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'-ge 14-The

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POWELL'S COYPON

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We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

.
Yp1.40, No.2315

COunty will _review old claim

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The Meigs County Commls· out of court, the commissioners
stoners will be reviewing the explained, and Hawk appealed.
status of an old animal claim However, the appeal was also
from Calvin Hawk, Tuppers denied.
Now the commissioners have
Plains, for the loss of sheep.
· The original claim against tne been notified through Hawk's
county was for $6,000, but the · attorney tllat tile $945 settlement
commiSsioners reduced the orig- Is acceptable. But given the
Inal claim to $945, which was tile circumstances surrounding the
going market value at tile time. animal claim, the commission·
However, Hawk refused the $945 ers will be verifying whether or
payment an!J sued the county for . not they are sun responsible for
damages. The case was thrown the claim before Issuing _

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·Colby ·Cheese .~~.... $1 99
' CRUNCHY ·COD ·
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Fish. sqUaieS ..~.....- J0

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PICI·OF•THE-CHICK

9 UVES . ·" •

. CAT FOOD

-EASTER SIGHTS-: Quite the popular thiD&amp;ID lawn decoratlona
In the Bead area this week of Easter are IDflatable bunnies aad
colorful e111ree8. Mr. and Mrs. Fraak SllliOJi on Lasley St. used
bOth In their dlaplay admired here by their youlil nel&amp;hbllr,
Brapdy Soiiler.

6.00Z.l6

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LEG··QUARTERS
Chicken ...............~~. 49. (

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Spratley qu~tions
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Gwtl S.. Apr. I lhru Sat~· A,.. 14

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payment .
-Met with Daniel Gilbert, of
-The commissioners also con· Klals and Company, the county's
dueled the fo.Uowlng other t)usl· . medical Insurance adminlstra·
ness matters.
tor, to~ general policy review.
-Announced · there wlll be
,...Tabled bids for a computer
meeting on Monday at McArtllur systein for Meigs County Court
to continue discussion Into the for another week.
possibility of a multi-county jail
-Approved a request from
In this area.
Meigs Prosecutor Steven L..
-Reappointed John Rice, Jen- Story to appoint a special prosec-·
nifer Sheets and Ron Ash as utor In a juvenUe case, due to a
members of the Private Industry conflict of Interest.
Council.

Richardson_found .· innocent

1·6

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POWELL'S cou~.N

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2 Sectlona, 18 P1ge1 26 Centa
A Muhlmedio Inc. Nowopope&lt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 12. 1990

Copyrighted 1880

PINEAPPlE
20

-IEEF BUCKET

ses.

1~9-34-36-37

I AND 11.01 PVBCJIASE
I
.
•

l98 SECON-0 ST.
.POMEROY, OH.'
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., APRIL -14, J 990

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Low tonl&amp;ht In mid Zfs.
Friday, cloudy. Rl&amp;h In mid

Super Lotto

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STORE HOURS
Monday thru $unday ·
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-CORN

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I.angsto~

DEL· MONTE·

1---

Ohio Lottery

A Meigs County Court Jury of Richardson was at the home to
eight deliberated (or less than exercise visitation rights with his
one hour before deciding that Infant son.
·
Thomas J. Richardson, MiddleAccording to Meigs Assistant
port, was Innocent of two charges Prosecutor Linda Warner, In
of· assault and a lesser Included closing statement, Richardson's
cbarge of disorderly conduct.
former wife became concerned
Richardson was _!!barged with during the visitation of her
the two separate counts of former husband because she
assault an~ a lesser Included .thought l!_e was playing too rough
charge of disorderly conduct In a with the 1chlld and was actually
caseflledagalnsthlmbyMr. and · causing the child pain. Cindy
Mrs. James M. Soulsby, Pome- Rlcharason turned to her father
roy, and his former wife, Cindy for help In making Richardson
, · Soulsby Richardson, also of stop what she felt was too rough
Pomeroy .
·
treatment. The visitation ended
The two-day trial before Ju\lge with harsh words and a scuffle
Patrick O'Brien began Tuesday between Richardson and Mr.
mornlllgandconclllded5:50p.m. Soulsby. Mr. Soulsby 'sustalned
Wednesday when the jury re- an Injury tohlshand as a result. of
turned their verdict of Innocent. · the fight. Mrs. Soulsby tllen tried
Charges against Richardson to break up the scuffle and to
stemmed from a domestic dis- retrieve a tape recorder-which
pule on January 28 at the Rlcbardson had In his possession
Soulsbys' Union Avenue hOme. and had used to record the fracas
At the time of the lncldl!nl, · at the home. Mrs. Soulsby

l!/ charges

received a bruise to the chest as
FUchardson pushed · her from
lilm, Warner said.
Warner' pointed out that "If not
for Richardson's propensity towards being violent with his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Soulsby would
probably not have-been there."
She urged the jury to consider
why Richardson was carrying a
hidden tape recorder In the firs(·
place. Warner accused Richard son of coming to the home "for a
fight" andactuallyproVbklngthe
situation.
.Warner also urged the jury to
disregard suggestions from defense counsel that Soulsby, as
Meigs County · Sheriff, hild
abused the power of his office In ·
·regard to dealings with "his
former - son·ln-law . Warner
pointed out that when a 11armful
Incident happens within a private
home, whether or_not the person
living In the home Is an elected

~,~8f-~~t:··-~ · : jt~;~}~:~~;!~~~~'- ~J:iEfeciifives ._.$iJy
· · ·, ·-· -J-~Ob apj}t£Cants

liJcli s#tiifs

.OJI!IlJ; COfl!lUJl\~r.~· ,. C91!nsel Wll-

watchdog.
tlim",.!lj!ratley said Wednesday
Spratley said blocking would
DAYTON,- Ohio (UPl)- Ohio
The, poll of business officers,
the new "caller Identification"
be justified wheil giving anonym- business executives say 20 per- , . mostly chief executives, from
technology offered by Ohio Bell · OilS tips to Jaw enforcement cent of tile people who apply to . coinpan'les across Ohio found
Telephone Co. could alter the
agencies and news organlza· their companies have trouble widespread concern with a dele·
!:laslc concept of privacy In
lions, c~llng social service agen· completing · an appllcatlon be-- rloratlon In the entry-level work·
telephoning unless a blocking
cles or shopping by phone. ·
cau·s e they can't read and write force1 with 45 percent saying It's
option Is made available.
He said his agency will ask tile
well enough.
·
worse than belpre.
Spratley held a press confer- POCO, If It approvesCaiJeriD, to
A Society Corp. surVey of 1,054 , · One teiUng sign Is people who
ence to cite a wide variety of forc'e Ohio Bell to offer the executives released Wednesday struggle to complete job appllca·
potential abuses of the service, blocking mechanism.
also found that 72 percent of the lions because of deficient skUis. ·
which allows a customer to view
Dah Fugate, public lnforma·
executives would support higher
·
the ~hqne nwnber of an IJicornlng tlon .officer lor the POCO, said ' taxes If the money would go for
can before deciding whether to the cop~mlsslon has the request education.
answer the telephone.
under consideration and has until
"What tlley're saying Is there's
The service already Is avalla- May 19 to act on lt. The some kind of problem here, some
By UnUed Press International
ble . In several other states, commiSsion could extend the kind of !allure that needs allenOhio typically has a rough
marlteted as a method for deadline, .he said.
tlon;" said Ken Mayland, chief transition from winter to spring,
discouraging obscene and haFugate said the commission eeonomlst for the Cleveland butThursdaymomlngcameasa
rasslqg phone calls.
· staff Is studying the Ohio Bell bank.
surprise to even the pardlest of
OhloBellhasaskedthePubllc proposalandwlllconslderSpraBuckeye State's weather
Utilities Commission of Ohio for !ley's proposed blocking option.
veterans.
.
permission to offer It In the · "They are getting as much ·
Up to 3 Inches of snow fell
Buckeye State at $6.50 a montll Information as they can," he
overnight In tile nortlleast coun·
P!!J:!!_j'one-Ume$60 to $SO charge· said. "They are looking at what _
ties, and the morning rush hour
for Tristiiliiiijf~flieldentlflcatlon other states are doing."
In the Cleveland area was a
device.
Douglas Mangen. a spokesman
wASHINGTON ( tJPI) - U.S, mess.
Spratley said that for the sake for Ohio Bell, said Caller ID Is
retail sales plunged by 0.6
A nine-vehicle accident Just
of balance and retaining the right being marketed becallse It Is one
percent In March for the second before dawn closed Interstate480
to ' prlvacy, a person making a of the three ''most desirable
stralghtmontlllydecllnelnmore west of Hopkins International
call to a telep~one equipped with features" that customers want.
than tllree years, the Commerce Atrport. A five-vehicle acclde_nt
''Caller ID" should be-.able to }fe said the blocking option_would
Department said Thursday.
snarled traffic on the Shoreway
neutralize the device and pre· defeat the purpose of Caller ID,
The decrease was the Iarges) In front of Burke Lakefront
rendering It useless.
monthly drop since a 1.4 percent- Airport Authorities reported nuserve his or her anonymity.
"This would totally and radl- ·
Continue~ ~n page 16
fall last October and provides merous minor accl~ents on Icy
further evidence that America's freeway bridges throughout the

"A full tO percent of applicants
cannot spell 'Cievela_!ld' properly," one CEO said.
The results were contained In
the Inaugural edition of ''Reglonal Review," Society's report
on business Issues, to be pub-llshed quarterly.
,
· The review Includes a survey
on general business conditions

Ohi·o .weather

Re t a"L•1 ·prwes
•
fiall in MarC
· h_

'

Workers comp board
· hi h
·
sets ·

eeo~lo~~J~!~b~~:o~:g~ de- a~:jd

sa1an•es

cline In sales · except for food
stores, which recorded a 0.2
percent Increase last montll,
according to the report by the
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Some
AFL·CIO.
department's Census Bureau.
Workmen's Compensation Board
Chalnnan of the compensation
The 0.6 decline In March and a
members' could co Uect $30,000 ;1
board John R. Hodges, president 0.3 percent decline In February
year just by attending meetings. .of the Ohio AFI-CIO estimated lare the first two consecutive
The -, Cleveland ~lain Dealer
Wednesday that board members - monthly decreases since October
· . reported Thursday that a new
were likely to be paid about and November 1986 when sales
law created the '.business-labor
$30,000 this year. .
were off by 4.6 percent and 0.5
board to oversee the $7 bllllon
Hodges and Celeste aide Rlpercent, department said.
compensation system. The elghi·
chard
Murray
said
the
fees
were
Total sales for tile month stood
• member board appro~es rates,
based ·on · research by · two
at - 148.6 biUion after hitting
pollcles and Investments, and
members.
$149.5 bUllon In February and
cap also set Its own salaries.
$149_9 billion In January.
State Sen. Richard Finan, R·7,
From Nov. 8 when the board
of Cincinnati sponsored the blSales of durable goods _
took office, through Feb. 6, seven .. partisan reoganlzatlon bill.
expensive Items made to last
of the eight bdard members were "I think the whole purpose Is to
three or more years -;-fell by 0.8
paid $12,000 each for meetings,
get outstanding business persons . percent In March, while sales of
wblle a seventh was paid $10;000.
out there (on the board) ~~tty to "bon-durable goods dropped byO.S
This translates jnto sallirles of
operate It like a business, Finan
percent the commerce Depart$2,000 per member lor each
said, "I think I would rather
ment said.
meeting of the system's partMarcli sales at automotive
judge by theresultsover tile next
time board • far more than any
two years. _If they g~~ results, I'll
dealers were off by 1.4 percent
such state board or commission
double their salary.
,
after 8 7.2 percent coUapse In
pays members.
·
Cincinnati-based Western &amp;
sales In February, In January,
The Jaw requires the board to Southern Life Insurance Co,.
sales ot cars, tr\lcks and vans
base Its salaries on the salaries of
whose 1988 assets made It abou
zoomed by 10.2 percent, as
private-sector boards i'ritll slm·
bait the size of the cornpen-.uon
dealers ·offered Incentives to
liar duties.
system, paid outllde dlrectora an
clear their-loti of1989Ieftovers _
~ All required from the reorganl·
average of 18.086 In 1985. •
and helped push total retail sales
zatlon law. Gov. Richard Celeste
Nationwide Ute Insurance Co.
up by 8.2 percent. ·
names the eight members. Four of Colwnbu~ bas 1988 -.~eu of
Ill a related area, March sales
from busiiii!IS and four are about $8.7 blulon and paid lls17
at gasoUne service stations
from labor from llata submitted dlrectoraan- averageofal~.OOOin
C ti
d
'
~.
on nue on page 16
by business lobbies and the Ohio 1985.

•a
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are

'-.li----'--: __ --- -----

downtown restaurateur

Maureen Cook: "You know, I've
livedinCievelandallmyllle,but
this Is rldfculous. You get used to
strange weather here , but
enough Is enough."
'"g)Js Is great weather, for
February.:," silld anotller office
worker.
·
At dawn, white-out conditions
were reported In Medina County,
south of Cleveland, with traffic
on Intersiate 71 slowed to a
crawl.
·
Elsewhere, skies were clear or
part!)' cloudy at mid-morning,
and t' .e National Weather Ser·
vice .aid temperatures were to
"warm" to lhe40s under clearing
skies. Another cold night was on
tap, though, with lows Thursday _
night to drop again Into the 20s.
Friday will see highs In tile 50s
ul_lder sunny skies.
The ralil will return on the
weekend, however, with showers
expected both Saturday and
Sunday, before lair skies return
on Monday. ~lghs will be In the
mid-50s to mld·&amp;Os on the weekend and In tile 50s th low' 60s
Monday. Lows will be mainly In
the 30s !jaturday and Monday.
and In the mld-30s to mld-40s
Sunday.
,
The continuing cool teniperatures Thursday and Friday will

-·- ii---- -~

~eat

official has I\,Otlllng to do with ·
tllat person being entitled to the
protection of the law. ''The laws
are there to protect all of us,"
Warner said.
Meigs Public Defender Charles Knight, representing Rl·
chardson, urged Jurors In his
closing statement to Indeed conslder the "Inner relationship of
these people." Knight recounted ·
events prior to the January 28
Incident In which he believes his client was denied his rights by
the Soulsby family.
He also pointed out that Pomeroy Policeman Joe Kirby testl- ·
fled that he (Kirby) had been
called to. the Soulsby home on :
January 28 foUow!ng the alleged ·
assault, and that Kirby had asked Mr. Soulsby If he had
struck Richardson. According to
Knight, Kirby testified that
Soulsby said he did not strike his
Continued on page 16
·

that show.~ executives optlm~tlc
that the · grow til recession of
· the lastl2 months may be over.
Initial unemployment ,claims
are edging down, purchasing
managers say conditions are
better and commodity prices are
rising, all signs consistent with
an economic rebound, though
probably a modest one, Mayland
said.

-~0....

11 •.a

Febru_ary.

keep drying rates limited and
The slx-t.o-10-day outlook for
soils will show only a little
Tuesday through the foUowlng
firming. SoU temperatures at 4 . Saturday cal~ for cooler-thanInches under bare ground are
normal temperatures and above
still averaging only In the upper
normal precipitation.
40s.
Ontheearlymornlngweather
'_I'he ground will warm some
map deep low pressure was over
under the Influence of the nearly
Newfoundland wlth a cold front
tuU sunshine Thursday and Frl- over tile western Atlantic. High
day,andaveragesmayholdnear
pressure centered over eastern
50 degrees even on the weekend
Kansas occupied most of the
as showers develop once again.
eastern two-thirds of the country.
Wind speeds Into the teens, as
The high was to graduaiiJ :
well as prospects for subexpand to the east and Into the ·
freezing temperatures, wlll _deOhloValleylaterThursday.The ·
l!rade spraying conditions. Llgh- high center wlll move across ·
ter winds will Improve prospects
Kentucky Thursday night and '·
for spraying Friday. However,
through the Vlrglnlas on Friday. :
extension specialists caution · Low pressure will move out of the ·
fruit growers to consider the ROckies Thursday night and :·
toxicity of their chemicals on across the Plains states Friday :

~::mw;;~~~~y are present In ~~?d!~t~~!~~- Mississippi Valley -:
Local news bn·e~II_ 8
•.
Patrol citeS Pomeroy man
- A Pomeroy man was cited In a crash Involving _ a
tractor-trailer and a pickup truck Wednesday at 10:40 a.m. In
Rutland Township on S.R. 124, about half a mile east of milepost
. 14, according to the Gallla· Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Ronald S. Haggy, 38, of 35230 Wolfe Rd., was cited for !allure
to yield after his 1988 International tractor-trailer hit a 1986
Ford F-150 pickup driven by Malcon M, Ingram, 81, of Noble
Summit Rd., Mlddlegort.
Ingram was driving west when Haggy, heading east, turned
left Into a driveway Into Ingram's path.

'

Deputies pr.obe theft
A 1974 Plymouth, reported stolen from the Shady Cove
residence of Homer "Cotton" Mille~: on Wednesday afternoon,
was recovered early Wednesday evening by Middleport Pollee,
according to Meigs C9unty Sheriff James !'4, Soulaby.
· Sheriff Soulsby also reported that two Middleport area
juven-Des were taken Into custody. They were apprehended at
Manley's Recycling where theY had sold some alwnlnum cans.
It was reported the cans were stolen from a realdence on WIDow
Creek. An Investigation Is conllnulng on the theft.
Sheriff Soulaby reports that charg~ against the pair will be
flied In ~etga County JuvenUeCourt. They wereteleased to the
custody of their parents.
.
.
In other matters, Sheriff Soulaby.reporta that Frank Houser,
27, wu arrested Wednesday evening on a bench warrant from
Continued on paae 16

. ------~-~~

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'

�Ohio

·c ommentary
'

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~v

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

.

Mail stirs voters' ire ___J_ac_k..:-,,A_nde_r_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Va_n_A_tt_a,

The Daily Sentinel

"lb

. Porn.-oy-Middllport. Ohio
Thursday, Aprl12 •.1990

·.

.

Bm~ ~

'

........... ,,........,.c::::~,..,.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manacer

!?AT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspape" Publishers Association.
· LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome: They should be less than 300 .
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and m11st be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publlshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Media needs
more mavericks

consolation Ill one' lowlY constituWASHINGTOJII - Our readers during an election year. The
ent
who simply wanted to be cut
newsletters
become
thinly
dis·
have had It with junk maiL They
ott
the
mailing list.
gulsed
campaign
material.
could complain to Congress If It
Rep.
Ronnie Flippo, D·Ala.,
We
recently
reported
on
the
weren't for one small problem.
who
Is
ru'nnlng
for governor, ts
biggest
mailers
on
Capitol
Hill
The Junk mall they're sick of
getting
a
boost
for
his gubernaand
asked
our
readers
to
send
us
comes from Congress.
torial
campaign
with
the tree
This Will be a record year for their junk mall. There is no
congressional
mailing
privilege.
mass malllngs, the selt- shortage of It ou.t there.
He sent out a n!lwsletter touting
One reader said he wrote his
con~~&lt;atulatory letters members
statewide
concerns beyond those
of Congress send to their constit-· congressman, Rep. 1'ommy Roof
hl.s
dlstrlct.
He bOasted of a 90·
uents In the guise of news from binson, R-Ark., and asked him to
percent
voting
attendance restop
sending
franked
newslet·
Washington. The mall ·goes out
cord
and
Included
a picture of
under the congressional franking ters. But he stU! got them. The
himself
with
George
and Barreader sent us one of the
· privilege, which Is a quaint,
colonial way of saying you buy offending pieces of mall In which
bara Bush at a White House
the slamps.
. Robinson noted his high voting soltee.
A Minnesota reader wrote us to
About $124 million was spent on attendance record, his resPQnses
complain about rnall from Sen.
taxpayer·flnanced mass mailto 11.000 constituent Inquires and
Ings by Congress last year, but
his efforts to help more than 5,000 Rudy Boschwltz, R·Mhin. Bosch·
people cut through government
wltz was among the biggest
the bill will be higher this year
j)ecause . members of Congress red tape. That wasn't much spenders on mass mailings last
year, spending $1.7 million. He
always seem to have more to say

draws a happy face next to the
signature on his letters.
"My husbanli has been dead
for five years and Is still
receiving regularly Rudy's correspondence," the Minnesotan
said. "I can't tell you If be draws
a happy face on the brochures, as
I don't bot()er to open thern. Tbey
are tiled In the wastebasket."
A Pennsylvania writer gets
more ll;lall thai! she needs from
Rep; Joseph McDade, R-Pa.
"The offensive thing about getting this piece of junk mall was
not the newsletter Itself, but the
fact that we rec~lved fOur - one ·
tor myse1f, my huaband, my
8-year-old son, and how they
remembered the dog, I'll never

know.''

Our AT TBIRD - Caap&amp; stealln1. ClDChmatl
Beds' Paul O'Nelll·(21) lllalged 011t by Bouton
Aalnt'lblrd bueman, Ken Caminiti, Ia the tblrd

.

· ·

politicians.
·
.
·
Medin moguls should back up their minions who refuse to play ball
with political propagandists. That means supporting reporters wlio
decline to collaborate · with staged government events and
photographers whO properly pass up so-called "photo opportunities."
The nation's .newspaper editors have just concluded a useful week
In Washington, bashing themselves for their sins.
"We often see ourselves as Davids, fighting the establishment,"
• Loren Ghlgllone, president of the American Society of Newspaper
:tdltors, told .his colleagues. Then, delivering his hard news !lash,
Ghigllone added, •'but the public sees us more as status quo
Gollaths."
. · Editor and president of The News In Sou til bridge, Mass., Ghtgllone
· bas. guts, a prerequisite for good medla-mogullng.
. ·
• In ~Is speech, he. denounced the tobacco Industry, an Important
advertiser, and took a swipe at the horoscopes many new.spapers
publish.
. Ghlgllone pushed boldly for the socl~iy's board to publish the
nllmes of newspapers with no minority journalists. Alas, the boar(!
timidly d.eclded . to name only those newspapers willing io be
Identified.
·
: As one of the society's 'few editors who own their newspapers,
Gbigllone surely qualifies as a media mogul.
And as a man of courage and Integrity, he also Is a medta maverick,
which unfortunately
Is becoming an Increasingly
rare breed.
.
. '
'

Berry's World

"

~~
11) 1990 by NEA . Inc

' "ON£ - just ON£ rerun of 'Gilligan's Island'
from TV Marti, and it means WAR!"

Fast trains would be good all around · · .
'

· ·

· ·

·.

LAS VEGAS (NEA) - Before Ironic compOnents, offer outthe 21st century arrives, moder- standing conversion opportuniately priced trains · could be ' ties for the companies that,
whisking thousands of pas- throughout the Cold War, have
sengeu betweyn this vacation been heavlly dependent upon
mecca and Southern California military contracts.
High-speed ran could relieve
at speeds of 250 to 300 mph.
Moreover, three other high· much of the pressure on overbur·
speed rail systems -In Florlaa, del'led - and therefore IncreasTexas and Ohio -could also be In Ingly hazardous - alrUne routes.
operation by the · end of this Almost two-thirds of all commerdecade, providing quick, reliable cial air travel .fnvolves trips of
· and affordable' tral)sportatlon 600 miles or less - the range In
. whlle relieving congested air which fast ground transportatllln
can be especially efficient. .
lanes and highways.
SlmU&amp;rly, the Innovation holds
That may sound like a fantasy,
but such trains ·have been operat· the promise of alleviating severe
lng for years In Japan and highway overcrowding. Without
France, with others either such relief, for example, the
planned or already under con- Florida Department of Transportation estimates that Interstate
struction throughout Europe.
High-speed rail lines are not 95 between Miami and Fort
cheap, but the average construc- Lauderdale wUI require 44 lanes
tiOn cost of $7 million pet mile Is to accommodate the traffic load
comparable with the expense of expected wlt~ID 30 years. ·
Four projects already are In
building new highways -and the
advanced
planning stages:
transportation Innovation Is es~
Thtee
consortiums have
.
pecially timely.
proclaimed
their
Intentions to bid
The manufacture of rail cars
right
to
build
a high-speed
for
the
and other heavy equipment, as
rail
line
projected
to carry 6.5
well as .the assembly of elec-

'

,,

· ·

·

million passengers every year
between Las Vegas and Anahelm, Callt. It could Include
additional stops In Barstow,
Palm Springs, Ontario, San Bernardlno, Riverside · and other
California communities.
A one-way trip would take only
90 minutes and cost about $50.
Th,e · 16-member CaliforniaNevada Superspeed 'l)'aln Commission has set July 15 as the
deadllne for the submission of
bids, Including routing and fl.
nanclng proposals.
- The nine-member Texas
High Speed Rail Authority also
expects to award a franchise this
summer, to one of two consort!urns bidding to construct a
250-mlle line between Houston
and Dallas.
If the service attracts the
expected 10,000 to 12,000 passengers dally, nine-car · trains
would eacli carry 500 passengers
from downtown to· downtown In
about 90 minutes. Service to
Austin and Sa'n Antonio might be
added later.
-In Florida, a north-south line

Robert Walter&amp;

·
would start In Miami, traverse
Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood,
Palm Beach and other "Gold
Coast' • communities, then term!·
nate In Orlando, An eastwest
spur would link Orlando wlih
Lakeland and Tampa,
- In Ohio, a system expected
to carry 3 million to 4 ·million
people annually would lnlt,tally
link Cleveland, Columbus, Da)lton and Clnclnnat~ with a fubse:
quent northern spur tl\at would
serve Toledo, Akron al)d
Youngstown.
Countless other routes have
been suggested througbou t the
country. AlongthePaclftcCosst, ·
for example, various blgh-speed
rail combinations are being
promoted to serve ·Seattle, .Partland, San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.
Typical tares would be twothirds to three-fourths those
currently charged for air travel.
And high-speed rail o~~erates
safely In . the inclement weather
that can .affect auto or alrUne
travel.

Washington has. finally lost its sway
What It they put on a Congress
more than a century ago that "to
and nobody cared? Wha! If
hear some men talk of governWashington ceased to count In . ment, you would Suppose that
the march of newsworthy events,
Congress was the law of grl!VItaand ~he hundreds of reporters. tlon, and kept the planets In their
·
places."
.
and camera crews stationed In
the capital suddenly found themBut the hl!blt of seeing every
selves reduced to watching selfAmerican and world Issue from a
Important leaders fencing with
Washington political perspective
only Increased over time - to the
rubber swords?
Well, that's pretty much
point that by the early 1980s, a
what's happened In tMpast year, . network's 6 o'clock ·broadcast
might as well have been called
and It Is pure tonic for those of us
who've long resented the media's the "Nightly Washington News
.'
tendency to gaze almost exclu- Report."
Now,
blessedly,
we've
been
sively at Washington's navel.
·Not that our objection was new. reprieved. Everywhere Amerl·
Wendell Phillips complained cans turn. ilreat events lack both

Today in history._ _ _ _"-----~---By United Press International
· ·Today Is Thursday, Aprll12, the 102nd day of 1990 with 263 to follow.
· The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and SatiU'n.
· The evening stars. are Mercury and Jupiter.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
American statesman Henry Clay In 1777; opera singer Lily Ponaln
191M; singer Tiny Tim, bom Herbert Khaury,.ln 1922 (age 68); ji!Zz
keyboard player Herbie Hancock In 1940 (age 50); talk' show host
David Letterman In 1947 (age 43) and actor-singer David Cassidy In
191i0 (age 40) .
·

Ratliff, Reid

si_on

~-·

with Ohio State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Mlddletown'sJtmRatUffand·J oe
Reid of Chagrin Falls University
School, a pair of 6-8 forwards,
Wednesdav
• signed national basketballletters-of-lntent with Ohio
St:i!tllff, a first team UPI
Division I ali·Oiilo pick, aver-

On this date In history:
In 1861, the Civil War began when Confederate troops opened fire on
Fort Sumter; S.C.
In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt died at Warm Spr!Jigs, Ga.
About three hollfS later, VIce President Harry S. Truman l'VBS sworn
In as chief execuUve.
In 1961, the_Sovtet UniOn launched the first manned spacecraft.
Yurt Gagartn became the first human to orbit the earth and return
safely.
In 1981, the first U.S. spa~e shuttle flight was launched.

,.

Washington's prompting and
partlclpatl,on, and the major
debate In 'our capital Is over the
proper ton11 the president should .
strike when noting how th.e earth
Is shaking somewhere else. Dominoes fall our way In Eastern
Europe, and Washington acts as
dumb-founded as the local com- ·
mlssars. Moscow teeters between crackdown and anarchy,
and Potomac-based experts .
seem as bafDed by the likely
outcome as a 52 rortuneteller.
China goes Its thin-Upped way,
contemptuous of U.S. pie!~.$ for
restraint. Japan stumbles Into
economic self-doubt, but not
because of anything Americans
did or did not do. Even Latin
America, the United States'
traditional back ·y ard, displays a
maturing confidence. Mexico's
president, for example, has
shucked the bugbear of economic
natlon11llsm and actually proposed a Jllorth American treetrade zone.
Even at borne, the dominant
news II not of Waahln8ton, but of
science, medicine, the environ·
ment (although Conaress comes
Into play here, of course), animal

"I wasn't real comfortable at
the start," said Armstrong, who
Is beginning hl.s tlrst full majorleague season. " I had to work for
everything I got. I had some .
trouble especially Ill the first
couple of Innings and they had
me on the ropes. I was able to
make some good pitches when I
needed them.
"Once I got l'I)Y rhythm, I was
cruslng. "
Mahler picked up his first s~~;ve
stnce 1981, allowing one hit over
three Innings. Cincinnati' s
bullpen has- now worked 14
Innings, allowing just one earned
runandnlnehltsfora0.64earned
run average.
OVerall, Cincinnati pitchers
have ·a 1.55 ERA and have
recorded 32 strtkeo11ts In three
games.
"I felt we had a good pitching
staff. In spring training, " said
Cincinnati's first-year manager
Lou Plnlella. "Last year, they
had a few Injuries and It seemed
they were mostly In the .pltchlng
staff. It's still early, but I think
we' re capable of'having a really
good staff.
·.

lackadaslcaL"
.
. Cincinnati took a 1-0 lead tn the
second. O'Neill drew a leadoff
walk, stole second and scored on
Todd Benzinger's double to left.
The Reds struck for three more ·
.runs In the third. Billy Hatcher
singled and Barry Larkin
reached on a. fielding error by
third baseman Ken Caminiti.
Eric Davis doubled to score
Hatcher, and O'Neill followed .
with a two-run double down the ,
right-field line to give the Reds a ·
4-0 lead.
Cincinnati Increased Its lead
to !Hl In the fo.urth. Mariano
Duncan led,oflwlth a double,
advanced to third on Armstrong's s~tcrlftce and scored on
Chris Saba's single, which sent
Portugal to the dugout.
"Maybe I was just trying to do
too much since we lost.the first
two games," Portugal said. "I
never settled down. Next time
I'm going to come out and
concentrate on just throwing
strikes."

The Daily Sentinel

h~~~t~'::c~:~~:::d~~d:~l~~~

to do lt. We just have to k,eep
them healthy."
Houston pitcher Mark Portu- ...
gal, 0-1, allowed five runs on
seven hits In 3 1-3 Innings. The
loss was his first since June 5 and
ended a seven-game winning
streak.
Astros manager. Art Howe said
he Is not ready to panic even
though his winless Astros have a
pitching staff with a 4.65 ERA .
"It's .still early," Howe said.
"We didn't play well, we didn't
pltcl) well at Urnes, and we didn't
deserve to win this one. We have
an off-day tomorrow. Maybe
that's what the doctor ordered." ·
Armstrong had an Impressive ·
spring and looked forward· to
starting the season with the
big·league team. He was 6-10 In.
two previous stints with · the
Reds, but earned a look after
winning 13 games In an MV'P
~ason at Triple A Nashville,
Tenn.
"I have a lot more corlfldence
. In rnyself ·and I'm getting more
famlllar with ·the mound, the ·
hitters, and the game," Arm- ·
strong said. "My mechanics are
coming together and I can relax
and let my mind think. I got five
runs early tonight and that really

LAFAYETTE, La. (UPI)- A gate and hiding his horse at the Thomas said.
jockey suspended from racing , far turn: _where he sprinted out • At the. hearing, Carmouche
for · 10 years after allegedly front of tHe field to win the 11th
ld t h other jockeys probabJv
sa
'
.
rntssed e him . as he went. by
taking a short'wt-to win a horse race.
Two.jockeys In the nine-horse
because of the soupy fog. He
race tn a dense tog protested his
field that day flied protests
Innocence, saying, •'I know I
estimated the visibility at about
Immediately after the one-mUe
ain't did it."
12yards. Others at thj!traokhave
race. Track officials di$Quallfled · estimated the visibility at beSylvester Carmouche was a
aged 24 points and nine rebounds
long shot from. the start, given Landing Officer after a review of · tween 50 and 80 yards.
and
declared
Somea
videotape,
"How
could
It
be
that
we
saw
per game the past season at
23'1 odds of winning on~ mount,
the race (on videotape) and your Middletown and Is considered an
Landing Officer, at tlie Delta . .thing Strong the winner.
Downs track In VInton Jan. 11. · · Racing Commission chairman horse and silk colors are not excellent 3-polnt shooter, hitting
'rbe t.outsl'a na Racing Com- Harold Thomas said the tape did there?," asked . vice commls- better than 40 percent from that
stoner Jeffrey Kallenberg.
distance.
mlslllon . Wednesday suspended not show Carmouche or his
mount
anywhere
during
the
race.
"I
don't
know.
I
ran
the
whole
Reid, a 215-pounder and a
hlin for. 10 years from rac.lng
"I
dont
know
how
Mr.
Car·
race,
..
Carmouche
said.
·
physical
Inside player, averaged
after a hearing on charges he cut
mouche
did
It,
but
he
did
It,"
claims
of
the
l8
points
and 12 rebounds per
Referring
to
the
across the oval after leaving the
other jockeys, Thomas asked, game this season.
"How could you have passed the
.Buckeye coach Randy Ayers, •
two jockeys when they weren't who had five scholarships avallaaware of It?"
ble this recruiting season, said he
"Probably when I passed them would possibly award one more.
up they didn't know It," said
That one could go to Dayton
Carmouche, who stood to win Meadowdale guard Jamie Skel·
s140 for riding a first place ton, who will make his official
"' By KEI'ftl DRUM
Ohio State visit this weekend.
mount
Rumeal Robinson of Michigan,
UPI Coll!lltl, Buketball Writer
•Th~t . answer speaks for It- Skelton, however, still has some
and Gary Payton of Oregon State .
OJU.ANI)O (UPI) - If the. ,among the absentees . ..
self," Thomas commented.
. academic work to Improve upon,
NBA draft' Is Indeed a form of
!forwards ' on hand Include
'The testimony In this case bas
Even though he already has
Russtan Roulette, then Dwayne
Duke's
Alaa
Abdelnaby, . been fairly consistent as to the · passed his American College
Scblntzhis Is this yeM's biggest
fog ... , which certainly confilcts Test I ACT). Skelton reportedly
Wll~e . Bq,rttn,
Minnesota's
- and perhaps most dangerous , Michigan's Terry Mills and Loy with Mr. Carmouche's state- must show better grades in his
-bullet.
.
core subjec~s to qualify under
Vaught, Colorado State's Mike · ments," Thomas said.
Which pro team will be willing
Defense
lawyer
Kent
Schaeffer
Ohio
State s more stringent
Mitchell, Xavier's Derek·Strong, ·
to pull the trigger and draft the
Clemson' s·: ·Elden Campbell and
said be wiD appeal the ruling 1n re::':atl:o:ns:.
7-2 Scblntzlus, who quit Florida. St. Louts star Anthony Bonner, the
state 1st District Court In
In mid-January In the latest act
the nation's leading rebounder:
New Orleans.
of a lengthy rap sheet of
unconventiorillbebav1or?
Ohio fishing report
That's the overriding ques lion
this week at the third Orlando
AIL-Star aasslc, . where 36 of
.cq~ege basketball's top seniors
'
are gathered to showcase their .
skU~ tor pro scouts and agents.
• 1'hFei! days or·practices ended
Wednesday aJid three night of
'
tog should Intensity during
the
•Y United Preu International
games, begin Thursday .at the
nighttime
hours
along
the
rip-rap
The
weekly
Ohio
flshlne,
reOrlando Arena, .home of the ·.
port, as compUed by · the Ohio shoreline above the dam.
NBA's ..expanslon Magic.
Northwest
Department
of NatiU'al Resour. While there Is an array of.
Maumee,
Sandusky Rivers ces'
Division
of
Wildlife:
capable a!ld versatile prospects
has been good
Walleye
fishing
Southeast
on liand .,... from leading scorer
Salt
Fork
Lake
:.....·
Crappies
,
during
periods
of
fair weather,
Bo Kimble of Lpyola Marymo\lllt
but
heavy.
rain
early
this week
8%
to
nine
Inches
are
averagll!g
to .unheralded Dee Brown of
fishing
action
to
slow. At
caused
being
taken
by
anglers
using
JliCksonvllle - none Is being
angler
pressure
.was·
midweek,
crappie
minnows
fished
near
watched more ·closely than
very
light,
but
Is
expected
to
'
submerged
structure
In
t111Siake,
·
Schlntzlus. .
·
on
the
weekend
as
Increase
.
located
about
.10
miles
north
of
· His size and skllls are a !.ease,
bUt his past history and erratic · Cambridge off I-77. A few mus- conditions Improve. High
kles lri the 30- to 37 ·Inch range numbers of fish are present In
performances are troublesome.
The · fact that Schlntzlus have also been caught In scat· · bothsystemsandaverage15to20
Salmon fishing trip for two to Alaska.
Inches.
showed up after almost three tered areas.
Huron River - Good sucker
Piedmont Lake- Largemouth
months oft scored him a few
RIST PillE •• ~
fishing
has been reported In the
smallmouth
bass
up
to
4%
and
points, however.
Quail/Pheasant
hunting trip for two to Texas.
pounds are being caught on past week near the Milan Dam at
•'1 don't know how good of
shape be's In right now, but that spinners and small jigs In and the Milan Wildlife Area. Most of
'flil!e include:
doesn't matter," said Golden around Essex Bay and tlie 4-H these fish are common white
• RoUnd t!ip airline tickets.
• Three nights deluxe accommodations.
State coach ·Don Nelson, who camp. Most of the bass . are suckers, but a few redhorse
are,
also
being
taken
by
suckers
averaging
2~
to
3'1..
pounds.
• Guides, rileaiS and more!
watched a day betore heading to
snagging
or
spearing.
The
fish
Musktes
averaging
34
to
401nches
the Warriors' next game. "Just
and weighing up to 20 pounds are are a-veraging 18 )o 24 Inches.
being here has helped him.
llllmiiOWI
· Lake Erie
Anyone who ·~· not afraid to shtw being taken accidentally by bass .
'No purchase necessary
Some llpllt catches of walleyes
, their skills (here) has my fishermen around the 4-H camp.
See store for details.
have
been reported by anglers In
respect."
·
the Niagara, Crib and. Round
Schlntzlus received , advice
Reef
areas with sizes averaging
tram SQme to skip this week, but of submerged structure.
17
to
221nches.
The best method Is
sOuthwest
he said he felt It was essential
to
use
Ice
jigging
lures tipped
Grand Lake St. Marys
after his .allbre{,tated senior
with
minnows
fished
·slightly
year. Schlntzlus quit Florida's Crappies averaging nine to 11
As low as
above
the
bottom.
.Some
yellow
Inches are being taken by using
team In a dispute with Interim
perch
a're
being
taken
In
scatsmall jlgs'·tlpped with minnows
bead coach Don DeVoe, partly
tered nearshore areas through·
around
submeried structures.
over the iength of his self-styled '
out
the western and central
Central
"Lobster" haircut.
everyday
basins. Early reports ot yellow
Scioto
River
Saugeyes
In
the
"People were questi«?nlng my'
16- to 22-lnch range are being perch fishing success have come
For a llependable start in
heart," .said Schlntzlus, who still
caught
below Greenlawn Dam In from Huron Pier, the ·stone dock
hot and cold weather, trust
has the hair. "Butltlcamebere,
at Marblehead and FalrPQrt ·
I show them I love basketball and .Columbus. Crappie fishing below Harbor. Fish are averaging eight
NAPA quality motorcycle
waiit to play after three months. the Main Street dam also Is good to 10 Inches and are being caught
batteries. (Includes acid)
with fish measuring up to 11
oft.·~
perch spreaders tipped with
Scbl!itzlus never bas been In · Inches.
Hoover Reservoir - Crappies, shiners.
peak condition In his career and
and channel catfish are being
be's far from It now. But his size,
caught I
the northern end .
&amp;lrength and rare passing skill Anglers shtuld use cut shad and
for a big man make h!m an other cut batt to catch channel
enticing prospect In a league catfish, and small minnows
bunii'Y for centers.
fished arouild submerged struc·
Even after the layoff and
ture to catch crappies. When
assorted other doubts, Scl!lntzlus conditions lmpr'bve, walleye fishremains topa among the
Designed for reliable
aeven·foot . center prospects,
starting power. Fits
most of wbcim are In Orlando this
week.
Louisville's
Felton
most lawn and garden
ON CARPET CLEAJING
!!Peftcer, VUlanova's Tom Greis, ·
tractorB. (118221)
Temple's Duane eau-ell, .
WHOLE HOUSE SPECIAL
lo'jllll's Lea Jepsen and Texas·El
Over 125,()00 parts available.
·ON ANY COMNAfiOII OF S
paao's Gres Foeter all ate as
lOOMS, IWlWAY Are lATH
·Available at participating
inucb suapect ·u prospect for
NAPA AUTO PARTS stores
VIU'yin&amp; reuona.
·
'
ONLY
and NAPA AutoCare Centers.
• WilDe the center condngent Is ·
lliiCti lain, there II an abundance
CllllOLET-NAPA
ADVAIICID CUAfiiiG
of outltandinl forwardl and
for the store nearest YCJU.
pardS, even with top proepects
Sale ends April30,1990.
Derrick Coleman of Syracuae,
U..ltU
IJonel SlmmODI
of LaSalle,
I
.

(l.JSPS Jfil. . .)
· A lllvlaiOft of MuHbnodlo., lac.

Published '£Ivery afternoon , MOnday
thraolh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pul&gt;
llahlng C&lt;lmpany/ Multlml!dla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Pb. 992·2154. S...
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Assoclatlon and the
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Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue.
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·
POSTMASTER; Send address chan(l8
to · The Dally ~ntlnel, 111 Court St.,

Pomeroy, &lt;Jtlo trne.

&amp;l.JB8CBIPTION RATI!8
IJ CUrler ow Mole.. Boote
one Week .... .. .. ........ .......... .. .. ,.. ..$1.40

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••••••••~h=e~lped=~·~I~jus:t~d:ld:n~·t~w;:an;t~t=o~g~e~t-:;~;w;e;ekl;;...;..;"';"';";"';'";'";";'";"'~:::~·~m~=·t·O:;.

.. I never would have-guessed It, but rumor has It that we're the na,lon's
most precious asset."
·' ·

1

.

·

By WCHARD LUNA
UPI Sporta Wrller .
HOUSTON (UPI) - The Cln·
clnnatl Reds, bolstered by an
Impressive three-day showing by
their pltchln&amp; staff, are off to
their best start since 1987.
The latest pitching gem came
Wednesday night as right·
banders Jack Armstrong and
Rick Mahler combined on a
foiU'-hltter,leadlng Cincinnati to
a 5-0 victory and three-game
sweel! of the Houston Astros.
Paui O'Neill hit a two-run
double to highlight a three-run,
third Inning as· the Reds swept a
three-game series tn tl!e Astradome for the ttrst time since
Aprl11987. Cincinnati Is ott to Its
best start since opening the 1987
!Ieason · with tour consecutive
victories.
Armstrong, 1-0, allowed three
. hits over s1x Innings, striking out
five batter and walking one. He
allowed only one runner past
second and retired 10 Astros In a
row during one stretch.
·

Schintzius to -get ·long
looks in NBA draft.·

a~~~~:~a1~:~a~z;~~!e~~ ~c~f:~;~~~ tts manipulation by the

I

lnnlnl of the Reda-AIItnt I &amp;me Weclnelday.
O'Neill tried to eteal third aad wu lllrown out by
Alltnt' catcher Crall Blglo. The Redl wen, 5-G.
(UPJ)

'Short-cut' co.sts.·. J·oc.k ey
· 1.Oyears

By LEON DANIEL
VPI Chief Col'l'ellpondent
WASHINGTON - The manipulated media must share the blame
for the trlvlaltzatlon of politics.
·
Without a compliant press; the Pledge of Allegiance could not haye
been taken seriously as an Issue In the 1988 presidential campaign.
Reducing news to 30·second soupd bites allows politicians to get
away with peddling some danger!'usly dumb notions.
For example, President Bush and a lot of lawmakers lnsls(. the
Constitution must be eroded to save the nag.
Meantime, the press permits politicians to duck real Issues Uke
budget deficits and the.sorry state of education and the environment.
Don't blame reporters, journalism' s h\f:d·slogglng Infantrymen.
And It's not the fault of television corresr,&gt;ndents, the glamorous
·
fighter pilots of our craft.
It Is the media moguls who are responsible for relentlessly trivial
news accounts. Their commitment to bottom·llne journalism
guarantel!s us a steady diet of soft and fluffy news.' Their certal!ltY
that readers and viewers prefer style over substance Is not only
wrong, but patronizing.
There Is, of course, some demand for pap, but It Is more than
adequately supplied at supermarket checkout counters by the weekly
tabloids.
The mainstream media too·often neglects the crying need for the
bard news and Incisive analyses that report and Interpret for readers

I .

Reds win 5.0, sweep ·Astros

Page 2-The Deily Sendnel

Vincent Carroll
rights, gossip and crime.
Consider the domestic topics
that the three big news weeklies
have played on their covers so far
this year: a depression dnig, the ·.
gay community, graduale
schools, astronomy, cold remedies, the right to die, hunting, a
Boston murder, aging, and addiction. Other than a restrospecttve
on Richard Nixon lind a look at
,the arrest of Mayor . Marlon
Barry, the magazines Virtually
Ignored Washington-related topIcs In their lead stortes.
But even the most parochial
observer must have finally noticed that our government
. doesn't dOminate the world's
agenda. as It u!ed to, and that
among commou personal priorities - health, friends, spiritual
fulfillment, entertainment -the
government plays but a minor
role, If any role at all.
It t.s aa If. 500 year• after .
Copertllcus, we bave undergone
yet another revolution In • our
undentandliiJ of what 11e1 at the
·center of the solar 1yatem.
I .. • ,. ...

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•

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

.

.

.

•

Jordan's 22-point effort pushes Bulls to 107-86
. . By United Preu ID&amp;erllll&amp;loul
·The admirable job Cleveland
did containing Michael Jordan
jVent for naught Wednesday
night when Mark Price was
unable to contain his temper.
Jordan scored 22 points, far
!ewer than the69pc:ilnts he scored
las 1 time the teams met, to help
the ChiCago Bulls to a 107-86
triumph over the Cavaliers. The
Bulls, ·who won tbelr eighth
straight game, were helped considerably when Price, a key
player lor Cleveland, was
ejected with 32 secorids,lelt In the
first hall.
The guard was called for an

offensive foul after he pushed Craig Eblo said. ·.. usually they
Bulls rookie B.J. Armstrong give you a warning before
when attemptlpg to take. an another techniCal. There was no • ·
lnbounds pass. He bad to be warning."
restrained by teammates aller • The Cavaliers already were
being hit with the first technical, without Larry Nance, who
tben was ejected after continuing ·!JIIssed his third straight game
to argue.
.
due to a sprained ankle. John
' 'It · was a totally different "Hot Rod" Wllllllms also was
game alter that," Chicago coach taken to the locker room for a
PhU Jackson said of Prlee' s · time In the second quarter afler
ejection. " It.took the threat away he was accldenllllly poked In the
from their game."
eye.
It was believed to be the first
Jordan scored his career-111gb
technical of Price's . four-year 69 points when the two teams met .
,.
· . . March 211 at Rlchlleld; Ohio. ·
career..
· ''They were going to try to do
''I've never seenMarkgetmad
like he did. tonight," teammate everything to eliminate me from

I

I

I

l

.....,..._ l'lalollll M, Net&amp; _,

At Aubum Hills. Mich., Mark

AgUirre &amp;coi-ed 13 of hiS'2a points
(luring the .ftrstalx·minutes of the
fourth quarter to help Detroit
rally. Bill Lalmbeer sealed the
tnumpb with two foulshota In the
final 15 ' seconds. Chrla Morris
and Purvis Short led New Jersey
with 19 points aplllce.
Hawks 108, Bucu M .
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
scored 16 of his 27 points In a
third-quarter su.rge to lead
Atlllnta. The Hawks kept In the
running with Cleveland for tM
final playoff berth In the Eastern
Conference. Ricky Pierce scored
31 points for the Bucks, who were
prevented from clinching a
playoff berth.

By JOHN SWENSON
Louis has a 3-llead.
pre, making his ltrst NHLplayoff described Poulin's play In tbe
UPI SportS Writer
All series are ~t-of-sevell and start In four years, · stopped 22 final · period as "an Incredible
The New York Islanders' switch sites after Game 5.
shots and John Druce's second· performance, at both ends of tbe
comeback bandwagon ran off the
Patrick Division
period goal broke a tie and tee. He was not to be denied. "
·road Wednesday night when the
Rallprs 8, lalanderal
Boston, wblch had the league's
powered Washington.
New York Rangers used a
At UniOndale, N.Y., John
Fifteen seconds after Kirk . best regular-season record, was
lopsided 6-1 victory to put their OgrodniCk scored one of the New Muner tied the game 1·1, Druce without InJured Ray Bourque for
· regional rivals Into a 3·1 hole In York Ranger's' three second· · skated freeofDevllsdefenseman the second straight game. "Tbe
their first-round Stanley Cup period goals and set up their Vlachesiav Fetlsw, took a pass Bruins staar defenseman and
plllyoff series.
opening score on the ftrst shot of !rom John Tucker and scored te.a m leader Is sidelined by a hlp
The Islanders were talking the game.
·
pointer.
past goalie Sean Burke's le'
aboutmlraclesalterstuMingthe
The Rangers led alter 41 skate from the slot at 13: 17 oftlje
Sabres 4, Caaadlena Z
Rangers 4-3 In double overtime seconds of pllly and led 2-1 alter second period for the 2-11ead. J
At Montreal, Pierre Turgeon .
.... Monday, but now they face one period. They added three
''It was just a sensational scored two goals and Dave
elimination In Gam~ 5. Friday goals within 2:32 midway game by Donnie Beaupre. He A!ldreycbuk had four assls ts to
night at MadiBon Square Garden.
through the game to seal the could not come up any bigger lift Buffalo, with the fifth g~e to
.The matcbup w'as one of lour victory.
· than what he did out there be play~ In Bulfalo Friday
division semifinal series played
Carey Wilson, Randy Moller tonight," Capitals Coach Terry night.
·
Wednesday In the Wales Confer- · and Ogrodnick scored during the Murray said. "He made some
Turgeon, the leading Sabres
ence. In the other Patrick Dlv· spree. Brian Mullen and Darren tremendous stops.'' ,
scorer during the regular season
lslon matcb, the Washington Turcotte scored the Rangers'
The serieS . resumes Friday with 106 polnts,got his first goal
C&amp;pltals beat the New Jersey flrst·perlod goals.
of the playoffs on a high back·
night In East Rutherfond, N.J.
Devils 3-1 to even their series at
"Six . (Islanders) guys are
hand shot with Just three seconds
BMton 8, Hartford I ·
two games each. ·
buSting their butts and 't he
At Hartford, Dave Poulin's, left In Buffalo's three-goal ~e­
In the Adams Dtvtslon, the
(puck) takes three bounces and tle·breaklng goal with 1: 44' re- cond period, ·breaking a 2·2 tie.
Buffalo Sabres topped the Mont: goes In the net three times," maining capped Boston's lour·
"We did a good job In the first
real caJilldlens 4-2 and tied their Islanders defenseman Doug goal third-period comeback.
period but they bounced back
series 2-2, and the Boston Bruins C1'06aman said.
"I've ·been In situations like with a power play goal In the
rallied past the Hartford Whalers
The Rangers also played a
this before," said Poulln, ac- second and then that t)llrd goal
for a 6-5 victory and a 2·2 tie In ilear·flawless second period and
quired from PhUadelphla In a also In the second with just three
kUied six of seven penalties.
. their series.
January trade. "I've seen seconds left kWed us," Montreal
The Campbell Conierence re- · · "It was ,a pretty even game,"
goaltender Patrick · Roy said.
strange things happen. ''
sumes play Thursday night with Rangers Coach Roger Neilson
· ·Game 5 will be played Friday ''But I think It was a lucky goal
Lqs An~les at Calgary, Win· said. "And all ol a sudden the
because the puck bounced on
night at ac&gt;ston Garden.
nlpeg at Edmonton, MIMesota at goals started going In for us.
Turgeon's stick. I dove but
.
.
Chicago and Toronto at St. Louts. They (Islanders) played a pretty
Hartford scored four times In
missed II."
The Kings and Jets lead their strong game."
the second period to build a 5-2
Turgeon was just relieved to
series 3-1, the mackhawks and
Capitals 3, Devils 1
finally S(!()re .a goal.
.
lead and chase goaltender- ReAt Landover, Md., . Don Beau- Jean Lemelin, who was replaced
North Stars are tled2~2. whUe St.
"Maybe I took the blame for
not scoring In the first three
by Andy Moog.
games bu ti don't think about It,"
Poulin started ·the comeback
with a goal at 1: 28ofthethlrd aod
said Turgeon. "I Just think about
tryini as hlll,'d as I can. Tonight I
set up Dave Christian for the
game-tying score.
got the bounces by taking advan·
tage of my chances."
Boston Coach Mike Mllbury
.._JIIoOI&amp;LI&amp;ot..,.

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Spor18 briefs
.
..
Footllall
· Mark Seay, the Cal State Long
Beach receiver caught In a 1988 ·
shooting, will return· to footba11
next season with one kidney and
a bullet lodged near. his heart.
$eay was shot at a children's
tfolloween party while lunging to
protect bll,3-year-old niece !rom
cspray of gang gunfire.
'

p.-:a.

aru•aaMI•.,.ala,lp.m.
Jlllwullt al Okap, 8:11 , ,,.,

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Cal~

Ke(ly denies throwing balloons
at woman during 1987 picnic

EDWABD8 BLOCKS PASS -Detroit P1ato111' .Jamet1 Edwardl
blocu a paas to New .Jeney Nets' Chris Dudley (rear) 111 tile On&amp;
quarlier of &amp;heir game Wednnday. ({)PI)

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ILUOI. JNDOOa &amp;OCCBa t.r:AGUI:
Wll
hi'G.m.

By DICK ~SIAK
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)
Buffalo Bills . quarterback Jim
Kelly admitted Wednesday he
drank "four or five beers" at a
1\187 bar piCnic, bUt denied
throwing beer·fiHed balloons at a
woman now suing blm for
$200,000.
Kelly testified In a lawsuit
brought by Marlene Edbaur, 40,
of Clarence, N.Y., who claims
she was Injured when one ofthree
beer-balloons thrown at her by
the .. lnllllonalre quarterb11ck
struck her In !lie face as shewas
drinking from a plastic cup.
Kelly, who recen tiy slgoed a
seven-year contract extension
for a reporled 120 mllllOii;\ald be
attended the August 1987( picnic
. )Vlth Bills' fullback Jamie
' Mueller · and two other mns
players who have since been cut
!rom the team.
·
Kelly said he and the others
played horseshoes, an egg-toss
game and threw water balloon
passes to several children at the
, picnic.
·
"I tossed a football with the
kids and balloons that I assume
were filled with water," Ke1ly
told a packed courtroom. "They
were going out for passes and I
was throwing them passes."
The two parties disagree oil the
liquid contents ollhe balloons.
Kelly said during the outing he
ate and also drank "aboutfour or
five beers." He said no one
complained about his behavior at
tbe picnic until Edbauer was
leaving.
.
"Sbe wa.s complaining that I
was acting childish," Kelly said.
He was expected to continue his
tes tlmony Wednesday afternoon.
Edbauer Is also seeking d'am·
ages from a bar that sponsored

the picnic, but bas since gon~ out
of business.
Cl ty Judge Michael Broderick,
who Is hearing the case, denied a
motion by Kelly's attorney, Vln·
cent Tobia, to dismiss the Jaw·
suit. Tobia argued Edbauer had
failed to show she suffered Injury
because of l.he alleged Incident.
The judge, however, agreed
with Ed bauer's attorney, Paul
Bumbalo, that earlier testimony
had shown the full case must be
all'ed.
.
Ear Her, Mueller testified he
and KellY had lour or five beers
while attending the picnic but be
did not see Kelly throw water
balloons at anyone.
Mueller said he and KellY
threw water balloon passes to
chUdreit at the picnic.
"To my knowledge, nobody
complained that IIIey were hit
with anything whatsoever,"
Mueller. said.
Mueller said he was with Ke1ly
throughout the picnic. except at
times when Kelly went to the rest
room.
.
"It would be safe to say he had
four or live (beers) unless be was
c!rlnklng beers on the way to the
bathroom," Mueller said.

Thtnday, April12, 1990
·
Page · 6

.

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Lllllitetl Dolh•y Ana

A games party was conducted
for the recent meeting· of XI
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the old
American Legion hall In
Middleport.
Communications from Inter·
national consisted of many fu.nd
raising projects which could .be
·
usedthroughout-the year.
Charlotte Hanning thanked the
group for Its participation In
· assisting with the gaines party.
It was decided that a member
made a reser.vatlon lor Founder's Day bulla lied to attend, then

SEATTLE (UPI) - A Soviet
• \ pilot exposed to radllltion
dllrlll(l the 'Chernobyl nuclear
dilute~' In 1986art1ved In Seattle
late ·· W~ay .for a bone
martow transplant, officials at
the · Fred HutebilJ.Bon Cancet
.l'leiearcb Center said. . .
• .Uafoly Grlsbohenko,. ·.53, .
luff~!"~ frcm leukelnla, which
wu diagnosed three years ago
after tile Chernobyl dtsas ter,
Hutcbthson sjlokeswoman Susan
Edmonds said.
·
; A ·donor baa· been found In .
Trance; where ,bone marrow will
J1e collected alld floW)I to Seattle
for Grlsbchenko' s transplant,
Edmonds said.
• Grls~benko was exposed . to
radiation frcm Chernobyl while
~pplllg cement on the nuclear
~plant from a plane to seal
Wald; ~ .the· dlsas ter, • Edmonds

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Oak, Weeping Willow, SUgar free trees, send a $10 member·
Maple, Green Ash, Thornless ship contribution to Shade Trees, '
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Birch, Tullptree, Silver Maple, 100 Arbor Ave., Nebraska City, ·
and Red Maple.
Neb. 68410, by April 30.

· Ten free shade trees will be
given to each person who joins
The National Arbor Day Found&amp;·
119n durlrlg AprU.
The free trees are part ol the
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•CRICKn LANE

.z

a

DON'T "MISS THE BOAT S~LE

.-

• OplioAol Autamolic leo Mlkor

•e.....,.aav., s -

CHESHIRE -There will he a
free clothing day Thursday from
9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school buildlrig In Cheshire spon·
sored by the Meigs GalUa Community Ac!Jon Agency:

• Rovenible lloala

)

Pair Price

Only

1991 S-1 0 PICKUP TRUCKS

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$7995

es SPUD

JIM
COBB

· JocU:r Sylvester carmouche,
iecUIId of takilll a sbortcu t In
lfmM q to ride btl! 23-1longahot
t9 a U.leqtb victory Jan. 11 at
Delta Dowlll, wu llll.lpended
ltOIIl raclq for lD year• bY the
Raclnl Commluion.
... utd be wW appeal.

,.

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nee.

Free trees given to new members

'Awareness
..campaigrf
underway

Sunrise . services at the Ca·
rleton Church·, Kingsburg Road,
County ROad 18, will be held at 6
•a.m. SUndaymomlng. The public
Ia Invited to attend.
··

.,OWD AN'II-I.OCI IUDS
•All CONDIIIOI.G

.........

that member Is responsible lor
the cost of the meal.
Barbara Black reported that
many Items on hand had been · ·
donated to a needy person.
Lynn Shuler distributed lair ·
ads to the members to sell.
The next rneetlrig will be a
recipes auction with the second
hall of tbe group to provtde .the
recipes. Girl of the year will also
be voted on ai this .time,
It was voted that the group will
assist with the canteen at the
American .Red Cross Bloodmobile visit on
12. .·

..
.. "He was dumping cement Into
the reactor to seal It;" tlie
SUNBJSE CANTATA - Sunrise service a&amp; tile _cordially Invited lo attend. The first wor:shlp
I
ipokeawoman said. "Because
MlddleporiCIIurehofChrlatwllllea&amp;ureaean&amp;ata service will be a&amp; 8:15a.m. followed by Sunday
bement Is .a heavy,, .the plane got
"Bow Gre.&amp; Thou Art" by &amp;he adult choir dtrecled school a&amp; 8:30a.m. and lhesecond wOI'IIhlp alit: 30
quite low and he was quite
by Boa Ash wilb JennUer Sheets, accompanist.
a.m, The church Ia located a&amp; J!lflh and Main In
William M. Hannum and Bar- Parker and Sarah J . Parker, ·
~d."
.
The eervlce wiD begin .&amp; 6 a.m. and will be Middleport.
bara A. · Hannum, parcel, to Lebanon.
Robert J. Reeve, Easement, to
Grtsbcbenko was exposed t.o
follOwed.&amp; 7 a.m. by a breakfu&amp;. The public Is
James B. Neal and Debra LNeal,
GTE North Inc., Columbia.
radiation.during .repealed flyov- ...ia--------~-----""":'"----:----::--------- Olive.
Michael R. Ryan and Linda K. ·
"' . 'era above the Soviet reactor, she'
to Ryan, .57A, to Margaret M.
said.
Hermetts Kay Hysell, 1 A, to Wood, Sutton.
His journey to · tbe United
Giles Lee Hyiell, Chester.
States for the. transplan:t was
Jackie Lee Larie and VIrginia·
·
Hermetta
Kay
Hysell,
parcel,
Large,
lot 106, to USA Farmers
.TBUBSDAY
GALLIPOLIS-There will be a
organized by cap ,P~rHer, dlrecRUTLAND -There will be an
,tor of testing and evaluation lor ' REEDSVILLE -The United meeting of the Dla~tes SuppOrt all · n lght hymn sing at the to Giles ·Lee Hysell, Chester.
Home Adm.; Middleport VIllage.
Elbj!rfeld ~ally Company, pt:
Thom!IS M. Theiss and Cla'the LH helicopter at McDonllell · Methodist Churches of Long . Group on Thursday at 7 p.m. l'n Rutland Freewlll Baptist Church
lots, to Melga County Commis- rinda Theiss, parcels, to Steven
'Douglas Corp., Edmonds said: · Bottom ·and Reedsville will hold
the French 500 room at Holzer on Friday starting at 7: 30 p.m.
sioners, Pomeroy VIllage.
Ray Hupp and Laura Joye Hupp, ·
: McDonnell Douglas employees ·, spring revival services through
Medical Cen ler. The guest
Theodore
Wlllford
and
Nancy
Sutton.
,prganlzed fund-rilslng drives to
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m. nightly
speaker will be Dr. Barbara
POMEROY -The Wo.m en's
Willford, 40 A., to Homer P.
11elp ~y for· the . search for with Rev. Charles Eaton, as. Wiseman. ·
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
speaker.
:POtentl•l donors, she said.
Hospllsl wlll have a bake sale
RUTLAND - The Rutland Friday beginning at 10 a.m. In the
' Par ne:r learned of Grlsjlc hen'ko's Illness ~¥hlle he ·was ln.
CHESTER -The Mt. Her,nan . Firemen's Auxiliary· will have a lobby of the hospital.
France to participate lit the 1989 United Brethren Church will
donkey baSketball game on
.PariB . Air Sllow . and .began have revival through Sl!turday Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
RUTLAND -Dan Hayman
makblg Inquiries a bout)tow to
Rutland Civic Center. Admission and Faith Trio and the McDaniel
with evangelist Lall!ar O'Bryan t
I .
brblg the Soviet pUot to the . speaking nightly at 7: 30 p.m.
Is $4 for adults and $2.50 lor Trio w111 sing Friday and Sunday
There ·will be special singing.
cl!lldren and senior citizens.
:United States for tre~tment.
at 7 p.m. at the Hysell Run
·• Grlshcbenko Is acbeduled .t o Robert Sanders; pastor, Invites
Holiness Church near Rutland.
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
.recelye: a bone . marrow trans- the public.
plant in late April and will be In
springs Grange will meet Thurs·
SATURDAY
day at 7: 30 p.m. at the ha11.
Seattle al'least 4 ~ monUts for · HARTFORD ·- There will be a
Cll:ESTER - The Queen and
' treatment, Eclmonds said.
revival at the Fathers. House
King Bees 4H Club will have a
Church In Hartford, W.Va.
TUPPERS PLAINS -The bakesaleSaturdayfrom9a.m. to
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 noon at Gaul's Market In
will meet Thursday, 7: 30p.m . at Chester.
There will be special singing and
preaching and the public Is the post home.
Invited to.attend.
RAC:INE -TheRaclneAmerl·
POMEROY -The Meigs can Legion Post 002 will have an
County Better Uvest&lt;ick Dairy eas ler egg bunt on Saturday at 1
POMEROY , ...:.There will be a
revival at the Hysell Run Holi- . ..4H Club will have Its first p.m. at the post home. All area
ness Chapel through SUnday with meetlnghof the year on Thursday children are Invited to attend .
at the Meigs County Extension
An · awareness campaign to George Williams, pastor of the
SYRACUSE -The Save the
alert residents on the educatkinal . Point ,Rock Church, ,as speaker. Office In Pomeroy at 7 p.m.
lJ!ere
will
be
special
singing
and
Pool
Committee will ha.ve a car
rfibta of handicapped cblldren In
services
are
nightly
at
7
p.m.
FRIDAY
wash
at the fire station In
public schools Is being conducted
Invites
the
RUTLAND
-There
will
be
an.
Pastor
Robert
Grimm
Syracuse
beginning at 10 a.m.
In Meigs County~
·
all
night
gospel
sing
on
Friday
public.
Proceeds
will go for needed
The local public school dis·
at
7:
30
p.m.
at
the
beginning
repairs
of
London
Pool.
.
.
trlcts and the Ohio Elepartment
SYRACUSE
-The
Syracuse
Rutland
Freewill
Bap
Us
t
.
of Education are· attempting to
Nazarene Church wi11 have revl· Church. · Singers Include Chris·
BURLINGHAM -There wlll
· Identity haridlcapped children
·val
through
Su~Jday
at
7
p.m.
tlan
Sounds,
Heaven
Bound
be ari Easter potluck dinner
from birth through 21 who may
be In heed ol. special education nightly and 10: 30 a.m. on Suhday · Four, Narrow Way, Edens Fam· sponsored by, the M9dern Wood·
with Rev. Ronald Roth as special lly, Reflections, Gabriel Quartet, men or America Bui'Ilngham
programs.
speaker.
The public .Is Invited to alld Charity.
Camp, on Saturday at 6:30p.m.
Children entitled to these proattend.
Meat will be provided by the
grams and,ervices I~~dude those
CARPENTER -"A Place For camp and those attending are to
with hearing Impairments, or·
You" win be presenled by the Mt. bring a covered dish.
MEIG~ -The Vanderhoof
tbopedlc, · pllystcal and other
Church
will
have
·
Union Baptist Church on Friday
Baptist
health Impairments, vtsual lm·
pre-Easter
revival
thrilugh
Sat·
at
7 p.m. on Golgotha's Hlll off
RUTLAND - Return Jona·
paJrments, multiple Impair·
idnts, mental . retardation, . urday at 7 p.m. nightly. The Route 143, two mUes !lOUth ol than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
speech and language of bearing' evangelist will be Charles Fer- Carpenter on County Road 14. of the American Revolution, will
rell, ·Pine Grove, W.Va. There Pastor Joe N. Sayre Invites the meet Friday at 1 p.m at the home
Impairments. .
of Mrs. Vernon Weber, Rutland.
Once a child Is Identified, the will be special singing each public. •
evening and the public Is Invited
child's parents are contacted and
to attend.
' ·
'
notified of tbelr rights and
.arrangements are made to evaluSYRACUSE -The Syracuse
ate the child.
Nazarene Church wlll have revl·
· Residents wishing more Information on the program are to val through Sunday with Rev.
eontact the Eastern Local SChool Ron Roth as special speaker.
Dis trlct. Mary Price, 38900 S. R . Services wlll be 7 p.m. nightly
7, Reedsville, 985-4292; SQ)Ithern and 10:30 .a.m. and 6 p.m. on
White-Westinghouse
White-Westinghouse Washer &amp; Dryer
Local SChOOl Q!strtct; Joyce Sunday.
Frost Free Refrigerator-Freezer
~ren. ~lm St., Racine, 45m,
DRYI!I
'
POMEROY
-The
Pomeroy
.
949-2611; or Meigs Local SChool
&gt;SIIoly81111Bull0ft
81&amp;15 Cu. Ft.
Group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
IBtrtct, Charles HOHiday, Melga
·AoQuloi-Orf
•
AdjuatabM
Glido.O..C Sholvoo
meet
Thursday
at
7
p.m
.
at
the
SChOOl
District,
742-3113.
Local
·~~
.
. " JTPA office In Pomeroy.
·~ Slotooo 8u1101
81
1

Sunrise
. . seroice

•4.CYL

Whlte•We.stlnghouse
30" Electric
Range with

•ChtDme,....., ~ llowil

Self-Cleaning

• lolllnilo liNt Cootllalo
• Allnov- 0.... Rlldl
• 1.11.(1(1 o-lloal
•41Avoql.ep

....... -!' ~~ .......,. ..........

Oven
• Aulamllla 11mlnG

ew.ICitldt

'\'. ,.

•.

• HIJ!IIIpuf. ..... Oul

CHEVROLET

·¥1-UIIII
•lllllilelfoMCIII.

CADILUC·GIO, INC.
992·661.4

I ·: 301 .AST

11!1.. ..

·

·Sorority chapter· 11;1eets

Cherno)?yl
• •
vtaun
to·get
transplant
in.. Seattle.

White Only

-• .. \,

..

The Daily ·Sentinel

Comm
... unity ca_le..nda
_ r

Scoreboard ...

Maj01"8

·

Meigs ·County property transfers::

.

l

By The Bend

VICtory

sCoring 69 points or any points," . 33-5 at home, a new franchise
Jordan said ol the llrst quarter, recol:d for victories . at Chi(: ago
In which he was shrouded by · Stadiwn. The Bulls have won 14
Eblo. " I think It hurt them of 16 and are a league-best 24-4
because It let our other guys get since tbe Ali·Star break.
The Bulls remained three
going. "
games
behind Central Division·
· Jordan led a bal,anced scoring
leading
Detroit, who defe!lted
attack. Scottie Pippen, · Bill ·
New
Jersey
Wednesday. The
CartWright and John Pax.on
cavaliers,
fighting
for the eighth
each had 15 points for Chleago,
and
final
playoff
spot In the
which led by as many as :U In the
Eastern
Conference,
fell one-half
final quarter. Armstrong
game
behind
Atlanta,
which also
chipped In 14 points and nine
won
Wednesday.
.
.
assists.
In other games 1 Detroit
Chicago, ·by completing the
dumped
New Jersey 98·93 and
live-game season-~rles sweep
Atlanta
axed
Milwaukee 106-94. ·
from the Cavaliers, Improved to

Isltinders down 3-1 in series after 6-1 loss
I'

.

llundey. Aprl 12. 1990

PO-OY, 0110

I:

••••non,

.
01•

Furnltu;l

199

�•
I

· ll11ndlly; Aprl 12, 1990'

.

Thundly, Aprl12, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;hae 6-The 'Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

IIC-24

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APRI

•
50°, OFF

ASSORTED LADIES' .DENIM, CANVAS JEANS
ORIGINALLY 19.99 ........................ FINAL SALE ............................ 10.00

50% OFF

ASSORTED LADIES' DRESS, CASUAL PANTS, SKIRTS
ORIGINALLY 9.99·19 .99 ................ FINAL SALE ............... S.OO T0-10.00

50% OFF ALL LADIES' VESTS and MOCK VEST SETS
ORIGINALLY 9 .99·15.99 ................ FINAL SALE................. 3.00 TO 5.00
50% OFF ASSORTED LADIES' ACTIVE SEPARAT~S .
ORIGINALLY
11.99·19.99 .........._... .FINAL SALE••.•.•...••.... 6.00 TO 10.00
i
.
.
50% OFF

SELECT LADIES' CAPE COD, RELATED SEPARATES
ORIGINALLY 10.99·36.99 ..... ......... FINAL SALE••.......•••••.!i.OO TO 18.00

500Jo OFF ASSORTED LADIES' CASUAL and SHEER HOSIERY ·
ORIGINALLY .99'-5.99 .....................
FINAL SALE•.........•....•.•• SO• TO 3.00
.
50"/o OFF ASSORTED LADIES' EXERCISE WEAR
ORiyiNALL)' 5.99·1~.99 : ............... FINAL SALE,.•., ...•••.••••• 3.00 TO 7.00
500Jo OFF ASSORTED .LADIES' BRAS and- PANTIES
ORIGINALLY 1.99-5.99 .... ........ :..... FINAL SALE................... 99' TO 3.00
500Jo OFF ASSORTED LADIES' HANDBAGS
ORIGINALLY 6.99-12 .99 .............. .. FINAL SALE................. 3.00 TO 6.00 _
.

·500Jo OFF

.

'

ALL GIRLS' EASTER DRESSES, SKIRT SETS; HANDBAGS
. OUR REG. 2.99·3~ . 99 ........... .. ...... FINAL SALE...............1.50 TO 20.00

. 500Jo OFF

ASSORTED MEN'S FASHION FLEECE
OUR REq. 11 . 99·2!-99 ............. :.FINAL SALE...............6.00 TO 14.00

500Jo~OFF ASSORTED MEN'S CASUAL PANTS
OIJR REG. 19.99 ................ ....... .. FINAL SALE ............................10.00

500fo- OFF ASSORTED BOYS', JR. BOYS' SHIRTS
OUR REG. 1.00·13.99 ...... ............. FINAL SALE•...•..•...••.• :••• SO• TO 7.00
50% OFF ASSORTED BOYS' PANTS
.
OUR REG: 9.99·34.99 ............ ....... FINAL SALE...............4.00 TO 17.00
50% OFF ASSORTED JR. BOYS' PANTS and PANT SETS
OUR REG. 9.99·39.99 .................. FINAL SALE•.•.••••..••..• S.OO TO 20.00
50% OFF

ALl INFANT and TODDLER EASTER PRESSES,
HATS and BONNETS
.
ORIGINALLY 3 .99-17 .99 ................ FINAL SALE••••••••.•.•••••• 2.00 TO 9.00

50% OFF

ALL SPRING INFANT and TODDLER OVERALLS

ORI~INALLY 7 .99 .......................... FINAL SALE-~ .•......•••..•••••....•.• :.4.00

.,~

9

10.00 OFF

11

''·

OUR REG . 21 .99-54:99

'

"

,1

40%0FF

-4UR

LOWIEIT PRICE
0, THE YEAR!

OUR .REG. 1.99·19.99 .

TEENAGE MUTANT
NINJA TURTLE© VIDEOS*

NINTEND()® SOFTWARE*

SALE 1-1.99 -TO 44.99-Exciting titles.

·2

..

PRS.

7.00

Classic oxford. Assorted colors. Interlace
oxford, white. 6·9, 10.. REG. 4.99 &amp; 5.99 pr.

SALE 1.19 TO 11.99 Many sizes.

ALL DISCONTINUED .
BICYCLES*

SALE 29.99. TO 64.99
Ladies· . men 's. boys'. girls' styles.
. 12" to 27" fram es.

OUR REG. 9 99·249.99

.

ALL ELECTRIC
KEYBOARDS*

SALE s.99 TO 174.99
,,.,,•., ,•• Pre• "'" Prl• " 88 ' 0 '" .,..,..

.
24
5.00 . 2.99

OUR REG . 19 .99·69.99

OUR REG. 3.99-24.99

ALL STROLLERS
·. and WALKERS* .

ALL SHOWER
CURTAINS*

SALE 13.39 TO 46.89
Strollers with canopies, umbrellas.
Walkers· with gyms. more.

9 9· 0UR

•

MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS*

Two button placket with
knit collar Poly/cotton .
CoJors. Sizes S,M,L,XL.
REG. 6.99

KODAK
COLOR. PRINT
FILM*
135/24 exp. 100 ASA.
.110/24 exp. 200 ASA,

RE~.

39. 99 49~9R:~~.'99
CEILING FANS* .

A,.~ requj,«J.

•
ALL LADIES'

OUR REG. 6.99-54.99

·

SALE 5.24 TO 41.24 Clip-on, stand,
brass plated and oscillating
mode.ls.
.

.

bracelets, necklaces

8uotJ.i not lnc:AxJed '

ASSORTED
CORDED PHONES
ORIGINALLY 9.99-49.99
f'INAL SALE 6.00 TO 35.00
Many brand names. .

FIN_AL entertainment, bedroom ,
Ut•hiY.
d much more .
dinette sets an

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4 0'0
•

8Pit
PKO.

LADIES'·.
FASHION
HANES HER WAY®
JEWELRY • rBl
HOSIERY*
Selection of lashion

ENTIRE STOCK .
FREE STANDING FANS*

OFF

ORIGtN~~tl ~;:~ii5 i~-~O

SALE 2.311 TO 14.1111
Vinyls, vinyl lined fabrics,
water resistant Excelont•. ·

25%0FF

. 34.99

Many styles to choose from .
• All fans include light kits. ·

·· '

' 50".o/.!»J;}fF
AS~ORTED FURNlTURE
9

50% OFF 30% OFF 33% OFF 40% OF·F
ORIGINALLY 59.99-129.99

30%.

.

LADIES' CASUAL
CANVAS SHOES*

ALL AUDIO I VIDEO
STORAGE UNI'FS*

Cartoon episodes. VHS. REG. 13.99

Tit'-t W!AI vary .0)' store Game Boy!• sortwsre uof mclur:18d

50% OFF ASSORTED INFANT and TODDLER FLEECE
ORIGINALLY 5 .99 &amp; 7.99 ............... FINAL SALE..••.•••.••.•.••••• 3.00 I 4.00

• . Assortment of styles.
Cotton/nylon ,. 3 white, ' '
3'
.

·.

'

50% 0FF

50%
OFF

OIEC SELECT
ORIGINALL ~~T VEHICLES

FINAL SALE . 50·11. 99
12 Pk. COlor /5' TO 6.00
lransporr ch ars. Galoob
ACTION FIG?fPer. rnore. .

ASSORTED
PLUSH TO .J
. ORIGINAL
YS

llld ACCE

FIN'"
LY 99'-19.99
... L SALE 49" TO
Children 's favorite 10.00
characters.

RES

ORIGINALl~ORIES

FINAL SALE 3.99-16.99
Police Aoade~-Oo TO B.so
C.o P S anct 01
F=ighters.

6f/00ci

*EXCLUDES ALL ITEMS ADVERTISED IN THIS WEEK'S CIRCULAR==::.

liP
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Silver Bridge Plaza ,
.•'

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SOR~Y NO RAINCftECKS.INTEAMEDIATE MARKDOWNS MY HAVE II!EN TAKEN. UMITED TO STORE STOCK. STYLES MAY VARY BY STORE.
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�Page 8- The

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Dati Seutinel

lhurldav. Apt 12. 1980

Pon~e~oy-Middlaport. Ohio

· Middleport ~lage financial report
.Fire equipment: receipts,
$9,699; dlsbursem~nts, $1,076.73;
balance, $6,935.01.
Fire truck, no receipts, no .
disbursements , balance,
$66,797.57.
Economic deveiOjllllents, re,Buck
ceipts, $1,380.03, dliblirsments,
There was a balance of $il,511.34, balance, $4,980.89.
$19,923.02 In the general fllnd · PubliC transportation: · re·
with receipts of $23,737.37 and celpts, $2,642.50, dlsbllrsements, .
disbursements of ·$14,1l8,08 ac- · )~,J14.M; balance, $8,029.87.
cordlDi to the report.' In other
wa~r system Improvement,
funds, lhe receipts, dlsbllrse· no receipts, no · disbursement,
ments, and balances, were as balance $60,736.43.
Water, receipts, $13,872.74, disfollows:
Street maintenance, receipts bursements, $16,495.55, balance,
.
$5,381.40 , disbursements $13,727.37.
$10,846.63 with a deficit balance
Sanitary sewe.r , receipts,
·
of $5,226.30.
$1i.842.07, · dlsbllrsements,
Mlnt,...golf, no receipts, dlsbUr· $12,187.83, balance, $7,291.13.
Swimm!Di pool, no receipts,
liements -$339.62, deflc,!J: balance
disbursements, $666.36, deficit
$948.03.

The total of all funds In the
Middleport VIllage treas11ry as of
March 31 was $192,721.06, with
: receipts for the month totaling
$71,062.24 and disbursements b~
lng $9!1,610.70, accord!Di to the
report of Clerk-Treas11rer Jon

1990 '

Nominees sought by group
•

Winning $15 rniUion jackpot ticket sold
.

CLEVELAND (UPI) -There Their tickets are worth UOO,OOO Eligible farmers In Athens, committee -assists the FmHA
was
one winner In Ohio's $15 each.
.
.
Meigs and VInton Counties are county office In deterinlnln&amp; the
Lotto
drawlne
·
~turtlay's
Super
Lotto jackpot
mWion
SUper
Invited to becorne nomlneel for ·· ellglhUity of applicants for cer·
Wednesday
night.
.
·
will
be
$";!
mUlion.
·
.
the Fanners Home Admlnstra· taln types of FmHA loans.
_,
Lottery officials said Thursda:!l.,.
iton county committee, FmHA
Generally, farmer• who · ara
the holder of the. winning ticket,
Cc!unty SUpervisor David P. !llldents . of these countlei are
Urwin announced today .
eligible to becoine. nominees for ' wbo has one year to claim bls
prize, will receive $573,750 annu·
As a result of the ·1985 Farm
the f'mHA county commltf!ee.
ally for the next 20 years, after
Bill, two of the three members of
"FarmerB In these coutie.
mandatory federal and state
FmHA county committees must
serving on thecommltleeplay an
withboldlug.
be elected. The third member Is
Important role by asslstiU In the
Flfty·flve arrests were made
The winning n1,111\J:iera were 1, durin&amp; tile month of March.
destgnsted by FmHA. The
process of loan appllcttldns·and
6, 9, 34, 36 aDd 37.
Athens, Meigs and Vinton County
reviews, " said David Urwin.
accordiDi to the 'repQr.t of ~
.r
Nominating petitions must be _ In addition to the top-prize Middleport Pollee Departmeat.
- - - - - -........- - - returned to the FmHA colmty winner, 255 players had five Qf . Ten ac~nts were IIM!fll· .
the six numbers for payoffs of gated and 83 meals were ll!1'ved
ofttce.by May 21.
balance, $2,015.81.
Additional Information and ap- $1,000 each, and 11,189•players to prisoners by . the retldenf
Cemetery, r~elpts; $2,922.13,
plication forms for those who are had fo1ir of the numbers for dispatcher. Merchant pollee co1:
disbursements, W,087.63, deficit · In teres ted In becoming nomtnees payoffs of $75 apiece. •
lections totaled.$'11 with parkiDI
balance, 14.653.32,
In the a«0111panytng Kicker meter collections totallni
for the county committee are
. Water meter trusts, receipts,
available at the FmHA coimty game; there players had the with 3'19 parking tickets ~tng
$585, disbursements, $213, bal·
Office, 200 East Second St., winning combination - 064437. Written.
ance, U 7,043.23.
Pomeroy, or by calling 992-6644.
'

Middleport pollee

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People in the

~s-___,;,.-

.,. WILLIAM C. ftO'IT
lJIIHed Preu lnlerllldloaal

1

A)\INIE C-'NNBD FOR Bl!liNG TOO OLD: Dulelle l1'llldle,-,
12, found out just how fiCkle show business can be. The Kansas

City, Kan., schoolgirl won a nstlonwide search to star In the
musical "Annie 2," went through rehearsals and suffered
thrQugh the rewrites and bad rev.tews the play received during
Ita run In W'ashl~~&amp;ton, D.C. The show was such a bomb the
prodUcers dectaed not to take It to Broadway. The creators have
now decided to revive "Annie 2" but Danlelle was told that she
won't be a part of lt. Director-lyricist MartiD aaandll had the
job of gMng Danlelle the news. ''She Just erew up too faa t," he ·
told the New York Dally News. "I was havifti a problem. By the
time we get tq Broadway, 1111 be Christmas and she'll be too
old:" 'l'be new Annie Is Laaren Gaffney, 10, of Summit, N.J .,
who Is now appearing with Debtiy Boone til "The Sotind of

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· 1990 PLYM. SUNDANC!E 4

DR~

bolt Mleroldl, ll'a lbe Beiltlea

on four legs, each one-tipped with
CfoMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI)a ballthatreplacesthewheeland
Thl!' fame of rock music's fah
~e.
four, . tiie Beatles, now stretches
lntQ.outer space.
Election takea backaeaUomovie
John, ·P aul, George and Ringo
HOUSTON (UPI) - A televl·
each bave an asteroid named
sian station's election-night cov·
after th'e in by the discoverers of erage In Texas was curtailed by a
the mtnor planets.
higher power-.
.
NBC affiliate KPRC·TV was
AsteroidS numbered 4147,4148,
4149 and 4150, are now called
asked not to Interrupt the final
hour ,of IJie networ~'s presents•
J.ennoa, . McCarll!ey, Harflson
·':'llJid . starr;- tht!- lJnternlittonill·. ·uon'-- of. "Jesus of Nazareth"
Astronomical Union's mblor 'I'llesda,y with• updates of
· planet center said Wednesday.
s_tate's runoff primary vote.
. • "It Is customary to name
NBC planned no Interruptions,
asteroids after distinguished
no commercials and no news
scientists or Greek and Roman
cut-Ins during the crucifiXIon
vgoddesses, l&gt; ., f!.llld' Dr. Edward
portion o, the biblical epic and
,Bowell ofth~~ll,oell Observatory asked all of Its stations to honor
In Flagstaff, ~ .• who disco· the request.
ver!!d the four l'n!lior planets with
"Naturally, we agreed," said
his colleague Brian A. Skiff. •'But · Jerry Moring, executive protimes are changing, and we think ducer of nllWs for KPRC.
·- tt Is -a tun thing to honor some
"I can't Imagine anyone really
other people :we like and who we being miffed;'' Moring said.
thlnkhavedonentcethlngslnthe '·'Sometimes, evenrthe news has
world."
• to take a-back seat."
The asteroids are rocky bodies
left over from early formation of - He didn't know the cake was
the solar system and orbit the sun loaded (with tctnc&gt;
CINCINNATI (UPI)- A man
In an asteroid belt between Mars
and Jupiter. Bowell and SkiH argued In court that killed a
dls!:Overed•t!lese partlclllar aste- person because the Icing on a
roids, between 5 and 10 mUes In piece of cake he was eating made
diameter, In 1983 and 1911!1. Too his. fingers so slippery they
faint to be seen with the eye, they accidentally fired a g~~n he was
appear as star·like points of light holding.
The arg~~ment failed to conIn a taree telescope, Bowell said.
vince
the judge.
Eric Clapton, the English roek
A
lawyer
for the defendant,
star, also bas an aiterold named
George
Sulllvan,
39, of Clncln·
for hlin. The honor was bestowed
nat!,
contended
Sullivan was
by scientists at the Oak Ridge
check!Di
a
revolver
as he ate
Observatory In Harvard, Mass.
cal!e. The Icing caused his thumb
TIIJOta pulll wh!in&amp;y, wacldness to slip on the hammer of the gun,
killing Robert Floyd on March 5.
. In novelty can
Ho\vever, HamUton County
NEW YORK (UPI) -Imagine.
Municipal
Court Judge Deldra
a ve!Jtcle without a steering
Hair
found
Su!llvan guilty of
Wheel,' accelerator or brake
negligent
hOmicide,
noting the
pedals, operated onty by the
gun
was
loaded
and
apparently
vehicle
human voice. Or
controlled by volume; the louder painted toward the·victim.
Its driver screams, the faster It

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23rd of April.

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Tbose are two of the whimsical
vehicles exhibited by Toyota at
the Greater New York Automobile SIM;Iw. They were award
winners at the Tokyo Idea Expo,
an event sponsored annually by
Toyota " to create Inventions that
do not have the practical 11oa1 of
eventual production In mind,"
said S. Sasaki, vice president of
Toyota Motor - Corp. "Fun and
originality are the alms, not
practicality," he _said.
Tbla year's entries, on display
In New York; lnclllde the Teira, a
tbree.Jeaed ·vehicle that looks
111re a UFO. It moves on spherea,
lilstead of tires, allowiug It to
move quickly In any direction. It
C'ould move lldeways out of a
parlciDC apace.
And there's the Screamer, a
peart·llke vehicle powered by
tl)e human voice. In 'place of a
slll!erlq wheel and su pedal Is a
jllysdck and micropboile. The
louder you acream,tb*tuter you
you want to atop, you just
,lllut up, aaya Toyota epokelman
Tutll Hlroka.

ao. u

_,_to

Dldcb' Loq t:ep was de''walll'' slowly lleeau•

motorlalll 1IIOYe too fut, Htiob
ayil. Tbe
literally walb

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Your ·
Easter
Headquarten
For
Children's
Clothing

The ouy Sentinel-Page s _

Ohio

President undergoes three-hour medical checkup
d WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres·
l ent Blish, whose health Is
dscrlbed as excellent, under·
·Went Ills annual phy1tcal examl·.
nation Thursday at _ Bethesda
Naval Hospital.

expected to be Issued later In the sustained d11ring his fijght days
day.
tn World War II and allergies
White House spokesman .Mar· related to beestlngsandseasonal
lin Fitzwater told reporters Wed· changes.
.
nesday, "Dr. Lee describes the . Bush wenqothehospltal on the
current state of the pres'tdent's eve of his departure foor Ber·
.
muda where he will meet with
health as excellent."
The 65,year-old president, .
On May 10,1989, Bush also was British Prime Minister Margaret
wearing a dark suit, while shirt
pronounced In excellent health Thatcher on Friday for their
and DQ tie, flew by heliCopter to
after a t~hour exam In which reg~~lar consultations on the
the bospttal where a team of
all tests proved normal.
riveting political changes In
doctors was watttne to give hlm·a
Europe and his recent talks with
three-bour checkup. He was
Bush, who jogs regularly and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
accompanied by Dr. Burton Lee,
plays tennis, continues to suffer Shevardnadze.
the White H~use phyuslctan.
During their one-day summit
from a mUd case of
In
on his
was
a .slight
loss In Bermllda,' the two leaders will

... · . .· . J

-

,. RONIITADTFORCIIARI'J'Y: UndaR. .stadhvlllperformat
~ fund-raiser for the T.J. Martell Foundation; one ofthe record
Industry's biggest charities; Elektra Entertainment Chairman
• lob Knanawwill be honored as the group's humanitarian at the
June 8 sala In New York and other big names may be joining
Ronstaadt c)nstage. The foundation Is named for CBS Records
eilecutlve Toll)' Marlell's son, wbl) died of leukemia, and raises
II!!IReY to fight cancer and AIDS.
·
· '8'1'1\GE NEWS: Clorlll Leachman Is taking her show,
''Grandma Moses - An American Primitive," to Broadway.
The Academy and Emmy Award·wlnntng actress, who toured
the country with the show abQut the American artist, Is
rehearsing now In St . Paul, MIM. The show then willembarkon
a 20-week, 10·dty tour on AprU 25 and open In New York In late
September or early October. The only other actor In the play Is
P~ Thoemke, who p~ys several roles, InclUding Grandma
Moses' husband and ¥ her art dealer·blogi'apher ... New ·
Dramatists, the New York eroup thai helps boost playwrights,
will honor Oscar winner le.lica Tandy an1H1~ ~usband, Rume
Cronyn, May 8 at Its 41st annualfund·ralsln~cheon. "The
work done by New Dramatists Is Invaluable to the futUre of the
American theater," Tandy said. "We need to nurture writers
and this wonderful organization Is doing a ereat job." _
GLIMPSES: Carl Perklnll earned his Ph.D. In rock 'n' roll
lORi ago and now he'll get an honorary doctor of humanities
from Lambuth' College \n Jackson, Tenn., on AprU 29. When
Lambuth President 1'llomaa Boyd called to talk to Perl!ins
about the degree, perkins asked him, "Can you eraduate from
. College with only eight years In school?'' Thomas assured him
that he could, In Ibis case .•. There's another Kennedy wedding
coming up In the ' fall. Kara llenoedy, 30, daughter of Sen.
Edward M. K-dy. D·Maas., and a producer on "Evening
·Magazine" at WBZ·TV In Boston, will marry. Michael Allen, a
Wublngton, D.C., architect. The date and site of the wedding
were· not announced. Kara's cousin, Kerry Kennedy, 30,
daughter of the late Robert Kennedy, recently announced her
eqagement to Andrew Cuomo, the son of New York Gov. Mario
CUomo.

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Thundly. Aprl12, 1990

,.

IIIUI'f8AIII
POSCOY,-

participate tn ihe ls,land's Good
Friday tradition - kite flying. •
They will have two major bllat·
era! meetings, a luncheon, a
reception aboard the British
HMS Arrbw and dinner at the
·Governor's Ho11se.
·
Bush will spend Saturday on •
the golf course before returning
to Washington tn the late-after·
noon. On arrival at Andrews Air
Force Base he will board a
helicopter and head for Camp
David where he will join Ills wife
Barbara and members of the
for an Easter celebratiOn.

DESK ·sALE

l(r/U"cf(JI( •cf

' ?

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SPRING SALE
.CONTINUES ·WITH GREAT
SAVINGS THROUGHOUT
THE.· STORE!!
•·
.

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.

Graduation Special
Sale prices on quality knee-hole desk$
for home, office or .maybe that
special graduate!

·SALE

DINING ROOM FURNITURE

Reg. 1249
. ' I
Reg• . 289
Reg. 1339
Reg. 1369

Tables, chai~s, hutches, china cabinets, pie safiS and
IMI'e. Htre 11 onlv a partial listing·
.
leg. S219 - ''·
· · .
Dr~·leaf Table, 2 chairs, oak or· maple •••• Sale S175
R...
•529
.
~val Table, 4 solid oak chairs:.,.;................ Sale $419
R-s. S719 luHet and China lfutch ............... Sale S629
R-s.• t97' Trestle Table; 2 leaf, 6 chairs ..... Sale S779
Reg. 1629 luHet and HUtch, oak ....:- ......... Sale S499
Reg. '259 Oak Cupboard .............................. Sale 1209

.SALE

Pine Desk •••;••••••••••• Sale 1189
Oak Desk ••••••••••••••• Sale 1229
Rustic Oak Desk •••• Sale 1269
Dark Pine Desk •••••• Sale 1289

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MISS OUT
ON OUR
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•TELEVISION SALE
•VINYL FLOOR COVERING SALE
•&amp;ERILINE RECUNER SALE
•LIV,NG ROOM SALE

•

sl\L~ . HASSOCKS
Get your feat up with a new hassock! 3 styles
- durable vinyl cover - great colors.

Metal
Cabinets

REG. 117.99 ................................. SALE S14.39
REG. S24.99 ................................. SALE S19.99
REG. S33.99 ..................:.............. SALE S27 .19

.

SALE

Base cabinets, wardrobes, china cabinets end
utility cabinets; White or almond finish. Sturdy
construction.
·

DAYBEDS

.....................;...........:....... SAlE 184.00

REG. 199;oo~

8ra!!;Or white flnllh daybeds. Sturdy contrution. Unk springs Included.
.
-

REG. 1119.00 ..................................... SALE 1101.00
REG. f129.00 ...................._.. _........... SALE 5109.00
REG; s139.00 .....................................
SALE .S118.00
REG. 1219.oo ...................................... SALE 1186.00

•

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.
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8:30-8:00

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Alder ., __

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CASIAL OlnDoOI FUIIITUIE

STORE HOURI
. Monday.

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'JhundaV. April12, 1990

Paga . 1 o-The Daily Sentinel

I.angston, Witt combine ·for
season's·first no-hit effort ·
•

guy to flnisb thl.$ one," Rader
By Ualted PressiDiernatloul
said. " He's dOne it before: Witt's
If be keeps this up Mark
Langston will be a bargain at any · perfect game was the most
price.
dominating I have seen. · I am
very bappy for both of therri."
The 29-year-old left-bander
comblued with ·Mike Witt Wed·
The ~Is scored In the
nesday night to· fire a no-hitter seventh lmilng when Dante
and lead the California Angels to Blschette dreW a bases-loaded
a 1·0 victory over the Seattle walk.
Mariners.
Johnny " Blue Moon" Odom
Langston signed a five-year, and Francisco Barrios of the
$16 million contract with the Chicago While Sox combined on a
Angels this winter. He may make ·· no-hitter against Oakland In 1976.
bellvers of those who wondered If ·Odom pitched five Innings and.
any baseball player was worth Barrios four In a 2·1 victory . .
-that kind of cash.
· Witt made his first relief
. : "It's just wild, I'm shocked," appearance since 1983, 'helping
;Langston said. "I tried to envl· the Angels to their ·eighth. no- ·
_stan the way my first game would hitter. Witt and Langston retired
go. Believe me what I pictured the last 14 Mariners In a row.
isn't close to the .way It turned
Th~ was the first no-.b ltter In
out.''
the majors since Tom Browning
. Langston, malting his debutfor · pitched a perfect game against
Cal!fornlil and pile bing against the Dodgers on Sept. 16, 1988;
his former teammates, left after
Seattle stsrter Erik Hanson
.98 pitches through seven Innings. scattered five hits over five
· ''I finally hit the wall after the
Innings before giving way to
seventh," he said. •'This early in
Gary Eave who walked In the
the season I .~as fortunate to go winning run to take the loss.
.seven."
"There was good pitching on
The Anahebn Stadium crowd both sides, " Seattle Manager
booed when Langston failed to Jim Lefebvre said. ! 'Unfortu·
come out In the eighth Inning. For nately It took a no-hitter to beat
lhe last
outs, the fans were us. We just couldn't get anything
on their feet, and the noise built to going."
a crescendo as Witt sll"uck. out
Elsewhere In the AL, BOston
Ken Griffey, Jr. to end the game. edged Detroit 3-2, Minnesota
Langston walked ·four and
blanked Oakland 3-0, Texas
struck out three. Witt pitched the belted Toronto 11-5 and Kansas
. last no-hitter for the Angels -a
City defeated Baltimore 2·1. Ba(!
perfect game against Texas In _ weather brought two postpone1984.
.
ments: Chicago at Milwaukee,
''I knew that Witt was the right
N:ew York at Cleveland.

three

I

I

I

Twins S, Athletics I
At Oakland, Calif., Kent Hrbek
hit a first·lnnning home run and
Kevin Tapanl pltched six Innings
for only the third victory of his
major-league career. RlckAgull·
era earned the save. Oakland' s
Mike Norris, making his fltst
major league appearance since
1983, pitched two Innings of
relief.

RaniJere 11, Blue .Jays I
At Toronto, Pete Jncavlglla ·
delivered a tWo-run single and
three- run homer for the Rangers,
Texas scored five runs In each of
the first two lnillngs. Ruben
Sierra had three hits and two RBI
for the Rangers. The game 'Was
played before 35,031 fans, snapping a _streak of 41 straight
sellouts at th~ SkyDome.
Royals 2; Orioles 1

hailed lhe 1ame Wecillesday. The IJame ·was
· delay~ lf8. minutes be(ore reaumpdoa of llle
IJame. The IJ&amp;me wu flaall)r cancelled. (1Jl"l)

SNOWSTORM - Qevelaad hatter &lt;;ory
Sayder, oa dedl, ae¥er came tO hai In the bottom
of &amp;he aecoDd IDID1 aplul New York u

now

hours, the game was called off In
the bottom of the fourth Inning.
It just began a few days early
for the weather to cooperate. The
forecast was 111uch better for
later In the week, with highs of 50
to 55 predicted for Friday.

Even the Indlans,ln.somewhat
admitting defeat to Mother Na·
ture, postponed opening d"a y
festivities until Friday night,
Aprll20, when ttie Indians return
from a seven-game road trip to
play the Chicago White Sox.

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man for the board, said the ruling
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ·'l'l!e Ohio State . Medical Bqard means Downing will barred from
has'" .s uspended tl!e . license of performing autopsies' for :,0 days
and will be on probation for six
Lake County Coroner wnuam
years.
~IDg for falling to take
"When these physicians renew
education seminars required to
their
license, they sign a card
maintain his license. ·
swearing
up and doWn ·that they
The board also fotin'd Wednestook
the
required nuinber ·of
day Downillg had lied about the ·
number :· "of hours he hail
continuing · medlcai e(lucatlon
boors," Lubow said. ''There's a
~pleteQ..
Lauren ll.ubilw, a spokeswo- , fraud Issue here, and there's
. decepjlon. That all played a part
In the decelltlon. "
' __
Downing, 69, who was first
elected coroner In 1984, said he
. .
dldn' t give much thought to
Three forfeited bonds and two
signing the forms.
otl)ers were fined on charges of
"I did that ·offhand because I
.OWl Ill the court of Middleport
assumed that an old retired
MlYOl: Fred Hoffman Tuesday
surgeon that Is no longer taking
care
. of live patients wouldn' t
night, "'.. .
, .
. ·.
Forfeiting bonds of $460 each
reall)r be held to that," he said.
on the charge were Kelly Hay' ·
The board determ,ln~ Down:
man, Racine, Thorn~. Stone, lng, who retired as a surgeon In
Pomeroy, 'and P)lllllp M. Sho1986, completed eight hours of
ei!Uiker, Cheshire, who also
medlcal.semlnars In 1987 and six
forfeited a bond of $60 on a charge
hours In 1988, but could not find
of left of center,
·
evidence he attended any more.
Fined on the charge were .
Board rilles req ulre pbyslclans
Tammy J. Bush, Racine, and
complete 100 hours of seminars
Carl L. Buckley, :Rutland, each . and reading medical journals
$425 and costs with sentences of
.
every two years.
three @ys In jail. Bush was also
The suspension becomes effec·
fined $100 and ·costs for possesti.ve 30 days after Down lng
sion of marijuana,
receives his official notification.
Others fined In the court were · FoUoWtng the-30-day suspension
Micah M. Large, Stoutsville, $Hi
period, he can apply for recertifi·
and costs,. runlng a stop sign;
cation If he can document comJoey R. Pridemore, Jr., Cleve- . pletlon of 40 hours of seminars
land, $10 and . rosis, no license
and 60 hours of reading.
plates on his vehicle; and George
"I can llvewlth that," Downing
OstErmeyer, Middleport, $25 and · said of . the terms, adding he
. costs, discharging a fire ~rm In
would be able to · determine
the ~lllage.
.
whether he could. complete the
· Scotty Tripp, West VIrginia,
requirements after he· receives
forfeited a bond of $110 on a
the notification.
,disorderly manner charge.

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•

Indians-Yankees' opener snowed out
Not
CLEVELAND (UPI) even the postponement of six
games because of baseball's
labor dispute and a seventh game
because of rain pushed back the ·
season far enough for. baseball
weather to prevail In-cleveland.
The Indians and Yankees tried
to open their reasons W!!dnesday
night In Cleveland Stadium with
the National Weather Service
fo~ast calling for lows of 25 to
30 degrees .and an !KI percent
chance of snow. But after two
snow delays and· neatly three

.
'
l'j'EW · YORK- (UPi) - Ex· ported In Its Thursday edition
book and movie, ''Somebody Up than a mllllon d9Uars with his
middleweight champ Rocky Gra· that Graziano . was In critical There Likes Me."
·
lists. ·. .
.
zlano, whose . climb from the condition after suffering a stroke · He honed his flghtlllg skills on
But his career didn't stop when
ghetto to the boxing. ring pro- last Sunday .
· . the streets of New York~ then he left the ring, and he finally
vided tbe most turbulent chronl·
became a boolleg amateur boxer earned publiC respect In the
cle 'ln championship lllstory, has
Graziano had suffered a heart
who turned pro In 1942 and boxed unlikely roles of a television
been hospitalized, o(flclats said. at tacit on Feb. . 5;' and had
10 years. He fought 83 times and performer on the Martha Raye
A spokeswoman for New York recently been discharged from
knocked out 52 opponents.
show from 1953 to 1956, and as a
HosptW·Cornell Medical Center the Rusk Institute· of Rebablllta·
But Graziano will be parlicu- crusader against Juvenile .
said Wednesday the 69-year-old tive Medicine. The Ugbter' a.wife,
Jarly remembered for three delinquency.
ex-flgh_ter W!IS being treated at Norma, was said to be "ex- savage fights with ·T,ony Zale,
that facility, but • declined. tQ · tremelydlstraught" at this latest· known ·then 1n boxing as "The ·
" He never lost that ·a ppeal be
describe his condition.
setback, the News reported.
Man of Steel."
had with fellow New Yorkers,''
The spokeswoman said Grazla·
Graziano's errors as a young
Perhaps the most consistently
Louis Fugazy, a close family
no's family had requested that no · New York hoodlum and as a good drawing card for a decade
friend, told the News. "I'll bet
Information be released.
primitive, devil-may-care flgh· In middleweight hlsloty, Grazl·
Rocky Is still the most popular
However, the oa'l ly News re- .· fer was made Into a best-selll!lg · ano estimated be earned · more . · ex-athlete In town."

&lt;;:OLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - The Ohio-Supreme Court has
ruled The Way International is not required to pay sales tax on
gOOds It purchase$ because It a church.
Wednesday's ruling reversed a decision by the Board of Tax
Appeals that said the New Knoxville organization was not a
church and therefore d!d not quality for religious exemptions.
The Way had appealed a $156,900 tax assessment for
·purchases It made .from 1974 through 1976.
'
• .
The Department · of Taxation contended the Way was
operating a business In Auglalze County,_where It has a print
shop and a recording studio In addition to an auditorium,
·
student housing and executive offices.
Rather than holding services In church buildings, The Way Is
C)rganlzed In a "tree" pat tern. It spreads Its message,.which Is .
-developed at the "root" In New Knoxville, mainly through
servlce,s In members' homes -known as "twigs," , _
The department says the Way's profits- prbnarUyTrom the
sale of books, tapes and "required donations" - had grown
.from $1!Xl,OOO In 1973 to $5.8 million In 1976.
·
The Supreme Court sent the case back to the Board of Tax
Appeals.
·"Selling books and tapes to ltsfoUowerslsnota business bulls
a means to Its religious ends,'' the court said.
The ruling does not change The Way 's responsibility to collect
sales tax on books and tapes It sellS, however.
. ··
The high court held The Way qualified· as a church under
guldel~s established 'In a 1972 case.
"It has adherent$. It adopts tli'e Bible as the main source oflts
dogma, ·.u propagates a comprehensive set of religious
objectives and beliefs which attempt to answer Its adherents'
religious concerns and it.conducts services, both at Its Bible
Research Center and at twig meetings," the court said.
"The Way's motive Is to advance Its religion and It employs
bo\IIC$ and tapes In a functionally related' way to accomplish
this ."
The Way made a profit on Its books and tapes , but the court
said It "did not distribute any profit to Its trustees, oiflcers, or
emplo~ees, but Instead, paid them modest salaries,"

AI Boston, Dwight Evans
·. singled justtnsldethlrd base with
two out In the lOth to score Wade
Boggs, giving Boston a season. opening · three-game sweep.
Winner Greg Harris pitched the
lOth. Jerry Don Gleaton was the
loser.

At Kansas City, Gerald Perry
and Kevin · Seltzer delivered
conseCIItive run-sclirlng singles
In the firth Inning.' Five Kansas·
City pitchers, combined for a
five-hitter, with Mark Gublcza
getting the victory. Jeff Bal)ard
took the loss.

Ex-champ Rocky Graziano hospitalized

Court says The Way
is exemptfrom tax ,

Red Sox S, T!len ~

The Daily Sentinel· Page 11

Pomaoy- Midcleport. OhiO .

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Nobody is indispensible,

I

. SONG FOB BYAN- EUoalolm IIDp "811Jlme Plpoa" dar1D1
, llle Wedllelcl83' fuaenl of Ryu Wldte at 8eeoad Preebyterlaa
\. ~ _]

Cllureb miDcllaaapolll, llld.loba decllcl&amp;ed •'Caaclle ID 111e Wlad, " ·
, to llle youiii,_Satlll'dq at llle Farm Aid Cooced, tbe d&amp;Y before tile
, ~ vldlm cUed. (UPl)

;Thousands gather to honor Ryan ·White
: INDIANAPOLIS '(UPI) - The
lnuslc of pop singer Elton John
and a blgh school choir filled the
lmpoeiDg Gothic church where
lbronp of mourners gathered to
bid farewell to Ryan White and
remember his courageous fight
UaiDst AIDS.
• Second Presbyterian Church,
knOWD for a congregation that
Includes some of the most In·
fluential people ID the stale,
opened Its doors Wedpe&amp;day to
more than 1,000 people who came
to mourn the death of the
lS.year-ol!l.
.
· White, wlio died Sunday, was
honored by celebdtles and
schoolmates alike for his fiveyear battle against acquired
Immune defiCiency syndrome
·and the Ignorance and unrea·
sooed fear that accompanied the
disease. ·
~ The massive
church was
ebosen because It could accomodate a large crowd. yet f.t least
500 people had to be !urned away
30 minutes ·befOre the servtl)e
because the church was full.
Those In attendance, InclUding
first lady Barbara Bush, heard
John sing "Skyline Pigeon," a
song.written In 1969, before White
was born. A do~n girls,
members of the Hamilton
Heights High School Choir, sang ,
'.'That's What Friends .Are For,"
breaking Into tears as they
finished.
White was laid to rest In his
hometown of Cicero wearing bls
favorite clothes: blue jeans, a

p

I

red· shirt, a jean jacket, an&lt;j his
Oakley sunglas~~e&amp;. Alsowlthblm
was bls "guardian angel," a
, nightl1ght given to hbn by a
fam!IY friend w)!en he first was
diagnosed with the deadly virus
In 1984.
Jeanne White said her son
chose "the clothing In which he
was to be-burled, once telling her,
''Mom, I just want to be
comfortable."
John, ·tillk·lihow host Phil Donahue and Los Angeles Raiders
football player Howie Long
served as pallbearers, as did
White's uncle, Tommy Hale, and .
two school friends, f...ell Joseph
and John Huffman.
John, who kept a constant vlgU
at White's bedside until he died,
also helped the family make
funeral arrangeme11ts.
Also In attendance were singer
Michael Jackson, actor Lukas
Haas, who played White lp the
1989 televlson movie, ''The Ryan
White Story," · actress Judith
Light, who portrayed hrs mother
In the movie; 'and White's sister,
Andrea; his estranged father,
Wayne White, and stepfather.
Steve Ford.
"Ryan ... knew ,Jesus personaiJy ,and up close. He knew God ·
and he wasn't afrllld to die," the
Rev. Ray Probasco,' a Methodist
minister and friend of White's
famUy said ~n his eulogy· . ·
"Accept Ryan's fate, " Pr~
~
basco told the congregation.
"Ryan was successful in getting
us all Involved. He helped us to
care and believe that with c.~ ·"

help, nothing Is tmposslble, even
for a kid."
"With God's help and yours,
we'll make AIDS a disease, not a
dirty wont."
Not much was known about
AD;&gt;S when Wh,te was diagnosed
with the disease In 1984, Probasco said.
'There were few drugs at first
and very little Information about
the Illness," he said. "So very
quickly a great deal of fear
permeated Ryan's community.
After he contracted AIDS,
Rxan's struggle to live life as an
ordinary kid became more In·
tense because he wanted to go to
school.'-' J
,
. Soon · after learning he had
contracted AIDS, White was
barred from his school near
Kokomo, Ind., and ·ostracized l)y
many classmates and. their parents. He eventually was allowed
to return to school after a
yearlong court battle.
"It was Ryan who first humanttized the disease called AIDS.
He allowed l!S to the see the boy
who just .w anted more than
anything else to be like other
. cbtldren and to be able to go to
school.
"He didn't want to be labeled
as the AIDS Boy," Probasco
said; "He often remarked to his
family that tr othe.r s wouldn't
keep telllng hbn that he had It, he
would forget it."·
Gov. Evan Bayh ordered nags
In the slate fiOWD at half·staff.
Classes were schl!quled Wedlles·

11\llllon expansion to .Turtle weekend ..
Beach, which opened last year.
The Beach, across the freeway
The estimated ileparture time
"It was such a success last from Kings Island, opens May 26,
tor Flllbt Commander Ia Satur·
year that we're capitalizing on · the Friday or Memorial Day
day, ihortty after Ktnp Island
It," said Llaa Orlss of the park's weekend, and wiliiK!&lt;ipen though
greets tile 1990 amusement park
public relations office. .
Labor.Day. The new attraction Is
Ieason In Ohio. ,
A monkey bar climbing system The Cliff. a water ride with a
Flight Commander ts a new
Is one of the new Items at Geauga .. free-fall e)\perlence.
.
ride that allows the passenger to .Lake, and a Similar one at
''It's the fourth of Its kind in the
COIIt.rol his space pod, thus
Wyandot Lake, Its sister park world and the only one with a
creating a unique rlde. ·
north of· Columbus. A dry play tunnel at the end, '' said Doug
That .a nd an lnnertube ride
area and a volleyball court are Martin, a group sales representa•
added to the WaterWorks area
other new Items·at Geauga Lake, live for the pari\.
·
· ~among the new attracUons at
which w111 be open weekends In
Besides the numerous wa£er
the park. In southwestern Ohio,
May and dally between Memor- activities, the Beach has four
about ~0 miles north of
Ial Day and Labor Day, then sand voDeyball courts,' and
Cincinnati.
weekends In September and closes each night with a water
Also opening Saturday for
~ober .
·
color show.
.
Weekend operations Is Fantasy
Wyandot (.ake, which offers a
Also opening May 26 Is Suif
Farm ,near Middletown. New to
new water area known as Bucca- Cincinnati, a water park that .
the · chlldren·ortented park Is a
neer Bay, opens May 12 for opened In 1984. It has a 25,000kiddie ride · known as Teeter
weekends, then dally Memorial square toot wave pool, three body
Copter.
Day through Labor Day.
flumes, a lazy river ride, lour
~ Slnce this Is Easter weekend,
The Americana amusement speed slldes, and lnnertube
Fantasy Farm has Invited the
park near Middletown opens · rapids.
!!=aster Bunny to share In thetlrst
May 5. A new food court and
A disc jockey arrives at the
days· of the 28th ~ason, said · midway games section awalt park Friday evenings for a Suif
Doug Baskett,. ihe group sal~s
viSitors In the area where a $5 Dance for the teenage patr'!ns.
·representative at the park.
million fire In January destroyecL
Coney Island, along the banks
Kings Island and · Fantasy
a dance pavilion that had seen of the Ohio River In Cincinnati,
Farm willlle open Saturdays and · some of the nation's big bands In begins its 104th year this spring. .
Sundays until 'the Memorial Day
the 1930s and 1940s.
It is part of the complex that also
weekend when they begin dally
The park lias also ·added a Includes River Downs race track
OPtratlons through Labor . Day,
bumper car ride.
and Rlverbend, where big-name
'Sept. 3. Both will be open
· Among the 70 rides are a the entertainers perform throughout ,
weekends after Labor Day.
Raging Thunder, a log flume ride the summer.
il/1
Other parks In Ohio open In
that ·drops four : stories; the
Tile park reached Its peak
May.
Screeching Eagle roller coaster before 1972, when many of the
Cedar Point, which opens May , of the camel hack series, and a
rides moved up the freeway to
5, lntfoduces $9.5 million In swinging pirate s)llp ride.
Kings Island. But In recent
Improvements, the largest In the
The park, which opened In 1921, years, Coney Island has been
park's 120·year history.
. also lias 14 pavilions, making It rebuilding Into an outdoor reThe most challenging conpopular for comjll\ny picnics.
creational area·park.
struction · project Is Disaster
Americana will he open weeA Ferris wheel and skid cars
Tr~sport, .a futuristic ~pace
kends untli May 26 when It begins · have been added to the altrac·
adventure that combines new , dally operations, and then wee- tions which Include a swimming
lighting tec~nology, robotics and
kends In September.
pool wlt!t two slides, ·. paddle
anbnatlon with a roller coaster
Sea World of Ohio, home to boats, bumper boats, miniature
enclosed In Its own theatre.
Shamu. the killer whale, sea lions golf, and fac111ties for tenn~.
Other new attractions at the
Clyde and Seamore and 140 softball, volleyball, basketball,
park on the wes.tern shores of
penguins, opens for Its 21st year horseshoes and soccer,
Lake Erie In Sandusky Include
May 19.
.
the movie ''The Dream Is Alive"
Shamu and Clyde and Sea'
on the buge Imax screen, a new
more, and the champiOnship high
ride ID Klddleland and addl!1ons
divers w111 be enterlalnlng with
to' Soak etty water park. A S4 · fresh shows. Canadian lumbermillion Sandcastle Suites hotel . jacks will be showtng their skills
wil!'open June 29.
In a competitive atmosphere.
Sea World In Aurora Is open
Cedar Point will be open dally
thro\lih Sept. 9. A laser
dally
through Labor Day, then weelight
show
Is offered on weekends
~~ In September.
.&gt;\!so opening May 5 Is Geauga: beginning June 8 and nightly
Lake Park In Abrora with a $1.1 · June 29 thro11gh Labor Day

u......._ IDtenMJollll

· MAfo!ILA, Phtllpplnes (UPI)Thoosands of FIUplnos, reenacting the agony of Jesus
ChriSt, dragged heavy wooden
crosses and flogged their bare
backs with glass·studded whips
Thursday In grisly Lenten
rituals.
At least 12 people were scheduled to be nailed to crosses on
!3ood Friday ,Including 10 men In
ll_farmlng 'village near the U.S.
Clark Air Base, to climax the
yearly spectacle.
Roman Catholic Church offl.
clals In the Ph111pplnes have
described the bloody Easter
rituals as "ridiCulous," but the
talthful In Asia's only Christian
nation continue to bring pain and
iufferlng on themselves In hopes
of redemption.
Throughout the country Thurs . .
day, thousands of penitents
trudged barefoot through dusty
streets under a scorching sun;
whipping their backs with glass.
~ded bamboo sticks as a sign
or remorse for their sins.
; Many dragged huge wooden
crosses or 'Carried beaUtifully
decorated ststues or Christ.

Some wore crowns of thorns,
velvet robes and hoods.
The bloody scene was repeated
In the capital's slum areas and in
jails where lnmates,.hoplng their
sentences w111 be commuted,
slash their tatooed backs with
razors and flog themselves with'
whips.
Other penitents visit 14
churches In Manila, symbollzlng
the stations of the cross along
Jesus' journey to Calvary for his
crucifixion nearly · 2,000 years
ago. They "18lk on their knees ,
from the church entrance to the
altar.
The annual Good Friday crucl·
tlxlons will takeplaceat3 p.m. on
a ~mat the center of a rice field In
San Pedro Cutud, 50 mUes north
of Manila. Organizers said the
penitents they w111 be hoiSted on
15-toot crosses, with 5-lnch steel
nails hammered Into tllelr hands.
Two others, Including a
woman, were expected to be
crucified In nearby Bulacan
Province.
Refreshment stands have
mushroomed overnight In San
Pedro CUtud In anticipation of

'Doll4r
opens mixed in Europe
.
.

: LONDON (UPI) - The dollar
· ;~~pened mixed against major
European currencies Thursday.
.Gold was higher.
The dollar opened higher In
Frankfurt at 1.6750 · marks
aplnst 1.6735 at Wednesday's
close.
The dollar opened lower .In
Paris at 5.6295 French francs
against 5.6390, In Brussels at
3U6 Belgian francs against
34.70,and In Milan at 1,232.50 lire
against 1,234.75.
, In Zurich, the dollar was
.11nchaqec) at U855 Swiss ·

fr_ancs.
· In London, the pound opened
lOwer at $1.6UI compared to
$1.6435 at Wednesday~&amp; cloee.
EarDer In Tokyo, the dollar

'

closed lower at 158 yen against

Wednesday's close of 158.50, and
also was lower In Singapore at
1.8780 Singapore dollars against
1.8790, and In Hong Kong at 7. 7970
Hong Kong dollars against

7.7977.
Gold closed higher In Hong
Kong at $3711.25 per ounce agalns t
$374.25 per ounce.
In Zurich, gold opened higher
at $375.50 per ounce agalnlt $375,
and was higher In London,
opening at $375 per ounce against
$374.50.
Silver opened higher In Zurich
at $5.15 per ounce agalntt $5.10
per ounce, and also was hlper In
London at $5.14 per ounce agalnlt
$5.12 per OU(1Ce.
.

the thousands of local and foreign
tourists expected to witness the
real·llfe c~clflxlons.
Historians say the bloody tradl·
tlon of ielf·flagellatlon and cruel·
flxlon can be traced back to a
combination of pagan practices
and Cathollclsm Introduced Into
the Phlltpplnes by 16th century
Span ISh friars.
.
Marlo Castro, 40, this years
"main Christ," Is a 1 10-year
veteran of the bloody ritual. He
pledged 11 years ago to have
himself nailed to a cross until his
ailing daughter . was cured. He
. said this would be his final
cr.uclflxlon because his daughter
has regained her health.
The other "Christs" are asking

•LEVI

•LONDON FOG JACKETS
•LONDON FOG COATS

•

•

•

Bohr Clothiers

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

. '

POUCIES
,
•Adl ouflide M1111. "G allia or Mnon counti• must be p~• ·
paid.
'
~
•fleDIN'I 1 .10 dtlcount for ada peid in advance.
•p,.. 8ds- GHe.-.ey and F'"'nd ads unCI.- 15 word• will be

ruri 3 d.,aat no ch•t•·

•P,i~

·

·

of M for all -r•ital •• ,.,, is double pri« of ad COli
•1 point Mnt1ype oNv u•d.
.
•Sendrle( is no1 rllponlibtt for tnau after first d~ . IChedl
for .,..or, fiflt d-r eel run1 WI,..,..., . Call -efore 2 :00 • ·"'·

•A cletlified -*•rtMm.,t piKed in Tha Dtlly Stnttn.e lt.l ·
copt - cl•lifi.. dioplt¥. Buoin•• Car4 ond log II notiootl
will 1110 app. . in the~ . Pl....,.t Aef'lttr and the Gtlh·
poNt O.ity Tribune. Mechlnf over 11,000 boma.
DAY lEPORE PUBLICATION
-11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY·
- 2 o00 P.M. MONDAY
2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

- · 2 :00·P.M . FRIDAY

.

:· 2Foa.89(

0 , 0

ALL RUSSELL STOVER
EASTER CANDY AND
RUSS_ELL STOVER EASTER
BASKETS ·'···· 2 5°/o OFF
PEEPS .

...

DRESS &amp; CASUAL SHOES
INCLUDES CQNNIE, DEXTU, AUDITIONS, NUISEMATES
and IUSTU IIOWN

htrita~t kls.t

HOLLO'!'

,MILK CHOCOLATE

.

OFF

ALL:
·WOMEN'S, MEN'S, CHILDREN'S

PALMER SOLID EGGS

RABBITS

89C .
·

lEAL •ur CHOCOLAIE..........t.9k~

a·9· C,

lOIII SlC-

.

.

.

Classified

pa~es· em·

r t e

following' .t elephone exchan~es ...
ArtaCo4ol14

Area Code 304

...-O.II"i'
317-Ch,.hiro

112-Middlillort

17&amp; - Pt , Pltalnl
671 - Appll Grove

241-Rta Orand•

111- Ch••r
1&amp;3-Portlend

•aa-•..w• D'-t.

211-Gu~DIII .

247-lotirl Foils

371-Waln~t

1&amp;1-R•clne
1'• 2- Autlend

311 - Vin1on

,'

Me~ton

QeiJia C:oumv

-lge County

AreoCodoe1•

Pom•ov

Co ... WV

451-loon
773-M•son
812-Now H011en

11&amp;-Let•t

137-Bufflllo

187- Coolvllo

·oet Ruulft Fatt
Public Notice

PubRc NOtice

Words

1

1&amp;
1&amp;

PASTEL WICIER . , s·O/- . . ·.
EAS Iii IASIOS......
IG OFF

2

.

Rete
t4,00

ov,r 16 Worda
'
.20

tii,OO

.30

15·

t&amp;,OO

10

1e
16

*13.oo

11 IQatltl

.42

PRESCRIPTION. SHOP

j

•

AIIIHIIellt .
lEW LOOATIOI
DAVE'S SMAll
ENGINE IEPAII
UIIWnt .....

.08/day

aclt .

····':1'·

3-Annoucemints

•- ah, •.,.v

5-Heppy Ad•
t-Lost ..,d Found
7 - V111.d latt fpaid ifl ect.o1netl
8- PubU c Sale • Auetfon
9-Wenttd to IUy

v 11:1~~,

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
·SIDING CO.

. lrMJidl
, 41-HOUIII tor Rtnt
42-MotMie Hom• tor Alrlt
&lt;13-Ferms for A ant ·
.W-Apertmen1 tor Rent
oil-Furnished "oom•
41 - &amp;PICI tor Rani

47-Want•d to Rent

.ti-Equipment for Rent
41 -'For lt•e

PUblic Notice

St. lh. 7 &amp; 241
CJaSIU, •o

CALL
992-5519

915-3350

2·2-'90-l•o:

4-1· '10-1 mo,

•

4, 16-16-tfn

v.w.
PARTS &amp;

CHEml, 0!110

SERYI(E

In Metnory

In mamoryof
ELSIE 0. CIRCLE

e1 - ferm Equipment

62-Winted 10 luv
63-Liv••tock

'':=

FREE EITIM

VIIY IIASONAIL!
HAVE llfiiiPKIS

AFTJI , ,...

(61

74-Motorcyr:i•
71- Boeu &amp; Moton for 1111

' 7e-Auto P.,-u • Atc•tofl•
77-·Auto Repair
78 - Ctmping Equ ipment

79-Compeoo • Motor Homn

St~r

v 1L P :-;

81 -· Homelm~trowmMII

. IZ-f'lumbirle • Helling

ee-Mobite Home R••••

17-Uphol,_

Public Notice
Bond, -··~•1 the ful
-~~~of the contr8Ct price
M - l i l y for contldenttlon

tlwiewlth.
The o...

,..,..

"''"'".

In eech and ~ery
way.
And •• I oft111 gaze
upward to the •kv
I Clll •••• tMt
twinkle In
your
.ye,
In your pretty little
cottlga on high.
TAKE CARE LITTLE
ANGEL, WI! LOVE
YOUI

the

S!lcly mlalld by

family and frllnda.

915-.aliO

ileward L Writ...

ROOFING .
IIW -

Gutters
Downspouts
Butter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168 .

2·1-'!0'1110. pi!:

DOZEI
SREWORK • ~OADS
CLEARING

oCiubR=•·
·-0
,......... .....
,....... .
•EnP:t

N\WLAND
ENTERPRISES

I Hra ....... t41
12 H1L .... t90

a-·
=··

u

New lhafta for BroUn
Clubo. Clubo
for
aon or dlltgllt•.

JOHN TEAFOIII

46117 S...t """' ...
a.tor. 111M
.

614~742-1315
3-Zt-'911-1 110. pd.

4·S.'ICI-Iooo.

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dil1

(6141 667-3271
G.-tA.Newl•d

7....'...11•

USED APPUAI(ES

.,

to

SER~ICE

. . .Aim

Wt can ~ and rt•

lEN'S AIIPLIANCE

PAT Hill FORD

992.SU5 or 915-3561

MICROWAVE
OVEIIIPAII

Bring It I• Or Wt
Pick Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
992 ·5335 er 915-35' I
Acr- f.- ,_. Office

PGIIIIOY,

•a

10/30/'19 Ill

JeaMe• "'"•
lspl•l4!-•l ......
lteW11 '1Nulltieft
· Slllnn D.rs &amp;

......

FREE EITIMATEI

Call 992·2772

4-5-'911-1110,

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAll EIGIIE

cnnn

ISBIIOWIIS
. . YAIIIIOIICIO

Thun. 1hru Sun.

HOURS:

lw•P.m.-s..tc.,

WHOLEIALE·RETAIL

s..... ...... ,...

10 •~m.·ll p.m.

PIOMm

Senlce c:..ter • •c

............. cw. .
HOURI: M·F I· 7

Bot. 9-8; Cloeed

31 zti1 110i lloi

.-

TII·(OUNIY. R'CYCUNG

OfiiiiS I IOCAftOIIS YO SDYI YOI-

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.ll. 143
ALIANY, OHIO: Rt. 10. S.R. 143
HE NOEll ION: WV.: Rt. H.wt. to lldert Equipment

CUSTOM IIUIT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NEW HOURI:

"AI ......... Prictl"

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 94t•216d
Day er Night

MO SUNDAY CAW

. '-'""'""

· POMEROY: I e.m.·7 p.m. 7 Dayo
.ALIANY: 10 e.m.·t r·m, I Dave. Clollld SIMidey
HENDERSON: 10e.m.· p.m.IDeye.Cioeedlun.·Moro,
PAYING 1¥' OF TODAY. MAR. 13, 1980
lt1
850 per lb.;
Cleen
Cena. 311C per lb. .
IATTUIIU, .
lTC,

WEIUY
ITAIIT!III;

SUN'S UP TANNING

•'

....... ...., ........ 0...
1· SII.Jion ..........:.............................. S3.50
6 Sisli.....-••·-···-·-···..··-···"···· '12 .00

HOME PAll
•Mobile Home

..rt.

12 S.•ll••-·····-··-···..··-..- '20.00

•Mobile Home

R....la

15 Sttllons.--."--"""-""'25.00

. •Lot Rent~~~•

Ftir VISIT FREE - POSSIILY.MOlE

992-7479

,.•.,.,.. .. "-

LOTIONS - STICKERS

lt. llllertlt

ea~s

;

•• c.-.

AnnouiiCIIIIIftta
NOTICI OF
· AJIIIOINTMI!NT OF

FIDUCIARY

liNGO

Court. C.a No. 11,110.

EVElY MMSDAY
YFW POST 9926
IUSON, W.VA.

Lon I . ..._, P.O. loa
U4, .......... Olllo417U,
- •u•aw I •
... - o f Vlwlln K. 11......., !Iitie of 401
UnaelnHIIIRollci.Pon\eoot.
01110 41711.
.

.,.,of

.,,.,

l'ollwt I, ~
lluall.
• Line It ,..... iL
Clwll
(41 II . .12. 11 ,_

IPBIWOPA
••• StAll ftOO , ...

--··

110 -

- · 18 YIAIS
SJUI
.....

MlPft--

~un.

949·2969

4131'10/1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CarttintllllS

OPEN:
APR I THIU JULY I

St.lt. Ul, S Ml•
............. Ololo

POIIROY, OliO
ll&amp;r90/llll

-

,_,_.oHI.

2C7-40:U

217 L Sec. P1M1roy

~

SOY ICE

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIYEI
HEBSalld ·
EVEIUmNGS

ALLIIAIIES .

MOIIU

•P

a.....

992·2198

INSULA nON
Vlnyi'M.g

'-ater coris. Wi can
also acid W and rod
DUt radiators. Wt aho
repair Ga1 Tankt.
Middt.part, Ohio
.
J.IJ.ttc

J&amp;L..
...tic -

core radiatan and

COUNTIY

IEPAII '

..-J~!:'"'*.I
.

Jetta, Golf,
Beetle and Bus.

W• exchtnglld low

ll-l!r~c.,atinl

l.t-Eitctrlcll R•fflg•Aclon
85- Gen«tl Haulinll

IIU SLACK
99,·2269
EVENINGS

KOUNTIY KLUI

The days and yeora
71 - Autol for..Salt
72-Trucll.• for 1•1•
73- Vant. 4 WO ' a

*FIREWOOD

lllforo

For Rabbit.

on April 1 2, 1987.
flow quickly by
But alw1y1 we'll atftl
moum end cry.
You -e. oh, 10 IIJIcl81 In every WIY
Qualitlel no wonlt
could evar uy.
And now our vlalte
just cen't replace
That twinkle In your
aye end 1mlllng
face.
But thank God during
your life' I etly

ES

tho • • out ef polntlolf
.., . . . . It . . you.

NEW&amp; USED
PARTS

who peued away

Qr~ln

*LIGHT HAULING

'-25-lfll

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
•GRAVEL
•UMESTONE
•FILL DIRT .
•ANYTHINO
AT ALL

UIWOI

lllllt.. Ch•• . .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REf.Aifl

PH. 99~·5682
or 992-7121

NO SUNDAY (IUS

.I...

UIDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 1-241. , _ . , Ohio

PH. 949·2101
or las. 949·2160

. 8a Family

Transpor!JI111n

32-Mobile Hom• for Slit
33-f•m• ror Salt
34- Bu•in•s Buildings
35 - Lots &amp; Acreegt
31-Rell Eetete Werned

CHEml
QUII STOP

Reaidential •
Commercial

Doug!.. Circle

li VI'S!UIJ

65 - Sted &amp; Ftrtillltt

31 -Homlolor Solo

Service

Altt Tr .,.,,,,,.

F .H'I ~llp piiPS

&amp;

4 Qt. Max.

ntE IEPAII
IIOVIIMAl
(ONV. .NCI STOll IJIMS

lefrigerallon

. . .,...luilt
Eatimet.. "

"Fr~

58 - fruit!l !II Vet••bl•
!59- For Sale Of Trade

1 7 - Miac•Ueneoue

HP .Ii f ·:Lilt~

$1695

- .. -'
*SHAUB • TREE
TRIM anti REMOVAL ·,

~

Earth's loss is
Heaven's gain.

61-BuMdkle Suppli•
!58-P••• tor S.le
157-Mu-'ctlln••rum..,t•

64-H•v •

21 -8u1iniu Opportunity '
22-Monev 10 Loan
23- Prot•lionel ltrvlctt

GIEASE JOB &amp;
OIL CHANGE

......., coon..,

Pl. 992.3922
6-21-'lf.tln

1987.

f.i 1-Houe..,old Goo~ ·
52-Sporting Ooopt
IS3-AnUques
&amp;•-Misc. M•cttlndilt

11-Htlp W1ntld
~ 2-Shu.•Uon W•nted
1 3- lneurenct
14-Buain•s Tr1inina
Hi - Schoo .. • l"ltruetion
11-R•dio. TV. CB Aep.W .
18-Wanttd To Do ·

•Bi'akl Work

IWN ST.,

HUMPHIEY'S
CUIUTE
CONTIOL

lrw • Stratton.

f lllpli.yllll.lll
S1~r

•Oil Change • Lubl

ond

From U. A Save!

weed.tor. Tocumooh.

you since
April 12.

~ lllllllllll.t!lllt:IIIS
1- Card of ThMkl

0.•.

PARTS AN SERVICE
011.
For MoM 2 and 4-cycle
llll.gln•
· Stock ...rto for ltomoiHe,

ELSIE
How we miss

.eo

11.30/ day

~-In MtmO'V

Allgrinwnt

3-2e. ' IIC).Ifn

2

R•t'• 1re for .;:on .. cutiwe n.rnl, brodn updi\'IWiH be Chii'Qid

''"' eri It,..

•com•

Bird·
•Fountain Bird lett. • Plue
Frogo. Anelh
Oth• Y•d Orn~•• ·

"LOWIIC-NM''

For Appt. (all
992·6717 HoiM or··
992·62~4111~.':,."rmo.

On Aprl I. 111t0, In 1M
.,....
Coullly Probate

Mldlllapart, Ohio .

209 South 4th St.
Ml ••bpart, Oh.

.

lmtlulllrttleo
•dto,...lil•.
141 12. 21.21c

992-6669 .·
21.7 fWth Second

992·6173

SIOIIJ 2n11St., MilllllpartJ

' 3
6

Monthly

•Tire Sales
•Front End

··
- &lt;om-.v
V••
OCior llld .........
lotllo

Rof••-

RATES .
Days

742·3011

IN ITOCK: -c-..-

lUCK'S CAl WASH

'""' 1o .....,.

. ..YOUR EASTER HEADQUARTERS"

SHOE PLACE

T.L.C.

27 Yra. Exp.

•

· TO PLACE AN AD CAU· 992·2156 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT

MAISIMAUOW

IS NOW OPEl
FOI IISIIESS. ·

GoodR-

· • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

-

THRU SATURDAY

•DIIIPon, 01.

ClasSified
.
"

- 2 :0Q P.M. W!ON!SOAY
- 2 o00 PM . THURSDAY

Easter Sale ...

fTh

f,

f.,

similar favors, except for Ben·
jamln Enajue, a house painter,
who will have himself nailed to a
cross to give thanks for having
survived a . fall from the third
floor of a building.

. '.

..... Piu. . . .l

985-4422 .
I

IUTLANDniE
SAUS and
SDYICE

m••o.o .

-~
,WITH
BARGAINS

d., ah• pubUc.iion.to 'm ake correctfon.
•Adt thll must be pei(d in actpnce.,. ,
~
C.rd of Th'enka
Happy Adt
t&gt; .
In Memorilf'n
• Y~rd Sal• •

992-2156

JO'S GIFT

WAIT ADS

Philippines begios ploody East~r ·rituals
,.

Business· Services

By &amp;\ND~ L. LATIMER

EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF WEARING APPAREL
FOR SPRING AND
SUMMER
•JANTZEN
•CATALINA
•WHITE STAG

Pomeroy-Middleport. 'ohio

Kings Island, Fantasy Farm open

CALCUTTA, India .(U!"Il · MotherTeresaresumedherbusy
Nobel laureate Mother Teresa life, sayln&amp; In a ·meeuq last
afftnned Thursday that her poor month with PalesUne Liberation
health and advanced age promp- · Organization chairman Yasser
ted her to ask to be relieved as . Arafat that she planned to visit
bead of the charitable order she · Jerusalem and Bethlehem later
fOunded some 40 years Jgo. · this year.
.
sa}'ID&amp; "nobody Is lndlspenSI)lle
In the IDtervtew, she did not
In this wotld."
say If she Intended to go. ahead
''I want to resign because of . with the trip.
my falling health and growing
She was asked what woqld
age," the 79-year·old Roman happen to the nuns of the order
Catholic nun told United Press that bas grown from humble
In ternatlonal In a telephone beginnings In the teeming slums
Interview hours after flrstdeclln· of Calcutta to more than 400
lag to . cornment .o n a Vatican . fac!Uties In 92 countries.
announcement Wednesday that.
"God. w1lllook after them and
her wish had been granted by God w!Jl provide," she repUed.
Pope John .Paul II.
"My sisters are well estab, 'I sought the permission of the llshed all over the world and they
holy father some time ago to can carry on the activities of the
resign, butldonotrememberthe Missionaries of Charity' In my
, date," said Mother Teresa, who absence," Mother Teresa said.
won the 1979 Nobel .P eace Prize '.'Nobody Is lndlsperislble In this
for the work perfOrmed for th~ world."
.
destitute and dying by her
Mother Teresa declined to
reveal when she · would · leave
Missionaries of Charity order.
. Mother Teresa, who has sui· office or what she would do after
fered coronary · problems for that.
.
several years, in September was
' 'I cannot say anything now ..
hospitalized In Calcutta after her One thing at a time. I am now
condition deteriorated. She was ' waiting for the holy father's
released more than a month later advice," she said.
,
The diminutive nun was born of
with doctOrs hoping to control her
albnent with drugs.
Albanian parents In what Is now
But she was readmitted Nov. 29 Yugoslavia and ·came to India In
suffering from giddiness and an 1929. .
.
Irregular heart beat. Two days
She founded the Missionaries
later, surgeons Implanted a of Charity In 1950 to help the
pacemaker next to her heart.
poo,rest of poor In Calcutla,
· Doctors advised her to restrict India's most populous city, 845
her activities.
miles ~outheast of New Delhi.
But despite tile Warning, ·

day at Hamilton Heights High
School, wllere White was ·a
junior, but students were allowed
the leave and attend the funeral.
. Several hundred mourners
who were turned away from
White's funeral stoOd In a cold,
stinging rain outside the church.
"It means the world tome to be
here to sharethegrleL" said Tim
Oliver, 23, . who drove . from
Dayton, C)hio, to attend.
Many of thQse who came found
It difficult to explain the tie they
felt to White, Including Amanda '
Hurst, of Avon, Ind., who
struggled to answer what It was
about White that drew her io the
service.
·
''I don't know," she said, asher
eyes welled with tears. "Just
Courage, I guess."
·
Hurst's father said White
taught blm that AIDS can strike •
anyone.
"Just for the grace of God, It
could be her," said Mike Hurst,
nod&lt;!IDg at his 13·year·old daughter, the same age that White was
when he contracted the AIDS
virus.
.
Wl)lte was · diagnosed with
AIDS In December 1984 after '
contracting the disease through ·:
contaminated blood products
used to treat his hemophUia. He
was told he might live six months.
to one year but he survived more
than five years.
White was hospitalized March
29 with an AIDS.related respiratory aliment that ultimately
proved fa tal.

•

1990

~.Apt12,1990

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODEUNG

aGI!NERAio CONTRACnNO
A Gnot Cllllltltt~tiiR"...IJ _. 1111111 'h Prfaa"
. . . . . . 1111&amp;
.., ...10 •
....,
t

I•

�. Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway ..

4

44

Apartment
for Rent

51

. Houae.hold

KIT 'N' CAllLYLE~ ~y Luty Wriah!

1m
~~~11~.

'"' ....,

· TIIATDAILY C.~
PUIZLII V~ ~~~

Raorrange
0 four
xromblod

lt~ors

11M.

.

·1_, K....W K2

.

.

(I) ·lludweiMr TloorOugllblad

Dtgnt ··

EVEN IF
'(OU STAND
UNDER ATREE.
'{OU STILL
6ETWET!

o. ·:

., . . tiOO lnlorlil... ·

a.c.;..,....lllue....,..
- .. .. .
·.
...

1111.

75 Bolts • MciCOI'I
for: Bile

1D Tlm8llM (PU 01·1) The
. VIking ega ot conquelt ends
and a new medieval age

~~RolnbOW

.

• !Ill AndY Qrllltlh Q
0 World focloy
0 Jle.Miori

. @ CMotH In Chlrge

1•011 Cll Be~ Hllbl!le•

I .. , . I

.

[5

.

·~----··

/Ji 8porWl.ook .

- ~::=

.

1.. .

....
•

I.

A
V

~~~~~ -

'·

!1-l:C::~

....-;g--

· J:lutlol Ooalel, Rt.110, .lpl!l•14,
~"
- . .fumllure.
. candJ,
ole.

bo In

P.O. BOx Ill. At'-. Ohio or
calll1~. . ·
..
NO Jobt No ......, No ox...,-'1 No lnllnlngt W0111d
Wall 11111~0 •• of lhile and
.....,
5 In IIIII 2 hounl of
1unt ,....
flu ~no

. ·AU Ylftl -111111 le Paid In
, . _ _ DEADI.INI: 2:00 p.m.
'tho •y bolorl tho ld le tq Nn.
~ • 2:00 p.m.
.l'rldiY; llonde! ldlllon • 2:00 .......... .,MI:I1741 and ....... Dolorw.

JUI'·.....,.,. . .
l'()meroy,
MiddlepOrt
&amp; Ylclnlty

-w

0Moo..,MI18
0 Ml8nil.VIce To Have And
To Hold Ster10. · '
Ill Mu~ Row VIdeo .
Abbolt • Coallllo

=

Flqoms

tyPiet and
. I l'lmiiY s.liot llooldo .Hollell'o 'lnarmn~u. ncoSend ,...._ ·to
-

THE.$pte IAf..J At-It CQLJ,Jt:ou~,
Tra nsportat1on

4 I'OOIWt Iiiith. .,... bn1IMI'It, I
Bwdllte Adctl, Polnl P'cownf,
WY.
.

71 AWM1 fOr SSie
1M7 I'IW•"""h Coupe, .._por

48 Space~ Rent

z-,.,...1n flodney, 114-

llldng . ·~
.
..
DomlnM-. ~.­
llpollo. Colt locll .....

.fAWPAW IJI'
79

" ·- . .....

c;:am.-.&amp; ·

.

DIll Em.rtal""""' TDfllehl

JVIAfli •'MAHi'. . ' ·

a Ill M-'1 FeiniiJ ·

.,,A,'Holeoplirdyl Q

Motorttomtl

IDic-.IIN

.wu. ...... ,...-..

@ Nlgllt Coul1 Q

12100. .,._ 1171, 11-1•

•• 4M•. ·

'

7t08 (I) Je"'1'80111
7:30 a(]) Flllllly Fllld.
(I) t.dlea Pro Bowling Tour

AGA, ~AGA~ I AtiP

7:35 (I) a.ntord And Son
ltOO ()) MOVII!t 1111 Croll And
The 8wltchlllldl (PG) (2:00)

11.12.

al2l e

:..... ............. 215 lllldwlv
.IJrl... Hown. 1-4. Frldly •

Coobr 111ow Rudy

develops a cruah on her

'1:1111..
'

e~a.-mate.

(R) g

.

. ,. Ndollll a.ognpblc
8peclll SCienHata l~ta
c~s

to human behavior by

' .studying primates.

(l) (!)~How 10

For Lea•
FOR LEASE: 1Wo loaaftd.-

In Daont-. Ollflpallt, lip top
-nlonl Opon L~.- ~
2-4. No ,_1018, -MIG No. 11 . '

-~~~~~
IIIII.
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2!21.

bin ment.
eon .114-742·

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32 Mobile HO!RH
for SSie
12110, 110011 riondltlon, MOOO ot.

- ·

. anttquas that once belonged
tohlallm~L

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0 Murder, 8ht Wrote. HM,
Fiun &amp; HomiCide
,
ill Hjl(ldey Oounnet

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1 ''W«MK lHE. DISil'E.If Pl£ru ·,.

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Wlll-!''IHEIR ~ ~ ... ·

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304-t71-4a40.
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s bod- , 111
n••.

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., design, select mellrlala, and
.build a custom privacy renee.

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• Goods

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(2:00).
ltOll (I) IIOVII!t 1111 cn.r.11
11to1y l!v.l Told (2:21 I
lt30 a(]) ta Dlftnnl World
Whllfay lobblti agalnat
Heavy 0. &amp; the Elo_1Z .

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CJl Wild Amttlca Marty
StouHar tracks the South's

1arge11 •nlmal. the black
bear. Q

v:ooaCil e

·.

CIIHia Cilia

i:onaulta li mtdlum to contaC1

.her lall hulblnd Eddie' a

Wandy'o N.,. firing, lor cloy

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L-11&lt;;1: A NICE

18 WantedtoDo &lt;

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FillS l l'or 4 Pa~
whlll d~"' Ford B - ,

aCOOper
Ill • Ill Twin PMka
lnd lruman learn

GU~

mora about the troubled
!,aura Palmer. ll
lD (!) My...y(The · .
Berowne's fimHy nurte dies,
(PI4 Of S)Q
til
1D Mu MoniWt
L.ooM CIMDn Charlie takes
a bulil1 when • sUng
. cperallotl srupts In gunfire.
(2:00)' ...
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Chlmplonlhlfllst Round,
. From I&gt;JIIm Beach Gardlins,
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1112.

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Instruments
fiiANO CAlli

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.

For Bile: 7 rllldtntlll HNI In
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country IMno In tho ally, 114441-7130.
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lJil JOU 1111C1 -.?WI A.304..
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--~--.R-IMn REIIOD~NG INTER!'!""'-!!!!· Lol8 ond 1CNA1J1 lVII- lot
PAINTIIG, """"'""'•
~NI1URE
~JII'O'I=IUC-·81 • - · 11+1D- TERIOA
OONCRI!TE
.
WORK, AIP\Im RMd. Rurol -or,
IARN IIONEY Rlldlng po¥1d =~ g;:!"lilo
-no. Hoi , hold fllmlllllno. 112 m1.
~cr=~:~~·m~ tlono.
No ..... ~ Ad. PI PI-, WV,
130.000 yr. palanllol. IURAIICI
CL.AIIIS ACCEPIED.
call304-876-1410.
"
~. (1) -.e7.eoll0 ED. Y·
PLEASE , CAL.L AFTER IP.II.
.
RENTlOOWN
1144Jf-1111. '
•m up to l3o40 por WMII.Top
Guilty
lralld Rent31s
product811- ..,. Claon . - . lnaludlng
~3 noom IUIIM 110/Wk.,
OUollty chlldcaro In "" llomo.
11-F.
0111. With - · - · 11""*

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the hit TV slfln Ainen, and .
goapel musiC sup8ratar
.

Sandi Patti Q.O hOSt ~ 21st .
Annual pave Awards. ..
~t30aCZl e o ..~~o~ Noma'
mother reiums io town; Edda
has a birthday party. Q
10:00 ()) ~ Club Willi Pat
Rabai'IIOII
aCZl ea... Rebaoca
and Sam IDtnd !Ill night
tripped In ROilln'e

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hoon,lnol!ldlntJIIunclly.

THANK? FER
TH' BODACIOUS
PRESENT, .
THELMA
JANE!!

-· -11~·11·

a. ioiiiie

~ Newawstole
·
CJl Under PIN
•
New Twilight

13.501Wk,1 ·
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SNAFU® by Brqce Beattie

ih ·

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P,OIIIbiAIY you might txperlence this CAPIICOIIN (~Jet!. 22 oiiiiL 11) QcQ.
todBy. .
'
.
I tlonlllylt't . . . IOiaiCU~RileOUI
CAiiCM ltlunCI11.,....,. 22) Hyou h - '-1, IIUt 1111 might not bee INIIn youi
Aprll11,... doubtl abOut IIUIXIrdlnllll'a ability to, , lnaterq todoy. WM!I mlklng . , . . _
.
perlonn, don't..-.,n lukathalexceed , . , b810gl011, not~.
· Your llnancl8lllptl:la 1oG11 ·rar~~~r en- IIIII J**l!l'l talenl. You could be Ilk· 'AOUAIIUI ....... M. 11) PI r or~
'aourtgJngiOr 1111 ye« IMICI· ..c1 H 1e 'lnafllr trOUbl8.
•
',
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lWiy you might 111111118 10.--or· Llo=•::t:J..'I'IMn••CIIInCill, prtae tag nllglllnot M up to Yflitt •·
111e meiWllllhlnge you've tong dtllrM. you
b8
to ~•to- Pll*tlone ~ ~ IIIII In mind II
~fun; but IIIlO try to 1M 1 111i11 11 deY WIIO Ill ....... akiiiUI ~· vau',,. ......,.. ,IOIMIIIIng 10111.11 with
Will.
·
· Hlhle peliOn ~ lllhllhlnOI you Hiea . ~ ·
'..-1 (~., Ralhlr thin
MIP'Ifi4Jit GUild' up.
NCD (M. • X Ill 20) Ycu lfno

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.NORTH

tKU
'16432

When an overruff
threatens

+uu

wdr

EAST
+JT6
'19 T5

+10

By J•mea Jaceby

'IQJIOB

.Q6
I' JI09~3
North's ri!SpoliSe of two diamonds +Qt&amp;
+KJI083
hde,nied tha.tbe had a strong ~it but did
SOUTH
he had some useful high
+AQ88U
l1~j;fcij~-w·h~n South showed his natural ·
. ·.,
.
•u
North's immediate
· IAK72 .
Hra.~pfoillliso!dsome values. That was
• 7 •
J,e~IOutih to propel $0ulh to the eventual ·1
Vulnerable: Botb
slam contract. But declarer was careDealer:
South
lesa.in the play. ·
· He wonlhe ace of bearta, played the '
Well Norllo Eut
ace of spades and then cubed the A·K S..llo
Pill
z+
Pua 2••
of diamonds. Altbqup East played the , 2+
Pill
Pua 3+
diamond queen, South ISSIJ~ this to 4 t
Pili
' Pul· 4'+
,.·
be simply a false-card, so be ruffed.a
Put
tNT
P111
~·
third diamond With a small trump 1J1 6+ .·
Ali pus
dulilmy. East overruffed 11tld teturned
•temportzlng respoue
a trump. Decl11rer was now left with a
OpenlngJead: • Q
dl•mond loser and could do nothing
I •a1K1ul il '
.
There was no excllie for declarer's .
error, since be bad an ablloluiely cer· ace ·to play a second diAmond 1~
taln play for his ~tract at the key . dummy up to his king. That war.. If by
moment. Tbe slam as guaranteed.If de- some unusUal quirk of distnblltilla
clarer .r;uffs~the .third diamond wltb East sillrled With only one ~~nan dil·
dummy·a spade king. He ca.o then ruff mond, be 11111 not be able to 1'11ff away
a club back_to bls band and trump the declarer's king, iDd the slam.11111 still
-~ diamond low. East can 11verruff make along the llDes de~eribed above.
that card, but 12 tncts are secure. In J•,.., J~KYJ~&gt;y's-. 'h&lt;o/11 00 ....,..• . , ,
fact, best technique.II for declarer to ·hcob1 ..,c.ri1GIIM"(wrtdiia'lri1UIItou...,
play ace 11! spades, then. ace of dla· .1/Je hot. ,Ootrold J-y) .,. ,... ...aol••;..ot
mot~ds, and tbeo go .tO dummy's dub . llootstolt .. - . , . . ,...u
l'larao ~

l.....-----------..1

1

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,

CROSSWORD

.. --..

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS .· 42 M&lt;J?ify
. 1 Seallle
43 Fru1t
44 Refuse

DOWN
(Derby
1 River boat
horse)
2 Rodgers
·S Certain
&amp; Hart
9 Envy •
t 1 Trolley
song ·
t 2 Egg-shaped 3 Qu~bble
13 Diamond 4 Mol~ten
' 5 BullOck
miscue
6 Hockey
1.5 Espous·e
1
18 Pheasant 7 r::man
brood
8 ElCpresslng
18 Japanese · . feeling
statesman ·to Sinew .
19 Anthology 14 D
15
21 Pen
n~~~.a
. with
· ~nl
122 SP':ck
"The"
23 Alp1ne
SfiOW field
. 24 Scrutinize
28 Equine
27Con
game
Declare ·'
taboo ·
29 Thrash
30 Musical
composition
33 Vocation
34 Maltese,
e.g.
35 Winglike
part
37Two
39 Rosalind'
Russell
film
•41 Boys'
· school

Yesterday's Answer
17 Still ·
28 Python
··
30
"''da•s· .
20 Genesis
,..1
name
"Nile-·
23 Zola novel 31 Elegant
24 Blemished
style
25 Musical . 3i! Foreign
plece
36 Nest
26 Chanled 38 Camper's
word
. purchase
27 Pierce
.40 Hoary
·

•

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.

DAILYCRYPTOQUoTES-Here'sbowtowOrkit:
•'12
.
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AXYDLBAAXR

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II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands fot another. In this sample A is used
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. ~ch day the code letters 81'1! dlffere!lt.
CRYPTOQUOTE
4-11
LYK.CGA.W. .ID

WO

.IVK

QUB .' ·O

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CMilllffTaifgllt

MKURBJ(OO

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LVWAC'O

' OJVKBXJV.-LVUVAKO
AUQT
Y1 ...rler'• ·Carpto • ...- PROCRASTINATION
IS mE ART OF KEEPING UP WITH YESTERDAY. -

'-llllld lllipiiiU o. IIIIIIUrlll. biit
'

Yrill P«*f

...... a..

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On ltliiJ ollillon. • • "!."!'~ miglllllek ~ "! ~-.......

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~~tot ~O::i~~==~
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Gf!::1WIIe,._!flllt , .. tolllllon-

b8
. t.lnllll f Don'llll..., llllnldiiff•

"All the flights an1Yed on tlme. ..wlictl cao..t
a tralllc jam that delayed me an·holl'."

z- .

are governing you m the ve• ahead. · UIIIA (lepf. 23-,0ct. 23) Flattery IS not
IDi l!lf8!llnll .....
Send lor your Aalrq..Graph predictions an ellec1lva tool to usa todoy. Compan·
• DNaWe
· ·
todoy by mailing $1.25 to Astrp..Graph. Ions will know If your comments are 10:30aCZl taDownHomeA
cfo lhla ,_paper, P.O.. BOx 91428, truthful and lhe)l'lllosa respeCt lor you H
New Yorker rttuma to her
Ctaveland, OH 44.101-3428. Be sure to Y91J'ra ln.ii)Cira.
I'IOrii8IO.,n to ~-the
· state our zodiac sign:
,
· SCORPIO (Ool. 21241-iNa,..,Y. 22) You're en·
familY biJaiMU.
TAURUS (April :rNhy 20) Try not to tilled to pamper yourself a bit at 1hls
liJ ... IIMpliU
give thl,g~ ol a material naMe mora . time, b!ll don't WU1a money foolishly
Lamberlllld FrlfiM raturn1
... conalcteratlon than friendship !odaY In •on .t~ thet could later cauaa yO&lt;J 1
10 Ireland lfllr their ·
yow Involvements with a pal. Ita bett•r ' .spender 1 - ·
. ,.
honlymoon In Parts. Q
·
(!) ,.,_.,, Den It Styt Right
to sa.~&lt; leu and keeP I he relailomohlp IAGmANUS (Nov• 21 Die · 21)
;Intact
,
PromiMii you make to ote.wlodtY Will
Here
Ql..,. ,.., 21""- 20) Sometlmee be tlken -.riOUIIY· 10 be an ilbou1
IIMinV • . _
when .,.. t~ loo hard lei p1aa1e eome- your oWn Intent. Don't make COfl')l'llft. ·
11:00~ laL-IIW l lhiCJnl ·
one who 11 fickle Hhu an ~polite el· menta marel)l to make a gOOG
feet of thai lor which we hope. There's a

Kimono - Civil.;. Fully .., Vestiy- YOU LIKE . ·
"I don't think yo\Jr direc;tions are right," admonished
the tourist. "Well,' drawled the local, "ask somebody
, who gives you directions YOU LIKE."

BRIDGE

a

Dill
(J) Cunent Affair
1D (!) MIONIII Llhrw
NewoHour

Fum~

"t - 1\.

SCRAM-CETS ANSWfiS

i (])8porteCtnllr
PM Me(IIZIM

45

...

•

comblll8 erila!tllnment trivia

with .lhe luck ql the draw.
@ Hllngln' In
i:35 (I) Andy .Grlfllll
7t00 (]) Scaowcrow • Mno. ~lng

....

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE. lETTERS
'TO GET ANSWER .

. ,.ToP Ctrd COntestants

. Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

0

·&amp; PRINT
NUMBE.REO lEJTERS li'l
THESE SQUA RES .

·1;1

(Jl3-2· 1~Q

(I)

j

Complete the chuckle quote d
by fi ll ing in the m1ning· words
1...;.....1..-l-.1-.....lo.,.....L--..J you deve lop trom soep No. 3 .below.

UO .(]) Ql NBC Nightly Nn1

12 1 . - IIGI! with .Inlier

liDO. 11+44N411.
.. . .

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4CIO KIIINIIId ..... Iyaii. 1200'

For -

on.

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ID, . •a.

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EVENING

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1. . -?110.2
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-. . . . . . . 'n'ldi""

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words below to form four simple . words.

1·~---.-.ao

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WOII

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c.rt I ....... I IIIUII ......

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Molorc:yclea

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- · .yro. OWl;
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74

Television
Viewi.n

t.

DON MARQUIS

•

..

.

• ~ tll80 by King F8110018 Syr!dlcllt, inc.
I '

, ... -

-

�Pega 16 The Dally Sentinel

Th&amp;nclay. Aprl12. 1990

Pomaloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Spratley... Continued rrom page 1

Local neuis briefs...
Continued from page 1
Meigs County vourt. It was reported tnat ne nad failed to pay an
·
old fine. He was lodged In the county jail.

Community service set Friday
Community Good Friday Services, sponsored by the
Middleport Ministerial Association, will be held Friday at 7
p.m. at the Heath United Method.i st Church. Les Hayman of the
Ash Street FreeWill Baptist Church will be the speaker.
Combined community choir directed by Darlene Rlndfllesch
will present the special music. The public is Invited to attend.

· Eastern board tours facilities
A tour of the school buildings and other facUlties In the
Eastern Local School District was taken at Tu!lsday's special
, session of the Board of Education. Following the tour, the board
moved Into executive session to discuss personnel matters.

Roush home damage by fire
The Walter and Anna Roush home on State Route 124 in
Syracuse was extensively damaged by . fire early Thursday
evening.
·
A spokesman for the Syracuse Fire Department reported that
the fire In the single story brick home started around the
· f11rnace In the basement. No one was at home when the fire
started. It was dlscovered·by Jack Lyons, a passing motoriSt,
who saw the smoke coming from the house. He stopped, alerted
the Syracuse firemen who were on the scene within two
minutes, and then began an effort to extinguish the flames with .
water from a garden hose.
The fire was primarily confined to the basement although
some of the flames did break through the floor into the main
living quarters, It was reported.
Syracuse summoned the Racine fire departlilent to assist and
also the Middleport rescue unit. The 18 firemen of the Sy~acuse
department were oil the scene for a bout two hours. It was
reported that the owners have Insurance.

Squads have 14 cai.Is Wednesday
.

Spratley said Caller lD "will
reveal unlisted pl)oue numbers
and could make consumers rel!lctant to dial anonymot~s or
confidential calls to social, government, law enforcement,
health agencies, the news media
and businesses."
' 'Some &lt;;rltlcs - argue b)lsl·
nesses will use the service to
develop marketing strategies
which could lead to more telemarketing calls and mall sollcl·
lations, " he said.
"His views are based upon

speculation," said . ¥angen.
"Those sl tuations have not Mp·
-pened In other slates."
.
Spratley said the bloctllng
option' should be offered•free to
customers with untlsted phone
numbers, or to any customer who
requests it. He sal&lt;l It does not
cost the , telephone company
anything and Is part ofthe Caller
ID technology.
"
Mangen said the blocking
option "would require additional
technology and software."

The annu~~ol Cancer crusaqe, a
house-to-house fund drive, will be
held frOm Aprll18 through Mity 5,
according John Runnel, spokes·
man for the local office of the
American Cancer Sodety.
Hunnel said that area captains ·
and other volunteer workers are
needed to conduct the drive and
anyone willing to assist should
contact the office, 992· 7531, on
either Tuesday or Thursday or
· call Lilllari Moore, 992· 7231, or
Runnel at 992·3029. CaniSters will
also be placed l.n several local
businesses ·for contributions,
Runnel reported.

Cullhloua for sale
The Meigs High School A!t!tletlc
Boosters now have stadium cu·
shlons for sale. The cost of the
cushions are S5 each and may be
purchased at the high school or
from any booster member. The
cushion~ will remain on sale until
supplies last.
:
Cemetery dues
:
. Dues are now . payable for
Beech Grove Cemetery; \
The dues are $5 per grave and
money may be sent to Po*'eroy
VIllage Hall In care of Pat
Thoma. Checks are to be 'IYiade
payable to the Beech ~rove
Cemetery Trustees.
l

.
----Meigs announcements _ __

Units of the- .MelgB County
Emergency Medical Service ~
sponded to 14 calls tor assl$tance
on Wednesday.
At 3: .. a.m. the Pom~roy unit
was called to Route 248 for Brian
Collins who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
5:39 a .m. the unit went to Route
681 West for Wll)lur Warner who
was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital:
The Syracuse unit, at 5: 40
a.m., was called to College Road
for Helen Harris who was taken
to Veterans.
Th!;! Rutland unit, at 5: 54 a.m .
went to Ml!lgs Mine 31 for James
Marcus ,to Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, and at 7:46·a.m. theunltwent
to the mine for John Sullivan who
was taken to Holzer.
At 9:09a.m. the Syracuse unit
went to Minersville Road for
Goldie Reitmlre who was taken
to Veterans.
,
At 9: 30 a. ni. the Pomeroy unit
was called to Powell's for Florence Allen who was taken to
Veterans.
At 10: 47 a.m. the Rutland unit
and fire department and Middleport unl~ were called to Route 124
for a tractor trailer ·and auto
·accident In .which Malcolm {ngram was takeu to Veterans.
. Tlie Middleport unit, at 1: 03

',...,.....

•

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·~--~

\

souShl

chardson was ·arrested, ·brought
to th.e sheriff's office, finger·
printed and photographed ''when
he was on his way to court."
.
In regard to the tape recording,
Knight said that his client used
the tllpe recofcler because he
~ound himself In a situation
where It was just his ('Richard·
son's) word against the sheriff of
the county.
Knight said his client had been
defending himself and his property (the ,tape recorder) during
the January altercation In the·
Soulsby hom~.

Vol.40, No.231

In the Meigs County Court of ;,
Common Pleas, BancOhla Na- :;':
tiona! Bank, Columbus, is seek· .:
ing $3,220.20 from Victor L. and :~
Grace E. Chevalier, both of •
Reedsville.

New Washtrs . ~om- 589 5 ,., .._
New YCRs from.

5900,., a
Color· 1Vs from"-5 795 ,.,

'

Retail
...
· Continued from page 1

Others fined In the court were
John Clonch, Ga!Upolls, $63 and
costs, ·operating under SU$penslon; Shane Randolph, Point
Pleas.a.nt. W. Va., $50 and costs,
speecilhg; Ralph Moore, Dexter,
$63 ·· :and costs . for expired
teaistratlon . . · ,
·
·· Foi-ieltingbonds.ln thecourton
spee&lt;Jlng cllji'ges were Rl ta
Matthew, Racine, $48; Stephen
Nease, Racine, $49; Rachel Ster·
rett, Copley, $52; a11d Duane
Johnson, Pomeroy, $49. Others
forfeiting bonds were Mark Gaynor, PhUippl, W. Va., $43, Illegal
left turn; ~othy Jones, Pomeroy, $63, failure to control;
Timothy Oldaker, Letart, W.Va.,
$43, Improper backing; Leta
Harmon, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
$43,"parking In front of a private
driveway . .

.

GE IEMOTE
.. CONTIOL

-~---=-

20' COLOR
TELEVISION

Judmn.en granted·

~

STEIEO

S297

......

I

CAIU IUDY

'

SAMSUNG -VCR
tea· a •11

$199
'

1-------....---......,--_,... . .
'

._ ...

S499

~RP.

· WI1H REMOTE COmOL

;.1.

'',

'

WEL .LI FBIZEI

The jobless rate in Gallla
County was up In February, but
posted a 1:lecrease in Meigs
County, according to una&lt;Jjusted
figures from the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
OBES said that out of an
estimated work force of 10,900 In
Gallla, }.200 people were listed as
unemployed, placing the jobless
rate at 9.7 percent.

(5 ~ ft.)
1

... ,..

• llfiiJtrlhlr·
. Fllillr
'

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FHOI

Ice In

ClOSS IN 1'41 GOLD, GOLD FIWD, miUNG AND
ILACI HILLS GOLD IN PENDANTS AND IAII.GS
FOI PIEICED UIS.

There will be no Rotary Club Easter egg hunt In Middleport
this yea~.
·
Mark Murphey, president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club, announced today tiiat the group has decided not to sponsor
an. egg hunt this year.
It has traditionally been staged by the club on Easter Sunday
• · at the Hartinger Park at tractlng hundreds of area children who
scrambled around the park to gather up the eggs, each· one
worth a prize.
·
~
.
In the early .years of the egg hunt the Rotary mer)'lbers and· ,
their wives colored dozens of eggs which w~re hid at the park. In
.recent years, hoWever, plasUc eggs h~n used.
· The Rotary president did not Indicate whether the traditional
Rotary Club Easte~ egg hunt will be resumed next year.

c.. re:

If you buy eomethlng from Eliott'•· end
within 30 deya find It for 1111 et enother
locelltOCklng deellll', Eliott's will mund
the dm.rence plu1 211% of the difference
upon proof of l o - price.

212 EAST MAIN

POIIEIOY

SAIISING Cl .

.S999
1250fo PIICE GUARANTEB

per,

No {lotary egg hunt this year

Cr rlsr

WiiDJin

22

It was a six-tenths of a percent
drop fr91'!' January's 10.3
cent, but still up over the
February 1989 rate of 9 percent,
OBESsaid.
Unemployment in Meigs was
set at 9.4 percent In February, a
sharp 1 percent decrease from
January'~· level ·of 1o.4, the
service reported. Out of a labor

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

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The.,..
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. W/IZ??Dft COIIIIOI. .

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-. S199

IUott'

SllYEI BRIDGE PLAZA

•w
.............
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HOIIS

frl. t UL tl I P&amp;

Darst .home destroyed by fire

s.t. t UL tl 6 P&amp;

S....1 P&amp;t.SP&amp;

The trailer home of Mr. and MrS. James Anthony Darst and
their two chlldren 1 County Road 55 In Columbia Township, was
destroyed by fire early Thurld.ay momlag.
Continued on
. paae 12

992·3715

.

-~.

put up three new storage tanks is
expected to be signed In a few
days, accorplng to Poole.
The storage tanks will be
located at Silver Ridge, Gold
Ridge and New England. Two of
the tanks are replacements to
handle growth, while the thtrd is
required to handle the new line
.system, It as reported.
The 140 customers which will
have water · service available .
after the 17 miles of main are
completed and the tanks are In
place will Include Silver Ridge,
West Shade, Kingsbury Road,
Court Street, Letart Falls and
County Road 53 between Alfred
and Lottrldge In Athens County.
The money for the extension
andconstructlonofthenew tanks
comes from a Farmers Home
Administration low In teres (Joan

of $641,000 and a 29 percent grant
of $187,000 to the Water District.
Poole advised that the District
will be contacting all of the new
customers by letter explaining In
more detail how things will
proceed .
He said that any additional
expansion to the District will
require additional plant capacity
and more storage. Poole also
said that the District wants to be
contacted by anyone Interested
In receiving water In the, area
served by the company. Forins
requesting service are available
In the office, he noted:
The general manager also
Indicated that the District is
hopeful of receiving some Issue
II funds for enlargement of the
treatment facility.

Additionally, Knight ex·
plained, "the affiliated counties
would be provided with investl·
gatory services and sentencing
specialists to aid the county In
determining appropriate facts
and sen~nces. The local defend·
ers wmlld have additional aid
ff'!'lll the ,s.i ¥ie ofllce, for· re- ·
search on special issues, appeals
and co-ordination of cases."
Knight pointed out that counties within the proposed branch

office would also be entJtied to
supplemental attorneys' servic'es at no add~:d cost to the
counties '.'when Inevitable confilets occur.:·
.
Over the next biennium, the
10-county branch would be
funded by specific amounts from
t~e pa~tJ!;IpatJ"i COijlljJes, total·
ing approximately $1.1 million
altogether, Knight reported.
Meigs County's share would be
$35.000.
"

17 re~gious ·Filipinos
are nailed to crosses
SAN PEDRO CUTIJD, Philippines (UPI) - AI least 17
Filipinos' were . nailed to crosses
and thousands of penitents
scourged their backs with glassstudded whips In griSly Good
Friday rituals that have degener·
ated Into a commerCial
spectacle.
Thousands of spectator.s, many
of them foreigners, watched
under a hot sun as 12 men were
nailed an~ hoisted · 'on 15-foot
crosses atop a mound ·tn the
farming village . of San Pedro
Cutud, about 50 miles nQrth of
Manila.
Three other men and t.wo
women,. self-proclatnled faith
healers, also were crucified in
the nearby viUage of Santa Lucia
and In Butacan province, organ·
lzers said.

The Flllplno ·'Chris ts," accom·
panted by horse- riding men
dressed as Roman centurions,
paraded for at least a mile from
the Village chapel to the mound
which was surrounded by barbed
wire In the middle of a rl~e
paddy . Onlookers chanted,
"Cruelty them, crucify them." ·
Pollee es limated the crowd In :
San Pedro Cutud at 30,000. Many
of them were foreigners, lnclud-,
ing U.S. servicemen from the
nearby U.S. Clark Air Base, who
came with their families In cars
arid luxury vans to watch the
crucifixions.
"It Is very painful," yelled
Maynardo Pabustan, 22, still
nailed to the cross when asked
how he felt. "But I have to do this
for the sake of my younger sister
who Is paralyzed."

Meigs jobl~ss ·rate decreases

$797

.....,..nMCOIDEI

Cenu

Meigs ·County .urged to take
part.i)1 proposed joint project

'Ask About
Our 5 Year
Product
PrOtection
Plans

plunged by 1,7 percent.
Excluding autos, March retail
sales were off by 0.4 percent the ·
government report said. . '
·
All the figures are adjusted to
reflect seasonal factors.
Although there was a 0.2
percent Increase in sales at food
stores last month, restaurants
and bars saw their retail bus!ness drop by 1.5 percent In
t
March, the Commerce ~partment said.
e-••
In other categories, March
In the Meigs County Court of
retail sales • were off by 0.8 Common Pleas, The Farmers
percent at building materials . Bank and Savings Company has
and hardware stores, down by9.1
been awarded $22,119.19 In a
percent at furnlt\lre stores, off by foreclosure action, and George
0,8 percent at departrnent'stores,
Collins, Meigs County Treasurer,
aown by 0.5 percent at clothing has been awarded $425.05 for
stores, and off by 0. 9 percent at
taxes on that property, In a case
drug stores.
·
against Kathleen Rosllnsk~ eta!.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICU
Seutlnel Nna Staff
Construction of a 17·mlleexten·
slon of the Tuppers. Plains·
Chester Water District service
lines to accommodate 140 new
• customers will get underway
,
"
next week.
Donald Poole, general manager of the sy~m. announced
the constructlon 'schedule this
morning noting Robinson Con·
structton will be handling laying
the. new lines and has 180 ·days ·
from April 19 to complete the
project.
.
The "notice to proceed" on the
project . was signed by. the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District board lit Monday's
meeting.
·
A simUar notice for Mid·
. Atlantic Storage Co: which will

"Where' s ihat wasca.lly wahbit?". asks Elmer Fudd of Bugs
Bunny cartoon fame.
Where.do you think? It's in the
llvlq.room. ...
,
When Camil41.Yoacham asked
for a rabbit for l)er lOth birthday
last July 24th,, her parents, Mark
and Nancy Yoacham, Racine,
tried to talk her out of it. "You
don't really · want a rilbblt,
· Camilla," her -Dad would say.
"Yes, I do/' Camilla would say.
And then· when the blrth!lay .
arrived an.d Mom and Dad•
realized they had "piddlepopped~' around and didn't have
a present, they decided to get the
rabbit afterall.
·
. •.--, ."
The evening of. her -birthday, .
Dad suprJse:d Camllia by taking
her to a local rabbit faim to pick
out her rabbit. "I didn't know
where we were ·going," Camilla
said, "and when 'I found out, I
almost cried. I was so happy."
As It turned out, Camilla
selected a black . and White
mlnl·lop that. . she !!Welitually
· named Wh!,skers.
It would be . wise . for Meigs
Now once the decision haii been
Vounty to participate In a pro·
made to get the ral!bit, Mom · If!{\'!~~;· ·
posed 10-count.y branch of the
stopped by the MeigS County
Ohio Public Defender's Office,
Extension Office for lnforma tlon
according to a letter to the Meigs
on c~;~rlng, for a rabbit. All the dos
Cou~ Cofnmlssloners frQ!ll
and don'ts of typical rabbit care
Meigs Public Delender Charles
were.cavered ill the Information ~
' ~lght.
"
provided by th~ e1't~J1~~~- .
Not on I~ "''"'~I~.JilU'tlcjPJltll,ln In
However, Wb'iskers i!ldn •iti!rn
the diultl:county agency mean
out to be the typical rabbit.
additional services to the Meigs
Whiskers do~n't live i!l a pen
County Public Defender's Office,
in the backyard. ·
but there would be no additional
He lives in an unlocked cage in ,.
costs for the Increase in services.
the family room, arid he uses a
Meigs County's current yearly
Utter box.
budget for . the local public
Allin all, Whiskers has made ·
defender's office is $35,000. Half
GOOD BUDDIES - He's not the Easter Bunny. He's the
for a happy addition to the family
of that amount, or $17,500, Is
Birthday
,Bunny. CamUia Yoacbam got her pet rabbit, Wl!lskers,
- except. that. he found a thread
relmbursible to the county from
for her lOth birthday last July 24th. Since then, Wb.l skers hes been
stickl1'g up In t,he corner of the
the state.
living the good IUe at the Yoacbam house In Racine.
family room rug and by the time
Knight met recently with Ohio
he finished chewing, he'd desPublic Def~nder Randall Dana,
troyed' about four inches of
several members of Dana's staff
dlsconcerthig for visitors, as well outside. He lies beside her when
carpeting. He also chewed a
and approximately 30 represen·
as to the family's 15-year-old cat, she's watching television or
section of wallpaper that was
tatives from nine other counties
Gulntvere, who tries to pretend doing homework. He plays
loose near the floor In the family
the rabbit doesn't really exist. games like running In a figure 8 · surrounding Meigs, regarding
room, and he chewed the finger· · Only when tl)e rabbit actually around and around her legs, and
foundation of the branch of the
tips ·of . a doll belonging to
State Public Defender's Office.
hops on lop of Gulnlvere does she rolling a big pink ball all over the
€amllla's sister, Leba. There
(Guinlvere, the cat) acknowlege floor. And ,sometimes he just The other counties represented
may also be a 'few other minor
at the meeting included Washing·
the rabbit's presence with a hiss . hangs out with her In her room .
gnawed places in the house as yet
ton, Athens, Jackson, Vinton,
and a swat of the paw . .
undiscovered, says camilla's
Ross,
Pickaway, Fayette, High·
As for visitors, the Yoachams
But he's a big responsibility
Mom.
·
land
and
Brown. If the branch
usually try to warn them not to be
too, and Camilla has learned that
. But all In all, a rabbit In the
office
becomes
a reallty,lt would
alarmed If a rabbit hops by .. It Is she must feed and water and
house Isn't much of a problem.
be
centrally
located
in Athens
rather unexpected to be sitting In clean Whiskers' litter· box ·and
Actlially, the rabbit and his ·· someone's ljvlng room and sud· cage regularly.
with attorney services to be
propensity for chewing on things
provided In all Individual
denly see a rabbit run through
· So, as long as things are going
he shouldn't provides an Incencounties.
the room, hop three feet off the smoothly, and until something
tive for family members to put
According to Knight's letter,
floor, kick Its feet and then turn In
valuable Is fo'unq to have unac·
things away In their proper , mid-air an&lt;! run back the way It ceptable rabbit teeth marks, the
"Dana intends to contract with
places, Mom adds.
I!leal counsel as he did with me to
came.
"wascally wabbit" will continue
But having a rabbit running
provide this local
As for Camilla, she can't to live the good life- inside- at
loose · In the house can be
-.,presentaUon."
tniaglne Whiskers ever living the Yoachams.

• Rwhiy;nal•• Frain- $995 ,. -.
New

2~

A Mutti.medi• Inc. NeWIPIPer

Water· line .e xtension
to .begin ·next week

A girl
and her
rabbit

..

2 $ectlono, 18 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. April 13, 1990

Copyrightwd 1980

- -·Pomeroy Court newsTodd Goode, Pomeroy, was
·fined on three charges when he
appeared In the court of Mayor
rtlcliard Seyler 1'uesday night.
He was fined $313 and costs for
resisting arrest, $63 and costs for
disorderly conduct, and $63 and
costs for expired registration.

· Low tonight In low fh.
Cl!ance of. rain 50 percent.
Saturday, high near 60.
Chance of rain 80 percent:

•

at

.

~·

:Richardson... Continued from page 1

'f ormer son-In-law. .However,
under oath,4 Soulsby said that he
slapped Richardson In the face,
Knight pointed out.
Knight also cited othef Incidents which ·were testified to
during the course of the trial, In
which he believes that Richard·
son was mistreated by the
sheriff's department. One such
' Incident allegedly took place on
the day of a scheduled court
appearance by Richardson In
regard to divorce and child
custody proceedings. On this
occasion, Knight said tllat Rl·

Pick 4

Page 4

.

•

400 •.

0849

..
WED~SDAY ADMISSIONS '.",
-Helen Harris, Syracuse; Terry ~ ·
PhDlips, Racine; and Beatrice ·
Blake, Racine.
· .
.:.
WEDNESDAY qiSCHARGES ::;
- John McKenzie, Lena ;•
Hellman.
..
_

J~ent

Pick 3

•

· Hospital -news.
v•rllll8 Memorial

·Ohio Lottery .

Padres hand
Los ·Angeles
8-6 setback

p.m. was called toLe&amp;alngCreek ·•
Road for David Watkins who w.as
transported to Veterans, and at ~· .
4:33 .P-111· the unit went to
Overbrook for Dora Smith, also ·.
taken to Veterans.
· At 5: 34 p:iil':' the Syracuse Fire
Department was called to Route •
124 for a structure fli'e at the •.
Walter !Wush residence. The ,
Middleport rescue · unit was •·
called to assist at 5:48p.m. and at ~
6:06 p.m. the Raclne unit was ·•
called for assistance.
·
Finally, at 10: 39 p.m. the ::
Tuppers Plains unit went . to Route 681 J;:ast for ·Chad Whl· ;
tlatch who was transported to ::;:
Holzer.
'
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-- ·-· -·

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·--~--------------

1orce estimated at 7,000, there
were 700 people In Meigs out of
work In February, OBES said.
The rate was also an Improvement over the 10 percent unem·
ployment reported in February
1989.
In the area, Vinton County had
the hlghes t percentage of unem:.
ployment at 12.5, unchanged
from January and a steep, 2.1
percent increase !rom the February 1989 )eve! ofl0.4 percent. Out
of an estimated work fofCe of
4,100, there were 500 listed as
unemployed In Vinton.
The lowest level of unemploy·
ment was reported In Athens
County at 7.2 percent down
six-tenths of a percent from the
7.8 percent reported In January,
but an Increase over the February 1989 figure of 6.9 percent.
In Jackson County, unempJoy.
ment was set at 11 percent, down
a full1percentfromJanuary, but
up ·1.6 percent. from February ,
1989's level of 9.4 percent. Lawrence County pOlled a 7. 7 percel!t
jobl•l rate In February, down
from 8 percent In January but up
1.2 percent from a year ag9.
Statewide ~urlnll February,
unemployment wu at U per·
cent, down nlne·tenthl of a
percent from January, but up
from the5.8 percentllsteddurlng
February last year.

u uctloll II&amp; &amp;lie evee&amp;, wlileb waa llped by
former Manball Ual\tenHr Coach SoDDJ Randle,
!ell, ead lll..ola Vllllllp' Coi'IIOI'baell Carl ·
Lee, . riJM. Also Mtndlel &amp;lie 8YIDI fND'
011.,... waa Oallla Coautr cunpalp cbalrmu
Bob neu.:y. (OVP pboto b:y Lee AD~ Welch)

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