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                  <text>Vanderbllt
wins 53rd
annual NIT

AU

Daily Number
486
Picll:-4
6322

Wini1HIS

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MARCH 31, ·1990 ·

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.Despite program success:

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We're seeing more and more
program. Since no residents
restraints
.being
put
on
the
.
were
present to comment. the
L
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"
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prugram. .
.
application will now be submitEdwards, along with George · ted to the funding source.
Arnott, assistant director of the
Architect 6111 Dittoe, of the
JTPA program, was at Wednes·
firm of Burgess and Niple,
day's commissioners' meeting
Parkersburg, W.Va. , presented a
for a p1,1bllc hearing. A public
completed feasibility study for
hearing prior to submission of a
office space needs for the Meigs
JTPA grant application . is a
County Departmllnt of Human
requirement of the funding
Services. Dittoe is recommend·
orocess.
lng the department's present
Edwards and Arnott reported
location on Race St. in Middlethis year's program sustained an
port be enlarged to 14,000 square
overall cut of approximately feet. The building is pow 3,500
$73,000 In both counties, but that square feet . By enlarging the
some of that. money was reco·
building, Department of Human
vered through a recently funded Serivces • offices now housed In ·
training program for displaced the Coates building on Second
coal miners. Galiia-Meigs Ave.; could be combined with
JTPA subcontracts the coal offices in the main building. The
miners' training program from suggested expansion reflects
Tri-County Community Action possible growth within the
Agency in Athens County.
·
agency over a ~year period.
No area residents attended Costs estimates are from $800,000·.
Wednesday's hearing where Ed· to $900,000.
wards reported Gallia-Melgs
The · commissioners accepted
C.A.A. Is seeking a total of the feasibility study , subject to
$337,098 for the 1990 JTPA approval of the State Depart,

.

ment of Human Services, since
.state. funding is involved. If the
study ,Is approved by the state,
the county would begin seeking
methods of financing the project.
In other matters, threy bids
were received on a computer
. system for Meigs County Court.
Cards Inc., of Elida; the Hen·
schen .company, of Bowling
Green. and Dlreci Market Data
Systems Inc., Dublin. submitted
the bids. The proposals were
tabled for review by Linda Bentz,
Meigs County Court deputy.
Two bids were also opened on a
mini-van for the Meigs Depart· .
ment of Human Services. The
bids from Pat Hill Ford, Middleport. and Smith-Nelson Motors,
Pomeroy. were tabled for review
by Human Services Director
Michael Swisher.
·
Finally. the commissioners
au thorlzed the Meigs County
Highway Department· to bid on li
monthly basis for bituminous
and aggregate materials for the
department.

Vote set
today on
aid ·p lan

1 3-lb. Jar.Gel 1

· ·

VORITE GRADE A-1 0-14. Ia AVG.

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Bologna •••••••• ~ ••~...~ 119
FISH FILLETS
. Ll.$4'99
Orange Roughy •••••

$'»

'

PARKAY SPREAD

Bologna •••••••••••L:.•••• 89&lt;
.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Despite the apparent success
of the JTPA program In Gallia
and Meigs Counties, those who
adminisler the program locally
are concerned about Its future.
Recent federal funding cuts and
rwnors of additional funding cuts
are the cause of concern.
"How effective do you think the
JTPA program has been tiiMeigs
and GalUa Counties?" Meigs
' County' Commissioner Richard
Jones asked Sidney Edwards ;
director of Gallia-Melgs
Commqnlty Aciion Agency
whiCh administers JTPA: in the
local area .
"I think we've been very
effective," Edwards answered.
"JTPA is a ,piace for people to go
for help. We've been successful
in helping individuals who had
lost hope. We have been, and will
continue to be, most effective In
providing long-term traiJIIng.
And we would be even more
effective If our funding isn't cut.

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Pick ·of the Chick •••••

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Goed o.1J. At Pewoll's Su!Mr
Goed Tilt• Satwdoy, lllar. )J, 1·HO

LB.

!

JTPA officials are concerned

·fREE v•

•

2 Soctlona. 16 Pog11 25 C.nu
A Muldmodlo Inc. Nowopopor

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20 oz• .BonLE

LOTSA POP

LONG ACRE-LB. R.OLL .

Ohio LOttery

SPECIAL GIFT- Gerrl MIUer, left, beck row, preslilent of
Drew Webster America Leeton Auxiliary Unit, presented a gift to
Maxine Barnes, Lucaster, eighth district president, ai the 7lat
birthday celebration held recently ai the post home. Pictured In
front are junior color guarils Jessica and Aahley HamUton.

local news briefs---.
Man returned. to prison

.
· David ' Dillard was returned to the Plckaw~y Correctional
Institute on Wednesday by Deputy John Spires, reports Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Dillard will reswne serving
his sentence Imposed by the Meigs County Court of Common
1
· Pleas. Dillard had been returned Monday for a shock probation
hearing, but at the Tuesday hearing Dillard, after consulting
with hi$ attorney. withdrew his appUcation for shock probation.
The judge consented to the withdrawal and· the defendant was
ordered returned to the state insdtutlon.
On WednesdaY. John Moore, Gold Ridge Road, reported that
he has a beef cow missing from his pasture in the Gold
Ridge-Kingsbury .area. Anyone spotting the cow is asked to
contact the sheriffs office or [){Qore at Ills residence.
Deputies wee called to the Bill Buchanan residence on Joppa
Road, near Reedsville, Wedne5day evening. Sheriff Soulsby
· reports that. when Mrs. Buchanan came home Wednesday
evening she discovered the house had been entered. No other
details are available at this time.
.
r
Sheriff Soulsb~ reports that Brian E . Bass, SyracuSe, was
arrested Tuesday evening on an assault warrant from Meigs
County Cou;·t. He is scheduled to appear on this charge. He was
lodged .In the county jail pending the hearing.

Huck ple.acU guilty in killirr.g
WINFIELD - Raymond Huck pleaded guilty to a reduced
. charge of second-degree murder Wednesday in Putnam Ci&gt;unty
Circuit Court and was sentenced II&gt; up to 18 years In prison for
his role In the death of en off-duty sheriffs deputy.
Two GalUpolis area men - Robert Gray, 31, and Robert
Bates, '32 - are also charged In connection with the shooting
death of John Janey, 32, In August 1989.
Gray has been charged In the shooting of Janey, a Putnam
sheriff's deputy who was staktngoul Huck's home in Cow Creek,
near Hurricane.
Huck, 34, was accused of arranlinir en ereon attempt on his
residence lest August. Janey. who wu mOOIIIJahtlng from his
deputy's job, bed staked out Huck's home because of previous
fires end thetta there.
.
Gray and Bates are alleaecf by Putnam offlclela to have been
the two Huck hired to bum his bouse. Grey Is el lePd to have
·shot Janey whea !Janey attempted to arrest Grey. In a struggle
with Janey, prosecutora ellege, Gray aelzed Janey's pn end
shot him.
Huck had ~ llldtcted for ftrst-dep-ee murder, which would
have carried a lite sea~. He entered e guilty plea to the
reduced cbarp miDutet before hll trial would he:ve bepn.
During bll sentAmcllll betore Putnam Circuit Judge Clarence
·
,
Watt. Huck cholled back teara.
"I'd like tosen.d my apOlogies," heselcl. "lhednocontrolover
lt ...

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wAsHINGToN ·:(u:Prt :_ ·The'' •·· •
Senate braced for a • possible
showdown over a $500 million
plan to provide ald.to thousands
of coal miners and other workers
If the clean air bill becomes law
and prompts major industry
changes and layoffs.
.
With a vote set for Thursday
afternoon on the workers aid
amendment by Sen. Robert
Byrd, 'D·W,Va., Senate leaders
hoped for an agreement on a less
expensive compromise to help
tliose who could lose their jobs
because of increased emission
control expenses pn industry.
Byrd rejected the leadership's
latest proposal on Wednesday as
Inadequate, . par,tlcularty with
regard to West Virginia coal
miners. " The counterproposal
does not do what needs to be
done," Byrd told reporters.
A:t the same time. Byrdsaldthe
negotiations were not dead. "The
door Is not ·closed."
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell of Maine said he
still hoped for a compromise, buf
Byrd appeared very close to
having enough votes to pass his
amendment without a deal.
Mitchell seemed resigned to
•
the possibility that Byrd could
win, even suggesting he could
accept the legislation If it was
adopted.
.
Mitchell said he did not conDEMOLRION BEGINS -Demolition crews of the debris and relevel the property. The boa pisider Byrd's amendment a
began knocklug down two hulldlnp at Lakin tel will be UDdergolngseverel changes durin II the
"deal-buster" that threatened to
. Sta&amp;e Bospl&amp;al earlier this week. A spokesmaa next six months lo Improve facilities.
upset the clean air bill, the
sal!! It could take six to eight weeks lo remove all
product of a compromise be· .
tween Senate leaders and the
Bush administration.
The Senate has promised ac·
lion on. the entire clean air bill
project related to housing and
next week.
form last January.
By LEE LEONARD
would open the door to abuse.
Mitchell said he favors some
Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron. the
UPI Statehouse Reporter
form of job protectlon·for miners
chief sponsor, said he hopes for
COLUMBUS ..... Turning aside
Verich told his colleagues that
and other workers bul Byrd's warnings that it's an lnvitatlo.n to
Senate ratiflcatk&gt;n next week.
about
20 percent o!Oh lo' s popula·
amendment was not structured scandals, the Ohio House of
If reapproved by t~e Senate,
is
struggling to find or
lion
the right way. In particular, Representatives Wednesday ap·
the constitutional amendment
maintain
a home, dettpite an
Senate leaders objected to provi; proved a constitutional amend- will be sent to the ballot in
eight·year
old state housing
sions giving coal miners more ment permitting the state and
November. Ohio voters have
program
which
hu provided
aid than displaced workers in local governments to borrow
rejected government borrowing
low·lnterest morqeges to 53.110!!
other affected industries.
for housing three tlmett in the last
money for housing purposes.
first·time home buyers.
At the same time, the Senate 20 years.
Byrd has twtc'e scaled down his
•
Senate Jolnl Resolution 11
concurred
In minimal House
Verlch said the amendment, I!
legis)atlon to meet the adminiswould' amend the stale Constitu·
adopted, would enable the state
tration's cost objections. It now changes and sent to Gov. Richard
tton to make houatnr • "public
Celeste
e
$138mUiion
supplemento help private 'contractors prowould provide ,a maxlmwn . of ·
purpose" for which the atate and
tal budget corit.lnlng $92 million
vide housing to the 140,000
three Y,ears unemployment benefits for coal miners end lesser to offaet e pnijected sborttall in locel aovernmentl mey borrow. · homeleu, the 400,000 young
Currently, onlyhllbwaya,educa·
Ohioans who cannot afford their
assistance for displaced workers Medicaid tundl .
tlon, poUutlon control and transThe Senate also adopted
first home, the 200,000 Ohioans
In other Industries.
·
portation are public pUI'pClleS for
who went homes that are no1
Byrd maintains the high-sulfur House·approved new and
borrowing.
stronger
child
support
guidelines
available, and to help an ettl•
coal miners of Appalachia and
Rep.
Michael
Verich,
D·
ordered
by
the
Supreme
Court
to
mated
100,000 senior cltJzens
the Midwest will need more help
Warren,
said
a
crlticel
housing
take
effect
AprU
1.
The
House
make
repairs
ori their homes.
than other workers because they
shortage
lndicalea
that
aovern·
must
concur
in
the
Sena,te
"This would not allow us to
stand to lose the most Jobs from
the clean air proposal, speclti· changes before the governor gets ment should be allowed to form give it (money) away, juat loan
partnerships with private con· II," said Verlch, pointing out that
caily from Its acid rain reduction the bill.
tractors
to provide housing for 40 other statett have houlllll
The housing resolution passed,
provisions.
those
who
wen I it.
programs. ''Government hu en
The bill requires a ~0 million- 8().15, end was returned. to the
But opponents said the mea· obligation to respond to the
ton reduction in sulfur dioxide Senate for concurrence in numer·
sure wu drafted so broadly it
housing needll of this state," he
emissions by the . turn of the ous chengett. The Senate had
would
allow
virtually
eny
type
of
adopted
the
proposal
in
different
said.
century.

House approves housing legislation

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;Commentary
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Page 2-The Dlllv 81 •llllel ~
Pomlloy-MUdleport. Ohm i
Thurldly, Madl 21. 1180

The Daily Sentinel · Is Pell past his prime?
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO mE INTERESTS QF TBE ~IGS-MASON AREA

~lb

cs:m~

,..,..._,.._~, ,.,...,.,.c::~,

~v

ROBERT L. WIN(lETT

....

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaqer

Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD ·
AssiStant Publlsher/Conlroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, lnlalld DaJly Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.· . ·
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Th~y should be leu than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edlllng and mu st be signed wllh
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!- ·

ties.

I

Lithuania:
Gorbachev's waterloo?
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Aside from the broccoli imbroglio, the
front-burner Issue at the White House Is still the future of Lithuania
and how the United States can promote a peaceful resolution of the
dilemma facing the Soviet Union.
·
Actually, some sympathy Is being shown for Spviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev as he must preside over the dissolution of his
empire that President Ronald Reagan once called ·'evil. "
.
It took a long· time for President Bush to aceept Gorbachev's
glasnost and perestroika pollcles as the real McCoy. He became a
true believer when Gorbachev kept the Soviet army ln.place while ali
of the Eastern European satellltes called it quits with Moscow and
decided to establish democratic governments.
While communism was being booted out, Gorbachev was still-able
to enhance his power as the leader of ihe land. But the issue Is now
coming down to mother Russia and, the Republics that want to secede
from the Soviet Union.
Since the United States has never recognized the annexation of
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia in 1940 through Nazi-Soviet pact
where the peoples otthose countries had no say, It would seem to be a
sii'nple matter to simply say so and extend diplomatic recognition to
Lithuania, which has now declared Itself an Independent democracy .
Moscow has escalated the pressure on Lithuania and apparently
has yet to come to terms with the possibility that it. will break away.
The concern Is that it will soon be followed bx Its sister states, Latvia
and Estonia. Later on, perhaps Ukraine and Armenia.
Where will that leave the Soviet Union and Gorbachev . It's
superpower status· will undoubtedly be reduced by the political
rejection. But It could become a memben..ofthecommunltyofEurope,
prosperous and respected with an open society .. Such a statement
might have been far.fetched as much as a year ago.
. Bush has warned Gorbachev that a mUitary response to
secessionist moves will only backfire, sayhig that It "lnevlta_ble."
He has repeatedly called for a peaceful dialogue to solve the
problem, saying a continued war of nerves in Lithuania "could have
adverse International repercuss!ons and could be counterproductive
..
for U.S.-Soviet relations."
There Is no question that Gorbachev would lose his heroic status
and popularity In the world if he cracks down on Lithuania.
As some political analysts have observed, he had a chance early on
to state clearly that the three captive nations, Lithuania, Latvia an~
Estonia, · were ruthlessly annexed lit the Stalinist era and he was
permitting them to become Independent a~.
·.
1
It would nQt be Impossible for Gorbachev to take that route. but It
seems more and more unlikely.
•
In the vernacular, he could blow it and'lo5e all the goodwill he has
accumulated In permitting the Berlin Wall to be dismantled and
former satellites to go their own way.
·
On the down side, the retention of secession-minded states in the
Soviet Union by violent means will give new ammunition to
hard·llners In America who have yet to be convinced that the Soviets
are not bent on world conquest.
The hawks will also have a heyday In urging more and more funding
f!'r the Pentagon and the Soviets w111 again find itself In a runaway
arms race.

WASHINGTON - After 30 convention of Southern Baptlsis.
Pell has particularly tustrated
years In the Senate, Claiborne
Democrats
by his mellow chair·
Pell can hear some whispering
manshlp
of
the Critical Senate
behind his back these days, Some
Foreign
RelatiOns
Committee.
of his colleagues are beginning to
think thilt the eccentric Demo- That has allowed ranking Repub·
cratic from Rhode Island Is past lican, Jesse Helma, to pun tile
r.
his prime.
· stringS.
It all adds up to a rough
At n, with a long and dlstln·
guisbed career behind him, Pell camj,algn for Pell this year, u he
Is not the type of man t.h at people runs for re-election. He dido' t
want to do lt. Sources told ·our
lambaste publicly. He lsa gentle,
If somewhat odd, aristocrat and . associate Scott Sleek that Pell
an earnest politician. The des. was sorely tempted to retire and
cription, ''sweet mari, ''comes up . pursue his personal interests.
But fellow Democrats, as dis·
often In polite conversation about
couraged
as they are about Pell,
Pell.
leaned on him to run again. The
But there is that other side that
reason is that Rep. Claudine
his fellow Democrats don't know
what to think about - The Schneider, R·R.I., wants to jump
newage Pell whO befriends psy· from the House to the Senate. She
chlcs and spoon benders, who Is Is a formidable candidate, and
Democrats were convinced that
fascinated by mind reading and
psychic phenomenon and who only Pellcan beat her.
thinks the country would be
Both candidates have prombetter off if the senators medl·
Ised
no mudslinging, but Pel!' s
tated regularly.
·
·hobbles make him a
bizarre
In short, Pellls the kind of guy
large target. He Is a fan of Uri
you want for an eccentric uncle,
Geller,
the high-profile psych,lc
but he stands out In the Senate
spaon
bender. Pel! has taken
and
!Ike Shirley MacLalne at a

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Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atta

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By United Press International
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Today Is Thursday, March 29. the88tll day of1990 wlm 277 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter'.

Berry's World

•

"Oh, yeah? Well, I say MY favorite co-snchof' ·
'person Is PRETTIER, BLONDER and PERKI·
~R than YOUR favorite c.o-snchor person. "

fl~·

and cigarettes

You're a cigarette company fair game for any assault these
exec, wres lllng with. Mission days. But middle-aged white
Improbable: how to devise an ad ·men either already smo~. have
campaign that won't result in quit, or never samp\ed the weed
your being bound, flailed and and never want to.
Then It hits you. Why not
fricasseed by the nation's army
appeal to the nation's altruismof public-Interest nannies.
Targeting blacks I• out of the even Its patriotism? You' II an·
riounce to the public that smQklng
question. You already tried that,
and It was like poking Godzllla In Is In the national Interest like
the snout. Even a member of the paying taxea on time. And the
president's Cabinet joined In nice thing about this angle Is that
It actually might be true. Or at
stoning your headqllartera.
Then, In an •utious m~r least a number of health economent, you cranked up an ad mlsis seem to think. so.
For one thing, smokers tend to
campaign aimed at underedu·
die
younger and so collect a lot
cated young white women. You
less
Soctal Security benefits on
might as well hav~ doused
average
than their non-smoking
yourself wJth guol111e In the path
of a prairie fire. It aee11111 that. contemporaries. Even smokers'
youna white women, even those medical bills may be no higher
who drop out of sci\ool, also have than those run up .b y the rest of
us. Not only Ia a non-smoker's
frlendi In high places.
Alld so here you are, peering death just as certain as a
and poldni at tbe options. ot smoker's, It often foliDwl the
course, you could always direct same sort of resou.-ce-dralnlng
hospital stay.
ltle next adverttalng effOrt at
Plua, tile I!On·smoker has four
middle-aged white men, who are
. '•
,
(

nu Ill

S.mf*7'7'•1· ,.,.

c~

ConneCticut

MEN'S

Young :p9int guards lead way
to NCAA tou•·ney's .rmal four

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C:art"BOn

BASKETBALL
1990

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i

I

Sports briefs

young freshmen coming Into
college today.
''The good players that come In
are coming really as sophomores
·or maybe juniors in mental!ty.
Maybe (y(lung) In age Is one
thing, but mentality is totally
di(fererl t."
Krzyzewskl said another rea·
son the players are performln~
so well at this stage of the se.a son
is they have more than ·:lO
collegiate games behind them . .
''Maybe In age, . they are socalled rOQkles," .he said, " but
these kids have played a lot of
basketball before. Wllb all those
AAU tournaments and aU-star'
games and the press that top high
school players get nowadays,
they learn to live under pressure
before they ever came to college
and they thrive on it.
''They've played about 35
games now, ·so each of them, I
wouldn't look at them as young
kids anymore."

The Daily Sentinel
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Robert Walters

lion was limited to 500,000 square
Various surveys place the
the region, is clogged even In
Increase In the value of area
non· rush hours) to the loss of the · feet annually for five years.
Finally, about the rain: To
homes at 24 to 32 percent last lifestyle they long cherished.
minimize the lnfiuence of yearly
year. The median . price for a
Those fearful of "Californlcaaberrations, the National
. residence was $110,000 at the end tlon" note, tor example, that In
Weather Service has an elaboof1989, up sharply from less than the majestic San· Juan Islands
rate method of calculating aver$89,000 only one year earller.
.north of Sl'attle, Californians
age annual rainfall. At the end of
In the area's hottest residential account for at least one-fourth of
each decade, it recomputes thl!
market, east of suburban Bel· all vacation home sales, often In
figures for the most recent 30
levue and Lake Sammamish, the $500,000 range. But the more
both the population and number than 300 Californians who reset,
years. ·
Seattle (like most ofthe Pacific
of ·houses doubled during the tie In the Puget Sound region
Northwest west of the Cascades)
1980s. Housing prices there, each .week accou11t for only 20
does J~ave ·m ore than Its lhare of
characterized by one market percent of all newcomers. .
dreary, overcast days accom·
report as "'ballistic," soared .~3 . . In downtown Seattle, the overpanted by Intermittent showers If
.p ercent last year alone.
heated real estate market pronot constant drizzle. ·
Beleaguered local govern· duced an Intense burst of high·
;But when the city's official
ments In the Seattle area have 'rise construction during the late
been .forced to hastily alter 1980s. It added about 1.1 million · rainfall Is recalculated at the end
of this year to Include 1981-1990
zoning requirements to reduce square feet of office space
precipitation, the annual aver·
development density, Impose annually - Including the tallest
construction moratoriums and buUdlng anywhere on the West
age - now 38.5 Inches - almost
certainly will decline by about1.5
enact other emergency mea- Coast, the 76-story Columbia
Inches.
sures to restrain uncontJ:Qlled Center.
growth.
Moreover, current average
Last year, the city's voters
Searo;:hlng for a convenient approved by a margin of ·m ore
annual rainfall Is lower than In
Boston (43.8 inches) , New York
scapegoat, some longtime local' than 2-to-1 a citizen initiative that
residents blame recently arrived was supj)osed to place strict
(42.8 Inches), Baltimore (41.8
Callfornlas for every thing from limits on 'future downtown con·
Inches), Philadelphia (39 .9
Inches) and numerous other
traffic congestion (Interstate 5, structlon. New buildings could be
cities.
the principal highway traversing only 40 stories tall, and consthtc·

Bless nation,

Tacll

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DENVER (UPI) - Three of · · we all put pressure on Jilin."
Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewskl
the four teama remaining In the
· was in a similar situation and
NCAA
tournament
are
disprovEAST
SOUTHEAST
fo~nd many of the same probIng the theOry that leaclershlp
EaSt Rutneltonl. N.J,
New Orleans. La.
lems and solutions.
comes
from
upper
clasamen.
r--::D~Ul&lt;e---,
Ga. Teen
Maicn22&amp;44
"I was always s~nsitlve to
Man:n23&amp;25
A
pair
of
freshmen
point.
79-i8(0T)
Minnesota
93-91
Bobby's (Hurley) situation, but
!.
guards .;.. Kenny Anderson and
MitllleSCiil
never afraid that he was unable
Bobby Hurley- keyed U.drtv~
Duke50.81
82·75
of Geol'lla Tech and Duke t9 the · to handle it or that he was having
any problems with It;'' said
Final Four while Arkansas fol·
Krzyzewski. "He keeps It all In
lowed
the
guidance
of
sophomore
uc~
Syracuse
perspective. I'm amazed at how
guard
Lee
Mayberry.
'
Damer.
Colo.
well
he handles lt." ·
Only Nevida·Las Vegas,
Denver. C~lCraac
· Aonl2
Perhaps
Kryzewskl shouldn't
Demer. ColOrado
which turns to junior Grea
·~arc:'l
31
too
amazed.
after the way
be
March3t
An!hQny (11.1 points a game and
last
season and the
Mayberry
did
'l.'Carouna 100 uslits) brings the more
UNLV
fact that both Anderson and
tra.dltlonal amount of e•rlence
Hurley were such hlgh·profile
Into Saturday's NCAA lourna·
UNLV69-'07
prospects In the New York City
ment semifinals.
·
¥'kansas and Duke square off area.
Arkansas Coach Nolan Ri·
In Saturday's first game (5: 42'
8olll St. .
chardson said, "You've got to
p.m. EST) ahead of the UNL V·
UNLV
MIDWEST
Georgia Tech pairing. The · look at the fact that these kids
WEST
131-101
Dallas.
r
exas.
played so many basketball
winners of tboae games bav~ a
Cal&lt;tano. Calil.
Marcl'l
22
&amp;2~
gamesin
their high school senior
9:
12
p.m.
EST
Monday
game
to.
· MarcnZl &amp; 25
''
year
and
the AAU and all the
XaVI er decide the tournament
tournaments
and all the recognl·
1 championship.
tlon
they
got
over those years,
: Ander1011ls UPI's freshman of
T.;xas 102·39
Loyola M. c2·00
that
really
has
changed the
r the year andhis20.7polntscoring
average and 277 steals only
_ _ _;;,..ie::A;:ill= 1enhance that credential. Hurley
L.
1 averaged 9.2 polnll but bettered
\Anderson's assist total by two
Soccer
L---~---'--...:...--.,...-:-..,...:-..,.,__.--::==:=:::==============:- while directing a very different
Nearly half of the 36 referees
attack. Mayberry, comlrtg off a for the World Cup finals are In
strong freshman season, scored. poor physical condition and must
14.6 points a game and had 177 get Into shape if they are to
assists.
remain on the Cup roster .... The
"Both. of those kkls - Hurley · Republic of Ireland beat Wales
and Kenny Anderson- are pure ·. 1·0 In London on a goal with four
point guards," UNLV Coach m!nu.tes to go by Bernie Slaven,
Jerry Tarkanlait. said Wednes· who made. his International deday during a teleconference. but.' ... Brazilian International
"And there aren't very many Romario, who plays for Dutch
pure guards around. When you champion PSV Elndhg)'en, may
get. one like that, you're really on not recover from a broken leg in
time for the World Cup finals.
the right track.
·'Those kldS'were point guards
Track
from the time they first star ted
The
Athletics
Congree susplaying basketball. They had the
pended
sprinter
Andre
Cason for
mental!ty. \hey had the vision.
years
for
failure
to take a •
two
They had the feel of a point
guard, so it's a lot easter for them drug test.
to come In and play."
Boxing
All three of the young point
Virgil Hill's ninth defense of his
guards opened the year under the
World Boxing Association light
pressure of great expectations .
''I thought there was too much beavY,..eight title will be against
of a superstar label on (Ander· ·third· ranked contender and Brit·
son) and It got out of hand for a Ish Commonwealth champion
while - people were talking · Guy Waters at Caesars Palace in
about the NBA," Georgia Tech Las Vegas, Nell., April 29.
Waters, 12·1·1, replaces Tyrone
Coacb Bobby Cremiils said.
"I cannot see how a young man ' Frazier, who withdrew with an
can deal with that. II did bother eye Injury. Hill Is 27~ with 17
me thal'my1polnt guard who was knockouts. On the .u ndercard,
only 18 years old had to deal with middleweight Doug DeWitt faces
. all tJ:tese high expectations and Nigel Benn.

a

Today in history

s.rt#lhWillt

G11019ia Tecl1

•.

SEATTLE (NEA) - Here's
t.he seeret that residents of the
communities bordering Puget
Sounddon'twantotherpeopletO ·
know: The r~gion's average
annual rainfall has decreased
slgnlflcalltly In recent years.
Many denizens of. tbe Pacific
Northwest believe that their
accounts of coilstant cloudiness
a~d perpetual precipitation have
helped keep the overwhelming
lnDux of new resldenta from
becomlna an Intolerable mass
migration.
Even the reputation for · foul
weather hasn't deterred people
from moving here from elsewhere In the country. In the late
1980s, Washington ranked third
among the 50 states - behind
only booming California and
Florida - In net In-migration.
Most of the almost 100,000
newcomers to, the state every
year relocate In the Puget Sound
area, encompassing Seattle and
Its ever-sprawling suburbs. The
voracious demand for homes
here made the region the nation's
hottest housing market last year.

¢?I

at.ao(on

Geller alQJii as llli 1111est to
that Pell anci Schneider can atlck
perform milld·readlq tricks at
to their clellJI·Campalgn pJ.edie,
Washington gatherlnp - even
Some well-meaning Democrats '
at the arma negotiations · In
have already auccumbed to ·
Geneva.
temptation by using their fax
His offbeat Interests bave
machines to .,read the news that
spWed Into lawmaking. In 1988,
Schneider had made an off·color · :
Pell authored a bill to set up a · joke on TV:
NatiOnal Conimlislon on Human
The occasion was a Washing·
Resources - sort of a new-age
ton Press Club dinner televlied
approach to solving the Uls of the
by C·Span. Schneider and other
world through a vague mission to congresswomel! got carried
help people achieve "full hpman
away with the goqd-old·glrl conpotential." Pelllleld a hearing on viviality and began trading ~XU·
the bill, trotting out elCperts II! ally suggestive jokes. ·
Zen, yoga and tranacedental
Pell later apologized to
meditation. One doctor led the Schneider and said he did not
group In relaxation techrilques.
know his supporter• had faxed
The commission would have accounts of Schneider's pertor·
been privatelY funded. But even · mance around Rhode ls!aDcL
with no tax money lnv3lved,
Pell's personal style Is laidPell's colleagues were coy about back, and his spokesmaa 1181d
lining up with him. The bill Is still Pell Is "conatltutlonally lncapa'
languishing In the Senate. ble of bragging." But his choice ..
Schneider will have a hard time of polltlcal co111ultant li deft·
criticizing Pell for that bill, nltely Type A. He bas hired
however. She co-sponsored the Squier-Eskew Communications,
original House version, at Pell's considered to be the Democrats'
urging. ·
'
big.gun equivalent of the GOP's
Democrats and Republicans Lee Atwater.
have quletiy expressed doubts

Seattle residents pray for·rain ·

The o.ily S 1 ltlnll Plge 3

lhndlly, ~ 29. 1990

'
PASS - St. Louis llnilver·lllt)r's
Al!thony Jones (C) dishes off to teammate
I Charles Newberry (R) l1111tead of laking a sbol
,

Vanderbilt defeats.· St~ Louis.
74-72 to _capture NIT title

·I

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By IAN LOVE .
UPI Sporla Wrller
.
NEW YORK (UPI)- Vander·
bill coach Eddie Fogler, who
twice saw his team come back
from 17-polllt deficit~ In the
opening · rowid of the National
Invitation· To1,1mall)el!t, nearly1
suffered through the reverse In
the chan\plonshlp game Wednesday nl&amp;ht,
The Commodores built a 17·
point advantage lri tbe second
half and thenalmosthadltwither
away before holding on fora 74-72
victory over St. Louts II! the ,!lard
edition of the nation's oldest
postseason college basketball
tournament.
_ Fogler, who steeled himself for
.- such tension-filled clrcumatlln·
ces by driving a cabin New York
during his college summer vacatloas, watched u his te~ had Its
lead whittled to two points four
times In the final 3: 26.
. ."We came back from 17 twice
In this tournament (against Lou!·
slana Tech and T~tnneasee) and
•' then we get hi!re aDd pt iap by 17 .
and almost lose It," he said.
Tile Commodores, the third·
best free throw llbootlng team In
the oo1111try,, converted 21 of 27 In
the game, lncludltelO In the final
6:46 to -keep St. Louis at bay.
Derrick Wilcox hit a pair of

Vincent Carroll '

or five extra yeara.on average In .It's the gQvernment'a problem). ,,
which to accuiDlllate medical
As _The Washington Post's .;.
fees.
Malcolm Gladwell concluded af"The Implications of our re· ter a review · of tbe evidence,
suits are that smokers 'save' the "Little Is known about whelher
Social Security system hundreds smoking costs society more than ,.
of billions of dollars," wrote is saves." ·
.
three Stanford University econoNaturally, that hasn't stopped
mists In a recent study.
Health 11nd Human· Services
Which Is another way of saying Secretary Louli W. Sullivan from
that anU-smoklng campaigns are trumpeting a ."savlnp" of $52
justlfled If the goal Is to · bo(lst bllllon If everyone stopped amok· ..
collective loqevtty and lndlvld· lng, But then whoever expects a
ual viJOr, but tbelr effect on ~e crUS!Ider tO·tell the whole truth? •
national fisc Is quite another
Sitting In your office at World·
matter.
wide Cigarette Inc., you admire ,
Smoking has many "costs," of Sullivan's chutzpah. . But you
course, lncludlna lower produc· . don't really mind It, since two
tlvty, fires, higher life Insurance can play thli aame. So long uno
pay-outs and certain \)'pes of one really lulowa whether amok·
medical bills. But Its "'benefits" lng costs society more tban It
are considerable, tQO: reduced saves, who can object to an ad '·
nursing home and peltsiOI! ex· campaign tbat directly f,apa the
penses, the additional taxes that patriotic lmpulle?
smokers pay, and a lower burden
If Social Security II a problem, .. ·.
on Medicare (If yoU dleat 60, the who knowst Maybe amokllll II .
· ,.
expense generally falls on the tab the solution: ·
of a private Insurer; die at 70, and

..

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over the outalre&amp;ched arms11f Todd Ml1h11Dand of
Vanderbilt UnlverStty early 'In the lint half ofthe
NIT final game.Wednesday. (UPI)

·~~·

'

•••

three-pointers in a 15-5 surge that
carried Vanderbilt, 21-14,: ~rom a
41·34 lead to a 56·39 advantage
with 10: 37 remaining.
· St .. Louis, which becail)e the
.first team In 34 years t~ lose
back·to-back · NIT finals, ·then .
used a . stiDing defense and a ·
three-point binge to get back Into
. the game.
·
. · Jeff Luechtefeld anll Charles
Newberry each hit a pair, of
three-pointers to bring the Blllik·
ens within 59-51 with 7: 15
remaining,
The only basket the Commodores could muster In that
stretch -w as a three-poin!et by
tournament MVP Scott Draud at
8:29.
•'Luckily, we ~ere ~ible to keep
our poise ·aftd beat a very
well·coached team," said Draud.
"1 thouaht I played well, but not
that well.,.
· Wilcox and Kevin Anglin each
hit a pair of free throwf'to put
Vanderbilt ahead 63-51 with 6:27
remalnln&amp; before Anthony
Bonner keyed another .St. Louis
surge.
He scored llx polnli in an 11,1
run that brouellt the BIRikella
witbtn IU2 wltb3: 28 temalnlng.
Wilcox then scored Vander·
bill's only basket from the field In
the final ~: 29, a three-pointer

"

with 2: 24 remaining.
St. Louis, which lost to St.
John' s in the final last year, cut
the deficit to two three times
after that. Tlie last was on a
three-po,lnter by Jeff Gaona at
the buzzer.
.Vanderbilt received 16 points
from Wilcox, 15 from Draud and ·
13 from Morgan Wheat.
. St . Louis,-21-13, was paced by
Bonner with 19 points and 11
rebounds. Newberry added 18
and Jorge Wallace 15.
Vanderbilt's abUity to doubleteam Bonner, the natlol!' s lead·
lng rebounder. contributed to It~
success. The Commodores held
Bonner, who entered with a 20.8
scoring avera11e for the tourna·
ment, to .juat ·four points In the
first half.
"Vanderbilt. totally frustrated
us with their defenle In the first
balf," said St . Louis coach Rich ·
Grawe~ . 'They were pbysl~al•.
flu t legal. I tbi.Dk their defeDIIIve
ll!tenslty affected us not only
oftenlllvely, but defensively aa
well."
, ,
Wallace picked up the acorlng
alack for St. LOuis, hlttllll for 11
ll In the opentq period.
aud scored 10 of Vuderbllt'l
12 points, helping the Com·
modores to · a 31·28 lead at
lntermliilon. .

e

Cnoltecl foor Luxury""" Hltlh ,..,.. ,._

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Traiuminion
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ArDericai way to go!
•

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Pte•

4 The Daily Sentinel '

""!-eat. Mild• 21. 1110

Pomaeov-Midd!IPQI't. Ohio

11te Daly S ...... Ptpr I

Ste!~~~~t;_~.!!J!~!!~_t,~d~e.!:-i~vadmesltted~la~~y~bGlen~ ~~wd
lJPI8p01111 Writer
George Steinbre nner might
have· more In common with Pete
R
ose than he would like.
· ' The Yankees owner 's Involvement with a dmitted gambler
Howar d Spira Is under lnvestlga tl!ln by John Dowd, The New

.'

day. Dowd 1~ the Washington
lawyer who conducted the six· th 1
ti
Ia
mon nves gallon of Rose st
,year, whl~h led to the Cincinnati
mana ger s suspension . frorr.
basebalL
Commissioner Fay VIncent
and Dowd both d lined to '
ec

Involvement.
••,
, Dowd's lnvestigatl
f St 1 . paying Spira -..,000. Spira
ld
on
e n · claimed the amount was for
brenner wou fall under the lnfortnatlon Stelnbli!nner uaeilln
same major. league rule which alawaultagalallt YBDkeeslugger
deals wltiJ conduct deemed not to Dave Winfield Steinbrenner bas
be In the bes t Interes ts of
·
baseball
offered different explanations.
·
In other base b a II
developp~ents: . .
In Chicago, the Cub$ announced their t!Jree-game April
9-11 series against Phl.!!ldelphla
Phlllles has been rescheduled for
Oct. 1.3; and the April 6-8 series
against the New Yor~ Mets has
been reset for Aprll 16, June 13
and Sept. 24. The June 13 game
will be a double-header.
The scheduled opening serJ.es
between the Wblte Sox and the
Brewers In Chicago has been
resetfor Aprli9, JulyllandSept.
2?. The Sox's three-game series
at Boston· originally scl!eduled
for April &amp;-8 were reset for Oct.
1·3. .
·
The Indian's announced the
opener of a three-game series
against the Kansas City Royals
will be played In Cleveland May
7. The either two games will be
played Oct. 2 and 3.
The Indians also need to make
up three games at Yankee
Stadlurn. One game Is to be
played In New York April 12. The
other two games have not yet
been rescheduled.
With 10 days remaln!Dg be'fore
the Milwaukee Brewers break
camp In Chandler, Artz ., threefour !hi ol their starting Infield Is
plagu~ by health pa:oblems.Thlrd baseman Paul MoHtor Is
beset by shQulder . tendonitis, .
shortstop BUI Spiers has a
s prafned ankle, and second baseman Jim Gantner Is .recovering
from knee lllrJery.
The California Angels an·
nounced't beir makeup dates with
Oakland and Seattle, whom they
wereJo play the first week of the .
season. The A's will entertahl
California Oct. 1-3. The Angels
will play Seattle May 3, .MaY. 10
and July 11.
The Angels ·also announced
shortstop Dick Scbofleld left
camp to · ha~ his 1 trained left
hamstring examined. He could
.IJe sldel.lned as loq u six weeks.
In exblbltion games: ·
At West PaJm Beach, Fla. ,
Charles Smith (L) holds Dlvac from ·'til~ front
Roberto Kelly and pltcner
while teammate Benoit BenjamlD (R) bol!b him · Jimmy Jones each homered to
from the rear, ( UPI)
send the New York Yankees to a
5-2 triumph over the Montreal
Expos.
At Winter Haven, Fla., Kevin
Romine's ninth-inning · single
dro~ In the Wl~tnlng run for
Boston In the. Red· Sox's 6·5
victor~·
over the Minnesota ·
Twins.

f.

•

r

EYES BALL - Los Angeles Lakers ·center
. VladeDivac (12) keepahlseyeontbeballalterhls
·• shot was blocked during first period acllon at ihe
. Sporls Arena Wednesday. Cl.lpper forward

With 69 points from Jordan,

°

~ Chicago hands Cleveland. .

117-1131o
sin
overtime
·
:
·
,.
.
.~.~·
.
...: .
By United Press International · this xempUfled th.at.," · ·· '
.Don' t let Michael Jordan bear
Jo an connected on 23 of 37
·· you bad-mouth Cleveland ....:. he sbqts from the field , 21 of 23 shots
loves It there.
· from the line, bit two 3-polntets,
: He proved It once again Wed- · had six assists and four steals. It
rresday when he completed the was the hlgbestpolnl'total since
most prolific night of his eareer, David Thompson scored 73polnts
a. 69-polnt, 18-rebound per!or- on April 9, 1978. .
mance, both career highs.
Jordan's previous career high
~ The Bulls, who defeated Cleve- :. was 63 Points against Boston In
land 117-113 In overtime; have ,• the 1986 playoffs, and his pre·oow beaten the Cavaliers ln ' aU~ vl~usregular-seasonl'llgbwas6l
four meetings this year and points In 1987. He scored 151n tbe
Jprdan has ·averaged 50.5 points first quarter, 161n the second, 20
in those games.
In the third; 10 In the fourth and
" It was by far my bes t game, " eight In overtime. .
·
J ordan said after postin~ !be': · Horace Grant, with 16 points,
rilnth·highest point total in NBA r-wl!s !l'e only other Bull in double
l(lstory. " I try to do whatever I figures. .
.
can to help the team win. My
Cleveland was led by Mark
heart goes into every game and Price's 31 points, 26 from Craig
'

'\'~ ,...

•}
Sout.hem emr s .
' 194
..
romp
·
'
·
'

•'

·Ehlo, and, 23 points . and 10·
·· rebounds, from John "Hot ROd "
. WIUiains. . . . . ' 1
"I played well, I must admit, "
The Southern Tornadoettes
Jordan ' said. • 'Everything
girls'
softball team of Coach Kim
seemed to energize, all par ts of
defeated tlie HT Wlldklt·
Phillips
my game. I just tried to jump on
tens 19-4 ~Wednesday In area
It ~nd ,ride It as far as I could.
high
school softball action. ·
· 'Jle II be the rtrst 011e to admit
Southern
'Is 2-0. .. ·
,
that he gets fired up to play
'
S
outhern
collected
,
eight
hits
Cleveland; '' Ehlo said.
along
the
way,,
led
by
Cheryl
The ·cavs opened the game
P ape with a double and single;
W!th ·Wlnston Bennett guarding
Michelle
McCoy with t~ singles,
. Jordan, then switched to Eblo.
Marcy
Hill with two.sb!gles.
and
· They tried double -teaming him;
The
Wlldklttens
were held to
they tried fouling him. Nothing
just
one·
single,
that
being a
· worked. . ··
.
single by D. Brace.
' ·
· Elsewhere In the NBA, New
Pape
picked
up
the
win
In three
.)'ersey nipped New York, M!nnelimning&amp;
of
work,
fanning
one
sota slipped past Sacramento,
and
'
w
alking
one,
while
Megan
Philadelphia trounced Boston.
. Wolfe came on with two fine
,
.
Innings of relief. Wolfe fanned
one and walked one.
VIcki Rosltter was the losing
.
pitchers with one strike out and
six walks.
Monday evening SHS rolled
over
North GaiDa In a hard·
'
fought
9-6 game, that saw South·
Laura Fryar-So. ·
ern
collect
just two bits.
Tamara Hayman-Fr.
Michelle
McCoyhled with one
Debbie Railey-Fr.
single
and
Tonya Ingels had a
, Heather Hlll:Fr.
single.
.
Nikki Ible-Fr.
Again Cheryl Pape was the
Heather McPhali·Fr.
winning hurler with 4 strikeouts
Angle Mills· Fr.
and three walks.
Christl Ma!dens-Fr.
For North Gall1a Karen
Heldt Snider-So.
Spencer
had a double and single,
Kelley Snider-Fr.
and
'
Kathy
Hager and Beth
Emily Shain -Fr.
Sl\llsbury
two
singles.
Michelle stobart·Fr.
Spencer
suffered
the loss on the
Angle Swiger-Fr.
mound, despite a great !f!ffort of
Stacey Thelss-So.
ten ·strikeouts and 12 walks.
Jenny Varney-So.
Southern goes to Symmes
·
Valley Friday .

SHS
girls expect to field winning·
.
team with se~e~ ·veterans.returning
.

'•

I

.I
t

~·

•

• It·

Despite losing three Key- play- · games or. experience under their
ersfromlastyear'ssquad, Coach belts; It is going to take a lot of ·
Kim Phlll!ps' Southern .Torna- work from the kt.~s to have a
doottes girls' softball team re- successful season.
turns a strong ' nucleus for this
Overall . 36 players are vying
year's squad, which is currently for positions on the Tornadoette
2-0.
•
·
roster, 16 on the varsity and 20of
Lost to graduation were star- the reserves. Phillips was
ters Cl'ystall Hill. Tracy Beegle, pleased with the overwhelming
and Carol Fisher. Hill was the
turnout of pla~s.
·
starting pltcherflrst baseman. a
Coach PhilliPs hldlcaled she Is
four-year letter winner, All· Dis·
looking forward to this season
jtrlct _ all League honoree. Beeand hopes that the girls will
'g le carried equal laurels as
Improve as the sea s on
shortstop, was a lour year letter progresses .
,
.
Following Is a complete roster:
wlnner, with All· District HonoraSouthern Softball
ble Mention and All·SVAChonors
to:her credit.
Vanity Roster
Fisher, the veteran SHS .Shannon Counts-Jr.
catcher, was also a four year
Jennifer Cross-Fr.
lti{ter winner and SVAC Honora-·
Chris Harmon·Jr.
bfe Mention.
.
Marcy Hill-So.
.Returning to the squad this
Tanya Ingels-Jr.
Jenny Usle-Jr.
ylfar are letter winners Shannon
Michelle McCoy-So.
COunts at third, Sophomore
Marcy Hill at Shortstop, Juniors
Cheryl Pape-Jr.
Tony a Ingels and Cheryl Pape tn
Heather Roush-Jr.1
center and pitching respectively,
Shelly Sawyers-Sr ·
and senior Shelly Sawyers at
Angel Snlder-Jr.
second base.
Jan Wllllams-Jr.
Junior Shelly Winebrenner,
Shelly Winebrenner-Jr.
All-League honorable mention,
Megan Woife-Fr.
returns at first, and.junlor Mayla
Mayla Yoacham-Jr.
.Yoacham Is In the outfield.
Amber Cumillgs·So.
·• Southernflnlshedlastyearata
SOtrrHERN GIRLS SOFT·
fine 9-5, and was 8-21n the league, · BALL RESERVE ROSTER:
good for aecond place.
Annie Amos-So.
Coac~ Phillips stated, · 'The
Mlc~elle Brown-So.
season was shortened las year
Raberta Caldwell-Fr.
ilue to all the rain, so my
Valerie Connolly-Fr.
returning lettermen only have 14
Ke111e Ervin-So.

r.

~
y

•

DOMINO'S
PIZZA
DELIVERS
FilE.

t:

111 w. MAih
POMEROY
992-2124

Mei@!J ·,allies to defeat FH I .ancers, 6-4

..,..,..~n.
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Rey
Palacloa slqled borne a run In
tb 12th IDnlDJ to lift the Kansas
Cl~y Royals to 1 2·1 victory over ·
th T xas Ran-a .
e e
-~· · . "'
victory over the Reds.
At Yuma, Ariz., Rob nelson
At Bradenton, . Fla., Bpbby belted two bomen and Fred
Bonilla walked and scored on two Lynn and Tony Gwynn added o~.
errors In the eighth Inning, lifting apiece In the San Dleao Padres'
the Pirates to a 3-2 victory over 10-7 triumph dver the C.llfornla
the White Sox. PittsbUrgh also · Angela.
placed outfielder John Cangelosi
At Scot~dale , Ariz., six Seattle
on waivers.
.
. pitchers combined for a n ve.
At Clearwater, Fla., Mookle hitter and Greg Brlley hit a ·
Wilson batted In two runs and two-r un homer In the Mariners'
scored once to lead the Toronto 5·2 victory over the San FranBlue Jays toa'6·1 vlctory.overthe cisco Giants.
Phltadelpbla Phllltes;
· At Phoenix, the Milwaukee
At St. Petersburg, Fla., Cecil Brewers pounded ciut 15 hits In a
Fielder blasted three home runs i2·2 rout ·of the · Oakland
and drove In six runs as the Athletics.
Detroit Tigers beat the St Louis
At Mesa, Ariz., Opening Day
Cardinals 7-3.
pitcher Greg Maddux pitched
AL Vero Beach, · Fla. , Tom three shutout Innings and Mark
Redington cracked · a two-run Grace had the game's only RBI
double In the loth lnnb)g to powl)r to lead the Chicago Cubs' to their
the Atlanta Braves to a 7·5 first sprljlg training victory, 1·0
victory over the Los Angeles over the Cleveland· Indians.
'
·

The Melp Marauders scored 6 Laneen -took advulqf ll'f four
runs ID the fifth lnnlq to wallll fn tile iDDIIIII ud a 2 run
overcome a J.O Federal Hocklnl double tram l'lllle ,.,..an.
advantage and held on to cleteat
Melp wu beJd In bay by losing
the Laneers 64 ID a TrWalJey pitcher Brett 1.-ll•tll tile fifth
Conference g&amp;JlleTUesday Jlight . whell the Marauden picked up 5
The game was called after six of their 9 hlta for the aame. The
innings because' of dl,rkneils .
big blows for the Marauders
'The Lancers took'advantage of · were two-run slnJ)M troni Eddie
uncharacteristic wildness from
Crooks and DeiUIII Boothe and a
run scoriag aiDJie tram Randy
Jeremy Phalln to Jump out to a
3.0 second Inning lead.
The
. .

• · •
Davis and Ken Camil)ltl blasted
homen and CIDclnllatl's Luis
Quinones' feeble atJampt to play
first base ended with a decisive
iwo-run error In the .Utroa' 8-6

•

·

.

l''

;Lady Quakers sweep.
·~ two over Redwomen
•· " ·~

; ' Plagued by errors In Its first
: outing of the season at Capital
; last week, the University of Rio
:;~rande softball team took some ·
• loq strides toward reducing the
: mistakes Tuesday at home .
:·a'g alnst Wlbnlngton.
: But the Lady Quakers outh!t
' the Redwomen in both games of
• ·the doubleheader and emerged
, with wins of 12·5 and '11-4. ,
:1 Rio Grande recorded six hits
,:and three errors In the fi rst
·fgame, while Wlbnlngton netted
:tl3 hits and one error. In the .
:\ nightcap, the margin was closer
::·when the Redwomen ·advanced
. on s~ hits to Wilmington's elgl!t.
. The hosts held their errors to one
while the Lady Quakers were
credl~ with five.
,._ Cindy Rldgeway •. a freshman
• from Jackson, relieved Gena
: Norris In the second Inning of the
, first contest and allowed Wll·
• mlnJion six hits .,and two walks . .
: Her counterpart for the visitors,
~ Tracy Sprinkle, let the Redwo-.
: men record four hits and post
• three walks .
•
• Wilmington cantered to a 4·1
: lead early In the opener and
:'p osted the bulk of Its runs late In
':tile game. The Rio ladies· also
.:.rallied late, with Ridgeway scor:·tn~ two hits and a double, Renee

FOUL BALL- Oriola' oullleiiJer PhD Bradley chops IIi llie ball ·,.
only to Jiavlltbounce&amp;olbeiJ'G!Dd a&amp;hlsfeetdurluJac&amp;IODBialaat .,. ·
the Met• Wedlle.day ID Miami. The ball was ruled f~. ( UPI) '

Bobcats .defeat Pirates 6-1 ,; ..
Vikings beat Highlanders ...

VlkiDp 21, IDJidaaders 8 ,
At Gage, Symmes Valley born·
barded Southwestern with an
11-run Insurrection In the first

;.

Inning to put the game .away a.t
that point.
The Vikings, who scored In ·
every Inning while facing four
Highlander hurler s In the five-.
frame contest, scored four more
In the next two timingS, Including
a two-run homer.by junior Chad
Renfroe In the second Inning,
before the Highlanders mounted·
a four-run rally In the tlilrd.
In addition to Renfroe's fence- .
buster, the restofValley's 10 hits '
cBr!le courtesy of Jaye Cr.l swell
43-3; double) , Fred Wilburn (2·5,
double), Darren Mlcliael .(2·3, .
two doubles) anc) Andy Lester
(1·2, triple).
Collecting the Highlanders'
eight hits were Cbrls , Metzger
(2-3, triple), John Sites (2·3). ·
Adam Blair (1·2), Joe Hammond
(1-3), Kevin Kiser (1·2) and Bill ·
Potter (1-2) .
!
,
.
Walks hurt Soutliwestern, as
the ' pltchlitg quartet of Sites,
Metzger, Potter and- Brent Davies surrendered 20 tree passes
and !~ned only four. Valley's
hurlers walked five and struck
out seven.
Southwestern, 0·2,ls scheduled
to play Hannan Trace on Friday
at Mercerville.·
Score by lnDIDp
5-Valley ... .... .. ~13 ~ 2 4-21-10·5
Southwestern ... 0 0 4 11- 6- 8-3
WP-Mlchael
LP- Sites ,

•

Samsung
Soundeslgn
Zenith

Lhwltoll Dolh-ery Arto

.'

HOME ENfERrAIMNT (ENIEit'

391

wm lUll 511$11

.
992·1524

'

~ Redmen

lose twin bill
.ton ·toad to Marietta
,

, ,., A sacrifice fly for host Ma· Inning to tie (1·1) when Donnie
• '1'ietta In the seventh Inning of the Becker's RBI batted In Jimmy
: ·first game with the University of · Kearns, but the Pioneers; ad: Rio Grande baseball team Wed· vancing on Barber's two for four
! nesday allowed the Pioneers to performance, exploded for
: post a 3-2 win.
.
another run In the fourth and
, .. Marietta then · went on to win three more In the ·fifth . Marietta
: -the bottom half of the bill, 5' 1, In
posted six hits to Rio Grande's .
; :nine Innings.
four.
! The Redmen , who went to 8-6
Becker and Kearns were both
• on the season, slipped past the one for three to lead the visitors '
! ·P ioneers In the opener to lead 2-0 htttJng. Kuhn was relieved on the
: .afier three Innings. Rio Grande mound by Bucky Spindler In tbe
: pitcher Darrell Marcum, who fifth, while Spindler was spelled
• went to 3-1 overal~ surrendered In the eighth by Mike Voorheis.
: &lt;One earned run, struck out three ·
' 'In the second game we played
: and allowed five Marietta play- competlllvely, we used some
: i1rs to walk lri his efforts to hold . different players and still gave
•• doWn the basts' offense.
them · a pretty good game,"
• Don ScMiy's club made Its Oglesby reflected. " Even at 8-6,
: first run In the fl1th and lncbeds we're prOgressing well, and If If ·
~a head 1n the sixth · to knot the
we tighten ·OJir defense and If our
score at 2. Scott Barber's sacrl·
pitching remains strong, we will
flee 'hit. In the bottom of the be very competitive In District
"sev~tnth allowed a teammate to . 22."
• trot home for the wi~ .
The Redmen are scheduled to
. Rio Gri~Jtde, . snapping a two- 'play , at Bluffton Saturday In a 1·
"WHk · break In Its schedule,
p.m. doubleheader, while Ma· postled six hits to Marietta's five. rietta hosts Tiffin on Saturday .
The vlslton and held their errors
.to two wblle Marietta had none.
S~rts
·, ; ·t wu pleaSed that we played
competitively,~· ~en Coach
CoDep Baaketball
Dave ·QalHby remarked. "We
For the second time In four
shoUld have won the game, but
years, Gannon Unlvenlty of
w, bad a couple of bad breaks
Centerville, Mass. , 24-8, has been
aqd a couple of erron that hurt
named Eastern College Athletic
· us. Allll'f that put together gave
Conference Division II Team of
t!Uim the win."
Leading Rio Grapde's hitting
the Year. .. . Xavier coach Pete
Cbrls Boggs and Herb
Gillen has removed · his name
Sll'arfenaker, who were each two
tram consideration for the head
tilt three. Mille McCarroll, one coaching position at VIrginia to
tor two, was Marietta's top
remain with the Musketeers.
hitter. Aaron Emery.tOok th.e win
the Pioneers. going to 5-0 on
CycliDJ
!lit! seaso11 with three strikeouts
Greg LeMond pulled out of the
~tnd two walks.
De Panne pro road cycle race In
Marietta scored .early In the
llelff(Um prematurely, the fifth
nlptcap but were again hekl
ra.;:e be has failed to finish this
dcnnl IJy Rio Grande's pitching,
aeuon.
lllliltlr five lnnllllll by Rob Kulln.
l'oDIMII
1('111111, now 1·2, 8llowed Marietta
The Green Bay Packers have
five lllta, struck out three and
surrendered 111n1e eaned I'IIJIS. told Plan B free.apnt quarter·
back Tommy Kramer, who was
Far the hosta, Eric Karney
reconted four strikeouts and .. left ynprolleCted by the ,Minnesota Vlklnp, they are not
allond foiar wallll. ·
Interested.
.
Rio GraaqeiCOJ ed ID the fourth

briefs

•

Brian Dunn, Chad Jones walked · for Eastern. but suffered the loss.
to load the, bases a11d Thad · Scott Fitch relelved In the sixth.
HalnesdouWed toglvetbeOaksa
They comblnedto scatter Jus tsl.x..
2·0 lead. An error again loaded
hits, tanned tbree.and gave up
the bases and a two base er ror In
two walks. EHS had four costly
left brought home two more run s
errors.
.
for a 4·0 Sc:ore.
Kuhn fanned twelve In picking
bak Hill added one earned and
up the win, walked . 6, and
one unearned run In the fifth on a
scattered three hits, the first of
Chad Jones double, the score 6-0.
those coming In the fifth Inning.
JeffDursq)ltchedagoodgame
Eastern hitters were Jason
··
·
·
Hager a double, Sbaun Savoy a
single, and Mark Murphy an
Infield single.
· Eastern, weather permitting,
hosted Waterford tonight.
Llnescore:
Eastern .... ... .....000 000 0-0 3 4
Oak Hill .. .. .... .. 000 420 x-6 6 1

win over Hannan 'Trace nine
I

The Southern Tornadoes
picked, up a 7-2 win over the
Hannan Trace Wlldcat5 on the
SHS diamond Wednesday even·
lng to even their league record at
1-1 In the SVAC boys' baseball
standings.
·
Southern Is 1-2 overall and
Hannan Trace 0-2.
Southern's pltchlng, lleaded by
Mark Taylor hurled a no-hitter
against the Hannan Trace squad,
handcuffing the HT batters
throughout the night.
Southern went ahead 2·0 In the
first when Andy Baer reached on
an error, Jason Quillen walked,
and Brent Shuler brought ;both
home on a two-run double •.
In the second frame ' ~.;oiiD
Maidens walked, TOdd Grind·
staff singled, Maidens .scored on
an error, and a Shuler sacrifice
fly brought home Grinds tat!. The
RBI was ·Shuler's tlllrd of the
night.
.
...
In the third frame Doug
Lavender singled, Mark Taylor
singled, Arnie Dugan reached on .
an error which brought home one

t-o,

Jar

'.

I

POIIIOY, 0110

I'

••

VINGS

run, and Grindstaff had an RBI
single, the score qul~kly 6-0.
HT added two In the !11th, and
SHS added. an Insurance run for
.
· .
the 7-2 finale.
Southern hitters were Grind·
staff with two singles, Brenth·
Shuler li double, and singles by
Lave11der, Taylor, and. Javier
Bothollo.
· Mark Taylor picked up Uie win
with . short relief stints from
Jamie Anderson, and Maidens.
They combined to fan 7 and walk

1916 CHEVIOLO
CELEBIITY EUIOSPOIT

6.

2 Dr., V-lmotor, automatic, air. AM-FM

Swain and Saunders combined
to fan 6, while walking eight for
the Guyan nine.
Southern travels to Symmes
Valley Friday for a key SVAC
game and ts idle tonight.

atereo. power locke, po-r windowa.
Budutt - t l with con10la.

Llnescore :
Hannan Trace ....... : 000 02·2 0 4
Southern ................. 222 01· 7 6 4
Batteries: Mark Taylor(WP·
No hitter) ,Anderson 5th, Maid·
ens 5th and Lavender.
HT·Swaln (LP). Saunders, and
Saun~ers , Queen.

1914 OlDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPIEME
SPECIAL EDinOI

MHS
girls belt I .ancers, 22-~
'

Air, tilt, cruln, 1 'AI vinyl roof, reardafog·

By DAVE HARRIS
slam home run. Kathy Lambert
The Meigs Marauder girls added a single and a double and 3
softball team erupted for 14 runs rbl 's to. the Marauder hit parade.
In the second and third Innings · Kristen Stanley added a single
and Kelly · Douglas fired a two and a double, Trlela Baer a bases
hitter to power the M~auders to loaded triple, and HtWiher Hoa 22·2 win DYer the Federal vatter and Marsha Kinl a single.
Hocking Lancers Tuesday night
Kelly Douglas we~t the route
at Federal Hocking High School. for Meigs giving up. two hits,
The Lady Lancers jumped out ·striking out 4 and ·walking 4 to
to a 2·0 lead In the first Inning off pick up the win. Morgan was the
of winning pitcher J(elly Douglas loser.
but the Marauders came l!ack to
Meigs raised It's record to 2·2
score 6 runs In the second and~ In and will travel to Alexander
the third. Meigs scored 4 r1111s In Friday night.
the fourth and fifth Innings to Meigs .. ......... .. .... ....001 44-22 8
close out the scoring.
FH .. .. .... .. ....... .... ....200 00- 2 2
Kim Osborne had the big blow
Douglas (w)and Osborne
for1,the M~rauders with a grand
Morgan (I) and Glass

P~rt-time
... ·
l
He. roe~. ·-.
·;

In 1775,' a rag-tag army of farmers and z,~if·7~~;'&gt;
shopkeepers took on the British. They weren't
.'~professionals;'' but their desire for freedom
·
was a powerful weapon.
In 1977, a similar part-time
.i ·
army of teachera, coaches people from all walkl of life,
- set out to flgbt t)le powers
pt corporate Amerle!l. They .
wanted a different kind of
freedom - flnancllil
'
freedom .for average
.Americans.
.
,·
• Today, the fight's s tUJ on. But the
Winner Is clear: A.L. WilliAms li the
largest marketer of financial aerv!ces
America.
,
bUll• of IDdlvldual Ufe lnnraace placed 111 fone Ia ·

•u

.... ~ 1IIILICoe

Pti'U IIWioa 6atal ID farce (more tllu

IDiaraace OOI!IpaiQ&gt;)

&amp;a)'

-

other llle

i.s

They may be "only part-time." But to
mllUon policyholders with a brighter flllancfal future, they're definitely
heroes.

were

'

WE REPAll AlL MAKES

\

''

FACTOIY AUTHOIIZED SERVICE
Emerson
Shintom
Multi 'tech
.Scott

Lundy posting a pair of hits, and
Missy Kitchen and Kathy Snyder .
each contributing a hit. Lundy .
had a triple, while NorriS,
Kitchen and Kathy Lute each had
a single.
Laura Griggs, connecting on
two of th~e appearances at bat,
led Wilmington's hitting In the
second game. Norris was two for
two for the Redw~;~men, while
Ridgeway, Lute, Snyder and
'
Robin Stull. each had a hit.
Lundy pitched the flrsf three ·
InningS for Rio Grande and was
spelled by Ridgeway. wh~;~ al·
lowed Wlbnlngton seven hits. ·
Jamee Barnhart was credited
with the win and held the hosts to
five bits.
" We're getting better," Rio
Grande Coach Doug Foote remarked. "We made a few errors ·
and dldn ~ tblt the ball as we have,
Qu t we' re seeing some light at the
end or the tunnel."
The losses put the· Redwomen
at 0·4. They were to face West
VIrginia State at home Thursday
and are scheduled to play the
University of Charleston In a
home doubleheader Monday,
starting at 2 p.m . Wilmington,
which went to 4·5, · played at
Capital Wednesday · and faces •
Defiance Sal urday:

'

VCR-TV
Repair Center
G~star

Striking out 12 Eastern batters by Nor th Gallla, dropping the
along the way, Oak Hlll's PhU · contendlq Pirates to 1-1, while
Kuhn led his Oak Hill Oaks to a KC lleads the teaaue at 2-0.
6-0 shut-out victory over the
S)1Jul)es VaJJRy, which deEastern Eagles here Wednesday felted Oak Hill 3-1 Monday could
evenlnl in area . high school hiJ.Ve 1110ved to 2.0 wltb a win over
baseball action:
.
. SouthwesJarn luJ niiJit.
Eastern is 3-1, 1·11rithe lea gue,
With two outand DOllie on In the
while Oak H1ll Is 3·2, 1·11n the fourth llllllng, Oak H111 broke
league. Southern defeated Han- open a scorelesaJameonulngle
nan Trace 7·2 and Is also 1-1, toChopperWUilsand~doubleto.
reoortedtv KvRer Creek sliPPed
,
·

Southern scores:·'7-2
SVAC
.
~

Kyger Creek · broke a 1·1 ·
deadloCk In the third Inning of
Wednesday's ·game against
North Gallla with a three-run
rally to set the Bobcats on their
way to a 6-1 victory at Cheshire·
Kyger Elementary.
senior hurler Chad Johnson,
who went the distance for the
victory~ gave . up three hits, .
struck out seven and walked five
In the contest, which was called
before the Bobcats' !11th was
completed because of darkness.
{iyger Creek, 2-1, collected
foUf bits . - singles by Phil
Bradbury, Johnson, Marc VIlla·
nueva and David Wellman - off
three Pirate pitchers - starter
Darin Smith and relievers John
Conley and Ulysses Davis. Two
of tbe Bucs' hits were extra-base
hits - a triple by Davis and a
double by freshman Rob Canady,
with Darin Smith getting a
single.
North Gallla, 2-1, Is scheduled
to host Oak H111 on Frklay . ·
Score by lnaiDp
North GaiUa ......... 100 00-1-3·2
Kyger Creek .... .....103 02-6·4·0
WP - ·Johnson
·
LP - D. Smith

over all and 2-G ID the Tri-ValJey
Conference, they will travel to
,
Alexander on Frl~y .
Melp ............. .....000 010 I 9 2
FH .. .. ....... ......... ..o=-1 010-4 1 2
Jeremy Pballn, Kevin Taylor
(2), Chris Stewart (6) and Eddie
Crooks. ·
Brett Lewis a nd Matt Harrb
W-Taylor Save-Stewart.
L- Lewis .

Oaks hand Eastern Eagles first defeat, 6-0

OUT BY A MiLE - University of Rio Graade thb'd base player
· . Reaee Lalld7 (11) lap out a WllmiDctoD player duriDI Tuesday's
;· ·d,ublebeader a&amp; Slaale): L Evaas Athletic Field. WllmiDgton won
• the doubleheader, 111-5 aDd 11-4.
.

'

Hawley to take the lead.
Jason Wright had two doubles
for Meigs while Kevin Taylor .
and Boothe had two lingle&amp; each.
Crooks and Hawley each a t ingle
fo r the wlnnen.
Kevin Taylor picked up the w1n
In relief, Chris Stewart plc~ed up, .
the save.· Brett Lewis was the
loser.
Meigs Is now· 3-1 on the year

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Skeptical pap,el c~llenges
q~lifica~ions of
choice
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Bank!na' Com·
mlttee·on Wednesday Cballenged
the credentials of Timothy Ryl!n,
President Bush's nominee to
become the nation's top savings
and loan regulator as head of the
Office of Thrift Supervision.
After a tough three-hour questioning sess.lon, committee chair. man Sen. Do~ald Riegle, DMich., told Ryan that questions
still linger about ·his quaiUlcatlons for the job. A ~taffmember
said the earliest the panel could
vo.te on Ryan Is at Its next full
committee meeting. April 3.
"I think the ·issue of qua!lflcatlons Is a key concern," Ryan
said. •'I am who I am. 1 feel very
confident ~hat If conflnn!!d I
would do an excellent job. Am I
the absolute best candidate for
·
this job? I don't know." ·
sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D- . ·
Ohio, also questioned the proprIety of several actions ull!lertaken by Ryan In his past
government service, as solicitor
tor the Labor Department, and In
the prlv;ile sector. ·
··
"I can't say to you that I know
you've done' anything Illegal or
unethical but it ts a rather thin
line," said Metzenbaum, who Is
not a member of the Banking
Committee -but was allowed to
q ues lion Ryan.
Specitlcally, Ryan was questioned about his handling of the
Central States Pension fund of
the Teamsters, which after lead·
lng a successful effort to clean up
.,. SPEAKS TO TO NEWSMEN - Cbarlel
slon nominee Timothy Ryan. Keating told
corruption
In the $10 billion fund,
;: Ke.tlng, fonner chalnnan of Ill&amp; failed Lincoln
reporters the committee bad refused to allow him
Ryan
left
government and be;: Savlnp and Loan AasoclaHon, spealul to reporto testify. Seated to his left 18 Judy Wlscher,
came
Involved
In the regulat,ory
. ter1 at the Marcb 28 Sena&amp;e Banking Committee
president of American Conllneatal. Keating Is the
he·established
..
process
: conflnnatlon bearing on Offlee.of Tbrlft Super vifonner CEO of American Conllnental. (UPI)
. Also, while serving as solicitor,
Ryan was Involved In the Investigation of the National Maritime
Union and Its election process.
When he le,ft the department In
1983, Ryan was hired by the
By LEE LEON"-RD
- . to provide a hardship for livesmain culprits.""
union's leadersiltp to defend It
.. · UPI staleho111e Reporter ·
tock feeders," he said . .
·"Don"t kill the largest segment against charges the election was
: COLUMBUS- Despite a handWise said the bill requires the of our largest Industry," he said. unfair, )letzenbaum said.
ful of complaints that It's not state to speed up its consldera·
Rep. Joseph Haines, R-Xenla,
Ryan ·Said he had no dealing~
properly funded and could ruin tlon of per~J~its for animal feed·
· with the Labor Department for
complained that a $500,000
Ohio's No.1 indust:rY,' the Ohio lngoperatlonsandalsolncreases
appropriation for the program
more than one year after he left
1fouse Wednesqay adopted com- the · penalties for those who was whittled to $105,000 for the
.
the agency.
Metzenbaum also highlighted
prehenslve legislation atlempt· . vl.o late the agricultural pollution
next two years. "We need to ·
Ryan's appointment, while In
lng to get rid of agricultural laws.
put our pocketbooks where our
priVate practice, to serve on the
pollution.
The penalty will go from a
thoughts are," said Haines.
. The bill cleared on a 94-5 vote maximum $100 fine to a maxi·
But his amendment to kill the . Employee Retirement Income
mum six months ln. prison and
and was sent to the Senate.
anti-pollution program If there Is . Security Act Advisory Council,
• Rep. Dwight Wise, D-Fremonl, maximum $1;000 fine, he said.
' no funding by July 1, 1991, when
&amp;aidtnsteadofcalllngformandaRep. James Bilchy, R'
the next. budget Is enacted, was
lory regulations, the bill provld~ Greenville, who owns a large
tabled.
for farmers with small opera- meat producing operation In · Rep. Thomas Johnson, . R'
hens to work with local soli and western Ohio, warned against Cambridge, Induced the House to
water conservatiOn officials to overregulation.
," amend the bill extending the
find better ways to manage
"Less than 1 percent of our state's multiflora rose control
animal waste.
farms are polluters,.. said program for five years: The
: Wise said the bill applies to Buchy. He said most complaints
multiflora rose is a noxious weed
farms or animal feeding opera- are centered around odors and
growing In farm fields and along
lions with less than 1,000 anim-· that fertilizer and sludge. not highways, i'hoking out other
~Is. "U .is notthe Intent of this bill
· -' ~"eduction, "are the ,plant grow!h.
·
skep~al SeJ~Ate

'g

.ors

where he supported a policy fru&amp;tratlon at the governm~nt's
po~ltlon that would benefit
stow-moving thrift rescue effort.
clients. Advlled by the Labor
"I bave a reputation for
Department that'thll appeared moving thlnp along," he said.
to be a conflict of Interest, Ryan "Quite frankly, senUemen. I
resigned from the council.
make things happen." .
While Metzenbaum focuaed on
Ryan was nominated by Bush
ethical Issues, others on tbe last week, just days after a U.S. ;
Banking ·Committee hammered diStrict judge found that former · .
away at Ryan's lack ot expe- OTS director M. Danny Wall and
rience with financial Institutions. his temporary replaeement, Sal"You have virtually no expe- vatore Martoche, were aprience In any way with financial pointed Illegally. .
Institutions. That's a remarkable
u,s. District Judge Royce
statement by the administra- Lamberth agreed with argution," satd Sen. Timothy Wirth, ments by Olympic Savings and ,
D-Colo.
Loan Asaoclatlon or Berwyn, Dl.,
"I want to be candid. The that. Wall's appointment was '
president has had five months to Improper becau~ he lia~· never ,
consider a nominee, but all the been confl~med by the senate.
lnfonnatlon I have show (Ryan)
Wall, wbo resigned In · De- ,
has no knowledge of the thrift cember, served previously as
Industry," added Sen. Alan chalnnan of the Federal Home •
Dixon, D-lll. "I have serious Loan Bank Board ·and was :·
reservations."
··
named to head the OTS when It ·
Ryan told the panel he was was created last August by the :
surprised when Treasury De- administration's !brUt bailout ,
partment officials called him . legislation.
three to four weeks ago to ask If
Last Frtday, a federaleppeals
he were Interested In the court granted the government a
position.
30-day emergency stay of the
"I did not seek the job," he lower court's ruling . . Governsaid. "To be' quite frank. I was ment lawyers argued that. Lamsurprised when I received the berth's decision threatened to
call..'.' .
throw the government's . thrift.··
Ryan, 44, stresaed bls reputa- rescue effort Into chaos until a
tion as an effective admlnistra· permanent director Is confirmed :
tor and seized upon ·the panel's by the Senate.

KREEM FILLED COOKIES, 5 oz. ·

: :COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) the Ohio Senate unanimously
&lt;tdopted two resolutions Wednesd$y dealing with the problem of
tapldly spreading zebra mussels, which one senator said pose
a11 . ev,n. greater threat to the
environment than the Alaska oil
spill.
- Troublesome zebra mussels,
which attach themselves to ships
arid other objects In the water.
were first carried to the United
States by foreign freighters In

J:lome health-care aid lacking
WASHINGTON IUPI) -Ohio
Gov. Richard Celeste says the
federal government has failed to
provide enough JliOney !or programs designed to help ~ar~ for
elderly· people In their homes.
"In a speech Monday to the
National Association for Home
Care. Celeste called· for homecare professionals to work to
change attitudes on the part of
publiC officials and to encourage
thOse officials to raise ne.cessar.y
re,ources.
Jfe said the natton must stop
fojlowlnli pat pOlitical phrases
s.;eh as "Read my lips: No new
taies." and Instead must support
ca)dldates' who are wlll!ng to
ratte the money for needed
pr~ams, such as home health
care.
t Ail over the world IVe are
seflng leadership that Is willing
to4ccept challenges beyond our
Jn!aglnatlon, ' 'Celeste said. "Yet
In this country !we) settle for
leadership that goes around
mumbling prases. Something Is
terribly wrong ..:... with us, not
with him, wtth us."
Celesle said In addition to new
attitudes about resources and
f.ues. the country needs to alter
beliefs about medical technology
and the role of elderly people.
. He satd the country 114!ems
daazled by the latest· medical ·
t~oloiiY. wben many elderly .
piople could be cared for In their
homes rather than a nursing
home or hospital.
Also, many elderly people
believe It would be better for

•

them to go Into a nursing home
rather than to move ln.with their
children and become a burden,
Celeste said.

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threat."
One resolution memorializes
Congress to pass legislation,
' co-sponsored by Sen. John Glenn,
D-Ohlo, preventing the· unintentional lntroductlon Into the Unites States of non-l·ndlgenous
plants and animals.
The bill also provides for a
program to control species that
are not Indigenous to the Great
Lakes, especially ze.bra mussels,
and for research into the ecologi·
cal effects of species nonIndigenous to the lakes.
The other resolution creates a
task force to study the problem of
zebra mussels In Lake Erie,
ways to control or eliminate
them and methods to prevent
their spread to other bodies of
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D-Jefferson.
They have proliferated In the
shallow waters of Lake Erie.
clogging the Intakes of power and
water plants, and are spreading
to Inland waterways. There Is
fear they will destroy the reefs·
that support other aquatic life,
Boggs said.
"We're all aware of the extreme damage caused by th(!
Exxon Valdez," he said. "Zebra
mussels pose even more of a

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~. M.rah28,19JO

8 1he Deily Sentinel

.Greyhound offering
reward· on shootings
By Uallted Preu Iateraatlonal . over to authorlti!!S tnose responGreyhound Lines, declarinll 11 sible for the shootings.
would not ne110Uate with its
'!;he company released a report
strlklna drivers "while a gun ts that said there had been 23
pointed at us," offered a $100,000 shooting Incidents, 71 bomb
reward for Information on 23 threats and 123 other lncldent.s of
shootings aimed at its buses VIolence. The uniOn has released
during the three-week labor Its own set of figures on Injuries
walkout.
·
received on the picket line In
But UJ\Ion officials said the which it charged there had been
company, which expects to re- some 50 Incidents of VIolence
place Its entire work force with directed against strikers and
. .
non-union drivers by Easter, was supporters.
"We
hope
the
rewardS'
will
using the violence as a ploy to
an
end
to
the
violence
and
bring
avoid negotiations to end the
help lead to arrests and conVIc·
. strike.
P . Anthony Lannle, executive · lions," Lannle said, adding that
\(Ice president and chief -labor the company Is spending $112,000
negotiator for the company Of· dally on security measures.
Healsosaldthecompanyplans .
fered the reward at a Washington
news conference J'uesday and to have 3,200 full-time drivers
said at least five union officials and operate Its full, regularly
have been arrested or are under scheduled serVIce by Easter. The
Investigation for alleged violent company has hired 1, 700 replacement drivers; and about 400
activity.
drivers
are crossing their union's
"There can be no meaningful
negotiations whli~ a gun Is 'picket line. The company · Is
pointed at us, " Lilnnle said. "The providing abo\lt 50 percent of Its
service, he said.
terrorism must stop:"
The Amalgamated Council of
After the news conference, a
union spokesman repeated its Greyhound Local Unions has
condemnation of .violence and Q\leS tloneil the company's work
reiterated its wlllingt!ess to force figures and maintains the
hiring of replacement workers Is
"cooperate with local law en·
forcement authorities when Illegal.
The National Labor Relations
asked" to aid In an Investigation.
Is reviewing a complaint
Board
But the union noted that 59
people had been 1\urt on the by the union that Greyhound was
picketlines,lncludlngone person bargaining In bad faith before the
strike, and was trying to break .
killed by a bus driven by a
the union.
replacement driver .
The company has ·accuse(! ·
"One way you 'deal with
drivers, who no\\' average $24,700
(violence) Is to allow . law en·
a year, or asking for wage hikes
forcement to do Its job, We think
the company is using the violence that could only be' financed
through rare Increases. Each
as a subterfuge not to go back to
side
has accused the other of
the bargaining table." the spoIts positions.
·
distorting
kesman said . "It Is a smoke
Talks
between
management
·
screen to ·avoid bargaining. "
and the union were suspended
"We're prepared to be at the
March 18 In Tuscon. A federal
lbargalnlng) table In an hour's
mediator met separately with
notice," the spokesman said.
both sides last week but no
Union and company officials
progress was reported.
.
las r met March 18 and Lannle
Greyhound , based In Dallas, Is
said there are no further sessions
the natlon'.s largest !nterclly bus
planned. nor Is the company
company . It carried 22 million
meeting with federai ·medlators
passengers last year and Is
seeking to resolve the 'dispute.
crucial to low'lncome travelers
Lannle did not say what the who live In smaller communities
that have no bus lines.
unions must do to end the
The strike Is the first since .
violence or provide any kind of
·. time period that would indicate Greyhound was sold ln. March
the violence had ended but . 1987, officials said. A 1983 strike
suggested that union officials under ·the company's previous .
play a more active role In turning management lasted for 47 days.

Cotton, rice program
changes·are outlined

ArMlGAMATED .
' COUNCIL OF
GREYHOUND LOCAl
UNIONS·' .

ON 'STRIKE
AGAINST
G.REYHOUNv LINES INC
FOR

FAIR LABOR CONT RACT

STILL ON STRIKE - A striking Grp~·hound workers Dashes a

~ ~ '1:rl~~u=:'tJ:~

TROY, Mich. (UPI) -Buyers that any new technology must be
can expect to see a wider use of weighed by fui)Ction, cost and
solar glass In their cars as a manufacturing complexity.
to draft sugar policy at that
WASHINGTON (UPI)
means or reducing interior heat
A high priority or any glass
meeting.
Members · or a House panel
and
helping
Jess
etrlclent
but
supplier
Is to provide vehicle
' The administration has· proproposed a freeze pn cotton and
more
enVIronmentally
safe
air
makers
with
glass that can
posed retentiOn or the cotton and
rice aubsldy rates Wednesday
conditioners,
oftlclals
·
of
PPG
control
or
cut
Interior heat
sugar marketing loan, which was
and 1'8tull!d to go along with
lndustrjes
Inc.
said
Wednesday.
'
buildup
a
challenge
because
created In 1985, but bas made no
White House suggestions to
Also
expected
to
be
seen
are
designers
will
require
larger
suggestion on "target price"
change several other parts of the
new
glass
compositions
that
glass
areas.
levels. Target prices are a key
farm pi'IJII"am.
Thatwlllbecompoundedbyalr
dramatically cut infrared rays
factor In deciding the size of
The s~bcommlttee also gave
and
moiStu
re-sensitive
wind·
conditioners
that will become
subsidy payments. · ·
tentative approval to proVIsions
automatically
act!·
·
lessefflclentbecauseofconcerns
shields
that
In ad&lt;lltion, the White House
that would specify how the
vale the wipers, they said during over chlorofluorocarbon emls,
wants
to make extension of' the
go~rnment would. fi!Sl)Ond If
a tour of the company's new slons and a change to more
U.S. cotton Is too high-priced for .. lilltlai 10-month cotton Joan opAutomotive Technical Center. enVIronmentally safe coolants
tional at the administration's
the world market.
The
facUlty opened . last ~p- . within .the next few years. ·
discretion. At present, the
Deputy Agriculture Underse·
PPG, tnethlrd-largestsuppller
cretary John Campbell said ·the grower can decide whether· to . tember In Troy.
·
But
such
new
Innovations
may
of
original equiprqent automo·
obtain an eight-month extension.
administration preferred a freer
not
be
Immediately
clear
to
car
live
glass In North America,
The administration alSo wants
hand - like It has now - In
buyers,
or
even
to
automakei's.
makes
the massive windshield
to eliminate the nilnimum loan
adjusting the so-called market
That
presents
a
challenge
for
used
In
General Motors Corp.'s
prices for cotton and rice. It also
!rig loan for cotton.
S!!flPliers
like
PJ&gt;G,
which
new
front-drlvemtnlvans
like the
glass
''They have 110ne to excess with would like to use a slightly
are
working
with
automakers
to
Chevrolet
Lumina
APV.
different foW~ula for determln·
formulas," Campbell said. "We
developthemostcomplexshapes
This 17.25-square·foot wind'
think there's room for some lng loan rates, which·could lead
and largest sizes or glass ever for shield has a coating that cuts or
'to slightly lower rates.
bralnwork there."
future
vehicle designs.
absorbs over 60 percent of the
the
target
ptlce
for
Currently,
The United States grows 20,
"It
Is
an
educational
and
heat striking the glass 19 minim·
cotton
Is
72.9
cents
a
pound
and
'
percent of the world's cotton but
marketing
problem
we
fac~,''
.
lze
interior temperatures or
the minimum loan rate is 50 cents ·
only half of the U.S. crop Is used
Robert
K.
Moore,
general
·
raise
lliterlor comfort.
said
a J)ound. For rice, the target
domestically, meailing exports
manager
of
sales
for
PPG's
PPG,
which among others
price Is $10.71 per 100 pounds with
are vitaL
GM,
Chrysler Corp. and
Automotive
Glass
Group,
adding
supplies
Members of the . Agriculture a minimum loan rate of $6.50~
The package · agreed to -by
subcommittee on cotton, rice and
sugar agreed on a Package that · subco~mlttee member~ also
would continue the cotton and would require tlie Agriculture
rice marketing loans, freeze Department to announce terms
target prices, retain the or the cotton program by Nov. 1
minimum-priCe. loan · rate, and with a final announcement due
continue to base loan rates on the by Jan. · 1. An. 'amemdment
current formula. The plan also adopted . by the ' subcommittee
.would retain current cotton loan would give the government the
·program, under which farmers option of letting farmers partie!·
can put their cotton In storage for pate In the program on tl\e basis
of the Initial announcement,
up to 18 montbs. .
rather ·than the final one.
. But the.·s ubcommittee delayed
Backers said the change was
final action on the cotton-a tid rice
provisions until · April 5. Chair· necessary so farmers In earlyman Jerry Huckaby, D·La., said planting regions would not be
the. subcommittee also would try penalized.

RECLINER ,

Acid rain plan to ease
'impact rejected by Senate

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - The . granted a 20 percent Investment
Senate rejected a plan We(lnes." tax credit to utilities that put
day that would have eased the "" ·smokestack "scrubbers" on coal
Impact of acid rain control on
burning power plants In order to
CO!Il miners by giving utilities tax
reduce sulfur dioxide emiSsions.
Sulfur dioxide Is a primary
Incentives to encourage the en·
vlronmentally sound use of high·
component of acid rain, which
polluting Eastern coal.
·
has been linked to forest and lake
The Senate voted 72-25 against
damage In the Northeast and
the amendment to the clean air
Canada.
b!U as several hundred ~lners
By using scrubbers,' .utilities
from Alledonia, In eastern Ohio,
could ~ontlnue burning high- ·rallied outside the Capitol to
sulfur coal and avoid laying off
protest job losses that would
miners in the coal fields of
result ~Pm the lelllslatl®,
Appalacpla and Midwestern
In enrottbllilt"'telna11t!!" to tfle ·'Stale!! such as Ohio, Indiana and
protesters, Sen. Rober! Byrd, ·.. DlinoJs.
:·
D-W.Va., the chairman or the
·The proposal, estimated to cost
Senate Appropriations Commit·.· $1 billion over five years, was
tee, vowed.to use' all Ills Influence
designed to dissuade Midwestern
to help them.
.. and Appalachian utilities from
"I grew up In a coal miner's
switching from high-sulfur East·
home," Byrd said. "I slept In a
ern coal to low-sulfur Western
coal miner's bed. I married a
coalasalowcostwayofmeetlng
coal miner's daughter. '
the acid rain .reduction provl' 'The man who used to pick the
sjons of the clean air bill.
.
banjo with me When I plsyed the
The bill requires a• lO million
fiddle died In a slate fall. ... I
ton reduction In sulfur dioxide
carried the heavy coffins ot coal
emissions by the turn of the
miners on the steep hills of West' century, with virtually all the
VIrginia.
reductions coming from about
"My heart lias always been
100 coal burning power plants In
with you," Byrd told the miners,
Appalachia and the Midwest.
Ills voice rising dramatically.
Without any Incentives to keep
~'You are my roots and you will
using high-sulfur cpal; the En vir·
always be my rootS. I will never,
onmental Protection Agency esnever, ne..,er forget you."
tlmates 3,000 to 5,000 miners In
Byrd later met with coal miner
the East will lose their jobs
ramllles and promised he would
because of the diminished utility
press his. legislation to provide
demand for high-sulfur coal.
special unemployment benefits
In addition to saving' coal
to miners and other workers who
miner jobs, the tax credits would
lo~ their jobs because of the
help affected utilities hold down
clean air bill.
·
electricity rate Increases stem·
Senate leaders, concerned
ming from costly acid rain
abOut the minimum $500 million
control measures.
price tag of ijyrd's all'lfndment, . - Specter and other supporters
have proposed a compromise
of the tax credit plan argued that
plan, bu 1 Byrd told reporters the
Midwestern and Apjlalachlan
offer was unacceptable to him. · states deserve financial assist·
"The counterproposal does not
ance because they were being
dQ what needs to be done," Byrd
required to do more tlian their
said.
fair share or acid rain control.
But he said that negotiations
Specter said that nine Midwest·
are not dead. ''The door Is not
ern and Appalachian states
would have toachleve90percent
closed,:' he said.
Byrd's amendment Is scheof the acid rain reductions
duled for a floor yote Th~rsday,
requlrect under the chiao air bill
but Senate Democratic leader · through 1995, even though they
George Mitchell or Maine said he
were responsible for only 51
still hoped toreachan~&gt;greement
percent or total sulfur dioxide
with Byrd.
·
emissions nationwide.
The disproportionate burden,
Mitchell also said he did not .
consider Byrd's amendment a they said, resulted from placing
"ileal-buster" that could up~t all acid rain control requirethe -compromise bill worked out 111ents on utilities and exempting
between Senate leaders and the factories from any cuts. They
administration, whrCh 1s con· said states such as Texas had
cerned about the cost of Byrd's substantial tndustrtal sulfur dl·
proposal.
.
olllde ~isalons that would reMitchell said he favors some main untouched by the clean air .
form or job protection for miners
bill.
and other workel'8 bui Byrd's
But opponenta said the tax
amendment was DOl' structured credit · plan was unfair In that
the right way. .
rewarded Ml~est utllltles lhat
~nators rejected another · had dragged their feet on acid
proJ!Oilll to help coat miners
rain cleanup while etrectlvely
Wednesday, votlnl doWn an
J)enallzlng "clean" utnltlea that
amendment by Sen. Al'len Spechad redueed their emissions
ter, R·Pa., whlcb would bave without any federal

Two more shareholders back. Silnmons

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American Honda, also expects
Its new Soiextra 7010composltlon
glass to be adopted by some
carmakers within the next five to
seven year~.
Now Installed on several top
line models or Flat's Lancia
Thema sedan In Europe, the
bluish tint glass blocks nearly 60
percent of the sun's energy while
transmitting 75 percent of the
sun's VIsible light - 5 percent
more than the North American
vehicle standard.
The rotor of glass, .whlch has
for the most part been green
because of the Iron oxide used tn
the tinting process, Is also an
area that may play.a larger role
In future vehicle design In which
glass will account tor a larger
percentage of the exterior surface, Moore said.
Surprisingly, there Is no com·
prehenslve data on hand yet to
determine which shades may be
easier on a driver 's eyes or which
transmit · a wider light band, he
said.
.
PPG and other glassmakers
are also developing sun roofs
with photovoltalc cells that act!-

Skip's Gone ·Again

'·

Dally NeWs said.
·MoVIe star Kathleen Turner's
husband, Jay Weiss, who leased
the Happy Land building from
DILorenzo and sublet to Elias
Colon, the club operator who died
In the fire, was cited last year for
failing to proVIde heat and hot
water at another building owned
by D!Lorenzn, the News said . .
DILorenzo was fined $8,750 for
violations at the Harlem buDdlogs and Deputy Housing Com·
missioner Ron Davis told the
News, "lor us to take this "!any
cases to court.agalnst a landlord
Is a signal that he Is a real
·problem."
The heir to ·one of the city's
biggest real estate fortune's ,
DILorenzo qwns scores of build-'
logs, the News said. Real estate
records show many are leased to
corporations or partnerships
headed by Weiss. the newspaper
said.
.
Outside the Happy Land club
Wednesday, two bunches of flow.
ers lay against a tree as the ·
curious gawked at the burneed
out shell of the two-story
building.
Nearby, at the Rivera Funeral
Home, mourners wept and
clutched each other for comfort
as they filed past the open
caskets of the victims.
Edith Martinez, 19, collapsed
In the arms of a . friend at the
wake after VIewing her 22-year·
old cousin, Denny Alvarez, who
died In the arson fire.
''Denny loved everybody,'' she
cried. "Why did he have to die?"
The mourners we~e calm. as
they waited In line to enter the
funeral home, but lost. their .
composure as soon as they got
Inside arid saw the bodies o( 17
f~ vicllins In Qpen caskets
upholstered in baby blue.

ERIE, Pa. (UPI) - A bank·
ruptcy judge . Wednesday ap·
pointe.d a trustee to oversee an
lnvesiment firm accu~d · In a
lawsuit of mtshandlln11 $10 mil·
lion from funeral directors
throughout western
Pennsylvania.
Judge Warren Bentz made the
decision during a hearing lnvolv·
lng Mechem Financial Inc.,
which flied for Chapter 11 protec·
tlon in U.S. Bankruptcy Court at
Erie Friday.
A.Plt11barrb attorney !'$res·
entllgleflllll!l'al directors said he
w• p iued wttb the decision by
Bentz, who also maintained a

"v" sign while walking the picket line Wednesday. Gteyhound
personnel have been on otrlke sine~ M~ch 2. ( UPI)

•

Report city sued social club'owners .over other:_. viq(atiQn$.
. NEW YORK (UP!) - Landlords of the Illegal social club
where 87 people were killed In an
arson fire have been cited
repeatedly by the city for hazard·
ous conditions In sites they own
or lease, a published reJ?ort said
Thursday.
The Dally News report.ed that
real estate millionaire Alex Dl·
Lorenzo HI, who owned the
building that housed the lll·fated
Happy Land social club, has been
slapped with 1,585 housing viola, lions In fou~ Harlem apartment
buildings.
Some 150 or the violations
against bu lldlngs owned by DILorenzo and his business associates
were considered dangerous, sue)!
as cracked walls and cascading
leaks, the newspaper said.
A lawyer for the jilted lover
accused of setting the flre Sun·
. da~· . the worst .l')lass slaying In
U.S. history, said Ills client will
tes tl!y before the Bronx grand
jury Investigating murder and
arson charges against him.
Julio Gonzalez, 36, a Cuban
army deserter who came ·to the
United .States In the Martel
boatllft, was under a suicide
watch In the prison psychiatric
ward at Bellevue :Hospital
Center.
Joseph Sloboda. one of five
Legal Aid lawyers working on the
· case, said Gonzalez was aware
he faced up to 2,000 years In the
case for the 87 counts of murder
ualnst him.
Lawyers for Gonzalez, who
prosecutors said has made a full
,VIdeotaped confession, planned
to return to court Friday andl
hear whether or not. the grand
jury has Indicted their client.
The suspect's former girl·
friend, Lydia .Feliciano, who
worked at the club and who
escaped unhurt from the blaze,
was under pollee protection after
threats from family and friends
or the vlcllms.
Wakes for 17 victims or the tire .
- the city's deadliest since the
Triangle Shirt Waist factory
blaze killed 145 people In 1911 - ·
were held Wednesday and more
were scheduled for Thursday and
Friday around the city.
Most of the Vlctilns were poor
immigrants from Honduras and
el~where In Central America.
The city's crackdown on Illegal
clubs like the Happy Land, which
began shortly after the blaze, has
been beefed up with narcotics
qfflcen taken from the Tactical
Narcqtlcs Teams, pollee said.
· City records show that DILorenzo is the landlord of at least
two other Illegal !IQCial clubs that
were ordered c!OIIed In 1988, the

Pometoy-Mkldlepo......, Ohio

7

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - In
another blow rorLoekheed Corp.,
two major Institutional stock·
holders . said Wednesday they
~ve backed a alate of directors'
put jogether by Texap investor
Harold Simmons, wllo II seeking
to takt over the aerOIIJ8ce giant.
The ~ holden - the Callfot·
nla Teache1'8 Rftlrement Fund,

wltb 425,000 shares, and the
Florida State Board of Admltlll·
tratlon, wltb 210,000- represent
about 1 percent or Lockbeed'l63
million sbarea.
The dllcl0111n1 followed Tues·
day'a annoucement by the can.
tomla Public Employees Retirement System that It had voted Its
500,000 shares for Simmons.
.\.

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vate Interior coollna fans and
variable transmittance coatlnp
that could ,darken the glass In
parked cars with a switch to
reduce radiant energy In the
Interior.
Some breakthroughs In automotive glass have not always
been successful, while others are
just downright Impractical, like
a double-paned glass that could
dramatically cut Interior sound.
The antf.lacerallve wind·
shields found on some GM cars
severalyearsagoandsupplledln
part by PPG are no longer
offered, Moore said. ThOsewlndshields had a plastic laminate on
the Interior side, Instead of-being
.sandwlc:hed between t.wo glass
layers to reducee occupant
injury .
. But they were found to scratch
easily If consumers did not care
for them properly, Moore said.

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�Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Beat of .the Bend

-People in the news ___.....__...:..,_______

The local connecrion...

1

B:r BOB BOI:FLK: ..
married life.
There will be a bit of a local
So the celebration was a famlly
· connection on the
Feud dinner carried In by the Thomas
show which airs
chlldren and their famllles. Preson television at
ent for the occasiOn were John
7:30 p.m .
and Patty Thomas and their
Friday.
sons, Jetftey and James. .of
O!le of the two
Portsmouth: Zana and Peter
famtlles taktng
Yakoublan and their chlldren.
• part Is the BarGeorge and Kimberly Ann. of
. !lett Famlly of
Grove City. and another grandNewport. Ky. Mrs. Bartlett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ThoJane, Is a slsier of Vernon. (Tex) mas, Christina Lynn MIUer and
Blevins who resides on Pomeroy · her husband, Dean Miller, and
Pike. 'The Bartlett family was their daughter, Sarah, of Grove
selected to take parlin the show &lt;;:lty. Christina provided the
out ot about 700 families who decorated cake for the family
were looked over by the selection celebration. Joining the group
panel In the Cincinnati area. also were Dean's paren~s. Mr.
Jane refused to participate but and Mrs. Lewis Dean MIUer of
her husband, James Bartlett, Lancaster.
and the couple's three daughters,
·And....., by the way- Gretta and
Jackie, Tracey and Joy and Edgar certainly want to thank all
Tracey's husbands will be the of you tor the cards, flowers and.
conies tan ts.
calls of congratulations . they
The Bartlett Famlly, Jane's received to help mark their
sister, Jorhetta Roach, and her golden anniversary. They espe:
brother, .James Blevins, were In clally appreciate the Calvary
HoUywood on Feb. 17 to tape the Baptist Church which donated
. show. The trip was expense free five Bibles In their name to honor
for the Bartlett Famlly. I hate to the couple on their anniversary.
spoil the show for you, but the
Bartlett Famlly did not win.
It you enjoy gospel music, a
However, It was a great fun
new show called Gospel Jubilee
experience for the group and the will be aired for 1hz first time on
.outing Included a drive to Las Saturday, March 31, on TNN- ·
Vegas, NevB!da, where they spent Nas!tvllf11 Network. The show
a few hours seeing t~e sights.
will be a fred for the first time at 3.
p.m. and then will be rei&gt;eated at
. Mr. arid Mrs. Edgar Thomas of 6:30 p.m. each Saturday and on
Nye Avenue, Pomeroy, observed the following Monday at 8 p.m.
.their 50th wedding anniversary and 11 p.m. The last rerun of each
·on Saturday, March 24.
program will take place at 2:.30
Edgar and Gretta were marp.m. on the fqlloW!ng Tuesday for
.rled on Match 24, 1940, at ihe
the 13 week period for which the
home of her parents, George and
show Is scheduled.
Mary Elsie Brown ln ,M inersvllle
--..:.... ·
with the late Dr. Alonzo Stark,
In answer to a Columbus
. who was pas lor of the Pomeroy
reader who had found a postcard
First Baptist Church, o!flclilttng. , picturing Bungalow Park " In
When the golden anniversary Middleport, Charles Edwards,
date first arose, the Thomas
lorig-tlme Middleport resident,
children kicked around the Idea
reports that the park was located
of a reception at a public
on North Second Ave., In an area
location. However, the Thomas
across from the Sunoco Station.
:home on Nye Avenue Is scbe·duled to •'go'' due to plans for the
Aren't those basketball play·widening of the avenue and the
ers something these days?
children felt they would like to
Seem$11ke they can bit the hoop
,observe the anniversary in the
from just abOqt anywhere. And
horpe where they had always
- George doesn't like .broccoli
lived. In fact. Edgar bas lived in
and causes an uproar by saying
the home for 75 years and Gretta
so ·and refusing to eat ft. I never
·has lived in the same residence
have liked It either - but who
lor the 50 years of the Thomas's
cares? Do keep smiling.

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NOIOIIY COMPARES
ElfCTIIONICI SPECMIIZATION

Wlllong, Megan Andrews, Jane Ann Xarr,
and Gwen Hall.

. Officers were elected at the
r:ecent meeting of the Ohio Eta
Phi !;;bapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the home of
Gharlene Hoefilch on Tuesd,ay .
The
ritualWith
of Jane
jewelsAnn
teaKarr,
was
obl!erved
d
1
Kathy Wilfong, Gwen Ha 1• an

members of the chapter.
Elected were Susan Clark,
.president; Betsy · Jqnes, vice
president-, Theresa Kennedy,
treasurer; Debbie Evans, recording secretary; and Kathy
Wilton&lt;&gt;,
" · corresponding secre·
ti.ry. Committee chairmen are
Megan Andrews, social; Jamie
""
·
_ _ _ _ _.;..;.
·,

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a good indication that the situation Is serious.
When someone, like your
By John C. Wolf, D.O.
friend, who has had a bright
Associate Professor . of Family
outlook begins to be "down In the
Medicine : ·
dumps" anil talks about suicide,
Ohio Unlvenlty College of OsteoI'd take his statements very
pathic Medicine
serlou~Jy. He Is very likely
suffering from depression, which
Q!lestlon: A friend of mine has
can be defined as "an emotional
been .acting weird recently. He
disorder characterized by 'feeltalks about bow bad he reels and
Ings of profound sadness." ·
says lie may decl&lt;!f . to kill
The' good news Is that there are
himself. He's always been a
very effective treatments for this
positive person and I have
"profound sadness" we . call
trouble taking .-.his statements
depressiOn. In some cases, psy.seriously. Is It likely he'll actuchotherapy- the so-called '"talk.ally kill himself?
ing cure" - workS well. In
Anawer; First, let me make a
others, one ·of several medica·
few general ' comments abOut · :tlons can be real life-savers.
suicide threats. Then, I'll adQuestion: What can I do to
dress your specific question.
help? r
'
Answer: Often ·a suicidal per1 AithoUJh mo(t f)eople who
threaten sulCI de dbn' t !W through
son wUI pick.out just one person
with . It, you should .always be
to drop a few hints to. If you're
concerned about suicidal Intenthe chosen one, take that respon- ·
tions. E&lt;!ch year about . half a · slblllty seriously. Your willingmillion·Americans attempt to kUI
ness to discuss the situation may
themselves and about 10 percent · be more helpful to your friend
succeed.
than you'll ever know. But
It:s very dltflcult to judge
please, encourage him to see a
whether a person who threatens
physician or mental health prosulclde ·wlll actually go through
fessional. · Ir he refu5!!s, go to a
with his or her Intentions: There . · professiOnal yourself and ask
.ate $Orne statistics · on this
him or her what you should do . .
subject, but they are not of much
Most cities have a telephone
use hi a specific case. For the
suicide prevention service. and
record, males are much more
.t he mental health or psychiatry
Ilk ely to take their own Uves than
department of a l~al hospital
are females. In one rec~nt year,
can also be of help. You may also
as an example, for each 100,000 choose to contact a member of
people in the U.S. population,
the clergy.
..
about 19 men committed suicide
What most depressed people ·
compared to only about five
lose sight of Is tba t depress ion is
women: The suicide rate Is the
almost always a temporary
highest among men between the
condition. Even the. mqst seages or 75 and 84 years old. Ot~er
verely depressed people -If they
factors that make S!llclde more
d&lt;;~n't succumli to ' sulclile ,likely 'are a recent significant
typically get 'better within six
loss, !Ike that·or a spouse or job, a
months to a year. This wlll occur
family history of suicide, or a
even without treatment. The
previous attempt. Also, the suiaverage duration for all types of
cide risk Is greater In those who
depression combined Is about
constantly worry about becomthree months. and 75 . to 85
Ing, seriously lll.
percent of all patients recover
One of the most . Important
completely . .
clues to whether ·someone Is
really S!!rlous about suicide Is
your own Impression· when you
talk to hltn or her. If the person
seems hopeless and helpless or
makes_you feel depressed, that's

100-Watt ~ck System

Forest Run UMC
plans celebration~-·

SYttem 1010 By Realist~

Save'IOO

The Fo(est .nun United Metho-

ftM~=44a-.;
........
.·-~
...............
.......'"'
...

_
----·-

dist Church Is planning to celebrate 75 years. The first planning
session was held at the church
last Sul\(lay. ·
Mrs. Varela Arnold is chair·
man coordinator.
·
The observance wil I be held on
Oct. 7.
·
If anyone bas any Information,
old records, or memorabilia that
might help complete Ibe history,
call Mrs. Arnold at992-2249, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott at 992,2385, Mrs.
Mary K. Roush at 992· 7858, or
Edith Sisson at 992-5660.

Hi·apeed dubbing, dlaltal
tuner, 5·band EQ, 11S"·1234

Cordi... Phone or

"10"' 1 Beepert... Answerer

cho'C. . .. . . '40

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Light Dl!p!ay

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-

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ollorlllll411110

.,'

Solid Ollk and Alder tram11 with an array of beautiful
covera. These ch1lr1 are very comfortable • nd will
compliment any decor.

SALE PRICED FROM ONLY

S299
-----,:=---1·. L(IQI~.

,)

Pearl L. Russell, Racl~. spent
the weekend as a ~tof Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman, and the
former Kenda Russell and Kim
Chapmail or Plckerlarton.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Carter,
Baltimore, also attended a baby
shower for S_helly Chapman
Carter.

/1.

WASHER
• $.4'llf ():lpocl'f •

~!&gt;ad·---

• ~ ICIT!tile Con'-Oot'\ Celli

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W'Ol ~ *'10 Li'f ...... Dotii:J6t.O ;y
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Reg. 'S529
.

Observes binhday
'

Travis Hubbard. son of Dave
and 'Feresa (Thomas) Hubbard,
celebrated )lis second birthday
recently with two parties.
The first PB!rty was held on his
blrtliday In Aiken, S.C. It was
hosted 1:Jy his parents and c~rrled ·
a "Mickey Mouse" theme. ·
· The second party was held at
the hom"' of his grandparents,
Harold and Charlene Thomas,
Middlepprt. where the same
theme was carried out.
Attending were his . parents,
grandparents, ~P:eat grandmoth·
ers, Stella Thomas and Mabel
W~!bum , Tim. Adam and Ashley
Thomas, Jeff, Julie and Stacey
Hubbaril, Deb and Junior Oftenberger, Adam Triplett, and
Wendy ·McNickle. Sending gifts
were Dave and Plane Tbpm!IS.-

.

Sale
$449

PRICE BREAK ON
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TRAVIS HUBBARD

. •

Sale
S339

2..... ~

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POMROY

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·Persona.! ne\vs noteS

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ELECTRIC
DRYER

.· -RABBITS •••••
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Olefin Pile
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PC•Compatlble System

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·s1 6 79

Blaetlnar, service; and Julie
Dillon, ways and means·.
Linda Jones presided at - the
meeting In which the Selling of
d
fair ads were dlscusse .
Members are io contact fair
advertisers and tum theadsinby
May 1.
.
.
Founders Day 'will ·be lleld
.;:::

, ~~W~f.s~t

. Level-Loop Carpet ·

,•&amp; Y~r W1rr11nty .
•Anti·Stet .
· ·

'

Susan Clark named sorority president

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Oscar

Community Calendar

i

.

this. cloua and pornographic." Attor- whlcb won him an
sometime before mld-1992.
ney Bertram Plelda said Lucu Is week, lacludel a fictional ~eene
IN SXYWALKER'S IMAGE:
Georre Laeu says the force Is greatly upset that the Skywt.lker In which Syracuae pollee beat
not with the rap .group I Live trademark Is being Impr-operly anti-war protesll!l'a durlq a1970
uaed. "Not only. that, but It's . demo111tratloa. '.'A feature film
Cretl', and his Lucastllm Ltd,
company Is suing because one of bellll! used by a guy that's putting Is not a documentary," · St!)lle
the singers uses the nall)e Luke out records ot a type that are. the said In a letll!r to the Pollee
Sk:rywalker - with an extra Y. · exact opposite of all that Luke Benevolent Association. "I took
The $200 mUllan suit seekS to stop Skywalker stands for," Fields creative license to make my
point and sometimes sacrificed
said.
Skyyi&lt;ralker, whose real name Is
smaller truths for larger ones."
Luther Campbell, !rom capltallzSTONE TIIKOWN: Director Nancy Lllrnlne Boffmu, a state
lng on the Image of the heroic
Luke Sky'walker In the "Star Oliver Slone, long concerned senator who was a protester at
Wars" movies . The suit also says with ensuring that VIetnam vete- the rally, says she's not satlsfle4.
rans get a fair shake, has "I'm not sure If I was a member
the 2 Live Crew, recently the
center of an uproar in Florida apologized fo.r giving the Syra- of the PBA If I would be
over selling explicit records to cuse, N.Y., l'ollce Department comfortable with an apology that ·
minors, makes music that Is an unfair shake. Stone's movie refers to sacrificing smaller
"Born on the Fourth of July," truths for larger ones,". she said.
•'sexually expllcl(,.obscene, sala-

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
Ualled ~ JuteraaUoaal
NEW ROLE FOR JACKSON:
· Actress Gleada Jacbon Is running for Britain's Parliament
and says she'll give up acting If
elected. The Oscar·wlnnlng star
or such films as "A Touch of .
Class" and "Women In Love"
beat three other contenders late
Tuesday for the right to run for a
Labor Party seat in an area of
north London. "Its quite wonderful that I've won and It's a
humbling experience," said
Jackson, who pleflged to give up
acting and devote herself to
politics If she wins the par llamentary election that wlll be held

__________

THURSDAY
Point Pleasant High School Band
• RACINE - The Morse Chapel will have Its Black Knight Revue
: church located on County Road on Friday and Saturday at 7:30
·as, Racine Portland Road, is p.m. and on Sunday at 3 p.m. The
: holding a revival through Satur- ·theme Is "Fiesta" and the 20th
. day . Speaker will be Rev. John annual performance Is live.
· Jeffereys of Galllpolis. There Tickets are $3.50 tor adults and$2
will also be special singing for children. The event . will be
: nightly. Rev. David Curfman held in the high school gymna: Invites the publiC to attend.
sium.
SATuRDAY
: POMEROY - The Pomeroy
POMEROY - The Bells and
·group of A.A. and AI-Anon wlll Beaus Dance Club wlll sponsor
meet Thursday at 7 p.rp. al the an open dance on Saturday at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in senior citizens center in Pome1 Pomeroy: For more Information.
roy. The caller will be Kent Hall ·
call 1-800-333-5051.
and the dance Is 9pen to all
western square dalicers. ·
MIDDr£PORT - 'i'liere wlll
REEDSVILLE - Tbe junior
be an organizational meeting for
class
of Eastern.Hlgb School wlll
all team managers and others
have
a
spring carnival on S~tur­
Interested In a men's summer
day from 4-9 p.m. at the high
basketball league on Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Middleport VIllage school. Dinner will be served
from 4-6 p.m. by the athletic
Hall.
boosters.
BURLINGHAM - · There wlll
CHESHIRE - The Gallla
be
an old fashioned all night
Meigs Community Action
hymn
sing ori Saturday at 7:30
Agency will have a tree clothing
p.m.
at
the Word of Life Church
day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to
noon at the old high school in Burlingham. ' There will be a
potluck at breakfast and Paster
building In Cheshire.
Ray Lau!lermUt . i11vltes the
' REEDSVILLE-Tberewlllbe public.
·a meeting of the Eastern Alumni
LONG BOTI'OM - The Fel·
·Association on Thursday at 7:30 lowship Church of the Nazarene
:p.m. at Eastern High School. All will have a gospel sing on ·
Interested alumni are welcome Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at
to attend.
10:30 a.m. The Conners from
Sutton. W.Va. will be the fea.
REEDSVILLE- The Was tern tured singers. John DoUglas.
High School student council and pastor, Invites the public.
the American Red Cross will !)old
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
a blood drive on Thursday from
Cub
Scout Pack 249 will be having
10 a .m. to 2 p.m. In the
·
its
annual
spring round up on
gymnasium.
Saturday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church at 2 p ..m. For
· FRIDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP- The more information, contact, Dale
Lebanon Township Trustees will Thoene at 992-7616 or George
hold their regular meeting on Wright at 992-2439.
Friday at 7 p.m. at the township
SUNDAY
prqe.
ATHENS- There will be tack
BRADBURY - The Bradbucy auction ·sponsored by the Go!dell
Church of Christ will have Galls 4H Club on Sunday, 1:30 ·
weekend revival on Friday, p.m., at the Athens County Fair
SatiD'day, and Sunday at 7: 30 Grounds In the junior fair
p.m. nightly. Former ministers building.
or the church will be preaching
SYRACUSE - Dan Hayman
each night. The public Is Invited
and the Faith Trio will be singing
to atll!nd.
at the Sunday evening service at
LONG BOTI'OM - There will the Syracuse Mission at 6 p.m.
be pancake supper on Friday at 5 The mission Is located on Cherry
p.m. at the Carmel Church . Street and the public Is Invited to
building located on Carmel attend.
Road. All proceeds will go
toward repairing the chqrcb. The
MORNING STAR - Revival
public Is Invited to attend.
service~ will be held at the
, MIDDLEPORT- The MiddleMorning Star Onlted MethQj!lst
port Order of the Eastern Star Church Sunday thro111h Friday
will bave a chicken and noodle at 7:30 p.m nlglltly. Putor
dinner on Friday from 11 a.m. to Kenny Ba~ will be the bring
7 p.m. In the basement or the measageandtberewlllbeapeclal ·
slngfnl each night. Tbe public Is
llluonic Temple.
Invited to at lend •.
POINT PLEASANT - The

..

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

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·---- -

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Tullday.Satwdlly

8:30-1:00

FlEE
DEUYIIY ·

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II'PIWICIS, tv'S, noo1 cov•ano
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992·•671

DOWIITOWII

POMIIOY. 0110

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.-~:--=~~:_ . :By
- ··--. -i·~··-. •

- ..!.. • •

--

•

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---.

The Daily Sentillel~·

Th_
e Bend

}

~~· • ~·.

'

'

~.Mach

.·

..

. ..

Classifi

I

28,1910 .;

:Pta•

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•

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l
~ orna · ~ atety=', .·ee
I be
. 0 bserved 1"ocally
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Ann ·
·
.
L.andefS
De~~r.Anl.a'ldrn: Afterlelding ,
~0:~:::.:~~~': ;~=~~;:~?
~a:~:~f:v:r:~;:~~~~h:!
Pinl wife, { ~ doWIIIIIirs IDd L----~:!;::!:::1 used on an unlimited basis as It
r::r:.~==~..:a:~
Is," Johnston said.

•

,

· Bu5h:to ·give
first address
. . .'

on AIDS today

Did you know that this .was ·- possible tornados.
If a tornado hits and you are in
"Tornado Safety Week?" Well. It
Is, and wtth that In mlpd, an· office building, stand in an
WASHINGTON (UP I) ~Presremember, spring Is a period of Interior hallway oti a lower floor, ident Bush prepared .a ·.~ serious
warming temperatures, but Is
preferably In the basement.
·, message" aboutcompafslonand
often accOmpanied by violent ' In factories. when a tornado· hope for his first major address
storms.
.
warning is received, · post a on the deadly AID_S epld_emlc, a
Meigs County elementary lookout. Workers should move White House official said.
school students received approx-. quickly to the section of the plant·
In . a speech .scheduled for ·
lmately 3,500 "W~at You Should offering the greatest protection, Thursday." Bush planned to tell
Knoll' AbOut Tornados" sat.ety "in accordance wllh advance the National Leadership Coall·
brochures from the Ohio Insu· plans.
tlon on AIDS the nation was
ranee Institute. The institute
In homes; small bulldings, and fighting tbe disease with "dig·
donates and distributes the bra- ·vehicles, go to the basement or to . nlty, compassion, care ..: and .
chures as part of a state-wide · an interior part of the lowest without discrimination," the unl·
effort to Inform the public
level. Get under something dentlfled official said.
regarding severe storm
sturdy. If In a mobile home, or .
However, AIDS activists critic·
precautions.
vehicle, ,leave and go to a !zed the administration's
substantial structure. If there is position.
·
The United ~tales Department no sheller near,bv, lie flat in the
"Compassion. is not going · to
of Commerce reports that torna- ileafest ditch, ravine, or culveri'·· take care of".lhe people ·Who are
dos can approach from any and shield your· head with your dying In the streets," said Jean
direction, but in Ohio about 90 haMs.
McGuire of the AIDS Action
percent or all tornados come
In schools. whenever pOssible, Council.
,
from the southwest quadrant of go to an Interior hallway on the
McGuire said ~ush's request
the horizon. All tornados come lowest floor . Avoid auditoriums for. abOut "$1.6 billion for AIDS
from thunderstorms and gener· and gymnasiums or other struc· · resea.!"Ch -and treatment in the·
ally drop to the gro,und from the lures with wide free span roofs.
" pro~ federal budget was
back portion of the· storm. they ·
Charles w, Legar, 'director of . "eSsentiAHy .level funding" and
are usually preceded by very the Meigs Co11nty Dlsas ter Se_rvl· was Inadequate.
heavy rains andor ·hail. If hail ces, acd Pauline Atkins, Farm
Other AIDS ·activists planned
falls from a thunderstorm, it is Bureau Coordinator, remjndres·
to protest Blisli's s~h aJ a
an indicaqon the storm has large !dents that a tornado watch Washington hotel. ·
' .,
amounts Qf energy and may means tornaqos are expected to
"'This protest"Is basically to,let .
become severe: The larger the develop: A · tornado warning. PreSident Bush know on lhe flr~t •
hail. the · ml)re potential for means a tornado has actually .· qpportunlty of his willlllgo~s to
· strong thu"llderstorm winds and
been ·
speak out on AIDS that ~es ilat
, doing enough," s~l~ Linda J'.!eredlt~ of the group A:cT-UP.
·
•The group wants Bush ,. t6
rescind a"policy that affects lhe
ability of ~ople Infected with the
AIDS virus "to. enter the country,
and to "spend the federal money ·
11ecessary to end this epld~lc, ".
she sa·ld. • .
·

•

:

ANN LANDERS

soc~~.2DIIiili'ot' 1rydeu ...~...
24
tolla ofPIIIII'IIIMII.
ell:. Alooe·
.W...welllddMIW
. !llllfullofiiiOIIu
..-thltdry~~OIIIofdleo~aaupply_~
- """"
I clonou:6pcoupons, Am.I~uily
huahlild wllo lw IOIIC bllwW. ·
Meln'lll'hile&gt; lhe lir c:ondiliona'lll'e
slillindlecloset,llldlhekildlalsink
driplllllinilyUIIderlhec:abinet.

.

· (Rec. U.S. Patent Off.)
By ,United Press International
·
Marlnea retreat
TERRA ALTA, W.Va. (UPI)It Isn't always easy to call off the
Marines, but even the tough
leathernec.ks could sympathize
with the sensitivities or resort
homeowners.
. 'Ale Marines or Alr Group 29 at
flnt obtained permission to land
their helicopters on Alpine Lake
1n West Vlrgtpla's Terra Alta
resort town.
But tbey sounded the retreat
alter residents were annoyed
about all t~ no~ from the ftrat
I

.

t

•

11
15

••.oo

11.00

u.ao

Ovor 15 Worllo
.
,20
.30

Y. C. YOUNG.

992-621

.4~
.10.

111. 00

11.30/dlfll

· .OIItdoy

.._,-.,.~ ~eill. Gillie or M•, an coum• mu-. ..,._.,.. -~'"'l"'-'::'•:.:•::•:••::lo:•.:co~•=•::ou:•-~••::.••::.
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. . .y Mit FouM 101 uno. , I WC'tdt wUI N
roHi

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let all OIPIUIIIH•t IS dowlM• PfiH of
. , ...... .. . . ., . . Of'lly Ylld.
........ il not NIIIOnllbtt tor tirroralfttr tint Cltv . ICh•

•Pt•-: et,..
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• .._ " - lnUII •• llicl in

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tf\ .... " · ltl-...t A.,_.,'"' th• Gtlli·
poNt DtW,. Trtbunt. ,.tefteng ow.r 11.000 hom•

wiM

'

PUblic Notice
•

Public Nollc!e

CO~

OEADLIN£ -

. MONDAY PAPER
TUIIDAY PAPER

WI.DNIIOAY PAIIEII'

. THUIIIDAV PIU'IA

••,

PfUDAY ltAitllll
lUNDAY li'All'lfll

Reeultc

I. L IOLlOII
.TIUCIING

DA'f 1111011! 'UiiJ,.ICAftOJ\1

_,1,00 A.M. IATUIIDAY .
2,QOP.M . MONDAY ·'

-

2:00P.M ' FJ!ItDA¥

Busin~'ss

Situotod

2

.

in the VIllage of

In Marnory , ·

In Memory Of
LUCILLE .
BRANDT

EASTER. SOCI&lt;S?

-'

Who Paned
A,_way Two Years

•
'

Ago

.L ET US MAKE THEM
FOR YOU ••• ·

·''

SIZES

•

NEWIOIN TO 11
OYEI 20 IEAUnFUL COLORS'
AVAILABLE,

'

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.'

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.

•
I

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(WE NEED AT LEAST ONE DAY NOTICE)

·,, - ,
'

,With C~riat we'll
; . apend eternity.

I

'

: ..March 29, 1sea
· GMt will not laat.
joy will return.
For through tha
teara
I claarly
'
.
:ll'~ while we part
but for 1 time,

l !

·

••

'

,,

'

.

, 992·6110

epproioed voluo.
Jom• M. Sautoby,
Shorlff of
MollO County, Ohio

IUTUND Tia
SALES and
SEIYICI

131, 1 5, 22. 28, 3tc

•Front End
Alltnment

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE lo hereby tivon

•Oil Change • Lube

•Brae Work

«

IIAIN 51., IUTLAIII
1·15-'110-111

·P!IIJIIc H!Oilce .

Roger .Hysell
. Garage

FilE DIPT, ·

11. 124, Pwwwooy Ollie

lalhdi"M4Inl.

6:SO PJI,

Vou were 1 our aun·
our laughter
our Nln.

'

.

ANNlA,.,._

. noW thltt VoU'N
gonoo time do• not
' • - the pain. ·
1. uane but not .forgot-

C IIIia, ~ Sl'ndica11

ten..

3 AnnounceiiMinta

RUSSELL STOVER

CREME EGGS

SUNGLASSES
'1

IEG.4~W

.FRANKFORD EGGS
COCONUT CIUM
FMIIT &amp; NUT PEANUT IUMR

MINI EGGS

99c·
NOW ·
.·

·aEG. sua .

.

'
·'

Stop In
Today!
'You~: ~Ill

Hometown

1

·Piaarmaey

33(

" HappyAdl

Solill - Chocolott
Eftl With ACrisp
. . $uglr Shell
.

ltg.SU9
601: .

.....
··- ,......, ......
PIIUCII=

~!!!

PEANUT
BUTTER .EGGS'.
lEG. coc

NOW

(
27

BINGO
EVERY THURSOAY
YFW POST 9926
MASON, W. VA.
.

TY-TAIS
EXTRA STRENGTH

ACnAMINOPIIEN
500 mg 100'•
'
REG. $3.25

.

. MOIIDAY~
API&amp;J, -.
1990

'

I

'

$ 99
NOW

OPfiiS
GOlD
INIOIU

i

'.

••
'
.I
I

I

t .
I

!
I

~

t

?
•

742~2771

lake

own

-.. "'·
Ol'"'"*
d 110 ........

111, _ ,

-

Rt
In l'oo1or.
~

.

11~

'*• c~ .. 11111111'1f
- · ....... clolh!nl ........
ruu

3 ". •

-. ...... . .......
.._., ,....... ottelr, ...., ~
,.... lawn furniture.

0to1 T-. Poollll - .

t"n . .

..,..,lunlflur8;

.........

rii.£=:.-:i.$~

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

'

·
'

.~=;;::::;;~·==:;::=::=~"~12~-110-~1~,1 - Or - - lelrto ?atill .,
STREO --...._.
=::"..:T=•AfrrJ
PillA
•• •t
Clulb, = 1'1101.. .
~

. . . . miiUIIMOUI.

=·

t

=..,~.=- II

·· LOWEST PIICES

JIGHEST QUALITY

FIE£ LOCAL DEUY£RY

-

eoo•wy

Solo:

_,_.,,..._,

.T••• I •••

......., -

JO.

Pomeroy,

..
...

MlciCIIIporl
VIcinity

a

DAVE'S
SMAU ENGINE
·· IIPAII
J.e.ltclat Ytiler I I

SSO.OO

PO

G. .

IONUS GlME IN

4#

AU PAPa .NGD GAMES

FIE£ COfFEE

OYEII IEPAII .
l!411AUS
r

Ill ••••1rt1 Olo.

PARTI AND IEIIVtCE
For MOot 2 and 4-cyclo
analnoo
8toc:k "-rrofor

PUBLIC NOTICE
.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Gallla-Mei&amp;s CommunitJ Action •ncr has.tht toi- lowina •'luipmeat tor ule to be disposed of throu&amp;h
COIIIpttittYI biddint.
,
lNCh 1nsul1ti011 Blowin&amp;lachine (C&amp;I brand)
2 llch lnnlation Blowill lachine with Attach•
ments (Krtndll brand)
·
1 IICh Hofllllitt Gener~tor-2.250 AC Watts
1 IICII Hofllllite Chain Saw
.
Sealtd bids will be received at the CAA office m
Chtshin unt114:00 p.m .. AP!Il16. 1990. Etlllipment
may be examined at the CM office in Chlallire btt-n the hours of 1:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., loRdly
throulll Fridlr. Each bid •ust be Hlletlalld completCrhl Gallii-I!IIIP CAA riHIYM the rltllt to
waive any infon~~~lltits or to reject uy or llrblds . .
for furtlier itlfon~~~tlon c011ttcl Ron C~rd at
614-367-7341 or 614-992-6629.

Tocumlth.lrltllo•
ltlltton.

PH, ..,r.:

.l rlnt It ln. Or We
Pick Up.
lEN'S APPIIANa
sEIY,ICE

,......

J&amp;L
INSULATION
Wiater S~ee111 Oa
~YLSIDING

992·53SS • 915-JS.I
Offill

FREE ESTIMATES

21

fn.

99~·2772

).5-'!0-1 110.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM., .
H-S &amp; GAUGES

"At ...1111..11

,_,~

-. !!Jor!twft

8

EIIS:::iifup
lEI'S APPLIIIIICE
992:SJU • 915-3561
..... · - .... OffiM

•::-.
....,......,. _ ................
IUok Pwuws •• I
now buldna •

.
*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·.
.

'

*LIGHT' HAULING

.·

*FIREWOOD

lnll SUCK
992·2269

...

EVENINGS ,

.....

ROO.FING

NEW - .liPAll
Gutters
Downapouta ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESnMATES

~QIUID

.
"EI'RIPIISES

DUMP TRUCK
land-ltoi'Mi·Dirt

(61C) 667-3271

.... a..

c

'·.

&amp;Auction
~ua,..

s Cece+=ar

aua.,., ... ,
,,

Ohio. Koo* '"'· Yllglollo, -71W7U. '

•o

CONS'IIUCnON
a.na,
Custom 8ullt
Hames,

RemadeHng&amp;
Rel*rWork '

915-3365 .
S66tt•7

...,,,.,...........
4 . GMIII.,.

.

.

Ao otfon ..._, 11 yra
llf.I711UMiw""f':! a Ia. IJoM.
.....
'"" Ohle,-.
In lllr........
-

-··
.....
-···

1

wantld to Buy

..........
-

Qol """' '""'"" .,..

0111 -

•

•-= ..,

.... l4lt1lo, .......

::-:=· ' .~~:.:r-=.

-

not ail cal

1110.

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~·-··
Cooh
Pllol......
Cllll-1117
•
114-Mit.
'

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HelpWanled

Cllt........ : ,-

AVON· A I =
. . . . . 1.. - t l .

AVON I All I lhfftoll
.,...., 111W11-1411.
.
...,.......... ht . . . lll
In I
11..... ., . . ""'- - l e i ' ! O . I o l i ...

=
,.,.
0

..

X

Olllo..,

lAIII IIONIY R

Price Drastically Reduced
TQ Settle Estate

•

Publlc8118

hw•d LWrltllll

·una

·lOADS
•
CLEARING

....

Aprtf I II
I:IN:IIO ......

"110-""

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Acroa

-Niol,----

- · IIHr .... -

:ue.

ONI UNDEI II YWS

,

-~."• ~'

lllwdauw. ~ 1111

•"•••••t.

GAMES STAll 7:00P.M.
NO

-_lumll_....,.,__
-

-10,21........ 2. .......
tNn Powtill r 1 ltlh08,127 Pll:h
•• lllolne.ln ...... • ....

"I.OWHeC. . . . . . .

OPIN"5:00 P.M. .

• 1ooc1 cook.
•

Call Susan ColeMan,

209 Seuth 4th St.
Oh.

Oh, ~in't It greatl
You'ra-aucha

.

LOTIONS - STICKERS

Good Ronoo
T.L.C .
27 Yra. t!ap. ·
II of• on-

Notice ·.

..

COMPLETE STOCK

New Lima I d., lutlan d, Ohio
1 Session .....................~.................. '3.50
6 ·Sessions ...........................;......... s12.00
. 12 Stss~s................................... SJO.OO
15 Sessions................................... SJ S.00
FIRST VISIT FIH - POSSIILY MORE

~,"::~-:.~;.7:
,..., _...,ootot, ••- . ......

4-25-1111

Homlllte, W......,or,

5

·. SUN'S UP TANNING

PH. 992~5612
. or 992·7121

'•"in ewe

·..

Wife,

c-.

. ""' llollfoo c-,.
.a.. '
• - · A flotunlay, I to ' •.

~:::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::; . 1::_~IIWM~~~~~~~-,~~~n=t~~~~~~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAI~
Alu Trll•lttlaa

EYDY· .
, SAT, NIGHT

OHIQ

1Wo 0. ~ 811e: Ill oltho
yoo~ &lt;In K - Aaed, -

131 28, 29. 30, 3tc

d-ly .

.•

..

~~:.:-~

tloo tivon.

~

MoN th811 wordo cirn
uy.

to: Brilles, c/o Alut I...tJ/IMrs, P.O.
Bo;cll562,Citicogo,/U.6061 UJ562.
. (IN Clllltldll, und $4.45.) .

AUYonl--·-ln

, . , . _ DUOIJNE: 2:00 jun.
tho lily tho ld to ID ""'·

A Great Comblnation"Quality ond Reasonable Prices"
WE GO 1• EXTIA MILE.,.,.

Termo ofhle: Coo h. ··.

thot on lhturd•v. March 31.
1880. 10:00 a.m.. 1 pubtic oale wHI be heid at 1011
Union Avenue. Pom•oy.
Ohio. to Mil for cllfi tl\e foil-ing aoiiNrOI:
1884 Chryolor Lozor S#
1C3BA44E7EG171873
1878 Ford LTD S#
8813F188839
.
The Fermero hnk ond
hvliltll Comporny, Pomo·
roy, Oblo, ......,.. tho right
to bid at thla Olio, end 10
wttlidtow the abovo colla·
torol prior to IIIIo. Further,
The Fennoro lank and lavlnga Company ,..,.,.. the
right to rejoct any ar Ill bllll
..bmlnod.
. '
Furtt.Mr. tl\e obovo coMo·
torot wll bo oold In the """'
dl1ion It lo In with ·no .,..
p-Hd or lmpfild werron·

. Yard Sale

7

Galllpolla .
• VIcinity

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

' Roll ••,.,. connot be oold
for Iouth., two-third of tho

One .,.. ago today;
- stlll .mlu you

(!Iris ~lwJtspoS14ge lllllllliutdllllg)

992-6421

GIIG IAILh

ot '111.300.00 ..

Wha Died
.March 28, 18$8
God ceme and took

'

DODGE

-·

S.1Nrd...........

I and J CONSTRUCTION

ENGLE; SR.

.'

. 'CHIYSUI:PLYMOU1H

'

WOODROWW.

'

. 99~ ...5"177·
220 EAST MAIII
POMEIOY I OHIO,

Children and
' Grandchildren

In Loving Memory Of

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS·· .

PAT HILL

of ... 0 - of

will offer for uto, ot · the
•fro11t door of the Coi.ort
~ouoo In ' Pomoroy, ··Molp
County, O.hlo. on tho 18th
day of April, 1810, at 10:00

«w .._. llllllr:
,....
.n a tt'raM•, t1...._
-~--.

,_..:II

Public NolJCe

Byrocuoo. County ot Moill"
and • - of Ohio:
' Stle toouM out ofllle·Comllelnl Lotto Noa. Four (4).
mon P'leli Court "of Meip Five r 1. end llx 111 In
,Coulll,y, Olrio, In tho - • of Croollo Achltlon to the VII·
Noni .....Cerroll. 1111 MH loge of 8vrocuoo. In Sunon
C.nall, Plaintiff. oplnat Townehlp, Moip County,
'VIctor II. Countoand Lura P. Ohjo.
DEED RI!FEIIENCE: Vo.Cou"'o; '*' ol.. Defenclonto,
oBion 1 Juclllmont theroln lume 304, Page 807. MellO
-dlred. belng Cooe No. County Doecl R-do.
11-CV·H Jn llid Court, t
lleld IN!fcel-"oppmHd

........

. c.

lllr-•t~1J11.

'AT

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

L.olt a Found

,....: · ~

DALE HILL

915-4422 '

Fatt

a

Stop In and S..

CII"ISIII, 0110

2 :00P.M . 'TUIID&amp;V

- 2:00 P.ll! . ~IDNIIDAY
- Z,QO P.M. THUftiDAY

NOTICE OF IALE

. a, vlnui!

NEED. FANCY

pays for wlttu? Wlro slllllds wltei~?
'TireAiuti..DIJMrsGwideforBrilles"
IIIIS Ill/tire iiii.Swtrs. Send 11 self-ad·
dreued l011g biiSintss-sirttlllltlope
'
'
•
~ll.ciltd:orrno~~eyortkrfor,~.65

fo~~y~~~n~~~~~~er~~:t:r~

day of landlftgs, sald,Gary Bunn,
for best loser between Jennie
general manager of the Alpine
C11rry and VIrginia Dean. The
Lake resort.
·
runner upwasArzllla Fields. The
"We got some calls, and the ," best preteen loser wau Kristin
understandlna was, If anybQdy
Torres.
.
complained, we would cancel the
The fruit basket was .won by
operation. We didn't want to · Diana Herdman and the surprise
upset people or anythlnc." he gilt ·went to Sylvia NeeCe.
said.
·Peggy VIning gave an article,
The Marine helicopter eroup . "When I Gain" and ccinducted an
had plallned to continue landing
all member weight story, ' 'Not
thl! CH-46 helicopters at the "lake J)lllt Another Fable." The winer
Wtd M4af. But Blann · said the
wis Trlna Faulk.
1'1!1011'1 IIDard decided to cancel
New team membfrl wUJ be
All lll'"ft'lent with the Marines drawn at the next !JIW!lnl.
..., C!bmplalnts were voiced.
The meeting cl~ wltll "'I'IIIIi
Is What God Is Lllr.e."

10

Montllly

wl1:

'

1&amp;

11110

...

P81ntlna
-~-··IFIIEE UTIMATEII

•TireSalea

..

•· h
·
Qui.rks tn
t e news...

16
16

&amp;

o'olooll A.M. 1M folowlnt
Iondo ond ten_,o. to-

~

CHILDREN'S T..SHIBTS - The Pomeroy s:~~==~
Committee now has available chUdren's t-shlrlaln
and large. Pictured here Ill Randy Hart, Jr. In his new
sesqulcentennlalt-shlrt.
.,
,
·

. Words

3

TOPS welcomes
.
'
new members
.
..
Two new ' lnemi&gt;ers ·were wei·
corned when Ohio TOPS 570 met
Tuesday evening at tlie carpen·
ters hall in Pomeroy . .
Lennie Al·eshlre. leader,
opened the meeting In ritualistic
form, ;and annoucne(l that offlc·
ers ~II be Installed at the next
'm eeting as well ·as new names
drawn for secret pals.
The leader read a letter from
Kay Sage regarding t.he Area
Recognition Day.
Kathy McDaniel led the group
In the singing or "Mary Had a
Little Lunch."
It was announced that Bernice
Durst Is a new Kops In Waiting.
Ola Slncla.Jr, secretary, was
•. bono~d for .serving that.. office
for three years.
It was 1reported that Nellie
Grover was IU and a round robin
c·a rd was slgoed for bet. Mary
Mardn thanked the group for
· cards sent during her husband's
Illness.
·

,

Days

·

742-3011

You'leripubclillo-=. .~ ·

aCOIIIJ'Pision,butfm
lhllifhe
~. IIIIJiher compullioctwould
ClOp"' 111 lib its plale. ~we
shouJdpulmy~iniDIII:II wilh ·
the wife o1 L.B., 10 IIIeY could ift..
dulp iD 1 joint OilY of tefimtlinJ.
Melnwhile,lc:ouldllireiOIIIebodyto
act die IDIID 1a ..._,
·.1...
~_,•
I have IU dole - · Ann. My
busblnd juSt lefl wilh I fisd'ul ol
. coupons ~ I have Ill go aim lhe
he!Jics:I&gt;.S.'Ibey have AI·Anon for
· tbefamilieaofalcollollcLHowabout
·Oip-Anpa for spllllel of COiiPII
freaks? We could meet, eachanse
honorstdries,haveaJOOCIJiu&amp;hllld
-maybe swap llljiplial. •• TOUGHlNG IT OUT IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR TOUGHING IT: Yourchief
allyinlhisno-winblaleiJyounensc:
of hUmor. RaJ on 10 it no matter
. what. Thanks for wriliJia.
. Wlre11 pltllllll11g 11 "Hddiftg, .wlro

-EIIablael

-Conoaca. Wortt

I

Army"of Milwaukee to be dllt;r~ . :,
uted to the needy.
.
;;
"In Ugbt of the threatelled . •
Idaho lloycott by abortion adVo- ::
cates, we ..-e p~nted with a , :
wonderful opportlmlty to·~~ .· :;
our commitment to \lnllorn eiiUd· • ·••
ren and to assist our n~
·
brothers and sis ll!rs In. 1 eon- :t
structlve and positive way,'! said· .
Barbara Lyons, execullve dlrec'-· •
tor of the group. · · · · · · 1
•
'In West VIrginia, the Rev . Avis •
Hill, leader of the Patents for
Ll fe cailed on Amer.tcans to buy ·.:
extra bags of Idaho potatoes as a
show 'of support for the contra:
verslal legislation.
.
Carrying · grisly signs of · ·
aborted fetuses, supporters of
the measure were urged on by ·
their leaders In the demonstra· · ·
tlon that remained peaceful. .
Off to the side, Brian Jobnstoil.
Pacific-Mountain regional dlrec· ..
tor otthe -National Right to Life
· Committee, played ·down the
effect or the boycott proposed by
the National Organization of
Women and other gtoups.
'
"We see It as a mellnlngless
threat, because we know by and

. Husband
gc;&gt;es bananas

given to ea~h sludenl.lo ensure their liDdei'Siand. lng and each student completed a baliket which
they took home.
·

CUPENTD SDWICI
_...,_
a,..,....,.

-1100111 Addlllollil

-11001111

BOISE, Idaho (UPI) - A flooded With allout 2,000 phone .
shouting match erupted Wednes· calls a day urging passage or
day among a crowd of aboutl,OOO vela of the bill since 11 Cleared the
people In front of thl! Capitol,
Senate last week. Andrus' aide
most. urging the governor to slgo Marc Johnson said the calls are
a bill ·giving Idaho the most almost evenly sjlUI on the Issue.
restrictive s!&lt;lte abortion law In
Andrus has consistently been
the nation.
an abortion foe, but has given no
Raucous chants of "pro-lite, Indication of what he will do with
pro-life" by an estimated 800 tbe bill that would prohibit
people on the steps of the abortion as a 11\eans of !Jirth
·s taieho.use steps almost drowned control; ending an estimated 95
out chants of '·'freedom means percent or all abortions fn Idaho.
c-bolce" by an .estimated 200
It would ban all abortions·
opponents ofthe politically polar· except In cases wlien a wol)lan's
!zing measure.
life or health Is threatened, .
Faced with a po(l!ntlally,dlsas· severe fetal deformity or rape or
. trous nationwide ))oycott of Idaho Incest with restrictions .
potatoes - the state's top cash
Pro-life forces are countering
crop - other products · and
the, urging abortion foes nationtourism, Gov, Cecil Andrus said . wide to buy more Idaho potatoes.
he will take action Thursday or
Wisconsin· Rlj~ht to ll.lte, Inc .. '
Friday on the "no-win" biU.
said It will donate 1,000 pounds of
The governor's office has been Idaho potatoes to the Salvation
BASKET MAKING - Charlotte Hart recently
visited the sixth grade class of Ed Bartels at
Salisbury Elementary to demonstraled how to
make and egg basket. lndlvldual ·attentlon was

YOUNG'S

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

-l-&lt;

•
Abortion foes· counter during rally:
'.,'..,
ilrge Americans .to ·buy Idaho potatoes :{'

Business Service

·.

:; :

'••

.:.. :

•.
:·

•'

« • ...... •.

~r,·~=ar~-

.

�........
-" :a----....
-- a--......,_.=...::
_,
-· .

Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

11

•

I

~·
Cit
I

II

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..........

,.,_

-

I ., _ . llf . _ 1ft lllo

_

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llllnl

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lliiD,.,DIII

!...:;;;t?fa ~ .

.THURS.• MARCH

71tuelalllolora
fOI'SIIe '

12:tl0 .... 1:01 Pll. IM.flll. .

Jerusalem lalla from
Christian handa to Saladin
and Muslim army. !;I
(I) fiNding 1111-1;1
CD I!]J Andy Grtfllth

Rllid--lor
t
, ....,..-.

@ Chorles In Charge

...ii.tv.•

:::,_-~......";,""';';

...,:o

-·- .... .,; '*' 1IoM.
114~
•r:;::

n.e...,..
.._-"' -··••
:::·• • r~wr~i~ti~n~g~as~s~i=g=n~m~e~n~t~?~"~~~~
31 Hom.
35 Loti &amp;

p' 'laW.,_
-..... . .
111
·
ealor
on~illpll _. ..,.. v..tiY ....

·-

,c:a:..,
lor . . lliNI '
yeer. .... 'PI-

110111 • Wild Ohio 1111.,...,

::.:=:ft,.."C .:...':'J::

blllo 1

81

=-~a.:ll: W.,:

IMiaidlna.lhe , - . &amp;!::

=m;• ~~~~

1Wo 1c11o lor K
Crook

oarage, , _ -

loohlnd

1~7-!::~.-:::-· c.ll

38

RNI Elllte
Wanted

1 bad-•, 11111

By -

wtalolocirt.ood

00•

W.-: P - In GoHio or
Gil- 11"""*7211.

•rr

. . ._. _. . . . , - -. •-•• =
acl'l!ll,ll-41.

' ·
..-aua
. .' _,
1!• •
iCI For .... tprOWnlr:PifliiA:Nol
-.
-t••
llbllvlokiil, Sbr, 1 112''11idho.

=.-..

E.D.I~S.I&gt;,

........

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

~I 1~~1.
JIUI':led
- lramM
-IU,
dafll ume • callh wllh •

Rd. Qpen I A.ll. to I P.ll. lion,
thru lilt. Cli~ 114 4•1 C122.

·

._T.v.- -or,:

.-oppi ..

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

lllr, ........ , _ , 2 lrom
,_,,AI.
ill. 814 Ill IIIII.

WUhero, d - -~~
....
,.....
~
Upper 'R!wr RiJ. a.ldl 8tone
CNII-.Coltll-7211.
11fttl0 and ·tOit..- . . .
8
·~ 1Q.
Lhrl.. A_,. SuMo, llglol ......

booblo wtdo. 1•112 oa.IDI. I roomo I both, polo ollowwl,
Tqlol -rio, { - ,..,.,,, :Ill Conlonol A-uo. 1 1 oompl•ety fumllhld. 1 mtle 14n.
of 'Ill- P...., Rloo
Run Rd. llr IIPPolnl-.

gnourid, I -··
no. -,IZOD.I1-141C
Moftohln Fumltur.. CMoll •
0111 lor -My 1 loW prlcM on
oorpll
IUmMure. 1 1 -

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114 MIN lnel laC. City~
.,.._..,1111.
1w · In liMOn,
t1'1:,DOG.304-727-t010.
- f o r •"'· 112 411111. - n . CoN 1411 11111111.

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2111' ·- l n 'cowo1ry, f11811no.

IIW~ZIII.

~~~~ii;;;;;;;;;;;;4'2 Mobl'..:
Y..·mas
.. l"ftolln.,... tor Rent

Folllnl._boo,Hit.ioull,
3Jtt yorlolololo 1210• • , ..
441·17111

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,

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1114117;

IDid - -' 114-

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PICKENS FUANRUAE
tlo!oN..d
/2 mi.
-Jorrlcho Rd. Pt.
··-- ...
. . .1. ·wv.
01111044711-1480.
hoolll ,.bloW motu-·~--·~ lu~hl

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1211;
114-4182121.
1·
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coutllly,
1211'1110. p1uo dlo., m. ,.
AENTlOOWH
:::.~, 104475-4174.
- · • dryw, . - . .Ired. 114 411
Top Quolily BrondAir - · Zbr,
natlor
for Lhrlna I'OOIIJ eulloo •10/wlo.,
1m Holil' Porll Nf'll.
114471-2401,
It no
....,,
lo/4 _._ •7.IJDI!Ioll.1 bunk
-.121110 1 "' n tlpoul.
Front ldlctten, and 2 tl ill com&amp; 814-4414110.
,bodo, oamplolo .,....., .._
114447-21141 oflor ,7p.m.. ., Fui ,..,NCI, .. .a.atrtc. 2 lr., 1
- - . . . - ...,....... Vl'llo
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.
furnlluro. Ill. ~~~J 4 Opon
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on
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IDI . . _ Rot. a - · dop. 7 dllyo o - . .... lluu Bot. 1
1174 llobllo Hot!\e, '3br, olr 11.
••• M « 441411:1,'
Lm. - 8 p.m., lun. 12 •I
cond,
-·
~,!t}or_,_...... Hou8e tmller ava.llable nul p.m. 114-441-3111. ·
.
rwtrlgerlllor,
11~~
.-

Stop
12!1 Church Street Statton
@ MOVIE: Arlzono Manhunt
{1 :00)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Daalh In Canaan .
{2 :30)
8:30 B (})
Different World
Dwayne and Ron s)ar In a
commercial opposite two
basketball stars. 1;1
(l) Sneak PN'IliWt Goao
Vldao
(I) Wild America Witness tho
dogwood and the

cond, 30447II4a4.

17 MIKellaneoua
OUIIIdo It Ul !1- 11110d. io&gt;oulllid .... ""· Colt
114-347- ...... -

18 Wanted to Do

loollao 10d0, -

•tt.

- ... ...__ _

. . . .121. month, 104 ••
llliD Iuddy 14xll, 2 a.., 2 .11417.
bllho, nw - - a n d ooopll,
wood ...... building ln- - - l o r o o n t , = A I.
7. Kenaug~, Ohio. 11401.
golloltle. 8144...-.

..,

Apartmant

for Rent
-

Cloonlna • In Olllllpollo
- . For Tnlamllllon, 114. - . ,...., -

qulrtleonfr.

•

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Dl1

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_aftanllbll.·
.. Darurc...
: ~ii'4SM~"iii;;;;;;;;;:-"i4;dii.
Slfl,
12' -a . ...,.
Clayton Ua•pu~t. 141110,
1 Lm. • 1:30 p.11. A.- 2~10. Zbr, or . 114-216lloloow, aallool: DnosHna 1122.

1•

UllrlD~ IU 411

aat

11-AII&lt;?II. Ill ""274.

Building ,

Supplies .

rhododendron burst into

bloom. D

a-.brloll,-lliooa.llln-

............ CloUdo'-wapator,
2dr,
171; -lliii
Cljando, DH Coli '114oo"'iintor,
whllo.
PI; :1414121.
oolrliorotor, lnll1 low, advaccio, nice, new ~: 11 ar, 56 Pets tor Sale

----·.= :
lion
. '8

.; ~
-:n"ll!i.-·
ntnga,
..
lnoh, wh .. - ; ..... nngo,

1210; nrlrlgerotor, -

·-·........ __ __
__

-

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" "TTW WII:..L.I!Ie A
MlL.L-iQtoiA.IRE ...

.

0

aa

IF 'rOW HAPf'Et-t 10
DONALD TRUMP. ;,

se

W~

Myateryl Sir Paul.
Berowne has res~e&lt;l from
the govemment.
·
l!ll • Qllolend n Daniel
assigns Metzger a VIP
patient whiCh proves
dlsasterous. {R) 1;1
GJl Larry King Llval
i1J MOVIE: Crime $to,.Y

llllb 304-7714111 ..

"'*" .. .......... *"""'·

a

nu -·

asks for Sam's help when he
wants to elope with Kelly. 1;1
GCil Young Rlcllra
Lou 's brolller and sister are
taken from their orphanage.

' MO K MEEKLE AND WINT ~O~P_ ____, . - - - - - - - - - - ,

:m..t':'..
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1114
II 't I druu:t
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11 112 It 120 liD; 11:111

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musi~ ' s

~~~~~~--~·~
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,1,, TFord.IOt- . . .

1-....
1-..

(2:00)

Ill Heohvllle Now Country

!lQ'

llinl-.

IT AIN'T. YDII

4:00

DAOBU~N

'

·

12!1 On Bfllga
9:00 G (I) 9 Chura Woody

TV ........ lfl8lllllllno

· - - -.. moil
~...-.wv
111M.
Olllo81""'*

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GWA ..... lin lids i rt. ·
~.
m; ..... nngo,
Upolllno _
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fllgliiOirw, Ill; ..... and ldtchln fut.
. . ; - - ~~~•
- · 1141111.87 0( 114- pwtono,
tnoh,
mi.-.
.
till; wuhlr, ...E. Whoo, 1 ;
1br, fMI wa ~ Ill •mlng flteDIIICe, K - drwor oot,
twniiMd, al ulltldli p11d, ln- 1101 ""' old 1110 oacft. Dryer
otudlna Olblo. - I' lor I .,... . MhiCDto, t1s6o·' Kern'ltON drYer
11 ;
Apollo-, U- A- Rood,
114o446-11a.
t

Oolaland POlk. ,,• ., ·-.
' ..... CA,1 • .......,

a

........................ .....,.
A-ohlolr.ot~I&gt;Od.~

{2:00)1;1

i1JJ PrlmeNawo
i1J Murder, She Wrote Truck

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

-

National GeographiC

takes viewers to Ashlorl&lt;,
Arizona. C
(I) Fatiler Dowling
Myotert.. An eccentric
parishioner leaves six million
dollars to Sister Stave. 1;1
l!ll CD Gl 48 Hou-. Q
1D I!]J MOVIE: Tough finough

•

STILL!!

10 Cltoly plolt
m.al7.
. up, -

.

hottest stars are

loature&lt;lllvo.
@ MOVIE: Lulu Bille (1 :00)
9:30 G (})
Grend Wayne
proposes marriage to Janice;
Carol Anne has 1 secret
e&lt;lmlrer.l;l
10:00 (I) 700 Club With Pol

a

•

Rab1rtton

B

(I) 8 LA. Lew
Mari&lt;OWI!i 11 arrelled for .
drunken driYI"ll. Q
f!GI 8(1)~eLive

Frn;mciJI

21

8ualnll8

lfi Newowotoh

----- .... .

OpporlUnlty

2I7L

_rio_.,. ....,.
on

"1

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'!'!fine,
- .......
L1
dllaalukl••
~~~ '

=·1111~ .,.LiJt.~
.......
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.
7 II ••-1'111.

Ill , _

BEDEOsOL

!Ill Ill iiJI Knola Lending

2
Haw Twflght Zono
iiJJ Evening Nawe

allair
2 - Kazan
3 Conlribule·
4 Night

=.~
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............
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............ .

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: E---. :::.....

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ti:OIIIIl 1P111! 1111 LUOk 01 t11e
111111(==1;1

"I dtlc~ nolto lwnp from lilt roof. I'm
only • little depreuad,"
~

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..mTonigllt
.
.

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'

CRYPTOQUOTE

Ill CoiMclr Tonlgllt

IU t•tm.

...

hints. Each day the code letters are dlffereot.

lauetbM!
ellll Arllnkl 11111

IPI 2 012)
Ill Clluralllllwlllltlon

.
....

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X ftlr the two O'a, etc. ~le letters,
apostrophes, the le"8lh and formation of the words are all

(I) Colaga

~~

.,

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

a

aJIIIo...,....
Ill lillnll VIol Prodlgot Son

' '

n!n:=it;~:'i:~;:-;;;,rl;it:-"-;;;:
""

before

elll BIMWI

on,tl~_...

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DAILYCRYPTOQUITI'Ell-

ICil GaD 8(1) aJ.
·

Yilllliito, ..,4

5 Earthly
6 Condition

6 Rebull
7 Felled oak
10 Existing
6 Drooping
11 Rental
9 South
sign
.
American
13 Call delicacy counlry
14 Greek · 12 Thrash
market·
17 "How
- the
place
15 New
mighty
Guinea
fallen I"
23 Mana9ed 36 Dillerent
town
19 Drinking 25 Allenltqn 38 01 the
United
16 Traitor
spree
26 ·Kingdom
18 Groan
20 " Marla"
(abbr.)
provoker .
Is .
27 Hall
39Wlthin
19 Cap
Nothln'
a score
40 Pilsner.
21 Oceanic
Like a
29 Beetle
e.g •
24 Lawmen
Dame"
31 Sweel
420ne
(sl .)
21 With
ron
-time
28 Vacuous
(Ger.)
33 Lamina
29 Permission 22 Anecdotal 34 Corpulent 44 "Swinging
-Star"
30 Zesl
collection 35 Liveliness
31 Infertile
,.-,.-,........-32 Baflle
34 Fixed
charge
37 Some
38 Apron part
41 Relieve
43 Sustained
45 undergo
46 Splice
. 47 Approach
48 Burt
Reynolds
film

Trees
mi!]J lanny HMI ShOw
111 Crook a Cheaa
10:35 (II MOVIE: Summer 01'42
(PG) {2:00)
11:00 .,_row Mnt- King

8 ........ , _ .........

...
'
:=

THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN
1 Social

Ill

1-

.AQJ3
.AQ72

~ Ryen'e Den Grow On

iJERNICE

a.tt-11

.JIO

ACROSS
1 Procreate

@Newe
10:30 (!) llaaablll Tontahl
(l) MIIWpil cI ftoaatre
Francie camn to live with
her causing O.harlolle Mullen.

Ratr~lon

Ou: t»olll

~y

I!]J

lllet'!CII a

•

CROSSWORD

Danny reveals to young
Bobby that his father Is Gary.

.

HI

E1pertsdiffer about tile correct bid
with the North hand. In competitive
EAST
!·circumstances tile bidding side is bet•AtU
•ts2
ter placed
a one-diamond open·
+KI2
ing, since ,opener will be able to bid
+Ktt
bolb his suits without raising tile bid·
level. Here tbe opening bid of one
SOUTH
worked well, since an opening
.• KJ B 1S
of a clUb would very likely have .
.K?S4
·
caused two spades to be !el.
tt8
Aller the opening diamond lead,
+103
East won !he king and returned a dia- .
Vulnerable: Both
mond. l)e(:larer won in dummy and led
Dealer: Soutb
tbe beart jack. West won tile queen
and played a third diamond, declarer ,
W..l
Norlll Eltl
sluffing a club. Tben came another
Puo
Pass' I+
Pal&amp;
Pass tNT
'heart, won by West. He returned bis
Pus 2•
Alllast diamond, East disCarding bis last .
heart and declarer ruffing. Declarer
now ruffed his loslnl heart witll dummy's spade 10. When East discarded •
club, declarer knew how to play the Ln-i,n-e'"
·. -:-bu-:t-dec:--.1:-are=r•:-s~eon-.tr--:a-c=-tw:::.:-as:-sal:-:-:-"••
spade suit. East would certainly have
...
overruffed with tile spade queen if he He l01t only. iwo hearts, two spadeshad it, so West was marked witllthat and one diamond.
..
card.
. Tbe information tbat East c:ould nol
Declarer therefore led a spade back overruff wltb tile apade quean auldecl
to liis king, dro;:::mg tile sinRleton declarer to make the wllmln&amp; .pplala!Y· ..
I b
Jo,..J-,.~- ·J-,.•l/iidri " ad
: queen. He retur
to the c u ace to ·J-,.•C.nUJ....,•(wnlr.iJ oniii~Wt•...,.,
play another spade. East took the ace ""' JJole a...Jd J-,.1 .,. - • . . . -.••
and later scored a trick with tile spade _ . ,... Bol.lll!f , . . , _ 11y l'llolw ~.

(I) Under Flnl

lor ..........
OllliOii&amp;
.....,.,..,
• &amp;tlae•lji
..IJIJ _, '

NOiml
.1013

By James Jeeoby

(I) (I) Thio Old Houaa Stave

32 Mobile Homes
2 or lllr toioilor 10 mlloo out 141.
114-3711-2104.
for Sale
.................. hO;
oven, I top,
10150 tWo b droom mobUa
ooncl, tz21/mo. Elootrlo 1111 -

BRIDGE

a

~i

c.-

-_
r,
- laur,
.... _
Colfl14-lll-

I

concluded that families run slllOQther when lhere is
TEEN WORK.

7:35 (I) Sanford And Son
1:00 (]) MOVIE: Tho Luck 01 The
lrloh (2:00)
8 (}) rBl Cooby Show
Sondra and Et.in reluctantly
· let Denise babysit the twins .

1t.

·•·

COII!plete lhe chuckle quoted
by fill ing in tht .missing words
you develop '"'"' IIOp No. 3 below.

_V

Wrench- Motor - Plnlcy - Hermit- TEJN WORK
I've observed many tamilias wilh 1011 of kids and I've

C12 Night Court

Halldl' RaMil ..r •h
..... hlloh.
- ••
" ~ -Iori.
OM!Ing'
Coll11 _ . . . otarllp.in.
tm •

~

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i1JJ Crooollnt

MolOI'Hom.. .

".,~

·---·.....
-SCUM LETS ANSWIU

Cll PM Mlogeidne .

a

o,::.'

7444.

'IWo or bid,_, _ , r 1170
I ,.lad,UncaJn
loi!IO
' . ment,
IIOighl~ 111 1111"1"

abiciii

:t 'G'OT Tl'lfM

I C1llltengor
I -liid ..........
14" .....
_,., .ope
. , . 10W714112 ....
4:00.

·

A UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
·
•

under the gun and he owes it
all 10 the woman he loves.
Stereo.
Ill Mutlc Row Video
@ Abbot And Caotello
7:05 Cll ...ffer.eono
7:30 a (}) Family Feud
(!) Pre·S.IIon Major
League laHblll
Cl Gil Entertatnmant Tonight
(I) Mama'• Family
!Ill •G
Jeopordyll;l
ID I!]J M"A'S'H

I

·

17 01. ft. noror 110. 101111
1835.
.
::Coumy=:--:-Appl-::1-0..-.~.,., lno:--.-0= -:
01

YWWW

~_.,.., .

.

First not so smart cutie : "II
you cut onions under water,
your eyes lljon'l water. '
Second nol so smart culie :
"Well, okay, bul how do you --?"

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

!Ill • iiJI a Wheel 01
F:ortunoD
e I!]J Night Court 1;1
iiJJ Monoyllno
i1J Mblml Vlca Crockott's

1
1:
Ford ""~·:1-A'~~
1:00=."
.

- r d l hO - ' up 10 MI.'

~on Big C.. Ad.~~- !!!!~8Jj""llt""::· dot
· =~==-"':'::===
2 or s bodtwm, ,_, '-'.._,':::
.._,
UIED ·-··~s
rtduamld. Nloe, on Unooln

814417-3484.

-lody lor1o _.........
llvo In ·-.y
lllil
.....
hall U:Otllt. ,,.....,
_ _liGht
,,_'IV15.

wllh 101011- 1211 lftd up to
..._ bobr 1110 - -

ltJOftd CNdtt. 3 mi. out lullviRe

4 u-..
na-a
. 1 nvUIBI fOr""'"

(I) ABC !Mwa 1;1

Nlwlllour

-or
boio..r.= IIIII or:;;.~ a.~~w::
10

Roopw n·- 1n- - - .
~
- ........... • ""!!!!!....~ .... - ., O&amp;nor: IDIIna VII:.;5::.,ilnll -":ii:~ roy"""· bilcll, lllr,1 i/2 6olho, 2 bll-• Form - and
iiO ~ "l ~":....t ~...:'...
~ ~:.:~ =~.:·.:r.t=
.....,, •

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,...... Md two MIP.IIfi•lt
NIINnUI to Plllw•it P..1 - of loul- Olllo, 3111
-J.,t~ 1: .

=

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(!) 8portaCanlar
D Gil D (I) CUMnt Affolr
· (I) (I) MocHaU LlhNr

11&gt;0 AI a ldo\g :';k'="V:.:a.,
•
21
lllolgiCountYwAh.._...,
....
NO.-•Iw&gt;llonollol1101
~, 1111 ·
· lltd
· 304=-. ..,... . iiOblnolo,
•

..ibol c_,untc.iii:n ···
1111 1adga of bullnne eo. llbJ home 1n PUny. WY, alx
, lnctullng oomputer, rorotM IIIICI Mill, _. "tiulkllnal:,
IIMI. M 8blll · to ·~ . . q_~ 1aalllot" aood ... w.rer,
tltl bad llffiiN .pra u II - . CIIJ ...., • ....._,, 1 ..,_
llult lie .... te ...,_. with .......... J04..171.3111atlanlll-·

::"":.-..-:~ :::.

i

. . . toJIIII, T.-IIOandup ·
to 1121. IHdT • bada . . . to

~~·14&amp;~-t"- I II '
.-vII
up. uun•
.-pI

0121.

=- t- -rtl

~..

.... .ollolro P!loal -

-~ - 1 - l / 4 - from .1011 - ' up to MIL •w..l
Proctarvbll.dty ·Witll'.l1~ ....._ w-1 aMtra
101711.

... - ·

...,..._.,._, W
PCAIIIon ~ 1 -'
rt
......, wllh
lyfllng
- - ' - m ug
......,...,. lllull e ""'h

LllH£'81'URNITURI

.

\

combine entertainment trivia
with the luck of the draw,
@ Hengln'ln
1:35 Cll Andy Grtfllth
7:011 (]) ScarectOW a M-.. King

Holll8hold
Goods

:r~e:':r,:cibln. l14- tobullcfon.ll~

~Y. u ~a dad..._

•WP •kwllii ..,_ •adlclne
pa '"' CPA
n. ,lw
. .t1io
. k::=

·
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-tf ::w,:-:;~0~~
1211
111111
:=,"' Paowuy,

51 '

for Sale
.

and

hktg -

fAerCilalldiSC

·

15

..

1 L A XH E E
h,.--;.1
:..:.;~~.;,:.:....:;1...=..,,,..,-1 ~

CD llody Eleclrlc
. (I) 3·2·1 Contact 1;1
!Ill • Ql C88 Nril 1;1
. . I!]J ~·· Conlp!lriy .
111 Top l:a!d Conleatanll

311f~bolh,1111mocluler._ 0~ Whllolld
Mil

·

~ SporteLook

D Gil D

-

on.,

I I .I I
-

a

"Y , . .
ou re the one who muned
me 'Boy,' and you expect to
help me with my creative

I

R U QA T

1:06 (l) llavll'ly HlllbiUIOII.
NBC HIQ~tly Naws
6:30 8 (I)

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7 """ lun.'illp.m. ,.a;~.
2!M;IIL101.

0111 . . Cit

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iiJ Ho-Man

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(I) EIPN'IIpUdwllk

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11 l11.41nw.
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..... 11..

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1:00 (]) Hardcllllle And .
MaCon•Q
.
• (I) • •
• (I) Ill

011

-Jonldnli""L;i:r...,
. P.O.

PI IIlii

EVE NINO

.,.. Coliil"'

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Television
Viewing

I

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~~~a 7

-.
....,.,_,.
.---..............,...
- - - · 1 f t - - - hal

""''01111 011. 114-

_.1&amp;

74

lllrct.ICII8e

47 W&amp;\118dtoRent

...

1980

Ohio

I

QIVLMUE

HVPN

PDR

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JIPN

DPM

XPNSUVKDI

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'•

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SAT U K.A L

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Y..ter. .ll'• cq.I7Qae..aAlLOW CHILDREN TO

BE HAPPY IN THEIR OWN WAY. FOR \VltATBEIIER

WAY Will. THEY EVER fiND. -

DR.~·

C) I flO br King F - S,o fclll. Inc.
l .

•

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•

•
'

.
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�PI 8 I 18-lhe Deily Sentinel

One btg winner In Super Loab jaClpot

EMS has 12 Wednesday calls Pomeroy court news

1
I

I

Ten forfeitures on speeding Columbus,$63, traffic ligllt violaCLEVELAND CUPI) -There
tton; Anna Will, Pomeroy, $43, wu one big wlllner hi the Super
charges were among the cases
handled this week In the court of stop sign violation; Darin Ad- Lotto Jackpet wo\"th $6 million
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. ktns, Rutland, $63, no operator's W~ nllbt, the Ohio Lot·
·
tery C
*.liot~&gt;reported.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge license.
were Me1inda Keesee, MiddleFined were Roenla Rollins,
·The wmner will get $300,000 a
port, $55; Philip Pheslng, Mason, W. Va., $63 and co,ts, · year for '20 years before taxes.
Athens, $50; Charles Jacks, expired. vehicle registration;
Tile wtnnlnll numbers were 17,
Pomeroy, $49; Steven Hood, Randy Lee Dugan, Rutland, $63 ·24, 30, 32, 37·, 39.
Middleport, $49; Carol Carson. · and costs, driving under suspen- · Tllere were j! ·tickets with five
Pomeroy, $50; Phylls Spangler, slon, $51 and costs, speeding, $113 of sill tllllll~lor $1,000 apiece.
Rutland, $52; Debra McDaniel, and costs, possession or a .conMiddleport, $54; Michael Car- trotted substance, and $53 and
sey, Whitehall, $43; Keith Kinzel, costs, open container.
.
Pomeory, $61 , and ·Laura Noel,
Others fined were Donnie FreeAlbany, $44.
man, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
McDaniel also forfeited a $10 reckleSli operation, and ·$63 and
bond on a charge of falling to costs, threats; James P. Hayes,
having her child restrained In a Pomeroy, $113 and costs, public
car seat, and Carsey $63 bond intoxication and $313 and costs,
on driving under suspension.
rests tlng arrest; and Lori
Others. forfeiting bonds were Garnes, Pomeroy, six months
Floyd Rut;le, Rutland, $375, OWl;
probation on a charge Q( disorMichael Boggs, Athens, $43, derly conduct.
_. •,
·m ega! left turn; Sean Hayes,

Units of· the M~tgs County
At 1: 40 p.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Eme1awy Mecijpal Service reDepartment went to Zion Road
sponded to U clll'for as sis lance for a brush fire on lbe· Roland
on Wednesd4Y.
Morris property. The fire burned
At 12:28 a.m. the Polllliroy unit off four to flv~ acres and
went to Union Ave. for Angle according to Pomeroy Fire Chief
Curtis who was taken to Veterans
Danny Zirkle, the fire started In a
Memorial Hospital.
barrel where trash was b~ing
The Racine unit, at 12:42 am., burned.
was called to Broadway Street
AI 3: 01 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
lor ~evln Dugan who as transwas called to Route 681 for Hilda
ported Veterans, and at 2:03a.m.
Lawson who refused treatment.
the unit weqt to Hayman Road
The Racine Fire Departm~nt,
at 5: .22 p.m., went to Relfer Road
for EstherIa Powell, also taken to
Veterans.
In response to a brush lire.
At 5: 46 p.m. the Bas han Fire
The Pomeroy .F ire Depart·
men! , at 5: 31a .m. , was called to . Department was called Ia HayNye Wve. for a brush fire .
man Road for a brush fire.
At 6:45p.m. the Tuppers Plains
At 7: 54 a.m. the Racine unit,
Fire Department responded to ·a
as!;lsted by the Syracuse unit,
call in the Arbaugh Addition for a
went to&gt; Route 338 for Charles
McNickle.
·
structure fire. The name of the
owner and other Information was
The Racine unit. assisted by
the Syracuse unit, at 11:43 a.m.,
unavailable.
Finally, at 8:08 p.m. the
was called to LOIJ8 Run Road fcir
Vlriglna Pratt who was trans- Pomeroy unit went to the sheriff's office for Harley Barton
ported to Veterans and later
who was transported to
flown by Care Flight to Dayton
veterans.
Veterans Hosl'ilal.

C. Glen (Peek• Burton, 70, of
3601 Coolville Statton Road, Coolville, died . Wednesday morning
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va. as
the result of injuries .received In
an accident.
He was a veteran of World War
II and had retired from the
production department of Remington Rand In Marietta. He
attended the Ireland Road Com·
munlly Church
Born'in Wl.ndy, W.Va., he was
the son of the late Frank Burton
and Fadella Wright Burton.
He is survived by his wife,
Fran~ VanHorn Burton; three
brothers; Charles Burton of Elizabeth, W. Va., Richard and
Edward Burton, both of Parkersburg, W. Va.; five sisters. Gall
Cline of Elizabeth, W.Va., Jessie
Harbin of SandyYille, W. Va.,
Opal Thompson, Richwood, W.
Va .. Amy Johnson of Mineral
Wells, W.Va., and Edith Allman
of Rockport, W. Va.
He was preceded in d·eath by
one brother and one sister.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. ai the White
Funeral Home at Coolville, with
the Rev. Ch&lt;!rles Buck and the
Rev . Ralph SaJl)psoll of~i~latlnji.

Meigs
announcements
Cleanup to bepn
The cleanup ,of cemet~rles In
Lebanon Tolwnsip will begin on
Aprill, Sharon Cremeans, clerk
for the Lebanon Township Trustees, announced today. Residents .should . remove from the
graves any !lowers, vases or
other items they want to kt;!ep
· before then, Cremeans said.
AppUcadontnuuder
,
The .transfer of one liquor
permit in Meigs County has been
reported by the Ohio Department
of Liquor Control.
Robert Allen, dba Riverview
· ·Carryout In Scipio Township has
transferred his permit to James
R. Hill and Ear ley W. Hill who
will continue to operate the
business under the sanie name.

Stocks

This .,Rial oHer h • • IMint 11fi!MIM hi our now Mallllic
Gatdl• Section.

.._lilt

In the Meigs County Court or
Common Pleas, Nancy L. Griffith has been granted a 'judgment
of $6,124.83 In a case against
Danny M. Griffith.

FALLS

AQDR~S------~~------------~--------­

CITY -------...-----.,.--STATE

Meigs Co. .Memory Gardens

400 Cadotllrd.
Galli)lells. 011. 45631
(6141 446-3615

Pomerey, OH. 45769
1614) "2-7440

L-----~-------------------·

White

Bone

LIGHT TRUCK CLOSEOUT SALE
FIIESTONE lTX

s55
235175115 IOWl XL S80

zunnu ....

COliSEI ODT WG 6 PLY ·

mmm IOWl

sao

S89

31110.50115 IOWL
VISAIM'a.,..•CAIID WI.LCOME + .6t

m

·1Pom•oy·Home &amp; Auto
600 l Main St.
··

.

· 992-2094

r.....,.y

SERVIN~ THE AREA FOR 23 YEARS

'

-

•

Nevy
BIIICk
Red
Ch-ut

FII.-SAT.

lt. 3 .

. GETHNG READY ' - Norma
back, -pd Jean
Rouh, are pictured here loading bOob oato
shelves ol Melp
County's yery own bookmobile. The mobile library wl)l_be on the
road live days a. week, Tuesday, Wedliesday, Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday.

By JULIIl; DILLON
. 30.
.
July 7 'and 21; an&lt;!: Aug, 4 and 18.
Salem Center Pick and Shovel.
·
Reedsville at Reed's Country · Letart Falls a\ .E tr(e's .Restau- Saturdays, 4:30-5:30 p.m. on
Sentinel ~ewsStaff
MelgsCountysveryownbook- · Store, Thursdays, 6-7 p.m: on . rant, Wedne~days, 6-7 p.m. on April 7 and 21; May .5 and 19;
, ' mopll~ Is now on the roads,
Ajlrll5andl9; May,3,17,and3i;
Aprll4andl8; May2,16,and30;
June2,16,and30; Julyl4and28;
:' &amp;• •~~·15-~~&lt;~J1~~p.W,~/.'~ 1_d~te.~ :., ~~. qe ~4 ~nd, 28;, J'lly, 12 ;and· ~; ..June 13, and 2T;',:July ·u 11!1&amp;-25; ·' · !Hld::M~g~l'l;,and'i!i. '!"-')'!- ~··
· ,tol'' .of tlie 1/f~lp' c(lOunty, ~'lllJCI. " and' A~g: 9. -and\2~.
. . · ..· and Aug. 8 and 22.
. ..
Tuppers Plains at Lodwick's,
.Library.
. Carpenter Church, Saturdays,
Racine Bank, ·wednesday's. Thursdays, noon to 5 p.m. on
used but well malntal.ned
4:30,5:30 p.m. on Aprlll4 and 28;
noon to 5 .p.m. on Aprll4, 11, 18, April 5 and 19; May 3, 17, and 31;
~n~ eq)llpped vehicle WI!S purMay 12_ and 26; June 9 and 23;
and 2.5; May 2. 9, 16, 23, and 30;
June 14 and 28; July 12 and 26;
cl1itsed from the Ohio Valley
July 7 and 21; and Aug: 4 and 18.
June 6, 13, 20. and 27; July 11, 18. and Aug. 9 and 23.
Area Libraries for $10,000:
Dexter Churcli, on Thursdays,
and 25; and Aug. 1, 8, 15, 22, and·
Syracuse, Fridays, noon to 5
5-6 p.rn. on Aprill2 ad 26; May 10 29.
.
p.m. on Apri16 and 20; May 4 and
The schedule for the mobile
llbraty ·has been announced•and
and 24; Jyne 7 and 25; July 5 and
Rutland Civic Center, Thurs- 18; June 1, 15, and 29; July 13 and
is a~ follows.
19; and Auil, 2. 16 ..and 30.
days, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Aprll12 27; and Aug. 10 and 24.
~urlinghl!m Mobile Park,
Keno, Frl\lays, 6-7 p.m. on and26; Mayl0and24; June7and
Tuppers Plains, Lodwick's,
Tuesday~ from 2:30-3:30 p.m. on
Aprlfl3 and 27; May 11 and 25;. 21; July 5 and 19; and Aug. 2, 16, Fridays, noon to 5 p.m. on April
April3 and 17; May 1, 15, and 29;
June 8 and 22; July 6 and 20; Aug.
and 30.
Continued on page 12
June 12 ..and 26; July 10 and 24;
3, 17, and 31.
and Aug. 7 and 21.
Portland Post Office, WednesDanV\IIe Chu~ch, S.:.turdays
days, 6-7 p.m. on April1l'and 25;
from 3-4 p.rn. on Aprll 7 and 21;
Mav 9 adn 23· June 6 and 20· July
'May 5 and 19; June 2. 6, and 30;
18; ·Aug. 1, 15, and 29.
'
July 14 a!ld 28;. and Aug. 11 and
Rutland, Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 2
25.
.
.
p.m. on April 7 and 21; May 5 and
being withheld pending the ftlfng
Deputies of the Meigs County
Hemlock G.rove Church, Tues19; June 2, 16, and30; July Hand
of
charges.
Sheriff's Department took a
days from 1-2 p.m. on Apri13 and
28; Aug. 11 and 25.
.
A
1978 Ford pickup truck was
17; May 1, ~5, and 29; .June 1~ and.
Chester Fire Station, F.r ldays , report Thursday evening from a
destroyed
by fire at the Cline
26; JuiY.lOand 24, and.Alig. 7 and
6-7 p.m. on Aug.. 6 and 20; May 4 Portland resident of an unauthoon
Route 7 around 6:30
Orchard
21:
•• ' . .
'
and 18; June 1, 15. and 29; July 13 rized use of a motor vehicle. The I' p.m. Thursday. According to the
resident reported his 1988 OldsLangsville, Thursdays from· and 27; and Aug. 10 and 24.
report: the truck, owned by
6:30-7:30 p.m. on April 12 ad 26;
Harrisonvllle Church, Satur- .mobile had been driven by a
Rufus
Cline, was being used in
subject that he knew, butwhodid
May 19 fl~d 24; June 7 and 21;
day~. 3-4 p.m. on Aprll14 and 28,
the
orchard
to haul branches that
not have permission. Names are
July 5 ~n,d 19; and Aug.?, 16, and
May 12 and 26; June 9 and ~3;
had been prunned from the trees.
When the truck was shut o!t it .
1 backfired and caught fire. ThP
Tuppers Plains Fire Department
responded to the scene.
• r
~·
.
~
The department is investigating the breaking and entering of
the concessions booths at the
Meigs
County Fairgrounds. The
WASHINGTON . cOP!) - It
recommending that shops bo? a monfly-saver.
..
Continued
on page 12
·may · takl! a little ,more persuac opened and closed earlier du~ln!(
The study indicated a 1.5
s!on thiS' year io convince Amerisummer months ro cut·the costs
percent to 2 percPnt reduction in ·
cans to set their clocks ahead
ol providing lightlnll.
March and April highway traffic ·
Sunday to daylight-saving time
William Willett began urging
deaths any Increase In hazards to
-this spring's cloc,k adjustment
the adoption of daylight-saving "'arty morning travelers. It
.ralls on April Foo!JI.pay .
time in J;:ngland and during
showed a 6 million bartel savings
The "spring ~rward" • .part of
World War I It was adopted by
in oil use for · March and Api:il,
the old addage, "spring forward,
England, France, Germany and
and noted that a study of violent
fall back" occurs .at 2 a.m. local
a few other nations.
crimes in Washington, D.C. ,
time·11n the tlrst Sunday of April,
The Un !ted States took up the
indicated a 10 percent to 13
'tleprivlng most Americans ·or an
concept late In the w.ar when
percer&gt;t reduction In violent
hour of sleep and plunging the
President Wilson, on March 31,
crln•es during daylight saving
nation Into daylig!tt-savlng time
1918, signed leg~tatlon promoted . time. In addition, the study listed
and more sunlight at the end .of
by Robert Garland or Pittsburgh.
a . number of polls showi1J8 a '
the day.
However, It was repealed the
public preference lor ' eight
: '11le clocks go back at 2 a.m.
.,
'
·
following )'.flir.
months of daylight saving ume.
local time on the last Sunday of
In the United States tjle _prac- with standard time runninl!lrom
October.
·
tice was revived In World War II,
November through February. ·
It has not always been so, and
and ln'l966 the Unjtorm Time Act
The s 1udy, however, cited
not eVeryone In tlj,e UniteiJ States
provided for th~ first nationwide some dlsadvantagea to extended
observes the prljlctlce. · • .
obsetvance of daylight -saving dayltaht saving time, Including
I'
For Instance, Hawaii, Arizona,
time during pejlcetlme.
uncomfortably late sllllrlses for
' During the energy crisis or 1973 . several days In early March for
the Eastern Time Zone part or
Indlall8, PQeriO Rico, tile 1/irll!n
and 1974 the nailon went to ·those who live at the western
Islands ani! Amtrl~!lemoaal'l!
daylight-saving time year-round :edp of a time 1.0ne, and apprenot maklnll the sWIIII:II. ,
tb conserve eneriY, but standard
heiiSion about . early mol'lllng
The seveii Q!Ontlls 4C daylllbt
time ·wu
tate In 1974 buatdl to travatera. lt said
saving time DOW oblervtd II · !'Or .the
complaints mlllht come from
based .arowtd the iclea of provtd·
with tlie
farmer&amp; more attllllld to natural
lng an equal amount or extra
and •mrl than time
evening sianllllht on e11her &amp;ide of
tiOD
··
lr.otn funilamentalllt
the hottest daya of the year.lty tor
!ani who con1lder
Jenerally In late July. · ,
law dates to the
daYlllbt-lavlng ti!Jif unnatural,
· HistoriCally, the Idea tt lUll· · zones .were of lmi&gt;nrttalil'trom outdoor theater owners,
.lllnll the )lour hand allout to
cauae ol the need
and from the elderly who llavp,
adju1t ~alrcbeillll• to the
standardized railroad rchetlules.
diUiculty adjuatlng to lbe cllan·
A · atlldy anilertalcen for the
longer alld lllol Ill!• fbi~- be
11eovers to and fropl daylight
treced IG _,.11111t
d.partmnt durlnl tile enei'JY savlftl time, l'eprdll!ss of '!'hen
who wrote a paper whllf llei-'lllna . cl'lall alao revealed ·d ayllllbt·
they take place.
as the U.s. envoy to France
aavlng time to he both a life- and
I

. 'Pile

Deputies probe unauthorized
use; of vehicle in Portland

It's no joke! Move:· your ~ clocks
ahead one hour ·on April Fools' Di.iy

20°/o OFF..

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR FASHION
SHOW TICKETS TO BE GIVEN AWAY
TUESDAY, APRIL 3.

'

.hinldla,

C·HAPMAN SttOES
... _ ,,

211 Cento

'

'

WASHJNGTON (UP!) -Opponents of an. amendment to the
Senate clean air bill helping coal
miners and other workers whose
jobs are jeopardized by the
legislation applied heavy pressure at the end to defeat the
proposal.
The amendment for a $500mUiion package proposed by
Sen. Robert Iiyrd, 0-W.Va. , was
not billed as "deal breaker,"
but Senate leaders and the White
House applied that threat to
defeat the measure .50-49 .
Thursday.
The massive clean air bill is the
product of a compromise between the Bush administration
and Senate leaders. Proponents ..
and opponents to various amend·
ments have to some degree used
the delicacy of the agreement as
leverage.
The clean air legislation -proposes to strengthen federal em is·
sian controls on factories, power
plants and cars to reduce acid
rain, toxic and cancer-causing
industrial pollution and urban
smog now .choking 101 cities.
Senate leaders have promised
fu II action on the bill next
Tuesday, which would send it to
the House.

The so-called Byrd amendment was by far the most
dramatic showdown on clean air
since the compromise bill was
produced in January. Byrd challenged the White House and the
Senate leadership in trying to win
passage.
The chairman of the PO'Verful
Senate Appropriations Committee, entranced a packed Senate
gallery with passionate remarks
on the floor.
He referred to Roman history·
at one point, then speaking
poignantly about the hard life of
coal miners, whose cause Byrd
has championed throughout his
long Senate career.
.
"The coal miner, when he sits
down at night, his body knows the
pain of the day's work," Byrd
said. "He knows the sweat, the
toll, the back-breaking pain that
went into the earning of that
dollar.
''We are not asking for wei'
fare," he said. "We are asking
for justice."
Proponents argued Congress
could not Ignore the thousands of
Appalachian and Midwest coal
miners certain to be hurt by
proposed acid rain reduction
rules.

EaSiem ··~;m-.i, ~wards
Shue one-year contract
Dr. Donald 'Shue, elementary nine weeks notices for high
principal, was a awarded a new school students when they are
one-year co:~tract, for the 1990-91 completed.
school · year at Thurs~ay ·evenDown lng Ch lids Mullen Musser
ing's rei(Uiar meeting of the Insurance was awarded the
Ea~tern
Lccal Board · o( contract on building and contents
Education.
insurance coveraj:e,
Also empioyed were Brookset t
The board aiSC? approved the
Kay Davis, Karen Sue Lyons, application for reimbursement
Deanna L. Apling, and Joyce for professional growth for
Otto as substitute teachers lor teacher George Gagai.
the balanc~ of u.e 1989-90 school ,
New appropriations were apyear , The substitute teachers proved for the 1990 Chapter II ;
will be used on an as needed only programandthe1990DrugGrant ·
basis. Cathy Darlene Cllffod was
pgogram. Als~ ,llPproved were
employed as a substitute food
permanent 'appropriations for
service employee lor the balance the general fund.
of the 1989-90 school yl!ar. The
The 1989-90 existing school
resignation of Darla KPnnedy as calendar was changed making
a substitute teacher was Apri113 (Good Friday) a holiday
instead of April 20. ..
accepted.
Charlie Ritchie was employed
A date of Aprlll8at 7: 30 p.m . ln
as an unpaid volunteer assistant the high school cafeteria has
basebal coach for the 1990 been set for ·the .next regular
season.
meeting.
The boarp adopted notice of
A special. meeting will be held
~ommendatlon resolutions for
April 10 at 9 a.m. at Chester
the elementary students who Elementary School lor the·board
have made the honor roll for the to tour the buildings · of the
fourth marking period an\1 au tho- district, beginning at Chester .
rlzed the Issuance of the third

--/?
z

v·

&amp; MON.

.

BOOKMOBDI.E DRIVER - Danny WIU has the taak or making
sure Melp Couaty'a Bookmobile arrives at all ol Its deslinatlons.
The mobile library will serve the needs of county residents who
lind It d!Uicull to make lllo the library In Pomeroy or Middleport.

Nfeigs ,County's _bookmobile now on the roads

COTTON

POIIBOY'S QUAUIY SlOE STORE

.

a

!tp_ _

Olio Yallty MlntOI'y h-elens

Multlmedle '

•

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Senate downs
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aid.plan for
coal .m iners

Wlthooot oWI...Ioft.l woultllkotorl&lt;liro inlormlllitft
livintOH•
lor two ..rlllr,.ll. lo d•tion, I woultlliktto rocoiYO yoin lrhrtoPI.,.... Gilldt ·

r-------------------------·
I

.

YES, I Willi TO TAlE ADYAIIIAGE OF YOUR'
TWO FOI ONE UVING OFFER AND SAVE S59S

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From the Premium P70 A/S 70 Series for luxury St·
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2 Soctlono. 16

1990

j

TEAR OFF AND MAIL IN TODAY!!

u itions.

Judgment awarded

III!TRIC RADIAL

Tlr~s

· :Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

Hospital n:ews

CU$7011 AIS

•

SSt'S SlV.GS-SAfE 5011f0 BY ...,.G ftOW .
· ·~· WHAT US TO IE DONE-:SOONEI 01 UTEI

frtL

Low to.IJIIt Ia lower 501.
Saturday, hllh lnmld tlh.
CUnce of rata til

at

Weather

IIMFMCRAFT

Daily Number
282
Pick4
5578

.

Second order of
sesquicentennial
c®khooks are here

I'-7V

forward
one hour
Sunday

Middleport court news

FALLS MASTERCIAFT -TilES

Radial

There were 5,143 wttb four of six
numbers for $'1!1 each.
There wu one big wtnaer In
Wednelday's K1cker game far
$100,000. The wlnnlDK nurnllers
were 837620. Seven got flw 1111 six
numbers ·for $5,1100 each. . Sixtyeilbt ,ot tour of six numbers for
$1,000 each.
,Saturday's Super Lotto jackpot ·
will be worth $3 mUllon.

~

Seven were fined and three .Middlepor-t, $25 and costs, failure
others forfeited boods In the to maintain coatrol; Rodney
Tuesday night court of Middle- Clonch, Middleport, $100 and
· costs,- no operatQ!''s license. .
port Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Christopher Tllomas, Leon, w_.
Fined were Perry Hughes,
'
Va.,
$10 fine only, running a stop
Middleport, .$25 and costs, dl~or­
Burial will be In the Coolville
sign;
Aaron Davis, Middleport;
derly manner; bRandy K. Lee, ·
Cemetery. Friends may call at
$100 ljnd costs, with three days In
the funeral home after noon · Middleport, $10 and costs, expired tags; Bobby R. Stewart, jail suspended, criminal miSaturday with the family to
schief, and $50 and costs, conreceive friends from 2 to 4 and 7 Middleport, $100 and costs, driv- suming alcohol under age.
ing under suspension; E. E.
to 9 p.m.
Forfeiting bonds were Oranga
Kn lght, Middleport, $10 fine only,
CtJarles McNickle
J.
Walker, Letart, W. Va., $50
failure to yield;· David P. Smith,
bond on running a stop sign;
· Charles R. McNickle, 73, of
Bruce B. Llewellyn, New MarshMcNickle Road, Racine, a refield, $60 expired operator's
tired dredge boat captain, died
Ucense. and Frank T. Swanson•.
Wednesday at his residence.
Gallipolis, $200 bond on failure to
Born on May 20, 1916 at Gaclne, ·
control her motor vehicle.
he was the son of the late Rush
•
McNickle and Veatrice Roush
The second order of the PomeMcNickle.
roy sesquicentennial cookbooks,
He was a member of the '.'Treasured Recipes ofthe Past"
Antiquity Baptist Church and . have arrived at the Chamber of
Masonic Lodge 461, F. &amp; A.M., Commerce Office In· Pomeroy. 'Dally stock prices
Racine.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
The books may be purchased for
He is surVived by his wife, $6.50 at the Chamber Office.
Bryce and Mark Smith
Kathleen McNickle, Racine; a More Information may be obof Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewt
brother. Lawrence McNickle, tained by caiHng ~2-5001.
Harrisburg, Pa.; two aunts,
Am Electric Power .............. 30
Helen Williams, Clifton, W. Va.
AT&amp;T , ....... ~ ........ ,.............. .42')4'
and Leona Dudding, Nitro, W.
Ashland Oil ......................... 37
Soutb central Ohio
Va., and several nieces and
Bob Evans ...................... .. .. l3\j,
Rain or drizzle likely Thursday
'' .
nephews.
night, with a low near 50. Chance Charming ShoppeS.. .........\ ... 9\j,
Graveside services will be held
City Holding Co . ........... ...... 13~
of precipitation is 70 percent.
Friday at 1 p.m at the Letart Rain continuing and a chl!nce of . Federal MoguL .. ..... :.:....... l8%
Falls Cemetery with the Rev.
thunderstorms Friday, with Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 36%
Earl Shuler officiating. Friends
highs between 60 and 65. Chance Heck's .... , .......... .... .. ..............3
may call at the Ewing Funeral . of rain is 90 percent.
Key Centurion .................... 14%
·
Home from 7 to9 p.m. Thursday.
Lands'
End .......................... 19
Extended Forecast
· Masonic services will he held at ·
Limited Inc . .-..................... .41%
Saturday throurll Monday
7: 30 tonight at the Ewing Funeral
MulUmedla Inc ................... 80~
A chance or rain Saturday and
Qome.
!1111!4ay, ~ .fa~!. \featner o.n Rait ltestaurants .................. 2~
J\llollda~- ftiWIII Wfl'! lJit mostW Ill' " RiiiiiiiM &amp; ~s ............ .15~
the 60s Saturday and Sunday, Shoney's Inc ............ ........... 12%
dropping
Into the 50s Monday. Star Bank ................. :....... .. l9%
Papers &amp;Jed
Overnight' lows will be mostly in Wend:c's lnt'l. ........................5
the 40s Saturday and Sunday Worthington Ind ............ .. .... 21%
Articles of Incorporation have
I
mornings and ranging from the
been filed by two Meigs County
mid 30s to the mid 40s early
businesses with the office of
Monday.
Secretary of State Sherrod
Veterans Memoiial
Brown.
,
Wednesday admissions - AriUcense issued
Filing (or incorporation were
gelicaCurtls, Pomeroy;'Virglnla
Chancey's .Food Mart, Inc., SyraE. Pratt, 'Long Bottom; and
In
the
Meigs
County
Probate
cuse, with Robert Wingett and
Nancy Neutzling, Syracuse.
Court,
a
marriage
license
hws
.
Charles Frederick Chancey as
Wednesday . discharges been
Issued
to
Hubert
Earl
incorporators and Wingett as the
Carla
Morris, Mary Goodwin,
Terry,
38,
Branchland,
W.Va.
,
agent; and Facemyer Forest
Melinda
Hayman, Angelica Cur- ·
and
Dottle
Lynn
Adkins,
22:
Products, Inc., Middleport, with
lis,
and
Virginia
Pratt.
·
Branchland,
W.Va.
William A. Morse . as the Incorporator, and William L. Face- ·
myer· as the agent.

II~RCIIAFT

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-Area deaths--C. Glep Burton

Ohio Lottery

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·

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