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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April18, 1988

r------People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
Untied Press International
OLYMPIA DUKAKIS DAY: Academy Award winning actress Olympia Dukakls was cheered
Saturday by more than 150 friends, fans and
politicians In her hometown of Montclair, N.J., on
"Olympia Dukakis Day ."
Dukakls, named best supporting actress last
week !or her role In "Moonstruck," was brought
to tears dur.tng a ceiebratton she called, "So, so
satisfying." She added, "It's quite wonderful to
see so many faces I know. Sometimes you're so
Involved In what you're doing, you don't realiZe
how people are taking you in."
Montclair Mayor Robert Jackson said, "We're
all walking around now with our chests sticking
out." Deputy Mayor Betty Jane Ricker said,
"People bump Into her In the A&amp;P. We've been
enjoying her for years, and now the whole country
ca~:~ enjoy her."
CASHING IN ON LANb: Johnny Cash took his
act before town officials In Hendersonville, Tenn.,
to seek permission 'tbdevelop95acres of farmland
he and his wile own. The request has already been
turned down by the planntngcommlsslonbutCash
showed up at a meeting last week to discuss the
matter with the Board of Mayor and Aldermen.
"We're talking about a qilallty development,"
Cash 5'!ld. "The property means a lotto June and I
but ... It has outllved Its usefulness as farmland."
The Cash plan calls for building 78 homes as well a
setting aside 17 acres for commercial development in the Nashville suburb.
Some residents showed up to lobby against the
development but Cash, like a good American,
wasn't offended by the dissent. •'I thank God that
these people can come here to oppose me," he
said, recalling a recent trip to Poland. "That
country Is run by communists·. People are
starving for food. I got to thinking about
Hendersonville while I was In Warsaw. I'm glad
we can speak olit."
HALL MONITORS DAUGII'J:ER: Marjorie
Hall says she reacted like most mothers would
react when she learned that her daughter was
dating Mlck Jagger. She's the mother of Jerry
Hall, the model who has had two children with the

Alta Ballard and Lora Damewood hosted the recent meeting
of the Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, held at the Ballard
home.
Laura Mae Nice opened the
meeting by reading. "One Solitary Life." The Lord's Prayer
pledge to the flag were given
nison, and Inzy Newell and
lma Whlte gave ·officers'
reports. For roll call members
named their favorite spring
flower, It was noted that on
behalf of the club, Erma Cleland,
Opal Hollon, and Ethel Orr had
placed flowers on the grave of
Letha Wood .

Betty Roush was reported ill
and the Injuries of Sadie Trussell
were noted.
Erma Cleland read "God
Created The Earth for the Four
Seasons" and Opal Hollon read
"Who and What is a Senior
Citizen."
Games were conducted by
Laura Mae Nice and Marcia
Keller.
The door prize was won by
Charlotte Grant. Refreshments
were served to those named and
Margaret Tuttle, Mary K. Holter, Pauline Ridenour, Goldie
Frederick, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek, Margaret Amberger,
and a guest, Bonnie Landers.

FISH vs. FISH: Former isolationist congressman HamUton Fish Sr., the one-time scourge of
Franklin Roosevelt, Is urging voters not to elect
his grandson to Congress. Hamilton Fish III Is
running for Congress In Westchester County
outside New York Qty but his 99-year-old
grandfather has been writing to the local
newspapers, saying young Fish Is way way too
liberal for the job.
•
Fish Sr. points to his grandson's edlto~shlp of
The Nation, a progressive publication that he says
"appeases communists." The Fish family has a
long and rich Republican history, with members
having served in Ulysses S. Grant's admlnlslra·
tion, as governor of New York and as senator. The
youngest Fish Is running as a Democrat.
WANDERING WALTER: Walter Cronkite
discusses his fading relationship with CBS In TV
Guide and talks about how you might be seeh•g
him on another network someday. Cronkite's
exclusive $1 million-a-year contract with CBS
expireS on Nov. 4, dropping his pay to $125,000 and
reducing his duties to consulting.
Since CBS will no longer be able to restrict his
appearances, Cronkite might develop some
projects for the competition. "Some of the offers '
would Include ABC and NBC," he said.
Cronkite makes It clear he would like to be part
of CBS presidential campaign coverage but says
he hasn't been invited. "I'd like to be Involved but
It's their candy store,'' he says.

Riverview PTO has meeting
Dr. Dan Apllng, superintendent of the Eastern Local School
District, met with the Riverview
PTO recently to discuss the
upcoming school levy to be voted.
on in May. Approximately 90
parents, students and teachers
at tended the meeting.
Mus1cal selections were presented by the school choir under
the direction of Maxine
Whitehead.
School announcements. as well
as planned end-of-the-year
school trtp·s were announced by

Grace Weber, head teacher.
Reports were given by the
auditing and nominating committees. Special recognition was
given to all grandparents in
attendance. The sixth grade won
the attendance banner.
· Refreshments were served by
the mothers of second graders.

A 1984 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he joined the
Navy in December 1986.

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DAILY SENTINEL

Daily Number

Demjanjuk guilty
Page 7

Page 3

894
Pick 4

8943

Clear tonight. Low In mid
30s. Mostly sunny Wednesday.
Highs In low 60s.

•

•

e I at y
42

~~~N;o· ~~~~==============~P::omeroy-Middleport,

enttne
1 Sect;on, 10 Pages ·. 26 'cent•

Ohio, Tuesday, April 19, 1988

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy
Rizer
Village CounCil vacancy
. By NANCY YOACHAM
&amp;mtlnel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Village has a new
counclln\an and a new village
• administrator.
Franklin Rizer was voted In as
councilman at Monday night's
regular village council meeting,
to fill the position created by
John Anderson who resigned last
week.
Rizer was nominated. by Councilman Bruce Reed. Reed said he
had already spoken with Rizer
and that Rizer had agreed to take
the position if council voted In his
favor. It was pointed out by
Mayor Richard Seyler that Rizer
has served on council before and
would be familiar with council
business. Rizer was unanimously
approved by the members of
council present for the meeting. ·
Councilman Bill .· Young was
CAMPAIGNS IN MEIGS- For the third time In
for Tax Justice, a national effortto close loopholes ' absent. A little less than three
years remains of the term which
recent weeks, David Wilhelm's campaign for the
which allowed corporate giants to pay no federal
Rizer will fill.
Democratic nomination to run for 10th District
Income tax. He has also served on the staffs of
Congressman brought him Into Meigs County
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, Sen. Paul Simon and
Monday. Wilhelm, a native of Southeastern Ohio,
Sen. Joseph Blden. In the photo, Wilhelm, who
received his BA degree from Ohio University
resides In Athens, ·eJCchanges comments with
where he was named outstundlng undergraduate
active Meigs County Qemocral and a former
In the department of government. From 1985 to
Meigs County Commissioner Don MuDen.
A delegation of some 200
1987, he served as executive director of Citizens
. ·•
parents and 'patrons of the
Portland and Letart Falls Elementary Schools was on hand for
a meeting of the Southern Local
School District Board of Education Monday night.
Parents indicated they attended the meeting because they
understood that the board of
education was making plans to
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Gore, trailing In the polls, areas, and they close at 9 p.m. turn both the Portland and Letart
Democratic presidential - canditoday picked up the.endorsement EDT.
dates made a last pit~h for
of the NewYorkPost, which said
After twu weeks of campaignsupport today in heclic New York
In an editorial that "a vote for Ing almost exclusively In the
City, and early voter turnou.t was
Gore Is a vote for the survival of Empire State, the three Ciindlreported heavy in the state's
the Democratic Party's moder- dates scheduled only a handful of
ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) primary that could be pivotal in
ate wing." Gore also has the stops today .
The
hijacking of Kuwait Airways
determining who the party will
backing of New York Mayor
422 entered Its 15th day
Flight
run for the White House.
Edward Koch.
Dukakls, recognized by all the
today,
·.
but a leading Kuwaiti
With sunny and cold weather
Polls opened as early as.6 a.m.
public opinion surveys as the
newspaper said the 31 hostages
over much of the state, MassaEDT In some parts of the state, front-runner, for the most part
be freed within 24 hours
could
chusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls
and Bea Dolan, the executive wrapped up his effort Monday
without
authorities meeting a
and Sen. Albert Gore of Tennes- director of the Board of Elections with a barnstorm lng tour
demand for the release of 17
see met morning commuters in
In New York City, noted that through the state. Jackson and convicted terrorists jailed in
New York City.
polling places were busy during Gore, meanwhile, concentrated
Kuwait
At Pennsylvania Station in
the morning rush hours.'
on New York City.
"The .breakthrough comes as a
Manhattan, commuters
"The iurnout is heavy alresult
of the Intensified efforts
emerged from the subway to be
ready," Dolan said. "There'll
Some polls have shown Jack·
exerted
by Kuwait at a high level
met by Gore, as well as volun- probably be a slowdown, and son cuttlng Into the Dukakls lead
with
sister
states " Al-Qabas
teers for civil rights leader Jesse
then It will pick up again. But It statewide, while Gore has main·
newspaper
said
cuing Informed
Jackson passing out campaign
was heavy as they were going to talned In the past few days that
sources.
'
leaflets. Dukakls made a stop in
work."
the undecided voters were break·"There are Indications that the
Queens.
Polls opened later In other Ing In his favor.
ordeal Is approaching a happy
~

. John Anderson has been appointed by the mayor to fill the
new position of village administrator. Voting by council was not
necessary to hire Anderson.
The position ofvlllageadinlnis·
trator will replace the village's
Board of Public Affairs arid was
created in an effort to deal more
effectively with problems facing
the village regarding EPA mandated upd aling of the Pomeroy
sewage system. Duties of the
village administrator encompass the scheduling and superv1§·
lng of employees In all village
depariments, Including water,
sewage and street. Anderson's
office will be in village hal I.
It was reported that a problem
with Pomeroy's water system
has developed and Is taking
precedence at this time over
sewage problems. Mayor Seyler
reported that one of the village's
water pumps stopped working
last week and that the village is

now dependant upon one welL
Efforts are underway to get the
other well back Into operation the
mayor said, and fortunately, no
water shortages have been
experienced.
A resolu tlon was passed by
council approving the financing
for Pomeroy Fire Department's
new truck which was just recently delivered. The loan for the
truck was handled through the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company. Passage of the resolution
was a routine procedure in the
loan process.
A donation of $500 to the
Pomeroy Youth League was
approved. Each year council
appropriates $500 Into the budget
for the youth league.
Finally, two locations in the
village where street lights are
out and need replaced were
reported. It was also reported
that one of the gates at Beech
Grove Cemetery needs repaired.

schools Into three grade schools
- one of them grades one
through three and the other
grades four through six . .
Parents Indicated they were
agalns1 transporting the students
the long distance from one school
to the other. On the other hand, it
was reported that some of the
teachers in the two schools have
a very low count of students,
some as loW as six .

The board moved Into executive session several Urnes during
the meeting, Treasurer Denny
Hill reported, to dlscussk the
problem.
I he board agreed In an attempt
to reach a solution satisfactory to
the parental group, to keep
grades one through six in both the
Portland and Letart Falls
Schools and to use a double class
Continued on page 5

Hijack stalemate continues .

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Candidates .make final .pitch
in NY;· Post endorses Gore

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Charles E. Davis
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serving aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Lynde McCormick, homeported in San Diego.

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African
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Rol11ng Stone singer, and mother and daughter
will appear together Wednesday night on "Like
Mother. J,.lke Daughter" on the Lifetime cable
network.
"I was worried," Mrs. Hall said In recalllng
when she learned about Jerry's romance with
Jagger, "but he's really a find , a gentleman, and .
he' s excellent with the children."
Jerry admitted she also was a little skeptical
when she took up with Mlck. "When we first
started dating I thought, 'If this lasts five years,
It's a miracle. )3ut we get on pretty good and I'm
real easy going. I think I got that from my

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WASHINGTON (UPI) -PresIdent Reagan said today the
situation In the volatile Persian
Gulf appears to be "quieting
down" and he hopes that no
further U.S. military action Is
needed to keep it that way .
Reagan, who has held out the
threat of further action if U.S.
Interests are threatened, also
said that nine U.S. ships were
searching for a missing U.S.
helicopter and Its two-man crew,
I

the only apparent American
casualties from Monday's In·
tense battling In the war-torn
rtglon.
U.S. jets, ships and Marines
blasted two Iranian oil platforms
early Monday, retaliating for
renewed mine laying that damaged an American warship last
week and crippled or sank six
Iranian vessels that fought back.
''There are nine ships right
·now trying to find the answer to

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that," Reagan said, when asked
for any news on the missing
helicopter had been shot down by
Iranian forces.
But asked If he expected a
further show of U.S. military
force, he said twice the situation
seemed to be sta blitzing.
"It seems to be quieting
down," Reagan said at a photo
session at the White House. "We
hope It continues that way."
Reagan, meeting with GOP
congressional leaders on the
trade bill, also said he did not
think the United States had
underestimated the Iranian response to the U.S. attack.
On Monday, alter the most
serious clash yet between Iran
and American forces ptaced in
the gu If to keep commercial
shipping Janes open, Reagan
said, "We aim to deter further
Iranian aggression, not provoke

llcly, "We've taken this action tQ
make certain the Iranians have
no Illusions about the cost of
Irresponsible behavior."
Defense Secretary Frank Car-

Iucci echoed the threat of further
armed action, saying: "We hope
that Iran will draw the approp.
riate lesson from this and cease
Its attacks on peaceful lnterna-

tiona! shipping in the gulf. We
stand prepared to defend this
shipping ... as we have in the
past.''
Continued on page 5

it."

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At the same time, the president

told an audience In the White

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tiona! Airport In Lebanon. Algerian authorities would let the
plane leave for Beirut In return
!or guarantees the 31 hostages
would not be harmed, the sources
said.
Lebanese and Syrian authorlties refused to allow the airplane
to land In Beirut AprilS after the
Boeing 747 left northeastern Iran
where It arrived Initially after
the hijackers commandered the
jumbo jet with 112people aboard.
If they relented, the hijackers
probably could "melt away"
after they freed their hostages,
the sources said.

Search continues in gulf. for missing helicopter crewmen

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end whereby the hostages wlll be
freed without Kuwait giving up
Its principles," AI Qabas said. It
said the hijacking could be
resolved within 24 hours.
The newspaper did not elaborate. But the Emir of Kllwait,
Sheikh Jaber AI-Ahmad AI·
Sabah, has been in telephone
contact with a number of Arab
leaders rec.ently, Including Sytlan President Hafez Assad, to
try to break the Impasse.
Some Arab diplomatic sources
said Kuwait and Saudi Arabia
were trying to persuade Assad to
allow the airplane~o. iand,at the
Syrian-controiled Beirutlnterna-

AIMJNO '1'0 t.El'Bil- l'relldell&amp; Reapa adda til II a paup of
contrac&amp;on MolldtQ' on the AmeriCIIII a&amp;lacllllllran. Reacu lAid
that .._ aim to deter Irulan &amp;lp&lt;eMion, nt~l provoke
Jt.:• (UPI)
.,
)

House complex Monday, "(IranIans) must know we will protect
our shlpa, And If they threaten us,
they'll pay the price."
u.s. Jets, ships and Marines
blasted two Iranian oU platfonns
In the gulf Monday, retaliating
for renewed mine-laying that
damaged an American warship
last week, and crippled or sank
six Iranian vessels that fought
back.
Reagan said the decisive milItary action aent a clear message
to Iran, and he explained pub-

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MolldQ _....._., after $lie pla&amp;fonn waa
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�. . .

........

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
'
I

The

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE 1\JEIGS-MASON AREI\

'

~lh

~ m~
~v

,..,.,_. '--"'T"' ,..,...,.,.d ..=.
.

.,

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT'
,. Publisher ,
PAT WHITEHI&lt;;AD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH·
Gener!l,l Manager

Pentago~'s

WASHINGTON - Somebody
should tell the Pentagon that
"winnabl e nuclear war " Is a
contradiction In terms. The Rea·
gan adminlsirat!on may be negotiating with the Soviets . over
strategic arms limitations, but
its ultra-secret plan Is to build
and use strategic nuclear weapons with the Idea of winning.
That aim Is apparent In a
highly classified Pentagon plan-

nlng document we have seen ,
which spells out the "operating
guidance" for nuclear weapons.
The primary role of our nu clear weapons is deterrence , the
guidance says. So far, so good.
But the fallback postlon wlll
surprise those who believe a
full -scale nuclear exchange
would be an Irreparable and
unw!nnable holocaust: "Should
such an attack nevertheless

occur, the United States nuclear
capabllites must prevall even
under the condlt Ion of a prolonged war. ''
The document Includes more
bad news. If you thought the only
good thing to come out of a
nuclear war would be an end to
the costly arms race, think

LEITERS OF OPIN ION are welcome. They s hould be lt'ss than 300 words
long. All leTters are subject to edlll ng a nd must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Leiters should be Jn

good ~a s tc, addressing Issues. not perso na lit ies.

Democratic chainnan
seeks positive camp~ign

Letters
to
the editor
.
.
A bout the solid waste crisis
Dea r Editor:
Every Ohio community is
affected by today's solid waste
crisis. According to the Ohio
·' Environmental Protection
Agency, ove r two million tons of
out -of-sta te so lid waste are bei ng
dumped In Ohio: solid waste
l'VJdfills a re co nt a mlnat ing
drinking water: there are over
900 unregulat ed and abandoned
solid waste disposa l s ites In Ohio
containing unkown qu anil Illes of
· Haza rdou s wast e: and 62 Ohio
.counties have less than five years
;solid waste disposal capacit y
•remaining.
· Twenty years of legislative
In action on solid waste could e nd
oon if I he Ohio Senate follows
the lead of the House of Representatives an d adopts House B!ll
592.

There is concern, however,
I hat strong efforts by the waste

Indu stry and others may weaken
the bl!l as it winds through the
Senate.
In crea sed recyc!Jng, strict en·
vlronmental standards for old
landfills, increased fees for en.forcement and the clean-up of
abandoneq hazardous dumps,
and state and local solid waste
management planning are crlt !·
cal elements needed in the bill.
If you are interested in a clean
environment and ensuring sound
waste managem~nt alternatives
for Ohio businesses, contact your
State Senator today In support of
HB 59~.
Sllicerely,
· Stephen H. Sedam
Executive Director
Ohio Environmental Council

Lauds business firms
Dear Editor ,
The Middleport·Pomeroy Ro·
tary Club wishes to thank all the
businesses that contributed to
the recen1 egg hunt. We would
also like to thank the VIllage of
Middleport for making the Har-

linger Pari\ available. We especially thank the children who
participated in this hunt.
R. K. Ash
President,
Middleport -Pomeroy Rotary
Club.

Joday in history
By United Press lnlematlonal
Today Is Tuesday, Aprlll9, the llOth day of 1988 with 256 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury. Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
statesman Roger Sherman, a signer of the U.S. ConsUtutlon, In 1721;
music patron Augustus Jullllard In 1836; FBI agent Eliot Ness In 1903;
actors Don Adams In 1926 (age 62) and Hugh O'Brian In 1930 (age 58);
actress Jayne Mansfield In 1933, and actor Dudley Moore In 193!5 (age
53) .
On this date In history:
In 1775, the American Revolutionary War began at the Battle of
Lexington, Mass. Eight Minutemen were killed and 10 wounded In an
exchange of musket llre with British Redcoats.
In 1971, the Soviet Union launched Its first Salyut space s.tatlon.
In 1972, the U.S. Apollo 16 spacecraft began orb!Ung ihe moon two
days before astronauts landed on Its surface.
In 1987, Argentina's President Raul Alfons In negotiated an end or a
four-day rebellion by officers opposed to human rights trials.

•

again. The Pentagon's goal is to
have enough nuclear weapons
stockpiled after a war so as never
to be caught with Its backside
exposed.
According to the report,olilese
are the six missions of the U.S.
strategic nuClear forces ;
- "Promote deterrence by
being convincingly capable of
responding to a first strike In
such a way as to deny the Soviets
- or any other adversary- their
pollt!cal and mllltary objectlves." In other words, look tough
and they won't attack us.
- "Minimize the extent to
which Soviet nuclear threats
could be used In a crisis to coerce
the United States and our allies."
Qr, look tough and they won't
lean on us.
- "Maintain the capacity to
support Alliance commitments."
Translation : Be there for our
friends.
- "Should deterrance fall,
deny the Soviet Union --' or any
other adversary - a military
victory at any level of conflict
and force earllest termination of
hostllltles on terms favorable to
the United States." In Pentagon
parlance, win the war ASAP..
- "Limit damage - by active
and passive measures - to the
United States and its allies." Or,
win the war neatly.
- "Maintain In reserve, under
all circumstances, nuclear offensive capabllltles so that the
. United States would never
emerge from a nuclear ,w ar
without nuclear weapons whlle
still threaten~ by enemy nuclear forces."

Judging .Jesse Jackson ____
Ro_be_rr_wa_lte_rs
NEW YORK (NEA) - StandIng in the hallway of a midtown
Manhattan hotel, the Rev. Jesse
Jackson' s campaign manager is
offering his acerbic analysis of
the status of other bids lor this
year's Democratic presidential ·
nomination .
Sen. Paul SimonofJIIJnols, who
has suspended his drive for the
White House, is stuck with "a
lingering kind of campaign,"
Jackson aide Gerald Austin says
in response to a reporter's
question . " He should get out. "
When another journallst asks
about Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of
Tennessee, Austin proclaims
that "it's sayo ra lor him " If
Gore doesn't fare e eel ally well
In the New York
mary. "
' What's goln
n here? Why
does the repre E'ntative of a man
not long ago regarded as more of
a political curiosity than a
legitimate contender have the
audacity to summarlly dismiss
Jackson's political rivals?
Austin himself answers: "You
have seen a candidate go from
nowhere to being a serious
contender for the nomlnatlon."

Indeed, Jackson's success in
He advocates establlshment of
building the beginnings . of a universal child care and medical
"Rainbow Coalition" has caused care systems as well as greatly
many voters, poiit!cans and Increased spending on job trainjournalists to reassess their ing, welfare assistance, agriculattitudes toward a man pre- ture subsidies, hOusing proviously assumed to have very grams and educational
limited public appeal outside the scholarships -but he lias never
black community.
specified how he would pay for
For whites, that task is espe- them.
cially difficult. Only after racial
Simllarly, Jackson claims gloprejudice and ethnic stereotyp- bal trading problems can be
ing have been surmounted can resolved by insisting .that all
Jackson be fairly judged through nations Increase wage scales and
an honest answer to the tough Improve working conditions to
question: What If he were white?
levels enjoyed by workers In this
Unfortunately, Jackson's pen -· country - an impossible goal In
chant for playing fast and loose many less developed countries.
with the facts, his proclivity for
Even if those formulations can
slmpllstic solutions to complex
be dismissed as polltlcal hyperproblems and his affinity for
bole typical of campaign rhe·
demagogic rhetocrlc would ra- torte, deallng with Jackson's
maln serious llablltleS.
veracity on a more persona! level
How, for example, can Jack- · remains a problem .
son's call for vast Increases In
There Is, for eKample, Jackdomestic spending be reconciled
son's controversial claim that he
with his claim that the uncounted
was standing beside the Rev .
bllllons of dollars needed to
Martln Luther King Jr. when the
finance those initiatives can be clvll rights leader was assassimade available through soaknated In 1968. Nutnerous witthe-rich tax Increases and
nesses dispute that assertlon.
slashed defense spending.
Those who view Jackson as an

The New York conspiracy
I was born and raised In New
York City, went to school In
upstate New York and Jove the
whole place, even its strange
brand of politics. New York's
po!Jtlcs alwa~s seem to end up as
a roughhouse spectacle, and a
conspitatorlal one. This year's
presidential primary - Tuesday, Aprll 19 - Is no exception.
There have been denunciations,
name calling, slams and counterslams - about little items like
race and religion. AND, there Is a
three-way race Involving three
very dlstlnct points olv,lew. AND
there Is a unique, four-carom
polltlcal bUllard shot at work that
only a true New York consptra·
tor!allst could con~oct- and It's'
probably even accurate.
The three points of view are
radical, liberal and moderate.
Jesse Jackson Is the radical.
He's for major bigger·
government· control of the do·
mestlc economy. He's for a sharp
turn In the American lorelgn
policy of the last four decades slashed defense budgets and a
half-blind eye to the Soviet threat
In a still dangerous world.
Mike Dukakls Is the liberal he's from Massachusetts, and his
politics do not seem to be
discernibly different from tbose
of the senior senator from
Massachusetts - Ted Kennedy.
Dukakls Is for more gove~nment
activity at home (defensible) and
seems to be quite dovish on
foreign policy.
,
Al Gore Is the moderate.' He's
been a leader on environment,
has a fine record on clvU rights
and poverty Issues. But he's
studied defense and foreign pol· ·
ley, and Is tough when he has to
be.
.
So - In a real way the Issue
before the New York voters

concerns the soul of the muchbattered Democratic Party. Quo
vadls? Radical, quite liberal or
moderate.
Now for the bllllard shot:
Please pay close a !tent Jon. Most
Democrats are afraid that Jesse
Jackson might get the nomination. So the Dukakls supporters
are passing the word that "a vote
for Gore is a vote for Jackson."
In political code that means' that
if the white vote splits between
Dukakls and ·Gore -then Jackson voters are, In effect, asked to
vote for front· running Dukakls.
The Jackson people are saying
there is an unfair Stop Jesse
movement'. Imagine! But who's
leading It? Surely not nice Mike
Dukakls, who · has the most to
gain from II. It must be Gore
because he's · the one who's
attacking Jackson. But Jackson
doesn' I want to attack Gore too
hard- after all, hewantsGoreto
split the Dukakis vote. (Of
course, by attacking Gore, Jack·
son could also gain votes for
Gore.)
And Gore? Gore has this
strange un-New York Idea: He
says "a vote for Gore Is a vote for
Gore." Gore notes that there are
lots of big primaries after New
York to settle thin~, so voters
ought to vote lor the brand of
politics they prefer: radical,
Kennedy liberal or moderate. So
he attacks Jackson and, with a
twist, also attacks Dukakls for
not attacking Jackson.
But, that's only three caroms.
On the table Is stUI New York's
charismatic, Intellectual and In·
scrutable governor - Mario
Cuomo. Does he want to be
drafted by a deadlocked convention? Absolutely not, he says. He
just won't do II. There Is no Marlo

•

. By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

A MEMBER of The Untied Press Interna t ional, Inland Dally Press

Ohio House Republicans and the bu sin ess community are alarmed
that the sta tp's workers' compensation system had an actuarial
&lt;jeflcit of $1.8 billion in 1986, and it is over the $2 billion mark now.
The House GOP said last week in order to prevent the deficit from
growing still further, employer premiums lor the injured worker
Insurance would have to be raised by 75 percent, on top of a 30 percent
hike in 1987.
•
Their solution. contained in a bill they introduced, is to put~ lid on
tempora ry-total disabilit y benefits, which tl)ey said can go on
indefinitely, milking the system dry . 1
. The Republicans also proposed changing the assessment on
companies to re!lect the num.ber of their workers that are receiving
benefits Instead of on thei r entire payroll . This, said thE' GOP, would
cause greater awareness of safety in the workplace.
There Is already legislation in the Senate changlqg the
administration of the workers' compensatlon system. It was agreed
upon by employers and organized labor , but now Democrats, at the
'insistence of labor, are holding It up.
The Celeste administration is preparing to put injured worker
rehabilittlon in the han~U of private hospitals, Instead of relying on
two huge state rehab!lltation centers because of their operational
costs.
The Republicans said las t week they fouf!d that a facility in
'Cincinnati could rehabilitate and train an inJured worker for $2,500 In
six weeks with an 80 percent success-rate-· 'far above what the state
has done so far . "

By DAVE FREDERICK
UPI Sports Writer
Having lost 18 straight playoff
series against the Montreal Canadlens, the Boston Bruins
seemed to be on the recelvlng end
of a good omen when a power
failure hit the Forum.
·
The blackout came with 6:27
left to play In the ftrst period of
Monday's Adams D!vlslonFlnal.
The game continued on with the
help of auxlllary generators,
after. the massive generator at
James Bay some 400 miles away
blew . But the Boston fortunes
remained the same.
"We found It hard to play with
the poor lighting," Bruins defen·
seman Ray Bourque said after
losing to the Canad!ens once
again 5-2. "That's our excuse. We
didn't play our game. They were
on the puck all night."
However, Boston coach Terry
O'Reilly said the power failure
had nothing to do with his team's
effort, or lack of effort.
" I don't believe In ghosts." he
said. "I have no excuses. I can't
Imagine us playing much better
and Montreal playing much

'big bang' theory

Association a nd the Am?ric'an Newspaper ?ubllshefs Association.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Oh io !UP!) - With the Ohio pres !qential primary
just a lew Weeks away, Democratic State Chairman James Ruvolo
has cautioned the candidates In his party to keep their campaigns
positive.
"On behalf of the Democrat s of Ohio, l as k that you refrain from
negative campaigning in our state and focus on the issues of concern
to our region,'' Ruvolo wrote to the candidates remaining In the race.
This would seem to work agai nst Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee,
who is on the at tack, trying to make some headway against Jesse
Jackson and frontrunner Gov . Michael Dukakts of Massachusetts.
But Ruvolo, who is neutral. says Ohioans don't like negative
campaigning a nd wan t to hear what e ach candidate would do lor
them . He said he wants to make sure the Democrats set a positive
tone for the general election campaign this fall .
· "We've got th e best of all possible worlds," said the Democratic
chairman. "We've got George Bush's personality and Ronald
. Reagan's economy. But we have to have afl alternative. We have to
present an economic blueprint , and our ca ndidate is going to have to
deliver a strong and consistent message about what it is."
_ Ruvolo says his party's polls show the economy is the No. l issue in
0h!o, and that the candid ates would do well to address the needs oft he
Midwes t.

Bruins bow to Canadiens, .5-2

Page-2-The Daily S.entinel
Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio
Tuesday, April19, 1988

Scenario, he says. Cuomo says to
the candidates: Cool It, you guys,
don't attack each Qther. That 's a
criticism of Gore, the attacker.
Well , naturally he'll say that, the
consplratorlallsts speculate. It
makes Cuomo popular with the
two biggest blocs of delegates:
Jackson's and Dukakls'. He may
need those delpgate votes later.
After all, what patriot could
really deny a genuine draft?
But - hmmm - how should
New Y'orkers vote If they want

opportunistic self-promoter note
that he counseled others present
at the King slaying not to talk
with the news media, then made
a dramatic appearance the next
day on network television wearJ ng a shlr,t stained with what he
said was King's blood.
In more recent years, Jackson's leadership of Operation
PUSH In his hometown of Chicago has produced a series of
embarrassing questions about
$1.2 million In federal grants
whose disposition remains uncertain .
Finally, there's Jackson's embrace (literally as well as figuratively) of two of the world's
better known hate-mongers Black Muslim leader Louis Farrakhan 1who classified Adolf ·
Hitler as "a ·great man") and
Palestine Liberation Organizatlon leader Yastr Arafat.
Jackson has played an Important role In this year's campaign,
engendering a valuable
consclo\lsness-ralslng expe rience in race relatlons for the
entire nation - but he lacks too
many of the qualities we need In a
president.
·

Ben Wattenberg
their governor to be drafted? The
governor won' t say It, probably
because he doesn't believe It, but
I can t(;!ll New Yorkers. The right
vote for the Marlo Scenario Is for
Gore! After all, If Gore gets hot
and takes off, that derails Duka·
kls and . might give you a
three-way spilt and chaos at the
convention. That would yield a
call lor Cuomo! Only In New
York! It's simple: A vote lor
Gore Is a vote for Cuomo!!

Berry's World
CARTOONISTS
NlGt\tM/\RE

COME
TRUE

'I-I

worse.'' .
With the blackout extending to
par ts of New Brunswick. Onta·
rio, the northern United States,
and the Boston defense. Claude
Lemieux scored twice to give the
Canadlens a l-0 lead In the
best-of-seven series.
pame two Is scheduled for
Wednesday night at the Forum,
barring any strange happenings .
Montreal Coach Jean Perron.

.

WINS BOSTON MARATHON
Kenya's
Ibrahim Hussein crosses the finish line one second
ahead of Tailzanla'sJuma Ikangaa to beoome the

first African to win the Boston Marathon Monday.
Hussein won the 92nd annual race wil.ltl' th;ne of
2:08:43. (UPI)

Carleton Racers end

African cops 92nd Marathon
BOSTON (UPl) - With a
single sllent sprint, Ibrahim
Hussein of Kenya 'e dged Jumo
lkangaa of Tanzania by one
second Monday to become. the
first AfriCan winner In the
92-year history of the Boston
Marathon.
In the closest finls.h of the
world's oldest continuing mara thon, Hussein triumphed In a
time of 2 hours, 8 minutes and 43
seconds . The Africans were
locked In a two-man duel for the
flnal5 miles before Hussein burst
from just behind the Tanzanian's
right shoulder to pull away In the
final 50 yards .
"I didn't even hear his shoes,"
lkangaa said.
"I like to make history," said
Hussein, 29, who was also the
first African to win the New York
City Marathon, In 1987.
Temperatures were 49 degrees
'at the Hopkinton starting line and
a llght rain fell for the .flrst hour.
· "When we ran the first2'1nUes I
was feeling my muscles were
tight," Hussein said. "I thought It
was going to bother me, but
fortunately It didn't at the end."
Rosa Mota of Portugal successfully defended her women's
crown, taking the lead In the
third mile and never being
threatened. Her time was
2:24:30, nearly two minutes off
the course record of 2:22:43, set
by Joan Benoit In 1983.
The diminutive Mota, 5·foot·1
and 99 pounds, was so fresh after
completing the race she jogged
away !rom the finish line. "!tried
to run as fast as I can and think
only about myself," she said.
Hussein and Mota each won
$45,000 ·and a Mercedes-Benz
valued at $35,000.
Hussein fell short of both the
world record of 2: 06: 50 set In

Rotterdam, the Netherlands, on
Sunday by ~iayneh Dlnsamo of
Ethiopia and the Boston Mara thon mark of 2: 07: 51 set by Rob
de Castella In 1986.
Bill Rodgers, 40, a four·tlme
winner at Boston, was the top
American finisher, at No. 28,
more than nine minutes behind
Hussein. Most of the top U.S.
male . cbmpetltors skipped the
race to compete In next weeK's
U.S. Olympic Trials In New
Jersey .
Last year's winner, Toshlhlko
Sekoof Japan, did not race In this
year's event.
John Treacy, sllver medalist in
the 1984 Olympic marathon,
finished third at 2:09:15.
Mota finished 4: 56 ahead of her
closest competition, Finland's
'I'Iilja Jouslnna. Finishing third
among the women was Odette
LaPierre of Canada at 2: 30: 35.
"I'm so happy to win here for
the second time for two reasons,"
Mota said. "First, I llke to run
here, and second, It's Important
to all the Portugese people.''
The raln-sllcked·streets proved
no obstacle for men's wheelchair
champion Moussetapha Badld of
France, who set a world record of
1:43:19 seconds, six seconds
below the record set by Canadian
Andre VIger In Boston In 1986.
Candace Cable-Brookes of San
Llus Obispo, Call!., won the
women's wheelchair division for
the sixth time with a time of
2: 10:44. It was her fourth str\'lght
Boston win.
The start of the race was free of
the mtshaps that marred the
start of last year's race, when de
Castella tripped and fell over the
starter's l;(!pe and six wheelchair
competitors crashed and fell.
Johnny Kelley, 811, finished his
54th Boston Marathon with a
time of 4: 26: 30.

I

Cavs clinch playoff berth
Herb Williams had 24 points
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI) -At
31, Phil Hubbard Is the oldest but the loss hurt Indiana's
member of the Cleveland Caval!- ' playoff chances . The Pacers,
ers and the lone holdover from 3643, have lost seven straight
the 1984-85 squad that made the road games ;tnd are one game
· behind New "i!ork and Washingplayoffs.
The veteran forward exuded ton In the battlefortheelghth,and
final playoff spot In the
quiet satisfaction Monday night
after Cleveland's 112-107 victory conference.
"We just have to win games.
over Indiana secured only the
Cavallers' second post-season That's all. We've got to win
games," said Indiana coach Jack
berth In 10 years.
Ramsay. "They had three guys
"My role with the team has
(Nance, Daugherty and John
changed. I'm not really a starter
"Hot Rod" Williams) with 10
anymore, but everybody around
rebounds each, and that's the
here contrlbu ted," said Hubsort of consistency and good
bard, who scored 6 polnls In 14
minutes. "It Just feels good to be defense we need."
Indiana trailed the entire seIn . the playoffs again. People
have said we probably wouldn't cond half until Steve Stlpnanovlch's layup pulled the Pacers
do It, but we proved them wrong.
Into a 101-101 tie with 5:01 left In
"We have talented young play·
the game.
ers here, and they are winners."
Larry Nance scored 24 points,
Ron Harper and Mark Price each
added 19 and Brad Dauaherty 18
as Cleveland, 40-40, clinched at
least the seventh-best record In
the Eastern Conference.
But the Cavaliers, eliminated
by Boston ln the first round three
years ago, are not overreaetlng.
"We can't be satisfied with just
making It, so we're pleased but
not ready to celebrate," said
Nance. Why get too excited?
We'll save It for later."
The Caval len have won 9 of 11
games and took the season series
with Indiana by a 4-2 maratn. · ·'-

tJ

In the over-40 mast~rsdivlslon,
the winner was Ryszard Marc·
zak of Poland at 2:17:53. The
women's masters champion was
Priscilla Welch of Great Britain
with a new course record In her
division of 2: 30: 53.
Hussein, running in Boston for
the first time, changed his
strategy during the race.
"When we started I wanted to
control the race. When we hit the
Newton Hills (about 17 miles into
the race), I was feeling real
strong and decided to stay
behind," he said. · "I wanted to
concentrate on just relaxing and
letting lkangaa do the walking
(pacing)."
Hussein and lkangaa ran
shoulder to shoulder until they
turned onto Boylston Street, less
than a half-mile from the finish
llne.
lkangaa, whO finished 11th in
last year's race, moved four
strides ahead of the Kenyan and
appeared to be pulling away. But
Hussein's final sprint put him
ahead of Ikangaa about40 yards
from the finish line.
Ikangaa said he was unaware
of Hussein's final surge untll he
saw the Kenyan race into the
lead .'
As eKpected, the young African
runners pushed the early pace,
but were not allowed to break
away. A pack of18 of the top men .
formed by the 5-mlle mark and
maintained a tempo that was
slightly off a course-record pace.
The group dwindled to seven by
the 15-mlle mark and to three by
18 miles when Treacy, lkangaa
and Hussein were alone In front.
Steve Jones of Great Britain, who
had earller fallen back, rejoined
the leaders and they were four
abreast as they crested Heartbreak Hill near the 21-mlle
marker.
Jones fell back first and
Treacy dropped back In the 22nd
mile, leaving the Africans to
complete their duel.

who- led the Ca nadlens over
Boston in la s t years playoffs,
said his team controlled the
boards and upset Boston with Its
forechecking .
" We kept their defen semen In
their zone and that helped us," h e
said. "We didn't let the power
!allure bother us."
It seemed to bother the Bruins
as Kjell Dahlln opened the
scoring for Montreal at 3: 33 of
the first period. Dahlin took the
puck behind the ·Boston net,
skated In front , and bea t goalie
Andy Moog with a low wrist shot
through the legs.

Montreal took a 2-0 lead on a
short-handed goal by Mike
McPhee at 8:52 of the fir st•
period . McPhee outskated Craig
Janney to the puck and tipped It
past Moog low to the stick side.
Lemieux then followed with the
first of his two goa ls on the night.
Rookie . Bob Joyce and Randy
,Burridge scored for the Bruins,
Who have only d efeated · the
Ca nadlens twice In 22 playoff
matches.
In the only other game Mon dayu, the Washington Cap itals
defeated the New Jersey .Devis
3-1.

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The Car teton School River
Racers' basketball team finished
their season with a 43-42 win over
the Beacon Blue Devils of
Athens.
Ray Laudermllt, high scorer
for the River Racers with 41
points, swished two three-point
shots during the game. The score
was tied 17-17 at half time and by
the third quarter, the River
Racers were ahead by three;
29-26.
Scoring lor the River' Racers In
addition to Lauderm!lt was
David Karr with two points.
Scoring for the Blue Devils
were 8111 Beard with six points,
Wade Bullock with five points,
Dan Stanley with 22 points. Mike
Spafford with two, Scott Bentley
with five and Bill Porter with
two.
A pizza party and dance for the
athletes followed the game.

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•

FAMILY FLOCK HEADQUAJITERS

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Giants edge Reds 6-3

•
ID

i•

CINCINNATI (UP!) - San
Francisco manager Roger Craig
considers Ci ncinnati 's John
Franco the best relie f pitcher In
the National League .
"That's why I wa s so. happy
when Franco left the game."
Craig said after Monday night's
exhausting four -hour Giants-·
Reds marathon finally ended.
When Fra nco le(t in the 11th
inning. after pitching two perfect
Innings of relier. the teams were
tied 3-3. No sooner was Franco
gone than his replacement , Pat
Perry, surrendered three r un s in
the 12th inning and the Giants
made off with a 6-3 win.
As muc h as Craig admires
Franco, ·he had a brilliant re·
liever of his own in Craig Lefferts
· Monday night . Lefferts llmlted
the Reds to just two hits over the
9th, lOth and 11th inning~ to keep
the game tied and earn the
victory . Joe Price pitched the
12th for his first save.
"Anytime you can win an extra
inning game on the road, that's a
bi g win ," said Le fferts, who
threw almost nothing but strikes
to the first severa l batters he
faced.
"That's the key for a relief
pitcher - get ahead of hitters
and get the momentUm going
your way," said Lefferts. "W hat
a rellef pitcher does when he first
comes In usually sets the tone for
him the rest of the way ."
"Leffert.s was simply excellent, just outstanding," praised

Tuesday, April19, 1988
Tuesday. April 19, 1988

12

Craig. " He kept us going until we
San Francisco starter Mike
finally go t some hitting going In Krukow lasted 6 1-3 innings,
the 12th inning ."
giving up four hits and two runs .
.Jose Uribe opened the Giants' Cincinnati starter Tom Brown·
12th with a single off Perry, 1·2, lng went six innings, surrender·
the fifth Cincinnati pitcher, and lng six hits and three runs.
took second on a wild pitch. After
Cincinnati scored twice in the
plnch· hltter Mike Aldrete popped seventh to tie It 3-3. After Chris
out, Brett Butler singled Uribe to Sabo hit his first major league
third and Kevin Mitchell bit a home run off Krukow, Barry
sacrifice fly to deep center, with Larkin singled off reliever Don
Butler taking second. Will Clark Robinson's glove, raced to third
doubled in Butler to chase Perry . when Robinson threw wildly to
Candy Maldonado singled off first and scored on Jeff Tread·
Frank Willia ms to send ·Clark to way' s double. It was Robinson's
third a nd J e ffrey Leonard first error In 230 games, dating
singled in Clark.
back to 1982.
" We've been having some
The Giants had snapped a 1-1
trouble a t the plate so far this .tie with three s tralght doubles In
year , but we scored nine runs the top of seventh. Leonard
Sunday and six tonight , so we doubled down the left field line
may finally be starting to swlng and scored on Bob Brenly's
the bats," said Craig. " We double to left-center. Robby
definitely go t some clutch hits Thompson foJ,Jowed with a third
tonight."
straight double to right-center to
The Reds had blown numerous score Mark Wasinger, a pinchc hances to break the game open runner for Brenly, and stake San
before Perry came In to lose it in Francisco to a 3-1 lead.
the 12th.
Ci nci nnati got a run in the sixth
"It 's rough towinagamewhen to tie it 1·1. Treadway singled,
you leave 15 (actually 16) guys on stole s~cond, advanced to third
base," complained Cincinnati on Eric Davis' fly out and scored
manager Pete Rose . "We got when shortstop Uribe threw
hits, but not clutch hits. Some- wildly home on Nick Esasky's
body's got to get a hit with a man ground ball.
The Giants got a run in the
on second sometime. Eventually ,
the law of averages has got to first . Butler singled, moved to
seco nd on Mitchell's single, took
catc h up with you.
"It's possible to get base hits, third on a wlld pitch By Browning
take my word on it," added Rose, and scored on Maldonado's sacri·
baseball's career hit leader with lice fly .
The game was delayed 13
4,256. "You've just got to bear
down and make it happen. "
minutes in the middle of the
fourth inning after an usher
accidentally pushed open a gate
and fell about six feet down to the
field in the Giants' bullpen. The
usher, Ed Vogel of Silver Grove,
Ky., was taken off the field on a
stretcher and examined In the
stadium first aid room . Reds'
officials said the usher was
conscious and did not appear to
have been seriously Injured.

Af~·

BOWLING CHAMPIONS - The Middleport Trophies bowling
team won the Monday Trlpllcates Championship RoD-off Monday.
Members of the team are (first row, (L toR) Gall Ferry, Jean
Gilmore and Jeanie Roble. Rear -Taking second was The Shelly
Company. Team members are (L to R) Dottle Wlll, Jackie
Walburn and Reba Boru:d.

NBA results

Majors
,\MERit't\N LEAGUE
F..ast
w L p,.•.

.
"

...
~

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II

Nc\\o l ' orll
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Mond~ '11ltes ti1

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Clt!"elattd lit, lndllena 101

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Ttl~-"l''ll Gltmf"'l

!&gt;«roil at BoMion, 7: :10 p.m .
A.tlula IU Ne wJPrftl'y, "/: :10 p.m.
O!ica~ at Ne w \'urk, 7:3&amp; p.m .
Mllwau\1!1' at Phlla.ddpiUJl, '7 : :W p.m .
DallRx at Houston, 8:31p.m .
Lt\ Lakl'rtt at San Aat011lo, 8: 30p.m .
~Attie at lknvcr, 1: 30 p.m .
Goklen State Ill PhoenU, 11: 30.p.m.
I.A. Olp~n Mt Sacmmento, 10:30 P-11'1 -

.1" I
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Utll.h n.l Portbuld, 10:-31 p.m.
W e dneHd~'8 Gamt•s
In dii&amp;Ril! iU Atlat~ta , niMhl
WMhlnKion Itt Mllwaulirr, nlp;hl
LA. Lakers at DallllS, nlrh(
Utah Ill LA Clippt'rs, niRM
Portland aU Golde11 State, night

lhiroil 4, Kanlti!l City 2
New \'ork 18, ,\ llnnesoca 5
fltlca«n 4, Suttle 0
Oaldand 5, Callfor,.a ol

PhOtJnix al SelltUe, niP1

Tuesday'a Gamet!
Balllmo~

(Thunnond 0-'l) at MllwtmkN• (Nieve~ ~'l), 7:05p.m .
Tl'li:IL"'
(fjuJ.mlt.n 1-1) a.i ('le,'f' ·
land (Balin 1-D), 7:35p.m .

..

&amp;~ton

CCiemcn11 2-0)
Httt1rrill 2·1), 'l: :U p. m.
K~tnMM

•

. Calendar
AmtrlcM Le ~
Baltlmon- at Mllwau llle, 7:0S p.m.
TeuA al Clf'\leland . '7:-U p.m .
Boston 11-t Detrott.l:35p.m.
K11.n~ Cit]' ll.t Toront-o, 7: 3.1 p.m.
New Yurk 111 Mlnrr!iotll. , K: 0~ p.m.

Detroit

at

(11y (SRherhlllt'rl 1-1) at

Toronlt! tqwwy 0-~). 7:35 p . ~tN••w \ 'urk f kiter 2-0) IIJ Mlnfi!Notll
(Ni o•km 1-0) , ~ : 05 p.m.
fhl•·a,;o fHeu~ I -I 1 111 S••llllle
(l.aftaKtontl-1 ), Ill: II$ p.m.
( 'allfo rnh• (Fi nM&gt;y 1-1) at Ollltland

(:hh:a80iU ~attle,l0:115p . m .
(:amornla Itt Oakland, 111:35 p.m.
N llliO .... Lfo ape
Mont"'ld ttl Chlc~tgo, !:~p. m .
Sl. l.oul&lt;~~ at Pltillhtlrwh. 1:05 p.m .
Phllllddphla al. New York. 7: :15 p.m.

(Sicwart9-0J. HUS p.m.

~

•
•''

San Franct!ICO ill ClndmiUI, 7: 35p.m .
Athuna at Houlli.on, iJ:U p.m .
S~tn Dlrp at Los t\n~tele'l, 10:111 p.m.
Basl&amp;etll all

WedfK'lld!U' 's Oamftl
C~tllrornla at Ollkland
C'hlu,;o Ill ~eallle
Halllmo~ at MllwMuile e, nl~
BotUOII Ml Dft roll , nldlt
T ..u." ut Chl¥1'1Knd, niRilt
Han!&amp;'! Cllyat Toronto, nlt~:hl
Nrw York at Mtnr~."!!o&amp;a, nlaill

Detroit a. Bolton, 7:31p.m .
1\tlanbl. at New .lf'r!l!)' , 7:30p.m.
Ch1c&amp;~o at New l'ork, 7:3t p.m.
Mllwaukef' M PhUade-lphla. 1:SO p.m .
Dallu at Houllllon, M: 30 p.m .
LA. Lllkt'l'll at San hlonlo. K: :JO p.m.
Sf'alt~ a1 Denwr , 9:30p.m.
Golden Slate a1 Phoenlx , 10: 3CI p.m.

NAT IONAl. l.EAGtJJo:

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flrtelnt'lltl
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lllah ld Portlwtd, 10:38 p.m .

Hockey
Ntn. Pla)'oflll

Sec.-ural fto•nd
St. Loula at Detroit. 7: 1115 p.m.
tAimonlon at Cal...-y, !1: 3' p.m.
Socc:er
M'-Jor Indoor Socrcr Leq;uc

No

Tenn111
Houl!lllon - 1!50,000 \ 'l rlilliM- Slim. of
Ho•!!llon
Mo.ae Cat to. Moraco - 1182,&amp;00Mont.e
Carlo Open

MondiQ''ll RestM $
Philadelphia 10. NPW Vork 7
San FnndiM'o I , CIIN'InM113, 121nn.
Loa t\n,eltti fl. San Di e~ 0
Tut'llda,y'~~; GameN
Mon1noal ( Mill'tlni'J. l ·tl at Ch luro
~ ,\toyf' r 1·11) , 2: Mp. m.

St •• l.Dubi (('OX

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at

,__Local news briefs-----

Plll'!lbu~h

Phlladelplda fC•rme n 1•1) 111 Nl'w
Vor• (Ojeda 2·0) , 'l':S5 p.m.
SIU1 Franct!l4!o (l.aCo!ls 1-0) 111
Clndnmil ( RW~muMen 0--1) .1 ~ 3:ip . m .
A.llaftlJl (r. Smtth 0-1) at llou!lton
(DtShaiN 1·0), II: 31 p.m .
HIU1 Dtr,.o (Iones 1-0 Ill l..lls Mrell'll
(Valemuela 1·2), 10;0$ p.m.
We~.r'A

Monfre ..

••
•
•

at

Games

8Mehall
Ba.ltlmore -

Mo\'e d their an!Ull

mi•J~an1p for drafted pla)'ert to Mou•
Sl. Mar1'11 Colle!" Ia F..mmllftl'f, lila.
Collele

Alhrllhl IPa.)- Naml'd lky Rlcllelt11
haketball L'OACII.
DePaul - Guard Rod 9trklklud
announced he wllllu\'e uheoland enter

the NBA draft.

Plil!lb•IJh- Re--1lpd lootbaiiCOIIOfl

(}llilcaco ,

Mlb GoUirled.

SC . [A)td.U t Plti.UJ'kh, nliCfll
Phllad~lpN&amp;al

Football

New t 'ork,nl1ht
San FranciKo at Clndn.-.t l, nls:hl

New Elt&amp;t&amp;Jtd - Slped lree-arent
offen!Rve IIMman QrerOttn.

Atlanta llt Houlllon. nlrfM

Gln-tlud (MISL) - TraJnu Aaron
Gal pert m~lped.

San Die ,a 111 Los An Jdes, ftll{hl

The Wellston Lions Club and
the Milton Banking Company Is
sponsoring the sixth annual Journey for Sight, a 5K benefit race
which will be held Saturday, at 10
a.m. at Lake Alma State Park,
off SR 349, north of Wellston.
The en try fee Is $6 for those
reglstel'ing before the day of the
'race, anq $7 for those entering
the day of the race. The fee
Includes a hat.
There wlll be ntne age-group
divisions for male and female
runners. Awards for best overall
male and female runners and for
individual runners.
Proceeds wlll go to benefit the
preservation of sight.

Free tickets are availa ble at several locations in the
Columbus area to watch former Meigs football standout Mike
Chancey and his teammates on Ohio State Universitv's football
team in Its annual spring football game, which wlli b~ p'tayed
Saturday, April 30 at Ohio Stadium.
Fans can pick up tickets for the 1:30 p.m. contest at ali Big
Bear and Harts stores, any Huntington Bank location and at the
Midland Service Center In the Ohio Union. There is no limit per
request.
There were 38,000 fan s on hand for last year's spring game.

EMS. has 5 calls Monday
'

Orioles hope to end losing streak
BALTIMORE IUPI) - The meetings and a wardrobe sha·
Baltimore Orioles can tie the . keup. He ordered the players to
major-league record for the wear their orange jerseys for
worst start to a season Tuesday only the third time since 1984, but
with a loss to the Milwaukee
the club lost anyway, 4·1, to
Brewers. who last year tied the Cleveland on Sunday.
mark for the best start.
"You don't make changes that
Baltimore has lost its first 12 you don't think are going to help
games - six under fired Man- this club in the long · run, "
ager Cal Rip ken Sr. and six under Robinson sa l.d. "But then again,
new Manager Frank Robinson- the way we ' re going, 0-12. you do
and a loss Tuesday will match the something to loosen them up.
0-13 marks set by the 1904 You tell them togoupstandlngon
Washington Senators and the
th.eir head, go up without a bat .
1920-Detroit Tigers.
"We've tried lineup changes,
A loss by the Orioles Tuesday but It just doesn't seem to be
night at County Stadium in working because nobody Is hit Milwaukee would be ironic. The ting consistently and when we get
Brewers won their first 13 games the men on base, no matter who is
last season to match the major- up there, we're not getting them
league mark for straight vlcto· in," he added.
ries at the start of a season.
As would be expected from a
Robinson has tried just about team suffering through a 12anything to spark his team, game losing streak, every fac~t
including lineup changes, team of the game has beew a. struggle
to the Orioles.
Baltimore Is batting .186 as a
team, which Is substantially
higher than the .043 Orioles
shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. ts
hitting. The five-time All-Star is
riding a o for 29 streak, with his
out the tournament.
lasthitasingleof!TomCandlottl
Any coach lntersted In signing In Cleveland Aprll 9.
up his team for this year's
"Ihavetokeepalevelheadout
tournament must contact James here because all kinds of things
Crace Jr. at 446-6758 or Steve are going through their heads
Neville at 675-6751.
right now," Robinson said. "I

SIK:cer

•

•

OPEN DAILY 9-S-SUNDAY 1-5

snatUSI _ 99J,5716

INSTIIUCTOIS:
Mick Howell, lladr ltlt
Ed C•zart, llack ltlt
lohn ltaYir lladr ltlt

~. .,: I

.

REV. ROY DEETER

Rev. Roy Deeter

(PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE ~-DESTINATION)

58395

•5()() CASH tw:K

*
''Base suc ker pncl) mtnus r dsh back allowance Excludes uue·

•

$64,95**
Disalverone or Americas best carVIIIues!
'Cash back for retatl buyers on new 87and 88 models 1n dea/Pr stock
··ease sucker pnce m1nus cash back allowance
Excludes tttle taxes and desrtnar1on charges

.r_i;"

CLM!rs l1,100rs or 70000 rroesoopower~ra~n ooctl years or 100000 """'

.• J il',liWlS(OIIefbo&lt;ly 1lJSI·tl'ro.ql See a cot&gt;V tflllls hmll!dwarramy wt1en
. · \P-1 VISit YQUf !Eater certan I'PStriCOOOS appl\j
'
I.

Norris Northup

300 THIID AYE.

446-0842
You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Bu•ineu

BUC~LE UP.. AND PLEASE DRIVE SAfELY

,

substltute custodian and Supt.
Bobby Ord was asked to secure
specifications from the Columbus Heating and Ventilating Co.
on. a new furnace for the Racine
Elementary School.
Contracts were gjven to eligi·
ble members of the teachings taft
Including Wanda Shuler, two
years; Don Dudding, Deborah
Harris and Diane Rice, three
years; William Baer, Roger
Roush, Joyce Thoren, James
Wickline, Delores Wolfe ·and
Suzanne Wolfe, five years; De·
bra Hill and Donna Sayre,
continuing. Not given renewals
were teachers, Vickie EIDabajo
and William Lake. Non-certified
employees given continuing con tracts were Cintera Winebrenner
and Donna Wolfe. aides. The
contracts of Roger Roush as head
teacher at the Letart Falls
Ehimentary School and Bob
Beegle as transportation super·
visor were not renewed.
Board members attending the
session werr Charles Pyles, Gary
Wilford, Charles Norrlis, Scott
Wolfe and Dennie Evans.

Revv. Roy Edwin Deeter. 76, a
llfelong resident of the Coolville
area, di·ed Monday at his home
after a brief illness .
Born Oct. 24, 19JJ In Hockingport, Rev . Deeter was a son of
Levi H. and Nora Wires Deeter .
He was an ordained elder, pastor
and general evangelist of the
Wesleyan Church. He served the
church as a member of the
District Board of Administration
and other district offices. He has
also served many churches in the
surrounding area as pastor,
Including ' his home church,
White's Chapel Church, for 30
years, 1~47-1977. He was currently serving as the Supply
Pas tor of the Reedsville United
Methodist Church.
· Survivors include his wife,
Lucy Gibbs Deeter. Coolville;
three daughters and sons-In-law.
Carolyn and Robert Bowser of
Jacksonvllle, Fla. , Martha Sue
and Herbert E. Matheny or
Coolville and Faith and Dennis
Willoughby of New Carlisle,
Ind.; four granddaughters, Darletta Martinez and Dawnita
Cook of Jacksonville, Fla., Diana
and Charity Willoughby of New
Carlisle, Ind.; one grandson ,
Nathan Craig Matheny of Coolville: five sisters, Gertrude
Ahart, Gladys Webb and Ada
BibbeE!, all of Coolville, Laura
Parsons of Columbus and Marjorie Scott of Belpre; 11 nephews
and eight nieces.
He was preceded in death by
his parents: two sisters. Nona
Biles and Lillian Taylor; two
brothers, Ernest and James
Deeter; four nephews and
nieces.
Services will be Thursday, 1: 30
p.m., at White's Chapel Church,
Route 2, Coolville. Officiating
wlll be Rev . Oennls Wllloughby
along with Pastor Phillip Riden·
our and Rev. C.E. Hanks, district
superintendent of the Wesleyan
Church. Burial will be In Weatherby Cemetery at Coolville.
Friends may call at White
Funeral Home from 2 to9 p.m. on

By United Press International
Cold Canadian air moved into
the Great Lakes and Upper Ohio
Valley Monday, sending temper- atures down .
Readings by daybreak could be
some record lows for the middle
of April. Readings were expected
to be in the low to mid 20s in the
north and in the upper 20s in the
south. A frost and freeze warning
was Issued for the entire state.
Growers were advised to take
measures to protect susceptible
fruit trees, plant and flowers
from freeze or frost conditions.
A cold front pushed through
northern Ohio Sunday night and
through southern Ohio Monday.
That sysiem produced a few
showers and thunderstorms, but
they diminished Monday after·
noon with precipitation generally
less than one quarter of an inch.
Afternoon temperatures were
below normal, in the mid to upper
40s.
Fair weather . high pressure
will
continue to dominate Ohio's
,
weather through Tuesday, but
the sunshine won't help raise
temperatures. Highs will be In
the mid 40s to low 50s.
Monday's . w_e.ather map
showed a low-pressure center
over Quebec with a cold front
'trailing southwest through New
England, Tennessee and Texas.
High pressure was over the
upper Plains. The cold front will

move a little farther south and
become stationary by Tuesday
while high pressure moves into
the western Great Lakes and
upper Ohio Valley .
Skies will be clearing Tuesday
night with lows In the mid 20s to
mid 30s. It wlll be mostly sunny
Wednesday with highs In the 50s
In the north and the mid 60s In the
south.
There is a chance of showers in
the south Thursday, ·otherwlse
fair Thursday through Saturday.
Lows will be in the 30s to low 40s.
Highs will be in the 50s to low 60s
Thursday and in the mid 50s to
mid 60s Friday and Saturday.
Around The Nallon
Thunderstorms crashed
through the South early today,
bringing a fusillade of golf
ball-sized hall and creating a
tornado that killed four people
and wrecked bulldlngs in northern Florida.
The twister that hit Madison
County, Fia., at about 5 a.m.
destroyed homes and toppled a
church during its the 8- to 10-mlle
dash .
"It killed at least four people
and we're finding people who are
alive but burled in some of tht&gt;
damaged buildings," Sheriff Joe
Peavy said. "It cut through an
areas west of here for about eight
to 10 miles out to the Hickory

Grove area."

Search continues..:ontfnued from page

I

Yet Carlucci emphasized a assume that it'~ some kind of a
desire for no further conflict as fanatical reaction or slavish
some observers questioned obedience to a contingency
whether the aggressive response plan."
by Iran Monday indicated ReaHouse Republican leader Rogan's advisers had underesti- bert Michel of Illinois said
mated the regime of the Ayatol· Reagan told congressional lead·
lah Ruhollah Khomeinl.
ers in a briefing before the U.S.
Asked whether he was sur- attack on the oil platforms that
~lsed by the Iranian reaction to
he Intended to comply with the
overwhelming U.S. military su- 1978 War Powers Resolution.
periority, Carlucci said, "I
The resolution requires the
wouldn't use the word 'surprised' president to notify Congress
because the Iranians have been within 48 hours when U.S. forces
known to engage In this klrld 'of are in an area of "Imminent
frankly foolhardy behavior be· hostilities," and Congress th_e~ ...
fore . I might say we ar~ d,i~~p- has 60 days to vote on whethl!r to
Wednesday; ·with '" th'e ' · t~thiiY' · patnred. We 'tio'pei:f they would approve prolonged deployment
present from 2 to 4 and 7to9, or at heed the warnings that we gave." of combat troops abroad.
the church for one hour prior to
He added, "I'm not sure it's
''The president did specifically
services. In lieu of flowers, explainable in terms of Western at that meeting say, 'Of course
memorial contributions may be logic at this point. I have only to we're having the consultation
now, but it Is my intention within
made to the White's Chapel
One driver cited
Memorial Fund. established to
48 hours to make the required
support Wesleyan missions,
The driver was cited in a one , report to the Congress,' and I'm
R.oute 2, Coolville. 45723.
car accident at 3:30p.m. Monday confident the president wlll do
on SR 681. just west of mile post that," Michel said during an
John Mulford
Interview today on ABC's "Good
John William Mulford, 60, of 25 In Ollv~ Twp.,Melgs County, Morning America."
Cheshire, died Monday at Holzer accord!~ to the State Highway
Lawmakers generally emPatroL Troopers said Mlldred 0.
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
braced
the president's decision
Harris, 76, Rt.l Reedsville, Ohio,
Mr. Mulford was born Feb. 28,
to punish Iran 'for its actions.
1928 in Bellaire and was a son of lost control and her vehicle went
"I support the decision to
off
the
road,
striking
a
telephone
Dewey N. and Thelma Halley
, destroy the platforms," said
connector
box
owned
by
All
Mulford. He had retired as an
Senate Democratic leader Ro·
operator from Foote Mineral and Telephone Systems of Coolvil- bert Byrd of West Virginia . "I
le,Ohio.
Damage
was
minor.
No
~as recently employed by the
one was injured. The patrol cited think it Is a legitin;'ate response."
Ohio Valley Bank, Gallipolis, as a
Harris for failure tq maintain
custodian. He was a U.S. Army
controL
veteran of World War IJ and a
member of the Disabled American Veterans . .
Surviving are his wife, Helen
Louise Davidson Mulford, Che- .Dally stock prices
shire; two daughters, Mrs. Jo- (As of 10:30 a.m.)
seph tRita I Fields of Pomeroy Bryce and Mark Smith
and Mrs. John (Sandra 1 Norman of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
of Athens; a son, Randy John
Mulford, Cheshire: four grand- Am Electric Power ............. 26~
sons;. one granddaughter; one AT&amp;T ................................. 26%
great grandson; one sister, Mrs. Ashland Oil ................ .... .... 68'):\
Floyd (Wilma l McDonald, Rey- Bob Evans ..... .. .......... ........ .17~
noldsburg; onE' sister-in-law. Charming Shoppes , ....... ...... 12~
Mrs . Ray (Opal) Mulford, Le- City Holding Co .. ................. 33
tart, W.Va.; and several nieces Federal Mogul .................... 40!4
and nephews.
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 62',(.
Mr. Mulford was preceded In Heck's Inc ........................... 1~
death by his parents; one sister, Key Centurion ..................... 39
Mrs. Carlos (Virginia) Carpen· Lands' End .......................... 22
ter: one brother, Ira Ray Mul- Limited Inc ....................... .19%
ford; and one grandson, Jeremy Multimedia Inc ................... 66!4
Buck Mulford .
·
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Services will be Thursday, 2 Robbins &amp; Myers ................. ll
p.m., at the Old Kyger Freewill Shoney's Inc .. ..................... 24'Vo
Baptist Church with Rev . Samuel Wendy's Inti ........................ 5'):\
Clay offlclat ing. Burial will be In Worthington lnd ................. .20%
Gravel Hlll Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends 'may call at
Rawllng-Coats-Biower Funeral
Home In Middleport from 12 to 9
Democrats to meet
o.m. on WPdnesdav .
A regular meeting of Meigs
County Democrats will be held at
Veterans Memorial
6:30 p.m. Thursday at Carpel)Monday Admissions - Philllp . ters' Hall in Pomeroy. All interDonovan, Syracuse; Allen El· ested Democrats are Invited. The
chlnger, Pomeroy; Cora Birch,
meeting time has been changed
Racine: Melanie Carman,
du~ to the meet the candidates
Langsville.
forum to be held latethatevenlng
Monday Discharges - Joy
at the Meigs Senior Citizens
Hysell, Howard Wagenhals.
Center.

I

Area d eaths

GET OUR BIGGEST CASH BACK EVER!

Mike Northup, Pete Sommerv~e,' Tommy Sprague or Dale Hlll

01992-5896

I

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

,_:_~.:_:_----------------------~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

I

I

COMPLETE LINE OF VEGETABLE
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
HANGING BASKETS, AZAlEAS,
FRUIT TREES .. SHRUBBERY

CARLETON SCHOOl SYIACUSI
Fer Information Cal
992-6139 After 6:00 P.M.

system with one teacher for each
two classes.
As a move to conserve money
in the district, the board did not
renew the teaching contracts of
Jenny Manuel, Martha Banrug,
Dixie Circle and Linda Fisher.
Also for financial reasons, the ·
contracts of aides, Peggy Hill
and Alice Williams, neither
working in the Portland or Letart
Falls Schools, were not renewed.
Added to the substftute
teachers list were Rebecca Jane
Wood and Rob Roy Walters. Five
calamity days were approved
and lnclu.d e Jan. 4, 8 and 26, Feb.
4 and March 16. The resignation
of Kimberly P~lllips as girts'
head basketball coach was accepted. A list of seniors was .
approved for graduation.
The board evtered into a new
contract with non-certified employees .of the district effective
July J, 1988. The contract pro·
vldes for a $1 an hour increase for
the first year, and 60 cenis an
hour increase for the second and
t!Jird years.
Sue Walker was named a

Naw Open Far Spring
Seasan

We want ID make~an American Wiilmer:
See your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer tnday!

:

Delegation ...__c_o_n_ttn_u_ed_r_ro.:...m_p:._a..:.:g.::..e.::..l_ __

have to keep a level head and
show that I have confidence In
those guys."
On the bright side, if there is
one, Baltlmore:s ERA fell to 5.43
during Its just-completed, sixgame sta nd at Memorial
Stadium.
''Our ERA came down blgtlme
(from 7.41) on this homestand, "
said catcher Terry Kennedy: ' 'So
did our batting average."
Robinson, the Hall of Fame
slugger, managed poor teams In
San Francisco and Cleveland.
"We've tried different things
and we will keep trying. We know
they're hitters and they are going
to hit but I don't know when,"
Robinson said. "I've been
through these things myse,lf. I
know what goes through a
hitter's mind. A lot of things .

ltginning Cia- Starting
TUESDAY,.APII 19-7:00 P.M.
AT

Meigs ·County Emergency Medical Services reports five
calls Monday; Tuppers Plains at 5:23a.m. transported
William Grueser to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at
10: 22 a.m. to Sycamore St. for Danny Fink to Holzer Medical
Center Clinic; Rutland at 3;01 p.m. to Malloon's Run Road
for Melanie Carman to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 5:24p.m. to Route 681 East for Floyd
Barringer to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at 10: 17
p.m. to Short Fourth St. for Mabel Walburn to Holzer
Medical Center.

Riverfront Stadium. The Reds' Barry Larkin,
right, was c!l'edlted with a hit and reached third on
the errant toss. (UPI)

WILD THROW - Giants' first baseman Will
Clark can't reach the ball, as relief pljcher Don
Robinson's throw goes wide In the seventh Inning
of Monday night's game against the Reds In

·

SHOTOKAN KARATE

Ohio temperatures plunge; tornadoes
okill 4 people early this morning

Chancer to play in spring game

Journey for Sight'
set for April 23

Transactions

(1-'blhl'r t-0), 'hl-1 p.m.

•

~:une~~ M:hedu~d

Individual trophies at the tournament will be for most home
runs, most hits, most strikeouts
(for pitchers), first home run of
the tournament (a new baseball
bat wlll be given for an out-of-thepark home run), a new baseball
glove for the first complete game
no-hitter and for the most outstanding defensive player of the
tournament .
For each home run hit over the
fence, the hitter will have his
~oice of receiving a new baseb'li 1 or the ball he hit, plus a free
hot d&amp;g and soft drink. All
players will receive a free soft
drink following their first game .
A total of 250 Kyger Creek
Lit tie League Tournament Tshlrts will be awarded through-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

~

,Tournament signups
are being accepted
Slgnups for this year's Kyger
Creek Little League Tournament, which Is slated for the
week of July 16-24, will be
accepted until June 25. The first
25 teams registering by the
deadline will be allowed to play In
the tournament. No sign ups will
be accepted after June 25.
The entry fee Is $10, ·which
must be paid by check and
included with a notarized team
roster to be submitted to tournament directors James Crace Jr.
or Steve Neville at or 'before the
deadllne date. There will be a
drawing and meeting of toutnament team managers or team
representative on July 11, at 6
p.m . ~t the Kyger Creek clubhouse. Only one manager or
representative per team Is
requested.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

Stocks

Announcements

Hospital news ·

"We Now Carry Christian Supplies"
BIBLES - BOOKS - BOOKMARKERS
STICKERS - PENCILS • PINS
CARDS (Boxed and Counter)

We Invite You To Stop In Today!
Chuck and Jenny

TO GOD BE THE GLORY!
VILLAGE CUT RATE

IHIID SUED
•

•

949·2140

IACINE, OHIO

Loans Subject
To Qualification
Of BomlWer

·

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 4-2~

~SNOW
FRONTS:

11 Warm

-RAIN
SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Static
Occluded

ft

Map shows min1mum temperatures At least 50% of any shaded area is lore&lt;:ast
to recetve preop• tatiO n 1nd1cated
UPI

WEATHER MAP - Scattered showers and thunderstorms will
extend from eastern portions ol the CaroUnas across Georgia and
northern Florida to the central Gulf Coast. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms will also develop In Cal lfornia with snow
developing In the Sierra Nevada mountains. ShOwers wlll extend
from Oregon to the northern Rockies.

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
light and variable tonight.
Partly cloudy today, with highs
Extended Forecast
between 50 and 55. Clear tonight ,
Thursday through Saturday
with a low between 30 and 35.
A chance of showers Thursday,
Mostly sunny Wednesday, with with fair weather Friday and
highs in the low 60s.
. Saturday. Highs wlll range from
The probabiliiy of precipita- the lower 50s to the lower 60s
tion . is near zero through Thursday and It om the mid 50s to
Wednesday.
the mid 60s Friday and Saturday.
Winds will be from the northw- Overnight lows will range from _.
est at five to 15 mph today and the lower 30s to the lower 40s.

FmHA accepting nominations
The Farmers Home Admlnis·
tration (FmHA) began accepting
nominations April 5 fer election
of county committee members
under new rules that make it
easier for farmers to qualify as
.sandldates and to vote, Lawrenee E. Bess said today.
FmHA-county committees perform a variety of duties for the U.
S. Department of Agriculture's
credit agency,~ including decid·
tng whether an applicant is
eligible for a farm loan.
"One important change broad·
ens the definition of a farm er to
anyone who has an interest in a
farm tn the county as owner,
tenant, or sharecropper,'' Bess
said. "The new definition also
Includes the spouse of an eligible
far.mer. An old requirement that
more than half of the candidate's
Income must comlffrom the farm
operation has been dropped."
"The nominating period has
been extended to 45 days from the
previous 25 davs. thus allowing

more opportunity for people to
run for ' the committee," Bess
said. "A t least three eligible
farme~ voters, including the
nominee, must sign the petition."
Two of the three committee
members are elected by farmers
in the county, and one Is appointed by FmHA. One of the
elected seats is to be filled for a
three-year term at this year's
election, which is scheduled for
June 30.
"Another im!'ortant change
this year is that one mem~r of
the committee can be an active
FmHA farm borrower, or be
eligible for an FmHA farm
loan," Bess said. "Previously,
this was not allowed ."
Anyone interested In running
for the rommittee can obtain a
pelltion and other information
from the FmHA county office at
529 Jackson Pike, Room 304,
Gallipolis.

�.. .. ' ...

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•
Tuesday, ADril 19. 1988

By The Bend

Demjanjuk will appeal

The Daily .Sentinel
Page-6

- - ; L~\-

--

There are still some
honest people around

'

.....

Luke Pickens of Racine ca n
vouch for the
fact that there
are stili honest
people around .
Pickens' bii·
!fold -co ntain·
ing $140 plus usual important
papers--was lost last week In the
area of Long John Silver's In
Gal !Ia County. The finder of th e
wallet brought It to the Pomeroy
office of The Dally Sentinel a nd
Pickens was advised of the find
- picked up hls billfold and was
rea lly pleased.
One problem, we neglected to
get the name of the gentleman
who found the wallet and turned
It In - a great thing to do.

---·

Already lots of "s tuff" from
wheelbarrows to trac tors have
been lined up lor a consignment
a uction to be held on Saturday,
April 30, at the Carmel Church.
P urpose of the sa le Is to raise
money to finish the Interior of the
c hurc h and pay off some money
owed on the new addition
co nstruction.
Auctioneer Dan Smith is donat ing his se rvices for the day. The
sa le will begin at 10 a.m . but just
before t he sale gets underway,
the sm all children of the church
who make up the class of Connie
Little, w il l provide
enterta inme nt .
Women of the · c hurch will
operate a sale of homecooked
food throug hout the day and
there will be a rummage sa le In
progress also during the day .
One "monkey bu siness" fea·
ture will be a " post hole " sale
wi th politicians be ing especially
urged to participate In that.
Items can be consigned right
up to sale time but it's bes t to plan
a bit In a dvance . If you have
something to consign call Larry
Circle, John Rose or Randy
Rieber.
Jo Smith who operates Jo's
·Red Barn In Syracuse has
changed the scope of her opera·
lions a bit. The sa le of cement
items will continue outside her
hom e but the. inside part of the
bu siness operated Inside the
house has been disco ntinued.

I don 't know why I'm mentioning this so far ahead except that I
was asked to. At any rate, women
of . Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport wm be
holding a s pring rummage sale
from 9 a.m. to 3: 30 p .m . In the
church basement on Ma y 3 and 4.
Congratulations to Virginia
Bland, Racine, who recently was
presented he r 25th year members hip pin at a meeting of the Point
Pleasant , W. Va., Chapter 75,
Order of Eastern Star . On hand
as a guest for tbe occasion was
her daughter, Margaret Ann
Caudill of Jackson.
Graduation time is rolling up
a round the country a nd among
this spring's graduates from
Ind iana University at 10 a.m. on
May 7 at Memorial Stadium In
Bloomington will be Melanie Ann
Weese. She will receive her
bachelor ol science degree In
optometry.
•
It's also getting to be alumni
reunion time.
The Racine-Southern Alumni
Banquet has been set for 6 p.m.
on Saturday, May 28, at Southern
High School in Racipe. Anyone
needing information a bout the
reunion is to call Joyce Quillen,
949·2695; Pam Diddle, 949-2747;
Larry Circle, 949-2021, or Robyn
Reiber, 949·2288.

'

,,,

'' '

I

. r:

'

I .04
·'i
I "

I
I

MARY ~· BENTZ

Bentz retires from Ohio Power
· Mary W. Bentz of Lincoln Hlll,
Pomeroy, retired April I from
theOhioPowerCo. where she has
worked for the pas\ 45 years.
A senior clerk in the Pomeroy
office, Mrs. Bentz has been on
disability leave for the past five
·years.
.
She was hired on Aug. 9, 1943as
a clerk and stenograher-jr. at
Pomeroy, advanced to general
clerk-sr. in 1956, and accounting
clerk, a title later changed to
senior clerk, in the Marketing
~nd Customer Services Depart-

ment in 1969.
._
In retirement Mrs. Bentz plans
to spend her time around home
with her husband , Walter. Their
only daughter, Dreama, will
graduate in June from Meigs
High School and wlll be going on
to college.
She enjoys collecting antiques ,
particularly clocks with a collec·
lion of more than 40. She Is a
member of the Minersville Uni·
ted Methodist Church and has
been organist there for 45 years.
'

People in the local area who
receive Social Securlty checks
have an Important responsibility
to report any event that could
affect their right to or the amount
of their check, Ed P eterson,
Social Security Branch Manager
said.
A report can be made by
telephone, mail, or in person and
should include the following
· information: name of person,
what is being reported, date it
happened, signature: address,
and ' the claim number under
which benefits are being paid (a
nlne·digit number followed by a
letter).
·
The following events should be
reported:
·
Change In mailing address.
Earnings of more than the
annual limit - $8,400 for people
65-69, $6,120 lor people under 65.
People getting benefits because
o( disability should report any

work.
A person goes outside the
United States.
Imprisonment for commission
of a felony . Dependent s and
survivors should also-report:
· Div orce or annulment of
marriage.
Marriage.
Adoption of child.
Child leaves the care of a
parent .
Child nearing 18 is full -time
school student or disabled .
Ch~ge in school attendance
for student 18-19.
A person becomes unable to
manage funds .
A person dies. 1
More information a bout re·
porting can be obtained a t any
Social Security Office. Th e
Athens office Is open from 8:45
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday. The phon e
number is 992-6622.

Business Services

to remind the world once again
that it really did happen,"
Kaufman said .
"And we must remember that
some victims of the Holocaust
were born after World War II. ·
Among these victims are the
Demjanjuk family ," Kaufman
said. " How could one not (feel
sorry for the {lemjanjuk fam ily)? Just Imagine having this
man raise you from childhood ....
Then someone comes along a nd ·
says your father Is a butcher, an
a nima l."
Demjanjuk, a native of the
Ukraine, went to work at a Ford
plant In Cleveland in 1952. He and
his wife Vera had three children
a nd a hom e in th e quiet suburb of
Seven Hills. He is described by
friends as a good hearted m a n.
But Demjanjuk's typical
American life changed signifi·
cantly after t he editor of a
pro-Soviet newspaper In New
York g ave the Immigration .and
Naturalization Ser vic e the
names of 70 suspected Nazi war
criminals. Demjanjuk's name
was on that list.
He is the first pe rson since
Adolph Eichmann In 1962 to be
convicte d In Israel on war
cr imes . Demja njuk faces a possi·
ble dea th penalty at next Mon·
day 's sente ncing.

CLEVELAND iUPl) - Mon·
tered , ., she said. ·'I think it's just
day's conviction of retired a uto·
a s ham, thei r so-cal led
worker John Demjanjuk on
democracy ."
charges of se nding thousands of
Lawyer Alvin Lodlsh , who
Jews to their deaths during
worked on the case for the
World War II brought mixed
Justice Department from Oc·
reaction from people in the city
tober ·1983 until Demja njuk's
where he lived and worked.
extradition in February 1986,
" I believe the evidence from
described the evidence as
the Soviet Union was faulty, "
" overwhelming."
said Luba Rozsa. a member of
Cleveland's Ukrainian commun"The primary ev!dence was
ity a nd secretary of Co mmittee
t he eyewitness tes timony ," he
Against the Use of Soviet Evl·
said. " There were eight to 12
dence in U.S. Courts. "They (the survivors who ldentl!ied John
Soviets) like to d iscredi t the
Demjanjuk In hi s visa photo he
Ukrainians. "
used in gaining res id!&gt;ncy to the
Demjanjuk, 68, contended a ·United Sta tes as .the guard "Ivan
card purported to be his Nazi SS i he Terrible. "
pass at theTre bilrikadeath camp
''He got 10 years of du e process
was a fake provided by the til the United States a nd Israel.
Soviet s in retaliation for him and He didn't give 10 seconds of due
other Ukrainians defecting from
process to his vtctlms," Lodish
the Soviet Union. But the three· said. "I' m sure he thought time
j udge panel in iHael said the had been kind to him."
defense failed to show the idenli·
Mark Ka ufma n, 40 , believes he
fica lion card wa s a fake.
had relatives who were among
"If they (the judges) can
the 1!50,000 Jews killed in
convict him on that evidence, Trablinka .
t~eir so-called democracy is a
"In Israe l. John Demjanjuk
big sham . I can't believe it . I can · apparently received far more
believe it , but I didn't wa nt to," j ustice than he deserved. How Rozsa said after be ing told the ever, I don't believe the pu rpose
verdict.
of this trial was to get even with
"! believed their propaganda an old man, but to impart' to the
about how fair th ey are in their world some sense of justice and

REPAIR

Authorized Service
&amp; Parts
Brigs &amp; StraHon
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh.
992-6611

J-3H71fn

-az: LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
c(

~

z

-

_

!zed, 14 families have been
involved.
It was also reported that 1413
units or one hour each of respite
care were provided over the past
year. The funding allows for two
respite aides and a part-time
coordinator and the Council Is
currently advertising for an
add! tonal respite aide slrice only
one Is currently employed.
Meetings of the support group
have temporar Uy been discontinued although plans are being
made to resume them In June.
Mrs. Thomas again noted that
she still has only verbal approval
on the funding.
The far-reaching aspects of
Alzheimers disease was dlscuued with Rhonda Dailey,
director of nursing, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, noting that

statistics indicate that by 2040
there will be more than 8 million
victims. Theaverageonsetageis
between 50 and 60 although some
much earlier age onsets have
been reported, she said. Since
people are living longer the
Incidence of the disease Is
expected
to increase.
The phone
alert system for the
elderly disabled was discussed
with a demonstration to be given
· before Council sometime In June.
Mrs. Thomas reported on the
progress of the renovation at the
Center. Candidate's night wu
announced along with Senior
Citizens Day to be observed on
May
withemploye
a dinner,
entertain·
ment,17and
recognition.
The occasion will mark the 15th
anniversary of the program In
Meigs County.

and Immunization records are
required for every child being
registered.
Kindergarten teachers will be
on hand to meet the parents and
the children. Kindergarten will
not be held at the school on the
day registration Is being
conducted.

L&amp;L
INDEPENDENT
CARPET
CLEANERS

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;==;;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~

action~

as "I van the Terrible" at the lreblinka
death camp In World War II. Demjanjuk Is

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

handcuffed and on leaving said he would appeal.
REUTER

168 North S.&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Man. thru Fri. t a.m.·S p.m~ s.t. 9 11.111.·1 p.m.
SONABLE"
"OUR PRICE - MOST REA
.

STOlE HOlliS:

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
9t9·2-

IAQII, OliO

MASTERCARD- VIlA- GOLDEN BUCKEYE

BUSINESS PHONE
(6UI
RESIDENCE PHONE

••usso

&lt;tOHD \UNDIY

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TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp;. Backhoe Work

•Will Do Hauling With
t Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bueineas

WAN! 10 IUT WIIUID OR
JUNR CARS OR TRUCKS

•

J&amp;L
INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CONDITIONERS
' •HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES
l-28·88-1 mo ..

POMEROY
992~6687

State Auto
lnsur._
Ca ;•clc•

liKE
DIAMONDS
\,

_,

__

41 - ..... -

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___ _

lmm MOVIES &amp; SLIDES to
VMS TAPE

,

Let us conwtrt tholt old Mow its
&amp;_Slides ovtr to 111y VHS.
CAll AMY CARTEl
or 101'! ILECTIONICS

"•'_"'_

.......

446-7390

_
·-.,

__..,_

ll/2/'ll·tfc

.•·-"... ___ _
a::-'""""-

BOGGS

·SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
- GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Real Estate General

Auihorizod John Deero,
Now Holland, -.,h Hog
Form Equipmtnt
Doaltr
farM E~•lp11ut

.DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL Dl RT

Perte &amp; Stlfl••
1·3· 16tfc

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E.,
' JUDY DeWitt, BROKER

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES CALL:
CHERYL- LEMLEY, SALES AGENT
742-3171

CARD OF THANKS
We would llketothank
everyone who showed
their thoughtlulneaa
by flowers, cards and
gifts during the lou of
our son, Casey Mark.
A spacial thanks to the
staff of Holzer Medical
Canter and Dr. Her·
nieh for their care
and klndneu shown.
Thanks to Ewing Funeral Home, Rev . and
Mrs. Clark Baker, Middleport United Pentacoate! Church, and ·au
our many friends and
relatlv• for all you've
dona to express your
sympathy.
Charlet 8o Dianna
autera

8

CHARLIE'S
MIDTOWN
VIDEOS

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PH. 742-2833
Open Monday thru
Saturday
12 Noon till 8 P.M.
Comer of Now Uma
Road &amp; lryont Strut

AUCTION
AT HOWERY AUCTION HOUSE

Rutlandl Ohio

RT. 50-5 MILE WEST OF ATHENS, OHIO
Several Families Hawe Rt~~uesttd That We Sell
Merchandise at Auction !including one
compltfl h01111hald - . _ antiqutsl

4· 2-'18·1 mo.

MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

TV. couch. -h•. dtYer. sidt-by-sidt rtflia.. nnae. Ia·
bits, lamps, halters, hutch, microwave. eoffNtebla, pots
an p111s, tools, lawn mower. power saw, sweep•. ladder,
cedar chest. misc. ot all kinds indudtnalurnlturtlrom local motel.

A LARGE SALE- THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING
Come on Out to Tht Solo - You Won't It Dilappointod
REFRfSIIMlNTS AVAilW - PUNTY SEATS &amp; PAlliNG
'
TEIMS: Caiih or Chock with Pos. L D.

thtnlt

~th

Care

Prov~~ For the
Elderly tn Thllr Homo.

VV•

NURSES AIDES,
ORDERLIES, LPN '1

Hourtv or Live-In

0,

AUCnONEER-RODNEY HOWERY
7231 or 594-3710

.

FREE ESTtMA TES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
l-28 · 8~-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

e1 .. 448·3F2
TOP. C ASH peid for '83 model

and newer used cars. Smith
Buidc-Pontlec. 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Qalllpolil . Call 814-•48- ·

1

Arrengemente
BONDEO • INSUREO
Cov.NCI Wwfth Workmen' s
Compenutlon

PH. 614·'992··26li 7

Auct)on,

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 9~.2860
Day

Third

Olive,

&amp;

814-448·3159 .

Want to bUy: Uutd furnitura and
antique•. Will buy entire hou ...
hold furniahing. ,.,arlin Wedemeyer, 614-246-6152.
Car$ with or without

Junk

Wanted Standing timber. large

or ..,.11 ~r•ge. Call 614-8827348"' 882·721S . .
Wanted to buy: U1ed Mobile
Homes. Call 814-446-0175 .
BuyinQ daily gold, 1il1olef c:oins.
ring1, Jewelry , lterting ware, old
coins. l~rge OJrrency. Top prl-:
ces . Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614992-3476.
'
Wanted , u• d compact but
powerful PA avltem for band.

Cell Steve 11•-742-2594.

Emplnyment

"At Reasonable Prices"

ot !'llght

~e rVtCe s

11

Help Wanted

NO SUNDAY CAm
4-16·86-tfn

Will do Federal

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

AVON- Sell Avon for ALL areas.
Call 814-446-3358.

992-2264

DIATE OPENINGS . Call 1·

3·21-'87-1 mo.

WOODIID or m WOIUJ WI
1118t1Ul1CI II8Cim
S&lt;:rvln).! MeiJ.i!&gt;. (ialli ~ and
Ma.slln Co unt ies

J&amp;L
INSULATION

RICK HAlSTED, AGENT

FREE ESTIMATES

Point Pltesont, WV
13041 675-7611

CALL 992-2772

J/U/'11/1 - ·

GARAGE &amp;
POLE
BUILDINGS
ROOFING &amp; •
GUTTERS

Announcemenls
3 Announcements
Reduce ufe &amp; f•t with GoBeu
Capsules &amp; E·Vap " Water Pills"

Roger Hysell
Garage

4

Giveaway

Ham•ter to give -.Ntll'f. Call

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

614-446-6978.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Uke
1how.r slall to give
liN IV . Mu1t be tak elf! out. Call

2 smell dog~ to give tltNIV to
good home- 1 male. 1 female .
Cell 814·••&amp;-1909.
Regiltered M~e Afghan Hound
to give fiWIY to good home. 8
Vl'!l . old. Call81.· 742·3194 Of

r - - - - - - - - " 1 1 8 1 .. 742·2075 .

----Fre.,.fuuy hllf grown Clltl to
good home. A11o • y ou ng collie

dog. 81 .. 949·2906.

Half Collie pup. 7 months old,

304-875-2068.

6 Lost and Found

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
.__ _ _.-II.;;2;;;ZI.;,88;;;,/;;;Hn..,

LOST. ltdi81 watch,. Point Pie•
Hnt. •ntlmemal wltue, reward.
Phone Alo Grende 114-24&amp;-

6082.

1

7____v_a_r_d s_a_le_ _

.......G.allipolis ......... .
&amp; Vicinity

GEARY
BODY SHOP
550 PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OPEN 8:30-6:00 P.M.

3-14-'U· llllo.

...----,---'-----,·(

and recore radiiators lnd
heater cores.
can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

HIRING . Your area.
813,550 to t59,480. IMME-

NOW

1315)733-8013, En. F 2758.

EXCEllENT WAGES lor .,_.
time a.. embty warlt ~ectonlca,
crafta. Other1. tnfo 1-{504)

...•.

641 ·0091 . ht 2987. Open 7

MANAGER TRAINEE
Do to -• tremdou1 incr. . e in
bJsin.. &amp; lunh• corporate
•peniaon. w. heve to offer:
•income from 115.000to20. 000
fint ve•. ~cal r. nltionlll
emp'oyment, "Worling oondlt~ns: 9 -5 wHkdlys. *EJtCCelln
benefit•. For confidential intar-view call 814-44S.3373••k for
Mr. Hick1, betweeri 9AM-5 PM.
Mon . - Wed.

Position Open - So clat Worker.
ContNct. part-time: with m•dmum of 14 hou" per' week.
Applications will be taken
through April 22. 19 88. For
further infvrrntrion, call the
Galli• County Heatth O.,art·
ment et 448·4112. ea:t. 292.
Eqlllll ()pponunity Employer.
Dependable woman needed fo r
ehild e. e. light OOuMftleaping In
my home. Ref""'"'*· trlnlpor·

Full &amp; Part·tlme LPN posiUona
lll'lilllble. Appty 11 Pine Crest

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mu1t It Ropairoblo "

FEDERAL, STATE. AND CIVIl
SERVICE JOBS.·

814-448-1830.

Female hem1ter to gtve awey .

DEAD 01 ALIVE

Bt••·

mtlon required . Call 814-4468568 bet we., 8-9 PM ,

can e 14-446-3449.

WANTED

ASSEMBLERS _,tid . IMn
monev auemt;.~lng Tedct;o
Ft-.. lnfor,..ion. Wrtte: Jo-El
Enterpria81b P.O. Bo• 2203.
Kisaimmee, A. 3~742-2203.

n.,..

Alao Tran1mluion
c

6-17 ·1ft

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
516,040 - 859,230/ yr. Now
hiring. Your erN. 80S-687600Q Ext. R·10189 for current
Fed..-.. lilt.

and State
Income Tax.
typing,
bookkeeping.
and Notary
Service .
Margaret Parker

1-28-'88-tln

REPAIR

!! ...............

614-662-3821

992-3410

We pay Cllh for letemodet clean
u"d car1.
Jim Mlnlc Chev.-Oidl ln c.
Bill Gent John1on

388-9303.

at Fruth Ph.,macy .

10-8-tfc

PH. 992·2772

214 EAST MAIN

-· -__-

.. ,.11-,.....,
1 --··-·-··Do

,

U==:- .. ~rr-

BUSINESS SERVICES

16141 99.2·

··.----·
...·... ,_
...
···-_
__
..
.,_
..
_
....._..._
n-•-•-··
..·--··- --·.1;::::=:-=-:==r..':
N
7----·--·-

,,

JU- 111• 0 • -

'"'o••

•AIR

•
I

•New Roofing

_

0111111

~

•FURNACES

'

...

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

•'

SIZES 7 THRU 12
SHIONS
STOP IN TODAY A• 511 011 SPIING FA

.

We Carry Fishing Suppli&amp;S

1 Card of Thanks

LADIES' roRMALS
NOW IN STOCK
r:

31D Slllil

V. C. YOUNG Ill

4-1 8-' 88 tfn

~•e•n

Want~d To Buy

9

motors . Cell Larry Uvety -814-

•Replacement Wi'ndows

~stimates)

992-62t5 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohi~ .•.. ,_· I
L-----~41~

Located Halfway Be·
tween Rt. 7 8o Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
B.7 Financing On ·
Yardman
5ervi&lt;o On Ail Makes
We H....r MC/Di1&lt;/Viso

- htwHn9
or lean

.

work

(Free

742-2451

PH. 949-2969
DoalorFor
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

···-~~~
Ol(IO

Rick Pe.r.on Auctioneer. li-cenud Ohio •nd Walt Vlrgini1.
Elltata. an1ique, l•m, liquidation 18181, 304-773-6785.

Comp'-te houllholds of furniture &amp; antique.. Al1o wood S.

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

- Concrete work
- Plumbing a nd e lect rical

MIKE LEWIS-OWNER

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

RATES

304-896·3430 . Uc. No . 754-

88.

2282.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

- Addons and remodeling
- Roo fing ~nd gutter work

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3· 11-tfn

'61t-742-2617

'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

..00
OIIIOI 11 --'11'011111
IC AU 01t...
0111&amp;

-Auctioneer Col. Ote~r E, Clidc.

614-742-2355
4 -11 -' 87-1 mo.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATiON

Now Homos lull!
"Free Estimates"

TO ,LACE AN AD CAll UM 156
MONDAY thrv fii:IOU 8 A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY

6t52.

Happy Hollow Road

YOUNG'S

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

-FRIII5ntUn!-

1

Rt. 124 Across

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

For any of these ltrwicu call

Wilen you nlld us, we'll be
there ... with prompt, concerned insurance service. We
aiWIJS try to be friends you
can tltpend on. Call us today.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

C·ll·'ll· l mo.

Kindergarten registration ·set
Kindergarten registration
dates for schools In the Eastern
Local School District have been
announced by t~e superintend·
ent's office.
Registration will take place on
May 6 at the Tuppers Plains
School, and on May · 9 at the
Chester Elementary School, 8: 30
a .m. to 3 p .m . Birth certificate

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wedemeyer'• Auction Serviceavailebte at your oon..,.nienee
end loc.tiont. M~rlin Wed•
m~ Auc;tloneer• 814-246-

&amp;

Philathea Women's group meets ·.

...

'Modern Ammunition''
CAN ORDER "Modern"
GUNS ON REQUEST
At Reasonable Prices

8

coal heater-1. Swain' a Furniture

Landers
e

Black Powder Supplies
1

·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy, Ohio

Racine Auxiliary has meeting

...

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

on listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp;~or.to•
~ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Roush birth

..,.,.,

CLEAN UP WITH n..,_
CLASSIFIED ADS ~ 1

SMALL ENGINE

Rt. 1, Rutland, Oh. 45775

WJLi.. APPEAL- John Demjanjuk is escorted
by Israeli pollee across the courtroom floor
Monday as he leaves alter being found guilty of all
crimes Including crimes against humanity for his

HOUSE OVWLDWINC?

t:-::::::::::r:::::;::::r.:=======::;~

triaj s, but once the trial started,
it (the belief) wa s' totally shat ·

ewe meeting held at church

Ann

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

The Best Technique
In Carpet Cleaning

The open church wedding of dlately following the wedding in
April Haggy. daughter of Waiter the church social room.
and Nellie Haggy, Rutland, and
Miss Haggy Is a graduate of .
Rick Colburn, son of Jerry and . Meigs High School and Is emA report on confirmation held Mullen gave the secretary's
Connie Colburn, Gallipolis, wlll ployed at Vaughan's Cardin!!!.
Thursday
night at the Sacred re port and May hostesses were
be held' at 6:30p.m. Saturday at
Middleport. Colburn graduated
Heart
Church
was given at the announced as Dorothy Thomp·
the Rutland Church of God.
from Kyger Creek High School
Marietta is certainly one of
recent
meeting
of the C~tholic son, Wibna. Mansfield, Betty
Music will begin at 6 p .m .
and Is employed by Dr. Donald
Ohio's most historical cltiesr and
Women's
Club
held
in the church Stivers, and Rae Qwizdowsky.
A reception will be held lmme·
Warehime, Gallipolis.
many activities are planned for
social hall.
Mrs. Welsh gave a reading on
the city this year. Trolley rides ,
Phyllis Hackett was chairman the life of St. Vincent Serrer,
sternwheel cruises and museum
of confirmation planning as- patron of builders. Sue Raub won
tours are a mong the highlights.
sisted by Marllyn Poulin, Diana the traveling prize. Refresh·
PFC and Mrs. Rodney Roush of
You can secure a pac~et of
Bartels, Carol McCullough, Alice ments were served by Loretta
Fort
Drum, N.Y . are announcing
visitor information s o you'll
Freeeman, Jane Beegle, Kate Beegle, Vera Buchanan, Mary
the birth of a son, Christopher
know what's happening and
Welsh, and Donna Gibbs.
Kunzelman with Shirley Huston
Edward Lee Roush, born Dec. 26 ,
when by writing the Marietta
Plans for a bake sale to be held contributing. the ewe prayer in
Touris t and Convention Bureau, , at the House of Good Samartian
afer Masses on May 15 were unison closed the meeting. Ma·
Hospital, Watertown, N.Y. At
316 Third St., Depart. 201, Ma·
discussed. Mrs. Freeman prertlyn Meier gave a textile paint·
birth the infant weighed seven
rtetta , Oh. 45750.
sided at the meeting which was
ing demonstration an displayed
pounds, twQ ounces and was 21
preceded by rosary . Barbara shirts which she had painted.
inches
long.
You might wan t to help Olive
Maternal grandparents are
Weber keep smiling. Olive,
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Bailey,
really a good Indian over many
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparyears. is confined · to the new
ents are Mrs. Beverly Roush and·
Western Hills Rehabllitlation
An Election Day dinner to be the meeting with prayer and the
the late Lee Roush, Pomeroy.
Center In Parkersburg. At the
at the firehouse ann~ was pledge to 'the flag. Officers'
held
Maternal great-grandmother is
present tlme she is confined to a
planned
al the recent meeting of reports were given. It was
Mrs . Thelma Hawley of Miners·
wheel chair but the center staffls
the
Racine
Volunteer Fire De· reported that Gary Johnson won
ville. Paternal great·
hoping to get her back on her .feet
partment's
Ladies Auxiliary the East~r basket used as a fund
grandmothers are Mrs. Helen
soon. The address 3 Weste rn Hills
CHRISTOPHER
ROUSH
raising project for the group.
held
at
the
hall.
Eblin of Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Drive, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Others attending were Wanda
the
dinner
with
Menu
for
. Mary Roush of Gallipolis.
26101.
serving to begin atll a .m will be Patterson, Sandy Patterson,
fish, french fries, cole slaw, Barb Lane, Jean Johnson, Trudy
baked beans, rolls and dessert. Spaulding, Missy Jones, Angie
The prize will be $3.50. Plans Patterson, Emma Lyons, Wanda
were also made for making ice Lyons, Rhonda Lyons, and Sherr!
cream to be) ;old at the firemen's Grady. Junior members attend·
In life there are no dress rehears· out on the porch. How can they be
Memorial
Day dinner .
ing were Valerie Patterson and
als. -- NORlll LIBERTY, IND.
so uncaring about their animals?
•
Layne
,
president,
opened
Elizabeth Lyons.
Ann
DEAR N.L.I.: There's a great deal What is wrong with them? What
'
ANN lANDEris•
of wisdom in what you have would you do? - WARM AND
ftni•S, r
er. .... e, r •
written. Thanks for sharing your SAFE IN DETROIT
philosophy.
DEAR DETROIT: Don't ask me
A candlelight Installation ser·
On the prayer list were Francis
Dear Ann Landers: Today in what's wrong with these airheads. I
vice highlighted the AprU meet- Roush, Carl Nelson, Jim Burt,
the
child.
I
was
llabbergasted.
What
Detroit it is 10 below zero with a . can't tell you .
do you think about this, Ann . lng of the Philathea Women ofthe Mary Poole, and Jeanette
wind chill factor oi' 45 below.
If I had neighbors like that I'd
Middleport Church of Christ.
Thomas.
Lan~rs?-SANTABARBARA
People are tucked safe and wann in phone them and make an uraent
Installed
by
Nora
Rice
were
Plans were announced for the
DEAR S.BARB: I would make an
their homes. This morning hun- plea. If after IS minutes the dog was
Maryln
Wllcox,
president;
all-church
mother-daughter ban·
appointment with the teacher and
dreds or mothers drove their kids to Slill out in that miserable weather,
Mildred Riley, vice president; quet to be held on May 7, 6:30
discuss t~e matter. Maybe the child
school because no matter how I'd call'thetn again and tell them 1
Dorothy Roach, secretary; Bea p.m. The men of the church wlll
is telling her thinp that are not Stewart, assistant secretary;
warm they were dressed, it was too was taking the poor pooch into my
prepare and serve the dinner.
true. Often children fantasize that and Farie Cole, treasurer
cold to wait for the bus.
house. Then I'd do it.
A $100 donation was given on
their divo·rced parents will reunite
Tonight I called the Humane
As
Mrs,
Rice
outlined
the
the
new church van. Nellie Boyet
Dear Ann Landers: My daughter
and the pleasaniness between you duties of each officer, a different donated a lace tablecloth to be
Society again about the dog next is in the third grade. Her father and
and your ex has given her false colored candle was lighted from used for . special occasions.
door. I was told, "We are swamped I have been divorced ·for six years.
hopes.
a main candle. The offices were Donna Hartson announced "La·
with calls. Try again tomorrow." Shortly after the divorce I married
(Feeling
pressurrd
to
go
"all
the
presented
carnations matching dies Day Out" at the church oil
We think the dog we are concerned a wonderful man who treats "Sue"
their
candles
by Clyda Aliens· Saturday with Debby Melton to
way"
bemuse
everyone
else
is
doing
about might be dead by tomorrow. as if she were his own. My former
worth.
The
service
closed with be the speaker. Others attending
it• You 're tWt alone. For answers to
Our neighbor has left her beautiful husband and I remain good friends.
prayer
by
ClariCe
Erwin.
were Thelma Boyer, Grace Haw·
yow: questions about sex, ·and to learn
pet outside for the last two days.
When Sue's dad and his wife
The Installation service was ley, Martha Childs, and Regina
how your peers really feel about it,
I cannot understand people like come to pick her up for weekends,
write for Ann lAnders' IU!W/y revised preceded with a poUuck dinner Swift. At the May I2 meeting '
this. The woman is intelligent and we invite them 'in for coffee and the
very pleasant. I have a cousin who
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager." with Donna Hartson giving the snack night will be held.
feelings are warm and hospitable.
blessing. Mildred Riley presided r;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!iiiii;iiii;iili
is the same way. I'll bet anything
Send SJ plus a self-addressed, at
Yesterday I received a ad! from
the meeting with reports being 11
her dog is outside right now. ·
stamped No. 10 envelope (45 cents given by Dorothy Roach, Farle
Sue's teacher. She said I must break
These are the same people, Ann,
postage) ro Ann lAnders, P.O. Box Cole, and Mrs. Riley.
clean from my ex-husband because
who wouidn 't leave a house plant
11561, Chicago, fll. 61M/ /.()562.)
the friendliness between us confuses

Advisory Board hears reports
A report on the Alzhelmers
Disease-Re la ted Disorders program of assistance to caregivers
wa s presented at the Friday
meeting of the Meigs County
Council on Aging Advisory Board
held In the conference room of
Veterans Memorial Hospital. •
Eleanor Thomas . executive
director, • advised that Beth
The iss has been employed as
health coordinator for 'the AD ·
RD program replacing Sandy
White, who resigned.
A report of the past year's
program activities showed that
there are 12 clients currently
receiving respite care with 25
having received the service over
the past year. Training sessions
were attended by 17 caretakers
with five othersviewingth~ tapes
made at the sessions. In the
support group which was organ-

1

Haggy, Colburn plan to wed

Hard task will be worthwhile
Dear Ann Landers: I would like
to respond to the reader whose
elderly mother is in a nursing
home. The woman no longer recog·
nizcs her daughter and she lives in
the past.
I do not condemn the daughter
for feeling that it is an awful chore
to visit her elderly mother. The dear
woman's mind is gone and she
recognizes no one. My hean goes
out to those who must spend hours,
day after day, with a loved one who
is different from the pet'liOn they
knew.
But I would like to tell the
daughter that there is another way
to look at it.
Surel y you know that whether
yo ur mother acknowledges your
presence or not , you are doing
everything you can to brighten her
days and make her feel that she is
pan of the living world. You do
this not o nly· for her but for
yourself.
When your mother is gone, you
will be glad that you did everything
you .could for her. You will never
be able to live those days over.

teach In the absence of Kenny
Imboden. They a re Jo hn Riebel,
Randall Davis, and Fields. There
was a di scussion on having a
meeting with the Cornerstone
Class sometim e this s ummer at
the Kloes home. Davis had the '
closing prayer. Refreshments ·
were served to those named and
Carolyn Davis, Jean Thomas,
Melanie Flt!lds, Glenna Riebel
and Mr. and Mrs. Kloes.

Social Security guidelines given

'

I

Golden Rule Class holds meeting •
Helen and Ray Flelds hosted a
receitt meeting of the Golden
Rule Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church.
J une Kloes preslqed at the
m,fetlng with Fields giving devotions from I Corinthians on the
topic "Child in Me. " Class
members signed a get well card
for Howard Wagenhals, a
member who is hospital !zed. A
flower had been set to him .
Thre members volunteered to

r

•

By BOB HOEFLICH .

By RICH EXNER

:ruesday, Apri119. 1988.

Beat of the Bend

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

AtThurmen. Oh io. Between 279
31 IOJOII from tha old
Centerville .chool hou•. . ,
~edn81diY. Thuradrt
Frld.,..

•

a

.. .....Po'merov.......... .
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Care Center. 556 Jackson-Pike,
EARN AS MUCH oa 1300 .
WEEKLY. lltembt,ing Pf'odut:b
in ywr home. Stan right .way.
No Mperience Ntces•rv . Send
stlf.eddr•aed. ••mpld enw .
lope to : HOMECRAFTS. P.O.
Box 7802. Huntington. WV

2S778.

Government Job&amp;. 116. 040859,230 ¥"•· Now hiring. Your
area. 1- 805-887-8000 E~~:t . R·
9805 for eurrent Feder~~! list.
Hair StyUsu. Aerou The Street
styling salon i1 .eking one
addit io nal stylist who il looking
for m ore than fuat ,1nother job'.
Call Terri at 614-446·9510 for
details.

A•emblers Mnted. Earn money usembling Teddy Bears
Free infornw~tion. Wtite: Jo -El
Enterprises, P.O. Box 2203,
Kinimmee. Ft. 32742-2203.
Governmen1 Jobs. $16. 040 .
8 59.230 yr. Now hittng . Your
•ee 805· 687-1000 ext A·
9808 for current Federlllist

E11cellent ca~ hmoney! Als!fM'nble ,
products at horne. J.,..elry , toys.
electronics, mo"'l FT &amp; PT
!Pieilable. 1-518-469· 3535 E111 .
9·1622 24 hf s.
Federal. State .,d CivH Service
Jobs. Now hiring. Your ar .. .
113.660 to 159,480. lmm·•
dface openings. C.ll1 ·31 5 · 7331062 ext . F 27SS .

Setl Avon tofriM'Idllndnlletiw•
Or In a 1erritory. No 1fgn up fee if

coi1114-992-7t80.

.......................... ···-- ...
We bUy quift1. Pre 1980's. Any

condition . !*5· 1400) . Nood
now. Call 814-992· 58&amp;7.

12

Situations
Wanted

WacMMd~, Apri120andThura-

:::iH~U~v~::."r~":!e.

tiMt. Adutt clotNng end mille.
14 Fon• Drtv.. M•on. WMt
Vlrgtnle. Turnlt1ctr•th.ln•kle
If raining.

Ellm Homo.

2oe s. Fourtll,

Mldcl~ . ~io . Room M'ld

boerdtor..,loroltftnt. Specill
eire In prlvetehome. t14-912· ·

1873.
--,...----\

�- ./
Page
12

8 The Daily Sentinel
Situations
Wanted

Plains

46

LAFF-A-OAY
-.

I now h..,e an opening for a
elderly women or man in mv
private home. 17 yrs . expe·

riance. Tuppers
614- 667-340 2 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mobile home lot. 60 tt. or
tmalll!ll'. 920 4th, Gallipolit.
t7S.water paid. Call 446-4416
after 7 PM .

IMTfRNAL
REVENUE
SE'R\IICE

Olhi. ·

Space for Rent

51

Insurance

Household Goods

home. life. health.

Wanted to Do

Jim's Odd Job!
Sundectcs. 1iding, painting, roof·
ing, ca rpenter work. trailer repelr. Call 61 4-379-2416.

e ........ ,-... s , . - .. -

Cleaning-House ~ o ffices . Ref·
erences. Call 614-446- 8788 or

•..,..•• _ _ .,. .,

"What's wrong with •tlisting
my share 0 f the. deflICI as ·-a
bad debt?"

245-5363.
&amp; A's Roofing· Siding &amp;
remodeling. Will build garagM &amp;
outbuil dings . Minor car penter
J

. wprk
tv , 1 B yeers experience.
GO 0 0 US
ED APP
ll ANCES
Cill! on
614-446-6327
o-r 446- ~-;;;:~~~::;~=~==-T;:;=:::;=::;::::;::;:===1 Washers.
dryers,
refrigeratOrs,

32

1912.
Will haul any klndoftrashexcept
car bOdies. S20 pickup load. Call
304-675-5462 or 67S. 7274

SWIMMING POOL&amp; - S988
ORDER NOW · PAY LATER

44

Mobile Homes

Apartment

for Sale

rongeo . Skaggo Appli•nceo,

Upper River Rd. beskle Stone

for Rent

Creo• Motet 614-«6·739B.

~~~.'1!'1H~: 2'45~~~~condi ·
Pionet~J receiver &amp; 2 speakll'a10 months old. 8175. Cell
614•448·6729 .

1972 PMC mobile home.' 3
bedrooms. unfurnlsMd. 304-

Real Estate

2 or 3 SA .. 2 full b .. hs on First
Ave. Call 614-448-1079 .

Rentals

Garage ap~rtment-3 rooms &amp;
bllh. w / d , air. Clean. No pots.
AduHt anfy . Call 614-446·

Homes for Sale

41

Owner has house for Ill Ie. Been
remodeled with new garage and
, work!hop. Hasgasheatwithcity
wutm ltlld sower. Utilitios are
low. Ave minute walk to town.
New school real close. Asking
price 518000. will accept land
contract . Calll -767-4206 after
6PM.

2 bedroom, 2 baths, Z car
g~raga IIN'el lot on Rt . 33.
Swimming pool, 11telite. close
t o Meigs High. Call 614-992·

3254.
3 bedr oom house. 1.9acres. On
Rt. 7. Appointmttnt onty. 614-

992-6332.
4 bedroom hou:e. Geraga on
Gravel Hill in Middleport. Must
see to appreciMe quality. 61 4-

992-6714.

1519.

Homes for Rent

Nicety fvrni1hed smaR houSD.
Adutt1 onlv. Ref. required. No
..... Call 614-4411-0338.

Hou• for rent / ule-Sac*lded
country home. 8 mi. from locks
&amp; Dam. Glenwood. W.Va. Call ' Completely furnishetl- 3 rooms
614-446-2914.
&amp; bath. 8225 per month. C.ll
6 roam house in Gellipolia. No
prru. Have ref. &amp; dep. Call after

8:30PM 614-44(1.1734.
Hou• in Pl111tz Subdivilon:3
BR . ranch. S325 a mo. Call
814- 448· 7123 Mornings &amp;
evenings.
2 BR . trallerlncountry . 5166a
mo. plus deposit. Call 614-3792435.
Furnished Houte, 3 BR . 29 Neil
Ave .. Gallipolis. S225amo. Call
446-4416 after 7 PM.
1 BR , hou• next to lodge haU In
Crown City . Call 614-446-

1 61 1.

3 bedroom bric:ll; houae. Full
bMem!l1'1t, 2 ear garage. wood
bJrner. 1111 acres. P:O.I. 814985-3920

2 be~ooms. carpeted. rlove.
refrigerator. Will accept one or
two children . Deposit ~equirad.
No inside pet1. 614-992·3090.

3 bedroom raneh . 169 Beech
St.. MiddiGPort. Single both.
c ny lot. 518,500. ~~~ 614-

2 BR, large INing room, yard.
laundry. patio, on Sprfng Ave.
No pets. Deposit . Call efter

992-2806.

614-992-6886.

2 bedraom, full basement.

patio
and garage. Fenced back yard.
Bellmead@. 304-675-3427.

Downtown. ground floor apartment. 4 roomt, blllth &amp; basement. Newly deooratad. Off
street l)llrking. For more lnfor.
call 81~446-0855 . 8 AM-4 :30
PM Weekends.

e.

Nice 2 bedroom kousa In GallipoliJ, range, refrigerator, air
cond, carpet, waaker and dryer
hook ups. Refrenoa and deposit
required. One child. Call 304876-3988 after 6:00pm .

61 4-.4(1.4109 Of 379-2740.

N&amp;W one Bedroom apts. In
Middleport. Furnished or uriLr·
nlshed. Call 814-992-5304 or
446-8898 af1er 5 .
For .ant- 1 BR . updahs. New tv
remodeled. Secand Aw. · Call
614-446-8519 Of 446-4927.
Nice 1 BR . apt . Range!. rofrig.

Maytag automatic waaher. Excellant Condition. 8200. Call

ln vest mtmt property tor sale.
Remodeled rental hou!le. 2 bt
wtt h b111ement. chy , $17,500.
304-675-6331 .
H ou~e tor !1818 Gallipolia F8fry, l
acres or more. 304-675-4668 or
675-2412.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

for Rent
In Eurelc•2 nice &amp; clean 2 BR .
mobile homM. S200&amp; • 226 per
mo. Dep required. No pels.
Adu Its only. Call 814-246·
5863.
14x70, 2 BR .. unfurnished on
private lot. % mile from Hol:r:er
Hospi1al. Aduhs only. all 814-

..

44(1.2300.

Sofa &amp; chair. Good condition.
Call 814· 266-6795.
Cabinets tor sale. Start• set. 5
ft , Meke offer. Call 614-256 ·
1445.
Refrigerator. Good cond. 8200 .
Call 614 -448 -3648.
MaHohan Furl'iilure. Quality fur·
niture 8c carpet at Iowen poui.,.e prices. Financing available to
qu•lified buyers . Upper River
Rd . Gall. 0. 614 -446·7444.

53

1986 Redman .Sectional home.
28~56 . 3 BR , cent nil air, reatt{
to be moved. Call 814- 4468594 ttfter 6pm.

e.

54

Very nice. 2nd. floor. 1 &amp; 2
bedroom apts. for le- wtth
atove &amp; refrig. 521 O-S226e mo.
plus utiUtiJIII. Call 614--4464249 or 448-2326 or 4464.t26.

Double bed, sofa &amp; chair, sofa&amp;
loveuat, Curt if Math• TV. end
tabiM, 24 ln. girls 10 speed
Huffy bike. becllpreads, drapM,
••dsa bike. Call 304· 676·
5996 after 6:00 pm or aft•
12:00 noon Set.

3- 2 BR . furnished apta. No pets.
Ref. &amp; see. dep. required. Call

814-4411-1 384.
In Rio Grande. nice 2 BA. S225
mo. Refrigerator, stove &amp; w1ter
furnished. No Petl..Call 614446-8058.

1988 Redman, 2 bedroom,
cantr11lair , on lot in mobile home
~)ark . Uud one mo. 512, !JOO or
batt offer. Set up loc81. Call

304-863-9644.

PM .
Government homes fron\ •1 . !u
replir) . Dellnqllllflt •x prop.-ty.
Repo11"16ons. Call 806-8878000 E)d. 0 H 9806 for current
repo lin
19 69 Price Meyeu 12x85
t,.u ... Muat •fl. Call 814-817·

Call 114-

7646.

2783.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming , Ail breeds ... AII
atyles. lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446·0231 .
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlmlllayan, Persian and
Si.m•e kittens. New AKC
Chow puppl•. Call 614-441·
3844 after 7PM .
2 AKC Reg. Boxer pup1. 1 male
&amp; 1 female. Ceii614·74Z· 3080.

57

Musical
Instruments

Elactric Guitar, 8200. Call 614·

446·4458.

lndN idual guit•r l•aons. Beginners, Serious Ouit•iat. Bn.tnic.dis Music. 814· 448 -0687 .
Jeff Wamslll¥ in.. ructor. 614·
446 -8077. Limhad Op111ninga.

F.Jrlll Supptii!S

&amp; L1ves1uck
61

Musey Ferguson, New HoiiMd,
Bush Hog Sal• a Service. Over
40 used tr1cton to choose from
&amp; ·completeline of new 6 used
equipment. Llrg•t ee6ect:ion In
S.E. Ohio.

44

Apartment
for Rant

1 bedroom furnished affedeney
apt. 1 upttlira apt. with 2
bectooma. Kitchen furnlthed. E.
Main. Pomeroy. 81~992· 8215

/

.Farm Equipment

John DeeJe 14 T baler, manure
spraader, grader blade, di~c.
cultN'ators. ploWs, 6 bottom
cultipeck•. fertili:r:e spreader·
200, hl't wagon, electricwelder,
gas welder &amp; cutting torch, hao,'
eh•v•tor-square bel•. Pasture
fl'n rent. CaM 814-446-2784.
Mauev Ferger•on 166 dieul.
Good cond. 14000, Firm. Call
61 ... ·388-9354.
Br•nd new, New Holland Sluny
auger type manure spr811der.
$6,000. Brand naw, New Hoi·
land hayblne. 8 ft. cut· h• onty
cut 6 acr• hay, 86200. John
Oeer'e 7000, 4 row corn planter=
top thap .. can also sad plant
with It, t3250. 3 paint hitch, 4
wheel hev rake, 8325 . Clll
614 -246· 5223 .
LocUst poat-Larg.e pile. 880. Call
614-367-0624.
Manure spreader. Good cond.
Call 814-379 -2733 after 4 PM .
Farmall Cub tractor whh plowa
cultivator~ . Very good condi·
tion. 81800 for all or will
separate. Call 614-448 -4045.

&amp;

1964 Farmall Cub. Hydraulic:~.
42 irlch belly mower. 81900.

OBO. Coli 614-742-2142.
Oeuu -AIIis new 386 4 row
no·till plant•. plate units, dry
fartill:r:ar, lnacet attach.
$7,600.00. Used Alli1·
Chalmer• 2 row three point no
till plant•. chy fartilizer, inaect
attach, u•ed approx 100 acr•.
e.xc cond, S2.600.00. Keefer'•
S.,iceCent•. St. At. 87, Laon.
W .Va . phone 304-8915-3874.
Used 1500 and BOO s•i• Ford
tracton. New ·Holland Round
bat.,;s, rak•. mowers. nBW ~md
used. See ua for all your tractor
and hl't' tool needs . 0 p• cent
financing for one year on all new
,:ord tractors and New HoiiMd
equipment. Ke.ter' 1 Service
Center, St. Rt. 87. Lean, W.Va.
304·896-3874 .
1660 Oliver traCtor.
. 304-675-3190 .

~c

cond,

63

Livestock

3 Ewa sheepa- 1 yr. old. 41embs
for Ale. Call 814-367-0334.
Special Springer Cow/Calf Sale
• Fri., April 22, 7:30 PM.
Stirling at 8 PM-12 niM'6 u1ed
Jtock trlilers-gooea nedc &amp;
bump• hitdl. All breeds indudlng Holatains. Cattle will be
accepted 4 PM. Thursday. April
21 &amp; up to sale - April 22.
Hauling available. Alhens LivestoO: Sal• 1 mlleeMt ot Albany
on St. Rt. 50. Call node yard
614-592-2322 or 698 -3531
evenings.
1 &amp;th Annual Bantltt¥ Pig S.l•
Wed.. April 27, 7 :30 PM,
FaYette Co. fairgrounds, Wa·
shlngton Court House. Selling
200 hud · Qurou, Hamp·
Duro•. Hamp. Yorks, Barrows
&amp; Gilts. Remember the chlm·
plan barrow at the Ohio State
fair plus the champion at
Fayette. Green &amp; Rou were
purch•ed 11 l•t yell'S ..le.
Ragar Bent!., 3112 Reed Rd .,
Sabina. Ohio. 613·684 -2388.
Regist•ed Jer~ev COw from top
bloadin•. 'Jullt fr•h· seoo.
Call 614-448 -0231.
Reglst•ed Paint Stallion ••vice. Beautiful d•k brown loud
toblano. APHA and ROM aren•
bloodiil•. Faa $76. 614-949·
2062.
Quer1• Horae m•e. Bay with
black mane and ttil. Good with
children. Appro•imatety 12 v•·
ers old. 814-742-30&amp;4.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain .

Ground shell corn ••.&amp;o P•
100. be round btl• Alfalfa or
o.. h.,. In dry 120.00 . 8:0012:00 dllty. Morg.,'s Woodllwn Ftrm, Rt. 36. Pliny. W . Va ,

2811-6522 .. 281-7214.

1887 ChwraiM Celilbrity. 4 dr .•

Sundov. MlddtopCH'I.

PS. PB. IlL cn~loo. o", AM-FM-

Two-four bedroom ipartmants
in Pomeroy. O.potit ,.qulrad.

46

.41-0112 """'"""
11131ultlt Skvl•lt. 1914 Mer·

3 ro~m turnilhed apt. 11t. floor

'""· No

om. 814-949-2283.

tt•eo. Call 81•-'"•·••ao or

Rent

'

cury Lynx for •le or lrade. Cal
1181 Plymoulh fllellant etMiDn
VMgOn. Automatic, air condl·
tkmlne. arulla Body in IOOd
lhiPO. ne110. Cttll 11.·441·
1708 aft•l PM.

7479.

Blec:h Street. Middlaport. Ohio,
2 be*oom fumlthtd apt. utli-ti• pai d. ref•en cee an d deposit,

Por~

304-882-2111.

304-1711-3073.

Apartmtntl In Hen.t.son. W.
va•. after 6:00 clll 304-875-

TraM• lots. At. 1 loOJ .. Road,.
bKk af K &amp; K Mable

1972.

11.·211·1270.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k.
Aau• 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rentll t,.il••· Call 8 14-02·

2 bedrooms moble home, p1 r1 ~
, Cally furnkhed. drap•. c.-pet.
eir cond, S4, 996.00. 304-876-

,,.11...

Space for ..,.."
All
hook-ups. C.ble. A11oefflaltnOV
room~. llir and cMI• Millon,

1978 Mercury M~rqula. •1200
or belt oN•. C1ll 114-843·
0101.

W.Vo. Coll304-77~1111 .

Spaclou1 mobn• home locator
rent. Famtty Prldrl Mobile Home

1974 F01d Elho. 11.000 mil•.
Colll14-1230 or 317·0132.

Golllpollo ""'rv· W. Va.

304-1711-10711.

HDrn•.
.-

Auto·s For Sale

1982 Pontiac Firebird. New
engine. paint . .a cyl., standard
ahift. EKeel. bll'gain- t 3000. Call
614-446·0046 aft• 6 PM .
1983 Chryst• New Yort.•·Fifth
Ave. edition. (loaded) . Brown
exterior with beige vetour int•
rior. heel cond. Priced 10 sell.
83696. Call 614- 246-6609.
1981 Buick Skylark. 4 dr., AC.
AM -FM-Cau. Good car. High
mileage. Call 61 4·446· 7211 .

1 sao· Ponhsc Sunbird, 231-V6,
4speed, hetchback, rear spoil•.
louvflfs, sunroof. Pontiac Rally
rims. 81000 neg. Call304-676·

"Parking's not e problem In this
neighborhood. Just walt a second till
someone steals a car."

6812.
Red Hot bargainal Drug doalera'
CIIS, boats. planet repo' d. Sur·
plus. Your Area. Buyers Guide.
(11806·6~7-6000 Ext. S-9806_.
1987 Old• Cutl•s Supreme.
14.000 mil•. AC. AM -FM
radio, titt wheel, power win·
dows. V8 . S10.800. 614-843·
6163.

614-992-8313.

THE COURAGE:

~TH55AM5 ~

THI? ¥00~6 WOMAN
0\,;P,AYt'D-

COURAGE A•L .,
GRoAT AMERICAN
HEROS,; ARI'
MADE FROM.

wh-.

~-

DIDIJ'T USE IT ~u.,, DID YOO?

367-7606 .
306 ' engine &amp; transminion.
71,000 actual miles. 304-675·

3289 .

'77 Pontiac Sunblrd, 4 cyl:'.
auto., runs good, good body.
S800. 304-676· 7375.
1986 C.11ilar, 2 door, \1-6, fully
equipped, P-v' b•l~r~ce due,
phone 304-676-2746.
1976 Pontlte G.P.. neoN tina,
·~76.00 .

304-876-4038.

1880 Z-28. T· tops. crulae. tilt,
PW, 13,000.00 or make offer.
1814 ChiiNy Bel-Air. $1.100.00
or maka offer. Phone 304-896·
3427 or 304-676-1106.

1977 Buidt, 4 door, runs-needs
e~gina work,
good tire~,
S200.00 firm. 1977 1J.r. ton 4
wheel drWe Chevrolet: Suburban, run1 good 360 eninge.
trtntfer c•ejult gone through,
two new front tend8fa, 8600.00
firm. Phone 304-87&amp;-1981 after 6:30PM .

72

Trucks for Sale

1979 Dodge, V-8 atand•d.
Excel. running cond. C1ll 61 •·

379-2588 .

-

1987 Ford
fl• bed. S200.
Call614 ·317 -0624.
1977 % ton pickup 41(4. Good
cond. Mu .. sell. Call 614-446·

2109 .

1978 Chwy •x4. 360. auto, PS.
PB, tilt whHI. 61.t -949·2237 .
1978 Bl•ar. 400. Trail«ing
Special. auto. 1973 GMC one
ton pidt·up, auto. • . 110011.16
trudt tlr•. Call 614 -992- 2250
after 6 :00p.m.
1976 Ford F-150 pick· up. Auto.
PS. half racks, h• recently been
moved . Can be 11en moat
anytime. Price reduced. 856
Diamond St.. upp• end of
Middleport.
1982 Toyota truck lA ton, 6
apeed with topp•. 17,000
mil•. axe cond. ss,ooo.oo.

Coachman 34 ft. travel camper
with extension. Excel. cond.
Call-114-388 -9796.

Squares

(!I American Muscle
Magazine
flii]J Judge
l!tJ Wheel of Fortune

27 "'oncord camp•. sleeps 6,
e•v out awning. tub with
shower, S1,800.00 after 6 :00
call 304-882-2069 .

THINK

Services

I_,"1 ...

Home
Improvements

304-876-1616.

73

Vans

BASEMENT

Do you WANT Mj;;
io THIN/&lt; oR 're&gt;
wo~"?

For nle or trade-1976 CJ -7
Jeep. 11600 or b•1 oWer. Call

814-388·8764.

remembrances of his
and an encounter
with Marvin the Martian,
while Wile E. Coyote gets a
chance to catch Roadrunner.
childhood

3I!!!

P.ri'"eNews
MOVIE: Take 1he Money
and Run (PGJ (1 :25)
fil (!) MOVIE: Emma: Queen
of the Soulh Seas, Part 2

814-387·0121 .
Trenchlng· rNionable rat•- we 1M, -'ecltic. g•, drain~gelin• .
Pipe&amp; fUrtur• at discount. Call
61.t· 448·0608.
Siding, overhll'lg gutters, .torm
doora a. windowa. Free eatimete. Call 814·4•6-6070.

1971 J ..p Wagoneer, S900.00.
Runs good, 4 good AT track•
tlr•. 304-882-2089 att• 8:00
pm.

DlA.OMAIS
LCDKitvG EO&lt; IOJE

Can' t afford high pricMi' Cell A
&amp; 8 remodeling . You name it, we
do it at tow low cast. 61 4-4468970 .

00...

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON ' S Television Service.
Houst nils on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Sl)ecialing in Zenith. Catl
304-678 · 2398 or. 614 -446·
24ti • .

WHY WOL.IL.D I
WANT TO E!&gt;UY

YOI.J WANT TO
BL.IYA DEAD

A DE'AD FRO:'!~

FROG-~

Fetty Tree Trimming, atump
removal. Call 304-676·1331 .

l

j

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed sam a day.
Pump tal• and servic.. 304-

I'

896-3802

St1rks Tree and Lawn Sarvice,
lawn care. landscaping, Jtump
removal. 304 -678 -2842 or
576-2903.

ENJOY YORE
CARD GAME.

CARTER'S PLUMBING

PAW

AND HEATING •

I'LL BE HERE
DRUDGIN' AWAY

AT

CHORES

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpotls. Ohio
Phone 614-448-3888 or 814-

6800. 16150. Coli 114-2111924.
1984 Yamaha XT MonoCI'ou
100 co. Runs good. 1&amp;00. Cell
614·381-131•.

1811 Buzutd 01 710. 4000
mil•. New tlr•. v.-y dun.
12000. Coli '114-441-4q41.
Hond1 CIIOO fuly ctr. .ld.
cycle ...,.., new tlr-. many

utr-. 304-112-3317.

THE

OUfl. AI-INIV~­
SNil:l I 601"
AI-IS.V

1110 H - 800 C...,om whh
extr-. 304·171-4038.

PldElC:...

··~·3171 .

Mowrey'• Upholst•lng swv.,g
trl coumyarea 22 re•s. The beet
in lurntture upho)atarlng. C•ll
304 - 6715 - •1 154 tor free
eatlmll•.
"'

lO
II
13
14

15

19

8

Larry King Live!
9:30 l!l NHL Hockey
9:50 CD MOVIE: The Far Coun1ry
INA ) (1 :37)
10:00 CD Slraigh1 Talk
II~ til)) NBC Nowo Special
Women Behind Bars: At the ·
maximum-security Illinois
state penitentiary in Dwight,

21

22

+

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
West

Opening lead: • 10
took the queen. the jack was casbed
and declarer finessed to ·his diamond
jack. He then cashed the spade king,
hoping the 10 would fall, but no luck.
Even now, running tile clubs would
squeeze East, but instead declarer
ruffed the spade nine and tried to drop
the diamond king. When it did not
drop, the slam was one away. No
doubt tbe unusual success of his wild
pre-empt wiD encourage West
make similar idiot bids in ~~~~ futore.

,

11:00 CD Remington Ste•

11 w CIJ Ill &lt;IJ tm

43

Painter
Chagall
Chicago
airport
Put on
guard
Perk up
Piper
or Rabbit
Unclose
(poet.)

44
45

Bone
cavities
Verdi's
forte
Mountain
lake
Type of race

DOWN

1 Fly alone
2 Flake

...

~~~

"'

3 Plunder
4 Verb form 17 "Hail"
29
5 Retiree's
to Pompey 31
income
20 Mine

volatile
6
Hawaiian
7
baking pit , 8
Artless
9
Name (Fr)
Forest
· 12
creature

34 Have debts
35 Sioux
·

32

Tree syrup
entrance
Brew
23 Scheme
Entourage 24 Elm fruit
Italian
25 Food
city
26 Priestly
FOR's
headdress
27 Love

Haul
"Bess, you
is my - "
Brolin
series
O'Hara
plantation
Palm leaf
Blunder
Primate

TV

36
37

39
41

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juniper
tree
40 Mortal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

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4/19

AXYDLBAAXR

Q)J News
(!)Sign Ofl
11]1 The Flnnloh SoluHon

•.

lsLONGFELLOW

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
api&gt;strophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
CRYPTOQUOTE

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4·19

KFX

R MU X

YP Z VP F E KT R X

T X J ·

LKTMEN

T K J

I!Jlllpoote Tonight
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II (J) lllahUine C
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and the llellerlnli'

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"\ 38 Biblical

10:30 CD Celebrity Chefs
11]1 Tony Brown's Joumol
_ Ill III Jallersons

::::r..,.

.•
...
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to-.:::

plateau
Polio
vaccine
developer
27 Guiltless
28 Descended
(poet.)
29 Filipino
peasant
30USSR
space
stati6n
31 Value
39 Wood
core

and children in

@ Evening Newa
Ill (!) Benny Hill

11:110~~1!:

'lA 7
tAJ4
7 6 53

24

sexual frustration, which
oflen leads to lesbianism and
the adoption of surroga1e

coverage

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+K9 7 6

23 Andean

mto the .unique problems of
mothers held for long-term
mprisonment, such as
separatiOn from families and

~Newt

42

1 Squabble
6

18

Explore lhe beautiful
landscapes and city scenes
of Finland and the Images of
the people and lheir culture.
IIJl Moneyllne
1!J1 Twilight Zone
II til Love Connection
1t:3011[]) tm Declalon 'II New
York primaty election

Paul Rupe. Jr. Weter Service.
Pools, Qat.-n.. walla. Call 614·

1911 tCZ 1000LTDMotar.,..o,

304-171-2307... 1711·1211.

cume

a

1.::__:.::._.::._...::.:.::._____ I-------- - -

~RIZZWELLS®

~

pools, cilternt, wells. Ph. 614-

Upholstery

ACROSS

bomb1ng al a press
conference.
1m mt!21 MOVIE: 'Case
Closed' CBS Tuesday Movie

l!Jl

+Jio

•

creative intensity in writing
her poetry is captured. 1;1

J &amp; J Water SffVIce. Swimming

87

1HAT~

t95

+82

by THOMA5 JOSEPH

&amp;;'~Ieee &amp; Vlelono Plalh ·s

Dill•d Wat• Service: Pools.
Cisterns. Walls. Delivery Anv·
time. Call 814-446-7404-No
·Sunday calls.

2819.

AL.JNAY'S ASK ME

EAST
+lOBS.
'IKJS
t K 1087

~~ttt'

0 (I) thlrtyoome1hlng
Michael and Elliol struggle Ia
overcome a creative block.

General Hauling

Watterson' 1 Wat•r H1ulin9.
r ...onable rat•. i"'m•dlate
2,000 gallon delivery, elsternt,
pools, wei. etc. Call 304·676·

West's absurd three-bear! jump into
the twilight zone is not textbook bid·
ding. West assumed the opponents had
game or slam after bis partner had
passed as dealer. So, trading on favor·
able vulnerability, he got in their way
witll bis pre-emptive jump. Then everybody got Into the act ..:. North with
a random cue-bid of four hearts, East
witll bis raise to five hearts. Probably
South should bave doubled with his
minimum opening and poor club suit,
but he passed. So North bid six clubs
- not a great contract. but very
makable.
When the heart 10 lead is covered
with the queen, king and ace, declarer
should realize his best hope is to find
tile spade queen witll West. A spade to
the jack, tile A-K of clubs, !lien spade
ace and a diamond to tbe ace will allow South to get rid of dummy's losing
heart on bis spade king. He will then
have to lose only the diamond king.
But this declarer was blind. After winning tile opening lead, be played A-K
of clubs and exited with a heart. East
woo tile jack (better if he had let West
win) and played a spade.Dummy's ace

rn

Rllldentiai or commercilll wir·
In g. New , service or rapair.s.
Uc:ensad electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304676- 1786.

R
R Wat• Servic.. Pools,
cisterns, Wills . lmmediate1,000 or 2.000 tallans deiNey.
Call 30.a-675-6370 .

By James Jacoby

16 _

husbands

. Electrical

1979 Honda XR 210, on or off
roMI, UOO. 1881 Honda CM
400 ltrllt bilr.e,. low mllua•

WEST
+Q32
'1109860

(R) 0
(!) I]] Frontline Investigate
the unsolved 1984 lerrorisl

prison. C

448 -4477

245-928&amp;.

WHYC:OE5~

NORTH
&lt;-IJ-81
+AJ
'IQ2
tQ8 3 2
+AKQ9'

The battle
of the palookas

IL. host Maria Shriver delves

BARNEY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1111 Honda V-11. Call 114~
441-eon.

BRIDGE

of The Taming of the Shrew.

814-388-8491 .

UNSCR AM BLE fOR
ANSWER

Aller beginning our flight. 1 asked lhe aenal pholographer
specific direc11ons 10 our destination . He sm1led , ··· Follow the
highway wesl and the name is on the MAILBOX. '"

Jahan of Flashdance in
action. (NRJ
. 9:00 []) 700 Club
II~ IHI J.J. Starbuck
CIJ 0 Ill Moonllghling David
~nd Maddie acl out a spoof

R,C remodeling . Odd jobs·
Carpentry . Free estimat•. Call

Complete the chuckle quoled
~y f1l/ 1ng in t he m1ssing words
you develop from, step No, 3 below.

SCR.AM.lETS ANSWERS
Infamy - Blaze - Vixen - Moslly -: MAILBOX

I]) The Wonder Years
Kevin, madly infatuated wilh
Lisa, asks her lo the Junior
H•gh dance. 1;1
1m It's Flaahbeagle, Cha~le
Brown Snoopy 1ries his paw
at a new dance style. The
OOagllfs routines are drawn
from photographs of Marine

Tree &amp; stump removal . New
lawns, stone. mulch, shade
tr ..., shrubs:, A:r:ali •· top toil.
Dan "• Landscapes ·' 614-446-

Motorcycles

Must tell 1982 Vamah1 760
Maxim. .Good cond. 8800 mile~ .
Coli 814-241·1192 oft• I PM.

8

lil 0

MID cOMFNJIOklsti&gt;--IP_1-L...I....

THE STAT£
OEH\RlMEIJT?

I"

PRINT NUM BERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

(R)

Sl~£

Coli 814-246-9162.

85

L._.J.-...L.-.l·---L-....1..-.J

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Universe
Competit1on from Tucson , AZ

Brick-Biodc Work- Foundations.
brick 'IIIW'IMI', iireplaces. rep lira,
restor•ions &amp;. •mall jobs. Free
aatimat•. 26 veers experience.

6

s u T Nu J I
f--rl
I ;;.._yl_,;,.lr.;7;...,;.,18~~-l ()
r

8:30 CD Lasl Froniler
l!l Bodybuilding 1967 AAU

&amp; Refrigeration
1981 Oatson 4 wheel drive.
Runt great, high mlle1ge.
Chetp. 814·992-7384 ...,an.
inga.

7:35 (1] NBA Baskelball
8:00 CD Crossbow
IJ ~ IHI MaUock Mallock
defends a pro wrestler on a
murder charge . (R)
lil 0 I]) Who's the Boss?
Tony tries to fix up
Samantha wilh the new kid in
town. (R) Q
(]) I]] Nova Nova follows
the urgent efforts to track
down new med icines in
Buslin• Ou1 All Over
Springtime brings Bugs

Painting. roofing, remodeling,
tree trimming, buildings torn
down, general hauling. Call

84

Q
!lll Crossfire
fll @ 1H1 Jeopardy! Q
I!!! Bamey Miller
fil (!) WKRP In Cincinnati

nature. C
1m m@ Bugs Bunny's

SWEEPER and sewing.machine
repair. parts, •nd suppliM. Pick
· up and deiN fllY, Davi• Vecuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
·Georg• Creek Ad. Call 614 446-0294.

&amp; 4 W.O.

1987 Ford 160 extended con·
version... van. 14.000 mil•, R•
111111 a l • h • e~ptain chairs &amp;
lounge. Call 614 -218 -1327.

74

MAI&lt;e up youR MIND.

WATERPROOFING
UnCQnditionlll lifetime guaran·
tee. lOcal references furntshed.
Free estimMet. Call collect
1-61.t-237· 0488, day or night.
RogertBasemant
Waterproofing.

82

One of 1he greatest puzzles in
life is how do you respond when
- - - - - - - - - - ,· someone says , '" Hey. I know a

5

6:05 CD Alice
6:30 II~ til)) NBC Nighlly News

fil (!) M•A•S•H
7:05 CD Andy Giilll1h
7:30 IJ ~ CIJ Hollywood

9646 .

3A ton

I

~:·
~__rT,:_;E;:;-T:.,..;J:...;Y..,.--11
I I 1 I. . ,

~!!! ' Facts ol Life
fll III Happy Day~

~ Chee•s

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

7894.
VW Baja railbuggy may trade for
small car. 1979 Honda Custon
500 atreet bike. 1982 Suzuki
126 dirt bike. 1979 Mercury
Grand Marquis. 304-676-5135.

I

l!ll Owl TV 1:;1
l!lJ ShowBiz Today

Inside lhe PGA Tour
I]) ABC Newo Q ·
(!) Nlghlly Buslnelll Report
1m Ill t!2l CBS News
l!Jl Body Electric
l!lJ Inside Politics ·a~
I!!! WKRP In Cincinnati '
· fll (!) Too Close lor Comfort
6:35 (1] Carol Burnett
7:00 CD Remington S1eele
IJ ~ PM Magazine
l!l SportoCenter (L) ·-&lt;
CIJ Entortainmen1 Tonight
fl1 I]) People's Court
(!) l!ll MacNeill Lehrer
NowoHour (1 :00)
tm News
I!]) Moneyllne
Ill @ IHI Wheel ot Fortune

IHERt WASN·r fo\OC~V YOU

Ii

CLUGH

.

Ford automatic transmission fits
302 engine. $100. Ten reclining
bucket seats, 150 . Call 614-

1979 Dataon. body good c;ond.
8360 .00 . phone 304 -675·

ROCEFS

f--rl=-;:-I..::,..;::..1
' ~I·

li\CIJ 0

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

81

•.

a Fox

Daleks

1979 Lincoln Continental Town
Car. Loaded. Vinyl roof. Cheap.

•c cond, .,,&amp;00.00. Phone

1171 C...o11dll0. 4 - ·
Rotty
711000 mM-.
16100. Coli 114-441-1822

I

(!) MOVIE: Dr. Who: The

0966.

79

the

be·
low to form fovr simple words

tm New•

Olds., Buick. Pontiac, Chevy,
Chevy truck. Ford. Chryslertransmiutons {used) are intll!if·
neltv inspected&amp;. c•rv 3000mi .
or 30 day warranty (whichever
occurs first) . We buy junk
tranamiuions. Call 614-446·

304-178-1211.

Tr illlo llllrl al1o 11

-letters of
0 foRearrange
ur scrornbl~ words

l!l SPfl.rtsLook

14ft alumn simi Vwith 6 hp air
coolad motor, $300.00 . 304 -

71

,..

II ~ CIJ 0 &lt;ll 1!t1 Ill t!2l

304-576·2364 .

1984 Ford EXP. sun roaf, 6
speed, clll after 6:00, 304-6761126.

"'81&lt;4-992·3523.

Coli 114-992-8723 ofl• 5:00.

/

L.::;:;::;~~;:::;;::~~~T:::;:;::::;::::::::::;:::::1

19715 Pontiac Flreblrd. V-8,
Mtto. Sh•P· S1 110, Call 81··

814-992-2363 evening~ tnd

for

'

2342.

A:oom fDf tent by d.,, werek or
mon... 114-992-7121 110-51

Space

.'

WORO

GAM I
----~-'-- Edit•d by CU.Y R. POLLAN _..:.__ _ _ __

APRIL 19 •

6:00 (IY C1azy Like

1987 boat, take over payment•
nothing down, V·6, 19ft. 175
hp, extras, uud 54 hours.

76

61

TUES.,

S© RJJlA.;.. LG £ trs~

EVENING

875·4038.

1983 Chevy. CHatlon. Am radio,
auto. trans .. PS, PB. 81.000
mH•. S14150. Can beuenatthe
O.llipoll• Dally Tribune or fot"
more Information ca/1814·446·

Rooms for lllnt·week or month.
Starting at $120 a mo. Gallia
Hot~ - 81 ~446- 9180.

•

19ft. St•rcraft. 1 1010 unit. 'with
trailer. Call 814· 446· 3797.

//'

114·2B8-6622.

,.1

.·

'

--: ,

MF 20 Turf tractor with I h .
finished mo~•4310. 830
Case with b
, mower. &amp; rake,
II finance. Ceil
83660. Own

Furnished room-919 Seoond
Aw .. Gallipolis. 8125 1 mo.
Utilities
d. Single mala Sh •e
birth. Call 448-4411after 7 PM.

12ft. basi boat &amp; 1raller. noo.
Call 614 -448-0767 eft4N' 6 PM
or weekends.

))

..

,.,

U.S. 36 W•t. Jac*son, Ohio.

614·281-6~51.

'

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Television
Viewing

26 H . 8ayllnll" Ct'Uis • . 1986
wide beam, all electronic, glllley,
eanvu, ate. 350. V-8 eng.,
sleeps 6. V•ry low hours.
827.600. Call 304-727 -6890.

-lr-2'''
,

Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10 ft. Tri-Haul. 60 HP Mercury
Motor, trailer topper. skis.
Lo.cled. S2600. Call 614-992 2676.

l,:::::::::::::::::.J.:=======~ 71Auto'• For Sela
------

APARTMENTS. mobile homee,
houiH. Pt Pl-.mandOelllpo-lla. 814-••1-8221.

·'

Concr'.a:e blodc.• all sizes. yard
or delivery. M110n aand. Galllpg.
Ill Bladl: Ctt., 123% Pine St .,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 814-448·

Boats and
Motors for Sale

'

((

Furnished Rooms )"

Two mobile ham. plus 50x100
lat. 305Hollo._,.y Strllt, Hendet"son, WV1. 30""&amp;715-87215

otter 5:00pm. 304-6711-3118.

Quean sl:r:e water bed, 2 night
lltands. U *awen. aolid oak.
eKe cond, 1600.00 . 304-676·

pet:ed. Nice tetttng. laundry

3.a9.

1984 F1lrmont, 1•1110. cant...t
air. 2 bedroom. 1Y.r bllhl,d call

Zenith color 19 inch TV wrth
stand, 8126 .00 . 304 -875&amp;090.

2 bedroom Apt . far rent. C.r·

2 bedroom tpt. Ch•ter . . ..
814-915-4291.

6268, 10:00-5:00 PM.

246 ·6121.

•

1987 round above ground 4x24
H pool. Udder, skimm•. pump.
filter, swaeper. Used 4 months.
81,000.00 lirm. Ol..lletmbled
and In atorage. 304-882·3687.

1 be*oom apartments. Fur·
niahed and unfurnished. noo.•226. per month. UtiUtie~ furnished. Call 814-992-5724.

45

2 BA .• 12x85. Very nice. Call
614-266-9349.
12x60 Mobile Home with porch
in Crown City. •3700. Negotieble. Catt 814-44&amp;-02715 after 8

7223.

614-992-n87. EOH.

2 BR . furnished or unfurnished.
Deposit required. No pets. Call

'"" 5 PM. 814-4411-1200.

2 cartons 24 pkgs each, 5
Brothers tob•cco, 304-676 -

Grac:ious livin~ . 1 and 2 beetroom apart mentt at Village
Manor and Riv•rsida Apartments in Middleport. From
8215. including Ultlh:laa. Cell

2 pm. 614-4411-0527.

Building Msterlals
Block, brick, •ewer pipis, win·
dowa. lintelt, etc. Claude Win·
ters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·

1 8 ft. uud uteHite system.
Installed tiOO. 30~- 676 · 6477 .

Furniahed apt . for tent in town.

992·3711 . EOH.

Misc. Merchandise

SURPLUS DENIM. army, rental
clothing, Wild turk&amp;¥ se•on
soon. c:amouftage grean. black
white clothing, NO checks.
PolitiCII advertising imprinted
sp.,;:iahi•. Sam Somerville. At.
21 junet:ion lndependanceRoed,
East Ravenawood, Frl, Sat, Sun,
noon-8:00pm. 3'o.a-273·5865.

Furnithed apt.. 1 BR . 607
Second, Gallipolis. •225 a mo.
Utiliti811 paid. Cell 446-4416
after 7 PM.

Mobile home for rent. Call after

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques, 1124
Main Street, Pomeroy .
Hours: M,T,W 10a.m. to 6p.1J1.,
Sunday 1 to 6p.m . 614· 992 :2626.

furnl1hed. Wllt&amp;r &amp; g•bage
paid. Depolit required. Call
814-446-4346 after 5 PM.

tadlhi• available.

Building Supplies

614-992-6941 .

Call 814-4411-1423.

42 Mobile Homes

55

'
I

I

.\ ' j

(I

Financial

Madern 2 Bedroom home. anached gwage. Close to golf
courae &amp; s)'Vimming pool.
Fenced in back yerd. Call 61444&amp;9818.

---~/'

0948.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Harvest gold rafrigerator S..
electric stove, brown carpet,
2 BR . opts. 6 closets, tcitChenNeed diP{care sarvice? Call 614l1111ender c•pet, BR suite. g•
appl. furnished. Washer-Dryer · Sof• and chairs priced fTom
882-2808.
949-2410 Of 614-949-2450.
U96 to $995 . Tables $50 and cook stove. Cell 614· 446· 2867
·hook-up, ww carJ)IIt nMiy
up to a126. Hide·a·beds S390
or 448 -7808.
painWd. deck. Regency, Inc.
Will care for eldet"ly in their 33
Apts. Call 304-676-7738 or to &amp;596 . Reclinau 822;6 to
Farms for ' Sale
home. Excellent mference and
1375. lamps $28 to $125 .
Sand Aon1111. tool box for pidlup.
67&amp;-5104.
exparience . Ca ll 614 - 742Din&amp;ttM $109 and up to 8495.
Call 614 · 367·0448.
- 2631 .
New completely furnished Wood table w·6 chairs $285 to
168 aa-es, Rutl~~nd township, • apanment &amp; mobile home in S796. Desk 8100 up to 5375.
Fiaher Woodburning stove plus
A &amp; 8 Odd J~bs. if you need it remodeled 3 bedroom hou!IB
Hutches S400 and up, Bunk
truck load of wood. Living room
city. Adults only . PIJI'king. .Call
done wu can do h. Auto, IO"Nn or with 1% baths, 2 b•ns. 3 other
bedt completa w-mattresses
tables . Call after 6 PM, 614·
614-446-0338.
home. Free ~timate , 304-773- buildings, pond. free gas. miner5295end up to 5396. Baby beds
446-9284.
ala included. Call after 5p. m .
5045 uk for Arbie.
$110 . Mattrasaas or box SPfings
BEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
614-742-2348.
For sela: Firewood. seasoned
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK - full of twin $68, tirm S78. and
' Baby si1tor available flmdable
hardwood, HEAP Vendor No.
SON ESTATES, 536 Jackson $B8. Qu~n sets 8226, King
72
acre
farm
.
6
mllea
badl
of
hours, part or full time, fenced
7047. pick-up or deliver. Any ·
Pike from 5183 a mo. Walk to ·1!1360. 4 drawer chNt 869 . Gun
y.ird, close to schooL 304-675- Robertsburg, call 304·937·
time 614-742-2426.
shop and movies. 614·44&amp; cabtn&amp;ts 6 gun. Baby mattresses
2784
.
2095. 937-2006 or 937-21 36.
535 II S46 . Bod frem• 820,
2568. E .O.H.
$30 8c King frame 560. Good
Prom dr•sea for sale. Worn
·Care of the eldertv at horJMt,
tulection of bedroom su;tes,
once, size 5·6. Asking 135 eech.
Brookside
Apanments
:
located
cleaning house &amp;: windows. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Call 614 ·992·2962 evenin91.
off8uhPJMieRd.-1 BR . spactous metal cabin eta. headbo•ds $30
Interior and outside painting,
apar1ments with modern kitchen and up to se&amp;.
Free estimates. Car bodv work
Pal amino mare for aale. alao MM
and washer·dryer hookups, ceand painting, 304-675-6495 or 2 acres. Rt. 160. Drilled well &amp;
tractor with earn pllflter and
ble television available. Call 90 Days same as cash with
675-5839.
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
cultivator. C1ll 614 -986-3891 .
rural water. Concrecetrailer pad.
6.:.14.:___
4•
.:."'
.:.....
19
.:.3
:.:2::..:-:---:----::- g BuiBYMie Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Numerous fruit trees . 810.500. .:.
Catering Service, luncheon,
Sony B•ta VCR machine and
Cell 614-388-9364.
Up!1111irs unfurnished apt . Car· Mon. thru Set. Ph. 614 -446dinllftr, piz:ra parties, baking
350 movl•- Cue. All 8360.
l)eted, ui:Jiitlas paid. No children. 0322 .
goods. 304-675 -6495 or 675·
614-992-2617 .
2 acres Rt. 124, %mile from
No pets. Call614-446-1637.
5839.
Valley FUrniture
Harris Farms, Portland, Oh. 2 8R
200 tree's as.advanised before
trail Bl' , 2 nice big additiOnal
Downtown-Modern 1 BR ., eom.- New and uted turniture and
Wallpaper hanger, tO . 00 pet' rooms, g•aga, cell• with stor- plete kftehen, AC,. carpet. Call applicancea . Call 614· 446 ·
at a reduced price. This week
double roll, dry\o\MIIII or plumbin!].
7572. Hours 9-6 .
ontv. Robert Vance At . 1 Middleage room, plsnv water. g•den
614-44(1.0139.
304-675-6495 if no answer spot, g• wood burner, outside
port.
675-5839 . . /
chimnev. Sea to appreci•e.
Unfurnished apt.-2 BR . $185.
King size waterbed, complete.
Priced on in1pection. 614-843Water p1id. Stowe &amp; rflfrig. 1 1 38
UOO. Magn~ox st&amp;reo. t20 . .
5424 call for appoint~t .
Se~nd. Gallipolis . Call 44&amp;614·986-3920.
4416 after 7 PM.
Ashton. large building lots.
PICKENS
U H•ul truckl and trailer• tor
mobile homes permitted, publl~ Furnished efficianr;v. 5145. UtilFURNITURE
rent, 304-676-7421 .
water. alSo rNer lots, Ctyde
ittes paid. Share blfth. 607
Bowen. Jr. 304-576-233&amp;.
Second. Gallipolis. Call 61~
21
Business
Dinnette1, beda , beddind.
446-4416 after 7 PM.
Waterbed super Jingle 8100.00.
Opportunity
drauars. chests, couches.
1112 a ere lot with rural water at
Two queen size watorbed
chsirs.l11mps,
cof:feB.
endtebles.
Apple, Gtove. phone 30~576Gan1ga apt .. furnished. $225.
sheets, coat 850.00 will take
2383.
Utlliti• paid. 29~ Neil, Qallipo- Every dav Specials. "12 mile: out
S20.00 0 -8·0 . Twin French
Jerricho.
304
-6
75-1460.
I NOTICE I
"Providential bed 820.00. 304·
lls. Call 614-446-4416 aher 7
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· · LOTS. one acre. level wooded.
PM.
675-5839 or 876 -8495.
CORBIN &amp; SNYDER FURNI city water, Jericho Road. owner
lNG CO. recommends that you
TURE CO.
financing. good terms. 304do business with people you
13 Court St. ·2 BR .• 2 bllhs,
John Deero No. 68 riding
372-8405 or 372-2676.
klttchen furnished, w / w cl'rpel. 966 Seoond Ave., Gallipolis,
know. and NOT to aand money
mow&amp;r, 36 in. cut, very flOOd
0
.·614-4-46-1
171
throUgh the mail until you have
No pets. Off sti"Ht ~rking.
cond, call 304-882 -2670.
House lots, G.. lipofis Ferry,
$325a ma. plus utilities. Dep. &amp; Used refrigerators, air condi·
investigatftd I he offering.
tioner, rocker recliner. ·
304-675-8908.
""· Coli 614-44(1.4926.

31

~

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
O.live St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 p c. JNOOd groupo $399.
living room suites- $199 -1699.
Bunk beds with bedding· $199.
Full 1ize mattress &amp;. foundation - Cemetery Lott - Marnorv
starting- 899 . Re c liners
Gardens, Garden o f Devotion·
1tartlng· $99.
section 3, lot 137 C . .$375 each·
USED- Beds. dres•ers, bedroom
Firm. Call614 -245 · 6467.
•uites, S199 · S299 . Desks,
wringer washer, a complete line Steet I beams· &amp; in.x6in.x8
of usal furniture.
ft .K7 / 18in. $30 each. Channel
NEW-' West•n boots· $30.
lron- 10 ft. $20 e•ch. Call
Workboots 818 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
614-367-7619 after 6 PM .
soft toe) . Call 614·446· 3159.
Sanyo small refrigerator, 1.5 cu
Coun1y Applionoe, Inc. Goud ft ., 566. Nicegoldeledricstwe,
Whirlpool, 8115 . Nice white
uspd appliances and TV sets.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon th•u
deep tr88le , 12 cu . ft .. $125.
sat. 614-446· 1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
CompleluM
lifting weights·
400 lbs of ofwaighta,
S126, (

304- 982 - 2145. Also : autD.

75

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Baldwin Console piano-bought
niiW' in' 1986-81260, Tri-Star
IWeep•-new in . 1986-S&amp;OO,
Seers Kenmore heavy duty
washerS. drver-13!50. Call614·
446 - 7123, m orni ngt &amp;
evenings.

Call us for your mobile home
insurance : Miller Insurance.

18

Misc. Merchandise

Huge 31 ' oval pool with d.:k.
fence &amp; tllter. lns181181ion Ill
financing •Vailable. 1· 800· 346·

cu 304-875-71 BS.

•.

Tuesday, April19, 1988

Call&amp;t!en'• USed Tire Shop. Ovitr
1,000 tif•. llzet12, 13, 14, 16.
16. 16.6. 8 miles out Rt. 218 .
Call 614 -266·8261 .

Merchandise

Hou ,ekeeping. Furnish refer8fl ·

13

54

•

.;

··.

�.-------People in the news------...,

Doerfer birth
David a nd Ginger Doerfer
an nounce the bit-th of t hctr !lrst
child, Jose Nickcole, born on
March 30. The Infant weighed six
pounds 12 ounces and was 19
Inches long .

United Nations in his organiza -

•'

representative changes every
year or two.
··you need to build up a degree
oft rust. ... In the firs t year or two
that yo u're on the executive
board, you're not go ing to be
listened to ." Yo ung sa·! d.
"Yo u're not going to be given a
chance."
In other tes timony, the presidential commission w~s told the
WHO is forci ng AIDS programs
on underdeveloped African cou ntries without considering their
needs a nd desires suff iciently.
Dr. Samuel Adeniyl-Jones. a
Nigerian who Is a visiting researcher at the National Institutes of Health, charged the WHO
has gone beyond Its mandate
with programs to fight acquired
immune deficiency syndrome
and now claims " to have the
mandate from the United Nation s to 'co ntro l ' AI DS
worldwide."

t.ion had strengthened gover nment efforts to battle the deadly
disease In 136 nations.
But Dr. Frank Yo ung, the U.S.
"The Insiste nce on cont ro lling
represen tative on the WHO execprograms in each 'developing'
utive board , sai d the United country will prove counte rpros'tates has sacriliced its leader- ductive because it appears as an
ship in these programs by not
unnecessary Imposition to the
paying its full share of U.N. dues . countries involved," Jo nes said.
Young, also com missioner of ' 'And of course resistance
the U.S. Food a nd Dr ug Adminis- develops .
tration, said he has been "deeply
"As a n Africa n official said.
e(Tlbarrassed .. .. Failure to meet ' How com e .WHO is not imposing
our payments has permitted Its programs on developed counother nations to successfu lly take tries of E urope a nd the United
the leadership even thoug h we Stat es?'"
pay 20 percent and other nations
Jones co ntended the main
pay far less than we do ."
A co ngres sional mandate three thrust of the WHO AIDS program
years ago and s ubseque nt bal- so far has been gathering data on
a nced budget acts have left the the number of people Infected
United States owing the United wit-h the deadly virus that destroys the body's ab ility to fight
Nations more than $350 million.
In addition. Young said U.S. · infec tion, with insufficient e m leadership has been underm ined phasis on educa tional. blood
bank, counseling and treatmen t
by high turnover. Representatives of most nations sit for programs that would stop th&lt;?
severa l lerms, sometimes more sprea d of the 1 disease more
than a decade, while the U.S. directly . ·

a federa l prison in Lewisburg,

Pa .. today , He was sentenced to a
2 Y., -yea r term in the Wed tech
case and a co nsecu tive 2-ycar
term for an unrelated conviction
of lying toa federal grand jury.
"J go not like a quarry s lave,
bu t ra ther as a warr ior
knowing tha t bla c k America is
at war wit h the scu m that
!Attorney General Edwin)
Meese. (President) Reagan and
now Rehnqui s t represent ,"
Clarence Mitchell ssaid Monday
night.
Former state Sen. Michael
Mi tchell's 2 'h -year term for .his
Wedtech convlcton is scheduled
to start May 19. AA federa l jud ge
in Baltimore last week pushed
back the prison reporting da te so
Mitchell's law yer could settle a
theft case pending agai ns t him in
state court.
" I just think there 's some
heavy racism go ing on in thi s."
said veteran act ivis t lawyer
William Kunstler .
Kun.l( ier had as ked the Supreme Court to al low the. Mitchells, both Democrats who
re presented Baltimore, remain
out of prison until their appeals

are exhaus ted.
Kunstle r had argued it would
be a "blatant denial of the equal
protection of the Jaw " if the.
Mitchells were not a llowed to
rema in free pending appeals.
The Mit c h e ll bro t h ers,
members of a prominent Maryla nd civil rights family, were
co nvicted Nov . 6 of accepting
$50,000 to obstruct a congressio nal Inves ti gation of Wedtech
Corp., a NewYork-baseddefense
contract or.
The Investiga tion was headed
by their uncle. former Rep.
Parren Mitchell , D-Md. But
there was no evidence that the
congressma n, now retir ed, was
ever contacted by his ne phews .
Wedtech went bankruptfollowing criminal c harges of influence
peddling involving fed era l and
local public officials.
In his reques t to the Supreme
Cou rt , Kunstler cited a New York
judge's decision allowing Rep .
Marlo Blagg), D-N.Y. , to rema-I n
lree on bond " following his
co nviction for the misuse of his
oflicial position, ev,en while he is
presently on trial for much the
sa me crimes attributed to (Clarence and Michael Mitchell ) In
connection with the Wedtech
Corp. sca ndal."
The motion' points out that the
Mitchells are black while Biaggi
is white.
Kunstler had asked Re hnqulst
to ass ign the request to .a nother
justice beca use · both Clarence
Mitchell and Kunstler tes tified
agai nst his confirma tion before
the Sena te.
" It is blatantly obvious even to
the uninformed that I am a
political prisoner," Clarence
M-ell sa id.

Harrisonville area
Pla ns for a trip in May have
been made by the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens. A report on
donations made ln the .. past
several months were made.
Those receivl ng gifts from the
group were the Sa lvation Army .
Senior Citizens Center, Heart
Fund. Ca ncer Fund. and the
Scipio Alumni Assocaitlon. Blood
pressure clin ics· have been well
attended.
Mr. and Mrs Don Anderson of
South Carolina recently visited .

'

Farrakhan but Mailer says, "Koch's statement that any Jew
who would vote for Jesse Jackson Is 'cra•y' may have
succeeded In blasting the last rickety catwalk of comm unlca- .
lion between Jews and blacks In this city .... Iwritethesewords
as one of those crazies who will support Jesse Jackson for ·
· president. "
Mailer says Jackson is the candidate who Is best suited to
fighting drug abuse and will do the most for Jews as well as.
blacks and that he " offers a cogent sense of sym pathy for
human suffering."
He conclusled by lauding Jackson, saying he cou ld "give us
dignity again as Americans. I want to believe In tha t. I am tired
of living in the miasma of our indefinable and ongoing national

By WILLIAM C. TROTt'
..
United Press International
DIDDLEY TALK: Bo Dlddley's latest song not only has a
beat, it has a message. The rock ' n' roll pioneer recently
returned from a tour of Japan with Rolling Stone Ron Wood and
was in Boston last week to promote a :')howtime cable special.
The song, " What 's Wrong with America, " castigates " lyln'
a nd "con nivin" ' politicians and pleads, " It's time to get drugs
and the pushers off the streets." The song Is being released on
Dlddley's own label, Big Dad, and also will have a music video.
"I plan to dress up ' Jike an Indian chief and lump out of the
bushes as a rich politicia n's limousine goes by," Dlddley told
The Boston Globe. "Do you think that wiJJ get the message
across?"
GOOD MORNING, NICARAGUA: Adrian Cronauer has been
in demand on the lecture circuit ever since Robin Williams·
portrayed him In "Good Morning, Vietnam" and he used his
forum at the University of Florida to warn that Nicaragua could
become another Vietnam for the United States
" I do see similarities and so do a Jot of people,'' be said. "But
If there' s one Jesson we lear ned from Vietnam, it's that If we're
ever going to get involved In another war, we'd better be totally
committed to-doing the job. If we don' t agree as a country , we
better not even Jet involvement In a war get started."
Cronauer, 49, who says he wasn' t near ly as maniaca l as
Williams was in the movie, is now a Jaw . student at the
University of Pennsylva nia .
MAILER'S CANDIDATE: ,Writer Norman. Mailer says he
can' t forgive New York Mayor Ed Koch for his bitter criticism
of Jesse Jackson. Mailer endorsed Jackson for the Detnocratic
presidential nomination in a piece In The New York Times .
Koch has lashed Jackson for his "Hym ietown" remark four
years ago and association with Black Mu slim leader Louis

LITERARY LIONIZED: Writer WilHam S,t yron is the 1988
recipient of the Edward MacDowell Medal, named In memory
of the former composer who founded a 450-acre artists' retreat
In Peterborough. N.H. John Updike, a,former recipient, will
introduce Styron at an Aug. 21 ceremony a t the MacDowell
Colony. Styron, author of ''The Confessions of Nat Turner' ' and
"Sophie's Choice," is the 29th recipient of the niedal, joining the
likes of Thornton Wilder, Aaron Copland and Georgia O'KeeHe.
GLIMPSES: Arnold Schwarzenegger will start work this
summer on hls firs t straightforward comedy. He'll be the
unlikely twin brother of Danny DeVIto in ''Twins," which Is
expected to begin filming In Santa Fe. N.M., this summer. In the
meantime. the former bodybuilder has "Red Heat" with Jim
Belushl coming out in June ... Bill Keene, the judge on' 'Divorc e
Court, '' will be dealing with real lawyers May 6 when he speaks
to the National Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers convention ln
Tampa, Fla. He'll talk a !lout his career as a real-life lawyer.
Keene a lso will be dealing with a real psychologist May 16 when
Dr. Joyce Brothers appears on the show as an exper!'witness In
a divorce case Involving an a bused wife.

COLUMBUS. Ohio iUP I) The Ohio Department of Insurance Monday ordered about 100
insuran ce compan ies which advertise supp lemental insurance
for Medicare to stop using
misrepresentations made by
"celebrit y hucks ter s."
Warnings wen t out to the
companies that Gov. Richard
Celes te and Attorney General
Anthony Ceiebrezze Jr. s upport
the department's effort to ellmi·
nate deceptive advertising praclic~s in the insura nce indu stry.
"We want to protect the elderly
who t&gt;uy Medicare supplement
insurance in 'this state," said

super intendent. George Fa be.
Fabe said the offenders include, bu t are not limited to,
Colonia l Penn Insurance Co ..•
which emp loys Ed McMahon to
do the advertisements; Union
Fidelity, using Danny Thomas;
and National Home Life, Tennessee Ernie Ford.
He said some companies make
incomplete statements which
hide policy drawbacks.
"Elderly people Jet their guard
down when approached by 'old
and trusted friedns, "'said Fa be.
" They often think If one Medicare supplement policy Is good,
then two policies are even better.

Companies do not let people
know th at some policies are not
cumulative and as a result, only
one . policy will pay. We want
these type of half-truths to stop.
"Often a celebrity will say on
television that a policy 'pa ys all
that Medicare does not pay,"' he
said. ' 'But when you read the ·
application, bu ried In the finE&gt;
print is language that says that
the policy does not cover."
Fa be said if a company fails to
comply with the warning, It could
face administrative charges of
unfair and deceptive advertisIng, and could have Its license
revoked.

531 JACto(SON PIKE -RT.35 WEST

PhoM 446-4524

e
lio1.38. No.243
Copyrighted 1988

Daily Number
366
Pick 4
. 9746

at

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Numerous !!'aching and nonteaching cb ntracts wer e
awarded when the Meigs Local·
School Dlstrlct Board of Educa- .
lion met in regular session
Tuesday night.
Teachers given one year contracts Include Phoebe C~ rey ,
Jennie Dorsey , Roger ..:Foster,
Harold Graham, Janet Hoffman,
Cheryl Llghtfrltz, Nora S.
McGuire, Eleanor McKelvey,
Kathy Reed and Elizabeth Story.
Three year teaching contracts
went to Kathy Carter, Jon!
Jet1ers. Barbara
De-

ALL SEATS $2.50

Gay Pippert, Kevin Sheppard,
Linda Stanley, Saundra Tillis,
Becky Tr ent and Chri s
Wakefield .
Five year teaching contracts
went to Lynn Bookman, Mary
Brauer, Judy Carter, Joan
Corder, Barbara J,.ogan, Marsha
Radabaugh, Carla Saelens, Rita
Simmons, Carolyn Smith, Linda
Zarnoch and teachers, Rick
Blaettnar, Connie Gilkey , Tom
Probst and Gary Walker were
awarded continuing contracts.
Given two year non-certified
employee contracts were Roger
Holman, director of tran sportation; Frederick Dorsel Thomas,
bus
Bernice

Ruth Pearson, cooks; Don Karr
and Rosalee Snowden, cu stodian ; Mary Beth Musser, aide.
Non-certified employees given
continuing contracts were Linda
Morris, bus driver; Sharon
Black, Do rothy Clatworthy, Joan
Edwards and Ruby Rtfe, cooks,
and Kelly Lambert, secretary.
The board accepted the resignatlon"of Deborah Lowery as
head teacher at Harrisonville
and Barbara White as a substitute teacher. Jeanne SJawter was
named a substitute teacher for
the remainder of the current
school year and DavidA. Barnes,
Denver R. CotterUJ and Eugene
Samuel Morrison were hired as

NIGHT TUESDAY 52 50

VELVE
APER TOWELS

TIII-IIFFEIED

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

WORKING TOGETHER - The problem of
Illegal dumping Is beiDA' tackled in Melp County
by botll governmental autlloritles and prlva&amp;e
enterprises. A good example of government and
private enterprl!ie working together for a cleaner,
healtlller envlromnentlsthls site onMelp County
Road 38, the flood road. The Illegal dump slte Is

..,.;a.......

60 COUNT CAPLETS

BUFFER II

"A NEW WAY TO TAKE ASPIRIN"

79

RACINE - Racine VIllage
Council, in recessed session
Tuesday evening In council
chambers at the village's Shrine
Pari\, honored younger members
of the community for their
academic achievements.
Recognized were students . of
Racine Elementary, Southern
Junior High, and Southern High
School.
Racine Mayor Frank Cleland
first praised the area youth for
tl(elr achievements, then gave
the floor
. to Council President

OUR REG.
$3.49

COUIT
CAPLET

__.-==-

BUFFER II
"A NEW WAT TO TAll! ASPIRIN"

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happeni~gs

her mother . Bessie Graham.
Mrs. Faye CotterU) has spent
the past two weeeks vis iting her
parents and other relatives In
Dade City, Fla.
Roger Carsey and sons, Mike
and Robbie of Columbus, and
Jason Carsey" Millersport, visited Ora Carsey Easter Sunday.
Easter guests of Mrs . Louise
Eshelman a nd family were her
sisters, Doris Vannatta, Springfield, a nd Virginia Casteel,
Columbu s.

HEAVY IUn
FUSILIIHT
IIRI'IWI
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COIDITIOIER
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substitute custodians. Phyllis
English was granted a leave of
absence as a cook at the Meigs
High School for the remainder of
the year.
Other resignations accepted
Included Mlck Childs as boys
varsity basketball coach; Bob
Ashley as boys assistant varsity
basketball coach; John Arnott as
boys ninth grade basketba.ll
coach, and cur• Kennedy as
reserve boys basketball coach.
The board did not renew the
following supplemental contracts: Don Dixon, assistant '
varsity football coach; John
Blake, head seventh and eighth
grade football coach; Carson
Crow and Rick Edwards , seventh ·
and eighth grade football; Rick
Edwards, eighth grade basketball coach; Mitch Meadows,
seventh grade basketball coach;
Mike Edwards, junior high
track; Rick Edwards, assistant
junior high track; John Porter.
assistant baseball; Pam Miller,
girls' volleyball, varsity and
rese rve; Rick Ash , head girls'
lunlor high basketball; Mike
Edwards, girls' junior high bas'

ketba li; Janet Russell, high
school cheerleaders; Mary Hudson, junior high school cheerleaders. It was reported that the .
contracts were not renewed
because the Individuals did not
have the recommendation of
head coaches or the Individuals
are paraprofessionals and could
not be hired at this time. The
contract of Julie Randolph who ·
has been teaching for a teacher
on leave was not renewed .
Given one year supplemental
contract s were John Arnott, John
Redovian, Martha Vennarl, guidance; Eleanor Blaettnar, librarian; Earl Young, assistant
high school principal, part time:,
head teachers, Joan Corder.
Bradbury; Carolyn Smith, Middleport ; Mar jorie Fetty, Rutland; Ron Drexler, Salem Center; . Ed Bartels , Salisbury;
Joyce Vance, food service supervisor. Head coaches were given
supplemental contracts to coincide with their regular teaching
contracts In the number of years
Involved and Include Bob Ashley,
head -football; Jim Oliphant,
cross country and boys' head

.track; Roger Foster, head baseball. girls varsity basketball;
Kim Atkins, girls reserve basketbali; Gordon Fisher, girls' head
tra ck; John Arnott. girls softball; Becky Trent, girls' reserve
softball; Kevin Sheppard, head
wrestling; John Krawsczyn .
head golf. Assistant coac hes and
others given one year supplemental · contracts were John
Arnott, MlckChilds, Tom Probst,
Kevin Sheppard, assistant varsity football; Cliff Kennedy,
assistant high school track; Bob
Ashley, athletic facilities care;
Eleanor McKei vey, yearbook;
Fred Baloy, newspaper; Cella
McCoy, drama : Jeannie Taylor,
junior class sponsor; Gordon
Fisher, athletic director. Rebecca Triplett as head of the
Pomeroy Safety Patrol, and
Gordon Fisher, extra printing for
schools, were given contracts
corresponding to their teaching
contracts.
An exec.utive session preceded
the awarding of contracts.
The board accepted the resignation of Kar.en Meadows as
Co ntinued on page 12

being
up by the Meigs County Utter
Control with help of equipment and manpower
dooa&amp;ed by the VIllage of Pomeroy, Salisbury
TowDllhlp Trustees, the Melp County IUghway
Department, Jay mar Coal Company and Jeffers
Excavating Company. Collection supervisor for
Meigs County Utter Control Is Bernard Gilkey.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
record Increase in the cost of
women's clothing and other
apparel helped push up consumer prices 0.5 percent In March.
more than double the pace of
Inflation In February, the government said Wednesday .
When figured on an annual
basis, the March upsurge In the
Consumer Price Index was 6.4
percent, according to the Labor
Department's Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Other major contributors to the Increase last month
were higher prices for food ,
beverages and transportation.
Prices rose 0.2 percent in
February and 0.3 percent In
January.
The ..cost of living In the first
quarter of 1988 advanced at an
annual rate of 4.2 percent, with a
4.9 percent decline in energy
prices holding down Inflation, the
department said.

An 8.2 percent hike In energy
prices led to a 4.4 percent
Increase in Inflation during the
flrt three months of 1987.
All figures were ad).usted !or
seasonal variations.
Twenty-eight percent of the·
March Increase In Inflation was
due to clothing price Increases.
as retailers Introduced spring
and summer merchandise, particularly women 's clothing, the
department said.
Overall, prices for apparel and
upkeep, such as dry cleaning and
laundering, rose 2 percent from
February to March. It was the
biggest monthly price advance In
the apparel component since the
government started keeping records In 1947.
If apparel prices had remained
flat, consumer prices would have
Increased 0.3 percent In March,
the department said.
Prices for food and beverages

Increased 0.4 percent las t month .
Grocery store prices jumped 0.4
percent following a 0.6 percent
decline in February. Higher
prices for fresh fruits al)d processed fruits and vegetables
accounted for most of the advance, although fresh vegetable
prices fell for a third straight
month .
Prices also rose for meats,
poultry, fish , cereal and bakery
products, restaurant mea Is, alcohoUc beve rages and especially
for eggs- up 4.6 percent. Dairy
product prices fell.
Transportation costs rose 0.1
percent as gasoline prices rose
0.4 percent In the first such
Increase since August. Prices !or
new cars were up 0.3 percent but
auto finance charges fell 1.4
percent . Prices for used cars
declined 0.8 percent. the depar tm ent said.

Racine Council honors pupils for academic achievements

' 00

99

OUR REG.
$1.97

2 Sections, 16 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

[Warch consumer prices up

4~0Z.

FIB

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 20, 1988

\\
•

•

•

W£ IESERU ntE RIGHI TO
Ltllll QUAitTiltES

PRICES Slllll THII SUIIAY,
APII. 24, 19111

Partly cloudy tonight. LOw
ln mid 40s. Pardy cloudy
Thu1'8day. Highs In mid 60s.

Meigs ·Local Board awards new contracts

.BARGAIN MATINEES SAT &amp;SUN
BARGA!~

Ohio Lottery

Page 3

shame.''

'Celebrity hucksters' must stop·
representing insurance: official

Mitchells allege racism
in court appeal rejection
WASHINGTON !UP!)- Chief
Justice William Rehnqu ist rejected a request by two black
former Maryland lawmakers to
remai n free wh ile appeal ing
their co nvictions in the Wedtech
sca nd al. leading to charges of
racism.
A Supreme Court spokeswoman sai d R.ehnqulst offered no
reason for rejec,ting the req ues t
Monday by Clarence a nd Michae l Mitchell .
Th e court action means former
Marvland state Sen. Cla rence
Mitchell IH will have to report to

Reds blank
foe; Orioles
lose again

'

Young attacks shabby
U.S. ·role in World
Health Organization
WASHJNGTON !UP I)- When
the pres ident 's AIDS panel
turned its attention to global
aspects of the disease it got an
ear ful. with American and fOI'·
elgn experts faulti ng heavyhanded- U.N. efforts and feeble
U.S. leadership.
Leading a parade of notables in
the internal ional AIDS bailie
Monday, Dr. Jonathan Mann , the
Wor ld Health Orga nizatio n director of the Global Programme on
AIDS, said WHO efforts have
replaced "the chaotic00a nxiety
about AIDS that was typical of
1985 with th e struct ured , purpose fu l and increasingly powerful work of current nationa l and
internal tonal A IDS prevention
and con trol."
· Tes tifying ·before the President's Commissio n on the Hu man Immunodeficiency . Virus.
Mann said AIDS effor ts of the

Tuesday, April19, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Scott Wolfe, who made award
presentations. He was assisted
by council members.
Also receiving special recognition were two Southern basketball stars, David Amburgey and
Jeff Caldwell, who.were honored
for making AIJ-SVAC, ALL·
District,' and Amburgey lor ALLState.
Following the awards ceremony, Mayor Cleland recognized
visitors on the agenda . The first
scheduled visitor was Tonl De
Bruin, an Urban Forester, who

was asked to attend to help
advise council on the development of a tree replacement
program.
DeBruin reported ''Ohio is the
number one state in the number
of tree city's with 141, while the
next closest is tallfornla with 52.
It takes a community effort and
much time to Implement a
program. You first must know
your plan, then carry It out."
He continued, ' 'How many tree
you plant and the size depends
upon the space you have. Trees

make an Impact on any communIty . The larger the tree the more
the impact. The federal government has become involved in
programs like this because too
many urban areas are becoming
barren and dessert like. "
Council recently became more
Interested In a program because
of aging and disease of existing
trees In the village, 18 o! which
required trimming or removal
this past weekend .
DeBruin Is to do a study of the
town May 18 and then make a

.Finances topic of state education official
'

Dr. Bernard Hatch, associate
director, State Department of
Education, offered a r ather grim
presentation on school district
finances when he spoke Tuesday
night at the regular session of
Eastern Local Board of
Education.
Hatch presented Information
on the problems a school district
faces and the negative effects on
students, should a district be
forced to go Into the Emergency
School Loan Fund. Dr. Hatch
Indicated tllat 'E astern LOcal,
should the Mary 3rd levy not
pass, would have no choice but to
enter the Joan lund .
In regular business, the board
heard a status report on the
district's search for a more
cost-efficient health care Insurance plan lor employees. The
board also heard brief reports
from the superintendent on the
recently completed and satisfactory yearly audit lor fiscal year
1987, and on current enrollments
and projected enrollments for
next year.
Accepted by the board was the
, resignation of teacher VIckie
Layne, currently on maternity
\

•

reemployed for the 1988-89 year:
head softball coach; Dennis
Mary Price as special educaEichinger, boys track coach;
tion coordinator, Jim Huff as
Ralph Wigal, girls track coach;
federal and state funded proMaida Long, high school cheergrams coordinator, Archie Rose
leader· advisor; Doris Well, lunas · transportation coordinator
tor high cheerleader advisor;
and supervisor, Grace Weber as
William Hall, band director;
Valerie Ransbottom, high school
head teacher and Grace ~tout as
cafeteria operations and coordichoir; Maxine Whitehead, elenator and supervisor.
mentary choir; Valerie RansbotAll athletic and extracurricutom, flag and majorette direc- ·
lar supplemental contracts for tor; Gina Tillis , yearbook
the 1988·89 year were nonre- advisor; James Huff, senior
newed because ohheuncertalnty advisor; Rita WliUams, junior
of school district finances, pend- advisor; Valerie Ransbottom,
Ing the outcome of the May 3rd
sophomore advisor; and Carol
levy. The persons and supple·
Brew~r. freshman advisor.
mental contracts involved are:
Also because of the uncertainty
Dennis Eichinger, athletic diof
external funding for the
rector; Archie Rose, head footlibrary
aide program, the board
ball coach; Ron Hill, Dennis
Eichinger and Don Eichinger, . nonrenewed Margaret Cauthorn
assistant football coaches; Den· and Judy Wolfe as Ubrary aides
The board approved several
nls Eichinger, head basketball
Deadline for eledion
coach; Ralpll Wigal, head girlS approprla lion modifications and
basketball coach; Ron lUll and some revised appropriations.
lettft'8 set AprU 25
Board members In attendance
Don Eichinger, assistant basketLetter• to lbe Editor dealing ball c~ches; Scott Wolfe, aulA!· were Jim Smith, president; Ray
wltb 11113' pelitic Ill tople wiiiiiiK be · ant elrll basketball coach; Pam Karr and I.O. McCoy. The report
of the meeting was submitted by
accepted for publleaUan In Tbe Doutbltt, head volleyball coach;
DaU, SeniiDel after Monda,, Don Jackson, assistant voUey- Dr. Dan Apllng, superintendent,
ball coach; Scott Wolfe, head on behall of and at the direction
April U.
o! the board.
baseball coach; Pam Doutllltt,

leave, effective ·immediately.
Reemployed by the board were
the following' teachers:
Mary Jo Buckley on a continuIng contract; William Blaine,
Patricia Chapman, Kay Long,
Cindy Pitzer, Debbie Pratt and
Mike WiiJ, three-year contracts:
Carol Brewer, David Chadwell,
Klm Conlcl!, Rebecca Edwards.
Ron HiiJ, Jennl!er Machlr, Valerie Ransbottom, Linda Schu!tz
and Gina Tillis , two-year
contracts.
Reemployed by the board as
classified employees were:
Carl Barringer, Lucille Kimes
and Linda Spencer on two-year
contracts.
The following individuals on
supplemental contracts . were

l

t

recommendation to council on a
replacement program.
It was agreed to approve the
payment for tree removal to Ed
Hupp as per contract agreement
for the tree work done. Huppalso
had made some recommendations to Mayor Cleland concernIng trees as he Is a landscaper.
Carroll Teaford, .c ouncilman,
and Mayor Cleland reported on
having gone to the fairgrounds to
view litter containers the village
Is to build through the County
litter control program. The two

also reported on the a lley between the Jaundramat and Bill
Cozart's apartments and recommended that It bemadeoneway ,
running east to west, bec ause of a
blind spot that poses a safety
factor .
,
County Engineer Phil Roberts
presented Mayor Cleland a la mented version of the new county
map, which was made possible
by the engineers department.
The map also has enlarged
versions of political subdivisions
Continued on page 12

Dukakis cautious
despite easy victory
NEW YORK (UPI) - ~chael Dukakl.s, !l~sh from his big win
in the crucial New York slate primary, today remained
caudous In victory, refusing to say his domination ofthe contest
asoured him tbe Democra&amp;lc presldendal nomlnallon.
"Yesterday, obviously, was a wonderful day In New York,"
tile triumphant MasiiBClhusells governor told reporters a&amp; an
early moming news conference.
.
However, Dukakls said his victory, In which he captured 51
percent of the vole to 37 percent for civil rights leader Jesse
Jackson and 10 pen:eol lor Tenoesaee Sen. Albert Gore Jr. ,
provided no guarantee the nomloa&amp;lon would be his.
"I'm pleased and fell very 10od about the results, " Dukakls
said. "I also know lila&amp; notlllog In tills world ls Inevitable."
Dullalda said be recelwd a telephone call from Jackson
toda,, who offered bls coogratolatlou aod the Massachusetts
governor vowed the race between tbe t'(l'o men would be a
''poelttve ciunpalp~, with each candidate running on their own
strength.
•"l''lere Is no room In IIIIa country lor tbe politics of division,"
, he said, an apparent reference to tile strident verbal as..ults
agal•t .Jacboo mouated by New York Ma,or Edward Koch,
wbo had backed Gore In tile race.
"Our Job now Is 10 be .l lelllen and unlters," he said.
But Dukakla wu alre&amp;dJ loGklngiO tile next major contest
before atl tile votea were counted
Tile MM.. clnillett. ga-.eraor made a aide trip 10 Pennaylvanla 'l'llellda,J before ret.,.IDIIO New York to deliver his victory
1peecb. He told pu1J bnas at tile. ,Phlladelpllla Democratic
Party Oub df-lllat he ''will aot concede' 'their larply black ·
, ell)' 10 rival Democrat .Jesae .JaeU..

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