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                  <text>Pacl•

14--n,.

o.ilv Sentinel

Pomelov Midcl1pcrt. Ohio
I

Squads receive
--...;..._--Area deaths--+----r-- six
Tuesday calls

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Effie N,cw 1111111

Ernest Perkin&amp;

Effie Orvbt McGraw Norman,
90, of Pomeroy, died Saturday
while vlslttnlhrelatlves In Phi·
ladepbla; P.L Mrs. Norman died
at Parkvlew Hospital In
Phlladephlll.
~at ;pawpaw; Ky. on May
12, 1899, she was a daughter of the
late WWtain Jasper and Nannie
Kate McCraw. Sbe was a homemaker and was affllla\ed with
the ~postollc .faith.
Survivors Include six sons,
Mose Norman, of Pomeroy,
Wallace Normali. of Huntington,
W.Va., Donald Norman, ofLouslville, Ky., Harold Norman, of
Pomeroy, with whom she made
her ho!lle. Leland Norman, of
Shade, and Rodney Davis, of
South Carolina; three daughters,
Daisy Parker, of Chicago, Til.,
Beatrice Miller, of P;~trlck, Ohio,
and Aretta Flinn, of Middleport;
37 grandchildren; , several great
grandchildren and great great
grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Lew Herbert Norman; a son. Benjamin; two
grandchildren ; three sisters and
four brothers.
Servic,es will at 7 p.m. Timrs·
day evening at Rawlings-Coats·
Fisher Funeral Home with Rev.
R. A. West officiating. Gravesfde
committal services will be held
at 11 a.m. Friday at Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 4
p.m. until the time of the services
on Thursday.

Ernest "Nick" Perkins Sr., 57,
Tu)lpel's Plains, died ~ay at
O'Bleness Hospital In At~ns
following a brll!f mness.
Born Feb. 23, 1932 In Fayetlevllle, W. Va,, he wa.s tbe son of the
late Ed and Delena Hall Perklna.
Mr. Perkins worked as a welder
of the Marlon Power Shovel. He
attended the Ftrst Southern
Baptist Church In Rock Sprlnp
and was a veteran of the Korean
Conflict. He wa.s also a member
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 3477, Athens,
.
H~ Is survived by his wife,
Patsy Clark Perkins, a son,
Ernest. Perkins Jr.., Athens; a
daughter ; 1\'!ary · :Moreland,
Athens; a brother, James Per·
klns, Pomeroy; and two grand·
children, Sarah Perkins and
Timothy Moreland, both of
Athens,
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by. four
sisters and six brothers.
Graveside serVices will be.hel&lt;!
Friday at 1 p.m. at Wells
Cemetery with" the Rev. Lamar
O'Bryant officiating.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home on Thursday from
7·9 p.m. ·
·

for over 20 ~ari.
He was a member of the
SIX call• for mecl1cal as all t·
Emory Chapel Metllodllt Church ance were anawerecl on Tuelday
and a member of tile Redred by units of the Melp County
Employees of Wright PattertOn Emerpllcy Medical Service~~.
Air Force Bue, a·member of the
At 1:44 p.lft., tbe Rutland·Ftre
National Campers and Hikers Department was called to i truck
Auoclation, and the Golde!\ fire on Collese St. OWner of the
Buckeye Carnplq Club.
truck wu ~Y Ellis. No Injuries
• He IJ survived by bia wife, were reported.
Susie A. Circle Harl'll 'whom be
At 5: 55 p.m., Pomeroy 111114
married May 24, 1J'M: f011r called to ~he Amertcare·
cblld!'en and !belt a~. Leta ; Pomeroy Nursing Center for
and J\l'nold Thonlsen,. Cedar· Dwllhl Spencer who was taken to
ville; Russel and Pat Harris, Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
Mlckl and Ken Liming, all of , 7:05 p.m., Pomeroy \Vent to
Xenia; and Irene and Ken Dul!le, Grueser Hollow Road fOI' Chris·
Springfield; one sister, , Pear I tine Grueser tQ Veterans Memor·
Proffitt, and one ala11er·ln-law, lat Hospital.
Lula Circle, both .of Meigs
Jtactne at 7:15 p.m. ,went to
County; 14 grandchildren, 36 Bashan Road for Charles Cook
great grandchildren, one great who was taken to Veterans
great granddaughter, and· nu· · Memorial Hospital.
. ·
merous nlece,s and newpbews.
'l'ljppers Plains was called at
In addition to hili parents Mr. 9:56p.m. to Route 681 for Jwmes
Harris was !;!reCeded Ill death by Kelly to Veterans Memorial
one grandaon, five ·brothers and Hospital.
.
. two slste~s.
Middleport at 11:25 p.m. trans·
Services were held Jan. 19 at ported Tracy Radcliff from the
the lngllng-WIUiams , Funerlll Beech Street Apts. to Veterans
Home In Cedarvllte With burial In Memorial Hospltjll.
the North Cemetery.

Hospital~
Veter- Memorial

Lee HIUTis

LeeR. Harris, 84, · JameStown
Road, Springfield, died unex·
pectedly Jan. 16 In Greene
Memorial Hospital In Xenia.
Born In Spencer, W.Va. on
March 9, 1900, he was' the son of
the late .tacob A. an&lt;~ Mary
.Ella Roll~
Connally Harris . He had been a
. Ella M. Rollins, 84, Tuppers . Greene and Clark County resl·
Plains, died Tuesday evening at dent since 1941.
. Mr. Harris was employed at
Camden Cl;~r!&lt; Memoria.! Hospl·
tal In Parkersburg, W.Va. follow- Wright Patterson Air Force Base
for 25 and one half years. He
Ing an extended Illness.
Arrangements will be an- retired In 1967 and was owner and
nounced later by White's F.unera.l operator of l;larrls Sales and
Services In the Sprll)gfleld area ·
.Horne In Coolville.

Tuesday admiSsions - Rl·
chard Warner, Rutland; Anna
Sprague, Dexter; Christine
Grueser, Pomeroy; Charles
Cook, Laq Bottom. ,
Tuesday discharges .:... Eliza·
belli Horak, Hal de Sellers, Alva
Newell, Roxie "Moore, Pansy .
Laudermllt. •
,.

License issued
. · A marriage license has been
Issued In Melas PrObate Court to
Raymond E. Wilson, ' 56, and
Clarinda · Jo MUter, 25, both of
Sandyville, W.Va.'
·

Ohio Lot~ry

--~-~yors~----~.
and costa, fallure tp comply wM.
1111 otncer. $83 and eoltl, d~ '
derly conduct and obleelle tuguap; and Jetrref CliJidltr,
MldciJeport, $2:1 and COlli, fat"""
to appear for ma)'l)l''s court.

• Seven ptopte .forfeited bollds
11,11d 10 were fined In Tuet4a,Y
night's court of Pomeroy Mayor
Rtcbard Seyler.
·""rfeiUDI bonds were El·
1 therla Powell, LDIII Bottom, $43,
failure to yield; Jenny Adkinl,
Oakhut $63, . ell;pjred Vllblde
reatatratklil:hJames W.. Olbbe,
PomerOy, ·$63, ,eckllls OJiera·
tt1111; · Daniel Eilts, Alii iY I 1,
speed; · AmY Sh11veq;~ddl
. eport, $43, speed; Scott
olle,
Racine, 855. speed; and· Tammy
Russell, Racine, $48, speed,
. f'lned were Frank E. 'l(oll\li,
'Pomeroy, $63 and·costs, operat.
ling under suspension, and $63

305
Piek 4
' 8284 '

a suectilfl

Super l.cJuo
4-7·27r29-32-40
J{id(er 801724

In the COW't of M~
M
Fred Hot-·· •-·· _,.
ayor
"'-'• "'"' ,......,
. f~rfetted bonds and fl~ were

s,.

and costs. failure to control;
Timothy Herdman, , Pomeroy,'
$113 and costs, public lntoxlca•
lion; Jerry Moore, Middleport,
""
ts
In
,.
$213 ·AI..,.
cos • 1resP115s g, an~
$313 a,nd costs; destruction, of
property; Earl Phelps, Pome' roy, $63 lllld costs, operating
under suspension; Robin Dugan;
Pom
. eroy, fine reduced to$25 and

costs, speed.
. Richard Herman and Jtmmy
Graham, Pomerey. RQute, flnet '
dropped ·and both put on six
Rutland water safe
months probation for fighting;
David Watkins, Middleport, $63
The residents of Rutland no and costs, no illll!rator's ilcense,
longer have to boU their water $375 and costs, 'DUI, $63 and
before drinking It or cooking with , costs, traffic light violation, $63
It, accordlna to an Ohio Environ·
men tal Protection Ageqcy spokesman. The OEPA tested 12
consec.utlve samples and the Gard• Club to meet
.
samples were regarded as safe. .
The Riverview Garden Club ·
will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Cases dismissed
·
the hollle of Mary Grace.
.
l
Cowdery.
•.
The following cases have been Pia~ bake sale
dismissed In Meigs Common
There will be a bake sale at
Pleas Court:
· Kro.,.er's sponsored by the Ca·
, John C. Snyder against South·
· "'
ern Ohio Coal Co.; Bancohlo rletohSchooionFeb. lbeglnntng
National Bank aiJalnst Deloris F. · ~ !ra.\rn~ meet
Tryall; Rodney Sloan, et al,
District 13, Daughters.of Amer·
against Meigs Local School Dis- tea, will have a special meeting
trict; Paula Kay Bowen against this Saturday at 1 p.m. at the
Terry Lee Bowen.
Chester · Lo bge HaJJ. All

Forfettlnl bond&amp; were Allee L.
M
Ch hire ....,., DWI all&lt;l
ay • es
• .....,,
•
$60, drMng a weavlna coune;
La
G McCormick Proct
rry ·
. •
orville, $60, drtl!llli prlvtJe&amp;es;
Edward M.' Wood, LDq Bottom,
$!10, speed; and Sharon Fat
Goble, VInton, $60, failure to '
·
· yl~~~ were Connie . Thorton,
$
·
Point Pleasant, W.Va., 10 aDd
costs, runnlngastopslgn,and$1()
fine only, aolna the wrong way on
a one way street; Jerry D.
swartz, · Middleport, $25 an&lt;!
costs, no lnaW'ance: Cllarles, R.
Stewll't, Cheshire, $425 and
QOsts, three days jaU.'DWl; Jeff
C,undlff, Middleport, $425 •and
costs, three days jail, DWl', and
S25 and cots, no operator's
license: and Kendal Lemley,
· Porne~oy. $100 and costs, 10dayl
jail, theft; and '100 and costs and
ten days jail, destruction of
property.

----Meigs a'nnouncements.- - -....

.

PJek3

members are asked to attend.
Plans will be made for the sprlq
rally which will be held March 17
at the senior Citizens Building IIi
Pomeroy.
()fflces to be cloeed
The Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District O(ftce and
the Soil Conservation Service
Office wllfbe closed on Friday,
Jan. 26, so that employees may
attend an out-of-town water
quality meeting.
The offices will open on Mon·
day as usual.

. Pom•~--Midclepoit. Ohi~. · i'huradey, January 26, 1990

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..SERVES, 4-6 PEOPLE

·~~tcr
YOACRW
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. Nm~f ' '

coming trcm last year's alloca· mla$1oners said.
.
11011 o( Co!IIJltunlty DevelOpment
In other blillnesa, the cornmls·
All of
8: II a.m., Block · Grant funds to Melp alonera dlscuaied a request froin
'
·
F'errelllaa tq Ina tall petitions In
elder~ and
apped resl' . County.
Elderly •nd ~ancilc•pJIIIII resl· their office at the former Ohio
. den~ of Melli!
lll)ty will no
lonatr have to j!lldlll stairs to aet denll ot the COIIDty are expected . Bure~u of J::mployinent Services
where they n.., to 10 at the to benefit ife,atly • frcm the bUIJd1il&amp;, at the lnterlleCtiOD Of
colll'tllou.M S. PolnerO)I.
· adcUtlon of·the elevitor.
UniDD Ave. and Route 7. Ferrel·
Metp Cl)unty do8 owner. have . Jau ·sub-leues the office apace .
. Conatructlqll i( a COW'tbouse
~ator baa been completed ud untU .fan. 31 tQ pu~hue llce1111!8 from the commluloners. Tile
tbe tacWty w111 wope11 fl»' public tor their antmala. Tbe eolllmls· commlallonei's said they must
uee Monday morntna, 111'1111''"'*' atoneta durtna Wednellday'a tint,obbtaln approval from the
·~::. the · MeJP County Comii\IIIIOII· meeUna el!tenlled the sale ofdol baikilna'a OW1Ier before 'approvWedl!esday•a· l'fiUiu. llce~ unW the ' Jan. 31 date. · IIIII the request. Commissioner
After that time, a N
ijcenle Richard Jonea laid be would
The COUJ1h1111Se elevator wp will cost Sir: And a
Jrennel • conllict the owner.
·bUilt by, Bll!lls Construction Co. llc.wlll~lt~. T)lerewlllb~ \ . The .cominlistOners reported
:for appro~1y $138,000, with • no further l!llteiistons, the com- that a ' new 1990 car for the
the majoritY. of that amount

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SmaH Serves 10·1 S Peaple
~;J·

~.

BROASJED

lillie of

t

10~

Mozzarella

"&gt; "•

-

llherttrs departmeni lias been
delivered. 'nle vehicle was or·
dered In October an&lt;lla part of
the commitment of the cornmls,
stoners to purchase one new
vehicle a year for the sherlfr s
department.
The courthouse elevator ·was
built by Banks Construction Co.
for approximately Sl38,000, with
the majority of tha~ •moimt
comlna from last year's allocll·
tloil of Community Development
Block ·Grant funds to Meigs
County.
, ,
·
·
Elderly and handicapped resl·
denta of the county are expected
to . benefit sreally frcm ; the

•• P&lt;S. (IIICJIEN I
•SLAW40US"

~ .

2 UJII •.
'

' be ·IIIWn to

•

Save , , _gg
12 Inch

· FRESH .

. , Toma t o ·J·Ul(e
. • ••••••••••
46 oz
89&lt;
Shurf 1ne
~····~
IIIIE·SEUS

POTATO CHIPS
12 oz. $ 49

CRACKERS

'69&lt;

1-U. 10.1

'

aeblllelt;

PMQ' Mllllxer, '

Baellle; Reee
Ba::.~i:,.. Bock Sprlap
star; Doretby Bolen,

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dep·.... , ud Chelle•

&amp;hr"i..
G -~
8
r nap.

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,
LBB LEONARD ' · · ciiBFges ot eorruptiQn within 'the Mlch~el Miller, a Republican,
. tJPI statebo- Jteperter
ad!lllnlstratlon of Gov . .Richard did much of the work 011 the
Celeste.
·
·
public corruptiO!I cases Involving
.
He
replied
that
as
at•Arney
the
Cel-te·admtn•·-atlon.
: COLUMBI{S - The Ohio ~
"'
·
'""' by Sen.
.
nate Judiciary Commltt.ee Wed· general, his powers encompass
The -bill, sponsored
nesday approVed legislation em~ only clvlf cues, with. a ,few . Paul Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus, the
pilwertq the attorney. aeneral , speclftc excepUons.. County pro- committee chairmen, permits
tor the first time to Investigate !lecutorsa.reenipowered~olnves- the ~ttorney general to Invest!·
1
d
te,.,. 1 Ina!
and prosec:ull! corruption ; by t•w
.. a e an prosecu "r m
gate and prosecute on his own
state offlclala or employees,.
cases, and they · auard that Initiative,
An amendment was added at
· 'l'he bl11, I!Ouehl br· Attorney respilnslbl11ty vigorously.
Celebrezze would have been the last minute In committee to
General Anthony Celebrezze Jr.,
was reported out on a '5-0 vote. ·It . permitted to enter the ln.vestlga; satlafy the county pi'Oiieclltors.lt
now faces a Senate floor vote,
tions of the Celeste adrnlnlstra· alves the prosecutors a 30-day
,
probably next month.
tlon only upon Invitation by the "right of lint refusal" to take
CelebFezze. now
candldat41· governor or. the General Aseem· any of tbe cases.
for the Democratic nomination. · bly. , He did not a~k either for
. 'lbe attorney general, how·
for go\ot!rnor, was the lar'&amp;et of perm luion to Intervene and t!ley ever, may not tum over a report
ultlclsni durtna the last &lt;rew dkLnot offer lt.
·
of ln~tlaptlon to a prosec11tor
years for, falling to lnveslltate
franklin County.· Prosecutor and force him to prosecute the
•
case.
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9&lt;

DELICIOUS

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ar..smmia .w..na, ·~•·

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I(E I LI.-IAG

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FOR$599

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White

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'Sena eOilUil'I ee approves
·.·'a. ttorney
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DELl
PIZZA

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elallll!fal•••w~~~~·M~ llolllltal-:r-~
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~ . fti;·,..lllt.IDIUI/.1 s&amp;r"ne.a oeal:et
a ... -., . . . ....,.
a ' · CJie
';f'Vt;:rll:..: Pld..:e. ....,.. " - - Moatcomeroy,
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PEPSI

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SNOW WHITE

GREEN

CAULIFlOWER or
I!Y GREEN BROCCOLI

L: ft ~

uy

YOUR .

~ · CHOICE

:CABBAGE.
•

25&lt;11.

,!

CAUFORNIA ICEBERG

..HEAD

LETTUCE
HEAD

addition of the elevatoi'.
Meigs County dog owners have
until Jan. 31 to purchase llcenaes
for tbelr animals. The eornmls·
stoners · durin&amp; Wednesday's
meeting extended the sale of dog
licenses unUI the Jan. 31 date.
• Afte~ that time, a N dog license
will cost .$8; and a $20 kennel
Jlcenae will cost$40. There will lie
no further extensions, the com·
rnlallonera said.
.
. In other bl,lslness, the commls·
stoners dlf!C\Iued a requeatfrom
Ferrenau to Install petitions In
their office at the former Ohio
Bureau of EmplOyment Services
building, at the Intersection of

Union Ave. and Route 7. Ferrel·
!gas sub-leases tl;le office ~pace
from the commluloners. The
commlasloners said t!ley must
first obtain apwqval ·~om the
building's owner ~i~ approv Ing the reque~t.
.
Commissioner ~~C~I\ Jones
said he would conta~the owner.
The commissioners reported
that a new ~ car for the
sheriff's depa , . ha.s fbeen
deUveri!d. T"'
' le wli&amp; or·
dered In Octo~r
Is Pf,r t of
the commlttmeqt , tbe coll)rnls·
stoners to . puq:h~ one new
vehicle a year for the. sherlfrs
departmen I.

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DETROIT (UPI) - otflclals
numerous United Auto
Workers locals representing
workers at all three major U.S.
automakers announced . plans
Wednesday for a rally Thursday
protesting all plant closings and
layo(fs.
At a news conference, local
union represenlaUvft said plant
closlnp and layoffs have reduced theUAW'smemberlhlpby
half a mDJion workers during the
pas,t decade despite countless
conceslllona.
"Fo~ the past 1() years, UAW
mam'-l bave , ·ma~\lh
sf&lt;ilil and coojlerated with the
companlet t!ley work for to make
qualltf products more efflete~tly
· which ultimately resulted In the
·highest profits ever In their
history," said !J!e coaiiUon,
called Workers and Community
Aa'alnst Plant Closings.
The group Will hold the rally
Thursday afternoon at Chryaler
Corp.'s Jefferson Avenue plant
OI!Delrolt'aeastslde.
'
Chrysler lstoclcsethesu,bcompact car plant permanently Feb.
2, Instead of continuing productlon while It bulldl an adjacent
plant to open In early 1992.
The closing wlli Idle aboutl, 700
workers unUI then.
·
·The union 1181 asked Chrysler
to keep the Jefferson plal)t
operating to supp'"
rn
. arkets
Y
where those cars are still selling
weJJ, A Chrysler spokesman said
the mmaker will respond to the
unlon'srequestbytheendofthls
week, althO""'.h the outlook "for
any extension Is grim.
But the protest concerns more

than the Jefferson plant closing,
Coalition . spokesman Larry
"It Is to ~~monatrate that we Chrlstensensaldaletterwas~~ent
are no long!!!' willing to go alona to the UAW'slnternatlonaiExec·
with plant closlnlp .and layoffs," utive Board asking It to officially
the coaliUon said In a joint endorse arid support Thursday's
statement.
· protest.
·
''The companies signed con·
But be denied the rally Is also
tracts In , 1987 tbat said there . anattempttosUrpubllcltyabout
would be no further plant clos· the coalition because of locill
logs for the Jeftilh of thoee un.~n electloiJ!I this year.
contracts," added Pete Kelty,
We are uktng eve~ybody to
Pl'f!lldent of UAW LQcal 160, support thls,"besald. "Ourrnaln
wblch representl workers at Intent Is to say to the companies
GM'a Technical Center In and politicians that we have had
Warren, Mtcb.
enough."
T'l'*' contracts, however, al·
UAW spokesman Frank Joyce
~ ·.14HlllleCUillely· . aatd .·.U.· ~.aeF¥11t!••pt, lN
Idle plan II In theevelltota aales aroup's request for national
downturn~ acmethlng !"bleb baa ~.upport, !iddlq that thl! unlo~t as
pJaaued the. Industry since . a whole has bef;? active on a
October.
number of frf?Dis In ~rytng to
"But automakers have ba&lt;l a avertlayofts.
.
lot .of cholcet," Kelly , said,
The group also asked Aaron
adding that they !lave tanored Taylor, Pfe!lldent of UAW Local 7
optl~ to bring back work. from which represents workers at the
foreign and non-union firms. , ·
Jef(erson plant, to endorse the
UAW members also· said re- protest..
.
.
nialnlng workers are forced to
"Like anyone, we naturally
work harder as output Is ID· supportanyactlonsagalnstplant
creased at other plants.
closings," ~aid Taylor, who Will
The coaiiUon staging Thul'l· . be. meeting with Chrysler offl.
day's protest Includes rnembera clals Thursday to see If the
of NeW Directions, a dluldent Je!ferson closlna can~ delayed.
union group !bat has cll81tlsed
.'Butmyg\lesslsthlir~!,ymay
the UAW at the natlonallevelfor be more political In nature tban
beln&amp; Ineffective In prevenUng an actual protest of substance,"
further job losses. .
·
he i(lld.
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CHICIIN:'' ··

Or A SDeclaUiend
Of 5 Clleeies

1 Section. 14 Pag• 211 C.nto
A MUtdm•dlelnc. New..,._.

protesting layoffs, . closings

SUPER BOWL
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mid . ..

UAW workers to stage rally

MEAT &amp; CHEESE -TRAY.

S2849

Parll7 eloucb' Frldq. Hlp Ia

courthouse elevator project completed

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Patrol to administer ·COL program
COL!,JMBCS - Sergeant El·
bert W•. Kelly of the Ohio State
Hlpway Patrol has been chosen
to admtnlllter the diVIsion's com·
mercia! driver 'lce,nsina &lt;COL) ,
Jli'Ogr&amp;m In the Jac'iclon District. ,
Beginning 1!1 ·January 1990 all
c:.ommerclal drivers will bq,ln
taking testa to be licensed to
dr"'e specific cluslflcatlons of
commercial vehk:lel. All comrnerclaldrlveramustposseesone
of the new classified commercial
drivers Jtceues by Aprll,l, ,1992.
Acconlllll to Colonel ThOmas
W. Rice, h!&amp;hway patrols~- ;
tendent, ,total reltructiii'IDI of
the COf!llllei'C!al drivers tal dna
and llcenlinl syat:ern came u a
retult ~ the OD)IIIIIerci41 Motor
Vehicle Safety Act puled by.
Congresa In 11186.· Tbe law requires every alate to meet
rnlnlrnum comrntNial IJcenstq
·• standards. ..
:. The J111111C111t Df tbe aar.ty act Is
to Improve dlltlti qlfAIIty; c.
lnOYII ~ . driY. . frGIII '. .
road and lltalllllb •Iii hE~"
wUI preveahtriW•• Gil eomDia'· .
Clal motor ~ fl'CIII ba'Jbll
more tJau 0111 drlvw'allce••
Tea llflbWil)' patrol . .1181111
tbr?..,...,t the state have re-

celved In-depth training to ad·
minister the written and road
akUIJ test baft:ery each commer'
clal driver must take. .Thae 10
~eraeants will be assiated by 30
drivers examiners', au of wbom
have passed the "CiaQ ·A"
I'I!Qulremeata nec:ell8l'Y to drlw •
vehicles welplng 26,000 pounds ··
or more.
The sergeants will coordinate
testing ,w ithin the highway patrot' s10 districts acrou thea tate,
the Colonel said. Wrltien teatl
,,ll be scheduled at exla llq
driver examination;•tatlona and
I&amp;UijiCiiary flicllltln to be 1111·
noUIICed on a fegular bull. Tbe
CDL·aergeanla will also cl01ely
monttpr contracted tlltrd·IJ&amp;riY
!elan,. or thoR larp fleet·
oraantzatlona wbo wtah to main·
tala their own teatllltr alte 1111d
the *Ills teata.
.
Tile CDL III!I'JI!8llll are ~
1aapoulble for taapect~Dc all
CIIIIIIDift!la1 · drl~a tralnlq ·
ICbooll wltbla tbtlr ttll*"Uve
dlalrlctl to tuure w lm.aJi¥
with thenleJ uclftiUiatlo•llt
Iordi III the law.
·
''Be C8111t tb1i JII'Oil'8lll 1a 10
IIIII requlnl evwry Olllo
. ~ drlotr to teat lor a
~ e~ COIIIIIIII'Cia1 Jl.

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cense, the 10 admlniatratora will
be IIi contact with local media to
kl!llp the public Informed," Colonel Rice said. "Our CDL
sergeants will l;le available as
speilket:• to explain this prOifam
tQ ln~tld aroups."
Serp8111 Kelly leaves the
Portsmouth Post, where he has
been an .ualltant commander
since 1990, to . aceept the CDL
posiUon for the nine-county
Jackson Dllltrlct. He bepJI bill
career at the PortllmOuth Poat
~litre he was cllo8en Trooper of
the Year 11119711. In 1876 he was
Pl'GIIIO*ed IQ1he ran~ ot llll'fHII·
thand 111111"4 to the JaekiOD

foatU811Uiiatant~.

He remained there 1111111 tr11111fer·
rtna back to Pol'llmouth In 19al.
Kelt;y Ill a Hlllltlqtoll, w. Va.
native wbere he IJ'IId!alted from .
Vlnaon Hlp Scboolud atttllded
Marlball UDIYI!ratty. He ucl his
wife, Sandra, Uve In Poi llliiOUth
and 114ve t11110 lio!MI, Sellll, Ill, and
Jeff, 11.
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J'or fl&amp;rtber lldDmlaUon, cau
the ~ Patrol BoWDe at

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Ill' CO!Itlct Seraeut Kelly at the

Jacbon Dlltrtct be•dqw Eint
61..11W1U,

Retrial of officer's '81
murder ente~ third day

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
An FBI agent testified Stacy
-Officer Randy Byard says the · wallredoutofRoom 71ntheLittle
sight of a fellow patrotmail, · Churns ·Hotel ln. Springfield, Dl.,
sprawled on a sidewalk with after 'being told he had no way to
mortal wounds, caused .him to escape.
Jose control when. he tiled out an
Special agent Carl Schaffer
official report, and, "I slatted told the jury that a hotel clerk
crylq like a baby.''
Identified Stacy as a g\lest. FBI
Byard's description of the 1981 apnts cle~ the hotel, and
murder of Patrolman Paul Har· then telephoned Stacy In his
moo keyed Wednesday's leCOnd room.
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round of testimony at the retrial
"Mr. Stacy was advised that he
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!}
of Bol)by Dean Stacy, a Colum· wu surrounded by FBI agents
· Ohio Republk:an party leaden bus, Ohio.
and ,to come out," Schaffer said,
have not given up Qn their•
Byard told tbe court heard a "He CQmplled."
· attempts to·get HamUtoa County shot, furnped In bls prowl car,
Stacy was convicted of the
Commlslloner Robert Taft II to and sped to a street corner when shootlna In 1982, but the state
drop out of the governor's race Harmonlay bleeding.
Supreme Court threw out the
and seek another atatewlde
"He was Jylna on his left aide;
verdict, ciUns several errors.
office.
blil knees, were up a little, with Cabell Circuit Judat Alfred Fer·
.'llhey planned to meet with Taft ' blood on ·the .back and top of biB
&amp;UIOD traveled to Mercer County
Thursdaytodtacussthare~ullaof
·bead, and blood was runntna to pick a jury, saytna local
a recent poll conducted by-State ilown btsfhead," Byard aald.
residents knew too much about
GOP Chairman Robert Benllett. ''He was . eedlng from his nose the cue to be lmpartjAI.I.
Me'anwblll!, state Sen. Euaene and mou · "
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Stacy was arrested at the hotel
Br~tool, O.Utk:a, appears to
A West lrglnla trooper tes II· Feb: 7, 1982, at 9 p.m., several
'be Demoeratlc aubernatOI'Ial fled Tuelday that he found a
weeka after Harmon was shot.
candidate Anthony Celellrezze's blood·stalnecl pn belonalng to Schaffer testified a search of bls
cholca lor a runntna mate.
the all In lawman under an bote! room turned up a Kentucky
Celebreue aald Wedlleld8)'he armrest In a 1971 green Buick · birth cerdfk:ate In the name of
wlllmakellll8llliOUJicellleDtiHIXt registered to the defendant. Curtis Godley, Jr.
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WHk, and the Columbus Dt1-' Harmon was lbot with biJ own
Hatcller trteel to s:ruw Stacy
patch 1epo1 ~ In a copyrlpt re~olver.
. ·
wu Deal• from the unllnaton
story Thund8y tllat Branatoolla
The cldet detenae couneel, Bob .crime, and was llllnl GociHy aa
· expected to aet tbe nod.
Martin, ukad Byaid pointed an allla. Martin, however,
. ''BarrJnianytbllllunforeaeen, qlll!lldona, 101111 over nearly arauedaotblngfoundlnthehotel
I'YI! IIIIC1e my dectllo11," C.Je.. every detail of bl. .ccount of the linked Stacy to Harmon's
b:eza.e said. HoweYel', that ded- fata!JII&amp;ht .. Attlmel, thtwi!MII .murder.
aton"ian'taftnlldecllloll"unW appearedconfu• .
,
On crou-examlnatlon,
a bacJI&amp;roWld check ~ com·
Aaa!Jtant Pr-.:ut:or Paul Scbaffei' aelalowled&amp;eel that
pleted, be aald.
Hatcblr 10Uibt to Juatlf)" ,the $lacy Ud a bl'otber 8lld atater In
Ullll8llllld Republk:an party · contuslo11, uldna Byard In what ·tblliprlacftelll eteL Jlla IIIIer' a
ICMII'Gtl told the !IIIWII*Jiel' the condition he was In when he , name 'IIIII Nuey Gl&gt;1
8.nd her
raaltl ofBellllett'a poD of liDO ret11!'1111dtotbutattonllldtotnl "'•+and'a ' name was · Curtis
couty parf7 ofllcla1l lbow a , out a1eport.
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.a.to.l pnleieate for former
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A ~. Oblo, car aalel·
Cleveland Mayor Oeorae VoJDo.
''I loabd down at Paul'a blood · maa alao W.llfted that he had
vtch u tbe J181'lTIIUIII!rn8tOI'Ial 011 blood on my banda and I
aold Stacy the Bulck. All Ohio
namllee and a preferet~Ce for started CI'Jfna lb a baby,"
t)epartment ot Motor Vetilclel
Taft to take anolber spOt QD the ~. aald. ''IIoet control of
offlelals tlldfled that tbecarwu 1
ticket, the DIIJI'tCb reported.
lll)'ltlt.
reglallnd to Stacy.

GOP. leaders
want'Taft·out
of top race

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIO!!-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGET!'
' Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslllant Publlsher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G~ner&amp;l

Maaager

LE'n'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leoolllan Me
words lone. All !etten are oubjeet lo edlllnl 111d muol be alped wltb
Dallle. addr,.oaad lelepbone n11mber. No uulped tetcen wW .be pub·
llalled. Lettera should be In 1ood lasle, addressing IAaues, nol pei'aonall- ,.
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Mayor Barry seeks help
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Editor

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·The ·Daily Sentlnei
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WASHiNGTON - "''be·
nama Invasion II yesterday's
news, .. and George Buab, defender of democracy, won't be
able to milk It for much more.
When Congreaa retun11 to wotk
later thll mo
. nth, It will turn
attention back to Bush's love lest
with brutal China.
Senate Investigators want to
get to the bottome of the
administration's overtures toward China. Is Bush motivated
by sound foreign policy or are
people with buslneas Interests Iii
China pulling hts chain?. .
The United States Imposed
sanctions against China last June
after the bloody Tlananmen
Square massacre of prodemocracy demonstrators. But
that didn't stop Bush from
sencitng National Security Ad·
vlser BrentScowcroftandAsslst•
ant Secretary of State Lawrence
Eagleburger to meet with Chi·
nese leaders In December.
They also made a secret trip to
China just one month alter the
massacre, ostensibly to deliver ,
Bu•h's messaa:e of outrare In
l'lllio.'J.IISio fat!

WASHINGTON- Mayor Marlon Barry, disgraced and branded a
crack smoker In an FBI-pollee sting, may have taken his first
tentative step toward recovery !rom addiction.
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Perhaps fearing perjury charges, the formerlY charismatic .
politician - who repeatedly has denied using cocaine - did not
speclftcally ·admit drug addiction. But Barry publiCly promised
Sunday to seek unspecified help "to heal iny body, mind and soul."
Some olthe mayor's friends say privately be has a serious problem
with alcohol.
·
· II Barry Is addicted to drugs or alcohol - or "cross·addlcted" to
both- he could be the last to realize his addiction, which of,course Is
necessary be!ote admitting lt.
1
That Is because denial Is a major sympton of diseases of addiction.
Barry's acknowledgment ol "my deepest human frailties" was the
first hint by the mayor that he may be an addict. Addiction specialists.
saw this as encouraging evidence that Barry may be ready to work
for his own recovery.
Barry needs to remove. himself quickly from the public eye and get
Into a rehabilitation center. There, In relative privacy, he must push
aside his legal and polltlcal problems and deal forthrightly with his
far more serious personal tragedy.
For years, Barry was surrounded by sycophants, proteCted !rom
the consequences of his actions. A self-proclaimed "night owl" who
boasted ol hts political. Invincibility, It took the disgrace of "hltilng
bottom" to force him Into treatment.
·
: The mayor's public humiliation was total because· ol the evident
bypocrlsy of his giving antl,drug pep tal~ In the public schools. Such
recklessness Indicates dental so powerful it defies understanding.
Can an Intense craving for ca&lt;:alne exptaln why the mayor of the
nation's capital would dare buy crack !rom a beautiful woman friend
and smoke It In a doWntown hotel only a short stroll from the White
House?
There bas been speculation that Barry subconsciouslY understood
that his life was out of control and that the brazen behavior that finally
broughi him down was his cry lor help.
Although some addicts use cocaine dally, other users do not. Use Is
tHggered for some by situations, as when havlng.sexual relations and '
Ingesting cocaine become Inextricably linked.
As the smokable form of cocaine, hllhly addictive crack travels In
.seconds to the pleasure center of the brain, which governs responses
to sex. Cocaine users often drink alcohol to "come down" from the
Intense effects of the drug.
.
Rehabilitation lor cocaine addicts Is dUflcult. Relapse Is common.
Treatment empaslzes abstinence and usually Includes partlclpatllon
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In Narcotics Anonymous, a self-help groop modeled after Alcoholics
Anonymous.
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On Sunday, flanked by preachers, Barry stOod before tbe television
caml.'ras and told his constituents ol the difficult journey he faces : He
looked short on charisma and very vincible.
Then, In an Invitation to "others who are as pained and hurt as I . stories have recently emerged
am,'' the mayor said, ''J.oln me, brothers and staters. We can ·make
about what passes for ethics on .
it."'
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Capitol Hill.
The first Involves five sepators
-John McCain, R·Arlz.; Dennis
DeConclnl, D·Arlz.; Alan Cranston, D-Callf.; John Glenn, D·
Ohio and Donald Riegle, D·Mich.
They are all In bot water for
Dear Editor:
I would hope all the counties
taking campaign contrlb)ltlons
I would like to express concern now trying to build a new landfill
or trips !rom Keating, his family
over our area and landfllllng as will push not only for It but push
or his company.
our county has no landfill.
for the recycllllg of all the trash
Typical Is Rep. Douglas Bar·
We now
many counties In this area. It's happening all
nard,
D-Ga., whO chaired a key
trying to build one big iandfi!L I over America making thousands
House
monetary affairs subcomwould hope a lot of people would of new jobs for people who need
mlttee while also sitting on the
speak out on this before millions them.
•
full banking committee and Its
of taxpayer dollars go Into this.
So come on Southern Ohio let's
llnanclallnstltutlons subcommll·
Neither America nor our area . lead the 'flY In recyclllig for
tees. FEC Illes show that In the
can keep on building land~l_tls, Ohio. Maybe then our slate
1986
election cycle,, Barnard
spoiling our land.
elected officials will pass new
·
received
$9,000 In contributions
We could slow that process by la~s tomakeeverythlngrecyclli·
from
Keating,
his family and
'building a landfill area Recy·
ble In Ohio. So lor now lets at
associates.
He
accepted
a $2,000
cling Plant to recycle at the least try tohelp.theworldandour
speaking
honorarium
and
a free
landfill area site. Not pnly would environment before Its too late
trip til Phoenix from Keating's
thll slow filling up are landfill but lor are children and theirs ..
American Continental Corp.
make many new jobs lor this
Yours Truly,
Other, House banking commitarea. Plus we will be ·dolng our
Floyd H. Cleland
part to help save our natural
Box 144·F tee members receiving direct
resources which we are using up
Middleport, Ohio 45760 Keating contributions Include
Rep. Jim Kolbe, R·Arlz.; · Ste·
at alarmlmr rates.
phen Neal; D·N.C.; and· Rep.
· Frank Annunzlo, 0·111. Annunzlo
Is now chairman of the financial
lnstltullolll subcomrillttee.
On the Senate side, Keating

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relations with' China // ~ ·· :

Jac~. -A~rfon and/Dale ·Van Attf)

· person. ·Apparently BliSh didn't
.
truatthemallswlththemeliaee.
lze, Ill tel~. corpora.te,/Cllenta
haven't put an end to the
nor did he trwst the American
how to deal With govetnments,
qt!fttlolll, mainly because of the
people enough to tell them.
/ here and overseas. Some of those
secrecy surround~~~&amp; Klslllll ~
The Senate Foreign Real allons
clients do buslneas In China; and soclates. . Kissinger refuses tp
Committee wUI acbedule a hear·
hope to count on continued dllclose tlle'namea of 1111 clients,
lng next month on developmen.ts
friendly relations between Wa·
As part ol his col!f~tlo!l ·
In ~astern Europe, and Secre·
shlngton and Beijing.
: hearlnp lor the ,asllta~J:'Secre.
tary of State Jamea Baker ts ·
Congress would love to know • ~ry of state ·job, Eagli!burger,
expected to teatlfy. \Vhlle he's ' w~her Bush bas taken any cues
revealed hll personal clients;
there, some committee members
directly from Kissinger or 'lndl· / while he worked for Kissinger-'~
plan to ask ,hill! about China, : rectly, through Eajlleb\lrger and
some of whom had ties t~ Chill~.
source$ told our associate Scott Scowcroft, or, at the very least,
But Kissinger has not allo\ved t~
Sleek.
·
whether the U.S. reaction to complete cllenyilst to be given to
Eagleburger· Is expected to'be , events m'Chlnals driven by some . the Forelp ;Relations Comm!~
summoned after Baker, and; like/ senttme11tal attachment Eagletee, even ~nfldentlally. ·
:-.
a . rerun ,of his ~onftrmation
burger and Scowcron have to old . Scowcroft has been elraslve
hearlllg~ be will be .asked about frlenda.
He cla\1'11 that Klsstnpt den!~ ,
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hts past bus~s deallnp with
A f~ members of Congress
him permission to .~al hiJ 1
China.
,· .
.
are s~y about pointing a finger at .Cll!!nls. Since the national secul)';
The big fish In this case Is · Klsslilger, who still has consider·
lty adviser job does not requ,~
former Secretary of State Henry
able respect and power In Wa·
Senate conftrmatlon, .the Senat~.
Kissinger, but sptce the senators
slllngton. But Sen. Jesse Helms,
has ha(l no leverage to Ioree ~~~. have neither the will nor the R·N .C .; r.eportedly has no
accounting out of Sccwcroft. •. ·
excuse to summon him, uiey will I qualms about 11. He Is expected to 1
Scowcroft and Eajlleburg~
reel iJI!EaRleburger Instead.
pummel Eagleburger with que~·
both promise to exC)lse .them·
BefOre they joined the Bush tlonubout Kissinger Associates.
selves from any ma~ters jnvolv·
team, Eagleburger and Scow:
Klsslllger has denied any role
lng their former clients. Thaf
croft were top officials atKtssln·
In the administration's dectslon
pledgelshardtopollcewbenonly
~r·s COIISultlng firm, Ktsslnger
to kowtcw' to China so soon after
they know whO those client$.
Associates. The business special· the massacre. But his denials
were.
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~ASH!oN~A&gt; f!!Og~~~Sen~~~ar~!~lesph~!it!~~~~nan

utters to the editor

Expresses concern

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Berry's World ·

R·Utah; Harry Reid, D·Nev.;
and Jake Garn, R·Utah, Garn' s
former assiStant and protege, M.
Danny Wall, recently resigned as
chairman of the Office of Thrift
St~pervtsor, and Wal)'s wife Is
Garn's secretary.
Further, over 'the last several
election cycles, Keating,
members of his famlly and
American Continental have donated the maximum allowed by
law to the National Action
Committee - a PAC r11n by
former Rep. Dave Evans, now a
lobbyist lor, among others, the
s&amp;L Industry. In turn, the Na·
tiona! Action Committee donated
to the re-election committees of
virtually every member of the
House and Senate banking
committees.
·
-The second ethics story has
todowlthanewwaymembersof
Congress have discovered to hide
their travel expenses.
·
Under both' House and Senate
rules. · any· member or staffer
spending Senate or House funds
lor travel must give a full
accountlngofandreasonsforthe
expenditures. These reports
must be !Ued quarterly and are
open to the public. It Is these
reports that sometimes lead to

::
dla about costly, unl)ecessary funds. Thus, the costa don't show, ,
trips that ejlt up taxpayer up at all on the expense report ,,
dollars.
forms ol members of Congress. l·
For years, Congress has hid·
Now congressional commit· ·
den part of Its travel expenses by tees have gone· even one step •
using military aircraft. The further. They are building some:,i
usual reason given Is "security" ofthelr travellrtto the budgets of ,.
or "time constraints," but the departments and agencies they ',
real reason Is that using a
regulate. When they travel, they· .
military plane provides the tra·
simply make that agency pick up:•
vellng party with a prlvate plane,
the entire tab.
.
·
while the cost comes out of the
The result: no expense report • ..,
·Pentagon's budget and does not
For example, during this boll,-,•
show up on the congress day recess one staffer ol the ,,
member's expense reports.
HouSe Appropprlatlons Interior, ·
Then Congress wen a little
Subcommittee was ' scheduled to ::
further. U.S. embassies In for·
lake a month·long trip to the .
elgn lands - especially Ill
South Pacific and Australia to
countries popular with congresvtslt various U.S. trust terrlto- .,
slonal junketeers - maintain
rles whose budgets are her ..
staffs to act as hOsts to visiting
responsibility.
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delegations. Often these em·
· Thepurposeofthetrlpseemed ,.
bassy staffers pick up the check
reasonable and fully justified. "
formealslorvlsltlngmembersof · The staffer revi~wlng Guam's .~
Congress (and their spouses and
budget should know what's going ..
staffs) . The money comes !rom a
on In Guam. But first-class
contingency lund put Into the
trans·Paclftc travel Is very ex- , .
State Department budget by
pensive. Rather than have thts ,.,
Congress.
amount show up on Its budget, :
According to State Depart·
the cctnmlttee simply wrote ·the ;
ment sources, the fund has been
trip Into the ·Interior Depart· ~
expanded so that the vlsltlllg
ment's annual budget. Now Inte- 1;
delegation's entire In-country
rlor Is pa'ylng the bills- and, of.. ;
expense Is billed to the embassy
course, no congressional ellpense ,
and not paid for by congressional
report has to be !lied.

·. Pay me, and r11 .forget cruel 'past.

·&lt;il·• .,,..
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"SAY - would you folks be lnt-ted In
IIIIVIng on • jury In Miami?"

ll your last nanle ts Rosen.
O'Leary, Chan or Mart~ez. and
the lottery has not yet paid of!,
. lake heart: There may still be a
route to unearned riches.
·
Why not jolll the reparations
lobbY, " movement to force
U:ncle Sam IIIIo payllla people for
the pain Inflicted on their forebears?.Such paymenta are aWl a
loiiJ shot, to be sure, but there Is
gatherllle momentum for them
In this pecuJI.ar era of
vlctlmbood.
Conerea1111811 John Conyers,
for example, hu Introduced
lqlalatlon that he hopei will
reault In reparatlou paid to
blacks for damap lnlllcted dur·
Ina slavery.,The Mlchlpn Democ
crat wu llllplred by paymenta
Congreu approved ~o years
aao for Japaneee-Amerlcans Interned Ill camps durllle World
War II.
·
During that earUer debate,
critics warned lhef!! might be no
~

Booatersllft.a·tbon, plctllftd from left to right are
booeter president Sheriff Jim Soulllby, Andenon,
Blake ud football coach Mike 8tagp.

DAVE LESTER won the'heavywelgbt class and
Joe McElroy won the flyweight class In the
llft·a· thon, pictured from left to 'rlght are booster

Rio ·r ladies
face crucial.
'

contest

.,.

'

..

. . :~

V1.noeht Carroll ,:

end to such clalme8 from ag· · case that bigotry at one time or
grteved groups; n0w It seems the another slowed the advancement ble warts, has generally done ';
critics had a polllt.
~
of his or her ancestors? My own well by Its citizens. Moder11 ,
Since the first vote tor repara· favorite cand.ldates for pay· victlmhood tnststs on dWelling on
tlons followed a commission's menta (and I assure you It hila
the negative: the riots that ,.
report, Conyers' bill would also nothlllg to do with my surname)
targeted lflsh In cities like ,,
create a panel, thll time to are lrtsh·AmerlcaiiS.
PhUadelphla; the appalling ,~
examine ''whether IORie remedy . · Now, some mtght argue the
wages and living condltloni they .l
should be made to the deiCend· Irish .who made It to America
endured; the cruel job dlacrlrnl· 1
anti ·of slaves." His ultimate were a lucliy lot. They traded a
nation; the astoundlllg rates of . ,
Intent t. clear en0111h~ bilweYer, mean,'low, hunery Ute In a hovel
disease and mortality. In Boston
and a number of, orpnlzatlons . - a life with virtually no future
alone between 1841 aild l845,
havealreadydeclaredlnfavorot other than poulbleatarvatlonnearly two-thirds of all Irt.h·
reparatlolll for blacka.
for a mean, low life Ill · an
.A merican children under 5 died.
Without a doubt1 blaclrl have American tenement, but a life ·
Clearty, according to victim·
endul:l!d worse treatment than that at least held a remote , hood's toetc. Uncle Sam owes
any· other erouJI In America, chance for advancement. And
Irtsh Amert
·
111 •
lncludlq Japaneae-Americans. the Irish, despite arrlvtne Ill the ,we ~re h~~sb::c;:n!.e:.; ·.
Yet the lolic for payments to New World often weakened by : slowed down. Goodnees knows '
offllet eveau of the distant put •fever, with no lldlls or education :where we'd be today If we'd •
extends to many other people, too and • clanntsh, . pfe.tnduatrtal ~ gotten a fair shake from the tbtle- Indeed, to just about everycmir outlook, manaeed over the dewe ataa'aered off the boilt.
.;
except a few white Anglo-Saxon cades to ualmUate and succeed.
But. hey: we IriiiiJ.Amerlcani•,
Proteatant males.
·
Yet such a thesll obviously
are a reasonable buDCh. For a J
Jews, Chinese, Hla~CI,Indl· renects old·fuhloned atutudet,
modest check of, uy, $100,000 '
•na, every woman ln'.t he land the kind of thtnttne that bel~
apiece, we're perfectly wllltntr to •'
you name II. Who can't make·a America,. d~plte Ill COIIIIderll·
foraet the whole sorry' alnry. ,
u~

~ ·.

A showdown tor domination of
the Mid-Ohio Conference will be
held In Lyne Center Saturd~ty at
7;30 p.m. when the University of
Rio Grande women's basketball •
team, 14-7 and 3·1 in the MOC,
meets the !Jrbana LlldY Blue
Knights. ·
Urbana Is 14·4 and 4·0 In the
conference and faces .anotlier
MOC opi;X'nent at Walsl) today..
The Redwomen boos ted their
MOC ~tanding ·Tuesday when
they knOcked off Mount Vernon
Nazarene, . 66-49 , Center Ann
Barnltz led the way with 17 points
and 11 rebounds .
. "We have to take It one siep·at
a time/' first-year Rio Grande
Coach Qoug F9ote commented.
"That next step Is Urbana and WI! .
will have to play very well."
The Redwomen offense, much
ilnproved . since , the seaSjllt's
beginnings. ' has seen balanced
pertorman~es fr(lrfi'llliujy oNI)e
team's players. Barnltz Is cur·
rently at 13.3 points :. and 6.8
rebound&amp; to lead In bOth areas, I
while Debbie Fredrick ts contrl·
butingl1.4 points, 4.4 assists and
3'.8 boards.
~Indy Montgomery's skill on .
3-polnt field goal has been a
highlight of the last several
games. ln the past flve,contes.ts,
. she has connect~d on 21 of 31
trlfecta attempts for 67.7 . per·
cent, making her one of the
leading Dis trlct 22 shooters ln.
that category.
Kerr! Kidwell, a member o!the

~~:J~~ !~r:~r~~:~::~~~ ~~

MEIGS

',

Track and Field .
The ·f astest active woman in
the world, Dawn Sowell, will
compete In the 55·meter dash
Feb. 2 at the Mlllrose Games .
Sowell, 23, recorded the fastest
times In the world last year for .
the 100 and 200 meters and was
ranked first In the world at both
distances.
Yachting
Organizers of the round· the-

world BOC Chaljenge yacht race
have announced, that 47 sailors
have signed up lor the solo race
that leaves Sept . 1 ~ from New·
port, R.I. The cqmpetltors will
Include 13 Amerlcans,10 Britons,
seven Australla,ns and six
French Sailors. The field will
Include three, women, Isabelle
Autissler of F'i'a nce, Noelle Cor·
bett of Canada and Jean Weber of
Canada.

PASTRAMI
BURGER·
$2.29
'I• lb. • burger lopped ,w llh

OvERALL WINNER - Dave Lellter recleved
the trophy for the most weight lifted Ia thll years
IIH-a·thon at Melp HIJh School. Pictured from
•,

grilled pastrami, swiss ch-se,
/eltuce, tomato l our famous
McGvver sauce In a grilled
sesame seed bun.

left to riJht Is Athletic Booste~ president Sheriff
Jim Soulsby, Lellter and head football Coach Mike
Slagp,

698 West Main

TVC frosh tourney
.starts Satunlay

'

The TVC Freshman Basketball
will begin this Saturday morning
at Meigs High School with 4
games being played.
Alexander ana Miller will play
at.lO: O(l'a m, and Trimble will
play Nelsonville-York at 11:30 a
m . The' winner of those two
games wtll meet on wednesday
night Jan. 31 at 6:00pm.
In other action on Saturday,
Belpre will play VInton County at
1:00 pm, with the host team
, Meigs Marauders 'playing Fed·
era! Hoelting' at 2: 30 p.m.
' The winner ol the Me!gs·
' Federal Hocking game wl.ll play
Wellston on Monday nlg'ht Jan. 29
at 4 p.m. The winner will advance
to p!B.y ihe winner of the
' Belpre.VInton County game 'pn
Wednesday Jan 31, at 7:30p.m.
The' Winner .of the 6 p.m.
· Wednf!Silay game will pia~ the
winner ol the Wenesday 7:30
gaine for the champio~shlp on
Saturday, F'l)b. , 3 .at &lt;2: 30. The
losers of the WedneSd~tY games
will meet In the consolation game
' on Saturday ab 1.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Uft-a-thon helps raise money
for weights, e{juipment room

.

'
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wer.e : Flyweight-Joe McElroy
By DAVE HARIUS
. The Meigs ' Athletic Boosters ' (185 lbs), Lightweight-Frank
recently held a llfl·a·thOn to help Blake (225 lbs), Middleweight·
raise money for. weights and Bill Anderson (280 lbs) ,
equipment for•the weight room at Heavyweight-Dave Lester (290
Meigs High School. This year's lbs) .
llfl·a·lhon Included 48 students
with pledges of approximately
The Athle!lc Boosters and the
$3,000 for the weight trlllnlng
coaching start at Meigs High
program.
School would like to thank the
Also helping In sponsoring the Individuals and businesses which
event was Pat Hill Ford, Vete- sponsored students. If a lndlvld·
rans Memorial Hospital and the ual didn't sponsor a student and
Meigs County J~;~ycees .
would like to contribute to the
Each student obtained ple~ges llft-a-thon they can do so by
lor each pound that they could lift contacting Coach Mike Staggs at
In the bench press. Trophies went the high school .o r booster pres!·
to student who could lift the most dent Jim Souls by.
In the, folloW\ng weigh! classes :
Flyw~lght (101-133), lightweight
· (137-16~). middleweight (166-186)
and heavyweight (187) .
WIMers In ·tilts. years event

the last · two weeks ," Foote
commented. As a re$ult, she Is
seeond In rebounding with 6.3 per.
game. •
·
··
Foote ·wlll start with Fredrick
and Jennl Coucli (6.5 points) as
the guards, with Kidwell (7.7
points) and Kathy Snyder · (6.6
polnis, 4.8 rebounds) as fo P
wards . Barnltz will repeat at
.c enter.
·Urbana, mired In the basement
of conference play last. season,
has sptll)lg to the le(ld this year
with a bench of seven p!ayers
under Cindy McKnight's gul·
dance. The Red women lost to the
La(ly . Blue ~nights, 11·63 In
overtllne, at Urbana on Jan. 9.
· The guests' top scoring threat
The Daily Sentinel
will be Cindy Frere. a 6-3
~ophomore ·center 1\Veraglng 18.5
(VIPS lfHII)
points and 9.5' reoounds. Behind
A lllvlll.. oiMultbnodla, lol&lt;.
her, the Redwomen will have to
' I Publ)ohed every afternoon, Monday . ,
contend With !Qrward Sa rita
thrO\IIIh Frt!llly, 111 Court St., Po·Brown (5·11, sophomore). who Is
l meroy, Ohio, by the ohio Valley Pub·
,bringing 18:1 points 'and 9.1
IIJhlng C(&lt;!mpany/Multlmedta, Inc..
1'\!meroy, Ohio'f57811 , 1'11. !IH-21!56. Se- : ·
rebounds c
CC)n&lt;l ~, . ., pootagt paid at Pomeroy, •
McKnight's other starters In·
Ohio'.
'
chide point guatd Denice Martin
~mber: Unital Preoo lnt..,..tloMI,
(5-4, sophomore, 6 points, 4
Inland Dally Pnu ANodatlon aile! the
rebound&amp;); starting shooting
Ohio !lowiiJ)Ie::;woclatton: !latloMI
h~
AdverUalq
tattve, Branhlm
gllllrd Jean'I)vehues (5-6, senior,
News.-per
•· 't3a Tbtrd Avenue,
10 ' points, 5 assists) and small ;
!lew York, !lew York 111017:
forward Kim Fields (5·6, sophoI' ·POSTMAI'n:R:
111n~ c~~"'~~"'
more, 6 points, 4 rebounds) . .
io The DallY Soatlllol, 111 COurt St.,
Saturday ·~ • game Is free of
The. Meigs Junior High Wres- · , Pom..-oy.,'Oiilo - ·
.
admlss!Qn . to area htglt sc!tool, · tllng team defeated Federal
BVBBaiiPTIO!IIL\TIIII
junior high·and elementary bas·
Hocking 48-36 tills past Mon4,ay 1
.,~ . . - - ketball coacl!es and their teams.
night at Federal ·Hocklilg High , t One w-...................................auo
School.
,
/ One Moolb .................................16.1D
Literature o~ the Redwomen will
be available and a promotion will
Individual winners for the . OneYur ..~~LE~n'" '""mllll
he' held.
Marauders were: P. J. Chadwell
PBJOIE
'
.
at 80 lbs; Danny Rees at 86ibs, I Dolly , ,................................ 211 Cento
'
Jerod Cook at 90 lbs, Pat Yoq · Su!Jocrlbinnatdeolrtnatopaythecar·
at 11~ lbs, .Josh Heck at 120 lbs,
~ 8!f(y =.1~.\" "'!"~'!. :,:,.~
Donn~
May
a!
126
lbs,
Curds
bull. CrallI ttr111 he pv•u•arrw MCb
Gel
- ·
.LPGA golfer Jan Stephenson Storms at 138 lbs, and Shannon
11o oublerlpt- by man ponnltlttl ID
suffered a broken linger when an· Statts at 155 lbl.
Jake ~JIIIedy turned In an
areu
bome carrla' MrVIce II
assailant grl!bbelt her purae Ill
outstanding
'
pel'lolinuce,
at
155
avattallle./
· she was puttlpg It into the' truilk
- • It ,.,.._
of.)ler car on her way In a Mlanil lbs., ~t Kennedy llljured hll
hould
d
.
-~~~~
.. c.on.,
'
Hill!l b&amp;llketball game. Ron Culp; ~ould !'t CQu::ueth. e match and
13 wee~~a ............... ................... nu•
21Weella
..................................
S37.96
.'
trainer .. fort .,tbf,! NB~ team, said
·
Thllls
the
first
year
lor
junior
52
woe~~a
..................................
rt6.36
X· rays showed the ring finger on
uw~~.~~.~ ... Ol.lll
stephenson's left hand was htgbwresdlngllltheMetgsLocal
21 wee~~a ..............................:... M0.30
broken and would probably re- School District, the Marauders
·have, 12 boya on thll years team.
u wee~~a ................................. m..o
qWre euraery·.
·
~

president Sheriff Jim Soulsby, Lester, McElroy
and football coach Mike Staggs.

Sports briefs

I

- ~p;..~f

I

BilL ~ERSON won the trophY for the.
middleweight dlvlllon and Frank Blake ,or the
IJcbtwelpt dlvlllon IIi the Melp Athletic

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L-----······-·-------J

Meigs junior

.
. Sports 'briefs

Save One Dollar on the
Purchase of a Pastrami Burger.
One coupon per customer, per
visit. Not v~lid with any other

992-2174

POillEIOY, OHIO .

�.'Jhncl.v, "*"-¥ 21. 1190
\

\

Pomaoy-Miiddltport, Ohio

.

By JEFF SBAJN
UPISpo,rja Writer
Louisiana State Coach Il&amp;le
BrQWII believes the voters should
grade the Tigers on their perforr
mance Instead of their potential.
The 13th· ranked Tigers misled
the front end of elgbt consecutive
1lne-and·one free-throw sltua·
tfons down the stretch . and
allowed Georgta to run oft 10
straight points In overUme Wed·
nesday night, droppln8 a 94·92
Southeastern Conference decl·
slon to the Bulldogs.
·"We should drop out of the .
,poDs. Completely out,". said
Brown. whose team dropped to
12-4 and 4-3 In the SEC. "I
honestly believe we could have
been 12-4 with our schedule with
an Intramural team."
LSU' s only consistent prDduc·
lion Wednesday night came .f rom
Chris Jackson, who led all
scorers with 45 points. Shaqullle
O'Neal . added 15 points and
Wayne Sims 13.
" Frankly, I wish ll wasn't so
late In the season," Brown said,
·"I'd bring In some redshlrts." ..
The game featured an Improbable finish to regulilllon In which
a Georgia player hit three tree
throws with four seconds lett to
tie the score 79-79.
Rod Cole was awarded three
free throws as part of an
experiment In the SEC this year
In whlcll a player fouled while
shooting a three-pointer Is given
three shots from the line.
"We hit some big shots, and
their missed tree throws helped
us. tremendously," said Georgia
Coach Hugh Durham, who~
team lmpmved to 11-5 and 4·3.
Alec Kessler scored 27 points to
pace the Bulldogs. Marshall
Wilson added 22 and Jody Patton
a nd Cole finished with 19 each.
The Bulldogs played without
second-leading scorer Lltterlal

TAKE THAT ! -Duke's Alaa Abdelnaby (30) gives N.C. state's
Tom Gugliotta (24) a whack In the nose as hetrlestodrlvethelane ·
during first half action at Cameron Indoor Stadium In Durbam.
The matchup featured two Atlantic Coast Conference teams.
(UPI)

·Mianli string snapped
by Ball State Cards
By United Press International
The Falcons took the lead for
Miami's solo flight atop the good at 40-39 with 14:46'remain·
Mld·Arnerican .Conference bas· ing and slowly pulled out to a
ketball sta ndings was joined 63-55 margin wlih 52 seconds
Wednesday night by a flock of remaining. on two free throws by
Ball State Cardinals.
Clinton Venable.
The Redskins, who won their
Craig Sutters led Toledo will!
first five MAC gaines In Impres- 24 points and_13 rebounds.
sive fashion, came up short
Kent State, behind Rlc.Bievl]ls
Wednesday · night at Muncie, , 22 points, built up a 20-po!nt lead
Ind.. dropping a 71-64 decision to but had to hold on for Its 72-67 win
the defending champion and over Western Michigan.
pre-season favorite Cards.
The Golden Flashes led 37-20 at
Chandler Thompson's 19 points halftime and were cruising a long
led four double-figure scorers for . with a 66-46 lead with 6: 11
Ba ll State, which used a late 10.0 remaining In the game. Western,
run to overcome a 62-59 Miam i however, mounted a comeback
lead.
attempt that cut the margin to
· Paris McCurdy's two free 71-61 with 58 seconds to play
throws with 29 seconds to play before the Broncos ran out of
capped the run and gave Ball time.
State a 69-62 lead.
"We struggled," said Kent
The Ball State ' win left both State Coach Jim McDonald. "It
teams with 5·1 MAC r ecords ·a nd was a matter of them wanting the ,
a full game ahead of Kent State at basketball. They saw an oppor·
4·2. The Golden Flashes beat !unity and we left the light on for
Western Michigan 72-67 Wednes· them. They lost the g~me by
day night . Miami and Ball State score, but they didn't lose It by
meet agai n Feb. 21 in Oxford.
not trjrlng. They surely out·
Tim Stewar t paced Miami with scrapped us."
'
16 points. While Paris McC urdy
At Dayton, freshmen Sean
had 15, Roman Muller 12 and
Hammonds and Bill Edwards
Shawn Parrish 11 for Ball State.
contlnued to be the Wright State
In the other two MAC games
mainstays, s'coring 15 points
Wednesday night , Bowling · each to lead the Raiders to a 79-64;
Green won 64-60 at Toledo and
win over Eastern Kentucky.
E.a s tern Michigan edged Central
. The Raiders, now 13-4, took the
· lead for gopd at 28·26 on a tlpln by
Michigan 71-70 in overtlme.
At Toledo, the F.alcons and the 6-foot-8 Edwards with 3:42
Rockets resumed their battle of leit In the first half.
nor thwest Ohio before 9,116 fan s
The Raiders' lead · reached
' in UT's Savage Hall, the larges t double figures for the first time
crowd there since Toledo played at 59-49 on a 3-polnt play by
Purdue In 1986.
Hammonds with 11:14 remaining
Steve Watson scored 15 points and they never led by less than
and grabbed 10 rebounds to pace five points the rest of the way.
Bowling Green, which also got
At Manhattan, Kan.. Jean
double figu re scoring from Joe Deroulllere scored 19 points and
Moore wit h • 13 points and Ed Jeff Wires 15 to lead Kansas State
Colbert with 11.
to an 84·60 win over Akron.

.
.

-

• -::::::r·•-l= .

I

86,1

m

WAJ!H~NGTON

(UPI)
Tliree white NFL quarterbacks
allegedly tested positive -for
cocalneuseoverthepastlOyears
without undergo~ mandatory
counseling or treatment, while
drug tests were used to target
black players In the league, a
television station reported
Wednesday.
The station, ABC affiliate
WJLA-TV, In a cppyright report
on NFL drug testl'ilg, quoted a
.f ormer· assQCiate of the man
hired to lead the NFL's drug
.testing program as saying the
league's drug policy was biased
· against biack athletes. The sta·
tlon reported the three quarter·
backs were "stars."
The· report came four days
before the kickoff of Super Bowl

'

•

' I

XXIV In New Orleans and two
da,ys before the first "slate orthe
league" news conference for
recently hired NFL Commis·
sloner ·Paul Tagllabue.
Tagltabue called the report " a
sniear of all quarterbacks" and
"quite absurd. " The story was
tainted because 11 came from a
dlsgriiJ!tled employee, he said.
"I think the league, Including
Commissioner Rozelle (predecessorPeteRozelle),wascaretul
to apply the progrim with an
even ~!and," Tagllabue said In an
Interview on · CBS's "This ·
Morning. "
Much of the report was based
on remarks from Gordon Grlf·
flth, formerly employed by Dr. '
Forest Tennant, .a California
physic an hired by Rpzelle In 1986

'

~c.

1989 OLDS
CIERRA 4 DR.

~~642

&amp; - · Do . .o IIH) ............... _, , .

I.-=.-- (N)

1990 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

1989 OLDS
TORONADO

~~m

,

OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Jo Ann Ward and Juanita UHI.HOUIS: 9:00 a.m.-;.12 ·Midnight

I:

•

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'

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BRAND NEW
A'w eoc•lto.81N\'Miqnlppedl

· . 1989 PONTIAC

SAN DIEGo (l!Pl) - ~ry and punta, while opponents did
Puquole, special teamJ coach not b~ any aucCt!lstul fakes ..
• for the Nevi York Jets' the put
nine aeoions, wu named special
~ leaml cOordinator tor the San
., Diego Chllflel'a, coach Dan Hen·
(All 0 - )
'i nlng announced Wednelday.
. TBAII
W L P OP
Puquale, 48, who began his
Mlller ...... ~ ...... 10 3 liN 'Ill
NFL coaching .career ln..m:t' as, • Welllton ......... 10 3 ~ :
special teilma coach with the
Alexander ...... 9 6 :::0: . IH1
Detroit' u~. wu pralted by . Trimble .......... 9 5 =Hennllig tor ibe effectiveness of
Fed·HockiJII ... 8. 71082 10S11
; tbe Jets'lpecl81 teamJ.
.
Belpre ............ 7 1 1001 . 8'fl
· • '1've known Larry for a long
VInton County. 5 · 1 '101. 'IQII.
.. tlme.'He'acoaclildepectal teams
Melp ............. 2 n 116 lntbe ..·--foralotof ....araand
.Nell-York ....... 2 '12 '116 10M·
..._...,
bea
...,. IIIIXI , .ft!l H1l ' ~·· ""I
Welllton
a.
,
I8UDI have alwoya flnJibed 1n
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·cHIV'J4!QM'JRSICA
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PONTIAC
PRIX

CONVERSION VANS

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Take ldventage 'of up to szaoo CISII Bleil or 4.11% Financing up to 48 months Or! approved credit ON SELECTED MODELS. Hurry, Jebates and factory sponsored
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CADILUC·GIO, INC•.

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

Alter, 13-1, got 21 of 36 first Henry, all ullbeeten In Dlvlalon
place votes In Dlvlllon n The ID, have the belt race gollla
Knichte, who beat .Dayton Dun· ' among the fQur dlvtalllal.
bar 65-116 over the weekend,
Liberty, 11-4, leads with 21 first
amused 337 points to 24~ for place votes and 2f7 polnta.
rWUierup Bellevue (10.1), wblcb Orrville, 1«1, l'elained tbe No. 2
received two flnt.. Steubenville poeltlon this week with four fltlta
wu • close third with 232 POints, and 216 points, while St. Henry,
with Hillsboro right behind the 12.0, was a close third with 214
Big Red with 230.
points and six tint place votes
The rest of the II list consisted after being In the runnerup spot
of Canfield, West Geauga, North last week.
Bend Taylor, Columbus Whet·
From there It tell off to Ontario
stone, Dayton Colonel White and In fourth p~ce with· 1M points,
Fostoria.
.
toUowed In order by Beachwood,
Colonel White had a disastrous Burton Berkshire, Houston, Ross ·
week, also losing to Dayton Southeastern, East Canton and
Chamlnade-Jullenne an~ Dayton Delta.
Belmont In addition to the loss to
Berkshire lostfor the first time ·
Scott. The Cougars now ue9·5.
Tuesdaynight,49-47, toGarrettsUberty, Orrville and St. ville Garfield.

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CORSICA 4 DR.

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CUTLASS SUPREME !

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FREE
ENTERPRISE

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ELDORADO

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BEST BE WON
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.1988 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Jim Cobb

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Parking at tl:ut Carryout During the
Day or Nightll

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1987 PONTIAC GRAND AM
57672
1987 CHEV. CELEBRITY EUROSPORT
S8499 '
1987 OLDS 98 ·4 DR. o. .~..,-................:.....-...........·-··-· S9995
1987 CHEY. IROC le did, .... OWIIIf _ ........- ........~·--··-·-·-·-· S977.9 ''
1987 CHEV. SPECTRUM 2s,ooo m~~es .....~-..-·-·-··-··-·-·--S5995 · '
1987 PLYMOUTH CARAYELLE Auto., air .......,...................._ S4 99 5 ··:_·~:
1985 CHEV. CAPRICEv.a.......,_.........;;........................._.S$995
··1985 FQRD CROWN VICT.ORIAu........_,____,_.;_S$788

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to heajl the league's drUJ pro{
gram. Griffith was dlstnlssed In
what was described by the:
station-as a payroU dl1pute.
:
Griffith told WJLA that Ten·
nan! was protecting high~
visibility white players whll~
targeting some black athletes. •
"I becameverycllscoufaged In'
terms of knowing how unethical
some Individuals can be Iii terms
or Injuring other people's Jives;
when It comes to. drug, testing,'\
Griffith .· told the televlstori
station.
' .
·

1990 FORD
BRONCO

$17,988

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. . . . . lea: IL r.rt=n* II; II.
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CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.

lOW S9889

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.... (I) (1~1) ,.......,. .............. 111

......

Scott (13-1) which beat Dayton
UPI . . . . . WrMer
Colonel White 74-il Ia Ita Jut
I)Utlng, got 28 ol 38 tint pia~
COLUMBUS - For the third
COIIIICIItlve """- Toledo Scott,
votes In Dlvlllon I llld held a
Ketwlq Alter, Younptown 380-318marstnoverNo; 2Canton
Uberty Qd Columbul Webrle . MCKinley (12·1), whlcb received
weft tile top-ranlled teamaln the
one flnt.
Unltled Pr.a JJiternatJpnal Oblo
Beaverct eek. unbeaten In 13
JBp Scbool Board of Coacbes' gamea, wu pllt!ll aevc:n first
'boye bulretball raUng~.
·
place votes and flntsbed a solid
Scott, AI• and Liberty. au third with 285 poU points, fol·
made It tbroulh the put week lowed by Newark In fourth with
197.
unscathed, but Wehrle, the Dlv·
lalon lV•Ieader, wu ambushed
RollftC!Jng out the biiiChoolllst
59-56 In overtime Tuesday nlgbt
were Toledo St. Francis, Westerat unbea.t en ~lchmond Dale
ville South, SaJI!!UIIky, Mansfield ·
So'utheaJjtern.
Senior, Mount Vernon and CleveThe lou wu the third. I~ 16 land St. Joseph, whlcb returned ·
gamer for the two-time defend·
to the top ten afl!!r a week's
lng champ Wolverines, who ted
absence.
30-18 at balftlme, but were
outscored . 19-8 In tbe fourth
quort.er by the Trojans, ranked
No. 8 In Division l1l at :J5.0.
Bulretbllll
Wehrle,. however, still held a
The United States, Soviet Un·
big 299-192 lead over runnerup ion, Yugoslavia and Brazil will
Springfield CathoDe In the small hold the top spots In ibe tour
school ballollng, recelvlnJ! 29 or grouplnp for the 1990 world
31 first Qlace votes,• with one · bulretball c hamplonship. The
coach completely omitting the U.S. wtll head Pool C In Buenos
' Wolverines from his bailot. ·
Aires, joining Greece, Spain and
· Sprlngtleld Catholic ( 13·2), South Ko.r ea. The U:S. opens
which lost 63-61 to. Miami East Aug. 8 agalilal Greece.
last week, was just two points
Boblled
ahead or unbeaten New Madison
Switzerland's Gustav Weder
Tri-VIHage 115-0), whlcb ad- and CUrdln Morell set a course
vanced from fltth a week ago into record on their first run and went
the No. 3 spot .
on to win the European Two- Man
Vanlue and Van Buren slipped · Championships at Igls, Austria.
to fourth and fifth, respectively, The team opened the champion·
and were to Uowed In order by ships with a stunning first run of
Tuscarawas Catholic, Berlin HI· 52.94 seconds, setting a record at
land, Miller City, newc;omer the Igls Olya:llple a&lt;lbsledCourse,
Cedarville and Ashtabula St. neu lnnsbruck. '
John's.

Sports briefs

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JANUARY USED ·CAR· CLEARANCE ·

I •

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I.

_Racial bias alleged :in drug progr.a·ffl':
•

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game. the absence of Humphrey
would probably mean the Bron·
cos would put more emphasis on
the passing game.
"I don't think Bobby missing
the game would put any more
weight on my shoulders," said
Broncos' quarterback John El·
way. 'There is enough there
already."
'
Both teams took Tuesday off,
but the return to serloi!S work
prDduced a return to a serious
attitude.
"You can't understand how
much I want to win this game,"
said Denver receiver Michael

.

Green,wboaatoutthegamewith The Blue Oevllallftded a Up-In The Fr111r1 made jllat 2&amp; of 67;
a boll on his buttocks.
• by Christian Laettller ofL a abo1a from the floor ,
:
"If we had had Green, It milled free throw, with 18 seAt Stilm, Conn., Cllrlll SmUll
wouldn't have altered things conds left in reeutatlon to force &amp;CQredl9polntailldTaf.George
overt!~. Rodlfi!Y Moproe, who added 16 to lead Connectleut put,
mucb," Durbam aald.
ElleWhere In the Top 20, No. 6 made only ~of 261hoii,ICOred 19 Central CoJIIIeCIIcut. The I&amp;JIIe'
Oklahoma beat Iowa State 107-96, points to lead the Wolfpack.
wu the last to be playecJ at~
No. 7 Duke outlasted North
At Bloomlnlton Ind. Kirk Connecticut's Storra Field;
Carolina State 85-82 In overtime, · Manrui scored 25' points and House, ·the scboOI'a horne coun
Mlchlian State shocked No. 15 Mlcblian State dominated lndl· since the 19M-55 RUOn.
:
Indiana 75-57, No. 17 St. John's ana defenllvely to· pull within a
In other glllllft, lt waa Templej
topped Providence 83-75 and ~o. half-game of the Big Ten lead. 81, Rh~e Island 70; Aubllm 74,~
19 .Connecticut blasted Central The.Hoosiers scored their fewest Kenllleky ''10; ,fllcklonvllle
Connecticut 99:77.
points since a 55-53 victory over Alabama·Birmi.JIIham S.; Van··
At · Norman, Okla., WilHam WIIICOII8ID In 1988 and lost , to derbllt 71, F1orlda 64; Vlrclnla'
Davts.scored 24 points and pulled Michigan State by the tariest 77,VIrglnla Tech 59; Kanaaa:
down 14 rebounds to lea4 the mugln since. an 82·58 drub!&gt;ing · State 84, Akron 60; Notre Dame.,
Sooners. Victor Alexander by the 1979 Spartan team that 88, Wichita Sta~e 78 and Slippery;·
scored 20 points for Iowa State wcin the NCAA title.
Rock 80, Clulon 68.
·
· :
and Kirk Baker had a perfect
At Providence, R.I., Jayson
Also, • Winston-Salem State,
night shoollng for the Cyclones, Williams scored 23 points and gave coach Clare!'Ce "Big_houae"~
going 7 for 7 from. the floor and 4 Boo Harvey added 18 to lead st. Gaines hls 800tb career victory•
for Ur,om the tree-throw line for John's. ·The victory moved the with. a 79-70 victory over Llvlng·i
18 points.
Redmen Into sole posl!t!Sslon of stone. Gaines Is OnlY the second; ·
At Durham, N.C., PhD Hender·
trst place In the Big East coach In NCAA history to record•
son scored ~ points, Including conference with a · 6-1 record, a 800 wins, joining· Kentucky
four In overtime, to lead Duke. half-game ahead of Georgetown. gend Adolph Rupp.

After three home games, from Redmen Coach John Lawhorn Me)vln Selnion led the charge In
wlllch they emerged 2-1, the commented earlier this week. Rio Grande's surJirtse 98-86 loss
University of Rio Grande men's "They beat Urbana and that was to the Storm on Its Painesville
basketballleam takes to the road the whole season for ·them. We campus last .February.
... • .ltJyra C1WIIl
Shuster's main · offensive
for two games this weekend.
will have to go up there and play
threat will be In 6-2 freshllljln
The Redmen are at Walsh, the well."
surprise team of Dis trlct 22 and
On the other hand , Lake Erie forward Matt McElwain, who Is
JAYCEE WEEK- ·.
tile Mld·Ohlo Conference, at 2 bali posted only a single win In 24 averaging 10 points a game.
JANU,UY ~t-27.
p.m. Saturday and travel to Lake starts to date. 77-67 over Ohio Charlie T$!hut; a 641 senior
Erie Sunday for a 2 p.m. contest. . Dominican early In the season. · guard, Is cdntrlbutlng 9 points to
~- · ...... .
Now 6-12 and 2·3 In the.MOC,
The Storm, In Its second year or the team effort each time out.
Other . poten tlal starters In·
Rio Grande's probable starting NAJA participation under Wll
lineup will · Include Its . four Shuster's s tewardshlp,ls plliyhlg elude Shannon Rucker (6-1, soleading scorers In Gary Harri· without the services of last year's phomore) , .forward Doug Irwin
son, who Is now averaging 20 scoring sensation, Jackie Wat- (6-3, sophomore) and center
points a game; Brad Schubl!rt, ters, who was ranked eighth Chris Fleming (6-3, sophomore) .
As of today , the Redmen carry
15.8: Jeff Brown, 13.5; and Mark nationally In Individual scoring
Erslan, 10.4. Harrison Is leading during the final week of regular a 100.~polnt per game average
the team In assists with 8.4 per season play last season at 28 a,nd are gOOjl for 37.1 rebounds
game, while Brown Is averaging points per game. Watters and per outing.
9 rebounds per outing.
Rounding out the lineup will be
center Troy Donaldson, who Is
credited. with an average of 9.2 ,
markers and 6.2 boards.
.
Rio Grande's exploolve, on·
the-go offense was well In evt:
I ~· i· ,
dence Tuesday ntght when Ohio
Dominican crumbled, 115·65, at
Lyne Center. Harrison and Schu·
'
bert accounted for21polntseach,
while Donaldson added 18 points
2 door, 1ilt.•crul•, low ml- 1
and a career high of 16 rebo.unds.
Eddie Iauer EIHtien
Automatic,
tilt.
crul•.
low
Walsh, whlcb finished 12th In
INge, 2 to pick from.
Only 3.600 mllee.
mlleege.
IIOW
the district at 11·19 and seventh .In
IIOW
WAS
the MOC at 3-lllast season, has
•23.171
burst forth In Dan O'Connor's
second yeu as coach to rival·
Tiffin's current supremacy In
both organtzatlons. This week,
the Cavaliers ue ranked' ~cond
In the district bl!hlnd the DragI
Loaded, Nil with ... leather,
ons, and are 16-4overalland3·21n
lnt.,..tlonal Serle•
·
A
utometlc
end olr, 2
pick
only 26,000 mllee.
the MOC after defeating Cedar·
Demo, 6,000 ini~•·IOw
from. ·
·
I
'
ville, 91·83, at Cedarville Tues·
flOW
WAS
'
WAS
day night.
.
19995
flOW
r:26$
Making the difference for
$19;945
Walsh Is 6-2 senior guard Jeff
Young, who Is pouring In an
average of 20.1 points and 6.9
rebounds .Into the Cavalier of·
tense, Center Corry AppHne, a
Trofad Ntloll ·
Lt. blue with cloth Interior.
6-5% freshman, Is proytdlng 11:8 ·
White
with
blue
leather.
Lotlded.
loW mllee.
Automatic, olr.
;!
points and 5.7 boards •. wblle 6-1
loaded.
WAS
IIOW
'
junior guard Jason .Frederick
11995
chips In 12.7 markers per game.
O'Coruior's other probable
,j
starters Include forward• Zedrlc .
McDonald (6-4, junior, 9.6 points,
6 rebounds) and Charles Glenn
Loadu•---·-................_ ...
(6-4, senior, 8.2 points, 4.7
.'.
rebounds).
1ew ................
"Walsh has had a great year,"
·~..·.
;C

'

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - The
San Francisco 49er s and Denver
Broncos returned to the practice
field Wednesday; a day that not
only marked the middle of Super
Bowl week but signaled a notlceable change in the mood of the
players wllo will compete for the
NFL title next Sunday.
" I like this time of the week, "
said San · Francisco receiver
Jerry Rice, who Is going throug~
his fourth Super Bowl expe;
rlence. "Things always pick up
around Wednesday."
Wednesday was perhaps the
most impor~nt day of the week
- other than game day Itself because sometime during the
afternoon Denver Coach Dan
Reeves was going to find out how
likely It will be that rookie
running back Bobby Humphrey
can ptay on Su9day.
Humphrey, who gained 1,151
yards in his first NFL season,
· suffered two cracked ribs during
Denver's AFC championship
game victory over Cleveland . He
planned to put on pads Wednes·
day for the firs t time since that
game.
1
"If Bobby Is not close to 100
percent, he won't play," Reeves
said. ·'If he takes some shots and
doesn't respond very well, then
(backup) Sammy Winder will
see a lot !lf practice time. " .
Despite Winder's two touch·
downs In the AFC championship

BJ G.a: CADDBS

I

Walsh, Lake .Erie next ~tops
on Redmen's road schedu,le·

49ers, Broncos return
.
to practtee Wednesday
.

.

cage poD

Leaders re~ain sa1ne in UPI

Georgia edges LSU; Sooners, Duke \riD!

- - - - · -·---

·I
7
7

M
"

lUI

5PI 2II

'
-·---·'-'-----.,-~---~~

••

I

�'

e n. Dilly Santlnill

/ PI

Pcm1roy Mlddlaport Ohio

·, North GBIIia, Southem
with 34 points and 28 rebounds In
ll'
OVPii&amp;aHWI'Iter
lastweekend'smlnHourney,has
; • With a 7-3 mart 1n the SVAC, proved on muy occasions his
t
NorthGaiUa' sPtratesarelndire atrength and leaping ability to
; straltsastheycbuetbeODiytwo get hls share of rebounds and
· team~ that have beaten them In points In the paint.
;/ conference play - froat-ruJIIIel'
But Jet's lace facta. Maynard
• Eastern and second-place studs six feet, and will have bls
Southern.
bands full of 6-5 senior D.J.
·•
As the Eagles have swept the
Hammel. Hammel Isn't as likely
' Pirates for the second straight torememberthelactthatlnthelr
year, the Btics 111\l&amp;t outfit their last meeting In December .( wlllfh
cruiser with such state-of-the-art .tbe Tornadoes won 73-60) he
weapons as the three-pointer and outscored Maynard 14·9 as_he Is
to remember that Maynard out·
tried-and -true weapons such as
. solid defense, rebound Ina at both
rebounded him 15-3. Hammel
ends of the court and altitudinal
knows he has one more chance
advantage when they drop an- against Maynard to ·even
chor at Racine to play the matters.
.
; Tornadoes.
Considering Hammel's ob~
True, Southern has a tuntor vlous advantage, It Is Imperative
. three-point ace who should be · for Maynard anq fellow front' declared a strategic weapon at
man Brent Shuler to · sandwich
; the next SALT talks, as he .made · Hammel ~~~~ever poSsible and
life somewhat un-Baerable for
Ioree him to put the ball on the
, Hannan Trace with his five treys lloor. To counter. that, Hammel,
1
•;· In last weekend's series sweep of
whowillalsogetsomellt$1dehelp
the Wildcats. But Andy Baer Is by from J.unlor forward Shane Smith
·.~ no means the only Instrument
and sophomore swlngman Darin
which So'lathern uses to keep Its Smith, must maintain optimum
, . edge as· ilenlor postman Brad . concentration In the lane and not
';'~ Mayrtard, who. ca.m e through . let the pair's defense throw him
·
"' ··

B:r G. SPENCE&amp; 08801tNB

A

~ fi,.i~t- lo stay in :.Svi£ tifi; iif·.!:4.

orr In addition to taking a few
shots from oulllde, as he has
do11e In the past few games.
• The Pirates can shoot threepotntersalso,asshownbyguards
Chris Tackett and Brian Stout,
· who at this point In the season
have combined for 48 bull'seyes
from beyond the arc .
" In short, II the Pirates w:n,
they will be half a game be!alnd
Southern. If the lose, tben they
m11st win every remaining conterence game and hope that
Easterh loses every league contest after Friday night's game
against Kyger Cre11k.
· Southernmustwjntosiay •one
game behind the Eagles, assum·
lng the latte~ keeps the oddsmakers happy and . does what Is
. expected of them against the
. Bobcats. If the Tornadoes lose,
they wllllall two games behind
· Eastern with four games left·for
both $Quads.
Vlklap-WI!'!Ud~
Symmes Valley s fortunes are
rising, while South we~ tern,
hmmm ... :well, they haven t won
since .their back·to·back knock·
outs o!Qhlo Valley Christian and

' ~6.er·~ return· .home,
· s m

' .~

l. a

r

.'

•,

.

.;,

•

By iJee Clallnl ·
UPISportl Writer
For the Phlladelphta 76ers

no place like
., lately,
home. there's
·
·;;· · The 76ers, who lost to Orlando
,., ' In Florida earlier this .season,
• ~.· rolled over the . Magic 125-103
. . Wednesday night for their- sixth
': • straight victory and eighth In
; : nine games.
·
.,., Not coincidentally, six o! those
\ ' nine contests have been played at
1• • the Spectrum In Philadelphia,
·~· where the 76ers are 15-3.
: ' "The main thing Is we just
,•: came home," said Charles.Bark·
-r ley, who led Philadelphia with 27
' points (on 11 of 13 shooting) and
. &gt;. 16 rebounds. " It's tough to get
·':chemistry, continuity or confl·
' dence on the road. We have a lot
·' ol confidence at home. We Just
' ·, bave to take advantage ·of our
·1 situation and win our home

turnovers, thanks to an active
Philadelphia defense. ,
'We took ourselvl!ll out of It

: The victory closed the 76ers
• ' within two games ol first-place
.'t- New York in the Atlantic Dlv·
• :1, lslon. The Knlcks are faced with
~·· a three-game road trip.
·~ "I knew that if we kept It close ·
•, eotng Into January, we cculd
; :• make a move," Barkley said.
o. "It's workingoutperleetly. II we
: '.l llad played better earlier In the
.)&gt;1 .season, we'd be rolling. Now we
have to play ~atch-up ."
Not for long, if Barkley has his ·
way, especially with two more
home games .this week. .
"It we take care ol business,
',. we'll be in first place next week,''
he said.
f!; Philadelphia, which defeated
. \ Cleveland 103-88 on Tuesday
· " night, certainly took care of
. business against Orlando, which
rested alter arriving In Phlladel·
· ., ph!a Tuesday afternoon.
· · Johnny Dawkins and Mike
. Gmlnskl added 18 points apiece
./ , tor Philadelphia, which had six
players score In double figures as
'li It handed the Magic their 15th
: straight loss on the road. .
Orlando, losers of six of seven
:: and 14 of 16, got a career-high 33
. ·points and 16 rebounds fr!lm Otis
':• Smith, 14 points from Michael
Ansley and 13 each !rom Sam
11
VIncent, Nick Anderson and
•,_ Reggie Theus.
·
.
'1 The Magic shot only 40 percent .
as a team and committed 20

...

.· SVAC standings
'.

•
(Alll&amp;mell)
, , TEAM
W L
PF PA
'~', Eastern ...... .. .. 11 3 1045 999
~ Southern..... .. .. 8
5 924 . 801
North Gallla ... 8 6 973 894
Hannan Trace 7 8 888 850
S-Valley ........ . 6 6 752 757
Southwestern .. 5 9 1038 894
, Oa(j. Hill .. .. .. .. . 3 12 85Q 1044
Kyger Creek... 1 14 791 1123

t..

Kyger Creek at the start of this
month.

Thedemonsofpalnandsufferlng did to HlgblaDder forward
John Ehman what no defense has
been able to do; and that was to
limit him to single digits (eilht
points) In last Friday's 22-poiDt
loss toEasternbeforehesuffered
aspralntooneofblsankleslnthe
second half. He will 'be' out of
action for at least two weeks.
In the first halt of that same
game those same demons unleashed their wrath on senior
guard Brad Briant, whO · Will
return to action after suffering
bruised ribs In the first hall.
Junior ChrtA Metzger, whohad18
pOints In the Eastern game, hurt
Ills ankle In practice WlidneSday
and IS a question mark for the
Symmes Valley game.
Tbe VIkings, who have won
four olthelrlastflve games, have
seen Improvement from senior
center Kevl Nichol&amp;$, who has
stepped In the paint and contrlbuted with consecutive doublefigure scoring. efforts In· the
Valley's.last two games. .
· '

amr., 125
' -10~.·~

Jllf
•
lfl l' ... _.

1

1h
ear Y w I turnovers al;ld poor
shots," Orlando Coach Matt
Guoka~ said. "They got out and

1

g.ot easy baskets' because of our
mistakes. ..

Tlll'et calli were llDIWm'ed W~ay by units of the Meigs
Emez p!lcy Medical Services.
. .
· At 1: 10 a.m., Rutland was called to Melli Mine No.2 for Mark
Richman wbo was taken to Ple-.ant Valli!y Hospital.
Pomeroy _at 3: 22 p.m. went to Willow Creek Road lor Tina .
JacObs to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:24p.m. , .Middleport was called to South Third Ave. lor
Gladys Walburn to Veterans Melll()rlal Hospital.

E•=••·•

IIIII I

Same.As.Cash

BEDIOO SUITE

'
BIGB QDILrrY .

wu

CUi I SMUSBIP
CDDIIDWIII
IDGIIDDC,DIII .

rwo
NEW· JVST ARRJVBD! ,
'.

(

IN COUNTRY BLUE·

(SVAC l&amp;mell)
TEAM
W L PF
·\;; Eastern .......... 9 0 674
.. Southern ......... s 1 698
~ North Gallla ... 7 3 725
.~ &amp;Valley .... .. .. .4
5 543
't• Hannan Trace 4 6 592
·, Oak Hill ........ , 3 6 538
.,,. Southwestern .. 3 7 707
Kyger Creek ... 0 10 526

.

, WOOD
TOP TAB~
.,

'

.. A BBAUTD'l11.
ADDmON!
'

j

•

~.

TEAM
W
, Southern ......... 9
•i North Gallla ... 9
_ 1 Hannan Trace 6
Oak Hill ..... .... 5
So-Valley ......... 4
·i; Southwestern .. 3
·" 11:utern ... : ...... 2
;'• Kyger Creek ... 0
TOTALS ........ J8

.•

L PF
0 458
1 499
4
4

436
409

368
386
371

5 371
7 · 383 465
7 · 328 411
10 266 472
18 1111 1111

FrldiiJ'•eollfel•
E•tern at Kyeer Creek
. Oak mil at Hannan Trace
',.,·Nortll Gallla at Southern
~, l)'mmt!t Valley at SQuthwestern
~, .
llltwdq'• adiOI

.:r.JtGaroa

St. Joe at North Gallla

·.Mfller at Eastern

~ftaWII.IWOOCI ·a t Southera

____ -

.•

"

'

SAVE!
WfultW•

What W• WIU ~ ··•

&gt;

... We Will Offer mp QUallty,
At The Loweat Poa.tble Pdcel

~ •• We

WID !lot Advertl.e ODe
Item, Then Try To Sell You An·
other!

.

'

Owned And Opintedi
•

'

(

.i

••• We Will Oft'er Low f'rloea &amp;Yery«ayl
'
'

. - ·- -·· --·
f

- .

'

'

ft Oc' '·!0°rl

· WEATHER MAP - During early Frld~Q' mornln1, raiD/show'
lore&lt;:~al for pulll of the mid Paclllc Coast Slates; lh~
Central Intermountain Relioa aad moet of tbe mid lo aorlh
Atlantic Coul Slates with sbowers and thundeJ'IItonns In tbe mid
to &amp;outb Atlantic Co•l Slates. Snow Is forecast for parts C!f the
upper ~,sippi Valley. Snow Is poulble Ia paris of lhe upper
Ialermountaln Region, parlll ol the northern Plains and most of the
Ohio Valley.
·

era are

Dr. Daniel
R. Trent
Family Practice

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday a_nd Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m. ·
Wednesuay
9 a.m. -Noon
Appointments a~d Walk-ins Welcome .
Office Staff: •
·Lisa Thorne, LPN
Gail Hoveatter
Linda Trent
138 Main St., New Haven, WV

+ (304) 882-3134

Formerly Bend Area Medical Center

-limited Time OflerFor Ail Consumers Answering Our Questionnaire

THE NATIONAL AIR SAFETY ADVISORY
SERVICE WILL PROVIDE ROUND TR~P AIR
FARE CERTIFICATES TO ORLANDO, FLOR·
IDA OR FREEPORT/NASSAU BAHAMAS FOR
6*17* NIGHTS. ·, . ·
For Only

per person

mull be at least 21 years old (althou~h second

;~o~rt;~~~;~;~;~!~~\~~

ReservatiOns
andinarrangements
least 45 days
advance through
travel time may apply 11
·
are subject
· i · . Therefore. travel during major holidays
·other

i

·

design11ted
accepted. e.g .. Christmas week, Easter week, July
.
pay standard room rates of $52·200 per night. depend•ng on

I . All taxes, meals. ground transportation. telephone calls, extra
bed&amp; , etc .; are recipient's responsibility. To better accommodate departure

req'uesta. a ~tlon of 3 depenure dates bei!'lg 15 days apart are

~ske.d

tor. Certificates are transferrable, by sale or g•ft. completely at rec1ptent s
discretion. Based ·on a comparatJ'e study, of ten orig ination cities across

the contiguous Untied States. redeemed a r fare certilicales have an average

value of $990.00 . Actual value will vary by origination city, destination,

and time ot lraliel. No C,O.D.'a. IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED, RETURN
THE UNUSED CERTIFICATE WITHIN 30 DAYS FOR A FULL REFUND .

.

--·------~--------·---------------------------MAIL
TO: National Air s8tety Advisory Service
w ~5 1 1
.
Cepllol Hit!
325 PennoyiYania Ave., S.E. Dept. 33&lt;1
Washington. D.C. 20003
CuotOf!IOI'
~I'Yice Number: (812) «8-8826
&lt;
•
.

~

N.m•------------------------~----------· 1

.. _ --

A~~---------~--~~--~~~--------- 1

City/State/Zip

.

DOES NOT INCLUDE

'

' . Veta' IT lleiiiPI'Ial ·
". Wedllnd~y adml111ons J)mes Kelly, CooMII&amp;; GladYS
, Walbum. Middleport; Tina Jacobi, Pomeroy: ·Mary Baker,
Reedsvill&amp;.
. Wedllesday discharges - Rl·
ebard Wa~, Arthur Barr.

. . Sialic

consumers and Other interested parties on request. NAS'AS is a private ly
tleld firm deriving its general revenue for operations from the distribution
of air travel certificates. arid is not aHiHated with any government body
or agency. '6 nighl certificates are for 0 ne passenger to Orlando
and
are not available to the Bahamas. "Two passenger certifica1es
I
to Orlando or Freeport/Nassau for 7 nights. or longer if
·

II. Hoepi
.
t8l
•

••• We Wll1 Alway~ Be Locllly

Co let

SHOWERS .

NOTICE - PLEASE t:IEAD: The National Air Safety AdVIsory Service
(NASASI makes s~rvey results available to U.S passenger air lines.

D. Michael Crites, · United
. States Attorney for the Southern
Ots b'lct of Ohio, also credits the
l'lfelgs County Prosecutor's Of.
11ce lor lnvesdl(atlve efforts
ithlch ll!d to charges against and
subsequent federal Juzj convij:tlon of Paul A.. Duff, Dexter. In
doiiiii!Ctlon with the growinlt an~
manufacturing of· marijuana on
·
lila
prCipl!l'ty.
•
I
I . · The Bureau ot Criminal InvestJgatlon, tbe Ohio Attorney Gen...,.al's Office and the Meigs
ilhet"ltr s Depar.t;rneQt were also
ipvolved In the Joint
' ' I Investigation.

' ' ,•
'
'I

... We 'WUJ Plovlde You With
Superior Semce After The Sllel

"

0

Qualllicalion: Simply answer our short questionnai re when it
arrives with your air fare cer1ificates.
Lodging: • In Orlando-10 national hotel/motet chains to selec t
from -( all location s co~v~)1ient to Disney / Epcot/MGM)
• The Bahamas-Select from 4 world class resort/oas in qs
Benelifl: • Round trip ai'r fare from. virtually any major U.S . ci ty
lor one or two people on regular scheduled airlines • Stay s·
or 7' nights at standard room rates (n o inflated charges) •
Certificates· are transferable and can be given as gifts (usable
up to 18 months)

.... ,~

. 1Bob Evans ................. ... ..... :.1~
. '!(harming Sl\oppes ......,. ........ 9~
:ctty Holding eo .. :............ :... 15
.Federal Mo_gul .................... 20%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ............. .. ..36%
:tleck't ............................ ..... 2~
:Key .centurion ....... ,............13¥.!
Landa'· Elld.. ,:................... ; .~)\
:u111fte4.Inc ... :........,. ........... ~"
Milltlmedl41nc. ......;............ 82

AND
END TABLES

..&amp;hrchuet

Warm

fJS RAIN

Your Request Must Be Postmarked No Later Than Wednesday. 1/31 / 90

.

auomey•s oftice .

••• We Wll1 Not SeD You Procluctl
That Can't St•nd Tbe Tellt Of ·
Time!
'
••• We WID Not Preaaure You IDto

FRONTS: "

·

$33

:eredils pl"'OIeellling

'

,._

·

~uamey gen"'al

648

PA
301
376

.

~ .Relta.uJ'Jiltl .................... 1~

(Reserves)

&gt;•.

~

'

6,676 players selected four of the
numbers to win S75 aptece .
There was one $100,000 grand
prize winner In the accompanyIng Kicker game. The winning
Kicker combination was 801724.
Iri addition ·to the one ticket
that . listed the six Kicker
numbers In exact order, six had
the first five numbers, which
pays $5,000; 67 had the fll'st !our.
which ' pays $1,000; and 660 llad
· the first three, wblch pays $100.

Robbins &amp; J'i!fyers·.. ,.............. 16
· ·shoDey's Inc:-.......... ,........... 10%
·Star Bank .... .... - ........... ...... 19~
Wendy's Inti...... : .................. 4%
Worthington lntf................... 21

711
760
TOTALS ........ 38 38 11813 11011

•

A divorce action has been tued
In Meigs Common Pleas Court by
Janet Nakamato, RuUand,
against Ivan Jerry Cardwell, The
Plains.

:t\shtand Oll ...... il .... , ......... /.36%

. '·

.l

~·

f

MICROWAVES
AT LOW PRICES
FROM FRIGIDAI

PA
579
518
632
587
568

OsNow

Divorce action filed

''Dally stock prlcfll
1(As oll0:30 a.m.)
:Bryce aad Mark Smith
:of Blunt, Ellis ' Loewl
,. . '
Am
Electric Power·, .. :, .. .'., ..'.~'',
1
AT&amp;.T .'~ .•.• i····•t..... ~~..... :.... ~~... ...2 ·

AND WHITE WITH

GAS AND ELECTRIC RANGES:
SUNRAY
GIBSON
'
FRIGIDAIRE

....

'

'Stocks ·

TABLE .AND 6 CHAIRS

'

!

dea'ths

much of Rhode Island, where the
mercury was In the·mtd 30s.
The NWS Issued a flood watch
for parts of Vermont and New
York because ofthe possibility o1
)leavy rain Thu~ay and runoff
from a rapid snow melt caused
by very mild air over the llood
watch area:
·
A warm front brought rain al)d
warm temperatures to the mid·
Atlantic region early Thursday,
the weather service said.
Temperatures throughout the
area were In the upper 40s and
low 50s, and rain extended from
southern Maryland to the New
Jersey shore.
Rain dampened much of the
South, with nash !lood watches
posted In Georgia; Al!lbama and
Mississippi. B,ut fair weather
prevailed In milch ol Florida,
where dense fog cut visibility In
the state's north and central
·regions.
Temperatures In the South
ranged from 49 In Knoxville,
Tenn., to 52 In Atlanta, 67 In
Charleston, S.c. ; and 74 In
Miami.
Temperatures plunged as a
Pacific cold front moved through
Oklahoma, Artc,ansas and Texas,
triggering wind gusts . up to 40 ·
mpl).
A few snofo' flurries were
reported Thursday In northern
Arkansas and severe thunder·
storms · rumbled through SOllth·
ern Louisiana, but the cold !f ont
produced mostly dry condltlon5·,
clear skies and temperature~ In ·
the 50s and 60s. :t;lelore the front
passed, nearly an Inch of rain !ell
Wednesday In Port Arthur,
·'
Texas.
A storm gathering strength In
the Gulf of Alaska threatened to
send rain across most of Wa·
shington and Oregon. Much.
colder illr following the 'storm
front also could bring more snow
to the mountains of both ststes
late Thursday and earty Friday.

Lotto ac.kpot grows to $} 0. million..

•

REFRIGERATORS:
GIBSON
KELVINATOR
FRIGIDAIRE
'

.

Weather

FIIDIY
111118
SAftRDAY

•90Days

I

.

2DIYI.
OILY!
•UHYour
Visa .o r MasterCard

By Ual&amp;e_. Pres• IDlerna&amp;lonal

Grand jucr·decisiOn
·co be made public saon ·

'

30

·weather from Midwest

Blustery winter • torms chased
mUd weather lr&lt;m the Midwes t
early Thursday , while soupy log
blanketed portions of New Eng1and a11d rain darn\lened mu!!h o!
the South and scattered areas ol
theiiSouthwest.
.
Wintry conditions ·re turned to
the Midwest early Thursday,
breaking a spell of rrilld weather
that dominated region for most of
January, the National Weather
Service said. In the early .morn·
Ross declined to say whether lng hours, snow blanketed parts
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio
of Wisconsin, Ohlo and Illln~ls,
(UPI) .... An announcement Is the grand jury Indicted anyone. ·and storms dumped as much as 5
expected soon on a Perry County He said that tnlormatlon would' Inches In parts of Iowa.
grand Jury Investigation of be made public "In the ·next
Although snow white ned por·
. confilct-o!-lnterest . accuaattou couple of days ... when . all the tlons of southern Illinois, Chicago
against former county engineer. paperwork Is finished.''
, The Ohio Ethics Commission and areas south oltheWtndy City
Chris Wilson . .'
e,n loyed a brief res plte from the
: The nine-member grand Jury has been 'tnves dgatlntg .allejta· !rigid, snowy weather that was
completed Its dellberatlou Wed· tlons against Wilson !or more predicted to hit. the city In the
nesday afternoon, However, Its than 1 ¥.! years. The commls· ·e arly morning hours. ,
.
slon's l!ndlngs·, which are secret,
Tl!Port ~s ordered sealed by
parts
of
Dense
tog
covered
Morgan Cciuniy ProsecutOr Rl· were turned over to ·Ross last northern New England early
chard Ross, •.who Is actlng .as summer and were the 'basls lor Thursday as mild , dampY{eather
much of the lnfonnatton he
SPecial prosecutor.
remained In the re~lon. Temper·
· presented to· the grand jury.
atures In Maine hovered Just
&lt;above the freezfng mark as fog
..:.----,·- .....;____ spread throughout the state.
Central New Hampshire re·
.Lou 18
• M•-hi \
· Foreign Wars.
ported dense 1og and tempera·
-..
Pallbearers will be Sam Clarlt, ture~ tn the Iipper 20s, and skies
.
David Durbin, John Cornett, were overcast across Massachu·
Louts (Gee) Marchi, 60, Route · Bobby Marchi, Reino Rocch'l, se.ttll, where the m ercury was
. 3 GaiUtlolls. dle:d Wedlleday at James Miller, Alfred Gabri!!IU, around the 40-degree mark .
· Holzer Medical Center following Richard Cornett, Billy Joe
Temperatures in Vermont
' a lengthy Illness. He operated a Johnson.
were In the low 40s under partly
·: restaurant and carry-out bu.slContrlbudO!l$ may be made to ' cloudy skies, while haze covered
ness for 23 years and was a buyer · the ALS Association, 1900 East
· at Gaillpolls Parts Warehouse. · '.Dublin Granville Road, ~!urn·
. Born DeC. 14, 1929'1n Marietta; . bus, Ohio, 43229.
.·
; Phlo, he was a son of the late
Louts (Gee) Marchi Sr. and'lnes EUa Rollins
South Central Ohio
t Buoiaamtcl Marchi.
• 1•
Snow flurries Thursday night,
A slstllr. LIIU&amp;Ti, also preceded
Ella (MerUe) Rollins, 84, of wllh a low near 30. The chance of
him In death. •·
Tuppers Plains, died Tuesday snow Is 80 percent. Partly cloudy
Surviving are his wife, Wanda evening at camden-Clark Mem· Friday, with highs betwe,en 30
Glover ..Marchl; two sons; Ml· ortal Hospital following an ex- and 35.
chae.l Marchi and Spott Marchi, tended Illness.
Extended Forecast
. both of Gallipolis: two daugh· .
Mrs. Rollins was born in
Saturday through Monday
ters, Marissa Marchi of Colum· Robertsburg, W.Va. to the late
Fair Saturday, with a chance
.bus · a'nd Maryann Clark of Rutherford and A.llce Bailey ol rain Sunday and fair weather
i Zanesville; f(!ur grandchildren::
Jlvfden. She was a member ol the on 'Monday. Highs will rallge
' ansi one brother, Bo() Marchi of 'Middleport Nazarene Church.
, !rom. the .lower 40s to the lower
' Galllpolla.
.
Surviving Mrs. Rollins are her 50s Saturday and Sunday, and
, He was a member of the busbl\nd ol 67 years, Roy; two from 35 to 45 Monday. Overnight
' Golden Era football team at "' sons, Orville Rollins, ol .BOston, tows will be between 25 and 30
:GaiHa Academy High .!!ichool, !Vlais., and Denver' Rollins, of Saturday morrill)&amp;, In the 30s
p nd graduated· there In 1949. He Chilllcothe; two daughters, early Sunday,' and In the 20s
: attended .Ohio Unvlerslty · and Mary Scarberry, of Amlin, Ohio, Monday morning!
, Served In the United States Navy . and Glenda Benedum, of Reeds· · '
- '
J•
: during the Korean Conflict. He 'ville; 16 grandchildren; 26 great
; was a. · member of St. Louis 'grandchildren; two great , great
Catholic Churcll, the Gallipolis . grandchildren; and one sister,
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Ohio's
-!'lks Lodge; .,\merlcan Legion Acel Brubaker, of Robertsburg,
$6 million Super Lotto Jackpot
. Lafayette ~~ 27 an~ tl).e. W.Va.
went unclaimed Wednesday
J&lt;nlghts o(~ltUI4'Ns. ,
. · . , Slle
preceded In death by
night, boosting the top prize to at
;- Mass of Cfi'ffsUan Burial, will her · parents, three · daughters,
least $10 ·million for Saturday's
· be conducted •10 a.m. Friday at live brothers and lour sisters.
drawing.
·
,
St. Louis Catholic· Church, the
' Services for Mrs. Rollins will '
None of the tickets sold for the
midweek drawing listed the six
: Rev. William Myers officiating. 'be Friday, 1 p.m., at the While
, Surlal follows In Mound Hill Funeral Home, Coolville, with
winningnumbers-4, 7,27,29,32
• ~Cemetery.
.
·Rev. Lloyd Grimm ofllclatlng.
and 40, a· lott~ry commission
;. Friends may call at Waugh· Burial will be In the Meigs spokesman said Thursday.
f!alley-Wood funeral Home to- Memory Gardens. Friends may
However, there were 125 play·
cj,ay, 6 to 9 p.m. Rosary-devotions call at funeral hOme · today
ers who . picked five of the
(Thursday5 from 2 to.4 and 7 to9 . numbers to win .1,000 each, and
' will be !lt II: 30 p.m.
• Military flag presentat!o·n will ,
.
,
. .•
•
. .
,
.
)be lly' Post · ~&amp;&amp; . Vetetans of

,~ . .••••••••·~··••

S~rric:e

NATIOtlAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST t ·26-~

..-1 Mal news briefs~ -S tonns chase mild
EMS has 3 Wednesday caUs

1he Dilly S 1~111-P Ill 7

,

Pomelov-Mkklapart. Ohio

The btagest key for · VlkiDp
!~!U-w's~..,!!I~l':::O
In this IBme may
tbe1r
ru
....._.,..._
relatively balalloCell 'li:qriDg.
1M. beld to llqle diJI1IIII tbJ:ee ·
They had four men tn double
oftheOab'lutflvepiiM'I,wlll
figures tn Tuelday nilbt'• 18do,asthephraH''youcaa't~
point win over IrODtonSt. Joe and
a good mu clowD" will certsln)J
no fewer than thiee In aU blat two
applY.
;
of their last five garnea (OIIe of
~
tn•
1
. those was a 1f..polnt 10111 to
Wblle deacrlblnt u upcom,
Portsmouth Notre Dame).
encounter with Keatucky center
OU.WIIIIeau
.
MelvlnTurpinaeveraljearsago,
The Oaks bas a four-1ame
Auburn pivot Cbarlel8arkley, ~
loslni streak they'd like to lllled
rather hetty 6-6 forward IIOw
like old leaves, and there'sl)ope ptayln1 for the Philadelphia
for them, considering that re76ers, said ''I've got to put my
cently they've, cut tbelr t\U11l1V·
butt on his legs (Turpin stand•
ers from 21 (vs. Minford) to 19
6-H), because he Can oniY get h!•
(vs. Northwest), But they will
legs on my• butt." Well, thtta
!lave to do much better than that
what Kyger Creek postman John
against the cat.quick bands and
Sipple (5-11, sr.) mustdowhenbe
teet found on Hannan Trace's and his fellow. Bobcall bolt the
Squad. ·
Eastern Eagles and 6-4 center•
· Considering . that only two
Mike Frost. · ,
·
players- guard Eric Lloyd and
Sipple an4 Juptor guard Se811
center Craig Ranklil-scored In
Denney are the malllllaYa .ln a
·do)lble figures In last weekend's
Boticat offense that desperately
games against archrival South·
needs the spirits o! deparled,
ern, the Wildcats are Itching to
scoring aces Chad Le11ch and
light a fire under some o! their
Mike Reese to give Ute to an
) players, because they know that
attackthathasi!C&lt;Ired70ormore
tn spite of. Oak Hill's record,
points only twice this season.
Trace wiU have to play tough · The Eagles, remembering
defense, create turnovers and
what happened to . them on
make good shots If they are to
Kyger's court last year (the
come out o! the affair with a· Bobcats pulled off a 79'74 upset
victory.
'
•
on Dec. 30, 1988)' must exercise
A. false sense of security could
willpower to remember that they
spell trouble lor the Wildcats If are on a mission to claim the title '
they believe that anything less and not take the H4 Bobcati
than good defense
Junior
lightly.

•On-Site

'' games."

., 21. 111o

lheadl)'. ...

•..

. · 113 COUIT
PO.ROY, OH.
992-2054 .

LAYAWAYS OR A~fiS.

lAVE/ .,

·

I

· 342 2nd AVE. '
'-\II/ GALLIPOLIS, OH•
--~
-= 446-2691

----------------------1

I Sl•nole Cantllcate-Ortando only
(1
tore nlghta) ..... . . , ...... $33 oach
Doubll Certillca-Ortando
(21dultalor 7 niQhtll) .... .... ..... $66 oach
~ Canillcate-Fr"''PQrt/Batuomaa
(tlitdulta for 7 nights) ... , ......... $66 each
NO'TI: Ouutlan.,..,.lb •
Foo- Wltll Colatloeto(l)

-·--

Payment by: Personal Check, Coshier's Check or ~oney Orders Only
Payable to: National ~ ir Satety (10 certifiCIIta limit)
·

•

�•

.

Plpa

!

••••v. 'u . , 21. 1110
Poriwoy-Midclaport.
~u outbreaks linked to sunspots? Bacteria blamed jor hospital deathS ~

~....... ,21.1880

The Daly Santin•

Ohio

10 Top ·phone frauds named
Musicians ratify contract at
.
e
hie
·
were
.fiIVe ma•or
gaJD
,
m
g
resorts
-~tste~~~~an~~~~
'J
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) closures of some Strip show·
Members of Musicians Local369, rooms. But the solidarity was
who lost a long and bitter battle to broken In September when enterkeep taped music . out of Las ~ talner Wayne NewlOn, under
Vegas showrooms, ratified a new · contract at the Las Vegas Hilton,
_four-year contract Wednesday · crossed the hotel's picket lines
with five major gambling after falling In an attempt to
resorts.
Intervene In the dispute.
The 92-6 vote ended a nearly
eight-month strike at the Tropl·
Other superstars, who 'had
cana, Caesars Palace, Bally's, honoredd strike lines, began to
Las Vegas Hilton and"·Flamlngo · return. to ·Las Vegas stages In
Hilton, About 130 muslclaris once time for the lucrative Thanksglvemployed at the big-five resorts lng, Christmas and New Year's
were eligible to vote.
weekends. Singer Frank Sinatra
Picket lines were removed was one of the few entertainers
Wednesday afternoon and the who held firm and refused to
new pact becomes effective cross musician picket lines at
within 72 hours,
Bally's, where the singer has a
"The only strike line still on the long-term contraCt .
·
street at the time of the vote was ·
Many entertainers now travel
at the Troplcana, and they came with bands and no longer lilre
down after the vote," said union local musicians. Sinatra, Dean
spokeswoman Beth Smith .
Martin and Ann-Margret are
The ftamada Corp.-owned among the longtime Las Vegas
Troplcana Hotel-Caslnb, which performers who still use full
switched to taped music In Its orchestras with local musicians.
' Smith said the next step will be
''Folies. Bergere' : extravaganza
Ills I ·summer, had been picketed to resume union negofiatloris In
slnce June 3, 1989.
the near future with the Desert
The 1,500-member musicians Inn, Hacienda and Sahara Hotels
union, wlt!J400 active members, - all Las Vegas strip gambling
challenged five ofthe largest and resorts.
·
richest resorts In Nevada In a
The new musician union conDavld-vs.-Go llath struggle. All tract with the so-called "Big
the gambling resorts hit by Five" does not prevent the
strlkes are owned by nationally- unllm.lted use of taped music In
traded companies.
showrooms and does not grant
' 'This Is the conquest of a musicians a, guaranteed work
small, tlny union, that 's what It week.
amounts to," said Bill Calanan,
Forty-six musicians, already
orchestra leader for the "Lido'' displaced by cantieq music being
production show at the Stardust used in extravaganzas at the
Hotel. which signed a generous Flamingo Hilton, Bally's and the
union contract Julie 13. "The Tropl~ana, will receive $28,000
hotels have taken a small union each In severance pay .
and beaten lt Into the ground. I
Caesars Palac.e, the Las Vegas
hope they're happy."
Hilton and the Celebrity Room at
Musician strike lines Initially Bally's agreed to employ one
turned back superstars . last band leader and only three
summet and forced temporary · musicians on a fuU-tlme basis.

.
l
A t an

,.

0

·tl~
kll

..CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Space Center early Thursday,
(UPI) - The space shuttle Allan- bolted to the back of a NASA
tis, mounted atop a powerful jumbo jet.
.
crawler-t ransporter, was slowly
Colu~bla landed Saturday at
hauled to the launch pad Thurs- Edwards Air Force Base, CaUl.,
day In preparation for takeof_f to close out the year's 'first
around Feb. 22 on a blacked-out shuttle mission, a successful
mllltary mission.
flight to launch one satellite and
The slow 3.5-mile trek from retur11 another to Earth before It
· NASA's cavernous Vehicle As- burned up ·tn Earth's
sembly Building to launch pad atmosphere.
39-A began at 6:55a.m., an hour
The rescued .satellite, called
and five minutes ahead of sche- the Long Duration Exposure
dule. The 4.5 million-pound shut- Facility, will remain In Columtle and Its mobile launch plat- bia'scargobayuntlltheshuttlels
form were expected to be In place back on the gr:ound at the
ai the seaside firing stand by KennedySpaceCeliteronFrl4ay
around 2 p.m.
or Saturday.
'
· Engineers then planned to
If all goes well, technicians will
hook up electrical systems and remove the 11-ton satellite next
fuel lines to prepare the space- week for a detailed Inspection to
plane for routine on-pad check- . find out how a variety of
out and processing before the experiments and materials
start of the ship's countdown' to might have been.affected by 5.5
blastoff on the year's second · years in the' harsh radiation,
shuttle flight, th6F"! In the his- temperature extremes and va:
tory of the program.
cuum of space.
· Commander John Creighton,
As for Atlantis, the Shl!ttle's
46, co-pilot John Casper, 46, exact launch time and flight
David Hilmers, 39, Richard duration are classified, but sour' 'Mike'' Mullane, 44, and Pierre ces have sald liftoff Is scheduled
Thuot, 34, are scheduled to climb for 1:14 a.m. EST on Feb. 22 and
aboard Atlantis for the final that the flight will last aboutfour
hours of a dress-rehearsal count- days.
down Satur6y, Feb. 3, to set the
As usual with such mU!tary
stage for launch.
missions, the identity of the
While liftoff is planned tor Feb. shu llle' s cargo also Is classified,
22, an official date will not be set but Aviation Week &amp; Space.
until after a format-1Ught read!· Technology magazine reported.
In Its Jan. 22 Issue that the
ness review Feb. 10.
Amid work to ready Atlantis payload Is. a 37,000-pound digital
for takeoff, the shuttle Columbia, photographic reconnaissance sajust back from a record 11-day telllte also capable of Interceptspace mission, was scheduled to lng television and radio signals.
begin a cross-country trip from
The magazine reported the
California back to the Kennedy satellite will be launched into a

INSPEOOR
GADGET
He's IJalf man, tiaff contrapliOil. He's
Sl11llt nieCe.

''The two phenomena ... ap·
pear 19 have kept In s(!!p over·
some 17 cycles," covering more
than two centuries, wrote Hoyle,
and Wlckramaslnghe, who are
.mathem!ltic~ns at t.he Unlver-

CHANNEL23

THE JANE
WAUACESHOW
Distinguished journalist Jane Wallace
hoSIS this
show 11111 addt asses 1l1e
issues 111at.affed Mlefic:a's """""'ll&gt;day.
The guests and lhe audience ei!Change
ideas that toaJS 011 011e issue a day.

Ia*

'

This
. Friday
and

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CHANNEL26

'•

SANDUSKY, Ohio . (UP!) - '.' gram continues . to \)e a '!'Bjor
Cedar Fair Limited Partoershlp part of Cedar Fajr's strategjc
said Monday the number of . planning," Kinzel said. . ·
people vll;Jtlng Its amusement
''After the $11 million In capital
parks ·ln Sandusky and Mlnnea- expenditures currently underpolls and their new roller coa:t'- way at our parks for the 1990 .
ters Willi the blgh~!~Jt In history, . seasoll are .comp~d,· Cedar
leading to record revenues and Fair will have made nearly $30
net.lncome for 1989.
mU!Ion in capital Jn.veslments
Net Income tor the year was 'since the public offelilnlt jn 1987.
$31.6 mllllon, or$1.48 a unit, up40
Cedar Point Is tooated·.' In
perceqt from $22.6 mllllon, or Sandusky ori Lake Erie between .
$Ul6 a unit In 1988: ·
·.
Cleveland and Toll!ilti;,. Bnd' v!IJ.:
Net revenues lllcreased,' 16 leyfatr· (s · .t6'c ated ~ear · , I_A;~~~~~=::====;=::=::::::::!'!~::!~~J
percent tp $120 . mUllon ·from Mlnneapolls·S{. Paul. • · : .. · '.• ' .~
· '
$103.2 mUlloli 11 year ago.
·.
·
'
'
Richard L. Kinzel, president
and · chief executive officer ot
Cedar Fair Management Co., the ·
managing general' partner of
Cedar Fair L.P ., said. virtually
· all of Cedar Fair's gross income
Is ~allzM during the operating
seuon froin mid-May to lateSeptember, with the major portion liistorlcally concentrated In
the peak vacatlon.months·or July
an&lt;! Al!lrllst. .
·
.
,
"Combl!llld attendance was ·
the Jilghest .In' the parks' history
· and totalled 4.3 mUllon, as l&gt;oth
park.$ set new records. Combined
125'- PRICE GUAIANTEEI
per capita spending also rose 6
H ygu buy ICM'Mthing from Eltott'a. 1nd
percent, to $25.63 from $24.10 -l ast
within IOdap find itlorleMat•MIMrlo·
~eltbrate
year," Kinzel said.
011IIIOCIIdng 6Nier, Elion'a will refund the
dlfler•• plvl26% of the difference upon·
He attrlbu ted the record
pnoof of to-• prico.
operating results to the
successful debuts of the
Partnership's two new roller
Crlllley 15 c.. ft.
coasters, Magnum XL200 at
-~
Cedar Point and the Exc alibur
19"
IEfiiGEIATOI
at Valleyfalr, together with .
FIIOST.fiR
COLOI TV
generally good weather In July .

.D on't Forget Our Services of
Parcel Post and Dry Cleaning ·
Pickup.
•

.

Roller coasters boost·attendance
at Ce~r Fair amuse;ment parks

STILL GOING .ON!!

WEEKDAYS ON CABLE

.
.
always bacterial Infections In a the patients is that we havt•
hospital alld many are routinely people with open wounds or who
treated. Tills happens to be a are physically weak from surgerparticularly virulent form of tes whO ar£' more susceptlblP to
bacterium Infection." ·
.
this kind of Infection," ht' ~atd
Detroit Receiving is a trauma
"After iden tifying the problPm 1
hospital that does no e lei;tlve , and removlng all patients from
surgery and treats crjlically the unit, the next st~p in th~ '
injured patients taken to Its tre atment protocol i&lt; lo clean JhP
emergency room. Archambault unll with special t'lc.&gt;anlng solsaid the 19 patients who were vents to sanllize and steri lize th&lt;' '
e_vac uated were placed in Isola· area.
.
tton. All are listed In critical to
Hospital officials arP Inter
.serlouscondltlonfoUowingemer. view ing patien ts to idPntlfy all
gency surg~ies.
·..
ot her people with whum the~
Archambault said the patients may have fOme In contact so they
are receiving a variety of treat- can be tested for thl' bactet la.
ments, Incl uding antibiOtics to
Dr. Norman HaynPr. •·h.i(·lnf' ~
treat th e bacterium, identified as the division of disc asp contro l for
acinelobacter calcoacetlcus lla· the Michigan D~partmPn t of '
ranltratus. or ACV.
Public He alf h, said nai'!Pr).l• '""" •'
No outs.ide experts have be~n as ACV are tran;;milt&lt;'d In •
called in because the l;&gt;acterlum several ways, lncJudlngpcrsonal·
has been identified and treat- contact and contllm ln~ tion of
ment has started, he said.
_
food , water, hospital rrta tPri.ll. . ·
"Our co ncer n in evacuating drugs and intravenous fl uid.&lt;.

COMPLETE STOCK

four years before the peak In ,
solar activity. "If _you are really
trying to find an association, it .
looks lllte In about half of the~ ,
cases the l~fluenza 'caused' · the .
sunspots," he said.
·
ru; of Jan. 19, the CDC said

.

FIIDAY, JAIIIAIY 21

'

.

lnspec)OI Gadget. fiallfino Crime Willlltle. · ·
~ o1 hiS ean1ne sileldCl&lt; and Penny, hiS.

sm nam

I '

,•

l 2 PRICE .SALE

Coslf::

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 ,

WASHINGTON (UPI) '- Brit· · slty ot Wales.
·
.
' .
.
Ish , scleatlatl thlllk th!!Y have
The scientists noted
t ef- intl114111Z8 outbreaks had been
DETROIT (UPI) _ - Seven ·
uDCOVI!I'I!d a link ~tween flu forti to link various he~ena reported In 1~ 1tatl!tl and there patients at Detroit Recelvln~
outbreaks anchunapots, but U.S. with tthe solar . actfvtty bave appe&amp;rl to bean "upswing" In flu :ospltal have died of a virulent
heelth exper:tl IBid Wednesday tended td "look od ·over a few activity. The National Oceanic
acterla in the past three
they doubt that extraterrestlal cycles, but go ~loualy adrift" · and Atmospheric Administration m.onths, prompting hospital offlforces caull! epidemics .
when lollger Jll!rlods are · recently predicted the latest clals to close a surgical ward and
' R.eportlna In the jOUI'JIIll Na- examined.
·
11-year peak In sunspot activity move 19 patients to an Isolation
hsre, Fred Hoyle and N.C.
''This does riot happen for the would oceur In February. ·
unit.
Wlckram$Singhe presented evl- postulated sunspot-flu conne·c- • DF. Gary Noble, writing In A H~spltal spokesman Dennis
deuce that they say adds "ere- tion," they said.
Basic and Appl!ed lnflpenza
rc ambault said the seven
dence to the speculation that
Hoyle and Wlckramaslnghe Research, said ltlillans used the ~atients who have died sf~ce
solar activity and lnfiuenza ac- speculated flu epidemics might term Influenza, as early as, the
ovember co ntr~~ted a nosotlvitymay have a causal link."
oecur when Intense $Oiar winds 14th century 'to describe the comlal !nfectlon. · -In
The work bY. the British duo associated with sunspot peaks 'lnfiuence' of stars and planets layrrrn s terms, a hospital·
expandedona19'18study by R.E. '"drive charred parUcles of the · and la~r tod~rlbe 'lnfl!lenza dl acqu red Infection. All seven
Hope, who obll!r""' that peaklln · size of virullts down throu h freddo '- the ' Influence; or the were critical-care patients
the sun's activity and fluepldem- (Earth's) exposed upper atm~s- · cold ~on the epidemic be)lavlor ref~verlng from surgeries, he
lea both appear to occur In pherelntolheshelterofthelower · of,\nfiuenza." _
sa ·
.
n cyear cyclj!S.
atmosphere."
~wever, the exact Influence
Unit 41:', a surgical mtenslve
Solar activity Is traditionally
Dr Larry SchOnberger 8 viral on Influenza epidemiology, If ~ar~ward, was closed at 9 p.m .
gauged by the number of suns- dlse~ expert with the Centers ' any, or such factors are uncere ld esday so hospital personnel
pots ,- dark areas on the Sl!rface for Disease Control in Atlanta .taln," Noble added.
. cou thoroughly clean It, said
of the 'sun produced by convec' said he was not swayed by !h~ u Noble also commented t!Jat · ru;chfmbauit,. dtrector of public
tlon of gas.
British arguments · ·
. Hoyle and · Wlckramasinghe's re at ons and marketing for the
Hope' a atudy found a "remar"I don't think yo~ need to go to i effort to link flu outbreaks with ~spital and University Health
kable coincidence" between rna- , something like sunspots to ex- extraterrestlal influences '.'has
nter.
jor flu outbreaks and sunspot plain influenza outbreaks" no direct evidence to support It
· "We started noticing a probcycles between 1919 to 19&amp;8. The Schonberger said.
and does not accord with current tern with the Infection in midnew work extends. the comparlThe CDC officials also noted 1 knowledge of lnflue~za virus November," Archambaulf told
son bacl\ to 1761 and f&lt;!rward to I· that 111 some of cycles, the flu sut;?val outside the body." .
the Detroit News. "There are
1979.
.,
.. epidemic appeared ·as much as · ..-...:.-----,_,_...,...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..__.,

on now IIIVI!I ted fundi will be
"at the beart"
spent. They
· of eatlmatea Americana loae $2
billion annually to penny stock
swindles.
-Look-alike envelope pr_on:wtlons: Malllngs that dupllcalethe
look and names of federal aaen· ,
cles such as the Social Security
Admlnlsttation and the IRS.
They often suggest contacting a
toll-free "800" number an&lt;! plac·
lng an order.
-Accelerated mortgage
scalpers: Consumers need .to
check with the financial lnslltu·
tlon that holds theli" mortgage to
see if a payment plan Is legit!·
mate. Most legltiinllte bi-weekly
payment plans ,do not demand
service chaflles.

675-3398 or 1-800-344-3331

d
d
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·
rea le or ml ltary .mtsswn
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-Boru•

health care promotions: Be wary of arthritis
remed8, welght·l- plana, sexmillion an hour, an aiHance of ual aids, baldness remedies,
Other musicians will be hired as
consumer, bushless and govern- nutrition schemes, "chelation"
needed, depending upon the ment groups Issued a list Thurs- tberapy, muxle stlmulaton and
orchesteral requirements of lndl· day of the top 10 telemarketing anUfungal drugs'·for bypersenal·
vidual acts.
swindles of the 1990s.
tivlty to "candida." These
• The contract provides for a 5
The scams ranse fr.om "900" schemes "could result In serious
percent pay Increase for the few
phone numbers that promise Illness or worse."
musicians who remain as fullcredit cards ·but only dellvey
-Bank-financed precious metime employees. Other musl·
generic Information, to loolr- tals: Investors promised· big
clans,worklnglnanon-agaln-off·
allkeenvelopes thatappeartobe profits for a downpayml!nt on
again arrangement, will be paid from the government and over- gold or silver will-lOse $1 biWon
on a sliding scale, receiving $150 ·.seas "baUer rooms" pushing this year, mainly 111 Southern
tor each of the ftrst three nights
penny stocks.
,
· Callfornls. Commissions and
and $100 for -each additional day: ·
The list was released bY the fees make It nearly Ill) possible to.
Musicians who previously per: Alliance Against Fraud In Tele- profit.
formed In orchestras at Bally's,
marketing, a coalition of more
-"Blind pool" penny stocks:
the Las Vegas Hilton ·and Cae- .than GO consumer groups_, trade Typical offering document con·
sars Palace will split a $!0,000 associations, businesses, unions talna no meaningful Information
per hotel signing bonus, similar · and government agencies coordl· . - .
to severance pay. Bally's . em· natedbytheNatlonalConsumers
played 24 musicians, plus a
League. ..
leader. The Las Vegas Hilton
"While the alliance recognizes
employed 15 musicians, plus a
that many products and services
leader, and Caesars Palace em- are sold legltlmaiely through
· played 12 muSicians, .plus the telemarketing, we want to warn
leader.
consumers that con artists are
Health, welfare and pension inaklng these types of offers
henetlts for musicians wlll cor· . through high-pressure sales
. respond with contracts signed by
pltches providing UtUe concrete
CuUnary Loca1226 at the resorts, . lnformatlon," said NCL ·ExecuSmith said.
tlve Director Linda Golodner.
Under terms of a partial
She said consumers •'need to
amnesty agreement approved take tlme to ask· questions, get
last week by the executive board answers In wrltlng and contact
. of the American F-ederation of consumer protection agencies
Musicians, 100 muslcta.n: strike when they don't know with whom
breakers cannot be fined more they are dealing."
than $5,000 each. A slde-let(!!r to
The group said telephone
the contract said the strike .scams Involve tens of billions of
breakerscouldnotbeexpelledor doUars a year. It has been
Available On
suspended from the union unless estimated that ·Americans lose
they fall to pay the fines within GO $10 billion.a year- more than $1
days of notification.
mutton an hour - to telephone
Musicians Local 369 has rene- con artists In theinvestmentarea
gotiated contracts with the Union , alone, It said.
Plaza·, Circus Circus, Stardust
The scams are:
,
and Riviera Hotels, but musl-Abusive 900 numbers: Swln·
clans still have no agreements at dies Include a failure to inform
the Desert Inn, Sahara, . Ha· consumers of the costs, keeping a
clenda, Sands, Holiday, Mirage caller on hold to run up perand Dunes hotel-casinos on the minute ch!lrges'orappeals aimed
Strip.
at children. One scam Involves
o
•
promising a credit card for a
$29.95callbutdellverlngahow-to
.
kit on getting credit.
127-mile-high orbit inclined 62
-Overseas boiler rooms:
d~ees to the equator, that is, ~~~~j~:el~:~:r~ces;!~~y ~~~: .
the sate! Ute will pass over all
d reel us metals have moved
points on the globe between 62 ant ~th 0 hofU s re lators
degrees north and south of th·e ~u ,? fee~=~~ns" 1 ~
Rica
equator-lnciudlngmorethanSO 1 ~ ~a hamas Liberia and South
percent of the Soviet Union.
Afe 1 a
'
r ca.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Say-

.

SALEM. Ore. (UPI) -Oregon
will resume state-funded organ
transplants tor poor children
April 1, thanks to .a provision
lmpoeed by Congress, officials .
said.
The Oreaon Legislature In 198'1
cut off Medicaid funding for all
Jransplants except kidneys and
corneas, preferring to spend the
monc!y on preventive health care
for low-Income children and
pregDant women.
· But last December's federal
Bud,et ~nclllatlon Act will
require tile at.te to apln otter
other transplants· to poor people,
uDder 21, Jeu Tbllrne, bealth
.adnlinlatrator ror .\he Oregon
· Adult and FamUy StrYICI!I Division, said Wedn~ay.
Oregonians refusal to pay for
the lite-saving transplants drew
national attention and forced
some parents of alllng children to
seek help In other stata. Otbera
launched fund-raising etforta to
save their sick children.
The legtalatlon will force
Oreaon to expand health. servt·
ces, l~ludllll transplanll, to the
71,000 children of Medicaid recipIents In Oreaon. Thorne said.
Sbe estimated that transplants
and other medical .ll!rvlct!l required under tile act will cot! $11
mmloli to t12 million between
AprU 1 and JUDe 30, lltl, the end
of the curnat blef'tnm. Tbat
money mllllt come from CUllin
. other hwnu IIII'YlCI!I PJ'OII'Iml
aDd a boalt Ia auppl!rt from the
stile aenenl fUnd.
'
·
TranaplaDI:I wiD coat about $1
mOlloD a year, Tborne 1181cl, but
oilier ~ collld nm milCh
bllber. ·01 tbodonUca, "'r exam·
pie, could add another U.5
mOlllln.

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GALLIPOLIS
Upper. liver Rd.
(acroll from the Airport)

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People in the news _ __
8F WILLWI C. ftO'l"l'

u....................

ftUIIP 8f'BAK8 BISIIIIND:
Demld Tr.ap Install tbat he
Isn't eotng to run for president
but IJiat dOesn't stop blm .from
espousing a lew hold optotons on
commerce and International af·
fillrs. ''1 predict (Mikllall Gorll•
chev) will be overthrown be· cause he has shown
extraor~lnary weakneas ... ,
Trump says In an Interview In the '
March Playboy. "Suddenly, tor
the first time ever, there are coal
miner strikes and brush f~
everywhere, which Will all ultimately lead to .a violent revolution." As for the United States,
Trump says, "Some of our
presidents have · been incredible
jerk-olts. We need to be tough. I'd
do the job as well as or better
than anyone else. I like Georce
Bash very much bu 1 I disagree
with him when he talks of a
kinder, gentler Arperica. I think
if this country gets any kinder or
gentler, it's literally going to
cease to 'exist. (The United
States) is being ripped off so
badly by our so-called allies Le., Japan, . West Germany,
Saudi Arabia, South Korea. "
BIG MAN WITH TBE BOSS:
Now that &amp;uce Sprlapteen's E
Street Band is in abeyance,
saxophonist Clarence Clemo•'is
hitting the road with his own
bAnd, the Red Bank Rockers.
Clemons, wllo recently released
his third soJo album, has 12 dates
set, starting Jan.. 31 in Ontario,
and then Will tour Europe. "I'm
jilst really glad to be out there '
p:taying saxophone," Clemons
said. "I dldn'tget to play as much
ait I wanted on the last few E
Street tours and I knew the only
W4Y to make it happen was to do
It on my own." Clemo11's tour
includes two nights, Feb. !1-10, at
tile Stone Pony, the Asbury Park,
N.J., bar where Springsteen and
the E Streeters built their
reputation.
ASK DR. BOX: Roxaaae PuIIW!r, the Palm Beach, Fla.,
socialite who made headlines
With her steamy 1982 divorce
trom pUblishing magnate Her. bert P1dlber, bas a new part·
thne gtg. She hosted her first
radio call-1n Show for Florida
station WJNO-AM during the
weekend, dispensing a!lV!ce on
custody battles.• writing and sex.
'!I feel like I know you personally," gushed a fan who had read
her highly detailed autobiography, "The Prize Pulitzer."
PuUtzer replled, ''You do, a"" so
does the world. You know where
thy birthmarks. are." Pulitzer.
who also.posed nude for Playboy,
joked With her listeners that she
liad started drinking 15 cups of
· coffee a day after reading about a
study linking caffeine to sex
drive. Assistant program dlrec·
tor Douc Yoq said he would
love to hire Roxanne on a l'ell\llar
l;laSis but thought It was I!Dllkely
she would agree to that. "She
doesn't need the aggravation,"
lie said. ·
.
. CHEERS FOR TBE ENVIRONMENT: The cast of "Cheers"

'

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i

\
I

did some lobbylna Tuelday In
Los Angeles. Ted llen a, who
has long been Involved In environmental c1111-. Klnlle Alle7,

1a1ea Perlman, Geerp WeM&amp;,
Woedr~andi... IW-

•...,_,• Joined people at a
fe~Jefal•btllldlng to protest the""'
of the spray malathion In flrhtlng
the Mediterranean fruit fly.
: 'Eveqo time ypu use a pestlc!cle.
It enda 1up getting washed off the ·
s~t, ,tt gets Into \ the . water
system alid ' eventually Into the
ocean," Danson said. Alley
echoed Danson by saying, "I am
concerned for the well·belng of
unborn children. Stop (malatblo;ln spraying) until proper
tes tjng Is doae and then take a
vote, I don't want . somebody
telling me that I have tci be
sprayed,"
·
FLOJO'SFASHION: Ftoreace
Grlffttb loJDer, whose flair for
fashion is exceeded only by her
speed, proudly unveiled her
latest creation Wednesday new uniforms for the Indiana
Pacers basketball team. Joyner,
the Olympic sprint champion,
dazzled the track .world with her
Qne-legged running oulflts and
wildly painted extra-long fingernails but had to keep the
·basketball uniforms comparatively sedate. •'I was going to Pill
.a lltllelacesomewhereandmake
a one-legger but they (NBA
officials) wouldn't let me," she
said. '1'm very pleased wttb the
way it turned out. I was really
concerned with how it would {eel
for the players. Designing for
men 6-feet tall Is very different
from what I'm used to. I didn't
want it to look too flashy." .
Joyner's creations are dark blue
With gold trim and have colored
triangles going down oile side.

!~~..==·~d~V=·~Ja==·~~~t~21~,=1~·~10~~;;;;;,:;;;.:~~:-~;;:;.:;~;P~a;~:·:~::~M~•;~;~~·~D~it;;ONO;:;
· :;~~~--~;;~~~:;,::::~
· n.~:o:·~~:~::~~~!'*~!la~1~1;.:
BUENA PARK, Calif. (UPI)- 1111 father only by hlsflntname, Pr'- WedDeaday and takeo loa
''I don't want to know where he $200,000 a year.
Tile
'lllllom fatlllr aet 111m oa aald be would l!e able to put the secret location, where he Will be
is," said David,
Much of the money will pay tbe ·
le'VeD
yenra
qo
Ia
a
twlatljJ
expealeace
bellini\
him
only
the
moat
tightly
controlled
paroDavid
was
asleep
when
his
salarieS
of three lull-time parole
fire
Man who
atlllmpt to puslab 1111
· "wll.a Qarlee dlee."
lee in California blltory. Carry·
father poured kerdlene around agents who Will alternate watch-

•

· Conununity calendar

.

;

hoy

====:,:.:va;::;..,:;~.A~l';:======;;nJPPERS;;::P;:..,;:
. :u::==:P~LAINII7;:=_=~'1'11e;::~~a.;,~:oc;ll~os:=ia~a:;:hlr::_.:;::;lt:=.;T:~II;:p.~m.:==;Jtbelri:i;:=;moa:i~tiliY;;im;;llll;ii";ar~oa:is.:tur-;;
VFW Fait 11111 wlll._nu....
day, T:llp.m. at tlleptballlelll

LO'l iRJDGI:-co.tr)rMIIIIc
soaMelpCrulldefor01l111twlll
rapt w111 11e aiiJII'Wil at the
be boldlng 1 revtvnl at tile 'l'uppJnPlnJa. TblllstlletDurtll Lotta•'p - - . l t y - - Ia
HartfordCbriltlallUaloaCburcb Alllltvlnlry, of tbe pG1t ud ' ttr111p
OooMIIt
Ia Hartford, W.Va. thi'OUPSull· . IIMI!Ilberurnrpd toattlad.
~~·
p,m. to 'm=
day with -"''* at T p.m.
n(lllt. "nle twter 11 loCated. on

HARTFORD -'l'lleGallla Ma-

rr:'T

llJibtly. Tbere will be apeclal
LONGBOTl'OM-TbeRlver·
•tnaen and 1peaken illebtly. view GaMeD Ollb wiU lllllllt
. Rev. Clyde V. Headerwa, cru· Tbundsy at T: 311 p.m. at tbe
vl
tbe home or
sade president, lll tes
·
__ , G· raee ,.__.
.........ery.
public.

v--·

l'aiDAl'

RACINE-TIIeSoulbe.-nBCM18ters will meet We1reeday at 7
p.m. at the bilh acbool. , All
parenll are.urged to atllmd ·
POMEROY - The WildWOOd
Garden Club Will meet WedJiee..
day at the bome of Mrs. DwiJbt
Milhoan, Flatwoods Road, for a
noon luncbeon and 11tt exebange.
RACINE- The Racine American Legion .b,uxllllry will meet
Thunday, 7 p.m. , at the legion
home.

POMEROY -Tbere w1U be a
support II'OIIP meetlq (Boaale
Marleae Flaber) 011 Friday at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy oaJce of tbe
American Csal:er Society.
RACINE -Tbe Booater Ud
Falthflll Servant clanes of tbe
Racine Baptist Cburcb are ,poa.
IOI'Ing a ftlm; "Sbeffey'' 011
Friday, T p.m. In the cllurcb
socJal room. Tbe public lllnvl
toatlend. .

POMEROY
SeniOr ct
Club will
POMEROY -The PomeroY ha a round .and liQIIIre dance
gi-oup .of A.A. IJid AI:-Anon will . on !day trcm g.;.u P.lll- at the
meet Thunday, T IJ.m., at the II!! tor elllzella.ceamr. Mulllc will
provided by True Country
Sacred Heart Catholic Cburch.
For more Information, call
biers. Tbe public II lavlted
1-800-333-11051.
o attend IIIII tbe admlaaloa lis S2
per·per1011. TIIOie at lending are
POMEROY -The Precepter to llttnr refrelhmeata for tbe
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta SIJ:ma snack tnle.
Phi Sorority will meet Tbutsday,
6 p.m.. at the · ho~ of Donna
SATURDAY
Jones for a soup dinner.
RACINE -Tile Junior . BYF
group of the Racine 'B aptlat
HEMLOCK GROVE -The Church lallavtq a b!lwllng party
Women's Feltowahlp of Meigs at the Ravenawood Bowling
County Churches of · Cbrll t Is Alley' at 2 p.m. on Saturday.
requested to bring quilts for a
display to the meetlna on ThursMIDDLEPORT -Peray
day, 7:30p.m .. at tbe~Vanpllall • Y1!1\lli!J' wiU be a111Jb!1 at tbe
in Hemlock Grove. ·
Alb StNet Freewill Baptlat

CoutyRAIIdU,oaellllle-tbof
RouaSO.Allbudaarenlcome
aad reflwllmellll will be IOid.
SALEM CEl'l'l'ER- Tile Sa·
!em Towlllblp 'l'l'llaw. wlllllold

day Itt a.m. at the fin! bowie In '
Sa.l «n canw.
'

CHESIE

R

-

bUrned

.,.,,....., t•
.,,.,.,.., .,, •

Dn~':''!f~~."!J!~

"'._
'¥
1p.m.,sttbeCb•terLodJeHall. l
AIJmemberlareuDdtollttl!lld. ·
Plana wiU be_..madell
be ~ldrtbeM aprlngb
,
rally \Vbleb ,.,
.... aM~ 17 j
atlhellentorcttlzeiiiBulldlnrln i
--'-·
Pou.a..,.. ·
·

e~e-wtre

".

David · wu 6 when Charles
held a newacc;.:afl!len-'1! totellbla
newlyparoleddacltllatllenever Rolbenberglel blmonflrelna
wanll to aee blm apiD. ·
Buena Park, Calif., motel room
'1 wanted It to (be , known) In 1983 after be and Jill ex·wlfe
nationally IJiat 1 neYer want to had argued over visitation.
see . my father aaain," David r(Jhts. Burned over 90 percent of
Rothenberg, 13, said at a DI!WI his body, D~vid was severely
cotlference be held to tell bil disfigured. but now lives a
father, wbo was paroh!d Wednes- -remarkably normal life.
David, while saying he is no
, day and presumably watched hll
son on teli!Yialon. ''I wanted to ,,longer afraid of his father, is
make It clear to·him.
adamant about never wanting to
"I think be still wanta to be my see him or talk to him again.
father but that can never be done
"I don't want to say anything to
aaain,~' be said. "~he Will my · him," he said. "Charles doesn't

son

~led, ' bOy

1 • .,.....- mee

doesn't want

•

1 '

•

•

to see him

PUBLIC NOTri:E

.~;~.~ad, be .wouldill act like he

NODCE.il hartb' given thaton Saturday,~­
27th, 1990, at 11ho0 a.lft.,.a public IN wtll
lit ....._ at 105 Unkln AY111ta, romero,, Ohio, to sell
for cash tilt follewlng collateral:
.1919 Chew S-1 0 PU, Wo, lumfMr, 5 sp. ovwdriva
· S# 1GCIS·14E2112112131
.
1917 Ct.vroltt Spactrum 4 dr.
1916 Chivrolatc 10 Pickup
S# 2GCCC14H4G1151124
(To lit sold for tt. YiUaga of Pomaro')
1916 Ford LTD Crown Vktoria Polka Cruisar 4 dr.
·Jha F•mers lank and Sawings Company, Pomaror, Ohio, rtHrwes tha right to Wd at this ••·
and to withdraw tt. altova collateral prior to salt.
Furtt.r, tt." Fanners lanlc and Savings Companr
.....,.. tha right to raitct
or all bids submittad. .
.
.
Furthar, tt. abowt collateral will ba sold In the
condition it is in with no axpr•ad or impliid war-

. TO PlACE AN AD

MONDAY thni FRIDAY 8 A.~•. to 5 P.M.
8 Ut until NOON rSATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

rvn 3 dar• .. no chaee.

for eM:h d., •• ,._,,. ads .

8 -W~nted

Ctrd of Thanks
In M~~morin

Classifi••d pages rut'l'r tht•

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949- ftedne
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Public Notice
324,• Albany. Oh. 41i71 O:
IVA JANE DALTON, P. 0,
lox 324, Albony,
Oh.
4&amp;710; DANIEL E. WILLIAMS. lox 972 A.P.O,
Son F,..o!oco, CA. 91111111;
The Unknown Halra. Do-

• ' - · Legal- · on~ A•
ligna of John L. Clor!c. Da-

na.

Inc., 27 Colt...
::;:';.
Atilano. Ohio
Coplaio of tho controct
dOaumenla""" be obiW!necl
ot theoflloe of E,.,., M--

by

It,...

. . . . . .. . . .

____,

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d ..........
'DLWI'PO-- 'W1, . . !11111A

ROSES' ..
El(CAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

lOP SOIL
FOR SALE
. 949-2493

Bub&amp;b..l p&amp;l aod owr prwl-.t's 'c•• sd'lfiNClll
' CINCINNATI (UPI)- Executives at tbe city's CBS affiliate
are betting that their viewers
would f!ltber watch a cone,e
ballletball game than pretlldeilt
Bush's State of the Ulilon
address.
CalllnJ Bulb's addre.. · a
"canaed speecb," WCPO-TV
propam director Rick Reeves
IBid Qle station will air a pme
between tbe UntverlltyofQacln·
nat! IIIII c:roa·towil rival xavter · ·
U•JVentty Jan. 31 wblle tbe
prwldellt .. mak1aJ blltpeeCb to
Conpeu.
.
.
•'It's a ciiiiMd speech - not
real -1111811er - and what we
wlllllave lllprCJIIeN II t;lbeoftbe
blgl!lt eportlagtveataln towa, ..
• ldlleevel.

EVERY SUNDAY

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment
•011 Change • Lube
•Brake Work
MAIN ST., IUILAJID
1-15-'90-tln

Start• at 1:00 P.M.
Factol'y Choked
12 Gauge 'Only
9-H~tfn·

742~3018

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, .....,., OIH

Badlan luldlnt

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

nomad Plelnt"' 1he author·

po•-•

6:30 ....

1ty 10 qu:.t tlt!o and
lhe entlra Pnter•1 In lha d•

acr- r•P utete, ond the
prayer It 1hat the rlahto, In- ·
Uor•t and 11..,1 of liT penial
be fully de!armlnod, adMd ~ ond
Plllm"' ..e·au1ho·
IO be tuly Mod of1he
an1PraiM !nto,oat ., tha aub-

rll""

Faclory choke
12 Gauge Shotgull Only
Stricklly Enlor...t
.
10-9-tfn

~HIPWOOD

'WANID

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

W. Va, c:.i'I:7J.Inc.

.

~

.

Pl. 992-3561

1·1 5",... ...

Buying Houra;
7:30;8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Saturday
.
1-2-'90-1 •••

.

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At INICI!dtlt Prien"

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Alto Tr~•••luloe
PH. 992-5682
·or 992-7121
4-25-tfn

•VINYL IIDINO
•ALUMINUM BPQPNO
•ILOWN IN
IN80LATION

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

...

....

"Fr" Estlmatea"

PH. 949-2801
or ln. 949-2160

DOZER

I

'I'
NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
I

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(6141 66'7-3271
Gr011t A.

Newland

7-11-'b,;lln

'COUNTRY '
MOBILE
HOME PARK

In MkWiapart, OIL
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cycla
aneolor
SICock
H-Pte, WHdlltor,
T-moeh, lrlgga •
Stratton.

•Mobile Home
Pltrta
•Moblla Home
Renteit
• Lot Renta!t

PH. 992-3922

NO SUNDAY

f.ZI·1f.lfn

'

SITEWORK • ROADS •'
•
CLEARING

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

.l ......, ,...,. La •••

I

.
'

992-7479

. Rt. 3:111wth of
·-roy, Ollie
1-12-'11-!fft

'·

......,.rv
Larry E. I - .

*SHRUB lo TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

ClerkofCouno.

USm APPUANCE$

FURNACE

ttauw•um

FUINACE

FUINACE ·

*LIGHT HAUUNG

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALLMAKEI
GAl OR ELECTRIC

*FIREWOOD

Oil'S APPUANCI

BILL SUCK ·
992-2269'
EVININGS

sava·

or 915·!561
hit Office

R. L HOLLON
DUCKING
CIIEnn, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

'-..J

1· 11 -IO·tln '

'

S160 n..':...

..,..'10

OHIO PALLET
COMPAN't

a

!

'
VINYl SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

- 12-13-'U-1 ...

RUTLAND TilE
SAUS and
SERVICE

. IACINE
. FilE DEPT.

11111111 County Common
PleuCourl
(11 •• 11, ~·. 21:
(211 .•

.

Wl•ter Steolel 0• .'

992-2772

RACINE
'
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

GUN SHOOT

.

0(

hu fllod on Application In Hoi!. Thio op~Hcotion wiD be
tho Pr-1• Courl of Mllgo h11rd ot 1: 0 p.m. on tho
coumr.· Qhlo, C.o No. 27th cloy of Februory. 1990.
28110 • requullnga chono- (1) 2&amp;, 11c
of hla name to David Sc:ott

J&amp;L
INSULATION . ~

'

,..,.,811(

....

Ott.

3rdStr•t,

ploint It 10 give 1hl ...,.,.

,...el

Public Notice

•

I•••••·

crdw • thlnga,

81 - Homaln\provementa
82- Piumbing &amp; Hnttng
83 - Eaeavat ing
84 - Eiectric.t &amp; Aehigwation
86 - Gun•tl Hauling
86 · -Mobile Home Repair
87 - Upholstery

Busin.e ss ,Servi

Dev-.

I

Maahwert. tt.mbllton •

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Noticllo hereby&amp;:"en thot
·Dovld Scott,
PP-v , gf
111a1e &amp;toM 'Routo' 12it
Long BottOI!I, Dhlo, 411743.

ce•od In 1941: Tho Unk~-n Hllra.
L•g - ond Auigna of David
Radford, ·o-uod: LOLA
CLARK.
RouUo 4, Pam•oy,
Buell, Oh. 48711; The Un!mawn
.• ' ,, Prot.ta Judge
Hllro, Devia-. 1A1IatetJI
Lano K. NlfMII God, Ciarlo
•d Alllan• of John\JiW,elt,
11121; 1~1 1. a, 311
o-•ad: CLIFFORD H.
BRYSON, 419 Bucome
,--p.;ii;u~iiiiiiiitl~ A_,ue,
Plttlburgh, PA.
Nadce
111214; lETTY 'I~CK­
WOOD. 31141 M!nwavlle
Rood, Ricin a. Oh. 48771;
ADVERTISEMENT
DEFENDANTS
. FOR BIDS
the unkn-n hllro:
Tu!ll*'l Plalno-C!outer
WatwD~
ond ntxl of Pdn of
Clortc. Dovld ·Rod311111 Bar 30 Road.
R.....lla. Ohio 411772
and John Jewell
lallli»IW-IIDBfor whoalna-ond·~;:::
id
the con11nrotlon of Rural ...
Wotor Expona!on Ph•• IV. with
-.ga toniiii and Ill·
purlln.,_wllbenaol~~td
you haveby the D!otrlcl ot Tlta nomad . . _ _ , In olagal
Dla1rPot Oftloe, IIIII 1, Bar action. antltlpid The V:nlon
30 Road. RNdlvllo. Ohio County Nltllonel Bank va.
unll 2:00p.m. loco! t-on C!atll Dalton. a1 II. DalendFebnlolry 21, 'IIOMdt'- onto. Thia lOtion hod lt
Mid office publicly ullaioed C.a Number 81CV·l47 and Po pending In
-odandi'lld,._,
The CONTRACT DOCU· tho Courl of Common PIIIIENTI miiy be eumlned at of Malp ~ounty. Pomoroy.
.
lhelollowlnl -!ona: The Ohio41711.
Tloe object of thia comDla1rPot Olfloe or Evana.

oontl
the
_......,•• ,t otel flnonclol
pwfoua ..... C.. Na. U·
111111-GA·COI hu -

--

Services.

51-Hou•hold Goods

112- Sponing Goo.t.

53- Anttqull
54- Mile. MerchMdise
56- Building Suppli•
66- Petl lor Salt
57- Musical Instruments
58- Fruits 6 Ve;••tM•
59 - For Stle or Trade

..21 ~ Busin•• Opportunity
22 - MOnt¥ to loin
23 - Prof•lional S•.,ic..

182- New
895- Letan

Co1111• 11nlt. Atilano,
Ohio upon PIIYIIIIII1 of
110.00 lor MOh-all.
'
IIJtry RIDDER, raYou
requlrad
to on·
,..,ora
-·
·
.......g the - - """" ject
lhe
complolnt 'l"'thln
a''.._. wlthC8M NoL ·
prlllll(ltl\r
'Mid
In
good
CB-111-GA-Alll through 00......... wll be ,.,,.... 28 doyo altar 1he Peat publiend •nv noncation af thia n01icl which
U:OI20·0A·AlR, 18-84,_ the
OA-cMII, fnd 18-144-0A· blciiWuponao..,.rnlngthe wll bl publlthad onoa ~h
oanlract ,._,.,.. wll be
Clllll.
lor IIIII
alx publ!oat!on
-""'"
......
....... Tha
Tha ............. rlltad by relundad 10.00.
w11 Ill mode on tha lth d-v
111313,000,
Tha ~·
!ltlmlte of Fabruory. 1990.
eJ wl•dM • total.-u&amp;p~nr lor....
In of your failure lo
_.... ...,,. lliliuld ..........,. 1 ' 1110
. . Hmld-= . , _ o r otherwlle -lie ' adcpiWd In !lou of !ndlvldullgawal . . . . ,...
"""" • raqulrad by lht Ohio
lloerd of Dlracaoro lloilto of Clvl P....-.ra.
lor.each of~ _,panw'ara'·
(1141 8111-h11i (uclgm.,. by delwlt wll be
glonc
.
bl _ , _ ..,..,... con- t11 Ill: (21 I, .11. 10, _41D
,.,..od oplna1 you for·the
trwct
DUIIOII'I• .........
ci~nionilid " lhe aom·Public Notice
ohoulcl be CNdltecl ta 1he r•
plolnt.
_.....
of 111Dalod:
2. 11eo

...a,.

Merchandi se

'

Jaot
of the · · - ' apploa- wart. HembPeton • Tilton,
tlono,oralhe-Md M10Un1 of ecfcltiOnil Inc.. lOOited ot 27 North

•n•

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

~IIINOtldlowlfl

143'- ArabiaDitt.
371-Wslnut

74 · MOteircycl•
7&amp; - Boats&amp; Motors for Sale
76 - Auto Ptitl &amp; Acc•IOfi•
77 - Auto Repair
7B ...... Camping Equi!'lmef1t
79 - Camper~ ~Motor Homn

to Rant

49- For U•t

.,-

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

71 - Auto• for Sale
72 - Truckslor Stle
73 - Yitnl &amp; 4 WO's

48 - Equipment for Rani

ljhhl.$111

571 - ApploQ,...

773- M.....,

843 - Portlend
247 - Letert fills

"-E.

~-

- ...... =e:-opi!I--.II.T .... Iirplul ...... ltlf,
lCI.TrPm.P21
LOIM.II .... IIH,-100111-.II.T ..

..........

915- Ch•••

NOTICE OF .
APPOINTMENT OF
,FIDUCIARY
.On J•'*Y 1I. 1190, In
tba Mllga (:ounty Probe10
C'ourt. c.. No. 211411,
J..,u E. Dldcla. lox 1187,
Roclna. Ohio, 411771. appointed E_,lor of the
-tAl of Roy Edword Proffitt. d-oaod, late of Box
121, Racine. Me1111 County,
Ohio, 411771.
.

fNioMbl••• •nd the,.IIP·
proprlalo t - ·of the

ON SELECT
·VEHICLE
R

381 ..!Vinton
245-Aio Or~dt

675 - ~ . ,,..;..,.,

Public N qtice

Public Notice

lllbmlttod to tha Commiallon bY. Caiumblo Gu of
Ohio, Inc. moy be by
tha IUoff of the Commiallon
or by ••IWIWI)Inll pertiaa and
miiy be adOpted by the Comm!ellon.
r
The Commiallon Initialed
Coae No. H·11181-0A-COI
In onlar to inveltlglte the

48 MONTHS

R11HIWIGER4X411TYLESilEPAI,211RU11411C

•aa .,. . Leon

.

the South-lSi 11 Roglon:
I 14,1 13.000 In the city cif
Co!umbuo; ond •421,000 In
1hl cily of Zon-t..
· R-mandaliona which
dlfhi from the opplcotlono

STOCK t H8l DEMO

982 - MiddiPom•oy

' I

LEGAL NOTICE .
Tho PubMc Utlltlaa Commlaolon of Olllo Ilia ~-,
ulad,('. IW4NI . :0.-: -·piib!loi
hNkogl In the lolowlna•
eoa•: Coao Noa. 19·1111GA!AJR. 89-1117·GA-APR.
11-1111-GA·AIII, 11-111•
GA-AlR, . and IICI-120,GA·
APR-t ln The Mau. of llpp!lcatlo!N of Cohftnb!a G• of
Ohio, Inc. 10 E.UbP!oh 1 Un~
II- for NaluiOI Gu

FOR

44a- Gou....-

• 200

Region: U.ll24.000 In the .
E•tam Roglon; 14,1 311 In

XLT4X4

AteleCode 114

Mason Co.•' WV
AreeCodt 30&lt;1

6e7 - Coolville

.the N - lloglon;
129,1121,000 In the Con1ril

the news

MeigaCou~y

317-Ch•hir•

.l«~

-·noo
z,oo

Gallia CCK.Inty '
ArteCode 814

47 - W~ted

Farm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
Li..,ettO&lt;:k
Hay &amp; Grain

Transportation

41 - Hou•• for Rent
42 --MobiltHomes tor Rent
43 - Farmt tor Rant
44- Apartment for Rent
46 - Furnithed Room1
48 - Spaee for Rent

14.- Butin•t Training
1.6 - Schools &amp; lnsuuction
18 - Radio. TV .. Cl Atptir
17 - Misclill.neou•
18 -Wanted To Do

•

OAY BEFORE PUIILIC.ATi&lt;IIN

COPV DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAV PAPER
WEDNESDAV PAPER
THUIISOAV PAPER

R11KIWIGER4X411TYLESilEPAI,21il'i,1W ' I,lu!W..._,__....._._ .. ,,. 00~---.lCL.T .... IirpUIJ I C
114f, XLT
P21._ OWL II Mlr. llw,XL.T .. \ • • • - lir

to &amp;uy

11 - HtiD W..,ttd
12 - Situation Wtnttd
13 - lnsur_.,ce

'

"A cl•lifitd idvtrtite~-"' J)ltctd In ThtOally Senttnlll••
c..,t
classified dilpiiV. Busin•s·Card and ltgll notices)
will also_ app•• in the P•. Ple•ant Refit.ter al\d the GaHipolis Deily Tribune. reaching OWl 18.000 ham•.

rciltiiS givan.

lijijUidd ·

Serv1ce:;

Happv Ads
Ylfd Sal•

61 82 . 6364 65-

35- Lott I Acre~•
36- Re .. htate Wanted

~ 11 1plo y1111; nI

"1 pelnl tint type only uted.
' .
•senUnal il not respon•ible tor tnorsef1tr flrtt d.,. (Ch•c:k
tor tnon firtt dt¥ ad run~ · in papet). Ctll Htore 2 :00p.m .
d., after publiCilion to mRecoHection.
•Acta thM must~· peid ·in ad'tlance ••
•.

31 - Hom• for Sale
32 - MobileHomn for Sale
33- Faufts tor Stle
·
3 •- Busin•• Buildint'

7·-Y•d Saltlpaid i~ advtnctl
8 - Public; Sale&amp; Auction

"Price of 'ad for eH capilal leiters il double price of ad con

on,

·4a8o/o APR

1 - Card of Thtnkt
2- ln Memory
3- AnnDUCemtntl
4 - Givt.WIIV
5- Htppy Adt
6 --lott and f~Uo!nd

··

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

.

crthe
. ••11,1111,000 :n 11oa Lake
Erla Roglon; 14;372,000 In·

'DLW110--.TA!I,IIIIIIX1RA

A1111 ou11 cements

' '. Worcla 1 · Rote ' Ovtr 1$ Wpr!IJ
16
.4.00
.
.20
3 "
1·6 ,
••. 00
.30
8
111
••. 00 '
.42
10
111
.13.00
.60
Monthly
111 ·
$1 .30/doy
.06/ doy
AMn .,,,0.. con•cutw. "'"a. broUnupd.,swill becltaeld

POLICIES ..

SJOCKt9t79

Ilium.-._ from-,_..-_-~~

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Doya
,

t

"Ads outside Meip. Gallia Or M•on counti• mu.- be prepaid.
•
"Aec.We $ .&amp;0 diuoum tor adl paid if! e~tnca.
•frH ads
GiveMty tnd found actlund" 1tSwordtwill be

'~::.-

~

costing taxpayers more than

C.AU. 992-2156

...

..

to accept him.

II

XLT4X4

Jllllc':~t ~.IMng,...,..,t

his bed and set ltonflre, bumtng tng Rothenberg 24 hourt a day to
him beyond recognition.
ensure he does not contact his .
David, whO sal• he has had son. He must also wear an ;
nightmares In which his father electronic "leash," a transmitter
comes after him, said he Is thai will signal authorities II he '
comforted bY assurances from leaves hls assigned area.
':
the state that Rothenberg will be
Rothenberg, 49 , has written to ,
kept aWay from him .
local news organizations that his
'1'm not afraid . lthlnk he's in only reason for Jiving is to see hiS :
good hands," said the teenager, son and ."ask hls forgiveness."
whosleepsW!thaBBgunnearhis
That appeared unUkely since ;
bed.
his parole destination Is "not ,.
Tipton Kindel, a spokesman for anywhere close" to Oranp .
the state Department of Correc- County, where David lives with :
lions, said Rothenberg's three- his mother and stepfather, a '

••

1181 RANIER .

...,..,......,.:

lng two boxes of personal belong·
lngs, Rothenberg ' s only
comment when he was freed was
"I'm afraid and upset," a prison
spokesma11 said.
'
Officials said be Will live In an
apartmeni and has a clerical job
with a private company.
Escorted by two parole agents,
Rothenberg was rel~sed shortly
past midnight after serVIng 6 ~
years in prison and was driven to
his parole destination, which
authorities said they were forced
to keep..ecret becau!J! of Intense

·re"a~t~:!~~:~~r~aht'~~:;;J · :'~ft~;~~n ~'.'if~t!h~is~~~: ~:~~~~~::!!~~~.~~~~~:~~-on :

still
Rothenberg was freed from

'*'

FORD - LINCOLN - 1\IERCUH.Y - JEEP · El\GLE

--.--IJit--.
.
.
.
-.
.
.
.._
.
.
.
.
,
.
.......... -..,....................... ,...

~~~·~!~t:~~~~-~e

The younplll!r, wbo ~fen to

. . .

Quirks in

--

21, 1110

TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS

.-..-WII;NIInl.

.

\

I

•

- -- · · · ·

· cndii,-

Age 1111d loob not lmporlllllt ...
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- All that Delete Holstein
wan ted In a man when she ran
ads In local newspapers was ·
honesty.
The ad the 34-year-old woman
ran appealed to readers: "Very
lonely, plain, depressed, country
lady, desires to meet gentleman
·
for friendship.
"Age and looks not Important. ·
Honesty Is."
Police say a known 127 men
responded, and Holstein dated a
few of them. _ ,
"She would meet them, date
them, and steal their check.boOi!a." says Pollee Lt. D.E.
Drennen of the Kanawba County
Sheriffs Department.
Authorities said they learned
that one man had 1011 his checks,
and that Holstein allegedly
forged them to open an account
at a local bank,
Holstein was charged With two
counts of forging and uttering,
then jailed In lieu ol a S2,000bond.

lhndiV, .-.,.y

\

,,

.
'

.

~.

..

••

··- ~-

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

,_.. _ _ _

I

... _ __ _ ,._

....

6.-

,

_.. _...
_.

........

.

•

_____

•
•,:

\'

··-:-· ... _
-........
....... 111111,.
ostr . .at•s.W.IIH

.... GasTIIIIo.
PAt IILL FOlD
812·2181

Middleport,

ALLIN'S ·
Hl.UUNG '
UMEITONE
AND DIRT
SPREAD
10 Ton Minimum

1600 IWian Water

·

· Dellwery

992-5275

�.

..

·-

21,1880

2-The
~~ \l1

4t

~][1, l'ill(ll!',

LAFF-A-DAY

Glveawlly

26,1990

. for Rant

.............CA.--..
..... . . .
All;w ...Nc,
nkwe.

rook

~, .......7,

t/1 11om
.... 1 , _ old.
., Dee' ad, ...,.... II -.....,

11
m
ge
,., lolo: 1bl0 ....... - .
MWir Nil ad lid on 1.1acn tot

aM l'n

Good with .ohltdron. I t , _
Ul7.

Television
Vi.e wing

2bt ~ .. ulll11oo lllld.
lniUtiCirllldt.'l14411 .... .

111 11 ·
-ar, - w-•
a ro!!lf.-c.
JIM,

-

.....

whlta - •· lt4-3'/1.2117.
2 nico beogl! niiiiH -

to 1
ntoo homo, Con hove tlio dog
box toollt4-441-::1052.

IT'S YOUR IIONEYII You con
..-o -ndiOII I - 1111910
or doublo wido . Col 1·
Klngabury Homo

eoo:7a-4041.
......

You..,.

~ 114-441-7&amp;11.

M

..... ttiG'InO. ,._ OI

Ul11110o, ..~ ......... , , , _

• .... oi-...AIIol011 thO toe. In of _.,..
:111 w......
Uvo In - ......
and - _ tho ......
lll,toq.
oaor· .nal
nd

acoJico
1 - _ , .old
outoldo •1&lt;111, toYIIblo
..., I

a-. .........

- ~nt

1111 - 1 4 . , . , I lor, 2luol

1472.

mulll ti»WW) . . to

44

32 Mobile HomH
for Salt

_____ ,

bum.., •••

•

•

.

• I

THURS.. JAN• 2i
·...,_ IVINM

a,..,a..
11r, 1 11o11t, ..,..,...
ClaM Ia
II'IIOOIJ • - a .......... fer,
.....
"--I

--.1. -

1:00fc=:=· Anti
eCJI !II .~ •

prowldld. .. . . . . ~ .11..
..1-4111.
.
.

cr=:s ....

·. l!llhlat,.. Sin ~riiiCIICO Yl

.

Miami
.
ltd •Itt TIN •110111;1

(l)

1;'~~1;1 ··

5 -pin to gln-y, will bo
lln.lll dogo,lt4-24H241.

r: :::.::-&amp;..,..~;~ .

6 montho Old ~otoNd Enolloh
Shophwd, bl~ · ond wnho,
fomolo, 304..7WMI lolvo

O.lem
I:OIIJlllevMJ Hl.. lllu

..· ;ii:w••

m. . . . ..

8 you~~g , _ . , . to giveaway, I
814-211'8Cl03.
.

[1!

1-112 mo'nth okl doa.
rier/pllrt O.c::h•huncl

homo. 8t4·742·2111.

Help Wanted

11

Llttlo CoMor'o ...... lo

oookl"'i

eg 11a1v. lnl8vld_.. tor d
..... ..........- pooltlono,

1top In ""' loeltlon or mall
to: 1'. o. Box 70, larbot rovllto, WY 251104.

Umole cloa, t ,_, to good
. Good wlUt child'"". 114- EA~ MONEY R-.g lloobl
32
:.:..:"..:t:::;·,.--"""';;-;--;--:- • 130,00Giyr ' - potontlol.
T9 good homo 01n.1lllomolo dog Dololll. (11 IOW87-IOOO Ell. Y·
opyld, 304-17WI71.
101ft.
.
1
iiilhllo 111n.11o cdll, opayld and · Eom S300 • POO pllr -k.
R-Ing Bocb II hoinl. Col t•
llttor trol··• 304 "75-3962.
I..Uo
"''ii'
115-4l'S7440 bt. ll-301
Lost lc Found
Elm $300..IOO por r
·•i:!booko at h-• ~ 1 t
LMI: Black 6 Whhl ~ hllred ra.u
-·-· '
ctt, woa~ng 0111Y, 1 lloil eolllr, 815-ol 7440 Ex1. Blat.
v.(oodland
Or vo
Vlclnhy. Eoay . World Excollont Poyl ,u.
RltworcUt4-448·tDII.
'
11mbl0 product• II homo,
Leat: ·Hound dog' whhl with for lnlonnotlon. 50W4-711
0 P;:"'::.n;-:u:::ncloy::;;.-;-;-:;;-:
13::.•,;;
8
- n opoto. t~ Bullvltlo Rd. :Eltl.::.;;-:3;;,
=aojoaF.:;81,..;.4-444-40t0...::.;_;;.:
.~==--~I Echoing Moodowo Rooklontlol
:- ·• Squoro bl·- to~• ~ Contw ond ICI' MR.OO 38 bod
..- _..- t.clllv
d ' Ill In ~old,- In -ntown,
., II cwrentfy -"'lj1
,..
OWird. lt-1-1* l~tlono lor~ Umo RN
G•lllpollo,
• · ..:
•• - -. - - - I 11.21
ond LPN'a.
811
•!!94! LPN
81_..,.':'
8 ·::.
~0 ft
. ____
par hour
a RN'o ito.oo
vardSale
.,... hour. lnt.,..od ...,._
7
_,.lnllon-Frl, ..tlanclt .. to
flU ou1 -lootlon. INing
1
,
,
.
,.... . II lido Umo to Ill W.
·.&lt;L y nl
M·-a.
· p·•• 1 Union M., Athlnl, Ohio ot call
,.., a 81 100 · n I14-IM-384t fat IWthor lntorAdvonco. DEADLINE: a:oo p.m. -ton
tho doy bolaro tho od lo to Nn.
Slondoy odiUon • 2:00 p.m. ,,.. .,Cologilel l'lnll _..to
Frkloy. Mondoy odltlon • 2:00 llgn up to ooH Avon. Oot A_,
ll"'"Soturday.
• - · lt4-IIZ·7tl0.
li· '!' wanted to Buy
Hourly Clinic Aldo .......,. part·
"'"'
limo In 1101 llonlly oloo~
Jlutk coro wRh or without olllcoo. Muot hlvo high 1
oqulv11oney; (IOOCI
303 Col • Larry Llvoly lt4- dlploml..:.
commu
lon oil llo; -urocy
•·
whh flguroo1 bo clopandobll, or.,
Old log hoUM or bam to oanlziCI, and Nlllble. Training
p n o - l n - Co. 304-878- ova- for _,u,. lndlvkluil
2540 CUI! oncl cilln up. .
~=-~
.w:.~:
Prlvoto lpftot• wll buy olnglo for 101n.10111 who Ia ~~~~
flmlly 11om• or ....a Nillol motiYIIod and con grow tn tho
unlto, Oall(potlo ANo, 114-444- -'lion ao , _ aitooo. Must
&amp;382.
,
hoYO lolloblo 1nni-Mton· bo

6!

eo•

_+'--•·------l

:;:==.;:·:.,.--,-.,.-=-"0'":"'-...,-,:-

::1,':,"

or.::..-·

=

~..,.

., OuiHo
willl"' to travel - - - ...,.
· rout~ne~r.'
_ . , W..J&amp;da•
lnd
Pre 1MO ll'ltita. Any aondlllon. I
._,b

car

ltHf2.248t.
be''\cpoctld.-~
-·
Cuh
Pokl.
lt4·11:1111Y • ,.
onnl..:;-lnd
..,,....,_ houn
_.
·•
To~·
PIM""or
inctucllng
..,........,_
W.nl
·
'~,
l o r - 1o P - Broa. It
tt87 lo.m. to . ::....., 111 Bauthoul Ohio, 311
4
p.m.
Rlchlond A"""'*Y
v - , - .31,
. , tiiO.
Ohio
~-''

oorj.pany In .,.. Tti~P llan1glmenl. 6 Salel. Atp..
AI,DOO to 171,000 per ytar.
Palontlol ·aornlngo. 114-4*
:not fat apl., Ulc lor Mr.

-.n,
EA!IN MONEY Roocllng looklll
130,000 yr. lnoorno polontlol.
Dotollo. (fiiGWII7"000 Exl. Y·
411 2.
"-·•o ~-ro Olvor Ouolll~
~I* ..ll~rlenc•
working with oldorly and or •
hNith rolotod llold. Muat havo
experience In offiCI 1klll1, have
nlllbtO tronoportatiOII and bo
willing to work flo1lblo hOU!O
Including wookllndo. An E.O.E.
Allum oppllclllon IIOitmorkod
~:."o;.·cit.~4t;Ji?· lal 722'

;u:;;.

:.:;:.:=.;:::..:=-=,:.:.:---,,_;:;=

Subatl..,.
_..,.
. kin
- an
·Ohio-..::.
• ·- ~ wiii':J
to ..,.
taln
of ucoUon
....,.
Aide CortHicatlon. Contact -

~~o~~monautlllllaeeet.

~--- • - --'~.
,_
Muot hoYo two

•••yooro ••·
porlonco, ol- drl- NOOid
oncl bo ablo to ~ · now COL
~ ond Dr\lli ScrMn. Homo
maot -llonclo.ltl 111 4122.

We-: lilllyllttor lor 3 yoar

old, Your honio. CtoiO to town.
114-444-1811 altor 4pm.

12

Situation
Wanted

Con fat lonlot Cltlziono. Homo
_
~- • .....;.!· s•u __

---• ·~ -

"

ftl ,_,.
. .h T.V. 0.... ........ 114-112-

-

·

Hove - 1111 lor 2 •lclorly ocoupanlo, mole"' llmolo In my
homo.lt4,..7·3402.

Han prlvato and llmi11rlvato
1001111 In our homo for aldorly

;;r;w':.,.~:;~

8oclful .,
-----·ro.
11..__..,.,.

~ Lots &amp; Acreage

z bod-

Oraclouo living. t . and

AduM caro In oty " - 30W711711 •
0~1 Mpluoint:r•no: I ropalra,
•
m ng
co ,_try.
lnounnoo
clllmo -lolomo,
m•lll,orl14-211-1
11. 814u. 1
t h. ~-· 1

t:r_.,.

8~t~4~31!1:!:85~5~7---,:-::-=·-:-:~ 1•114.
Aaldon Iorge buldlng toto,
mobllo ~ pormHIId1 public
wat.r, prtc• f'ilduced, 1180 loti
whh rlvor
Clydo
'
loWon, Jr. 304o671o

ftont;J;i

Rcnlals

thiOUIIh ....... 11.
FI..C IIIOIIth lrw to who qualifY. CoU It 4-112-m7.

EOH.

·

NlcoiJ lurnlohod .,... houoo.
Cl- to now ohopplng - ...
Suhobll lor t fit 2 ltol441-4331.
Ono bedroom apt, vory cloan,
new cerpt1, 1dula only,

304.en."t388.
for Rent
1 BA houNwtth m.. wn. 1 Cllr

41

5IOtf2 2nd St~ Middleport
For Appt. Call
992-6717

do bobrolttlng In my homo
IWir Hotzw Modlcil Contor, lt4441-74N.

to-.

rotoo, call

tor 111rm.te, 114 441 aao.

. Oependlble Htarin&amp; Aid
Hearln&amp; Evaluations For All Aps

a:

"m.

......
!4

Motorcycles

.

0 _ , . VIol Tubbllhlnktl

=

C::,m;r:';,,:r,.::

TNiw • CNwn City, OM, llor,
--.
.._
lum'ld.
W.ohorldl,.,; ~ Col
Hunlngton, 304 UH71L

·

IT . .fAy~ Hill TtiAT

till -.cR 210, Ea.-..

A$

1141111311.

Boats &amp; Motors

flnanc1JI

tor Rent

BUIInta

t bedroom lfii'Ut!lnl In dloport. Totaloloctrto. Wltor oncl

kitchen IUml-. 114-111 3817

'Veter1ns llemorial Hospital
, Julberry Hils, Pomeroy,

you

OL()ifl

for Sale .

GET "

/

'

you

l MUJT HAVE
TtiE JEc~ET of
eTf~rJA'- '(&lt;)UTH·

[&gt;oN'1 SL$p

AS _WtLL.
Two
cuto, llul!l'
-hiiMh
-.nlano.
hod ollolo,
Ncord l..uabll 1 II• 4:DD p.m.
304-8111-tlll.
.

_ .... •

...• I .. '

'. ~-., · · . \HAll~ S i·l~

..

,,

;'
~ '

1D 1tiDbyNl,.. IIIC.

18 VldllaCou .. , ·
7:05()) ...,.,_.
7:30 • (2) Fallllbo Feud
(I)CII pllukell!ll

(J) laa..,_llllftlftt Tonight

.,,,.,,~IDPIIdrii;J

11)1 Cronflre
all Night Cot!tt
7:36 (J) lentonl Anti loll
8:00 (J) MOYIE: 0.,... from /

~~:=.~
~ «?:.~&lt;
0111 MouH

~~tUM alidl trip IOJ
futurtatlc shOW houH in

~·&amp;l~ia~.
91 • i121 41 Moura CBS

takas a blckllage, on-stage,
and ofl-11110 IOal&lt; II Peul

McCa"ra'JiJ~
:301
Q
e
\1])
flulieii!IR
.11)1 PrlmeNewa
all CGIIge

53
=~=~Ailt=· -:;l:;::q::u::"::-:o::.::=
~

Buy "' 11111• ~-.
1124 E. Moln IINO~ P-roy.
Hotua: M.f.W.10:00 o.m. to I:GO
p.m.1 Su.2:/ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
114412

•

T::C,~::
ou

palcl. Old -

...
quU.,.
or1an1o1,
palntlngll, toyo, ., •niiN . ..,,
coli .eollocl 104..11 :1271, fit
104-aiHIM

e

en--.,........_.

from a enootY Hlatcirl. 1;1
VIdea

F;,. rr, Sl!fJtJl!
,, L ., e~.toc~

(J)

,..........
. . - . ....,,_, t-

a ci'ook a Chua

61 Farm EqUipment

1:00

PIH\ot)IUI evening """'

·-~~ ........bbh

Robin. Cl

a 0111o --~ =t:.

(l) (!I ..,_,, • l'oiiGI (PI2 •

Cllfiol, , ....., 1117.

I

01 I) Jtolrotla liked to help
In 11M1 I.W.tigltlon,oh
woman's llricidl. D

I

11J Larry King uvtT

((J . .d •• l.... ,,...ntt:

ThurldeJ ~ l'lgllta

(II Nat.....,_Now

lltrllllza- I boo oprlng
Ill, W/1111111 btcf hinl,llU AIW,
114 441 1411.
1 - ,..,.. _., ........ hDIII

--SfQ.

:..;. =:t,t ..:..ctl. ':;i

1:30 e (2) Grand Clrol Mne
ICCUIII Tom

IT's 60 QUI~T SINe&amp; 'THE

BIRD5 Fl-E'N 50U'Jl.:IFOP. •
THE WINTeR.

Ollwf Tnlctor with - 11 lnolr
. . -, ..... - -.l?il.
lt~44s.all.

63

·Livlltock

lot

itollnal. 1 1 -

AIWQI
tho -lptlooj
polcu.•Kollort'l-cy,

Oall ....., ,., prloo . . - . 114441 a11 ·

iiMiT---.
.........,......... . . . .
•~,_._ -

- " otovo, Will

...... llr ~-~

Mwlnl

I

71 AuiOI for &amp;ale

e

e

l

I

Tr ,•llspor I dl •on

(I) Cal age 11a111et6e11
91
il2l D- 'ntoma
lltGw Dave 110111 1 rad\CIJ
mixture of ollblll,
freewMellng ""tchee thll

ROIIIrtMft
(2) Gil L.A. Lew Kuzak
ata.with a Brltllh berristar.

Hay &amp; Grain

11.00. It 1141 1

:lilt..

aftalr wfth Janice. D

lncluetry Inside out.
10:00 (]) 700 Clull With Pill

414--11--

154

I WISH E!oiRDS DIDN'T
t:L..Y SOUIH R?R
THE WINT!=R.

of having Ill ·

turnt the entertainment

-·~ T
~...~...~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~uil,;,
;..,;.
IIIII,-

lllllo, · .101-LWIIII
Cirovolr 110. 114 Ill 2MD.

-

e (2) C...... .RebeCCa Irks

Sam by crowing lbout her

54 MllcellantOUI
·Merchandise

...... -

WHet Amarlcl A IOal&lt; II

our moat endurlitg trHt, thlt
EvergrHna. D ~

·

1 ·...... Uvtng -

laaketllll

QICDIIIIIIalltelball
OMwder, ... Wrote
18 Clturch . _ lllllon
8:05 (J) MOYII: lumt Olfltt(ng1
IPOI (2:251
1:30 (2) DIHtlfeltn,.,lllllll WOIId
Whitley encounter r1Cl1m

811R•a111• tAIIIIIIa':,oo,ILU- Rlvor
OIIG, 8 4-444-..
·

l·l'i

.'

e (JJ PHtt'illlnte Live 1;1

Newawatclt

Leatel II.. Updlle
\Ill .• il2l ~ LMdlttg
Greg Ia drlutalecl by the
rnunt.r of 1118 dlugh!8r. I;J

(J)

BARNEY
DID TATER EVEI
STOP SUCKIN'
HIS PORE

LITTLE

THUMB?
,'
,•, '

• illl ,... Twllgltt z-

......
10:30 IIJ
Ill ~-··
MOVII: Tile
leleiiiiPikllor(lld
- - (I'll (2:30)
cD MallalpiiCI Til-. (PI
3 01 I) Michell Ia emplOyed
by the Sunday Crulldlr •••

'

..

'MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTEI

...... .

EABI'

•uu
•xau
tAHI

••

fiOiml
.Q 105

11t11 ~ dtll"l are &amp;OOtllhllt be will
bolli t1te - or jadl of dlamonda. And
U the
lead II not belt, at
Wilt will be Wdin&amp; from bll

.HI

tJIO
.KQIH

'"•mmc!

.

Vulner1ble: Neltber

Dealer: Nortb

01t Wilt's epade lead declarer
played low from dummy, and Eut put
Ia ille jaek. Soutb - tbe ~ IJid
lid lite jlek of belrll. But tOok tbe
tilt&amp;. IDd returned the two of 1p1del.

Soollt

97 I&amp;CH Sli&amp;l, IPIIIPOIY, otiO

I NT

Openlnc lead: •• .

Dlcllrer -

ran tbe remalltlng
. ltelrlllll dttlllmy, dllcltrdli&amp; ....~

fovtll batrt. Weit bid to cit.
twice. He let p • dla!DO!!d, IDd lea to HJ, if Weat lllartu d~mllltd 1111
UtUe llllpeetla&amp; tlllt Sontb be1c1 the co, IJid the ddeatllntike fov ell'
10 muda Ia tbe elub lltit, be parted unoat1 trlc:b · IDII ,riittdt to •
witb 1 elub. Tbe Hd reealt from tbe belrt leacl, declarWwlll ~~ ~~~
belt
deftlllden'•llantlpolnt •• tUt declar· only- trlcb. , ....,.. f
~ fl~ clall trleb, tbree belrll from the lnrt&amp;'llt IQtllltriiDtelt lltit Ia'
. lhtl t11noe 1p111e1 for 11 trlcb. Need- certainly the wtmer bere.
•
01 tlte

we

.

~~~~~~2~~

4 ~tric
measure

ACFIOSS
1 ls(amtc

5~ccord '
.8 Backbone
Hurry oil ·
8 Arab
t3 Comma d
sultanale
14 Senseless 9 "Days ol
15 Dessert
- · and
1
16 "The Music
Roses"

11

dally ·
· 8 Boast
10 Crown
11 Muggy

,;1

•

l:l Actre!ls
18 Born (Fr.)
France!)!
t9 Bequest . 17 Fmmel 25 ti1ee~
recipient
t 9 Libyan
letler
2f Do penancP. pori
2(1 fycoon
24 Forbid
28 All

:20 1 enni!l
great

•
34 nem"'"
35 Fmnti&lt;:
ot Rr;PIIr ·
311 f1tiS!liRn

hJrrtPI

•iv~&gt;o
38 Custo111

27 Minino

29 Me.asuring 21 Rubicunrt

lind

:22 Gene!'li!! 29 Artilici~l
n~me
3t ApiP.c:n
2:1 !';mop
33 'MoqAmhr, ··
"' jAcket
c;IAt
'

·delilce
30 late
111m great
31 Holiday

39 Ge~etlr.
110 Pudu. P !I·
112 ~Mh inl"
114 !';miQ!JP' v

highlight
32 Means
34 Bleacher·
ile
37 Prepare
for war
38 EspousP.
41 Bllter
43 Venerale
45 Adversary
48 Thick·
willed .

-- .

Clio
.
. . .•
. .. .and
. . .~-.
furiilt ......,air
...

I

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS FORI
. NQN,ftQfJT GIO!IPS .

HUURS: Mon.-Fri. 12:00 to I p .m .
lewnley 9 a.m. to 1 2 noon

fOI INfOIMA'hOtt CAlL 992-3194

12-14-18·1 mo. ·

ASTRO-GRAPH

...... .

FhC

t

a(R) ·

.

BERNICE
BEDEO$q[..

....

..... ,....
I
n=*le!

eQAIIIf\1 IWII ' · ·:

P'ar•Jinl

. . . VItta

•Tanllflt._

al;: ::::·-

!llOiteORL

.t.J.. ...,
o.aCIIIIII

'

,,
.

-1-t-'--f;

.. •;
•.'
1

""

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
'

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the· two O's, etc. Slllf!lle letters,

aPoatrollbes, the lqth and formation or the words are all
hlnta. Eilch day the code letters are dtrferent. · .

!
'
.,~'
\
·r'

,
•
'
•

CRYnC)QUOTE .

1-11

.

'8 H J A

BVP

FVNQABWJA,
SXQ B :

SJBVPN

JSBPN

WZI.BV

'

Jl.K . · A.ILBJ

f' J W P .B V P A P

"IXPJAP

BQ K

· tiVQFV

NPWQB! "

KQFVAZL ' A

.j
•
•

VJI&lt;

••

QlU A

~

.

NPJK :
I J 0 X

"BZJABA"
(IN DISCUSSING AN

. y_..,•.,.• C.,.••••te1
I

,I

.;
r
r

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI 1!8- He~·• how to work It:

SZN'

,,

'

.,,'

'

.

.(2) (II .(JJ • • •

'

•

tltll-.t. .

11:00(J) llltidll •• And

. ."

•

Elrtl'l, and Fl'lllkll VIAl lnd
thlt Four Snrionl perform In

BUYING ALUMINUM CAI\IS. O~SS,
PLASTIC, COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM, 9AOIATORS AND MORE

.......
•

DOWN
river
3Take
on cargo

Of
Herman 1 Heunlla, An

..'

47 - Keri Te
Kanawa
48 Join In

Jr.

lncltidln9 , . . , Noone

'

-

Rock 'n' .AoH·ilalndl

Lecat.d llor• illedl1 lllew .... -.a Next
teW''•u tlu;ll•

·

· ·.

.AIH

majon.

1 On
2 llallan

· e \1]) Crt.Mwalllll TOitllhl
I:::'cfcw1110 11oc11 1

'

NORTH

•u7
.AQIOI
tau

IIPIIIhr lltdl ODe ttG-trumr:;..~ I
f_...s majOr 11111. Ute st liet lor
t1te d l f - II to try to take trlclll In
tlte
'l'llat wu we.t's thlpkin&amp;
w1te1t be led Ute lpMe four. A better

juniOr rtlfiGI1Ir. D
CJ) W..,.lgiOn Report

ConQreaaman Nick J. RaltaU,

'

BRIDOI

tlteory Ia IIIII since tlte opponeptllta~
lltoDil8d at oae no:trump, partaer bu ·
1-J.t · bl&amp;b-eard points. 'l'lilrefore, In

• (J) , . _•• ,......, '

Rana- :111 lnclt, whlta,
O•
I : ttl;
ou

.71. old
:llllnclt
-110.
·
~
w..a1111111
Eottr,

1.1crchandl58

of marralge w11en an old
flame retum• to town.

''"

-:

Ron~

SCIIAM-Lm ANSWIIIS .
,•• ~
Anchor-Mouth-Jumpy-Quorum-HURRY
The Highway Patrolman pulled the speeding car over,
wal~ up to thil driver and said, "I'll make this quick, I
can tell you're In ll HURRY."

wbt "IIIIOUid Welt lead aplnlt one
ttG-trump? ODe theory Ia lhllt when re-

CGurt 1;1 .
all Abllol Anti Coet8llo

1111 Hoftdl ,121. 4 whular.llkl
MW, tt000.114 Ul 001•.

75

..... O!

1=...

•

or at

..

e (JJ c:- Alhtlt

,or:,.~

::..l....,a
111,

:n;

1711-411Mdoyuncl
·•·
tro
a
":.. lor1·.,.,
Countr)' - . . , H4!rM Pin.
·
n, North cf Pornonoy.
a gR. country,
Y1nt011 oroo. . l.o!Ot.'!"'"lo. ...,., Coli
1
•
- ltiG
clhlgot-.
.,
-.:..;...,...:.;;;:;.;7;.;.471;.;.,;...- - - - palcl.
- h . wata:r
ltao _
clop. -

for Rent

t, 2, or ~ apt. ~~- por
All utolhloo paid, Dopollt
od. Contoct I "' Jlllt
114-441-7713, . , _

z ;Gll6polis, Olio 45631 '
- '

8 o.m. to I p.m. IIOn•.SII. &amp;t4..S·111!J. 127 3rd. Ave. 011lipolto, UH

l:J. .

or 114-8121131.

:i 1.(6141
446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, Boll 1213

•'

-L..--1. -.1.-1..--l'--l you develop from stop No. 3 bolow.

C!l MilcH.. IAinr
Nnrltlcu
.

Caun!J.-,\Jipllanoo
""" Ooocl
uud appM··cea, T.'v'......
Open

.;.;..;===-----

Apartinent

21

had been standing at a·--··.

I..

lp a taCtnter

(l)

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Woidd Ulco to atoy Wo'llcforly rent. Rim clel1d lnektl. ,_ -. - - - - - - - - lady nlaht llhlft, UDOrloncocl.
· ... 114-74W171, 51
uklorlult.
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. ·-

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

Ill

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1-11-'80-1 mo.

441-~444.

Ono ............ _..,,., Nloo.
2 Story S bo~, nf&amp; 102 112 Twonty.fourlh St., Point
clot&gt;roqulncl,HUDocOoplod3G4- Pl-.114-102......
.
171-2088 aftor I p.m.
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2!&gt;', ~ lor Nnt, rnlallr klr· for t pl...,, • •. pt..
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11011 Unfwaa ... wd epl.· 4 aooa. 6
- · 814-251-1307, 304-875- bath, Contorotly -od. Rot •
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1171.
FOU' bedroom houoo fat nnt, 4S
M 1"HI
No
pots
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1271, 81 4-nz-teto or 814-112aese.
11oorno fat rent· -•k or month.
In E. .orn School Dlotrlct. Nlo•, Stortlftl at ll20/rnor. 011111
a bodroo111. 1200. otuo uUINioo Holol.lt-I-I*HH.
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carpet, ltove lnd i'lfrige ... tor IUt,llaMn wv.
nrmniMI, ....
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nloronco ond dopoolt, 304.e7a. 46 Space for Rent
Whl~pOot w - 1 dryer
.lilt .
horvoot gcjtd, 11150. Thno bedroom houoo lor
t of!lco for - · ltOO
K~; Dryor, KINIICIN,
In PO!Roroy. Roforonco ri&lt;t\~iii.:J _ , , AI utllltllo Incl.-. .
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tow ortooo. Mollohln RUN. lt4-

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Business Services
CHUCK'S CAl WASH

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7:00'1 1/lc.• - • a Mra. Klnll

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••'came.l14ttiU24.
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814-2u.autl or 114...,....7102.

Employment Serv1ces

KRNUT

® ~ .dtta41,1Ye

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room apon- • Ylllat!O 1121. 8abo Adlllno, :104-8751 .... lind, 81. At. 184, 17,1500.
~~kid..:~ IOU.

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18 Wanted to Do

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Help Wanted

11

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ELOGIB

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\

ENEMY): HE HAS AU THE CHARACIERISTICS OF A
DOG - EXCEPT lOYALTY. -· SAM HOUSTON
1 If) 1!190 hoi KIN!I'ootuc .. ~ot•. inr

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:By The Bend
-

·The Daily Sentin·eJ

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.Forest Run United Methodist
.Women have program on nra.v~r
"Call to Prayer and Self .
benial" was the title ot the
program presented by Faye
Wlratns at the January meeting
of t11e Forest Run United Metho.
.dlst Women held at the home ot
Kathleen Scott.
The Quest Day Service opened
with the song "Take Time to be
Holy." There was various read.
lngs and scriptures and prayers
'lly members and the closing song
was "I Need Thee Every Hour."
'

'

Edith Sisson, president, conducted the business meeting In
which the devotional meditation,
"Bake More Bread" was given
as well as a scripture reading .
-from Matthew, chapter six,
·
verse 11.
OftiCEWS reports were given
and 31 sick and shu !In calls were
reported.
Refreshments were served to
ten members and guest, Betty
Jewell.

-lri~HoKI
Sup11 ~ow.l Spe~i1l1

.

life of fellow worker

S1800

25 INCH.
. COLOR
'

SIIB

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S$69
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.SAVINGS·..,.0,..,
QININP .ROOM.

Sending cards atld gltts were
Jeremy's maternal grandparents Maytord and Wilma Harris,
great grandmother: Beulah
Schultz, great grandmother,
Erma . Connolly, Laura and
Bruce Hawley, and A.J. ToWver.

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discuss loans tot education.
College-bQund seniOrs and
their parents trom all three
Meigs 1County high schools are
Invited to at lend. They are asked
to take their financial aid forms
to the meeting. Questions concernlng the workshop may be
directedtotheguldanceotflceat
Meigs High, 992-2158.

,,

care Pomeroy Nursing Center,
It was reporied that Bill
Chapman had major surgery at
Grant Hospital lh Columbus on
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McMurray
have moved back to Florida.
Mrs. VIrginia Gibson attended
the tuneral of her brother-In-law,
Richard Welby In Dayton
recently.
.
Miss Hellfii Jqng, Georgia,
spent the past week with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil
King.

VIrginia Dean. The best preteen
loser was Amy Smith and the
runner up was Kristin Torres.
, PeaYVInlngannouncedthata
new game on the heart will be
started ,next meeting, and Mrs.
Aleshire announced that oftlcers
will be elected In March.
A white elephant sale was
conducted during the meeting.
Norma Torres announced that
the Health Department wm be
having blood sugar. lestlng at the
center soon.
'
·
Ohio TOPS 570 meets every
Tuesday evening at 5 p.m. tor
weJab Ia ud meettn8 at 6 p.m.

IE~. 56,99.00

$.
$
59:
.

~~~~~.~v..
S•ls,
Fhtleh _ ·
·

....:.Uoht Oek

•. · OAK CHAIRS

'

g,,, $459

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REG.

(' .

sn 19.00 ,CHINA CABINEt
I.

-:-62'' t,ength

-6 Do0rl;· 1 D111W.er
-Mirrored "Back

-Light,tj ,

g,,, $899.
I

-6 Upholatenu;l Chlirt
'

'

'

-btend•
to 7.., Foot
'
'
-+Dar!l Qak' Flniah
~

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:liESTLE TAILE . ·
2 ARM/4 SIDE CHAIRS
Inlaid Wojld Top

''''$899
leg. S379 - OAII

TRESTLE TABLE

REG. 5979.00

DR~LEAF

UILE
2 SOUD OAK CHAIRS

S•I•$J-79

Lamln•ted 1;op

I

g,,, $299

..

Jim aad ,Darla 1'ltofnu.

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modify the ~orne, at the reilt~r·s"
expense, to meet the needs ot the
handicapped Individual.

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Murphy.
.·
In regard to families with
children the law says that only
bulldlnjl~ which were ·built
The owner may make certain strictly tor senior citizens, such
requirements of the renter, such as The Maples complex In
as the drawing up of plans and Pomeroy, will be exempt ·from
hiring ot a reputable contractor . rentlng 'to tam Illes with children.
to niake the modifications.
Also, certain percentage ratios
Also, the owner may require must be tnet by building owners ·
that the renter put away a certain as tenants move out and families
amount or money on regular with children have opportunity
basis to ensure, within .reason , to move ln.
that the premises )le restored to
their original condition. For
Enforcement provisions In the
examjlle, a doorway widened to Fair Housing Law have also been
accommodate a. wheelchair beefed up to give HUD more
would not have to be narrowed authority In discrimination
When the wh~lchalr oound per- cases, and to expedite and
son moves out, since a widened streamline the discrimination
doorway would not affect the complaint process.
next tenant's enjoyment· of the
Kim Shields, Meigs Director ot
home.
Development, conducted yesterStarting March ,13, 1991, sev- day's .meeting w)llch Included In
era! changes will exist with the audience, county oftlclals
regard to new structures. Those and 'community and business
changes were also explained by leaders.

Sluggish 18st- quarter leaves
1989 growth rate at 2.9%

•

.$U~~R · B~WL ~AVIN~S

. ON OUR
ROOM .SUITES!

WASHINGTON (UP I) - A ofl989, GNP Increased 3percent,
slowdown In personal consump- .or $30.4 billion.
lion spending helped push the
In another repo~t. the governnation's economic growth !o a ment said orders tor durable
sluggish 0.5 percent annual rate goods rose 2.5 percent, or $3.2
In the fourth quarter ot 1989 tor a
billion, In December to $133.5
2.9 percent rate tor the year, the .billion, but showed the lowest
government said Friday.
annual Increase In three years,
The Commerce Department,
up 5.9 percent tor th~ y,ear.
In Its first estimate ot fourthMost ot December's Increase ·
quarter economic growth, said
In durables, those goods ex-.
the $5.2 billion rise In tbe. gross
peeled to last more than three
national product was the lowest· years, was concentrated In
quarterly Increase lnnearlyfour strong gains tor new orders. for
years. During the third quarter
transportation equipment, which

1

.$629

l

·By NANCY YOACHAM ·
Sentinel News S&amp;alf
Amendments to the Federal
Fair Housing Law were ex- · •
plalned Thursday · to several
Meigs_ County residents In a
luncheon meeting at the Meigs
senior Citizens Center.
Caro~n Murphy, of the Houslng and. ... Urban Development
Area Ottlce, Columbus, and
Harry Jennings, of the Ohio .
Department of Development's
Off!£e __q!, ...!&amp;J;,l!.L ,Cp'{ernment
services, addressed the topic.
', The amendments became effectlve In March of last year,
· explained Murphy . Now, In add!tlon to preventing such dlscrlmlnation as race and sex, the law
also protects the handicapped
· and families with children.
In preventing dlscrlmlnatlon
of the handicapped, the law
requlres that an owner of an
already existing rental unit permil a handicapped 'renter to

Llminlted l:op-Dropleaf·

SOFA
&amp; CHAIR
Country Chlmp11ne

BUNOI N. TIIOIUI

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REG. S719

i

ex~~~~J:4 . tQ,_·. ~f}f,g~;. ~esi4~.~ts

Ill. •nt.ot-OAI .
TABLE &amp;4 SOLID

CHINA C:ABINEJ
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-&amp;0" Length

By NANCY V9ACHAM
on Wayland II\· an effort to they continued CPR until WaySentlael News S&amp;att
dislodge the tood , but Wayland land revl ved. He was In a dazed
The morning ot January 11
collapsed In the process.
· state when Meigs Emergency
seemed like "just any other day"
Moon and the rest ot the crew Medical Services personnel arto Ohio Department of Transporknew Immediately tllat their rived to take him to the hospital
tation workers as they left the
unconscious co-worker and whete·i t was d lscovered that he
highway garage at Chester enfrie nd was in big trouble - he really was sick - with walking
route to their respective duties
was minutes from death unless pneumonia:.
throughout Meigs County.
they could save him. "He was
Naturally his co-workers viBut for one guard rail repair already turning blue. " Moon sited him In the hospital as soon
crew, the day would turn out to be says. "We couldn't even find a as possible and told him wnat
"one like no other:"
·
pulse.''
happened, but Wayland had no
the repair crew .of Phillip
recollection, and still has no
Moon, Virgil Carl, Donald
Of course by this time, Jacks . recollection, of anytb"lng other
Folmer, Marcella Jacks and had already radioed the ODOT than Moon's Initial attempt to
Charles (Frog) Wayland, were office where an office worker had perform the Heimlich Maneuver.
working on U. S. 33 near the In turn, called for medical help, He realizes however that he
Meigs County one-mile marker . but this was one . of those
"would have been a goner" If his
While on a morning break, situations when you can't walt co-workers had not been able to
Wayland choked on a bit of food for the experts.
help him.
and at that moment, Wayland
Trying to remember · what
His co-workers on the other
and his co-workers were caught they'd been taught In their · hand, say thatlf a CPR Instructor
up In a life and death situation ODOT-sponsor-ed safety and first _. had been grading them on their
that no one could have aid courses, Moon, Carl and
work, · 'we'd have failed, " says
anticipated.
Folmer " began the llfe.savlng Folmer. "We weren't sure we
Wayland, upon realizing he cardiopulmonary resuscitation were doing anything right. "
was choking. rnotloned franti- process on Wayland . And fortu'
It seems to Wayland and
cally to Moon, the foreman of the nately, they were successful In · everyone else that has heard the .
cr~w, Indicating with a pointing
their efforts.
story that they did everything
!Inger to his throat that he was
For some reason wblch neither just right. They saved the life of
choking. Moon Immediately per- of the three gentlemen can their co-worker and friend .
formed the Jielmllch Maneuver explain, the food dislodged and

Vair . Housing Law changes

51 . .

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meat, and Carolyn Murphy, representing HUD,
talked with Kim Shields, Meigs Director ot
,Development. Shield&amp; conducted Thursday's
session.

ADDRESS ISSUE - FoUowlng Thursday's
luncheon meetlnr: at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center In which amendments to the Federal Fair
Housing Law were dl8cu88ed, Harry Jennings·,
seated, from the Ohio Department ol Develop-

.·sUPER -BOWL

JEREMY.CONNOLLY '

211 Cento

A Multimedia Inc. N•wJPaper

ODOT crew saves

•

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· leDiillll 1Mb were Chalky and 1

. _ . . llijltuss, and Carrie
_ . . , , .-eat grandparents,
,_., 1;111
• Jennlter, and Greg
I!Hll!lr .therlne Mees, an~
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2 Soctlono, 14 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 26, 1990

t •

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•.Brandl !'llcole :Thomas re~ntly celebrated her fourth :
birthday with a party at the home
ol her parents, John and Cheryl '
Tllomu, Pomeroy.
I·
- A "Winnie the Pooh" theme
was carried out wltb cake and ice ,
Cl'ftlll belllg served · to the :
followlnf guests, Jim and Elea- 1
--·nor Tbomas, Ed and · Carol .
. KeDJ*br,, grandparents, Dan !
aDd Karea Beam, Usa and
Alhlee Blluaders, Chuck, Beth,
J)lvtd SCiott, and Stephen
Kin ,.,.• Debbie and Mike I
~ and Autumn .
_ . Brandl's brother,

A6Uft,

a1

-Remote Control
-Stereo
. Our Reg. S229S

Sll• ,. $3l7-.,·- ·

.

birt~day

•
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PROJECTION TV

-Remote Control
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TQPS welcomes new members
Two new members were welcomi!d Into OhiO TOPS 570 at the '
recent meeting of the group held
at the coonbunters lodge on the ·
Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Lennie Aleshire opened the
meeting with prayer and pledge.
It was reported that NeiUe
prover, MBrY. Martin, and Ola 1
Stnclalr were Ill.
Vlrgmla Smith, assistant Se- ,
cretary, gave that report.
The trult basket was· won by '
Charlotte Smith and the surprise "
aJft was won by Nancy Manley. ·
· The best l~r wws Suzie
Dreyhel and the runner up was 1 •

'

OUR ENTIRE STOCK IS ON SALE.
:LISTED BELOW ARE JUST A' FEW OF
OUI SUPER BUYSlt ·

Clear lonllht. Low In upper
208. Sunny Saturday. Wrh
near SO.

4924

-Sylvania
Supersetl Remote
Control
.
.
.
.
-:-,On-Scretn Tuning ..
· ·
~ · ~3 CabiR.t StYles

~arrisonville -~appenings
Terry Lynn Gilley, Otway,
~lied her grandparents, Mr.1
and Mrs. Russ Eshelman, re-'
cently. Mrs. Eshelman also re-'
celved a New Year's greeting.
trom her adopted daughter,:
Marilyn Wikel, ot Witt, Ill. and
Mrs. Easter Dawn Clegg, ot,
River Dale, Ga.
Lola Clark and Frances Alktre
attended 'the funeral ot their
aunt, Mrs. ~ va Lutz, In Lancaster on Frlilay afternoon.
·
Mrs. Frances (Knopp) Sand-,
ers bas been moved trom a
Columbus Hospital to the Ameri-

Pick 3
2.4

CONSOLE T·ELEVISION

Financial aid worlcshop set
A tl•clai aid workshop wllJ
be held af Mel8s .High School ·
Monday at 7 p.m., John RedOvtan, Jr., guidance counselor,
pnounced today,
i
Cheryl Roush, director of fl.:
nanclal aid at the University ot
Rio Grande, will conduct the,
11,1eet1ng. Sharon Werry ot Bank
~e In Athens wlllhbe present to,

''

Page 3.

'TELEVISION

.

. .Jeremy C6m\oUy, son ot MI.
chael and Sheila Connolly, cele. "lfrated his .sixth birthday re;
.cently at his parents' home In
·Tuppers Plains.
·
, A ''Super Marlo Brothers'!
·theme was carried out with a
theme cake and other refresh:
.ments being served.
:,
. Attending were Jeremy's
·brother, Christopher, paternal
,grandparents, Ted and Marg~
·CoDJIOlly, Debby Misty, and
. Travis Lyons, Arlene, Jason, and
.Amanda Jo Parker, Brian and
·Tonya Connolly, Robin and Jlmi
:nile Putman, Beverly and Brad·.·
: ley Wilford, Sue and Andrew
· ·Rollins, Trennla, Robert Jr. !
•Lori, and Jennifer Harris, Ryall
· Q~wley, Erma Jean and Darlene
- ·Connolly, Bren.d a King, •Sherrl,
:Tttrll!IY, and B~andy Blsselli
·Kurt Bennett, and Debby anci
·Co~ Youpg.'

...

'flMndev, Jenulry 21. 1880

19 iNCH COLOR

Swimming was enjoyed priOr' prize was won by I.Jnda
,to the J~uary meet,l ng ot the
Broderick.
·M iddleport Child Conservation· · Hostesses were Helen BlackLeague held at the Royal Oak• ston and Peg Harris.
;Resort.
'
Members atiendlng were Ann
During the business meeting It
Colbu~, · Kitty Darst, ·Nancy
.was stated that pamphlets · on
Morris, Linda Broderick, Tracy
;!eenage ~!regnancy are to be O'Dell, Peg Harris, and Helen
:dlstrlbu led throughout MiddleBlackston.
port and Pomeroy.
The , February meeting wliJ
. The hostess gift was won by
focus on child safety:
·Tracy O'Dell and the traveling'

Connolly
:birthday
••

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Pick 4

Middleport CCL meets·

Thomas

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Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
lose tllt
to· Purdue

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rose 8.7 percent, or $3.2 bllllon, or
$39.9 billion. Durable goods
gained a revised 4.9 percent In
November.
Economists said the two reports seem · at odds, with a
stronger-than-expected showing
from the nation's manufacturers
In' Dec_ember amid a general
econollllc slowdown.
"Taken together, they seem to
tell different stories," said RobertDederlek,chleteconomlstat
Northern Trust Co. In Chicago.
Continued on oa1re 10

Congress urged ;to .take fresh
look at acid rain legislation
WASHINGTON, O.C . - ConNAPAP, which took 10 yean
gressshouldstepbackandtakea
and costi $500' mllllon, Is to .be
treih look ilt J)endtna acid rain
completed by late summer.
legl$1atlon, according to a senior
In lestlmony betqre the Se!J&amp;Ie
electric utility official trom the
Energy and Natural Resources
'
·
Committee, DowdsaldthatgradMidwest.
A.' Joseph Dowd, senior vice
ual awareness Is building that the
presldllllt and general C&lt;!URSel ot' environmental benefits necea· the American Electric Power
sary to , ·support 1 this · costlY
Servlct: CorporatiOII, headquarlegislation "simply are not
terec1 In Columbus, said that
there." Dowd waa part of a panel
enactment ot thts legislation
that Included .the ljdmlnlatrator
should be deferred 1/Dtll Con; · of the U. S. Eivlronmental
~· ca11 see the COII·beneftt
Prollictlon Afency (EPA) and
&amp;nllyeee being prepared by the dtrector of NAP1.P testif&gt;'Jng
National Aeld Precipitation As·
on Senate Bl1116!l:i
·
seument Program (NAPAP).
'.'Tile · politics nave moved

I-

ahead ot the science," Dowd
claimed. He said that NAPAP
studies show that lakes In ihe
Northeast- "the principal tocus
ot the acid rain controversy" would not benefit sltnltlcanlly
trom the massive cos II Involved
In the pending lerJsltitlon, which
calls for a 10-mllllcm-ton reductlon In aultur dioxide emlsllons
by the year 2000.
"NAPAP baa conctuded that
such an emllllolll reduction
would reiluce the percentage of
acidified lakes In the Northeast
trom only five percent to .four
Continued .on page 10

..

a new-fouad respect·for each other and the value
ot human IUe. Ailolberemployee, MareellaJacks,
shared the experience with her co-workers but
could not be pret~eallor the picture.

A LIFE SAVED- After experleaclng a life and
death sltuatloa together, ODOT employees Virgil
darl, PhUIIp Moon and Donald Folmer, lett lo
rlcht In back, 8J!d Charles (Frog) Wayland, have

Eyewitness testifies in Stacy trial
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
-A witness who was 10 years old
when a Huntington pollee ottlcer
was shot to death said Thursday
that even after eight years, she
has no doubt Bobby Dean Stacy
killed him.
''The only person I saw that
night was Bobby Dean Stacy and
the other persOn lying on the
ground, " testified Angela Nor·
man, who then lived near the
scene ot the slaying.
·
"He Is the one that killed (Paul
Harmon)," she said.
Stacy, a Columbus;. Ohlo, native, Is standing ·trial tor the
second time on charges ot using

Harmon's own service revolver
to shoot the oftlcer to death In
1981.
' Stacy was convicted In the first
trial, but the state Supreme
Court threw out the verdict,
cl ling technical errors.
Norman, who has since married and changed her last name,
Is legally blind In her right eye.
Her grandfather, Ted Norman,
also testified Thursday , saying
he heard a gunshot but could not
Identity Stacy.
In testimony Wednesday, Huntington pollee ottlcer Randy
Byard slild he was close by when
Harmon, was killed: He said he
heard a shot, leaped In his cruiser

Taft renews call

Deputies investigate
mishap; no·one hurt

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert Taft II. beiet with ·
pressure to seek a lesser office,
Thursday renewed his call tor a
· Deputies ot the Melg&amp; County
series of deb&amp;tes starting In Sheriffs Department are InvestiMarch with-his opponent, George gating an accident that occurred
·Volnovlch.
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
According to the report, Dan tel
At a press conference•. Tatt M. Dodson, Rock Springs Road,
also repeated bla ~uest for a $1 Pomeray, ll(as backing trom a
mdllon apencllll&amp; lllnlt for each parking space and did not aee a
gubernatorial cllldldall! In the vehicle parlr.ed In front of the
GOP primary, and callecl'for no S&amp;llabury township bulldJna. The
negative televlatoo advertillng.
parked vehicle was owned by
'
'
Harold Brinker, Bailey Run
A spokesman tor Volnovlch Road. ,
said tile tonner Clewland mayor
Moderate damage was listed to
will debate during the primary Dodson's 1986 Chevrolet truck,
campaign and added "we're and there was no. damage
eoln&amp; to try to work something ported to Brinker's 11173 Ford
out" on a apeadlng !Imitation.
pickup.
However, "aald apolrelman Curt
Deputies are also lnvestlgatlq
SteiJ~r, Taft's call for no nega· · a report from Terry Hutton,
ttve campaigning Is "silly"
Beech Grove Road, Rutland. He
' '

re-

.,_1

•

.... ..

,;

. ' .....

...

_.

and raced to the street corner
where Harmon lay bleeding.
On Tuesday. a West Virginia
state trooper testified to finding
H4rmon's bloodied revolver
under an armrest In a 1971 green
Buick that was registered In
Stacy's name.
Thqrsday was the third day of
tes tlmony In the trial, which Is
expected to take 10 days. Prosecutors are expected to continue to
present their case Friday.
A jury made up of Mercer
County residents Is hearing the
case, after Cabell Circuit Judge
Alfred Ferguson · ruled there
were not enough Impartial local
people to get a talr panel.

reported that around 2: 30a.m. on
Thursday someone entered his
residence by breaking out a rear
window and after entering, and
upset the turnl~ure.
Raymond ·Smith, Hysell Run .
Road, reported that someone ran ·
over hts renee sometime Wednea .
day nlfht or early Thursday
·mornJna. He also reported that
hll neighbor's mailbox had been
run over.
Sh~lff Jam111 M. Soullby
reports that Larry R. Grlmrz! Sr.,
Mason, W.Va. wu charged With
driving under the Influence,
driving UDder auapeulon, 8lld
talliq to maintain reasonable
control. He poated bond fllr
appearance In Melp Co11n~

···~--- - --- --··-

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