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~

Wenu clay, March 9, 1988

TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT V
5ftil DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES I c:xlgcarettludlnG••

Midclaport. Ohio

I

Daily Number

)

MUST PROVIDE IOLDEI BUCKEYE CARl OR DRajER'S UtEI*

I

Ohio Lottery

Science
fair

574
Pick 4
1537
14-15-16-30-41-42 .

Page 12

I

Middleport, OH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. It Pearl St.•992·3471

e

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Vo1.38, No.212
Copyrighted 1988

'

CORNED
BEEf
BRISKET

Grade "A"

THOROFARE
LARGE EGGS
dozen ..carton

Granulated

PER LB.
.

$189

CAUFORNlA RED RIPE

at y

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•

enttne
2 Sactiono. 16 Pagoo 26 Canto
A Muhlmedle Inc. New8paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 10, 19BB

.Rich Jones upset with Meigs' share of funds

FLAT·. cuT .

'

•

Clearing tonight. Low near
30. Sunny Friday. Highs between eo and 65.

STRAWBERRIES ••!!!.~•.

·THOROFARE
SUGAR

Sugar.

5 pound package

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
"We always get the· crumbs ,"
said Meigs .County Corilm!s. stoner Richard Jones , "and
never a chance to sit down at the
. table for a full piece of cake."
Jones was speaking in reference to Monday's joint announcement by State Sen. Jan
Michael Long, D·Circlev!lle, and
State Rep. Jolynn Boster, DGa1l!pol!s, of $21 ll)lllion lor
capital improvement projects. in
Meigs, Gall!a and Athens
c;ounties.
· ·
According to the announcement, the majority of the money
will go to Ohio L'nlvers!ty .in
Athens County. Gallia County
will get over $2 million for Rio
Grande College-Community Col: .
lege. Money will also go· to

1202
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TISSUE
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4 rolj package ,

204

Hocking Technical College:. in
Athens County and to Our Hduse
Museum lnGall!a County. Meigs
County will reap $13,800 for ithe
Buffington Island Memorlai. 1
"That 's .06 of one percent Ifor
Meigs County," commented
Jones in Wednesday's meeting of
the commissioners.
1
Jones said he was grateful for
the funding for Butf!ngton :1s.·
land, but called thevastd!fferences in funding amounts to the .
three counties another example
· of Meigs County being "shOrtchanged now , and In the pa ~t , " .
regardless of which party 1 is
running the state administration . ·
"What I'm trying to say,"
Jones continued, "is that all the
institutions benefitting from the
funding are either state-owned or
state-related in some way. How

SPAGHETTI

The newspaper is not reimburs·
ing the company for the trip and all
accounts written about the tripl if
any are published, will be ~ed
with an editor's note explaining to
readers that the informatibn 1 in
those articles was gathered durjng
the Aptus-funded jo~y. The ,
newspaper before making a comtnillllent 'to go, .told cha:!'Jber
ofl!~ials ~ wuuld auend only ifltbe
IP'!*Il.'was eQnipbeed of ~Is
•"" nnnnnentS· of the. h8z.ai:doos ,

haZardous wasre incinerptor on the
site which would biJill about 5~.000
tons a year oC what Datko said are
hazardous wasres regulated under
the federal Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act. Datko S81d example~ of those wastes are solveniS
and pw._nt sl~!!es. ~tus has not y~
determined if 1t will seek a penmt
in West Vqinia to , bum high.ly

The cham~ · of comm~i'ce, ·
boiD tbe
··Col!ii'Y Bbaid of which is laking que ot the ..logisEducation, iho Sunny~ Parent· tics, does not consider setting up
.1\!achers Orpnlzation, the Ga11ia the trip un endorsement of the
Count)' Charllber of Commen:e, the project but simply a fact-finding
Mason A•aoclation for a Clean En· {lJlPOI!Onity, explained Bernie Rid~t, the Valley Voluntw" dle, cham~ preSident Rkldle
F'~re Department and Rescue declined to release the names of'the
SqUid, the Muon County Farm individuals attending from MaSon
Bureau, the Point Pleasant Register, County.
;
Aptus, a pannership of Natiopal
possibly a representative from the
Mason County Commission, the Electric and Westingbouse, ~as
Masori County Developmell! taken an option on .a 200-acre ,ire
Authority, the Mason County Area soulh of the Goodyear Polyester
ChaJll~ of Commerce and the plant along Route 2m the south~
Beale Parent-Teachels Organiza- pan of the county. The land is
lion·, a l;hambc:r spokeswoman said owned by Appalachian Power Cc). ·
Aptus wants to constructj a
Wednesday afternoon.

PCB incineration is regulared

By Charleli A. Mason

SAUCE

Aptus is paying more than

$13,000 to Dy pout 20 Masol! and
Gallia ·Counly residents to Coffeyville, Kan., Friday for a tour of

32 ounce jar

~I

1 .,

its polychlorinaled biphenyls-buming hazardous waste incinerator, a
. company official said. Wednesday

afternoon.
"The lOIII cost for the lnllspona.
tlbn is $13,65).20" -.Jd Andrew
2 •. 1 U

1.•

•.-.wtpi

~t iliteercr.

· •t

d~-ed
' .· , ·• ' · t;;~eTs5Ue.

•Tbe ~- r•zaenlltlves

Board rehires

·•

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·

Local news

funding !rom ARC had been
secured tomoveforwardw!ththe
project. However, the -project
was held up due to Ohio Departmen! of Transportation stipulalions and lor a tlme,!t was feared
that the ARC funding was lost .
Through the efforts of Carper,
the Buckeye Hills- Hocking Val.ley Regional Development Distr!ct, the offices of the county
commissioners and engineer,
and others , the project has
apparently been salvaged .
The commissioners said it is
their understanding' the project
is now in the hands of ODOT for
placement on their construction
schedule.
Although the commissioners
consider the Carper project
" good news," they aren't so sure
about Information they've re- ,

ce!ved regarding the progress of
state legislators in determining
howStatelssuellfund!ngw111 be
distributed throughout Ohio's 88
counties, even though State Sen .
Long is on the senate committee
to develop distribution methods .
" When it's all over ," said Jones ,
" I think it'll be like everything
else, the big boys (meaning the
more populated areas of the
state) wll1 have their way."
Sal!sbufY. Township Trustees
and residents ·of shady Cove
Road discussed with thecommls- .
sloners the posslb!lity of apply:
!ilg lor Community Development
Block Grant funding to help pay
for raising their road out offload
level. The commissioners expla!ned block grant procedures
and that the trustees would have
continued on page 8

briefs~
l

pemployees

J

dan~us .~· buh J?a1!Ln ~
thete is nO quesbOil at this tiJIIC that
the : ton\pany wil\ butn •RECRA.
wastes.

.

pnder a more stringent federal
standard, officials said.
Those atlending the trip will
leave !he Tri-State Ait:pon outside
Huntington at 7 a.m. Friday, and
wiU arrive in Coffeyville's ~
before 9:30 a.m., Central Stlindard
Time, Riddle, said. Aptus wiU
provide a tour of the plant lastins
two hours that morning and also
will have compeny officials avail·
able to answer questio_ns.
. ·
Datkp said the group will be "on
its own" in the afternoon.
.
After a meeting earlier this week
between the diverse group and
Continued on page 8

.

.

COLUMBGS, Ohio (t;PI) Gov . ·Richard Celeste's $618
m11Uon capltal construction appropriation for 1989·90 sped
through the Ohio House on a 90-8
. ·vote Wednesday despite a han&lt;l·
ful of complaints about the rush
job.
It was joined by a separate $82
m1111on long-range construction
proposal to replace dilapidated
fac!Uties of the Ohio Department
of Youth Services, which houses
·
wayward youth .
I
Coming in -the other direction
Barry G. Thompson and Ronald Alan Casto, of Ripley, W.Va.,,
from the Senate Thursday will be
entered voluntary pl~as of _gu!lty to charges of breaking and,
a $481 m!U!on capital reappropri·
entering when they appeared recently before Judge Charles-H. I · a lion, using unspent money irom
Knight In Meigs County Common Pleas Court. Thompson and
the last two years.
Casto were charged in connection with a recent break-in al i ,
Much .of the construction will
Eber's Gulf Statton IJ! Racine. The two men were ea~hl
be financed with long-term
sentenced to a six month determinate sentence in the Orient,
bonds, and the , state Office of
Correctional R~cept!on Center, Orient, and ordered to make,
Budget and Management re·
restitution.
,
ported that the debt service for
Charles W. Green entered a voluntary plea of guilty to
the , capital projects will . not
aggravated assault in connection with an incident Dec. 3, 19871n
exceed the recommended 5 perwhich Cheryl Hy:;ell was shot in the foot by Green. Green was,
cent of the state's operating
sentenced by Judge Knight to a six month determinate sentence'
budget.
·
In Orient.
i
Lawmakers pian to have all
1
three bills on the governor's desk
when they go home at the end of
next week lor primary election
The Pomeroy Youth League has designated Saturday March '
campaigning.
·
12, as sign up ,day for all boys and 1lrls interested in playing !
The
new
two-year
capital
ap·
baseball or softball. Registration wiU take place at Elberfeld's
store from 2 p . m. unt115 p.m. ThOse who did not participate last ,
year must brtns a· copy of their birth cert!l!cate . Registration
fee is $9 dollars.
l

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Pair sentenced by Judge Knight

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U. S. NO. l

Signup slated March 12

.

IDAHO POTATOES

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Parems plan seminar
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. Parents For Education in Melg&amp; Local Scbool District is
spo1110rlq a aemlnar Thursday, starting at 7 p.m., at Meigsj
Junior Hlah Scbool with Carroll McCall!lllon, 11 Columbus,
dllcusalni school flnanclila'. The public Is invited to attend.

Woman cited by patrol
;
;

A south Bloomlqv!Ue woman was cited in an acc!den~
WedneldaY, atlO: 15 Lm., In Olive Township on S.R. 681, less
Conttnued Qn page 8

.
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KEMP · WITHDRAWS - Rep. Jack Kemp
(R-N.Y. ), left, shown with his wile Joanne after
leaving a press conference earlier this week,

withdrew from the Republican presidential race

at 11:07 a.m. Thursday. ( UPI).

House adopts capital improvements bill

' Five employees were rep!red Tuesday night when the Meigs!
. County Board of Education met In regular session at its ofl!cesl
in Pomeroy.
·
Rehired were Elebra Buck, Robert Hudak. each given two;
year contracts as sc~ool p~ycholg!sts; W1111am Buckley, twoJ
year contract as secondary school supervisor; Sandra.
Chadwell, four year contract as a speech therapist, and Nancy''
Carnahan, two year contract as a secretary.
I
· The county board issued a school bus driving certificate tol
Tim Fry and adopted·an amended resolution to participate as a i
Class C site with the Counc!l of Government'ss Southeasteml
Ohio Voluntary Education Cooperative Computer Network. '

10 LB. BAG

According to a project announcement from Congressman ·
Clarence Miller's office, the
Appalachian Regional Comm!ssian has approved $56,000 to
cover 80 percent of the construetion costs to build an access road
to the nursery. Local money will
pay for the remaining $14 ,000
cost of bu!ldin2' the road.
The re-establish of direct access to Carper's Nursery is
expected to increase its retail
bUsiness by 100 percent, to
expand it business by investing
$125,000, and to create eight to 10
jobs .
Carper fought in court to get
the access road to his nursery
whenRoute33wasbu!!t,andlost.
It was thought a couple of years
ago that · the necessary perm!ssian from the state and the

.Aptos .trip to Kan~as will
cost -fii'In more · th~ ,13,000

.Ragu Homestyle

c

many state offices or institutions
do you know of in Meigs
County?" ' The only one. he said,
would be the extension service
which Is funded by the cou~ty .
Jones acknowledged that the
money for building improvements at O.U. and Rio Grande
shows a commitment by the state
to higher education. but that it Is
his opinion that someone at the
state level should show as much
concern lor secondary educa·
Uon, •·especially in Southeastern
·Ohio where it looks like it's going
down the tube."
Twenty years after the ·constructlon of the Route33~ourlane
in Meigs County, George Carper, .
owner of Carper's Nursery, five
miles north 'of Pomeroy, may be
· getting an access road from
Route :l.l_to his place of business.

proprlatlon contains $417 million
lor construction projects on
Ohio's college and university
campuses, $48.3 million for men·
tal health and retardation faclll ·
ties, $56.7 million for parks and
recreational fac!Ut!es and $45
mlllto·n for correctional
fac!Ut!es.
Rep. William H!n!g, D-New
Philadelphia, chairman of the
House Finance Committee, told
House members the plan has
"bipartisan consensus" and ·
would promote jobs and higher
education, protect past investments with rehabUUatlon , and
preserve the state's financial
credit rating.
"It is affordable within existIng revenu~s." H!n!g said shortly
after the bHI came out of his
committee on a 21-3 vote.
The plan was worked out
behind closed doors during the
last several weeks by state
legislative leaders from both
parties and the Celeste
administration.
"I don't think that's the way
the legislative process is supposed to work," said Rep. Joan
Lawrence, R·Galena, one of the

Anti-landfill group

COLt;MBUS, Ohio lvPI)
Former Ohio Attorney General
William Brown Is threatening a
libel suit against a citizens' group
oppoalq a Pen!Jsylvanta com·
pany'a propoeal to open a landfill
In eastern Ohio.
Brown, Who represents
Cham. .• Inc. of Plttlbur1h,
. aald Wedneaclay the ifOUp Is
nillreprnenttq lhe company's
propoeal, lncludlni llaylq It
wOUld aceept 20 miDIOn pounds of
··,·
\

.
opponents . "What you have is a
leadership pork barrel."
Lawrence complained that the
leadership was able to add about
$100 mUI!on worth of projects to
Celeste's original plan In private
negotiations, while she was un·
able to get included a $120,000
allocation for a scenic rivers
project along the O!entangy
River.
''The chairman treated us very
fairly," said Rep. Thomas John son, R-New Concord, ranking
m!onor!ty member of the Fi ·
nance Committee. Johnson said
if more hearings had been held,
various projects would have been
added but the state's ab!l!ty to
pay for them would not have
improved.
· Hin!g said he even turned down
a request by th!l governor for a
last-minute change. Senate leaders also are committed to pass·
!ng the b!U as is next week.
Despite the statements of
Hlnlg and Johnson, Rep. Ronald
Amstutz, R-Wooster, said he
voted against the b!ll because
Ohio's credit rating might be in
.danger in future years If the
capital spending pace keeps up.

threat~ned

garbage a day from the East
Coast.
·
Chambers has appl!ed to the
Ohio Environmental Protection
A,ency for permission to open a
lindtlll on an abandoned strip
mine about 1 %m!les outside of
Cadiz, about 100 m!les east of
Coiumbua.·
Nancy Beck, a spokeswoman
for tile Cltlzena Watch Commit·
tee of Harrtaoa County, said
Chambers II propoelq to bring

"We were not given good
information about precisely
where we're going with our debt
l!mi!ation," said Amstuiz.
Rep. Ross Boggs, D-Andover ,
said the youth se~v!ces construction would relieve overcrowding.
anhe Buckeye Youth Ce nter and
Scioto Village, and would provide
for a new center in southern Ohio.
Boggs said only $10 m!llion or
the construction will be started in
the first year , meaning future
state . budgets will have to take
care of most of the ·debt.
The Senate passed unanlm·
ous!y and returned to the House
for concurrence in amendment"
a bill protecting "wh!stleblow ers" In the private sector. A
wli!st!ebiower is one who reports
evidence of a felony or a hazard
to public health or safety at the
place of employment.
In order to have protection
from adverse employer reaction,
an employee must lile a written
report with the employer and
give the employer until the close
of business the following day.
The Senate adjourned until 11
a .m . Thursday and the Hou:;e
untll1 p.m . Thursday.

with libel suit

In 10,000 tons of garbage a day, by
truck and rail, from New Jersey
and New York.
· She said the group is not
opposed to a landfUl being
opened on the site.
"We'd be glad to take our own
garbage and neighboring coun·
ties' 1arbqe, but not 10.000 tons
a day from the East," abe said.
'·'If New Jersey can 'I bandle their
garbage, then Harrison CountY
can't either."

'

But Br.own , whose offices are
In Columbus, said it would be up
to the EPA to determine how
much out-of-state garbage would
be allowed In the landfill.
.
Last month, he aent a letter to
the leaders of the committee
after It beian distributing ~
paniphlet, titled "No Eastern
Statel Qarbap."
:
"I em demanding tha~ YOII
eeaee ~ uae of tile "mphlet
Coatlllued on pap I
:
~- '

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�Tht.uday, Marchio, 19a8

. ·'

Comment

Ptga 2-The Dally Seudnal
POmeroy-Midclapon. Ohio
~.Nbuch10,1988

Did polls guide attack on Libya?

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO'JED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON

A~
Blm~
~v

AREA

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

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Alalltul Publlsller/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Muager

A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
lana. All letters are subject to edltlng and must be signed wtth name1 address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publlahed. Letters should· be ln
tood taste, addressing Issues,, not personalities . .

Letters to the editor
Appreciates support
Letter to the Editor:
I would like to take this·
opportunity to thank the doctors
of Holzer Medical Center and the
people of Gallla County for the
outstanding turnout on Sunday,
March 6th, at tlie Tri-County ,
MACE Meeting In Galllpolls.
We all realize the busy schedules these doctors have, and for
them to take time on their
Sunday afternoon to support this
very Important cause Is com·
mendable.
This support uqdoubtedly demonstrates the ' severity of the

hazardous waste problems we
are now facing, The MACE
supporters are happy to have
Gallla County' join us, as MACE
III, of our organization.
The chairmen of the MACE I
committees will he glad to help In
any way possible to get MACE III
committees started. Just give us
a call, We need ·people to work
and get your organization
Involved.
Anne Hlte
Secretary /Treasurer
MACE, Inc.

wASHINGTON- Even before
he ordered the bombing of Libya
In 1986, President Reagan kriew
he had public support behind
hlm. It wasn't a gut feeling on the
part of the great communicator.
Heknewbecausetheadmlnlstratlonhadcommlsslonedapollthat
Indicated the majority of Amerlcans were finally ready to strike.·
back against terrolsm.
In an unprecedented move,
Reagan's National Security
Council paid for such polls In the
pivotal year of 1986 to help It
shape foreign policy.
· Using the.s e secret polls (and
others that . were publicly reported at the time), the NSC was
able to track public antagonism
toward l.lbya to such a fine
degree that the officials In the
White House knew when the
majority of Americans had
swung over In favor of retallatlon. That happened In Mfirch
1 1986. U.S. planes bombed Libya
on April14.
The polls, done for the NSC by
private pollsters, were reported
to the NSC Crisis Management
Center In a series of four
quarierly reports. The subjects
Irea ted In t hose poII s, according
'
to the f lrst report, were "cons!dered germaned to the current

HE?L.L.O,
RON •••

NQ9S@

H@~ •••

t

think they have the right to say
who can go and who can't.
And some klda who weren't 13
got to go, because their parent
was a chaperone, that's not fair
either. Other parents would Uke
to be chaperones too, but they
can't because of other .little
children at h6me or other
'
reasons.
Brenda Tatterson
Pomeroy, Ohio

Little known House Rules
Committee \plays critical role
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) - 'Of all the committees of Congress, the
House Rules Committee Is one of the least known outslqe Washington,
but nontheless one of the most powerful.
To the dismay of House Republicans. the Democrat-controlled
committee again demonstrated Its clout as the House prepared
recently to again take up the Issue of aid to the Nicaraguan rebels.
It had been expected that the Democrats' plan toprovlde$30mllllon
In -non-military aid would be the primary bill presented to the House
and that the Republicans would be allowed an opportunity to offer
their somewhat similar plan as a subsltute.
That prospect worried some Democratic leaders who feared the
Republican subsltute might attract enough Democrats to pass,
thereby precluding a; vote on the leadership plan. The Rules
Committee took care of that problem, however, by simply reversing
the program - making the GOP proposal the pending bill and
allowing the Democrats to offer their plan as a subsitute to be voted on
first .
Republicans were surprised and Infuriated by the rule. GOP leader
Robert Michel Issued a bitter statement saying, "Seldom In my
(30-year) tenure In Congress has the Democratic majority excerclsed
·
such abuse of the legislative process."
As It turned out, the whole Contra package went down to defeat
when the House vot.ed, but the anger over the committee ruling
remains.
-Michel is not the first person, nor will he be the last, to be outraged
by actions of the House Rules Committee, a urilque congressional
entity.
·
·
The Senate has nothing comparable to the committee, which
decides how much time will be allowed for the House to debate bills
and what, If any. amendments can be offered. In that way, the
committee serves as a kind of traffic cop, working to keep the House
from getting bogged down in endless debate. Filibusters- the bane of
the Senate - are not possible under this system .
But many House members chafe under the restrictions Imposed by
ttie committee. Most of the time it Is the minority Republicans who
complain, but Democrats also protest when they feel unfairly denied
the opportunity to offer amendments·or want more time to debate a
bill.
The committee is sometimes referred to as "the speaker's
committee' • - a reflection of Its role In backing the policy and wishes
of. the speaker of the House. But even that does not always hold true.
Jlack In 1960s, even the awesome persuasive powers of President
John Kennedy and Speaker Sam Rayburn. D-Texas, were unable to
sway the then rules chairman, Rep. Howard Smith, O-Va.
Kennedy and Rayburn wanted the House to act on civil rights
legislation, but Smith strongly opposed the bills and refused to have
his committee clear them for House action.
tormer House Speaker Thomas 0 'N elll, D-Mass ., when he was just
beglnlng his climb up the leadership ladder, was appointed a member
ot:the Rules Committee and dutifully voted as he was expected.
]n his book,. "Man of the House," O'Neill recalls how Rayburn
explained that O'Neill was appointed soley to support the leadership
wlteri crucial bills were scheduled for House action .
(•If It's a party Issue, your obligation Is to get It on the floor,"
Rllyburn said. Once a bill Is ori the floor, committee m~mbers can
vote any way they want, Rayburn said. "But if we need your vote,
you'll gtve it to us- even If you hate the blllandeven lfltgoes against
the economy of your area."
The current rules chairman Is the venerable Rep. Claude Pepper,
D'Fia. Operating with a solid 94 Democratic majority Pepper
coQtlnues the tradition of delivering the kind of debate rules the
leadership relies on.

Today in history

__J

'

By United Presa Inlematlonal
Today Is Thursday, March 10, the 70th day of 1988 with 296to follow
'lbe moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn..
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Thoae born on this date are under the sign of Pisces .
'.;

)

I/t\ ONL"/

•

AL!SlweD

Touname1h
o\I ... Uc It

ONE!

CAL.\-.

P1rRt

nine percent said yes.
··
Between March 8 and 11. the
NSC, through a Washington think
tank, polled 1,500 adults bY
telephone throughout the nation
and asked them 50 questions,
some on terrorism and Libya.'
Sixty-six percent were now ready
for ml~tary action.
Ano er sign! fl cant ch ange
had occurred as a result of
Reagan's unrelenting .verbal as·
sault on Libya. Libya had replaced Iran as the favored target
foranattacklntbemlndsofthose
polled.
·
Tbe message was clear: It
h
Libya engaged In anot er terror1st operation or significant antiAmerican activity, there would
be overwhelming American support for military action.
The March ~eport to the NSC
even spelled out the ground rules.
To recleve public support, the
reportsald,anattackwouldhave
to be "reluctant," not resul!lng
from anything we did to provoke
the terrorism. II would have to be
focused on the bad guys, would

.

-,One of Noriega's personal
pilots flew cocaine to a Costa
Rican ranch owned by an American contra supporter so the drug&amp;
could be exchanged for weapons.
Another key witness against
Noriega Is his former pilot Floyd
Carlton.
Carlton testified that on numerous occasions he flew to
Colombia for bribe payments
stemming from a 1982 agreement
between Noriega and the Medellin .narcotics cartel to protect
cocaine shipments flown Into
Panama en route to the United
States. Carlton also says that on
17 different occasions he piloted
shipments of arms from Noriega
to leftist guerrillas In El
Salvador.
Officials believe Carlton's testimony on these points.
But when he says he also
piloted llleagal CIA-arranged
arms shipments to the contras,
his Information Is considered
suspect. If such flights were
made, say officials, the source of
the aid must have been private
groups or Individuals - not the
CIA or U.S. government.
:
Another problem Is who to
believe.
,
Ramon MUian-Rodrlguez and
Steven Kalish have a lot In
common. Both are convicted
money launders serving time In
federal prisons who say they paid
huge bribes to Noriega to launder

ECAC Metro Coldeftllt'r

~mlll•l

Mo.n~ II, st . l"ra~~eia (NY) .U

.,"' ......

RD..U.t. .d Colllfereae

8emln ...la
NE IAIIllla• 1M. ' Texaa· Arlln~toa 8S
North Teu.a St. II, McNe..e 81. II
· Wet~~era AU.Irilc Cnlerenet&gt;
.
F1nt roMd
Hawal! If, .\lr Fon:e 71
,
l'!iA.IA Dl~ld II
ChiiiiiiiiDMillp
Hullnp Coli. II, Doallt Coli. ·n
N..\IA Dlsb'let 14
,Ouun,.onshlp
"'I•Z., Claire AI, Wlt-Piattnlllf' ·-;·,
. (OT)

NA.IA District :U
Clwapi-IJ

Grar:t t7, TQIOr M
01 ...
. Mldweat
IU110Is 81, Mlchl1an 1~
Ollkt st. 71 , P\lnhw M

. .,. 01110 Hlatl Sthool Baaketball
BJ \lnlted Preaa llillf,..lklnal
WMiitllda,, M&amp;ft.l

WlltftallHenre 71, W,... kault &amp;4
w...&amp;er •· N Ca•• Gle.Oak It
Olvtaloa II
C.mbrW~t M. Wn&amp; Hobnu.
C.liield 17, Yo .. p Mooaey IZ
CIIII&amp;GD 8ollilllt, ..U:r81 VIncent Ill loll
DrftduTri-Valley 18, BeDalre II
HamlhN aula At, 0 n MeNicboii.M Ill
Ledl CloWrleal Sl, Bar Vl.plt
8prlqfltld Cath 14, N Collep HID 58
,..,.•ville II. llredlavUIP M
Wett
u, Soloa a
Yo•p 8oudl ftl Yo•rs t'hr.IM"y

3 .4M

&amp;hlbUion Ballt'ball

Beac"- fl1a. , 1:01 p.m.
Delroh va. PUtab•I"J• at Bradenton,
na., 1:1111 p.m.
Otk:ai(O !ALl VI. Sl , Lotill at , St.
Petertburr, Fla., 1: 111 p.m.
Toronto v11. Ksnau City at BatriesCity,
Fla., I:Jep.IIIL
.
Boa.a n . MlmeM&amp;a &amp;I OrlaDdo, Fla.,
I:SI p.m.
'
New V•rtl (.tL) n. Texas al Port
Q~IDUe, F1a., 1:31 p.m. ,
.
CbkiiO (NL) 111. San Franciii1Co al
Scota.lalt:. Arll., S p.m.
San Olep va. OaJtland at Pboeftl•, S
p.m.
Callforala vs. U.veland at Tuc110n,
Arll. , S p.m .
8f'alfl.!!' \IL Mtlwauliee at Chandler,
Arl:l. , s p.m.

Ge••

( lorfell)

IMvlalon Ill
llur. U, C.S...I Crawlo ... 3t
ladepP.•eaee 11, EI)Tia Open Dow Ill
Oberlla P. a.pia FaiiB tl
WQ~~Niale 71. CaRlon C.nt CaU. 51
Wy.ronl H. Mlk• Eclllloa 47

STRAWBERRY UPSETNew York Melli outfielder
Darryl Strawberry points to a
fan In the stands u he comes
off the field before the Mets
game Wednesday against the
Baltimore Orioles. Strawberry has accused teammates
Gary Carter and Keith Hernandez of qulttlnc In the
middle of the National League
pennant race last September.

Mets hold
clubhouse
••
meetmg

MIAMI (l.JPI) - The New
York Mets held a clubhouse
meeting Wednesday to "clear the
air" after Darryl Strawberry's
·published remarks criticizing
Manager Davey Johnson and
several teamm;~tes, and then
tried to brush them off as
''' history.''
GoH
The comments were made In
Coral Sprhp, Fla. - 1111,110 Honda
Clautc
the
AprU edition of Esquire
HociiQ
magazine.· Strawberry called
LoallapiH at Boaon, 1: Sl p.m.
\\'Mil IIIIi on at Plllia.del .. la, 7: 35 p.m.
himself thP. key to the Mets
Vancowver at ,DetNM, 7: a p.m.
Quebee at NV l..._.era. 1:01 p.m.
season and blamed Johnson,
f'tu.burch at St. a..o•. 1: a p.m.
Gary Carter, Keith Hernandez,
Wl•lpe• at C.lprJ, I:SI p.m.
s.ecer
Wally Backman and others for
M~r Woor Soccer Lope
the team's failure In 1987.
Baltimore a1 aevelaad, l:tl p.fT!.
The right fielder would not
T•Bo&lt;!a Raton, Fla. - Allt,Otll Vlfllllla
comment on the situation when ,
Slim• ol Plo~da
·
'
Lab • • • Va.ta, f1a. - MU,Dtl
· he was approached by'a crowd of
me•'• 0. Poet Claalllc
reporters before the Mets' game ,
against ·the Baltimore Or.loles
Wednesday. The Mets held their
' Transactions
meeting at their spring training
,.... ~
complex In Port St. Lucie before
Melll.ft!al - Slped outfleldr.r Matt
busing to Miami, and arrived too
O.nl1• I• a mlaor-leque contrad.
' late to take batting practice.
Collep
Reton Hall :- Slped bulletball COICb
"We just had a little meeting to
P •.l. C&amp;rkalmo 10 a I-Jear e..trad.
talk
things over, and cleared the
ToW. - Name• loh• McNamara
MJ*'*A lafonnaUon director.
air," Johnson said. "I think It
W•tVIrslnla Tech- NunedBIIILeg
was a good meeting, but what
aul•lant football coach.
WMllhiiiOD SU.te - 8tp• haall .... all
happened In the meeting will stay
coach lleh1n Sampso~~ to 11 4-year
there. As far as I'm concerned,
colltracl.
FootbAll
It's over and done with."
NV .rete - 'haded defeatlve lineman
Carter, who Strawberry acBarry •••U lo &amp;he lA Raiders for a
draft ctaoke.
cused
of quitting last year,
Su IHep - Named .Larry Roberta
head tralaer.
de,ended himself.
Hadl~)'
"The only bad comment -he
MIMf!IOta - Named Lou Na•e
prHWellt..
made about me was he said I
•
Soccer
quit," the catcher said. "I know
Kaneu Otr (MIBI.) - 81ped forward
Darid O.yl~ for tile remainder ol the
In my own mind I never quit. I
eeuoa,
was hurting all year, and he can't
pick on a guy who Is hurting like
'
'
&lt; I that.
1 . "Htfs a moody guy. One time
1
he wants one thing, another time
It's another thing. That's Darryl.
"As far as I'm concerned It's
run-scoring double.
Vlzquel added a single, double over. It's history," Carter said.
and triple to the barrage off five "It's all a matter of maturing as
a player and as a ~rson. Maybe
Indians pitchers.
Eddie Williams, Ron Washing- the way It came out wasn't the
ton and Randy Washington ho- way It was Intended to come out.
Darryl said It was taken out of
mered for Cleveland, 2-3.
Mark Langston pitched four Context."
Innings to notch llls sec~nd
In the article, Strawberry was
straight victory this. spring. He quoted questioning · Johnson's
allowed one run orl two hits, decision-making last year.
walking
none and I striking out
"And the manager, nobody
'
could figure out some of the stuff
two.
he was doing all season. We're
hoping .Mel (Stottlemyre, pitchlng coach) will make a lot more
~
of the (pitching) decisions In '88,

DhlaloniV
ae Laatleraa t: 1ft, BloomfleWI4f.

McDouhlt1,ColwnblanaCreal¥lew-13
·
s .... pl._ H, Garaway ll
Za~~n Ao~eCra• 17, TllrM:atawas Cath

-'--

OWO RIP !khool Batlltetball
GlrllllleliOMI TolrU.meM ltealllts
BJ tJalk!d Preas Jatei'natloMI
. WfdWtd~q~, MIU'(h'
Dlvhdoal
At .VADllalla

Bea\lertretkll, 0• Merey St
Cln Setoa Ill, Cia Prlae!etea f.l

-

Pro results
'

NATIONAL BA8XBTII..\LL ASSOC•
WMDNIIQ'a BtHIIa
Boat&amp;• Ill, Ru Aatoalo 118
WaahiJIIIOD Ill, Phoulll: Ill
Otw!laad 11'7, Mlhnnlkee II
Def;NM_I.. tJ&amp;a.ll!

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

IALaliltniN,NewYertiM
Nnr lener 17, lA OIJ111erstl

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

ftc, ......... /

"""l..aiiiiNal~leqt.&amp;:•p. m.

........ I:. p.m.

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

NATIONA.L ROCkEl' LEt\GtJE
Wetbtnda,'~ Re.u.lla
I

Haril•rd $, Lea AllpAH •
a.11a1o t,
r

MI...,...

ataoapt, T. ...... a

C.l&amp;&amp;tJ I, Wa.lpe1 I Hie)

Me•real t, IW...O. I
ft.... Q'aGame~~
IAsMpktlatBodo., 7:3Jp.m.
W_.bllltD at PIIU.delpllla, 7:31p.m.

Vucouwr al Del Nil, 1: II p.m.
Qllebee at NY ....nden, 8: OS p.m.

.Indians
drop 11-5. tilt
. .

..
.•
•
•
;.

Nolie of this Is meant to.
The Palestinians are a hometerritory; perhaps a million assimilate the 700,000 Palestiwhitewash
the brutality of recent
less people, we're reminded , Russlans sought refuge from the nlan Arabs who fled Israel at Its
Israeli military repression, nor ·
again and again, as If that Bolshevik revolution.
birth.
World Wariiproducedanother
Mllny Palestinians of course to deny that nation's duty to work
condition were unique. It Is not. It
the Palestinians are unusual, It's
role call of refugees. Hundreds of did emigrate to other nations and for a settlement agreeable to all
because their own leaders and thousands of Flnnls forever lost prosper, but an astonishing sides ..
As Rabbi Hillel Goldberg of
friends have Insisted they retheir homes In the area bordering number also rem11lned behind In
Denver
has written: "I will not
main homeless for decade after Russia. Millions of Germans - 2 camps. The World Refugee Sursay
that
... because Arab Jewish
miserable decade.
million from East Prussia alone ·vey clanlfles over 2 million
refugees
rebuilt their lives Iii
Most of this century's refugees - packed their bags and fled Palestinians, most of them hom
Israel,
and
because Arab counget on with their lives In fairly west from towns In which their since 1948, as refuiees today.
short order. They adopt new ancestors had lived for centuries.
Wby are. they still refugees? tries kept Arab Palestinian refucitizenship and abandon corro- And an expanding Soviet state Surely not just because Israel gees In camps to prevent them
sive dreams of revenge and pushed atUI another 1.5 million occupied the West Bank and from rebuilding their lives In ' .
restoration.
Poles farther wesi.
Gaza In 1967 and has refused to , Arab countries, Israel has no
More than 1.5 million GreekS
A map In "The Times Alias of ll'ant autonomy to the Palelllnl· responsibility for Palestinians.
fled Turkey In the early 1920s, yet World History" charts the·move- ans ever since. Egypt ruled Gaza Concept~lly, perhaps, Israel
we hear nothing of schemes to ments of more than 20 million for many year~, yet ~er has no mponslblllty. But we're
repopulate their settlements. postwar refuiees In Europe anpexed the area or granted talldng nellhbora."
No, a decent netabbor doesn't
The Greek dlaspora dated back alone.
Paleatlnlan autonomy. The
to classical antiquity, yet It
The PalestlnlaDI can't even Egyptian government wouldn't !pore the homell!ls on Ita ,
simply stood up and walked off claim they're tbe only major even permit Gaza realdellta to dOoratep. But Israel Ia not the ,;
Palllllnlaal' only nellhbor nor
the world stage.
group of refuJil!tl In the Middle emiJrale to that cou11try.
During the same post·-world East. Arab countrlea deported
Jordan ruled the West Bank for the only one to thwart their · ·
War I period, 200,000 Hungarians 600,000 Jews In lN9 and 111!0 and decades, too, but never annexed dreams. ConlrJ~ry to the lmpm- · ·'
abandoned Romania; 350,000 ·seized. their property. Yet while · the area, either. To dO 10 mlgbt slon left by most . tele\oqlon
Turks tied Greece; a mUllon Israel welcomed thoae Jews, have rllked Bedouin power In . reports, Israel alone cannot · ·
relieve the plight of thole untor- \
Poles were uprooted from Soviet Arab countries refused to fully Jordan.
tuilale people.
,J
7

!:

Ph ... delphla ,.._ Chtc;IIUUlll al Pl1nt
City, f'!a.,· l:t$ P·~·
Lo1 .\alples n . lkuaatonal Klulmrnee,
f1a .. I: II p.m.
AtlaMa VI. New V•rk lNL) at PortSi.
l£1de, Fla. , 1:• p.m.
Bal~ore V11. Meltlrt'!al at We-t Palm

...,.._ n. IIHie;ll at; Rar1fonl, •lchl

•

S .Ill
J .4M

Calendar

M•JUtN 71, Euclid tt

r.~t~u~~

3 .101

3
I

. (UPI)

M'a..nekt Sr 11, PeiT)'SbUf171

~~-.r~o.

They're not the only refUgees.__Vi_nce__;_nt__;;C~ar.:....:::.;rol=-l

"'

I~)

IAnln 8r 11. Laii.Jewood st Edward '70

..

3

At\aMa
Ctnci.WI
St. Loula
New York
S:aa J'ra..CIIICO

Lo••

Tounament ResWI!

u.,_ 8r 81, SMI!Iuaky II •oO .

HOIIICOn

I 4 .ZH
I I .111
Weti~A)''II Resullll
Atlaa.ta 1. Moatreall• ) '1:
Ho~toa 4, Molll.real (M) I
Phlia.tlelplda. 4~ Plttahura:b S
Loll Aa.feiPI I, Daelnnall I '
Ne. Yortl (NL) II, Baltimore I
St.
s, ,Te.....,l, 11111a.
BoiUin I, Olll':ap ~ALl l
MIIHMIL&amp; (u) i, &amp;a_. Ctty S
New York (.\LI 10, Texas 3
Ml.aeM&amp;a (M) 10, Detroit 7
St-atUe II, CltW!la... 5
San Dlep I , Milwaukee '1:
Oaldaftd 1, San Fr••l~o I
O.k:qo CNL) t, CallfGmla 0

Prep scores

c.1 u•eau, ae,aeldlbara a

Pct .
.811
.. .
.IN

..111
.. .
Toronto
3 3 .. .
Nrw 'York
S I .lit
. Oakland
J S .Ill
BM~e•
I I .. .511
Balilntel't"
' s -~"
(;1ewland
I S .ttl
DtlroM
I 3 .~II
Mllwa~~ltee
2 • .US
Ollearo
I ~ ·" '
NATIONAL LBA.GUE
Team
W L Pet.
Lo1 Aaaeln
· I Dl.M
Chk'lap
S I .831
Moatr. .t
4 2 .U7
Flttlbtlra:b
fi t ,..,.
Phllallelpbb.
3 3 .HI
San Dlep
3 3 .5H

P•lftc Coul Attlletlc Colllferenee
~
Ci.l 81 . h~ 'TI, Fftuo st . $1
Suol.-efM. '71, PRihC'II

t'

drug profits through PanamanIan banks.
·
Kalish's testimony was key to a
second U.S. Indictment of Noriega obtained In Tampa. Even
though be Is a convicted felon who Is attempting to make a deal
on a second long sentence he
faces - he too Is to be believed.
But Mntan, a Cuban-American
accountant from Miami,. Is not to
be believed, according to oJficlals, when he tells of channeling
Illicit narcotics fund to the
contras through dummy Pana-·
manian front companies. Millan
said he did so after receiving a
request from ·:a ,liaison with ...
U.S. Intelligence." MUian ldentl·ftes the contact as Felix 1.
Rodriguez, also known as "Max
GQmez," a formet: CIA agent and
a ley figure In a secret contra air
resupply operation. Rodriguez.
has denied Millan's allegation.
Prosecutors say that whll~ all
of what Kalish says abou) his
dealings with Noriega should be
believed, another story he tells I~"
more suspect.
Kalish says that he once paid a
Teamsters Union official In' Detroit $825,000 to bribe a Customs
Service agent In New York City
.and to provide transportation for
a marijuana shipment. Officials
say the matter Is under Investigation, but they have found no
evidence so far to back up
Kalish's claim.

E11htbltlo• Sta.thc•
AMERI CAN ~AGUE
Tum
W L
Seutt.
~ ·1
MI.......,
J !
CaUfol'llla
J J
KaN&amp;a "CIIJ
3 a
Ttua
I J

Weber state H, NeW. ILl-Reno n (OT)

.
!l€

Noriega provided security for
drug traffickers and laundered
drug protrts through Panamanian banks, he was to be bi!lleved,
U.S. officials said.
Blandon was also to be belleved, said officials, when he
called "a lie" Noriega's state-•
ment that In December · 1985
former national security adviser
Adm. John Poindexter asked the
general to help establish Panama as a staging ground for a
U.S. Invasion of Nicaragua.
Blandon said he was at the
meeting and no mention was
made of any such plan.
But once Blandon starts talklng about other Noriega dealings,
officials suddenly say his word Is .
suspect. Among the "suspect"
allegations:
.
-Noriega provided ·military
training for U.S.-backed contra
rebels at Oliver North's request,
at a time when U.s. training was
Illegal.
-VIce President George Bush
had Noriega relay a message to ·
Cuban leader Fidel Castro warnlng Cuba not to Intervene In the
U.S. Invasion of Grenada. Bush
called this testimony a
"fabrication."
-The CIA and the National
Security Council sent Noriega
Intelligence reports on the poilU,
cal act)vltles and personal lives
of certain U.S. senators and
congressional staff members.
The CIA dentes this.

ro-..

Moll&amp;a"aa n . Northen Arlzou 12

D111tllon I
Akr Eaat tD, •-.wlcll. H
Bedford 71, Oe Ht!IJhial5 ·
Cle Weal THh 11, Parma 12
Col ............. Col South "

By Untied Press International
CLEARWATER, Fla. (UPI ) Darren Daulton hit a two-run
triple to highlight a tour-run
fourth Inning Wednesday, giving
the Philadelphia Phlllles a 4-3
victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Don Carman got the vtcioi-y for
the Phlllles, 3-3. The Pirates
dropped to 4-2.

Exhitition

Ill Sky

Were there any illegal ties ?_----=By'--R_ob_ert_-w,_agma_n
WASHINGTON (NEA) Grand jury testimony against
Panamanian strongman Gen.
Manuel Antonio Noriega has
forced federal prosecutors and
the Reagan admlnstratlon Into a
tenuous position.
they accept as fact lnformation that points to Noriega's
personal guilt, but they deny
testimony from the same witnesses that suggests Illegal activtties between the U.S. and
Panamanian governments.
Central to this dilemma Is the
testimony of former key Noriega
aide Jose I. Blandon. Blandon
was a senior member of Panarna's Intelligence organlzatio.n
before becoming Panamanian
counsel in New York.
Blandon's testimony that Norlega accepted $4.6 million to
provide a safe haven for narcotlcs and money-laundering opera!Ions led to the indictment of the
general by ·a Miami federal
·grand jury. Federal prosec!Jtors
vouched for Blandon's honesty
and credibility before 'the grand
jury .
When Blandon detailed how
Norlegaallledhlmselfwlthlnlernational narcotics cartels and
built a criminal empire through
military control of Immigration,
customs, airports and railroads,
prosecutors said he was to be
believed.
When Blandon testified that
.

·

Templt 11. • .._.e llaa.t u

would be beneficial If other ,
nations helped, and If the admln- ·
!stratton j!.ppeared publicly unlted on the military operation.
0 M h 23 1 ss than two
n arc
, e
weeks after the poll was taken,
each report. The key question
Ubya,(lredantlalrcraftmlsslles
was always whether the public
at American warplanes In the
would support a military attack
Mediterranean. On April 5, a.
on state-sponsored terrorism.
In
bomb expo
l 'ded 1n a West Berlin
.
Other Words. If the United Stales
discotheque, kllllng two people,
attacked Iran, Syria or Libya,
Including an American servicethe chief state sponsors of
man. Reagan Immediately fin.terrorism at the time, would the
gered Libya as the villain. (West
public stand behind the
Gremans and others have since
administration?
expressed serious doubts about
Theprelildentwaspaitlcularly
. theextentofLibyanculpalilllty.)
Interested In Libya. He had
I
1 11 t 1 vised news
Isolated It as the chief source of
n a nat ona y e e
terrorism after attacks on the
conference, Reagan called Llbyan President Moammar GadRome and VIenna airports In
haft "this mad dog of the Middle
December 1985. Iran and Sybrlat
East."
were In on the planning, too, u
On April 14, American planes
Reagan was secretly negotiating
took off from British bases and
with those two countries, and 11
bombed "terrorist-related
wouldn't have been kosher to
targets"lnTrlpollandBenghazl,
harp on their flaws.
Libya.
·
On Jan. 11 and 12, 1986•
The NSC's private pollsters, In
according to the private reports
their June report, said they were
to the NSC, Reagan's pollster,
no surprised by the overwhelmRichard Wlrthlln, conducted a
· B t th
confidential poll asking whether have to be perceived as neces- lng public support. u
ey
bee a use nothing else had warned that It would be typical
the Public Would Support a s.a ryked
military strike against ·a state wor ' and the ac tlon wou td •.or the publlc to c h ange Its mind
have to be limited and defensive. as time went on.
that supported terrorism. Forty- In addition, the report said, It
So, In their June surVey, the .
NSC's pollsters tried to find out
whether the bombing had received "sustained public support." The poll revealed a 75
:t~
percent rate of approval - the
same as various media polls
Indicated when the action was
CsOUCAL.L M@ iACK
first
taken.
IN AN ..OUR?
'
The report concluded: "Not
only bas the popularity ofthe raid
lasted with the American public, '
but Its effect has been to raise the
president's overall job rating
higher than It has ever been
.. ~
before, as - measured In the
Gallup Poll." A mld:May Gallup
survey showed 68 percent of the
pllbllc approved of the way the
president was handling his job.
This was a higher rating, the · ·
report said, than any previous
p_resldent'ln the second year of·
his term since World War n.
~
The preslde.n t had done his
1\• . . work In convincing the pu)llic
that Libya needed .to be punished,
~
~19l and the pollsters verified that the
$1.. 3-A
support was there.

'

Phils edge Pirates; Mets rip Orioles ll-5·. in spring action ··

. Plalllb•ralll• 81 . ...... 1: a p.m.
Wl_.pel u CalprJ,I:SI p.m.
Frkla.J'a GamN
Nu rames IIClheduled
·

c.....,.._.,,

By Jack Anderson and Dale Van A tta

·O·
f. .

. :.

Weftead!l'.)'a CoU.ce Ba~lu•thaJI Rnullll
By U•lted Pret~alatrrullonal

BUS&lt;/ RIGHT
NOW; BUCCCt... CAN

.· Not fair
Letter to the Editor:
'J'hls Is about the teen dances at
the City Hall on Saturday nights.
I tblnk It's a nice thing to have,
but I also think It's not fair for
ldds who are 10-11 &amp; 12. What are
· ·they suppose to do for fun. I think
·. ·If they have permission from
..,. " · their parents to go, then they
· have just as much right to be
there as a -13-year-old. As for the
people who started It, well I don't.

national security Interests of the
United States and hence to the
NSC and CMC for presidential
decision-making in policy formalion and crisis management."
·Terrorism, and the public
reaction to It· Was Included In

..••

Scoreboard ...
I

'

The Daily Sentinel Page-3

Pomerov-Midclaport, Ohio

'

TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI) -Brick
Smith collected four hits, IncludIng a home run, to highlight a
15-hlt attack that sent the Seattle
Mariners to an 11-5 Cactus
League victory over the Cleve·
land Indians Wednesday,
Smith also doubled twice,
driving In four runs for the
Mariners, 4-1. Hls sacrifice fly
scored Omar Vlzquelln the first
Inning, and Smith put Seattle
ahead to stay In the third with a

'I ""ood
h
I
d
Cleve
an
may
ave
rea
·
catcher.prospect in Todd Pratt =~~~ha~:~y~~~~s
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) -Todd
"This must be a full-page
Pratt, who's never played a day· story," the voice said,
In the majors, was taking a
Pratt grinned. He's learning
big-league ribbing.
all about the big leagues, everyPaul Zuvella had noticed the . thing from strategy to throwing
21-year-old catching prospect to kangaroo courts. When you're
chatting with a reporter, and the just out of A-Ball with a chance at
kidding began.
"the show," grinning comes
''This must be the longest easily.
lnll!rvlew In history," Zuvella
"Real good. Real good," he
said, gesturing to a practice field said whell asked how he felt
at the Cleveland Indiana' .spring about being tn.carilp. "It came as
training base. "It started ·all the a big surprise because Boston
way over there, and now It's had big respect for me. But they
continued here."
·
lost me. They're going to get
Another voice filled the Clevehurt. They tried to aneak me by,
land Indians dugout, more than
and It didn't work out."
loud enough for Pratt to hear.

Awaftled
new contract
'

JiJ United rr.alatenatloiiAI

Seton Hall Coach P.J. Cerleslmo, on the verge of leading the
Pirates to their flrlt NCAA
Tournament bid, was rewai'ded
with a new live-ye• contract.
Cer~o balcompllld a record
of 20.11 this ... - afler aolng
M-91111 bll ftrat ftw 11810111 at
Seton HaD.
II

the staff
"Man, I wonder all the time
how many games this team
would win If Whitey (Herzog, St.
Louts Cardinals Manager) were
managing It," Strawberry said.
Johnson's response Wednesday was: "I don't think anybody
likes having derogatory remarks
made about him.
"You don't like to see these
things happen, but that's life In
the Big Apple," adding he never
publicly criticizes players and
doesn't want his players doing It
either.
"I think It's a good thing for .
playera to take care of their own
bu~JJ!e~s," Johnson said.

MIAMI (UPI) - Tim Teufel
and rookie Mark Carreon each
collected four hits to lead a 19-hit
attack and power the New York
Mets to an 11-6 victory over the
Baltimore Orioles.
With the score tied 3-3, Carreon
gave the Mets the lead for good In
the sixth Inning with a home run
off losing pitcher Oswald Peraza.
Teufel doubled home the first run
of the game, In the second, and
Carreon followed with a two-run
double for a 3-0 lead bff Baltlmore starter Mike Boddlcker.

Lynch, 2-9 with a 5.38 ERA for
the Cubs last year. has allowed
one run In six Innings this spring.
The While Sox are winless In four
games.
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -Sal
Butera walked With the bases
loaded and one out In the bottom
the ninth Inning to give a spilt
squad of Minnesota Twins a .6·5
victory over the Kansas City
Royalsr
The other half of the team
traveled to Lakeland and posted
a 10-7 triumph over the Detroit
Tigers. Minnesota pounded 16
hits, getting three each f~om
Billy Beane and Chris Plttaro.
Joe Nlekro earned the victory
and Jack Morris took the loss for
Detroit.
Minnesota outfielder Mark Davidson was taken to the hospital
In Orlando after slamming into
· the center-field fence while chasIng a flyball . He was released
after X- rays proved negative.

of

CHANDLER, Ariz. (UPI) - ·
Eric Nolte struck out three
batters, Candy Sierra six and
Dave Leiper four to lead the San
Dlego Padres to a 9-2 victorybver
the Milwa-ukee Brewers.
Nolte pitched the first three
Innings, giving up both Brewers
runs .. Sierra pitched the next
four, allowing only two hits, and
Leiper pitched one-hit ball over
the final two Innings.
'
Milwaukee committed five errors. Chris Boslo gave up four
hIts and three runs In three
Innings. wa !king one and striking
out one.

DUNEDIN, Fla. (UPI) -Mike
Laga singled home the go-ahead
PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla.
run and Tim Jones squeezed In an
(UPI) -Mike Pagliarulo drove
Insurance run In the 11th Inning In three runs with a homer and
to lift the·St. Louis Cardinals to a · double · to lead the New York
3-1 triumph over the Toronto Yankees to a 10-3 victory over the
Blue Jays.
Texas Rangers.
Dav.e Stleb started for Toronto,
Jack Clark's RBI double off
allowing only tWo hits over four starter Bobby Witt sparked the
Innings.
Yankees In the first Inning.
Pagliarulo followed with a dou SARASOTA, F1a . .(UPI) -Ed ble. giving New York a 2-0 lead.
Lynch, released by the Chicago
Dale Mohorclc gave up PagliaCubs at the end of last season, rulo's two-run holl!er In the
pltc bed three scoreless Innings to Yankees' five-run ninth Inning.
help the B&lt;;lston Red Sox defeat Jose Cruz also homered for the
the Chicago White Sox 2-1.
Yankees. who had not homered
In their first five games.

Bums edge Cincinnati
VERO BEACH, Fla. (uPI)Jesse Orosco pitched out of a
bases-loaded jam In the ninth
Inning Wednesday to help the Los
Angeles·Dodgers to a 6-5 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds In a
Grapefruit League contest.
Orosco, obtained In trade from
the. New York Mets oxer the
winter, pitched two scoreless
Innings for the victory, and
· retired rookie Chris Sabo on a fly
ball to end the game and kept the
· Dodgers unbeaten In spring play,
6-0.
Orosco allowed one hit, but

Sampson inks new
fo~year ~ontract
By United Press International
Washington State Coach Kelvin Sampson, In his first year,
has signed a new four-year
contract. Sampson, an assistant
for the Cougars during the 1986-87
season, last April was named to
replace , Len Stevens as head
coach.
In other basketball news,
Clevell;lnd State guard Ken
McFadden was named AMCU-8
Player of tne Year. The rest of
the AMC'G All-Conference team
Includes Cleveland State center
jl:rlc Mudd, center Kelby Stuckey
and forward Dan Worthy of
Southwest Missouri State and
Eastern Illinois guard. Jay Taylor. Charlie Spoonhourof Southwest Missouri State was Coach of
the Year.

walked two In the ninth .
The Reds reached righthander Tim Belcher for three
runs on seven hits In three
Innings. Barry Larkin collected
three hits, Including a runscoring single off Belcher In the ·
seventh Inning, and scored a run.
Tracy Jones and Eddie Milner
·also had a pair of hits, and rookie
Scott Earl drove In two runs with
a pinch single.
Right-hander Marlo Soto, at temptlng.to come back from two
Injury-filled seasons, allowed the
Dodgers two earned runs In three .
Innings. Rookie Rob Dribble took
the loss In relief, surrendering
two runs In the elghtth Inning.
Jeff Hamilton brought home
the tying run for the Dodgers
with a sacrifice fly , then Dave
Anderson singled home the winning run. Mike Devereaux also
collected I two hits for the
Dodgers.

Indictment possible
By United Press International
A 5th circuit court judge In
Columbia, S.C., has found sufficient evidence to send to a grand
jury for possible Indictment the
case of South Carolina wide
receiver Ryan Bethea, who has
been charged with possession of
cocaine with Intent to distribute.
Bethea was arrested Feb. 4 on
campus.

~

'
•

:

SCOTTSDAI.E, Ariz. (UPI) - '
Mark McGwlre hit a three-run ;
homer In the ninth Inning, a drive "
that cleared a 30-foot fence 430
feet away In center field, to give
the Oakland Athletics a 7-5 •
triumph over the Sari Francisco :;
Giants .
McGwlre's homer off Craig
Lefferts was his second of the
game and fourth In his. last three
games.
.
The Giants suffered their fifth :·
loss In six games.
MESA, Ariz. (tiPI) - Rick
Sutcilffe pitched five scoreless .. ,.
Innings and Darrln Jackson "
drove In Wade Rowdon with a . ··
seventh-inning single, giving the ·:..
Chicago Cubs a 1-0 victory over
the California Angels.
, ·.
Sutcliffe, who missed winning ,·,·.
the National League Cy Young c
Award by two votes last season, .. .:
has not allowed a run In eight , .;
innings this spring. The Cubs ·
have a 5-1 record.
Butch Wynegar had three hits -for the Angels. Kirk McCaskill
pitched three shutout Innings .
Reliever Donnie Moore too~ the
loss.

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(USPS ltli-ltlO) ,
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~Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Th.....y. M.ctt 10, 1988

· Th&amp;nday, March 10, 1988

Ohio State upsets No. 2 PUrdue, ·71-60
By United Press lotenallonal ' ally. I'm real proud of this
The real Impact of Ohio State's team ."
Purdue, which.saw l!s JQ.game
upset of No. 2 Purdue Wednesday
night should become ap(ll!rent winning streak snapped and fell
to 26·3 overall and 15·2 In the Big
Sunday.
Ten,
led 32-30 at halftime and for
Jerry Francis scored 12 of his
much
of the second half.
14 points In the second half to
another
Big Ten contest, No.
In
propel the Buckeyes to a 71·60
19
lll!nois
upset lOth-ranked
victor)' over the Boilermakers.
Michigan
85-74
at Champall{n,
NCAA tournament at-large bids
are .awarded on Sunday. Ohio ill. Ken Battle and Nick AnderState could be one of the 64 teams . son each scored 25 points to lead
in the field after this weekend's the Illin! to Its second major
victory in the last four days.
selections.
"Ohio Slate played a great llllnols upset No. 12 Iowa on
game," said Purdue Coach Gene Sunday.
TI!Inois' man-to-man defense
Keady. "They did what they had
held
Gary Grant, who entered the
to do to get in the NCAA. It was
game
averaging 23 points, to only
probably their emotion that won
8.
.
it for them."
"Look
at
the
teams
we've
In the Big Ten, Michigan,
Iowa , and Illinois, are almost beaten," Illlnl Coach Lou Henson
certain to receive bids. Indiana Is said. "And with a win Saturday
. fifth In the conference with a 9-7 night (against Northwestern) ,
mark and · 17-9 overall record. we should get a top 16 bld,(ln the
Ohio·State is 16-11 overall and 9-8 NCAA tournament)."
In other games, top-ranked
. In the Big Ten. The suckeyes
Temple
·earned an automatic
travel to Michigan on Saturday to
NCAA
berth
by beating Rhode
meet the Wolverines in a game
Island
68-63
in
the Atlantic 10
that could ultimately decide their
tourlljlment
championship;
NE
NCAA Tournament fate.
Louisiana
destroyed
Texas
Ar·
Curtis Wilson and John Ander·
llngton
78-63
and
North
Texas
son, two !Jirely used seniors,
played major:roles in the victory defeated McNeese State 82-61 in
over the Boilermakers, who the Southland Conference tourwrapped up the conference title nament semifinals; Cal State
with a triump~ over Michigan Fullerton defeated Fresno State
73-59 and San Jose State drubbed
last Saturday.
Wilson scored 12 points and Pacific 76-60 In opening round
Anderson added 6 points off the games in the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association tourna·
bench. ·
ment;
and Hawaii beat Air Force
"We wanted this to be · their
84·
76
in
the preliminary game of
greatest games," Ohio State
the
Western
Athletic Conference
Coach Gary Williams said of his
tournament.
seniors' performances. "We had
Elsewhere, Weber State
everything going for us emotion-

·. BURSON .MAGIC- Ohio State guard Jay Burson goes .under
Purdue's Troy Lewis ( 23) and Melvin McCants during the first half
ol. Wednesday night's Big Ten contest In St. John's Arena In
Columbus. The Buckeyes lopped Boilermakers 71·60. (UPI)

c

•

Montreal increases . win ·streak to nine

Indians Into the final of the
Southland Conference tourna- ·
ment against North T.elUIS. Tim
Duryea hit 4 technical foul free ·
throws in the middle of a 14-point ·
first half run to propel North ··
Texas into tonight's champion·
ship game. ·

stunned Nevada-Reno 96-93 in
overtime and Montana stopped
Northern Arizona 77· 72 In 'firstround games In the Big Sky
Conference tournament.
At Morgantown, W.Va., Mark
Macon, the Atlantic 10 Freshman
or the Year, scored 25 points and
Mike Vreeswyk added 17 to lead
Temple, 29·1, to its fifth straight
NCAA lli&gt;pearance ·and Its third
Atlantic 10 cluimplonshlp In the
last four years. Tom Garrick,
who was voted the tournament
MVP, led the Rams with 25
points. Rhode Island, 26-6, lell to
0·23 against the Owls.
At Denton, Texas, Michael
Saulsberry scored 19 points and
Alvin Jefferson had 14 to lead the

At Inglewood, Calif., Henry ,
Turner and Richard . Morton •
scored 26 points each to lead Cal
State Fullerton. Andre Sims
SC"ored 12 points for the Bulldogs, ,
who finished their season at 9-19.
Ricky Berry. scored 13 of his 36 1
points In a 23-7 Spartans burst ·
that carried San Jose State and
handed Pacific Its 22nd consecu- .
tlve loss .

MAC names
of year
. freshmen players
.
'

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -East- leader with 2.33 a game.
,
ern Michigan's Lorenzo Neely
Nissen was a near unanimous ',
and Central Michigan's Sue choice for the women's award . .
Nissen were named Wednesday She Is the only the third lreshmim ·
the Mid-American Conference to be selected first team All-MAC
Freshmen of the Year by ballot- in women's basketball.
Ing of the MAC News Media
She needs just five points In '
Association . .
Friday's tournam~nt semil!nals,
Neely Is a 5-foot -11 guard from to break the MAC freshman
Detroit and Nissen Is a 6-loot scoring record of488 points, set In
forward from Redford, Mich.
the 1982·83. season by Ohio's
Neely, who played a role in Caroline Mast.
leading Eastern to Its first MAC
Nissen Is a graduate of Divine
men 's basketball championship, Child High School and . was.
took over as the starting point runner up . In Michigan's Miss ,
gllard early In the season.
Basketball voting . .·
·
A graduate of Detroit Northern · She was fourth in the MAC In
hlgb School, Neely averaged 10.7 scoring with ail average of 17.3
points a game and ranks second points a game, and was second In
in the MAC with 4.6 assists.
rebounding with 9.9 a game.
He Is the conference's steal

..

·R io ranked
seventh in
field goal
percentage
As Rio Grande and Defiance
collide tonight In Lyne Center for
the District 22 championship,
both will be carrying national
standings into the contest.
In rankings released this week
by NAJA Communications in
Kansas City, Mo. , Rio Grande
ranks seventh in the nation in
team field go~! percentage. De·
flince is third In team free throw
percentage and 12th in rebound
percentage.
As of March 7, the Redmen
(now 27-7) had netted 1.116 of
2,149 attempt~ on field goals for
54.3 percent. Sharing the same
percentage are Biola (Calif.) ,
which has connected on l,Om ·of
1,846 tries and Mobile (Ala.),
which has sunk 925 of 1,702
attempts. up to that point , the
Redmen luid played 3.1 games,
including its first playoff round
against Urbana, and the other
two schools had been In 31
contests. The highest field goal
percentage among NAJA schools
is Spring Hlll (Ala.) at 56.2
percent (1,187-2,113).
Defiance (currentl y 23-6 ),
coached for the past 23 years by
Marv Hohenberger, put in 443 of
Its 5fi.1 tries at the foul line for 78.7
percent in 28 games, Including its
first playoff encounter with
Mount Vernon Nazarene. The
Yellow Jackets have recorded
1,004 rebounds compared to their
opponents' total of 7&amp;1 for 56.2
percent.
Tonight's game, beginning at
7:30, represents the third time
the Redmen have competed for a
shot at the NAJA Nationals under
Coach John Lawhorn, the 1962
Rio Grande alumnus who wa s
hired as the Redmen's mentor on
April 29, 1980. Lawhorn's record
at Rio Grande entering the game
is 204-68 earning him status as
,
'
one of the
NAJA's .winnlngest
coaches for the past five seasons .
On March 6, 1985 the Redmen
defeated Walsh 85-68 at Lyne
Center to enter the nationals, the
first time In 31 years a Rio
Grande time had competed on
the national level. Dan Curry
supplied 24 points and Greg
Verhoff added 21 for the win.
: At Crosby Kemper Arena on
March 13, the Redmen defeated
Berea (Ky.) 89-86, led by Jerry
Mowery with 18 points. Two days
rater, Rio Grande lost 84-68 to No .
f.seed West Virginia Wesleyan .
Qan Curry Ied the Redmen with
22 points. Rio Grande's overall
record was 31-5.
. The district championship
went to Fln&lt;llay the next season,
but on March 5, 1987 al Findlay,
ihe Redmen wrested the Iitle
away from the Oilers on a 91-84
victory that was .fueled by Joe
Verhoff's 32 points and Mike
Smith's 14. Paired off with No.
8-seed St. M{U'Y's of Texas on
March 12, the Redmen were
4e(eated 74-54, with Verhoff
scoring 16 points and Smith
adding 14. Rio Grande's record
ebded at 28·8.
, Tickets tor tonight's game are
$4 for ·adults, $2 lot students and
$2 for Rio Grande students with
ID.
•I

The Daily Sentinel-- Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1PERRY SCOREs- Temple forward Tim Perry (33) makes sure
this shot JOel In the basket as be gQeS past Rhode Island's Tom
Garrick (22) and dunks the ball In Wednesday night's A!lantlc·lO
totll'llamenl ebampio118hlp game In Morgantown, w.Va. The Owls
took the Atlantlc-10 champlouhfp by winDing 18-43. (UPI)

By United Press International
and the Oilers with 84.
The Montreal Canadlens are
Canadlens General Manager
threatening to end the regular Serge Savard has not discounted
season the way they began it: as the Oilers, ·but wondered if they
the best team In the NHL.
m ight have to change the.ir style
The Canadiens, wbo led the of play. 1
NHL standings most of the
campaign until a mldseason
"They 're missing (Paul) Cofslump, Increased their Winning fey on the power play, and they
streak to nine games Wednesday have to get \!sed to playing a
night with a 4·1 road rout of the different style," he said .
Edmonton Oilers. The victory "They're used to beating teams .
e nabled Montreal to maintain a 7-5 and 8-6. But I think they're
two:point lead over Calgary In still the team to beat In the
the league race.
· league."
Montreal struggled offensively
Elsewhere, Hartford edged
and lost five straight games In Los Angeles 5·4, Buffalo dumped
early February. Now, they 're Minnesota 6-2:, Chicago shaded
relying on defense to pull away Toronto 4·3 and Calgary tied
from their Adams Division ri- Winnipeg 6-6.
vals. The Canadlens, who !Up·
flopped the first two places In the
Whalers 5, Kings 4
division with Boston last month,
At Hartford, Conn., Ray Ferswelled their advantage to seven · raro scored twice, Including the ,
points over the Bruins .
game-winner, and Paul MaeDer·
"We played Well in our own end mid cpilected a goal al!d two
and capitalized on our chances,''
assists for the Whalers. Kevin
Said Montreal's Shane Corson,
Dineen and Dean .Evason also
who matched teammate Mike scored for Hartford. Paul FenMcPhee with a goal and assist.
ton, Jimmy· Carson, Luc Robi·
"We blocked the ·middle ice on
taille and Bernie Nicholls prothem and maybe they didn't
duced the Kings' goals.
make I he big play, but we did our
job and that's the main thing."
Sabres 6, North Stars %
Playing before a sellout crowd
At Bloomington, Minn., Phil
of 17,502, Including many voca,l Housley celebrated his 24th birthCanadlens fans, the Oilers scored day with his 28th and 29th goals of
first but seldom threatened the- · the season, sending the North
reafter. The Canadlens domi- Stars to their seventh straight .
nated defensively and capital- defeat. The losing streak is three
ized on scoring chances. ·
games short of the club record
The Oilers missed a c bailee to
set in 1975-76. Buffalo has won six
tie the Canadlens for first place. of Its last seven.
overall and gain on first-place
Blackhawk&amp; 4, Maple Leafs 3
Calgary In the Smythe Division.
At Chicago, defenseman Keith
The Canadlens, have 88 points,
Brown scored two thlrd· period
followed by the Flames with 86

RICHTER SLOWED DOWN- Washington Capital Greg Smith,
right, &amp;Iowa the progioess ol Vancouver's Dave Richter, lelt, In the
first period ol Wednesday night's NID.. contest. (UPI)

Arizona .
Pacific 10
favorite
..

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: ! "Just klndll ease up ana play
sbme of the guys on the bencn and
· r~st (the .starters) . It might give
·~m an advantage In the first fllund of the NCAA playoffs. Jt's
something for them to think
about."
course, that thought never .
occurred to Olson. The Wildcats
\VIII play to win It all, beginning
vtlth !heir opener Friday at 4
P.m. MST against the winner of
thursday . n.lght's first-round
gan\e between · USC and
· &lt;'1allfornla.
''It's Important to go Into the
tourname'nt and continue to play
well," Olson said. "Our shot (to
win the national championship)
Is the best since I've beeil here.
We're not about to stub pur toe

.PRICE

GUARANTEE

iOf

nl&gt;w-

• "Our guys are excited about
tills tournament . Frankly, we've
tten pointing to this and the .
f'iCAAs since the season started.
We weren't excited about win·
rJll1g the league title."
, After the Trojans, 7-20, meet
qaurornla, 8-19, at 7:30 p.m .• .
1\flzona State, 13-15, plays Washington, 9-18.
On Friday, Stanford, 19-10,
meets Oregon. 15-12, at 2 p.m.
llefore the Arizona contest. At 8
p.m., It's Oregon State, 18-9, vs.
tile winner ol ASu·Washlngton,
IOUowed by uCLA, 16·13, against
'1\'aahlngton State, 12·15.
.·
}Arizona won alii&amp; home games
ancl17 of 18 conference contests
tills year, losing only at Stanford.
The Cardinal and Todd Llchtl
cp11ld play the Wildcats In .Saturday's semifinal round.
.
:"It's real Important to think In
~ or two or three CPac-10
~~ In tbe NCAAs)," said
SUnford Coach Mike Montgo·
. ,, whole team can post Its
flnt 20-vletory -OD "' siDce
ltll-&amp;2 with a triumph owr

.

. easily. #21·1005

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· TUCSON,Ariz . (uPI) -South·
·e rn Cal Coach George Raveling
'suggests that for the benefit of
1 all, No: 3 Arizona take It easy on
the rest of.the conference in the
' Paclfic-10 Toltl'nament, which
begins Thursday nlghtatMcKale
. Center.
, The Arizona Wildcats, 28-2,
: have a berth In the NCAA
Tournament - and probably the
; ~o. ,1 seed.In the West Region;all ·sewn up. A loss here before
, ae!F red-clad . ·fans · would do '
: ~thing to change that.
•· But for Oregon State, UCLA or
' Stanlot'd, a toumament victory
' -'- or at least an appearance In
: Sunday's final - could earn a
spot in the, elite 64-team field.
·I : "II (Arizona Athletic Director
. Cedric Dempsey and Coach Lute
, Olson) are really as thoughtful as
· I think they are," Raveling said,
; ",they probably ought to talk to
the players about what's best for
: the conference.

gary's Hakan Loob scored his
40th goal of the season at 12: 53 of
the third period to forge the tie.
Winnipeg went 5 lor 8 on the
power play to become the first
NHL team to score 100, man·
advantage goals In a season .
Paul MacLean totaled lour goals
and an assist for Winnipeg.

goals, Including the gamewinner with 1:12 left, to lift the
Blackhawks a nd extend Toronto's losing streak to six games,
The Maple Leafs received goals
from Sean McKenna, Russ Court·
nail and Ken Yaremchuk.
Flames 6, Jets 6
t ''llnnlpeg, Manitoba, Cal·

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7DAYSAWEEK
1:00 1.m. to 8:00p.m.

S&amp;ontflotn
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to 5:00p.m. Sunday.

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•
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�\

- M.-ch 10. 1988 :·

Ohio

Nets continue success under
.
-·
new coach; Cavs post victory
l

By Ulllted Preu Jatenalloe•l
under new Coach Wlllls Reed.
the New Jersey Nets have served
notice they are to be taken
seriously.
Granted; Wednesday nliht's
97-93 victory came against the
Los Angeles Clippers, the worst
team In the NBA, but It was New
'Jersey •s fourth success In five
games since Reed took over. The
Nets rallied from a 20-polnt
deficit for tbelr third road victory
ot the season.
"It was a very Important game
for us." Reed said. ' 'Wewon'tget
to the playoffs, but we want the
rest of the year to be competitive.
I want my , coaching to be a
positive experience. Our coming
back wa!l a positive experience. ''
Jobn );!agley ·scored 24 points,
InclUding 10 In the final quarltlr,
and Otis Birdsong added 23 to
help rally New Jersey, which
trailed 61-4.1 at halftime.
"I bad a halftime talk," Reed

Tissue samples are
taken from body of
eager Don Redden

BIRD EXECUTES FAKE - Boston Celtic
forward Larry . Bird (S3), wearing protecllve
goggles, executes a lake on San Anlonio Spu~
forward Walter Berry as Bird makes his move to
the basket during Wednesday nlsht'sNBAcontest

In Boston Garden. Bird haa·toweartbe goggles for
at leut two weeks to protect his left eye, which
,was Injured Iii a game against the CavaH!!rs
Sunday. The Celtlcs slipped paslthe Spurs 119-118.
(UPI)
·

Wi l.liams wont' be upset iJ:/
Bucks J'ail to make playo·''s
'JJ •

Teams
wanted
TbeWorldSoftballAssociatlon

of Zanesville \viii hold Its second
annual World Series qualifier
1
tournament for the Memorial
Day weekend, which will run
Purdue, which shOt just .367 from May 28 untll May 30.
. By GENE CADDES
from
the field In the second hall,
UPI Sports Writer
The tournament will be played
was
even
worse from the · free ln Zanesville, at Riverside Park.
COLuMBuS Will Ohio
State's 71·60 win over No. 2 throw line, hitting just 6 of 14 for Awards will go to the top three
ranked Purdue Wednesday night the game. It was a string of five teams, wl th a car to be given to
earn the Buckeyes a spot In the consecutive misses In the second the MVP (providing that at least
half that allowed Ohio State to 60 teams enter) . The top 10 teams
NCAA Tournament field?
The ques.tion won't be ans· take over the lead.
will advance to the WSA World
Keady said he didn't feel the Series ·on the Labor Day weekend
· wei'ed until Sunday when the '
64-team field Is announced. It loss would hurt his team as It 'In Dayton.
may depend on how well . the prepares for Its run at the
The entry lee for this Class C
Buckeyes play against No . 10 national championship and may and D tournament Is $115 and two
Michigan Saturday at Ann even be a help.
softballs. For more Information,
"I think Indiana lost to Illinois contact Roger Clark In Zanes·
Arbor.
"I guess its possible," said and Purdue last year late In the ville at 1-454-6072, or write to him
Ohio State coach Gary Williams season," said Keady.
at 560 Amber Dr., Zanesville, OH
when asked about his team's
NCAA chances. " We did beat the ~===========~~!:!:!:::==
top four teams in the Big Ten, so
they have to look at us.
"How much that 'lleans,Idon't
know . Believe me, they (the
selection committee members)
have a difficult job. If they pick
us, It's the greatest thing in the
world for this team.lf they don' t,
we won't compiain. 1f we jlad lost
tonight. we would have had no
chance for the NCAA ."
Purdue, which already had
clinched the Big Ten champion·
sblp with an 80-67 win over
Michigan last Saturday, scored
only 13 points during the final
12: 21 of Wednesday night's ~arne
as Ohio State overcame a 47·42
deficit to run Its record to 16·11
overall and 9-8 in the conference.
"They did what t.hey had to do
to get probably Into \he NCAA
That'll what
Tournament ," said Purdue
the exciting
naw·Pr,~fe•tlit,nal rtcj:~~:: ~::.::.~~~
by SunTana.
coach Gene Keady . " It was
firm up ugglng
tighten your skin and
probably their emotion that was
lose Inches. Faot.
And you'll gat rasuita without muscle strain or fatigue. You'll
the dffference in the game.
even improve circulation and help rid your body of problem cellulThey've played extremely well
·
ite.
at home this year. You've got to
Each
workout
takao
leu
than
an
hour
eight minuteo on
hand it to them ."
each machine. And you won't have to shower, change clothes or
evan fix your makeup after your workout because the ProfallloEmotion. helped along by
nal Toning Syotem leave• you feeling refreshed. inotaad of need13,320 screaming Ohio Stale fans
Ing
to freshen up.
In St. John Arena, which is
becoming one of the tougher
places In the Big Ten to play .
Jerry Francis led ·Ohjo Stat e's
balanced scoring with 14 points,
12 of them In the second half.
The European Body Wrap is a New
Both Jay Burson · and Curtis
Wilson had 12. Grady Mateen 10, ·
Program To An Old Problem
Tony White 9 and Perry Carter 8.
John Anderson, one of the three
· At No Risk To The User.
Ohio State seniors playing their
IENEATS AND ADVANTAGES TO YOU:
final regular season game in St.
John Arena, came off the bench
•Noticeable differtrKe in one visit
to score 6 and bit a rare 15·foot
•Works for men &amp; women
jumper with 3:51 to play to put
the Buckeyes up 57-54.
•Treats unsightly cellulite · •No pUis or shots
"It pretty much turned the
•No exercise or perspirat;on •Not a water loss
game," Keady said of Ander-.
. •Not Saran Wrap and creams
son's only basket of the game.
TrOy Lewis led Purdue With 20
•1 00% safe and effective
points, but got only 2 the final
•Skin feels tighter, cleaner &amp; silky soft
12:57 of the contest. Melvin
McCants had 17 for the Boller·
•Great maint-nce program
makers, Including 10 of their last
AND lEST Of AU. ASUMMER AND TRIMMER
13.
LOOKING YOU IN ONE HOURI
Todd Mitchell, a Toledo, Ohio,
native, scored just 2 points, 14
below his average.
WE HAVE SPECIAL HOURS FOR COUPLES
"I kept pulling him out and told
Call for an Evening Appointment
him to 'relax, you dont have to
prove anything, you're a great .
player:" said Keady. " He bad an
off night. He probably wanted to
prove be could play his last garntl
In Ohio. It's one of those things
105 8UmiNII1' .
POMEIOY
that happens to you. Ji's too bad It
happened his last iame bere. "

BATON ROuGE. La. (t:PI) Tissue samples were tsken Wed:
nesday from the body of former
Louisiana State university basketb.ii.Jl, star Don Redden, who .
apparently died of . natural
causes a day earlier, a forensics
expert said.
"We're hoping to learn something from the tissue work
tomorrow," said Norris DeVIUe,
East Baton Rouge Parish deputy
coroner. "We're doing the tissue
now," at Earl K. Long Hospital.
Deputy coroner Chuck Smith
said · Tuesday "there were no
drugs Involved" In the death pf
Redden, 24, who Was found
unconsclqus about 7: 30 a.m. at
his girlfriend's apartment. He
was dead on arrival about 30
minutes later at Baton Rouge
General Medical Center.
"It a!Jpears to be a normal,
natural death," Smith said.
"There was no foul play Involved, no lllegal activity Involved In the death of Don
Redden."

said. "I never raised my voice. I
.told them that the first half was a
poor display of basketball. I told
them If we're going to lose
games, that's OK, as long as we
lose trying to do the things we're
trylni to do."
With the Nets trailing 83-79
wlih 6: 43 left, Bagley scored 9 of
the Nets next 13 polnts,lncluding
a 3-polnter. to put New Jersey
ahead 92-87 with 2: 39 remaining.
"Willis got on our back at the
half," Birdsong said. "We
showed a lot of character ln the
second half. WIUis bas a quality
that makes everyone on the team
feel like an Important part of the
teani. We felt like we bad a good
chance of w)nnlng. They had a tot
or key people out, .so we felt we
could win lt."
Benoit · Bepj'ainln led the
Clippers with 23 points and
Quintin Dalley contributed 19.
The Clippers had their highest
first-half scoring total of the
season despite playing without
three regulars because of Injury
and illness.
"In the second half, !hey Just
defensed the hell out or us,"
Clippers COach GeneShue said of
bls team, wblch held Its opponent
under 100 points for the 35th time
thiS season. •'Things that worked
In the first bait simply shut down
on us."
· '
In bther games, Detroit
downed Utah 103-98, Cleveland
clubbed Mllw11ukee 117-91, Washington whipped Phoenix 115-

lhurldly. Mlrcti 10, 1988

.,

NATIONAL WEATKER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·11-118 ,

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fOUl INDEPENDENT
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~SNOW
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Voinovich announces
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as Smith
a volunteer
fireman with
dtqY
Pqmeroy Fire Department, was
stmck by a vehicle driven by
P!trce.
be plaintiff claims that
Pl;rce was negligent In striking
Sf9lth In tba t he failed to
\
maintain a proper lookout and
•
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ME)I'S
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
MEN'S ARROW
clE;ar distance ahead, driving
within the block where .fire
apP.ratus was stopped.
FOR !PIING AND SUMIIII
AU
Colors ewy, !hart' .... SleHt
:!'he plaintiff further alleges
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that as a direct result ofdbe
REDUCED
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MEN'S
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DRESS &amp; CASUAL
betn flied against Malcolm W.
Leftt2 M.D., GalllpoUa, and Hille·
REDUC:ED
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rest Surgical Clinic Inc., In care
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'he plaintiff alleges In this
matter that the medl~al care
prgvlclers were negligent In the
methods which they used to try
By,Tuxedo
ana repair her busbaild's lnjllrle!i. A monetsry Judgment ls
being requested ,for the pain,
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reilulting from the alleged negH·
LADIES
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lADIES lEVI
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tncll!ded In the complaint.
Au.
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In ~th suits.
Sw~alln &amp; Slllrts
In other court matters, a
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AU LADIES
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A JudiJIII!Dl of 13,301.11 baa
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I

Industry.
Matsushita Electronics· Is a
joint venture between Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd.
of Osaka, Japan, which ()wns 65
!lercent,' and N.V. Philips of the
Netherlands, which owns 35 .
percent.
"Matsushita Electric's decision to locate ln Ohio reinforces
the fact that we bave an economic cUmate conducive to Jap·
anese Investment," Leonard
said. "I am confident that
. Matsushita, Ohio's 94th J apanese compa1;1y, will qul~kly
prosper and grow ln 'l)"oy."
· Matsushita Electronics produces CRTs, Image pickup tubes.
plasma displays, semiconductors, magnetrons, fluorescent
lamps and other lamps.
The company bas been promotIng local production as a cornerstone of Its corporate policy of
manufacturing products where
they are purchased.
·The new factory Is Matsushita's eighth In North America and
one of 64 manufacturing operation~ In 28 countries around the
.world.
Matsushita Electric ls one of
the world's largest consumer
electronics companies, with projected 1987 annual revenues of
more than $36 blllon. It manufactures under several brand
names, Including National. Panasonlc, Quasar and Technics .

Specials For The Month of March

Amount In IRA At Age 65
Assuming An.Average Yield 0/8.25%

$50

suits

•

FROM
SWISHER
LOHSE

Matsushita to build plant

fbed"
" by

'

IN

BEGINNING
AT AGE 25

as a winter storm bit the We$!,
Winter storms watches coBobby Blowers. 14. was briefly
promptll)i weather .officials to vered northeast Colorado, east- trapped unde( a 35-fbot elm tree
post storm watches and snow and ern Wyomhig and western parts near his home. A companion,
wind advisories. froin California of South Dakota and Nebraska.
Thomas Vance, 17, helped free
to South Dakota.
Winds picked up to 58 mph ln Blowers, who was taken to
A cold front moving through J he southwes~m t:tah city of St. · University Medical Center for
Soutll Cealral Ohio
.
the Southwest triggered the George, with brief heavy snow treatment of cuts on hls back and
Becomlni partly cloudyy tbls storm system, kicking up winds falling ln the area. Two Inches of legs.
afternoo11, wltb highs In the low up to 70 mph In Nevada and snow fell at nearby Cedar Cl \yIn
Authorities also reported a
50s. Clearing tonight, with a low unleashing 2 Inches of snow In a two-hour period Wednesday trailer and some parked cars
near 30. Sonny Friday. with highs two hours In utah, the National night.
·
were damaged In the flurry ()f
between 60 and 65.
Weather $ervlce said.
High winds slammed Into Las winds. Gusts or 50 mph to 60 mph.
· The probability of precipitaForecaster Lyle Alexander Vegas and the surrounding area battered the area, with a 70 m'pb
tion Is near zero through Friday. said snow will extend today from ln southern Nevada Wednesday . gust ln the northern part ·ot Las .
Winds will be from the north at northern Arizona Into Utah and knocking down power lines and Vegas Vall e y Wednesday
10 mph or less today and light and acrDI!s the northern and central trees. A wind advisory was In afternoon.
variable tonight.
Rockies to the northern high effect for the area today.
Exteaded Forec-.1
Plains .
Saturday lhrou1h Monday
Two Inches of snow fell at West r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;~;!!!!!!!~~;~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;
Rain likely Saturday and Sun- Yellowstone, Mont,, In a six-hour
day, possibly mixed with snow In period ending late Wednesday
the northern part of the state on night.
SundliY. Cloudy Monday. Highs
Snow advisories were In effect
mostly will In the 50s Saturday todllY for the mountains of Utah
•
~nd ranging from the mld 30s to
and southwest Wyoming. •
the mid 40s Sunday and Monday.
A heavy snow warning Will be
Overnight lows will range . .from
In effect through today In the
the mid 30s to the mid 40s early · mountains of Colorado, where
Saturday, ln the 30s Sunday possibly• more than a foot may
morning and In the 20s early fall, Alexand41r said.
Monday.

TRoY. oblo &lt;uPI&gt; - The
Japanese giant Matsushita ElecCOLti1\ofBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ironies Corp: has formed a U.S.
Tackling a favorite campaign
gram "a sacred trust between subsidiary and will build a plant
·Issue of Democratic Incumbent
workers, retirees
and
"VI
lh their
ld ·go.. . toprod 11ceupto 1 ,mllllon
0
nov c sa puu- . television picture tubes annuHoward -Metzenbaum of Oblo, . vernment, '
Republlcan senatorial candidate · Uc opiniOn polls show confidence ally, the company announced
George v. Volnovlch Wednesday In the system Is plummeting.
. Wednesday.
proposed a five-point plan· to
He said his plan would lower
The new subsidiary, American
remove politics from the Social barriers blocking senior citizens Matsushita Electronics Corp.,
Security system.
from ' earning supplemental In- wiD be headquartered In Troy.
Results of a poll announced this come, prevent raids on the Social Construction on the $160 million
week by the University of Akron Security trust fund and ·protect plant Is to stsrt this year, with
' show Volnovlcb tralllng Metzen.
benefits for the, elderly.
production to begin In sprjng
baum 67.5 percent to 32.5 percent
At the top of the Volnovlcb 1989, company executives said.
among Ohioans 65-75 years old Social Security agenda Is a
The plant, wblcb will produce
and 60 percent to 40 percent proposal to take the system out 29-lncb and 33-lnch screens for
among ·those 55-65 and 75 and from under the wing of the televisions and monitors. will be
older.
· Department 01 Health and Hu- 440,000 square feet and eventuBut Volnovlch said be was man Services and have It admln· ally employ nearly 400 people. ·
. making the proposal In respon!ie lstered by a tbree-memherpOlltl- .
A land purchase signing ceto Federal Reserve Board Cbalr· · · cally Independent, blpartls;ln remony at .City Hall was followed
man Alan Greenspan's call last board.
.
by a news confe~ence with
Board members would be Matsushita ·executives Fumio
week for cuts In Social Security
andotberentltlementprograms. nominated by the president for ' Kanazawa and Yasublko YamaThe Cleveland mayor told a stagge_red six-year terms and gucbi,Lt.Gov.Pau!Leonardand
news conference be did not want face confirmation by the Senate. Troy Mayor Doug Campbell.
to get Into Met3enbaum's record
"Under my proposal, Social ,
"Tbts Is the biggest single
on Social Security and said the Security would not be an Issue In investment Matsushita has ever
senator perhaps might even the 1990 elections," he said,
made In a manufacturing operasupport his plan.
t
Volnovlcb said be also would tion In this country," Kanazawa
Calllng the retirement pro- retain benefit levels and payroll said. "The Troy plant wlll
tax rates promised ln the 1983 become a very Important source
Social Security amendments, not of CRTs, servlni the new and
Increase \he current tax rate·on . ; growing market needs for larger
Social Security benefits and.stop
penalizing retirees ,wll!l want to ·' ~reen size color TVs ·
i
remain In the worktorce.', ·
.' "We expect It will eventually
The final point of the voinovlcb be able to supply other U.S. color
1 · ll f
1 1 tl
Soc! 1 TV manufacturers to help depan ca s or 80 a ng
a
velop- the entire U.S. color TV
Security funds from the main
federal budget.
'.'As the nation's concern about
the
federal deficit has Increased,
.•
the Social· Security ·surplus has . . CLEVELAND (iiPI) -There
~utb A. Smith, Pomeroy, lndl·
been used to conceal the exact
was no winner of the top prize In
vldually and as guardian of her gap between revenues anii ex- Oblo'sSuperLottodrawlngWedhusband, Homer Smith Sr .. bas pendltures," said Volnovlch.
nesday night, Increasing to the
filed suit In Meigs County Com"This ls a shell game being. Jackpot to $9 million for Saturmon Pleas Court for $500,000 played with precious dollars and day's. game.
from James E. Pierce, Rowl' should end."
No player picked the six
RQed, Racine. The suit stems
The candidate said he would winning numbers of 14, 15,16, 30,
from a September 1986 Incident have prepared within 60·90 days 41 and 42, a lottery commission ·
ln lSallsbury Township In which
his own comprehensive proposal spokesman said today. Wednes-

.

MONTHLY BEGINNING
INVESTMENT AT AGE 35

ft

(

~oney

'

N ":{ ' lRAIN
~SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Sta!ic
Occ'~d~d

WEATHER MAP- Snow will exten4 from northern Arizona !Uid
utah acrou the nortllen and central Rocklealo the northern hlch
Plains. Seattered rain or snow wiD reach lnlo eutern portions of
the Dako1aa and parts of Minnesota. A few flurries wiD OCI)ur over
northern Mahle. Rain showers wiU reach from I he mid· Ati!UIIIc
. litatee IICI'OM the CaroUnu to Georgia. Thunderstonns wiD extend
over eotdhern F1orlcla.
·

•

"HOW/l'O
RETIRE .ON
$50AMONTH.

.W inter stor·nts move through Southwest
Weather

r;:::::::======~~~

INSURANCE
111 Second . Pomeroy

.

B;l' Ual&amp;e4 Preu International .
Fierce winds toppled trees and
d.owned power lines ln Las Vegas

111 Boston nipped San Antonio, .
119~118, thb LA Lakers stopped~
New York 104-99, and Seattle
slapped Sacra men to 106-97.
Bullels·ll5, Suns 111
.
At Landover, Md,. M&lt;ises Ma-'
lone scored 24 points and Bernard King added 21 to lift the
Bullets to their sev~ntb stralibt
victory and band Phoenix Its
seventh consecutive defeat. The
Bullets winning streak Is their
longest since 1984. Tbey bave n6t
won eight straight since 1983.
~
CelUcs 119, Spurs 118
At Boston, Larry Bird, playing
with goggles to protect a badly
bruised left eye, scored 36 points ·
and Dennis Johnson added 16,
·Including:a pair of game-wi'nnlng ,
free throws. Tlie triumph was!
Boston's l18th straJiht over the~
Spurs, who have 'not beaten the
celtlcs since Jan. 5, 19110.
.

DOWNING CHILDS·
MUUEN MUSSEl

The Daily Sentinei-Paga-7

Pomarov-Middleport, Ohio

If you want lo relie on more than S&lt;ICial sectlify,the chart above shows how much monthly·
contributions to an IRA can mean to you at retirement.
Under lhe new lax law, lhe average family is Slil eligible ~ deduct every dolar contributed from lis

arrent Income lax.IJp ~ $2,000 per wage earner, per year, I( 'ffMX family income is $40,000 or less
($25,000 wsingle). Regatdless of 'ffMX income, you pay no laXes on lhe Interest you earn unlil you
actualy uselhe fundi.
Have lroOOI&amp; saq? Alii. usllllcQ direct lleposit from your Peoples Bank ~ account! The
,SOQner your IRA 8l8rts ~·~sooner )'OU can stop!

LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

,. s.n.

...
"
"·

THE DEADLINE FOR 1187 TAX YEAR CONTRIBUTIONS IS APRIL 15, 1988

. mit,.,.,

SWEATERS
mus

•.-.. 20%

lf2

BLOUSES
..-..400fo

u.s

PEOPlES BANK
Mason
n.3-55t4

Point Pleasant
675-1121

New Haven
882·2135
'
Member F.D.I.C.

"•

J' '

.•

...

-xr

'lOPS

DIESSED

Benclover
Sportswear

SUifS &amp;

lWEI$

1/2 ,_,

.. Bll lead

Tile plallltltr II to pay

eOlltt ....

il

'.

.

I
I•

Umit 6

NOW

.3/89('

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY
EXPIRES 3·14·88

CLIP COUPONS AND SAVEl
r.,1" , I

(

1f'J

f "r

I.·I.
,. I''
r
1 "Jt

•

t ....... MoC-Ii.....
......... Hlltlftlo fl.Ptt. - ··"'·
Moft. ttw lit. 1:00 A.M. to I P.M.
lund~\! tO:OOA..M. to 4:00P.M.
MIIIICIUPTIONI
PH. 01·21111
;
·
Pn.ndly ltnriat
1. Mlill
l'onwov. 011.
01*' IIIJIIU ttl t

•
diu ,..., wu tile cue of
. . . l'ltriMn Eullalllt ...

apiiilt'IUIIftltll. .

REG. 45c

20'/o

._,1/t ... .... 30°/o

lbl •

CADBURY CREME EGGS

..

COUPONS
..
EIPIIES .
MilCH 14,
.1911

_____... .
•.

.

.. .

•

�Pllga 8

Meigs County Court news
' cases were processed . Cobb, Sy.1cuse, $22 and costs,
Sixteen
In the Meigs County Court of
Judge Patrick O'Brien
Wednesday:
Forfeiting bonds were C. Scott
Manning, Orient, speeding, $75,
and no seat belt, $40; Thomas
Pettit, Huntington; W. Va., $55;
Sharon Goble, VInton, $55;
Emma Fultz, Gallipolis, $55, ali
on speeding charges; Teresa
Scoville, Athens, !allure' to dis·
play valid registration, S35;
Shawn Stobart, Racine, stop
·
sign. $50.
Fined on speeding charges
were Roger FIMearty. Athens,
$22 and costs; Lora Swiger,
Syracuse, $25 and costs; Mary A.
McKinley, MlddleJ?Ort, $20 and
costs; William Crites, Parkersburg, W. Va.,$26andcosts; Held!

Others fined included Dean J .
HlU, Racine, failure to control.
$10 and costs; Richard Laney,
Columbus, driving while lntoxl·
cated, $250 and costs, 10 days In
jail and one year license suspen·
slon; no operator's license, $75
and costs and 10 days In jail;
speeding, $24 and costs; Anna
Williamson, Pomeroy. following
too closely, $30 11nd costs; Jerry
urlbe, Pomeroy, disorderly con·
due\_. costs only; no operator's
license, $75 and costs, $25 suspended; given 14 days to provide
valid Ohio license; unsafe vehl·
cle, $10 and costs; Deborah Aker,
Gallipolis, driving under suspen·
sion, $75 and c.osts, five days In
jail, jail time suspended, one
year probation,

Local news briefs....cont.lnued from page 1
than five· · miles west of 'Ree&lt;lsvllle, according to the
GalUa-Melgs J;'ost of the State Highway Patrol. ·
Ida L. Wolfe, 38, was·cited for making an Improper turn when
her 1970 Dodge station wagon was hit by a .1985 GMC truck
driven by Mark J. Mumford, 24, of Roseville.
The truck, owned by Roseviile Motor Express of Roseville, •
was traveling east when upon negotiating a right-hand curve,
Mumford saw Wolfe making a turn In the r(l8d. Mumford could
. not stop In time to avoid hitting Wolfe's station wagon.

]OneS UpSet With.
to apply for the funding which
must be approved bY the Ohio
Department of Development.
The residents asked County
Engineer Philip Roberts if for
safety purposes, he could Install
a hidden drive sign on Hobson
Drive to alert motorists of the
turn off to Shady Cove Road.
Roberts said he would Install the
sign, and possibly make other .
'
signing changes.
Roberts also told the residents
·that he would have highway
departll!ent .employees cut the
steel cable which Is strung across
Leading Creek which borders
Shady Cove Road. During flood·
lng, if emergency personnel were
needed, the cable would prevent
boats from reaching Shady Cove
residents. The cable Is part of a
swinging bridge that once
spanned the creek.
· A meeting with a representa·
live of the u.S. Army Corps of
Engineers to discuss the flooding
problems on Shady Cove Road
was held fi!arller this week,
Roberts reported. The Corps'
representative took pictures and
measurements of the water level
·or Leading Creek to determine
how much of a factor the rising
and lowering of the Galllpolls
Locks plays in the Shady Cove

Contlnuedtrompatel

flOoding. The Corps' represents·
live is expected to get back with ..
Roberta as soon as possible.
Also meeting with the commla·
stoners were Sidney Edwards
and David Gloeckner, of the
Gallla-Melgs Community Action
Agency, to discuss the progress
of the Job Training Partnership
Act program In Meigs County.

Immediately and 1 further demand a wrl tten apology from the
'(lfOUp)," the letter said. "If my
demands are not met Immediately, steps will be taken to
protect the reputation of my
client and the (group) and
Individuals responsible will face
legal action."
·
But Richard Moore, chairman
of the committee, said the group
will not withdraw the pamphlet.
. Shade bldlf4l &amp;o niee&amp;
' "We think this is nothing more
A regular meeting of Shade than an outright attempt to shut
River Masontc'Lodge will be held us up and keep us from exercts··
at 7: 30 this e'(enlng. Refresh· lng our First Amendment
· ments will be ~rved.
rights," he said. "We stand bY
Final slgnup
the facts asserted In thiS pam·
Filial slgnup for the Middleport phlet and we do not apologize.
Youth League will be held from 2
"We think It is highly tnconslst·
to 5 p.m. Saturday at Middleport ent for Chambers to publicly
VIllage Hall. Youngsters who advance Its own arguments and
have never played ball before are attempt to silence those who
required to supply a copy of their disagree with them."
birth certificates.
Brown silld there were a
number of other Items in the
Tag d8y Saturday
pamphlet that were f!llse and
T~~g Day for tile Eastern Boys' · added, ''Any debates that one .
Varsity Baseball .Team will' be wants· to be In Is fine with
thls Saturday, according to Scott (Chambers), but Jet's keep It
Wolfe, coach. Team members above the level of truth."
He said Chambers', which
will be tagging throughout the
operates
landfUJs In six states, Is
area and can be Identified by
their team jerseys and baseball proposing to build a 70-acre
caps. All donations wlU be landfill on an 1,800-acre site.
•'There would be a huge buffer
appreciated Wolfe said.

:rone around the till," he said.
"It's a perfect spot for a landfUJ,
with lots of clay. It's (astrlpmtne •
that was) abandoned before 1972, •
before tbe laws required (mine
operators) to reclaim the land, so
It's pretty pockmarked and In •
pretty bad shape.

..

••

Stocks

Announcements

Dally stock prices
(As of 11:38 a.m.)
Bryce and' Mark Smith
of Blunt Elllll 6 Loewl
Am Electric Power ...... ....... 27%
AT&amp;T ..... ...... .... ..................
Ashland 011 ...................... ..65%
Bob Evans ... ....................... 17%
Charming Shoppes ..............13%
City Holding Co ....., ............. 34
Federal Mogui ................... AO%
Gopdyear T&amp;R .............. :..... 61
H~k's Inc . ................... .. ..... 1)1
Key Centurion ....... :............40% ·
L!lnds • End ....................'..... 20%
Limited Inc .... .............. ...... 20%
Multimedia Inc ...................60%
Rax Restaurants ....................4 •
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 8%'
Shoney's Inc ....................... 24% :
Wendy's InU ................. , ...... 7%- ;
Worthington Ind .................. 21%

28*

EMS has nine calls Wednesday
Meigs County I!:mergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Wednesday; Tuppers Plains at 1: 17 a.m. to RoUte 248 for Dorsel
Miller to Camden-Clark MemortaiHbspltal; Middleport at 9:06 ·
a.m. to North Second Ave. for Keith McCarty to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plalits at l1: 02 a.m. to Route 7 for
Rod Newsome who was treated but not transported; . Racine ai
11:48 a.m. to County Road 35 for Roger Powell to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 1:20 p.m. to Dewhurst Lane for
Audrey Patterson to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 2:39
p.m. to Route 692 for Louise Burbridge to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 3:23p.m. to Dye Road tor LucUJe Lambert
to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 3:58p.m. to Romine Road
for Tom Mozingo to Veterans Me"\orlal Hospital; Pomeroy at
10:48 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Alfred Farley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

Aptus...

Divorces sought

Hospital news

. PoUee IWU'd parking meters:
his naine," said Elmer Gnau, a
:GALVESTON, Texas (uP!)-'- A
ti d t 1 d dl
ke
h'
.sus,.,....t
In the theft of the master lives
re rein La
ooGrange,
an
eKy.,
ma and
r w
fl
.-~
was
key to Galveston's city parking vacationing in south Florida. ' II
meters was at large, and pollee knew tf he said Kenneth he would
guarded the meters closely to be my cousin. Not many peopfu
l
:prevent more coin boxes from are named Gnau."
·being stolen.
The last time Elmer and and
The key apparently was taken Kenneth Gnau saw each other,
In a Feb. 29 break-In at the
they were children tn Loulsvllll!,
Galveston Tra!flc Department . Ky. Elmer .was-13 and Kenneth,
m11ln oftlces. Coin boxes from 95 who now lives in Margate, was fl.
:of the city's 1,000 parking meters
Elmer is now 73 and his cousin Is . ·
63. •· ·
;
. -diSappeared before pollee ar·
:rested two suspects March 3 In
"I never thought I would have
ihe burglary.
recognized him,'' Kenneth Gnatl·
· Pollee Wednesday were look· said ofTuesday'schanceencouplng for a third suspect and the ter. "But I looked up, and my
:master key'. •City Traffic Man· stomach came right up to niy
.-ager Joe Nadon, meanwhile, is throat. He has the face of my
awaiting delivery of new locks father. I almost cried."
·
·and keys for au the meters In
The men's fathers were
:town. Tile new locks may be brothers.
,
'
'nstalled by the end of the week,
Elmer Gitau went to tile
Nadon said.
, radiology department of HCA
: The two suspects already be- · university Hospital in Tam11rac
·,hind bars were arrested after for an X-ray. He had been sl~k ·
·pollee received 'oi(Ord the lnen · .. with pneumonia a month ago arld
were buying wine and marijuana . his lungs were stlll congested.
Kenneth Gnau was waiting to
.and counting out stacks of small
.change to pay their bills, pollee
haveanX-raytakenofashould~r
.said.
injury.
,
Investigators said the suspect
Elmer Gnau's granddaughter
who remains at large is a former
Teresa, 25, said her family knew
:traffic department employee.
that Kenneth Gnau lived In south
:
' ·
Florida but had been unable to
· Coubul meet In doc's waiUng . find him.
:room after 80 year~: TAMARAC.
'
•
I
:Fla. (uPI) - Two cousins who
Armo.-ed truck Jose~~ SIIOO,OOO:
•hadn:t seen eachothertn60years
.SAN
FRA-NCISCO (t..PI) .r
:were reunited In a doctor's
Passers-by
told Louis Lopez npt
·waiting room when a n·u rse
to
race
off
with
money bags thp.t
:called out the name "Gnau" and
.
fell
out
the
back
of an armored
they both stood up.
truck,
but
the
Daly
City man just
"I looked at him and asked him

ssoo

Former Pomeroy resident, AI·
bert (Tom) Young, 78, of Nelson·
ville. died Wednesday.
Mr. Young was a coal mtrer,
born and raised In Pomeroy, and
the son of the !ale Henry S. and
Clara Lehew Young.
Survivors Include his wife,
-~---·

Martha; children, Tommy, Dou- '
glas, Tony, Don and Elizabeth,
all of Nelsonville: sisters. Vlrgl·
nla Will, Faye Will and Betty
Butcher, all of Pomeroy; nieces,
Susie Soulsby of Pomeroy and
Mary Rawlins of Dayton; and a
nephew, Jed Wlll Jr. of
Kentucky.
Memorial services are to be
announced later.

'

.

,,

couldn't resist the temptation _
to haul the cash to Loomls
Armored Inc.
·
At least $500,000 could not be
accounted for among the est!·
mated $1.7 million that spilled ··
onto the street Tuesday, pollee
said Wednesday ..
Witnesses told officers that
three motorists stopped and
grabbed money bags while at
least one pedestrian helped ,
himself.
Sgt. William Herndon said the
unidentified Loomis truck driver
was unaware the back door had
opened and drove 2 % blocks
before a honking motorist
alerted him about the cash
spilling out of the vehicle.
Herndon said the cash had
been picked up at 20 banks and
the driver was heading back to
the Loomis headquarters when
the unlatched door swung open.
One of those who picked up
bags of cash was the driver of a
white pickup truck, the sergeant
said. ·
'.'People told him not to take the
money." Herndon said, "but he
kept tossing the bags Into his
truck.
But Louis Lopez did not sue·
cumb to temptation .
Lopez: · picked up two bundles
containing $40,100 in total and
drove straight to the Loomis
offices with them. pollee said.
Pollee said the three people
who made off with money would
face felony grand theft charges' II
arrested. 'They also said late
Wednesday tliat they had no
suspects :
·

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn.
(L'PI) - A laser. has been used
for the first time to vaporize
plaque blocking a human heart
artery without surgery, hospital
officials said Wednesday.
The one-hour experimental
procedure was conducted under
local anaesthetic on the right
coronary artery of Janis Konze, ·
38, Chaska. Tuesday by Metho·
dlst Hospital cardiologist Leonard Nordstrom. The woman
was being released from the
hospll!ll Wednesday.
"It Is a new alternative.to other
treatments of blood vessel dis·
ease such as angloplasty, drug
treatments and bypasses," said
hospital spokesman Jim Bayer. Bayer said the laser was used
with· a catheter and fiber optics
alopg with angloplasty, In which
a balloon Is Inflated in the
clogged artery to help open ll.

"There has been some use of
lasers In the heart In open heart
surgery but this Is the first time It •
has been used In•this particular
situation and with this system,
Bayer said .
"The laser Is used to first to
open the plaque, to make an
opening, and the balloon Is then
threaded into position to open it
wider.''
Bayer said doctors had no
projections for the number of
heart patients the procedure
may benefit in the future but
called It a step forward In
non·S\lrglcal treatment of coro·
nary artery blockages.
"It won't replace bypass
surgery necessarily," he said.
"It is an alternative to those
tliings for people who can be
helped by it."
Doctors at Methodist Hospital
used a system designed and
manufactured by GV Medical .

Inc. of MinneapOlis. The system
has been used In more than 130
cases on leg arteries since May
1986. It Is In use at 17 sites In the
u nited States and other
countries .
Last August, the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration authorized
GV Medical's system for use In
heart cases . Since November,
four other cases had been sche·
duled to be done wltli the laser
but for cllnlcal or technical
reaspns conventional balloon an·
gloplasty was used Instead.
James Grabek, president of
GV Medical, cautioned that the .
Initial use Is only the start of a
long investigative process.
"utmost in our mind Is the
safety of the patient, malnta!nlng
the integrity of the technology
and the protection of our share·
holders' Investment," Grabek
said.

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'

JEEP GRAND
WAGONEER

1988 FESTIVA LX

SALE!

'1988 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

'·'

$299

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Beauty and supertl comfort . With
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FOR MORE INFORMATION,
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·

~--------~------------------- - - ~-- ----------1

I PLEASE RUSH ME CENTRALINE INFORMATION .FOR A

I LI,MITED TIME ONLVI

'

Stock t-Jo. 8511 ·

Stock No. 8524

Slicker Pdce

Sale Price $6950. 9. 75% A. P.R.
For 66 Months. Tax, Title u.

cenae, Feea Excluded.

_$26,032.

SALE PRICE

~2,375. .

$

SAVE

3'675..

Price in effect thru 'Monday. March 14, 1988

No De~ler Participation To Affect Consumer Costs

SALEI

$299

&lt;a.&gt; Transitional

Recllna-Rocker" Recliner
A aoft. ca&amp;ulllook. Featuring a
tapered beck. pillOW arms ar'ld
deeQ, plush seet cush•on•na.

250 New Cars &amp; Trucks Available
fl'llllllwtry

""'"".....
0,.
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SALEI $399

(c.&gt; Contemporary .

Recline-Rocker"' Recliner
Sleek and streamlined. With a

hint of contouring. Channel ·
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I

NAME .......... ,........................................................

I

I
I

: ADDRESS.............................................................
I
I
I

I

I
I

I

Area deaths
Albert Youilg

new~.--:"""_ ______. Laser used to unblock heart artery

'

Continued from page 1

Riddle, the chamber made anan- answer," but simply one pan of
gements, per the group's request. to what will be a long process.
Nancy Anderson of MACE
have representatives from several
organizations in kansas available ~lieves the trip is a'waste ·of time:
to answer further questions at ses·
Why. go look at a PCB-buming
sions in a downtown Coffeyville . plant if they (Aptus) are not going
meeting room that aflemoon. As of · to b1D11 PCBs here?" she asked
Wednesday afternoon arrangements "It's like comparing ~~pples to oran:
included preSentations by a ges."
representive of the local •board of
Datko said the open-door offer is
education, the federal Environmen· a standing one for Aptus. "We
tal Protection Agency, the Kansas -made the same offer in Utah (where
Department of Health and En· a similar facility is planned). The
vironment, the local fire depart·
folks paid for the trip themselves.
ment. the hospital including emer- Datko was surprised there is
gency medical · personnel, a criticism of the trip.
· "How can anyone criticize the
representative of the Coffeyville
Journal, and a local realtor. The intent to gather infonnation and
chamber made some of the Kansas facts?" He was asked how he
contacts and members of the group viewed the possible conflict of interest of the newspayer attending
mad~ others. The Point Pleasant
Register contacted the Coffeyville . and Aptus paying for it. "I think
that's a judgment the newspaper
Journal, a Gannett newspaper.
The entourage will be flown · has to make."
William Childress, executive
back to Huntington Friday night.
"I don't expect anyo11e to come director _of the West Virginia Press
back saying anything difterent than Assocl8bOn . d1d not view the
they did before, but IIIey will have newspaper's attendance as a blatant
more information when they say conflict of interest "No, it is done
it," Riddle observed. Asked about quite often," he said of the trip.
local feedback about the trip, he "Some newspapers will reimburse
replied. "I've had more calls from the company for expenses." He said
reporters than anyone else." Infor- the question comes down to profesmation about the trip has llppe8fed sional conduct "You can be bought
in Charleston and Huntington for a cup of coffee."
The executive director said
newspapers and in the Register.
Riddle, in an hour-long meeting "You owe it to the readers to lcno~
this wee!c with the group, said, "Do you (the newspaper) went at the
not be afraid to ask a question. expense of the company."
Gather as m~h infonnatlon as you
Pam Ramsey, bureau· chief for
can." He added Wednesday after· United Press Intellllitional in West
noon that the chamber does not Virginia viewed the newspaper's atview the trip as "the definitive tending the trip on Aptus' tab as a
conflict of interest when contacted
by the newspaper Wednesday after.
noon.
A divorce act ion has been filed
"Personally, I would consider it a
in Meigs County Common Pleas conflict of interest," Ramsey said.
Court by Harold J. Wlll, Pome- "There is the pen:eption that it is a
roy , against Patricia Kay Wlll . conflict of interest," she said, adMason, W.Va.
ding, "It's a lobbying attempt by
, Dissolutions ot marriage have the company to convince people in
been reque~ted by Shirley A. Mason County that what they (ApDurst, Syracuse, and Ralph L. tus) have is a good idea. Personally
Durst , Racine; Brenda K. if there . are any govemment
Hickel, Middleport, and Ben - offic~als ~ing .on !he tril'• I would
jamin Paul Hickel, Pomeroy; cons1der 11 a confl1ct of mterest. If
Deborah S. Wolfe, Middleport, tax 1 dollars were being spent, I
and Michael P . Wolfe, Calvert would call it a junket."
City, Ky .
A divorce has been granted to
each party in the case of Judy
Ann Jewell against Pearlle F .
Jewell, and the plaintiff has been
Veterans Memorial
restored by the court to her
former name Judy Ann Denny.
Wednesday Admissions
Dissolutions have been
Keith
McCarty, Middleport;
granted Ginger Pratt and CrenJeremy
Watson, Pomeroy; Conson Pratt; David Powell and Eva
nie
Smith,
Pomeroy.
Lee Powell; Tracey A. Lewis and
Discharges- Wal·
Wednesday
Gregory N. Lewis. Tracey Lewis
ter
Bentz,
Harold
Darst. Alba
was restored to her former name
Yost, Candace Harrison.
Colley.

-Quirks in the

f•ll ••• ~=.;.:,:.:___:....:.....-continued from page 1 ·
A n t t-~ lan dr'.1.,

Th8 Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Tm.nday, March 10, 1988

Thlndey. M.-ch 10. 1988

Ttle Deily Santinel

Cl TV" •••••.•••••.••••••••••.••••••••••••••
.
STATE ........41 ZIP.........

II
II

L-----------~-------------------------------J

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·
.-..- Tlw Bank That Makes ThinD'fl Haptnen
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.

•

M"POIIS.._ orno. -Mini lei*

Jnd Aw.

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341 ._, .. _

...~r·

MEMBER FDIC ·

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'

.

IIIPm,-.
17 No: • 2M Aw.

1121111

�..
March

Lisa Gay Starcher, a student at
Wahama Junior High School has
been named a United States
National Award winner In band
by the United States Achievement Academy.
The daughter or George and
Judith Starcher and granddaugher of Gaynell McAbee
West Columbua, and George and
Mary Starcher, Pomeroy, Lisa
was namonated for the ;iWard by
Ke~th Stutz, band d.l rector at
Waha~a . She will appear In the
U. S. Achievement Academy
Official Y earl!ook published
·
nationally .
· The Academy selects USAA
winners on· the basis of the
recommendation of teaching personnel. Criteria for selection are
a student's academic performance, Interest and aptitude,
leadership qualities, responslbll·
lty, enthusiasm, motivation to
learn, and Improve, cltlzensh(p·,
attitude, and cooperative spirit,

Thtnday. March 10. 1988

--=
· =======================---~~----~~----------~~0
People .in the. news--------.,
repor~r

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United PreH International

; · · ~GS JUNIOR HIGH CJIEI!JRLEADERS cheerleaders have enjoyed a succe88ful
• ·seasoo cheering the Meigs Junior mgh school
: basketball team on to placlnc second In the

;-These

Federal Hocking tournament. They are from left ·
to right, top to bottom, April Hudson, captain,
Nikki Meier, Usa Poulin, Candy Hen81ey, and
Melllssa Neu~zllng.

fut yourself in the place
·o f a handicapped person?
.

about It, see that the doors In your
. Dear Ann Landers: Recently I
building open easily. In fact,
tell and broke a hlp. In a single
second Ijolned the group known . some doors could be removed.
Who are they shutting out?
as "hal\dlcapped."
Whe_n you speak to a person In a
: I wanted more than anything to
move. Move In bed. Move out of wheelchair, get down so you can
6ed. Move around the room. look that person In the eye. It Is
hard to converse with someone
~ove around the bouse. Move out
who
Is way up there.
of the house and Into the world. I
You
will help millions of
never realized what a luxury It
readers
by printing this letter.
was to enjoy those simple free·
doms. I also learned a few other -B. H. IN LEXINGTON
DE;AR B.H.: May I add a few
fhlngs, for example, how
.thoughtless and Inconsiderate suggestloQs f~;om a meinber of
my staff who just shed a leg cast
able-bodied people can be.
: Do you folks realize how far It after three months of misery?
M9ve wltb care through revolvJs to anywhere for a person who
11ses crutches or a.wheelchalr or Ing doors, Don't swing around
walker? Please get your car out llckety-spllt. It can be extremely
pf the space reserved for the hazardous for the elderly or
handicapped and thank God you someone on crutches.
Ditto when you are walking
can walk.
down
the street. A person In a
It would be awfully nice If you
hurry
who Isn't paying attention
.Would open doors lor us. It will
could
Inadvertently bump a
]lot be Interpreted as "pity." It's
handicapped , person and knock
~Imply good manners. And,lf you
are In a position to do anything the crutches out from under him.

a

.•.··

Ann
Landers

And one last thing: Hotels ,
restaurants and business places
should not say they have easy
;~ccess lor the handicapped when
they don 'f. Some very nice places
In Chicago make the hand!·
capped go down a dark alley and
through the kitchen to get to the
dining room. It's degrading.
HoV( much do you know about
pot, cocaine~ LSD, PCP, crack,
speed and downers? Think you
can handle them? For up-to-the
minute Information on drugs,
write for Ann Landers' newly
revised booklet, "The Lowdown
on Dope." Send $2.50 plus a
sell-ad&lt;!ressed, stamped No. 10
envelope (39 cents ·postage) to
Ann LaMers, P.O. Box 11562
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562.
'

HEFNER FOLLOWS SUIT:
Huch Hefner Is suing back. The
Playboy magjlzlne publisher
filed a countersuit Wednesday
against former -live-In girlfriend
Carrie Lelcb, accusing her of
Infidelity and of being a gold
digger.
Hefner held a news conference
at his mansion and also said he
would seek legal sanctions
against Leigh's ''palimony" lawy~r, Marvin Mitchelson, - for
filing a $.35 million suit against
him on her behalf. Hefner called
Leigh's suit ··· an orchestrated
publicity stunt ... to maintain ·
Mitchelson In the public eye,
tlrereby Increasing his ability to
attract new celebrity clients ."
Hefner wants at least $1 million
In general damages or the return
of all money and gifts he gave to
. Leigh during the nearly five
years· the couple lived together,
plus unspecified punitive damages and legal fees. He says
Leigh entered Into the relationship with him With designs on his
money, not his affections.
YOUNG KENNEDY A DUKA·
KJS DELEGATE: There's yet
another budding politician In the
Kennedy clan . Patrick J.
Keanedy, 20, the son of Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D·Mus.,ls
going to the Democratic convention In Atlanta this summer as a
ilelegate for Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakls.
.,
Kennedy , a student at Providence College In Providence,
R.I., pulled In 6,184 votes as a
Dukakls backer In the Rhode
Island primary on ·Super ·Tuesday, finishing second only to
Providence Mayor Joseph Pao·
llno In the 2nd Congressional
District. "I'm pleasantly surprised," Kennedy said of his
showing.
· Young Kennedy says his famIly spent $11,100 In his delegate
quest with most of the money
·going toward mailings, which
makes them expensive mailings.
, POINT OF VIEW: Actress
o Tracy Scoggllls says she didn't
really write that article In the
· National Enquirer about the man
who allegedly tried to sexually
assault her In an El Paso, Texas,
elevator. The story In the March
15 edition of the supermarket
tabloid is Written In the first
person but her publicist says
Scoggins had nothing to do with

•

Starcher·named USAA

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

1988

from the magazine as the American woman she most
she spoke with many reporters at admires.
the press conference," Eileen
GLIMPS,S: Los Angeles
Duhne said. "lt was written by a speech pathologist IJIIIan Glass
repor~r at the magazine In the has worked with HollyWood
first person. The facts stated In clients like Dustin Hoffman to ·
the article are correct but It was perfect his woman's vtllce for
. not written by Tracy."
"Tootsle," DoUy Parton and'
Pedro Concepcion PadiUa, 35, Herve VIUecbalze, says Albert
Is charged with attacking Scog· Gore ·sounds the most PI:I!Siden·
gins at the hotel. Scoggins was In · tlal. "He reminds you of a
Texas as a co-host of the Miss SOuthern gentleman," she)lays.·
uSA contest. Padilla's lawyer "He's as smooth as glass . It'
had called the Enquirer story a makes quite an Incredible lm·
"cheap publicity stunt" on Scog· age." On the negative side, Glass
gins part to boost a sagging says the "blackness" of ·Jeue'
career.
Jackson:s voice may tum off·
SADAT HONORED: Jlhan Sa· some white · voters' and thatda&amp;, wife of the late Egyptian George Bush still sounds Ulre a,
President Anwar Sada&amp;, was wimp ... SOap-operl! shrew El·&lt;;
honored In San Francisco for leen Fulton of "As the World ' ·
helping the women of her coun- Turns" will begotngontournext.:
try. "Our women are. lucky, " month to push her new mystery-:
Sadat told a news conference novel, "Take One for Murder."&gt;
Tuesday after accepting the It's about a soap-opera actress; ·
Eleanor Roosevelt Humanltar· who teams up with a private- :
ian Award for Lifetime Achieve- detective after a murder and a:ment at a banquet. ''We have no · sequel is already planned for this•;
problem with equal pay for equal summer.
1
::
work or 'discrimination In job fi===========::;~
'
opportunities but as a conserva••.,
:
tlve country. we still have a long
way to go."
'
l'!adat's ·accomplishments In·
elude founding an organization to
help women become selfADrflfntiiiO IIOTICI
sufficient. through training In
Due to a manufactUJer's delay in
shipment. the Newborn 2 Piece Knit
handicrafts, establishing a cen·
Sets at $7 .99 shown on page 34 of
ter for disabled war veterans'a nd
the Home Sate circular wt• not be
their families, pushing through a
available. We will substitute a
civil rights law Increasing
similar item at the same Price . and
'
women's rights.
rainchecks wdl be avatlable on the
Sadat, 54, named Jeanne Kirk·
ong.nal item. We are sorry for any
patrick, the former U.S. ambas·
inconvenience this may cause.
sador to the united . Nations, as

ELBERFELDS PRE-SPRING

·

•
VINYL FLOOR
COVERING
Quality Armstrong and
Congoieum vinyl floor
covering. 12 ft. width.
Large a11ortment of pat·
tams 11nd colol'l.

USA G. STARCHER

dependability, and recommenda- ·
lion !rom a teacher or director.

SALE

•

OUHO LUX
KATIE ALEXANDER

FUU SIZE SIT "--· 1299
QUEEN SIZE SET-··· 1399

BRANDON STURGEON

10 YEAR WARRANTY

Sturgeon
birthday .

Alexander
birthday
I

:- Katharine . "Katie" VIrginia
.iGexarider, daughter of Bradley
W. and Stephanie ·Alexander,
Routes; Marietta, celebrated her
f!rst birthday on Feb. 25 with a .
family dinner at the home of her
ai-andparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Slephen Houchins, Middleport.
· · Others attending and sending
glfts were Susan Houchins, An·
~Ia· Houchins . and Ed Perkins,
.ll&gt;hn and Joey, VIctor and Olive
Casto, George and Karen Tripp,
.'l)mmy and Janet Alexander,
~bble and Krista Eason, Rufus
Edith Kirk, ~teve and.
4!MIW Hirl'llolf; -Megan and
tlilura; Steve and Donna Jenkins,
Sabr!el and Sarah Dawn, Johan
ijid Arilta Maro and Goran.

w

.

The second birthday or Brandon Sturgeon, son of Dwight and
Terri Sturgeon, was observed
recently with a party.
A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out with cake and lee
. cream _being served to the guests.
Attending were his greatgrandmother, Verna Sturgeon;
his grandmother, Ellen Thoma;
.Sheryl Thoma, Mary, Melissa
and Jamie Barrett, Kathy and
Stephani Michael, Adam, Cory
and Tlffanl Wllllams, Marie and
.Joe Phllllps, and Brtt, Kathy and
Jonathan Wyat. Sending cards
and gifts were Leo and Pauline
King; ~olumbils; Pat, Holly arid
Suzanne Thoma, and Christl arid
C. J . Estep.

"She did Indeed speak with a

• Dr. Charles Shaver, Kansas

¢I ty, Mo., will be evangelist for

-

You'll build a big nest egg when
you sove with the classifieds

..

rubeve &amp; shrimp $
·

lnclucb: ribeye steak • 6 goklen fried shrimp
• baked potato • our all-you·can·eat
soup and salad.

I .

, BRAZING - Pete Bumem receives lips on
;oxyacetylene brazing lrom Instructor Ken Eblin

durlag his weldlag class In the vocational
program at Meigs High School.

tudes and knowledge required to
course to prepare students for achieve the Instructional objects
entering the welding field at for the program. The basic
tntry level employment Is being principles of science and mathe·
&amp;ffered as a partofthevocatlonal matics, with strong emphasis
upon safety Instruction, are
program 111 Meigs High SchooL
; The program Is open to stu· Integrated Into the Instructional
dents 16 and older and Is open not units.
Students completing the
Only to Meigs High School stucourse
should be capable of
dents but students of both East·
entering
the welding field entry
e)'n and Southern High Schools.
level
as
welders or plpefttters,
During the two year course
welders,
maintenance
tool
~tudents are provided a continuous three hour block of time In welders, construction welders or
shop or laboratory experiences In similar welding occupations.
While certification Is not a
as well as related classroom
Instruction of an hour and one- requirement for credits In the
belt ev~;ry day. The laboratory welding program, It Is an option
aild related Instruction is based the student can take advantage
11p0n '.an ~cupatlonal anaylls · of before lea villi! the program. ,
which
11¢/IJdes
.
. the skills, attl·

BEIILINE

SWIVEL RO(KERS

A grMt accent chair. extremely
comfortable. A11orted colo.-.
end febrlco.

Sale Priced
From Only

•

•

'

••

.., .......... IN.

,,.. , ... &amp; ~""

,..,.. .,.. 1M Atr,lrtl
• ........ Olllt

ftut\afe=tljll " 11&amp;f11 S111i1 ••

''

PRE-SEASON SALE
Llnu GilLS'
Beautiful spring f811hlona and colors.
Quality brands Include Ruth of California, Miu Quality and Her Majesty .
Sizes: 3 moe. tC~~ 24 mos. and 1 to 14.
Reg.
to '53.00

·

sa.oo

~~::ed$6 7 ' TO $45·09

.

Since 1970, Shaver has been
teaching at the N11zarene Theolilglcal Seminary In Kansas City,
Mo., where be now serves as the
Frank and Gladys Cooper professbr of eA~angellm . He also serves
as minister of outreach at the
First Church of the Nazarene In
Kansas City.
l..s ministry has Included
pastorlng and organlzlng •of two
home mission churches, the first
beginning In a remodeled horse
shed.· He has been a full -time
' 'e vangelist and has preached at'
camp meetings ~nd at all the
liberal arts colleges of · the
Church of the Nazarene In the
U!!Ited States and Canada.
Shaver has written seven
books, and produced· two audio
tape sets and a video. His "Basic
Bible Studies" has sold over
250,000 copies In Epgllsh and has
been printed In 22 other languages. Most recently, Beacon
Hill Press released his-audio tape
album, Lord Teach Us to Pray;
Living In the Spirit, a discipleship study; the audio- tape,
Peop~, Sex and God, and a video
for trallllng purposes, A Personal

•New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of· tile Earl
Dean ,WUUng Workers Sunday
Scllool c;:Jau held at the home of
Howar,d and Wilma Parker.
Elected were Ruth Karr, pres!·
··dent; Sid Branch, ylce president;
Betty Lou Dean, secretary;
Geol'le Wolf, treasurer; Kathryn
Mora, news reporter, and Wilma
fsrkcer, activity coordinator.
Mrs. parker )lad devotions
reading tbe 53rd chapter of
Iaalab, verses 7·12. She resd -an
article from "Quiet Moments"
entitled "Laughter Is the Best
Medic hie." For roll call
member• rela led a secret ambl·
tton the$' once had but never
atlailled
·
. Doll aDcl &amp;llldy ~her were
PJI r111Wd a- Jlft from the ..,_..
for their blrthda)'l. Games were
lr)

$1 71

SPRING DRESSES
BRA SALE

Ni~e

selection of stylee including fashion support bras.
fully padded bras, eeamless contour bras and french draa·
eing ~ras . Sizes 32A to 440 .

REG. S6.00 BRAS .....................................SALE S4. 99
REG. S7.00 BRAS •• ~..................................SALE 15.99 .
REG. S9.00 BRAS .....................................SALE S7.69

SALEf ·

MEN'S NECKTIES

Our new rpring and summer eelaction. Solid colori. neat patterns .
knits, silk tiee and polyesters.

S8.50 Ties.................. S6.80 ·
S9.00 Ties.................. S7 .20
S9.50 Tiu.................. SJ .60
s12.50 Ties ............. s10.00
s13.50 Ties ............. s 10.80

DR. CHARLES SHAVER
Evangelism Calls. Dr. Shaver '
·and his wife, the former Nancy
Dol'f!. have three children, Ra·
chel, Paul and Miriam.
Jim and Cathy Sisson and their
three children, 'l'racl, Jamie and
Stephen of Gallipolis, will be
providing specfal singing each
night of ·the local services which
. will ~tart at .7 p.m. The Slssons ·
are members of the Church of
Christ In Christian l.lnlon.
President of the Meigs Area
Holiness Association Is the Rev.
Clyde V. Henderson.
·

Willing workers meet

A two-year welding and cutting

••••, ,,,..1

'

SWIVEL!

ROCK!

tbe Meigs Area Holiness Assocla·
!ion's '26th annual Indoor camp
.meeting to be held at the Church
ot the Nazarene, Main St .•.
Rutland, Monday through March

20.

... THEY

. .. THEY

$haver evangelist for
indoor camp meetings ·

•

WalkerI Jumpers,
Strollers. Baby leds.
lklssi!lettes, High Chairs,
Carrie~s, Car $1ats,
Booster Seats, Toilet
Trainers and morel

PREMIER COMFOIT S99 EA. PC.

•

."

Sit- Yil.

BABY
FURNITURE
SALE
PlayptM,

II.

Dinrier

$5 45

played and Leona Machlr and
Kathryn Mora won the prizes.
Th~ group played a game. The
Rev. Mr. Archer had the blessing I
with a dessert course being
served by the hosts to the
Archers, Geroge and Helen Wolf,·
Harry and Grace Holter, Paul
and Ruth Karr, Sid and Madeline
.Branch. Betty Lou Deen, Leona
Machlr, alld Kathryn More.
The door prizes were won by ,
the Rev. Mr. Archer and Mrs.
Dean. Marcli meeting will be
)Jeld at · t~e home of Kathryn
Windon.

·Pledge made

•

. NEW CONCORD - Edward
Kitchen of Middleport · has
pledged memberrblp to the Mace
Socla4 Club at r,llilkiqum Col· ·
lep where he II a atudellt. ·

IOYS'

LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVED

SPORT SHIRTS

You'll like the naw atyler and colore
1!1 slzaa 8 through 20- Save Now.
Rag. Priced $1 •.96 to '39.96

All the new looks for Spring
'88. S. M, L and XL lizes plus
big sizes 18, 19 and 20. Solid
color~ and patterne. Western
rhlrta Included.

SALE

s1270 S3395
TO

512.95
516.95
519.95
522.95

BOYS

SHORTS
Take advantage of an early eelecdon and 11va. Sizes S (B·
10). 1111 (12•14). L (11-18Jand
XL (20). SoUd colors and pat·
tema.

19,95......Shorts "'" S8,45
S109
'· ""' S9,30
• 5......Sh0rtl
S11.95-•••Shorts_,S_10.15
S14,95 ..,mShortJ ,,.$12,70
'

Sport
Sport
Sport
Sport

Shirts •• ".Sli.OO
Shirts •••• $14.40
Shirts ••••• S16.9S
Shirts ..... 519.50

BU&gt;(ron. ;~~~· ijJ1J
SALE PRICES

· MEN'S BUXTON WALLETS .

Bi-fold and trl·fold styles. In your choice of colors. All
genuine l11thers•. Excellent quelity.

Reg. 112.00 to
Reg. 115.00 to
Reg. 117.50 to
Reg. 121.00 to

114.00 WaHtts ...........;.............. l10.40
117.00 W.U.ts ............"""'"""'""'" S1UO
S20.00 W. .ts ........................:.s15.20
127.50 Walats....._.___.......... S17.20

�---

........

~----------....

-

·-------------~· --

Thured.v. M.c~t

-

•

io. 1988

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

•

Eight and !Forty conducts meeting
Donations · were made and
plans for the 23rd annual dinner
to be served on May 2 were
discussed at the Monday night
meeting of Meigs County Salon
710, Eight and Forty held at the
America n Legion hall In
Pomeroy.
The salon voted· to give dona.
tlons totaling $103 to the. state
projects an(! theN ationa I Jewish
Hospital.
It was noted by Julia Hysell, '
children and youth chairman,
thai valentines and gifts had
been taken to four children. two

'

ustness
Services

with cystic fibrosis and two with · clerge. The spring pouvlor was
asthma, and that money had announced f•r March 26 at the'
been given on medication for one Rodeway Inn, Dublin. Chapeau
child. The children wiU also be . Day at the National Jewish
remembered with Easter gifts.
~ospltalln Denver, Colo. will be
The annual dinner will be held
held In April. The death at· the
at Trinity Church wjth Martha husband of Chapeau Passe V~rgl·
Marsh, departemental chapeau, nla Rahe was noted.
Patricia Oldaker, . first deml
Pearl Knapp and Mary Martin
premiere, to be honored g\Jests. were named to revise the salon's
Salons to be Invited will be constitution and by-laws. Knives
Gallta, Vinton, a nd Perry.
and pecans are ·for sale by the
Veda Davis, chapeau pro tern, salon. Next nieetln.g wlll be April ·
presided at the meeting with Iva 4 with Mary Martin and Rhoda
Powell giving the prayer. Pledge Hackett to be hostesses.
was by Eunle Brinker Ia con·

TO IUCE AN AD CAll 992·2156
IIONDAY thru FIIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M. ·
I A.M. ~il NOON SATUIDAY
ClOSED SIIIIDAY

·.

RATES ·
0.11 WOI!OI 111-• .WOI!!II
1DA'II
04.110
M.llll
I OA'II . ...110
11.1111
I:JA'II
-.111
111.111
,. DA'II 111.1111
121.1111
1 11011111 IU.IIO
111.1111

-..................
.. ....___

"

,

za.a WOI!!II

.:-·..,
..........
........

m.oo

.......
110.110

equalization model, wblle Paul Sharp completes
his electrical optical light sensor prorram. Wllh
the students is Rusty Bookman, science teaeher.

SCIENCE DAY - Elrhth rrade physical
science sludeols are l!uay complettnr projects for
lhe annual Science Day at Melp Junior Hlgb
I School. Here Jon Sargent, left, works on his water

I

Science Fair held
· The Meigs Junior High
School's fifth annual Science Day
Will be staged Tuesday at the
school .wlth exhibits to be judged
during the day and an open house
to be held In the evening.
The event is sponsored by the
Meigs Junior High School
Science Club and the Ohio
Academy of Science under the
direction of Rusty Bookman and
Jesse Vale, science teachers.
About 150 students. all physical
science eighth graders, will have
an exhibit In the scle~ce fair.
Judging
be done by a team of

will

•-

10

Meigs Schools

professional educators using as
criteria, originality and creatlv·
lty, clarity of expression, use of
the scientific method, and know I·
edge achieved.
Purpose of the annual activity
is to stimulate Interest In sclen·
ces. lo promote research, to
promote scientific knowledge,
and to recognize high achieve·
ment in attaining those
objectives.
Ratings of superior, excellent,_
good and fair will be awarded.
.Stud!'nts with superior ratings
will be elibible to compete with

· their projects In the district
science day to be held at Ohio
University oli April 9.
The open house will be held
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and students
as well as parents and family
members are urged to attend.
Again this year special Governor's Awards for Excellence will
be presented. These will be given
In the areas of research In
energy, water resources, agrf,
culture. and food science. litter
prevention and recycling, and
environmental sciences.

..

RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters wUI meet Thursday,
7:30p.m .. In the high school band
room. Parents of all band
members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT- Parents For
Education In Meigs Local School
District l.s sponsoring a seminar
Thursday evening, starting at 7
. p.m., with Carroll McCammon.lf
. Columbus, discussing school fl·
nanclng. The public Is Invited to
attend.

.,

AUTIIOR SPEAKS - Erica Magnus of Athens,
author of several books Including 'Old Lars" and
"The Boy and the Devil" had a lecture-workshop
presentation for students of the Racine Eleinen·
tary School Wednesday In the basement of the

Racine Baptist Church. The program was In
conjunction with the annual Right to Read Week.
Here the expressive Ms. Magnl's reads segments
of "The Boy and the Devil" to the fourth, fifth and
six graders. .

Chester Garden Club meets .
A donation of $10 was made to
Amerlflora to be held in Coium·
bus in 1992 ai a recent meeting of
the Chester Garden Club held
recently at the home of Mrs.
Eleanor Knight.
Announced at the meeting was
the regional meeting to be held at
Rio Grande, Apri116. Maye Mora
extended an invitation from the
children of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mora to. a celebration of their
parents ' 40th wedding anniver·
sary on . March 26. Also an·
nounced was the 50th anniver·
sal')i celebration of the Belpre
Garden Cl ub.
Pat Holter thanked the cl ub for
f!O\I'ers during her recent hospi·
tallzatlon, and It was noted lhat
Edna Woods will do the sunshlne
project of the club for Jack
Spencer.
Ruth Erwin. co-hostess. gave
devotions. Members answered
roll ca ll by commenting on
spring gardening plans. Dorothy
Karr talked about the blue bird
houses which are available tho·
rugh the Ohio Wildlife Division.
Maurita Miller prese nted
"Dazzling Day Lilies" explain·
lng how well they bloom from
spring until fall, take the · bot ·
weather well, and like both the
sun and the shade.

OPTOMRRY
SERVICES ON
PREMISES
Americare-Pomeroy
.Nursing and ·
Rltn ' Italian Center
(614J 992-6606

She said that day lily bulbs
should be pian led in a 12 to 14 inch
wide hole which is about a foot
deep, a nd that the crown of dirt
should be mixed with 5·10·5
ferlllizer. They should be wa·
tered well and divided every four
or five years before frost. The
bulbs should .be planted two to
three feet apart.
Mace! Barton gave "Dreams
of a Fair Flower Show" using
seed catalogues. She talked
about the types of flowers. floral

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
United Pentecostal Church Is
sponsoring a chicken-noodle
dinner on Friday from 11 a.m. to
2 p.m. The menu will include
chicken noodles, green beans,
cole slaw and a homemade roll.
Price $3.50.Meals may be eaten
at the church or delivery Is
ava ililble. To place orders, call
992·3824.

Pharmacy,
/.

annual
charter day luncheon of Return
Jonathan : Meigs, Daughters of
the American Revolutlon,wlU be
held 111 12:30 p.m . Friday at the
Holly Hill Inn.
POMEROY - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter. Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet at 12: 30 p.m. Friday at
Holly J{lll Inn for the annual
Charter Day lunchon. Ma~jorle
S. Stone, Athens, wiD speak on
the Northwest Ordinance. Hos·
tesses are Mrs. George Skinner,
Mrs; Ronald. Reynolds, Mrs.
Edward Foster; and Mrs. Mark
Grueser, Jr.

__ _

designs, and specimens. Now is
the time for planning for the
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Meigs. County Fair flower show,
Flame
Fellowship
will
meet
whether you plan to enter annuFriday,
6:30
p.m
.,
at
Dale's
als, per~nnla.ls, or roses, she
Smorgasbord. Speaker will be
said.
. She also suggested that the Suzanne Bush of Racine.
first of May is a good time to ·
POMEROY - Senior Citizens
begin planting gladioli bulbs with
round
and square dance 8 to 11
repeat plantings every two
p.m.
Friday
at the center with
weeks until July.
Pat Holter won the door prize. La rry Hubbard orchestra to be
featured. Admission, $1 .50 and
A dessert course was served.
those attending are to take

~illage.

--POMEROY - The

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Alcoholics Ano·
POMEROY - Slgnup day for
nymous and AI Anon will meet all boys and girls Interested In
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the JTPA playing baseball or softball In
offices In Pomeroy, formerly the Pomeroy Youth League will be at
Diamond Savings and Loan.
first floor of Elberfeld&amp; from 2 to
5 p.rn. Saturday . Anyone who did
POMEROY - The Preceptor not play ,Jast year must furnish
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma copy of birthday cerliflca te to be
Phi Sorority, will meet Thursday · kept by the slgnup group. Slgnup
at 5 p.m . at the Episcopal Parish . fee Is ~9 ,
\
,,,
House In Pomeroy for a potluck
dinner.
·
RACiNE ' - Morse Chapel
Church is having a hymn sing on
POMEROY - Rock Springs Saturday at 7 p.m. The church Is
Grange will met at . 7:30 p.m. located on Racine-Portland
Thursday at 'the haiL A class will Road, County Road 35. The
be held In Sign language follOW · public Is welcome.
lng the meeting.
WILKESVILLE - - The Py·
FRIDAY
thlan Sisters are sponsoring a
EAST MEIGS- Eastern High smorgasbord t.hls Saturday with
School's Winter Sports Banquet serving starting at 4 p.m. The
will be held !"riday, 7 p.m., at the smorgasbord will be held at
schooL $1 donation at door. Those · Pythlan Hall in Wilkesville.
attending should bring one veget·
able dish and a salad or dessert.
MIDDLEPORT - The second
registration for the 1981! MiddleMIDDLEPORT - The united port Yoilgh League summer ball
Pentecostal Church of J.VIIddle- season will be held at Middleport
port Is sponsoring a chicken· VIllage Hall on Saturday from 2
noodle dinner on Friday from 11 to 5 p.m. Any .boy or girl who did
a.m. to 2 p.m. $.1.50 per dinner. not play ball last summer must
Eat In or request delivery . To bring a copy of his or her birth
place orders call 992·3824.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Flame Fe llowship Chapter will
meet 6:30p.m. Friday at Dale's
Smorgasbord. Special speaker
will be Suzanne Bush, Racine.

-~

snacks for the refreshment table.

.

certificate which will be kept 011
file by the Middleport Youth
League. The registration fee Is$~
for each child registered.
· •

·:1 ::::

-~

Rt.

CHESTER - . Chester Fire ,'
Department will stage a public :
vegetable soup supper beginning •
at 5 p.m. Saturday at the station
house. Dinners will be served airtl
soup will be sold by quart~ but ·
customer must provide ·
container.

..

RACINE - Harvest Trio will ·
be performing at a hymn sing to :
be held at 7 p.m:. Saturday at ·
Morse Chapel Church on Racine· ,
Portland Road.
'
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A meeting
of Mejgs-Mason girls' softball
coaches and assistant coaches,
will be held Sunday. 2: 30 p.ni., at
the .Middleport Masonic Temple,

124, Ponwoy Ohio

" AUTO,&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

,lUPPiiS PlAINS, OliO
'.. 17 Yo8. E•porlonce ·
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

BUS. 667-6102
·HOME 374-5599
'HOUISs 9•30

a&amp;~6 p.m.

M1 #at·Frillly
Sat. "' , , ••nl!f"nl

KAY'S
BEAUTT SALON
Middleport, Ohio

992-2725

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS .

992-6282

PLUMBING &amp; IIUtnu:.·l

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

' d C 8 bt 8'11
H
1

t.,.

BUSINESS PARTNER
Polish your pr~l slyle by teaming up
with this sharp hard-worker. Count on Its claSsic
lines to WOlf&lt; wonderfully with vr:u wa1ctt0be.
And count on its low price .to WOlf&lt; wondets with

your budgetl In White, Bone or W/Navy

$37.95

e
ere
•
IIUSINISS PIIGNf
(614) •• 2 .550
IESIDENU ;HcitiE
1614) 0 92·77!14

"

Vflllge of MiddlepOrt. Ohio
Fled Hoffmen, M1111or
1313. 10. 2tc

NEW _ IEPAII

Public Notice
Qflell

11

Ho-nl L Wrltesel

ROOFING

Gutter•
Down1pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

9ol9·2263
or 9o19-2168

.

s:rc'~ ~~:~aRK

-..., • .....,
915·4141
G..DAL
COIITUCTOIS
Rotorenc" . "·=t,""

PHOTO ADS SELU
Promitring

Tho origlnol Buy, loll,
Maguine for cars,
lrucko, boots, cycloo, RVo
FOR QUICK REsULTS ...
Ad..rtlee today In .
Wheeler Deeler. or r,o~
Juot may mioo 1 11 el
Ph.1·99J·SI27 •1·16l.42J3
· or
Tra~

loo•o.
~;;~·;.;;.2~2·;2155-'~·;117;·;•;-~·!
IUIIOUGH'S CUSTOM
UPHOLmiY ·
-

__
.,.

26

SOFT
MATE P.S.
SALINE SOLUTION

REG. '6.69

REG. S4.79

S4.29

Mill
.,,::;;;:

-

"';' :· ,

FOR SENSinVE EYES

NOW

oz.

NOW

It, 2, CoolwUie
Servtag Melp &amp;
Athena Counties

Rootvllng • ·Rouph.,_rina
Rooldon1iei •
Comm..clal Fum~uro
Automotive • Morine
Oroporin • Comlooo
A LAROE SELECTION OF
FABRICS
Pickup • Dolive&lt;y
FREE ESTIMATES

(6141 667-6695

1-11"17'~•

GOLF

LESSONS

. sa.oo

6 far S45

Clllll lflltltfttll $5.00
Ntw GrlfN $3.50
Set-• ar..... 1o.oo
llnkttloall .Trophies IN

s

JO'S GIFT SHOP
Fer Spt111 111111 s.SYIACUSE,. OHIO
NEW STORE-NEW STOU
lOW PIKES .

III!Jister for FiEE
lird lath - No
Purchase Necessary

Plaqu.$3.50
Englavlng
JOHN

Come In - Lou of
New Gi{t•!
3· -'88·1 mo.

nAFORD

CIMstor, Ohio 3·1·'•' 1....

STEWliT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

FlU 11MI &amp; PAIT
'liME IN
.SUPEIYISOIS

J&amp;L BLOWN
•suunoN

PAIT·TIMI
LPN'S
3:00.11:30 .(.M.

ALIIIIINIIM SIDING

11:00 P.M.· 7:30A.M.
75 10 ICF/lONG-YEIM

CAIE FAUlTY
Loolllng "" • FGd
nurtNto
jotn our dlciiCMM
ltofl- .,. commltlod 10
...............ltv ..... If you

..-............ .
lolol you itltrtlhlododlootlan
•nd aammittmtnt to qulllty

-- .

Vlf4YL I

olntulatlon

•Storm Doo11
•81arm Wlndo•Rep&amp;aaement Window•
•N- Rooltng

FnE ESTIMAYES.

JAMES IEESII
PH. 992-1772
N·'ll I

C~,

OPEN DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAY
Lot of New Items:
Flohing Supptleo, !Juno,
Archery, ond Much
More.

c• l. o. Stewart
or •••

742-2421

'lite Store
On New Unte lcitNI out
ollutlatld
.2·21 ·'B7·1 mo.

010.

&amp; lhed

SALU..SIIVICI·SUPPUIS
lopal I SUI T.,.writors
loyol &amp; MAX (ekulotors
Ropal I Moa CCIIh lletisten

HOMII liLT
...... loti- 01. U74S

Ph. 1•14) 143-541.
QUAUTY Plltn SHOP
1•141

'"·n•

.. lu A.ltlo St.
' " " ' Ollit 45713

I

7·

. DENNY CONGO

r

EXTRA STRENGTH
ANTACID
TABLETS

•Doaor • Bock- Wo"'

owtll Do HouHng With
Dump Truck
•Wreckor BlfYice
•Junk Y11d BuaiWANT TO IUT WIKIID Of"

JIINI CAl$ 01 JIIKIS

-FIH ISTIIATISFor any of thtso ""'ICN caN .

614-742·2617
letw- 9 a.tn.·6 p.m.
ar ...... •rsooe

2·1~•·ttn

"

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addon1 •nd remodeling
- Roofing end uuttar work
- Concrete work

- Piumbingancf electrlctl
wo•k
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-62tS or 992-73t4
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

.....,..,

' GRAVEL • SAND
T~P

SOIL
FILL DIRT

YAIFIAII &amp;ICIIO

Loc.t.d Helfw•Y be·
-

,NOW

S7 .79

Over 1 00 Propertiea

For Sale- Call Today
982-.2211
1·1 Men.-Frl.
\
· 8·3 leturdap

Announcements

'

SUNDAY

l:OOP.M.
RACINE

GR
.,_.J.,,

ancJ naww 1.11ed cars. Smith
Buldt· Pontlac. 1911 E11tern
Ave., Gelllpolle. Cell 814-448·

2282 . .

Kupld' s Neal •n~ Connections
DatlnU SeMce of Huntington
Joint together sh~~rlng profiles .
l=Gr lnformltlon wrlta: Kupld'a
Nast. P.O. · lox 119, Ironton,

Compltte households of furnl,
ture 8&amp; 1ntlqu ... Also wood 6
co•l heltlfl, Sw1ln'1 Furniture
&amp; Auction , ;fhlrd &amp; Olive.

Ohio ·4613B .

e14·«1·31 ea.

A klnely retired Columbus men
wtahN to corr.,ond with •

W1nt ta buy: U1ed furniture and
1ntlques. Will buy entir• houa•
hold fufn ..hing, Merlin Wide· ·
meylf, 614· 246·15162,

Gelllpolil woman with the ·int~nt
to pi rnam.d lt\auld It lud up
to this. Write tD hint Marcua
Co,, Charita CennHev. 13•8

Fllr AVII, Columbua, OH 43205,

Went to buy ltendinliJ timber •
Pine. P1y TOP DOLLAR . 5 ecrea
or more. Excell1nt rllferancea.

MARINES: We're -.ldng for 1
few good men. Far mare infor,
mltion. eatls.rgunt Mlli.e Abell
et 30•·•20.6018 coNect.

C11l lArry Strickland Logging.

De1per11tely ••king Suun Hot Fudge SundH Ia welting.

2764.

oil in it. Ctll 614·448,4534.

Part Peklnae... part Poodle. 4"!.1
mot. old. Mille, C•ll 81•~-"1,

3398.
• young catl, 7 moa,·old to good
' - •· CoHI14· 251·1839 . .

814·182· 7823.

trucks. C•ll for
prlee., 61•·379,2888 or 379,

Junk Autos •

Junk Cart with or whhout
motors. Call Larry 'Uvety-81•·

38B·9303.
St•nding Timber. Cl11614-379,

2788.

992· 3476.

QUILTS

High prlcea paid for p,.19150
quilts. AppUque, pieced. •nv
COfldhlon, C•ll 11 4·992•2101

I1•·•••,

.GivHwty·l puppiel to • good
home. Call
3797.
FrM player plano to non·profh
org•nlnt&amp;on . Call 114,•41·

' 71121flerl PM.

0&lt;

614·992-6667.

.

Dehon Logging Inc. Buyer of
atendlng limber 1nd loga. AI·

bony, Ohio. 1.14·8,1-8284.

Coll814-448 ·7888.
FrM to toocl home. Calico cat. 1
old, Found et Wendy 's In

OoiNpollo. 114·912·7382.
Fem1l1 dog, iookl like Ole

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SE~VICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIW, OIRO
614-662 ·3121

Aulhorizlll Jot. Dttrt,
Ntw Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dt~~ltr

fal'll E••lltflfllf
: Patti &amp; lff'IJ•

..........

Bulkl for your future. le•rn both
rough 1nd finish carpentry skills
It the AduH Educ·• tion Cent•·-..
Tfi,County Vocational School.
The Adult Carpentry program
will provide you whh training to
become a earpantar. Cerpentrv

1kllla . . 10 lmport~t and
~atlle th1t earpent.,. mllka
up thl l11rgeet group of building
tw:ad• worbn:, To regl•• for

cltliHI beGinning April 4th, c.U

783,3&amp;11 txt. 1 • . A1k tbo\11:
our variety of funding ..aurce1
IYIIIIble to PlY for training.

Get own Avon at cost. Prl:r:11.
Insurance. No lign·up fee if you

·

Information .is needed for book.
Anyone victimized by prof".

atonal penon call The Re ,
1e~rchers . 1·800·248-3882.

lnformMion needed concerning
..,., flip· over of 3 or 4 whHI All
Terrain Vehicles IATV or ATC).

C1lj · The Re1Nrehers . 1 -BOQ,

248·3882.
AVON · All areal. C•ll M1rilyn

w••.,., 304-882-21415 .

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS, Now· hiring.
Your 1re1. t13.&amp;50to $69,490.
lmmldiMe op•ninga, C1ll 1,

..

N1tktn1l Gu1rd. 30•·875,3950

or 1·800·842·3119.

Sl:l VICI!S

I Need mature blbysitter in my

814-IBB·38B4.

home for 2 children. reference•
give •way.

to

814-982-7147.

Be1utlful outdoor cMa, m11e 1nd
f.mele, eolld · bl.:k 1nd white.
long hel•. 304·888·3083 Iff•

8:00pm.

Vocational Adult Center at 7533&amp;11 ext, 14. A v.netv of
funding tol.trCII to P8¥ for
training ilr1 available for lhOSI

Part,nme Joball Join the Army

f IIIII I!I ylllf!lll

Yelllf, 2 rMie. 1 female kittene.
CM, white with d1rk spota.
Collie

JOb hunting? N1ed • skill? We
trtln people for joba 11 Auto
Mechl"lca, Carptntert, E'-ctrl,
clant. Food Serw)ce Workert,
Electronics T•chnlciant, Indus ~
trial M1lntenadce Work,,.,
Nurtlng Aui11anu and Order,
lin. Machlanlata, and Weldart.
Reglatir now for cl••" begin,
nina April •th. Call Tri·County

(316(733·1063 oxo .F2978.

v--

Mele

Help Wanted

calll14-992·7180.
Buying dlllty gold. altver coins.
rings, jewalrv, eterling ware. old
coin•. l•o• currency. Top pricee. Ed 8urklltt •BIIrber Shop,
2nd. A'4e. Mlddl,ort. Oh. 614·

.

.

Lost and Found

11

required, write to Box 8 cere·
Point Ple11ant Register. 200
.Metn St,. Pt, Plt .. W.Va,

Help Wanted

Get 1 h• c::ologne • Sell Avort,

M•ke big buckl. Clll

61•~•46·

3358.

GOVERNM.ENT JOBS .
118.040 • •&amp;9. 230/ yr. Now
hiring. YOur •rea, 805·887··
8000 bt. R·1 0189 for current
hderelll11,

LOST: Blonde • ttn lenji, look
dog. Mlulng from the vicinity of
Huel Ridge• C.rto Rd, Anwer,
Inti' by the n•m• of AaNey, If
found coli 114·2&amp;1·1735 01

441·2477.

Found: M..• · BIIMtt Hound.
lleck. whhe •nd brown. Svra·

- · 814·992·1313.
Found: S~'Qrev Toy Poodle.
Femelt, Found on Brlak St:,
, Rud•nd. Melg1 Co. Humane

. 8ocloty.I14·112·150Soo8·1 4·
112·5437.

Teking lpplicttiona for &amp;KP•
rlenCIHI truck driver• apply in
person A • A S1nitation, 410 .
Fourth Avenue, K_.n1uga, Ohio,
. No pho~ CIIHI.

AVON all 1re11; Shlrlev Sp..,.,,'

304-178-1428.

.

Leiding Paramedical Comp•nv

FEDERAL, STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS .
NOW HIRING . Your Area.

11 3,6&amp;0 10 059,480, IMME·
OIATE Op-o. Coli 1·318·
733·1063 Ext. F 27&amp;B.

lnfo,.,.akln ia nNCIM for• book,
Anyone victimized by protnalonal PIUOn , Call The
Rea-chers· 1-800·2•8-3882,

II looking fOr 1n RN or LPN In the

Point Plnent •nd sunoundlng
lrtl to

do tnaur1nce phyaictla
1nd blood drt1wlng1 on • mobile
ta.ls. If yoy .,, looking for en
eKtrl Income 1nd flllllble houq ,
thil could be whit you .,.

ktoting for. Cell Becky 30,.·

343-9444.

12

Situations
Wanted

FREE Piece e&gt;f Jewelary to flrl1
10 p•pl• to HII Avon· C•ll

11 ...«1·2188.

Board end roo~ . Elderly, Privne
room• 1nd 1tmi prfvele . 81•· ·

•eoo Rntard for rec:av-v of 1
Unaoln AC·DC 280 - ..

Rt. 7 • B..,.n.

NEW &amp; USED MOWIIS
8.7 Flf1II~Oing ail
Yilldmen. .rvlca on All li1eke8

...

.. lllnlr rtt./ ' /Villi

7

,.,u,;. and ra·
core
and
heater cores.
can
also acid boll
rod
out r1diators. also
11pair Gas Tanks.

892· 7204.

. ,.

Feb. 2. from

Yard Sale

.. .....Oatlipotri........ ..
· &amp; VicinitY

Holkley· lnn lit GIHipoli• now
tceepllng eppUcettons for Ho•

t/Hooo-. Moral! 14. 1 8 .....,,
Applvln-. No phone coHo.

Appllco11ono bolng ,..., too
e&amp;per..~ed. aell·motlv•ted
con1tructlon euperln1enden1

tr-.

lo
f..,Mf• wllll
FHA/ ltUD _....,.. lor upo

-

com"'a projeote In ~""

o1r1o. tono~ ._....with ....,

,.qui._,. to P.o. Box 1110•
...,_,.., Ohlo43130.

PAT HILL FORD

Call us lor your · mobil• home
inuranc1 : Mlli•r lnaur•nc•,
304·882 · 2141 . Aleo: IUIO,
home. life, health.

1 B Wanted to Do
•
Would like to do houiNieaning.
Oalllpolia·VInton aru. For more •
lnformllion call 114· 318·1111

or 311·1112.

992-2198

Give Pano, ci•~tey~ton and ~
t.aDnl In my home to

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

oreen

boglnn...

IIIVIII::;:s ....-

lllu1ta. Alia -

•VINYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM 8tD1NO

EVElY

11

Wanted To Buy

Do._ lowrnlll Albony. I 14·
118-1214.

PH. 9ol9-2969

JUST CALLI

9

417 Second Avenue. Box 1~13
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memprial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,

TOP CASH pold 101 'B3 model

3

4·15·'8o·IC

100COUNT

NEEDLE

6·
Annuu n Cl~ lllt:nt s

Milelng -

SMAlLENGIM

WILL HAUL

992-3410
LIMESTONE

GAVISCON
lEG. S9.95

to
YHS.
("' ••y (AR
.... ""'
or IOI'S El£(Tl0NI(S
44 7390

~----~~'l;~o=··o=·~~·======
TRIPLE p
4
Giveaway
EICAVAnNG
2·56 gal . Oildrum1' oneh11little

..
EAGLE IIDGE

l.lt. I.O.N.

,M&lt;ADIA
.......MUNG
--~
mrm

Stewart

Or 5top ly

fw' lutcu wllw. WIW Will

.·MAALOX ..,..

Evenlttt
2-:15-'11·1 mo.

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

KOUNTRY CLUB

wollo. .,._coli or wllto:

\

Day or

z

-

R'Tl.

&amp; llidoo -

8

PAm

COME IN AND PICK OUT YOUR
ST. PATRICK'S DAY CARDS
by CARL'ETON

98 5•3365

::1: (614) 446-7619.or (614) 99~-2104

...:J!EoldMo,;.

I Puppies: 5 ·main, 1 female .

Help Wanted

7:00 A.M.-3:30 P.llol. SHIFT

ASMART

SALES &amp; SERVICE

~':::.....:..:r~':!::.::!.~

·~----~~~--~~

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

SUDES to

......

Addition•.
Remodeling &amp;.
Repairs, Roofs.
Baths, Kitchens

REPAtRSEMs •

·EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser~i.c4
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

•

lm111 MOVIES I

Custom Home
Building, Room

New

" ' aontulting .......,., ••
of
d e c - ltho
o r an Urben D•
vllopment lcllon Goont pro·
Jt!ct in d - - • butl·
..,.. dillrict of tho Vllloga of
Middleport.
. ,BerviCH will inolude, but
111 not 1 - to, the fot.lowtng ltemo:

Happy Ada

•RD~J~':,C:,EUNG •

161 Norlh Stcond
Mithloport, Ohio 45760

an

ployment Opponunity Em·
ployool.
··
fheto
. Qwna•
.....,.,
rlgllt
reject .any
or afl pro·
po..lo and to wolve any In·

I

Ntw lo&lt;atlon:

We Carry. Fishing Suppll•
Pay Your Phone

Public Notice

1

CONStRUCTION
CHESHI, OHIO

Basham Building

........

serv1ces
•

4·16·16·1fn

11"--------

~j('

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BU1LOING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS. BATHS

Pl. 949 _
210 1
or ln. 949-2160

tel'-

· -

.__W. Prices"

"At

WAll-INS WR(OIIE

PUBLIC NOtiCE
wlfl be received
at tho office of Bornord
;1. Prep8ratlon. end com- V. Fultz, Anomey·at·Low
plotlon of on 111vlronmen..l 11 t I&lt;&gt; W. Second Street:
revl-.
.
.
' Pome10y, Ohio 45789, until '
h
; ~. Prepara11on and execu· ' T Ida M
1
9 88
tlon of logally binding docu- ,:,•th.~re:t•th, !.~ -•
lt&gt;erito b e - the deval· ot theleto Opal L. Rondolph,
opel, vltloge. Dept. of Houo· lituotad in the Vllleoe of
ing 1nd Urben DIMIIOp· Reedavilla, County of Mltga
ment. and ony oU. ontitloo end Stmo of Ohio. Sold real·
-ry.
donee ft 1 two otory lrorna
3.Preporl11on ond pecu· dwllling with 1h1M becllion of •nv 01her documenu roomo. one both, kitc.,.n
, _ r y lor tile impte_,. living 100m, beMment, cor:
~ton of IIIIo project.
pc,.t end centrel gao heot.ln·
,SuCCOIIful bldcler muot be
panin who wloh 10
111 Equal Employrn1111 Op- look It llld relldence moy
Pi&gt;rfunlty Employer, willch contact Chorloo Houbar 11
poohlbita -rlmlnotion be· 378-1248 or . Bernold v.
ceu• of .nee•.creed, color, Fultz a1 992·2188. ·
niational . origin, · 111, age,
Bernard V. Fultz,
handicap, politlcololfllltion
Elecutor of tho Elt8te of
' II•·· bell*fl. Tha Vlloga of
Opoll. Rondolph
' Middlapoo'l lo an Equol Em· (3) 4, I, 7, 8, 9.10.11, ?to

\

a

17 '\'

CONTIACTING:

diiPDrl. Ohio 48710 1111111
3:00P.M. March 21. 1118

-tot.,. -r-

•

'1..._

'ERWIN

CUSTOM lUI
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

169 N. 2nd Ave.

Public Notice

•• t~ ..N~~apart "'~or· a
- · '111 R- tit•• MI.,.

•X'!-·-·

\

BUSIDeSS
•·

BISSELL
BU.ILDERS
. LT

U.IM.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Prop aollt wll be reaelved

u......, ••

1'1 tlhH&amp;OW . .,
D.._,,

and Kay at

·

6·17-tfc

•

!~ .......

;:;:;'IMbllltln

Mary, Donna,
Naomi, Angela.
Jane, I•r;:=;::::;,::~==tr.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;]r;:==~::;;:;===;mr:;:::;:;:;:;:::;;:;:;;l
Grace,

or 992·7121

RandS
"AUTO REPAIR
41926 ST•.IT. 7

~~~~~~~ · X EM

••
"*'
·~-­
Ill'_...,.

Re-acquaint yourself
with the stylists -

AlPH.11 Tr••••'
"
'
..
992·5682

POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire .
Department Captain D's fish ·
dinner at fire station Saturday
from 4 to 8 p.m.
HARTFORD, W.Va. - Hym~ ·
sing Saturday 7 p.m. at the ~
Hartford Churst of Christ In ..
Christian union : public Invited. :

Roger Hysell
·Garage

I

.

··_j~~=-

•••• - It

117-o::...

THE PLAINS - Zion Comi
murilty Church will be In revival
through Saturday. with services
at 7:30p.m. Evangelist will be Ed :
Barney of Racllffe. Special sin· :
.gers will be featured each :
evening. Public welcome.

Public Notice
. NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FID.UCIARY
•
on f.obruo,.Y 2&amp;. 1988, in
tho Moigo Couniy Poobete
Coun, Cooo No. 2&amp;685, Ru·
lena A. Roberto. 38013
'-"rig Hollow Rood, Pam·
oroy, Ohio. 4&amp;789, woo ap·
pointed EJUKOulri• of tho -1Cite of Adriln R. R-na.
Sr., deceolld.latoof38013
Long Hollow Rood, Pom·
eroy, Ohio, 45719.
Robert E. .......
Prabell Judge
K_..!i~~!'llld. Clerk

---·
--·

11-M'r 71 ...

1122/U/Ifn

·. RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Campers, RVs,
or Mobile
Home Lot
Rentals
992-5623
POID0[~ 9~-~0ma.

11·-TIDo

Service All Mekeo

GUN SHOOT

BROWN'S
TRAILER PARI

I
1._..,TVICI . .

MICIIII'I M

We

2·5-'81 I ma.

1 1 - -.. t

'IN

915-3561

PH. 992·2772

.., 11 'b , . . . .
111&amp;d

,.....,._

Mle.tl14

AriiC0*111

· RA~INE -A hymn sing will be
held Saturday, 7 p.m., at Morse
Chapel Church on Racine:
Portland Road , County Road 35.
Guest singers will be featured. ,

---

.c..., -eo..

... c..,l

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

FREE ESTIMATES

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

Cl,.ified page• cotJer 1M
following lelep/wne exchange,... ·

01 AUYE

"Must It Repairable"

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

11~ ...-

17.110
110.011
111.111.

,...,

DE~D

•Wa1her1 •Dryen
•Range• •Free;rer~
•Refrigerators

HEAnNG &amp;
COOUNG

Community calendar
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall. The
sign language ctass will be held
lmmedla tely followl11g the
grange session..

WANTED

J&amp;L
INSUUTION

•BLOWN IN

8

Public Sele
• Auction

lnfcMwtJII&amp; I ....... 001~

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

11101

%t..."C:2'?4o:.

Ali-T~,. Vwllaha CATV or

... ;

I

•'

-.. -- - ·_
.. ........,. ___
co.
..
=e....
_
__
_
-- ·-·
=-----·

INSULATION

IISIIU

WJJL IICIW•' I Aualtan ltrvioe14 7 2II et your OOIIW . . . . .

"""' A•rDtta.-. 11-t.l41·

1112.

ATC}. ~ TIM lh
1 - -·241.-el.
...... Apfl1

....._ -..

tor ... , , • • of

""

melediO: ...... La II

I

Wanted

To Buy

-'ifllrlal-- ·

.

MIMCMw.-loo.

..

11-1872

......

--...v-..etavv m

Third lt.. lyrHou, Olllo
"41l7t.
.
.

Gowtlll_.lolll.,.a.-.

...

..... ......_Y_

•n.uo~

-

f I II l I )I I

at:an

,1 ~ IIOD 1M. II·

21

Buelneu
Opponunity
_:___

•
'

I NOTICE I
,
1111 OHIO VALLI!V l'llauaH. I
lffCICO.u .,_.._.You ~
. . . .Ia.............. .

- · - - · itnol _ . , •
1lllthlaflooloa. .
•

�'

21

LAFF:-A-OAY

Bulineu
Opportunity

&amp;1 Houuhold Goocla

dlnln1 room •ulte - tJIO .
Ra: MI~~~t•IIM'tina ett111. New
Phlloo 28" colotlV-•4110. e
llvlnt room eulte•· ••Q';:

Carpet,-

Kltch•n

ot U

a yd.

J llathraor:n v inyl

n-.
_., flnenc
*'·"""'·
lnUIIIItlon •
inl

M-Fumft '

ts

-

403 4111. :!&gt;...·K!!R
GaiUpolla. Ohlo-81 • . 448.1.-..

'

30in. MIIIIoChofpn1a... Uica
new. C.ll 814-C41· 1411.

,,

. Kenmore mlcrowav• oo;lri-llke
"'¥~~ · *1150. Cell 814· 381·

8780.,

'

Services

,

~'~-. o._

, _ , ._ COl
Mary Lucao-814·"8·8787 or
448-"2.8 .
.

Wal'- • Paintint
11 Y'lt· of upMen••ll worll.

- - -- ·-oatlmotoil. COl
........1121 .

.

..

"We'd like a pizza and a big ::::::::~~~- .:::: K~:=
_ red-~'_ hecked tablec1o
. dryer-whho,
'95. G.E. cfrYor·
'""
1 ·_ th,".
whho, tt8. \illblripool ....,_._
44

CUetom c ·a blnel1 end ' Mill
worU 11110 SeCond A

814 448 111
· •

•

.... .

,..

Homes for Rant

3 roam furnlthecl.

Nicety fumiahed amlll houte.
Adults. onty ~ Ref. required. No

..,,, Call 81 4-448-0331.

31

· Ca!l-441-4411 aft
_ ..- 7pm.

.

2 BA . unfurnlahH. 1 mn.218

H omea for Sale

off Rt. 7 . tZ:OO rent. 1110 dep.
Ret. M~rried coup... . One child.

llg 3 lA . f•m hom• built on
your lot, •115.9H and up :,Cetl

Calli! 4·448·8HI.

1-814-888-7311 .

Modern 3 . bedroom hoi.JH at
P.trtot. t210' p..- month. t .7 5

story house louted lrt
GaiUpolia:-~ sc:hool: 3 lA .• 1

...... Call 814· .. 8-3870 "'
448-1340.

2

beth. WIH Mit on l111d c!)ntriCt:
13~;100 total.

ie,ooo. dOwn.

Call 9-8· 814·"8-7172. aftor
5·61'-"8-1522.
3 BedrOom hou~ w / 32· .Crw.

In Eurllul acrou from Dam .
P811ill beumaht/ gMage. Stor·
... building. County weter. 011
hMt. Nice. 131 .000. can 6141·

. .8.2208 .
3 bedroom house-2029 Chltham. Nice siding. New roof.
EJtcel. c:ond.

e31 .000.

C111

......8-2205.

233 SJ~ond A""- :w / WCII'P't, 2

BR .. IV. bot~. khchonfumilhad.
t3150 a mo. plus Hp.

a ref. ~o

new fence, pond • pine trees.

Call 814•"6·2107-dayo. 245·
5800-•en.

I

2 lA . newly remodeled home.
Large fenC*I lot, lwge utility
room, bullt-kl ov•-rangtl!~ b.ll•
"' bNrd hut. "ear Bidwell Elem.

tch091. 129,000. Call814-388-

9783.
· 1mmedi~e

poueaion - I rooms
and bath. Nsement • prage in
,O .IIipollt, Ohio. Cltl IU--U6·

Adu~.

BR.

furnishad . U 50 • ino. Oap. •
rei- Call 814·"6·2543.
48 ChUNeothe Rd . 1176 a mo.
plus ut1Utie1 &amp; dep. C1ll 11_4-

"8·1410.
5,00,

1 Or 2 bedroom hOuse . in
Pomll'crf· fl,ecenlly remodeled.
Fumithlld .or unfun1ithed. 614992· 6723 after 6 :0Q.
3 bedroom Farmhouie fcir rent
on Jac:kton Ad .~ Patrtot, Ohio.
11 00. Depotit, 1110 per month.

COli 814· 748-9928.

One bedroom houae. nuraery.
bath, 1100.00 month. Close to
· M11on Jukaon County Una; At.

87, 304-451-1042.

month, 30.·875· 1137.

'I

2818 "'814-949-2321.

Second Aw. Total alae. ezoo
piUa dep. Adulll Only. ·No pet:a.
Cell · 814·«8· 2231 or rMI·

2881 .

Gracloua living'. 1 and 2 bad rqom , IPirtmtentt at Vilt.ge
Manor and Rl.,..... Apartm•nt• In Middleport. Frorri
t21 !i- Including utiUttlll. C.ll
814-992-7787. EOH. .

42

2 bed~oom apt. In Syracuta for
·rent. Eld~rly prtferr.S. Aeason•bll ,.... 114·982-2749.
2 blpdroom Apt. for rent. c.ipeted. Nlca 1mlng. l.Jiundry
:facilhieJ anllabla: C.ll 814·
Nice one b4tdf'OOI'i1 unfurnlthed

apartment in Pam8roy qloae to
1hoppin~. Depoait rtqulred.

e••·9sz-zot4 ..
APARTMENTS, mobile homeS,
houlel. Pt. Pl...ant end G•lllpo-

lio: 61 4·"8·9221 .
8Hch _
S treet, Midd1ep0rt, Ohio.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

till p1id, rtferlnCII and depo1it,.

30'-BB2-28H.
Two and one bedroom fumiahed
apartment. qall 304-875·3800.

4 room apt and bath. uliUties
paid. nice yard. call 304-1763.100 or 17&amp;·6609.
4~ Space for Rent ·

RIVER LOTS

2 bedroom' hOuH, family room,
full basement, centr~ll hut ind
air, l~ge lot. ~04-675·3119

on

ceptad. COli 814-441-3197 or
245-5223.

2 Bedroom mobile hame on
Neighborhood . Rd. ~all 814·

367-0632.
2 8ft . untumithld tr'8iler. tl60

32 Mobile Homes

plus dep. &amp; utHh,iu. No pett.
Ref. rtquired. Call 1514· 446·

4491 or "6-3888 .

for Sale

Nice 2 &amp; 3 b8droom trail••·
Urge yard. In Kadauge. Call

_614-. .6-7473.
1 973 Hoily Park. 60x 12,

2

bedroom. Land contract poaai·
ble. ..ooo. 614-742-3033.
1974 Holly

. P~rk.

70~~:14,

3

bedi'oom. Verv .nic:e. t8000.

614· 742-3033.
For sale or rent. 14x70 2
bedroom mobile home. 61 4-

992-8722.
1980 14x70 Shultz . Allelec:cric.
excellent c:ondition. Pric:e reduced - C.tl aher 6:00. 61 4·

992-5862 or 814-992-3348.

14xe6 Mobi.. HOme. t12.000
addition. 18x29 ft. living room.
2 bath. 3 large bedrooms, ni!IW
, earpel: through out. In Aut11nd
on "h: acre. Ger~ge. out buildirtg.
aid1 Wilks; large front lawn.
~26,000-

614•742-2067 .

WindiOt' trailer3 b;.rooms. whh

addition, 3 ec;:r" l1nd, out
buildlngiJ. OaiUpoli• Ferry, 304-

Four

eycle horiZontal 1% HP
" United.. Antique engine. fly

78

*38.00. Ma-County, Oollla.Oioloancl--wllhlrl
,...... •• OUt di..-..dan. 304118--.'
.

btu ._,......
-.... la\ahlon
•-30,000
... .,00,00.
4 .aid
hald-kU-chalroUO.oo
- h. &amp;mallaldldblhariflour blri and mota! allclo
ohoiVoo t7&amp;.00 . . 304· S85·
3838.

•
d .a.~ '
Pnoto
a ..... oom equipment,
,...,.... offan · ue~pllble.
Call304·878·1"'....... .......
UHCIS.ft-bUiba.IOC
oach. no
ftallablo
Friday ,_lng. 8UIP ot ··
PokltPioMant.

Cell 814' 266-8251 .

SWIMMING POOLS · •!lei
NOW· PAY ~TER .

0946.

Flrewoo4·inl~~:ed hlldw'ood. Av-

1---- ------

Computer IBM PC Junior Plua
printer .. At10T1:ed toftware. C.U

. can. 'boltl, plen• repo'd, ~r­
plut;. Your II'N. luv-t. gukll~

.

I14-448-87S2.

nn c - • · 4 cyt. autO.. 4 :

doOr, Pl. PB. air. MW tirae. rilly
1 Chlirolilo, , Chorolala COW • . ,.,.,_, UIOO. Call 114-99232Q.
- - Call14·387-7418.

2 · -...... , Chl:!&gt;ntUI,

Pets for Sale

llr-. . and Supply lhap-Pot
O"oOmlng . AU breede ... An

12S3.

2679.

1990 Oldl 81. RobuDI 69 350

Dr1g0~d

Raglo,.,od Oua- H - for
-814·112·2070
or lrado . for - · Cal

C.nary kennel.
CFA Hlmelayan. PeNian and

Slameaa kin-. :!&gt;KC · Chow
pilppln. Coil 11 :f-448·38"
1fter 7PM.

814-446-7313.

84

Hay &amp; Grain

ti•Y for,uta. *.1 .00 per bale. Cll

81'-381-8411.

.

Coni!lllanod mlaod hay. U .oo•
- Call.,._ · ,, _28porbalo. lonllok-Call
81!1-387-7727.

AKC reg'i ttef.d. Slblrl1n Husky,
all blue eyll, thott • Wormed.
Also hiiVe Chow Chow puppiae,

Atg..._. toi ui-..Crocheted. Cell
Katheryn Yeauger-614-387·
7790-Routh Lane. Cheshire.

Rlae, R11davllle. 414·617·

3311.

5 rogi01.r... ,......_ dogo, 3
1•m-'• and 2 malo, 304-•&amp;81892.

Oaad Alfofl
_ a .... tof - -.•,2,00
-304-171-2188. ·
"•• t1 ,oo bola, 304·112·3315.

Good te!ephOne ·pol... 26' -36'
long. Prlcea-1t1ning at $20 per
PQie. Cell ~14·446-7447.

1

43

Farms for Rent

.

58

2109.

Fruit
&amp; · Vegetables

10 HP riding mower,

71

Auto's -Fot Sale

1113 Ctiwy. Cltotlon. :!&gt;m radio,
auto. trono., P8, PI, 11,000
miln. et4&amp;0. CanbrtManltthe
Gol...,. Dally TribUne ar for

morelnformltlon clfl.e14-441·

2342.

. .

1977 C.nwo. V·l. auto. trtne.,

good cond. Maple frame blue
cola. Call after 6 PM-614-367-

FrHzer IHI. 304·8715-4182 •

7800.

PB . .PS. Call 814·448· 181'&amp;,
aftor I ·I'M· "1-12".

r .1111 Sii!lllil·'~

II

.

·;.,m· on

At. 36 · Soulhllde;
••eeU~ 1700 tq , ft. farm
~· bam, pond, 60 ecr... mid

I'

lpertmenlll whh m.t.n ldlahen

tlncl WIIMr·diV• hookupe, Cl•
bll talavlllon tv_.l...,.. Can

304-171•3030 or 175· 3431 .

114-441-1132.

36 Lo~ 81 Acrejlga

UpltMI unfurnished' apt .. Car·
potod, utUklaa poid. No chlldron.
No pota. Co11814-448-1837.

bulldlnl•

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Qrlzzly (PG) (1 :32)

1:00(1) 700' Ciuti

.ill!IJICiiHra
(I) • ()) Hotel Peter must
inake a crucial decision when
lie' s asked to sell the hotel.
''

rnOOW.M~
-:
~ RJ.DS,SIR
J

uen-;il

torn daWn,

"

haUling. CaH61'-387·0121. ' ,

.

For home repair. r.moct.Un4.
flnlall worlt . . . ..... Ci\]1
114-448-8422. May Ood biOO!I

you ~chly'

1'\omp -

'-

I

driiMng.

r COLJLDN'rc5is:T
ANY BANANAS ....

571·2903.

t1l ·• ()) Buck James BuCk

laceo; a possiDie racial
discriminalion charge. 1;1
(!) Great·Parlonnoncee
LUciano Pavaro11i returns to
Naples to celebrate the ·
Nsapolltlln song.
IIJl ei!Jl Knots unclng
Mack and Frank have an
explosive confrontation: letter

~PE'FRLIIT.

SEE Dry Wali: ••Parlone&lt;id
hanging, flnlahint. ropalr worli.
make 'DOlling • - -

tutura. 30+671·1417. • - , \

82

Plumbing
&amp; HNtlng
'

CARTER'S pLOMBINO
ANDHEAnNG

· Cor. F..-th end Pine
OIIIIPDIIi. Ohio

.

1

I

;

Phono 814-441-3811 or •••·

441·44n

84

· ,

shocks Val. C
!Ill MYateryl Morse suspects

/5 CeNIS

,.

'

:104·&amp;71·&amp;121.

4 W.O.

IT OLJ&lt;S&lt;HT TO
TASTeL...IKE

,.

nuall ond campor.

Vans&amp;

Mi.ilrrl Morl!l suspects
that no one in the church Is
lelllng the whole truth.
IIJ) Billy Gra~am Denver
Crusade, P1 2
!Ill Myateryl Inspector Morse
is called when a church
warden Ia found murdered.
1!J1 LMry King Llvel
Bill)' Graham Denver
Crusade
9:30 II ill «&lt;I Night Coun Harry
plans a Houdini-like escape
lrom a sale fqr Halloween
party. (R)
(I) Col. 8'ball
10:00.(1) Straight Taitt
II (JI 11)1 L.A. Law Woman
who buys Arnie in an auction
wants her money's worth . (R)

e1121

and ..,.,... 304·

• good · aDIIdttlon,

.

~_.._...., r - - - - - - 1

:

1001

~

•

SU·«··

898·3802

-

.,

H

RON ' S Televillon lervi ~W.
HouH aUa Dn I'CA, .Ouutr'.
QE. S-aling In Zonldl. Call

"'"""· Aoldnt t?H. COli 814·
446-8287.

= .....

-

,.,.,,

'I

304-5'18-2388 or
2484.
.

1hat no one In the church Is
lelling the Whole 1ru111.
I!Jll!vanlng Nawa
ilJI Nawa
aJ Q) College Baak-H
10:05 (I) MOVIE: The Nlghl of lite
Oltzzlr 101 (1 :42)
10:30 (}) Great American ~
Fishing anil Bear Hunting
11:00 (}) Remington Steele Signed.
Stpeled and Delivered

Ol' SNUFFY

WAS A· REAL CUT·UP
AT TH' DANCE
LAST NIGHT, ,-....c:.

LOWEEZY

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

• ill

(I) iiJ) •

t1) •

Public Penn and Teller,
known as the bad boys of
magic, blend comedy 111d
magic In this partonnance . 1;1

I!JI MoneJIIne

Gener~l Hauling

iiJ) loep

'

'

u:30e (2) 9l Toti!tlh1

1

Dillard Water ~~Moe."' Poult

Clat.na, Wellt.

- ........................

1t78 Ha~oy O a - 8uoor
Glldo. Callll•-379· 2"7.
. ' ·lc1111 luzuld 700 Intruder

1.128
......
1113 ·
liM 210
E
- -·-1·
lian. tiOO ftnn. 1111 fiX 90, good

liNd.

~••

t:JOO. 1910 XR-10 "onda: Fair
aDntlltion. ezoo. 1111 ~
4-- 21011. Oaad -Miilian,
~ _ , - oft•
· f1100.
COl
114-112'41111
1:00 p.m.

a2l

.QI)NC!) Blgn 011
!Ill Penn and Teller Oo

1177 llaer, 4 wheel driVe. new
bilkM; 111ft!r.z. r8dlttor.
raac1y ia go, t1,7uu.oo. 304871· 71 • ., .. 171·-··

16

Dellftrv

A~:

...... Call ., ...448· 740• •, .
Sunday

J • J

o.IJI.

~,

w.... s.r.1oo. Swlmmlnfl

-Z\41-8211.
clotorno. - ·· Ph. 814'

..
it-

.

R • 11 w- Sarvloa.
alotora, _.._ , _ fH~ . For.•

maoly Jamoa ...,. Woton.COI

304-871·1370.

'

'

hut Aupe, Jr. Wllllr lervlc4l.
~814.,_.3171 . .
.
'

---·Cal

1111 Klwullll 4 wh IIIII with ·

bl•dl. ••a con.-.
euoo.oo. 304'4171·3371 ...
,_I,OOpm. . '

Ravage - Joist - Annul -

DOG!"
-~----~

.........-

BRIDGE

Turbid- IN the DOG

··-, --'---c-------.,
NORTH

· 1-10-11

+&amp;2
.AKJ
tQJ109H
+K%

James Jacoby
WEST

!!:AST

+7 3
. .7 54 3
tA3
+H863

+KQ986t
.9 862
tK2

+10

SOUTH
.A JIll
Inexperienced players frequently
.Q 10
make the mistake with-the South hand
+865
of bidqing clubs after East has jumped
+A Q 75 4
to two spades as a .pre-emptive weak ,
bid. There is _no point iii bjllding three ..
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer:~orth
clubs on such an auction. What if
North raises to four clubs? Now there
Wesl
Nortli Eai1
Soul•
is no way to get back to three nol
t
2+
3NT
trump, which is almost surely the best
PaSs Pass
Pass
contract. Although South's bid was
best, East found the play to bold deOpening lead: + 7
clarer .to eight tricks. ,
, South was prepared to allow East to
billd the first tri.ck with the queen of
spades, thus breaking up the defenders' communications. Instead, East
East was convinced by the bidding
played low on tbe ppening lead. Declarer had to Win the flrst trick witli and the appearance of dummy that the
the spade '10. He no)!! went after clubs only chance to set declarer would be if
but was stymied when East showed partner West had the diamond ace and
out on the second lead of the suit. Next a second spade. Thus, ducking the first
came a diamond; but West took the spade lead stood out as the right play.
ace right away to play a second spade. Let's ho~ that all of us make that play
the next hme .a stm1lar deal arises:
Pownone.
.

1:30 • ill 1111 A OHferent Wo~d

JMr

St.- 2. Bedroom, 2

Locet_.
off .-utavlla Ad.· 1 BA . apacl0t41

.

Moetwelltoa,mpleted•em•_"IY·

73

bath•, kltCMn tumilhed. Wt w
c:arpet. 1328 a mo. pfus utllh:'-'·
No ..,., d-h • ref, Call

lroaltt~ Apartment~ :

IPGI (1 :34)

81 CD College Baeketbal Q

Rawy or ·cablo

304-112·201 1'

and "'ovlaa. 814-"8Z&amp;H. E.O.H.

111 acr11, 24x60 .,.n, out
.,..._, pond, good rood lron1"110, will oplit proporly Into 40
•nd 78 acrl treats• . own.-

I!JI PrlmeNews
Ill MOVIE: Raggedy Man

1977 Oadat plollup. Auto ..

1178 ~·-Cal
c
310 engine, good 1hape.
•1.000. or belt otfw. Phone

ahop

814-. .8-4928.

Home
I rriprovements

toolbox, rec*1. Rune tJOOCI. Body

•aeo.

Plk• from • 183 a mo. Walk to

Cou~ ·

e

folly Troa Trim-g. tmtmp
.......... C.ll304-171·1331."

1173

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT J:!&gt;CK·
SON EITATEI, 838 Jockoon

11

Serv1r.es

ian Oodgo 4x4 pickup 'II ton.
PS, PI, . -. , _ , can 81 4-,
448-2101 IM!w- I· 11 PM. .

Aunt

pllnted. deck:. . A•genov. Inc.
Aptt. Call 304·876·7738 or

Fum- ap1, 1 IR. 107 2nd.
100 . . .. M11011 County AI. GoiiiP"'Ia. U31 Uti!- pd. COl
87, rolllnga lilllo of -land 448-4418oftor7pm. ·
.nd m11dowt, ' IXOIIIInt · for
huntlnt. good ......... 'F~ apt. 701 4111. 1 BR, ·
eltet. f•no•d for cettle, 1.2 20. Ut- pd. Col 44Sf35.ooo.oo. can .lion Tllomp, "11 ..... 7pm.
oon 3114·118-3813.

'·

Trucka for Sale

newly

10'1, 304•878-5420.

!ln-. ·-- ........

72

1iBI Chewy 1·10, bluo. 5
16,900.00. 304-882·
3174.
•

61'-448-0338:

l 578.

8:00 (}) Hell Town Indigo's Sister
Dill 9l The Coeby Show
When Thea Is late, he makes
the lamMy miss Vanessa 's
e!_ay ope
_ nlng.(A) C
\1) • ()) Probti !Aystery
surro_u nds the &lt;ltialh ol a
colleague in a nuclear
accident. Q
(!) Myalaryl Rumpole takes
lha case when old Cpt. .
Gleason's car brakes· fail.
IIJ)
a21 U Houro
l!ll Televlaf9n Look at·the
rise and fall of the varlet}'
show on American TV. t;1 ·

too. Lac:al-~..:
Froa' . . , , _ . call ~
IOOd cond. low ·.mlluge, new . 1-614-237-0491. day or n!ilht.
tlrel, ' one owner. loaded til
R_o g 1 r 1 8 1 1 em • n ·t
...tt... *12,100.00. 304·17&amp;· Wat..-prooflng.
:
7117.
.
SWEEPEII ond MWiolg onachiolo .
1910 Pontiac G...,.. LoMano. ropalr. up Md·"defh•...............
r. Devte' Vacuum
· .... 4 - ; gaad · call Cleaner.
:104-112-2744,
one h•lf mAe it.JI
Ooo 1100 C - Rd. Coli 61.,_
. I'
. 1171! T-. Arr!. 488 -or. . .••0284,.
11.000--- u.ooo.oo
,...nttno. roofing• .,.. ti'IIAINni•.
o r - - · 304' 175-8422.

2 BR . 1_pte. 8 clo•trt•. kltche"appl. furnished. Waaher· Dryer

3 bedroom. 2 bMha. central air.

7:35 (J) Sanford lll1d Son

UnCandltkmel NMIN eu-iln·

1178 F210 ••4 Fard ._cab,
NC 1M111. all.,; mll-llroa,-·-.loc*out
hubo, U.781.00. 304-1711.21.

Ntw completely furnilhed
1.,.rtment a. mobile hOm• In
city. Adultt only. Parking. Call

•1121 e

.'

1671,00. 614·441 ·

opoad,

Apartment
for Rent

875-6104.

30 ICi'l f•m: Mottiy liHible.
Nelf' RiD Gr1nde. Pond. bwnt,
ood homt. C•ll 114· 246-

whhl1~

2171.

·
Jeopardy! Q
iiJ) Barney Miller
81 Q) WKAP In Cincinnati ·

12ft. Jraller. 7000 lb. capacll\'.
14 Inch aide ralla iue'reqt~ .
Faclory ·mado. '718. 814·742·
2057.
. .
'·

SCIIAM·LETS ANSWERS

By James Jacoby •

1!J1 Croaeftre

New Blue Tand~tni Axle I~ •

BAlE!lENT
W:!&gt;TERPROOFING

PRINT NUMBERED LETTER S IN
THESE SQUARES

The lines
are kept open

IIJ) Wltael of Fortune Q

91/.z ft. truck Clml* tor .....

81

you develop from step NO. 3· below.

e

~~.::!'a'ball

Oood condhion. A-,. t70Q.
Cal_l814·182·22H aftor a,oq,

1977 _Caprlco l.ndau. rally

1171 Dodoe ~ c,.nom 4x4." 2
Jona. 30+·&amp;78-1574.

268-6689 aftor 6 PM.

underpe_n ning. t1 3 ,500 .00 .
Phone 3Q4-871-1367.

33

1878 Ch..- . Y ,OCiO OC1Ual
mlloa, t478.00; 304-875 ·
2457.

" ' -· _., clean. •sst&amp;.
114-112-2174 or 114-8123857.
.

Household Goo.da

com-Crown City .,... Calll14-

4*'plt,

'

Complete the chuckle . quoted
by li lling -in th e rriissing iNords

A sportsman's wife lett this note for her husband, who was
late for d inner again: " I went shopp1ng . Your dinner Is IN the

1 Ill (J) Judge

lng in Mandt pert• and a.-viM

&amp; C1mpera

-'· --' · ·

'I

&amp;IQ) M"A'S'H
7:05 (J) Andy Griffith
7,30 II (}) (I) Hollywood

alnoo 1978. Phano 1304) 372·

Motors Homes

.8

1!J1 Moneylne
.
• C 11)1 Wheel al Fortune'_
Qti Chaera
·

..n.tce.

79

,._ _.._.,....J.I.-...1...-L.-

D &lt;ll PM Magazine

iiJ) NeW1I

Ripley, WH1 Vl.....la. Spoclai\Z·
t.

·

1-- _Tli'5-_-. 11r.-~.;;;_~r-_-.,-~- ..;.:.;1--....,j

,f:..~,A~:::•it)ort .

. (!) llportacanter (L)
(I) 1-nment Tanlghl
(J) People'• Court.
(!) llll MicHell/ L t - ·
Nawa"-(1:00) .

'
' l'i-''

1817. Nln• to five.

..

9l NBC Nlghdy News

ex·

riew cas!1ier was taking
Ira long. causing the line to grow
steadily. '' She can't help it," annouri_c ed one guy , "she 's still
green __... the ears;" ·.

alit

"

.

lmpon Auta

~r--:--I
-----.
BELBI N I
Q
I

. -T,:--M~ l',..;P:..,~.!~~
. n.e
1 1 , . :.!

8:35 (I) Carol Bumatt
7:00 (}) Remington StHie S1etle

1984 Ford V. - ·plolc-up F180 . Slarluo Troa and Lown some:..
lawn cera. lendaceplnQ, nu,..P
' ....~ . __6 cyl. 3 ............
,...,.ov•l. 304-171-2142 Or

L1 Vi::diii.k

Land tQ rent- tuhable for railing

hook-up, ww

.JHn'•

~-. . L . . . L
• .-1.:......J
.

I!Jllnakle Pl)lltlco ·~
. IIJ) WKRP In ClnctnnaU
.• • CD Too c:oae lor ca,.rart

~·

Auto Repair ·

I

! Ill I~ ii

'

iiJl e 1121 CBS Newo .
!Ill - , 'Electric

Ch..., flot capo. call 304-878·

1112 MerOitdu. r-..llrabll en-

gino 1 toE. body and lntorlor
_.,..,. COnd, call 304·8757749 aftor 1:00 P\11 -

"'"11'0-

304-875-6483.

14x70 tot1l electric, all 2x6
construction 'I" o1k p~~neling 1nd
theet rock. Full blthroom wh:h
""din tub. _3 btdrOOmt, vinyl '

Farms for Sale

1981 Pondac. 4 - r 'Pari·
Nico. Low mlltogo, VB
wldl ovord~••· won oquippad.
*1285. 114-812-2174 or 114·
892· 3857.
.

1183 Pontiac Trane Am.: loldld.
boll , oflor. 304·815·5588 or
171-5789 ··~ for

2 bedroom mobil• home ·halt
mill out Jericho Aolld , cell after
pm,

brak... Priao U710. Calll14·
941·2437.

like new, all optioit'1. SHARP,
uldng .7.8H.OO. Make offer.

!1 dll:;p11rl.ililill

2 bMirooms, fur~jahed , V!I8Sher
end dry,., air conditioning.
12·1 0 month plua d•poait end
utilhiH. 814-992-7479.

5:00

motor. New QoodyMrtiNI, new

1185 Oodgo Daytana Turloo l,

Musical
Instruments

lndividutl 'Guit4fiir L8•nsll Bru·
nlcerdis MuaiC 114-4-41-0187
or Jan Wlrttllev1nttructor 4418077 . Limited · openlna•
IYIIMable.
·
,

~

I I 12

IDLYE

Super 1owt ot Sparta T-

31.7 .0238.

3788 after 4 :00 pm.

RENVIM

·PI

·

IIi Boardwalk a BaubaH'o

..:.
4..:.48~0·:..:•..:.1.:.._ __ ;__~
8udpl Tranomiaaloila \
UHCI· ltar1lnfl . ot til. "'!·

r

304-875-5308.

mow,er. Electric start, roar ditcharge. Nlca 1hape: (:all 614·

Dyna~ai'k

l!ay for oalo. Flnt cutllng. Novor
.Tim.
- ·-Cut
prlar to Juna 1.
AM.·
t1 .25 por bolo. Horloy

304-878-21,13.

67

8:30 • (2)

1988 cacllnac ·cou~po DeVIIIo,

814-. .6-2108.

Herti,age II Kl,rbv aweeper. CaH
614-446·8180 or 446·7441.

Uoad lotornallv ............
an- carry 3000 mllea or 30 daya

-77

I

Fox The

I!)) Sllowllz TOI!ar
IIJ) F - ol Lite
• Q) HIIPJIY Oayo
8:05 (J) Allee

Utad • rebuHt ttMSmlt.ione.

· - .... aalf, 10 ......... ' 1871 Mont1 Cado. PI, PI,
ald. CON Gaylo Pr1oo 114·843· :!&gt;M-FM, roug~ . '500 81 4·892·

Va Chow, Chaw pupptlll. Cute,
rOady to go. •25 nch. can

Merch~ndi sc

61

Red Hot .blralntl DNO ~all.,.

30 round boloa .af 'hay for
moo. aid-malo. Champlo!&gt; 8laod ..... no oac:h. can 814-848·
Una. Call 814-258-8021.
. 2011.

Cal 11 • ·448-1437,

SpeCious mobi18 h~,... lote for
rent. Famif'v Pride Mobih Home
Perk. Galllpolit Ferry, W. Ve.
Trail., loll. _Rt. 1 Locutt Road,
beck of K &amp; K Mobile Hom•.

Livestock

1181 Iuick S - llmltad
- . ,, Pl .. Ptl., -~.
crutae, elr, bleak with l11ndlutop.
uooo. 614-812-3283.

66

Rani

Eo--

83

a

C!) Or. W11cli Mark of lite

Dol-

U 100. 614-9S8-4227. Momlnt- Kaop nylng.

four K rambled words be-

(I) llportaL-

taaduptoono-' Caoh•corry
81 Farrii,Equlpme
, nt .
71 Auto's For Sale
orlnotan.ea_11 et•-•n-222Dor
·
~·
,
304-175·4230'
Lite. model 110 CoabhUt trllc· Oov.,.ment Hom• fntrn •1 . CU
.
tar. 3 pl. hllch, lvo I'TO ohaft.• ilipalrt.
tu _....,_ Oldo., Bulolc, Pondao, a...,.,
~ ~cuiNotor buthhOg
R IIIII 'ons. Call1·101·187- Chwy truck. Ford, Ctwytler~
,_......... ·' · ·
" IOOO·Ea. GH -8801 for current trentmlllionl (UIId) •re lntei-·
mowing machine a belar. _,,~_.
.. .3000inl
UIIO. a - w i l l -- can · - R•
nallylnlpac1ad.aarry
.·
114·211·8122.
or 30 day wanMtty 1 - • .
Muot' aolll 1983 Ford
.accura flrot). Wo btl'l (u'!l&lt;
Udllty ~- s&amp;,
. 3U••40'xl' v,.., cl-. garage kopt. L~ad_ 1ranomloaloM. Call 814·44f·
-t-11'xl Jlld
- r • 3' U1fO'o. P~cocl rltlht. 814- 0911.
_
. ~
- - r- "88 ERECTED. 812-1117.
.
Iron Horaa Bldga. &amp;1+332.
199'-85 l!lodll" pick up nuak
9745.
181; Horllon, _
, " ·000 left fnin1 - r . Uoo.oo . .,..,
miiM. elr condftion, 4 tpeld.

~y

• (2) Cll It (I) IW Ill a2l
llllllawa
.

• whaol
drlwTurt.o..
...........
bUill
~~~-~.,~-~-~~~;;~;:;:;~;;;;;~;:~;;;;~~~ •._.,.
0'1~
to 310
2 wh
... '
OM
........... Ouarail-

Flrewood·LArge pick-up load- ' ---.,---.:......:.._ _
t36 deliv~· All hardwood. AKC Ragitt.-..1 Rotlwlllw. 14

3 TVt- 1 color con10le, 1 c:olor
19", 1 BW 19"-AII need repair.
Chinon 8 mm movie camera. All
prica~ to aMI. Call 614-446·

.

0

814-448•4781.

OaiUpollo. Ohio. Call 114-441·
2783. '
.

low to fo rm four simPle Words.

""-·
.........,"' t-Jlono, ......... o.or k1U for GM

ll!lllt
iUIII,ft'

St.'aomardAKC·booU11fuiPupl. · lalad hay U • up. Uaod form
macfllnorv. Call 814-311-8483
•260 aech. Ca11 . 114-1-lll·
8928 after 1· PM . :!&gt;lllalla. Ohio. ar 311-1110.
21 mil• fram GaiHpoilt.

c.n

387-7441 . .

W.Va. con 304-n3-5651.

• to
,-

.THURS., MARCH 10.
8 :00 (}) Crezy Like
Duke Is Dead

"llrot) •. Wo can holp widl hard •
lind 1ranomloaloM. Call 81 t

.•

QRtorrange .·lett• rs -of th•

'::~:t~~, S©\\Q{llA-~£trs·
::::
l ditod
CLAY R. 'OLLAN _;;;__ _....__

EVENING

w·. ,1nty. (w,.lchiYII' occura

o

Concntl! b&amp;ock1- .all all•· y..t
or deltvery. Mltonllftd. Gallipo- · Chewy tNall w/llowlo body:
lis Block Co.• .1 23Ya PIM 8t., ~ _Contect ~Hen Bolter·

- a d . uoo 388-8S90.

.

'D

1-105,187·8000. EK1. 8-9908.

Now tlklnt depostt for Ei.wtW
Hug. 31 ' OVII pool with deck, beautiful AKC Coct&lt;or Spaniol
fence It filter . ·lnttellatiOn • - pupo. Blonde, Buft • Slack.
finanCing •~aH•bl•. 1·800·341- Wormed • lhotl etert.::l. Yet

614-446-8866.

'

Hoi'MI for Ill• Stand•dbred
and Ttnn..M Watkin; C.H

OROE~

_heUI. 135_ delivered local.

~~

Television
Viewing

Auto .Parts
&amp; ·Accessqries

0

c--

Jtyl81. lama Pet FOOd 0..111'.
Julio- Ph. 814·"1·0231 .

Callihan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tlres.llzn12 ..13; t4, 1 li,
16, 18.6. 8 n111n out At. 218.

-

FlrowaOtl dollv-. ..... .... .

wheel type. 304-273-6898 .

Misc. Merchandise

84 .........

A..-.ft 12ft a l u - 17 1'i
HP OIC ....- boot I 'Ho HP
- - a n d -. 304273-lltl.

2 lA. trailer-Kerr. t 176 • mo.
plu• ct.p. 'h water bill paid. Call
614-44_6 -1490.
.

1984 SchuHz, 3 bedroom, porch
whh tun dHk. 304 -87&amp;-&amp;376
aft• 4:30 pm.

304-882-3473.

-.zn.-.

AM l'onobiO S - P.O.- Box
704, H u - . W. Ya. 21711 ,
·phone 100·142-:2434.
1o10 of utioo. 4 _
prom . _ ooffoo and and
..__ 304·875·2217.
·
·
&amp;moll ...... l r - tiO.oo.
ConMIIt • - - .. eeo.oo.
Phono 304-875· 7211.

~--~--------------~------~::~:=~~~~~--------~-.---------~~TIM~-~Dw~-~~&amp;~~~-M~I~P~~~:!16~

·1117 bOlt. taka awr ~-,..
-lnt · V·l. 11 , 171

pno.
I . mm o1m.fa. VCR. ancl
-...ete r~ordet . 304·171tl74 . .

lerge 2 Br. Mobile Home, 1'/z
b•tht; dining ;oom. parth•lly
furnlihed. Upper At. 7 t225 1
mo. Cell614·2415·5818.

44

875-8930.

....... I aD • • FtL llt.laft:

248·8121.-

Dynamark 1 1 'H, P . .riding lawn

8732 .

--·:00

BORN

11ft Collman-...,_
:104-171-~99 ,
'

• , , ...............

Mller.i•l•
Block, brict. HW• p6pea.. win·
~. llntlla. etc . .claude· Win·
.... Rta Grande, 0. Cll 11•-

small tofa. h8 Juat 'been ,...
upholltlfld with 100 · nylon
materiel. brown •nd beig8
ltripea. ·Cen ... at ' Mowrr;o
\,lpholetery ~r c•ll 304· 875·
4164.

Space for •mall treii8rs. All
hook-upl. Cebla. AltO efficiency
room1, air and cable. M1eon,

304-876-1076.

F\lrniahe(i, l•ge living roorn lit
kitchen, 2 BR . Cell 814-388-

M·

plavpen. Call614· 446·7413 .

7479 .

304-876-3073.

r::· .

Pomeroy-M~. Ohio

·Tmndey, M.rch 10, 1988

B011tl 1nd
Motors tor Sill

... - ... 304-I?..UM.

lin 'lltlt1.
lam ta...-Aa'a. Okl lit. 21·

Bulldl~g

Ohio.

2 BR . mobile home in Evergreen
private lot. ' Children ae-

...-.......... ..

.

wetlitlnQ l::ltJitliW

304·871·8574 . ·

54

·'

~~-c-.,-.WOI'tloloat.................

6&amp; Building Supplies

2 BR,, water, 1ewage fumithed . . For Bomlng &amp; C.mping-For Sale·
BHutHul river view. No ctty
or Rent. A-One Reel Eatme Baby Clothes. 0·3 Yrt., swing,
COUNTRY MOBILE Hame Perk.
Route 33, North Df Pomeroy.
Rengl trallert. Call 814-992 -

24x60 double wide home on
60•1 10 lot, screened porch,
utility bldg. f8ncad yard. Clift~m.
.W.Va. 304-773-6625.

.

orega pick-up load-U5, you

26 3 lA . mobilehometforrent.
Call 814·446·0627 attar 2 PM.

Ctoll304-875-4890.

304·678-.1450.

9Q2-37,11. EOH ;

Brokar, 304-676-6104.

Moun 4 rooms end bath, lot.
gar au-. half buement, 1 137
Second Ave. . Gallipolis, Ohio.

Bedt, dr.....a. oMit. dln"ett•.
coucht, chalrt, odd ch•ira, r• ·.
friglratora, 110v11. &amp; mite ;

1. bedroom apertmentl. Fur·nlthed and unfumilhed. t200..f22&amp;. per month. Utlllt._l fllrniih.ed. Ci11614-112·6724.

toea. Foater's Mobila Home
Park; Clll614·446· 1602.

-~

PICKENS USED FURNITURE.

Fumiehed efflciency·9~ 4th. · 1987 Ioney TV, 21 '' brand new,

Avo. "85. Utilhlea pold. COli
814-"1·4416 aftor 7 PM .

7 room 3 bedroom hou•e on
UUret Clift with 7 acr81. Washer
and dry•. r.trigef.tor, atov,,
dilhwash.,. Asking 146,000 . .
614-992-6310.

aft« 4:00 pm.

' I

oc.--ad porch. 458V.

~.

-•ntola.

apartmlllnt

2 bedroom· furi'llahed apt, utili-

. Ext,. nic8 ·a yr old home,
recentty redecorated. 2 bed,
2 bedroom. 2 batha, · 2 car rooma, · idlal for eoupl•. no
g•aga. ~I lot _on Rt. 33. chil*'"· referen'cee and depotit
Swimming pool, utelite, cion required. Jo.t-675-3485.
to Meigs High. Call 614·912·
3 bedroom home, $3315.00
3254.

¥.1 tcra; ·5· rooms and beth.
Outbuilding and gerage. For
morelnfonnldton call 81 4· 949-

0 -· wuhor and dryor far
'lilt:. Contect: IWftetidal.lt 814·
asz-2 1 11.

No peta. W.tar

2805.

6 room house and b.th. 80 plua
acrn. -Yellow au·ah Rd. Recine,
Ohio. t46.000. 614-992-5988.

River Ad.• 814·441·7388.

2 badroom apanm;.tton Lincoln 63
Antiques
· Hill, Pomeroy. Call 514-992- · · - -- - - --'-...,.-:-FUmiMed 3 room cott8QII· one 8539 .... 814·992-3489.

SyrKU... 814·992-7189 1fter

MrdWood flooR. Outbuildings,

white.
•11 . ..
W.ettln1houae
dryar-whho,
5. 22 cu. ft.
upright frOtt·frM frMnr-llka

..... CaY 614-448_-.928.

3 bedroom houu for rent In

2 BA . hou.. on 13 1 / 3 aer•
with full bu.ment. 2 . baths.

wft~ .

.IURP&gt;lUS OI!NIM,

·--

now, t115. Col~' rof....whho, fro... froe. U75.
. Sk-1 Applla- 158 U -

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished ' apt. 243 Jackaon
Plkoi. 1 BR . 0235. U1Hklea pd.

·

41

R1~.d FsLill'

range-whitt. 191. 31" r.,.ewhh.e. 17&amp;. t(enmore wMher·
whtt•· Ill. Kenmore .¥~111MrcoppertQnl , e915 . G . E .

----------T;:;;::::;;:::~==:::==,

~

.

30" -~ht, ttl. 30"
ranve-•vOCido, *91. 30" 1M

___,..........._______ ........

7&amp;

54 Milo. Merchandise

2pa._....I _ _.....,.
.. t:JOO. • pc. ..... - - a t U 2 1 . 7 p e.

23 · Pi'ofe11ional

· Thul'ldlly. Merch 10, 1988

Pomaiov-Midcleport OhiO

. , . .14-The Daily Sentinel

IT

. ,~

.

'.

Show

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(I) Chaara ,

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IIIII
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by THOMAS JOSEPH

I

ACROSS

3 Athena's

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lOEase up

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title

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13 "-You Glad &amp;Meager
You're You"
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14 Gr. meettimber
Ing plaee
8 Chinese
liS Extinct
port
bird
9 Exhaust
!&amp;Operate
12 Fire
215 Actress
18Cravlng
17 FUnction
Munson
19Savor
19 Fortune 28 Seraglio
21 Royal
teller's
chamber
residence
cards
27 Weight
24.Debatable
20 Ham it up
unit
280n the
Z1 MISsile . 29 Prisoner
watch
site
31 Storage
29Dwelllng
22 Fatima's
box
30Aeneas'
hwband 33 Gaseous
love ·
23 Pioneered
eiP.ment
31 Luzon

Answer
34 Gypsy
35 Russian
city
38 - noir
38 Dwell on
39 Brink
40 Undress
42 Altar
constel-

lation
44 King (Lat.)

peninsula
32Nonsense

34 Actor Lowe
37 Picnic
pest
38In the

groove

41 Mountain
nymph

43 Sultan's
decree
45 Paris
subway

46 On thf edge
47 British
ftlm

director

480ust

DOWN
1 Study
ZType of
81U1dwich

DAD.Y cRYPTOQUW&amp;s-Here'• how to work It:

1110 .
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laLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
. for the three L's., X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
aposta ophls, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each dey the code letters are different. ·
CRYJ'TOQUOTE

8·10

tn\ow

90 D•v• tame •• e11h with
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
lut.....tne Rd. ()pan lam to &amp;pm
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OF US WHO KNOW ANY'I1UNG WOiml KNOWING .

. KNOW 111AT IN MARCH A NEw YEAR BEGINS.
JOSEPH WOOD KR1JTCit
\

,..,.

�'-ga . 18-The D.ey Saatinel

n"....,. March 1o..191.8

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Students·. continue .protest untll hearing president resigns
she quit In favor of a deaf
executive, plans to make ap·
polntments to convince students
that a hearing educator can lead
the school for the deaf, she said
today.

By GREG HENDERSON

WASHINGTON (t.;PI) - Gal·
laudet University's new presl·
dent, rejecting demands from
students and a congressman that

MAKING A POINT- Gallaudet University
President Elisabeth Zln!ier (L) addresses repor·
ters at the National Press Club Wednesday while
lnterpreter Janet Bailey translates the remarks
.

.

.

Students crowded at the main
gate of the nation's only liberal
arts college for the deaf before
dawn today, vowing to shut down
the campus for a fourth straight
day unless Elisabeth Ann Zinser

toslgnlanguage.Studenlsattheunlversltyforthe
hearing lmpared bave protested Zinser's appoint·
men! to the presidency since she Is not hearing
lmpared and does not know sign langua,;e. UPI

resigns as president.
Wednesday, hundreds of stu·
dents blocked the gates to Gal·
laude! and shut down the campus
and faculty and staff members
voted to supportthe students and
student leaders who walked out
. of a Wednesday meeting with
Zinser.
"Today Is the day tl\at I am
going to attempt to establish the
communications that' Is needed
with the students al)d the faculty
and have some . appo,ntments
established for that purpose," ,
Zinser said In an IntervieW today
on ABC's "Good Morning
America."
As Zinser was being Inter·
viewed on the' network, a fire
alarm was sounding In the
background. Numerous false
alarms ~ave rung on the campus
since the dispute began.
Despite . the protests, Zinser
and Jane Spilman, chairwoman
of the Gallaudet board· of .trus·
tees, maintained . at a news
conference Wednesday that the
decision was final.
"I think. we have to acknowledge that the governance system
on the campus has broken
down," .Zisner said. '"I am In
· charge. If It gets further out of
control, I will have to take some
kind of action." She would not
elaborate.
Rep. David Bonlor, D-Mich.,
urged Zinser to resign Wednesday In a rneeti~g with the new
president. Bonlor, a member of
,
•

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (UPI)
-Two Army uH-60 Black Hawk
helicopters co!Uded In-flight at 90
mph and crashed In flames
during a night training mission of
the lOlth Airborne Division,
killing ali 11 ·soldiers aboard.
oftlclals said Wednesday.
The cause of the Tuesday night
crash was being Investigated by
the Army Air Safety Center at
Fort Rucker, Ala., but an Army
official In Was!llngton who asked
not to be identified said there Is
·•evidence accumulating" of h~ ­
man error.
Army spokesman Maj . Randy
Schoel said all17 occupants of the
two copiers were kU!ed In the
co!Uslon, which occurred about
9:45 p.m.. at an 1\ltitude of 800
feet near the TennesseeKentucky border about 12 miles
from the center of Fort Campbell
Army Base.
Bill Harralson. spokesman for
the "Screaming Eagles" 101st
Airborne at Fort Campbell, said
three helicopters on one mission
were headed east and a solo
chopper on a separate mission
and headed north co!Uded with
the lead aircraft In the three·
chopper formation.
· Harralson said It is normal
combat procedure for heUcop·
ters to tiy with no Ughls at night ,
but added he did not know If that
was the case when the two
choppers collided at 90 mph .,
Schoel said the pilots '"were
flying visually - with night
visual goggles - which amplify
existing starlight a nd
moonlight. "
Weather conditions at the time
of the crash were good. The
National Weather Service said
skies were overcast with vislbll·
tty of about 7 miles and winds of
10 mph,
Investigators also were trying
to learn whether the pilots fUed
flight plans and were In contact
with each other or Fort Campbell .
ground controllers.
"The investigation team will
turn up who they should have
been talking to," said Schoel,
who added one of the two aircraft
that crashe&lt;,l was equipped with a
flight recorder that wUI be
studied.
Flags at Fort Campbell fl ew at
half·staff Wednesday to mourn
the rlead , whose names were not
released pending notification of
next of kin.
" All the dead soldiers were
based at Fort Ca mpbell, which
was touched by tragedy In
December 1985 when 248 JOist
Airborne Division soldiers re·
turning from Mideast peace·
keeping duti es died In the crash
of a chartered plane In
Newfoundland.
In Washington, Pentagon
Army spokesman Maj. Phil
Soucy said there were 10 passengers and four crew members
on one helicopter and three crew
members on the other. Each
Black Hawk can carry ll fully
equipped soldiers In addition to
Its normal three-person crew,
·
Soucy said. ,
The two helicopters and seven
crew members were from B and
C companies of the 5th Battalion
of the lOst Aviation Regiment of
the lOlst Airborne. The 10 pas·
sengers were members of the 2nd
Battalion, 502nd Infantry Reg!·
ment, also part of lOis I Airborne.
Reporters taken to the crash
site Wednesday saw only one of
the downed craft - a blackened
.. pile wlt!J the fuselage .and the

boom discernible and debris
scattered for about 200 yards .
The other "t.;H-60 Black Hawk
went down In woods about 200
yards from the first chopper and
was not visible .
Schoel said the crews of two
other choppers, also flying night

that killed 65 people In the six
years the chOpper has been In
use, but the Army said Wednesday It Is the safest helicopter It
has everflown.
..
The Uli-60 Black Hawk has
the lowes~ accident rate of any
Army helicopter In the first six

..

years of Its use, said Soucy. ·
Schoel said helicopters on
night missions usually maintain
radio contact with the base, but
there was no details of any
communications with the
downed craft Tuesday night.

e"· .

Also at the news conference,
one finalist for president, 1. King
Jordan said he · supported
Zinser ~nd Spilman said another
finalist Harvey Corson also
backed' the selection. Both Jor·
dan and Corson are hearing
Impaired. Gallaudet has never
had a hearing-Impaired presl·

•

r

'

,

1987FORD
TEMPOGL

COL L"MBl:.S, Ohio (UPI) Absentee votinJ! reared Its head
In the Ohio House of Represent&amp;·
tlves Thursday as · lawmakers
scramblecl to deal with a heavy
calendar of about 16 bills and go
home. for 'the.weekerid .
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D·
Cleveland, conceded he had his
seatmate, Rep. DanlelTroy, D·
· Willowick, vote for him on three
bills while he was out of the
House chamber.

House Speaker Vernal · Riffe
Members must be.on the floor
·Jr
.. D'New Boston, .a stickler for
to cast a vote, according to House
decorum,
said lie did not notice
rules.
·
Troy
pushln~
Sweeney's button .
• ''Was he not voting again?"
·Riffe
said
voting
for another
said one House member .when
asked who had pushed the button member Is breach ot tb!! House
on Sweeney's desk to activate his rules, but that nothing would be
sp11ce on the electronic roll call. done unless a complaint Is filed.
Sweeney said . he left the
recorder.
Troy at first denied votlpg for chamber briefly to receive a
Sweeney, then said he flipped his telephone call In the nearby
switch on one blll at Sweeney's clerk's office from ·Bernard
Hurst, state director ·of
request.

a

1986 CHEVROLET
CAMAROZ-28
182111, 2 docn, V-1 eng., faf:IOIY
cond.,4spMdlnllt.. P.S.. P.B .. P.W.,
18111, P. door loeb, Ill IIIHiing
cru1a1 coma, ll1llfm radio, • iadlll tim

Unique wDOCI trim ICCtnh lh~ plush llvlng100m
lor a look you"rosuro to lo'lt. Thick, gt111raos
1111 cushioning anG bu"non-luftsd bock&amp; wHh
quality mHomonshlp by ENGLAND. Alto ltlturos

wen trim end lttlcbld d1car1tll 1rm

1984FORD
TEMPOGL
ffl652,4docn,ll!llll,lninltllhleldrfw11
4cyl.eng., tldaryllroand., ........

P.S.. .

SOFA

LOVESEAT...............................................1549.
MATCHING CHAIR.............................1449.
OITOMAN.............................................IJ.49.

COUNTRY STYLE SOAF................ ". ..

..

.'1t)LJ.

·ALL LIVING ROOM SUI.TES DRASTICALLY REDUCED-

Mason .Furniture Maaon,
Co.wv.
(304} 773-5692

.

ladfll IIIII, bucket IIIII, ,_

only

2 Sections, 1 8 Pigea 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Transportation.
misses a vote would later ask
'"I said, 'Catch me on these
permission of the House to have
final three bills, will you, Dan?"'
his vote recorded as "yes" or
related Sweeney.
" no" had he been present.
The bills Involved a college
But .s weeney took a shortcut,
tuiUori trust fund, a land 'transfef '
"I wasn't voting for him," said
In Athens County and creating a Troy. " He left the floor for a little
lottery fund for schools.
bit. He said, 'Catch me with a yes
Roll call votes and attendance vote on this.' I only voted on that
records are used to evaluate a one bill. He's done that once or
legislator's service, both by the twice for me. I wouldn't do It if he
legislator and his or her opponent wasn't here. And I Qnly did It
In an election.
when he Instructed me which
Normally, a lawmaker who way to vote."

.

~i4..

Troy pillnted out that members
engaged In conversation elsewhere In the chamber ofte)l have
their seatmates vote for them.
The pr&lt;icess sometimes becomes
even more relaxed during hectic
times of the session.
Former Rep. Edward Orlett,
D-Dayton, caused a controversy
a~x?ut 10 years ago when he was
recorded as voting while out of
the chamber. Or lett, at that time,
said he was Ill in the members'
lounge.

.

Due to the severe financial
condition of the Eastern Local
School District, several positions
were abolished when the district's board of education met In
special session earlier this week.
The board abolished one ele·
mentary principal's position effective at the end of the current
school year; one teacher's aide
position; three two·hour custodial positions, alld one malnte·
nance position effective June 1.
The board approved a 'resolu·

FLORIST

Meigt County' a Otdeot Florlet

352 E. Main St. Pon.-oy, ·Oh.
PH. 99'2·2644
"Often Imitated -Never

_

tlon to participate In the COG,
SEOVEC consortium's attempt
to bid on a cooperatively purchased health benefits prograll)
with an Insurance company
authorized to conduct business In
Ohio. · The partiCipation agreemerit Is not binding on the district
and would be considered only If it
meets all current district con·
tractual requirements.
The board decided that the
district will not join with other
districts In the county In a joint

application for addtlonal state
funded special education units
because of the excess costs
Involved In the light of the
district 's currently poor financial situation.
The regular meeting for March
was set for 7 p.m . on Thursday,
March 24, In the plg'h school.
cafeteria. Attending the meeting
were Jim Smith, board president; Kathy M'anlcke, vice president; S\lsle Heines, Ray Karr
and I. 0. McCoy.

Watson enters voluntary guilty plea

~

Marketing Education students
at Meigs High School not only
receive training In the marketing
of goods and services but also get
actual on·hands experience In
conjunction with their studies by
working In local business establishments on a part· time basis.
Taught by John Blaettner,
Marketing Education, a part of
the ·vocational program offered
at Meigs High School, Is a
cooperative program of vocational Instruction designed to
meet the needs of students who
desire to enter, progress, up·
grade and Improve their skills,

1987 RENAULT
ALLIANCE

~~ ·

1986FORD
ESCORT ·
185561' 2 ~. Ql1418, 4cyl. """'' ,. . .
trans., P:S., P.B.,am.1mllldlo, rd~ht!l
bucket Mils, under 20,000 Iii..

$.15,000.
W. Robert and Ellen Bell,
Marietta, have filed· a foreclosurE! action against ~at E. and
Marcella Sue Mitchell, Langsville. A judgment of $33.741.451s
requested.
An order quieting title to
propqty c.ln ·the- names · of the, ..
plaintiffs has been filed In an
action by William E. Cray and
Dorothy A. Cray , against Hllah
Dorothy Smith, also known as

attitudes, knowledge and ability
In OCC\!patlons Involving the
marketing of goods and services.
Course content Includes studies and activities involving
salesmanship, advertising, display, management, business law
and business communications.
The program consists of two
related courses, Marketing I and
Marketing II, and employment
at local businesses during the
senior year, to give students the
opportunity for practical expe·
rlence In occupations which are
within their career objectives.
Students may enroll in Market-

I

1984 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO BLAZEAII!
1185021, 3 docn, 4 wheel drive, V-1
faclllry air cond., auto. trans., P.S.,
P.W.. P. 8881, P. door loeb, lllst•inl '
whlll, cru!te control, ll1llfm lldio,
bucket seals,_ • ..,~

FAMILIAR WITH PROGRAM- All three of
these JOung mea are all famiDar with the
Markeflnr Education Procram or Melp Hlp
School. Tom Hawley, center, dllcalllll!a an IIIVIIIce
ull prleln1 wltb Darrla Wlll1b ud David Wlll1b
at .Powell'• 8uper·Valu In Pomeroy. Halflq,
ma~~a~er al Powell's, Ia a IJ'IIduate of lhe Melp
Hlp inarkl{llnll coune IIIKIIa bulneu maaqe-

$7999'
WARM COLONIAL with
MAGINIFICI~NT WOOD
TRIM ACCENTS

'

Eastern board abolishes posts
·because of finan~ial probl~ms

170541, 3doanuedan, fronlllhllll*ivll
176321,4 dool8, sedan, Irani wheel
4 cytlflll., factOIY li" cand., aUio...... ~ 4 cyl. q., 4.Bfl"d trans .. amlb
P.s., P.a,amnmradlo, stereo tape,
SIIINO ~.bucket ..-s, 5, 400 lnilll"l
tillS. w111e walls, bucket seats, rear
·dow defOOOif.
low miles

1

'

Hliah Voorhes Sm ith·.
· Dismissed were the cases of
Edith G. Wllklns against Ronald
Paul Wilkins; William M. Powell
against James L. Mayfield, ad·
ministrator of the Bureau of
Workers' Compensation, et a!;
Raymond Fields, et ' al, against
George,•D, Conley; Debple Mel,
dau against Mike Meidau; Laura
Lynn Richmond against Donald
Richmond .

MHS ~tudents receive training in
marketing o) goods; work part-time

117652, 2 ~. sedan, 4 cyl. eng.,
speed trans., P,S., P.B., amAm
itlf80 ~. l8dial tires, bucket
Libra luggage rack

'

en tine

Absentee· voting up in Ohio House ThUrsday

•bag.

·

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. March 11, 1988

REMAINS- An MP stands ruard near the twisted wreckqe of
an Army Blackhawk helicopter that collided In mld·alr with
another Blackhawk during night maneuvers Tuesday . All 17 on
board the two helicopters died. UPI ·

1986 CHEVROLET
. CAVALIER

2nd street

{

Terry L. Watson entered a
voluntary plea of gUilty to
breaking and entering when he
appeared rece)ltly before Judg~
Charles H. Knight In Meigs
CouQty Common Pleas Court.
Wat!jon Is to serve a determinate
sentence of six months at the
Or\el!t ' Correctional • Reception .
Center.
A sult has been fllj!(l by James
E: Lucas, Pomeroy, against
Wallace Reuter, Middleport, for

.I

pillows.

'

.

Vot.38. No.213
Copyrig~ted 1988

...•

· dress up
your home

~ontrtst

.
at y
.

fl~d~en~t~l;n~ltisi1~24~·yieia~r~h~lsit~oryj.iiii~~iDi_~uipjlica~t~ed~"iii~

crash.
landed
safely and
trainingThey
missions,
witnessed
the

wete driven back to the post after

giving statements, he said.
The Army spokesman said he
had not talked with either the
witnesses or with members of the
Fort Rucker team about a
possibie cause.Lt. Col. Herbert
Blanks, spokesman for the Army
Safety Center at Fort Rucker,
said the investigation could take
up to three weeks.
. Officials said the Black Hawks
have been grounded several
times 111 recent years. Lt. Col.
David Kiernan, a spokesman for ·
the XVII Airborne Corps at Fort
Bragg, N.C., where 57 Black
Hawks are stationed, said there
have been four crashes of that
type helicopter since 1981.
Soucy said the Army has 846
Black Hawks, Including the two
that crashed Tuesday.
Thirty-one Black Hawks have
been Involved in major accidents

.

Earlier In the week," Jordan.
Gallaudet's board who ftivored
dean
of Gallaudet's CoUeae of
the selection ot a hearing lm·
Arts
and
Sciences and a grad~I.e
paired president, said be urged
of
the
school,
had encourall!d tJ11!
Zinser to confer with a broad
demonstrating
.student&amp; to "con·
range of deaf students, faculty
tlnue
this
In
a
positive
way," but
and alupml before making a
on
Wednesday
he
reversed
his
decision.
''There's a varletyotscenarlos position .
Jerry Covell, a Gallaudet seand that 's one," Bonlor said after
the meeting: ".I prefer that she nior and a protest leader, said he
make the decision through a spoke to Jordan aft.et he
period of meeting. with students dorsed of Zinser and described
and faculty . and arrive at a Jordan as "heartbroken."
Spilman said Corson, superln·
d.eclslon . that's best for the
tendent
of the Louisiana School
university."
for
the
Deaf
In Baton Rouge, bad ·
BOnier said he warned Zinser
made
a
statement
supportlna .
that her a·ppointment-could burt
future federal funding of the Zinser.
But Corson's secretary, Artie
university, which receives more
than 75 percent of Its $76 million Terrell, cast doubt on that claim,
saying Corson "In the American
annual bu4get from Congress.
Zinser. who Is not ·hearlna· tradition, did what e~ry good
Impaired and has only begun to loser does, he wrote a stat.ement
Jearn sign language this" week, saying 1\e pledged his cooper&amp;· •
.
.• ·
said she met Wednesday with tlon and support."
The
on-campus
opposition'
to
·
several student leaders before
the n!!ws conference and "began Zll\ser inounted Wednesday wl~
a dialogue that 1 hope will the faculty voting 136-11 to back
the students.
continue."
Faculty members from Ken·
"I like to rise to the occasion of
a challenge," saldZinser,48, who dall Elementary School and the
has served since 1983 as vice Model Secondary School for the
president for academic affairs Deaf, both on Gallaudet's cam·
andprofessorattheUnlversltyof pus, unanimously backed the
North Carolina at Greensboro. '"I resolution.
The university's non-faculty
have no llluSion It will be easy at
all. The only way 1 would step staff, Including custodians, ~
aside Is It the board of trustees cretarles and other non.teachlng
personnel, met and passed a
asked me."
.
slmlllar
resolution.
Tim Rarus, la student who met
with Zinser, s~ld the president's r----~-----.....,.contention that a dialogue had
been established · was the "most

Helicopter crash caused by huinan error ~;~~~~~s~::~:::~~:ro~;
,
By SYBIL MCLAIN

.'

1984 FORD
BRONCO II
185302, 3 docn, 4 whlll drivt: 8 .
eng., IIIIo. trans., P.S., 111111m
111111 lne, bucket Mats

meat at Hoeklnc Teeh!!lcal College. Darrta Warth
Ia a ~enlor Markellnl Education aludenlal Metp
Hlp wboae 1lallon Ia a1 PoweU'a · He plan8 to·
attend Boclda1 Tech. His brother, David Warth,
II a lt88 Melp · Hllh Markeflnr Edueallon ·
IJ'adaale who allo plans lo·attend Bocklnr Tech
next faiL

WindOW tinting ban to.be .delayed
· . COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The .Ohio House took flnalle&amp;lita·
live action Thursday on a btU
cancelln&amp; the state's regulations
against darkly tinted windows Ia
avtomobtlel and requiring the
Ohio Department of Hlahway
~aftlty to write new ones.
·. Tile bill, which alto requires
~ reflectors on bicycles t1dden,
. ~t lllglk, was flllpected to lie
IIIPIIIJ 1ly Cov. Rlcbar4 Ctlette
l&amp;ie 'l'hunday or early Friday,
1111 ollbl&amp;ld. .
.
: Tbt lllplrtmeut said It coul(l
~ve new: rules ~ the

· Without the lea~atlon, niles
adopted In January would ·have
taken effect at midnight Thurs.
. day. They eliminated tinting,
other than the manufacturer's,
on front and aide windows, and
banned any rea~ wlndowll block·
Jng out more than 6!1 percent ot
the lll:bt.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Newark,
said 1111811 cullom window·
IIDtlq firma and llmOUJIJie tervl·
cea ..ad for reconstderatloa ot
OIIIJ'OIIIIdllt would hurt
their llllala-.
Gutlll'le tald those flrml bad
blea Ullll'ld by the depertlbtnt

'"l'1lllf

. IIJIMd wb 1 .. l'lad:Y .
Wltlllll it daY•· II •Ia JiveD 11x lbatlllwldcJe"wlntlonwouldbe
~Mavity

,,

~till by
'

•

the biD.

permlttad to bet~ to aUDiv In

only 35 percent of avai)Jble light, .
which can still be seen throUgh
from the outalde. ·
The purpoee Of banning the
heavily blackened, one-way
rlau II to aUow pollee officers to
-lulde IIIII allow other motor·
Jail to view tile drlver'•·tace as a
lllpal ot bll er her Intentions on
the I'OIId,
Rep. Patrick' Slllfnrey, D·
QMiu4, uld Umolllllle llrVi·
aee 8lld fwlllral bomllla IIIIa rea
ullld for • the delay blcaute
''till; Jlad . . apeement 011 35

.

- · 8lld ....., ..... lite ...... of 1111 ....
......,. ....., of Bz+ Ca I autlu,lo plak ap a

cempaar lrack. Tile owl wu dllcneNII IJIDI
b•Jilellte ll'llclll. KeMII \loed, Melp CellldJ r-e
Dt IIIII., ud
a I lid
~.,.
. ..
.
, . . . . . . . IN R all tile owl Ia a Goalud,.J
Gutllrle uld forblddlq tint; .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 tile .....
ing, ·~llui&amp;Qturen, 01 · Vw' 1''1 Clllllll nt1 a 'fll ul Jt'a• • *I L
: ODD
011111815
' '"cha .... Mlaft. ... ~-.1111 a'llt 1o be an,

.

. ·'

"

INniiiBD OWL- l&amp;'e aaa•' .. 11114 aa owl,

let.._, flad .............. Bat ............. ....,.
wu foad on liutter•IAve. about '1: a 'ftlurldar
IDO!'IIbtJ ., Lake ............. wu . . . "117 to

e;•••• .....

Pill' ,

WI ,

lng I during their junior year as a
regular academic CO\IrSe or may
enroll In both Marketing I and
Marketing II during their senior
year.
The program Is designed not
only for students wishing to enter
a career field Immediately after
high school but also for the
students wishing to further their
education In business admlnls·
!ration at a tec hnical school or a
four year college.
·The program is open to Meigs
students as well as those from
Southern and Eastern High
Schools.

'

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