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·rP.,agiioe-••1•2•
- •Th•e•D•a•l,;;,ly.O.S.O.en.t;,;,ln;;;,e;.l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:;P;o:,::meroy;-Middleport, Ohio

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Utility customers are
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cost for rate increase

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the plant will go into operation this
week. Dale Hart of Racine was
hired as the sewer system opera10r.
Council was also advised that
T.A.M. Conslruction of Westerville
will be returning 10 Rutland Monday 10 beg in installing grinders.
Every home and business establishment in the area served by the system will have a grinder pump 10
pulverge the sewage generated and
propel -i~ into the main lines which
lead to the treatment planL
The resignation of John Spires
as Rutland police officer effective

Dec. 31 was accepted and several
individuals are being interviewed
for the position.
Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien was present at the meeting
10 swear in Jo Ann Eads, new to
Council. and Vickie Fink, who was
re-elected for another Lerm. Mayor
Edward Martin presided at the
meeting and other council members
auending were Steve Jenkins, Jerry
Black; ·and Keith Molden;· The cur·
rent term of ·Sandy Smith, clerktreasurer, who was re-elected in
November, does not expire until
April!.

General, special revenue fund ·
budgets appJOved by ,county

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Rutland residents will begin
paying for sewage treatment this
month, according lo an action taken
by Rutland Village Council at
Tuesday night's meeting.
Since the entire project will not
be in operation until May or Junc,
it was decided that the residents
will be billed only the minimum.
$16.12 a month. That figure covers
the usage of 2,000 gallons of water.
Warer usage is the'basis for the
sewer charge. The monthly charge
has been set at $8.06 per I ,000 gallons of water used.
II was reported to Council that

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Rutland residents to begin paying
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 9, 1992

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Prosecuting, Attorney, $178,234.92;
Bureau Qf In spection, $45.000:
County Planning Commission,
$8,784.
Common
Pleas
Court,
$77 ,194.09; Domestic Relation s
Juvenile Court, $57,270.27; Pro·
bate Court, $30,787 .59; Clerk of
Courts, $134,395.83; Coroner's
Office, $27,626. 78; County and
Municipal Courts, $101,530. 70;
Board of E!1)ctions, $123,873.15;

the grand jury fallowing a prelimiBy JIM FREEMAN
nary hearing Dec. 23.
OVP News Staff
A Pomeroy man accused of
Simonaux was originally
stabbing a Gallii?OiiS man 10 death charged with murder, punishable
in an early morntng altercation put- by life imprisonment. However, the
side the Addison Club Dec. 20, gra nd jury indicted Simanaux
1991 , was indicted on a charge of Tuesday on a charge of voluntary
vol untary manslaughter by !he Gal· manslaughLCr.
Section 2903.03 of the Ohio
lia County Grand Jury Tuesday.
Revised
Code pertaining to volunA trial has been scheduled for 9
a.m. March 9, 1992, in the Gallia Iary manslaughter states "no person, while under the innucnce of
County Common Pleas Coun.
Lloyd A. Simonaux, 25, was sudden passion or in sudden fit of
arres ted soon· after the stabbing rage, either of which is brought on
incident whjch resulted in the death by serious provocation occassioned
by the victi':ll ihat is reasonably sufof Terry E. White, 31.
Three other men were injured in fiCient to 1ncne the person into
the altercation: James Taylor. 25. usmg deadly force, shall knowingly
Dennis Coughenour, 32, and cause the death of another."
The section continues, "WhoevDaniel Darst, 27.
·
Simonaux was bound over to er violates ibis section is guilty of

LCCD meeting set

WITH COIJPON.

more than $600 million to cover
the Zimmer conversion.
The consumers' counsel opposes making customers pay uti lilies'
rate-case COS!$.
"Rate-case expenses should be
excluded in the cost passed on to
the consumer," said spokeswoman
Beth Gianforcaro.
The PUCO traditionally allows
companies to pass on such cosLS to
consumers, but it recently eliminated about one-third of a $1.5 million ·
reimbursement sought by Ohio
Edison.
Utility customers also pay the
consumers' counsel's .cos! of fight·
mg rate mcrcascs, wh1ch so f:JI has
amounted to S190,000 in th e
Columbus Southern case.
Ohio residential utility customers arc. assessed 52 cents per
year by uulay companies, whiCh
pass on the money to the utility
watchdog agency .

voluntary manslaughter, an agra·
vated felony of the first degree.'
An aggravated felony of the first
degree is punishable from· five-to25 years confinement and a maximum fine of $10,000.
Simonaux plead not guilty to the
charge of voluntary manslaughter
at his arraignment following the
indictment
.
Simonaux is currently being
held in the Gallia County Jail in
lieu of $120,000 bond.
Gallia County Prosecutor llrcnt
Saunders said he was satisfied with
the grand jury's indicunent.
Simonaux' defense allorncy,
Ronald R. Calhoun, was out of the
county and could not be..reachcd
for comment

Southern Local Board adopts budget

Local briefs·-__,

ifiFREE

convert the Zimmer power plant in
Moscow, cast of Cincinnati, to
burn coal •nsLCad of generating
electricity with nuclear fuel. .
The Ohio Office of the Consumers' Counsel, the PUCO and
Columbus Southern arc negotiating
the •ncrease request. The cons um~rs' counsel represents consumers in utility rate cases. ·
Columbus Southern had said il
would impose th e rate increase
request without.PUCO. approval
because the commission had failed
to act on it within the 275 days provided in state law. But late lasl
month, the company said it would
delay imposing the increase to
allow for more negotiations.
The other co-cwners of the Zimmer plant - Cincinnati Gas and
Electric and Dayton Power and
Light- are seeking $1.4 million
and nearly $1.3 million, respcctively,to recoup the~ expenses.
The three companies sought

Meigs .man indicted on charge
of-voluJ!tary manslaughter

Capital lmprovcmcnts, $50,000:
Maintenance and. Qperation ,
$196,881.67; Sheriff, $405,805.99.
Recorder, $78,312.77; Disastcr
Services, $6,975.48: County Public
Defender Commission, $22,777.W;
Agriculture, $93,993; Registration
of Vital Statistics, $200; Children's
Services Board , $102,950: Soldier's Relief, $49,535.77; Veteran's Services, $35,432.86: Public
Assistance, $78,188; County Park
District, $27,716.33; Engineer,
$43,67 1.46; Law Libraries,
A budget whi ch projects a
$1,396.20;
Hi storical Society, deficit
r---$236,080 in operating
$8,000: Insurance on Property, monies of
in
the
general fund for the
. $146,876.35; Miscellaneous. 1992; 93 sc hool
year has been
$22.1,987.21; Transfers, $50,000.
by the Southern Local
The regular meeting of the Leading Creek Conservancy District
Special Revenue funds apfropri- adopled
Board
of
Education.
ated were: Dog and Kenne Fund
Board of Directors v.'lll be held on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the board
According 10 Dennie Hill. trea(hall),
$65,14.67: County Board of surer,
offices in Rutland. The public is invited.
anlicipated revenue for the
The date was reported incorrectly in The J)aily Sentinel.
Mcnral Retardation and Develop· 1992-93 school year is $3,490,600
mental Disabilities, $582,300; Pub- while anticipated expenditures total
lic Assistance Fund, $3,924,134; $3,726,680.
Litter Control and Recycling Fund,
The bond retirement revenue is
A spokesman for Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soul sby · $54,000: Real Estate Assessment
repof!ed Thursday that Faye Clifford of Bryson Road reported that
Fund, $200,220.60; Litter Conltol
on Fnday, lhelf etght·mOnlh-old female We•mancrdog was stolen.
and Recycling Gift and Donation
The dog is gray. with blue eyes, and was wearing a bright green
Fund, $574.84.
.
collar.
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline
'J'ax Fund, $1,971,596.16; Soil and
ATiffiNS - 'J')Je Athens County
Water Conservation Special Fund,
$52,000; Youth Service Subsidy commissioners contend they have
A Eastern Local School District bus driver was cited after a busGrant Fund, $31,915.91 ; EMS Spe- legally withdrawn from a six-count
pickup wreck on Lebanon Township Road 39 (Smith Ridge Road)
cial Levy Fund,.$407,230; Tuber- solid waste district and have 10ld a
Monday afternoon.
·
culosis Special Levy Fund, landfill in their county to stop colAccording to a report from the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
$124,384.15; Children's Services lceting fees for the district, accord·
Highway Pa1tol, seven children were on the bus driven by Bruce D.
Fund, $123,038; Marriage License ing the Columbus Dispa~h .
Myers, 61, of Long Bottom. Nclne of the children were injured.
The Ohio Environme~l
ro Special Fund, $4,114; CDBG 91 _ Myers·was northbound on Smith Ridge Road, went left of center
tcetion
Agency
and
Lane
·
n,
92, $339,060; CDBG RLF, f:XCcutive director of the w
m a curve and struck a southbound vehicle driven .by John P. PickS;
$18,652.60;
State
Funds,
cns,70, of Portland, the patrol said.
say the commissioners e
$18,494 .76; MR/DD Special trict,
.J'ickens received minor visible injuries, !he !)lltrOl reponed but
wrong,
sraLCd the article.
Assessment for Bond Retirement,
was not treated. Myers was uninjured.
·
'
The
Ohio
EPA has yet to rule on
$16,725.28; Computer R.esearcli, Athens Counly
Damage to P\cken,s' 1984 Ford F-150 was listed by the patrOl as
~ s request to with$2,294.97; Petcrs Memorial Trust draw and form iLS own waste dis·
moderate and dtsabling. Dama11e to the Eastern School District's
Fund, $12,540.94; Law Enforce· trict, said Rob Berger, an agency
19831ntematio~al S-1700 was hsted'3S light
mept Trust Fund, $29,314.70.
Myers was c1ted by the patrol for failure to yield one-half of the
Other
funds
totaling spokesman.
· .roadway.
"We are awaiting a fonnal attor$302,874.40: Juvenile Court Com· ney general's opinion, and until we
muoily Corrections, $4,688.50; get illhey .(Athens. Coun!)') may
Indigent Drivers Alcohol Treat- not with~raw," he was quoted as
ment, $2,800: En(orcemimt and saying,
Meigs County is one of nine Southeastern OhiO collnties where a
·
Education, $2,362.20; Delinquent
new license agency contract will be awarded thiS year 10 provide
Athens
County
is
the
first in
Real Esl8te, $30,604.75: M.R. Gift
driver license and vehicle ~stration services on behalf of the Stare
Ohio 10 attempl to withdraw from a
Fund, $5,724.82; Special Emergen- solid
Bureau of MOf:DC Vehicles (BMV). .
,
waste district, Berger said.
Qy, $7.,072.70; MR/DD Residential,
',1
BMV officials announced today that the the agency will issue a
The
includes Gallia, }Jock$78,396.45: Indigent Guardianship,
request for proposals on Jan. 13 for tlie seleefion of more than half
Meigs, and Vinton
$60; . MR/DD-,-T-aD$~Ortat:ioJt,. ..,:;;e::
~
l,
ofthesiat.e's&amp;eascaacnel.cs.
~ ~ -,. .... , .
·
Tile Jl!aciil wm Will Wllll '~rete~no 11e h!id in .. '$8,4"30.47: •.co·uruy Home,
The counties joined in 1989 to
$112,653.81; EMS TranSfer, fulfill
. seven Cities during the week of Jan." !3-17. BMV offtcials are hold·
requirements of House Bill
$45,000; Emergency Manage· · 592, which
· ing tile conferences to help fakniliatizc potential proposers with the
allows governments 10
ment/Einergency Services, $5,100. form multi·C9Ufity districts 10 regusystem.
·
. Continued oa page 3
Issue Two Funds, $270,443.62.
late waste disposal and lantlfills.
The Meigs County Commis sioners approved the county's 1992
general fund and special revenue
fund budgeLS last week.
The general fund budget, totaling $2,92·1,167.68, was approved
as follows: Board of County Commissioners, $205,717.18; County
Autlilor, $196,443.38; County
Treasurer, $!08,310.91 ; Buckeye
Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development District, $2,298.70:

POODUUID
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Columbus Southern Power Co.
customers facing a $202.5 million
rate increase arc being asked to pay
for the cost of getting that increase
approved. according 10 documenlS
filed with state regulators.
The company included the
$640,000 cost in its request for rate
tncrease or · 28.4 percent. If
imposed in full, !he increase would
add an average of ~16.21 io resi ·
dcntial customers ' monthly bills.
As p&lt;ut of the r~lc-setting process, uulay compan1es customarily
try to re~oup the cost of seeking
mcreascs m requests filed wiih the
Public Utilities Commis sion of
Ohio.
. Columbus Southern's request
mcludcs the cost of legal advertising, expert witnesses for rate hearings, transcripts and other expenses.
The company said the increase
would cover its share of the cost 10

Sheriff reports lost dog

projected at $27,900 with expenditures of $27,688. There is also
anticipated a carry-over in that
fund of $31,159, Hill reported.
Budgcts for other funds for the
1992-93 school year as adopted by
the Board include:
Principal's fund. $40,000:
Activities Fund, $58,000; Di sad·
vantagcd Pupil Program Fund,
$38,000; Lottery Fund, $25,000;
EMIS information manage ment

system, $5,000; math and science
(Dwight D. Eisenhower) $4,000:
Title 6B $35,000; and Chapter I,
S 165,000; drug abu se. $5,000 ;
Meigs Rural Assistance Program i~
cooperation with the University of
Rio Grande, $61 ,000; food supply,
$245,000; uniform supply ,
$2 1,000, and Student Activity
Management Fund, $31,000.
The district's millage stands at
3.5 inside, 19.5 ouLSide, and bond
retirement, one-half mill, Hill said.

Grpups at odds over Athens landfill

School bus driver cited in wreck

'·

Meigs to get-new BMV contract

- -·-·-- ..
'

Commissioners were dissatisficd with the dislticl's proposed
5olid waste plan because !hey claim
it is inadequately financed and the
county's recycling program s arc
more advanced that other~ in the
district, according to the Dispatch.
"Our words went unheeded, so
•

we said, fine, we'll just withdraw
and form our own district," said
Commissioner Roxanne Groff.
The commissioners hired Conner
Ohio Atlorney General Anthony
Cclebrezze to represent them.
Groff said Cclebrezze.advised them
they could withdraw from the district

'
The Meigs County
Commissioners appropriated funds for the
Meigs County Deparunent of Liner
Conttol at their regular meeting on
Wednesday.
. Upon the-request of Director
Kenny Wiggins, the county's general fund share of lhe department's
operating budget in the amount Of
$12,000 was appropriated as follows: $10,325 for salary and fringe
benefits; $250 for supplies; $100
flll''ecfuipment: $100 for .contraCts
and services; $900 for tr8vel; and
$325 fot otller expenses.
The commisSioners approved .a
$312.62 funds transfer from the
treasurer' s office advanced real

estate fund to the undivided real
estate fund. That transfer completes
a transaction involved in the Kerr's
Run intersection project.
A request from Recorder
Emmogene Holstein Congo for a
$50 petly cash account was
approved, as was a request from
Treasurer Howard E. Frank for a
carTyover of vacation time for an
employee in the office. •
·
A le~tcr from Meias .C11unty
!'.tannins Commissioa Bx~ulive
Director Chlftles Blakesloe
reviewed. In the letler, BlpJeo
indicated that the terms of CCIIDIIIssion member Joh.n Lontoa and
Continued on paae 3

Commission appro.ves
appropriations, transfers .

"'
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war

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�••

Thursday, January 9, f992

Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTER:ISTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associjled Press, Inland Daily Press Assoc.alion and
the Amencan Newspaper Publisher Assoctalion

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long All letters are subjecl lD edttlng and must be s1gned wttb name,
address and telephone number. No unSigned leller.l w1U be published. Leuers
should be m good taste, addressing 1ssues, not personalities.

·Letters to the editor

WASHINGTON (NEA) Desp1te George Bush's assertions
of late !hat Japan is a closed market
to U.S. products, some Amencan
companies are succeeding - and
even flourishmg - in Japan. They
are doing so by following the
advice of former Japanese Prime
Minister Toshiki Kaifu to "build
better products and be willing to
work within the established
(Japanese) distribuuon system."
Ohe prime example is Spectrum
InformatiOn Technologies of Dallas. a relatively young high-tech
company that has developed an
innovative new technology !hat has
Japanese and Amencan f11ms, as
well as companies from the rest of
the world, beating down its doors.
Spectrum was started m 1984 to
develop Wireless data communication technology. The company's
founders foresaw !he rapid growlh
of cellular telephone technology as
well as the explosion IR the usc of
portable computers. Thus it set out
to write computer software, and

A valid point
wnhout the mmes.
Realizing !he severe impact the
Clean Air Act amendments could
have, sUite leg•slators last summer
passed a bill !hat requires !he Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to
take such socio-economic factors
into consideration when rulmg on a
utility's compliance plan. That's
the right thing to do for all of Ohio.
The editorial also mentwncd
federal job-rcu-aining assistance for
miners. What good is !hat if there
arc no jobs!
As for the mines "bccommg
more expensive to work," that is
stmply an incorrect statement.
Let's set the record sU'atght. The
cost of coal from lhe Meigs mines
IS comparable to the average of
coal de It vcred to utility power
plants in Ohio. Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs mines are producing at record levels and at the
lowest cost m Ihe1r history. At the
same ume, AEP mmes were recently named the safest mines in the
natiOn. But that, of course, didn't
merit even a mcnuon m the Dispatch. Phase I of lhc Clean All' Act,
they would st•ll have to build
scrubbers to meet Phase IT requirements in 2000. Why wait?
Installing scrubbers now will save
Jobs and cost clectncity consumers
less over the long run.
Everyone in Ohio is going to
pay for the federal government's
overkill with the Clean Atr Act
amendments. But we irr Southeast
Oh•o should not have to bear the
brunt of it with lhc economtc devastation of our region.
Wilham Oiler and James Shinn,
COMPAC Represcntauvcs,
U.M.W.A. Local #1886
AI Childs,
COMPAC Rcprescntauve,
U.M.W.A. Local #1857

invent an interface device, that
would allow a portable computer,
or a fax machine, to send and
receive error-free data over a cellular telephone.
It was not an easy ljiSk. "Sending data over a wireless system is
about the harshest environment
imaginable for data communications," says Specl!um's president
Dana Verrill. "But we were able to
make !he breakthroughs we needed
and to develop a technology lhat no
one else has come close to being
able to duplicate."
By 1986, Spectrum was starting
to bring its products to market.
Over !he past four years it has bolh
refined and expanded its product
line and has recently received
patent protection on its proprietary
cellular data commumcation system, which 11 calls the SPCL Protocol, and on its computer-cellular
JOtcrface devi ces: The Bridge,
Bridge Plus and Axsys.
As an example of what the company's products can do, in a test a

To/'liGHT, o~
II Lil/e TR;aL.S oF iHe.
RicH ~ND FaMollS .. ''

laptop computer in a car in Dallas
was able to commumcate, errorfree, wilh another laptop in a car on
the streets of London. On a more
pracucal level, several major U.S.
corporations now equip !heir enure
field sales and service forces wilh
laptops and cellular phone for
home-office communications and
dispatching.Spectrum is now succeeding well beyond even tts own
most optimistic projections. In fiscal 1990, Specl!um did .about $18
million in total sales. Orders m the
first half of the current fiscal year
that ends in March have more than
tripled, and the company expects to
do between $30 million and $40
million in sales. Projections for fis. cal 1992 sec !he company's volume
doubling again.
Tlic firm sells its products and
technology both dtrcctly and
through non-exclusive licenses.
Some of the b1ggest buyers of
Spectrum's products arc Japanese
computer giants like Toshiba and
NEC. They arc buymg lhc products

for them. Wh•ch ts to say, nearly
everything. Protect me, they plead,
from (pick one): a) words, b) pic·
turcs, c) booze, d) weeds, e) drugs,
f) 'timorous dates, g) hwassers. f)
sexual disease.
They arc clearly related, these
syndromes. Both have to do with
irresponsibility. Americans have
become alibt artists, and we have
developed the habit of demanding
things be done for us !hat we ought
to be doing for ourselves.
We no longer want a concerned

to market with their own laptop
computers, and they are acting as
selling agents for Specl!um products at the retail level.
·
One example ts NEC, which is
marketing a "cellular workstation"
consisting of one of thetr laptop
computers, one of their cellular
telephones and Spectrum's interface and software packaged in a
sltm leather briefcase. Another
example is Toshiba, which will
begin marketing an internal modem
m their laptops that will allow both
land-line and cellular data telecommunications . Thts device was
developed as a joint project by
Spectrum, Tosh•ba and Rockwell
International's :Qigttal Communication Divtsion.
According to Verrill, !he company spent a great deal of time and
energy dec1ding how to enter the
Japanese market: "To begm w1th,
we had begun to develop close
worktng relauonships with several
of the large Japanese computer
makers who were licensing our
technology or buying our products
directly. So we had Ia make the
basic dec1sion as to whether to
aucmpt·to enter the Japanese market direc tly at the wholesale or
retail level or whether to work
through our developing relationships.
"After looking at it very closely, and looking at what other U.S.
companies have been domg over
there wilh and wilhout success, we
concluded that the easiest way, and
the most profiUlble, was to align
ourselves wilh Japanese companies
w1th whom we already had a relauonshlp, and through them wilh the
various tradmg companies who get
products into tht retail distribution
channels."
How is 11 working? According
to Vernll, very well: "We have a
worldwtde market for our technology. Europe, China as well as the
U.S. and Japan. But clearly Japan
is going to be a major market for
our products, and I must say !hat so
far we have been welcomed into
thCI! market."

By Joseph Spear

Uncle Sam. When somcthmg goes
wrong, we want someone to fix it.
We want a Mama-san.
' him to put it down or
· In Japan, the Mama-san is the waitress told
bar woman- hostess or propnetor move to another table. Make those
- who lends an ear, pats hands lib1dmous men read approved literand makes thtng s right The ature, Mama-san. In Seattle, a pregmetaphor ts not perfect, because nant woman ordered a rum daiquiri
Americans seem to want more and two restaurant employees
someone to actually solve thc•r refused to serve her until she had
problems. But it docs have a nice been fully informed about the
ring to it: No more Uncle Sam . effects of alcohol on fetuses. Make
Give us a Mama-san.
those molhcrs-to-be read !he labels,
The concept of a Mama-san as a Mama-san.
ubiqUitous, all-knowing rectifier of
In St. Paul, Mmn., five female
errant t/ungs has actually been tak- employees of the Stroh Brewery
hollow, cast of the Excelsior Gaso- on the hill back of the school mg form for some time, in both Ca. claimed the firm's Swedish
line Tanks, along beside State house. These houses, be10g 10 the public and private forums. The city Bikint Team ads contributed to a
received by the last letter·wnter. It Route I24 tn Mmersville. The last location !hey were in, could scarce- council in Quincy, Mass., voted to
. Dear Editor:
First, there was a column by was unsigned and called her dumb year of th e sc hool was Sept. 4, ly be seen from the htghway and ban cursing in public places. sexist aJmosphcrc in !he workplace
and sued for damages. We know
Fred Crow discussing Metgs Co. and stupid.
1933 to April 27, 1934, grades I you had to be almost in !heir midst Mama-san protects her children there arc Jaws that govern sexual
Come on now, thts is America, through 6, wilh Chester Knight a before realizing they were there.
h1story.
from dirty words. The Walt Disney harassment, Mama-san, but Ihesc
Then, !here was a letter concern· and we may voice our op1mon teacher. Tile students were Imo- Thus !he name "Seldom-S~n."
Co., whose founder sported a mus- commercials offend us and we
in.!( a discrepancy in Fred's h1story whenever we please.
gene Lake, Francis Spencer, Jean
I checked with mv neighbor, taehe, ordered aU its park and hotel would like them removed. On
·AAil intelligent people sign their Robson, James Hawley, William Mrs. Ronald Arms Grindley, and
IE The
!ftihnext letter~ commended the name.
employees to shjlve off facial hair, "The Arsenio Hall Show," come·
Rizer, Pina Stillwagner, Sara Har- she verifies Ihesc 4 names. When trim their head hair and eschew dian George Carlin offered a soluPhebe Roberts ns, Marton Rizer, Mary Stillwagn- her famdy moved from West Va., bright-colored makeup and red fincolumn writer and said she was
tion for the homeless problem:
Box 8Z er, Helen Lake, Douglas Lake , to MinersviUc, they lived in one of
entertained by his writing.
gernails.
Mama-san
wants
all
her
"Golf courses. Plenty of land that's
Racine, Ohio Mary Karr; Dorolhy Robson , Ver- the company houses. Her dad
Then, a personal letter was
children to look mce.
devoted now to a meaningless,
non Rizer, Virginia Harris, Richard worked in !he local coal mine. Mrs.
The ed!lors of "Biblical m•ndless activity engaged 10 priKarr and Norman Rizer. This Haily Clark, now living in this area Archaeology Review" magazine martly by white, wcll·to-do, male
most important preventable cause school house was also used as a also verifies lhese names as being published photos of ancient oil businessmen." Yeah, Mama-san,
Dear Editor: ,
.
lamps bearing depictions or people give !he golf courses to. the home·
Since 1977, the Ameiican Can- of death m the U.S.A. (according to church and in the period of 1874· correct.
Thus we have CAR- engaged in sexual activllles but less.
,
cer Society has sponsored the the Center for Disease Control , 1875 was called "The Calvanistic
There's much more Mama-san
"Great American Smokeout" to Mortality &amp; Mortality weekly Melhodist." In the nineteens atten- LETONVILLE, PAMUNKEY, perforated the pages for easy
dance was over 100. ( from an old CALLOWAY AND SELDOM- removal. Many of Mama-san's could do. Young people tell pollpromole community wtde anti- rcportofNov. '91).
Parents need to be good role picture.)
SEEN, all being correct.
children do not acknoo,ylcdge the sters they want to be paid for vot. smoking activities that encourage
Where
!he
name
"Seldom
Minersville
has
an
unusual
hismodels
for
their
children.
Once
extstcnce of body parts. The Pen- ing. Feminist lawyers want to make
· smokers to refrain from smoking
Seen"
came
from
I
do
not
know
but
addicted
to
cigarettes,
it's
a
worse
tory.
tagon published a m~nual that wolf-whistling a crime. "Huckle·
cigareitcs for at least 24 hours.
I allow it to the number of coal
a(jiction lhan heroin or cocaine.
Victor L'Berger Brown, advised returning Desert Storm berry Finn" is alleged to be racist
(once a year, in November).
All of us must increase our company houses that were built up Pomeroy
troops how to deal decorously with and . ought to be proscribed .
· In 1990, during the smokeout,
their sexual needs. Mama-san's Bun$ee-jumping can kill people
more than 7.4 million of \he efforts to prevent the initiation of
=nations smokers refrained from smoking. Parents: if your chilchildren do not frolic.
and tl should be banned. Kids have
dren's
friends
are
smokers,
there's
Mama-san
has
obviously
been
:smoking. In 1991, 17.7 million
taken notice of Old Joe Camel and
an increased hkelihood that they
: refrained from smoking.
.
Governor Voinovich has once
The vendors' aUowancc is now very busy, but her to-do list grows those ads should be pulled. Young
·: Figur~s show there pe htgher are smokers 100.
again proposed to the legislature being used by retailers Ihroughout longer by the day. In Berkeley, people also watch beer commerI congratulate all the serv icc that the vendors' allowance that !he state as part of operating funds Calif., a customer at Bette's Ocean cials, so let's do away wilh them,
rates of cigarette smokmg among
8eparaled &amp; divorced persons; they agencies that have "no smoking" retailers receive for collecting and . essential at !his time of a downturn View Diner was reading Playboy too.
Make it better, Mama-san.
. are also less likely to quit. Stress, rules for their areas. All community remitting the state sales tax be in the economy. Certainly the vcn· magazine with his b~fast and a
(which has been associated with areas should have !hem.
abolished.
dors' allowance plays an ip'lportant
Respectfully submitted,
· difficulty in quitting) from marital
A vendors' ~llowance in some role in holding con~umer prices
Norma A. Forres, RN; BSN, form has been in the Ohio law down.
' discofll, may dec~ there likeli·
MSEN since !he sales tax became effective
hood of quitting.
It is unrealistic in these difficult
Nursing
Director
Cigarette smoking is the single
in 1935. Currently the law provides economic times when many small
'·
for the retailer to retain 1.5% of the retailers are teetering on the edge
tax collected to partially compen- of bankruptcy •tO assume that
By The Associated Press
.
sate him for costs incurred in acting Ohio's retailers can absorb a
Today is Thursday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 1992. There arc 357 days
Recently Attorney Fred Crow o a creek running up through as an agent for !he state in collect- $50,000,000 a _year loss in OJ,lCra~- left in lhe year.
had an article in the Daily Sentinel Edward' Bouom, on a mine map of ing the tax.
·ing funds. Theil' only alternauve ts
Today's Highlight in History: .
regarding the ·name of the eastern The Pomeroy Colliery Coal Mine,
Battelle Memorial Institute, to pass this loss through to conOn Jan. 9, 1793, what's generally regarded as the ftrst manned balloon
area of Minersville being called whic)l was located up in this bot· tho~ght to be one of the most effec- sumers creating a $50,000,000 flight in !he United States took place as Frenchman Jean Pierre Blanchard
"Pcrmonka".
tom. The date o the map is 1925. live private researi:h organizations "bacli door tax: increase".
·
rraveled between Philadelphia and Woodbtiry,N.J.
In a later edition Keith. Ashley This is the area in the east end of in the counuy, recently tjjxlatcd its · According to estimates from ~c
On this date:
·
,
·answered stating he didn't agree ' Minersville that floods frequently • study of retailers' cost ~iated Legislative Bu4get Office Metgs
In 1:788, Connecticut became the fiflh state 10 ratify the U.S. Constitu·
with Mr. Crow, that this area \~!as bphe b~ck - w.ater of the Ohio with being the state's tal!- coUector, .... C(\untyre~lcrs reuli~ $~4, .tl!Of!.; ........~2"·
. ,
__ .. ' , • ·:
.
called Carlctonville. I agree wtth R1ver dunng mmor floods. Could The study f\l,vealed tltat 11 costs tile . sand dollars annually tn vepdors
ln·J861, MisSJSslppl-~ed from tile Umon. •
,- 'both of these names .bein~ correct !his be ~where . the na!"e average merchant more than 3 of allowance. The question is: "Is the
In 1?45, Am,e~ .soldic:zs led by Gen. ·Douglas MacArthru:' i~yadcd
exce{lt the spelling, whtch is in 'Pamunkey was ll.erived ? I think the tax collec:ted. .
economy of MetMS County better Luzon m the Pbilippmes dunng World War II.
.
quesuon
it was, ·
The elimination ·of the vendors' served by retailers retaining vitally
In 19S7, Anthony Eden resigned as British prime minister, citing
The ~~ven prompted me
This area in Minersville was allowance
among the propos- needed operating funds or is lhc heallh reasons.
·
,
•
io wrile and a lillie·more infor· also cafled Seldom Seen and Cal· als sept to the legislature by the county better served by having the
111"'1964, anti·t],S. rioting broke out in the Panama Canal Zone; rcsultatation to the subject and clarify loway.
·
Governor as part of his suggested money come to Columbus where it i~g in the deaths m21 Panamanians and-tluee U.S. soldiers.
· die diJI:Uiiloit.
A cement block school house , pro~ to bring swe expenditures will be redistributed wilh litUe of it
, In 1968, the Surveyor 1 space probe made a soft landing on the moon,
· CarletOJiville, was a separate stood on !he lot where Jim Davis' m line with income. :
returning to the county?
markina the end P.f the American·series of unmanned explorations of the•
. ,ommunity between Minersville house is now located and it was
Ohio's economy is in the dolJohn C. Mahaney, Jr. lunar surface.
•, . .
.
.
lnd Syracuse and was annexed to called the CALLOWAY SCHOOL drums causing state revenue to fail
President
In 1972, 20 yean ago, ~usJVe b~ Howard H\l&amp;hea, spcaiinJ
Mintnville in 1857.
('WiUiams School Disuict"l This is to meet expectations. Everyone is •
The Ohio Council of · by telePhone 1'rom the Bahimalto teporUirs tn Hollywood, Slid • biogra•
P·A·M-U·N·K-E-Y, is the name. in the area near the mouth o the hurting incfuding !he state rerailers.
Rclail Men:hants phy of~_ill by Clifford Irving wu a fUe.

This is America!

Good role models

Proposal would hurt merchants

Today in history

Both names correct

wu

I

.

~

\

•

,-

I"'- - .

conditions and

Robert]. Wagman

The Alibi Age enters its third year
Regular readers will recall that
their eagle-eyed correspondent was
the first 10 peg the 1990s as the
Alibi Age. All we've heard for \he
past two years, it seems, is excuses.
I d1dn't do it: It was the (pick one):
a) ctgarettcs. b) booze, c) telev• sion, d) movies, c) mus1c, f) medta,
g) ozone hole, h) Prozac.
There's a fllp Side to this crybaby phenomenon !hat has Jess to do
with excuses for thmgs that have
already been done to peo ple and
more with things they want done

forecast for

MICH.

U.S. firm cracks Japanese market

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

In its December 29 edttonal, !he
· Columbus D•spatch made a valid
point about the EPA and its scheme
for
diSlllbUll ng emiSSIOn
allowances for compliance wtth !he
Clean Air Act. But beyond that,
there arc some maccurac1es !hat lhe
publtc should know about.
Ftrst of all, a decisiOn to close
the Mctgs mmes that supply Ohio
Power's Gavm Plant ncar Gallipolis would not just affect "the job
sc~unty of I ,250 coal miners in
Me1gs County." What about the
jobs m the many support mdustries
for mimng across Ohio? And what
about all the small businesses in
th1s region - the banks, the car
dea lers, res taurants, hardware
stores. gas stations (the list goes
on)- !hat depend on mining related paychecks to stay in business? A
Penn State University study concludes that every one mining job
supports six olher jobs in !he local
economy. That's a lot of JObs to cut
m a part of the state already hard
hit by high unemployment and economic hardship. Most severely jolted would be Athens, Meigs, Jackson Gallia and Vinton Counties.
And make no mtstake about it.
If Ihcsc mines close, !he coal industry in Ohio is doomed. AEP consumes more than half of !he coal
: mmed in Oh10. What happens at
·- Gavin will ultimately affect all 26
coal-producing counucs - fully a
· quarter of !he state.
·
; Those who are worried about
; the "cost" to electrictty customers
· should Ihmk about the cost to tax: payers sUite wide if you put all these
· people on unemployment and wei·
: fare rolls. Schools, busmesses,
: health and human services, pollee,
· ftrc and other government ser: vices ... all these rely on tax rev : cnucs that would be nonexistent

Friday, Jan. 10
Accu-Weather~

•

PA

31°

•

.. ... ..

•I Columbus I 35° I

,Gil\

~

Ice

Sunny

v,a ASSOCIAted Press GrsphcsNet

Cloudy
C1992 Accu-Weather, Inc

-----Weather-----'-South·Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with
widely scauered nurries late. Low
25-30. The chance of snow is 30
percent. Fnday, cloudy with widely
scattered flurries durmg the morning, then becoming partly sunny
High 30-35. The chance of snow IS

30 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:
Fair on Saturday and a chance
of rasn Sunday and Monday. Highs
from the low 30s to around 40 Saturtlay and the 40s Sunday and
Monday. Lows in the 20s Satunday
and !he 30s Sunday and Monday .

r---Local briefs...----,
Continued from page 1
Person s mtercsted in agency openings in Meigs, Belmont,
Gucrnscy, Jackson, Lawrence, Muskingum, Scioto, Vinton and
Washington Counties should attend the conference being held on
Jan . 14 at 2:30p.m. at the Ohio Deparlment of Natural Resources,
360 East State Street, Athens.
The end result of the proposal process will be !he awarding of
contracts effective July 1. The state currently has 203 ltcense agenCies in opcralton. Nmety-six contracts were awarded in 1991.
Approximately Ill conrracts will be awarded during the current
proposal process.

Athens man sentenced
An Athens man has been sentenced on SIX embczzlqmcnt-rclated
charges in Meigs County Common Pleas Court
.
Oladalon Fasheun was convicted by a Jury on !he charges m
December, following a week-long jury trial.
.
On a count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, a ftrst
degree felony, Fasheun was sentenced to seven to 25 years in prison
and fined $10,000. On two counts of fourth-degree theft, he was
sentenced to 18 months on each count. He was sentenced to two
years on each of two third-degree felony counts of grand !heft; and
to five to 15 years on a second-degree felony count of aggravated
!heft. A fine of $,7500 was 10c!uded in the aggravated !heft sentence.
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. -Crow III ordered the sentences to be served consecutively, or one after the olher.
In addition to the jail sentence and ftnes, Fasheun was ondcred to
pay $184.086.25 to Lee and Beatrice Wood, the ~rimBrX victims in
the case, and $488,000 to !he balance of the II v•cums mvolved 10
the case.
Fasheun was accused and found guilty of em~zzling lhe funds
through his affiliauon with !he Alhena Trading Company.
.
Fashcun was also given credit for 99 days served 10 the Mctgs
County Jail and was transported to Orient Correctional lnstituuon to
begin his sentence on Tuesday.

'

EMS units answer five ciJlls

Meigs County Emergency Medical Scrvit:s ~wcrcd five calls
for asststancc on Wednesday and early on Thursday.
On Wednesday at 9:57 a.m., Middleport squad went to Lmcoln
Street for Dallas Blevins. He was taken to Holzer Mcdtcal Center.
At II :49 a.m., Syracuse unit went to Second Street for a smoke
odor at Baer's Market At 7:37 p.m.• Tuppers Plains squad went to
Main SU'eet for Melvin Walker. He was treat¢ but not transported.
On Thursday at I: 15 a.m., Middleport squad went to Bradbury
Road. Mary Lalhey, who was taken to H~lzcr Medical Center. At
5:13a.m., Tuppers Plains un!l went to Mam Street and transported
Walker to St. Joseph Hospital.

--Area deaths·- Vona Gillenwater
Vona Barnes Russell Gillenwater, 91, of Main Street, Rutland,
died Tuesday, Jan. 7, 19?1 at Veterans Memorial HosptJal, Pomeroy,
following a brief illness.
Born in Wellston, she was the
daughter of the late Olho and Lizzy
Sharp Barnes. She was a homemaker, affiliated with the Rutland
Nazarene Church, and a member of
the Meigs County S.enior Citizens.
She is survived by two sons and
daughters·in-law, Homer and Freda
• Russell, Orlando, Fla., and Gerald
and Irene Russell, WcUston; a son,
Ralph Russell of Soulh Carolina; a
friend and companion, Carl HyseU,
RuUand; six grandchildren, ana 12
great-grandchildren.
Besides her•parents, she was
preceded in dealh by her first husband, Ed Russell, and her ·second
h·usband, Gay Gillenwater.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m"at Ihe..BJrchfield
Funeral Home, R!!tland, with !he
Rev. James Queen officiating.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory
Gardens, Pometoy . Friends may
call? 10 9 p.m. ThurSday (today) at
the funeral home.

Rutli Dunbar

.

· Ruth P. Childs Dunbar, .93, of
Perry, Fla., formerly of Cheshire,
died Tuesday, January 7, !992 at
Good Samaritan Center in Dowling
Park fill, She hid been living in
Tampa. Fla. for 40 years before
.niovins to Perry in 1988.
.
She was a
of the late
ROJCOO F. and
MatfC Klillht
PeterS. She marrlod tho late ~after
F. Childs and tho lite Melvm F.
Dunbar. She wu a homemaker and
a school teaCher, a lifetime member

.lOr

'

of Order of Eastern Star, Mystic
Chapter 110 in Tampa 311d was a
member of the First Baptist Church
in Perry.
She is survived by four sons:
Robert R. Childs, Perry, Fla. ,
Theodore J. Childs, Hendersonville, N.C., Thomas C. Childs,
Clcarwat~r, Fla., and Samuel E.
Chi)ds, Tampa, Fla.; one brother,
Merrill K. Peters, r!ltsburgh, Pa.;
seven grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren. Among the
local survivors are a sister in law,
Martha Childs of Middleport and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wiD be held on
Friday at noon at !he F.T. Blount
Chapel in Tampa, Fla. with Dr.
Louis T. Edwards of!iciating.
Graveside services will be held
Monday at II a.m. at Gl'\vel Hill
.Cemetery in Ch~hire.
·
Local arrangements are under
the direction of Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.
Contributions may be made to
Metropolitan Ministries at 2002
North Florida Avenue in Tampa, .
Fla.

Name winner
'
Mike Van Meter, 3069'5
Mitchell Road, Racine, correctly
identified the mystery fann in Suriday's Time-Sentinel as that of
Robert Lee. lie was one of eight lP
make die comet identifiCation and
his name wu aeleaed by IOitely as
the winner
pJjze from The
OhiO "ft'lle
islting Co. The
contest is co-sponsored by the
Meiss Soil and Water Conservation
Dimict and the l'1le Ohio Valley
Publishina Co.

1tpejfi

By The Associated Press'
The National Wealher Scrvtce
was predicting a cold snap for Ohio
tonight, With temperatures 20
degrees colder than they w,ere 24
hours earlier. Some snow flurries
were possible by mom mg. especially 10 the northern part of the
state.
Lows tomght were to be m the
mid-20s. Highs on Friday will be in
the low 30s.
Even colder temperatures are
expected next week after a relauvely mtld and dry weekend, forecast•
ers said.
The recond high temperature for
th1s date at the Columbus wealher
station was 65 degrees in 1946. The

record low was 5 below zero in
1979: '
Sunset tonight will be at 5:24
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
7:53 a,m.
Around tbe nation
Rain fell over Michigan, Ohio
and Tennessee early today, while a
cold front that dumped record
snowfall on Denver moved mto the
East
Drizzle dampened Alabama and
Georgia, and Pittsburgh received
showers. Fair skies prevailed over
much of the rest of the nation.
The storm !hat dumped nearly 2
feet of snow on parts of Colorado,
Nebraska and Wyoming on Tues-

day weakened Wednesday as it
headed Jowand the Great Lakes.
. Record rainf~ll for Wed~esday
mcluded 3 1/4 m~hcs at Gal~eston
and three inches at Port Arthur,
Texas.
Heavier rainfall during the six
hours end10g m the early evenmg
mcluded I 1/2 10ches at New
Orleans .and an mch at Mobtlc, Ala.
Ftve mches of snow feUat Internauon~ Fall ~. Mmn.
.
A miX of snow, tee and ram was
expected to sweep through lhc East
to~ay. Rat~ was forecast tn the
mtd-Atlanuc, Appalachtan s and
Southeast. Most of the West was
expected to be dry, and the forecast
for Flonda·was for clear skies.

Most of flood-sodden Texas
expected clear skies, but another
st?rm is expected tQ dump more
ram on Fnday and 10to !he week·
end.
Temperatures were forecast tn
the teens and 20s 10 M10neso_ta,
parts of the northern Pla~ns, Mame
and the Rockies; Ihe· JO~ m much of
the central Plains and the Great
Basm; the 40s m the Ohto R1ver
Valley, Oklahoma and north Texas;
the 50s 10 much of the South~!·
soulheastern Texas. and the Califor.·
ma coas~ !he 60s m the Soulhwest
dese11;5 and parts of Georgta, SoutQ,
Carolma and northern Flonda; the
70s 10 most of Flonda; and the 80s
m Miamt.
The htgh temperature for the
nation Wednesday was 80 at Hollywood,Fia.

Commission seeks more
federal money for Ohio River .coc'!!.~!~~!?a~~··

W VA

Showers T-storms Ram

The Dally Senlinei-Page-3

Cold sn.ap predicted for Ohio tonight

OHIO Weather

'

The Daily Sentmel

PATWHITEHEAD .
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

Page-2....:.The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 9, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Oh10 R1ver Valley Water Samtation Commission wants Sl million
a year from Washmgtoo to help
coordmate new programs to reduce
polluuon in !he 981-mtle river.
CommissiOn staffers satd they

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP)- There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Wednesday 's
Super Lotto grawmg with $8 million at stake so Saturday's Jackpot
w•ll he $12 m1llion , the Ohio Lottery said.
Here arc Wednesday night' s
winning numbers:
Super Lotto
2-11-22-28-32-45
(two, eleven, twenty-two, twenty-eight, Ihirty-two, forty-five)
Kicker
0-9-0-7-3·2
(zero, nine, zero, seven, three,
two)
Pick 3 Numbers
7-8-9
(seven, eight, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
1-5-6-5
(one, f1vc , SIX, five)
Cards
2 (two) of Hearts
7 (seven) of Clubs
10 (ten) ofDiamonds
7 (seven) of Spades

would brief the 27 members at a
,meetin g today on the agency' s
efforts to lobby Congress to proVIde the money as pan of a new
Clean Water Act bill. The commission represents eight Ohio Valley
states and the federal government
"The commission feels it's
proper and umely to seek attention
to the problems of the Oh10 Valley," satd Alan Vicory, the commiSSion's executive director.
Congress is debaung legislation
to extend the Clean Water Act.
Vtcory satd he is aware that olhcr
agencies are competing for polluuon-control money under !he law.
··we're very early in the process. It's hard to say how tt'U come
out," he said.
The commission wants the legtslation to establish a watershed
management program for !he Ohio
River and to authorize the commtsston to coordmatc efforts to find
and reduce ,POllution sources, Vicory satd. The !lVCr IS the dnnking
water source for more than 3 mil lion people.
Vicory said that previous federal
clean-water Jcgtslation has· gtven
recogmtion and funding to polluuon-control efforts in the Great
Lakes biJ$in and the Chesapeake
Bay.
The commisston , created 1n
1948, and other water pollution
control agencies have focused

-Meigs announcements __
Country music night
Country Music Ntght at the Lottridge Community Center wtll be
held Saturday from 6 p.m. to midnight. All bands are welcome and
refreshments w11l be available. The
public is invited to attend.
Group to perform
The· Spencers, of Shiloh, a

To close Jan. 20
Dtrector John R. Hall of the
Ohio Dcparunent of Liquor Control
announced today that all state
hquor stores, state hquor agencies
and departmental offices will be
closed on Monday, Jan . 20, in
observance of Martin Luther
Kmg's birthday, a legal holiday for
state employees.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- None.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Erncstme Williams , Mabel
Shields, Virginia Phalin, Wayne
Gtlhland, Ruby Durst, and
Elladcnc Watson.

gospel smging group, will perform
Jan. 19 at 2 p.m. at the Faith Bapti st Church in Mason, W.Va. The
Rcflecuons Trio will also perform.
The public is invited to anend.
Board to meet
The Racmc Board of Public
Affairs will meet Tuesday at 1:15 .
p.m. at the council chambers at Star
Mill Park.
DAY to meet
The Disabled American Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary will hold
an organizational meeting on Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut Avenue m Pomeroy.

Cases processed
A personal lDJury case has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Celia F. Mulholland, Wilkc svt lle, and others.
aga in st Melis sa M. Fife,
Langsv•llc, and ·olhers. No specific
monetary )Udgmcnt amount was
demanded m !he complaint.
The ctvil case of Richard Stewart, filed agamst Patrick Mihn,
Administrator of the Bureau of
Workers Compensation, has been
dism1ssed in !he court.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Jan . 8 - Omega
Bosworth, Heath Drummond, Carl
Hendricks, Joseph Huff, John
Leighty, Vtrgil McWhorter, Clyde
Mount Samuel Shawver, Melva.
Sheets, 'samuel Will, Roy Williams
and Mynlc Yates.
Births Jan. 8 - Mr. and Mrs.
John Beers, daughter, Vinton.

..

~.·.

Stocks

The commissiOn wants to dcv•se
a spcc1f1c pohcy for dealing wuh
se wer system overflows . It is
cxamtning what some states and
federal regulators are dom g to
attack tileproblem.

Dissolutions
An action for dissolutiOn has
been f1lcd 10 Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Todd Christopher Johnson, Pomeroy, and Gma
N1col Johnson, Middleport.
A dissolution action has been
granted in the court to Lawrence R.
Lee and Kimberly Rene Lee.

Am Elc Power ................ .33 3/4
Ashland Oil .... ...... .... ...... .30 3/8
AT&amp;T............................. .41 118
Bank One. ...... ...........49 5/8
Bob Evans .... ......... ........24 7/8
Charmmg Shop ..................25
City Holding ..................17 3/4
Federal Mogul .................. 16 7/8
GoodycarT&amp;R ..... ........ 54 7/8
Key Centunon .. ...........•...... I5 1/2
Lands' End .. ....................28 1/4
Limited Inc ................... 28 7/8
Mulumedm Inc . .......... ...... .25 1/4
Rax Restaurant .... .. .......... 1/4
Robbms&amp;Mycrs .... .... .... .38 1/4
Shoncy's Inc ..................... 23 1/2
Star Bank .... ........... .. .. ....... 26
Wendy lnt'l .................... I I 518
Worthmgton Ind . ... ..... ....... 22 3/4
S10ck reports are lhe 10:30 a.m.
quoles provided by Blunl, £/lis
and l.oewi of Gallipolis.

Our Post Holiday Sale

Continues
Storewide Savings
Save 20 to 50°/o
.

Last Week For
Our40%
SALEROOM

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

On on Roush had expired at the end
of 1991, and recommended that
both members be reappointed for
another term.
Also, Blakeslee's letter said that
the unexptred term of Eleanor
Thomas, who had retired from !he
boara at the time of her retirement
from lhe Council on Aging, had not
yet been filled, and Blakeslee provided potential appointments for
that unexpired term.
The appoinlments to that board
were tabled until next week's organizational meeting.
Present at the meeting w·ere
Commisstoners Manning K. Roush
and Richard E. Jones, and Clerk
Mary Hobstetter. Commtssioner
David Koblcntz was not present
due to a death in the family .

efforts for years on requiring Cities
and industries to improve removal
of pollutants from wastewater
before dischargmg into waterways.
The agcnctes now are turning
attention to other harder-to-pmpoint sources include chem1cal pollutant runoff from mines and farm land, and municipal sewer system
overflows when rain storms exceed
sewer carrying capacities.
Vtcory said !he runoff and overHaws account for about half of the
Ohto River's pollution . About 25
percent of the polluuon comes from
unidentified sources. The remainmg 25 percent is d1vided among
pollutant sptlls, wastewater treatment plants and natW111 sources of
pollution - such as iron deposits
-in geologic formations under the
river.
"If we arc to make broad general progress for improvements to
water quality m the OhiO R1vcr,
!hen we have to tum our attention
to agricultural runoff, mme runoff.
the urban runoff," Vtcory said.

fll're

:;,:·

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OHIO

SHOE PLACE
MASTEHJSA-DtSCOVIR

992·5627 :

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Publuthf!d every i Rernoon , Mondfl.)'

lhrough FridRy, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohia by the Ohio Valley Publuihtng
Company/Multifne~ia Inc , Pomeroy,
Ohio •5769. Ph. 992-2lli6. Second ela.RH ,

1988 DODGE SHADOW·

PQHt.aae peid fll Pomeroy, Oh1o.

Membor. The At&amp;socialed Press, Inland
011tly Preu Auociatlon and the Ohio
Niwapapu

A&amp;~ocifltlon ,

NAtional

• 4 door s.edan, black wih red interior.
Only'has 31,600 miles-· This is a lo9al carl
4 cyl., auto., front wheel drive, factory air, PS, PB·,
tilt wheel, cruise, AMIFM cassette.
You Must Drive This Car·
Still Has 38,000 Miles Warranty.

Advertia1n1 Rl!pnaenllltive, Dnmham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New YOrk, New YOrk t0017
I'OSTMAS'I'ER: Send addre01 ohanll"• lo
The D11ly Sentinel, 111 Court St. ,

l'omei'Oy, OHio 46769.

StiBSCRIPnON RATES

By Carrlor or Motor Ro.ate
One Week ...................,. ..............•. $1.60
One Month ..................................... .,. S6.96
One Yoar ...............~ ............... _..... 183.20

.PiiCED JUST FOR YOUI

StNGLECOPY

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PRICE I
Daily,...... ......... ,.... ,, .. ,, ..............

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SubiCriber'l not d&amp;anirw to PRY the can1·

er may remit lh advance direct to The
OallipoU• 011ily ~bune on 11 3.6 or\12
month baaii. Qmdlt witt be pen &lt;amor
...hweek. •
\
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No aabooripllono by mall pormltled In 1 ·•
aft111 where hoiiNI carril!r urvice 11
available.

Mall Ba..•riRilono
11 ~w.tit.~l&lt; .. l ................. !......t ....... h:l.84

' llll!ldlt.QIIIlto Oo~l\lll

M w..u .........................................k!l.16
52 Weeluo•••... ············-··,'·········· ... , .184.76

Oulal4o Oollla c.. nl7

)3 Woek1 ............................ .............. 123,40
26 Weeluo•.........•.•••...••••.....•.•.••.........kUO
112 Weeluo.•.........•.., ...•._... .................$88.4()

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The. Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, January 9, 1992
Page-4

q'

Carolina State 80-63, Virginia
upended No. 19 Wake Forest 58·
53, No. 22 North Carolina-Char·
lotte defeated Virginia Tech 62-53
and West Virginia held off No. 25
Massachusetts 76-75.
.
David Johnson scored 24 points
and made four of Syracuse's eight
3-pointers.
No. 1 Duke 83, Maryland 66
· Thomas Hill scored 25 points
and Duke pulled away to beat
Maryland.
The Blue Devils (9-0, 3-0
Atlantic Coast Conference) led by
13 points at halftime and scored the
first 10 points of the second half.
Maryland (7·5, 0·2) never got
closer than 14 points after that.
Christain Laettner had 13 points
for the Blue Devils, while Walt
Williams had 2S for Maryland.
No.4 Kansas 81, Wichita St. 51
Adonis Jordan had 20 points as
Kansaswoneasily.
The Jayhawks (11·0) used 'their
fast break for a 48-30 lead at half·
time and added the first 10 points
of the second half. •
Wichita State (2-7) made only
'·

19 of 53 shots.
Memphis State 89
No.l2 Missouri 78
Missouri's streak of 17 straight
regular-season victories ended
when Anfernee Hardaway scored
26 points.
Missouri (II -I) was within 69·
66 with 7:50 left. But in the battle
of teams named lhe Tigers, the
hosts scored the next nine points to
break 1t open.
Hardaway shot 8 of 15 from the
fteld and was 9 of II from the foul
line. Kelvin Allen added 14 points
for Memphis State (7·3). Anthony
Peeler scored 25 points for Mis·
sQuri.
No. 16 Alabama 65
No. 13 Arkansas 63
Latrell Sprewell made two key
defensive play s in the last seven
seconds and Alabama held on.
Alabama (13·1) led 64-63 when
ToddDay,wboledallscorerswith
21 points, made a layup that appar·
ently put Arkansas ahead with
seven seconds left. But Day was
called for charging into Sprewell
and the basket was disallowed.
After Sprewell made one foul
shot, he stole the ball from Lee
Mayberry at midcourt in the closing moments.
James Robinson scored 20
points for the Crimson Tide.
Arkansas (12-3) lost in its first SEC
road game since joining the league
thiS season.
No.l4 Georgia Tech 80
North Carolina State 63
Malcolm Mackey had 24 points
and 12 rebounds as Georgia Tech
won its first ACC road game of the
season.
Mackey made his first seven
shots and Onished 10-for-13. Tech

Scoreboard

Wednesday's scores

In the NBA ...

E. Michigan 61, W. Michigan 64
Ken l 73, Ball St. 54
~fi ami, Ohio 69, Toledo 39
Ohio Unl". 611, Bowlin&amp; Green 65

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantlc Division
Te11 m
W L Pet.
New York . .. . 20 I I
645
Bcwam ................. .21 12 .636
Phil~delplm.. ........ 15

GIJ

Saturday's games

18
.15 19
....... 13 20

.455
.441
.394

6
6.5
S

Washmgton... ...... .12 20
Orbndo ...... ... . .. 7 25

.375
219

8.5
115

Mi~mi .....

NewJe"cy

Dowling Green 11 Ccnl Michigm
E. MlchiRin at Ohio Unlv.
Kent It Miami, Ohio
Toledo I t W. Michigan

Ohio college
basketball scores

Cfntnl Division
S44
Chicago. .... . .. ... 21 5
Cltveland .. _. _____22; 9 . 710
4.5
MJ.lw•ukoe ....... ... .17 14
548 , 95
531
10
Athnti .
..17 15
529
10
Dcuoit..
I&amp; 16
Indiana ............. !) 21 382
15
Charlotte .............. 9 24 .TT3 185

Mld·Amerlcan Conference
Kent73, DaU St. 54
Miami, Ohio 69, Tol edo 39
Ohio U. 68, Bowllna Cretn '5

Ohio University, Miami
among MAC winners

Mid-Continent Conference
Wri ghl St 72, E. lllinoa65

WESTERN CO\'FERENCE
Tra m
Utah ..... ..
San Antorui"l
!iOU!IOfl

Denver
Dallu ...
M.mne.solil

.... 22 13
.. \8 14
.. ..... 11 16
... 13 19
...12 20
. .5 26

GD

629
563
515
406
375
16 1

Pacific Di~is l on
Golden St.ate ....... 21 8
Portl"'d ..... .. .. . ... lt 11
PhDa\~ ....... . ..20 13
LA . IAers. .
19 14
s~ttJe ..
. .. 17 lS
LA Oippen .......18 17
Smamenw .............. 9 23

Ohio Conference
n ,John c..rroU 6 1

c. ~tll

Midwest IMvlslan
W l
Pet.

Ht1delbezg 61 . Oh1o Nonhem 54
Hiram 84, Moont Union 72
Muskin~um 69, Blldwlti·WaUace 45
Ouctbcin 94, Mlrict&amp;4175

l5
4

75

Allegheny 78, Kenyon 67
Ohio We~leyan 91, Cue Won.em 75
W1nenberg 72, Dmilon 46
Wooster 72, Oberlin 59

124

656

15
3

.606
576
.531
514
281

Non-conference

4

Cincinnati 62, Tcnncascc: 51
Dayton 60, Muqueue 57
Eck.CJd 71. Fmdh y 72

S5
6
135

Major college
basketball scores

Wednesday's scores
RosUln 99, New Yor.k 95
New Jersc)" \03, Mll11l~Oll 97
Philadelphia 114, Hoonon 104
Chicago 108, Miami I06
Delroitll4, Sacnmento 95
L.A. Oippen l04,lndiana 102
San Antonio 103, L. A. Lakc:n; 87
Milwa ukee 99, Ut ah 98
Phocru.t !35. Denver 11 4
Orlando 104, Seau.lc 103

East
Fairfield 7J . Bucknell 70
Hofstra 80, Col umbia 66
Maine 85, Rider 12
PiuaburJh K3, Syrteuie 74
Portland 60, Danmnuth 54
Princeton 68, lona 51
Rhode b land 93, St. Oora vcntun.: G4
Villanova 83, Boston College 74
Wu t VIrginia " · Massarhu sclb 75
Yale 73, Brooklyn Col. 65, OT

Ton ig ht's game s
Cleveland al WaJb.lnJion , 7:30 p.m.
Sacumento 11 Chulouc, 7:30p.m
Dallu 11Atlan\.1 , 7:30p.m.

South

Friday's games

Alabama 65, Arkansas 63
Charleston Southern 60, N C •
Asheville 53
Cincinnati 62, Tcnne&amp;Scc SI
Comal Carolin1 79, Davubon 62
Duke 83, Muyland 66
E Kentucky &amp;6, Morehead St. 63
Aorid1 53, South Carolina 52
Gcorae Muon 89, Towson St. 75
Georgia Tech 80, N. Carolina St. 63
llmca Madison 82, Penn St. 69 , OT
LSU 17, Auburn 70
McmphiJ St. 89, Miuowi 78
Miuinipp1 86, SE LOI.Iisian1 82
N. Carolina A&amp;T 82, Coppin S1. 80
N.C Om 1otte 62, Virgin ia Tech 53
N C .Qrcc:ruboro 65, W. Carolina 55
New Orleans 76, Cent. Aonda 60
Richmond 76, VMI 59
StctJon lt2, Dany 79
Vanderl&gt;Ut 83, Austin Peay 66
VUlinia 51, WU.e Forut 5:l
W. Kentucky I I, RadfGtd 78

Minnelou at Boston, 7.30 p.m.
M.ilwau.kee 11 New JeRe )', IJO p m.
L A. Clippera at Philadclph.11, 7 30
p.m.
HouslOn 11 Mj anu, 7:30p.m.
Portland II Owo1L, 8 p m
Utah at Chica go, 8:30 p.m.
Seanle at Dallaa. 8:30p.m.
"Orlando at PhocnU., 9 30 p.m.
Denver at L A. Laken, 10:30 p.m.
San Antoruo 11 Golden Su. te , 10:30

p.m.

In the NHL. ..
WALES CONFERENCE
Palrl'k Dlv li lon

.,

Tea m

W L T PU. GFGA

N.Y. Rangers .....
Wuhinaton ..... :.
Pitybu.rgh ..........
New Ieney ......
N.Y Islanders ...
Pltiladclphli ......

T1 16
26 14
23 IS
20 14
14 20
12 19

1
3
4
6
6
8

A.4f.ms DlwlsiiHI
-Monuul ...... :.... 2B 14 2
8Cl'LOO ......... ..... 18 18 5
Buffalo............. 14 20 7
Hanford .:.....
15 18 S
Quoboo ...... ..... II lS 5

55 167145

55 187144
50 191 !56
46152 11 7
34 150167
321 12 136
51
41
3S
3S

Mldwesl
Alcom SL. 74, NE Dlinois 67
Duller 91 , Detroitl2
110, M.on;oeue 57
E. Mich iaan 68, W. Michi &amp;-n 64
Ulinoil 74, Purdue 72, OT
Kansu 81, Wichita SL 51
Kent 73, Ball St. 54
Miami, Oh1o (J} , Toledo 39
Ohio U. ,8, Rowllna Crcen 65
Wisconsin 69, Northwe~tcm 67
Wriaht S1. 72, E. Winoil 65

o,,..,

139 95
14 11 46
132 147
121134

Z1 129 164

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
SLl..ou.il ....... ... :
cruu3a............
Mlnn&lt;oau ..........
, TotQnto ......... ....

l916
11 11
11 18
II T1

54 166 132
7 45147 140
~ 43 147 138
3 39 121 134
5 77 112 161

SmylhoDI.Uion
Vtn(:(NVct ......... 2312 7
Winnipeg .......... II II 8
C1 1pry .............. 1118 5
Lot: An gdcl ....... 1716 7
Edmonton .......... 16 21 6
SanJOIC ......... :... 9 31 3

Transactions
Baseball

t\mulcan u.gue
CAUFORNI" ANG ELS- A&amp;""d

10

531 49 123
44 134131
41 "1l7143
41 149153
31 147164
21 105187

lour-year con1rtc' and One Johni on,

pitcher. oo • mc-ycar c~tract.

ot!C·)'tlt COI\\tlct,

with J1mie Moyer, pii.Cher, on 1 mi·
nor-leaaue cantttct.
COLORADO ROCIUES - N1mcd
Rick Matthew• pit.china eoa th (or their
roolr.ic lctpe lam.
·

tclllll

MontrW 3, Boston 2

SL Lo\liJ 5, N.Y. Ranger&amp; 3
Winnipe&amp; S, Edrnoruon 2

C•I&amp;UY 10, San IOH 3 '

HOUSTON ASTROS - Aamd

Tonight's eames

• minor-loa&amp;ue cSntracc,
PHILADELPHIA PH!LL!ES Aarced to turn• whb Rick Schu, lhird

bu anan, on 1 minor ~aue ccrnnct. A;quired O.rrin Oupin. pitcher, fi"QI'n ·the
N;w York Yanktel for 1 player to bo·
l\lmtod later.
SAN DIEOO PADIUlS -A..... "'
tcnns whh Ti.m ,ftuftJ., infielder, on •

.

T0tot1tc tl0tiu.Jo.l:35 p.m.

Friday's aames

·

~ " Blll!.ID, 7:3l P"'·
Los Anaclu at 'ruhlnaton , 7:3S

p.m.CIUCOIOOI\I'Irnipolo
·
· ll'
: l p.m.

;

two-yc~r

.'

c... - ................,.:.. o o
lotl-......... _......&lt;..:..0 I

~·~ ar.::::: :;::::::::::::: ~
tlowliot~

CCiftliiCI.

PUBLIC .NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given that on Saturday, January 1~, 1m,
It 10:00 A.m., 1 public Nit wlll.bt held at105 Union Avenue,

,

SAN FRANCISCO OtANTS AarMd 10 Lltmll wdh Mite Felder, out·

Pomeroy, Ohio, to Nil for cash the·following collateral:

(IClid•, Oft I OM-yilt CGIW'ICL

Piouburi)l "CoiJU)'. 9:3l p.m.

MAC standings

10

' tcmu whh Rt11cl Ramire&amp;, sho11110p, on

Qucbcc: ltBoatm, 'fl5 p.m.
Minne&amp;OII 11Detroit. 7:35 p.m.
Hutfotd at N.Y. IIlandem, 7:35 p.m.
"St. Louis n New Ieney, 7;3' p.m.
Lo• Anacle• st Philldclphta , ~: lS

T•
'
WL
ONt Uaf•,- - - -.- 1 . t
- . Clllo ..................l 0
E. ..............:.............! 0
1 ( &amp; -............... --1 0

•

CHICAGO CUDS - Aarecd to

B..truo 4,Quebecl

t' c1111.

Lca&amp;u~

ATLANTA DRAVES - A&amp;Ned to
tcrma with S1eve lrona, i.nticld c:r, on 1

Wednesday's scores

p.m.

temu: Wllh 8J)'IR Huv ~, pitcher, on I

Nallonal

Football
N1Uoool FIOIIIIQ

,

lAo&amp;••

WL
' 3
~ ~
~ 1
6 4
9 3

l !~
............o I · 2 1

Ouook """...
.
SIIATIU SBAJIA WIC5 - N..,...
Lonyx-.oaft'.a.............. .

' Hockey

the rlaht to bid et th11 Nit, and til wllhdi'IIW the
ab o¥eooUat~ril prtor to Nit. , ·
·
.
. . . ,
Further, thl ibo:ve oollatetal will be sold In the condition It
Ia_In with ~ ettprHIId or Implied warrentlta given.
.

.

TORONTO liAIU UAI'II- .R..

caUed x.ri. Me"'·"=«&lt;, fort!Pinl,from

St. lottn•• of die

ta,...

A•lri••• Hoc:lltJ

1917. 'HONDA CIVIC

fiiiiWI

'

l'loU_II._J Lupo

.

4 DR. ·sSPIID, Air, 11111GIC4537Hl036671
'f!le Fannin Bank • Savings Compuy, Pomeroy, Ohio,

LOS ANOELBIIIAMS - Nomo.t ·

~u

'

• For ••liformatlon collact S~ott Sh1111k at
.
992·3293.

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JAM SESSION- Georgia Tech's Malcolm Mackel (left) goes
up for the dunk over Nortb Carolina Stale's Anthony Robin.son
during the first half or Wednesday night's ACC game at Rale•gh,
N.C., which the No. 14 Yellow Jackets won 80·63. (AP)

Sports briefs
Tennis
SYDNEY , Australia (AP) ~
Top-seeded Gabriela Sabatini of
Argentina easily routed Manon
Bollegmf of the Netherlands 6·0, 6·
I in the second round of the New
South Wales Open.
In men 's sc;cond-round matches,

1988 PONTIAC
Thla car Is extra extra 'harp! Equipped with tilt, cruise, cassette,
automatic V-6 engine.

$6 895

SALE PRICED

SMITH·NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992·2174
500 East Main Pomeroy, .Ohio
r--------_;____ ____ ______
LEGAL NOTICE

.

'

The Public Utilities Commission of Ottio has scheduled local public hearings in
Case No . 91-418-EL·AIR, In the Matter of !he Application of Columbus
Southern Power Company for Authorily Io Amend Its Filed Tariffs to Increase
!he Rates and Charges for Eleclric Service. The hearings are scheduled for the
purpose of providing an opportunily to interesled members of the public 10 ·
teslify in this proceeding. The local hearings will be held on Thursday, January
16, 1992, at 1:30 p.m .. at lite ·offices of the Commission. Hearing Room 11-A, :
180 East Broad Street. Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573, also on Thursday,
January 16, 1992, at 6:00p.m., al the City Hall Council Chambers, 789 High
Slreet, Worthington, Ohio .43085, and on Tuesday, February 4, 1!i92, at6:00
p.m., at City Hall Council. Chambers, 8 East Washington Street, Alhens, Ohio
45701.

ratemaldng purposes:
e)

·.

•

· .·
'

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the appropriate revenue distribution' among lhe various customer classes; ··
'

g)

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~·/

!he level of the wortdng capital componenl of the con1»ny's rate base; .•_

.
the lllatlilenl of 8XJ111111U arid lost revenues ·a~ted with denilnd side
.

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h)

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management'ICtivitieS I~;

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Whether any rate Increase authorized In this case shoo~ be phased-in. ·•
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Fullhtr lnlonnallori may tie oblllntd by conllcllng the Public Utillles
.~
lion of Ohio, 1110
Eut• Brold Sllltt, l;otumbus, Ohio ~. . ·
.
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By The Associated Press
Count the ways that the Orlando
Magic snapped a 17-game losing
streak.
- Missing their leading scorer
and No. I point guard and having
only eight players in uniform
because of injuries, the Magic got a
career-high 35 points from Sam
Vincent and 30 from Catledge in
Wednesday night's 104-103 victo·
ry at Seattle.
- Ranked 24th in the NBA in
free-throw shooting, Orlando went
32-for-33 from the line, including
17-for-18 by Vincent
- Ranked 25th in rebounding,
the Magic fought the SuperSonics,
the top rebounding team, to a 37-37
draw on the boards.
- Trailing 101-94, Orlando
outscored Seattle 10-2 in the last
3: 02, with Vincent scoring six
points on free throws and Nick
Anderson hitting two baskets to
finish with 22 points.
The Magic's losing streak
stopped three losses short of the
NBA single-season record of 20 by
the 1973 Philadelphia 76ers.
"Nobody else in this building
thought we could win but us,"
Anderson said.
Vincent hit six free throws and
Anderson scored four points in a
10-2 run in the final 3:02, overcoming a 101-94 deficit.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Boston 99, New York 95; New Jersey 103, Minnesota 97; Philadel·
phia 114, Houston 104; Chtcago
108. Miami 106; Detroit 114,
Sacramento 95; the Los Angeles
Clippers 104, Indiana 102; San
Antonio 103, the Los Angeles Lak·
ers 67; Milwaukee 99, Utah 98;
and Phoenix 135, Denver 114.
Benoit Benjamin led the So nics
with 24 points and Ricky Pierce
had 20.
Celtics 99, Knicks 95
Boston won its 23rd consecutive
regular-season liome game against
New York behind Reggie Lewis'
33 poi/Its.
.
Patrick Ewing scored 28 pomts
for the Knicks.
The Knicks hit their first nine
shots and led by as many as 15
points in the first half. But they
were 4-for-18 and were outscored
25·13 in the fourth quarter.
76ers 114, Rockets 104
Jeff Ruland's return after a five·
year retirement gave Philadelphia a
lift at home against Houston.
After knee surgery last summer,
he returned for the first time
against the Rockets and scored nine
points, playing short spurts in each
quarter.
Hersey Hawkins scored 24
points for the 76crs.
Hakeem Olajuwon scored 28
points feMhe Rockets.
·')

Bulls 108, Heat 106
Michael Jordan scored 40 points
and escaped injury despite a fright·
ening out-of-bounds tumble.
Chasing a loose ball with four
minutes left, Jordan went flying
over a row of cheerleaders seated
under the Bulls' basket He landed
awkwardly and was helped off the
court, but returned' to the game
before play resumed.
Scottie Pippen scored 24 points
for C~icago . Glen Rice had 33
points for Miami.
Bucks 99, Jazz 98
. AI Milwaukee, Moses Malone
scored 22 points and Dale Eltis hit
the go-ahead layup with 28 seconds
left.
Ellis' layup broke a 93-93 tie,
and Alvin Robertson and Jay
Humphries hit two free throws
each in the fmal 10 seconds to preserve the lead.
Karl Malone scored 28 points
for Utah.
Suns 135, Nuggets 114
Jeff Hornacek scored 24 points
and Tom Chambers and Kevin
Johnson had 14 each in the first
quarter as Phoenix rolled to a 37-18
lead.
Chambers finished with 23
points and Johnson 22 for the Suns.
Dikembe Mutombo scored 24
points for the Nuggets.
Spurs 103, Lakers 87
David Robinson had 22 points,
II rebounds and seven blocked
shots.
The Spurs used an 8-2 thi·rd·
quarter run to tum a 63-55 lead into
a 14-point advantage with 3:04 left
in the period.
Sedale Threatt scored 17 points
for Los Angeles.
Pistons 114, Kings 95
Orlando Woolridge scored 23
P.Dints on 9-for-11 shooting and
Dennis Rodman had 23 rebounds.
Joe Dumars scored 22 points for
Detroit
Clippers 104, Pacers 1~2
Ron Harper's basketw1th 5.4
secpnds left gave Los Angeles the
victory.
A 16-3 spun gave Indiana a 91·
79 lead with eight minutes remain·
ing, but the Clippers tied the game
95-95 on a three-point play by
James Edwards, who scored 10 of
his 12 points in the fmal quarter,
Danny Manning led the.Pippers
with 22 points.
Nets 103, Timbenvolves 97
Drazen Petrovic and Sam Bowie
scored 24 points each.
The Nets led 85-71 early in the
fourth quarter before the Timber·
wolves used an 11·1 spurt to get
within five with 6:41 remaining.
But Minnesota didn't get closer
than that until two free throws by
Scott Brooks made it 101 -97 with
5.9 seconds to play.

Knox hired ... (Continued from Page 4)
able to win five division till~ in a have made the playoffs - . Knox
row (now) and I would take the has yet to coach a team to the
kind .of criticism I was taking," Super Bowl.
Knox said. "They used to call me
"That's the ultimate goal and
Ground Chuck. Then it was Air certainly it bothers me," Knox
Knox,
said. "I waont 10 play in that game
• 'It depends upon the kind of and win it.''
personnel we have. We'll do what
Robinson, 56, coached the Rams
the talent can do best."
for nine seasons. He resigned on
As the successor to John Robin· Dec. 18- four days before the
son Knox became the 14th head season ended.
coach in Rams history. He is the
sixth-ivinningest coach in NFL his·
tory with a 171-114· 1 record.
Skiing
Knox who inherits a team that
BIWABIK,
Minn. (AP) ~ John
went 8-24
last two years, will
Aalberg,
a
native
of Norway who
have a say-so as far as his talent is
concerned. That's because he was hopes to receive his U.S. citizen·
given additional duties as a clu.b ship Jan. 23 in order to compete as
vice president, and as part of hts an American in the-Oiymp•cs, won
new Job he will be respoqStble for the tO-kilometer classical-style
ll!e college draft and player person· race in 30 minutes and 23.8 see·
onds.' Nancy 'Fiddler captured, the
nel. '
Knox said he agreed to a four· 13th national title of her career and
year contract with .the Rams. Terms second of the championships, win·
weren't announced, but ~ohn Shaw, ning the women's five-kilometer ·
the ttam's executive via: pratdent. 1:1assicicai·Style raCe in 16:50.8.
.
said Knox would' be paid a~
FIIW'e
skadna
comparable to what '.he ma4e 10
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Seattle. Knox reportedly ~med
Der~nding
champl~s Natasha
$925,000 in his fmal ~ Wtth the
Kuehiki
and
San(j.easily won
Seallawks.
.
Starting in 197!, Knox spent t~e ·original program portion of
ftve IWOIII u lhe bea!l coach of pairs competition in the U.S.
the Buffalo Billl before mol'ing to Champiopships. Jcnni Meno and
Scott Wendland finished second
Seallio in 198~. ·
AJ succcssfW as his leJlllS have an4 Calla Urbanski and Rocky
been over diC )'C811- 11 or the 19 Maival were thitd.

Sports briefs

ihe

lhe determination olllte appropriate rate of return to be allowed;

0

(

··
·,

d, the determination of lhe appropriate level of generating capacity for ·

',j }

I

third-seeded Guy Forget of France
defeated Javier Sanchez of Spain 62, 6-4, Christian Bergstrom of
Sweden upset fourth-seeded Petr
Korda of Czechoslpvakia 6-3, 2-6,
6· I and eighth-seeded David
Wheaton of the United States beat
Olivier Delaitre of France 64, 6·3.

~

The Dally SenUnei-Page,--5

night in a battle of the association's ward Roy Le.e Bailey showed in the
top two teams.
ftrst six games, in which he turned
The Tornadoes and the Oaks in as many double-digit scoring
have one thing in common, an·d efforts. But tl\at streak ended when
that is that they lost their last he was held to nine in the Torna·
games, both against non-league does' 61·50 loss at home to Galtia
opponents. But Southern should Academy.
keep in mind that the trend in its
While the south Jackson squad's
games against the Hill is toward a eyes will be on senior guard Jere·
tougher struggl~ for victory, as the my Roush (15 .1 pts./game) and
scores from the lilst two years (72- Bailey (14.1 ptsJgame), they .had
60 and 70.67 victories in the 1990· better not forget about senior guard
91 season, compared with the 95· Scott Lisle, who scored a personal
67 and 86-49 wins in the 1989-90 season-high II points against the
season) show,
, Blue Devils, or junior guard
Racine will need more of the "' Michael Evans, who has demon·
kind of game that senior center/for· strated a capability of scoring in
double figures.

Vincent, Catledge
P.ropel Orlando to
104-.103 victory
over Seattle

the mistakes I made, recognized
By JOHN ~ADEL
them.''
AP Sports Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
Knox, 59, resigned as the Seat·
- Chuck Knox, who took his rust tic Seahawks' coach on Dec. 27.
NFL head coaching job with the The Seahawks were 7-9 this season
Los Angeles Rams 19 years ago, is and 80-63 during Knox's nine
back wbere he started in what he ,years as coach.
foresees as his last head coaching
Knox ' s appointment was By its applica~on. Columbus Soulhem Power Company seeks a rate increase
joj&gt;.
announced by Rams owner and which would generate approximately $202.5 million in additional revenue. This
Knox returned to the Rams on president Georgia Frontiere, whose represents an increase of 28.4 percent over current revenues. The major
Wednesday, 14 YCii!S after the par- late husband, Carroll Rosenbloom, . issues ·in the case are:
ties went their separate ways.
let Knox go after the 1977 season
"I would certainly hope so," - despite the fact the Rams had
Knox said with a smile when asked won five NFC West championships a) the reasonableness of ,!he company's decision Io participale in !he con·
at a 'news conference if this would in as many years.
version of lite Zimmer generating s~tion from a nuclear untt to a coal·
.
be his final position in the NFL.
At the lime, Rosenbloom com·
fired unit;
"Age is just a nuinber. I feel just plained that the Rams' offCIIse was
about like I felt 19 years ago.
tOo dull.
b, the appropriate valuation of the Zimmer plani:
''I've grown as a football coach.
"I would hope we would be
'
I like to think I've profited from
(See KNOX on Page 5)
c, the proper level ol Zimmer operation and mainlenance expense;

Telu T~X:h 10, Sowhcrn Mcth. 69

W L T Pta. CFGA

Oelmlt ............... lS 12 4

with 4:16 to play, then survived a
20-10 run by the Falcons and
clinched the victory with two free
throws by Dan Alai with 6ight seconds to play.
Lewis Geter led Ohio with 20
points. Michael Huger scored a
season-high 21 for the Falcons (2·
7) .
"W e didn't have the killer
instinct when we got the big lead in
the second half. I think we were
feeling too good about ourselves
and that allowed Bowling Green to
get back in the game," said Ohio
head coach Larry Hunter. " We feel
fortunate to come out of here with
a win."
E. Michigan 68, W. Michigan 64
Kory Hallas scored 22 points
and was 6-for-6 from the free throw line for the Eagles (5· 7).
Tbe Broncos (9·3) trailed by 17
points twice in the early pan of the
second half, but came back to close
the gap to 64·60 with 34 seconds to
play. Eastern Michigan then got
two free throws from Kahlil Felder
and a basket from Chris Pipkin to
~tO up 68-61 with 12 seconds left
Jim Havrilla with 14 points was
the only Western Michigan player
in double ligures.
·
Kent St. 73, Ball St. 54
John Wil son led the Gold en
Flashes (4· 7) with 18 points, his
best effort as a college player.
David Hall put in 14 for the Cardi·
nals(9·3).
Kent, which led 45 -39 with
14:56 to play, went on a 13-2 run
to lead 58-41 with 6:59 left as it
broke a fbur -game losing streak.
Ball State was 6 for 27 from the
floor for 22 percent in the second
half.

L.A. Rams make Knox head coach

Southwest

Norrla: DI,Uion

Tum

By TIM PUET
Associated Press Writer
It's been 30 years since Toledo
had the kind of performance it put
on against Miami of Ohio. The
Rockets' fan s probably llfe hoping
they won't see anything like it for
at least another three decades.
Toledo was held under 40 points
for the fust time since the 1961 -62
season in losing 69-39 to the Redskins as Mid-American Conference
play opened Wednesday. Ohio
University edged Bowling Green .
68-65, Eastern Michig'an got by
Western Michigan 68-64 and Kent
defeated Ball State 73-54 in other
MAC games.
Miami (Ohio) 69, Toledo 39
The 39 points were the fewest
the Rockets (3·6 overall) have
scored since Savage Hall opened in
1976. More than halfToledo's out·
put came from J.C. Harris, who had
20. The Rockets were 17 for 45
from the floor for a 38 percent
shooting mark.
Jamie Mercurio's 14 points led
Miami (8·3).
"I think our kids panicked in
the second half 10 Miami's defensive pressure," first-year Toledo
head coach Larry Gipso~ said of
his conference debut. "It's very
frustrating for players to get beaten
like that and hopefully, this will be
the only loss by that margin.the rest
of the year,
Miami's Joby Wright said,
" Toledo played us tough in the
first half. But in the second half,
we made adjustinents and broke the
game open .'' Miami outscored
Toledo 39-19 in the final 20 min,
utes.
Ohio Univ. 68, BGSU 65
The Bobcats (9·3) led 56 -45

Norlh Coast Conference

85
15

(12-2) forced II turnovers in the
first half and led 42-28 at the break.
Tom Gugliotta scored 21 points
for Nonh Carolina State (6-5).
Virginia 58, No. 19 Wake Forest
53
j
.
Bryant Stith scored 124 pomts,
including seven of Virginia's last
nine.
Wake Forest (8-2, 1·1 ACC)
trailed by 12 at halftime ~fore ral·
lying- for a 45-43 lead w1th 10:32
left. But Virginia (6·5 , 2-1) went
ahead 49-47 and Stith made sure it
stayed that way.
Rodney Rogers scored 20 points
1 for the Demon Deacons.
No. 22 UNC·Charlolle 62
Virginia Tech 53
Henry Williams scored 22
points and North Carolina-Charlotte rallied to win for the second
time in three days.
Williams made two 3-pointers
as the 49ers overcame a 45 ·44
deficit in the final nine minutes.
UNCC (10.1) heat North Carolina-Wilmington in overtime Mon·
day night. The 49ers led 26-24 at
halftime this time and again had
trouble breaking away. John Rivers
scored 13 points for visiting Vir·
ginia Tech (5·6).
West Virginia 76
No. 25Massachuselts 75
West Virginia held off a last·
minute mlly.
The Minutemen trailed 76· 70
with 21 seconds left. Tony Barbee's 3-pointer with two seconds
remaining left Massachusetts just
short.
Pervires Greene scored 15
points for the Mountaineers (7-5, I·
1 Atlantic 10). Harper Williams
had 23 points for Massachusetts
(11 ·3, 0-2).

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oak Hillto.entertainSouthern in Friday's SVAc·headliner
By G. SPENCER OSBORN!&lt;:
OVP Staff Writer
Will the SV AC, well into bas·
ketball action after its return from
the holiday layoff, be able to stand
against the rest of the world when
tourney Lime comes late next
month?
Probably not, unless the conference does something PDQ to
improve-its 4-18 record in non·
league c.ontests. But that's a con·
cern to be tabled until Saturday
night. Friday night's business is
more pressing.
Soulhern, the conference front·
runner, has an appointment at Oak
Hill with Doug Hale's Oaks Friday

·Pitt downs Syracuse; Duke tops Maryland
By Tile Associated Press
For four straight seasons, Syra·
cuse has started out with at least 10
sua1g ht vic10ries. And for the sec·
on d time, the streak has been
stopped by Pittsburgh.
Sean Miller scored all II of his
points in the last4:08 and the Panthers stung the No. 20 Orangemen
83-74 Wednesday night.
Syracuse ( 10-1 , 2-1 Big East)
led by seven po10ts 10 the second
half before Pitt (10·4, 2·0) came
back to win at home. Darren Mom·
ingsiar added 21 points for the Panthers.
.
"Pitt is very strong inside with
steady leadership,'! Syracuse head
coach Jim Boeheim said.
.
Pitt al so got In the way 10 the
19R8-89 season , when 1t saddled
Syracuse with its first loss after 13
straight victories.
In other games, No. I Duke beat
Maryland 83-66, No. 4 Kansas
do wn ed Woc hi ta State 81 -51 •
Memphis State upset No. 12 MISso uri 89-78, No. 16 Alabama
defeated N:o. 13 Arkansas 65-63.
No. 14 Georg1a Tech beat North

Jhur_sday, J,anuary 9, 1992

What has happened to Bill Pot· instrumental. part in keeping Oak for the Highlanders of shooting
·
ter, one of the Hill's scoring Hill in the hunt for the title, just as guard Adam Simpson.
Simpson,
a
5-foot-8
senior
machines, this season? God only Chris Simpson has been.
knows, but since coming off the
Simpson, a 6-foot-8 junior, is whose head-down , nose-to-the·
disabled list in time for the Oaks' averaging 12 points per contest and grindstone approach to the-game
second gall!e against North Gallia could have a relatively easy time masks his ability to shoot lbrecs,
- a contest in which he scored 20 keeping his average afloat unless has half of Southwestern's 20 baS·
points in a 69-66 overtime loss, his forwards Russell Singleton (6-3, kets from beyond the arc. McCany
points· per-game average, hurt by jr.) andoMichael Russell (6-S, sr.), and junior forward Jamie Morse
single-digit efforts against Symmes who average seven and 4.4 points (11.8 pts./game), another scoring
Valley and South Webster (eight per game, respectively, pump up threat, have five each.
.In Saturday night 's action ,
each) and a scoreless contest their Offense and help Bailey shut
Kyger
Creek will head to Iron10n 10
against Eastern, has plummeted to ·down Simpson. If the Tornadoes
lake
on
St. Joe, while Southwestern
I 1. But Hale's charges need not ... can do those two things, that will
will
host
Hannan \W. Va}
worry. Junior point,guard Benji force the Oaks to rely on Lewis,
!&lt;:astern
vs. Hannan Trace
Lewis, who is ave~aging 19.2 Potter and junior Mike Turner (9.7
The
controversy-racked
Eastern
points per game, has been an pts./game), another contributor to
·
· the Oak Hill cause, to get it done Eagles need a win against Hannan
Trace to reach the .500 mark. Han·
from outside. .
·
Sfmmes Valley vs. N. Gallia · nan Trace needs a win to keep from
I all goes accordingto the· being mired deeper in the second
script, this contest should provide division.
The Eagles, winners of two of
some fireworks similar 10 the ones
their
last three games, must find a
fired four seasons ago when Nonh
way
to
take the Joe us away from
Gallia, which had Keith ~urnette,
the
controversy
surrounding their
Rusty Denney and Greg Glassburn,
coaching
situation
and beat a Wild·
et. al., and Symmes Valley, which
eat
squad
hungry
for
a win after the
had Paul Hayes, Danny Justice and
Dallas Tibbs, among others, played Iauer' s 60-41 loss in the Bluegrass
a pair of games that wCIIt down to · State Tuesday night to Russell .
Senior guard Tim Bissell (19.3
the wire.
pts./game)
has scored at least IS
This generation of Pirates ,
points
in
each
of the Eagles' last
which was tQrpedOed on the Ohio
five
games,
and
senior forward Jeff
when Chesapeake beat North 74-39
Durst
(16.6
pts./game)
has burned
Tuesday night, needs to break the
the
nets
for
double
figures
in the
win-lose cycle that has been played
last
three
games.
That's
expected
three times since losing its ftrsttwo
of them. Now what the Eagles need
games.
True, Pirate center Kevin Hunt, is a continuation of the double-digit
who has never been held 10 single offense senior forward/guard Terry ·
digits in any of the Bucs' eight McGuire has provided in the last
games this season , had 14 points two game s (I 0 points and II
rebounds in Eastern's 80-71 win
against the Panthers to ke~ p his over
Waterford last Saturday, 13
14.6 points-per-game average relatively constant. But if North Gallia points in a 70-65 loss to Oak Hill
the night before) and an encore
expects to beat Symmes Valley, the from
junior guard Chad Savoy (14
sailors must have improved efforts
points
vs. Waterford).
from junior guard Charles Peck,
The
Wildcats need to give
who now averages 15 points per
senior
forward
Chad Swain, who
game after having a four -point
night against 'peake, and junior leads the team with a 16.4 points·
forward Rob canady, whose score· per-game average, more offensive
less games against Unioto and help. In the games that the 6-foot-2
Southern and his four-point effort Swain has scored in double figures
Tuesday night have contributed to (Trace's last six), the Wildcats
his 6.I points-per·game average. · have had two other players besides
The Vikings, 82-31 victors at Swain hit the doubles only twice.
BONK! - As Detroit center Bill Laimbeer {background) looks home against Ohio Valley Chris· The Guyan squad won both games.
If furthcr proof is needed of the
on, Sacramento's Lionel Simmons (22) bounces the ball off the head
tian Tuesday night, had no com ·
of Piston forward Dennis Rodman (10) during the rirst half of plaints about center Chris Blake. Wildcats' need for more offense,
Wednesday night's NBA contest at Auburn Hills, Mich., which the The 6-foot-3 senior sank a game· senior forward Jimmy Brace -the
Pistons won 114-95. Rodman pulled down 23 rebounds in the game.
high 26 points in the affair, and team's second-leading scorer(AP)
joined fellow vet Andy Lester ( 12 has 68 points and averages 9.7 per
points) as major stockholders in contest. The next three scorers Valley's win. Against these two, Dave Poling, Shawn Cox and Brian
the host Pirates will probably need Unroe - have between 50 and 55
to usc the 1·2·2 zone that in the points on the year.
past has proved effective against
, front-liners.
SVAC cage standings
But North also needs to keep its
put one or-two ~uys on him. We're eyes on Jeremy Fuller (9.7
ByTIMPUET
(Overall)
just
out of gas.'
Associated Press Writer
pts'jgame) and Rick Dillon (someTeam
W L PF PA
Elsewhere in Ohio college bas· where between 5.8 and 8.7S
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins
Oak
Hill
.............
.4 2 393 366
feared the Bearcats would be worn ketball Wednesday, Mid-American pts./game, d'epending on if he
Southcm
.............
.4
3 464 413
out by the time they took the court Conference play opened with Kent played four or six games, respec·
Eastern
....
...........
.3
4 460 513
at Tennessee, but apparently they defeating Ball State 73-54, Miami tively), who have established them- North Gallia .. :..... 3 5 428 530
of Ohio outscoring Toledo 69-39 selves as the Norsemen's principal
found their second wind.
Symmes Valley ... 2 4 335 364
Cincinnati (10-2), playing its and Ohio University edging Bowl- three-point threats. They have com·
Hannan Troce ...... 2 5 379 491 ' :
third game in five days, snap~ ~ ing Green 68-65.
bined for 10 of Valley's 12 treys Kyger Creek ........ ! 4 258 275
Wright State (S·S) stopped a going into the OVCS game (break·
seven-game Tennessee w1nnmg
two-game
losing streak by downing downs on point totals were not Southwestcm .......O 6 310 444
streak with a 62-51 victory
Wednesday, holding the Volunteers Eastern Illinois 72-65 in the Mid· available for the OVCS game).
(Conference)
scoreless for more than eight min· Continent Conference. The Southwestern vs. Kyger Creek
Southern
..............
4 0 299 211
Raiders' Bill Edwards scored 14 of
utes of the second half.
This game looks to be tied with Oak Hill ..............3 I 277 257
" I'm really proud of our his 22 poinls in the second half, the Symmes Valley-North Gallia North Gallia ........ 3 I 246 235
effort," Huggins said. "I thought including five in the final three gaine for "Most Likely to Go Into Hannan Trocc ...... 2 2 249 247
our guys really sucked it up. We minutes.
Overtime."
Eastern ................2 2 237 258
"It was important for us to be
like to play faster than that, but we
Aaron McCarty, Southwestern's Symmes Valley ... l 2 167 191
ready from the word go, and I think 6-foot-1 junior point guard , will
just didn't have any legs."
Kyger Creck ........ O 3 145 162
Nick Van Exel came off the we were. We had to re-establish lake his 16.8 points-per-game aver· Southwestcm .......O 4 210 269
bench to lead the Bearcats with 16 our home court advantage and age and in all likelihood , increase It TOTALS .... ..... .lS IS 1830 1830
points and the Cincinnati defense show the Mid-Continent that it is somewhat against Kyger Creek
held Tennessee without a point for tough to play here," said Wright guards Marc Villanueva (5-10, sr.)
(Reserves· SVAC only)
m~ tJian eight minutes of tbe sec· State coach Ralph Underhill.
and Craig Kingery (5· 11, sr.). But Team
W L PF PA
Alex Robertson 's lbree-pointer if the 0· 7 Highlanders expect to
ondhalf.
Southem
.............
.4 0 220 ISS
The Volunteers were held to 39 at the buzzer gave Dayton (S-5) a capture their first win of the sea- Eastern ................3 I 169 147
percent shooting and turned the 60-57 triumph over Marquette for son they will need the kind of Symmes Valley ...2 I 125 133
ball over 18 times, canceling out the Flyers' fifth straight victory. gam'e that Chris Mande ville (11.3 North Gallia ........ 2 2 ISO 150
the effects of Cincinnati's 19 It's their longest winning streak ptsJgamc). a burly 6-foot·l junior, Kyger Creek ....: ... I I 70 73
since they took 12 in a row in in their 76-45 loss to New Boston HannanTrace ...... l 2 118 149
turnovers.
It wasn't a night for high scar· 1989-90. Makar Shayok led Day- Tuesday night (16 points, 12 Oak Hill .............. ! 3 171 176
ing. Herb Jones of Cincinnati led ton with 18 points.
rebounds).
Southwestem.......O 4 118 IS8
In the Ohio Conference, it was
both teams with 13 points. Allan
The Bobcats have senior for· TOTALS .... :.... .l4 14 1141 1141
Houston, averaging 22 points per Capital 77, John carroll 61 ; Hei- ward Phil Bradbury (15 .6
game for Tennessee, was held to dcl~erg 61, Ohio Northern 54 ; pts./g ame) and 6- foot·3 j uniot
Weekend-action
Hiram 84, Mount Union 72; Musk- Brian Davidson, who averag es
nine.
Friday- Eastern at Hannan
" I think he (Houston) was con· ingum 69, Bal~wi~·Wallace45 and eight points per outing, as the prin· Trace; Southwestern at Kyger
scious of making sure he broke our Otterbein 94, Manetta 75. Capttal, cipal threats, but sophomores Chns Creek; Symmes Valley at North
pressure and didn 'I get in!o the Heidelberg, Muskingum and Otter· Crace and Paul Covey, both of Gallia; Southern at Oak Hill
offensive flow. He's an absolutely bein remain tied for the league lead whom have scored in double fig.
Saturday - Kyger Creek at
great player. We're very fortu - with 4-1 records.
ures this season, can't be counted lrontDn St. Joe; Hannan at Southnate," Huggins said. "We couldn't
• out of the offensive mix, as is true western
0

UC Bearcats post 62-51
victory over Tennessee

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Ohio

LaFontaine's 300th career goal
helps Buffalo beat Quebec 4-2.

By The Bend

SER
a dearly for their last vlsitto~lhe also scored for the Jets. Cra1g MacBy JOSHN K~~t
~l~mpie Saddledome, scoring six Tavish and Vmcent Damphousse
AP ports rt er
. h a1s · th second period scored for the Otlers.
It was a night to remember for strrug t go m e. I
arne
Canadiens 3 Bruins 2
Pat LaFontaine, and another to breakJopen ah~hore ess2g1 at.Cal
Kirk Muller sco;ed one goal and
· to forg t for the roadSan ose, w 1c won ·
•
.
evenmg
e.
on Nov 30 for its only road· set up another.
weary Quebec Nordiques. .
gary
d ~ beatlhe Flames 4Muller assisted on a goal by
LaFontaine reached a mtlestone VIC~
~al e on Oct g for Denis Savard while Shayne Corson
with his 300th career goal Wednes· 3 at e ow ac
b · d also scored
day night as the Buffalo Sabres their first wind eve~,dw:s un~f
Cam N~ely scored twice for
extended the Nordiques' road win- under a secon -perm arrage
Boston
less streak to 20 games with a 4-2 20 shots.
·
victory. LaFontaine beat Stephane
Ten Flames each scored once
et at. 12:50 of the second period and 16 players had at least one
No 300; 61 seconds later, Don- point.
Hockey
il A~deue scored to put the
•
Jets5,0ilers2,
NEW YORK (AP) - NHL
bres ahead of the frustrated
Bob Essensa made 40 saves .as president John Ziegler selected
Nordiques, who have yet to win Winnipeg survived lhe loss of 115 nin e- time All-Star defenseman
away from home this season.
leading goal-scorer, Ed Olczyk, to Larry Robinson of Los Angeles
LaFontaine, a Sabre for less beat Edmonton. .
.
and eight-time All-Star cent~r
than 10 weeks following a sevenOlczyk was earned from the tee Bryan Trottier of Pittsburgh as h1~
player deal with the New York on a stretcher near the end of. the Senior Choices to the All-Star
Islanders, was happy with the goal sec~nd penod With. hts. left leg 10 a Game. The category was created
and happier thalli came m a v1cto- sphnt after what mtllally looked last year 10 reco~ni.ze the career
ry.
like a routine tumble. Prehmmary contributions of dtstmgutsed play" It's exciting," LaFontaine reports said h~ ~ad a separated
.
said. "I think when you score a big elbow and an lDJ~red ankle and ers.Robinson,
in his 20th season,
goal in your career you want to would miss six to et~ht weeks.
was
added
to
the
Campbell Conferremember it winning the game.
Earher m the ~nod, Olczyk had
ence
team
and
Trottier,
in his Dth
They guys played well. I'll remem- scored Winmpeg s thlfd goal of the
season, was added to the Wales
ber it."
game.
·
.
Mario Ma.rOJs, Doug Evans, Conference team. The game will be
LaFontaine was acquired on
Oct. 25, then mis·sed 13 games Teppo Nummmen and Pat ElynUJk played Jan. 18 in Philadelphia.
because of a broken jaw he suf'""",__ _ _'"""ll!llllll!!!!!!!
fcred against the Calgary Flames
on Nov. 16. He said he now feels
close to 100 percent.
In other NHL action Wednesday
night, it was SL Louis 5, the New ...,.___
York Rangers 3; Calgary 10, San
Jose 3; Winnipeg 5, Edmonton 2;
and Montreal 3, Boston 2.
Blues 5, Rangers 3
Brcu Hull's goal-scoring streak
reached 10 games as he scored
three times to lead the Blues ro a
rare victory at Madison Square
Garden.
Hull scored once in each period
to move within three games of the
modern consecutive-game goalscoring record set by L.A.'s Charlie Simmer in 1979-80. He also
added an assist on Adam Oates'
goal and owns a 19-game point5 speed trans., 2.5 EFI, 4 cyl., sunroof, bedliner, running boards.
scoring streak.
Oates set up two of Hull's goals
hours after his agent said his client
would refuse to play after taking
pan in the Ail-S tar game unless the
team moved to break his contract
stalemate. Oates wants the Blues to
either renegotiate his contract or
trade him .
Flames 10, Sharks 3
500 East Main Pomeroy, Ohio
The Flames made the Sharks

WOOD FLIPPED - Quebec right winger
Greg Pasalwski nips Buffalo's Randy Wood (15)

during the first period or Wednesday night's
NHL game in Buffalo, which the Sabres won 42. (AP)

Buffalo needs big, early lead in
AFC title game against Denver
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
Here's some advice for the Buffalo Bills, heading for an AFC
·championship game showdown
Sunday with the Denver Broncos.
· Roll it up.
· Take no prisoners.
·· If you get up a touchdown, go
for two. If you get up two touchdowns, go for three.
In its last three Super Bowl
a~arances, Denver has lost by 19
points to the New York G1ants,
then 32 to Washington and finally
45 to San Francisco, the deficit
increasing by 13 points in each
game. That is the best fonnula for
beating the Bronco! . Ten pmnts
ahead with a quarter to play often
won't get it done. Not with John
Elway pitching against you.
Elway is the current master of
the comeback, having rallied Denver from behind on the final drive
of games 20 times. That's 20 t.irnes
when the Broncos had one last
chance to tie or win and Elway
delivered th e necessary points,
either eating up enou~h yards for a
field goal or taking h1s team all the
way to the end wne. . . .
Twice, Elway dtd 11 m AFC
championship games, both times
against Cleveland, beatmg the
Browns first in 1987, 23-20 m

overtime, and then, as if to prove it
wasn't a fluke, again the next year,
38-33 , He also victimized Piusburgh 24-23 in a divisional playoff
in t990.
His latest Supennan show came
in Sunday's playoff against Houston. The Oilers, up 21-6 at one
point, were sitting on a shaky 2423 lead with just over two minutes
left on the clock when they punted
the ball to Denver's 2-yard line.
There were no timeouts left.
And there was no problem,
eiLher.
Denver had the Elway edge, a
two-minute drive to the winning
field goal. Twice he keptlhe drive
going by converting fourth-down
plays. It was the classic comeback.
Elway tried to explain the
dynamics of rallying his team from
behind. "You don't have time to
think in a situation like that," he
said. "The game is going by about
eight times faster than it nonnally
docs.''
Not fast enough, however, for
the other guys. Houston defensive
back Cris Dishman remembered
thinking that the Oilers had the
game ~on. ''No way John Elway
drives 98 yards on us," he said to
himself.
Oh, no?
Coach Dan Reeves knew Elway
was capable of pulling it off.

"John has done thiS over and
over again," he said. "Because of
John, our guys believe we're never
out of a game if there's any time
left on the clock."
Detroit quarterback Erik Kramer
admired Elway's accomplishment.
"He's got intangible abilities,
not just physical," he said. "He
wants the ball laiC in the game with
the money on the line. He's like
(San Francisco quarterback Joe)
Montana. He's just a great player."
The solution, then, is to blow
out the Broncos.
In their first meeting this season,
the Oilers used that approach, beat·
ing Denver 42-14. You don't come
back when you're 28 points behind.
Comebacks can be a double edged sword, though, and nobody
knows that bellcr than the Broncos.
Last season, they went into Buffalo
and opened a 21-9 lead. As they
lined up for a fourth-quaner field
goal, the Broncos could be forgiven
for thinking_ the B word blowout.
The kick was blocked and
returned for a touchdown by Cornclius Bcnnell. Within 77 seconds,
between an interception of Elway
and a fumble by Elway, the Bills
scored 20 points.
Final score: Buffalo 29, Denver
28 .
Evi!!l Supcnman fails sometimes.

NFL wants Detroit to arrive in D.C.
Friday for NFC title bout vs. 'Skins
By HARRY ATKINS
AP Sports Writer
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - As if
the Detroit.Lions aren't haltered
enough. Now, the NFL is putting
an additional burden on them.
The league wants the Lions in
Washington on Friday, almost 48
hours"before their NFC championship game with the Redskins
(15-2). Detroit head coach Wayne
Fontes asked for a waiver, but was
denied.
During the regular season, teams
generally arrive the day before a
game. The 48-hour rule applies
only to conference championships.
But the Lions have a long list of
walking wounded: Many of them
take treaunent every day, including
early on game day. Fontes worries
that living in a hotel for two days
will disrupt that routine.
"I wish we didn't have to go w
early," Fontes said Wednesday.
"We really need to treat these football players. They'll have to give
me a place to .practice and a place
to treat my players. ·
"Unless they give me a second
airplane. One with a big Red Cross
on the side of i.L••

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It's an extra hurdle the Lions
don't need. But this is a team that
has overcome great odds all season ,
especially injuries. Fontes said
there was no doubt in his mind
where the Lions would be without
the depth his team has developed.
"Without a doubt, we'd be a 412 team," Fontes said. Instead, the
Lions are 13,4.

It is truly a remarkable achievement.
Tlw Lions lost five key players
to season-ending injuries as the
1991 campaign rolled along. Gone
are quarterback Rodney Peete,
orfensive linemen Mike Utley and
Eric Sanders, linebacker Mike
Cofer and noseguard Jerry Ball .

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Question: My underarms itch
so much that I scratch to the point
my friends bring me bananas and
ask me to make monkey sounds.
What can I do?
Answer: First, let me compliment you on your fine sense of
humor. It's a sign of good mental
health when we can joke about our·selves as you have done in the way
you phrased the question. l got
quite a laugh out of it. Now to
address th e serio us question that
lies behind your humor.
Itching can be the sign of several problems including serio us illness, reaction to a medication or
food, or the result of a chronic skin
problem. Since your itching is
localized to the underarm area, it's
unlikely that the problem is due to
a reaction caused by a food or medication you consume, and it's also
unlikely to be caused by a serious
illness. These conditions typically
cause generalized itching - that is,
itching in many parts of th e body
instead of just in the underarms.
The skin problems seborrheic
dermatitis and atopic dermatitis can
involve the skin of the underarms
along with other areas of the body.
Perhafs your itching is the result of
one o these conditions,. But, I think
it's more likely that your deodorant
or antiperspirant is causing your
itching.
Deodorant contain chemicals
that slow the growth of bacteria
that live on the skip. These bacteria
break down the body s waste prod·
ucts excreted by the sweat glands
in the underarm, and it is this bacterial action that is responsible for
underarm odor.
Slowing or stopping the bacterial growth reduces the number of
these odor-producing organisms
and keeps us n shower fresh" for
hours longer than would be possible without them. Several chemicals, including triclosan, safely and
effectively stop or slow bacterial
growth.
Deodorants help reduce body
odor, but they do not reduce underarm wetness. Another approach to
"' controlling body odor is to limit the
amount of underarm sweat that is
produced. This reduces the amount
of material the underarm bacteria

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Tueday-Saturday
.9:30.5:00

992•,671
DOWNTOWI ,NIIROY, OHIO
F

.

mances of Handel's "Messiah," in
conjunction with the Shawnee State
Umvemty Chol! and the Ohto Val·
Icy Symphony, m early December.
The
Chorale,
Murdock
explamcd, IS an oratono chorus
spcc,ializing in the masterworks of
mus1cal literature.
"The term :maste.rwork' does
nQl!mply .mus1c thatts beyond the
capabtl1ycs of m~~t ?mateur
smgcrs, he noted. A masterwork' is a. choral wo_rk of extended
length whtch was .wnuen by a ,composer who 1s constdcred to be clas·
sic '. i~. his or her onentallon to
mus1c.
.
.
.
Scores wlll be avallable dunng
the first two weeks of rehearsal,
and later m the camp.us bookstore.
For more mformallon, contact
Murdock at 245-5353, ex~enston
1Jl~. The toll-free number m Oh10
1s 1-800-282-7201.

taineers will perform Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will hold a hymn sing featuring local talent on Friday at 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.
HARRISONVILLE· There will
be a community miscellaneous
shower for the Frank King family
who lost their home to fire. The
shower 'will be held Friday at 7
p.m. at the Harrisonville Presbyte·
rian Church. Anyone wishing to
participate is invited.
SATURDAY
REEDS VILLE · "The Pfeifcrs"
will perform at the Fellow ship
Church of the Nazarene on Route
124 in Reedsville, near Forked Run
State Park, on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Rev. John W. Douglas invites the
public.
RUTLAND · There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Sat·
urday from 8' p.m. to midnight.
Music will be provided by the
Country Kin Band. Ray Fitch will
be the caller. The public is invited
to aucnd .
BURLINGHAM ·The Burlingham Modem Woodsmen will hold
a soup supper at 6:30 p:m. on Snt·
urday nt the hall. Oyster, vcgclllblc
and bean soup with crackers, com
bread and coffee will be furnished
by the camp. Those attending
should bring a potluck dish. There
will be a door prize drawing alld a
short business meeting. Everyone
is welcome.

Names in the ·news
NEw! YORK (AP) - Diane
Keaton jsn 't at all like the flaky
characttr She played in "Annie
Ha ll," c lleagues say.
Con oi~·eur magazine's January iss e rtrays the 46-year-old
Keaton as a sensitive actress and
rilmma er, but also. a tough bustnesswo an.
"Sh 's very precise and organized in her thinking," said Gerald
L'Ecuyqr. a director who worked
with her on "Wildflower," a
movie· she directed for cable's Lifetime network. "Her father was an
engineer and she has his mind."
Keaton won an Oscar in 1977
for Woody Allen's "Annie Hall.''
Most recently, she played Steve
Martin's wife in "Father of the
Bride."

•

'
I "

called the video "extremely unforBy LAR~Y NEUMEISTER .
tunate." He said Symington, who
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Public became governor in ~arch, cam·
paigncd on a promise to' work !O
En~my has released a mp video in
WhiCh make-believe publiC offi· make Martin Luther King Day a
cials responsible for thwarting cre- state holiday.
Cole said the assassination fanation of an Arizona state holiday in
honor of Martin Luther King Jr. are taSy clashed with the understanding
"that our socfcty works by lhe balassassinated.
'
· "It's a trip into the fantasy lot box, not through violence."
At his news conference, Chuck
world of Public Enemy. You know,
the !;lig payback," Chuck D, the D was asked if the group's violent
fantaSy clashed with the philosophy
group's lead rar.per, said Tuesday.
The video, 'By the' Tim~ I Get of non-violence that King
to Arizona," begins with "a David pneached. .
·
Duke-type character as g\)vemor of
He noted th81 Kin~ was shot to
Arizona" denying he is racist, death and said, "We ve got to be
. Chuck D said. Throughout are re- able io say ... 'tf I get hit ... you're
enacunents o( Civil rights struggles . going to get hit back."'
Jewish gro~s criticized Public
from the 1960s. . .
By the clld of the video, a sena- Enemy two Yt:IIP ago, claimina its ·
. tor falls to his office floor after eat- record "Welctfne to the Terroring poisoned candy and the gover- . dome" was anti-Semitic.
nor's car is blown up after he steps ·. MTV spokeswoman ·carol'
into it. The killinas are intersperSed Robinson said the ·cablo music
with re-eaactlnents of King's assas- channei-N~ould shOw tl)e video, b!lt
each time ''"m a context where tt is ·
sination. •
•
Douglas Cole, spokesman for discussed prior to airjng."
Arizona Oov.•.Fife
Syminglon,
.'
.

'&amp;
'.i

\

.~ .

based on Mount Airy.
LdS ANGELES (AP) - TwoLime Olympic gold medalist Edwin
Moses is divorcing his wife of nine
years.
His m'anagement company said
in a stlltcment Tyesday !hat Moses
and his wife, Myrella, were break·
ing up because of irreconcilable
differences.
"Mr. Moses wishes his fanner
spouse the best in tl!e world and
will continue to suppon her in her
endeavors as a free-lance anist," it
added.
Moses was the 400-meter hurdles champ ion at the 1976 and
198~ Olympics and set the world
record for the event in 1983. He is
training for this year's games.

NEW YORK (AP) -Actor
MOUNT AIRY, N.C. (AP)- Martin Sheen says a stllte of emerA burglar stole a ·slingshot that gency ought to be declared to belp
bclongcd ·to Andy Griffith from a get hom eless people into proper
theater in this town that served as a housing.
model for TV's Mayberry.
"I think that's a very, very good
The slingshot, made for Grifnth idea," Sheen said after a public
by his father, was taken from the hearing on homelessness where the
Cinema Theater over the weekend, idea was raised by another man
said Patrolman Mitch Whitener.
Tuesday.
"I don't think it was targeted,"
" It has to be looked at as thai'
Whitener said . ''Those people ki nd of emergency. People are on
might not know what they've really Lhe streets through no· fault of their
gaL."
ow n, but the reflection of the ecoNothing el se wa s stolen, nomic disaster that our country is
Whitener said , although other Grif· undergoing.''
fith memorabilia was in the buildSheen, whose films include
ing.
"Apocalypse Now" and "BadGriffith is a Mount Airy native. lands," is active in several other
"The Andy Griffith Show" used causes. He has protested agamst
characters, names and settings pollution and nuclear weapons.

Weight control series begins

The Meigs County Health
Depanment will begin a series of
six-week classes for weight control
POMEROY . The movies "loci· at6 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdent at Hawk's Hill" and "Library days beginning next week.
·
World" will be shown at · thc
All classes are free to Meigs
Pomeroy Library on Saturday and County residents whq have a
Sunday at 2 p.m. and Middleport choice of night th ey wislito attend.
Library on Monday at 4:30p.m. AtiCndance is required at only one
All area children arc invited to. two-hour session weekly. Each·
view the movies free of charge.
class will be of two hours duration.
Classes will include nutrition
FAIRPLAIN • :rhe Liberty education, stress management,
Mountllineers will perform Satur- weekly weigh-ins, relaxation techday at the Jackson County Jam- niques, recipes, diet recall sheets, ·
boree in Fairplain, W.Va.

exercise techniq ues and other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are to be held in the conference room of the Multi-Purpose
Building, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations. To register, residents
should call the Health Department,
992-6626, and indicate their preference of the Monday or Wednesday
class.

HENDERSON, W.Va. · Square
dance and clogging at lhe community building from 8-11 p.m. Mus1c
by the Salem Ridge Boys. Everyone welcome.
SUNDAY
POMEROY • A 12-step AA
meeting will begi"n at the JTPA
office, 117 West Second Street in
Pomeroy on Sunday at7 p.m.

Achievement list
announced
The following students were '
recently named to the Southeastern
Business College fall quarter
achievement list.
To achieve this honor, students
must have a 3.5 or beuer grade
· point average and have taken at
least eight credit hours.
Students earning 4.0 grade point
averages are: Carole Bush, Richard
CoUey, Erma Fi nley, Tina Frans,
Sandra Gilland, Rosemary Keams,
Iva Price, Rachel Sallee, April
Shoemaker, Fay Stout, Joy Thompson, Rebecca Ward and Rhonda
Wheeler.
•
Students with 3.5 or better grade
point averages ~re : Nancy Ash·
worlh, Gloria Birchfield,.William
Call, Pat McCarty, Debra Mullens,
Richard Rcitmire, Barbara Samour,
Penny White and Charles Wood.
Enrollment for the winter quarter is open until the quarter begins
Jan. 6. For more information, call
the admissions department at 4464367, Mortday lhrough Friday from
8:30am. to 5 p.m. 1
·

Participating
Stores Will
· Mark Down
Merchandise
This Thursday
For The
"I didn't get H•••

·New rap video 'assassinates·'
make-believe Arizona officials

I •
'

Rehearsals for the spring pro- play and Oscar-winning film
duction of Mozart's "Requiem" by "ATadcu,s," Murdtx;k said.
The Requ1cm 1s one of my
the Masterworks Chorale at the
University of Rio Grande begin favonte. p1cccs, one of .ife greatest
Monda , Jan . 13 at7 p.m. in Room 1n . m~~1cal ln~rature, Murdock
115 o?'the Fine and Performing sa1d. It combmes all of the cleArts Center.
ments that only Mozart could
The Chomle will present one of demand and put onto paper. He
the famed composer's most cele- was com missioned to produce the
brated works on May 12 in the cen- piece, but he never knew who d1d
tcr's Christensen Theatre. so, so that part of th,c story t~.at
Rehearsals will be held every Mon- appeared 1n Amadeus was true.
.day from 7-9 p.m. until the date of
All !ntercsted sin~ers are u~ged
the performance , explained Dr. to paruc1pat~ m th1s p~o~ucuon,
Merv Murdock director of the Murdock sa1d. No audtuons are
Chorale and assdciate professor of necessary.
music at Rio Grande.
"We're always happy to have
Mozart's "Requiem" was the new people involved in our presen• final work of the yoqng musical lations," he said. "They will be
·genius. Commissioned to compose required to sing because the
the piece by an unknown source, it 'Requiem' is a demanding work,
was incomplete when Mozart.died but the results will be well worth
in 1791 and was finished by one of it."
hi s students, based on notes,
The "Requiem" will be the secsketches and desires e'xpresse&lt;t,by ond of the Chorale's two major
the compilser. Some of these 'events productions of the academic year.
were portrayed in the Peter Shaffer The group presented two perfor-

'

~~REFRIGERATOR

have available to produce their
undesirable odor. Antiperspirants
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tupwork in this way. They stop the pers Plains VFW Post 9053 will
sweat glands from working. This is meet a1 7:30p.m. on Thursday at
usually accomplished by chemicals the post home.
that have Nyard long" unpronounceable chemical names.
ROCK SPRINGS · Rock
The brand I use contail1s alu- Springs Grange will meet on
minum zirconium trichlorhydrex Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of
gly - whatever that is.
William Radford.
Please notice that this chemical
comains aluminum, and aluminum
POMEROY · Preceptor Beta
can produce a chronic allergic skin Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
irritation -just like you have will meet on Thursday at 6 p.m. at
experienced. In fact, almost any Grace Episcopal Church and Parish
one of the subs tan ces In any House . The program will be "A
deodorant or antiperspirant mixture Time for Surprise".
can cause skin irritation in a sensitive individual. The manufacturers
POMEROY • The Meigs Counof these products carefully test ty Democratic Commince will
their products to be sure that they meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
arc effective and safe. Most people CarpeDLers Hall in Pomeroy. A regdon't have adverse reactions to the
ul ar business meeting will be held,
product, but a few individuals do.
and a recommendation will be
I[ you arc one of the unlucky ·
made for the new member on the
ones, you wind up with itching and
Meigs County Board of Elections .
orten irritlllcd underarms. The irri- The public is invited.
tation can develop immediately
after the first usc of a new product,
POMEROY • There will be an
but more often, it develops after AA meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at
several days , weeks or months of th e Sacred Heart Catholic Church
usc. The reactions occur a bit more in Pomeroy.
often in women who shave their
und erarms because the process of
FRIDAY
shaving prcduccs small nicks in the
HOCKINGPORT ·There will
skin.
be a round and square dance at
So what should yeu do about Hockingport on Route 124 on Friyour itching underarms? Put down day from 8 p.m. to midnight with
your bananas and sell your monkey music by the Pleasants County
suit. Stop using your current brand Boys. Jim Carnahan will be the
of deodorant or antiperspirant. caller. The public is invited.
Wa1&gt; h-your underarms with a
•CHILLICOTHE • There wtll
•
deodorant-type bath soap twice
be
each day and afterwards apply a a revival at the Chillicothe Westhin coating of a 1/2 percent hydro- leyan Holiness Church on Diehl
cortisone cream. (Conaid brand is Street in Chillicothe. Services will
one common brand.) In a week you
begin at 7:30p.m. and will be held
should be much better.
on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Then try another brand or Rev. Juddic Peyton from Bedford,
deodorant. Choose one that has a Ind. will be the speaker.
different active ingredient than
your previous brand. If neither or
TUPPERS PLAfNS ·. There will
these approaches clears up your be a round and square dance on
itching, you should see your doc- Friday from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. at
tor.
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post The
"Funuly Medicine" is a weekly band will be "Seco nd Cuttin" ,
column. To submll questions, write sponsored by Post 9053 and the
to Joi1D C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- Ladies Auxiliary. The pubhc 1s
versity College of Osteopathic ·invited.
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.
RIPLEY . The Liberty Moun-

Rehearsals scheduled to begin Monday
for Chorale's production of 'Requiem'

-

Whirlpool Washer

THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
group or AA and AI-Anon will
meet Thursday night at 7 p.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church
in Pomeroy for discussion.

john C. Wolf. D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

1989 GMC "S 15"

SALE PRICED

Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or that event Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

Family
Medicine

Sports briefs

U

Thursday, January 9, 1992
Page-7

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

ac

.

Tlte Daily Sentinel

1985 PONTIAC FIERO
V-6, 5speed, 2 door, sport coupe with sun roof.
Only has 59,442 miles ·. Just broke in well.
You Must See This Ca( To Appreciate It!
Has factory air, PS, PB, power '!"indows,
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:

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Athens,

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

R~E.M.,

Bryan Adams, Natalie Dallas doesn't rely on Hollywood;
Cole top Grammy nominees uses tougher standa!d to rate movies

•
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - R.E.M.
and Bryan Adams, whose hits have
sol d millions but never won a
Grammy, received the most nominations for that award Wednesday,
and Natalie Cole collecied four for
a se ntimental tribute to her late
father.
Bonnie Raitt was nominated
five times and Amy Grant ratified ·
her conversion to pop with four
nominations for her album, " Heart
in Motion."
R.E.M. topped the list of nominees with seven; Adams had si~ .
Nominees for record of the year
were Grant's "Baby Baby ,"
Adams ' "I Do it For You ,"
R.E.M.'s "Losing My Religion,"
Ra in 's "Something to Talk
About" and Cole's '"U nforgettable.''
Song of the year nominees were
"Baby Baby," "I Do it for You,"
"Losing My Religion," "Walking
in Memphis" sung by Marc Cohn,
and "Unforgettable," a single once
recorded by her fa ther. Nat King
Cole died of lung cancer 25 years
ago, when Natalie was 15.
Album of th e year nominees
were Grant for " Heart in Motion,"
Ra itt for "Luck of the Draw,"
R.E.M. for "Out of Time," Paul
Simon for "The Rhythm of th e
Sain ts" and Cole for "U nforgettable."

By MARY MICKLE
No minees in the 34th annual David Sanborn for "Another
Associated Press Wr iter
Grammy Awards to honor the Hand," Toots Thielemans for
DALLAS (AP) - In Dallas, it's
year's best recording anists were "Bl uesette," Dave Grusin for not eno ugh for Holl ywood to
released at ·T!te Apollo Theater in ''How Long Has This Been Goi ng declare a movie suitable for chilHarlem. Winners will be On" and Stan Gctz for " I Remcm- dren . The ci ty applies its own,
often stricter ratings to films - and
announced Feb. 25 at Radio City ber You.''
Music Hall and televised by CBS.
Best jazz vocal performanc e backs them tip with fines.
Barbra Streisand and Cole were nominees were Mel Torme for
The 26-member Dallas Motion
nominated for best tradi · 1 po
"E 'n ton Medley," Take 6 for Picture Classification Board is the
perfonnance, Streisand fo;;r·7fthi!e~~-"'1tieli't
•
hr istm as, " Cole for only agency of its kind in any large
" Warm all Over" and Cole for "Long 'bo
'dnight," Shirley American city . Its job is to look
"UnforgettaBle."
Hom for " You
n't Forget Me" over the shoulder of Hollywood' s
Jn"othercategories:
and Manhattan Transfer for "The Motion Picture Association of
Adams, Cohn, George Michael, Offbeat of Avenues.''
America.
Michael Bolton, Seal and Aaron
Best rock voca l solo perforIt is needed. said its chainnan ,
Neville were nominated for best mance nominees were Adams for Fred Aurbach, because the moviemale pop vocal. Adams wasc'nomi- "Can't Stop This Thing We Start- going public has gotten more connated for "I Do It for You," the ed," Bob Seger for "The Fire se rvative over th e past 20 years
theme song ·from the movi e Inside," Raiu for " Luck of th e while th e MPAA ratings have
."Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves."
Draw," Robb ie Robertson for become more liberal.
Seal was nominated for the sin- "Storyville," Eric Clapton for "24
"I' ve seen lhe things that used
gle "Crazy," Michael for "Free- Nights" and John Mellencamp for to be rated R are now PG-13, and
dom 90," Cohn for " Walking in " Whenever We Wanted."
the things that used to be PG-13 are
Memphis," Neville for his album
in the PG slot, and we're slowly
The nom inees fo r best male seeing things that used to be in the
"Wann Your Heart" and Bolton
country
vocalist were " Don 't Rock PG slipping into the G area," said
for his sin~le "When a Man Loves
The
Jukebox
," by Alan Jackson, Aurbach, a dentist.
a Woman.'
"
Here's
a
Quarter
(Call Someone
MPAA c~ief Jack Valenti counIn the category for best female
Who
Cares)
,''
by'
Travis Tritt, tered that the MPAA system " is
pop vocal, the nominees were
Whitney Houston for her single " Pocket Full of Gold," by Vince the best we can do and it's accept"All the Man I Need," Grant for Gill, "Ropin' The Wind," by ed by the great majority of Ameri"Baby Baby," Mariah Carey for Garth Brooks and "Somewhere In can parents."
Not only are the Dallas beard's
her album "Emotions," Raitt for My Broken Heart," by Billy Dean.
ratings frequently stricter than the
her si ngle "Something to Talk
Best country performance by a MPAA's, but a ci ty ordinance
About," and Oleta Adam s for
duo or group nominees were The allows fines of up $200 againstlhe"Get He~~: ."
Kentucky Headhunters for "Elec- atcr owners who violate them. The
Nominees in the cate go ry of tric
Barnyard," Alabama for "For- MP AA ratin gs carry no sanctions.
jazz instrum ental solo were Ph il
ever's
As Far As I ' ll Go," The
Board spokeswoman Marsha
Woods for "All Bird's Children,"
Judds for " Love Can Build A Cranford said it has been five years
Bridge," Diamond Rio for "Meet since anyone was prosecuted. But
in the Middle," Forrester Sisters filmmakers and the board have
for "Men" and Texas Tornados often clashed, most recently over
for ''Zone of Our Own.''
the new Universal Studios picture

"Kuffs," a comedy-drama starring allows kids to see it.
Christian Slater as a "cop with an
The board was founded in 1966,
attitude."
two years before the MPAA began
The MPAA rated the movie PG- its voluntary ratings system. Its
13, meaning it contains material members, who range in age from
that may be inappropriate for chi I- their 20s to late 70s, arc appointed
dren under 13 but is open to any- by the City Council.
..
one, with or withoutan adult.
Irving Baker, an urban pohucal
Th e Dallas board , however, expert at Southern Methodist Unithou ght "Kuffs" contained too versitv . said Dallas tends to be
much violence and harsh language " traditional ," and the classifica- ·
and wanted to add its own rating of tion board represents a way to
" unsuitable for young persons." maintain those standards.
That would have made it illegal for
In 1968, the Supreme declared
people under 16 to see the movie the board unconstitional because it
unless accompanied by parents or -wa:; preventing adults from seeing
guardians.
certain movies. But the court ruled
Under an out-of-court settlement that cities do have the right to prethe board agreed to rate the movie vent children from seeing movies
"suitable, except for drugs, vio- that adults would have a constitu·
lcncc and language,'' a rating that tiona! right to sec.

Quality Prescription Service
. At Competitive Prices
We fill PCS and

By the Farmers Bank and Saving, Co.

1982 Champion Mobile Home
1b65 • 2 bedroom, septic system, Leading Creek·
water, electric, telephone, 2 (mil) acres located at
35299 Loop Road, Rutland, Ohio. Approx. Y. mile past
Fort _Melga on Loop ·Road. Contact Scott Shank 614~
992·3293 for.more ·Information.

The Farmera Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this sale, and .to
withdraw the ibove collateral prior to sale, Furthetr,
.the fermers Bank end Sevlngs Company reserves the
:right to reject any or ,ell bids submilted.
•

Further, the above collateral will be sold in the
,condition it .Is _lrt with no expre11ed or implied
fwln'enties ·

Pharmacy
ICenn•h McCullough. A Ph.

Ukrah;te shuts ·down army communications facility
0 hio tire firm
away Japanese cars.
abcut making a stand. Honestly, we
can' t. ge t our political leaders to
make a stand Qitless the people will
make a stand," be said.
The policy also includes cars
such as the Honda Accord, which is
assembled i!l the United States. The
Accord is made at the Honda plant
in Marysville.
" I have people who argue with
me about that. But the policy is if it
has a Japanese company name on
it, it won't get serviced. We're trying to make a statement,"
Schwartz said.
Schwartz said his store has
rumed away about one customer a
day since the policy took effect.
He admits his stand won' t bring
Japan to its knees. But he said
Japan's inroads in the United States
are hurting his community.
"The Japanese make a very
good product. I don't want to be
misinterpreted that I'm anti-international trade. I'm in favor of fair
inlernational trade," be said.
President Bush is visiting Japan
with business leaders, trying to get
the Japanese to eliminate barriers
blocking U.S. products from being
sold in Japan. It's pan of the president's 12-day, four-nation trip to
the Far East.
U.S. officials would like to see
an increase in the number of American cars being sold in Japan.

FREMONT, Ohio (AP) ~ A
local commerci~l tire dealer says he
has received solid support for the
com~any 's policy of refusing to
serv• ce Japane se cars until th'e
Japanese change their trade poliCies.

Dennis Schwartz and his three
partners in the Smiley Tire Co .
made the decision to turn away
Japanese cars last month and
announced their policy in local
newspaper advertisements over the
holidays.
"I didn 't know what to e~pect;
but I've received a strong
response," Schwar1Z said Wednesday. " About 99 perc em of it is positive.''

Schwar1Z said his decision will
cost him money, but. he wants to
show the Japanese how serious
Americans are about breaking
down trade barriers with the Asian
nation.
"Something has got to be
done," said Schwartz, the company's vioe president of finances.
Smiley Tire had about $2 million in sales last year. About
$120,000 of that is generated from
servicing Japanese vehicles. The
dealership sells tires, offers wheel
alignments and brake work.
"We just thought that it was
time for someone to start talking

..

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PubliC

PubliC Notice
.
PUBUC NOnCE
NOnCE II~ gi- lhlt
'on S.lurdll•, Jonuerv 11,
'
'
., ~llo
.1112,11 tO:OO a.m., • pu
eale w!U ~~ held at 1OS
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,

....

~ o!~~:~~~ I!Je fol.

:1187 HONOA C1Y1C • DR., 5

wlUtdrow Ute llbo¥1 coU.IIr·
'II prior 10 ..... Further, Tho
FIIIMII IIMk MICt S.VIntll
I·ConJpenyrtoer¥tolhl rlaht

any or ·•II ~rde

Fur1hlr, lh" above coU•t·
erll wll Io. oolclln the oondillon It II In wllll no

..,,..,,... or lmpll~cl'war·
!Milito given.
. '
For .,...lnlonlilllon oon·
•-1 8oot1 Shank,· at 112•
ror
!*Jo
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trvtolht
121Ltl
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1 •· ,, 10. ....,
to 111d at 1111•
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81 tHGEC4U7ii"A0311?1
•- k --~
Tho FIIMIII -n ....,
IIIVIntll CompoJIY, POCII•

9·13· '11 -dn

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Read the Qest Seller
Read the

WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE

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EVElY
SAY. NIGHT'
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

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COLOR TV

Un_., ,j.fi!•tl I'OJ.W·'

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FIRE DEPT: -:,

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992~2825

.0 5/ day

Annoucemen h
G1veawav
Happy Ads
l ost &lt;lind Found
Yard Sale(pa•d '" adviJ II CC)
8 Public Sale &amp; ~u c1 10n
9 Wanled lo Buy

Empioymenl
Serv1ces

_

·~

60

3
4
5
6
7

31
31

Jl
3I

35

36

11 Help Wantud
12 S 1tu~11onW a nted
1 3 Insuran ce
14 Busmess fra mr n g
15 Schools &amp; lnstruc lton
16 Rad1o . TV &amp; CB Rcp ,w
17 M11 cel l;mt"Ous
18 W.1n t ed To D o

Homes lot Sa le
M obl lt~ Hom es !01 S dl ~
FJrm s 101 Sale
Bus•ness Bu•l d • n!J~
lot s &amp; Ac re ag e
Rnl ht•te Wanted

&amp;1
62

43
44
45
46
47
48
49

f ou m EqUipmom
W 01n l t!d lo Buy

63 L111cstoc k
6 4 Hay &amp; Gram
·65 Sued &amp; Ftr t tl11 11 r

ljftitfbd
42

GUN SHOO.l.

PRICE REDUCEOI

~
~

.42

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

Real Eslale

1 Ca rd of- Thanh
2 In Memorw

41

1.f.l21 MO.

Porto! - JiJancili "'~blo. 1lo Jlllt hos be"
1JCiKod to ~. ST1;IlllT, $73,9011 ool owllil
liooJKOi d 'l' to II% d I'JKhoit ,...,. ""' be!!"'!
blo "'MIMna - " M' ¥tOY ••• Jomo"' 3~ ...
11 illlin: 4lt, 3 ldl\1, )fl~n~od I BR '111-

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.30

Rates OJrc for co nsecutJ¥e run s. br oken up d;rysw dl be chitl gcd
d~ as separat e ads

Strictly lllhntol

&lt;.....l"!'t::"ol: ~ ·

conference-with Minority Leader
Roben Boggs:·n :Jefferson, where
they answered qu estions about
some of the political ramifications
of his appointment by the Demo,
cratic caucus.
To hold the Senate seat, Espy
will have to file petitions by Feb.
20 to seck the Democratic nomination in the May primary as a candidate for the 15th District seat. He
then would run for a full, four-year
term in November.

crowded Senate chamber.
The 48-year-old Espy succeeds
Conner Sen. Richard l'fetffer Jr. of
Columbus, who resigned to be
sworn in earlier in the day as judge
of the new Environmental Division
of Franklin County Municipal
Court.
The Senate ceremony preceded
a routine floor session at which
Espy cast his fli'St votes as a senator.
Espy appeared later at a news

Announcemenls

1 5 Words

.

l or each

6 t 4-992-3524

PUBLICATION

188

988·

~'··~~~

"Go ahead, tear me to pieces,"
he told funous shoppers crowding
around him in a food store in Saratov. Later, he joked that "I thought
they were going to throw rotten
eggs at me!"
Yeltsin began the tour on
Wednesday to assess the mood of
his poople following the freeing of
pnces on Jan. 2, the first step of a
bold plan to establish a free market
system .

Trans ortation

Houses lot Re nt
Mobrle Ho m es fu r Fl t! ut
Farms tor Rtmt
Ap art ment t o • RtJnt
Fu rnt shed Rooms
Spact= tor Ren t
Wanted 10 Re nt
Equ1pment !01 Run!
For l ease

71

·n

A u10s t orSal u
Truck s l or S&lt;tlc
V;m sllo 4WO · s

73
7 4 MutOf cydcs
1~ Bud I S &amp; Mot o rs lor
ltl
76 Aulo Part s &amp; AccllS!iOI •t.!li
77 Auto Rep an
78 Ci1 111PI09 ·Equ •pnu:nt
79 Cumpers &amp; M !l! OI Huml.!s

s..

Merchandise

Services

5 1 Household Goods
62 - Spo rting Good'
53 Anl rquu

81

54 MtSc Merchan d•sc

82 Plumbrng &amp; Ht1 ilt lll!J

Hurn~

Improvement s

Che51er

576 Apple Grovv

55

B w lding SupplttiiS

83

Ponland
Let an falls

773 M1son
882 New Have n

56

Pets t o r Sale

84 Elet:tm;al &amp; Re tr.gur;,tton

21

Bu sines s Opportunrlv

57

MuSlcallns uumL'f'lts

R acrne
Rutland

895 l etart

22

Mo ney 10 Loa n

f HHIS

85
86

937 Buffal o

23 Pr o f B!SIOnal Serv1 ces

58
59

&amp;

V1!g~ ,b ltll5

87

For Sale o• Tracie

E .. c ONalmg
Gcnl!fal Ha~t hng
M nbtlt! Hom t1 RepN u
UphoiSUHy

Coolv1lle

Business Services

:ABIG PIKHI

5

0\l~r

SUO / day

mcK

W/FOAM BUNKIE

5

Monthly

WANT ADS

&amp; BRASS DAYBED

1

3
6
10

SMAll

BULLETIN BOARD

5
Now 133°

SEOIONAL W/INCLINERS

WAS $899.00

ROCKERS

0

ENGLAND· CORSAIR 3 PC.

WAS $289.95

NOW

MONDAY PAP ER
f UES DAV PAPER
W[ON FSOAY PA PE ~
THURSDAY PAPER

VELVET SUL

WAS $229.95

95
5
NOW 399 3 PC.

REG. $599.00

5129°

0
'

D AY DEFORE PUBliCATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 0 0 PM TUESDAY
2 0 0 PM WEDNESDAY
2 DO PM THURSOAV
2 ? O' P M FR IDAV

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15
15
15
15
15

Days
• 1

fo/11 1wi Ill-{

Fr11 bllo!ot-25Yrs. xp.
Call all• 6, ... -992-2921

SOFA SLEEPER

·

RATES

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SUNDAY PAP ER

~t\~
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tHIOAY PAPER

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former City Councilman Ben Espy
has been sworn in as a state senator, less than three months after his
narrow defeat in a bid to become
mayor of Columbus.
He took the oath of office
Wednesday from a friend and fellow Democrat, Allorney General
Lee Fi sher, as his family and
friends, including form er Gov .
Richard Celeste, looked on in a

Pom•oy. OM.

.

14Kt Gold
Diamonds

more.''

Democrats welcome Espy tQ, Senate

9

• A (;I ,.!Oiftllll ;H.Ive rt lklii~I•.'UI vldCt.'\1 Ill 1 hi! O ;u ly S t~lll llil!l l ell
Cl! pt
c l t~ss• ht.'&lt;l thsplav . Busuu.::.s C;wd .uul lt.'tliil llOIICt!$ )
wtll otl so ••PP I!ilr Ml th e PI Plc.IS CUll RI!!IIS 1ur o.nd the Galh
pull s Oouly Tr•bur1c. rco~ch u1~ 1 over 1 a .OOO h onli!S

England-Corsair
Spring Air
Lane

embassies and diplomatic missions
around the world.
Yeltsin, meanwhile, continued
his"tour of the provinces, where
Russians angered by soaring prices
heclded him Wednesday.
He acknowledged to farmers in
the Volga River region south of
Moscow that the public that once
adored him is "a pplauding no

PH 982 · 2851

Fli.,cly Servlct

In Mcn• or rano

Bassett

is based, several thousands Russians rallied Wednesday to protest
Ukraine's claim of control over the
ships.
The Britain-based International
Institute for Strategic Studies estimates the fleet , a jewel of the for·
mer Soviet navy, has 45 warships, .
28 submarines and more than 300
other vessels in addition into 15J
combat ai11:raft and 85 helicopters.
President Boris N. Yellsi n of
Russia said Wednesday that the
ships should not belong to any one
republic, and must be "subordinated to th e joint command of the
commonwealth," Radio Moscow
reponed. ·
Foreign ministers of the II commonwealth states planned to meet
in Moscow on Friday to disc uss
other sore points, particularly the
Russian claim to all former Soviet ·

•:oo p.m.

Cou d o t

Vaughan

with the Commonwealth of Independent States' defense·ministry,
said today that the Ukraine had
switched off a command and warnin~ system belonging to the central
military command in Moscow.
Nikaronov said that meant the
central command could only communicate with "its troops" in
Ukraine by ordinary telephone.
Ukraine shut down the communications system sometime this week
but it wasn't clear e~actly when.
The action also severed links
(letween central military authorities
and the forces controlling baulefield nuclear weapons in Ukraine,
the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta reported today, citing officials
with the former So viet general
staff.
In th e Crimean port of Sevastopol, where the Black Sea Fleet

Mon Uvu Stt . 1 :00 t .m. to 1 :00 p.m

POLI CI I:.S
'Ads ou i~Kii1 M ct~JS . Galll a or M asu u co untu~ mu 5! be pr e
patcl
'R cct'l¥1' S ~0 d• sco tml lor ad s p;ud 1n attvancc
·ruw d'b
Gtvcawa~ and Found ads undt.'l' ,5 w orU~ w•ll btl
run 3 dwts at no ch;wye
'P11 cu ot ad l o • all cap•tall4!1ter s ts Llo ubh q u• ct: o t 1111 cost
'7 p01111 !m e type only u sed
' Sc ntuHJIIS no t ft!S POII5tbh! lo r tH t U15 •It er IHSI dif¥ !Chtlck
tor l!rrtn s tu s t d if'( old f\11 15 no p apml C;•ll h c lor e 2 00 p 111
l1 d'f i!tll!f pubh cal1011 t o mallt! r:o rre c uun
' Ad s that must be pa1d m ad ... ancc ou •!

111/INIIIJIII

MOSCOW (AP) - Russia and
Ukraine W!!re caught in a tug-ofwar over the military today after
Ukraine officials seized control of
an army communications facility
that links 300,000 troops to the
central command in Moscow.
The move even cut central military authorities of( from troops in
charg e of short-range nuclear
weapons in Ukraine, a newspaper
reponed today.
The political battle over control
of former Soviet forces in th e
Ukraine has intensified afler members of the new commonwealth that
replaced the Soviet Union decided
Dec. 30 to allow its members of
fonn their own annies.
Ukraine has claimed control of
· the Black Sea Fleet and its president, Leonid Kravchuk, has
ordered all troops on the republic's
territory but those with strategic
nuclear forces to swear allegiance
to Ukraine or leave.
The dispute is perhaps the most
serious point of contention between
Ukraine and Russia as they try to
reach terms for cooperation and
coexistence in a new political
scheme devoid of Kremlin domination.
More than I million servicemen,
or one-third of the former Soviet
military, are based in Ukraine 44 pe11:ent of them ethnic Russian.
Ukraine is th e commonwealth 's
second most populous republic
afler Russia and its breadbasket. .
Vladimir Nikaronov, anJlfficer

Aonlld Htnnlng. fi .Pft .

3-Registered
Pharmacists to fill
your prescnphon
needs.
'

Chal• Rlf, .. fl . Ph ..

Ohio

TO PlACE AN AD CALl 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

PUBLIC AUCTION
JANUARY 11 I 1992-1 ·1:00 A:M.

5WI5HER LDH5E

PAID
Presuiptions

Pomeroy Junior ·rroop
holds several activities

Members of the Pomeroy Junior Heck.
Receiving the Junior Aide Patch
Troop No. 1309 participated in sevwere
Autumn Phill ips, Amanda
eral activities during lhe months of
Miller, Mi che ll e Kennedy and
November and December.
Those activities included attend- Melissa Houser.
Receiving a certificate of recoging a Musical Saturday in Parkersburg, W.Va., making brag bags as ni tion for serving as patrol leader
part of the self esteem badge, how was Andrea Neutzling.
Receiving certi ficate.~ of particito plan and use a Kaper Chan, and
taking part in the adopt-a-grandpar- pation for troop service projects or
specia l activities were Amanda
-ent program.
. The troop also attended a meet- Miller, Autumn Phillips, Andrea
!Jig for an intenroop ac tivity wi th Neutzling, Melissa Houser and Jen!'he Brownie Troop at Pomeroy nifer Heck.
During the month of December
Elem entary. The Junior Troop
invited Dr. Nick Robinson to visit the troop took pan in the Pomeroy
and speak on nuaition, posture and Christmas parade. Participatin g
fitness. Other items discussed were were Bethany Cooke, Andrea
'the ovemightcr being planned and Ncutzling, Autumn Phillips, Amanthe juniors invited the third grade da Miller, Michelle Kennedy and
Melissa Houser.
Brownies to attend.
The troop (l ;igned invitations
An ovemighter was held at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall with for the play, •· . he Best Christmas
seven junior girl scouts and four Pageant Ever" that was presented
Brownies. There were three adults by the Rutland Nazarene Church.
attending. Senior Girl Scout Misi They also read the play, "The Lit·
Neutzling also stayed and helped tles t Angel" and discussed characters in the play.
wi th a vespers program.
Members of the trOop interThe juniors worked with th e
viewed
the teens in the play "SeeBrownies on several bridging activing
the
Star" at the Rutland
ities and ear ned the junior aide
Nazarene
Church including Misi
patch. Aucnding were Ashley Hannah, Brenna Sisson, Sarah Houser, Neutzling, Travis Dren ner,
Brandee and Brianna Gilmore,
and Emily Stivers.
The juniors worked on various Jeremy and Israel Grimm, Holly
other activities including a bridg- Williams , Michelle Mill er and
ing, investiture and reded ication Morgan Vanaman.
Girls aucnding the eve nt and
ceremon y as well as a co urt of
working
on the theater badge were
awards.
One special ceremony was held Andrea Neutzling, Autumn
to conclude the overnighter with Phillips, Melissa Houser, Bethany
Cooke, and Amanda Miller. Adults
approximately 21 guests auending .
Bridging from Brownie to attending were Brenda Neutzling,
Junior Girl Scout was Amanda Terrie Houser and Debbie Cooke.
On New Year's Eve a lock-i n
Miller who wa s inv es ted with
·was
held at the Trinity Church in
Autumn Phillips and Michelle
Pomero
y. A hairstyle party and
Kennedy. Giris being rededicated
were Jennifer Heck, Andrea Neut· make-over session was held during
zling, Melissa Houser and Bethany the evening. Assisting were
Michelle Miller and Misi NeutCooke.
,
Girl s received th e foll owi ng zling. Amanda Miller was elected
awards that had been earned since as the new patrol leader with
Autumn Phillips as her assistant.
September.
Cookie sales were discussed as
Girl Scoutin2 Around the World
Badge: Jennifer Heck , Meli ssa were several launch events th ey
Houser, Michelle Kennedy, Andrea would like to attend.
Aja McGlothin was welco med
Ncutzling, Autumn Phillips and
to th e troop. Others mcJllbers
Amanda Miller.
Girl Scouts in the United States attending were Andrea Neutzling,
of America Badge and the Prints Amanda Miller, Autumn Phillips,
an d Graphics Badge: Bethany Bethany Cqoke, Jennifer Heck,
Cooke, Jennife r Heck, Melissa Melissa Hotfser and fytichellc
Houser, Michelle Kennedy, Aman- Kennedy. Brenda Ncutzling, Debda Miller, Andrea Neutzling and bie Cooke and Terrie Houser were
the adults atlemling.
Autumn Phillips.
For further information on the
Musician Badge and Music
Lovers Badge: Amanda Miller, troop contact Brenda Neutzling at
Melissa Houser, Autumn Phillips, 992-5770.
Andrea Ncutzli ng and Jennifer

January 9, 1

·Thqrsday, January 9, 1992

"-t

.

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

614-992-5528 or
385-8227

12·11·1 mo.

RIC EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS · SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESITES
,
HAUUNG: Llri1Mtone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coel
UcenteciMJd Bonded

PH. 614-992;5591-

12-5-ttn

IIIDIPIIIHIT ·
CAIPn ,CUAilliiS
'alld nl.l flOOI CAll
•Aeooo~toblo Rete~
oQuellty Work

HOME PARK
Sllrllng ot .235 per mo.
Very nlce2 or 3 BR, 2
blllh hou"
wlbuement'•nd
cesport, fi'W gee.'

Call814-112-6528 or
385-8227

•Free EotlmltH
•Carliet H11 Feet Ory
Time

'

on ·TI\,8 Floor Flnloh

•High Olou

o.,..-

. MilE tnns,
b. 1, RutiiJifl, OH.

IlL ILIWI
MASTIC®_
1HE NATION'S FINEST
· REPLACEMENTWINDOWS

USED APPUANCES .
90 DAY WAIIANTY

WASHm-$100 op
DIYIS-$69 op
IIFIIGIUTOIS- $100 op
IINGIS- C..-Itft.-$12~ up ,

FlfiiiiS-$125 up
MICIO OVENS-$79 'II

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or .915-U61
Acro11 rrom Post Oflict
POMEROY OHO

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR
POMEROY

markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI, &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·l:OO P.M.

Swuthtut Special

Call 614-992·6637

949·2826

_Chashlre,,OH.112Afn

&amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCnON
eNtw Ho111t1
•Garages
•Complete

lt1110tlellng
Stop ' Co~~part

FrH Jstl11ates

U5-C473
667-6179

BRONZE
lAC INI

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - 51400
Offer Good lhru
J.b. 14

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1·6· I mo. pd.

DK's FARM TOYS
bytRTL
Displayed at Tile
QuaHty Prlllt Shop
HOURS:
8:30 arn:4:00 pm

614·992-3394
. Or Call
742.30~0 Evenings
12-2-81-1

Low Grade Oak
Saw Logs

All IIADS .
Iring It In Or Wo ·

Pick Up.

1

150 per 1,000
Delivered To

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

Ohio Pallet Co.

992·5335 or

Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·6461
,.,.. ,_

Across fro111
217 I. locollfl

POMIIOY,

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAI1S

~JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
St. At. 7

.MI
OVEN -REPAIR

WANTED

YOUNG'S
CARPENnR SERVICE ·

Specializint in
C,stom Fr-• lepair
~EW &amp; USED PAITS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MODELS

- Room Addition•
- Gun•r wort!
- Eitctrlcel •nd Plumbing

- Conertte wort
- Roaflrlg

- lnllfior • Ext•ior

PolnllntJ
!FREE ESTtMATESI

992·7D13
or 992·5553
01 TOU flO

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1-100-141-0070
· DAIWII OliO

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

992-6215

l / 311'91 lin

RACINE' GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

11-14-'90 tfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ,and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIR~WOOD

·
••
BILL SLACK
992-2269-

USED RAILROAD TIES

~-6- tln

1110.

-BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding

New Garages • Replacement Windows

Room Addlt_lons • Rooflng .

11111111

,,.

.. -

:;$t,.ll '
• HEAT PUr.tS and
FURNACES FOR·MOIIlt i. DOUIUWIDE HOMES
• • ·.• •• • • •• ' f. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

'

Coauneralaland Residential

nEE ESTIMATES·
614·949·2101 or 949'·2160
(No Sua~ay Call)

8·12·90-ttn

BENNETT'S
uno.

MO•LE 10•

~:::,'

lecatetl On SoHenl SchHI ld. tff lt. 141
.1'1•1 M6·9·16 er 1·1Dli·IJ'J.S''t7

�'
·'
Page-1.0 -The i&gt;all

SNAFU® by·Bruce Beattie

Announcements

3

18

42

Wanted to Do

Georgu Ponabl• Sawmill, don't'
haul your logJ to tha mill just
call304-87&amp;-1957. .

Announcements

t·male dog, mR. size, mix
br.ed, epprox. 1-yr old, black,
tan, &amp; wh itt to a good home,
614-992-3577
2 Beagle puppies approll. 3
mos. old. 614-446-2052.

Will do houHCteanlng.
parilncld. &amp;14-44e-m&amp;.

2· , yr. old cats, 1 mate and 1

21

~...

I

1:00 (]).

Opponunlty
!NOTICE!

11

mate. 614 -256-6348 .

11

Help

Wanted

1-lERE , LET

RMall StOf'l Menager W.nltd
For local Chain Stori'. ·Musl

Help Wanted

Hove 3 Ye•rs M•n•gomonl Ex·

S35010AY PROCESSING

Had Obedience Training. 614- PHONE
ORDERS!
PEOPLE
245 -9622.
•
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Brad, blac k Lab, 3 yr. old male,
1-800-255-0242.
gentle, obedient, to good home
only, 614-992-7285
... POSTAL JOBS...
Halt Border Collie, Half Sable
NOW HIRINCi
•-•
C 1
Coll io, 1 Yoar Old, Vory Pretty, Cl ar ks .
~~~•rs.
arr era,
Mechanics. Slart $11.41/hr. For
Emplo~ment

lnlo. Call ' 1·216·
Rabbits, 304-675-2527.
324 -2'1 2. 7a.m. · 1p.m., 1 Days . ·
Torn down building good lor AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
kindling and llrewood, to some- weaver 304-882·26 45 ,
one whoever will haul away.
304-675-5103.
Acllvlty Director, tre you a
warm compassl,:male ptrson
willing lo work wit~ ~ncl tor
• 6 Lost &amp; Found
residents ol Care Hann of
. FOUND: 4-5 mo. old tamale Point Pleesant, enthusl~atlc and
puppy. Yellow Lab. mi•. out~olng to coordinate ac. Neighborhood Rd. area. 6 l4- tlv it1ts
p~ram.
Certified
and/or sxpar~tnct dtslrtble.
: 446·1139.
Send rtsumt to Greg Stephens,
: FOUND female Beagle near Rt. 1 Box 326, 1Point Pleasant,
· Ma son Bridge, no col(ar, 304- wv 255SD by Jan. 10.
173-5626 or n 3-5531.
ADDRESSERS WANTED lmFound · gold fork, Hampton Hol- mediately!
No
Experience
low aroa, 614-742-2443
Necessary.
Process
FHA
Mortgage Refunds . Work AI
P
. LOST, 25 Aula Raven istol, Home. Caii1-40S·l21 •3064 ,
, Ha rtford, WV. $50. REWARD,
· 30HI82-2602.
AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
: LOST- 2 .saag~s. 1-male, 1. Speara, 304-675-1429.
female in Stivarsville area, Babysitter In y_our home
· Please call 614-843-5403
(Addison or Chuh1re area) tor 2
. Lost: Black Purse In Rio Granda children jDay &amp; night shlfta).
. And s A. 325 Area. Reward~ Call after 2 p.m. 614·367·7215.
·
5 5353 E
9
. Daytime: 614-24 JCI. 21 .
Clarks,
sorters ,
carriers,
mechanics. Slart $11.41 1u. For
: Lost: Heart Shaped Diamond employment Info. Call1-2'16-324. Ruby Ea rring, Sentimental Value 2102 , 7am·10pm, 7·dly.
. 614-367-7528 , Reward !
1.:. .':::;:;-:;;:;::7.:-;=::7.::-::::::-:::: Lost: mala , Siberian Husky, 1
CONSTRUCTION WANTED
blue eye, 1 brown _,eye, very ~ 80 -$ 65 ~ L~borar~ ~ar~n~ars,
0 ers,
friend ly, reward, Crew rd. area, EaOsoEns 80•0 n5158 '" 542n
614-992-7168
. . . 1- - 1-1 .

°

Construclion
Wanttd-$180Lost: Tuppers Plains area , $650, laborers, carpenters,
· 91aek, mal t miniature poodle masons, painters atld rooters.
with tid collar, please call 614-- EOE, 1.800·55'1-1542.
. 667-6855
Otpendsble babysitter niMdld
tor 2 children. Mon. • Fri. Call
,: 7
Yard Sale
614 ·44~17 after 5:30p.m.
Dapendtbla sitter ntldtd for at·
ter sct'lool etrs and school
holidays, W1St'llngton School, 2
children. Send rtaponse to: Sit·
to.r 1 206 Klnaon Or. , Gallipol is ,
OP'I 4S631.

· ALL Yard Salas Mus t Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Laborers, earn to $450 wttkly,
the day before the ad Is IO run. will train several openings also
Sunday editloo - 2:00 p.m. PT, HI00-551-1545.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
Live-I n housekeeper! corn·
p.m. Saturday.
panlon tor 97 yr. old lady, avail·
able now or near future, nursing
skills nol required, call collecl
614-698-2765
6
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Needed: Christian musicians •
dru'lll, bus, guitar, keyboard .
• Rick PNrson Auction Company, Call Date attar 5:30 p.m. 304·
' full ·time auctioneer, comptllle 675-71154.
: auction service. licansad Ohio,
NHded: Salasptrson for area .
• West VIrginia, 304·n3·5785.
Plena And ruumt to: Rt. 2
'
Box 001 Pl. Ptoasont, wv 25550.
: 9 Wanted to Buy
Part-time reespllonlst, must ba
• Honda Odvtlt)', Qed, model In
, hava telephone
: good cond. Call Kent 614-446- sp~raonable
kills , able to deal with public,
• 4371 .
and handla gan~ral oHica
: Wanted to buy, Standing limber, dulles, $4.60hr, 'Pomeroy araa,
, Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-992- send resume' to: Daily Santlnet,
Bolt 729H, Pomsroy, OH
, 5449.
• ::.:C..:C~--::-,-:-.,..,-::-,-c-:• Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S. Reprasantatlves wsnted tor
• Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins, Avon, no lerrltory nacassary,
' Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, !rae gin with "gn-up, Call Kay,
614-992-7180
: 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

perltnct. Send RHume To: Box
CLA 103, C/0 Gtlllpollt

Dtilr.
Tribune, 825 Third Avenu.. Ga.

llpollo, OH 45131.
Social

Worktrl

Counselor.

Dlrtd Hrvlet counseling and
ctllmanagtmtnt with adolts·
cents lnd thtlr Ia miiiet. Evtn·
lng tnd WHktnd flexibility re·

qulrtd. MuiU-Ievel progr1m
re:rr,slbllltill Involving oHiel
an ln-t'lome crisis, lntsnslvt
ttomebased services snd indepandent living skUI building.
Ever changing, Innovative and
cretlivt non-trtcllllonal sarvlct
dttlgn and delivery rtlpon·
slbUHtes. EnsrGtUcj CCOC, LPC
and/or USW pre erred, LSW
considered. Must dsmonst111t1
cultu1111 competence tnd have 1
tamlty based focus. Send
resume to: H~K:kltbtrry House,
142'1 Ham ..t 9trHt, Columbus,
OH 43201
Surrogate Mothtirs Wanttd, FH
Plus Expenses For Carrying A
Coupft't Child. Must Bt 18·35
And Previously Had A Child.
Steve Lilz, Atty., 317-996-2000.
Wanted : Eltetronlc Technician
Wilh TV &amp; VCR br.rienct. Mall
Resume To P.O. ox 702, GalIIpolls, Ohio 45631.
We'll Pay You To Typa Mamas
And Address• From Home!
$500.00 Per 1000. Call1-900-896·
1666 ($D.99JMin.J Or ....,Wtlla:
PASSE· 33M, 161 S. Llncotnwsy,
li. Aurora, IL 60542.
We'll pey you lo typs nam11 &amp;
addrtssn from home! $500. per
1000, 1•90o-eK-1666 ($0. 99/mln
Mln/18 yrt.+) or write: PASSE·
517M, 161 S. Llncolnway, N
Aurora,IL60542.

12

Situation
Wanted

Call: GanUtman needs home
and help with some household
duties. Will psy r1nt Please call
between 8a.m.-12 noon. 814-446lllj03.

Lots. 614-446-1279.
·44
Apanment

WOOF WOOF

ME SEE

1 bdrm. basemant apt., tur·
nlshed, ullllllas . ptld, $200
monthly, 614·949·2526afler 6pm

VENDING ROUTE' G~ Rich
Oulek? No Way! But We Hav1 A
Good, Steady, Affordable, Busi- i bdrm. unfumlshad apta., parness. Won't last. 1-800·284- tial utilities
d1poslt and
rtf1rances requ r.d, 614-992·
8363.
2094
1&amp;2-bdrm apta, In Racine OH,
Real Estate
unfurnished, &amp;14-892·65611
2 BR, CA, washtr &amp; dryer
hookup, no pets. $250/mo. 61431 Homes for Sale
44&amp;-449'1.

""I

Buy now: Low Interest, just
reduced $38,500. 3 BR, 1-112
bath..l. full carpal , 2 car garage.
75'1 ~.R . 141. 614·446·7878.
Double Wide With 1 Acre · Land,
Gallipolis Ferry, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Electric, Central Air,
$37,000. 304~675-7217
Split entry, 2112 acres, B miles
out Sand Hltl, 2,240 sq H,
swimming pool, 2 decks, 304895-3624.

32

~

I'"'"'your t' ,,~,. rnlo
.
qr~lr,
Sell it tire easr wuy... by 11hune,
no ne~tl to IPflt'~ you.r: lrouw.
l'lace you•· clussilied ad tU(la y!
I 5 wonl~ orle~~, 3 duys, 1
J PUIJers;$6.00

2br Apartment Fer Rent, $200
Plus Deposit In Crown City,
01\lo. 614-256-6495.
2br Apartment, Located, 466-1/2
Fourth
Av;nue,
Gallipolis.
Stove, Refrigerator, Waler Furnished. $235/mo. $'100 Daposlt.
614-446-3810.
2BR,
bath , kllchtn.. .Newly
remodeled. Nice area, big yard.
$325/mo., 1325 dap. Days 614·
446·1157, Eve. 814-894-4501.
3 room effecisnc:y, Ullllllas in·
eluded, 614..g91!:·5949

Mobile Homes
for Sale

$173 Per Month Will Buy You A
New 1992 Deluxs 14x70, 2 Bath
Home With A Warm, Cozy
Woodburnlng Flraptaca. tncludts QuicK Delivery, Setup,
Skirting, Steps, Blocks, And Up
To 6 Months •••Free••• LOI Rant .
Limited Time otter. To Stt A
Tlmt To Sst The Home Call 1800-466-7671 And Ask For
Elaine Or Branda.

3br 2 Battis, FP, OW, CA,
$475/mo. Deposit Raquirild, 614446-4222, or Evenings: 614-4462174.

Apt. tor rant $175, house for rent
$'100 Pomeroy. Apt. tor rent
Mlddlepon 1100, 614·992-7511
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockson Plko
from $192/mo. Walk to ehop &amp;
1972 Castle, central ai r, under movle11. Call614-446·251i8. EOH.
pinning, porch, part. furn is hed, Comptatly Fumlahtd Small
$3000, 614-742-2369
HouH, 1250/mo. Plus Utlllll11,
1973 14)(68 Shultz, mobile tloma, And Daposlt. 614-441.0338. Call
Betort?p.m.
good cond, 614-992-2111
1974 Holly Puk, 12x70, 1112 Furnished Apartmenl, 1br, n•xt
baths, ali electric, completely to Ubrary, p~rking, cent1111 heat,
f'lmodatad, $10,500. lnvastment air, retar~ees. 614-446-0338,
Before 7p.m.
wilt 1111 $7,900. 304-m -5840 .
1979 Cleirmonl 14x70, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 bath, wlunderpennlng
and front porch, gas heat ,
cantral air, must move, $8,500 .
304-882-2341.

1 acre lralttr lot on Georg11
Craak Ad. Good locatron .
$5,900. 514·446·1615 or 446-1243.
3 Acres : Old House And Barn,
Half Flat, Halt Hilt Swann Crttk
Road . Call614-256-&amp;554 .

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at ViUag•
Manor
and
Riverside
Apa,ments In Middleport. From
$196. Call 614-992-7197. EOH.

Apt far rant by month or wHk,
304-882·2566.
Rooms lor rent - wttk or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia HoteL
614-446'-9580.

WOOF WOOF
WOOF WOOF

Goods

Rentals

2 pr drapes, 5T' long, multi·
color wlllght blue, lllte n•w
n•ver cleaned or washed, 304·
675·4563.

Houses for Rent

2 bldroorn ail tlte hOIJMI, Lion,
WV. 304-451-1808 bttwNn
1:00AM l 2:00PM.

40 ln. Round 5pc . dineU• $10; 3
driwer btaok metal diSk w/
typewrlt'r tland $50. 514-4480020.

2 Bedroom HouH, D•~•lt And
Alftrlflc.' Reqwlrad. No Pels. 5 Piece Dinene Stt: 9make
114-441-4879.
S1alned' TabM Top, · Chrome
liM, 4 Plddod Sldo Chllro.
2br HouH Off Allee AOfid, $300 $150. Ctll Aft" 5p.m. 114-441Plus Utllltl11 And o.;r.slt. 1 8157.
I
Ytu Lust ..114-388-873 •
Count~ Applllnce Inc. Good
2br Houn, e Milts From Gil· ullld
eppllancn, T.V. tstloOpen·
llooll11 AI. 7, Boulh. Ctll 114-2151- 8 1.m. to 8 p.m. Mon ...Sit. 8141·
1&amp;64, ...........3100.
•.
446•159!_~ . 527 :Jrd. Ave. Oil·
l llodroom hou'" 14CIS Codor llpolil, UH
Sl, Pt. Ph, 304-175-3753.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
3 BA
In Mon:orvlllo. Dop. Waahera, dryere, r•fligatatora,
r&amp;ri(IH. Skagas Appliances,
&amp; Ret. 51.-446·1151.
Uppir Alv• ACI. B11ldl Slon•
3 lA houat lor rani, Pt. '"'Crllt Mottl. Call 814-«e.-1318.
Pltuont, 1 112 bolltt, dopoolt.
LAYNE'S FIJRNITUAE
Aol. req, 304&lt;17!1-2081. .
'
Complete homa tumlshlngs.·
3 ' aA, 2 tun batha, tp, wood Houfi: • Mon-Sat, · W . '114-444deck. patio, count:r, liltinG, 10 0322, 3 mlloo ... lulnlllo Rd.
min. from Qalflpot s. $350imo. Frw Dellw•ry:
Dop. • 2
roq'lcl. 114-441- :.=.;;PICC.:K"'ENS::::CI'U=AN"'ITU=A;-E--;.7104.
(·
Nowo\Jtld
Sinlll:lbr Komi Por Alnl, I Min.

homo

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675-}333
992-2l56

Lj,LJ,6-23L1,2

O ·UpCiooe
World Today
0 Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
Stereo. Q
1:051]) AI In 1111 Femlly

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=On

~~~~~~~::=::~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ea~a
51

56

Household
Goods

Salo On All C.rpot In Slockl

lvmll!t!ng. 1~ m~
Jontelto Ad. Pl. Ploiunt, WV.'""' Holzer
O.llpollo,
• At.35,
, .. ·
coiiJOW7I,- .
Dopooll, 11...-1710.
QuWI o1zo JJino llod oomploto
6moH Unlumllhld Hoorll,__:i wf!h · - tao. Coli e A-, 8olh, All ~on"'l 2111.
Ctrpotld. DrQOIIoo, ...... ~
Porch, P~v.,. Por1t1111, 114-441. FIENT 2 OWN
fM-44I.J15I
2102.
VI'" •··-•uro
c~m
42 , Mobile Homes
Sofa
&amp; 'Citolr,
111.10 Swtvll
WMtt;
Aloi!Mr,
1$.47 Waolt,
AOI:klr.
•to
WtH.Iunk
1ec1
tor _!lent
~-~ - • .._. 4 1Jratoa
-·...-• - · "-'"'
r
2 bdrm mobllo liomo tor rent, Cltoll, 11.21 Wllllfl; Pooler • -· I mlloo tnrm Potnaroyl room lulll, 7 po,. ltU7 Woof!, ·
==~· IIIII oloclrlc, '14·
-

Pets tor Sale

1 Reg. Bri1tany, 14 mos. old.
Must sell. Make offer. 614-446·
3486.

VInyl, 14,gg yd. Corpot $4.00 Up.
Mollohan Clrptttl. 6M-446-ilt44. AKC registered Boxer puppies.
304-882-3397.
SWAIN
register.d
Teaeup
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 AKC
Olive St., Gtlllpolls. New &amp; Uud Pomeranian, 5 mos. old, 614turnlturs, heal1rs, Wtttarn &amp; gg2-7841
Work boots. 614-446·3159.
AKC Scottish Terrier puppltt,
Unci Ttppan microwave tor non ahtddlng, 2-tett, health
guarant11, now taking deposits,
salt. 614-446·3496.
814·594-4677 Att'lsna
VI'RA FURNITURE
BeauUtut St. Benard puppl.,,
614-446-3158
LIVING ROOM : Sofa &amp; Chslr, lull blooded but not reglstared,
$199 .00;
Rtc:llntr, $149.00; taking dsposlts, 614·"'2·'2025
Swtv11 Roehr, $99.00; Cott11 &amp;
Drsgonw~ncl Cattery Ptrsltn,
End Tables, $89.00 Set .DINING Slame11
and Hlmalsyan klllans.
ROOM: Table With 4 P1dded &amp;14-445-3844afttr
7 p.m.
Chair&amp;, $149.00; Country Plna
Dinette With Bench And 3 Fish Tank, 2413 Jtekson Avt.
Chairs~, $299,00; Matching 2 Point Plaaunt, 304-675·2063,
Door nltch, $349; Or $589.00' lull tine Troplcal flshl birds,
Sal; Oak Table, 42x62 With 6 tmall anl~11sand suppl ss.
Bow
Back
Chairs,
$&amp;29.00.BEOROOM : Politar Bed· lguant tor salt, 304·773-~72.
room Sulta (5 pc.J, $349.00 ; 4
Drawer Chnt, $44.95; Bunk Tools: C111fttman, Chtlltngar,
Btd, $229; Complete Full Matt Rldgltd, Proto, Wf'lnch aockets,
Set, $105.00 Set; 7 pc. Cedar loolbox,s, standard and matrlc,
Bedroom Suit1, $899.00.0PEN : 814·142·2001
Monday Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4' Milas Ott Routt 7 On
Farm Supplies
Route 141 In Centenary.
&amp; Livestock
52 Spontng Goods
1 Bear Supar Magnum 44; 1

Golden Etgle Super Hawk 61 Farm Equipment
Turbo, txc . cood. Ctll 114·367·
185 Allis Chalmers Diesel Trac7289.
lor, $5,950; D·14 AC With Loader,
$2,950, 0 -17, AC With PIO"'• Cul53
Antiques
:---.,..,..:..,-,..,,-- tivstor, Grain Drill, $2,950; 614·
Buy or sett. Riverine Antiques. 288~522 .
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 4020 JD Tract, With Big JD
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. Loadar, $5,950; 1020 JO OIHII•
91\arp, $4,995j 460 Lona DiHel
614·992·2526.
With New 5 Ft. Buill Hog,
· $4,350. Owner Will Flnanct. 814·
54 Miscellaneous
288~522.
Merchandise
1989 Ford Escort, LX, Steel
Grt'y, Top Condition, Call 614256-6554.
25 ln. console color t.v. Good
cond. $150. 614-446-27'13.

8 n.ChmoiOIIIIJCk bod. ci11~
ter 5 p.m. 614-446-3243.
Baby crib, baasinen, hiGh chair,
swing, roc:ker, dressing tJbla &amp;
car Nit. Full size bed, twin slz1
bad, complete caff11 labia &amp;
end plaeea. 304-675-4548.
Big 4BR, 2 bath, Dakots dream
home bultl lor you $29,995. 61488ti ·7311. Display modal now
open.
Big Little John wood bumlng
stove $100 with plpa. 614·3889918.
Elactrlc hal water ltnk, 42 gst,
good cond, SSO, 614·,.2-31,67
Emeraon microwave $35; stereo
w/spukars $50; 1irwsva com·
puterlztd exercise bika S75. 814·
445-71155.

Gehl 95 grlndw mlnr. New Hoi·
ltnd 478 h1ybint. New Holland
460 9ft hayblne. Alles Chalmert
two row no 1111 com plant1r. All
good cond. 304-273·4~15.

63

2 Hone Trailer Naw Ptlnl, Naw
Tlroo, $1,195; 1990 AOHA GOld·
ing, $800; 8 Y•ar Okt Paint Mare,
$610. 614-2B6-6S22.

Firtwood For Sata , Will Deliver.
614·258·6202.

Limousine Bull, registered with
Gf:.ra . Call after 5 p.m. 114-388-

Firewood, lump and slacker
coaL Raven Woeklng Coal Corp,
Clifton tlppta, Cllfton, WV.
Delivery avallabte. 304·713-5531.

WIII hauli1VIItock.ll14~.,6-1514.

Good, ulld washer and dryer,

Handmsde oall }lwlrey cablntl,
ladin wedding rinG Ml, appro,:
113 c:arat diamond, 304-675·1m.

-

, w.441olllt.

·=
t.

an Cent:..,. ,

AT lEA!&gt;f, fHAf'5 WHAT
I Ll~ TO fHIJ.lK.I

64 Hay &amp; Grain
,...-,---"'-,----,.,...Hey tor sa... large round batas
$10 excellent qualltyi ·orctlard,
Grill &amp; clover, 614-3711-6459

MacNeil
Nowo-EJ
IJleeondi!CotiOfl
Gil Current Aflllr 1:1

Trucks for Sale

•

1985 Ford F150, auto, llr, good
condlllon, 814-247-3895

- I
I

1986 Ford F·250, V-8, 4x4, 47.000
Milts, Call A"'r 5p.m. 614-4464473.

~T0

5:00PM .

198S Ford F·150 Custom 23,000
Liner, AMIFM 614·445-4316.

,

1988 Ford F·t50 XLT Llrtot, I
Cylinder, 4 Splld, 4x4, Elc:etlont Condlllon. 614-388-9614. ,

73

Vans

.fHOPf

&amp; 4 WD's

1982 CJ7 joop, 304-8B2·338l
1986 Bronco 11, XLT.L 4 whatl
drive, V-6 aulo, air, t~W~PO, .2
tone paint, running
. rdl,
original paint, no rusl, Zl• art
unCIIrcaatlng &amp; clear coat. Mull
111
to apptlclate, liking
$5,500. 304-575-2919.

'

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1 ,.

I

i

•

!

•

..
'

I

I

I

Army I••P· 1983 Ford F·250, 4
wheel drive, 4 speld. 1976
Buick. 304·937-4080 after 8:00
PM.
Motorcycles

_.,. -

eo-~-

1MI NotU . . . tltal Goad
Wwtt ~· f\1:10. -.m2.
1,;,:,:;_::;~E""':;..:.;;;,_;;.:.::_
1111 111t1s Claro~:~~-.

1;:;.;:

SOliTII
+AQII2
'AU!
t KJ tO

ts

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
11 ••,...

a•

VOlt&lt; City bomb equid

·The World. Almanac" Crossword Puzzle

~ahlzanl.

'

ai"'i'n:t'elnquo 11 111rt

fooll tlte town Into lltlnklng
that I child hu ._, down I

q:~·-

Stereo.
IIIP111t11Ntw1Q
11!1 Thot'l My 'Dtti

8:30 (])

e

0 The Tolttellono A

ridlo pop-psychologist trial

to apraad a ~ obout
love. Sllteo.
I!De 11tm11n • Haacl

9.

· MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Hennen lets Louise's oecrat
out of the beg and hB.£!1YS
the price. (R) StBreo. GJ
Amorlcln Mullc Sliop
Stereo.
11!1 You Alkld for II, Again
t:OO (]) G g Clteln Woody
moonllghll at a cemetery to
pay for Kolly's engagement
ring. Sttreo. Q
, CD (!) MytaletYI Afamous
a rtist Is found dead of an
rlnt sulci()&amp;. (PI 1 of 21

campers&amp;

a

Motor Homes

Serv1ces

t

Home

113111.,SII'MI-•
tereo, r;il
liD. Bev..ty HIUo;II0210

.

YOU AN' LU.KEY ·

I'M GITIIN' ME

SPLIT UP?

A NEW DISH·
WASHER II

GUESS/!

A.UWM'

3

t I 2, Romlft ----~4 t
mlatako

43

10 Guoutd
13 BHr foam
14 Group ol

44

~

turn

47

Crci
,
SUlfa, and Young
Tum the
pogo (obbr,)
Actor O'Naol
Mldlcll
auHIK
Crtnt orm
port

15 Un IYod
I halo
16
uRllarlo
17 Cut
18 AccounUng

52 S&lt;Kt
55 ·Take tho buo
56 Type of

2D Sflppor, a.g.
23 Long, loo11
gannont

57 Shout
58 Funn
59 Language

49

age,.

ch••••

26 Not on

auffl•

courH

30 Sht (Fr.)
31 - IYII
33
34
35
36

to P1eWIDU1 hall

DOWN

Taro paote
Wino cup
Mild oath
A- by any

7 No man-lolond
8 We•

I lledlcal
picture

2 Uneven
3 Doctrine

other n1me

4 Acct.

37 Orlglnata

om lndlono
12 Colo~ng
16 Coin or
France
11 Soul (Fr,J
2I Groupo of

chalco

6 Cot

5 Makea

9 Subtlde

tO Fnt aircraft
labbr.l
I I Southwlll·

Brandon meets a skater and
laama about the cttal!_engas
of training. Stereo. 1;1
II) MOVIE: The Fury (R) ·

'BARNEY
GUESS WHAT I'M
1 GIVE
GITIIN', LOWEEZ:Y-UP!!

ACROSS
4 Clown
9 Makll a

a 011

Naw gas tanks, body parts, 0111·
ton truck whMII, l'ldlators,
floor mat~J etc. 0 6 A Auto,
Ripley, Wv. 304-3n·3933 or 1·
800-27:1-8505.
.

a Nollltvllll -

BERNICE ·
BEDE OSOL

-

( !) Ullcllf Fl,. 11\la

*Y·

42 T~god on

lllltlp't rope)

pe110n•

.lon.W,1112

,.._:

Jwllal- you do 'In tM Ifill ahald II tlon~ today. KelP a 'loW 'profile . and :c~arc:id:
Ill Someone
to .be d..- on a grander oc:Bie ' dont r - Your lnlentiD?' tq .,-one you've-tty mot 'llvwy lnKIOIII to
:than In thB put. Thll li ept to be true . i10I dlr*!ty'~;
,
.
get toe-thor wllh you ageln In order

'll~lfy

ooi:l&amp;lly •

111011 u QOflltlllf¢ally.
'CAFIICOIII (Deo.II.Jin. 11) Sonle'
1 necu 1 ary to toot your own
'hom In otdlr to IMOUIICO IQmllhlng
·w.~~~y you've crone thai iiiOufCI be
1
..........1 to thB -lion Of - · · II.
"'
!lry, blow your l!tllllt today. Get 1
jump on lift by underltancllng thB 1~nu-IJQM!nl"' you In thB year ahaad.

- · n·

•

TAUIIIIS

201

YOI;! c.n
.merc. a favotabll, luting lmp.-on
today byputtlngyourllll outforolharl,
~1111)1 Wyou do 10 WithOut malting
t1t1m fell ollllgalld In lrll' way.

(ApriiiO llay

..dllcuaa a ...tuBIInll&lt;tll' Thll meellng
coutd tlk1 ~ 1-y.

IAGrTTAitiUI (Mow, II Dee 211 From
time to tlml t1w0ug11out lhll month. you

~ 201 Oon't be ~~:::::'=~.::e::.~
IITald to eleVate youralghtu bit today ~,... , becluM thfl coutcl II; OM of

....
-

(llay

tltabllahlng

your ~~Ya!-, You ih:'dayo.

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44I.JIIIIHCI

46 POittlltft,
word

46 On lilt OCIIn
4611oldt50 Unemployed
51-·-

Goddto

u..

53 lila -- tung

54 1'11111 thing' I
55 CoriBI grlln

progr1m

r&amp;&lt;:I'BBtel major,_.
atorleo, !ocullng on the
storlta behind !Ito hBedllnea,
In I 11amll11 blend with
IICtuol ~or the events.

~!OJ,. Knolil.lilcrrng

=

vau:n

0:::"'/:+:::'•lo

.....

3::0.

Houston at To••• (L)
10:00 (]) • Q, LA. Llw Mullaney
usea his defense of a killer
to ODite hla wife. Stereo. Q
(I) liowa
Ill MOYIE: ·c..lllt (2:00)
Cll (I)
Time
s-tereo.
C!l Adv
• or Robtn

!:me

Elm
Eggs on
Sorry worde
Orgon or

40 Enllronmont

0 College lllaltliill

Send for CapriCOrn''s Astro-Graph pre- can perfomt remart&lt;ably well - II you
dlctlono today by mailing $1.25 plus a push yoursell a little harder t~an usual.
long, self·addresoed, stamped enve- CANCER (June 21.July 221 If tlte&lt;e Is
lope to Astra-Graph, c/o lh!• 1111Wt1pa- an Important agreement you have to
per, P.O. Box 9142a, Cloveland, OH nagotiate with another, this Is!&gt; good
44101 -3428. Be sura to stale your zodi- time to put It on the table. Chances ere
· ac sign.
•'·
a quick undllitandlng can be raached.
AQUAIIIUI (.lon. 20-Foll, 11) Condl· . LEO (Julya3-Auti. 221 YOu're quito eNI·
tlonelool&lt; e•tromoiy.ravorable today for clent • today and certainly not apt to
enhitnclng your material oec:urlty: Thare waste time or motion perlormlng asIs something you can do at thil time that slgnments, partlcuilrty In a Joint
could produce long·t•m beneftta.
endaavor.
PtiCII (Poll. :II .... ch 201 Slow start- YIRGO (Aag. a3-a.pt. 221 Sometlmil,
era bettor 11111- today once you get IWO haadl are better than one. Thil II
on a roll.
mlln' b l l - and, If ont of , thoaa days whB!t your mtorta
anyoM-Iohop on your blndwag- could .be doubly alfacthre worklng , ln
on, tltay'IIIWWI to be of thB..,.. !rarne tandem with anothar'a.
·,
a! mind , .
, ,
. UIRA (llpl. D-Oc!. 23) Th!OI!Qh un·
AJIIII (Minoh 21•Aprit 111 In your own selftah deolre to tlo'what you can to halp
qulol way, pOiitlve - t l can be otlten. you ·mlghl r - rowarda you
token to lurtller ywr
arnbl- didn't IMit today- yet you'll -.a

Hontywinl

, 38 BIMbllt

Stereo. r;J
0 Wingo StBreo. 1:1

ASTRO-GRAPH

Opanlngo

Kart
32 lllw&amp;llln ian
35 ZuZaa'a
lllltf
38 Rodont

s1ereo.

Ill LillY King U..l
11!1 Fatlter Dowling Myo-.

.•

anlmlll
22
23
24
25
27
28

2Q llldt equal

(2:301

Ftther Dowling's life II put In
dangar because of a
photogropl&gt;. (R) Stereo. Q
t :30 (]) • Wingo Antonio and
Holen poli aa an tngagad
e011ple 12..1oo1 t1te autttorltles:

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

UphOIItery

t6

Last September at a club ·iit New Soatlt
Eul
a 13-table section played U
Pua
g e Flmly FIUCI
.
rounds.
Wben
the
IICOres
Pua
It
1•
Pus
a a. a .,., StBreo.
tiwere computed, .the East-West win· 2•
POll
Pus s••
0 College lelkllbll
had 49.13 percent. With no lrregu· · tt
Pus 4 NT Puo
Michigan 11 Iowa (LI
~
lariti1es
of
any
sor~
how
could
a
wins•
Pus
AlltaCrilufh
•game-forcing
score
be
under
average?
·
7:351]) NIIA llllk- Dallaa.
1986 the World Bridge Federa..
Maverleka 11 AU1nta Hawke
Opening lead: • t
introduced instant matchpoinl:
(L)
Uscoril3g in the Epson Worldwide Si·
8:00(])• 0 Colby.._ Pam,
multaneoua Pain. After each hand, 'I.L - - - , - - - - - - - . - - - !
Lince ond Cllarmllne -*!
~llr'slag.ol edvlce. Sl8rea.
you learned your score immediately.· mood 8 ·ut killed the colttract. .~
For example, if you were plus 650 on ' Did yop u spot South's error' When
~ MOYIE: Milk olllamla
boanl26, you received 56 matchpo1nts ·
· ri · k
(2:00)
and your opponents got u .
·. East drops the heart aeven .at t c ., ..
rn we corulllbo
Today's deal is from a JJ91 instant l two, South must unblock hie eight. · ·
Columbo's pt"'tnd to IOtYI
matcbpoint event beld by the Ameri· 1 West !'- best to duck his kine. but if
a murder for which IIIOfe'o ...
can Contract Bridge League.
I be wms and returns the club klnc,
1JS1 body. (R) (2:00) S...O.
A collUilOIIIlne of play In si1 hearts South ruff• with the beart nine, cu11es
was to win trick one with dummy's the heart ~""· and leads the beart
Ell lman Menu pllnnlng
club ace and run the bear! queen. West three for a fmesae of dummy's olx. Tbe
lnd COOking tips ...
woo with the king and led the club. last trump II drawn and the diamoDds
provldad; the changing role
or faat food In t1te Arrir1can
king, South-ruffed, cashed the bea~t, wm.u::=::Point acorlnglt I
dill II txoml"""; I CO!JI'Min
ace
and finessed the bear! Dine. Tbe di·, is ~•., f the -"··•·· pair to fin· "f
food lhollPIIIQia give~(. (I :00)
amond 10 was overtaken With dum· · ..--e or
w.......,.
(J) Wol de WOib Plllftllr
my's queen and the last trump was- ish :.!:!."!".:~•tcUiw- .
Mooll Slareo. D
.
ikaWII. But the UOOipected ~~
•
,
.. . Ill Ill Top COpe A New

Auto Pans &amp;

--.~.!..,.'
I. - ~"

tQJ8652

tKI0953

score
how much?

aWhBIIofF-1;1

Budgll Tl'llntminlolw, UHd &amp;
l'lbuln, starting It 1911; Auto
Parts. 614·245-5677, 614-311-

81

: +K74

Cll Enll!l!lruneflt Tonight
s-tBr!O,_r;iJ
\II• Mlilfld,..WIIII ~

Accessories

79

,,

e

1986 Kawasaki KOX 80 Dirt
Blkl, IIC cond, UHd very lilt..,
ool&lt;lng 1500. 304·117&amp;-2919.

W1ntlng to go lnlo the utld car
psr1s busk1. ., over -40 cars,
over 2,000 parts In etock. Call
aftw 5:00p.m. 514-441-3072.

. 'K 1012

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3404.

....,

\-

,986 S-10 Blazer 4x4, blut1 • 5spted, Ilk $5,000, Clll 614-va:S.
4492

.
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AKC C'haoaflle LlbrNot
-l!ul, ,7 ,..
llltoio W Wonnlll. 111111y1;:
P-1 13011114 111 11n. ,

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7:051]) Allin lilt Fomlly
7:30 (]). 0 J-rdyl 1:1
(I) Now HCon Be Toil

~

188&amp; Dodge Caravan LE, Dadtd,
clean; i7,000 milts, NADA
"BooK" vstut- $5900. Asking
14900. 304-175-53011 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINO
71 Aut f · S I
Unconditional li,.tlme Gutran·
= = = o..s-=o~r==-a--e=-:- t... Local rtltl'lncH tumlshld.
198'7 C1m1ro, $2,500, pottlble Frw estl•., atn. Ctll collect 1·
tradn and cash, 614-111-7049 814·237-G4N, da~ or nlfK.
~11"1 BIMmant waterprooor 114-698·'7tl8
fing.
Sattllht TV System
1979 Chryllw Cordobl naw
PROSAT Modtl 810 Sattlllte paint, new Urn, $1000, itk-675- Complete MobiJI Home Sll~
Repairs; Commtrlcal, Attldln,
Sylttm, With Aectlver And 5955 after Spm
PH!tlontr. Good Condition.
M 1'·· C
1
AJC liaf fmprovtmtnts . Including:
$425, Buyar RemovH sr.seem. 1980 al Ul,l 1111 c, auto,
, Plumbing, Electrical. lnauranc~
• • SEOEus
cruise, good body tnd Nbblr, C\11:1• Accoptld. 114·266·1111. ,
C
~~O.Enc ,..,
"' • • 4-441:' motor 1ock1d, btst offlr, 304·
875-4461.
. Curtla Hams . lmprovsmenlai
So100111d l Spill Ash, Ook And
•8(1 M
c
1
1 1 304 YNrt Experience On Older I
Hlc:kory Fll'tWoOd Dallvartd And 1.
onle ., o, r•• ·n ce,
• Newer Homea. Room Addltlona,
Sttckti:11 Don Wauah. 814-4u. 8~437.
FoW\dallon Work, Roof!~.
9141.
1180 Otdo Cldll, 8 cyl, 2 door, Kltc:htnl And Baths. FIH Esllmtlnl Atftrencea. No Job To
Stm Somsrvme·, Army $5IO. 30.W7S-1II ·
Big Or Smollll~41.-s,
'
SUrptua .by Sand~lllt Pottr 1111 Buick Sllytartr; tor Plfll,
0111ce, Jackton Counly, WV. ~engl:tnnt.814-Mt-222&amp; FNiman'g Plumbing And HMtJ
.lng, 1)4-211-1611.
•
Camftaugt cloth!~, Carhart• 10
parcant dltcount 1 junior csm· 1111 Chivy Chevttle good
tlou- roaulor prlcoo. Fri., body, lntorlor~~?, HILAtr• AIC, Ron'• TV Ser¥1c:e1 wpecllllzlng
Sat., Sun. Noon • 8pm. other 'good titK. •~41-:1410, 441- In :Z.nhh also ..,.Icing molt
other b111nd1. Hou11 calls, ar.o
doyo houtw coli 304·273-IIIIS, 2110. $550 0~0.
oomo opolllllco
WV
tnswltltd Dacfon camoflouge
:104-571-2~ Oltlo 114-44644M.
llo
130
oo
1111
Culluo
au.,_,
$2,000.
Co'.r. '
· '
·
'304-175-tftt..
Dtvlt
Slw·Vac
llrYIGI,
stlhl Chain Saw 051 Super, $3.00
Or B"t Otfer. 814-441---3411. ,
1m ·VWA AlbbH 4 sgookdoEa'ood Georg11 Ct11k Rd. Parte, 1up.
piiH, pickup, 111d clollvory: 814·
8
un1 00041
=1·"'' e xeii- 446-&lt;1294.
1 ody,
Walerbtd Solid .O.k Callfomlt tt&gt;nt Second car. I'M~1-G020.
Kin,, Comptoll lookoooo Mlr· •1114 Iuick: Ctntury,• 2.5 Utor .Will build polio co,.ro, dockll
50
:11: ,'t,~~~e::=~=
; ~ut"OT!'~
Htwp·: ·.~~. A1r -~drl"n~nldor r,oorno • Pk"' 11P • 1nyt
111 I 1111 ng. 1141 .,.vu,-,000 .,
... rowi ....I.NIW ant,
, "r
55 .
Building
MHn, "" To 8ollo11tl 814-371- _24_5·9..;5.;,2._ . - - - - 2.40t.
·
=--.-:~S~u..;p~p..IJt
..s=---:-.11114 Iuick Pork Avtnuo, AU 0p- 82 Plljmblng &amp;
Block, ll&lt;lck, -~po 1 , w1n14,000 ~'":!. O.r:¥:
Htltlll.ll
0111 1
_
-~..
Hmlti, oto.
tKio 'Will-=~11..•'~!!~,
nd..........
Plno
.,,., .•lo Orondo, 0 Ctll
•-~
_2-4_5_-112_1._ _ _ _ _ _. _ 1114 Dodge Arl•, 4 - · .bl1&lt;ki
1AIIJFM1 . . . . . ., 4 Cyt, MW IX•
56 Pets for sale
- · oM-M-'1231,' Mllllnoo .
1114 Plymouth Grond Fury,
Electrical
~~and /lupflty I~' 11110. tM-441-41111.
.
•
O.Jllltna. All _. .,_,
Rt~lrlgeml'oli
.... Pil hod .._...,,
1MI
~Wit~ Air

~

~

ANI&gt;

• Mf.f.IAGf cENTfk
• iJ&lt;tflC t$f GyM

Milos, 6 Cylinder, 5 SpHd, Bod

ALDER

~=£
ra

-··-...
• (ZEPAt? SHOP

1989 Ct'lav S·B, Blk, exc cond,
:lllvtt'ldo, 27,000 miles, all op.
Ilona, $9,000. 304-895-3638 alllr

PHtLLIP

Montrtlnt
0 The Waltonl

""~· Ft&gt;&lt; ·IT,
Mp. fAX·IT

H·tt

NORTH

.QJ85
tAQ432
+A 109

SlorBO. 9

'FRANK AND ERNEST

.,

BRIDGE

liD. Bllr Ti: nr. Nell
a.-tlon
IDle E'l!ftlli 1110111 Tontgltt

f

1983 GMC dine!, exc:. cond.,
low mi!Hge. Ctll tfter 4. 5t4446·7252.

Prom Dfllt, Slzt 8, Metallic,
GrHn And Blac:k, Worn Once,
175. 814-446·4393, A•k For
Sharry.
Rldihg lawn mowar, S750. 304·
458·1559.

=i
N
,
•w
-•

asked."Is this line open or 11"1 vou lust an OPTIMIST?"

1])=:~~
CD
C!l

Improvements

Transportation

1continued ta unload my grocery can while the clerl&lt;
took a shon break. A woman came up behind me and

OZono
1:351]) AU In IIIII Fomlly

- !

1-11 ·

Ms~r-Visor-lmpa/9--0PTIMIST

Blltlmoro Colts vs. Dallas

We buy nil or tr~dt. Jim
Coc:h111n Auto Center, 5th tnd
Viand Sl, P1. Pit. 304-675-1985.

72

scJtAM.Lm ANSWiu

Cowboys.

7:00;· 0 - o f F -

Tow vehicJt,, 1884 Eacort 4dr
Yurllng Angus And Charolaia wilh tow bar tnd light packAGe.
Bulla For Safe. 8143-441-4447.
gOod condition, 814~41-2141

'-'

\II
i IJie CBS NIWI 1;1
. liD • Andy Ot1llllll

2263.

Livestock

Firewood For Ssle, Big Flatbed
Loada, $45, Load. 614-446-9329.

For Sa.. : ComP'ete Watarbtd
Wllh A Semi wavolo" Moll'"'·
Call 614-441-0628.
'

e

Statlonwagon 1979, Ch•verolal
Malibu, auto, PB, PS, new tlrts,
$800, 614-992-2717

62

now buying 111 entry tlcktts to
Ohio Lottery's c11h explosion
gtme, call 614 · M2~3703

8:30(])e ONBC-~
(I) liVId by thB Bell
I]) (I)
CD Wild .AIC
_ Stereo. Q
Square One TV Stareo.

II) lcooby Doo
0 . _ low! V Hlgllllgltto

Otds Toronado 1979 low mll11,
sharp, asking $1495 obo, mull
soli 614..g92·2478

76

Wanted to Buy

.

For Sa..: 1182 Ford F-250 414.
Very Good Condition, $3,500.
614-949-2127.

74

:=,:w-:s :=::~ ~ rL-.::=_'elf
011~ reo•....... .....: .. .,..., ~ ,..... -· "" • ...!I!!!L'.... . . . . ,
=· ~.~.1. itC':
:=&amp;r\!:';C:~.~ ~~;-;;,~-=~~ ~lli;=.'lo.~

... -

'

Flblf'GIIIS T·Buc:ktt Body And
Fromo Wllh Suopen0lon 1750
Also, 4 Flf'l11one nm,
P2157'0R14, $250.614-4411-1425.

Jim's Farm Equlpm1nt, SR . 35,
Wnt Galllr.:l\s, &amp;14-44&amp;-977'7;
Wldesalact on nsw &amp; uttd farm
tractors &amp; lmplamantt. Buy,
sell, trade, 8:00-5:00 waekdays,
Sat. till Noon.
Wantad : Used farm aqutpm•nt,
enythlng you want to Hll. 614·
258·1308, 614·258-1040 After
8p.m.

AQHA 1888 ChntntO Golding 90
Days Training, 1991 Martz Stock
Tralttr, Big 'ltllt~ Aoysl Show
Saddla. t;14"·288-8522.

=:--:--- - ---c:----,..,- 814·247·3895
~"plng rooms !fflth cooking.

Also traller tptce. All hook-ups.
COUNTRY ACREAOE
Near Carptntar (Athens Area) , Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·77'J..
Ovar 5 Acras: Part Meadowland , 5651, Mason WV.
Ptrt WoodscL Nict Mlni·Farm
Site With Strtam Croulng.
Merchandise
Mobile HomH O.K. S7.950,
DopO.It $750\ Poymonll ii22.
Owner Finane ng . Clll Owner 1·
1100-127·21111.
St
Household

41

~~;;:bo~ Stereo.

THE LAD't' AT
THE LIBRARY 5AID
HER DOG LOVED IT

wheal drive, complete powar,
1988 Station
WagonEm.
tour
one ownor,
low mllooge,
614·446-9430.

for Rent

1981 Naahua mobllt home, Middlepor1, Besch St, 2 bad·
14x64, 2 BR, 1 bath, · new room furnrlshad apl, utilities
Elderly Houstbound lndivduals 1 rsfrlgarator, newly recarpated, paid, raterenc::et &amp; deposit ,._
Will Collata, Fold, Staple Ana wssl\er /drye~ S.16 front porc::h. qulrtd, 304-882-2566.
Stuff Envelopes , 814-446-6312 Park Ltne ~o;ourt . 614·446-6732
New Havan 1 &amp; 2 bedroom lur·
Betora 4:30p.m. Monday Thru after 5. $9999.
nlsl\ed tpl, deposit &amp; r•leren~
Frldoy.
1890 Spruc,rldgt, 14x70 3- cu requlr~d, 304·882·2566.
Would Llka A Placa To Uve . bdrm., 1-blth, heat pump, 1 2.75
Close To Town, With Roomate acrt1, 2 mlln north of Chestar, Nice 2 IR, 4-1/2 mi. from Gal·
llpolls. Slove. &amp; rtfrlg, No ptll.
To Wash CiolhH, Fhr: Dlnnar, In Rt. 7, 614-985-4492
$235/mo. 814-446·8031t
Return Will Pay Rent. 614·446·
3658 II No Answer Please Call 2 bdrm. trailer &amp; lot, located at Compl1tly Furnished mobile
Back.
360 Paarl St. Middleport, good home, 1 mitt below town , avercond., &amp; within walking to most looking river. No Ptts , CA. 614·
nacessltlta, $16,000, 614-949- 446.(1338.
14
Business
2389 or 614-742-22'11 ask lor
Training
Dave.
One
and
two
bedroom
apanments
lor
rent.
304-675Retrain
Now!!!Southeastarn Graat Selection Ot Repooses· 2053 or 675-4100.
Buslnns College, Spring Vallay sed Mobile Homl!s : Double
Pltu. Call Today, 814-446~3671! Wldts · $1.1.000 Down And Single Two 2 bedroom apts In Point
Wldes - 1500 Down With Ap- Plaasanl, 614-44&amp;-2200.
Reglstaratlon f90.05..1274B.
proved Credit Call Mid Ohio
8 W
Unfurnished 2br Giraga ApartFinance At 1-614·n2·,220.
::1,..,,.,..a.,n,..t,..ed.,.,.;t.;,o,.o_o;...,,..,..
ment, 322 Third Avenua, Gal·
Mobile home, 5 acrts, eJ:lra
Will Babysit In My Home. Rod· trailer hook-up, outbuildings, llpolls, 614-446-3JIB, 614-256ntr ArM. Refe,.neas Avallabla. fenced, 3 miles Pl . Pit, 304-6?5- 1903 B•fort 9p.m.
'Call114·245-518l
Very nlu 1 BA furnishtd apar1·
7853.
ment on Mt. Varnon A'lla.
Baby sitting In my home, blhlnd Short Time On Job?,....p(st Credit Upstaira . Private. $235 plus
school, r~~ltrtnces furnished , History A Problem? Many electrk. Ref. &amp; dep. 304-675:;:304,.,.:&lt;1.;;75.;;·2:;;7-:,84,;;·--:--:--:-:-:- Rapo11t111d Moblta Hom•• To 25S1.
Chlmnar Cleaning And Stain· ChooH From. Small Down
lass Stul Relining "S~Ing Tri- Payment. Callt-800-589-5711.
45
Furnished
Stata 16 Vtart" 614-867-'3618,
Rooms
Catdwoll Chlmnay SwHp.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

PIN downEX11U

CA8tl?H
I

ne11 whh peopta you know, and
NOT to send money through lt1e
mall unlit you. have lnvesligeted
the offering.

Ill liZ.

~ Square One TV Stereo.

Ex-

~~~-~;-~~j;·;;;-;j~st.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-r-=========1 OHIO
VALLEYthat
PUBLISHING
CO.
rnommtndl
you do busl·

c9Ae.s
wl•iO•Ii
lia
nnG
, puppies: 3 female, 6
eu11
lint

low to lontt fo•r dmplo word1.

(I) Vkllo Powa&lt;

Business

park, so I SIOCked up for the cruise."

I])

IIJ NoWI

WIIAT 'lou:Re READING ..

"I knew I'd miss feeding the pigeons at the

-0
loar"'nge lotttro of lite
.
lour IICtllmbltd -d•· boo

I

THU., JAN. 9

I]).

PIIILII

EYE NINO

WOOF WOOF ''

5 puppies, 8 wks old, Mother
3 0 4 88 2 28 5 5

&amp; VIcinity

TAA€&amp;

Financial

lom•!•· 614-992 -6666

Gallipolis

Television
Viewing

eor 1 ONt.Y LOST

Witt do babyslltlng any shlttJ
anyllmal wMkenda, Langsville
lrll, 614-ilt2-2443

1 112 yr. old bltck and whits Cotlit, 614-742-2858 or 614-992-6520

Good Wat ch Dog. 614-446-1621.

for Rent

1

,.., ....,

Autos fiir Sale '

Will catl for bed p1tlanl or In·
vllld In my homa In Raclna, OH,
614·949-2393.

Giveaway ·

Black Terrier Dog. Ftmalt,
Spada d. To Good Home, Hn

Mobile Homes

71

Tr11 work; topping, rarnovlng,
ehaplng, 8 yra experlanca, 304·
7'73-11165.

Meet Area Sl~laa By Choice
Not Chanee. Wr~ta : Singles, P.O.
Box 1043, Gallipolis, Ohlo 45631.

Beautitul shepherd mixed puppies: 4 mos. old In n..cl of 1
good home. 614-446-3728.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

9, 1992

Mitt Paula'• Da~ Ctra Center.
Sill, afto~ble, ch~dcare. M-F
8 s.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 2l4r10.
Bttore, aftw school. Drop-lnJ
wllcomt. 814-446-8224. Naw In·
tant Toddtw Cart, 814-441.f227.

Road construc:tlon Is upectld
to begin this week on Letart
Township rd. 97 culvert. tnsolt·
lion work Is being done by
Oravo Bas k Materials Co. Inc.
directly off SR 338, and an excess road will be availabt. to
motorists.

4

Thursday, January

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

Sentinel

p1lgl nvelotp Beltlmoro;
Tldll Entrg1.

Mill~ ;__

.

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VJK

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PREVIOUS SOLUTiON: '"ThO oraat'
thB world ore tnooo who
plant lltade t - ~~ thay will ..,. Ill utftllr." - Rw, Emonuet

'

.

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e.

�.

. Paga-12-The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Beat of the Bend....

HT girls
defeat
Eastern

by Bob Hoeflich
Unless you're enthusiastic about
· icc and snow, the weather is probably the one thing you can't complain abOut this January. Many of
· us have .lost the kick we used to get
. from sledding and trudging through
' the snow-we'll settle for this. through gray it be.
: President Bush is traveling the
· universe and has even made a deal
· in Japan. They're going to import
more American-made cars. Somehow that doesn't figure since
· Americans for years have been
turning their backs on the American-made•vehicles to purchase the
Japanese imports.
Are the
Japanese going to buy the Ameri. can cars which arc allegedly not as
well made?
Meantime, at the theater box
office, "J.F.K." is being well
received. The story line strays
from the government findings we
have been handed about the assas:sination. Color me among the 72
percent who when polled said they
don't believe the government version. I've always had a little problem with that, haven't you?

Thanks for your response to 'a
recent column noting that Dr. Mark
and Karen Brown were undergoing
a bit of homesickness over the holiday season after having left Meigs
County for Bar Harbor, Maine,
where Dr. Brown is practicing.
The Browns were so pleased
that you remembered them-you
are always so good about these
things- and Dr. Brown has sent
you the following message:
"Karen and I were genuinely
touched by all of the Christmas
carM we received from our friends
back in Meigs County. Your
thoughtfulness was very appretiated and it helped with our homesickness. All of you will always ·
have a special place in our hearts.
. "We seem to be slowly settling
m up here although I still consider
myself a Buckeye and a Marauder.
People here have been friendly and
BIRTHDAY VISIT - Fans visit the gravesite
birthday event that included a cake-cutting on
have made us feel welcome. The
of Elvis Presley at Graceland in Memphis
what
would have been Elvis' 57th birthday. (AP)
practice is keeping me busy, and Wednesday, Some 250 people attended the
Karen has plenty to do at hom e.
We have been enjoying the snow
and winter activities-&lt;:ross country skiing and ice skating.
Two more Meigs High School
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - A 2 the Sloan Construction Co. plant ed about the move. ll took all day
"We think ba-ck to our days in
seniors are among the 350 students Meigs County with much fondness, 1/2-foot-tall great homed owl took idle for I 1/2 days, at a cost of Monday to contact the Audubon
.who have been accepted out of and contmue to have very mixed advantage of the holiday shutdown $6,000, until the eggs could be Society, the state game commission
2,000 applicants to enter Ohio Uni- feelings about our decision to at an asphalt plant to make her nest rcirieved and the owl shooed away. and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser-versity's College of Business next move. Karen and I join together in there and lay her eggs.
"You can' t just tum your head vice.
· fall. They arc Frank Blake, son of w1shmg you all a healthy, joyful
Unfortunately, the roost was on the other way," Ashmore said.
The imposing owl was shooed
John and Margie Blake, Middle- and peaceful New Year. We hope a ledge nestled against a giant fan "You have to do what's right " ·
from the ledge Tuesday morning
port, and Tricia Baer, daughter of and pray that good fortune will that can get hot enough to broil
Because great horned owls are by a bird handler. The eggs were
Susan Baer, Middleport and Ed come to the people in Meigs Coun- eggs and roast owls.
protected by state and federal law, then whisked to a heating pad at an
Baer of Pomeroy. Quite an accom- ty.'~
So manager Larry Ashmore kept various officials had to be consult- Audubon bird-care center.
plishment since the O.U. facility is
I know I speak for many of you
considered one of the top business when I say that we'll be happy to
schools in the country.
welcome the Browns back to
Meigs County anytime.
If you can look ahead that far,
the annual Meigs County Fair has
I hate to be the one to tell you
·been set for August, 17 through this, but it's time that you went on
August 22-a six day event again the diet to take off those holiday
this year. The fair board has issued pounds and did I mention that it's
a one page calendar with the fair easier to put 'em on than to take
dates highlighted in red.
'em off? Do keep smiling.

-§fo

HOUSTON (AP) - Mayor Bob
Lanier is geuing a new, but familiar, neighbor at City Hall: his wife.
Elyse Lanier, 44, is setting up an
office in a small room next 10 the
mayor's office. She says she will
use it for her volunteer work on
city beautification projects.
Lanier, 66, was sworn in Thursday. The former mayor, Kathy
Whitmire, used the room for storage and for three TV sets, so she
could watch evening newscasts
simultaneously.
The Laniers, who have been
married six years, arc used to
. closeness.
Mrs. Lanier used to be a fixture
at meetings of the Texas Highway
Commission, awl Metropolitan
Transit Authdrity, over which her
husband presided.
: And at Landar Corp., his company, she kept an office connected
to his through.a dressing room.

11. 74sale pnce
-$ .75 mfr's. coooon

28-29 Frank Sinatra Gold Invitatio nal at the Marriott Desert
Springs Resort.
The festivities benefit the Barbara Sinatra Children's Center at
Eisenhower Medical Center and
Desert HospitaL
Also participating in the tournament will be Frankie Avalon, Pat
Boone, Glen Campbell, Dina Mernil, Chuck Connors, Chad Everett
Victor Mature, Dale Robertson'
Buddy Rogers, 'felly Savalas and
Alan Thickc.
.

SAV E 75

.

fletaller. We~mpay$ .75
plus Se handling. Good m
USA on named productlsi.

Card shower
Kenneth Madden lll, 17,-son of
Kenneth and Jane Madden Jr.,
Middleport, has undergone heart
surgery at Children's Hospital in
Columbus.
He attends Kyger Creek High
School where he is a sophomore.
He is the grandson of Mary
Madden and the late Ken Madden,
and the late Wendell and Eva Barrell.
He had open heart surgery previously at the age of three.
Anyone wishing to donate blood
in his name may do so.
His support group consists of
Eugene Caldwell, JoBob and Clyde
Schuler, Steve Spires, aunts, uncles
and cousins, friends and neighbors.
Cards may be sent to him at
Children's Hospital, 700 Children 's
Drive, Columbus, Ohio.

with coupon

I
I

·-Cit'

71153 - 2073:

l

01 Tl Willi! til

•STI01~STIOI7 .

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....

=-~

1" )

--------------------J

097 i,r
•o-

; RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
(AP) - Robert Stack, Leslie
Nielsen , Mickey Rooney, Willie
[vlays, Mike Ditka and Alan Shepherd head the list of golfers m
Frank Sinatra's chaTtty tournament
next month to benefil a children's
hospital.
· Sinatra will be joined by Dean
Martin and Julio Iglesias for a
black-tie gala culminating the Feb.

Better-television
_organization is
ceasing operations
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Action for Children'' Television, a
23-ycar-old group that has pushed
for beller TV, announced today that
it is disbanding, in part because
(egulations governing programming for kids arc firmly in place,
" It seems crazy to stay in business to be a sountl bite," said president Peggy.Charren. "People who
want better TV for kids now have
Congress on their side."
'
Charren cited. passage of the
1990 Children's Television Act as
one reason ACT is phasing out its
four -person staff by the end or the
year.
,
• Under th~ federal law, broadCitslers can lose their licenses for
failing· to serve the educational
needs of children. The law also
J:imits the amount of.air time that
~an be dev~ted to advertising.
- ACT wtll donate $125,000 to
'IJle Harvard University Graduate
School of Education to·establish a
$cries of lectures on children and
the media and an annual fe.llowship
for research on the same topic,
Charren said.
· · ACT was founded in 1968 to
encourage diversity in children's
tGlevision

Workshop set
·There will be a college fmancial

aid workshop for all Meigs Coonty
high school seniors and theit parents on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the ·
cafeteria at Meij!S High School.
· The workshop will deal primarily
with'parents and students completing the Financial Ajd Form.
.

2 Seetlono, 14 Pages 25 eents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 1o, 1992

Rutland's $2.2 niillion treatment plant in operation
Work on facilities began more than 15 years ago
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The treatment plant for Rutland's'!'i2.2 million waste water
collection and sewage treatment
project is in operation.
Thursday representatives of
. Engineering Associates, Inc., of
Wooster, who designed the plant,
and Mack Industries, Inc., Valley
City, who constructed it, were
joined by Rutland ViUage officials
for the startup and testing process.
Completion of that phase of the
project allows T.A.M. Construction, Inc. of Westerville , to begin
installing the grinder pumps next
week at each residence and business to be served by the system.
Approximately 300 pumps will be
installed between now and June
when the total project is expected
to be completed.
Art Carpenter, the on -si te
system into operation. Others there tor the startSTARTUP OF SEWAGE SYSTEM· Rut·
inspector for Engineering Assqciup and testing process were from the _lert, Kent
land's sewage treatment plant located on 26
ates, Inc., explained that as each
D. Baker, of Engineering Assodates, Inc., Dale
acres behind the Rutland Civic Center and ball
grinder pump is installed, and the
Hart, the plant operator, Rutland Councilman
fields, went into operation Thursday morning.
Iines from the residence or business
Steve Jenkins, Mayor Edward Martin, Dave
The plant is a part or a $2.2 million waste water
connected to the main lines, the
Gavlak of Mack Industries, Inc., the contractor,
and sewage collection system. Here Art Carpensewage from that facilily will be
and
Councilman Keith Molden.
ter, on-site inspector for Engineering Associates,
pumped to the sewage treatment
Inc., nips the switch whitb p_ut the treatment
plant
·
At the plant the sewage which
was pulverized as it went through
the grinder pump will be put
John Wargo, a fonner state leg- Ohio Ethics Commission will through several stages of Ireaunent.
LISBON, Ohio (AP)- Planned
construction of an up to $200 mil- islator who now is a Columbiana quickly answer a request for an
lion federal prison in eastern Ohio County ccmmissioner, said the pro- opinion about what kind of governwork
Paul
will carry an economic kick felt ject could sparJ&lt; creation of 2,500 ment-related
jobs
overall.
Voinovich 's company could pursue
beyond the Columbiana County
"We've got 59 job categories inviewof his family. relation_ship.
site, Gov. George Voinovich said.
"It means jobs, jobs, jobs," listed inside, and those Outside
The prisons will be built on a
Voinovich said at a ceremony would be in the private sector, the site near Lisbon, the county seat,
Thursday announcing details of the support and supply," Wargo said. with a population of about 2,500.
woject by the Federal Bureau of "They even have a priest on salary.
Housed in the prisons will be
He's a federal employee."
Prisons.
500
high security, 752 m.edium
Voinovich also said there would security,
The complex will be made up of
and 1,000 low security
four buildings, each with a warden, be no ethical problem if a jail inmates, along with 500 prisoners
that will house 3,000 prisoners and building company Voinovich Cos., in ·a minimum security camp.
need about I ,000 people to operate. headed by his brother, Paul,.would
Some 800 construction jobs will
"These facilities will trigger a seck a contract for the federally
be
generated.
About 600 permanent
boost to the local economy by cre- funded project.
jobs
at
the
prison
will be ·new posi"There would be absolutely no
ating spin-off jobs in this area. It's
going to have a tremendous multi- problem whatsoever on this," tions, while the other 400 will be
plier effec~ right straight through," Voinovich said in an interview transferred from other federal facil ities.
Thursday.
Voinovich said.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons
" I don't think there's any prob"It's going to ripple through
is
expected
to hold a series of pubthis county and adjacent counties in lem with state funding . He's the
terms of generating additional jobs one that decided he wasn't going to lic hearings and conduct an envifor individuals that are going to be do state work. I never asked him to ronmental impact study, which
could take up to one vear before
supplying services and material to do that,'' he said.
Voinovich said he hopes the construction starts.
the prison facility,'' he said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co .
stands by its decision to put a rate
increase into effect Monday,
despite a lawsuit challenging that
action.
The company is following normal procedure by implementing the
28.4 percent increase, spokesman
Tom Holliday said. But he said
Columbus Southern would comply
if a court orders to hall the
increase.
Franklin Coonty Common Pleas
I udge Richard Sheward scheduled
a hearing on the suit for this afternoon.

New arrival
Scott Allen and Rebecca Dawn
Ours, Racine, arc announcing the
birth of their daughter, Rebekah
Michelle Ours, on Nov . 17 at
O'Bicncss Hospital in Athens.
She weighed eight pounds and
eight ounces and was 20 and onehalf inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Pam
LuiZ and Dale Riflle, Racine.
Paternal grandparents arc Bob
Ours, Texas, and Edith Hubbard,
Racine.
Great grandmothers are the late
Frances Barth, Greenville; Pauline
Rose and Virgie Ours, both of
Racine.
. Great grandfathers are the Iaie
Warren Rose, Racine; Harold M.
Barth, Greenville; and Richard
Ours, Racine.
·
Great great grandmother is
Velma Taylor, Racine.

•

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Elected chairman

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NQ one hurt in accident
Two vehicles were heavily damaged and towed from the scene
but but there were no injuries or citations in an accident at5:38 p.m.
Thursday night on West Main Street, Pomeroy.
According to the police repoa:t. Floyd Burney, Pofueroy, driving
a 1989 Oldsmobile,was southbound on West Main, He had stopped
to allow several cars to pass before attempting a· tum into Super
Amenca.
,
. .
~he made the left tum his car collided with a 1986 Oldsmobile
driven by Nichole E. Ihle, Racine, who was driving wilhout lights.
Burney said he did not see the northbound !hie vehicle.
The right side from the front door to the rear of the Burney vehicle and the front eM and passenger side of the !hie vehicle were
heavily damaged . .Neither driver nor the passenger in the lhle car,
Valerie Connolly, were injured, according to the repon.
·

SZiff

-48l!~
F

.

The suit said the increase lacks
approval of state regulators and
therefore violates the Ohio and
U.S. constitutions.
City Attorney Ron O'Brien and
Ohio Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley filed the class action suit
Thursday in the Franklin County
court. They seek a temporary
restraining order and preliminary
and permanent injunctions against
the increase.
·
Also on Thursday, about -12
members of the Coalition for
Lower Utility Bills protested the
rate increase outside the downtown
offices of the PubUc Utilities Com-

--Local briefs-____,

co

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l'rioljOocl ... _

-Named part-time policeman

'•

On dean's list

CIC.

Robin Dorsi of l'omeroy made
the ~·s lis! for the.fall quaner at
Hocking Colle~e, Nelsonville. Her
name was not mcluded on dte listmg from the College submitted til
The Daily Sentinel.
I

Vol. 42, No. 174
Copyrighted 1992

including trash trap tanks, aeration,
skimmer, chlorination and de-chlorination tanks for purification
before being emptied as clear water
into the creek which runs by the
plant site. The facility includes two
large drying beds for the sludge
which is removed as a part of the
purifying process.
Earlier this week Rutland Village Council hired Dale Hart, a
licensed Class I waste water operator, to operate the sewer treatment
system.
It was also decided by Council
that se wage fees would go· into
effect this month even through the
project will not be completed until
June .
Everyone who will be going
onto the system will be charged the
minimum through June. That figure
is $16.12 a month. Once all grinder
pumps have been installed and are
in operation, then the charge will
be based on water usage with
$16.12 a month as the minimum
for 2,000 gallons. Each additional
1,000 gallons will be charged at
$8.06.
The sewage charge will go
toward the expenses of operation
and maintenance of the system and
also toward debt retirement. There
has not been a detcnnination yet on
the amount of money which the vii-

!age will need to borrow to compl ete the project. However ,
arrangements have been made for
the village to borrow what is need·
cd from the Ohio Water Development Authority at a low interest
rate to be repaid over a 20 year
period.
.
Primary funding for the project
came through grants from the Environmental Protection Agency of
$1.5 million, and Federal Issue II
monies of $617,000.
The area included in the sewage
plan takes in the complete village
of Rutland and extends up New
Lima Road to White Hill Road ,
down Route 124 to Happy Hollow
Road, out Salem Sirectto the top of
Lasher Hill, and out Depot Street to
beyond the corporation limits.
The work on trying to get need- ·
ed sewage treatment facilities for
Rutland began ·more than 15 years
ago. In 1975 the problem was studied and recommendations made but
due to a lack of funds and other
rroblems, the project was not pursued.
Then in early 1989, when funding prospects for such projects
appeared to be more available, the
village, assisted by Kim Shields,
village consultant, submitted grant
request's and was successfu l in
securing funding.

Columbus Southern says it will
stand by rat(!-increase decision

REBEKAH OURS

Delbert Smith was elected chairman of the Board of Sutton Township Trustees'at their organ~onal
meeting for 1992.
Otis Knopp w~s elected vicechairman and· Grover Salser Jr. is
the third member of the board.
:Regular meetings will be held
the first Monday or each month at
7:30p.m. in the Syracuse Municipal Building.

mid 40s.

Federal prison set for eastern Ohio

chase Consumer pays

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limit one coupon per pur- 1

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hibited. taxe d or restrict - I
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12587. 1 Fawcett Dnve.
Del RIO. n 78840. Cash I
value 1 12 0~
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in mid-20s. High Saturday ln

KENNETH MADDEN ill

Minulactur!r'S Coup011
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A-H; 9-C; K-D;
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Page4

Asphalt plant closes rather than disturb nesting bird

-People in the news--

Pick 3: 249
Pick 4: 9952

'

OP.EN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
BIOit _ , 1:10 1.111- to 7 p.m. - - _.., .... ·~·

.

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GAWPOUS

••

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.

Iii

_

Ben Davidson of Middleport has been hi~ as pan-time policeman ~ot R~tland Village. •
. . ·..
· ,
·
Davidson was hired by Council after several were inlerviewed
for the position, vacant since Dec. 31 when John S,Pires resigned.
Co.uncil at a meeting earlier this week elected Jun Fink president,
Fink is Hlling an unexpired term on CounciL Fink who was mayor
resigned that position in Dec~mber to accept the appointment !0
council.
,
·
Conlinaetl on page 3

..

. M'l

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1\11

.,.,..

mission of Ohio.
State law allows Columbus
from the left. Rutland Councilman Steve JenkTHE PROCESS OF PURIFYING - Steve
Southern to increase the rate withins, Kent D. Baker of Engineering Associates,
Kemp,
a
technician
for
Mack
IndQstries,
ln'c,,
out approval because the PUCO
Inc., Dave Guvlak of Mack Industries, Inc., Art
who
constructed
the
Rutland
sewage
treatment
did not act on the request within
Carpenter
ol' Engineering Associa.tes, Inc.,
plant, explains how the waste water and sewage
275 days of the filing.
Mayor
Edward
Martin, Dale Hart, system opermoves through a series or tanks to remove
Holliday said the procedure is
ator,
and
Councilman
Keith Molden .
sludge and impurities before being emptied into
I
common in other states. He said
the nearby stream. Listening to Kemp, were
consumers would receive a refund
if the PUCO rejected an increase or
approved a lower one. The utility
also would have to pay 10 percent
interest.
The lawsuit said the refund is
made by temporarily reducing customers' bills.
"There is a whole class of people out there who would not get
IRONTON - The Ironton the Southeastern Ohio Emergency a deputy in Gallia County, his famtheir money back - people who
Municipal
Coun bound over a for- Mcdical Services, testified that ilyalllive in the county," said
move out of the Columbus Southmer
Gallia
deputy sheriff to when he and his partner arrived at Kmght, who said before the hear'
em service area, whether it be out a LawrenceCounty
County
grand jury after the scene about 3:10a.m., he saw ing that he knew Varney when he
of state or to Cleveland, and, well,
Varney lying on top of Blain.
was a deputy. "He has never been
people who die certainly won't get a preliminary hearing Thursday.
William
F.
Varney,
29,
of
"He
said
he
didn't
mean
to
arrested
before."
it back," O'Brien said.
Ewington
is
accused
of
shooting
shoot
her,"
Floyd
said.
"And
he
Assistant
Itoseculing Attorney
Holliday said the company
his
girlfriend,
Lisa
Blain,
at
2:52
said
'Save
her'."
Many
Stillpass
recommended that
would notify customers about what
a.m.
last
Friday
while
he
was
a
pasFloyd
said
he
examined
Blain
·
the
current
$100,000
bond require-'
procedures to take if they move.
senger
in
the
car
she
was
driving
and
determined
a
bullet
had
entered
ment
be
continued
because
Varney
Imposed in full, the increase ·
the lower back o( h~ head and !hen may pose a threat to the community:
would add an average of $16.21 to on state Route 93 near Ironton.
split
into two pieces. The larger or to himself.
·
Varney
has
been
charged
with
residential customers' monthly
portion
of
the
bullet
traveled
Municipal
Judge
0.
Clark
felonious
assault.
bills. About half a million cusAccording to an article in Fri- through the left side of her brain· Collins agreed with Stillp~ss and
tomers in 24 counties would be
day's
Huntington Herald-DispalCh, and lodged in her forehead.
let the current bond stand.
affected.
~
Blain
remained
in
serious
condiVl!fliCy remailled in the
Chief
Deputy
Jim
Howard
of
the
Columbus Southern said the
tion
for
several
days
after
surgery
Lawrence
County Jail.
·
increase would raise $202 million. Lawrence County Sheriffs Depart- to remove the bull~ fragments. On
Before
the
hearing,
Knight
said
The money would help pay the ment testified that he interviewed
Thu_rsday_cvenin~, ~he~~ out of he 'found ilunpsual thai the colll'tY.
company's share of converting the Vamey who said he and Blain were the
mte_nstvc c~ umt .and m stable · prosecutor's office would partici'·
·the
only
ones
inthe
car.
Zimmer power plant in Moscow,
con~itton, sa!d Steve Owe~s, a pate in the preliminary hearing
Howard
said
he
asked
Varney
if
Ohio, ,east of Cincinnati, to bum
nursmg supervlSOI' at St. ~ _s.
• because Varney had been hired by
coal instead·of gcnt:l'!!tinHiectrici- he shot Blain.
· Howard said _the s_h~nff's the coullty ,prosceutor a day before
"He
(Varney)
said
'Why
would
ty with nucleaf.fuel.
I do that? I love her,.' " Howard department was sull awuung the the shooung to work as an under:
The company has absorbed ' said.
results. of tests on the handgun and cover agent for a mulfi-county drug
.'
$219 million in Zimmer costs with'
task forte.
· ,
· ·· ·
Howard said the investigation the bullel
out passing it on'to customers, Hol- determined that Varney possessed a
yarney's attorney, ,Charles
. Howard sai,d(urif1g his testimoliday -said. He said Columbus .38-caliber handgun found in a Kntght of ~omeroy, . moved I~ ny that Varn~~Y was applying for an
Southern has not increased rates ditch behind the car, 11nd· that allow V1!f11ey s release on a secun- undercover &amp;gent's job but had not
since 1983.
Blain's head wound was not self- ty bond mstead of a $100,000 cash been hired. However, Vaiitey was
\he .consumers' counsel sup- inflicted.
or ~roperty bond.
involved as an unpaid undercover
ports a rate increaSe of $157 mil'He (Varney) was employed as informant, HQW~Ud said,
''
Carl Lloyd, a paramedic with
lion to $170 million.
'

Former Gallia,deputy bound over
to ,Lawrence County Grand Jury

~)

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