to Charlotte earlier this
was eight points at the end of the
season, had 22 points .and 10
first quarter and In the opening
rebounds for the Hol'lljlts. Trl·
minutes of the second. .
pucka bad 19 points, ·BOgues 11
The score was tied 59·59 at
and Kenny Gattlson, another halftime, and Charlotte led 83-80
former Phoenix player, 11.
at the end of three quarters.
,Tom Chambers, returning· to
Phoenix led 102-97 With 1: 311eft
action after missing one game In the fourth quarter.
with a strained ha11111trlng, led
BQgues scored from the top of
.Phoenix with 36 points. Kevin
the circle, Gilliam blocked a
Johnson had 26 and Eddie John· Chambers attempt and Curry hit
son 15.
a three-pointer to tie the score at
TheSunswerewithQutstartlng 102-102 with 32 seconds left In
guard Jeff Hornacek and his
regulation.
backup Dan Majerle, both out
Kevin Johnson mlssl!d a drlv··
with , Injuries. Mike Morrison lng layup with 26 seconds left and
started In the spot. He was qnuam grabbed the . rebound. ·
replaced brlefiybyTimLegler,a Curry tossed up a jumper with
CBA player the Suns signed three seconds left, butlt bounced
Wednesday to a 10.day contract. off the·rtm forcing the game Into
. But, rookie Kenny Battle ended overtime.
up getting most of the playing .
Charlotte hit 53 percent from
time at the position.
the floor compared with 48
Phoenix suffered Its second percent for Phoenix.
straight loss at home after
Elsewhere In the NBA: Wahaving a 19-game win streak shlngton pounded New Jersey
snapped by San Antonio on . 136-106, Chicago overcame
Monday night.
·
·
The Hornets gained revenge

Atlanta 99-89, Boston stol)ped of Bob Thorp ton, who played 21
Cleveland 123-114, Charlotte physical minutes, scoring ·five
u~t Phoenix 115·114 In overpoints, grabbing a pair of re·
time, Utah tripped the L.A.,
Clippers 118-102, Sacramento
topped Minnesota 90-84, arid
Indianapolis powered past Mil·
waukee 112·96.
·
Sixera 118, Beat ff7
At Philadelphia, the Slxers
showed no mercy, chilling the
Heat 118-97 Wednesday dlght.
"This was a tough game to get ,
motivated for but It's the kind
you have to win," said Charles
Barkle~, whO had 19 points.
"Everybody chipped ln."
Every 76er who got Into the
ga"'e scored; led by Hersey
Hawkins, who had a game-high
25 polhts.
"It was a game we had to win
because we want to build our
lead, " Hawkins said. "We have
guys coming In, playing hard and
doing what they're supposed to
do. That's what we need down the
stretch."
.
The Philadelphia bench con- ·
tinued to contrlbu te to the 76ers'
success,personlfledby.theeffort
·

Logan took advantage of _two scored on a base hit by Redd.
The Chieftains made It 2.0 In
unearned runs to defeat the
Meigs Marauders 3·1 Wednesday the third on consecutive singles
afternoon at Meigs High School by Sheka, Rooker, and Conley .
In the season opener for both Sheka scored Logan's last run In
the .fifth when l)e doubled and ,
teams.
Logan scored .first In 'the scored on il Marauder error.
Meigs scored their only run In
opening frame when winning
the
last ' Inning whim Kevfn
pitcher Rooker walked, he later
Taylor and Jason Wright singled
and Chris Stewart hit a sacraflce
fly to score Taylor. .
, .
Wright led Meigs at the plate
with two singles, Mike Walls
added a double .and Taylor a
MEIGS WGH SCHOOL
single.
VAIIIIITY BASEBALL
Chris Stewart was the starter
DATE-OPPONENT
LOCI\TION
and hard luck loser for Meigs,
March 21-Logan .............................. : .. H
March 22-Galllpolts ....... , ........ .. ....... ... A
Stewart went the first three
March 23-Athens .................... :........... H
Innings giving up two. runs (one
March 26-Mtller .. .~ ... ................ ,......... H
March 27- Federal ...... ......... :.......... .. .. A
earned) and striking out four ,
March 30- Alexander.......... .. .. ............. A
while walking two. He gave the
April 02-'rrlmble ...... :..................... .. .. H
Chieftains
three hits. Kevin TayApril 03-VIntoo ...... ........ ... ................. A
Apriiii6-Belpre ... ............................... H
lor
went
the
final four Innings.
April 09-WellstCI\ .... .. ......................... H
giving
up
one
hit, walking one
Aprtll2-NelsonvUle...... .......... ............ A
Aprii14-Jal'i&lt;S&lt;II(DH! ,..... :.. .'.............. A
and ,strlklng out four.
Aprii16-MOI..- .... ......... ... ,......... .. ....... A
Meigs will travel to GaiUpolis
Aprii17-FedOI'al ............ . : ..... ......... .. .. H
April 20-Alexander,.... ......................... H
to take on the Blue Devils on
Aprll2:hTrlmble ............. ............. .. .... A,
Thursday night before returning
April 24-Vinta'l ..................... ... .. .. .. . .' .. H
home on Friday night · to host
AprU 2'7-Belpre ... ..... .... ... ................... A
AprU·JO-WeUstat ... ........ .. ... ............... A
Athens.
May 01-Athens ........ ......... .... ........ .. .. .. A
Logan,
.. .... :.............. 001 010~3.
May 03-Galltpolls ................ ............... H
May Q4-NelsmvUie...... ,...................... H
,Melgs ... ....... ............
oo~-1

'

Meigs ·baseball · .
schedule and roster

ooo

·

The Public · Utilities Commission ol Ohio has sel lor
public hearing Case No.
90-02-EL-EFC, to review.
the fuel procurement prac·
tices and jl(llicies ol Colum·
bus Southern Power Com· .
pany. the operation of its
Electric Fuel Component
and related ~ers . This
hearing is ·scfieduled to .
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 26, 1990, at the ol·
fices ol the Public Utilities
Commission, 180 East ,
·Broad Street, Columbus.
Ohio 43266-0573

·will

Robert Walters

Berry's· World

· All interested parties will ~e
given an ovportunity to be
heard. Further information
may be obtained by contacting the Commission at
the above address.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Gary E. Vigorito,
Secretary.

'

SPRING HAS SPRUNG
.
•.. THE GRASS IS RIZ
.

•

l

)'

'

•

'

.THIS IS WHERE.THE DEAlS.IS! .
I

.

...

Letters to the editor

...

I

Today in history

.

j

.•
One ca
power options. on1Y 17•
compere anywhere.

..
.

'

.I

•11·
000 miles.

0
ref ul owner l ..ther lnteri '•

i

_P.,_

. . ClfVIour

1984 OLDSIIOIILE
. , 98 IIO..GHAM ·

,,

'

,,

· 'u"v
equ,,J·IIAzrt .
fteteo Wlo. ' 4-~111 ~

·

one ~oc,1 oW:IIIe, •luntlncl • AIJI-FM .
r, II.OOe ...!! 'YIIIela,

•

•

•CBEYIOLQ

..

.

bOunds and making two steals. _
Miami lost center Rony Sel&gt;
(8e~ NBA oa Pa1e 4)
·

wgan.downs Meigs 3;.1

games, for us.
By SC,OTT WOLFE
With 6 possibly seven· players
· Eastern Bsseball Coach
·
returning
there's going to be a lot
·Son)e Information In yesterof
competition
among the other
day's Dally Sentinel was lnad·
players
for
the
remaining posl·
vertently omitted from the Eastern preseilson p·revlew, leaving tlons. Shaun Savoy, a senior, Is
out one key player's name In the out for the first time since pony
Eagles' lineup - senior Shaun league, but Is a good athlete and
always gives 110 percent along
Savoy.
'
Eastern opens today with Fed· with being a good leader,
will
probably
start
at
Shaun
era! Hocking.
We have a strong nucleus first bse, but can play anywhere.
I have great expectations for
returning and our players have
this'
team. Two weeks ago we had
gOOd. baseball Instinct, but even
the
best
week of practice I ever
with this In their favor, only a
had
as
coach.
The kids really
"GOOD" attitude and serious' ·
worked
hard,
were
enthused, and
approach to the game can be the
dlf!ereJICe betwwen a great or took It all seriously. Last week,
mediocre season. I · was not ·despite the great weather we
satisfied with the i2-6 ~eason we had, we didn't give 100 percent
posted last year. It wws a good and dldn' t .get what we wan ted
year, but lack of concentration accomplished. If our "GOOD"
and lackluster play lost 3-4. team shows !up, we could be
really toUgh . and In for a gOOd
Sl!ason; If the other teams shows
The Daily Sentinel
up we may not win a game.
(USPS 11 ~~oell)
What's In this team's mind
1\ Dlvloloa of MuH-a,lnc. .
(attitude) and hearts will deter·
··'
' ·
·
mbie tlielr success. I thing
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
Publ!shed every atte'rnoon. Monday
th' eyv~
• go1 hear t . I tbl
VAIISITY SOI'TBALL
through Friday, 11l Court St., Po· .
. nk they are
1 meroy, Ohio, by the Obio Valley Pubwinners! . · .
.
'
DATE'-OFPONENT ......... ... LOCAVIDI : .
~':;;f:d'f~;;:56~: . ·: Hilt!~ \vm be our -itrong suit,
March 21-J,.opn . ._.., ...... ........ ............. ~
cond class pos,tage paid at Pome&lt;oy,
· but we ve got to concentrate . ~::.cc ~rn- :: .. :....................... A
, Ohio.
,
more defensively ,master·the fun:
March 26-Mlller .......................... ... .... H
damentals.
and .believe we can
March 21-Federol .................. ............ A
Member : Unlted 'Press· international, ,
March 30-AI.Xanclel'....... ... ................. A,
make
the
big
play
.
A
little
more
Inland Dally Press Assrelatlon and U\e
AprU 02-Trbnble ...... .......................... H
Ohio NewSpa_per Association. National
effort defenslvelq could make
AprU 03-VInt&lt;ll .............. .. .................. A
AdverUiiq; Representati;ve, Branham
April Ohllelpro ...... ,........................... H
our
·
season.
Lack
·of
effort
New..,.per Sal. .,., 733 Third, Avenue,
~· April 09-:-WeJistm .. ... ... :::....... ......... .... H
,
defensively
and
Inexperience
at'·
.,New Y~rk. N.-.; York l00l7 . •
• Aprt112~NelsonvUle....................... ..... A
Al"fllii-Jacloi&lt;II(DH) .. .... .,.. .. .... .. ...... A
~ our wea,
key pi&gt;sltlons
~: Send aclcnss chartii'S · knesses at first.·
. Aprlll&amp;-.MIIl.., .... ,;............, ................. A .
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Apr1117-Federal ................................ H
Pomeroy. Oltfo 15769. ·
Overall we 'have good team
Aprii211-Aiexander .. .......... .. ... .. .......... H
Aprli23-Trbnble .. ,.. , .... .. .. .......... .. ...... A
speed,
a
strong
nucleus,
and
.
( SvilscRII"fiON RATES .
Aprti24-VIntlll .. , ... .. .......................... H ,
great'bench strenghth. Our abll·
Aprti21-Bolpro .. .. ........ .... .... ........... :.. A ·
· .B)' c-rier or Motor Bouie ·
30-Wellllal .. .. ..........'............ ... :.A
One Week .. .... ........ .... .... .. .... .......$1.40
lty to get these players Involved · Aprtl
May 01-Aihens .... , ......................... .,... A
One Month .... ... .. .. .. .......... ......... .16.10
In the gaine will 'qe a key asset. I
May 03-Galltoolls ......:........................ H '
Onf,Year ...... :.. .. ...... .. ........ :..... $72.80
May 04-Netsm,vtue,......... .. .. ............... H
like
to stick with a set lineup and
SINGLECOFY
develop a. rhthym,so once a
FRICE
MEIGS BASEBALL
DaUy -;;""' ''r'···· ................. ... 25 Cents
players steps forward and wins a
VAIIIIITY ROS'11!:R
position,' he'll most likely keep It
SutJ,crl~r~ not desiring to pay the car·
·
1'()8. YEAR
rter may· remtt In advance direct to
If he perfonns. I've got a lot of. PLAYER
Dennis Booth .... .... ............ ........... OF,P 4
The Dally sentinel on a 3, 6or12 month
Ed Crooks ........................................ C 4
capable people ready to step ln.
bull. Credit will be gtven carrier each
Keith Hagen ............................ ... .OF.P t
I'm looking forwar(l to the
week. : · ·.
Randy Hawley ............................... ,OF 4
Eric Heck ............................ ,....... INF 3
season.
No subt&lt;rlptlons by mall pOnnltted In
Jay Humphreys ... .. ......................... OF 4
Eastern plays Federal today ,
areas where bome carrier .ervtce. Is
Sllawn Lambert ........... , .................... p 4 '
available. .
then starts a full week of play
Tim Mayea ...... ........................ ... .... OF 3
Kevin Muaaer ....... ............ ..... ........ ,OF 2
at
home
with
Southwestern
Mall BubM:rlpltoM
Terry McGuire .......................... P,INF 2
'-1111• Melp C.Unly ·
Monday.
Jeremy Phalln .. .......................... P,OF 2
13 Weeks ..:......................... ,.... ,$19.24
Terry Rewter ........ ;........................ 1st 3
Wolfe expects Oak Hill to lead
26 Weeks ........... .,..................... S37.9ti
Chrlo Stewart ...... ;..................... INF,P t
the league this year, whllz
52 Weeks .................................. $74.36
Kevin Taylor ..................... .. ...... INF.P 3
Outllde Melp Cou•r
Southern and North Gallla could
Mike Walls .................. ... .. ... .... INF,OF 4
13 Weeks ..... ,............................ $20.80
Brtu Warener ............. ......t . ~..... .. INF 4
26 Weeks .......................... , ....... ~.30 . be darkborse candidates to do
~81&lt;11 Wfl«&lt;tt.. ...... :...... .............. ... INF 3
52 Weeks ................... ,..... .. :...... $7UO
some d.ama..:e.

·Vincent Carroll

I

.

Attitude, approach vital
.to 'great season' for Eagles

MOdem pagans love non•human··life
.

'

The Deily Sa •til•ei-Pege 3

Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio

--·· ........

•OLDSIIOIILI

•GEO

,,

'

'

'

SKY HOOK- Charlotte's J.R. Reid (rl&amp;ht) puts up a hook abol
over Phoenix center Mark West during tbe first quarter of
Wednesday night's NBA g..,-.e In Phoenix. The Hornets edged tbe
, Suns 1111-114 In over~e . (UPI)

�Pega

Thursday, M.-ch

Ponwoy-Midd'aport. Ohio ·

4-The Daily Sentinel

22,

•·

Savoy, Best DefensiVe and Most Assists; SVAC
Coach olthe Year Charles Riley; Mike Frost, Belit
Rebounder; Scolt Fitch and Ken Caldwell, Belit
Free Throw Shooting; and Tim Bissell, Belit
Defensive Player.
·

EASTERN'S TOP GUNS - .These young men
and Coach Charles Riley r~celved special
recopltlon at Eastern's banquet Wednesday.
Pictured are (L-R} Randy Moore; Most Improved; Mark Murpby, 110 percent Award; Shaun

NHL roundup

Mllch22, 1810

VanderbUt,. Penn
. State advance to semifinals

.

.

Edmonton hands St. Louis 8-6 loss
By JOHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louts Blues, fighting to
hold on to first place In theNorrts
Division, lost an 8-6 shootout with.
the Edmonton Oilers Wednesday
night, but became part of history
when star forward Brett Hull
scored his 70th goal of the season.
Hull Is only the sixth NHL ,

•

GIRLS' BASKETBALL srEc~L AWARDS These girls won the special awjlrds 'f or ' Coach,
Georre Gagal's Ellll!tern Ea1Jettes. Plc&amp;un;d are
(L-R) Lee GIIUian, Beat Free lbrwo ~enta1e;

Mlcbele·Metqer, Most Assists; Tiffany (,lardn~•. l ·
Beet 'Defensive Award and 'Best· RebOunding
award, and Tabby Phillips, Most Improved.

..

'

player to score 70 goals In a
seasoii, . joining Phil Esposito,
WayneGretzkY (whoscored70or
more four times), Jarl Kurrl,
Marlo Lemieux . (twice) and
Bernie Nicholls.
Hull scored at 17:·17 of the
· second period after Peter Zezel
won a faceoff In the Edmonton
zone. The goal pulled St. Louis to

....
.....

within 6-5. ·
~
Aft11r the game, Hull was
unable to enjoy the record
.
because of the loss.
"It doesn't matter, you ~ve got
to win hockey games,'' said Hull.
"We've lost four In a row and It's
just not good enough, the way
we're playing."
(See NRL on Pace 5)

·~
....

4UPA~ .

'

made ·a steal and a breakaway the game and drew two technlJaymFFWOOD8
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPl) - ' dunk and Leonard sennett hit a cals as he berated the referees.
Vanderbilt's Scott Dreud scored fasthreak layup after another Di'aud hit two of the four free
19 polnta and Eric Reid added 18 steal to cut Vanderbilt's lead to throws. giving Vanderbtu a 5-4
Wednesday night an~ the Com- 59-48 with 10:02 left, but the lead, and Reid then scored In the
modores routed New Orleans Privateers ·c ould get no closer. lane to make It 7-4.
BS-65 to advance to the Final Four They ended their season at 21·11.
The teams traded tile lead slx
New Orleans was hurt by foul times before the Commodores
of the National Invitation
, trouble. Three players commit· went on a 10·1 run to go ahead
Tournament.
Vanderbilt, 19-U, led by nine at ted three fouls each In the !Irs t 23-14 on Derrick Wilcox's 3half, and two starters, Harris and polnter with 8:01 toptay . Vander,
halftime and starred the second
half by outscoring New Orleans 6-11 Ervin Johnson, picked up' bill led 37-28 at halftime with
12-6 to go ahead 49-34 with 16: 49 to their fourth fouls early In the Reid scoring 12 of his points In the
play. ;Reid started the run by second half.
first half.
New Orleans coach 'Tim Floyd
Reid and Draud paced five
scoring twice !n the lane and
Draud finished ·It with a 3- stormed on to the court after the Vanderbilt players scoring In
Privateers were called for fo"r double figures. Steve Grant bad
pointer.
fouls
Iii the first three minutes of 11' Wilcox
14 and Todd MllholNew Orleans' Tony Harris
.
· land 12. ;F:or New Orleans, the
co-champions of the American
South Conference, Tank Collins
scored 20, Harris 12 and Leonard '
Bennett 10.

•

Creallve; -and Debbie BrookS, Most Outstanding
Cheerleader.
Special Senior Cheerleadlng awards went to
Amy Murphy, Kym Mcintyre. and Debbie
BrookS.
The bbys' basketball program was next In line
for recognition and awards were given by reserve
coach Zane Beegle.
Next, Coach Charles Riley., 1990 SV AC Coach of
the Year.· commented on the excellent .boys'
basket.b all season.
Riley stated, "We put the ·season Into three
phases. In the pre-season we established our
goals, then developed our at [I tudes, and -prepared
to build· upon last year." ·
"I'm proud of these young men. I've watched
these young men .grow In a very positive .way.
Coach Clarence Gaines of Wlnston-Salem.... has
turned out a lot of good men ...and I believe
Eastern High will do the same by turning out a lot
of good yoUflg men."
·Senior Shaun Savoy claimed the MoSt Assists
award adn shared the Best Deferislve Award with
sophomore Tim Bissell. Senior Mike ~rost
claimed Best Rebounding Honors;· Scott Fl~ch
and Kenny Caldwell won Best Free Throw
percentage, (74.2 percent); . Randy Moore won
Most Improved Honors; and Mark Murphy
claimoid the Bryce Buckley 110 percent award. .
Senior awards went to four young men having a
great high school career: seniors Shaun Savoy,
Mike Frost, Scott Fitch, and Kenny Caldwell.
The team won the 1989-90 SVAC erown with a
13-1 mark. 15-6 overall, and 24-4 the last two years.
Eastern principal Charles Moore gave the
benediction.
Awards .
Varsity boys' basketball: Shaun Savoy, Scott
Fitch. !{en Caldwell, fyllke Frost, Tim Bissell, Jeff
Durst, " Mark Murphy. Randy Moore, Jason
Hager, Matt Flnlaw, Chris Adams and Mike
Wheeler,
Varsljy girls' basketball: Suzanne Clay, Leigh
Anne Redcivlan. Toby Hill, Tiffany G\lrdner, Lee
Gillilan, Tabby Phillips, Jennifer Roush, Ste· ·
phanle Otto and Michele Metzger.
Varsity cheerleaders: Amy Murphy , Debbie
Brooks, Kym Mcintyre. Angle Murphy, Kristina
Connolly, Carrte Gillilan and Monica Adams.

.

'

.

. .

.--Meigs sports briefs---.
WILCOX DJtiVES- Vanderbilt's Derrick Wilcox (left) dr~ves
put New Orlean$' Louweegl Dyer lu thelr NIT pme Wedneaclay
n!Jht In N uhvHJe, T~nn. The.Commodorea sunk the Prl11ateen

88-85. (UPI)

.

Southem's Maynard gets
all-Ohio special mention
SeODDIITIIIII1
J
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (U)&gt;I) Marty Gazarek, North BaltJmore. S.l ,
Racine Southern's Brad -MayJunior, 28.0.
Steve Hanek, Alhtabula St . John, S-6,
nard, a 6-0 senior center·, reSenior. 21.2: · · · · .. '
·
·
ceiVed all-Ohio special. mention
Chad Olds. a.dttneatal, f&gt;2, SeJ\Ior; 2U
honors from United Press Inter.'
Jim Roediger, Sprtngfleid Catho~c. 6-4,
.
national for his efforts..In helping . S~nlor, 20.~. ,
· Rod Rose, Vanlue, 6-3, Senior, 20.4.
push the Tornadoes to the DivThlniTeam
RJcky Brown, . Mogadore, 6-3, Junlor,
Ision IV Southeast Dlstrlcfftnals.
· Maynard, one of ·five veterans -23.0.
Kyle Herndon. wayJ!KIIelti-Goshen, r.-~.
on Coach.. Howle Caldwell's
Junior, 27.1.
·
Lart;,~ Har~. Columbus Wehrle, 5-8, ,,.
squad, played In all of the
Senior, )6.2.
Tornadoes' 24 games and scored
Creed Perers, Mingo Junction, 6-2,
328 points for an average of.13.6 Senior, 19.4.
,
Ben Rosenbauer, Holgate1 6-2. Junior,
points per game.
22.7.
'
Falkaor coa~h of tile year
Spedlll
Mention
.
,
Lyle Falknor, who gulded'New
Bret BeESie, Vap Buren: Ch1: Brown, "'
BerOn Center Western Rnerve: .Brandon
Madison TI:t·VlUage to an unC~andler, Soutb Central; ~ .. r;,_q:h&amp;y, .
beaten se11son. has been voted · Hemlock
Miller; .. Eric HlritJUier,
the United Press Internationtl · . Pandora-Gilboa: Brad May..n, RadDe
boys Division .IV coach of the Soullaem::' Ryap McMaltOtl. / Gllm~r .
Acadt!111Y; Adam Smllll. "l'JIIInl Calvert; ,
year. ·_
"· ·
·
Kirk Scheckelolf, Miller City. ·
·
·
Falknqr, whose team finished
Honorable Mel)lhm
'nm Arnold, ·F reeport Lakel~nd; 'Eric
20-0 and was ranked second to·
·columbus Wehrle In the final • Beidler, IDittqJ; Mahl&lt;ll Blaclt..,ll. Rich·
mmdHelJbf$; Matt Carder,UmaCentral
UP! Board of Coaches ratings;
Ca.UioUc; 1ony Clemens, Cedarville; Jeff ·
edged out Van Buren's Lynl\
Dl ..,z. Boitl.lna: Bob Eddy, .W4"'1&amp;tleld;
Davtd ·-Hasla.m/ Craysvflle Skyvue; JayMartin by a single vote In
Sd'l Hutchlnsm, Cincinnati Country Day; ·
balloting by Division IV coaches
David H~ . Walerfonl; deft Holbert,
Gl-'er-Trmble; Craie Icemaq. Lucas:
!rom around the state.
~raJg Jo ... sm, Seven Hllb; Dave Jones,
Others receiving more 'than
S~ East; Todd JApei:, New •M:aa;
vote were Bo.b Arnzen of Delphos
Str;Ve Lo""ry, t)pper Scioto Valley; Matt
St. John's, Jim Dennis of North · MCCracken. Vln Buren: Mike Moiii'Cit,
;saltimore, , Chupk Kemper of . Po....outb flAil; Len Morris, Pitsburg
• i;ra,olllln Monroe; Lance flllller, Berlin ·
'Columbus Wehrle, Kl!'vli'l Hiland; ~.,y Pr c.b, Port.mouU. _Clq;
John Ro.;bed&lt;, Bellaire St. John; Allm·
McLaughlln of ~Iiller City and
Stryker; Brad Sites , l:iardJaGeorge . Gossman of HemloC.k . SUUivan.,
Northern; JasCII Smith, aneinnatl Cou_
n·
Miller.
try Day; Kyle Schroer, New Knoxville:
· Here's the 1990 United Press • Dave Watts, TuBCarawas Catholic;· Jasm
Bradford; TOOd Yoslck/ Buckeye
'International boys' DlvlsloQ 1V . WoOO,
Central.
·All-Ohio basketball team, lnclud- ··
Player of the • .=ar - Will 1,feadows,
tilg height, grade . and scortn&amp;,; Mansfield St. Peter.
Coadl Of lhe ~.,.-Lee Fattchoc. New
average:
Madlsm Tri-VIllage.
·•
Junior. 20.7.

•

.

•.

,Jotm Jacoby, McCol'flb, 6:-7, Senior, 26.1 . .
Steve Jetttnghotf; Delphos St. John, 6-4,
Senior, 25.8.
' Will Meadows, Mansfield St. Peter; 5-'10,

1

Senior. 32.1 .

metal, loosens rusted parts

Aara'l. Perry, South Charleston. Soutt)eastern, S.l, Senior, 29.1.

and frees sticky mechanisms
(#42150).

NHL action.:.

~

· · (Continued from Page 4)

SJ~z.)

N75-0505W-30 N75-UOSAE-30
· N75-14020W~50 N75-100 !OW-40
N7l&gt;-130 lOW -30 .

The Blues still hold a one-point
lead for tlrst place In the'dlvlslon,
but the second-place Chicago
Blackhawks have two games In
hand.
The Oilers put the gall;le, away
tri· the third period. .Vladimir
Ruzicka scored lils second of the
contest at 7: 15and Mark Messler
added his 44th for·an 8-5 lead at
18:23. '
'
·The victory kept Edmonton
four polnts .ahead of Winnipeg In
!be race for second place hi the
Smythe Division.

• After manufacturer's rebate.
'·

"

~. /o

.

'

Lawn &amp;Garden

v

.

_$2195
cmmiUJ!:AD~G HONORS ...,. .T J.e yonq
ladles~ 1pe~lal award wlnnera for c!Jeerlelid-" .
1111 at Eutern•• winter aporlll fete Wednesl!ay .•
Pictured are (L-Rl Amy Marphy, senior Award

/VlJJt

.

'

.... Mel!&amp;
Improved; Kym Mcintyre, Senior Award;
Monica Ad1111111, Mo•t Dedicated; and De)lble
Jrookl, MOit-Ontltandlng and Senior Award.
. I'

~a~... _·~(C~~~H_nu~e_d_from
__P_a~g-e3~)~~~~·--------------------

·' . Atlanta led 78-73 entering the
Buill 98, Rawu 88
kaly and his 17 points per game to
At Atlanta, . John P~IIOii . final period, but the Bulls fought
a stomach virus, and Glen Rice,
back to tie the score a't 87 with
Its second-leading scorer, went scored 11 of bls l5 points In &gt;the
down with a hlp Injury In the first fourth quarter and MlchaeLJor- · 3: 22 · left In the game
dan added 27 to .lead the Bulls.
half.
Billy Thompson and TeiU~
Frank led the Heat with 16 points .
apieCe. ·
"
. "l . tbought we battled and
811 W.MAIN
- played hard," said Miami coacb
Ron Rothstein, whOse team has
loll• four ln . a row. "We really
992-2124
cotnpeted. We had a lot of good
shOts that didn't go down, which ·
L-MI Oollvoty ~reo
Is not all that unusual tor us. Bull
th~t we made a game .ol It
,_.;_--~---~anyhow, In spite of the final
11Y----------~
OUIIIIW LAIGE ' I
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DOMINO'S

PIZZA
.DELIVERS
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DINIIII FOI
ILaHI "" s n•

score."

Bullet• 118, Ne&amp;a lH "
At Landover, Ledell Eackles
scored a career-high 40 points
lead WashJngton.Eackles and
$eraard King each scored 10
pc;lata In 23-6 run that gave the
Bullets a 33-18 edge after one
qUIII'ter. N~ JerseY lost Its
elfhth straight alld 21st In a row
on tile road.

J

"II'

II ,..,.,
WI.. '""'""·
-....
......
ClotiM .........
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I ftUJ 4-16 01. SOf11.11S

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with exchange
Here'sjustasample:
UstPrlce Sale Price
Chevrolet350(#219-7) · ·$143.64
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Designed for reliable
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Becciuse there ER no ·
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e•Hidln.i'

h;Panlt t WiOft
'

Penn State 58, Rutsers $5
At . New Brunswick, N.J ..
Deron Hayes and Edward Fogell
eacli scored 16 points Wednesday
night to lead Penn State Into the
semifinals of the Natlonallnvltatlon · Tournament with a 58-55
victory over Rutgers.

Edmonton coach John Muckier
was . relieved ihat the ieam's
s!fuggllng ~wer play, . which
connected three times, was the
key to the Oilers' · slumpshapplng victory.
"The powerplay played very
well," said Muckier. "We sc(lred
ttu:ee poW\?f·play goalS; we.
moved the puck ' very well, ..
RJizlcka and Rex! (Reljo Ruotal!· •
lalnenl played very weiJ on the .
points tonight and we got $ome
movement In iront of the , net
which created so~p.e good chances for ourselves." ·'
'
Elsewhere In the NHL, the
N'.Y. Rangers tied Toronto 5-5,
Hartford whipped Quebec H.
Buffalo stopped Calgary H ,a nd
Winnipeg edged Montreal 3-2.
·· Ran1en 5, Maple I.eafl 5
;At New York, Daniel Marois
scored his · second goal of the
~~e with eight secondsle~ In
re(llllation to' create the tie. With
Toronto skating six-On-lour, Marois beat ' Ranger aoaltender
Mike Richter to the stl~k side.
Mike Gartner sco~ his 41st of
the season and his seventh In
•-r•m ga1111!11 with tbe·Ranprs.
Whalen t, Nordlqaea. 1 ·
At Hartford, CoM., Pat Vf!r·
*k scored his 41st and 42nd •
aoals to power the Whalers. Mille
Hough scored the only goal fc?r
Qaebec, which IW WC111 onlyoaee
lit Its lallll ..... r

At least~

oldmQWer

can cut·
'

Former Meigs star Joey Snyder ol Rutland, a 5-10, 155-pound
sophomore at Kentucky Christian College will be starting
centerfield for the KCC nine this spring.
. Srtyder, In tw.o scrimmages went :.i-4 with a triple and single,
and stole three bases. He also pitched three Innings, giving up
three runs.~.
.
KCC wlll start their season this week against Cumberland
away and Charleston at home on Saturday.

'

li()illf!1t]l~ ••

thecost: a

new Snapper.

446 4524

~:

'.,'

·:

Coach Kent Wolfe's New Knoxville Rangers' season came to
an end last week when they were defeated In the reglonals by
Lima Central CathOlic, who lost to Springfield Catholic, who has
advanced to the State Tournament this weekend.
Lima defeated NK 54-51 to ending the Rangers' seasonat15-8,
the best record at the school In over a. decade.
Wolfe's club finished third In the league behind Delphos St.
John's and St. Henry's1 which both have won berths In the state
tournament In their respective divls·lons . ·

299
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Rangers' season complete

FtrliTeam · ,

Stops squeaks, protects

Vanderbilt, whtch finished
eighth In the Southeastern Conference. advanced to the NIT's
quarterfinals by beating Lol!iSlana Tech 98-90 In overtime and
Tennessee 89·85. Both of those
· games also were playe&lt;l on
Vanderbilt's home court.
The NIT's semifinals wlll be
played Monday with the championship game Wednesday at
New York's Madison Square
Garden.

Snyder to start for_KCC nine

Doug Elzler, Convoy · CrestView, 6-0,

Save up to $3.00 per case
on NAPA Motor Oil. Lill\it
one case per person or
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6

I

NITrou~

Eastern athletes honored
at winter sports banquet
By SCOTT WOU'E
.
. Senlinel CorreapDIICient
.
Winter sports athletes ahd cheerleaders at
Eastern High Sc.bool were hOnored with a very
nice potluck ba.n quet and awards ceremony hj!re
Wednesday evening In the high school
gymnasium.
Easlern High student and sports lnfomiatlon ·
director Tom Hunter served as m.a sler of
ce.r emonles and gave the opening address and
welcome.
Athletic director Pam Douthitt then made a
special presentation to honor all senior athletes
and their parents . On behalf of the athletic
boosters each athlete aitd family recleved a
flower for their years of service to athletics at the
·school. The boosters were comnwnded for ·
.
making athletics possible at the school.
Next came a dellclow;ly preP'!red potluck style
meal·, followed by the various. awards
presentations.
·
Coach Bob Lang recognized mem~rs of the
junior high girls' basketball team and Coach Don
Eichinger honored members ofthe boys' seventh·
and eighth-grade teams:
Junior high cheerleildlng advisor Tammy
Capehart made presentations to the Jr. High
Cheer leading squad, followzd by the first varsity
sport, Introduced by Varsity mentor George
Gaga!.
· ·
On behalf of Gagal assistant and reserve coach
C.D. Mcintyre awared the re8erve basketba)l
gals. Next Gaga! commended his young team on
their rebuilding year, and challenged them to
work hard for a bright future.
Sophomore guard Tabby PhUlips was recognized as the Most Improved Player, while
Sophomore Tiffany Gardner earned Best Defensive honors as well as the Best Rebounding
Award. Freshman Michele Metzger claimed Most
Assists honors and So ph. Lee GIIUlan won the Best
Free Throw Percentage award.
·Theresa Lambert was· the lone senior on the
squad.
· ·.
· Next cheerleadlng awards were made ·by
advisor Ruth Brooks, who first honored the
·reserves, then the varsity squadron. Carrte
Gillilan earned Most Improved honors, Monica
Adams was Most Dedicated, Amy Murphy , Most

1~

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I£MDI"...RII"""

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P"astUioMScl 1

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nzndt,. llsd• 22. 1880

6 The Deily Sentinel

.

'

!!.~~ .~~~'~.!:-Jvano ~!!1.,~ !8~~.!~~!:~~ ___ ..
North Carolina State basketball
coach Jim Valvano will be asked
to ·resign because of academic
problems of his players and a
patternofproblemswithcarnpus
pollee, a report said Thursday.
The News and Observer of
Raleigh quotes unnamed sources
as saying new evidence has
surfaced about academic probIems wiihln the Woltpack basket-

The newspaper had no comboard a report on previously dlsclosilre of el&amp;ht NCAA violament from Valvano, who could
unreleased complaints filed by uons within the basketball pronot be reached bY UPI early campus pollee that show a gram, Including players selling
Thursday.
pattern of some basketball play- complimentary game tickets and
At an emergency meeth\g of . ers' getting Into trouble, the game shoes.
the university's board of trustees
sources told the newspaper.
The team was pia cell on two
Tuesday, ~ Interim Chancellor .
No specific details on the years of probation and banned
Larry Monteith released a report
academic problems (lr pollee from the NCAA tournament this
about a wides!iread lack of complaints were mentioned In season. Valvano was stripPed of
academic progress by some
the published article. ·
'· . his title as athletics director
basketball players during ValvaThe newspaper's sources said when the University· of North
no's 10-year tenure.
. university negotiator Howard Carolina Board of Governors
Manning asked for one week to said no one could be a head coach
get Valvano's resignation. The and an athletics director.
trustees agreed not to release the
The university and Valvano
Hetzel of Davidson College, Totiy
negative Information about the have' been negotiating for several
Klmbail of the University of
academic problems If Valvan'! weeks to end the coach's career
Connecticut, Dlc!t VanArsdale of
resigns, but added the lnforma- at N.C. State, however Valv11no
Indiana University and orthotlon would be made public If he has a buyout clause In his
pedic surgeon Dr. Donald Baxter
does not resign,
·
contract that requires the unlverof Mercer University. Stan
•
•
slty to pay him $500.000 If he Is
Watts, former coach at Brigham
An Investigation last year by ··: terminated fQr any reason other
Young, Is the recipient of the
the University of North Carolina tlian a felony conviction or
NABC's Balfour Golden Anniversystem found academic policies lnvolvem~nt In a .major NCAA
sary Award for more than 50
had been "bent" to aceommo- violation. '
years of service to the sport.
date basketball players, but
Last month, former Wotrpack
Sumo
found no evidence' to ·support eager Charles Shackleford, now
Hawaiian-born Konlshlkl used
allegations made by spbrts au- with the New · Jersey Nets,
a relentless two-handed attack to
thor Peter Golenbock.
admitted he took cash payments
force Asahflujl from the circle
In ·the book "Personal Fouls," from two men while he was. at
and lead a trio of three wrestlers
Golenbock alleged some Wolf· N.C. State. ·
with 10-1 records on the 11th day
pack bas!tetball players mainHowever, Shackleford denied
of the 15-day Sprlng Grand Sumo
talned eligibility when falling accusations made by an anonymTournament In Osaka, Japan.
grades were changed and posl- ous person to ABC News.that the
The 513-pound American Is attlve drug test results hidden.
money was to pay players to
tempting to win hIs second
The Investigation led to a probe shave points - to play poorly on
Emperor's Cup In the last three·
·
events.
Tennis
Todd Martin of Northwestern
and Sandra Birch of Stanford
NORTH OLMSTED, Ohio pins. Steelsmlth's bestflnlsh was
retained the No ..1 poslllon among
(UPI)
- Jimmy Johnson of a second-place effort two years
men and women respectively In .
Columbus,
Ohio, took a step ago. He sat out last year because
the latest Volvo TennisColleglate
toward his first Professional of a shoulder Injury.
Ranklngs. Stanford rated No. 1
Bowlers
Association. victory
Amleto MonacelU of Venezuela
among teams·In both categories.
Wednesday when he grabbed the . and Tom Crites of Tampa, Fla.,
first-round lead In the $160,000 complete the top five. They share
Budweiser Open.
fourtli place with 1,378 each.
· Monacelli and Crites both are
Johnson scattered 1.404 pins
forhlsslxgames.Helsthesonof. fresh from top five finishes last
two-time PBA Player of the Year Saturday, In fact, Monacelli has
'oala. at MIMII
and
hall of famer Don Johnson. • dominated the tour by qualifying
New .IH_,. at W l Cift'r-1-.1 .. Alcap .
:rom
Baker of Buffalo; N.Y., . for the top five In six of the eight
Gel*t18tate .. Utah
owns
the
No.2 spot just four pins events he has bowled this year . .
MIDII!f'U at l"hoe11lx
· L..-\. OlpprrM at L.A. Laker~
behind Johnson. Baker bas seven .
Twelve games a walt the 160
PBA crowns to his credit, but jlowlers before cutting to the top
N.tTION.U. HOC&amp;EV LEAGU ..:
none In the last four years. ·,
24 Thursday for the match-plily
WaleH Cunfere.re
Pa&amp;lick IMYiiiDD
Rick Steelsmlth of Wichita,
pordon of the tournament. The
Te11m
W L T PIH. GF GA
Kan
.,the1988RookleoftheYear,
top
53 earn paychecks with the
11:-NI' Ran~" .34 U IS HI
Netlf Je...y ..... sz as ft 12 :~::
holds down third place wit1J1,379 winner banking $31,000. .

maniiJUlated to buettt
gamblers.
ABC ~~ latervlewed a man
who clabped bewu a member at
the 198'1:aB Walfpacll team and

--ys . '·.
that . SIUieldlltiJrd paid 111111 IIICf
twoaiii«JIIIiYw•tp•vepolntl.

~- J__, Mdlorlttil J'eo
ladlet an~ Ia tlleJr , .
lnvest!gatloa of !be a1Mtlltl9• ,
because of ln.uffkleat evldetlce.
••sill!'l~-------------•••*!1•
(JI.ed to

a,
'·

••

-----Sports briefs _ _ _ __
.
.Football
Hennepin County District
Judge Robert Schiefelbein, who
has been ·hearing the lawsuit
Involving control of the Minnesota VIkings, removed himself
!rom the case "as a matter of
conscience." Schiefelbein said a
March 9 decision by the Minnesota Supreme Court to send part
o( the case back to him included
advanced observations, reneelions and c"oncluslons that appear
to predict the outcome at trial. ...
Dick Biddle, the defensive coordinator at Minnesota, has resigned to become llliebackers
coach at Navy. Biddle, 41, had
been on the Gophers' staff since·
1985.
Honors
Rick Barry, the only player to
lead the NCAA, ABA and NBA In
scorhig and an eight-time NBA
All-Star, leads the National Association of Basketball Coaches
Balfour Sliver Anniversary AllAmerica team. Comprised of
collegians from the class of 1965,
the team also Includes Fred

Pro results
NATIONAL IA81UE'RALL AS SOt'.
E•lf!ra Collleret~~t''
.4ti1U1Uc Dlvllllon
Tll'IUII

" ' L Pd.

r•u.4etplia u

GB

.117 New l'.• rk ....................St 21 .... 1%:
BoA&amp;Dn •........ ·-·-····· .. ···:.lt 21 .aet , I ~

w.w ..a~o• .................u .at .ns 1nf
New .Jtr.,. ... ........... .. Js

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Cenll'l.l ·DIVIMID•

DetrvM _......................51 ts · :rn

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Chlr:qo ........ , .. ............-n !! .HI 1 %:
Mllwaukee............ ...... JS Sl .1. II
•••ua .......................33 s.a ..aM IH ~
Altaata .......... :•• ••••••••••.31

WMhlnaton .._... :13 31
PMtllhu.fiii ....... S! :JI

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Phlladelpllla .... n 31 t

10
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Clneland ......... ...........31 3S .-Itt tiV,
Orlt.nd4 .. :....................17 ' ' .m '"

WeKtern Cellference
MldWMt DIYI8kln

Teun

Johnson leads PBA tourney

W L Pet.

Oblllll Ill .111 SIUI Aatonto ................. U tl
Dallu. ........... .' .............35 2t
O.nwr ................ ....... .Jf 3CI
Houalon .. ;................... .31 3$
MIDn!I'CU ................... 11' -1!1
Charlotk' ..................... 14 SS

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• · Boll&amp;on .......... n 24
x· BuHalo ......... u •
x·Montreal ...... 31 :tl

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Portland ......................UI
Pllteeab ........................-14
Sealtlf. ................ .'........33
Goldfon St&amp;tt' .... ........... .31
LA CUp,rr11 .. ...............U
Sa(!ramellllo .... .'., ..........tl

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r1 Cl~r Coat Paint

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......

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3tt 210

p.m.~$:00

p.m,

IU till !15
1t !IS Ut

Vaacouw-r ....... l!3 41 -13

5t

Ul 21-1

(lllllfll

NY Ranpn S, Torollto S lOT)
Wlalll.,.ll. MollltUil!:
• EdmNioa8, St. LouiN t

Ill, Mlae•t&amp;a 11-1

Tlnnwd~'s Jl:ametl

Quf-hecM Butoa, 7: 15p.m .

DaUulllOrlullo, 7:31p.m.
Detroit al Houl'lfon.ll:st p.m .
Pol11an•at Man AatdiiiO, M: Sf p.m.
Den\ft' • Sfoalile, II p.m.

Frld.ay's ~l&amp;rTit'K
Atlanta ..t ..,_lOn
St~tram~o Ill Pllllll4elphla
Nf'W Vorl at CharloUr

PIUebllrrllat r.nad~phla , 7:SI p.m.
MlnftP!Iota .. Dt&gt;h'WII,1:' 35 .,.m.
Nrw .l~rlll!)' a1 Chlup. 11:35 p.m.

·1990 CADILLACS

NV MuderN ld l.o!S Aa..-lett. It: tl
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The wounded gunman was
captured buta pollee apnt said
A leflllt snWldllltlal candidate aulhorltles Were searcbbl&amp;foran
'wu llhotalldllllled lila crowded accomplice, apparently also
Bolota airport Thunday nlom- wollllded. Tbey said they did not
Ina by a gunman wbo wu then know his ldendty.
·
wOUIIded by tbe cUcsldate's
Radio re ts said two others,
bodygUardS In a gunb8ttle pollee · a securlty~Uce agent and· a
said.
·
'
· .woman bystander were also
Ber-nardo Jaramillo, candl- wounded Ill the 'attack and
date for the leftist Patriotic ensuing bat de.
Unlon party In the May 27
Jar11mlllo, described by one
electtons, was hit tWice In the Patrlot!c Union member as "the
chest aad died ata BoiQta clinic, most threatened man In Coloma nurse In the PoUce Clinic told bta," was shot as he entered the
reporters.
domesdc terminal In Bogota' s

~A COlombia (VPI) _

EldoradO IDternatlonal Airport
to fly 1o the Caribbean coaatfor a
vacation.
The politician's bodyguards
responded with automatic weapona and wounded tbe suspected
auassla, Identified tentatively
. as JalrO Resjrepo Posada and
wearing a bullet-proof . ves I, a
bodyguard told radio reporters.
Right-wing death squads
linked to drug traffickers and
members of the army have kllled
more than 900 members of the
five-year-old ·Patrlot!c UniOn,
organized by fon'r!er members of

I .

tbe COJomblu · Revolut!oaary
Armed Frontprrtllaaroupand
communist poUtlclans, by exguerrillas and communist
poUIICians.
Patriotic Union spokesman
~~ Cabrera said tbe gunman
was sitting readtna a newspaper and when JaramUio arrlv~ at the entrance of · the
airport, he got up and .~ncovered
a "' submacbtne gun,
''There was Immediate confuslon," said a newspaper vendo·r
at the airport. "Children, women

and men ran at hearbl&amp; the rirlt at tacks durllla the election camshou and 10111ht protection. ·No palgn. The party reported that
')ne knew what was 80111&amp; on."
more than 70 leftist activism
Jaramillo wu the second pre-. have been kUied this year by
slclenttal candidate In the May ?:T right-wing death squadS Unlled to
election to be attacked In less drug traffickers and soldiers.
than a year.
The death squads are believed
Liberal Party candidate Luis behind the slaylngs ,of more than
Carlos Galan Sarmiento was 900 members of the Pat nolle
killed last Aug. 18 durlnaa surge UniOn since It was organiZed In
of violence by drug trafftckers, t_h_e_m_l_d_
-1_9~-·------prompting President VlrgiUo
The Chicago River In Illinois aac:e
Barco to declare war on drug
emptied
Into Lake Mlchi&amp;an. Beealords.
of
tndustrial
pollutants 1n the rl-,
The Patriotic Union has beeR a engineers rerouted
with a
of
target for killings and other canals. It now flowsitthe
opposite way,
into the MlsaissiPl'l, accordfna to The
Kids' World Almanac.

•rl•

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Meigs
County's
Only
Children's
Specialty ·
Shop

U.S., Sovie~ Union sign pact
for $6 billion grain purchase
possibly could be signed · at the
U.S.-Soviet summit meeting lJl
June.
"It's almost a done deal,"·
Yeutter said.
The two superpowers have
relied on long-term grain agreements since lhe mld-1970s when
huge Soviet grain purchases
caught the United States offguard and emptied Its grain bins.

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' That's what they're
saying today about
A. L. Williams. In 1977,
this brand new
· c.o mpany took on the
largest, most powerful
. -I ndustry In America · the life Insurance .
·industry.
And won.
In 1988:
.
$92.3 bUllon ollndlvldualllfe insurance placed
ln force throu1h MILICO•
$257.9 bllllon total In force (more than any
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Our competition calls It "a fiuke".
·· We call It a revolution.

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PAT HILL ·FORD'S

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519· , 999

have lett rural factories hurting emphasizing agriculture, He
for cash and raw materials, Kang said agricultural credit
forcing 3 mllllon to close down or will be Increased this year by $2.1
merge with other enterprises, billion, of which 10 to 20 percent
will go to rural enterprises .
according to official statistics.
· The agriculture minister said
Premier Ll Peng said Tuesday
the government would gradually , 30 percent of rural workers who
ease 1\s austerity program, lost their jobs will return to
which has created widespread !arming and 20 perc_e nt will find
production halts· and unemploy- work In ·s mall businesses.
· The state will allocate $640
ment even as It achieved Its aoals
.,
mllllon
tomoblllzetheniinalnlng
of trlmmlng record lnOatlon and
50
percent
to work on lrrlgatlon
slowing breakneck growth.
and
agricultural
development
In · keeping with the current
projects.
government policy of re-

Qy GEORGE LOBSENZ
The Bush administration strongly opposes ,
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate leaders disByrd's legislation because of Its estimated $700
posed of one major threat to their compromise
mlllion pnce tag, but Byrd appears to have
clean air bill, but still must address a plan tn aid
ByCHABLESJ.ABBOTT
enough votes to galn·passage of his plan,
Coal miners facing job losses from proposed acid
UPI Flinn Edllor
Late Wednesday, Byrd sought to Improve his
rain control measures.
WASHINGTON
(UP!) -The
position bY modifying his proposal to provide
United
States
and
Soviet Union
The· leadership won .a key victory Wednesd~y
benefits to workers In other Industries that also
when the Senate· voted 53-46 to defeat a proposal · might be hurt by the clean air bill, such as•steel · agreed on terms for a five-year·
by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., for Environmental
grain agreement Thursday that
and chemical plant employees.
could
worth $6 billion and reProtectl9n Agency smQg reduction requirements
He also scaled down his proposed payments-to
quires
Moscow
to buy more grain
on cities that fall to take adequate po~lutiOn
coal miners - reducing their cost to $500 million,
control steps.
than
In
the
past
but gives It
he said ·- but miners stlll would get greater
flexibility
In
meeting
the goal. .
Such federal intervention Is required under the
benefits than those offered tn non-miners.
The
agreement
In
principle
existing Clean Air Act, but the compromise plan
Byrd ·said he Included benetftstor non-mbiers In
was
announced
by
the
Bush
worked out with the Bush administration would
response to objec:tlons from many senators that It
,
administration
at
the
end
of
the
make that type of EPA enforcement action
was notfalr to help miners while doing nothing for .
second round of negodatlons discretionary rather than mandatory.
other workers that might lose their jobs due to
an unusually speedy concl~lon.
Kerry contended the compromise unnecessarIncreased emission control costs on Industry.
It
would be the fourth In ·the
Ily weakened ·a key enforcement tool needed by
. Senate leailers have put off a vote on the benefit
series
of agreements ,
·the EPA to ensure state and local officials carried
proposal In hopes the White House could reach a
The adl!\lnistration said the
out the often expensive and unpopular pollution · compromise . with Byrd, b,ut the senator comagreement "represents a welcontrol, measures needed to meet fed\?ral air
plained the administration had not made any
come advance" In U.S,-Soviet
quality standards.
\
proposal to hlin.
'
relations.
• Hnwever, Senate leaders said the requirements
Byrd, the powerful chairman of the Senate
It calls for the Kremlin io buy
for EPA Intervention had not proved effective In
Appropriations Committee, said he was eager for
10
mllllon metrlc tons of wheat,
ensuring'· cleanup and that the compromise
a vote on his legislation and that he was "very,
feed
grains, soybeans and soy,promised better results by requiring ail cities In
very close'' to having enough votes to win . .
bean meal a year -1 million tons
!lOncompllance with fede~al air quality stimdards
' "It could be adopted," Byrd iJ!IId of his
more
than the minimum now In
1o reduce smog-related emissions by 3 percent.
legislation. "It might not he adopted. It's that
force.
For the first time, barley
•. They also warned that Kerry's proposal was
close."
and
sorghum
would •he Included,
unacceptable to the Bush administration and,
Byrd liald he was ,;amazed" at the support he
Instead
of
corn
being the only.
1i)us, threatened the compromise bill,-Tiley said
had gotten for his plan, given the Intense pressure
feed
grain.
'breakdown of the a~ment would jeopardize
on sena(ors from the leadership to oppose it.
Based ·on current prices, the
;Qveral! pros~s for passage of to~,~gher clean air
He noted ·many of hla supporters were from
.....latloli:
~
. .
- #-1• '"'
•
•
•
pllct
could be worth more thail $6
stites that had no coal mtnei• and would not
'.
bllllgn
In sales over Its five-year
While prevailing over Kerry, Senate leaders
benefit trom his oi1gtnal plan, but simply thougl,lt
life,
assuming
the. Kremlin
"blearly were headed for an even more suspenseiul
It was tl)e light thing to do,
'.
• .
bought
only
corn
and
wheat. The
showdown with Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., over
"They see In tills amendment the element of
prlcetag could be much hl&amp;her tr
his plan to provide special unemployment
fairness and jusdce so they are wUUng to do what
large 11mounts of ·soybeans and
benefits to high-sulfur coal miners In Appalachia . In their conscience Is light," Byrd said. •'They are
soybean meal are sold. Soybeans
and the MldW!!st likely to lose their jobs due to
willi.Dg to walk the plank and vote for this
cost
more than twice as much as
,acid rain reduction.
amendment."·
.
corn.
The clean air bill requires coal-burning power
Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell 'told
Agriculture Secretary C!aylon
plants to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions linked to
Byrd he had drawn up a possible coin promise plaD ·
. Yeutter said only a few technic a)
acid rain. Many utilities are expected .to meet , to aid displaced worker~ and that he expected to
Issues remained. He said the those requirements by switching from high-sulfur
hear rrom the White House· Thunlday about
should be ready for
coal- which Is mined In the East- to low-sulfur
whether It could form the basis for a deal.
coal.
·
'

.sl,OOO.

,.

•'

brleOng held by the National stopped production, .he said.
BE_IJING (UP!) - A ~nlor People's Congress, Cblna'snomlOnce the fas"test-growlng secChinese official said Thursday nalleglslature, said 1 million of tor of China's economy, rural
3.5 mllllon rural workers lost the workers were laid off due to a . enterprises have been.hlt hard by
their jobs last year as a result of . . nationwide slowdown of capital the country's proitrarn of ecoChina's continuing austerity constructlon&lt; .
nomic retrenchment.
program.
Theremalnlng2.5milUonweie
The program's ' tight money
Agriculture ~ln~ter He Kang, workers In rural enterprises who policies and preferential treatspeaking to reporters at a news lost their jobs when factories menl'for large slate enterprises

.1991 S-1 0 -TRUCKS

I'

$3,000°0 Off

_

8 JOIII!PR

presidenti81 candidate Jar&amp;J••illo killed by gunman

Clean Qir compromise ~hreatened
by aid plan to .help coal miners

I

1111
u.. ,.,.
n1 et7

SmJdle DIYlAion

11:-lm Anlt'le~~ .. lt

rl ~ustom Trim
r1 5Speed ,
r1 ~ear Step Bumper

CELE RATI.ON! ..

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Hartford -1, Q.lrbel.· I

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JJ 8ARAH LUBMAN ,

X-t.:llahH piaJclf berth

WedtlleMI-.,'" reulh
IID..aon IU, Clf'\/.. lud IU
l:hJcqv tt. Al ..nlll Rl
Phlllldflphla IJK; MIIITII91
lndl-113. MIIWIIIIIre H
Wao~III•Jton 151. N,_ .Jer~y 116
1'11 .....11' Ill, Plloralll HI {OT)
Saeram~o

!IS !15

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Approximately
3.5
million
rural
Chinese
!ost
jobs
.
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.EMS. makes responses
• Units of the Meigs County
heraency Medical Service re!IPOnded to five calls for assista_Jice on Wednesday.
• At ~ : 13 a.m. the Rutland unit
·W!U called to Strong's Run Road
for Edward Oalley who was
~k~n to Holzer Medical Center.

•nie Middleport unit, at 4: 19
a .m ., went to Page Street for
Kenneth HarUey who was transported to Veterans Memorial

Area

Heart Fund drive eollects $3,800

dea:um
aL ....

fi&amp;pttal.
.
At 11:01 a.m. the Syracuse unit
responded to a calion Cook Road
II) which Helen Carpter was
PaUl Wbea&amp;oia
taken to Veterans.
.
Tile Scipio Fire Department
Paul C. Wheaton, 85, of Belpre,
was called to Myers Road at 1:52 fonnerly of Hockingport, died
p.m. for a brush fire on property
Tuesday evening at the Clarki·
owned by Eldon Barrow.
bui'J Veterans Hospital a!te~ an
Wt 10: 23 p'.m. the Middleport extendedJllllela.
unit went to Riverside Apart. Bom In Hockingport, he was
ments for Shirley Roush who 'Vas , the son of the late R9bet:t ·and
taken to Veterans.
· Marte White Wheat011. He wu a
world War II U.S. Armyvet~ran.
Mr. Wheaton Is survived by 11M'
brother, Brooks . Wheaton of
Wublnlton, D.C., several nieces
and nephews ..
Brad Schwenk, Rutland, ,falled
Besldef his parents, be was
to tarp, $10 and costs; Geo111e
Preceded
In death by two broth·
Cundiff, Racine, dlsorderlywl)ile .
ers
and
one
sister.
Intoxicated, $15 and casts; Vada
Graveside
service wlll be held
Cundiff, Racine, disorderly while
Friday
at
11
a.m. at tlie Stewart
intoxicated, $15 and costs ~
.Cem!!lery near Hocklngport.
Johnny E. Donohue. Middleport,
driving under suspension, · $75 White Funeral Home Is In cha111e
and costs, thr~ days jail sus-· of arrangements.
pended upon proof of valid
operator's license; Donald E.
Stone,' Pomeroy, disorderly
while Intoxicated; $35 and costs;
Cornelius Phillips, Rutland, lit· · . In the Meigs County Court of
terlng, costs only; Isabe.l Dill, Common Pleas, Harold- Dwight
Rutland ; littering, costs•Oilly.
McDaniel has been granted
Christopher Taylor, Pomeroy,
divorce from . Janet Kay
resisting arrest, $100 and costs,. McDaniel.
30 days Jan suspended to time
served and one year probation;
Vera Buffington. Reedsville. obstructing offiCial business, $50
and cost, 10 days jail on condition
of performance of 40 hours of
community service and one year
probation, falsification, same
I :
sentence as on obstructln~ official buslne!is; Donaid Foreman,'
Bidwell, pos!il!sslon of mariJuana, $50 and costs; and Andrew
Chaffin, I..ebanon, Va., speed, S25'
· and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard
Terrell, VIrginia Beach, speed,
$60; Sanford Tolman, Mingo
Junction, speed, $80; Timothy
Ellis, Logan, speed, $80; and.
Robert Craft, Ashland, Ky .,
speed, $60.

C.

Meigs County Court
Twenty Individuals were fined
and four forfeited bonds In
W~dnesday's
Meigs County
Court.
Fined were Deborah R. Litchfield, Racine, five charges of
paaslng bad checks, $25; restitution and costs; Mlcltael Cham!lerlaln, Troy, Pa., speed, $25 and
cbsts; Rodney H. Manley, PomeO!Y, DUl, $300 and costs, three
days Jalf upon completion of
·residential treatment program,
$150 of fine and )all sentence
suspended, reckless operation,
~ and costs; Willie Jones,
Tuppers Plains, expired tags, $10
and costs; Ronald Toler. Bid·
w.ell; speed, $24 and costs; Bryon
D. Penrod, Windsor, Pa.. speed.
$27 and costs. ·
• Donald R. Crites, Reedsville,
DU1, $300 and costs, 10 days )all.
ojlerator's license suspended for
90 days: no headlights on after
s_unset, $20 and costs, no operators license, $100 and costs, 10
day )all concurrent, and failure
to control, costs only; Robert W.
Riffle, Racine, domestic violence, six months jat'l suspended
to 10 days, two years probation
and costs; Josephine Donohue,
Middleport. failure to control, $10
and costs; Catherine s. RIchards, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
speed, $22 and costs; Lisa Campson. Rutland, speed, $21 and
costs.

D

ivorce granted

a

Approximately $3,800 bu beeu
collected In the annual bouR-tohoue fund drive of tile Meigs
DlviJIOil of the American Heart
Association.
This wu tile report of MIUie
Mldldrt, treuurer, when the
dlvlllon's board met Tuelday at
Vetel'ans Memorial llolpltal.
The llllnual bo~~~e-to-llouse effort
Is In the process of bem.
completed. The board extended a
vote of, thanb · to the chair
persons and door-to-door ·
workers In the Cll.lllpalgn. Mid·
klf! .tso reported that the divIsion hu ~lved $150 In memorIals II) the late Howard Well.
James Dlebl reported on plans
for the annualaaleof carriatlons.
The division will be securing
carnations for tbe aale through
Francis Florist anc;l delivery date
for the flowers will be the first
week In May. Residents wllhlng
to order flowers may do so by
contacting Mr. and Mrs. James
Diehl, Mrs. and Mrs. Denver
Rice, or Donna Carr.
The board agreed to work In
various capacities, partiCIIlarly'
In cholesterol testing, at the
annual open house of Veterans
Memorial Hospital to be held
from 1 to 4 p.m, on Sunday. May

'

&amp;. The open llouse will mark the
opening
tile ol)lervlnce of

of the bu brought on
publll: conl!aolc)n, WllloD laid.
Nationalllolpltal Week at VeteJohD COatuzo reported tbat be
raas Memorial.
and Mn. l)leJII Will 11e aolng tnto
Rbonll• wu-, field rep~· tile elementary tcbooll, proba- ;
tative, · tepo!'ted on the new bly In May, to conduct "heart •
reorpnlzatlonal plans of tlie health" eclucatloaal Pf'OII'ams.
AnlfrJcaa Heart A.uoclatlon
Tile bo&amp;rd made te11tatlve ;
with tbe rearoupm. having little pt.ina for a picnic to be held on
effect on Metp County. She also Thul'lday, May 17, at 6p.m.,wlth
reported that 10 lJIIllctmenta a speaker to be featured.
have been returned on the state ·
Att,endlng the meeting were
level against organlzatl.ons Dr. Wilma Mansfield, president; ·
which are using "sound alike" Mr. Diehl, Mr. and Mrs. Rice,
names to conduct fund .drives. Carr, Costanzo, Midkiff, Wilson, '
Several of . these organizations Unda Haley, Sandy 1annarelU,
have "sed ~·heart'' and ''cancer''
Rhonda Dalley and Bob Hoentch;
In their·buslness titles and the use
'

·or

•

'•

AEIOIIC DAIICI
IEGINS
. _ IUICH 26, 1990 · ,,

-.

22. 1880

PropoSed...

The Dilly I Jtil:tl P 111 9

ConUnued

10 WDI SPIIIIG SESSION - '$4200 .
1Ottfo HIGH SCHOOL DISCOUNT
CLASSES: Mon.-Wtd.:

tile publll!, feel tile dlatrlc:t could
tll....... llltcountla qreed f.t the
ttn:e tbe dtatrtct was fonned to PlY •&amp;Ond portkln of Ita contrac1111'11 obltpUon to the eqtneer.
accept their ftiWiclal l'l!lpoallbMoi'Jan, apeaklng u Vinton
UU., If It beaame dec IIIII')'.
County tresaurer and not u the
only Atbelll and Melp Colulties
district's ftiCalofflcer,sald there
: bave pUt their bllll thus far.
One elivlrOIUIU!IItallat at last wu no way her ceunty could
afford to pay Ita share of the
· nJ&amp;bt'IIIMriJI&amp;·IUIII!Sted that If
dlatrlct expenses.
the o • COUilti• would pay
tbelr lbarea, then tbe district
She collld not apeak for the
would likely have t!IIOUib money
other three counties of Ga!Ua,
to meet' Ita biQ when the .next
Hockin&amp; and Jac:klon.
,
phase otenglneerlng 'tees c;ome
Of coune, once the enatneers
due In June.
have been paid off and a 10-year
management plan Is In plac:f;!, the
Jean Moi'Jan, treasllfl!r of
VInton County and flacal 'officer dlalrlct will have to maintain an
for ihe soUd' waste dlltrlct, 'Office and pay a coordinator to
Teported that the district ,has . overaee landfill operations
about ~.000 on hand right now,
within tbe district, and , that
bued upon a rateofabout$10,000
money Is suppoRd to come from
surcltaraea too.
per month Into · the district.
·Together, t&amp;e· remaiDlng four
· "It's a vicious circle," said one ·
poUcy member, "as to · wno's
counties In the dlltrlct awe about
·$27·,000. COmbine that . amount going to pay. The fact is, we're all
with the money tbe district ·golD&amp; to pay In one way or the ·
: a~ready has and aome. poHcy other. Either .through taxes or
of collection services."
.·members, as Wl!ll as members
'

. DaiiJ atcicli prteee
. (AI of Jt:lt LDL)

Brree ... llatk Smltb

Tua.-Thurs.:

ol illunt, Bll., ~ LoeWI

30,.

· Am ~tctric Power .............
.' AT.-r .. : ..... ..........._. ..... : ........ 42
· Ashland Oil ........................35\ol
Bob Ev~ns ............ .. ............ 12%
. Charm big Shoppes ............... 9\ol
• City Holding Co............ ; .....13~
' Federal Mogul. ..... !.............18%

E3EF3KLINE

Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .........., .37'f'1
Heck's .................. ............... 3Y,
•
Key Cen turton .................
,... 14I
'Landa' End ......................... 18%
Umlted Inc.., ......................40~
Multimedia lnc.....................79
Ru Restaurants .................. 2'4
Robbins 1: Myers ..... ........... 16\ol
Shoney's Inc...... ................. 12%
Star Bank ........................... 18~
Wendy's Int'l.. ................. .... 4%
Worthlngtoti Ind .. ................ 21!1.

:west Virginia man pleads
·:innocent
to ·OhioariS death
.
.
.

IRONTON, Ohio ' (UPI) - A , ' Ping, aggravated murder and an
. West Vlrglnl&amp; inan charged with · unrelated count of felonious
, murdering a Lawrence County assault.
•store clerk . lut summer has
Copley a!Jeaedly kidnapped
pleaded Innocent.
and stabbed Paula Kelley, 26, In
. Michael Glenn Copley, 33, of
the heart durin&amp; the July 28, 1989 ·
Wayne County, W.Va.,descrlbed
robberY of the Ports lnternaby Lawrence County Sheriff Dan
tiona! convenience store 111 Atha·
·, Hleronlmus as a "transient drlfIta where she was a clerJt, If It Is
ter"llvllig' In GalUa CountY at the
prove• tbe kll\m. OCCIIrred dur·
time of the murder. waa ' held
lng the · robberY, Copley would
' wltbout bolid. after 'b ls arraignfal.'e the deal~ penaJty.
ment Wedllellday .' He was tnA trial date In May will be set.
· dieted last week on ,charges of said Lawrence County Common
· agl1\favated robbery, kidnapPleas Judge W·. Rlcbard W~ton.

i

,._,
~

~Restraining · order sought

;
,.

:a~i~t

j

,

- ,

C9lumb"(.t8
facility
.
. .
..

COLuMBU~. Ohio (UP!) there,'''· Cefebrezze said.
"ohio Attorl)eY General Anthony
In 'addition to the health
Cele~ Jr. ,·ts "seeking a
department Investigation, Ceterestraining order against a Cobrezzeaaldhe~redanlnvestilumbus nu~l~..~ callln&amp; . - IJ,~IL - ~ i!1P own "whlcll may

'

CbriiUna H. stover bu been
named admlnlatrator of Plea·
santValley NunlngCareCenter,
according to Michael G. Sellards,
executive director of Pleasant
Valley Hospital. PleasanWalley
Hospital, Inc., owna and operates
tbe' Nuratna Care Ceater, a
100-bed lkDied nunlq faclUty,
llx:ated ID PoiDt Pleuaat.
Stover earned bar Bacbelon
Dejxee lnaoctal ~from West
. Vlrglllla State Collep ID 19'15 and
her Masters Dellft In business
admlnlltratlon !rem Marshall
UniVersity In 191!2. ,
· Prior to jolnlnl Pleasant Vi!l·
JeyNuntneCareCente",ahewas
&amp;taft ICCOIIDtant and . general
ottt~:e manaaer for Trenton M.
,Stover: CPA In Pplnt Plea8ant.
. Sbe previOusly worked with the

BEF

NEW
SHIPMENT OF BERKLINE RECLINERS
.
.

.

W~ll-away ltdlners; .ock·O·Loungers, Swivel lock•r·lecliners, Swivel Rockers
You'llloya ,the great -new fabrics in an array of colors.
.,
Berkline Furniture exceeds Industry Quality St•ndards. so
you can buy With confidence . .

.

Friendly Salis Clerks Will He,lp You In
Selecting Your Chair.
FREE DELIVERY
'
SALE
REGULAR
PRICE
PIICE

,$249-

NOW ..,$'~19·9
.

$329

S263
NOW $295
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.

$369
$389
$439
.$469
$499

NOW

NowS34.9·
•
Now·S3J5
NowS399.. .
•

•I•.

"

:~Ohio· news 'briefs---.
.'Flying kite.' boniber on display
'

WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio (UPI)- A
wooden-frame bOmber with a fabric cover of Jrlsh linen was
towed to the Air Force Museljm Thursday ifter a two-year
restoration.
·
· ·The Capron! Ca 36; one of only five multi-engine airplanes left
from World War I, Is on loan for at least 10 years from the
Capron! family In Italy, said Nick, Apple, museum spokesman.
Membeta of the Capron! ramllY ar.e to be on hand for a public
presenfation of the plane Saturday at 10 a.m. at th~ museum.
"Among tile world's 'first strategic bombers," the bl-wlng
Capron! waa used by the Italians to fly over the Alps Into what Is
now Austria and Hungry toward the endoftbewar, Applesald.
It could carry .a crew pf four and Just under a ton of bombs.
The plane lias a 74-foot wing span and Its wooden frame Is
stretched with Irish linen, a fabric used for early aircraft, Apple
Y Said.
·
,
•'This thing looks like a flying kite," he said. "It looks out of
place In today's society."
'I.

,

,

..

Sto•.ln A•• Look Ovt' 01r Ntf.
. Strl•a Arriitltl · . .
t }.

DINING F•iiTUIE, GU..I 'OCIQS,.
.. .OOMS and 110111
. ·

ble for allowing this Intolerable
situation to cic:cur."
Health Inspectors found severa! vl9latl~ during a.surprise
visit to . .the home this week,
otncl_als said. Their repOrt said
one female patient was "thrashlng In bed, her left wrist ... ·so
tightly restrained th·at her arm
had .SI\'Ollen ,to approxlmat'ely
twice Its normal ·stze."
·

"

~

buy 7-Eieven

Department of Human Resour-

ces aa a social worker t.lld with
the Department of Human Services In Mason County.
"We are pleased-to have Mrs.
Stover as a member of our health
care team," SellarciJ saY•· "Her
combined experlen~:e In social
work and business will be or
great benefit to our fac1Uty, lbe
patients we serve and their
families."
' , _
Stover Is a membi!r · of the
Tu·Endle-Wel Garden Club' and
Trinity United Methodist
Church, and Is a BrOWIIIe Troop
leader.
.
She and her husband, Trenton,
are the parents of two children,
Sarah and Joe and reside In Point
Pleuant:

.,

'

CHRIS'I1NA. H. STOVER

Chlldblrth education Is an
learn techniques for dealing With Classes held each month, feature
Integral part the single-room,
labor 'llnd delivery. Including a slide program d~slgned to
famlly~entered matarntty care
bre!lthlng and· relaxation. Kl~- appeal to children between the
proaram Pleasant Valley Hofpl- chen says brl!athlng techDiques ages or 2 and 12.
tal brlnp t!lOUrcommunttywlth . learned durllig the program ire · The program, taught by Pleathe opentna of Its "Creations" helpful during the early stages·of sant Valley Hospltlll ob§tetrics
unit, according to Jeri Kitchen.
tabor even It tile mother has . nur~s. reinforces the Idea that
R.N., maternal/child health cor- ·, chosen an epidural delivery:
· the new baby Is "our baby" and
rdlnator at the hospital.
The class also features. lnfor- not just Mom and Dad's. In
Pleasant Valley Hospital
matlon on options available addition to the slide program.
offers a variety o!. classes de- · during delivery, what you can dolls are used to teach the "big
signed to meet the needs of the expect to occur In the hospital,
kids" how to bottle feed, dtaper
entire "expectant': !amlly.
..-.breastfeedlng and bottle ,feedlng and hold their babies.
"Beginnings-." the early preg- ' ;md parenting.
Kitchen says children get the
nancy program, Is designed to
Kitchen, who Is certified by the most benefit from the program If
acquaint the newly expectant Council of Childbirth Education they attend a class close to their
mother with the changes occur- Specialists as an educator In the mother's due date because then it
lng In her body and In her life. field of family-centered and seems more real to {hem, and
Information on nutrition, exer- psychopropoylactic (Lamaze)
they are more likely to reclse and parenting ts tnchided In childbirth preparation, teaches member what' they learned.
. ·
these classes, whlcli are offered · At the close of the class ,
the program .
"BirthRlte," the prepared . fnie to the public as a service of children receive a swclal certlflcate and button showing that
chlldbirth program,!~ a six-week Pleasant Valley HospitaL
modlfled·Lamaze course de"Big Kids and Babies" is a they are a certified " big kid."
signed for the woman In her program designed to help preFor more• information, about
seventh month or pregnancy.
pare older children for the programs sponsored 'by "CreaShe and her support person will arrival of a new family member. tioris" at Pleasant Valley Hospital, call (304) 675-4340, ext. 253.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is
creating a new experience In
childbirth for' the women of our
community with the opening this
month Is "Creations"., a maternity care unli des~ned to prOmote family unity and ertbance

· ~~;~·!·::~~~~~~:;,~~:!.at~
Ser:~:s·r~~:~di~~~o:. Trl-

County area for Its progressive
and family-Oriented maternity
care. the' hospital hks taken that
concept one step further will\ the
development of Its single-room
LD~:tp., l!)llt, that Incorporates

sophlstlcat!!d delivery !Jptlons.
The development · of the unit
came out of the Increased desire.
of · women today, and their
famllles. to play a more active,
involved role In the maternity
experience.
women who choose to have
their babies at Pleasant Valley
Hospital will labor, deliver, recmier and receive postpartum
care (LDRP) In the same room.
And because each of the unit's
seven rooms are private, the
mother may keep her newborn
with her throughout her stay .
maximizing the bonding process
that makes a. close, healthy
relationship between mother and
child.
The hospital's skUied · obstetrics ' nurses have beeri specially
trained to provide comprehensive care to both the mother and
her Infant, and will · provide
support In every aspect or
newborn care and- parenting
techniques .
•
Each of the rooms on the new

a

unit feature. home'llke decor.
wltll soft lighting; d~llcately
printed wallpaper, recliners and
rockers. Specially designed blrthll)g beds make It .unnecessary
to divide childbirth Into distinct
stages, with the mother moved.
from one area of the hospital to
another, Medical equipmen('ts
out of sighI until needed, then '
col!venlently within reach. And
after delivery , the room returns
to Its homelike atmosphere.
In the event that a woman ,
·requires a caesarean birth, the
hospital's state -of -the-art
surgery suites are aval)able to
prolld'e that gpeclallzed care,
,.
Mothers who have a caesarean
birth will return to their private
room .on the "Creations" unit.
wher.e they will enJoy all of the
· benefits the unit has to 'offer.
In addl1ion to the seven birthing suites, " Creations" has a
fully equipped new.born nursery,
where babies who require special
medical attention, or whose
mothers need to rest or receive
special care. may stay. Tliere Is
also ah outpatient room wh~re
expectant mothers may come for
certain prenatal tests.
The emphasis at "Creations ·
will tie on providing safe, quality

'

Mostly cloudy 'rbursday ntglit, :
with a low near 40. Chance of rain :
Is 20 percent. Partly cloudy ·
Friday. with highs between 45 :
and 50.
055lru bx be-extended: 52 03-22 :
Extended forecul
Unseasonably cold through the ·
period. Generally fair Saturday. : .
with a chance of snow In the :
northern partofthestate Sunday .·
and Monday. Highs will be In the ::
30s Saturday and ranging from ·:
the mid 30s to the mid 40s Sunday :.
and Monday. Over 'light lows will :
be In th 20s early Saturday and :
ranging from the mid 20s to the ·.
mid 30s Sunday and Monday :
mornings.

.

.•
,

VETERANS MEMORIAL
•
Wednesday admissions '·
-none.
Wednesday dlscha~ges - ;
Donna Morrison, Dorothy · Gil-':
more, Mae Lightfoot. James :
Hayes, Ancll Burbridge, and :
Roland Glenn.

Cbeck Our .

.EASTER
Reg. 591

MARSHMALLOW

EGGS

GRASS

NOW

Baseball sign !fP
Pomeroy Youth League Baseball sign up will be held Saturday
at 10 a.m. · at the Pomeroy
· Elementary School. Theleels$11
and those signing · up must ·
provide a copy of their birth
certificate If they did not play
last yeat.

-·

Hospital news

anci cost-effective naternlty
care, while fostering family
unity.
For more Information about
Pleasant Valley Hospital's new
·'Creations'' unit , call 't he Pubic
Relations · Department at
(304)675-4340. eJ~:t. 2~3.

CARTON OF 12
Reg. 69 1

39(

NOW
RUSSEU
STOYER

STOVER .

EASTER BASKETS

.

PEANUT BUmR
RABBIT

Reg. 's2.9S ...... $2l9

Reg. 65• ,

sus ...... $144

NOW

RUSSEU STOYER

47-;
'"

5 OZ. - Reg. $1.95
I

s 44 .

MILK CHOCOLATE
CREAM EGGS

Joint 'venture draws criticism '

....... ...

·weather

'Creations' planned at PVH

.

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -An announcement from Akron City
... Hospital that It has entered a joint venture With Ritzman
· Pharmacies Inc. of Akron Is drawing crlllclam.
So,me competing· pharmacies claim the deal creates a
monopoly and call It unfair since they did not. have the
OPf.!lrtllnity tO bid for the arr&amp;np!Jient.,
_,
.
'I feel trade has bee!! l'fttrlc:ted by thll ajjlieenl.ent,
considering we were exCluded _from ever negoUaUng or being
part of a bidding procesa," said Barry Klein, manaaer of·K ieln's
Option Care.
"The big question Ia, how did this decision come about?"
• Klein said. "Why would one pharmacy In particular be cho~n
an.d the albers clOit!d out? And If tbere wu a l*d for 111cb a
thing on the ltoapltal grOUDciJ, bow was the deelalon made for
Rl ......an?"~
. '
:
·
- •
_Hotpl~ otftclala we,.e.not available for comment,

DALLAS (UPI) - Southland
Corp., parent company of the
7-Eieven convenience atore ·
cbaln. announced Tbunday It :·
will .ell 75 percent of tbe world' • :
lareest convenience chain to Ita
buslnesa parurer In Japan.
·Ito-'iokado Co., Ltd., Japan'• .
lart~est retatler. said In Tokyo '
that It w111 purciha.e three- .
four~ or Southland Corp. for ;.
$.00 million In cuh.
5
. Southland Chalnnan John P . ·:
Thompson said the sale wu the ·,
option choeen during six
·
:
mo.nths of discussion to
· .
"maintain the long-term vlabll- ·
lty and sitcCI!I!I of Sou \bland." ·:
Ito-Yokado, In a statement ·
released In Tokyo, conflnned tbe :
purchase o!three-fourths of what :
Is the world's· largest conven· :
lence store opf;!ratlon.
,
.
The transactlon. the late'St In a :
recent string of high-profile ·
Japanese purchases of American :
assets, was made necessary :
because of Southland's $1 .8 bll, ·
lion debt. Thedebt'wascreatedln :
1987
·.

Childbirth education classes
set
.

t~~~ij~\Up'. tJI.:,tlle. l!om,e ·~-~~ttr:.~==~"l(.r.~·:~~}~~~~\t:.~llff.f

Celebrezze flied tb~ acUon
.Wednesday tn· Frank}ln County
Common Pleu Court on behalf of
the Ohio DepartnJent of Health
· against the Elmlngton Manor ·
nursing h~e. A hearing was to
·be held 'fllul1tday on the attorney
;general's iJIE!Quest.
· ·"We are taking ,all possible
"legal and admlnlstr.atlve action
to protect the •. patients &lt;whllllve

]apane~e

Stover named administrator

trcm pap 1

----stooks----.---

CAIILI1CHI SCHOOL, Syr•••1 Ohio

Conrail ... __,._.:::co:.:n:.::tl:::n.:;ue:.::d~f:.;ro:::m::..p!::a:!:g::.e.:.1...;·_· _ _ _ _.:...
other bolts that held the sWitch to ported that the vehicle landed In
the lie. The sheriff's report a ditch on Its right side In frorit of
s1&lt;1ted that ihe vlj)ratlon of the the Willis residence.
Ganns was cited for falling to
passing train caused the switch
maintain
control. Moderate damto move. The report went on to
age
was
lis
tell to the tr\lck. There
say that. had 'the switch moved
While the coal tral n was p&lt;~ssing, were no injuries and it was
there would have been Injuries reported that It took approximately .two houi'S to clear the.
and considerable d11rriage.
Dan Jones, track supervisor, of scene.
Sheriff ~ameS M. Soulliby
New Lexington, was on the scene
reported
,Deputy !:larry Lyons,
»"th a nu,m~~ of emploj~,ees, ,
while
'"
making
'. routine ' patrol
In other matters, deputieS
lnvestlgated.two as:ctdents which . Wednesday _mQrpll)g 11round 2:40
occurred Wednesday. . ·
a.m., discovered that three vehl- ·
~ 'Ole fllllt ua~ldent haPpen'll! ;;:; !l~,,p!IJ.'k~ a), tl!e Park ~d Ride .
around '12: l!J a.m. on Columbia '6n Rbli\h'llad been enl$-ed. He
Township Road 13. According to went on the say that n9tes were
the· report. Richard Cooper, 29, left by the deputy for the .owners
Athens, was traveling east on the 'to contact the sheriU:sofflcey;lth
road when he pulled to the rtght · reference to any stolen articles.
for an approaching vehicle. In - The . repor.t stated that the·
the process, his 1985 Ford struck vehicles were owned by Beverly
a 1973 Ford that was parked and Whittington, J11mes Michael .
owned by Rex Cheadle, Route 1, Reynolds, and Brenda Fry .. It
Albany. Both vehicles sustained was reported that the side
moderate damage. The report windows had been broken opt and
stated that there was no contact the radios taken. Reynolds re)fetween the moving vehicles. ported that other Items taken
The . accident is still under from his vehicle Included a chain
investigation.
saw, radar detector, scope,_biThe second accident occurred noculars, speakers. a tool set, an
Wednesday evening around 5 ax, a coat, and cassette tapes.
Finally, Sheriff Soulsby rep.m. on New Uma Road, approxlmately one and a half mile out of ports that 26 year old Daniel Leon
Rutland. Accordlngtothereport, Guthrie, Athens, was arrested In
Jeffrey L. Gann, 31, Senecaville. Athens on Wednesday evening on
driving a Christman Enterprise a warrant charging ~ecelving
truck (1972 Mack model), went stolen property. He Is Wing
. held
ott the roadway on the right as he In the Meigs County Jal pending
was traveling south on New Lima a preliminary hear g. The
Meig,s
Road. The truck was loaded with charge Is a felony fl'
large stone thatis being used on a County Court, according to the
reclamation proJect. It was re- ~herlff.
,

.........,, Mad:

3'1t oz.

WitTMAN'S.

-

$

·· PEANUTTY BUNNY · .
SOUD lUNNY
WITH tiiSPS . NOW ,,

leg. '2.15

149
•

DIGITAL QUARTZ
WATCHES

MOTRIN II

CAPLETS- SO's

~NlY S3 69

ONLY

S2 99
I

Police recruiting unfair: NAACP
DAY'roN,

01110

(UPll -An NAACP chapter alleles black

people applylq to become D.ytba polce offken ant Illig
re)eated on tbe basil cit credit ratllap and
m~OI'

,.wr

FlEE
DIUYIIY
n •
0...,

recorda.
.
·
·
Tbe Rev. W.T. Head, chief IDWIUptar ~or tbe Dl:y1oB
NAACP, said Wedllr hy wblte appllc1,11te with IIIDIIar
baclljj1'ouDdJ have beell accepted tor pollee n!Cl'lllt cwa..
Mayor Richard DlxoD ordered u ln-tlpUoa Into the
cbargel. Saadra H~lllllld oltlle Qlvlllel'vl~:e board, said a
1-eport ahould be ~
by Wdll1 Say.
'Head sa1d tbe lt:ACP l:il NCeiYed four comp.tnta
concer,nlli&amp; the board ID tile put week. ,

····"·

........
• lelollllp.M.
...... , .. . . . . . . 4:110 p.M..

I'II.CIIII'f-

1...

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. 0,'!"~

IUICI16,
1991

•z---.OM.

PH.

I

�The Daily Sentinii-Pagl 1,

The Oaily Sentinel~

By The Bend

P•a• 10

.
;
.
pter meeting held . · . ~

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

Community calendar

Sorority

A necklace maldq meettne

was held recently by members of
THURSDI\Y
on Friday from 8-:-l1 J!.m. MUJic
MEIGS -The Ohio Valley will be pl'bvlded by the Happy
Church of God, Route 50 East,
HoUow Boys from Athens. Adwill hold a revival through mission Is $11 per person and those
Sunday at 7:30 nightly: The · attending are to bring snacu for
evangelist will be Joe Beasley.
the snack table. The caller Is Jim
Carnahan.
REEDSVILLE- Th!!l'e will be
revival services at 7 p.m. nightly
BURLINGHAM -The Modern
Thursday through Sunday at the Woodmen Youth Club will sponFellowship Church of the Naza. sor a family program on Friday
rene In Reedsville with Rev. at 7 p.m. at the woodmen ball.
James Kittle, Winchester, Ky. Music will be by Denver Rice and
John Douglas, pastor, and the the Bedford and Lodl History
congregation, Invite the public to Group will be there and slides
attend.
will be shown. The public Is
Invited.
·
MIDDLEPORT -Evangeline
Chapter -No. 172, Order of the
TUPPERS PLAINS -There
Eastern Star, annual Inspection, will be a soup supper on Friday at
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. Inspecting the St. · Paul United Methodist
officer will be Deputy Grand Church In Tuppers Plains from
·
Matron June Scott. Home chap- 5-7 p.m.
· ROCK OF AGES -Leo L. Vaurltu recenpY reiW'Ded frcim
ter grand organist will be Bea·
·
attendlnr
a aemtnar oa memorial coiiJI!IMjllar. The day Joar
trice Kuhn. All members are
POMEROY -Any Individual
seminar,·
held
... Colurnbua, wu apouured by :Raek of Area
urged to !lttend.
Interested In working with the
Corporatloa.
It'
a
purpoee wu te.broaden lklllll In famtlyplallntar
1990 census may take that test at
aad
selection.
Lo18D
Moaument Company hu offteea In Lo18D,
POMEROY - The Women's the Meigs County "Library on
Pomeroy,
VInton,
Wellston,
,a nd Circleville. The company dltea
Fellgwshlp of Meigs County Friday. Test limes are 9:30a.m.
back
te
18111.
·
Churches of Christ will meet at and 1: 30 p.m. Those taking the
the Pomeroy Church of Christ on test must provide two forms of
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Identification. For more Information contact the library. , .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. ·and Al-Anon will
MEIGS -The Bosworth Counmeet Thursday at 7 p.m. at ihe cil 46 R &amp; SM will hold a special
Sacred He;~rt Catholic Church. - meeting Friday at 7: 30 p.m.
For lnfo.rmatlon call There will be work In the super.
1-800-333-5()51.
excellent l)laster.degree. ,
Thelma Giles was the hostess
flowers, and Weeds, In Thier
•
for
the
March
meeting
of
the
Final Stages," by Jane Ember·
REEDSVILLE -The River•
SALISBURY '- The Salisbury
Fernwood Garden Club.
ton. She stated thar'P(i(ts--are the
view Garden Club will meet Elementary Basketball Banquet
Ida MurPhy called the meeting , fall and winter shapes of plants.
. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the will he held Friday at 6 p.m. at
to order and all repeated the club
Mrs. Embertson had researched
Reedsville Church of Christ.
the school. A pizza party will be , coUect. Mrs. Murphy had devothe book three years by studying
Hostesses will be Betty Boggs, held.
tions using an article and poem,
the plants all seasons, and
Klla Young, and Nancy Wachter.
"spring Fever" by Edgar A.
watching
their progress. She
, MIDDLEPORT - Raymond
Guest,
and
a
"After
the
Winter"
stated that. there are five differPOMEROY - The Preceptor Rice will be the featured speaker
by Helen Steiner Rice.
ent
areas for different types of
Beta Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma at the Weslyan Bible Holiness
Roll call was answered with - pods. · The areas · are, an open
Phi Sorority will meet Thursday Church, Peat! Street. on Friday,
members sharing something un·
area, wooded . area, wetlands, .
at 6 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Saturday, and ' Sunday at 7:30
usual
they
had
foun&lt;!
In
the
woods
and rushes, and ,wlnter
grasSes
Church Parish House. Members p.m. nlghtiy'i The public: Is or meadow.
·
'
skeletons.
Yhe also said that
are to bring a sack dinner. Invited to attend.
.•
The regional . meeting was weeds are riot detrimental but
announced tor April 28 at the · are 'used as food for animals and
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Hocking Valley Motor Inn In
birds, and for conservation. A
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
The Salem Township Trustees
N~lsonvUle hosted by the Athens
week
Is an uncultured plant and
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
will meet Saturday at 9 a.m. at
County Clubs. The morning ses·
the pod Is the container or vessel
have a round and square dance
the Salem Fire Hall.
slon will feature Connie Hill,
to hold the seeds. Several trips to
herbalist, and the afternoon different areas are . needed to
1
program will be "Prelude of know when to harvest.
Spring Designs" by Myrna Cor: · During the social .hour, Mr.s.
•
dray, Ohio Association of Garden · Giles served refreshments and
Club chairman of junior garden
showed a video of the Rutland,
clubs.
National
Garden
Club
.
Pomeroy, and M!dd'teport areas
Lrrt'LE PRINCESS - Me.'
Week Is Aprll 8-14 and.Arbor ay of about 1935, and also of one of
lanle Reaee Matthews, gran~- , .
ts' April 27.
·
the frog jl!lllpjl In Pomeroy. ·
daughter · of Mr. and Mra.
Jan
Harmon,
state
president,
The hostess had two arrangeDavid Matthews, McMurray. t
sent
a
letter
telling
of
a
wildments of wild drle,d grasses and
Road..Rutland, was chosen as
flower and butterfly quilt to be pods and she also gave a packet
the 1989 Homecoming Pringiven away at the state conven- of wUd flower seeds to those
cess for the SOphia Mld1et
tion on Aug. 2 at Avon On The named and Kathryn Johnson,
Football Team, the "L'Ittle
Lake.
All money · from this Wilovene Bailey, Helen Eblin.
Hawks.'' She Is a cheerleader
project
Will be used for the
Evelyn Thoma. Suzanne Warner.
and In the third lfade In
scholarship fund .
and
Marge P\lrtell. .
Sophia, W.Va. She was preThe
time
for
the
club
meetings
The
next meeting will be he!!!
viously a first grader . at
has been changed to 1 p.m. each at the Zion Church of Christ on
Harrisonville Elementary.
meeting day.
April 17 at 1 p.m. with Helen
For the program. Mrs. Gll!!S Eblin as hostess. The program
reviewed a book "Pods, WildWill be ,on propagating Lllles.

19 at the senior citizens center In ;
Pomeroy. This will aiJ.o be a ..
necklace making meeting so ,
members need to bring suppUes. · ;
Founders Day will be held '
April 261n GaiUpolls at the Down . ,
1
Upder Restaurant.

the XI Gamma Epjlllon Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at the
aenlor · citizens' center In
l'Om!!l'oy.
All conipleied necklaces
should be turned In as soon as
possible. It was noted that group
Ellen Rife lost the most weight
In the Monday night class of
was accepted to sell !'ecklaces at
tbe Athens Craft Show on May 5
Sllndenlla held at Five Points.
and 6, which ~Ill be sponsored by
There was a tie for runner up
the Lions Club.
~ ..
between Judy Ebljn ani! Mary
Browning.
The next meetlnr will be April
5 at the home of Jenny Smith In .
In theTuesdayevealngclassat
Gallipolis at 7 p.m. Members are
Mason, W.Va. the bestlo.s erwas
to meet In the upper Pomeroy
Carol McClure and the runner up
parking lot at 6:15 p.m_ This . was Kathy-Honaker.
meeting will also be the ritual of
New members are now being
jewels tea and Installation of
acceptelllnto the classes. JoAnn
officers.
Newsome Is lect\lrer for the

Slinderella meets

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COUNTRY DECENCY: Country singers EIIUIIJIH Barril
and Rl~ Skqp agree that there's l!(lme trashy music.around
. but they stlll oppose mandatory warning labels on records.
They both testified Tueaday before a Teii'nesse Leglal(llure
committee that· Is conslderlnJ a propollal to put wahllq
stlck!!l's on sonp that' touch on luiclde; fell, vlo~cepr &amp;up
and akollol. Harris who ·~,a prt~ll'ent of the Country Millie
Foulldatlon, said olfenslv' lyrics are ·a "cry for help:' by
troubled songwriters but saya warning Iabeii stlll aren't 1 gold
Idea. '"~'here Is music out there today that frightens me," abe
•ald. "We might succeed In eliminating some of this •!?ft o~t
thm! the truh, but It would also Inhibit the Industry. Sbe 1
also ~ncerned because. her 20-year-old daughter woru In a
record store. "If the bill paises, my 20-year-old would be Ill
d1J11er of belnr arrested for seiUnr records to minors," 1he
said. Tile lobbying worked. The proposed legislation wu kllled
by a subcommittee Wednesday.

.

..

..

'

'

.

4th Annual
Spring Sale-A-Br8tion

' ~.

1
,. I

~

~\
,.

'""
:;, ·
''' ' n' ~

~
)/' '

t'

,:·~
.. · :
'• '
7.::

I

'

.

·Aslro vans
• Rai$ed Roof Vans (That Wll Ftt k'l7' Garage)

•Leather Seats
• Pbwer SealS
• Power Tri·Fold Bods

• Stalllard Varo·

• COOlers

• COiorTVS

• Rac»r Octeckll's
• Oualitpo LUIIU"f Pri::e . We\18 Got Them All!'!

• G-20 Vans (f(jl Sjze)

30 Vans Must Go!! Plus Up 'ro $2,000 Cash Back!

·Video Cassene ~e rs

1989 BUICK SKYLARK
PONTIAC GRAND AM

1990 GEO PR!ZM
AIA ..... k;, 111 ~-iftl, .-.: 11 Q~Ui~ l
_-,_E""''
(~llO C IIOOSii l-110\1)

Delivered~

Deliverea·

,,.~

·

'\

1\IIIOIMIII:, 111

Nl··HM.. Can. Eat

Delivered'

SUND~

'

.

" '
tRADE ANI' OIDMOWB! AND SoftiE .
ON ANEW SNAPPER DUlliNG AU-AMERICAH liiADtNG DAYS. ·

This coupon entitles you to our
AII•You•Can•Eat Sundae Bar FREE
.
when you purchase our Shrimp Oinner Spec/s/at$3./19.

.

. · •EGGS •STUFFED ANIMALS
•CERAMICS .•EXCELSIOR

W •. '-k&gt;lli

Del:vored'

.,
. Only

PONDEROSA®·

EASTER DECORATIONS :

•·

"'""'i!KIIin,,

~ cr wtndaWI. poo.n:r dul.or

ALL BRAND NEW
1990 PONTIAC GRAND PRIXs

THECosr

~\­

BAR

· )·!'~o~ WICIEI EASTEI · .
~'f-.w .
' BASinS ·. -.
.

DISCOUNTED
$3,000'

·$9,999&gt;envered'.·

•••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••

I

FASIION GlASS ·

• . SPECIAL PLUSI EAml

CASH
BACK
UPTO

BUlin E'IS ·
. ., , C
FGa liDS ........·..........

$2,000

Wmla•s.lo l'lllcilst

Of CAKTOI Dml CAIDS•
·, , YOUR 1990 EASTER
HEADQUARtERS!!!
.
.
. "'· .
'•

I

I

· BOXEO &amp; ASSOR'fED EASTER
CANDY AND .EASTER BASKETS ·

~

· Sale Priced: $16,999~$35,999!

Over $2,000 1000 Of Custom
Van Inventory In Stock!
80 Conversion Vans In Stock!

/'.·.

.

~

,.

Announcing: TOM PEDEN'S

. ·\

with your Shrimp Dinner Special!

NA'I'UUL

the s ewage searching for
plunder. ·
Robinson hopes they will flnd a
valuable coin to help pay · the
city's bills - such as a $10,000
fine from the California Regional
Water Quality Control tloard for
sewage spills Into Deer Creek .
"The city could conceivably
find a coin worth $50,000. That Is
definitely a possibility, " Robinson said . " We already have an
1895 quar ter," worth about $35 . ·

160 Vehicles Must Be Sold!!
500 Cars, Trucks &amp; Custom Vans In Stock!

AII•You•Can•Eat

P

nickels, .71) dimes, 209 quarters
and four 50-cent pieces.
That adds up to just $149.65.
But Robinson, an· avid cqln ·
collector, says the city could hit
the jackpot by finding a single old
coin.
. An Auburn sewer service hired
by the city Is sucking the
underground lines clean wltlj. a
large hydraulic pump. The slime
Is taken to the public works yard
and city crews - like modern·
day prospectors - pick through

;

I

Clip the coupons below and geto.ur

'

•

years old and ·have never been
·cleaned. They have tremendous
potential," ltdblnson said. "We'll
find something out there that' Is
valuable."
The 144-year-old Sierra mining
town began cleaning 17 miles of
municipal sewer lines earller
this month after · clogged lines
caused a half-dozen raw sewage
spills last year.
So far, with about half of the
lines cleaned, the city has found
2,258 coins: 1,060 pennies, 274

VQeltdJJir-ltSMil'llt WMTA£

-

i··\

iussili novil

I ·

NEVADA· CITY, 'Cal!f. CUP!)
- In a city where gold prospectors swarmed more than a
century ago with dreams of
striking It rlch, officials now hope
their muck·fllled sewers will
yield hidden treasures to help
them· pay their bills.
Nevada City Manager Beryl
Robinson Jr. said he expects to
find old coins In the smelly waste
that will allow the city to remodel
Its archaic sewer system.
"Some or the lines are over 100

::. '
.• CijiCAGO (UPI) ·-Elliot.! Welsh. whose 7-ye&lt;!f·Oid son was '·
denli!d entry ·to the Boy Scouts ·of -America because the boy ·
; refUsed to talie an oat!) recognizing God, has f!led a federal suit
charging the group with discrimination. .
. . '
The suit. flied on behalf of his first-grade son, Mark, asks the
, court to ,overturn the Boy Scouts' religious requirements and
r:• allow his son to become a '''Tiger Cub."'
The suit, filed under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bars
dl~rlmlnatlon based on religion, could be the ·f irst religious
dlsc'rjininatlon suit brought agal~t the nationwide youth group,
said )IVelsh's attorney, Rlchard .9r~an :..;
·. •
j .Welsh, an 'Al!JlOIItlc, said he brought his 0pn to sign up.with the
Scouts at a Burr Ridge elementary sci!QQI last September. But,
he said he left the sch09l when he r~alized the boy would have to
agree to ''recognize an obligation to God1' by taking the . scout
oath - which Includes an Invocation to God.·

Adelicious golden-fried Shrimp Dinner with
· potato or fries, garlic toast &amp; Ponderosa ·s
· AII•You•Can•Eat Grand Buffet:· ·

'

earlier Wednesday to evaluate
37 uffered head and hand
~·url~
s.
condition. He accompanied
1 When. she arrived at the her
her back to New York In the
Hospital for Joint Diseases
helicopter with her husband.
Estefan was tightly bound· on ~
Fans and well-wishers - Inrolling stretcher 'as she was eluding President Bush wheeled Inside, where well- Hooded Scranton's Community .
wishers had been arriving all day Medical Center with cards. flow with flowers and cards.
ers and telephone calls. Hospital
The only part of her body · officials said Estefan received
visible was her face, which was tWO c allS ·from Bush, who had
tightly held In a bright orange met with the singer Monday at
bra e that resembled a ll{e the White House.
re~erver. A tube was Inserted In
Estefan was catapulted' to
her nose and her eyes were national prominence with the hit
closed a.ithough she apparently single "Conga.'' Miami Sound
was cJnsclous
Machine' s music Is a mixture of
An ambula~ce attendant who Latlri. pop, .rock and urban
made the flight with the singer · Influences .
said Estefan was In good spirits
Estefan and th~ band w~n the
and quoted her as saying, "It 's a American Music Awards, 1989
nice, sunny day for flying ."
favorite pop-rock duo award, and
Neuwirth flew to the s inger' s Estefan was a hos t on the 1990
awards show .
.

11

~· ~coul ple~ge io God fac;legal challenge

By WILLIAM c_ TROTI' '
United Press International

i

.

ter to New York from a hospital
In Scranton, Pa., where she was
taken after the crash.
Dr. Michael Neuwirth. the New
York hospital's chief of spinal
surgery, whowllllmplantthetwo
elght·tnch rods a.t the junction
between Estefan s . middle and
lower back, said W~nesday ~~~t
her prognosis was excellent.
"The risk Of P,aral~sls IS
exce~lngly. rare, Neuwirth
said. There s always a posslbll·
lty for things to worsen. but we
would not expect that. The key
problem Is Instability of the
spine.''
..
.
. Neuwirth said ,Estefan had
·suffered rplnqnal neurological
damage In the accident and
should recuperate fully within
six months.
Her son, Nayab, 9, also suf·
fered a broken coUar bone In the ·

City prrospects sewage system to pay bills

Following an Investigation by the Austin Pollee Depilrlment's
I ·· Internal Affairs Division, ·Sulllvent was accused of dereliction
!)f dutY and failure.to devote his aitentlo!l anlf time.to his job. ·
. '. Sgt. Gary ·Fl~!mlng of the InternaJ Affairs _Division .said .
Wednesday the Investigation showed that Sulllvent spent. an
excessive amount of time at a Dunkin' , Donuts shop In south
Ausiln. The visits occurred durlng a three-day period In late
November and December of last year.
·
. SuHivent served his one··day suspension wlth~ut pay last
week, Fleming said.
.
- ·. . A parole ofitcer for 21 years, . Suutvent has received 19 ·
•· commendatlons ·iront cltlze1,1s and public officials. Howev!i!r. he
. : , bas also reeelved 10 citizen compllilnts since 1982 for rudenes·s
or abusive language.
·
•.
.;·;
.r.·'·. .
,,
.
r · TV thleves•·stuck In tile mud
. .
·
:
DEERFIELD, .Mass. (UP I) - A 'wllc~ap who tried to help
•· ·two men free their car fro111 a patch of·rn,il&lt;! wound I!P arres !lng
' ' the pair when he took a look alt11e ~nazzr~I?oklng eQUIP,m!!nt I~
· thebackseat .
,.
:.
·, The . two au tomoblle stereos, television set and a video
, · cassette recorder had been reported 'stolen Tuesday from a
pickup truck and a .van parked at a nearby house. ·
·- Several ·hours after the break-Ins, pollee said they received a
report that a car was stuck In the mud. When officer Robert
Warger arrived, he spotted the stolen merchandise Inside the
·. velllcle, a pollee spokesman said.
- .:
·. ·: Michael Copland, 18, of Springfield, and Alexander Alicea.,23,' . of Jtoiyoke, were both charged with two counts of breaking and,
: . entering Into a motor vehicle and larceny of more than $250,
•· pollee Sa.ld. .
.
·
·
·The two pleaded Innocent, to the charges.

NO COUPON NEEDED

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Doctqrs
who plan to surgically Implant
metal rods In pop singer Glorla
Estefan's broken back say her
prognosis Is "excellent" and the,
risk of paralysis 1temmlng ~om
her bus accident Injury Is exceedtnrly rare...
.
.
Doctors . at the Hospital for
Joint Diseases said they would
operate on the 32-year·old Miami
Sound Machlrie lead singer
Thursday mornll!g for three to
four hours. ,The procedure Is
designed 'to correct subluxation,
an Instability of the spine between her middle and lower back
that can Include fractures.
Estefan, who was lnjuredTuesday when a tract!'r-tra!ler
plolfed Into .her tourb'\son snowy
Interstate 380 In the Pocono
Mountains In Tobyhanna, Pa.,
wasflownWednesdaybyhellcop-

it. ..

'
'

People in the new,s
DRUMS AND TREES: There's an environmental tie-In with .
the new book on drums by Mickey Hart, one of the Grateful ·
Dead's two drummers. "Drumming at the Edge of Magic: A
Journey Into the Spirit of Percussion," which will be published
In September by Harper &amp; Row San Francisco, Is about the
·history and significance of drl!lllmlng and Hart's travels
around the world In pursuit. of ancient and endangered
'drumming traditions. "It's a natural progression from learning ·
about endangered music to caring about our endangered
planet. ••says Hart. Therefore, because of Hart's concern for the
environment, particularly rain forests, his publisher will plant
two trees ·tn a South American ralri for~st for every one tree
required to produce his book. "Although obviously the paper
used for book production doesn't coine from rain forest trees,
we see this action as a powerful symbol of our joint
responsibility for replenishing natural resources," said Clayton .
Carillon, publisher of Harper &amp; Row San Francisco.
CABBm RECORD: Carmen "Irish" .Fasanella, .who had
some pretty famous fares In his 68 years as a cab driver In
Princeton. N.J., has made It Into the Gulnriess Book of World
Records as the world's longest-licensed . ~ab driver. Many of
,Fasanella's customers were Princeton University students.
Including Brooke Shields. ''That Brook!! Shields, she was ~
wonderful girl," he says, "but her mother was a. snob.
Fasanella also served as a bodygyard of sorts toAiberiEtnaleln
when the scientist came to the United. States. ''He hired me to
foUow him on his walks In the morning," F~aaells &amp;ald.
"People used •to come after him on his walks to try to get his
autograph and scare htm out of his shoes. They didn't mean any
harm but he didn't know that. I used to shoo them away." He
said another famous scientist, I, Rober! Oppenheimer, who
worked on the atom bomb, "wasn't much ofa customer. He '!Bd

Singer Estefan to unde~?..J:~..~~~IX.. " ,:,~·~

Doarhnut-lovlng cop suspended
AUSTIN, Texas (UP)) -A poUc~ officer has been suspended
from duty for a day without pay for spending too much time at a
doughnutshop.
·
.
"I can't deny It," senior patrol officer Ray Sulllvent said. "I
did 11. Alii can say Is that I'm not the only officer who has done

STEAKBOUSE

Fernwood Garden .Club
me,eting held recently

his own cars.''

'

POiiiiEROSI
UMffED TIME ONLY

news-~
,,

Now 7011 aee It, 110w you don't
·
PETROIT CUP!) - A Greek re~tauran!'s nude statue of
Poaeldon Is no longer quite as revealtpg as It once was, but the
eatery's proprtetors are unsure who was responsible lor the
ges lure of prudery.
·
.
The. sea god now sports a plaster gr.pe. leaf on a strategic
portion of his anatomy, said Tommy Pensterls, co-owner of the
New Parthenon restaurant. He does not know who put It there.
:'Nobody saw anything, except one busboy says a woman was
touching the statue In front,." he said. "I tried to remove ithe
leaf), butnoway.lt'sglued onfprgood. Whatamlgolngtodo?"
Perlsterls said the grape leaf has some advantages: It
matches the oxidized copper color of the rest of the statue, ~nd
diners have stopped commenting to him about Poseidon's
anatOl!IY.
.
,
."Before, everybody gave their own opinion: II don't have any
complaints any more," he said.
•
.
· Several customers, mostly.womeq, had suggested clothing
the statue since the restaurant opened three months ago; he
said. One woman In particular, he said, complained that she
dldri't like seeing PoSeidon's -naked body while she was eating.

'TllurtdiY. MilCh 22. 1980
·

Q

,...._ Qurik..r in the

This coupon entitles you to our
AII•You•Can•Eat·Sundae Bar FREE
·when you purchase our Shrimp Dinner Spec/If/ at $3.W,

:!5-.E.:t.:r:·
Po.NDEROSA®
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271 ..... S.COIIII

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�.ip~~~g;B~1~2~~~~~~-~s.nn~~-=·~::::::::~::::::~~=-----_!P~~~m~.,~o:y~-~M~id~ii~~~-~~~~~OhQ~-~:---~--~~~-.-----:--~~~~~~~~~M~•~dh~22~~1~1~1~0

, AIDS not discouraging
lle•()e
sex,•. surve:r ·.
Co /-/!(
0

•.

•'

Getty Museum buys Van Gogh's ·~~' ·

themostexpenslvepainttngever
BOq!l, whose cr~bllng flnan · York.
bought at auction.
ctal empire Is more than $5
"What the purchase doel con·
for an art auction reeord of
Diana D, Brooks,· president of
billion In debt, bought the paint· firm Is the Getty's Incredibly
nearly $54 million three years Sotheby's North America, whtcn
~g just after the October 1987 buying power, '1 Sadeh said.
ago, has been resold to the J . arranged the sale to the Getty,
stockmarketcrashtnanunusual
With the purchase, the Getty
Paul Getty Museum for an said "Irises" had been sold to the
deal financed by Sotheby's.
owns thrft paintings In what .Is
undisclosed price, tt' was an- Gettyfor"anundlscloaedsumln
The deal reassured a nervous commollly called the "Top 10,"
nounced Wednesday.
a private transaction."
art community that the lnterna- the 10'most expensive paintings ·
The purchase by the Getty, the
"'Irises' has a power that
tiona! art market was soaring· ever sOld at auction.
.
world's wealthiest private mu- nobody . can miss," mllseum
despite Wall Street's troubles.
Van Gogh'·s painting Joins the
seum, brings to three the number director John Walsh said. "A
But there was widespread crltl- Old Master · oil "Halberdler"
o! paintings It owns among the 10 piCture this lmpilrtant needs a
clsm that the auction house had' attributed to Pontormo and purmost expensive ever $Old at · permanent home·and we're overartificially Inflated the art chased by the Getty for- $35.2
auction. .
joyed that It can be the Get'ty. ,.,
market by financing the record· million last May, and Eduard
The Malibu .museljlll bought
Tbe masterpiece, a vivid
setUng sale.
Manet's "Rue Mosnler, Parts"
the 1889 lmpresslonl!t painting flower palnUne done . a year
The auction house, the world's bought by . the museu in last
from Australian financier Alan before Van Gogh's suicide Ill
large~!, loaned Bond $27 million .. November for $26.4 million. •
Bond. ·Bond had created an 1890, depicts lbe corner ·or a
to buy the masterpiece and Those two · pelnttngs are the
unprecedented controversy tn garden In the asylum of st. Paul
accepted the- painting Itself as seventh and eighth most expenthe art community when he Mausole In st. Remy, France, ·collateral on the loan. Bond was slve bought at aUction.
,
bought the painting In 1987 for a where the artist had committed · later forced to renegotiate his
"Irises" was In private Eurorecord $53.9 million, making It himself.
ioan and to sell an Eduard Mane! pean collections unt111917, ,when
·
·
from his cOllection for $14.85 · New York philanthropist Joan
million to help pay off the debt. Whitney Payson bought - It for
J
Sotheby's has since stopped $80,000. It was bequeatlied to bet
·
" "''
"·
"''
accepting Intended purchases as son, who placed It oillong'-lerm
0
collateral.
loan to Westbrook College In
·
.N1t2 ;..,_
"ltwouldbeverylnterestlngto Portland, Maine.
fU/;
know What the Getty paid. They
Prompted by the sale 'of• van '
0
might have gotten a bargain, Gogh's "Sunflowers" for $39.9 :
NEWARK, N.J. IUPI) -The statement saying the firm . "dewhtch Is unflkely.: But lflheypald million In March of 1987: Pay· •
nation's best-known maker of nle~ the charges and maintains
equal to wh;~t Bond paid or more, · son's son put "Irises" ·on the
kosher food conspired to fix the that Its prices have been lndeII reconfirms the market," said block · to fUnd'' a charitable
price of "kosher for Passover" pendently and fairly determined
DeldreSadeh, associate editor of foundation. •·
matzo, the unleavened bread andhaveneverbeensetpursuant
Art &amp;';'l.ucUon magazine In New
Jews use to commemorate the to any agreement . with an
escape from Egypt more than competitor."
3,000years ago, prosecutors said.
"Manlschewltz will vigorously
B. Mantschewltz Co. of Jersey defend against the charges," the
City was charged Wednesday In a statement added.
,
one-count federal Indictment
The Indictment does not !denwith Illegally fixing the price of llty the alleged co-conspirators
the matzos made especially for or elaborate on how much the ·
use during !he holiday, Justice alleged price fixing cost consu'· DepartmentspokesmanJoeKro- mers. It does. allege, however,
vlsky said. ·
that the conspiracy Included "the
Passover Is the eight-day Jew- major manufacturers of kosher ·
Ish holiday commemorating the for P!!ssover matzo products In
Exodus from Egypt In 1200 B.C. the United States."
The use of matzo recalls the fact
The nation's other large manuthe Jews did not have tlme'to let tacturer In the kosher tor Pastheir bread rise before they were sover matzo business Is Strelts
forced to flee Into the desert. The Matzos of New York.
holiday begins this year at
·" No one Is In the office right
sundown on AprU 9.
now. It's the busy .time of the
. RU1l)JID vuRtn~uRE
The .Indictment, handed up
year," a receptionist at Strells
·'
Monday by a federal gr11nd jury
said In response to a request for
In Newark, charges the company
comm~nt on·the Indictment.
JORN 1&gt;9!.
with conspiring with competitors
None of Mantschewltz's other
through six holiday seasons products, which Include kosher
from 198l,through at least April
c11kes, cooktes soups and pro'
1986 - to set hlghet pr)ces on
cessed fish, are1mentioned In the ·
about $25 nillllon worth ot matzo
indictment.
·
Items sold In the United State$.
. -The company', founded In 1888
No Manlschewltz .. executives
In Cincinnati, ·also makes-matzos
were· charged hi the 'Indictment.
under the Goodman. and l!oroThe company, If convicted, could
witz Margareten labels.
Stop In, Or Call To Receive An Application ...
be fined $1 million.
Manlschewlt~ reported record
We'U Procell Your Request Quickly •• :
Robert Mann, Manlschewltz's. sales of .$32.5 million In 1989ln its
vice president and secretary,
latest annual report.
Whea Approved, You'll H&amp;Te Huaclreda Of
refused to comment beyond a
LOS ANGELES IUPI)- Vln·

'th
WI.

,,

Fro• -

NOTICE TO -ALL
MASONS

Calling the new research "a
landmark study," Lewis Judd,
director of the National Institute
of Mental Health, said previous
neurological studies of schizophrenia had been clouded by the
normal variation that exls Is
among different people's brains.
The latest study overcame Ihat
difficulty by comparing the
brains of identical twins, who
share the same genetic makeup
and shduld have Identical brains
Ohio ven., Memory O.dMI .. Ill~ llfhl IPIC• to Malone in l'- Gelll ..
/Meig~IM•on Caunty Ar... At • U.Dn you m .... be ........ for F'" lurlalll
lpeca. However. you mult
th11. Yo.. mutt b• .We to lhow proof of

,..._,.,for TtMrele
the MeNnie
OfGMIHt~.

1RUCIING

• ·The Area's Number
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M.

lteJ;DS To Choose
,Aloaa With Easy lloathly Payilleat1l

1

Umttld number of •PK• w.a.

-.... c.rtllla.~• fof .,._. wll be.._.... on • flrtt come. flret HfWd bel.._ To •·
eure ,...,.uon, mlll•the DDUpon betow to;
Ohio Vollooy MJJmory Ger-•
Metp co. Memory Gardena
400 Codot IIVII.
•
Rt. 3
Gllttpola, OH. 41131
Pomeroy. OH. 41718
11141441·3111
t8141812-7440
lend My Maoonlc Eligibility CertltiCite ·

PI•••

_ _ _ _.::.._..:.__ _ _ _ NO. IN

'

•

RUTI:.AND, OHIO • (614) 7·~·2211
H~: Monda\I·SOJII!dav. a:3o am-6 pm
~.ClaM At NOon

•VISA/MASTERCARD
ACCEPTED

·•

·

THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP.
WANTS TO HELP YOU RID
YOUR HOME OF ANY TYPE
OF POISONOUS SUBSTANCE
·DURING·

_ __:_:__ _ _ _ _ _.:.__A8;Lf_

Ooolk
IZ-8pcwtlrt1 GDCHII

53-Anllqutl

1 1- Htlp

13 - Uvtttodt

FRIDAY PAP~A

17-Niiscellaneous

SIIN_DAV PAf:'ER

, 1-Wented

~o

Art~

•·n-GallfPoli•

112-MiddiiPOrt

·

3&amp;7-Ch•hirt
311- Vinton

245? Rio Orende

266-Guyin Din.

;e43:...A.,.bia Oiat
379-V.:.tlnut'
:to,,,

,I

Pomlfoy ,

91&amp; - 0h~ttr

·

'143-Port!and
247-Latort Foil•
e••-R•cir~•

742-Autllnd ,

-Homn for lilt
for Stlt

175-Pt. Planant
451-leon

42- Mobilt Homn for Aent
43-Fari'nt tor 'ltnt
41- Space tot Rent

47-Wenlld to Rent
•a-Equipmtnt tor Rent
•&amp; - For

L•••

· Publle Notice

~,

.

."TMII' SIIOULD
\ .
·.. .

SOURCES !USES) .
Other 8oun... ;
Racelpta ............... 260.00
TOTAL OTHER
FINANCING SOURCES
(U8EB) ................. 250.00
Fund Ceah lelenco.
·
Jan. 1. 1888 ... 38,021.29
Fund CAah IIIMICO,
Dec. 31, 1•818 ...10,203.41
NON 1~XPENDAILE

'J'RIJIT FUNDS
•
Supptleund ,.
Motert"':driii:ii. 11oo.oo

ii,..

'FUND 'BALANCE
'RECEIPTS: ·•
TIXH .... :...........36,817.73
tntorgovernmontal :
Recetpto ..........84,882.58
Int-I ...............2,686.18
All Other
Revenue .......... 18.989.28
TOTAL
.
RECEIPTS ..... 123,076.23
EXPENDITURE
OISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENTS
Gener•l
Governl!'onl ..... 32,648.77
Public Sllfety .: ..... 1: 371. 10
Public W~r~• .....71.321.22
Health .•..... ,......... 3,429.38
Cepltel O'utlav ..... &amp;, 748.85
Supplloa &amp;.
Materllla .............. 600.00.

.

Other Sources/

•

Recotpto ............... 250.00
TOTAL OTHER
FINA,...CING SOURCES
,(USES) .................210.00 ,
Fund Cuh Batonce. ·
·
Jon. 1, 1888 ... 38,021 .29
Fund CAah BIIMice.
Dec. 31. 1181 ... 50,203.48
Fund COih Bolonce
Dopoalt01y
8etonco ........... 50,203.48
TOTAL
•
BALANCE ....... 80,203.48
I certify the following re-

port to be correct end trye,

to the baat of mv knowl·
edgo.
·
Clerk
Bonnie Scott 3/12/80
'28238 IAgion ~old
IAnpvNie, Ohio 46741
(3) 22 1tc

.

? '

,.

i'

•.

•Dt~~POIT;

. ;·

•

'"

.

BILL SLACK
992~2269

EVENINGS

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
... . . _ lkiilt
"FrM

Eatimeleo"

PH. 949-21D1
or lias. 949-2160

FURNACE
FURNACE

EQUIPMENT

•E_rigr.,,in'i Trophlei,

up
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335

Dr

985·35111

Across f ,_ Peat Office
lfn

J&amp;L

INSULATION
Wl•ter ·steel II 0•
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
3-5-'90-1 mo.

UNDArS
PAINTING &amp; CO.
INTIIIOI EXTEIIOR .
FREE ESTIMATES .
Taka the pain out of
painting.
lei •• do it for yau.

VEIY IIA50NAIII

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ltfora•p./II.LtaroMos...t
11·15·'81·1 mo.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
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In 'Middleport, Oh.
PARTS ANI:) SERVICE
For Moat 2 •nd 4•cycle
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SYIACISI, OHIO

lAbove Plna Shofl

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IN STOCK:

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lout •C.m .terv Flower
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Acreas fi'OIII Post Office
217 I. S.C. P-oy
IVIl/'19 ffn

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s·..ler Cltlz- atlll

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Heating, CooHng,
Refrigeration
Strwka

992-6873

Residential It
Commercial

•"LOW INCCIIII HOIII"

CALL
992-5589

209 S.uth 4th St.
Midtllapar1, Dh.

2·2-'90-1 mo. d.

1-12-'10-1 mo.

SUN'S UP TANNING
New Lima lei., Rutland, Ohio

1 Session ........................................ $3~50 ·
6 Sessioni ..................................... 512.00
12 St'ssiOns................................... 520.00
15 Sessions................................... S2 5.00
Call Susan Coleman, 742-2778

3·12·10·1 mo.

... ...-.·. .MAIN STREET
PIZZA
LOWEST PIKES
HIGHEST QUALITY
FREE LOCAL DELIVERY
POMEIOY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
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· Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

992-2228

YOUNG'S

CARPENtER SERVICE

-Room Addition•
-Gutter Work
-Eiootrlcot • Plumbing
-Concrete Work
..-Roofing

-Interior • Eaterior
· Painting
!FREE ESTIMATE$)

V. Co YOUNG Ill

2-

RACINE

GUN ·CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVElY SUNDAY
Starts -at 1.:00 P.M.
F1c10,Y Choked '
12 Gauge Only

992-6215
PDmeror., Ohio

-30-'lt-2 mo.

9-6-89-tfn

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GIEG .AILEY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

AGreat Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"

WE GO THE EXTIA MILE .....
992·6810
POMEIOYt. OHIO

3-5· 90-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SER~ICE

We can rtpair and rt·

cart radiators and
heatlr corn. Wt can
also .acitl bail and rod
out' ratliaten. We also
repair Gas Tlllki.

PAT IILi. FOlD

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

110..-le Prices"

PH. 949·2101
•
j
or.Res. 949•2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

992-2198
Middleport, Ohio

4-1&amp;-16-Hn

1-13-tfc

3 Announcement•

lelnl Lola Noo. Four (4),
Five ( ), o~d tllll Ill in
Croakl Adlltlon to the VII·
loa• of lyroou•. In Iutton
TowMhlp, · Mel.. County,

EVElY THUISDAY

DEED REFERENCE: Ve&gt;-

VFW POST 9926

liNGO

.. ,..;,..

Ohio.

MASON, W. VA.

Roger. Jlysell
Garage
It, 114, ••

., Oltle

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR

II t11,300.00.
T - of lele: Cooh.

GAllS SUI'I 7.00 PA

for ............llllrdofthe
IPflllllltl wllie.

. •so.oora••

...
,,
........
.
PH. 992·5612

· All PAPIIINIO tiMIS

or 992·7121

NQ 0111-1 II TUIIS

lOIIlS ..... 41

, _.... laullflr,

•

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.

'FIREWOOD

20"/o OFf ON AU

GoodRetn
l'.l.C.
27 Yra. Exp.
Rotor"""- .

.
IMrlffof
Metr.County. Olllo
11111, 22,
' Jlo

I

90 DAY WAIIAJm

•LIGHT HAULING

Hantllca~

..... _ _ bllold

OHIO ·

915-3561

LOTIONS - STICKERS

PUBLIC NOTICE
IAidlng
CrNk ConHr·
••ncv Diatrlct w"t eccept
- • d btda It Ito oflioo
locotod tl 34481 Corn Hotlow Rood. Rutland. Ohio,
45n5, tor Hie of the to~
lowing two vehidoa.
1884 Ford
Styloatdo
.
Pickup
4x4 F-210 (J!Iod)
302 Engine
Automllic Tronamiaolon
1984 Ford Ranglr Pickup
4x4 2.8 Utre
V-tlonglna (Creme/Boown)
Autometic Trenamialion
ThOle vahldea can be kl·
apectod at the offtoe, Monday through Fridey lrom
8:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
Thooy wll be aotd 01 Ia. whore

C4!uMY o..t . . . . .:

.

Of

Aa... ,,_ Peat IIHice
217 I. S.C. '-•Y
PCNUIOY, OliO

FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIIL Y MORE

. .... ...--ii;illllit

'

..

KOUNTRY KLUB

2-

KEN'S APPUANCE
,SEIVICE

Maw location:
161 North Sacond
Mldcll.,...,.. Ohio 45760.

AFTII 6 P.M.

Chtsttr,

Public Notice

.,d • - of Ohio:

992-2156

12 Gau• ~;r.~~Only
Strick fly

HAVElEHlENaS

lad goa
•New Grip•
eCtuba Short-

Iring It In Or Wt
Pldc Up.
992-5335

Foctor1 choke

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL ·.

NO SUNDAY CAW ' :
• 4-16-1&amp;-Hn

TEAFORD

'NOTICE OF BALE
ly virtue of on Ord• of
loto iaauad out of 1he Com·
mon PI- Coun of Meip
County, Ohio, in tholllia of
Noro Milo Conotl, oka M10
Carrot!, Ploln1111, ogllnat
VIctor R. Countund lura P.
Counta, et ol .. DetondlniL
upcin 1 judgm.,t thoroin
,...derld, baing Cua No.
18-CV-11 In Hid Court. I
will oflor for Hll, ot tha
f r - d - of 1he Court
hou• In Pam•oy. Molgo
Clullly, Ohio, on the 1Ith
doy of April, 1180, It 10:00
o'cfooll A .M. tho foNowlng
lin• ond .!H.......,L te&gt;wH:
·
Bltwted In the Vllllll of
lyroauea, County of Molgo

:

MAIN ST.,

7 Scout

All tMied blda muot ba
filed 11 tha office of IAedlng
CrNk Coniii'Vonoy Diotrtct
by the 301h dooy of March.
1880, byfouro'clock(4:001
P.M. All blcla wWI be opened
and read aloud an the 2nd
day of Aprl. 1880 11 ftino
o'clock t8:00) A .M. II 1he
office of LNding Creel&lt; Con·
llfVIftcy Olotrict. The Board
,..._
, ... thl right to tcoept
or Niect ony ond/oull blda.
(3) 111, 22, 28 31C

the Classified Section'!

•Front End
Aignment
•Oil. Change It Lube
•Brake Work

. onld
.Pat t.D.
Togo

lume 104, ..... 107. ...

PRESCRIPTION SHOP ·
J71111fiOIWJinll
.. SKOID

TOTAL
DISBURSE .... 118.426.28
OTHER FINANCIAL
SOURCES JU&amp;E&amp;I ·

Public N otici

•

2-6-'H-1 mo.

•Tire Sale•

ia. Terma: Cuh

'

OFFER GOOD THRU 3/24180

. 992-6669

RUTLAND nRE
SALES and

1!17 - Upholsterv

Dt~~~~EFiNllJct~~-

IE A IOnLE OF IPECAC. SYIUP IN IVDY MEDICINE CHEST"
- . ·

.

11 - G•n••l Hauling
18-Mobllt Hom a Reoai'

e.

.Iring in al'!y bottle of an old prescription you're no long~ using
or household cleaner that could be poisonous. We will discard
. this for you and give yolt a bo~tle of IPECAC SYRUP "FRE."II ,
'

POMEIOY, OHIO

8, ~ - Home Improvements
82 - Piumbint 6 Ht•ing ·
83-EIICIV81ing
84-Eiec'lricel &amp; Atfrtg•ation

DIIBURSEMENTS
DISBORSEMENTS
.
G.neral "~
·
'GovernrJ!ont ..... 32,648.7.7
Public Sllfety., ..... 1,371 .-10
Publlo Workl .....711.328.22
Hel!th .•..•. ,...... .. .. 3,429.35
Copilot O!rtlev ..... 741.85
TOTAL
·
28

TIXN , .... :... , ...... 311,817. 73
1ntlrg0var'1"'8fttll
.
R~celpta ;,, ....... 84.882.58
lntan111t ............... 2,68&amp;.88
Aft Oth...
Ravenue ... :.... ,.18.989.28
TOTAL
RECEJr.;~No·tWii~7&amp;. 23

6:30P.M.

PI.UMIING &amp; HEATING

36629 517

742-3088

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Flacot Yeot Ending
Docembar 31. 1888 ,
lotom Townehip;
Courity of Molgo
"Thia Ia en u ..udltld
Anonciol llepon"
SUMMARY OF CASH.
8ALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RE~~~~~E RECEIPTS

lashat Bulding

ALL MADS

USED APPLIANCES

4-6-8!1-Hn

SERVICE

' PUb II!: Notlce ;

IACINE
FilE DEPT.

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

3/61'90/Hn

985·3365

Grant A. Ne•rlr

Public Notice

:or•

GUN SHOOT

Repair Work

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone· Din

41 _:_ HOUIII

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY .
On March 18, 1980, tn the
Metp Coun!Y
Probate
Coutt. C111 No. · 2116118.
Wllllom Bahr, Routil 2, lox
31 :'. BldWolt, .Ohio: 45114,
_. oppolnted Executor of
the - t e of Moynord ' l.
Bahr, d-ed. late ·of
Overbrook Nuralng . Home,
3~3 Poae s,iwt. Mid&lt;!'•
port, Ohlo, 46710.
Robart E. Buck
.
· · Probate Judge
lAne K. Neaaolo011d, Clark
(3) 22, 28; (4)11', 3tc

992·62~~~-

Remodeling &amp;

(614) 667·3271

18-24

.

ENTERPRISES

, 182~NIV!I

let Rualb Fact

POISOI
PRmiTIOI
WEEK

SITEWORII • ~OADS
CLEARING
N~WLAND

79-Cempers 5I Molor Homn

676 .,... Apple Grove
773- M .. on
'

Rent
46 - Furnith~ Roomt

I

DOZER

· 75-Bottl 6 Moton tor Sele
71- Auto Pant &amp; Accatori•
77-·Auto "•p•lr
78 - Cirnplng Equipm•nt

44 - Ap~rtment fot

PU8LIC NOTICE ·
• ·~ Th~ Molgl County Com.·
. mit~~-· ~11, 'It , tt\41 ro- .
quoal' ·of . the Gollla-Melgo
Community Action Agency,
'901\duct l .'publlc hfii:J.;t
;3:00 P,M, on Wodn • •.
,MorC:h 28, 1180 Jt tho "!'nl·
·mi11olon•• . oHJco In the
·court Coullhouea in Pom- ·
eroy. Purpoea·of the heorlng
ia to lllow 1ho commiaolonend public to rwiow the
propoted JTPA PY'80 piMI.
For eddltlonot informotlon
;contoot: !JIIti•Melgo ,C,AA
JTPA . (114) 387-7342 0r ,
(814)·882-!1128. ·
(3) 22, 1tc

Homes,

'

73- vens a 4 wo ·s
74- Motorcycl•

667- Coolvflle

Public N~ice

•Mobile Home
Plrtl
•Mobile Home

CHESTEir OHIO
Custom Built

1·12-'88-Hn

71 - Aulot for S,.t ,
72 - Truc:ks tor ••••

Haven
896-Letart
937-Buftllo

CONSTIUCTION

ERWIN

lt. J3 • .,.. ef
Pomeroy, Ohle

Tr anspnrl .1 lrnn

Are• Code .3 04

For Appt.
992-6717

Ftr~iU.~:tf

Ma•on Co ., WV

Codo 014

c•
H-..-

St. Mi'~,.nl

EYEIY·
SAT. HIGHT.

COUNDY
MOBILE
HO. PARIC

to luy

••-H•v a. Gttin
11 - Setd &amp;

j(Jilou·in~ telephone exchanf:es ...
Mtiip County

949-2168
.
2-1-'90-1 mo. pd'.

Do

IN CASE OF ACCIDENTAL POISONING, KNOW WHAT TO
: DOl TIME IS VITAL QUICK ACTION CAN SAVE A LIFEII

~.

6~ - Wanttd

cot·er the .

O.llia County

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7479

"'IIV!"II.r.k

115 -School• lo lnatr~o~ction
11 - Radio, TV &amp; CB Atpatr

AooaCodt614

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

RenUIII
•Lo1 RenUIII

slllllll!!• s

e 1-Ferm Equip('tent

•'

'

V-e••bl•

.... or Trade

F"Ill

12- lftuation W.nttd

zn

I

159-F~

~3-,lnturln~ ·
1 4 - lu,tn,.s; Tr~ining

p.re VvTorth Alot

MARCH

&amp;1 - Fruitt.

Want~

. "'-'zt Le •nzngs ·

DO YOU KNOW TO
,•lc"p all medicines out of the reach of children
.
,
- •never.assume that child-resistant contain·
. .... are child-proof containers .
..ltcarefuliy store drain openers, solwe.tts, antifreeze, kerosene, gasoli.ne, pesticides or
any other toxic material well out of a
child's reach.
.
..

57 - Muticellnttr~o~mtnlt

MONDAY PAPER
TljESDAY PAPER
WEDNUDAV PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

T ' t,

'

151-Pett for &amp;II•

~P ~v lf'f 1 \

''

POISON PREE.NTION
WEEK ·

·

&amp;•-Miac.. Merchendlll
151-luilding Suppll•

Happy Ads
Lon and Found
.
V•d S•t(paid in advanctl
Public Slla • Auction
WentldiO lu.y

lrr rtlllyrnr•fl !

.

.Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nea•lroad, Clerk
(3) 16, 22, 29, 3tc

\

61788-

•A clatlititd ldrver"titem.,t plac.ct in The Daily StnHntl l••·
cept - CIMtlfied dliPII't,. luain•a Card and lttll noticnl
will also app . . in tht Pt . Pl. .ant ...~,.end tha Galli·
polit Deity Tribunt, reeching over 11.000 homn,

pa~es

NEW- IEPAII

1-11

&amp;1 - Ho~o~Mhold

3 - Annoucem.,tt
4 - Giv ..wa~

.

Classified

ROOFING

985-4422

Mr ·r rtl.lllilrsr•

1- Card of Thenlca
2 - tr~ Mamorv·

lot etrott tint. d~ ad runs in papet), Call be-far• 2 :00 p m
d~Jt aft• .DI.Ibht.tiOn to mlllat cotrection .
•Adl th•fm1.11t b~ Plitl in advance·ere
C.d oJ Th.,ka
Happ.; Adi
In Memorlem.
Ylf'd 511•

'45~U

FINANCING

('WIIM

.

FAMILY!-~

•BANK

Ovtr 111 Won•
•
.20
11.00
.30
18.00
.• 2
113.00
.eo
-'1.30/ day . .011/diV

Arlllllli l rr·rtllrlllr,

"'hntintl is not rnponsible for .,,orsafttr first d~ . IChtck

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF ·
FIDUCIARY
On Moli:h 8, 1810. in the
'Molp County
Probato
~Court. Coae No, 28112.
Marilyn R. Newm.,, 7800
Wyonclot Morloh Rood. Got·
'lon, Ohio 44883 wu ap·
pointed Executor of the .,.
tote of Pllul 0", doptlled,
llle 01 Route 1. Long Bot·
.tom, Moip County, Ohio,

ST. RT.124, tHREE MILES OFF RT. 7

'

•p,·~ Ot ad foJ Ill CepMIIIMtltl't.il dOuble priC. of ld cost .
•7. po,n1 MRI1YPt only Ulld .
.

. .ON-SITE SERVICE u"'••.o

-R UTLAN·D
FURNITURE.

1

Rote
14.00

5101/t 21111

1--f('lf ••r.h d• .......l t . •::d;.•~----....~....- -

- Oiv. .way and Found ada und.r 11 word1will be

'
COPV DEADLINE -

Words
15
15
15
11
. 15

IIUCirS CAl WASH

liow.-d L WrltiHI

A1t .. •r&lt;t 1t0r eon•euti\le runt. brok•n upd._,twiiiNchltfed

run, d., tit no chqe.

Call Collect (614}
. 742-2~11 For More .lnformstlon
.

·.percent of the time, Weinberger
said.
·
In an editorial accompanying
'ibe study, Dr. M. Marse! Mesulani of Beth Israel Hospital ln
Boston said a better understan·d·
lng of the causes of schtZopfu-enla
may lead t.o new treatment based
on a collaboration between psychiatrists and neurologists.
Even with the·best treatment
now a,vallable, the·disease 111ads
. to chronic deterioration In )lalf of
all schizOphrenics, with costs ·
totaling as much as $20 bllUQn In
the United States, Mesulam said.

Devs
1
3
6
10
Monthly

or M110n countiM mUst be prt·

:Iii•..... I .IO. ditcount for 1d1

.

'J .

to 5 P.M. ·

'
p~id in 1dv1nce.

•G"AVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL diRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

RA

·· 8 .A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

~~!:::M:ol~go~.:0.:1111

CHISTII, OliO

Marketplace

·TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992·2156.

' fi'. t._'Xtno
•
zo pnee

BOSTON (\]PI' - A study of
If DO envlromental factors COnie
researchers were able to pick out
Identical twins has uncovered an
Into play, Judd said.
12 ·of the 15 sch~ophrenlc twins
apparent link between schlzoph·
Reporting Wednesday In The simply by looking at the pl~lures
renla and brain abnormalities,
New Engtarid Journal of Medi· of brain tissue.
··
suggesting the mental Illness
cine. Weinberger and his colThe computerized Images remay not be inherited as some had
leagues said they detected brain vealed thaI all but one of the
thought, researchers sal_d .
abornomalltles In 14 of 15 twins
twins with schizophrenia had
National Institute of Mental · with schizophrenia that did not smaller brain lobes and larger
Health researchers said they
exis I In their non-schizophrenic
fluid-filled areas, known as ven·
siblings.
found brains of schizophrenia
' trlcles, than ·tHeir nonnmal
sufferers had malformallpns not· · Using a high-technology, non-. slblll!gs.
present in the brains of their Jwtri
Invasive technique known as
· "We don 't know what caused
brothers or sisters without the
111agnet1c resonance Imaging,
these change~. but Ills popular to
disease. The brains of schizophthe researchers found brains of
think that S\)rnelhlng Oappened
renics were also slightly smaller
schizophrenic twins tQ be slightly
early In the development of the
than their non-schizophrenic si - smaller than those of .their
brain, possibly In the fetal
blings, they said . •
normal brothers and sisters.
stage," Welnllerger said.
The !lndlngs suggest that schl·
Although prior studies using
Ev?n among Identical twins,
zophrenla, a chronic mental
less sophisticated imaging scans
he said, '.'there are many differIllness affecting about 1.8 million
have detected enlarged fluidences In the course of fetal life"
Americans, may be caused by
filled spaces In the middle brains
that might prompt one tWin to
physical changes In· the brain,
of some schizOphrenics, Wein- · develop bra!n abnormalities
changes that might occur even In
berger said they did not provide while the other does not.
the womb, said Dr. Daniel
the finely detailed look that the
The findings may also help
Weinberger, co-author of the
new research provides.
explain wby schizophrenia
study.
Using the magnetic resonance
strikes · both members of an
Imager, Weinberger said the
Weinberger said his research
Identical twin set no more than 35
m11y · help settle a long'
simmering controversy about
''how much of tots disorder Is of
the mind and how much Is of the
brain."

·~

I. L HOLLON

Man,;J·rhew·,;tz rharoeu
,

Brain abnormalities link in schizophrenia

memblrthlp In

Business Services.

cent van Gogh's "Irises," sold

BOSTON IUP I' - College women are using condoms more
often In response to AIDS, butthelrsexualbehavtorotherwtsels
unchanged from that of their 1970s predecessors, a campus
survey showed.
·
ResearcberslnRhodelslandwhoquerledl32womenstudents
In 1989 found the same proportion had six or more lifetime
sexual partners as 486 women who were surveyed In 1975, before
the epidemics or AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
The women or tile pre- and post-AIDS eras showed no
differences In their willingness to engage In oral or anal sex or to
have multiple partners, said Dr. Stephen Zinner, a professor of
medicine at Brown University who helped conduct the survey.
While 11ecalled the Increase In condom-use ''encouraging,:• he
noted the proportion of women polled In 1989 who had their
partners use ·condoms still was only 41 percent
"I U less than 50 percent of the women In this educated college
group use condoms, one would have to wonder what the
proportion Is In .other groups," said Zinner, whose study
appeared Wednesday In The New England Journal of Medicine.
He said the fact that the women were no more likely than their
predecessors to limit their number of sexual partners, despite
apprehensions about AIDS, means ·'we have a long way to go to
get the message across about safe sex practices·."
Although the women In 1989 were knowlegable about AIDS
and sexually transmitted diseases such as chlamydia, which
annuafly Infects an esllm!lted 4 million Americans, Zinner said
they did much less th an the researchers expected to protect
themselves . . ·
·
·
In addition, "when they got seriously Involved with someone,
they tended to Qse less, rather than more, protection," be said,
calling that "a potentially dangerous habit, since l' ust knowing
someone better doesn't make you more safe."
In their sur-:ey. Zinner and his colleagues asked questions of
women who had medical examinations at a college health
center In 1975, 1986 and 1989.
The · women all attended the same school; which the
researchers described only as a "large private university In the
Northeast." In each survey, the women - near.ly all
undergraduates - averaged 21 years of age.
·
Among those surveyed In 1975, 40 i&gt;ercent said they had
between two and live lifetime sexual partners. In 1986, when 161
W011!en were queried, the corresponding number -was 42
percent. By 1989, those with two to five partners grew to 52
percent.
.
The pr,oportlon with six or more partners was 22 percent In
1975, 20 percent In 1986 and 21 percent In 1989.
Those who said they had three or more partners in the year
before the survey accounted for 21 percent tn 1975, 18 percent In
1986 and 21 percent in 1989.
The women of 1975 were more likely tq.use birth control pills
than those in 1989, but much less likely to use condoms. Only 12
percent of those surveyed In 1975 used condoms. ,
The study found the proportion of women who occasionally
engaged In anal sex was low bu I relatively unchanged over the
study years, ranging fro111 10 percent in 1975 to '7.5 percent In
1986 and 8 percent In 1989.
·
··
.
By comparl~on, a fairly high 'number "oc.casionally'' or
" regularly" engaged In some form of .oral sex, -with IM
proportion exceeding 60 percent In all three su~vey years.
Zinner said the "basic message" he gleaned from the sprvey ·
results was that "t!lere has to be more education and more
awareness about Safe sex" strategies such a.s using ~Qndoms,
avoiding ana) sex and reducjng numbers of sexual par.lners.
He said health educators al~o need to stress that' 'when people
use alcohol and drugs, their education level· doesn't matter,
because they lose some .c ontrol'' and often tali to tak~ pro'l!~tlve
measures.

It also cast doubts on whether
the disease is Inherited as some
recent · studies have suggested,
Welnber~ter said.

Pom.oy-Midcleport. Ohio

Mlrch 22, 1990

~

••comE

I.

... 2~

-

Stop In and See

·DALE HILL
·AT

PAT. HILL
DODGE

"' s. l'ltlrtl, . . . .,.,,
992-6421
·eo.1 m...

�Television
Viewing

3 Annoui'ICIIIMII'Ibl
, . . .....

lor..,

I 1'11*11 I
I tIII

·

TER6AY

a:ooi=:~w
e!ll ee elll •

4

eo e .....

tom011t. 1

;:,::

Cl)lu... lllll TltoiiOND·$···ifai1114MI

I

I

~.T11MIIIIklnQ

I
I I' I r I ..

l!q1orwOnaTVQ

II]) Alldw lli1tlltllt

E XA R L

The new recruit arrived In
I
'1 Iceland last fall and was
. . . _ . .
amazed a1 all the snow drifts.
~~~=~~~:_ He was shocked to learn that it
j: E S y 1 L lwas leltoveri!Qm the ·--- ·---.·

a) Wlllld fOliar

ESPECIALL'( WilEN TilE
CALLS ON 'I'OU ..

Ill .....

OCiwteelii~

1:05 (I) lantlr tlllllll11

I1

1:30!11!!11 8 NIC,.,.,.., ..._

(I) lplrt" Mit
.

-·

:ttuppy -

PubliC Sale

B

A

lur ot 101. RlvOotno Anllquoo,
11114 E. lloln ..........
Hotn:II.T.W.1-Lm.tot.
p.m., - Y 1:00 to t:oo p.m.
1141113 YM.

~

Wlncorolorz-.y..,.

homo.

.,......

":E:tS'\:Jt

: : :...:~·
·-.

tiiO.I 14-

-177 .... I:P,.III.

HAPPY

1

'

..

JACK~

fl'J ••!.!
-·
- ..~ ~tu-!
• •AJ

...

~~ ~o:t,. ~.

:,Wou,.._,ld.,-,:IIM,.--,10_go_ln:--po-~:-no-rohl-:-:-p
now booking •uctktne, ex· ootn~ • ........._ on
- c o mo"'o tilt cllforenco.
,..
-•
Llconood 011 ~ ~ntucky, Wort ,;.SI;;.,AI;;;;;_,1;.;110,;;;·.,;.11,;_4;.;1;;.81;.;101;.;
· ,;_I;;.,- Rick Pootoon Auction Cotnpony

10 .......

Y..tlna IIOIIod llwoluod IIUI.

............. 11-741111.

84

e (J) PM Mepalne
(J) lpa 11C lfttl'

1 1 f t . - - bool, tNIIof, I :·

a&amp;l14fl~

Hay &amp; Grain

lla - 1041101-111

. - _.......-

• • •Ill CuoNnl Altair

'·

New..... .,

'"eGI IIJW-01

..., lor. ....

IT.::!~"
I;! .
11J Mlarnt Yloe
s..reo.

JN llo!&gt;Yolti"U_"" "-· daT.

TtftY SAY

'TtlltiGJ COME TO
.ttrM wHO w.A1T$'·
FAll, '!-'Vf H~l&gt; . j
JuJtSITIJ, Tfll FW, !
ATH/Jrt'l F00 T' •••• !

so
'

EllA Troo llervlco. . Tappl"'l,
t~mmlna.
ollna
•
troo

·
Junk coro whh or wMhout ,.,_.r, Pnlnll!ll
~Coli Lony L.Moly 114- 4411411.

'

iiodgl.,

-.or::.

Gardano
01~ Pion!, 114-117

........., -

114-

Aoody

to

.
.
.
.
=

01~ o
"';~;-p;~;:-B;;~iiil,
, ~ I'QIIt Poe' • 'r . a- umil

and o11w
11

ALL .

-·-'Jtt:f

'

PIANOCAIIE .
t_unl!llo ... n bo

Don'f hout lop • o ml
ootlc•'II 10 yout 30U781NT.

Homo'o. QuaiMy

Oono'o -

ot rooonoblo
2
mlloe
"""'
Fl•n-ne ~ d bddae, Jct.,I771P1. 2. IOWTU1fa.
UmMod Ottor. l'oolor)o to you,
14xTO, 2 or 3 bedroom, u-..

Slcyllne -

ortcoo.

=-.::: =s
'="'=
t·
, ......1,100.

m•1•

No Doom ...,_,. . on -

CllcUI111-IIIIa """ largo lomo • nw. 114-171-1122.

Lovoly
Unlu- • _ . :lbr opl.·ln d -

hlltorlo tton., d

I b II, 0...

=• ,..•a•
I

·

=~= ~":

" " - · Aol!lgonltor, ........... --~;Bon:
t2711rno. LAUftlie nat 'n c't dad, 1100
.•14-44e-1071.
Pita.

.........

noroc(d. ' "

'

Zl.

r.1e1Ci1Jndhe

1-

21
Eloclllt.. Noodoct·
11u8t hive prevlolll!l ..ulng,
IMfllollng ._twoco. WIN lie
working .wtth t~ .........
communlly thnNgh tt., Ohio
¥alloy Onlonbatlanol •
murt. Unlfmltod ~ poiOno

PI---·tlol far an . .-

- ··

Buslnill

_ _Ot:;,;r:;:'P;,IO;,rtu~n,..lty,:_.,;.
'_
INOTICII

OHIO VALLEY PUI~ CO.
rwca Mllllnde that you do
bUal"
wtdl PNfllrl you know,
IIIII NOT to lind -

moll- you hi-.
i-.;f.i~;-~·hl~olloi;;rln~..;·;;-i;;;
n.:...wt In lo 1 • - Ia&lt;

throuato.,.

- to:· Clo lox 021, c/0 Qal.
!!poliO DOlly T~bun,!.. 121 Third lloln •., P-101'·
. . , _ GolllpoUo, ""4M31.
Low IIO,-o. I14-IIIM31T of.
tertp.m.
Dairy OUMn of Oollopollo.

Ex~
.. ADOtW
b11t:un
2 a •.
Thiftdll)', Frldoy, Botuntoy, &amp;
EARN MONEY Roodl!lll - 1
110,000/yr.. ,_,. tlolontlol.

Drtollo. {1)
10181. '

.......,._

OPrlmeNswa
·111 Murder,~IIIIO

llutbony
- . -Cloeo..,..- -.
llld , _ .
roam.
Coli 114-111~111, 114-112-3431

w..-...- ....

ft•

Rd., 1• IN127-·

~~~~~

ln-

loMH
- - llooiorTI:uiNII•,
'"+1111 q u h l 7 - -

w-.. -

I boll!, ,._,.,
1·---~1171.......... onoiWII o. ~ tloo.AIIIII
'
AldM, lloclltnlot8, Porol!lllo,

'.'

"THA-n, TH!i KIND

atct:.Df: '=""= tt~
1M

OF HEU&gt;'IOJ~

AROUND HERa.

·

·-=

. . . ClllliiM8 ......

C. wltl
culttvllkn. rune ••a • 11, ...,.

1•

1144111-1...
DOUILE R TACK - .

-

~

c-

plotelntllloll-ondilrtllo
-_ ....· .:- 1111
w.....
llld •ooddloe
.....
.._ . . 1ft oil. Molo, · vtoa llld
......~ IIOCJplld. .,.....,.

-----11M ..
_ . . . 304-41-.
-.
11M Oklo ~ Claro,
...... ghan. Dlaoot,10 ..........
on
trlislsrabtl waaltJ.I14-

-

.._ lffA.- _. ll,liOO Mile, ACO.,~

-

Noli ....... -

botloly.l14 MNftt

Wontod: P - In 011111 or
lllotgl Count¥ wlh ... ·nrtll'll

.. -.1..-.?al.

~

For -

• -

-.
-ttp,rn.

- · - . ...
.......
,;.-=·
·-_,...,.-,--...,.,-

Rent a''

-

7

1117 Clroy · - _ , _ AJI.

Hal-

v-

=-

2 or 1 , J wm, ._.,
nlfu lid. filii, on Llnoolil
~IRteNJ. 11MU-

Colt_,

u

--lld.

--llablolorl- ........

lAtiN IIOHEY R-.g - 1
. ..-,.. , _ io1ln1toL
o.:otto. {1)
y.
4812.

...,....

111M . . ...., ••• ,, ....
ario1
to ""'
114-81ltll. ., .....
.bor,
..,....
...
~

·nt:t 4...... .

-DceRino'•
tMinrl
Pliza.

.ai:J-.....
• . Col 11)

, . . . . . Hill I ....

-,
tt-.

.-. -

171-1111.

for .... 11r OWnlt: Puri:wbu ak
• t Rut I a. ar, 1 1/J lathe,

• l1u1111r.

, _ _ , ' ' ' JlonlnfD.OII

BERNICE

42 Mobile Homes
114 lot. City-.
11..-1111.
torRent
..... -

WIWIOd

1!1 (IOr'Oh,

. . ---lot,
. . . .-..

BEDEOSOL

2 l1droom llllllle ..._ lor

are Fllllirl1.,..., Mlkalll tl· .

10ft tot IIIII lima to begin to brcMidan
parlpiCI-. Tlta wtdar
!Iori- '

pllano~.

11

POITAL EAYICI . - , ~

-

-·· lllot--

1M

lo
r - t n - . ::;:11:;;;....._=;:.;7•;;,'
---·tiT,GOD.
-117-1010.
11;;,·--

-tar-~~·-·· -

-Col1..14 . . 1114.

-

tn Vtntan on • ,.,,,. 0 n
a (II. 1111. .... lrt,- born,

:::...-r:.. ~II,~

-

$1.25 to Aslro-Graph, c/O thla MWIPI- . tlwty fW not your belt inper. P.O. Box 91.28, CleVeland, OH tiNIIs. Your indeplrtdencl _ wltl be
-«101-3&lt;128. Be...,. to ttato wour zodl. ~ nrecl*l.
ac ll(ln.
ICOIII'IO IOit. M,Nof. Ill HloOktllke
TAUIIUS (April • ..,. 10) M-lngful thlt ooutd M 111 exlremeiy productive
Kltle_t.... pollible today' probee.... you will be InClined
vldad you 1ocu1 prOI*Ir on your ob)eeand 111,ut1ng wltlc:h
tr... You oould IIIIIIOrt of your lltlllk K
you r.ck CG4-Ikatl0n Md continut1y.

St*lt Of Adventure:

fell

1n till Wlkl

swoop

.•.

33 Sojourn ...
35

eo ...., Twltl;ttl za» l!venlng ......

.

Demo!lah

'

it~~blediM

eo..., ...
.On
.....

One' letter stands for another. In this 8IUJII)le A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apcllltrophes, the length and formation of the wor~ are all
hinll. Each day the code letlerlare dlfrel"enl.

111ow

•.••

luwoaiMra._ICIIII ·

for

-~

....,.,.,,_,n , ~

~

r:r t t".:-~r: r-:1;

.•....
,.

·~·

..

•

"I'm tn~lng a complllniiD my lluiiMnd'a
' hOtile Cmj)i'Ow.inant magazlna."

.•

,._ ..

I

c'l-!0'-_,..,o 0'&lt;.-'11' . -...... .. ....:'\'..

'

'

.

.·

'~

T

1

IEWC

' VC

- · Z L H L D. .I L

'

-IIIIIM _ . . , l'totoo,
..
4\'b .all.

r' •

VTXBTQ

BTIIUA

~· .r...' Ill . IIIGI

I

'

CIIYPTOQUOTE

JOTW

for Rent

....... lllldo.1·11:t-lol.

•

10:05 (I) MOYII:•KiuUI (R) (2:001
10:30 (IJ AIWII n MilExamine till artlttic growth
In Slmorfl .,ark. (RI 11 :3011J

=-:.·-;;;;/,.:*'a': "=

-

~

DNewa

... _ , 01111 -

=

'

· DAILYCRYPTOQUOII!B-:Ihfe'tiMwk!worklt:

T

... 10

.-.

(

•

7 ~ ILJIL010p.lll. 141MI7·
11H;Ild.101.
-1711, 114-lll171t.

,..,. ond I Inti , - roloot. IUD- . . you
, . . .1.-..7110.

35Teaae

'

32. '

(I) Under l'tnl

.••.v!li: - -

31 Imbroglio
34By way
of

colleclion
27 Peddler
of old
30 Hallos
31 "3 St0C19'S"
member

Cfl~~awewatch
you In the year aheld. Send lor your Ao- 10 group pr-re today 11 they want you
tro-Graph prodlctlona tOday by mailing' to go alOng with iontethlng you lnttlnc:-

river

28 Anecdotal

• • • Ill , ,1111110i.11111nm..
,. uw. v.

tor CIIII lleglnrilng opltt1ot 1100. .... "
. .
II, 1110.
eouel Mull C.nMr .t 1· !1J ...._ I bid Olftll, tul
iiiMfl.-. A _..., ol til!&gt;- ~
. . . - t o - litlfl!lnlnl AIC, nloel'ttaad. 2100
I• 110W

25Shyness
symbol
28 Oldwomanish
29 English

endorse·

~~J.=·§
Omaha ••

3 Tailoring

ment

L.A. Law Abby
retuaai to fOllOW 1 Client's

12

DOWN
1 Exhausted
2 Call
lor help

24 Equal
· 2S ·Paupon

e al •

-----11-

auppor1

23Ciamping
tool

e

Orlndor. AI rtwoo, 1 - · lfwnltiw.._botlo · -.... - . - 17111.
2JI.4inl.
1117 Hondo Clvto, ........ ....
....... 11,000 . . . .. a-.

horlololl. -

·

111111ic'a hottlltstera lrt
teaturiCI live.
1:30()) L.Mnt ., Till loOII
al Ill Grind Tom
' conllldars Tiki Mllune's
otter to buy Carol Anne. 1;1
10:00 al 700 Club Wlllt Pal
RlblrtiOII

I SETTER
GO LIGHT
A FIRE!!

!!!!"

39 Notion

• Nalhvllle Now Country

''""'"

·--.
!!
1

Young Pillara

McCrory likes on Jeff
Lampkin tor tilt IBF ·
Crulaarwaight Ch*mpionlhlp,
frOm Newc:aatle, England (T)

Dodao . . _ u. Turbo,
l'ul .... b11o11 ~-. IIIII lno, 41.111 - , 111011 - . 114- · n o - .. am
dolour 111'·71111attorfp.rn.
•
..,.,,,,,,
........_

thorn's
fruit
9 Violin
maker

rtgglng

14 Half a
term
sawbuck
4 Second
13 Brink
15 Calaboose
15 Dairy
111 Waa
5 Egyptian
p!&lt;Jduct
preeminent
deity
18 Bellow
lllamsntable21 Sapient
17 Football
play
·
7 Without
22 Tia's title
23 "MI~ml
19 Fall behind
a peep
20 Japanese I Unacathed 24 Earlier
code word 1o Histor.lcal
.
21 Carry on
era r-1,....,tt- years
22 Food fish

~ Tlturlday Nlgllll'lghta Glenn

Ul 1211UIIoti:PJI.

,. a.,..

Ill Chiaro Norm
invents a tyronnical partner
to manage his employees.
IRlQ
())............,.Great
American Events: Paul
Bunwon Timber
Championship from
Nelsonviila. OH (Tl

(1)1 Lany King

Compulor - . 1...

-

e aJ

Uval
Q) . .dWIII• PreHIIII:

31 Rebel
37 - of Man
31 Ship's

11 Astringenl
12 Nix!

seetcs to avenge his wile's
murder. g
CD (J) MYIIMIYI Sir Paul
Berowna con1111ts Adam
about threatening lettere. 1;1

Dirt-. -fullr

,.,. !IOIIa. lbortlont -Iori. 114-

AIMik:l South

• • • (I)

ACROSS
1 Tree
4 Male

voice
• Black·

The OUI(fd Marshall Cain

11 ' •

-.

··~.-...
•.aaa.CIIIttt•aan.
41 Hou. . for Rent
Elactr1clono. ~

Aaoountln&amp;~:'putlnl
I
I·-~
Coi-

9:00

I

II 1M' Tloot• wlh '""" llld :::..
cHilD. MIW t.uhr"""""t.h boa oondii"L 114•ir• '
II.~'-1NIIF~ ........ 14M\Ij ..,._,_..,,OH. ·
110
. . M.5IO. · -.114-i~WZ,
11M~

-

by tHOMAS JOSEPH

iCnooloiCIIIII

t-. ,.....,:. 2~-'(!; q t;rc;';
- . ..... 304111··.
-=~=­

Real Estate
Wanted

:i:MIII

01ft

IN FOnt

0..1. Willie till., I - - .
buttdlna
...114'241 ~~ Roody
to
bulkfon.

b

~

-11,0110-.

inqylotoo to P.O. loll 121,
Aniheroi,Ohlo44001.

1714.

..... ---. . .-;-·--·Meot . . .

Meahlnlc•,

llolnt-

11414111411

lnbn18tiOII - - for.

"'"ltlltile,

Mull Mwe villi Ohio ~'1
on11 nonbltlly.- bo
10 provlda tro"'p l1don
ace l~.lenll ....,... ..:
.toto C . . P.O. - 317, 1110
Cll1rton lit, 8yrooui!O, Oh.
41771. T o - .oiod roglolor far
......,.1lail-nor.
.toto Hunting? • itdu? Wo
troln _.o lor Jo!ll oo Aulo 1 , _ ... Wh. Full

.r.........

lnOfll

VIdeO
(I) Wid

111111 RIIIIIJ!~=·
~
-.
1110.
11
114417;

rod Howl&lt; 44 llognum
• -ion of T.V. - ,

ICIFE..

Hickory

.....

Dakota's Badlands National
Park Is markld by erolion.

11 .....1. . . ,, ..

---•tghan.
otn, hand
"""'
~4.

t-.o~:z.e mlloo, Pl. 2,

___ ,.,..

1110- -~ ~ 111011,
1110 - . 4oVI.
71,000
- , Pi"
PI~ AIIA'II
$1'1110. i::li ... 4p.lll.

II.

•
rtollor. lolory on
. . . .ncL 8erid ,......,. 10 ....0 •
.... 11111"-101'·
Job Ca .,_ ~ IO train
loidlold "" wlh -blllloo In
WIIUII jobo. ~-IWIancl ;.rt tl• ...........

C:lr.;:"Jt'~c'r·~
•
.

I 112 oo- fw ooto; .-y
..cludH I qu...1 2 lllllee from

I 1-·k--.

CROSSWORD

al Ill DHieoent World

(I)SnHkPteule•sGafa

.....

wlh .. 'iind ........
tabl-.11,100. 114 3111111.

w•

Whillay IS torOid to laM Dr. .
Waf a math c:lln. (Rl 1;1

.I -

1400. .. ... ollor,

appll.noe 1ft..

Furntlure and

1110 Clwvy -

mlnorol rtgillo,
tlmbor, houM olloo, gojdan
opoto, 304..,..2771.

wtth ..
mlnotOt - . . In Wllkoovlllo
Taomohlp, VInton ~.Ohio.
No illniDtuNa on lftl• '
Por

Ext. y. 3b................... 212

1:30 e

'

~

Weove A'Tanglld Wab

41 -

For Solo In ¥1111101 of Vinton Lol;

lit Tho
)

• Ctturcll ........ . -

1111.

=r.-"'• 114-4441-1711, 11WU.

-·-•,..,..,..1

.........11

ID MOYIE:...,._ tn
TIM (PO(C2:00l
1.115 (I) MOYIE: C8l llallou 12:00)

:·~ L11..e:~tock

304-

e Gl

Diloiiltwlloo1 (AJ (2:

'.

35 Loti &amp; Acraage

Woodect

31 Homes for sale

0111t 112

2 lol• ., ••ooo.

J•,...

and plumbing

.{!!) MOVII:

f ;,rrn Suppl1r•

For 8olo, By Owrw: 141

Real Estate

- ,.

Tral.., ..nd
171o7MI.

IJ
ord -

consunant;;~•
inalllatlons.
' the

ill

o.nod All .,.,. ,., ..
tu and 'Tille FMei 10 ..,._to
a,-, U• , _ Tu Ro..nd.

Coli
- - Contor,
~7112.

a~c-­

Haa~ng

1tUI'OniAMo8W 1.oro1n von.
l.ooltod: 14,000 _,. 111,100.

51

. II.P..f.:apanlyl 1;1

~all·brolhar.

1111 luloll • ' t rs Cullom,
twa daar,low ~lie. .111,
Block with
'lnl-.
11,000. Col 11
.
1:00.
4•'
114-742 1111 '

.

mistaken tor his criminal

59 · · For S818
orJrade

~

•••• ,

e

(I) Tllla

IAQJ 2

+KJ

•s

7:05 iil Jafla..O..a
7:30eaJ ,~ 'tllll
· ()) !IPN'e lpaadwiH
• • !-1811WIIinl Tonlglll
Ill " - ' 1 Pllltlly

'&lt;D

..\2

s.,.-

•M'ttoita*
• e CJiFather
'"""'Dowling
Dowling
IS

I""!' 304-nMn"l 1:00 ' 1111

r~·

·

• Folta And l'allllvala:
W a - County Till talr
lalturll parlormtnc:os by
Eddla Rabbln and Highway
101 , as -" as bake aalea,
an antique car and alrplene
show, and llvootock exhibits .
. . ... 1111~

(J) ~ 111 cabw Show c
()) ~lnl WOIId S.rtea Ol
IIOga-a
.

buy,

J.II•N

When Careful Charlie got back to · WEST
EAST
his regular bridge g,me after a vaca- • 7 3
+A4
lion, he quickly proved tbat he hadn't • QJ 10 $
.K8743
gotleD rtllty '
• 10 9 7 4
tK5
North liked Charlie's spa~e re- ; + 10 7 1
+QIB3
enough to jump to four. 'As for
SOUTH
Weat'a raiae of his partner-'s heart
+QJlDH
overcall, thars fine if West has his
&amp;
own U.S. Treasury printinc preu.
• 863
Charlie grabbe!l the opening heart
+A6Z
lead aild played a low spade. East was
Vulnerable: Both
not aoing to be endplayed, so he took
i.
Dealer:
North
the 1ce, casbetl his heart king and then
got off lead with a spade. Now, dear Sootll
W..l
Nortll Eut
readen, we can see that the diamond
f i - will not work. f.Jtd we can also 1 •
All pus
see that diamonds do not apllt. So it is
probable that even Charlie might • Opening lead: • Q
a diamond and later blve to toke a 1111iq club lineae. But declarer found a
way lo do better.
He wctD the -.!spade and played Eventually tbe fourth diamond Ia
dummy's ace of diamonds. Tben he dummy w.ould be a winner one way or
played &amp; spade to bis band and led a another. Does this sacrifice anylbJDC?
diamond up to the Q-.1. East· now won Only an overtrick wben Weal bolda
the kiltg and bad to either lead a club both the king of diamonds and tbe
back into the K..J or give a sluff and a queen of clubs. Surely it's better to try ..
ruff with a beart play. And Wbal would to make your contract.
·
h&lt;flllr~-. "Joc:oby.., Brldp"lllll :
blppen if East did not even bold the ~
kin&amp; of diamonds? CbarUe would win "JI&lt;ObymCIIriiGomel"(ml""rrill!llilf•-·
.........
i dummy on the leCODd dla the J." Onr•Jd JM:ObfJ •n .,. n1U.IW •t
...,queen
~ to•.
hdbyPI•or.. mond play nand come to his club ace
play a lblrd diamond up to the jack.
co---aw•a•;••~

a.-oo e

···~

Sl.lloob. (

Wollod 10

.

• Nl;tll Court
~ 7:35Ciliantonl Ancllon

'
.....7NIII .
1111, . . - · 11'
10
Faith Boobi 114 .... 1117, 111il

NORTH

··

+K162

By JaiAH!I Jaeolly .

Crockett and
, Tubbi probe I g~tlr'l
· money laundering operation .

. . . . . . . ..00. . . . .

CMwiEIIalloll8ponlol .......
-·:IO,bloOkot-111101o,4
............, ' ttl 0114.
.

Wlntor AU&lt;11on s.mco, 11
or
oxporloneo, roforonc'!!1 LicOn- ...~.,
·~- or -~~
ood ond 8ondod In .,.. VIr·
••
.... ,~
!lin'- ond Ohio, 3114-273-3447.
dloro. 1t~4UIIIZ.
...t
B
DtJnndaW.. a.rt•!.n WDmlln
9 . Want~,. to uy
w1"11111 to c1o bobnltlng ·at ""
Eloclrlc
or wood plono. 114- " -· 814..CMifZ.

BRIDGE

&lt;D (J) Mlicllell ~ .

Lwao ol .....
110
.........
-.114
. . 1111
_

Yonder- Knoclf - Every - Horrid - VIDEO
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Wider use of epilepsy
surgery recommended

Maalt 22, 1180

Stroke risk reduced by aspirin:· researchers.

But It cautioned that only about
BE111ESDA, Md. (UP!) Brain surgery could benefit 10 50 percent of pa!tents report
times as many eplleptlcs asnow "marked" reduction In seizures
undergo such operations, a panel and the death and disability rate
runs as high as 20 percent.
· · of medical experts concluded.
"The procedure Is moJt fre·
, A committee convened by the
Nailonallnstltutes of Health said quenlly recommended In pa-.
ednesday that as many as 5,000 · tlents who are prone to violent
erlcans with epilepsy mlghl" fails that often result In head
. helped by surgery each year. Injury," the panel said. The
Only about 500 such operations operation used In such cases
are now performed annually at Involves cu ttlng the corpus calla·
about 40 U.S. hospitals. The sum. a thick bundle of nerve
operations cost $4Q,OOO or more.
fibers connecting the two· halves
·
.. The committee emphasized of the brain.
Surgery as a laSt·dlich treat .surgical 1reatment, which In·
· valves cutting out abnormal ment for epilepsy has been used
brain !Issue thought to cause I he since the 1940s. But Rowland, a
,epUpetic seizures, should be neurologist at New York's Co·
·considered only for those pa· lumbla Presbyterian Medical
:uents who are not helped by drug Center, sajd new electronic lm·
Jherapy,
'
I
.
.
aging. techniques .that give sur·
- CutUng out brain tissue poten· geons a better view of the brain
Ually can damage a person's have made such operations
"much safer."
ability to speak, see, think and
The average age of a patient
:move. BOt Dr. Edward Laws,
;chairman of the neurosurgery undergoing surgery is now 27,
·department at George Washing- and he or she has· usually
ton University Medical Center, suffeted from epilepsy from 10 to
said the side effects frorn epl· 20 years.
In Its 24-page report, the
lepsy surgery are now "very
advisory
panel recommended
minimal" and it has "a reasona·
ble record of safely."
studies be conducted to find out If
EpUepsy - a seizure disorder it might be better to resort to
characterized by recurrent , un- surgery earlier, and- if surgery
controlled electrical discharges might be preferable to the side
·or brain cells - affects at least 2 · effects caused by long-term use
of high doses of anti-convulsant
million Americans;
In most cases, the disorder can drugs.
"It's possible that If we oper·
be · controlled with drugs, and
epUeptlcs can live near-normal a ted earlier, (pat.lents)· might do
lives. But about 10 percent to 20 better in the long-run ," said Dr.
percent of epileptics have recur· Louis Caplan, head of the neural· :
.renl seizures that are poorly . ogy department at Tufts Unlver·
controlled with an li -seizure 1 sity School of Medicine in Boston.
drugs .
Dr. Lewis Roland, chairman of
the 13-member panel, said
surgery appears to be most
successful In treating patients
troubled by complex partial
seizures. Such seizures are
mar.ked by purposeless activity,
such as staring, fidgeting or
Two students from the Meigs
mak-Ing chewing motions . Usu·
County
area were amon~r 40
ally there is no memory of the
recently
Inducted _into Alpha Mia
!!,(&gt;izure afterwards.
Delta.
Hocking
Technical ColAbout 55 percent to 70 percent
lege's
chapter
of Phi Theta
·Of patients with complex partial
.Kappa
.
honor
soci~ty
durln'g a
'Seizures, which usuallY.orlginate
ceremony
at
the
Quality
Inn
In a brain region called the
Hocking
Valley.
temporal lobe, are completely
Tapped for the honor . were
free of seizures after surgery,
Allen
King, Racine, a recreation
although one-third musl still take
-.medication, the committee said. and wildlife student; and Shirley
,The combined rate of death and Lyons, Tuppers Plains, a ·pracll·
'disability from the operation Is Cal nun;lng student.
In addltlon.to academic excel·
less than 5 percent, the panel
·tence,
students must also exhibit
said. ··
.
qualities
of leadership an·d ser·
. Surgery also ll}ay help som~
vice.
Former
~elgs County rest·
patients with generalized sefz.
dent,
Charlotte
!:.amber!, Is one,
ures, which Involve the loss of
of
the
chapter's
advisors.
consciousness, the panel said.

HTC list includes
local students

COIOJI!m'able II'OIIP that received '
Bet- JuDe 1987 and NoLeounl and collea,ue. at the
nc"nedtcatloll. ·
wmber . 1989, 517 people with Texas fiiCWty c:ooniiMted the
The ujllrta. therapy wu. 10 lrre,ular heartbeata were given study _.., lalonnatldn on pa· ·
•ucceaatul, a
laid, that 18 one asplrla tablet dally while 5211 tleall trealld· at 16 medical
montha Into !be 1t11c1;y a ~tor- received a ueleu aut.lhUie. ceatenaJ'OIIIIltbeUaltedStalel.
lag II'OUP told ~ to Nl~ people Ia the ~
Ill people 'fl1tb atrial tlbrlll• :
•tart giving the "011 ul*la II'OilP suffered strokel ,a~~ 18 lion, lhe rllk of strolle II
group either uplrln or 11111111- peoplebadatrokellntbecompar· lncreued tllle-fold becau• tbe&lt;
coaaulalltlmowD uwartarle.
· ~aoa,roup. ·
·
heartteadlto"qulverllkeaboWI ,
The renmcb "fou8d, 11nexT!lere '1"U ..10 a reduction In · ot Jelly," forc!AtJ bloocltopoolln
pectedly, tlii.t you've 101 to give the atrolre rate amoq199 peOple the top two ehimbers, Leonard
these people somethlai," said whO ~lved warfarin but 1Je. said.
:
McBride, a blostatlstlelan at the cau• the n!learcb wu Inter·
AI the blood pools, clots te~ to •
Statistics and EpldemioloiY Re- ruptec1 by the monitoring coni· · form tbat can· cause strokes· Jf,
·search Center In Seattle. The mHtee. "we really don't have a they reach the brain. Aspirin and
study results were published ·good Idea of warfarin's effective· warfarin, as anti-coagulants.'
Wednesday in The ...ew England ~ nell yet," McBride said.
prevent the formation of tlier
J()urnal of Medicine.
·
McBride said that because cloll.
1
. \
most or the study subjects were
Altogether, l.,244 people wltb,
under 75, the researchers could the ·condition took part In the,
not come to any conchlllona study. When researchers com-.
about the effect of aspirin or .pared those taking either aspirin.,
NEW YORK (UP I)- Monkeys de~ ·the nneasure because of
warfarin in people older than or warfarin with those receiving .
arriving at John F. ~enJiedy l'eCel)t Casel in the PhWpplneli · that.
.
the phony substitute, they found:
International Airport from over· and the United ·states In -which
Atrial fibrillation affects about a five-told ln~ase 4n strokes+
seas will need to have papers persons handling moilkeys In· · 1 million Americana, niost ot · · amoq the placebo grc)llp.
• ·
showing they're free of 'the tected with flloYirus came down
them over fill. or these people,
However, since the warfarli(
deadly Ebola Virus, state health wltb the dllease.
"about 75_,000 , will suffer · group was smali and the re·:
officials said.
stroke~," .said Anne Leonard, a
search was Interrupted. McBride.
'ThiS p,oles a r~k to animal
ObserYI!rs likened the action to handlers anCI researchers and
senior research nurse at the ' said, the study could not 'judge;
a de facto ban on the Importation could uttilnately ~ a risk to ' University · of Texas Heaith
the effects .of warfarin vs.;
of monkeys for biomedical re· . others,'! Frances Tarelton, spoScience Center ln. San Antonio.
aspirin. .
,•
search. A,bout 20,0IJO- monkeys kesman for the state·Departrnent
are imported annually Into the of Health told the Washington .
United States, 80 percent of them f'ost.
.
through New York City.
But observers said -the action
Effective Friday, persons amounts to ll ban on monkey
bringing monkeys of the C)'noImportation. because exporting
molgus, African green, ·and rhecountries do not have the faclll· '
sus species from overseas must lies to quarantine or test the
show proof .the anlmal1! were monkeys. Cynomolgus monkeys
quarantined for 60 days before come mainly from the Philip'
. '
shipment and tested negative for
pines and Indonesia and· Rhesus
antibodies to·fllovlrus, the sl;lte
trom China.
·
Health Department said
Fllovlrus Is an Illness capable
Wednesday. . .
of Inducing fatal . fevers In
Once Inside · the state, the !Jumans . .
· monkeys will .!lave be quaranTraces of fllovlrlls recently ·
.
'
tined again for a second twohave been detected In 10 percent
month period and be tested again ' of monkeys of various species
for the virus, which Is deadly to from other ·countries tested by
.
humans, tbe department &amp;ald.
the U.S. Center,s for -Disease
Health officials said they· o:· Control. ·
.BOSTON (\Jfll-A dallydQie
or -aspirin cu cu lin bait tile rllk
of 1tralu!l Ia people wbo 1uffl!r
from a l~Qrt condiUon that
affects 1 mDIIon Americans,
researcher• reported.
A study of' older people who
suffer from alltrreplar heart·
beat that maksotbem prone to
strokes . found ene tablet_ of
aspirin a day was an effective
preventive meuut.. said Ruth
McBride, who helped compile.the
results.
.
McBride' said people with a
condition knOWIIasatrialflbrllla·
lion wbo took the aspirin had 50
percent fewe' · 'strokes · than a

O'Verse:as monkeys need papers

•'

WE'RE NPT GIVING '·ogUflE Oil.
. EVEN .TRIPLE COP.~ONS... ., . '
'

Maw Sp.rlng _Marehln~lsa
· Arriving Dally · ·
,.

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WE RENT TUIEDO.S
'

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... FOI lOTH MEl &amp; 'BOYS

•

WE'RE GIVING 1
. 0 TIMES THE.
VALUE OF ANY MANUFAOURER'S
COUPON UP TO 50'. .

-

TEN TIMES THE VAlUE
ba111ple:

50~ ~ Coupon

-

tll,·5100 MON.-SAT.

is worth SS.OO

THIS. WEEKEND ONLY ··~·
'NOW .OPEN TIL 6 .
' t

BAHR·
ClOTHIERS
.
•IILIPOII
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Corne~ · Collections
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ON , .

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~'T" ~

MIDDLEPOIT

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Ohio Lottery

. NCAA

Daily Number
758'

·resUlts

Piek-4

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Page4
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9571
Wealher

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Vo1.40, No.222 .
Copyrighted 11110

·"" Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, March

23.

2 s.ctlono. 14 Pog• 25 C...tl
A Multi&lt;Mdielnc. NOWIPII*'

1990

House votes .to regulate preserve · hunting
COLUMBUS, Olllo (UPI) -The Ohio House of
Representatives voted Thursday to regulate
hunting on game preserves for wild animals and .
·
birds that are not native to Olilo.
. , Before )otnhig ihe senate In weekend ~djourn­
ment, theHo1,1se also adopted, 86-5; a longstanding
bill protecting sehol&gt;l districts when tax abate·
ment Is offered as an Inducement to Industry to
locate or expand In an area.
The hunting Iilli passed orl an 85-5 vote and was
forwarded to the Senate after R~p . Ross Boggs ·
Jr., D·Andover. said It was requested by the Ohio
Department of Natural l_tesources and does not
allow endangered species of birds or animals to be
hunted.
Existing law regulates only the hunting of birds
and animals native to Ohio. Thomas Addis of the
Legislative Wildlife Fund sal_d Boggs's bill would

apply to preserves that offer slka deer, b)gllorn
sheep, mouritaln goats, wild boar, elk, rlngneck
· pheasants, chukk!lr partridge and quail to
·
sportsmen.
One of the opponents, Rep. JQAnn Davidson,
R·Reynoldsburg, sa,ld she was concerned about a
provision In t)le bill that expands the number of
available game preserves.
Davidson also objected to allowing Sunday.and
year-rounq hunting on the preserves.
.
The tax abatement b,lll, Introduced In January
1989, also was sent to the Senate. It requires local
school districts to be notified within 24 hours after
an Industry applies with a local government for
tax abatement.
Sponsored by Rep. John Bara, D·Eiyrla, the bill
also requires that. no action be taken on such an
application until at least48 hours after the schOol

district Is notified.
Bara said the school board would not have veto
power over any tax abaternent.
Before passing the bill, the House ·adopted an
amendment by Rep. Michael Fox, R·Hamllton,
limiting lawsuits by school districts against
companies which receive tax abatement but fall
to lll(e up to Its terms.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura, an opponent,
said any thr.e at of a lawsuit by a school district
''could kill industry'' In an area because company
.officials would be wary of moving ln.
. Earlier, a Columbus attorney told a special
Senate task force on campaign financing that the
way to eliminate excessive amounts of money
spent on campaigns is to require that incumbent
officeholders debate thei.r challengers, and
require that the news. rnedia cover the debates.

"If these. ethical principles were adopted the
followed, ordinary ciUzens would .be able to run
for office withOut the necessity of raising or
spending large amounts of money," said Clifford
Arnebeck.
.
.
"Voters would lie able to make Intelligent
choices among candidates . There would not be a
valid purpose for expensive advertising to
achieve name recognition or to manipulate public
opinion."
Arnebeck Is challenging veteran Rep. Chat·
meres Wylie, R·Ohio, in the Republican primary
this year.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R- Lima, said senators will
begin to amend the House-passed ca1J1palgn
finance reform bill next week, bu 1 be did not
i.ndlcate any action will be taken soon.

Child ·dies
in accidental
shooting

Stranded
. snowmobilers
r;each,highway safely
.

' CODY, Wyo. : (UPI) - Res·
Hodge said they left Cooke
Twelve-year-old Jeremy Ray
cuers on snowmobiles successCity, Mont., on rented snowmoGuinther,
son of Kenneth and
fully led six stranded snowmobll·
biles Tuesday for a day long
Carol Guinther, died about 5:30
ers, five of them from Jackson outing and were reported miss·
p.m . Thursday of an accidentally
County, Ohio, safely out of
lng when they did not return as
self-Inflicted rifle shot wound,
· Wyoming's rugged Beartooth expected. ·
·
according to information fi'om
Mountains e'ast of Yellowstone
A search was launched. and a
the Meigs County Sheriff's De·
Civil Air Patrol plane spotted the
National Park Thursday.
partment. The bullet entered the
Park County ·Sheriff Dan stranded· snowobllers late Wed·
boy's body In the area of the
Hodge said the party reached
nesday . However, poor'vlslblllty
larnyx, according to a deputy.
U.S. Highway 212 safely and
made it impossible · to fly a
A news release from Sherifi
would be able to snowmobile on
helicopter into the area to rescue
James
M. Soulsby stated that the
them .
the snowpacked highway to its
sheriff's
department and Racine
junction with Wyoming Highway
Hodge said his department
EMS
were
called to the Guinther
·296, where they will l;le picked up. ·took over the rescue effort when
residence on Bashan Road near
The snowmobilers could face
It was discovered the snowmobll·
Racine at about 5:30p.m., after
·penalties of up .to six months In ers had traveled a few mUes into
the youngster's body was found
Wyoming and a plane dropped
jail and $5,000 fines for llle~ally
outside by a member of. the
snowmobiling .ln . a wilderness - supplies, Including gasoline, to
family,
.
...
..
.area.
·
,
. lhelii. ellr.~. Thl'_r:sday.
,
Dr
.
.
Douglas
Hunter,'
Meigs
'Tbey·~e ,o it(" Hodge sat!!:
Rescuers u~lng ·skls and snow·
County Coroner, was on the scene
"There was · some ques lion shoes also reached lhl!rn before .
along with Sheriff Soulsby and
whether they get ~el them all out
the snowmobiles arrived later In
Deputies
Robert Beegle, Harry
and the snowmobiles too, but the day.
Lyons
and
Ralph Trussell. Dr.
they got everything."
•'They had about ·o ne gallon of
Hunter
ruled
the gun shot as
He said It was still unce~tain gasoline left in each of their
accidental.
how the snowmobilers became machines," Hodge said. "We
The body was removed to
stranded near Granite Lake In don'l ·know why they were in the
Ewing Funeral Home.
the mountains near the Montana
predicament they ,were. ·In,
·E xact circumstances sur·
_border, buttherescuersrepor~d . whether they were stuck · or
rounding the accident will proba~
(he .terrain was so rugged they
what."
brush fire "jumped" from one area to another
bly never be known, authorities
BRUSH FIRE SEASON :.._ Equipment from
could leave the area the same
Gallatin National Forest Dis·
around
the
said.
rklge.bonlerlng
the
property,
said
one
Rutland,
Pomeroy
ud
1\llddleport
Fire
Departway they entered it.
trlct Ranger John Logan said the
fireman.
Firemen
brought
the
fire
under
control,
The boy was a seventh grader
mentA
were
used
Thursday
to
fl1ht
a
brush
fire
Th~ sheriff said the six people area where the snowmobilers
only
to
be
called
back
when
the
fire
rekindled
at
Southern Junior High at
which
started
sometime,
around
noon
on
the
8111
appeared to be In good condition
were fo11nci· was deep inside. the
about
6:40
p.m.
No
injuries
were
reported.
Racine.
Willford property on Route 124 near Rutland. The
after spending two nights In the forest's Absorka-Beartooth Wll·
mountains. 'He · said weather · derness, where federa)law pro·
conditions had been .favorable
hlblts using snowmobiles.
·Logan said issuance of ciiTuesday and Wednesday but by
!J'hursday snow was falling inter- allons will depend on a determl·
mlttentl)( and blizzard conditions nation of whether.tjle snowmobil·
A grant of $35,467. has been · fective treatment. programs and
Ohio is only one of thee states In
were approaching the area from ers entered the wilderness area
made to the Alcohol. Drug and supporting local efforts for ad· 2,000 people on waiting lists at 66
the
nation to have a cabinet -level
the north:
deliberately or were lost.
Mental Healih Board serving .dieted Ohioans . I'm extremely drug and. alcohol treatment cen·
dealing with the
deparJ,nlent
GaiUa, Jackson and Meigs Coun- . proud that less than six months ters funded by ODADAS In Ohio.
problehi
of
drug
and alcohol
The mQney Is targeted to help
ties for treatment programs :by ' after this department was
addiction. Celeste called for the
the Ohio Department of Alcohol created , we are seeing real reduce treatmenl center waiting
creation
of the department in his
lists
and
improve
the
quality
and
and Drug Addiction Services.
dollars distributed to local facili· access! bilily of alcohol and drug . 1989 State or the State address
The local area gran I was one of ~~~~ around th~ state."
and in October, 1989, signed H. B.
treatment programs In Ohio. It
53 made across Ohio totaling $5.3
317
to establish ODADAS. The
will
provide
beds
and
cribs
for
stay open ori Saturdays and
million, according to an an·
According to Lucellle Fleming,
Voter registration for the updepartment
coordinates alcohol
lhe
centers
and
vans
for
trans·
nouncement made today by Gov. director of ODADAS, there are
coming primary election closes . evenings prior to the registration
'
and
drug
treat,nent
efforts by
portation
in
rural
and
other
deadline.
· ....
Richard F. Celeste.
now approximately .2.400 treat·
on Monday, April 9, aceordlng to
other
agencies
and
provides
In addition to deciding many
In making the announcement, ment beds for people suffering inaccessible areas. In addition,
Ohio Secretary of State Sherrod
training,
consultation
and
evaprevention and Intervention se·
local issues, voters will be
Celeste said; "An Important part from alcohol and other drug
Brown. .
luation
for
statewide
treatment
minars will. be funded for rami·
nominating party candidates for
of my work as governor has addictions. AI the same time,
"If you've ·changed your name
programs. ·
lies , teachers and clergy.
both state and local offices for the
center-ed around developing ef. said Fleming. there are nearly
or if you've JIIOVed since the last
November general election.
election, you have to update your
Brown said voters can contact
registration," Brown said.
their
local election boards for
Co11nty boards of elect·lon will
more
Information about voter
be operi' until 9 p·.m. on April 9.
I
and the upcoming
registration
A'NN.tPOLIS, Md. ~UPI) Various-election board offices or
stage for the issue to be deterout of this body on Its own,"
ended when abortion opponents ·
elections.
Offering. Maryland voters two mined by Maryland voters in
branch registration offices will
agreed to halt the debate at 12:40
Boozer said .
. distinctly different proposals 'for November.
.
a.m. EST Friday after a day of
Abortion opponents, however,
an abordon law was the only way
Both bills are likely to be
negotiations over the
argued that the same could be
to resolve an elght·day filibuster petitioned by O\ltside groups to
compromise.
said of the abortion rights leglsla·
that paralyzed the state Senate, public referendum. If neither bill
lion and that the filibuster could
"Nobody that's seen the hell
legislators said.
.
is called to a public vote, the
have continued until the blll was · that we've gone through in the
Senators ended the stalemate largely unrestricted legislation
lastelghtdayscanconslder this a
killed.
early Friday by agreeing to pass would be effective.
The filibuster, which began . cop-out," said Senate President
legislation that would sharply
Thomas V. "Mike" Miller.
March 15 and recessed nightly.
'WASHINGTON ~UP!)- Gov.
In a referendum, the bill
guaranteed 85 cents · for every
restrict abortions In the state and
Richard C~leste appeared before dollar in federal gas taxes they
favored by the voters would
a companion measure that would
a House subcommittee T·hurs·
collect.
allow abortions under most become state law, enforceable if
day, calling for a change in the · , Celeste said. Ohio actually bas ·circumstances. '·
the Supreme Court disturbs Its
..
formula the federal government
1973
Roe vs. Wade decision
received only about SO percdnt of
Abortion rights supporters had
uses in ~lstrlbuting money tor
asserting
a woman's constltu·
the money It contributed since
been stymied In attempts to raise
)IJabw.ay proje~;ts.
tional
right
to abortion.
the 85 percent minimum was
the two-thirds majority needed to
Celeste told the SUrface TransMany
abortion
rights senators
adopted in 1982.
end the filibuster, falling one vote
portation Subcommittee of the
refused
the
compromise
and
"And the Irony Is lbat In every
short of the 32 votes required for
Public Works and' Transporta·
voted against tlie restrictive
JACKSON, . Ohio ~UPI) ..:.. An Oak Hill landlord has been
major national . Infrastructure cloture In the47·member Senate.
lion Committee that ~President
legislation,
which
was
approved
charged
In the t•talshootlng Q(one oi hls'tenanis.
.
study released In the last 10
Sen. Walter Baker said the
~ush's proposed transportation
by•
a
slim
24·23
margin.
WIUlam
Donia
Jr.,
67,
was
arrested·
Thu~ay
In
Ashland,
•
years, Ohio bas ranked among
dual-bill package appeared to be
··poucy reduces the federal go"I penonally tolind the blll the
Ky., on a. Jackaon County 'warrant charging him \lllth til!!
the top five states where needs
the only way to resolve the thorny
vernment's traditional role and
most
reprehensible
r
have
ev.
e
r
Wednesday
.slaylne.ot Rick Ratutt, 32, Oak Hill.
are measured agal~t the lack of
Issue, which thteateni!d to derail
shifts responslblity to tbe states.
seen
on
the
Senate
floor,"
said
Donta,
who
maintains residences in Jackson County and In
sulflclent.. resource~\" r,eteste · legislative action tor the rest of
Harford
County
Sen.
Catherine
'
Ashland, appeared Thursday In Boyd County, Ky., District
said. . -,
• ·
the llelalon.
Court and was ordered held ~thou! bond, pending an Aprll16
I· The presld,ellt's plan calla for
·Thirteen perci!Dt of oiu- urban
•qt wu this -or nollUng," he'' Ritey.
BalUmore County Sen. Vernon
continuing federal money to help lntentat~, 22 percent of our said. "Aa a cofldl_llon of getting
hearing.
,.
Boozer,
a
aeaoUator
who
worked
Urias
Hall
Jr.,
Jackson
County's
chief deputy sheriN, said
. modernize exlsdng roads and . rural Interstates and 21 ·l)ercent
the (aborilon rlgb~s) biU passed,
tor concMstons that would allow
Hall apparentl)l plana to fllht extradition to ()hlo.
;-brldees. but for state and. local . o( our brldaes are considered . we had to pus (the more
the aborUon rfahts legislation to
Hall said a dispute~ a borrowed chalnsaw.may have led to
JOventments to take tbe lead In structurally detJClelit," the gov·
re~tJ'IciiVe measure)."
· ·
be
approved.
said
It
Is.
unseemly
peylng for new projects.
ernor said. .
the
shooUng, which occurred In Ratliff's home. Ratutt was 's hot
AI part or theagJI!\!lllent, final
that a minority of 16 senators
once In the chest with a handgun, Hall slad.
' l'llneteen states, Including
This year Ohioans will receive approval of ellller bill by the
eould , get the restrictive bill
·'I thin~ that there was an argument between the two," Hall
,Oblo, lend more aaaollne tax $496 mWion In tedaral IIIJhwiY House of Delegates and Gov.
passed.
said. 'There was no st:ruggle. Hewanll!d tokllowwhy the victim
doUars to !be 'federal IJOVel'n· moneyblitwlllpay-.nmmtoilln William Donald Schaefer re"IUs a bill -that ·in a mli!Jon
men I thu ,they let ba.ck. Those teclerlleuollne taxel, leavln; a
t.adn't brOUilht his cbaln &amp;aw back to hltn."
mains contingent on paa~age of .
could,
have
gotten
years
never
·~tes aet only the minimum
lou of $35 mlllloa, Celeste ~ald.
lis counterpart, a!Jd sets tbe
.

Grant received by dr~g treatment group

Voter ·r egistration deadline
nears .for primary election :

Bill~

Off··
'

end Maryland abortion filibuster

Celeste .seeks more federal
.highway money for Ohio

.

KRISTEN WALKING AND
AEROBIC SHOE

Landlor4 charged in
slaying of Ohio man

.

.
I'

,

.

'

- ~ ------------------------~----~~------~~----------~

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