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••

•••

r
I

By The Bend

The ·Daily

75 t•t•nt~

Suncla.'

Sentln~l

'

Buffalo advances in grid playoffs

Friday, ~nuary 8, 1983
Page-1.0'

Country

~

•

Woman says ·she has made a better ·
life for herself, despite her parents
Dear . A. . L11ders: !Your
grcady apprecialtd
response to a distraught reader,
.,_.Au: rm in prison and miY.
'.... .,' '
"Parents do the best they can," ·
be ben: for quite a. white. I have a 1- ·
ytM-old daughter who thinks I'dl
cc:rtainly
sho~ yow ign(piCC.
I never used drugs or alcohol
wortinl out of town. I don't lil¢'
or did uything self-dcllrUCtivc.
lying
but rm not sure that under die
ANN LANDERs
When Iwu IB,IIeft home. IIIOUihl
..~LotA-.:11•
cin:UIIISUinees il's wrona. Yea or~
counseling••muaaed to get u - .,.... 1)"4': 11 . .
-TEXAS
:
Cno&amp;on
educalion and lllllried a wonderful
,DEAR . TEXAS: The ·sh•bbie;jt
man and we ire raising two tcrrifil:
bUth is always beller.thin the ~­
children •• 110 thanks to my pareniS. · 10 the panel bullons so they can push dressed lie. Tell your daughll!t
. In plain English, Ann, some the red atann buaon if anacJted
where you are and why )'Oil lie lhc(re
people malr:e lousy puents. t-{y
That wu poor advice. Pushing the before somcotie el$c does.
~•
mother ate ~ silly and dietal a1ann buttQn may stop the elevator,
Plallllillg a weddi11g? Wha{ts
constantly. She was far more 81!d if it stops between floors, you rlglll? What's wro11g? "Tite AIM
interested in weighl·loss PIOP-ms will be imprisoned with your La11ders Gllide for ·Brides"
than in us kids. She didli't do volun· auac..,r.
LreUe~ your tuaitly. Sellli a
.
teer work. and sbc ~er read a
The best thing to do is push as addrused, lo11g,
b&lt;¥&gt;k or tried to better herself. many floor but19ns as you can. The t11vtlope Cllld a clteck .or
The woman complained about elevaJa will then automatl!:ally ~ ordu for S3 .65 (this
everydting and everybody. smoted 81 every Ooor and you can then try pOstage altd ltattdliltg) to: Brl.dM.
in our faces for IS years and · to.....,.,.... or get help from someone clo AM Lmttkrs, P.O. Box llJ·04.·
criticized the ne'......,_.
Our house wailing
--.-to get on.
Chicago. l/1. 60611-0562.
'6'""" •
was a mess, and dinncn wen: mostly
1 leamed this from an exceUent C/JNJJQ, send $4.45.)
.
carry-out My father was loyal to TV show called "Street Smw.•
'bet (a miracle), never complained PI~ share the infonnalicin, Ann.
and.let her run the show. .
. · _ EP.INROCHESTER, N.Y.
, So, Ann, when you say. that
DEAR EP.: The name of thai 1V
parents c!o the best they can, you show on Public B,.,.OCuting wu ·
never met mjne, I'm happier now "Street SmartS: How to Avoid Being
than I've ever been il) my Ufc, but a Victim •• With Detective JJ.
1t look a lot of hard _work and Bittenbinder," a Chicago homic~
~· My m~ tried. to run detective.
!"Y life_ after I married, which wu
11lankS to you and all the otherS
lion.
!~g bec•n• sbe showed 110 wlio wrote. Your correclioa is
mrerest tn me when I was at home. I ~~--~~~~!!"1!!!"!'~~~11,!!!"'!!!!!1!!!~!!!!"!~~~-~
fmally !Old her to bun out. AD~Qbe
••
thinks I have a problem. •• PEACE
A
ATLASTINGREENBAY
DEAR GREEN BAY: Since
&amp;
you've already decided I am
"ignQnnt," I ris1c nothing by Slick·
ing to my ori1fnal statement,·
: '.
"Pannnlll do the best they can. •
:,"
Unfonunately, their "best' is
'
sometimes not good eaough, or jt is
.:
downript awful. Blllllmoa always,
'
it is because they were victims of
legiaai•l
II, 1993 .
~
:,
:
pen parenting themselves. We tend
-IIODIIATOI: 10a AIMS
·:
to treat our children the way we were .

Ann
Landers

LAUGHS • Saturday Night Live guest host
Danny Devit.o, left, and musical guest Jon lion
Jovi, right, share a li~ht moment Thursday dur.-

ing taping or a television spot in New York for
Saturday's show. (AP photo)
·

Eric .Clapton, .'Beauty and the
Beast' top Grammy .nominations

•

lly JOHN ANTCZAK
record,.album and song of the year.
Associated Press Writer
Bill X Ray Cyrus· "Achy Breaky
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. Heart, ' k.d. lang's single "ConThe 35th annual Grammy Awards stant Craving" and album
are shaping up as a clash of two "Ingenue,'' Vanessa Williams'
very different .titans - rock single "Save the Be~t for Last," .
warhorse Eric Clap10n and "Beau- Annie Lennox's album "Diva"
ty and lhc Beast''
and U2's album "Achtung Baby"
Clapton, 47, re~ved nine . were nominated. for top· honors by
Gram my nominations 'Thursday as members of the National Academy
performer, songWriter and compos- of Recording Arts &amp; Sciences.
er for the song "Tears in Heaven,"
Clapton's single "Tears in
the albums "Unplugged" and Heaven," his lament for his 4-ycar"Rush" and a soundtrack song old son, who fell 10 his death out a
from "Lethal Weapon 3."
window in 1991, was nominated
The song and album "Beauty for record and song of the year,
and the Beast," featuring Celinc best male pop vocal performance \.
Dion and Peabo Bryson, could and best song written for a movie
yield eight Grammys. "Beauty" or television.
songwriter and producer Howard
"It's overwhelming 10 have my
Ashman, who died of AIDS in song so extremely well received,"
1991, got four nominations.
the guitarist said in a statcmenL
But the big roes could also face
Other top nominceo included the
strong competition at the awards folk group The Chieftains, with
c.ercniony Feb. 24 from others, five' nominations, and rocker Peter
especi~lly in !he top categories of Gabriel, with four.

Weight
. control classes slated
'

Th~-

Meigs CountY Health
Department will begin a series of
six-week classes for weight control
at 6:30 p.m. on Monday and Friday
evenings.
.
There will be a choice of nights
for the classes, either Monday or
Friday , and classes arc free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will be or two hours ·
duration. Attendance is required at
only one two-hour session weekly.
Classes will include nutrition education, stress management, weekly
weigh-ins, relaxation techniques.

recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise
techniques and other phases of
weight control.
.
There will be a limit as 10 the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are til be held in the conference room of the multi-pui:pose
building, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations by calling 992-6626.
Upifn registering indicate a preference of a Monday or Friday class.

Community calendar

•

Community Calendar items · Ru ssell Building in Millfield.
appear two days before an event Music will be provided by Out of
and the day of lhal event. llems the Blue. John Russell will 'be the
must be received 'Yell in advance c ;~iler. Public invited.
to assure publication in the calendar.
RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
FRIDAY
Legion Hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs to midnight. Music will be providCounty Pomona Grange will meet ed by Pure Country Band. Public
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock invited.
Springs· Grange Hall. Rock Springs
Grange will be the host.
SUNDAY
POMEROY • SOLOS meal for
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup· alljmcrested singles at Pomeroy
pcrs Plains VFW Post No . 9053 . United Methodist Church. Call
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a Rev. Grace Kec at 992-5788 or
round and square dance Friday Rev. Sharon Hausman at 985-4312
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by for inl'ormation.
C.J. and Country Gentlemen .
Everyone welcome.
CHESTER - "Growing Through
Grief" group at Chester United
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full Methodist Church , Call Rev.
Gospel Church in Long Bottom Sharon Hausman at 985-4312 for
will have a special hymn sing Fri- inforrmaion .
day at 7 p.m.·with the Marvin
Clark Family. Pastor Steve Reed
MONDAY
invites the public. Fellowship will
KYGER CREEK • Women
follow.
·
Alive will,. mcct Monday at 7 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek Club House.
SATU.RDA.Y
There wi II be a devotional speaker
BURLINGHAM - The Burling: and craft demonstration. Refresh· · ham Modem Woodmen of America ments will be a salad bar.
will hold a soup supper (oyster,
bean and vegetable) on Saturday at . POMEROY , Th~ Disabled
6:30 'p.m. at the Modem Woodman American Veterans and the Ladies
hall. Those attending bring a Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
dessert or salad. Officers will be p.m . at the hall, 124 Butternut
Avenue in Po'meroy.
clcctCct. Everyone welcome.
LOTTRIDGE·· Country Music
Night at the Lottridge Community
Center will be Saturday from 7
p.m. to midnight. All bands arc
wclcoinc. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone welcome, •

Two versions of "Don't Let lhe
Sun Go Down on Me" earned
nominations, one for Eho.n John
and George Michael for pop duo or
group performance, tl)e other for
Oleta Adams for female R&amp;B
voc:~l performance.

Church holds
Christmas parties
A special visitor in a red suit
was present at the preschool and
kindergarten Christmas party at
Hope Baptist Church recently.
Garnes were played and refreshments were served.
Santa presented two presents
and. a cahdy cane to everyone presenL

,

Off the hook

.

·Will Elvis stamp become collector's

Vol. 27, No. 47
Copy~ghtod 1883

Union, .companies deny
break in contract ~ talks
•
•

"It's ordinary collective bar- with four midsized Appalachian
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
gaining
preparation,'' Corcoran producers whO banded together as
- Spokesmen for the United Mine
Workers and the nation's largest ·said. "We do similar things during the Independent Bituminous Coal
Bargaining A!Uance. Those negoticoal operators broke a two-month every negotiations.''
''We do i~ they do it,'' he said.
ations began Oct. 5, and also have
silence'Friday to deny a report that
The Bituminous Coal Opera10rs been the subject of a news black.
ne~otia!ions had ceased and the
Association represents 12 of the out
~mon was preparing 10 snike.
Those companies also signed
The Charleston Daily Mail nation's largest coal producers, and
the
contract
between
the
associa·
the
1988 contract that expires next
reported Friday that negotiatio~~
lion and the UMW has in the past moath.
bad ceased "at least temporanly,
At the start of those talks, both
and that union officials had told set the standard for most of the rest
of
the
industry.
sides
said they were interested in
their members to get ready for a
About
300
other
companies
drafting
a significantly different
strike.
signed
the
1988
contract
once
contract
that
would employ cooperThe newspaper attributed its
ative
labor-management
techniques
report to unidentified UMW and negotiations were completed.
.The OMW also is involved in to i1f1prove productivity.
·
industry sources.
.
"The reports of a total bre!lk • negotiations for a separate contraCt
Continued on A-3
down in talks and an impending
strike are not accurate," said
UMW spokesman Joe Corcoran.

.;:-•

''The stories are not accurate,''

J••••ry

~vidual~ who wen: beaten,

lied to, ignored or sezually al!,used
often do the same to their lcids.
Cotmeling ind suppon JIOUll8 can
break thlt wre~hed chain. My
COilgiiiU1Ition ttl yoU for gelling
help and c1oinl jllll dill. .
oe.-·AID. Loden: 'Wendy in
Chicago" wrote to you a while bact
about her cousin who was robbed in
an elevator. She rold your reackin
that when they are in an elevator,
they should position dtemaelves next

Brotherhood meets.
Opportunities that men have for
ministry service· were discussed
during devotions at the recent
meeting of the Brotherhood of
Hope Baptist Chhreh.
Jim Ditty, missiOfU!CY to Korea,
gave the opcniag prayer.
·
Plans were made for the work
project that day at the ehurch.
Pete Quick conducted the closing.
Breakfast was prepared by
Brotherhood director Sonny
McClure.
Attending were Sonny McClure,
Pastor David Bryan, Jim Ditty, Bob
Mills, Pete Quick, Lee Williams,
Jason Bryan, Jarod Bryan, Adam
Williams, Brian Justice and
Matthew !ustice, Peter Ditty, Paul
Ditty, Jarntis Ditty, Mark Miehacl,
NichOlas ·Michael, Paul Bailey and
Bill Bailey.

REGULAR
$799.99

SALE

$57999
The Stytlot"' llachlno Modol tl43

.

sews 30 stilclroo oOno-ottp buttonholtr •Eilctric LCO scraon oEroc-

rooic spood con~l .wind-in-plooo bobbin •Aulomrrlic 1tn1ion oyollm
•Slant oSix -..1 fwtarling -eull-in ...,.. 11.-.dlo.

20% ro] 5% OFF All FABRI C

25 LBS. - 54.30
SO LBS. - 58.30

I0 LB. - ~~25

BLACK and STRIPED

110 WEST MAIN

.. 25 LB. BLACK SEED- 55.50
so _LB. BLACK .SEED- 510.25
25 LB. STRIPED SEED - 5 5~80
50 LB. STRIPED SEED~ 510.90
NIGER (Thistle) - 95' lb.
WHITE MILLn - ,20' .••

We Also Have·Cracked Cont

SUGAR. RU

ILJ. CONNIE$
IICLUDII lOOTS

AlL IIOOIS, ASia
and I·SWISS

30% . 0FFI

POMEROY

~

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Staff &gt;
POMEROY • The Ohio Public
Defender Commission will try to
appoint a local an~rney to the
Meigs County Pubhc Defender
position by mid-year, accordtng 10
J Michael Westfall, dircc10r of lhe
Multi-County Public Defender's
office in Athens.
·
Westfall met with the Meigs
County Commissioners last week
to discuss the controverstal
apP.oint 111 cnt of Athens Attorney
Wtlliam Safranek to the vacancy
left by Charles Knig~t-. Kni$ht
resigned· the posrtron rn mtd·
December to accept an appo~nt·
mcnt as Assi stant Prosecutrng
•
Auorney by Prosecutor John R.
· Lentes.
.
Since Safranek's appointment
last month, the commissioners have
voiced concern for the future of the
·
BUYS F'IRST STAMPS • Doliald Hmonc,
Middleport Post Office to purchue the stampa.
affice in Meigs County, going so
. left, 18 lilu Street, Pomeroy, wu the tint resl·
Middleport sold out of the ltampa at about 3
far as to threaten to cancel the
' dent or Pomeroy lo pnrchue a sheet or Elvis , p.m. Pictured wltb Hartun1 II Jllll Saadqullt.
county's contract with the Ohio
stampa at tbe Pomeroy Post Ofrt(e 011 Friday.
olllcer-ia-c:harae lilt Pomeroy. Sudclalll'ltated
Public Defender's office.
: The lobby or the )1011 omce mled witll eustomers
16,000 stamps were available aDd that be wq
The county contributes $31,636
· shortly before noon when tbe stamp~ went on ·
Into the iptrit 171 the clay by IOIIetlina 111111•1
per year to the contract, and
sat• and by 11:30 p.m. the stamps _were (OM·
Elvis sonp or quot1n1 pbrues trom thOle 101p.
Knight's salary as Public Defender
. pletely sold·ou.t. Patrons were then aeat to the
wu $40,000 per year, paid to him
-·
by lhc: Ohio Public Defender Com·
million.
.
·
..
Kniaht notified the board of ~ts
reaJanalion. However, the commrsPOMEROY· "You can do any- siahted there for the firs1 1lme. POmeroy to Donald HanonL' wbo aioners expressed disappointment
thing you want, but don't step on Nationwide, the stamp honoring hit sana "You Ain't Nothlll"iut a that Westfall had not consulted
Mr Blue Suede shoesl" or "We're · contribution to the music world Hound Doa" to win tlllt llclia.
, them about possible local replace·
al dancing to the J all House went on lale 81 noon.
In a ha)f bour It ~· Ill·ever, menll nor had he informed the
At tint thcle were Only a few, and it wu "Holrdlnlt Hotel" .. board' of the appointment of
Rock!" or even "Love Me Tender,
1iut
as the noon linin -.d. more
Jove me 111101" Thole are jUJt afew
'
lateeomon
than
20 lilvla flftl had filled tho no~
aupply 'nle
hu 11.tar w-t.
qf the lfeelinas you ,would have
WOitfall outlined his rettsQns for
received ' at tbe Pomeroy Post lobby In anticipation of the ule. PQineroy, but If dlrNnd
S.hnek's appointment, noting lhal
Office on Friday when_.Blvis.was Ofricer-in-chup, Jim Sundquiat, thiJ hi'h el..wll.... , k !IIJ lit he wu aware thjlt Knight's resigaotd the first Elvia ttamp ln 1ll8lked 'Return to kt 1111'."
nation had been repo!,ted to the

.......... .
......., ......,
ILL DEITER

· 20%otF! ,

ALL Sll'"ll

HALF PRICE!

30% OFU

· TElliS SHOES

20% Off!

M·\HSH·\1' \"IJ,\\11'10N\llli'

'WI Yl4.oHIH.ri \NOV. n~ 'd 0&lt;.. !c.
- ~

SHOE PLAC~ .

_218 N. Second Ave.

Mldclltport,

Elvis stamps go fast; more may be ordered

&amp;un&amp;'::it.:

,,

I .

•

Post Office_sold aimost all of its
60,000 stamps wuhm three hours.
. Also in Lima, disc jockeys from
a local radio station handed out
jelly doughnuts in the post office
lobby, while people waiting
·perused a special display of Presley
records and pictures, as well as a
replica of a 1957 Cadillac.
"I like him and stuff but I'm not
like some peoPle.'_' said T~r_ell
Devoe. "I'm not gomg to cry tf I
can't gel a stamp."
Janet Predieri bought $25 worth
of the stamps in the Cleveland atea.
She was wearing an Elvis T-shirt
and confessed that she ~Jeeps in an
Elvis nightgown.
•

.

~

board. Westfall said that at the time
of Knight'§ resignation, he (West·
fall) was preJ&gt;Ilf!ng for the Do~ald
Lindeman capual murder t~Jal,
which eventually was settled wrth a
plea.
"Time was of \he essence,"
Westfall said, "We needed some- .
one who· would be able 10 take on
case·s on December 14, when
(Knight's) resignation was effective, and no local atiOrncys were
willlng 10 do that."
Westfall confirmed that four
local attorneys h~d expressed .an
interest in receiving the position,
·including former Prosecuting
A110mey Steven .L. Story and his
assistants Linda Warner and
George McCarthy. Ho~~vcr, at the

I

time, all three were still t'cpresenting the state and unable to take the
position. Safranek, Westfall said,
was able to take all pending cases
without conflict,
;
Westfall said that the rcgionaJ
office has always attempted 10 hili:
a local auomey, when possible, mi.!l
.said that he will make every
attempt to hire a local attorney for
the positio11 if lhe board decides to
renew the contratt in June.
:
Safranek was hired on a halftime basis so that his salary would
not have to be approved by the
state controlling board. Westfall
said thllt another a110mey could be
hired for the remainder of the contract rieriod.

.

Three hospitalized after
two-c4r wreck Friday
MIDDLEPORT - Three peo- lei Citation. Divers' car then overple were hospitalized ~ollo~ing a . turned on the roadway 'while Multwo-car wreck at the Juncuon of ford's car went off lhc: right s~ of
.
Hobson Road and Ohio 1 near' the road, the patrolrepqrted.
Mulford
and
a
pasaenger,
Kevin
Middleport Friday around 4:40
Grady, 18, of Bowmans Run Road;
p.m.
According 10 a repon from the Racine, were transported by Life,
GaJlia-Meigs .Post of the State Aight to Grant Medical Center to
Highway -Palmi, Corissa M. Mul· Columbus. A hospi181 spolceswom.
ford, 18, of 47849 Morning Sw an said Mulford wu listed in seri·
Rd., Racine, w11· westbound on ous.cOIIdiiion around noon SatnrHobson Road and turned south day. Grady wu listed ia fair and
on10 Ohio 7 while failina to yield stable concliti9n. she added.
Diven wu -~to Vcecr.•
for a northbound car cliiven by
ans
Memorial Hospital when: ha
Charlea B. bivers, 41, of New
,
was
admitted
b aeaunent.
Haven, W.VL
·
Dap!age
'to
both vehicles was
Diven' 1988 Pard E$cUt SlntCk
·,
tlie side of Mulford's 1980 Chevro- . listed: as heavy and disabling.

l

l

• I

I'

Appalachian Ohio Microloan and
Technical Assistance Program
which is designed to assist women,
minorities and lower income indivictuals who possess lldlls in buslness management but who cannot
get loans from other sources due to
poor credit llistory or ljmited collatetal.. ·
·
Trussell said that MicroLoans
can be Used by eliJiibtC businesses
for eqliipinent and machinery, ftirniture and fixtures, inventory and
supplies, and work·i ng capital
needs. The amount of the loans can
range from a few hundred dollars
to a maximwn of $25,000.
"The 1MicroLoan Program, a
new funding source through the
Small Business· Administration,
may provide a means 'to start new
businesses in the downtown and
thus fill the vacant storefronts,"
said Trussell. She also explained
that technical as$istarice is provided
by the Athens Small BusinesS Celftcr.
Other incentives are being
explored to encourage economic
activity in conjunction with the
downtown revitalization ptOjlflnl,
Trussell said. She encouraged resiContinued on A·3
.

Ohio group will attempt to appoinf.
local attorney to defender's post
·

ALL WOMII'l

MULIEIRY AVE.

992·2115

By The Associated rress
offtee so)d ~ore than l~.ootl of its
Post offices hued extra clerks 180,000 ElVIS stamps rnday, mostand Elvis Presley impersonators to ly during the first tw'o hours they
handle the Ohio crowds who WilDt· were' available, said Postmaster
ed to get stamps commemorating · Michael Brose.
.
'me singer. ·:
·
To accommodate the rush, the;
· · Fans in the Cincinnati area, post office scheduled three. extra
which received 1.S million of the clerks, including an •Elvis imper·
:SOO million stamps issued nation- · senator. Another iMpersonator
wide bought more than 450,000 on . hired by the post offiel!·crooiled for
Friday, said spokesman Michael the crowd in the lobbY,.' ,
,
House. ·
"I wanted 10 be hdre thts mom"I've never collected stamps ing and gei in line, ~UtI had to
before, biltl'm keeping these,'' work,'' said Beth , W~rman - of
said window clerk Sharon Fawley. Lima, waiting in line,jut her local
"I've already threatened my farni- post office at 1:30 p.m. "I've just .
·. ly If they touch 'em, they're got 10 get a bunch.llilpe I'm not
dead."
too late. I've just got 10 get some."
She did, even thou~h the Lima
· _In Columbus, the main

.,f

LLS

'

up fo.r Elvis stamps

992-2284

~ PRICE!

SUNFLOWER SEED

.

FABRIC SHOP

WILD BIRD SEED

s LB.- 51.20

WAITING FOR THE KING - Dedicated
8,000 staiiiPS by 4 p.m. Friday. Buyers were Ibn·
lted to 200 stamps per .purchase, but it was
Elvis Presley tau walt in Une Friday at the Gal·
reported some people went through the line
" Jipolis Post Olrice to buy postage stamps bearing
.. tile !d•l 171 rock 'n' roll's !Uieness. Postal ~k
more than once. Ada Fnnee wu the first person from Gallipolis to purchase the specia.l
Roo Keeun bqan seDin&amp;the lllamps at noon to
a ;Crowd which packed the pOll office !Ike rau
stamp. Keenan· said individuals seeking the
"''ltiai to ba' concert tickets. A po~tta·l •• ..., ~p.Jiepn filling the post.ofrtce lobby an hour
spo
· kesperS.cin said t,he office sold· its stock or
.. ·_ i~r II! s~Ie time. (Till!es-~entjnel photo .b_y
, ,
(
·
vm fimson)
'

Housing speciaUst offers ,
new business service

said Tom Hoffman, spokesman for
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association negotiating team.
·
The comments were the first
MIDDLEPORT • Information
from either side since Nov. 6; when on available space, resources for
talks began for a contract 10 replace supplies, and funding sources is
one that expires Feb. I.
available through a new business
The contract covers about service being offered by Middle60,000 active· UMW members in port Village housing specialist,
Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Ken· Jean Trussell.
tucky, Ohio, Pennsylva11ia, VirTrussell said .that 'the do~town
.ginia ~d- ~est Vit:ginia.
survey held in conJunction ' th (he
Both sides apnounced at the proposed revitalization pr gram
start that they had agreed to a news . has provided quantities of informablackout during the tallcs.
tion about available space, square
Although that is usual practice footage, leasing terms and other
in coal industry talks, Kidder, data needed by someone interested
Peabody &amp; Co. analyst Marc in establishing a business or applyCohen in New York said he found ing for a loan.
.
it "worrying" that even the rumor
The village now !las 31.5 permill was so quiet so close to the cent of the storefronts vacant in the
oontraet's expuation.
area targeted for re'habilitatiQn. She
"It is the most quiet period of said that village is anxious 10 get
negotiations I've ever heard in my those siOrefronts filled and 10 that
life," said Cohen, who has covered end have researched possible fundthe coal industry fqr 19 years.
· ing for startup of new businesses
"One doesn't have a clear pic- and service agencies.
ture as-10 ... what's going on,' he
. Trussell said that she recently
said.
learned about a loan program being
Corcoran, executive assistant to offered 'that will provide locally· ·
UMW President Richard Trumka; based busin~sses with planning
said the union had cbnducted some assistance ·and small-scale loans.
strike training sessions in south· The program is geared 10 start-up
western Pennsylvania earli':' !n the and expansion of small businesses
week, but dismissed the -tratmng as in southeastern Ohio.
"nothing unusual."
One such program is the

.

Ohioans~ line

CELEBRATE
WITH SAVINGS

14 Secllone, 108 PlgM
A llultlmodle Inc. Nfta)lllpw

. , • Ml_~dleport-Pomeroy-GalllpoiiS:-Polnt Pleasant, January ~ D, 1993

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT
at 7:00P.M.

.

Freabrlnll.
llllb Ia ..,... 301.

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lt. 143

EUCHRE .. GAMES

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•'

I.'

Corner of Rt. 7

AloQg the river -----B1·7
Buslness/Farm ....... - ....D1-Ii
Ciasslned ..... - ..... - ..- ....Dl-5
Deaths.
Editorai .............. _ .. _ ......A-4
Sports ..........- .........- ....Cl-6
Weather. -·-....- ..--..A-3

item? • Beat of the -B~n«J_ .. Page B-6 '

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MIZW..Y T VERN

•
BEVERLY ffiLLS. Calif. (AP)
- No charges will be filed against
"Beverly Hills 90210" star Shannco Doherty and a woman she
scuffled with at a nightclub.
A hearing officer from the Los
Angeles County District AtiOmey's
office concluded on Thursday that
there was insufficient evidence to
bring bauery charges against either
·c.I. Bill or' Rlgbta was staned
Miss Doherty, 21, or Bonita onThe
June
22, 1144, providillg veteratUJ
Money.
benefiiJr. ·

RACINE - Racine Village
Counc;il will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

. PORTLAND • Portland Elc·
mcntary·PTO will·meet Monday at
' 7 p.m·. at tile school. The spring ·
MILLFIELD • There will be a . carnival will be planned and other
round and square dance Satur4~y events discussed.
and Jan. 23 from 8-11 p.m. at the ·

·"

Attendin' were Bton Williams,
Jackie Jusuce, Jenny Whitlatch,
Carrie Michael, Jonathan Owen,
Jam in -Riley, Rebecca Owen,
Michael Owen, Nicole McDaniel,
Emily Ashley, Whitney Ashley,
Jessica Justice, Matthew Jt~Stice,
Jason Riley.
.
The youth Cbrisimas party featured a gag gift exchange held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Michael.
Refreshments ·of cake, sloppy
joes, chips and pop were served.
Carlos Mtana, a foreign
exchange student from Brazil, was
presented a special gift. Othets
attending · were Mark Michael,
Chrissy Williams, Nicholas
Michael, Eric Toops, Tracy
Grueser, Eddie VanMatre, Amy
Clonch, James Ditty, Nancy Mar·
low and Rachael Ashley.

family affair

.1\

s,..._.

Inside

· Island Queen destroyed by blast
in 1947 • James Sands - Page A-6

mUSIC a

C-1

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PiliP

A2 &amp;m

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Union ....

Voinovich moves Conrad
to administrative services
· COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)Gov. George Voinovich has
• appointed C. James Conrad, now
acting direc10r or the Depanment
of Human Services, .to his third
Cabinet post in the past two years.
The governor appointed Conrad
on Friday as director of the Departme·nl of Administrative Services.
succeeding Stephen A. Perry. Perry .
announced his resignatjon in
December and said he will rerum 10
the private sector.
Perry's resignation is effective
March 15. Conrad will sWitch positions then, the governor said in a
•
wrinen statement
Conrad Served as administrator
of the Bureau of Employment Services [rom the beginning or
Voinovich's administration in January .1991 until Nov. 2, wl1en he .
:NATION'SWI!AIHER -Tile Attw-Weather forecast map for
succeeded Terry Wallace as
s..ctay predids- a t!otr for tile southwest, with snow in the
Human Services director.
IIIOIUltails ud 'nillud
ia)bt lower elevations. Snow will
The Depanment of H\llllan Ser·~ran ill,.tl Gl'llle Rriin AliOtber area or rain and snow wiU
vif es has been riddled in recent
l i d - till a &amp;I' die OlliD Vdey, :wbilt drizzle and freeJ;ing drizmonths with problems that includzlE aff«t die Atlr I • •
Coc*r air wiU push intO South Texas.
(A,P)
.
ed allegations of unethical conduct
and illegal practiC!l$.
One employee went 10 jail last
year
for theft an off!ce. Last week,
$unda y oc:cuional sleet or snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs 35 to
€=zing Jllin. ~ )dy dWI£ill£ 10 40.
Tuesday, fair. Lows in the 20s.
rain.)fi&amp;b iD dae "RJCC" 30s. Chance
Highs
40 to 45 . Wednesday, a Juvenile cited
orcr.::"80peaceoc.
beast
chance of rain or snow. Lows in the
RACINE - Jeffrey L. Grimm.
Monday. a chance of rain or 20s. Highs 35 to 40.
Racine, was cited Friday evening
by the Meigs County Sheriff' s
Depanment 10 Meigs County Juvenile Court following a traffic accident on Pine Grove Road.
According to a report from the
depanment, Grimm was ttaveling
•
west on Pine Grove Road in a 1987
:WASHINGTON (AP) - The among nations due to its flagrant Ponliac
owned by Virginia Henwpitt House said Saturday that attempts to violate the cease fire dricks. Penland.
and failed to make
IraQ had ''bao '""' cloWII in dae face regime."
the
curve
and
slid
off the roadway
He said the allies' warning to into a fence owned
or:ooalition solidarity" :n1 lilt*·
by Harrison
entJy IWiOved its -.i-aiauaft mis- Baghdad "remains in effect. We
Smith.
One
strand
of
barbed wire
will continue to scrutinize Iraqi
Sili:s out of du • in&amp; p ISjoM•IS
was
broken
and
one
(1051 loosened,
:White House Press Scaewy activity. No further warning will be
issued if Iraq violates the require- according to the report
~lin FiJZWaa:r Slid. " All availNo injuries were reponed.
able evidela indicates lbat baq is ments of the January 6 demarche.••
He said the episode should conacc.Cding to~~ of the
vince
Baghdad "that interference
coalition' s Jan. 6. 1993,
deman:he."
·
with United Nations and coalition
But bolb ~ House and hn-- operations ... will not be tolcrat- .
•
tagM ofrocials said the allies will ed."
A senior Pentagon official also
cotitin~ to keep Iraq's miiilary
acl&amp;ilies unclel" close lDUiioy, IIIII stressed that.altl)ough Iraq has
suite without wamjng if lbc mis- backed down for the moment, the
siles or Iraqi "ainr.lft apin pose any allies will keep up the pressure by
mating it clear 10 Saddam that if
~ 10 allied aioaafL
JACKSON - Former Jackson
Fittwattr. in a written state- • the missiles in southern Iraq ~ re- County Commissioner Joe Conger
meat. said. ..Once apin Saddam installed in threatening positions, and his wife Mary Lo~t were each
Hu sein bas backed do- in the the allies will strike without warn- given six-month suspended jail
race' of coalitioo solidarity. iraq ing.
sentences and each Qrdered to pay
remains isolated and a pariah
$100 for court costs by Meigs
• Coumy Common Pleas Judge Fred
W. Crow III last week:
The couple pled guilty in Jack.
son
County Common Pleas Court
M.ElG S - Units of the Meip to Pleasant Valley.
to
one
count each of auem(ited vote
At 3:24 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
CQuoty Emergency Medical Sertampering
in last June's primary.
was called 10 The Maples for James
v~ responded to nill(: caiJs for
Th~
Congers
agreed to a plea bar~ on Friday at eaoty Sal- Travis who was taken to Veterans.
gatn
on
a
reduced
charge arising
The Middleport Fire DepartulllaY morning. .
from allegations made by the Jact:-61 Friday at 9:34 a.m. the Syra- ment and Squads and the Pomeroy son
County Board of Elections.
Squad
were
called
at4:33
p.m.
10
a
cq~: unit went 10 nird Strc:Cl for
The Congers, who reside in
MM)arel CouriU ...t1o was taka! 10 two-car motor vehicle accident at Wellston. were placed on ' nonRoute 7 and Hobson Road. The
Ple4sanl Valley Hospilal.
probatio~ and ordered to
:At 12:21 p.m. the 1\wldoy unit Middlepon unit uansponed Kiissa rcponing
have
nothing
to do with ballots
and Charles Divers and
WO:falled to ViiJa&amp;e .9n:en Apan- Mulford
other
than
those
of family members
mll)s for Todd Admnan. He was the ~eroy unit transported Kevin during that time.
t.:llrlll to Ve~m~DS Memorial Hospi- Goady. All were taken to Veterans.
Crow was appointed to hear the
At 6:05 p.m. Lifeflightl transp&lt;)ntal::
case
Jackson Common Pleas
The Middleport !lllil responded ed Grady and Mulford to Grant Judgeafter
William
C. Martin removed
1a Cheshire at 12:47 p.m. for Medical Center in Columbus.
himself
due
10
possible
conflict of
AI 10:18 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
Donny Saxoo ·who was blUl5jJOited
interest
Prosecuting
the
case was
was called to Second Street for
Hocking
County's
Charles
Gerken
Donald Jones who was ·transponed
after
Jackson
County
Prosecuting
10 Veterans. .
.
On Saturday at 2:21 a.m. the Attorney Mark Ochsenbein stepped
down forth~ same reason.
;(;LEVELAND (AP) - There Middleport unit went to Coal Street
for John Hess. He was taken to
we(e four tickets sold naming all
ri¥C: numbers drawn in Friday Holzer Mr,dical Center. At 5:25
nillf!t ' s Buckeye 5 drawing. and p.m. the unit returned for Hess who
cacJ! winning ticket is worth was then taken to Veterans and
later transptlfled 10 Children's Hos$1.00,000, the Ohio Looery said.
pilal
in Columbus.
·
:llcre are Friday night's Ohio
At 7:17 a.m. the Rutland unit
L&lt;lt'""' selectioos:
went 10 Main Street for Jack Cle·
!aDd who was transponed to Veter·

• •

*""'*'

Weather

I

Iraq now considered in
~ompliance with US demand

J~dge . Crow

gtves sentence
in voti.ng case
•

-

.Meigs .units responq to 9 calls
'

L!)tfery numbers

·.

Marren H. Ball

Cha,rge filed
LANGSVILLE - Deputies of
. the Meigs County Sheriffs Department arrested Ricky Priddy.
Langsville, on Friday on a charge
of domestic violence following a
call to the residence on State Route

124.

.

A repon from the department
stated Priddy is being held pending
a hearing in the Meigs County
Coun.
Also jailed Friday night was
David Priddy, Com Hollow Road,
Rutland, on a charge of driving
. under the influence. He will also
appear in Meigs County Coun.

Deportation hurts
peace chances .
JERUSALEM {AP) - Foreign
Minister Shimon ~eres said Satur·
day that the deportation of 415
Palestinians has hurl Israel's
chances for peace. and that the
main task now is to minimize the
damage.

Hospitill news
Veterans Memorial
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS • Den·
nis Hart. Pomeroy; Charles Divers,
New Haven, W.Va.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES
Helen Will. Glada Davis.

Clarification
MIDDLEPORT - Peoples Bank
in Mason County, W. Va. and The
Peoples Banking and Trust Co.
with a branch in Middlepon are
two separate banking institutions.
Clarification was requested by an
officer of the Peoples Bank in Middlepon after questions were raised
with employees there concerning
an embezzlement which took place
at the Mason County Bank.

Dissolution action
POMEROY · An action for dissolution has been filed by James D.
Houdashelt, ·Racine, and Nancy
Houdashelt, Barlow, in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.

Foster Bean

lUI~

COMMAND L. Leach, .GaUia
County's ·n"' engineer, was sworn in recently by Common Pleas
Judge Joseph L. Cain. Leach is the foi'IJier deputy director of the
Ohio Department of Transportation's District 10. Leach succeeded
four-term GaUia Engineer James P. Baird.

Seven rep~rted killed
in restaurant shooting
PALATINE, Dl. - Seven people were shot to dea!h at a fast-food
restaur,nt in suburban Chicago
officials reported today.
'
The bodies of the victims were
found in the meat cooler of a
Brown's Chicken restaurant in '
Palatine, 25 miles northwest of
downtown Chicago, said George
Cantrell of the Coole County medical examiner's office.
Police declined to comment on
the shooting or on a possible
motive.
··
Nursing superviSor Jeff Shaw at
Nonhwest Community Hospital
said police had indicated the victims were all employees who were
shot after the rcstauran~ closed.

No funds
POMEROY • The Ohio Department of Transportation in the Dec.
22 contract telling awarded 38 ·
highway improvement projects
totaling $62.8 million. None were
in Meigs or Gallia County.

couples to.wed
fi.e. five)

GALLIPOLIS -. The following
couples recently applied for marriage ~censes in the Gallia County
Probate Court of Judge Thomas
MouiiOII:
~
Alfred Lee Warren, 65, Gallipolis, and June L. Adams, 52, Ripley;
Robe rt Dwayne Herdman II, 28,
and Gwendolyn Sue Knox, 27, both
of Thurman; Robcu Eugene· Lee,
20, Gallipolis, and Stephenie Lynn
Peck. 19, Patriot;
Robert William Ayers Ill, 35,
Winston-Salem, N.C.; and Debra
.Kay Estep, 32, Patriot; Shane Jeremy Tackeu, 18, and Heather Mae
Raynor, 17. both of Gallipolis;
Randall Ellis Harrison Jr., 23, and
Leah Dawn Murray, 22, both of
Gallipolis.

· ®~

'"""" America Goes 'll Relax-

Judgments filed
I

s~~,·-·-.;_-

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POMEROY • A judgment for
the amount of $4,4 74.90 has been
fi.ted in the Meigs County Coun of .
Common Pleas by American General Finance. Inc .. Gallipolis,
against Jack A. Justis, Syracuse,
and Glenna A. Rummel, Syracuse.
Another judgment·filed is in the
amount of.$791.30 by Columbus
Southern Power against John L.
Richards, Reedsville ..

'

'

Gen~

H. Abels, M.D., Inc.
Arnold J. Sattler, M.D., Inc.
lalusa•y iubbiah, M.D.; Inc.
Gerald E. Vallee, M.D., Inc.

"

WILL BE ACCEPTING
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS!

Li£ense issued
POMEROY • A 111arriage
· license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to James
Russell Mills, 53 ,' Pomeroy, and
Sally Gail Sparks. 35. Pomeroy.

Man could face death penalty

Dolores R. Day

ZEN IX -VIDEO

MEDICAL PLAZA

Proudl' Presents•••

936 n. IT. 160

446·9620

Warlords are Housing.~._c:_on_.t_in_ue-'d_fr_o_m_A_.t_ _....,._ _ __
dents to contact her at992-6782 for total applied for must be matched
still powerfuJ ·additional
infonnation on the new by local
or business ownfunding program Or for Other busi- ers and Trussell as currently getting
KISMA YU, Somalia (AP) · Despite pleading from its populace,
American troops are preparing to
withdraw from one of the most brutalized places in this lawless land.

ness assistance.
Meanwhile, Trussell is completing work on the application for
funding for downtown revitaliza· lion through the Ohio Department
of Development. The deadline for
Twenty miles away in the bush, submitting an application for funds
Kismayu's most notorious warlord of up to $400,000 is Feb. 5. The
coolly bides his time - armed,
coiled and wailing.

fro"' the bank aboard our deluxe mo~n:oach. That eve~ing we'll

Kismayu. a deepwater port
south of Mogadishu, dramatizes 'the
dilemma that will confront homeward~ looking American forces in
coming weeks.

'

The next day, we'll travel to Edinburgh, Scotland..After visiting Edinburgh Castle and the Royal Palace we'll move on to the sceni
Troon and Lake Dlsbicts. .
.
.
.
•
c
.
'

UnwiUing to take on the role of
policemen, ihey have conftBCated a
' tiny percentage of Kismayu's
·weaponry. Their formidable show
of force has simply driven the guns
underground.

I

The following day, w,e'll ~?to Strat(ord on Avon in "ShaKespeare's Co~nny", where we will have accommodations for two ni hts
Among t~e places we _11 VISit are Anne Hathaway's cottageand Shakespeare's birthplace. Then il's6n 10 Bath for a visitto the fa~o ·
baths built by the ancaenl Romans.
us

Follo~ng a visit to mysterious ~t~ne'1enge, we'll return to London with a free evening to do whatever we wish! The next day, a city

. Since crushing the warlords is
not part or their mission, the U.S.
command in Kismayu gave the
local one, Col. Omar Jess, food,
·water and fuel to get out of town
with his weapons and 300 to 400
militiamen.

.

tour wall show us Big Ben, Westounsler Abbey, The Thames,the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace and shopping at Harrod's.
.
.
.
.
On our last day in "the Old Country•, we'll visit Windsor Cutlt (fire or no fire!) and be treated to a "medieval banq.u~t" atthe Beefeate
restaurant near the Tower of London.
r
'
·Joln us u we go 11\ searchof Mg~ times"ln Creat Britalnl Per-member price:$3,495 double occupancy, $3,750 single occupancy. Nonmembers add $25. $500deposit IS due by February 15, 1993. Final payment is due by Aprill, 1993. For lnform.tdon or reservations
pleue contact Mary Fowler at 675-1121. Peoples Choice Is a division of the Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant, Member FDIC.
'

.

No one is under any illusions
about Jess' intentions once fO!eip
troops leave or prove ineffectual
peacekeepers.

'

YOUR COST INCtjiDBs:
• 12 brealdasts
• J1 dinners, including medieval feast
• All admlaeions
• Travelers insurance, taxes, and baggage handUng
• Escorted by Mary Fowler, Peoples Choice Coordinator

I •

"Before I)Ulling out. U.S. fon:e~
have to eatalitish alcgilimatc polili·
cal SlnlCture and diann all sides.
Only the United States can do thla.
If il doe~n 't, things will revert 10
what they were before, or even
worse." said Ken Wood, of Cbat·
tanooga, Tenn., a IIIU'fer with the
relief agency World Concern.

...

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.GEM
STAR
. ..,,...,·"• Satellite Entertainment System
·~

••

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PLAYBOY .
COMING SOON!

•Compact 5' or

buildin~

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Med"Kal Shoppe

..

CHESTER
985·3301

A deluxe m~torcoach will be at o~r di~pos,al througho'ul our stay and local guides will accompany us every day. On our'first day in
•. England,':"'~ II tour the famous umvers1ty town of Oxford. Then il'son to York and Castle Howard where the televiSion series "llrid
head ReVISited" was filmed .
·
' ·
es-

• Pre--tour reception
• Motorcoach transportation to and from airport
• Round-trip airfare to London
• Motorcoach touring with local guides
• 12 nights superior hotel accommodations

a

Rev. B. L. Darst.

BAUM'
LUMBER CO.

Peoples Choice goes intema~onal in May wi tha once-in-a-lifetime journey to En81and and Scotland. From theallureof the sophisticated
captta\ to the. ch~rm of the p1cturesque countryside, you'll glimpse the ureal England" ... as they say, "London is England's pulse but
· '
the countrysade 1s her soul."

'

In talks with the Bituminous ,
Coal Operators Association. neither
the UMW nor the operators indicated what they considered 10 be
major issues in the lallcs.
•.
But B.R. Brown, chief negolii:
tor for the operators, contended that
the industry "is not in goocJ
health."
.
Coal prices have fallen while,
coal inventories "are at unaccept: •··
ably high levels," Brown said. He&gt;said the operatOrs need flexibility
in addressing new technologies and
market conditions.
It also is likely that the companies will ask for concessions in the. ·. :
health care benefits for worki~g_
miners. Under the current contrac~ '
the companies pay 1()() percent or
the cost of the miners • health insuc.ance plan. which has n(i ,
deductibles or co-payments.
. Trumka, the president of the
UMW, has said repeatedly that the ..
. union's major issue is job :;ecurit}."
for its members. Union miners now ·
produce only about one-third of the
nation's coal. Much of the rest is
produced by the non-union sub· :
sidiaries of companies represented
by the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association.
In 1984,lhe UMW and the Bitu- •
minous Coal Operators Association- •
negoliated thei{ first strike·free'&lt;•
agreement in more than 20 years: ' '
Another agreement without a ~
was reached in 1988, but that was
followed by a selective strike .
against The Pius10n Coal Group ip ~
1989.
.

Wade

· May 4·171 1993

As with all Peoples Choic~ lrips, we'll leave for the airport dir~ly
depart for our overseas fhghl to London.

Journalist killed

.

Stay Warm All Winter
For Just Pennies A Day.

~

• •

ROME {AP) - A reporter for a
. POMEROY -James~· Travis~ 67, 100 ?· Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Sicilian newspaper who covered
the Mafia was fatally shot in an
Born March 20, 1930, in Mason, s11e was daughter of the tate George d1ed Fnday, Jan. 8, 1993 an Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
Born March 12, 1925 at Newark, son of James Ross and Viola Ball anack that fellow journalists
F. and Edna A. (Theiss) Icenhower.
·
blamed on organized crime .
A former employee of Imperial Eleebic of Middleport, she was a mem- Travis, he was a retired tow truck operator. ·
Surviving
are
a
son,
James
Roben
Travis
U
of
Columbus;
two
daughGiuseppe Alfano, 47, apparently
ber of the Graham Methodist Chwch.
ters,
Rita
Garrell
and
J!lne
E~ans,
both
of
Vinton;
a
stepson,
Jack
Lee
stopped
his car for someone on a
SurvivOIJ include a~ and dauihter-in:~w. Ronnie ·L. and Stella IcenHenry
o~
Bull
Head
Cny,
Ari~.;
seven
grandchildren
and
three
greatquiet street about 100 yards fro!ll
hower of S'unbury, Oluo; daughter and son-an-law, Carolyn A. and Danny
Jeffers . of West Columbia· four grandchildren and three great- . gran~chddren; a brother, Wtlham Claggett of Eureka; a sister, Mary · his home near Messina, Sicily. on
Friday evening, news reports said.
grandchildren; three brothers~ a sister-in-law, Rev, John and Wyoma Trav1s of Ox~ord; an~ a spt;cial friend, Opal Tyree of Pomeroy.
A memonal semce will be announced later by the McCoy-Moore
. ...............................................................
~-~.
lceniiQwer, Letart, Freddie Ic:enhQwer, Charles Icenhower, both or Colum·
·
"
bus; five sisters and four brothers-in-law, Lenore and John Dillard of Mt. Funeral Home, Vinton.
Vernon, Ohio, Eleanor Knapp .of New Haven. Lucille and William Davis
of Middleport. Jane and James Chapin of Danville, Ohio, Delores and
Be~sie
~nald Gourley of Westerville, Ohio; four special friends, and several
meces and nephews.
·
. "Se,..,ing the patient and phy.Wion for
ATHENS-. Bessie Wade, 85, Athens, died Saturday, Jan. 9, 1993 in
She was preceded in death by a sister, Freda; .
Doctors Hosp1lal, NelsonviUe.
~
Oller 30 .yean."
.The funeral will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Foglesong Funeral
Born in Rutland, daughter of the late Charles and Bertha Pruiu
Home, Mason, with the Rev. Rex Young officiating. Burial will be in the Grover, she anended ~hool in Rutland and was a fanner employee of the
Sunrise Memorial Gardens.
Physical Therapy Services Available For:
Rambow Restaurant m Athens. She ,was a member of the United Pentecostal Church of Athens.
·
"·
•Consultation
•BIICkltleck Jntiii'IM
Surviving are a daug~ter and son-in-law, Virginia and Kenneth West
•Physical Capacity
of Af!'ens; !h"ee grandchildJ:en, Mrs. Randall {Teresa) Alldnson of Little
•Arthrltldunllls
Hocki~g. L•sa Wolfe ~f Norfolk, Va., and ,Todd West of Pon St. LuCie,
•Cybex ,Testing
•Athl«lc lnjwiea ·
CHESHIRE -Rev. Budd Lawrence Darst, 92, Cheshire, died early Sat·
Fl_a.; .s•.x great-grandchildren; two sisters, Mildred Ashcraft of Vinton, and
.Pre-employment
testing
•Stroke Rehabllbllon
urday morning, Jan. 9. 1993. at Overbrook Center in Middlepon.
~9_•ma McClelland of Rutland; and a brother, Douglas Grover of Rut•Adult
Fitness
oCardiiiC Relulbllbtloo'l
He was born April 30, 1900 in Cheshire Towrtship, a son of the late
Newton L. and Mary E. Rupe Darst. Mr. Darst was1a retired coal miner, a
•Pain Control (TENS)
oJolnt Repl8cernent
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clifford Wade in 1970· a
'· .
carpenter and·an ordained minis~r. He was the oldest member or the Ohio
•Work
Recovery
son, Ernest Hawkins; four sisters, Bernice Vanaman, Blanche.Eads, G:U.Rllhabll"-llon
River Valley Freewill Baptist Conference. He was a member of the Meigs
net Ead~ and J:!:elen McKee; and a brother, Dalton Grover.
Quanerly Conference and a member or the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
Servace.!! will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the lagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home,
HERMAN L.
MICHAELL
MARGARET
Church.
'
Athens, woth the Rev. Glen James officiating. Burial will be in West
DILLON
HEMPHILL
Mr. Darst is survived by five daughters and sons-in-law, Katie and Umon Street Cemetery, Athens. Friends may call at the funeral home
JOHNSON
Rev. William Curfman, Cheshire, Dorothy and Burdell Rife, Ridgway, Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
BOC
MS,AT
PT
Anna and·Roy E. Lemley, Reynoldsburg, Mary and Harry Stobart,
Racine, and Sarah and Dayton Spencer, Long Bonom;, 13 grandchildren,
32 great-grandchildren, nine great-great-grandchildren, and several nieces
and nepl),ews. •
·
.
. . , .;,;.. .
Bl:sides his parents he was preceded m death by h1s wofe, uertle Ward
PoliCe said Houser· admitted his
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Darst in 1974; three sisters and five brothers, a great-granddaughter, Shelinvolvement in the slayings.
Virginia
man
'was
charged
West
ley Smith; and a grandson, David Darst
'
•
with aggravated murder in the fatal
Services will be .Monday at 2 p.m. at the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
beatiilgs
of two women.
Church with Rev. Noel Herrmann and Rev. Miles Trout offJCiilting. Burial
Daniel
B. Houser, 19, of Scarbo,
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
W.Va
.•
was
indicted Thursday by a
Friends may call at Fisher Funeral HOme in Middlepo!l on Sunday
County
grand jury. He
Franklin
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.!ll. and one hour prior to the service at the church.
was charged with six counts
including rape.
'
!(. convicted, Houser could
receive the death penalty ot life in
BURLINGHAM- Dolores Ruth Day, 73, Columbus, died Friday, Jan. prison. He is being held.near his
~ometown w]:lile awaiting extradi8. 1993 at her residence.
uon.
Mrs. Day was a retired me~c.handising clerk [or Schoucnstein DepartHQuser is charged in the slayment Store. She was a member or the Indi;mola Church of Christ. ·
ings
of Stephanie Tussey, 20, and
Mrs. Day is survived by a son, Eugene (Maria) Nelson, and daughter,
Lori
Charles, .20~ both of ColumMrs. Fred (RoSalie) Johnson; nine grandchildren and 17 great-grandchil- bus, The
women were round dead
dren.
Nov.
18 in Tussey's home. Both
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ernest D. Day.
been beaten in the head.
Services will be Monday at 2 p.m. at the Burlingham Church in hadFranklin
County Prosecutor ·
Burlingham with Rev. John Mallinak officiating. B'urial will be in Michael Miller
said Houser was an
Burlingham Cemetery.
· acquaintance of
'women and
. Friends may call at the Schoedinger Linden Chapel, 2741 Cleveland y.-as in Columbusthe
when
the slayAvenue in Columbus; Sunday from 2-4 and 6-8, and one hour prior to ser- ongs occurred.
vices on Monday.
18.

The·M.edical' Plaza .Physidalfs

GALLIPOLIS

The lobby or the Pomeroy Post Office became
filled with patrons in sear~b of the popular
stamp which sold out one-half hour after it went
on sale,

James R. Travis

. WEST COLUMBIA • Blanche E. Bland, 62, West Columbia, W.Va.•
dib.ed Saturday, Jan. 9, 1993', at the home o{ her daughter in West Colum-

EFFE(TIVE JAN. 1, 1993

~ THE

ELVIS MAI'!IA • Meigs County participated in. the Elvis sta'"p-ma.nia on Friday along
with the rest of the CQuntry when the limited edi·
tion slamps or young Elvis went on sale at noon.

Blanche E. .Bland

f£ng{ancl/ScotfandJlo(ic£ay

ans.

G!JYSVILLE - Foster ~rewer Bean, 88, Guysville, died Friday
evenmg, Jan. 8, 1993 at the Kunes Convalescent Center in Athens.
.
Born in Guysville he was a son of the l~te Emery and Emma Brewer
Bean, A Conner Athens County Commissioner, Mr. Bean was a member
of the Guysville Methodist Church, the Guysville Savannah Lodge No.
466 where he was a 32nd Degree Mason, and the Shrine Club of Athens.
He was a former school bus driver for the Federal Hocking Local School
District and he was a retired real estate agent for the Athens area.
·
. Mr. Bean is survived by a sister, Norma Bryson, McArthur; two
meces, Ester Cassill, McAnhur, and Lenora Miltner, Strongsville; one
great-nephew, William Cassill, Wellston; two great-nieces, Linda Johnson, Fredrick, Md., and Donna Greenaway, Cleveland
•
Besides his parents Mr. Bean was preceded·in death by his wife, Freda
Parker Bean in 1985, three sisters and one brother.
Masonic services will be Monday at 7 p.m. at the funeral home by the
Guysville Savannah Lodge No. 466. Funeral services will be Tuesday at
· 11 a.m. at White Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial will be in the Tuppers
~laitls CJuistian Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the funeral home O!l Monday frpm 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.

'

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Continued from A-1

Services for Marrell' H. Ball,.63, Rio Grande, who died Tuesday, Jan.
6, 1992, w~re he!d Satur~y !I' the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. with the
Rev. Ronrue Lemley officuumg. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery.
Pallbearers .were Juruor Ball, Coy Edward Ball Gregory Douglas
Dale and John Ball.
'
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Comad ~ a top-level staff

shake-up that included two dismissals and a R•spension of a !bird
offiCial . .
.
Voinovich did not indicate
whether be believes the problems
in the Human Services agency have
been solved by Conrad, his chief
aide when Voinovich was mayor of
Cleveland from 1979 to 1989.
His statement referred 10 Conrad's ·"superb managerial skiDs"
and said that he. would .work well
with other Cabinet members to
carry out the mission of the Department of Administrative Services.
Last week, Conrad ftred Katb·
leen Boston , a $58,583-a-year
administrator, and Paul Guthrie.
who earned $60,899 a year as bead
of the Human Services Department's personnel division. .
He s~ded Robyn Matheson,
ah account clerk supervisor, for 30
days.
· Ms. Matheson was once married
10 John Ray, former fiscal officer
who was jailed for theft last year
after usin$ a state car on state lime
to take h1s girlfriend to an amusement park.

Sunday

OH-Polnt

J_!nuary 10~1993. .

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Pomeroy-Middlepon.;-Galllpolls, OH Point Pleeunt, WV

t'Tlmll Sentinel

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' 6' Antenna

commitments on what work needs
to be done and how much the
owner is willing 10 put into the project.
That commitment figure ,will
determine the grant amount for
which the village will apply, she
said.

•Easy
Installation
-certified
Performance

eCholce of
8 mounts

LETART CORPORATION

SHOWJIME.

•Made in U.S.A.

PLANT t 3
KANAUGA, OH.
UPPEH HT. I, HJST PAH BURLILE 011

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ALL FOR...

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP UP

$29!R~DIIH
$0

MWe Deliver aad Spread Umenone"

•Mason Sand.
•Concrete Sand
•Pit Run
•Drainage Gravel

•Top Soli ·

•Fill :olrt ·

MONEY DOWN!

•Shredded
Top Soli
•Straw

•Pea Gravel
-Drainage Tile .
-culvert Tile (all alzea up to 5")
•Block 1nd Mortar Mix

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f ' 1•

%f,tiLE WEST OF HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
OLD RT~ 35, GAWPOUS • 448-2411 or 1 800.17J.0311

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Commentary and persp~ctive

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. January 10, 1993 . :'
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junbg limes· jentinel
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ADl.Uionof
~NC.

llS Third Ave., Golllpolll, Oblo
(614) 446-1341

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992·1156

ROBERT L. WJNGETI

PubU.ber

HOBART WILSON JR.
ExeeutiYe 'Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstant Publlsber·Controller

MEMBER of The AISociated PreiS, and the American
Newspaper Publisben Association. ·
A

l.ETl'ERS Of OPINION ""' welcome. They should· be less than
300 wonla. All letterl ""' subject to editing and must be signed with
D&amp;me, address

an~

telephone number. _No unsigned letters will be

published. Letten obould be in good taste, addressing issues, not

JIO"'OIali)iel. .

Delegates ca'n VQte, but. only
when it doesn't count

Clinton's seconds and ·thirds .

Compared tQ Odysseus; Bill
Clinton had it easy. The legendary
Greek itinerant lost six men trying
to navigate his ship between two
competing shoals controlled by
Scylla and Charybdis.
When Clinton tried to navigate
his presidential-elect Cabinet
between a rock (white males) and. a
hard place (women and minorities),
· he didn't Jose any men. But censer·
. vative white males have forcefully
berated his judgment.
·
And what was his egregious ·
wrongdoing? Well, for the first
time since America's foundin~ in
1789, Clinton appointed a Cabinet
· that was not dominated by white
males. 0( his 15 Cabinet appointments, in fact, ~nly six were white .
males.
·
Columnists Evans and Novak
moaned that lite only reason distin·
guished foretgn-affairs scholar,
educator and busmess executive
Dr. Chfton R. w_ harton Jr. was
appoin~ deputy secretary of state
was skin color.

By WALTER R. MEARS
.
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Inside the Beltway, it makes perfect sense: There
are going to be five more people voting when the House does business
from now on, unless they change the outcome. ln that case, thetr votes
won'tcounL
That's the compromise that lined up a majority, all Democrats, to
change the House rules and gtant diluted voting rights to the five Demo·
cratic del~ates from the District of Columbia and four territories.
Republicans said they woulll go to court to seek a reversal. The precedents arc not promising; the courts usually try to stay out.of such congrcs·
sional questions.
.
"Good luck, fellows," said Eleanor Holmes Norton, the Disttict dele·
gate and architeCt of the rule change that got her a vote along with dele·
. gates from Pllerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam and American Samoa.
She said i~ was a question of fairness and democracy for all American
citizens, and also claimed momentum in her quest to make the eapitalthe •
51st state.
Republicans said it was anything but fair, halving their election gains
in the House, and granting Samoa, with 47,000 citizens, representation
comparable to !hat of members of Congress w~o represent an average of
just under 520,000 people. Then again, there are about 3.6 million people
in Puetto Rico, equal to six or seven congressional districts.
The political argument began a month ago, after the House Democratic
caucus decided to grant delegates the right to vote on legislation in whnt is
called the committee of the whole. Formally, that is the Committee of the
Whole House on the State of the Union, which means everybody. It is the
parliamentary forum in which the House does its legislative war~ .
That procedure - which dates from the first Congress and had its
roots in the British Parliament- avoids the more rigid formalities of the
House and speeds the legislative process. In the committee of the who1c,
100 members are a quorum for business. In a House session. opponents
can force delaying roll calls unlc~s there arc at least 218 members on
hand.
Republican protests and the defection of conservative Democrats led to
the compromi$e approved before the 103rd Congress convened on Tuesday. It guarantees that any action on which the five delegate votes are
decisive can be subject 10 another vote without tl'icm.
·
· That would be done by putting the questiQn to the House as the House,
not as the committee oflhe whole. The delegates can't vote in the House;
they acknowledge that wi&gt;uld take a constitutional amendment
When that question came up 22 years ago, l«lp. Thomas S. Foley, D·
Wash., now the speaker and a sponsor of the new rule, said it would rake
a constitutional amendmeni to gi.ve Puerto Rico a vote in committee of the
whole, 100. Foley's spokesman said he'd changed his mind.
The rules including delegate voting were approved by the House, 221·
199 as it organized for the new Congress. Twenty-seven Democrats voted
.against them.
·
Republicans were solidly opposed. Their noor leader, Rep. Robert ·
Michel of lllinois, compared it all to Franklin D. Ropscvclt's attempt to
pack the Supreme Court with extra justices who would approve his New
Deal measures.
·
·
"In my mind, this House-packing scheme is of the same ilk - the usc
of raw political power which can only be countered by popular outrage,' '
Michel said.
In cffcct,' the Republicans complained, the Democrats had just grabbed
back half the 10 scats the GOP gained in the 1992 elections. Michel was
moved to alliteration, saying this won't work in Walla Walla, serve in
Shreveport, do in Denver, sell in Sacramento or play in Peoria, his home

town.

Maybe so, but there was no sign of a political backlash. And chances
are the change won't make a whole lot of di(fcrence. Democrats control
the House, 259-176. aoyhow. •
.'
· Besides, any time the margin of approval or rejection is within. five
· votes. there will, in effect, be an automatic recount. Ms. Norton sa•d 99
percent of the Lime, that won' t happen bccauS(l the votes aren'tthat close.
And when the extta five do count, they won'! count.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics tor more than 30 years.

That columnist of Olympian
·erudition, George F. Will, was chagriued that Clinton had succumbed
to what he derisively condemned as

Chuck Stone
'.' quO!D games and math games."
But even sophisticateil racism is
no longer fashionable. To avoid
that ignominious label, Will con· .
cocted a brilliant prc-ef11ptive strike
by ironing out his favorite black
authority on black ·people, Shelby
Steele.
The scholarly Steele serves a
noble purpose for conservative
white males. By mercilessly flail·
ing away at what Steele calls black
America's ."victimization" syn·
drome, he gives right· wing ante·
diluvians a socially respectable
rationale for 'opposing black American's unfinished fight for complete
civil rights.
.
."We're not racists," they insist
with peacock serenity. "We're
only condemning black people with

,'
r

the logic developed by Shelby
Steele, and he is black."
.
Steele has come up With a tanta·
lizingly brilliant, but ultimately
superfi~ial. argument for opposing
eq,ual.~ghts for women and ethnic
mlllOCiues.
Stc~le c,~lls it "the new
soveretgnty . . These groups have
not earned a. ~eritocr~tic entitle·
ment to pos111ons of power. He
contends that the government con·
ferred these positions on them ex'
cathedra.
.·
.
,·
But that's American democracy
-our entire history is a history of
"new sovereignties." Beginning
with-the colonialists' separation
from Great Britain, successive
presidents and Congresses con·
ferred several "new sovereignties''
- emancipating slaves, ~ranting
women's suffrage,·proteeung labor ·
unions' right to organize, giving
special considerations for 1war vet·
erans and guaranteeing civil and
political rights fur minorities:
In 1993 for' the .first time a ·

'

president doesn't feel he needs .a
204-year-old
white . male .
"sovereignty" to hold his Cabinet
togetl\er. And that's what really
threatens the George Wills, the·
Arthur Schlesingers, the Pat,
Buchanans and the New Republic
magazine crowd - a loss of their,
MfWMS (most favored white ll)ale
Status). '
·
Consider how slowly Clinton's
competing new sovereignties have .
evolved. It was in 1933, 144 years
years after the nation's founding, .
that the 32nd president, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, appointed the first
woman to serve in the Cabinet,
Frances -L. Perkins, as secrewy of ·
latK!r;•
Thirty-four years .later, the 36th
president, Lyndon· B. Johnsoil ,appointed the first · black ·to the
Cabinet. Dr. Robert C. Weaver, as ·
secretary of housing and. urban
development.
·
.
Chuck· Stone is a .syndicated
writer for NeW$paper Enterprise
Assoo:iation.
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1992 -Honor 'Roll of Meigs ~nd Gallia Counties

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Irion, Lowen.·sanders, le{frey S. ton, Vernon ClelaQd, Carol Ann ver Walker, Herbie Lance, Hattie I
"Lest We Forget"
The individuals named herin Halley, C8r! Ray Wolford, Jesse E. Knous, Georgia F. Watson, Saxton, Opal Stanley, Helen Jenli:·
departed from this world during the 'starcher, John E. Lambert, Cecil A. Eleanor A. Werry, Carl A. Young, ins, Les;ie Steele, Olivet Crooks,
calendar year, 1992. Special recog- Miller, Roy Neal Saunders, Lois Ora M. Sinclair, Gaynell Clark, Paul Brewe.r, Nailmi Prueui, , '
Buena Gnicser, John Edward CIU'!. Blanche Fitch, John Colwell, Ftine •
nition is hereby given to each indi·
vidual. May God Bless the out·
Cledith E. Johnson, WH!iain E. Davis, Mellie'Kempet, Arlena Cot· '
standing achievements of the indi·
Swatzel, Elsie Mae Easter, Sadie trill., Robert Farlcy, 'Kenneth L. I
Catheine Chaney Davidson, Edith Knor, Robert Thomaschek, Ruth !
victuals and his or her contribution
to the history of our counties. For Alyne Osbourne, Harrel Ivan VirginiaRyther,.Albert V.Hoffner, Smith, Da&gt;'id Dunn, Lloyd Neil
this reason we are placing each one Miller, Kathryn Hall, Doris B. Evelyn Boggess, James w. SuUle, Ring, James Leonard Dash. Anna
on our 1992 Honor Roll.
·
Gilmore, Delcje Forth, Fredrick W. Charles F. Wildermuth, kristen Knight,. Lucy Hartsook, F.Iorence
Delamar Swain, Helen Cald· · Gregorich, Elmer C. Gillingham, Mae Randolph, Nellie LOuise Sar· Quickie, Roger Turner, ,Donald •
well, Effie Sanders, Virginia Florence A. Baldwin, Mildred
Elm · M E 1 Lo · v McPherson, Virginia Riedel, James
Ch
gent,
a E.
ae Dailey,
PP. e. Murl
utseHart· Hamilton, John Evans, Ethel Gor·
Burke, Robert Burke, Elma Bailey, . Barry, Earnest R. "'--k
"""' , aries H. Dixon, Marie
Bernard Bay, William Hobart Brumfield, Derick M. Johnson, Wood, Kermit (Hall) Frost, Johnie shin, Maxwell Barnes, Ralph Triv·
Swartz, Osie Henderson, Raymone Barbara A. McCalla, Gene Allen · L. Evans, Gladys Joan Vaughan, ett, .Dadie Cooper, Daniel Morris,
Vineyard, Mary Swain, Harold Duke, Clenna B. Edwards, Beartice Garnet Mae Drenner, Marie Alan George
McGhee,
Ruby
,Sedgwick, John Brewer, Augusta E. Evans, Mary Ann Sommer, John Beegle, Delmar James Logan, Cartwright,Mayland Isaac, Larry
Bam han, Mary Buchanan ;-Kenneth Michael Sommer, Richard C. Cald· Georgia Pauline Rose, Waid L. Skidmore, William Staton,. Ralph
Bi ssell, Larry Baker, Georgia well, Kathryn G. Cauer,.Ada M. Spencer, Robert w. Cundiff. Wiseman, Cresa Burke,. Rae
Mays, Frances Sheets, Eula Ward Acord, David L. Jamison, Alice Charles Blake.- Roger Wayne DeWitt, Emma Reynolds, .Thelma
and Warren Pickens.
Rowley Brooks, Roy Gladman, Grimm. Kristen Ray Grimm, Mary Campbell Lee, Edgar Lee Hawk :
Thomas Kemper, Grover Hill, Lullia Wise, Allene Raike, Charles Norma Cheatham, Alice V. · and Worthy BrighL
·
•
Wallace Kemper, Theodore Henry B. Berry, Gayle Mullen, Gary D. Koenig, Marjorie Manuel, .Wan8a
Jewell 0. Massie, William j
Allhof, Sr., Michael Anthoney Drummond, Mildred J. Jordan. L. Lyons and Margaret Faye Hut· Dewey Burk, Evelyn Ann Born· 1
Davi s,
Syna
Harringron Gladys E. Johnson, Lena Criner, ton.
·
·
. gardner, Martha Effie Ci'ouse,Allie !
Yokokawa, Matthew Burns, Milton . David Allen White, George W.
Emma Mae ~pman, Freda L. Carman, Bennett Saunden, .Edwin :
Massie, John B. Rippey, Johnnie Tope, James Tredway, Jr., Jersule Elllm, Nora B. Pearson, Betty L. Otho Suiter, Arthur W. Wroblews- •,
Hagans, Elizabet,h Lee Barker, F. Sigler, William Young,.Joseph Laudermilt, Hugh P. Custer, ki, Dallas .La!"rence Elliott; ·Ruth •
Bertha Fay Baylor, Mary Margaret A. Gibbs, George White, Clarence Maude Betz, Elmer (Bake) Proffitt, B. McGuue, Lana Joy jtussell, •
Howell, Edward Clark, Mildred A. Miller, Gerald W. Dennison, Herbert Johnson, William E1 Quiv·· Ramon 0. Bomgardner, Nan. A. •
Fish, Eva Amsbary. Dorothy Hask· Dixie R. Henrik;sen, Harold F. ey, Ulla Strauss, Dora Smith, Carl Lanier, Leonard Ambers Vaughan, '
ins, Hauie Maynard, Claude Miller, Watts, David L. Massie, Sharon F. Hendri,cks, WHliam Krack· Edna Pearl Cook,ll'iolet Virginia
Rosa Serpte Jones, EvelyQ Hart· Lee Burnett, Sidna Hall, Miles•A. · omberger,GeorgeC. Rowley,Mar· Evans, George Ernest Woodyard,
ense Epling, Vernon Tucker Grum- Johnson, Floyd E. Folden, Lillie M. garet Lucille Rupe, Norma-Jean Thomas E. Ragan, Luella Bradbling, Rilla Frances Rusk, Lois B. Stewart, Richard H.. Fischer, Stevens, Ho.ward M. Lawrence, bury, Herman Skaggs, Jda Mae •
Riley, Bori s Brashich , Dina Charles W. Casey, Huldah F. Gor- Zelpha M. Stewart, Paul Arthurs. Gillenwater, Ruth ~; Brown; Myel :
Howard, Chester E. Myers, Willie don, Douglas 0. Clonch, Jr., Lester Lincoln Russell, Alta Murray, Benton Robens, Dorothy Laven· :
White, Hattie Redith Saxton, John D. Angell, Valeda Lewis, Rachel Mary Jane ll.ill, Celia Hite, Violet der, William E. Province, Joe~. :
Frederick Diddle, Everett McMa· L. Bickle, Mary A. Clay, Bruce B Brewer, Bennie Dewey Lyons, Sylvia Burnette, Thomas E. Butler·
hon, Ruth Murray, Louie Varga, McDonald, William K. Faulkner, Dale C. Congrove, Walter Bentz, field, James S. Miller, Esther
Coty Alan Conn, Elberta Jane Effie J. Mayes, Mary C. Martt, Mill( Folmer, Alia Hensley, Clara Gilmore, Daniel R, Wagoner,
Jarvis, Shennan Kemper, and· Vir. Joseph Aaron Burmfield, Bertha I. Custer, Franklin Rizer, Catherine Martha Faye Mooney, Lenna Ethel
ginia Dean.
Dillon, Morgan N. Saunders, Frank Mees, Millard C. Jones, Charlene Brumfield, Thelma M. Boswell,' l
David Edward Arix, Dorothy Tabor, Gary E. Lunsford, Robert McClung, Ralph K. Smith, William Otho P. Belville, Sara E. Gillespi~ •
Perry, Joseph.\Rupe, Jr., Clinton G. Caldwell, Ray "Speedy" Belch· Franklin Reeves, Barbara D. Betz- · Ted B. Perry, Pauline F. White, . :
Douglas, Pearl Estep ; Caroline er, Orlyn R. Cochran, Geor~e Fos- ing. Clifford E. Young, Sr., Owen Goldie Matney, Nella V. Taylor, i
Wert, Timothy Workman, Albert ter, Fred Beman and Patncia R. F. Dailey, Alban L. Taylor, Leora Raven Lejean Virginia Qarnes, I
Price, Virginia Porter: Esther Howard. ·
M. Young, James C. Council, Gre- Ernest E. Tonkin, Harry W.Shock· •
.. Dixon, Thomas Smith, Jr., Cecil
Nancy Sullivan, Betty J. Dud· gory Sanerfteld, Charles P. Bailey, . ley, Joe Nickle LawsoiP, Mary• :
Hoyd, Anna Cline, Earold Dean ding, Goldie L. Ingels, Buddy Virgil L. Hill, Sadie S. Turner, Otis Kathleen Bostic, Carl Donald Joy," '
and Murl Galaway.
Keams, Lola M. Weaver, Freda H. McClintock, Nora Carroll, Fredcr· Stella M. Saunden, Horace E.
Dorothy ·M. Demosky, Florence Warth, Roy Curtis McClure, Edwin ick A. Billingsle~. John (Jack) Dewitt,
Well, Marcella M. Coleman, Ruth ·B. Roush. Margaret Fox, Carl Gene Scarbrough, William T. Evans,
Eunice E. Keffer, Joseph W.'
P. Dunbar, Caleb N. Manley, Mary Sauvage, Burwell S. McKinney, Murl L. Douglas, Luster Ash, Stewart, Bobby L. Schoonover,'
Gibson, Virginia F. Eastep, Sylvia John Young, Jr., Madalena Neut· Martha V. ~orre and Floyd R. Martha Leon Reapp, Ora M.arie
B. Blake, Jenevee F. Chesher, Don· zling, Gabriel S. Ohlinger, Gerald· Farra. ,
·
,
REdupeh. WSh,anda KF. ThomaS, Nettie'
aid W. Mills, Andrew T. Hood, ing E. Layne, Orris E. Harris, Cora
John Lochary Chase, Florence
tt
eets, ranees Danner;
Melvin R. Cremeans, Barbara J. M. Fry, Kathryn M. Johnson. Eliza L. Smith, p)adys L. Taylor; H. Delores H. Bush, Ode Manson ,
Smith, Eunice M. Christy, Marie E. Jane Roush, Edna A. Icenhower, Scott Shank,. Charles A. B~gess, Beaver, Joy Gaye Straigh_t, Thelma ~
VanCooney. Raymond G." Justice, Woodrow L ·. Foreman, Wanda N. Sr., Florence E. Baer, cathenne S. Lamm, Grace I. Wood Monroe,, 1
Domingo R. Alverado, Garneu K. Kapp, Essie1F. Gibbs, Harold M. Birteher, Marlin J. Morris, Eliza Flossie Russell, Jewell Shata, Mar· 1
Ashley, Lois A. Pauley, Michael D. Winnings, Themla M. Scally, Hayman, Emily Pickens, Helen guerite Kail, Roy 0. Sibley, Clay·' '
Hindy, Gladys M. Lewis, Lillian B. Clyda M. Fields, Thomas G. Red· -Crabtree, ira G. Roach, Jr.;Richard · tOn Miller, Joseph Eugene Fender- :
King·, Mary V. Overturf, Robert L. man, Okey Van Meter, Jr., Ralph Merrill Reuter, Arthur Allen Sto· ·bosch, Jon Eric Frownfelter, Clin- · •
Gilmore, Frances M. Sman, Ernest Ty Cartwright, Lloyd F. Gibbs, ban, James W. E. Hawley, Colter ton E. Smith, Imogene F. White; :
E. Perkins, Audrey D. McQuidd, Ronald L. Clendenin, Helen F. H. '!:layman, Roy Allen Sayre, Ruth Evans. John W. Bradbiuy," !
• Mary L. c;ro· Roben G: Painter. Kimes , Elsie Jane Bennett. Sue Michael D. Hannon, Donald Barry · John David Prose, Oley Z. Angel, •.
Clarence • Boyles, Alma E. Kell, Kara.and Greta Lewis, Larry Allen, Florence Leifheit Windon, Joseph E. Jackson, Harry A: Betz,
Miller, Edi E,_King, Tierza M. Clark, Charles E. Knapp, Jack W. Harold L. McClaskey, Alleyen . Alva E. Chapman, Wayne Leo 1
Thomas, Virgene E. Elberfeld, Dal· Frey, Dennis...R, Boston, Sr., .Frances Rees, Carl Thomas Roach, , Shaver, Lawrence Lee, Camille I
cJ.as "Chief" Blevins, Robert V. Lucille C. Cundiff, Ray M. Roger Neal Buckley · Agnes L
Monee Stokes, Malissa Childs,
Haggerty, Viviene M.Bin~, Roger Weaver, Ethel J. Drake, Leona M. Mowery, Eula M. El~m. John J: · Edna Mat:ie Hencr. ~eHie ScarlJer.
V. Athey, Kenneth M. T1emever. McFarland, Eber Roush, Charles Fick and Russell M.. Cline.
,
r ry, Curtts Har!tngton, 9r1 E".
Rodney F.Downing, David w. W. Hargraves, "Jt., Paulint; .Jeffers,
Russell G'. Eshelman, Joseph Drummond. E;d1th Frances Saun- . :
Darst, Roben K. Canaday, Guy H. Anna Louise Sherman, Mary Mae. S~huler, Sr., Binda,A. Diehl, Vona ders. Carter. Sandlin, Kathe~ne :
Shuler, Bessie M. Haddox, Kath· Roush, Jack Orland Hesson, Alice Glllenwaler Anna Hart Connie Rucker, Shtrley Jones, Donald . •
'leen "Katy" Anthony, William B. J. Clark, Russell A, Lewis, Mash, Theron E. Morris: Rosalie Kei.tb Lam!'!, David Lee Thomas,
Ledlie, Stella E. Thomas, Etoilla L. Genevieve Roush, James R. Han· C. Nk;bols, Ju~ior E. Preston, Veva Em~ Lewts Baker, He!~ Mildred
Cassell, Raymond S. Conkle, Betty ley, Glenn Huffman, Otis W. Hes· V. Searles; Pad! E. ·Van Meter, Harnson, Audr~y Hednck, Gary ·
Archer, Vida Green and Ruth . son, Donald Lee Phillips, Elsie /li.. James C Wyatt, Dwight"Milhoan Lee C~r. Bess1e H. Shafer, Max· ~
Schramm.
Lieving, Chlorus J. Herb, Okey J. Charles
Jr., Robert B. Black: ine Wells Robinson. " .
,.
•
Ruth G. Tewksbary, Helen G. Howard, Jr, Betty Roush, Helen Nichotas Grueser, Kasey .Ann
The wnter apologtzes 10
:
KennedY,, Clarence J. Stevens Gibbs, Lillian M. Smith, Marion L. Hysell, Eva McKinney, Carl S. advance i.f a name~ been ~itled
:
Henry 'Bill" Durst, Steven E: Rayburn, Leo F. Young, Sr., Leona Ntchols, Sr;, Everett A. Pierce, or there ts an eiTOr m spelltng. In
:
Gray, Frances 0 . "Dar• Anderson, Varian, Gerald L. Man:. ·Kalie Van .Cecil E. Searls, Anna E. Sprague, the. ev~nt '!'ere. are any errors or" ', ...
Virginia V.. Hartley, Gloria "May- Meter, Leroy B. Roush, Sr., Eddie ·Bernice Willford' and Cash Zim· · omilsstons tn· this ltst, do not besi· ..
belle" lhle, Mary K. Kauff, MyrUc Casto and Megan Morrison. · '
merman.
tate to contact e.ither the paper ·or ·- !
F•fe, Erma L. Turnbull, Hallie M.
Cressa F. Brown, Nadine Noble,
• Mae Railce MOITOw, Shelby E. myself.
, .
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Zerkle, Ralph R. Pratt, Theodore Mlltine Robinson, Elma F. Bailey, Belisle, Larry Lee Harris, Geneva
IN GOD WE TRUST
"Ted"Riley ,. Sr .. Ora E. White, Murl V. Gal.away, Orlyn R. Fisher.~W. flensott', Thomas
FredW, CJoW
Robert L. Lewis, Sr., Velsia M. Cochran, Sr., Sharon Sue Huffman, D. Cremeans, Billy Craig, Blanche
I would like to thank the followc ,; w '
Roush, William D. Stewart, Clerc Leroy Roush, Sr., Dr. David L. 1.1c:Calla, Berniece A. Clait, Robert ing funelal homes for their help in o~.','!
M. Baker and Grace Welch. ·
Thomas, . Cash Zimmerman, - L. Kiesling, Christl A. Halley, Bert accumulating the names on this -" ,,
Fredrick L. Fellure, Lucille S. Bernard D. Bay, Samuel 0. Hoff. · Cottle, Otta P. Clair, Sr., Ishmael Honor Roll. Ewing Funeral Horne, .•;11
Rathburn, Dowie Williams, Ray E. man. Gertrude J. Fork, Clarence
Gillespie, Owen Ed Lewis, Albert Rawlings-Coats-Fisher Funeral • r.;,h
FricM, Mabel G. Triplett, Gerald Hammer, Floyd G,. Wessel, Jess1e Eugene Nance, Pribble Nell Wil· Home, Birchfield Funeral Home, '. •
E. Walker, Melburn. C. Tackett. Jones, Alice Beegle, Gary Lee son, Charles R. Kiesling, Jessie 0. White Funeral Home, Foglesong ":J': .
Mary Margaret Arnold, Mack D. C8rg~. Russell Cline.
. ·
Hoffman, John A. Simmons, Stan· Funeral Home, Bij!ony·J ordan ·"'t '
Williams, Denver Lee ·Green,
Earold Dean, John Pick, Janice ley Moore, Walter L. Danner, Fqneral Home, Wtllis Funeral ,, ,.,
Dorothy Lee Massie, Harold E. L. Gorby, Hele~ M. Harrison, Bdw•4 John Swidenlci, John C. Home, Waugh.·Halley:wooci .;
Ferrell, Nellie Pearl McGuire. Jean Audrey M. Hedoclc, Oeorae R. Stewart, Jlealricc Strow, Donald J. Funeral Directors, Cremeens .·· ~·
M. COle. Lillian Williams; Homer Noble, Betty Jane Woodall, Gary Lambert, Avonell R. Wells, Anna Funeral Chapel Jl!l(l McCoy-MoOR ,_,,,
McCulty, Betty Marie Betz, Harry Lee, Lorain Wilcoxen, James WauaJI, Erma J. Colley and David Funelal Home.
· · : .,
Lewis Bates , Gomer Frances Gatagola, Qrace Welch, Betty Pullz.. Carryon.
'" "·"
Smith, Emil C. Janko, John Joseph Hammer, Cllirence E. Hammer llld
Lorain Wllcbxen, I ames GarafoEditor's note - Lona·thlie . , ,Jones, Olga A. Manowes, Charles Oiatles Vaughan. . 1
Ia, Grace Welch, Betty Hammer, • Attorney Fred W, Crow 11 Ute '''"'"
M.Sanders.
Wallace,Garnet
Cbarles A. ChafCee', Herbert L. Clarence E. Hammer, William contrlbator or a wukly cola•• •; ~i
Howard A. Browning, Gary Jtoech, Sayre,. Ardith T. Baron, Lillian H. White, George Northup, PJlkmell ·ror The Sunday TIJDa.SendneL """'
Douglas M. Mason. Augus~us Napper, Edgar B. Brewer, Mabel Miracle, Wayne Raclcey, Rhonda Readen wlalllna to appla~ crlt· ·
Steele, Emerson B. Bing, Jr., Shields, Arlin J. Frerich, ij:enry Elizabeth Cardwell, John ~~e lebe or eommeat oa any Abject '"''
Charles B. Van Sickle, Dessirea ·(coke) Monon, Robert B. Pilnell, Moriarty, Howard SlmJIIOn.
I (except re111loa or poUtle~).:tlre ••l•ll
King, Loris M. Barlow, Charla E. Tina Jacobs, FlQta Cross, Susan Harlca, Miry Hall, Lucy Lambert, encouraaed to write to Mr, , '.,:
Cochran, Lloyd Blake, Sadie G. Emily Lewis, Alice Amelia Stock· Glady~ Snous, Oelben Davis1Den· Crow, In car• otlhiiiiiWipaper, , ,.

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FredW. Crow

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Berryls World

Tyree,

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"Unlike President-elect Clinton, I prefer to think itr
terms of 'sexual quotas' - not 'gend_er balance.....

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January 1o, 1993

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~:J~-~~~~~~::~~::~~~~~~~~P~o~m~e~ro:y~~~AI~d~d~le~p~o~rt~G~a~ll~lpo~ll=s,:O:H~~P~o~ln~t~P~Ie~a~~~n~t~,W~V~~==~======~S~u~n~d~a~y~n~m~e~s~Se~n~tl~n:ei~P~~~~A~S :
r

Local News in Brief.·-...., Test burn .
.
Man arrested by police
.
t
~
.
a I act1I ty
was.
WJDS OK
...

. GALLIPOLIS- A Gli!Jipolis man was. arrested by the GalliJl(r
!ts Pohce De~arunent Saturday morning after allegedly breaking
mto a Galhpohs residence.
James Lee Games, 23, of 1801 Third Ave .•
charged with
attempted burglary and no operatllrs license
. • Benila ~enson •. 34, of 228 Third Ave., rdpc&gt;rled to police that she
. heard a nmse outstde her house around 2 p.m. and saw a black male
weanng a tof?oggan outside of the residence. She then repottedly
called the pohce !!fter hearing a subject in her dining room.
Garnes, weanng a toboggan, was arrested soon after when an
.o.fficer observed Garnes' yeUow Volkswagen Rabbit run two stop
stgns, a re~n s.tated. The car's headlights were reportedly off.
Games IS bemg held m the Gallia County Jail.

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EASTJ..IVERPOOL (AP)•' •
The U.S. Environmental ProteCtion
••
Agency announced Friday that it
:•
had given its approval to a plan for
'
••
a test burn at a hazardous waste
••
incinerator.
••
••
The approval was the fmal regu1:
latory requirement which operators
I:
of the Waste TechnoiQgies Industries incinerator faced before pro·
•••
ceeding · with the test butn.
GALLIP~LIS.- Deputies of the Gallia County Sheriff's
I
••
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Approval already had been
Depanment mv~sllgated two reported assaults Friday ni~ht.
received rrom the Ohio EPA.
'
Peggy Muld!n· 45, of 17225 State Route 7, Crown Ctty, reported·
'
'
The
EPA
also
said
Friday
that
••
Saturday ~ommg that a lnale subject J!UShed her daughter and a
••
WTI wouldn't be allowed io begin
::ond subject assaulted her hitsband. Bill, .at Scott's Bar near Eure·
commercial operation until it met
specific
requirements for incinera'.••
Robinson, Mt."fzion Rd., Patriot, reported she was
tor effectiveness. The trial burn is
••
assaulted by her husband, ~gar Ro.binson, Friday night She also
to
be
monitored
by
technicians
'
reponed thaf her daughter was assa.ulled.
'
from
the
U.S.
and
Ohio.EPAs;
EPA
Mr. Robmsof!, 54, was arrested by deputies and placed in the
••
'
Region 5 Administrator Valdus
T~G TJ:IE BENCH- WilliamS. MeiiGallta County Jail on a charge of domestic violence.
Jhe Bible used in the ceremony. Medley had
I'
J~y, r~ght, new Judge or the GaUipolis Municipal
Allamkus said in a news release.
been a member or the.Emerson E. Evans College
•••
Court, was SWQr!J in as part or an honorary cer·
. ''The decision to approve the
of. Business Management faculty for more than.
emony Thur~day at the University of Rio
mal bum P!f!D has been a very diffive years prior to his appointment to the munic. GALLIPOLIS -An employee at Johnson's Market on Vine
R10
Grande
Community
College
by
Grande
and
ficult
one,
Adamkus
said.
"In
ipal bench. A reception for Medley followed the •
Street, Gallipelis, reported a male s~bject stole cleaning supplies
•
Probate-Juvenile
Judge
Thomas
S.
Moulton.
Dr.
making
it.
I
have
been
fully
aware
ceremony.
· from the store Friday evening.
·.
•
Barry M. Dorsey, president of Rio Grande, held
of the company's rights as well as
Accor!lirtg to a police report, a Gallia County Sherifrs Depan·
the
local
cpmmunity's
expressions
·
ment deputy observed the S!lbject place the items under his jacket
•,•
or
deep concern atK!ut the health
and leave the Store without paying for them.
.
.
impacts of incineration and the ,
..
~ves
need for jobs.
.
J
"By allowing the trial bum to
Gi\LLIPOLIS - The following people were arrested and placed
take place - but requiring cenifi.
.
y
in the Gallia County Jail overnight:· Douglas C. Brafford, 28. 173
cauon prior to even limited comCardwell Rd., Thurman, Saturday morning by the Gallia County
mercial operation - I have done
Shenfrs Departme.nt on charges of no operators license and failure
~y
~Ito fulfill my legal responsi·
I •
to dim highbearils, released after posting bond; Dirk Banrum, 23,
b1ltty m thiS matter," he said.
Route 2, Box 9Q, Crown City, Friday evening by the sheriff's
WTI officials couldn't be
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
department on a charge of disorderly conlluct after warning,
reached for comment Friday after·
House
will hold hearreleased after posting bond; James Lee Garner, see related story
. noon..A secre~ said all managers ings onapparently
a
bill
to
prevent
Dr. Jack
"Man arrested by police;" Edgar Robinson , see related story
were m a meenng.
"Deputies examine &amp;Ssliults:"
~evorkian
of
Michigan
from
help·The incinerator operators had
Charles E. Cochran Jr., 24, of 1012 Third Ave., GaUipolis, was
mg
people
commit
suicide
in
Ohio.
said earlier this week that they
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelarrested Frillay evening by the Gallipolis Police Depanment on a
would proceed· with a test burn
ersburg,
said Friday he will order
charge of domestic violence and transported to Middlepon Jail.
tentatively set fOr Jan. 13, once fed:
hearings
if a bill is introduced
· In addition, Sheila Lynn Springer, 38, of 136 Springer Rd., Gal·
era! EPA. approval ·had been
although
he's not sure how w~
lipolis, was jailed Friday evening on municipal coun order for a JO.
obtained.
would
vote
on it.
d8y driving under the influence commitment
The move llllgered opponents of
He
noted
reports that Kevorlcian,
the plant, whO said the operators
who
has
helped
eighi terminally ill
·were rushing to conduct ihe test
women
commit
suicide, said he
· · DARWIN - No injuries we~e reported after a one-&lt;:ar wreck on
bum before President-elect Clin·
may
.come
to
Ohio
to help a sick
U.S. 33 near .Darwin Friday around 3 p.m.
ton's administration takes over.
pattent
because
the
state
has no Jaw
According_to the Gallia,Meigs Post of the State Highway Pauoi
Vice· President-elect AI Gore has
against
helping
someone
commit
Cfaig W. Kingery, 19, of Kerr, was eastbound on U.S. 33 when th~
said he wantS the General Account~uicide.
He
has
not
identified
the
left-front lire blew out on the 1992 Chrysler LeBaron he was driv·
ing Office til take another look at
person.
mg.
.
the plant.
Michigan .~as passed a tempoA spokeswoman for the enviThe car went off the right side of the toad and snuck a ditch the
report said.
.
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ronmental action group Green- !)llY law bannmg the practice pendDamage to the car, :owned by Jim Mink Auto Sales, GaUipolis
peace, Beth Newman, said Ft:iday mg a special study of the legal and
was listed as light
.
:
tJ!at Adamkus' decision was "a other issues it raises. ·
Riffe, D· Wheelersburg, noted
slap in the face not only to the stat·
'•
that
several Ohio lawmakers have
.I
ed intentions of the Clinton-Gore
administration but the residents of said they plan to introduce bills.
· OALJ.,IPOLIS - A Point Pleasant, W.Va.; man was cited for
On Thursday, following news
the Ohio River valley."
failllfC to maintain assured cleat distance after a two-vehicle wreck
stOries
that Kevorkian may come to
on O~io 7 near Ga~ipolis Frillay around 7:10p.m. ·
"I feel mat the liming indicates
Ohio,
Sen,
Robert Nettle, D-Bar·
how frightened' both WTJ and the
'.;~.b1r~y, .,.. Col~n~, 3~; 26940 Apple Grove-Dorcas Rd1, 'Racine,
benon,
l!"d
Rep.
Dale V3!1 Vyven,
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Wa,'l northbOund on Oh1o 7 and stopped to make ·a left turn onto · · current EPA ·bureaucrats are about
•
Rand Avenue. A following car, driven by James A. McClanahan
the upcoming GAO investigation " R-Cmcmnati, said they plan to ·
"
introduce legislation.
·
·
1
she
said. ·
'
SI, .Point Pleas~nt; failed lD stop and struck the rear of Collins
Riffe said Sen. Grace Drake, R·
· v ~htcle, accordmg to a repon from the Gallia-)'deigs Post of the
Solon,
and possibly others also are
.•1,
State Highway Pab'Ol. · .
·
consideringintroduoingproposals
.
. No injuries were reported. Damage to Collins' 1978 Ford Econo·
The first bill introductions are
OPE'N
hne van and McClanahan's 1991 Chevrolet Cavalier was listed as
,.
expected Wednesday in the newly
moderate.
£1
'JJ cconvened Legislature. ·
SUNDAY
The Catholic Conference of
snoe srore
1 TO 5
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Oh!o 51!id ~urSday it plans to have
George
Voin4tvich
on
Friday
legtslauon
mtroduced
on
its
behalf
:•
GALLIPOJ.;JS_- F~ur deer-vehicle collisions were reported Fri~a.y by the Galha-Metgs Post of the Stat~ Highwar,Patrol. No
banned
·~----------------------· · :.r
~ ,.
and
cars.smoking in state buildings to make assisted suicides a fe_Jony.
. He said his executive order
IDJunes were reported.
..
'
James A. Melton, 56, Hurricane, W.Va., was eastbound on U.S. · would take effect after meetings
"·'
35 near Rio Grande around noon and struck a deer with the 1988
wllh employee unions and other
Ford L9000 he was driving. The track jackknifed off the right side
arrangements. He did not specify a
of th~ roadway, sustaining moderate damage.
.
target date.
·
·J
. . Rtchard J. Mershon, 22, Patriot, was westliound on U.S. 35 near
The ban would expire when he
: •:
·R10 Grande around 6:20 p.m. and snuck a deer that ran ·onto the
leaves office or if he should rescind
roadway. Damage lD Mershon's 199l ·Dodge Shadow was listed
moderate.
·
The order covers state buildings
·
·. Wesley K. Cochran, 28, Langsville, was westbound on Ohio 554
and
it vehicles, whether the state
tn Morgan Township in Gallia County around 7 p.m. when he
owns them .or leases them, except
struck and kiUed a deer that attempted to cross the roadway. Damfor
rcstdenual ljl"eaS of universities
. age to"9ochran's 1989 Ford Ral)ger was listed as moderate.
and certam other institutions
•
Chnstopher I. Nelson, 26, Bidwell, was northbound on Ohio 160
..•'
inolud!ng J?risons.
· '
near Bi~well around 9:30 p.m. when he struck and killed a deer
Vomovtch ctted a U.S. Environa~temptmg to brass the road. Damage to his 1992 Buick Skylark
mental
Protection Agency report,
was listed as moderate.
.
released Thursday, that said as
many as 3,000 people a'year die
from "passive smoking" - inhal·
ing cigarette smoke exhaled by
ALBANY,- Re~ Cheadle, Staneart Road, Albany, reponed
other people.
early Saturllay momm~r to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department
..:r,
The rederal government now
that he had a Honda four-wheeler stolen.
classifies such smoke, called envi. Ac.cording to a report from the depanment, deputies located two
ronmental tobacco smoke; as one
JUveniles _that confessed to the th~ft and implicated a third subject
~f 23 human carcinogens, ,accordthat •s bemg sought No other details were available at this lime.
mg to the report.
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"A personal choice becomes a
.
public issue when it begins to
. . RI;EDSVILLE - Gei)C Jones, Reedsville, was arrested Frillay
infrinKe upon other people's
•
rights, ' Vomovich sa111. "In light
e~ening on a capias from Meigs County Court for railing to comply
of the new evidence, this order will
wtth the coun's order an,d was lodged in jail.
. .
be the right thing io do.··
A report from the Meigs County Sheofrs Depanment stated
Jones got into an altercation with another prisoner and had to be
. Dr. Peter Somani1 director of the
transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Potlleroy Squad
sta.te I;Iea,hh Departmen,t, said
••
for treatment He was then returned 10 jail . .
Votnov1ch s order will mean safer
I
.workplace for stale employees.

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Deputies examine assaults '

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Fra~kie

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Pollee investigate theft

Five a"ested overnight

Ho u·se e
bz"ll to sto'n

.· . · ·

Ke VO ...kz"an

Patrol probes one-car· wreck

...

All HIKEitS

Y2

Man cited in two-vehicle wreck

PRICE

LARGE SElECTION OF

WOMEN'S SHOES

l/
/2 PRICE

Smoking ou"t·

in S#ate o•.f!J.;CeS

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&lt;Carl's

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported

r"____________..;._____.;___,________..._____.,.

HOLZER

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CLINIC
PRESENTS

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RIO GRANDE
UNIVERSITY

...

Four-wh'eeler reported stolen

BASKETBALL
.

.Prisoner injured in altercation

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TUESDAY
JAN 19,1993
7:30P.M.
vs.
URBANA UNIVERSITY

Hunter's death not
linked.to killings
MARIElTA (AP)- A hunter
was found shot to death in rural
Washington County, but the death
ts not connected to a series of slay·
mgs under''invesLigation, a sherilfs
deputy said. .
.
. Other hunters found the body of
Dennis Wayne Armstrong, 34, of
Marietta, aboui 3:30p.m. Friday,
satd Deputy Brian Schuck.
..
. He. said the shooting is being
mvesugaled as an accident and that
there were no suspectS.
Armstrong, .who was wearing
camouflage clothing but not
required blaZe orange, may have
!'een sh9t by a muuleloader', which
ts .a high-powered weapon, Schuck
sa•d.
. The dealh II not believed to be
hoked to the deatha of 11 Jeait four
othet outdoonmen In eutem Ohio
becau1e Armstrong was hunting
Wllh otheu in a rural area away .
from mads, Schuck
.
. said

.

At RJo'~ Lyne Center

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Free Admission
.comPliments of
Holzer Clinic

Cai[Jera for a picture with VINCE AND LARRY- the famous Ohio
Department of Safety Crash Dummies. Presented at halftime by.
AAA ofSouth Central Ohio. ·
·
FREE GIFfS COMPLIMENTS OF AAA.

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Page-A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy..!.Middleport-GIIIIIPolls, OH--Po,lnt Pleasant,

wv

January 10, 1993

Island Que~n a popular boat in Old French City
By JAMES SANDS

BURNING OF THE ISLAND QUEEN • In this picture pub- ·
lished by the Belpre Historical Society, one can see the burning or
the Island Queen, a boat that stopped at Gallipolis on a regular
·. basis from 1925 untill947. A fuel tank exploded while the Queen
was at Pittsburgh, killiDg 19 crew members.

Buddies who switched IDs
~t hospital begin prison tetms
CARVILLE, La. (AP) - A
man who let an injured friend use
his name - and his health insurance - says what started out as an
act of generosity has cost him his
job, his freedom and probably his
house.
Benny Milligan and James
McElveen cried as they said goodbye to loved ones Friday and
entered a federal prison to begin
serving fraud sentences.
· The two longtime friends had
switched identities so McElveen
could use Milligan' s health insurance after an accident
"I committed the crime of
humanity, I suppose," Milligan
said. "I did what I had to do to
keep a man alive."
During a 1990 vacation bip 'to
Tennessee, McElveen was severell
hurt in a fall from a 30-foot clif .
Milligan and his wife, Tammy,
helped pull his broken body from a
chasm and raced him by car to the
h()S(lital.
.
On .the way, Milligan swhched
identification with the unconscious
McElveen, who didn't have health
insurance, because they feared he
wouldn 't.be admitted.
McElveen said he continued the
deception later out of fear be
wouldn't get the surgery be needed.
In May 1991, all three were convicted by a federal jury in Ten nessee· of fraud and conspiracy to
defraud the U.S. government of
$49,000.
Milligan ls to serve nine months
in. a minimum security prison in
Carville: McElveen is to serve
seven monlhs.
Mrs. Milligan was sentenced to
four months house arrest so she
could care for the couple's three
daughters. Their youngest is 14
months old.

Milligan, fired from his job of
eight years at Martin Marietta
Corp. when the scheme came to
light, has been working for less
money and without benefits for
over a year. He said his wife, a
waitress, will probably have to go
on welfare while he is in jail.
"I think this could have been
w.o rked out better for everyone
including lhe taxpayers," Milligan
said. "We didn't make any money
on this. We will pay for the tteat·
ment James got. We aren't hardened criminals. But now we've lost
everything but our house and w11&gt;
may lose lhat before it's over."
The federal government got
involved because NASA reimbursed Martin Marietta, a·n
aerospace contractor, for insurance
payments.
Ernie Williams, a U.S. attorney
in Nashville, spurned claims that
the three were unduly punished.
"The government of the United
States .viewed this as health care
fraud," Williams said in a telephone interview. "It was an ongoing conspiracy that went on for a
number of months.' •
McElveen and Milli~an said
they now realize hospitals are
. required by law to provide emergency caie to all. But theY. said they
would 'repeat the crime, tf they had
it to do over, to make sure
McElveen got the care he needed
.beyond e~ergency treatment.

Court news
POMEROY - Divorce action
filed
An action for divolCe has been
filed in the Meigs County Caliri of
Common Pleas by Gail J. Taylor,
Long Bottom ,Jrom Clark A. Taylor Sr., Nelsonville.

Special Correspoadeat
GALLIPOLIS-Oneofthemost
popular boals ro stop at Gallipolis
from 1925 to 1947 was the Island
Queen.
• lt'sbestfeature
was wha~ was
billed as the "largest dancing salon
'
on any ship in
world ." When
completedin 1925
thexe was I 5,000
square feet of
maple wood floor. To dancers in the
know. this sort of surface was the
very best as the maple could be: polished up to be as slick as glass. Dancers could glide across the floor. ·
In 1941 the Island Queen was
enlarged and the dance hall grew to
20,000 square feet. A new floor .had
been installed that year that even had
an air cushion beneath the floor so
that one could dance all night without
sore legs.
·
In 1941 thelslandQueencameto
the Old French City on May 12 under
the sponsorship of Phi Delta Kappa
and the Eagles. The boat left the
Gallipolis landing at 7:30p.m.
. Johnny Lewis and his orchestra
provided the dance music and entertainment. This band, that could be
beard regularly over WLW !WJ.io,
had Jean Gordon, "the Cinderella Girl
of Swing" as the vocal soloist
When this particular Island Queen
ftrst came here in 1925, an article in
lheGallia Timesremarkedaboutother
features of the Queen:·
"The Island Queen is handsomely
equipped. There are spacious decks

,Along the River

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' · Editor's DOte: The rollowin&amp; .
article appeared in the December
1.992 edlliOII ol AEP Fuel Supply
eoaJ COIIFilr and is being reprinted
the permission of the publica: .

;t:

Mike Mattea, Kathy's brother.
resides i,n Middleport, Ohio, and
worlcs at·AI;P River Transportalion
in Lakin, W.Va.
By Dan Waitkus
Two shows in five hours.
Eigluu11 Wh4els alld a Dozen
Roses sWJg for the 77 time. A dozen
roses from a devoted trucker fan
who dJOve all the way from New
York to Wheeling. Don't forget ro
ackn~ledge .'the fan who knew
you 1n the firth gtade.
Hugs and lcisses from Mom and
: Dad Autographing more photos.
~mile big {or.:lhat camera. On the .
bus again ·for a quick nap. Anolher
~ Gity, anotber show.
Is Ibis
&lt;:Jevcland or Boston?
, • Such is the hectic life of country
dlusic superstar Kathy Mattea.
1Meanwhile, back m Middlepon,
lllhio, lives one of Kathy's biggest
· 'l)ns am! mas~ devoled supporters !):r brother, Mike Matlea.
"' .. A senior. dispaleher at lhe AEP
', River Transportation . Division,
\iike joined Kathy on a later OcIOber "mini-tour" which covened
tbur cities in five days. I caught up
!ith the Mattea entourage in
Wheeling: Previous stops included
a show in Muncie, Ind. and a "day ·
~'IF and ';~inner at the MaltC3
H lomesrcad m Cross Lanes, W.Va.
t .Follow;~~ two shows at the Capitol
!Music Hall in Wheeling, it was a
late-night dash to Cleveland for a
Sunday night performance, lhen·on
to Bostoq lot a P.romotional show.
Although Mtlce and Kathy are
nine years apw:t, and her singing
and touring career limits her visits
with the family - which includes
parents Ruth and John and an older
brother, Joe ' they sliD find the time
to recall what it was like when per.:haps Mike and Joe were more
:.ramous than their litde sister.
'· "We went through the growing
~· soages, but we were always very
•,close as a family," said Mike.
: "When I was a freshman in high
•.school, Joe went away to WVU
(West V~rginia Univeisity) and thai
; left Kathy.and I at home IOgether."
• "She was very inquisitive and
i eXtremely liCiive as -a cliild," he
r tontinued. "She took dance lessons
'11t f&lt;iut yea11 old - the earliest pos'ible age • and she was always the
type who liked to perform. I didn't
mind it, though, because Mom
. would always· give me the car to
taJce her places. She would take all
!}lose lessons, and I got to run
around!"
: "She grew up in our footsteps,
hearing
about Mike and Joe," he
,

Action filed
POMEROY - A judgment
action has been flied in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas by
Gress Equipmen.t Corporation of
Marietta against Hemlock Pipeline,
Inc., of Racine:

Family Planning
It Makes Sense...
RlE£ TWISTY BltEAD AND RlE£ GARDEN ~H SAlAD.
When you order any large, one: or more-topping pizza.

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added. "I always tease people, but
it's really true. At one time, I was
more famous in my homilown than
my sister. She grew up having to be
Mike and Joe's sister. Now, we're
ln a position ol being Kathy's
brothers. Which is not bad."
Kathy has ~en Nashville,
Tenn., and the country music world
by the same storm since her fi,rst
album bitlhe street in ,1983. Nearly
a dec:ade later, she celebra!eS the
recent release of her eighth project,
titled Lonesome SIIUid4Tti Time.
Along the way, she was named
''Top Femak; ~I" in 1989 and
1990. '!Wo of her songs (Eighteen
Wllee/s muJ · a Do:en -Roses.
WMre' ve You Been) rec;eived
~'Single of the Year" hoflOCS frQm
bolh the Academy of Country
Music and the Country Music Association, and she earned a
Gtarnmy in 1990 for "Best Country
Performance/Female."
.
Several of her songs reflect
career on the road, but Kalhy noled
that country music has always been
IC~~ded with trains, truckers, long
trips and lonesome cowboys. ·
"I wouldn't choose a life on the
road," she said, prior to · the
Cleveland show. "Although. if you
park yourself in one place and
everybody comes to y&lt;&gt;u, it doesn't
feel lhe same as ~oing into some.
one's town and bemg a pan of their
life."
"I have a real Iy great group of
people and that makes a hugc ·different," she continued. "A lot of
people in country music work 150,
200, even 200-plus dates a year. I
won't do that because I don't want
to burn out myself and don't want
10 bum everybody else ouL"
· Instead, she holds herself and her
band to approximately 80 dates per
year. That leaves plenty of time for
family, friends and a "normal" life
athome.
·
"II keeps us all alive, we can all
make a decent living and we enjoy
it,". explained Kathy, who along
with her husband, ·songwriter 1on
Vezner, calls Nashville home. '!We
appreciate it and enjoy itlt doeSn't
get to be a grind."
While on-'the road, the Mauea
group travels primarily bY bus. As
you might expect, though, this is
not your Ol'llinary bus. Within its
shiny, custom-painled exterior are
six bunk beds, a stateroom fo.r. the
"star," a rest room, two loun~; a
small kitchen area, two IClcvtSions
and enough stereo equipment to
make any type of music sound
good .•
"This is the first time I've been
on the road with them," admitted
Mike. "Every other time. I've met
up with them somewhere along lhe
way. I've been backstage a lot, but
never on the road."
"I rem em bcr lhe first time I went
backstage,"
Mike
continued.

a

A friend from that group actually •
Why? "He's my brolher and he's
my friend. He's a constant," she receives the credit for talking
replied. Tllrniqg 10 Milce, .she ad· Kathy into moving to Nashville for
:.
ded,_' "l respccred tOU. I didn't want an attempt at a singing career.
'
to
disappomt
you.
·
"I
thought,
'What
do
I
have
tO.
'
.
"You wm always the person in lose?'" she said. "I can do school, C•:
'
the family who thought," she COli· !mow bow to do that. I'm young '
tinued. "Mike was the person who and this would be an opportUnity to :
would say, 'I love you.' Or say, have some different life experience.
'Hey, we don't say, 'I love you' If it doesn 'Lwork l&gt;l!.t. I can always
enough. We arc a real cl~ family; go back to school, but I'll be a
but we !ICvet said iL I never wiSCJ person for iL If nolhing else,
noticed, but it was you who · I'D just go· think about it fo;~r a
noticed. He was always the serJsi- year." .
.
tive one."
That was in 1978, and the rest, asWhile. growing up .in Cross they say, is musical history.· Her.:
Lanes, Kathv served early notice first album, appropri31ely titled
that "boring.f cir "mediocre" would Ka1hy Maltea, came out "five years·.
never be used to describe her or her to the day from when I rolled into •
effort in taking on a challenge. .
town wilh the mattress on top of
"What happened was, I was this the car," she said.
,
sort of 'whiz kid' And Mom
"Everybody
her as ·a big ;
figured that out pretty early." she star," ~d Milce, "but this is my sis- ·
explained. "When I skipped the ter. I like to watch the way people ~
first grade, Mom went 10 them and react to her. I love to listen to her
said, 'What can I do?' They said, . sing, and I catch myself singing bel: .
'Just don 'I let her get bored. Get songs. But I watch people going
·
her involved. • So she put me in 'ga.ga' and I say 'Boy, if you only :
everything! Scouts, dancing, etc. .knew!""
J
And the thing that SbJCk was always
Kalhy appears as relaxed on the ..
the musical stuff." ·
road, backstage or in front of a .•
Did Kathy really know lhat she huge audience as she would be at
would someday be a star?
home with her family. Her fans ,
''That was my fantasy, always, proVed .their devotion recendy by. _
from when I was a kid," she admit- sending hundreds of cards, lette!l ·
ted. "I didn't know what But it was and gifts during her recuperation
.. always my fantasy that I would be from a June 12 surgery on her vocal '
famous. But I thought everybody cords-a traumatic experience for a.
had that fantasy. I thought that was sin~er.
·
~
what everybody dreamed abouL"
' I really do love what! do," ~he
People really began noticing the l!lmitted. "It's like any other job.·
young lady with the powerlul sing- There are· days you don't feel like.;
ing voice when, at age 15, she !an- doing it and !here are things about.'
. ded a spot with the Light Opera it you don't love. But, I'm really ,
Guild in Charleston.
lucky. There are a lot of people out .
"The first time I heard it was her lhere who don't wind up finding a••
first performance in Charleston,~ job that they love."
recalled Milce. "She had first solo
Well, it's almost time for yetc
and I had second-row seats with another show. The band is primed,·
Mom and Dad. Thlit was the firSt lhe !heater is filled to capacity, and ·
time I really ever heard her _sing, lhe ·road manager is pacing ner- ·
and she
absolutely blew my vously between the stage and dresssocks off.
,
ing rooms, ensuring that everythingt
Kathy said one experience that · is on time apd in place. Quick, ..
wiD stick with her forever occurned Kathy, tell us what it's like to be
on the campus of WVU during her fam0115.
.
brief two-year Slinl in college.
. "When I go borne to visit, it's '
"At WVU, I met up with a bunch JUS! the .same. It's the same as it''
of people who played bluegniSS was when I used to come home"'
music and acousuc folk pop," she from college 10 visii, or whenever I .
began. "I stuted han~nl out wilh used to, come home from Nashville··
them
and playing mUSic.
and visit and I wasn't famous," she '
Phaloeawteq olltEP F•l Swpply ~ CtliNr
"We
would play on the answered. "It doeSII't feel an dif- •
FAMOUS SISTER • Mike Mattea, who resides in Middleport,
weekends, and 200 ~le would ferent The only lhing that
dif. Ohio, and works at AEP River Transportation In Lakin, W.Va., Is a'
show up on the streets! she con- ferent now is when I ·gO to visit-'
brother to country lilisk's Kathy Mattea. Mike joined his famous
Willed. "After awhile, the pollee someone,. the neighbors are iiOIIle-' '
lister oa toar receatly and wu featured In AEP Fi&lt;el Supply Coal
came on Friday nights and blocked times watching out the window!" J
COJITieT this m1111th. ne ~Isler was granted j)ermlssloa to reprlat
off the Slfee!S. We wrote songs
"I'm real proud of her." Mike'"
the pbaCos and artldt wrlttu ~y Dave Waitkus. It begins In today's
about
all
the
people
who
lived
on
"People ask me if it-- ·
·concluded.
edltloa on page 8. Pictured above arc Mike and Kathy as they
the
street.
all
our
friends.
bolhcrs
me
when
people ask if I'm :
board the bus to bead ror ber show in Cleveland.
Everybody learned them 8IJd. they Kathy Mattea's brothe~. It's not that ~
•
would sing along. There would' be a I ~lly ~eed it to boost my ego, but
"Kathy said, 'If !hey ask you any- however. has returned the· compli- hundred people singing in har· I thmk n's neat for peOple to ask :
lhing, just tell them, 'I'm with the mel)t on more than one occasion. In mony! It was unbelievable ui me anlll'm '?' gl~ to tell them. She's
band, man.""
fact, when asked during a television how good bow musical, it was a great k1d She s crazy, she has a
Obviously, Mike is extremely interview who her idol WI!$, she around there. I've never had an ex- ball!"
\
perience like that since then."
proud of his "little sister." Kathy, responded, "My brolher, Mike."

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KATHY PERFORMS on
her "home soil" at the Capitol
Music Hall in Wheeling, W.Va.
The Matteas bail from Cross
Lanes, W.Va., which is located
just outside . of Charleston,
W.Va.

HOLZER HEAlTH
HOTliNE
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The Answe.rs You Need ...
As Close As Your Phone!
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"EVERYBODY SEES HER u a big star," said Mike, "but this Is my sister. I like to Wlllch the wa
people react to her. I love to listen IO her slag, and I catch myself ~inging her songs.'' To which Kath~
countered, "He's my brother and he's my trieodl. He's a ronstant.'~

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KATHY AND MIKE ham it
up backstage after a show in
Wheellna·. ·"I remember the · ·
nrst 1time I went backstaae,"
, said Mike. "Kathy said 'If they
ask you anything, just tell them
'I'm with the band, man.'"' ·

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~ILLNESS

OR INJURY • PHYSICIAN REFERRAL

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•HEALTH .CARE OP~ORTUNITIES • SUPPORT GROUPS
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Country music is a family .. affair; Matteas hit the road

me

CallUs!

Section B:;
_January 10, 1993

)

with large roomy rocking chain for . bells, a different piiChed cow bell to IIQCllllrip, the prices f&lt;»: the evening
those who wish to view the river each line. By such devise Joe would voyage being 25~ and SO¢,
BOih of the Cincinnati-based Isscenery, or listen to the dance music; know when and wherehchadsnagged
land
Queens came to Gallipolis CVeJX
a. cafeteria with the fmest cooking a "big one".
year
in the spring and the fall as ira
and most delectable and savory
He would row out in his boat and
dishes; hundreds of tables for those there be would fmd a blue. channel inain ·task from Memorial Day to
who wish 10 bring their own lunches; catfish, a bullhead catfish, a pe!Ch, a Labor Day was to take excursions
hundreds of comfortable chairs for buffalo fiSh, a white bass or maybe from downtown Cincinnati 10 Coney
every one and plenty of room for
even a jack.salmon (the latter caught Island Amusement Part. •
It was Sept. 9, 1947. while the
' largest crowds {the capacity is 5,500 in late fall).
people).
•
This particular Island Queen was Queen was at Pittsburgh that her fuel
"The Island Queen is ·beautifully not the firsl bo&lt;tt by lhat name. In the tanks exploded resulting in the deilluminatedatnighttimeswithasolid early 1900s there were actually two SITUCtionofthe boal and the loss of 19
mass ofbrillianl white lights over the Island Queens, one out of Pittsburgh crew members. No Jli!Fnger-s were
exterior and with soft, coloned dome and one out of Cincinnati. The latter on board. It was the-s-cbolt flimily '
lights in the interior. Three power one was a frequent visitono Gallipo- that owned the Island Queen. This
engines on the lsland .Queen furnish lis'from alloUt 1905 until it burned in family also owned Coney Island,
theelecbicityforthese4,000elecbic , 1922. This boat bad~ hit a low- GCCJrge Schou was succeeded on his
bulbs. On the upper deck is a power: banging wire at Dam thus knock· death in 1935 by his 28 year old son
fulsearchlightthatcanbeseenamile ing off the stacks and 1 ~ng two Edward Schott as principal oWJier.
James Sands is a special correaway."
.
boys. The five llour excursion trip
ofthe Sunday 11mes-Sea- ·
spoodent
Some came on the Island Queen from Gallipolis to Pomeroy and back
tine!.
His
address Is: 65 WIDow ..
just to talk and visit, maybe to swap cost in 1916 about 15¢ for children
fish stories from "younger days on and25¢foradults.Thatwastheafter- ·Drive, Springboro OH 45066
the river...
·
One of the favorite ftSh sl()t'ies 1,0
originate in GalliJl!llis was about
Uncle Joe Drouillard who had the
habit of setting several trot lines from
200 to 400 feet in . length which
strelehed across deep boles in the
Ohio River channel.
Uncle Joe would draw the lines
feal tauL To the shore end of lhe trot
lines Drouillard would attach cow

Confidential Services:
Birth C!)ntrol
V.D. Sc;reening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing .

1rim.es - ~.entinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,
Page-82-Sunday Times Sentinel

wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-PIIge-:.83

Mcintyre admirers 'save a seat at-the
theatre' for the famous
. . columnist
.

By EDNA WHITELEY
GALLIPOLIS • A seat at the
Morris and Dorothy Haskins Ariel
Theatre bears the name of 0 . 0 .
Mcintyre, thanks to the generosity
of 14 donors who shared the
$1,000 COSL
About a dozen onlQokers
watched the syndicated columnist's
nameplate put in place. Nearly two
years had passed since I initiated
the fund.
While I'm a Mcintyre admirer
and a proponent for perpetuating
his memory, those factors were
secondary 10 my decision to memorialize him at the Ariel . From an
historical perspective, Mcintyre
belongs there.
When the 97-year-old theatre
was near! y new, the teen-aged Odd
did a song and dance act there with
boyhood friend, Alf Resenei. Odd
was about the same age \)'hen a
backstage rcndez vous with starlet
Della Fox ended on a sour note.
Odd had a crush on Della. Some
of the cigarette packs of the day
cont~ined pictures of show girls,
scanllly clad for the day, and she
was one of them. Odd owned alll4
poses, a collection kept under his

GARY COX and . MELISSA PE'ITRY

Pettry-Cox

LAURA VANMETER and DANIEL HAKES •

VanMeter-Hakes

: CHESHIRE • Carl and Sharen employ~d with ~uck.cye CommuniWamsley of Cheshire, announce · ty Serv~ces, Galhpohs.
the engagement and upcoming
Mr. Cox •s a 1984 graduate C!f
marriage of their daughter, Melissa Kyger Cree~ H1gh School and IS
Pettry, to Gary Cox, son of Kay employed with R1ve~front Honda
c;ox of Gallipolis, and Bob and and Yamaha, Gallipolis.
I:.oreua Cox of McCully Road, GalThe weddt.ng Will be held Feb.
Iipolis, and father ofBobbi Cox.
27 at theFtrst Ch~rch C!f !he
• Miss Pettry is a 1989 graduate Nazarene m Galhpohs. Invitallon
of Kyger Creek High School and is only.

COLUMBUS • Linda Gheen,
Newark, De., announces the
engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Laura VanMeter, to Daniel Hakes, son of
George and Kathy Hakes, Columbus.
The bride-elect is employed at
Discover Card Servicl;,'l, Inc., as a
unit coordinatOr.

Hakes is also employed at Discover Card Services, Inc ., as a
coordinating technician.
The open church wedding will
be an event of May 22 at 4:30 p.m.
at tlie Grove City Church · of the
Nazarene in Grove City. A reception will follow at the VFW Post in
Columbus.

•-

PATRICK PARSONS and MICHELLE BLANKEJIISIDP

Miss Blankenship is a 1990
graduate of Piketon High School.
Mr. Parsons is a 1989 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School
and is. serving in the U.S. Navy,
stationed in Norfolk, Va.
The wedding will be held March
6 in Waverly.
·

MR. and MRS. PAUL (ELIZABETH) BUTLER, SR.

Anniversary to be celebrated
CROWN CITY - Paul and Eliz·
abeth (Bush) Butler Sr., will celebrate their 45th wedding anniversary on Jan. 10.
They were married at the bride's

,.

MICHELLE CARUTHERS and RICHARD BLANKEN

Bostick-Doyle
· RACINE • Mr. and Mrs. Jack L.
B'ostick, Racine, announce the
eflgagement of their daughter,
Angela Lynn, to Shawn C. Doyle·,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Doyle, Clarksburg.
Miss Bostick is a 1988 graduate
of Southern High School and a
I992 graduate of ~e University of
Rio Grande/Holzer·School of Nursiqg. She is employed by King's

MISTY GRANT,and BENJAMIN BLACKBURN

Grant-Blackburn

Daughters Medical Center in Ash·
land, Ky.
Doyle is a 1990 graduate of
Adena High School and is a junior
communications major at the Uni·
versity of Rio Grande.
The couple is planning a Jan. 30
wedding at the Racine Baptist
Church at 2 p.m. A reception will
follow at the Racine American
Legion Hall.

VINTON· Mr. and Mrs. Dale of Rio Grande and will be transter(Qebbie) Grant of Vinton, 'ring to Marion Technical College,
announce the engagement and where she will be majoring in
upcoming marriage of their daugh- Nursing.
Mr. Blackburn is a 1989 gradu·
ter, Misty Dawn, to Benjamin Lee
Blackburn, son of Mr. and Mrs. ate of North Gallia High School
Billy (Scilvie) Blackburn of and is currently employed with
Ultra Care Factory in Marion.
Ewington.
An open church wedding will be
Miss Grant is a 1992 graduate of
North Gallia High School. She is held Feb. 14 at 2:30p.m. at Vinton
currently attending the University Baptist Church.

$18 million richer, New York.
9ity cq,bby packs for Florida

Hamilton helps in relief efforts
'

: NEW YORK (AP) - Cabbie 16 drawing because he "was feel·
Michael Lipp has survived 20 year.s ing lucky."
He learned he had won after a
~hind the wheel, so now, an $18
111illion winning lottery ticket is his ni ght driving his cab. When the
numbers 7, 19, 25, 33, 38 and 42
ticket to ride..
·
Lipp, 49, packed in his hack matched his ticket, "I checked it
Ii~ense and packed up for Aorida and rechecked it for aboll,l. half an
aCter learning he was a miUionaire.
hour." Lipp said.
• i 'I'm retiring. My wife's retirHis wife, Estelle, a medical
iag . We plan to spend all the assistant, moved to Aorida with the
ntooey on everything you can think youngest of their three children in
of - buy' a home, a boat for July.
swten." Lipp said.
Lipp had been scheduled tG join
I Lipp said he bought 10 $1 tickthem this month, but wasn't sure
for the Ney.l York Lotto's Dec. how he was going to earn a living.
Now, that's not a problem.
He received an initial payment
of S857 ,100 and will receive 20
inore annual payments of
$85,7, 145, said state Lottery
spokesman Bill Knowlton.

GALLIPOLIS - 'Lance Cpl. pliers coming in and sending them
Todd A. Hamilton has been out into the outlying villages.
Anyone wishing to write Hamil·
assigned to duty in ·somalia with
the •3rd Supply Division (Tustin .ton, can send to:.L/CPL Todd A.
Marine Air Base) in El Tora, Calif. Hamilton, 294601293, USMC OIC
· He is stationed a't the MATCS-38, UIC 41053, Dox .·
Mogadishu Airport hand! ing sup- 2761, FPO AP 96611-2761.

Caruthers~B lankenship
' RACINE -· Sue Laudermilt, Mae Jones, Levi · arid Sherly
Racine, announces the engagement Caruthers. James and Vada Smith
and approaching marriage of her and Zcnis 1;\lankenship.
daughter, . Michelle Elain'e
Wedding J?lans are incomplete.
Caruthers, to Richar&lt;l Lee Blanken·
ship , son of Robert and Stella
Blankenship; Shade.
,
Miss Caruthers will be a 1993
BIDWELL • A card shower is ,
gr,aduate of Southern High School ·
after completing two years of cos- being held for Lonnie W. Burger
metology ·at Meigs High School. who will celebrate his 75th birth· .
Blankenship is a 1992 graduate of day on Sunday,Jan. 17.
Cards may be sent tQ: 871 I
Meigs High School. He is currently
.a welder for Tampa, Aorida Tanks. . State Route !60, Bidwell, Ohio,
. Grandparents are Ayward and 45614 . .

Card shower

home in Gallipolis by the Rev.
Scott Westennan on Jan. !0, 1948.
They are the parents of Carolyn
Haner, Ed Butler, and Paula Saunders, and they have five grandchildren.

ATLANTA (AP)- Federal
health officials warned against use
of a leather spray tha.t left about
1,000 people in 18 states complaining of respiratory ailments.
Although most of the symptoms
are mild and disappear within 24
hours, some people have been hos·
pitalized, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention said Thursday. Symptoms ranged from short-

ness of breath to chest pain, it said.
Until. the federal agency identifies what is causing the illnesses,
no one should use the spray, it said.
The Wilsons Leather Protector,
in a 5-ounce black can, is manufac·
tured with a petroleum distillate as
a propellant instead of chlorofluorocarbons, which harm the atmp·
sphere.

.

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GALUPOLJS, OHIO
814 446·22011

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~ond

Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
(614) 446 4343

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French·Squats

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Open 0.1118:30-6:00
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GALLIPOLIS

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Community
Calendar items Avenue in Pomeroy.
for additional information.
.
I
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. ,Items
RACINE • Racine Village
MIDDLEPORT • Ballroom
must be received well il! advance Council will meet Monday at 7 dance lessons, Tuesday, Middleto assure publication in the cal-. p.m. at Star Mill Park.
port Art~ Council . Cost is $7 per
endar. '
couple per session. Beginners, 7:30
PORTLAND • Portland E-le- p.m.; advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
mentary PTO will meet Monday at Gerald Powell, instructor. Call 992POMEROY • SOLOS meal for 7 p.m. at the school. The spring . 2675 for information or to register.
all interested singles at Pomeroy carnival will be planned and other
United Methodist Church. Call events discussed.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
Rev . Grace Kee at 992-5788 or
Bible Class of Hickory Hill Chtirch
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun· of Christ, "Friendship Day" Tues·
Rev. Sharon Hausman at 985-4312
ty Board of Elections will meet day at 10:30 a.m. Be.tty Miller,
for information.
Monday at 4:30p.m. at.the office.
retired teacher from Ohio Valley
CHESTER - "Growing Through
Christian College in Pl)rkersburg,
Grief' group at Chester United
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Athlet- W.Va., will be guest speaker.
Methodist Church. Call Rev. ic Boostezs will meet Monday at 7 "Love Your Neighbor" will be the
Sharon Hausman at 985-4312 for p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
pro~m. Call 667-3b74 for infor·
information.
mauon. '
TUESDAY
POMERbY • Ohio Eta Phi
MIDDLEPORT • A Sunday
POMEROY · 'Meigs County
school teachers meeting for Hope Chapter.. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Chamber of Commerce will meet
Baptist Church wiU be held Sunday will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Tuesday at noon at the Pomeroy
Meigs County Senio~ Citizens Cen· Nu,rsin~ and Rehabilitation Center.
at6 p.m·. at the church.
· ter. Jack Slavin wiJJ present a pro- Lunell wiU be available at a cost of
CHESTER • The Shade River gram on art. ~ecky Triplett and $3.
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM will present Becky Trent are hostesses.
a 50-year pin to Herman Carson Sr.
PORTLAND • Portland and
on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the lodge
HARRISONVILLE • Har- Letart Elementary Schools will be
hall. All masons are invited.
risonville .Senior Citizens Club will hosting an open house on Tuesday
meet and hold a blood pressure from 6-7 p.m. Public invited.
•
MONDAY
clinic Tuesday, 10 am. to noon, at
KYGER CREEK . - Women the town house, weather permitWEDNESDAY
Alive will meet Monday at 7 p.m. ting. Those au.ending are to bring a
POMEROY • Pomeroy Merchants Association will meet
at the Kyger Creek Club House. covered dish.' Dues are payable.
T/lere will be a devotional speaker
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the con;
and craft demonstration. RefreshPOMEROY - Meigs County ference room of Bank One.
ments will be a salad bar.
Junior Fair Sale and Show ComRACINE -~he Village of
mittee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY • The Disabl.ed ·'at the Meigs High School Cafete· Racine will be collecting pine
American Veterans and the Ladies ria. Meeting open to all junior fair Christmas trees on Wednesday.
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7 market l~vcsiOCk membe~s. parents Racine residents are io have trees at
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut and advisors. Program for 1993 the curb by 8 a.m . on Wednesday.
'
will be discussed.
Call 992-6696
.
- '
,}

MIDDLEPORT • Texas dancing
lessons, Wednesday, Middleport
Arts Council. Cost is $7 per couple
per session. Beginners, 7:30 p.m.;
advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m. Gerald Powell, instructor. Call 9922675 for infonnation or to register.
The FBI has 56 field offices iD lbe
principal cities

ABBY
FRY

We Have New Wolff Tanning Bulbs

Meigs County calendar of events

~--------------------~ ~•
INVII,.ORY ~

BUY THE CASE &amp; SAVE!

THE ADDED .TOUCH

leather spray linked- to illnesses

'

ANGELA BOSTICK and SHAWN DOYLE

GALLIPOLJS • Jackie Graham ·
was the guest speaker during me·:
Dec. 18 Christmas party of the Lit-about 15 years.
tle Bullskin Raiders 4-H Club.
Circumstances were much dif·
Following the 4-H Pledge, Graferent when Mclntyr~ saw Fox ham ·gave information 10 members
again . .He was a you~g New York about the 4-H program, and disCity reporter assigned to interview cus sed projects for the Gallia
her and she was a faded beauty. County Junior Fair and what the 4She didn't recall the Ariel incident H program is and the kind of comor Gallipolis. Odd said he left "ter- munity projects the 4-H clubs
rifically conscious of the mustiness could do.
·and emptiness of a dead passion.~ ·
She handed out books and pamThe Mcintyre seat, main floor, phlets concerning the program and
back row, is there for special rea- she also an swe~ed questions from
sons. It's highly visible to.!Qurists, children and their parents.
it's where a busy journalist would
Door prizes were won by Grawant to be and the " Gallipolis ham and Stephanie Church, while
Daily Tribune" seat is also in that MaUhew Johnson was the drawing
row . The "Tribune"· published winner.
Odd's first words, a Personals entry
Fifteen 4-Her's and 6 Clover
he wrote as a young~ter. It read, Buds attended the meeting.
"Mcintyre says- Mr. Ed Maguet
The next meeting will be Jan. 11
has gone to Cqar[eston, W.Va. t&lt;t at 7 p.m. at the township builliing,
do some important hanging for a Little Bullskin Road. A election
large wallpaper house.''
officers will be held.

CDC issues warning against .

Blankenship-Parsons
PIKETON - Mr. and Mrs. ~irgil
E. Blankenship of · Piketon ,
announce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Amy Michelle, to Patrick
Ronald Parsons, son of Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Jabez Parsons of Gallipolis.

mattress, far removed from Grandmother MclntyrC:s eye.
Imagine Odd's joy when theatre
manager Ikey Kaufmann booked a
show starring Fox. Odd confided
his fancy to the stage electrician
and the man sinuggled him backstage. · '
With eyes glued to the dressing
room door, the Iovestruck Odd
waited for Ilella to appear. Then
came, as Odd called it, the "Big
Moment." With excitement he
could barely contain he watched
the woman of his dreams walk
toward him. His hopes crumbled
when their eyes met and she bel·
lowed, "what is that brat doing in
the wings?"
The incident probably had Gallipolitans snickering by the next
day. But, it wasn't until Mcintyre
was an established journalist and
magazine writer that he related the
incident to the reading public in the
piece, "A Tear for a Lost Art.''
At the time'of his death in 1938,
Mcintyre's syndicated column,
"New York Day by Day," appeared
in 550 newspapers across the
nation and a Mcintyre story had
run monthly in "Cosmopolitan" for

Jackie Graham
addresses 4-Her's .

CALL FOR A HAIR OR TANNING
APPOINTMENT- 992·5766

THE ADDED TOUCH
271 Y. N. Second. St.
Middleport; Oh. 45760
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9:0().8:00; Sat. 9:0()..5:00
Evenings Appts. Available; Walk-Ina Welcome.

o~f~lli;e~co~·~un=tr~y~.pi!~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~~~=~~;~ii3

�•
Page

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

84 Sunday nmes Sentinel

January 10, 1993

January 10, 1993 .

Meigs County to give
DARE
an0 ther try_
.

r:;:p~':!:~;r:e~~':s~~:o

watching at People in
the local laundromat the -news

NEW YORK {AP) - Older
with low cboleslerol are tluU
times as likely to show signs of
depression as those with higher
cholesterol, a Sllldy found.
If the connCiltion is confll'llled,
researchers said, cholesterol-lower·ing measures such as diet or drugs
may be recommended only for ncopleat highriskolheartdisease.
The ' researchers, led by
L~wrence Palinkas, ;usociate
· adJunct professor in the Department of Community and Family ;
Medicine at the University of Califomia at San Diego, didn't know
whether low cholesterol triggers
depression, or vice versa. ·
:
.
But Palinkas speculaled that low
cholesterol may somehow reduce
levels 'of serotonin, a brain chemical. Some ~xpens believe people
with low levels of serotonin are
prone to depression.

men

If I had to pick one thing that I

. absolutely, positively despise doing
more than anything else in my
meager existence on this planet, It
would h•ve to he laundry.
·I probably wouldn't mind it so
much if I had a washer and dryer of
~y _
own, but I'm forced ra haul my
dirties to the ,laundromat - a little
piece of hell right here on Earth.
Laundromats serve two purposes (neither of which is to clean
clothes). First, they play an irnpor-

'

' role in the stability of the
tant
riation's economy by' keeping too
many quarters from circulating in
the markelplace and slowing down
trade.
: · Second, tlley give the town
~.eirdoes a place to hang out once
tbey are barred from all the taverns.
: · Government regulations require
li1Undromats to stock a certain
number. of weirdoes, which is cal·
culated by dividing the town's pop..lation by the total number of people in the state named "Bub."
, In order to keep up with the
'Required Daily Weirdo Allowance,
~orne laundromats hire full-time
freaks to just hang out near the
\vasl)ers and pretend they're doing
a load of clothes.
, Regulations require a minimum
number or weiidoes, but there is no
niaximum. Therefore, the full
timers are kep't on to ·insure the
establishment never falls below the
legal minimum. These freaks also
work in shifts, guaranteeing you
wiD never see the same one twice.
My personal favorire is the
$l:r&amp;wny long-haired guy in a camouflage jacket who ar¥ues with
JOmself and bears a strilcipg resemblance to Charles Manson.
; In a tie for- second are the 70•

J

Social planned

......

..

:s eniors' schedule announced

GALLIPOLIS - Captive Free, a '
music-minstry team of young
adults touring the East Great Lakes
region, wiD be at New Life Lutheran Church, 1210 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, on Tuesday, Jan. 26 at 7
p.m. during the church's family
night progrilm.
Members include Becky Hendricks of . New York, Curt
McGowan of Iowa, Nathan Ernsberger of Michigan, Chris Dahlvig
of Wisconsin, Scott "Scrappy"
Lawrence of Virg\nia, Sarah Borg
of Indiana, and Elizabeth Petersen
of Minnesota.
Captive Free is among the
Lutheran Youth Encounter's
National Bands..Since 1964, L'YE
has sent over 300 young aduits to
49 different countries:
LYE is. an evangelical Lutheran
organization that offers minis1ry
resources to the church, with a spe-

Friday, Jan.lS
: GALLIPOLIS • The following
10 a.m.- Walking
::are activities and menus for Jan.
10 a.m. to noon and 1-3 p.m. ·;11-15 at the Gallia County Senior
Art and craft class
:~itizen's Center, 220 Jackso.n Pike.
Menus consist of:
·,.
Monday, Jan. 11
Monday: Macaroni and cheese,
::; 10 a.m. • Willking club •
'~ 10:45 a.m.· Armchair travel
. spinach, stewed tomatoes, bread,
11:30 p.m.· Blood pressure vanilla wafers with fruit.
Tuesday • Porkeues with dress(EMS)
ing,
mixed vegetables, bread, cher1 p.m. • Chorus
7-9 p.m. - Tatting class with ry crisp.
Wednesday- Beef stew, crackBelly Plymale
ers, cottage cheese, biscuits, appleTuesday, Jan. 12
sauce in lime Jello.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Quilting
Thursday - Chicken, whipped
·10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Auditor's
potatoes,
green beans, bread pudoffice (dog tap)
ding
with
sauce.
: 10:30 a.m. -Walking
Friday - Ham loaf, sweet pota· I 0:30a.m. • STOP/Exercise
~oes,
Kale, bread, pears wi1h
12:30 a.m. -Video matinee
cheese.
VVednesday,Jan.lJ
-Make reservations by calling
· 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. • Adult Day
446-7000 before 9 a.m. on the day
Care
you· wish to aucnd.
: 10 a.m . · Walking
· 10:30 a.m. • Bingo with Tom
Hopkins
·
10:30 a.m. - Herbs class
II a.m.· Attorney Tim Foran
Thursday, Jan. 14
FAMILY
PRACTICE
. .
.
.
..
10 a.m.- Walking
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. · Quilting
10:45 a.m.· Bible swdy
II :30 a.m. • B'ood pressure

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

CHESTER • Annual inspection
of Shade River Lodge will be held
Saturday. at 6:30p.m. with work in
tile fellow craft degree. All members bring two pies.

POMEROY · Shawn Lipscomb,
spn of David and Georgina LiP.·
scomb, Rou1e 124, Pomeroy, w1ll
begin serving with the United
Stat£S Marines on Jan. 18 at Paris
Island. He is a 1991 graduate of
Meigs High School.

.
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKlNG PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN ·'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

2

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WINTER SHOES

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THE. SHOE
:CAFE

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Trudy Manhall wiD also be lolnlng

Shear mudona .oOD! .

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"

Kearney is
IJIIIY 8 years old. . ·
~ Michael started classes at the
'll'iversity this week, after tranferring from Santa Rosa Junior College in California when his father
tbok a job at Naval Station Mobile.
· His presence in an anthropolc;~gy
lecture. earlier this week caught
&lt;l)der classmates off-guard. ,
• "If he makc;s a better grade than
rile, I'm quitting," said Jenny
&lt;)lossinger, a senior majoring in
English. ''This whole thing is
:imazing. It's hard to believe an 8- ·
xear·old canl he only a year behind
me and I'm 21."
: Michael is majoring -in anthropology, and after he receives his_
)Daster' s an&lt;! doctoral· degreqs,
Michael said he plans on becoming
,a geologist, or a game show host,
or a cartoonist.
, _
:- Michael was reading "Treasure
Island" and "The Count of Monte
.C risto" and reciting algebraic
equations by the time he was 3
:years old, his parents said.
,
: • He doesn't expect any special
{reatment from teachers or stu.dents.
• "I jUSI want to be treated like a
:Oormal student;'' Michael said.
. 'I'm 23 when I'm in class, but I'm
·8 when I'm out the door."
'
· : He said mosi of hi~ friends are
,ris age, and "We !lo regular
•things," like playing video games
and watching cartoons and TV
.~arne shows.

z

OFF FALL &amp;

z

cfay.
f Of course, Michael

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; MOBILE •. Ala. (AP) - One of
the juniors at the University of
South Alabama has his mother
accompany him to school every

::0

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TRETORN • BASS •

Shear I[{usions

293 S. SECOND ST.

992-2550

Mon.-Sat. 9:00-5:00
We carry a full line of

P~ul

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Eve. by Appointment
Mitchell products. .

A native of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Dr. Kusnir joins the capable staff at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and opens his practice in the Meigs Medical Building
adjacent to the hospital on Monday, Jan . .18.
Receiving his medical degree frqm the National University of Buenos Aires
School of Medicine in 1971, Dr. Kusnir served his internship and residency in
Internal Medicine at the C. Argerich Municipal Hospital in BuenosAii'es. He was
promoted to chief resident in 1974 and completed his residency in 1975. He
served as attending physician at that hospital from 197~ to 1980.

25TH&amp;: JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

For That Special Oeeasfo11•••

'93

:IJ

m

(POINT PLE!\SAN'f MEDICAL CENTER)

•

weaaings:

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CLEAUNCE
SALE!

::0

He is Dr. George A. Kusnir, M.D .• Internist and Nephrologist.

'1

.,•

m

S.mi·l•IIHI

$-year-old is
¢ollege junior

-i

%X,'Err' OW(
9{'EW P1l'YS ICI.9-19{

Inspection slated

To begin duty

-i

:IJ

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

.

Sasan Jenldn.s, M1r., and
Paula Butelaer of Shear Dlusfons
are proud to ann,unee .tlae
addition of :EifzaHtla Sndtla,
Tatnm)t Marefn•o and
Dlfn
to tlaefr 'tine staB of st)tiists•

cia! emphasis on youth ministry.

:IJ

If you are planning a wedding, lhen you should come
see us al Haskins-Tanner.
You will have over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose
from . We have a large selection of the laleat styles
11nd complimentary accessories for this special
occasion .

Quality Formalwear at
Affordable Prl_ces ·

.,

G_ROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR MORE
IN WEDDINQ PAFJTY

year-old woman wearing mauv.e
stretc~ pants an~ 10-pound earrings
who Sits cross-legged on ~ of her
machine while chain smoking perfumed cigarettes and the unbathed
lllotorcycle mama with curlers in
her hair and -three preschool-aged
screaming children who spend the
whole time arguing over whose
tum it i~ to pry the change machine
open w1th a screwdriver.
Despite all ihe glamour and
excitement of the local laundromat,

I am a chronic procrastinator when
it comes to doing the laundry. I
w~it until there is absolutely nothing left to wear before giving in. I
even resort to wearing heavy metal
T·shirts and ripped jeans to work
first
·
By ihe time I've worn everything in my wardrobe, it takes a
small U-Haul trailer to transport
everything to the laundromat
Laundry duty is quite a workout.
Besides two tons of clothes, I'm .
also carrying detergent, reading
material, mace and enough ~unds
of quarters to make me elig1ble for
the hea~weight boxing class ..
Findmg a machine is always
fun. Your average laundromat has
only one washer and one dryer
which work well, and it's the fun:
time freak's.job to always keep
them occupied.
Therefore, you have to ~rounge
among the unoccupied machines.
It's basically a process of elimination:
Nope, those machines are out of
order. Nope, that machine has
gl'een swff growing out of iL Nope;
that machine is next to the guy
who's wearing a. flea collar and
keeps barking at himself. Nope,
that-machine has algae~ covered
water ·in it.and looks like it might
be incubating a new life fonn.
Once washed, the clothes have
to do !,heir time in dryers which get
about as hot as a spring breeze.
Three hours·and 25 quarters later, I
generally give up, take home my
half-dry clothes and hang them on
lamp shades, curtain rQds and door
knobs.
Kevin Pinson· is a starr writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing who
will probably be banned from
every laundromat in Southeast
Ohio.

Anthony arranged for emergency passport service.
"I told niy wife I was·going to
do everything I could to make it
happen," Anthony said. "I said
after 14 years {in Congress) I want·
ed braggin' rights to be able to say
that! pulled that off On a weekend
- especially a Christmas holiday
weekend - and as a benchmark
for the kind of service he ought to
aim for.''

Dickey's son had his passport
the next day, hours before he left
on ))is trip.
.
.
Anthony lost in the Democratic
primary to Secretary of State Bill
McCuen, who lost the general election to Dickey.

--

GALLIPOLIS • People move

from one state to another for a vari-

ety of reasons: job opponunities,
retirement, health, family, even the
weather. While one or more of
these reasons may' be tbe main
motivatin$ factor, do not overlook
the financial consequences of relocatilig to another state.
Some of these consequences
may be obvious . There is, of
course, the cost of the move itself.
The cost of housing, food, and
transportation varies significandy
from state to state. These factors·
may be important to consider, e~­
cially if you will be living on a limited income, say for retirement.
Other financial consequences may
be less evident, but no less impor•
tant.
Taxes, ilnd how states determine
the tax base, vary dramatically.
Some states have no personal
income tax, for example, but may
have high property or sales taxes.
On the other hand, California's
income-tax rate runs as high as II
percent. Local taxes also vary
widely. Sometimes, something as
simple as relocating to one side or
the other of the county line can
save you tax dollars. Some states
and counties tax intangible proper·
ty such as stocks and bonds and
other securitieS-something to consider if you have an extensive port·
folio.
A few states impose gift taxes,
which certainly should be taken
into, consideration if you plan to
give away a big chunk of your
estate during your lifetime. Every
state has death taxes, but again the
rates and the tax basis vary significantly. If you have a large estate, a
move to a state with steep death
taxes could cost you plenty. The
cost and hassle of probate also can
be a factor, particularly if you must
file multiple probates.
Marital rights issues differ from
state to state, and can have signifi·
cant financial consequences. In a
community-property state, aU P£01?"
eny acquued during marriage IS
owned by both ~ties {with the
exception of g1fts and inheritances). In a common-law state, the
assets are owned by whichever
party buys them. F.urthennore, you
· ·

may have to deal with the laws of
both states should you divorce.
Property acquired duriog marriage
in a common-law state is subject to
its Jaws even if you move So and
get divorced in a community-property state, and vice versa. You
proba.bly should have. an attorney
review your will in light of the
Jaws of your new state.
Inheritance laws may be a consideration. Not all states allow an
unlimited tax-free transfer of assets
to a surviving spouse. In Louisiana,
individuals cannot disinherit their
children.
If you do move, be sure you are
clear about where you wart to •
establish permanent residence
(known as esrablishing domicile).
For example, if you move to a state
with lower death taxes. but maintain a home in your old state, you
could find your old state actually
being the one to tax your estate
upon death (as well as having a say
in your will, income taxes. and

l. w. aNNAMO

Meeting planned

(1-1100 886 0529)

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior Granl!e will
have fun night Saturday begmning
with a poduck supper at 6:30 p.m.
All members, potential members
and guests invited.

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HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
'

HOM EOXYGEN SERV ICE

"C•mtl•t• ·Hutlfll !utpllu Fer He111 Uu"

1·100..451·6144
446·7213

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Pay Bills.
Save Money.

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stop by today.

.

IpS! II~~~~ Aoolllonlt

-htnllllllf

~,.....,,.....

;a;tld

·F armers Bank

LT

&amp; Savings Company .

--Dr. N: W. Robinson

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211 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614/992-2136

992-2168

Route 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
6!4/667-3161

Mo!I.-WecL.frL

TIM. I:CIOa.ln..f."CCI p.m.

l

Member FDIC

nurs. 1:00 &amp;m.·1Z:OO'Noon

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New Year's Resolutions aren't the easiest .
things to keep. Let Fanners Bank help! Our
New Year's Resolution account could help you
pay your bills and save money. We'll'even
tailorthe account to make sure thjs is one New
Y~'s Resolution you'll be able to keep! Call or

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FREE DEIMRY &amp;SO UP

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1:00 a.m. • 1:00 p.m.

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BAIKRUP ...,

-111=111 OIIMII. .
dlili~IMo
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·marital rights issues). Also. don't :
overlook the potential for having.
your estate taxed in both states. . ··
To establish residence in the·
new state, register to vote, maintain
a driver's license and automobile
registration, spend most of your
time there; and pay taxes. Move
your personal property Lhc:n, consider selling or renting your old
home, establish relationship$ with
auorneys and financial se~ices ,
professionals, and open.banking or·
securities accounts.
:
Before relocating, discuss your·
plans with yout Certified Financial
Planner practitioner. It could ~ve
you some costly moves. This col-·
umn is produced by the Instiwte of.
Certified· Financial Planners, a:
national association representing ·
the top financial planners in the
country, and is provided by Mark
Curry, CFP, The Wiseman Agencr.
Far a list of CFP f;lWfessionals m:
your area, can toll free 1-800-282-·
PLAN (7526). .
'

PARIS {AP)- The Olympia
music hall where. the Beatles,
Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan
made their French debuts will be
classified as a historical monument
to save it from demolition.
· "The Olympia has had atumultuous past, but it will remain the
Olympia," Culture Minisier 'Jack
Lang said Thursday. ·
·'
The hall, where Edith Piaf captivated thousands with her Jove ballads and Maqrice Chevalier
crooned his way into French hearts,
had faced destruction as part of a
real estate development slated to
begin in 1995.
The Olympia has been a landmark since it opened in 1893 with a ·
I U
triumphant performance by "La ~ 614-.221-0888
Goulue"- a leggy beauty immortalized by Toulouse-Lautrec in .
dozens of cabaret scenes.
Despite its simple decor and
AnORNEY AT LAW
what many call its inadequate
8 Eut BroH Sti'Mt,
backstage areas, singers say the
Sulta 800
acoustics are among the· best in
Columbus,
Ohio
Paris.
UOOIIIOLAW

· - 963 Cea. Bartiapr Parkway
Mlddleport, Ohio 45760

VETERANS .MEMORIAL
"'HOSPI·T•AL
115. E. Memor1al Drive
Pomeroy
992·2104

. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) ·U.S. Rep. Beryl Anthony's last al:t
of constituent service went to an
unlikely constituent.
,
The Democrat received a phone
caD Christmas Day from Jay Dicke')'., the Republican who replaced
him this week in Congress.
'
Dickey said he needed a ~uick
passport for his son, and d1dn 't
know where to go, so "I called my

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-85

Making all the right moves

MEIGS COUNTY
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

Telephone numbers for the new Meigs County physician are 992-7463 and
992~7579 .
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Dr. Kusnit received. a Nephrology Fellowship at the University of Buenos
Aires Hospital from 1982 to 1984 and practiced in that field of medicine before ·
· coming to-the United States in 1989. He held a Nephrology Fellowship at the
University of Virginia Health Science Center from 1989 to 1991 and meantime
has continued his training in Internal Medicine at the Memorial Hospitals in
Roanoke and the Veterans Administtation Medical Center in Salem, Va.

.CMiJ

LONDON (AP) - Princess
Margaret was released from the
hospital Friday, five days after
being admitted with pneumonia
Margaret. 62, the younger sister
of Queen Elizabeth II, entered King
Edward VII Hospital on Jan. 3.
Margaret smiled as she left and
her driver carried out several boo·

congressman.''

~:.*:.~t:~

New Life Lutheran Church to
welcome music-:-minstry g,roup

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, .OH-Polnt Pleasant,

~eirdo

-,
POMEROY • While effons to
He explained that in Ohio the
get a Drug Abuse Resistance Edu- D.A.R.E. program is co-sponsored
cation Program (D.A.R.E.) started by Allomey General, the Ohio
in Meigs County schools last year Association of Chiefs of Police and
were thwarted by Jack of money the Ohio Department of Education.
and personnel to do the job, Currently there are 531 D.A.R.E.
chances of initiating it this year orru:us serving 1137 schools in 63
look better.
Ohio counties, according to the
Meigs County Sheriff James Attorney General. •
Soulsby says that he is enthusiastic
"There is no denying that drugs
about the llfOgr&amp;m and looks for- and drug aJ!use are a major threat
ward to trying it again this year, to the health and welfare ·or all
particularly since more funding . Ohioans, especially our children.
will be available through provi- !here is also little doubt that the
sions of Senate lli11275.
only way to substantially reduce
That bill is essentially a law 'the scourge of drop in this countrY
which increases the penalties for is to raise a generation or children
drunk driving, but two of its provi- committed to drpg-free lives. The
sions profoundly impact funding D..A.R.E. program doel! just that,"
for the D.A.R.E. program.
S81d Auomey General Fisher.
According to Attorney General ~~----------:"----::::-----------,
Lee Fisher, one section increases
the ClljTent license {einstatement
. fee .or $125 to $225. fifty dOllars or "
the $225 is to be deposited to the
state treasury to the credit or
D.A.R.E.
Another component states that
the proceeds of the sale of seized
motor. vehicles are to be disbursed
in
part to D.A.R.E.
CREW MEMBER.S - Pictured are crew
pilot; Susan J, Helms, mission specialist; and
In July, 1993, this law will
:;: iDem ben or tht Endeavour Space Shuttle scbedGregory J, Harbaugh, mission specialist. Helms,
begin
to provide more than $1 mil:: uled for Urt off Jan. 13. The crew includes, {I to
daughter or 19~8 Jackson High School graduate
lion dollats of additional funding
:;;; r) Mario. Runco Jr., mission specialist; John H.
Pat Helms and Dori Helms, will be c\lnducted
which
the Attorney General's
~ Casper, commander; Donald R. McMonagle,
various high-tech chores while in space.
office
can
distribute in the form of
••• ' '&gt; '
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grants to local law enforcement
agencies interested in the D.A.R.E.
program.
. '
"D.A.R.E.·is a nationwide effort
designed to educate children J~way
from degradation and drug abuse
and toward the confidence and self:;.. JACKSON. The Endeavour a B.S. degree in Aeronautical Engi- Armament~boratory Junior Engi· esteem they'll need to be successTHIS AREA I MAll US l PEIIIIIIEIT STUIIO OPEl 7 DAYS
ful,"
said
Fisher.
':Space Shuttle will lift off on Jan. ~cering from tbe USAF Aca~emy neer of th~ yellr 10 19~~.
Mallllat-5ahlrtlar. I0:00 a.&amp;·7:00 ~&amp; ·
:13. This mission is special to the m 1980 and a Ma~ter of Sc1en_ce
As a fl1~ht test .engmeer, Helms
On Sunday fr011 Stert 0 . . Ulll 0. How hfort &lt;losllg
:jrea because astronaut Major degree m AeronaulJCs/AstronautiCS has flown m 39 diff~~enttypes of
GALUPOUS
.
.(USAF) Susan Helms will be on from Stanford University in 1985.
U.S. and Canadian mlluary aircraft.
. POMEROY • There will be an
p~
~~ as a mission specialist on the
· She is the recipient of the Air She was selected by NASA .m Jan.
"
:~rew or STS-54.
Force Meriwrious Service M~. uary,_ 1990, and became an astro- evening social at the Senior Citizens
Center
in
Pomeroy
on
Thurs:: The shuttle, a six day mission, and A1t Force Com!'lend~uon naut m ~uly, 1~1.
.
'
')Viii feature the de Joyment of Medal; was named a D1stingms~ed
She _lS 9uahfied. f~r ass1gnment day from 5-8 p.m. The Classics
:::rDRS·F (a sateliitef, and Major Grad~ate of the USAF Test P1lot as a m1Ss1on sp~ctahst on futu~e will be playing old time favorite
· Helms will be doing many high- School, and was the recipient of the space shu~tle f11ght c~ews and IS music. A free will offering will be
:tech chores in space.
,
R. L. Jones Award for Outstanding presently . _workl~g .
?n taken for the musicians. Bring
: Major Helms is the daughter of Flight Test Engineer, Cl~.s 88A.
RMS/Roboucs 1ssues 1n the miS· snack foods for the refreshments
:t L Col. {Ret., USAF) Pat Helms, a
In 1990, ~he _rece1ved the s1on development branch of the table to share during the evening.
'
Public inviied.
.;1948 graduate of Jackson High Aerospace Engmee~g Test ~ta~- astronaut office.
:;School, and Dori Helms.
lishment Co_mmandmg ,Off1cer s
:: The major graduated from C~mmendauon, a ~pec1al award
, Parkrose Senior High School, Pon- un1que to the Canadian forces, and
.Lois
::land, Oregon in 1976. She received she was named the A1r Fo,rce

·1Daughter of Jackson gradu~te
~among space shuttle astronauts

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-86-Sunday Times-sentinel

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January 10, 1993 ..

·Gallia County calendar·

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The long-awailed Elvis postage County Pioneer and Historical
stamps went on sale Friday and Soci~ty . Geraldine would like to
there were lines almost ~verywhere have a copy from the original and
including Meigs County post says o!hers would too, Could the
offices, several of which reported owner give her a ring at 949-2568?
.sell-outs in just a few hours.
It's hard to imagine but the
One woman interviewed on a
national news program reported financial pictbre .of Robyn Astaire,
that she had purchased $4,000 widow of the famous dancer, Fred
worth of the stamps. Can you Astaire, must be bleak.
Ginger Rogers was one of six
believe that 500 million of the
stamps have been printed? What honorees at the 15th annual The
with so many it seems doubtful that .Kennedy Center Honors television
they will ever become collector show on Dec . 30. However,
'Astairc's widow demanded
items.
After much debate on the prob· $17,500 from the producers of the
lem, we in America did go for the show for th e usc of clips from
one stamp featuring a young Elvis. movies showing her famous husBut wou ld you believe that the band dancing wi!h Ginger. The
United States is not the first nation producers refused 1\) pay. and con·
to issue Elvis Presley stamps? seq uenlly the show had to gloss
While one stamp was issued in this over Ginger's appearances as
country. a t St. Vincent, a small Astaire' s popular dancing panner
nation in tjle British West Indies, in those great old movies. Too
sets of nine·different stamps show- bad.
ing Elvis in every stage of his
career went. on sale earlier. The
Mr. and Mrs. Albert (Mary
nine different cqlorful images of Ohlin~er) Schleicher of Cleveland
Elvis are printed together on the were m Meigs County for Christ·
same commemorative sheet.
mas, guests of her twin sister, ·
I didn't purchase any of the Martha, and husband, James VenElvis stamps as they went on sale nari of Pomeroy.
Friday-l'm waiting for the Glenn
The two couples left on the folMiller one.
lowing Sunday for Cleveland and
flew from there to Lehigh, Fla., for
Middleport's Paul Gerard, a a surprise visit with Mildred Baimemb,er of Middleport Village ley, a sister of Mary and Martha.
Council and·an employee of the Many of you, of course, remember
Meigs County Common Pleas Mildred as "Moody", a former
Court, h~s some serious health teacher in the Meigs Local School
Problems. He is undergoing treat· District.
ment at the present time. The
Moody was expecting the Schle·
address is Room 757, Riverside ichcrs, but not the Vennaris who
Methodist Hospital, 3535 Olen- had not visited her and.her late hustangy River Road, Columbus, Ohio band, Joe, since they had retired to
43214. Paul undoubtedly ean use Lehigh in 1981. .It was a gr'eat
all of the support we ~an send his reunion and an enjoyable outing for
way.
the Ohlinger sisters antl their hus·
bands.
Now just where did that photograph come from? That is the
So you covered the bathroom
question posed by Geraldine Cross scales for the holiday season?
who spotted a picture of the Cross Well-it's time to uncover them
Mill which was Ideated at Bow- now and see just how bad yo.u
man's Run and which is one of were. Ke ep in mind, it could
many photos in the latest photo· always be worse and do keep smil·
graph book published ~~ -the Meigs mg.

Sunday, Jan.lO
GALLIPOLIS • Evangelist ·Paul
Chapman will be preaching and
spectal singing will be presented ~Y ~
Kim Herdman, at 7 p.m., at Whlte
Road Church of God of Prophecy,
Route I 60, one mile past Holzer
Medical Center. Everyone -we!.
come.
GALLfPOLIS - Dean Warner to
preach at Mina Chapel Church on
Neighborhood Road, 7 p.m.

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Januarv 10, 1993

.

GALLIPOLIS - DiSiricl Library Muzzle Loading Rifle Club month·
Board of Trustees meeting (organi- ly meeting, 7 p.m., at Bossard
zational), S p.m., follo~ed by regu: Library.
tar meeting.
.
,
· RIO GRANDE • River Valley
CHESHIRE. River Valley High High School and the University of
GALLIPOLIS - QAPSE meet· - School Band Boosters· meeting, 6 Rio Grande financial aid worlcsl10p,
ing, 7 p.m. in Washington Elemen- p.m., in the bandrOOm.
7 p.m ., at the James Rhodes Stutary cafeteria.
.
dent Center, rooms 113-114.
GALLIPOLIS · Backwo&lt;ldsmal?
Tuesday, Jan. 12
GALLIPOLIS - Galli a County
Extension Homemakers meeting,
10:30 a.m. at the First Presbyterian
Church. Morning program: "Or~­
ni zing the Household" by Rua
Smith and Jane E. McGovern.
Rock of Ages is the only'tlationall y
Potluck at noon. Afternoon proknown brand of memorials. As an
gram: "Planting Tips For Outdoor
Authorized Rock of Ages Dealer, we
and Indoor Plants" by Hal Kneen.

meeting on Bidwell-Porter
Wastewater Treatment and Collec·
lion System project. 7 p.m. in .Bid·
well-Porter Elementary 'School
cafeteria.

,.

P-r ofessional

. BIDWELL • Jeff Smith will be
preaching at Springfield Baptist
Church, 7 p.m.
PoRTER . Gloryland Grass will
be singing at Clark Chapel Church,
7 p.m., along with preaching by
Ronnie Lemley.

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gal

'

'

are proud of our unmalched reputation '

GALLIPOLIS - PERI meeting,

3 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Cen:

ter.

Monday, Jan.ll
BIDWELL - Informational

..

for service. You can trust Rock of Ages

and their Authorized ~a!ers.

"

MEIGS COUNTY .
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
PHONE 892·2588

,~~~~

Wlilted: Art·All arust sJ&amp;ned pieces

.

'IIJtwiJJ 'Jwm. ~-

Presents ·
Class Study of "REvELATIONS"
Taught By "Professor" Clifford Maraquardt
Graduate of Dallas Seminary

EVERY MONDAY 6:30·8 P.M.
Starting Jan. 11 and Running 15 Weeks
Cost $5.00 Per Session- College Credit Available .
For information call (304) 675-1251

.

REUNITED - A dinner was held recently for Linda Darlene
Nloodispaugh Hawley, Columbus, formerly or Middleport, and
Brenda Lee Ballard Vandyke, Kansas 'City, Mo., formerly or
Chester, mother and daughter, who were reunited after 30 years. .

GALLIPOLIS FERRY

Wanted: Antique Je""lry at old C8lli&lt;OS

•

·We·wa•1t

Mother, daughter reunited

VINIDH,OHIO
DISPLAY YARO
STATE RT. 160
JAMES A, BUSH; Mgr.
PHO.NE 388-8603

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LOGAN MONUMENT CO.·
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·:MIDDLilPORT - Linda Darlene has brought our family together
f&gt;1(K&gt;dispaugh Hawley, Columbus, after 30 long years and made it
formerly of Middlepon, was reunit· whole. Miracles do happen."
Attending were Brenda Ballard
ed-with her daughter, Brenda Lee
Ballard Vandyl{e, Kansas City, Vandyke and husband, Rydale
M9., formerly of Chester, after 30 Vandyke, daughter, Kelly; Linda
Darlene Hawley, Mrs. Rick Haw·
y~ars. Her father was the late Del·
ley
and son, Darla Lynch, Gregory
mar G. Hawley.
· Rick Hawley is a brother to and Margie, Brenda Hawley, Ricky
Vandyke, and Darla Lynch and and Hanna Hawley, Narsa and Sam
Brenda Hawley, all of Middlepon, Terzopplous, Ryan, Marlene and
are sisters. The late Rhonda· Haw- Darlene Moodispaugh, Bert. and
ley Roush was a haJf,sister.
John Hawley, Viv Phillips, Dolores
The family celebrated with a Tyree and Dee Tyree, Tom and
dinner at the Meigs County Senior Rhonda King, Brittany and Beckey,
Citizens Center. A cake was served Sharon Whiteside, Cindy and
and pictures were taken. The Arron Little.
inscription on the cake slllted "God

Signed ph01011, documenlJ! &amp; autographs

Salvation Army helps needy, .
POMEROY - The lives of near·
ly 900 men, women and children

were touched by the Salvation
Army's program of ~ssisting the
eld~rly, mfi~ and d•sadvanta!led
dunng the hohday season.
Dora Wining, outpost sergcan!,
reported that I I 0 food baSkets were
g iv ~ n out, about 300 children
rec~1ved new toys, 108 girts were
dehvc r~d to P!necrest Nursing
Home m Galhpohs. 96 to the
. Pomeroy Nursmg and Rehabilita·
t1on C en ter, 100 to Overbrook
Nursmg Home, 35 to the Extended
Care Unu at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and 13 to patients there,

13 to Brenda's Personal Care and·
12 to residents of.the Meigs County
Infirmary.
The project was made possible
only through the generosity of resi·
dents and numerous volunteer
workers, said Mrs. Wining.
Hundreds of new and used toys
were donated, many gave money in
· the kettles at Krogers, Big Wheel,
and Food land, and, the Spanish
Class at Meigs High School donated canned goods.
. Volunteers assisted in _preparing
the food baskets and m distributing
the toys and gifts.
·

Rolcx Cosmograph 82,000·820.000

.I

CHRISTINEAMICO

GALLIPOLIS
Silver Bridge Plaza

AT THIS
STORE ONLY

Experience the drts'
'GALLfPOL,IS • New instructors
a1 the French Art Colony for the
wijlter quarter are adding greater
dimension .to the class schedule!
: Jane Daniel, of Gallipolis, will
teach Introduction to Music Theory
beginning Jan. I I. The class will
la~t six weeks, from 4:30-6 p.m.,
and will focus on developing slcills
. fllndamcnUII to the understanding
o~ theoretical concepts of. music.
These skills include preparatory ear
lr\lining and mastery of such elements. as all major an~ minor key
signatures and scales, inter"als,
rhythms, note values, pnd major
and minor chord structure.
' Janeua Davis, adjunct professor
of theater .at the University of Rio
Grande, will teach Creative Dra~
matics from 5-6 p.m. for children
ages 8-12. The class, be~inning
Feb. 3, will consist of crcauve dra·
matic games e11ding with a skit
written and performed by the students.
Christine Amico, of Wellston,
will teach Beginning Ballet from 4·
5 p.m., and Intermediate Ballet
from 5-6 p.m. beginning Jan. 12.
Amico, currently attending Ohio
University, has danced for 15 years
with 'fhe Violin Regionai.Dance
Company and has taught'ballet,

A Fair decision?

In 1989 . the Exxon Valdez. an oil
ta nker. s tru ck a reef in Alaska 's
Prince William Sound. spi lling 1I' mil·
lion gallons of oil. The accident caused

nothing less than

devas tation of lhe region 's marine en-

vironment. Origi nally convicted or
negligence, Capt. Joseph Hazelwood's

' '

misdemeanor co nviction was over-

lu(Jled in July 1992. An Alaska appeals .
court' held that Hazelwood wasJ m·
mune to prosecution under a provi·
sion of the federal Clean Water Act or
1972 because he had reported the spill
prompPy to the Coast Guard.

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS
•

VISIT FROM SANTA- While
making his rounds at Christmas
time, Santa stopped at Over·
brook to visit with the residents
there. Here he gives Nina Wyatt
a 1\oliday hug.

·to

Re•dy_ln

5 MINUTES

·JANETTADAVIS

TAWNEY STUDIO 424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, DH.

*

tap, and jazz for five years.
'Amico requests that children are
five years old or older for Beginning Ballet and at least eight years
old (or has had some ballet training.) for the Intermediate Ballet
class. All dance classes are held in
the French Art Colony's dance
annex at the Lupton Building. The
Lupton Building is located on Stleond Avenue and the entr.mce door
is between Jack and Jills and Carl's
Shoe Store.
In addition to the new classes,
several classes taught in 1992 will
carry their success over into the
new year. These classes include:·
Elementary Spanish (Tuesdays
from 5·6 p.m.) Drawing for Youth
(Wednesdays from 4:30-6:30 p.m.)
Tap and Jazz (Wednesdays from
5:15--6:15 p.m.) Dance away the
inches (Wednesdays .from _7:308:30 p.m.) Aerobics (Mondays,
T~esdays, and Thursdays from
6:30· 7:30 p.m .) Basket Weaving
Workshop (Tuesdays frdin 6:30·
9:30 p.m.) Piano and violin, both
by appointment.
For information about 'the class·
es available, call 446-3834: All
French Art Colony programming is
offered with the support of the
Ohio Arts Council.

and we'D pay the bighest cash prices!
Don't ~lniss this,important event

Wed
•
.:.sat.
at
's
Diamonds
.
&amp;
:
Gold
You may have thousan~ of dollars
Diamonds, gpld, precious stones••.
worth of items lathering dust

Co~uderbrln~gEVERYTErnNG
We have surprised many people who thought
their items were not valuable enough to con-'
sider. The nationally known expert appraisers ·
we have gathered together for this orie week
event.-.. along with our qualified staff... offer you
a wealth of knowledge and experience. We are
accustomed to paying over $200,000 for valu!lble items. Don't miss this opportunity. Perhaps we'll help you find a real treasure in those
hidden away pieces. There's no charge for our
consultation and advice during this event. ·
Acustome•
brought these
unwanted Items
to us and =etved
$12.000. L.ook

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I**

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· .AT THIS STORE ONLY'

Home Owned Home Operatitd

"Servlnt the Ar11 fer Ovtt 15 Yuu"

fNiiiM

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1480 Jackson

'

IT'S BUSINES8-A8-USUAL AT ALL OTHER AMES STORES

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6 ALLIPOLIS • Ariel Players
will be holding auditions at the
Ariel Theatre Jan. 14 at 7 p.m. for
the upcoming production of "Drac·
· ula".
'
. Auditions for the 6 men and ·2

~o"!~n

#

'

parts, are :open to tbe pubbe. Dracula" will be performed
. May 21-22 and JuneS ..
For more information call ttie
MQnis and Dorothy Haslcins Ariel
11Jeatre at 446-ARTS. •

•
I·

~

Auditions for 'Dracula' sei

SALE CONDUCTED BY NASSI-BERNSTEIN COMPANY INC. AS AGENT

WobiU

'

GAL

Sllver'Bridge Plaza .

Medical Shoppe
Pike'
Mork Dillon, Sale• Manager Dee Dillon, ~.N ., Owner
446~2206

... .

. John Noose, chaplain's aide; Chad
Briggs, Kyle Clark, Dan Magnussen and Jeremy Euton, instruc·
tors and TJ. Lambj:rt, den chief:
. . The troop also held an overmght
campout Dec. 29 at the Stanley L.
Evans.cabin at 0.0. Mcintyre Park
· and are presently preparing for
Merit Bail~e Day, to ~ held Jan .
23 at the FtrSt Presbytenan Church
in GaUipolis. .
'
:rroop 200 1s chartered by a
group of Gall1polis businessmen
and meets at 7 p.m. the first thnee
Mondays of the mOf!th at the First
~sbytcrian Chureh.in Gallipolis.·-

•

..

through your
· home. check your
safe deposit box
to see what .
YOU may find
that we would
ltke to buy .

unusue.J watches: Patek Philllpe to $250,000;
Vacheron to $125,000; Tiffany to $100,000;
Role,x to $40,000; Cartier to $100,000;
LeCoultre to $10,000. Don't miss this oppor~
tunfty .t o have your timepieces professionally
evaluated at no obligation on your part.
Perhaps you've already thought about selling
your unwanted jewelrY or collectibles but. didn't
·know of a reputable firm to talk to. Our years ·
of service and fine reputation In Athens offer
you the assurance yim 've wanted. .
We will buy.at top prlcea and pay Immediately. Everything We c:Uacu11 witb you Ia
beld In strict confidence.

• Pocket Watches
• R. La llq ue ltf'ms
• large Pea rl Ne'ckla ces
• Old Cui Diamonds
' • Cartie-r &amp; Tiffany Ite-ms
• Jewelry rrom lO's, 30'S, 40's
• Georg J e nse n Items
• Galle' Items
• Old Autographs

•

Compllc~t(:d

Watches

• Antlque Sterling Stiver

• VIctorian J ewcdry
.• ·Old Fountain Pens
• RookwOQd Pottery
• Mens' Old Gold Wristwatches
• Oil Paintings
• Art&amp;: Decorative Antiques ·.

• Toy Banks "

"

• Suck.Ptn s
• Rolex Watches
• Antique Bracelets
• Diamond Bar Pins

•·old Mllltary Items
• Antique Lockets
• Rose Cold He ms
• Art Deco J ewe lry
• Signatures

EVENT IS ·FOR .4... DAYS ONLY ~

DUfi'IKJI'fiS

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&gt; .

_,
•
•
•
•

Diamond Earrings
Mourning J ewe lry
Diamond Bow Ptns
Diamond Bracelets
• Art Nouveau J ewelry

: • Sliver &amp; Gold Boxes
• plder Cocktail Rings

• Patek Phli]Jppe Watches
• Old Documents

Jan.

•'
•

•

-.-

13~16

Wed.-Sat. 10-9

.Diamonds
tt Qold
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Univer.s ity Mall_ • Athens, OH • 1-800-982~2728
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.Wristwatches, .pocket watches and
intricate timepieces are In d~mand
We pay the hJghest possible prtces for fine and

Rely on Dunkin's fine reputation

Troop 200 elects ·leaders
GALLfPOLIS -During one of
their regular meetings in December the Boy Scouts of Gallipolis
Troop 200 elected the following
members' ro positions of leadership:
James Standish senior patrol lead·
er· Chris Alth~f assistant senior
pairoi Icader: Walter Sttafford and
James Standi~, patrol_leaders.
. Scoutmaster David Walker- also
appointed the foUowi~g ~eouts to
posjtions of responsJbJbty: John
Eichman and Corey Burlile, quartermasters· Kevin Walker, scribe;
RQII Hojat historian; Levi King,
. librarian; Bob Ma~ul!len, bugler;
•
•

Your unwanted jewelry may
prove to be.very valuablf;.
Here .are a few ~pies of
the prtces ~are now paying
for diamonds, depencUng on .
weight, color, cut &amp; clarity:
l ct. $1.000 to $10,000
;3 ct. $3,000 to $30,000
5 ct. $7,000 to $90,000
20 ct. $20,000 to $200,00o

· Almost everyone lias something of vluue they
no longer need or want:· inherlted items; jewelry that doesn't fit your style; watches that
are old or broken; silver pi~es; and even old
toys·. Seireralitems that might be useless to
YOU ... may be cons!del'ed treasures by the . ·
collectors from our vast I.Iitemational network.

Scout news
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Unusuol Pat&lt;k watches up 10 •100.000

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AFC .playoff action .

:
B)' ALAN ROBINSON
Thatwas easy for Reich.
• PITTSBURGH (AP) - Frank
The Steclers, in their first playReich is the Jd'l,~ COI1ICbacks off game in exactly 10 years, treat·
- . and he abo
he's a pretty ed the 60,407 10wel-twirling fans 10
good quanaba:lc with a-lead, too.
a 3-0 lead on Gary Anderson's 38·
The Buffalo BiJls needed no yard field goal in the fmt quarter.
magic, no'~ or a lifelime, The Steelers proved no beuer in
qo miracles ·from Reich 10 beat the holding a small lead than the Oilers
Pittsburgh Steclen 24-3 in the AFC did in mainraining a huge one.
playoffs Simrday. His two .touch·
The Steclen looked rosty, ·espedown-passes and adcpl use of his cially quanerback Neil O'Donnell.
receivers and the clock in the sec- He was making his first start in
ODd half were good enough.
more than a month d!¥'10 a broken
Reich, filling in again for right shinbone and he looked it,
injwal Jilii:KeHy, threw a one-yard throwing~ inrerceptions and losscoring pass 10 MilCh Fteroue on a ing a .fumble that led to the first
liliemaJKligible play .- Frerotte's Bills wuchdown.
third IOUChdown receplion this sea·
Defensive end Phil Hansen
son - aud a 19-yardcr 10 James recovered O'Donnell's fumble at
Loftoo in the third quarter as the the Bills' 41 with 6:27 remaining in
Bills advanced 10 the AFC champi- the first half, and Reich put them in
onship game for the third suaight the end zone nine plays later.
year.
Thurman Thomas gained II ·
The BiBs are the first team since yards on third-and-one from the 50,
the I972-76 Oakland Raiders to Kenneth Davis gained 14 10 the 19
reach the AFC' title gliJlle at least . and Reich hit I)on Beebe for 19 to .
three successi..e ~· By winning the one. Frerotte, lined UJ? on the
in Pittsburgh before the biggest left side or the line, poppea up free
crowd in Steelers' history, they ' in the en&lt;! zone to grab Reich's
became the fmt wild-card team 10 short flip, his second TD catch
win a divisional playoJf game since against the Steelers this season. He
the NFL adopted its cunent playoff also caught a one-yarder in the
formatthreeyCII'Sago.
· Bills' 28-20 victory at Buffalo
, Of course, this B.ills team is Nov. 8.
quickly becoming known for the
The key play of the game
historic.
.
,
· proved a pass that neither team
• The Bills milled f1001 32 points · caught
down - the greatest comeback in
Pittsburgh purlted on its first
NFLhistory-IO .beatHouston41- possession of the second half, and
38 in overtime last Sunday, hut Reich - clearly outplaying
they had 10 come back ftom only O'Donnell in the duel of former
ihree points down this time.
Maryland quarterbacks- immedi-

ately drove· the Bills 14 plays in 80 .
yards.
Reich hit James LoftQn for 12
yards, Thomas for 11 and Don
Beebe for nine 011 a drive aided by
a critic~!~ p:yard interference call
on Sammy Walker, who was
replacing injure&lt;! All-Pro cornerback Rod Woodson.
On second-and-13 from the
Steelers' 17 aftet a delay-of-game
penalty, Reich threw the ball
directly into the arms of Richard
Shelton, th~ dime defender in the
Steelers' six: defensive back-package. With a wide-open field in
front of him, he dropped the ball,
After th;n scare, Bills -coach
Marv Levy could have played it
safe by handing the ball to Thomas,
but .didn't. Instead, Reich came
right back with a scoring pass to
Lofton, making it 14-3 with four
minutes left in the third quarter,
and this time it was Pittsburgh that
had 10 play catch up.
They couldn't:
WRAPPED UP ....:. Pittsburgh · running back
Rivers Stadium, wbere tbe Bills won 24·3 to
The Bills defense sacked
Barry Foster (29) finds himself wrapped up by
earn
tbe right to race today's San Dlego-Miaml
O'Donnell seven times, forced him
Buffalo defenders Henry Jones (20) and Darryl
winner in the AFC title game on Sunday, Jan.
10 fumble two ·other times that he
Talley in the first quarter or Saturday's AFC
17. (AP)
recovered and never let the Steelers
divisional playofr game at Pittsbur!lb 's Tbree
get back in it. Not even Barry Foster's 13th 100-yard game of the
season- he had 104 yards on 20 a.nd they hardly resembled-the nine did against Hous10n, but they made two rushers - Thomas and Foster
touchdown passes that Kelly put up this one loolc easy. Until Saturday, -with 104 yards on 10 canies.
carries- could'llelp Pinsburgh.
in
his final two games against Pitts· · NFL wild-card teams had been ()..8
Even ·the towel-waving Steelers
. Reich spent most of the second
burgh.
It
hardly
mattered
as
the
with
an
averal'e
loss
margin
of
11
fans
threw in the towel after Carhalf working the clock and a tired
Bills,
the
only
AFC
playoff
team
points
in
div•sional
playoffs
the
well
Gardner's one-yard touchSteelers defense, which was withthat
Pittsburgh
didn't
beat
this
seapast
three
seasons.
down
run with two minutes left
out its top player, Woodson, for
the
Steelers
fpr
the
..
·
Buffalo
didn't
get
a
huge
game
son,
defeated
made
it
24-3 and ended a strealc of
most of the half due to head ·and
fifth
straight
time
since
1985.
from
Thomas,
who
had
19
~arries
five
straight
Bills road postseason
left hand injuries.
The
Bills
couldn't
have
made
it
for
54
yards,
but
got
one
f1om
·
losses,
including
lhe past two Super
Reich's numbers weren't aweanv
harder
on
themselves
than
they
Davis
who
upstaged
the
AFC's
lOp
Bowls,
·
some - 16 of 23 for 160 yards-

without a ·basket a5 the Badgers' away until Rose's running bank pointers 10 nigger an 18-4 run that jx:Jints of the half.
overall, 5-1 conference). Wittenfive-game :winning streak was shot started a 10-0 run with 3:14 helped the-Jayhawks turn a21-17
Hare scored nine of Dayton's berg's last reguhir-season defeat at
ended in their Big Ten opener.
left in the half. Rose added a slam deficit into a 35-25 lead with 24 first II second-half points as the hoJ_tte w~s Jan. 20, 1988, against
·. Chris Webber scored 20 points, dunk, a jumper and ihen assisted.on seconds left in the first half. Iowa Flyers built a 44·37 advantage, But Hetdelberg.
Rose and J uwan Howard each had a dunk by King as Michigan took a State could get no closer than six Jason Williams began Notre
The Gators (1()..2, 6-0) took the
18 and Jimmy King had 16 for the 44·30 ·lead with 25 seconds left in afterthat.
Dame's decisive surge with a lead for good with 3:35 to go as
Wolverines, who avenged an ) 8- the half. Webster made two free
Notre Dame 71, Dayton 66
three-pointer, and HOQver followed Owens hit a layup, was fouled and
point loss at Wisconsin last season. . throwstocutitto 12.
,
At South Bend, Ind., Ryan with back-to-back threes, the sec- made the free throw 10 make it 56Michigan (12·1) is 2-0 in the Big
Wisconsin was in early foul Hoover set a school record Satur- ond tying it 46-46.
5). Owens added a three-point shot
Ten for the first time since 1988- trouble against the bigger Wolver- day with seven three-pointers as
Case Western 72
with 3:03 left 10 increase Alleghe89.
'
ines and Michigan began shooting Notre Dame beat Dayton 7.1-66 10
Denison 63 (OT)
ny' s lead t.o six points and the
Tracy Webster scored 25 points bonus free throws with 9:14 left in · break a three-galliC losing streak.
At Cleveland, Ohio, Case West· Gators added seven of 11 free
and Mic:hael F'mley hod 17 for the · the half. The Wolverine$' balance
.Hoover, a freshman and part- em Reserve's Kevin Wojciechows- throws in the cl(l!;ing stages 10 seal
Badgers, Who Jlave Lost 10 of their was eviden! in !he ("mt ~al{ .whe!l time sla!ter, came off t1!e bench to ki hit a three-pointer to send the the viciOry.
last 11 games 10 Michigan.
. King, 'Howard and Webber each liit seven of 13 attempts from • game into ovenime and !hen scored
Owens had been benched for
The Wolverines~ didn't pull had 10 points. Finley scored 12 for · bcyo~d the three-point line on his U of the Spartans' next 16 points much of the second half because he
the Badgers, ·seven in the game's. way to a career-high 28 points.
10 spark a 72-63 overtime vtctory had four personal fouls. ,
fmt five minutes.
.
He hit two three-pointer! in a over Denison Saturday.
Josh Miller scored IS pointS,
·
Michigan had a 28-12 fmt-half. decisive 15-2 Notre Dame run l!lidCase (4-6 overall, 1-4 in the Owens 14 and TJ . Florlciewicz 11
rebouding edge and was called for ' way through t~e second half as the Nonh Coast Conference) held a 3().. for tlie Gators. Matt Croci put in 21
nine fouls to 15 on the Badgers, Irish (6-5) rallied from a seven- 25 lead at the half, but the Big Red points, Luke Ragan 12 and Josh
who made only 4 of 15 three-point pciint deficit tq take a 52-46 lead on (7-5, 3-3) went on a 7-0 ru.n to start Leslie I0 for the Tigers.
auempts.
Monty Williams' three-point play tl)e second half to get back into
No. 4 Kansas 78, Iowa St. 71
with 9:25 remaining.
contention . •
Ohio Northen 72
At Lawrence, Kan., Richard
The Flyers (1-11) were led by
The score was tied scveri times
Mount Union Sll
Scott scored 18 pointS Saturday Chip Hare's career-best 33 pointS in the second half.
At Ada, Ohio, D.' Artis Jones
and No.4 Kansas beat'lowa State as they' lost their sixth straight.
Wojciechowski's thiec-pointer with 24 pointS and 11 rebounds
· for the lith consecutive year at Hare htt'six three-pointers.
with two 'seconds to play made it · helped Ohio Northern retain a twohome, 78-71 in the Big Eight open-Notre Dame improved to 16-0 56-all at the end of regulation. He game lead in the Ohio Conference
er for both teams.
against Daytoil at lhe Joyce Alhlet: thcri sank another three-pointer and as the Polar Bears ~feated Mount
Scott scor;ed underneath to begin ic and ConvQCation Center.
eight free throws down the stretch Union 72·59 Saturday.
and end a 13-2 run early in the sec- . Hoover's seven three-pointers 10 ice the game for the Spartll!ls.
Aaron Ma&lt;lry score&lt;! 14 and
on&lt;! half as the Jayhawks (11-1) bettered a Notte Dame mark of six
Allegheny 66, Wittenberg 57
Tom Nation and Mark Gooden,
pulled away to their biggest lead of set by Daimon Sweet against ManAt Springfield, Ohio, Derrick who went over the I-,000-point
the game at 20 points.
hattan in last year's NIT tourna-- Owens scored six straight points to mark for his career, each had 13 for
Kansa$ won its 13th straight ment. Hoover's 13 attempts were put Allegheny ahead for good SatNonhero ( 11-0 overall, 6-0
· home game and 18th straight in lhe one more than David Rivers put up urday as the OaiOrs took sole pos- Ohio
conference). ·
league.
Dec. 1, 1987, against Indiana.
session of first place in the North
Andy Huffman scored 14, Scott
Iowa State (8-4) has lost all of
Notre Dame also set a team Coast Conference with a 66-57 vic- Gobely
13 and Willie BullS 12 for
its road games Ibis year to Top 25 record for throe-point shooting, hit- tory over Allegheny.
the Purple Raiders (6-6, 2-4).
teams.
· ',
ling 13 of 32, The Irish set the rrcThe victory snapped regularOhio Nonhero led 3I-26 at halfThe Cyclones played their clos- vious highs when they hit II o 27 season home winning streaks of 59 time
expanded the lead to 18
est.game in five years in Lawrence, in a loss to Indiana earlier this sea- games overall and 36 games in the pointsand
several times in the second
where they have won only once son.
conference for the Tigers (9-J half.
,since 1913 and had lost their previHare, a 6-foot-10 sophomore,
ous four by an average of 35 and Hoover dueled from long range
points.. ·
in a first half that saw 11 lead
The Cyclones made all 17 free . changes and en.ded with Dayton
BOSTON (AP) - New Eng- MacPherson had not led directly to
throws they took, but shot 40 per· leading 33-31.
land Pall'iots' general manager Sam his resignation.
cent from the field and had only
Hare scored nine " f his 15 ftrst· Jankevich resigned Saturday, a day
"After a great deal of considerafour points off the bench.
half points on thrcelof-five three- after he ftred coach Dick MacPher- tion and after consultation with the
Eric Pauley added 15 points for poin\ shooting. Hoover had nine of son.
owner of the New England Patriots '
Kansas, while Steve Woodberry his l2 from beyond the arc, hitting
Jankovich, who moved to the football club, I ha-.:e decided to
had 13 and Rex Walters and Ado- three of six.
Patriots from his post as athletic submit my resignation," the statenis Jordan ll .each.
Williams, who entered the game director at the University of Miami ment said.
Justus Thigpen led Iowa State , leading the Irish averaging 18.6 in •1990, said his resignation "is in
"The events of the last· couple
with a season-high ;1.5 points. He points a game, was scoreless until a the best interest of both myself and of days had no major impact on
led an -11·2 spun midway through dunk gavq Notre Dame a 20-19 !he Patriots' organization."
.
this decision," it continued. "Now
the second half that cut Kansas' lead with 7:09 to play. Williams
The Patriots were 8-24 in their the Patriots have a golden opPortulead to61-SO.
· finished 1fiLh 15 points ~nd 15 two seasons under the control of nity and must look forward 10 the
Julius. Michalik contiibuted 13 rebounds. 1
.
GET OFF ME! - Willc0115in's Michael Fin~y gr!lbs a rebound points, including a three-pointer . Dayton led by as many as six Jankovich and MacPherson, includ- future with Jim Orthwein as owner,
a new football coach and coaching
wbile IICOW&amp;ng8t .Midllgan'• Juwan HOwllrd (behind Finley) In the with 27 seconds to go that made it late in the half, but Notre Dame ing a 2-14 record this year,
Jankovich,
athletic
director
at
staff,
a new day in the National
first lullf or Saturday's Big Tea matchup In MadiMJn, Wis~ which
75-69 -the closest margin of the pulled wi\hin two at halftime on WashingiOn State before spending Football League with the labor
tk third-naked Wolverines won 98·73. (AP)
.
second half.
·
, Carl Cozqn's off-balance three· eight years at Mial!li, released a agreement, and free agency and the
Jordan hit co~.;ecutive three- pointer ~~ the buzzer, his only statement saying the firing of No. 1 draft choice."'

MADISON, Wis, (AP) ~ Jalen
Rose led Michigan on runs ai the
end or the frrst hal( and the start of
the Second S.aturday and the thirdranked Wolverines routed overmatched Wisconsin 98-73 for their
lith stralght victory.
Rose had six poi,nts in a 10-2
burst over the flll81 three minutes of
the first half that built a 44-32 lead.
He added seven more in an 11-2
sp~rt after halftime that gave
Michigan a SS· 34 le&amp;!l three min·
utes iniO the half,
Wisconsin (1·3) went nearly
seven minlllel clurinc the ~ runs

C

BREAST

99( il SJ290

10 LB. PACKAGE

Limit 1 Per Cuatonr

'

74~3 , in

B)' RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Civil
rights leaden llld playcn' associations have joined IDgCiher 10
for the integration of team
oiTJCCS.
The groups, spuned by alleged
racial remarks altributed 10 Cincinnati Reds owner Mlr&amp;e Scholl, said
Friday they would cill for teamS 10
consider ll !cut one minority fol.each fature Croat-offiee opening.
They postpOned a decision about
iame pickets and lioycous but
· called Cor eunent IIJlOdl executives
to Unclerao sensitiVIty trlininal. ·
Film dim:tor Spike LCc, also ll
Friday's 3 lfl·
inn, poiar.ed out
why many lthlelea have 1101 spoken
OUl qainll racism in ..,arts.
• 'Today's African-America!)

~~~ At Po.,..l'e Super V•lue
J•n. 10 thru .len. 11, 1113

Olf•r

January 10, 1993

Civil rights leaders, former players · pus~ing for front-office integration

---=.-----.. CHICKEN
SHOPPER'S VALUE

·Section C

In weekend meeting about racism in sports,

----~vvPOI-----,•

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· Good Only At Powell's Super V•lll• .
Off., Good .18n. 10 thru J•n. 18, 11113
Umlt 1 Per Cuatom.r

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Jankovich resigns as Patriots' GM

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No.3 Michigan beats Wisconsin 98-73 for 11th straight victory

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a_thlete is not goin to jeopardize
· their contract, not g ' g 19 jeopardize their sponsors p of sneaker
deals by sticking s neck out,"
Lee said. "Who's going to stand
up 8lld say something that they're.
goingiO lose millions and milltons
of dollars?"
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, pres!·
dent of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, was the
most fon:eful speaker and drafted
the itatement the group issued.
"I ~this !• fh:e most iiJI~ifl­
event m l'ICISI!I m sports m my
lifetime," he said.
The statement against the
remarks attributed to Schott was
endorsed by Benjamin L. Hooks,
executive dim:tor of the National
Associatioo for the Advancement

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Committed tQ racial justice, fair- sity on· the playing field and in the ment
ness and ~uality and 10 the dignity nation. Failure to do so will he' the · "No one -..:iJI identify • baseball
player, or should they, as a vicof every!individual, we urge an&lt;! biggest racial slur of all."
.
.
lsiah Thomas of the Detroit Pis· tim," he said.
expect the owners to take meaning.
Fehr went on' to criticize the
ful •and appropriate. disci{llinary tons participated via telephone
adion ·- now - for Justice hookup. Fat Lever of the Dallas delay on dealing with Schott,
delayed is justice denied.
Mavencks auended the meeting as &amp;Cj:using owners of "pOOrly func"ThiS unfonunate incident pro- did former NBA P.layer Alex tioQing institutions at this
:
.vides an ,Opportunity fot the owners English and former maJor league IJIOment."
Grantham was harsher, saying!
to not OjllY condemn racial slurs, inl~elder Tony Bemazard
Fehr said that tbC players associ- "It only suggests the inept manbut recognize that the failure of
at,ions
had diff'teult~g r;acial agement of the leagues that has
baseball and all sports 10 include
equality
a top issue
use of their allowed so much time to pass." ·
African-Americans, Hispanics and
Deputy commissioner Steve'
rolq
in
coHectivc
bargaining.
"To
other minorities at every level of
Greenberg
said later lhet "it would
suggest
they're
all-consuming
is
the industry - general managenot
be
appropriaiC
for me 10 comundersuiting
the
caso,"
Fchr
said,
ment, entrepreneurial, professional,
ment
or
for
anyone
from maJor
·
He
also
said
the
high
wageS
of
etc.- constitute !11Cial slurs.
professional'
athletes
averaging
leagt!C
bltee"'!l
to
~ent_
as lonJI
"We hope that action taten·wiJI
as
the
current
mvesupnon
"
pend·
more·
than
$1
million
in
baseball
precipitate immediate effort's to
ing."
,
and
basketball
prevented
players
remedy inequalities so that baseball
at every level will reflect the diver- from receiving sympathetic treat·

of Colored People, and John E.
Jacob, yresidcnt of the National'
Urban League. Also joining were
Don41d Fehr, executive director of
the Ma)ol: Li:aguc Baseball Players
Assoctation;' Charles Otantham,
executive director of the National '
Basketball ~layers Association;
Clark Gaines, a regional director of
the NFL Players Association; and
Reggie Willtams, who works for
the NFL.
"This body here assembled
joins with citizens around the
nation in expressing outrage and
pain at statements an&lt;! behavior
attributed to Marge SchQtt, owner
of the Cincinll8li Reds," the group
said. "Such statements and behavIor have no place in the sports
world and indeed iii the nation.
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· Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

January 10,-1993
Page-C2-Sunday Times-sentinel

·Ma.riet(a ,drops GAHS to thirdplac~ in loop with 71-56 win -~;:;

River Valley knocks
off Eastern 55-51
to reach .750 mark

MARIETTA. - Host ~etta
dropped de~endmg champton Galltpohs to th~:fd place tn the South·
· e~ster~ Ohll? League ~asketball
race Fnday rught followrn$ a 71-56
VIctory ov~r tbe Blue Devils.
.
The, vtctory left Coach Tim
Tol~da s Tigers 6-3 overall and ~-I
ms1de the league. Coacll hm
Osborne's crew dropped to 4-4

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·sy G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Chris Mandeville and Dave Poling
Times-Sentinel Staff
and guards Shawn Cox and Paul
EAST MEIGS - For a time Covey - coming in for Raider
during Friday night's River Valley- starters McCarty, Peck, center
Eastern boys' basketball game- a Kevin Hunt and forwards Rob
contest Mike Jenkins' Raiders won · Canady and Ryan McCarley, East55-51- it seemed that the Raiders em was prevented from gaining
were headed for a 'c3ic:ewalk, con- anything more than·the four-point
sidering .that the they scored the lead (20-16) it had following a
game's first eight points and after jumper from beyond the Jane by
leading .by seven at halftime, tbey senior guard Chad Savoy with 4:45
ballooned their lead to 18 points in left before halftime.
The Raiders ·quickly slashed
the "last two minutes of the third
qua(ler.
most of that lead with a three-point
But the Raiders (6-2), playing . · shot from the left wing by Covey
theiC third road game of the season, that cUt Eastern's advanlllge to 20were in for a rude shock- in fact, ··19 at the 4:32 mark in the second
a pair of them.
quaner. After Covey was called for
After battling !urnover trouble traveling 21 seconds later, he 'made
- ·the thing that eventually proved up for that miscue by driving in for
to be. their downfall- early, Greg a layup with 3:03 left to give"the
Ullman's Eagles.(1-7) ended their visitors a 21-20 lead.
early. scoring drought with offense
The Raiders followed with conpr~&lt;)rily from juniors Pat Ne:-vland
secutive three-pointers by Crace
- :·h)s one-and-one shots wtth 13 and Cox to lead 27-20 wuh 1:45
se,oMs left in act one gave the left before halftime. Then Mandevhc:ists their first lead- and Wes ille's layup preceded a bonus free
Ar&amp;augh that outscored their guests throw made necessary by Eagle
11.;2 in the last five minutes of the postman Charlie Bissell's fllSt foul
fir'.!~ quarter to lead IJ.IO at the
with 1:07 left 10 give River Valley
qu3rtei-'s end.
#\
a 30-20 lead. But Eagle guard/for:Jhe Eagles ' comeba ck also ward Randy Kaylor's three-spot
re$Uhed in h\ngthy bench time in from the right wing in the quaner's
th( firs t half for ~aider guards last minute settled the Raiders'
Aaron McCany and Charles Peck, halftime lead at seven. ·
boUt of whom received two foul s
Eastern didn't recover terribly
eaC_h before the ftrst-quarter buz;zer well from its 7-for-28 showing
· sounded. But with a revised SC((Ond from the field in the first half. The
fiye- [rontmcn Chris Crace, third quaner saw the Eagles hit one

. 1

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Tales
from the hardwood ...
'•
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE

·• Times-Sentinel Starr
:GALLIPOLIS- Rematch time
. is );et for Monday night for the varSil)' girls' teams from River Valley
and Gallia Academy.
Raiders (5-4), coming off a
51·34 road win over Eastern Thursday night, will keep their tour bus
ro)ling thro ugh Gallia Academy
and will end their four-game, road
trip this week )Yith a Thursday dale
at :Wellston 10 start the second half
of-their seasOn.
.
:River Valley will need :r ro;vival
of· the Amber Staton-to-Eiisha
Meadows connection that worked
so: well in Meadows' recqrding a
career-high 16 points - this was
thi: first time in her varsity career
th~t she has scored in double figures - against Eastern. A revival
of.double-flgure offense from scorfng leaders Shelly Metzger and
Nickje Meade will also be needed
to: get revenge against the Blue
Angels (6-3).
:The Angels, owners of a three&amp;llflle winning streak, have been
o utscored in the second half of
their last two games. That cannot
be allowed to become a trend if the
Angels expect 10 keep their streak
alive. For them, the fact that the
last time they outscored their opponent was their road game against
River Valley on Dec. 21 - a contest the Academy won 79-61 -has
if' to ·be encouraging. Repeating that
deed should be on the Angels'
agenda.
Though nothing is promised,
Mindy Pope, a 5-foot-11 freshman
forwa rd who is JO. points away
from 200 on tbe season, should be
th~ most il)fluential factor in .the
Gallipolis offense. Pope has scored
at least 25 points per game, in the
las) three games, including her season-high 28 against the Raiders.
. The scri be recently found the
!l(;Orekeeper's goof in Pope's scor-ing total from the Dec. 28 game
a~inst Chillicothe. Pope scored 26

:The

points, not 25 as was marked in the
book.
Ties mark
Tbe River Valley boys saw. two
things happen in Fnday night's win
against Eastern. Senior frontman
kevin Hunt's team-high 12 paints
tied fellow front-liner Dave Poling' s ecron against South Point on
Dec. II for the lowest team -leading
point total.
Also in the.Easter:n game, senior
guard Charles Peck. who entered
Saturday night's road game at
Logan one poinl short of 100 on
the season, scored fewer than 10
for only the second time this season.
All-star game Friday
At Chesire; the Buckeye AllStar Classic, sponsored by WZXFM (99.7 MHz) of Columbus, will
be held on Friday, Jan. 15 at 7:30
p..m. at River Valley High School.
The baske.tball game will have
former Ohio State players such as
Jay Burson, Joe Concheck, Steve
Hall, Bill Robinson , Rick Smith,
Ron Stokes and Troy Taylor taking
on a team consisting of former Rio
Grande players Gary Harrison,
Reggie Giles, Greg James, Bruce
Morrison and Tom Strickland as
well as fonmer .Marshall University
player Rodney Holden.
Admission if $5 per person. Preschoolers may enter free.
· For more mformation, call River
Valley High School at367-7377.
Youth ca~erest Saturday
Oak Hill High School principal
Bill Haines announced a Biddee
League boys' basketball touma. ment, for students in grades 5 and
under, Satutrday, Jan. 16 and Sunday, Jan. 17 at Oak Hill High
School.
There~ entry fee for any
team.wislilng ill enter.
For more information, call
Haines no later than Tuesday at the
high school (1-682-7055) or at his
home (1-682-6420).

oNwtMivNo wa

• .Self Umited·Foed F~
• Fomrulaled to Balance Your Forage Condllions
• CoonalierltJ Feed

•

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•TwoSi1Bs501l. lnl5110 Ill.

ovef!ill w:'d 2-2 behind Athens and GAllS wtis credited with only tliree
The tigers; behind Ben Kroft's
Marietta m conference play.
assists and two steals during the inside shooting, blew the contest
The T1gers, playmg what some 32-minute contest.
wide open in the third period,
MHS observers .sa1d "w~. our best
Marietta jumped off to a 11-2 outscoring Gallipolis 20-8 to take a
game of.the year by far, pr_es,sed advantage behind the outside commanding 58-39 advantage into
Ute 9alhans frt&gt;m start to ftmsh, shooting of Cam Mcintyre !luring the fourth quarter. Both coaches
forcmg 17 ~lue Dev1l tumove~s. the ftrSt three minutes of play, and emptied their benches during the
From the f1eld, the Blue Devtls never looked back, leading 18-10 · final eif$htminutes of play.
n.ever seemed to get untra~ked, hit-. after one period and 38-31 during
Galhpolis hit three of five Chari·
ltn)!; 4lpercent of thetr shots. the halftime intermission.
ty tosses, and picked off 40

Soqtheastem Ohio
Athletic League contests, the
Athens Bulldogs relllin the top spot
in the standings with a 64-37
pounding of Jack son, Marieua
remains in second place by thrash" ing Gallia Academy 71-56, and the
Warren Local Warriors notched
their first victory of the season in a
67-65 squeaker over the Logan
Chieftains.
. Athens, now 4·0 in the league,
1s followed by Marietta (3-1), Gallipolis (2-2) and Jackson Logan
and Warren Local (all 1-3).'

•

•WHO'S OPEN? -River Valley guard/forward Ryan McCarley

(~tght) ~ansthe paint for the an5Wer .to the eternalllaskelball ques-

WORKING THE PERIMETER - Eastern guard Cbad Savoy
(left) takes the ball around tile perimeter or River Valley's 2-3
ddense in the third quarter of Friday night's game, which the .
Raiders won 55·51. Savoy finished with 10 points. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

lton whtle Eastern guard Jeremy Cline shadows him In the first

qu~rter of F~iday night's game at Eastern High School, where the
Ratde~s survived two Eastern threats to win 55·51 in part because

of McCarley's team-high 10 rebounds. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spenc r Osborne)
.
.

.

two-pointer (Matt Martip's fade~
way jumper. 7:28), two free throws
(by Bissell, 6:30) and a three-pointer (Chad Savoy's bomb from the
left corner, 1:33). That was their
offense for the quaner.
Meanwhile, McCarty scored
se.ven of the Raiders' 15 points in
the period to help slalce his team to
an 18-point lead before Savoy's
trey (his second and last of the
game) cut the guests' lead to 15
before the' quarter's cOnclusion.
By the time senior guard Jeremy
Cline's tiey from the right corner
rubbed the twine with 1:31 left in
the game, Eastern, having cut the
Raiders' lead to 53-49, had
outscored River Valley 16-8 while
the Raiders were playing somewhat
relaxed ball in tbeir 2-3 zone. But
turnovers and missed shots haunted
Eastern once a~ain, as the Eagles
failed to capitalize on their guests'
last three misses at the line on oneand-one situations in tbe next I: 16.
Peck got a key steal in the last
minute to set up Canady's pass to
McCarley for the layup that put
River Valley ahead 55-49 with 44
seconds left. That and a pair of
missed shots by the Eagles put the
game out of reach.
"We haven ' t played since
December 19," said Jenkins. "Our ·
concentration was somewhere else.
Maybe we were looking ahead. In
this ~e. we played two 9uaners
- the second and the third.
"We . stressed getting a shot
every trip down the floor," said

Ullman in eJ~,plaining his team's
comeback. "We had the right guys
on the floor. We had four guards,
and we got Chatlie inro the game in
the fourth quarter."
River Valley, which played at
Logan Satunday night, will be idle
until next Saturday's game against
Warren Local at Vinceril Eastern
will be Federal Hocking's guest
team Tuesday.
. •

Steals- 8 (Arbaugh 3)
Turnovers - 18
Reserve game. -

Athens 64, Jackson 37
At The Plains, the host Bulldogs
scored the first eight points of the
game before Dave Seymore scored
the first Jackson poinrs for an 8-2
lead, which balloned 10 17-2 before
Matt Walburn swished a three
point goal for the Ironmen at the
2:09 mark. Athens led 21-7 after
one quaner, 39-17 atl)alftime, and
55-32 entering the final slllnza.
.A tough Bulldog defense
checked high -scoring Walburn
with 13 points, three in the first
quarter and 10 in the third, as he
accounted for three of Jackson's
six trifectas. The Ironinen finished
with a six of 33 effort on three
point attempts which pulled their
shooting average down to 25 percent for the game. Meanwhile AHS

River Valley ·32
Scoring leaders - Eastern :·
Micah Otto - II. River Valley :
Jeremy Belville- 15

Eastern 34,

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RIVER VALLEY
(10-20-15-10=55)
. Hunt 6-0-0=12, McCarty 3-10=9, McCarley 3-0-2=8, Cox 2-10=7, Crace 2-1-0= 7, Mandeville 10-1=3, Canady 1-0-0=2, Pa.:k 1-00=2. TOTALS - 20-4-3=55
Field goals- 24-52 (46.2%)
Three-pointers - 4-16 (25%)
Free throws- 3,9
Rebounds - 30 {McCarley 10)
Assists - 10 (McCany 4)
---·Steals- I~ (McCarley 3)
Turnovers- 8

flnistied with 43 pet'l:ent on a of
58 field goal effort.
.Athens owned the boards as
they manhandled the Ironmen 4219 in rebounds with Sunny Kalu
accounting for 13 and Justin Scholl .
6. Scholl also led four AHS players ·
iniO double digit scoring with 15.
Kalu and Pat McHugh each had 13,
and Kyle Lonas added 10..

JAC~SON.
. (7-10·15-5;37)
Dave Kight 4-0-0=8; Matt Walbum 0-3-4=13; Dave Seymore 1-01=3; Tommy Hill 1-2-0=8; Jason
Evans 0•1-0=3; Tony Thompson 10-0=2. TOTALS -7-6·5=37
ATHENS
(21-18-16-9=64)
Nick Toth 1-1-0=5; Paul Car-

Sunny
_5-03=13, Jusun Scholl 6-1-0-15, l'at
McHugh .4-l -2=13; Josh Chandler
0-0· 1=1; Mike Dahn 1-0-0=.2; Kyle
Lonas4-0-P=IO; Paul Bresnahan I·
0-0=2; Dan K1ger · 1-0-0=2.
TOTALS- 23-3-9=64
Reserve score - Athens 28,
Jackson 18
Warren Local67, Logan 65
At Vincen~· Jason Harris scored
14 of his game-high 31 points in
the third period as Warren took a
51-42 into the fourth quarter and
then fought off the Chiefs to record
their first victory of the season in
10 outings. The host Warriors had
led 15-13 and 30-25 in the fl'rst two
quaners before the big third quarter
surge enabled them to withstand
Logan's fourth period rally.

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER,

Near Kanaap Drive-In

VISA

446-2532

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO:
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352 Third Awe.

Ph. C46·2327

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Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
Cuslomer Servlclfl
·
W!::(rallers mosllo you when il comes to propane?

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we'd like tO put it to.
a vote. ·

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coope~at1ve customers
ha-xe .little to say when
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If your electric power comes from a cooperative, you're not just a
customer. You're an owner. And as a·member-owner. you have an active
pan in how your cooperative is managed... through the democratic voting
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Through their cooperative's annual me.eting, our member-owners have
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lnfiiiiiiiiiiDn: (11•1448-1132 or 1-t00a1·BAEC

O.Dg t'EmMIII1DIII 1410 , '-7101 ·

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One Of 27 Ohio EJectrtc Cc ap aliNe

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POWER BY THE PEOPLE,
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FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THE HANDY APPLICATION BlANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDROR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE FOUR
DOLlARS ($4.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR F£MALL .(KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $20.00). DOG TAGS Will ALSO B£CON SALE AT THE HUMANE
SOCinY LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF NORTH SECQND ST. AIID WALNUT ST., MIDDlEPORT, OHIO 45760.
MAL£ $4.00
SPAYED FEMALE $4.00
FWU $4.00
KENNEL LKENSE $20.00

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Bissell 4..0-5=13, Savoy 2-20=10, Kaylor 1-1-4=9, Newland 10-6=8, Cline 0-2-0.6, Arbaugh 10-1=3, Manin 1-0-~2. TOTALS
-10-5-16=51 .
Fi~ld goals- 15-42 (35.7%)
'Three-pointers S-12
(41.7%)
Free throws -16-19 {%) .
RebouRds- 34 (Bissell 17)
Assists- 12 (Newland 3)

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Rudy Brandt 0-0-3=3; Ryan Car- :
penter 3-0-3=9 · Tom Smiih S-O8=24. TOTALS,-17·2·25=65 '•· ·
' ·
WARRENI,.OCA,L
· ·,
(15-lS-21·16=67)
' :··
Chan Wentz 1-0-2=4; Jayson ' :
Pyau 1-0-0=2; Scott Spencer 1-0·. ·,
0=2 ; Steve Shotwell 1- 0-5=7; ·
Jason Burroughs 7-1-4=21; Jason ' ,
Harris 10-1-8=31. TOTALS 21-2; ~ ·
19=67
·
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Reserve score- Warren Loc,.!· '
57, Logan 51
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Logan had
the lead to .
made 19 of 29 free throws.
66-65 before Warrens Jason Bur- Tom Smtth's 24 pomts topped
roqghs canned the front end of a · Logan with Dustin Dennis adding
one and one ·to mak e it 67-65 . II points and grabbing .10 of his
Logan missed a three point shot ieam's 37 rebounds. Warren was
and the Warr iors grabbed the whistled for 30 team fouls, resultrebound and ran out the clock. The ing in Logan's 25 of35 effort at the
Warriors convened 10 of 14 free charity stripe.
throws in the final period, includ·
ing 4 of 4 by Harris and 3 of 4 by
LOGAN
Steve Shetwell.
(13-12-17·23=65)
. Harris led both teams in scoring
Tim Mauck 1-0-0=2; Ed Downs
":1th 31 pomts and clatmed 10 of 1-0-6=8; Chad Zimmerman 3-0hts team s 36 rebounds. Burroughs 2:8; Dustin Dennis 1.2-3= II;
added 21 points for the winners,

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·LARGE SILECTION

- r· J~ .,

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and lltumovcrs.
~.
Gallipolis placed three pla yer~
in double figures in scoring. Chan .•'.
Barnes had 13, Nathan Miller l'i ·' ·•
and Hoffman 10.
MHS had three players in dou· . ':
ble figures. Kroft led the way with •' .- .
24 points. Michael Smith tossed in ·
22 and Mcintyre added 17.
(SeeTIGERSonC-4)
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rebounds in the defeat, the Blue
Devils second in a row. Eric Hoff.
man and Jason Williams had eight
reboqnds apiece. GAHS had 20
personals
Marietta conn~ted on 27 of 57
field goal attempts for 47 percenL
At the line, the Tigers were 16 of
24 : MHS had only 10 personal
fouls, 25 rebounds, 10 by Kroft,

Athens,
Warren
Local
record
wins
in
remainder
of
SEOAL
contests
In-·F~day's
is ~nte_r 0-0~ 1=1;
~lu
trimm~d
wh~

1993 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 7,' 1t92
fire Weat/tetploot Blodt b' Btood Cows

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnet~Page C3

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�Times

Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

January 10, 1993

Cage standings
SEO, oppooents
(All gamts)
Team .
W L
P OP
Chesapeake .........8 0 588 485
Point Pleasant .....5 1 375 34 7
River Valley........6 2 597 523
Southe'm ..............s 2 474 418
Marieua ...............6 3 635 579
Vi~ton County ....6 - 3 543 463
Athens ............... ,.5 4 500 492
Giillipolis .............4 4 545 463
Greenfield ...........4 4 446 430
Jackson ......:........ .4 5 .563 596
Wheelersburg ..... .3 5 517 519
Fairland ...............2 4 . 362 384
Logan ......·............2 6 460 530
Warren Local ...... ! 9 573 746
Portsmouth ..........O 6 374, 442
(SEOAL VARSITY)
Team
WL
POP
Athens .................4 0 257 207
Marietta ...............3 1 288 24 7
GaUipolis .............2 2 260 231
Jackson ................l 3 244 270
Logan ..................1 3 · 233 275
Warren Local ...... ! ·3 204 256
TOTALS
12 12 1486 1486
(SEOAL RESERVES)
Team
W L · P OP·
Marietta. ............. 4 0 222 140
Athens ................ 3 1 · 157 160 ·
Gallipolis ............ 2 2 185 167
Warren Local..... 2 2 214 191
Logan................ 1 3 156 205
Jackson ............... 0 4 104 175
TOTALS
12 12 797 797
Friday's results:
SEO varsity
Marietta 71 Gallipolis 56
Athens 64 Jackson 37
Warren Local 67 Logan 65
SEO reserves:
Marietta 52 Gallipolis 35
Athens 28 Jackson 18 ·
Warren Local 57 Logan 51
Area scores:
Vinton County 70 Trimble 54
Chcsapeake95 South Point 73
Fairtana 65 Coal Grove 47
Russcll64 Portsmouth 55
South Webster 66 Wheelersburg 61
River Valley 55 Eastern 51
Last night's games:
Southern at Gallipolis
Athens at Meigs
River Valley at Logan
waverly at Greenfield
Pt. Pleasant at Jackson
Wheelersburg at Oak Hill
Tuesday's games:
Meigs at Vinum County
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
Rock Hill at Fairland
Greenfield arLogan Elm
Parkersburg at Marietta
Hurricane at Pt Pleasant
Friday's games:
GaUipolis at Jackson
Lostan at Athens
Marietta at Warren Local
Federal Hocking at Vinton County
ChesapcakeatF~Wnd

Symes Valley at Southern
Ripley at PL Pleasant
Portsmouth at Ironton
Ports. West at Wheelersburg

Ohio high school bas~etball scores
Alliance4S, Cant.on Tunk.cn 'Z1
Amand•·Clcai"Cf''lllk 69, Hamilton Twp. S2
Amelii 91, Fel.ici1y 53
An\hcm.

Sports briefs
Football
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Safe- ty Andre Waters was activated
after being sidelined nearly three
months with a broken leg and
promised he wouldn't hit Dallas
running back Emmitt Smith during
pregame introductions.
·
Smith labeled the Philadelphia
Eagle$' defender the ''dirtiest player in the league."
Waters adds defensive strength,
but will .be used sparingly in $onday's playoff game against the
· Cowboys at Texas Stadium.
'
WaterS, one of !he NFL's hard·
est hitters.and Eagles' leading UICk·
lers during his nine-year career, has
been out since Oct. 18 with a broken fibula and tom ligaments in his
left leg,
Baseball
NEW- YORK (AP) .;._ Toronto
re-signed shorts~ Alfredo Grifnn,
Minnesota re-s•gned outfielder
Randy Bush, and outfielder Chris
. James left San Francisco to sign
with Housrnn.
Pitcher Dave Smith went back
to the Cubs. Pitcher Mark Grant
went past the deadline and can't
'Sign with Seatlle imtll May 1.

/'

"ymo 52
Arlinaton 49, Jike!X'ftb 37
Archbold 63,

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BcllcfOf?,taino 56, Tccu.msob 51

, \J!Il l
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SECOND IN INVITATIONAL~ Obio Val·
ley Christian's bask"baU team captured second
place in the OVCS Invitational Tournament,
sponsored by Willis Funeral Home of Gallipolis.
Kneeling are (L-R) Shawn Rice, Byron Burke,
Dusty Hill, Andy Brumfield, Josh Sebert and

NatlWI Lusher.
are Cleeland WUiil of
Willis Funeral Home, Jerry Back, Noah Smith,
l\1att Swain, Tony Hughes, Jason Beayer, bead
coach Greg Atkins and assistant ·coach Bill
Burleson.

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TOUGH DEFENSE -Marietta's Cam Mcintyre (21, wbite)
keeps close tab on GAHS forward Mike Donnally (22) durin&amp; rust·
quarter action of Friday's SEOAL game, whlcb tbe Tigers won 71·
56• .

G";llia ~c1ademJ:'.s

Barnes (14)
denec:ts pass Marietta's Darrell Shuss
during .first-quarter
action Friday ni~ht. The Tigers won 71-56, dropping tbe Blue Devils
into third place m SEOAL play.

Tigers win...

-..mou

(Continued from C-3)
apiece.
GALLIPOLIS
(10·21·8·17=56)
Jason Williams 2-J-0=7 ; Chad
Barnes 6-0.1=13; Nathan Miller 31-2=11; -Brad Murphy 1-0-0=2;
.Eric Hoffman 5-0-0=10; David
Hager 1-0-0=2; Jeff Pope 1-0-0=2;
Jason Castor 0-1-0=3; Chris Som.
merville 1-0-0=2; Terry Qualls 20-0=4. Non-scorers- Adam Blair,
Mike Donnally. Ll!fi'Y Howell,
Chris Roettker. TOTALS - 22·3·
3=56

land
Umvers•ty
saysimposed
It will accept
two-year
probation
by thea
NCAAonitsrnen'sbasketballprogram for rules violations involving

HILLSBORO, OHIO
PHONE 513-393-3424
AUOION EVERY MONDAY

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:;::::~

ClmbridJc 75, ZancMllei 61

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boo~~c!t::Fnday
it found
evidence of six violations ilivolvjng

·BoB EV:.:ANS NIGHT ···:~;

Ashland - three revolving around
one team booster - and a seventh
that didn't,directly involve the
schooL
' ·
"I understand the athletes had
· actually been warned in advance of
some of these violations to be very
careful of dealing with this particular individual," said David Swank,
chairman of the infraction~ committee.
"So though there were serious
infractions involved there, the uni.versity had already taken steps to
get away from that"
Ashland president Walter Waet·
jen said lhe university Was.satisfied
with its treatment by the NCAA
and would not appeal rl1e penalty.
. Most of the alleged violations
occurred during the tenure of coach
Keith Dambro~ now coach at Central Michigan. Dambrot was not
accused of any wrongdoing~
The invesuption found that
-A booster paid excessive
wages to a student athlete who had
performed cleaning worlc in March
1991; improperly gave student ath- .
letes rides m his car or allowed
them to use the car in the spring

l•lf
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UNIVERSITY
OF RIO GRANDE
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Saturday,
January 16th
7:30p.m.

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Cle.}fty 103, 0.. Adlm1IOI

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CoL ~ 113, Col Academy 56
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Col.
cn·McKWey 56, CoL N"""'ond ll
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Col.
·on·Franklin lt!i, Col weln
Col.
· 92., Cql Whlllltone 51
Col. South 95, Col Brill' 43
Col, SL Oaarlca67, Zanclville RolecnN 64 (01)
Cal.. We~tl•nd 62. Dublin .51 (2 01)
Coldwlw62. Pamwty 31
ColWRbia Su.tion 37, Brooklyn 33
Columbus Grove .56, Upper Scioto Vall . .53
· CmVoy Cn:aview 60, Lim• Temple Chr. S4
Cory·Rnnon.56, Vllllue '1
Coviqt.on 47. :t'ri-County N. 45
CI'OIIIrotdt 47, Atwtter Chr. 41
Daltan' 60, Smit.hvillo ~
o.y·. ~bv 16. l)ty. Colonel White 83
Day. ~tterson 81, D•y. Delmont 80
Dcl'1MCe60, W1pakoneu44
0.1!"'0. leffmoo 13, Wmo l'oocy 65
·· DiXle 77 ,' Brookville 76

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DAILY HOG MARKEJ'
PRE-WEANED FEEDER CALF SALE
WED., JAN . .13,1993-12:00 NOON
For More Information Contact
Donnie Everetts, Manager (513) 393-3118
weidoo Taulb8e, Cattle Salesman (513) 876·2238
Don Knore, Cattle S$lesman (513) 393-2840

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Cle, ljncaln- w_.l'), Ca. EcT.,h 64 (1 011
Clo. Souok 59, Clc. But 51
Cion- 00. Loudonv!noll
. Clint~lie6S, W1yn..vW.Sl
Clyde 3. Milan Ediacn 69
CoL
Vat. 54, CoL 8coct.craft: 4!
Col.
wfonl69, Buckeye Central S4
C61..
le~68, CoL Ready 52· t
'
Col. EOn 73, Col. c.n-Jal 56
•
Col. Ehtmoor 57, Col lodopend..,. 34

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.icholll _83, Oin. Roser B1con II.

Cin. Yrnton Woadl62., Cin. HuJhet: 51

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Cin. _SaUc 61, Cin. SL Xavillll'46
Cin. e•ricmont&gt;76, dn. FlMe)'lOWn 65

Cin. \\'i.lhrow S9, Meum Huhhy 46
Cin. \Yood.-ud 15, Cin. Tu!pin 44
Cio. Vr.omH!&amp; 61, Iaman Hilll3
Girol.,;n. 75, T•)'l Voll 47
'Cle. O.tholic 60, Gufidd Hu:. Trinity 43
Cle. Oollinwood 74, Clc. We« Tech 68
Clo. Qloavillo 77, Clo. MuWll 63

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TICKETS AVIILAIU IT
RIO GUIDE&amp;
GALLIPOLiS LOCIDOIIS

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Cin.
Mtiian6l,Hami11onBtdin47
Cin. unvnit 57, SL Bernard 43
Cin. t•ylor 15, Cln. R..eadina73
Cin. flilnt~~ Hilh 75, Cin. Northwst 60

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E 76, Cin. Deer Puk 64

Cin. olenin 13, Cin. Oak Hilll7&amp;
Cin.
try Da.Y '17, Cin. Lmclmuk 69
£in.
61, Ctn. Moc.ller 51

Cin-

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University of
Rio Grande
~-&lt;"~~'f'To.

POMEROY
BOWLING LiliES

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Faid'lll. 71, Cin. St'l*"on~ 39
Flididd Union 82. Lqm Elm SS
Foimow 56, Hi~ 41
Foimow, Ky. 66, ln!ou!O Sc Joooph 33
Fu.Iando 55, Eltyia W. ll .
P"'LononU!79, Plillownl3
•

o.n...1n . - J I

Sports briefs

,
BasketbaU
C;HICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jor~n became the 18th NBA player to! reach the 20,000-point plateau
when he hit a 3-pomter in the
foulth quarter of the Chicago
Bull$' game against the Milwaukee
Bucks,
•: Jordan's basket gave him 35
i.opoints for the game and exa.ctly
I· ,~· 20,000 for his career in 620 games.
Jordan reached 20,000-points faster
than anyone except Wilt Chamberlain, who did it in 499 games. ·
Jordan's career scoring average
~f 32.3 is the highest in NBA history, compared to Chamberlain's
30.1:
.
GREELEY, Colo. (AP)- Former Northern Colorado basketball
coach Ron Brillhart sued lhe university over his firing last year,
saying he was treated unfairly.
Btillhart seeks loss of income
and fringe benefits. The lawsuit,
filed in Weld County District
\..~gt~~~t~does not specify a dollar
a1
He was paid $46,000 a
he was fired. ·
served -as basketball coach
1m"" ' •·• IS, 1983; until Feb. 20, ·
when he was informed'by
~~;~~~1~:i~d~i:rr~ector Bob Oliver

·

Salem 56, WtftDI KCII\J\edy32
S1ndusty 89, N. RidiCYWo SO ·
Secbrina McKinley 13, Columbi.W C=tview 54
Shelby 58, Norw1li. 43
Shenandoah )4, Cald¥1'Cll 44

SponeoMllo59, Ado55
SprinJ. Locll.l9, Vienna Mtthewt2S
Sprin~ Nollh 9l."F.uioom 43
Sprint- Ndt.Ulllm !55, Spr!n" Northweitem 53
Sprina. Soulh II, K-f,Fwm0111 71

n. eo...."'

ltc:Um Caurz 13, HOIIIUin 44
J..Uon lotilloo ({7, S. R~55
hd'enoa 71, Albt&amp;buli
ewood 66
John G1con S4, Tri-V.U.y
Kanou Lalto&lt;a 7i!. Oloea• 48
LaB•70, Hubhud 46
Lak=~~
.· 69,
SO, Orand Rivet 34
Lak
vu.c. 51
.
I..eaonil74, Columbima 50
r..;p.;c SO, Pondcn-Ollboo 45

60,Ro ..... 37

Looeland 60, Modela56

Lo-43, Bertin w...., R......,l9
Lucu66,NOiiluidp61
l.u&lt;uvillo Vall 64, 1\ldlamoo NW 60
-Piau,. 85, Jonlihu! Ald«·63
""''""' 6l,Lol,oland 56
Man-76,SandyVoll51
,
MalllflelJl Otr. 61 , Plymouih 52.
Mantficld M.dilan 41, Marion Hardl.na 40

16.
21
22
25

.467
.276
.214
.074

6.S
12
13.5
17

3.5
6.5

1.5
9
ll.S

L&amp;kca93, StctamMto 90

They played Saturday

College basket hall

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Oklahoma 121, W. Tuu St.? l

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BasebaU

American Lt:lpc

.,

NCAA - Pltced Middle TIII!\CIIOCI
Su.tc'1 men '• buketball J)IOIRm an twD
yun prob&amp;Lion 1nd b&amp;rrocl thorn from
poNcalon plty tiW: year rar NCNftinJ violttiOnl th1t oecuned from 1917· 90.
~aced AJhlancl Univenity ll'tm't buket•
ball p~ on two jan probalim and
limi\Od Ill ftiCNitinJ ltld 1c:holanJU.. durin&amp; that time ·rcw dlepd violltiou in its
buketb•.ll. proartm. Reprim1nded Bill
Tierney, .Princeion ltcr'OIIO.COIC'h, for hil
&amp;ctions durina: the: 1992 lacrGtiC nttional

Tramal'l ions
•

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- ARJ&lt;Cd 10
· ~s with O.uct Cary,[itcher, on aminor·1uaue conlnct an invited him to
spr\ng,tninin&amp; a• a non · rotter pbyer.
Nlmcd Paul Cuinovt bullpen cttcher.
MINNESOTA 1WINS" - Agreed to
terml with Ben BJyleven, pitcher, and

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cham~onohipo.

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PITTSBURGH ..... Ntmed Chuck
def'cn&amp;ive eoordinator.
SACRED HEART ..,..... Sianed One
Bike, men 's bulr:etb•ll 001ch, to • ttno.
Drie~bach

Rtildy BLllb, 01.1tlicldw, on minor-league
eodllcu w1 invited them to sprina train·
ina u non·rottcr .Uycn.
TOR0'-"1'0 BLUE JAYS - Apood"'

-

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College

Far West
• Mantma 9S, E. Monllnl47

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NoUIIUI HOCkey t.oave
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS - Sent
Bry•n Foprty, delco.-nan, 10 Ceveland
of the Intemational Hockey Lupc: !Dr
two weeki of conditionina. Auianed
Mike Necdhtm, riJht_ wina. md Pctct
Ahola, dcl. .eman, to Clovcland.

Southwest

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vttcd Andre Wttera, ufct). from the
pr•c ticc sqUad, Placed Cuey Weldon,
quanelback, ·on the po«t.tc~sc:m de~Cii.va­
llon lin.

Prru. 88, Dartmouth 63
Prin&lt;clon 63, Huvud 39

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.___________..,_________________________J
year contnct.

-... ;:.

D1y. Stebbins Sl

WUIOOI'I 92. Montpelier 44
W1\lldoo 64, Oureaaville 51
Wa)'lle. Trtce-10, Ayenville 38
Wollin~ 62, Miami Vall 57
Wdl.ville 90, Be~v• Local61
w.....m. N. 64, Hilliud 58
W-.erville S. 59, Oth1M142
w..r.u 76, Pikclixi5B
Whi...... 70, Fnnklin Hu.59
Wickllffe70, Solan 47
Willtrd 67, Otliex~45
Wilkt-Hil171,.1Cifta'• Aead . ..9 •. ,
Willoualtby S. "· Lynolhuql ~""h 4R
Windham 75 Mopcl_ore F~ .53 ,
Winfon115, ~...... 19 (01)
WintalrilJe 56, WeUIGn, W.Va. j0
Woodm...,l5,0lboaobu'Jll
w...... 76, Muolllon PeDy 64
w.........,., Otr.l2, c.n-70
.
WanhinatOn Kilbowne 75, Oillllcothc 58
Xenia 14, Hubic.- 1111. W1yne6l
Y"""l ~ 95, Woocbow Wibon 59
Y"""a.Euo49,Y...... Ro,..,41
Youna. Uberty 69, Nowton Falla 6l

l~n

•.u ~ J
ln.}

\

1•2 MERCURY lAlLI GS 4 II.

I

ve

3.8
engine, pOWer steering, power
brakes, auto. trans., air cond., AMIFM
st.e reo casselle, till &amp; cruiso. power
Windows andJocks, power drivers seat,
rear defroster, extr~;~ clean.
WAS
.
.

1

ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMASI
,,.....,,,.
rr.~-

''

·~·*

-

'"
. '
t-'~i
'

".

.

$14,995 ·

Now 812

99&amp;

1992 MERCURY 'OPAl GS 4 Di.

.,

W• hove bt.nk ..tdeo llpea oVIllllble lor purchue, or bring In your

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Bmm- SUPER 8- SLIDES a PICTURES
"Let U• VIdeo Thllt Special Event"
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PHONE 992··2196

i
onVHBTepe-OFFEA EXPIRES DEC.3t,1H!

--.~ ,1
L 1'1

Tri County Ford, Inc.

,

lfi.. ~ ,

'.

Wood, stf'Q\gth co.ch.
NEW ENG~ANO PATRIOTS 'Fued Dicit MlcPhmon mach.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES - Acti-

EaSt·.

P1lrlck Dlvlllon
Tdm
W L T Pta. GFG~
PINb!OJh .......... 28 10 4 150 191144
w~ ........ 21 11 4
46 1611ll
N.Y. Rana.. ..... 20 17 5 45 175161
NewJmcy ........ 20 1;7 3 43135136
N.Y.Wandm .... 17 20 4 31100ll7
Pltilad&amp;lpllll ....... 14l9 6 34 152159

.~ :

Football

T&lt;Kiay's eames

.W~t;binaton•~ New l~y, 7:30" p.m.
OUCI&amp;Q tt Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.

"'

'· I

N1t1on•l FootbllllAIJut
CINCINNA Tl BENGALS - Ro.
•i,gnc d Jim Andcnon, runnina btckl
c?-c!ot; Mqv Briden, lpocial1Um.l 001ch;
Jun McNt!Iy, offensive line coa;h: Bob
KlnnelD'II"icz, delsuive line cotch; Ron
lynn. defcntive coonlir,.tor, Rrr~ MeW:
defensive backfield coach· Rit::htrd
William•on, reCeiver~ co.ach: t nd Kim

San J010 at 0tttw1, I :40 p.m.
Monueal tt Htrdord, 1:10 p.m.
Cllauy tt Buffalo, 7:1o p.m.

Edn1onton tt Pbiladelphill, 7:10p.m.
PituburJh at Winilipes. 8:10p.m.
1...01 An~C~ca at Chiea10. 8:40p.m.

.......
_"III'Ynrr
___· ~,
.

own, u,_., ouper

...
....

Basketball

N.Y. R•ngen at Jthi.ttdclphia, 1:1 0
p.m.
.
NewJmey _a t Bocton, 7:10p.m.
Quebec at Hintcml, 7:40p.m.
Vancouver at N. Y. lll andea, 7:40p.m.
Edmonton at Wuhingtan, 7:40p.m.
Toronto at Monucal, 8:10p.m.
Tampa Bay It Minncsotll, 8:10 p.m. ~
Oticago at SL LoW., 8:40p.m.

2.5

.

'.

'

NtiiOnll Buketball APocl1tlo11
CHJCAGO BULLS- Pltced Scou
Willi~rni, center, OR the injuzNliA.

They played Saturday

WALES CONFERENCE

w..nn Hmlioa 82;Y·....a. Mooney 73

~9.1mt .Yqru~n~l.W.;tin• ·~ ,

38 144158
35 111168
14 12 1207

Calgary at PitUbwJh, 12;40 p.m.

:\IlL

Wtdl.worth 41, Copley 40

N. Adan~74, Pccbkll66
N. Baltimore 1S, Scnec~ E. 60
N. Roytlton 63, Medina 61
N1polCG1 S9,1'1wnool ~01143
New Boston 39, FnnkUn Furnace 0recn 37
' New Lon·~ ·67, Mon.t'GCVille 4.5 '
New Milrnl!2. Cin. Sewn Hillil41
Newut Cath. S2, Col. Wttt.enon 48
Nordoni1 SS , Kent: ROOICYdt S4
Northmont63, Vand .U.-Buh.ar 43
NOdluidse65,Cadiola5l
Norwa.Ur: SL Paull2. Athland Cdii\View S4

17 • .414

S4t64t26

4S 112 167

7
2

' ·'

Friday's scores

Bo.tan u New York, I p.m.
LA. Ctippen tt Milwtukoc, 8:30p.m.
Utlh It 1t0Uitan, 8 :30 p.m.
MWni. M L.A. Llicn,l0:30,p.m.

W, Union 62, WhileoU; 60

Mine:Y• 72, C111ton S. 68
Mins,oJunction Sl , Otic Okn,. W.Vt. 4.5
M~ Sl, Wu11wiU.vw View .55

S4 1&amp;6119

S
4

"•

u•non-.....,,..,....

Buffalo 6, N.Y. lalandcn S
New Jcney 6, Otu.wa 4
TotontoS, Sm J011e I
Detroit 6, Vancouver 3
Winnipeg 6, ~- :"n&amp;elcs 3

4

Tonight's games

W. MuUinl""' 6l, Coooa.m. 62

'

Vancouver' ... ...... 2511 4

lnditnlllt Orltnd~ 1:_30 P.:!!l
. .
Minncsou tt CLEVELAND, 1:30 p.m.
Galden State at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
Utlh M Dallu, 1:30 p.m.
Portland at San Antonio, 8:30p.m.
Scaulcttl&gt;Mver, 9 p.m.
Milllli at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m'.

i9.

M•llillm l•cbon 60, N. Canwn SO

36 1441S5

32136151

Smylht Dlvlllon

LMAngelel ....... 20 16
WinnipoJ ........... 17 21)
Edmorita'l .......... 14 22
StnJose............. 6 34

GB

·

St. Fnndl 92. Cardinal Sll:itch ~0

WubinJ~o~tCH76,

SL Louia ............ 1S 70 6
TtmpaBay ........ IS 2S 2

8.5
8..5

Pet.
.690
..552

LA ~

U'rb.na 82, S"prina. Sbawnoe 42
Valley ForJO 9!, Parm1 Nmmtndy 51
Valley View 68, Middl.&amp;owa Mldison 62
Y1n Buren 61, Htrdin NCII1heul43
Vormilion 47 Loroiolll
Victory Oar.
Calvuy Bape. 37
Vincent WUftlt 61, Lopn 6S '
Vinton Co. 70, Tdmble 5~
W. Chootorl.ak,..56. Millc..Il9
· W. OC.up U, Owdm48
W. Jdl'enon 57 ,1chnltawn 51

Union

6

6
8.5

Bolton 102. NeW Jen:ey 88
Phila4clphia 11 9, Wuhinston 117
Oaa.dotte liS, LA. Clippers 101
Odmdo 9S,New Yodl: 94
Atlania 10 I, Detroit 92
Scanle 98, Min:ncaota 93
OUeaao 120, Milw1u&amp;ee 95
Dt.nver 11.5, Houaton 90

uP,.. Arlina&lt;on 58, o...v. Ci&lt;y 40

Manlfiold """"" 67. Aohland 54
Muwnha Otr. 74, N.,. H&lt;1p0 Chr. 46
Mari... 71. ~56
' Marion flain 62::
52
Ml:ion l.oca144, Now Bftlm.M 41
Me,riori Riv• Vall. 61, B\M:koyc V.U. 42
M.eymtle 57, I&gt;ei.wue S6
Muat 74. Cladloft 44
Muolllon 70, Cbymon~ 47 .
M..lillon Ott. 61. ZancMilo au. 43

4

'

Nallon.. lMpc _

onCAGO CUBS - Apecc1 to tftu:
with Dnc Smith. pilCht::r, Gil • minor-b~c contract and inwi&amp;od him 1.0 sprinJ
IRWniU onao·-. ploy•.
.
FLORIDA MARLINS - AJ'Mi to
tcrrnt with Jim Coni tnd Anctn.. B.u·
mea, pitdlcn, on on&amp;-yeu ooruracu, an4Stan Spencar tnd Ocno W tlt.cr, pUc:hln.
•nd T~ McOrlff, uteher, on minor•
lea:guc contncu.
HOUSTON ASTROS - Aa-d 10
terml wiU! Chril Jame~, oulfldder, oo 1
~or-loiJ'!IC' contAc\ and iDvilod him so
'f'MI bluun&amp;
LOS ANGELES DODGERS Aareed to termt with Lance Panilb.
catcher, and Wtlly Riu:hlc. pitchor, oo
minor-leap contn.C\1 and invited them
)0 •prina """"'•· ""''"""" plo. NEW YORK METS - Aarud to
tenn1 wi1h Owlic O'Brien. c:aLc:ber, &lt;11 a
one-yeu contnct. tnd Dave Tel&amp;hodu,
pitchc:r, on 1 minor-lup COftUICL

Norrl• Dlvlllon
W L T Pll. GFGA
Chi"J&lt;&gt;··........... ~3 14 6 52 IMlll
Detroit .............. .. 23 II 3 49 184156
· Minrle50tt .......... :W. l5 6 46 144 139
Toron10 .............. 17 17 7 41 13l135

Friday's scores

Tol. St John't1S, Tol Bowsher .50
Tol Whian• 53, Orqon Clay ~2
Tol Woodwtril ~. ToL Waite 51
Trar.woad-M1ufiaon 11, Troy.-12
TU~C~Rwu C.lh. 71. Strubura 63
Tlllltw 62, TUICII'IIwtl Vall. S2
Twin Vallcy S. 75, Newu.a 65
TwinobwJ 75. K""""' 61
Union Local Bl, Ctdiz. 55

7'/.

W L

U 12A IIO
9 9520S

3 37 3

Team

Mktwst Dlrilion

S•cmncnto ...... ..... .tl

Steubenville C.th. 64, Suubmvillc 62
Stow 12. Cuyat\~1 FaU. 69
Stredsbaro 19, Ctwtwoad 58
· Sump.m. 65 , Midpuldl
Swantcll6l. Libelly Ccntcr.60
~lvtnU. N'otthvicw 56. Bodford, Mi .52
Tollmodp 69, R...,. 67 (CIT)
l"llfin Columbitn 62, B.uC)"RRI53
Tot C.~ 51. Tot. Start48
Tot. a,;,1ian 51, Joc:Uao (Mi.) BopL !2
Tot. Emoni&gt;ol Bapt. 61, Calve:y Cu. 59 (OT)
Tol ROCI!Ol'd 14, Sylvanit Southview 76
ToL S...t 79, Tot. Ubbey 55
~-·· Tol

46 111147

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

9.5
9.5

Utah .•.....................20 9
San Antonio.......... .t 6 13

St. Henry 5:l,Dclpflc. St. oM 'a41

Lomoit·Mauoo56, Mid&lt;ll""'"' Fon,.;.k 54
lJ.beny Union 70, Berne Union 61
Lickin.R H&amp;l. 56, Now Albtny S4
Limtlftth 64, Vm Wcrt61
Lincoln81)ll.71 1 Ttceot'Life48
Lockland~- Baiovia 50
l.oo!don 62, Onnd&gt;iew 43
.
.LmoiaAdminllGn 76,Eiyri•69
Lmoia Cleor;)ow
!.-. Bmobido 65
Lorain Midview 57, Lenin Southview 56
LoWville 59, W. Bnoch 31

4.5
8

.357
.323
.!10

Paa:lnt Dlvlalon
Phoeni·Jl ............. :.. ..23 .5 .821
S..jtle •. ., ................21
I .7ZA
Porthod ..•......... ....20 9 .690
LA. Lakon ............ l~ · 13 .581
Golden State .......... I? 14 .548
LA. Clippon ........ J 6 16 .500

S. Wcbl(e:r 66, w&amp;eeka~ 61

::"'"OU

4 cyl. eng., pow. steering, pow.
brakes , auto . trans., air cond .,
AM/FM stereo, cassette, tilt &amp; cruise,
pow. windows and locks, pow.
driver's seat, rear defroster, 14,832
miles. Extra clean .

~-

+,·:rC+.

:~9~5

NOW

··•I''I

• ••

...

... '

-

.r-·-··-

8,999

8

&gt;l ~ 1

1988 CRIYSLEI
. ..,

4 cyl. eng .. PS, PB, auto. trans.,
AMIFM stereo cassette, tih and cruise
•
air conditioning, rear defroster, exira
clean, like new, -52, 783 miles . Must .
see .
Was
8
Now
$7,495

..

,~

8,49B

'

1992 F·ISO XLt LARRIAt 414
302 eng ., P. steering , P. brakes, auto.
trans .. AMIFM stereo cassette, till &amp; '
cruise, air cond ., flight l)ench seat
w/pow.' lumbar, cast alum. wheels w/P- ·
· 265 ~tires, chrome rear step bumper, 8
fool bed Limited, slip rear axle ..

~~~186

48" PROJECTION STEREO
COLOR TELEVISION
•
•1'81..Channel Cable Compatible
-55-Key Learning Universal Remote
Control
.
•2-Tuner Color Picture-In-Picture
•Built-in.Clock

'

',-,,

18,488

NOW 8

1983 MERCURY

'

Ll2 Dl.

.,

3.8 engine, P. steoring, P. brakes, auto.
trans :, AM/FM stereo ca'sselle air '
conditioning, tilt &amp; cruise, rear
defroster, P. windows, P. driver seat,
rear dofroster, local tar, power mirrors.
Was
2 995
.$ '
NOW

.

.

~:::..::..:..._.....:.:::.;.....,.,~~

fJ ,188

Brine In your best deal on a New Car or Truck and we
will try to meet or 8eat the Dul.
POJI A GOOD D.UI•••
SEE .JACK ROUSH
BOB ROSS

or

Our Service Department is ()pen Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 11-12
.
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 11-12

re-

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TOSHIBA
SATELLITE
SYSTEMS
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Ctntral Dlylllon
9 .119
c.EVEI.AND....... 19 13 .594
alui0ue ................ l6 14 .533
DcaoU ................... 16 14 .533
A........................ .l4 17 .451
Jndi.ana. ................,..l4 ' 17 .4.S2
Milw•ukee............ .l4 17 .4.52

H~ ................. 14
Denver .....................8
Minneoou ................6
Dlllt1.......................2

See Puzzle on Page D-2

I

'

'

'

3~

.ll9
.415

QU~.,_....~·.-.:.: .. -· .. ··2:1

Team

Rock HiD 14, Bul!olo, W.Vo. 70
Rocky River 60. N. Olmoied 46
R.ocll:y River Lutheran W. 90, Auror. 56
Rooutown 63, Woociridac 44
Ru...U, l(.y. 64. ""-"""'55
Ruuil 65, Botkjna 63
S·. Ccatnl 71, Maplewn 63

Hun......,l9,Z...Tmcol6(0T)
Hui"CCIl 61, ''-nduU. 'I St. Mizy. 64
lni 1 wWnce64,1lid!mondllu;,.54
L,di.ia lake 60, W, Llboay SalAm 54
lruti.. v.n
ll

Buffalo ............... 20 IS 6
OU.wt ...............

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Rittirl~r~ ~. Doyr.own 4J

Ot.!olville62, W. Cmollton 61

54 115157
53 174142
46 ISH146

Hanfonl ............. 1125 4

GB

.531

Monuoal ........... ZA 14 l
BOlton. ............... Zl 16 2

c.J8ary .............. 2512 4

Rid,ewood 1S, Jcwat.-Sclo 64

0........, 59, Thanw Wollhin.... 41
lhmil!oo 67, Cio. ""'-oo 54

IS

13
Bocton ................... l6 17
Pbilodolphia ........... l.O II
WuhinliOO .......... 10 21
t.fiami •.•.... ; ..... " ......9 21)

Rovam SE 72, Moudooo 60
Ridpdola 75, ML d!ioad 71

~0...,6l,N'"""'l7

Medin• Fin&lt; B•P.'- 79, Mon!«Otr. 53
MiAmi E. 77, Milton-Union 53
Midrlletawn Chr. 62, Xc:nit WWon SO
Midview 57, Lenin Sou&amp;hview .56

llowlaooy ............ l7

Odando....................

"""""'illo

O..eva41.Madioca44
Clirud II, Sllulhe.. 57
Clnham 57, Silkloy l.olunan 51
Gnnvillo 66, FUhcor Calh. 4R
Otca1t\ icw 60,£. C1iaton. 45
a....... 50, Kaun Ri!lac47

MayJVille 83, Sheridan 70
McDooold 51, Mlnonl Rldpd,

Allaatlc Dlvllia.
T,..
~ L
Pel
NewYOit ............. .t9 11 . .633

l'eaiivillo 76, N. Canitll 71
Ftillo 66, New I..uintJon 59
Pickerin.... 62, RoynoWobuta ll
~UI 75, SidQey 74
I'M Oin"" 7', S......y Pcmno 61
.
. 1\N.-11 Cloy 92. Eu.... Piko n
Porumouth E. 61, Ponlmooth•Notte Dune 42
1\N.-11 W. 73, MWonl52
Flilland 67, CootO.... 49

Fan R~~CUVC~y 73, New ltncnville 61
F011t«U St. Wenddin 52, M~Nwk 44
FIUildiol6, IAanan SO
Fzanont St.ICIICfb ~ 1'1&amp; Cal.Wft 60
11'~75, W•.,ord73

~Aquiou

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~!alll !55, AYOn LAkt S4

OnwiG 61, Riv-*le 59
Onn .. 73, a...,;n Fallo 65
Onn .. Otr. 71, Elyria FUitBopL 65
Otrvi11e U, Tri.w1y 82.
Oxford. Tlllwanda 72, O.y. Curoll..58
Po;noo.;n. llmooy 72, Aohiabu~ Sl John S4
Painervillc Riw:rsicte4401 Athtabula 34
Ptint Vall. 70, tJniiMo 6()_
Pum.1 Hu. Holy Nune .59, Owdon N1).CL 43
Polriokllauy 61, Fm J""""'o58
Ptuldina 68, Allen E. 40
~obwa 67, Moumoe50

. Hola~tc 51, Edjodoa,50
Hollaftd Sprina. n, Anthany Wtyne 63
Howb.nd 49, Youna. UraW..&lt;M
Hu..... 59,Hiahland 53

Cin. . en 66. Cin. W•Witn HiUJ 52

Cin.

2!--JZ 44, Bit w..... 41

Hcmlockldillu49,Fedcnl~47

.

AdiiM DI•Won

Qu.boc .•...•........ ZA 13 6

OldfMl7, Bd11Villo55

Hcri~op Ch&lt;. 76. Souih"""'" Ch&lt;. 3$

Ch
'at67,Bodtal9 .
Chin 65, Parmi Padua S4
C
e 9S, S. Point 73
River V.U.. SS, Rccd.mllc Eutem SJ
C

,

Bat.orf15,Pmble Shawnee 59
Edgewood 62, MiamiobutJ 61
~ 62, N. Union 52
Elidt Sl, Lim• Shtwncc 39
Evcqreen n, Ddu. 1S

'\B\

Ookwood",B - 5 5

Oberlin 61 ............... 67 (CIT)

~~r=.~~~'tiQe72

CompbcU MomilriallO, c..&amp;ld 49
C•nal Fulton 'NW 52, CanoUtan 34
ComonC.ok. ll,Alaoo Hobonl9
· Cttdin · 56, Nonhmor 53 (OT)
Care \1 New Riotei.51
C
• o59, S. CIUrlauon SE 52
C . . 66, St. MU)'I.55

-----------..,:
"
'
J
JOIN US FOR

,-----~------·

Bdlcwc 71, t1J)«)U Sartduety 63
Belpre 60, Wellitoa. 42
Benjamin Lot,an 77, Triad 74
Bcra73, Cloverleaf 64
Bexley 58, Lic.tin:l Vall SO
Jilek. liver 7,1, CoUinl Wmc:m RC~C~:M 6S
Blanchelter 63, New Richmond 62
·nloom.Curoll52. Conal Winchcmr50
Bloomfiold 48, Lmlaownl9
Bowlin' 0.... 75, Milbuoy We 57
BrcckiVi.lle 71, BIUI\I.wic:k 53
Broakfldd 61, Corlland Lakevi8w 45
B""'cy&lt;Lo.a1l5,1!dlom s. 47
C&amp;lvuy Ol.r. 83, E. Liverpool Quo, 24

1991 gave a student athlete money. ', -:~

MARIETTA
(18-20-20-13=71)
Michael Smith 8·1·3"22; Cam
Mcintyre 6-0·5=17; Ryan Robinson 1-0-0=2; Darrell Shuss 1-0·
0=2; Ben Kroft 9-0-6=24; Greg
Schieleit 1-0-0=2; Spencer Dennison 1-0·0=2. TOTA·LS 26·1·
16=71

PRODUCERS LIVESTOCK
·ASSOCIATION

. ..

•i&lt;f

4

Ashland University agrees to NCAA probation
AS~AND, Ohio. (~- Ash· and summer' of 1991; and in April

-,:•.,

w..,

,.•

Scor·cboat·d

ouH.-74, ~60

f"""""•l'l, MoclJ.... but&amp;l?

Ashtabula Harbor 61, Conneaut 58
Alben~ 64,Iacbon 37
Aultintown Fitch 69, Boardman 46
Avon 68, Ke}ltWnO '2
B a - 67.-Aiaon Sprinafldd 23
B•y 74, WCillake 73
Betehwood 71, Cuylhoaa Hu. 49 "
Bea~ 4g, Cr.nterVillc 32
Bodlon1 44, Mm10r 43 .
Bcllw. St. John'• 84, c:.n.... v.n 62

"·

Marietta will host Parkersburg
Tuesday, and play at W;uren Local
Friday. Gallipolis, played Southern
last mght at home. Friday; the"Gallians
travel to Jackson to complete
Lyne Center slate
first half play in the conference.
In the preliminary game, leagueRIO GRANDE~ This week's leading
Marietta piled up a 30-19
activities schedule for Lyne Center lead early
in the third period after ·
is as follows:
leading
15-10
and 22-17 at the fust
Gymnasium hoUrs
two
breaks
before
Blue Imps
Today- 1·3 and 5-7 p.m ., carne storming backthe
to
pull
within
open recreation
three
points,
32-29
near
the
end
of
Monday - 5:30-7 p.m., open the quarter.
recreation
The Little Tigers broke it wide
Tuesday - closed for in en's open
in the final frame, outscoring
basketball vs. Ohio Dominican, the Gallians
17·6 for a 52-35 viclo·
7:30p.m.
ry . MHS is 4-3 ov.erall and 4-0
Wednesday - 7:30-9 p.m., inside the league. The Blue Imps
college recreation
to 4-4 overall and 2-2 in
Thursday- closed for men's dropped
conference
play.
basketball vs. Findlay (Foodland
For
Gallipolis,
Dylan Evans
Booster Night), 7:30p.m.
in
10
points,
whil,e Greg
tossed
Friday - 6-8 p.m., open recre· James ildded nine. Brad
Kieft and
ation
Stephen
Arnold
tossed
in
14 points
Saturday - closed for men's
basketball vs. Tiffin (Bob Evans
Booster Night), 7:30p.m.
·
Sunday, Jan. 17- 1-3 and 5-7
p.m., open recreation
Pool hours
Today - 1-3 and 5-7 p.m.,
open swim
Monday- closed
Tuesday - closed
.
W~dnesday - 7:30-9 p.m.,
college swim
Thursday- closed
Friday-'- 6-8 p.m., open swim
Saturday- closed
Sunday, Jan. 17- 1-3 and 5-7
p.m., open swim

83, Faimew PaD.: 47

Anilonia t7, Natimal Trail 53
Arcam&amp;m 61, hliati.inawa Vall. 57

E.~I57.Liobaol5
Eu.n BmWn. 61,1A.thun
EuOab N. 74, Maalollu. 65
Eutwoo4 73, Nordiweod ~

•

Norwood 62. Gn. Ha"""" )J

O....lO,lolulin.... 1J
.
It C1e. S}t•w 65, LtkewOod 41
E. Ktw. 41, Danvillo 47 (OT)
E. u-159, a....., w.v•. 40

AknlnE. 76,AlaooBuct..l50
Ak:r«1 Ellet S8,Akmn CtnL-Hower42
Akmn Fin:.tonc68, AJuur. N. 41
Aknln Kenmo.e 58, AJaoo Guf'..W53
Ab'Ul Mancheur 76. Sandy Vall. 52
Aleunder 80, Nelsorrvill•Yodr: 73

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-CS

'

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January 10, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

P~&amp;-Sunclay 11mes-$entlnel

arm/llusiness

Cavs' Wilkins thinks Bulls not
so tough, Jordan or no Jotdan

CAPTURE FlRST- Six area youtbs captured championships in
the first-round qualifier In tbe Elks Hoop Shoot in Gallipolis hi
December. In front are (L-R) Cynthia Ward (8-9 )'tar-old girls'
class), C!)dy Lane (10-11 year-okl class) and Brian Bockle (8-9 yearold boys' class). Behind tbem are GaUipolis Elks 'Club tournament
cbalrman Tom Meadows, Valerie Karr (10-11 year-old girls' class),
Susan Tackett (12-13 year-old girls' class), Aaron Bickle (12-13
year-old boys' class) and Gallipolis Elks Club Exalted l(uler Mike
Sheets.

. CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve- Milwaukee.
. land guard Gerald Wilkins lhinks
The Bulls, who led the Cavaliers
t'he Cavaliers can outplay the br 3 1/2 g&amp;mes in the Cenll'81 DiviChicago Bulls with or without a . Sion after Wednesday's game,
healthy Michael Jordan on the haven't been routing teams they
way they did last season. This year
coun.
The Cavaliers beat the Bulls they are winning by an average bf
117-95 at Richfield Coliseum on 4 .4 points per game, rather .than
Wednesday. Chicago's Jordan 10.4 points per game as they !lid
missed his last seven Shots from the last year.
field and was pulled from the game
"They are stip a very good
wilh 6:05 to play.
team," Wilkins said. "I think,
Jordan blamed the flu for his 23- though, other teams are learning
poillt. showing, his fourth worst in how to play them beuer. Teams
42 regular season games against today can dominate for only so
the Cavs. But Wilkins, who was · long. Every night, someone they
defending against Jordan when he play is C!)mmg at them. . .
.
put up six of the seven misses, dis"They may be getting tired .
sented.
. There is a lot of wear and tear on
· "Michael is a funny guy," lhem. They are under a lot of presWilkins said. "He never wants to sure to win it (the NBA title)
admit he and the Bulls got their again ," he said. "Other teams,
butts kicked when they get their though, including us, are ready to
butts lcicked.
step up."
·
"Hey, when it hapl.'ens 'to me,
Cleveland cen~r Brad Daugher. I'm not afraid 10 admit 11," Wilkins ty agrees that the gap might be narsaid. "Maybe that's why his confi- rowing.
·
dence is so high. He never thinks
"There is a lot of parity in our
the Bulls really lose."
division," he said. "Nothing is a
Jordan couldn't. be reached given anymore."
· ..
before Friday night's game with .

'

.

•

By ROB WELLS
Millcen, once a power on Wall
•
AP Business Writer
Street as head of Drexel Burnham
··: NEW YORKyuppie era Lambert Inc.'s high-yield bond
•s,:long gone, the Republicans are department, entered a halfway
-packing their bags in Washington, house in Hollywood·Tuesday. Tile
'bill the financial felons who inade
image-conscious financier looked
jl~adlines in the 1980s are still
considerably different as he arrived
~ logging their way through the
at the Vinewood Community Cor~ system.
rectional Center: Millcen was bald,
:. • This past week, Michael Millcen having been forced to shed his
eillered a federal halfway house in toupee. Federal prisoners cannot
j.i ls Angeles, Charles Keating Jr. , wear hairpieces.
a!ld his son were convicted by a
Milken will work days as a parJ'aileral jury and four executives at alegal for his lawrer. Richard San~nera1 Development Corp. were
dler, and spend nights in the house
to prison for defrauding until March 2 as part of a program
'!f~NUhome buyers.
·
to ease him back into society. He

1993 Dodge Daytona Delno

A~rnatic;

llir, till, cruise, eassaae.

;n.e

ITOTAL SAYINGS ~91

$10 99 AFTII
All-New 1993 Dodge Colt ·
4 spd., AWFM stereo, rear defrost.

I TOTAL SAYINGS '856 I

New 1993 Chrysler LeBaron
V6, auto., air, P.·win., cassette.

.

.

has served ·nearly two years of a
10-year term at a minimum-security work camp in the San Francisco
Bay Area following a conviction
on six counts of illegal securities
dealings.
On Wednesday, a federal jury
returned its much-awaited decision
on Keating, the former chairman of
American Continental Corp. He
was convicled of 73 counts of racJceteering, fraud, and other charges
in the downfall of American's Lincoln Savings and Loan. Keating's
son, Charles Keating Ill, was convicted on 64 courits; both men face
maximum sentences that call for

.Q(i/0
New 19931lodge Coman
7 pus., auto., air, 111110. .

ITOTAL SAYINGS '24491

$1

Low rates
make state Farm
homeowners
insurance a good·buy

...

Our service makes it even better.
Call me.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 Sel;ond Ave.
Galllp!lll•, Oh.
Phone 446-4290 - Home 446-4518

Cleaning service Is located at 43 Court Street,
Gallipolis.

NEW BUSINESS • Michael Wallace, sbown
:above beside bis van, opened a new business· In
lia County .recently. The Quality Care

After Christmas

uality Care Cleaning open for business
: GALLIPOLIS - Quality Care

on workshops 10 keep up 10 date on

~eaning, 43 Coun S~. 'Gallipo· - • the-latest·cleaning techniques. •

THIRD-PLACE WINNERS - These area ynatbs came
.
in the In front are (L-R) Jared Denny (8-9 year-old' boys' di\'ision)
and Beth Johnson (10-llyear-old girls' division). Behind them are
Gallipolis Elks Club tournament chairman Tom Meadows, Amanda
Beli .(U-13 year-old girls' division), Mike Sabieskl (10-11 year-old
boys' division) and Gallipolis Elks Club .Exalted Ruler Mike Sheets. ·

Blue Jays re-sign Griffin; Twins
keep Bass infold before deadline
lly RONALD BLUM
.
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Toronto Blue Jars re-signed shanstop~ Alfredo Gnf{in and the Minnesota Twins re-signed outfielder
Randy Bush before Friday's midnight deadline. outfielder Chris
James left the San Francisco Giants
to sign with lhe Houston Astros.
Pitcher Dave Smith also went
back to the Chicago Cubs. Only
one player went past the deadline,
pitcher Mark Grant, who now can't
re-sign with the Seattle Mariners
until May I.
The four who agreed to conu-acts Friday technically got mioor
league deals, but they also agreed
to side letters for major league contracts they will sign if they are
moved to major league rosters at
the end of spring training. Griffm
agreed at $500,000, of which
$100,000 is guaranteed, and has the
chance to earn anolher $400,000 in

performance bonuses.
Bush gets $250,000 with the
chance for $150,000 in performance bonuses, and James gets
$500,000 with the chanee to make
$200,000 in bonuses. Smith gets
$250,000. with about $50,000
guaranteed, and tl)e chance to make
$500,000.in bonuses.

(614)-~9~-6614

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· cruloe, PW &amp; locka.

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5·10 PICKUP

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Equipped.

Not ~ripped

Auto., •lr, •tereo.
AS LOW AS

of assoeiatlon

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5

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.R.IdenOU.
fS
TV &amp; APP,IANCE
·
GAS SERVICE
•

..· CHESTER
'

1

189Down
1189 Per Mo.

1911 OLDS DELTA II
BROUGHAM
LOADED. HURRY!

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1919 OLDS CUTLASS

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1989 FORD CROWN

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Sat. 9 am-4 pm
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Sun. 1 pm-5 pm ,

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2 Dr., •uto., •lr, otereo, Quad 4.

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p., Mo.

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1991 DODGE
Auto., air, crulM, tQt, lo.clad.
1

55,000 mila, one owner.
Llk•new.

40,000 miiH.. Hurry!

. DEVILLI

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*17,495

offiCer

.

DON liTE CHEY.·OlDS.·CiD.·GEO
TAx AND TITLE FEES NOT INCLUDED
ALL PAYMENTS SUBJECT
TO BANK APpROVAL

J •

.Keith Briulbury honore,d
for 35 years .of service ·

.$9399 'lit
Dow.
189 ,.,.

1991 CADILLAC SIDIN

(614)-992-e614

Adkins elected officer in
Ohio ,H ospital Association
GALLIPOLIS - Charles I.
Adkins, Jr., President and Chief
Executive Officer or the Holzer
Medical Center, has bee1f elected
secretary/treasurer of the Ohio
Hospital Association, according to
Jim Castle, OHA President. Adkins
assurfled his new position on the
OHA board and executive committee, effective January I.
Adkins has been active in both
area, state and national hospiuil
organizations. He is a member of
the President's Club of the Ameri,can Hospital Association. He is a
past member of the OHA Board of
Trustees, and past chairman of oolh
the Central District' Council and
Southern Ohio Hospital Council .
He ·is vice·t:hairman of the board of
trustees of the Hospital AssoCiation
of Central' Ohio and a member of
the board of directors of the Ohio
Hospital Insurance Company.
Named 1991 Person of l)le Year
for Gallia County and recognized
by the Southeastern ,Ohio Regional
Council at their An.nual Person of
the Year Awards Banquet last year,
Adkins served on the board of the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce for six years, including president 1988-89.
.
fie co -chaired the Gallipolis
Bicentennial Commission for more
than five years, climaxing with the
200th Anniversary Celebration .of
the founding of Gallipolis throughoutl990. He is a past board member of the Gallipolis Community
Improvement Corporation and a

or

.

+rrers

(800)-837•1 094

I &gt;.
I

..

•

past president, member of the
board of trustees and Paul Harris
Fellow in Rotary International,
Gallipolis Chapter 669.
He.is a member of the board of
directors of B.ank One, Athens.
Adkins chairs the board of the
Rio Grande Community College,
and serves on the advisory commit. tee of the University of Rio Grande
Holzer College of Nursing.
He carne to the Holzer Medical
Center in December, 1970. Eight
months later he was named vice
president of general services, and
m May, 1977, vice president of
professional services. From
September 1983 until April 1984,
he served as Interim chief executive officer, before being named
president and chief executive officer in April, 1984, the position he
continues to hold at the hospital.
He is a board member and president of Consolidated Health Systems, Inc., the Holzer Hosp1tal
Foundation, Holzer Vanguard, Inc.,
Holzer Foundation for Tri-State
Health Care and Joint Ventures
Pharmacy,lnc.
He serves as a member of the
board of trustees and on fhe executive commillee of the Oak Hill
Community Medical Center.
Adkins is a charter member of
both the Ohio Valley Chapter of
. Ducks Unlimited and Tri-State
Ch~. of the Ruffed Grouse Society. He holds membership in the
Gallia Cg.unty Conservation Club,
Cliffside llolf Club, Gallipolis Elks

Lodge, No. 107, French Art
Colony, and Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council. ·
Members of St Peters Episcopal
Church, Adkins and his wife,
Marge, a registei'C!I nurse, are the
parents of two S(lns and ·a daughter,
and have aile granddaughter. Their
son Jeff is assistant. prosecuting
attorney of Gjdlia County, and he
and his wife Andrea, also a regis- ',
tered nurse, have a daughter, Lau- •
reo. Their soo Brent lives in Hunt- •
ington, W. Va., and dau~ter Ann :
is a senior at the Universuy of Rio .;
Grande.
;•

•

C. I. ADKINS, JR.

..."

•.' .
•

Fifty -seven perce~t of all rural
~~
land in Gallia County is forest land ~
woodland shows the results of mismanagement. (Information take~
from the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District Resources
Inventory.)
Although we arc growing more
timber than we arc harvesting (well
over half lhc amount) conservation
or proper management of our
wood.lands is still necessary. It is
essential that woodland landowners
become aware of how to ma.nage
their woodlands. When a woodland
owner can rccogniz~ what kind of
shape hiS/her woodlands arc in, lhe
he/she can begin to properly manage those woodlands.
What condition arc your woodlands in? Do you have a grapcvinc
problem that needs allcntion? Is
livestock grazing your woodlands?
Perhaps you have a young sk1nd of

timber that needs thinned'! Is all or
part of your t1inbcr ready to harvest?
•
If you find thut you need assistance in any of the above menuoncd areas you may ·want D
attend a Woodland Management .
meeting sponsored by the Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation Dis-.
trJct on Fe~ruary 18, at 7 pm. The .'•
meetmg will be held at the new
Gallia County Agricultural Center
on Jackson Pil&lt;o·.
A panel of three professional -,
forcstc_rs will be !here to speak to '·
those. mterestcd _and also ans:---cr ·. •
qucsuons about umber harvcstmg, ·
contracts, betterconscrvauon mcth- "
ods an~ other Important maucrs , J
conccr~mg for~t management. F&lt;;lf J '
more mformauon call the Galha
SWCD at446-8687.

ASCS offers long term agreements

ny E. A. (Lisa) Coli ins,
GALLIPOLIS - Sunset Valley
Gallia ASCS
Farm ; Rodney, Ohio, is a new
Cou·nty
Executive Director
member of the American Angus
GALLIPOLIS
- Long Term
Association, reports Dick Spader,
Agreement
(LTA)
applications
nrc
executive vice president of the
being
taken
tbrough
January
29,
national organization with head1993. LTA's (\re for 3 to 5 years
quaners in SL Joseph, Missouri.
and
cover. the same type of conserThe American Angus Associavation
practices as the annual Agrition, with over 24,000 active adult
cultural
Conservation Program.
and junior members, is the largest
The
L
TA program provid~ both
beef callle registry association in
technical
and finanCial assistance to
the world. Its computerized records
~ YEARS OP !!Ell VICE- Keltlo P. Bnidbtu'J (r!Pt), cllnctar1
help
farmers
solve severe soil.
include detailed information on
!p vice ptellldtlll q/ lliuii!Ce lllld admliailtratlon, treanrer Pd
watq,
and
pollution
problems on
nearly II million regis~ Angus.
~ief flaaiiCial ofncer q/ Bob Ev- p.,.. .nc., was llonond by
their
land.
LT
A
funds
are used to
The AsJOCiation records ~sE,.u (left), cblr••• aiiCI chid execatln omcer of Bob
correct
conservation
Problems
on a
11'81 information and keepS records
.tva01 F-. Inc.., for 35 ye., vi 1e1 vice to tile compuy.
would
be .
farm
beyond
which
of production on individual animals
I
'
accomplished
with
the
farmers
own
for its members. These permanent
.
records help members selecr and. resources.
The
Soil
Conservation
Service
mate the best animals in their herds
establishes
priorities
and
the
Agrito produce high quaUty, efficient
breeding caule which are then Name executives
rec:o,ded witb the American Angus
NEW YQRK (AP) - I~terna- .
•
Association. Most of these regis' : COLUMB~S - Keitb P. Brad- Bradbury became chief financial . tered Angus are used by the U.S. tiona! Business Machines Corp.
in August 1988.
~. direcla, group vice president .
named three new executives to the
farmers and ranchers who raise company's
Bradbury attended Kyp deck high
management commitIf (mancc IIIII adnunistrallon, lrc8-'
·quality beef for U.S . con- tee, Its top policy
making body.
SIJtcr and chief finlrocial offlca of High School in Cheshire, 1114 the sumption.
.
The addition of the executive$
dab Bvau Fanu lllc., wu ftiCOS· Ben Fnnldin Business Unlvenity
d for 3S years or service in Wuhlnglllll, D.C.
Thursday doubles the size of the
Bob Bvaaa Farms owns and Buyout approved
panel and singles out three possible
~·Y·
WASHINGTON (AP).- The successors to John Akers IBM's
, Bradbury, • Westerville reai- operate• 279 Bob Bv•n• •nd
bepartmcnt chairman.
.
t. Slllted with BOO Evana FIIIU Owet11 Family ltcltaunnts in 17 Transportation
1'
the lllea oft'tec in ColUIDbul, In stateS, plus 0118 Calllna del Rio, a approved a $450 million puyout of
The new members are Robert J.
mber, 1957. He beCUIO tiel· Mexican restaurant. Bob Bnn1 CQOtinental Airlines by Air~ LaBant, senior vice president for
for the pneral office In 011· ' Farms includes Bob BYans PIIIU and other investoiS, hoping to help IBM's North American business;
lis In 1963 and then moved sauuae ud foodscrvicc, and the the U.S. airline emerge ·from Ned. C. Lautenbach, senior vice .
k to Columbus in ft,ugust, 1968, wholfy owned subsidiaries of bankruptA:y protection.
president and contact executive for
the C:Wipliif moved its head- Owen~ Country Sausaae. Mrs. · The deal, which has been sought IBM's marketing units in the rest ·
there. In 1974. he wu ~ Oilea C!IUntty Kitchens and Hicko- by Continental's management, of the world, and Patrick A. Toole,'
must still bo approved by the u.s. senior vice presideat for manufac!flied to vice president ud !rea- ry Spetialtiea.
Bankrupll:y Court.
layer for Bob Evans Fums Inc.
turing and development• .

.t&gt;••

1913 OLDS DELTA II

.3999 ' .

Quality Care offers 4iscounts
services for churches and empty
houses.

Local farm
named member

C•ll 992·6139

*89.99

'

POMEROY, OHIO

.

vice.

'
hundreds of years in prison.
in Miami on W~y sentencel two .counts of lying 10 the Federal
The elder Keating perhaps sym- four executives of the home devel- Reserve afrer he allegedly bid more
boliz~ lhe savings-and-108(1 fiasopment rum to prison ~s from than the company's allotted share
at a Feb. 21, 1991 T~eBSury securico~ having fmanced an extrava~t five 10 10 years.
Some 10,000 out-of-state cus- . ties auction and then tried 10- cover :
lifestyle and business·throuah JUnk
•
bonds sales. He already was serv- tomers, mostly worlcin¥ class, eth· his tracks.
Mozer's attorney, Stanley :
ing a tO-year prison term on a sep- nic and some non-English S(leaking
arate stale conviction of swindling families, suffered losses or $117 Arlcin, bitterly complained that his .:
invesmrs.
million because they bought prOIF client was the scapegoat in the :•
Keating 's latest courtroom eny at innated prices af~r .being case. He contended Mozer's unau- defeat means he 'II probably spend pressured by GDC sales representa- thorized trades caused no losses
and didn't enrich his client. Other
the rest of his life behind bars.
tives.
And there was plenty of activity banks and brokerages caught in a .
Another white-collar criminal
case is that of General Develop- in the Salomon Inc. Treasury auc- similar case in 1991, improper bid- !
ment Corp., perpetrator of what's tion scandal. Salomon's former ding for Ginnie Mae•and F;mnie
been called one of Florida's largest · head government bond trader, Paul Mae bonds, got off without crimi- ·
c;on!,inued on D-'8
•
real estate scams. A federal judge Mozer, agreed !.'&gt; plead g11ifty 10

By Cindy Jenkins, · ·
District Forester,
Gallia SWCD
· vice president of the American .
Judge Jarold Callahan, OklaGALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Angus Association.
homa City, Oklahoma, and ilssQci- . is 53% forested. Fifiy-sevcn perSome 220 exhibitors, who are ate judge Glenn Cantrell, Rush cent of all rural land in Gallia
members of the American Angus Springs, Oklahoma, will place the County is forestland.
Association .with headquarters in open show cattle. Judges for the SO
Conservation treaunent is needSL Joseph, Missouri, have entered pens and 9 carloads will be Jim ed on 86% or 153,483 acres of-the
a total of 527 head to compete for Bush, Britton, South Dakota; Vern county's woodland. Livestock
top honors ll.t the national ROV Suhn, Eureka, Kansas; and Richard exclusion is needed on 12% of the
event
McClung, New Market, Virginia.
woodland. Erosion control meaThe Angus show at the National sures are needed on 2% of the area.
Wes~ Stock Show is one of the
Establishment and reinforcement of
iargest Angus events held annually. stands is need~ on 9% of t!'e area.
Breeders and spectators from
Timber stand Improvement IS needacross the United States, Canada ed to improve the quality and proand foreign countries will be in ductivity oflhe forested land. I
attendance to watch the three days
Grazing by livestock has
of showing.
destroyed leaf litter, killed young
trees·, damaged root systems, and
compacted soil..ln some areas the

1992 CAPILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

5 •pHd, .tereo, low mlleo.

11 •

'

·59,999

COOLVILLE ELEMEIIIARY
AIID 011 JAIUARY 14
AI CARLOOII SCHOOL

1991 GEO TUCKER

Z

E. MAIN ST.

Air, auto.,
stereo, loaded

AT6:00 P.M.

•E111pire Heaters
eCo~art Circulati•g Heaters
•Coleman Trailer Fur•aces

.

(800)-837-1094

1992.0LDS ACHIEVA S

IEGIIIIIIIIG CLASSES
011 JANUARY 13

SEE US FOR HOME, FARM, ·
·BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY

9·5·3307

1992 CHEVY LUMINA

WILL STAAT
WINTER QUARTER

•HEATING
•HOT WATER
•COOKING

'

(614)-992-6614

301

dehumidification, lire and smolce
resioration, deodorizing and-disinfecting aild high pressure eJ&gt;terior
cleaning. ln the near future, Quality
Care will also offer tile floor ser-

Local farms to exhibit cattle

CHEYY.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

MEIGS CO. KAUTE CLUI

IN SYRACUSE AT6:00 P.M.
For More Information

lis, owned by Gallia County native
Quality Care employees such as
¥~chael Wallace, opened for busiJohn Baker, who IS an approved
ness recendy. ~-·
· applicator of DuPont Masterseries
1 Wallace is a cleaning technician and has four years of experience,
trained by the International lnsti- have also attended workshops.
ti!te of Carpet and Upholstery Cer~allace's business offers such
Ofied Carpet Cleaning. He has also servJc~s as carpet and upholstery
•tended many classes and hands- cleamng, water e.xtracuon and

LAST WEEK OUR SALE WAS SO SUCCESSFUL THAT WE'RE
EXTENDING OUR SALE THROUGH THE FIRST 15 DAYS OF JANUARYI

DON TATE

January 10, 1993

White
collar criminals ·are ·o n parade
.

r

SECOND-PLACE WINNERS - Taking second place In tbe
first-round qualiroer in the. Elks Hoop Shoot in Gallipolis. in December are (L-R) Meredity Addington (8-9 year-old girls' division),
Amy Wilson (10-11 !ear-old girls' division), Ryan Arrowood (8-9
year-old boys' division) and Kevin Walker (12·13 year-old boys'
division). Behind them are Gallipolis Elks Club tournament chairman Tom Meadows and GaUipolis Elks Club Exalted Ruler Mike
Sheets.

Section D:

1rhnts
~etdinel
....

cultural Stabilization and Conservation Service approves cost-$hare
funds on practices that will obtain
the most conservation. for the dollar
spent
Requests are evaluated as to
loss of soil a~d or water, and the
amount that can be saved by per-

..,

forming the practices that have' ,.
been requested .
.·
If you have several conservation ·:
practices that you would like to do , , .
over a period of 3 to 5 years, contact the ASCS Office at the C.H. ·;
McKenzie Agricultural Center,
,
phone 446-8686, by January 29.

Kemper Securities adds i.
local ·stQck to market list ·i
•

GALLIPOLIS- Kemper Securities, Inc. last week.became a "market maker" in Point Bancorp, Inc.
stock,- according to Bryce Smith,
senior vice president and branch
manager the firm's Gallipolis
office.
"We are proud to add Point
BancQrp to our prestigious market
maker list of area bank stocks,"
said Smith. In addition to Point
Bancorp, Kemper Securities makes
a market in Key 'centurion Balk:- .
shares, City Holding Company,
Star Bank, and Ohio Valley Bank.
Marlcet makers buy and sell
securities for their own profit, at
their own risk.
"Our client benefit from the firm ·
being a market maker in a stock," ·
said Smith: "Because we are a mar·
ketmaker we are able to execute
trades m'ore quickly and many
times at a n'IOre cost-eftective price
for the investor." Kemper .Securities makes a J11arket on m0rc than

500 stocks.
.~
"Our equity research depanmcnt :
analysts cover the banking industry •
extensively, making it possible for :
the firm to identify and make a •
market in regional stocks, such as ~
Point Bancorp," he said. Kemper
Securities has three banking analysl.! who cover the more than 50 '
banking and thrift stocl&lt;s.
,
Headquartered in Chicago, ~
Kemper Securities, Inc. is a fullservice nationwide securities tiro- :
kerage firm which provides indi- ~
vidual, business, municipal and •l
institut.ill!'al clients with a full I•
r~ngc ofqiiillity_invcsuncnt altcma- ~
uves and financial advice. The firm ~
has lhe largest trading floor outside "(
of New York.
~
· Investors interested in more
infor.mation about Point Bancorp,
ln.c. stock Or other invc~unent ques- r,
tions can reach Bryce or Mark ~
~mith at614-446-8899. The office ~
IS located at416 Second Aven~.
~

3

"-

I

•

�''

~ge

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

D2-sunday Tlmes--sentlnel

Sunday Tlmes Sentinel Page 03-

January 10, 1993

'

unsophisticated, but still a treasure

Friends,. family say shooting
victim was·kin·d and gentle .
By ANGELA AHN · .
Associated Press Writer
MIDDLETOWN, R.I . ·- A
woman shot to dealh as she prepared to press abuse charges
against her estranged husband was
remembered Saturday as kind and
. gentle.
.
Family and friends galhered at a
funeral Mass for Marie Willis, who
was killed Monday at the legal .
affairs offi~e of lhe Myrtle Beach
Air Force Base in Soulh Carolina.
Jeromy Willis, 23, shot his wife
in the head and chest wilh a 9 ;om
pistol in front of nine olher people,
authorities said . South Carolina
authorities continued !heir syarch
Saturday for Willis , formerly of
Ironton, Ohio.
"She would not want people to
· continue to mourn her dealh,'·' SB\d
Keith Mello, the dead woman s
brother. "She just wanted to assure
her son is well taken care of."

By TED ANTHONY
As$ociated Press Writer
RICHWOOD, W.Va. -When lhe Saturday Rtvlew proclaimed Jim
Comstock's West Virginia Hl1/billy "sophisticated" reading, he demanded a retractmn.
•
. " I knew I couldn' t circulate a paper in West Virginia ifl was c~sidered sophisticated," he said. ·
When Comstock published his newspaper with ink scented -like malodorous mountain onions, he aroused the ire of the Postmaster General

"She was a kind and gentle from hi$ wife after the AugUst inc\woman and an exeellent molher," dent.
Mello said. "All of us are deeply
Mrs. Willis returned with her
tooched by !his loss. God bless ber son to Rhode Island, where her
soul."
mother and four of her five broth.
"It's always tragic to lose a ers live. She returned to South Carloved one, a friend," said the Rev. olina last Sunday to testify before a
Thomas Carnevale, who presided board hearing evidence of a possiriver lhe service at St. Lucy Roman ble coun-manial of Willis.
CalholicChureh.
Mrs. Willis and her son,
"Life is difficult," Carnevale Thomas Raffa, had been living in
said. "It has its moments of joy, Bristol with a brother, Stephen
sorrow, tragedy."
Mello.
·
Mrs. Willis had been hospital·
Mrs. Willis had asked Bristol
ized two weeks after her husband police for proteCtion last October. •
allegedly attacked her with a Police Chief Thomas Moffatt said
propane torch in August, burning she told officers her husband liad
her le~s. authOrities said.
threatened to kill her if she ever left
Netghbors said the night she left him.
lhe hospital, Mrs. Willis' husband
Bristol Detective Lt. Terrence
assaulted her again, choking her Mullen recalled that Mrs. Willis
while her 6-year-old son from a "was extremely l!Pset, very ne!- .
prior marriage tried to stop him.
vous and was afnud he would kill
Air Force officials have said ~ her. She felt he would figure out
Willis was ordered to stay away where she was because he knew
she had family here."

BAY OF QUENDALE- While tbe oil tanker
Braer r.emains unbroken in the Bay of Quendale, Shetland Islands, Saturday, a local policeman orders press representatives away from the

area in order to commence detergeat spraying
operatioas with. helicopters. Gale force winders
are still preventiag·salvage operations from takiag place. (AP photo}
·

Two supermarket chains ban
fish from Shetland Islands
!

By KARIN DAVIES
Associated Press Writer
SUMBURGH, Shetland Islands
-Two of Britain's biggest supermarket chains have stopped selling
fish from the Shetland Islands ,
where millions of gallons of oil
from a. wrecked tanker has polluted
part of the sea.
The supermarket ban, and a
government ban on fishing and
salmon harvesting around the oil
spill, have sent turmoil through the
fishing industry, a mainstay of the
windswept islands 100 miles north~
east of the Sci&gt;ttish mainland.
·
Oil began·rouling the r:&lt;onb Sea
on Tuesday when the 89,700-ton
Braer, CliiT)'ing 24.6 million gallons
of light Horwegian crude, grounded on the southern end of Mainland
island after losing power in gale·
swep\seas. ·
· Efforts to contain the spill were
frustrated again today by winds
, gusting up to 80 mph.
The Tesco chain, which adver. tises itself as Britain's biggest fish
seUer, said Friday !hat it will templ)rar'ily stop selling fish caught
anywhere around the Shetlands.
·
· Another national supermarket
gtoup, Marks and Spencer. said it.
h3S stopped buying salmon from
offshore Shetland fish fanns.
The government's Scottish
Office on Friday night ordered a
total ban on fishing and lhe suspension of salmon harvesting _at fish

farms in a ·32~-squaie-mlle area
around lhe spill.
Millions of gallons of oil have
been disgorged, threatening fishrelated industries that offer a major
source of employment in the Shetlands.
Salmon farming in offshore
pens is worth $50 million a year to
the Shetland economy. Fishing is
wonh $35 million and fish processing, $32 million.
Fish, seabirds, seals and olher
mammals from the Shetlands' rich
wildlife colonies have washed up
dead on oil-tainted beaches.
Thousands of sheep on the
southern part of Mainland island,
their pastures, potato fields and
other crops have been covered in a
scum of oily sea spray.
Blown onto land by gales !hat
have swept the islands !his week,
the sticky brown scum covers
~verything and suffuses the air with
lhe stench of petroleum.
Planes have sprayed the slick
with chemicals to break it up and
booms have been laid to try to contain the oil, but bad weather has
severely hampered cleanup operations. More gales are forecast (or
the weekend.
Shetl~nd marine operations
chief George Sutherland told
reporters Friday that the Braer's
engine room was showed signs of
separating from the cargo tank.
Geert Koffeman of the Dutch

Plane crashes and burns in
India, all aboard survive
By VlJA Y JOSffi
Associated Press Writer
NEW DELHI. lndill- An Indian Airlines domestic flight crashed
on landing Saturday, flipped upside
down, broke apart and caught f1re.
All 163 people aboard jumped to
safety.
.
· " It was not only a wonder, it
was my rebirth ," said Prabir
Kumar Banerjee, who survived
with a minor neck injury.
Six people were hospitalized
after the crash at the Indira Gandhi'

International Airport, which was
shrouded in heavy fog, said Harbans Kumar, the airport director.
The Russian-built Tu-154 jet
was leased, along wiih a crew,
from Uzbek Airlines to break a
month:old strike by more !han 400
pilots of lhe state-run Indian Airlines.
The flight from Hyderabad,
1,000 miles south of New Delhi,
was carrying 152 passengers,
including two naturalized U.S. citizens, and 11 cre)l' members.

salvage company Smit Tak told a
news conference Friday he thought
more !han half lhe oil was still in
the tanker. He s!lld the brealcup of
the ship would not increase the rate
of spillage because lhe cargo sec'tion appeared to be separating from
the rear section in one ~ece.
A Smit Tak barge IS sch!lduled
to arrive in lhe Shetlarids on Monday to pump out the oil remaining
in the Braer.
·
It will take at least anolher day
to secure the barge alongside the
tanker and rig the pumping gear, he
said. If lhe weather calms, pumping
will start eady next week, he said.

ACROSS
1 AHiuence
7 Shoreline .
12 Antlered animals
17 Simians
21 Make certain
22 Pertaining to
the cheek
23 "-Attraction"
24' Young horse
25 At home
26 Delude; trick
28 Irritated
3D Courteous
32 A, E, -. -. U
33 Gave food to
35 Heroic event
37. More d!lCile
39 "On Golden -"
40 Bother
41 Guido's low note

·

WEST

l-t -13

EAST
' +HJ
• 9 5;1

•QJ!0812
tAJl0843

.Q

43 Classify
45 Lavishes
fondness (on)
47 Word of approval
48 Strip oH (skin)
49 Damp: moist
52 "Cheers" regular
54 Soften in temper

+KJ 8
K4
t76
+AJ962

•...

56 Pasteboards

• Q9 2

57 Beg
59 lndigenl
61 Mature
62 Nimbus
63 Hurried

.Kl08 5
SOUTH
+A Q 10 9 6 4 2

•s

.t K S
.14 3
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

,.

Soulb

weSt
t•
5t

Pass

64 Marinaro 10
66 Pedal digit
67 Encountered

68 Mud

Nortb

Easl

Pass

Pass

l NT
Pass

.

I .

See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-4

ALDER

.A

.radioactive waste.
"We look at this as a positive
step to secUring a safe, centralized
low-level waste facility here in
Ohio," said Debbie Vivalo, executive director of the Council for
Responsible Waste Solutions,
whose members include some of
the waste generators.
The hearings .will be similar lO
· legislative hearings, said Jane Harf, .
Ohio Environmenial Protection
Agency's deputy director for policy.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

PHILLIP

NORTH

Ohio, which must dispose of its
own low:tevel waste and similar
material from Indi;lna, Iowa, Minnesota; Missouri and Wisconsin for
20 years.
The advisory committee is
.exploring technical issues involved
in a stomge center.
.
Most low-level radioactive
waste is produced by nuclear
power plants but does not include
sreqt fuel rods. Hospitals, universilles, private research ceiners and
industry aho produce low-level

Pass
s•

Opening·lead: Y Q

69 .. _ 109"

71 TV's Koppel
72 District in
Germaryy
·• 74 Coy
76 Ravelings
77 Enemy
,
78 Hesitation sound

Usually there is
an alternative
By Phillip Alder

79 Make melancholy
81 Goldberg role
in " Sister Act "

82
83
84
85
87
89

Datum
Profit
"Bagdad - .;
Weaken
Ridicule
"-Faith"

The Senior Life·Master felt that his
Saturday morn.ing students were pro- 90 Matheis TV role
gressing well.
.
92 Hebrew measure
I have decided (he began) to give
94 Auction word
you so,me tougher deals today. However, if you count your tricks carefully
and consider all the information available to you from the bidding, you
should be able to find the right plays.
This first deal is based on one in
Hugh Kelsey's excellent book •Ad·
vanced Play at Bridge" ($15.45. Gollancz. 212-866-5860).
.
The SLM ·wrote the N~rth-South
hands and the bidding onto the board.
You reach five spa4es after an exciting auction (he continued), Perhaps
you should have let partner double
five hearts, but it's too late to worry
about that now. West leads the heart
queen. How do you view your ·
prospects?
After allowing the students to analyze the deal, the SLM proc~ed .
West, from his spirited bidding,
must have at leastlO red cards, probably more. Tbis means that the clubs
are more likely to be breaking f-lthan

DOWN
1 Homeless child
2 Anglo-Saxon
Slave
3 Thus
4 Haul with eflori
5 "-Grit"
6 Aids
7 Centimeter: abbr.
8 Blrame necessity
9 Landed

95 Sows
96 Roof edges
97 Yarn used lor
embroidery
99 Sandra or Ruby
100 Kiln
\ 101 Ute stages
102 Collapsible beds
103 AFL-105 Submerges in
water
107 Therefore
l 09 Legal matter'
110 Ordin011ces
11 1 "The - Prince
of Bel Air"
113 Lean-to
114 Water- - .
115 Phys.
116 An Elliott
117 Petition
118 Turt
12Q .. _Mom"

pronunciation

12_1 Semi~precious
stone

20 Backless seats
27 King of beasts
29 Sets limits to
31 Danson tO
34 Unloaded
36 Cut
38 Depended

122 Separate
123 Fiber plant
124- Minor
126 Staid
128 African antelope
130 Small; little
132 Decorate
134 Famed
135 -

40 Danish island

42 Bound
44 Jog
46 Clan
48 Wan
49 In - (without
enough care)
50 l:llgher

in Peace

136 Greek leiter
137 Watt - Disney
139 Stumble
141 Concerning
142 Informer
143 Is 111

51 Prosecutor: abbr.

t 45 Chemical dye
147 Shut with Ioree
149 Haggard heroine
152 King of Bashan
153 Roar
155 River in Africa

157
159
160
162
164

DiHiculty
Mr. Pacino
Regulation
Vncanny
Bert Parks. lor
one
166 "The- Of
Rosie O'Neill"
168 Chair
169 Platform
170 Scraped together
171 Lawmaking body

'

53 Debatable
55 Neon symbol
56 Vehicle
58 Conductor
60 Clieck
62 Clue
65 Insane
68 Rodents
69T-ingend
70 Cares lor
72 Vaults
73 Vacation places
75 Mire
76 Climbing devices
77 Swoon
79 Res'cues
80 Titles
82 Set In order
83 Del, Harris on
"Barney Miller"

Hollow places
86 Church benCh
88 Sl"'l"f Stewart
89 Smooth and
IOOihlng
90 Whiskers
91 Ardent
93 Dl118r&amp;IOni play
95 Actress Stelanle
97 Farm animals
98 Falsehood
102 "- a Giant
Shadow"
104 G..- peak
106 Unit of electriCal
reotatance
'107 Decrepit horae:
· slang
108 Lubricated
110 Fat of swine
111 Useless
112 Vast throng
114 Freshets
116 Jargon
117 L!lCalion
119 Son
121 Aroma
122 Time gone by
123 Sch. course
125 Broadcasts
127- garde
128 Mistakes
129 "MaJor130 Young hen
131 Simpler
133 Cry over spilt 136 "Psycho" star
138 Another 136
Across
140 Trousers
143 Diphthong
144 North American
rail
146 Between torso
and head
148 Additional
150 Stop
151 Otherwise
153 Wager
154 Hairpiece
156 Female ruH
t s8 Sn Is Its symbol
161 "-Law"
163 Estrada ID
!85 Mr. Sullivan
t87, Rough lava

J

..

3-2.
.
If East can get the lead in clubs, a

diamond switch will surely defeat you.
To light to keep East off the lead, you
m.,.t duck the first .trick.
If clubs are H and West switches to
1 11-., J91 will ....... . .t aup,_ ... ._.. 1 ~ttiiiiRif. 'ltba win
,.... !
;'I - 41111111 till A•X el
. ..... 7 Axadlltll. . . nffa
1M f11111t
Dlmmy hu tbree
trump entries, allowlaa you to estab'!ish the fiftb club for a diamond
discard.
· ·
At trick one, you have two plays.
Conaider both of them.

•

?a._..

l'

;..

West Virginians, who see Comstock as an expen prllllloter of West
Virginia and of l.imself, recognize the publisher i$ but one facet of the
man.
·
·
Pan sincerely and part tongue-in-cheek, Comstock founded lhe "University of Hard Knocks" to honor overachieving Americans who never
earned college degrees.
.
.
. · •
Among its 2,000 "graduates" are Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., fonner
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., and former Oaldand A's owner Charlie 0.
Finley.
Applicants must be successful in a particular field, donate SIOO to !heir
alma mater that wasn't, and buy a subscription to the Hil/IHJiy.
.
'Something to do'
Because no one else had, Comstock.wrote and published the West Virginia Heritage EncycloP._edla, complete with hand-lettered bindings. It has
become the definitive, 1f somewhat rustic, referenc.e for state history.
It is 51 volumes.
''It was something to do,'' Comstock said.
Comstock also sank lhousands of doUars into reprinting long-forgoucn
books about the state. He amassed 100,000 volumes and ultimately sold
them to Davis &amp; Elldns CoUege for only $1 apiece.
He also spearheaded the purchase and preservation of aulhor Pearl
Buck's binhplace in Hillsboro and he bankrolled the rescue of a historic
milroad near Richwood.
Once he was amused by the prolifemtion of "do-it-yourself" manuals,
so he ~tote a tongue-in-cheek column about removing one's own
appendix. ·
1
The article was distributed worldwide and a Mr. J.W.C. Fox from ·Loodon wrote ComstoCk 8$king for further details.
"Apparently he wanted to remove his own appendix and was !ired of
waiting," Comstock said. "The English don't know when you're kidding."
He sent Fox his story; then alerted Lbndoq police of the man's address
because there "might be a situation" there. Then he called a London
newspaper and warned !hem to be Oil lhe lookout for ''quile a story.''

"AU I know," Comstock once said, "is that when I shuflle off r.his
m11'181 coil, and after I have checked with SL Peter to see if my wife has
arrived, I am going to ask about Mr. J.W.C. Fox.
.
• •I want to knc)w if he has arrived. And if so. I'd lilce to know the circumstances."
Comstock's career began when, fresh from the Navy and World War .~
n, he founded a Richwood newspaper he called theNewsletttr.
-:
The postmasu:r didn'tlike the name, Cornsiock recalled, and demand: :
ed to know whether it was a newspaper or a letter. So he changed the •
name to News-Leader, .a weekly newspaper his son, Jay, still&gt;publishes ;:
out of the same shop as the ffillbilly.
·
.
.;
The Hillbilly was bora in 1957.
"I wanted it to be a paper for all West Virginia," Comstock said.
•
.
'Same as alway&amp;'
..
He attended Democratic and Republican national conventiQns and .:..
reported West Virginia news. Along the way, he met every president from :
Eisenhower to Bush.
·
••
At home, he covered the Legislature as a human interest story.
Comstock suld lhe paper in 1981, then bought it back on five years
later on his 75th binbday. Open-heart surgery in 1987 forced an01her •
leave--of-absence and, since !hen, Comstock has had more bypasses than a "
major city.
The sale to the McCauters. he says, is for real and for good.
"It's been a wonderfplume," Comstock said.
·
McCauley, f9flller publisher of the Lancaster (Ohio} Eaglt-Gazettt,
quit lhe newspaper industry last July, but "got bored after about a
month." A friend told him about the Hillbilly and he bit.
· ·
He says he and his wife are commiued to boosting circulation while •
·
preserving the old neighborly flavor. _
"If .it's pld for West Virginia, it'll be in the· Hill11i/ly. If it's bad for
West Virgmia, it'll be criticized in the· Hillbilly. Same as always," :
McCauley said.
.
'
Comstock will retain "free rein" over lhe paper. McCauley said.
In Charleston, about 175 people are working to get a memorial to
Comstock erected on the state Capitol grounds aside statues of Abraham'
Lincoln, Stonewall Jackson and Booker T. Washington.
·
But a state law requires such heroes to be dead at least 50 years.
Still, businessman Walt Painter, who bottles spring water, has bee~ try- :
ing lD convince Gov. Gaston Caperton that his friend Comstock should be
an exception.
·
"No one's going to know Capenon's name 50 years from now, but
lhey'd know if it
next to Jim Comstock's name on !hat monument,":l·
Painter said. "Jim will live on from now until Doomsday."
&gt;
When it happens, people predict Comstock. won't be far from Rich- :
wood.
.
"I picwre Jim Comstock dying at his desk at Hillbilly," Corbett said.
"If he can still brealhe and write, 1don't lhink he ean quit

was

:Mountain State's first lady battles 'outsider' label
to attack her is unfair," he sars.
But, he concedes that IS the
price of taking charge.
' ~ I th!nk a~y_body who is in a
leadership posmon and IS aggressively trying to do something has
detractors," Caperton says. ' 'If
someone doesn't have detractors,
they aren't doing anylhing." ,
. Those who _know her best say
Worby became first lady carrying
plenty of baggage.
,
Worby, .52, and Caperton,' 43,
married within a year of his highly .
publicized divorce from Dee ·
Caperton, a well-liked Kana)l'ha
County legislator who many say
pointed him to the Governor's
Mansion in 1989. , ·
Many West Virginians see
Worby, a native of Nyack •. N.Y., as
an out-of-towner and ." the second
wife."
Nearly six months after Worby
married Caperton, a poll showed
West Virginians still preferred Dee
Capeno11 as West Virginia's first
lady. The situation also got sticky
when Dee Caperton unsuccessfully ·
ran for state treasurer in the May
1990 primary and the governor
lined up Democratic allies against
her.
But most of the people who talk
negatively·ahout Worby won't talk
at all if their names are used.
"Here's a woman who's Jewish
in a Bible Bell, who wants to be
more than the governor's wife,"
said an administration official who.
declined to be identified. "It's difficult for people to accept her in
total. People would accept her very
easily as Rachael Worby and symphony conductor, or people would
accept her as just first lady, but not
togelher."
Worby is music director and
conductor of Carnegie Hall's Edu-cational Concerts with the American Symphony Orchestra. She held
lhe same titles for seven years with
lhe Wheeling Symphony Orchestra.
She has guest-conducted with
the San Fmncisco Symphony. the
Los Angeles Philharmqnic and the
Seattle, PittSburgh and San Diego
symphonies.
·
•
·
Since she joined the Wheeling
Symphony, its budget has tripled to
nearly $1 million and ticket sales ·
. have mushroomed.
"She is an extremely dynamic
woman who has energy tO bum and

~

·

WATER EVERYWHERE- A horse ranch
and an abandoned vehicle are _surrounded by
floodwaters from the rising Santa Ana River in
Norco, Calif., Friday. Three days or rain caused .
has done a tremendous amount to
put the WheeUng Symphony on lhe
map," said Laura :Willumsen,
e~ecutive director of the symphony.
Worby has taken the symphony
on the road, bringing classical
music to the tiniest hollows of
West Virginia.
"Rachael is absolutely adamant
that what we're doing is helpin~
p~l~Jple discover classical music,'
Willumsen said. "She is very wonderful at taking down the traditional barrier to symphony music."
Willumsen said the orchestra
was in danger of being shut down
before Worb:t came, but now it is
the strongest It has ever been.
. "She tends to attract all the
prl\isc and all the blame, but no situation in life is black and white.
She's the Jype of flamboyant personality·mat people just want til pin
everything on and it's just not that
simple," Willumsen said.
Beyond trombones and trufnes,
Worby also has founded an Arts
an\1 Letter Series which brings

•

·

tbe river to overfloW its banks, spilling into the
west Riverside Couaty commuaity. While the
rain subsided Friday, more rain was expected
with tbe arrival of a aew storm Saturday. (AP)

notables to Charleston to provide
free concerts and lectures.
Last year, she launched a camP.aign to solicit donations to fij!ht
Illiteracy. Though the campa1gn
fell shon of ilS S I million goal. she
says it allowed her to travel the
state and become acquainted wilh
the "interior hunger" of Wesl. Virginians.
· "It's about... not feeling value or
valuable. I'm entering their lives
through passion, -Riving something
else to their lives, ' she says. "People are unable to move forward in
their lives unless they're sated."
Worby says her dual careers are
a successful miJ!.. albeit a ·hectic
one.
.
"I feel both worldS 'Complement
each other,'' she says. "The
orchestra is my ~reatest platform
for social change. '
However, she does dmw.a line
between maestro and first lady.
"It's me completely !hat you
see on lhe podium," she says. "I
bring every single thing I own with

me to lhe podium. My dedication,
my passion, my discipline, my
.focus, my charisma, my joy, my

desJJ&amp;ir•••

Not so when on the political
stage where, she says, "aU !hat vui!1Cl3bility" could be painful.
Just before the election, it was
reported Worby was registered as
an independent despite serving as a
delegate to the Democratic National Convention and ·voting for
Caperton in the Democratic primary.
"I assume I'm registered a
Democrat," Worby said. "I really
can't remember how I'm registered. Anybodr who has the time to
wonder how I m registered to vOte
leadS.a life or great luxury."
She said she served as a delegate as a matter of protocol and she
does not get involved in the governor's decisions.
"Gaston and I talk about our
days and our lives as any people
do," she said, but that is where it
ends.

AIDS study :
encourages
sufferers
By JOHN ENDERS
.
Associated Press Writer
'SOUTH SAN FRANCISco·;·:
Calif. - Tim Oviatt has good rea-·,
son to hope !hat an AIDS reseatch .
study at San Francisco General '.
Hospital will open new doon to -_
treatment of the plague that hal &lt;
killed so many of his friends.
•·
He, too, has AIDS.
"I am very hopeful," ·said Ovi: .".
att, a San FranciscO clothing shop .
owner who has taken the drug AZ1" 1
for three years.
"
Oviauand -19-othen will participate in the study, which begms lhiS · •
mon!Jt and will test the erfective:ness of combatting AIDS-relate('
tumors known as Kaposi's sarco.'·'
rna, which strikes cells lining biOOJt
vessels.
•
The study will be the third, mos(':
extensive trial of an unusual proce. ·.
dure known as "cell therapy ."
White blood cells, known as Cii8
cells, are removed from the··.
patient's blood, !hen isolated and :
treated-with smaU doses of Interleulcen sl!, a cancer-fighting drug,
and phytohemaglutina, a soybealf
extract
The cells are then incubated fOJ
two to lhree weeks, when they multiply about tenfold, !hen are reinfused by the billions into the
patient's bloodstream.
The idea is to use a patient's "
own cells to fight the tumors, ancl
thus ,Promote lhe healing of the ·
body s immune system, damaged.
by lhe HIV virus.
The small biotechnology fiT!ll in
Santa Clara !hat developed the pro-·.
cedure - Applied Immune Sci- c
ences Inc . - says it has shown ..:
good results· in two earlier tests, ·
and no negative side effects. It·.
hopes lhe study will confirm cell
therapy's effectiveness against
Kaposi's and also help develop a
broad ~tment for AIDS and other
immune diseases.
"We think we have a process
!hat is anti-HIV, anti-cancer, antivim! and anti-fungal," said Dr.
Thomas B. Okarma, president,
chief executive and chief scientist
for AIS.

Economy, calamity join to end fabled 'California dream'

-

HI THERE - A young Somalian lrles to climb aboard a United
States Marine Armored Personnel Carrier, Saturday. The dty center Is Mogadishu is ringed with armored check points that attract
local curiosity. (AP photo)

merce.

He riever heard from the man 3gain.

'

· (EDITOR'S NOTE - Wilen
she married .the millionaire who
governs West Virginia, Rachael
Worby did not foresee that she
was in for a personality clash, not
with her husband but with the
varied constituency of this Bible
Belt state. How does a New Yorker with gr~at talent make it?
With great difficulty.)
_ ___,·
·
By NANCY NUSSBAUM
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, 'W.Va - She
conducts at Carnegie Hall for a
week every year. She has guestconducted some of the nation '·s
finest orchestras with passion and
perfection. She has taken classical
music into the crannies or her
adopted state.
But she is also married to West
Virginia's governor, and thereir'l
lies the rub.
Her critics characterize her as a'
pushy, arrogant New Yorker, an
activist in everything she does, just
not what many West Virginians
think a first lady should be. For
instance, she wouldn't take her
husband's name.
But Rachael Worby has defi.ed
convention and thrived in separate
worlds where critics abound.
The same drive that brought her
kudos on the stage an6 in the halls
of power has produced its share of
slings and arrows from many directions.
Since marrying Democratic
Gov. Gaston Caperton in May
1990, Worby has bCen assailed for
snuggling with the governor in
public. ·
She has been accused of yelling
obscenities at a state trooper and
kicking another.
•
Some people say she has a superior "New York attitude." Some
talk about her clothes, her taste,
even her hair.
"I've spent many nights sobbing myself to sleep since I met
· Gaston, sobbing myself awake,
sobbing through brealcfast and sobbing through lunch," Worby says. ·
"Half the people don't know
how deeply I fccllhis stuff. Gaston
. is the only one who knows."
.
Caperton, a millionaire insurance executive, ~ays it pains him
more when lhe criticism is leveled
at his bride.
"I think to attack me is OK and

84

10 Dinner course

11 Earthquake
12 Field to
13 Hit lightly
14 Above and
touching
15 Awkward fellow:
slang
16 Molle stealthilY
17 King topper
18 Italian river
19 Omitted from

.

"Now we're the only newspaper under orders from the federal government not to smell bad," Comstock said. "That's an awful thing to do to a
striving newspaper."
.
When interstate highways were new, Comstock saw tlleir potential in
keeping troublemakers out or his mountains.
. "Tmveling newspapermen·and magazine writers won't be able to see a
thmg," he wrote . .
Few would see as much as Comstock has in his 35 years as editor, pub·
lisher and writer for the pugnacious weekly known for its keen doses of
Appalachian common sense and humor. .
"My dad once told me that !he Lord paid special attention to fools and
drunks, and kept !hem pretty IJIUCh from hann," Comstock once wrote. ·
" I add country editors.'
·
• Mountain morsels
Comstock, 81, has been a self-described troublemaker for much of his
life, always dismissing himself as "a country editor in tlie boondocks.''
Inside his head lurk a melange of mountain morsels about the amusing
men and women who make up his much-maligned state.
' 'There are so many stories to tell,'' Comstock said.
.
Now he has passed the torch. On Jan. I, Comstock turned over the
Hillbilly to two Lancaster, Ohio, publishers and relinquished a generation·
long tradition,
·
Through it all, he kept things modest The Hillbilly's Page One nameplate labels itself, " A newspaper for people who can't read, edited by an_
editorwhocan'twrite.''
'
It is wrong. Comstock takes laughs seriously and seriousness laughing·
ly.
Today, 6,000 people in 40 states and six foreign countries subscribe to
the West Virginia Hillbilly, and 3,000 more.copies are distributed to classrooms as part of a West Virginia Studies course.
"We send more copies to New York !han the New Yorker sends here,"
he boasts.
Comstock's writings have been anthologized nationally, revered and
reviled locally. Still, only 19 of Richwood's 3,000 residenlS subscribe.
•'Never caught on here,·· Comstock said.
In retirement, Comstock will continue to pen his oft-acerbic back-page
·feature "Comstock Load."
·
Appalachian essence

.Public hearings help choose radioactive waste site:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Two state panels will conduct public hearings to help in choosing a
low-level radioactive waste site.
The Low-Level RadioactiVll
Waste Advisory Committee and the
Blue Ribbon Commission on Siting
Criteria have ~heduled 12 public
hearings, beginning Jan . 20' in
Columbus and ending April 3 in
Painesville.
The commission will propose
guidelines for finding a sjte in

.

~~~

')'he new publishers, RL. "Sandy" and Carolee McCaul!:)', have a lot
to hve up to. · ..
"You have assumed custodianship of a West Virginia treasure, thanks
to the lifetime work of Jim Comstock," wrote Richard Marks, a West
Virginia native who now lives in Gambrills, Md.
Disease has shriveled Comstock's 1eft hand, and the weathered old
Underwood tyjlewriter !hat was his trademark sits unused. .
He now writes all his columns in rapid longhand. He laments that he
has lost "!he grasp of expressiveness I once had."
Yet many credit the former schoolteacher wilh being·the essenoe of
Appalac~ia.
- _
.
"He's given a glimt&gt;se of West Virginia to the oulSide' world." said
Maxine Corbett, executive director of the Richwood Chamber of Com:

'•

•
•

I'

'

ID,_....,.,. ...mlbNL"'IWI'I A_
H H.

By DEBORAH HASTfNGS .
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - Janice Sar·
gent so embraced the dream of the
Golden Stat~. she had it emblazoned on her license plates.
" DREAM 65" commemorates
the year she and her husband
migrated here from Maryland and
wrapped their arms around. the
·promise of affordable housmg,
. well-paying jobs ami seemingly
endless good weather.
·
: But fn 1992, she and nearly a
million other Californians watched
that dream slip through their fingers in a bizarre cp·nfhience of
record-settin$ unemployment,
financial calamity and 'assorted naturn! disasters.
..
Confronted with lhe Los Angeles spring riots •. floods, ~anh­
quakes, crop-k11l10g pests m the
Central Valley, a nearly banlcrupt
city school system and the largest
state budg~ deficit in U.S. history,
the year was one of the worst 10
C•'ifomia since statehood.
·
"t

I

I

'

•

cent drop in similar positions.
During the same period, postCold War defense cuts and anum~ of firms abandoning California
for cheaper quarters forced the
aerospace industry into eliminating
22 percent of its state jobs. The
United States saw a 16 percent dip
in aerospace positions.
A:nd while the country as a
whole appears to be making a slow
economtc comeback after bottoming out this spring, California with a recession that has run lhree
Egypt . •~"
times longer than the entire
T~e statistics are mind·bllg- · nation's - has yet to hit bottom. .
gling. California's t&lt;~ovembcr · For Mrs. Sargent, who lost her
unemployment rote was 10.1 per- construction industry job JUSt
cent, the hi,hest since lhe Depres- before Thanksgiving, time has
sion. A rnaJor reason is lhe reces- come to give up the California
sion's disproportionate impact on dream . .
"In 1965, land was cheap, housconstruction and aerospace, two of
ing was cheap," .said the 52_-yearlhe state's lar~est industries.
Since spnng 1990, high land oid mother of two grown ch1kflen.
J;Jrices and credit shortages con- "I dido 't need to work. I stayed
tribqled to a 20 percent loss in Cal- homo with the kidS •.The economy
ifornia consquction jobs, while the was booming, there was .a lot of
nation experienced only lin 8 per- • work.
. According to the latest economic forecast, 1993 will provide no
relief. The Californi.a dream, as it
used to exist, is gaspin~ for life.
Even Gov. Pete Wtlson's office
seems overwhelmed by )he enormi·
ty 'o f tribulations facing the
nation's most populous state.
'2 plagues behind Egypt'
"At this point, the only precedents for what we've faced are bib·
tical, said Wilson's communications director, Dan·Schnur. "We're
runninR two plagues ·behind

"Everyone wanted to come
here,'' said Mrs. SargenL "Now
everybody wants to get out of
here.''

Sliriitkiag s~
She is applying for jobs in Arizona, Colorado and Nevada, staleS
where the construction industry
remains heallhy. Her husband, who
is a Los Angeles County sheriffs
deputy, will :relocate wilh ber.
It was not the ftrst time !,bey had
considered leaving a state lh*t once
promised every crcaure comfort.
"Even before the RCCSSiOn hit
really bad, we v.:ae thinking about
leavmg," Mrs. SIJ'ICDI said. "It's
just getting so crowded, and thc:R's
so much uaffic. We just Wlllled to
~:~ewhere _ where_it's not so
The Sargents are not alone. In
fiscal year 1992, for the first time
in more than two decades, more
people left California than mipated
here.
Those Ieavins. accordiag to
state records, tended to be white,

over lhe age of 40 and among Call~ compagies "- all of which could
fornia's highest wage earners. take up the slack left by- the demise Those moving here tended to be of former boori industries such as
members of ethnic minorities, aerospace and construction,
uDder the age of 24 and workers in
. "The California dream, if it's
low-paying, entry level jobs.
defined as Ozzie and Harriet, overDespite intimidating numbers, priced jobs in the aerospace Indusnot every Qne sees the changing try and living off the government .•
state of California in hues of gloom - that dream is .over," Kotlcin •
:and doom.
•
said.
Joel Kotkin, an intcrDational fel"There's going to be a Jendency "'
low at the Pepperdine Uni+ersity · to panic and to say it's the end of -'
School of ausiness and Manage- ·the world," he added, "but it'snot ~
ment, and a senior fellow at the the end !:'f the world.''
.,
Center for the New West, believes
In LOs Angelos, lhe couatry's •
California is merely in flux.
second largest city, community
"Everythinr that could have leaden are trying to realize new
gone wrong went wrong at the prospelity- by holding on to 11 1eut
· same time," Kotkin said. "I don't a sliver of lhe old California dream.
think the:re. s anything f undamenThe Chamber of Commerce
lally wrong in California that can't lobbying to keep open an' El Segun-be turned .ound.••
do U.S. Air Force research tenter
What will help turn lhe state's slated for relocation. The bale acnecoaomy around, according to e~ $4 billion each year in conKotkin, are burgeoning businesses tract resean:lt, said chamber Plcaisuch • environmental enginccrins, dent Ray Remy, and is IChec!Qiecr 1
biomedical rCsean:h, sernicondue· to 'move tQ Albuquerque, N.M.;
·
!Ors and small- to medium-sized next year.

is

•.

.

.

�..
.

'

friends. What you do 'now couid come
unQer review later. Capricorn, treat
yourself to a birthday gill. Send tor

ASTRO·ORAPH

Caprico&lt;n's Aatro-Graph predictions
lor the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus
a long. sell-addressed. stamped envalope to Astro-Graph, c/o this •
pw, P.O. Box 9 t 428, Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodiac Sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 11) In a partnership arrangement. It Is best not to
l ake it upon )ooursell today to make decisions without enlisting the endor""'
ment of your cOlleagues.
PISCES (Ftb. 20-March 20) Use good
iudgmerit todav or elsa you might get
yourself into something which could be

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

g'Your

a

&lt;Birthday

very

deman~:iing

and could also cramp

your style. Look before you leap.

ARIES (March 21·April111 Be wary of
becoming involved today with a clique
Of smal l group whose Ideas and inter-

.lan. 10. 1113
In the ,... -.cs. be sure to taka ad·
vantage of any opportunities that will
add to your knowledge regarding your
· present !leld of tndeavor. Finding time
lor 1111s pursuit may be diHicuil, but your
efforts wll be-arded.
CAPRICORN (DeC., 22-Jan. 111 Keep
everything on a buoiness level today,
even commercial matters that include

ests do not correspond wilh yours. If
they make trouble, you could be identi·

lied as one of them .
TAURUS (Aprii20-Mer201 Don't count
too heavily on Lady Luck today to help
you fulfill your ambitious expec~ation s.
Instead of greasing the skids for you,
she mighl work againsl y_~:.

GEMIIM (Mar 21-.lune 201 You are not
apt to be too euecessful today In passing off information you cannot aub$tan·
liate aa fact. What you say is apt to be
challenged, so be carefuL
CANCER (June 21..Julr 22) YOu are
UIUIUy lither ll&lt;illlul in your dealingl In
the commercii! realm, but this m(Oht
not be true today. It could be hard for
you to distinguish between a good and
bad deaL ·
.
LEO (Jutr aJ.AIIg •.22) II )oou take an un'
yielding position on a critical Issue today, it could generate severe opposltion
that may overpower you. Be assured.

where your car- II concernad. What AQUARIUS (...... »Fell. 11) II you ex·
you put together forcefully COUld be peel more than what you're entitled to
destined to unravel.
todly, d1Mpp&lt;M'11ment Ia . Hkely. ReSAOITTAIIIUI ( -. 22..0.C 21) Tty to werda will come in proportion to effort
l vold indMduala today whom you know expended .
ltom- experlenel atwlya lmpoee their PISCES (Fell. 20 Mlrch 20) UnlortU·
will on others. You won't relish being nately, it could take more than your
told What to think or do.
, charm. wit and good looks to got bye today. Thills a toUgh world where parlor·
m~.

not promises, will impress

others.
·
ARIES (March 21·April111 In trying to
be a nice guy today, you might do things
that could build. othlirs up tor a big tel·
down, ~uae you'd rather say what
people want to h - instead of telling
them the truth .
TAURUS (April 20-Mer 20) Pretending
to be someone other than who you real-

..... 11, 11113

l&lt;nowledge you've acquired through

both schoOl and experience will be P'JI
to constructive use in.the year sheid.
What you know could make or break
so.
.
VIRGO (Aug. :IS-Sept. 22) 'Strive to be you.
~~~~ to others today. but don't let CAPIIICOIItl (Dec. 22-.tan. 11) Instead
t
pawn off so many problems on ol viewing mat1era trom a rt!81istic peryou that you might not have time to take spective today. you might be Inclined to
color facts to suit your circumstances.
care ol your own, interests.
LIBRA (Sipt. aJ.Oct. A) Your attitude This is not a good WII!Y of achieving your
will be greatly lnfluencad today by peo- purpoaes. Major changes are ahead lor
ple with whom you &amp;SSO!'iate. II you get Capricorn in the coming year. Send lor
involved with negative . lrlends, yOu . Capricorn 's Astro-Graph predictions
might begin to see things trom their today. 'Mail $1 .25 plus a long. setl·ad·
dressed. stamped envelope to Astraperspective.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) This is not Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
a good day tb attempt to pound round 91428, Cleveland,.OH 44·101-3428. Be
pags Into square holes; especially sure to st&amp;;te your ~~i~ sign. ·
this opposi tion is st rong ·enough to do

-a......-- •.ooo .

--·--

ber, a day of reckoning comes when the; •

bills arrive.
VIRGO (Aug. ZS.Sipl. 22) 84! v.,Y care-"

expectations. ·

CANCER (June 21·July 22) Guard
against inclinations today to· Sfl8!1k
without thinking. If you are careless,

__ Cal.._..._

haughty or condeecendlng manner.,
Conversely. however. don't undareatl·.•

mate your: worth , ~ause you're as·'" ·

-polo.-.

--•-a
_.......... .Ia:

Rtrit

r.1crchandrse

good as they are.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 23) II you are not :
a seil-atarter today, you're likely to have..
little to show lor your wasted hours. Set' .
a productive agenda and abide by it. : .

GE

121

Houll At:

51

HousehOld

Goods

Fowth · Ulllltflo
Ooltlpollo,
u.tt.tlo.
Plul
·1
DlpoeM, 114 4.. 0124.

ICORPIO (Oct.-· 22) Someone' '
who has you figured out wetll]'lighl ern- •
plOy !lottery today In order to manlpu-:
late you tor his or her purpoSSI. Beware::
of acquaintances bearing accolades.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Mere-· .
ly thinking big won 'I cult he mustard or. •
prQduce desirable ertd results today. In :
order to achieve important objectives.
you'll have to work for them .

hoo"' ...,. -

*· -

.,_

1110

cut Ia
m.
,.
• . lnoh
... - 10 t7l.- lie»
· .......
"
ratrtaoratoro, potce ""' 111 All
aold' wltll ~- Slllaaa
ADD''IF~.!L.11 VIM II. ..........

41 HOUIIIIor Rent

z ..... 011{111

7MI or 'MUU 411 t ' "

Z lrd~ ~ Uvlnt
· Kltchon,
Dliilna .......
......_.,
CatponL
114-2411111UIIM I 1'.11.

r.-.

....... I n " -·
..,U, fllmlohod, IO'fviiO -fnO,
121111 - h , PIJ """ utUflloo,

11t- till.

.

I ltd ...__In Glllitolla. Uno

CI!POI\ - h311Mo.

furNihld,

woot...1100. lf+411..71H.

Re~J~garator.

52 Sporting Goods

VI'RA FUIINITUIIa AND •

PUANCU

1144411UIOR .............

for Rtnl: .,._
ntallld-.
-info

1 ••dswuft Pur:Avalllllle Fob
Call · -

·That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuclcle
Edited lay CLAY R. POLLAN - - - - - , --

0 ~earrange

the 6 scrambled
word s below to make 6
si mple words. Print leiters w• •...,each in its line of sq uores.

I
I

l

Q E L. p 0 A'

I

GUELDE

Ar·no mccmcnts

a few penni-es spent here
comes back folding money

3 Announcements

- - - - - - - - - Qwllll Vou HaveOurNu...rlll
3 AnnounctmlfllS
Cal Ue -~~· Glflalll Uvolll 1·
-1110 3391 Etd. 111411113.11 Par

lin. lluot 11111 v... Uniotat c:o.
10:1-11.

4
1

Giveaway

· W. wou)d like to
exp..ss our appreciation for the
friendship and
kindness showed
to us during the
loss of our beloved
son,
husband,
father
and
grandfather.
The family of
Gary Lunsford

.,.malo Puollieo,
........ SllftlU Fotllor ~
........ -6-7'1:11.
F-: 3 Pupploo, 114-4441-71143.

The family of Rog~r
Buckley wo;&gt;uld like
to expr••• our appreclaUori and heartfelt
ttoanka to the menr
lriands, netghboro end
relatives lor the flow·

ere, loocl, money and
••do we received durIng lha loao ol our
Mtoved father and lov·
lng huebend.
The Roger Buckley
Family
In the midst ol oul
eorrow we wi1h to
expre.. our heertfelt
thank• and appreci•
lion to relatives,
frien&lt;k and neighbors
lor their kindneos and
syn,&gt;athy they have
shown to uo in the
lo11 of our beloved
hu1band, lather and
gr1111dfather.
We aleo wioh to
thank the elalf ol
Hoizer Hospital, Rev.
Godwin lor hie con·
soling words, thole
who eent flowers,
lood, cards. tlie pall·
bearer• and 1he
Cremeans Funeral
Chapel lor thair kind-

n••• and menage ..
.ment of the eervlcee.
May God Bleeo you.
THE FAMILY OF
RAYMOND GREEN

AntlqUH

PDmelow~ Hours: II.T.W. 1D:DD
a.m. Ia 1:00
1:00
tai:OO _p.al
2121.

c-:.zsuncllr

Nothing Ever Prl a ned.
COUNTRY FURNRURE ··AND
CRAFYI

-~6~-· . ; I_,N;. ;. . ; E~0.;. .,. - - 1 .

lmaU - · put Chow/ pOrt
- · - i o , to goocl homo,

deuglltor-ln·low, nleceo,
nephewe, , friend• A
neighbon.
THEFAMI..YOF
LEVI E. ~DKINS

'

11
..:..;.....,..:..:He,.:::l::,p~W;..:.a:;,:n::ted;.;;-. " POSTAL .lOBS •

114-112-7180.

Lost l Found

6

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milk - I n - porlor, luiiUmo or perHIN. hnd namo,
phone number, oxpootod ooflry

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MANAGEMENT

Llny Uvoly. 114 311 I:IGI.

2

In Memory
In Loving Memory of

ERNEST R, FLACK on hie
74th Birthdey, Jan. 10,
18113.

"In Loving Memory"

Of
ROBERT C.
BURk~

Who Paued Away
.January 9, 1992.
Seclly mi~aecl by
Grandchildren, Ll•• &amp;
Kevin Lute; Trlcla &amp;
Greg CArpenter,
Sherry &amp; Greg Burke

ASSISTANT RETAil
STORE MANAGER
'l(o hove en lmmedilta
opportunltr lor an ••I•·
..nt elore m•nager. Thil

offer• excell•nl
bonefi.., oalery end bopo1ition

nuo polantill, pluo op.
portunltr lor l!dvan. .
to lndividualo with
P,IOpla oklllo and
to lead 1 retell
to · lncreeoed
an.d profda.
PooiUon lo 1Vailabla In
Gatlpotil. r ·you have 1·2
or ..... axperlence
In i high volume reiiH
oiiUng and dnire the
rewerde that come with
•ucc•• ,..... can John
Criatalulll collect at 304736·11801 .
Equal Opportunltr

Y•••

Employar,

INFIOIV.

REVCO
·DRUG STORES
f

31 Homes tor Sale

Apanmant.
tor Rent

,.. - ·
In town.

REDUCED, REDUCED, REDUCEDII!
WE'VE STOPPED FOOLING AROIJN)•. .
And rediJced the price on this channing oidar
clastic to $72,500. This home offers 3
bedrooms. 2 balha, iving room, dining room,
family room , large eal-in kitchen, 2 cer garaga ,
situated on a picturesque 3 acres, mn. wooded
setting with access to large fishing pond. Selkor
means busine, s. No reasonable offar relused.
Call Carolyn today.
1603.

ca111114t2 mLEOH.
IIEAUTIFUL APA11'111ENT1 AT
BUIICII!T I'IIICII AT HCK!IO!!
EITATES.· AI .......... Plu
1 1 - Willi to olloD I
JN!wlll.
C.. tn 111 2111 EOH.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SAT., JAN. 16, 1993
10:00 A.M.
Located on St. Rt. 124 bet-n Portland, Ohio

tuoillehod.
1 ,11-porl,
_ 1101. uUIIIIOI
·Ohio,
v =~ I ret ·req~nKI..·

and the Rltchl Bridge at RIIVanawood. Small
item~ to Mil at 10:00. Large lterr11 at 12:00 Noon.
taka con1ignmenta on Friday, Jan. "15, 9 JlM. till
5 P.M. and Sat. A.M. Come to ..u&amp; buy.
DANSMITH-AUcnONEER
John Smith -Apprentice
Cash
PoeltweiD
Refreahrnente by Ba1han Auxlliltry
Ohio 11344 .
•
W. Va.li515
Not reepon11ble lor accident• or loll ol property.

Cal

Middleport, OH
RACNE - L-1- Make your appointment today to this three bedroom home with two car garage, new roof
and wiring. a wonderful gordon spot with lots ofsllllwber·

-.

-

•-·

• t2411/11o.

11t,leM

No

llofriiOiotor,
Polo. 114-

J

F - Apt: lA, 120 4th
...,. Ullltlea ,.W. 111 Ul

$32,500

tiii

aftarT p.m.

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOlE
S.tlle into this homey thrH bodroom with
fenced backyard. You'll love the large kilchiln
and adjoining cozy family room. Priced at

$37,900.
YOST ROAD - 7.8 acroo and ranch type home will1 3
badroomo, luU baoament and o1&gt;o car garage. Home haa
juat baen radleorated with now cebinets and heldwood
floors. GANIIioC&amp;Iion just off F6rreal Run Road.
S48,500

PUBLIC AUOION

/IAIII(fQIE

1506

Location: From Galllpolla follow State Route 141
oouth approximately 25 mile• to Ald, 1u.m left on
State Route 371 end go one mile.
l'helollowlng wHI be eold:
HOUSEHOLD: Bedroom set, woodburning cook
stove, 2 LR chairs, writing desk w~h chair, buffet,
platform rocker, wardrobe wlmirror, walnut mantel,
antique mamel clock. dresser, 2 new van ·seats, 2
elec. ice cream lreezers. church pew, electric sewing
machine. kitchen cabinet, iron bed, k~chen cupboard,
lelephone clock, horse clock, stoneware. some dish·
es &amp; glassware. 2 wooden wringers, and othar kama.
TOOLS: Lonestar deep hull 141 boal wllrailer, wood
lathe, new potato cratea, stone Burr grill miU, electric:
drills, electric motors, Stlhl 04J chain saw, wheat era·
die, come·a· long. Coleman camping stove. metal ·
fence poet. angle iron, cast Iron bathlub, wood 1plk·
ter cone for tractor PTO, fishing equipment, RR ties,
alum. ext. ladder• and olher tools and mlac. ~ems .
· Terma: C.h Cone-ion Stand
Mr. &amp; Mre. Orville Con lay, Ownera

- =

IID.QIIr.•~XA

Bank One, Athens, N.A.
seeks an energetic
experienced commer·
clal lender lor th1

Gallipolis, Ohio Branch.
Individual wll.l bt
rtaponslble lor buslnell development and
c6tTttnerdllloans In !Itt

Gallpolis Marktt arM.
Five years commtrclaj
lending experience
required.
Equal opponunar
Send CoviiJ' letter end
reoume to:
BANK ONE. ATHENS

e.,...,.,

Lee Johnson
AUcnONEER

c

SHADED LOT
.
Close to town location. Roomy bi-iovlll homec
Family (OOITI st&amp;rted.in lower lavei (not much to
finish) , 3 bedrooms, eaHn kitchen, living room.
Pncad to sell at S49,900.
11205
HERE'S YOUR CORNER OF COUNmYt
Very nicely remodeled home resting on 2.84
acres ol Gallia County. Oak kitchen. remodeled
bathroom , new windows and more, leave you
with little to do. Free gas heat 3 bedrooms. 1
large balh , living room , dining room. Bam and
outbuilding. $59,900.
1224
HIGHWAY EXPOSURE
Need a piece of ground with good At. 35
exposure and acres? Hare's 14.2 acres. ml1.
right along U. S. 35 . Good access to the
h~hway. Good road frontage also (lo~nsh1p).
Producing ges well on propelly.
1216
INCOIE PRODUCING PROPERTY
ON 10 ACRESI .
Buy lor investment and building lot potential.
CloM to town . SmaN pond. Duplex type unol
providOs good income. S~ .goo .
1222·
SPRING VALLEY HOME
Your family will onjoy- ail the apaca this 3
bedroom has .to o«er. Includes extoa large
family room with woodbilmer. living room with
wann fireplace. loomal dining room and eat~n
kitchen. 2 lull beths. Outsida amenities includa
large deck and patio. Good size yard.
Outbuilding. Priced to soil at $79,900.
1221 .

POMEROY· Buslneu building. 2 story comrnen:ill 1-2
apts. $27,000

00 YOU WANT IT ALL BUT CAN'T
AFFORD IT ALL?
Thishomeisloryou ..4 bedrooms, I both. large
livi~g room, family ·room. kitct.n with dining
area,. utility room located in a gr:eat
neighborhood on an oversized lot great lor kids.
Priced at only $43,500.
, 16110

1

COUNTRY COMFORT
"
Imagine oilljilg and ralaxanit\\ by your own private
pond and not t.aring
ing butlhe fish bite! .
Very privalo home in G"""' Township. Over 4
acreo of heavenly back yald. Comfortable
home with a kitchen thot won't qu~ . Give us a
cal lor mont detail s.
~

.

..

This immaculate 3 bedroom , 2 'h bath .brick

REEDSVILLE· !Jeautilul 10 room, 4 ~home completely oomodaiOd. $68.000

ranch beauty overlooking the river has it aU .
Beautifully decomted lonnai living room with
firapiBCfi!, fonnal dining rvom, large f~mily. room

..
I

RUTLAND - · A oornar Buolnea,..;. Opan three yea111
ago. but io doing ·a thriving buoineso. Evorythlng you
n4tad to opaoalll a video rental, oon Move ice cralm, hoi
dogs, etc. Tho buoinoll comH with the building, IIFPIOX.
2300 current videos. VCR's Ninlllndo games, 2 Ice •-m
machines, and much mo ... Lock, Stock and l!arral.
. ·•
ONLY Sn5,ooo
'
POMEROY - W. Mlln Street - A view ol the boeutilul
Ohio River comes with this 4 bedroom hOfl!l which l)u 1
F.A.N.G. tum-. city walor and Mwage, 1 car garage,
and new ti~ out windows throughout.
116,000

F...- -

Clooplllly

--~---­
=·-·No-·
CA.,,..

••
0 \

==-.1=••·--..
. . . . ,_.,..
Ono

I

I

m"

y -Ill.

a2hle. II atud11 uUNU•, tiOO

-

SS9,9()0.

.

11200

Onot
flliiWilo . . . _ lill- . . .
..... - . 12/L-

45

BUSINESS .FOR IIALE - RL 124 ~ Have you ever
dr"""'od ol owning your own buoineoa? Thio buoineulo
~uipped with lhake machine. deep fryer, ice cream

mach1ne. ~ frHzera, ice mAchine, grill .nd Iota mora.
Sitting on' a.,prox. on11 acte ~mer lot .&amp;ong • I t * rout..
·
REDUQED TO tso.ooo

Wt~luytrsl

We need SelersW
. Call today for a No Oblgidlon
Market lnalnll_
Wlse11an Is a

RACINE- 1112floorframe home4bectooms. blocl&lt;building
with gas &amp; ele&lt;:. lot size 65 x 119+. $21,000
POMEROY· Commercial lot on Main SlreeL nice comer lot
heavily travelad street. $40,000
MOBILE HOME ONLY· I975 14 170 Nashua 3 bo«oom,
inoludas deck. $7,000

TREES MAKE GREAT NEIGHBORS!
Your privacy is preserved in this brick m;n~h.
Offering 4 bedrooms, 2V. bath s1 formal hve~g
and dining rooms , la.rge .lam.ily ~o~m With
fireplace insert, Ia~ kitctlen with d1nmg area .
Oversizad 2 car anachod gamge. 2 horsa stall ,
largo work shop, storage building, fenced
propelly. As prorty as a p~vato park! $103,900.
1610 .

"

.
,.••

'

~~~~~~E-Ruslic log look home 3 bedlooms. 100 ,

'
~

RACNE· Ranch home wilh 3 be&lt;tcoms. 1 112 bath, 3.2+
acres. $25,500

•·'•

MIDDLEPORT· VIne SL one ftoor lrama home with deck 2
baths, 3 bedrooms , neads repair. $t5.000
BUTTERNUT AVE.· Duplex with 4 bectooms Mads some
ntpairs: $6,000
.
.
POMEROY· 2.story homo with eanlot some new ph.mbing. $8.000
RACINE· Vacant lot all utilities al8 available. $10,000
POMEROY· 2 story biocl&lt; horne 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
Home in good condition! $19.500
APPLE GROVE· OORCUS RD. IIIIIIII1 ftoor block home,
B.G. lumance: applianceo. 2 aeplics, ell1nl mobile llomoi
hook-up. $25.000'
MIDDLEPORT· Grent SL· 2 otory lrama New paint inside &amp;

out. $39,000
LeGRANDE BLVD.

MIDDLEPORT· 2 story home 3 bedlooms, lull baae.
Uniqua features. $14,000

beauty. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large living room

RACINE- Vacantloii,SO ft frontage. s - I watar ovllil·
able. $2.500 each lot.

tt'oNee~ lt'o Adorable a k'o AHordablol
Thafs what you'll say when you view this ranch
and kitchen with huge dock to spend your lroa
tima on while the kids plqy in large f~nc ~
yard . Everything you need and the pnce IS
right Oo~ $49,500.
16&lt;J7

MIDDLEPORT· Cote SL one ftoor 2 bedrooons llreploce,
newly painted. $8,500
·.
MIDDLEPORT· Eligant colonial horna on lewl lo~ 2 car
garage. $45,000

-,

MIDDLEPORT Grlnt St· 2 stoir 3 bedroomJ; lui be10.
carport, shad, fenced lot. $26.000

{

DEXTER· CR 10 1.13acreswith 11torylramehome,, _
oepeirs inside, driled wei. $15,000

'

ROSS RD. Lebanon Twp.appiOI!. 94 aaas of veoanl
grqundl $300 par acre.

•.•
.

POMEROY· 2 story frame homa lui bill. 3 bedlooms, 2+
acre• : 1 car gorage, workshop. shad. $20,000
APPRO X. 3 aorea ol river lrontagel Priced u

,
BEGGING FOR CHILDREN
Fnenll\l 4·S bodroom·. 2 bath bi-ievel locatod
in one of the be st neighborhoods for raising
childre:n. large living room and dil'"!ing room ,
nice k~chen, extra largo family room with pool
table included, nice lot, wooden deck, 1 car
· garage and ampko storage lhroughout. This is
ov•oything·a family could want. Delay might
moan di01ppointmon1. Call Carolyn today.

fn.soo.

·

par acoe aold1

SR 1a4 Longbottom- one lewl acre paved ...... w- &amp;
electric availilbief
POMEROY· Ramodalad home on large lot 3-4 bedl-.
Ownei wang !old. $19,100
·
LONGBOTTOM· I ....., ol Ohio FUver Front~ge. E-lont
camping site . $8,000

li604

REEDSV1W-one11DrYRanchhomeinRiaaoCiestMinar.
3 bldooonil, 2 bltho, ... garaga. $311.801JSR 184 HAR~·12.013-olveclonttand.
. $12.000
MIDDLEPORT· Hellllllon St.· NiDI "" I I J 1 112 ~
home, ..need rd.ltOriiQI bulltlng. S1UOO
•

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446-9555
Loretta McDade- 446-7721
Carolyn Waach- 441-1007
B. J:._alraton- 448 4240
Sonny ~Games- 448·2707

J

.•

MiNERSVILLE- Smoler horne with buement, porches;
great river view . $15,000

REAL FS.IAIE IN: · ·
.446 ?044 · ·. ·. ·
1.;:. t

Filmlslltd
FIOOml

..'
I•
..•.

. SYRACUSE· 1972 Mobile home with added room, 4 loll
with shed, garden S113C8. $20,900

with fireplace plus a rae . room , fam1ly onentad

eat-in kilchen. 16132 ingmund pool with large
patio area. Large 1 acre lot, mn. Call today for
your private viewing. this will be one of your
boner moves! $134,900.
1204

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS!
Now Is the tile to seiiUI
DON'T MAKE ANOTHER MOVE • .
WITHOUT SEEING THIS HOME FIRSTII!
localed in · a quiet family oriented
noighbolhood, this 3 bjld!oom home oWers a lot
without asking tor a lot. Large kitchennamily
room aoea with cathedral ceiling and skylights,
living room , 2 full baths, serMned in PQrch,
anaehad garaga. Largo lot. City schoolo.

••

. SUMNER RD.· North ol Chester. 1.485 aaea 2 ~ bJ.
level country home. Decks, ga~~~ge, Ollllr. $72.000

WINDOW ON THE RIVER!

this double ,.ntad. Good condition. Nice lot, o«
strMI parl&lt;ing. $44,500.
1211

I• ' •

.

~

MIDDLEPORT·. Ranch lnma homa 3 bedr_,. 2 befls.
Heat pump. $39,500

Good in town location close to school keeps

Hoi Ruponlllbt.for Aoddeoota or Looo of Pro,..ilr

Alhene, OH 45701

WELCH TOWN HILL· 1 floor frame home 4 .-no, ·21o11.
$24.900

'
INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY

Crown City, Ohio
Phone: 256-6740

Attn: Angola Anderoon
PO Boa550 ·

Raal Estate General

.

Saturday, January.l6, 1993, I 0:00 A.M.

Whatn&lt;er it tnkP.J(

MINERSVILLE RD.· 2 siO!)' frame. 3-4 bectooms, older

home in need oloepair. $22,500

GETAWAY, IIDEAWAYI
Hero's an out of tho way ·32 acnos of ground.
Appmx. 8 acl8s lilablll, balance pastu,. and
woodand. UtiUty pole, aeptic system and dug
well on poopelly. Bam. lnexpenoive proparty.
Perlaetlor mobile home,., up. $19,500. 1212

Contonary - · Nloo a loci-

r; and blackberry plants that bring in an extra income
each yoar. Allthio on appiox. 2 acres of land

TOUCH A THING . .
Just move right into lhis Rami&gt;erad 3 bedroom ,
2 bath ranch with ca,ra·lroe brick &amp; vinyl
exterior and 2 car aaached garage. Stop inside
and - the new carpel, the large master suite
and .the overall great condition . Instantly
inviting at S64,500.
1506

..
"

MIDDLEPoRT· Hoboon Rd.· 2 bedroom&amp;, pert bell. and
garage. $18,500
· .
·

11,DIIO
-

MIDDLEPORT· Nice starter homa 3 bedrooms, 1 belh.
Neado finilhed ·~16,000

-~

lurniiMd,

Apd'W·a Ill ave~.-..
II: Yi~loaec ~ AI!IO. IMt or

·-7311.

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

303 ··~ 1:213.
Reglll.,.. Nunee: LOoking fOi
1 "'-go? Oppaotunftflo ""
AN'a avalllbtl In tc:AX:U, v.,._
.... lhllta, full lnd ,...~, ....
Crllicll
....
ori-Uon
proaram IVIillbfl. i b WIIIO ond bonolit pee-. Aflo
po~·tlmo
avolloblo In

POMEROY· Condor SI.·AIIordablo houM or rental inwot·
menl Older home with 21arge loll. $8.500

MIDDLEPORT·AohSL•oneftoortramehorne3bedlaomo,
enclosed rear porch. $I 9,000

......... Ioiii - · .,..

OFFICE 992-2886

205 North Second Ave.

lnsu,.nce. Sind ....,... to P.O.

Wlllod To luy: Junk Aulae
Wllh Dr Wllhool lloloro.• Call

ua em.

1224.

,....ionO

Box 4!0, Polnl P - . WV
aM- 21110
. .

to

..-.d

----lo-

Real Estate

p,.. lila I lA Oo- .,.rm Home
chI o/llcMoiAgel- tMtl on yow lcic. t39.Mil I up.

AppUonceo, EaiJ Woold E-ionl PIJI AaColor
TV'•
Retrlg.,atara, umble Praductli AI Home. l:all
FNIZII'I, vcR·.. Mk:fowavea, Toll Free, 1..SOO~I7-1511, Ext.
Air Condtllonerw, Gul1r Amps, 113.
MoO'Surg. Appir In poroon ID:
Elc. 114-:zal.1238.
O'Biene. llemort.l tto.pltal,
ex,.~oncod lloc:hlnlllo
ss HoooHar
~s'5'1t Athofto, llNO
J I D'o Auto Pone end Job Shop oxpo- roqulracl. 45101,
fl.t.fi
. EDE.
Slllvogo, 1110 buying junk core lluol han machlnfll tootO.
Capable of making yo"r own
1 trucko. 304'773-&amp;341.
machine eM up~ . C.pabte ol
,.ldlng blue prJnto. Top PIJ •
Standing Tlmt.', 114 311 1833.

Worldng

Coro- 1

And EJporlence Ia Tile

ITocldiM'I 111

-lone """"""

taltphone call• pleue.

44

Juol

., Conctm For Yow Chlld'o
Care. Call Ue For A YloiL 1n1ont

Rood,
-...
Wit ..
D·• E lnduat,..., 11\anubcturer ·
liking
.
Rick Pelr.on AIM:tlon Com~nr, of pnclalon componen1a for 1he '121b, l P.l(. To 3 P.M. For Dlrocl
h.tll tiiM auctlonMr, complete lflnlportltlon lndulllry, hat op. Cora Slaft. - · High
•ucthxt
aenolce.
Uc:anMd portunlty for ea:per'-hcrd 1004 School EquiVIIont, OhioUoonoo,
And
..
Avlfllblo
For
III,Ohk) I W•t Vlrglnlli, 304- ond dll makl&lt;. Conv.,.lonal
1nd Elll oquipmonl, polmariiJ Drug .._lng. Mlddllton e.
773-5716.
1orat tooting. Excollont lllnolite to101 Ia Looatid ...,_ F Wodomoyor'o Auction SorYice, whh g -lng oom,.nr lor right CII- Goll C....
Rio Orondo, Ohio 114-:MUIII2.
_.,.. II intorollod, Mild
NIUrM by JanUirr 11th to : E l - . .: 10 Pooplo To r.E lnduolrlll, PO 8o1308t H,... Wolaht · No WIN P a wanted to Buy
Comlllllo Houoohold Dr &amp;tot•l Any Ty,. Of Fumftwo,
Appllanc · , AnUqu. ... Etc. Aleo

, _.. Doy

'

RUTL-'ND- IMw Llml Rd.• Doubla wide I'IIOdiU' 3 becJ.
room&amp;, nioe level lot. $~.000 I
'

Real Estate.General

HandYman.. 1
Odd1.......
iOUidOor
' - -- E~
,.ndo.· fotJIII Per · 11(.241.·
1441
'
-

tulbeae.m.~

114-211- .

0no lA t01llor doue111 aa
O.UIDGtla
g.-y. 114-146-11118.

AVON I All - · I Slllrloy

&amp; Auction

. . . ..

.

FLATWOODS RD.•2storycontamporarywith4bedlooml,
2112 betho. aauiooed kilcllen, fi~. bar wildowo, CIA,

1321 . mo. -

CIIIIIDOIII
~• ...,.7M335 or 575-i07\l.

Spoora, :SOUTS-1421.

Smon

..,

Vkllan, Ohio ..... 304-f75.571l.
Abancllntd . brand
new
Ollrwoodmobllehomii1UIO 2
llldraa••· "'"' ind' lo. ..~

1 - Woot Of HIIC On......_,
Plu ll.f 0 A.ll. -6:30 P.M. •

below.

Ro-

--loryow to the •111111
call*'411-11n

.

VACANTLOT·60X 100on Mliil SL in Po111810Y.W-and
electric should be available. $ 1.1100

R I nl Peri I In

Colomondrl:.
tumoc;o.
ITU,
ocindlllon,

'

REEDSVILLE· SR 124 ~at ~ lites Wifl boeing
access and river frontage. $15,000 IIIICh lcic
.

a iR troller, porlially tumlohod.

Ohio. -..... , . _ ...... •'-"'

ol Pl. ,..., :IOWlWOOI.

Public: Sala

........'ld
Hr·nhakl ~ - 112 "'1.
Jonlcho Rd •. PL - · WV,
caii*'471-MSO.

~

vrOuM

~Frant
-o,
CUrto Clllinll,
.lawtory;
Ootd
·
Topa.
"--o.
114•ttll
'

PICKEIII FURNITURE

••

••

SRS84 HARRISDHVILI.E-16.760ICIIII o l $13,500
.

Complete the chuckle quoted

3

·.

POMEROY· ...... SL•111oorlralnl3bedloou• andarlon
windows, carport. ~toraga • •lull basunaot $44,ilcii ·

I
I I I&lt;G ,, "'""" "' .. .,..,, ~··
r·r r r I' r r r r r 1
you develop from step No.

.

.•.

REEDSVILLE· SR 124 1 acre lots, 10 •rhl• ~
camping silos boating acceso ri..,lrontage $15,000 iacll .

1-10

.

·

•

C II tor

.

PilL·--::!::"'· ,_ -·

Fmanc;al

. In

,._ cloy bo- tho od 11 10 Nn.
SUnday -on • 2:00 p ....
FlldiY. ~ odftion • 2:011
"":::'"'"·::.Sat
=":;.'clay::!.; ______ mUll.
::

8

NonMft

_

BASHAN RD.·6 room single frame home 3 bedlooms, 111
2 bath, enclooe&lt;l.palio heat pump/oontral air. 1 car gailge
2+ acn&gt;s $55,000

Molll!e Home

ttoqu:;9d

11::.\:. ...,. r::"C...:::

iUYant Saln lluot lo Paid In

· Sand

I

114-411Rd.

O'f'WHJii•·.. ~·

• Laundry Hlg~
School grad or oqulvalont ,..
qulrod. t&gt;oolllon .ntng ...,...

Advonc.. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.

.

~· Dopoalt I

488ll.

llol&gt;l'rl, I :CJO.UI.4-.

'AVON" ALL AIIEASI-- yoUr

tar, 114-24fl.l313, 114-t4f.111T,
Loot Dr • -: IIIIo ~~Hound, 2 Voora Old, Porter Aooa,

....
Ringe,
c..- Tllo, .,.._ ~ 110.

2 IR Plllidy tum'od, -

II Ullltll, 104-1114230, at 42,

Doro.

Found: llodlum Slu Dog, Qol.
- t - . FolondiY. hU Rod
Studdod Colllr,IOA On·110 flor..

CUi=•

-lila

ASKING $t65,000

--------m

I 1"1

6111 ,rn•oanl ·

2bldiEiDIO~I1,-I

RH,~ ~

Help Wanted

........: lion t•, M
11322,
I eul
F- Dalw.-,.

DoDooll.
-2 P.ll.
....
q-.
NO Plio,CaA Aftflf
114 441 Dl27.

A-frMM, 3 bedrooma., 1112
bot._, U ~";~rogo, ewlm-

mlng pool,

!'"'...... ::2451::::·-------=..,.
2 wah wooc1

wl• ..

:1Q4.1711.1o31

14dO 2 lr,· ·1 mUe loulh of
Eurallo, on IL Rl.7. No polo,

21111 _ _ _ For

'

~ dial•

......
m.
1:01~11.

-r
.

12 ·-~-.!..~~!!!!. """- . ....
,...,. a11. 114411 1011.

gnga. 40 eatW, . .,100, IM--,

32 Mobile Homes
tor Salt

•*m"""'.•·

...,,._,

An ADDI
And Exam fn. _.,..,_. to: PO laz 72tC,
tonnoliOn, Call 141.73&amp;4711, Pom•01. Ohlo41711.
Ext PM32. I A.M. To I P.ll' T

37'N11C11

a

gr•ndchildren,

c-

-plol•

_,...

1114 Caeo bookhol 530. SMOO.
Uooa.ln top ........ :IOW'IJ.

vinrf -.g,

RACINE· .Yetlowbuoh Rd.· 2 si!&gt;!Y......,. 4 bedloomo, lui
baae. 2640 oq.• •2 heat pumps. 30• 40garsogawith3bayl,

A pro bowler wads absked wh,dy
· f I I 1 I · he a1ways trave 1e y car. "1
L I NNA0
like to fly," he smiled, "but have
..,_...,...__,.~-r--r:~r--~ you ever gone to an airline and
_ _..I_.._le--~.1..;.·...,~1._'--~.I.....J
· trier to check in a
?"
I
.,.;.G_L;;;..

I

Hoi Point Rolrlgorator, tell, 114-

.
.
LAYNE.. FURNITURE
Complolo homo lumlohlnge.

e-.11112. or

•.

-.111

11oM . . - ...,_, CaU
44Hf71.

Wo "ould .Uko to
expr..• our ainar• •nd
heilrll.. grali- to the
·folloWing during the looo
ol otir loved one, Lovl
Ezr• Adkina:
Care Hevon of Point
Ptea11n~ Plnecrnl Caro
c:.n1or, The Apo.tollc .
Goopel Church, Wyoma
Pontacoatal Church, Cal·
vary Chrietlen Center,
Oro. McGiftniO Morgen,
Ple-t ""'"' Hoopltal,
Weugh-HIIIO) ·Wood Fu·
-~~ ~. Rov. W-d
Blank-hlp, Rov. • Tor·
ence LAwrence, Mr1.
E - Bt•kailohlp, Mo.
Ani .. Eotep and all the
lndlvldualo. who eent
tood, flowera, carde &amp;
llnoncial oupporL He 11
11diy mi..ad br child:

11

.-

-H-. A.. .,. ..

IV29.

N.

ren,

l*'lencllf,

1111

limon P.- Maio Cot. &amp;14-44f.
Ono • Month Okl Doa, " - 9 Wanted to Buy
Homo, PI-I Sovod A0r From ::--::-;.;.;;~.:;,.:.:;.;:;::,....,.,~
Till Pound! -&amp;4ll7.
'!:011 Paid: All Old U.S.
fluallllot 2 llonl.. Okl, Y - Colno, Gold R l , _ - Colno,
Lab·• lrloh llottar, lllxod, 114- Gold ColnL II.T.I. Coin &amp;hop,
+tf.ltOI.
111 A-111, Oalllpollo.
Alglot- Cookor
to
Employment Serv;ces
......,. · 30WTW111.

31 Homes tor Sale

- Set. Fl. .11 - lot,. ~.. SELLER MYI ALL CLOIIINQ: •·
Cenlflod~ollw
botho, llnlrlg
w.....
• M rOf- .......
lb· ....... 2
,...., ..... rillom.lbdnn., ~

WANT
ADS
WORK!

a 8.....,

card of Thanks

~11;_;..::.:!:...:.:W:.:a::nted=--l 18 Wanted to Do

31 Homn tor Sale

SR 124 RUTL-'ND-1987 Forelt Park Mobile Home. 1.10
acre. 17x 52 garaga, 2· 15 x 52 carports. ASKING$25,000

POMEROY· Baum Subdiviaion- ~ranch 3 becJ.
roomo, 26 x14 garage, CIA, $40,750

NIOWWO

I

LEBANON TOWNSHIP· Bald ~vile Rd. 25 +
aaa• ol vacant ground. Good h..,ling lilt, or bulltlng 111111
$8,750

CHESTER· Frame homa 2 bedl"'"n&amp;, , _
Eastern School Oillricl $17,000

w Mil A,_.... Anliq..O,
1u;i E. llaln . . - . 011 Ill. 124,

i&gt;opooh On flant.a.Own:

"

lowoq' 211 OA. P"':,!f ~

-1422.

P•e.

SHOULDN'T YOU IE U8TED WITH lltE RII!ALtoft
WHO GETS YOU RESULTS!? .
THIS IS A SAMPLE OF RESULTS WE OITAINED
FOR OUR CUENTI .. 1..21

POMEROY· CR 20- 2+ acres wiil older homa,llhed, t.n,
appliances. $7,500

WaiCaipot, . _.....
WI Noft Ctlfto And Crll ....
Ala Orondo, I lA, 1·112 both, plloo, AIIO Wll CUllom· Doo!gn
. . . -. Qopoalt raq-: 114- Your lhlrlo. Wa Buy And SOli
Good Uood Fumll.,._ c- SOl
446-1222 Uyl, - · - · ··
Uo AI 222e Stole Aouto 111, 114-

Tnilor,
~AIIIFII~ A~ulrecl No

992-22S9

ChoiJo. $3111.011
r
12-121A. ,.... ChokL
1421.00• ._7317 Allor 5:PII

No

42 Moblla Homes
tor Rent

-

borrallo. 110" •
_...,....
SZJI.Ioral.171-1112.

t1uy

-Elldrlo,
a Bod,_,
- . Tolat
Holt Pump, WoJt To

'0©\\(\lJ\-~·tlfS®

::a/1 • , •• -

53

. 11R

Sunda)

12-·--·

=~~.::-

4th. For
1711.

••

.

.

wv.

au.

fultoday that you don 't treat others in a :

;6 • •

Real Estill Gtnenll

Goods

weE FOti R£Nt.

L.- Land DI'PICI

-·0
1
=:rrtotod,

Remem-. ~

•

Houllhold

Moclem ...... . . tn IUIIIMII
fl. A S.Fumll- - · . -. ....
I Praf ' rrW Wna now liqwe.
lloo I llofd ....
lalol'or~
Ill-.
-l'JUS41. .
114-44!-oet1 Al)ot , 111 1112131 or44f.2111~
SWAIN
AUCTION I FUIINITURE. 12
1fT Wanted to
Olivo ....
Uood
Over
on olofiA':
1111Ffonk
- Uvotth
· bo Rdlng
Wa- To fllnl: llolor ""!'~i!f::.IJI'I •
oul8ldlillul
114 111
For Wooloanol TriD To _,.
...... catt.floll1t4111TYiola: C . . . - I.v. Rentals
1110, lalo Ill: RCA ~v.

ly are could turn off companions tl)day.

Vou have anough qualities of character
to trade on, so don't uae aHectaiions.
GEMINI (Mar 21-June 20) Others can't
alwaya be whet we'd like them to be, so
don't be disappointed today it someone
you highly esteem doesn 't fulfill your

46 Space tor Rent

T,...ol'or Iota On M-1--..:.....:..;..:..;::...:..;:.:.:..;;__

M -

'

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

35 Lots a Acf'IICit

there's ·• chance you might say the
wrong thing to the 'wrong persOn . and
rou·ube unable to retract.
LEO.CJutr aJ.Aug. 22) Your resistance,~
to sales could be rather low at this lime
and 81\llce you to· buY luxury·ltems you •
neither need nor can afford.

..

,.

' 10,1993

January 10, 1993·'·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH . Point Pl.easant, WV

Page D4 Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

\

I

l·..
'I

�l.

l

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

54 Miscellaneous

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

61 Farm Equipment

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Merchandise

r;;::=7......=-=-==-:-;;;;
n;-..+o
dtl:::"e.
wlnlor oool, donlm wl lolllw
_ , 711 - r .,....

lrlnl, llonnolllnlng, IU now, ... llolinco - · Ideo .r
ldng ~[,;;;~tf!O;
1111oc. own plol.- 1 - · --1917.
..... .
i call l14--lt2Z156, Hpm Of I14-MI-2Z04 al- Now Holland Hiring Equlprnant,

181 BIG Round Bolet, 477 Hoy

81ncl, 11 Alka, Com Plcbra,
onr1 loodor tar 1 -, F.,....N H Troct"a!:'alnl Hllch,

:ce: &amp;-~.

ou.r Equipment.

Ham:::::

Howt'l Fann
GAS /PROPANE 111•000 BTU lllchlnory, · Jockaon, Ohio,
Einplro Frooolonclna F - . 2 P~: 11+281-5144.
YNro Old. I!W67·70:11.
~
NUIIIIIon .. Producto
looturlng Amino Acid Body 63
Livestock
Bulldln;lor:'aht loa ond lot
burner
uf"eL AvallatM .... 1110 AC»&gt;A Sortllll l'ftlr.; 1111
clualvoly •• Rill Aid Phonnocy. AQHA Sotroll gelding, Fontolllc
Tho ooto ••r ta dlot.
1187 AQHA SOinll alolllon. 614Cool, $41 A Ton Slolcer 281-5522.
C!lol, 150 A Ton Dollvorod, 114441-41141.
ADHA
Hood Brood
YNrllngo, 2 ·3 Yoor&lt;10 Oldo,
Mom, AQHA 911111on, 114-21116522.

=,.....,.,=-=--::---=

-=

I

~1\111.

1171 Chevy llollbu Cllalc, 350

Auto, Runa Good. $850, 114-441-0381.
CandHlon,

581. 614-

Aallr whHia, I'Ufl8 a=,le~

S.m Sonrvlllo'o S.ltlollold
Tooted Army Surpt""' llooldo
S.ndyvllll Pool Oftlco IE. ~771.
F~. Sot, Sun Noon • I:GO Pll,
Other doyo hrw ~5.
New ahlpmenl: rwntal cov.alla,

dacron lrwullt.cl. new COVIfllta

m.11.
-tlnuoueso·CMin,
Ellctrlc Aongo, conAdvacltdo, $150,

18 AIIIMCY ElfiN

AUTO SHREDDER H.AUL DIREO
CAR BODIES

cond, 304-1175-7108 Of
llalocoUng,
muot lltrillco: 1181 SuiMru GL, ... SIOOi 1171
Rogloloreil ooddlo broil 1 'fl.
314 lon plciHip, S!IOO;
Qllillng. S Qoltod "Ridln; Horoo, Choorolol
VICCinotlono curnnl. $2,000. 614-1102·21108.
S.rlouo ..no ,_ monogo 1182 Voll&amp;awagon .IMtL Call af.
114-441-2131.
lor 5 p.m., 814-441-0111.
Slovo Davll Bred Gill and 1183 Camaro V-8, With T-To,..
Production Soli: Jon. 11llh. 1 11,200 Al8o, 1171 Honda tt.wk
p.m. F8)'ilttll Ca. Fairgrounds, 400 cc. 114-256-1810.
Woohlfllllon Courlhouoo, OH.
S.Uing Bred Glllo, Boroo, I 1981 sulck Skylark, 304-6n.
Opon Gino. For Cllllog, Call 4312.
114-852·2741.

Real Estate General

614-t4&amp;-11355 . .

Surw Wllor DIIIIIIOr, Uka -

$30. 814-3118-11809.

sso

Auto• ror Slle

.......... -

-

_,

~..:o.

1811 ~

.. -

~::~

s2.SO Per Hundred.

..

1111 -..ry CougorNOO.IM411-1104.
.

Must k free of tires, batteriesnd gastaaks.

4

.,_

~.;

G,IOD.~-

='-l::rliat~ c.:~ ;;g.,;.,Af;l:;.~= ~ ~·

~'FL-M =~~-=-~~

5

APPLIANCES 30 per ton.
5
tri c mo
torHundred
·Fre~ o f eIec
an d capec ito rs .
1.50
Per

~117~- ~-~:T·~·:-.~~.. ,~. ,~o~r~.~=-~·~"'g·..~,'~-~m.&amp;~.~·~Tl l,~ ~ . ,.~d~.:
1304

mony alhor114-114,....,
nt~.L...ucollonl
A11!F11.......
c 1110 T·T..••
condHidn,
or 114- ......,
Ut-OMO
• , ••
247-31181.

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:0Q-4:30

.

•.

614-'373-6002

DRAIII CARE AI: Tho- Do ft
c.nter, 171 McComdck Road,
Gallipolo.

POMEROY - Th11 good qulllity is ~ on
Mulbeny Hoi~ts. It p~-lly hu 2 becfloom8 bul anohr.
is betn~ uoad as a utility room 1tet could be a - . .. •
There IS one beth, living room Md an Ml-in lcilcfton
birch cabinets. The exba la~ge lotio lencod in. The~!!'!"~!"
is attaclloid. Lei us show you thiS houl8 loday! AI this 1n
the lo,w 50's.
·

CLOSE TO GAWPOUS
Good lnvNbnent proporty~ moms, 3 bedrooms, I bath
with shower, wltite wood lap siding. Chain ~nk lont»
around yard, front pon:h, stonn 00o111 (2). Carport with
oonc,.t. driveway, Nrwl wat.r syst.m. See il NOW.
11695
BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

D. C. Metal Salts, l~e.
Canne1bu~,lnc.

45719

Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Oesi{Jled to meet your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS

FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post ButldingS and
Package DealS. Save
Hunt reds, even ThcxiS8Ill:ls I
of Dollars.
local SaleiSS ~rf~:

Wood ~a[ty, Inc.
· 32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066
Allen C.

ken

Real Estate General

I

DONNA Co

11366S. SL

55

Building
Supplies

Pets tor Sale

1

r11 .... • :.

fl· .•1 ·\1 f ,,,

rill\

,....Sllt;~t.

.
-Dadlotlan-borl,
. XX ollorJ.l7,111. ll!ow -1114-

.

=-. =
-~

NEW LISTING! RACINE - (GOTTA SEE) lhlo
home. II has that southem; feel to it 3 bed·
rooms, balh &amp; Y., really nice kitchen, family
room , living room, a gigantic attic that you
could make 2 more rooms cut of. Then when
you get to me basement it has laundry mom,
den &amp; family room plus a collar lor those
canned goods. This is a gorgeous older homo
with a newer hat water lumaco. 2 car detached
garage with automatiC opener. Great buy for
only $46 ,500.001
t506
HAPPY HOLLOW ROAO ;.. Is this 1Yo slory
log home with basement, 3 bedrooms, 2i'1
baths, lamily room , living mom, ~lichen, laun·
dry area, skylight. satellite system. cove,.d
parch . heat pump, central air, 12'x12' building
and much mo ... Call for details.
1425

ON FRANK ROAD - A partial brick mnch on
1.034 ac. mil with 3 bedrooms, 1Y. baths, living
room, dining room and kitchen. One car garage
attached. Asking only $52,500. Call today.

Grooming. All brMda, 8\ylu.

lomo Pol Food Dealer. Julio
Webb. Coli 114-4411-0231.
2 odun AKC Roglllorod Shot.
tiM: 1 male tri-color, 1 .........
l'lld &amp; white. 1100 eac:h. 614-388-

8354.

Ado111bla tHo,dabla Ang'ora
rabbita, champion blood lfMt,
304-67~490 after 4:30PM.

AKC German Shephard pups, 11
wk• old, m1IH $150. femaln

$125. 304-458-1542.
AKC puppln, Man..., m111 A
t.....Ja, m11le

eoc•

Spanlale,

female ShtHIN, tefna~ LhiM
Apoo, 614-1112·3168.

AKC Slllorian Huokr, Silky Torrier, Miniature PlnKher, Wire
Fox Tenter, PeklngHI. 114-441 ~
0404.

Boor pupoloo no1 r.gl110rod,
$75. NCh. 304:-&amp;n-2183.
Brittany Sponlol PuDDioo, 4
Monll• Old, 114-245-9507 After
5P.M.
Cocker Span511 PuppiH, 7
Wilko Old, Buff, $75 Each. 6143884502.
Ongonwynd Conory: CFA Porelan. &amp; Slam•• Ktn•n•. 114446-3844 Aft• 7:00p.m.

Floh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.
P..... nll,

'.
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS --Located on Rt 7 (Eure·
ka), 30'x36' block bwldirrg with storage in basement, 70
ft. frontage on At. 7 . Lot runs to Oh1o R1ver. Was used as

convenient marl. DRASTICALLY REDUCED
ONLY $25,000.

NOW

COMMERCIAL - 470 JACKSON PIKE - 1
aero lot, .ipprox. 36'x56' 6uilding with two bay
garage, asphalt parl&lt;ing lot. ,
N486

REMODELED ONE AND ONE-HALF STORY HOME Located on State Route 7 at Eureka 3 bedrooms, liv1ng

room, dining room , kitchen and bath located on 32 .9

acre m~ . CALL TO SEE'!
REDMAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUIAL CREEK- 6 years
old, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, living room . d1nmg room, kitchen, utility room. Priced at $29,900.
LOCATED IN JACKSON - 3 bedrooms. ,y, bath. liv1ng
room , kitchen, central air, ona car garage, vinyl sidmg.
Priced at $25.000 .00. CALL TOOA¥.
.
HOUSE LOCATED IN JACKSON - 2 bedrooms , bath,
screened-in tront porch, nice starter home or buy and
rent it. CALL TO SEE!!

ernd •nlm~le 1nd .-upp...

collll pupo, $75

..eh:· 1 rn11e 3yr. old Jack Au.
ooll, 614-1112-:IOSo.

Puppy Poloeo Pll Shop.
Located In Q.C. Murphy Co. Oo~
llpollo. Now opon. 614--I41-CJ404.
R-ctiMtrMI Border Collie Pup.
· oloO, Sconloh Bloodlln~1 Wllfk·

lno Parente, Sholl:,
$150, 614-~1061.

CHEAPIEI $11,000- S4 MILL CREEKI Living
room kitchen and dining room, combo bed ·
room' bath and covered carport. Call today!
lmmed~ate possession! ·
1502

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Ltvestock
61 Farm Equipment
tm 5040 AC, DloMI TIICtor,
With Loodor, 256 Hro, SUOO;
185 AC Tr1clor &amp; Round 8111r,
$7,950,.. Financing Avallabt,, 614--

28f.jjo22.

2130 JO dlllol triCiot, ol!orp; JD
Illy-~- 11110; 2020JD
dto.l 853141. ~lnonclng ovol~
oblo. 114-211 U22

'I

BUILDING FOR SALE IN JACKSON - i&gt;t.t business
downs~irs and it has a 3 bedroom apartment upstairs.
Start your own bus&gt;ness and live upstairs. CALL ABOUT,
THIS ONE! .

•

NICE LOCATION FOR A HOME - 12 acre M or L.
Approx. 1~ mite from new River Valley H1gh School, on
blacktop road. Aural water available. Priced al $1 5,000 ..
LOCATED IN GALLIPOLIS - Vine Streel - 4 rental
un1ts, good income property. Call lor more information.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II . Call lor
more mformation.

-1.

23 LOCUST ST.
446·6806

•
~-· .

~~

!I£V£N !IMOAO!.....

Canaday

__

*"'

.

~b.

1141 . HARRISON TWP. - 80 ac m.1 , mineral ~Is.
Lake. poo::ls and wooas and okter llorne . located on

Hannan Trace Road.

t762. FOUR 8EDAOOII HOME • 2 bolitO. ranch 110m0 _,.., it lhe
Elrl- -

'Ill,\

H•

P I :11 &gt;· . ·

'II•'

con'1)teled

lolow3' 'new Tt.mo Als6dl wll•wa.
securi1y doo:s , steel sktllng, heavy root , kitchen,

18ol8. NEW LJSTING- Brick ranch , lui basement, 3
bedrms , 2'4 baths, 2 fireplaces, heat pump, 2 car
garage, 4,000 sq ft . commercial building, used lor
welding shop. 4 acres mora or less.
~

ceratNc tie enlry extended inlo lll:c:han, 11x53 deck.
cement wa.lkl and p1d. See Ita home and stop

Ill
1101. BUSINESS OF YOUR
with constant
income . lovely rest home plus separate living
quarl:ars. L"icensed lor 10 reskjents A• tumHure and
equipment included. Al9o 2 bedroom Fairmont
wlglrden tub and tumHure 3 ae. ml1

XI.T, .,.., PS,

_,

_
.... .-.

___
....__ ...
.....

t848. DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING -

QL

..

a''

••

==·=~

Thlo

toyer.·
ca-..
collnp-.,, 3
-. laflin tie -...... of""'--*'

oil--·--..

BR, 2'1. baths, lvlng room Wlh """'''M '*IG .... · ,
!!QUI&gt; ldlehen. brolllllll , _ , . . . . 1;. - ·

II CIA- -

---.a,.IOI~

lt5

IOoldn!l•""--

Conwlloh
· ~~ Ilion.

- ·- . ...',.,--.4WD,
......
......

t '

"""'*'·

LA, 2'1. baths, 1 ac m.1. lmrnedtAte poss.esston.

1630. EXCELLENT
APARTMENT BLDG.
INVESTMENT - Good monev maker IN JONN.
Large apt. bldg . with 3 two bedroom apls This
properfV has been well mcuntalned ReOOced pnce.

.................. "'
K

1

Hll. SPECIAL NOnCE ·.PAl~ REDUCED· 6
ACRES M.o\. - TMieluly decorated. 11 tolat mt11 ., .IS
bedrooms, 3 ballw, LA, OR, kit., utlllly rm ,lui &lt;!Mde&lt;l
basement dh faml~ room, 2 car garage, pool and

GREEN TOWNSHIP - INCRE_DIBLE VALUE. APPROX.
24 BEAUTIFUL.t'CRES, MOSll.Y FENCED PASTURE.
CABIN WITH FIREPLACE, BESIDE STOCKED POND.
WELL MAINTAINED 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME HAS
FORMAL LIVING ROOM PLUS FAMILY ROOM WITH
BRICK FIREPLACE AND CHERRY 'PANELING .
$EVERALOUTBUIL~INGS. $120,000 . .

Fcord PI, PW, POt. -

·-. ----.241-1 . .

446•3636

...

, . . Fonl ..,. t
V...•
F 7 nt

. ..

Realty

1738. FOR RENT - U25 liD. • Primo IOCIIbn.

11£A1111RIL BRICK ON NEARLY AN ACRE EXCELLENT FLOOR PLAN. FORMAL LIVING ROOM
OFF FOYER, FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, ATTACHED GARAGE,
CONVENIENT LOCATION. CALL SOON FOR AN
APPOINTMENT.

Eastem Ave. Opportunity lo combmt· home and
business. Ohio River fronlage , Very nice 3 bedrm.
home with appHances, lull basement. This Is a money
maldng proposition. Call lor appointment.

r •..

75 •BM'I lr MotOrs

...... opellkors ~~~'""""""· """ ""'- ...
much
more.
2
car
2
aaes nt11. Tta hone 11 malnt.,.... trw al .._

-·

quolty. Make ,ow

_.,.,,.., end -

I ,.. _ ,

torSIIIe

NEW USTINGI LOCATION!
CAT10NI
LOCATIONf 242 Lariat Orivo. Woll construct.d
brick ranch style homo consisting ol 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths. living mom, kitchen, dining
ar8a, tamMy room &amp; more.. 1 car atlachad carport. Call today lor an appointment
1505
JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR FAMILY! 3 bedroom
mnch style home consisting of lui! basement. 2
baths,' living mom, dining mom, lamily room
· and mora, approx. 1.6 acre lawn, ~tached
24'x32' garage with concreto tloor~ng . Call
today loryourshowing!
1500
. 31 WOODED ACRES in Southwestem Sehool
area. Already has water tap. Six miles to Rio
Grande. Call now. .
1429

.

MAIN ST. VINTON is thiS 2 bedroom, 1 bath
brick home, w11h kitchen. living room, laundry
room and a large walk-in attic that could be
converted to a third bedroom, nice covered
front porch and largo patio, a one car garage
and more. Call today"!
• *503
CLOSE IN!- Enjoy a view ol the river lrom the
great room olthis lovely _6 yeor old, 3 bedroom,
3 bath home with family room and f&gt;mshed
basemant nine closets, 2 are walk-ins. Tax
free for n'ine years. Too many amenities to
mention here. Call or mora information. Asking
sao's.
1475
CLOSE INI -Enjoy a view of the river frnm the
great room of this lovely 9 year old. 3 bedroom,
3 bath home with family room and f1mshed
basement, n1ne closets, 2 are walk-i~s : Tax
free for nine years Too many amemt1es to
mention here . Call for more information. Asking
$SO's.
t475
HUNTERS PARADISE! - Approximately 81
acres. Cafl..._be yours. Deer and other small
game abound. Including w1ld turkey. There are
building Sitts w1th no restrK:tions. Timber has
not been harvested for years. On country rti~d
with electric available. Act now and y&lt;&gt;u will
have a place to hunt and call your own. 1499
OWNER SAYS MAKE OFFERI IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - Just waiting for you! 3 bed·
room ranch style home, living room, family
room, 1, car garage with auto. door opener and
mora. Excellent IDcat1on!!
• f488
PICTURE YOUR HOUSE HERE! - Vacant
land. o :J. Wh1te Ropd . 2,392 acres, lots ol
trees. Good building sitos lor $11,900.
1492
RACCOON TWP.
liB ACRES
RA_CCOON TWP.
80 ACRES
HARRISON TWP,
.81 ACRES
OHIO TWP.
· 133 ACRES
HUNnNGTON TWP. 16 ACRES /

lfl001
10002
fOOO:i
lfl006
lfl007

76

1832. FAMILY HOME· WHh el&gt;ow room lo S·P·IH·
A·D O·U·T- 4 bedrooms, balh, kl., DR, LA, lam.
rm., 181 floor bedrm . and 3 up . Enclosed fronl and
badl: porch, tul b~nt, anachod garage. 11ac. mil
REDUCED. 542,500

Aulo .,.... •
•

Accniartes

"
_._..,_
••a•
a-&amp;
211-N~Mrl

MODERN, PEACEFUL, COUNTRY HOI!IE Two story, 2518 oq.lt of living spaeeMd a
acreo lo be det.rmined by survey. The homo
has bean monsivoly remodeled lor your 0011·
venionce and hoppinaaa. Four bedrooms, baths, large walk-in clooel. po-r room, laJgo
new lamily room. AI C»dar and a largo counlly
kitchen. Ruml wat.r, cenlral heating and cooling. Located on Stat. Highway. You may have
any pets your childran may desire or even
recreational vehicles. I can't explain d al in lhis
~d. Tho as~ing price is $75,000. We will be
wailing lor our car.
1472

,.w

NEW LISTING! PRESTIGIOUS CEDAR 4
bedrncms, 2 story home. Conststs of Ioyer, iving room, dining rnom, kitchen, den, lamily
room, 3~ baths, rae. room &amp; more. Over 3 ,000
sq. ft. Ideal location, over 3 acr&amp;s land, r;ityschools. Caller complole listing.
15011

•

=

- - . - - . 1114-

I I

-~M\==
•. ~

2311.'

••

79

•

a- Fulls• Tna
'
.
~-

c

e

Ser .1ces

•

81.

t508

-·

..

COZV &amp; CUTE! $11,1100 - Whothor slarling
out or ratiring Ulis home is for you! 2 bedrooms,
living room, kitchen, b•th, alum. siding.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1417
ON DURGAN ROAD is thiS 3 bedroom molal
s1dad ranch with 2 baths. laundry, living nn .•
d1n1ng area, 2 car altached garage. Can be
sold w1th ~ acre
or 5 acrEts ml1 and bam .
Call today lor moro &gt;nlo""atico.
1477

mn

CHESHIRE VILLAGE is this well eslablishad
used car business on Rt. 7 with two bay
garage and offico. A mobile home that has 2
bodrooms, .1 bath, living nn .. dining nn . and
kitchen. Asking $99,500. Without mobilo heme,
$89,500.
1473

doublewkle, storage building? Located on okt

, Polter. CaM lor appointment. $40,000
,_.

1614. LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING • On
Slate Route. 2 beCirm apt. on 1st floor. Possble 3
more apts.

coUtnRv ESTATE~-:~_)_G.IV101E... YOUR

FAMILY THE
PRIVACY THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
FAMILY ROOM, PLUS RECREATION ROOM . LOVELY
FORMAL UVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, EQUIPPED
KITCHEN. FORMAL DINING ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BALCONY. ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTERIOR. 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. SURROUNDED BY A 9 BEAUTIFUL
WOODED ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.
$125,000.

112!.

OW~N~~~~

YOUR
HOME, tt.n lhla Is the property. -2•3 bedroom. 2

~N.JOl

baths LA FR eat-In klchen. etec::. BB heat, r:JN, uti.
rm.
slora9e on 'h a&lt;:. mil. Can be a 3 BR single
home alsa.

purchue neat and clean ~ 8R I10mO
ono balh.
Lg. FA, LR. lnd Hl·ln ldlchen, with goraQo lnd

FoUlLY APPEAL! - LARGE LIVING ROOM WITH
FIREPLA:CE. FORMAL DINING ROOM. FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEN, 3 BEOROOMS, 2 B,rt,THS, FULL BASEMENT,
LARGE LEVEL LAWN, PERFECT FOR FAMILY
ACTIVITIES, BASKETBALL COURT, FRUIT TREES,
GARDEN SPACE. CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE
CITY. $49,800.

ai.d

basemenr and 5 acres mil. Also c•n be purchased
with 10 acres more or less.

'.

-

1752. IF YOU WNIT"SPACE, ltD IS TIE
~FOR YOU-311R--2-•
equljlpod llleliln, - . -.IVC, lg. LR, llll, wtlli lfll*'tl liN, vory lg. FR. 18'1138' -rM•V pool
oft endoMd plllo Wooc~M~mer heals enlft ' -· 1

acre also.

1717. NEW LISTING. HANNAN TRACE ROAD •

1825. CLOSE IN. 5 aaos mil o1 roling lan&lt;l.

Cozy 3 BA ranch with eal-tn kkhln, LA, DR, bath,
fuel ott held, new roof. Ju~ rlghllor newry weds or

1811-.

H31. LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO BUR.O - 21o 5 aaes mont or .... D1twt
to wrnte Rd to etwoaa1s l.aiGI Df. to • • ,...,
Otrertn!J 2 1'- to rolling tols., • vMMy ol 1IMe and
beautiful view of the lake. AI MiW 7' r • 7 'N,

a.

TIIRTY-RVE THOUSAND DOLLARS - BARGAIN
PRICED 2 STORY, 3 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY.
CONVENIENT LOCATION. WALK TO SCHOOL,
CHURCH AND SHOPPING.

Building lot approx. BO'x717' situated al
Jackson Pike. Residential only! City scllcols &amp;
uliilies.
1507
NEWLY LISTED! Ovor 82 ac,.s olland and
21' camper. Situated in Huntington Township.
Rural wliler &amp; electric already on property.

tiJ31. LAND CONTRACT- Lootdng lor 6 ac tM,

Rurot
olodr1dly.OflPIII.
.......
ae&lt;opt_ ·_ illidooglounct
ROIIIIciiVe covoniiOs
C..
ta
Holzer and Sl'ooflplng.

OVER AN ACRE LAWN - 3 BEDROOM, I Y, BATH.
HOME HAS FULL BASEMENT, ALUMINUM SIDING,
CARPORT. APPROX. S.MILES FROM CITY. $49,900 ..

1786. LOW PRICE $22,000 will D\ly a nice 3 - . .
Mme. 2 baths, outbuldlng, 1 ac m/1. Close to

$30,000- FRAME RANCH HAS LIVING ROOM, EAT-IN
KITCHEN, TWO BEDROOMS. ONE BATH ANO UTILITY.
100'X150 LEVEL LAWN . NICE STARTER HOME .

'Chi shire.

1850. PLEASURE YOU'LL TREASURE • Rustle
home lound In the woods w•n 2 bedrms, 1 i'r baths,
sunken LR, slep 14&gt; dillng area, coontl';' cabinets In
lhe kn :, utility nn , storage building with earpon.
$38.000

PANORAMIC VIEW . OF THE OHIO RIVER - 3
BEDROOM, •• 2' BATH HOME HAS FAMILY ROOM.
, VINYL SIDING, COVERED PATIO/CARPORT LARGE
DECK AREA PRICED REASONABLE AT $47,000.

1852, IN TOWN COMFORT - 3 bedrrn., kh , Lg. LR,
DR, 2 ear garage. Gas heat and CA. Nice level lot.

$30,000- FRAME RANCH HAS UVING ROOM, EAT·IN
IQTCHEN. TWO BEDROOMS, ONE BATH AND UTILITY.
IOO'X150' LEVEL LAWN. NICE STARTER HOME.

Close lo everytt-«lg.

Real Estate General

.., 1133,HERE IT IS-Brk:kranchwi1h3bedrooms,1~
balh, living room. dining room, lull basemert , 2 car
garage, swim)mg pool. A must to see!

t712. SPECIAL OF THE W£EK - $32,- FOR
ALL QF THIS • 3 bedrooms. bllh, l¥1ng room,

dir11ng·ldlehan c:ombined, utlly room. CtoM to

"""""" .., oliopplug. Colt t o r -·

•

Real Eatate General

IN VINTON VILLAGE! Here you will find this 3
bedroom 1 ~ bath one story home with living
room, kitchon, laundry and den. -. del8chad
one car garege, blown-in in.. lation and more.
On a 127'x115'comer lot Asking only $30,000.
Call today lor y&lt;&gt;ur appointment.
VACANT LAND ON UNCOLN PIKE -66 .acr·
es, small pond. plus 18x24 shower house.
Asking $25,500.
1476

(CALl US ANYTIME)
446~7101
;&amp;

•••

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVINUI, GALLIPOLIS
RUSSELL WOOD, Broker ................446-4618
PHYLLIS MILLER ............................. 256-1136
MARTHA SMITH ••..•.•. ~ •....•..••.•.:........ 379·2651
PATRICK COCHRAN~ ....................... 446-8655

or
1·800·S8S-710l
••

rJliliii I
®

.

.

CENTENARY AREA

bath a, LR, OR, FR, att.ched
garage, lull basemen!, 2 fireplat»s, Mid $70's.
(1001)

4 Bedrooms, bath, LR, kitchen, dinelto, lull
basement, bem on property, 2 water taps, 4.49
acres m~ .
' (1176)

PA'ffiiOT AREA- 3 BRs, lilling room, kitchen,
bath, carpet anachod garage, storm windows
and lloors, 85xf72 lootlot.
· (759)

3 E!Rs, 2 baths, l.R, DR, FR. 2 fi...,._., IteM
pump.·~ ground pool.
(1C*J

1224, TAKE A LOOK AT THISII - ~ocated
01t Soc:orld /we., wolk to otor&amp;, church, ocbool
and ~~hopping, 211ory home olhtra k~chen, ~R.
DR. FR, 2 BRo, 2 betht, llflt lteatiunbal air. '

PANORAMIC VIEW OF OHIO RIVER
VALLEY - 2,484 sq. ft., 3 BRs, 3 baths, groot
room combo ·(kitchen, LR, DR), 8' dec!&lt; all
around houso, heal pump, building• on
property. Too much 1o adverliM. Call .

joHNBON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON TWP•
- 380. ~cr&amp; lann, 3 ponds,• lobaccc ba~.
55xl00 ft . bam, with concre• Hoors. May
conaider op!it.
(5711

FIRST TIME ON THE MARKET - Juot oil
Neighborhood Rd. Cily ochoolo, al ~
roomo, 3 BRs, 1l\ betht. LR. kite'-, on!; I
· v..ruld.

CHURCH ST. (IIIDWELL~
3 bedrooms, bath, living nn., kilchon, cellar,
unottached worktlhcp, 31oto- eB'lclllll' •
(114)
CARMEL ROAD - 4 1ni. N.- ol Rio Grande.
Appmx. 24 oc,.s ol ourvayed vaca~l land.
Ideal lor now horne. $19,000.

3 BRo. 1~ bolhs, !kitchen wiranga and
ralrigarator, walk·in beaoiMIII, t»rport.

.,1 8R RANai Off ST. RT. 7 ...... nice view
ol riwlr. 3 BRs, l.R,
priood in•.,. 20's.
•

PIKE STREET
Formerly T..a..... HcuM c.....ics, 2,060 oq.
II., bath, kitchoii , 10X52 mobile home used as
rental.

cining nn.,

3 BRs,

I~

"'

.
LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUSINESS? - SR 180 near Bulavillo Piko.
Approx. 2CKfx200' lot All ulilitioo available.
(818)

TAMMIE DEWITT .............................. 446-151'4
J. MERRILL CARTER ....................... 379-2184
CATHY WRAV ...................................446-4255
... CINDY DRONOGWSKI ..................... 245-9697
JUDY DEWITT .................................. 446-4465

o.m'or

100'11!50' LOT ON DEBBY DRIVE wanto a quick oale. Call today and start
building rig)laway.

· PLANTZ IIUIIDIV!SIO"

&lt;•l

.PLE 1"SAitiT VALLEY ROAD (RIO)
l.R, kilclton, family
atun•. -111-.g.

17.5 ACRI!I IIIL, RACCOON TWP. - Fronts
SA 325 N. near Rio Granda. Nice . home

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1~94-1066

'

vrn&lt;&gt;IHIA S.. TH, IJIIOKEA.- - - - ·- • •
EUNICIIi NIEIIII, IEIILTCIA.- ...... - 4. .IIUTH a-. AEIIL101'1..._,, -·- 1• Citl
D€-ICITEI, IIEAI.lOIL ....
Ill
LYNOAF~T. AEAI.IOII._.. _____ Itl
I
MICHAEL-LEA, AEAl,TOII. ....- 1.11!1
PATIIICIA ROSS, N:AUOI'I. . .. ---...M*I$

Once again, the Winhlin Group, a leading research flfl!l has awarded top honors na~onwide to CENTIJRY 21® System
Professionals. In 12 separate cruegories homeowners rated the CENTIJRY 21 sys1em first every time by a wide margin.
Trust. your home to the organization more homeowners trus~ the CENTIJRY 21 System. Discover The Power Of Number

HOUSE ANO 5 ACRES M OR L - Located on State
Route 588. House has 5 room s. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath.
PRICED AT $25,000.

wormed,

.·

Fcord ...... tqf, .....

-~

IN GALLIPOLIS - 3 bedrooms. bath, kotchen , living
room , basement, 2 lots, 20x 150' and 37x150' . Call for
appointment . $14.600.00.

100 ACRES M or L on Fnendly Ridge in Clay Twp.
Water and electric available. Pnced at $32.500

,.,.......

~-- · 'l

..... -..qt
-

...

304475-2083,

lull Uno TropiCal lloh1 bl ...,

-d

BUY ON LAND CONTRACT! - 3 bedroom.
beth, ' living rnom. kitchen, .950 acre lor
$35,!:100. Owners say make an offer. Will also
sell on land contract with $5,000 down .. - 1491

I

:~

PROHSSIOHAlSIRVIU MAm IHI illffiiiJKt

1\ESibENJIAl · INVF.STMEHfS COMMERCIAL· FARMS

Real Eltate General

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING! FANTASTIC RIVER VIEW
with this quality buill 4 bedroom, 21/2 bath
ranch home. Basement has linished family
room. Siluated on 1 acre Wtth paved drive.
Pomeroy areL Call for appointment
1501

'

Groom onct Supplr Shop-Pol

'

1171F25e..._ _ _

111:(

6 OAK STREET - $13,000.00 - 1io\ story
home, with 3 bedrooms, living room + dinlrtg
room. NiCe back lawn approx. IOO'x94'. Front
and s&gt;de porches. Immediate possession . 1485

245-ai2L

Full

forSale

72

Real Eltltl General

1

-. ra•-.4WDond
-..-..~--

The Results Are In. Homeowners·Rate
Us #1 Again. ... and Again and Again.

EXECUTIVE HOME - 2 story bnck colonial, 3
bedrooms, 2l\ baths. lull finished basement,
electnc heat pump w/solar heat1ng system Wllh
.amenities too numerous to mention nestled on
25+ acres. Call today lor your privata showing.
1498

Block, brick, MWtr Dlpea, win.
dowl," llntela, etc. Ciaude Win·
ten, Ala Grand., OH Call 114--

Potnt

~.-=-~ 3,1110

7;

wit!:

Real Estate General

PRICE REDUCED! Now $28,500, 226 Spring
Avenue. Pomerny. 4 bedroom ranch style
home, den, fam ily room, kitchen, dining room
and living room, 1 car garage and more.
1497

Moae

cy~- 9! g~ ~/'~lak-

l'SFcordMian,nallll

MEIGS COUNTY Pt:IOPERTIES
CHERYL LEMLEY 742·3171
SHERYL WALTERS 367-Cl4211992·6583

LEADINGHAI't\ REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

56

;..

_,_ ___ 4

~~..

lloMv Bock ClulrontMdl Buy

I

24.111-TolrtM
.......

.........

llpollo.

SLOW DRAINS?
DRAIN CARE Endo Slow Drolno.
· - - YNrt 01 Buildup In
Plpoo And R'o 81,. To U.o.

C. C

asulll

Q

Real Ellltl Generlll

t8:W. BI· LEVEL HOME - 3 bec:lm'ls 1 eal·ln kit ., tg.

\11-.,t

Hllrdwan, State Route 160.

._

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

Syotom Working P._.ty. Bur
ENFORCER S.pllc Tonk.TIRI·
ment At: 8rown'a TrUI~:z

..,....NC, _ _

~- -

.

SEPTIC TANK BACKED UP?

U• ENFORCER Sopllc Tonk
Troltmllll To Pnvonl Blck.Up,
Foul Odoro And To KMp Your

Real Estate General
'

tr:r'nAncl
c...d.. R 11 lllll. Co:: I Sf
clol. -1111.

114011,

t • r.:&gt;
AN$WERS TO
SCRAM·LETS
PLAQUE
A pro bowler was asked why he
DELUGE
always traveled by car. ''I'd like to
BAMBOO
fly," he smiled, "but have you ever
LEGION
gone to an airline and tried to
INLAND
check in a BOWLING BALL?"
WINDOW
BOWLING BALL

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

•

.....
• . - . _..._. • .

::':-.

84

1

=~.,:~~- -. :~a-, 4*

PER TON

1114 Rod eo-.., 327 Enalno 4
Blml, AI '§~ .
t1,4M, 114 m 111il ___ ·

nn.,

7~_

::,1:.~.:.a= ::::11,4011.:.·:
1811 -

Booll Votuo• 13,000. 114-4*
COnnrtlbl' allver In 4331.
color, l14--l4...~5.
Dodge Dan. 11,000 actual 1111 Buick Somo- NMdo
Enalno Work, Boot Oltor, 114miiM~ NoW llf'lka •=m. Runo 441~780.
ood o1
aood.
--'

........

. Autos tor s.~e

•ulo.

Har~op

t=::::"n-"nMM~

~~~~~~··
71

American Car Crushing Inc.

1811 Buldc Clnllll: 4 o-,
71 Autos for Sale
Good Condition~ 85,bo0 MIIOo,
--,:,=:---:---,::--'---::=--:::lm &amp;Mer- llonl 450 SL w......... Mod. Ullnlllll· $1,200,

1881 c_, VJeiOrtL Looko &amp;
rvno good. $1,!100. 114-446-&amp;111.
1881 Mozdo RX7 4 CYIIndor, 5
Sr-d, Air Condlllonlnga:roo,
Hly For Salt, Round Balli, Suf*'
ClAn, 11.811, or
Of·
Uuot Sol: a..utlful Full Lanalh St~d In Barn, Can O.llv.r, 11C.
lw, l14-441-o551.
Whllo Shadow Mink Coo~ Apo 245-611l
Dl'lioed: $7,!100. P~ No;. 6141181 Uonta C.r10, MW th..a,

1

a•

w-.

Transportation

-

rW: 2

PS1 _PB, AMIFII.

Nice, 4 n-. "Econornlcol.
Prloocl To Sotlll fM-388-liiiOI, Altor5P.U.

- . dry - · 130, 114-1102·
2421.
Far 111u -um ....

-

c-or,

1114

For Sale- Ullllee wlnler ~. tYM
longlh, gror wlplold ....,, hu

="-poo4w~~

1114

e:uMtte llliti"'I, -... 302

IM-256-1:nl.

~..

Autos for Sale.

call 614-14v-21l45 or 114-11412871.

Flrwf = Dd: An Hardwoodt Spill
DollY- $.tO Pldo-Up laod.

1., •-·

71

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

•

I

--

- - ~ -~

RODNEY YILUGE I

lri-. -. ,_ ""'-

RACCOON ROAD
3 IIRt, ..... ......
2~ car un
Qllllllga, bJ .....
...,odor:l4.5acreo.
•.
T

•

r

,,.

COIF E~ PROPERlY - U A. 1M, lMI
loonlagl along SA 7, jqal fnom Ollltl
RiwrPiau.(214)

.
'

'

•

�..

..

45631, and you may win a $5 prize .from the
Oblo Valley Publishing Co. Leave )'OI!r name,
address and telephone numbe~ witb yoar card
or letter. No telepbooe calls will be accepted. AU
coolest entries should be turned iD to tbe .newspaper off'ICt by 4 p.m. eacb Wednesday, In case
or a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County rariD will be rea·
lured by tbe Meigs Soil aDd Wakr Conservation
District

Area cattle producers
in·vited to attend session

Farm Flashes
·'

Sometimes OC:A is criticized for Although the average price for the
By EDWARD VOt.LBORN
the
heavy direction toward the larg- season is still above a year .earlier,
GALLIPOLIS - All cattle proer
feedlot
sector. Under Earl ihe lar~c amount going to the pool
ducers are invited to attend a focus
McKams'
leadership,
the cow-calf is a big worry. Some growers
IJleeting 'this Wednesday, January
pointed to tougher "grading" which
sector
will
get
a
fair
representation.
13. The 7 p.m. event will be held at
often
follows slow .
We
ar.
e
pleased
~t
Gallia
County
the C.H . McKenzie Agricultural
market
conditions. The USDA
was
chosen
as
a
site
for
one
of
Center, beside the fairgr6und just
Market
News
estimate that 85.7
about a dozen regional sites in
west of Gallipolis.
peceef!t
of
the
1992
crop has been
· The evening will stan with a Ohio. Plan to attend!
sold.
·
Tobacco markets operied for
''free" sponsored hamburger fry.
The
Annual
Tobacco.
Expo in
Please call 446-7007 to help us sales on January 4, Most people
Lexington,
Kentucky
will
be held
\Yith the planning. Mr. Earl who attended auctions this week
on
Wednesday,
January
20,
1993.
McKarns, President of the Ohio felt that the market had dramatical·
This
event,
in
only
its
third
year,
Calllemen's Association will com- ly fallen off. Average price belt
has
become
the
showcase
for
new
ment on association activities and wide for the week was $179.30 per
products.
Several
educational
seshighlight what he sees as emerging hundred with some 29.9 peceent of
sions
are
planned
throughout
the
i_ssues for too callle industry. Mr. the crop going to the pool this
McKarns is a cowcalf producer week. This brought t.he average day. The local Tobacco Associafrom rural Carroll County and real- price for the season down to . lion will be makiilg a decision this
ly fits the description "good ole $181.99 ancj the "pool" take for the Tuesday evening on renral of a van
season up to . l4 .5 percent. for a group uip to the Expo. If you
boy".
would like to attend, please call to
indicate an interest. This is a good
place to talk to producers from
Continued from D-1
other areas and gauge the mood of
·
'
theindustry.
nal charges, Arkin said.
SMOKING GUN
'
Farmers
Tax
Guides
are
availMeanwhile, Salomon settled a
Tobacco stockS were left wheezdispute over back pay with t~o t~p
ing after the Environmental Protec- able free at the County Extension
e'xecutives w)to left the f~rm m . tion Agency on Thursday declared Office. These are commonly used
wake of the August, 1991, bidding second-hand cigarette smoke caus- in preparing 1992 returns. S!OP by
sCandal. Although Salomon didn't es cancer and other respiratory ill- and pick up a free copy.
.Edward Y.ollborn is Gallia
specify the total amount, Thomas nesses in nonsmokers ·who inhale
W. StrauSS, Salomon's {onner vi~ the ·blue haze.
County's extension agent, agri·
chairman, apparently received at
Philip Morris Co. Inc., makers culture.
least $10.97 million and John Meri- of Marlboro ciearettes:, American
wether, the brokerage's former Brands, Inc., makers of Pall Mall;
president, got at least $9.7 million.
and a handful of tobacco proces·
COLONY THEATRE
Salomon said the executives sors and wholesalers saw their
merely were repaid for work and stock drop after the re(ion's findii\vestments held up following the ings wafted into the markeL
bidding scandal, which involved
Subsequent news me()ia articles
illegal bids for Treasury bonds and brought the industry more negative
noteS between 1989 and 1991.
publicity, with discussions or
Salomon also agreed to pay $4 potential liability employers may
million to settle claims by securi- face if they allqw smokmg in on
Mon.
ties regulators in 39 states and the the premises.
District of·Columbia.

White ...

DETROIT (AP) - With Detroit
leading the way, tbe U.S. auto
industry posted a modest sales
improvement in 1992, selling just
under 13 million units of cars and
truckS.
In a year when Ford's Taurus
midsize sedan finally outsold the
Honda Accord, Ford , General
Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp.
.saw U\eir overall sales rise 6.6 per·
cent vs. a 1.6 pececnt improvement
·for Japanese autontakcrs.
The U.S. companies stole about
2 points ·Of market share from the
Japanese, in pan because of price
increases forced on Japanese cars
by the strength of the yen against
the dollar.
Almost all of the sales gains
came in li~ht truckS, minivans and
well-appomted spon utility vehicles, which are heavily dominated
by the Big Three.
•
•
Pickup truclcs, which traditionally drive the industry out of recession. were the No. I and 2 best·
selling vehiCles. For the 11th year
in a row, Forct's .F-series pickup
truck was the best-selling vehicle
overall, followed by Chevr9let's CK pickup truck.
·
·
Overall truck sales rose 14.2
percent compared to a slight 0.4
percent improvement in passenger
car sales.
·
Iri the most-watched auto sales
race in recent memory, Taurus
edJled Accord by 16.474 units to
clrum leadership in U.S. car sales.
The Accord had been the best-selling car in the United States for
three consecuti~ years. Taurus and
Accord finished third and fourth in

Ohio Lottery

Southern,
Meigs boys
lose cage

Auto sales improve modesily in 1992

. • MYSTERY FARM- Tbis week's mystery
: farm, featured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water
· Ccmservation District, is located somewhere in
: Meigs CoutUy. Individuals wishing to partici. pak iD tbe weekly cookst may do so by guessing
: tbe rarm's owner. Just mair, or drop off your
: guess to tbe Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
· Pomeroy, Obio, 45769, or tbe Gallipolis Dally
, Tribune, 825 Third Ave., (iallipoli_s, Qbi_o,

\

January 1O, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

Page 08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

total ules followed by. Ford's 13.3 peceent, the greatest ~ceent­
·Explorer sport utility truck, up age gain among the Big T11cee. . .
At GM, where a year Qf turmOil
from seyenth last yeM.'
Huge incentives on the Taurus resulted in the ouster of top manand Accord helped overall sales of agement, car sales were off 2.5 perdomestically built passenger· cars cent, mostly becaUse of GM's deci-.
rise 4.5 percent io the fmallO sell- sion to reduce low-profit sales to
ing days of the year. For the year, daily rental companies and focus
domestically built car sales were up more on individual buyers. GM
, said it CUI about200,()()() units fro111
2 percent.
Sales of domestically built fleet sales, which hid small gains in
truclcs, up 17.3 percent focthe year, retail sales.
Truck ·sales, however, were up ·
were down 9.5 percent in late
9.7 percent, giving GM.an overall
December. ·
Among the Big Three, Ford's gain of 1.4 percent in total vehicle ·.
total vehicle sales were up II per- sales.
Among importers who also.
cent over 199 L It was the only
assemble
vehicles in North Ameri·
automaker to gain market share in
ca,.
Honda
reported 4.6 percc;nt
both cars and trucks. The Ford
Ranger compact pickup and the lower sales, Mazda sales dropped
Escon subcompact joined F-series 1.8 percent and Mitsubishi sales.
truclcs., Taums and Explorer amoo.g feU 7.6 peccenL . ·
Nissan sales, inciQding iinports,
the top 10 best sellers m 1992.
"The market's strength in were up 9.9 percent for the year,
recent months is encouraging, largely due to the success of twp,
especially the return of individual new U.S.-built vehicles, 'the Altima
customers to the car ·market,'' said midsize sedan and the
, Quest. mini..
van.
Robert Rewey, vice president of
Toyota remained the only . .
sales operations for Ford's North
importer
to sell more than I million
American automotive operations.
vehicles
in the United States,'
Chrysler, on the strength of its
7.3
percent higher sales
reporting
minivans and Jeeps, had 27.9 per'
roc
its
combined
Toyoca and Lexus
cent higher truck sales in 1992 tban
divisions.
·
a year earlier. It sold 37;568 units
of •he all-new Jeep Grand Chero·
kee, leading to record Jeep sales.
Archie Habn of the U.S. won
Chrysler also set a record in U.S.
the
200-meter race in the 1904
minivan·salcs at 462,070.
.Olympics
on a strai!lht coune, . ..
Chrysler car sales fell 3.6 percent in 1992, but its new line of
widely acclaimed midsize cars
were il)tcoduced with only four
months remaining in 1992. Combined car and truck sales were up

Pick 3:
2SO
Plck4:
7504

Super Lotto:

6-17-30-34-37·38
Kicker:
720346

Page4

Vol. 43, No.181
Copyrlghlod 11183

GRANT RECEIVED • For tbe third year
tbe Middleport Arts Coun.cil has received a
. grant rrom tbe Ohio Arts Council to further
' develop. the programs and goals or the organiz;l·
tion. ·Michael London, a consultant witb tbe
· Ohio Arts Council met witb tbe council this past
1Vel!kend to discuss the goals or the group.

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TORYP

ILLION DO
1992 GEO PRIZMS·

COLUMBUS, ·Ohio (AP) Until a disposal solution is found
for mixed waste, a nuclear fuels
plant
Piketon has little choice
but to store that waste on site, Ohio
Environmental Protection Agenc:t..
authorities say.
"There is no existing technology to deal with the waste," Ohio
EPA spokeswoman Pauicia Madigan said Sunday ni~t. "The problem is that it is a mixed waste with
radioactive and hazardous constituents. Nationally, there is a
search on for a treatment of that
waste, but so far there isn't one."
EPA Director Donald Schcegardus roc the third.time has approved .
the continued storage of the waste
at the Ponsmouth Gaseous Diffu·
sion Plant; about 70 miles south of
Columbus.
The plant operator, Manin Marl·
etta Energy Systems, is storing
more than 25,000 drums of waste
at the plant. which enriches uranium fuel for use in nuclear reactors.
The United States has only one
disposal site that accepts the mixed.
waste, and that site IS filli~g up,

neat

•

9 99

According to London, the council is growing and
becoming more sophisticated and able to benefit
the areas whicb it serves. Pictured witb London
are Mary Jane Wise, Nimcy Cale, Gail Hovatter,
Rae Gwiazdowsky, Marilyn Meier, Jeannette .
Thomas and Susan Baker.

EPA says there's no choice
but to s~ore waste· at plant.

••••••••••••••••••

~oupon

UN denies fatest claim by lrf!q

Former Ironton resident suspected
of shooting wife to death still at large
. PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
man suspected .of shooting his
·estranged wife 10 death at a South
Carolina Air Force base as she pre\, pared to press abuse chargesa.gainst him remained at large
today, authorities said.
Federal and local authorities in
several states were still seacehing
for Jeromy Willis, 23, formerly of
Ironton, Ohio, said 1st Lt. Jody
.Cox at the baSe.
•
Authorities said Willis shot his
wife, Marie, of Bristol, in the head
and chest with a 9 mm pisiol in
front of nine other people at the
Myrtle Beach Air Force Base a
weekago. .

.

CHEVROLET

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-

WASHINGTON (AP) - · An
·unexpectedly large deficit and
uncertainty about economic recovery is dampening talk about a tax
cpt for middle-income Americans,
congressional leaders acknowleilge.
· During the election campaign,
President-elect Clinton promised
reneAtedly to seek lower taxes for
mliiiiie-iclConle taxpayers, but Clinton aides and key lawmakers concede the issue is being reviewed
because of current economic conditiona
· ·+m· not sure in the light of the
i!re~enl cin:umstancef, that (a tax
cllt) shouldn't be rethouabt,"
House Speaker Thomas Foley, DI

Meigs County Auditor William Methodist Charch, was a member
R. Wickline, 46, of State Route 338 or the Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valin Racine, died on Satarday night, ley Regional Development District
January 9, 1993. afrer collapsing at Executive Committee, served as
the SouthemtGallia Academy High chairmal) of the Meigs County
School Junior Varsity basketball Budget Commission; and serv~ on
the Meigs County Records Coni·
game in Gallipolis.
Wickline suffered an apparent mission and the Public Assistance
heart attack and collapsed in the Examining Committee.
Services will be held on Tueshallway outside the playing 'arena
day
at 2 p.m·, at Racine United
shonly after Southern's 47461astMethodist
Olun:h, with Rev. Roger
second reserve win over Gallipolis.
Grace
offiCiating.
Burial will folWickline's sOn, Scott, is Soulhem's
low in Leiart Falls .Cemetery. ·
J.V.coach.
.
Friends may call.atthe Ewing
The varsity game was delayed
while Dr. Gerald Villee, Gallipolis FUIIellll Home in Pomeroy from 2
physician, and Bob Cornwell, to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Mon·
GAHS team trainer, worked to day. The body will lie in state an
revive Wickline until the Gallia hour prior to the service at the
County EMS squad arrived minutes church.
A court order filed by Meigs
later. Wickline was transpol1ed to
Holzer Medical Center, where he County Common Pleas Court
WILLIAM WICKLINE
Judge Fred W. Crow III today
died shortly after his amval.
reads
as
follows:
Wickline has served as auditor
since 1983. Prior to his election,
"Whereas, William "Bin" WiCk: Roush remembered Wickline MonWickline had WO!ked for ooe-time line. was the duly elected Auditor day for his non-panisan approach
Auditor Howard E. Frank for eight or Meigs County, Ohio, and to his work.
·
years, and was also employed in . Whereas, Bill suddenly passed
"We lost a great friend Saturthe treasurer's office· during away on Satarday, January 9, 1993, day," Roush said. "He was welland Whereas, Bill was truly a . liked by both parties. If a township
Frank's term there.
'
He was a former school reacher friend of all Meigs Countians, a clerk or trustee came in to ask Bill
and basketball coach for four years cledicated family man, and an hon- · for help. be took care or them. Bill
in the Meigs Local School District, ornble citizen, and Wheicas, Meigs diditnghL"
·'
,
and served as time keeper for the County Commissioners Manning
County Treasurer Howard
Meigs County Department of High- Roush, Janet Howard and Roben Frank, who hired Wickline in the
ways for several years
Hanenbach passed a resolution of treasurer's office and then in the
He was born on September 2ll, uibuiC and mourning, and Where- auditor's office, called Wickline
1946 in.Racine, son of Douglas and as, the duly elected officer holders "'courageous."
Inez Wyant Wickline, wbo survive. and the Meigs County Courthouse : "Bill and ·l had a wonderful
He is also survived by his wife, employees desire to attend Bill's worldng relationship," Fr3nk said.
Beverlee Hunt Wickline; iWo sans, funeral to show their respect and "He was 11 prompt, capiible·auditor
Scou and Kyle, both of Racioe; a honor, and Whereas, Will will be and a courageous person. He was a
sister. Mrs. Jim (Joann) Price or missed by all, .it fs therefore wonderful guy to work with."
Columbus; two brothers, James ordered, adjudged and decreed that
Mary Hobstetter, clerk of the
(Shelba) Wickline of Racine, and the Meigs €ounty Counhouse Shall board of commissioners, was
· Thomas (Patricia) Wicldine, Car- close on Tuesday at noon and that appointed by the board this mornroll; his mother-in-law, Kathryn the counhouse bell shall be tolled ing to serve as temporary auditor.
Hunt; Racine; four nieces, a 46 times at 12 noon on Tuesday, She wiD serve in that' capacity until
nephew, a great-niece and a great- with all county employees slanding Wickline's successor is appointed
by the Republican Central Commitnephew.
·in silent prayer."
He anended the Racine United
· Commission Presideilt Manning tee.

said Sean Graham, EPA public operations is going to solve the
.problem," said Pamela Allen, maninvolvement coordinator.
.. "There: s onl~ one place to send ager of the compliance monitoring
Uiis'waste"and it is our estimatiOn · and enforcement section in the
that the way it is being handled and EPA's Division of Hazardous
stored is as good, if not better, than Waste Management. "We can't
sending it to the disposal site in maceh in there and solve the probNorth Carolina, because their lem."
capacity can't handle all the waste
Yin a Colley, leader of
coming in," be said.
Ponsmouth-Piketon Residents for
The U.S . Energy Department, Environmental Safety, and Gerold
which owns the- plant, the Ohio Wilkinson, safety and health reproEPA and the attorney general's senrative for Loc!il3-689 of the Oil
office are negotiating a long-range Chemical and Atomic Workers
plan for disposal of mixed waste, Union, said the public has not had
Graham said.
'
any input into the EPA's decisions.
Under federal law, the Energy
"The whole thing has been hanDepartment was to plan .a method died behind closed doors," Ms.
of disposal at Piketon by May Colley said.
KUWAIT (AP) - Iraqis in
1992. The .lllant..js: among federal
Graham disputes the accuSation. civilian clothes crossed the border
nuclear factliues bemg cleaned up.
saying both groups were aware of into Kuwait tOday for a second
Schregardus on Dec. 18 allowed the second permit extension, of the time in as many days and began
storage .of the wasle for .at least five waste plan negotiations and of the emptying and dismantling waremore months. Extenswns of the possibility of another extension. He houses at a disJI!Ited naval base, a
storage permit also were given said he has spoken fcequenUy with U.N. official saul.
The burder crossings came amid
Aug. 7 and May S.
the groups.
The plant would have closed
"We've gone out of our way to · risin$ tensions over an escalari'lll in
without the EPA action.
.
accommodate them, at least we feel lraqt challenges to the United
"We don't think that having we have," Graham said.
Nations as well as the United Srates
Martin Marietta shut down site
and its allies.
Abdel Latif Kabbaj, spokesman
for the U.N. observation mission in
Kuwait, told The Associated Press
that about 120 unarmed Iraqis emp.tied or removed "warehouses,
water tanlcs and eleclrieal wires."
He said the men were warned by
"We haven't seen hide nor hair
"It's always tragic to lose a U.N. observers that they were vioof him, and we have no solid dues loved one, a fnend," said the Rev. lating Gulf War cease-fm: IECOII!s.
to go on . We're hoping," said Thomas Carnevale, who presided
· On Sunday, 200 anned Iraqis .in
Detective Frank Daniels of the over the service at St. Lucy Roman civilian clothing went to the same
Myrtle Beach Police- Department
Catholic Church.
area and seized annaments, includ"We've got quite a bit of law
At the burial ceremony. family ing explosives and four Chineseenforcement activity, and we've members clutched each other and built anti-ship Silkworm missiles,
had a lot of calls from the public, wept as they surrounded the closed abandoned by Iraq during the 1991
just nothing we can sink our teeth · caskeL ·
war.
.IOlO. "
....
Mrs. Willis had been hospital"
Thefirstforay~eadayaf~
Family and friends gathered at a ized two weeks after her husband the United States said that Saddam
funeral Mass for Marie Willis on allegedly attacked her with a Hussein's government capitulated
SaiUrday.
propane torch in August, burning to an allied ultimatum to remove
"She was a kind and gentle her legs, accordinjl to authorities.
anti-aircraft missiles from southem
. .
•
woman and an excellent mother," . She told a fnend she lied to Iraq.
said her brother, Keith Mello. "All police about the incident to proteCt
But it coincided with a 1110\(C by
of us arc deeply touched by this her son, telling authorities sbe wls Iraq to prevent U.N. leallls chalged
loss. God bless her soul."
burned in an occident.
with dismantling Saddam's
Neighbors said the night she left weapons of mass destructioa from
the hospital, Mrs. Willis' husballd flying into Iraq in their own~
assaulted her again, choking her
Iraqi
Foreign Mmister
·
while
her
6·
year-old
son
from
a
··
Mohammed
Saeed ei-Sahbaf told ·
0
I priormarriageuiedtostophim.
the Egyptian-owned Middle East
·
Air Force officials have said News Agency today tbe ~ who
·
· •
Jeromy Willis was ordered tQ stay crossed the border Sunday were
Wash., said Sunday. ·
away fro~ his wife after the "W!&gt;rkers .for a privale comracting
company" and were removing
Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Calif., anoth· Augustincl!'e!'L
.
property
left beltilll by baqi forees
, er member of the House DemocratMrs. WIIhs returned w1th her
ic leadership, said that.wh~le he son to Rhode Island, .where her as they retreared in the OullW•.
He said Iraq had permission
~upports a ta~ bre~, for mtddle- motl!er and four or her five brod!from
Maj. Gen. Timothy Dibana
mcome Amertcans, whether we ers live. She n:tumed South &lt;;arobcan afford it under these ciceum- na on Jan: 3 to. tesufy before .a of Ghana, commander of an
Stances is questionable."
board hearing. ev1dence ~a JIOSSI· . un~ U.N. fon:c thll mooill)n
the demilitarized zone aloa1 the
Clinton and hili economic advis· ble COUM·ffi8!U~ of WilliS.
.
·
ers are papplina with the news last
Mrs. W1lhs and h~r son, Icuwait-lniQ border. ·
week frOm the Bush admin,lstntdon Thomas Raffa, had heen living In
Kabbaj denied the lnlqia bad a
that thi! year's ~fu:lt could be 560 JJristol with her brother, Stephen permit to be in the --.
1n Bonn, Germany, U.N. ~
~inion higher !han believed, reach· Mello.
. .
.
mg a record $327 bi.Ulon.
~s. W1lhs h~d asked Brtstol tary-Oonoral Boutroa BoatrosAt the same ume, they are pobce for ~non last October. Ghali said ho hoped tbe Security ·
uncertain about whether .recent Bristol Police (::hief Thom8a Mof- CIIUCICil would IIVC I ",cry stiff
signs of economic recovery will fatt sald she told officers her hua- answer'' 10 Iniq's inc:1nio8a.
The border illl:idenll occomd
hold up.
band had threatened to kill her if
about SO miles north of Kuwait
Continued on page 3
she ever~eft him.

Talk of middle-income
tax Cut becoming muted

1616 EASTERN
GALLIPOLIS
(614) 446·3672
1·800·521·0084

.

Meigs County auditor dies
after apparent heart attack

LUMBER &amp;

:

1 Secllon,10 Pagn 25 centa
A Munlmedla Inc. Ne-peper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, January 11,1993

·CAROLINA

:

40s. .

•

Scientists urge worldwide
network to monitor soil ·quality
"It's no longer just a question
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agriculture Department scientists say a · of measuring the traditional physiworldwide network is needed to cal and chemical properties to premonitor soil quality and develop dict crop yields." he silid.
broader means of rating iL .
Parr and colleagues would lilce
·'There is nothing currently to see a global network developed
available that can measure and pre- that would rate soil quality accord:
dict farming's effects on all the key ing to a new index or repon card.
aspects of soil quality - soil proThe proposal was based .on
ductivity, environmental quality, reports presented at a recent soil
food safety and quality and human qualiiy conference, said Parr, who
health," said James F. Parr of the oversees ARS soi I fertility ·
Agricultural Research Service in research.
'
Beltsville, Md.

lAW toaipt aeor 40.
Tuesday, rala,lilgb In upper

'

City near the pon town of Umm border. In fact, Baghdad still
a naval base claims sovereignty over all of
before the war.
Kuwait, which it invaded in August
Late last year, a U.N.-appointed 1990 and held for seven months.
border commission completed the
No shooting or casualties were
first formal demarcati!)n of the reported in Sunday's incident
Kuwait-Iraq border and the. naval among the U.N. personnel manning,
base was awarded to Kuwait Iraq the bunkers where the weapons
retained Umm Qasr.
were stored 400 yards inside
Iraq has refused to.recognize the Kuwait.
Qasr, wtiere Iraq had

·Forecasters see job
growtlt tripling this year
WASHINGTON (AP) .- American businesses will create three
times as many jobs this year as
they did in 1992, according to ·a
survey or economiC focecas1ers, but
such growth still would. fall far
shoct of many past cecoven~.
The consensus of SO prominent
economists polled by the newsletter
Blue Chip Economic Indicators
predicts 1.59 million new jobs this
year, compared with the 557,000
nonfarm payroll additions already
reponed for 1992.
.
lf so it would mean Presidenteiect ciinton will enter the White
House aided by the best employ- ·
ment performance since payrolls
grew by 2.11 million during 1989,
President Bush's first year in

office.
Nevertheless. the two-year per·
fonnance would be far weaker than
the increases of 3.5 million jobs in
1983 and 3.98 million il! 1984,the
y~ follow,mg th.e pcev1ous recess1on.
During the last retession in
1990 and 1991, JOb losses totaled
56,000 and 955,000, respecuvely.
The modest job growth paralle_ls
the slow pace of the economic
recovery.
The Blue. Chip survey, releaSC?&lt;~
Sunday, proJects the economy will
grow .j ust 2.9 percent .this year.
Altho~gh 1t would be the fast~st
pac:e smce a 3.9 percent expans10n
on 1988, it would be just ~f of the.
averat~e growth .followmg other
recessions since World War II.

Possible landfill closings could:
hurt waste management district
CHILLICOTIIE, Ohio (AP) And last week the Ohio EPA
A waste management district in refused to allow the Triangle Landsouthern Ohio wili run out of fill' in Ross County to J:eopcn four
money if its two landfills cannot dumping areas that had been filled
and wen: cxdered closed in Decem'
operaiC.
bee.
'
The disuict Qf Ross, Pickaway,
Highland and Fayette counties
Ohio EPA Director Donald
receives iu ooly iocome from the Schreganlus said rules prohibit him
ree cbaqed to dump in the land· frOm cOIIIidering the landfdl' s ec~
fills, llilfLoma Abbott, one of two nomic benefiu.
·
in the district's office. ·
"My primary responsibility is to
ffice is using a $200,000 ptOIIiCt h1D8D health and the environment.' t he Slid.
bud1et carryover to remain open
The di~trict is appealing the
tbisl;'.Nic landfill near WI!Shing· decision on the Fayette County
ton Court House in Fayeae Comity landfdl, Ms. Abbott said.
is expeceec1 10 e1o1e af1ec the Obio
The district also wiD join other
Envimnmental Protection Agency disuicts facing similar problems to
tumCcl down a ~ to eapand ask the Legislature to .change the
the site.
way solid waste management districts R fundixl.

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