<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10368" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10368?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-07T02:09:57+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20811">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/d61610921b6dd5fc1849acd80223c241.pdf</src>
      <authentication>52efaa3347609a7f597e7cb834c81651</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33086">
                  <text>Ohio

Ohio Lottery

OSU outlasts

Your Commmri~y Minded
Low-Priced Supermarket ·

Minnesota
five 72-69

· Pick 3: 837
Pick 4: 2417

Cards:
10-H; 9-C; J·D;
2-S
Super Lotto:

Page6

9-16-23·3~42-44

Low tonight In mid- 20s.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Friday, high In mid 40s.

Kicker: 463190

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January ~992

Vol. 42, No. 183
Copyrlghtod 1992

2 Socllono, 14 Pages 25 cent&amp;
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

County officials may
seek restitutlon of jail
expenses from inmates

GRADE 'A'

PICK 0
CHICK
1

99c

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Inmates incarcerated in the
Meigs County Jail could be forced
to reimburse the coun1y for expenses, if a proposal introduced at
Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners
is approved.
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
made the proposal, based on two
sections of the Ohio Revised Code.
The primary code section quoted
by Jones yesterday was Section
341.19, which states: "Commis-

NATURE'S BEST

COOKED

HAM

At

In-Store
Deli

Where

LB.

sioners may require a person who
was convicted of an offense other
than a minor misdemeanor and
who is confined in the county jail
to reimburse the county for its
expenses incurred by reason of his
confinement, including but not limited to, the expenses relaling to
provision of food , clothing and
shelter."
According to that ORC section,
a civil suit CIUI be filed by the county prosecutor on behalf of the board
within a year after the conviction of
the subject in question. The amount

of the judgment is then paid into
the county treasury.
The second ORC section read at
yesterday's meeting outlines the
hearing process required in such an
action.
Jones pointed out that many
convicts spend several weeks in the
coumy jail prior to being convicted
while awaiting trial times. After
they are convicted, they are transporlcd to state prisons to serve their
sentences.
Action on the proposal was
Continued on page 3

Paper glut delays Mas·on pulp mill
FLORIDA
RED or WHITE

GRAPEFRUIT

$

KRAFT

RUSSET
POTATOES

32 oz.
JAR

MIRACLE
WHIP

FOR

U.S. NO.1

99

Roberts will seek
Gallla · E·ngln-eer's ·post

Meigs County Engineer Philip
oberts will be stepping down
rom that position at !he end of his
current term, and will seek the
same office in Oallia County in the
May primary.
A Mei~s County native, Roberts
was appomted to the office in 1980
upon the death of Wesley Buehl,
who died in office two days prior
the 1980 Republican Primary.
Roberts was appointed to the office
by the central committee and then
eli(Cled the following November.
He was subsequently re-elected in
1984 and 1988.
Robens is the son of the late
Marvin Roberts and Frances
Roberts, a retired school teacher

190

KRAFT

I

JELLY

!

BAG

I

I

.

I

I

With Coupon. Coupon Expires 1!25192

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The state and Ohio's largest public
employees union have agreed to
work together to find ways to
reduce lhc cost of health care benefits, negotiators say.
Health care was one of the
issues left unresolved in a fact-finder's repon of recommendations for
anew two-year contract. Boih the
slate and the 35 ,000-member Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association recommended that the contract
be approved.
· TIKi agreement calls for a freeze
ill basic wages until July 1993,
when a 5 percent increase would
like effect.
.: The pact will be adopted in two
weeks unless 60 percent of the
Uition's eligible membership or 60
P.Jrtent of both houses of the Ohio
Legislature reject it.
·
: Administrative Services DirecIQr Stephen Perrr said !~creasing

s
A
v
E

Clip .

.

'

1fx:f~~~~

.............
.·---·--..-......=-.!
!:-...,..
,.....

C..ft.. l l ' l

:-r:---=
.
.
---·-=:t::r
.......
.:--~-"='

IIIIDD F80DLIII '

OPII 7 U·ll PM MOIIB 11110081 Iii Ula'IAY

-··=--·
..

....

from Racine. He graduated from position in the upcoming primary.
Southern High School and Ohio James Baird, a Republican, now
University, with a bachelor of sci- serves as Gallia County's engineer.
ence degree in civil engineering.
As of yesterday afternoon, no canFrom 1967 to 1979, Roberts didates had filed for that race,
worked as· a project engineer with alihough several candidates have
the Ohio Department of Trans- picked up petitions.
portation. While in that position,
Roberts surveying office is also
Roberts was responsible for work- located in Gallia County.
ing on the Gallipolis and Pomeroy
"When I was appointed in
bypasses, the approach and inter- 1980," Roberts said yesterday, "I
change to the Silver Memorial realized that there would be a time
Bridge in Gallipolis and various when !here would be Meigs County
bridge and road projects for people who would be qualified for
the position, and I now feel that
ODOT.
Roberts, who now resides in that time has come."
Galli a County, said Wednesday
"It's a ~ood time for a change,"
afternoon that his "plans are to fi ie" Roberts satd.
for the Gallia County Engineer's

health-care costs tor employees are
one of his department's biggest
concerns. Fact-finder Harry Graham did not recommend an
increase in the portion of insurance
premiums that employees pay, but
suggested the stale lind union work
together to control costs.
"The union leadership and the
state of Ohio have agreed to try to
work toward a manageable health
care program for employees ,"
Perry said. " ! think that's one area
where we are hoping to be very
sueeessful."
·
Paul Goldberg, OCSEA's executive director, said health care, job
security and wages were the
union's priorities in negotiations.
"State employees' concerns in
regards to health care weren't so
much how to improve the benefi~
but ... how they could afford to
hang on to what ihey've already

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

'FREE COFFEE

.: Police probe two .B &amp; lis · .
·
• Two breakings and entcriitgs of churches ~hich occurte~ ei~r
· late Tuesday night or eartr Wednesday monung are under mvesu-

BUY ONE, tifT OIIE .FRfE AT CHlCKour
on AnY 7 01.-tAIII&amp;'s CIOia.
. N'WII' COttu

. gation by the Pomeroy Pollee Deplrunenl
.
· At 10:19 a.m. Wednesday it was reported to pohce that the
. · Sacred Heart Catholic Church at 161 Mulberry Ave., had OO,en
' entered and several items taken. A basement window was broken
' out to gain entrance 10 the chareh
,
·
.
• Taken.were a three-channel wireless micrQphone sys~m, a cas·
selle deck, several can!l'es, and a small amountc;~f money from a
candle box. All of the ttems were recovered Wednesday afternoon,
Chief of Police Gerald Rouaht reported, after on a tip from a local
resideni. No anests have been made, Rouaht said.
The Pomeroy Church of Christ at 212 West Main St. was elso
· entered but there was no report bf anything being taken, Rought
1
COiltiaued on jll!!f j
·. , ·
,.,

.

-0\
. ..
GOOD WEEK OF '
1·11-11 to 1.JM1
ONLY II FOOOLAHD

I

HDUUJI

1o UmH Oulntltlll I Prlcel
•

I .

..

Potential sheriff candidates qualify
Meigs County Common Pleas disclose any criminal record , mined and cenitied to lite Board of
Coun Judge Fred W. Crow III has according to Judge Crow . The Elections thal both men qualify to
reponed that two additional per- record check revealed that neither be candidates.
Paut"Oerard of Middlepon and
sons have met all the requirements Beegle nor Rought had a criminal
James
M. Soulsby, Pomeroy, were
to become candidates for the office record. No person may be a candipreviously
ccnified 10 lite Board of
of Meigs County Sheriff.
· date for sheriff who has a felony or
Elections by Judge Crow. Gerard
Roben E. Beegle of Racine and serious misdemeanor record.
Gerald E. Rought of Pomeroy have
Both Beegle and Rought have has filed his petitions and will be a
previously submitted fingerprint also .made statements to the court, candidate for sheriff in the Repubspecimens, as the first step in the in writing, that they each meet !he lican Primary on May 5.
February 20 is the filing dCI!d·
qualification process, and those fin- other statutory requirements to be a
line
for all candidates in the Repubgerprints were sent to the Ohio candidate and thereafter to serve as
lican
and Democrat Primary elecBureau of Criminal Identification sheriff. Upon review of the infertions.
and Investigation (BCI) for a mation provided by Beegle and
search of state and federal files to Rought, Judge Crow has deter -

Health care issues are left
Adkins, Rouse lead RGCC board
unresolved in fact-finders report

L------------------------~------------------~

.......
...........

'

~ Phil

$ 59

1·. \"'' I"\'\" ~ H ~4 ~Ill.\ '\II ~I'ECI \I. COl 1'4 1'\

15 LB.

700 W. IIIIIIW\ POMaGY, Glllf

'
Pomeroy, who was 1\'~stbound on West Second
Street at the time of the accident. Both cars
received light to moderate damage. The accident
was investigated by the Pomeroy Pollee
Deparbnent.

ACCIDENT PROBED - Randy Roble of
Pomeroy was cited for failure to yield right of way
following this accident on West Second Street at
Mulberry ;\venue on Wednesday afternoon. Roble
struck a vehicle dtiven by Melody Forbe.•, also of

"There's no guarantee that dumped into state rivers and
CHA'RLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A paper market glut is delaying they're even going to build !his streams.
plans to build a $1 billion pulp and plant," Burton said Wednesday.
The federal Environmental Pro- )
paper mill project in Mason Coun- "The earliest they would even be tection Agency recommends that
considering this would probably be dioxin, a toxic brproduct of the
ty, a company official said.
"There are some delays in 1993 or 1994."
pulp manufactunng process, be
John Ranson, state secretary of limited to .013 parts per quadrillion
going forward l&gt;ccause of perceived
market conditions at this point in Commerce, Labor and Environ- of water.
time," said Ken Goddard, a vice mental Resources, agreed that the
The state Water Resources
president of Parsons and Whine- mill is far from being builL ·
Board has agreed to increase the
"If they do it, it's years away," maximum allowable amount to one
more Enterprises, parent company
of Alabama River Pulp Co. of Per- Ranson said.
part per quadrillion, the equivalent
Up to 1,000 jobs were forecast of one drop per 13 million gallons.
du~ Hill, Ala.
"'"lab!lma River recently opened for the Apple Groye plant, wl\ich is
Tile Ho.uso and Senate Judiciary
another .P.~apt in Alabama, said op~9).1&gt;r labor and environmen,; . ~ommiuees will consider a bill to
Steve' Burio'n\ spbkesmah for the tar groups because the company 'addjx \he board's recommendation
Tri-State Building and Construc- wants to ease limits in the legal next week.
tion Trades Council.
amount of dioxin that could be

\

·'-

•

'

gol, " Goldberg said in a news
release.
Perry said state officials dis. cussed the repon with Gov. George
Voinovich on Tuesday.
"We reviewed it with the governor and the governor's direction
was that we recommend to the Legtslat.ure that they accept the
repott," Perry said in an interview.
"I would characterize this
agreement as being very fair and
reasonable, considering the fiscal
situation facing the state of Ohio.··
Voinovich and the Legislature
are working on plans 10 cut a $457
million budget deficit in the current
fiscal year.
.
Goldberg said the·fact-finder's
repott didn't give the union every·
thing it wanted but addressed most
of its concerns. .
" We have a packagl that
employees, taxpayers. managers
and legislators can more than adequately live with," Goldberg sald.
The union'.s final proposal
called for a 3 percent raise in base
wages during the first year of a
thn;e·year agreemetlt, 6 percent the
second year and a cost-of-living
adjustmel1t the thin! year. The slate
offered no raises in base wages.

Charles I. Adkins. Gallipolis,
was elected chairman of the Rio
Grande Community College Board
of Trustees for 1992, and Elaine B.
Rouse, Cheshire, was chosen the
board's vic.e chairman during its
recent meeting.
The board set !his year's regular
meeting dates for March II, May
13, July 8, Sepl 9 and Nov. 11.
Adkins has been a member of
the board since SepL 11, 1985 and
has been president and chief executive officer of Holzer Medical Cen. tcr since April 1984.
A native of South Charleston ,
W.Va., Adkins attended Marshall
University, West Virginia Universily and the Unive'rsi.ty of Rio
Grande, Prior to joining the staff at
HMC in December 1970, Adkins
worked in production/managemem
for the FMC Corp. in South
Charleston, and later in sales man·
agement for Baxterfl'ravenoll.aboratories and Skyland Hospitlll Supply.
He began at HMC as director of
purchasing, rater becoming vice
president of general services.
Named vice presidefit Qf professional·services in 1977, he served
as the hospital's interim chief exec·
utive officer from Se_ptember 1983
until the spring of 19\!4. ',

'

and treasurer of !he Gallia County
Retired Teacher~ Association.
Other members of ·the bOard are
Andrew R. Adelmann· iJr.,•
McArthur; Carl G. Dahlberg, Wellston; Thomas B. Hart, Pomeroy·
William McDonald, Jackson: Man:
ning E. Wethcrhoh, Gallipolis; and
John T. Wolfe, Racine. An addi tional board member is to be
appointed by Gov . George
Voinovich.

The Issues:

Parental notification
for minors' abortions

EDITOR'S NOTE- The Associated Press asks the major presidential candidafes a question each weekday about their views on a
particular issue and assembles their responses. President Bush has
(eclined to participate at least until after he forml\lly launches his reelection campaign. Responses were not available for all candidates.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are the views of the major presidential
candidates on the question: "Do you supper! any parental notification
requirements before minors can obtain an abortion?' '
•
DEMOCRATS
- Jerry Brown: Not available.
- Bill Clinton: Favors parental notification requirements.
- Tom Harkin: Opposes mandatory parental consent.
·
-Bob l&lt;errey: Opposes parental notification. "While it's an idea that
sounds terrific, what government would havQ «i do10 make it work would
.
beawu
· .
. _
f I."
Named Oallia County's Man of
-Paul.Tsongas:
"I
oppose
Jaws
requiring
parental
notification
or con:
the Year in 1991, Adkins served as
sent
for
abortion,
because
they
result
in
young
women
seeking
abonions
president of the Gallipolis Area
Grand opening Frjday Chamber
under dangerous conditions. Decisions about abortion should be made by
of Commerce in 1988-89 women
themsolves ... limitations should not be imposed by government at
. A grand opening celebration and was co-chaiqnan of the Gal· any level,'
'
· ·
· will be held at the Middleport lip9lis Bicentennial Commission
REPUBLICANS
office of !he Peoples Bank located fQr five years. He is a member of
-Patrick Buchanan: ''The 1.6 million abortions performed each year
. at 97 North Second St. tomorrow numerous professional, community
in
this
country are a disgrace. Until Roe v. Wade is ove~. the states
and public service organizations,
(Friday).
..
Ribbon cutting will take place and serves on the advi59ry board of should undertake legaf measures to protect innocent lives, including
. at 8:30 a,m. The celebralion will the University of Rio Grande's enactment of laws to ..pre~ent,!"il\\)rs from having abortions without · ,
parental consent or nouficabon.
·
.
.
continue to S p.m. with refresh- Holzer College of Nursing,
Duke:
"Yes,
I
do
favor
parental
notification
requirements
·
-David
Rouse, a member of the board
. ments being served dtrougltout the
·
since Oct. 11, 1985, served as the before minors can obtain an abortion.'.'
®y.

.-

'

•

board's vice chairman in 1988 and
1989. She retired from a 31-year
high school teachinl\ c~rcer in
Meigs and Mason counues m 1977.
Rouse received her A.B. and
M.A. degrees from West Virginia
University, and is a member of the
Gallipolis. chapter of the Amcncan
Association of University Women.
She serves on the board for
Planned Parenthood of Soulheastern Ohio, and is a past president

.'

�•

Thursday, January 23, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomer()y-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 23, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Temperatures will drop into mid-20s tonight

OHIO Weather
Friday, J11n. 24
Accu-Weather• forecast

The Daily Sentinel
•

Dear Japanese friend,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
'

.MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

An ~pistle to a Pacific pal ___,_Be~n~::-.a_tte_nb-.!:ergc

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER or The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Associalion and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less lhan 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,

address and telepbone number. No unsigned lellers wiD be publisbed. LeUers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not persoqalities.

•

Excerpts fro.m other
Ohio newspapers
Following arc excerpts of edi10rials pubtished recently in Ohio newspa·
pers:
The (Lorain) Morning Journal, Jan.lJ
This nation's citizens and its corporate and government leaders have
·shown great creativity in blaming U.S. economic woes on others, a fact
highlighted by President Bush's trip to Japan.
; But one sad fact remains unspeakable by the public. corporate bosses,
·the U.S. Congress and the presidenL Japan is not responsible for economic
:C:onditions in the United States.
"
Yes, the Japanese should open their markets 10 U.S. products, but even
:p they did, it would be no instant cure for our cunrent econom1c problems.
·• In a nutshell the illness in the U.S. economy IS not tbat the Japanese
:aren't buying o~ can't buy American-made products, particularly au10s,
·it's tllat Americans aren't buying these products, e1ther.
"Made in U.S.A." used 10 be a synonym for quality products. Bul, sad
to say, the nation sat idly by and watched the quality of our products slip.
Now we must struggle 10 regain the dominance in product quahty we once
· iook for granted.

I had a nice time visiting with
you. I'm only sorry I missed the
fun when President Bu sh came
with his pals, the rich beggar boys
of Detroit
Your prime minister said that
Japanese ought to feel "compassion" for Americans. Thanks. Then
the emperor beat the president at
tennis. Then the president went
whoops! on the prime mini ster.
Then the rich beggar boys didn 't
get enough dimes in tlleir tin cups,
and snitched to Congress.
Boo. Hiss. Some Japanese pundits are saying, "America is in
decline." How very superior. Do
you..believe that? Dear friend, that
wmild be too bad. It isn't true. and
only trouble comes when policy is
based on fiction.
I wouldn't blame the Japanese
for buying it. We hear it in America. We are told that we are not
"competitive," that our incomes
have stagnated, that we deserve this
recession to "pay the piper" for

economic promiscuity.
I think the America-in-decline
stuff is bunk, certainly when America is compared to Japan. So, this
letter.
America, not Japan , is the
world's biggest exponer. American
exports have almost doubled in the
last five years (particularly in hightech), and rose almost tenfold in the
last 20. (We didn't seriously get
into foreign trade until recently.)
Exports were up 7.5 percent even
in the 1991 rece ssionary year.
Competitive?
Our automobile industry is troubled, but not typical of American
business. We are first in aircraft,
soft ware,
.Pharmaceuticals,
telecommunications, oil technology, entertainment, computers, biogenetics, lumber and agriculture, to
begin a long list Our trade deficit
is shrinking. Excluding oil it's
about even.
America has not lost manufacturing jobs, although factory workers now produce mu ch more per

person . But arc factory jobs the
most important'? It was once sa1d
they were boring, and it would be
better if more people were in professional and technical fields .
That 's happened here. We spend
more on Research and Development than any other country, more
on non-military R&amp;D, arid we'll do
even better as we switch from m•htary research.
The recession is personally
cruel, but numerically moderate.
Unemployment is 7.1 percent in a
statistical system where 5 percent
10 6 percent equals full employment. I know: The president said
the economy is in "free-fall." But
he 's weird sometimes. He had it
,wrong going down, and he's got it
wrong coming up. In fact the last
quarter apparently showed minuscule growth. By some definitions
that could mean we're not in an
official recession.
The recovery ha s probably
begun. Our stock market thinks so.
It's booming. (The Japanese market

IT COULD

BEAN

IM~I?;oNAToR

&lt;

The (Canton) Repository, Jan.15
As a means of creating an atmosphere in which tile administration and
lawmakers can taclcle Ohio's problems, Gov. George Voinovich's State of
the Slale speech was a success. . .
. .
.
; The governor sounded a concihaiOry note, md1cated he would hsten 10
legislators and renewed h1s comm1tment to findmg workable soluuoos.
- But the address was not a blueprint on how to overcome the budget
deficit and keep Ohio moving ahead during a nagging, job-stealing recession. His aides said specifics would come later.
· Suggestions for an International Expon and Exhibition Center 10 show·
case Ohio products, a business tax incentive to encourage more exports
and an improved transportation system for tile state are all good ideas. .
What they want to see now is action to turn proposals into reahty,
hopes into jobs.
·

'·'

fcll44 pc!rcent since 1989.)
America has the highest per
capita purchaswg power, 45 percent higher than Japan. Income is
not stagnating. In the I 980s per
capita income rose 20 percent and
family mcome chmbed 8 percent;
in addition, the value of "benefits"
has soared.
As you know, I think lapan is a
neat little country with a first-class
economy. You make good cars.
And other things.
But, by American/European
stundards, most Japanese are not
Jivin g first-class lives. A lypical
Japanese family spends twice as
much on food as an American family, and lives in half the space. Car
ownership is less than half th e
American rate. Japanese women
arc not treated nicely.
Anyway, "decline" or
"ascent" arc concepts that aren't
only economic. Kuwait once had
tile highest per capita income.
America is the greatest military
power. That's new. Ask Saddam.
American universities are the best.
(In the 1980s, American scientists
won 40 Nobel Prizes, Japanese
won 2.) English is the world'.s language, and American is the global
cuhure. Not the hallmarks of a
soc iety io decline.
.
America has twice the population of Japan . Because of sinking
Japanese fertility, and because
America takes in Imm1gl'ants, m a
few decades America will be three
rimes as populous, and the only
major industrial nation that is
growing. Diversity causes some
turmoil here, but it has made America the only superpower, and the
only global nation, ever.
We do complain about ourselves. all the time. But that ends
up making us tougher. Sayonara.
(C) I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise Institute, is author of "The First Universal Nation," published by The
Free Press.

Berryls .World

.

~A
·--

'

·~·\

•

•
IToledo I 21' I
e

IMansfield I 21' I•

.mA
.. . ..

•I Columbus I 23' I

W.VA.

/cs

Cloudy

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A
1!1-monih-old labor dispute
between the United Steelworkers
and Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
shows no signs of ending, with
both sides standing fast and no new
ialks scheduled.
Union officials accepted Gov.
Gaston Caperton's invitation
Wednesday to mediate the standoff,
which has idled 1,700 workers at

C1 992 Accu-Weathef, Inc.

------Weather----- County...
Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:
A chance of snow Saturday. Fair
on Sunday except a chance of snow
northeast, and cha.nce of snow
stalewide Monday. Morning lows
5-15 Saturday and Sunday and 1020 Monday. Hi&amp;hs in mid-20s to
mid-30s Saturday and Monday and
mid-teens to mid-20s Sunday.

South-Central Ohio
Tooigh~ rain changing 10 snow,
then taperin~ to flurries. Colder.
Low in the m1d-20s. Chance of precipitation is 90 petcent. Friday,
variable cloudiness with a chance
of snow flurries. Cold with a high
25-30. Chance of snow is 40 percent.

r--Local briefs...-_,
Continued from page 1
said that entrance was gained through a back windo~ of the church
which had been forced open, and that mud tracked ms1de mdicated
that it was one nerson. Tbe person left the church by way of a wm dow in the men\ restroom. Andrew Miles, pasiOr, reported the mcidentiO police at4:II p.m. Wednesday afternoon.

EMS units answer 10 calls

with rubber bands.
ing of building an international .
Now that the rubber bands are in tllermonuclear experimental reac- :
place, researchers are anxious to lOr.
•
march on. It appears that the frrst
Unlike present day nuclear reac-.
significant test for U.S. screnllsts tors which produce electricity by ;
will take place in mid to late 1993, tile fission process (tile splitting of·
when the Prince10n lab will attempt atoms) and in the process create ·
to produce as much as . 20 large quantities of hard to dispose
megawatts of fu sion power m a of nuclear waste, a fusion reactor
similarly designed reac10r.
would present no such radioactive
While these recent develop - waste problem. Furthermore, the
ments are extremely encouraging, fusion process does not carry the
one must realize that we arc still risk of producing accidental and
decades away from possible com- potentially catastrophic chain reacmercial application.
tions, as happened at Chernobyl
What should help hasten getting and Three Mile Island, and the
this process to market, however, is materials required 10 fuel the prothe improving international envi- cess are both cheap and abundant
ronment. Whereas countries were
Scientific journals have often
once prone to jealously guard their referred to the fusion process as
research oo such mauers, tlley now having the potential to bottle the
appear inclined, in the interest of sun's power. Though I may not see
the global environment and in less- its commercial application in my
ening dependence on finite fuels, 10 lifetime, I'm confident that in time,
share their findings. In fact. steps we will reach that goal; thanks in
toward an integrated effort are large part to the success of the
already underway with physicists maiden experiment at Oxfordshire.
in Europe, the United States, Japan
and the fonner Soviet Union talk-

prejudice and intolerance since ele- Blonde women managers can commentary school, and I was always mand just as much respect as their
under the impression that hurtful brunette counterparts, and get just
stereotypes are applied 10 a whole as far in the business world . In been an impediment to anything I
range of characteristics (such as some instances blondeness is a ever wanted to.. do. Maybe that's
race, gender, ethnic origin or body boon.
why it doesn't bother me when my
shape) one can't do anything about
Perhaps in a perfect world we hair color is the subject of a joke
The maligned person doesn't go to wouldn't need to mention any dif- once in a while.
a beauty shop or plastic surgeon ference in bodies, and no one with
Hey, Ms. Lynch, save your righhoping to have someone craft the any sensitivity believes that we teous indignation for a real slur,:
condition for him or her.
should pick on each other because something cruel and hurtful that:
Yet a huge percentage of the of any physical characteristic we're truly impairs a person's life. In:
"dishwater'.' blondes, as Ms. born with. But in my experience, other words, lighten up.
.
•
Lynch describes herself - and lo, - blondes have sometimes enjoyed
'Oops, I forgot! You already did,:
the outright mousy browns and an edge on women with darker and you had 10 shell out 80 bucks'
I
.
even dark brunettes - undergo hair, and I can understand. why 10 don.
1
gargantuan histrionics to becqme bruncues might enjoy a blonde joke
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER;
flaxen-l!aired. When I was growing · now or then. Blondeness has never ENTERPRISE ASSN.
;
up, blon(jj:s were sometlling pretty
sought·lfter. They had more fun ,
the ads said.
So why aU the hue and cry about
blonde jokes? Where I come from,
the,bloo~kes were foUowed in a
week or two by a series of
By The Associated Press
• :
"brunette" jokes, playing on the ·
~oday
is
Tl)ursday.1an.
23,
tbe
23rd
day
of
1992.
There
are
343
days:
stereotypes of that group. The left m the year.
·
,
brunettes I told them to ·didn •t
Today's Highlight in HiStay:
·
:
laugh as hard as they did at the
Sixty
years
ago
~n 1an: 23, 1932, New-York Gov. Franklin D.
blonde jokes, but they laughed. ~velt announced hiS candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomina-·
They didn't think any more than I uon.
·
did Jhat the stereotypes we made
On this date:
fun of were ones that people use to
In 1789, GeorgetOWn Univeriity was established at the future silt ofi ,
. keep a race, gender or ethnic group the~tion'scapital, WashillgtonD.C. ·
·
· , ·: ·
· down.
'
· , Jn.l84S, Congrea decided all. national elections would be held on the 1
Unfortilnately, there are plenly first Tuesday after the W. Monday In November. .·
,
of stereotypes that are used 10 that
In 1849, Elizabeth B~ became the ftrSt woman in America to ·
en4. I don't think blondeness is one receive I medical degree, .~ Bristol, Engi8nd, native was awarded ber
degree by the,Medlcal lnJtitua~ of Geneva, N.Y.
,. ,
. !D 1920, tbe Dull::h JIOVet:nment refused demands frOm the viCIOiiOUS 1
because Qf her hair color, or of a AIUea 10 hllld over die ~.w.er of~~
· 1, •.
student who was treated as less
In 193'7, 17 people, me lading Xarl
k, went OJ) trial in Moscow I
than her classmates becluse of iL dllring lillof Slllln's "a.t PurgC." ·
·
·
'
;

Sarah Overstreet

Today in hist~ry

.

Roc&gt;:

i

'().

Sunny . Pl. Cloudy

Via Auocisrtd Pr&amp;u GtaptksNet

Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical S~rvices answered
ten calls for assistance on Thursday and early on Fnday mommg.
On Wednesday at9:!9 a.m., Rutland unit went to State Route
143. Pearl Estep was taken 10 O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. At
9:25 a.m., Middlepon and Pomeroy umts went to Barley Run Road
for a frre at the Marty Hart residence. At 9:56 a.m., Pomeroy umt
was dispatched to Overbrook Center in Middlepon and treated Mae
Lynch at the scene. At 10:03 a.m., Rutland unit tran~ed Lynch
to Holzer Medical Cenler.
At 3:25 p.m.. Middlepon squad went to Brownell Apartments.
Lisa Haggy was treated but not transported. At 5:16p.m., Health net
Helicopter transported Ronde! Kinder to St. Mary's Medical Center.
At 7:16p.m., tuppers Plains went to Calaway Ridge for Wayne
Gilliland, who was transported to Veterans Memon.al Hosp•ial. At
9:51 p.m., Tuypers Plains squad was sent to Ind1an Run Road.
Robin Boswel was taken to St. Joseph Hosptial. At 10:25 p.m. ,
Pomeroy squad went to Lincoln Heights. William Tiemeyer was
taken 10 Veterans.
At 12:18 a.m. on Thursday, Middleport unit went to Locust
StreeL Mary Uribe was taken 10 Holzer. .

Cong. Clarence Miller

~~~~~ ~'t :~~.~~er::

By The Associated Prtss
By late 10night it will be back
into the ice box for much of the
slate. Overnight lows will generally
range from the mid teens 10 the mid
20s and it doesn't look as though
highs on Friday will be much high
than IOnight's lows.
Snow flurries are expected over
much of Ohio oo Friday. Altl1ough
western and southern parts of the
state will see an end to these by
early afternoon. A more general
type of snow is likely over north
central and northeast Ohio. Snow
squalls are also preuy likely in the
northeast.

The record hiRh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees m1967. The
record low was- 15 in 1936.
Sunset wiU be at 7:48 p.m. Sunrise Friday at 5:39a.m.
·
Around the nation
Rain fell across the South and
parts of the Pacifrc Northwest early
today, while snow covered Maine
and winds buffeted the Great Lakes
region.
The snow in Maine was brought
by a storm that was expected to
sweep across the Northeast coast
today, bringing snow and freezing
rain to the mid-Atlantic region and

scattering showers as far south as
Florida.
Meanwhile, gale wind warnings
were in effect today for Lalce Erie
and Lalce Huron .
The Pacific Northwest storm
was expected 10 bring snow to the
mountains of Washington and Oregon and rain to parts of the coasL
The rain in the South was
caused by a separate storm that
moved in10 the region Wednesday
and caused flooding in parts of
Louisiana.
More than 3 inches of rain fell
in Lafayette, La., during a six-hour

period Wednesday afteritoon, while
McComb, Miss ~. got 1.46 inches
and Baton Rouge, La., recorded
1.35 inches.
Highs today were expected to
reach the teens and 20s in the Great
Lakes region, the 20s and 30s in
New England, tbe 30s and 40s in
the Nonhwest and Midwest, the
40s and 50s in the mid-Atlantic
states, the 60s in most of the South;
the 70s in California, and the 70s
and 80s in Florida.
High temperature for the nation
Wednesday was 80 degrees·at Fon
Myers, Fla.

Steelworkers union discusses 14-month labor dispute

ClQsing in on bottled sun power
tum are sure 10 hasten the pace of
such research worldwide.
The European effort, which
resulted in a burst of enerav 10
times hotter than the sun's core
(350 million degrees Fahrenheit)
and generated 2 megawatts of electricity for two seconds, was first
launched in 1973 when work was
begun on the design and construeLion of a 3,500 ton donut-shaped
fusion chamber that could contain
the enormously high temperatures
necessary to accomplish fusion
reaction.
Without getting too technical.
what basically is required in a
fusion reaction is for the atoms of
specific materials, in this case tritium and deuterium, to be forced
10gether under coUision conditions
which in tum produces a heat generating plasma (a soup-like mix of
positively and negat1vely charged
particles). Heretofore the ablhty to
contain such a reaction was tllought
10 be next to impossible. In fact, the
noted American physicist Edward
Teller once maintained that trying
10 hold plasma within lin~s. of f!lagnetic force was like conhrung jelly

PA

24°

..

Blonde jokes don't wash with some

:r

MICH.

•

Unlike the much heralded and
since discredited cold-fusion experimenttwo years ago at the University of Utah, little fanfare accompaRavenna·Kent Rfl!ord-Courier, Jan. 16
nied a very successful "hot" fusion
: Yugoslavia appears to be going the way of the Soviet. Union and East
e~~riment conducted by scientist~
Germany, a victim of the wave of post-Cold War nauooahsm wh1ch swept
at a Joint European laboratory in
?Side the Iron Curtain two years ago and has resulted in the first changes . Ox fordshire, England this past
m tile map of Europe since World War II.
November.
: The European Community's decision 10 recognize Slovenia aod CroatHailed by the scientific commuia as independent nations is the latest signal of the impeding demise of the nity as a "quantum leap in nuclear
.Yugoslavian state as it has existed since 1918.
physics. the successful experiment
· The 12-mcmber association agreed 10 extend recognition to the two is being compared to the break;tates in exchange for their guarantees of human rights and pledges 10 through by Enrico Fermi, the father
:SCCk a peaceful resolution 10 border disputes with the remaining compo- of nuclear energy, who in I 941
)lents of Yugoslavia. Those conditions were deemed to have been met, conducted the first self-sustaining
and diplomatic recognition was granted.
nuclear fission reaction.
· It is time for the United States 10 join in welcoming these two states 10
This fusion breakthrough by the
the community of nations.
Europeans puts them ahead of their
American, Russian, and Japanese
The Columbus Dispatch, Jan. 20
competitors in the friendly race to
In trying 10 plan for retirement. whom should ~orkers believe? Dorcas achieve commercial application of
R. Hardy, who was Social Security commissioner for three years under this potentially limitless, pollution~onald Reagan, and other who subscribe 10 her viewpoint? Or current fedfree energy source. Tbe success of
eral officials and their advisers.
the European lab's experiment was
. Hardy is among the latest voices ot call for sepsible reforms in the hailed by Ron Davidson, the dircc·
hation's budget-making, particularly as it relates to Social Security. llut tor of our country's Prince10n Plasshe has a book 10 publish, so can she be trusted?
ma Physics Laboratory, as "the
Among her critics are federal officials who have their jobs or re-elec- beginning of the transition from
tion campaigns 10 defend. Can they be trusted?
research to reality." The accomHardy urges the federal government to swtl!&lt;!lancing its budgeL
· Hardy, whose book is titled "Social Insecurity," explained: "When plishments by the Europeans in
]he Treasury is in deficit, this leads ot a sheD game. The Treasury siphons
the money off to pay for current government operations, and in exchange,
it gives Social Security an IOU.
; "When tile IOU comes due, there will be no money in the Treasury 10
pay it off, so one way or another, at that point Congress will have 10 raise
I find by reading the editorial
revenue."
page of USA Today that I've been
At some point, future generations will just say no 10 higher taxes and ignoring a wrong done to me by
deficit spending. And those elected officials who won 't listed will find insensitive mankind. How did I,
!hemselves without jobs."
always so welcoming of any reason
to feel.sorry for myself, miss it?
Yes, II d lleard the blonde jokes.
My ftrst one came at the hands of
the two brunette teen-age daughters
of a friend, something about blondes and shoulder pads, gleefully
told while I was wearing a set
myself that wlllild have .Protected a,
Dallas Cowboy from D1ck Butlcus.
•
I don't remember the punch line,
•
but
I laughed .
••
Oh, c~llous mel Now I l~arn
•.
from Lorrie Lynch, associate editor
•
of USA Weekend, that I've been a
party 10 my own subjugation, deni~ration and degradation. Blonde
JOkes are, Lynch wrote, "disgusting," a "sexist and stereotypical
state~ent from people who ought
to know beuer, alleged feminists
among them;· a "thinly veiled
misogynistic attitude."
. Aha I So, raven:haired ·daughters
· of Satan masquerading as sweet,
giggly teen-age girls, your secret is
out AU your declarations of equali- .
ty and your allegiance 10 Ms. mag·
azinc:
are no more than ruses aimed
•
' ~~
at malcing me·feel inf¢rior to the
Master Hair. What on eanh was ·I
•
doing all those hoUrs payinj! some'•'
one $80 a whack. to highlight my
browning bait tQ keep it looting
.•
~~?
.
But wait! Here I read in Ms.
·.'•
•11 IJI.HIU I'm not the only ont buying chNper
Lynch's
discourse that she, loo,
,•
wlnil /fl the IWCfflionf"
.
.
.
pays $80 a whtlc~ 10 render ber 8
~
blonde. Now, I've been 1 *Mient of

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

--Area deaths-Buddy Kearns
Buddy Kearns, 68, of Route I,
Box 22, Letart, W.Va., died
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Feb. 6, 1924 in
Hartford, W.Va., son of the late
John Keams Sr., and Nora Johnson
Keams.
He was a retired foote mineral, a
member or the Graham Baptist
Chwch, American Legion Pbst 140
Smith-Caphart, VFW StewartJohnson Posl 9926, and was born
again of the spirit in 1950.
Survivors include his wife,
Kathleen Grimm Keams; one son
and daughter-in-law, Marie and
Nida Kearns of New Haven,
W.Va.; one gfllJldson, Andy K;eams
of New Haven, W.Va.; two SISterS,
Alice Blaker of Hartford, W.Va.,
and Louise HaU of Middlepon; and
1wo brothers, Delmas Kearns of
Middleport. and John Keams Jr., of
Hanford. W.Va.
He was preceded in death by
one sister, Maxine; and two broth·
ers, Hennan and Ernest
Funeral services will conducted
1 p.m. Saturday at lhe Foglesong

Funeral Home, with the Rev.
William Bud Hatfield officiating.
Burial will be in Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday from 6-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests that donations be made 10
the Alzheimers Disease Research,
15825 Shady Grove R., Suit 140,
RockviUe, Md., 20850-4022.
In 1982 and 1983, Ralph Sampson of
the UDiveraJty of Vlrgiola won the
Jobn R Wooden Award for the nation's outstanding college basketballplaying student athlete.

Court news

Continued from page 1
tabled until next week's regular
meeting.
Other business
Highway Superintendent Ted
Warner indicated that ditching
work now under way on Forest
Run Road had been interrupted
because of wet weather.
Commissioner David Koblentz
reported that "one lane bridge"
signs needed to be installed on
Keno Bridge, near Bashan. The
narrow bridge has caused traff1c
safety problems during tllis week's
bad weather.
County Engineer Philip Roberts
and Commissioner Richard E.
Jones discussed administrative fees
relating to Issue Two Funds for
1992. Those funds are administered
through Buckeye Hills/Hocking
Valley Regional Development Dis·
trict in Marietta, and for the first
time. that agency will deduct
administrative fees from the county's allocation.
The commissioners also:
- transferred $400 within the
Meigs County Juvenile Youth
Grant program;
·
- discussed minor roof repairs at
the sheriffs office;
- approved tile appropriation of
the first half of 1992 funds i the
Soil and Water Conserva ion
Office totaling $14,375.
Boy Scout Lamar Lyon of
Chester also attended the mee ·
as a pan of his civic and community activities in the Boy Scouts of
·America.

Lockhart pleads

Member: The Allodated Preu, Inland
Daily Pteu Auocia~ion and ~he Ohio
Ntwapeper AltoeiaUon, National
Advertt•inl Repre~e~~tative, Branham '
Newopaper Solos~ ?33 Thin! Avenue, .
Now YOril, New Yurx 10017.
..
POSTMASTER: Send addmoo chanpolo
Tho Dally S.nlinet, Ill Coqrt St.,
PometoJ , OHio ~769 .
8tJII8CIUPTION BATES
By Carrier or Motor Roate
one weok....... ...................................auo
One Month ,....,,................................ I6.91S
'&lt;&gt;no Yoar............................... ,..._, ....$83.2Q
SINGLE COPY
··
PRICE
.
Dolly.........................................-.:ja c .....

KUFFS
]FK
,,,

7:30PM OA!Ll .
SATf5UN ....TI~EE~

Z:lO

SlUt:

M,\RTIN

IH"Nt:

II.:ATU~

MAlTI~

SHORT

Wll{R ot 1M &amp;i~

'"'

,..._Meigs announcements--

7: 10,t:lQ MIL'!'.

MATINEES
1:10,3 :10

~T/SUN

services set
Evangelist to speak
There will be preaching and
Evangelist William Villers of
singing at the Faith Full Gospel Anna Mo~iah, W.Va .•. will be at
Church in Long BotiOm on Friday _.Mount Ohve Commumty Church
at 7 p m. Pastor Steve Reed invttes 10 Long Bottom on Sunday at 7
the p~blic.
p.m. ~lOr Lawrence Bush mvttes
the pubhc.

Come Celebrate our

Grand

•

pen1ng.

We're having a
Grand Opening celebration
•
At the Peoples Bank Office
97 N. 2nd Ave.

eport

.

.•

I

Qeck Out Our Sprilg '92 Shoes.
SeverafSt les Now In Stock.

219 tt Stcollll, .

·Mldteport

The keys to Peoples Balik ..• your
hometown bank anytime, anywhe111.

II

Marlena ·A..t•s . Belpre
Lowel. Middleport Nelsonlle
373-3155 593-776 423-7516 896·2369 992-6661 75~·1955

J J·
•

; ,,,~
(Ui]\]'\'
11 ~ lr 1 , I' .

The Air Bound.

·

w-..................:.........:......,. .sca.ao

KEVIN
COSTNER

Forfeiting bonds on speeding
charges were Michael Holland,
Cheshire, $50; Ahca Council,
Langsville, $49; Susan. Watson,
Gallipolis, $52; Chnstma Bare,
Columbus, $49; Gail Hart, Middlepan, $50; James Barry, Grove City,
$48; and Marlene Carpenter, Long
Bouom, $50.

1

w..u.......................................=l.l4

IS Woob. ............... ....................... .,t23.40
28
1!1 ...................."'"'"'.."''"'"'''"'..181'41!;

SAT/SUM lliATIIIE£S
1:15 3:30

l '

avadabal,

1.:...... ,................... .18
w~;w·i;·aliiiii'co;&amp;~iJ· ·78

.... f ' '

..•wor~g to exceed your expectations

;

No o-pUono by' mall pormilled In
are•• where home carrier 111'Yice ta

1

cuttrng: Friday, January 24 at 8:30 A.M.
·celebration: Friday, January 24, 8:30 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
Refreshments ,Will Be Served

lbrough Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi1hing .
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomef(ly, ,
Ohio 46769 Ph. 992·2166. Second clau •
poolqe p1id atlllmeroy, Ohio.

w-.. . .

Three were fined and seven others forfeited bonds in the coun of
Rutland Mayor Edward Martin
Tuesday night.
Fined on speeding charges were
Mark Morrow, Syracuse, $52 and
costs; Tonya Ingels, Racine, $51
and costs; and Hilly Harless, Jr.,
Rutland, $51 and costs.

L

Ri~bon

(USPS US-1160)

-h-. .· .

l

--Rutland Court news---=--

WEST UNION, Ohio (AP)The fonncr treasurer of the Adams
County Ohio Valley School District has pleaded guilty to stealing
money from the finan cially
strapped southern Ohio district.
Albert G. Lockhart, 40, of
Manchester, pleaded guilty
Wednesday in Adams County
Common Pleas Coun to a charge of
theft in office, a third-degree felony
punishable by up to two years in
prison and a $5,000 fine.

Publiahed every afternoon , Monday

11
28
51

Judgment filed
A judgment action has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Beneficial Mortgage Company of Pomeroy against
Gary Donohue of Guysville, and
others, in the amount of $4,004.49,
and interest
The case alleges default on a
$5,000 promissOry note.

'

Subecrllim not doolrl..r 10 Y!lie....,;.
er m&amp;f
itool to The
cJ.ii~f.-t);,jly'Tribuno on • 3.6 or t2
""m.'!!.~la. ~~ will he rrtvon "'"""

cess,'' Boger said. "We just sit to the parties volunlarily resolving
back now and wait on the judge's these mailers. We've hoped they
decision, which could take several would. We encourage it. But they
months.
haven't done so yet" Ledford said.
"No mauer what the ruling is,
No discussioiiS have been held
either party has appeal rights. It can
be appealed all the way up through since July . None are scheduled,
the Supreme Coun of the United said federal mediator Carmon
Newell.
States," she said.
Earl Ledford, acting regional
Members of United Steelwork,
attorney for the NLRB, agreed.
crs
Local 5668 have been off the
"But there would be no barrier
job at Ravenswood since their contract exp,.ired Nov. I, 1990. The
union says its workers were locked
out.
The company says they are on
Veterans Memorial
strike
and has since replaced tllem.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS .
·- Charles G. Dill, Pomeroy; Max
Folmer, Sr., Long Bottom; Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse; William ThornSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
ton, Langsville; and Wayne
"'"'
' ,,
446 4524
'f
Gilliland, Reedsville.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
-Junior Hunt.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Jan. 22 - Wilma
Devol, Marianna Ford, Mrs.
Ronald Petrie and daughter, Violet
Stumbo, Mrs. Chad Taylor and son,
Mrs. Richard Weller and daughter,
and Sandra Williams.
Births, Jan. 22 - Mr. and Mrs.
II I'd l
Charles Cox, a ·son, Oak Hill. Mr.
I
·
I
\I
l\1,
1 h.\
and Mrs. Trent Nash, a son,
\
I~
I
i ill
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs . Bill¥
Ill
Walker, a daughter, Gallipolis.
7:15,9 :10 DAILY.

Hospital news

Divorces processed
A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Sabrina Person, Long
Bouom, against Harold Person.
Divorces have been granted in
the court to Donald Berry Allen,
Jr., against Kim Joan Allen; to
Roben B. Six against Kathleen J.
Six; and to Carl E. Klaiber against
Tracy N. Klaiber.

guilty to theft

The Dnily Sentinel

....llub_o!aliPitoDI
' IMidt OaiUa Coaat)':

the Jackson County aluminum
plant.
But Ravenswood spokeswoman
Debbie Boger said the dispute is in
the hands of an administrative law
judge with the National Labor
Relations Board. The judge will
rule on union allegations the company bargained in bad faith and
locked out worli:ers.
"When the union filed the
charges, it became a legal pro-

''

'

1H Plalls
797-4547 ·

�Thursday, January 23, 1992
5

Pomeroy-Middlf)port, Ohio

-·

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

New Jersey edges Phoenix; ,
Cleveland tops Indiana in O.T .

Thursday, January 23, 1992
Page-4

.,
By The Associated Press
'
Tbe New Jersey Nets showed how far they've
come this season and let head coach Bill Fitch know
there's still a long way to go- all in lhe same night.
~e resurgent Nets overcame an early 13-point
defictt, then nearly blew an eight-point lead in the
final 70 seconds before beating the Suns 106-104
Wednesday night.
"The finish was.God's way of telling me we have
a lot of work 10 do," FilCh said after lhe Nets nearly
wasted a 106-98lead with 1:10 left
Two three-pointers by To in Chambers, who
scored 31 points, puUed .the Suns to 106-104 with 3.9
seconds left. Chris Morris then threw away the
inbounds pass, giving Phoenix possession under its

Southern to host Hannan Trace for final time Friday
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staf1' Writer
The long-standing boys basketball rivalry between Hannan Trace
and ·Southern - a series that began
in the 1966-67 season and one in
which Southern currently leads by
a 32-23. margin ·- will-come lo its
regularly-scheduled conclusion Friday night when the two clubs meet
at the Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium.
The game, the headliner of a
weekend of SV AC action that will
mark the start of the second round
of conference play with Friday and
Saturday night league games, will
also mark the finale of the Wildcats' three-game road trip. So far it
has been a successful one for Mike
Jenkins' charges, who are 2-0 on
'the lour and are 4-2 in all road
games this season.
The Wildcats,· victors in their
last three games (all conference
affairs), are looking to extend their
winning streak against a Tornado
squad that can't seem to get it
together in non-league games (0-4),
especially after losing 90-71 to
Ross Southeastern at Richmondale.
But Southern's primary concern
will be keeping pace with conference co-leader Oak Hill, which
boasts a 6-l mark in the confer·
ence, while Hannan Jrace's princi·
pal concern will be improvmg its
stock beyond its sole possession of
second place.
If lhe Wildcats win, they will be
tied with Southern for second, and
if North Gallia - a 69-66 overtime
winner over Oak Hill in the season's second game -beats the
Oaks again, presto! Hannan Trace,
Oak Hill and Southern would share
fir.ll place, at least for 24 hours.
The Wildcats, who have divided
their first half of the season into
mirror opposites of each other (14
in their first five games, including a
78-60 loss al home to Southern,
and 4-1 in theirlasl five), need continued improvement from frontrnen
Chad Swain (16.3 pts./game) and
Dave Poling (9.5 pts./game). Swain
hasn't been held to fewer than 10
points since hilling a pair of free
throws in the season opener against
Raceland, and Poling has scored in
doubles in his last two games.
Judging by the trend established
in Trace's 10 games, senior forward Jimmy Brace, second on the
team with a 10.8 points·per-game
average, usually scores in double
figures in the two games following
being held to fewer than 10 in any
~e. Since he scored eight points
til last Friday's 61-56 win over
North Gallia, the Tornadoes will be
in big trouble if he is allowed time
to set up his three-point missile
launcher (in 10 games, the 5-foot11 senior has 17 to lead the Wildcats).
· Speaking of three·pointers, the
Wildcats would be wise 10 play the
kind of man-lo-man defense that
would keep Tornado guard Jeremy
Roush from getting into a shooting
rhythm from beyond the arc, as he
has a con ference -high 26 in II
games.
But the Guyan squad, knowing
all too well that it can't afford to
key too extensively on Roush (13
ptsJgame) or Tornado forward/center Roy Lee Bailey (14 .5
ptsJgame), as junior guard Michael
Evans (II pts./game) has demonstrated a knack for scoring in the
teens and 20s (he had 29 against
Southwestern last Friday and 18
against Southeastern).
Tornado forward Russell Singleton, who is back in action but
sti ll recovering from an ankle

.SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill .............. 7 3
Southern .............. 6 5
Eastern ................6 5
Hannan Trace ...... 5 5
Nonh Gallia ........4 7
Kyger Creek ........ 3 7
Symmes Valley ... 2 7
Southwestern ....... ! 10

PF
661
774
762
583
621
506
490
598

(Conrerence)
Soulhem ............ .. 6 I 538
Oak Hill ..............6 I 490
Hannan Trace ...... 5 2 453
Eastern ............... .4 3 461
North Gallia ........4 3 439
SymmesValley ... l 5 322
Kyger Creek.. ...... I 5 296
Southwestem.......O 7 373
TOTAI,.S .........i7 27 3372

PA
583
675
787
677
723
590
564
783

.TOTAL.S...... .U ~ 21U 21l6
WHIF.end lllle
...

Friday - HAnnan Trace at
Southern; S)'llllllel VAlley at KyF.
Creek; Nonh Oallia at,Oat Hill;

.

Sat•rd17 ;... Soulbwestern It
Haman Trace; Soulhem atl!aslern;
Iller Cretk at North Gallili; Oak
HiU SyJIIIDCf Vallt .

al

r.

But the Highlanders must dominate .on the boards against a much
more physical Eastern squad that
has won · its last three games and
four of its last five.
The scribe isn' t sure how long
Highlanderfoint guard Aaron
McCarty (14. ptsJgame) will stick
around before he leaves for good,
but just in case, Greg Ullman's
Eagles had better not count him out
of their plans.
Junior center Chris Mandeville
(!2.3 ptsJgame) ruled the paint
against OVCS Tuesday night with

his 14 points and 20 rebounds, but
if he wants to repeat that performance, he will have to work much
harder for it against the Eagles.
Two player lhe Eagles will find
troublesome if they forget about
him are junior forward Jamie
Morse and senior guard Adam
Simpson. Morse's 10.4 points-pergame average allowed him to quietly reach lhe century mark shortly
after McCarty and Mandeville,
while Simpson (10.5 pts./game)
reached that ·milestOne with a 16poinl effOrt against the Defenders.

The J;agles have a few other
plans of their own, namely offshore
shelling from conference scoringaverage leader Tim Bissell (17.5
pls./game, 10 three·poinlers) and
fellow senior Jeff Durst {17.(,
pls./game, 16 treys) a:nd double: ·
digit scoring from semor forward :
Terry McGuire (11.5 pts./game} ·
and freshman Charlie Bissell;'
whose 9.7 points-per-game average .
hides the fact that he has connected ·
for double digits in his last five ·
games.

By TJ, SIMONEAUX
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- West Virginia's 90-76 win over
Marshall avenged last season's 17point loss, but Thundering Herd
coach Dwight Freeman said his
team gained something, too.
Marshall Jed for almost seven
minutes and stayed close most of
th e first half. But West Virginia
(11-5) got a record-breaking per: ·
formance from Chris Leonard to
pull away Wednesday.
"Our guys played hard, and
even though we're 3-12, I think we
gained some respect tonight,"
Freeman said.
"They beg~n to realize we are
better than our record. They realized we had everything to gain and
they could lose," Herd forward
Michael Peck said.
·11 was Marshall's ninth straight
loss.
Playing without leading scorer
and rebounder Tyrone Phillips,
Marshall was unable to keep up
with a West Virginia team that
remembered last season's 97-80
spanking.
''This is definitely a game I
wanted to win," Mountaineer forward Pervires Greene said. "I took
a lot of ridicule last year from my
friends in Oak Hill who go to Marshall."
"They're a very good basketball
team," Freeman said. "They just
keep coming and coming. You
have to play a complete game.''
West Virginia has won five
straight. It leads the series with
Marshall 14-6 and has won three of
the last four games, including the
last one in Charleston in the 198889 season.
·

.LIVING TRUST SEMINAR
•Learn How To Reduce or Eliminate •learn How To Avoid Probato Cool

)rom Appolndng AGuardianohip
tf Your Spou11 BecomM
Dloabled or lncompolonl

•Leatn Why To Avoid Probata Coot
•Learn Why AWilllo Not Enough ln
Mo1tC1111

•Learn How To Prevent Your Eetltt
From Becoming Public

PLACE: Meigs Senior Citizen Building, Pomeror, Oh.
TIME: 7:00 P.M., January 30th
THE HOCKMAN GROUP

The Estate Planning Company
The llockiiiD Gro1p • 657 Hlg. St., 11144ltport, 0 •• ~ 992-7066

In the NBA ...

. CLEARANCE SALE ON ALL

Sylv•ll

~Ol

GE

.

••• Win 11111 mm ,

SAVE UP TO 50o/o

tt2·J524

I

Lo.Angt.lra ....... 171910

44 \6SI 7B

.475
.463

6
6.5

Edmontoo .......... l 8 21 7
Sanl01e ............. 10 33 4

41 113\ 88
24 118 2.09

.462

6.5

Washington .. .......... l4 2S
Orlando .................... 9 30

.359
.23 1

IO.S

Wednesday's scores

155

B01 tM 5, Toronw2
LosAngele~ 3 , Miflnea«a 3. tic
N Y. Rans:en 4, Cligll')' 4, tie

.1175
.68..
.564

19

.525

I
l lS
14

20
26

.487
.W

15.5
W.S

30

.268

24 .5

t:!
11

Toni2ht's 20mes

MontJU.]I t 801100,7 :35 p.m.
VanC(a.IYCf at DclrUt, 7:J5 p.m.
Toronto ll N.Y. hlmulcn., 7:35 p.m.
Winnipeg 1t Philadelphia, 7:3S p.m.

Mldw .. t Dlvl£1on
W L
Pet.

Uuh ............ ...........26 IS

.634
.550
.538

J.S
4

Denvct .................. 15 1A

.3&amp;5

10

Dallu .....................\ 3 26
Minnet!U ............ ... .? 32

.333

12

.179

18

P1clnc Dlvillon
.. Golda! Sute .......... Ui 10 .72 2
, Ponland ................. 26 13 .f.Ji7

J.S

.-. PhocnU .................. 26 IS

.634

2.5

L.A. Lak en ............ 23 16
Selulc .................... 20 ~0
LA . Oippcm ......... 20 21

.590
.SQ:I

4J
8

AU
308

1.5
IS.S

Sacramanto ............ tl 27

SAVE UPTO

CIM!f.

E. Mich ............................!

•

••
•

•

f.m.

WALES CONFERENCE

,.

A-IM-

t"~· Borwn
Mannal ............ 29 IS
....~ .......... 23 II

Mutercard

Dlecover

OIUSI

HOUU ·

DAILY
9105 .
FIIUY
910.
,
. '

4 62 UlllO
S Sl 164 U9
.• Butralo ... ............ 16 22 I 40 1450 111
,. Honl.n ............. 1! 22 6 )6 133150

rl ~ ............... u 21 s 21 '" 11&lt;1
r,
'•
~
CONfERENCE
'•:.- CAMPBELL
N..trJM.•
•

!iorth Coast Conference

Oberlin 80, CUI We~~em 71
Oltio Wedyn 101, Earlham 11

Wincnbal 72, Kenyon 1118

t:k'

Atllllllll Pmland, 10
Sn~nmenlo II L.A.
en, 10:30
p.m.
New York •t OG Jdcm Sute, I 0:30
p.m.

• New!...., ........ 2215 ·7 51 1721:W
N.Y. !......... 17 22 6 &lt;10 t61113
' J'!Piodoifld.o ...... 14 22 ' 11 121151

'

OhlcJ 8L 12, Minn-. 69

DalW 1t Orlando, 7:
CltvtWid at lndlu1, :30 p.m.
Dcuolt at Chi~o, Bp.m.
Mi1w111koe 11 San Antmio, I:JO p.m .

l

JC PP11f

Big Tea Conference

:30 p.m.

. ' Palrkk lMvUion
Tum
W L T PU. GFGA
: N.Y. ~tar~aen ..... 3017 2 62 193163
• WuhintiOfl ........ 2815 4 60 204155
• Pltublqb ........... :M" 5 5Ull169 '

';

Ohio.college
basketball scor:es

Or.cn-

Minne~OU' at Philadd~,

-'' In the NHL...

•

Ball S1. ll C. Michipn
Toledo It E. Mlchipn

Pboenbl It Be~l«l , 1:30 s·m.

1•

•

VIla .

Miami, Ohio 11 Ohio llnlt.

..

HUGE SAVINGS!

•Free Parking
efree Delivery

Saturday's games

Ktr~t at B&lt;!wlins Otftll

Tonight's games

~atNewJ~y , 7:.

TW LT .... OPGA
Doaoll. ..- ........ 27 13 6 60 1921!3
IL~ . .........

2111 I 50161163
Cldoop... .......... :W II tO 50 160147

Far West

6 10

NOil-tonf'fAftet
E. Mi~hi&amp;llll09 , Chicaao SL12

tJwh 100, San Antonio9&amp;
Golden Stale 136.Atbn!.ll l24

Frld'•y's games

Southwest
Ammau 7S, Aoridl62
Rice M, TOUI Tech$
Tuu 106, Soulhem Mcd!. 91
Tu.u Sa.uhezn 11 Tuu A&amp;M, ppd.
Arilonl 92. Arizon1 SL SS

Transactions

Mi•nd, Ohio 59, W. Michipn l 3
Toledo 51, Bowllna Green SJ

Cltn 1nd 119,Indlan~IU , OT
Dallu lll, MUwalLkce 11 6

l

3

Wednesday's scores

119,NcwYo.t 109
Miami llS, Washington 112
Chic.~to 115, O.ar\on~: 112

•
•
•

Overall

Ball SL 76, Ohio UaiY. 61
Ken1 SL 7S, CalL Michis:an 63

Philadcl~

lkuoit u Minn.ru, 8 p.m.
L.A. OlC::::, 1t HoultOn, f:JOp.m.
U\&amp;h It
Yet, 9 p.m.
Por\land at Sclule. IO p.m.
LA . L1k.cr1 11 Sacr1mc n1o, 10:30
p.m.

Midwest
Ball St 76, Ohio U. 60
CinrMruti II , E. Kentucky41
E. Michig1n I 09, Chica4o S1. 82
E'VIniViUe 17, NE IllinOd Sl
Illinois 74, WilcoNin 67
Iowa 71, Nonhwatcm71
KaNu St 84, S. Ullh 14
Kent 7S, CI!I'IL Michij1t163
Mitmi, Ohio S9, W. Mich iaan 53
Michigan St 66, Purdue 61
Ohio St. 12, M.imololl69
Toledo 57, Bowlin&amp; Oracn S3
W'IChiu St. 65, N. to•• 60

Team
WLWL
Mi1mi, Ohio .................... 3 I
10 5
Cent. Mkh ....................... J I
9 5
W. Mich.......................... J l
12 4
Ohio Univ....................... .3 2
II 5
B1 ll S111t .........................2 2 12 4
Tolcdo..............................2 · 3
S 8
Kent State ........................2 3
S 10
BowiinaGrcc:n ................ J 3
s 9

t01,0rlandg9S
New Jene)' 106, PhocnU \{W

•

Miuis~ppi. 78, Ailblma71
N. Camlin1 St 99, NorlbCarolina 8S
Richmond 82, Old Dominion 'T1
S. Carolinl St. 60, Coli. of (.'Mrlc.lal
52., 0T
VMII OS, Bluefield CoiL 11
Wake Fort~tt 86, Maryland 16
Winthmp 58, C~mpbcU 57

MAC cage standings

8011m

••
•
'

41

New lency atWuhinlton, 7:3S p.m.
C1lvry 11 S•n J111c, \ 0:3S p.m.

Wednesday's scores

50o/o

South
Aubum BS, SOI.IIh C&amp;r01in1 68
Auatin Jtay 103, MWiuippi St. 97
a cmwn St, Virginia 41
Funnll176, GcorJi.a Soulhcrn 741
Goorsi11l. Vandesbilt 70
Jamc:a Madilon 56, William &amp; Miry

Friday's 21mes

GB

San Ant.onio .......... .2l 18
H01.111M .................ll 18

WM VirJinia 90, MmhaU 76

Buff•lo at P!uabur&amp;J:l, 1:lS p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tt.m

Penn 72, Amai.can U. 6S

Q\lcbo:: •tChicaao. 1:35 p.m.
Lot Anaelcatt St Louit,l :35 p.m.
N.Y. R•nacn 11 EdmCI:Iton, 9:35p.m.

"'

HotPollt

PO._lOHIO

.605

Philadelphla ........... l!l 21
Miami....... ............. ll) 22

Cle"" and.- - -..l'
[)euoiL ................... 22
All~onl.l ...... ............. 21
Milwaukee .............1 9
Indian~ .....
.... 15
Cbarlonc ... ........... .1 1

, RllaPsodY·

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

GB

New Yc0. ..............2J h

PeL
.625

Ncwleney ........... \ 11 2 1

Ni1~ 74, St Bonlventwe 73

Smytht Olvlllon
Vancwvu ......... 2.613 7 S9 16613S
Calgary .............. 2.019 7 47 179163
W mni~JC8 ........... 19 20 9 47 14BISI

Centnl Dtvlslon

.

WE REPAIR ALL.MikES

W L
IS

Da~too ....................2S

·Sleeper Sofas

FAOORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
· c~

Te1m

Dl~l,lon

Chiu!o..................:lS 5

-.

Scoti

A.llantk:

Stearns &amp; Foster

THE BEST VALUE YOU
CAN.BUY IN A.SLEEP
SOFA.

RCA

Minnes.cu .......... 20 20 Ill 44 150 US!
Toronto .............. 12. 30 S 29 lli17S

EASTERN CONFERENCE

CLOSE:-OUT
PRICES

field, Ohio, whicli the· Cavaliers won 119-115 in
overtime. A fight rouowed shortly after the roul,
and Battle was called ror the technical. (AP)

Scoreboard

MIDDLEPORT, 0110

With Deluxe Innerspring
Maltre88es

M1lt1Tec•

LET'S GET IT ON!- Cleveland's John Battle (right) sizes up Indiana's George McCloud
arter McCloud routed Battle in the fourth quarter or Wednesday ni~ht's NBA eame in Rich-

Sponaored IJ:

ON STEARNS&amp;
FOSTER

later, then" added two free throws 10 gtve Utah a 97921ead.
Cavaliers 119, Pacers 115 - Larry Nance sanlc
two baseline jumpers in the fmal 1:13 as Cleveland
overcame a ~ve-point deficit in overtim.e.
.
Mark Pnce, who led Cleveland w11h 30 pomts,
and John Battle each made two free throws in the
closing seconds.
.
Warriors 136, Hawks 124 - Chris Mullin
scored 30 points as Golden State won its fifth straight
game.
·
Dominique Wilkins scored 29 points for Atlanta. ·
The Warriors led 87-76 before running off a 15-6
'spurt, fmishing the run with eight straight points and.
taking a 102-82 lead on Victor Alexander's dunk
with 2:39 remaining in the third quarter.
Bulls 115, Hornets 112- Michael Jordan's tiebreaking three-point play with 8.3 seconds left gave
Chicago its lith consecutive victory.
Jordan's jumper in the lane and Horace Grant's
layup tied the game with 29.7 seconds left. Larry
Johnson, who led the Hornets with 31 points, then
lost conll'Ol on a drive. Jordan, who fmished with 23
points, scooped up the loose ball, drove for a layup as
he was being fouled and made the free throw to complete the scoring.
Celtics.l07, Magic 95 -Reggie Lewis' 14thirdquarrer points and a 14-0 fourth-quarter run keyed·
Boston's fourth straight victory.
Orlando got within 80-77 on Jeff Turner's two
free throws. with 10:20 left in the game, but a hook
shot by Robert Parish started the 14-0 surge that
made it94-77 with 5:3110 go.
.
76ers 119, Knicks 109- Charles Barkley scored
37paints. ·
Barkley scored the first IO points of the third )lCriod and had 17 in the quarter as the host 76ers bmlt an
86-72lead.
Heat 125, Bullets 112- Glen Rice scored 22
points and Rony Seikaly sparked a thir.d·period
surge.
Miami put the game out of reach in the third quar- ·
ter with a !9-3 run. Seikaly had seven of his 13
points during the run.

Rogers takes blame for Nelloms' ineligibility

FREE
Foderol Eo late Tox
•Learn How To Avoid the Court.

·

Kevin Johnson, held 10 nine points the night after
he injured his lower back at Chicago on Tuesday
night, missed a last-second three-pointer that would
have won it for the Suns.
Derrick Coleman scored 28 points, Rafael Addison had nine of his season-high 19 in lhe fourth quarter and M~e Blaylock had 18 points, 12 rebounds,
nine assists and five steals to lead the Nets.
Mavericks U8, Bucks 116 - vauas ended •ts
11-game losing streak as rookie Doug Smith scored
12 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter to help the
Mavericks erase an 11-pointdeficiL ·
Rolando Blackman added 20 points and Fat Lever
had 17 for Dallas, which trailed 90-79 entering the
final quarter, while Derek Harper contributed 16
assists and scored his IO,OOOth NBA point on a third-'
quarter layup. Lever's baske( with 1:43 remaining
broke the game's last tie and he added two free
throws fora lll-1071ead.
Dale Ellis had 2Hor Milwaukee.
Jazz 100, Spurs 98 - John Stockton hit three
free throws in the final 16 seconds and reserve Mike
Brown bad five of his II fourth-quarter points in the
last 1:16 as Utah improved to 17-1 at home.
Stockton's three-pointer with 2:23 to play gave
the Jazz a 92-87 lead, but Sean Elliou hit a threepointer with 2:07 to play to bring the Spurs within
92-90. Brown made a three-point play 27 seconds

FIRST BUCK - Bill Osborne or Reesdville landed this, his first
buck, during this year's muzzle-loading deer season. The 18t)o
pound, eight-point buck was killed near Success Road. The deer
had a 19-inch span between beams, compared to an eight· to tOinch average ror a deer of Ibis size.

SLEEP SOFAS

.

bllsket.

West Virginia defeats Marshall90-76

383
408
433
455
428
391
372
502
3372

(ReServes • SVAC only)
Tcain
W L PF PA
Soulhem .............. 7 . 0 376 242
Eastern-................6 .. • ' 321 ' 276
Symmes Valley ... 3 3 253 278
. North Gallia ........3 4 275 . 284
Kyser Creek ........2 3 184 212
}{annan Tm:e ......2 4 246 274
Oak Hill ..............2 5 276 298
Southwestern ....... ! 6 195 262

SaaterD • Soulhwatem

injury suffered before Southern's winning records. Meanwhile, the
road game at Oak Hill on Jan. 10, Hill beat conference cellar-dweller
is likely to see some acuon, wh1ch Southwestern and Kyger Creek ·
will make it imperative that Trace before falling 66-55 to Minford
conll'OI the inside early and hold it
Saturday night
The Tornadoes' team concept of
How wiD the Oaks win? F'li'St, il
offense is shown by the fact that wouldn't hurt Oak Hill skipper
they average eight men in the scor- Doug Hale to put in the fast break
ing column per game. Other play- that gets Simpson past the halfcourt
ers the Wildcats should keep 10 stripe when the fast break starts.
mind are senior guard Scott·Lisle With guards Benji Lewis {16.3
(79 points), Mark Allen (66), pls./garne) and Btll Poller (10.1
Joshua Codner (55) and Billy pls./game, nine games) providing
the deep pass following rebounds
Davis (51).
In the last three games, Hannan by the Hill's Twin Pillars Trace is shooting 32 for 53 at the juniors Brook and Ryan Morgan,
free-throw line (60.3%), while known better for their brawn than
Southern is 33 for 52 at the stripe for their scoring, that could serve to
(63.5%) in the same span. Fouling spread the Bucs' defense thin
will still be the lllh "Thou shalt enough to give Simpson some
not," but it's not likely to carry breathing room. The spread seems
consistent enforcement of the to be the Oaks' only salvation,
penalty (translation: free throws because the defense it forces teariis
to play can take the speed out of
made) if broken.
The Wildcats will probably send anyone's fast break.
guards Brian Unroe (5-11, sr.) and
Saturday's agenda will have
Shawn Cox (5-10, so.) against North Gallia hosting Kyger Creek
Roush (5-9, sr.) and a choice oJ and Oak Hill as Symmes Valley's
either Evans (5-9, jr.) or Davis (5- guest team.
8, sr.). On the front line, Swain (6· Symmes Valley vs. Kyger Creek
2, sr.) and Brace will probably see
Kyger Creek saw the promised
Codner (5-ll, sr.) and Singleton land of above-.500 basketball after
(6-3, jr.), and Poling (6-2, jr.) will beating Ironton St. Joe 57-56 in
take on Bailey (6-l, sr.) in the overtime on Jan. II, but the Bob·
paint
cats, 34 at the time, were prevent·
The datebook for Saturday night ed from crossing the River Jordan
will have Hannan Trace hosting by losses to Southern, Oak Hill and
Southwestern and Southern head- Wahama
ing 10 Tuppers Plains 10 face EastThe Cheshire five will host
ern.
Symmes Valley squad that also has
North Gallia vs. Oak HiD
lost its last three games and has one
Nonh Gallia will be one game less win on lhe season.
out of first if the sai lors can pull
Hopefully old scoring habits
out a victory on the road. Do they will return to Bobcat forward Phil
need any better reason lo win this Bradbury. The 5-foot·IO senior
one?
saw the 16.1 points-per-game averThe Pirates still haven 'l pullwo age he carried into Tuesday night's
wins together this season, but if game against Wahama drop to a
they start by winning Friday night, team-high 15 when his dOuble-fig.
they will also sweep the Oaks ure scoring streak ended at nine
losers in their last five meetings games with a season-low five-point
in the season series for the third effon against the White Falcons.
Chris Crace, KC's 5-11 sophosuarghl year.
North has the speed of 5-foot-ll more guard/forward, has gained a
junior guard Charles Peck (!5.7
roductive scoring habit that hasn't
eft
him lately. He has scored in
pls./game), which is best used on
double
figures in four of his last
lhe fast break, and the inside game
five
games,
including the last two
of 6-foot-4 junior postman Kevin
to
make
him
lhe second Bobcat lo
Hunt (15.1 pls./game), which was
part of the reason behind Oak reach the century mark in scoring
Hill's Chris Simpson (15 (he has 101 total points in 10
pts./game) scoring 10 points - the games).
Bul the Bobcats will have lo
second-lowest poinllotal of the
drop
one old scoring habit - scorseason for the 6-foot-7 junior cening
fewer
than 10 points in any
ter- in the teams' fusl meeting of
quaner
(overtime
periods excludthe season.
ed).
KC
is
2-6
in
games
in which
But if the Pirates are to win,
they must have more offense from · that very thing has happened .
Rob Canady, who has 78 points When the Bobcats put at least l 0
spread across each of North's II points on the board per quarter,
$ames. To his credit, the 6-foot-3 they are 1-l.
In spite of their 2-7 record,
JUnior has been a solid contributor
on the boards (he has 10 or more Symmes Valley's Vikings comgrabs in five games this season), mand more respect than might be
bul as the team's third-leadng scor- suggested at r.rsl glance. Ask Haner, he has not scored in double fig- nan Trace, who had to come from
ures in three straight games, as behind in the third quarter to beat
Peck and Hunt have done. Neither the Vikings 68-60 at Aid nine days
has junior ·guard/forward Jim Bob ago.
The Vikings have only shot
McClure, who was of the Bucs'
above
the .500 mark at lhe foul line
other starters earlier in the season
and has continued to see playing three times this season, and two of
time since the return of senior for· those times - 8 for II against
Southwestern (55-54) and 8 for 15
ward Darin Smith.
Junior guard/forward Ryan against OVCS (82-3 1) -~h y
McCarley, who started the season won. The other time came in 0with four straight games in which 62 loss to lhe Oaks at Oak Hi I, in
he scored fewer than lO points which Symmes shot? for 13. Since
each, put three double·digil scoring the OVCS game, the Norsemen
efforts together (10 against Kyger have gone 17 for 44 (38.6%).
Kyger Creek will play Symmes
Creek, 13 against Southern and 14
against Southwestern), but has ' Valley at Aid on Tuesday in a conscored 22 points in the four games test originally set for Dec. 13,
1991.
since then. Row harder, Pirates.
Eastern vs. Southwestern
North Gallia needs to be more
Southwestern's
Highlanders are
productive in the middle quarters,
riding
high
after
Tuesday
night's
because the Pirates are averaging
75-54
road
win
over
Oh10
Valley
13.8 points in the second and third
quarters in the last three contests. Christian.
Is this de ja vu? It has to be,
Oak Hill isn't doing much beuer,
averaging 14.5 points in the same because Southwestern won its first
frames in its last three games. But game of the season last year on the
in that span North beat Symmes road- an 81-69 victory over HanValley before losin$ to Eastern and nan at Ashton, W.Va. on Jan. 8,
Hannan Trace, a pavor teams with 1991.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

W001ta62. Duliaon41

Ohio Conference

BaseboU
AIMtlwl I.Mt:IM

CAUFORNIA ANO£l.S -

Nomod

John McNamua lpteill udanmtnl
u:out-eatdiqlnltNclcr. Ap:cd to IMnl
with Bon BlyJ...-on, pitclier, and 1010
Gcr\W.. cUIWdar on miaar leap eon-

MJLWAUKBB BREWERS "'"'·
Apod
wilh OtriiBoli.D, pit.ch.-,
to 1ctm1
on 1 ~you cant!KL

NatlooalLutut

CINCINNATI ~~Df - Aa-Jio
1.e:rm1 with $c«1 Bankhead, pildla, on 1
CI'ID-l_UJ'«WWUIC\.

FLORIDA MARLINS - Named
Jonalban D. Marina' vice~ prolidCiflt oC fl.

""''"'
,_,..,_

LOS ANOBLES DODGERS Jim Ool1, pi.tcher, on

A peed \0.,.... wi\b

NEW YORX MEl'S - T11dod Mall
Cnroon, outfielder, and Tony Cutillo
piW., to 1M DlttoU n.., far Pul Oib.., """!body M&amp;llholl. .........

PIITSBURGH PJIIATES - Apd

*""' wlih Jim ~.
miMJCII', Gl'll
five-ywr
Alftlld to tonn1 with

Blldwin-WaU1ce &amp;0, Moun\· Union

10

Captal 71, t.hzieu... 69
Hinm CGI. 91, John Con.u 73

Guy Vanho, ou.lll.fdu, on • Ollll·ptr

OQIIII'Ut.

416
M~ 75,1Wdolbaa !I

&lt;Atabc:in 61, Ohio Narthem 62

Non-coarennce
Albioo 77, 8 .. 111&lt;&gt;1' 64
Cimlnn.U I I, B. Lntudi:J 41 o.
Flndl.of 92,~60
'
Malon• 124, Lob Erie 94
11o Graodo H, 11111a M

Major college
basketball scores

c.cu

r••·

........ ltwW
l!&lt;t&gt;l'.lno, Ty Golnoy""' 1'dlh ~· ...-,,
m: Joe ~ infilldet, Bn.aa Filbw,
Mike Dillon, Mark P.litoYIIIk, Eddit
Dilon and Blu Minor, pilchMI, tad Bti·
111 Dorsltt, c:1u:t.u. t9 lllltWta camp u
non-Mitlrj!l.ly-.

-you_,..._ "

ST. LOIJIS CARDINALS - Apod

to Wll"'!d Mill Ton PapGIEi. ~. \11. • ..

SAil DIIIOO PADRES - ,o\pool 10
, .-m••wiih ~ta•J 141•• piu:her, on a

Baketball
Nadtull•looQoll-lloo
CHAILO'I'Tl! HOillftlTS - Aotl·
va~ J.1. RtU. Cln*, fftlrn .,. inJund
liiL

-·

IJBtROrr PISTONI - Ilpot 0..

. aid H.M--. pard, m I 1~)' CCG•

FootbaU

. N-f-t.ea.o

DmOJT UONS - Nomod !loa

u.nma aftwM ww II nar

'

PHILADBLPIIIA BAOUI N....tllll ....~,!Jno_.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State track Coach Russ
Rogers says he is to blame for
sophomore sprinter Chris Nelloms
being declared ineligible.
Nelloms, who has posted worldclass times in the 200- and 400meter dashes, was declared inetigible by Ohio State last week when it
was discovered he ran for a track
club while sitting out his freshman
season as a Prop 42 student, an
infraction of NCAA regulations.
"It was one of those rules I was
unaware of," Rogers said. "I take
the blame. I should have been on
top of the situation."
As a Prop 48 athlete, Nelloms
was requined to sit oul his freshman
season at Ohio State and pay his
own way the fli'Sl year. As he was
sitting out, track clubs began calling, asking Nelloms to run for
lhem.
Rogers set Nelloms up with
Accusplit of California, and Nelloms ran six meets, for expenses
only.
"Chris was my fJrsl Prop 42,"
said Rogers. "I was completely
dumbfounded. That's life. That's
what I have to deal with. It's not
hurting Ohio State. It's hurting a
young black kid that needs an education. I blame myself because I
wasn't on top of it"
According to the NCAA, Prop
42 alhletes can compete individually, but not as part of a team. The
usual punishment is a meet for a

meet, meaning Nelloms could be
declared ineligible for up to six
meets. NeUoms has already sat out
his r.rst meet, and Ohio State is trying to get any further penalty
reduced .
Rogers said N.elloms was
un~ware of the rule. Nelloms has

said he wants to run and is thinking
of transferring from Ohio State or'
turning pro:
·
Rogers said he will help Nelloms do whatever he wants to do.
"I feel just like resigning
myself," said Rogers. "I feel like l
messed up a young m~n's life."

Meigs freshmen's recent wins
improve season record to 6-4
The Meigs Marauder freshman
basketball team recently won three
of five games and in the process
ran their record to 6-4.
In the fJrSt contest the Marauders jumped out to a 22-5 game at
the end of the first period and
coasted to a 22-5 victory over
Alexander.
Adam Krawsczyn led .the Little
Marauders with 19, Jerrod Folmer
added 17, Jerod Hill seven, Travis
Grate six and Benny Ewing four.
Mike Sherman led the Spartans
with eight.
Meigs ran their record to 5-2
with a 52-31 victory at Wellston.
Krawsc;zyn once again led Meigs
with 18, Ewing added 12, Hill and
Folmer scored six each and Brett
Newsome and Todd Mitch four
each. Ewins also had an outstanding game on defense. Miice Fox led
Wellston with II.
The Marauders used a balanced
scoring attack to defeat Federal

Hocking 45-33. Krawsczyn and
Folmer led Meigs with 11 each,
Hill added 10: Ewing five, Grate
two and Mitch and Newsome two.
each. Chad Nelson led the Lancers
with nine points.
Meigs lost to former Marauder
Steve Ohlinger and his Belpre
Golden Eagles 51-32 behind Eric
Williams and his 14 points.
Krawsczyn led Meigs with 12, Hill
and Adam Hendrix added five and
Dean Hankla, Frank Dickens,
Grate, and Folmer chipped in will]
two each.
Justin Gale scored 24 and Jason
Gale added 12 as the NelsonvilleYork Buckeyes defeated the .
Marauders 62-49 in Buchtel.
Krawsczyn led Meigs with 18, Hill'
12, Folmer eight, Ewing six and·
Grate five.
.
The Meigs Frosh (6-4) willtrav-'
elto Jackson to battle the lronmen
on Thursday evening at 5:55 and
will play at Southern on Friday
evening at 5:00.

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, January 23, 1992 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Thursday, January 23, 1992

I

Tide are on a three-game losing
streak, the latest a 78-77 home loss
to Mississippi on Wednesday night.
" I thought all along that we
weren't a good basketball team,"
Sanderson said.
After ~de Harvell had scored 32
points aM the visitors had taken
control with a 21-4 run early in the
second half, the Rebels were 8-7
overall and 1-3 in the conference,
while Alabama, which played without starting guard James Robinson
for disciplinary reasons, was 14-4
and 2-3.

By The Associated Press
Apparently Wimp Sanderson
knows a lot more than just which
plaid jacket goes well with the
motif of each Southeastern Conference arena.
The Alabama coach was telling
anyone willing to listen that his
Crimson Tide weren't as good as
the poll was making them out to be.
Just 10 days ago, Alabama
broke into the Top Ten holding
onto an eight-game winning streak
as it was reaching No. 9. .
Now, the 15th-ranked Crimson

Cincinnati beats EKU;
Ball State tops OU 76-60
Ohio Northern 68-62 in Ada. The
victory set up a mid-season showdown Saturday as the Cardinals
(13-3 overall. 8-1 in the OAC) host
Capital.
Capital (10-6, 7-2) got 19 points
from Tim Moore and 17 from Chad
Young in a 77-69 victory over
Marietta in Columbus.
At Berea, Harry Marko scored
22 points in Baldwin-Wallace's 8066 victory over Mount Union.
Eddie Norman and Scot! Gobely
led the Purple Raiders with 16
points apiece. .
Andy Moore scored 22 points to
lead Muskingum to a 75-58 win
over Heidelberg in New Concord.
Darrell Russell led with 12 points
for Heidelberg. At Hiram, Steve
Fleming scored 24 points as the
Terriers beat John Carroll 91-73.
Mike Toth scored 25 points for the
Blue Streaks.
In North Coast Conference play,
Mike Peirson scored 13 points as
Wittenberg won its 12th straight
game, 72-48 over Kenyon at
Springfield. The Tigers improved
to ll-3 overall and 8-0 in the
NCAC. Chris Donovan led the
Lords with 19 points.
Wooster (15-2, 8-I) remained a
half-game behind the Tigers with a
62-41 victory over Denison at
Granville. Brian Buchanan scored
15 points for Scots while Mike
Foster had 18 points and 10
rebounds for the Big Red.
In Delaware, Bryian Burson
scored 23 points and five other
teammates were in double figures
to lead Ohio Wesleyan to a 108-77
victory over Earlham. Jason Padgeuled the Quakers with 18 points.
Ricky Washington had 28 points
as host Oberlin beat Case Western
Reserve 80-7 1 and broke a fourgame losing streak. Ed Saxon 's
scored 14 points for the Spartans.

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
Cincinnati head coach Bob Huggins used the occasion to work on
the Bearcats' full-court press. Eastern Kentucky's Mike Pollio
thought the work could have been
finished a little sooner.
Cincinnati's defense forced 31
Eastern turnovers that led to 38
points and the Bearcats went on to
a 81-41 rout of the Colonels
Wednesday night.
Herb Jones led Cincinnati (13-3)
with 26 points.
Cincmnati held Eastern Kentucky (9-9) to just six field goals in
th e first half and forced 17
turnovers as the Bearcats built to a
43-19 halftime lead.
''It's one of the best presses I've
eve r seen," Pollio said. "We

played Kentucky Saturday night
and Cincinnati plays bener
defense."
Huggins said Jones' play is the
•key to the press.
"Herb's almost a guard with the
way he can pressure the ball,"
Huggins said. " It' s like having
four guards in there. We can get to
the ball quickly."
Pollio indicated that Cincinnati's defense may have been too
enthusiastic.
" I was really surprised they
were pressing when they were up
by 30," he said.
But Pollio carne away impressed
with the Bearcats.
"I think Cincinnati should be in
the top 15 .... I can't believe
they've not been in the top 25," he
said.
Cory Blount added 12 points
and eight rebounds for Cincinnati.
Jcihn Allen led the Colonels with
11 points.
In the Ohio Conference
Wednesday night, Larry Laisure
scored 18 points as Otterbein beat

In other games involving ranked
teams Wednesday night, it was :
No. 6 Ohio State 72, Minnesota 69;
No. 7 Connecticut 97, Providence
86 in overtime; No. 9 Arkansas 75,
Florida 62; North Carolina State
99, No. 10 North Carolina 88; No.
11 Arizona 92, Arizona State 55:
and No. 14 Michigan State 66, Purdue 61.
Alabama made a late run against
Ole Miss but fell just short. Robert
Horry, who had 32 points for the
Crimson Tide, hit a three-pointer
with 17 seconds left that cut the
lead to 76-74. Dondi Flemister
made one of two free throws to
push the lead back to three. Alabama had a chance to tie, but Elliot
Washington's
three-pointer
bounced out, Ole Miss got the
rebound and Harvell made a free
throw to seal the victory.
No. 6 Ohio State 72
Minnesota 69
Jim Jackson made- four free
throws in the final 29 seconds and
scored 21 points as the Buckeyes
(12-2, 4-1) won. Mark Baker added
15 points and Lawrence Funderburke had 13 for Ohio State.
Vashon Lenard scored 19 points
and Townsend Orr had 16 for the
Gophers (11-7, 3-2).
No.7 Conneeticut97
· Providence 86 (OT)
The Friars (8-10, ().6) missed all
13 shots they took and made only
five of nine free throws in the overtime as they remained the only Big
East team without a conference
victory. Chris Smith had 27 points
and Scoll Burrell added 25 for the
Huskies (14-1, 5·1).
No.9 Arkansas 75, Florida 62
Todd Day passed Sidney Moncrief as the Razorbacks' all-time

ALAN

;~~iated Press Writer
:•: WASHINGTON {AP) _Con•!tressiooal Democrats are begiMing
"•a new election- ear ush to extend
!':~ho
! · emCav~
1o ment benefits for
le
used up their cov=e

;;~ unlilce last year President Bush
~~$U

non, Bryan Specht (freshman, Belpre) and Brian Brelsford (sophomore, West Lafayette) placed first
in the mile relay at 3:39.4, while
the B team of Benson, Hutchinson,
Zoldcn Eastwood (freshman,
Kingston, Jamaica) and Marc
Mic higan (freshman, Kenering)
was third at3:45.91.
In the two-mile run, Chris Smith
Uunior, West Jefferson) was second at 9:54.36. Brant Mclaughlin
(sophomore, Lillie Hocking) finished the event in 10:31.
Nancy Keller (sophomore, Mantua) led the women's events by
placing first in the shotput with a
distance of 25 feet, three inches.
She also finished second in the
880-yard run at3:21.
In the two-mile run, Debbie
Gray Uunior, McConnelsville) was
fourth at 13 :05 .67, while Angie
Cress (freshman, London) was
sixth at 14:01. Vonda Stiles
(senior, Shawnee) was third in the
long jump (14 feet, 11-3/4 inches)
and third in the triple jump (30 fee~
2-1(2 inches).
The teams travel to Ashland
University on Friday for another
meet.

;,~tie. But under pressure from tbe

~ssion, high unemployment and
!~ .

THIS ONE'S MINE - Ohio State forward Lawrence Funderburke (left) goes above Minnesotp's Bob Martin to grab therebound during Wednesday night's Dig Ten game at St. John Arena ·
in Columbus, which the sixth-ranked Buckeyes won 72-69. (AP)

•

Peplowski, who finished with 14
points; broke the final tie with a
low-post basket with 1:03 left.
Freshman guard Shawn Respert

paced the Spa11ans (13·2, 3-2) with.
17 points. Woody Austi·n led the
Boilermakers (10-6, 2-2) with 22
points.

Cosmetics,

ir·
:also

111UO
PROTECTS

Doctor, hospital

ENGINES FOR
50,000 MILES AND MORE I
S!J99r-slippery PTFE resms
redvce friCtion dynng start-

ups and stresses One

than 50,000 mles

•

like hell ."
decline to education effortS involvWilson aides said the CIJ!S are ing schools and doctors and a rise
necessary to help close a twl:l-year of 25 cents per pack in cigarette
shortfall expected to near $7 billion taxes.
and to pay for a health-care proDetails of the study were dis·
gram for poor pregnant women and closed by a co-author last week in
infants. They said the money would Texas at an American Heart Assobe restored when the economy ciation meeting of science writers.
improves.
Betsy Hite, a spokeswoman for
Tom Lauria of the Tobacco · the California Department of
Institute, the industry 's lobby,
applauded the proposed elimin~tion
of a campaign that "focused primarily on ridiculing industry ... and
basically put smokers in a bad
light."
In on'e TV commercial, actors
portrayed industry executives plotting to lure 3,000 new smokers a
day to replace those who die or
quit. "We're not in business for
our health,''. one sneers.
A series of radio spots featured
comedians joking about smoking's
unanractive side effects, from
smokers' hack to nicotine-stained
hands.
"A crazy thought," says one
comic. "I mean why sell
cigarettes? Why not just sell
phlegm and cut out the middle
man?"
The anti-tobacco push came
after a 1988 ballot measure that
established a formula for spending
tobacco taxes on anti-smoking
efforts. The tobacco industry spent
$21 miUion trying to defeat Proposition 99, outspending proponents
more than 10-U&gt;-1.
The media campaign contributed to a drop in the percentage of
smokers in California from 26.8
percent in 1987 to 22.2 percent in
1990, a 17 percent reduction,
according to a study.
The study also atuibuted the

Health Services, which commissioned the study by researchers at
the University of California at San
Diego, said it will not be formally
released until at least May.
''We have some questions about
the methods used," she said, but
would not elaborate. The study was
based partly on interviews with
34,582 adults and adolescents.

-

!Pbs.

To The Veterans ofMeigs County:

lore rg r~

or OOmesrrc

.•

'

•
••
l

.cards

swlsHER·LoHSE PHDMACY ~ 992·Z9~s

The new Rostenkowski-Downey
bill would add yet another I 3
weeks of extra benefits through ·
June 13. That means people who •
use up the standaid 26 weeks of .
coverage could get33 weelcs or 26 weeks of extra payments through
that date.
,
As of June 14, exten\led benefits ·
would lapse back to 20 weelcs or 13
w~ks. But those benefits _would be
avatlable through Oct 3, lllStead of ·
exprnng June 13 as now scheduled. ,

cleared in death

treatment protects lor more

.• Qreetlng

0

KATHLEEN GRUBB
Associated Press Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) To the delight of the tobacco industry, Gov. Pete Wilson wants to
eliminate funding for an anti-smoking advertising campaign credited
with inducing thousands of Californians to kick the habit
The TV and radio campaign
included commercials that depicted
the tobacco industry as greedy and
coldhearted.
The Wilson administration has
also delayed distribution of a study
- praised by the American Heart
Association- that shows the campaign contributed to a 17 percent
reduction in the number of smokers
. over three years.
In a proposal submiued to the
Legislature on Jan. 9, Wilson said
he wants to use. $122.8 million in
tobacco tax revenue to offset a budget shortfall and pay for health
care. The money is earmarked by
the state constitution for anti-smoking effortS.
The money includes $30 million
set aside for the ad campaign, along
with funding for community and
school anti-smoking programs.
The proposal awaits action by
the Legislature but has already had
an impact. A new series of ads
scheduled to air this month was
suspended, auti-smoking organizations said.
"Cutting the media campaign is
a total disgrace," said Marie
Pertschuk executive director of
Americans' for Nonsmokers' Rights
in Berkeley. "We're going to fight

1!1ke on an American partner ;General Electric Co. - in the rail•.iar project
: : The contract was for 41 rail cars
:to be used on a 23-mile commuter
•line between the cities ofEI Segun:~o and Norwalk. The line would
include a ~ to Los Angeles 1\vo-year note yields .
•International Ali'JlOrt. It is schedfall at auction
~uled to open in 1995.
-~ The commission, which award:Cd the contract to Sumitomo on
WASHINGTON (AP)- Yields
:Dec. 18, had come under increas- on two-year Treasury notes fell in
-ing pressure in recent weeks to Wednesday's auction to the lowest
'
~ithdraw it, with critics complain- level since they were issued on a
;ing that too many jobs are leaving regular basis starting in 1974.
~he United States. The pressure
The average yield was 4.99 perCLEVELAND (AP) - A jury
.,-,ounted with President Bush's cent, down from 5.12 percent at the
has
cleared a doctor and St. Luke's
'Visit to Japan to break down trade last auction on Dec. 18. The noteS
:tWrlers.
wiU carry a cou~n interest rate of Hospital in a suit filed by a Cle~e­
: · "This controversy is not.l!bout . 4 718.perce~l wrth eacb $10,000 in · lan.d y;oman :wl!o.,~·~lS~cond twin
was overlooked in the delivery
~span-bashing," said City Council- face value selling for $9,978.40.
man Joel Wachs, an opponent of
A IOial of$13.77 billion in noteS room and was stillborn. The .
ljJe contract "This is for American were sold out of bids totaling woman never received prenatal
care.
$42.67 biUion.
This is for local jobs."

Watches~

l'inishlng

Sumitomo was awarded the contract over Morrison· Knudson Corp.
of Boise, Idaho. The American
comJ,lany bid $5 million less and
said·tt would would give more jobs
to U.S. workers than Sumitomo,
but the commission said Sumitomo
was better qualified.
"The citizens of Los Angeles,
the citizens of Califorttia have won
a great victory here today," said
William Agee, chainnait of Morrison-Knudson, which now gets a
second chance for the contract.
Sumitomo built the cars for a
similar line linking Long B~ach
with downtown Los Angeles that
began operating two years ago. The
lines are all part of a 30-year, $150
billion plan to build a new rail and
bus system throughout the county.
"We were selected by the commission on our merits because of
our experience, technical superiority and past history of delivering
world-class products on sched,ule
and within budget," Miyahara said.
He also said Sumitomo had
operated in Los Angeles for 30
years anll contributed to the county's economy before it applied for
the contract.
The company has been in the
United StateS for 40 years, employs
1,000 U.S. workers and exported
about $1.7 billion in American
products last year, Miyahara said.

In a last-ditch effort to save the

Jewelry ·

• PhotO

The move to. exten.d unemployment benefits is _the first i~ wha_t
Demll':rats say wtU be a legtslauve
offenstve by them thiS y~ kered
to the recessiOn. Bush s fadmg
popularity has convinc~d
Democrats that the prestdent s
chtef weakness - and the~ maJOr
strength - ts deahng wtth the
staUed economy.
.
Bush plllllS to announc~ hrs economtc recovery _plan m hts Jan. 28
State of the Unron address, anG m
his fiscal 1993 budget the next day.

.

: ;.: LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sumit. omo Corp. of America complained
• ··it was the victim of-Japan-bashing
;: ~fter the county buckled under
•:political pressure and canceled a
: •$122 millton contract to build com·
•:'muter rail cars.
::i: "Our contract was canceled f~
:-,~on-business-related reasons,'
•::Sumilomo President Kenji Miya.~ •lutra said after Wednesday s unani·
-~ous decision by the 11-mem ber
::Los Angeles County Transporta: ) ion Commission.
' · ~ The vote brought praise from
:~utoworkers and those concerned
: ··l!lat too many American jobs are
· going overseas.
After canceling the contract, the
commission asked a subcommiuee
to study proposals that include
building a plant locally to manufacture the cars. The commission
asked for a report by Feb. I 9, and
bidding on the project could start
over again sometime r.fter that.
~yahara said his company has
not *ided what its next step will

T11W llldllltlll,_

oT~~OIIts

extendmg the benefits. What brll
we sign and what form, vie haven't
decided .... We understand then~
toe~tend unemployment benefits:
Fttzwater added that the admmistratio_n m_ight propose its own bill
extendmgjobless benefits.
Hous~ Republica~ Leader
Robert Michel, R-Ill., satd he wants
to extend the benefits by 13 weeks.
He satd he would pay for the pro-.
gram by ehmmaung what he satd
was a t~ loophole fo~ o~n~rs of
some savmgs and loan tnsuruuons.

Angeles County cancels California governor wants to extinguish anti-tobacco ads
By
:~Japanese rail contract

129~

•

tenlcowski, D-lll., and subcommrttee chainnan Thomas DoW!ICy, 0N.Y., also would pay exrra benefits
through Oct 3, mstead of June 13
as now scheduled.
Democrats want Bush to declare
a budget emergency so the expenses could be paid by extra federal
borrowing. But Bush opposed that
approach last year, ltilling two bills
that used the emergency approach.
Nonetheless, White House
spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said
Wednesday, "We're supportive of

~Los

Rll

• Computerized
Prescription
Service · rr---,
.·• Medical
Supplies
• Perfume~

l'l$ the ides from the start.

f~ ~fferences between the two
~es QVer how to for the proV.:iram could presagell!~ bat-

Redmen track team finishes
first, women third at Cedarville
: The men's indoor track team at
the University of Rio Grande took
fust place, and the women's team
third, in a meet at Cedarville College on Jan . 18. It was the first
competition for the Bob Willeycoached teams in more than a
month.
Rio Grande competed against
tea ms from Cedarville, Muskingum , Willcnberg, the University
of Dayton, Hanover (Ind .) and
Mount St. Joseph.
In men's action, John Miller
(freshman, Waynesville) was fifth
in the shotput at36 feet, eight inches. In the high jump, Tim Murphy
(senior, Zanesville) was second at
six feet, six inches. and Blaise
Reader Uunior, Waverly) was third
at six fee~ two inches.
Chad Cannon (sophomore,
Dublin) placed second in the long
jump with a distance of 20 feet, 73/4 inches. Chad Benson (freshman , Glenford) was first in the
880-yard run (2:03), while Court·
ncy Hutchinson (freshman, Gal·
lipolis) fmished the event at 2: 11.
Jason Weeks (sophomore, Pon
Clinton) was sixth in the 300-yard
run at 36.9 seconds. The Rio
Grande A team of Murphy, Can-

the upcoming elections, many law·
makers and. aides believe a replay
of last year's four-month ftght
between Bush and Democrats is
unlilcely.
Th~ House Ways and Means
Comriuttee's human resources subcommittee scheduled a hearing
today on a $4.5 billion Democratic
measure that would provide an
extra 13 weeks of payments for
people using up their coverage.
The measure, sponsored by
committee chairman Dan Ros -.

,~ontract, Sumitomo had told the
~iommission that it was willing to

2177

Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

~~emocrats
begin
new
pu~h
to
e~tend
un_
~
mployment
benefit~
_
.
•ta
FilAM

Ole Miss edges Tide; OSU beats Minnesota
'
leading scorer, but it was the points
Of Lee Mayberry and Oliver Miller
that mattered. Mayberry had 2 I and
MiUer added 18 as Arkansas (16-3,
5-l) held on to first place in the
West Division of the· Southeastern
Conference.
·
Day needed nine points to catch
Moncrief, and he finished with 12
on 5-for-15 shooting from the field.
The points that gave him one more
than Moncrief's 2,066 carn'e on a
dunk with 49 seconds to play .
· Stacey Poole led the Gators (9-6, 23) with 22 points.
North Carolina State 99
No. 10 North Carolina 88
Tom Gugliotta had eight threepointers among his career-high 36
points as the Wolfpack (9-6, 3-2)
beat North Carolina in Raleigh for
the second year in a row. North
Carolina State made 14 of 31 three·
pointers and took command with a
9-0 run midway through the second
half. Brian Reese had 22 points to
lead the Tar Heels (13-3, 3-2).
No. 11 Arizona 92
Arizona State 55
The Wildcats (12-3, 3-2) looked
like their old homebody selves in
their first game at McKale Center
si nce UCLA snapped th eir 71game home winning streak on Jan.
II. Arizona closed the first half
with a 27-4 run for a 43-2 1 halftime lead. Scan Rooks had 18
points for Arizona, while Stcvin
Smith led the Sun Devils (11-6, 23) with 16 points.
No. 14 Michigan State 66
Purdue 61
Mike Pep low ski rebounded
from game-long foul trouble to
score six of the Spartans' last seven
points in the Big Ten victory. After
making four straight free throws.

Th~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~

c.= ' .

OP~N S~VEN DAYS A WEEK
-ltoull: &amp;JOo.m. IOT p.ot.llandoy .......... - , . ,

·

-

... ,oo.m.IOip.m.-,

GAIIIPOUS

"'ll'i,,.::.,-

•

•

••
t

•

Judge Fred Crow III has found it in himself to go against the
expressed wishes of over 35 veterans representing almost all of the
Veterans' Organizations of Meigs County. He did this by
reappointing Otis Knopp to another term as Veterans Service
Commissioner. Upon the completion of this term, Mr. Knopp will
have served for 35 years on the Commission.
In the past, these veterans organizations to be represented were
asked to submit a list of three names for the Judge to select from.
This was not done in this case. Judge Crow asked the AMVETS
State Department for a list of three names. Before these names were
received by Judge Crow, he had contacted the AMVETS and stated
that he did not need the list, that he had made his choice.
It is the contention of this organization that the wishes of the
veterans of Meigs County were not the paramount consideration
when this appointment was made.
We ask, what does it take to have veterans organizations here in
Meigs County heard?
We would like to ask Judge Crow to reconsider his appointment
: and solicit a ~st of prospective appointees from the newly formed
[AMVETS Unit 1942 of Meigs County.
· One day all the veterans ·will see and understand what is and is
not being done for them. This disregard for veterans wishes pertains
not only to the local level, but to the State and Federal level as well .
. fPerhaps when these government officials f'md out that their jobs are
lnot guaranteed, that we can and will vote them out of office, then
iour voices will be heard. .
.
, . To all ·veterans, we, as the Commanders of the below listed
urge you to go to the polls and vote. Your
iVeterans Organizations,
I
.
:vote does count and it, when added to all the other votes of fellow
•
;veterans, can insure that the rights and benefits that you helped to
i&gt;reserve are applied to you as well.
William R. Gilmore, Sr.; #128, American Legion
- '•
Robert A: Ashl~y. #53, DAV Chaper
• .,•
•
Elm,er L. Pickens., Post #602 Legion
Iii
.James R. lnge)$, Commander, VFW #9053
•
Charles Carr, #9053
Robert Smith, AMVETS
Mark A. Tillis,
Post #467 A.L.
.

ENDS JANUARY 31ST
SAVE

%oN THE

TO

LARGEST SELECTION OF SELECTED
FURNITURE AT RUTLAND FURNITURE
I

! .

S!OREWIDE Sl
LARGES' DISC
OF !HE YEAR!
.

.

.

•RECLINERS •DINING ROOM SUITES
•LIVING ROOM SUITES eBEDROOM SUITES

First 'Coma - nrst Serve

·'

.,
.,

.
•
•
•

.

••

.• ·,

I

•

~

'•

• e

,.,

RUTLAND FURNITURE

:)
i

RUTLAND, 01.

STATE ROUTE 124
742·221.1

'

.,.

-"

,

"•

:· t\.

...'

�I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~!:~~~~se~.~n:!!tl2nei!!,__ _ _..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.!~~!::!:!!!~~~~~-----~--~-~':""""--Thursday, January 23, 1992

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of tbat event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in tbe catendar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
·Alumni Association will meet on
. Thursday at 7 p.m. at Dairy Queen
. Brazier. All interested alumni are
: welcome to attend.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta will meet at the Episcopal
Parish House at 6 p.m. on Thurs:day. Bring a sack lunch. Dessert
· wiU be provided.
. RACINE - The Racine Ameri·can Legion Post 602 Auxiliary will
:meet on Thursday evening at the
:legion hall at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlepan Fire Depanment will hold its
month in-service training on Thursday at 7 p.m. The session will
cover auto extrication. All mem.bers are urged 10 attend.
: MIDDLEPORT· The Meigs
:county Women's Fellowship will
·hold its monthly meeting at Biad:ford Church of Christ on Thursday.
:The public is invited.

RUTLAND · There will be a
dance at lhe Rutland Legion Hall
on Friday from 9 p.m . to midnight
featuring a variety of performers.
The public is invited to anend.

TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
· and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
. dance on Friday from 8 to I 1:30
· p.m. at the post home with music
: by C.J. and The Country Gentle. men. The publi c is in vited to
: auend.

..

..

Squires, Eighth District President,
concerning the 46th session of
Buckeye Girls State held at Ashland College on June 13-20.
Dorothy Casey gave a report of
the Christmas pany and a vote of
thanks was given 10 Mrs. Casey.
It was noted that unit has
reached its membernhip goal.
Cheer cards will be sent to the
sick and shut-ins.

Lula Hamp10n, IeJislative and
national security chamnan urgod ·
the members to write their Con•
gressmen on issues for lhe Ainelj·
can Legion National Legislative
Commission. She distributed leg.
islative addresses and the pamphlet, " How a Thought Become's
and Bill" and "How a Bill Becomes
and Law."

.AUDRA HARRISON

~liD ~OlD

JANUARY 25, 1992

Register for FREE RENTALS
Drawing held during Open House, Jan. 24 &amp; 25.
Ask for data lis.

2 Tanning Beds

COUNTRY
220 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

614-992-6008

By DA VJD GOODMAN
Associated Press Writer
DETROIT (AP) - A physician
who developed suicide machines
and used them 10 assist three ailing
women in killing themselves is
proposing a nationwide network of
doctors who could help people end
their lives:
Dr. Jack Kevorkian outlines the
plan in an article in February's
American Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, a quarterly for psychiatrists
who serve as expen witnesses in
legal~.

If You can't
Watch The Game,
LISTEN!
~£Ausnc..

Deluxe AM/FM
Cut30o/o

I
IIIIEMOREX '"

~EAusnc.:.

COlor TVIMonltor

22995 2'::;,

Color TV With OSO

Save 30

Save 140

11995

• On-Screen Display
• Last-Channel Flashback

27995

Wood·Graln AM/FM Clock Radio
Cut
~15 • Wake to

24%1888

Radio

11 2·1S7s

Hurry! Sate Elldosaturlltty 1/~/12

=27995
-

e~e

HurT'f! S.lt £nd&amp; Sat11nlry 1125112

Hurry! Solo End1

Four· Head VHS VCR

Available
to Those Who Qualify
•Approved By Ohio State
Board of Cosmetology

Hurry! Sate End1 S.por S.nlltty 1/21/l2

• On'Screen Display .,..,.,

MEMOREX

COSMETOLOGY

• Portable m.625
Entenainment

Reg.
Low AI S15 Per Monlh• 31SI .SI5

Reg.
low At S15 P1r Month• 1-40 .95
While thty 1111 .
116·159
Some mty be demos .
Not In 1llttor11.

116·2251

MONIY
MAiliNG
WEER IN

Pocket-Size LCD Color
TVIMonltor
1

2718 3~'15 .

~CALISI7C...

. Or Alarm

-i=

Reg.31U5

• Double-Azimuth Dosign
115-525

V&lt;11f*•-'r

Programmer

VIIS HI·FI Stereo VCR

5995
BUY!

iiVi 32995
.!!!!.

GREAT

Reg. 389.05

; On dean's list

E,.ryday

jU.:iJell

V

,. ....... 90

:=:~~~

: Daniclle D. Scou, daughter of
· Steven and Sandra Scot~ Cheshire,
: was recently named 10 the Marshall
: University, College of ~ucation,
. Dean's LisL
· A 1991 graduateofKygerCreek
• Hi~h School, she is a freshman
: maJoring in special education.
.

of15·1920 Low Prlc:t
1.ow At St5 Ptr Month •

•For Your VCR

2427

1u-,v Off
ft01..

AS LOW AS

1S·Serits vu Anttnnll Only

·

~EAL1Sf7c_

Flavoradlos®

...

26%Dff 888,
Rtg. l1.95
Slrawberty, 112·720
Blueber~. 112-721

Hunyl Replace Your Winter
Damaged Antenna Today!

.

Rov. 1U5

• AM/FM 112-na
H•rryllllaEoa
laturlltty 1/~/12

Hu"Yilllt Ena .
Sopor ....., 1/21112

Our outdoor VHF/UHf/FM antennas

are on sale. so flow's lhe time to ra·

place your wom·out ~ damaQed an-.
tenna. See the clear pH:ture ar.d
color your TV was Deslonad to de·
liver. Factory preassembled-install
one today and save!

lllnYI IIIla E. . ll1tt. . 111&amp;1tZ

TANDY

~£4LIST1C.

Cellular Phone·

Bookshelf Speaker
38"" Off

.Save s120

-

1:35

o30-Number
Memory
• Full 3 Walts

.
Low
,.. 115 ,.,. MonU..

~all

7915*

Low Ao 115 ..... Monlh•

49-~i
•

Size, BIG Sound

117-1076

OUOFONE •

~£4LIST1C..

&amp;O·CII. Scallllll'
Save 150
LowAo~5

12915
;.,lloo)ih.

1~5

• Don't Miss the Action-Hear
Pollee, Fire, Rail, 1\lr and Much More m -129

Phone A~aerer ·

So Easy to Use You Won 1t
Believe It's a Camputer

Cut'500

6991!.--=:

LowAaut , . , . _ .

126-I&lt;IS21-

•Tandy 1000 RLX ·
• DeskMa~ Software
• Aulomalee Dally Tasks With 24 Applications

. Save 140
.•

7AIftA..111:1\ni
;:,..;:.711

Low
'

~5;.. lioOib.

'o LED Displays Number of Calls
• Beepe~eaa Remote Call Ret~eval

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Shack Store or Dealer NearelfYou '
'

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEA~f!S
•.

'I

·-·-

The 85-page issue is entirely
devoted 10 the anicle, "A Fail-Safe
Model For Justifiable Medically
Assisted Suicide (Medicide)," and
responses from 13 psychiatrists.
"He's an unusual thinker, a
very avant-garde thinker. But a
serious thinker," said Edward
Miller, executive director of the
journal based in Laguna Hills,
Calif.
Miller said he learned of
Kevorkian through reports of the
three lethal-injection suicides in
which the doc lOr assisted in Michi ·
gan. Medical authorities suspended
Kevorkian's license, and a grand
jury is considering whether to
charge him in lhe two most recent
cases, in October. Michigan does
not have a specific law against
assisted suicides.
Kevorkian recommends estab·
lishing panels of suicide specialists,
whom he would call "obitiatrists,"
who would review requests from
people wishing to kill themselves .
Would-be suicides would need a
doctor's referral to the panels.
"This is a way 10 do it without
abuse," Kevorkian said Wednes·

Dana Plato violates
probation tenns

Low At$15 Per Month•

MEMO REX

-·----~··..:.,0•,·-' ~--· ..

ing tbe International Poultry Exposition in
Atlanta. The carton weighs in at 36 pounds.
Some ZS,OOO people are expected to attend the
three-day expo at the World Congress Center.
(AP)

GUARDING THE GOLDEN EGG • omcer
Antonio Johnson of the Fulton County Sheriff's
Department stands guard over a 24-carat gold
egg carton owned by the Cascades Diamond
Company, of Tbondike, Mass., Wednesday dur·

. . PIIMI btl 2111/12 Ela)ll Wltetlflllltf

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Dana
Plato, the "Diff'rent Strokes"
child star who robbed a video store
last year, has been charged with
·violating terms of her probation
and could go to prison for six
years.
Tbe 27-year-old Miss Plato was
arrested Tuesday. Authorities
would not say how she violated
terms of her probation.
After pleading guilty last year 10
the video store holdup, ·she was
placed on five years' probation and
ordered 10 perform up 10 400 hours
of community service and abstain
from drugs and alcohol.
Two other child stars of
"Diff'rent Strokes," Gary Coleman and Todd Bridges, have also
had family and legal problems in
recent years.

day from his home in suburban Karols, a Navy psychiatrist in San ·
Royal Oak. "It certainly would be Diego.
·
abused if every doctor could do
iL"
Kevorkian said his proposal for
a medically approved, controlled
system for terminally ill should
reduce lhe number of suicides.
Many people who kill themselves do so in a panic, but knowing that medically assisted suicide
is available could ease their minds,
he said. He also proposes making it
a felony for a doctor who isn't a
death specialist 10 assist in a suicide.
Kevorkian's article includes
guidelines for the makeup of the
panels, examples of patient consent
forms and fictitious case.studies.
Miller invited Kevorkian to
appear at the society's April 2· 5
convention in San Francisco and 10
write for the journal.
"I was curious why a doctor
would give up his license," Miller
said. "Was he a madman? Was he
a dedicated physician? Was he a
killer?"
Miller said he was impressed by
the careful thought Kevorkian had
put iniO lhe issues and details surrounding assisted suicide. Most of
those asked 10 critique his article
were, too.
"It's a well thought-out, thorough system," wrote Dr. John
Ravin, a psychiatrist from Torrance, Calif., who saluted
Kevorkian's effons to legalize and
regulate assisted suicide.
"Dr. Kevorkian's paper is
thought-~rovoking
10
the
extreme, ' said Dr. Kenneth

Superset • 2-in-1 SupeRemote • 178 total

So"""" ·178 toW channel capability. Pro-

channel capability • Dark Lite 100 picture
tube • O.annel reminder di!play • Sleep
timer • Castor~~

grammable stan-luning • Multkolor on!ICI'een graphic displays • Sleep timer • 23
button remote oontrol

SALE
PRICE

Inventor of suicide machine propo~es
nationwide network of death specitlists

AMERICA'S TECHNDLtJGV Sf'IJRESM

19• Dia. Remolc Portable

25• Dia, Remote Console

WANTED: Craft Consigners
CRAFTS AND VIDEO

SINCE f92f

Low AI IJ15 Per llllonth •

lRAIN FOR

.,

Tho American Legion Lewis·
Manley Unit No. 263 met recently
at. Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis
wtth Lou.ella.Pauerson as hostess.
Contnbuuons were made to the
U.S.O. and Paralyzed Vet~s.
Orders. were a!~ submtlted for
the AmC!'can Leg1on J?lspatch and
for popp1es for Me~orial Day.
Lorrene Goggms, preSident,
read a bulletin from Sharon

OPEN ROUSE

HOCKINGPORT · There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8 to II :30 p.m. at
Hockingport on Route 124 at the
home of Kenny and Millie
Reynolds. Music will be provided
by Ramblin Country. Jim Carnahan
will be the caller. Country and
bluegrass music will be played
every Monday evening beginning
at 7 p.m. The public is invited to
attend.

.·'

•/

GIFT CREATED • Andy Sanders, son of Susan Sanders,
Spring Avenue, Pomeroy, and a sixth grade student at Pomeroy
Elementary, created this pidure of the school whit:h is highlighted ·
on this stoneware crock. The crock was presented as a gift to John
Lisle, past principal of Pomeroy Elementary, for his service in that
capacity. It took Sanders two days to complete the drawing of the
sehool.

RIPLEY, W.VA. • The Libeny
Mountaineers will perform Friday
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

RACINE · The Southern High
School cheerleaders will sponsor a
spagheui dinner on Friday beginning at 4 p.m. at the high school
prior to the ball games. Cost is
$3.50 for adults and $2 for stu·
: POMEROY • Belles and Beaus dents. All proceeds will assist in
·Western Square Dance Club will funding the cheerleader's trip to
-hold a special dance on Thursday compete in national competition in
1Com 8 p.m. to II p.m. at Royal Florida. The public is invited.
-()ak Resort with national caller
'Gary Shoemaker from Tennessee.
SATURDAY
All western style square dancers
RACINE · There will be a
·are invited.
cheerlcading clinic on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to noon at Southern
REEDSVILLE • The Riverview High School. The clinic is spon:Garden Club will meet at7:30 p.m. sored by the 'Southern Varsity
·on Thursday night at lhe home of Cheerleaders. Further information
-Frances Reed. Delores Frank and may be obtained by calling 992·
:Janet Connolly will provide the 5138.
·program about birds, and Grace
:weber and Gladys Thomas will be
KANAUGA · The Liberty
:assistant hostesses.
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at the DA V Center in Kanauga.
: MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
:Chapter I 7, Ohio Association of
RUTLAND . There will be a
·Public School Employees, will round and square dance atlhe Rut·
:meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at Meigs land American Legion Hall on Sat·
:I unior High School.
urday from 8 p.m. 10 midnight with
muSic by the Country Kin Band.
: TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tup- Ray Fitch will be the caller and lhe
·pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 public is invited to anend.
:will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
·sixth year anniversary will be
POMEROY · The movies,
:observed and the Auxiliary will "Frog and Toad Together" and
:serve food after the meeting. All "Hand Me Down Kid" will be
: members are urged to attend.
shown at the Pomeroy Library on
Saturday and Sundar. at2 p.m., and
. RUTLAND • The Leading at the Middleport L1brary on Mon·Creek Conservancy District will day at 4:30p.m . The movies are
:meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at.the free of charge and all area children
:office. The public is invited to are welcome 10 attend.
·auend.
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE · There will
: be a youth rally at the Harrisonville
. Holiness Chapel, Route 684,
· Pomeroy, on Friday at 7:30 p.m.
: Rev. Bryon Myers will be the
speaker and Rev . John Ne ville
· invites the public.

Audra Harrison, daughter of
Charles and Mary Houdashell of
Pomeroy, attended Columbus College in Columbus, Ga. during the
fall quarter, majoring in Psychology.
Audra recei ved a 4.0 for the
quaner. Her husband, Roben Harrison is serving in lhe U.S. Army at
Ft. Benning and is scheduled tQ get
out in April.
Audra is attending Ohio University in Alhens this quarter.

MIDDLEPORT ·Rejoicing Life
Christian School at 331 Nonh Second Avenue in Middleport will
hold a spagheui dinner in the
school lunchroom on Friday from 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. Parking is available
in the parfng/playground area
behind lhe school. The cost of the
dinner is $3.50 per person, which
includes spagheni, salad , bread,
beverage and dessert AU proceeds
will go to the operation of the
school. Information is available by
calling 992.{;279.

POMEROY • The regularly
.scheduled board meeting of the
·Meigs County Library Board will
be held on Thursday at I p.m. at
:the library.

Legion reaches mem.bership goal

Attends college

Community calendar

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-8

SALE
PRICE

$499

FREE DELIVERY
AND SETUP

ANDERSON'S
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

Now Under Construction:

ur

nual

reetin s ection!

Services held
A special New Year's Eve service was held at Hillside Baptist
Church .
The service or:ned with a performance by God s Litde Lambs.
All visitors were welcomed and
Greg WiUeu presented a me$ge.
A ftlm, "Believers Heaveh" was
shown followed by singing by
Linda Jones.
Special honors were given to
Greg Peck for his performance in
the tract "'inis!t}'. Alia honored
was Vincent Laudennilt Sr. for his
performance in the bus ministry.
· Other speakers during the
evening were Joe Humphrey, Rev.
Charles Willett, and Rev. James R.
Acree, Sr., pastor of lhe church.
Other performers were The Joyful H~. The Redeemed Quanet
and the Children of God.
Following the service, pizza and
refreshments were served to all
attending.

Schedule For Completion On February 14, 1992
Don't miss your chance to thr ill someone
upcciul with yom very oym meseage of love.

Here's The lluts &amp; Bolts:
• Your Message Only Cosls

20' Per Word

•Dring in or Mail your typed or neaily
handwritten message to Valentine Greet ings,
care of this newspaper.
• Your greeting must be received
by Wed., Feb. 12,1992
•All greetings will be published in
a special section on Valenline'
Day, February 14.
• Ask about our Special
On Messages with pictures!

L

FRIDAY NIGHT BUFFET
SPECIAl.
4 p.m. ·· 8 p.~.
This Week's Baffa Speefal

For t!.ll the heartwarming details, call
'

-•
'

992·2156

---------------------------------------------------------,
Write your message below:
or Mall yo~r Messaee and
Bring in

Total Anlo••llo:
THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Olilo 45769

·SEAFOOD SPECIAL

YMibnt: ........... .........................................................................................
A~n: ...................................................:............. :... ~ ...............,....................

$895·

,·

------------------------.

PER PERSON

1otai'Ntl41:.............................................:..........................., ...........=..................
1ota1 ~mo~~~~lnda...J: .................................,.........................................................

...

I

.I

I

1

I
I

I

I

1

---------..-_-_-_-_-_-:-..-_-,;_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-,;_-.._.....::::
_:~--~~~~~·:11&lt;!~!~~!!~!~1~~!~ "!..~~-l

•

SONYA'S COUNTRY

(Across Fro• Ho11t National lank) ·
3rd lbMt
· Raclnt
949·2324
'
l.

•

rl'he .l)ai(y ·ScntitiCl

•

�:

·:

Thursday, January 23, 1992·:

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

page-10-The Dally Sentinel

.

E WOULD LII{E TO. WELCOME
PEOPLES BANI{ TO THE
.MI.DDLEPORT AND MEIGS
COUNTY AREA

·las.s ifi
•

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21511
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

Days

3
6

10
Monthly

'

.

2 00
2 00
2 DO
2 .0 0
2 00

~HIOAV

PAP ER

S UNDAY PAPEfl

3 1 - Hom es tor Sate
32 M obll u Homes for Sal t!

2 In Memory
3

AnnDUCIImflnh

3\ Business llu ~ dtngs
35 Lot s &amp; Acretge

5 Happy Ads
6 losl and Fou nd

36

1 'l•d' S ai •I JH~ id in ;advan ce!
B Publi c S o~l e &amp; Auc l ion
9 W anted t o Buy

Gallli Co unty
l.reaCo d e 614
G ;~ lhp ohs

446
J6 7
JIIB
2 45
25 6
643
]79

PM MO NDA¥
PM JUESOAY
PM . WE ON ES OAV
PM THUfiSO AY
P M . FRIDA¥

Mergs Countv
Are a Cod e 614

M;ason Co .. WV
Are a Code 3 0 4

9 9 2 M1ddl epon

6 7f, Pt Pleaant

Ch•hW e

4S8
576
773
882
895
93?

POmt!I"O¥

Vint on
Rio Gr1nd e
Guy,tn O ist.
Ara bi• Dist
Willnul

985 C hstar
84J Portl.-.d

2• 7 leltn Fat11
949 Redn e
74 2 Rutland
667 C ooh11ll e

Ho u ~ea l or

Mobtle Homn for Rtmt
Farm s lor Attn!

Rent

7 1 - Autos fo r SEll e
72 1rudu l01 Sii l e
73 Vans &amp; 4 WO 's
74 Mot Drc'lfd tS
75 Bo al s &amp; Mot o!S ior Siile
76 Auto Pa r11 &amp; Ace• UK • ~
17 - Aut o Rep a11
7 11 Ca mp1ng Equ1pment
7 9 Campers &amp; MotOf Homes

S pace ICM Rent
W1nted 10 Rent
-Equ ipment for Ron t
For l e•e

Merchandise
51

lillbUiiijll
21 Businen Opportunrl y
22 Mon ~ to loan
23 Protes seon• l Ser v1c11t

FerhhlBr

Transportation

41

42
4l

46
47
48
49

12 SRuat io n W anted
1l Insura n ce
14 Bus in en Trilintn g
15 Scho o ls lo lnst rucuon
16 Ra d10. lV &amp; Cll Repa H
17 Miscet lani!O u s
1~ Wante d To Do

l eon
•
. Apple Grllve
M a•on
New Ha.,e n
Letarl
Buff alo

'6.5 - S.ed r.

4 4 - Apart m en t lo r R11tH
4 5 -- Furnilih ed Rooms

I l · HelD WanI ed

f ollowiiiK I l'lc•l'lwrw c•xdurll!{c'.&lt; ...

a,.,n

Real Es tate W IRted

ljtlbllll

Em ployme nt
Servt ces

1.'/n." ifw tl I'"K''·' c·m ·c•r rII c•

61 -- Farm Equtpmvnl
62 Wamed t o Buv
6 3 lnlltS iock
6 4 · Hay &amp;

ll f •r ms lor S;tle

4 Ginawaw

.0 5/ day

Farm Suppl tes
&amp; Liv estock

Real Est ate

1 C~rd ol Thin••

•

D AY BEFO RE PU BLIC ATIO N
.11 0 0 AM SATUR DAV

TU ES DAY PA PER
..W £0NE.SDAY PAPER
THUR SDAY PAPER

$6.00
$9.00
• 13.00
$1 .30 / day

.20
.30
.42
.60

A at es.-o ler con secu trve runs. bf oktn updil\' 5 wtll be chlfged
tor eliCh dilf' as separat e ads

' A class rfulll ;u lve rt isllm t. oi lt l) l o.~cctl m 1t1e Dmly S l!ll tou el te•
Ct!p l
dassthtJd 1hs ph1y . 8 11 SII11."SS C;1rd iiiHI \t.•u al 110 1\ Ct!SI
w1ll ,1ls.u •'PJHl&lt;lr til lin! PI Ph!;l!iiml R ll ~J I !&gt; I c r illld Ihe Gal h
pul•s O,lrl y l11 buntJ. m achtn g o wc1 18.000 homl:l

COPY DE ADLIN E
MONDAY PAP ER

.

$4.00

15
15
15
15

Announ ce ments

Ovt r 15 Words

Rate

Wo rds
1&amp;

1

c-!~~c.:!:!... Metgs, Gall ta or Mason counh es mus l be pu!
paid
• RecttW•t $ .5 0 dtsco unt lor ads paid m adllanc~
'fu'!e ads
G1vl'liJWily l'llld Found ads undet' 15 wo1ds W ill b~
"'" J da,s at no c h •ge
' P" c" o l ~ d fo1 all ca p1till l ~te1 s •s doublt:-~11 ce ol all cu~ l
'7 pomt !me t'IIPI! o nly uM!d
.
'Se!IIIIH.ol IS n o t respons 1bl l! lor e 11o rs ah c 1 hut !lay {Check
lor en ors hrs t day ad m ns "' p apml Ci! ll tu~f o r e 2 DO p 111
dll'l ah m publi cation to makt~ co rrec tmll
' Ads \h ill m ust be pilld m advance ilf'!
Ca1d o llhanks
Happ'lf All~
1!1 M t! m o rlil!ll
Va1d Sah.'li

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Services

Ho ul8 hold Goo dS

6 2 - Sporting,Goods
Sl Anliques
54 Mist- Merch an dise ·

11 1 Ho me lmpro'ltment ~
82 Plu mbm g &amp; He 11 mg

S S Build ing Su pplies
56 Pets lo r Sal e
~ 7 ·. M u si c~ ln 1trum l!flt s
511 Frurt s ' Yegutabl 65
!j9 For Sale or Tud e

87

113 E.u:;r~~ 01t i ng
114 Elect n eal &amp; A e tr ~g6ta t 1on
115 Gun•al Haulmy
86 Mob1l e Humo Rt1 pa 11
U pho l s t e r ~

I

PubliC Notice

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Public Notice
well.-• lo right and proper.
FINDINGS AND NOTICE OF
INTENT TO ENTER
PROPERTY
The Athens and Pomeroy
Coal and Land Company
Acree Land1iide

(OH-91.027)
Baaed on the above
lindlngo, the undorolgnod
declare• that:.
1. Tho landslide In lho
vicinity ol Thomoo, Sellabury Townohlp, Melga
County, Ohio conaUtuloa'"'

PRICE REDUCED! .

Porlill "'"'' t..Milg ovo~ble. ne pi:o has be01
roduco! " ~. l!t.m. 113,'100 ""' "'""

ll&gt;lMilt~ up" m ~ "'rthos' ·- rmv "'~

ble lw o.lfvila """" 10 00."'' ''' lono oo 3~ w•
11 oRcicilo.' 4'Iii. 31xrths,.l !ii;"~od I 81 qll.
Proptty iKIHios 4,!00 sq. n. ~"'
Col614-992-7104 fo

Business Services

health, aafety 1nd general

UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA
DEPARTMENT OF THE

DK's FARM TOYS
YOUNG'S
by-tRTL
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room
Displayed at The . -Gullar AddiUon1
Work
Quality Print Shop -Electrical and Plumbing
1-fOURS:
8:30am-4:00pm

614-992-3394

extreme danger, threatening

Or Call

the public health, aaloty and

.

United Stat11 ol
•cti ng by and

general welfare;
2. Control and abatement
of the landalicle In question,
a product of paat coal
mining practlcea, Ia
nece11ary;
3. No other peraon or

Statealli~:,~~~~~~~R::•teo
Work

lindlnga,
tho acting
United by and
t9n, 3D of
America,
seq., pro-- through tho Deportment ol
to undertake tho the Interior, Office ol
at

work to protect
'·

ABargain... I~~~!~~~y
Reap The Rewards...
When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Boun~ Is Yours!

GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION
RIBBON CUTTING 8:30 A.M.
CELEBRATION 8:30A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

Now that the weather has cooled
dOWD, why not heat things up a bit
by clearing your closeta, attic or
basement of those unwanted items
and adYertlsln8 them for sale lo
the Classlfledsf
And, you can put that ellra
C18h It good use by chedliDK
the Classlfleds for local 8IJ1Ie
sales, flea markcta and bargains
in your neck of the.woods.

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED

K&amp;C JEWELRY
POMEROY

992·3785

Middleport Community
Association
KINGS

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

SALES AND SERVICE

992·2975

POMEROY

Quality Pr.int Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT ·

Dairy Queen Brazier

SERVISTAR HARDWARE
992·3784

Gravely Tractor

MIDDLEPORT

ILL STREET BOOKS

992·3784

MIDDLEPORT

INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY

(row's Family Restaurant
992·5432

POMEROY

VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
992·6128

MIDDLEPORT

To put lhe ClusiReds to wtrk rer ,ou,
call .., ad·YIIon, Mlladay·Frlday 11

992-2156
..•''

MIDDLEPORT

992·5627

.992·3148

STORE

•

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT

992·6611

.,

.•,

992·6491 .

.,.,••

Prescription Sho_p

. 992·6669 .

POMEROY .

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

WESTERN AUIO
•

'

992·2121

POMEROY

BAHR CLOTHIERS

.

992·6685 Mike Swiger, Aa•t IIIDDUPOIT

•
j

•
I

; I

- I'
I

.I
I

work and tho benaflla

property

Ia

more

par ·

Enforcement

the

In memory of

, PAULE.
HAPTONSTALL
who pa~ away 5 "-PPY ~·
Jan. 23, 1988. . ~====::;
'

Little

When

we
WI

kneW
woke

that mom
ThiiOf'lOW the 'day
would bring;
For the· nil Wll
.. ....,, the lhock
',.
To put will! one WI

..........
loYIII•dllr·

•'

Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14
949~2826

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

woo.o-o-o
~~ ·

·ll.,.,.r,

llASSf18J,
. ADS .

r~

........,,

.,..._, J•lll"allan

"Bi640"l ·

H¥P1Birllld111

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacemenl
Window
•Roollng
~neulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Blyon

Mlddlepot~

.'

.; .

992-2269

.....
.
.
lAMES Ifill
C.Ufar lr-

H!-2772

•Ufclime frame Wllftllty

IIIIIIIPOIJ

~Mashc

r.l

BISSELL BUll

INC.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Roo• Additions • Roafing
COMMERCIAL Dlld RESmENTIAL
FREE ESHMi\TES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
IHo Sunday Calls)
12/3111111

Nowln
Stock
AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

'
MOBILE HOME
BENNETT
.
HEATING &amp;

'

locato4 o.SaiiOfd School Rd. off Rr. 141
1614)446·9416or 1·800·872-5967

USED RAILROAD TIES
6·12· 90-dn

WANTED

frMisil.atn-25JrL IJI.
C411111w 6 p&amp; -992-2921

IIIS.Ia,r

Help wanted

R.N.'s

Saw Logs
$150 per I,00
Delivered To
OHIO PALLET CO
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992•6461

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucanaod ond Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

1 and2
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK ·
Stortlng 11 $235 ~or mo.
nloe2ot3B ,2
w/b11tmontond
c.-por~fr"~·

CALL 614.92·5 28 or
385-ll227
12·11-1

., .

Contact
PERSONNEL OFFICE

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

985·4473
667·6179
5·31

MARCUM
CONTUCTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept. 28
Factory Choke .
12 Gaogo Sholgun Oalr
Slrlcllr lnltrcd
9·13-'$1·11n

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

H.E.C.

Addltloas
985·4141

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OH10
614-1102-3524

11·22·92·1 mo.

12·5-dn

Need·ed

GUN SHOOT

BISSEll &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION
Low Grade Oak I•Na1W Homes

1-7·92, 1

Fr.A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
REMOVAL
Pruning aflfiLandscaflng

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Cho~e

1·22-'92·1 ...

SIMON'S ....
PICK·A·PAIR
~

POMEROY

Last markdown
on shoes
be(ore closing
store.
..
OPEN FRI. &amp; Slt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.
1211211

mD;

.

.
.

Ne~Re·Dolt

EXCAVATING ·

PLEASANT
VALLEY
.
..
HOSPITAL

COU YMOBILE
HOME PARI
has
lor up to

-....

··-

POINT PLEASANT, WV.
...

(3041 ~75·4340 .
'

EOEIAA

· - I; D... Ia ILoriM

BILL SLACK

OPEN 9 AM·9 PM
1-li-1

Opportunity To Gross-Train.

HOMY1 Oh, 1111
·podMu, No,

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
. NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODElS
992·7013 or
992·5553
OR TOLL FREE
1·800·841·0070

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Experience Preferred

•inluk.r,

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

14 TANNING
SESSIONS- s1400

Swuth•art s,.eltd

.

11

. Did """ lhilllc ...

forp~yo,.,

~

992-6215

RACINE

·Medlcai•Surgical
Nursing

lnMemorv .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'•

rlghta of acdon or ellmln•t•

Uculorly deocrlbed In deoda exlsllng lmmunltle1. Such
doted Juno 10, 1913, and entry ahaII be conetrued a1
June11 , 1913, and recorded an exerciae of pollee power
in Deed Book 112, Page 11 and ahall not be conatrued
In tho Clerk's office lor aa an act of condemnation
Meigo County, Ohio. The of properly nor of treapa11
property Ia further ldenUfiod thereon.
11 being located on Thomas
For lurlher Information,
Fork In tho vicinity of contact the Olfice of
Thomas, Salisbury Town- Surface Mining Reclamation
ship, Melga County, Ohio. and Enforcement, Eastern
Said tract Ia depicted aa Support Center,
Ten
Lolli 025 ond 026.on lox Plat Parkwav Center, Pittsburgh,
14, Salisbury Township, In Penn1ylvania, 15220 ,
the Molga County Rt· Attention: Chief, Division of
Abondonid Mine Landa
corder'• Office.
The current ownership of (telephone) 4121937·21 &lt;16.
the proporty Ia uncertain. December 23, 1991
Recotdl In tho County Tu
Lowla M. MoNoy, Chief
Office lndlcole lhol property
OMolon of Abondonod
taxoa hovo not boon pold lor
Mine Landa
more than fifty yeera and
Office ol Surlaoo Mining
tho lui known legal
ReclamaUon and
of

(FREE ESTIMATESI

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

FOREVER
BRONZE

provialone of Section 410,
money• expended for such
accruing to the propertY aa
entered shall be chargeable

Painting

DAIWIN, OHIO
7/31f91/dn

of. tho public requlr11.
Notice It alao hereby given
that pursuant to tho

The Athena ond Pomeroy
Cool ond Land compony or
dolormlno II tho lond h11
rovorted lo tho county or
adjaoont property owntra.
Tho nerclao of tho
outhorltloo granlod under
Title IV, Section 410, lot tho
protection ol tho public

2

MIDDUPOIT

26, 1991, It will enter tho

agalnal the land ond shall
general welfare ol tho public mitigate ol olfaet any claim
is being endangered by 1 in or any aclion brought by
the owner• of any Interest ·
landslide.
b. The property where in the land lor any alleged
entry muat be made It damage• by virtue of ouch
purportedly-owned by Tho entry ; provided . however,
Athena and Pomeroy Coal that thlo provision Ia not
and Land Compony. Tho Intended to creel• new

.Fruth Pharmacy·

The Daily Se~tinel Ewing .Funeral Home· ~ .State Farm Insurance
POMEROY

property prevloualy relerenced for the purpon of
doing the necanary work
ae the aituation and eafety

eaaence, It Ia not po11ible
IQ locate any IUCCeiiOrl to

,. h F
1
·
'
:
11 er ·unera Home ,

I

9t2·2155

Slate ol Ohio.
Section 410 of tho Surface
Mining Control ond
Reclamotlon Act of tOn, 30
U.S.C. 1240, provldeo for
entry by the United Slol11

repr•~•ntatlve

~--~----~-------+~~--------~~~~----------------~ - ~
.oowNING.cHILDSMULLEN
l
.
MUSSER INSURANCE
'

VALLEY LUMBER

conlraclors, give• notice
that on or about December

company died prlot lo 1988. (I) 23, Ito
Slnco limo lo ol tho

1-99•2-·6·6-57• .------MI-DD;,;L,;,;,EP.;;,OR;.;T+9:.:9~2·;,;;26~3;,:,5_ _ _ _ _...:;M;;ID;.;;D;,;;;LE;.;.PO;,;~;.;.T-+-99-2•·5-1•41--~---·MI•D..;DL;,;;,;EPO..;.;.;,RT~~(:

The Shoe Place /Locker 219 .MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT

of
Thomn
In
Township,
Meig•

of AmeriCI, Ita agent•,
employee• and cantr~ctora,
and having made an
lnVeaUgatlon of the facti,
purauant to 30 CFR an.14,
the following finding• are
made:
a. The health, IBfety and

FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1992

~THE

Surface Mining Reclamation

health and aaloty a nd Enforcement, II•
landallde In tho agenta, employeea and

•Unbealable t D«BYu~ings
oCult!lm fit·no illllBIIatioD meu
•Nevet requires paintlna
•Sahel tilt-I n fct ell)' cleaniq

-Interior &amp; Exterior

1H4·' 90-4f

INDEPENDENT
CARPET CLEANERS
TILE FLOOR CARE

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

-Roofing

Pomeroy, Ohio

ol
ol agency will act oxpodi·
lloualy to oboto tho
prA~e~. result ol ouch

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION

.

IIS11MATES

~·3138 ·

61

St. ~t. 7 .

OisWrt,OH• .

~

,.
~

•
~

�1992

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

3

11_•......;He;.;;IP;..W;.;.a;..nt.;.;ed.;;.__ ;J~ Mobl.lll Homea
1
for Sale

Announcements

Moot Slngloo: Quyo • Olrlo. CoM
Todor. Dillo Tonlaht 1·-71004, $2.95./mln. ltust Bt OVer

18.

Giveaway

4

4 Cutt Pur,pln: Fox Ttrrltr
Mind,

2. M1 11, 2 Ftmaln,

448.0457.

614·

Black And Whlla Ktlty, Litter
Trtlntd, CaU AHtr &amp;p.m. 114·

44&amp;.0026.
Fru Pupplta, Pert Chow, Ptrt
Somoyod. &amp;14-441.0311. ·
Modlum Slzod Long Halnod
Mtlt, Vtry ~rlendl~, Good
Nalurod, 814-448-1314.
plano, willing to glvt to church,
304-882-3271.
Pupplto: 614-446-8924.

6

Lost &amp; Found
FOUND, 6 to a month old malt
BIk Lab' Maton Fast 4 U lrll,
304-7T3·5834.
Found: Boaglo, Rt.325, BotwMn
Rio Grandt And VInton. Collar,
No Ta9o. 614-245-5497.
lost : Black And White Busel
Hound Vicinity: At.775, Raccoon
County Park, On Taylor Road
Has Brown Collar, With Tags:
Answers To Name: Clto,
Rtwardl614·446·9503.
LOST; brown &amp; whill lomalo
Beagle, Redm~nd Ridge back af
Henaerson, belongs to Elmer
Kapp, Noal Rd, Pl. Pn.

7

" ...And another thing. You didn 't yell
'ouch' loud enough when I hit you."

t=========T=========I
9

Wanted to Buy

Wantod To Buy: Junk Auloo
With Or Without Motot'l. Call
larry lively. 614 -388-9303.
Pald: All Old U.S.
--·:·:··-··c·- Rln¥'· Silver Coins,
M s c 1 Shop
.. . Gallipolis.
on
•
Would llko To Buy Uaod Ton·
nlng Bad. Call After 5p.m. 614·
446.0929.

11

Help Wanted

~~':.. ~~~.;~;;, 1 Shklor
Cltrkt,
tolttf'l,
carrltra,
mechenica. Slart $11.41hr. For
emptoyment Into. CaU 1·216-324·
2102, 71m·10pm, 7-dly.
·
Cosmetologist Nttdtd:
Gauran·
laod J17V Jlor WHk, Paid
Vaeatlona, C.JI614-446-7267.
DRIVERS
Eorn To -$650 Wkly1 Will Train
~~~. ~"1 1111' " 110 Pl. 1·

111

Yard Sale

ALL YaJd Salts Must Ba Paid In

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. _11-:-_H...,e,.,lp=-=W,.,a,n,ted,.,::..-Sunday odHion • 2:00 p.m.
$350/DAY PROCESSING
Frldo~. Monday odltlon . 2:00 PHONE OADERSI
PEOPLE
p.m. llurdar.
NO EXPE~~i:.I~cESSARV.
1.SOO.Z5!5-G242.
8
Public Sale
tha day before lht ad Ia to run .

&amp; Auction

AVON • AU lrtll, Call Marilyn
Rick Pearson Auction Company, WNVII 304-882-2845.
lull Ume auctiOOHr, complele
WANTED lm·
aucllon service. licensed Ohio, ADDRESSERS
mediately!
No
E•perienct
West Virginia, 304-m-5185.
NKIIIIr)'.
Proceu
FHA
Mongogo Rolunda. Work At
9 Wanted to Buy
Homo. Coll1-405-321·3064.
'
Farmall .Cub Tractor Wllh At· Allontlonl Earn 1300. to 1500.
tachments. Call &amp;14..g98-6528.
WHklr rNdlng books II home.
Fu1Vplr1·11me,
guartnletd
Want To Lease Tobacco Bans. paycheck/ 1-301...u4"·7000 tit
Call After 7p.m. 614·388·97'69.
478.
Wanted to buy old tube radl~
AUSTAAUA WANTS YOU
lunkers or mini cond, biO Ew:calltnt
Par,
Bentlht,
money for some models made Transportation,
407-292-4~7.
before 1942. Phone Chuch 304· Ext. 571. h .m.·10p.m. Toll
882·2220.
Refunded.

DRIVERS, urn to h50. wkly,
Will train NVel'll openlnga 1110
PT t.SOO.Z31·11157.

Poy Ofl T"- Chrlllmaa lillll
1om lrlra Coah P•OI!-Ing
Mall. lo YourAnd
Own Application.
· - · F...
lnlormallon
Send Long SASE: Muaklngum
Arw1 Pu611thlng, Ia• 1111,
Zonmlllt, Ohio 43702.
Oullky CoN Homo IV Sarvlcoa
Now Accepting Applle~tlont
From Aeal•l•lil' Nurua lnltr·
oatod In Tho PooHion 01 Homo
lnfullon
Coordln1tor. Appllcanll ~ull I• Rtctlv•d By
January 27, 1992, 101 Eaat Main
Strool, Olk Hill, OH 45!156, 614IJ82.e530 EOE .
AN Chargo Nurao; 88 bod 10119
term CIN flcldry aMklng RN tor
ptrt time haurs. Cavtr avery
other wttk~nd. V1rloue ehlha
IVIIIIblt. Salary commtnsurate
with experltnceJ. EOE. eppty
Care Havan of Point Pleasant,
At. 1 Box 32&amp;, 304-875·3005.

i111 lohun 14x'll ar, a lalho,
Fomlly Room, Utlllly Room,
S.va: SS,OOO. PNnoh CHr.
Mobllo Homto. l'lncnc~val·
:::;. . ,_-IS40,
2S1·

S1ytltt wanted for high traHic
aalon, no clltnltla necttury,
we can help build yow future,
tor appointment call Carol King,
614-446-81122.

35 Lots

Surrogate Mothlrs Wanted, Faa
Couplt'l
Child. Far
MuttCarJying
Be 18·35
Plus Expenetl
A
And Provlouslr Hod A Child.
StovoLnz, Atty., 317·996·2000.
WANTED; Fuii·Timt 01 Part·
Tlmo RN 10 work four (41 ton
hour daye per wttk, to work
with r11identsln an ICF Faeltlly.
Salary commensurate with n ·
pt~rlenet. ExttntiYt bentfll
~acki~Contact Opal Gru11tr,
N•
H 111304•
' Lkl
I n ap a,
6rs.3230, ext. 39. Monday·
Friday, 8:00AM-4:00PM.

12

Call: Genl"man nHds home
and htlp with·. aomt houtthold
dutloa. Will poy rani. 614-4483658 If No Antwer Plaaae Call
Back.

Legal S.c,...try tor local office,

typo

60

wpm,

dlclaphono,

lmowlldgt of l~gal dacumenla 1

SHuatlon
Wanted

14

Business

plus, computer knowledge, nut
tppnrtnet, 101M 1ccounllng
helpful. Sind rnume ancUor ltf..
ter of lntttal with phont num-

ber, Bolt H·22, c1rw Point
Pltaunt Regltttr, 200 Main St,
Pl. Pit, WV 25550.

Legal Socralary, nood lo havo
basic computer tklllt, typing,
take dictation, sand reeume to
Box C·21, car. Point PINIInt
Reg/1111, 200 Main St, Pt. Pit,
WV25550.
Pomeroy
Nursing · -·- And
Rthtbllltttlon Ctnl1r lt Accept·
ing AppUcatlont For Par1·Tkne
LPN. ROiallng Shl~ Avallablo.
Salary BaH&lt;I On Voara 01 El·
~rilnct.
ElctUtnt Benefit
Package.
Call
Carol
Kanawaltky, AN, DON For lnllr·
vlow AI 614·V92-66041. EOE.

Read the Best Seller
Read the

ClASSIFIED RDS

18

Wanted to Do

WIH BabysH In My Homo. Rod·

ney Area. R•leranc11 Av•llablt.

Coii614-Z45-5887.
Convenient Uve In Town And
Would Ukt To Do BabytiHing In
My Homt, Anytlmt WNkcfilyl
And Some WHkendt. 614-4482455.
Dozer work, reuanable r111s,
304-675-7104.
E &amp;· R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrH Removal, Hedge
Trimming. FrH Esllmatos! 614·
367·7957:
Georgfl Portable Sawmill, dcn'l
haul yow togs Ia the mill lust
cell 304·675·1957.
Miu Paula's Day Care Center.
Safl, tHordtblt, ctllldcare. M·F
6 a.m. · 5:30 p.m. A911 2\1-10.
Before, after achool. Drop-Ins
welcome. 114-44W224. New In·
lant Toddler Care, 814-446-6227.

Plano leatont, all ltvtlll and
beginning Ofgan ltstont n my
home, prater tludents, 10 end
avar, Abbie Stratton, 814·i92·
8103
Will Do Houtt Cltanlng And
Office Clunlng, hperlenced.
614-446-7715, 114-441-1711.

Want to:

PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?H

21

Clayton Buckingham 2llx5!1, 3br,
2 Baths, Patio Door:la Deluxe
Carpll, Ster10 !pee I Prlct
$29,995. (Diaplay Only~. Finane·
lng Avalloblo. Fronch Cltr
Mobllt Homtt, 614·448;0340, 1·
800·231-4487.
Sh011 Tlmo On Job? Pall Crodlt
Hlotory A Problorn? Mony
RepoaatsHd Mobllt Homts To
Choott From. Small Down
Pa1mont. Caii1·B00·589·5711.

2100x1SO'
Flat Clean
,100'x185',
&amp;
MIL lo11
1 1Mila
West Of
Hospital, Trallera Allowed, City
Water And Sewer Available. Call
814-446·48111 Aftar 5p.m.

~~==:':":· :·~====::;:========::..~

Big Savlnga On All Corpol In
Stock. Cash And Corry, Mol·
lohen Carpals, 814-448·'11144.
41 Houses for Rent
CIODD USED APPLIANCES
2 bedroom home, bath, kitchen, Wathera, dryers, retrlgtrt.lort,
dinlng-tr.., lerge llvlngroom, nng... Skaggs Appliances
baument, 1 mile out Sand Hill Upper Alvor Ra. Bnldo Slono
Cr.al Uotti."Ca\1614-446-7398 ,
Ad, 304-875-2272.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
2·3 b&lt;irm houoo, $2851 monthly,
Complete home furnishings.
caii614-9B5·3ft7
HOUI'I:: Mon•Sat, 9·5. 614·446·
0322, 3 milts out Butavllle Rd.
FrN Dtii&gt;Jary.
PICKENS FURNITURE
3
bedroom
house,
Now!Used
Meadowbrook Addn, 1405 Ctdar Household lumlshlng. 112 ml.
St, 304·67i·3753.
Jtrrlcho Rd: Pt. Ple11anl, WV,
3br 2 Baths, FP, CW, CA, call 304-675·1450.
$475/mo. Deposit Required, 614·
AENT20WN
446-4222, or Evenings: 614·446·
&amp;14-448·3158
2174.
Vl'ra Furniture
&amp; Chair, $11.10 Wtlk i
3br Homt In Mtrctrvlllt. Sofa
Rtcllner,
$5.47 W•k, Swivel
Rtlerenc:e And Oepotll. 614-446· Rocker, 13.83
WHitBunk Bad
1158.
Complete $8.41 Wetk, 4 Drawer
3br House For Rtnl, Deposit Choat, $3.26 WHk; Pootar Bod·
And Rtftrtncn Requlrtd, room Suite, 7 pc., $1&amp;.17 WHk,
Leave Me11191 On An1w11ing lncludoo Bodding.Counlry Plna
Dinette With Barich &amp; 4 Chairs,
Macttlnt. 614-446·8002.
J10.98 Wook.OPEN: Monday
Small Unfurnlsh1d Houu 3 ThN Slturday, 9a.m. Ia Bp.m.,
Roomo, Bolh, Air Conditioning, Sunday 12 Noon Till Sp.m. 4
Carpeted, OrlptrJta, ScrMnt&lt;J Mllu Off Routt 7 On Routt 141,
Porch, Privett Parking, 614-446· In C.nttnary.
2602.
Slde-by·tldt
refrigerator,
tltctrk:
double
oven
ttove,
42 Mobile Homes
$250. IICh both $450. 1h1r 5:00
PM, 304-875-5593.
for Rent

. Apanment

Financial
Business

2 bedroom apts In Paint
P1Nunt 1 mod1rn, clun, Hud
acctptea, 814-\41-2200,

Opponunlty

Apartment Far Rant, On First
Avonua, In ClaiUpolla. 114-446SZ!l

nee(l lfJ leu t'e your home.
Place you1· classified ad lotlay!
.15 wonls m·less, 3 days,
3 papel's,$6.00
1w

'------- --- _____
f), _ _ __

_

2, ________________ ](}

:1.------- - ---

ll.----4, _ _ _ __ _
12 . _ _ _ _~
r:.
1.1 . _ __ _ _
·'··-----------------------6. ______ _
.14•. _ _ _ __
7•. _ _ __ __
15.___ _ _ __
ll,, _ _ _ _ __

BEA\ITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jackoon Plko
lrom 11112/mo. Walk to thop &amp;
movloa. Coii 614-4411-3M. EOH.
Complttly Fuml1htd Small
Hou11, $250/mo. Pluo Utllltlaal 12 gougo auto Wlnchaotar RanAnd
Oapboh. 614-446.o338. Cal gor
J1115.
Wlnchoator
bo~•
Betora,?p,m.
tcUon
with30.08
Simmon•
4·12140
acopo 1175. aftor 5:00, 304-875EHiclancr. apt lor rant, bHullful 5604.
ctrpel,
675-8042n c• cauch and bar, 304· 53
Antiques

Fumlthed Apartment, 1br, naxl Buy or ttl!. Riverine Antiques,
to Ubrary, parking, cantrlll hal, 1124 E. Mlin Street, Pomeroy.
;1!'to:;,~.cee, 114-446-0338, Hour~: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
Ci~~~;5~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
VEND.
Gr~cloua living. 1 and 2 bed· ;,:_::...:::..::~--:--::-::...,..,.,-room aportmonlo ol Vlllatll Fumnuro Ropolr, Fallnlohlng:
Manor
and
AIYifiiCit Old Plclure FramH; Trunks
Aponmonll In Mlddiopon. From Raotorod; ~Ihta Aowlnod:
Real Estate
11118. Call614o99Z·178T. EOH.
Ex
nco), Walter
Mlddlopon, Booch St, 2 bod· .:.;.;.;;;.:;;'·.;:';.;14.;:
·2.;;45-:.;14&lt;1:.;.;;8;;..- - - - room tumriahod apl, utlllllaa
31 Homes for Sale
polcl, roloranc11 I dopoolt ro- 54 MISCellaneous
1 acre hom• aht, 70x14 mobile qulrod, 304-882·2568.
Merchandise
home, 2 atory houn could be
rtpelrad, 16120 out bldg, New Haven, one bedroom lur•
$24,000. 114-4411-1830 aftor 5:00. nlahtd apt, depoah and 191nch color TY, 304-175-ZTe6,
reference requlrMI, 304-682· Exerc::IM bike for 1111. Excellent
3 Unit Rental, Situated On 112 2561
·
condlllqn. 304.&amp;75-4834.
Acrt Lot, Maintentnea FrM, ExNlco 2 bedroom apt, nowly
cellent Sh1pe, 814-441·8568.
~
tod
t
1
.ra\IIII'COfl , nope •J. n lftne• Flrowood lor aalo, 614-9112-6285
ovonlnga
4 bedroom•, hall baseman!, 1 raqulrod, 304-t75~6•.
acrt, gorbogo pick-up, city
Firewood For Solo: Hardwood,
water, Cllbll optiDnll, good Cornplotly Furnlohod mobllo Big Flotbod Loa do, Oallvarao
homt,
1
mila
btlow
town,
aver·
locollon, 131,915. 304-815-387e.
And Siackod. 614-448·31169, Or
looking rlvor. No Polo, CA. 114- 114-448-tlZL
Craot llodullra: Now lo Tho 448.0338.
Tlmo To Buy. Many Sluo And
For Solo: llornbonhlp In Roral
Floor Plarw AVallablt. S.. AI One •nd two j bedroom OOko Roton. Prlco 13,1160, eon
ll)lirtments
for
rent.
304-175Fr~nch Chy Yoblll Homu, C.l·
11W32-5113.
IIPS!IIo, OH 614-441-9340, 1-801). 2053 or 1711-4100.
Ivory woddlno draM taa longth,
231-1487.
45
Furnished
HooCiploco olu 18, $711. AOtoRench ltylt·homt, 3 t.droomt,
llllor 180. Glrlo 20" bloyclo 120.
Rooms
2 full btth1, tit In kJichen,
304-t7fl.l413.
dining room, aUched garage,
focattd
University
Lint, Apt tor rent by mOnth or wttk,
..
$e6,500. 304-875-4132 or 175- 304..82·2!111.
014.
Roomt for (tnt ••w tlk or month.
Aoducod To SoU: $~1 900, S1:1:2 ol ~· Clallla Holol,
1160,
•
ChHhlr'!t_ Ohio. D04·1132:e959, I
1104-132·11!70, 114-317-0141:
Slooplng wnh cooking.
Wanted lo buy, horJN and/or Alto trolor _ ., All hookoupo.
P&lt;OI*IY In Qallla Counly on Call alor 2:00 p.m., 304-m
land controcl, prlood In tha 20'o. 111111, llaoon WY.

446-2342
.-675-'!333
.
.
992-21.56
'

~.e?Wl'H.

32

Merchandise

Mobllp Homes
for Sale

1178 Naohau, 2 bdnn, ond
ltlchan _.h bay wl~ aood
condhl~ 11100. 1
-1194
or 114-IR•'1121
.

St

Household

Goods
IWMP'f',

L~N6il. ~T&gt;Je't
Got,PI.HNTO ...
\

~AT06LAPI~J_/

AT

nME

BUilding
.
Supplies

55

Grande, OH can 614·

~c·r

_...,._
.-. _.......

N6l. "'"" . . . llbolod ...

FAX. MACI11 NE

stereo. Iii ·
8:05 Clllltvlt1y Hlllllllllel

e iiJI NBC NIWI
()) Sitveil by 1111 ...
(I) (J) e ABC Ntwo

Blonde and while Cocker
Spaniel, malt, 7 wka old, $100.
304-675-5409.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Polnl Pleasant, 304-675-2063,
full Unt Tropical llahl birds,
small animals and supple~ .
Part Collis pupp\11, black &amp;
wlllte, S5.00ta, In order lo gel
mommy tpaytd. 614·742·3118

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

71 Autos for Sale
;;~;:~~~;:::~~
1m
both
color

1i77 Cedilla; Coupe Deville,
beautiful cer, every option, a
It ill II S1100, 114-992-&amp;711
1177 Chevy Comaro, 305 outo,
honey comb m11ga, new tlraa,
1815 obo 114·11112-2478

•••
Mf .. :t PtJN'r WANi

'' EvOI.IIf "7 NOT

Edition Q'

1· 1:2

__

- -- - ~~· -

-ro

·

1

.JrA~T

$0MfT/'IING :t
CAN'r flt-ltf/1·

H2
+A Q 10 6

. PHILUP

...

r

f, r..J ~ · .:!
r.:;:..JI!t o ::;; • •

(I)

Enll!lllnmenl Tonlghl

~

::ai'rlad...WIIII

By Phillip Alder

Clllklr8n

N-~

l:::'~r~=Q

1Z1 Sid Wolld
ill Crouflr:e

7:35 Cll Santoni ones Son
8:00 ())
iiJI Mattock Mallock
tracks down his cousin's
two-timing husband. IPI 2 of
· 21 Stereo. C
(J) MOVIE:Winltr Paople
(PGt3)12:001
(I) (J) Family Mallin
Eddie and Url&lt;el are sent to
jail because of a
smooth!:lklng cousin.
Stereo.
(l)Wa
WHI&lt;In
Review Stereo. ll
liD 1121e Reacul: eu An
Ice diver runs out ol air; a
child Is ll!l.ten by a snake.
Stll'eo. Iii '
II). Atrie!ICa'l Moll
Wanted Two men's close
lrlends~lp becomes a
motivall2!).101' murder.
Stereo ...~

e

ALLEYOO~

e

EEKANDMEEK
AIVD NON 1t1E.
RER::RT

Af1E.R SGME V£1("{
1RADOO
O/J WAlL

P!CKR:Xl&lt;m 6AIIVE.D
OI£R R:XI::~1) RA&lt;' m.
11-\IRD DfH /AJ A RW

AGGRE.SSIVf.

srmr ..

0 Milnier, Sha Wrolt Q

ill On Stlgl Stereo.

B

(2:001
8:30 (I) Ill

e Step by 81tp

~

Al'l You Baing SaMd?

ill Te111 Cor•IICIIoft Stereo.

Home
Improvements

Y~Y...

·

HE: FO.INDOUT' "T'HAT

lbflUI"F IN HIS Wo'e~F:T

OllER HIS HeAD.

ITLlt: L.OTTER( TICKET HE

FO.JND W.l!oeJ LAST WeEK'S.

)

)

/

Interviews, debat86 and
analysis leading to the
Presldenl's Slate of the
Union Addi'ess. (0:301
1:00 ())
i1J1 MOVIE: ·~n llfOad
Daylight' NBC Movie of 1111
WHI&lt;I2:001 Sllreo. ll
(I) (J) BabJ Toll Jlmes
dumps Maggie, but he still
~f!nds her honOr. Stereo.

e

e

m. .

Talking With D1111d
FI'Oit Stereo. Q.
(!) Walhlngton WHI&lt; ln
Review Stereo. E;l

Slereo.
II) H
Vklao A men
poses as a body In a casket:
workers art apookid. IRI
Sllreo.

e

THAT

king. ,
.
North s two nl&gt;'lrum~ was the Ja·
CObr forcmg mse. Souths three-spade
rebid sho~ed a smg_leton tn that sutl.
~o cue-buls (Souths bemg debatable
With such bad trumps) and Blackwood
followed. . .
,
.
Alter ptckmg up West s kmg, declar~r c.ashed dummy's heart queen,
conlirmmg that he had a trump loser.
Now South had to diSCard his three di·
a~ond losers on dummy's black-suit
wmners fM;lore East could ruff m and
cash the d1a~ond king.
ThiS requ1res East to hold at least
three. clubs. Therefore, the correct
play •• to unblock th~ spa.de a~ and

then start casbmg tne clubs. When
East shows up with four, tbal suit is
. played off, 011e diamond bein discarded. Now it Is time for spa~es East
ruffs the last one, but it is too l~te _
. de&lt;larer's final diamond loser disa
pears 011 that trick .
pAt the table though South 1 ed
off his spade ~inne'rs hrst. Bu~ ~I
ruflt!d the third spade and shed th
diamond king
ca
e
"We bad 011 iy four spades and seven
clubs, partner," bemoaned South
"How coul~ 1 expect East to hold onl ·
two spades?" Dummy was slightly
sympathetic _ but ooly slightl
Y

ll&gt;---~~~~••

SEE!!

ACROSS
1 Mono 5 Conclude
8 Gur
12 Cuetomtr
13 Statue 14 First-rate

2 Wdl. ~

15 1ndonealan
leland
16 Aaf'a kin
17 Forehead
18 Mlk" do
with
18 Spanl11d1, '
e.g • .
21 lrlahman,
perltapt
23 Daughttr'•
brother
24Goona
crlriH

12

Wdl . ~

27 Vallow fiVer
moaqulto
31 lltreiFr.~
32 CaHie mael

34 Kind of copy
38 GrMk ltHer
37 NIVIgtUon
davlet
38 Snlflad
40 Pollack lleh
42- fill .
lobHIIIOn~

43 lleforo court
llfOC"dlnge
47 t'alllt quite

50

Entarll~ner

- Andlreon
51 lnventO!
Whltnay
52 Covar tht
lnllkle ol
53 Dlmlnuu,.·
eulflx
54 Grallllnd
55 Small emount
58 Jacob'a eon
57 DolortlRio
58 Adam'•
grandeon

s P!oparty

1 Machinery
oil, for ohort
2 AuthorDIIIIMn
3 Choice
4 Gtll up

DOWN

Yt/~H

8 Deprive of
Hnaatlon
7 ldlotelll.~
8 FtHngSllarttlround
cqnca
IQ By lncl by
11 Btnchee
20 Cooktd
22 Worker
24 Drtnkl lklwly
25RtpeUIIon
28 -vol
28 RtducUon
29 FKN': ·

ill Tlllllll
ill ....., lUng Llvll

e

...30 (I) (J) P8tfecl StSbltl"fti'IIM,..f1!1
Larry btllevta Bllkl'a claim
lhe
haunted. (RI

hout-:5

30 Slide
33 Of cioN
ralallvae
35 More
dellcloue

Stereo.
Wal

\It
WHI&lt; Stereo.
ii!
• .... of 1111 wHemy Youngman tlkae a
lrlp

39 ActO! Nllllan
41 Plodtlct
43 Delendlnt'a

to the streete of New

......

York. S::OIIia~ T1IHw
Olbiy

=..:r..

10:00 ()) NIWI
which govorn you In lhe year ahead. courage you to make
Send for Aquarius' Aslro-Graph p!edlc· dellya.
1
1ionsloday by mailing $1.25 plus a long, LI!O (JuiJ 23-Aug. 221 Actions you
self-addressed, stamped envelope lo today out of spite or anger are detllned
BERNICE
c/o lhls o8W81)8per, P.O. to be Ml·faled. llon'llat 1our temper or
BEDE OSOL Allro-Graph,
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. emotiona do your lhlnklng for you . Keep
Be.,,. to 1~11 your Zodiac sign.
a COOl head .
PISCES (l'lb. »•rm' 201 Be careful VIRGO (Aug; 21-lept. 221 Speculative
lhat an enallc frtend who cauled you risks you wouldn't normllly consider
cornpllcltiOI'll prevlouoly doeln't draw could be extremely .tempting IOday.
you Into something atlcky again today. Slow down and carefully analyze any
You're ·a btl vutntrablt In 1hls Pt'opMala oHel'ed you.
atrana.ment.
·
(lept. ZS.Oct. 231 Your lmpul·
Allll$ (......., 21·Aprll111 If you li.td· • - could CIUH you 10 be abrasive
c1an1y ran.ge on• a commltmenl you today wtth thaw you hOld near and
mecle to anolho! loda1 1 you could ere- ' tMit. P!ovoking an ugly lnclde&lt;~t will
ate a ~pplllfl!ttt of. complleallonl lor,. C8Uie you MIIOUe regrets.
.
which you'll be held accountable.
ICCIIIPIO (Oat. MoNo¥. 22) Under
'
'
'
tApoll20 'I r 201 n you have mol1 condltlono, you'r:e ll!etly good at
olein. 1112
, TA..,_
to
-'&lt;
wllh
un11mt1tat looll or materl- kiiPirt~~ MDfllla. But you mey be a tom·
!!'' .~
Sulllllf1 and dramallc chanQtl In your . 111 tOdiiY. be C8UIIoul tlfld reed all In- pulltWt lalkel' today and, without !eaiiZ·
IOCie life .. . p!Oblbilltlel IO! the 1'181 alrUCIIDnl and lnlonnatlon 11 your d/1- 1'!11 It, 1111 much 111en than you lhould.
llhi*d. You lillY biCOrrie lnvol'led with ~ beiOra throwing the 1tr111wttclt. namAIIUI (liM. 2loDec 11) Ac11v·
.,tiiii(IIIJI1oMie•IYoonnlgttlbe ·IIIII you par1lclpataln today 111at.,.
unulllll
a lftlle advlltt- lllld ftiJ1atloUI to- . ,.....lwly lllexpenaM
apllo be the
bedul~
d.Y. Thll cCUd GIUII!I you tO lmllullhllty · 01\11 that tum oulto be the mOll fun.
'
tl) d you II'Y 1orm an lltMhml!llllllllllighi'and ... Don1 to 11uJ a gooc1 Umt.

COirthday

-

a..

·--.

.....!di!Y·

on

are

....,
.. ft .tllllnl% Ill
CANC1R I. .

13:

. CAI'tlyouDNI(Da0;...,_1f10bjec·
..
you 1\ape
DOiftlllllld .,.IIIIIIY
*' lltiiiiMt
'f'NIIIItiiiCilon IOdlr, but thn ..
ltr tiacat•
lniiY buck
11

10

10 ftl)lltll

A matter Iivia
1 1 Thta

polliblllly oultlde ~ lillY .,. '

•

lblllll Ill! youl'llll loday .
to IOhleve•
you
the tkhi

10 1M

be

44 Dellllorlltl
45 O!alttd, In

!i (J). ~;.':':'· Q
ft.~
(!) :.:TiM. With O.vld
Float
~ Vlltt
(11
. .sw.o.
. . 1owt

he!ildiJ

.. Shelltrect

from wtncs

48Upon
AI Vqetabtlt

!Itt - . CIII1PI

Insight
Into - . a~n~tegy and

:,'=-g::ilwl
~porta from ....
lnM~.

Mlb odomt
·

IIC&amp;wr:..A

IJIRA

'Youi'

.k

The World AII:Danac:: &lt;~&gt;Crossword Puzzle

ill Nalhvtlll Now Slereo.

1rJ.Ianoo

...

+

0 a.yDIId RHIIty

I GOT TO

&gt;

...... .:..

[,.equllli llonalll

Ill 1121

es:.'

,.

•

Frank's son J.T. goes 10
work In CarOl's bea!!!f
rlor. (RI Slereo. C
Wall $lrHt WHii Stereo.

...,...v DUMPEDALL THe

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Well
Norlh Eool
Pass 2 NT
There are hands in which de&lt;larer
Pass
Pass
Pass
may cash his winners in any order. In
Pa55
4 NT
Pass
others, though, the exact sequence
Pass 6.
All pass
may be critical for success. In today's
deal, cover the East-West cards and
Opening lead: 4
de&lt;ide in which order you would cash
the black-suit winners in your six- 1L ______________________.J
heart contract. West leads a low dia-l
mond. You win in hand and play a
trump, West producing the singleton

8:05 W MOVIE; KllltUCky Woman

Serv1ces

.109763
'+ A!063
+KJI

1Z1 Wolld Cup lk!lftg (T)

ill PllmaNawall

Rootl (PI &amp; il8)12:001

MY UNCLE ~ W&lt;l.l.J(.W
IN10 HI56055S OFFICE

.K

+JRI
. +98

Correct sequence
of plays

s-ter~:.lil

.r:.,r-lt!?f'll
-1\1, ~•

EAST
• J9
• J 52
+ KQ 9 7
+7 53 2

SOUTH
+A

' !ill.w,tr~i

J

BUSI~SS

WEST
+10875132

ALDER

Special Edition .
8Monayltne
1111 '1111 Waltono
7:05 W Addome Famly
7 30

..) 1\-

1-%~11

NORTH
+KQ6
.AQBI

BRIDGE

e ci"ncit Clmara

a Stilt of .... People

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
·
Uncondhionol lllotlmo guaran· ·
tH. Loc11 ret.,.nc• tumithtd. ·
FrH aotlmat11. Coli collocl 1· •
814·237.Q488, day or night. :
Rogoro Baaamont Watorpr""" .
ling.
·
Compllte Mobile Home s.t·Upl,·:
Rtpalrt; CommtrJcal, R•ldt""' '
1150.
1111 lm~-lo.
lncluding 1·'
,.... ...
1
1183 Lincoln Town Car, claim ~~rbi'Z'c!'pl~!.''r.~ lneuranco '
high mila-, loadod, 614-992mo
-· - 258 ·1111. :
~
·s1731m·2015.
Curtle Home lmproYimtnlt:
v-o Exporlonco On Oldof ( .,
1183 RonauH Alllonco, Naw NIWif H-. AOonl Add~lcino, . •
Pain~ Excollon1 Interior, Now Foundation ·Work,
Roollng . •
Ttrn. N - Englno Ropolr 114- KHchono And Batho. frat'
441·1m BalwHn la.m.To Sp.m. 11molnl Ralor11-, No JOb To&lt;
1914 Camaro Z.21 T~opo 360 Big Or Smaiiii14-441-G225. , ' .
eng, 1uto, load;;d, $3000, or F,..man't Plumbing And HNt··;
trotlo for 8·10 B~llr or S-101eng~,l;c.14o'=2C:58-1&amp;::.11::..--------,~·.·
truck, 304-1,.3311
;;:
7
Aon'a TV Sarvlco, opoclallzlog · '
1984 Oodgo 100,1350, 114·11112· In Zonhh alto aorvlclng moal ' '
3173
othar brandt, HOUM ctllt, ~..,.~
1114 !!ocftll.loJIOO, 4 d-, black, oorno
IOPJira. • Vft~
AII/FM1 co-to, 4 cyl, now ox· 304 -678
Ohio l14-4~~
hauot, oM-1112-7231, OYonlngo
Davie
S.W.Voc . Sarvlco, .:
1114 Oldt Delta 81, 2dr coupe, Oea•UII• Crwk Ad. Parte, ·•~ · 1
beautiful family a.r, avery apo .,._, pickup. 1nd . .vary.~e,:· ;
lion, 30T v.., 12298, 114·11112· ~.0294,
• • '~
6719
Will build )lotio co...., dOOk'i, •
11M Ford e-n Slatlonwogon, ~ r;:;
~f
Low MI1Hgo1 Qoqct CondHlon, Z4S4152.
., .. •
AC, PS. PB', Auto. 614 441 0041,
AHar 4:30p.m.
82 Plumbing &amp; ~... '
1115 VW Sdrroco, WIU Take
.\
.
• Heating
Bill Oflor. 614-441-11107.
'

·-2,

--=-:.:.
· ·~
~ -=
-- ...:
:...._

a SportiCentli Super Bowl

New gaa tanka, body parlt, one ·
ton truck whMia, radlltare,
lloor m~~. Ole. D &amp; A Auto,
Rlplor, "v. 304·372·3133 or 1·
600·273..115.
.

*""

1 1 1 1 1 I I

Unload • Icing • Knack • Dilute • TALKING

Bowl
OMacOyvarC

"" ;i
JDHIJ.5l&gt;D

WD's

lilT c•wy Nova: high.,..._ · lloolii Uo•lllll -r!olilt.
......,. Good ~-" lllllor-. llloaltlool,
lion 011r.
Aedund. IIOiO" To 1711.
.. '
11,100. For .,...lnti!motlon Col
Aolt ... Poul.

•

. Ovemeard at lectufll at our local COllege: 'Wisdom
1s the reward you get from life lor listening when y0u
would rather be TALKING."

91 CutNnt Allalr g
~~:THe Naxt
1121e Road it the Super

.

~':. ~ ~

•

C!l Laglalatlve U~ll

1178 Chewolot lmP!'ia 1 Eaay On
Qaa, Nlco Body ona inlorlor.
•1 ........ .llll!a
• ·~~-··
1971 Chryalor Cordoboo, naw
paint, .... Urn, $1000, 304-875S955a~or spm
1180 Ford Pinto Pony, Exc:elltnt
Condhlon, Must Still &amp;14-25e.

u.zoo. ~.SIM.m.mt.·

•

SC~ETS A~EIS

NIWIH~

(J)

Compl~to ·~o c~uckle quoted

by f•ll•ng . the missing words
you develop from stop No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED tETrUS IN I
THESE SQUARES
•

6 u~~~~s~N~~~E tEllERs

rz '1111 Jei!Mone..C

11110 Nlo=tlck·up, gray1 _bed
liner, 5-a
, 21,000Ml, AMIFM •
star.o, perfect cond, $6200, 614· ·.

~

f9

7:00\)je iiJI Wheel of FO!Iune

=-

Q

5

•

8:35 Cll AndJ Gltflltll

1987 Ford Ranglf. Sharp. $2700.
304-675·2457.
1990 GMC Shonbod, 5 Spood, V·
6, Loaded, 110,800; lrownin;
s-t- 18 1625 Firm. 814-44~..
7351.

81

I I 1 li 1:

Hlghllghtl

Custom datuu Chevy
truck, hall ton with Iepper, I cyli_
standard 1hiH, extra tires, runt
H~5~~ cond, $1,300. 304·

~~~~t~~~_:
~

t-lr__,D:;...:E;-:.:R.,G;....:Yr-=.E.......

10 New Zono Stsreo. Q

fll

If

N0 HU D

~~ :;;;~~!~.!lhich all the issues

§

a Super Bowl XXIII

1V81

&amp;4

I

oi~:Q

78 2 98 6

Vans

1--IIJ

I had attended a political
rally. I overheard one poiHician
.
.
.
.
_ • ~ 0 say to another, "I certainly
~=====~admire the straight forward

OScoobJ Doo

~::,:.-5,:.::''c::----·- ; - : - - - : = ; -

73

0

I

1---.-l;...;,l,..;.;..;.l..;,.r,.--~::11

~ lqulr:e One TV Sltreo.

9112.et73! 9112·2015

61 Fann Equipment

Q

Ill Wild Amlt1ca Storeo. Q

.•

1

+-j;-:uJ:...r.p-:.

r-1

1111 Rln. 1J!1 Tin, K·l Cop

8:30 ())

1973 Chevy,' PU, 314 ron; 19VI
Chevy
PU, 112 Ton. Coli Anytlma
56 Pets for Sale
•
:------:-::--:-....,,...-..,.., Aftor 2p,m. 814·448-3243.
Groom ancl Suefr Shop-Pot 1178 F·100 truck, 814·9411-2888
Grooming. All
Mdt, 11~111. after 5pm and wHkandt
l1m1 Pel Food Dealer. Julie
XLT. 1184 Ford Eoco11
Wobb. Collll 4-441-0231.
AKC regllttrtd Mlnature Oach· ~~~~~~~co~nd~,:_'_'_c _:g"
thund, vet checked, 304-675•
-8t5-356l
•
2193.
1078 lnlarnatlonal dump truck,
30 4

Stereo.

a 1111 Ciotti
ill Wolld Today

231 V-8 Engine 24,000 Milos,
And Car, Talte Bast Offer. 614·
445-3025.
·

.'

1llcounl:s·
...

LEFT f.lOME .. 110W CAN [
TELL MOM NOW THAT
M'i STOMACH I-IURT5?

.

31,000
Mlltt, Call
$4,000.
For Mort
Information
614-44~2342
Ask For Plul.
·

1tal E.cart SIOOi till Twlsmo,
Cartofa -bing
Fourth oncl Plno
law mllll, .IUn roof, l1010i 1N7
Ho~•on, 40 miiH gal. 304-1711Qal~~:; Ohio
2440.
11
888
•
1DN Foni Touruti lllllonwoaeon,
'
loodtd, ~:'" Eltcollonl co'i1dl' 84
Signa: Ponablo llllhlod chantlfo lion.
814
1429.
. Electrical &amp;
ablo lotlor oiGn All. Frao liol·
Refrigeration
lwldollvory. Plllltlo lotloro 11M Ford Tompo LE, goor1
$47.10 box, 1-80Q.SIW483.
cond, 4 door, air, full power, ANI
•
1om s-v!llo'l ~ SU&lt;Piuo
l1y lllldwlllo Poali Ofllco,
Jloltoon Counly, WV.IIallof ~ .
77
Aa-ood.
Corlio~
OOtll...
M
frt., ........ Noon •
.

.

I NEED A

O

1989 Ponllac LeMons AMIFM
Rodlo, Air, Good Condltlcin,

72 Trucks for Sale

®&gt;1121~

!,~RalnbowC

I NEVER SHOULD HAVE

r i

0
8
1o 12y ,

I

GJNIWI
())Vklao"8qun One TV Sllreo.

Atlc About Our ln.. anl :ru
Block, brick, nw•r plptl, win· Refund, EIHI Home c .-ntlr,
dews, lintels, etc. Cltude Win· 114-772·1220.

~~~~~\o

8

FRI., JAN. 24

e:oo(l)e Cll &lt;lle

WI-lEN [ WAS LITTLE AND
I DIDN'T FEEL WELL, MOM
WAS ALWA'f5 T~ERE ...

Senti

Television
Viewing

TilER£ H~ 60£S lloAIN,
TRYII¥. 'Ill Till~ .1111&gt; 1J.IJ:

SrP"!IINOIXLop
6,jlxhA6tAPQNr

EVENING

5000 Ford Dlastl Tractor 1984 Chevy Blazer, Sllver~da '
15,850; Lato Modol 4000 Ford package, aut~, 305 onglno• 4
With Loador, 18,350; 1991 Moritz whHI drlVt, v-8, PS, AC, Jo'l,
Stock Trailer, $1,895. Owner Wilt sharp laaklng, 304·576-2652.
Flnanea. 114-286-6522.
1984 Joop ChorokH, 4 WhOol
Jim's Farm Equipment, SR. 35, Drivo. 814-4411-3861.
West Gallipolis, 6t4-446-9777i
Wldt 11/tcllon Qtw I used larm 1SIU S·10 Blazer 4x4, blue, ~
tracrtors
I lmptementt. Buy, opood, Ilk $5,000, call 114-~S.
SWAIN
trade, 8:00..5:00 wNkdtys, 4492
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 1111,
Olivo St., Gallipolis. Now &amp; Uaod S1t. till Noon.
tD89 Full Slzo Bronco XLT,
lumfture, htsltrt, Watttm I Wanted: U1td ftrm equipment, loaded, Ew:etllant CondhiORi
Work boota. 614-446-3151.
onythlng you want to 1111. 614· C.ll Anytlme,l14-3&amp;7~65i. : ·
VI'RAFURNITURE
256·1308, 614-256-8040 Aftor
6t4-446-3158
8p.m.
74
Motorcycles
UVING ROOM: Sola &amp; Chair,
..,.,,..,__;_;;,:.:..:.:,;:,::....__..;.
$1t1.00j_ Recliner,
$149.00;
HliO Yamaha Warrior 4 Whuler,
SWival Hockor, $99.00; CoHN &amp;
350 (iC Motor; Accoaaorill InEnd Tabloa, S89.oo sot.OINING 63
Livestock
cludod; Holmot, Goggin, And
ROOM: $149.00;
Tobia Wllh
4 Poddod
J'I,BOO. "Dayo:
814·
Ch1ir1,
Country
Pint ~~§~~~~~:: I Kldnoy
4~6-8269;Boll.Evening•:
814·379Dinatto With Bonch And 3
0271;.;;;;5·--------------..;.
Chalro~, $299.00; Matching 2
Door Hitch, 1349; Or $5811.00 Dna Chorolalo Cow, 4 Vearo Old. 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Sot; oak Tablo, 42ldl2 WHh 6 614·388·17'14.
for Sate
Bow
B1ck
Chairs,
S62V.OO.BEOROOM: Pootor Bod· 38 Nanny Gotto, To Kid April
room Sulto (5 pc.~. $349.00; 4 First. 114-446-4556 Or Soo lloyd 1Zh V bottom boat, 15ft trallor, ·
Drawor Chaot, $44.95; Bunk Bllko, Neighborhood Road.
4hp Evonrtolo . mol'!!., lroillng ·
Bed, $221i Complete Full Matt 64
motor, Mlnkolll, 304-8I&amp;o'M13. • :
s.t, J'I05.oo Sol; 1 pc. cociar
Hay &amp; Grain
Auto Pans &amp; . ..
Booroorn Sullo, 1899.00.0PEN : :-:--:---:'-:=~,--::-- 76
Monday Thru Saturclay, 9a.m. to Har, lor aa!!, 1000 baloa. $1 per
Accessories .••
&amp;p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till ba o. 304.ei&gt;-52118.
5p.m., 4 Mil• Off Route 7 On
ludgel Tran•mlalane, Ulld".. ·
Routt 141 In Centenary.
·
rebuilt,
st1L1Ing at SH; A_.o :
Transportation
Pana. 61~·24S.5!177, 614-37152 Sponlng Goods
2263.
.'•-'

=·

1hm. your duffer into cash,
Sell il tire easy way... by plwne,

filtlf6tyii'IIIHP

•

5

Rentals

44

G(.).[) 5.
\

:::'.:.:
'"':P·;:;m·....,.._,=--:7.....,.,..,.,.
:.:
1988 Muotang QT, whllalblai:k
trim, S.opood, VB/5.0, 26,0GqiiL
power Lumblr ttltt, laid on.
must tell, $9500, 614·992-81731
992·20'15
·

1 ~).~

lhe

Ohio

.BORN LOSER
..
y I

.

1181 Mazda 323, 41,000 MIIOJ, 4'
Spood, Stanclanl 2 Door,
Hatchback, Eictlllnl Condition,.
$31!00.
614·38T-7217
A~or

HOUSe h O ld
For Sola: 1.25 Aero lot, Locotod 5I
AI Charolalo Loki subdivision.
Goods
Call After &amp;p.m. 614·256-1901.
5 Piece Olntttl Set: Glass To!)
Lola for tilt, trailers accep·
table. 304-675-2722.
Tabla Chrome Bast 4 Side
i~~:&amp;.8~55t Call Alter 5p.m.

2br Mobllt Home On Large
Privale Lot, S215!Mo. Stcurl\y
Deposit, RtftrancH. 614-446·
2236, 614-446-2581.
New 14H mobile home, S1H per
month Including lot rontal, with
delivery, complete lltup, tklnlng, and atapt, call 1-BQ0-837·
6625
Total Electric 2 BR Mobile Home
For Rent, No Ptt1. 114-387·74ll.

Auto• for Slle

.

1988 Ooclgo Daytona, 18,000.
614-441-0731.
•

&amp; Acreage

112 Acro 1 Fist, On Rt. 2, North Of
Point P11111nt, Septic System,
Eltclrie Hook·UP And Wattr.
Ready For Mobile Home. French
City Mobile Homtt, 614-446·
9340, 1-1100.231-4457.

71

1817 l)odgo Chat~.Wo ~ Uf
Aulomatlo, Qood contlllon
U,600. 1144Tto:IH4, 114-CQ.
1414.
I
1117 Oldl Cutllll CION gray
$2,600. 11M Oida CioN black
$2,298. 11117 Ford Ranger XLT
$2,111. 1tl5 Ford Rl!!lllr nod
$2,300. 11M Ooclga Vlilo 4x4
12,600. 1185 Dldamobllo DoHa
88 12,715. 1182 Comaro . V-B
11,995. 11186 Bulcll Skyhawk
54,000 mlln U,ZN. 11187
C1Vall1r 2 door blue 12,100.
1i8i Cavalier 4 door brown
$3,500. 1178 Font F-150 4'4
$2,100. Scolly'a Uud Car., Now
Haven, WY 304-182-37!12.

2 bedroom mobllo homo and 2
bedroom homt 17 aCI'II,
S38,0QO. Lotan, 3'04-885-3421 af·
tor5:00PM.
.

for Rent

!NOTICE!
cOHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends th11 you do buslneu wllh ,.aplt you know, and
NOT to nnd money through the
mall unlit you have lnvestfg1led
the offering.
I'm lnvcMvlld wlltl some busl·
""' PfO{)'It In 1 mtrkttlng net·
work. Wt rt w1ntlng lo expand
mthll lrN and art looking for .
butlnHs minded pilrtntr who It
lntereeted In 1 secondary In·
come. For appt call Greg, 614·
'1112·2157
VENDING ROUTE : Got Rich
Quick? No Way! But We Have A
Good, Study, AHordable, But\·
n010. Won'l LaoL 1-800.284·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriRhl

.

IIQI~mlefllboV
who
to ... Jtdl'l 101'1.
Storeo.

9

r

Tllq

8WelldNIWI
10 1011
Wltll'lt
RaUIIIIII
10:01111liiiCMI: Wlllllr . . . .
11'013~ (2:1101
'

'**

. 111:30 9 '1111 tlllahltlitr

ill CNIII 11111 Ct.11:Gf1Jle Ill &lt;lle • • •
IINIWI

"

!!filii c:-1 Q
IIana I I

-~ llal8tno.

'UMJV

OMW

LP

'. KRLOHDU.

L' E

W Z II W

ERPMTZLPWLT.

TIIO'W

F V W

L W' P

GMD

IICIIQ

I ·D P W

HXMI

KRL0 •' "
YURD ;
Y.L 0 P Y L ,
•' PR!VIOII8 SOLUTION: "Whon I'm doing a r'oll, I'm the pen I'm 1111
· But whon I'm llntohod, I'm me." - Jtanna " ' -· ·

!'

·-b!/HIA,IIIo.

' . 23

lna*d Olllowlng with II .

,
,.

...,

,. .

�·.
~~ 14--The Dally sentinel

Shuttle astronauts experiment on plants, cells.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Certainly a big welcome from
the local business community to
Donna and John Tillis who are
opening the Office Service and
Supply at 112 W. Main in
Pomciroy.
The new business operator's
will kick off their endeavor with an
open house this Sunday from I to 5 .
p.m. and will observe the grand
opening from Monday, Jan .. 27,
through Saturday, Feb. I.
The Tillis' welcome any comments, suggestions or opinions you
may have on their new business.
Their goal is to "bring business
back to Mei$S County at the lowest
possible pncing we can provide
with fast, friendly and reliable service". Good attibldel
The administration, volunteers
and employees or Veterans Memorial Hospital send along a big
thanks to the Reedsville Fellowship
Nazarene Church Bible School.
The Bible School recently sent a
batch or extremely nice toys to be
used for children who might unfor·
tunatcly be hospitalized. It was a
nice gesblre appreciated by many.
Earlier, the Meigs County Granges
abo presented a number of toys for
the same purpose. It's nice to
know thai there are such lhoughtful
organizations in our county.

If the chance to audition for
beins a performer in the shows at
Cedar Point that I mentioned
recently didn't tum you on, perhaps, a change in location will.
Kings Island which also
em~loys a number of entertainers
dunng the summer monlhs is also
stasing auditions for young, talented people. The closest auditions

Thursday, January 23, 1992-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By SUSAN IDGHTOWER
Associated Press Writer
SP'ACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - Two Discovery astronauts
took turns today riding a sled while
blindfolded and wearing earplugs
will be"at Hughes Hall, Room 013, to sbldy the disorienting effeciS of
Ohio State University on Friday,
.
b'
Feb. 7. And again if you are sin- space.
The shuttle blasted mto or 11
cerely interested, I do have more Wednesday morning on a sevendetails, so give me a caU.
day trip -- the first shuttle mission
or 1992.
Next Wednesday probably will
The sled, which slides along a
be a time for considerable emotion 40-inch track on !he floor of Spacefor Joan Tewksbary, RN, and Carol lab, stimulates the balance system ,
Bachtel Tannehill,~in the inner ear. The blindfolds and
As you pr()bably remember, earplugs eliminate sound and visual
Joan will be honored with an open cues.
house in the conference room of
In one test, each astronaut was
the multipurpose building on Mul- strapped to the sled on his back
berry HeighiS in Pomeroy from 3 to with his legs in the air. In the other,
5 p.m. The event will note her each sat upright. The two tests
retirement as Meigs County's combined lasted 15 minutes for
Tuberculosis Nurse.
each astronaut.
Now about that emotion.
While riding the sled, astronauiS
Joan and Carol, you might say, David Hilmers and Ulf Merbold
have worked together for some 30 ·also were given electrical shocks
years-for years they were both on behind their knees to record the
the staff of Dr. J. J. Davis in Mid- calf
muscles'
responses.
dleport Then they both went to !he Researchers want to see how the
multipurpose building where Joan nervous system adapts to weight·
became the tuberculosis nurse and lessness.
Carol began work as a nurse with
Also today, Hilmers spun in a
the Meigs County Health Depart- rotating chair while wearing a helment In the same building, on the met that measures eye movemeniS.
same floor, they naturally main- The experiment was intended to
tained their close relationship.
help sctentisiS learn how to overThat will be ending, so to speak, come space motion sickness.
with Joan's retirement.
By the way, you all are invited
to Wednesday's open house staged
by tuberculosis office employees
and the tuben:ulosis board.

Discovery's seven crew mem·
bers are working around-the-clock
in 12-hour shifiS inside Spacelab, •
pressurized lab in the shuttle's
cargo hay.
After settling into a 187-milehigh orbit Wednesday, the .astro· ·
nauts worked furiously to get severa! experiments going. They reach
Spacelab by floating throu$h a tun·
nel connecting it to the cabm.
Discovery's scientists are
''upbeat and looking forward to
seven days of.science," said Harry
Craft, NASA payload project man-

ager.
.
.
gravity on the direction of plant
The crew of six men and one growth.
.
woman will conduct experiments
Me.anwhile, Hilmers began ali
on billions of organisms - includ· expenment that uses fetal mouse
in~ fruit flies, frog eggs and sperm, leg cells ·to study how cartilage
slune mold, human blood cells, develops in weighqessness. The
lentil rooiS and bacteria- to mea· resu!IS could help show how brosure the effects of weightlessness ken bones heal in space,
·
:
and space radiation on growth and
Todar. some fruit flies escaped
procreation.
.
from therr cage but got trapped m a
Late Wednesday, Merbold, a glov~box and were removed wilh a
Germim physicis~ planted some of suctton system. Mission Control
the 360 oat seeds which, along •vith saJd the fhes would have been no
120 wheat seeds, will germinate in more than a nuisance if they had
space to test the effects of zero golten loose.

MPIRE FURNITUR

I don't believe this. On a recent
bill I received in the mail there are
reference numbers involved. Just
one of the numbers is
74610441364004416000201--and
that is a $10.45 purchase. How did
life get THIS complicated? Do
keep smiling.

White among Who's Who
Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White, Coolville, has been
chosen far inclusion in the 1992
edition of Who's Who Among StudeniS in American Junior Colleges
at Ohio Valley College.
A business major, White plans
: to graduate in 1992. He is president
: of the Kappa Social Club and is a
member of the A Cappella Singers.
. Selection was based on academ. ic acbievcment, service to the com-mlmity, leadership in extracurricu. lar activities, and potential for con-

tinued success. Students are selected from more than I ,400 institutions of higher learning in all 50
states, the District of Columbia,
and several foreign countries.
Ohio Valley College is a two·
year institution offering associate
degrees in liberal arts, secretarial
science, and science as well as the
bachelor of ariS and the bachelor of
science in bible. The college if
fully accredited by North Central
Association of Colleges and
Schools.

DALE TRIBBLE

On dean's list

Dale Tribble, Parkersburg.
W.Va., was named to the Dean's
List at West Virginia University for
the winter semester.
He was also honored on the
dean's list while auending the University of Rio Grande for two years
after graduation from Southern
High School.
He is presently a lead designer
The Crusade for Christ will be Tuesday; Rev . Bob Grubb and
held Monday through Feb. I at 7 church _singers and Wednesday; for John Brown, Inc.
p.m. nightly at the Church of God Rev. Miles Trout and the Victory
of Prophecy, 22nd Street, Point Singers on Jan. 30; Rev. Bill Banks
Pleasant, W.Va., Rev. Rick Towe and the Narrow Way Singers on
is pas10r at the church.
Jan. 31 and Rev. Bob Wiseman and
The Harrisonville Senior CitiThere will be special speakers the Shamah Singers on Feb. 1.
zens
will meet Feb. 25 at noon,
and singers including Rev . Paul
Rev. Clyde Henderson, presi- weather permitting, at the town
Chapman and the New Life Singers dent of the crusade, invites !he pub- house. This is a regular monthly
on Monday; Rev. Clyde Henderson lic.
meeting.
and the Solid Rock Singers on

·Crusade for Christ scheduled

Seniors to meet

OPEN FRIDA'f. 8:00A.M. DLL8:00 P.M.
SATURDAY: 8:00 A.M.
.
- 'TIL 5:00 P.M. .

FREE DELIVERY
FREE FINANCING FOR YOUR BUDGET
WITH APPROVED CREDIT

$300 MINIMUM

People in the news
NEW YORK (AP) -- Old rockabilly mixed with new country and
rock ' n' roll when the legendary
carl Perkins was intrOduced at the
Hard Rock Cafe by Clint Black and
the two performed onstage.
Perkins was honored Tuesday at
the 8th annual Hard Rock Cafe
Industry Party.
Perkins. 59, who had throat cancer surgery last spring, sang his
most famous tune, "Blue Suede
Shoes." He is best known for his
1956 version of the song. Elvis
Presley recorded it later.
Perkins also perfomed a cut
from his latest album, " Friends,
Family and Legends. •'
"Honey, my nerves are going
this way and thataway," said
Patins, schmoozing upstairs in the
VIP lounge with Black and his
acuess wife, Lisa Hartman, before
they performed. "That an old rockabilly lilce me could be honored
like this - 1never dreamed it."
"Carl was knocking me out
wilh his stuff before anyone else,''
said Black, 30. "I told him, I'll
intrOduce you to New York anytime you wanL I'm thrilled to be
able to do Ibis.' '
Pettills ~ted a guirar.to the
Hard Rock s collection.

-- Kitty Dukakis, a recovering
alcoholic, is counseling others with
alcoholism.
While husband Michael teaches
at Florida Atlantic University this
winter, Mrs. Dukakis is interning
three days a week at Wayside
House, a 24-bed non-profit center
for women addicted to drugs or
alcohol.
"I think I could have gotten
sober at Wayside," Mrs. Dukakis
said Tuesday.
She doesn't think most people
can kick bad habits on their own.

SUPER .
RECLINER SALE
~·7"~-· ~~· ·· ·

. . ...... ,

· - ~· '""

' ' . ··'· :~

.

'•

\'

~-.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Country singer Emmylou Harris
will be mducted Saturday night as a
member of the Grand Ole Opry.
"She has a deep appreciation
for the Grand Ole Opry and its
members - past and present and her music has always reflected
those traditions." said Hal
DIU'ham, Opry general manager.
Harris won Orammy awards for
such hits as "Blue Kentucky Girl"
and " That Lovin' You Feelin'
Again," with Roy Orbison.
She was the Country Music
Association's Female Vocalist of
the Year in 1980. Her albums
include "Trio," recorded with
Dolly Parton and Linda RonstadL

DELRAY BEACll, Fla. (A!')

R11.S24t.io RECUNERS-..

. 1TS TIME FOR DOMINO'S PI1ZA"

r---- -,---.,
~~~
1o1..c
I ~;~
I

·
I ~~

'8.99

I

II ,::!~Wzu II
I

•

'

111.$329.00 RECLINERS."""'"""'~6f
. sut.oo REaJNERS-...... .}299

I

I

.

OneLaqe I
Deluxe pizza 1·
plus4colu 1

I
I
I

I
I

I'
I

}309'
.... $469.00 IECLINERS......:., ... ...S379'
.a.,. $419.00 RKUNERS..- -5399'

:a.,.$379.80 RECUNERS.........

Sf0.99I
I

..••5199 ·

•'

992·
2124'
..,

·lllldtlil" 'Mills l-t. ll1 II • wl1buhtM,.:.t'r
...._.ellf ., •aa't alan .-a•,.

't

~. ibhtul

t

'

.

'S
DOWIITOWI POMEIOY

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="319">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9613">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33088">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33087">
              <text>January 23, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="403">
      <name>kearns</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
