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                  <text>t'age- 1 0 - r11e Daily Sentinel

Israeli cabinet delays
probe into spy affair
JE RUSALEM (UP!l-The
Pollard's conviction and Sel·
Cabinet Is delay ing action on Ia's pro moti on have un·
demands lor an investiga tion leas hed a storm of U.S .
Into Israel's use of U.S. Navy , criticism against Israel, even
civ ilia n analyst Jonathan Poi· from some of its strongest
lard to spy against the Uni ted America n su ppor ters.
States.
Severa l Is rae li leade rs
Severa l mi nisters issued issued apologies to Was hing·
calls at Sundav·s Cabinet to n for the espionage affa ir,
m0eting lor a probe in to the wi th one official ca lling it ''the
Polla rd affair. whic h has most dilficuil moment in the
damaged rela tions betwee n history of Israe l' s inter naIsra el a nd the Un it ed States, tional relations."
Its CIOSI"St ally.
Shamir, one of rhe staunch·
Th€' Ca bi net took no ac tion est opponents of opening an
on the demands except to turn inqu iry, sa id "as far as Israe l
over the matter to th e in ner is concerned," the Pollard
Ca binet, the bod y' s 10 mos t affair is over.
influ e nt ia l members sche·
"We cooperated with the
duled to meet Wed nesday.
Un ited States In all the matter
Severa l inner Ca bin et and It was a very good
members, led by Prime Min is· coopera tion," a Shamir sspo·
ter Yi tzhak Sham ir, are op· kes man said. "We apologized
p ose d t o ope n i n g a n and we dissolved the governinves tigation.
ment unit that was involved in
La bor and Social Affairs the espionage·and Mr. Shamlr
Minis ter Moshe Katzav sa id a doesn't see the need for an
probe is needed beca use Is· offi cial inquiry.' '
rael is " at a very cri tical
A spokesman Foreign Min·
moment in !his iss ue and I is ter Shimon Peres. who was
believe that there will be no pr ime minister when Pollard
other choice th an to inq uire ." was recruited, wou ld not com·
Po lla rd. a for mer Navy ment on reports th at Peres
civilia n Intelligence analyst, also opposes an inves tiga tion.
was sentenced to life in prison
Leading the Cabinet ca ll lor
last week after confessing he the Pollard probe were Kat·
sold U.S. mil it ary secrets to zav, former Defense Minister
Israel. U.S. prosecutors have Ezer Welzman, now se rvin g
called the case as da maging without portfolio, Energy and
as a ny In U.S. history.
Infr as t r uc tur e Mini s t er
Is rae li air force Col. Av icm Mos hc Shahal and Communi·
Sella, recent ly promoted to ca ti ons Mi nis te r Amn on
co mma nder of the nation's Ru benstein.
second -largest air base a t Tel
Other government officials
No t, was indi cted last Tues· and lawmakers have Issued
day by a gra nd jury in calls for an investigation into
Was hington. He is cha rgc•d Israe l's efforts to spy on the
with recruiting Pollard and United States. which gives
acting as one of his chief Israel $1.8 billio n a yea r in
contacts.
milit ary aid.

"(JSX to open ' pellet-making facility
MOUNT IRON, Minn . tU ~ !) ­
When USX Corp. start s up It s
Minntac taconite pellet plant th is
sum mer, its employees will be
developing a new type of pellet II
hopes will help it ride the
cost-saving wave of ths fut ure. ·
..Jerry Cor nell , a USX spokesma n in Pittsbu rgh, said during a
recen t interv iew that the Min·
ntac plant will tes t what is called
a "!lux pellet" process. Steel is
ma de from three bas ic mate·
ri als: iron in the fo rm of pellets;

limes tone, a flu xing ag'ent that
removes Impu rities: and coke, a
coatproduct that adds the carbon
eleinent. Un der the flux pellet
system, the limestone normally
added at the blast furnaces
Instead is mixed in when the
pellets are made.
Cor nell said the limestone will
be shipped to Dulut h anq then
hauled to th e Iron Range, possi·
biy by the empty pellet trains.
The company Is looking to the
new method to hold down energy

PPG workers approve pact
NEW MARTINSVILLE. W.Va.
"We' went out as a un ion, we'll
tUP i i-Some 600union workers go back as a union. " he said ..
ra ti fied a 42-month cont ract
Clegg said he expects workers
Su nday at a ca ustic chemical to begin going back to their jobs
pla nt in Wetzel County, W.Va ., on Tuesday, returning 100 at a
endin g the longest strike in the time. He explained that all must
his tory of PPG Industries Inc.
undergo physica ls and normally
The package fea tured slight only about 100 workers are
wage and pension increases over processed at a time.
the last six months of the pact.
The vote brought to an end a
stri ke that flared Sept. 1 at the
Wetzel County fa cility. It was
··we hav0 · a . co ntract. " sai d
longest In the firm 's history.
Charli e Clegg, public rei at io ns
Negotiators for PPG and Local
director for Local 4!i of the 45 met throughout the las t two
International Chem ical Worker s weeks and refined the 3Y,·year
union. following the afternoon cont ract that calls for improve·
vote .
ments in pa y a nd pensions. a
Clegg said the union wor kers clarification of items such as
asked that the vote not be sub-co ntracting and a cos t-of·
pu blicized.
liv ing adjustment.

Ohio, area weather scene
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy tonig ht- with a
low near 20.
Mostly sunny Tuesday with a
high between 30 and 35.
The proba bility of precipita·
lio n is near zero tonight and
Tuesday.
Winds will be !rom th e northeas t at 1!i lo 25 miles an hour

Study:
violence
will hit
pre-teens

tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of rain or snow Thurs·
day, lair Wednesday and Friday.
Highs will be in the 30s Wednesday and between 35 and 45
Thursday and Friday. Lows wil l
be in the teens Wednesday and in
the 20s Thu rsday and Friday.

costs, even though there could be
some a dditiona l costs tra nspor·t·
ing the limes tone.
"We wouldn't be doing this If
we didn 't think we could do It
economically," Cornell said.
If the theory a nd test ing pan
out, it will m ean usx- can
produce s teel cheaper.
·
"We tl)lnk It 's the product of
the future," Cornell said.
1\!:inntac was designed to churn
out 18 million tons of taconite
pellets a year. In its bes t years1978 a nd 1979 - production
reache d about 16 million tons. As
the ma rket !ell, production projections were reduced to · 12
million bu t, In r eality , only about
9 million tons were shipped out
each of the las t three years,
Cornell sa,id.
Wha t that meant was the
compa ny would produce d the 9
million in much less than 12
months and everyone would be
laid off for the remainder of the
year. Now, the company is
projecting onl y 9 million tons,
will u se fewer employees and
keep them working yea r -round,
he said.
"This is a recognition of the
marke t.w~ are in," Cornell said.
"We know this is wha t we' re
go ing to be lo oking at for the
foreseea ble fu ture, and recogniz·
lng that, we have configu red
ourselves."
Cornell said 1987 will be a year
of exte nsive ies ting or flu x pellets
at Mlnnta ~.
"It' s going to be running
probably throughout the re·
mainder ol the year ," he said .
"We will be examining the
qua lity of the pellets we make
and the efficiency. "
Cornell said other steel com ·
panies also have don&lt;&gt; r esearch
into flux pellets.
"If :vou were to check on the

"It we can get in position to
produ ce the kind of pellet they
(the mllls) want, then that bodes
wei! for Minntac," he sa id,
Translated, that means it
would mean more jpb stabllity
for the Iron Range steelworkers
who have been rocked by mine
shutdowns and layoffs sin~e the
heyday of the 1970s.
Du ring th at boom time, USX
and the other steel companies
rushed to expand their pellet· :
making capacity and, along with .
that, their workforces. Mlnntac
alone had 4,300 steelworkers.
Comell calls those "the good old
days" when they could "produce .
pellets at any cost" and stlll
make a profit on their steeL
But when Minntac reopens In
June or July it will have about
1.150 workers - 350 less lhaJI
before It shutdown at the start of
the contract strike last August.
Cornell said tha t while the
reduced staffing level hurts those
who had hoped to go back to work
this summ 0r. it should mean a
more stable. year· round job for
thos e who are left.
Despit e the efforts to cut costs.
however. Corn&lt;:'ll said the futur e
or Minntac and the taconite
indust ry is not yet clear.
"We are strictly market
driven." he said. " Whatever
happens In the steel market is
going to affect us. It Is hard to
predict what Is going to happen
with tha t ma rket out there.''

•
·'

Ohio Lotterv

Rio Grande
ready for
tourn_ey game
-Page 3

Iron Range, I think you would
lind practically every pther ll!lll
has .tes ted on this," hi! said.
He said I! the flux pellets
imp rove the quality and effl·
ciency of the steel-making process. "it would be a plus for
Minn tac."

WASHINGTON I UP II- More
than 80 percenl of today's 12·
yea r-old Americans will be vic·
tims of violent crime at so me
point in their1ive' and abou t half
will be victimized twice or more,
a government st udy wa rns.
1n addit ion, about two- lifths of
the nation's yo ung people are
likely to be in jured du ri ng a
robbery or an assa ult be lore they
die.
In a s tudy reica,cd Sunday, the
Justice Department's Bureau of
Justice Statistics based projec·
lions on the average annu al
victim iza tion rates fro m the
burea u's Nationa l Crime Survey
fo r 197&gt; through 1984. The life·
tim e . cited begins at age 12
because younger children are not
interviewed In the surve.v.
Noting the survey res ult s.
burea u Dlri'Clor Steven Schlesin·
ger said, "The chance of being a n
assa ult victim is much grea ter
than the ri1k or being a robbery
victim. The likelihood of being a
robbery viet im is also much
greater than thE' cha nce of being
a rape victim.

IJailv
.. Numlwr
.

145
PICK-4
3316

•

at y

Vol.36, No.215

1 S ection, 10 P'a ges

· By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A commit tee to study overa ll
development of th e riverbank in
Middleporl. with an eye towa rd
programs · offered by govern·
ment agencies, was appoint ed by
Mayor F rf'd Hoffma n when Mid·
diepor t Village Co uncil met in
regular session Mond ay night.
Mayor Hoffm an named Coun·
ciimen Dewe.v Horton, Robert
Gilmore and J ames Cia lworthy
to the committee which will,
accord ing to plans, hold regular
month ly meetings to discuss
pla ns lor the development.
Ma.1 or Hoffman sa id that he

had discussed the possibi lity of
working out a plan for overa ll
development of !he rh·erbank
area with planner Kim Shields
and that he is interes ted in !he
project. P rograms are offered by
the U.S . Arm y Cor ps of F: ngi·
nrers, the Ohio Department of
Nalu ra·t Resources and the State
Waterways Agency, Mayor Hof·
fm an said, with the implication
being that these agencies might
have programs of help for the
village in development of the
riverbank.
The village is working with !he
Middleport Chamber of Co m·
merce in im prov ing the Diles

Park site and a jogging. path is
being pla nn ed along the river
pend ing the securing of th e
necessary right of way from th e
C &amp; 0 Ra ilroad. While these tw o
projects ore improvement s to the
area along the river , Mayor
Hollman is hoping for a complete
program to Include th e en tire
river ban k development.
Tourism plans
Mayor Hoffman also reported
on the touris m grant which !he
village has been awarded by the
Oh io Depa rtment of Dev.ciop·
ment. The $4,000 gr·ant must be
comb ined with $4,000. in local
funds which ca n include $2,000 in

local services plus $2,000 cas h.
Bill Blower, pres iden t of thr
Midd leport Chamber of Com ·
mercc. is the tourism pmjecl
director and the money will
provide for the pubil ca t ion of a
color brochure showing fea tures
of the town an d promot ing
touri sm for th0 comm uni tv.
Mayor Hoffm an wi ll confer wiih
Blower on steps lobe ta ken now
in gettin g the brochure in to pr int.
Loo kin g towards the J uly 4th

fi reworks as a part of the
cc lC'bra ti on. Firewo rk s ca nnot br

pu rchased without th&lt;' permit
and a reside nt m us1 attend a

spec ial school deal ing with fire·
works befor·e the tow n ca n get lh l'
s tal&lt;' per mit. Th e lire depart·
me nl is lookin g in to thr mall cr
and proper procC'dllrf's wi ll bP

follow&lt;'d. the mayor said.
Cou ncil gave a fi rst rradin~ to
;tn ordinan ce dea ling wi th lh &lt;'
mu tt er in

reg&lt;.~ rd

to fi n ' pr.('VC'n;

I io n

in order lo comply with the
s tate code.
l..t•vy out lor Ma y
Cou ncil approved th t' l"r·bruar.v report of Mayor Hoffm an

cel ebrat ion wh ich has bern ap·

proved fo r the tow n, Mayor
Hoffm an reported tha t stare iaw
now requ ires that a stale per mit
b0 sec ured in order to h;;1ve

Area unemploymen
•
•
continues to rtse
By KEVIN KELLV
OVP News Editor
Ris ing unt•mployment ligu res
in Ohi o ov0r the past few months
were re!iected in the January
jobless ra tes for area countie's
rcieasrcl by th e Ohio Burea u of
Employ menl Services.
Ali bu t one of the area counties
pos ted in c r eas~s in jobless ness In
.Janu ary, whi le state un emplo.v·
mcnt stood at 8.:1 pen·enl. arms
said February's overall unem·
ploy ment wa' H.fi pcrcenl. Thr
agrnc)· has not yet prm·idc\f a
rouni )'·by-county br0akdown for
Februa ry.
Ohio·s increase cont rasted
wit h the 6.i percent na tional ra te
for February set las t week b) the
U :S;:tlimar.tin~n t of La bor, whic h
rem7ni'd stable from January ..
"White we arc concetned ltbO ut
the Februar)· unemployment
rai P. . wr do no t believe it
Indicates a deterioration in
Ohio's job future." ruul lonrd lk
Robrrla Stein ba&lt;·hcr. OBES

percent.
OBES said th at from an
es tim ated work force of 8.600,
there were 1,200 unemployed in
Meigs du ring Janu ary.
Athens Count y's ra te rose 1
percent, fr om8.1i in December to
9. 6 in .Ja nuary, slill down from
thr .Janu ary 1986 level ol 10.:1.
From an estimated work force of
2:1. 900. there were 2,300 withoul
jobs in Ja nu ary.
In .lackson County, un rmplo.v mcnt was up !rom 11 .i ih
December to 1:1 inJanuarl' . a rise
of U percen t. With l l,!itlli people
employed during the month ,
OBI'S determined there we re
1,700 not working.
. Jackson's unemploy ment in
. J ~n\!!!n:JJ!!!~_;vas I:IR percent.,
~~~;renge County refleQtcoct
.Jacksop' s 'increase of 1.1 per·
cen t, go ing from 10.:1 in Dr·
rember to 11.6 in Ja nuan·,
leavi ng an estimated 2. 700 resi·
dents of t he cou nt y wi th out work.
OBES estimated . Lawre nce's
work Ioree at 23.000. Jts January
1986 un emp loyment 12.4 perceni.
Only Vi nton Count"· showed a
decrrase - aibril one-tenth of a
. !Contin ued on Page 101

Rutla nd rcsi dt•nts wi ll have to
relv on th e. Meigs Count y Shr ·
rill' s fle p;rrt mr nt tor law enforcement . since Ru tl and Vi llage
Cou ncil votrd at it s most recent
meeti ng to eli minate• thr position
of Iow n marshall .
Rutl and Mayo r .James Fi nk
n•)lort s the action ca me abo~ t
brcau se 1hr vlliagr ca n no longer
afford to pay Ru tla nd's part -time
police o!!iccr. Clint on Pa,tt r rson.
" I wis h wr co uld co mt&gt; up wit II

·-rn-e 1116nr;...~~~"~~ ·:.F t!!!I.JI~Ill. ,
WINNING PERFORMA!\C ES- Meigs (;ounty
Superint endent of Schools .John Richt'l prcS&lt;•nl&lt;·d

·' Pt•lit•d exls trn c&lt;', and th••n spr•llcd cxhaU!d to win

trophi es to tht.1 runne r-up un ci champion In tlw

traveling trophy which will remain on dis play at
his school for thr· nex t year. Tlw champion and
runner-up in the counl y compl!lltion art• now
cligihh• to compr•h• in th t• 39th annual Herald·
Dispatt h Spelling Br••· to he held i\prll 25, at
Marshall University in lluntlngton, W.Va. Th&lt;•
Tri-S tate Bee will ~:e t und t•rway at HI a.ni . on that
day.

Meigs County Spelling Be&lt;• IH•Id Monday night at
Southern High School. Run•u•t·-up was Salisbury
Elementary sixth grader Shelly Smith, daughl l'r
of Mr. and Mrs. P&lt;·arl Smit h, Pomeroy. Th&lt;·
winn er was Norm an M at son, a South ern .Junior
High ~lghth grad&lt;•r, and ""' ol Mr. and M".

K(\nn(•tl.l Matson, Uacin1· .. Mat!'&lt;inn torrt•clly

tl1('

&lt;·omprtilion.

If(•

wu~

al!'io pr(•s cntt•d a

" I bel ieve it would be a mista ke
to mali evcrv th lng in to Co ium ·
bus." Justine Caskey, H dep uty
registra r from Shelby, said at th e
fi rst of fou r pu blic heari ngs on
the registration s.vswm. " I th in k
our svstem works."

The task force was assigned by
Go,·. Richard F. Crlestr to find
out in 90 days how to ma ke the
svstem for issuing license piatt&gt;s
a·nd motor vrhiric registratio ns
mo rr e!fic i0nt and less pollt lea L
About 250 deputy registrarspl'lvat.e lJusincss men and women

appoi nted by th e party in control
of the governor's office - per·
form !he service now. a lthough
motorists ma .v n ·ncw thf'ir li·
c0nse pla tes by mall th rough the
Ohio Bureau of Motor Ve hicles.
The drput ies charge a Sl. Oilfee,
of which thPy kre p 10 percent. II
is customary fo r lhr m tocont ri iJ·
ul c to the political pan:v· In·
p0W( ' L

" I haw had hoth ing but nega ·
til'e com ment s from people
across th e counter !about thp
proposed change I·," said deput.v
registrar Marlene Goudy of

Wapa koneliL "Thr,v say thry do
not wa nt ec•nlraltzatlon . Their
primary conrern is tiJal it is
going lo cost the m more money.''
Caskey agreed. "They eost will
go up if it comes to Frankli n
County," sh0 sairl . "Somebody Is
go i n ~ In havr to pay all those
stat e emp lo.1·ees ."
But under queslionl ng. neither
Caskrv nor thP ot hl' r ~rputlr s
wrr&lt;' will ing to offer uny rr rom·
mrnd rd Improvements lor re ·
du ring lo ng lines at rr glstrar·s '
offlrt's or tak ing lhr politic.\ out
of 1hr s)·stem.

Chapter
honors
Racine
Council

Cha nces ol being raped are one
In 12 for a white fe male and one In
nine lor a black female, the st udy
said, using data from 1973 to 1982
In tha t category.

Racine Village Council has
rccPivrd a certifi ca te from the
Rac ine Chapter of Future
FarmNs of America In apprecia ·'
lion of coun cil's cooperation In
rarious commun ity projects un dertaken by FFA.
Ma king the present ation at ;r
recent meeting of·counc· ii we r e
Scott Kiser, chapter pres ldr nl.
Tim Wil lis. prcs ident-r iert, Chris
Grindley. vice pres!Mnt-elect.
and Aa ron Sayre. advisor.
FFA built several picnic tables
and benches as well as constructed the shelter house at the
Old Ferry La nding Par k. FFA
members also provided the labor
• a climblrlg ca bin at
to co nst-ruct
the village's Shrine Club Park.
The village !lnanclai re port. as
. read by Clerk-Treas urer Jane
Beegle. was approved, .The rc·
(Continued on Page 10)

The chance of becoming the
victlm ·or a violent crime duri ng
the res t of one's iilctimrdecil nes
rapidly with age- 72 percent for
today's 20-year·o!ds, 53 percent
lor those now agr 30. ~6 percent
for those age 40. 22 percent lor
those age 5,0. 14 percent for those
age60 and 8 perce nt fo r those now
70.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.

&gt;iiBased on suggested rntail price versus full-price brands
with 200 cigareUes per carton. 2·0 per pack.

FILTER: 15 mg."tar", 1.1mg.nicotine av.per cigarette by FTC method.

•

showing receipts of $6,719.76 In
fi nes a nd fees a nd a second
read ing was give n an ordin ance
which will . raisP th e mayor's
annu al sa lary to $1;,fl00 a nd th P
annu al salary or the cler-ktreasurer to $o. 1Xl0.
Thr mayor advised coun cil
th at the renewal ol a fi re
protection levy ran not lega ll y be
placed on t hr ba lint In pr·tmary
t•lec tions. acco rd ing to word
received fr om th ~ M t•i~s County
floard of Eieet io ns a nd tht•
renewal mcasurr will have to·bt•
voted on In th r tow n at the
November elec rIo n.
1Co ntinued on Page 101

Rutland
lays off
police
officer

·Registrars lobby to keep present system

About JO perce nt wi ll be the
victims of an att empted or
completed ro bbery . tht1 study
said - ha il of the blacks now at
that age and one in fou r of the
whites. Seven of every eight will
suffer a p~rsona l theft threr Ot"
more tim es du ring their lives.

2 6 Ce nts

A Multimodiolnc . N ewspap er

Middleport will study riverbank development

Stein bathcr added thha t thr
drpa rt mrnt has "morr conli·
dcncr in the accurac.v ·Of the
monthly employer survey, whi ch
has cons istenli)' shown emplo)•·
mr nl grow th lor Ohio."
The mo nthly employer survr)·
is bosed on data ga lhercd from
COLUMBUS !UP II -A string
tO,()()() Ohio emplo:v-crs who re·
of
deputy motor vr hic ie regis·
present 41 percent of the non·
trars lobbied fo r· th r status quo
far m payro ll jobs In th e stall·.
Mo
nday, saying they can give
l.oca ily, Ga lila County's unem·
a nd cheaper lice nsing
better
ploy ment was up 1 p&lt;•rcrnt , from
services
to the public than a
10.6 p~ rcc DI in December I986 to
centra
liz0d
oilier in Col umbus.
11.6 in .Janua ry. OBF.S indica ted
But a retired vetera n of thr
that fr om an estimated 1rork
force ol 12,300, there were I.4fl0 Ohio Department of Highway
Sa fety testi fied oti)erwis~ to a
without jobs in .Ja nuary . .
But the fi gure wa s an i m prov~­ special govern or's task force
mPn l ovrr thr 1:\..1 perce nt exa mining the registration sys·
.Jobless i!'vrl rrported In January , tt:'r'it:'-{le said there should br
one-sto).shopping for a il ve hicle
19R6.
licensing &lt;tnd titles.
Meigs Coun ly wen t up U
percent In jobiPssness. from 12.6
In December ton 9 ihr fo lloll' ing
month , still down from the
.January 19Rh jobless rate of 16.:!

crime ra tes change in the fut ure,
the r isks or becomi ng a cr ime
victim will also change." he said.
Bas ed on rates in the survey.
the agency pred icted s:l percent
of Amer icans now 12 years old
will beco me victims ol an at ·
tempt ed or completed vio lent
crime du ring their li fetimes and
about !ill percent will be vict im·
!zed two or more times .

Clear tonight, with a low
betw een 15 and 20. Incr easing
cloudiness Wedn esday, with
.highs between 35 and 40. The
probahlllty of precipitation Is
ncar zero throu gh Wednes'
day.

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohi'o, Tuesday, March 1 0, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

i.ldm in is Ira tor.

" It should also be noted that if

But the survey said about 40
percent of those now age 12 are
likely to be in jured du r ing a
robbery or assault in their
lifetimes, and seven ol every 10
households will be bu rglarized at
least once du ring any 20-year
period .

-------r

. "Monday, March 9, 1987

Pomeroy-:- Middleport, Ohto

but pointed out th oft hr flliiliNil
burd en to the village, which
includes a bt•nrflt packagr. has
beco me too great.
·
Fin k' says Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank has lx'r n apprisrd of
thr Rutla nd situa tio n.
In other viiiHgl' matters, GrrR
Va n Met('r, clrrk-trrasurer, reports that the annu al appropla·
t ion for 19R7 was acce pt~ and
tota ls $ 11 ~. 71:1.29. Ineludcd In t ~i fi
tota l Is $19,910. 19 1n genera l fund ,
$ 1 2.7~l!¥.i In sfr('('f ma ln ta lnancl'
and rrpal r. S.1. 96:t. 78 In 8tr('(' t
lrvv, $17,9oU:l fire fund ,
$07,4H7. M w111er fund and $3,602
walrr deposit .
·
Va n Metrr sa id th r approprla·
lion may hav&lt;' to be amended
because council is slili wulilnRon
a judgment about t ra n sf~r of
funds !rom a cer tifica te or
deposit.
Charlie Hat field appeared be·
forr co uncil rrquestl ng permls·
sian to put In a !i lllnR s.tation on
thr cor ner· or Salem and Mai n
streets. t!leld ussurcd council
hr will ubi b) ' village ordln an· _
ccs and stales H!le~ i ufln g ...__
such business.
A request !rom ,Jimmy Ellis,
not present , ror penrn tss lon to put
In~ vidro urQadr on Ma in Street·.
was discussl'd at le ngth. Counc!C·
votrd' to allow the arca de and tci :
lower the p41rmit ·frr pr•r arcade
mac hine from ~2rKJ r·a r' h to s:~ l
ear h. How,•vr•r , rouilcll will . :
accor&lt;il ng to Van Mctrr. r&lt;'S&lt;'n'&lt;; .
tCo nti nurrl on Pagt• lO t

Maintenance
set for area
power plant

SPELLING CHAMPS - Seventeen champion ~pell e rs from
throu1hout Melp County, ranging from grades four through elghl,
gathered Monday night 11t Southern High School for the annual
Melp County Spelling Bee, under the direction of Russ Moore and
John Costanzo, county sc hool supervisors. Donald Dudding, a
teacher at Southern High, was pronouncer . Judges were Ri chard
Roberts, superintendent ol Eastern Local Schools; James
Carpenter, a~lstant superintendent of Meigs Local Sc hools; and
Boh Ord, superintendent of SOuthern Local Schools. Competitors
Included, left to rig hi, seat ed, Rachael Hysell, filth grade, Itutland
Elementary; Virginia Shuler, alxth grade, Salem Ce nter
Elementary; Missy Harrl8, fifth grade, Tuppers PI alns
Elementary; Shelly Smith, sixth grade, Salllbary Elementary;
Sandy Morr is, nith grade, Pomeroy Elernealary; Michael

VanMeter, fifth grade, Racine Elementary; Eric ,Jaclul, fifth
grade, Chet!ter Elemenlary i Brandl lUng, fifth ~C~"ade, Letart Falls
Elementary; and William Childres•, fourth gr~tde, Middleport
Elemenlary; In back, Karen Morris, sixth grade, Rlv enlew
Elemeritary; Suzaane Clay , el11hlh grade, Eastern ,Junior High;
Jennifer Carman, fifth grade, Hlirrii!Onvllle Elementary ; Raena
Eblin, el1hlh grade, Melp Junior High; Norman Matson, eighth
· grade, Southern Junior High; Cry•lal Powell, sixth crade,
Portland Elementary ; 1\nglc Mills, 1lxth grade, Syracu ~~e
Elemebtary; and Wendy -clark, sixth gralle, Bradbury Elemen·
tl'l')'. Mataoa, or Southern Junior High, wa8 the winner and Shelly
Smith, or Salllohury Elementary , w• runner-up. Over lOG people
lumed out lo 1upiJ(II'IIhe spelling bee partlclpanls.

COLUMBUS 1Ul' l r - Amf'l'l·
can Elrctrlc Powrr Sv s trm·~
Mounta ineer pla nt In New
-Haven, W.Va .. which has set
record s !or conti nuous operation.
wil l be take n ni l ll nr Frid a)' lo r
ro utine malntl•nance. AF.P announced Monda,\".
As of Monda.v, th l· pla nt had
been OIJ('ra tin g for 60.1 cOnS&lt;'t'U·
live days . T he previous n•cord
ror contiQu ious opera tion by a
stea m-e lectric ~t·nerati n g plunl,
set by a smaller nuclear pla nt .
was 439 days, wh ich Mountaineer
passed Sept. 27.
The previous record for a
coal·flrcd plant was 346 days,
s urp~ssed by Mountaineer June
26.
The 1. 3- mliilon·kllowall plant
Is own ed and oper a ted by Appal·
ac hlan •Power Co., an AEP
subs idiary.

,
'

,.

'

�Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio .
Tuesday, March 10. 1987

Commentary
The ·Daily Sentinel
II 1 Court Street

The release of

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

~lb

ts:m~
~v

rT"'L....&lt; ' -.....-.
-

,...,d•o=o

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A!llllstanl Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana,er

A MEMBER of Tho U nllcd Press Inter national, In land Dally Press
Assoclarlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LEi'TERS OF OPINION

an~

Pa~adox-gate:____________
Be_n_W_a_ue_n_be-.:....rK

wt•lcome . They should be less than 300 words

long. All letters arP su bjl'CI to editing and ITll st bt&gt; sig ned with name. address and
tell:tphone numbc1 No, unslgne:l lef1ers will be pub ll~hed. Lellers shou ld be In
gOod taste, addressing Issues. ·not persona lities .

Wa~hington ·Window

the Tower opening-to-Iran, including the
Commission Report onlhe Ir.an· _ '!f!M:hostages trading, _ made
contra scandal has yielded a new sense. I don't think so You may
round of firestormlng journal· not think so . But Reagan did,
ism. Can this presidency su r- and, surprise, It happened. Rea·
vive? Can Ronald Reagan gan also wanted arms to get to
govern?
the contras so they could survive
It ali so unds quite calacylsmic . while the Congress was dither·
1 don't believe it. The story has ing. Guess what? Arms and
been wrenched out of perspective money got there. So: Two things
by the failure to absorb a basic were operating simultaneously.
idea. that two or more things- A disengaged president . And a
sometimes contrar y - can president who mad e things
happen at the sa me time.
happen. Was he in charge or not
Consider: The report says · in charge?
And what about the sca ndal
Reagan was disengaged a nd lost
control. ThPrefore, free-lance itself? It was stupid. We sold
foreign policy cowboys like arms to a terrorl'st nation while
Oliver North and John Polndex - publicly lecturing others not to do
ter did things on th eir own. True, so . Money may (or may not)
Reagan is a hands-off president. have been diverted to the contras
Yet. regarding Inn, these free· illegally lor legally ).
lancers were doing just what this
Scandal? Yes. But how big?
di sengaged president wanted Suppose we rank sca ndals on a
done . Reag a n thou ght the severityscaleof lto10withl0 the

worst. Let's ass ign a 5 to the 1961
(;uba..!l_ Bay ..Qf f.!gL fi ~SC(). We
backed a rebel army and felt
them hanging out to dry. Many
were killed and wounded Fidei
Castro ended up more solid ly
entrenched than ever. A Russian
presence was es tablished in our
hemisphere. That's 5.
Think about Vietnam. In order
to get South Vietnamese pres!·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu to
endorse Ihe Paris peace accords.
Richard Nixon made a promise .
He said that if North Vietn amese
broke the accords and fron tally
invaded South Vietnam, he would
use American air power against
the north. Water ga te arrived, the
North Vietnamese attacked,
Nixon couldn't and/or didn 't
respond, South Vietnam was was
subjugated, and our friends were
killed, imprisoned or beca me
"boat people" fl eein g a new

White House smiles
upon Howard Baker
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP II -There are smiles agai n In the White House
with the takeover by former Sen. Howard Baker of Tennssee as the
chief of staff.
Baker, somewhat awed by his new role in running the ship of state,
has already crea ted an atmosphere of goodwill and civility that has
not been there in a long time He also has a sense of humor, which was
In low stock in the pas t many sca ndal -ndden months, as all President
Reagan and a il the top aides ran for cover.
·
Baker has let the sunshine In and like a loyal cheerleader he is
taking command to repair Reagan's damaged pres idency.
The ouster of Donald Regan as the top presidential aide has had a
ripple effect throughout the White House. Regan's power grab came
to a halt when he crossed Na ncy Reagan.
After that It was curtains for Regan, but he did not realize until late
In the game that he had overstayed his welcome. The first lady. who
aides said was trymg to protect the president in the aftermath of the
Iran arms-Contra aid sca ndal, felt that Reagan could not get a fresh
start as long as the unpopula r chief of staff was ruling the roost.
Her role in Regan 's demise has crea ted a new image for her as the
woman behind the throne But her aides said that she has always
played a part In her husba nd' s poll tical and official life when it came
to the people surrounding him. A negative nod from the first lady was
enough to send an aide packing.
For weeks the publ ic was treated to a g llmpse of life behind the
scenes In the White House with a tug of war between Mrs. Reagan and
Regan for the president's allegiance
Naturally he chose his wife of 35,years, a nd he also took a shot at
Regan, claiming that he had changed his tes timony before the Tower
Commission at the behest of his top advisers, apparently mea ning
Regan.
Mrs Reagan has been harshly crit icized for her role in the dumping
of Regan But she undoubt edly believes that she did the right thing to
save her man.

Before and during the Watergate scandal, Pat Nixon was left out in
the cold. President Richard Nixon's Palace Guard, particula rly his
chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, conlrolied Nixon and blocked her out.
Mrs . Nixon's good sense and know ledg£&gt; of politics and .the world
was far grea ter than the so-called California Mafia that Nixon
brought with him lo the White House. But neither Nixon nor his
colleagues let her know what was going on. nor when she began to
realize the ship was go in g down. did she have much of a say.
Mrs. Reagan has been called "Lady Macbeth" by a Washington
Post columnist, "v indictivr" by a New York Times columnist. and
Baker, himself. had told a Miami Herald editor that she is like a
"dragon" when her " hackles are up."
If the criticism grows. Reagan at some point will take up the
cudgels against his wile's critics. He became irate durjng the 1980
campaign when there were reports that Mrs. Reagan was seeking to
pick his press secretary.
Baker has the fir st lady's blessing to put It all back together again,
He is the Southern gentl ema n and Is not expected to an tagonize Mrs.
Reagan as Regan did
So me of the antipathy appeared to st&lt;&gt;m from Regan's own attitude
toward women, saying th at they were not up to discussing arms
control, and asking whether they would be willing to give up their
jewelry if ~anctlons were Invoked agalns! South Africa to signal
opposition to It s apart heid policy.
So It's a new day a dawning at the Whit e House and the changes at
the top, Including the appointment of press spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater, a reasonable man with a quick wit, should help the
president restore his credibilit y.

Opinions of other editors
St. Paul Pioneer Press- Dispatch
Correctly ripping the president and many of his men was not the
only work of the Tower Commission- only its most riveting and best
reported. Its Investigation also makes sound, if unremarkable,
recommendations about Improving national security arrangements
.
and proeedures. ...
For example, Johrt Tower. Ed mund Muskle and Brent Scowcroft
recommend that "Congress consider replacing the existing
i~telligence committees of the respective houses with a new .joint
committee ... patterned aft er the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy
that existed until the mid-1970s."
It Is hard to envis ion any significan t drawbacks to such a change ....
Should administra tions be legally bound to keep a small number of
legislators informed of covert activities• Of course. Does such
oversight serve presidents no less than Congress? Yes, again . ...
Better to streamline those obligations, if safely possible, than to
needlessly challenge what presidents and aides largely view as their
own, constitu tionally sa nctioned business.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, March 10, the 69th day of1987 with 296 to foll ow.
The moon Is moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars ar&lt;&gt; Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign or Pisces. They include
actor Barry Fitzgerald in 1888; French composer Arthur Honegger in
1892; Sherman Billingsley, owner of New York's Stork Club, In 1900;
jazz cornetist Bix Belderbecke in 1903, poet Margaret Fishback In
1904 (age 8.11 : and playwright David Rabe In 1940 (age 47).
On this date In history :
In 515 B.C., re-bu lidlng of the great Jewish temple in Jerusalem was
completed.
In 1862, the U.S. Treasury issued the first American paper money.
In denomin ations !rom $5 to $1,000.
In 1969, James Earl Ray pleaded guilty to the murder or Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. and was sen tenced to 99 years in prison.
In 1982, President Reagan imposed an embargo on Libyan oil
imports and restricilons on high-technology exports to Libya, citing
Moammar Gadhall's sup~ort for international terrorism.
In 1985, Konstantln Cher ne nko, the lastSoviet leaderoorn under the
czars. died of heart failure at age 73.

•

communi st tryanny (read "The
Palace File" by Nguyen T. Hung
a nd Jerrold-L -5checter 1 :- Rank~
ing• 7.
On this scale, where .Is Iran?
Well. what happ~ned? Bad guys
(Irani fighting other bad guys
(Iraq ) got some arms. America's
diplomatic honor was tarnished.
Ranking• Two. So, again: severa l things true at once. Scandal,
yes; big scandal, no; small
scandal played as big sandal,
yes.

Or consider Lt. Col. Oliver
North He says things that aren't
true. That Is called lying. He may
have committed Illegal acts. He
inay be a power-hyngry, hyper macho loose cannon. He inay got
to jail. Something else: He
helped give the contras sustenance when there was little other
sustenan ce available. Someday
when there is a free Nicaragua,
there may be a spot In Managua
called "Plaza Oliver North."
Bad guy• Good guy? Both?
And then there Is the lame duck
argument. Reagan's wounded;
he's crippled: he can't control
the agenda. True. he's hurt. But
out of action? The president of
the Unit ed States Is a powerful •
man He ca n veto legislation . He
can command the limelight .
Alone, he can put America at war
for 90 days.
Because he is so powerful, he
r ides In the saddle of event s. For
one example: If Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev says, as he
just has, let's limit medium
range missiles only lame duck
Ronald Reagan can respond yea '
or nay. If he says yea, there will
probably be a summit In America that can produce a deal that
ca n sha pe the history of the world
for good or ill . It will drive
lranga te off the front pages. The
limping president may not be so
limp.
Paradol!es ga lore: Passive
president -or active president?
Big scandal -or little sca ndal?
Bad guy North - or good guy
North? Lame duck -or still an
'eagle?

Tuesday, March 10, 1987

~or the thir~ lime In the lll ~)·rar hlston or the
~c ~ 01 • Rio Gra nde College Is again on th e

J.a whom. saying !hat the pr&lt;'ssurr was not ,15
g1·ea t fo r this ga mragai nst Si. M,u 1 's as it was for
a ana 1 tournament trail.
thl' Dtstnrt 22 r hampwnshtp ups&lt;"t agamst ·th e
to:f:~Redmcn left the campus by busa t7 ~Oa . m.
Findia1 Otlrrs, warned that " wr'vr go lid b&lt;'
f \ and headed to Columbus, where they flew.
ourselves agatnsl them. and no! someone Pise.
~ 11 owing a bn_cf !&lt;lopover tn Chicago, to Kansas
What has been good for us can't change ...
C:: tiY, jl'lo., JlfriVing ilJ!lYnd 1 p m. 12 p.m. loc.al __
. __ IL~IP~~To_ llave Vett•r;~os_- l.:•w!I!ir~
II~.) .
Chant::e IS one thing that isn' t likely to be ,,
e tnp all~ws the Red men two days before
major factor in the Redm('n's future. regardless
.they meet thetr opponent in the NA IA Tourna ·
ofhowfar thcygetlnthisyear's touinamen t.Wilh
me~t -the Rattlers of St. Mary's, Sa n A nto~lo,
only two pla yers graduati ng fr om this yc,u·'s'

VPrhoff. ti-4 semor and Ron Rlttingcr. 6-6 junior at
thl' forward s lots with Doug Fogt . 6-7 jun ior
opening at center
First off th&lt;' bench will be .l!mmv Kear ns. 6-l
so phomore guard, followed b)' Rav Smt::lrJon.li.:l
JUniOr forward and Mal,. (;or hard. 6 ~ sop homOI ,.
forward .
Mary's Starll•rs Anniliiii&lt;·&lt;•d ·
St. Mary's Coach Buddy Meyer of th e flistri&lt;"t 4
&lt;'hdmpions wi ll probably go with Barre· Fi(•ld s .
0 10 senior guar~; An thony Houston. 1 HI

Texas .

sophomorr guard; Darrm Sublet. 6&lt;l junior wing:

eh &lt;1 nrP

H&lt;·n r1- .James. 6-8jumorpost and Prli' Hansen,li-ti

nolm g thot

1

edit ion ~ Lawhorn should ha ve a team that Is rnnr·r

,

. Pep Rally Held Monday

some members of the squad traveled the same
route two years ago to face Berea College in the
opening round of the tournament. After defeating
Berea , the Redmen left the tou rney aft er losing to
West Virginia WPsleyan
Thoughts of thE' past. hoW('VPr, were not on th E'

tha n respectable. But for no11. Law hor n silid
durin~ a press bnrfing Monduv altC'rnoon. "tt
helps to ha ve vetera ns who tiavr bwn there
before."
The veterans p1·ovrd to hc the nght stu ff in thc
Red men's91-84 viet ore' over Findlav . as 1;.4 se nio r
.Joe Verhoff hit ~C)' three point shots in thf' sreond
half to help pull RIO Grande out oil he dl'ficit and

team '.s collect ivc mind I his morning. or during t hP

mto the lei.ld.

fina l practic·e Monday afternoon at Lynl'Center.
or at the pep rally staged Monday night by thl'

Lawhorn noted Monda y that although Fmdla)'
was la\'OI'rd to win thechampionship contf'st. Rio
r.randr stay c•d in the ga mr i.-til thf' wa\ ;;~nd tat el\
allowed th&lt;' Oil ers to post a major lead .
The RIO Gra nde mentor expects to oprn "ith
Ant hon)' Raym~ll sop homore and MlkP
Smith. 6-.l se:rnor at tho guard poSi tin s: .Joe

It s a lnp thut gives r isr to a littlr df'ja vu, as

{'OIIf'gC' to srnd th('m off. Their mind s wet·(' on thr
game to be played mKansasC'itvThu rsdae·a t 2:4:,

p.m against the Big State Conference champion
Rattlers. a tram Coach .John Lawhorn, based on

Information rec~ived after thr pairin~ la st week.
isn't taking lightly .

that must be overcome: the
recent clai m by Pakistan's top
nuclear scientist tha t his country
has the capability to build a
bomb. This would seem to make it difficult . if not Impossible, for
President Reagan to certify that
Pakistan is not making a nuclear
bomb, which he must do before
Congress can approve furth er
aid.
While concluding that the drug
sit uatio n in Pakistan is much
worse under civilian rule. the
House study makes clear that
corruption was pervasive under
martial law as well. Here are
some highlights of the committee
staff's Investigations in
Pakistan :
- Most of the opium/ heroin
now produced in Southwest Asia
is "either refined or transiting
through. Pakistan." But corrup·
lion at ali levels of government Is
so widespread that officials In
1slamabad can do nothing to curb
the dope tra ffi c.
- As an "egregious exa mple"

of corruption, the investigators
ci ted the case of two military
officers who "were arrested with
o,ver 900 kilos of heroin. y,e t
managed · to ' 'es'Cbp~" ;iutl's'e·
quently from heavy guard
pro tection."
- Economic reality makes
corruption Inevitable. An ordi·
nary police officer earns about
$100 a month - but can make
$2,000 a shot si mply by Ignoring a
drug -traffic offense.
-Even with the best will in the
world, Pakistani pollee are ha m·
pered by the legal system. "They
cannot testify in a tr ial." the
study notes, "there are no
conspiracy or asset -seizure laws,
(the police) have no guns,
prosecutors are unsophisticated,
they receive low pay, bail Is
easy ." Furthermore, a "clearly
deflnE'd caste system (puts)
influential drug traffickers a t the
top and policemen at the bot·
tom." The drug lords are widely
regarded as Immu ne from th e
law.

An urge to see "Platoon_'____Sa_ra_h_O_l'_er_.~rr_e(_''
Several of my Vle1nam-age
male friends have decided not to
see " Platoon," the highly acclaimed movie some critics say
does the ·best job yet of portraying the VIetnam War.
The memory ol the time they
spent worrying about whether
they woulo have to go to VIetnam
Is simply too painful, they say. "I
spent too much timesweatingout
that turkey to go and see a movie
about it ," one 38-year-old atlorney , who ts a heck of a nice guy on
a lot affronts, to ld me. or his 1966
graduating class, two were sent
home from Vietnam in fla gdraped coffins less than a year
after their last day of high school.
In contrast to their disinterests . I wonder about my continuIng interest In seeing movies
about VIetnam. No, that 's not
accurate; it's not •merely a
continuing interest. It Is an itch
that won'l go away, an unflagging desire to rna ke sense of what
happened over there and to
understand my feelings about a
war 1 did not und ers tand when I
protested 1.1 in college.
So no, I don't know why these
men don 'I want to know more
abo lit the war than they did at the
time, perhaps to learn more
about the sacrifice their unluck·
ler buddies made. (Some of them
say they have made little at·
tempt to read up on the subject ,
either, in addition to skipping the
Vietnam movi es.) But since they
don't want to see the movies, and
since these are basically decent
guys who show concern for their
fellow man In many ways, I
wonde: about my own curiosity.
If they- the guys who sweated

out thei r draft classifications,
tried to do well in school to keep
deferments, waited In clammy
lear to see the lottery numbers
posted and even damaged their
bodies to flunk their physicals don't want to see movies about
Vietnam, why do I? Logic might
tell me It wasn 't my war. My
participation was limited to
painting doves on white arm·
bands, marching aroun d my
college campus and waiting with
a draft -age boyfriend to see the
lottery numbers posted outside
th e office in the fine-arts
bullding.
Yet it was war. Not In the same
way it belonged to women who
waited for their men and lost
them to death and psychological
trauma, but it was my war. The
women's movement was gaining
momentum during the Vietnam
War, and I was gaining an
increas lng sense of my own
equality and responsibility.
Equal rlghtsmeanlequal responsibility to a bluecollar child of the
'50s, whose parents held "the
buck stops here" right up there
next to "We the people of the
United States, In order to form a
more perfect union ... " If men
had to go to Vietnam, I believed I
should have togo. My protest was
lor ali of us; and, I believed, lor ·
the people or Vietnam.
I am glad, as I was glad then,
that I did not have to go to
Vietnam. Who is disappointed to
miss pain, dis memberm ent ,
trauma and death? But the
decision not to go to war, to
protest the war, was one I made
believing I was either a part of
the war or part of its end . I'd like

to believe that if I had believed In
the war, I wo uld have enlisted .
Almost two decades later. 1 think
I would have. I ca nnot say for
sure.
What I do know for sure is that
20 years later, and after friendships with many of those men I
didn't think then should be going
to Vietnam, I want to know what

happen ed. I want to know what
the men and women who went to
Vietnam experienced and what
they felt. I want to know how we
differed so grea tly In philosophy
20yea rs ago, and how we came to
be so close In philosophy now.
And I'll take the information any
way I can get It : a movie. a book
or a long talk over a few beers.

1st Round
Okl.lllOrll.I

.IS

f:o .os 1r C' olii iing goc•s tho• jllihli&lt;· lt "

senior wing

IHt s nwdr Hin(;r.md4 • \\i'll

.lamrslsaveragin g14. 1 point sa nd s lxiebounds
a game; Fll'ids 12 points a game. Houston righ t;
Sublet 7 8; and Hensen 11 :l.
Ot hers ex pected to sec action fo1· the RaliiPrs.
who play&lt;'d five !\CA A DivisiOn I tf'ams lhts
winter areDary l DcrrybNry. ro ill junior gu;ml.

st hools
Mry(• r. wh•N· su u:od sh:m•tl ' '"' Big St:ott•·
C'o nft•n•n• ,. 11 tth ~ ~ l·:c111 .mls oi Aus!ln . Trx.os.
, !l t 1 ha s ill '&lt;'n hl'.o d J(.o ltt rrs r·o.Icil ' "' nln&lt;· 'Pars
" Itil an owr:o il m.1 oh of ~:1 1'.'1
S&lt;•&lt;·Oind ltnund l'lay Frula)'
11 t ht · Hr·dnwn w 111 Tllu 1 :,~, Lt \ .J ftt •t·noon · s
OJlrncl . tho '' "i ll pl.o .v tlw \\'IIIIH 'I ot Thurscla\ 's
Trol'rcca N,oz" '""' ' To ·nn d~ '\o .o nd W.11 l;md
Rtpt is t TPx&lt;~ :- 1n 101 111 st•t one\ rou nd o~ct ion nn
M.u d &gt; 1'1
Th irt1 "''" ni t ill' n.JIIun·s top ,., .,,,, .o l'l' l'llt&lt;·If'oi

Andre Walker. 6.:\ seniOI wing. 10 . ~ poml s .ond
Ca ll Douglas. 1&gt;-4 senior post .
Ot hcr St Mar~ ·s players llStf'CI on th P lfJKh·R7
rosiN a rc Sit'' e O'Kl'ith. 61i fi rshm.&gt;n post. Dan
K&lt;'lium. 6-2 senior wing. Car l flouglu s. h 4 post

1~

Coach Lawhorn not ed St Ma1 y·s has gone

2nd Round

:luartertlnals

Semtltnats

M.Hi'l l 1 I

'\1. 11 tl l

M.tt( ~~ 1(,

Mlttt&gt; t~l

Mtnn~·&lt;.,OI.I

Dulultt( ,•·l b)

'1." l'll 17

ThP champ ionship til t ts si.Ii&lt;'il

Championship

Cecutti~

M. ~tlll

Reynolds
Co-Coaches ··
of-the-Year

1/

Coty iJ I Ol

Nortllw ooo

n '.[! I(Jfl, ll hl l.! h

in th' ' six dd' .... ing h• 4'111 n H1d l lll 11 h JUlll,lnH'nt ·

and Pat Shrrldr.m. 1)- 6 junior post.

I ·I

k rHI\\ nt1)

TOI 1-'1 &gt;0 . llillo 1L l 'I I - Till'
1\ 11llt11II ( 'onl f&gt;l'(• ll! I ' b.t~kl' l
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Soutlwm i ecli ( .A (.?l b)
l;oytor . INt :&gt;~ I )

KEMPER·ARENA, •in downlown K..,...., (lily; Mo., IKI&lt;H·aled in"''
tht• &lt;·ircled ar&lt;'a of H-17 on this map. That's whP&lt;e Rio Grande
C:ollegt• and St. Mary's, Tt•xas will mt•el in a first round gamt•ofthr
19H7 rtational finals Thursday in the iiOth annual NAJA Tournamt•nl
at 2:~5 p.m. (EST). 81. Mary's is a m&lt;•mher of till' Big State

.1

liru ... h .tiH ·t llw Cru
-. o~dt·t " t1o~ d IJPt•l \ pwkt •d to lln !sh
t'l.L: Illh 111 t lw lt•,tgut · C tpit.ll won
10 ol II " l .1~t 1'\ ).!, trill '" l o lin lsh
\ ~) \ .!O\'I' I.Ili ,\ IHl \1 f) inlht • O:\('
1\ )11/'7 gt,IC IU .I H' oJ (', 1pil,d,
11111 d pl.t t

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f.onrt•rt•nct•.

Rebels named UPI
cage poll champions

t l,tw.w Htlo (.':1 •11

l

By ,JIM tliTTREI.L
UPI Sports Writer
NF.W YORK 1UP I I - Th&lt;·
closest thmg to a su t·r hot in !.as
Vegas. Ne\' . thi s vra r is th1•
Runnin' Rrbds of UN!.V.
Nevada-Las Vegas was named
United P1·ess lntrrnationa l'scolh'gr basketball nationa l cham·
pion for fh&lt;' first tim&lt;' c1w in
voting Monday b.1 UP I's Board of
CoaehPs .

With their Xl-1 1word. t hr
Rrb&lt;'is rarn&lt;'d ~~ fir st·plarr
'ott•s .md t;26 points to rapl un·
thr top spot for thr sixt h
co nsrruti1·r "'rrk and 12th time
this season. Indiana, moving up
two notches to a di~tant second.
t'l'&lt;'r iVl'd two No . I votes a nd 04K
points
"Some schools arr alwa\8 No.

The Daily Sentinel
A Dlvl.,lon of Mulllmedlu., Inc·.

Berry's World

10 pl.1~ m _. n&lt;~ltun.tl tout naml'nl ag&lt;Hn .

W.1yl.mn O.il)ll.r;t TX(.'.&gt; 10)

!USPS H~960)

.

-- st.

i 4 point s; Mark Miller, 6-7 senior po st, 7 fl pomt s;

M.ltt ll l 1 &amp;

'

head·lo·ho•uci " 1th s.mw Iough Trxus collrgi.I t.r
trams. a nd h,os hrld its own. som&lt;&gt;l hln g h e ~
takmg Into ""'·ou ni .IS hr plan s su·atcgy fOI
Thur-cla v. But again hr strPsso·clt hat HioG ra ndr
musl pi.I\' th• • gam&lt;· it h,os p!.m·d anci not begin
aping somrflocil •'lst •'s Sl) le
· Big-time Hou sion down&lt;'tlllw f(,ll t io' rs. HIHil&lt; St
M:u')":&lt; IJ~ a l I ilm :u·. 711 til( :on&lt;! lo' t to MrN &lt;·asP St.otl•, 74·rlii .
L.l\\h01n. ~"&lt;ho s IJO •o' n with Jill' J(o'dmrn for
seven seasons. t l 7'&gt;· 1~1 1 w,IS' IS!llil p!P:oso·d b1 IIIO '

1987 NAIA Men's Basketb II Tournament

a:.:.c.:..:...h·

narcotics. It notes that m01·e than
hall the heroin reaching this
country co mes from Southwest
Asia - a nd Pakistan's share of
this deadly tr affic has grown like
a weE'd Sice Zla ended marti al
law.
"In 1986." the stud y points out.
"opium production exploded to
140 ton s, making Pakistan again
one of th e largest opium producers in the world ." The figure
represents a 350 percent Increase
In Pakistan 's opi um production
from the previous level of about
40 tons.
The Increase "may be attrlb·
uted largely to the transition
from military to civilian rule and
the resulting uncertainty as to
the power of the new civilian
government during the crucial
harvesting period In March
1986," the report co ncl udes.
The committ ee report could
deal a body blow to Pakistan's
hopes for congressional approval
of $4 blilion In aid over the next
six years. As we've reported,
there is already a major hurdle

..·'-·

Rio enroute to Kansas City for NAIA meet

The p a~is tani rou'te ---~] . :. . :A. :. . :n:.:.d(:. .:. 'r:.:.:. .w~m:. . . :&amp;=-·.::.:1(~'-~:. .!(&gt;l. :. :.'h:. . :S2p:. :. .e.: .:. ar
WASHINGTON - .Congress
and the Reagan administration
were delighted when Pakistan's
dictator, Gen. Mohammed Zia
ui-Haq, lifted martial law In late
1985 But no one foresaw the
mali gnant side of the apparent
progress toward democracy: a
staggering Increase in the pro·
ductlon of opium in Pakistan and
the export of heroin to the United
States.
The unexpected development
Is attributed to the rule of civilian
politicians , who are apparently
eve n more corrupt and incompetent than the military offi cers
they replaced. This, at any rate,
Is the Inesca pable conclusion to
be drawn from an unpublished
report on global dope tra f!l c
prepared by the House Foreign
Affairs Com mitt ee staff after
m o nth s of on - the - s pot
Investigations.
The study, seen by our asso·
elate Lucetle Lagnado, was done
for Rep. Larry Smith, D-Fia .,
chairma n of a task force on

The Daily Sentinel Page- 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Puhll~hr&lt;l PVrrv afte-rnoon. Mondav
thr f1Uil: h Frh1av . 111 Cou rt Sl. , PomPrO~ . Ohio. b~ lh&lt;' Oh io Va llf'\1 Pub·
llshin l! Co m p;mv , Mu ltlm r'(liu. InC'.
Pom t'tO\ , Ohio H 7ti9. Ph . ~92·2 l ~li Sr
cond &lt;'l i~ ~~ poc;ta ~!' puld " ' Pom••ruy.

Ohio.

Mi'miH'T" Unilfld Prf'ss lnlrrnatlonal.

Inland D;rllv Prrss A"sorl at ion .1nd 1hl'
Ohio N1· w ~ papt&gt;r Assoc\[lt\on Nortlo n~tl
AdHlll!-1 \MI! Rf'pfC'!I(' ntuli\'1' . Branh.tm
Nrw ..pap£'r Salr~ . tn Th i rd AvPnu('

Nrw York Nc&gt;W York HlU17
POS'!Mt\.9'TER· Sl'nd addrf'Ss ch.m,L.rt"!;

to Thf' D,•il;.• SPnlln~J. 111 Cnut t St ..

Pomrr 0\', Ohio 4!'1769

SUBSCRIPTION R~TES
By farrier or Mot or RouW

Ont• Wf'rk ... .. . . ... .. . . . ... Sl :.!~
On r MonTh . ....................... S~ 4'
Onr Yrar . ... . .... .. . . .
ilifi Hfl

SINGLECOPV
PRICE

Oa llv

.

. .. .... ........ ....... 2~ Crntl!

Sutr.wrl bf'l ~ nor d&lt;'S irlnl! I o pay rtl(l rm
rlcr mav rt'mit In Hdvan('(' flif(l&lt;'l lo
Thr D.•ll.v Sf&gt;n tln('l on il '1. ti or 12 month
ba1li~ . Crf'rill will bt• ~h·l'n carrir'rr-ach
~ ·rl'k
·

No

sub~c r l priono;- b~·

mall pPrmltlf'd In

rn•s wht&gt;r'('l homr r arrlrr li('fVIC&lt;' IK

:1

tl\all.ihlr .

Mall Suh!M.:rlp..on~
lnftlde Melp Counl)'
1a Wcrk~ .................. $17.:!9
26 Wcr•ks ................................. $34.00
52 Wc!'ks . , . .• . .. . ....... $66.56
OuL!dde Mel~ Cou~y
13 Wrl' kS ...... ,, ............... $1H.20
26 Wrt•ks ...... ............. ... 1.. .. $35.10
52 Werks . ... .. .. .. ... . .. . .. .. $67.60

~ :.11

I. but th ts is all ncw to us." s.Iid
UNI.V

Co~I C' h

C ll.ll lt~·. l t l l l

!"1C IJII

It

urt

.Jr rr \' Turkan1an ,

who lO&lt; lk thc Rri&gt;Pls to th l' Final
Four in 1~77 "Thc commu nitv
has b&lt;•rn excited abou t 11 and
thPrr has b&lt;'rn an unbehrvabl r
followi ng this .v rar."
Thc lono blemish on UNI.V's
rccord came on tho • road at
Not man . Okla .. when thr Rehels
droppcd an H9·8!\ drdsion to lh&lt;·
SoonNs in a nationally teirl'isPd
gamr.
Not th Carolina . the onlv othe1
tl'am Ia hold thr No. I pos ition in
the regu lar seaso n. slipped one
position to No . .1 attcr being upsol
by North Ca rolina Stat(• I!H-1;7 in
t hP championship gam I' of t~e
At ian t lr. Coast C'onfrr&lt;'n&lt;'l'
tournamC'nt .

Thr Tar Hrrls w&lt;&gt;rc fo llowrd
bv No. 4 Georgetown. Jhr Big
F:ast"champ which surgl'd three
spots, No. o fl&lt;oPaul, No . !i
Purdue. wh ich tumbled three
positions after losing to Michigan
111~ -6K in its season final! '. No. 7
lowo . No. R Temple. No. ~~
Alabama and No JO S.H.ICU,e .
Illinois was No. II &lt;Ind was
followrd bl No. 11 Pltlsburghanil
No 1.l UCI.i\. which jumped
thr('(' spots alter winni ng thr
inauguml Pacific·· 10 Journa·
· ment. Missour i. th&lt;• Big J·:lght
champion . made its fli 'S t apprw ·
a nrc oft h&lt;' season in t hr Top 20 a!
No. 14 and prCCC'drd No 1&gt;
Clemson. No 16 Texas Christian
and No. 17 Wyo ming. whic h
retUI ned to thr Top 20 for the
thh·d time this season
1'\otrP Dame was ranked 18th,
and lied at No. 19 were New
Orlrans. Oklahoma and Texas·
El Paso.
Last year's NCAA champion
Louisville finished the season
unranked and was not Invited tu
the Tou'rnament with an 18-H
reeord.
In the past 10 yr;&gt;ars ,' six UPI
national c hampion ~- Ken tuck)'
119781. Indiana State 119791.
Nort h Carolina t19821, Hou ston
(198.11. Georgetown i1985t and
Duke t1986i - have advanct'd to
the NCAA title game. Only two,
however, the Wildcats and Tar
Heels, won the tltle. Duke lost to
·
.Louisville 72-69 last -year..
~

JACKSON PtKE · AT 3' WEST
Phone «ft. 4fi:z.t

BARGAIN MATIHEfS SATUROAr &amp;
SUNOAr - All SEATS $2.50

AOMI SS tOi EiERY

TU(SDAY 11 50

L MARCH a thru 12_j

NAJA Pairill!{-" For Men~~ Ba.~ketball Teams

FRIDAY thru THUilSOAV !

Louisville snubs NIT invitation Monday
Nf-:W YORK 1UP! o - f&gt;rf r nd·
in g nati onal chumpion l.ou Js

'lllr. snubbcd hi

t hi' NC',\A

Tou rnil mt •nl. M o nd . 1~ 1urn4 •d
rlown 1:1 n in v it atiO n to p ~uti&lt;'lr&gt;.Jtf'
in lh f' National In \ it &lt;.ll1on
Tou rna mPnt .

,\!though

LouiS\·il li• tt•a m

li1 st tound ,eamr WP&lt;.I ncsda\'
J ~mr.., Mudi so n, ~~ ) - ll , hPad ~ 111
Stl'ph{' O F . Au~! in on Thursdd y
l or a fir s l -muml r!H:-.h .

Among trams acrrptlng NIT
llJ(JS Suntla\· w0rr R.hodr I sland
,\ r k an s :.is . (. t t t 1,. R o r k .

T rn nos s!'e · Cha t t a no og u , S t .
Mt •xko ,

tPams ..

Ct urn sa icl lti :-; I ;..~rdtn. ll ..... IK 1-1 ,

w• ·rf' hvp;.~ ssrd in fit\'Ot ollt · o~ms
li k1· Mtddl&lt; •'J'I'n nrsst'l' oft hi' Oh lo

mrm b{'rs vot('{l / -ti to iH 'C'()pl l hf'

Lou is

1\IT bitl. th r -roa r hrs vo ted
;,ga inst go ing. l.ouJS\·iiil' Coarh
flrnn' Crum said .
" If thrlr heart s &lt;l'l'l'l' n't Int o it .

Clrvrlund Sll.II P. VIllanov a, NP

Vet! if '\ Co nh"Jr&gt;nl'r whl('h hml ;1
lw tt r·r J'('I'Ortl hut &lt;~ J.:~Iins1 .1 .... nnr•t'

braska . Uta h and .l:ol'k, onvlllt•.
The fir st lhrcr rounds will be

sc ho •ilu lo·.
c,·um hlnt••il th• · il•· t·IS!On to

pLt y rd at sit es utTo!-ls I hi' country

1 lliHJSI '

.1 nd thc se mlflnal s and finals will

hdl'l ' lll'o·n m.otl&lt;' hN·aust• thr

bt ' pla yC'd Ma rch 24 :.1 nd 2t) a t NPw

c·omml ss lorwr ot t hf' OVC' wa !&gt;i nn

York 's Madison Squar•• Cardon
Ct·um. whos&lt;' !&lt;•am played In

tho sl'll'l·tion eommitl&lt;·r.
" I wou ld likl', " 'm• •how . r· ltlw r

il would b&lt;' u ,, u..., lC' (J( limP."
Crum said at a npw s C'o nfrrPncr
" W0'vp got somr kid s who nrr·d

the tlmr for acad(• ml cs."
An NIT S(JOkrs man said ihP
tournam f'lnt's sl'kction commit
IN' would h;.~ v r nu ('Ommr nt on

l\kron.

IPP comf's up witll un all sol uH'.
dt •.l()-c't•t 'lain formu li t !or piC'klng
lhf' l l tr; tm ~." Crum !&lt;W id " Tht •n •
b '-'U mu C' h !lOiit i('s In pll'king lh1 ·

r\t '\\

thfl N IT In l ~Un . ~a hi h&lt;· wan ts to
mt ·PI with NCAA s£1li 'C'Iion ('Om ·

mit lee mrmhrrs to talk .ohoui
r
hanglng thrsrlcctlon prOI'&lt;'&lt;' !IJ
Louisville's d&lt;•ctslon.
guarantrP
thC' stronges t trums
Meanwhlil'. thP NIT com ph ·tPu '
rna
ke
t
hr
fi
eld
.
thr :12-fl•a m tle ld with the St'icc·
linn of Wa shington a nd Str phcn
1
1 1
.
hhaskl·tba
ink i1 1sll "that
ho u1th P
iml'
i0
collt•gp
NC/\1\
F' . Aust in. Wa shin gto n. IR· I-1. w&gt;li
1is it Mont ana S!ilto'. 21 · 7. in a Toumamt.•nt srlr ctlon co mmit ·

t h 1 ou~h ftn upt ·ll forum or tlw

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Oakland pitchers to hmt1 a split
and th(' Pirates 1-2 In Grapefrutt
squad of San Francisco Giants to
Leagu(' play
live htts in a 8·1 ex hibition
The Pirates led 2-1 when
triumph atj'hoentx Stadium.
Francona homered In the eighth
First baseman Rob Nelson
to give Ci ncinnati a .J-2 lead
Tracy Jones and VInce McClen- singled and homered and Luis
Polonla ripped a two-run triple
don followed with run- scormg
and sin gled to lead a ·-14-hlt
Singles lor the Reds. while-Max
Oakland attack. Haas. 1-0, perVenable ~apped the rall y with a
mitted only one base runner in
two-run single.
·
three Innings
The Pirates came back with
three runs In the ninth. R.J .
WINTER HAVEN. Fla. tUPI I
Reynolds and Sid Bream collected RBI singles and Mike - Mike Greenwell and Glenn
Brown walked with the bases Hoffman drove in etghth -lnnlng
runs to lead the Boston Red Sox to
loaded
a
4-2 Pxhibttion victory over th e
Tony Pena was 3 for 3 for the
Ptrat('s, who collected 14 hit s Philadelphia Phtlltes ·
Boston starting pttcher Bt uce
overail. Cincinnati finished with
10 htts Ptttsburgh committed . Hurst left the game alter walking
Gary Redus to open th&lt;' third
livl' errors
Bill Scherrer, the Rl'ds' third inning. Hut st. who had won two
games in tile 1986 World Series.
pitcher, collected the nctory
.John Smtley. who gave up the stx rein Jured the same groin muscle
that forced htm to miss stx wee ks
runs m the l'ighth, took the loss
las t season.
The Red Sox won the game m
TEMPE , Ariz I UPI I - .Joey
the
etghth on a leadoff single by
Cora drove In Mark Parent with a
LaSchelle
Ta t vt•r. a walk to Todd
sacrifice fly in the ninth lnntng to
Benzmger,
Greenwell's RBI dou lead the San Diego Padres to a 7-5
exhibition victorv over thP Seat - ble to deep crnter and Hoffman 's
RBI single to le!r ~
tle Mat iners.
Rookie Hector Stewart, who
Parent opened the mnth wtth a
pitched
th rre shu tout inn in gs,
doubl l' of! losl'r Rich Monteleone
fl31'0€'d
th
e ViCIOf\1 Wh!)(' [)on
and wont to thu·d on Monte·
leone's wild pickoff throw. The Carman took th e loss lot the
PadrPs added an insurance run Phi Ilies
on a double bY Stan Jefferson and
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. t UP I! Shaw n Abner's two-out single.
Matt
Williams belted a grand
Lance McCullers pitched the
!mal two mnings for San Diego to slam and Atlcc Hammaker
threw a pail of scoreless innmgs
ptck up the triumph.
to lead a split sq uad of lh(' San
Francisco
Giants to an 11·6
PHOENIX, ~riz . t UP II Cactus
Leagu('
triumph O\Pr !he
Moose Ha as com binpd with three

By United Press International
MESA, Ariz tUPI ) - Jody
Davis smacked a two-run double
with one out In the ninth Inning
Monday to lead the Chicago Cubs
to a 5·4 exhibition triumph over
tlw C!fllclJ!Dd lndi&lt;~ns ,. _
Davis drove a double Into
right -center field with the bases
loaded off loser Mike Murphy.
Joe Carter. who stayed out of
cam p three days because or a
cq~tra,ct dispute, played for the
Indians. The Indians were playIng with a split squad.
In his fir st at -bat on his 27t h
birthday. Carter htt Scott Sanderson's first pitch for a homo' run .
In the eighth inning. Carter and
Mel Hall put th&lt;:' lndtans ahead
4-:l wtth back to back doubles off
.Jay Bailer.
Four st ratght pinch hitters
tgnlted the Cubs' ninth-Inning
rallv. Thad Bosley walked and
.JNry Mumphrey smgled with
one out. Shawon Dunston 1an for
Mumphre~ and. alter R~·ne Sandberg was hi I b~ a pilch to fill the
bases. !ollow&lt;·d Bosley wilh the
winning run on Davis' double.
.Jackie Davidson picked up the
\'tctory with an inning of scoreless rPik•f
BllADENTON , F'la tUPi t Terrv Fran&lt;'ona' s 1\\oo run hom er

highlighted a s ix run etghth
innmg rail\ Monday th&lt;~t carril'd
th1• C'mcmnati Reds to a 7-5
exhibition vtcton over tho Pittsburgh Pirates
Francona. a non -toster playet
v.tth the Red s. played fu·st base
and went 2 fOJ i. The Reds ard -1.

Cleveland Indians.
Williams, a rookie playing his
second year of professional ball.
tagged Indians loser Ed Vande
Berg lor the grand slam In lhe
fourth Inning. Jack McKnight,
ptcked up hfs first victory,
hurling three scorless Innings of
middle relief.
Hammaker, a left-hander,
made his first appearence since
spring training last year and
tossed two scoreless innings.
MIAMI {UPII - Brad Wellman and Mike Sciascia drove In
two runs each to lead the Los
Angeles Dodgers to a 6- 3
exhibition triumph over the Bait !more Orioles .
Wellman followed a lead-off
triple by Mariano Duncan In the
first inning with an RBI single off
losi ng pitcher Scott McGregor.
Rtck Honeycutt pitched three
scoreless 1nnlngs for the
Dodgers .
DUNEDIN. Fla. IUPI!- Matt
Stark and Kelly Gruber belted
two home runs apiece to power
the Toronto Blue Jays to a 12-11
exhibition victory over lhe New
York Met s.
Major-league home run champion .lrsse Barfield added a
homer leading off the second
tnning for Toronto, which rallied
from a 6-1 deficit All five homers
came off losing starter Sid
Ferna ndez
Toronto scored seven unearned runs in the third inning
because of thn·d baseman Dave
Magadan's error

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Tarkanian is happy with NCAA pairings
And he has fond mem01 iPs of
Ida ho State, the team he beat tn
1977 to advance to his only
Final-Four appearance.
Thursday afternoon at Utah
Special Events Ce nter, UNLV.
1:!-1. plays the Bengals , who a t
1o I'J own one of thi' thrre .&gt;00
records in the tournam ent.
"If vou ' re competing for the
national championship, I don't
think any team should be able to

By United l'rr"' Int&lt;·rnallonal
NP\' &lt;~da Las
V0gas Coac h
.let ry Tarkanian smiled when he
saw the pairings for the West
Reg10nal Hts top-ranked Rebels
won ' t have to pla y at Tucson,
Artz . and they will have to play
Idaho Stale
Tarka ni an is glad to be in Salt
Lake C' it y, wh&lt;:'J'P the Rebels
avoid the University of Arizona
and its home-cou ri advantage.

pla v 011 it s home court." Tm·kan
tan satd of the Wildc-a ts' advan tage. " I thtnk thr S&lt;:'iectton
commt11P&lt;' dtd a g1 eat JOb. I'm
h a pp~- - ..
Ten ~· eat·s ago and 40 miles to
the south at Brigham You ng.
UNLV and Idaho Stair met In the
West Regional fina l. altet the
Bengals had ups0! Lon g Beach
State and UCLA. The Rebels
trailed at halftime but pulled

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1~:.! II

:- .. The Victory Circle
:;::Name Charl~s

Eichinger new
·:: Mifflin high football coach
By SCOTI' WOLFE
, , Although many teams are sill!
:- &gt; In the midst of basketball tourna :: . ment play, high school baseball
: season officially opens March 23,
, : just two weeks away. Boy does
:- ;. time really lly!
· :-. Recently, as you may have
:;: :read, former Meigs Countlan
:, ; -Charles Eichinger was named as
·;·;the Mifflin High School Punchers
:. &gt; head varsity football coach,
;: ;:replacing Bob Orth who resigned
·: •ln December after 16 seasons.
:;; : Eichinger Is the son of Opal

';~ ~~~~;~i~hf::::er,

and the late
•; Eichinger's brothe rs Dennis
~ : and Don are bolh, coaches at
; · :Eastern High School. while
• ·-Laura Jean Is actlv&lt;' In the
: recreational department In
:. rolumbus.
·: · Mifflin prlnrlpal Roger L.
:: Duma reP said of Eichinger, "His
:- fxpericnce here at Mifflin has
·: been so Instrumental In the
: successful tea ms that we've had
:· over the years. Eichinger Is a
· . dedicated ed ucalor, has a love
:· lor kids. a sincere person and has
:: ~n Interest In young people
. · beyond the playi ng field ."
Eichinger was previously the
head coach at Reynoldsburg, but
• has most recently been an
: ~ ss lstant at Mifflin . He substl ·
-: tuted for Orth {who was 1111
: during the class "AAA" football
·: playoffs thi s season. claiming a
21 -0 win over Gall Ia Academy.
Eichinger's daughter Susie,
. ·\"ho attends Walnut Ridge H.S.,
-; Is a multi-sport. all -sta te alhlete.

.

led Racine's scoring with 17
points apiece. Wolle, who had
played only the !lrstl3 minutes of
the contest hit seven field goals In
seven tries and three of four foul
shots.
"However, high scoring honors
for the game went to Harrisonville's Roger Norman . The little
hustling guard sank five field
goals and 17 of 20 foul shot s for 27
points."
Ronnie Salser had 9 points. Jim
Adams 14, Arnold Adams 14.
Powell 10, Gaul 5, McDade 10.
McKelvey 14, and Price 17.
Larry Morrison was the coach.
The Ohio Dental Association
reports that "More than 200,000
dental Injuries could be prevented annually with the use of
mouth guards In high school
sports."
ODA Is recommending that
parents. coaches, school admln·
lstrators and alhletes consider
the use of a custom-fitted mouth
guards for all sports, where
In cidental contact could resull.
A survey by the Department of
Education's center for statistics
has confirmed results obtained
by the National Federation that
high school students In activity
programs such as sports. tend to
get good grades.

- .... According to a report

by the
National Alliance of Business,
the number of young people in the
work force will shrink by twofifths by the year 2000, while
three out of four jobs by 1990 will
require some education or Irain·
lng after high school.
So, kids, the bottom line Is to
"hIt 1he books."

. Southern's Tornadoes recently
.. went on a season ending-tear that
:-demolished several opponents In
• :tbelr wake, scori ng 90 or more
: :Jioints ¥IX times to epd the
Congrats to Chris Judge, a
: -~eason.
· ·· The 125-51 vlctoryoverSoulhw- senior at Ohio University, and
: estern broke the old scoring the son of Roger and Jan Judge of
· record of 119·54 ovl'r Harrison- Pomeroy. Chris recently re·
: :Villi' set back In 19~7
celved the Joe and Joyce Yanlty
:-: Following are some excl'rpts Scholarship. Chris has been the
:rrom a " Dally Senllnel" article place kicker for the Bobcats for
: written by Donald Wolfe: "With three seasons.
seven players hitting ten or more
:· points , the Tornadoes' 119 points
15 years ago (19721 Th e
. ·established a new school scoring Stanton-Powell County, KY boys·
; :record. The previous one game basketball team made 70 free
· :record was 109 against this same throws In a game against Louis·
: · harrisonville team earlier In the ville Shawnee, KY. S-P won the
season . This was also one of the game 104-97. To this day many
·most points ever scored one team experts still proclaim that
In a Meigs County Tournamenl ' Stanton-Powell Counly "really"
· game. The former record was won the game at the line.
, held by Middleport.
"Carl Wolfe, star forward, and
Until next time I'll see you In
Sam Price. freshman reservist, I he victory circle.

I •

I

1&gt;._ r1. ~

Milner hopes
to make Reds
regret trade •

'

t

n

I

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r.

away for a 107-90 tl'iumph.
Idaho State is given little
cha nce to beat UNLV, but Coach
.Jim Boutin Is thrilled to be
playing the Rebels anyway.
"It's an honor to pla y the No. I
team." he added . "How many
tim c·s docs Idaho State have a
chance to play the No. I team in
the country? We know we don 't
have the personnel of a UNLV,
but we have character. We won 't
be tentative. We'll try to control
the tempo and we'll help each
ot he r out ..
Bucknell i~ another club expPCted to exit in the first roundthe East Coast Conference champion Bison will meel No. 4
Grorgetown Friday night in the
Southeast Reg ional.

.,
I

SCOTTSDALE. Ariz . IUPiiS,m FranciSCO outfielder Eddie
Milner has one goa l in 1987: to
J.ESA RUI'KER
TONYASAVEY
PATTY DUUST
make Cincinnati red with embarassment over tradtng him .
tlw lcagtw's roaches. Patt,\' Durst rN·('i\'t'd
Ei\STEUr\ HIII'OOREES - Tanya Sav&lt;•y and
"I 'm not esp&lt;'Cially mad at the
hnnorahlt• mf'ntion .
Lt~~a Kuckt•r, seniors, WL'r(• nam«'d to the l9K6-M7
Reds lor Ira ding me," says
AII·SVAC First 1'1•am in hu.~kcthalllast month hy
Milner. :11. acquired by the
Gtants In exchange for pitchers
Frank Williams, Timber Mead
and Mike Villa on ,Jan. 8.
"They obviously fell they
·n('('dcd pit ching more than an
experienced c&lt;:'nter fielder. l1
was tht'i r decision to make, but 1
plan to prove I ca n contribute to
the Giants' success Since we're
in the same division, 11 should be
Interes ting."
Milner became expendable
with the progress of Eric Davis,
and was trad ed despite having
th e fin est offensiv(' year of his
career. The left-handed hitter
went 259 with 15 homers and 47
RBI in 14o gam£&gt;s. and was
seco nd in the National League
with a 990 fielding pcrcrnlage.
The natlw of Columbus , Oh io,
"here he won thn~· city batting
tttles at Marion-Franklin high
C:RYSTM. IIJU.
ANGIE IIOSTICK
sc hool. is battling right-handed
RACHAEI. REIBER
mcumbent D;~n Gladden for a
hu.,kcthall hl-'1 month hy Uu• league's &lt;•oachJ•s.
SOUTIIERN HONOREE'I
l'rystal Hill,
starting job although thr two
Angl&lt;• Brn&lt;lid rce••iwd honorahh• mention.
,ophomort•, and Radml'l Reiber, senior, wer&lt;·
may be platooned
named to the 19XIi-X7 AII·SVAI.: First T&lt;·am In
A

b

~

LOcal bowling
IND. HIGH SF.RJES: P.-.~ Houd a~ hl'lt
477: J an('l Duffy &amp; Th(•lm&lt;~ Slnf's 46~ ;

POMEROY BOWLING LANES
Early Wednesday Mixed

11-11·87

Team
Shammy's Carry-Oul • ... ..
J D. Drllllnjl:.... . .. .

.
. ..

TEAM mGH GAME: Whal&lt;'V 's Us&lt;'d
Cars 8i Aut o Parts 649, Kmart 59.1: ~ar
TEAM HIGH SERIES: Whaley's Us&lt;'d ·
Cars &amp; Auto Parts 1782; S&lt;&gt;ars-Pom&lt;'roy

High Serlcfi Ray Roach. 517: Debl
H£'nslcy, 526; 2nd High Series Larry
Dugan, 516; Pal Carson, 493: High Ga me.
Larry Dugan. 199; Debl Hensley. 199; 2nd
Hl~h Game, Bob He nsley, 197, Pal Ca rson,

TEAM

carry-Out .......... .. .. .. ... ..

187.

Mlddi&lt;'J)Ort1684; Quirk Rick 's t668

6

Pa:.mf&gt; Truckln~~: .. J

• •

.. •

. . 100

_

....

l&lt;ut N' Kurl .. ....... .... .. . .
~harmaC')' North
,uk&lt;' Trucking .

. . 96
. .. 96

.. ... .. . .. .... . J\9

J s Exxon . . .. ... ... .. .. . .
Jpfrprs ' Truckln!Z &amp; Exra valln~ Co

.Jl8
.Ri
K~arl . .. . . .
..
. ..... 78
~~ ck Rick 's .... . ........ ... . .. , ... 7fl
o Mini Mart ... .... .... .... .,. .. 6i
IND . mGH G~ME: Keliha Williams
202; Thelma Slnl'S 171. Chris Bailey 166
IND. HIGH SERIES: .Kelthn Williams
476: Shirley Raush/ThPima SlnPS 466' Pc.~t
Houdashell 444
TEAM HIGH GAME: Jim Mlnk 'sChev
rolet-Oidsmobl1e 654i: Gall€'ry Ha ir Arts
600: Jim Mink's Chevroi{'I-Oidsmobii C'

NITEOWU!
Skyline LMeo-Fob. t 1
PTS

Whaley'" Us('d Cars &amp; Auto Parts ..... 98
Payne TrucklnJZ ......... ......................98
Sears- Pomeroy Middleport .. _ . . .97
.. _ . .. .96

GaliE"ry Hair Ar!s .... ... .. ............. 92

Jim Mink 's Chf:\v. Old s............. _.92
Pharma('.y North . . .. .. . . ... _ .. 90
J's Exxon .. ,...... ........... ......... ..... 86
Jpft~rs Trurk l nR &amp; Excavallng Co ....85

m.

DukE" Trucking ... , . .. .............. 81

TEAM HIGH SERIES: Jim Mink 's
Chevrolpt-OldsmobllP 1804 , Gallery Ha ir
Arts 172J: Whalt'Y '! Used Cars &amp; Aut o

Km art .. . .. ...................... . .72
Quick Rick 's................................ 70
Ff.lo Mint Mart .. .. ... . .. .. . ........ ,G.'S

PariS 1694.

IND. HIGH GAME: Brenda Hlrke1188;
Janet Dullv 187: Thelma Sines 181

'

IL·R) Josephine Clark with Robert Young, Sales

WINNER OF THE OHIO VALlEY PHONE BOOK
19 IN. REMOTE COLOR TV SWEEPSTA~ES
Sponsored by CHAMPION OIR-ECTORIES, INC .
of Norwalk, Ohio

Tuesday, March 10, 1987
Page-5 .

--

.Beat of the bend

By BOB IIOEFLICII
Sentinel Stall Wrlt&lt;•r
George Hlcl;s. security offlcet
at The Farmers
Bank and Sav
ings C'o .. ha s a
probl em.
George lost a
sma ll pla s tic
Case containing
his driver' s hcrnse and lh t r0 gasnitnP rt r d tl
CiJrds Thr cr('d tl c:.u · d ~ hcl\'P

been ca ncelled but Ccorge 11 ould
a pprerta lr hd \ ing his

dn \'f'l

's

license bt ou)::ht tn should am on''
find thp case. You 1\ tn IPaw tt at
The Oatl y Senttnel offtrr on
Cou11 Strci'l. and thc~nk s a lot

hour - hut dtd!indthe chrck. Not
a pleasant task. but a 1"""'d ing
one
Sometlung new fOJ th e mea
"til be a gun sho• to br stag ed
fro m R a.m. to 6 p m. on
Satutda)' . Apn l6. at the Rutlancl
Ci,· tc tt' nlcJ. It 's going to he a
bu), sl'll. trade &lt;'ven t and th et ,.
" til b(' an admission rhargP.
T&lt;~birs can b&lt;• rr nted lo t th&lt;•
show"' $'rach and to ~andlr tha t
matli•r ju st ea ll i42 22:\\.
And. incidenta l!)' th e ct rrus
wtll b&lt; · pla~· ing the rPnH·r aga in
thiS \rar with thr dat&lt;' ha\in g
been set fo r ilpril 2

Library lines

Mrs Ruth KMr donat ed&lt;~ qutlt
Sorrv to repm t thd t Chatl es
Clhbs. former PomeJO)' F.xcmp
trd Vtii,Jge Supet mt endent ot
Schools. is quil r til"' thr Hol1r1
Medical Center tn (;allipolts. \'&lt;Ju
ca n srnd r&lt;.~r d s lo Rnum 218.
You al"o mi ght wdnl l o 1('

membl't

Vtdta Git•o i,tmt ol
at this ttmr Shr ts tn

PomPro~

floridu C:lnd ca t ds c an IJ(' srnt

lfJ

her .tl noi Surf Road. S1 ngr1
Island. Rii'PI '" flp,J('h. Fl onda .

:\:\404 .

You m1 ght c. lil 1t like looki ng
fo r a ner!ll r tn a h&lt;~' stack
An meomr t,JX tetund chPck of
a Mtddlepo rt co up le rr ro nousl\
got lhtown mto the tra sh Th&lt; ·
trash was picked up b\ Manic\
Trash Si't 1 ice
Thl' coup!(' we nt to 1h&lt;' Iandi III
.1 f1(II'

d isC'OV{'I mg 1hr pt obiPm

hu t the Man!&lt; ·~ packe r !tuck h.1d
not nw ·hrd that l.tndlill so the1
traf'krd dm&lt; n the paekrt It uck
&lt;mel

~r .tJ

rhNl

in ~ 1 CI P

in fu1

l1n

By Ruth Powers
Help! !! Your libraries are
p[•r so n to I'C'CPJvr it a~ a PJI I of J
going nut s this month trying to
!Uhd r.~!'er lor M,\11 C was Rrc~ recover overdue books They arP
Rouo.;h
so nutty, that Instead of tlnmg
you they are willing to reward
11"s nP\ rr too l.ttr to lf'a rn so you lor returnmg their owrduP
\\ h\ not !-iOmf' clcJ ss('s ut Rw books. Now, how nutty can you
Gra nd r Coi!J•gc and Communtll get? Well. we can get 1eal nutt y,
Co ll ge·t
you bring tn the books and we'll
Op(' n rrgtsrJatJon ror sptmg give you a bag of nut s Now,
qu.t rt f• t r lasS&lt;•s will be hrlcl ft om. that's the nutti est.
March, Is National Peanut
.l to i p.m Monda .' . March :m.
.md ro urs0 olfrnngs in&lt;'ludr Month and th e Peanut Growers
Association has donated 500 bags
Cl.iS.SPS in 0\'( ' 1' ;)() .J('JdPmlC'
pt og rams plu s thr t r arc otf- of peanuts to the library in
C'c tmpus and con tinuing rducc.~ ­ conjunction with their Finr Free
llon p1 og1 dOJ s a\ailable thmu gh Month, which Is also March
the college
The library has more new
videos, so you may want to think
And i t \OU ha\c•am quc•slton s,
about jolmng their video clll!!,
pC'rhap '-., 'ou ran gl't the ans.\\.f'l'"i
tht oug h " toll lrrr numbrt. Fee Is $15 but that Is a one time
J fi(N) 2~2 720 I.
charge. unless you abuse the
privilege
The book station which we put
R1 •t1 et tu ha1 &lt;' ioq•d and lost In at Reed's Grocery In Reeds·
&lt;~nd a !so be• Iter to hm e had 1h1JSJ ·
vill e, is being termed a success
IP'~ d it,\' "i ol W.ll m su n.s hm ('. Thts,
too. sha ll pass so vou krep nght therefore the lib rary will be
putting another book station in
on smt ltng

famili&lt;~s

and ft i(•nds

The group mret s on the seco nd

.Riverview

Garden

Mrs. George Pickens showed
sltdcs of the Ivory Coast in Africa
at the recent meeting of .he
Rtvcn ie"' Garden Cl ub hrld at
the home of Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery,
Attired tn a nativ&lt;' dress whtch
had been made espec la ll)· lor
her. the slides emph asized 11opt cal plants, trees, the beauttful
flow ers and the animals of the

arr

av:.~ilable

An~'one

nC'cding mor(' lnform.J co nta c t Barbora

v.ith J'('scrv.J IIono.; to bf' q• nt to
Vit gtnw C&lt;&gt;~·e t t. P 0 Rox 21:1,
Rio Gt ande. Ohio. i"&gt;t•7l til ts
\\'rek. R csr r\'._i f lon dca dlinr

ts

Thu 1sdav and the tee ts S4
A IC'prrs (•Jlt&lt;Jfl\'r' ol

B laZll ' l · ~

F lot IS IS wtll talk on ga rdening
a nd ("Vcrgt rf' n CJ I'P in thr m 01 n·

In g. and the afternoon pt ogram
will be by Mela nic Steth&lt;'m.
Pomeroy, on r ohtrlvrd flower s

Those attending an' to take
clippers. !l or&lt;~! tape. and mate
rial s to makr an an gPmrnt s
ThPI t• will bt• a !-i ack lun ch .1t noon
With lhl' hf'H'I &lt;lf:W IO IJC' pi'OV!dt •d
TtH' WOI ko.;hOJ) WIH ~ !.It I .tl 10

a .m. and cone lud.- at .1 p m

SALE PRICES
GOOD THRU
MARCH 15, 1981

-- -. .-

II OZ. FIIIL TOUCII

ma~·

--·--

FAIIIC SimlER

2

39

NOW

Club ·has meeting :·-

LIMIT 2

ou• muw uu

PEDIA·CIRE
#3 LIQUID

121 IZ.

SCOT LID ILEICII

coneluded the devotions with a
prayer. Cards were sig ned lor
several friends "ho ate . til
Sevct al !hank you notes were
read lor gifts from the club.
Thr door pt ize was won by Mrs .
Frank Bise and refres hm ent s
were served by the hostescs.
Attending were Mrs. Picke ns
and her son. Mrs. Harliss Frank.
Mrs . Ronald Osborne . Mrs . Donald Myers . Mrs. m~c·. Mrs .
Tern Cline, Mrs. Connoll1 , Mrs .
Donald Putman, Mrs Paul Thomas . and Mt s. Lyle Ba lderson .

....,lf!llltl

F all grounds ,

... 399

to aOS\\f'r ques-

at H6-524ti It om Ra m
·to 4 p.m. Mondav through
Frid,JV .

were

Co unt v

PUR
EX
DETEIIIEIT

M cKm lc~·

Ivot·v Coa ts. ShP also displayPd
several paintings and drawings.
Mrs. Ernes t Whitehead and
Mt·s. Het·man Grossnickle
co- hostesses lot' the meeting.
MembNs answered th e roll call
bl naming a hl sto~lcal event.
De' otions were given by Mrs.
Okev Con noll~-- She read a poem
by Helen Stet ner Ri ce and

AI hens

Wes t Uni on Street, ,\then s Th&lt;'
workshop ts open to tile publi c

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES

tio ns durmg the meet mgs. Dr.
Davtd F. va ns and Dr. .James Orr
act as ad v ts ors to the
organlzatton
tion

in a scr u·s of workshops on

M.trr h IS at t hr F. xtenston Of fire .

the

Retarded Ci tizens an d the lurk\

The Publ1c Utthttes Com·
m1sston ol Ohio has set
for public hearing Case No
87-01-EL-EFC, to revtew
the fuel procurement practiCes and pohc1es of the
Oh10 Power Company, the
operat1on ot 1ts Electnc Fuel
Component, and related
matters Thts heanng IS
scheduled to beg1n at t ·30
p.m on March 16, 1987 at
_ C1ty~unc 1 i Chambers,
218 Cleveland Avenue,
S W. Canton , Oh1o 44702
All lnte1ested pa~1es w1ll
be g1ven an oppo~umty to
be heard Further information may be obtatned by
contact1ng the Commtsston
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By Nancy L Wolpe
Secretary

Region 11 . Ohio Assocw tlon of
r.ard&lt;'n Cl ubs, 11 ill h,ll e anothrt

co unty This one Is being put
In the Pick &amp; Shovel grocery, at
Salem Center II ali goes Wfil. It
should be In operation sometime
this month. The de!lntte opening
date will be anno un ced later

to thC' MP1gs A ssocri ;Jtton fot

Thu rsda~ of eac h month at 7 p.m
tn the French &gt;00 Room of the
Holzer Meedtcal Center The
m('('tln gs start s wtth &lt;~ brief
bu smPss sess ton, a speaker and
then breaks mto dtscus sion
groups
Two rrgi slen·d nurses hom
Holzer Medtcal Ce nter, Barbara
Me Kinley_ and .Jackh n Ktllcn,

LEGAL NOTICE

Peanuts, peanuts

Diabetes group formed for support
A diabP!cs inlet es t group has
bern f01 med to oiler prople with
diabetes support and up to dat r
informdt ton.
ThP new gt·oup sC'rY rs di&lt;~bet ­
ics ft·om (;allia . .J ackso n. Mrtgs
and Masop count ies. a nd is oprn
to di abetics of al l .Jgos , thei r

OAGC workshopr-----set for members

IN ' TRAINING - Thomas
Sp&lt;·nc&lt;•r, l~ong Bottom, has
c"mplch•d his first quarter of
_ siJ!!!.Y J!l the Ohio Unh&lt;•rslty
follcge of OsiCOJlnlhlc M&lt;•dlcinc In i\thrns. Th&lt;• son of
Waid and Gladys Sp&lt;•n&lt;·t•r,
Long Bollom, II&lt;' Is a gradu:th•
of Ohio University and i'
marrl&lt;•d lo the fornwr Cathy
Pickens, also of Long Bottom.
Tht• coup!&lt;• ha' two t•hiiJr&lt;•n.
.Jart•d and .Jan&lt;'i. SpPn«•r is a
nll'mht••· ol 1h&lt;• filth clu.- ol
IIIII enh•rlng fir't y&lt;•ur 'tu·
d&lt;•nts at the&lt; ollcg&lt;• which was
&lt;·r&lt;·aled hy til&lt;' Ohio L&lt;·glsl.tlur~ in 197~ aud Is 1h&lt;• only
instltullon in Ill&lt;' state unr&lt;··
dlh•d to &lt;•du •·ah• osh•upalh)
physldan,.

Even an officer...

NOW79c

NOW

OUI HCUUI M'

3Z IZ.

DltE IISII LIQIID

149

N:IW

399

0111 1!&amp;1/lM Sol••,

~

---~ -

- ·~. .

co.nuuL
cmns 011
TilLETS
24 COUll

NOW

369

OUt ltG411M $1 H

u oz.

CLOSE-UP TOOTIIPISTE

129

NOW

LIMIT 2

Slinderella rneet.r
Ba t·bara Hudson lost the most
weight and Roberta Dill a nd
.Janet Morris were runnet·s- up at
Monday mght s meeting of th e
Ftv e Points Sli nd crella Class . At
the Tuesda y Mason class. Ge·
wanna Ntchols lost the most
wright v.ith Darla Roush as
runner·up . .Jo Ann Newsome Is
h'i'turer for th e classes with new
mPmbers being accepted at

Th&lt;• fN•IInJ( of slttdt•nts Inwards tcach&lt;•rs
al till• Rivt•nl"" Sdmol is r~•h•• • h•d in this door JIOstt•r sl'&lt;'n In litis
pldur&lt;•. Slxlh grad•· stud••nb. Brmdt B;~llcy, ('ha,tJd.~ ~llllhon••
and ('harll'S t' ran.-ls pay lrlhttl&lt;· to Patri&lt;-.1 Shiv&lt;·rs, S&lt;'&lt;"nnd from
right, third grtld&lt;• h•a•·h&lt;•r at tlw sdwnl.

C'ommunit~ projec ts w1•n• discussed at the recPnt meetin g of
the Commu nit y Butldcrs Club
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs
Lylr Balderson.
Ernest Whitehead pt·rsicli'd at
the meeting with members 1'01·
lng fot ne11 o!!lccrs, Mrs Balderson. vice president , ad Mrs
Ernest Whitehead. sccret ,Jl'\'

Refreshm ent s were enjoyo'd during the social hour to Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Osborne. Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Mver-s. Mr and
Mrs. Warren Pi ckens. Mrs.
Den vet Weber . and Mr. a nd Mrs.
Whitehead. Next meetin g will be
on March 21 at a Belpre
restaura nt.

Money making projects to
raise fund s for th&lt;' purchase of
uniform jacket s were discussed
at last week's mr~ tmg of th&amp;
Meigs High Sch oo l Band
Boosters.
It was noted that Avon has
offered the group an opportunit y
to sell beauty products for pro!lts
and it was decided that would be
the lund raising project for April.
The annual walk-a· thon wa ss~t
for 9a.m on Aprll4, with April II
as the rain date. Students will he

out enlistin g sponsors starting
this week.
All band parents, Including
those of seven th and eighth
graders. are Invited to attend th e
April 6 meeting of the Boosters
which will be held at the
Middleport Junior High band
room. New officers will be
elected and new parents will be
given the opporlunlty to learn
about the band support program
as well as help with planning for
the 1987-88 school year.

KIEE HI'S

DEODORANT 2.5 02. OR

LilY SPEEI STICI

~NTI-PERSPIR~NT

1.5 OZ.

1~"169

rJ'l'f}..

LIMIT 2

Middleport
Literary
·Club meets

r ,,
' bUl'lders have meeung
.
"--A.Jmmuntty

lffl.

IEIIEI
SPIEl SnCI

an y lim P

Band Booster.r planning projects

100

Sf&gt;ars-Pomt"roy!Middl(1&gt;0r1 .. ... .. . 99
.Jim !dink's ChevroiE"t -0\dsmobll(' .. . 98

Gam('. Mlddlf:•port Lunch Room, 699.

. . ..

·

I!T8
.•104

Whalev's Used Cars &amp; Auto Pa rts.

Team Series· Shammy's, 1924: Tfam

Kul 'n' Kurl .. ..

TO

NfrE OWLS- Feb. 18

GaliPrv Hair Arts ..... ... .

I

TEAM

"

.s-Pomrroy-Mh:ldl('porf :;86.

J A R Construction , .
_ ....... 26
Middleport Lunch Room ...... .. ........... 19
savres Small En~rtn£' f«opatr .. ..... ...... lti

Tony's

rAf'

I "CONfJRA TULA 1/0NS/"

Sonva Roush 434

Pts.
. ..... 42
........ 35

'lt.

The Daily .Sentinel

~SSORTEO

COlORS

... 89~11-1
12 OZ. IYLUTI

Mrs. D1ught Wallace re, lewed
the book. "Norman Rockwpll 's
Ameri ca" by Thoma s S.
Buechner at last WC(•k's meeting
of the Middlepor t Literary Club
held at her hom r .
In her review. Mrs. Wallace.
described Rockwe ll's plctu tcs as
telling a story, many painted a nd
Illu strated with humor and
warmth. She said that Rockwell
Illustrated lor 47 yea rs lor the
saturday Evening Post with
many buying the magazme
simply for the Rockwell cover.
He pam ted sports figures , president s, common ordinary man,
friends and neighbors as well as
Important people. During her
review, Mrs. Wallace showed
p1ctures from the book She
concluded by commenting that
while Rockwell died In 1978, his
_
pictures will live forever.
For roll call members eit her
brought a favorlle Rockwell
picture or told of one. Mrs.
Wallace. president, welcomed
the members and was Introduced
for her review by program
chairman, Mrs . Wilson Carpen·
ter . Ca ndles and crackers were :
served by Ihe hostess.

'

29

NOW

2

"'"""""'

IIACII 3
M TAILETS"

189 .,~..,1'0&lt;1

NOW

IIIIISOL

110Wl9°

NOW

3~9

'"""""'"

SCIIICIIIAZHS
1•1U EIU: I'S

NOW

~~~ '"~""~
EIDI·STIEIITI

IITI SUI

Jl9

TYLEIOL
II TIILETS

.,.399

LIMIT 2

'

�'

Tuesday, March 10, 1987

•

..

Miniature drill strips fat from ·arteries

March

~olf Pen community
: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ba rr of
Rutland were recent 'isuors of
Mr. and Mrs . Howard Thoma.
: Mr. and Mrs. Les lie Frank,
Sarah Beth a nd Mat thew Rvan of
Texas Road. visi ted Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald
: Mr. and Mt s. Cha rles Knapp
were Monday afternoon guests o!
(he Pat tersons. New L1ma Road.

wt•rc, !rom left, Donita Pooler, Sean Dodson,
Angle Sloan, Shannon Slaven and Kl'vln King.
This is the fourth year Meigs has participated and
the !irst lime to host a tournament. Advisor Is Rita
Slavin. Other schools In TVC Quiz Bowl are
Nelsonvilht York, Miller and Wellston.

WINSTON -SALEM, N.C I
!UP!) --.= USAir Group Inc.'s r·
proposed $1 6 billion buyout or
Piedmont Aviation Inc., the
largest merger price In aviation I
history, could stymie a hostile I
takeover of USAir by Trans
World Airlines Inc., analysts sav.
A federal judge In Pittsburgh is
scheduled today to hear a request
by USA1r lor an injunction
requiring TWA to dives t the
USAir'shares It owns
Piedmont accepted USAir's
offer Monday, but the cash
transaction still needs the approval of the federal government
and th e two airlines'
stockholders.
If the deal is consummated,
USAir Group Inc., now ranked
No. 8, would become the No. 7
-rline with 34.000employees and
J ,!eet of more than 309 aJrcra!t,
offidals said.
Analysts said the merger
would mak e It more dnfllcull for

Connolly birth
is announced
Michael a nd Sh••lla Conn oll y,
1'uppers Plains. arc announdng
the birth of a son, Ch 1·rstophcr
Lee, born Feb 11 at O'Blcnrss
Hospital. Athens
· The infant weighed eight
Jiounds. seven ounce~ . and was 21
Inches long. Mr . and Mrs Co nnollv also have a three year old
son, Jeremy Michael
: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Connolly , Tuppl'r Plains. arc the
paternal grandparents and Mt.
~ nd Mrs. Ma yford Harris Sr .
l&gt;ong Botlom, are the mat ernal
~randparent s
Grea t grandparents are Mr. a nd Mrs.
Everrtl Schult&gt;, Tuppet s Platns,
fi:rma Connolly. Recdsv iliP. a nd
He len Harris, Portland Mrs.

~ Quirks
; Moose-~ow romnnf'(1

O\'f1 r,

Christopher Lee Connolly
Lola Grilfin, Tuppers Plains, is
the great-great-grandmothN.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
ROCK THE CAPITOL: A gang of rock 'n' rollers went to
Washington. D.C.. to say no to drugs. Former Sl'x Pis tol Steve
-Jones, Michael Des Barres of the Power Station. Sheena Easton
and Gregory Ahholl appeared to promote MTV's "Rock Against
D1 ugs" campaign.
Jones brings up the heroin death of former assocl8te Std
\'tcious in his anti-drug video and IQid a news conference that
his drug use "got to a point where It wasn't fun a nymore. It was
just a nightmare."
Des Bar res said he jumped into cocaine and alcohol to get in
the spirit of rock 'n' roll and ended up addicted.
Easton's story was about how she was advised not to mention
that she didn 't use drugs out of fear that It would hurt hPr rock
·n· roll image.
The MTV campaign also includes videos by Belinda Carlisle,
Cinderella, Genesis, Glenna KliSden and Patrick O'Hearn,
VIcki Peterson of The Bangles, Lou Reed, Paul Stanley of Kiss.
and Aimee Mann of 'Til Tu esdav.
SOUPY GETS CANNED: Soupy Sal"" is getting canned In
New York City WNBC will drop his four-hour middav
comedy-talk show next month alter a two-year run because of
what is known as "crrativP differences." The NBC Radio
Network also is chopping Sales's year-old weekend series. "The
Moldy Oldies Show," as of March 28 because Soupv's sales were
down wllh advertisers
FltOM 'Li\SSIE' TO 'LAFF1E': When ,June Lockhlll'l left
"Lassie" In 196-l she swore she'd never put on another
housedress and apron. But she reprises her super mother role on
"It's Gary Shandllng's Show" lor what sh(' calls a " tender
sa tirP" on "Lass ie" this Friday !The episode is railed "Laff!P"
because the Shandling show couldn't obtain the rights to the
word "Lassie" I.
Lockhart says recrea ting the role was "just hke dropping
bark some 20-odd yt'ars ago. I got the strangest feeling when I
put on that housed ress and apron again because it felt entirely
correct somehow."
.

By GEORGE ANDitEASSJ
HACKENSACK, N.J. tUPIJSurrogate mother Mary Beth
Whitehead's attorney cap ped fi nal testimony in the Baby M trial
by presenting a 1984 psychologi cal screening that signaled she
had strong reservations abOut
giving up her child.
Harold Cassidy, Whitehead' s
lawyer, contended the initial
psychological screenmg abOut
two yea rs before Baby M was
bOrn weakens her surrogate
contract with William and Ell7.a beth Stern, o! Tenafly.
Cassidy introduced the psycho·
logical report as evidence Monday at the conclusion or testimony m the landmark tria l that
legal expert s say could determine the future of surrogate
motherhood. It is the first case in
which a surrogate mother has
been brought to trial lor refusing
to give up her baby. Gary Skolofl, the Sterns' attorney, told reporters outside court
that Whitehead's refusal to hand
over her baby daughter to th e
Sterns was Impossible to predict.
He said Cass1dy was overemphasizing a report that was part
of an overall st udy endorsing

L1ps" and has no qualms abOut her maternal image.
' 'Motherhood has been a good dmdge for me," she says. "I've
done so manv or those parts . and If that's how the career goes.
that's JUSt fine.
MORE ROYALTY FROM MONACO: Monaro's Princess
Carolln~ is expectin~ again The princess's third child with
busmessman Stefano Ca.•lra~hi 1s du&lt;' at the end of the summer.
according to the royal palace. The couple married in December
198.1 and have a 2- year-old so n and 7-month-old daught er.
The coming child will be the first lor Caroline and Casrraghi
since hl' CI&lt;'ared up a flap with the Italian government over his
suitabilit} for ,-nili1ar\' service Three years a!(o Casrra~hl told
authorities he should be exc used from the draft because of a
tumor that left h1m temporarllv impotl'nt.
WHITE HOUSE SCOOP: White House spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater went on thP record Monday to confirm a report that
he is indeed an eligible bachelor. An it&lt;'m in The Washington
Times described Fitzwater as being "a hit with the women
because of his amactivr personaitt\'."
AI a White House news briefing, FltzwatN, who is H.
divorced. short and ba ldin g, blushed and told reporters, "That
story 1s absolutely true "
GLIMPSES: Famine-fighting rock singer Bob Gel dol crossed
a picket line in Npw York Monday to appear on ABC's "Good
Morning America." "I 've go t to sell myself." he told the
writers, researchers and artists who have been on strike more
than a W&lt;'&lt;'k .. Eddit• Murphy joked with reporters at a Minrola,
N.Y .. courtroom but declined to comment about the $.'!0 million
damage suit agamst him by agent King Broder. Murphy' s
mot her a nd stepfather, Lillian and Vernon Lynt·h. also were on
hand for lhP first da y'"of the tnal. Broder claims he -startedT
Murphy's career but that the comedian has broken ihei'r
contract .. The late Broadway columnist Earl Wll•on left his
$~.f1lO es ratP to his playwright son. Earl Jr. Wilson. whosE'
New York Post column was sy. ndicated across thecountry.
died
'
l
at age 79 on Jan. 16m a Yonkers, N.Y., hospital of respiratory
!ailute. pneumonia and Parkinson's disease Wilson's wifr.
Rosemarv, dted in 1986

parkin~

tlrk&lt;'t '
" I knew I hud some," s hesa1d .
husinl''" remains SHR EWS
BURY . VI. IUP l t - It 's brc·n " I 'II have to ca ll them and scr
P,retty quiet around the Can ara what's going on ...
farm smcP thP public 1omancc
Wrlliam' has twoex planat ions
"I think some of those tickets
tktwcen one of the rows a nd a
l~vcstruck
moose- ended tw o ·wNe go tt en when I was 1n
months ago. Rut mem ory- and Europe. but I slilll akr tesponsltbe spm -o!! business - ltngcrs .
blht' lor them because I loan my
· Lila Carrara. whose !arm was c-ar to proplr ."
Or it m1ght have been because
liosr 10 tens of thou sands of
v,lsitors, sa id Monda)' the fam tlv th r license plate on her white
still h••a rs from proplc wanting to BMW was stolen last ,par. shr
buv T ·shirts und olhPr m(•mc_•nto~

said

of the tll-f.ll ed roma nce
Since the split, the family has
opi'ned Carra ra 's Mountain Ltd ..
t(l spll "T-shlrts: hat&lt;, wet shirt s,
moose magnrt s Oo ~rr utr notf's
rr!rigerator doorsr and lots
111orc, " she said "Business Is
stili going st rong.'

shP pt·omlses the "t he
matter wil l be reso lved" 'oon
Itadio •tatlon D,Js pay Amy's
&lt;'ar lin&lt;•s : PROVIDENCE. R.I.
1UP II - Brown Universilv sophomore Amy Carter mav be
suspended or expellro for pro
testmg apartheid at a r.rmp us
demonstration . but at least she's
closer to getting h!'r car back
The 19-year-old daughter oi
former Pr~sldr nt Carter had her
cat "boQird" a nd towed because
s he had $305 in outsta nding
pa r·king fin es
But two Bos ton radio station
dtsc- jockrys, ca lling the former
fir st daughter a "brave young
lady" for her anti -apartheid
stance. paid the parking lines
and rowing f&lt;'es Mondav
Andy Moes and .lor Martelle,
the mot ning t ram lor WROR·
FM, said they paid the money
after receiving se,·era i telephone
ca lls during their show from
people supportive or rarter.
"This Is one little lrntant that
will no" beoutol hNway," Moes
said. " We happen to think she's a
bra\ e young lady."
Ca ner and 19 others face
possib lP expu lsion lor disrupting
a Boa r·d of Trustees meet in{! Feb.
1:1ro protest lh&lt;' college's Investments In compa nies that do
business with racia lly divided
Sou th Africa .
Moes satd he sen t an intern to
the municipal court In Providence to ,pay the $305 In parking
lines and $30 . In bOoting and
lowing fees. A courl clerk co nfirmed the fines had been paid . ,
Car ter cou ld not be reached for
comment, but a friend said she
would pass along the news.
A spokeswoman for Citizens
Auto Body, where the car was

on

, Th£1 moose, \.\'ho wa nde r(ld

from the woods onto the farm las t
fall. co ntinued his pursutt or
,Jessica 1he cow for 76 dav s despite onlookers .rnd 1cgula r
scrutln~· from the mr dta
Cat'rara sa id hr r hu sb.r ncl stlll
hears !rom strangers rnquirmg
abo~f Ihi' unlikrlv parring.
And for t hP sa kr of storvt r lllng,
the ram II)· decided to chan ge the
~arne or the moose· -w ho h&lt;ld
bc&lt;'n dubbed "Bullwink l"" bv the
media. - 10 ",losh" 10 avoid
confusion with the copvt tghiN.l
cartoon character.
"MY husba nd ne\ Cr reallv did
have · a nam&lt;· !01 him. but
Buliwlnkle was what m\' grand ·
children called him," sa id Car
rara. " My husband decided he
would just nam e the moose
himself."
The family. which ha s applied
for a copy'rlghl of the moose's
new name. also plans to sell d
children's book about thP
courtship.
CMndldate finds th:k&lt;•t to name
r~uplllon :
FORT WORTH .
Texas (UP!)- Most candidat~s .
try to establish namP recognition
just before an election. but not
the way city council ca ndldal e
Shelllta Williams got her name
}le!ore 1he \'Oicrs.
Williams. one or four ca ndl·
dates for Disti·ict 8 In the Aprll4
elecllon. made the city's l,ist of
the top four tral!lc ticket offenders by amassing 124 delinquent

Anyw.r~ ,

By PAULA BUTTURINI
VATICAN CITY (UP! I - The
Vatican condemned tes t tui:Je
baby · production, surrogate
moth erhood, artificial Insemination and human cloning today in a
sweeping document on bioet hit'S.
The document, titled "Instruction on Respect for Human Llle In
Its Origin and on the Dignity of
Procreation.'' forbid s childless
. Roman C'atholic couples to usr
high-tech procedures that mrght
allow lhrm to produce children .
Issued by thr Co ngrega tion !01
the Doctrine of the Faith and
signed by Pope John Paull!. the
40-page dotument is a comprchrnslvr compilation of new and
old church teaching on subj ects
ra nging fi'Om abot·tion and prenatal fetal diagnosis IO rommrt Ia I rra!ficklng in fe tal corp&gt;('S.
"Then• I' aconc••rn that mo1·ai
rinciples are being jropardized
~y new techniques," sai d one
Vatican source familiar with the
llocumcnt. "The churc h wants to
~ay thai mere technological
development does not represent
/nora I progress."
The document's findings arr
based on two traditional Catholic
~ riterla : that humans have a
right to life from the moment of
conception until death and that
the Jransmlss lon or human life
!"ust be "f'ntrusted by naluretoa
personal act" within marriage.
1 The document, which condemns as Immoral most modern
iechnologlcai' advances that permit childless couples to bear
children, also urges Cat holics to

DO YOU HAVE A WISH LISt?

towed. sa1d thl' vr hiriP had not
been picked up and storage fees
would continue to mount until It
was claimed

i\n honest day's work lor lour
aulo tn&lt;•chanlcs.
G,\RDEN
C' ITY . N.Y. tUPI J - Four
sharp-eyed auto mcchanrcs will
collect a reward lor noticing
something that an armor truck
driver missed - bags of cash
that had fallen !rom the truck
onto a l.ong Island roadway.
The five ca nvas bags contain·•
ing $128, 268 In cash and checks
tumbled out abOut 9:40 a. m.
Monday alon!( a road circling the
Roosevelt Field Shopping Center . Nassau County pollee sa id.
Guards aboard the Iruck didn ' t
realtze thr side door had flown
open, but four auto mechanics
1 lding in a truck behind them saw
the bags tumble to the pavement.
The mecha nics. employed by
the county pollee Fleet Service
Burea u. stopped to collect the
cash as the truck continued on.
its dri' cr oblivious to the
Incident.
They rook the monney to the
Williston Park police station,
where o!fic1ais of the IBJ Armored Truck Co. In Hauppauge
came Jo reclaim the ba!(s.
The armored truck had been
tra nsporting the money from the
Nassau Coliseum In Uniondale to
the IBI o!!ice In Hauppauge.
The mechanics will receive an
unspecified reward for returning
the money, a spokesman lor the
armored truck company said. As
civilian employees of lhe police
department, they are eligible to
accept rewards.

(

VIDEO CASSEnE RECORDER
SKATEBOARD
SPENDING ,MONEY
• NEW CLOTHES
KINGS ISLAND ·
BICYCLE ·
COLLEGE
CAR

!

'

~

AS ACARRiER FOR THE DAILY SENnNEL YOU CAN EARN THE
MONEY TO BUY YOUR WISHES
OR , '
YOU MAY WIN YOUR WISHES IN ONE OF OUR
CARRIER CONTESTS.
IF YOU ARE BnwEEN THE AGES OF 11 AND 18

By United Presalnternallonal
Jack Olsen, who wrote "Give a
Boy a Gun," a book abOut
convicted killer Claude Dallas,
describing the so-called "moun·
taln man" who was arrested
Sunday nearly a year after
escaping from Idaho prison.
"He- Is as heroic as Charles
Manson and as much of a
mountain man as Llberace."

CALL 992-2156
AND SAY "I WISH I COULD

B~

A CAlliER"

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

"

1•

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

before bemg merged mt o USAir.
said Nancy- Vaughan, a spokeswoman for USAir, based In
Arhngton. Va.
Pending the government's fl . .
nal approval, USAir flied an
application with the Transportation Department for permission
to purchase 100 percent of
Piedmont's stock to be put In a
voting trust.
The deal calls lor USAir to pay
$69 lor eac h share of Piedmont's
2.11 million outstanding shares
for a buyout pric-e that airline
Industry o!flcials called the largest on record.
Vaughan would not commment
on possible !light serv .. · OJ
personnel changes because "l!'s
a it just too soo n to tell."
USAir's major hub in Pitt sburgh has 26" daily fl ights, and
Piedmont's largest hub is in
C'hariotte, N.C .. with more than
200 dal ly flights

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Btlx 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

light to reform civil laws that the
churc·h judges illicit.
"Civil law cannot legalize the
donation of gam•'tes between
persons who are not legitimately
united in marriage," it said.
"Legis lation must also prohibit
by virtue of the support which Is
due to the family embrvo banks
post mortem Insemination a nd
surrogate motherhood."
The document, largely writtc•n
tn a question and-answer format.
udv isrs rhildl&lt;'ss Cat holic couples to t'ell'aln from !'&lt;'SOrting to
illicit techniques and to lind In
lhPil "sad &gt;iluation . .tn opporrunll\' lol' shoring In a par11ruia 1
w~•' In lhC' Lord's Gr O"!.; "

r

By WILLIAM CESPEDES
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (UPIJ
1-- In the second upheaval within
!he Nicaraguan rebel leadership
In a month, former Sandlnlsta
chief Arluro Cruz resigned !rom
)he directorate or th(• Iat gest
Contra group today over what he
called waning support for his
lleclsions.
, "I do not think I can co ntribute
!n any way by stav ing longer
•lnce measures must be made
together," Cruz said Monday In
.nnounclng his resignation from
)he leadership of the United
Nicaraguan Opposition, or UNO.
"For that there must be a base
ior making political decisions,"
lald Cruz, who In 1980 and 1981
was a member of the five -man
Sandlnlsta junta that ruled
Nhraragua .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radrators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs end welding.
(All makes &amp; models)

PH. 949·2893
or 949-2756
John K. Ientz
Owner /Mechanic

1· 2·'17-3 ••.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

ACTION
TOWING
949-9070 or
949-2045

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

992-3410

Sealed b1d proposals will be
received by the Pomeroy Vo·
lunteer F1re Department up to

lhehourof12 :00P.M onthe
23rd day of March. for the
•urmshing of one I1 l mobtle
fire apparltus. complete
with cab and cha1111. tire
apparatus body. and equip·
ment as called for In thesp&amp;ci·
ficetiont tttat can be p1cked
up at the Pomeroy V1llage
Hall Bid proposals must be
submhted to the following

bate Divis1on of Meigs
County . Ohio, for an order to
change her name to Donia
Rene' Crane.
Said application w11t be by
petition to be f1led in said
Court, on or after the 11th
day of April 1987.
Dated this 4th day of
March , 1987

addreu.

Donia Rene' W1ll

Vlllogo of

(3)10. 1tc

Pomeroy F1re Dept

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH:

PH. 992-9949

Bob Barton, Owner
2·1--86-ltn

320 Moin St.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARV

JANE WALTON
CLERK / TREASURER
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
(2) 24. )3) 3, t 0 3)c

On February 18, 1987. tn

the Meigs County Probate

Court. Case No. 25427, Rose

Public Nottce

M. Zimmerman. 1802 Eliza-

beth Street. Belpre, Ohio,
45714, Wll appointed Ad·
mlnirtrltrix of the ettate ot
Donald \ Gordon YeJter. de-

ceoald, toto of Roodtvillo.
Moigll County, Ohio. 45n2
Robert E. Buck.

Proboto Judge

Lana K. Nesltlroad , Clerk
[2) 24, (3) 3, 10 3tc

--=-:-::--:-:-c-:-c-Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Offers w1ll be received at
the office of Bernard V. Fultz
at 11 1 v, W Second Sueet.
Pomeroy, Oheo. for the 1118
of ttle Elmer Young. Sr. reel
eatate The real ellate ia
situated on . Eagle R1dge
Road 1n Chester Township ,
approximately :1.4 mile south ·
east of S.R 7 . The real es 1 tate conti1t1 of a one story.

- -- - - - - - - 1
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Estate of Sare E. Brown,
Deceased

Case No . ~5.409
NOTICE

Notice it hereby given that
on the 4th day of March ,

1987, Wllllom S Brown,
Executor of the Estate of
Sara E. Brown. late of 22
Main Street. Siasconset.
Massachuaetts 02664. filed
m this Court under Docket
M, Page 548 . an authenti·
cated copy of a Lener of
Appomtment issued to him
by the Probate Court of

not directly therapeuttc. is
illicit."
-Embryo nic cadaver or Ict al
cadav er research: Such cadavel'S " must be respected just as
the rl'mains of other human
beings tand) all commercial
trafficking mu st be considered
illicit and should be prohibited "
-\.cnetic engi neering· Cloning, " twin fis sion" and parthcnog(• nesis arc Immoral as arc
animal-human hybnds or ges ta
lion of human l'mbryos tn artifi&lt;'ia i or an tmai utrrus0s The

2·bodroom home wl&lt;h bath.

approximately 6 .76 aore1 of
real estate by Deed descrtp tion
The undersigned reterves
all nghtt to reject any and all
bids lind 111 bids are tUbJect
to the approval of Probate
Court of Meigs County Anyone Interested may call
992-2186 for an appointment to tee the property
Offer• will be received until
11 :00 am on March 13,
1987 Alllntereated parties
may be present at the date
and time of the tale and bid
competitively for the prop-

eatete who deaire to 111ert
their lien• on the real e1tate

Real Estate General

of the oold docodont locotod

when donP IOpt'eSNVe thPir life,
is illicit LI S Jlf' an\ "manlpu l c.~ ·
lions 10 produc&lt; ' human beings

The document 1r]rct&lt;·d "' srl\'('1f'd :..~c·t •nt'( II ng 1o "&gt;PX or ot her
moral!\' llllr lt nunwrous modern p1 t'lklt ·r mlnt'd qualities."
-t\1'1 i!i.-lui lnscm matron: 11 medrral procedure'. Including.
-Abortion:, The church's tota l ltrll whet her· It Involves insPmln ·
ban on aoot·tion for whatever na tlng a "oman "lth th(· sperm
of hPr husband 01 a ma.J not hrr
reason remains unchan~ed .
-Prenatal diagnosis: Permls- husband. or whether It Involves
sable only II aim Is to save a using a man's sperm to fertilize
fetus. Gtavely Immoral If diag- the eg-g of his wtf&lt;' or another
nosis seeks to determine malfor- woman . Arti!lclal insemination
mation or hereditary disease of any unmarried woman, single
thai might lead a mother to or widowrd. whocvpr lht• donO!.
also is morallv Illici t.
abOrt.
.
-Surroga te moJhPt hood · Mor-Prenatal th erapy: Medical
procrdures ·on l'mbryos are al- al ly llllctt in all rasPs .
- Test tube baby producti on:
lowed only II they seek to hea l the
Illicit
wh&lt;'lh&lt;'r tt invol,rs spprm
fetus and do not submit it to
and
eggs
taken !rom a husband
"dispro;&gt;ortional e" risks .
-(
wit&lt;'
or when It lnrludrs
and
-Embryonic research: Perdonor
Pggs
or sperm Ma sturba mlssable only If parents consent
and there Is no threat to the li!e tion to obtam sperm for IPs I tube
and "physical Integrity" of fertilization also is judgrd immother and child. "EXP!'rimen· moral because It "disassocia tes
tal ion on living, embryos, thl' conjugal af' t " from
whether viable or not, which Is prucreat1un

For mort information (all:

614-992-7537
1-11 -lmo

pd

131 tO. 17, 24, 3tc

NEW LISTING - LEE CIRCLE
- Nrce 3bed1oom ranch wnh
drnrng atea. latge INIIIg 100m
laundry atea. carport, and outside st01age N&lt;ce n~ghlxlt
hood ,Owner musl sacnhce
$31.!03.00.
MINERSVILLE- Small house
at a small p11ce Good rental
property Electnc BB heat. I
bedroom, eQUipped krlchen
Want S9 500 00
DEXTER - In the count1y. Appto~&lt;m alely 98 acres,bamand
othet burldrnp;;. pond. lencm~
apptomately 16 acres t~labl e.
35 act es pasiUJe w1th lwostcwy
home

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-

mp
Flatt•ned Alum. Cons
26• lb
Cl•an Sheet (asl Alum.
25' to 29• lb.
#1 COPP£R ............... 42•
#2 &lt;OPP£R ............... 32'
Irony Alumtnum
5 to 18' lb.

SCIPIO RECYCliNG
locnt ed 2 Mt E o f Pagey1lle
On Town 1hlp Ro11d #14 2

614·992-3466

-4- m

CLOSE OUT
ON

•SATELLITE SALES
&amp; SERVICE

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER - 98S-3307

1117 / tin

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Form Equipmtnt

Boshan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Farlory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
ID-8-tln

Roger Hysell
Garage
~Ito

992·2259

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pmts"

Authorind John Deere,
New Holland, lush Hog

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
E. Mtirt ...
POMEROY,O .

CUSTOM BUILT

GUN SHOOT

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Oh1o

said Letter of Appointment
in this Court or said llent
shall forever be detmed
barred and cancelled.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Approved by .
Douglas W. Little
Attorney for Applicant

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MARCH 16 &amp; 17

their claims. duly aworn to.

montht after the filing of

fr11rz in g of human Pmbryos. even

"All you need to know
lo make your own qudh
ond feel proud! "
lessons start

in this tttate shall preltnt

to this Cou" within six 16)

l /?811111

•GIBSON

• of tho Eotato of

Elmer Young. Sr .
[3) 4, 6, 6, 8, 9 .
10, 11 , 12, Btc

Nantucket County. Maua-

QUILTING
LESSONS

""VJohn Mora , Admmlstrator

schuaetta . Notice it further
gNen thet all creditora of said

, IU51NES5 'HONE
16141 99H550
RESIDENCI 'HONE
(6141 992-7754

•KELVINAIOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN

Pomeroy, OH.

46769
The Village has the rigf'lt to
eccapt or reject any or all
bids

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bllfs Hore :

10-M-tfc

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice it hereby given that
the undertigned intends to
make application to the
Common Pleas Court, Pro-

SALES &amp; SERVICE ,
We Carry F1st'llng Supplies

1-13· &lt;fC

Public Notice

Public Notice

161 North Second .:
Middltport, Ohio 4S760;

992 -2196
Middleport, ·Ohio

"24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE
USED TIRES
&amp; BATTERIES

3-4-1 mo.

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

PAT HILL FORD

8-IJifn

Whitehead as a surrogate
showed that afte1 inte1vlewmg
The Sterns. both 41. have sued Whttehcad in Apri11984, she was
the 29-vear-old surrogate mothe1· concerned about Whitehead's
from Brick Township in an effort "tendency 10 deny feelings."
"She docs not want to rea1
to enforce Ihe contract and win
custody or the child the couple morP rhildrPn now that her ov.:n
calls Melissa. bOrn March 27. are in sc hool and no long&lt;•r as
1986. Whitehead calls the child demanding, though she expec ts
Sara.
to have strong !rellngs abOut
Thf' Sterns have temporar)· giving up th e child at the end, "
custody of the Infant pending the Emwohne1 wrote.
outcome or the trial, and WhiteDespite the report , Emwohner
head Is allowed twice weekly ultlmateiv recomme nded White
visits under the supervlston of head as an appropna te candi date for surroga lr pa t cnthood
county juvenile of!lcials.
C'.1ss idy told Sorkow that the
Judge Harvey Sorkow, who 1s
hearing the case without a jury In repo rt predicted Whitehead
Bergen County Superior Court, would hG~\£' "strong" Jl•sen•a·
has scheduled summations lor tlons about giving up hPr child
Thursday He Is expected to issue and she should have been rehiS ruling March .'!0. The trial jected as a candida te for Ihe
surrogate moth&lt;'l'hood progra m
began Jan. o.
He also argued tha t th e Sterns
The Sterns sa id th&lt;'y would not
have entered the contract with should have 1eviewcd Ihe report
Whitehead if the; had known on WhitehPad before they ' &lt;'nabOut the report psychologist tered a surroga te moth erhood
Joan Einwohner submitted to the contract with her.
"Mr. Stern knew the rep01 t
Infertility Center of New York.
Outside the court room, Eliza- was avallabi•'. he had a right
beth Stern. said shl' and her under the contract to see the
husband were told Whitehead report. and he kn &lt;'w thr impot ·
had passed medica l and psyc ho- ta nce of the report," Cass idy
sa id .
logical tests
The report by Einwohner

~ruz resigns

WE CAN HELP MAKE YOUR WISHES COME TRUE!

Quote of che day

TWA to bid forUSAir. TWA's$1 .5
billion bld to lake over USATrwas
rejected Thursday after TWA
said It owned about15 percent of
USAir's stock.
,
A federal judge In Pittsburgh
granted USAir a temporary
restraining order Monday blockmg TWA !rom acquiring more
shares. USAir has also requested
a t.i.S. District Court injunctron
mandating that TWA divest the
USAir shares it already owns.
Investment executive David
Smith or Carolinas Secunties
Cor p said, "As it Is toda y, It
looks like USA1r may be the
winner In this case."
Paul Karas. airline analyst
with the New York brokerage
firm of L.F. Rothschild, Untrr
berg, Tobin, said It will likely b&lt;' a
dlf!icuit battle, but TWA probably will still pursue USAir.
Under the proposed buyout,
Piedmont will operate temporal'·
llv as a wholly owned subsldlan·

.·

Bus.i ness Services

Vatican condemns ·test tube
baJ&gt;.ies, surrogate mothers

in the newJ __~:.:.~~~-O~ck~h~ar~l&lt;~liS~o~pi~ay~s~,,~m~ot~hcrriin~M~ar~·ti~nM~ul~l's~m~o~vle~·~·R~e~nl~ed~~~~~=~~~=§¥~:=:~~~
hut

I he DailY

Tes'timony ends in Baby M trial

happenings.----People in the news ____________,

Robbie Reeves of Chester
spent the weekend with Mrs.
Dorothy ..Reeves and Bryan
Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
was th e Saturday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ha rl ey Smith,
l&lt;anauga .
.Joey McF.Iroy spent Tuesday
evemng with Jonathan Sargent.

1987

·us-Air, Piedmont merger
pr~ce largest in aviation ·his ..- .

By LARRY DOYLE
plaque - 10 millimeters' long, 2 be at least part of tht reasons ·
UI'J Sf!lence Writer
millimeters wide and ahlillt a wh~· (renarrowlng l occurs."
CHICAGO I UP I) - A new half millimeter deep. Four such
Preliminary tests of atherocnon -surgical technique using a U-s haped scoops caQ be taken out tomy on 57 patients with opcl4ded •
miniature drill can cleanly scoop of plaque before a retaining cup leg arteries indicate the proceout waxy, yellowish plaque that inside the device must be with- dure may need to be repeated In ·
clogs arteries and precipitates drawn and emptied
only 10 percent of the cases heart attacks and strokes, reone-third'
the rate of angloplas,
The technique I• very •lmllal'
searchers say.
to balloon angloplasty, m which a ties that eventually fall. AtherocDoctors reported their first thin balloon Is expanded inside tomy also had a 5.3 percent
successes using the new tech- narrowed blood vessel,, but medical complication rate, com·
nique, called atheroctomy, at a Johnson said atheroctomy may pared with 7 percent to 15percmt
meeting of U.S. and Canadian many· Important advantages complications seen with balloon
pathologists Monday.
over that Increasingly common expansion.
"We're still In the beginning technique
In addition to the northern
stages, but it looks vHy good."
"Angloplasty - really all it California hospitals, medlc,al fasaid Dr. Danna Johnson, a does IS push the plaque aside, and cilities associated with Boston
pathologist with Stanford Uni
that causes significant trauma to University and Duke University,
venty Hospital In northern Cali- the vessel wall. cracking and In Durham, N.C. are now testmg
fornia . "We did our first heart splitting it," she said. "That may the atheroctomy procedure.
last week, and that turned out
quite well."
Johnson attributed the success
of the procedure to thP artery
drill ilsel!. "a mechanical and
medtcal marvel'' designed b~·
Dr. John Simpson, a cardiologist
at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
ANCHORAGE, Alaska I UPit cine, m what Levine described as
City, Calif.
Skatlng superstar Doro thy ";J simple cere mony 1n
The drill - a devlc(' shaped
Hamill
married a Los Angeles Anchorage."
like a miniature cookie cutterdoctor
while
in Alaska for an ice
He sa id the wedding took place
1s encased in a cat heter and
show, her pubhrist said.
Thursday
and Hammlll then
threaded through the artery 'to
performed
in
thr show, "Dorothy
the site or plaque buildup
Publtcist Mark Levi ne said Hamill's Champions on lcP,"
Driven by an outside motor Monday that Hamm111 , the 1976 Friday and Saturday.
connected to a gu1de wire, the Olympic champion, married Dr.
Levine said it is the second
cutter peels out rectangular K•mneth Forsythe, a ph,vs1clan marriage lor Forsythe. 44, and
sections of atherosclerotic who speciahzes in sports ml'dl
Hamill, 30.

Skater Dorothy Hamill weds

HOSTS AND COMPETITORS - Meigs High
, Sf!hool played host Saturda) to sfvc n other
• schools In the Tri-Valley Con!crenc" Qeiz Bowl .
: Belpre won lhe competition, followed by Vinton
: County in second place. The Meigs learn won Its
· first match against Miller, and I hen lost to
' Alexander and Warn•n. l'artldpaling lor M&lt;•igs

'

Trutllllulu

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-llc

POGII!

Flr111 E4ulplllt11f
Parh &amp; Servin

1·3·'86 lie

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas •
Satellite Sales
Installation
Servite
Elec1ronic Organs
Mobile sBrvice . •

614-143-5241
RIASONAILE · RILIAILE
8·20-'86 tfn

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
EUGENE LONG
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Remodeling

Rooting ot all Tvpoo
Complele Gutter Work

Worked in hom11 area
20 veart

"VINYL SIDING

•ALUMINUM SIDING
"llOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New 11011111 lullt
"Free Eatlmeteo"

"F ree Ettimatu"

CAll COLLICI:

Ph. 16141 843-5425

3-9-'17-2 mo pd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

PH. 949-2160

or 949-2101
No Sunday Calla

3-11-ttn

SERVICE

- Addont 1nd r11mod~tliny
- Rootmy 11nd gullfJr w or k
ConcrBIB work
Plumhmg and elllclrt cal
w orlt

I Free Et11m•tet)

in power struggle

2

In Memoriam

Cruz has strived to reform Lalln America, told CBS that
UNO with lncre~sed civilian "Cruz has jus! di scovered wh~t
IN MEMORY OF
control of the guerrilla group and many or us discovered a long
DON SHEETS
has opposed efforts by rebel time ago - that the Contra
WHO
LEFT US
military leaders to direct policy. movement Is not a democratic
MARCH 9. 1976
"I am not sure that at this point movement."
know, eon, you are
backing can be found for those
Rep. Sam Ge jdenson, D·Conn .,
•
decisions," said Cruz. Cruz said said theresig nationof Cruzco uld
In our heert you
his resignation from the lhree· Ioree the collapse of U.S. aid to
live on .
heortoche and
member directorate of UNO, the the Contras "This would seem to
pain we ahtred that
rebels' political umbrella. would ju's t add strength lo opposition to
day
·
be effeclive today .
what Is clearly now a failed and
!When
wo
aald
good·
In a letter to the Miami Herald dying policy of the adml nlstra·
byo and had to walk
announcing his resignation, Cruz lion," he said.
away.
"spoke out against 'certain rae- ,..-----------:-----:1
time hod come for
lions' 'or the U.S. government .
you to go.
who did not act decisively to
we mill you, no
avoid supporting hegemonlstlc
one will ever know .
currents within the rebel move·
But to me you will al·
woya be near,
ment ," the newspaper •ald.
1
Because
you were my
Sen . Christopher Dodd, D- .
a
on
I
loved
10 d,ear.
Conn. , chairman of Senate For- I
Mom&amp;
elgn Relations su bcommittee on 1

Read the Best Seher
Read the

Clf\SSIFIED RDS

•

MIDDLEPORT - fhrs one
should be sold! [xcelle111 condrt~n home 1n a gteat n~ gh
borhood 3 bedtooms, I '!,
baths, drnrng room. i•rng room,
f•Jil basement. 2 car garage,
cenltal a11 and heat all st01ms
low heat bllls, catpe!Jng and
many other gJe&lt;tlleatutes Also
a new chrmney tor woodoorner
1n basement Only S42.000 OJ
RACINE - Appro•rnatefy 4
acres ol vacant gJoond rn the
country $1.50000
MIDDLEPORT - Newer modular. nice level Jot &gt;n M&gt;tldleporl Woodburmng l"e~ace.
porch and dec~ areas. Beauhful ()lace Owners must sacrtltce PRICE . REDUCED
$29,000.00.
Henry E. Clottnd. Jr.
9!2-6191 '
Joan Trussell ..... 949-266D
Dolllt Turner .... 992·5692
OIIIC4................ 992·2259

ICUI OUT fOI FUIVRI UIU

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915-3561
All M1ku
•W11har1 •Oithwlshen
•Rang••
•Refrigar1tora

•Dryers •Freazen
PARTS end SERVICE
4 5 lie

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992 -7314

Pomoroy, Ohio

41 1 '86 1c

Announr.r!lll en Is
3 Announcements
Racine Gun Snoot tpontortd b'f'
Rac1n11 Gun Club . hllf't' Sunday, •
btglnnlnfl II 1 00 p. rn FI CIO"f' ·
ChokfJ 12 gu1gt 1hotgun1.
,•
At p1rtn~tt fllvt " ~00 coupon"
for "Ooubl11 SOD Tlck•t " , 30.t-

675-2300
Someont to drfvt kldntv dletysl.. '
petlenl to Huntln;ton occa1ion, 1
eJiy For Information Clll 304 ·
&amp;75-3098 .
'

In per·

I

Trlbul'tt
Avllllnut,

1

�• u•••~•uy

' allt'-o- 1 ne uauy ;:,enttnet
6

LAFF·A·DAY

Lost end Found

44

lost-white envelope eontaimng
money. Second Ave. near tire

54 Misc . Mercha~dise

Apartment
for Rent

hydrtnt-acro11 tyc~:m Carl's Shoe

modern kitchen, gas hut, well Call 61 4·268·8251 .
insulated. wifed for phone &amp;
C:lble 1\1, IPICiOUI parking In .Piaat!C cistern state approved,

LOST- Black llbradore 1yr old
Vicinity of N"ighborhood Rd . 1f
uen Ph. 614-448-3488

rear, p.~~tio. t376 / mo. plul
utilities, Deposit, Referanus
required No pets . Ceii614-44Q·
4926.
.

plastic; septiC tankt. pl•tic
culverts,, metlll culverts RON
EVANS ~ ENTERPRISES, Jeck·
,.n, Oh 614-'288-593G.

Myrtle 9oach Cof1.do Rental 2
badrooms, 2 batfil, sleeps e.
furn11hed complete with li11en1,
tennis cour11, indoor·O(Itdoor.
pools. puna. Iteam room, restaurant. No peU·eMcellent rates
Phone 614· 423-8817.

Swimming Poola t999. New
leftover 1986 model poole.
Huge 16x24 foot swim erea, 4
feet deep. Includes dack, f1111ce
filter 1nd warranty Flnanc~nO
arranged, lnltellation availabla.
Call 24 houra 1 ·800·345-0946.

7

Yard Sale

.....P.oiii.erov .... ·- ..

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
houses. Pt . Pleasant and Gallipo·
li1 814-446·8221 .

Middleport

S. Vicinity

....

Yard 181e: 144 Mulbury. Pom•
roy . Wed. Ttuu Fr1 March
11 .12.13 9,oo-2·3o

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

FLEA MARKET
lots for rent Rt 326 between
Southwestern High School &amp;
Rio Grande
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean
used cars
Jim Mmk Chev.·Oids Inc
·
Bill Gane Johnson
614-446-3672
TOP CASH p111d for '83 model
and newM JiUd, cars. Sm1th
Bulck · Ponuac. 1911 Eastern
A\lfJ., Gallipolis Call 814-4462282
Buying dally gold, silver coma.
rin.gs. Jewelry, sterling ware, old
coms, large currency . Top pri
C81 . Ed BurhaU Barb&amp;r Shop
2nd Ave Middleport Oh 614:
992-3476
B ft, p1ckup topper wanted Call
614-949-2013.
Wanted . Pure Bred Norweg1an
Elk Hound Call 614-992· 7603

Emp loym en t

Serv1r.1!S
11

Help Wanted

AVON Sell Avon ·Make 40%
Call614-448· 3368.
Good with People? Put your
talents to work· E1rn good tU
selling Avon . Call 614 446
2158
Baby!ltter needed for 6vr old
from Bam to 12 noon Mon-Fri.
Call614-446-2153
- - - - - - - --leGOVERNMENT JOBS
S18, 040· S59.230 yr Now Hir·
ing Call 805· 687·6000 ht.
R-9805 lor current lt~derallist
Tha Ma1g1 local School 01ttrict
seeks an md1v1dual to prov1de
home tutoring to a ttudent who
lives in the Pomeroy area Tha
home tutor ing servicn are to be
prov1ded f1va (51 hourt per week.
The home tutor will be cert1fied
as an elementary te~~eher and· or
a specific learning disablhtin
teacher In the State of Ohio
Penon• mterested In thiS poll·
tion should contact R. Charles
Hollidav. Maigalocal Director of
Special Education. 614· 742·
3113 (Salem Center Elementary
School I
Wanted: H1irttyli1t. mall or
lemltie 1 year eaperianca pre·
ferred but not necessary. Stop In
et 293 S. 2nd, Middleport, or
Csll 614 -992-2660.
AVON. no 1ervice charge. open
territories. phone 304 · 676 ·
1429
Housewife. grandmother. tenior
high students oorn 4 to H hours
rncome plul bonuses, 50 needed
to take orders by phone reteil
edven1aing promotion. day end
evenmg shifts evallabletampor·
ary No ekptri8t1ce neceuar'f'.
W1lltram . Apply in per1on at232
Ma1n St . Thursday, Merch 12
between 9.00 and 7 00.
Need people fbr Ught delivery,
COO orders. muat dress neatly,
heve lranaporUtion. know P1
Plea1.11nt ares Apply in pMSon,
232 Ma1n St., Thunday, March
12. between 9 00· 7 00.
FOOD TRANSPORTER Tranaport lood to Henderaon. Mason
and Letart Nutrition Centers and
dellvt~r appro•imate 8 home
delivered meals on the route
Two {21 houra per day t3.36 per
hour and 20 c11nt• per mile Must
be In good physical condition
and able to llf1 havycontamer1.
Must have rehablft car or truch
and driven license Pie••• apply
Mason County Action Group,
Inc .. 101 Second St. Point
Pleasant. W Va
SUBSTITUTE COOK . Must be in
good physical condition and able
10 lift heevy containers Must be
able lo prepara food for 300
people Must be able to bake
piM. cakM cornbread and c:oo·
kre1 Hours may vary. 13 36 per
hour . Apply Mason County
Action Group Inc. 101 Second
St . Po1nt Pleasant
REPS NEEOEO to' bu1men
accounts. Fulltime, a.&amp;O.OOOS80.000, part time t 1 2. 000·
118, 000. No selling , repeat
buaineu. Set your own houn.
Tra1ning provided Call 1· 612·
938-6870. M-F. Bam to 6pm
(central standard t•me).
12

Situations
Wanted

Havft room and bond for eld81'1y
penon Reuonable 614· 992·
6022.
15

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now Southeastern Bu s·
1n111 College Call 814-446·
4367

18

Wanted to Do

Will do sewing In my home. Now
taking orders for Prom dre11el
Coli 114· 261-1989.
Sti'Je Hawley 's Trastl Service·
Reaaonabla rates -t6 par month.
good dependabfe s...vlce. Cell
114-317-0234

Two bedroom furn•thed apt New
Haven, 304·882 · 3267 or 304773-5024
45

"Wow, a diploma. I wonder
what it says?"

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light houu keeping room• Park
Central Hotel Call 614-4460766.

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO fflcommends thot you
do bus•ness w1th petOple you
hnow. and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have
mve1Uigeted the offering

Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

Ashton butld1ng lots, mobile
tlomn permitted. Clyde Bowen.
Jr. 304-676-2336
2 acre lot, drilled wen. Letart,
304-895·3564

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr ranch, Rodney Village II.
8286 mo. plus deposit Referen ·
ces requ~red . Call Blackburn
Realty 614-446-0008

Small house· Five milet from
Gallipolis. AC &amp; carpet . S1000
down 1213 a month Call
814-256-1216 after 6

8 room h1 on 50 acres at Eureka
S250 a month 6 room hs 75
acre farm-Muon County. Call
304-875-51114

3 bedroom• close to town. 2
baths, fireplace, central air,
range &amp; oven City Schools Ph
814· 246· 9248

4 BR , 1 112 bath, l R Ad , dep
required $250 per month Call
614· 446-4222 between 9&amp;6

3 bdr . 2 baths, gas hat, centel
air, 161136 mground pool, e11&lt;:el·
lent neighborhood near Hol1erm
city tchoolt. 861 .500 Call
614· 446-3981
To be moved or demolished·
large 2story frame ha loc1tedat
36 East South St . Jackson. OH
Make offer to Holzer Clinic
614-448-5186
By owner· Good Starter house. 3
BR . city schools. gaa haal,
window AC . fenced yard, hard·
wood floors 1 car garage. Call
614-446-1171 or 614-4464305

House tor rent on Te111
Cell 614-446· 0756.

Ro~

2 BR hou1e, located· 52 Mill
Creek 8160 month. *75 dep·
o11t Call 814-446·3B70

Completely remod•led two bed·
room house with basement,
6011160 lot. 2312 MadilonAve.
Would make e11cellenl starter
home or rental property. Also. a
new satellite syetem .
821 . 500 00 304 -675· 6477
10·00 to 6 00 or after 8·00 PM
3G4· 372· 9970.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST, GALUPOLIS. RT 36
PHONE 614-448· 7274.
1966 Skyline 471110 t2700
Cail614-446·0390.
12•54 Nashua. 2 BR.Iargebath
Must see 6 make otter. Call
614-446-76B7.
1972 Cattle 14JC66 with 1982
hpando 121120. F~repla c e , can·
Hal air, 2 b1ths. 2 storage
bu1ldmga. Mun sell Ph 246·
5884 after 6pm.
1982 M1nsion 14d!, 2 large
BR , all alec. Set up on beautiful
riverfront lot Ready lo move
into with everything you need
614·992-3348 after 6pm or
anytime on weekends
1980 Liberty 2 bedrooms. all
electr~c , lurmlhed S7750. Call
614-992-7479 .
'81 Commodore. 14a415 , ltke
new lived m only 6 months,
payotf. Phone 304-882-3854.
K &amp; K Mobilfl Homas, Inc, new
and used homea atartlng at
84,400.00 and up 304·676·
3GOG.
'86 .. Holly Park ". 14a80, J
bedrooms, 2 baths. 304-6757298
1978 Kirkwood. 14)170. 3 bed·
room, 2 baths, newly remo·
deled . 1ncludu carpeting .
S8.500.00 or best offer. 304773 ·6B73.
1977 Cameron. 12d0 mobile
tlome, totel electnc, 2 bed·
room•. eJCcellent condition .
m-"n offer, 304-875· 2268 or
676-2631. ask tor Rick.

In Eureka e11cellent shape 2 Bdr
with eap•ndo. Responcibla
adults only No pets. t226mo
Deposit reqUifed Ph 614-246·
5863
2, 2 BR mobile homes
$150 / mo ·each· S100 Oep .,
water paid. Call61 4· 448· 3B88,
after 5 446-4491
2 Bdr .. unfurn. 12x60 Holtypltfk,
WD hook-up Deposit r.. ref.
required Hall mite !'lit Holrer.
Cell 614·446· 4369 or 304·
11576-9760.
198&amp; Mobile Home 14)170, on
St Rt 143. $230. gumcluded.
Callll!i14-992 -6449
3 bedrooms. furnished, wt~her,
dryer. air. 1210. per month plus
deposit and utalitiea Call 614·
992-7479.
2 bedrooms. 58 Burdette Addn,
serious lnq1.uru only in perton.
t150.00 month plus ut1lititea.
01scount surplut uniforms
44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Badmom basic tint 8171.00
plus electric. Al10 requited a
a.200.00 tecunty depo1it. CON ·
TACT Jackson Eatttea Dept . Ph
448 - 3997 Equal Housing
Opponunlly.
Furnished &amp; unfurnished apts .•
t150.00 and up, referencu Ph
304· 675· 7738 or 304-876·
6104 A-1 Raat Estate '
6 Court Street. large 3 BA , 1 '12
bath. complete kitchen, gas
heat, park In rear, overlook city
park &amp; rfver. 12150/ mo. plua
utifiti ... deposit. ref~~rences required. No pets Great for 2 / l
alnglea Call614· 446·4928.
Furnithad Efticiency . S1 liO.
Utilities pd Single Share bath.
107 2nd, Gallipolis . Call 446·
4418 1fter 7pm.
740 2nd -Avo .. 1 BR. 0186.
Deposit required . Call614·446·
4222 between 9.6.

Tony's Gun Repairs. hot rebluemg. Open 9 00 AM to 7 .00 PM
Call 304·676-4631

49

Off whtte prom dress, e11c con d.
SIZe 9 , $20.00 Phone 304 -676·
2416
JVC Stereo Recaaver, B1cturnta·
ble, 2 Bose Speakers, $160 00
Brass headboard $50 00. 304·
676·3244.

For Lease

Wanl lo le118 lobaceo allotments Ph .614-38B· 8514.

I:5;;5:B;::u~il~d~in:g::;S;u:p:p~l~ie:s=

Merchandi se

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St . Galhpolls New &amp; used
wood·coal stoves. 6 pc wood lA
IUite &amp;399, bunh bed&amp; $199
recliners new &amp; used bedroo~
Illites, wrmger washers. &amp;
thou. New livingroom suitea
8199-$699, lampa Call 614·
448-3169.
'

2 bdr fullyfurnilhedadultaonlv .
utll paid Call 114-«1-4110

Firewood. $35 t'ickup load.
delivered Call 614-742·2075
or 614· 742 ·3 194 anytime

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Parh,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy
Rental trailers Call 614-9927479 .

Beautiful 3 bedroOm house m
Syracuse. Full kitchen. large
lawn Contacl days 614-992·
6298 or n1mht1 614-667-3786.

2 bdr . all utilities paid e•cept
elec.. turn . or unfurn . sec.
deposat required. Convenient
location C•ll 814· 441-8568 Df
814-448-4ne

Two used ehainsaw! and two
demon1tr1tor uws for sale
Pomeroy Home and Auto. 614 ·
992-2G94.

18 ' ~&lt;48' Steel Bldg ·747 Thtrd
Avenue . 3 phase power. 12 ft
overhead door. concrete tloor
Cell 614·446·2362

51 Household Goods

2 bedroom with bath and
carpor1 located on a nice lot in
Rutl•nd Asking $13.000 Call
614· 742 -2093 or 61 4· 742·
2367.

1:::-----------

Three room office, DTV\1 Galllpo·
hs, newly remodeled 8300 00 1
month, mcludea all ullhties. Ph.
614· 446-1647

3 bdr hs. 2 miles from HMC No
pets. t195 month &amp;100 dep·
Dill Cell 614 · 446-3617 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

4 Uniroyal laredo LTSR rathels
ST236B5R16 on B holeWheets
Lots ot m1le1left. $80. 1achor all
for S300. Brand new Sotalex
quilt box spring• and mattre11
plus frame Cost $200 , w1ll seH
for $100. Eldon Walburn. 380 S.
Third, Middleport. 814-99228G5

46 Space for Rent

3 bdr on Rt 218 $300 per
month plus $300 depo11t Call
614-256-1623.

1646lincain Heights, Pomeroy,
2bdr , Immediate pouession
19,50G.OO Ph. 614-992·3749
or 614-992· 3502 No Sunday
calla

Priced reduced. 3 bedfoom
house, Jim Hill Road. 304· 676·
3073. 5 PM to 9 PM

For Rent · Efficiency sleepmg
rooms. Call 304· 173· 6661 .

OHice Space for Rent EMeellent
for Attorneys, Aacc;HJnlant. etc.
Close to Cour1 Houae Call
• Wiaeman .Real Estate Agency
614-446-3644.

Rentals

Mixed hardwood slabs 81 2 per
bundle . Contalnmg appro~~. . 1 'lz
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio Call &amp;14-992·
6461 .

County Appll~mce. Inc Good
used appliance• and TV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 814-446 · 1699, 627 3rd
Ave. Gallipolis, OH
Valley Furmture. new r.. used.
Large secbon of qulihty furniture 1216 Eastern Ave
'
Gallipolis

Building Materials
Block, bnck, sewer p1p81, win·
dows. lintels. etc. Claude Win·
tMs, Rio Grande, 0 . Cell 614245-6121
Concrete block a allsi1es yard or
delivery. Muon send. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 123'/z Pir1e St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614-4462783.
Big 2' BR RustiC home bu11t on
your lot S11 ,995 &amp; up. Call
1·614-886· 7311
56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd C.11ttery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siamete kittens . AKC Chow
puppiea. New Chow puppin.
Call 614-446-3844 after 7PM
Groom &amp; Supply shop Pet
grooming, all stylea, all breeda.
Juhe Webb . Call 614 -446 9231

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wesheu. dryen. refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances.
UPPer River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446 · 7398

Registered Labrador Relrll!'llflr
pups. Yellows and blac"• Own
female and male. Callevenmga
614•992•6181 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Purebred Siamese k ittens Call
evenmgl 614· 992·3192 .

Solas and chain priced from
1395 to $996. Tablef S60 and 4 AKC Registered Cocker Spe·
up to t125. Hide·• ·beds t390 niel puppiet 4 weeki old. 3 butt
lo t695 . Recliners 8225 to colored. 1 champagne. Shots.
t375. lamps S28 to 8126. Cell 614·992-7719.
Dinettes $109 and up to t49S.
Wood table w -6 cha1rs *285 to 3 baby goats, 1 m•lk goat,
t795. Desk t1 00 up to 8376. 304· 675·5043
Hutchas UOO and up. Bunk
bedl complete w ·mettrenea Pomeran1an Pups. 6 wkt old,
t29&amp; and up to $396. Baby beds pure but no papers. wormed, 1
811D II $175. Mattresses or bo11 male and 2 tamales, free Pom•
sptings full or twm 863. lirm . ranian book with purchase.
173. and 183 Queen aets•225. 01 OO .GO t;,m, 304·882 -31 1G.
Kmg S360 4 drawer cheat f65.
Dreaaers 189 Gun cabinets 8.
10. 12gun. GesorelectrieranDB
1376. Blby manruan t35 &amp;
S46 Bed tram• t20. S30 &amp;
King lrame &amp;&amp;0 Good selectln 2 Quilts done by Ladias Aida
ot bedroom suites. metal Cl· Group Regular Size· Farm.-1
bineta. haadboards S30 and up Wrench Pattern $125 00. King
S1ze· Shadow BoJI in Mint
to 865
Green. White and Lavender,
Uaed Furniture· wood table 6 2 S160.00 Ph 937-2881 or
benchu, beds. dreuer, wood 458-1997.
wsrdrobe. 3 miles out 8ui1111Uie
Ad Open 9AM to 6PM, Mon
thru Sat. 61 4·446· 0322 .
Fum Supplir!s
STOP-LOOK-SAVE
Mollohan Furniture a. -Applian·
cea. R1. 7 North Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. I 14-446-7444 8pc: Wood
Uving Room Suite $399 .00.
Good used portable 6 floor
model color TV's Call 614·446·
1149
Gold Frigidaire refrigerator·
freerer. Coppertone elec1rlc
range with doubla oven. Borh
aacellent condition Gu
Humphrey Space Heeter, 400
BTU C•ll614-992-3337.
New Maytag wralnger Wllher,
304-676· 6367

phon~

40 inch e~ctric range. good
cond, 304-876-1887
53

Antiques

&amp; LIVI!SIIIi:k
61 Farm Equipment

2010 John Deere d1etel tractor·
plows. diac U960. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower 149&amp;. Ute
model 224T John Oette balM
f1296. Hay wagon 1300 Call
614-286-6522
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 We,t. Jadl.10n. Ohao
614-286-6461
Maney Ferguaon, New Holland.
Bulfl Hog Salea &amp; Strviu. Onr
40 used triiCton to choose lrom
&amp; eompfete1 11ne of new &amp;, used
equipment. Llrrgot teleet1on In
S E Ohio.

30 acre farm has good home,
lerge barn end large pond. South
We11ern School O l ~trict Ph .
814-246 ·9248

-l

t.._.............................., ....................;........

r

81 F11rm Equipment
360 International dleael tflclor
with front end loader t2710. 2
bottom plowa 1250. 3000 Ford
tractor with plowt &amp; disc
$395G. Call 814·286-6522.
1850 Oliver tractOf. Runt good,
good tires &amp; paint. w1th plowa. 4
row corn planter. 13550. Call
614-288-6522.
3:40 International tractor· PS,
live power, live hydraUlic•. with
•ntern.. lonal mowing machille
New Holland baler 12450. Call
614-281·8622.
J1viden Farm Equip. 614·446·
1675. Special Sala on our new
Kioti tractor! Up to 13000 oft on
Vermeer hey equ1pl Round·
baler~ . mowers. mower condition•. rakq, teddera, &amp; a
complete line of bile handling &amp;
feeding acce1. Grindtt'·mhr.ert,
~agona , rotary cutters, blades,
d11c1, cultivators, plows, lted·
au, post dnvan. wood·
sphtter~gates , haadgatet, truck·
r•ckt , truck · beds. trailers ,
sprayert, feed-bunks. livestock·
waten &amp; wheelhorse lawn &amp;
garden equip. Used Equip. 7
round-baler., tome of thHe
baltrarequlreatlowas 36 horn
power tractoral Mowing ·
machines . rakaa, tedders,
square-balers. Uaed lrKtors,
d1sca, plows, tobacco·allters.
wagon&amp;, harrow , buahog ,
gravity-wagon. Um•1prelders.
cutldltloner &amp; hay-bm•. Used
Wheelhone lawn mower. Lo·
cated 1 mile off 218 on lngalla
Rd
Utlhty Bldg. Spl: 30'x40'JI9',
18•8 OvMhead door, Service
Door t5333 Erected Iron
Horse Bldgs. 614·332·97411
Gravety Attachmenta· Till•. ro·
tary plow. snow blade &amp; Saulkey. Al10 3'12 Hp g•den tiller
••so OG Call 614-367-0149
John Deere 3010 with loader
84.850.00. 12ft transport ditc
$496.00. AC no till planter
8Uii50.00. J Bottom John
Deere Plow $395 00 Cell 614·
281-S522
Ford Tractor with bush hog,
grader blade, plowa. disc, culti·
Vltor &amp; draw bar 12,600 00
Call 114-281-6522
Late Model 180 Massey Ferguson Tractor $3,950.00. Number
12 Muaey Ferguton Baler
51 .150.00. Massey Ferguson
Hay Reike t400 00. 601 Fofd
Mowing Machine $460.00 CaW
814-281·8522
Cub- Plow, cultivator, mower.
looks and runt lihe new, 814·
992·1803.
Wheel Horse tractOf 16 HP.
with 37 tnch mower. 814·887·
3683.
Super A, FarMall w1th cult1va·
tors. Very good condition Allis
Ctlaml•s G with cultivators
Ve&lt;y good. C. II 614-949· 201 3.
1sat each of 12 and 14inch 3 pt.
plows Call614·949·2013.
6ft. uaed Brush Hog, 3 pt. 4ft ,
almost new 8ruah Hog, 3 pt. Call
114-949-2013
Sat of metal slide· In ttock racks
to fh 8 ft . pickup ·bed. Call
614-949-201 3 .
Mite Farm Tractors, Best Price
In Area. Siden Equ1pment Co,
Henderson, W. Va 304-175·
7421
New two row mech1ncal to·
b.lcco trantplanter with 300 gal
link, *1. 1GO.GO 304-675·
1286.
New Holland 477 hay bind•r.
Gehl 95 Grindtr miJCer w;th 21"
tnlli Flotation tlrH. Both eacel·
lent condition. 304-273-421&amp;.
62 Wanted to Buy

Now buving theU corn or ear
corn. Call torlataatquotas. River
City · Farm Supply, 814·448·
2985.
Want to buy a pick up load of
corn, 304 -882· 3110
.
83

Livestock

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for ta•se.
Oownto~n Pt. PltMant. Storn.
otfic:et. A·On• Real Estate.
Carol YeiiSI•· Broker. Call304·
175·51GI.
FOR SALE ·V. 5000 SQUARE
FOOT MEDICALBUILOING . PT.
CLINIC. 708 VIANO ST. PT.
PLEASANT . FOR DETAILS .
CALL3DS-847-3740.

Tra11sporla lt or1

71

Autos for Sale

1984 Olds Cutlau Siera CL
Loaded with extras. Super clean.
14860. S6100 book value. Call
114-281-8622.
1 984 Ford Escort wagon; PS.
auto., PB. air, 12850. Elltra
Clean Call614·286· 6622
1940 Dodga 8usineas Coup a:
All ortginal, 80% finished. extra
parts 97.000 actual mlln.
S6500. Call614-388·8620.
1984 Chavy Chevette, 2 dr .. 4
apd., AM , wire rims. Ceah price
t2499. John's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd . Gallipolis
73 Buidt 4 door hard toP 360
auto . power ateering &amp;: brakes,
very little rust. radiale, AM·FM 8
track. t1ll wheel. ex. COfld. Mutt
see. CaM &amp;14-441-2153
1986 ~ Mercury Lymr. Sport.
AC. stilt' eo. cloth interior. sharp
t4300 neg . Mull sell Call
8U·4-18-G362.
1978 Buick Regal PS. PB. Tilt
whee:!. air. cond , cruise, intmed
wlpera Call614-441·7390 .
1974 Chewolet, Good cond
Call IU-441· 1622.

1 ' bedroom tumlahed apt. In
Middltport. All utlllti11 paid.
*210 mon1h plus depoeh. Un·
turniah1d S200. 114 · 992 ·
1783.
Large 2 bedroom apanment In
Middleport, wether and dryer
hookup, partlfllty furnished. Pay
own utllltlea. t181 per monlh,
Call 114-992· 2381 dovo ••
614 ·992·2109 evenings.

84

,t,'ifi O C IAliON

EVENING

6:00 IICilCIJDIIJ ® GI ~tW
News

CD Big Valley

EII IIJ Joffersons

bus1ness at home agam and
K1m tells her mother that she
IS QUitting

Hay

1982 Ford Muatang GT 302
4-speed make offlf, verv good
condit~n Ph. 246·5580Nightt.
1978 Ch~sler Newpon 4 door
hard-top. vinyl top, one owner.
epprok. 30,000 mil•. a•rage
kept . loaded. all original
02600 OBO . Call 114·992·
7171 or 114-992-5587.
1978 Thunderbird. AAir, cruise,
tilt. Engine. tranamitaion and
braket recntty rebulll S1 000.
Call 114-986-4443.
1981 Olds Cutlau. !maculate
condition AC , n•w tin• .
chrome wh ...l . Asking $3200.
Call 114·992-5107.
1980, Z-28, 350 T-top. Many
eura. 304-6715 -6392 after
6:30.
1980 Cordova.
3G4-675-3385 .

*1. 600 00

1961i Foret Mustang, 30-4-1175·
6180 or 176-1247.
1981 Old10maga, 4door, auto
trtntmillion, PS, PB , air, AM·
FM c••tte, new tlret. 304·
676-3141 .
1971 Oldt Cutltll Brougham. 2
door, 210 V-8, 75,000 mi!n.'
12,26G 00 304-17S·•&amp;63 evenings or deys c1il 304- 876·
423G.
'80 AMC Spirit. I cyl, 4 speed,
air, S1 ;000.00 or bal1 off•r.
aher &amp;:00 cell 304-176· 6642,
1984 Cot"Yettt, charcoal and
silver, loaded, S17.900 00.
304' 171-3073. I PM lo 9 PM .
1871 Chtyy Impala. 4 door.
auto, SIIOO or belt otter, call
ofle&lt;2 PM. 304·882-2418
72

Ml11.ed hay for sate. flound baa..
Calll14-241i· l117.

~

ct... nrno~hv """· 250 bot•.
t1 .50 per bat• at Cora. Cll
I, 4-379-2201
86 Seed

Vena &amp; 4 W .O.

a. Fertilizer

01Kalb &amp; Kenworthy Seed
Com. W l 312 alftlf1. Phone
3()4-175-1506 ah" 7 p.m.

1•8e 4•4 DOdge Ram Chlf'9•
looll:t Hke Bluer, low mileepe:
AM·FM CUMtte stereo running

.m.wtll•
condftton. Mua1 Hli. C.H before
'77 Jaep, cloth top, at•eo and
tp•akart, good co11d ,
u .2oo.oo. 3114-937-2334.
74

Motorcycle•

ET travels to Israel 10 meet

D6VELOPIIJG IT-rKO~ASl.Y

w1th Kelly McG1IIts on the set
of her new movre · 'Drea-

JU!&gt;T JUNK.

..

11 mp le

f...

p.

words

I

Du L c 0 y

. II I 1 I I .
13'
c A;..::..1'
RRE I
~.,.:....:.1
1,.:.:....:;1~ ~
2

I

,.....,.:L...;E;..:H:...,.::O;,.:;L.,....-il
i

I I I I

5

An elderty woman lamented to
her fr~end, "I used to be the
mother af four children . Now, It
seems . I'm the -· ··· of ••••

.,'·!

I-:1

1mothers."

DI LF E0

If-7rTI:;i"-il"gF-rl~;,-=:.,,,-1 Q

Complete the chuckle quoted
by I,J I, ng 1n the mts~ rng word~
L---L--'--L---l--'-.....1 you de~elop !rom ste p No 3 below.
.

.

.

.

.

.

A PRINT NUMBERE D
~ lE ITE RS

.

I I I I I IoFI I I I I
YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·LITS ANSWERS
Cui'IHid - Flunk - Agent - Repeat - AUGUST
Whila traveling on business my husband read a local
newspaper and chuckled when he &amp;aw this haadllne: ·; March
Planned For Nell! AUGUST."

mers ''

EII IIJ M'A'S'H

BRIDGE

White Stallions ' Pa rt 2

James Jacoby

Auto parts tor uta Radto, A. C..
glass. and other partl for 1977
Cordoba. 304·773· 6151

ill)
MacNeil -Lehrer
Newshour

®l News

Gl ~@ Wheel of Fortune
@ Barney Mille•
7:05 IIJ Sanfol'd and Son·
7:30 II i]J CIJ New Newlywed
Game
(!J NHL Hockey: Teams to

Parte for 1980 Chevy Citation
X·11. or $500forwholecar Call
Lee or Debbie 614·992 · 6381 .

FRANK A·ND ERNEST·

Used auto pens Chevy, Ford
and Chrysler produatl. Pdhone
614-247-3281 .

•

Be Announced ~3 hrs ) l1ve

fN}ffl$

1977 Pontiac Gran Prix for
parts. Garden t1ller Call 614·
992-38a8

woW! ..''THE LifE
oF 5HI~L.5y
MAcLAINE::

l7 I'~

~q.~~l
-

Truck topper 6 ft tibtrtiHI.
$160 DO. 304-675-1974 efter
6,oo.

.

L·~1,;·~,~,'[

late '70 Chavy pick up bed.
outside good, S&amp;O 00 304·
676-6892.

NUM8f:~ ftV~

.

•

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

81

IN

A S~/&lt;11:5"•

mantha decides 10 apply to a

Gua•d'
IIl MOVIE: 'Here Comes
the Navy '
®l Billy Graham Crusade

ALLEY OOP

@ Great Moments from

Nova (CCI The bes1 segme nt s from the last 14 s ea·
son s of the scmnce se nes
Nov a are leaiUred. (2 hrs )

CD

8:05 Cil NBA Basketball: Detroit Pistons at New York
Knicks (2 hrs , 15 mon I
Live

8:30 II) 0 Ill Growing Pains
ICC! Maggie attempts 10
Juggle her newspaper JOb

EEK &amp; MEEK
1
(At.J'T...

I WiT'THt.

A~S5 .. .

9:00 CD 700 Club
CIJ 0 Ill Moonlighting
!CCI 160 min I
@I MOVIE: 'Timestalkers'
(CCI
Gl ~ Billy Graham Talla hassee Crusade (60 m1n 1
9:30 IIl Victory at Sea
10:00 U l1l @ Hill Street Blues .

!Wing. painting, roofing, frH
Htimlt•. Call814· 446·1174.

Calletano re turns threaten·
ing a ctvtl s u1t foUowmg a
trag1c shoot ing , and Bates 1s
kntfe d due to Flahe rty and
(60
Rus so 's neg lige nce

Roofing, P•nting, amall plumbina and ClfPetry jobs. R..eona·
ble. Free Ettlmatu Ph. 304·
11711-2961

m1n I

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

RON'S Televi1ion Service .
House calls on RCA, Quarar,
GE . Specieling in Zenith . C•ll
304· 578 ·2399 o• 814-4462454.

CIJ Jack and Mike
ICCI Jack1e and M1ke 1ry 10

II) D

rr----------~~

IT5 THE FIRST TIME I EVER
SAWSQ\'IEElCDVS 6HAI?OW
RUN AWAY FRO't\ HIM .

S HADOWBOX ING.

I..OOK ATNA6TY
MCNARF..: WHAT!::.
HE OOING"&lt;

1':--- - - - - - - - -

Fatty Tree Tr1mming, atump
remD'lfal. Call304-87&amp;·1331.

Newaho1.1r

[jj) The Kingaton Trio and
friends: Reunion The on·
ginal Kmgston Trio 1s jo1ned

Rotary or cable lool drilling.
Most wella completed nmeday. ,
Pump salet and service. 304895-3802

by Tommy Smo1hers. Mary
Travers , . Linds ey Buck·
tngham and current Trio
members (2 hrs .)

Gl iBI Kate &amp; Allie ICC) AI·

I

BURIED

. Ot.: SNOOPY
SNUFFY WON'T
FIND
IT THAR

MY

8UTTER-AN'EGG MONEY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

IN TH' SEAN
PATCH

AN' MY BEANS WILL

GROW LIKE CRAZY
IN THAT RICH

DIRT

!!

·.

Pa tll hopes that Sam will
soften up her tough history
te acher whe n she mvites
Sam to her schoot parents·
~h1.

eoo

t 1:00 II III CIJ IIIIJ ®
G1
Newo
I]) Hardcastle and McCormick
(!) Inside tho PGA Tour
• (l) M•A•S•H
Cil Tho Sltakeopoare Hour
Hottod by Walter ' Mat·
thau: All' o Well That En do
Well Helena travels 10 Flor-

Jam" Boys Water Service Also
poola filled . Call 114·258-1141
or 614·441-1176 or 814 ·446·
.
7911 .
Watterson's ..Yater Hauling.
reuonable rates, immed11te
2, 000 fliiiOn dehVtry, CiltlrnS, , 1
pools, well, etc . call 304-&amp;782919.
.{

.

Mowrey'&amp; Upholatarlng aervln"
fTwol 1111 4 whiillll... •e tri CDUnty arh 22 year •. fht bell
In furniture upholtttftng. C.ll
•-· IOnol 300 !Cow.. *2300. ,304
· 171-4184 for free
IOnol 230 Suz.. f2000. 14- eatlmat.,.
211·1471

boyfnend Jason. IRI
@ New•
t0:20 IIl Billy Graham Cruoade
10:30 OJ Celebrity Chell
C!J College Bnketboll:
1978 NCAA Final l'our
Highlights H1ghligh1s of 1ho
1976 final four college bas·
ke1bBII teams - Indiana, Mi·

Dillard Water Serviee . Pools.
Slsterna, Wells. Delivery Any·
time. Call 614-446· 7404

fl • M Cusrom Couch" and
Aeupholtterv. St. Rt 1 Crown
clt,•• oh. 614· 21SI-147o. Ev•.
114-441-3438 Open dalfv 9 to
4:30, 801. 9,30 lo 1-30 Old •
nM" Upholttrtd.

lie has a talk w1th Jennte af·
1e r she learns of a n •nc1dent
between Jenme and her

chigan. UCLA . and Rutgers.
GI IBI My Sister Sam ICC)

General Hauling

Upholstery

mtn .)

EII IIJ RO'/ Rogers and Oalo
Evans Fiftieth Anniversary

AINOLES' S SERVICE, ••perienced c•penter, electriaan.
muon. paint•, roofing (lnclud·
1ng hot W application! 304·
675-2088 or 676·7147.

87

help Mike 's father overcome
h1s alcohol problem. 160

160 min)
CIJ
MacNeil-Lehrer

Starkl Tree and LAwn Serv1ce.
Hedgea. shrubs. buahes
trimmed, landscaping, stump
and leaf removal, 304·570·
2842 o• 571· 2903.

Big payoff
for holdup man

..

e nce as a relig ious pilgrim in

•,
·~

band. (60 m1n.)
@ Honevmoonera
t t :20 II) MOVIE: 'Murdorer'o

t K 7 .1
.KQ 765 4

'

1 t :30 D I]) @ Tonight Show

•

Stowon. (60 min )In S1ereo.
ill SpomCentor
II) WKRP In Clncinmrtl

Row'

Tonigh1'&amp; guest ia Jftmes
IN

THE FIRST FILM

OF "6EAU 6ESTE:'WHO
PLA'IED TI-lE ROLE

OF '' 60LDINI "7

WILLIAM POWELL!
HOW DID 'IOU
KNOW THAT ?

EAST

WEST
• Q 10 7 2
10 7 3
• 10 5 4 2

Choosmg lh e nght openong lead '' a
fascinatmg cKe rcise. Wesl knew thai
tf h1s partner had a mJnOr s u1l ace and
another ace, then the singleton club
lead would bealthe five-diamond con ·
tract But West also knew tha1 wh en

'J

• K 94

"KQ985 2

.3

+a

• A 10 8

you have some length in declarer 's

SOUTII
• A./ 6

trump su1t, tl

"A 4

IS

7·10·!7

,. 6

James Jacoby

usuall y besl lo lead

your own sutl and sta rt forctng declar-

tAQJ 9 6

er to rurf Smce Wesl was look1ng at
four trumps, he led a heart
Declarer took the ace. trumped hiS
remammg heart and drew trumps.
Then he led a club. If Ea sl wms lhe
ace , declarer w1llta kc 12lncks, sheddmg hiS spade losers on dumm y's
clubs But Ea sl ducked. When declarer
contmued the su1t . East ducked again
Eventually Soulh had to -lose lhe club
ace and two spade tricks for down one.
What 1f declarer plays clubs al1 rick
two ' Now Easl may not know lo hold
up his ace tw1ce It is st1ll th e righl
play, however. and any East shrewd
enough lo figure 1l out deserves lo sel
the contract Alert readers Will also
noltce thal th e contra ct w1ll fail If
West opens a low spade. (Afler laking
the club ace. East will return a spad e
through declarer's J-6.)
Whal aboutlhat opemng lead of lh e
singleton club'/ If Easl takes lh c ace
and gives partner a ruff, th e rest is
easy Declarer simply wms th e return.

.JY2

Vulnerable Norlh-Soulh
Deale r· East
West

Norlb

Ea11

South

2,.

Pass
Pa ss

3+

Pass

3+
4t

Pass

Pa ss

Pa ss

1,.

Obi
5•

Opcnmg lead • J
dre~ws trumps emJmg 111 dummy and
dtscards three losers on the good

clubs. Bul agam Ea sl can dclend brili•anlly. Simply by nol wmnong lhe club
ace un1il th t: thml round of the su1t

And on&lt;:c agai n. the conlrac t goes
down

A new book by J,1me.&lt; Ja&lt;·oby and his
lather. /h e lut e o., wald Jacoby, is now
ava~Jable at bo&lt;JkstoM.&lt; It ;,, "Jacoby
on Ca rd G'ame.&lt;, " publisb&lt;'fl by Pharos
Book.\'

~tMAmiHd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Monastic

42 Nevada c1ty
43 European

room

river

5 Tennis
DOWN
great
I .lewelry
9 Region
t.e rm
I 0 Church law 2 Eat away
II Hlghway
3 Convince
12 Sagac1ous 4 Stripling
14 Calculate 5 Squander
15 Table scrap 6 Colony
16 Sw1msuit
member 21 Gl.,ry be !
part
7 Call m
22 Oad 's loan
17 Astan
question
to .Junio r
hultday
8 Hoard
23 llmst
18 Roman
a sleeper 24 Al an c r~d
greeting
10 Slice,
27 Ad ·
19 Oeslgnat.e
as turkey
umbratc
20 Bugbear
13 Golf """" ' 28 Cereal
22 Ringlet
15 Paddle
I
23 "Streamers"
playwright
25 One or the

ACTUALLV. LE610NNAIRE5
VER~ SELDOM PLA~ED
TRIVIA WHILE MARCHING
AGR055 THE DE5E~T..

•mT
..,
IIIIJABC Newt Nlghttlne

(CCI.
.
® @ M1111num. P.l.
II IBI T.J . Hooker Hooker
1MB 1o help his wounded
p!lrtner, trapped In an eleva·
tor with an armed robber.

(70 min.l (R)
12:00 CD Buma &amp; Allen
ill Maz[la SpomLook

30Summary
of hellers
32 German
dty

33 Snak e

38 "ll~anrly

39 Thailand
language

Arontes

26Toward
shelter
27 Painful
29 Badly
30 Tea variety
31 Shinto
temple
34 Oneself
(F'r )

35 Stool·
pigeon
36 Espouse
37 flalanccol
39 Brill.• h
title
40 Circumvent
41 Eng
composer

D.W..Y CRYPTOQliOTES- Here'a how to work It :
AXYDL8AAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A io used
for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a(!Q'Ir~~phes , the length and farmaUon af the words are all
hints. Each day the code lellers are different.

search of her estranged hu&amp;·

OKAV. TROOPS.. JUST
TO PASS THE TIME,
HERE'S A T~ii/I A
QUESTION FOR VOU ...

NORTH

• 613

and orgamze Ben's school
carniva l

All typn carpenter &amp; concrate
wark: Interior, exterior. ramo·

L1meatone. •and and gravel
deli-..ered, phone 304 ·875 ·
3190.

(fil Spies Stone and

Smythe mus t protect an tn·
fant bemg hunt ed by e nemy
~ents (60 mtn )
@ MOVIE: 'The French
Lieutenant' s Woman'

Home
Improvements

H'oute coal, llmntone, and
gr1Ve4. Deliver..t 1 ton •nd up.
Jim lanitlf, 304-676· 1247 or
175-7397.

G]l Jeffersons

7:35 Cil Honevmooners
B:OO U I]J @ MOVIE: 'Diary of
a Perfect Murder' (A I
OJ Hell Town
CIJ 0 Ill Who's the Boss)
[CCI Tony ObJeC1s when Saboarding prep school IAJ

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair. p.ns. and supplln. Pick
up and delivery, Davit Vaeuurt'
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. C.ll 614·
441·0294

85

fil ii) Too Close for Comfort
0 Cil Judge
®l Wheel of Fortuna
CD ~ @ Jeopardy

Ell CD MOVIE: 'Honor

B.ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
llnconditlonal lttetime guar~n ·
tee. Local ref•ancea·fumish.t.
Free estlmat11. Call collect
1-614-237·0488. diY or night .
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

82

•

I'

0 Cil People's Court
CIJ MOVIE: ' Flight of 1he

boerd, eun v~r.

5 ,()0 114· 742·2211, afl• 5:()0
114·892·S7t4.

.AMI

Used OM transmi1sions. All
tntllt'nally inspected &amp; guaran ·
teed. Also Ford &amp; Chryaler. Call
814·446-0918

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Four1h and Pine
1979 LT 9000 Fo"' 1976
Gallipolis, Ohio
I
Benton Tendern d'ump trailer.
Must &amp;ell lmmedl.. ely. Call Phone 614-446-3888 or 614·
4-11·4477
Ev•'• 814·387-0&amp;41

1984 Chevy, three quarter ton
pickup, 310 engine, auto, PS,
Pl. 33,000 mllll, uc cond.
·~.000. ()0 . 3114·882-2831.

C!J SportsCenter
CIJ Entertainment Tonight

f&gt;UT l UATt TO PAY fOR

Trucks for Sale

8Z Ford F-100. EJ~eellent cond.
8 cyl atanderd. New topper
63,000 mil... Coli 814-388·
11114.

.I

I~

WOlD

0 four
Rearrange lette rs of tha
Kro mb led word s be-

mick

· Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Se rv1ces

&amp; Grain

larga round bllet ofhtv. S10.00
· WI" dollv« C•ll11 4·4411012 aft• lpm.

15 h Tri-Hull, 70 hp Chrysler
with tilt traUer end accet~orin.
chaep. after 6 .00 call304·675·
6542.

1977 Mon1i Carlo 1 owner good
condition asking 1700.00 Ph .
114-446-4724 after 8pm

1984 DDC19e Colt Clean no rust
U.995.00 1982 Chevy Cll·
ation PS, PB, Air t1,496 .00 Ph
614-281-1622

Facts of Life
6:05 CIJ Beverly Hillbillies
6:30 II I]J @ NBC News
. C!J NBA Today
CIJ 0 IIJ ABC News
lil iiJ Hogan's Heroes
(]) DoctO&lt; .Who
®l Gl ~ CBS News
.il] To Be Announced.
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
6:35 ClJ Andy-Griffith
7:00 II i]J PM Magazine
CD Ha•dcastle and McCor-

16 ft fiMrglut runabout, red
and white with 60 HP motor and
trailer. 82500. Call 614·9922389.

1972 Cobra camper, fullv
equipped. 27 It Call 614·441·
0283
.

1986' Plymouth Turismo
t4,800.00 . 1985 El Camino
Calll14-446·8898

DAILY

PUZILII

@

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1982 Volkswaaon Scirocco
High mile1. good condition but
needs tome WCJrk. Ph. 614· 256·
1364 mornings or Sundays

73

WE.LCOME.
ETRI!&gt;TS
.... ....... - of

3/10/87

1981 Honda 200X. 3 whtt411',
nll'ill'cond. t11500. Ph. 304·676·
2988

76

THAT

low 10 form fou r

II) Square One TV (CC)
[jj) Perluns Family Chns
makes up hrs mmd to cheat
on a test. Mom wants to do

1977 Nomad camper, 191h ft .
Air, awn.ng, dull axla', self·
contained. Call 614-446-1838
afterl5pm

114-251-9314.

OPiOM

'&lt;OUI!S.

ill Mazda SportsLook

1 !180 C•dlllac 4-Dr Sedan
Clean. mu1t HI to appreciate
$3, 76G.()() Ph. 61 4· 448-8G38 .

2 QuBf'ter HOf'te Mares Ph.

ARE

ow~ M~ rog

1973 Sporlster. Completly rebulll •250G. II'- 742-2249.

75

Charolala ; H1raford, Angua,
H•reford StHfll, grain ftd 90
dayt . Hltv• • quarters. t1 .25
lb. Cell 304-137· 2100

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom ap1rtments at Village
M.nor end Rivenlde Apartmenu In Middleport . From
t216 Including utilities Call
114-992-n87. EOH.

,Ill; I I3I.JT' '(XI GliLL

1984 Honda CR 500. ••c cond,
low uHge, $860.00, 304-4BB·
1088.

1982 F100 Ford pickup tong
bed. 3 spd., VI. flunl good, a
llttlerowgh. Firat t1100. buye it.
Call 614-1!49·2013. ·

Very nice one bedroom apt
Centr1l Air, h•dwood floore. &amp;
garao•. Aaferencaa 6 depolft
required Ph. 1114·448-41&amp;8.

. I TOOl&lt;. '(Ol! /&gt;1-t'

-senir:::o w~

1983 CR125 Honda, excelllllt
condition, •100 . 304-468·
1995. Call after 6 p.m.

Tandem axle trailer. 18 ft .
flatbed. 2 Inch treated lumber,
el.ctric brak•, light end jKk.
114-949-2193

Farms for Sale

-511E

1983 Honda Ody11ey. Excellent
condition $760 Call 114-948·
2013

/if LK&gt;T, ~~~~!:!
'fo PO!

New 14•70 Skyline mobile
home, phon11 304-176·1357

33

i:EM~fl. W~ fiJ

Television
Viewing

1983 Kawauki LTD 760,
t13?6. 1981 Handa 600XA ,
*875. CoiiiU-892-7288.

All~! A1"WITQI!

1 SA. ground floor apiM'Iment.
All utllitiH paid. N..r McOO·
nalda. Call814· 441· 7026.

1979 Hollypark, 14x70, 2 bed·
room• Morris ster.o. record
player, 8 track Iape, gun ctbinet,
304· 676-7979

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

3063.

RCA Dltcplayer. induttrial Shop
Vac 6 acceuoriet. banding tool•
mcluding, cuuer. bander &amp; cart.
log ch.11lns &amp; wooden dollies.
IP:::-I-•a_•_•_e_ol_l_61_4_·_2_4_5·_9_1_:~3_.__
Public NotJce Closeout aalo on
1986 White tew1ng mac:hinet.
EqUipped to zig zau . monogram.
overcu(. mending II hemming.
Makes button holes, dll'na, sews
on button• &amp; more. Theae
mechlnesara new with a 1Oyear
warr•nty . Sug. price u;a 95
now only $98.96 Call 1·614·
385-4635 for free dehvery.

1-----------r-----------~ Room•
for rent. dey week.
month Gallie Hotel. Call 614·
446· 9715. Rent II lOW I I $120
Financial
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
month.

'Ohio

1981 Honda Goldwing
lnltrt11t•Burgultdy. Good eon·
diUon. t22DO. Call 114· 441·

16. 18 6 8 mil" out Rt. 218.

Storti Reward Call 614· 388·
8649 o• 814·448-471,

LOST black and whitt lemale
hound. Feb 16, Penile Church
VI Cinity , reward. 304 -882
3328.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by L8rry Wright·

74

Callahan's Used T1re Shop Over
1,000 tirn, sires12 , 13 , U , 16,.

16 Court Street, 2 BR, 1 Ya
baths. w / w carpet . complete

Tuesday, March 10, 1987

IU~y, IVIi:IJC.:II IU, llltf/

tWifUUtOJ.IUil, VIUU

CRYI'TOQUOH
3-10
M Z

M A

M II t: (' A A M I&lt; I' \'

z ('

z

I' (l .

MIII'Mf: W

VE SC: N

L W .1 I' N

I. E I' V A A

.r f' A

U I' V F. ZN

zc

II C .

-

(' II

S V li ( ' 1J V

(' E V

r;f' tlO
ll.

S V Q C II V
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : IT'S TOUlil·l TO MAKE
PREDICTIONS , ESPE lALLY ABO UT TIH: f"UTURE. YUGIRERRA

.·

�••
•

p

~-~~!~::~10~T~M~~~~~~~~------~----~_:·...

-;:-

, "'

~

-1 • •

''

'

,,.,.,~~··~-·~d~~-~rt~·~O~h~io~--~----------------~----T~u~e=sd~a~y.~M~ar~ch~10~·~1~9~8~7
.

~

r---nJC,al Briefs:--- Inventor defends design of ferry doors
Sout ern Band Boosters to meel
l h
Ba
. d B
·So ern
n
oostcrs will meet in the htg h school band
roo 7:30 p.m Thursday. Pa rent s of al l ba nd st udents in thr
1
·
di r cl arc urged to attend

•

Squads respond to eight calls
Meigs Count y Emergency Medica l Scr\'tccs repo rt s c·ighl
calls Monda y.
~aclne at .1·47 a m tra nsported l{al ph Web b to Vr tl' rans
• Memorial Hospital : Rac mt' f' irc Depar tment at 10· 22" m to a
• brush fire on Stt vcrsv tlle Road: Rac ine Fire De par tm ent at
10:39 a.m. to a brush fi re on Hay man Road: B:Js han Ft rc
Department was called at 10 4o a. m to asst&lt; t Rac ine. Po mcrov
Fire Department wa&lt; ca lled at 10 ~ g a. m. to a car fi re on
Mulberry Avenu e. Mtddleporl at 6:0:. p.m to 929 H.vs&lt;'ll St f01
Carolyn Young to Vetera ns Memoria l Hosp ita l: Pomero.v a t
6:48p.m to a chimMy fi r e~ ~ the Tcr rv Cull ums rc&lt;ldc nce at
Hemlock Grove; Middlepor t Ftrc Departmen t "' 7 2.1 p m to
structure ft rc at the MtllCI build mg in Ches htre

Firemen

spon.~or

LONDON tUP it - The de·
"gner of the bow ca rgo doors on
the Ill-fated English Chann el
fer r.v Hera ld of Free E nt er prise
says it ~~;as" foolhardy .. to se t out
to sea with more than ~&gt;00 people
aboard with the low-ly in g doors
stt ll opl'n
Trans por t Mini ste r J ohn
Moore told a husht'd House of
Commons on Monday th at tl
dppears "an mrush of watrt'
thro ugh the bow load ing doors"
ol thP vessel ca used the dtsas tl' r
But na,·a l archi tec t Jack
Brow n defended h1s inven ti on as

Rrita in mour nc·d th e loss of at
lt•ast 134 Jives wiJCn the 8.000-ton
\'C'SSt' l ca ps ized in cal m. sh(J II ow

F'ridav rve nlng as i t

waters

clea r&lt;'d the harbo r of Zeebrugge.
Re lgtu m. bound for DovPr,
England.
Seve r a l
sur v i vors have
clct imed t hry saw crew m r n on

the !owN vc htcle drck batt ering

Saturday dance

S) racuse Fire Departmen t is sponsoring a Sat urdd\' nt gllt
dance at the Sy racu se Grade School. 8 to ll p.m . with mustc bv
Mld.nlte Express. Admissto n $2. E\wyone 11 cleo me

Pr r5 ident Reaga n ag~ in r nd ors ing th e moV£'. at lras t one of the

.~Lated

Racine Ball Associat ton wtll have stgn-up th ts Sa tu rdav a nd
next Saturday. Marc il 21. lO a. m. to 12 noon. at Sou thern
kindergarten building. Regist ratton $1 0.

co ngrE'ss tona l committ ees probtng th r Iran arms Conlt a nt d
"'a nda l ap pe:1 rs rea dy to seck
i mm unil ~'

lim itf'd

from prosrru -

tion fo 1 k C'\' w itn essrs

. Lc.Jders ol bo th committcl's
&lt;J r rongrd to mer! latr today to

Lodge slates Thursday meeting

di scuss the issur loomin g l;u ge in
thr ir in vc~ ti ga t io n s. and lhrre

Shade Ri vet Lodge 4!i:\. Ches ter . will hold u regula r mrctmg
7:30p.m. Thursday. Refres hm ents will be servE'd

we re

pa nel

In dica tions
~&lt; as

lhr

Sr natP

fur thet alo ng th an its

House co unt rr part on thr scns1

tJ\•r mat tcr.

Sen War re n Rud man, 11-N. H..

Masonic lodge meets t.onight

thr co mmi tt.ec v1cc chili r ma n.

Racine Masonic Lodge 461 meets tontghl a t 7 30 in regul.r
session. All regul ar mas ter Masons invt ted.

Candidate collects
Senate race funds

~hapter

honors _,_co_n_tm_u_"d_f_ro_m_r_a,;...g'-' ~-'--

l'!&gt;rt showed a cash ba lance, as of
F'('b. 28, of $83.70!i.97; including
S21.41U1 , In gener al fund :
$1!.0'•l19 street fund : $16,211.90
lire lund;. $21.366.50 wil t or re·
venue; $2,796.66 revenue shar·
lit~t: $.1,:143.76 slate hi ghwa)•;
$2.121.48 cemet.l'ry: $2.400.97 wa t~r deposit : and $!;_1)0(1ce metery
endowment .
:Aletter from lhr Me igs Coun ty
tiller Control office was 1cad
(llvlslng that Ohio Clea n Up
,W('('k Is Aprll27 to Ma)· 7. Council
·will ,announce more deta ils r&lt;'·
t(ardlng village clea n up at a
lal~r date.
· Ben Petrel. pres ident of th e
Board of Public Affairs. was
,Present to discuss with council
specifications needed for elec t 1 i
cal work to be completed at the
aerator building.

Robert .Jo hnson . ftrr chte f.
repot·ted that a n adva nced fi re
tra ining course wil l be &lt;ta rtin g
shortly fo r Raci ne fi rc·mcn. He
a lso re port ed that three
members ha\'C star trt l a bas ic
courSI' and as ked council to
app rove purchase of ma nua ls
and workbooks fo r th&lt;' basic
class.
Cou nctl also accepted repor ts
from Mars hal J oe Kirbv and
St r('t' l C'o mmissto ner ·Glenn
Rizer. a nd accept ed the ma yor 's
report showmg one case in
Februa" wi th $1 ~.70 collected
"' bond.
Coun cil moved in to a one-hout·
c•xecu ri vC&gt;

St?ss ion

to dtscuss

perso nn el matters. before re·
ccssln g un ti l 7 p.m. Monday.
Marc h lli.

,..
i

to a la ndf111 or us ing leaves. grass
an d stu bble for com post
The di vision says if an a! ler na
llvr to burnin g is no! avl:.l ilabl e.

follow thesr prrca ut ions:
-Always burn after 4 p.m
when there is less wind . higher
humidi ty a nd c o o l e r
tr rnpera lu res
- Kn ow applica ble loca l and
state regula)ions.
-Selec t n sale, cleared sit e fo r
burning. free from over head
obstr uctiO ns

would be made altodav's meeting. A two-t hirds vole of the
special panels would be needed to
m ake an\ such gr ant

But Rudm a n sat d he anti cipates a volt' in lhC' "n&lt;'X I couple of
weeks" and added. "It 's now

Vt'lerans Memorial
Monda ' Ad missto ns - Ora
Stn cla ir. Pomeroy, Cat I Find ley.
Reedsville..Jul ie Mi ller, Pome·
ro': Darlene Hic ks, Pomer·o,:
Engta John so n. Middlcporl :
Jack Mi ller. Langsville
Monda.v Dtsc hargcs - El ro)
Kay lor

w her e

she

was

a

churc h

SC'Cretar,y.
Survivi ng bes ides her mot her

a rc her hu sband. Roland P
Ll del, New Have n, onr d aughler,
Marcia i\. Hoffman, Col umbus;
!wo sons, C' r a1g S. Lid£&gt;1. New

Have n. Douglas R. Ltd&lt;•!, IJc llevi llr. Il l : one brother. Rov A
Buehrle, Fresno. Calif. six
grandc hild re n.
Srt·vices will be Wed nesda\' a t
1 :10 p.m. a t the New Ha,·cn
Uni ted MethodiS t Chu rch wt th
the Rev . Doy lc Pa yne offic ial mg.
Buri al will follow in Sun r ise
Memoria l Ga rd ens. !.eta rt.
W.Va. Frie nds may ca ll at the
Foglesong Funera l Home on
Tuesday lrom 6-9 p.m. a nd
1! -:l!l-l ::lO p. m. on Wednesday.
In lieu of flowers, the family
1 eques ts ·co ntribu ltons be made
to the New Haven United Mel ho·
dis t Chu rc h or th e New Tr ibes
M ISSIO n .

William F. VanMt&gt;ler
Willta m f' VanMeter, 68, Ma so n. W.Va . dted Moncla v in
Pleasa nt Val ley Hos pitaL
Born Nov R. 1918, in Cedar
Crovr, W. Va . he was the son of
Kalil' Nollge VanMeter, Mason.
and th e late Okoy VanMeter Sr .
who died in 198o.
HC' was a r~? ti red coa l m inPr
fro m Mctgs Mine No. 2.
Surv ivors bestdes his mot her
include his wife. Luella F .
Va nMeter . Mason; two daugh·
tors. Bonnie Du rs t. Cott agc\lille,
W.Va .. Cheryl Jenkins. Ph il ippi,
•

W.Va .. one so n. Mi chael Van Meter, Mason: thre&lt;' ststcrs. Eva
Gibbs, Hosa ii E' Roush. bolh from
Ma son, Flora Brrws 1rr. Loga n.

W.Va: stx brot h e r ~. Winfi eld.
Ok ey ..Jr. .. John L.. Geo rge H , and
.Jack ie L, a ll from Ma&lt;on. and
.lames E VanMeter Boston.
Mass .. foUl grandchildren.
He 11 dS preceded in death b,·
onr so n. Larr y Lee Va nM eter

who d ied tn 1978.
Sc rvtrcs wil l be Th ur&lt;da)' a t 2
p.m . at tilE' Fogleso ng Funt't'a l
Home wtl h th &lt;' Hcv. Bennie
Stc1 r ns and the Rev (;po rge
Hosc hat officiat mg. Burial ll'i ll
be in Kirk la nd Mr mot·Ja l
Gunlr ns F r iends mJ\' cal l .::~1 thr

fun et a! home on Wcdne&lt;da,·
from;~ . ;)

an d 7-9 p. m .

·

fo r ward .

Carole Lee Staats. :.6. Rout e 2.
Ridge Road. Point Pleasa nl.d ted
Monda\

c'vcning at

Pleasa nt

Va lley Hospital
She was born May 7. 19.!0. m
Nltt·o, W.Va .. lo lh t' late Geo rge
R and Mace! .lcflet·s Cook .
Surv tvmg arc her. husband,
Charles F:. "Tubby'· Staa ts Sr.:
two daugh'ters. ·M rs. Burm a
Akers, Nit ro. Mrs. Donn a Ad·
ktns . Poin t Pleasant : three sons,
Charles E. Staat s II. Point
Pleasa nt . Terry Lee Staats.
Cli ftO n. W.Va. David "Tony"
Stdats. Rut la nd; fo ur sisters.
Mrs. Max in e Cross. Was hin gton
D.C., Mt s. Don s Lemon. Mrs.
Lo is Skidm ore, a nd Pa tncia
Cook, all from Nitro: three
brot het s. Millard P. Cook and
Donald E. Cook, both of St
Al ba ns. W.Va .. Ric hard Cook.
Alexa ndri a, Va , • nd 11
gra nd child ren.
&amp;'n iccs wi ll be at I 30 p.m
Thu rsday in th e Crow-HussC'I I
Funeral Home with the Rev.
.Jerry Scott officia tin g Buria l
will be in K ir ~ l a nd Memorial
Gardens. Friends may call all he
funera l home on W ednesd a~·
fro m 2-4 and 7-9 p m.

tCon tinu ed from Page 1t
were 600 without work in
Janu
ary
percent - in .Janua ry. Its jobless
r8 te fell from 1:1 percent in.
DeccmbN to 12.9 in Jan uary,
OBES said Vin to n's .January
indica ting that fr om a n estt- J9R6 jobless level was Jij.2
ma led work force of 4.800, there percent.

Rutland lays off
thr rlghl to revoke the permi t&gt; if

!COntinu ed from Page 11

necessa r:v·.

E lliot , Guy Hun ter and .Jerry
Black, council president.

Dav id Dav is, vil lage ma lnle·
nance superviso r, repor ted t)1 at
the prese nt village-owned law n

Ohio weather

mower is in need of extensive

-C heck weat her conditions repa irs Council is looking int o
and don't bu rn on drv, wind y purc has ing a new mower. hln p:·
·
·
days.
ing upon vi llage fin ances.
- Kee p f! re fl ghlln g tools
handy, Incl uding shovel, ra ke · Village clean-up da ys in Ru and wa ter supply.
lland have been tentat ively sc he·
-Usc approved, sale tras h duled for May i ·o on Sa lem
bu rnet'S and barrels.
Street, New Lima Road and the
-Stay with the li re unlll II is alley aro und the element ary
completely out.
schooL Clea n-up day for Mai n.
The threa t of forest fi res does Brick a nd Depot stree t areas will
not diminish until vegetables be May 6.
becomes green. Res ldenls needIng to repo rt a forest lire should
Present for the recent meeting
contact thei r loca l lire depart· In add ition to Fink and Va n
men! or Milliron at Shade River Meter, were Councilmen Dav id
Wi lkes.. Steve J enk ins, Herb
State Fores t, 614·378-61 16.

grtti ng 10 thr !im r \\ l ' ltaV(' to
gJ\'C' 1t urgr nr ron~Jdc r a ! mr1 . ·
Rccr nt com mc-nts l rom s('\ ·
rral co mm itt rr mC'm ber s lwvr
indi ca 1rd r PnclJness for J drc 1SJOn

menI donatiO n of $1 o3 million to
" relief fund and ordered a n
in ves ti ga tion under Hi!(h Court
J udge Sir Mar tin Sheen, an
,. x p c rt o n m ar 1 I i m e
catastrop hes.
According to the lat es t casu·
a ll \· toll rel eased bv Fla nders
prov incial gover nor Oli vier Vanncs te tn BelgiUm. 409 people were
resc ued. o:l ,bodtes we re reco,·crr'd and 81 people were miss ing
and pres umed dead. Most vic·
1ims were British Rhine army
personn r l. vaca tionrrs and bu siness people·.

Middleport will
i\ seco nd readi ng was gi\·cn

a

new flood da mage protectio n
ord in a nee

Ma)'Or Hoffman repot· ted that
he atte nded a me~tm g in Colum
bus on f'eb. 21i to h~· " aspects of
ru ral

t r&lt;:~ n spor1at,io n

l und r rd uc

!tons in JqRH. both in sl at e and
fE'drra! mo n iC'S

Acc;o n hng to wh.\1 1~ known
about thosr redu ct ions no'.\ , at
thC' vrry wors t M1dd lrpor t wou ld
lose only ~5. 000 a 'ea r for Ihi'

publte It unspot tal ton s\S tcm
now oprra ted throug h the Blue
Strea k Cab Co. It w,ts disclosed
at the meetin g also th"t a pplica tions lor gran ts dPi.lll ng with
rura l publw tbJnspmta tton will
br morr compC' !rtivf' tn th e

tutu r·r. th P m~wor sa rd
Clran· up wt•(• k sri
:\ IC't!rr wa s JC'&lt;~cl from SlC','P

tCont tn ued fro m Page

] I

had requ ested that a part of the
moncv from the sa le of the
Har tt ngcr property on Third
A' cnu c. be t1 scd for bleac hers fat·
the park satd th at lt c had met
wi rh ! he' Rrcreatw n Commiss 1on
a nd M"yo r Hoff man and
mem bers of the commi ssion feel
that upg1a ding the bas ketball
co ur" wo uld be ·a l&gt;ett er p roject
that the purchase of bleac hers
Tt1r commiss ion mr mbc'rs are
see unn g cs ti matrs on the costs

in1 olvcd in the upgrading and
wi ll att end co unrtl meetin g to
prrscnt flgurf'~ LIS soon as thPy
C:IIT' [IVUl!D bl f'.

/\!lend in g the session were
M,I\' Or Hof l ma n . Cle rk Treasurer Jon Buck. a nd Counci lmen Horto n. r. it morc. J ack
Sallcrftt'ld an d Wtllt am Wal ters.

Powell ol the Mctgs County
Offtcc of Lill t'r C'o nt101 askt ng
t h&lt;~t

thr rommun it v

rst~bli s h

clea n-up 11 eek fat· Apri127-i'il:ly 2
() ll d a~sUJ mg

tlw !ow n that somr

support wi ll be a\·a iiabl&lt;' dun ng
t h ~Jt

South Central Ohio '
Clear tonight . Wtlh a low
between 15 and 20. lncreas in!1,
cloudiness Wedn esday , wi th
highs between 35 and 10.
The probabilit y or precipita ti on is near zero · thro ugh
Wednesday.
Winds will be light and sou·
theasterly tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
i\ chance of ra in or snow
Thursday , with fa ir weather
Friday and Saturday. Highs will
range lrom 351o45 each day, with
overnight lows in !he 20s.

Meigs girls
on '· their way
to regionals
-Page 4

Ohio Lottt•n·•
Daily Number
444

0

PICK-4
8019

•

at y

Vol.36. No.216

wrok thr ough tlw r ounl\

Council had no problem
wit h the dates St' l fot clean up
week.
offt~e

Council P n •:-; icl f' nt ll or I on
. t .~ .li n \'Oi r (•cl co mpl~lint s t~gwn s t
thr rablr trlrvi sion 'lcrvicr of !hC'
t Q\vn Coun cilman G1lmorr. who

A. KEBLER Ill,

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICE
II 18 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457119

PHONE

614-992-7270
If you would care to
meet a CPA and talk
about what they can
do for your company
- call us. We would
be happy to visit with
no obligation to you.

You just won't find a
better value for your in·
surance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
policy from the State
.Auto Companies. As an
independent agency representing State Auto,
we offer truly outstand·
ing protection packages
for .houses. apartments
and condominium units.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

__
JJ .,...,.,..
992·6687
State Auto

,.

. ,.

Equity Money Service
makes borrowing
less taxing.
It's good to know that when you borrow through our
Equity MoneyService, the interest can still be deducted
on your income tax return . And because you're using the
security of the equity you have in your home, we can
offer you Equity Money at a very low rdte.
To find out about turning your home equity into
ready cash, contact your nearest BA.t\JKONE office
or call us at 742·2888orat
1·800·824·6954

MoNEY·skkV!cE.

2 Sect•ons. 22 Pages

26 Cents

A Mulhmed•a lrtc Newspaper

Fashion show's proceeds will benefit school
By NANCY YOACHAM
Chapman said Ihal 400 tickets
Sentinel Stall Writer
at $4 each will bE' sold fo r the
Hall of the pro&amp;!eds from show. If the show Is a sellout, $800
ticket sales for this year's spring will go to the school lor the new
fashion show, sponsored by the library and computer research
Pomeroy Area Merchants Asso- center. to be located in whHI is
ciation. will benefit Pomeroy currently the teacher's lounge
The new library will be a
Elementary School.
Annie Chapman , of the mer· memorial to Robert Morns, who
chants as social ion, reported on was principal at Pomeroy Elc
the progress of the fashion show mentary lor many years before
at Tuesday's meeting of the his death lhts winter, Chapman
Pomeroy Area Chamber of said.
Commerce.
The fashion show is scheduled
Chapman explained that half · for Thursday, April 2, in the
of this year' s ticket sales will be Pomeroy Elementary School
given to the school to be used to gymnasium, with a social at 6:30
expand library facilities. which p.m . and Ihe show at 7. Chapman
are now Inadequate.
said a shopper's mart with

several displays will be avatlable
for browsing-during the social
hour. In addition to other minor
changes in this year 's form at,
there will be parking assistan ce,
she said. and advised that tickets
be purchased ea rly a t the var ious
Pomeroy locations soon to be
announced.

Mary Powell, of th e merchant s
assoctation, and Paul Gera rd, of
th e chamber, re ported on activi ties which are being planned for
Easter.
Gerard said the Easter Bunny
will make a personal appearance
in Pomeroy to pass out treat s.
Powell said an "anything as long
as it's wearable" Easter Bonnet

Parade will also be held during
the season for homemade hat s,
recycled hats, etc. There will be
categories fo r children. teens
and adults, depending on the
number of entries received. with
prizes in each cat egory. To
encourage part icipa tion. Powel l
said local merchants will be
asking some of their regular
cus tomers to ent er the pa rade,
although cu stomers are under no
obligation to do so.
Gerard also spoke br iefl y
about the annual Heritage Weekend celebration. He said plans
will be und erway earlier than
usual this year in order to make
the weekend 's activities bett er

than ever Although a commtttce
of eight to 10 people is lo be
formr d to over see act lvit ies,

Gcrmd sa id he is ·•open fo r
suggestions" from a nyone. He
sa id thi s year 's btce nt Pnn ta l
,lnni v ('r ~a r v

of the Nor thwest

Territory wllllikl'ly be included
tn Heritage Weekend He also
encouraged chamber membcts
to begin thinkin g of wa ys to
relebrat r Pomeroy's sesqulcl' n·
tenmal (]50 year s~ anni ver sa r y,

which comes in two years.
Btl! Neu se, pres id ent of
chamber, said a golf tournament
may also be scheduled m co njunction with Heritage Weekend

ZEEBRUGGE, Belgium
iUPI J - Britain's Prince Cha·
rles helicoptered over the site of
Europe's worst, peacetime maritime disaster today, saying hts
.country owes a debt of gratitude
to Belgium for lis rescue opera·
lion after a Brit ish ferry capsized
in the North Sea.
·
The prince began a two-day
scheduled visit to Belgium with a
brl~l stopover in Zeebrugge.
where
olflclals said he vlsite&lt;l
..
with navy pesonnel, divers and
other rescuers who helpe&lt;l save
409 pa~s~ngers of the Herald of
Free !j:nterprise car ferry that
capsize&lt;! Friday with an esti,,; ,.,.•• ~t!l!f ~3 Jli!Dple aboard, most of
•. • lliem£rltons. ·· ' .
.Before flying to Brussels
where he was welcomed by
Prime Minister Wlllrl e d
Martens, he flew by helicopter
over the partially submerge&lt;!
hull of the 8,000-ton ship lying on
its side a mile from Zeebrugge
and visited wllh hospitalize&lt;!
survivors of Europe's worst
maritime disaster. since World
War II.
The Friday night disaster
clal!lle&lt;l 5:1 lives and 81 are
missing, presumed drowned a!·
ter they were trapped in the l)ull
of the roll-on. roll-off ferry when
II mysteriously capsized in less
than a minute In ralm seas while
en route to Dover, England.
Saying Britain owes Belgium

Counsel
seeking
delay on
•
•
unmuntty
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UPli- .John
Poindexter and Oliver North, two
of the major ligures in the
!ran-Contra scandal refusing to
talk, almost certainly will not
testily to Congress under a grant
or Immunity until the end of May,
lawmakers say,
Leaders of the select House
~nd Senale panels Investigating
the scandal are trying to Iron out
ditferences about whether and
when to grant immunity !rom
prosecution lo gel testimony
from such pivotal players. But
they were unable to reach a
decision Tuesday, as lndepend·
ent prosecutor Lawrence Walsh
sought a !io-day delay on the Issue
I rom a Housepanpl mlndlulolhis

concerns.
The delay Is Important to
Walsh because he Is still devploping his criminal probe or the case
with an eye to possible Indict·
'
ments, and any Immunity
would
protect witnesses from prosecu·
lion lor anything they say under
Immunity .
Asked II he was please&lt;! with
his meeting Tuesday, Walsh
said, "I'm not satisfied, but I
think (a brief delay I would be a
lair balance."
He was expected to make a
similar request today to the
Senate committee, and Chair·

Nease reported Iha I res ponse
to tht' chamber-sponsored Pomeroy post card contest has bee n
sslow, with onl y about el~hl
entries Nease hopes other ama·
leur photographers will enter
pictures A savi ngs bond Is top
prize.
In final ma tters, a motion to
writ e a lr l tPr to the s tatr direc tor
of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services oppos ing the closure of the Pomeroy OBES olllce
passed unanimously . Pomeroy Is
at the bottom of the stale's
th trd-phasc closing list and no
definit e closing has bee n set.
Tht• chamber met a t Pomeroy
Trinit y Church.

Speaker
searches
for more
funding

Royalty views. site
of ferry disaster
"a great debt of gratitude,"
Prince Charles !old rescuers the
disasler would have been much
worse had it not been lor their
efficient operatton m getting
people out of the vessel quickly

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS !UPl i - Ohio
House Speaker Vernal G. Rille
Jr .. D·Ncw Boston. recognizing
the sta tp' s budget constraints,
says he'd like to find a nother$.100
million to $4[)(1 million to puml'
The nearly 500-foot ferry,
int o edu cation du r ing th e next
owned by Townsend Thoresen , is
two yea rs
on the floor of Zeebrugge harbor
But Riffe also sa id Tuesday he
on Its port side in :mIOfI of water.
may ha ve lo rework the entire
The salvage company Smll
1988·89 budget proposal or Gov.
International has scheduled 35
Ri cha rd F Celeste later this
working days to weld attachment
month because hl' Is getting
points to the red-and-while ferry ,
A!I;I'OUAL EVENT - Many local residents took
signals
II may not be balanced.
lng I he activity. Answi!rlng preliminary qut'stlons
enabling two powerful lugs to
lime to donate blood at the Red Croos Bloodmobile
Riffe s aid he will be receiving
and j(('ltlng her hlood prc.surt• cllt'l'ked Is Meigs
pull II upright . drain It , remove
updat es on (c venu c estimates
held Monda)' at Meigs High School. Sponsored by
student Tamm,v Staats by BC'ISf•y I.caeh, R.N. 1\l
the cargo of trucks and cars and
the student council, th&lt;' Meigs hlood drive Is an
tram the Legislative Budget
the •·hed-ln lahlt• In hack art' Brian R•·•·d and
tow It to port
annual l'Vent, with nurse Sharori Tht•is~ ~vnseeOffice
ear ly nrxl week, and will
Shirley Scull, R.N.
check to see !!they cover pla nned
ex penses.
" II I'm told that this budget Is
out of balance by the LBO, we'll
ha ve to s tart all over," said Rille.
WASHINGTON I UP I !
resolution to cut off all uid to the sary weapon to block the resolu· planned to usc toda y's skirmish
The Speaker was not ready to
House Democratic leaders, c on~ U.S.·backed rebels trying to tlon - his veto pen - but they over Rea gan 's request to release say wh&lt;'fe he would get the
ceding they will lose thE' battle overthrow Nicaragua 's leftist noted Reagan will be back to Ihe fin al $40 million of last year's money lo balance I he budget and
but hoping to win a war. pushed a government. Included in thai ban Congress this yea r with a requ est package to t ~ ll him the votes arc add to education. Bulhe sald hels
parliamentary light to the floor was the final $40 million Ins tal- for $l0o mill ion in new aid to the not there lor another round of al rea dy makin g his own Inquiries
Contra a id .
of the chamber today In a bid to lmenl of $100 million in aid Contras for llsca11988.
"We have tM responsibilit y to and will consult with his Finance
That
reques
t
will
be
s
ubj
ec
t
to
halt U.S. ald. to th~ Nicaraguan approved by Co ngress last year.
say what we believe and !;1y the Co mmlll cc expert s on various
Contra rebel s.
Speaker Jim Wright of Texas defeat by majority vote or either
ease for a posit ive policy In Latin phases of the budge t.
Primarily as a backlash to the and majority leader Tom Foley the House ,or Senate. and Rca·
America ," Wright sa id Tuesday.
· "Th ere' s some Indication there
Iran-Contra scandal. the lead er· of Washington said they realize gan's veto ca nnot be used If no
" I don't think the$10o million will might be som e mon ey to be
bill
comes
to
his
desk.
::.....:::...:.:::.;;~:, to vote on..;a,...,._P_re_
s ident Reagan has the necesbe approved."
found ," he said.
The Hou se leaders, therefore,
Riffe told reporte rs he would
like to be abl e to give primary
and secondary schools, colleges
and universities enough to ollset
the 2 per cent rat e of Inflation.
Under the Ce les te administra tion budget plan. primary and
secondary eclu catlon would re·
Takin g less than ll v&lt;' minutes C&lt;'ive only $:1.:1 million more In
General Telephone Co. or Ohio
wants to know what customers to a nswer over the phone, the 1988 tha n th ey have this year think of their phone se rvice. So It ques tions arc designed to mea· an Increase of 0.1 Pt&gt;rcent. The
sure Impressions in the follow ing Increase In fiscal 1989 would be
asks.
"That's wha t we do eve ry categor ies:
4.4 perce nt. The two-year basic
Telephone install ation, repair. education budget Is $3 blillon .
weekday. And then we use the
responses as a ya rdsti ck on how handlin g or calls req ues tin g new
Coll eges and unlv ~ r s lt tcs
service
or
changes
In
servic
e.
would
receive less than $~million
we ' re doing and as a sounding
board lor needed Improve· direct-d ia ls lo ng-di sta nce calls, more In l'l ~~ than th is year - an
local calling, direc tory ass ist- 0.4 percent lnl'rcase. Another 7.3
ments," said G. Dan Boone,
GTE 's so ul he rn di v is ion ance, operatOI'• asslstr d long· percent would b&lt;' added In 198R
di sta nce calls and monthly
"I 'd like to at least Sl'f' thrm
manager.
bllltng.
co
me In line with Inflation," said
Developed In 1977. thi s ~ro­
"The result s provide lnlorma· Rifle. " I think that 's about 2
gram focuses on results of tan
ongoing phone survey to plnpolnl lion on bo th a current and trend perc&lt;'nt. Th at fl!(ures out to
wh at areas customers perceive basis." said Boone. "We use roughly $:1(J(I million to $100
as satisfactory or needing lm· TEu·CEL to help us detl.' rmlnc million ."
Rille ~a id prc llmlnarv discusprovement. Walker Reasearch. accept able service levels, set
of Indianapolis, Ind ., an lnde· pri orities on alloca tin g capital sions with 1h•· LBO have lndl ·
pendent firm , helped develop the resources and evalua te and sub· caled tht' budgrt "v&lt;'ry w~ll
stanll ate our objec tives ...
could b&lt;' " out of bal a nrr ."
plan and conducts the surveys.
"This conllnuous program proWh en the hudg et goe• to th(·
Called TEL-CEL . lor Telephone Customer Ex pectatio n vldl.'s comprehensive a nd statis- Senate, It will b&lt;' In balun cr. "
Level, the program seeks custo· tica lly secure ln!ormutlon." he vowed Rifle. "I will not send an
mers' opinions In eight major added. About 1,000 survey calls unbalan ced budget out or th~
ca tegories. Do they reel the arc made sta tewide each month Hous e. It 's again s t th('
NOT IN AGREEMENT - President Reagan, seen above with
service Is exce llent. good, lair or cover in g a ll T E L -CE L Constllutl on...
Sen. Robert Dole, R·Kan., Indicated Tuesday thai he does not
ca tegories
Meanwhllr, th e Sc nat~ unpoor?
al{ree with his daughter, Maureen, thallonner national security
So
what
do
CTE's
cus
tomers
animous
ly vot l'd to make per·
"
We
don't
wa
nt
our
cus
lomers
aides John Poindexter and Oliver North should he eourt·marllaled
think
about
ser v ic e·~
manent
a
law that requires court
be
just
satisfi
ed
we
want
our
to
lor not keeping him lnlormed about the Iran arms·Conlra aid
"The
trend
lends
lo
flu
ctuat
e
ln
officials
to
supply In format ion to
service
to
be
good
or
excellent
,"
scheme. "I gave up arguing with my daughter long ago," Reagan
dllle
~e
n
t
cat
egories
from
month
victims
.of
rrlm e about the
said Boone. "TEL·CE L resull s
said. (UPJ)
help us Identify problem area s so to month. That Is due In part to proceedings that have to do with
man Daniel Inouye. D·Hawal!, Its lvvesllgallon by Au g. 1 and the we know where to make weath er. whi ch ca n lnfiuence the crime.
said II Is now unlikely either House panel is under an Oct ober Improvements."
results du ring severe periods."
The tempora ry law , now lour
Poindexter, a Navy rear adml· deadline.
yean old, requires prosecutors
"Our employees see the resulls he said.
rat. or North, a Marine lieutenant
"But overall , In the southern to notify viet lms of th~ date, lime
With the senators talking to too, " he said. " so they know
colonel, will testily before either Walsh. the House panel arranged where our customers think we di vis ion , the pictu re Is Improving and place or the trial, or the date
panel unlllthe end or May.
and the res ults refl ect our lime and place tor final dlsposJ.
a meeting today to discuss the need to Improve. "
Inouye also said the Immunity status of Its lnvesllgallon or the
Residential and single- line bus- company's co mmitment ro qual· lion of the charges.
Issue could delay !he start ·Of secret sales ot U.S. arms to Iran Iness customers are represente&lt;l tty service," he noled.
Another provision requires
public hearings, now expecte&lt;l to and the scheme to divert prollls In the survey. A similar survey
The past three yea rs have three weeks notice to victims II
begin In mid-April . His Senate to Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
GTE started last yea r polls shown Improvement, Boone sa id, the offender Is btln~ considered
panel has a mandate to complete
lor parole or a pardon .
multi· line bus iness customers.
(Conunued on Page 8)
Salvage operations continued
today at the s ite of the wreck. but
official s said they do not expect
to recover bodies trapped in the
hull for at least three weeks- too
late for them to be identifiabl e

Leaders press fight against Contra aid

Customer's opinion
important to GTE

.i
,.,.

_____

ent1ne

Pomeroy - Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, March 11, 1987

• Copyrighted 1987

Partly Cloudy tonight, with
a low between 25 and 30.
Partly cloudy Thursday, with
highs In the mid 40s. The
prohabllity of precipitation Is .
20 percent tonight and near
......_....~
1.ero again Thursday ,

•

M oore announced a gover n-

The chann el is one of tlw
wor ld 's bus ies t tourist and bust·
ness waterways, ca rryi ng mil·
lions of peo ple between Bt ita in
and mai nland E urope.

Carol•· l,.t•t• S1aals

Area unemployment._ __

Forest fire season begins
The threat of spring fo res t fi res
Is prevalent at this time. J tm
Milliron. Sh ade River State
Forest, said toda y.
The Ohio Division of Forest ry
reports that the spr ing fores t
season began March 1 and
continues until Ma y :n.
In thl.' spring of 1986, Go\' .
Richard Cl.'les te ba nned open
burning In response to one or the
worst lire seasons In 15 years
Tills year could eas il y b(' a repea t
due to the lack or snow whic h had
not packed down leaves whi ch
tell last fall. Thi s mea ns they wi ll
~rn easter. Continued warm
weather combined with little
precipitation a nd spring winds
will put Ohio In a potent ial ly
~rtous !Ire. season. Mil liron
l'ilports.
Forestllres d&lt;'stroy In ad dition
.fo valuable limber, li ves a nd
Jlometl. This loss Is du e primarily
lo t)le careless burning of rrsi·
denlial debris and litter , the
division reports . The divis ion
ilclvlaes that lndlvldua Is should
tonalder alternatives to burning,
iuch as hauling houst:&gt;hold trash

II . Lidcl. 62. New lia,·c n.
W Va . died Mo nday morn lllg tn
Pleasa nt Va l lev liosptt al.
Sit e was bor n -\ ug 2:&gt;. 1 92~ . in
S1oux f'a li s. S D . to Hazel I
Anderson Buehr le. Sioux Fa lls.
S [), and lhr la te Elvin W.
Ruchcle.
She was a mem ber of the New
Haven Umted Meth odiS t Chu rc h
Lcor&lt;~

'

sa id no decis ion on immunit y

Area deaths
Lt•ora A. Lidel

WASHINGTON 1 UP! !
Mc tzc nbdu m ' atsed Soo&lt;.tKIII
Cleveland Mayor Georgi' Voino- fo r all oll 988- about the sa mP
vlch has already a massed a amount Votnov ich ro llectrd in
C(lnslderable warches t lor his six months- bt1t ·h ad co nstde raplanned race In 1988 against S&lt;' n. ble head sta rt over poss ible
Howard Met zcnbaum.
ri vals wtlh $1 mtllton in th e ba nk
' Volnovlch has co mplained that
as of .Ja n. I, 198o, from pas t
he will never be a ble to ma tch fund- raisi ng effort s
Metzenbaum In ca mpa ign dona·
Mc tzenbaum 's account . has
tlpns, but Federa l Elec tion Co m· ea rn ed $160.000 m inl&lt;'rcst and
ll!isslon ligures sa id othrrwisc.1 \div idends during t ~ e las t two
'011' FEC said the Republ ican · yC'a r s
n\ayor raised $ ~&gt;54 . !XJO In the la st
More th an half of Vo inovich's
he! r ofl9Hii.
fi rs t 864 contnbu tot s dona ted at
:Most of Volnovlr h's monrv was
talsed at his :,Oth birthdav pa rt )' . leas t $500. and onc-lh&lt;rd gave at
aha!lair attended by 1.200 peop!P lrast $1,000. Some 29 peo pl e' gave
J)IIY 14 and Ihal may have ra ised $2, 000, the ma ximum indtvidual
co ntribullon allowed by Ia \\ .
as much as $000,000.
The Its! of Voinovtch contribu: Republican Re p . Bo b
tors
includ es sevPr al senior v1rc
McEwen, who also is co nsider ing
pt·es
idents,
chairmen and chief
epterlng the race. had $19!i.!XJO
cxecu
t
ivrs
officrrs of Ia rgr
l~!t over from his successful
corporatio ns.
rr·electlon campaign.

harbor wtth them sti ll open. tf
With 250 crossings a day, the
that is what happened. was · Free E nt erprise and ot her fer·
·
·
r
fool hardy," hr said.
ries pre also majo r carrtt&gt;rs o
He said the door svstem was co mmercial fr elghl in truck
des igned for a life of 20 year s. six 1rat' lers In bot h d t· r~ct
' lon s
round tn ps a day, 12 openings
In Pa rliament and at a news
and l 2c losingsda ilyfor50weeks co nference, Moore decline&lt;! to
a yea r on th e cross-c hannel run say il the doors were open before
between Bn ta ln and mai nla nd the ferry went down or wheth er
Eu rope. The Herald of Free they were IDI'Ced apart by some
En terprise wc·nt in to serv ice in other fac tor.
1980
But hesaidthcgover nmenthas
ordl'red immcdi alec hcc ks on the
Ma ny au th or ittes have specu· opera Iion of all door mechanisms
Ja ted lhal a sudden shi ft ing of on cross-c hannel ferries sailing
sea water ballas t from one side to fro m British ports. From now on,
anot her led to a tilltngof the boil I "a ll ope nings in th e hull and
th at , co upled with open bow superstt uctu r&lt;' must be closed
doors. il llowed water to be before they proceed to sea," he·
sucked in abo ve deck as it moved satd

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with heavy too ls at tltestill·opcn
bow doors in an apparent btd to
close them as the vessel accelera ted out of Zeebr ugge harbor to
beat a heavy cross-c urrent
spawned by a n unu sua lly high
tide in the, narrow Nort h Sea
chan neL
Brown. in ter viewed by Indopend ent Telev ision News, said
the hydra uli c door system he
des igned had -four manu ally
opera ted stages that once
closed. 'properly co uld not be
opened by a&lt;;ctdenl.
" I ca n' t for the life of me
Ima gine why they would wont to
be htlling these it ems. 1 would go
fur ther to say th at eve n If they
were workin g on the doors on the
vt~ssl'l as it was movmg out of the
inner ha rbor to the out er harbor.
11 is' very ques ti onable seamanshtp to leave, the doors open... he
satd.
" In fac t. to go out of the outer

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