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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Southern
cagers lose ·
'
to Gallipoli~

Pick 3: 386
Pick 4: 3885
Cards:
5-H; S·C; 4-D;

J-S
Super Lotto:
5-6-10-29-38-41
Kicker: 526025

Page4

Patchy dense fog to develop
overnight. Low tonight in 30s.
High Tuesduy in mid 40s.

1 SectJon, 10 Pages. 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Vol. 42, No. 170
Copyrighted 19112

Bu.dget woes greet new
-Ohio House session

SUMMIT HANDSHAKE • President Bush,
left, shakes hands with his South Korean coun·
terpart Roh Tae-woo during the expanded sum·.

mit with their aides at the presidential Blue
House in Seoul Monday. Bush is on a three·day
visit to the country. (AP)

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) The House began the new year
with a new problem- a $457 million deficit in a state budget that is
less than six months old.
Gov. George Voinovich fixed
the amount of Lhe recession-caused
deficit last week and proposed a
number of actions that, along with
$196 million in spending cuts he
already has ordered, will require
legislative approval.
The Legislature has been in
recess since November.
The House has scheduled a scssian for today. The Senate is due
back Tuesday.
.Voinovich said his top fmancial
advisers were preparing a package
of "revenue enhancemems" for
consideration by the House and the
Senate.
But he said he won't submit the
bill until after he has conferred
with House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg, and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, on cures for the two-year state

Voinovich proposed a 12-centsa-package increase in the 18-cent
cigarette tax as pan of his plan. He
also wants to end a 1.5 percent discount given retailers foi collecting
the state sales tax.
He also has'resurrectcd a oncedefeated proposal to turn Ohio's
state-run liquor stores over to privatc operators in a move that would
end about1,000 clerks' jobs.
Voinovich said if the Legislature accepts his proposal and
authorizes the usc of $100 million
in a budget stabilization fund, the
state can finish its fiscal year June
30 with a balance of about $16 mil·
lion.
The House was to vole today on
a minor land sale bill and a proposa! to permit the fingerprinling of
juveniles charged with crimes that
would be felonies if committed by
an adult.
On Tuesday, the House considers a bill establishing a new standards board that would assume
responsibility for teacher certification in Ohio.
Among unresolved issues lrom

November were various proposals
to draw new congressional districts
for the state, which is losi ng two of
its 21 districts as a result of national population shifts noted in the
1990 Census.
The Democrat-controlled House
and the Senate, dominated by
Republicans, are expected to
approve separate plans for consideration by a joint coofcrencc commitlec which wiU seck to work out
differences, leaders said.
. Redistricting faces a tight
timetable because the filing deadline for congressional scats is Feb.
20. The Legislature may extend the
deadline.
Otherwise, Riffe and Aronoff
said they would like to see passage
of other maJOr proposals dealing
with cam paign finance reform
solid waste management and health
care reform.
Aronoff also mentioned a bill,
requested by_Voinovich,-giving the
governor hm 1ted authority 10
appoint members of the stale Board
of Education, who now arc elected
in each of the state's congressional

Bush exhorts North Korea C~t;id;~;~e~ schools to tri;;tbudgets
to allow nuclear inspections ma;!Ja;:~~faJ~~~~s!~o~?; ~~~r~~~~~:~~Jl~~~i~:~~~

·
dB h ·
th .. 1
·
f
ordered.!&gt;Y Gov. George Voinovich district's budget
SE0 UL, South Korea (AP)Wh1le students bumc us m on ~ n~~ car quesuon, peace u1 has Ohio school officials looking
"Th. · h. d "II
Pres.1dent Bush today offercdto effigy and 20,0 farmers tned to mtenu~ns,_ andalsosoughttocor- rorwa stoo f)!tewithless.
IS IS a ar P' conmn1
1mp~ve-&gt;~on~•sour 'f.elauons' wt\h ... m..:el:t.on Parbame~t to·d~oe··;~•"~t·a•·:mtOO•!I~ ~rd- f~r 1od1, ·• '""V'otbovlc~/ri:~'iiilil!'iiproj'ec'l~ ~ ·
No~ Korea 1f~ongyang honors a the U.S. pressute, Roh sa1d that VIdual nghts, human nghts.
.
ed $457 million budget shortfall, "iscal) year," Grier
prom1se to peflllll nuclear mspec- South Korea was expenenc~g ecoBush also made, a strong pitch cut $88.8 million in aid for ublic ' '
·
11
1 k
tors and P~?Jects more ''peaceful nomiC hardsh1ps and had 1mple- for openmg Korea s markets at a schools and $57.2 million rcfr col- ar~~~;u~~h~~~~~ ;r:~ 0 ;~;ur
mtenuo~s toward Its Northeast mented an austentr_program.
Chamber of Com".'~rce luncheon. leges and universities.
budget is tied up in personnel, it
As1an neighbors.
He told Bush: Because of our He urged Seoul to address funda·
Akron Su erintendent Tcrr
·
Bush coupled his renewal of peculiar situation, it will be exceed- mental problems thai stifle the abilP
Y doesn't leave you a lot of opuons,"
America's commitment to South ingly difficult to fully open our ity of foreign firms to .compete in
Korea's security with a prediction: markets in the immediate future. "
Korea-:- problems hke certam
"Korea will be whole again. I am
Bush blended economiC and unJUStified standards and regulaabsolutely convinced of it."
security issues in his talks with Roh uons, cumbersome customs proce"It's very possible the governor
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Security issues played heavily in as he passed the midway point of a durcs, delays 1n scheduled rcduc- Ohio's tax commissioner supports will accept this recommendation,"
Bush's talks with Presidenr Roh 12-day, 26,000-mile Australian and tions of duties and financial rcstric- a recommendation for a new study said Curt Steiner, Voinovich's
Tae-)Yoo against a backdrop of Asian tour that will be culminated lions."
of the state's economy and tax deputy chief of staff.
excitement wrought by the move by his visit to Japan starting Tuesin apparent reference to Korca:s laws.
Tracy said a commission could
toward accommodation by the two day.
rcsJstancc on droppmg trade barnbe
composed of 12 to 15 members
Commissioner Roger W. Tracy
Korcas after 40 years of staring one
crs because of its own belt-tighlen· said Ohio's economy has changed representing business, labor, farmanother down over a demilitarized
Tense talks awaited his arrival ing, Bush told the Chamber of greatly in 25 years. The last com- ers and other sectors of Ohio's
zone.
•
for meetings in Japan, America's Commcrce,- " Whilc the notion of plete study of the state and local economy.
Bush joined Roh in offering to fiercest international trade rival. fr ugality isn't inherently bad, tax stru ct ure was comp leted in
The review could include the
cancel an annual joint U.S.-South Bush has conceded during the import restrictions hurt your own 1967.
possibility of eliminating business
Korean military exercise_ which course of this trip that he' s been consumers and weaken the compel"This would be more than a tax equipm en t and inventory taxes,
North Korea views as an act of heartened by some recent indica- ilivcnessofyourfJ.rms."
study," Trncy said. "It would be a broadening the sales tax, allowing
aggression - in exchange for tions of willingness by th e
After an address to lhc National ge neral attempt to base line the voted property taxes to increase
Pyongyang's willin~ness to follow Japanese to work toward lowering Assembly, Bush new by hclicopler Ohio economy, and the n place the with in nation and eliminating autothrough on a comm1tment to Seoul their trade surplus with tho United to Camp Casey, home of the 2nd . tax system on top of it and study matic real cstale tax reductions.
to permit nuclear inspectors.
States.
Infantry Division, to address 3.500 the equities."
The I%7 study was done by the
The national news agency YonRob and Bush brieny answered U.S. uoops in a hangar at that base
Gov.' George Voinovich is con- Ohio Tax Study Commission . It
hap quoted an unidentified foreign questions at a joint news co nfer- near the demilitarized zone sidering appointing a commission recommended:
ministry official as saying that cnce at the Blue House, the South between north and south. There, to do a new study, an aide said. The
-Enacting a stale income tax;
North Korea was expecled to sign a Korean counterpart to the White Bush called the Pyongyang govern- study was recommended by the
-Broadening th e base of the
nuclear safeguards agreement this House in Washington.
mcnt "a failed regime that pro- Ope rations Improvcmept Task state sales tax:
week. But the report coulil not
Bush pledged to maintain the duces only misery and want."
- Authorizing IQCal sales taxes;
Force.
·immediately be conftrmed. .
U.S. mililllry comm itment here "as
On the touchy subject of U.S.· long as there is a need and we arc
South Korean trade relations, Bush welcome."
·
was rebuffed by Roh in his bid to
He also said that U.S. relations
gqt Korean agricultural markets with North Korea co uld improve if
opened to U.S. rice exports.
Pyongyang showed commitment
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) __:If - lo the raises for elected officials, . declined comment. .
The two-year budget agreement
elected state officials receive a 5 Cabinet members arc being paid an
percent pay raise, state workers average tif 5.4 percent more than reached last summer by Voinovich
sho uld get similar c,onsideration, · Cabinel officials were paid under and the Legislature contained no
raises for employees.
sa1d the head of Ohm s largest pub- former Gov. Richard Celeste.
On Monday, Voinovich ordered
lic~ mployces' union.
"Ins gross ly unfair for the
$196
million in spending cuts and
Rruscs
that
took
effect
last
week
administration
to
ask
our
members
"We are excited about becoming a part of the Meigs County
proposed
" revenue ·cnhanccfor
Gov.
George
Voinovich,
memto
work
harder
and
smartet
for
no
, business community," said Robert E. Evans, president and chief
·mcnts,"
including
increases in !he
bers of the_Legislature and other increase in pay, while they calmly
· executive officer of Peoples Banking and Trust Company, in
state
taxes
on
cigarettes
and alcoofftc1als w11l cost the state about accept huge increases in pay for
i annouQcing the opening of their 15th banking office.
holic
beverages.
10
help
balance
the
$330,000 this year.
themselves," he said .
Located in Middleport, the latest facility is the result of an acqui. " ltsccmsinconsistentforpolitiCurt Steiner, Voinovich 's budget by J unc 30.
sition of an existing office of Central Trust. The full-service office
Cl8ns
to
say
that
there
is
no
money
deputy
chief of staff, on Sunday . Voinovich's $5,000 rnise boosts
is Jocated.at97 Nlirlh Second St. and the office manager is Em ma
for
state
employee
raises
and
then
Paugh.
·
to pocket 5 percent increases for
Evans said .that the office conti~ucs the commitment of Peoples
themselves," said Ronald AlexanBanking and Trust Company to Southeastern Ohio and ~ belief in
der,
president of the Ohio Civil
the potential for the area. Peoples Bank has been a part of the MidService
Employees Association.
Ohio Valley since 1902 and plans to continue d~ccting resources to
The
union,. which represents
CINCINNATI (AP)- A fedcr- ings, which arc part of the commisthis area of Ohio and .West Virginia, Evans said.
~5,000 state employees, and
a! appeals court rejected the city's sion's process of deciding whether
People~ Bancorp Inc., the parent c9rporation, is a Southeastern
administralion officials have been ... ~li!.JO ~top slate regulators from to grant any or all of a utility' s
· Ohio bank holding company with headquarters i'o Marietta. Banking
in contract .negotiations for three ·beg1nmng hcanngs today on request to increase the rates it
: offices are also in Athens, Belpre, Caldwell, Chesterhill, Lowell,
months. The state .has proposeil a Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.'s charges business and residential
· McConnelsvill~. Nelsonville, and The Plains.
two-year contract, with no raises. · request for a $204 million ~lectrici- customers. The city appealed to the
6th Circuit on friday after U.S.
The union is seeking a three· ye;tr tyrate increase.
a~reement, with a 3 percent raise
The ruling by Judge Nathaniel District Judge' S. Arthur Spiegel
Lhlsyear,a6percen(increaseinthe R. Jones of the 6th U.S. Circuit had denied the city's request.
'
Cincinnati city· solicitors arc
second yeaJ and cost-of-living Court allows the Public Utilities
, ' Two peop!c wero .trcated fOI' minor injuries after a two-car crash
·among
opponents of.CG&amp;E's proadjustment in the third year.
Commission of Ohio to go ahead
· at the mtei'Section of state routes 124 and 338 near Portland Sa!urposal
to
increase electricity. ratell111The proposals have been sub- wiJil scheduled h~ngs in Colum. day afternoon.
,
least
21
pe,rcent.- including an
mitted to fact-finder Hany Graham, bus. '
.
, AccOrding to a reWrt_from the Gallia-Meigs Post of.the State·
average
of
25 percent for restdeQJones, in ll'·ruling .filed today,
Htgh.,vay Patrol, Ronald R, Eakins, 35, of Pomeroy was eastbound · a ~levelan~ State University ifidustnal relations professor. He is said the city tailed to support itsw tial customers.
· on Route 124.' stopped at the intersection of routes 338 mid.124 and
The Cincinnati utility says it
expected to issue·his report Jan. 21.
request for the appeals court to pre·
ulied into lhc path of a vehicle driven by Mary C. Evans 26 .of
·needs
the higher rates rriostly to
. ·~n
~~· - d
'
'
'
Graha'!''s ~~ill be binding vent the utilities commission from
.
,
, .
.\
offset
costs of maintaining and
unless 11 •s reJected by 60 percent going forward with lhc hearjngs.
. Eakins and .Evans were transporttd 10 V~Jerlns Mcmoiial H:ospi·
operating
the $3.4 billion Zimmer
of the udion membership or the
The city had ·wanted a tempo·
tal by ll)e· Me1as County Emergency Medical Service. Botlt were
Legislature.
I, rary resll1ining order to, prevent lhc · coal-fired gencrati'n'g plant at
'
•
C,pntlnued on page 3
''
Moscow, Ohio, which CG&amp;E owns
· Alexander
said that in addition
PUCO .from conducting
.
'
. ' l the hear.

nc said.
The Ravenna district in northcast Ohio stands ui lose $120,564.
That is enough to pay for five bot·
tom-scale teachers and their licncare just samples of
things we will have to do without
or find another way to buy,"
Superintendent Tom Kin g said.
Continued on page J

State tax chief supports study of system

1£ ~TS IN F6Ail NlD
ANGEli:, !JUT IN HIS

WE'AI(ENED 6TIITE H£ IS
EASILV SU&amp;DIJED. "CAi.M
YOUK5ELF, • ~INCE
VIILIIINT SIIV5.

-Converting the inheritance
to an estate tax and;
- Repealing the intangibles tax
on stocks and bonds.
The Legi slature eventually
adopted all of those rccommcndalions.
Tracy and Steiner said a new
commission wouldn't necessari ly
make specific recommendations.
"No conclusions sho uld be
drawn from this other than thi s
administration is looking at everyth ing." Sleiner said. "We arc trying to examine why the slate is
doing the things it is doing ... .
"There arc no plans to increase
any of the major taxes in th e
stale,'' he said.
Tracy said officials need find
out if Ohio is going to be competitive in the next century.
1ax

Public union'official criticizes raises

....---Local briefs-·---.
Glad facility part of community .

his salary to S105,000. He said he
would donate the amount of the
increase left af~er taxes to charity.
The raises for the governor and
L44 other elccicd officials resulted
from a 1988 law that automatically
boosts their salaries on Jan . I of
each year.
·Secretary of State Bob Taft and
State Sen. Scott Oelslagcr, R-Canton, have said they will not accept
thei r raises, citing the state's budget crunch.

Effort to stop state?s rate hearings fails

: T,wo'injur~d
.

in Saturday crash

~

'

'· '

.

..

,I

•

.

'

'

wi th partner utilities the Dayton
Power &amp; Light Co. and Columbus
Southern Power Co. But the city of
Cincinnati says CG&amp;E has failed to
show a need for a rate increase that
large.
The Dayton ·and COlumbus utili~­
ticsalsp have rate increase requests
·pending before the PUCO because
_of the · Zimmer project, which
began commercially gererating
electricity in March 1991. The
requests were med in April 1991 .
The CG&amp;E rate request would
affect about 575,000 business and
residential electricity customers in
Ohio. The utility also serves some
customers in nearby pans of northern Kentucky and· southeastern
Indiana, but they would not be
affected by this rate request.
'

�,.

'.

Monday, January 6, 1992

Commentary
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publkber
PAT WHITEHEAD
.~~~~~~.t. ~.bRsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
lhe American Newspaper Publisher 'Association .

LETI"ERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned lettel1i will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not pe11ionalities.

GOP optimistic
about court chances
Ry ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Republicans say they arc not worried about Democratic attempts to ex ploit conflict-of-interest charges against an Ohio
Supreme Counjusticc and a scuffle he had with another justice.
Rex Elsas, the state pany's executive director, was asked about claims
by Ohio Democratic Chairman Eugene Branstool that Justice Craig
Wright has disgraced the coun and should resign.
Wright, a Republican, denied charges that he violated judicial canons
of ethics for not excusing himsel f from hearing cases involving a compa·
ny in which he holds a financial interest.
He also pointed out that the scuffle he had Nov. 5 with Justice Andrew
Douglas, who also is a Republican, led to public apologies by both . He
and Douglas said their differences have boen resolved.
"Craig Wright and Andy Douglas will not be on the ballot this year,"
said Elsas, when asked about the Democrat1' apparent plan to publicize
the problems in trying to recapture the coun in this year's elections.
Republicans control the coun 4-3, having wrested it away from the
Democrats in 1986 when Chief Justice Thomas Moyer unseated Frank
Cclebrezze.
Moyer campaigned on charges that the court had losl respect and dignity under Cclcbrezze because of pQiitical favoritism and vindictiveness
agai nst ccnain lawyers and judges who were his advcrsanes.
Moyer's scat is one or three at stake this year, which is why Branstool
laid Wright's problems at the chief justice's doorstep.
"Craig Wright has 'trampled on the judicial canons of ethics long
enough, and now it's time for Chief Justice Moyer to do something about
it," Branstool said.
He said the situation is more deplorable bocausc Moyer in 1986 " rode
in here on white horse, promising to restore integrity."
Moyer declined to comment, except to say: " The Democratic cam·
paign has started."
Wright also accused Branstool of political posiUring.
Elsas said Branstool's attempts to compare the Moyer court to the
Celcbrczzc coun were ridiculous.
"Clearly. there IS a big contrast between the respect for the coun now
and the dark davs when Cclcbrczzc was there .1nd politics dominated
every rule," he said.
Elsas said voters will recognize the difference.
Branstool headed a'Screcning com miucc that will recommend to the
pany's State Executive Committee next week that it endorse Judge Roben
H. Gonnan of the 1st Ohio District Coun of Appeals, Cincinnati, to run
against Moyer.
The screening committee also will recommend c ~dorsemcnts for the
scats of Justice Robert Holmes, a Republican, and Herbert Brown, a
Democrat They are not seeking re-election.
The panel recommended Judges Francis E. Sweeney of the 8th Ohio
District Coun of Appeals, Cleveland, and Leslie Brooks Wells of Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, for those scats.

Letters to the editor
·A misunderstood disease
To the editor
I wrole to you yesterday feeling
as I often do. I wanted to give up
once again. Mcnlal illness is some·
thing I've had to live with most of
my life.
It is a very mis understood and
unsure disease that controls the
human mind . It forces people to
become very irritable, irresponsible, and unpredictable. I have been
fighting a struggle with mental illness for 34 years seeking professional help 111 various institutions
and clinics.
They try to treat the sy mptoms
but arc unsure of what is exactly
provoking the sym p1oms. After
years of research I have come to
understand it isii!t chemical imbalance in the beam. It is trca!able but
incurable. In the proper environ·
mcnt one can live a not nonnal but
full life. One can learn to accept it
for what it actually is and treatlhe
disease with confidence in knowing
that things will get better.
To be sick is sometimes 0. K.,
but to be sick and )101 know what is
causing the problem , well , it 's
something that ·is unbearable. I
have been forced 10 Hve in a peni·
tentiary. A world all by iiSclf, full
of anger and hOSiility, never know·
ing what lies outside your door,
never knowing what's on lhe mind
of your 100m male. It creates an
envirpnment where it is impossible
for me w remain calm and stable.

I cannot gel better. I don't have
a chance to live a life of hope and
success. But! do have a dream . I
have aoocaled mv conviction an~ r
pray the court finally recognizes
some of the aspects or mental illness. I only as k a chance to be
understood. I am not a criminal. I
do not commit crimes. What I am
is a very wi sunderstood person
with a di sc~ of Lhe mind who is
trying to better understand it and
conJrol it, not let it control myself
as it was for most of my life.
But how can I be expected to
control myself if I have no control
· over my environment? Prison is not
the answer. How can a doctor give
an accurate and professional opinion of somconc's state of mind if
he waits two months later to exam·
inc them? He can't and his opinion
could never be accurate or allowed
to be used as evidence against
someone. I might be menlally sick
and disturbed but I'm not stupid
and neither arc you. So where does
. that leave me? What can I do to
protccl myself? I will try an appeal
but I actually don ' t think I'll be
protected and get to the truth in
cpurt. I know the truth.
loses P. Scou
P.S. I'm continuing the medica·
tion and the therapy but! nceil des·
perately to be released SQ I can
receive treatment in a more stable
environment

Dear Edito{'
There is another fund raising
, organization soliciting and leading
people to believe they may be affiJ.
iated with the American Cancer
Society. It i~ called the CanGer
Fund of Amenca.
We do not know to what ex lent
that they help patients, or of their
-·-reputation, but we do know this.
·
They are in no way associated wilh
The Ameri~an Cancer Society,
which is one of tile 1•1 philan-

WASHINGTON- When !mel- · year to fonn his own public rela·
da Marcos returned to the Philip- lions firm . James hired another
.pines, it was easy to make a mis· White House veteran, Spencer
take and assume that the White Geissenger, to help with the logisHouse was rolling out the red car- tics and the Philippine press.
pet for her noiOriously well-dressed
Neither was on the government
feet.
payroll when they accepted the
Her much·publicized homecom· Marcos assig.nment. But sources
ing, code-named "Operation Beau- told our associate Jim Lynch that
ty," was handled by two recently the White House didn't like the
departed White House operatives appearance of a oonnection. James
who did advance work for Presi - still does some advance work and
dent !lush. And she was accompa· scheduling for the White House on
nied by a squad of American body· a free-lance basis. Both he and
Geissenger were considered to help
guards.
The connection was not lost on run the advance work for Bush's
current White House officials who Asian trip.
Judging by Imelda's splash, the
were nervous that it would send the
two
men know how to make the
wrong signal to the Philippine government. The Bush administration most out of a trip. Imelda had a
has worked hard to c.ement ties $2,000·a-day suite at Manila's
with Philippine President Corazon Plaza Hotel and 56 rooms for her
Aquino and wipe away old mem()- entourage.
Although many of Imelda's loy·
ries or America's allegiance to the
regal and greedy Marcoses, Imelda alists cheered her return, she was
not coming as a conquering heroand the late Ferdinand.
She is awailing trial in the
ine.
Imelda's homecoming was .coordinated by Gordon James, who left Philippines on charges that she
the White House advance team last helped her late husband sica! the

country blind. She was acquitled on
similar charges last summer in
New York when she stood trial for
allegedly stealing .more than S200
million from the Philippine treasury, using most of it to buy jewels,
art, buildings and shoes in the United SLates. .
,
The Wh1te House has always
had a soft spot for.lmelda. She is
one of the few ftrstladies on which
· the Central Intelligence Agency
bothered to work up a full profile.
Once a glamorous beauty queen,
lhe ambitious Imelda charmed U.S.
Presidents Nixon, Carter, Reagan
and Bush. She still loves to drop
their names.
In a conversation with a U.S.
congressman in 1985, Imelda
sketched a map of the world wilh
the Philippines at the center, and
then satd that her "friend,"
Richard Nixon, once confided to
her lhat the real reason the United
States got into the Vietnam War
was to protect the Philippines.
Imelda later bragged that
Ronald Reagan advised her to tell

ACc\l·Weather• forecasf for

~~~Yea~? 'rieL~,! Fo&lt;JGtiT a w~:u~,

f{el.eas.eD Tile HosTaGes, e,.,DeD
aP8RTH€.1D, STaRTeD MiPe8$T Peace
1aLt&lt;S, e~D€.DTI{e CoLD WaR,

Di$BZIND€D T~e $aVi~ 11/-JiON ••.

.'

her husband not to lift the onerous
·martial law in the Philippines. During Imelda's trial in New York, her
attorney claimed that then-Vice
President George Bush had advised
the Marcoses to invest some of
their overflowing cash reserves in
U.S. real estate .
.During the Marcoses' long
reign, Imelda was a notorious
shopaholic. While poverty raged in
the Philippines, she junketed
around the world on shopping
spr~s. demanding the royal treatment wherever she went. More
than 100 advance people and press
aides were sent to make sure the
red carpet was ready for her 1982
visit to the United States.
When the grand dame herself
arrived with 300 pieces of luggage,
she checked into a $1,400·a~day
suite in the Waldorf Astoria in New
York.
James 11nd his team made sure
Imelda's return to the Philippines
from exile in the United StaleS had
the same golden touch. But the
press coverage oouldn 't be plUMed
as easily as room service. Local
newspapers chronicled the boorish
behavior of Imelda's American
security guards, who were threat·
ened with arrest for not having lhe
proper work pennits.
James told us that he has done
some advance work for lhe White
House on a volunteer basis since he
left full-time government service.
He characterized his wotlc for Imelda as "nuts-and-bolts" details such
as baggage and flight logistics. And
he said he was unaware of any concerns at lhe White House about
what his involvement might imply
to the Aquino government.
A spokesman at the Philippine
Embassy said that the government
was not aware of lhe ties thatllllelda's handlers had wilh the White
House. But, he said, the presence
of so many Americans escorting
her home undercut her credibility.
Resentment of the United States
because of its ties with the Marcoscs is fading with time, the
spokesman added.

I~&gt;oes

through more in the mimner or
"Roseanne's" husb3f!d Dan Connm's or Kevin's father Jack Arnold
in "The Wonder Years" ..:.... or
(heaven help us) AI Bundy of
"Married-with Children."
Allowing for exceptions, even
the most im~rfect parents among
us love theu children. But they
show it in different ways - some
ways beaer than others.
Psychologist Kevin Leman says
he often asks
who say they
love !heir chi dren, "Do you love
lhem enough to discipline them?
Presbyterian minister John
David Bunon recalls when he was
·
· ·

TOda
· y ID
• h.•.•s.t__0 ry·
J.l

CIS

w~ihor Leo Bu:e:•s molher

n--'·.
l ot it down to t-li
wu
...,....
Leo pew up in Italian family. Hla mother, who·believed lhat
~ - ~ c~~~e-aU for any diseae, would line all the children up
eacb IIOming before ichool and
rub
ptlctbeir
on anecb.
handterdticf and do
., ilnlltiMI
• '"We lllled it." •YII Leo. "We

*"

trcaLC!l and released.
Three passengers in Evans' car, Nicholas Triplcu, II months,
Matthew Triplett, 4, and David Triplett, 37, all of Portland, were
rcponedly uninjured in the wreck.
·
Damage to Eakins' 1978 Dodge Aspen was listed as disabling
and moderate. Damage to Evans' 1979 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
was listed as moderate.
Eakins was cited by the patrol for driving under the influence, no
operators license, failure lo yield when turning left and no seat belt.

Carper segment will air on Jan.16
A segment of the CBS· TV series "Top Cops" that was to feature
Ohio Highway Patrol Sgt. Grant CaJllCr, originally scheduled to air
Jan. 2, will be seen Thursday, Jan. 16 at 8 p.m. on WOWK·TV,
Channel 13 in Huntington.
Carper, now with the patrol's Athens post, is the recipient of two
awards for valor and action above and beyond the call of duty for
his handling of a gun·wielding man in a domestic dispute. The incident occurred in early 1985 while Carper was assigned to the
Portsmouth post.
Carper, 32, was assigned to the patrol's Gallia-Meigs post from
1988 until1990. He has been at Alhcns for the last14 months.
The "Top Cops" segment will feature Carper in a monologue,
followed by a re-enactment with an actor ponraying the trooper.
The segment was to have aired last week, but a CBS entenain·
ment spokesperson said a change of plans occurred Dec. 23, apparently too late to change the listing which appeared in 7V Guid£.

Partners in education to meet
Business represenlatives and ecucators involved in the Meigs
County Parnters in Education Program arc urged to attend the program's "kick orr• on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Meigs High School. A
special motivation speaker will present a special program and par·
ticipation oontracts will be signed.

Library movies announced
The movies "Incident at Hawk's Hill" and "Library World" will
be shown at the Pomeroy Library on Saturday and Sunday at2 p.m.

and Middlepon Library on Monday at 4:30p.m. All area children
are invited to view the movies free of charge.

Board to organize
The organizational meeting of the Meigs County Public Library
Board will be held on Monday at I p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

.Marriage license issued
A marriage license has been issued in Meigs County Probate
Coun to Tommy Nolan Lane, Jr., 19, Pomeroy, and Melinda Sue
Lemley, 19, also of Pomeroy.

The Meigs County Democratic Pany Executive Committee will
meet on' Thursday at7:30 p.m. at CaJllCnters Hall in Pomeroy. Regular business will be conducted and a recommendation will be made
for a member of lhe Meigs County Board of Elections.

5

(t!SPS 21S.INIO)

Publiahed nery af\emoon, Monday
thro"'Jh Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahina

Comp•ny!MulUmedia Inc .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, 1'11. 911'lo2tM. Second cla11
pootaP, P!'lid ot P.......,, Ohio.
Member: Tho AMactAo.d Preu, Tnlond
Oatly PreU AaociaUon and 'he Ohio
New.,aper A11octatton, N&amp;tional
Adv8rUIInJ RepresenUIUve, Branham
Newopapor Sileo, 733 Third Avenue,
New YOrk, Now YOrk 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send ad"'- chonp to
The Dailr Bonllnel, Ill c ..ut Sl.,
l'oiiiiii'OY, OHio 46769;
IVIIICJUmON iiATBB
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&lt;&gt;no wo.ik, ..........~ ..............................lt.eo
0no M..,lll ...................,..................... l8.116
One , ......... .............. ......................183.20

.

IINOLICOPY

.PIICI

Dally.................................... ,....--..211 c....

. c~ we .fiii!Sl1101lea¥e out
pasSion m our mtimale relalionshi~~velist Lois Wy~ ~es the .
Dmllll' ~in these Wllldl:
'

s . - noldealri.. lo poy Ill• cani·
er mi.Y remU U. advance dit'ed Ia The

Dalllpolll Dally 'llibllftO . . . 3.6 ... 12
moatll bull. Credit will be II••• eanior

eoch-.

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.

No aubeerlptlona by mall pol'll!itted In
, tnt'- wttere home carrier aefYtce Ia
'41VIf~~·

me ,

'Weu your rubbaund bloW your ;
I P,"up iD •Iovin&amp; family, ,et ,.- ;:;;;· AnCI wbat teepa love ao ·
I,t:lllt ~ber "!1 modlor ever
n. fllctllil&amp; ,..,.., often 1
11)'inJ !love you . 10 me or my love II rem~tuous lltlllaltiloua
sisllr. AQd I never heard my father ·~ me qUICk. .. • '
'
sheiO'Iedus.

The Coast Guard searched for
more than SOO drums of arsenic
that ~ere lost off the Northeast
coast m a weekend stonn that top·
pled beach houses and splintered
boardwallcs. There was no immediate health threat, satd Mtchael Sui!ivan, a spokesman for the Maryland DepartmcntofEnvironmenL ...
Heavy snow south of Mammoth
Lakes, Cahf., caused the crash of'a
private plane Saturday lhat killed at
kast _three people. A founh person
died·rn a boat off the Southern California coast.
A major stonn was expected to
pummel 'the interior Western states

\

·~

today . A foot of sn~~ was expected
in the eastein Sierra and in ans of
Utah, Nevada, Oregon and J~aho.
Temperatures were expected in
the 20s in Minnesota and Montana;
in the 30s in the Rockies · and
Maine Wisconsin and 0 go . ·
thc40~in New York, theO~io '!;,~~
'ley, the uppet'"Plains and the far
Northwest; in the 50s in Washington, D.C. , New Mex ico and the
Tennessee Valley; in the 60s across
much of the South; and in the 70s
in parts ofAorida and Texas.
The high for the nation Sunaay
was 73 degrees at Brownsville,
Texas.

. •

'

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Columbus Public Schools
Superintendent John Middleton
said his district's loss of $2.74 mil·
lion, or 2.51 percent of its state aid,
''certainly will have a very negative effect."

A

d th

rea . ea s·

Harry Bright

w-.......................... ,. . . . :. . .

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.

LEARNING TO BE RELIGIOUS • A Rus·
sian Orthodox nun, left, reaches out to properly
position the hands or a child waiting to go up for
Communion during a Christmas Eve mass at a
Moscow church Monday. The Orthodox Christ·

On Saturday at 4:17p.m., Rutland squad went to Happy Hollow
Road. Connie Mash was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
5:49p.m., Racine units went to
State Routes 124 and 338 for an
auto accident. Ronnie Eakins and
Mary Evans 'were taken to Veterans. AI 6:12p.m.. Syracuse assisted at the scene of the accident and
too1c Matth!)w Triplett and Nicholas
Triplett to Veterans. At 9:04 p.m.,
Rutland unit went to Zion Road.
Bob Purtell was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Qn.Sunday at 7:54 a.m., Rutland
units went to Stale Route 143. Junita Carr was taken to O'Bleness
lv,lemorial Hospital. At 8:42 a.m.,
Tuppers Plains unit went to State
Route 124 in Reedsville for Mar·
garet Cauthorn, whq was transpon·
·ed to St. Joseph· Hospital. At 9:25
a.m., Middleport squad went to
R~ili'oad Street Hazel MeHaffey
was taken to Holzer. At 11:52 a.m.,
Middleport unit went k) Bailey Run .
Road. Odessa Cart was taken 10
Holzer.
,
. At 12:!16 p.ni .. Rutland unit
went to Sialc Route 124 . .Ernestine
Williams was taken 10 Veter.ans. At
12:44 p.m, Pomeroy unit went 10
Route 33. Diet Finlaw was taken

L 0ttery DUm berS
Super Lotto
' 5-6-10·29·38-41
(five, six, ten, twenty·nine, thir·
ty-eight, forty-one)
The jackpot is $4 million.
Kicker'
~-2·6-0-2-5

(five, two, six, zero, two, five)
Pick 3 Numbers
3·8·6
(lhree,'eighL six)
Pkk4Numben

'3·8·8-S
(three, eight, eight, five)

·,-

.

mas is celebrated on Jati. 7, according lo the old
religious calendar and this is the first year that
the holiday is officially recognized by the state.
(AP)

Gamsakhurdia, loyalists flee
Georgia as opposition takes over
TBILISI, Georgia (AP) - Presidem Zviad Gamsakhurdia, his loyahsts provtdmg cover wuh heavy
gunftre, fled th e cap1tal before
dawn today af1cr a bloody twoweek swge by oppostuon fighters.
The rebel leaders who ousted
G3Jnsakhurd1a had set up a rulmg
milttary counctllast week and srud
today they would try to form a
CIVIlian government that could call
new elections as early as Apnl.
One of the main rebel leaders,
Dzhaba Ioseharu, also: . . .
-Rat sed the .POSS1b1h ty of
estabhshmg a constlluuonal monar·
chy. He sa1d some members of the
Bagrauom famtly , thefonncryeor·
g1an royalt~. have expressed mterest tn retunung.
.. . .
- Welcomed paruc1pauon m a
new .government by fonner Sovtet
Fore1gn Mimstcr Eduard Shevardnadze. Gams!lkhurdta had often
criticized Shevardnadze , a Geor-

Harry G. "Goo(' Bright, 63, of
Henderson died Sunday evening
Jan. 5, !992. at his home.
'
He was a retired employee of
American Car and Foundry in Huntington.
Born July 1 1928 in London
Ohio he was a 'son of'Reba (Jones}
Bright of Gallipolis Ferry and the
late Randall Bright.
He was preceded in death by 8
grandson, Michael Bright, one
brother, and a sister.
Surviving in · addition to his
mother are his wife, Gcorgieanna
(Rayburn) Bright; a daughter,
Grace Wardell of Letart; two sons,
John R. Bright or Hurricane,
Michael G Bright of Millwood· 8
brother, Roben "Bob" Bright ' 0r
Ga11ipolis
Ferry· and
two
grandchildren
'
The funeral will be Wednesday 2
p.m., at lhe Crow-Hussell Funenu
Home with lhe Rev. Marlin
Campbell officiating. Burial wiU be
in lhe Concord Cemetery RenderVeterans Memorial
'
SA 11JRDAY AD~ISSIONS soFriends may call at lhe funeral Glcnna R ummcl, Syracuse, and
home Tuesday, 2 to 4 and 710 9 Connie Mash, Middleport.
SA 11JRDA y· DISCHARGES ·
p.m.
M:i[y Haggery and Harvey Earlcwine.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Richard-Finlaw, Pomeroy, and
10 Veterans . .At 1=44· p.m., Middle- Ernestine Williams, Rutland.
pon squad wentlo Overbrook CcnSUNDAy DISCHARGES
tcr. Pauline Hudson was treated but None.
not transponed. At 4:26 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to State
Holzer Medical Center
Friday, January 3:
· Route 7. Georgta Hamric was taken
to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi·
Discharges
tal. At 4:58 p.m ., Racine squad
Barbara Barr, Donald Fowler,
responcdad to I.:ong Run Road for · Virginia Howe, Mrs . .James Jacobs
Max Folmer. He was taken 10 Vet- and dau~hter; Kenneth Kerns,
erans. At 7:05 p.m., Rutland unit Corey Re1tmire, Erin Reitmire, and
went to State Rpute 143. Pearl Dottie Vaux.
Estep was taken to O'Bieness. At
Births
10:06 p.m., Middlepon squad went
Mr. and Mrs . Richard Stout,
to Overbrook Center. Betsy Heck son, Rio Grande and Mr and. Mrs.
was taken to Pleasant Valley Hos- Jamie B!!ker,' son, Jackson.
pita!.
Saturday, January 4:

EMs SquadShave bUsy Weeken d

The Daily Sentinel

•,

Cincinnati Public Schools will
freeze hiring and spending begin'
ning Monday to absorb the loss of
more than $2.3 million in state sub·
sidies, Superintendent Michael
Brandt said.
"If it's not an absol~te nccessi·
ty, we won't spend it," Brandt
said.
Sch.ool administrators and principals will be asked to suggest
other cuts, he said.
The Cincinnati school district's
loss of $2.3 million in basic aid
was the third·largest cut in the
state, behind Cleveland and
Columbus.
Education officials on Friday
released a partial list of cuts for
each oflhe state's 612 school dis·
tricts, totaling about $64 million.
Not included in lhe list are $24
million in line items, which help
finance preschools, driver eduea·
tion and other programs. That is
expected to cost Cincinnati schools
up to $300,000.
"We laid off 33 staff members
last spring. There are no buses for
high school. We've cut class offer·
ings. What's left?" said Joseph
Epplen, superintendent of Mounl
Healthy schools in suburban
Cincinnati. His district will lose
more than $141,000.
In Franklin County, school districts will lose as much as 6.2 per·
cent of their state aid.

Hospital news

Democrats to meet

'

leli~tuoul, ltllltdniOIIII, •

Wednesday, fair and milder. A
chance of showers west lale in the
day. Highs in mid-40s to mid·SOs
and lows in the 30s. Thursday, a
chance of showers. Highs in low
40s to low 50s and lows in the 30s.
Friday, fair. High in upper 30s to
mid-40s and lows in upper 20s to
mid-30s.

Continued rrom page 1

say "I love you" to me or my sister. And 1 never heard my father
say "I love you" 10 my molher.
But my father was lcind, considerate and affectionate.
Ma be •
th' 1
Y we ve got IS ove·business all wrong. We associate- it too · '
much perhaps with a sentimental · • ·
oti011 he 115
· ·
·
'
em
w
n
pnmary
meanlflg
may be something else.
Liza Howard, one of the characters in the novel "Bodies and
Souls," ponders the difrcring:
meanings of love ~d charity and;
comes to lhe ~CIUSIOII thai "what
.
eel
IS extend to another person in
matrimony is not love but charilY.
Love is too fickle . It changes
shapes. It is that agreement to be.
charitable ill of one's life to one
other penon that .""~vides die real

• -r.n..
•• I ................
.,...., M_... ,,. -

Cloudy

.----Local briefs... --..

.
George R. Plagenz:

-..---.-

Pt. Cloudy

0,992 Accu·Weathef, Inc.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partial clearing with
patchy dense fog developing
toward morning. Low in the low
30s. Tuesday, partly sunny and
milder. High 45-SO.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Fridar:

.

Of

Sunny

-----Weather-----

RECESSION
RECEDES, .
RETURNS: America's crisis of ·
confidence proves President Bush's :
biggest nemesis, as even pro-Bush :
business leaders balk at investing. ·
The recession eases, but only a bit .
- then returns in the third quarter,
as a decade of Reagan·Bush :
deficits ~ave left the president :
unable til jump-S181t the economy.

.

Ice

VIS Associated Prr~u GrsphicsNft

:rcd·~ c1on 't'!'&gt;thaL' · &amp;~~:::le~~~~·
S wou ~y hu 1 up! -for cozy heart, tl~~e~ on the cbeet, ·
WOuldhe
.

Snow

Showers T-storms Rain Flurn'es

at the last minute because "he ·
knows he races annihilation if war
comes.")
DEMOCRATS NOMINATE
BILL CLINTON: The governor of :
Arkansas becomes his party's pres- .
idential standard-bearer - and, in ·
a bold stroke, asks Gen. Colin :
Powell, chairman of the Joint ;
Chiefs of Staff, 10 be his vice presi- ·
dential nmning mate. Fearing.Pow- .
ell may decline, Clinton, who never·
served in lhe military, readies an :
alternate pick - Sen. Bob Kerrey, ;
his campaign rival, and a Vietnam
war hero.

bondwe~.............

record low was 20 below zero in
1884.
.
.
Sunset, tomght w1ll be at 5:20
P;m . Sunnse.on Tuesday will be at
7.53 a.m. ·
.
Around tbe nahon
A savage storm that pounded
Southern California and was
blamed for at least fo~r deat,hs
e~ up today after bnngmg h~vy
ram to th~ drought-plagued reg1on.
Arcttc atr chtlled the northern
Plams.
.
The rest .of the natiOn was
cloudy but m1ld, wuh temperatures
above normal. Sk1es were fatr m
New York C11y.

year."

·

10 or II years old commg home
with his first week'.s wages of $3
from picking cotiOn.
His mother said to him
"Tomorrow you' Lake 30 ce~ts of
that ro Rose Hill Ba{ltist Church."
Even the children 10 the family
were expected to .tithe.
·Jqhn David wanted to protest
this unwelcome disciplinary action·
"
that clished with his burgeoning
capitaliJt leanings. Then he remembered tiW''argw'ng wilh my mother fill usually hazardous to my
heallh."
Nor are they necessarily the best ·
parentS who end every conversalion with their. children by saying
"I love you." There are often better ways of letting your children
know you love them that don't
involve using those three little

.

Continued frwn page 1
"Butlhis is not my fust time as a
superintendent through a round of
budgetary reductions on behalf of a
governor. It's not something lhat
anyone looks forward to - I guess
all of us are going to have to help
bear the brunt or a bad eConomic

W.VA.

the perfect parent really exist?.

Fred MacMurray was "pop cui·
ture's perfect pop," said People
magazine when he died. Of-course,
those of us who are real fathers
know there are no real fathers like
Steve Douglas whose role Mac Murray plar,ed on lhelong-running
TV series .·My Three Sons." He
was too perfect.
We have even tried those two
MacMurray trademarks - the
cardigan and the pipe - to try to
,-nroJ'ec t th.e~roper MacMurray
msouciance. ut to no avail.
While MacMurray "made
fatherhood look as easy as ftxing a
leaky faucet," we have muddfed
.

38°

.

By The Associated Press
";-cloud deck that has covered
,Oht.o th; pas~ few days should
be!tn•m meve ou~ of the area on ·
Tuesdar as a cold front ap~roac~s.
the Nauonal Weather S~rvtcc ~d.
But temperatures will conunue
to be a.bou~ 10 ~grees above nor!Dal, wtth htghs mthe40sand lows
1n the 30s lhe rest of the week. .
Forecasters satd ~n advancmg
low pressure system lilcely.w~II pro·
.. duce some shower acttvlly by
Wednesday. ,
.
. The record htgh temperature for
th1s. date at the Columbus weather
station was 69 degrees m 1946. The

Cuts ..

By Martin Schram :

.

PA.

•I Columbus I 43•1

Here's what you can expect in 1992
Peering fearlessly forward, we Kremlin Wall. Now Castro ftnally tactical nuclear weapons sold out to
can clearly read the headlines, if gets the message - so he declares oil-rich Arab terrorists. The !error·
not the fine print, on the biggest that new Cuban realities make it ists hide a dirty little nuke amid
news stories of 1992:
possible for him to keep his innocent civilians. They are lhwanPEACE ERUPTS IN WEST promise (the one we heard in 1959) ed not by a surgical strike but by
BANK: In a move as stunning in and bring a modified, limited global publicily - Hve revelations
its own region as the collapse of democracy to Cuba. He wants to on CNN . The shock wave unites
the Soviet Empire was in Europe make himself the ceremonial fig- even old enemies behind demands
and Asia, Israel's Yitzak Shamir urehead, a sort or EI Comandante that the weapons be surrendered
and Palestinian leaders. forge a Emeritus. The tipoff of the new era and dismantled. The United
stunning peace agreement. The comes when Castro heralds the Nations, led by Egypt's Boutros
West Bank becomes an arrival of major-league baseball in Ghali, docs the job. But a shaken
autonomous - but forever demili- Miami - and his surprisingly world enters a new, sober age.
tarized - homeland for the Pales· warm words extol the pleasure it
(J{ e interrupt tomorrow's headtinian maJ!?rily who live there. The will bring Cuban·Americans living lines to remind you of yesterday's:
accord will be guaranteed into per· there. The remainin~ unkept One year ago, you read in this
petuity by the United Nations. The promise at year' s end IS John F. space that, in 1991: "Mikhail Gorfate of Jerusalem, holy city of ene- Kennedy's three·decades·old bachev , no longer able to keep
mies for centuries, .is the one pledge made to the surviving together his economically crumblood-s pattered flash point that Cubans of the Bay of Pigs brigade, bling and nationa~ly clamoring
defies solution, but all parties con- as they unfurled their banner in union, will resign' ; "the Soviet
sider a proposal to create a perma- Miami's Orange Bowl December Union will break into a oonfedcra·
nently divided city of autonomous ~9. 1962: "I can assure you that tion of nation-states": "the world
sectors, co-existing under an inter- this nag will be returned to this will worry about who controls the
national flag.
brigade in a free Havana.' '
nuclear weapons"; and here at
A NEW CUBA IS CON ·
NUCLEAR BLACKMAIL home, "the recession, which Bush
CEIVED UPON A CASTRO PLQT EXPOSED: Our worst officials were late to recognize,
CONVERTIBLE: For years, Fidel nightmare comes perilously close will be worse than they feared."
Castro couldn't read the handwrit· to reality, as U.S. and Israeli inwlli- There were also a few lhat this
ing- on the Wall, lhen he couldn't gence agents discover that jobless pundit hopes you won't recall,
see the wall at all, as the Berlin ex-Soviet nuclear engineers and esp&lt;;eially his notion that Saddam
Wall collapsed, followed by the field commanders who controlled Hussein would pull out of Kuwait

IMansfield I 43•1•
...

IND.

'·

•

e

By Jack Anderson
Michael Binstein

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-3

Clouds expected to m..ove out of area Tuesday
-

Tue,sday, Jan; 7 .,

Are U. S. ties to Marcos finally fading?

· ·
By Tbe Associated Press
. Today is Monday,Jan. 6, the sixlh day of 1992. There are 360 days left
m the year.
\
.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
·•
.
Fifty years a¥0, on Jan. 6, 1942, the Pan American Airways Pacific
thropic organizations recognized Clipper arrived lll New Yprk after making lhe first round·the-world trip
nationwide, not just by our govern- by a ~o~ercial airplane. The trip, which required more thad 200 ho~
ment but by you, our people.
of Oy01g tlme, began on Dec. 2, 1941.
·
.
Those friends and charitable ·
On this date:
people of our tri-county area who
In 1412, a~ording 10 tradition, Joan of Arc was bom in Domremy: .
receive lhis type of mail from the
In 1540, Kin&amp; _Henry VIII ~f England married his fourth wife, Anne of
Cancer Fund of America, please Cleves. The mamage las~ $tx months. · . .
. .
nole lhey are in no WliY associated' . In 1759, George Wash01gton and Martha Dandridge Custis were m$rwith your American Cancer Soci· ned.
.
. .
et
__
.In .1838, Sl!l!luel Morse pub!tcly demonstrated his telegraph for the
y.
John R. Hunnell - ·first lime in Morristo~. NJ.
IJO'High Street
In 1912, New MeXICo beca!ne the 47th state.
. "
Pomeroy
In 1919, the 26th JWCSident of the United Stales, Theodore Roosevelt
died at his ho!ne ln Oyster Bay, N.Y., it the age of 60.
'

Not associated with ACS

OHIO We attH~ r

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, January 6, '992

'

Pomeroy-M.Iddleport, Ohio

gian whom some have mentioned States would have to await estabas a possible successor to Gam- lishmcnt of a civilian. government.
sakhurdta.
..
. Georgia and the three Baltic states
- Satd the mtiltary counc.ll arc the only former Soviet
would seck to bring Garnsakhurdia republics thai have not joined the
back for a poss1blc tnaL He was new commonwealth.
believed to be m nctghbonng Azer- Qismisscd talk of Gam ,
bruJan. .
·
. .
sakhurdta contmuing the fight.
- Satd any mov e to JOtn the "No, we arc not afraid. He has no
Com monwe~lth of Independent support base. There will be no civil
..J
war," said Ioseliani.
loseliani said opposition fi ghters
let Gamsakhurdia escape from the
Parliament building, where he had
\
taken refuge in a makeshift bunker
Am Ele Power ........... ..... .34 1/8 and dcf~ndcd by loyalist troups. At
Ashland Oil ...................... 29 7/8 least 70 people were ktlled m the
AT&amp;T .............................. .391!2
fig~~ng. .
.
Bank One ................. "...... .S l 1/2
We satd we were lcavmg them
Bob Evans ........................ 24 1/4
an cxll on purpose, so that they
Charming Shop.................. 23 1!2 could leave without blood5hed,"
City Holding ..................... l7 3/4
Ioscliani told rcpon~rs. "The psyFederai.Mogul .... ............... l5 3/4 chologtcal and m1111ary pressure
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ..... 54
made the president take the choice
Key Centurion ...... .............15 1/2 we offered him."
Lands' End ........................ 29
Gamsakhurdia, 52, was persuadLimited Inc.......... ............ 28 314 ed lO abandon hts stronghold under
Multimedia Inc ............. ..... 24 l(l the Parliament building through a
Rax Restaurant.. ................ l/4
scheme dev1scd by the man he
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ................ 36 l(l appointed Sunday to commimd his
Shoney's Inc ........ .............. 22 114 troops, sources said.
StarBank ................. .......... 25314
His flight followed a heavy
Wendy Int'L: .................... I~/S rebel po~nding of the building wilh
Worthington Ind . ............... 22 114 rockets and machine-gun ftre .
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
Az rb .. • T
c alJan s uran news agency
quotes pro~ided /Jv' Blunt, Ellis
said 12 cars carrying GamsakhurandLoewiofGa/lipolls.Robbins dia, his family and supporters had
&amp; Myers is ex·dMdtnd tl/day.
arr. ived in Gyandzha, Azerbaijan.

Sfo',CkS

New federal law in effect

A new federal Jaw now in effect information on State law covering.
requires that all adults I)C inronned advance statements and on their
of their rights .to make decisions policy toward honoring them.
about their own medical care,
Pe!crson emphasizes that the
according to Ed Peterson, manager decision to develop a written state·
of the Athens Society Set drity mcnt to control medical trcuuncnr
Office.
is strictly voluntaf)l . If someone:
The new law, Peterson said, makes an advance statement, thai.
concerns "advance directiv-es'', -document can be changed or can-·
which is government wording for celed at any time. The important
what is commonly known as "Liv- thing to remember is that the
ing Wills" and "Durable Power of advance dircclive allows a person
Discharges
Auorney foi Health Care ." An to say "yes" to treatment wanted
Melvin Carter, Mrs. Sam Cor- advance directive is generally a and "no" to treatment not wanted.
fias and daughter, Carla King, Mrs. written statement that a person
The new Federal law docs not
Dennis Richmond and daughter; completes (most 'Often while that require that Slates enact any partie·
Katie Taylor, and f$s. Davis Tul- person is in good health) and that ular legislation , The attual sub·
loh and son.
details how medical decisions stance of the state laws .conccrning
Births
should be made on .his/her behalf advance directives remains a matter
Mr. and Mrs, ' Christopher should that person ~orne unable for the states and will differ.
Mullins, daugh~r. Pt. Pleasant.
to make decisions for him/herself. ,
Peterson $Bid people who
Sunday, January Sr
The written statement "may also more infonnation on advance ·State- ·
Dicharges
' • name a representative or proxy to mcnts should conlacttheit personal ·
Mrs. Jamie Baker and son:· Ray make lhe person's wishes know.n to · phHiCians or the care facility
Pickens and Gina Wallace.
providers of heallb care services. .· where they will be treated. People
Births
.
The new law requires most hos- eligible for medical assistance
Mr. and Mrs. Rog~r Cottrill pitals, nursing facilities, hospices, should contact the State Medicaid •
son, Albany and Mr. and Mrs. home carp program. and hea~th Agency forfurther infoimatioli.
Blaine GilHam, son, Minford.
maintenance. organW!tions to g1ve

need

..

' '

�'

\

: M,onday, January 6, 1992

The Daily SeBtmel

Pomeroy~lddlaport, Ohio

~~--------~------~~~~~~~

Meigs freshmen drop games toN-Y, Belpre

Monday, January 6, 1992

Pige-4

NFL playoff slate

Alcorn S&lt; 82. Gnmbllna S1. 79

Ccnl Florida11, N.C.-Gieensboro S1
Coll of Charl~~on 63, N.C.-Wilm-

Saiurday'11eores

iJtB!onl3
Delaware Si . 14, Bethune·Cookpli R
78

Wu hington24 , AU&amp;nta 1

Denver 26. Housi.OI\ 24

Sundly'l KOrtl

Dct.roit 38, Dlllu 6

8l

Conference cbamplonsblps
Sunch~tJan.ll

DcnvcratBuff'lllo, 12:l0p.m.
Detroit t t WuhinJLon. 4 p.m.

61

At Mlnneapollt
AFC ch•mpion vs. NFC champion

S11nday, Fcb.l
At Honolulu
1\FC VI. NFC

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENC)'
Allanllc Dlvitloa
W L
Pd.

9

.690

0 01too .. .......... ........ l9 12
Miami.. .......... ........ 1S 18
Pltilodelplti• ........... t4 t8

.613

GO
l
7

.45S

Ctnlra l Dl\'lslon
Chingo .. ......... .......25 5 .833
Cleveland ..........M..ll 9 .700
Milwaukee ............. l6 14 ~ 533
Dcuoit........ ............ 17 IS .531
Atl1nta ....... ............IS 15 .500
lndiana .:........... ......13 19 .406
Chldott.e ..................9 24 · .273

j Gallia
0

:

0

the usual offensive outpulfrom
Roush and Bailey. D"e t{t.its
in ability to penetrate , Bailey's
inside game was limited, while the
Gallians also pressured the perimeter.
Osborne sa id, "We kept do ing
what we had to do. Coming in to ·
the game we felt we had to do two
things, Lake away their three pointers {by pressuring them) and not
allowing them to IJ:Cnetrate. Those
are th ings that they can do very
well. Tonight our defense took that
away. I thought we played a really
good defensive game."
Ryan Young broke the scoring
ice at the 7:10 mark wh en he
scored on a baseliste inbounds play.
Lisle countered at t~e 6:55 mark
for the Lie, and Roush hit a 10-footer to give SHS a 4-2 advantage.
Scott Jividen then tied the score
4-4 on a baseline jumper before
Bailey grabbed a steal and drove it
in for a lay-up to make the score 64 SHS at the 5:45 mark. Tha~ however, was Southern's last lead , as
GAHS scored eight un answe red
points, six by Jividen and two by
Barnes.
SHS did not score from the 5:45
mark to the 1:28 mark "'hen Cald·
well called a time out to th wart
Gallia's momentum. Lisle capped
th e fr ame wi th a dri ve and the
frame ended 12-8.
Although the score was low , it
did not all come from the charac·
teristic Blue Dev il pati ence . as
many shots both ways rimmed in
an d out of both buckets. Many of
those misses were lay-ups tipped
by opposing forces or missed from
intense defensive pressure.
Eric Hoffman powered inside to
start the second canto before Roush
nailed a three-pointer to cut the
Blue De vil s' lead to 14- ll -

Blue Imps hand Whirlwinds
32-30 defeat Saturday night
Led by Jason Cas tor 's eight
points in the fi nal round, the Gallia
Academy Blue Imps rolled 10 a 32·
30 non-league win over the Southem Whirlwi nds Saturday night.
The game, followed by the varsity contest, was the second of a
l!lplchcader, in which the school's
freshman teams played in the opener at 5 p.m.
Southern 's freshmen won that
game 46-45, setting the stage for
what was to be an exciting evening
of high school basketball.
The reserve loss was tl]~fust of
tho season for Coach Scott Wickline's crew, now 4-1 overall and 40 in the SVAC.
Gallipolis took an 8·7 led in the
opening frame, however, the game
continued in the same close fashion
anll Southern knotted .the score at a
... hopping 11:1Hit the half.
Ace ustomcd 10 a much faster
paced game, Sout.hcm suuggled to
gain momentum, but after three the
scored stood Lie4 at19-19.
The final chapter resulted from
.good teamwork from Gallipolis.
'but had great individual impact
from Castor, who netted eight of
Gallia' s 13 fourtl1 q'uaner points.
GAHS won the final. chapter 13-11
·and the game 32-30. ·
'
·Castor led with 12, while Ouis
sOmerVille added 6, Jeff Pope four,
Chris Roetteker and Mike Eachus
had three each, and two apiece
from Lany Howell, and Otris WaltctS.

Utoh ........... ............2t

Academy takes charge in 61-50 win over Southern

_By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Whi'le claiming the upper hand
• in a defensive standoff in the first
: hal f, the Ga llia Academy Blue
•• Devils mai nu incd t.hc same intensi: ty th e secon d half en route to
. claim ing a 61·50 non-leag ue tn :: umph over the Southern Tornadoes
·: Saturday night in the Charles W.
__.....; Hayman gymnasium.
· GAHS is now 5-3 overall and 2: 1 in SEOAL action, whi le Southern
: IS 4-3, and 4-0 in the SVAC.
. After Saturday's victory, Blue
o Devi l head coach Jim Osborn e
: (who picked up viclOfy No. 301 )
,o said " I think defensively we set the
: temPo and offensively we did what
we wanted. We wanted to be
. patient and get our shots near the
baske t. This is always a good
game. (So uthern head coac h
Howie) Ca ld we ll alwa ys ge ts a
good effo n from his playcrs... thcy
play hard."
Southern 's de fe nse was equally
intense , forcmg 16 turnovers, but
Gallia 's patience on shot selccuon
from within the paim was a key to
the victory.
There was significant offensive
valour also as GAHS had a balanced effort led by poim g uard
Chad Barnes, who neued 20 points.
He hit 8- 13 from Jhe field for 57
percent and 4-6.from the line. Scott
Jividen and Enc Hoffmilll eac h netted 10 points, with Ji viden hiuing 4
. of 7 from the field, including Gal. lia's lone three pointer, and hit -1 of
2 at the line.
Hiuing 5-6 from the line, South em senior Scott Lisle led the Tornadoes with eleven poi nts, and
point guard Jeremy Roush chipped
in wi th 10.
Two prominen t factors, shown
by the box score, was the lack of

For Southern RyiiJI, Williams
egain.lcd the way with ·n. Robert
Rieber added 8, Andy Grueser 6.
'!'renton Cleland 4, and Kenny
Rizer ()lie.
.
: ,.
Coach lonatlion Rees'. Cyclones
,.hipped up a 46·4~ win ,in the

Southern 's closest bid the remain- tions that would put them over the
hump. SHS was close at 28-24 and .
der of the game.
Later in the sec ond qu arter. again at37-32 at the 3:08 mark, but
GAHS outscored SHS 8-2 as SHS that marked their last run.
One pivotal play came at this
again went three minu tes without a
tim
e (37-32) when Br ya n Hall
sco re. That resulted in a 26-14
score , but a follow up jumper by drove the lane and made the lay-up
Bailey made it 26-16 at the half. under pressure. An SHS player
With two seconds left follow ing an hammered the backboard , which
Evillls' steal , SHS had a chance at resulted in a technical foul . Jividen
the line to pull two points closer, drove through on e of th e foul
aucmpts, GAHS got t.hc ball at half
but came up empty handed.
Barnes had 10 at the half and court, and Barnes finished off the
Hoffman had eight. Li sle and drive with a lay-up. The live point
Roush each had five at the half for tum-around put the score at 42-31.
-5HS never got closer than cigfit.
SHS.
The fourth frame was academic
Three -pointers by Evans and
Roush opened up the second half as GAHS went up by 58-42 and
for SHS. pulling them to within 61-45 margins before SHS scored
four at 26- 22. Qu ickl y GAHS some quick buckets in th e last :23
called time to again pressure the seconds.
Caldwell stated, "Th ese arc
perimeter.
always
very intense games. I like to
The remainder of the third frame
play
Gallipolis
because of the calwas quite competitive, but SHS just
could not Lake ad vantage of si tua - .ibcr of basketball they have and we

learn a lot from them. I have th e
greates t res pect for Coa ch Jim
Osborne. I learn a lot fr om him
each year and we as a team learn
from playing them . What we learn
teaches up the th ings we need to
improve on for the t o ur~ c nt. I
give much credi t to thC(Gallipolis
kids fo r their hustle."
·
GAHS h1t 21-43 overal l for 49
pe rce nt, hittin g 1-5 three point
attempts. and cann ing 17-23 at the
line. SHS hit ll -27 for 4 1 perce nt,
but hit a meagC( 6-22 from three
po int rilllgc, and 10-13 at the line.
The Ga ll 1ans had a 33-25
rebo un ding edge led by Young's
eight , Hoffman 's seve n, and
Barnes' li ve. Bailey led SHS with
six , whtle Lisle and Russell Singleton each had li ve.
GAH S had nine steals, 19
turnovers, 12 assists (three each by
Ji viden and Miller) and Hoffm an)
and had 17 personal fouls. SHS
had 10 steals (Eva ns fo ur ), 14

sec ret weapon , und erclassman
Tony Sch wendeman, who tallied
·16 points, including four three poin ters in the third quancr alone.
The young star led the reserves
with 20, but had only one quarter
remaining for the varsity game. At
his third-quarter pace he was on a
pace that would have netted him 64
points for the game.
The balanced Wj ldcat auack
saw Larry Brooker add 12, Tyson
Powers with eight, Chad Poncha.k
six. il!ld Jeff Brooker five.
Fast-breaki ng and " hittin g
every thing," according to Ullman,
the Eagles roared to a 24 -8 first
period lead. Although EHS padded
its shooting percentage with some
bunny shots, it hit some equally
tough shots and conti nucd at the
same pace throughout th e game.
The second period was pretty
much even (Waterford taking an
18-17 advantage), but Waterford
could not gain any ground, as EHS
clung to a healthy 41 -26 lead at the
half.
In the third frnme, the tide soon
changed, mostly in pan to t.hc prolific performance from Tony
Schwendeman, who sparked an 8-0
run at the Eagles early in the third
fram e, and led them to a 27 -15
advantage in the· frame. His four
three pointers gave the Wildcats a
huge lift.
Ullman commented that
Schwendeman's effort was no
fluke, "it was an outstanding effon.
His shots were not cheap...Wc had
a hand in his face and he still nailed
his shots. We're fonunate he had

frosh game as Mason Fisher ncucd
13 points and Jeremy Hill added
II.
For Southern Eddie Friend and
Grant Circle each had eight, Aaron
Hoback four, and Donald Shaffer
two each.
For Gallipolis, Brett Baker had a
game-high 20 points, followed by
Seth Davis with 10, Dylan Evans
with seven, Eric Roderick with six ,
and Ryan Barnes with two.
Southern had rallied from a 2428 halftinle deficit to Lake a 35-34
lead in the third frame.
Fi sher had seven of his 13
points in the final round and all but
two came in.the second half. Jeremy Hill had four in the finale ,
including a crucial'2-2 from the -----SVAC cage standings _ _....;.__
foul line to help win the game.
•
Southern' s reserves will play
(Overall)
Alc~andcr at Wellston on Wednes·
Team
W L PF PA Symmes Valley...2 I 125 133
day as a make-up foe the Prep Clas· Oak Hill ..............4 2 393 366 NonhGallia ........ 2 2 150 150
70 73
sic (varsity only) game with Southcm ............. .4 3 464 41 3 Kyger Creek ...... .. ! I
Alexander played at Ohio Univcrsi· . Eastern ......... :..... .3 4 460 513 Hannan Trace ...... ! 2 118 149
ty in Dccenber.
Nonh Gallia ........ 3 4 389 456 Oak Hiii .............. I 3 171 176
The Blue Imps go to Warren Hannan Tmce ......2 4 338 431 Southwestern .......O 4 118 158
Friday wilh a 5·3 overall slate.
KygerCrcck ........ l 4 258 275 TOTALS .......... 14 14 1141 1141
Quarter totals
symmes valley .. .I 4 253 333
Blue Imj)s.............8 5 6 13 .. 32 Southwestern-...... .0 5 265 368 ·
· Saturday's scores
Whirlwinds ..........7 6 . 6 11 = 30
Gallia Academy 61 , Soutliem 50
South Webster 65, Oak Hill61
{Conference)
,
GALLIA ACADEMY ()2) Eastern
80, Watcrfad 71
Sou
them
..............
4
0
299
211
Chris Roetieker 1·0·1=,3. Larry
Howell 1.().0=2, Jason CastoJ 3-2· Oak Hill ..............3 I 277 257
This week's·games
·
0:12, C::hris Walters 1-Q.0.2, Jefr Nonh Gallia ........ .3 I 246 235
Tu.esday - Hannan Tra~e aJ
p 2-0-0=4, Chris Somciville 3· Hannan Trace ......2 2 249 247
Russell
(Ky.); North Gallia a1
EasJcm
................
2
2
237
258
0~6. Mike Eachus 0-0·3•3 . ,Symmes Valley .. .1 _2 167 191 • &lt;:hesapcake;
New Boston a1 South·
TOTALS -ll·z..blZ.
western;
OVCS
a1 Symmes Valley
Kyger
Crcclt:
........
o
3
145
·
162
. ·Fmthrowl-4·13 (30.8%)
Friday
Ealtem
at Hannan •
Southwestern.,
.....
0
4
210
269
SOUTHERN (30) -.Ryan
Trace;
Southwestern
at Kyger
TOTALS
....
"""lS
15
1830
1830
William$ 4..().3•11, Robert Rieber
Creek;
Symmes
Valley
11 Nonh .
3-0-2-8, Andy Grueser 3-0-0:6,
(Reserves • SVAC only)
GaUl!; Southern al Oak Hill
Trenton Clelarld 2-0-().4, Kenny
. . W L PF• PA
Sat1rday - Kygcf Creek at
Rizer 0-0-1•1. TOTALS- 12-0· Tmn
· Soulllem ...:.,.......A 0 220 . ISS I.-anton St. Joe; Hannan at S()jlth6=30.
EasJcm ................~ I 169 147 westem
Free throws - 6-12 {.50%)
0

•

only one quancr left. "
Al so cru cial in Wa terford 's
comeback was its more aggressive
penetra tion, whi ch drew several
fo ul s fro m th e hustli ng Ea gle
defense.
In the third frame WHS hit 9-11
from the line. The cunain fell on
the third frame with the score 56:"
53 .
Waterford went ahead 58-55, as
th e scored was tied or changed
hands on nine different occasions. ·
Eastern led 68-65 nearing the
two-minute mark when WHS chose
to put th em on th e linc. Al though
EHS did not perform well overal l
from the line, as the game neared
an end, EHS hit five of its last six
attempts.
Perhaps the game-saver came
from Charlie Bissell , who wi th 47
seconds left scored a clutch basket
and completed the three-point play
to erase th e Eagles ' two-point
defi cit and put EHS ahead 76-7' .
The last three points cam e fr om
Chad Savoy who iced the game at
80-71 ncar the buZ7.cr.
Eastern won the battle of th e
boards 32-27 led by Charlie and
Tim Bissell with nine and eight
respec ti vely. McC utcheon had 10
and Bryan Spencer,.9 for WHS .
EHS hit 2-6 thr~ pointers and
20-37 free_throws for 54 pencent.
EHS had c1ght steals, 20 tumovers,
20 assis ts (McGuire II'), ·and 21
fouls . WHS hit 16-32 from the

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 45Z4

turnovers, eigh t assists and 19 personals.
GAHS wo n the re serve game
32-30. (Sec adjoining stPry for ·
dcwils).
Gal lipol is wi ll go to Warren
Local Friday, and Southern will go
to Oak Hill.
Quart er totals
GalliaAc ademy. 12 14 21 14= 61
Southcrn .... ........ ... 8 8 20 14 = SO
GALLIA ACADEMY (61) Chad Barnes 8-0-4=20. Scott Jividen J- 1-l =l'tl, Nathan Miller 1-05=7, Ry an Young 3-0-3=9. Eric
Hoffman 3-4= 10. Dave Hager 01= I, Bryan Hall 2-0 ·0=4.
TOTALS- 20·1·18=61
SOUTH ERN (50) - Mar k
Allen 2- 1-0:5 . Jeremy Rou sh 2-20= 10, Michae l Evans 0-2-0=6,
Joshua Codner 0- 1-0=3 , Chad Wise
0-0-2=2, Michael Russell 1-0-0-2,
Scott L1slc 3-0-5= 11, Roy Lee Bai ley 3-0 -3=9. TOTALS - 11·6·
10..50 .

•

....
'•

0

•

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

59
OT

Philldclphi_. ...... 12 19 7
Adams Division
MonLJul.. .......... 27 14 2
801ton ................ \8 17 .5
H1nford ............. IS I&amp; S
Dui1"•1o ........ ....... \3 20 6
Qucb&lt;r ............ ... t I 24 5

56
41
35
32

Z1

Chioogo .............. t717 9 43 t47t38
J7 122 131
2S 1091 S9

Smytht DlviJioo
Vancouver ......... 22 12 1
Winnipea ........... 17 17 I
C•lguy .. ............ 17 U S
Lot. Anacle. ....... 16 16 7

Sl
42
39
39

EdmonlOn .......... 16 20 6

38 14~ 159
21101173

S1nl01e ............. 929 3

145 122
127132
1471'40
144 IS I

Saturday's scores ~
Pittsburgh 3, Winnipca 2
801tm. 4, Buft'•lo 2
Wuhina,ton 2, Hanford 2, tie
New JcfiC)' 6, N.Y. R•ngers 4
N. Y. l&amp;l~nd cr~ 5, Quebec: 2
Edmonlat J, C•l&amp;ary 2
Minncsot• 4, Vancouver 3
Chi eiJO 4, Toront.o 2
Dcuoa16, St. Lov.it 2
1..o1 Anaela 1, Philadelphi• 3

•

Minlonll7, Ook Hilt l3

Mogadore Field 43, Mantua Crc.uwoocl 3S
MOI'J&amp;n S9, Crcdav i.J.Je 2A
New Al blny 29, Wonhinaton Chr. 24
New l..e.linllM 60, M•yaville .53
New1fk 51, Wonbinaton Kilbourne
34
Nc:nwbury 50, Ledgemont 28
N. C1t11.0n S4, Gnct 34
N. Olmsted 49, Rocky RiY cr 36
NCX'\hmor 6S, N. Union 64, OT
PIIJN Holy N1mc 69, Solon SI
Paui.ci. HCJU1 S4, Cclp\e 26 .
Picluinat01'16 1, Rody Riwu MaiJU·

.,.J,

fica t J6
l'lcUint 69, Buckeye V1U. 64, OT

PrelaShlwnoe42.. Tri·COW1I.y N. 26

l')molWiina v.u. 10, Kittl.,d 32
lav.M 57, Lauilville 1tquinu 44

Rolioolldocrit ll,Catl. C:.........Uct~t

eou.....

lo~bw&amp;lt , Goltom• 61

lldodolo ~.Marion"'"'· 33
JtidnoD4 H
.....,..

u. 49,Chlpin Falls 32

ltid.,.....t7l,Mol•oot32
tU..rVoJL67,c;.ntinam4l
R_...IIO, S~34
Sllod7!1do 70, Bdda..-.. 3l
Sholby67, tiffm Cot......., :IS
Sidfte1",Piqua42
s....,.JII&amp;)tlondl3, M.Gilud3l •
Sprina. Cilll. 41, o..-iew 30

·

0

Ubllty c....

s,......79,1'1.,_66
T--' At w v.-: ..1. 62

-·..-•-.· • •r·
VLC:_..,_..,l7: N-om

.

Rnenna Southeul SS. Peninsull

Woodriolp l3

A
KmtRoooooe!t7t,AbonC,..·llow·

Techlt
'-bwl Fli&lt;fiold ll, CodUrillo..
~74, Vtnl'""'l9
l.oiifta1m 10, Ctt. Eta44
110.- JOIC!ph
6t
Ubll\yOu. 7t, W......... Qu.63'
Lickiftl Hu. Sl, Joh11nowll
NoMridp.U
.
l.lllt&amp;SIIo,...61,W.,W...41
~rala Brook1ide 61, Lon~

S&lt; 6!
'
.
a .....,tot,Dalow.,.76
lloll67,BMilml69

,
• 47 v--.C"'•·IO· "I
~ ...., ,
vm-e 7l, Otorplown 73 ·
xm.,Ollolt.I1"Htmpihitol9

·

.w.....,,..v
t..kowoc•IS&lt; Eolwud 70, Clo. Weal

S•JOMpll'o96;-U. I2

'!

Mllt.cr~ - Union S2.. Nn ional Tt~i127
Minerv• 65, C•nton S. 47

Htain 13, Mohowk l7 ·
Elyril C.th. 89, 801dlwoad 76
E,.,..,....so.Foy..,.4t

La,lewoad

s,

et.Mow46

'·

~ 71, M'
- Milli(lpl S&lt; 64

. Loni1 C.lh. 7f, - y St. Muy
74
•
_
~7~•·4f ·,- ···Loui1Wlo64,
c..b.6l

MiOdlcficJd Cudinal 35, Gmwl Vall.
Middletown Fenwick 39, Fnnk.lin 29
Midpul&lt; lO,l'lml• Noonondy 37
Midview ~5. Lorain 41
Milford S2, Middletown 24
Miller City 44, Odphol Jeffenon 42

E. Kno1 110, CtO&amp;t Foli 43
Edison N. 64, Unii.Cd IAc&amp;1 57

KcacMa Allor41, C.O....W. 29
Kidfon !:hr. 79, Lwio.Wt Aquents
74,201'
!ON •--~ · "

Mu.........-"

l -~a117,Y.., • .,PI."I . ' 5 1

26

or69

p,;,.....,47,LDyett,M4.46
Jlhodololutdll,I!.Mid&gt;JilniO
IWorl4, Bu1Ttlc63

l

Conouon Vall 65,ld&amp;Jvrcrn S9, OT

J.......,ll,PoiouPtoun.W.V•, 40

t..SollftlO,IMIII
Mmtwuoa67, ForiloUh66
Maria67, _y_IIO
~ 73

•,1uu ISIIPPFm MCIPia '

37

Indian Ill 64, Jdm GkmSI, OT

Md,J2

.
·~•••ul of SUI &amp; ··
fflldlf
.... lllleu
..

Col. Hanley 65, CoL Waue:rsoo S2
Col. Rudy IS,
12

HOIII1&lt;1nSO,' Minlo«l2,0T
H~
·
73, Wlllftll4l

Budutell 91,P,..ell 96
Druol61, t..r•Y* 46
Hor.cn 61, W•per 6.5
Holy Cro~ 1 11.5, MOWit St Mar)''s,

s,,,...,..,n.
....

Manillion W11hina ~on 62 , C•mon
C1lh. 56, lOT
Medin• 48, Norwayne 43
Mentor Lake C1lh. 32, Oe. I...aW'Cl JO
Mi•misburJ 43, OJJ'ord Talaw1nd•

Grove Cit)' 61, Delaw• S3
Orovepon 63, Newuk C.lh. Sl
H"tll '90. Johnaown 3.1

Eut

Logan 6S, Upper Arlingtoo 42
London 47, OIC11 Un JY 44
lot1in Clllt 37, Lorain BI"Cd1idc 31
Lorain Kin&amp;49, Lenin Soutlwicw 36

oy l2

lin&amp;"" 12

S•turday's action

G•new vil.le 25, Mogadore 22
Onndvicw S7, Like wood 44
HU!lh 81 , Fairfield UniM45
Houllon 46, New Bremen 39
lcwett· Scio 62. Conouon Vall. 47
loh.n Glenn 62, PhilO'! &amp;
l.dlanon 49, lmlon·MOiltOC 37
L.cipaic 53, Fort Jeminp 49
Uberty Cc:ntu .52, }1}. Centra148
L.ibetty Unit11 S4, Chovepttn 40
L.iWna v.u. 39, Madison P!Jins 36
L.od i Cloverleaf 41 , Medina Buckeye

Musillion Jidson 55, Mmi.l.lon Per·

Fairfield IS, Cedarrillc 64
Find II)' 63, Fremoot :R011 60
Firt.landl63, Rl)'ria W. 4S
foR Jamin.Jt72, Lincolnview 00
Fon.l..aatnie 7~ New Bremen 43
Fl1llklin·Monroo SS, BlOOkvillc S4
Frontier 13, M1plia 74
O.Wpolis 6l,RKine S01.1them SO
O~r•w•y 66, T\liCUiwu VaU. S9
cmcnc-.oiew 52. Keni.Oft Ridac SO
CirratsbwJ Cin:wr!. S.., AU1ancC Mar·

Major college
basketball scores

G11iM 68, No rw1lk 37
Gadield HLS. 66, lndc:pendence 44
Gllfat.ld Hts. Trinity 32, NOLte Dame

Lou donwille 69, Clear F«k 41
Louilvii.J.e 63, W. Brandl 31
Lucas 42, Cmtview 23

Delphol Jeflonon 62, Owwille 61

Lol An&amp;ebat PittsbuJ&amp;h, 7:3.5 p.m.
Wuhinawn. 7:3.5 p.m.
S•n JOfe llfV1neauver, 10:35 p.m.

..~Nose
tiufi.t

38

90,JOT

Minne~CM.al\

E. Knox 5I, Millmpon 46, OT
El yria 4S, S1ndusk y 32
Fairborn 51. D• y. Me~dowd a le 24
h irlield 46, Lima 41
Fithcr Cath. 41, C1nal Wine h~lcr 28
Fremont Rou 67, S1ndusky Pcrkin l

40

D~nrille S3, New Albany 41
O.y. CoiMel Whi10 69, Lon""" 61
D•y. Pltt.cnM 65, SP!ina· Nonh 51
Dc.f~:Mce 67, Bl')'lll 37
OcOraffRivenidc 91 , J•eklan Ccnlet

'Tuesday's games
N.Y. lal~nde!lat0euoit, 7:35 p.m.
BufT~o "Philod~phio. 7:3l p.m.

..

42

Cuyohop H•. 73, CVCA 69

Tonight's g~mes
Winnipc:a •t N.Y. Jtanaen. 7:3.5 p.m.
St LoW 11 Tozonto. 7:35 p.m.

e~~

45

Cu yahop Falls '76, Akron N. 54

'-

, :r

.

,

•

-'~----~-1.1. ----tl.------ .., - - - -........-

---..

~~---

Somt.tfli.ng (jootl's JUways Coo~ng Jlt

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

Located on Rl33 beside Mason Exxon end Mason Motel, Mason, WV
Open Sunday ihrough Saturday, 10 im·9 pm

-Creamed Chicken over BiscuiiS; Soup &amp; Salad Bar ·
-Bar-B-O Sandwich, french Fries. Soup &amp; Salad Bar
-Choice ol Cabbage Rolls or Lasagna wilh Cole Slaw &amp; Hot Roll
-Bar-B-O Chicken, Cho~ of Polaloe, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
FRIDAY -Spaghelli w~h Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUIIDlY &amp;THURSDAY, &lt;HILDRIN UNDIR t21AT IREI FROM &lt;IUIDRIN'I I\IINU.
(IXCLUDIS DIIINK &amp;
UMrr I CHtLD Pll AatiiT ·
CARRY OUT

GET I0% DISCOUNT

I

t~fgOit. g CARPET

SALE

lt.

21

January Sale
Prices On Quality
Carpet For Your Home!
FREE, NO OBLIGATION
ESTIMATES
I

~

PLUSH CARPET
-Endura Collection
-Soil Resislant-FHA Approved

SALE 51499

REG. 517.00

T-.46,Saoiboml..aool44

Tri·Valley.t6. Shlridan 29

Troy49,t..wooct--32
T.....,w•C.tll.47,0ontw•y4 t
Uriliodl..ocll63,EdilonN21
Uppt~S-,7tirl2

Urtioto 67 -

uu..so.w.Jtl!-·

' 44

V-41,N. Iici...,W.!I
V...W.l1,1'oo\Lcnmiell

_____. _ . . -----...J+...-.. .

...__ ...

-Guardian 10 BCF Olefin

-Actionbac -Soil Protection

-$999
SALE
so.

YD.
INSTALLED

REG. $19.00

SCULPTURED CARPET .TRACTLESS CARPET
-8 Beauliful Colors
-Dupont Stainmasler
-S Yr. Slain &amp; Wear Warranty

~9 Colors

-Scotchgll'd Stain Release
-Performance Raled Nylon

$1599
SALE

SQ. YD.

. SALE

s .. 99

INSTALLED W/PAD

17

SQ. YD.

INSTALLED W/PAD

REG. $18.00 ·

REG. $14.00

DEEP.SCULPTURE .CARPET LEVEL LOOP/DESIGN CARPET
-DuJK!al Certified Slainmasler
-8 Colors
·
-Easy Care, Low Maintenance

$1699
SALE - ..
sa.

-Guardian I0 Ole in
-Soil Proledion
-I~ Yr. Limited Wear Warranly

0

'

Sprinaboco64,Doy. loffononl2
Suooliuoa 46. Ltbtutcl44. OT

s..,ure, AJd&gt;bol4 )9,

SQ. YD.

LEVEL LOOP CARPET

INSTALLED W/~AD

Sprina, Nc&gt;nhlt,Day. ColOnel Wltlte

T-66,Spriot. Shawneolt

REG. SlJ.OO

REG. 516.00

s
1299
SAL~.
sa.
•

YD.

YD.
INSTALLED

INS{ALLED W/PAD

•

.!~~~.~~~0 · AtiDERSOfi•s ,
Tltllly-SIIrily ., FUIQIITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOrt COVERIIIG,.JG-5:00
.
992·;,671

DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

I L..__,.__~
, ~--~-~0-----·----·-M_-~_·=_67_._~
__64______~.·.--"~
' ------~~-. ------~

I ,•-,.

•"

Coptoy49,CVCA 40

c..,,...,"''

CalJII)' 3, Edrnonttl'l 2
Chicaao .5, M&amp;nootcu 2

.,.....
•••• ,

Cn:.atline 67, Plymoulh 34
Da y. Carroll 58, Trallon Edgewood

Cot SL Qmea66, BCJ.ley 38

· · Sunday's scores

eR••••

Soulhwul
Tu u -E1 Puo 68, reus Tech 62

Clc. S1 . lpuliua 65, 801rdman 42
Coloncl Crawford 77, Crcslline 64

MllOWCOlt.Sen r.., 0, OT

•ldlb &amp;Pediatric lhrp
~.... lids
·
Ill OlllrtnEar.
. -lnfecor....s
IIJIP .

Mklwesl
DcPauiJ25 , Loyola Marymounl 93

AvOn 5'2. KeyMnc 49
Bedford Ch•ne.l83, Auro11 41
Bellaire St. John 85, Wcinoo ~ . V a. )
M.adoona 70
Belll'onuinc 65, Muysvillc 3S
' Belpre 70, Vincent W1rrcn 64
Dcdi.n Hiland 82. 01lton SJ
8clhel 67, VeruillCI 58
Ria W&amp;lnut 57, 1on•than Alder 39
Brecksville 49, N. OlmslCd 4l
Bril~ 48, Faizpon Huding46
DI'O&lt;&amp;lyn S7, Rocky R..ivtr 53
Buck eye Tnil 66, Dame~villc 52
C ambrid~e 65, Coshocton 60
C1nal WU"' chcltu 72, FW!er Cii.h. 68
Ctnton rimkc:n '17 , N. Canton 67
Carroll\00 67, E. Pale.tinc SS
Celinl 84, Sidney 49
C\1ymon~ 63, Mc.dowbrook.Sl
Clc. Calholit 89, Cle. Bcnc~hctin c 70
Clc. l..uthenn W, 82, Cle. L nhrnn E.

Norris Division
Tt tm
W L T PLI. GFGA.
Detro it ................ 25 11 4 S4 164 127
St. Loua ............ 1815 7 43 140 134

1913.

Cin. Syc1more 51 , Cin. Princeton 34

Cin. Wyoming 57,·Cin. Due.r Park 38
Cli'Cieville 46, Aden• 37
Clc. Glenville 59, Bedford 48 •
Coldwaler76, V1n Wctt34
Col. DeS•Ie~44, Col. H1nley 39
Coi.'Walten(ln 56', Tipp City 55

Akron St. V-St.M 84, Walsh Je~uit 46
Alli an c:t 58, W001ter Sl
Ansonia 73, DoWn• 71
Atthbold 67, Hillltl!' 6]

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

MinnCI(lta .......... 17 II 3
Toronlo .............. 1027 5

38

Boys

t27tll0

..

..

The central bank for tlie United
Stales of America is the Federal Reserve, which was eslablished Dec. 23,

Buckeye Local Sl , Young. South 37
Calv ary Chr. 35, Cin. Ouisti•n 23
CarrolltOn 42, Canal Fulton NW 39
Centcrl:lu!J 95, Mansfield Clv. 26
Cen tc.tville 46, D1y. Chaminade-Juliennc 36
Chippewa 55, Orrville S4
Cin: Lockland 63, Cin . hylor 32
Cin. Mc: Auley 55. Cin . Reading 43
Cin. Notre Dame 59, Cin. Withro w

Ohio high school
basketball scores

136 93
139 143
1211 34
123 140

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS' SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Krawsczyn led Meigs with 22, and
teammate Jered Hill added six.
For the second straight game,
Meigs lost 'a game that was Lied at
the half, as Belpre p_ulled away
from a 23-alltie to win 48-39. Jon
Gerkin led "Belpre with 17, and Eric
Williams added 16. Krawsczyn led
Meigs with .nine, and Ewing, Hill
and Newsome added eight apiece.
Belpre is coached by former
Meigs standout Steve Ohlinger.

49

F•r Wu t
Arizona 79, Sanu. Clan 60

46 152117
32145 165
31 107131

N.Y. III1t1dm .... 1320 6

S~nford &amp;0, Cal . St.·Nonhridgc 59
UC San1.1 Bnbua 71, San Jose St 70,

Georgi• TeCh 92, Mal)' la nd 67

53 1601 38

INSURANCE

Krawsczyn's 11 points. Jered Hill,
Jerrod Folmer and Grate each
added six.
Th e Marauders raised their
record to 3-0 with a 60-44 win over
Southern . Krawscz:tn poured in 27
points to lead the winners. Ewing,
who added 10, was followed by
Folmer (nine) and Grate (seven).
For Southern Jeremy Hill led the
way with 20 and Mason Fis her
added 19.
Nelsonville pulled away from a
20-20 halftime to beat the Marauders 47-38 - their first loss of the
year. Ju stin Gail led the winners
with 24, and Jason Gail added II.

Belldornaine 40, Sprin g. Northea st·
em37, 0T
.
Benjlming LoJ~·lndian I....lkc. 23
Bcdcohiro l3,
30
·
Berlin IWand 49, Newoomentown 35
Bexley 47, JohmtO'NTI 36
Big Walnut &amp;0, Jonalhan Alder 44
Bloooa· C~troll44, Col. R~dy 30
B01rdman 39, C1nton McKinley 33
Bolkint 48, Lim• Cath. 41
Brun1wick 6\ , P1rma Valley f qrgc

Soulh

so 1191 51

20 14 6

Idaho 84, N. Arizona 80, or
Long Beach St. 86, Pac:ific U. 78
Missouri 79. Ornam. s 8
Moo.~m 87,ldaho St 74
Nev•d• 74, Boise St 68
Pon.land 34, Ail Fom 59
San Fr1neisc:tJ 85, Columbia 74
St. Muy 't, C•l. 98, S1cramento St

Pa. 60
Gec rge Wuhingtoo 87 , St. Bonavcn ·
Me 76
Ni1gara 67 , F1irfield 62

W L T PU. GFGA
55 114 139

26 13 3
26IS 1
2314 4

Gorwtg• 67, E. W.,hingt3. 49

Eul
Siena 9S, Cani.sius 90, or
F•irle.i&amp;JI Dicltinson 62, St. Fr• ncis,

Palrltk Dlvlslon
Washingtoo ........
N.Y. Ranaen .....
Pi1ubu.r8h ..........
New Jersey ........

far West
Arizona St. 59, San Diego 56, OT
Dria,ham Young 95, TCMUfCC Tech

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

WalYQ11VillC 84, ae. So~th 71
w.UICOn 113, ~UJville 38
W1ync Trace 74, Fort Recovery 6S
Waynodllc 56, Wooctei'Triway 47
We~tlake SS , Bete~47
Wheelenburg 92, lrontoo 73
Williard 73, To!. Bowsher 64
Xenia 66, U.Nn• 54

Akron Ceru·Howcr 58, Revere 47
Akron Hoban 64, Mansfield St Peu:r's 27
Aktcr~ St.V-StM 41 , Akron N. 32
Alli ance Marl..ingtoo 53, Dover 45
Amherst62, F1irvicw Puk 46
Aoltbnd ll,Onurio 39
Alhenl46, Otillicothe 42
ALwala W11.etlooS6, Windham 39
Avon Lake 56, B1y 35
·

Sunday's scores

WALES CONFERENCE

After a 3-0 start, the Meigs
Marauder freshman basketball
team has ,slipped t9 3·2 ·with two
tough losses to Nelsonville-York
and Belpre. Team members include
Benny Ewing, Jered Hill, Jcrrod
Folmer, Adam Krawsazyn, Travis
·G
te Adam Hen drix , Todd M'uch.
c- ra ,
Dean Hankla, Ryan Dodson, Reg. p ratt, Fran k o·IC kCh. S, D3VI'd
gte
Fetty and Brett Newsome . The
team is coached by Gene Wise
h .
. d b
.'
w o 1s ass1 stc
y Denn1 s
McGuire. Team manager is Tyler
Wolfe.
The LitOc Marauders opened up·
the Season with a 50·22 win OVCr
Miller. The Marauders used bal-.
anced scoring to defeat the Falcons,
with Benny Ewing leading the way
with 10 points . Reggie Pratt and
Adam Krawsczyn added nt'ne each,
and Tra•is Grate had six.
Me1gs
· de.' eated pOtnt
· PIcasant tn
·
th e second game 51-33 behind

Utic163, Gl'lndvillc 5S
V111 Welt 109, D1y. Jeffason 84
Vandalia -Bullet 59, MiltM-Union 47
W1dawonh 6S, Akron E. 53
Walnut. Ridae54, M.i!tlin 48
Warren Kennedy 64, Mineral Rid&amp;e

Girls

UCLA 87, Georgi• 80
UNL V 71 , UC Irvine 57
U1.1h St. 88, FlCitlo St. 83
Wdler St. 81 , Monuna St. 60

In the NHL ...

SPKIAUZING IN

--.-- - -----·

68

Tuesday's games

Ttam

5I

57

Atl ariu. at New Yolk, 7:30p.m.
Cltvdand at Minnesota, I p.m.
Wu hingt.on 1\ OUcaao. 8:30p.m.
L.A. l...lkers at :O..llu, 8:30 p.m.
Se.ttlc at Denver, 9 p.m.
Orlando u PMland, I 0 p.m.

IOAID CEinFIED

'

.300

p.m.
Hou.ston It Atlantl, 7:30p.m.
Dc:Lloitlt San An1oruo , 8:30 p.m.
lndi•na•t Utah, 9:30 p.m.

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.

.

2
3.5
4
5.5
. 6
12.5

S•c;nmwto 11 Boston, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Clippers ll New Jersey , 7:30

EAR·NOSE·THROAT
AWRGY

:

.'724
.645
.594
.581
.533
.515

56

Soulhwest
Alt.-Little Rock 83, l..amar 73
AlilnJII 110, Auburn 92
Ali~nsu St 64, Southern Miss. 54
Kanus79, Southern Melh. 67
N. lowa83. TulSI 68
,
Oral Roberts 85, E. Tcnncuee St. 83
S1m Houuon St. 72, Steph en
F.Austin 45 ·
Soul.h Al1blma 88 . Baylor S9
Texu· Arl..in&amp;~-on 96, SW TeJ.u St. 70
Tens-San Antonio 67, Nonh T~: Ku

Tonight's games

0

675-1244

3.5
6.5
8
14

Sunday's scores

NASA's Goddard Institute recorded
the average global temperature in
1990 at 59.8t degrees, the · warmesi
since t880oThe British Meteorologi'
cal OHice reported that no year had
. been as warm since it began keeping
records In 1850 and said that six of the
seven warmest years of the 20th cen·,
tury .had oc~ urred during the 1980s.

1

3

.533
.431
.387
.112

New York 108,Phomix104 , 0T
Ponllnd 11.5, Philldelphia 102
LA . l.aken 123, Miami 111

Hot, bot, bot!

IMiiAIJI NlliKT TLnDU .

.548

Houstoo 112, San Antonio 110, 20T
Denver 93, Orlando 91
Uuh 113,Dallu71
Philadelphia. 112, Seatlle 93
Golden State 140, Indian• 121
Miami 110, SacrtmenlO 9&amp;

·· · ·
'

NE Illinois 92, W. Winois 90. 20T
Nebrul11 81 , E. Illinois 63
PurdUe 64, W. Michigan 43
S. lllinoU: 70, Dn.b SS
SE Millwri 79, A1.11tin Pcay 76
SW Miuouri St. 66, St. Louis 59
i t Pew's 71, Wichita St 68
Tow1011 SL 67, Ywngsto wn S1. 52
Wis.·G!ccn. Bay67 , Cleveland St. 56
Wisconsin 81, Muq ~eue63

Sat~rday's scores
New York 11 3, W.uhin,tm.99
Chulo tle 113. Phocnia. 08
Alllltta91, L.A. Clippers 9S
Minne5ou 100, BoSLon 96
Chicago 140, New Ieney 96

fl oor, was 7- 13 from three-point
range and hit 18-27 from the line,
but was only 1-6 from the stripe in
the last period, including several
crucial one-and-ones. WHS had 33
fouls. No other stats were available.
Waterford won the reserve
match 48-38 as Schwendeman had
20. Eastern was led by Raben Reed
with 15 and Wcs Arbaugh with II.
Eas tern will play at Hannan
Trace on Friday.
Quarter totals
Watcrfo rd .............8 26 27 18 = 71
Eastern ... ............ 24 17 15 24 = 80
WATERFORD (71)- Eric
McCutcheon ~ - 0-10=20. Tony
Sc hwe ndcman't l -4-2= 16, Larry
Brooker 5-0-2=12, Tyson Powers.
2-1·1 =8, Chad Ponchak 1·1·1=6.Jcff Brooker 0-1-2=5. Bryan
Spencer 1·0=2, Steve Miller 1-0:2.
TOTALS -16·7·18=71
.
EASTERN (80) - Tim Bissell
6- 1-2= 17, Jeff Durst 6-0-6=18,
Terry McGuire 4-0-2= 10, Char)ie·
Bisscll6-(l-3= 15, Chad Savoy 4-\-:
3=14, Mike Newl and 1-0-4=6. :
roTALS -27·2·20=80

UKAII Jlt&amp;TJI[[S Y.'T\Ml¥ &amp; ~DA'f ,

74

GB

t2 · .636

14
14
17
19
24

Paclnc Division
Goldm State ..........21 8
PortJand .................20 11
P'nocnU .................. I9 13
LA l...lken ............ J8 13
Se.utlc .............. ...... l6 14
L.A. Clippen ........ 17 \6
Sammenw ..............9 21

Eastern pests 80-71 win over Waterford
By SCOTT WOLFE
Going from one extreme to the
other, but still getting the job done,
the Eastern Eagles boys ' varsit y
bas ke tba ll squ ad rolled over the
visi ti ng Wate rford Wildcats 80-71
Saturday night.
The win was the first for interim
boy s' va rsit y basketball mentor
Greg Ullman, who said , ''The boys
pla yed super. I am very proud of
their perform ance. We couldn ' t
have done better."
Ullman also cited his club's outstandi ng 27-45 night from the floor
for a sizzling 64 perce nt , th at
in cluded 2-6 fr om thr ee point
range.
Eastern was led by 5-11 senior
swi ng guard Jeff Durst with 18
points and senior Tim Bissell with
17. Three other men hit double figures, including fre sh man Charlie
Bissell, who had a varsity career
high IS points and team-leading
nine rebounds.
Jun ior Chad Savoy and Terry
McGuire had outstandin g floor
games and also hit double figures
with 14 and 10 respec tively .
McGuire's unselfish play not only
put him in double figures, but ignited the EHS offense as evidenced
by his II assists. "Mac", the senior
playmaker. had a hand in 32 points,
as well as having three steals.
Likewi se, Mike Newland had
his usual good game of six points
to round out the scoring.
Eric McCutcheon paced the
Wildcats with 20 points,- including
a 10-12 night from the line, but the
big story of the night was Wildcats'

O.yton 72, EVInsvillc '70
IlL -OU.c1go 92, Wri&amp;hl St 69
WUlois SL 56, Creighton 49
lnd.i1n1 81, Cincinnati 60
lndi1111 St.. 59, Br•dlcy 49, OT
Iowa 121, Ccnlenlry 76
Iowa St. 76, Minneaota73
Loyola, lll. 94. Georgia St. 73
Mo.·Kanhl City 82, WU .-Milw•ukcc

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Houstoo ..... .... .......11
S1n Antonio .......... .l6
Denver ................... 13
Dallu .... ...... ........... l2
Minnesot.a ...... ........ 5

Piqo•l4, Groham 51
PrcbleShawncef7,Arcanwn74
R...a&lt;il!e
Eutem so. w... nord 71
R•ynotdsbu 11 st,O•h•M•49
Ridged•le S9, Nonhmor 58
River Vll.l. 67, Spltt.a Highland. 41
RooiSlown 75, Akron Hoban 6S
Rossford 71. Sherwood.Faiiviev.o 61
St Henry 57, Miuissinawa Vall. 52
S1ndy v.u. 52, Canlon Heritage 37
Shaker Hts. 78 , Clcvellnd Hta. 63
Sheridan 66, Ftirlield lJniM S4
S. Central 58, Wcrnem Reaervo 45
S. ChlrlCSLOII. SE 69, W. Je.ffen.on 57
Spring . Non.hwcnem 66, Spring.
Catholit 50
Spring. South. 80. Sprina- Shawnee 7S
Swa nt.on 75, Dclta63
TaUmadac 68, Nonkmi• 63
Tccunueh (fJ, Clayton Northmoot 58
TuslaW 67,Covcnlt)' 59
Upper Arlington 71, Col. Cent ennial

Midwest

4
9
9
10
13
17.5

Mldwsl Dl"lllon
W 1..
Fcl.

N.C. Charlene 76 , Coulal Cuolina

Muoillon0.. 92,Zaneo,;]kO;r. ~J,_

uy 59MHiillon Tustsw 67, Aleron c.,.,
McDermott· NW 66, Por.. moo&gt;h
NoueDomelO
Medina Buckejc 64, Elyria Open
Door44
MiddtCIOwn 8t , C..nton McKinleyl4.
Middletown MadiiOI'I 71. New Mianu
l9
Mount Gii"d'J,Bucl&lt;•y;:Ccnt.44
""'~"""' Vemonl4, Thomu Worthing·
Newl.atdon6t,Piymo""'l7
N. C•nton GlenO•k l 7. New
Phil._1dclphia 53
N. u,;., 88, F•irl!w• 68
Oberlin 66, Wellingtoo59
Ontario 69, Shelby 6S
o.....-Gt.ndoxf9l, Elmwood 62
P•orn•65.N.Roy•honll
P•trid&lt;Hcnry 84·Millerc;,y 71
P••ldms l3,,Antwerp Jt

Akron 82, N. llLiflois fiJ
Ball St. 81, Grand Valley St. 53
CoMcc:ticut 70, illinois 66

.438 7.5
Wuhington ............ t2 t9 .387
9
New Jersey ............ 11 20 .355
10
Orlmdo .................... 6 24 .200 14.5

Tum

~ 80, s. c.roti.. s•.76

NE l..ouiaian• 83, Nicholls S1. 74
NW LoWiiana 101 , Mc:Nccae St. 92
Ne~ Orle•ns 56, Teus-~an Ameri·
can 49
Nonh Cuolina 85, Co1ondo 64
SW Louisian• 96, Jacbonville 66
South F.loridl18, Tuas Chtilti•n 67
Tc:nnCPae 91, V•nderoill 75
Tuu Soothem 76, J•ckson St. 67
TW...e 87, t.ow.ville 83,OT
Virgini117, Aoridl St. 68, OT
Vizainia Tech 78, Old DcminiOI'I 62
Wlke Forest 73, Clem1011. S8
Williun &amp; Muy 82. Lehlg); 6S

Pro Bowl

IT'S LAYUP TIME for Gallia Academy guard Chad Barnes
(14), who jets by South ern l'rontman Russell Singleton (42) on his
way to the hoop"during Saturda y night' s non-league game at
Racine, which the Blue Devils won 61 -50. Barnes scored 20 points in
the contest.

Maine 68, Fla. lni.Cmatiwlal61
Mcmphil St. 67, Ala .-Binningham 63
MiA. Valley SL91, Sou!.hcm U. 81
Millis&amp;i · 14, Stcllon 64
,...

N. Carolina S1. 83, Davidson 63

Sunday, Jan, l6

AIRBORNE DEFENSE- Southern's Michael Evans (14) pro·
vides just that against Gallia Academy's Scolt Jividen as Jividen
looks to pass to a teammate during Saturday night's game on lhe
Tornadoes' home court, which the Blue Devils won 61-50.

Lou.U:iana Tech I04, Cent Michigan

M&lt;rpn

Super Bowl

New Yon ..............20

·

Florida A&amp;.M 80, Md.-E. Sh~n 79
Howard U. 68, N. Carolinl A&amp;.T 59
Kentucky 80, South Carolina 63

owr.1o n.Kanm City t4

Team

-Monofietd Midioon 98·, Cto.
CottirtWoocll9
_, .
Mwf..td sr. 74, Elicl• n
'IV
Mwr..ld St. p~.,·· 92, Hopewell·
I,.oud:!:.~uon Wu hinaton 45 Ak.ron
Kcnm"'44
·

· Alabuna St 10&amp;, Pniri.c View 63

Second round

LISLE SHOOTS - With Gallia Academy's Eric Hoffman (34)
on his back, Southern's Scott Lisle shoots the ball for two of his 11
points during Saturday night's game at Racine's Charles W. Hay·
man Gymnasium , where the Blue Devils posted a 61·50 victory.

The .Dally Sentinel-Page-S

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The Daily SentineJ.

By
The
Bend
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Monday, January 6, 1·~2:
Page-:-$

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Classi II

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By KIM I. MILLS
Associated Press Writer
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) Hard times have driven Steve
Goodman to try to sell hi s most
valuable possession: a 4-inch strip
of dirty tape, stuck on a piece of .
paper.
.
Goodman thinks the tape mtght
fetch $100,000 or more.
The reason for the astronomical
price? The brownish-grayish grit
on the tape is moon dust- at least,
that's what Goodman says.
" I figured if somebody was rich
and wanted a conversation piece.
that would be the thing for them. "
Goodman satd in a recent interview . "I ' m goi ng to college and
I'm flat broke."
Goodman's sam ple docsn' tlook
ltke much. But his lawyer, Keith
Hallam. noted: "If it were cocaine,
it wa ul~ put yo u in prison. It
docsn 't take very much of something to either put you in jail or be
happy."
Hallam's words may be
prophetic. It's illegal to own moo n
material, according to the Nauonal
Aeronautics and Space Administration.
"Clearly, according to our rcg uJauons, lun ar dust is government
properly," said Gary Te sc h,
NASA's deputy legal counsel. "In
general, th e sale or conversion of
government property is a violation
of criminal statu te."
.
More than 80 percent of the 840
pou nds of moon pebbles. soil and
stones ob tai·ncd dunn g the stx
· Apo llo missions is in two vaults at
the Johnson Space Cen ter in Houston. Most of the rest was loaned to
scientists for research.
Goodma n's moo n du st- if
that's what it is - was a gift from
his father 20 years ago when
Edward B. Goodman Jr. worked
for Inte rn ational Latex Go rp .. a
Delaware co mpany that made
space suits for the Apollo missions.
Steve Goodman said his late father
was in charge of processing the
Apollo 14 suits after the mission .
Edward Goodman supposedly
ran the tape down one suit's pant
leg. the way you would to remove
lint.
He then stuck the tape on ILC
letterhead and printed this message:

"Steve 22 Aprill971
" A trace of moon dust removed
from the LH leg section of pressure
garment ASSY S-N A7L-073 worn
. by Astronaut Mitchell during his
walk on the Apollo 14 mission.
"The suit came to us this morning for cleaning and I got the sample.
"Dad"
Several NASA officials said
Goodman's story sounded plausible. One person who worked for
the space suit company that subco ntracted with ILC during the
Apollo era said it was common for
uniform cleaners to take lunar dust
samples.
"No one ever said it was absolutely illegal to keep the dust," he
sa id, speakin g on cond iti on of
anonymity. " We were JUSt th rowing it away."
.Good man. who at 31 quit work
to· return to college, deci ded the
dust might be the soluti on to his
financial worries.
Although he lives in DOV'er.
Del., Goodman ran a classified ad
in The Wash ington Post: "MOON
DUST .... This is the only private
ownersh ip in the world. Best offer
over $20,000.''
About a dozen people answered
the ad, half from the news media,
Goodman said. One of the respondents was Hallam , an Alexandria
lawye r who says he and Goodman
decided to join forces.
"This is a unique thing," Hallam said. " It's wonh zero or it's
worth $1 million. We have to test
the market."
Michael Duke, a lunar rock
expert at the Johnson Space Center,
said the sample could be authenticated by looking at a few grains
through a microscope.
John Dietrich, the lunar sample
curator at the Space Center, said
his department recently authenticated a sample of moon dust that
had been bought at a flea market.
NASA confiscated it.
Lewis Rinker, NASA's deputy
inspector general , said the agency
turns such cases over to the Justice
Department for criminal enfo rcement.

Price, near Charleston, W.Va., visited their sister and sister-in-law ,
Bessie Graham and Harold Graham
family on New Year's Day. Anethei sister, Nellie Lowe and family
joined them.
Duane and Hazel Stanley spent .
a day at the home of Bill and
Lorene Scott, Nelsonville. Other
guMtS"\IIere Doug and Janet Marrell and daughters, Amy and Hannah, Davenport, Iowa.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dill, Michigan,spemtheholidaywithhersister, Becky and husband, IHII-Foley
and family.
· Alan and Kenda Armstrong, Mt.
Vernon, spent Christmas with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Donohue: Other family members
visiting were Steve, daughter,
Angela, and son-in-Jaw, Mike
Hollingsworth, who recently
returned from th ~ ir honeymoon .
Gerald and Linda Donohue served
dinner to the b'I"Oup in the evening.
Carrie Gilley, Otway, visited her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Russ
Eshleman and son.

Contest winners named
Winners of the hol iday lighting
contest in the Village of Rutland
have been announced by the Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Winners in the religious category were Keith Kennedy, first; and
David Wiseman, second . I n th e
secular category the winners were
Dav1d and Don Hyse ll , ti ed for
first. Cash prizes were awarded by
the club with SID for first and $5
for second. Judges were Gladys
Cunningham and Marjorie Felly.
The club met recently home of
t~ presiden t, Kimberly Willford.
following a dinner at Gilmore's 'in
Pomeroy.
The ho stess gave a read ing.
"Lasung Gifts," and a ga me was
conducted by Judy Snowden.
A tree donated to the Mei gs
County Muse um by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners to be auctioned
as a benefit to the museum was
returned to th e club due to lack of
acceptable bid. The tree, used in a
fund-raising project for the cl ub,
was won by Margaret Edwards.
A decorated package co ntest
was held among the secret pal

packages with ideas featuring plant
materials. Winn ers were Judy
Snowden, first, with a t[c for second by Mafic Birchfield and Lorri
Barnes. Mrs. Barnes won the traveling prize brought by Janet Bolin.
Suzy Carpenter won the hostess
prize.
Margaret Edwards was honored
by her secret pal for her wedding
anniversary.
Secret pals were revealed during
th e gift exchange and new names
were drawn for the 1992 year.
Margaret Edwards has had the
display· in the Rutland Post Office
on a holiday theme, and Mrs. Willford displayed a Christmas centerpiece on her refreshment table, featunng dessert from Gilmore's and
Qth cr snacks. Also ancnding were
Carrie Morris, Marjorie Davis and
Shirley Van Meter.
The Ja nuar y mee tin g will be
held at thl! home of Margaret
Edwards and will feature an OAGC
video on Blue Birds, and informauonal handouts on building blue
bird boxes, as well as dried floral
designs.

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLO SED SUNDAY

'

"Living Wills" was the top ic two physiCians must determine b~
discussed by Pomeroy Attorney reasonable medical standards thai
Linda Warner at Monday's meeting "there can be no recovery and ·
of the Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary death is likely to occur within a ret:
atively short time if life-sustammd
Club.
:
Mrs. Warner indicated the infor- treatment is not administered."
Many pooplc have talkc~ abdu!
mation she had was to conform to
new rules as the result of the recent "Living Wills" but arc advtscd td
passage of Senate Bill I which consult an attorney if they wtsH
changes some of the previous such a will to be effective and atsq
.:
infonilation on this subject. Those tnform their family . .
John Rice, past pres•dcnt, was~~
who have previously executed Living Wills should check with their ·charge of the meeting and mtro; .
lawyer to be sure they are in con - duccq the speaker.
formity with the new Jaw, advised
Mrs. Warner.
Mrs. Warner stated a "Living
Will" indicates a person wishes to
die naturally without the use of
long term artificial life support
measures. This will guand against
premature usc and specifically provides th at a physician shall determine that a person is in a terminal,
" irreversible, incurable, and
untre atablc condition caused by .
disease. illness or injury." She went
on to say not only that, but at least

POLICIES
'Adt outl•de M11p. Gellt W

paid.
'A•o-"'• 1 .10 diltounl for ads ~·din •dv•nct.
'free adl - Qiveewtv 1nd Found 1d1 under 15 w ordt w•ll be
run 3 d~111 no chwge.
'Price ot td for all ceona1 IMiers

am-

·lrfMemor 1

Will

.
Rac1nc.

MONDAY

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I

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- 11 ,00A,M. SATURDAY

PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.EA

- z,oo PM . MONDAY

WEO,_.ESOAY PAPER

,- 2 :00P.M . TUESOAV

TMURSDAY PAPER

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- Z,OO PM . THURSDAY

FA IDA"( PAPER

=================j
SUNOAY PAPER

. - 2 :00P.M FRIDAY

AJDO

M Bo P. 0 · x 3"'
Syr-=uao, Ohio 45779
l614)t82-'681
Bida will bo oworded ol
the r lor Board mooting
J -ou 13 1992
.
onM!j'~,ou~ly B~ard of
MentafRellrdallon reoOIVOI
tho rigHt to accept or reject
any or all .bide.

''
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RUTLAND - 1 s~o
r ~. large parcel ground, 3
bedrooms, enclo
rch . Garage &amp; worshop.
Needs some repa . 14,000

HARRtSONVILL~
- ~a/I!Wi i mobil&lt;l. home Site I acre
or 23 acres . Le
lt.J~It water available . Cleared
and would make
ice home site. Will take an offer

1!
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.llltJal . If you want to be in

business lor yours

today lor details' $70,000

RACINE- This house needs some work to make il a
home but the be~utia~ lol in town would be 1he
reward lor your e

.

SR 775 Frame RaniWif home includes garage.
breezway

fulll!f1

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POMEROY - 5 aqt~nt~\ ground on lop ol .hill near
town.$ 3,900 FIRIIW"-

so\..v.

$7o.ooo

.

GALLIA CO.- 3 BR·s talt,"()\~rp?rt &amp; pal'o ~20.000

s~P!Nrl(IDDLEPORT·

busines~ stock &amp; iS~50 ,000

Eslablished

AT. 7· New Modular 3 BAM balh large, level I acre lot
Eastem District. $ ~(9\..V'
. ·
MIDDLEPORT- 2.! ".J!..fPi-Qj'ent buildmg. Good rental
Income good

neJg~18,00Q

TUPPERS PLAINS;,Aiii:ef\\alter home, 2 BR"s newly
repainled and li xe~lli'foi $23,900
REEDSVILLE - 1jl'l'\.,;Q,\k home 2 BR's, .screened
porch, garden s~~

R~CINE - Newe~;.;HV'I{Dlnch

POMEROY - 2 st901A.tnaLS tots I car garage, 2·3
BR's. $13,500 Maii)Uliifur:-

992-7013
or 992·5553

SR 33 - 2 aae totSOlJlLailable. $7,000
RAINBOW RIDGE ..Je.N, acres with mobile home .
lumiture. woodb~. ·$16,000

..
&amp; 101 nver VieW

I

POMEROY-

Ne!~bi~l

area. $69,900 .

GRAVE
BLANKETS
Homemade with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.

$20.00 eacll
Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

614-949·2058

11-251 mo. pd.

FOREVER
BRONZE
RACINE

Swttthmt Spec Ia I

14 TANNING
SESSIONS- 51400
Offer Gaod Thru
Feb. 14

949·2826
OPEN 9 AM·9 PM
1-6· I mo. pd.
'

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING r.
REMOVAL
Pruning and landscarlng
Fr• Estlmata.-25 Yn. ~aft• 6 p.m. -992-29 8
(113, , ... ;1

c•

1 Card of Thanks

31,500

~

RUTLAND- 3 BR,lAC&gt;&lt;n\lasement, 1 car garage,
shed. Nice tri - le v~\111~9 ,000 Make an offer!
I
.
RUTLAND- t . llo~""'-' Ole 2 BR"s nice lront porch
$19,500
~- ..

SPRING AVE.' Ps;I..OOf.\~ lloor plan home, lull
basement. garage,'b~~li'SKING $12,500

CHESTER- 2 story~
ri ~me home 9 rooms , 5 BR·s
2Yo baths fruit eel
jl.'\fees, basement. 2 car gar.
4l\ acres ASKING ,500

O"EXTER_- 26.2 ~illtv~\ider 6 room home needs
repair. Pnvate &amp; se~Asktng $28,000

•

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0

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0

•••••

0

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MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
located OR Safford School Rd. off lt. 141
(6141446·941~ or 1·100-872-5967

BENNETT'S

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes•Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Commercial and Residential

FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801

or

949·2860

· · · · (No Sunday Call)

1l/3tl8t 1 mo.

PENDING-MIDDLEPORT, 3 BR's bath nice starter
home $16,000
.

POMEROY-One of Pom;,~' Uniquest StrucMes. The
old Elm Hurst Tav~
lor sale. This building has a
variety of potenriallltW. 2.500 ·

PENDING- MIDDLEPORT- Ranch Style Home 3
BR's, 2 batlfs .fireplaceAsking $39,500

11

1\. Bright

Idea"

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD ·

"

.

BILl SLACK
992-2269

USED RAILROAD TIES
8-12-90-tfn

ED'tl

PAINTING

lnlorlor Painting,
Froo Estimates
30 yeara experience.
Four letters of
recommendation. Honest

and dependable.
(R-P.ln!htg18My
lpecldy)
Call Ed Battin
collect at
1·614-667·6474

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Sllrting ot $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2
bath houae
wlbasemenl and
carport, tree gao.
Caii614-992-S528 or
385-8227
12-11 -l mo .
THE BASKET WEAVE
Now ~ on Saturday!
·for rht
slmas Season.
Give a handwoven basktl
lo that ~dalsomeone on
y011r Olristmaslist.
Weaving suppi"Jts olso in
stock.
Located on Rock springs

Call
614·992·5528 or
385-8227
12-11-t mo.

DITIS-$69 up
flfiZIIS- St2S .,

'

MICRO OVINS-$79 .,

Classlftedsf
......:.-.._'

i

I

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 Of 915 ·3561
Acro11 from Poll Offict
POMROY, OHO
.
I0/30fl9

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
•Unbeatable energy savings
.Custom rit-oo ins1all1tion mess
•Never requires painting
•Sashei: till-in for eaiY cleaning
•Lifetime frame warranty

~Mastic

JAMES KIESEl
992·2772
MIDDUPORT

r~

_

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
" Helping YQu TQ
,Recover Your .
Investment ~ ·

614·949·2202
RACINE, OHIO
11/20/1 mo.

111611 mo. pd.

lfFIIG!UTOIS- $1 00 vp
IAHG!S- C..-aoc.- $125 •P

Read .
the

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USED APPUANCES .
90 DAY WAIIANTY
WASH US-$ l 00 "1'

AS YOU CAN SEE SALES HAVE BEEN GOODI
WE NEED LISnNGSI WE HAVE BUYERS!
iF YOU ARE CONSIDERING SELLING GIVE UU CALU .
If YOU ARE SERIOUS AIOUT SRLING....THERE'S NO BITTER PLACE TO BETHAN
WITH QEIAND REALTY!

HENRY E. CLELAND........-.........................~ ........:~: .......................................... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER.................................~~ ........................~ •••:...........·•••.•.••.•••.•. 949-243~ _~.
JEAN TRUSSELL... ~ ..............................................................~ ................................949-2660
JO HILL"....................... !·.......·••••••••••~ .........................................................:•••••••• 985-4466

REMOVAL

Newly Re·done
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
has nice homesites
available for up to
80' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75 per mo.

0

BLOWN INSULATION

TRIM ,and

Or Call
742-3020 Evenings
12-2-91-f mo. pd.

~-

PENDING- Approx. 3 acres with river !rentage!
$4,500 per acre.

&amp; TREE ·

614-992-3394

RACINE- 1Yo sto.l}l. ~0)., 3 BR"s 1 balh , Asking
$29,500

SHRUB

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Displayed al The
Qualty Prinl Shop
HOURS:
8:30am-4:00pm

MINt FARM- Close.tM!iO!port. 2 story lrame home,
38R's. 1car garagOW~sa acres $27,000

DARWIN- C~nt~ ~g\edroom l balh, all electric.
Modular Home witt!)Ltlrr garage and storage building .
On approx. I acre ol ~~d . lmmediale Possession
$34,ooo
sO\.V ·
·

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9-13-'91 -tfn

1111 SJ1mo. per.

LETART . 1 ltoorJlll'l!\..1@\e 4 rooms. garden space,
river lron tage $7 . ~

RUTLAND 119.89 ~~"0b land has qlder home and
buildings on prope11J~OO .

..-:.'IL.·..:..- - •. ~ • --·

0

Strirtly EnfDnod

9~2 -6855

NEAR PORTLANilo/:!lt'zQl..s with 14 x 70 Holly Pari&lt;
Mobile Home. poria!~ms, lruil trees $32,000

POMEROY - Lart3(i)W'Wigarage apt. lor ren1al. $

THf DAILY SENTINEt'j

••

fartory Choka

Rd. in Pomeroy , 3 miles
lrom !he Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.

·

SA 33 - 2 acre to~'

RACINE- Beauti~t)\L.Q\11 hookups on site 100ft .
lrontage $] ,000· ~
.

7/ 31 / '91 dn

with basement , 2 car

REEDSVILLE- ~- "l_ai'\fitl fll\ocant land. River lronlage.
Electric &amp; water ~~lrrr.!~.ooo

• n\

OR TOll FlEE
1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OliO

RACIN E - Co. R&lt;1-.:)0\\'l~ Slyle home w/7 rooms 3
BR·s recreation rdlllt~,reptace, landscaped. $44,900

garage, 3·4 -BA , ~\4&amp;!11• cour t 3'h acres desirable

.

12 Gauge Shotgun Only

Acres in country . ~Eirement , small barn $57,500

SA 7 - Well buii!JW:t()\,me, 2 car garage, well
landscaped, 4 B~s . lireplaoo $65,000

ho use

949•2206

style home on 2.37

POMEROY- 1 lloor MnO~me, s!Orage building I car
garage w/storag&lt;SW!Je!l;s Free gas! Asking $30.000

$5,900

•

. 6:30 P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

SYRCUSE· 2 beds€)\J:l.'Needs so me repa~r $6 soo

RAC INE- Appro~
. 3
s w/ 2 br. mobile home,
porch, pole buildi
•8 x 35 New Moon trailer.
Private, beautilul ,

_.nl
ANTIQUITY - s'S~·II

RACINE ..
FIRE DEPT: · '
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT .

BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

.,

•"••

~

i

tU• baseme nt 2. 1 acres .

IMMEDIATE POSSl ONI $21,000
MIDDLEPORT - llllllllttO\ome! 2 story. 3 BR's all
electric, lireplace ~eo Make an Offer.

••

~

118r'Ooms , older 1 story frame

RAC INE- 50 x l'lQ~~ LOT with all hook ups.
Cemenl pad on all!IWtfteet. $6,000.00

~

~

t-1any &lt;;lre~t . .te.a1~re.~l

business wilh gr

~

g

CUTTING,
SKINNI. NG '
WRAPPING

POMEROY- Cute sO~e needs some fiXing-up. 3BRs .
2 balh $14,000

RACINE- Restaurant w~~reat polenlial in Racine.

home with part bas ment. Make Oiler $12,000.00

~

I

I

CUniNG

5\500

COMMERCIAL

••
•

Covers, etc.
Profeuianal

HILL'S DEER . GUN SHOO.l.

RACINE- Brick RSc9. 3 BR's Rec room in basemen!, 2
car garage, garden space

NEAR CHESTER- Brick Ranch Home 7.2 acres. pond,
3 car garage and ken'le~ll maintained home with
hardwood lloors, cii!Q\ioVI'oom. 3 bedrooms, birch

RACINE - BuSines~opo~~~t,ily in Meigs Co. Res1raun1

~

~

RUTLAND - 3 yr. old ho me, large garage, tree gas to
house also 1978 14 x 70 Holly Park wlexpando &amp; room
addition. Metal barn Ml\.ll(r!tures $79,500

POMEROY· Brick Ranch 2 baths, Irani porch . garage
Nice wall taken ca15~e,1

Jl... s~;r~blac~ _&amp; wo~dburr~!·

~
~

~

FLATWOODS RD.- 3 be~.m. 1 balh. modular home
I .II AC. Cenlral aige\JJU,p $38,000

basemen!. $15,900"'

c abinets in kitchln , family room , full basemen t .

••

~

If'\\'lith 1 lloor hom e w1Jh 3

_ bedrOOm S, 1 batiC..~ fuiJ basement, garage 1n

~

~

4

POMEROY- 4 u~t,Q~ building. Monthly income
$400.00 potential~lf$17 ,500

ll~

AIR
• HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE. &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

614·985-3961

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
Specializing in
C,.sto11 Framo Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp; ,
MODELS

SHOULDN'T YOUR HOME BE DESCRIBED IN THIS AD? LIST WITH THE
COMPANY THAT GETS RESULTS •••CLELAND REALTY!
HERE ARE JUST AFEW EXAMPLES OF SALES IN 1991 .....

POMEROY -"40 x

;$1oekll

Real Estate General

POMEROY, OHIO

1 story HANDtM~~lMi Full basemen! up 10
bedrooms. Needs;b)lle Jepair Asking $8,000

{If.

Bags, Head

tngnmng

l_l~_l:_·.g_:~_~_.""_a_lSc-ho:~~~~~:. L..----1-111-41i_1_100m00o.J,

992·2259

•

i

.

NOTICE OF PUBUC
HEARING ON BUDGET
Notice lo hereby, given
that copiM ollhe propooed
budget and oatimate of cool
ol operation of the Melgo
Local School Dletrlct ol
Melgo County of Pomeroy.
Ohio, Including tho coal dl
operating the public
achoole ol 11ld dlatrlct lor
tho lio..t yoar of Juy 1,
1992 through June 30, t883,
oro on file In the alfice of
thelre11urel ollheboardol
and open to
of th• public,
purouant to the requir•
menta ollaw.
A pu~lic hearing on lho
propoaed budget ror tho
Melga Locllf Schoolo will bo
held at 320 Eaat Main
Street, Poi!Jeroy, Ohio, on
January 13, t992. at 9:00
A.M. ·
Jane Fry, Treaouror

_(t_2_)1_6_,2_3,_30_;_(-1)_6_,4-lc_ _

Real Estate General

..-

Peer pressure. The
desire to be a part of .
•
the crowd ·is
•
especially strong in
:
young people. It's
one of the main
reasons so many
children get involved
with drugs.
As a parent, it's impartant for you to
give your child the
facts about the dan·
gers of drug abuse,
and the kind of
~
strength it takes to· •
say "I)o" to friends.
Talk to your kids. Get
to them before the
~
pressure does,

-

DAY BEFORE PtJBLICATION

COPY O'!ADLINE -

Great, great grandmother ~
Audry Young, Pomeroy, The infait
also has a "special pepaw," Cai!
Klaiber. Chester.
:

•
\\

went to Kila Young.
Refreshments were served buffet style and favors made be Mrs.
Grossnic~le were given to each one
attending.
Attending, with those mentionr:d
above were Opal Harris, Pauline
My ers, Nola Young, Nan cy
W ac ht~r. Janice Young, Gladys
Thomas, Ella Osborne, Marilyn
Hannum, Delores Frank, Betty
Boggs. Mary Alice Bise, Janet
Connolly and Ruth Ann Balderson.
Gifts were exchanged that had
been placed under a lighted tree.

Holiday guests of Marguerite Clara Follrod and Edith Harper, all Carpenter, Louise and Gary
and Brownie Stearns were Donna of Meigs County. Stacie and Katie Michael, all of Meigs County;
Stoler, Centerville, Va., and Jeff spent a ni~ht with their grandpar· Aaron Parker, Columbus; Kelli
Troutman, Boston, Mass. The ems and vuited their great-grand· -Parker, Be1pre; Janice and Bob
Stearns' spc;nt Christmas in Fair· mother, Edith Harper, at Pomeroy Parker, Mar]\,Harris, Mariettaq
born with APril Neely and family.
Willis Parker,-Parkersburg, W.Va. .
Ex ~ended Care:
, .
Nina Robinson spent Christmas
Floyd ~vis and Lester Keaoon :
Martha; Joe and Will Poole and
with her daughter, Norma Jean Nellie Parker hosted the Patter are recovering at home following
Swartz, Reno, and family.
• Family dinner on Dei:. 29. Willis stays in the hospital. Clarence Hen- '
Holiday guests of Osie Mae and Parker asked the ~Iessing. :
dcrson is in HolZer Medical Center.
;.. Clair Foil rod were Mr. and Mrs.
Neltie Parker went to Columbus
Present besides lhe hosll "'ere
; Steve Foil rod , Katle, Brian and WiiJDa and Howard Parlee~', Irene to University 'Hosphal on New
• Brannon, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Parker, Nancy Campbell, Sarablllll Year's Day to visit llr sister-in·
, :. ave Watson, Stacie and Alan. Ho111er Parm, T~ Hy~~· SUZY, law, Cora Michael, who is recover·
ing from heart surgety .

1110 tppett tn the P,t . Plt•ant fltetisttr snd the Galli ·

polis Daily Tribune. reaching ovtr 18.000·h0mn-

Kent and Kim Eads, Rutlan~)
arc announcing the birth of the ir
first child, a son, Dustin Kent Eads 1
on Oct. II at Holzer Medical Cen·
I
tcr.
1
The infant weighed six pounds
and 14 ounces and was 20 inches
long.
·'
Grandparents arc Vicki e HarriS
and Roge r and Rhea Deem. Mid'r
dlcport; Jerry and Louise Ead~.
Rutland.
.
•
Great grandparents arc Mar~
Persons, Chester and the late VictQj"
Young II; and Virgil and Gcraldins
Parsons, Pom eroy; and Glada~
Deem and the late Edward Dcerii,

Pressure? ,~

Riverview gardeners hold annual party

:Alfred community families gather

Yerd S1lm

•A c;:l ..llfied adveniHm..n placed in The Dtily Sen tm-' 1111. ·
CIPI - ,l.lilia:l di1pl-v. Busin•• C.trd and legtl nOtiCft)

New arrival ·']

•'

tree to Georgia Power pickup point in Atlanta.
The tree will be recycled into mulch. (AP)

r

double pr~ce of ed cou.

'·'.•

DUSTIN EADS

Is Your
Child
Strong
Enough
To Resist
The

The comm unity Christmas tree
lighting project was discu ssed and
thank you notes were sent "! those
who assis ted.
It was noted that new figures arc
needed for the nativity scene.
"A Carol Service," directed by
Grace Weber and assisted by
Frances Reed and Phyllis .Larkins
was prespnted as Mrs. Whitehead
accompanied the carol singing on
the piano.
A game was conducted by Mrs.
Grossnickle. and the prize went to
Wendy Hannum. The door prize

11

•7 I)OitU lint type Only UMd.
'
•Senlintl is not rnponsible for lfrOfSiftt1 fitl1"dw . !Chedl.
tor I"Oftl firwl dwv ld runs in p1pert . Cal before 2 :00p .m
dl¥ aft• publiCatiOn to mike correction
·A~• tt\11 mult be PliCI in ldvenct 1ie
Card or Tf'ill'lkl
. HaPPv Ad1

"•

The annual Cljris tm a~ party of
the R1vcrvtcw Ga r,den Cl ub was
held rcccmly at the home of Maxinc Whi tehead. Margaret Gross·
nickle and Marlene Putman were
co- hostesses.
The Whitehead home was decorated in the holiday theme and the
lawn fcatu·rcd a red sleig h made by
Ernest Whitehead and fi lled with
. packages in front of a lighted holly
bush.
Roll call was answered by members having a holiday decoration
exchange.

M11an caunt•• mutt be put·

atct.":!~ :!\e~ until
3:30 p.m. Jonuory 8, 1tt2
lor tho following oupply
nMd«&lt;lor tho t2 calender
yMr:
GASOLINE and
DIESEL FUEL
Delivery will be madl lD
tho Cartoton School lor uio
1• 1892
!*'Iori
Jonuary 31,
throughofDecablr
19H.
Bide oro to be moiled lD !he
oddrMa below: ond; opec!lie bid . dotolla may be
obtolnedbyconbtcling:
Melgo County lloard of

Teaford
Co1ntry Club
Jr. Golf Sets ,
Graphito &amp;
Meral Oubs
Custom Fittitg

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;

608 EAST MAIN

•
•'

f&lt;E CYCLE CYCLE - Byron P.almer gets a
workou t while usin g an environment-friendly
mode of transportation to haul his Christmas

Business Services

Area's Number
1 Marketplace

HC's dean's .fist
The following Meigs County
students attending Hocking College
have been named to the fall quaner
Dean 's List there:
Rita Bailey, Debra Honaker,
Angela Kelly, Thomas Kelcy Jr.,
Allen King, Kathy Phalin, and Ken
VanMatre, ~II of Middleport; Valeria Bailey, The Plains; Terry Barrett, Lancaster; Lisa Barringe r,
Karen Carter. Crystal Kay lor ,
Debra Michae l. Cora Putnam .
Diane Rice and Thomas Simmons;
Derek Cremeans, Rutland; Angela
Donohue, Jeffrey Fields, Djana
Harrison , Judy Hart. Many Hart,
Warren Hart, Penni Jeffers, Karen
Lambert, Linda Priddy, Melody
Ramsburg, Amanda Sisson, Hazel
Six, Gary Snouffer, Richard Vru.cc,
Brenda Warth, all of Pomeroy;
Sherri Hendrix, Tuppers Plain s;
Pamela Honaker , Howard
Lawrence, Anthony Wolfe, all of
Long Bottom ; Julia Murphy,
Arthur Roush, Brian Shuler, Fredcrick Thompson, all of Racine ;
Terri Patterson, Christophe Smith,
both of Syracuse; and Judy Well,
Shade.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

r-:':'~:-----...;...ll-====-r======11R&amp;t EXCAVATING
TO PLACE ·AN AD CALL 992·21 56
Public Notice
Public Notice
. BUUDOZING .

Harrisonville area news Rotarians discuss living i
Moon dust for sale af
.
wiils; attorney spea~s j.
astronomical price
Eighteen members and one
guest of the Harrisonville Senior ·
Citizens enjoyed a Christmas dinncr and gift exchange at the town
hall . April Roush. Cheshire, was
the winner of a quilt made by the
club.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley had
as Christmas dinner gues ts, Mr.
and Mrs. Steven Stanley and
daughter. Emily.
Gerald and Linda Donohue
announce the birth of a daughter,
Rebecca Joy on Nov. 15 . She
weighed seven pounds and eig ht
ounces and was 20 inches long.
She is the fourth daughter of the
couple.
Ru th, Nellie and Jeremy Lowe
spent Christmas day with the Roy
Lowe family in Asheville.
Linda Fi nl ey and daught ers
spent a few days visiting her parcnts. Mr. and Mrs. Don Cotterill.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Anderson,
South Carolina, visttcd her mother,
Bessie Graham , and Harold Graham family and the Dorothy Frum
family.
Helen Young and Kath leen.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DEER CUTTING

and

WRAPPING

255 Cut &amp; Wra~ped
5 Extra to S i1

1

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RAONI,OH.

949·2734

11-29-1 mo.

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR
POMEROY
Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAt
10:00 A.M. ·3:00 P.M.
1211211 mo.

BtSSEU &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Caatpare
FrH Estimat11

iJ&amp;S-4473

667-6179
5-31-'90 ffn

YOUNG'S

INDEPENDENT
CARPET CUANEIS
CARPENTER SERVICE · and nLE FLOOR CARE
- Room Addition•
•Reasonable
flat"
.
- Gutter work
•Quality Work
- Electrical and Plumbing
- Concrete work
• Froo El timates
- Rooflno
•Carpet Has Fall Dry
- Interior &amp; hterlor
Time
Painting
•High
Gloss on Ti~
!FREE E~TIMATESI
Floor Finish
C. YOUNG Ill
' MilE tiWI~ Owner
R1. I, Ru11ond, OH.
992-621
742-2451
Pomeroy, Ohio
3-14;'91-Hn
t t·14-'90 lin

.

.

V.

s

~JAY MAR

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992·6637
St. Rt. 7
_Cheshire, OH.1m1"
R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES ·
HAULING:
Limestone. Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded

PH . 614-992·5591 ·
9-11 -1 mo. pd .

OVEN ·REPAIR
AU MADS .
lrin1 It In Or Wt

Pkk Up.
lEN'S APPliANtE
SERVICE
992-SJUor

985·3561

·Acron Fret11 Pelt OHlce

Owner
CLARENCE ATHERTON
C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration
We Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, Insider,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Conditioners

.

lal. . .a..ctaaiiCIII

.....

61700 SR 124
Bonom, Ohio

Long

.,

1111411 mo.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only
9-6-tln

J&amp;L
INSULATION
·Vinyl Siding
·Replacement
Windows
·Rooflnfc
•lnsulat on
JAMES KEESEE

992·2772 or
.742•2097

538 Bryon Place
Middleport, 011~
• 11 14llln

�l"llilti

Q

.

I llti Llllll}'

Monday, Janu11ry

i:~t~IUIIIUI

·SNAFU® ~y

MAKE If ARUlE...
USE WANT AI)$,
ARAfi)V

Bruee Beattie .

~---

11

41

Help wanied

,Part-tim•' riCeptlonlal, inult bt
pt:I'IOI'llble,

hiYI

ttltphQMI

eldllt; 1~ to dell with public,
and handle g~neral otflct

dutt.a. $4.10hr, ~omtroy. are-.

TOOL

Mnd retume' to: Dilly Stntlnt!,
8oa: 72tH, Pomeroy, OH

Lacal Dontill Offlco Snklng
Fuii·Timo Hjgonlsl, Port-limo
May Be Ar(lngtd. Send Rtaumt
To: CLA liM, CIO Golllpoll0 D1ll1

TrlbuMJ.~.2~ Third Avtnut, Gal·

Rt!all Store Manager Wantad
For Local Chaln·- Stort. MuSt
Have 3 Years Management Ex·
perltnee. Send Resume To: Bo•
CLA 103, . C/0 Gallipolis Daily

________
AIillle WAITA1JS
._

Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Gal·
llpolls, OH 45631.
Taking.

Announcements

I,

Norm1n Mtrlntr, ·am npt
raaponalbll tor any dtbta but

u,..

Aret Slngl11

By

Cholet

"Instead ol calories,
I lhe exercises you needed to wort&lt; on each serving."

1----------r----------1

Nol Cl\!lnco. Wrfto: Slngloo, P.O. 7
Yard Sale
Bo• 1043, Golllpollo, Olll.o 45631. .:,__ _ _ _ _ _ __

11

4

Actl'llity Director, are you a
wtrm comp11slonatt person
willing to work with and for
r11idents of Care Haven of
Point Pleasant, lntertstad and

1•malt dog, mtc:l. IIZI, mix
brMd, approx. 1-yr old1 black,
lan, I whitt to a gooa home,
614-H2·35n
2 Aabbllt, With Cage. 614·446·
3934.
3 Ftmalt Pupplts, Pa11 Collie, 7
W..U Old, And Vor1 lovoablo.
Give Only 1o Good Homts. 614·
446-1827.
36 1981 ro 1986 Nallonal
Geographies. 304-675·3718.
Frtt Puppl.., Half Collie, 10
Wttks Old. 614-256-1821, Leave
MetHgt.
Giveaway- Rabbits, born In October. 304-882·2866.
Lg. friendly tom c;at, 1 1t2yr old,
&amp; 1-t.malt Doberman /shepercl
puppy, 614-7'12·2754

6

Lost

&amp; Found

Found: Blonde Coc~er Spanial
With Blue Collar, No Tais.
VIcinity:
Holzer
Clin1c,
Sveamore Branch Ar11, Gallipolis.
Coli
614·446-3808
A.S.A.P.
Lost : 2 Male Beagles, In
Pleasant Valley Dri~•. Off At.
325, AI Rio Grandt, If Found
Call 614·446-7722.
Lost : Female Schnauzer!. 2
Ytart Old, Grty Short Hair,
Buehy Eyebrowt, Whiskers,
VIcinity Loat: Burkhart Lane,
And Tu10 Rood, OH Rt. 566,
Gottlpolls. 614-145-4929.

7

For

Wanttd: El.clranlc Technician
Wllh TV I VCR Exporlonco. Mall

Announcements

myown.

Applications

Houukttper, Wtdn11day And
Ttluraday At Econa LDdgt, 388
Jackson Plkt, Gallipolis.

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
All Yard Saln Mutt Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm tht
. day before the ad le to run,
Sund•l odlllon- 1:OOpm Friday,
Manday
tdltlon 10:00a .m.
· Slturdlj.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sales Must Bt Paid In
Advaneo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before tht ad Is to run.
Sunday tditlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday tdltlon • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, completa
auction atnllca. licensed Ohio,
Wast VIrginia, 304·173·5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

outgoing to coordlnttt IC•
llwhlH
program. Certified

tnd/or ta:per~net d11lrld. Send
resume to Guy Ster,hens, Rt. 1

BoK 326, Point P easanl, WV
25550 by ,Jan. 10.
AVON ! All Artas ! Shlrlay
Spoors, 30H75-1429.

Babyslntr In My HCmt, 26
Houf'IIW11k, 5 Year Old. 614446·1422. After 5p.m.
CONSTRUCTION WANTEO
$180.$650 Laborers, .Carpenters,
Masons Painters And Roofers,
E.O.E. 1-880·551-1542.

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

Construction
Wanted-$180·
Still paying .ose ta, far empty $650, laborers, carpenters,
Salem and camel cigarette masons, painters and roofers.
packag11 buying 1111 Jan . 24, EOE,H00-551·1542. ·
1992, 614·992-70931992-2703.
Easy Work! EJ:cellenl Payt AsWanttd to buy, Standing llmbtr, ambit Proci~X:II At Home. Call
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992· Toll Frte, 1·800-457-5566, Ext.
313.
5449.
Top Prices Paid ~ All Old U.S. Live-In houaeketperJ comCoins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins, panion for 97 yr. old lady, avail·
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, able now or near future, nursing
skills not required, call collect
151 Sacond Avtnue, Gallipolis.
,614-698-2765
MEOlA SALES
Ttlevislon Advel11sing Sales
Rep Nuded For The Gal·
llpolls/Polnt Plaasant Araa.
Employmenl Services We're Seeking ACandidate Who
Possesses Enthusiasm And
Wllllngnus To Wor~ Hard .
Sa~• E1perlenc:e, Cold Calling
11 Help Wanted
Strong Closing Skills
--::==-'::=::-::=;::-- Skills,
Pr1farred. Drew /Commission
$2,500 CREDIT CAROl
Guaran1atd Same Day Ap- /Car fAIIowanc:t /Bentllts. Send
proval! Also Qualify For NO Rttumt In Confidence To: 2120
Road,
Oopooit VISAIMC And Cuh Ad- Hamilton/Middletown
vancll. 1·800-264-6789 Ext. Hamlllon, OH 45011, ATTN:
Regional Manager.
2524.
Ntaded: Stlnptrson tor area.
$3 ."/0AY PROCESSING
.w
Pteast 11nd rttume to: Rt. 2
PHONE ORDERS I PEOPLE Bo• 607 Pl. Ploosant, WV 25550.
CALL YOU.
Pa11-11mt tmploymant: epply In
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
plf'Son Monday and Tuesday,
1-800-255·0242.
Jan 6 I 7. From t a.m. 1o 12
noon. Lifestyle Furniture, 8S6
AVON · All areas, Call, Marilyn Third Avt., Gallipolis. No phone
calls, please.
Weaver 304·882·2645.

Reaume To P.O. Box 702, Gal-

llpollo, Ohio 45631. .
We'll Ply You To Type Names
And Addrttses From Home!

$500.00 Por 1000. Coll1 ·900-8961666 I$0.99/Min.) Or Write:

PASSE ·33M, 16~ S. Lincoln way,
N. Aurora, IL 60542.

12

18

Opponunlty
,..
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommtndt that you do busl·
0111 with people you know, and
NOT to 11nd money through the
mtil unlll you hl'lll lnvn11gated
lht offering.

Want to:

PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?H

All Tvpe Loanslanders Specilal·
lza In Cradlt Problems. Till Us
Your Needs. 803-293·1641.
Local Vending Route Priced
Righi, Muot s.n. 1·600·234·2651.
Privata Pay Phones For Sale,
Choop. 1·800-226..,503.
VENDING . ROUTE: Gol Rich
Ouick? No Way! But Wt Have A
Good, Steady, Affordable, Busi·
ntst, Won't Last. 1-80G-284·
8363.

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Doublt Wide With 1 Acre Land,
Gallipolis Ferry, 3 Btdrooms 2
8tlht, Eltctrlc, Central Air,
137,000. 304-675-7217.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 14x68 Shut1Z, mobllt home,
good cond,l14·992·2111
1976 Futlval 14x70, 2br, 2
Baths, Utility Room, Undtrplnning And Large Deck. All
Eltctrlc, Air Conditioning, Excel·
lonl Condlllonl $8,200, Could Bo
Lett On One Acre Lot. 614-388·
8835.
1979 Ciolrmont 14•70, 3 bod·
roomt1 1 bath, w/underpenntng
end rronl porch, gat haat,
central air, mutt move, 18,500.
304-682-2341.

11rm. your duller into (~m~;h,
Sell it tire easy wt~y••• by phone,
rw need lo lem'e yoru· home.
Place your clftssilied ad tmlay!
15 wonls ,;,. less, 3 days,
3 paJJers, 6.00

118t N11hu1 mobile home,
14•64, 2 BR, 1 bllh, now
rstrlgarator,
r.carpetld,
wufltrldrya~ 8x1 front porch.
Pori&lt; Lono court. 614.·446-6732
oft or 5. SR\18.
2 bdrm. trailer &amp; lot, locatH at
360 Po1r1 St. Mlddloport, good
eand., a within w•lklng to most
n-nlllu, 116,000, 614·1149·
2388 or 614-742-2211 etk for
Oeve.
For Sale: 60112 Tralier, Panty
Furnished, Ceiling Fant, And
Central Alr.condltfontr, Call Af·
lor B:OOp.m. IM-367·7873.

nawtl

Groll S.loellon 01 A-us·
ltd Mobile Homn : Double
Wldu • 111000 Down And Slnglo
Wldn • t500 Down Wfth Apo
provod Crodft. Coli Mid Ohio
Fino,.. Al1.f14-m·1220.

35

I .__._ _ _ _.__

9,, _ _ __ __

2, ________________

. 10------~

&lt;:1 •. - - --- -----'--- l .l . - - - - 4·· - - - - - - 12.· - - - - - - ,),,
r: ________________________ J.'J •. __-,--___
6, _ _ _ _ _ __,.. .14· •.__,_ _ __

,7,. _ _ _ _ __

44

Apanment

for Rent
Baby slUing in my home, behind $173 Per Month Will Buy You A
achool, ralerencn turnlshod, New 1992 Oelu11 14x70, 2 Bath
304-675-2764.
Home · With A Warm, Cozy
Chimney Cltanlng Ancl Slain· Woodburnlng. Artplact. Jn.
ltll Still Rtllnl~ "Serving Tri- eludes Quick Otllvery, Setup,
State 16 Years" 614-867-3618, Skirting, Sttpt, Bloe~s A!Kl Up
To 6 Months •••Frat••• lo1 Rent.
Cakiwell Chimney Sw11p.
Llmlttd Tlmt Offer. To Stt A
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't Timt To S11 The Homt Call 1·
haul your lags to lhe mill just 600-166-7671 And Ask For
Cli1304-675·1957.
Elaine Or Brenda .
Loving molher will babysit In 1 bdrm. basement apl., lurmy fiomt day/night, hourly/ nlshad, utilities paid, $200
weekly, any age, referenc11, monthly, 614-949·2526afltr 6pm
614-992-7288
1
bedroom,
untumlahtd,
Miss P1ula's Day Care Centtr. upstairs apt, First Ave, ulllltltt
Saft, aHordable, chlldcara. M·F Included, $350. rei I dip r•
6 a.m. - S:30 p.m. Agts 2'ho10. qulrtd, 614-446-4369 or 304-675Btlort, after school. Drop-Ins 2330.
welCome. 114-446-8224. New In1 SA tumlshed apartmtnl.
fant Toddler Care, 614-446~227.
Upstairs on 13th St. $190 mo.
plus gas&amp;: tlec. 304·675·2651.

Business

Lots &amp; Acreage

c.....

1 acre lralter lot on OtorGn
Ad. Qood 1oc11roo.
l5,i00. 814-441·1115 or 441-1243.

3 Acr11: Old Houu And Bam, '
Holt Fist, Hoff Hill. Swann Crook
Rood. C.lll14-251-61154.

Rentals

• iS TWO .••'!NO

.·PWSOO IS

1&amp;2-bdrm a pis, In Racine OH,
unfurnished, 614-992-656il
2 bdrm apt. 211 Spring Ave,

Pomeroy.

2br Apartment For Atnt, $200
Plus Deposit In Crown City,
Ohio. 614·256-6495.
2br Apirtmtnt, Located, 466·1!2
Fourth
AYinUI,
Gllllpolls:
Stove, RtfrkJtrator, Water Fur·
nlshod. S24tlimo. 1100 Doposlt.
614-146-3870.

51

54

Household

FmW'S ltl&amp; :mi!U
6£l,IW IINION6 ;.-o&lt;'

PLUS~ I~
U:R0 ... $1~
Pl.05 t.II~. -&lt;AU\,

iN1ERN6~

Television
Viewing

1\1
.

AA ~ntt£nc.
~IP

•

Supplies
Block, brick, eewer l)lpes, windows, llnlell, etc. Ciaudt Win·
ttrs, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614·
245-5121.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Golllpoils. Now &amp; Usod S6
furniture, heattrt, Western a
Pets tor Sale
Worl&lt; booll. 814-146·3159.
'"""---:-:--:--::::-.,.-,
Groom ond Supply Shop.Pst
VI'RA FURNITURE
Grooming. All broodo, slyin.
614-441-31!8
limo Pot Food Doolor. Julio
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Choir, Wobb. Cllll4-4411-0231.
11119.00·
Aocllnor
I14V.OO·
Swivll Rockor, 1111.00; CoHN i. AKC Poodlo r,upploo, loyo &amp;
End Tobin, $88.00 Sot.DINING tiny loys, min aturt Schnauzer,
ROOM: Toblo With 4 Poddod melt, sllvar, Coolville 614-187Chalro, 1149.00; Counlry Plno 3404.
Dlntttt With Bench And 3 AKC reglattrtd Boxar pupplts.
Cholro1• S2H.OO; Motchlng 2 304-662·3397.
Door ~Itch 1348; Or 150.00
Sol; Ctik Toblo, 42•62 With 6 AKC A~lsttred Coc:htr Spaniel
Bow
Back
Chairs, Pups For Sale. All Shots, Wor·
$629.00.BEOROOM: Poolor Bod· mod. $150. 614-388-9162.
room Sullo (5 po.), $348.00; '4
Drawer Chttt, 144.95; Bunk Btau11fut St. Benard puppiu,
Bod, $229; CompiOio Full MaH lull blooded bul nol ceglst~rad,
Sit, $105.00 Sot; 7 po. Cedar laking dopoolls,l14·1112'2025
Bedroom Suite, S899.00.0PEN:
Monday Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to Dregonwynd Cattery Ptraian,
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till SilmtH 1nd Himalayan kittens.
5p.m., 4 Mlln Ott Routt 7 On 614-146-3844 oftor 7 p.m.
Routt 14'1 In ~ntenary.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Avt.
Polnl PINSinl, 304-675-2063,
52 Sporting Goods
lull llno Troplcol llshl birds,
smallanlmata a~ tuppl ee.
For Sal•: ltretta, Over And Un·
dlr, 20 Gl. 3" -11od And lmprovod Cjllndlr. 614~6-1800.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

61

Farm Equipment

185 Alii• Chalmtra OIHtl Trac-

lor, $5,850; 0-14 AC Wllh Loodsr,
12,850, 0-17, AC With Plow, Cui·
tlvator, Grain Drill, $2,950; 614288-6522.
Ford 100 Farm Tractor Just
Ovorhoulod, EquiPI&gt;Id To U11
Unlo- Goo. 614:~88-9916.
Jlm'o Foom Equlpmonl, SR. 35)
Wost Golllpoils, 014-146-llm,
Wldo ooloc11on now &amp; ulld form
tr1e1ora I lmplemtnta. Buy,
1111, trade, 1:00.5:00 wnkdays,
Sol. 1111 Noon.
Wanted: Used farm equipment,
anything you want to sell. 614·
256·1308, 814-256-6040 Aftor
8p.m.

,.,.nor

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

4

1m Chovy C.moro, 305 aulo,
honaw comb IMPL..new tlrss,
SO! ol1o 814·H2-24 ro
1171 Ct1tverolel Caprice Clll·,
tic, 4dr Hdan, excellent nlct
car, every option, 30' V-8, $)450,
014-62-6711

Furnished
Rooms

mt Chryolor Cordobo now
For Solo: Stogo Llgh11 And Ac.. paint, new Urn, 11000, S0....7SRooms for rent· week or month. CHIOiiM, For Morllnlotmation 8155 lhor 5pm
Slortlng 11 1120/mo. Gllllo Ho111. C.lll-11-811\
614-141-9580.
lUI C.dllloc Dovlllo, All - r .
cl:·~
Wiler
btd. 6 cSrawer AC, EVIfYIItlng Worl&lt;s, Runs
SIHplng rooms with cooking.
al. Headboard &amp; mirror. Vary Good, No "'Autt, Clan Car,
Also lrallor opoco: All hook·upa.
50. Qood ahlpo. 304-675-31171. 11,300 Firm: 514-141-7121.
Coli sftor 2:00 o~~.m . , 304 ·77~5111, Matan WY.
;
-poolor,
. .lnul
- -ortgloolly4 ltft VW Aobbll 4 .s.iod, Good
I &lt;Irs-,
Body, ilioN Qood, lloko EICI~
... 200. • ,. 111 3101. .... !Me- iltllllocond Cor. 114-441.0020.

Household
Goodi

1:00 &lt;ll.

•*:

.....

.

A ndltlonM wuhl,. &amp;
drjoro, nMI ond ... Wo
IIIIIIIIM. The Wollltr l
£!rror ' ' - ' f14 141 :il44.

·-llloTV ...Iom

PROIAT 110 lalollfto
'""""·
With
llocll¥w
•A1H1
,....... Condftlon.

-·

1114 1u1c11 C.ntury, 2.5 L..r
AuiCiftlll~,
Now TlrH All
Around Polnl Job, II 000
MHH, iiM To Blliovol IM-m
2409,
1m Comiro Z-28, T-lops,
luiO,

loldod, 13000,

W.

aR. . .

I i Ll

w•

SCRAM UTS ANSWIIS

' ·3
Jangle-Datu
E THING
Secietary to fellow get11ng Insurance for his new
motOrcycle: 'Do you have alien holder on the vehicle?"
Cyclist: "I have a kickstand, is that lhe SAME THING?'

BRIDGE

F.~d
r.:o~
Tanlgllt .

THE Plrf.JIPENT
ATTfMPTf{) TO
JTIMlii.ATE-

~~
Ill!

The WIIIOns
7:05 (I) Aclclllma Family

~

.i

T'HE-

f..~~ Tonight

JVCCfEDif) IN
ANNOYING IT.

Mlilled.. With Chllclrtn

WIIHI 01 Fortune &amp;;I
eFamllrFtud
lillie 1 8ter Stereo.

sf

QtC1'01111N
7:36 (I) MIA leek..... Houlton

Rocl&lt;lll at Atllnta Hlwlel tl)
1:00 (I) • Ill Frelh Princ:e of
lleiiUr Hilary takll I
catering 100 alter her credH

calda are destroyed. Stlreo.

2
c.pat
,,.'OIIIo
.... '-fllo
(lJ HMIIh

llloriH A rnodellng/Wik:e Ia 11WIIilglted lor

-

=·!to

..........

EEK AND MEEK ----

Ava'a

Stereo.

II])

e

lhe cabin.

II!: A Nlglltmalw

on Elm 8trMt (RI (2:00)
11J llunllr, IIIII ._Q
ill On Slllge Slllrlo.
BPrlmtNUIC
. II) Prince Vllllnl
1:30C2lelllotlom BlOssom 's
wish 10 dO Will on

a

·=

'1

Stereo.

Mllorlled~
MaJor arranges
lor Gunny

I

"'''t.J MCAN
WA~ONCE

8:00 (2). iiJ MOVI!: 'Murder
Without Mollve: 1'111 l!dmund
Ptny Staly' NIC 11 andlr
ilgllllllle ....... (2:110)
til ()) MOVI!: 'lurvlw
dll ll¥egl ...' AIIC

00'?! .

11H Ford F·150 CUstom 23,000
MliHo' l Cyllndo(, 5 S - , lod
Unlit', AMIFM 11~311. ,:

e

BASEMENT
•'
WATERPROORNG
•'
Uncondftlonol illotlme guorlin1... Local rllerencM lurnlttftd.
Froo ostlmotos. C.ll colloCt•·1·
114-237.o41ia, · doj or · nlg(\t.
Rogt,. Baumtnt Wattrpr...
tlng.
,
•

Mondlr Hlllld -

t2:00)

Stereo."C"

8 Bulhr hllrdo

41 Flnt hOminy
44 llldlcll fluid
45 Part ol coin
plant

a•

56 LlrP.t'

conllntnt

57 B1equal
58 L.oncloll' I
call clllrlel

bulden

26 Clothing

. llbrle

5g Acllfts

27 Cannonb1ll1
(II.) .

Cannon
eo~

29 Sltliilgl11• . .
3 t Futuruttra.'

DOWN
1 Sldnnr fl1ha1

2 Indicating
diiiiiH
3RIIsarol

floWin
4 Moloriata'
Olg,

5 Pilot

a Flrtt-rale
(2 ....,

7 Sla,gar

8 Jortul

eaclamaUon

,./

a•

w-

home. Stereo.-.9.

. 2.='!~te II :-"11110ma
Stele tLI
I
111:1111 ()) Newl
romance and you'll lind II. ~ Astro- CANCIR (.tune 21-.llllr 22) II you are
()) MOVll!: f'loocll (2:001
Graph Mat~hmaker lns11nt11 revealS required to handle an lmportanl maher
(lJ 1, nlllflln Amlllol:
Which signs are roinantlcally perfeol lor lor another today, tr811 h 81 eonsclen·
• !clu111lon 0111'1111 ~
you. Mall $2 plus a long, sell-ad· tlously as you would your own. You'll be
()) HMIIh Quel1111y
dresaed, slamped envelope lo Match- held aeeountable lor the r-hs.
. 1111
Nollllm
maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box L!O IJult ZI-Aug. 22)1t's bell nol to
HOlling lumlto Cl1rltl
91428, Cleveland, OH 4-4101-3428.
discuss with Olherl any dlsagreemenls
hllp Wlltn hll dlllnquent
AQUARIUS (.tlri. ' :IH'IV. 1~·'Try···to , you have With your mate ,lodaj. When
Sweo. 1;1
flow with the wiH o1 lha majorl1y today, outSiders enter the piCture, llmpluOiu·
II])
ll).stllld of being overly lnllllent thal I lona may no longor_be able_to-r....tve
01111
......
things be done ,our ~y. 11 you are, thl11gi. ·-·L,-- .. ....:.- .,.,..
~•rv;;u;~·~;~;;·~·t-:..__·~9·!"'t•Ctullan
· Will~
you',ll saw
the limb on Which you're VIRGO (A"I. 23-lepl. a)"Your
·• • .....
lllllng .
ol ObtiiiVItlon COUld be mor. acute
CliiM
PISCES. (feb. »&gt;IMch ZO) Guard lhenuoualtoelay. Juatbeoure·youdon'l
11:1111(2). (I)
Ill Gle
against making premature dlaclosureo . locus on lilt lllortcomlngs ol others
lllltewl
at this tlmt r~ardlng 'Ill ob~lw y® and oveolaOk lhelr attribul81. /
•
·
Cowl &amp;;I
hope to I!Chi8vl, There'l I chliiiii' that LIIIIIA ( . . . . »&gt;OL 21) Ba ald.-y
,,
NIW&amp;W&amp;Iall
w1111 you MY mar be uiiCIIICIIInll you. 01!8fUI ' -,you -.age y o u r , _
·
Allll8 (_,.. :t1-Aprtl11) 'lour prw- 1111111 llmt. Don't put younelfln lpoeiUIIWNr 1:1
ence wll commend attendon today, lion ol r.w, long-lorm debt tllal will be
On .._. Silto.
even though ~ might ~ot di111ber8tely dllftcult 10 endure,
, .
8lpolti lllllil!!!
-lt.Btwryewlulolyourdemeln- ICOIII'IO (OoL a4-llow. 22) Guard
0 ....... 1;1

a.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

WHI lxolld psllo COYirl •ocks
ICretntd roomt, put ·Up vlnwl
siding "' trallor lklrtlng. 814245-41112.
.

-1·""'*'
cornea.

- a

111 1

on

.,f

Electrlcll &amp;

.
......',,,.,

.

or, beclute the

·, .etillldletllliiOGrlll you llll1lt lrill-Of dw.cl

....
=

. ~- ..,...lllllll'lau lor •"'elKin 1111
... . . . . . . . tiDill..,, )IOU- ba,.Y

lllllil

~

I

I AC

,..._

~ICIIvld •• you

.

044 IUCDMI CD11.....,._,11) lfthlngt

llfw ._. •llltte tight lor yoU ftntlnclll-

lllllf, ....., Ill (IICICI day to I'IYIIw
~::'• TID
........ - ..... -be
X
I IIIOfiiOolt II nan It

IIRIIalout~ap. ~...,.to 10o1t

w•

\

.

lor

lmill 1tlon you milke tlgllnatthelnellnltlonlocllylo,......l

- IICIOd ar bid - could be 11111ng. · II1'1CIIderlng, alii lllue w1tt1 - •
yAUIIUI (~II) In order '10 ~ IIOin1 of view oppo1~1 youra.
I!Chllil Ill
Ob(lellve todly, lloth 1*1111 may be monl cpmbi!M
poOQIICI In a~. ""11141':11111111· lliln0011ll110oy.
•
- · H you 1110cM from lilt hlp, the ,. IAGITTNWI (IM, II Cleo 11) Y&lt;Nr
IUI!Inn't ~ to be Ill that nllly.
l r - Of m1nC1 Is llllramaty •lmporllnl
. . •• (-11...lulit .)8lrl¥e to be loclly; I I - Is I polllbiHI}i you mlghl
tiCIIIul whln delllng with co-work.. putuncluepr-.eanyau(IIII.Juat,..
todly. II you n !00 crltlell or IQIIrll- rnamber IIIII H you do. ....,..,. Y11!1.
live, an lncldenl could ,_" lha.t ,.,., anempt could btcomt more dllllclllt.
hiM llrioua rlmlllcalklnl.

£C.

11:JII!=~

'\

,

1....... '
"'-!.:1'111111
'llltllllno.

.

IPS: .

lllwM Allllll ...
(2:00)

·

c!i.EBRin CIPHER
.
. . , . . . . ,....,..Mdpttllnt,

~....- .... ,. . . . . .-........

........... ...., . . . . kwancMhlr. TOdtt'l.._, Y..... F.

'O .E ·DIN
. UCV

o ·H TU

II I M I W D,
Y

~D

IHCWTHW

A M

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NCEMITOEUIII,
.0 H T U

FI W J

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.

.I

I ' Q V

ZIYVUIOV . '

P W H X W

UHO

I W

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RMIJZVII.

wlfen the ectOrt orled '
Frlnll c.p... .
'1

PREVIOUS SOLUTIOH; ''I thoughl .that dtWM -

lid d,_ Is iilllll lilt, IUdll. crlll.'' -

\

. ,I .

•

4g Spirit
51 Tennll term
t2 wdL)
5381polllhlr
55 Aacencl

21 fiYorlll
22 Not IIIII
24 Banta ol

1.,_..11111

'.

ole Awrr

a

f-:10

wvO. '

.

Anowor lo Prowlouo Puulo

--- l. tut-:T-

..

.

p.,.
All pa.u

Pass

mystery ol a woman
lmpertO!!Iting Steve. till .. ·-·
s-.~
11
O..lgnlllfl
Julll Chaptrona Mary Jo and
-Mr mother on 1 bua trip

Ran't TV Smlce,. IP._IClallzJ
In Z.nllh olso sorviClng
Dlhor brlnds. Houoo Cillo, 1
IOfM appliance Npalra.
304-671-2381 Onlo 114-148-Z4M.
Room lddlllono, siding, roolltlg,
vinyl roplaetlmlnl wlndOWI
Clrpor)lrj 111' AI Trcmm, 814-~2!
2321. CALL COLLICT. "
·
Dovls .
hcSoivtco
On~ Cl'llk Ad; jtart1 ~~
pliM, pickup, ond dill._:, 814·
441-G214.
. ·-·.

...

•• ••s•

Pua

1D Father Cowing Mylllerlea
Dowling Investigates the

Froomon'o PMnblng And ~l­
Ing, 814-2M-11111.
.,

4j46-2342 . 675-1333
' .

Eu1

ill NllhW. . Now Stereo.
LMrJ Klntl u.e1

DOIN' TH'
CHORES?

llllglll

11,,_---:----

Norlll

W..l

Sotolll
1'
4•

Pllml 11me

,_ion

Refrigeration ·

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

arW;scm•
WWF

WHD'I

732

country

exam
35 011111 olllllf
lalee
38 Do•nward
llelld

(lJ Amti~Cen bplrieiiCIIQ
1111
MIMPhY ~~own
. While Muiplly and Jim
COI11Illle lor •lOb. Frank
~· hla Image. Stereo.

~BARNEY.

40 RedSI1

,g Sllpptrr

lllollom Sltreo.
On 811111 Stereo.

Ill! llllclc Stelllon Q

RWNeYA

1 Hen fruit

18 Mlrqula dt

andIIIIHOiowaehuk
lo
ol pool. Stereo.

TI-llS CCJWNlRv'

I K 9 54

tA1076S2

38 Senator Sam

12 Time periOd
13 L11J genua
14 For11111
atudent
15 Quiche -17 Amarle1n
Indian

Pollee lnvesllglte an eluaiY6

Services

•s

....

the Norwegian team tbat won t)le

4 At 1 dlltance

extortlon~t wanted lor rape.

MEE:KLE AND WINTHROP

t70

1990 European Junior Championship.
Opening lead: +5
South chose the wrong moment 10
make a four-diamond slam-try oppo-1'------------l
site his partner's limil heart raise. If king, 10. Declarer continued with the
be had just b1d lour hearts, Helpemo, spade king, but Helaemo withheld his
sitting West, would probably bave led ace. West won the second spade and
his sillgletoa diamond, after which the exited with the club ace which South
contract would make eas1ly. But lore- ruffed
·
'
warned, he opted lo lead a low club.
Deciarer knew that the odds faWhen you are defending aga~t a vored playing West for a singleton
su1t contract, 1t is. usually UD!flle 10 heart 10 rather than J-10 doubleton.
underlead an a~ m a s1de S':"t· ~r- Also West seemed determined to keep
baps. declarer .Will "ffre a trick With declarer out of the dummy 10 slOp a
the s1~gletoil king. l'lll:baps yo.ur part- ,second trump lead back toward the
ner Will be misled about the he of the queen. Judging West ,to have begun
cards, expectmg d~lam to have the with only ooe heart, South led a low diace. Here the l':3d did neither of these ·amond from hand, trying to force a
things, nor did tt help South..
diiDI!IIY entry in diamondl. Ho-,
~larer won tr~ck one 1n the dum- East won with the king and gave bis ·
my, discarding a diamond fro~· hand, partner a diamond ruff. The heart ace
and then played a low heart: eight, was the fourth defensive trick.

ACROSS

[£~ De!MIIve

Alploy, wv. 304-372-3933 or 1·
800-2'13-&amp;SU..
,

. .... a

10

Tbe World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

scholaatlc exam causes tell
anxiety. Steteo.Q

'
Now po tonko, bodj ps~o. fn•
ton truck whNia 1 "'radlat9!••
ffoor m~1~1 IIC. 0 l R Auto,

Complllo MDbllo Homo Soi-U~o,
Ropolrs; Commorloll, R u !
tiiJ Improvement•. lncludl . :
Plumbing, Eioclrlcol. lnauoa
Clolmo &gt;IC&lt;optod. 114-251·1111.•:
Cunll Homo lmpraVIInlmti:
V11ro Elporl-. On Oldor !l
Homoo. Room AddHIO!io
~ Rooll~
Kftahono And 8otho. Froo EIUmolnl Roflronao, No Job 11&gt;
Big Or 9011111 114-441-o225. ,,

c

III'OitiMIOn. S1trlo.

(!) AIC TO CIID t2:00)
dJ
l!ve111na llllldl
Problems plague WOOII and

Budget Traneml11lorw, Used I
rebuln, starting at t:H; Auto
Po~s. 614-245-Stm, &amp;14·fi2263.

::

au.:n 5'

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Accessories

Improvements

Ten

(l)

'Ju

By PbUiip Alder

on

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ALLEY

EAST

SOUTH
tK8
'KQUS

The In~\ional Bridge Press As·
sociation award1or the best defense of
19Vl went 10 Geir Helgemo, wbo was

aGeorgetown
ColleOt ......"
at ProYidence

1-1-tl

WEST

· t AIO 9 52

The best defense
of the·year

c

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l!l Now 11 can 1e Toil

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ALDER

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MOYIE: Magic

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Home

Complete tho chuckla quolod
·by filling I~ lito milling -d•
you dovolop lrom llep No. 3 below.

Ill CUIIIIII Allllr

142J,
luy.,
- - I·~-=·
Cell lrtc
AI IIOIMS,

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.

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Auto Parts &amp;

Plumbing ~&amp;
...... , .. Heating

f--il:;-7.:
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7:00;. Ill WIMtl 01 Fortune

1

81

l'orl'lliellyouhowlhat------.·

D• CIS Newa Q
• Ancly Qrllfltll
IIJ Scaoby Doo
Ql Iuper iowllll Hlghllghll
New York Jill Yl. Baltimore
Colla.
Ill! New ZOII'O Q
8:36 (I) Andy Qrlfllth

ur..•.

,

r

;

1112 CJ7 )Hp, 304-162-3311T. .:

76

A fellow was sp(awled out
on the bus seat reading a mystery
'Sit like a gentleman,'novel.
one rider announced,

...... OM 'IV Stereo.

1971 GMC 414 Sho~bod 350
Auto, Everything Workl, Clnn
Truck. 11,540. 614-4411-7128. :

IVIftlftQI

lz

I!)Savtd by dll IIIII
.
(I) ·())· AIC Newl C
(lJ Wild Amertc~ stereo. 1;1

&amp; 4 WD's

1168 Dodao Clrovon LE, lol~,
cloon, 9'7,000 mlln, NAOA
"Book" valuo- $5i00. Aoklng
141100. 31M-675-~308. "' • .
IHO Pljmolh V01ogor Mini-lion,
6-cyl, 3.3L Chryslw s~g, ps, pb,
auto, AIC, AMlf"M lttrto •'Uto
I'IIV 5-band, CB, very good
39,300MI
FL roglstorstlon
110,500, l..ngsvlllo, 614-~2-213'1

1

0

I:OS (I) lle¥elly Hllllilllltt
8:30 (1). Ill NIC NewiQ

Trucks for Sale

Vans

Rainbow Stereo.

=~
a
Wodd Tocllr

GMC
11179
1lpoup
~on!
381tnglnt 4-tpeed Allison, new
tll'll, 12tt walk-In utllhy btd,
runs good, $21100, 114-992-2478

73

iY I
II

!
I
,~ . .1. ; L;. I'. ;.O,;N1,;. .rK1;. ;L;. .!-I rl
~
'-·=·::;:·~-~-~-~
R E GN E D
I ;.l..::..r;~I~~..::..TI--1 8

Ill! Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
Stereo. &amp;;I

bu~ Mil

1918 Mock dump-lruck, 15h bed,
44 roars. Now pslnl, good llros,
runs good, $8500,114-992-2478
1e78 Chevy pick up, 350 auto,
$800. 304-1175-2457.
1978 Jeep truck, quadra-trae,
auto, topper, n.. tront tires,
$52511nn, 614·992-5305
1985 Dodgor hol1 lon pickup,
a"'o. AM!FM tltrto. 13500. 614·
448-7604.
1986 Ford F·250, V-8, 4x4, 47,000
Mll11, Call After 5p.m. 61t-44644n.
·

0

SOEEB
~.
,~ ;;,.::...r.l1..;;;..,.-...il

Ill 1D.

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JOURNEVTQ A NEW PLACE ..

b.

words:

OM TV Stereo.

lllldlng

IS UKE A

READIN6

or trade. Jim
Cochf'ln Auto Center 5th and
Vlond Sl, Pt. Pll. 304-6l5-iH5.

72

(l) ()).

loll.ro af lito

lour ·ICramblod ~~
low 10 form lovr ~~pit

IIJNewl
I!) Yldlo , . _

Statlonwagon 1m, Cheverolet
Malibu, auto, PB, PS, ntw Urea,
$800, 614-992-2717

Completly Furnished Small
Merchandise
Houn, S250fmo. Plut Ulllltltll
And Copooll. 614-148-0338. Cal
1988 Ford Escort, LX, Sloll
Bafora 7p.m.
Gro1, Top Condlllon, 'Con 614·
Fumlshtd Apar1ment, 1br, next 258 ..!54.
to Ubrary, parking, centrtl htat,
air, refertncta. 114-441-0338, Baby crib, bastlneU, high chair,
swing, rocker, drtttlng tlble &amp;
Btlora 7p.m.
car 1111. Full alzt btd, twin aize
Gracious living . 1 and 2 btcf. bed, complete caHH table &amp;
room tpartmentt 11 VIllage ond plocos. 304-675-1546.
Livestock
63
and
Rivtrtlde
~2~H-orso~T~ro~l~lo~r~NIW~~Po~I~~.N~ow­
Big
4BA,
2
bath,
Dakota
dream
Apar1menls In Middleport. From
homo lxolll lor you S29,H5. 614· Tiros, 11,1115; IHO AOHA Gold$196. Call614·992-7787. EOH.
886·731 t Display model now Ing, S800i 8 YHr Ofd Paint Mlrt,
In Mlddtoport, Ohio. 1 ond 2 opon.
$650. 114-2811-6522.
btdroom furnlshtd apt, some
with utlll1itS paid, reference and Brldtl Gown, Stml.formatlvor~.
deposit rtqulred, 304·882·2566. Slu I , Never Wom1 $200. 114· YNrMng Angua And Charalals
448-6833 Ahor 5p.m.
Bulls FOr s.ro. 8143-446-4447.
Ntw Haven one bedroom apl
deposll and referanc1 requlrtd: C.B. blsa rodlo, Cobtl 2000. [).
11M Mlko Docy Moloro PBL II 64
Hay &amp; Grain
304-662·2566.
Ant. 4 HCtlont. Tower, Co-ax
Nlco 2 BR, 4·112 mi. ~... Gil· olltroo. E•e. cond. $800. Coli Ml1od Hoy&lt; 'Round Boloo, S15
llpolis. S1ovt &amp; refrta. No pete. Hlwetn la.m. &amp; 10 p.m. 614· Ptr Bllt. ~toM Indoor!:. Hay,
$235/mo. 614-146-803&amp;.
251·1443.
500 Sq. Baln. Pur11 Aid uovtr.
Compltlly Furnished mobile Commercial video gama, aplce $2.00 Per Bale. 114·245-MIO.
hom•, 1 milt below town over· lnndtr, $150. Ron Tr11 prom
looking river. No Pttl, CA. lt4· drosns, 13-14 -$100.16 -$200.
Transportation
446.0338.
304-675-6485.
Ont and
two
bedroom
apanman11 for rant 304·67511 Autos for Sale
2b53 or 675-4100,
ttea Old1 F-85, 4dr, V-8, auto,
air, U,OOO ICIUII mlln, runs
~· 9.ood llrn, 1800 obo, 114·

5I

Q R10rrango

"'

Miscellaneous

Building

54

Merchancl1se

. I&amp;. .

I

. MON., JAN. 8

TO COt.l.£66
RlR Hll\ ...

1911 Pon11sc Orond AM, oil-; 4
70,000 mliM, good cond,
Goods
Merchandise
. 304:675-11060 bolorl 5:30, ·~or
304-882·2637.
1
3 pc bedroom tWit $125. Sell Or Trade : 3 Tobacco Bans, 1090 ford E1eort aT. A1klng
Nlnendo tystem $40. OuHn 4 Cholet Grave Spacet ln U,IOO. 814-441-0TJ1.
·
tilt water bed $150. 304-4575- Memorial Gardens. Chtapl 614·
73.
-..:4::8·- --- - -- - - !446·1004.
18"91 Plymouth LIHr: 59,d.,
AMJFM cas,ttteil AC, Take_~.,
Army P1yment1 Or agotlatt Prte,e.
Pollr 114-245-5204, LNvollls-.
~ For alt or trad• for truck, '78
Dodgo Von, she&gt;~ :&lt;oho!~J&gt;•••·
Now &amp; cllln lnsldo. ,..,..-6?5764D,
For SOlo: 1984 Ford Tompo (k_
11,115.114-387.0~,.- ·
'
Oldt Taronado 1m low mlf11,
lhlrp, ooklng 11495 obo, must
1111614482-2476
..

Apt.1or ront $175, housolor rom 53
Antiques
$100 1 Pomoro,. Apl. 1oo ronl ,;:._ __;.;,;.:;,::.::.:.:..__ _
Midaltpor1 $100, 6M-t92·7511
Buy or 1111. Rlvtrll'll Antiques,
1124
E. Main Str•at, Pomeroy.
Apt. lor ronl1 Spring Avo
$160mo, $100 aapoeh, 1·bdrm, Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 6:00
p . m 1 _~unday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
no pets, 614-867-3083
114-w.t-2526.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Antique furniture repair and
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON ro11nlshlng. (25 ,,., "'PI Wall
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plko Whllo, 114'245-11441.
from $192/mo. Walk to shop l
movies. Call 614-446-2568. EOH . :.::.:::::..:M::.:Isc:;:::e:.:ll::a::neo;_u_s___

45

.....

EVENING

2BR,
1&gt;11~ 1
kltchon...Nswlj llhoca Modll 37 12 Gougo Slug
ramodeltd. r.lce 11'11, big yard. Gun. Shool1 2 314 And 3 lncfl
$325/mo., $325 dop. Doys 014- Mognum ShoUs, $250. 614·256·
6~ .
446·1157, Evo. 614-11114-1501.

·15'--------

.992-2156

FllUit Pws' RXlR.
1$ Nl~&amp; •• . fW6

IS~~~~~~

1187 Cht~y No~a : tllgh mlaeaCr•.
netds repair. Good transporlil·
12x65 In country. Vln1on arsa.
Uon car. 1'1,500. For mort inf«ir·
Wattr, trash, stove, relrlg. lur·
molion Coil 614-446-2342, Alk
nlshed. $185/mo. Ret. &amp;: dep.
for Paul.
614·386-9680.
1987 Horizon Aulomalhi ~~
2 bdrm mobile home for ren1,
Air, $1,700; 1158 Edsll 11"1""
approx. 3 milts lrom Pomeroy &amp;
Mllu, 11,200. 614·256-1270. ,
Middlaport, total electric, 614·
19lfl Mozdo Rx-7 (whllo lh
992·5656
blue Interior) Turbo char
2 bedroom, unfurnished, 12x60,
roii,Y' anglno. Air, I • spHd,
112 milt plast Holzer Medic11
AM/FM'-!ereo casHHI, r.lr
Canter, $200. mo, ttl &amp; dep redllroSitr, power windo.-,
qulrod, 614-146-4369 or 304-675·
moon roof, rear window louvtr•
2330.
and front end cover lncludt'd,
Ont
owner. Exctlltnt condltlq:n.
2 BR mobile home, $200/mo.
52,000 mliOo. Gorogo kop1.
614-367-7602.
112,000. Tradoo nogolroblo. &lt;;Ill
C&gt;
2br Mobile Home On Larffe ~
•14-441·1108 after 5;00 p.m. .~:
Private Lot, $215/Mo. Securty. ~..,;;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _"""'~---------1 19 ~ Nlsun •-,., .. _..;en
Deposit, Aaf,rtncts. 814·446· r
ur
owm
,._...
2236, 614-146·2511.
11,800. 814-141.0731.
•:

Trailers FOr Rent; · Also Trailer
Lois. 614-446-1279.

21

...: :~ I'WS OKf:

614~ 441-1115 .

Retrain
Nowii!Southeast1rn
Bustn111 College, Spring Valley
Piau. Call Tod.iy, 114·446-4367[1
RoglstoraUon 190-05-12748.

Financial

1986 fqtd R•nger, smi.U pick.
up, topper, running · boardl,
$24 ,000 icJ ml, 4-c:yl, $28501 614992-6719 .

1 BR apartmant &amp; 2 BR trtlltr.

Total electric 2 BR, no pets. 614·
367-7438.
2 Trailers In Henderson tor rent.
with washtr &amp;: dryar. 304·773·
5248 anytime.

The Dally Sentlnei"'"':Pag~9

Ohto

Autos for Sale

for Rent

2br Mobllo Home, Rt.588 Gal·
· lloplis, $225 · Pius Utllllios,
,---.,...,.,-.,.....,~--- oerosll Requlrod . No Pots. 614Would Ukt A Place To Uve 44 -3968 After &amp;p.m.
CioN To i'own, With Roomall 3br Trailer, $200fMo. Water Paid.
TRa WathWC1olphoo,RFI• Dinnar, In Deposit Required. 614-256-8117.
atum 1II •r tnt. 614·446·
3658 II No Answer Plust Call Mobllt Homn For Rent:
Bsck.
Atlerence And Deposit A•
quired. Call After 2p.m. 814·446·
0527.
14
Business

Will Blbysit In My Homa. Rod·
nty Area. References Available.
Coll614·245-5887.

71

42 Mobile Homes

Wanted

Wanted to Do

.KIT 'N; tARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

Small 'Urlturnlshtd Houst 3
Rooms, Bath, Air Conditioning,
Carpeted, Dra~ries, ScrHntd
Porch, Private Parking, 614-4462602.

~~~atlon

Training

Pomeroy...,.Middleport,

' bedroom unfurnished houit,
507 Second St, Ntw Hevtn, 304·
875-3419.

llpolls, ""45631.

J!!LDM!f-li

3

Houses for Rent

1992

�•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Community calendar
Community icalendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
·endar.
MONDAY
LET ART - The Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the township building for an
organizational meeting.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet Monday at 7 p.m . at
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. There will
be a devotional speaker and a craft
Those attending bring a salad bar
item.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middlcpon
Presbyterian Church Social Room .
Judy Arnold will have a program
on "House Plants - Our Living
Room Landscape." from Plants Arc
Like People by Jerry Baker. All
members arc asked to b11ng a
houseplant to show and exchange.
Roll call is "What do gardeners do

in.winter?"

POMEROY· The Ladies Auxiliary of the Eagles Club will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. A pizza party
will be help and all members arc
urged to attend.

RACINE - South ern Local
School Board will hold an organizat ional and budget meeting on
Monday at 7:30p.m.

CHESTER • The Pomeroy
Chapter, No. 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall in
Chesler.

RACINE · Racine Village
Council will mee t Monday at 7
p.m. at the council chambers at Star
Mill Park.

TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleMIDDLEPORT · The Middle·
port Masonic Lodge No. 3.63 will port Literary Club wi·ll meet
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for a Wednesday at 1:30 p.m . at the
regular busi ness meeting. All mas- home of Mrs. Chesler Erwin. Mrs.
ter masons arc urged to attend.
Dwight Wallac.c Will review "Murder at Lhc Palace," and Florence
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- Smith will review "Nehru." Roll
port Comm unity Association will call is to bring a recent newspaper
meet Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at Mid- clipping abouLindia.
dleport Cou ncil Chambers. All
members arc urged to attend.
CHESTER - The po stponed
meeting of Chester Garden Club
POMERO Y - The regular meet- will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m.
ing of the American Legion Drew at the home of Mrs. Donald Mora.
Webster Post No. 39 will be held "Turning Winter In to Spring is the .
Tuesday at the post home. Dinn er theme of th e program by Mrs.
will begin at 7 p.m. followed by Ri chard Barton .
meeting at 8 p.m.

Monday, January 6, 1992

---Names in the news--.NEW YORK (AP) - Singer
Belinda Carlisle, who is expecting
u baby in June, said she has forsak·
en touring, her personal trainer and
her daily five-mile runs.
· "What the hell," she said in the
Jan. 13 issue of People magazine.
''I'm letting it all go. I'm eating a
lot and getting used to being a fat
pig. And I'm enjoying it."
Carlisle, 33, and her husband of
five years, Morgan Mason, hadn't
exactly planned to have a baby, she
said.
.
"We were sort of not trying, but
. then, I guess, something hap·
pencd," she said.
Carlisle, who went solo after
performing with the Go-Gos, was
recently in Europe promoting her
album "Live Your Life, Be Free."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Forget
Sherwood Forest and the fields of
Iowa . Kevin Costner prefers to
lounge hy the shore.
Costner, whose movies incfude
" Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves,"
"Field of Dreams" and "JFK,"
has bought a seaside cottage in
Santa Barbam County.
Costner, 36 , paid about $3 million for the contemporary, woodand-glass home enclosed in a gated
community ncar Montecito, the
Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.
The 6,000-squarc-foot home has
a guest suite with its own entrance.
two children ·s bedrooms and a
large master bedroom with a 40-

.

Group meets

TEN YEARS AFTER - Ten-year-old Eliza·
beth Carr, the rirst American baby conceived
through in-vitro fertilization, poses with a copy

of' the Life magazine with her photo on the
cover, at her home in Westminister, Mass. Carr
celebrated her tenth birthday on Dec. 28. (AP)

America's first 'test-tube
baby' marks her lOth birthday
By ANNE STUART
Associated Press Writer
WESTMINSTER, Mass. (AP)
- Ten-year -old Eli zabe-th Carr
recently nipped through the Gumness Book of Records. lookmg for
the entry on the world' s bigges t
turtle. Scanning the index. she hit
"test-tube baby."
"So I looked it up," Elizabeth
said, adding with surprise: "And I
was there.· ·
Indeed she was. Born on Dec.
28, 1981, Elizabeth camcd a spot in
history as the first American conceived through in-vitro fertilization
- that is, in a laboratory, ou tSide
the mother's body.
A dec ade la ter, Elizabeth
remains a miracle to her parents,
Roger and Judy Carr. and•a symbol
of hope for other infertile couples.
To herself, however, Elizabeth
is just another fo urth-grader who
likes icc skating, si nger Whitney
' Houston and the "Anne of Green
Gables" books, and who needs
constant reminding to tid y her
room.
"I think of myself as a nonnal ,
weirdo, crazy kid,' ' she said.
Well , maybe. But most kids
don't mark their 1Oth birthdays
with appearances on "Good Morning America " and the " Today"
show. Most don ' t sec their baby
:pictures on the covers of Life,

New sweek and U.S . News &amp;
World Report.
Aod few have been the subject
of a documentary.
Elizabeth and her parents- her
mother owns a pre-school program
and her father is a mechanical engineer at General Electric Co. - arc
used to scrutiny . While they don't
seck the limelight, th ey don 't shun
it, either.
"We dec ided we would go public," Roger Carr said in an interview at the famil y's home in rural
central Massachu setts. "We felt an
obligation to let other co upl es
~now that this proced ure was
viable ."
" We find peo ple wonderi ng
whateve r happened to her," Mrs.
Carr said . " They can sec she's a
typ ical, normal . healthy child."
Elizabeth herself seems unim pressed. Readi ng the Guinness listing, she was mos t interested to
learn that she and Louise Brown the world's first test-tube baby,
born in England on July 25, 1978
- both we ighed 5 pounds, 12
ounces at birth.
The Carrs sa id th ei r li vely,
frec kle-faced daug hter, who paints.
plays th e Oute and excels in school,
differs from other kids in only one
way : She's exceptionally knowledgeable about human reproduction.
·

Elizabeth und erstands that durin g tn-vitro fertili zat ion .' doctors
extract the mother's egg, fertilize it
w11h the father's sperm in a glass
di sh and implant it in the woman's

T~e controversy dwindled as
more test-tube babies were born.
The Jones Institute expects its
l ,OOOth birth in March. Nationwide, close to 10 ,000 in -v i!ro
babies have been born in the past
decade, according to the American
Fertility Society of Birmingham,
Ala.

Clouds frustrate southern California
crowds hoping for glimpse of eclipse
tains. "This'll happ,cn again in
another 20,000 years. '
Farther down the coast, th e
viewing was better.
On San Diego's Mission .Beach,
retirce Rhea Pedersen said the ring
eclipse " looked like God was
putting out a fire in the ocean."
The ring eclipse, .which blocked
82
percent of the sun's surface and
years. '
92
percent of its diameter, hap·
It was seen by thousands or peopcncd
because the moon is at the
ple who lined San Diego beaches
far
point
of its orbit around Earth
and parts of Orange County. But
and
appeared
too small to cause a
thousands of others missed th e
sh9w after bringing viewipg filters, total eclipse. The sun also appeared •
cameras, binoculars and telescopes larger because it was closer to
10 points streu:hing from Malibu to Earth than during II total eclipse.
From the air,,the view was tcrLoS Angeles to the San Gabriel and
rifle.
San l!emardino mountains.
. "~t was quite an experience. ...
"This is a nalUrtll event, and we
It
can't control nature," Costa Dillon, · was -unbeli~vablc," said Capt.
a National Park Service ranger, Bud Lofgren, an Alaska Airlines
saau a~ ........ au,. -· ~~it" ~PJt fQr the pilot whose crew dicUtlcd a diary or
night in the Santa Monica Moun' the ec lipse as they carried more
• '
By LEE SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Clouds obscured the weekend's ,
ring-shaped eclipse of the setting
sun for most Californians hoping 10
sec the phenomenon, leaving some
j~lum that another WO\Ildn'l be seen
m the same spot for about 20,000

than 130 passengers from Puerto
Vallurlil, Mexico, to San Francisco.
The diary says that at 4:50p.m.
PST, Saturday, "a perfect ring of
light" appeared on Southern California's horizon during the annular
orcentralcclipse.
The moon's shadow ,first
touched Earth at sunrise Sunday
west of the international date line,
creating a conventional partial
eclipse that made the moon look
like 'it was taking a bite out of the
sun.
·
The eclipse was blocked by,
clouds over. northeastern Australia
and the southern Philippines, but .
was briefly visible from Japan.
The lunar shadow lhen raced
eastward across the date line and
the Pacific Ocean, creating the
"ring of rire" ec~p~ at sunset Sat•
urday in Southern California and a
oartinl ec linse from the Rockies
westward, i~clutling Hawau.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy Village Council welcomed a new mayor and two new
council membets when it held its
first regular meeting of 1992 Monday night.
New Mayor Bruce Reed, who
was sworn into office last week,
administered the oath of office to
new councilmen Scolt Dillon and
John Blacttnar, and to returning
Village Clerk Brenda Morris ,prior

)

TIFFANIE DEEM
body out," sa id Ru sse ll Sibert ,
Hiram' s d~rcctor of public re iations. "We had to get tou gh. We
knew that so'mc people would comTim and Stefanic Deem,
plain."
Pomeroy. arc announcing the birth
William Streeter, vice president of th eir first child, a daughter,
for business at U1c college, warned TiiTanic Nachcal Deem, on Au g. 8
students in a letter last fall that fat!- at Holzer Medical Center.
ing to take care of unpaid biHs
The infant weighed six pounds
might lead to students bcmg dcmed and II ounces and was 20 inches
admission to dormitoncs and class- long.
cs.
Grandparents arc Don and Linda
He said it was the first time the Price, Rutland; VICki Harris, Midcollege had changed locked Lo dleport; and Jim and Becky Fife,
press its case for payment.
Cheshire.
"We arc working with each st uGreat grandparents arc Darlene
dent," Streeter said Sunday. "To Pril:C, Chesh ire; Mary Per sons,
this point, only one student, wtlh Chester; Darrel and Ada Gilpen.
excessive debt and no repayment · Point Pleasant· and the late Victor
plan, has been denied admittance." Young u.
'
The col lege has about 1,000
Great-great grandmothers arc
full -time students. It costs approxi· Audrey Young, Pomeroy; and Elizmatcl y $15,000 a year to attend.
abeth Stewart, Point Pleasant.

3-S

Partly cloudy tonight. Low in

mld -3~.
mld-4~.

Wednesday, high in

Vol. 42, No. 171

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 7, 1992

Copyrlghtad 1992

to the commencement of the meet·
ing.
Larry Wehrung was again
named president of the council, and
Reed indicated that he expected the
president of the council lo also
serve as chairman of the finance
committee, pointing out the higher
salary that lhe president of the
council now collects.
Dillon and Betty Baronick were
appointed by Reed 10 serve as the
other two members of the finance

committee, and Reed stated thai he miuee last night to review and
would like for the finance commit- · update village ordinances. Bill
tee to meel at least quarterly so that Young will chair that committee,
the finances of the village-may be with Blaettncr and Werry also serv·
more closely monitored. The com- ing.
mit tee will meet on Wednesday to
Reed also renewed the appointfinalize the appropriations for the mcnt of Danny Zirkle as the village
1992 fiscal year.
fire chief.
Thomas Werry, Wehrung and
Letter reviewed
Dillon were named'to the council's
A lcuer from the villa~c·s legal
safott commiuec, with Werry counsel, Patrick O'Bnen, was
named as that commiuee's chair· rcvtewed by council.
man. Reed also formed a new comIn the letter, 0' Brien stated that

he was forbtdden by law from
accepting the position of village
solicitor, due 10 his position as
Meigs County Coun Judge, but that
he would be willing to continue to
serve as legal advisor 10 the village.
O'Brien also addressed the vii!age's problem with uncollected
fines, explaining in detail the finecollection procedures used in his
court. In particular, O'Brien
explained that after all other payment options have been exhausted

on defendants and fines remain
unpaid, a warrant is issued and the
offender pays his fines by "sitting
them out" in jail at a rate of $30 per
day.
"I understand that this may not
be financially (casible for the village since jail would mean a loss of
fine and also' the pajllllcnt.of a fcc
to the county for each day served
by the defendant," O'Brien's letter
s~1tes. "However, once you get .the
Continued on page 3

BI' rth is announced

SWEARING IN CEREMONY ·. Council
members John Blaettnar and Scott Dillon were
sworn in as new Pomeroy Village Council mem,bers at the council's rirst meeting last night.

L--egislators approve
juvenil~ crime bill
Environmentalists say
secrecy shrouds mill

POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·6614 OR 1·800·837·1094
OUR YEAR-END CLEARANCE WAS SUCH A SUCCESS
THAT NOW WE ARE OVER STOCKED WITH USED CARS.
ALL CARS MUST GO!!
1988 CHEVY (·10'

CAVALIER R/S

Auto., AC, 4·dr.

$6999 '
5 To Choose From

Auto., AC.

1986 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA

$5495

$2995

1983 CHEVY S·l 0

1988 OLOS CALAIS

Ext. &lt;ob, V-6, aulo ., AC

Quad·4, auto., AC.

$3495

$5995

1988 CHRYSLER STH
AVENUE

$5995

1991 CHEVY

CORSICA

1988 OLDS

4 Dr., auto., AC.

CIERA

$7995'

$4995

1987 CHEVY
CELEBRITY EUROSPORT
4 Dr., aulo.

Renewalfiees due

$4995
1984 DODGE DAYTONA

Music equipment taken

Turbo Z, black, auto.

$2995

uro'l'"e heads Southern board
·

AS LOW AS

LEMANS

$7995

4 Dr., auto., AC.

Texan elected new AEP chief

'$

Gr.ant awarded

1976 FORD F·1 SO
PICKUP

$895

AS LOW AS .

$18,995
•
'

'

Meigs schools stand
to lose $172,745.93

Th ree autos uamaged . wrec.k

1990 PONTIAC .

1991 CADilLAC
SEVILLE

as saying they need a stronger law still working on the week's agenda.
to catch delinquents, who in recent
House Speaker Vern Riffe, Dycars have been committing more Wheelersburg, indi~ted that while
serious crimes, such as burglary.
Monday's House calendar was reiThe Senate was scheduled to atively light, the pace soon will
return from its holiday recess - quicken.
By MINDY KERNS
today. Senate President Stanley
He and Aronoff will meet later
Woolverton said she is network· across the state. It is imponant for
OVP
Starr Writer
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati. said he was this week to discuss how the Legising statewide with environmental the people in Mason County to take
"Wt can'r gtr diddly-squar out of groups and will be lobbying on the a very active interest," Woolverton
'
laturc can help Goy . George
the gov~rnor's office; the state dioxin standards at the legislature.
said, noting this is not an issue "just
Voinovich solve' a $457 million newspaper said it can't get any·
1;
deficit in the stale bud~et.
· "You have friends and allies
Continued on page 3
Rep. Michael Stmziano, D- thing out of Alabama Pulp ... What
,~
Columbus, sponsored the juvenile do they lum to hide?" - Norm
m
fingerprint and photograph bill at Steenstra, W.Va.' Enviro11111tntal
-·
Three vehicles were damaged in an accident on Mulberry
the request of Columbus police. •• Council.
Avenue Monday night.
,
He said members of the burglary
According to Pomeroy Police, Betty Baronick was traveling
squad told him that juveniles arc
That seemed to be the question
north on Mulberry Ave. about 9 p.m. when she struck two parked
responsible for increasing numbers of the evening wh6! the West V'tr·
vehicles. She was cited for failure to maintain assured clear disof burglaries but that under existing ginia Environmental Council, Ohio
tancc.
law, they arc unable to usc pho- ValleyEnvironmentalCoalilionand
Meigs County's thr ee lo cal tions, however, according to the
There was moderote damage to the left rear and quarter panel of
to graphs and fingerprints to find
Mason Association for a Clean Ensc
hool
districts stand to lose Ohio Department of Education, if
the 1979 Buick owned by Homer Bricklds, and light damage to the
suspects.
vironmenl (M.A.C.E.) hosle9 an in$172,745.91
under the budget cuts the Ohio Legislature makes provitaillight area on the left rear of the 1977 Ford of Robert Taylor. The
Times have changed since the formational meeting Monday evenBaronick vehicle had moderate damage to the right side door area.
1950s and 1960s, when the most ing concerning Alabama River Pulp proposed by Gov. George sions for exemption and approves a
serious juvenile crimes usually . and Paper's proposed mill in Apple Voinovich, according to a report tran sfer of $8.7 million in lottery
from the Ohio Department of Edu- funds.
involved stealing cars for joy rides, Grove.
If legislation permitting use of
Those holding amusement licenses, security alarm licenses, and
Stinziano said. ·
"II gelS into my craw that ari out- cation.
the
slate
budget
cuts,
the
lottery funds is nol approved,
Under
garbage collection licenses for Pomeroy are reminded that·renewal
Riffe said he expects 10 have of-state company comes into our
funding
for
education
will
be
then
losses to the districts in Meigs
fees arc now due and payable at Pomeroy Village Hall.
recommendations .within the next state and tells us we should weaken
reduced
by
$88.8
..
illion.
County
will be Eastern Local,
week to 10 days on how to dear our standards &lt;on dioxins),"
Thi
s
includes
a
2.5
percent
.
$31,951.86,
a 1.57 percent reducwith the budget problem.
Strcenstra told ·approximalely 75
An NTX Kickcrbox and six speakers were stolen from a parked
He was recovering from a bout people who filled a.meeting room reduction in sc hool foundation tion in state funding; Meigs Local,
vehicle sometime Monday evening, Pomeroy police reported.
with the flu ·and ·said, "I really at the Mason County Public basic allowance, special education, $103,404.96, 1.87 percent redutThe music equipment was in the vehicle of Bobby C_ooghenour
haven't had' much time to think Library. He added he had never · vocational education, and disad- tion ; and Southern Local ,
of Gallipolis which was parked at 132· Union Ave. when the theft
aboot it."
seen soch a secretive projoe!,
vantaged pupil impact aid.
$37,398.1I, 1.90 reduction. These
All other categorical programs, figures apply to fiscal year 1992
occurred. The equipment was valued at $519, the ownct reported.
Riffe declined comment on a
Dioxins arc cancer-causing by·
request by Voinovich for a legisla- products, aoeording.., to the en- with the exception of the simula- which ends on June 30.
Eastern is already in the state
HI ~·
tive bailout package thai would vironmental groups. Thelcgislatarc. tion system, vocational equipment
replacement,
non-public
adminisloan
program, and Meigs Local has
Scott Wolfe was elected president ·and Janet Sue Grueser vice
include increases in the cigarette will be .consideri.li&amp;-Jil[!l'J)ving the
tration,
desegregation
costs,
and
made
application and rcccmly
president of the Southern Local School Board at the reorganizationand alcoholic beverage laltes.
1.0 part per quadrillion dioxin disal meeting held Monday night at Southern High School.
·
Voinovich proposed other mea- charge standard when it convenes propeny tax allocations, will take a underwent an audit by the state to
detennine the financial necessity or
The board established regular meeting dates as the third Monday
sures that include ending a 1.5 per- Wednesday. The ·issue will first go six per cent c~t.
Some poorer school districts borrowing to continue operation of
of each month at 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
cent discount retailers receive for to the Joint Legislative RulePerformance bonds were renewed with the Ohio School Board
collecting the sales tax and turning Making Review Cof!!miltce, then .. may be exempt from cost rcduc- the system.
Association for the treasurer; assisUint treasurer, superintendent and
operation of Ohio's retail liquor the Senate and House Judiciary
board members. Membership was also renewed with the Ohio
stores .overlo the private sector.
Committees. State SenaiOr Roben
School Board Association.
·
In other business Monday, Diumar and House of Delegates
... ··-- The budget was approved and it was annOIJ,QCCd that members
House Minority Leader Corwtn member Charles Damron arc both
will be paid $80 per meeting for 13 regular mccimgs ~o·be held each
Nixon, R-Lcbanon, announced he members of theil' respective
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- E. chairman and chief executive offiyear.
'
will not seck re-election this-year. jl!(liciai'y ' oommittees,
each Linn Draper Jr .. crodited with help- ccr.
He has been minority•le!ider for 14 representing lhe district siting the ing Gulf SUites Utilities Co. out of
Draper joined Gulf States in
tough times, has been named presL- 1979 as a technical assistant to the
· Slate Representative Mary Abel (D·Alhens) announced·loday
years and a House member since pulp mill.
1962.
·
Strccnstra was · joined in · his dcnl and a board member of Amer- CEP. He headed the company
that the Corporation for ApPalachian Pevelopmcnt has OOc:n'awardNixon, who previously w_as a opinion by MiS$y Woolverton and ican Electric R
Co.
beginning in 1987. ·
ed a grant of $397,132 for the operotion of the state's TiUe V Senior
Warren County commissioner for Bruin Hagenbuch of tile. Ohio Val·
Draper, • who was chairman, · Gulf S\3tes, which generates and
Community Serivcc Employment Program. A/
1 tha h' 84th
12 years, S3l'd hd
. "Our older population is an indispensable resoun:e for the work
· e 1 t rs
• ' ley Environmental Coalition. president d chief executive offi'· sells clcclricity to about 570,000
,...
District is due for new n:pi'esenlll , Hagenbuch told ~ crowd of eer of Gulf Sillies of Beaumont, ' customers in Texas ani! Louisiana,
J;- force and· ~·c?mm':/:itics.: ;Abel said. ¥~.~akifg opportuni~s
·uoo-inColumbus.
·
mostly Mason and Gal~a countians ·Texas, 'was elected at a special had 1990 revenues of $1.7 brlhon
· :. like this a be to ose Cltlzens ·~ are •..,...lrrD, ng our commitRiffe.said he· and Niion .h•ve that they do have .aJiies in Hun· meeting of the AEP board of and toial kilowatt-hour sales of-$29
ment to th as valued members of our society."
~
trustees on Monday.
billion.
·
·
COAD 'II'
th fundin
· · ·de ·0&gt;b · ·
d
·
enjoyed ·a close friendship over the lin$_10n.
·
·
.
wr use e
g to provr ) traltltng an expen·
years despite their opposing politi~agcnbuch said the EPA conducarc
interesting
and
diffi·
AEP
has
annual
revenues
of
"These
ence in non-profit agencies to 68 older Ohtoans in 12 Appalacltian
cal philosophies. "I've known him led ti survey in 1989·and foun.d that cuff tlmcs in our in&lt;lbstry," Dnipcr mote than $S billion. Total kilocounties. PaniCl[ltlllts earn wages while worldng pan-time for government and ocher non-p~fit agencies. ~ties for movement
ever since he carne here. I Jutte to . ~-..tri-swe area inctudina _Hun· said ... , relish the opportunity to . wait-hour sales for 1'990 were '
into full-time staff poslUons arc also possrble 81\d an: encouraged
sec him go," the speaker said. · • 11fngron, Ashland, and Iron1011 were. work with the board .and the man, about SI19.S billion .
The seven operating companies
through theprogrma.
·
Rep, La(l'y Manahan, R-Defi: . included· in a huac cin:le that was agement B1 AEP Service Corp." .
Abel said that she worked with COAD as well as with the Ohio
ance, a House member for almost the most prone to ilir Inversion in · Draper is "a proven ~xccutivc of the AEP S)'Sttm serve 7 miUion
.....
fA ·
thai 8deq
~ d·
·ded
14 ycars,.also announced.Monday the eastern two-thirds of the United who has led Gulf Stat~s out of a • people in Ohro, Indiana, Mlchiatm ·
• ""pdttment
o "gmg 10 ensure
uate un ·mg was proVJ
that he will not run fo.r re-elcctiort S•••••, noun·g ••• 'pollution should troubled period with sOlid results,'' Virginia, Wes1 Virginia, Kentucky .
.
. Continued on page J , ·
·
......,
said Richard E.' Dish brow, AEP and Tennessee.
1.;.:.,"7-.TtA"~'----------....,--,. -\)1~~-----'.. in the 79th ~istrict.
a collsideiltio~ -'so: ' .
" ' .
I .
·,~,_
I
' '

----Local bri·e.e.s

$795

CALAIS

members that he worked with during his last
term. Front row, 1-r; I!eiiy Baroiiiek; Seyler and
rormer councilman and new mayor, llruce J,
Reed. Second row, 1-r, Bill Young, Thomas
Werry and Larry Wehrung.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Stale representatives have opened
the 1992 deliberations of the Legislature with passage of a bill easing
a ban against using fingerprints or
pictures to apprehend juveniles.
Sponsors, whose btl! went to the
Senate 95-0 Monday; quoted police

1"1981 PLYMOUTH
RELIANT
1991 OLDS CUTLASS

Returning Clerk Brenda Morris a·lso took tbe
oath or office. Also pictured is Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce J. Reed, who administered the oaths.

SEYLER
• Former Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler, front center, was recognized ror his years or service to the village at the
village council's regular meeting on Monday
evening. Pictur~d with Seyler are the council

CHEVY·OLDS.·CADILLAC·GEO

"TAl AND TITLE
NOT INCLUDED

Cards:
2-H; 2-C; J-0;

Council welcomes new mayor, councihnen

NEW YORK (AP) -Kimberly
Williams , who makes her bigsc reen debut in "Father of the
Bride," says stardom makes her a
bit nervous.
"I feel like my arms arc tied to
the wings of a plane, and I ' m
gon na be Oying. Half of me ts so
thrill ed. but the other ha lf is
sca red ," she sa id in· th e Jan. 13
issue of People magazine.
In "Father of th e Bride," a
rcmctkc of the 1950 comedy classic,

DON TATE

1~91

Pick 4: 4439

1 Secllon, 10 PagH 25 cents
A MuUimadla Inc. Newspaper

ut eru s.

But it' s not easy lor her to
explai n this Lo her friends. Mention
an egg, and they conjure up images
of a ch icken; mention incubation,
and they think of a refri gerator.
Usuall y, she said, "They just go
'huh?"'
The Carrs turned to what is now
the Jones Institute or Reproductive
Medicine at the Eastern Virginia
Medical School after Mrs. Carr suf·
fcred scvcml miscarriages and lost
both fallopian tubes.
The institute was renamed after
Drs. Howard and Gcorgcanna
Jones, who~l!l Dr. Ma so n
· Andrews pioneered in-vitro fertilization. Initially , their work I'(;IS
opposed by people who viewed the
rrocedurc as tinkering with nature.

Pick 3: 911

Page4

College changes dormitory room
locks to force payment of bills
HIRAM, Ohio (AP) - Locks
were changed on some Hiram College dormitory rooms to force stu·
dents to pay overdue bills for
tuition, room and board.
College financial officials held
office hours Sunday eve nin g to
work out payment plan s with
returning students and their parents.
The college, where the second
semester began today, said only
one st udent , who owed more than
$12,000, was unable to resolve his
bill and was barred from re-entering.
The crackdown began with letters and phone calls last fall warning that the private libeml arts college would nol tqlera te unpaid
bills, which the college estimated at
several hundred thousand dollars.
" No one is trying to kick any-

Ohio Lot~~ry
. .

EHS,KC
girls post
loop wins

Williams coaxes an expensive wedfoot deck·facing the ocean.
Costner and his wire, Cindy, . ding out of her father
h~ve three children. Their pennancnl home is in the Los Angeles
foothills.
A candlelight devotional service
was conducted by Mrs. Eula Prof·
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - No one
fitt
who hosted the recent meeting
can accuse Suzanne Pleshctte of
of
the
Women's Group of the Reorbeing shy, at least not during the
ganized
Church of Jesus Christ. of
filming of the CBS-movie "BatLatter
Day
Saints, PorUand-Racmc
tling for Baby."
'Branch,
at
her
home.
Debbie Reynolds, who also stars
The
Christmas
theme was carin the movie, which airs Jan. 12,
ried
out
with
the
focal
point being
said the two were ealin~ hm.ch on
on a lighted manger scene.
.
the set one day with about lW peoThe opening prayer was gtven
ple sitting around.
.
by Eula Proffitt and social hour
"All of a sudden, she blurted
was held followed by a gift
out, 'My pantyhose arc so tight that
exchange.
I can't cat,' and proceeded to reach
Refreshments were served by
under the table and t.ako them off,''
the
hostess.
Reynolds said in the Jan. ll ·issuc
The
next meeting will be held
ofTV Guide.
Jan. 21.
'' When she noticed people staring at her, she simply stood up,
fo lded the p'antyhosc, put them m
her purse and announced boldly,
'Well, they were too tight." '

"

I

•

.

.r

,· ;

.,

. ·l '

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