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                  <text>Paat

10-'l't. [Wy Sadiuel

M~. March

Pomeloy-Midclapcrt. Ohio

26. 1990

--Area deaths-- Temperatures below nor1'-al across Ohio
Ernest
Vineyard

Also surviving are tour broth·
ers, Donald. Charles, Danny and
Raymond, Hartung, all of Akron;
Ernest Dale Vineyard of Tal·
madge, formerly of Meigs
a . sil ter, Vena Marcinko, Cbes·
County, died Sunday morning at . ter, and her mother-in-law
his home.
Florence McGrath, Albany.
'
He is survived by three sisters
Bel;ides her father, she was
and a brother, along with several
Preceded In death by her husband, Tommy McGrath, Sr., in
nieces and nephews. Meigs
County survivors include a 1981, an Infant son, and an infant
grandson.
sister-In-law, Mrs. Hobart (May)
Funeral services will be held
Vineyard, R. D. Reedsville;
nephews, Ernest &lt;Bud) Vine- Tuesday at 11 a .m. at the New
yard, R.. D. Reedsville; Ernest Lite Covenant Church or God,
(Les) Damewood, Syracuse, nie- Chester. Pastor Gary Hines will
be In
ces, Mary Frances Vineyard. R. . offiCiate and burial
Meigs
Memo
ray
..
Gardens.
D. Reedsville, and Mrs. Eileen D.
Smith. Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral services will be held at Funeral Home, Monday, 4: 30 to 9
11 a.m Wednesday at Talmadge p.m.
with burial there.

will

Denford Douglas

Bret Rood

•

Coy

Clear Monday night, with a low
between 20 and 25. Sunny Tuesday, with highs near 50.
·
Exlended Forecast
Wednesday thr0,111h Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday , wltn a chance of rain on
Friday. Highs will be range {rom

36,000 more. than in the second- jobs, followed by wholesale trade
largest sector, manufacturing at at 3 percent or 8,000 jobs and
1.123 million.
construction at 2.8 percent or
Besides the auto industry, 5,000 jobs.
significant improvement .In tbe
Other Industries with l!bovegoocls-produclng industry sec· average growth rates were servi•
tors Included 4,000 inore jobs in ces, up 2.6 percent~ and finance,
fabricated metal products, 2,000 Insurance and real estate, admore In construction and 1,000 vanclng 2.3 percent.
Manufacturing employment,
more In prbnary metals.
Smaller gains lD the service- at 1.123 million last month, was
producing industry sector came 5,000 below the year-ago level.
In government, and finance, Since February 1988, employ·
insurance and real estate.
ment has fallen by 9,000 jobs
Ohio h!!S added 93,000 payroll among producers of durable
jobs since February oflast year. goods.
Non-farm employment has risen
Declines were reported in
1.9 percent, from 4.796 million tn primary metal Industries, fabrl·
February 1989 to 4.889 million cated metal products, transpor·
last month.
tat ion equipment, atone, clay and
Service-producing Industries glassware and electronic and
added 93,000 jobs during the other electric ~ulpment.
period.
.
Retan trade had tbe fastest
.1\8
growth rate, 3.8 percent or 34,000
DallY stock prices
(A8 or 11:11 a.m.)
B17ee and M11rk Smltll
of Blunt, Ellll 6 Loewl
Veii!I'&amp;DI Memorial
saturday admissions - Iva P .
Am Electric Power .............30\!t
·
Rayburn, Chester,
S&amp;turday discharges - Henry AT&amp;T ..................... ........ , .. 41%
. AlbJ.ancl Oil ..•.... ..•.• ...•.•.•.•••. 36
Carsey, Shirley Roush.
Bob Evans ........................... 13
Sunday admissions - None.
Chartnlni
Sboppes ......... ...... 9%
Sunday discharges - None.
City Holdina Co.............. ;.... 13
Federal Mogul.. ..................l8%
of
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................37%

Stoc•--

the low 40s to the mid 50s
Wednesday, and from the low 50s
to the low 60s Thursday and
Friday. Overnight lows will
range from the mid 20s to the mid
30s early Wednesday, mainly In
the 30s Thursday morning and
between 35 and 45 early Friday.

Squads have 17 calls·

.

morning.
The cold front was expected to
make Its way to the Gul1 Coast by

Tuesday and, as . It does, the
Dakotas high should build into
the Ohio Valley.

Pkk-4
Low -toal111t .. mid
htcreaslng cloud1Df!88
nesday. High Wednetclay ne.,
60. Chance of rain 40 percent. '

/

.

Vo1.40•. No.224
CoPVrlgh ..d 1990

WEATHER MAP - Cool and dry air will cover the Northeast
with mainly 1\IDny condiHons although a few motDitalnDurr[es are
Ukely. A band of rain and ral,.bowers will occur alo.._li stationary
front exlendlag &amp;ClrOB&amp; Florida Into .t he Gulf, with IICallered
showera expected· in the ,Central Slates. Unstable air . over the
Southern Rockies . will trigger some afternoon· rain · and
ral•howers while the West and Northwest \¥111 be dominated by
high pressure and fair conditions.

Arson suspect...

Continued from page l

from · the club. Many of the his sleep, made admissions and
victims were related.
· · wept; said Lt. Raymond O'Don·
Gonzalez,' who was picked up nell, a pollee spokesman.
Sunday afternoon at his 5-by-10"Baslcally, -he's saying he did
root rooming house apartment by It," ()'Donnell said. "He Is
a pollee lieutenant and two remorseful. He h~s been crydetectives who roused hbn from Ing."

goes along-way

No one big winner in the Super Lotto
CLEVE~ND ( UPi) - No big

But 105 of thenl had five of the
numbers for $1,000 while another
5,059 had four of the numbers for
$75.
.
.
The Kicker portion of the game
produced the number 865153.
Lottery otflclals said there was
one ticket with that number
worth $100,000, and It was pur:
chased In Minster.
Six or the $659,263 worth of
tickets had the first five of those
numbers for $5,000; 67 had the
first four for $1,000; 605 had the
first three for $100, and 5,970 had
the first two for $10.

winner In Saturday night's Super
Lotto drawing raised the jackpot
for Wednesday night's game to at
least~ million.
Ohio Lottery officials· said
Sunday none of the $3,545,637
worth or tickets had the numbers
1, 7, 23, 29. 40 and 43.

In Sunday's report ofthe Meigs
County Sherl1rs Department It
was stated that Anna Scarberry,
Racine, reported that she disco·
vered her trash cans had been
shot several times with a 22
callbur gun.
Tbe sheriffs report should
have stated that the trash cans
were located at the Route 33
roadside park. not at the Scar·
berry residence.

Lieense issued
A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to
Mathew Todd Cummings, 22, and
Ginger Marie Hayman, 20, both
of Charlotte .Harbor, Fla.

---Meigs announcements
The Syracqse Vlllage Council

·•aaoo-..........
The CRX HF ~the dis-

&lt;bws. And body-a,lloR:d bumpets.

The kM; wide S!aOO: makes the .
5? JWUghway," it's one !X the ioo:OOr~ and invi ·
highest maca,: 4-cylindcrcar.; in Ill fact, it\; line
~
America. Fuefinjc:ction gM:s it rno-scatas on the road
1:11i11i pickup. And theR:'s a 4-whcd
The CRX HF. The
1a11:c in srylc. AI: 49 llft'cil)' and

~ wStbone ~fur a
smooch ride.
.
)0011 take pleasure in the sk:ck,

aerodyl)arnk:~.l..;uj.,&gt;cwin·

nc:YCr5CCIJ\ roc:nd.

HONDA

TI1eCRX HF

J~THE HAPPY HONDA

.AIIt~n:J

PEOPLE"

HONDA.

C~r6

IIOLITATKII&amp;&amp;I,ATHDII,OHIU a111U

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 27, 1990

26 Cente ,

A Multimedia Inc. Nawip•per

Hobson .area annexation gets final approval
. By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
, , Sentinel News ~taff
Final approval on the annexa·
tlo~ of the Hobson area Into
Middleport . Vlilag~ has been
received from s_ecretary of State
Sherrod Brown s office opening
the way lor development
planning.
That announcement was made
by . Mayor Fred Hoffman at &lt;
Monday night's meeting of Mid·
dleport VIllage Council when he
· presented the annexation docu·

ments from the Secretary of
State to Cquncll.
The. area exte,nds from the .
present corporation limits to
Story's Run Road and Includes
th~ land extending from State
Route 7 to the Ohio River bank.
The final approval culminates
years of work by Middleport
VIllage Council to bring that area
Into the corporation limits since
it Is considered prime develop·
ment land.
MayorHoffmanal so presented

at the meeting a preliminary
s!udy and ilroposal from Floyd
G. Browne and Associates, eng!·
neerlng fltm, on water and
sewage ser·vice to that area.
Council will study the proposal
before any further action Is
taken; it was decided. Getting
services into the area is the first
step· toward any development
projects or funding proposals, It
was noted.
It was also . reported that
beginning today some pollee

'

protection will be provided there. with the Ohio Department of
Tl)e mayor also advised Coun·
Developmen) and they ha:ve
ell that the village have been . suggested t.he village submit an
tur.ned. down for emergency
application for funding to , Ihat
funding through State Issue 2 agency. Council authorized the
funds for the river bank eroSion.. mayor to pr&lt;;)Ceed with that
problem near the sew age lagoons
applpcation. It was noted by
In that newly annexed area.
Hoffman that turn-around time
The village had hoped to secure on loans through Ihe ODD are
the local share of $242,000 of the usually fast , about 30 days in
Iota! project cost of $742,000 set
many cases.
by the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
In conjunction with the meet However, Mayor Hoffman did
lng the required public hearing
advise that he has been in touch was held on CommunityhDevel-

opment Block Grant Funds.
Applying for compreh ens ive
housing fund s is being ~onsl:
dered by the vil lage
Soild Waste Re~olullon
Discussed at length was the
work of the multi-co unty Solid
Waste Management District . It
was announced tha t toni ght a
meeting will be held al the
Wilkesville School with members
of the consulting firm to be
present to brief the board. The
Continued on page 10

Maintenance of Rt. 124 at
Long Bottom constant problem

Portland and Long ·Bottom, ac· By NANCY YOACHAM
Proffitt is pleased thai the
cording to Proffitl. Tons of fill
Sentinel News Staff
difficult two-weeks of repair
Some problems just don't get material have bee n dumped
work was carried out by maintebetter, and don't go away , no along different sections of the · nance crews out of Meigs Coun. matter what you do to solve road, and patching Is almost a
ty's QWn ODOT divis ion. thereby
them. One such recurring prob- weekly need, he says, bul fill and
eliminating the need for outside
. !em lies along the Ohio River patching don'l las t because the' bidding. Piling for the project'
between Portland and Long road continues to shift. "We'il
came from a n old bri&lt;Jge in
put down hot mix in June qr July,
Bottom. The problem Is called
Morgan Coun ty and ODOT pro•
and then just wait for it to go
State' Route 124.
vlded its own crane wilh pile
·driving hammer.
F.or years, erosion of the river down," he explains . .
But although · erosion of the
bani&lt; beiween Portland and Long
All of this adds up to financial
savings.
Bot.tom has played havoc with river bank is a constant concern
Route 124's pavement. Some . for Proffllt, and basic repairs of
But In addition to the savingsin
stretches of the road are ex- the road are a constant need, he
costs by using ODOT workers
tremely rough and in other Is extremely proud of one job
and machinery, mos t imporplaces, the guardrail looks like a along Route 124 which was just
tantly, says Profflll. the road
winding snake, although, assures recently completed by local
never had to be closed to traHic
James Proffitt, Meigs County oooh ·)yees.
while the repairs were made.
About the end of January . a
supermtendent for ·the Ohio DeProffill reels that most area
partment of 'fransportatlon, the section of river bank beside the
resident s who travel Route 124
guardrail was Ins tailed . In a ro'!d just dropped off, p•·actlcally
bet ween Portland a nd ·Long
stralgl)t.'llne. ..
' ·,
ovemlght. Engineers out of • -Bonoin 'o,n a .' regular basis,
ODOT's engineers are defi- ODOT' District 10 office at . understa nd· a nd have leanied 10
nitely aware · of the problems Martella began Immediately to
live ,- with the road's problems. ·
·between . Portland and Long develop plans for needed repairs
However . with plans In the works
Bottom, but beliig aware of the and shoring up of the bank and
by the Ohio Depa rtme nt of
. '
problems and coming up with a road.'
Natural Resources to construct
near
road· feasible plan to alleviate probPLEASED WITH OUTCOME - James Prol·
The plans resulted In the
an Ohio River boat launching
caved In practically overnight. Resulting repair
· fltt, Melp County 'superintendent for the Ohio
lems associated with erosion are installation or piling along a
facility along Route 124 ad ji!Cent
w.o rk was carried out hy local ODOT crews.
Department of Transportation, Is pleased with
lengthy stretch of the road, wilh
two different t~ings . Until a
to Forked Run State Park
this recently completed project along Stale Route
workable plan can be designed, each column of piling five feet
Proffitt ariticipales thai tourisi
apart and 35 feet deep. Top pieces
· Proffitt continues to send maintetraffic on Ro.ut e 124 Is going to
were
welded
onto
each
column
nance crews to Route 124 to · 'trv
increase. If, along with increased
to keep the road passable. That;s fused together to form one
traffic. comes the need for an
continuous piece along thE! bed of increase in maintenance of the ·
about all we can do," he says.
road, then Proffitt gives assuAbout 35 percent of total time the road. Fill material was
'
.
rance· that as always, Meigs
spent by local ODOT crews in brought in and now Proffitt is
malnfalnlng state highways in waiting for the highway to settle County's ODOT crews will meet
Meigs County is spent between before reln&amp;talllng guard rail the. need as best they can.
along the repaired section.
Marijuana eradication efforts defendant was convicted by a this amount will also be forfeited.
in 1989 were, In the opinion or jury and is awaiting sentencing
Monies and properties forte·
in Meigs Common Pleas Court.
Meigs ,; Prosecu tlng Attorney
ited to Ihe State ultimately end up
Stev.en L. Story, "a .great sue- ·
The recommendation of the In the Law Enforcement Trust
cess." As a result of the efforts or
prosecutor's office for each de· Fund, Story explains. This Is a
the State of Ohio. the Attorney
fendarit In these cases has been a fund authorized by law and
General's office, the Bureau •of" one-year determinate prison previously set up by the Meigs
Crbnlnal Investigation and !den·
sentence, which has been lm· County Commissioners. Funds
· tlflcation, Ihe Ohio National
posed in each case by Common placed in the Law Enforcement
Guard, the · Meigs .County ShePleas J~dge Fred W. Crow III.
Trust Fund are utilized to further
riff's Department and th.e Meigs
Also as a result of the combined other drug and complex criminal
County Prosecuting Attorney's
efforts, the prosecutor's office I nves ligations.
office, "over 8.000 marijuana
The advantage to this fund is
has sought and succeeded in
plants were seized," Story
forfeiting 125 acres of real estale that the "crlmlnals themselves
reports. :.
·
which Is in the process of being fund the law enforcement efforts
As • a direct result of these
sold. The State has additionally to catch and punish Other crlml·
combined efforts, Story reports
obtained $4,000 in lieu of forfel· nals, "Story says. ''The taxpayer
that 11 people have been Indicted
ture. In the case now pending, pays nothing for these forfeitures
and all but two have pleaded
approximately $10,000 In cash but receives the benefit ofa more
guilty tocultlvatlon charges. One
has been seized and Is awaiting efficient and better financed
case Is pending and the other . dlsposlllon. Story anticipates apprehension and prosecution of
crlm Inals," he adds.
"Forfeiture hits many crbnl·
nals a second blow," says Story.
" First, there is the very real
threat of prison if you .are
Roule 124 between Portland and Long Bottom In
ROUGH RQAD - This sip Is a warntn1 lo
suc.cessfully prosecuted for cult I·
Melp County.
molorllta to exercise caution uthey travel Stale
vatlon of marijuana or selling
Two Syracuse residents were Injured in a car-truck crash
dr·ugs,ln
Meigs
County.
Addition·
Sunday at 2:40p.m. on U.S. 33, abouthalfa 'mUewestofmlleP&lt;ist
ally, this office will take your
11; according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the Stat~ Highway
Patrol.
·
·
property if we catch you gtowlng
William R. 'Hayes, 39, and his passenger, Patricia A. Stanley ,
or selling drugs," he states
19, were taken ·by the Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial
adamantly.
when he donned a blue Hillard
you know that the job market Is
HILLIARD, Ohio CUP!) "Wildcats" T-shlrt presented by
Story believes the eradication
Hospltah Hayes and Stan ley were treated and released for neck
good
here?'
'
he
asked.
Republican gubernatorial candl·
Dina
Minton, student council
efforts, and the prosecutions and
strain.
Receiving no audible response,
date George Volnovich attemppresident.
forfeitures which have followed,
Hayes, driving a 1984 Dodge Daytona, was headingeastwhen
ted Monday to lure the votes of the candidate pointed out that
. have made a very substantial
a 1988 Dodge Ram pickup driven by Danny L. Smith, 35, or
Michael DeWlne, the candl·
some high school students by Franklin County Is one of only six
date
for lieutenant governor,
Circleville. rear-ended Hayes' car as Hayes stopped to turn left.
dent In the drug problem in Meigs
promising them reasonable col· In Ohio with an unemployment
stirred
the audience when he
County.
Smith was cited for not maintaining assured clear distance.
lege tuition rates and available rate below the national average.
revealed that he has three
'''No longer will this p~ce
In · the background was a
jobs when they graduate ..
(Meigs j;:ounty) be regarded as a
children
1!1 College, one In high
spacial
Republican
banner
pro·
Volnovich led the GOP stateschool
safe haven fOr cultivation and
and
two In grade school.
claiming
the
party
for
"Leader·
wide ti.c ket on a barnstorming
trafficking In marijuana and
"You
know
I believe that
A "very small" roof fall occurred Monday' morning at
ship,
Jobs,
Integrity
and'
bus tol!l' of western and central
other
drugs.
I
am
hopetui
that
the
education
has
to
be the priority
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Mine No. 31, said Terry
,
Ohio In an attempt to create lome Change.'' ..•
·
dubious
repu~tlon
that
we
have
for
·
the
next
governor/'
he said.
Trlmper, publiC relatlonll spokesman for the coal company.
"The Issue In this campaign Is
visibility and ln~rest In a prim·
"When
George
Voinovlch
Is
earned
lns~e
circles
for
being
a
· Trlmper expres~d concern this morning that the Incident may
ary campaign where none of the good government," Volnovlch
marijuana
growing
capital
will
governor,
George
Volnovich
will
have been rumored to be more than it was, and gave assurances
told the students. "It's not a
candidates baa opposition.
disappear quickly. Ill fact, our
be the education governor."
that the filii was jue.t minor.Republican way or a Democratic
"We've got to keep the tuition
"This Is not an ordinary
informants
!'!!port
that
many
pot
No employees were · working In the area where the fall
dowtl so you. can eo on to way of doing things. There Is a
growers who have succeeded In conege," Volnovich told about right way and a wrong way, and
election," said Robert Taft !I, the
occurred she . explained, although some employees were
growing in the put ha.V'e now 300 juniors and ·seniors at an
candidate for secretary of state.
· transferred from their regu Jar working areas to clean up the
we want to do It the right way."
moved out of county to carry on aaaembly at Hilliard High Scbool
"This election Is going to deter·
debris. The area has already been cleared, she added.
,,
Votnovlch boasted that the
I
.
their trade," Story reporls. "It is In ·s uburban Columbus. "We
mine
the political complexion or
Republican tlc!tet has "expemy advice that they give It up or want to make sure the tuition you
thla
state
for 10 years."·
rience and ·vision to provide
stay out of the collllty. If cau.ht pay 18 reasonable.
Taft
urged
the students to
'
.
. leadership" In education, clean''lake
a
part
in
shaping your
here,
they
Will
face
a
fate
similar
lug the environment, and fight·
•'We want to create the jobs our
Many Pomeroy homes on Lincoln Hill were wlt~out water for
to thoae who have atready been young people ~eed to remain In
future
.
Register
and
vote 111 tbe
log drugs and crbne."
. ~ontlnued on page i()
apprehended."
Contlnuet\,on pqe 10
He received the best reaction
Ohio, l ' added Volnovich. "Did

s

Meigs County prosecutor issues
statement on eradication .efforts

Local news briefs-:-----:......

wlll meet tonight (Monday) at 7
p.m. at the village hall.

Two' hurt in car-truck crash

ERKLI.NE

GOP candidates tour state for
votes
.

· NEW Sllplllfn OF IEIIUNE IECU.IS
Wall-away llcUne;a, ltodc·O·loungers,
Swivel Rocbr-ltecllnen, Swlvttl Rodcers
You'l i~ the .gr•t new fibrlce In an array of
. colora. a.kllne !pnlture IJ!!c.dalnduetry Qualhy
Standarda, 10 you can buy ,w hh confldance.

Key Centurion ....... , ............14%

A change of venue bas been l.anda' End ......................... 18~
granted in the Metgs Common Llmlled lnc........................41%

~tltNoK't

Pleas Court cue of Hobart A. MultJJDedla lnc.................... 79
Barlt:el', et a!, agalut Howard Ru Reltauranta .................. 2%
Frank, sheriff. Metgs County, Robbbll&amp; Myers ............... ,15~
Oblo, et Dl. The cue baa been Sholley'a I.Jic:•••••••••••••••••••••••121
tr&amp;Diferred to Gallla County for Star Baalt: ............................ 19
trial .
WMCI)'•a Int'l .......................
The cue or Wayne
Wllaou Wo111alltlkJD Ind.................~1 ~
agalut Souiheru Oblo Coal Com(ATilT ... 8&amp;ar Bank are a
pany, et al, baa been dlamllaed. diYI.... IohJ)
.I

377
1347

'

Alittle fun

Heck'a ....·... ,,,;, ..... ·•·· ·~ · ........ 3~

s.

Daily Number

•

Six killed on Ohio
roads over weekend

Chan8e

•

••

Page 4 :

Hospital news

venue81'8ftted

seheduled
Wednesday

N4TIONAL WI!ATHIA ,OAICAST TO 1 AM EST 3-27-10

Seventeen calls for help were . port went to County Road. 5 for
answered over the weekend by Freda Clark to Veterans Memor·
unlls or the Meigs Emergency lal Hospital.
Medical Services. Eight of the
Rutland at 10: 27 a.m. went to
calls were on Saturday and nine Salem St. for· Lena Carpenter to
on Sunday.
Holzer Medical Center.
Saturday at 7: 22 a.m., Pome.
'
.Middleport was called at 1P: 53
roy was called to Condor St. for a.m. to Third St. for Katherine
By Unlled Press Int.:rnatlonal
County. ·
Tabitha Watson who was taken to Knight to Holzer Medical Center.
Six
people
died
in
accidents
on
Batavia: Chris E. Babey, 15,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 2: 47 p.m. transOhio
roadways
during
!he
weeWilliamsburg,
In a three-car
Tuppers Plains wen.t to Scout ported Patricia Stanley and Bill
kend,
the
State
Highway
Patrol
on
Ohio
133
II\ Clermont
pileup
Camp Road at 9:31 a.m. for Hayes from an au to accident on
reported
Monday.
·
.
County.
Millie McGrath to Veterans Route 33 to Veterans Memorial
A patrol count showed four
Sunday
Memorial Hospital.
Hospital.
Sunday
and
two
sa·
t
urday.
deaths
Brei
A. Rood. 18,
Athens:
At 11:26 a.m., ' Syracuse· was
Charles Spencer at 4: 18 p.m.
One
of
the
victims
died
In
a
Reedsville,
when
his
car went off
called to Durst Ridge for Mar- was treated at the scene of an
crash
'
and
another
motorcycle
U.S.
50
in
Athens
County
and hit
garet Holter who was taken to auto accident at the corner of Art
was
killed
ina
car-train
collision.
an embankment.
Holzer Medical Center. ·
Lewis St. and Hartinger
The
patrol
counts
fatalities
Warren: Steven M. Wolfe, 22,
Tuppers Plains was called to Parkway.
resulting
from
accidents
on
the
Newton
Falls, when hi~ car
Route 248 at 12: 31 p.m. for Eva
The Syracuse and Racine units · slate's public roadways each colllded with a train at a
Rayburn who was taken to at 7: 58 p.m. transpo~ted Troy
weekend between 6 p.m. Friday Trumbull County crossing.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
McDaniel and Harvey Whitlatch
and midnight Sunday .Killed- . Columbus: Tracy L. Horn, 23,
At 2: 40 p.m., Racine went to from an auto accident at the
were:
Friday night
Columbus, when his truck hit a
Hoback Road for Clarence Wick- intersection of Third St. and
utility pole at the intersection of
line who was taken to Veterans College Road to Veterans Mem·
None . .
U.S.
33 and Ohio 3151n Columbus.
Memorial ~osplta).
ortal Has pital.
Saturday·
Larry L. Franks,
Mansfield:
· . Middleport at 3:16p.m. trans' Syracuse transported Mark
·Cleveland: William P. Hoover,
33,
Ashland,
when
his motorcycle
ported Cecil Teaford from the Duerr from Short Dusky St. to 34, Garfield Heights, in a two-car
crashed · on a ~lchland County
Overbrook Center to Veterans Pleasant Valley Hospital af 9:02 crash on Ohio 2 in Cuyahoga
road.
Memorial Hospital.
p.m.
Pomeroy was called · at 4:57
Charles McNickle was taken
p.m. toNyeAve. for Bob White to by Racine at 9: 25 p.m. ·from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Route 338 to ·veterans Memorial
At 9:36p.m., Middleport trans· Hospital.
ported Stanley Roush from the
Pomeroy was called at 9:48
OVerbrook Center to Veterans p.m. to the pollee department for
Memorial Hospital.
· Harvey Whitlatch to Veterans
Sunday at 8: 59. a.m., Middle- Memorial Hospital.

Sheriff C)OITedion

Continued from page 1

night, clear skies will be the rule
across much of the slate but
cloud cover and the chance for
flurries will linger in the
northeast.
Lows Monday night are expected to range from the teens In
northern Ohio to the lower 20s in
southern Ohio. Under sunny
skies, highs on Tuesday should
reach the 40s.
A cold front that extended from
Quebec across southern Ontario
to north_ern Illinois brought the
cooler temperatures to Ohio
Monday. High pressure was over
the Dakotas early Monday

Ohio Lottery

------Weather---__;__
South Ceatral Ohio

Denford 0. "Dink" Douglas,
68,
Hili Lane, Racine, died
Bret Allen Rood, 18, Reeds·
ville, died Sunday as a result of Sunday at the Holzer Medical
an auto ~ccldent at the junction Center following an extended
·
of Route 50 and Route 71n Athens illness.
County.
BQrn on Sept. 8, 1921 at Rock
Born May 16, 1971ln Parkers· Castle, W. Va. he was the son of
burg. W.Va., he was the son of the late Harry 0. Douglas and
Jack B. Rood, Tuppers Plains, Ruth Ann Barnhart Douglas. He
ana Charlotte Durst, Reedsville. was a farmer.
He is survived by a brother,
both surviving. He was a 1989
Harry
J. Douglas, and a sister,
graduate of Eastern High School
Dessle
Boggess, both of Racine,
and a student at Hocking Techni·
along
with
several ·nteces akd
cal College. He was an employee
of Kroger's of Athens, and an nephews l~ludlng Eugene Boggess and Linda Roberts, Pomeavid hunter and fisherman.
In addition to his parents, he Is roy. Besides his -parents, he was
survived by a step-mother, VickY preceded In death by two broth·
Rood; a brother, Christopher S. · ers and a sister, along with a
Rood, Tuppers Plains; maternal nephew , Robert Boggess.
Funeral services will be held at
grandparents, Dawaln and
Emma Ours t; paternal grand- 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Flormother, lola Wilson, Reedsville;
a special friend, Mandie Harrjs, ence Smith . will ·officiate and .
. Tuppers Plains; five uncles ana burial will be In the Letart Falls
three aunts.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
He was preceded in death by the funeral home from 2to4and 7
his paternal grandfather, Albert to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Rood.
Services will be held Wednes· William Mitchell
day, 1 p.m. at the White-Blower
Funeral Home In Coolville with
Wllllam Monroe Mitchell, 78, of
ministers, David Prentice and Athens, died Monday morning at
Stephen Reed officiating. Burial O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
will be In the Reedsville following an extended illness.
Cemetery.
Born in Athel)s County, Mr.
Friends may call at the funeral
Mitchell was- a son of the late
home after '7 p.m. on tuesday.
Hat de Mulpas. His adopted par·
ents, also deceased, were thE!iate
Nitz
Florence and Leen Mitchell. He
was a retired coal miner and
Family members have re- un!Qn laboror in Athens County
ceived word of the death of Coy for over 30 years.
Nltz, of Siler City. N.C., who died
Survivors Include his wire,
unexpectedly on saturday. Mr. Allee Mite bell; a daughter, Mrs.
Nltz was a former area resident. Oris (Helen) Hudnell, of Shade;
Funeral arrangements will be two sons, Ernest Mitchell Sr., of
announced by Fogelsong Fun· Pomeroy, and Harold Hudnall, of
eral Home, Mason, w.va:
Albany; six stepdaughters, Mary
Haning, ,Patricia RobinsOn, Kim
Irene McGrath
Ruth, Marilyn Smyers, Jackie
Robinson and Cathy McGee, all
M. Irene McGrath, 63, Pome- of Shade; four stepsons, Larry,
roy Pike, Racine, died ~ll!l'day Wyatt, Roy and Johnny Robin·
at Veterans Memorial Hospital son, all oi $hade; 14 grand·
following an extended Illness.
chllren, several great grand·
She was born on Aug. 6, 1926 in children; 10 step grandchildren;
Chester Township, daughter of and a brother, Jack Mitchell, or
Berneda Tuttle Hartung of Ches· Dayton.
ter and the late Earl Hartung.
In addition to hill paren!s, he
A homemaker, she was a wasprecededlndeathbyblsfirst
member of the New Life Coven· wife, Geraldine, in 1974; two
ant Church of God, Chester.
brothers, Bill and Frank Dis·
In addition to her mother, she hong; and one sister, Florene
is survived by two daughters, Pat Risley.
Services for Mr. Mitchell will
(Ed) Schaekel, Chester, and
'Barbara (Jerry) Hart, Guys- be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
ville; and three sons, Tommy Jr., . Hughes Funeral Home In Atbens.
(Ruth) McGrath, ·and Harold Burial will be In the Alexander
McGrath, Chester, and Ron Cemetery. Friends may call
(Tanowa) McGrath, Alfi'ed, and atbthe funeral home on TUesday
eight grandchildren.
from 7 to 9 p.m.

No_n-ag.,,

.

By United Pr..l•lenuiUoBoth high and low tempera.
tlll'e$ are expected to be about10
degrees cooler than. normal
across Ohio durlilg the f!i-st half
or the week.
Temperatures were expected
to reach the mid 40s in southern
Ohio Monday and the upper 30s In
northern Ohio. Normal highs for
the date range from the mld-40s
In northern Ohio to the mid-50s in
southern Ohio.
The National Weather Service
said as· clouds thicken over
northeasi Ohio, they. will bring a
ch"nce of snow flurries. Monday

NIT fmals

4"

fUIMI . . ., AfPUAICIS, 1Y'S, fLO(MfCOVIMIIII

992-3671
r

/J

. Roof fall at mine said minor

Water
line break' repaired.
.

·-~--...__--:l'--------·~---¥-------~--'4------____,~~----- ~

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Mach 'D. 1110

Ohio

•
.Eagles defeat Highlanders m
'90 SVAC baseball opener
. The Eastena Eagles took advutage ot a six -run BeCOnd
tnnblg and 13 SOuthwestern
walks to defeat the Hlgblanders
13-4 here Monday night In the
SVAC baseball opener played at
Eastern, a 1ame in which a1117
Eagles saw action.
• ScottFitchplckedupthewlnas .
he, *&lt;&gt;poomore Michael Smith,
and Shaun Savoy all pitched well,
)"hlle splitting up the pitching
chores. ·
. Fitch fanned four and walked

/ The ·Daily SentineJ·.

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1

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111 Court

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AJ;b.
Sl!m:9

Stre~

Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON- The nuclear
· power IJidustry Nst ducked ·a
polygraph.
· In a rare show of teeth, the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
drafted a letter ordering power
companies to sign "sworn st;ttements" that their safety plans for
nuclear power PI!tnts are what
they say they are.
But the nuclear industry got
wind of the Idea, raised a russ and
forced the NRC to drop 11.
· The NRC's timid attemptto get
tough with the Industry foUowed
revelations that some utilities
were bluffing .o r taking shortcuts ·
with their plans for providing
backup power in the case or a
plant blackout.
A power failure at a nuclear
plant Is considered a pre~ursor to
a IT!eltdown because It hampers
the ability to keep the reactor
core cool. T)le NRC's safety
1division has determined that if a
meltdown does occur, there ts

·

DEVOTED TO '111E INTERESTS OF THE MEIGIJ.MASON AREA

(

I

q,~

,..,...._.._...,..,~=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaarer ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asalslant Publlsher/ConlroUer

A MEMBER or The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AsSOCiation and the American Newspaper Pt!llllshers Asi!Of;iatlcin.
·

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edltll)g and must be stgned with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be tn good taste, addressing issues, not personall·
tles.

Will 7-Eleven offer
sushi With its Slurpees?
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON - I can't wait to pop over to my neighborhood
7-Eleven for sushi and a green tea Slurpee.
Having once lived in Japan, I was not in the least dismayed to learn
that a Japanese firm has agreed to buy controlling interest in · the
world's largest group of convenience stores.
I admit that when I moved to Tokyo tn 1967 Japanese folkways
seemed to me decidedly strange. My wife reported that groeers
Insisted on cut)lng offthe green tops or turnips and throwing them
away.
·
·
As a native Tennessean, I could.n't see much or a future for a nation
whose citizens were so backward as to throw away turnip gJ;eens and
eat seaweed. As for sushi, it looked to me like bait. And I thought It
incredible that anyone could prefer rice rather' 'than grits for
breakfast.
Now older and wiser, I'm wHUng to admit the Japanese were right
all along in matters of health and wealth.
So I figure some Japanese influence on the 7-Eleven stores in this
country can only Improve them.
Too many of us already are hopelessly addicted to those
all-American artery-clogging 7-Eleven hot dqgs, doused with chill.
Japanese and Americans can learn from each other.
·
For example, their sumo wrestlers could lidd neetled ,weight by
popping those chilj-dogs into their mouths as If they were raisins, and
Californians W()llld dearly love seaweed.
·
I hope Japanese owners don't change the piping not. 7:Eleven
coffee, which I like well enough to w~lk two blocks to buy each
morning rather than drink my own homemade version.
Since some of us do our covert reading of the tabloids at
convenience stores, It rust the Japanese wmmake ~ochangesin what
fsavailable on the 7-Eleven newspaper and magazine racks.
It was In a 7-Eleven store that I learned that a midget fired from a
circus cannon disappeared Into the open jaws of a hippopotamus and
was never seen again.
·
·
· The 7-Eleven saga suggests that financiers who live by the sword of
the samurai may die by It. An earlier buyout of the Dallas-based
7-Eleven stores, financed by junk bonds. came to tie .known on Wall
Street as (he "Texas Chain Store Massacre." ·
Unfazed, the Ito-Yokado . Group, one of Japan's largest
supermarket and retailing chains, agreed to acquire control or the
nearly bankrupt Southland Corp., owner of nearly 7,000 7-Elevens. ·
. The deal, Including cash and debt theJ apanese flr.m would assume,
·is valued by Wall Street analysts at about $1 billion.
:, lto-Yokado has been 7-Eleven·•s licensee In Japan for 17 years. It
·b uilt the franchise .from a single store in downtown Tokyo Into a
'.
:p rofitable chain of m9re than 4,()(J(j outlets. ·
• In achieving Its stunning success, Ito-Yokado sold millions-of bowls
'
. of instant noodles. '
: These noodles, called ramen, are dellclaus. But w!Jen,you order
"them, don't forget to say, "Hold the chill."

·T oday in history
.
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, March 27, the 86th day of1990with 279 to follow.
The moon· Is waxing, moving toward Us first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus. Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries.. They include
printmaker Nathaniel Currier. of Currier and Ives, In 1813; German
physicist Wilhelm Roentgen, discoverer of X-rays, In 1845;
photographer Edward Steichen In 1879; architect Mles van der Robe
in 1886; actress Gloria Swanson In 1899 and actor Michael York In 1942
(age48) .

Berry's World··

"

'

. abOut a 90 percent llkellh004 thai that some utilities chose the
on Its high horse 8DII colnplilned
It would be brought on· . by a . cheapest way out and avOided
that the reason the companies
design changes or the cost or . were not satisfying the NRC
blackout.
Nine years ago, the NRC told . buying auxiliary power to sur·
Inspectors waa because the reguCongress that developing emer- vive a station blackout.
lations were muddy .
gency plans for station blackouts
One utility's Idea of an emerThe NRC buckled UDder preswas one of Its top priorities ..
.gency plan, according to NRC
sure and abandoned Its honesty
Apparently, top priority at the doeuments, was to tum off the . test. It has now agreed to let the
NRC doesn't count for much. The plant's control room and evacuIndustry write Its own guidelines
regulatory agency lumberec1 ate It to save power. Another
for meeting NRC blackout
proposed plan was transferring
through the 19805 trying to figure
regulations.
abbreviate
controls to a panel
out how best to draft safety rules ..
Paul Gil~ the !'fflC's lead
outside the control room. Those
A regulation finally passed in
engineer for blackout plaDnJna,
1988. Then, after giving the schemes are about as smart as
clalme that the agency di!Cided
a bandonlng the · bridge of the on its own to drop the sworn·
Industry time io think about It,
the NRC Inspected several nu- Starshlp Enterprise and flying it statement policy: He said. the1
clear power plants·las~year. Our from a ruse box.
utilities did not "fully ,ander·
In a rare burst of regulatory stand" the regulation. ·
associate Jim Lynch has -l earned
Indignation, the NRC drafted a ·
.that ·the six utilities were:
Robert Pollard of the Union of
letter to the Industry ordering Concerned Scientists, Is a former
Brunswick, N.C.; Maine Yankee,
Maine; Pobit Beach, Wis.; Tur· utility officials to sign state- NRC englpeer. He thinks that the
ments verifying that their safety NRC just doesn't want to admit it
key Point, · Fla.; Millstone,
plilns were legitimate and met caved in. Pollard said !lie utili·
Conn.; and Crystal ·River, Fla.
NRC standards.
The NRC would not say whjch
ties "don't wanf to . spend any
An industry group, Nuclear money to biiy more safety
plants raised 'conc~rns.
Utility Management and Resour· equipment."
But the investigators found
ces Council, Immediately hopped

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fRESl'PENT/
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GORBY GOES A GATHERING
0

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Purpos_e_---.:----=-:-Be_n_,..w;_a_ue_nb-:-e-.:r-rg·

II
I.

His title Is two-thirds accurate.
All right. But no one is.golng for beneftctal. ImUvidualtsm, plural· '
The Buchanlstas would make It
the gold. And so we ·come to Ism; opportunity, dynamism,
more ,likely that America would
nee-manifest des tlnarianlsm.
and the absence of a rigid class
be second or third.
American taxpayers didn't structure come to mind.
Charles Krauthammer aild Jospend ·trillions to create more
As democracy surges , (lt!fer·
seph Nye, coming from different
I
Swedens. Not long ago we were em features of many ·free sysdirections, make more sense.
troubled by the Swedish - · read tems Wtll · be pushed toward
Both know--that America wilt
European - model. It was seen synthesis. There Wtll be a contest
remain Number One. Both beas stagnant, decadent and even for the culture.
lieve Jdeolngy wilt play a lesser
"creeping socialism." Since
We ought not, be ~sstve
role . .Both know we must remain
then, they, and we, have gotten players. We have the mosi, and
a big time global actor. But ·better.
best arrows In our quiver. These
toward what end?
If the world evolves . toward
include our global entertainment
Krauthammer sees a "unipo·
European-style , social delno·. monopoly\ Immigration, the
Jar" world. America would coacracy, or some democratic hy - · spreadtng.Engllsh language, the
lesce with its democratic indus- brid , or some unipolar transna· prime tourist destination, ·the '
trial allies, establishing slllblllty tionaltsm, so be it . We an our best universities, the most pow·
and "binding poUttcal connec- a!Ues wfll have won a free world.
erful and far-flung mtlitary, an
tions." He says this means "the But that re~ult Is only accepta·
opportunity society and a world·
conscious depreciation not only · ble. As the last superpower, we wide information operation.
of American sovereignty, but of ought to try to shape evolution.
Without going sky-high on
the notion of sovereignty generAmericans have always felt' foreign aid, ·or neglecting the
. ally.'' Gulp.
they had something special to )lome front, or leaning too much
Nye's book, "Bound to Lead," offer. This sense of mission was on government, or becoming
solidly rebuts the _ Decllnists. once calle Manifest Destiny. AI
messianic -how can we, in our
America should aim at "manag- times ...If" went overboard, Into self-interest, · go. about boosting
ing transnational hiterdepend·
distant geographic expansion the writ of the American vision?
ence'' to form a free, peaceful. and wild-eyed cultural imperial· That will be the topic of a later ·
prosperous, fl"ee'tradlng global ism. We know now we can't clone piece..
community. You get to MTI
the world American-style.
In the rneantlme, 'remember
through the global organiza·
But American democracy has
this about American Purpose: A
Ilona! alphabet soup: GATT, distinctive features . Most Amerl·
unipolar world is fine, U America
IMF, NPT, lEA, IAEA .
cans believe most of them are
Is the unl.
·

I
I

I

By Jeseph Spear
Marine uniform during the Iraq, attitudinal overhaul. I cannot
If anybody asks me to pick the Contra hearings. I also got understand wily they have fallen
most popular criminal or the chewed out by an ex-Marine In tor this thlrd·rate Napolean.
1980s 1 am. prepared to respond.
Delaware who la_uded the former
They say h.e Is a patriot. Really
It can't be Jini Bakker. He lost lieutenant colonel as the only .riow?' Then why did he consort
us when he strayed so far from m~tn in Wasl)lngton with any ' with the Iranians, avow&amp;! enethe path. It can't be Ivan Boesky:
guts.
mies? Why did he violate his oath
Crooked brokers with bushy
Then there was the 80-year-old to uphold the Constitution by
beards just don't hack 11. Jt can't widoW In Michigan who sus- lying to the people's represent&amp;·
be Ronald Reagan: He was peeled 1 was unworthy or the tlves about his effortS to keep
popular enoug)l, heaven knows, crllic'_s crown. "Have you served arms flowing to the Nicaraguan
bul h~ was never charged with your country In rpllitary com· contras? Patriot? How about an
anything.
·
bat," she demanded, "put your arrogant, self-righteoilsautocrat ·
No, It's got to be Oliver North, life on the line for this great . who cloaked himself tn
convicted on May 4, 1989, of nation?" ('l'woyearsofVIetnam- patriotism?
obstrucilnl a· congressional In- era active duty, ma'am, all
They say he has such a sincere
qulry, shredding . government stateside. That's 18 months more · air about him. Sincere people do
doeumenta and accepting an ' than the former National not need to. pile fan mall on the
Illegal gratuity.
,
Gliardsman who went on · to witlleSII table while they are
111 pay dearly for these words, become our vice president).
belnl questioned by, Congress. ,
I know. I get nasly letters and
I am a dedicated P,OpuliJt who , Sincere people do not feel comcomments every time I accuse has always put Jll'e&amp;l faith In the pelled to remind Juries of their
Ollie of unvlrtuous things. Last wisdom of the American people. piety by' keeping Bibles. ont he
defense table. Sincere people do
time, I heard from a houleWife In But I have to I!Onfesa that OWe'•
Vlrgtnla who aald OllJe !:tad cut a filii· mouthed fans are forclne an not , send out histrionic letters
pretty handsome flllllre In bls
lllllcltlnJ fUnds for chauvinistic

. .. . .. .. ',.

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. The Daily': ._·s .e· n_tin. el
..

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Publblted .,.,., lti.......,, Mc!ndly
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~O:V· Ohio t5'18i, Ph. 992-2156. Se.. . colllJ :ct101o pcor.1e pold .at Pomeroy.
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LeRoy Ellis added 16 points,
Tim Griffin chipped in 14 and
Vincent Mitchell and Reggie
Odom each scored 10 for Ken·
, tucky . ~esleyan, which lost only
two of Its 33 games this season:
Cal-State's Wade Green, who

The Eastern Eaglettes of
Coach Pam Douthitt rolled to
their second win· of the young
season with a 12-1 score over the
Southwestern Highlanders here
Monday In the league opener for
both girls' softball squads.
·Eastern Is 2-0. SWHS 0'-1.
SWHS took a 1-0 lead In the
flr~t; bulEH$ cam~back '.to Ileal ·
-1_;1, . t)len splil the. game open .
·with six rulls in the second for a
· 7) -1 lead that- it never

S~pe_ar'

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_

EHS girls roll,

___;J:_ose......!...p_h

organizations and ~Yinl things
of such stupe(ylng banality as, ·
"Should I fade away or1lllUd THe
Freedom Alliance out or the fires
or my advetslty?" He's sincere
like an actor - whe'll the role
calls for II.
They say he seems so genuine,
so guUeless. He admitted to lying
to Congress. He accepted an
. Illegal lll'atuity ..,.. a security
system worth $13,800. On single
morning during Ills Iran-contra
testimony. he took the 1-dont·
recall route 30 times. During the
trial of former national security
chief John Poindexter, he was
chided by the judge for his
selective memory, ~'AlmD.Ili/IIV·
ery tim~ a question Is asked,"
said Judge Harold Greene, ''he
says he can't recall. ft'a like ·
puUing teeth." H Oliver North Is
guDeleu, then we shOuld reofrite
the book on weasals.

·"

Kentucky Wesleyan had
shared· ihe reCord of five titles
with · the Unl,.erslty of
· Evansville.
•. ·, : ·
·
Crowder, the -P anthPrs' junior
forward who scored 16 of his
points Jn 'the second half. hit on
. seven of 13 shots from the floor,
including three of six 3-polnt
:attempts. 11nd sank 8 of 10 free.
throws· to • lead five · players in
double figures .

'

·The argument now concerns
The American Purpose. If It can
be defined, perhaps we can do
someil\(ng about It.
It can. We can. What? Consider
neo-maplfest des Unarial)ism.
Until recently, our national
purpose was Imposed: Keep the
free world free. As communism
coUapsed, options expanded.
Theories bloom.
The Decllnlsts said America
would no longer be "Number
One'' ·because we were ·'over·
stretched" militarily . Their
remedy: Cut the defense budget,
manage our decline gracefully .
We will cut defense. The Decli·
nlsts still want us to decline
ourselves. They don't like being
Number One.
Pat Buchanan bangs the lead
tambourine for The Isolationists,
a conservative rap group. His
recent contribution, In The Na·
tiona! Interest magazine, is
"America First - and Second,
and Third." Buchanan says our
foreign policy should only be In
O)ll' national Interest. How origl·
nal. To Buchanan that means we
should "come home" and stop
peddling that sllly democracy
enhance our national interest?

was named tile tournament's
most valuable player, led all
scorers with 31 points,
The Panthers led 40-35 at
halftime and heid a 53·45 edge
with 12: 18left in the game before
the Roadrunners went on a 10·5
SCQring run to cut the margin to3
points, 58·55.
But Kentucky Wesleyan an_s·
wered with a 10-4 spurt to take
68-59 lead with 6 minutes left and
Cal-State never got closer.
. .Beau Redstone an9 Fred Eck·
les were thp only other players in
double figures for the Roadrunners, wh9 finished t.he season
.at 29-5.
.
,
.
RedstonE' and Marvin Redee:
mer each had seven reiJounds lor
Cal-State, which ouirebounded
the Panthers 34-32.
· In the game for third place,
D11ve Vonesh scored 35 points to
lead North Dakota past Morehouse 98-77. The Fighting Sioux
rfntshed the season at 28-7, while
tlie Maroon Knights fell to 26·7.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UP])
- Corey Crowder scored 25
. points and grabbed game-high
·lilne .rebounds to lead Kentucky
Wesleyan to a record stxth NCAA
Division ~ basketball title with a
93-79 . victory over Cal-State

(OFf.
On the American

·- ·

Kentucky Wesleyan
cops Division II title ·

.. ~) ;'MAAAA~/(~

IA weasel in patriot's clothing__'
I

..

fNVIRONMtNTAL-

-

. By Dave Harris
Ga!Ua Academy Blue Devils 5-3
Terry McG11rie and jason .' jn . a non-league contest at
Wright com~lned to pitch a ttu:ee Gallipolis.
hitter as the Meigs Marauders
In the big three run ftrst IMing.
won their T .V.C. opener Monday the Marauders loaded the bases
·night with a 5-3 victory over the behind walks to Wallslmd Mayes
Mtller Falcons. With the wlri the sandwiched around an Eddie
Marauders raise their record to Crooks single. Randy Hawley
2-1, 1-0 In the T.V.C. .
cleared the bases with a long
Miler jumped out loa 1....:0 lead triple to give the Marauders the
t_n the ftrst with an unearned run 3-0 lead..
·
off of McGuire. Meigs came back
The Blue Devils made·It 3-11n
to score a run in the second and the -second but the Marauders
two in the third and sixth Innings. picked up single runs In the t~lrd
McGuire had a· no hitter until the and seventh, Gallla Academy
fourth when Thompson picked up scored their other run In the
the first hit for the Falcons. · .
sixth.
Terry Reuter was the leading ·
Phalln went the first 5 Innings
hitter for the Marauders with.two striking out 8, walking 4 and
singles, Mike Walls added a giving up one hit. Kevin Lambert
double, Kevin Taylor, Ed Crooks, pltcl!ed a third of an inning
and Wright ea(.'h added' a single. ' striking out one, walking two and
Watkins added th~ only other giving up a -hit. Wright pitched 1
Falcon hit a single . .
and 2·3 of a inning sllking out 4,
McGuire went• the first 5 walking 1 and giving up·1 hit . to
Innings, striking out 6, giving up 1 pick up the save. Davis was the
hit and ,walking 5. Wright went Ioyer for Galllpolls giving up 7
the last 2 innings ~trlklng out 5 hits, walking 3 and striking out 8.
and walking 3 to pick up his
Meigs wlll !gavel to Stewart to
second save In as many tries ..
play the Federal · Hocking
Iri action .last Thursday night Lancers on. Tuesday night. and
sopbomore Jeremy Phalln wlll hit the road again on Friday
pitched 5 Innings of onP hit night "to play the Alexander
baseball and Meigs plated three Spartans.
first Inning .runs tr&gt; ·'

.,
f

.

wnen Jon l:ll&amp;sell singled , Jason
Hager and Jerrod Barber each
":''lked to· load the bases and
Mark Murphy delivered a t.worun single. Catcher Shawn Bush
had an RBI fielder's choice for a
3-P seo.re, Jeff Horner had an RBI
double, Scott Fltcll reached on an
error and .Matt Flnlaw had a
two-rundoubleforthe~Oscore.

·Eastern added two more in the
third on walks til Hager,Barber,
and Murphy. while Shaun Savoy
delivered a key two·RBl single,

8-0.
SWHS scored In· the fourth
when Bill Potter reached on an
error, Joe Hammond singled
home a run, and Chris MetZler
singled home another.
This came after Michael Smith
had struck out the side the Inning
before.
"
Eastern scored without beneftt
of a hit on ftve walks and an error
ln the fourth.
Southwestern struck for two
morp In the fifth off reltever

·Marauders edge·
Miller nine ·5-3.

'

1·WAN\. sc
~EMEM8EREP AS

none, gtvlng up no hila: Smith
fanaed five and walked none In
two IDDinp of work, and Savoy
fanaed one and walked two.
Chrb Metzger suffered the
loss, while Bill Potter came on In
relief for Coach Jack James'
Highlanders. They combined tor
tS wailla. while Potter did no!
give up a bit In the last two
Innings or work. They fanned
three overall.
After a scoreless first, Eastern
took. a 6-0 command in the second

Dally ..... ..... ........•...•. ..•....•... 25 Cenll

· ISubi&lt;rtbero notd..trlnrtopey tlleeor·
, rtor may romll tn odv111oo direct to
The Dally !loatlllel oeo 3, 8oirUIIIOIIIII
IMab. Crodtt wW
earrle'eacll

be,....,

ftel&lt;.

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II
'

reilnqulshed.
·Toby Hlllled the winners with a
3-tor-4 night on three singles;
MAry Jo Reed was 2-4 with a
single 'and double; Lee Gillilan
doubled, and Carrie Morrissey
,Lorrie Baker, Amy Murphy, and
Lisa Golden each singled, whtle
Mary Ann Kibble doubled and
singled. '
' '
(yn Gill and Christy Lewis
each singled for the Highlanders
,only hits.
• • · . ·
, . Edna Driggs w~ the wll)ntng
. ·. pitcher 'with two hits. one walk,
' an,d nine strike-outs tci her
credit, Lila Hall with Angle Rose
· ·a t catcher gave Up twelve hils,
{annecs.two and walked just one.
· Coach Pam Douthitt slated,
"We btl reallY well tonight and
Edna Drlltll pitched another
, good game. Mary J() Rf!C!d has bit
really we! !.In bcith gllmei."
Taking ·advantage · of a s-o
first Innings !COre, the Eastern
-; Eagleltes roUed· to a 14-0
shut-out win over Federal
Hocking.
Easte~n had five .hits, . all by
two players; three singles by
Mary Jo Reed and two singles by
Toby Hill.
·
Stacy Glasa and Mary Causey
had the lone FH hits.EHS committed 3 erron had 11 stolen
bases, the same as against
So\lthwestern; while FH had 8
erron and IWQ steals agalnat the,
toqb ann of Lorrte Baker.
Edna Drlap was the winning
pllcher, allowing no wallis, glv· .
lag up two hlt1, and strlkln&amp; ou~
ten. Michele Moraan wlllted 15
for Federal, gave up five hila,
and tanned four.
Coach Dolilblll IBid, "Edna ·
pitched a P'fttlune and did not
walk aayone, l'hlcb Is areat for
the brat game. Lorrie (Baker·
· 'caqht a good 1une·:a1so."
Eaatern played Wabaml
tGDIIht.

_.·= !:K·,.

oultlc:""!Ou by mlli pormltJid Ill
ora• wl!ore !lome eafrtor oervlee II

' . No

·· ~··· ....' '" t' ;............
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e

12~1

Shaun savoy after ' an error
should have taken EHS out of the
lnntog. Marty Jones walked,
Kevin Kiser walked, Bill Potter
teahce on an error and Joe
Hammond tripled.
Eastern hitters were led by
senior centerflelder Jeff Horner
whp had two singles, a double and
a walk; Matt Flnlaw doubled,
Mark Murphy doubled, and
Shaun Savoy,Scott Fitch, and
Jon Bissell each singled.
Joe Hammond carried the big
stick for SWHS with a triple and

•

single, · while MetZII• :......led
also. .
1
Thegamewascalledatt~rflve
Innings.
_,
Eastern played Walla
night and gnes tq O.k
Wednesday. EHS Is 2·0 and
In the lea!!ue . SWHS Is 0-1.
UDeiiCGre:
Southwestern .... ..()()() 22- •·3·5
Eastern ....... .. .....062 32- 13-S3
Batteries: EHS-.Fitch , Smith,
Savoy and Bush .
SWHS '- Metzger. Potter. and
Kevin Kiser.
·

Cavs keep pace
with Atlanta five

r·.f:.
l
PREsSLEY SCORES - Sacramento's Harold Pressley ( 21)
scores two points as Cleveland's John Williams defends on the pia~
in the third quarter of Monday night's NBA game on the Cavalters
hOme court. The Cavs won 116-95. (UPI)

......;. Sports briefsArnott has nine
Hockey
.
1
veterans retummg Minnesota
North Stars right

.

'

Coach John Arnott welcomes
back nine letter winners to this
years edition of the Marauder
,.
·~
soffbal!"team.
'

~

According to Coach Arnott the
Marauders big question is pitch·
ing. Coach Arnott feel s · that H
Meigs pitchers can get the- ball
over the plate they can be very
compet.etlve. The first part of the
Marauders schedule Is a real
cljallange with non-league
games with Logan and Gallipolis
and Arnott feels If the Marauders
can mature the first part of the
season the can make a run at the
T.V.C. title.
Ret.urnlng letter winners for
the Marauders are seniors Kelly
Douglas p&amp;1b. Heather Hovatter
of. Marsha King p &amp;2b, and
Shannon Newsome in!. Juniors
Kellv Smith tb, Kristen .Stanley
of, Tara Humphreys c&amp;inf, and
Kim Osborne c. Sophomores
Trlcla Baer p &amp;· inf, and Chris
Weaver of, rounding · out the
Marauders roster
is juniors
Kathy Lambert and Lucy Wine·
brenner, and sophomores Kerl
Black, Tara Gerlach, and Niki
Meier and freshman Missy
Sisson.

wing Brian Bellows. who scored
nine points in three games. was
named· thP Dodge Performer of
•1\14' \Veek. Bellows recorded five
"goals and four assists for the
week ending March 25. H4' raised
his goal· TOtal to 52 for the season.
the first 50-goal season of his
NHL carO?er.
Honors
A.J . English of VIrginia Union
was named Division 11 Player of
the Year and Matt Hancock of
Col by CollegP Division III Player
of . the Year by the National
Association of Basketball
Coac hes, English and Hancock
are guards who led their respective divisions in scoring . ... The
NABC Scholar-Ath!Pte awards
went to Georgia forward -center
Alec Kessler in Division I. David
Lipscomb f01ward Phillip Hut·
cheson in Division 11 and Clark
forward Jason Qua in Division
Ill.
Horse Racing
Mis ter Frisky was voted the
favorite to win the Triple Crown
bv media covering thoroughbred
racing. Mister Frisky recelved33
of 39 ·flr st-plac4' votes to hold a
large lead over No.2 Unbridled In
the poll conducted by Tho·
roughbred Racing Communications, Inc.

By STEPHEN RUTKOWSKI
UPI Sports Writer
. Cleveland kept pace with
Atlanta for the eighth and final
playoff position in ·the Eastern
CQnference, .while Houston
climbed closer :lo Seattle In the
Western for the last spot.
Brad Daugherty scored 26
points to lead the Cavaliers to a
116-95 rout of the Sacramento
Kings, keeping Cleveland 'h
game behind the eighth-place
Hawks, who also won Monday.
The Rockets socked the · San
Antonio Spurs 113-95 to move
within 1 ~ games of the
SuperSonics.
Cleveland has 14 games left:
Houston 13 remaining. The top
eight teams in each conference
advance to the playoffs ~hile the
remaining 11 teams go Into the
NBA lottery for a chance to pick
first In the annual draft.
At Richfield, Ohio, rookie
Chuckv Brown scored 13 fourth quarter points,Including seven in
a critical 9-0 run, to power
CI'eveland.
Cleveland led 91-86 In the final
quartO?r before going on Us run to
lead 100·86 with 4:46 left. The
Cavaliers outscored the Kings
37-22 In the fourth quartet·.
Brown. from North Carolina
State, made a 15-footer fot· th e
first two points · of th4' spurt.
Antoine Carr was then called lor
goaltending on John "Hot Rod "
Williams' shot that gave the
Cavaliers a 95-86 lead. Brown
completed a 3-polnt play and then
· hit a layup that finished the run,
sealtng the victory forClevei~nd .
" I just tried to go out and play
hard and get the t~am ignited. "
said Brown, who hit six of his
seven fourth-quarter shots. "We
seemed to go a little flat tonight .
It was slow In the first half."
Brown finished with 15 points
for Cleveland, which has won
seven of nine and eight in a row
at the Coliseum .
Craig Ehlo scored 22 points and
had12 assists for the Cavalier s.
Rodney McCray led Sa~ramento
with 27 points. Wayman Tisdale
had 19 points and Harold presslev added 17 for the Kings.
·At Houston. Otis Thorpe scored
· 30 points and Akeem Olajuwon
added 27 and pulled down 18
rebounds to help the Rockets
snap the Spur:,· five -game win·
nlng streak.
"We'¥e got to play every gam!.'
like It's thE' last game of the
season." Thot'pe said. "I just fpl.~
that I had to go out and do more .
ThorpescoredlO points and the
Rockets connected on 72 IJ('l l'Pnt
of their shots to hold a 34·2h lead

alter the .first period .. Houston
· increased its lead to 63-49 at
halftime.
San Antonio went on a 9-0 run to
pull within 74-64 with 5:18 left In
the . third period, but Houston
answered with an. 8·0 spurt to
lead 86-70 entering thE' final
quarter.
Hawks 113, Nun~s 102
At Atlanta, Dpmlnique Wilkins
sco red 36 points and Moses
Malone added 25 and 18 rebounds
for Atlanta, which sealed the
victory by outscoring Denver
14-5 in the final 3:37. Joe Barry
Carroll led the Nuggets with 18
points.
· Hornets 97, Nets 83
At Charlotte, N.C.. Armon
Gilliam scored 28 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds to lead
Charlotte over New Jersey .
which suffered its 11th straight
loss and 24th consecutive road
loss. Dell Curry added 16 points
for the Hornets. who won for thEfourth time in six gamPs. Purvis
ShOrt led .the Nets with 23 points .
Bulls 121, Sun• 92
At Chicago, Micha&lt;:l J&lt;lriAn
scored all 28 of his points I'll f(iss
than three quarters and Scottie
Pippen added 27 to lead Chicago
to the rout of Phoenix. Phil
Jack_son surpassed Ed Ba.l!tlet' .
for most victories by - . l!lulls
rookie coach. ChicagO has 4"
victories this vear: Bad~er hid
44 after the 1976-77 seasol\.
Clippers 101, Tlmberwdl\&gt;el 96,
0T
I
.
At Los Angeles ; Charles S~.lth
and Danny Manning combi\ted
for 10 points in overtime to help
the Clip!l('rs end their five-game
losing streak. Smil h scored four
of his 28 points In the extra
session, white Mannin'g had six of
· his 26 points in overtime. Tony
Campbell led Minnesota with 27
points.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
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LUBE, OIL/FILTER
CHANGE ·
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, .. 5.11111
.

JIDDUPOn, 01.

.

· · 9tl+tl1

r

�T1111IIay,

Pomeioy-Midclepart. Ohio

NEW YORK (UP!)- St. Louis
Coach Rich Crawer knows the
Importance of having one more
game.
Grawer had his season extended Monday night when An·
!bony Bonner scored 24 points to
send St. Louis to Its second
str;~ight
National Invitation
Tournament final With a 80· 73
triumph over New Mexico:
" Being In the finals Wednes·
day means we are the only ,game
In t~n." ·Grawer said ._of tbe·
final against Vanderbilt which
will be televised on ~ESPN.
"There are only siX tearrui left·
playing C\)llege basketbaH, so
I'm very pleased I'm still coach·
· ing and. they are still playing."
St. Louis, 21-12, faces the
Commodor.e s In the title gam~
starting at 9 p.m . EST Wednesday. Vanderbilt defeated Penn
State 75-'62 In the other semifinal.
St. Louis lost ·to St. John's In last
year's final.
Grawer, . who has .mentioned

how It he! ps recruit lng to tell the
candidates to watch tbe team
· play on nat tonal television, 's
technically Incorrect about only
siX teams left playing. 'the NIT
still plays a third-place game,
which Will feature Penn 'State
and New Mexico at 6: 30 Wednes·
day, but that game won't be
teleVIsed. ·
The Lobos opened their biggest
lead of the game at 44-39 on a
3-polnt basket by Andre McGee
four minutes Into the second half.
But St .. Louis responded with a
14-2 run over tbenext.4: 19toopen
a 53-46 lead. Jeff Luecbtefeld
scored . 8 points Ill the run,
lnclu&lt;I!JIII a pair_of 3-polnters ~ He
finished', with ·a career-high 19
points, s\a!'Passlng the 15 points
he twlced collected In the
tournament. ·.·
After a 3-point basket by .
McGee brought -New Mexico
wlthln 53-49 With 11: 33 left, St.
Louis weni on another 3-point
binge. Charles _New~rry connected on two and- Luechtefeld
another In a 11-2 spurt that 'put

the Blllikens ahea'C! 64-51 With the second half: Luc LoDgley had
18 rebounds ·for New Mexloo. Tile
7:35 left'.
'the Lobos staged one last Lobos. making their ~tlt
comeback when as McGee con- straight NIT appearuce, fell to
nected on two 3-pofnters In a 9·2 20-13.
Grawer was called for two
run to pull New Mexico wlthln
technlcals
with 1:04 left In tbe
72-~ With 2:54 remaining.
first
half,
leading
to four points
But a basket by BoMer with
for
·the
Lobos.
Rob-Robbins
hit all
time running out on the shot clock
four
of
the'
,
resultlilg
free
!brows,
Increased -the lead to eight points
and the Lobos were never able to when Grawer disagreed too
get closer than ·seven points strongly on a pushing o~f foul
against Luechtefeld. Grawer
thereafter. ·,
"I would just like to say that continued his tirade with referee
Anthony Bonner Is the real Jim Burr In the tunnel as the
McCoy ," ·New Mexico Coach · teams left the court at haltl.l me.
Dave Bliss said. "That Is wha,t • :- "I asked hlmm t Burr) what
they are supposed to .look like." , league he offtclated ln." Grawer
The Bllllkens also received 19 said. "I never found out." ,
The Lobos' Kurt ~Iller sanli: a
rebounds from Bonner, _!he na·
basket
-wlt(J tour, second&amp; 1Ieft to
tlon's leading l'llbc/under with a
·close·out
the balf with the seote
13.7 average.
tied
35-35.
The te~hnlcal was part
''We always felt we were
ol
a
13-4
run
for New Mexico over
capable of beating this team,"
final
.
six.
minutes of the
·
the
said Bonner, ' projected as a
opening half.
·
.
first-round NBA draft pick. .·
"l told the guys at halftime ·
New Mexico, eliminated by St .
they p)ayed great, but. I coached
Louis In tlte ihil-d round of the
bad '·" Grawer said.
NIT last year. was led by McGee,
.
' who. scored 18 of his.! 23 points hi
&lt;

'

Minor league. ll,mpires. call· exhib_ition openers

..
'
.
'·
By JOE JLLUZZI
lng he didn't really notice them. double and a sacrifice fly to give
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Jeff
UPI Sports Writer
"I t)!ought they .did really Montreal a 5·3 victory over
Kunkel collected two bits, fncludFans treat all umpires the good," said Cleveland pitcher Bartlmore. Expos starter Dennis
fng a solo homer, and drove In
same, whether they come from Tom Candlotti, who was called Martinez teamed with Dennis
two runs to lead Texas to a -9-4
the majors, the minors or Little forthel!alk. "Yougottothin~lt's "Oil Can" Boyd and rookie . victory over the White Sox.
Jamie Moyer went four lnnmgs
League. The men In blue wlll tough If he \ladn ' t seen the Darrln Winston to -shut out the
always Incur. the wrath of the pitchers before, especially the Orioles on six hits over the first
and struck out seven for the
fans.
knuckleball. He called a balk on seven innings.
.
Rangers.
Monday It was minor league me and I really balked.''
At Kissimmee, Fla.. Mike
At Yuma, Ariz.. Roberto
umps who received the majo(!ty
Three umpires from the Class Marshall slngled ·home two, runs
A.lomar had three hits, three RBI
and stole two bases In Sah ·
of the razzing. Teams played the A Soutli Atlantic League worked during a three-run eighth Inning
first exhibition games of the · the Pirates-Cardinals game af- to help .the New York Mets post a
Diego's 9-2 victory over Caiiforsprlng using minor league urn- tended by Commissioner Fay 7-2 victory over lioustop.Marnfa. The Padres. aided. by four
plres while the major league. Vincent In Bradenton, Fla.
shall was inaklng·hls Me\s debu t
Angel'serrors, scored five unumps started a job action. •
"I would preferJo have them after coming in a majo~ trade
earned . runs off Mike Witt to
The major league umpires, her!!," VIncent said.
with the Dodgers.
bre~k a 2-2 tlc In the four-th.
who · say they wlll work the
A federal judge in Philadelphia
AtQrlando, Fla., Hubie.Br.ooks
At Phoenix, Steve Howard's
regular season, contend they are rejected ·a request by the Na- and Eddie Murray each hlt a SQio
two-run single with two out In the
being short-changed on salaries Ilona! and American leagues for homer during a seven-run eighth
ninth gave world champion Oak·
and benefits because of the a temporary restraining order to carry Los -Angeles to a 13-6
land a 6·5 decision over the
shortened training season result- that would have ordered the pounding or Minnesota. Five or, Chicago Cubs. The A's scored
lng from the 32-day lockout that umpires back to work.
the se-:en runs were unearned.
five runs .In the Jast two Innings . .
ended March 19. The union also
At Haines City, Fla., rookie Gary Gaetti homered twice for
Chicago's Ryne Sandberg ho- .
objects to noi being consuit_ed on Mickey Plna smashed a home the Twins.
mered, doubled and had three
the three-day extension of the run In the eighth Inning to lift
At Bradenton , Fla., · Barry ·' RBI.
, ,
regular season.
Boston to a 2-1 triumph over Bonds and 'Qo!ISlaugh1 holl'!ered
At ·Tempe,. Ariz':1,;Edgar MarA trio of Triple-A umpires · Kansas City. Plna vlctlrhized to lead the Plttsbl!rgh to a 5·3
tlnez drove In two runs and five ·
worked the Cleveland Indians- l989 NL Cy Young Award winner victory over St. Louls.·Bonds put
Seaitle pitchers limited Mllwau- .
San Francisco Giants game In Mark Davis, who was making his the Pirates ahead 4-1 .With. a ... kee to three hits as, the Mariners
Scottsdale, Ariz. They took some Royals debut after signing a two-run homer · In the ' fourth. · defeated the Brewers 7-0. .Ken
abuse from the fans, but nothing · four-year, $13 million contract.
Slaug~t, obtained from the Yan- Griffey Jr., doubled twice .for the
out of the ordln&lt;~ry. The Pacific
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., kees In December, added a solo
Mariners.
Coast League crew ?f Dan Steve Balboni doubled home two homer. Terry' Pendleton hoWickham, Tom Mellor and Hank runs during a four-run sixth mered and Geronimo Pena hit a
Scbwartz 'even called a balk and Inning to lift the New York two-run triple for St. Louis.
drew praise. rrom both . Yankees to a 5-4 'victory over
At ·scottsdale, Ariz., Gary
managers.
Atlanta. Rookie Mike Blowers, Carter's bloop · double scored
Giants Manager Roger Craig who wlll start at third base for the Jamie Cooper frorp flr_st with two
poked his head Into their locker Yankees, ignited the sixth with a out in ihe rtillth to give the Giants
room and said nice game. Cleve- single. He also homered.
a 4-3 ti1umph over the · Indians.
land Manager John McNamara
At Miami, Tlin Wallach drove 'Chris Jam_es -had a tw.o-run
complemented the crew by say- In four runs with a three-run homer for Cleveland.
·

deleptelor BucUyi Qlrla State
by tile RaeiJie Amerli:t111 Lqion
Awdllliry Unit 602, and Jan
Wllllaml,: daughter of Mildred
n-nu. Racine, hiul been
~ as the alternate. BOth
a.re Juniors at Southern Hllh
ScllooL • ·

Monday night's NIT semifinal game In New York. St. LolJis won
8G-73 and Will play In the Nrr title game against Vanderbilt. (UPI)

Wiseman one of five
hall-of-fame honorees
COLUMBUS, OHio (UP!) Bexley's Gene M!llard and
Wayne Wiseman of Springfield ·
South are among five new
members to be inducted Into the
Ohio High School Basketball
Coaches Association Hall of
Fame Saturday night .
The Hall"s class of 1990 also
includes Max Douglas of J'lewark, and Paul Johnson of
Lowellville and Louis Heckman
of Ottoville, both deceased.
Millard, a graduatee of Dayton
Stivers High · Schoo.! and Ohio
State, coached for 25 years at
Bexley after a four-year stint at
Washington Court House, compiling a 404-212 overall career
record at the two schools. His
1983 aexley team captured the
Class AA state championship.
· Wiseman, a graduate of Waterloo High School and Rio Grande
College, where he starred as a
guard on the famou s Clarence
" Bevo" Francis teams of 1952-53
and 1953-54, coached at Oak Hill
and Northwestern high schools
before going to Springfield South
in 1964. He remained at South
until hls retirement · In 1986,

complllng an overall mark of
441-210.
. Douglas, one of the founders of
the OHSBCA, spent his entire
coaching _career at Newark,
compiling a 240-86 mark from
i942 to 1957. A graduate of
Frazeysburg High School and
Denison University, Douglas'
1943 Newark team won the big
school state championship.
Johnson coac.hed his entire
career at Lowellville, compiling
a 492-176 record. A graduate of
Kingsville High School and Ohio
University, Johnson also
coached football and track at
Lowellv!lle, whose gymnasium Is
named for him.
Heckman coached at Ottovllle
for 32 years, compiling a record
of 448-124 from 1918 to 1951. He
graduated from Glandorf High
School and St. Joseph College In
Indiana.
The new members will be
officially Inducted Into the hall of
fame Saturday night during the
association's hall of fame banquet at the Fawcett Center for
Tomorrow on the Ohio State
University campus.

Scoreboard ...
Menl.,- Gamf'll

No

Dallal! at " 'lchlla, K: :1!1, p.m .

NA.TJON;\L BASKETBALL A."'i~ ·.
'•

Monday R..,..,_ll

i\tlanla 11:1, Denwr 10:!
(,'lt.....,...,_ !1~. N- .Jt'f!ll'Y

II~

C'lrvf'lu.nd I II. Sltt'f".&amp;ml'tlln 9/i
UdCMKft I'll , l'hOt"nb; !t:!
HouMon 113, iolll.ll ,\nt onlo 15
Li\ OlppPr~t ltl , Mlnrnou !li. OT
1\lt•!ld._..· G•owN
\\'Mhln.-on:aa Nf'" ' Vork. 7: :Ill p. m .
Bolilera Mllndlani&amp;, II::M p.m .
Gollll-n Slllolf' Ill Dalla..&lt;o~.ll : :If p.m.
Plwwn~ 111f Mlhr~tuket•,

II : lelp.m .

Sf&gt;Mtl.,. ar SanAnlonlo, ll ::m p.m.

LA

Lak•·~

Ill Porlland. 10:3G p.m .

Wtdneoday G;am..,.

Bo.Jrteon at Pllllladl'lptda. 1: :111 p.m.
lb.-~ll·

_. 01!4 roll: , 1: :MI p.1n.

~nwru

M'aMWn"'Dil. 7: 38p.m.
Miami al Orludo, T: H p·. m.
N~· l ' orkal f'll' t'W .lt'hf'J,1: 3Ap.m .
Chlu•u al flenlud,ll p.m.
S~W:nmf'nto at Min~~rtrotll, 11,.m.
LA Lalu"'" .. LA CllpprrA, 10:31 p.m.
NATIONAL HOCIE\1 LEAGUE

Mo.ta.v R"ull ,

Mht..,.NGlll -l . Toronto .f
Thf'!ld JO' GamrH

llllllllo ld lkiro6t,

J!&gt;~Me~o !&lt;i~:twdulftd

Tuettd ._,. C:llmt'

Re8ults

U p.m.
Cal prr at NY IMIIuldPrll, 7: :13 p.m.
Hartfo~ llf PUW!ui'Jh. ~:l5 p.m.
~:

'

H'rdMM:ay Game

San Dlep al Kan- ( ' II .}', 11; 3$ p.m.
Tuf'!oldu.y Spftl'b fal.-ndlU'

Buckeyes open spring football drills
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State opens Its third spring
football practice under -coach
John Cooper Tue!liiay with the
emphas'ls on fundhmentals and
rebuilding the offensive line.
"We made strides last fall,"
said . Cooper, who gulde&lt;l the
Buckeyes to a surprising 8-4
overall record and a tie for third
In the Big Ten, "but tbere~restlll
areas where we need to Improve.
We will spend our time this
spring emphasizing fundamental
football In hopes of being better
next fall.
,.
"Sometimes It Isn't a lot of
fun ," added Cooper, "but football teams get better by stressing
the basics In the spring."
Both thhigs and people will be
missing during this spring
practice.
There will be no annual spring
game because of the new grass
Prescription Athletic Turf being

Installed In Ohio Stadium and
.also due to· a lack of healthy
tailbacks.
One of the missing tailbacks,
senior-to-be Carlos Snow, had
arthroscopic surgery on his knee
folloWing the Hall of Fame Bowl
loss to Auburn and Is undergoing
tests for a tumor which was
discovered recently on his right
hlp. Results of those te~ts . being
conducted at OSU's University
Hospitals, should be known later
this week. ,
Also missing will be senior
quarterback Greg Frey, a twoyear starter, who Is playing on
the Buckeye baseball team this
spring.
That leaves Cooper With only
three quarterbacks - · sophomores to be Kirk Herbstrelt and
Jason Frank and Notre Dame
transfer Kent Graham, a strongarmed 6-foot-4, 230-pounder who
sat out last year.

W'..tii,.C.on at Nl'w ""',..·" · ~ : U p.m.

&amp;oMen at St. Luui!!, II: 3~ p.m.
EdmoNon~tt

Vant'OIIwt',lt: :l5p.m .

WIIUII~WJ at Lot Allpfn1 II: I. p.m.
"'~'...._., Ganw

Nl' hludf'rro U To,..., 1: U ,_rn.

M.UOR INDOOR SOCCER LEAGUE

a subltal)tlat reduction in
your premiums with our
o\uto/Horne Discount
padtage.

.AN ·cta) ·
Call ualor alll0fl4!y·
laVing quote.

RNER

.

. lnallr&amp;IIOI ._,._
'

'

214 EAST MAIN .
POMEROY ·.,

· .............
---99H687

.,; ~

...........ial~

lafit'hall
ExbltiUoa
Kun H~U~ l 'lty " "' Toromo. Ill OuN'dln.
Fla., 1: 05 p. m.
Baltlmol'f: Kl A.IIIUita, al Well! Palm

Bracll, l'l11., 1:05 p.m.
HouMion w•. BoMien, .u Wln..,r Jllwen,
f-111. , 1: 05p.m . ·
Bo!iton v... l'.llad4!1 pbla, atnt&gt;arwlltrr.
f'l11.., 1:30 p. m.
Sf;. Loul!i v•, L'hlc:a1o {1\L), :d
1-'la.. 1:35 p. m . .

Houlllon \'11Fla., 1: :JJ p.m.

Mln~ota.

San&amp;~olll,

at Orkndo.

. Manlrr-W vs. ~ ,\n!feli", at \'f'r(l

Buch, Fh.. 1: :ts p.m.
C11111forni». ""· San Dl~p. at X•m• .

ArliE., 3:t5 p.m.
SeaU14! n . ClrvC"I».nd, at Tu,,.on, 1\rlz.,
3:05p.m.
Chlt:QO (NL) \'11. Mllw.aullfle, 111
Cb . . .l«"• ..Vb:., 3:05p.m .
SUI

Frawd~~eo

vs. Oaklatnd, at Phoenix ,

Pltt!lbu~h Y!l. Texll.'i. 111 Port C"hlltlotUO. Fha., 7: !10p.m.

••

Enjoy the flexi~ility and: liquidity cif a CD
which is automatically ren~wable abd redeem~ble
a~ each 7 day anniversary

Nrw \ 'ork (A.L ) u . !"OM!.' \ 'ork (NL),atl

Fla., 7: :tt p.m.
Clncl nMII ' '" · Detroit, at Lalu!land,

Pert Sl. l.ud l'.

na.. Kp.m.

Hou.!l on - \'i!'Kinill SUm.\ ol Hou!Con

Mond..,. Spor111Tran!l:l.dlo•

u.,, l.•·ri•••/1
(' ~I

•

'

'

•

f ,.

_.

.· Cnmmunity calendar
, ,TUESDAY
POMEROY -' The. Meigs
County ,Cooperative Parish will
be ' taking g~rden applications
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday (roin 9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
.

HAR{USONVI,LLE -The Harrisonville PastbMatrons will
f'!leel Tuesday at 7; 30 p.m. at the
boltjeof Betty Bishop. All past
mal roll$ are, urged to attend.

day at 1 p.m. at tbehOJheofDorls
Ggueser. Guest speaker Will be
Clarice Krautter. ·
MIDDLEPORT ~The Middleport Literary Club Will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Episc6pal Chureh Parish House
with Helen Hayes as hostess.
Books reviewed WIU ·be "Riding
the Iron Roosters," by Bernice
_Carpenter and "Alaska" . by
Betty Fultz.

The 7-Day-Pr~~ium CD '
is another example of our
Commitment To Customers.

Scht.t!r "'ll lpl'd u

prr•klltnt •nd ICHI'•I nvu•re- to
hr.t~ml' prPIIIdrnt of Denwr.

Foodlrall

-.

Drtrolll - Slpd dden-''"e haek Hertt
M'elch, a Plan I free lKelll.

~.

Soccer

,.

national soccer team, said he
Dale Mulholland of tlte United was convinced \liat there would
States signed with. leading Mos-· be an all-German team for the
cow team Lokomotlv, . TASS 1~ World Cup In the United
reported. Mulholland, who has States. ... Cleveland forward
played professfonal soccer for Zoran Karle, who scored ,four
teams In the United States, West goals and two assists In three
Germany; Saudi Korea and Hong games last week, was named the
f(ong, wu expected to join MISL Offensive Pla)'er of the
l.okornotlv Immediately, TASS Week. Baltimore goalkeeper
Said. ... Franz Beckenbauer, Scott Manning was named the
(oach of the· West German
Defensive Player of the Week.

I

'

_ Call dt visit you nearest
' '
Centti!I-Trusi office for details today.'
'

st.o,ooo·MINIMUM:DEPosiT

Mu~um d&lt;f"IOit S99,m99. Subsranoi~ j&gt;enoloy for ouly wiohdra.;.t. '
lnt~rar p~t.d co pnnap•l 111d rom~ndtif:J"tftkly.Rar~ eH~in , MaK~ 9, ~~
· ·

.and slbjea rochanp whhow nottee. Y•eld anum• rh1t st11red rat' rem~iu
· consc1nt for •' full yeu wirh 1'\-0 withdrtwtls of inremr or principal.

~ ~EI'qR.AL TRUST COMPANY

The. Bank , Thai !'!fake• Tl!ings Happen.
. 992-1611
446-0902
.
.
· Mkldiepon
Oafllpolll
ldembrr FDIC

Forest Run UMW meet .
held .at Salser home
.

i;Jo~key baske~baU

"
Cemetery' clean up ·

' ~ :The Wells Cemetery
~leaned up during ·the

will be
week of
April 7. Anyone wishing tohsave
grave decorations should remove tliem befor~ that time. ·

'

'

'·

.

"

•tfiniarure golf
_T he Mf4dleport Park 'n' P)ltt
·Qllnlature golf course wlll open
oo' Friday at 1 p.m.. The golf
CO'urse Will be open seven days a
'ftek wllh the foUowtng achedale, Monday through Friday
'-:W p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday, noon to 10 p.m. The price
. .Ina $1 per person_per
Wltll .prllel . OD ~~ illlet

'ame.

ho.IM.

,.....,

branch. ·

Mils Wllltarns Is alao a
member of the choir and Is
enrolled In college prep causes.
She Is also a member of tbe
National HonorSQclety and plays
softball ind volleyball. She
works at Pleaser's In Pomeroy
and attends the Mt. Moriah
Church of God.

Hymn sing ·
'

There wlll be·an old faslttoned
all night hymn sing on Saturday
at 7: 30 p.m. at the Word of Life
Church In Burlingham. Pastor
Ray Laudermllt .Invites ~e public. There Will be a potluck dinner
at break(ast.
·

.

.'

Arts and crafts
sale slated

.
There wDI be an arts and crafts
sa)e on April 7 at Eastern Hlp
Schooi sponsofed by the athletic
bOosters.· Table apace II sUll
available and !Of more lllforma· ·
tlon contact 667·6269.
.

Dance scheduled ,,
.

The Bells ud Beaus will
sponsor an open dtlllce at the
Pomeroy Senior Cltlllens Cent$'
on Saturday. The caller will llf
Keftt Hall and the dance'- open to

ali ...... D diDfll'l,

JUNIEBEEGLE

JAN WILLIAMS

.

I

Middleport Garden Club meets
The March meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club was
held at the home of Mrs. Dorothy
Morris . .
Roll call w.a s answered with
members narping an environmental ·tragedy th!!Y. felt was
most disturbing.
·
Tickets were ~old to members
for a ,quilt featuring wild flowers
and bu tterfl les. The winner will
be announced on Aug. 2 by the
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs. ·
Mrs. Betsy Horky . presented

Stone cops
best -director
award Monday

LOS ANGELES tUPI) Oliver Stone, winner of an
Academy Award In ~987 for
"Platoon," won a second best
director Oscar Monday for
another VIetnam War fUm "Born on the Fourth of July."
"My deepest thanks for your
acknowledgement that Vietnam
Is not over, although some say It
Is," Stone said In accepting hls
award.
Stone has been nominated
three times previously for best
screenplay, two the 1986 films
"Platoon" and ''Salvador," and
for "Mldnfglit Express" In 1978.
He also was nominated this year
for best screenplay 'fn·collaboratlon with Ron Kovlc, whose story
Is the subject of "Born on the
Fourth' of J,uly." ' _ ..·
Stone served In the 25th Infantry Division and the First Cavalry Division In the Vietnam
War. He was wounded twice and
received the Bronze Star and a
Purple Heart with Oak Leaf ·
Cluster.
He called on his experiences In
combat
for both or hls Oscar·
''
Wlnningdirectorlalasslgnments .
"Platoon," like " Born on the
Fourth
of July, " recelvet;l a total
' ' .
•
•
r
of eight Academy Award
nominations.
Acco:rding . to · Stone, Tom
Cruise was his c.holce to portray
. '
'
. . - ........'
.
Kovlc from the beginning.
· Carolyn Salser was t~e. hostess
Evelyn Hollon was the pro"I thought (Cruise) .was the
tor the March meet\lig of the
gram lead~r using the Lenten
best
person of his !(eneratlon to
.forest ,· Run United ;,Methodist
topic, 'iA Gift of Hope." Scripplay
that
role. He came from the
.
Women.
ture was ' read by Caro~vn Salser
same
kind
or working-class Ca·
', The meeting opened with Edith
from Romans 5: 1·5, and Jere·
tholic upbrlngiqg as Ron, and he
slsson, presJdent, reading an
miah 29: 11. The purpose of the
had the same drive to be the best,
article, "It Matters Not" about
program was to strengthen unto be No. 1. l saw that In Ron. I
St. Patrick's Day. Devotions
derstanding of spiritual life as a
were by Evelyn Hollon using the
community of Christians com- ·saw that in Tom."
Besides the two VIetnam War
topic "Sweet Fragrance" from 2· mitted to· the-church's mission.
pictures.
and "Salvador." which
Corinthians 2: 14 .which states
and to hear and participate In
he
directed
and co-wrote with
that Christ Is the . perfume that
stories of biblical women of faith
reporter
Richard
Boyle, Stone
makes our lives fragrant .
celebrat lng spirituality In action.
co-wrote
with
Stanley
Weiser and
: Officers reports were given
Mary Nease was the leader In
directed "Wall· Street," which
and 65 sick and shut In calls were
the litany prdgram. Evelyn Holwon a best actor ·award for
Fe ported.
lon read.an article~ "The TrumMichael Douglas.
petl'r;" and an ar-ticle on how
In · 1988 Stone directed and
Easter dates are determined. ,
Easter can be as early as March' co-wrote "Talk Radio" with Eric
Bogosian.
22 :and never iater than April 25.
"&gt;J
:
'
'
., ,;
'
•
Other Stone film credits in·
Faye Wiggins had a special
1·'The Rutlal\d Fire Department
elude
the screenplay and direc·article on "Life Goes On Because_
~dies Auxiliary will sponsor a
tion
'
of'
"The Hand" and screen·
He Lives" about liow "The Old
jonkey basketball game on April
plays for "Cona? the
at 7: 30 p.m. at the 1\u tland ·t \ugged cross" was written by
Barbarian,"
"Scarface,' "Year
Rev
.
George
Bernard.
c!:lviv Center. Admission will be
of
the
Dragon"
(-which he wrote
Refreshments
were
served
to
$3,50 in advance for adults and S2
with
Michael
Cimino
I and " Mid·
!1 members .a nd a guest; Ma·
'fOr senior citizens and children.
Express."
night.
AI the doorthe price wll be $4 and ' . rybel Warner.
Stone's next project Is an
$2.50. There wlll be three games
account
of. the '60s rock group
total. Teams secured Include the ' r·
''The
Doors,''
now In product ion.
JWtland ,Fire Department ver$us
'the Columbia Fire 'Department. ' Trustee~
For lnformatlol) contact Carrie
The Lebtinon Township Trus:
Morris at 74:l,~SQ or Joan Ste·
· tees~ ·Will hdld · their regular
'!art at 742-2421. ,
meeting on Friday at 7 p.m.. at
,.
)I
'.
the townshiP,garage.
t'.
..

, POMEROY - Tne Ohio Eta
•
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
THURSDAY
!J9rorlty will , hold Its ritual of
POMEROY ' - The ~omeroy
jewels .tea on Tuesday .at 6:30 group of A.A. and Al-Anon wlll
p.m. at the home of Charlene meet Tb11rsday at 7 p.m. at the
Hoeflich. A.ll members are urged . Sacred H~art Catholic Cburc.h In ·
Pomeroy. For more Information,
to attend;. Officers for the new
year Will be elected.
call1-800-333-5051.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - . The m~n of the
MIDDLil:PORT - There will
Racine United Methodist Church be an organizational meeting for
will be serving a pancake and
all team managers· and others
sausage supper on Wednesday. Interested In a men's summer
with serving to star,! at 3 p.m.
basketball league on Thursday at
7
p:m. at the Middleport v'Uiage
"Donations only'.' wm be accepted for tliedlnners. The public Hall.
Is welcome.
CHESHIRE - The Gallla
' RACINE -'- The Morse Chapel
Meigs Community Action
Church located on County Road
Agency will have a free clothing
35, ·Racine Qortland Road, Is
day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to
holding a ~r.!val on Wednesday
noon at the old high school
through Satui-ciay. Speaker will
'
building' in Cheshire.
lie Rev. John Jeffereys of GaiUP,Olls. There Will also be special
REEDSVILLE- There will be
singing nightly. Rev. David Curfa meeting of the Eastern Alumni
man Invites the publiC to attend.
Association on Thursday at 7:30
p.m, at Eastern High School. All
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Interested alumni are welcome
Garden ·club wlll meethWednesto atten&lt;l.

to meet

3:05p.m.

Ch...-lotW -

••

'

. . ,.lie Harrlsonvllle-S~;Ipio
and tea. Tbe price " $9 per
Alumni Association officers met
person for the banquet, dance
receiltly .• til make P.lltns tor the
and dues, or $4 Per person for .the
Wual dllllll!l' and dance wblcb danceonly. Hanalurnnlmember
wlll 'be ·held at the Harrtsonvtlle
Is unable to attend, they l'l)ay
Schoo! on"May 26 at 6:30p.m. ·
send thC!Ir dues of $1 ' .to the
M!lliC'wlll be provided by "The . HarrJ.sonviiJe.Selpto A.lumnl As·
Rock Run Ramblers.'' '
soclatlon, 35359 SR 143, Pomeroy.
The classes to be honored are Reservations m.ust be made by
1910, 1920, 1930; 1940, 1950, and May 20 and can be' made calling
1960.
one of the officers, Harold D.
The menu will Include baked •Graham, · president, 742•3033;
. steak or turkey breast, baked ·Larry Clark,- vice president,
potato, green J:leans, and glazed 992-3690; Helen Pickens, treas·
carrots, tossed salad, rolls and urer, 949-2678; or Joy Clark,
bUtter, pl¢ and ice cream, coffee secretary, 992-3690.

'u·

..;._---Sports briefs-----

I

lnlure both your car and
home through Ul with
the Stat. Auto lnsurllnCe
Companiea. You can get

One of Cooper's major jobs this
year Is rebuilding the offensive
line, where four starters have
departed. Only · cen.ter D~n
Beatty returns from a year ago.
"We have a major rebuilding
job to do up front," said Cooper.
''But we have some good' young ,
players who have the potential to
get the job done."
The defense. which lm'proved
as last season went along, has six
regulars back and also should get
additional help from some of last
year's redshlrted freshmen; ·
along with Mlck· Barsala, ·a
linebacker transfer from Pasadena City College, and a healthy
John Kac.herskf.
Kacherskl, a projected starter
last year at outside linebacker,
unde'rwent knee surgery Instead
and missed the season. He led the
Big Ten In quarterback sack~ the

T••nnl11
~"V Ran~r 11a1 Qur~. ~ : ~p . m .

HOW TO
SAVIMONEY
ONYOUR AUTOAND
HOMEOWNERS
INSURANCE.

Is aludent council vice preliltll!llt,
and plays volleyball, ba,sketball,
and softbalL Sbe enjoys dancmg
and Is an employee of KentuckY
Fried Chicken In Ripley, W.Va.
She also attends the Reorgll!ilzed
Church of Jesus C)lrllt Latmr
Day $alnta, Racine- Portland

Alumni group in~ts
' •'

Tandy
never
expected
Oscar

announced

Mils tleegle II a member ot the

Junle Beegle, · daughter of

.

BLOCKS PATH- New Mexico's Luc Longley (13) has his path
lo the basket blocked by St. Louis's Melvin Robinson (~0) during

~delegates

Mam- BDd Roger Beegle, . Southern Hllh School choir, ta
Rllclae, ila'beellleledecl as the enrolled In college prep COIII'MI,

•

The Deily 81 ltkNI Page I

P.omeeov-Midcl•port. Ohio

Girls State

St. Louis, Vanderbilt .clash..for··M T title
By IAN LOVE
UPJ Sport&amp; Writer

Mild• 'D, 1880

the program on " How to Preserve Our Natural Resources."
She stressed the Importance of
maintaining the tropical rain
forests and that the main source
of plants used as medicines come
from the rain forests. She also
noted that some groups of con·
cerned citizens are now buying
sections of land on which to grow
trees and proteci them from
exploitation. Mrs. Horky stated
at. the present rate the rain
forests could become extinct In
this generation. One example
given of how fU!'11E;S from ,facto·
rtes and pow~r plants are des·
troylng the forests was "Camels

Hurnp" which Is the highest peak
In Vermont's Green Mountains.
Trees on these mountains have
been affected by acid rain.
The meeting concluded with
refreshments served by the hasless, Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Jeail
Bowen.
·
Table arrangements consisted
of yellow mums In a basket
container and white candles In
crystal containers. Other arran·
gements were a red protea, red
roses , and eucalyptus In a pink
container which was prepared by
Mrs. Gudren Schaekel, an!! a red
amaryllus sent by Mrs. Dorothy
Roller.

Degree work offered
by OU Adult Services
Adults who are llusy with the
demands ol work, home and
family, often despair of ever
having time to finish a college
degree.
Ohio University, through Its
.Office of Adu It Learning Servi·
ces, aids the adult student In
achieving the dream of a college
degree by a warding college
credit . for learning achieved
through work, qobble, or volunteer experiences.
This credit ..which Is both more
time . and cost effectlv~ than
taking the same number of
credits on campus, can then be
applied to degrees, shortening
the time and expense necessary.

A four hour course that will
help adult students compile a
portfolio of their learning wlll be
held -on the Athens campus, .
beginning Aprll7. Over 900 adult
students from this area have
taken advantage or this pro·
gram, and they have earned an
average of 28 credit hours each;
Some students have even earned
the maximum allowed, an entire
year of college credit.
Credits earned through this
program do not necessarlly have
to be In the student's major field.
To find out more about this
program, contact Sue Boyd I'!
Adult Learning Services. Call
593-2150 In Athens, or
1-800-444-2420.

Long Bottom news notes
By Melody Roberts
Mary Newlun bas related a
cute story about her grandsons,
Dustin Riggs and Jonathan New lun. While they were visiting she
realized they were not around
and upon looking for them found
them In her upstairs. They have a
fish aquarium and one grandchild was sitting In one end and
the other was In the other end.
When she asked them what they
were doing, Dustin said, "Mam·
maw, weeze a catchln fish."
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Riggs
and Dustin, and Matt Cummings
and Ginger Hayman came borne
this past weekend for Ginger and
Matt's. wedding at the Long
Bottom United Methodist
Church. The reception was held
at the Long Bottom Community
Center.
Ernestine Hayman was to
come home from the hospital on
Friday after being hOspitalized
for heart problems.
It has been reported that
· Mildred Hauber has been sick for
over a week with a bad stomach
· virus. She Is doing somewhat
better.
Visitors at the Paul Hauber
home have been Mrs. Betty Ross,
Middleport: a~d Mrs. Elizabeth
Well, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Sinclair, Shade; and Mr.

Trustees to meet ,
The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m. In
the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Jea·
sica Tandy spent 62 years as an .
actress before finally wlnnlnil an
Academy Award Monday, taking
the best actress Oscar for her
role as the piquantly quarrelsome JeWish widow In " Driving
Miss Daisy."
"I never e)lpected In a inllllon
years to be In this position," said
Tandy in accepting her statue as
the audience gave her a standing
ovation. "It's a miracle. I thank
my lucky stars .... I'm on cloud
Dine."
She thanked "Driving's" dlrec·
tor Bruce Beresford, who, In a
gentle chiding of the Academy,
she called "my forgotten man"
- an allusion to the fact he was
not even nominated for a best
director Oscar.
· One of the most distinguished
actresses In America, Tandy, 80,
turned in a moving performance
as a prickly Southern matron
who, against her will, begins
using the services of a black
chauffeur and ultimately grow's
to regard him as her best friend.
The role of the long-suffering
black chauffeur was played by
Morgan Freeman.
·
"I think I'm very lucky that
they trusted me with such a good
role," Tandy said backstage..
thanking her producers. "T just
never thought I would win, and
I'm delighted."
- Asked why the film became so
successful, Tandy said: "It's a
movie about people and their
relationships. I think It appeals to
all ages."
Over the years, Tandy has
. been best known for her performances In theattical, film and
television projects with her husband, Hume Cronyn. She won
Broadway's Tony Award costarring · with Cronyn In ' the
Pulitzer Prize-wlnnlnj! play
"The Gin Game.' '
She won her first Tony as
Blanche du BoiS in Tennessee ·
Williams' "A Streetcar Named
Desire."
Tandy made her movie 'debut
tn 1932. In "The Indiscretion of
Eve,'' and since then has appeared In more than a dozen
fllms, Including "The Seventh

Cross,'' ' 'The Green Years. ''

and Mrs. Noel Sinclair, Athens;
and Wilma Wamsley, _Cheshire.
Mrs. BellY Loudin and Shan·
non; and Mrs . Wilma Wamsley,
all of Cheshire, and Phyllts
Larkins attended the Staller
Brothers concert at the Parkersburg High School.
Mr. and Mrs. BobbY Fitch are
In the process ofieariilgdown the
Millard Ball house.
To place Items contact Melody
Roberts at Box 7, Long Bottom,
Ohio 45743 or call 985-4275.

· 'Dragonwyck, ' ' , ''Forever
Amber," "A Woman's Vengeance," "September Affair,"
"The Desert Fox," "A Light In
the Forest," "Adventures of a
Young Man," "But ley:· · "The
Birds," "Hanky Tonk Freeway,"
"Still of the Night," ''The World
According to Garp,'' "Best
Friends," "The Bostonians,"
"Cocoon," " Batteries Not Included," "The House on Carroll
Street" and "Cocoon: The
Return."

A Good Thing
Is Now Even Better!-

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·Driving Miss Oaisy' named best .picture of the year~. Monday

1

•
By VEaNON 8COTI' '
weekend In Dublin." salq Day- "Glory/ '
Poets.Soclet.v." .
UPI Holl)'wood Beperter
s~nt
~ach
working
,
"I'd
litte
to
pay
homage
to
the
"Cinema Paradiso." an Italian
Lewis,
wbo
LOS .ANGELES -"Driving
daydurtngslxweeksoffUmlngln
54th,
the
black
soldiers
..
who
fllm
. al!oul a boy who spent his.
· Miss Daisy." a simple movie
Brown'$
wheelcha(f.:
eVen
havhelped
11'\aJ&lt;e
thiS
country
free,"
.
·
youth
In a sniall theater's projecabo,l(t the softer side of racism as
lng
crew
members
ll!ed
him
his
·
he
said
In
accepting
his
awar.d.
lion
booth,
won the a!"ard for
' to)d through a Southern black
meala.
.
.
:·ctory",
won
two
other
best
foreign-language
fll11,1.
· c~~uffeur and his Jewish rna·
.
Oliver
Stone,
·
who
won
the
.
awards.
for
·
best
clnemato·
The
best
documentary
feature
tron, was named best picture at
DltectorsGuild
Award
March
tO
•
.
grapby,
and-best
sound.
film
award
went
to
"Common
}the 62nd Annual Academy
won his second Oscar ils best
Brenda Fricker was best .sup- · Threads: Stories from the
Awards, and provided Jessica
dlrettor
for
"Born
of
the
Fourth
port.lng
actress as Chi)sty Quilt," and Its producers'Rollilrt
Tandy with her first Oscar In a
of
,July,"
.
a
bout
VIetnam
veteran
BrQWn,'s
mother
in the lr!sh "My Epstein and Bill Coutourle. ·
62-year career.
Ron Kovlc's patriotism h.trned to Left Foot."
·'
. Best · original musical score .
Nominated (or nine awards.
bitterness.
· "I'd !Ike to thank Mrs. Brown. · recogniilon went to Alan Menken
"Miss Daisy" also won for
"I
have
so
many
thanks
to
give.
Anybody
who gives birth 22times for the animatl!d feature, "The ,
screenplay and makeup; making
I want to give lt. to Ron Kovic for deserves one of these," Shl( said Little Mermaid."
It the biggest winner at t/11;!
his largeness of heart, and to holding up her Oscar.
· Thesummerblockbuster"Bat Academy Awards.
.
Tom CrUise for making Ron's
Playwright .. Alfred Uhry won man" ·took awards In ar.f dlrec· The 80-year-old Tandy called
dream come true," Stone said In best screenplay written fo.r · lion, presented to Anto,n Furst,
her Oscar. ".a miracle" and · accepting the Oscar. · ·
an_other • medium for ,"Driving and set decoration, whi('h went to
gently · chided the Academy of
Stone, winner of an Academy ..Miss Daisy," hiS adaptation of Peter Young.
·
·
Motion Picture Arts and Scle~ces
Award in 1987 for another Viet- his ·play, and 'makeup designer
Actor Walter Mathau . .presby thanking "most especially
ham wa·r movie, "Platoon," said MariUo Rocchettl was honored en ted the Jean Hershel! Human. ihat forgotten man, my director.
backStage that he was disap- for his work in agirtg nindy, ltarlan Award to producer HowBruce Beresford," who was not
pointed "BOrn on theFourth"&lt;1id Freeman and Dart Aykroyd. ·
ard W. Koch, a former Academy
nominated for a directing a\j'ard.
not do better. Nominated for
The awards were broadcast president and producer of eight
The evening's biggest surprise
eight Oscars, Its only ·o ther live from the Dorothy Chandler past Oscar shows and the movie·
was the victory of Daniel Dayaward was for editing.
Pavilion to an estimated 1 billion. "The Of,ld Couple. "
Lewis as best actor for his ·
· "H's p61itical and It made a lot. ·people in 90countrles. Fourofthe . Legendary Japanese· film ' .
difficult foie In "My Left Foot"
of people a11gry," Stone said, awardswerepresentedvi\lsatel- maker Aklra Kurosawa, who
as Christy Brown, a renowned
adding 1\lal "th.e re· was quite a Ute from · locations around the directed "Ran." "Seven Sainu- ·
· Irl.s h writer and painter who was
concentration of effort by the world - London. Sydney, Mos-. ral" and dozens of other films,
virtually helpless fro!J! cerebral
. received an honorary Oscar 'for
right wing against the movie. cow and Buenos Aires.
palsy and could write and paint
Host Billy Crystal opened the his life's work:
,
However, 1 felt. that If vou know
·
only with his ie'ft foot.
. th~ truth, you should teilll."
show by acknowledging .the film
Kurosawa· was greeted by a
The London-born Day-Lewis ·
i'ndustry's outstanding financial live transmission from Tokyo,
. ,received a standing ovation when
Den,zel 'Washington became . year, with worldwide bOx office where friends and family ga: he took the stage to accept the
on!~· the fourth blac.k performer
sales of $5 billion. "Jack .Nichol· thered to sing "Happy Birthday"
. Oscar he won over Such !letterto win an acting Oscar when he son it he Joker in 'Batman'~ is so to him on his 85th birthday.
: known actors as Tom Cruise,
was named best supp(Jrtjng actor
"I ·am very deeply honored,"
Robin Williams and Mo-rgan · for his role as one of the first rich. Morgan Freeman drove·
him
here
tonlgllt,"
he
quipped.
he
said through a -translator.
Freeman:. · ·
·black soldiers in .the 54th Massa- ·
won
the
award
·
..
"iBuO
l don't feel I have yet
Tom
Schulman
"You've just provided me with ·cnusetts Regiment to !ightfor the
for
.
best
screenplay
written
dlgras(l!!d
the essence of cinema."
.the makings
of one hell of a. -Union in ·the . Civil War ·in rect.ly for !he screen for "Dead
~.
'
'

~Daniel

LOS ANGELES &lt;UPI) - Da. . niel Day-Lewis won th"eAcademy ·
: Award for best actor Monday for
- his portrayal of cerebral palsy
vic;tlm and celebrated authorpainter Cristy Brown in "My Left
F,oot... .

,

"You've just provided me with
. · the making Of one hell t;lf a
· · ; wee_kend In Dublin. " Day-Le~Is

said·. after actress Jodie Foster
handed him the Oscar for best
actor-.
"For everyone In the film, all
tlie strength and pleasure of
making ibe film came from
ChriStv Brown. I'm truly grate-.
ful in being given this award that
you're enCouraging him to make
· his mark, "

:_People in the.- n~ws.. ~
bee~." Gray said. The newspaper
By WILLIAM C. TROTT .
article
quoted th'e pub's manager
United Press lnternallonal
as
the
source
of the story but the
, BAD MOON: The moon had .
viscount
says
she denied making
: hardly risen in Augusta. Ga.,
the
allegations
when . he asked
· before ·pollce arrested drummer
her
allout
them.
··
··
:Tommy Lee of Motley cr,.e for
·dropping his pants and baring hiS
PLAYER ACTS: New York
rear end to the. crowd ~t .the
Knicks. stat J'atrl!!k ' EWin~: has
heavy metal band;s concert
talents othe~ than basketball.
Sunday nlght: The band had been
Leonard Nlmoy, the "SiarTi'ek"
warned before the show abolli
star, says the 7-foot ·Ewing is
Augusta 's obscenity law but that
"actually very good, ·very natu'didn't stop Let-. "They were told
ral" · when it comes to acting.
·what they could and couldn:t do
Ewing' . has a role as ·the
and they did it anyway," a city
basketball-playing, friend of
official said. Lee; the husband of
Gene Wilder in "Funny About
actress Heather Loc"lear, was
Love, ''which Nlmoy is directing.
c)larged with indecent exposure
"He can ·have an acting career
and performing a sexually exany,tlme he wants," Nimoy said.
plicit act and was was fined
Wilder, Ewing and Mary Stuart
· $1,647 Monday. A Mo.tley Crue .'Masterson filmed some· scenes
· bodyguard, Vincent Taurone,
last week and more footage was
: also was fil)ed $117 for trying to . shot Saturday.night as the Knicks
· move a police officer out of .the
lost to the · Boston · CeltJcs In
way at ·tl]e show.
Madison Square Garden. ·
· · ROYAL SUIT: A, nephew of
HATS FOR SALE: Sports and
Queen EliZabeth has become the
entertainment celebratk&gt;s Sunfirst member of th.e roy;~l family
day took their hats off to the
to sue for .libel In high court.
Starlight Foundation of Chicago
VIscount Linley, 28, the sori of · --'- the charily founded by actress
Princess Margaret. said a
Emma Samms ' to help grant ,
: ·wholly invented'; story in the
seriously ill children their fondToday newspaper hurt him, his . est wishes. The biggest prize
business and his fam ,lly by
auctioned off at the Hat Dance ·
claiming he got the royal heave- · club . wa·s .. a slig~tly battered
ho from a pub for throwing beer
football helmet that belonged to
on his friends. During jury
former Chicago Bears running
selection Monday, his lawyer, •back Matt SuhfY. The· helmet
Charles Gray, told poten,tial
went for $350 wtille Samms's hat
jurors the viscount was unfairly
went for $80. Headgear from
portrayed In the article a~ a . other sports figu,re~ · were big
"Hooray Henry" - a: British
money-makers. A hat signed by
term. for a drunken highbrow
Chicago Bulls star Mlchaell/)r·
lout. "It suggests he was guntyof
dan was sold for $120, Bears
. tile worst kind of boorish behavCoach Mike Dltka's hat went for
Ior, giving offense to otbers ' $60, '$5 more than Cub' Manager
seeking to have a (jUlet glass of ·· Don Zimmer's, and Marlo Andretll's brought In $60. Other
sales Included a hat from David
Letterman for $55, one from
letter-turner Vanna Wblte for $75
There will be a men's slow
and a DoUy Parton for S75.
pitch softball tou_rnament on
BROCCOLI BROUHAHA:
April 7 and 8 at Reedsville. For
Broccoli is silll ·a hotter topic
·Jnformation call 378-6406 -or 378- · than 't he budget aiid the trade
6325.
deficit in _washington. First lady .
"
Barbara Bush accepted a shipment of fresh broccoU from
growers trying to capitalize on
President Bush's disdain for the
v~etable. Mrs, Bush _confesse(j
.. The Past ·Matrons of Evangliher love ·for broccoli but said,
llne Chapter 172 Order of the
"''m going to tell you the honest
Eastern Star will no! meet during
· truth. The president is never
.the.month of ApriL
·
going to eat broccoli again. ·

Softball tourney

· Group won't meet

_Cemetery clean up

R~viva1

.. 'J1le Brad~Fy Cbureh of Christ

win

-Bazaar, bake sale

.

TO PLACE AN AD CALl 992-21$6
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. 'to 5 P.M.

I A.,M. until NOON SATURDAY

~~t::M:ei=..~-

lllvl'-

.,

. DANiEL DAY-LEWIS

JESSICA TANDY

'

'• • 'I

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Best movie
is ·about
.
.
the soft' side·_ of··racism ·

.I

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2-ln Memory

fi·,., d.., . (ChiCk

c~a;veawev

CORV DEADLINE . DAV BEFORE PUiliCATION
MO!IDAY PAPER
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TUESDAY PAPER
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SUNDAY PAPER ·

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In._-·.'
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Ohio V...y. Memory hrM

IWgs CL ..._, Gor-.·

400 cadot llvd.
lit: 3
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P I - !lend My Vetil,., of hrvlae Eligibility Cfehlfloiie
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875'-Pt.Pitdilnt

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31-H,omn fot Sale
32-Mobile'Hom.. for Sele
ll-F1rms for Sale .
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35 - lot• &amp;. Aera-ve ,
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895-Letarl
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NEW- REPAIR
Gutters·
DownsPQuts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

74..-Motorcycl.•
75--Boett &amp; Motor~ for Sele
76 - 4uto P1ru &amp; Ace•sori•
77 ·~Auio Aep1ir
78 - Campin'g Equipment
79.'l""CimPers &amp; Moler Homes

Public Notice .

Scr VICCS

COUNTRY ·

83-Exc..,ating
84 - Eiec:tric:., &amp; Refrigeration
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POMEROY. OHIO: lit. 7 • 8.11. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: lit. 60 • S.R. 143
HENDERSON. WV.: lit. 311 Adj. tv SlclorsEqulpment
NEW HOUIIS:
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POM ... OY: I a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Doroi
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CARPENTER SEIYICE

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.
(FIIEE ESTIMATE&amp; I

FREE ESTIMATES

*-·

~ It d-111 aoothat
I yqr,
You laft a beautiful

AGLl- -

992-617

=~~ ~~:;:.·~:= ::"==•;n:;':;•:;:m;:IO:ry::==;

~
~'

'

VINYL IEPlACEIIIIENT
WINDOWS

EYENf..GS

=========:;

11

o.

W.YL SIDING

209 South 4th St.

1

YOUNG'S

Wllftr Spttlll

GoodRotM
T.L.C.
27Yrt. EKp.
Retor..-

Oltlo

Memory

AI ~ l-et you. 10

' IIMCII OF SERVICE _ _ _--,:_ _ _ _ _ lfj. II f4111LY,,.___

.

INSULATION·

•-uat•

~·
••
I

,-1.

P!~ft~Brey,

.

N-·

1614)915·4110

ltLL SUCK
-992-2269

It, J3 North ef

•·-'*'

2

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

*FIREWOOD

. ·- 992-7479

Public Notice

~.

·· FREDERICK W. K~EIN,
AKA
F.IIED W. KLEIN, t::r'AL. ,
CI&lt;SE NO·. 88 CL227
· tn puriUOnco to ., Order
of Solo directed to me in the
above entitled oct,ion, t wilt
offer for N.fe ot fl'!bllc ou~­
tlon. at the ·front door o! the
Courthau• . ' ~ 1 ·Potneroy,
Ohio, In tho obove nomed
· county; on 'ruesdoy. Moy 1.
1'990 at 1 0:00 i. m.• the foiJowlng dllcribed rut eot.te,
situated In the County o!
Melgo, and the _Stoto o~
Ohio, to wit:
·
Situated In the Vttto_go of
Middlepon.
County ol
Molgo lond Stote of Ohio: .
Belnv Lots Nos. 128 Mid .
130 In Palm_. 1 Addition to
Shaffl,.d: now incorr"llt8d
Into .,d·o port.of tho Vllllogo of
.. Midclopon. Meigs CouniV.
· Ohio. Fcir o more definite .description of Mid Iota. ref•·
1o hereby mode to the
ouiwved piJ!I _ , on ~
~rd tn the ofllce ofthe Meigo
Coun!Y Rocorclor.
Refer., .. .Deed: Volume
240, _ . . S86.. Moigo
County llocordo.
.
Thlo proPortv is lacoted at
41 &amp;S, Fourth A~nue, Mlddtepott. Ohio.
Property
opproiaod 11
129,000.00 ond aonnot be
.Old for leto thon two-thlrdo
of the oppreioed votuo.
Alto tho following ·doacribed real ntllte aituata in
tho Caunty of Molgs in tho
Stote of Ohio, ond Townohlp
of S.tlabury, ond bounded
ond described •• foU9Wo:
Porcoll: .
.•
Boglnnlng
South ~0
cholna I t ltnko from the N.
~- Cbrnw !Whence • block
''eok f2" bart N. 83deil. E..
64 ttnksl. of lection 18, fown
Range 13 of the Ohio.
..Company Purctoeoe; t""nce
!''N· 86\l:o dog. E., 20 cholno
):iiev. links to the contor ol
old I'CNid from which •
yo;omDnl 12" bewa N. 21
.
. i- 1o· E .. ;14 tintound lo•
t "auot ... beort s. &gt;40 dog. 35',
il"l4 Hnks: ttlonco 8 . 31'/~dog.
j,&lt;;E.; 5 chotns 88 links to the
&gt;·i"'ko of the r-; thonco S.
,.;18\l:o deg. E.. S cllol~~ 81
links; thence S. 42\l:o dog. E.
.,3 cllolno iiO llnkl; thM!ce S.
. ~,... deg. w.. 7 chlllnl 18
C:ilnks; thence S. 3a,; dog. W..
i-+20 chotns 42 links; thence
t,l!t. Bl'h dog. W.. 34 cholno
l'i~·1 tlnllo; thence N. 31!4 dog.
!'..E .• 41 ahiJino 7411nlti to tho
~;~~~- of boalnntng, i:ont81nt"lng 132.1f ocNe, more or
.,too sin old lectton 1 B. lolng
premisooo k _ ,
Adonijoh lmlth farm
1 end the ..me 01 conveyed
t'tiv Georgo Titue. 8horlff of

AnD6P.M.

J&amp;L

"loW

Ill, do

IIAVlllflillliaS

*LIGHT HAULING

•Mobile Home
Per1e '

'Meigs County t0 W~~~; E · rood io the West Hne ol Sec- B. Qilmm. dec-iod. tate ol
Hy•tl by deed doted NoN
th B48 Broadway. Racine. OH.
voim..r 4, 1884, •nd re- tion o. .1 8; thence oou
·
"
1 170 oitong tho Wost 4&amp;n·t. ·
corded In Volu11!o 14, pogo 'tine of Section No. 18 to the
·
· Robort E. Buck,
663. Rocord of· D - of
Probote Judgs
Molgo county, Ohio; EX- ptoce 111 beginning, contelnLeno K. Neosolraed, Clerk
CEPTINQ from tho obovo lng 27 ocreo.
!31 13, 20. 27, ,3 tc
Excejlt ott lei8t hlghwoys.
' d01crtbeil property o trion1 7 ocro
1
lelng the Nine real eototo
gu~r ...rip o acree. out~ conveyed to 'Hence Jo
. ~·
Public. Notice
tho S.E. CarMrto beulltid.lll!
on outlet to the 80 oclo farm ::.,;;diliEiiithll Joneo by d•d reodiolnlnv which
by · .,
In Volu'l'o199;peg~ .
NOTICE OF' AUCTION
John W. Cormon; ond EX·
.the Meigo County
Notice
io horoliY giVMI thol
CEPTtNQ AND IIESERV·
the boerd of,eduC.tion of tho
INQ on coet · oH ond u•
Moigo Locot School Dlotrjct,
. uncJerlying the uma ·With ,
Molgo Caunty. Ohio, w~t ofthe rlght to mine and operate
f• for ~Ia It public auction
for t"a ume.
.
at Melp , Hiah . Schoot. Pot'ltao the·fofh!wlnii rNI ••· ..
meroy. OhiO, commencing
tate oituoted In the Town1 &amp; tllpproloed ~t ot 7:00 P.M .. on Aprl '1 2.
ship, Courity ond Stote ofo- t27.1100.00 ond c.nnot be 1990, ttoe following deretold, ond , In said Section aold for Ieos thon two-thlrdo ocrtbed peroonal property:
18. Town2. Ronge13ofthe of tho oppre'laod Vllue. Tho
Ohio Company Purchase.
Sevorol Soto of • Fieoto
Boglnnlng 8. 25 dog. E.. 10 proporty locoted In tho vii- Ware Gl•aW.re
Thr• 131 Electric Rongeo
rods 20 lin~ from Fenny togo of Middleport, will· be
Three (31 Qoo Rongeo
IDid
- t o l y from propSmith's N.W. cor- ond in · _
on Salisbury Twp. The.
Termo of 10te oholl be cash
the centef of the road; ,_-I'"Oi''""ty
1hence N. 89'11 dog. E.·. 13 1'1
il\ Sotltbury Twp. in·the form of c•h. or a cortitled or c01hior' • check payH 1 unit.
roda;thel&gt;ceS.41'11deg.e..
'OF SALE: Tho able to the boord of educe13 rodo to the reed;
purchaoer. 01 tlon of tho Meigo Locol
olong tho rood 8. 89\l:o deg. OIIOn 01 hta bid io occepted Scho'ot Diotrict which io rew.. t 3 rods; thence N. 67 h,.t •u"red t de
~
dog. ,5 rodo 10 links; thence 1
roq 1 ·
O POIn qui rod ot thetlmo of the pubN. 22'h ileg. w. 7 rodo 17 on the doy ofoate. in C81h or ~~~ auction from the highalt
by conlflod chiCk. poyoble bidder.
tinko te&gt; tho ptoco o 1 begin- 10 tho Shoriff of Meigs
Information con"""""g the
ningcontainlngonaacre, ,... · County, Ohio. 10% of the auction Ale ohall be obtoinod
HIVing from this grant one amount of auch accepted at the office of tho Principal.
large chlltnut ,,.. and one bid~ but In no evant ,.., than
·cherry tree. Being known •• et,OOO.OO, Tho beiOilce of Pomoroy Pike.
Pomoroy, •
Moigo tTalephono:
High School.
42091
tho Peoch Fork School lot the purchOIO price shell be Ohio
6t4-992.,d being tho t8me pre2168j.
·millt convoyed by ~lnny duo ond poyobtoto the $horThe board rttaervn the
Iff of Meigs County. Ohio,
. Smith to Boord of Educotion within thirty (301 dlyt from right to reject any or oil bldo.
by deed datell November the date ol confirmotion of
Jane Fry, Treasurer
30. 1 988, !OCOrded In VQ- Nlo. The purchaoer ohetl be MeigsLOCill School District
tumo 102,' 248 of Mid reqUired to poy intoreot' on t31 ~o. 27; (41 3. 10 4tc
Mllgo County Deed Ro- the unpaid belance ol Jhe
rata of 10% per annum from
.c ordi.
Public Notice
lelng tho Nme r... 81 1111• · the dote of ..ta to tho date of
connyed •o Hen~ Jon• 1111yment of, bal..,ce, un.l111
end Ethel
Jon01, Meigs
•PUBLIC NOTICE
County·Oaed Records.
Mid bll1nce shell - poid in
Tho Vllloge of Middleport
eight
til
doyo
from
the
deto
will occopt IHIOd bido untl 3
of the Nle.
Porcel 2 ' · '
Tho follOWing real eatote
Jom• M. Soutoby P.M. April 9. 1190 11t the
litulted ·in 11Mi County . of
Sheriff of Meigs County moyOI'I office, ·2 37 II- St ..
Melgo. Township of Sofia- Dougloo M. Cawloo
Middleport. Ohio for tho fo~
bury and Stoto of Ohio, and Att~ for Plilntiff
lowing equipment:
bounded end dotcrlbed as
1-1978 Con backhoe
follows: . the following root· 131 20. 7; 1413. 10, 17,
,
This
equipment may be lneo••
In tho North- 24 etc
apected at the vitloge gorego
Wellt
One Ou1rtorof SeCtion - - - - - - - - - 11 Pork ond High St. bot·
No. 1B. Salisbury Townohlp,
W"fl 8 A.M . and 4 P.M .'
PubliC Notice
Metgo
County,
Qhlo,
. Tho vllloge reoervet tho
bounded ond deocrlbed ·eo
to reject ony or oil biclo
follows: ·aoglnni!Jg ot the
. NOTICE OF
•nd the right to w•iv• any in.
APPOINTMENT,
.Non"-! cor- of 127
formotion in bidding .
' OF FIDUCIAllY
'
17/100 ocre trect recordiod
Fred Hotfm.,, Moyor
On Maroh 7. 1890, In tho
in Doocl Book 173. page
VIUege of Middleport
Proboto C31 20, 27 2tc
168. on tho Wootlnooflec- Moigo . Cou]lly
tlon No. 18; thence EMt Court. CMo Na. 2111', E1rf
t 40&amp; lost to tho centor of A· ,Grimm. 1334 ~~-~
the rood; then,. North· 27 llood.
Cotumblio,
OH.
In
deg. 60' Woot .zo&amp; 43229ofWOI
oppointed
Exo- •
olong !h• cantor of the r - ; cutor
the eotate
of Horotd
thenO[I ,
11 dog. &gt;40'
In Loving Memory
Of Our Brothar
' VIRGIL E. COUINS
•38 dog. 30' w.t 180 - · •
Who Died
1tclngtho CM!tor of tho r - :
. lp1 Loving Memory .
March 26. 1989
thence N 7" detlIt'1 been o ye..- since
Of Our D- Mpt11w
40' W..t 373 lost ·:::::
.you laft u1;
GLAbYS
WINES
t h e - o f ther
·
It
1Hm1 lice only ye•Who Diad
thenco ,' Nal'fh 13 clog. 30:
tardoy we •w your
W01t. 700 feot oloni the
AIJerch 211. 1984 ·
lllllllng
center of tho rom; thence
. And Our DNr DU,.
lut 10 u1 you'll n Iouth 80 deg, 111' Weot. 80
CLYDE
WINES,
SR.
begone;
fOot olong the of the
Who Diad
In ciur h - you'll elwoye live on.
,
March
18811
. Your loving
Not a dey do - forI
•
r01h
get you;

SHEll IFF'S SALE OF ·
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIQ
MEIGS COUN.TY
. THE CENTRAL TRUST
,
COMPANY OF '
SOUTHEASTERN
~Ht~SN.I, . . .

It t.r yeu ..
vaY IIASOIWU

*SHRUB '&amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL·.

-MOilLE
HOME PAIIC

8 .1 - -t4ome lmprowements
82-Piumbing &amp; Helling

Plmllc Notice. .

pallllirit:
Lei

PAT HILL FOlD

FRiE ESTIMATE.S
p4.

liiiD

Tallt

heater earn. We cat1
alH add bail llfMI rod
tilt rllliaton. W. olio
repair Gas Ttmks. . ·

ROOFING

71 - Autot for S1le
72-TtUICkl for S•l e
73- VI!nt &amp; 4 WO ' s

\

· !'flEE ESTIMATES
it,. pain iut ef

. . . ...llall.....

Howard L WrltiHI

Tr~f!SJI!Irl ~linr

•,

.... 992-56,82
... 992-7121

nrn.OIIITIIIOI

992-2191
Middlepor1,

• Mobile Home
Ren•t•
•Lot Flentata

• ' .( .\:,1

,

12 - W•med to Buy
13-Liv.. tock
14 - Hey &amp; Grain
66-S.ed &amp; Feri~iler

41 -=Houles for A tnt

42 - Mobile Homts for Rent
49-Ferm• for ,_ent
44 - Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
41 .... Sp•eelor Rent •
47-W•nted 1o A!nt
48-Equiopment for Rent
41 - Forl..•••

Get

lgl~------~----~~------------~
',
ADDIEJS, ___________:---__:_.:_:;__...:....,:_;_,._._:__

IEIVICESDIIALIO.

13 - lna~rtnce

1 4-Buain•• Tr1ining
1 5 - Schoot. &amp; lnttruction

Suppli~~

Oth•Y•d .

11-Ferm Equipment

1 2-litY~tlon Wented

ex~han~es ...

Mei(jl! COu'11Y •.

f-.

•Founaln llrclllethl• lttus
Door,
Angolt ond

&amp; liV!!.\I IIt.k

11 - HeiPW•"'"

cmw the

following t·elephone

f nt r11

,)1•r JICf'~

- 2 ·00 P.M. FRIDAY

pa~es

· lloUo-•Coonoteoy FIQWor
Y•• oCJor lllril lothl
•Con!ent Bird lolhl

67-Mulic.. lnttNm*lft

Alit Trlt..leel••

PAitn'QIG &amp; CO.

IS NOW OPEN
FOR IUSIIISS.
IN STOCK: oCooo,tnt , _

f llli•IPV'I"'I: t

"•ti••r tnd cl-le O•lli·
poll~ Dilly T.rabune. reaching over 18.000 homes,

AVTO&amp;
REPAIR

stuca.: •o .

61-Frultt • V•v••bl•
5.9-For Sate Of Trlde , .

8- WMtld, to lu'f ·

wll~ llto: •PP~• In thil Pt. Plt•tn~

,

'

'

I - HIPPY Adt
6-Losl end Found
7-·Y•d Sai•IPiid In adVIncll
1-Pubtrc- .... • 'A..,atlon

'

MOllS &amp; GAUIIS

fAIJe,. Pl11a Sfllpl

11 -,-...oul.hohiGo. .
12- lportlng (loode
53-AntMtue•
s•-Mitc. Metchlftditt ,
615-lluilcMno Supptl•
68-Ptts fOr. S.ae 1

'

3-Ann'ouc.,.,tn11

cept - cl•lifitd disptly'. Busin•• Catd •nd 1~11 noticMI

t~e

a..... a.

Mr:r r: !1 ,Hi'lt .. r:

'

.

11.124, ,_..,

PH. 949-2111
01' .... 949·216d
Dey .. Night
. NO SUNDAY CAllS

(614) 667·S271

.42 -

; .io
113.00
11.30/ doy ·. . ,061doy

15

1-Co•d 'oiTh.,¥

•A ct ...rti.t advertiMment p~eld ~~ n,. Dlily SM'Itin" (e.~~:­

~

u.oo

in ~ch•"Cf'·
·
ad• und•1 I words..witl be

gublic.Cio'n 10 m•• correction,
mult be pajd .in edy..,ci art
·
Card of Th.nkt
Hsp,.,. Ad•
In ~mori,.em
Yll'd &amp;II,.

..

-

be pre·,·

u.oo .

.CUSTOM . .T

''At ......_.. Prien"

DUMP TRUCK
. Send-Stone-Dirt

Ovor 16 Worclo
.
. 20 '
:30

l)liid

~ou,.-

l'ftpontiblt fer ttron ltter

.

Reuivai .set

10
Mon1hly

flut d~ ed runS 6n p..,.,J . C1ll before 2 :00p.m

Ivana acCusees Trump of abuse

mali

and

mu,s t

Alto
14.00

Words
11
16
16
11

. 4

il d~ublt prlct at ad C:Ot1. ,

'

the .tiews.

or Meton co.urtt~•

dtlcount tot eds

,

Broccoli Wars- The final chapter?

Quir~ i~

:Oa:l_tla

s

Days
1
3

'

•E..WU•
EIITEIPIISES

.....
. . . . ..

logtr Hy•H

.IDIIS

C1WIIG

--

--·--

IISSIU.

SITEWOII
lOADS
.
.• .
n

LOS ANGELES iUPI) . ·walks ;o
market, untilat last !
,,
· :::.1
"Driving, Miss Daisy," a tal.e shl\ relegts. , , ,
about the soft side of racism told
The chauffeur-passeng!:'r rei a- 1
through th'e evolution of a touch- tionship ~ ~lowly, almo~t imper-.
ing friendship between a white ceptJbly evolves into a friel)dshlp
dowager al)d her. bl~ck chauf- ' . a~ the two shar,e .the ·problerrys of~.
leur, won the coveted best growing old..
·
•
picture Oscar Monday at the 62Qd
While other films about ~a cia!
annual Academ¥ Awards .
issues in the ,S,outh ~ave !lean~
"! hope 1 can eontlnue to be a:s with brick tlirowi11g, lynchinl!~t
religious .as I have ooen_ the last al)d' ma~~hes ; "I;lri".ing ~is~ .
two months," said Lilli Fjnl Daisy" shows It at a different
'zanuck, who, along · with ,J\er kinder level. · ·
· · ·
,
hu,sband, RiclJiird D, , Z.anuck,,
Daisy is a !J!iriorlty In her OWQ.',
accepted the Best Picture .award 'right as a Jewish woman, in th!!' .
for "Drivln_g.; •'· ·
· · South. In her close relationship '
.
.
·"Thanks to the academy for
with her chl!llf!eur over,.a span,o~~
In preparing for '.the role; later appeared on Sll!ge with the
20 years. she learns tolerance,_~
Day-Lewis spent eight weeks in Bflstol'Oid Vic Theatre company honoring us arid making my
overcoming the obvious prejudl1!;
an Irish clinic observing cerebral and with the Little Thea! re In momma so proud." .
Bas.ed on Alfred Uhry's play of
ces she denies harboring and•
palsy victims. Once production Bristol.
the
Same
tifle,
the
film
fellS
the
Uftimafely grOWing ,tO I regard;.
began, he spent the eJ!Iire workDay-Lewis, whowearshisdark
Hoak as "mvbestlriend' de.spill!~
Ing day of the 6·weetf production hair shoulder-length, was cast in story of a ·black chauffeur,
their cultqral and econo,m h''
ln Christy Brown's wheelchair, his first television leading role in . played . by Morga!! Freeman,
·even having crew members feed the BBC dtama "How Many Iiired to drive an elderly widow,. differences'.
, ' ,
him his meals.
Director Bruce Beresfo,rd
Miles to Ba liylon," followed by portrayed by Jessica Tandy, who
evoked nomiitation-wtnn,lng'pei-Besides winning trie Oscar, the lead on stage in ·"Another also won,.the ·best actress Oscar.
. Miss Datsy re~!s 1\gainst the
formances from, TandY,. :FreeDay-Lewis won the bes 1 actor Country" ·in London.
honors . at the Montreal Film
man and Ayk~oyd, but, the best
· Thereafter Day-Lewis went to . notloit' that she'tleeds a driver,
but her devote~ SQn, played by
director nomlriatioil eluded 'him.
Festival for "My Left Foot." .
Tahiti to play the ship's mate 'tn
At SO; Ta.n dy is a veteri!'n of
The· English actor burst on the Roger Donaldson's movie or' Dan Aykroyd; insist~ on.hlrlng .a
internallonal movie . scene two . "The Bounty."
st.&lt;ige and sqeen, ' b;ut thi~ was
driver after .she has a perilous
years ago, . starring lri ''The
accident trying to back her car
her first best iiCtress nomination
Like most finely trained Eng·
arid Oscar. ·a nd p&amp;isl~ly her las't. ·
out of .tbe garage.
Unbearable Lightness of Being" lish ' actors, Day-Lewis played
ijoak, · fhe easygoing ch,aufLeading roles fo~olderwomen .as a sensual Czechoslovak Shakespeare, 'joining the Royal
doctor-turned-po.litlcal refugee.
feur, is content to drive slowly
espe&lt;;ially good leading n&gt;les li)te
Shakespeare Company to tour in
Born in London32 years ago, he "Roll\€0 and Juliet" 11nd "A
besidehischargeasshedeflantly
Daisy .:.. ·are rar~.. .
·
,.
is the son· . of the hite Poet . Midsummer Night's [)ream." ·
.Laureate C. Day·Lewls and' acHis . best-known early films
tress Jill Baleen; the. daugtier of were "My Beaulifu'l Lauri.
~
.
WASHINGTON iUPI) ~Barrecipes Dunlop sald ndght lure
movie producer Michael Baleen. drette," in which he played a
bara Bush welcomed·a shipment Bush "Into tqe ,\\'Rnderful wq~l\1,
Day-Lewis got his flrst ·taste of homosexual plink, and "A Room
.
of
broccoll'from}:ali.fornla grow• of broccilU." .
. . , .,
theatrical life playing . a ·small With · A .View •: as an effete
ers
who · have ·seen sales sprout
role at' age 12 In the 1971 film Edward(ap sophisticate.
· :'I'm goirig io .• lell you the'
since President ·Bush declared . honest truth.," Mrs, Bush sal~
''S~nday, Bloodv S~ndav." He
thllt - Uke n!:'w taxes .:.. broccoli holding a Jl!i&gt;uquet of broc_cot:!,
will never pass. his ilps. ·
wrapped wlih a white ribbon.
"We're doiilg a bris1&lt; business ·'The president is never going to
and Jt's because of tl\e pres!- eat broecolt' again."
' · •
NEW YORK (UPH - Ivana
The complaint details Ivana .dent," said' Steve Adlesh. direc"But"
she
said
"I'm
never
.
.
Trump does not want a divorce Trump's .contribution to her tor of sales at Apio Produce of going 'to eat . pork
rinds." ·a
fromherhusbandDonaldbutshe
husband's wealth In her unpaid
Guadaluj!e, Calif. "Broccoli has favorite snack of tile president.
would like a solid half of his
role as mapager of his Atlantic
never .e njoyed so' much
• Broe~oli i&gt;qpped 9P 11gai,n at"
estimated $5 billion fortune.
City, N.J., casino hotels and
publicity."
later reception, where Mrs: Bus!\
Assertlngtherealestatemogul
president of the Plaza Hotel In
In a media event rivaling any
told a group from the ~ciety of
was verbally abusive and misled
New York, asserting his fortune
at the White House this month. . Amerl&lt;:an FloriSt~ .that t~e preS!·
his wife . wllen she signed a
had doubled from $2.5 billion at reporters, photographers . and
dential ban is nettlesome to' her
pre-1\uptial, agreeme.nt, lawyers
the time of the agreement to television crews scurried to the four da~ghte,rs-ln-law and daughfor Ivana Trump· sue~ in · state
about $5 billion today.
South Lawn Monday to record
ter - mothers all - who had
Supreme .Court· Monday for an
Donald Trump's lawyers de• the broccoU presentation. Bush,
''checked ln ,and said, ·'What' are
nied that his wife was "keptln the whose mother made him eat
"equltable·share" o!the couple's
we going to say to our children
&lt;lark" about the equitable dlstri- broccoli, remained inside.
. ' .. ·
'' ,
_marital pro(l!!rty.
.no~?''
.
. They estimated that after 13
butlon law, ana dismissed the
"I love broccoli," the.first lady
The edible escapade· erupted
years of wedlock Ivana·Trump's
lawsuit .as a "pressure tactic said. ·
·
las I week with "the revelafion
·stake should amount to $2.5 designed to force a selllement." " '·'We know, and we are gratefUl' Bush had banned the vegetable
billion.
Jay Goldberg, one of Donald for that," said George Dunlop, · from t.he preslderitlal plate, both
"She's a Catholic wom;m de- Trump's lawyers, said they president of the United Fresh aboard Air Force One ahd 'in the'
would move . to dismiss the · Fruit and Vegeta hie Associa.fion .. While House.
voted to the Idea of the family.
ShedoeSn'twantadivorce.'' said
lawsuit, asserting that Ivana He wore a broccoli sprig on liis ·
California growers responded
Ivana Trump's lawyer, Micbael Trump ' had Utile io do with lapel.
·,_
. 'a' two .trucks
.
by sendmg
packed '
Kennedy. '
Ificreaslng her husban~'s
Mrs. Bush thanked the growers with broccoli to Washington.
The suit said Do.nald Trump fortune.
.· ··
for three crates of broccoli, as They also began cashjng in "verbally abused and demeaned
"(Donald Trump) came into well as the , 10 tons of the , Adlesh said sales rose by abbutlO
(his wife) so as to obtain her this marriage super-wealthy high-fiber vegetable donated to percent.
submission -to his wishes and from a wealthy father. (Ivana are.a soup kitchens and a list of
desires." It also accuses th~ · Trump) cameinoffarunwayas
developer of "engaging in adul- a model. Because she took care of
'
terous relationships ... Including the children, cooked and went to
the notorious relationship with social events and had mallageMarla Maples, t' · asserting ' lie rial duties· at the Plaza, she Is
Intended·to seek a divorce before entitled to something and that's
the 1987 agreement:
. provided for In tbe agreement,"
The lawsuit was aimed a! Goldberg said.
' '
Invalidating a pre-nuptial agreeGoldberg denied that Trump
Who Have Honor•bly Servlc.,d Th&amp;,ir Country .,
ment the couple recently updated was having extra-marital affairs
· ' ·
In Time ,of War or Peace _1,1
':·'
in 1987, which offered Ivana four years ago. "If he was having
•\ ,I
Trump between $15 million and affairs in 1987, why IVO\Ild agree
$20 million, according to papers to quadruple the beneifts from
,.
made pulille by Kennedy.
(the previous pre-nuptual agree'·
It had be~ previously rement). Why would he not leave
..
ported that she would receive up t)le marriage?'' thl! · lawyer
to $25 mUllon, plus valuable asked.
~
'
property under the terms of the
. He Jllso dlsmlssecl the claim
P!lCt.
·
.
that Donald : ,Trump verbally
The complaint said I;awrence abuled 'hls wife.
~ner ; · the lawyer who repres· "'\"Ou would expect .to find
' .,
l
en ted Ivana Trump In updating times and date$. This Is m•de up
the pre-nuptial agreement In of \rhple clotll. 'nle onlY· tl!lng
1987, dld notlnform her of a state ' .that (Ivana Trump) relies on are
.,'
law entitUng her 10 halt of the statnienls that · Donald TrUI111J
couple's colilmunlty , properiy ' 'made ua loving bus band at that
and that Levner bad been hand- time hi biB book, 'The Art of the
Ohio Vllor Momooy Gor- lo ~--to V . /Mottllf- COunty , . . . ho-lly -orv!d 'fOIO!M ol , .. Uollod
picked by her huiband's lawyer, Deai."' .
' ·· '
'
.._,.,....,_...,yau~-.-......,fDrFrWiwtlf.,...tlot
the late Roy Cohn, ·
...... lortNo. Yau ..... b4i - t o " ' - proolol-lllo - - 'l'hoNno
'lnilllii-CJ!VIII
_ono
... _
. . _ _ . _ To_,_,.-..mllttwqoupon-to:

will . have a•. weekend. revival
Friday_thrQUgn Sunday at 7: 30
p.m. nightly. Former ministers
of the chun:h will be speaking
each night. Friday, Bob Purtell; . ·
'
Saturday,
Jobn Wright· Soliday
'
Bill Carter. SUnday
118o ~
(Her. u.s. f¥&amp;Oit)
lnhlsbackyard,butlocalal1thor. Pie and t1e n!lbt. Minister Tom '
JI'owl
Mellalllll
In
jail
ltlea
' lnalat that situation will
Runyon Invites the Public. · .
SENE()f. FALLS, N.Y.' (UPI) . change.
·_
. .
-.t TherewntbeanEuterllazaar
- A man wbo waa uked by a ,:, Asbley.wu cillu:ged'with l(eepand 84~ Slle IJIOIIIOred by tile
Judge to stve up his pet chickens Ina -Jlllultr)' . wttliout a. jlermlt
'1'lie .Mt. · Olive CQmri,unlty or
. MlddlePott Presbyterian Chareh
go to Jail chose 15 days In Qle lnalcle village limits. · .
Chureb In Lo11J Bottom Will be
; . on ;\prU ,6 trom10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
county coop.
Whe!l Judge Gol'don T~tor
having revlvll AptU ~7 with
· and on April 7 trom 10 a.rri. to 2
David
Ashley
has
been
emgave
Asl\ley a choice Monday of
aervlces at 7 p.m. Dlabtly. There
p.m. at IM!earaCiitalogueStore
broiled
in
a
battlewiththeFJnger
'gettiJ!e
rid ot: bla pet fowl or Ume
will be special llnalna and
' 'In Middleport. 'rbe sale will
Lakes
village
of
Seneca
Falla
··
beblld
ban, be took tbe latter
anointed preaching. Putor Liw:teature all lwldmade .or boineover
his
children's
Pllt
chickens.
an4
landed
In the county jallln
-inade IIHII.
. . . .' .. renee Buah
llie pullllc.
Ashley's chickens still rwi tree Waterloo for 15 days.
The Olive township , tru~tees ,
_'r equest that decoratioi!S be re- .
· moved from the cemeteries by
April 8 when spring clean up will
~ln.
.

-

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplqce

Day-Lewis wins best actor award
'

Business -Services
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Mln:h 27. 1990

Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

•

Television
Viewing

71 VIMA.WD'S

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35 Lots &amp; Acreage

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OpportunHy
liiOllCEI

OliO VALLEY !'UILISHING CO.
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througio doe iiilli un&amp;ll you loov.

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MORK MEEKLE AND

WINTRQO~

,·

114-446-

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came into direct conflict over
trade and power. D
ill
Retcue:l11 A
live·year-old helps his deal
m()!her summon rescuers. Q
• (I]) MOVIE: Aacky (PO)
12:30)
11J PrlmeNcl!ll
dl M:udcr, She Wrota From
AUI&amp;il, Willi LD'ICI
8Celabrtle10ftaleae
@ MOVIE: Tile Wlklllle (AI
(2:00)
1:05 (I) A - · i Choice
Awerdc Comedian Dennt.
· Miller hosts this exclusive .
special announcing the result
of Cable Guide's viewers
poll. l2:00)
1:30.QI . ( I ) T h c Yccro It's IlK time and the
receipts are nowhere to ba
found. Q
9:00 tl) 18 in The Heel Of
The Night Th:i arrest of a
b·iack murder auspect apartls
a raciSI Jcmonslratlon. !;J
• aD
(I) Equal JUIIICe A
young blacl&lt;'a murder
polarfzea lhe city along racial
linea. 12:00) Q
(!) NCMO A examinatiOn of
China's advances 1n
tectvoologlcal growth. Q
(J) Frantlnc ~Oiand'l new
SO:Idlrlty i:amment Ia
examined.

•a

For Sale

wllh ~·and-tallllluhud,II,IOO.
114111 II1L

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1:00 &lt;D MOVIE: All i;tWidl On
Dccl: 12:00)
'
.
(J) 18 Mctlacl: Michelle
defends one or MaUock'a .
friends. lA) C
·
• Ql
(I) \VIIo'o .Thc
lou? Samantha .Ia denied
admission to her flrst-oho.lce

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Slllplng-wllh-ng.

1110 DaiWI.Io t 4!171. lOIII -., 48 Space for Rent
-Plllil, .,_.,
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unolorDinnlng, 211&lt; Z full boih, Cot *7 H- Pori:,
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For Sale: 12xeo rnobhl home, FOR LEASE: lwo 8Jcmnd41oor
, 'hrw..., lie p' !:~..T Jl
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Nttle lurnltUN.
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7:35 (I) ...lore! And Son

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mu1ic's hollost sloo:s 1re
featured live.

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ll1droam eu111. ti1'1J...,.. a
ahall'8, $110.114 241 ....

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9:05 (I) MOVII!: Tribal (0) 12:00)

•·

BARNEY

10:00 ()) 700 Club With P1t •·

11-

(J) 18 Midnight Celie\'
Killian tries lo help an o•:can
adluat to lite outside of
prfson . !;J
(!) (J) rMttllt• Broken
proml- by oil oompenlci&amp;i

•

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to '118

and ~mcnt led

72 TrUc:ka for Slit

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blnhclay gilt. Send tor your AMro- Lla!IA
. G.-ph predlctlOne lor liMo year ahead by
- - - - - - - . . . , mlltng $1.25 to Aotro-Graph, c/o thll ·
.-.paper, P.O. IIclx 81421, Cleveland,

BERNICE

BEDEOSOL

.

TubbS try to protect I mot)
lntormer.
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D Cooiicdr TOIIIgl:t

OH 4410t4421. Ill eure10.11a1o your
zodlloc llgn.
.
· TAUIIUI (April 21 llel 21) Ail lil:lt II
. required todl)l to glln rupport from _. .

11:01~1=.;,rs&amp;at At

IOCialwtor ldwr\clng your ~m-. 11
to.._ pr-lnHIIIIYe. Tile first r110w

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you'l do lot~.
lion look good. ·
.
.CANcac.IIMIWIIIJ a) Todty'uo- CAPMCCIIC (DN. a .. 11) TDCiay
alii pllnt miGIIt not WCifk o:lt _ . , •
you .,. lkely to Ill Cl1lrfe.
you blulp:lnlld
Ha UIUW, Cion'! .,mtllc then ...... end Itt j:oop: II illlro
. lolltl:ll dlllurb you, " - • you'l ' - you'HIIIIIb on aihR 1111 bllaalll'lllll.'
· lllntll·a. 111D
fun.....,.,.. you go. ·
·
Tllla will bl .,.al_. 1n11 01 pnao•
· Lao Colulr a Alrl:i II) You're not likely who ...- you far tile 11r11 ame.
Tilolre .,.lnJI tla&amp;•- your circle ol. to IIUih yatnell too lin locley unleu ' AG'.!AMUa ,..._. Nt. ~Yow ,.o.

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Today's deal wu played in tbe Stat·
en Bank Cap Gemini Pandata invita· wr.si
EAST
tiona! pain tournament in The Hague, • K 11 s 7 4 2
u
Nelberlands, early Ibis year. The par· • A
•tot7U
-.'•
ticipanta ~)ieve that this is the best· +J 9
+AKIOII4
cooducted · competitive · event in · • Q 7 6 t
+s
bridge. As always, all of ·us wish we
SOUTH
... .
could replay certain deals, a:id as de·
...
clarer in four clubol doubled, I regret
• K.QJ5 3
'
carelessly ruffin&amp; with the three of
t2
clubol at the second trick ..That mistake
+KJ 1083
1ave my friend Zia Mahmood the opVulnerable: Neither
.- '....,"" ;,
portunity to shine.
.
Dealer: West
The jack of diamonds was .covered
wilh tbe queen and kin1. and declarer . Sot:~
N- Eut
.,
ruffed the IIC!CCIDd diamond wilh the
PUI
PUI
club lhree. Nell came. the king of 3 •
· 3 NT
Dbl.
hearts. West. Zia, won the ace and t+
All pUI
played the niDI! of spades. Dummy's 10
Opening lead: • J
won. A club wis 'played to the king,
and tbe jack of cltibol was led and fi·
nessed. A.I)Otber spade was played Co
the jack in dummy, and the ace of will be 10 tricks. The result wiU not·· :
clubol wu cashed.
change if West ruffs one of the hear~. ~~
If West follows low on lhe club ace. since he will still be eridJ.:!rd. Unfor- . •
tbe doubled contract will make. De· tunately for declarer, · IDiblocked ..; .
clarer will simply play a heart back to the queen of clubol under tbe ace.· ·
his jack. cash the queen of ~ hearts and There wu now no .way for declarer to· ,
lhrow West on lead with the queen of force West on lead, and declarer bad: :
clubs to force him to lead once more
110 rd001rn one trick, East wlnniDC tbe :
Into tbe dummy's A.·Q ol spades. That
wilh
hearts.

-.

..

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CROSSWORD

..

by JHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 37 Pantry ··•
1 ·Actor,
39 Sylvan
deity
Nicholas

..
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40 ~

5 Wild pig ·
·two-shoes
9 Bugbear 41 French
10 German
river
clly
42 Gen.
11 Cozy spol . Robert 12 Threa.ten· 43 Lady
Ynterday's Anewer
Jane lng phrase
DOWN .
7 Un- .
24 Period .
14 VIneyard
(Fr.)
1 Seashell
resolved
in history
15 Swiss r
2 Plato's
8 Bring
27 Cautious
river
market·
back
28 English
18 Japanese
pl~e
10 Ancient
river
30 Malmo
verse
3 Airport 13 Diner
17 Chinese
lacllitY · 15 F1ench
citizen
dynastY · 4 It's a
river
32 Mislreal
18 Anger
mouse! 21 Bard's
33 In lhe 19 Kitchen
5 Vetmont · adverb
(wealthy)
Item
cily
22 " ...,.
38 John
20 Gainsay
6 Viva
Pasquale"
or Jane
'torero! 23 Adversary 39 Haze
22 Terrible
23 RlsoHo's
main ·
ingredient · ~,;·c..
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thing ·
(sl.)
28 Golf bag
Item
27 Church
season
29.German
name
prelix
30- appeal
31 TheSpian
34 Army
member?
35 Under·
sized

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is Uled
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CRYPTOQUOTE
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UNSCRAM8i.E lElTEIS TO
GET ANSWER

By Jame1 Jaeoby

D~rtlne
·
IIJ M:.n: VIce Crockett and
Tullbc stumble upon tan111ca1

32 Mobile Homes .
for Salt

1110 llabUe ....... 2111J OUI-::1
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l2!l Mucic Row VIdeo

sr~•r.Ohlo41111

THESE $CMJA.ES

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The live year old climbed
into the baby's playpen and
asked the toddler, as he
peered out the bars, "So, whal

PRJNT NUM8ERfO tETTER$ IN

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combine entertainment trlvta

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�P 11 10-llw Dllv SSitlnel

r---Local news briefs...--..,
&lt;.:ontinued from page 1
nearly 10 hours late Monday and early Tuesday morning due to
a line break otl Uncoin Hill near the Intersection or Lincoln

Terrac:e.

sectlon wlthou 1 water extended from Riverview Drive
whtTe the tanks are located to the bottom or Uncoin Hill.
Pomer~ village workers were on the scene for many hours
makiDg the necessary repairs. The break occurred about 4 p.m .
an~ water was restored to residences about 2 a.m. this morning.

EMS has nine calls Tuesday

•·

Nine calls were answered Monday by units of the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services.
At 12: 50 a.m., Tuppers Plains was called to Route 681 Eas t!or
~art~ Smith who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
- Pomeroy at 1: 18 a .m . went to Butternut Ave. for Myrtle Klel!l
to Veterans Memor~l Hospital and at 1: 34 a .m . to the
Americare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for &amp;!tty Bennendyk,
· .
also to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Middleport at 3 p.m. was called to Bone HoUow Roa,d for
~harles McCloud to Holzer Medical Center.
Olive Township Fire Department was called at 6: 4\ p.m. to a
· garage fire at the Rick Blake residence. Tuppers Plains Fire
Department assisted Olive Township.
Pomeroy was called at 7: 17 p.m. to !;'each Fork Road for
Thomas Wilson Sr. who was taken to Ho~er Medical Center.
· Dorthea Fisher was transported at 8:10 p.m. fr.om Lincoln
Hill to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 10:35 p.m . transported Pat Imboden from
North Second Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Ball to vi.sit Racine Wedrresday
ATHENS -State Senate candidate Claire M. "Buzz" Ball Jr.
(R·Aihens) will participate In a series of events In the district
this week.
·
After making an appearance at the Plckaway Coll:llty
Republican Women's Club luncheon In Circleville tOday, he will
attend the Athens Chamber of Commerce's annual dlqner at .t he
Ohio University Inn In Athens on Tuesday before coming to
Racine on Wednesday for a pancake and sausage supper
sponsored tbe men of the Racine United Methodist Church.
On Thursday's calendar, Ball will be In Chillicothe for the
Thursday Republican Club meeting, and on Friday he will
attend the Wellston ltotary Club's 37th annUal Minstrel Show at
Wellston High School.
He will start Saturday with a speaking engagement at the
Ohio · Republlc!IJI Party's regional campaign seminar at ·
Newark, followed by a speaking engagement at the Ohio
Federation of Republican Women's East District Conference In
New Lexington. He will conclude the week by returning to Melp
County on Saturday night lor the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's Spring Banquet and Dance at the Royal Oak
~ort .

Building gutted by fire
. A metal building at the Rick Blake residence on Route 124
near Reedsville. was gutted by fl~ early Monday evening.
Olive Township Fire Department was·called to tMscene at 6:47
p.m:, and was assls ted by Tuppers Plains Fire Department. The
building was approximately 30 by 40 feet In size.
Total damages are undetermined although the contents of the
biJlldlng, Including many tools, were destroyed, reported Olive
Township Fire Chief Rick Barringer. There were no Injuries.
The origin 9f.the fire IS unknown.

--Area deaths-lrvilig.IWT

Magnolia Gibbs Nltz, Ramseur,
N.C. andthelateRussellNltz. He
was
a veteran of the U. S. Army
Irving R. l&lt;arr. Jr .. 85, of
·and
member of the Community
Mason, W. Va .. retired Meigs
County businessman, died Sun· Baptist Church of Silver City.
Surviving besides his mother
day at his home.
are
his wife. Nora R. Schaefer
Karr for many years operated
Nttz,
two daughters, Debt S.
the Karr.VanZandt ·Automobile
Brochert
of Springfield, Va.,
· Agency In Pomeroy retiring
L.
Morrison
of SUer City.
Vickie
from that In the late 1970's . .
N.
C.;
three
sons,
Rick W.
!lorn on Sept. 7. 1901 at
Schaefer,
Siler
City;
Brian J .
Decatur. Ill. he was the son of the
Nitz,
Springfield,
Va.
and
Donnie
late Irvin~ R.• Karr, Sr .• and
E.
Nltz,
Siler
City.;
two
brothers,
Chloa Banks Karr. He was a
Doy R. Nltz of Pomero~ and Hoy
member of Phi Delta Theta
L.
Nltz, Staley, N.C.; two sisters,
Fraternity and the Pomeor)· Gun
Wnnelle Bartoe of Statesville, N.
Club.
C. andMannetteM. Blumenaeur,
He Is survived by a daughter.
Rutland;
and eight
Patricia K. Carsey, Mason. W.
grandchildren
Va .. two gr.anddaughters. Mary
He was preceded In death by a
t:. Carsey, Mason, W. Va., and
·son.
Russell E. Nltz, In 1984c
Sarah Carsey Walker. Le?~lng·
Funeral
services will lK! held
ton, Ky ., ·t wo grandchildren.
Thursday
at 11 a.m. at the
Kelly E . Walker and Robert I.
Fogelsong
Funeral Home In
Walker, both of Lexington, !&lt;Y ..
Mason, with the Rev. James
and several nieces and nephews.
Queen
officiating. Burial will be
Besides his parents, he was
In
the
Union Cemetery where
preceded In death by his wife,
military
graveside rites will be
VIrginia H.HKarr In 1985, a
conducted.
Friends may call at
sister, Eleanor Crow, and two
the
funeral
home on Wednesday
brothers, Thomas and Horace
from
6
to
9
p.m.
In lieu of Oowers
Karr.
the
lamlly
requests
that contrl·
Funeral services will be held at
bu
lions
be
made
to
a favorite
10 a.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
charity.
Funeral Home. There will be no
visiting hours . The Rev. Fr. AI
McKenzie will officiate and bur·
tal will be In the Middleport Hill
PICK·3
~ 'Cemetery. In lieu of flowers
377.
donations may be made to the
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
·· Mason Emergency Medical Ser· . $1,200,412.50, with a payoff due of
.vice, Second Street, Mason, W. $425,183.00.
Va. 25260.

Lottery numbers

· Coy Nilz

Stocks

Coy E . Nitz. 51, of Siler City, N. Dally alooll prices
C., formerlY of Hartford, W.Va . ( A.l of 10: 38 a.m. )
and Pomeroy. died Saturday In Bryce and Marl! Sml&amp;b
: the Chatham Memorial Hospital of Blual, Ellll 6 Loewl
· at Siler City.
Born on Nov. 10, 1938, In Am Electric Power .... :.. ...... 30~
Harttord. he was the son of , AT&amp;'r ......... ........ .... .... ... .. ... 41'%
Ashland 011 .........................36'!1J
Bob Evans .. ............ ............ l2'Va
Charming Sboppes .. .......... ... 9~
City Holdlni Co . .;................ 13
Federal Mogul... ..... ............ 18~
Soulb Cenlnl Oblo .
Mostly clear Tuesday night, · Goodyear T&amp;:R ...................37%
with a low between 30 and 35. Heck's ................................ , 3~
Increasing cloudlneas Wednes· Key Centurion .................... 14~
day, with a chance or rain during Lands' End . ......... .... :............ 19
the afternoon and high&amp; near 60. Limited Inc ........... , ............ ~%
Multimedia Inc .......... :........ 80~
Chance of rat n Is 40 percent.
Rall
Restaurants ................. ; 2~
Elltea••. POI'eC!IIII&amp;
Robbl111
&amp; Myers ................. 16
Thu8118J ......... ~
Shoney'a
Inc. ...................... 12'!11
A chance or ~In each day, with
hllba ranging from the mid fOI to Star Bank ............... ..... :: ...... 19
lbl! mid ~ Thunday, and from . Wendy's Int'l .................. .. ... 4%
Jbe mid ~ to the mid eo. Ff14ay Worlhtnaton lnd.................. 21'Va
and Saturday. Overnight Iowa
will be m01t1y In the 301 Thursnews
day momiDg, rangillg from the
VtAnullllemerlal
mid 30s north to Ileal' 110 -~~~
· early Friday, and from the mid
·Monday adml11loni - Betty
·
3011 to the. mld 401 Saturday Bennendyk, Pomeroy. ,
morning.
Monday dbcllarpl - None.

Po~M~ov

.111 ..,., art. Ohio

Bone-chilling ·cold greets Ohioans .today J
By Ualle4 Preu lateraatloaal
Bone·cbllling cold greeted
early risers In 0(11oTuesday, but
the National Weather Service
says warmer weather should
reach the Buckeye State by the
end of the week. ·

At dawn, under clear skies,
temperatures were mostly In the
high I~ and low 20s, with the
exception of a 29 degree reading
at Greater Cincinnati Interna·
tlonal , Airport In northern
Kentucky.

Hobson area. .. Continued ~rom page i
next ~gular meeting will be held
on Aprll 10 at Gallipolis,
On recommendation of Paul
Gerard, the village's representa·
tlve to the district board, Council
adopted by unan trnous vote a
resolution In which It "strongly
opposes" the provision of H.B.
656 Introduced· by Rep. Mary '
Abel (0-Athens) 94th District.
That bill would deny to Middle·
port and other members of the
Athens, Gallla, Hocking, Jack·
son. Meigs and VInton Solid
Waste Management Polley Com·
mlttee veto authority as orlgl·
rially conferred by H. B. 592 as It
relates ·to develbplng a plan for
solid waste disposal.

- - -+--- - - --- - -·- ·

The clear weather Is to con·
tlnue thrO!IIhTuesday night, and
Into Wedriesday In the northern
counties. In the south, clouds and
possibly some rain are going to
appear as Wednesday we•rs on.
Along with the clear ·skies,
Tuesday and Tuesday night ttere
to see continued below normal
. temperatures. Highs Tuesday
were expected to range from the
low 40s to the low 50s. :with
overnight lows from the mld·20s
to low 30s.
Slight moderallon Is likely for
Wednesday when highs should be
mostly In the 50s.

•
Thurlday, Friday and Satur·
day will see a cbance of rain each
day. Hlgbs wll~lle In the mid·~•
to mid·~ Ttulrsday, and the
mid·50s to mld·IM'- Friday and
Saturday. Lows will be mostly In
the 30s 'rhursday, from the
mid·30s In the north to near 50 In
the south Friday and from the
mld·30s to mid•40s Saturday .

•
:
;
.:
.
.
.
;
:
~

of It not being (re!!."
&gt;
Councilman Dewey Horton' s
',
On
the
early
morning
weather
contention was that It Is a
map, a high pressure system
"starting place" and that since
covered
the eastern half of the
the commlttee·!Qoks•to becoming
United,
States.
By late Wednes·
self~supportlng, It gives "seed
day,
.
It
will
stretch
from the
money", a place' to start.
Hudson
Bay
to
the
East
Coast.
Complimenting 'wiSe and her
,
group on their work In getting the
NATIONAL WEATMER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·2f.IO
Middleport Arts Council started,
Councilman Bob Gilmore ex·
. pressed -his appreciation com·
'
mentlng that he feels the Arts
'
CouiiCII will be a contribuilng
factor to the quality of life In the
CO!llm~nlty.
.
',
,,
O&amp;her Actlo11
Council gave a second reading
'
to an ordlnance ·whtch will give
.village employees a pay raise of
Arts funding Approved
25 cents an hour. The ordinance
During the meeting Council was arpended to Include to add
.,
approved limited funding ~or the President's Day to the list of .
Middleport Arts Council for a six
holidays for which employees get .
month period.
paid.
Co11ncll agreed to pay the rent
Also approved at the meeting
or $150 ·for a building on North was the revised drug free work·
'•'
Second along with the utilities tor place policy . Council set clean·up
that period. Reconsideration for
week In the vlltagefor Aprll22·28.
continuing that support will be to coordinate with the state
given following the six montll Observance, and Mayor Hoffman
WEATHER MAP - Low pressure .over 'weatern Kansas will
period, It was decided.
talked on the Importance of an
prodace clt!udlnesa acr0118 the nation's mldaectlon. Scattered
Mary Wise, president of the accurate populatioJt count In the
thullderalonns will develop over the soalbern Plains, with
newly organized Middleport Arts census.
·
.
occuloaal rain for tbe central Plains. Cool weather will dominate ·'
Council, and Shirley Quickel, a
A job promotion project was
In the Eut tJtrough mld·~eek, as high preasure 18 anchored off the
member of the board met with
proposed by Gerard. His prop·
Atlanllc Cout. Mainly dry weather will prevail for the West Coast.
Council to outllrie plans of the
osal to be considered by council
(UPI)
group. Wise reported lbat 137
suggests setting up a $20,000
North Second, the building be·
annual fund for a pilot project.
Continued from page 1
tween the LaSalle and Johnson's · The project, as explained by
Variety Store, Is available to the
···-----~- ,,
Gerard, would pay "bounty" to
group and that work on cleaning
• ployees for several hundred
employerswhohlreanewperson election Nov . 7."
,
and redecorating has already
thousand doUars for his camas well as the employee.
Several of the candidates took
started. II was noted that a local
'
paign warchest.
The $20,000 would be used for swipes at their Democratic foes
'
business has·donated paint.
"This Is the finest ticket the
creating 10 new jobs with $1,000 without mentioning names.
Liability Insurance was dis·
going to the employer and $1,000
"We've raised an awful lot of Republfcan party has put tocussed and Mayor Hoffman
to the employee for each job If It . questions about the difficulties gether In 20 years," said Robert
advised t)lat the operation would
Bennett, the state party
continues for 12 months . which · that have gone on the last four
come under the village Insurance would be set as the maximum .. yel!rs," said Judith Brac.hman, chairman.
.
policy.
Ken .Robinson, an 18·year old ·'
flme for ~artlclpatlon.
.
«
the candidate for treasurer. "We
Wise sa.ld that the Arts Council
Ger~rdalsoproposeda Middlefeel now ·u·s time to fight against senior, said afterwards nothing .
views the location as a teaching
the Republl~ans said convinced .
port museum Iii which Items and those difficulties."
·
facility for arts and crafts as well
Information significant In the
' 'I regard the attorney gener·, him to vote. even though he's ·old .~
as an area for sale of local crafts.
history ·or the.· village could be at's office as a public trust and enough. '"I'm not ·Into politics/' .;
She said that the plan Is to stored 1and madeavallable,to the not a cash cow to line my
he said-.
·
"·
become sel(·supportlng perhaps public.
. The caravan·, wHich visited ·
'
campaign .coffers with," said
within the stx month period
Clilclnnatl .arid Xenta earlier In .
Atte~dlng were Mayor· Hoi· · Paul Pfeifer. the candidate for
depending, ·or course, on the fman, Clerk· Treasurer Jon attorney general.
the d~y, ·w.rnt' on
.Ll.ma a.nd• .
community response.
Buck, and Council .members.
Attorney General Anthony· Perrysburg. Tuesday's sc;hedule
Two craft classes and dance Horton, Gilmore, Gerard, James
Celebrezze Jr., the· Democratic calls lor ·stops In · Rossford, ,,
classes have already been sche, Clatwqrthy, William Walters and · candidate for ((OVer nor. has been Clevelarid and_Younllstciwn.
' '
duled for AprU. While each class Jack Satterfield,
·
accused of milking his em·
will have
fee, ihe craft
Instructors have volunteered to
teach thedasses free of charge
and also to provide the materials.
This means that the fee will go
Into the Arts Council fund.
Wise reported · that she Is
contacting several other com·
munlties with arts programs for
direction In Sl,'ttlng up aspects or
the Arty Council funding. Thl~
will help the group In determine
what percentage or class fees
collected by Instructors will be
funneled Into the Arts Council
fund.
Councilman Gerard contended .
during the discussion that all
activities should be offered free
to everyone In the village with
Council to subsidize the entire
operation. He said th.at he feels
there are many. talepted people
In the community who will not be
able to participate In the pro·
grams offered because of the
lack of momiy .
Council took no action on that
proposal and when the vote was
taken to support the Arts Council
with rent and utilities for six
mon·ths 1 he voted "no" with the
clartfyh\g statement that he !ell
•2.5·1JtwE-Fuol
io -.AIOSIOd "-·Wh!!ol
It was just .not In the "right
lnjl&lt;iodEngino
Oisc .......
direction. doing it halfway. and
o All,Now Coctcp;t S&gt;,lo
• Rood Touring Svopoooion
cutting out many people .b ecause
lnltrio/
• Menag. Center one!

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Ohio
Lottery
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play continues

Page 3

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life Insurance

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Vol.40, No.225
Copyrigh~ 1910.

Optional systems for recycling are discussed
· recycling expert who spoke at ·
By NANCY 'rOACHI\M
Tuesday's meeting. According to
Sentinel Ne\tls Staff
Optional systems for recycling Braasch, who showed slides of
were a main topic of discussion at recyllng operations currently
Tuesday evening's public meet· being used In other parts ol Ohio,
lng of the Athens, Gallla, Hock· recycling programs are designed
lng, Jackson, Meigs, V.lnton .to fit the needs of the community
(AGHJMV) Solid Waste Manage· by using combinations of differ·
men I Dis trlct. Th.e pubIic meet· . ent systems.
Most area residents at the
. lng was· lleld at the Wllk~svllle
meeting agreed with Braasch's
' School.
"I have never seen two recy· ·Information, but questioned
cling programs that were alike,'· whether enough residents within
stated Paul Braasch, an area the six-county district would

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actually Implement recycling In
their · homes In order to make
recyllng a viable district
consideration. .
There must also be markets In
which to sell recylable materials,
someone said.
In answer to the questions,
Braasch agreed that In addition
to meeting the needs of the
community, a recycling system
must be designed .to obtain
maximum rtnanclal benefit, In
order to keep the system

operational.
· For example, recycling becomes ltnanclally beneficia l
when large employers participate In a pro~ram , thus making
large amounts of recyclables
available at one time .
In regard to markets, Braasch
believes the markets already
exist for most recyclable ' ltems
and It's a matter of locating and
utilizing the markets.
But; It was pointed out,ln order
to reach the district's goal of 35

percent reduction In the amount
of solid waste presently being
landfllled In the district, house·
holds within the district will have
to recycle too:
It was also pointed out that
unless some type of Incentive Is
offered, mosthlocal residents
won't take the time to recycle .
A lower tr.ash hauling fee for
customers who separate and bag
recyclables could be such an
lnce!ltlve. ·
Just to make a point, Don

Graves , a district landfill expert,
noted that If the district merely
wants to reduce Its solid waste by
35 percent, then all that has to be
done Is to build transfer stations
anit Mill the solid waste to ·some
other state.
According to Graves. Ohio
House Bill 592 was patterned
greatly after a solid waste law
that was Implemented several
years ago In New Jersey. New
Jersey formed solid waste dis·
Continued on page 5

.

State will
pay 100

PAT HILL CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE

MIIIUPOif

992·6421

Americai.way to go!

;

·percent
of costs
By NANCY YOACJiAM
· Sentinel Newa Staff
The State of Ohio will pay for
100 percent of the approximately
$700,000 In costs associated with
the proposed construction o~ a
new cUlvert beneath State Route
124 at Kerr's Run, and Improvements tp the Intersection of
Route 124 arid U.S. 33atNyeAve.
In Pomeroy. Tile pyoposed pro·
ject was discussed at an Ohio
~tment of Transportation·
sponsor;cr public hearing Tues·
day afternoon at Pomeroy VII·
lage Hall. About 30 citizens
attended the hearing.
As explained by Tom Hedrick,
ODOT engineer, Marietta, the
plans for culvert replacement
and
Improvements to the Inter·
I
section were already In the works
before the hill side at Kerr's Run
coUapsed several weeks ago.
However, the project was expe·
dlted when the cave·ln occurred
and approval was secured from
· ODOT' s central office out of
Columbus, to designate the· cui·
vert replacement as an emer·
gency. ODOT of!lclals had al·
ready okayed Inclusion of the
Intersection of 124 and 33 as part
of the overall project proposal, In
order to eliminate the extreme
turn at the lntersecllon which Is
"nearly Impossible for large
vehicles" to maneuver, Hedrick
said. ·'
Many questions at the hearing
were from affected property
owners whose homes will be
purchase.d by ODOT In order to
""'"..to 11
make
room for the Improve·
I~ ll•
-SI-ala of Ohto
..
o........
ff ,......,....,.
ments
althe
Intersection. Most of
· DINIM .tHI...,.
the
questions
could. be answered
l[GINO
w:rr11~ ......,'*' _
In general terms, but, as ex·
"lto"OIU plalned by Joseph Leach, ODOT
•
... l .lt. "··
-'"District 10 deputy director,
another public hearing has been
scheduled lor Aprll 5, from 3 to 7
p.m, also at Pomeroy VIllage
Hall,lit which time, very specific
questions from affectett property
owners can be answered. Also, It
was explained by Leach that
anyone wishing to express writ·
ten comments should direct their
IMPROVEMENTS PENDING - The dotted line shows the
comments
to ODOT' s Marietta
current highway pbwement at Kerr'• Run and Nye Ave. In
office
by
March
30
Pomeroy. The Ohio Depar&amp;ment of Traaaporlatlon Is funding
An
explanation
of ODOT's
1700,000 ol lmprovemenls at the aile to lqclude replacemeat of an
rlght·Of·way
acquisition
proce·
UllderfP'ound culvert aad elimination of the extreme corner at tile
dures,
which
Includes
relocation
Intersection ol State Route 124 and U. S. 33.
assistance for affected property
owners, was presented by Wilbur
Minnick, right-of-way admlnts·
trator for DlstrlctlO. According
to Minnick, two owner·occupled
slngle·famlly residences; four
tenant·occupled structures, and
·three business locations, are
The Eastern Local Board of Education will meet at 6:30
l,lkely to be affected by the road
ThursdAy night In the high school cafeteria.
Improvements. Minnick did not
Charles Brown, associate director of the FlnanclalAulstance
state specifically the three buill·
Division of the State Department of Education, will attend and
ness locatlo111; although from the
speak to the board and residents 011 local, district and state
map which was oil display at the
funding of ed,ucatton.,the atate emergency load fund, and the
publiC heartna, tbe locatlo111
possible uses for local
tax levy proceedll.
would appear to be be the former
All district residents
to attend the meeting which
boolcmoblle bulldlna.!. the fofll)er
said Daniel L Apllnc, •
should be very
Pomeroy Cement t:tlock plan,t,
· superliltendent.
and poaslbly, the White Houle
Bar.
· According to Leach, ODOT
· hopei to have the undereround
.Unlta qt the Melp County Emer.pncy Medical Service
culvert replacelllent underway
l'ltlpotlded to five call8 for ullstance C!ll Tuelday.
by summer. lmpt'O\'ell\e!l!a to
At 8:" a.m. the Middleport lllllt went. to Sycamore ¥d '
the Intersection will folloly with
,ilaftJnaer for Flora Bailey who wu teken to Veterans · affected property ownl!rs belni
Memorial H01pttal. .
Jlven the req'llred lenJih of time
The Syracuse unit , at 9:24 a.m. was calll!d to Route 338 In
to relocate after reacbtna an
Apple Grove ·for Charlotte Eakins who was tran~ted to ·
agreement with ODOT on a fair
·'
Continued on pa1e !i
Continued on page 5.
·
\
1

~·
J

...

\\

ANSWE~ QUESTIONS- Pan I Braasch, at lef$,
ali e:~epert on recycling, and John ·Van Volken·

burgh, of SCS Engineers, answer quesdons at a

'

Tuesday evenlaghpuhllc meetlni of the AGHJMV
Sold Waete Management District. The meethil
was held at Wilkesville,

Health department issues advisory
The Meigs County Health De·
pariment has Issued the foUpw·
lng advisory to area residents
who plan to have home sewage
disposal systems lnstall!!d or
private water systems con·
structed on their property:
-Before work Is started on a
hotne sewage ~ys tem or a private
water· system. a permit must be
obtained from the health
department.
-By purchasing a permll to
Install a home sewage disposal
system, the land owner Is as·
sured ·of a site visit by health
deparUnent personneL Recom·
mendallons regarding the most
feasible type of system for a
given location will be made by
heal th department sanitarians.
-The land owner will also be
made aware of the names of
sewage system Installers who
are registered wllh the health
department. The department requires registered Installers to be
bonded, and this bond protects
· the property owner against negll·
gence and poor workmanship.
-Private water system con·
tractors areTeglstered not by the
county health department, but by
the stale. The state requires
these contractors to be bonded .
Thus, when the land owner
purchases a permit to lnstwll a
private water system, he or she Is
offered some protection against
faulty workmanship. Also, the
health department · cannot ap·
prove a pr.fvate water system

which has been constructed
without the proper permit, and
the lack of I his approval may
affect the value of the property
should the owner wish to selllt In
the future.

-Failure to purchase the re·
qulred permit before lnsialltng a
home system or constructing a
private water system Is a viola·
tion of state and local laws.

Classroom management and
clean rooms are board topic
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Board.
Sendnel News Staff
A resolution was adopted by
Concerns about classroom
the board to delay the post-semanagement and cleanliness
condary options program until'
were expressed by a delegation
March, 1991. The legislation
of Harrisonville parents at the
setting up that program provides
Tuesday night meeting of the
that tax money follows students
Meigs Local Board of Education.
who quality for college level
Robert Smilie was spokesman
Instruction and atteqd a college
for the group. In response to the
or university while still enrolled
expressed concern about, class·
In high school.
room management, Supt. James
Pomeroy Attorney Carson
Carpenter acknowledged some
Crow , was asked to do a title
problems, the concern which he
search on the Pomeroy Junior
and the board members feel, and
High School property to clarify
then assured the group that the some dlspu ted boundaries .
problem Is being addressed.
The Pomeory Youth League
As for the cleanliness Issue. he was giVen· approval to use the
reported that the Meigs County
baseball fields at Salisbury and
Health Department has In·
Meigs Hlch School as well as the
spected the building and found no diamonds on the hill near Meigs
problems.
.
High School.
During the meeting the reslg·
The board approved a field trip
nations of Roger Holman as
to Kings Island for a music
director of transportation and festival on AprU 21 and 22 for the
·mechanic, Harold Graham as · Meigs Junior High and the Meigs
head teacher at the Harrisonville High School choruses.
Elementary School, and Tim
In other action Deanna Apllng
Dunn as assistant varsity foot·
was employed as a 'ubstltute
ball coach were accepted by the
Continued on page 5

••
I ··

"..

&lt;

. .,... ft. V.-

Eastern board to meet

•.-"'--oood,_,

199 SOIIIII ~

2 Sectlona, 14 Pogoa 26 Conta
A Multimedia Inc. NewiP•P*'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 28, 1990

Local news briefs.__,;;;_-.

__

ID mid -..
of rain " pel'Ct!il&amp;.
Thursday, bf&amp;b near 80.
Chance of rain 90 percent.

•

•

\

•2.2·UiofE-Fuot

.

Daily Number.
077

Gop

Weather

H01pital

Tunlla;. Medlo 7:7. 1110 :

1 .

'

'

.
.

'

•

EMS has five Tuesday calls ..

POINTS THE WAY - Olllo Depaa1nietl&amp; of
Tr-portatloa Ellllaeer Howard Gilford polata
o•t tbe affected homea alon1 Nye Ave. 1\-

PomeiOJ wlddl wiD he l'll8ellla ..._ te ..., ... .
adequte apace for ODOT Ill wll1lll U, I. D _.
Improve llalllterledloa wltb
llihte ut.

fiP*'

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