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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

•

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.r

,· ;

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�Tuesday, January 7, 1992

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentlnei-Page--3

5

Commentary
Once upon a time, there were
venues. DetrOit was the capital of
the automative world. GM stood
for unsurpassed automoove dominance. Ford, legacy of the man who
mvented the assembly hnc, had put
workmg-clas~ Amencans on the
road. Chrysler, it was Sllld, was the
best-engineered car in the world.
Between them , they persontf1ed
Amcnca's cconomtc greatness.
Today, ail three arc troubled
gtants. Each periodtcally seems to
teeter on the edge of extmctiOn.
Narrow the focus to the purely
personal. Eleven years ago, I found
myself JOgging along with a some·
what younger man who srud he was
from DetrOit. As tl turned out. he
was the prcstdent of a company
whose chief customer, as tl had
been for 50 years, was GM.
Dtd I want to know why
Japanese automobiles were drivmg
a wedge into the American market,
he asked? Yes, grunted I. Well , he
satd, tl was easy to understllfld tf
you knew hts company's story. He
had gone to GM a few years before
and suggested, wtth constderable
restramt . that the Japanese obses·
with tm
thetr cars'

111 Court Street

~MULTIMEDIA. INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Assoctated Press, Inland Daily Press Assoetatton and
the Amencan Newspaper Publisher AssOCiation

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long Ail letters are su~JeCt to edtttng and must be Stgned wttb name,
address and telephone number No unstgned Jette"' wtil be pubhsbed Letters
sbould be

tn

Pagi!=2.,.,.The_D.al(y .se11J.LrreL
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.IAFIIIAFV 7, 1992

good taste, addressmg 1ssues, not personalities

Speaking out on
important issues

quality was findtng market
approval in the Umted States
Specifically, he smd, the pamt
job that Japanese automakers put
on thetr cars was several layers
deeper, and therefore more tmpervtous to wear and corrosiOn, than
those on Amencan·butlt cars.
Amenean customers were begmnmg 10 noucc.
Suck to your kmtttng, satd the
DetrOit gtant We know what we
are doing If we dtdn't, would we
be as btg as we are? What are you
trying to do, sell a few more cans
of pamt?
"Actually," srud my partner m
aerobtcs, "that was exactly what I
was trying to do, but in the process
I was try•ng to hold on to customers for my maJOr buyer as well
I thought that what would be good
for me would be good for them ,
and vtce versa "
It was unwelcome and unheeded
advtcc.
Now spnng forward a decade
My chtldrcn are all adults now. Not
one of them has recen~y bought an
Amcncan-made automobile. Thetr
dccts1ons are central to Detrott's

woes. and their dectsions are based
on one overwhelming percep!ion
Detroit's products don't measure
up to the quality of Japan's and
Germany's. What they have dectded is representabve of !heir generallon Detroit doesn't have thcrr loyalty, and winnmg 11 wtll be very,
very difftcult
It wtll not be won With htghly
pubhctzed tough-guy tnps to
Japan, like the president's pohtically dnven JUnket there His Ol&gt;JCC·
ttvc, he satd before lcav!Dg, was
Amcncan "Jobs, jobs, JObs," and
among those he took along were
the top men at Chrysler, GM and
Ford Wha( they wanted, they satd,
was better access to Japancsc markets and fatrcr play from th e
Japanese automakcrs, an obJective
tatlorcd neatly to the nauonai
mood. It was great rhctonc and
almost utterly bcs1dc the potn~
DetrOit's btggcsl problem wtth
the Japanese buyer ts that Amencan cars aren't butit for the
Japanese market Ali three try to
force left-hand vehtcles do~n the
throats of a nght-hand drtvc nauon.
Consider what would happen tf the

By Brian J. Reed
(Editor's Note: The rollowing editorial was written by Brian J.
Reed, a starr reporter ror Tbe Daily ~ntinel. Among Reed's report·
ing duties is coverage or county officials and agencies, including the
Meigs County Board or Elections.)
Secrew.ry of State Bob Taft voted against a mouon to restore the
Reedsville voung precmctlast week, addmg yet another chapter to a story
already wrought wtth controversy.
As a news reporter from Re.cdsvtiie. I've heard ali stdes of tlus story.
At home, I am surrounded by those who feel that their community has
been shghted. On the JOb, I hear from board members, eiecuons offtctals
and mterested potiti~ians on both stdes of the tssue.
Are Jane and the board of ciecuons "ptcking on" Reedsvtiie? Of course
not
Just hke your school board, the county commtssioners, you and I, the
board of ciecuons has a JOb to do Thw JOb is to carry out the electoral
process as cffictcntly, economtcally and as fauly as thetr resources, and
the law, allow. Untike the commiSSioners and the school board however,
the four members of !he board of elections do not have to be too concerned about pl(IOSmg you the voter, only the pohtical pany who appomted them to their postllons to begm w!lll. That's not an acctdent That fact
ts also preCISsly what makes me smckcr when I hear board members state
that they "don't play politics." Of course they do. As a devoted member
of my pohucal party, I'd be disappomted if they didn't.
Putung that astde, however, I do not feci that the dects1on to combme
those smaller prccmcts (and remember, Reedsvtlle was only one of sever·
al that were affected) was a pollllcal dcctston. It only became a poltucal
1ssuc when the "Commtllee to Restore the RecdsvtUc Precmct", and several county-level Republican officeholders, made 11 one.
"Elect a Republtcan Secretary of State and you'll get your voung
prccmct back "
One promment Metgs County Repubitcan (who ts respected and trusted on a biparusan level) satd that to a packed Oh ve Townshtp F~rehou se
crowd dunng the 1989 carnpatgn season And the Bob Taft campatgn
stgns sprouted up m Reedsville ovem•ght.
If 1 had put one of those stgns up m my yard, and if I had put that much
stock m a campatgn promtse (I didn't and wouldn't on both counts), I'd
be pretty distllusioned about the poliucal process m hght of Taft's dectston.
.
Instead, I'm reassured. It took a lot of backbone for Bob Taft to dectde
what he decided. In effect. he voted wtth the two Democrats on the board,
11 t a ttme when the two Repubhcans on the board (and that c!Uzens' com:in1ucc and the county GOP) probably thought that he would not Why
else w'ouid the tssue be resurrected almost two years after the origtnai
actton and after both stdes of the ISSue pledged that tl would not be
brou~ht up agam? (That was about the same umc that they satd ll wasn't a
poltucaltssuc.)
Now for the first ume smce the ongmai actton was taken, the tssue of
the Reedsvtlle voting precmct ts no longer a poliucaltssue, thanks to Bob
Taft The commiuee and the board of elccuons should now let thts tssue
·d~e.lt has become a cred•btlity problem.
'Would I tike to vote in the old Reedsville precmct? Yes, I would. Anyorne' a community loses somethtng as vital as a voung precmct, tl hurts.
And yes down m Reedsville it seems like we're always losmg somethmg
or bcihg' forj!Olten That's because Y&lt;.e're in one of the far comers of the
county and It's easy to be overlooked But, let's be honest. It's also
because the fine people of Reedsvtlle arc stlent unlll we get mad.
The very small contingency of Reedsvtlle q~zens who .have worked so
hard on thts iSsue should be commended for their anterest m the1r commun1ty, their perseverance and their dedication to make right what they
thought was a wrong. But to tmply that the Metgs County B~d of Elecuons tts direciDr, the Secretary of State or anyone else consp~red agamst
that ~ommumty to eliminate its voting precinct is madness. The pollticJtl
rewards of such an action, tf there arc any, arc so remote as to make them
mtangtbie.
So ts there a lesson 10 be learned from thts tssue? Certamly, the people
of R~svtlle ~ot a crash ~ourse in !he. electoral process (not to mention
the inner workings of the world ofpOhltcs)
1 hope that my neighbors have also learned the tmportance of bemg
involved m ctvtc affairs and speaking out on Important tssues. But more
1mportant IS thts iessoil: Be vocal and be involved, before the problem
~tarts. It must he more effective. •
·
In the past two years, I have seen poliucal signs m yards in Reedsville
where there were never any before, and that's good. I've heard potitics
dtscussed by people who never discussed potitics before.
The optmons reflected by those people rarely reflected my own potitical optntons but that doesn't matter. The important thing is that they were
expressed. really hope tbat spirit will continue, even if the ballots of
Reedsville voters are cast in Long Bottom.
Only then can we be truly responsible for our community's fate.

i

Today in

Accu- Weather•

for

conditions and

hist~ry

.
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 7, the seventh day of 1992. There are 359 days
left in the year.
.
Today's Higbliglitm History:
.: On Jafl 7 1789. the first U.S. prestdential election was held. Amenvoted f~ eleciors who, a month later, chose George Washington to
be the nation's f1rst president
.
On this dale:
'
•
• 1n 1610, the asuonomer Galilee Galile1 Sighted four of Jupller s

pans

'
~~i 782, the First commercial bank in the Unlted States, the Bank. of

North America, opened mPhiladelph18.
: In 1800, the 13th president of tlie United States, Millard Fillmore, was
bQm in Summerhill, N.Y.
. '
.
.·
•
. In 1927, commercial transatlanbc telephone servtce was maugurated
llctween New Yark and London.
· In 1942 SO years ago, !lie World War II siege of Bataan beg!lll.
·
:· In 1953: President Trumaneqnounced in his State of the Umon address
that the United States had develope!~ a hydrogen bon)b. .
.
, .
1111955 singer Marian Andenon made her debut With the MetropoHtan ~in New York, performing !he role of Ulrica in Verdi's "Un
Ballo 1R Mascberi." ~
,
, V,

.,

••

Japanese tried to sell Toyotas and
Hondas wtth nght-hand dnve m
thts country and you begm to
understand the depth of Detrott's
arrogant stupidtty and 1ts traveling
executive's effrontery.
On the home front, the same
exccuttves lobby relentlessly for
protcctwmsm.~a postuon no less
stuptd and blatantly contemptuous
of the consumer. The htstory of the
"voluntary" quotas tmposcd on .
Japanese car tmports for the past 10
years makes the case agamst pro·
tccttontsm Instead of gomg after
market share by culltng pnccs,
Detroit took advantage of the guaranteed market by rrusing them . The
Japanese, no fools, rmscd their own
pnces to the arbftctal plateau provtded by Detroit, knowmg th ey
could sell thctr supenor products so
long as they were not severely
undercut The Amencan consumer
was the btg loser.
But not the only one. The Amertcan automobtic mdu stry was
another. Instead of facing up to the
full mcanmg of the Japanese challenge and competmg wtth pncc and
quality, ll,htd bchmd admmtstcred
pnces and begged for more protecuon Its ovcrpatd exccuttves gave
great talks about compettltvencss
and dchvered too ltt~c Of tt.
The tndtctmcnt is overdrawn,
but only by degree Dctrott has
tmproved tts products constdcrably
over the past decade, but not
enough 'fherc ts no magtc wand
that can wave tls troubles away
ovemtght or even m a year or two
They arc too deep-seated for that.
Detro1t wtil fmaliy regam the edge
when It learns to acknowledge
qutckly that someone else mtght be
nght about the durability of the
pamt JOb, the ftl of the doer or the
iocallon of the ~ccnng wheel
"Quality or Else," a recent book
exhorts Am encan mdustry, and
quaitty at the nght pnce ts what
Detroit must dehvcr. Nothmg else
will work.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Hoddtng Carter Ill, former State
Department spokesman and awardwinnmg reporter, cdnor and publisher, ts president of MamStreet, a
Washmgton, DC -based teleVISion
productton company.

IMansfteld

Ct

attcnuon of people fined, fines will
be easter to collect."
O'Brien also stated that the village could order a defendant to
"work out" the fines and costs at
the rate of the mmimum wage.
O'Bnen dtd cxplam however that a
blanket worker's compensauon
policy and close supervtston would
be necessary for this alternative.
Foilowmg rcvtew of the letter.
counctl voted unanimously to
retain O'Bnen as legal counsel for
the year ahead
Btii Young reported Willis Htii
needed an appltcauon of limestone.
Accordmg to Young, heavy trucks
and the nature of the road prohtbtt
the usc of regui3l"gravel.
Young also stated he hoped to
sec a trce-planong project in the
bu stness distnct get underway
soon Money has betn set astdc m
the general fund for thts proJect,
and Reed advtscd council to wait
unlll the new appropriations were
made before the trees were purchased. No acuon was taken.
Wchrung commented further on

~-----·.,--~

•

I

But the tront w111 onng a return to
seasonal temperatures w1th highs m
the 30s and lows m the 20s.
The record htgh temperature for
thts date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees m 1907. The
record low was 6 below zero in
1942
Sunset tomght wtll be at 5:22
p m Sunnse on Wednesday will be
at 7.53 a.m.
Around the nation
A storm that brought heavy
snow to the Rockies was movang

.~~~·
Pr
Ice

Sunny

Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Wea ther, Inc

council's recent approval of a vacuum-style sludge de-watcnng system. for the new sewage treatment
plant. Wchrung stated that he felt
that the archttcct/enginecr, Burgess
and Niple, may have mtsled counCil on the space requuements m
relallon to a gravtty-type systctn.
In other action, council:
-Recognized former Mayor
Richard Seyler with a plaque, "m
apprcctallon for hts years of scrvtce
and dedication to Pomeroy." Seyler
was present for the plaque presentation, which was made by Reed.
-Accepted the mayor's report of
fmes collected for December, 1991
m the amount of $2,405.50;
- Recessed the meeting until a
time next week, to be announced,
when the appropnattons can be
approved.
Present were Councti members
Betty Baronick, John Blaettnar,
Scott Dillon, Bill Young, Thomas
Werry, Larry Wehrung, Clerk
Brenda Moms and Mayor Bruce J.
Reed.

Continued from page I
for Souiheastem Ohto.
"We want senior cttizens to look upon thts program as one exampie of how they can contmue to help themselves as well as tO contnbute to the economy of the regiOn, ev~r late m thc1r lives," Abel
satd
•
,

EMS units answer three calls
Metgs County Emergency Servtces units answered three calls for
assistance on Monday and early Tuesday.
'\
At 4 38 p.m on Monday, Pomeroy unll went to Pomeroy Nurs·
mg and Reh~bi~tion Center for Etoilla Cassell, who was taken to
Veterans Me~ Hospital. At II · 19 p m , Middleport squad went
to Overbrook Center. Joe Leach was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospttal
On Tuesday at 9:49 a.m., Pomeroy unll went to PNRC and transported Elizabeth Mcintosh to Veterans.

--Area deaths-Robert Frost

of Letart; three brothers, Eddie
Robert Edward Frost, 44, of 60 I Miller and Johnny P. Miller, both of
Cedar Lane, Ft. Smith, Ark., dted West Columbia, and Ralph 0.
Miller of Point Pleasant; nine
Sunday, Jan. 5, 1992 in Arkansas.
grandchildren;
and two greatBorn on Aug 5, 1947, he was
th e so n of Mae Frost Koblcntz, grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducChester, and the late Robert Frost.
ted
at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Bcs1des his mother he ts surCrow-Husseli
Funeral Home in
vtvcd by a brother and stster-tn Point
Pleasant,
with the Rev. Willaw, Steven and Jackie Frost of
liam
Banks
officiating.
Military
Chester: hts wtfc, Charlotte Frost,
graveside
riteS
by
the
American
daughters, Mcltssa, Cheryl and
Melinda, and a granddaughter, Legion Post #23 will follow in the
Stcrra, ali of Ft Smith, Ark.; three Lone Oak Cemetery in Point
nephews and a mece. In addiuon to Pleasant.
Friends may call the funeral
hts father, he was preceded in death
home
Wednesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
by a son, Mark Edward Frost.
Funeral servtces, handled by the
Edwards Funeral Home in Ft.
Smith, Ark., will be held Wedncs·
day.
I

Court news

Connie Mash
Connie N. Mash, 68, ofRo6te I,
Mtddieport, died Tuesday, Jan. 7,
1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements will be
announced later· by the Birchfield
Funeral Home, Rutland.

Jackie Miller
Jackie "Jake" Miller, 6S,ofPoint
Pleasaat, dt'ed Monday, Jan~ 6•
1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospttal.
He was born Au~ 8, 1926, the
son of Ralph 0. MiUer, Sr., and ·
Virginia. (Riley}, both of West
Columb~
.
A retired construction !"orker
and a member of .the local UIUOO, he
was also a Uruled StaleS Army
veteran of World War II.
· He was preceded in death by his
wife, Helen Agnes (Herringlon)
Miller; two sisters, Liuia Millet
and Eva Yonker.
In addition to his parents, be is
survived by one dauahter, Gloria
• Thornton of Point Pleuarll; two
5ons, Danny Miller of North
Carolina and· Jackie L. Millet of
Pomeroy; four__ ._., Clyda M.
Fields of Hanford; Mildred R.
Compson of P.l:lrland, TX., Esther
H. Bland and Judy A. Yq, bolh

eastward today. and wanter storm
"iarmngs were posted for parts of
thePiams.
Ram fell across Northern Cahfomta and Oregon, whtle gray, dtsmai skies hung over much of the
Mtdwesttoday
Thunderstorms were acttve in
the southwest Monday. A tornado
destroyed 52 greenhouses south of
Phoentx and another overturn ed
two trrulets m Mesa, Artz.
Heavy snow was expected
tomghtm Nebraska.
Ram was expected tn Iowa and
Mtssoun, and thundershowers were
predtctcd m waterlogged eastern

Texas Sunshme was expected m
much of the East, from the
Appaiachtans to the Gulf Coas1
states.
Tempcra1ures were expected m
the 20s tn the northern central
states and New England; m 1hc 30s
tn New York, Wtsonsm, Colorado,
Nevada and the Northwest, m the
40s tn IIIInot s; m the 50s from
Texas to the Tennessee Valley, m
the 60s m Southern Cahfomta and
the Deep South, and m the 70s in
Houston and Mtamt.
The ht gh temperature for th~
natton Monday was 74 degrees at
Vcro Beach, Fla

Ehzabetb Schaad, regtonal representattv( Governor's Regwnai
Economic Development offtcc,
announced today that the rcgwnai
office 1s seckmg local busmess
mtere st m the upcom•ng OhtoGABDI Busmes s Mt SSIOn to
Southeast Asia.
This mtsston is currently bcmg
coordmatcd by the International
Trade Dtv!Ston of the Ohto Department of Development, Schaad said.
The obJective of the mission is
. tO' asstst OhiO companies gam a
long tenn compettuvc advantage m
the markets of Southeast Asta by
promotmg the products of parttctpaung manufacturers, and promotmg vanous mvestment opportumties between Ohto compames and
counterparts in Southeast Asia.
Industries hemg focused on arc
food Proc ess mg and paekagmg
cqutpmcnt, machmc tools and
polymer producuon/proccssmg
cqutpmcnt
Parttctpants wtll be mecllng
wtth trade and mvcsun cnl partners,
pre-arranged by embassy offictals.
according to interests an order to
negotiate busmess agreements and
ex plore avenues for long-term
commcmai cooperatiOn In addition to arrangmg one-on-one mcctmgs wtth potenuai busmcss partners m the countrtes, the lnternauonal Trade Dtvtston and the
ASEAN Council for Busmc s and
Technology, Inc. will' provtde predeparture bricfmgs, country proflies, market proftles, fwancwg
informauon, travel arrangements,
to-country contacts, reccpuons wnh
the Governor, US Ambassadors
and Southeast Asian business contacts, post-m •sswn follow-up and
bncfings, and complete support

needed to make the msston a sue,
cess.
The mtssto n to Smgaporc,
I ndonesta, Maiaysta, and Thatiand
ts scheduled for Sept 5-19. Gov.
George V. Voinovich wtll be host•ng•a Mtsston Scmmar on Feb. 12
mColumbus to provtde full details.
For further mformat10n , restdents may contact Randy Hochstcltcr, lntcmational Trade Dt vtston at
466-5017, or ScHaad at the Regional Office m Marietta at373-5150

Panel hears charges
against administration Local business interest sought

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

'

~y .

Flumes

V1a Assoc1sted Press Graph/csNet

Robert]. Wagman

. The remapping•has set ·up three
likely congressional pnmanes
bet~Veen high-profile ~epubli~an
incumbents, and the mternecmc '
wru:farc could well' split the state

I•

I

S!towers T-storms Ram

By Martin

This has state party ofhcials
more than a little frantic. At the
very least, the three c~ntests will
dram off "tlhons m prunary campaign Cunei&gt; that could go to beating Democrats. At worst, the three
GOP contests could i_~:ave deep
scars. Backers of the losers mtght
sit out !he November election with
the result that Dcmperats could win
both Califom18 Senate seats.
There are probably more than a
few Repubitcans who hope that a
new lawsuit ftled by Democrats
against the remap will succeed.
'The suit alleges that the new
map violates the Voting Rights
Act, diluting the voting strength of
blacks in the Los Angeles area by
dtviding them among several dis.
'
tncts.
The suit further alleges that it
does not meet the one-man-onevote standards because it contains
an average variance of f;SOO people between districts where.by a
Democratic plan vetoed by WIIson
had a variance of only· 20 people
per district.
(C)I991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.,

PA

W VA

stdeshow m Japan. Yet they arc newly minted college grads, eager
~chram
vttally needed elsewhere. As the but unemployed The CIS doesn 'I
ex-Evil Emp11e struggles to run on need willing youths m overalls; Western business men , add to thts
empty and survtve m a brave new they need execs in thrcc-ptccc the new schools of management m
world, we arc debaung whether or sutts Amcnca's corporate htgh this country We arc gradually
not we can really help. Some urge rollers who earn mtiitons a year revtving the cntrcprcncunal spint
Bush to declare a new Marshall (and get mtlhons more when they that was strangled m 1917 "
Pian and pump btihons out of our bali out or arc booted out) can
A new Amcncan Peace Corps
defense budget and mto the CIS. prove their grautudc to the system -a CEO Corps- wtth execs hvmg tn the CIS for a year, could
Othe" warn it wtli be a waste to that has so ennchcd thw lives.
merely throw money at the CIS
The stakes arc htgh Whtle JObs qutckly help shape a new capttaland food arc scarce, the cx-Sovtct tsm And, truth be told, we arc
mess.
But here ts somethang a vtston- rcpubhcs arc up to th c1r Cossacks awash m ovcr-prud execs, anyway.
ary prestdent can do to help the tn nuclear weapons, matcnei and The Wall Street Journal noted that
CIS and utthze the one resource we technology. Nuclear cngmccrs and the average compensation of the
have mover-supply·
ftcld commanders may be unable to Amencan CEOs at the Tokyo sumLet Bush declare a New Mar- ftnd beef for their fam11Ics, but mit was more than $2 mtiiion,
shall Plan of Managers Plu s they'll have easy access to small whtlc theu Japanese counterparts
Money. Let Bush create a new kind tactica,i nuclear weapons We can arc patd, on the average, $400,000
of Peace Corps - a CEO Corps, in sec that - and so can any Thtrd or less Merctfully, we have execs
whtch our corporate elttes wtli, for World·terromts bent on nuclear to spare: General Motors alone will
once, give nchiy of themselves , biackmatl, w!lh btllions of petro- be closmg 21 plants, ail run by
thetr talents and organization skills dollars and no scruples
execs who, thcorcttcally, wtll be
10 heipang the people of the CIS
Hear Bam Ycltsan When left tdhng.
Now's the ttme to think big. Let
create the mana~~ment structures Newsweek asked if his people
they need tO SUfVIVC.
would "really sctze the mtttaUve," the president who once mvokcd a
Just round up Amenca' s Golden Ychsm replied · " ...The people's thousand pmnts of light, stan at the Parachute Gang and drop them spmt of tntllattve has been top. Let's send the Commonwealth
behind former enemy lines for a unshackled. Th e people have of Independent States a thousand of
spectal tour of duty of the highest sensed greater freedom, and that our finest corporate chandeliers.
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
calling. There ts no rule that says sptnt 1s gradually takmg shape.
all Peace Corps workers must be Add to tbts thetr contacts wtth ENTERPRISE ASSN.

ll!ove mto Ctther the 36th or 38th Cunntngham says that he has the
dtstrtct.
closest ucs to the new dtstnct
But problems extsl for because hts wife has taught school
Rohrabacher in both. Former firSt- there for 20 years and hts parents
daughter Maureen Reagan is arc iongtinie residents.
expected If run~~ the 36th- wtth
Rcpubiic~n Gov. Pete Wilson
her fathers constdcrable fund-nus- - who Lowery served as San
ing assistansc - an~ one of Otego vtce mayor when Wtlson
Rohrabacher s top atdes has was mayor - reportedly trtcd to
· &lt;81reaQy begun running in the 38th
make peace between the two.
How confusing the remapping Sources say he asked Cunningham
has become ID the GOP can be seen to move to the 49th, w1th the carrot
in the frantic ma~uvering further that he would give Cunningham a
south near San Otego. The newly high-ranking state job if he loses in
configured SlstJ?tstrict has. com- November. Cunningham reportedly
bmed areas n?w m the: districts of srud no.
four Rcpub.itcans: Btll Lowery,
The third matchup of incumbent
Duke Cunnmgham, Ron Pac~ard Republicans will probably take
and Duncan Hunter. D~sc usston.s place north of Los Angeles. It now
among .the four followed, and It looks like thud-term meum bent
was qu1ck!Y dec1ded that !ackard Rep. Elton Galiegly. wtll take on
would run m the 4.8th Dtstnct while eight-term incumbent Rep. Raben
Hunter wtll run m the new 52nd Lagoml![§ino. The remapping has
DtstrtcL
placed about two-thirds of GailegThe ne~ map actually places "' ly's current dtstrict into jhc new
both Cunnmgham's and Lowery's "23rd which contains most of Venhomes in the reconfigured 49th tlis- tura 'county, where Lagomarsmo
tricL It would seem a s~ple matter now lives.
for one to stay put wh~~ ~e o~er
Gallegly does not much like his
would move to an &amp;dJotmng dts- chances in his current disuict and
trict. The problem is that ' the says that he "ts fore~ 10 follo:ov a
remappm~ has ~ade the 49th lean
majority of my consutu~nts" mto
Democra11o while the new 51st Is the 23rd. It is possible 'lbat Lago·
prime GOP territoly.
.
marsino will •tve in ari'd move to
So both ~e freshman Cunnmg- another distriCt, but his options
ham and SIK·term incumb~nt seem vuy Umited.
Lowrey are t ailing the movm.g
Each of the three contests has
vans. Lo~ey 1says tha~ the 51!! IS !he potential of geuing very rough ·
nghtly hi~ because tt c~ntat~s and nasty. Ail three will feature
many of hts current conslltuerits. men who don't mu~h like one
anotlter at a llClSOIIlll
,
- . 'f ~vel.

43°

By The Associated Press
Don't expect today's break 10
the gloomy, gray sktes over OhtO to
last very long, forecasters satd.
More clouds and ram are to follow
the bnef splattering of sunshmc
The Naoonai Weather Servtce
satd an approachmg low press ure
system would bnng rrun to Ohto by
tomght and the showers wtll conunue throughout the day and mght
on Wednesday.
The ram will end wuh the
arnval of a cold front on Thursday

~

California redistricting stymies GOP
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A
panel of three former federal
Judges has handed down the new
Cahforma congressiOnal dtstnct
map. Ongmally, the GOP was JUbt·
!ant, but now the Republicans realtzc the new map has given them
btgproblems.
At first glance the redtStrictmg
based on the 1990 census appears
to have created a number of new
districts that lean Republican. It
also appears to have placed such
longtime Democratic incumbents
as Rep. Vtc f'azto, Rep. George
Brown and Rep. Anthony Betlenson in distriCts now tilting GOP.
But the remapping of congresswnal distrticts has also set up
three likely contests between highprofile Republican incumbents, and
the resultant internecine warfate
could well split, the California
GO]&gt;. .
• ,
For the GOP, the bi~gest mess
is in the new 45th Dislr)ct south or
Los Angeles. Although tense negotiations are still going on, it now
appears almost cenain that highprofile conservaoves Robert Dornan and P~na Rohra~acher will
square off m the hll3VIIy Republtcan d1stricL
.
Doman, in his eighth term, now
lives· in what will become the 46th
District. But the new map has
turned that district heavily"Latino.
Doman, therefore, wants to move
into the 45th, and he is demailding
that Rohrabllcher, only in his seeond term, bow to his seniority an~

j

• fcolumbusl 44°

Bush should send CEOs to Siberia
Rtght cargo, wrong trip
Two btg mtemauonal news stones arc happcmng stmnitancously
-a nd Alf Force One, with Its
bounttfui cargo of chtef executives,
flew to the wrong one.
Our prcstdenuai Jet ferried one
chtef executtve from Government
and 21 from Corporate Amenca to
an Astan summtt mtsstOn where
prospects were dubtous, at best A
better plan would have been to fly
that cargo of corporate know-how
ducctly to where tt ts needed most
- the Commonwealth of Independent States, that sprawltn g land
mass cartographers once called the
Sovtct Unton.
Prcstdent Bu sh hasu ly drafted
the CEOs to serve m Tokyo as hts
window-dressin~ manncqums, to
add a domesttc JObs mouf to tht s
summll he had cancelled 1n a pantc
last November, fcarmg folks would
think he cares more about mtematiOnai poltcy than their recessiOn
woes Now he says thts tnp ts
about "JObS,JObS,jObs."
Bush's goal was noble - to
prod 'Japan to open its markets to
thmgs Made-m-the-USA. But the
presence of the CEOs ts out a

Re_Spite.from gray skies to be brief

Wednesday, Jan. 8 _

Automakers teeter·on ·extinction
Hodding Carter Ill

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

OHIO Weather

...

1

COLUMBUS. Oh10 (AP)- A
spectal House commmee has heard
cirums by latd-off state employees
that they were treated tmproperly
or tliegally by Gov. George
Voinovtch' s admmtstrallon
Some former employees of the
Department of Natural Resources
also leveled broader charges of dtscnmmatwn aga1nst dt sablcd,
women and mmonty employees.
The admmtstratton has dented
the charges.
Rep Wayne Jones. D-Cuyahoga
Falls, cha~rman, and other members
of the House Select Commmee on
State Employment Practices heard
more tesumony Monday as part of
an 10vcsttgat10n ordered by Speaker Vern Ri ffe, D- Wheelersburg.
Jones satd the tnvcstigauon ts
not polittca liy motivated The
speaker stmply wants to find out tf
the year-old admmtstrauon vtolatcd
Ctvtl Servtcc and non-dtscnmmation statutes or unton con tracts,
Jones satd.
Bonn•c Dtrcnfcid-Mtchaei of
Worthmgton, a DNR admtntStrator
from 1983 until last June, claimed
she was ftrcd after bcmg tllegally
decMiasstfi0tcd f ld M h 1
s tren te - tc ac • an

attorney, said she received a letter
tn Aprti Stat10g that her pOSltlOn
had been ciasstfied under Civil Servtcc by mistake and that she was
bctng declasstfied
In June, she srud she was noofted 10 ~nothcr letter that her servtccs no longer were needed. She
cited a sectton of Ohto case law
that satd employees cannot be
dcdasstfted without the1r consent.
Susan Ball told the commtttee
that DNR laid her off after saymg
h postt•on was bcmg abolished
that she suspects her duues arc
necessary to the department.
Ms. Bail sa1d she could have
bumped any of 16 other employees
'" her DNR dms10n who had less
scmonty but chose not to do so "as
a matter of principle."
She and others ctted stat1sUcs
that they satd show DNR diScnmt·
nates tn hmng and promoting
women and minority employees.
However she conceded, in response
to questions, that the stausucs "can
be confusiOg ...
Mary Douglas Lacy, a 20-year
employee of DNR, read what she
called a statement from 40 fellow
employees who said the department
also ts unfatr to disabled employccs.

Environmentalists
...continued rrom page
•
for the btg boys". ''This is a natiOnal issue."
Woolverton conunucd by stating
the pulp mill can come to Mason
County and be a relatively safe
planL ''This plant docs not need 10
use dioxins. But will they do it
right?", she asked. ''That's up 10
you."
Not everyone at the mecung
vtewed the proposed plant as ncga·
tive, however. Jim Cochran, a local
car dealer, said the mill proposes to
employ 800 people. Even tf all
those employed at the mtli arc not
from Mason County, the mill would
still generate add•llOnal business
and jobs down the road, Cochran
said.
Others noted they were not
against the mill at all, if state
guidelines are meL
One woman from Apple Grove
said the jobs are needed in the area
''What makes the dtfference tf we
starve to death or tlie with cancer,"
she said. "We need the jobs."

t

Keith Taylor, prestdent of the
W.Va. Izaak Walton League, satd he
felt he knew why Alabama Pulp
and Paper is keeping the project so
secrellve. "Back in June 1989,
Luigt Terziotta, the general
manager of the Alabama Pulp and
Paper Co., whtch is owned by Parson and Whtttemore, said this mill
will use the latest technology from
Scandinav18, and the water discharge will not emu dioxins detectable at one part per quadrilhon (a
millionth of a bilHonth). He stated
this mill will operate and I quote
'wtth no detectable discharge of
dtoxin' tf built in Mason County."
''Then tn May 1991, at a Charles·
ton mecung Alabama Pulp offictals
proposed nusmg the standard for
dioxin emission by a factor of 100,
on the above suggested federal
gutdeiines if you will," he concluded.
A follow-up meeting was
scheduled for Jan. 14 at the hbrary.

dauon wtil be made tor the new
member on the Metgs County
Board of ElectiOns The pubhc ts
IDVIted
Grange meeting announced
Rock Spnngs Grange wtil meet
Thursday eventJJS at 8 p.m. at the
home of Wtlharn Radford.
Chapter to meel
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Stgma Pht wtli meet on
Thursday at 6 p m at Grace Eptscopal Church Pamh House. The
program wtli be "A Ttmc for Surpnsc".
Dance set
there will be a round and
square dance on Fnday from 8 p.m.
to 11.30 p.m. at tlie Tuppors Plams
VFW Post. The band wtll be "Second Cullin", sponsored by Post
9053 and the Ladies Auxthary. The
public is invited.
VFW to meet
The Tuppers Plams VFW Post
9053 wtil meet al 7:30 p.m . on
Thursday at the post home.
Seniors dances cancelled
The semt-monthly dances sponsored by the Mctgs County Senter
Ctuzens Center will' be disconun·
ued until April. The noxt date will
be announced.

Cases prqcessed
Divorce actions have been filed
m Meigs County. Common Pleas
Court by Terry Lee Bell, Racme,
against Carla Sue Bell, address
unknown; Lee Anna Ulery, Port·
land, against Robert A. Ulery,
Wcstervtlle; by Hetbert L. Graw II,
Reedsvtlle, against Rebecca S.
.
Grate, Reedsville; and by VIctoria
L. Miller, Racine, against Fred
Miller, Jr., Racine.
•
A divorce has been granil:d in
Am Ei~ Power ......,.. ..33 5/8
the court to Don M. King from
Ashland Otl . .. ... ... .. 29 518
Judy King.
AT&amp;T..... :........ .. ...........40 1/4
Actions for dissolution of marBank One .. ........ ..... .51 1/8
riage have been filed by Joe E.
Bob Evans ............ ,... 24 1/8
Veterans Memorial
Gilmore and Everett L. Gilmore
Chamung
Shop.................. 23 5/8
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
and by Dale Edward Sisson and Max Folmer, Long B'ouom; Emma
City Holdtng ..................... 17 3/4
Ann M. Sisson.·
Federal Mogul.. ................. l6 1/8
Chapman, Syracuse; Ruby Durst,
Goodyear
T&amp;R: ................. 53 5/8
Henderson, W.Va.; and Etoilla
Key Centurion .............. ~.... \5 1/2
Judgments sougbt
Cassell, Pomeroy.
Lands'
End ........................ 29
A foreclosure action has been
MONDAY DISCHARGES Ltmited Inc....................... 28 1/4
filed in Meigs County Common 1'4one.
Multimedta !ric . .......... :.;;:.. 25 1/4
Pleas Court by Farm Credit Ser·
vices of Mid-America, ACA, HOLZER MEDICAL CtNTER· . Rax RCStaurant .................. l/4
Louisville, Ky., against"Mark T.
Discharges Jan. 6' _ Ircda
Robbins&amp;Myers ................36
Cohee of Rutland iQ., die amount or Ba!les, Beverly Danner, Clarence
Shoney's Inc.................... 22 518
$43,112.02.
Henderson, Cheryl Kyle, John
Star Bank.. ......................... '261/4
A civil judgment has been filed Lambert, Bryan Leedy, Mrs.
Wendy Int'l...............,,....... lO 3/8
by Douglas Lambert, Rullaild, ChrisiDJ)her Mullins and daughter,
Worthington Ind............... 22 1/2
against'Wiley Phelps, P~y. in Dinah l&gt;eck, Joshua Queen, Mrs.
Stock reports ore the 10:30 ll.m.
the amount of $5,001.98. The case Richard Stout and son, Travis
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
alleges defatilt on a home improve· Sw~ and Gw~ndo!yn Wek)), ___.__l =a=nd:;Lo;;;;;;;;;e=wl;;;o;;;sf.;;G;;(II;;;I/po....,lls• ;;;;;;;;"""";;Ill
11
ment conttact.

Hospital news ,

••

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here arc
Monday ntght's Ohto Lottery
sciecttons
Pick J Numbers
9-1-1
(nmc, one, one)
Pick 4 Numbers
4·4-3-9
(four, four, three, mne)
Cards
J Qack) of Hearts
2 (two) of Clubs
J Gack) of Dtamonds
3 (three) of Spades
The Ohto Lottery wtli pay
$1,167,455 to wmners mMonday's
Ptck 3 Numbers druly game.
Sll).cs for the game total ed
-1-;31)7 ,01 0.50.
In the two other datly games,
P10k 4 Numbers players wagered
$270,051.50 and wtii share
$68,300, and Cards players bet •
$28,48 I and won $23,070.
The Jackpot for Wedne sday's
Super Lotto drawmg IS worth $8
mtilton .

Trustees reorganize

Charles Barrett, Jr. was re·ciectcd prestdcnt of the Ru~and Townshtp Trustees when they held thctr
rcorgamzattonal mectmg last week
South-Central Ohio
Elected vtce prestdcnt was Charles
Tontght, partly cloudy early Wtlhamson. Charles Rtfe IS the
then bccomtng cloudy Low 30-35 thlfd member
Regular meetings were set for
Wednesday, cloudy and mtid wnh
a chance of showers. Htgh 45-50 the ftrst Thursday of each month at
Chance of ram 50 pereen t.
6:30p. m. at the Rutland F1re StaExtended rorecast:
uon.
Thursday through Saturday:
Thursday, a chance of showers
mrunly north and cast Early h1ghs
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
m the 40s then faih~g 1n10 the 30s
,
446 4524 . '" '.....
M ~l
dunng the day . Morntng lows m
BAKAJN .-T um SATURDAY &amp; SliNDAW
the 30s Fnday and Saturday, fatr
I.I.IGA!M NIGHl TU£50Al
and cooler. Htghs mostly m the 30s
.IANUAJIY :1 thru t
and lows m the 20s.
:===...':!!"~OAf~thl"'l TIIUI!iD.UI
~
'n~t
felwil:JI_,.,,I'
\!All:
I I ~ Iii"'~~II"'I'
'&gt;11~11\

Weather

•

Meigs announcements
Revival slated
There wtll be a rcvtval at the
• Chliltcothc Wesleyan Holm ess
Church on Diehl Street m Chtllt·
cothc. Scmccs wtli begin at 7 30
p.m. and wdl be held on Fnday,
Saturday and Sunday Rev. Juddtc
Peyton from Bedford, lnd wtli be
the speaker.
AAIAI-Anon to meet
The Pomeroy group of AA and
Al-Anon wtli meet on Thursday a1
7 p.m at the Sacred Heart Catholtc
Church for discussion.
Missionary services sel
MISSIOnary servtCCS Will be held
at Harrtsonviile Holiness Chapel on
Wednesday at 7:30 p m wtth Rev
Donald Deli from All Tnbcs lndtan
School m Bernahlo, N M. as the
speaker. Rev. John Ncvtilc mvttcs
• the public .
Soup supper set
The Burlingham Modern
Woodsmen will hold a soup supper
at6:30 p.m. on Saturday at the hall .
Oyster; vegetable and bean soup
wtth crackers, com bread and coffee wtll be furntshcd by the camp.
Those attending should bring a
potluck dish. There wtli he a door
" prize drawmg and a short busmcss
meeting. Everyone is welcome
Dems to meet
The Meigs County DemocratiC
Committee will meet on Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at Carpenters Hail in
Pomeroy. A regular busmcss mectmg will be held, an~ a_recommcn-

Lottery numbers

Stocks

WOALDWAAII
m IY YEARS AGO TOD AY
JAN. 7

'I&gt;&lt; II

Beaury..
'""'
'" Beast fAnl[R ~ tlw BRIDf
7

ZC.~

(11.1

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0C [)oi,JLY

r 10 9 10 DAILW

!.ATfSIJj M.T!NE£S

SAT/S UN MATtN£E S

120,)20

1 10 )10

1 • 9 ·4 ·2

German U·boa ts begtn thetr ltrst btg
ollensflle agatnst shtpptng along lhe .
U S East Coast The Japanese
begin masstng thetr loroos for an
assault on the 80,000 Amencans
and Fll•plnos defen&lt;Jing the Bataan
Pemnsula In Malaya Japanese
troops tweak through Brtash detens~
along the Rtver Shm and advance on
Kuala Lumpur The Japanese push
to the border of Saraw and

Dutch Borneo
SOurce "2194 Days o! War "

H Smtttl

PuDitshors Inc "World Almanac Book ol Wor1d
War II " Bison Books Corp 1981

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�The Daily sentinel

Sports

Tuesday, January 7, 1992

PAge-4

With 42-39 victory over Hannan Trace,

Kyger Creek chalks first win of season
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
0 VP Staff Writer
The night belonged to Lucy
Mullens. It also belonged to Kyger
Creek's Bnbcats.
· Tom Weaver's Bobcats, lacked
in the grip of a sevcn,game losing
streak following their 43-32 road
loss to Waterford Saturday (sec
scoring summary), broke out of jail
and edged Hannan Trace 42-39 at
Mercerville- their first victory of
the season - on a night that ·saw
Mullens score her I ,OOOth career
point
"We finally won the close one,"
said Weaver, whose troops
watched their six-point halftime
lead disappe ar in a sea of lead
exchanges that marked all but the
las t minute of the second half.

The Wildcats (6-3 , 3-1), who
saw their overall five.game winning streak snapped and their 13game holiday against SV AC opponcms (!Oumament games included)
halted. put the game' s first five
points on the board in its first 90
seconds. Mullens, who finished
with a game-high . I I points to
extend her double-figure scoring
streak to 27 games, brought the
crowd a little closer to the edge of
its collective scat with a baseline
jumper in the first minute follow ing senior forward Michelle Ours'
opening jumper from the left wing
(7:31). But KC, playing the brand
of hustling defense that forced
enough turnovers against a squad
not blind to the coming milestone,
battled back to take a one-point

••
~

DRIVE·IN BANKING - Houston guard
(Sleepy) Floyd (21) banks off Atlanta for·
! ward Alexander Volkov during the second quar·
=ter of Monday night's NBA game in Atlanta,
~Eric

lead into the second quarter.
After Bobcat forward Angie
Bu sh sank the fir st of her two
three·pointers - the only ones
made m the game - 22 seconds
into act two, the red-clad Bobcats
led 11-7. But Wildcat center
Stephanie Stapleton, who shared
time in the paint with senior
Tammy Thomas, sank the second
foul shot after missing the first to
cut KC's lead to 11 -8 with 7:20
left. Then 65 seconds later, Mullens was fouled by Bobcat guard
Tonya Drummond while shooting
and was sent to the line.
Mullens made the first shot but
missed the second. She rebounded
her missed shot, went out about II
feet and canned a jumper from the
left wing to tic the game at 11-11
with 6:15 left. At that point, the

which the Hawks won 109-97. Looking on in the
distance are Hawks Jon Koncak (32) and former
Ohio University standout ·Paul (Snoopy) Graham. (AP)

San
Antonio trims turnovers
•
ln 100-90 victory over Detroit
~

By The Associated Press
: If th e San Antonio Spurs could
to protec t the ball, they would
~e a dangerous team at playoff

:cam
~im e.

• The Spurs, whose average of 18
rurnovcrs per game ranks 25th in
~c 27-tcam NBA , set a franchise
record for fewest turnovers Mon ilay night when they had five in a
300-90 victory over the Detroit Pistons.
:. "That is a pretty incredible
" Spurs head coach I.arry
said. "That was the key to
because we didn't shoot
real
had one
iun1over in 40
Playing his
ic''cn1th game of the season after a
holdout, Stri ckland also
•~ored a season-high 19 points on
••
12 shooting.
"The turnovers for the Spurs
M&lt;cre not a problem," Pistons guard
Joe Dumars said . "Their guards
~id a good job and maoo the autJide shots." ·
"~Guard Willie Anderson .had 18
ints and II rebounds and David
had 20 points, five steals
obi-~·~·
Jn&lt;! four blacked shots. '
, Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
"oston
110, Sacramento 108·, New
,.
lersey 105, the Los Angeles Cliprs 90; Atlanta 109, Hpuston 97;
nd Utah 124, Indiana 108.
Dennis Rodman had 24
.ebounds, one under his career
igh, for Detroit and moved to the
p of lhis season's NBA reboundg leaders with a 16.9 average,
head of Atlanta's Kevin Willis
ith 16.8.
· Dumars ~ored 24 points, while
· siah Thomas phad 18 points.and 13
assists for the JStons,
t Detroit trimmed·an eight-point
~.r:
~·cit to 82.-79 on Mark Agwrre'1
• Jumper with 4:17 !II play.
It But San Antomo Weill on an 1'2
fun, highlighted by an 18-footer
from Anderson, to puU ahead 90-81
t..ith I:OSremaining,_
·
r
C It' 110 KID 101
~ S·".!Menu:sto ~:.....!only three
. ·r __..
•...
. toad games the Jut two 11110ns,
. bu&amp; lOOk Boslcn ID lila wire u the
~ . . !'i;cltics played withOUI ~ Bird

w-

--- ·-·----

and Ke-vin McHale because of
injuries.
Kevin Gamble scored a carecrhigh 34 points and Robert Parish
had 22 points and 13 rebounds for
Boston, which trailed 98-88 with
eight minutes left.
Reggie Lewis, who scored 21
points, put the Celtics ahead 107106 with a 10-foot shot with 37
second s remaining and John
Bagley added three free throws,
nailing down Boston's 13th consccutive home victory over the
Kings since Jan. 17, 1979.
Richmond led Sacramento with
23 points.

Duane Ferrell added 15 points,
incl uding II in a 24-13 second-half
run that gave the Hawks a 15-point.
lead with 4:50 to play. Buck Johnson led the Rockets with 19 points.

~nipeg,

Toronto NHL's
Monday victors

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
NEW YORK (AP) _The Winnipcg Jets looked like a team that
wanted to go home. The New York
Jazz 124, Pacers 108
Rangers were just gladto be there.
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
Returnmg to Madison Square
had 34 PQints and 14 rebounds.
""-· Garden followmg a poor showmg
Blue Edwards scored 23 points, 111-f;;ew Jersey, the Range~s beat
John Stockton had 22 poin!S110_(l l5 ~h'a"''gpoegalt4e·n2dMeroMnd,akye nR,~tch~te'~
assists and Jeff Malone 20 points,••
·.
the Jazz ended a four-game losi~ ,_called one of thelf soundest ~forstreak to the Pacers, who were led m~es of the season.
,
by Reggie Miller with 20 points.
~ght we played a sharp
Trailing by 10 points going into game -o e-of our best. W~ erased
the founh quarter, Indiana closed to the me~tocre perfonnance 10 New
96-89, but an 114 run, capped by Jersey, Rtchter satd. .
Karl Malone'g drive with 4:48 to
That was the whoJlloidea. After
play, made it 116-101 and the Jazz the 6~ loss to the Devlis on Saturcoasted ''e rest of the way.
day mght, the Rangers_ were deter"'
d to
t th
1
mme
come ou WI a s rong
Nets 105, Clippers 90
performance Monday night.
At East Ruther'ord,
N.J.,
Mook"We didn't
want to plav&lt; aMark
cau1'
•
" R
ie Blaylock scored 20 points and uous game, · anger·capwn
Terry Mills had 17 points· and 12 Mbcakessdier said.N"WJe had sodm7
rebounds in relief of Derrick Coler
owns 10 ewWersey, and 11
man as New Jersey defeated Los cost us the game. e wante to
Angeles.
•
play an aggressive game tonight."
The Nets took control in the .
The Rangers toOk care of things·
third quan.cr.with a 13-2 spurt for a early \with three flrst-peiiod goafs,
69-54 advantage.
by John Ogrodnif:k, Jeff BeukcThe CJ1'ppers were led by Danny boom end Sergei Nemchinov.
"Th fi
·od
defi • ]
Manning with 21 points.
h
e trst pen was
IDlte Y
Colei1)8n reinjured his leCt anlcle . t e difference in the game," said
Saturday at c_::hicago. .
Winlnnipetheg ng•?alghtet' nsderonl.Byoo~hEsersenNsaHL.
'
·
&gt;
Hawks 109,· ll~kets
game, Toronto.b.eat St. Louis 3·2 in
""
overtime
All8J1ta, weakened· by injuries to
· ·
point ~uards -Rumeal Robinson and
With less than 13 minutes gone,
Maunce Cheeks, (ot 14 assists, the Rangers w~ 00 tOp 3-0.
five steaiJ and no turnovers from
A centering pass from'&lt;James
Marlon Wiley to wi'n at home Patfick ~it Og~odnick in fr9nt of
••ainstHouston. , •
the net and Ess~nsa\kicked the·
..., AI h h W'l
.
.
puck in at4:08. Beukeboom beat
the Hat :~sgft slceoyrt'ndgtdhen'f:tlscfoorem~ B~sensa l!'itl) a 45-foot slap shot
r
from the deep slot at'12:06.1'1emDominique IIkins with 2 points
h'
h'
d
-and Kevin Willis with 20 pOints c IOOV put IS own reboun past
and ·JS rebounds. i
Essensa at 12:46.

1

'1'

.

game was halted and she received a
plaque and flowers in ad~ition to
hu~s from her teammates m recogni uon of her achievement
When the game was resumed,
Bush keyed the Bobcats' 6-J run
that lasted a little more than two
minutes with a three-pointer (5:32)
before all scoring for the half
stopped following the second of
two lay ups in the frame by Bobcat
center Stephanie Jones at the 3:12
mark. Jones, a 6-foot-1 freshman,
finished the night with a team-high
10 points- the first time in her
varsity career she has scored in
double figures and only the fifth
time this season a Kyger Creek
player has done so.
The third quaner was marked by
two things - no lead greater than
four points and three deadlocks.
But the Bobcats, down 29-25 with
14 seconds left in the quarter,
began their second comeback when
starting center Keri Black, earning
a trip to the charity stripe on
Thomas' founh foul wiill four ticks
left, sank two free throws out of
three chances (Hannan Trace committed a lane violation after
Black's second shot, which was off
the mark) 10 cut the hosts' lead to
29-27 at the end of the frame.
Drummond hit a 10-foot jumper
from the left wing 15 seconds into
prime time to tie the game at 29-29.
But 27 seconds later, Ows got the
ball inside on Trace's next possession and put in the reverse layup to
give the Guyan five a 31-29 lead.
But Alicia Ward's pass to Black on
KC's next possession resulted in a
layup forjlack, and the game was
tied at 31.
The g e would be deadlocked
three more times before foul trouble, which cast long shadows on
Mullens, Thomas and Bobcat forward Amy Gindlesberger, swallowed them in the heat of the game.
. When Thomas got her exit visa
with I :35 left, Black made the first
free throw but missed the second,
putting KC ahead 38-37. Wildcat
guard Leanne Sanders, taking
advantage of the missed shot,
canned a 15-foot jumper from the
left wing to put Trace abeaad 3938. But on their next possession,
the Bobcats, facing a Wildcat team
with pesky Leanne and Missy
Sanders in the game, kept enough
of a lack on the ball and used
enough time to allow Bush to pass
to the 6-foot-0 Black in the paint.
Black connected on the turnaround
jumper from four feet out to put
Cheshire ahead 40-39 with 43 seconds left.
With 18 seconds left, Wildcat
forward Kim Triplett fouled Drummond, sending the latter to the line
for the one-and-one . Drummond
missed, and Jones rebounded
before passing to Bush. Then Bush
shot and missed, Jones rebounded
and missed before Bush rebounded
Jones' miss and got the layup to
drop with 11 seconds left to create
the final scare before both teams
missed one-and-one chances preceding the final buzzer.
"We got beat on the line and on
defense," said Wildcat boss Ed
Moore. "How do you win when
you shoot 6 of 19 (according to the
official book, which was found to
have foul shot credited to Thomas
that didn't drop) at the line?''
In the preceding junior high
contest, Hannan Trace won 22-6.
Laura Queen and Dara Belville led
the Wildcats with eigbt and si~
points, respectively. For the Bobcats, Cremeans scored four, and
Burnett had two.
Kyger Creek (.J-6,1-2) will play
Southwestern at Gage, while Hannan Trace will take on Eastern at
Tuppers Plains.
Quarter totals
Kyger Creek ......... 8 12 7 15 = 42
H
T
7 7 15 10 39
a~~~ercC:~~·k·(42) - s. ;ones
3-0-4=10; Black 2-0-4=8; Bush 12-0=8; Drummond 3-0-0=6; Ward
2-0-1=5; Wolfe 0-0·3=3; Gindlesberger 1·0·0=2. Totals _ 12·2·
12=42
Free throws -12-23 (52.2%)
Hannan Trace (J9) _Mullens
5-0-1=11; Ours 4-0-0=8; Stephanie
Stanfcton 2·0·2=6; Thomas 2-0l=S; M. Sanders 2-0-I=S; L.
Sanders 1·0·0=2; Triplett 1-0-0=2.
Totals -17-0-5=39
Field goals- 17-55 (30.9%)
Free throWs_ 5-18 (27.8%)
Rebounds- 30
Steals_ 9
,
Here arc the results of Saturday's Kyger Creek-Waterford
·
game.
Quarter totals
K
Creek
8 6 7 11 32
Wa:rord., .. :::::::::9 19 5·10 ~ 43
Waterford (43) _Waller 5-06=!6; Cl ose·4 -O-loo9; T. Long4-01•9; Tepe 1-0-1=3; Hottinger 1-00=2; Schwendeton 1-0-0=2; Wainwright 0-0·2•.2. Totals _ 16
11=43
.
.
Free throws -11-22 (50%) .
C
Kyaer reek (32) - Gindles·wbergcdr2S-00-30..710; Bush M-1•7;
ar ••• ; Black 2·0-0•4;
Clagg 1-0·0•2; Wolfe 1.0·0•2.
Totall·- 11-l-4=32
. Free tbrOWI- 4-20 (20%)

a

.o. ·

Tuesday, January 7, 1992

10
11
12
13
14

MINE! - Kyger Creek's Tonya Drummond (center) gets a grip
on the ball after wrestling it away from an unidentified Hannan
Trace player and Wildcat front-liner Stephanie Stapleton (to the
right or Bobcat Angie Bush, No. 22) in the first quarter of Monday
night's SVAC contest at Mercerville. The Bobcats won 42-39 to
record their first win or the season. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

15

18
11

18
19

Eastern posts 51-34 win
over Oak Hill Monday

20
21
22

23

P EHS collapsed on the OH post,
By SCOTI WOLFE
where again
Sentinel Correspondent
Placing six girls in the scoring Gardner excelled with defensive
column with nearly identical num- rehounds to initiate the EHS break.
The end result was a lopsided
bers, the Eastern Eaglettes widened
21-13
quaner that padded Eastern's
a 30-21 third-period score to claim
lead
to
51-34.
a crucial51 -34 SVAC victory over
EHS hit 11-22 at the line. OH
the Oak Hill Lady Oaks.
Eastern's 5-11 junior forward, hit 6-14.
EHS won the battle of the
Tiffany Gardner, led the way with
11 poilits and-19 rebounds, which boards 50-39, led by Gardner's 19
reportedly may be a school record and Jennifer Roush with 14. EHS
had nine steal s led by Metzger's
in that depanment.
three.
Stumbo led Oak Hill with 19
OH won the reserve battle 34points and 10 rebounds.
Dawn Heideman' s Eagles arc 24. Jaime Wilson had 5·, Nora Eastnow undefeated 4-0 in the league man, who left with an injury, had
going into a vital league match five before her exit. Michelle
with Hannan Trace and ace guard Schultz had 4, with two each from
Lucy Mullens Thursday. Eastern is Tara Congo, Amy Redovian, Deb5-2 overall .
bie Gray, Shelly Metzger, and
Oak Hill took a 4-0 lead to open Gillilan. Hawkins led OH with II.
the game, but the Eaglcttes cracked
Eastern hosts Hannan Trace at
down defensively, while taking the hom e in an SVAC showdown
-ball to the bucket offensively to tic rhursday.
the score at I0-10 at the end of the Quarter totals
first stanza. Eastern's team play Oak Hiii ........... .. IO 2 9 13 = 34
was well evident from the box Eastem ... .......... .. !O 8 12 21 =51
score.
Oak Hill (34) _:__Lloyd 1-0Eastern's aggressiveness in the 0=2, Kuhn 2-0-0=4, Sharp 0-0-1=1 ,
paint durin g the first and second Fi sher 1-0- 1=3, Carney 2-0-1 =5,
frames put Stumbo on the bench in Stumbo 8-0-3= 19. Totals - 14·0·
foul trouble for much of the second 6=34
round.
Eastern (51) - M¢:ilcr 2-0Eastern utilized its ·run more and 5=9, Gardner 5-0- 1=11 , Phillips 4got off several succe ssive fas t 0-0=8, Rou sh 2-0-2=6, Wilson 3-0breaks. Without Stumbo' s offense, 3=9, Gillilan 4-0-0=8. Totals Eastern rolled to an 18-12 advan- 20-0-11:51
tage at the half.
Opening the third round, Eastern gained· valuable momentum
ATLANTA (AP) - Bill Lewis,
when Shelly Metzger drove the who guided East Carolina to an Il lane hard for a score and made the l record and a No. 9 ranking this
ensuing free throw to cap a three- past season, was named Georgia
Tech's ninth head coach,
point play.
With th e help of Gardner's
'Lewis, 50, succeeds Bobby
strong board control, Eastern began Ross , who became coach of the
another break with Jaime Wilson San Qiego Chargers on New
cashing in . Wilson made the lay-up Year's Day after compiling a 31and hit a free throw to push East- 26-1 record in five years at Georgia
em's lead 10 24-12.
Tech. In three years at East CaroliThe second half action was fast na, Lewis has a 21 -12-1 record,
paced and .saw numerous violations in cluding a 37-34 victory over
and miscues. EHS held on to lead North Carolina State in the Peach
30-21 at the end of the frame.
Bowl on New Year's Day.
In the fourth frame, EHS maintained its a~gress ion and put the
Lady Oaks m further foul trouble.

24
25

O.lltdeGoUlaCouat)'

.
tsWeoko............................,.:..:........ aa.41l
:Ill w..u.:, ................,.....................141.10

..

1
2

3
4

5
7
8
9
10
· 11
13
16
15
17
19
18
12
20

23
14
21
25

~'"'"'"'"'TO TEAMMATE- Florida Stale's Andre Reid (44)
passes the ball to a teammate out or the reach or Duke frontman
Cherokee Parks during Monday night's college game in Durham,
N.C., which the host Blue Devils won 86-70. (AP)

Lo.s Angeles at Pin,burgh, 7JS p.m.
Minnesou at Wuhington, 7:35p.m.
SinJOSI!.'Il VanCCIUver, 10:35 p.m.

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
PeL
.690

GB

B(:CLOr\ ....................20
Milmi ....................ll
Phll.tclphio ..........14
Wuhin&amp;ton ............t2
New Ic:ney ............ 11
Orlan.do .................... 6

.62S

l.S
?
7.l
9
9.5
14.5

12
18
II
19
20
2A

All
.438

.3&amp;7
.375
.200

Centnl Dl¥lllon
l
.833

Cltiugo............,.....:!l

J

.7ot

M.ilwaukec .............l6 14
Atlant.a ................... l6 IS

.SlJ
J\ 6

9
9.5

0euoiL ...................17 16

.SIS

9.5

Jndiana.. .................l3 20
Char\oue ....... ........... 9 24

.394
.173

13.5
17.5

Clenland.---..21

Uu.h ............. ...... .... 22
San Ant.onio ........... l7
Ho~A~ton ................. 17
Dc:nve:r ................... IJ

12
14
IS
17

O.Uu .....................l2 19
Minnoo ... ................l 24

.647
.S48
.531
.433

lS
4
1

.387

8.l

.1?2

Ooldat Su.w: .. ........21

8
Poru""' .....:...........20 11

Phocnix ................. .l9 13
L.A. Lakc:n ........... .l8 13
Se~ule ....................l6

Major college
baskelball scores

.72.4

.64l
.l94
.581

.S33

· Slcnml&gt;110 .............. 9 22

.290

17 .soo

2

3.l

4
5..S

6.l
13

Monday'S scores
Bc.tcws 110, Sacnmcnto 108

Nn, lcraty 105, L.A. CUppcn;90
ALlanu. I09, Howton 97

San Antonio 100, Detroit 90
Utah 124, Indiana 101

Ho11Hon I 05, Cenlerlary 81
Iloward V. 64, S. Cuolina S1.. 61
J&amp;Wm St. 83, Prairie View 60
Lamar 92, J.c.kaonville 83, or
Mill. Valley SL92, Alcorn St. 66
M.iuiuippi 86, Oral Robet\&amp; 73
N. Cuolina AAT 98, Morsan St. 67 .
N.C. Ouzlotte 99, N.C.· Wilmington
89.0T
Richmond 68, Loyola, Md. '64
SoulhemU. il3,GramblingSt90
Tenneascc71, Towson St. 70
Tn .· Chauanoo&amp;a 80, N.C.-Grccns·
boro6\

·
88 , Penn 74
Wake Forcst74, Sunford 45
Winlhrop 62, Coppin St 59

Tt~bne

Midwest
Butlc:.r 86, Goor&amp;ia SL 82
Chic.ao St. 97, NE Illinola 96
Cind.MaU 79. Middle Tenn. 'JO
Da)'lOft 61 , Eall Carolin149
IU ..chieaso 74, Valpmilo 45
Mo.-K.wu City 71, W. DlinoiJ 46
N.tl.li.noi.lll. Ocvcland S1. 77
N. low1 S6, Onko 51
Northweftem 14, Cbicaao 41
SL l..ouiJ 73, S.lllinoi1 71
WY..Orocn Bay 62.Akron 60
Wia. -Milwaubo.l3, SE Miuowi 71

Chioqo II Milmi, HOp.m.
S.cnmcnt.o at Dcuoit, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Oippen at Indiana, 7:30p.m.

L.A. Lakon u Sm Antcnio,l p.m.

Southwest

Utah at Milwaukee. 9 p.m.

W L T PU.' CFCA

N.Y.ItanJia ..... Zlll l Sl164'f40
w.w.a............ 26 13 3 Sl 114139
Pitobuljh .......... 2314 4 lO U91ll
NewJ..y ........ 20 14 6 46 1'2117
N.Y.Iolandoft.... 13 20 6 32 IAl16l
Phlladolphll ....... 1119 7" 31 107131
.1
A4tm1Divloloo
- . ............ Z714 2 !6.136 93
• a................... 11 t7 l 4tll9143
~ HanfOlll ............. llll l 3l121134
I Boffdo............... 1320 6 32 113140
Qlldloc .............. It :14 l %7 127160

tM64

Ohio high school

girls basketball scores
Amhcnl 3&amp;, Eiyn• 34
A1h~bula Harbor 31, Painc•vllle
Rivenido 33
Aunirnown Fhc:h 101, YOWll· Eut

; Colp!y
w...,................
. . . .;. 1117 11,. ll . .u 147140
tl'ltl6
to, Aft.-.. . . 16 16 7
144llt
' - .......,.... 1620
ll 14lll9

214 EAST MAIN
. POMEROY

j

s.nr................ 919

892-6687

1

6

1

11 IOit73

MaadiJ'IICOnl

N.Y. a-4, WIMIN2'
T_..:!; ILI.c... :1, 0T

~

·

.

. lt81oAuto
......

'"'.c.........
u w..u .................... ~..................-.40
'--:----~·--~ 1
1

_....__.__~_ ......_....._......_,...______ _ '7;--==·-''~·-......,-,.---,.....~------~--'-r-~---·-·_ -----,-------'--".....:::.,......:.--,..----,. -----~~[-

Toell•••• p111•
' N.Y.-•DtilNil, ?•"P-"'Bidl'.to a!PIIILide\phit, 7::t.! p,nt.' .

B~ 67, Shadyaide,41

• Bucke1e Loc:d 47, Millin• ferry 34
Chonlon !l,Drlnae21
Chc11puko ,2, Port1mouth Noire

Pressure?.

Transactions
Bose boll
American ~aaue
NEW YORK YANKEES - Agn:od
to tum1 with DaMy Tarubull,·o.uficldet,
on 1 five· year contnct.
NaUonal Lul'le
PmSBUROH PIRA'(ES-

Fi"d

Bosketboll

PHit.\DELPIUA 76ERS - Signed
Jeff Rullnd, center, lo a multiyuz con·
tract. Waived Mi.chlcl Andey, forwud.
Football

Nalloaal FootbaiiWaue
NEW YORK IBTS - Fired Joe

Donielo, quU1abocl: DOlch.
PIDlADI!IJ'IIIA EAGLES - Annowtced ~·at BUl W111h, ol'feru:ivc line
coach, aad Dan Neal, auiltant offwive
line. coach, will nat flllllftl, •
PITISBUROH .STEELERS ·N•rno4 T"" Donohoe dUodot ol foali•.U
oparad01111.
_

'

SAN DIEOO O!AROEJIJ -Niincd
Chuck: Priefcr tpeci•l ...a11 COICh lnd
lalul MllC!IJOI qualhy Driii(Olditector.
SEATILE ·SEAHAWKS· - An·
nounted lhat Tom Floru, pre~ident and
&amp;eneral man1pr, wUJ lllo IIIWM dulia
ofhoad~cb.

Oa-•
43, Bu.U.. Troilll
Cin..,.Moaioli,Corlldo 33

'

'Cot RN&lt;ly 13, H•mil""' Twp.l3 ·
c-... V.U.41, Edhon N. 31

D•y. Cam)U 51, Middlttown Fenwick
30
'
.
• Doy. Dunbu73, lloJ. Bolritont lO
Doy. ()o,kwood 46,Cod1Mlle II
Dt . PailanGo4f o.·. White42

'!'T·_nr SL lohrf.. ~. Pt. ltM1nl'

ll....,...
B. Cari1oa oM, C""""Y31

-

.

.

41,0noon Suitdl·41
llrnauroiol Blp!ilt 39, M•....,. YoU .

- I.611, !clmlllo 43

33

___

~

c
.

. m

'

.

-'

THE-o·AILY SENTINEL

.

'

1·1
~~--------~~--------~--~~~
&lt;. --~--------------------~~
,_.,.;...
_,.........,.--..
--.

-----

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 im·
portant for you to
give your child the
facts about the dan·
gers ·of drug abuse,
and the kind of
strength it takes to
say "no" to friends.
Talk to your kids. Get
to them before the
pressure does.

National Bukelblll Auocllllon
BOSTON CELTICS - Plocod Lony
Dird, forwud, on the lnjurod lilt. Acliv.at·
cd Kevin Pritdwd, ~~rd.

Dtmi30

· v -..---.. 2211 ., ll 145122
:19
:19

'

Bcavcwcreei .56, Kaueritt&amp; Faizmont
Bell•itc St. JoM't61, Briclaipot\ 3l
· Bowlina Green .(2, ToL Whiwnor 40

• . Stl.oWo ............

Sllf!MDMolco .

•

Avon 79, LonlnClcaMew 10

Beaver Eanem 14, ~· VaUey

l3

llt'J&lt;&gt;il,.............. 2S II

We.lllville62, E. Uvcrpoo1 43
Whcelepbura S7, PikQOn 43

Aknla SLV·St.M?0, ~· 29

NorrtoDIW L' T I'll. OFGA

The

ficld 32
Waynesville 41 , Little Miami 28 ·
Wellin ..ton 39, Elyri1 W. 26

Alcunder44, ?,1.i11cr 33

Sl

4 Sl 164 I Z1
1116 7 43 142137
• CU..p.,.~ ........ 1717 9 43147131
' ~ ...c.:.... 17 II 3 11 122131
; r .................... ft27 l 27112161
1

Now Mexico SL 61, New Mc~~:ico 63
Nouc Duno64, S&lt;Mh~ Cal,58

'

Strong
Enough
To Resist

I

Colorado St. 71, Tolu-Pan American

l6

Child

Mt Gilea d 43, Ma rion C1th. 41
N. Ad1ms 52, Whilt.Oa.k 51
Oberlin 33, Ke)'J tooe 2A
Painesville Harvey 70, Ashtabt~la
Edaewood48
Pandora-Gilboa 48, Allington 38
Reedsville Eutem 51, O.U Hill 34
S. Wcbncr45, New B011ton 3\
Sandy Y1U. 60, Akron Ma nchester 46
Sltyvue 50, BcallJYille 46
St Mar~• 73, New Knoxville 24
Steubenville Calh. S8, Wintertvill c 4?
S~IY1ni1 Nonhview SS, Tol. Rogel'!
32
Tipp City S.S, Eaton 3\
Tol. Oui.Uan 43, Ever~fCC~! 3'J
Tusurawu Vall. 41 , TUJiaw 32
TwinsbwJ 3&amp;, WicklllTe 26
Union Lonl 57, Cambridae 38
Urban~ &amp;8, Sprina. Northv.utem 25
W. Bru~ch 55, Deaver Local 41
W. GeallJa 72., Sol~ 51
W. Union 67, Porumo.uh W. 27
W~m~~ Xennody 59, Lordatown 53
Wuhinaton CH 65, Leabura F•ir·

"' manager.

For West

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
; T-

33

McComb 45, Van Bun:n 30
Me~dowbroolr: 49, Warren Local 25
Minford 73, Fran.klin Furnace Gn:.::n

Larry Doughty, senior v,ice ptelidcnt and
general manaaer or bucbaU operations.
Named Cam Bonir•~ inter im general

Oklahcma Sl. 72, KaNaa SL 34
JUee 74, Fordham 57
Te.w 93, Mumy S1.. ~

:19

Let us ten you just
how much your savings

36

Coil. ofQu~ 67, Tuu-Atlina·

Palrkk Dl•~loo

Is Your

Mapleton 46, W. Salem Northwe5tcm

!Me 86. Florida SL 70
Fwman 80, L&amp;ndet 50
Georgia Soulhcm 88, Appalachian SL.

Jf~UW\ at ~~phia. 7:30p.m.

Lcbanoo 36, Miamilburg 29
LcipUdl, Vanlue40
Lemon· Monroe. 64, Tl!awanda 60,

Manlficld Temple 4S, Wayside Ou.

Campbcl198, Fem~m 97, OT
Cl\lrlcslon Southern 80, Liberty 75
Delaware St. 83, f1oridl Alr.M 80

Wednesday's Rames

York Ranger goaUe Mike Ricbter (bottom) and
another teammate during Monday night's NHL
game in Madison Square Garden, which the
Rangers won 4-2. (AP)

Uberty·Dmton 49, A~tadia J I
Loaan Elm 68, Col. Ha!tlcy 43
Mad.U:m 56, A&amp;htabl.lla St . John 39

Alabama SL 88, Texu So.11hem 76
BClh\lne·Cookman 77, Md.·E . Shore

New Ycxk a18011an, 'f;JOp.m.
Minnolo&amp;a at New Jc:aey, 7:30p.m.

Team·

OT

South

Orlando 11 Pmland. 10 p.m.

KING OF THE HILL - Winnipeg's Doug
Evans (dark jersey, center) becomes jusl that as
he goes to the top of the pile created by New

Jc.!TcnOn 68, Ad1tab.ola 37
Kalida 49, Ottoville 42
Ke.ns\.01'1 51 . Chagrin Falls 38

l7

Colgate 83, Harvard 70
Georgetown 70, Providen ce 63
Hofsltl 59, Bo5ton U. 55
ll oly Crou 72, DU1mouth SS
Navy S4, Drm.cl 71
Pitllbw'a.h 93, Dvqucanc 69
Portland87, Hartford 16

73

. ~· .

60

East

Tonl~bt's games
AlllntutNew Ywk. 7:30(·"'Cienland al Min neiGh, p.m.
WuJUnaton at Oiet&amp;o, 8:30p.m.
L.A. LIUn IC Dallu,l:30 p.m.
Suq.J.e at Denver, 9 p.m.

Denver u A-.oeNI, 9:30 p.m.
Orlando It SOI\de.lO p.m.

Greenfield 60, E. Ointon 40
Hardin Nonhem 59, Cary-Rawson 53
Huber Hts. Wayne 75 , Oay. Slebbuu

Kyger Crock 42, liann•n Trace 39
Lakeview 56, Hubbard 50
t..Uum W~~em 72, PorumouLh Clay

?7

14

L.A. Cippcn ......... t7

al Buffalo, 7:3S p.m.
Bosloo at Mootrcal, 7:35 p.m.
St. LoW at N.Y. Rangcn, 7:35p.m.
Edmonton at Winnipeg. 8:35p.m.
San Jose 11 Calgacy, 9:35p.m.

14.l

Pacific DlvlJian

Fuclands 69, Brookside 38

Omcva73, COMColut 52
Onnville49, New Albany 36

Que~

4

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t D!Ylaion
Ttlm
.w L Pd. CD

Federal Hockina45, Trimble 13

Wednesday's games

Atlandt Dlwlllon

Twn
W L
New Ycd. ..............lO 9

WALES CONFERENCE

can be.

victory. The Scabawks (6·5), who
trailed 43-34_at halftjme, bAY~:
never beaten a ranked team. James
Terrell led the 49ers with 24 points,
while Keith Adkins lOpped the Seahawks with 24.
Notre Dame 64
No. 23 Southern Cai.S8
Daimon Sweet scored 23 points
and LaPhonso Ellis had 21 points
and 15 rebounds in Notre Dame's
upset of Southern Cal.
Sweet had 15 points in the second half as the Irish (2-5) overcame
a nine-point deficit. Harold Miner
had 24 points for the Trojans (8-2).
No. 24 Tulane 88, Penn 74
The Green Wave (10-0)
remained unbeaten and celebrated
their first appearance in the ranlc·
ings since 1949 with the home victory behind solid defense which
forced 31 turnovers that were
turned into 42 points. Kim Lewis
had 17 points and seven steals ror
Tulane, while Jerome Allen led the
Quakers (2-5) with 22 points, 12
from 3-point range.

Pts. Pvs.

IntheNHL ...

Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
1educed even more by
· insuring both your car
arid home with the State
Auto Companies.

13-4 3 1/2 minutes in and were
never threatened as Grant Hill and
Brian Davis had career-highs with
26 and 19 points, respectively.
The visiting Seminoles (7-4, 1•
2) were led by Sam Cassell with 20
points.
No. 19 Wake Forest 74, Samrord
45
The Demon Deacons (8-1) led
35-17 at halftime and led by as
many as 34 points in winning their
13th straight home game. Rodney
Rogers led Wake Forest with 15
· points, while Bubba Sheafe:s 13
points led the Bulldogs (2-6), who
committed 21 turnovers and shot
38.3 percent.
No. 22 NC-Charlotte 99
NC-Wilmington 89 ( OT)
The 49ers (9-1) trailed by as
many as eight points in the second
half before Delano Johnson hit a 3pointer at the buzzer to force the
overtime. Neither team scored for
the first two minutes of the extra
period before the visiting 49ers
pulled away for their ninth straight

Scoreboard

111 Dnil S · 1
~
Y eniUie
g!;:p~[y,~~~,?~~~~:·:~:_ PP~:;::;;:

marvelOUS exhibj-

AP

Sports briefs

=~=:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::tU:

Record

7-0 1,625
UCLA
8-0 1,531
Oklahoma St. 12-0 1,492
Kansas
10-0 1,412
Connecticut 10-0 1,370
Arlzono
9-1 1,174
Ohio St.
8-1 \,160
North Carolina ~ 1 1,098
Michigan Sl 10-0 1,078
lndlane
~2 1,021
Mlchlgen
8-1 972
Ml.ssourl
11-0 910
Aikonsu
12-2 810
Georgia Tech 11-2 793
Kentucky
10·2 744
Alabama
12.1 614
Sl John's
8·2 576
S.ton Hall
8-2 538
Wake Forest 7-1 423
Syrocust
10-0 379
Oklohoma
10-1 355
N.C. Charlotte 8-1 303
Southern Cal 8-I 192
Tulon• .
9-0 t52
MllllchUIIHI t J.2 89

9

· SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Daily.................................~ ............ 2a cent.t
S•botTibm nol dNriil"''" poy tho oam·
er ""'Y romlt in advance dlrott ~&lt;&gt;Tho
Gallioolio Doily Tribune on • .3.8 or 12
moolhbaa~.Croditwillbelivoncanior
eachMek.
.
·.
N&lt;~~oboerlpllono by maii!H'rmillod·in
'arou where homo comet oorviee Ia
available.
' MoitSobocr18!::'no . .
InlideOollla ntr ·
13 W..t.L............................... ,........l2I.IW

"That Wl!S

~~

7
8

en.
en. ~:'Ui:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::JI
en..Yoar. ...................................- ...$83.20

,

Duke 86, Florida State 70; No. 19 its top two point guards because
Wake Forest 74, Samford 45: No . odf injuries, and lhe lack of floor
'
. ~lil'fl'l' tat8'1fiiil."..'t:ltai'lotte 9 9. leadership was evident as the WildNonh Carolina-Wilmington 89 in cats missed 14 of their first 16
"~ was just outstanding."
overtime; Notre Dame 64, No. 23 shots.
a 72-34 victory
"We got taken out of the game
Southern Cal 58; and No . 24
over
State, the Wildcats'
In ather games involving ranked Tulane 88, Penn 74.
by some defensive pressure that at
lowest point total since a 50-30 loss teams on Monday, it was No. I
Kalfsas State (6-4) was missing this time we are not cabable of hanto Oklahoma in 1947.
dling," Kansas State head coach
Oklahoma State (13·0) led 32Dana Altman said . "Oklahoma
11 at halftime, the fewest points it
·state is a very good bask.etball
has allowed in a half since St.
team defensively. We haven't seen
Louis had that many on Feb. 1,
anything like that."
.
1958, wben the Cowboys ~~~~ a
Oldahoma State was •.n foul
starting guard named Eddie Sutton.
· trouble early ~the three b1g men
Sutton is the. head oach now and
- Byron Houston, Bryant Reeves
he was ~fallout the defense.
and Randy DayJS- each had three
f~uls by halfume. But It mattered
httle exeept t!Jat Houst&lt;;&gt;n fimshed
wtth seven poll!ts, breakinj! a streak
of 32 consecuuve games m double
figures. ·
.
S~an Sutton had 16 pmnts and
Davts added 13 for Oklahoma
State, wh1ch won Its_23rd consecuuve home_ game, V.:hile Askia Jones
led the Wtldcats w1thl ~ pomts.
No.I Duke 86,1llorida St. 70
School (Firsl
The; Blue Devils (8-0, 2-0) led

3
4
5
6

SUBBCI\IPTION RATES
By CUTtor.,. Motor ao.to

• .

.

2

&lt;UsPs 213 •060&gt;
Publi•hed every onernoon. Mondoy
thn&gt;ugh Fridoy. tu Cour\ SL.. Pomen&gt;y,

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

.Oklahoma Statea beats Kansas State 72-34 to stay unbeaten

Rank lace votes}
1 Duke (65)

Ohio 45769, Ph. 992:2166. second ct ..,
p»lago paid at Pomenl)l. Ohio.
Memh&lt;r: The o\IIM&gt;cialod Preoa, lnlond
Daily Prou A11odation and the Ohio
Newopapor RepreHnlati.,,
AnoclaLion, Branham
National
Adverli11ng
Newopa!H'r sat... 733 Third A•••••·
NewYOrk, NowYOrkiOOt7.
POSTMASTER: S.nd •4dre•uhani!U"'
The Daily S.nlinet, llt Co•rt st ..
Pomeroy, OHio45769.
·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~-·

�I

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
'

.

By Jeff Hilleary

As the old yea r goes out and
into our memory and more tha n a

lew h" tory books, let us celebrate
bv looking at two movies tha t, by

Llie time you read this, arc already
· m your stores or on the way.

Hav &lt;n g a bad day? Nothing
go in g ri ghl? Accordi ng to Mel
Brooks there is a very good reason
"hY that is. Yo u sec, friends and
ncig li bors, LIFE STINKS. And in
his latest film , he shows us why
that is.
Mel pl :1ys a bu sinessman with
!ll ill ions to his name who· makes a
bCI ll'll h anothe r mi ll ionaire that he
, .1n Iivc on the street without his
""'""Y or contacts for a whole
~&lt;ow

month.

1h1s is a man used to
his eve ry whim catered to

• h:Jvln ~

by '''" ants and lawyers and his
many employees , suddenly hurled
on to the co ld and uncaring streets
like so many unfortunat es in our
socie ty. But don ' t worry about
Go duard Bo lt (Mel Brooks),
because he has fri ends he just
has n't met yet who can come to his
r~sc u e.

L.li-E STINKS is a lo p-si ded

philosophical view of modern life
"ith cu·ama and comedy Ouown in
ll' ith :1 master chef's hand making
lor a great cinematic fable that will
ic;ne yo u cheering for the underclog ancl bu ghing as the bad guys
,et wlm thcy deserve.
John C:mrly. however. has prob-

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day ofthat event. llems
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar, ·

!ems of a different sort. He i$ a
soap opera writer by the name of
Jack Gable who, after an accident,
wakes up in the town of,J.shford
Falls, a place he createll in his
show . DELIRIOUS? Maybe. But
that is the title of the movie that left
this critic sorry to see it end. From
start 10 finish, this movie is funny,
wiuy and one of the best spoofs of
tlle soap genre yet
Gable becomes a character by
the name of Jack Gates, rich, ruthless and chanmil]g who immediately runs afoul of tlle local rich villain played with understated elegance by Raymond Burr and falls
in love with his daughter, Rachel,
played by Emma Samms. Complicauons ensue and thanks 10 a guest
appearance by Raben Wagner, this
movie is as confusing as a real soap
opera and a thousand times funnier.
DELIROUS, a splendid mix of
Frank Capra meets Abbott and
Costello may never get an Oscar,
but it definitely gets my vote for ·
the best John Candy since UNCLE
BUCK.
Recapping for those who joined·
us late, and shame on you! LIFE
STINKS by Mel Brooks is funny
and sad and immensely enjoyable
with a PG-13 rating. Due in stores
January 29 from MGM/UA.
DELIRIOUS has a PG rating and is
warm, funny and whimsical. This
is currentl y in the stores and is
worth your time to sec.

•

MONDAY
•
LETART · The Letan Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the township building for an
organizational meeting.
CHESHIRE - Women Aliv e
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 Middle·
pon Garden Club will meet Mon. day at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
· Presbyterian Church Social Room.
Judy Arnold will have a program
on "House Plants - Our Living
Room Landscape," from Plants Are
!:ike People by Jerry Baker. All
mcm bers are asked to bring a house
plant to show and exchange. Roll
call is "What do gardeners do in

A fam il y Christmas dinner was

he ld on Sunday, December 22 at
the home of Opal Eic hinger.
,\tt cndin g we re Mr. and Mrs.
Ch:~rl cs Ei chinger, Pickerington;
Mr. anti ~Irs . Dennis Eichinger and
so n D:~n 2, Reedsville; Kris Wilson
of lknJasonv illc, N.C.; Mr. and
\IC'. Donald Eic hin ge r, Tiffany
:llld hhtln, Vi ncent; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom 1\ il' C, Po meroy; and Edgar
H:1rt11n &gt;. r\ von Lake . Gifts were
cxch:tn ccJ :1nd a visit from Santa
wJs ,·nJU)Cd by al l.
Chri&gt;tmas dinner guests of Opal
ll ol lon were ~1r. and Mrs. James
Hollvn, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Gera!J l!ollo n and family, Lancaster;
:vir. ond Mrs. Robert Parker, Keltic
Jn d Bob, Mane tta; and Mr. and
\Irs. R1ck Hollon and family, locaL
~Jr. and Mrs. Jeff Honan and
EIJzJbo:Lh , Columbus, spent the holrJ.l'i ~1th Opal Eichinger. OnFriL. che 'OJ ned Justin Eic hinge r and
1

f:r L:;u n's si xth birthday

.-.. ,, :: .r ;cr K1ng

Ill

Parkersburg,

' l.

,1,.

::1r:otmas

j 1n n~r

guest.s of Erma

.vcrc Yir and

~lrs .

Larry
-. :-.:.:.uH! u1d Grcu H1bbs. ,Vis.1tor s

--: "...:!:ll!L l

\·tr. ,::ctand Jlinng the holidays
·' '"'' \l r .UlLt \lrs. Dav1d Tys inge r
.I

11H!

!.und·.r. Kjngspon. Tenn .. and

\!r 11111 1-l r,. \v.1de Barry and fam:&lt;.c:unr:ntl. V:1.
' .dd (-~ a .,• ,lnli fncnd , Cleve,: .,r~.;ill ,llt; ·Nec kend wtth Mr.
: 11r. :&lt;.cnald Cloy
~ ·--.. 1m~ls dmn er g ue st~ of Mr.

, .: \lr. lame&lt; R1denour and Janet

were· Pauline Ridenour, Opal
Wickham, Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour , Jason and Jared, Mr. and
Mrs. Lowell Ridenour and family,
John L. Ridenour, Tresea Evans,
Rebecca and Stephanie.
Mrs. Eileen Hayes Coil, Baltimore, Md., spent the weekend with
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes.
Mr. and Mrs. Scouy Smith and
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Ridenour and
family were dinner guests. on
Christmas Eve 6f Mrs. Elizabeth
Haye s, in observance of Mrs.
Smith's birthday.
Ethel Orr spent Christmas with
Mr. and Mr s. Robert Lee of
Carmel.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Myers and
Jenna, Columbus, were guests of
Ethel Orr on Sunday and Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gruser, Logan,
visited on Sunday. Calling in the
afternoon were Manha Lee, Becky,
Amy and John Bentz of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Scouy Smith and
Elizabeth Hayes spent Chrisunas
wi th Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith
of Pine Grove Road.
George Reuter and Mary Frieta g, Akron , spent the weekend
wit/T their aunt, Lucille Smith.
, Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier,
Jessica and Kristen, spent Christmas wi th Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bcal
of Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Cleland.
Greg Hibbs , Mary and Christ
Myers spen t Christmas Eve with
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young of
Rutland.

Rejoici ng Life to host seminar
ReJOIClD!, L1fc Church, 500 has gifted him with insights into
\.,nh SccnnJ Avcn"c tn Mtddlc- Kingdom Finance for just an hour
rnr• ha, arno unced tllat it will host as this, along with being an
annointed preacher and teacher of
.1 'I ,n.• nc,al Freedo m" se minar
the Word of God."
.~ 1lh ;·u·;-.,t '\pcakc r Michael Bran·
"S tudents attending receive the
""" ·1he &gt;ehcdulc of tlle semi nar
, ,,Iulie. 1c r v J CC~ on Friday at 7 benefit of annointed teaehing, coni1 1:1 .1 r~::-:n's hrcakfast on Salur· ccnuatro on the subject of Biblical
c,,, .rl X '(Jam., and a service at 7 Economics." Pangia continued.
;' ,;, . '.O ncl"d'n g on Sunday at 10 "They also receive a syllabus of all
the teaching including extensive
.I !1
.. ,vJ,clw ei· Bra nnon has b£c n worlcsl!eets 10 assist them in their
,;:Jn[ ll,·ly called. qualified and prc- per59nal financial planning."
Pangia in•ites the public to
pr,·d hy God to m1nistcr financial
attend
this financial seminar.
!rcc tlu m to the body of Chri st,"
P."tor Mic hael Pangia said. "God

DOCTOR PAIN - Deolisl Arl Wimer, whose license plate on his
Harley-Davidson motorcycle reads "DR PAIN," wears a necklace
made of human teeth that he pulled from inmates at the Orange
County Jail. Wimer is the dentist in .lhe prison and a. former
'-"'
undercover drug agenL (AP)

Newsletter helps Nebraska
farmers find companions
SUPERIOR, Neb. (AP)- Jim
co llects oil lamps and Bibles.
Annie says she's "tired of going
out wi th guys who don ' t know
which side is up on a cow."
They're among those trying to
find companionship through Country Connections, a dating newsletter geared lo those living in isolated
fanming communities.
Bill Blauvelt said he founded
Country Con'ncctions six years ago
after reading about the plight of
single farmers who had a tough
time finding spouses.
·
The newsletter's circulation has
grown to more than 1,500, and
Blauvelt says an inch·thick file of
letters shows that people are finding love through the publication.
Blauvelt, who also publishes the
local newspaper in this southern
Nebraska town of 2,500, said the
newslcuer primarily auempts to
pa ir bachelors with city wom en
who grew up in the country and
want

lO

return.

" ' Long about 30, the women
start realizing that the city life isn't
all it's cracked up to be and they
want to get out of the city," Blauvelt said.
Most subsc ribers arc from
Nebraska and the Midwest, but
some live as far away as California
and New York, he said.
Country Connections subscriber
Joe Cockson, 39, lives in Bellwood; a small town about 60 miles
west of Omaha. He said 1\e wants

CHESTER - The postponed'
mee ting of Chester Garden Club
will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. '
at the home of Mrs. Donald M6ra. ·
"Turning WinlCr Into Spring" is the ·
theme of the program by Mrs. ·
Richard Barton.

win~.e;r?"

RACINE · Southern Loca l
School Board will hold an organizational and budget meeting on
Monday at 7:30p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tulle:
pcrs Plains VFW Post 9Q53 wiO:
meet al 7:30 p.m. on Thursda y ~
the post home.
-;:

RACINE - Raci ne Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the council chambers at Star
Mill Park .

ROCK SPRINGS · Roc r.!
Springs Grange will meet o ~'
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home gf;
William Radford.
!;

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . for a
regular business meeting. All mas·
ter masons arc urged to attend.
·
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Community Association will
meel Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at Mid·
dlepon Council Chambers. All
members arc urged to attend.

Reaction mixed after FDA advisory
on silicone-gel breast implants

"The Last Boy Scout," $?.1 mil- strongly. They included '' The
lion.
Prince of Tides, " " Bugsy,"
.....!llhcrt ~J9,Gims were ''JFK," "JFK," "Cape Fear" and, in lim~Iilon; if~Ay.~··ss.4 mil- itcd release, " Fried Green Tomalion; "Star Trek VI: The Undiscov- toes" and "Grand Canyon."
ered Country," $4.7' miUion; "The
The popularity of these criticallyAddams Family, " $4.6 million; · acclaimed titles suggested fil
.
and "My Girl," $3.8 million.
ers were avoidin~ the ate~~~~~
Final figures were not available because of th e re cess ion but
for the Christmas-New Year's because there were so many lousy .
week, but it surpassed the holiday movies,
· .
record of $209.4 million set during
" It always comes down 10 prod[he Founh of July week in 1989.
ucl and the values an audience puts
For all of laSt year, Nonh Amer- on the product," said Sid Ganis,
ican theater owners sold an esti- executive vice president of Sony
mated $4 .85 billion in ticke ts , Pictures Entertainment, parent of
down about 3 percent from the $5 TriStai ang Columbia Pictures.
billion for eaeh of the last two
Where the industry is not in a
years. Admissions were off more good place' is soaring production
sharply, but returns were offset by costs_ an average of $26. 7 milhigher ticket prices, as high as lion per movie in 1991 , up $7.7
$7.50 in some markets. Had it not million in three years
been for the Chirstmas showing,
Carolco Pictures had the year's
the year-end returns would have No.1 hi t in "Terminator 2" which
been much worse.
grossed $204.3 million.' but th e
"It's been a terrible year for film cost a .st.aggcring $95 million.
movies," said Jon Avnet. director Carolco is now on the verge of colof the well-received "Fried Green lapse and has laid off a fourth of its
Tomatoes." "People are sick of staff.
the junk .that's been put out there.''
Orion Pictures stitched together
Several high-profile film s, SI30.7 million from "The Silence
released late in the year 10 be fresh · of 'the Lambs," good for third-best
in Oscar
minds, performed of the year.

9

By ROBERt DVORCHAK
AP National Writer
Doctors and health groups split
~~er ,w,heth~r the Food and Drug
notmrmstrauonh went 100 ~ar --: or
ar enoug,,- tn as mg surgeons to stop using silicone-gel
breast Implants pendmg further
stu?y ofthell' safely.
. Women hav,e been used as
gumea p1gs. They ve been .~ng a
b1g leap mlo the un~own , Esther
Rom~. co-author of ~e Ne~ O~r
Bodies , Ourselve~, S31d m
ap~laudmg the FDA s recommendauon Monday.
.
But a psychoth erapiSt who
coun~ els cancer pauents m San
Franc1sco srud women lookmg for~ard to reco~~tructivc surgery
f~l betrayed.
. .
~~ople ha~e been calling m
tears, sa1d Sh1ela Propheter, who
has breast implants . "I 'think
Implants should be kept on the
market during testing. You bave to
understand what the loss of~ breast
means to a perso~ . You re not
whole anymore. It s a matter of
being able to look in the mirror and
not flinch.''
.
.
The FDA also asked manufacturcrs to stop ·sup~lying the
1mplants un11l an advtsory panel

recovenes, within 45 days. The
The American Society of Plastic
panel recommended .in November
and Reconstructive Surgeons said it
lhat the implants remain on the
would comply with the FDA recmarket while manufacturers collect
ommendation.
mo~ data. FDA C · . .
dAnd Dow Coming Wright, Jhe
owever,
omm1SS1aner 1ea mg maker of silicone implants
David Kessler said Monday that
suspended ~orldwide shipment and
~ mcc .then , new mformatJOn sales .~ hde 11 studied the FDA promcludmg ev1dence of rupt~res and
nouncement. Last month in Califormcreased nsk of tmmumty-system
nta, a federal Jury awarded $7.34
disorders- has come to h~ht. The
m1llion to a woman who charged
Implants also have been linked to
her Dow Cornmg Wright implant
cancer and chron1c mflammatory
ha~fuptured. .
.
disease, although none of the hnks
We arc sull totally convinced
has,~n p.roved.
. .
' that we have established both the
I believe all phys1ctan s and safety an~ th~ efficacy of these ...
manufacturers w1ll ab1de ?Y (the dev.1ces, sa1d Robert T. Rylee,
recomll!endauon) .. . and were ask- chatrrnanof Dow Coming's Health
mg pauents to understand that the Care Busmesses.
FDA cannot assure the saf~ty ~!
The advisory does not affect
these .de•1ccs at the present ume,
salme 1mplants, which are encased
Kessler said.
m s1hcone but are not believed 10
The FDA had never before pose the same nsk since leakage
ur~ed a moratorium on a device so releases salt water. The FDA has
w1de)y m use. About I mlll1on rece1ved about 3,000 reports of
women have received ,implants in problems with such implants.
the past 30 years; about 10,000 gel
Ctndy Pearson, program director
them each ~onth . About 80 percent for the Nauonal Women's Health
are cosmeuc surgery; the remamder
Network, sa1d the FDA's move:
are to replace diseased or damaged " This is a good first step. The FDA
,breasts. ·
.
.
has come down on the sl'dc of cau,
· The FDA· has recemd abe ut non. ·Th1s has been a giani, uncon3,400 re~rts of problems with sili - trolled experiment because there is
conc-gel1mplants.
no conclus1ve evidence they are

safe.'·

-

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

..

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until ~QON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDAY

POMEROY · Prec eptor BcCil.
Bela Chapter of Beta Sigm a PllJ,
will meet on Thursday at 6 p.m. ~t
Grace Episcopal Church and Parish
House. The program will be
"Time for Surprise".
;

RATES
Days
1

15
15
15
15
15

3
6
10

\
Q.., ~ r

Ra1e
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

Words

Monthly

a,

.

15 Words
.30

4Z
.60

$ 13.00
S1 .30 t dav

.05 / day

FSC holds party ·:"

The Faithful Servants Sunday :
School Class of Racine First Bap- '
ti st Church recen tl y held their :
Christmas pany at Dale's Banquet :
Room in Gallipolis.
~
A buffet dinner was enjoyed fol- :
lowed by singing Christmas carols, •
playing games and exc han ging :
gifts. Sunday School teacher Car- :
olyn Powell and husband Ivan pre- ;
scntod each family with a poinsct· ·
tia.
•
Manha Lou Beegle read, ;
"T'was the Night Before Jcs us f
Came." Pastor Steve Deaver had t
devotions using the Christmas story ·:
from Matthew 1:1 8·25 with closing "
prayer by Charles Norris.
:
Members aucnding were Bob ;
and Martha Beegle; Frank an d·
Delores Cleland; Billy and Laura :
Cozart; Sam and Mary Cuni s; :
Nondus Hendricks; Lil Hart; ;
George Holman; George and Bcu- .
lah Neigler; Charles and Enma Nor.:
ris; Joanne and Harry Pickens; Ivan
and Carolyn Powell; Betty Sayre;
Orctha Snider; Dave and Linda
SpeQcer; John and Naomi Stobart;
Mary .K. Yost and Pastor Steve and
Ellen Deaver. Also auending were
six guests.

C;trd ol Thanks

2

In M emory

J
4

Annoucements
G1veawa't

5

H appy Ads

6
7
8

lost and f ou nd
Y .ard Sate tpa 1d •n adva••ct.rl
Pubkc; Sale I. ~ •• c.ltcul

'IT //1!'

('(II

followilll{ I l'lt'llluim• t•xdtlllll{!'·' ·· ·
PRICE REDUCED!
IMIOO~. The pke has been
rlliocod IO ~.
$13,900 01!1 flooMOQ M"1' !O60% of [I!Khasi Oroounl JmY bo P,JII1ibiJ fOJ qidfyiJq penon 1o btt "'Y nke lane on 3~ o"
11 oM1t. 4BR, 3 I.lls~,l!Ott•Mn!oll BR q&gt;t.

Porto! owne1 f•oMOQ

m:m,

P"'''ily IKW.. 4,600 sq. rr. fann

Col6tH91-ItOH~

.

.

Gall li County
AreaCo de6 14

M e•gs Cou nty

Area Co de 6 14

M ason Co . WV
Aru Cude 304

446, G.l lltpOh $
367 Ch 111h1r e

99 2 M•ddlt1Ktt1

6 75

.

388 Vinton
245 Rio Grande

256 Guyan D•s•
64 3 Arab •a o,,,

379 Walnut

Pt Plu,ln t
4 58 Leon
576 Apple Grove
173 M.. ,on
88 2 N ~tYW H1ven
895 Lel~rt
937 Buftalo

Pom et"uy
985 Cheste•
Por11~d

843
247

l elar1 falls
949 Ra c1ne

74 2 Rulland
667 Co ohulle .

I would like to thank all my
customers who gave me cards
and gifts during this holiday
season . They were very much
appreciated by my family and me.
Thank you,
Kevin Hoffman, Sentinel Carrier

31
32
33

36

R eal Eu1t e Want ed

q1
42
43

Hou ses l or Rent
Mobile Hom as fur R ent
Fonm s lor Rtm l

11
12

Help Wanlud
S11uatton Wanlerl
1 3 lmurance
14 Bus m eis Tra1mng
15 Sc hools &amp; Instruction
16 R adt o. TV &amp;. C8 Rt:~&lt;c~lr
17 MtScellant10 u s
18 Wanl ttd TuDo

21

8U $1nt1U OppOI IUIIII y

Money to loan

23 ProfesSional

61

44

Aportm ent for Runt

4S

Furmsh ed Ro oms

46

S pa ctt tor Rent

47

W anted to Rent

48

Equ•pn1eot lo r Runt

49

Fo r l ease

Trans orlation
7 1 Autos l o rSal t!
72 Truck s lor Sa il:
73 Vans &amp;4WO ' s
74 Mot orc ycles
15 Boals &amp; Motor ~ h.&gt; r So~ l u
76 Aut o Paris &amp; ACC CS!&gt;O"e!o
17 A 11 \u Repo111
7B
79

Merchandise

Ca mptng E~l lt~m llnl
Comper ~ &amp; Moto1 HUll Ill!&gt;

Services

Household Qoods
Sporting Good~
53 An11que 5
5 4 M1sc. Merc hand1se
55 Butldmg Supplttl5
56 Pets letr Sa le
5 7 M uiUc!ll lrnlwments
58 f f ulls Pa. Vegf:flabl e5
~!I
fm Sal e or Tra n~
51
52

St!t\JI C~

far m Eq~upmunl

62 W an tt d t o Bll \'
63 ltvest ock
6 4 Hay &amp; Gliun
6.S Sued l!o Fertrhtu•

I;Ri\1111

Want.,d to Buv

11

&amp; Li vestock

Hom t~s lor Sale
Mobtl tl Homes lo r Sdl u
F.tr m s lor S.ale

3 1 Buslf•~As 8u1ldmgs
35 loh &amp; Acu taye

EmQI~vment
Servtces

C/nHi.fi t•d /In~!' .\

Farm Suppli es

Real Estate

1

9

"

News notes

Announcemenls

. 20

Rates ilrU tor consecuuve run s. broken upd~~ysw•ll be chMged
lor eKh dar i15 s ep;uate ads
•

81
82

H om~ lmprovument s
Plumbmg &amp; Ht1111111g

83

b,CifVil h ll!J

84
85

86

Elnt1nc&amp;l &amp; Rt! h t\ltJJatiOII
G.:nt..,al Hauhny
Mobile Humc At!pa u

87

Uphols turv

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
·- REMOVAL
Pruning and Landscarlng

Business Services

frM Esdllaltt-25 YrL xp.
Call all« 6P•· -992·2928

(I) 3, I.,, p4

WANTED

'

A " force majeure " is a conditi on permitting a company to
depart from the strict terms of a
contract because of an event or
cffcctlhal can't be reasonably controlled.

.. SMAll
l?WANT
•.•
PPD&lt;ADS
.

..

.

•

. . ..'. .'..
1; ..

•

'' :~..
.' . ..
~

Who's Who

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7 •

•

~ 00 PUt«;H!

Betty Bi s hop visited Ala., were Thursday dinner guest
\\ .Jncs,lty wi ~1 her mother, Golda of his gra ndmother, Stella Atkins
and aunt, Miss Ruby Diehl. .
H.&lt;~1o f l lcArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell and
\t,s Kare n Gilkey of Albany
daughter,
Norma Lee and Mr. and
~as the d10nc r guest Wednesday of
Mrs.
Cecil
aiackwood were Christ·
\\; and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
mas
dinner
guests of Mrs. Pauline
·
Mr. and Mrs. James Harmon
and fami ly of Port land; Mr. and Atkins.
Mrs. Stella Atkins and Mrs .
Mrs. Bob Snowden and family of
Ruby
Diehl were dinner guests on .
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Wednesday
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Gmcsc r and daughte r, local; Lois
Klocs
o(
Syracuse.
1
Chnstian an d son of Nashvi ll e,
Mrs . Judy Coombcr, Gcnev.a
Tenn.: were holiday guests of their
LUCIANA SCO'IT
parents, Mr. and Mr s. Millard Mc.Elroy and son and Chris Yang
of Bourbonnais, Ill. spent a w~k
ChnstJan.
Capt. Mark Rtggs and fri end , with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jc nn1fcr Johnson of Montgomery, Virgil King recently.
. Luciana L. Scott, daughter of
Steven R. and ·Sandy Scoit of
Cheshire, has been named 10
Who's Who of American High ·
School Students for the third consecutive year.
Scan was selected on the basis
of academic achievement. She Is a ·
. junior at the Kyger Creek High
. School where is active i1tl\'lituden11
•
Apinst Drunk Drivina. Artll Club, :
and the Key Club, and kplays solt·
ball and .voUeyball.
·
.
She il the llll!ddauallrtr of Mr.
and Mrs. Clilrloa Wlldormuth,
PGmaoy. and Mta. Mildl!ld Scott,
·r·.
Cllelhile, and die late BiH Scon.
"

HARRISONVILLE · Mi ssi on~
ary services will be held at Har'
ri sonville Holine ss Chapel on
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Rev.
Donald Dell from All Tribes Indian
School in Bematino, N.M. will pre- ·
sent the program . Rev . John,
Neville invites the public.

I
were
production costs
soared and some studios stood on
the brink.
The hits "Terminator 2: Judg· ment Day" and " The Silence of
the Lambs" ended the year boxoffice rich but studio-poor. Even 4week-old " Hook," withl$82 million i~ grosses, has yet to make a
penny.
Due to th e $70 million film 's
complicated contract with director
Steven Spielberg and stars Dustin
Hoffman and Robin Williams the
pirate epic must gross about S130
million al domestic theaters to be
on Wick for the black, according io
people familiar with the deal. It has
collected a.round $82 million, of
which TriStar Pictures has pocketed perhaps $26 million.
For the first weekend of 1992.
''Hook" made $11 .5 million. It
was followed by "The Father of
the Bride,' ' $9 million; ' 'Beauty
and the Beast," $8.8 million; " The
Prince ofTides,!' $8.5 million: and

v, ..

.llr&gt; .

'

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold its
regular meeting on Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the board' s offic.es. The
,,
meeting is open to the public.

By JOHN HORN
Writer

-'-"Hnllv_.

~.

Harrisonville area happenings

·992-2156

AP

THURSDAY
POMEROY ; The Pomeroy .
group of AA and Al-Anon wi'll
cl Thursday nig ht at 7 p.m. at·
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
. omcroy for discussion.
~':

POMEROY - The regular meeting of the American Le~ion Drew
Webster Post No. 39 w1ll be held
lo meet women, but not necessarily Tuesday at ·the post home. Dinner
find a spouse.
will begin al 7 p.m. followed by
"I'm not desperately seeking a meeting at 8 p.m. ·
wife," Cockson said. "I joined it
to-meet more people than I might
POMEROY - Business rcprcusually meet.
scnlatives and educators who will
"Li•ing in a small community be involved in the new Meigs
like I do, there is not nearly the County Partners in Education proopportunity to meel peo ple on a gram are urged lo aucnd the prodaily basis," he said . ." In my gram's kick off on Tuesday at 7
hometown, there is a lot of bache- p.m. at Mei~s High School. A spelors ~,nd not a lot of single cial motivauonal speaker is schedwomen .''
uled.
Mollie Sampson, 36, who lives
nonh of Wichita, Kan., said she
J10MEROY ·The Ladies Auxilre cei•ed about 60 Ieuers after iary of the Eagles Club will meet
Country Connections ran her pro- Tuesday at 7:30p.m. A pizza pany
file and picture.
will be held and all members arc
''If there arc thal many possibil- urged to attend.
ities out there, I am not going to
CHESTER · The Pome roy
settle for second best," she said.
Chapter , No . 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday a!
7:30
p.m. at th e lodge hall in
BALTIMORE (AP) - Charles
Chester.
J. Bonaparte, a descendant of
Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, was
WEDNESDAY
.
born in Baltimore in 1851 and
MIJ;&gt;DLEPOR~The
Middlcgr~duated from Harvard in 1871 .
He then practiced law and in p0rt Literary Club will meet
1905 was appointed secretary of Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
th e Navy by President Theodore home of Mrs. ChesLer Erwin. Mrs.
Roosevelt. From 1906 to 1909 he Dwight Wailacc will review "M.urheld the post of U.S. Aitomey Gen- dcr at the Palace," and Florence
Smith will review "Nehru." Roll
eral. Bonaparte died in 1921.

American Bonaparte

•

call is to bring a recent newspaper
clipping about India.
·':

Pomero Y.-Middl epo rt • Ohl
. o·

Hollywood's year ends With
bang
but
not
no
h
·
b
k
. . ' ._
e .. ug ... uc s

~

Tuesday, January 7, 19~2

Community calendar

Chester area news

:-

Juesday,
January 7, 1992
•

Page::...&amp;

Video views--·'- -

..•

.••
••

"'

The family of
Dorothy . Damoskey
would like to express
our great
tlon to all
your
'p rayers,
thou9hts, !lowers
and all yo11r kindness
at our lima of sorrow.
To the· nurstis, doctors and stall at
Veteran• Memorial
Hoapltal for all the
time and care you
gave her.
To Fisher Fur'"'"'' 1
Home who took
clal care ol
arrangemtnll.
Rev. · James Sedldatl I
for the kind and corn· I
lortlng words. It waa
a vecy etreaelulllmt
and we appreciate. all
your help ll!Ore than
you'll ever know,.
.God Bltaa all ot
Thelamllv·clf,Do..Otttivl

GUN SHOO.l.
RACINE ..
FIRE DEPT;· . '

low Grade Oak
Saw Logs
1150 ptr 1,000
Delivered To

Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·6461

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 ·P.M.
Starting Sept. 28
filrtory Cho..

Goutr• Sho!Jun Only

12

Strirtly lnhrud

9·13, '91 -dn

t ·l-tf , I 1110

JAYMAR

DK's FARM TOYS

by ERTL

Quality
Stone Co.

Specializing in
(llsto111 Fr-e b~air
NEW &amp; USED PAR S
FOR All MAIIES &amp;
. MODElS
992-7013
or 992·5553
01 TOll Fill
1·100-141.0070
DAIWIN OliO
and 2 BR ·•

614·992·3394 .

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Or Call
7•2·3020 Eveni•gs

Call 614-992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

carport, free ~11.
Call614-992-6 28 or
31Ui-8227.

-HOURS:
8:30 am-4:00 pm .

· 12·2·91-1 mo.

· Newly Re-done

COUNTRY MOBILE ·
HOME PARK
80' homes. .
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75 per mo.

. can

614-992-5528 or .

w~uementand

CARPENTER
one!
IIl·~j::~:~ -Ito

PluiJ'blng

- lrtttrlor. Ell1trkH'

Pllnllnrl

. V. C. YOUNG Ill

JAMUKEESEE
992·2772 or

992-621

· Sat Bry~n Pltce

(FREE

385-8227
12·11·1

ESTIMATES(

·P0111«oy,

.

'

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
'•Utlbll&amp;lbltt~·fllll

oCuloon) nt•aoldll--

o!Jf---··'

·
-fCJttMY&lt;Ioolllll
pliDIJIJ
- -·
Ult·~

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

. SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

AlL IUDS .
Iring It Ill Or We

. Plett Up. '

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SIIYICI
992·.5335 or
915-3561 .
Act011 ,,.,.

fled OHicol

117 I. loco.. St.
POMIIOY,

lllildloport, Ohio
1111""'"

1

.IlL BLQWI IISULAftDN

PH. 614-992·5591

OYEN·IEPAII

742·~097

·'
.lllffllfillli;
..
,~

'

: . ' ·'"'"'
.

'

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - 51400

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
. HOMESITE$
HAUUNG: Llmeltone
Dirt, G111vel and Coal'
u.....oc~ ~nd Bondoct

USED RAILROAD TIES

3-14r'91-tfn

•VInyl ~ldlng
•Repl-ment
Wlndowi
•Roofing
olnal!lltlon

Swuthurt Special

· OPEN 9 AM·9 PM
1-6· 1•••pd.

742-24S1

'INSULATION

· - Ro9m A&lt;ldHion•
- Outt•"r warll

UCINI

Offer Good Thru

INDIPIIIDIJn
CAIPIT CIIANIIS
and nil FlOOI CAll
•Ra11onabfo flataa
•OuaittY Work · '
•Frtt Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
·
Time '
•High Glou on Till!
Floor Flnioh
t
. MIKE lEWIS, Owner
.RI. 1, Rutllnit, 0~ .

J&amp;L

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BUllDOZING

BRONZE

Bill SLACK
992-2269

7 t 31 /'91 trn

RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE'
tfOMEPARK
Starting •t $235 per mo.
Very n~e 2 or 3 BR, 2
bath houtt

Displayed at Th,
Qua"ty Print Sltop

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM ,and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
·
4 •

AUTO PARTS

4!R CoNDmONERS ~ HE~T PUM'S and
F..NACES FOR MOW. &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

Feb. 14

949·2826

tNew Homts
•Garages
tCo111plete

12-5-tln

POMEROY

lemotltling
Stop &amp; Compare
Frtt Estimates

iJU-4473
667-6 79

Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt
I 0:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.

,,
'USED APPUANCES .
•o DA 'f Wltulln

WASHm-SIOO .,
DIYRS-,S6t Ufl

.

fllfltGIUTGIS - $100 "
UIIGD-C..-IIt&lt;.-$121 up ·
Flflllll- $125 op
'
.
111(10 OVINS- $79 op

KEN'S'APPLIANCE
SERVICE .
992-5335 or 915·3161
Acros1 From Poll OffKt

OHO

1211211 mo:

RACINE GUN
CLUB •
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Chok' Only

····If•
81S.SELL BUI~DERS, INC•
• New Homes • Vinyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacemenl Windows
R~11 AddiliOtls • Rooflng
Coaunercl!alaad .Residential
.FREE ESTIMA.TES

·614·949·2101 or 949·2160.,

(No Su•••r Call)

11111.tl 1 mo.

�,
B The

PaOe

Ohio

MAkE IT ARUlE ...
USE WANT ADS.
AHANDY
TOOl

J1

41 Houses for Rent

Help·wanted

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright ·

3 bedroom unfurnis hed house
507 SeCond St, New Haven 304~
675•34~9,

11

Ohio

7, 1992

Tuesday,

.

Autos for Sale

Television
.Viewing

''•

1986 Ford Ranglf, small pl ~k·
up, toppar, running boards,
$24,000 act l)'ll, 4-e yl , $2850, 814·
992-6719
1986 Nissan · Pulsar, 86,000 nil,
rtdlgray interior, AJC, ps, pb, 5speed, $1250 obo, 614·949-2600
9-Spm, 94~2644 altar 6pm

I

•

EVENING

w

e:oowe
!lle. 111 oe
ONtWI

good loOks good. Loodod.

$3,000. 614·388·11110, call af1er
6:30p.m.

for Rent

(!)VIdlo-

IZj Squore One TV Stereo;
~ lTV Plog...... lr.!a

Retail Stora Manj:lgor Wanted

For Local Chain Store. Must

Have 3 Yaars Management El·

H
~~:f!'ij""" 1;1
!DUpCioH

perianca. Send Resuma To: Box
CLA 103, CJO Gallipolis Daily

Trlbt.ma.L.ps Third Avenua, Gal·

llpolll, ut1 45631.

Taking

Applicalions

Announcements
3 Announcements

Wanted: Electronic Technician
With TV &amp; VCR E•perienca. Mall
Resume To P.O. Box 702, Gal·

I, Norman

"Wrth a wffe, kids and a
job, being
stuck in the snow is a metaphor for my life!"

Marlnar, am not
1

•"'y!'."po":":
':'_"_'•-::-c"'-c-'~"Y-=-de~bc::I:S -ob~u t 1----------~~----------j
~
own.
Melt Area Singles By Choice
Nol Cha&lt;lCo. w.n.,SI"Q'"'· P.o. 7
Yard Sale
11 Help wanted
Box 1043, Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631. - - - - - - - -- 4

Activity Olraclor, are you a
warm comp11sionatt person
willing to work with and for
residents at Care Haven ol

Giveaway
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnlly

1-male dog, mad. size, mil
b111ed, approll. 1-yr old, black,
tan, &amp; whita to a good home,

614-992-3577

ALL Yard Sates Mutt Be Paid In

2 Ra bbit s, Wilh Cage. 614-446· Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before lha ad ll to run.
3934.
Sunday adilion • 2:00 p.m.

Col lie, 7 Friday. Monday edll lon • 2: 00
Weeks Old, And Verr Loveable. p.m. Saturday.
Gi ve Onl y To Goad Homes. 614·
446-4827.
Public Sale
3 Female Puppies, Part

1981 to 1986 Nallonal
Gaographics. 304-675-3'71 6.
36

a

Point Pleasant, lnteras led and
outgoing to coordinate · ac·
tlvllles
program.
Cenltled
and/or IXJMrlenca dasil'ld. Send
resume to Guy S.ephens, Rt. 1
Box 326, Point PIIIIISIRI , WV
25550 by Jan. 10.

a World Today

0 Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
· Sta•ao. 1:;1
8:06 ()) Btverty HMibllltt
8:30())e 0 NBC Niwt ~
(!) SIMII by 1M lletl
(]) !lle ABC Newt
(ZJ Wild A!Mrlct Stereo. Q

For

Houaak11per, Wednesday And
Thursday AI Econo Lodga , 389
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

llpolls, Ohio 45631 ·

1111 1121 e CIIS -1:;1
llD

We'll
Pay You To From
Type Names
And Addresses
Home!

$500.00 Par 1000. Caii1 ·900-896-

iD Supor Bowl IV Hlglttlghtl
ONowZonoQ

PASSE· 33M, 161 S. Lincolnway,
N. Auro ra, IL 60542.

Situation
Wanted

Would Like A Placa To L!te
Clolt To Town, Whh Roomate
To Was h Clothes, .Fix Dinner, In
Return Will Pay Rent. 614-446·
3658 It No Answer Pleas e Call
Back.

AVON I All "raas ! Sbl rlty
Spears, 304-675-1429.

51

3br Trailer, $200fMo. Water Paid.
Deposit Required. 614-256-67'17.

3 pc bedroom suite $125.
Nlnendo system $40. lluMn
Sil:t Wlttr btd $150. 304-1757349.

Mobile Homes For Rent :
Reference And Deposit Re·
qu ired. Call AHer 2p.m. 614-4460527.

9

Lg. friendly tom cat, 1 1f2yr old,
&amp; 1-tamale Doberman /shepard

puppy, 614·1tt2·2754

6

&amp; Auction

wanted to Buy

ConS1 ructlon
Wanted-$1 ~0laborers , carpenlers,
Shll payi"g .05• oa, lo;~mpty $650,
Salem and Camel cl rette masons. painters and roofers.
..
packag11 buying till Ja . 24, EOE, 1·800-551·1542.

1992, 614-992-70931992-

Lost &amp; Found

Found : Blonde Cocker Spaniel
Wit h Blue Collar, No Ta ~ s .
Vicinity:
Holzer
Cli me,
Sycamore Branch Area, Gal·
ll polls.
Call
614-446·3808
A.S.A.P.

'

Easy Work! Excellent Ptyl As·
Wantltd to buy, Standing tlmbtr, semble Products At Horne . Call
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-992· Toll FrN, 1-800-467-556&amp;, Ext.
313 . 1
5449.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins , Go~ Rings, Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avanu•, Gallipolis.

Lost : , 2 Male Beagles, In
Pleasant Valley Drive, Otl Rl
325, AI Rio Granda, It Found
Call 614-446-7n2 .
Lost : Female Schnauzer, 2
Years Old, Grey Short Halt,
Bus hy Eye brows , Whiskers,
VIcinity Lost: Burkhar1 lana,
A"d Texas Road, Off Rt. 588,
Gal li polis. 614-446-4929.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted
$2,500 CREDIT CAROl

7

Guaranteed Same Day Approval ! Also Qualify For NO
Dlposit vtSAIUC And Cuh Ad·
vancea. 1-800-264-6781 Ex1.

Yard Sale
\

Llvt·ln houstketper/ c:om·
panlon lot' 97 yr. old lady, available now or near future, nurs ing
skills not rsquired, call collect
614·698-m5
MEDIA SALES
Television Ad~nlsing Sales
Rep Ntlded For The Gal·
li polia/Polnt Pltua nt Area.
We"ra Seeking ACandidate Who
Possesstt Enthus ias m And
Wlll in9!1ell To Work Hard.
Sales Exparience, Cold Calling
Skills, Strong Closing Skills
Preferred. Draw /Co(J'Imlssion
/Car IAiiOWir'ICI !Benefits. Stnd
Rttum• In Confidence To: 2120
HamlltonfMiddietown
Road,
Hamilton, OH 45011, ATIN:
Regional Manager.

2524.
Nnded: Salesperson tor are a.
$350/0AY PROCESSING
Please t end resume to: Rl . 2
PHONE OROERSI · PEOPLE Box
607 Pt. Pleasant, WV 2555.0.
CALL YOU.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salas Must Bt Paid In
Advancl . Deadline : 1:00pm tht
day before the ad Is to run,
Sunday tdition- 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:D0a .m.
Saturclay.

Part-time employment : apply in
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. parson Monday and Tuesday,
1·800-255-0242.
Jan 6 &amp; 7. From 9 a.m. to 12
noon. Lllaslyla Furnit ure, 856
AVON • All areas, Ca ll Maril yn Third Ave., Ga lli polis. No phone
calls, please.
Weaver 304-882·2645.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Baby silting In my homo, behind $173 Per Month Will Buy You A
school.!. references tum lst'lad, New
1992 Deluxe 14x70, 2 Bath
30H7:.-2'184.
Home With A Warm , Cozy
Fireplace. In·
Chimney Cleaning And Stain· Woodburning
ltll Steel Aallnll'\9 "Serving Trl· clud11 Quick Dallvary, Satup,
Slate 16 Yaars " 614-867-!'1618, Skirting, Steps, Blocks And Up
To 6 Months "'Frea"' lee Rent
Caldwell Chimney Sweep.
limited Time Offer. To Set A
Georgea Ponable Sawmill, don't Time To See The Home Call 1·
Maul your logs to the mill jus t 800-466·7671 And Ask For
call 304·675·1957.
Elaine Or Brenda .

Vloyl, $4.9!1 yd. Catpotl4.00 Up. Block, brick,
Mollohan Carpets. 614·446-'N44 .

sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
Iars, Rio Grande, 0~ Call 614·
245 -5'121.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Gallipolis. Now &amp; U11d SS

1199.00;_

Reoll"''·

61 Farm Equipment
185 AIUt Chalmers Olntl Trwc·
tor, $5,950; D-14 AC With Loader,
$2,950, 0.17, A.C With Plow, Cui-'
tlvator, Grain Drill, $2,950; 614·

VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich

Quick? No Way! But We Hue A
Good , Staady, Attordabl.e, Bu sinns. Won't Las t. HI00-284·

286-6522.

Antique fulfliture repa ir and
rtllnlshlng. (25 yr1. txp) Walt

Whitt, 114'245-1448.

Real Estate

Double Wide With 1 Acre Land ,
Galllpolla Fe"'· 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Electric, Canlrai Air,
13 ~ 000 . 304-&amp;75-7217.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1173 14x88 Shultz, mobile home ,
good cond, 614·912-21 11
1976 Ftstllo'al 14.:70, 2br, 2
Satha, Utility Room, Underpinning And Large O.Ck. All
Eiac:lrtc, Air Conditioning, Exct l·
lant CondlUonl S8,200, Could Bt
Left On On1 Acre lot. 81~ ·388·
8835.
1979 Clairmont 14.:70, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, w/underP.nnlng
and front porctl, gas heal ,
centra I air, muat move, $8,500.
304-ll82-2341.

w(ly ••• by

phone,

lem'e you,. /rome.

Place .your· clussified ad tmlay! ,
I 5 won/11 ,,. le11s, 3 days,
3 paiJer-s,$6.00

54 · Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1il1 Nuhua mobile hom•,
141184, 2 BR, 1 bath, new
r~trlger.ator, newly rac: arpettd,
watfierldrye~ 8x1&amp; front porc:h.
Park Lana l,;OL!rt. 614~46-8732
afttrS. Stnt. ' •
2 bdrm. trailer &amp; ~t. loc:altd at
360 Pearl St.,. Middleport, 'good'
cqnd., l within wa lking to most
necasallles, $18,000, 614·949·
2381 or 114-742-2211 aak ' hn
Dave.
For S1l1: &amp;or:12 Tral ..r, Partly
Fumlshed, Ctlllng Fans, And
Centl'll Alr-condltlont!L.Call Af-

·' " s,oOp.m. 114-367-78n

1989 Ford Elcort, LX, Sletl
Grey, Top Condition, Call 814·
256-6554.

Fumlshtd Apartment, 1br, nul
lo Library, pirklng, ctntra l htet,
air. reterenc:11. 814-446.0.338, Baby crib, baeslnett, high chair,
swing, roekar, dress ing table &amp;
Befor1 7p.m.
car uat. Full s ize b4td,1wln aiz•
Gracious li ving. 1 and 2 bed· btd, complete coffee table &amp;
room apartmenta at Vlllag1 end plects. 304-675-4548.
Manor · and
Riverside
Apartment• in r.,kldltpor1. From Big 4BR, 2 bath, Oakola dream
home built tor you $29,995. 114·
$196. Call614-992-778t EOH.
888·7311. Display model now
In Middleport, Ohio. 1 and 2 opon.
bedroom lurnishtd apt, aom1
with utilities paid, refertnct and Bridal Gown, Stmi-Formallvorz.
deposit re_qu ired, 304-882-2566. Slu 6, Never Worn, $200. 81 •
441-1833 Attar 5p.m.
New H1ven, one bedroom apt,
booo rodlo, cobnt 2000. 0deposit and reflrance riqulred,
104 Mlko Oocy Moto,. PBL 11
304-lt82-2566 .
Ani. ·• 'HCiiona. Towar, Co-ax
Nlct 2 BR , 4-112 ml. from Gal· tllrtt. Exc. cond. $600. Call
lipolls. Stove &amp; rtlrla. No pels. bttWitn 9a.m. &amp; 10 p.m. &amp;14·
$235/mo. 614_.46-8031. ·
' 58·1443.
Commarcial
vldto gemt, SP41CI
Compltlly . Furnlshtd mobile
tlome, 1 mile bttow tow!' 1 ovtr· Invader, $150. RoM TrH prom
tooklno river. No P.ta, ~ . ISM· dJH ..., 13·14 ·$100.16 -$200.
448.()338.
304-675-6485.

c.a.

.'1 ., ------------~

1.1.- - - - -

,,,___________

4··- - - ----.- 12.------1.'1. _ _ _ __
r:.
14. _ _ _ __

6. ~------

7._ ___,,;----- 15...____,__ _ __

"·- - -----'
446-2342 675~i333
'992-2156.'
.

.

'

•

For Sale: 1984 Ford Tempo GL,

Olds Toronado 1977 low milts.,
sharp, 11klng $1495 obo, must
1111 614·992·2478

$800, 614-992-2717

fO 'Tftf ffAC:f
CAPTA!f'J, Wf'Vf FNTf'~if)

Wt buy sell or trade. Jim
Cochran Auto Canter, 5th and
Viand St, Pl. Pit. 304-675-1985.

THf ~Nf OF C/ff14Pr:.:.~~~'Cl'

Unl.udN Gae . 614488-9116 .

Wanted: Used larm equlpmant,
anything you want to 1tll. 614·

2 Hom Trsll1r New Palnl, New

Mixed HayJ.. Round Baits, St5
Per BUt. _.1Dred Indoors, Hay,
~ Sq. lain. Pure Rtd Ctover.
' 2·00 Per Bale. 11 4-245"9480 ·

Transportation

Very Oo6d, No llutt c;ttan Ctr,
11,300 Fltm. IM-448-1121.

Merchand1se

3 Acr11: Old Houst And

Rentals

HousehOld

..,.,.... -

......... _

Thlw-•

Dry• ........ 114 4.. 1144.

Goods ·
County

1100 and ......

.....o'I'V .....m

AuiONIIc. Ntiw. Tlr• All
Around tiew Paint Job, .. 000

lllloo,:S.O:: To lollovol I~

2401.
',
I
• 1114 C11'1'11ro z-28, T-lops. SISO

P~OIAT II- flO loiiiiHi eng, auto, kMtclld, nooo, 304Inc. Good ~11om, Wilh Roell"' And 17$-3311
'.
.

-

POaldonw. Co!dllrln.
taa.
.....
·
·
Col lito A l - l ,

Itt':'

111 oe Rucut:l11 A
swerving car leads workers

to find an unconscious
driver. Stereo. !;I
(!]) 18 MOVIE: Dilld of
Winter (RH2:00)
0 Murder, She Wroll Q
1211 On Stage Stereo.
aall PrtmtNtw1l:l
Rln Ttn Ttn, i(:e cap
Stereo. 1:;1
1:05 (I) MOVIE; No Smell Aftolr
(R) (2:001
8;30 al NBA Bt1ktlbaH
Washlrtgton Bullets at
Chicago Bulls (ll

1975 GMC 4x4 Shortbtd 350
Auto, Everything Works, Cle'an
Truc:k. $1,500. 61~-448-7128.

19e2 CJ7 jMp, 304-882·3m.
1986 Dodge Caravan LE, loact.d,
cl11n, 97,000 miles, NAOA
"Book" va1u. $5900. Asking

. :.EEKAND MEEt\

$4900. 304-675-5306.

800-2734585 . .

lmpro- Tim loses to
Jill wlten the enUre lamJ!Y
goea bowling. Stereo. 1;1
a0 Cltun:h
· - Statloil
WllnHa to Surmll Q
9:00 (lie 11J In 1M HHI of 1M
Night Tenants are suspected
In 1M murder of an abuelvo
landlord. Stereo. C
(I) !lleRoltlliM
Rosaanna plays bingo and
tnlsaea Crystal's ihocklng
newa. Stereo. t:;l_
liJ ()) F~~q,
all
MOVIE; Mlltl
FIGIII Nowhtrt' cas
Tlltldly Movie (2:001
Tutodlr Night Flglttl (LI
1211 ---Stereo.

'MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HAVE "vv..l eeeN OUR.
NEW PRINCII?\1,..'=!

Services
81

f;f..i'a51CWT

I

BudiJII Tranamlttlons, Ultd &amp;
rebulll, s tarting at $99; Auto
Part a. 614·245-56n, 614-3792263.
New gn tanks, body parts, one
ton buck whHI!il, radiators,
floor mats etc. 0 &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, wV. 304-312·3933 or 1·

AND IUANlS 'TO

(I) (J). Homo

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories.

76

"'"!"

ftt.Y, KIHAT£1/ER flA~EO
10 ~ IUJATK FRII\K'£ 1

1990 Plymoth Voyager Mini-Van,
kyi, 3.3L Chrysler eng, ps, pb,
auto, AIC, AMIFM stereo auto
rtY 5-band, CB, ¥Rf good lirn,
39,300MI
FL registaratlon,
$10,500, l angsville, 814-742-2337
evenings

(IJ.

YES... HE- eEeMS
LIKE-' A VEE'RV

o

NICS: MAN.

Home
Improvements

~

6 Cyllmlor, 5 S -, Bed

Lln11, AMIFM 014-44a-.t316.

" '

·Unconditional 11ftUme guaran·
IN. Local ralertntH tumi1h;d.
FrH esllmat11. Call coiltc:l 1614·237-0488, day or night.
Rogers Basemen! Waterproofing .

SET UP TH'
CHECKER
BOARD II

·Complete Mobllt Home Sei·Upe:
Aapalr~ ; Comm•rieal, Rllldt04
t111 lmpronments. Including:
· PhMnblng, Electrical. lntunnc-

Ciolmo kcopttd, 114·251·1111. ,

'

.

c..-ond dollvtfY. 114·

Will bulkl . peUo COYtrl 1 iecllll
put up vinyr
tiding or lrallw tldr1i"""'. 014245-1152.
'.... .....

82

Plumbing &amp;
Healing
Carter's Plumbing ·

Foutth ood ~lno

o~~":~~11o

e

.

•

.

•

•

Complete the. chuckle quoted
by filling In the milling words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

•

2

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
IN THESF &gt;QUARES

-·--~..;;~.;;.~c,;,;:,;,;~ ; ,;~.;.;~; 1-tE-TT-ER;.E s.t.l_l,__.~.l

I

__,I

I I II

SCIIAM-t.ETS ANSWERS
•• ~
Lesson-Obese-Knoll-Gender-BOOK ENDS
A lellow was sprawled out on the bus seat reading

a mystery novel. 'Sit like a genUeman,• one ridar an·
nounoed, ' or I'll tell you how that BOOK ENDS." .

BRIDGE

.876 32
t AQ4
+AQ 3

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

tA1063

.AQ a
t K 10 6
+K 10 a

•....

+KQ J 9874
.KJ 1094
t9

+.. '

SOUTH
' .

A grand slam
·J
made with finesse ·

tJ8753 2

+J987642

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

By Phillip Alder

West

Soutb

Norlll1

a•

,

~ ,._ MIWIPAPU I N T I - AUN.

,

The World AlmanalCrossword Puzzle
ACROSS
I Glue
9 Gloaoy Iabrie

13 Shake-up
14 Futuro

LL.Bt.' e11m

15 502, Roman
16 Populollon

center

t7 Hawallln

food fish
18 Genetic material (abbr.)
19 A rote- roll
20 Cltaru 21 Now (praf.l
22 Colltgo deg.
23 Atlon country
26 Richer (lOIII
31 Slngla pott
32 Concealed

'I'!PI'-.

4 Thllll (abbr.)
5. More
omamtntal
6 Dlopotch
boll
7 Sh11k
8 Btldge txport

DOWN

33 Wom1n'1

namt

34Timt - htll
35 Chemical
IUIIIx

1AntWNr to ,,..,tout Puute

36 Croacent
point
37 Leotlng 24
houri
39 Expense•
40 Coelum
oymbol
41 Rttorvtd
42 Not noloy
46 Glide on
snow
47 Knlght'l IIIII
so Hookllko
porto
51 Lib aubj.
52 Ploywrfllltt
- Btltl
53 Roman rood
54 Hllvta
56111nutt
optnlng
S1 Foud
1 TV nawomen
Roa-r -

·2--arms
3 Mexican
shrub

8 Cudgel
10- of Wight
11 ActorJulll
12 And ollttro
12 Wdl.)
20 Drlvo11 org,
21 01 blrlh
22 F0111111
23 CIIIIPUI 1r11
24 - tnd tilt
King of Sltm
25 Otdorly
26 Htttlltr
27 Tttt rtli 2B AdltcUYt

Culbertson

-~
H Formtrly
30 Hill
32 Ftm11t bfrdo
38 Alttr-t.
38 Soundtd
41 Hl1tk
42 Jtot
43 Oo - olltt"

10;06 (I) MOVIE: My ~My, My
Cttlld (2:001
10;30QI Crook IIICI CliMe
' ---1--tt':IIO ~ al (J) ([). 9

44 Coolor
45 lrtllnd

48 Foot

IIJ-

AatrG-Graph pradlc1lons lor the year

c llned ·to assess your position realist!·

cally loday. Voo won't expect anything
for something yoo didn 't work IOf or io
which yoo're not entitled.
LEO(JIIIJ.Aug. 22) Don't hetllatelo
BERNICE
make a few minor concessions today 10
.BEDEOSOL
one yoo 're cto&amp;ely ~latod 'with, but
who Ia often dllllcltlt to please. Thlllndl·
vidual might give VO!I mote In relurn.
VIIIOO (Aug. 23-Btpt. 22) You may be
required 'to pick up the pitCH end tie
togetlttf the lOose endetoday ln.regerd
to something anotherhl8engl_,.ad, 11
JOIIodon 't do It, lt 'e not apt to be dOna
prapeny. .
·
UIIIA (ltpl. I3-0ol. 23) Your,lmmtdl·
Itt plant lltould ...... good - o f
lljGCtodlng toc11y; key ~ wiH have
.. mucllltlth In your concePti '•
.'
do. " - ! youratfl to get your
ocroa.
ICOII'IO (Oot. M-Nott. 22) Olllf'l
to tldd to Your re- c,te.
own lttgWUty In TAUIIUI (Aprll20 ..., II) Wl1tn prop. might not bublt 10 do It, but. II yoo ep.
you'l be GIOHty erly lftOIIYeltd today, you're llktly ,to "- ply yotlllltltodey, you•n httW tilt ability
opportunhleo into·
do-wtll · tMbwr.t, rnon ~lltd pnilltrtlln to tum ICHidlg yaw obllctl••· wMIMr or IOII'IIttllni ,... ding.
(Dec. INwl. . , You notywhttW . . . rr r t o f -.. IAIITTAIIUI ,....,, a Dec. 211 lndl-you'ra •mllt.ci with w11 111
lltghl edQI,In , _ 00111- _ _ .,.....,..,n~an·t- ..,
to
11t111t
Iough
today;
11
r
nth.tl
of ,aur tinct comment•
rwclll dull 101 today, pttivtdld you
you'ra
belllr
equlppWI
to
thtm
1oc1ey;
tlley'l
otnit
lhtl
you wtll toll the ,
, . . , 1dlnotlo J011F lniWIIOn Wldllcll11'111 yw'railltly to ~. youneilcredh tru1ft - _ , wh't palnlltl to you or
lirlty ... '"' fnllcle lnformllfOn of wlilllb tor. ~JOU( 111111111).1. • '
lhtm.
)eii'N- Cfllltlaorn, IIIII your~!~~! CAI!IIIII ,,.. t1"""" D) You're fn.
td1lllrlttclay gift. tSw\d tor ClpriOorn'l
•
•

,,

:,::::HIIu

alttadbymalllng$1 .25plusalong.setfadd•-· otampad envolope to AatroGraph, c/o lhlo · P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428. Be
sure to llete yoor zodiac Sign.
AQUARIUS l.ltn. · 1ti There Is
1101110 adviCe yoo've beln eager to give
lo a frltnd whlctt you've been reluctant
to IIIII. You might find the type ol
opening yoo've _ , ~ng for today.
~~ (feb, 20 Morell :10) . YCMI're
1811-tuftlcltnt lltd rel~ble to&lt;fay, and
yoo're not 1111 to treat yoor reaponslbll··
11111 lightly. When you give your word
lhtt you'll take care oiiOtnething, lt can
be tak!l" 10 1M bank. '
.
Alllll (Minrll t1·Aprll 11) An old
friend llllould not be ntgltctod at lhll
llml. e- WH'll Ill! lncdnvtnlent, plclc
up.tht piiOM tnd let thll pal know you

Easl

One of the most colorful characters
1 NT Pass
2•
of the New York bri&lt;fge fraternity, , 2 NT
Pass
6+
Obi.
All pass
Harold Berlin, died last October at 73. 7 +
Once he opened one no-trump witlt
Opening lead: • A
4-f&gt;-2·2 distribution. His partner bid
two clubs, Stayman, but Berlin rebid 'I
two diamonds. denying a major. When '-------- - --.--l
the opponents misdelended the subse- s~pport. ·North should hav; b1d now
quent three-no-Lrump contract, they i With 12 points ID hts partners SUits. Ficalled lor the director.
nally, when East brd SIX spades, wh1ch
"Do you play Stayman'" asked the 1 he w?uld have made, Berlin 'sacri·
director.
1heed tn seven clubs.
W~t tned to cash the heart ace.
"Of course. Everyone does."
"So why didn't you bid two hearts'" Berlin rulled and led the club jack:
"Stayman asks for lour-card rna- ktng, ace, spade. Declarer ruffed a
jors. 1 didn'Lhave four hearts."
, heart m hand and ran the club n1ne.
"So whY. not bid two spades?"
Next .came lh.e dtamond jack: kmg,
"If 1 was going to lie about Jive ace, n1ne. Berlin .drew the last trump,
hearts 1 certainly had to lie about lour entered hand w1th a rull and. lben
spades'."
j~dged to run the diamond eight
Berlin played today's hand in 1974. through West. Thts hnesse worked too,
East's two hearts was a transfer to and the grand slam was home.
spades. South's two no-trump showed Berlin .whispered to West, 'Yo~
a minor two-suiter Three hearts de- made a miStake, mtster. You shouldn t
noted values in th~ suit, .plus spade have doubled an expert."

·"-

.'

1-&gt;11

NORTH
• ; 2

Robtlllon

.

''

•

1D 700 Club With P.t

FrMm1n'1 Plumbing And Htah

Dlvle
Stw·VIC
Ssrvlce
1
~
Ad. Plrtlj 1~

6

~World

lng, 114-258-1611.

ma.Cll.L COLLECT ·

tests were given and lh8 parts
were given to the ones ···-··.

; -~xptrltnco 1:;1

,

Room-add itions, siding, roofing,
wlnyt ,.plac:ement windows,
carpentry by AI Tromm, 114-742·

Some
could only have
. o been cast 1n one way. SCreen

.

Sttuillllt tor DtmociRy

Home lmprovemtl11:
YNrl Experltnce On Older l
Newer HOmes. Room Addltions 1
Found1tlon WDrtl, Roofing;
Kltchlnl And ltlhs. Free Esl
llmaiMI Rat.rancea:, No Job l ei

Ron's TV Service, spec:lallzlng
In Zenith 1110 Hrvlcing m01t
othtr brtndt. Houae calla, also
somt applllnce repair!!. WV
304-571-2311 Ohio 114-4411-245-0.

.

e

Cunls

BigOt Smollll14o441-G225.

Llrry King Llvtl

all Fllhf!.Dowllng My1ttrlta
Stereo. 101
.
9:30 (!) (I) • Cotch Heyden
competes with Coach Judy
by INching en exorc(ae
CIUI. Stereo. C
=Coleg•IIUetbllll
Georgie at Kentucl&lt;y Ill
10:00 II!e o Llw' Otdtt An
ob88UIV8 Jan ltlikl I
celebrity: l!linBir!iiY
queetlon 11 locod. Stereo. 1:;1
(I) (J)
Hornlflollt Unda
Motel~ II tom ~n I
management job and 1ttr
campaigning. Sttrao. Q

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

11M lr.IJcll Century, 2.5 Ltltt tcrelned rQOml,
Holt
Flot, Holt Hill. 9wonn ~••··~-· I .!
;:~·iMiiiiif;~~;;;ii;;;;-J
Road. CIIII14-21U514. .
_ _ _ _..;,;.;..~---• ~Jati'MtMktned
walwrl
I

51

counting on high-tech
floodgates to seve ~ from
drowning. Stereo. C

73. Vans &amp; 4 WP's

11112 vw· Roblllt 4 -d, Oood ptloo, pickup,
loci~,:~;: Good, Uoko Exoot· 44e.0214,
lint
Cor. 114o441.oci2o. ·

-sJI

(l) (!) Nav1 Ve"irtca iS

GMC
1979
tl~up
frOnt
:J66engine 4-spetd Allison, new
liras, 12H walk-in utlllly bid,
rune good, $2800,614·992-24~

YNrllng Angus And Ctlarolais
Bulla For Silo . 1143-446-4447.

1111 Codillc 0..1111, All Potwt,
AC, EVI!Yihlna Worko, Runo

$5.900. 11«41-1115 01 446-1243.

e

4473.

Will haulllvntoc:k. 014_.46-1514.

:::"-:'-::"...:..:'"'~~-:--:::

why a boy plays Ill 10 skip
school. Stereo. 1:;1
allklla Eyo
(!) (J)
Full HCMIH Jesse
lakes up with a band 10 earn
extra money to S!IPporl his
family. Stereo. C

l DON'T BELIEVE
IT} WE'RE CAUEtt-'T
IN OUR OWN TRAP/

1986 Ford F-250, V-8, 4x4, 47,000
Milts, Call Attar Sp.m. 614-446-

Mil..,

Hay &amp; Grain

all Bt t Star Stereo.
iD Colttgt BtlktlbeU
Michigan Stile at Ohio Stile
(LI
aCroltllte
7:35 (I) Btnlord ond Son
8;00 (li G. 11211'11 Fly Away Lilly

,ALLEY .OOP

446-7604.

19811 Ford F-150 Cuatom 23,000

·•s

1 acrt lrtller lol on Georg" '
Crtlk Ad. · GOOd locatron.

1185 Dodger hall ton pickup,
auto. AM!FM etareo. $3500. 614-

ing, iaoo; aYaar Old Paint Mart,
mo. 614·288-6522.

64

Q2le Fomlly Feud

sympathizes when she learns

Livestock

,,._256-

Grell Selection Of Atpoti H ·
ted Mobile Homu: Double
· Rooms ·
Wldoo - 11,000 Down And Slnglo .
Wldoo • tiOO Down W11h Ap- Room• tor rent . week or monlh.
ptOvod CntdH. Coli Mid Ohio
Stifling al 1120/mo. OtiHa Hotel.
FlnlllCI At 1.. 14-772·1220.
614-44f.Q580.

1525 llmt, 614·992-5305

6p.m.

TltH $1,1115; 19!10 AOHA Gold-

-;jS Whttt of Fortune 1:;1

197e Chovy pick up, 350 auto,
$800. 304-675-2457.

256-1308, 614-256-6040 AHor

63

MAt'.

·'spEc,iu. EiF£-Crs.

72 Trucks lor Sale

Ford 100 Farm Tractor Just

Jim'• Farm Equipment, ~R. 35,
Wast Ga llipolis, 614-446-9m;
Wide stltcllon ~w &amp; usld farm
tractors &amp; lmpiamant s. Buy,
stU, lrada, 8:00-5:00 wetkdaya,
Sal. till Noon.

ACCO~DIN6

Statlonwagon 1979, Chevtro1at
Malibu, auto, PB, PS, naw tires,

Ovomoulod, Equipped To Usa

One · and
two
bedroom Diet No Morel Lost Unwanted
tpartmtr)ts tor rent
Poundo And htchlo. Ell Yout 71 AufOS tor sate
2053 or 875-4100. ,
Regular Muls. Tak1 Natural ::::::::-:~-=--=~:-::":"-,­
Unlurnished 2br Garage Apart· Htrb·Capa\dtt. A11ults Ouaran· 11M .Olda F-81, 4,dr,, V·8, aullo,
air, 47,000 act~o~al ·mlln, runs
mtnt, 322 Third Av1nue, Gail· INd. 814-446-81tl.
llpolll, 614-446-3'M8,
Electric hat nter tank, 42 gal , ~· 9aood tlrH, $800 obo, 614·
4
1003 Before tp.m.
good &lt;~. 110, 114-1112-3117
Very nlc• 1 BR fumlthtd apar1· For IIIII• womenl Juns,· d,.tt 1m Che"Y C.maro, 305 tullo,
ment on Mt• • Vernon Ave. panta a akhte, elzl 5 ' up. Alto hcnw.,. comb magsL..I'IIW m...
Upllalrt. Private. $235 plus a rtclllllr chaw, good condition, SQ5 obo 814·992·2471
tltcttlc. Rtf. I dtp. 304-175- $1Q, 814-IMI-2204"atltf 4pm
·1011 Chtverolet Caprlc:e Cia•·
2651.
• "
For Stle: ComDittt Watlrbtd tic, 4dr Hdln, er:callent nlca
305
Whh A semi wan ~e.. Matt'"'· :~:~:.v:7nt'lon.
v-a, .,450 •
Furnished
c.tii1Mo441-&lt;ll21.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

9, _ _ _ _ __
I "-----~---2, _ _ _ _ __ 10 _ _ _ __

PetS for sate

1149.00;

Privata Pay Phones For Salt,.
Chaap. 1·800·226-4!103.

31 Homes for Sale

Tum your duHer into Ctl~h ,

Building
Supplies

Farm Supplies
&amp;L1ves1ock

.

l

1121e Er. nment Tonight
Stereo.
I[) MICO tr Q
!D SpcrtoCenter
aMoneylne
11!1 Tht Wthono
7:05 (I) Addemo Fehtlly
7:30(2)e O~IC
(!) Now It Ceri Bt Tola
(!) Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. [;I
~~~· Mlirlod... Witll Chll&lt;hn

11,195. 614-367.0Z74.

5

--,1
I I I I I' .•

O.ntntlon

For ule or trade lor truck, 78
Dod~Van, ahort wheel base.
New-.- clean lnaldt. 304.fi75·
7849,

1978 J11p truck , quadra·trac ,
auto, topper, naw front tlrtt,

'

lo

55

1991 Plymouth Lutr: Sll)d.,
AMIFM Casstt1!1 AC, Tatle Over
Payments Or I'Mgollate Prklt.
614-245-5204, Leave Mntagt.

.

r--:T-:H:-::-E-:W--:-G-=1

CZl ()) Mec~l
NtwaHour
·
(J) e Cond Comtra
'Ill Current Affair g
llD mStir T~: Tlie Ntrtl

1990 Ford Esc:ort GT. Asking
$5,600. 614-441.()TJ1.

Swivel HOC:ktr, $99.00; CotfH &amp; AKC Poodle puppln, toys &amp;
tiny toys, mlnlatut11 Sc:Mnauzar,
1
bedroom,
unfurnished, End Tabl11, $8i.OO Stt.OiNING malt, silver, Coolwilla 614-667·
ROOM ' Toblo W11h 4 Poddod 3404.,.r
Min Paula's Day Care Center. upstairs apt, First. Ava, utilities Chtlrt,
.
; Country Pine
Sar. , attordablt, ehlldcara . M·F lncludad, $350. rtf &amp; dep re· Dinette $149.00
Wllh
Banch
And
3
6 a. m. • 5:30 p.m. Agu 2Yr10. quired, 614~46-4369 or 304·675· Chalre . $299.00; Matching 2 AKC raglstered Boxer puppies.
1
Before, alter school . Drop-Ins 2330.
Door Milch, S34i; Or SSSD.oo 304~82-3:197.
welc:omt. 614·446·8224. New InSal;
Oak
Table, 42d2 With 6 AKC Ragisterad Cocker Spaniel
fant Toddler Cara, 614-446-6,227.
Bow
Back
Chaira, Pups For Sata . All Shots, Wor·
S629.00.BEOROOM : Paster Bid· mod. $150. 614·386-9162.
"7:'-!C:.:_:--'-:.:_:.:_-=-:.:_:.:_:,.,. 1 room Suitt (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
'
Financial
1&amp;2-bdrm apt a, In Ra cine OH, Drawer Chest , $44.95; Bunk BeauUful St. Benard puppies,
unfurnished, 614-992-65511
ltd, $229; Complete Full Matt full blooOed but not reglattred,
;;-;::;::~::7--:::-'-:-:c-:':':-:-- 1 Sal, $105.00 Set; 7 pe. Cedar taking deposita, 614·i'l2·2025
2 bdrm 1pt. 21 1
Ave, Bedroom Sulta, $899.00.0PEN:
21
Business
Pomaroy.
Monday Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to Oragonwynd Canery Persian,
Opportunity
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till Slam111 and Himalayan kittens.
2br Apartment For Rant, $200 Sp.m., 4 Milas ott Routa 7 On 614-446-3844 after 7 p.m.
Plus Deposit In Crown City, Routl1411nCtnltnl"'.
INOTICE I
Fish Ta'nk, 2413 Jackson A&gt;Jt.
.,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHIN!IIICO. Ohio. 614·256-6495.
Point Pleaunt, 304-675-2063,
re commaods that you do 'busifull
lint Tropical llsh , birds,
ness wil h people you know, and
s mall animals and supplitl .
NOT to send l'lioney l hro~h th e
mall unlll you have ln v&amp;sl1gated
the offering.

1 bdrm. basement apl. , fur·
nls hed, utilities paid, $200
mon thly, 614·949·2526 attar 6pm

.

/iiThtJt~
lnoldo Edition

1969 Mack dump-tNCk, 15ft btd,
44 r11rs . New pslnl , good tlras,
runagood, 16500, 614·992·2478

8363.

need

Wtddlng gown: slzt 9-10, satin
&amp; lace. Good cond. 614-367-7615 .

Sale On All Carpel In ,Stocki

local Vending Routa PriCed
Right , Must Stfl . 1·800·234·2651.

PIN down EXTRA

no

Sam SomeNille's Army
Surplus.by Sandyville Poslr
Oftlct , Jackson County, WI/.
Clmtlauge ciOihlng, Car harts 10
percent discount, Junior cam·
tlauge• regular prices. Fri.,
Sit •. SUn. Noon • 6pm. other
days hours call 304-2Tl·5655,
ln1ulattd Dacron camollouge
COVIratla. $30.00.

614-446-3158
Vi 'ra Furnihue
Sola &amp; Chair, $11.10 Week ;
Recliner, $5.47 Weak, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 Week.Bunk Bed
Complllle $8.41 Week. 4 Drawer
Chest, $3.28 WHII ; Poster Bedroom Suite, 7 pc., $'16.67 WNk,
lncludn Beddmg.Country Pine
Olnttle Whh Bench I 4 Chairs,
$10.18 WNk.OPEN : Monday
Thru S.turday, la.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Mllll Off Routt 7 On Routt 141,
In Centenary.

All Type LoansLenders Specllal·
lze In Cr11dlt Problems. Tell Us
Your Netda. 803-293·1641 .

Want to:

Sell it lire easy

RENT 20WN

Sell Or Trade: 3 Tobacco Boxes,
4 Cholet Gra&gt;Ja Spaces In
Memorial Gardens. Cheap! 614·
446-1004.

ftl~s.

RHOCD

(!)

furniluri, heaters, Western &amp; c..,_ __;;;~-;_~-,,..
Work boots. 614-44&amp;.3159.
-::
Groom and Suppl~ Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brttids, &amp;lyles.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Jams Pal Food Dealer. Jullt
614-446-315$
LIVING ROOM : Sola &amp; Cl\air, Webb. Clll614-446-0231.

Loving mother will babysit in
my home day/night, hourly/
WHkly, any age, references,
614-992-7289

II
II
1-;lr.:-'"TIril---r-l-1~ J
SAlTY

t-Tl~~~. .y. . .;lr;l

1a1•

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
Goods

j

FARLLO

8:35 (I) Andy Ortllltlt
7:00
0 of F.orlune

2br Mobile Home, At.588 1 Gal·
lioplls, $225 Plus Ut11ilies,
Deposit Required. No Pels. 614446·3968 AHer &amp;p.m.

Babyslner In My Home, 26
HourSfWetk, 5 Year Old. 614•
446-1422. Attar 5p.m ..
Ric
k
Pearson
Auction
Company,
Free Puppies, Hall Coll ia, 10
full timt auctlonNr, completa
Wae ks Old. 614·25&amp;·1621, Leave auction
CONSTRUCTION WANTED
service. Llctnstd Ohio, $180-$650
Massage.
Labortrs, Ca r p~n1ars ,
West Virglnia, 304·'773-5785.
Masons Painters And Roofe rs,
Gi'laaway- Rabb~ s . born in Oc·
E.O.E. 1-i00·551-t542.

robe•. 304-882·2886.

mAndy Otllfltll

9 Scooby Doo

1666 (S0.991Mi"·i o, W•il• '
12

low 10 form lout slmpla wordo.

TUE., JAN. 7 . • ·

1986 Pontiac Grand Am, runs

42 Mobile Hom.es

' .

Gfour
R101rana- lotto,. . of· lit•
· JCramblod .WO&lt;do bo-

~ovtrlng

47 Stl ol
P!mtnll
48 BrUte Uml
--to
Pttotnli
48 Sub(IICrtHJI ·.
51 1105, Romon
55 Sy'"""'lor

Stereo.

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WHEAUC'Z

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LFI CJ .
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~ous SOLUTION: "MtOI&lt; .lollN«t hll tilt moot r:hlrtamMtc.
moot caring, moot kktd aporia ~ 1'.. In my IIMtlrnt." - Tom

,Yf H

Brdly. .

•

•

e tllltt,r.A.IIIO.

'

I'

7 .

�.

-

•'

.

.

'

'

,,
•

..
'

Tuesday, January 7

Ohio Lottery
Meigs girls
defeat
Wellston

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
BOYS
Friday; January _10-Hannan Trace ••••••••••••••••••• A

GIRLS
Thursday, January 9-Hannan Trace·................ H

EAS
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE
JAI-j. 1D-AT HANNAN TRACE
JAN. 14-NORTH GALLIA*
JAN. 17-SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 24-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 25-SOUTHERN
JAN. 31-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 1-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 4-AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 7-0AK HILL*
FEB. 14-HANNAN TRACE*
FEB. 18-AT NORTH GALLA*
FEB. 21-AT SYMMES VALLEY*

Pick 3: 656
Pick 4: 6137
Cards:

5-H; 7-C; 8-D;
10-S

EAGLES
'

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 9-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 13-AT NORTH GALLIA*,
JAN. 15-AT MEIGS
JAN. 16-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 23-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 27-SOUTHERN
JAN. 3D-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 3;-AT OAK HILL
FEB. 5-TRIMBLE
FEB. 6-AT HANNAN TRACE*
FEB. 1D-NORTH GALLA*

Vol. 42, No, 172
Copyrighted 1992

Friday, January 10-0ak Hill .......................... A

GIRLS ,
Thursday, January 9'-0arHm •••••••••••••••••••••••• H
Saturday, January 11-Meigs ............... (4:30) A

JAN. 10-ATOAKHILL*
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 11-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
JAN. 22-RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 24-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 25-AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31-NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 1-AT SOUTH POINT
FEB. 7-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 11 - WARREN
FEB. 14-0AK HILL*
FEB. 18-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 21-SOUTHWESTERN*
'-Indicates SVAC games

BOYS
l

Tuesday, January 7-Wellston ••••,.................... A
_) Friday, January 10-Trimble ............................ H
Saturday, January 11-Athens ........................ H

'-Indicates SVAC games

TOKYO (AP) - A frantic
pushing and pulling scene among
reporters and Japanese security
agents greeted PresideD! Bush as he
walked toward his limousine after
collapsing at a•state dinner.
Bush looked pale and haggard
as he walked by, steadily but slowly through the front hall of the
prime minister's residence. He was
surrounded by over a dozen security agents but was moving under his
own steam. He wore a green overcoat and his coUar was loosened.
Asked by a reporter how he felt,
he said "I feel good." But the tiaggard look on his face suggested
otherwise.
Several minutes earlier, pool
reponers clambered out of tbe windows of a holding room onto a
ledge when w~ heard an ambulance
pulled in front of the building.
Coverage of tbe state dinner was
limited to a small group of
reponers. referred to collectively as
a pool, and Bush's collapse was not

GIRLS
Thursday, January 9-Federal Hocking ••••••••••••• H
Saturday, January 11-Southern••••••••••• (4:30) H

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 8-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 9-0AK HILL*
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JJAN. 16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-EASTERN*
JAN. 3D-AT NORTH -GALl.IA*
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 1D-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
*-Indicates SVAC games

AFTER COLLLAPSE - President Bush
waves as he is led to his limousine after collaps·
ing at a state dinner at Prime Minister Kiichi

MEIGS MARAUDERS
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 7-AT WELLSTON
J~N. 1D-TRIMBLE
JAN. 11-ATHHENS
JAN. 14-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 21-AT BELPRE
JAN. 25-AT WARREN
JAN. 28-MILLER
JAN. 31-VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 4-AT ALEXANDER
FEB. '7-WELLSTON
FEB. 11-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 14-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK

JJAN. 9-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JJAN. 16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-I;ASTERN*
JAN. 30-AT NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 10-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB.13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*

AMultimedia Inc. New,opaper

Bush says he 'feels good'
after coll~psing at dinner

SOUTHER TORNADOES

BOYS

2 Sectlono, 12 Page• 25 cents

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 8, 1992

'-Indicates SVAC games

~--------------~
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

Low tonight In 40s.
Thursday, high near 50.

Miyazawa's residence in Tokyo Wednesday.
Bush was reportedly suffering from a bout of
thenu. (AP)

--Partners in education ...----

'

· ·

·

rowning defends Voinovich's .pl~n

JJ
,

OJ!ir,· ·

·

'You can't taX yourself out.of a"
'receSSion," he said. ,
' ' Browning defended the laXes as
but a small,part- $69-mil.IiOn -

•

suspects, collecting evidence and
working with various local, state
and federal law enforcement agencies.
•
While working at the Prosecutor's Office, he wrote tbe ·original
Meigs County Community Correc·
tions Grant and served as tbe initial
program coordinator. In addition,
he initiated the first federal forfei·
ture in a drug case in Ohio.
In January 1989, Gerard left tbe
Prosecutor's Office to become
Criminal Bailiff-Assignment Commissioner for the Common Pleas
Coon, a position he holds today.
G'erard has been active in a variety of community affairs, being a
past president of the Meigs County
Jaycees and a past president of tbe
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
He also served as District Director
for the Ohio Prosecuting Attorney's Investigators Association and
bas been a member of the Citizens
Advisory Board for the SEPTA
Center since its inception.
In connection witb his duties as
investigator, and now as criminal
bailiff, Gerard has completed a

Paul Gerard, 44, of Mlddlepon,
has filed his petitions with the
Meigs County Board of Elections
to become a candidate for Meigs
County Sheriff. A Republican, Gerard is the ftrst person in eitber party
to file for the office.
Gerard grew up in Middlepon,
graduated from Middlepon High .
School in 1965, and attended Ohio
University where he earned about
200 hours of credit toward a bache·
lor of science degree. He left col·
lege to accept full-time employ·
ment witb the local cable TV com·
pany, and spent the next seven
years tbere, producing local news,
sports, and public infonmation programs.
In 1979 Gerard left the cable
company and went to work for
then-Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow Ill, a position he held for just
over nine years. As the prosecu ·
tor's investigator, his duties includ·
ed the review, processing, and
preparation of all criminal prosecu·
tions. In nine years, he conducted
hundreds of investigations, includ·
ing interviewing of witnesses and

Racine Village Council mc.mbers passed a resolution declaring
Frank Cleland Racine's mayor
when they organized at Monda_y
night's regular ineeting.
The res olutions was ado!lted
that in accordance with O~io
· Reviscd Code Section 733.02 lind
related case law. that tbere was a
vacancy in the office of Mayor and
that Mayor Cleland was still the
mayor due to the fact tbat no sue:
cessor had been elected and quali- .
· fied for the position.
Robert Beegle was elected to
serve as President Pro Tempore for
1992, and Cleland appointed the
following committees: Finance;
Insurance and Security Committee·

s~~r~dRg~o~~·-~~~~~!::~:

co llision) comparee to tHogan
Warner's bid of $12,720 (with
$250 and $500 deductiblcs.)
The council approved payment ·
or tbe rcgisuation fee for a mandatory Clerk-Treasurer Workshop for
tlcrk-Clect Carolyn Poweli.
Council authoriz.cd Fire C~ief

Carroll Teaford and Jeff Thornton:
of the. package and said dri!lking cent disc~nt tbat retailers receive Park . Beegle and Teaford.
and smoking are costing Ohioans for collecung ~sales tax.
.
Glenn Rizer was appointed to
hundreds of tbousands ,of dol~ a
Bot)! were leJ~tcd by tbe Leg~~- serve ~ Street Commissioner for
year in added health-care costs.
lature mdehbera~ons on tbe state.s 1992, and Frank W. Porter, Jr .. as
"I'm not mofalizing. That's just two-year, $27 blllton buggetlast village solicitor.
a fact of life,'"·lie said:
summer. .
'
.
1992 Appropriations totaling ,
Voinovich already bas taken
Vomov1ch al~ _ wants authOt;11Y $188,713 were approved as folsteps to resolve $254 million of tbe to spend $IOO.mil~on !\'St. the sta~ lows: Genenil Fund, $57,000: State
deficit, mostly with spending cu_ts has been Jr;eq&gt;mg m a · ramy day · · HigHwa~, $2,000: Cemete~y,
but -also with Jund tr-nsfers and fund .
.
' .
54,700; Fire, $23,675; Street Mainother belt•tightening, Browning
S:o"ee~ey sa1g ,that cnd!ng the tenance and Repair, $18,188: Debt •
'said. '
·
_
, ret~1lers tax discount wtll hurt Service, $13,70; Water, $55,000;
.The governor is 'asking for an busl~~ ~se they maY. ha~e . Water Deposits, $1,000: Refuse ·
increase ,in 'tbe cigareuc taX from to;CIIse pnc~. A !ot,orre~erSJ~ Collection, $25,780. .
,
18 to 30 cents a p~l:age and a thts 5!8~.~ ~ 1_ng by tliear fir!After extensive discussion and
boOst of a few cents'in tbe taX on gegaus. he ~d. .
..
: . comparison of coverag~ lhe vilalcoholic beven~ges - 3 cents on a
weency Sll~ ~ acbmDIS~Uon !age Insurance contrac~- awardsix-pack of beer, for instance.
~hof~ld be corisiderin' bonddJSothsues ·- ed to Buckeye Administnton hanBrowning rene"ed tbe adn)inis- . to 1napce construc~on 81\,
cr died by J(inder lliiWIIlC:o A~y
tration's plan to 1111"' operation of p~jects that create JobS. , All_of in the amount of $12,106.60 (wilh
Ohio's retail liquor SIDI'fJS over to - tht~.(JJac~o) shOtlld be job·driV· a ~eft&gt; deductible on the compreprivace agents and end a 1.5 per· en, ·he said.
. . hensi~e a_qd $100 deductlble · ~n
- ~

PAULGERARJ)
number of specialized courses ·
through the Ohio Peace' Office
Training Academy, Hocking Technical College, Shawnee State Colle~e (Arson Seminar in conjunction
.w1th State Fire Marshal) and the
Ohio Supreme Coun.
Gerard is married, resides with
his wife and daughter in Middleport, and attends tbe Heatb United
Mctbodist Church.
Gerard is an elected member of
Continued on page 3

Racine _Council reorganizes;
Cleland stays on as m~yor

~

::cOLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) _:
Budget Director Greg Browning
has defended Go x. George
~inovich's eaii for higher tobacco
and alcohol taxes to help erase a
$1157 d9ficit i!} the state budget. ·
. . He responded :rue~ay to_critiCI~m. by House -F1nance Chamnan
.. Patnck Swe~ney. D-CI~veland,
... whose committee was bnefed for
. ·. tHe., first time on the recently
ai)Dounecd, rccession~aused . shon- ·
·. fall.
, ·. ·
· Sweeney a~d other Dem~r~ts .
sa1d they ar~ cJ!saJI!lOmled ':"lth the
plan because 11 does not mcl~de •
ptoposals to stimulate 9hio's econ.:
.

~

the entry way.
In tbe meantime, White House
officials · accompanying the
reponers tried to intervene, shouting , "Let them do their job!"
There were no White House
instructions to prevent photographs
from being taken, U.S. officials
said.
---· As tbe president approached, tbe
reporters burst out of the holding
room and were met by Japanese
security agents who tried to shove
them back into the holding room.
Secret Service agents stood by
as the Japanese security agents
roughed up the reporters. saying
"It's not our dinner."
After the president got into the
waiting limousine accompanied by
White House doctors, United States
Information Service officials
whisked reporters away into a wait·
ing bus to try to get access to Bush.
The ambulance that pulled up
earlier was not used.

Gerard files for sheriff
on Republican ticket

'-Indicates SVAC games

The Meigs County Partners in Education program was
"kicked oil" on Tuesday night at Meigs High School. Motivational
speaker Harvey Austin, leN, was the keynote speaker at the ceremony. A' former guidance counselor, Austin praised the program 's
parhcipants., 'I have told people in inner Cb'icago to go to Nelsonville and Mei~s County if they want to see schools that really
need help," Xushn said. "But Meigs County's kids are good kids
with good Am~rican val~es. They have just lost vision. You can be
heroes to these k~s." The program teams eac.h school building in
Meigs County with a local business in a cooperativ~ agreement.
Abo~e, Vicki Haley or Harrisonville Elementary $chool and Mike
Lively from Southern Ohio Coal Company are pictured as they
sign their agreement for the 1\191-1992 school year. Also pictured
is Teacher Becky Triplett, who helped organize the program, and
Pam Newell or the Meigs County Chamber or Commerce, which
co-~ponsors it.
.
.

witnessed at the time by the bulk of
tbe press corps in Japan.
As photographers tried to take
Bush's picture on his departure
from the residence, Japanese security agents and police immediately
began shouting "No, No, No!"
and tried to slam ,.the windows shut
and force tbem back inside.
"The Japanese just went nuts,"
said Dennis Cook, an Associated
Press photographer. ·'Finally. it got
to the point where we had to
retreat."
"They were very rough," said
Charlie Cole, a photographer from
Newsweek. "One guy was grab;
bing my leg from the outside,
another guy was grabbing me from
tbe inside.
"They wanted to make sure
there were no pictures taken."
As the pushing match on the
ledge continued, Japanese police
held up white sheets to block photographers from getting a view of

.

~

..

'I

John Holman to purchase a set of :
batteries for one of the denart. mcnt's pumper truck, an~ Holman ·
reported to council about a clarifi- ·
cation regarding the new tanker
chassis. Holman also reponed that
due to the ~ umber of requests, the
Continued on page 3

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