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'

:P.ge..-12~The Dally stml_nel

Wednesday, February 5, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TAMPICO

CITRUS
PUNCH

$ 29

Monday thru Sunday'
8AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. .

Pick 3: 834

Pick 4: 0414
Cards:
10-H; 3-C; 2-D;
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Super Lotto:

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Top-ranked
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by Tar Heels

14-21-24-35-36-47

Kicker:S07620

••

CARNATON

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

HOT COCOA
MIX

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 2THRU FEB. 8, 1992

10 ENVELOPE PAK

(

$
119
Steaks /Roasts..... ,s.
PORK BUn

FRESH

BAKERY
DOZEN

La.

Vol. 42, No. 192
Copyrighted 1892

a year when fully implemented and
promote "universal access .to
health insurance for aU ·of our citizens." More !han 90 million AIDericans would be helped, he said.
It would still be up to individuals to get their own insuranr e, SuiIivan said. "Certainly this is volun·
tary and this is in the American
spirit," he said.
· But Sen. John D. Rockefeller,
D·W.Va., said, "It just doesn't do
the job" 10 provide universal cov·
erage and hold down spiraling
costs.
"What the president appears to
be suggestio$ is to have seniors
through Medtcaid ·paying for the
uninsured, which is an incredible

irony .... " said Rockefeller. "It's
robbing poor Peter to pay poor
Paul. •·•
Both Sullivan and Rockefeller
appeared on ABC's "Good Morning America."
Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore.,
said the Bush proposals were good,
but won't solve !he.cost questions.
"This program i~ ~oing to ~epend
heavily upon indtvtduals usmg !he
credits. Many of !hem won't, and
they won't be covered," said Pack·
wood, who predicted the health
battle won't really be joined in
Con~ress until after this year's
elecuons.
Bush was traveling to Cleveland
to announce his health care initia·

Beef Chuck coMBo PAcK.Ls.
USDA CHOICE BONEI!SS BEEF BOTTOM $2 49
Round Steak...........
FLAVORITE
$189
Boneless Ham .........
OSCAR MAYER
$119
1eners................ oz.

Turkey~······

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

.18.6

2LITER

LB.

LB.

SPAGHETTI
16 oz.

s

16

PROCLAMATION SIGNED· The Meigs
County Commissioners have declared February
as Children's Dental Health Month. Pictured as
lhe proclamation Is signed, fronl 1-r, are Com·

RUFFLES

SJ39

s. ~0. 1 WHITE

.Potatoes...........1o Las.

1
$3 99
Velveeta..........
$299 TONY'S
·3
Pizza .. ~ ............... · ·
99(
99( TV Dinners... ~ ..~10·12'0Z. ~·
2YO Mdk...........

GALLON

.KRAFT CHEESE ·

e.2LB. LOAF '

SUNSHINE

.

Dog Food...........
MONTE

20ib.bag

,

. , STARKIST TUNA..
6·.5
o~.

2jS1

MAsnl ILEND COFFEE
34.5

oz.

$299·

POTATO
CHIPS

COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP)- A
bill in the Republican-controlled
Senate·!hat woulll draw new lines
for Ohio's congressional districts
faces ail uncertain future in the
House where majority Democrats
have a biD or !hei)- own.
The Republican proposal was
expected to pass the Senate today.
Legislauve leaders, hoping to
·
·

Reg. $1.99 Size

s ' 29

LITTLE DEBBIE

SNACK

CONNIE KARSCHNIK, RN

CAKES

Karschnik to·head
Meigs TB office
I

(

Connie Karschnik, R. N. has
been named executive director of

the Meig·s County Tuberculosis
Office located on !he second floor
of !he Meigs Multipurpose Build·
ing on Mulberry Heights.
She rt~places Joan Tewksbary,
R. N. who retired in late January
afternearly ·l3r.earsinthatposiiion. Karschntk said that she
expects no change ih !he general
operatioDS.oftheoffiCe- .
~Karschnlk received her nursing
degrees Cram the Hocking Tecb!li·
cal Collese and has had a wide
variety of nuning experience: slic
has ~ at Vete18Ds Memorial
Hospil81, Holzer, and St. Joseph'
Hospital, at Americare Nursina
FacUlty, and lpel!t over two years
It ihe Meigs · County Health
Depanment.
. '
SM.reJ!del with her husbilnd,
John P. ~. and 1 14 year
old 101 1 loteph Kevin, oa Flai·
wOodl RoW,l'umoroy. Another.
SOD,1011 JC,eltlt, 11 In tile Navy S!l·
tioned in Soulh Clrolbla. '

.

BANQUET
•

·.

,

,

r

TOILET nSSUE

MORTON

.FRIED ~~
·cHICKEN

CHARMIN
4ROtl.

PKG •. ·

99(.
.,\

missioners David Koblentz and Manning Roush.
Back, 1-r, are Amy Oblinger, RDH; Bridget
Rllchle and Belb Cremeans, all starr members or
Dr. Larry D. Kennedy, DDS; and Dr. Kennedy.

Senate to vote on
GOP redistricting bill

5 79

BR~UGHTON •

BY KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Village Council
Wednesday evening agreed unanimously to support the proposed
prison for Mei~s County.
Meeting Wtth council at their
regular session was Perry Smith, a
resident of !he village, in regard to
the selling of the village dump
truck and !he purchasing of a new
police cruiser.
Smith expressed extreme inter·
est in .the village and he made several suggestions on how the truck
could be utilized. He also stated
coopenition is the key word to
m:ike-tllm~'51JOr~ ·within the
lage, refemng 10 residents.
·
Council explained that the vii·
lage is handicaPPed by the factlhat
!here are not (uil-time employees.
This also poses a problem for council insofar as a IIUClc driver is concerned.
Smith offered his services in
any way that would be beneficial to
!he village.
Council will consider keeping
!he uuck as no bids were received
for the purchase of it, it was decid·
ed.
Mayor James Pape reported that
the new mower needs a new belt
and the older mower needs repair.
Council will investigate tl)e most
beneficial alternalives.
Arrangements were made to
have Council chambers cleaned
and a light repaired ori the outside
of the building. II was also reported
!hat the new shelter house has been
completed.
It was decided that Council will
enforce !he ordinance stating dogs
must be conrmed to owners proper·
ty, and !hat failure ti&gt; comply with
this ordinance will result tn being
summoned 10 court and rmed.
The Mayor's repon was accept·
ed in the amount of $1 ,741.50.
The police chief's report

vil-

MUELLER'S

.

tive in a speech to the Greater
Cleveland Growth Association. He
was then flying on to Las Vegas,
Nev., and vote-rich California,
where he will promote his health
care package in San Diego.
The president wants 10 pay for
the package pan! y by paring back
expected growth in Medicaid
health care subsidies for the poor
and Medicare programs for the
elderly and handicapped.
"My plan ensures that people
can fmd health care, choose health
care, afford health care and keep
health care," Bush said in a speech
Wednesday to the Small Business
Legislative Council.
.
Democrats and some health·

induslry officials claim Bush's pro·
posed tax credits vouchers will not
provide the now uninsured with
enough money to meet the cost of
health insurance premiums.
And the proposed limits on
Medicaid and Medicare spending
growth "could be devastating,"
said Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D·Tcxas,
chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee.
Ron Pollack, executive director
of Families USA, a private advocacy group for the poor, said Bush's
plan would cause doctors and hospitals to shun Medicare and Medicaid patients and cause some
increased costs to be shifted to
other patients.

Several Democratic proposals
would impose limits on all medical
costs and guarantee coverage
through so-called "pay or play"
systems requiring employers to
etther provide health insurance or
pay into a general system where
their employees could receive cov·
erage.
Among other things, Bush's
plat! would:
- Provide vouchers or tax credits worth up to $1,250 a year for
individuals, $2,500 for couples and
up 10 $3,750 for families of three or
more for the purchase of health
care.
- Allow health care tax deducContinued oo page 3

Syracuse Village Council supports
proposed prison in Meigs County

o11.

$169

A llultlmedlo Inc. Newopopor

Bush offers all Americans 'best health care'

• · .

FLAVORITE

2 Sectlon1,121'11gea 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 6, 1992

WASHINGTON (AP) - President BYsh pledged today to give all
- Americans access 10 "the world's
best health care." He wants to help
the uninsured buy health coverage
by limiting spending growth on
Medicaid and Medicare patients.
Bush today was formally unveil·
ing his election-year health care
package in Cleveland. It would
provide $100 billion in vouchers
and laX breaks to the poor and mid·
die class over five years to buy
medical insurance, according to
adminis!J'ation and congressional
sources.
.
Health and Human Services
Secretary Louis W. Sullivan. said
today the plan will cost $35 btllion

( DONUTS
Leg Quarters........ 49
s
79
WHOL~
59(
Fry1ng Ch1ckens ...

iCHICKEN

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Low tonight near 30. Friday
cloudy. High near 40. . ·

.. ''

Deputies
probe one-car
accident
A one-car accident on State
Route 124 at Miltersville resulting
in minor injuries to the driver and
moderate damage to his vehicle
was investigated by deputies of
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby Wednesday about 10 p.m.
According to !he repon, Charles
E.. Fink, 21 , Middleport, was trav·
cling east on 124 at Per Monkey

andlost~trolofhtsi982I;latsun.

avoid ~partisan confrontation,
agreed that cac~ chat~ber w~~ld
. pass tiS own v~ton ana thata)Oint
conference' committee would 1ry to
resolve differences.
House Democrats on Wednes·
!lay announced their plan to reduce
the dtstncts from 21 to 19. It
appeared 10 threaten the re-electio_n
prospects of two or more Repubh·
can mcumbents.
The Senate plan, recommended
for passage Wednesday by the ref·
erence and oversight commiuee,
could jeopardize lhe political future
of some Democratic members of
Congress.
· ·
Rep. Judy Sheerer, D-Shaker
Hei~hts, sponsor of the House bill,
indtcated a comprQmise will be
sought. " It likely is not wl!at we
will wind up with,'' she said.
Republicans said the same of
their proposal when it was in!J'O·
duced.
Ohio is losing two U.S. House
seats next year because of national
population shifts noted in the 1990
Census.

The ~cle ~entofftherl_ladway
on the nght. S!IUCk an electric com' pany pole JWdc WlfC, causing ,!be •'

of

=

'••

Crisp sentenced
Jack W. Crisp was sentenced Thursday Ia 18 months ln. prison,
and will be required lo serve thai lime unless he can produce $50,000
in bail. He was also rmed $5,000.
Crisp entered a plea of no contest In November to five misde·
meanor counts of receiving Chrislmas bonuses lolaling $5,000 while
serving on tbe Leading Creek Conservancy District Board of Directors. He appeared before Judge Roger Jones in Meigs County County
Common Pleas Court. Jones was assigned to tbe Crisp case because
Judge Fred W. Crow lll was the prosecuting allorney wben I he
investigation of Crisp's activities at LCCD began.
A January sentendng,hear!ng was postponed after Crisp was
1ransported to Holier Me'dl9!l Center for trealmfpt or chest pains.
·.. Jim'es,. ~p'i!Ptl9n orajad"sentelice JW!P,· ~~~e,In spile or lbe plea
bargain agreement reached between Speclil Pi'Hsecutor K. Robert
Toy and Defense Counsel Wi!Jiam G. McLI!Il~ a•d;Wllliam N. Ea~hf!.S
In November. Thai plea bargain agreement, among other thing's,
called for no jail time and an unsupervised probationary period of
one year.
Judge Jones refused to allow a statement from lhe current Leading
Creek board to be read on lhe courl record by Athens Allorney
Thomas Hodson. The contents of lhal statement are nol known, and
Hodson was unwiUing to release tbe information contained within the •
stalemenl unless il coold be read on lhe record.
•
Crisp stated al Thursday's hearing thai he had since made reslllu·
lion ror the bonuses, which were received between 1984 and 1988.
showed that he investigated one · and Dennis Wolfe; recreation and
breaking and entering with theft scheduling, Dennis Wolfe, chair·
and the subject were apprehended; man Jim Hill, Kenny Buckley and
one vehicle theft and two anemp!ed Bill' Roush; news media, Katie .
!hefts and vandalism of one vehi· Crow; London Pool, Bill Roush,·
cle an'd keys stolen from a vehicle. Kenny Buddey, Dennis Wo~e .and
All subjects were apprehended. Jim Katie Crow; health and santlauon,
Connolly issued 29 traffic tickets Jim Hill, Katie Crow and Jack
and !Ootherviolations.
Williams; building inspection ,
The mayor named !he commit· Kenny Buckley, DeMis Wolfe and
tees for the year: street committee, Jim Hill.
8ill Roush, chairman, Kenny
The clerk treasurer monthly
Buckley and Jim Hill; fin~e. Jack repon submined by Janice Lawson
Williams, chairm~n. Kaue Cro~ sbowed balances in all funds as foland Jim Hi!l; ordmance, Dennts . IQws: general, $5,083.72; street
Wolfe, chairman , lack Wtlltams- construction, $13,014.57; highway,
and Katie Crow; safety, emergency $3 142.96; fire, $3,917.64; water,
and fire, Kenny Btickley, chatr· ss',040.47; guaranty meter,'
man, Jim Hill and Dennts Wolfe; $2,420.28; cemetery, $79.42. Tolal
planning and· development, Katte for all funds is $35,699.06.
·
Crow, chairman, Kenny Buckley

Parks di~trict ritay seek
one-mill levy in May
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Parks Distfict may place a one-mill tax levy
on the Mar ballot, according to
. District Duector Mary Powell.
Pdwelldiscu!sedthatproposal with
!he Meigs County Commissioners
when !hey met in regular session
on Wednesday morning.
According to Powell, the district
has severallong·term goals for the

county's Parte system, but fund lim·
itations prohibit action on those
goals. A one-mill levy, if passed,
would create a budget of $223,697
for parks projects each year.
Among !he projects .being proposed by ·the district' s board or
directors are countyWide riverfront
· development in each of lhe county's riverfront viljages, development of recreational facilities, and
implementation of athletic pro-

·,

grams such as tennis p~ogram s ;
alonl with the "punt, pass and
kick program that was held las(
summer.
Powell also stated that if such a
levy is placed on the ballot and
passes, a countr "grant program~
could be admintsteied throUgh ·!he
parks district wh.ich would 'llak~
funds available 10 villages for use
in their parks and recreational facil:
Continued on page 3

S8fi10f
" d sen
. t ence.d Ofl Novem. ber ·rape ch·af ges ·

Thomas E. Sanford
New
wire to wrap arou~d the pow~r York was sentence6 on race
line&amp; 'l1l;at resulted m ~ short ctr· charges on Wednesday morning Y
cuit whtc~ temporanly cu~ off Meigs County Common Pleas
pow~r upmer ·from .the acctdent Coun Judie Fred w. Crow m.
site. ·
Sanforil, who plecl guilty til the
The Sy~ilse Fire Department rape of two teenaged alrls in
and Syracuse Emergency S'j:lad Pomeroy late last year, was sen·
were called to IJie.scene and mk · tenced to a: term of not lea dian 10
waiiWDOrled to Vetcrant Memo- · nor mcxe than 25 years in· pri8on on
rial ~1~ whenl be was treated each of two char&amp;cs of rape, each
arid Te!eaMd ·, . • '
"'--·being an qgravlled felony of,' ~
Pink Wll Cited to ~ , ..uunty fi111 de
Couf.~ cJ.pa of~~wu charpd In connec:lllll1111 velllcle apt! far--·~a lion with lncldenll wlllcb ocewti::d
, !ftOIOr vehicle whUe under t e . in November, 1991 , Jud.P Crow

mOuenc:e.

' '

·

·

ordered that · the sentonees be ·,vi~lent erilnC:S ·and .this is ~ly
served consecutively, or one after a violent ctuilc • have a riaht by
the 0\hCf. 10 make a totallll8fCiale statute to be present and to Slate to
sentence of 20 10 SO ~· accord·. the coun w!lal they believe the sen·
ing to the coun's Criminal Bailiff tcnce should be," Gerard said. ''The
Paul Gerard.
.
law is a guarantee that the victim is
· The sentencing hcarina was hOt !ell out the JIR!CCSI·"
ori&amp;inally. SC! for ~Y, ~ ~
"In this Jlllfi!Cular ~· ~ court
defayed unul the ffi!utred vtcUm received a wntten v.lctim tmpact
impact statel)lent'was completed. statement fro·m the prosecuting
Sailford was ~ted by Meigs attorney's offiCe, and an oral ~tate·
COUIIl)' Public Defelldci Charlea H. ment was made by ·a family mem,
Knlpt. while .•mi!Ft l'IQiecu1018 bet (plreats) of the victim's, 11 the ·
Linda R. Warner and Georac · sontenelnghearing,"Gellrdsald.
McCinhy iepm ented tho 11110.
Accordlnft to Gerard,. the oral
''Persons who are victims pf statement w I be transcnbed and
'

'

forwarded, along·with a colly of the .;
written statement, to the state .
prison system to become a part of :
Sanford's records, and to be a part '
of ~Y future consideration by the .
~le board.

.

:

Sanford was on parole from i ·
court in New Yollt at the lime of ·
the most recent offenses, and will •
be returned to New Yorlt on a ·
J!lltOIO viQtation, Once he hal com· :
plctcd his sentence thn, he will be : ,
~wmocl to Obio 10 begin his lell· ·
teneina on the Meiss County ·
charles,

�·~ commentary
The Daily _Sentinel
111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE JIIITERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

81"'U.TKOIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily PreS. Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subjecc to editing and must be signed with name,
address and 1&lt;lephone number. No unsigned leti&lt;IS will be published. Letters
should be in good tasl&lt;, addressing issues, not personalities.

..
.

'

::Letters to the editor
Meigs County assets
: ·Dear Editor,
. · We hear so many negative
· :;emarks and comments about
; Meigs County ; unemployment,
· -welfare, roads to nowhere , no
: industry; you name it; and Meigs
. ·County has been the buu of iL But,
· :how many people see the good
:ll!ings about our county and come
: ·ferth and give them the credit they
• deserve?
:
Before you get tired of reading
: this and go on to the funnies; I
- would like to mention some of
· Meigs County's assets, two of
: which being our Emergency Medi·
• cl!l Service and Veterans Memorial
: Hospilal.
• - On January 10, I fell in my
: home and broke my hip. The
: Racine Emergency Squad was
· called, and they arrived in minutes.
: J·was tenderly carried from my
: upstairs, and taken to Veterans
· ~ emergency room; where there was
: no waiting. (I have heard some
· . people say they waited two hours
to gel a splinter removed from thetr

?). ·I was taken care of immediately
by an emergency room doctor, reg·
istered nurse, and others. (X-ray
and lab techs.)
1 was soon made comfonable;
yes, even wilh a broken hip; they
can make you comfortable; and I
don't mean just with medication ,
but with their "care". I had a ptn
put' in my hip on Sunday morning.
It wasn't quite as nice as going to
church; but I was among friends, so
that helped.
I spent six more days in the
hospital and everyone was so kmd
and helpful. I would like to thank
everyone individually, but that
would be impossible. The cards,
flowers, phone calls, visits, all the
chun:hes for thetr prayers; and last
but not least, my own family, for
their support and T.L.C. I feel as tf
I am the luckiest and richest person
on earth, to have them, and you,
my Meigs County friends.
Sincerely,
Ann L. Boso,
Portland, Ohio

Tlluraday, Februa~ 6, 1992
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
'.

....

....
..
•. •

Against prison

.::Dear
- Editor.
••

Soulsby and his deputies. We as
• • 1 was beginning to think I was residents who oppose a pnson
· t he only person liv!ng in Meigs being loca~ here .c~ri do some·
• ~ounty who was agamstlocaung a thmg about 1_1 by vmcmg our op1~·
: penitentiary here, until I read Mr. · 1on. If we s1t 1dly by and let th1s
; Rowe's recent letter to the editor.
happen who,can ~e bl~ but our·
• · · 1 am for industry being located selves? Doli t wrut unul1t s 100 late
: here but would like to be able to to say NO. Write your letters of
: ~y ~ur county is lcnown for some- protest now!
Maxine D. SeUers
:Wing besides a penilCJitiary and~
.:Well-known "Meigs County

.,.,_.

: :':"~ng is being done 10 dis·
::COurage growing and selli~ "l_be
;*een stuff" by our sheri!!_1Jm

...
.·.•.
•.

Sets record
straight

: ~Edilor.

••• On Tucsda!. January 28, I was
:~stiQPed b{ Channel 13 about
: JIIY feelinp on the possibililies of
:'* iP Couuty JCIIIIIB .• prison. I
·:inr ISktd _.. questtCJIS.
:·.· Tile iauo wu who was for llld
"1tbo was against the prison. Tbe
'!iaedia used a small segment of
:,mat lllid to lll8kc it ~ I was
• . ;...... . ~ This IS not true
:JiliJ, I liD Cor ' die prison,, I wu
:fi!tel'if I IIIII •Y COIICCIIil far I
. . . . . . . . . illll)' blct yrd', Ill
:lit lltJIIicit I would have~
· ;c6ia:GD fer m1 mpthcr, ~ ,
•illlle IAIIrt 1110 wu choleR . ; :;.;
· IIMJiher IIIII flillcr live abcll1t 1
•
tltllllbO ...
l:. 'llleiiiOdil UIOd this JIIIIIIJOto
:pielli of wba( I uid to mate 11
the piiOIIIIId'
•lilllllnl could .be farther from the

:_. J-.,...

;pua.
. . . ..

.•.,,..
...•.
••
•••

Violet fi!Mtlt
.l'llmeloy. Olllo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OH 10 Weath er

Thursday, February 6, 1992

Friday, Feb. 7

· so Havel had plenty to thank
Zappa for. He was so grateful, in
fact, that he impetuously created
the special ambassadorship for
Zappa. The musician left town with
Havel's praise in his ears and the
adulation .of hundreds of fans who
treated him as a Czech national
hero. He was even 'talking about
applying for citizenship.
Two weeks later, Baker came to
town carrying an old grudge. It
dated from 1985, when Susan
Baker and other well-connected
Washington wives, including Tip·
per Gore, wife or Sen. Alben Gore,
D-Tenn., -formed Parents Music
Resource Center. The group's
objective was a music ratings sys·
tern similar to the movie ratin~s.
based on sex, obscenity and vto·
lence.
·
Zappa, the purveyor of aU three
in his lyrics, came to Washington
for a showdown before the Senate
Commerce Committee. He was
unrelenting in his criticism of the
ratings idea. He ridiculed Susan
Baker and the others, calling them
"a group of bored Washington
housewives," and said they wanted
to "housebreak all composers and
performers because of the lyrics of
a few."
Za~pa even mimicked Susan
Baker s Southern accent. This was
too much for Sen; Slade Gorton, R·
Wash., who snapped at Zappa dur·
ing the hearing. calling him "boor·
ish, incredibly and insensibly
insulting.' '
James Baker remembered the
insult When he arrived in Prllgue,
on the heels of Zappa's appoint·
ment as trade representative, Baker
had his surrogates convey his dis·
pleasure to Havel. It was delicately
phrased as "advice," suggesting

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------Weather--.,.---South-Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming cloudy with
a slight chance of drizzle or Our·
ries. Low near 30. Chance of pre·
cipitation 30 percent. Friday, con·
siderable cloudiness with a slight
chance of flurries . High near 40.

'

Chance of snow 30 pen:ent.
Extended rorecast:
Saturday through Monday:
Chance of snow Saturday and
Monday. Fair on Sunday. Highs in
the 20s. Lows in mid·leens to mid·
20s Saturday and 10·20 Sunday
and Monday.
-

Bank reports increased
earningsJ8th straight year
Raben E. Evans, president and at year end ·1990."
Evans a)so reported other events
chief executive officer, reported
that Peoples Bancorp Inc., Mariet· that have occurred since year end
ta, completed 18 consecutive years 1991. Effective after the close of
business at rear end I 991, The
orincreased earnings in I99 I.
New income of $3,615,000 was Peoples Banking and Trust Compa·
4.5 percent above the 1990 total. ny, an affiliate of Peoples Bancorp
Primary earnings per share was Inc., purchased a banking office in
$3.29 in 1991 , compared to $3.12 Middlepon.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. now oper·
per share in I990. Assuming full
dilution, earnings per share ated 17 banking offices in five
increased 5.5 percent to $2.86, counties in Southeastern Ohio.
compared to $2.71 in 1990. The Also on Feb. I, The Peoples Bank·
average number of shares outstand· ing and Trust Company acquired
ing was slightly reduced in 1991 all the deposi!S and selected loans
through the ~hase of shares for from Libeny Savings Bank, located
in Marietta. Liberty Savings Bank
the Corporauon's treasury.
Peoples Bancorp continued its was placed into receivership with
record of annual dividend growth, the Resolution Trust Corporation in
paying out $1,057,000 to stock· May, 1991. In addition to Lhe pur·
holders, 6 percent more than in chase of assets and assumption of
deposit liabilities, The Peoples
1990.
The ~orporation reported steady Banking and Trust Company will
gtowth· with loans increasing, 6.3 receive a short-term option to pur·
percent, deposits up 4 percent, chase the Liberty Savings Bank
stoCkholders equity up 9.6 percent real estate.
Following these recent addi·
and tolal assets increasing 2.8 per·
cent for the year ended Dec. 31, tions the total assets of Peoples
Banc~rp Inc. now exceed $450 mil·
1991.
Evans stated, "Despite negative lion.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a South·
reports about the United States
economy, Ohio banks continue to eastern Ohio bank holding compa·
be among the best capitalized with ny with headquarters in Marietta.
strong earnings records ·in recent Banking subsidiaries are The Peo·
years. People 1)ancorp Inc. has pies Banking and Trust Company
remained pan of that growth with . with offices in Marietta, Athens,
primary capilal now standing at 8.6 Belpre, Lowell, Middleport, Nel·
percent of total assets. Book value sonville, and The Plains, and The
per share of outstanding common First Nation!~~ Bank of Southeast·
stock increased to $29.23 ·at Dec. em Ohio with offices in Caldwell,
31, 1991, up from $27.06 per share Chesterhill, and McConnelsville.

--Area deaths-Carl G. Sauvage
Carl Gene Sauvage, 42 , of
Mason, W.Va., died Tuesday, Feb.
4,1992 at SL Marys Hospital, Hunt·
ington, W.Va.
He was born Feb. 14, 1949, in
Mason, W.Va., son of the late Carl
G. Sauvage and Helen R: Sauvage
of Syracuse.
He was a supervisor for the
town of Mason.
Survivors include his wife,
Teresa "Susie" Sauvage; one son
and daughter-in-law, Carl Gregory
and Cathy Sauvage of Pomeroy; a
son James M. Sauvage of San
Diego, Calif.; twin children,
Andrew S. and Andrea Sauvage, at
home; one step-daughter, Leanna J.
Gibbs of Mason; father and moth·
er-in·law, Ray and Billie Jean
Dawson of Mason; and one grand·
daughter.
.
- Graveside services will be held
I p.m. Saturday at Sunrise Memory
Garden, with the Rev. George

Stocks

Bush ...

P

will

Co"ection

8:00

Hospital news

Hoschar officiating.
Friends may call at the
Veterans Memorial
Foglesong Funeral Home on Friday
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
from 6-9 p.tn.
In lieu of nowers, the family · Judith Wolfe, Pomeroy, and
requests that contributions be made Burena Grucser, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
to the Mason County Chapter of
•
None.
the American Heart Association.
HOLZEI,l MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Feb. 5 • Doris Cole·
man, George Holley, KayIa Jewett,
April Moore, Jacob Parsons,
Wilma Scarberry, and Donald
Foredosure awardecl
A foreclosure has been granted Willis.
in Meigs County Common Plros
Births, Feb. 5 • Mr. and Mrs.
Coun to Famlers Bank and Savings Raymond Kimes, a daughter,
Company against Terry Wyatt, and Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Wolfe,
ottiers, in i the amount of a son, Syracuse.
$25,588.65. • .
Divorces, dissolution nied .
The Daily Sentinel
Divorce· actions have been med
in Meigs County' Common Pleas
(USPS 21S·II80)
Coun by MeliSsa S. Raybw'n, Rut· Publit~hed every ftRcmoon, Monday
land, agains1 Breu L. Rayburn, through Friday, lll Court St., Pomeroy,
by the Ohio VRII(Iy P\lb1ithinl
Point Pleasan~ W.Va.; and by Sue Ohio
Company/Mullime~ia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ann Yates, Middleport, against Ohio 46769, Ph. 9!12·21 66. Sec:ond cl••
p&lt;wt.aae poid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
~
Timothy Dalefyat.es, Westerville.
An action for dissolution of Mambcr: The Atisociatcd ~Ill, lnlRnd
mariage has been med by John E. DRily PrcHM AHaOetation and the Ohio
New11pnpar AaMociation , National
Lyons IV, Racine, against Susan D. Advorli
wing Raprelf'lntadve, Branham
. Lyons, also of Racine.
Nowapapar SAhli, · 733 Third Avonue,

Court news

Now YOrk, Now YOrk t0017.
.

•A/C c'

.

Rutland Court news

•Ciearcoat Paint
•All Power

· RuUand Mayor Edward Martin
fined four and seven others forfeit·
ed bonds at Tuesday's session of-

,LOADED

Mayor's l:oun.'

POSTMASTER: sCnd oddrou change. lo
Th• Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,

Pumcroy, OHio 46769.
'
SUIISCRimON KATES
By Carrier or Motor Routo

Ona Week........................................... tl .60
One MonLh:........................................$6.116
One YCRr....... ,......:.................... -~ .... $8~.20
81NOLECOPY
·
PRICE
D•ily.............................................26 C...to

Forfeiting tionds were: John
Richardson, New Haven, $55, SubJICribcn not dP-Iiring to pa)' th11. cani·
~g; Carol Russell, Pomeroy,
er may mnriL in advance direct Lo Tht'l
$SO, speeding; James Cantrell, Oalllpolil O..ily Trit.une on • 3.8 or 12
month buta. Credit will be given an'ler
McAnhur, SS4, speodi111: Kenneth each
Week.
Searles, RuU111d, $50, speeding; No ~ubaetiptlon• by mntl JX!rmltt.ecl in
Dwaln Edwards, Pomeroy, $59 •. are11 where home aniar aervice Is
apeeclina: 1ohn Blaet!nlr,l'llmeroy, avnilablo.
$53, spiiCdlng; llld Ronald Fenton,
Moll 8oltoGrlptl..,.
' lllllda Ollila Coant)t
Winchosler, $55, speeding.
t3 Wocko........................................ l21 .84
. Fined for speeding violations 26
Wockit ................. ......................_. .. 843.16
wer.c: Tim Frye •. Rutland, ~54; Gll Weolut .........................................$84.78
Oolllo c .. nl)'
Chris Huuon, Rl!llaDd, $51; Timo- 13 WteklOollklo
...... ,.......... l , ......... ,................40
thy Crowe, Pomeroy, $53; Carl 28 Weelul ........ ~ .................... j.,,,~,j.,,.1415.110
Gll Woekl .............:............................wuo
Bobb, Radcliff, $48.
'

111742 1 ~

WI REPAIR ILL MilES
.
I

HOME ENTERTAINMENT .(EtffER
ltl WU1' •••••••

110 Hlab ScreeC

1

,,

'

much of Georgia and Sotith Caro~·
na today, while a storm front over
the Great Lakes region could brillg
snow tb northern Michigan and
Minnesota.
Elsewhere, conditions we•e
mild, although sides were cloudy in
the South and there was heavy fog
early today in the Pacific Nort!l·
west.

EMS units have busy 24 hours·
..

•I Columbus I 39' I

W.VA

•V·6

"

PA.

IMansfield I 39' I•

Showers T·stonns Rain Flum·es

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is ThUJ5day, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 1992. There are 329 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fony years ago, on Feb. 6, 1952, Britain's King George VI died; he
was succeeded to the throne by his daughter, Elizabeth II.
On this date:
In 1756, America's third vice president, Aaron Burr, was born in
Newark, New Jersey .
In I 778, the United States won official recognition from France as the
two nations signed a pair of trroties in Paris.
In 1788. MassachuseUs became the sixth stau: to ratify the U.S. Consti·
tution.
In 1815, the state of New Jersey issued the first American railroad
charter to John Stevens, who proposed a rail link between Trenton and
New Brunswick. (The line, however, was never built.)
In I 895, baseball legend Babe Ruth was born in Baltimore.
In I 899, a peace treaty between the United States and Spain was ratified by the U.S. Senate.
In 1933, the 20th Amendment to the Constirution- the "lame duck"
amendment- was declared in effect

Dear Editor.
On behalf of the committee to
purchase the piano for the Meigs
County Infirmary, I want to say a
big thanks. We still do need some
more donations. If you like to give
on this project, please give by Feb.
9 (Sun). The final choice for the
piano wiU made a few days later. A
dedication date will be announced
later. Send donations to Joan May,
Box 16, Rutland, OH 45775 or give
to Eugene E. Underwood or Jane
Wise.
Thanks,
Eugene E. Underwood.
Minister, Rutland Church of Oltist

The Solution

e

IND.

any better through the weekend, the state by evening, bringing snow to
National Weather Service said.
· the mountains and hrovy rain to the
Drizzle and snow nurries coasL
tonight will tum into flurries and
It should bring rain to Arizona
snow on Friday as arctic air moves by tonight and to New Mexico by
in behind the front. Highs on Fri- Friday.
day could reach the 30s but temper·
It could also produce showers in
atures won't get out of the 20s Sat· Los Angeles. Las Vegas and
urday and Sunday.
Continued from page 1
Phoenix for the ne~t several days.
The reconl high temperature for Rain fell on Las Vegas early today.
lions for middle-income Americans
On the East Coast, a storm was
- those with incomes up to this date at the Columbus weather
statiC~~
was
60
degrees
in
1925.
The
$50,000 for individuals, $65,000
expected to bring heavy rain to
for rouples and $80,000 for fami· record low was II below zero in
1977.
lies of three or more.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:56
- For self-employed persons,
provide tax deductions equal to 100 p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
On Wednesday at 12:13 p.m.,
percent of their monthly ~ealth· 7:34a.m.
Racine squad went to Perry Run
Around tbe nation
care premiums.
Road. James Suttle was taken to
Rain fell on San Francisco early Veterans Memorial Hospital.
-Cap federal payments to
states for the $59 billion Medicaid today, carried by a heavy winter Pomeroy unit was sent to Butternut
program . Increases over this year's storm lumbering into California Avenue and Lincoln Hill at 1:51
amount would be tied to population from the Pacific Ocean. Most of the p.m. for John Howard Day II. He
growth, plus inflation, plus 6 per· rest of the nation enjoyed mild con· was taken to Veterans and later to
cent next year. Funher increases ditions, with clear skies over the Holzer Medical Center. At 4:05
would be capped to inflations plus Midwest
p.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to
5 percent in 1994, plus 4 percent in
The storm hitting California was State Route 681 East for Eula Lan·
1995, plus 3 pen:ent in 1996 and expected to spread across the entire don. She was taken to Holzer.
plus 2 percent in I997.
At 4:07 p.m., Syracuse units
went to State Route 124 fot a
motor vehicle accident. Romaine
QfkS ••• Continued from page 1
Frederick was taken to Veterans.
ities' budgets. Those "grant" must review and a(iprove aU subdi· At 4:29 p.m., Pomeroy unit was
monies could be used to subsidi~ vision proposals In the county called to assist. Shann Minshall
the village's pool and other rccre· before any lots are sold.
was taken to Veterans. James Min·
ational facilities, or to add other · In other business. the commis- shall, Sherry Milford and Milford
facilities.
sioners:
Frederick refused treatment.
The commissioners must autho·
• authorized Carol Baker and
At 5:12 p.m., P&lt;imeroy unit was
rize any levies that are placed on Gene Chaney to accept personal sent to West Main Street for Kenny
the ballot by county agencies, recognizance hoods for the ViUage Wiseman, who was taken to Veter·
although that authorization does of Pomeroy and Meigs County ans. At 5:34 p.m., Racine unit went
not necessarily indicate an endorse· Court;
to Vine Street. April Hudson was
ment of the levy on the pan of the
• appropriated a $10,000 certifi· taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
commissioners. No such action was cation from the county budget At 6:50 p.m., Rutland squad went
taken yesterday, but the board · commission for the new Trial to State Route 124. Jeremy Lowe
anticipated that a vote might be Coun Performance Standards Pro· was taken to O'Bieness Memorial
taken at next week's meeting.
gram in Meigs County Common Hospital. At 8:32 p.m., Rutland
Three Meigs Countians were PleasCoun;
unit went to State Route 684 for
nominated to fill vacant positions
• signed a proclamation declar • Louri Christian, who was treated at
on the county's Revolving Loan ing Children's Dental Health Lhe scene. At 8:54 p.m., Rutland
Committee. John Weeks was nomi· Month in February;
unit went to State Route 684 to
nated to replace the late Jim Diehl;
• -approved a request from the assist. She was taken to Veterans
· Jim Anderson to replace Robert Meigs County Prosecutor's Office and later to Holzer. At 10:18 p.m.,
Wingett, who resigned; and Paula to establish a Drug Enforcement Syracuse units went to State Route
Thacker to replace Elizabeth Trust Fund account;
124 for a motor vehicle accident.
Schaad, who left the committee
- noted that no objections had Charles Fink was transported to
when she took a state development been received for a new liquor per· Veterans.
office position. Those nominations mit in Bedford Township. The
On Thursday at 3:12 a.m., Rut·
will not become effective until the request will now be mailed to the land squad went to Meigs Mine 2.
nominees accept their appoint· Ohio Department of Liquor Con· Mark Richmond was transported to
ments, although Thacker, Meigs trol.
Veterans. At 5:45 a.m., Rutland
County's new Economic Develop·
Present at the meeting were unit went to Meigs Mine 2. David
ment Director/Chamber of Com· Roberts, Highway Superintendent Jones was taken to Holzer. At 7:22
merce Director, has already indi· Ted Warn~r. Garage Qffice Man- a.m., Syracuse unit went to Main
cated that she
accept her ager David Spencer, Commissionappointment to the 00,00.
ers Manning Roush and David
Other members of that board are Koblentz and Clerk M!!'Y Hobstet·
Millie Midkiff, Ernie Sisson and ter. Commissioner Rtchard E.
William R. Wickline.
Jones was at a meeting in Chilli·
·The commissioners discussed a cothe at the time of the commis·
proposed subdivision of riverfront sioners' meeting.
property in LebanOn Towns.hip
owned by Edward and Patnc1a Name contest winner
Schaekel. The plat map of that sub·
Larry Ritchie of P. 0. Box 229,
division was submitted to County Tuppers Plains, correcUy identified
Engineer Philip M. ~oberts for the mystery farm pictured in the
review yesterday: It IS expec~ed Sunday Times-Sentinel as that of
that a special meeung of_th~ MeJ~S Steve and Janice Weber of Eagle
County Planni~g CommiSSJ&lt;?n. ~~u . Ridge Road. He was one of 16 to
be held to rev1ew the subdJvlston make the correct identification and
with the Schaekels. That group his name was selected as the win·
ner in a random drawing. Ritchie
will receive $5 from the Ohio Val·
James Gaston was elected Vice ley Publishing Co. which ro-spon·
President of the Columbia Town· . sors the contest with_the Meigs Soil
ship Board of Trustees at the and Water Conservation District
board's recent organizational meet·
ing. It was inconenctly reported in
The Daily Sentinel that Granville
Sto_pt, the third member of the
board, was appointed to that posi·
tion.
By Tbe Associated Press
A wintery day is predicted for
Ohio on Friday, thanks to.a cold
front that's to pass across die state
tonight. And it's not going to get

MICH.

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstern

J0 day Ill
• hIS
• t ory

Frigid weekend ahead for Ohioans .

Accu· Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

that "an American should not
serve as a trade representative fO(
,
Czechoslovakia." Baker's real
objection was apparently twofold unavailable for comment, but his
- he was still piqued over the confidants report that he blames
insult to his wife, and he thought Baker.
the appointment made Havel look
Never mind the setback. Zappa
amateurish.
is still a busy and successful musi·
So the Czechs, anxious to please ciao, malting videos under Lhe label
the foreign minister of the world's Honker Home Video (named after
biggest superpower, cooled on the his nose), and selling memorabilia
Zappa appointment. They dragged under a company he calls Barfkotheir feet, explaining to Zappa that Swill. And, he continues to fight
bureaucratic red tape was geUUJg m the establishment. He hasn't driven
the way . Several months later, since 1969 because he refuses to
Zappa was appointed unofftcJal stand in line for a license. He rails
cultural ambassador.
against big_ government and taxes.
The successful conclusion of a He even hired two political consul·
duel is not something gentlemen tants to do a "feasibility stud~" on
boast about So Baker was unavail· a Zappa bid for president. Then
able for comment and Havel JamesBakerwouldbeoutofajob.
declined to discuss it. Zappa, who
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
is bauling prostate cancer, was also Syndicate, Inc.

Seeks more
donations

Education- mine!
Really: I' m not graced with two or three things to make my bill
being educated, but it hasn't upset less. I think one way is to make
me too much over the years less local calls, another is to call
because I've been able to work at more in evenings, etc. I would hope
jobs that fit my uneducated mind so they would give me the lesser
I was able to keep my family intact amount without asking but I have
My wife handed me the phone to study that two or three more
bill, aU five pages, plus an adver· days. They try to tell me how it
tisement buUetin, and said "Do you works by saying things like- prowant to see this bill?" Now I know posed usage sensitive service
charges. which means, to me, if
how uneducated I reaUy am.
I studied it for three days and you call when they wan~ to you it's
believe I got it figured out to a cheaper.
I have reached one conclusion.
small degree.
If
they
owed me S22 I could tell
We must pay for local service,
"em
why
less than five pages so
interstate access, e~change ser· maybe myineducation's
not so bad.
vices, inside wire maintenance,
Another thing, I've learned.
Jon~ distance calls, Ohio Sl!lte tax,
are times when a phone is a
: Dh1o local tax, federal exc1se tax, There
great thing to have around, and
: t.urrent charges, past ch~es. and they have educated me enough to
: f]lwre charges, and believe 11 or not go ahead and pay the bill if I want
• .we got a seventy-two hundrelh per to use it, but, all of that computer
:lint credit for, temporary services, chit-chat is sure a test of education
: ~hatever that is, and it did amount
·mine.
· lo nine cents, so I appreciate that
Brooks Sayre,
; The ad bulletin says I can do
Syracuse

•

Zappa, a hero to ,Czechs, shot down by Baker
WASHINGTON - When a
Texan like Secretary of State James
Baker defends the honor of his
wife, ,it doesn't mauer how long he
has to wait or how far he has to go
to do it
In the case we have uncovered,
Baker diplomaticaUy used his sur·
rogates to ace an American rock 'n'
roll icon out of a job as the trade
representative from Czechoslo·
vakia because the rocker had publicly insulted Baker's wife Susan.
This tale of international
intrigue was toid to our associate
Dale Van Alta by sourceS in Prague
and Washington. Incredible, but
true, is the fact that Czechoslo·
valcian President Vaclav Havel did
offer the job of special ambassador
to the West on trade, culture and
tourism to Frank Zappa. That is the
Frank Zappa - Lhe man who has
produced more than 50 albums
mcluding "Freak Out," "Burnt
Weeny Sandwich," "Uncle Meat"
and "Weasels Ripped My Flesh";
the same Frank Zappa who named
his children Moon Unit, Dweezil,
Ahmet and Diva; the same Frank
Zappa whose performance once
featured a stuffed giraffe that
squirted whipped cream on the
audience.
He is many things, but diplomat
is not among them , thanks to
Baker. Havel, a playwright known
for absurd satire, met Zappa in
Prague in January 1990, and the
two men hit it off immediately.
Havel had long been a fan of
Zappa's musical genius and even
credited his music as part of the
inspiration for the anti-communist
revolution . A Czech group, "The
Plastic People of the Universe,"
named after one of Zappa's songs,
copied his style and became an
underground sensation in
Czechoslovakia. Their revolution,
ary lyrics so irritated the commu·
nist government that the group was
thrown behind bars for disturbing
the peace.
That mobilized Havel and other
artists to form a dissident group
that led the opposit'!tm and, after
communism was toppled, formed
the nucleus of the current Czech
government

The D~lly Senllnei-Page..:..-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.·

.

Street in Tuppers Plains for Ruby
Miller. Miller was taken to Vetil~
ans. At 7:26 a.m., Racine unit w~t
to Mile Hill Road. Twila Clark was
treated but not transported.
: ;

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

.. : . .

�Thursday, February 6, 1992

~~~ ~HE~~N
,
D k 18 d ~ ess riter .
u e was e eated. Oklahoma
s, tate was overwhelmed. Arkansas
ost, too.
It was a very bad nightiO be a .
very good team Wednesday as lhe
No. I, No. 2 and No. 5 teams in the
Associated Press college basketball
poll all lost. .
The pretty good teams had a
pretty bad night also, with No. 21
Oklahoma, No. 23 Florida State
and No. 24 Georgia Tech falting.
In the mght that wasn't No. 9
North Carolina upset No. i Duke
75-73, Nebraska knocked No. 2
Oklahoma State from the ranks of
the unbeaten ·85-69, Tennessee
defeated No. 5 Arkansas 83-81,
Colorado stopped No. 21 Oklahoma 70-68 in overtime, Maryland
downed No. 23 Florida State 93-85
and Clemson crushed No. 24 Geargia Tech 95·78 in overtime.

rn other .game.s, No . 8 .Ohio pick~ the perfeet night for his best
State beatW1seonsm 86-n, No. 12 colleg1ate performilnce.
Missoun II?PJ&gt;!ld Iowa .State 81•71,
No. 15 MIChigan downed Northwestern 81-58, No. 18 Alabama ·
·
beat .texas A&amp;M ,74 -6J, .anil No.
.
..
.
.
22 LSU beat Florida 70-50.
·
J'!te~mverslly of R10 Grande
Duke was done in by a North men s mdoor track team placed
Carolina team ranked ninth ihat second and the women's team was
didn't make a 'single field g~ in seeo.nd in a meet at Denison Uni·
the final9:30. The Tar Heels' Der- verslty last SaUICday. ·
rick Phelps scored the final points
In men's results, Denison was
of the game by hitting two free f~rst at. 73 points, Rio Grande secthrows with 44.5 seconds remain- ond w1~ ~3, Dayton third.with 16
··
·
and :&gt;"llmmgton fourth w1th mne.
mgThe Tar Heels brought an end to Demson placed first in women's
Duke's 23-game winning streak_ . results at_79 points, Rio Grande
the nation's longest. North Caroli- se~ond Wllh 40 and Wilmington
na also snapped Duke's Atlantic th1rd w1th 27.
Coast Conference regular-season
In men's field events! Chad
winning strcalc at!! games.
· Cannon. (sophomore, Dublin) was
NebraskaSS
second !n the long_ium~ at18 feet,
No. 2 Oklahoma St. 69
11-1/4 mches, wh1le Tim Mu1phy
In Lincoln, Nebraska, Corn- (senior •. Z~nesville) and Blaise
huskers point guard Jamar Johnson Reader (jumor, Waverly) wet!- rlCSt
e ·
a~d second, respectively, In the
brte~s
hlg~ JUmp. Each posted a distance
.
.
I;
ofs1xfeet, fo~mches ..R~ralso
placed second 10 the lrlple JUmp at
39 feet. s-112 inches.
The Redmen were second in the
eight-lap
relay at 2:17.60. Marc
The Eastern boys varsity and reserve doubleheader against
Michigan (freshman, Kettering)
Waterford, originally slated for Saturday, Feb.. I, has been reschedwas first in the 500 meter run at
uled for Saturday, Feb. 15 at Waterford High School.
1:10.28, followed by Bryan Specht
The Southern-Eastern boys varsity and reserve basketball con(freshman,
Belpre) in second place
tests, postponed from Jan. 25, will be rescheduled for Saturday,
at 1:12.3 1. Mark Cline (senior,
Feb. 22.
Chillicothe) was first in the 1500
meter run at4:12.01 and Chad
Benson (freshman, Glenford) was
third irl the same event at 4:14.71.

Thursday, February 6, 1992

Page-4

SVAC front~runners solid bets to 'Yin.Friday contest~

By G SPENCER OSBORNE
'ovPStalfWriter
Ever one in the SVAC has
Ia ed ~ine conference games
~xc~pt Hannan Trace and Soulh·
western, who have played 10 _ a
tribute to the Jan. 24 snowstorm
thatmadethisincqualitypossible.
Oak Hill, which has beaten
Southern at home and swept Hannan Trace in its-final season series
with that club for the first time
since the 1987-88 season, has road
games against Eastern (at Tuppers
Plains Friday) and Southern (Feb.
14) before finishing conference
play at home against Soulhwestem
(Feb. 18) and Kyger Creek (Feb.
2i)
· No date has been re-established
for the Hill's home game against
N'onh Gallia (the game was originally slated for Jan. 24 but was
postponed because of the snowstOrm) though North Gallia principal/ath'letic direciOr/head coach Pat
Stout said he anticipates a decision
01\ that matter shortly after Sunday's announcement of the pairings
for the Division IV sectional lOurnament at the University of Rio
Gtande
. Southern is one game behind the
Oilks and Hannan Trace is half a
game' behind Southern . These three
teams are solid bets to win Friday
night's games and here's why.
Oak Hlll vs. Eastern
: Of the three front-runners Oak
1-Cill will have the hardest lime
~cause of Eastern's top guns_:
seniors Tim Bissell ( 17.4
pts./game), Jeff Durst (16.8
pts./game) and Terry McGuire
(11.4 pts./game), and freshman
QJarlie Bissell (11.4 pts./gamc) and the fact that Greg Ullman's
Eagles are still on the winning
track after edging Miller 65-63
Tuesday night to exte nd their

SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ............ IO 4
Eastern ................9 5
Soulhem .............. 7 7
Hannan Trace ...... 7 7
Nonh Gallia ....... .5 8
Kyger Creek ........5 9
Symmes Valley ... 3 10
Southwestern ....... ! !3

PF
936
969
1002
872
742
765
742
752

(Conference)
Oak Hill .............. 8 I 644
Southern ..............? 2 689
Hannan Tracc ......7 3 681
Eastern ................6 3 603
Nonh Gallia .. ...... 5 4 560
Symmes Valley ... 2 7 509
Kyger Crcek.. ......2 7 487
Southwestem .......O 10 527
TOTALS ......... .37 37 4700

PA
816
981

906
956
860
846
812
1016
517
522
633
586
565
573
569
735
4700

(Reserves- SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southern .............. 9 0 519 294
Eastern ................ 8 I 422 348
Symmes Valley ... 5 4 396 406
Oak Hill ..............4 5 375 376
Kyger Creek ....... J 5 305 337
Hannan Trace ..... .3 6 365 451
North Gallia ....... .3 6 326 400
Southwestern....... ! 9 325 421
TOTALS ......... .36 36 3033 3033
Saturday's lost score
Manchester 66, Symmes Valley 65
Weekend games
Friday - Oak Hill at Eastern;
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace;
Southern at Symmes Valley;
Southwestern at North Gallia
Saturday - Hannan Trace at
Fairland; Symmes Valley at
Portsmouth Notre Dame; South·
western at New Bos10n;

happy comnuls to stx games.
(All Eastern averages are current as of the aformentioned ~a~e
agamst Miller, as no other stausucs
from that game were made available)
.
.
To counter lh1s, Oak H1ll- a
75-59 wmncr over South Webster
last Saturday - will need more
off~nse. from 6-foot-7 redwood
Chm S1mps~n (14 .. 3 pt.s./game),
who seored e1ght pomts m each of
his last two games.after be in~ held
to fewer than 10 JUSt once m the
firs.~ halfof the season. ,
Staymg the course would be
what President Bush w?.uld te_ll
junior point guard Be.nJI Lew1s
(15.5 pts./game) and semorforward
Bill Potter ( 11.4 pts./gamc) ,
because Potter has burned the nets
for double figures in six of his last
seven games . In addition, Lewis
has a way of contributing heavily
to the Oaks' cause while creating
scoring opportunities for teammates such as senior forward Mike
Turner (8.9 pts./game), who has
contributed double_-digit offense in
four of h1s last .f1ve games, and
senior guard Dcvm Hale (87 pomts
in 14 games).
Southern vs. Symmes Valley
Southern will find out Friday
night that 12.5 miles (as lhe crow
flies) in Lawrence County can
make a difference.
The To~a~oes, the victi!lls in
Saturday mght s 92-77 dec1s1on at
South Point, will be Eastern Eagles
fans Friday night in their return to
conference play after failing for the
fifth time this season to pick up a
wm outs1de ~e SVAC.
.
Southern s sh~ll:game stnke
f~rce. w~1ch docsn t mclude offens1ve mamstays Roy Lee Ba1ley
(15.6 pts./game) and Jeremy Roush ·
(12.8 pts./gamc), features a cast of
players such as Mark Allen,
Michael Evans and Scott Lisle.
Sometimes there can be doubledigit cameos from people such as
Joshua Codner, Russell Singleton.
The point is, Symmes Valley won't
know who will get hot, so Kevin
Lewis' Vikings will have to play
everyone with equal respect.
The Vikings may be the most
dangerous 3·10 team in the association, and the rest of the league Southern included - knows this to
be true. Valley drives the ball
inside effectively and has productive shooters in senior forward
Andy Lester (13.7 pts./game),
sophomore guard Jerome Fuller (13
pts./game) and senior center Chris
Blake (10.6 pts./game). So why are
the Norsemen 2-7 in the conference?
The Vikings' 63-42 win over
Southwestern la~ t Friday marked
the only time in their last seven
games that they took the lead at
halftime and stayed on top. In
games against North Gallia. Eastern and Oak Hill, Symmes fell
behind at halftime and stayed
behind. Against Hannan Trace and
Manchester (that game, originally
slated for Dec. 14 but postponed,
resulted in a 66-65 loss for the
Vikings last Saturday), the Norsemen led at halftime (33-25 vs.
Trace, 37-36 vs. Manchester), but
were outscored in the second half
(43-27 by Hannan Trace, 30-28 by
Manchester).
Any questions as to why
Symmes Vl!lley has lost six of its
last seven games?
Kyger Creek vs. Hannan Trace
Hannan Trace, which cannot be
counted out of ·the conference title
chase, has the schedule gods on its
side now, because three of its final
four conference games, including
Friday night's encounter with
Kyger Creek - the second g~e

out of four to be ~layed m a sevenday stretch spannmg from Tuesday
night's game ~gains! Raceland to
next Tuesday s home game. and
reg~ Jar-season non-lea~ue fma.le
agamst Oh10 Valier. Chri~uan, w1ll
be~ home. The Wlidcats gamelhe1r last regular-season road game
- agB;inst Eastern (Feb. 14) is the
excepu~n.
.
J~st m case Wlidcat center Dave
Pohng (13.4 pts./game) , who
scored 23 points in last week's 8656 loss to &lt;?3k Hill and racked up
another 13 m Tuesday night's 7961 loss to a tough Raceland squad,
is thinking h; might get30 against
Kyger Creeks front tine, he should
talk to Wahama frontmen Mike
VanMatre and John Zuspan.
Those two gents found out the
hard way how KC made up for its
lack of height by limiting them to a
total of 12 points in the Bobcats'
68-59 win over the Bend Area crew
Tuesday night. Team rebounding,
best shown by the fact that no Bobcat had more than five grabs in a
contest that saw them outrebounded 38-22, and smothering defen~e
can wreak havoc on anyone s
inside game.
Kyger Creek has 5-foot-1 0
senior Phil Bradbury in the post,
and he combines the physical
strength honed on the gridiron as a
running hack and linebacker with a
small forward's quickness to record
a 17 pomts-per-game average.
Chris Crace, a 5-foot-11 sopho-.
more forward, averages 10.6 points
per outing and has put double fig·

ures !'~rough the nets m five of h1s
last s1x games.
But the the .new force on the
Bobcat squad •s 5-foot-9 sophomore Paul Covey. who f~om h1s
forwar~ spot surpass~ h1s flfSt·
half pmnttotal (46) tn !he three
games (12 vs. North Gallia, 17 vs.
Symmes Valley and ~0 vs ..Eastem)
befo.re Tuesday mght s senes fmale
ag~mst Wahama - a game.m
wh1ch he racked up a career-h•gh
26 points.
.
But the B~bcats w•.ll also h~ve
to contend .wll~ a. seonng ~chme
that. can strike ms1de or outsides~mo~ fo~wa~d Chad Sw.ain. He
wil_l Sign m With a team-h1gh 17.7
pomts-per-game average and a
capabihty to either soar into the
stratosphere for layups or to block
shots, or connect for thrce-pomters
(he has 12}from th~ ~lines.
.
There's m~re~ Just m case the
Bobcats are th1nking about crowdmg the pal~t_on a constant basis. to
take · pOSitiOn for potential
rebounds. Se.mor forward ]lmmy
Brace (I 0.3 pts./game) has 23
lhree-pomters .on the season and m
Trace s 14 games, he has had only
three games in which he hasn't
sunk at least one from beyond the
arc. Teammates Shawn Cox (8 .9
pts./garne) and Brian Unroe (8.1
pts./iame) are also capable of connecung for threes (they have 12
each)
.
Southwestern vs. North GaU18
Do you remember Feb. 16,
1990? Southwestern fans do. •
That date marked the last lime

the Hi~hlanders posted a conference VICtory. John Ehman, cunrent
reserve coach Jesse Ehman, Joe
Hammond, Chris Metzger, Bill
Potter and company knocked off
North Gallia (D.J. Hammel, Brian
Stout, Chris Tackett, et. al.) 81-71
on the Pirates' coun on Feb. 16,
1990. Twenty-four conference
gamu have come and gone for
Southwestern since then. No victoriesinanyofthem.
Tbe Highlanders will return Friday night to the spot where it last

Pomeroy-MtddlePQrt, Ohio

happened. But tlus year's crew semors Adam Simpson and juniors
Chris. MandeviUe and Jamie Morse
- wlil have the1r hands more lhan
full of a Pirate. sq~ad tikely ~ get
back on the wmmng track, giVen
the hosts' penchant for conducting
a roller-coaster season.
Most seasons ofthis type usually have smal_l margms between the
number of wms and losses throughout the season. But North, which
has lost two strai~httwice and h~
never put two wms together th1s
season, must start somewhere.

TO PUMP OR NOT TO PUMP.

M

•·
.
e1gs sports

95
SALE 1104

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney

Lin IS 111011

PLAYH•RD.

(:laabok ::~

David Grindstaff, a member of lhe Southern Athletic Boosters
Club, announced that the Southern High School boys basketball
team will be sponsoring a men's independent baskelballtournament
scheduled for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23.
The entry fee is $100 per !O-man roster. Trophies will be awarded 10 rlCSt· and second-place teams, and there wiU also be r~rst- and
second-place sponsor trophies to lhe champion and the runner-up.
For more information, please call 949-2025 (Racine).

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

219 N. SECOND

KCHS club to sponsor tourney
The Kyger Creek High School Pbp Club will sp&lt;)nsor a men's
league basketbaliiOumament scheduled for Feb. 29 and March I. .
The entry fee for this double-elimination tournamen~ whi.ch wil)
be open to the first eight teams who enter, is $100 per team.
Fo( more information, call Tom Riccardi at 367 · 7377 (Kyger
Creek H.S.).

...
10W40,

Tbe sophomore, who sat outlast
season under lhe NCAA's Proposi-

tion 48 rule, scored a career-high
25 points.

d
.
•
1n oor track teams p·Ja··ce ID meet

B ask etb all mak eup dates posted

JUST
ARRIVED

Gel pumped up belo1e you go to bonle in
THE PUMP'" 'Orml Zone- lor a ku~ mtom fit
TNIS WEEKEND RECEIVE 110 OFF

The Dally Sentlnet-Page-.6

Duke among top~'five. teams to lQse Wednesay night games .

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

,

MEIGS COUNTY KARATE
CLUB
WILL HAVE BEGINNING
KARATE CLASS
STARTING FEB. 11~:00 PM
AT CARLTON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE, OHIO.
Instructors art Mlck Hawaii
and Tim Jenkins
For more lnformaUon Call
614-992-6839 or 992-6170

·
·
.
·
ijnan Brelsford (sophomore, and fourth, respectively, in the
West Lafayette) placed flCSt in the shotput. Stiles also placed first in
400 meter dash with a time of the triple )urn at30 fee~ 10 incbes.
53.46 seconds, foUowed by Cannon
Runmng events saw Ginger
in second place at'54.88 seconds. Smith (sophomore, Bolkins) placed
Cline was first in the 1000 meter second in the 500 meter run at
run (2:44.03), with Murphy placing 1:28.3 . Renee Peck (junior, Ballifirst in the 45 meter hurdles at6.90 more, Ohio) was first in lhe .1500
seconds. Jason Weeks (sophomore, (4:52.94) and Shies was fiCStm the
Port Clinton) was second in that 45 meter dash (6.63 seconds).
event at 7.21 seconds. In the 3000 Crystal Patrick (freshman, Chilli·
meter run, Chris S!llith Qunior, cothe) was fourth in the 3000
West Jefferson) was flfst at (3:44.41).
9:13.31. Benson finished second in
Bot Stiles and Peck finished
the 800 meter run at 2:03.26, fol- first, respectively, in the 200 and
lowed by Michigan in third 'at 800 m~ter dash events. Stiles post2:08.31.
ed a ume of. 29.79 seconds and
In women's field events, Vonda Peck's was 2:28 .18. The Rio
Stiles (seni~, Shawnee) was first Grande women's 1600 relay team
m the long Jump at15fcet, 9-1/4 finished secondat4:43.35.
inch.es, while Melissa Carpenter
The teams will next compete
(semor, Patnot) and Nancy Keller this Saturday in a meet at
(sophomore, Mantua) were third

IIIII£
I D
VOLUNTEER nRE
D£niRTM£NT
~

'•.
•

The Huskers (15-4 overall, J.:f
Big Eight) opened an 18-11 lead
with 11;30 remainin in the first
half. The Cowboysg(20-1 4-1) .
·'
•
repeatedly cut the lead to one or.
two po1~1s b~fore Johns~n h•_l a
three.-~mnt f1e~ g~al With 2.38
r~:~kand e uskers never
·
Tennessee 83
5
.
1 KNo. .~rka~~r Sk 0

.!. ~oxv•

~· ~~

A

~J[\',' IJA~IO'l \',lr ;r-

BETTU\

::,[tl.,~L_

Our
welcome mat
is out
For oil your insuronc:e neids,

The Pomeroy Fire Department is sponsoring a
. . u.nn raising program to raise money for needed

---·~===~

---_________

I
I

I

Iec~~J~!!!:~~~ representing the Fire Department will

JEFF WIIIIEIIIISUUIICE
113 W. 2ND
POMEROY, OHIO
992-5479

be contacting all homes in the area over the
coming weeks, asking for a donation of $20.00.
Persons will be going door to door and will carry
identification or an I. D. Badge.
The Fire Department wishes to thank everyone
for their donation by giving a complimentary
certificate for an 8x1 0 color portrait to be taken at
the fire department.
Thb fund rabing program u klgitimate ond your Fire

SLEEPERS

DINETTES

ST.-nNG AT

STARTING AT

'

EMPIRE HAS COMPLETED. ITS INVENTORY AND
HAS FOUND SEVERAL ITEMS THAT MUST BE SOLD
AT .NO PROFIT OR AT A LOSSITHIS IS A. ONE DAY
EIGHT HOUR SALEAND WON'T BE REPEATED.
T ITEMS ARE ONE OF AKIN
.

~-

'

Come·Early aild $ave!

friday, February 7
12 Noon Til8:00 P.M.

MEN'S LEVI. DENIM
JACKETS LIN~D &amp; UNLI~JP

. - · 20% Off · ~ .

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30% OFF:

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.

DINING
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aa=---· 4~··a
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Department oiks for your support.

EMPIRE FU

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call or step by our MW ollice.

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

71153-2071

-•
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··Sorq, No Layaways!

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MEN'S JOG SUITS :

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p.;c. good with txehaoge

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seo d ~ 'f11001~bl kt dw•T0 dd ·
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Day sds~rr:-pomt attempt With 10..
secon e L
Arkansas (17-4, 6-2 South~!- ·
em) ~d one .last chance to tie ~r . .
wm, mbound1~g the ball under Its .•
own basket w•th 16 seconds lef,t. ~
After ~ouston blocked J?ay s:
three-pomt attempt to set off a mad: .
scramble at half coun. the Razor·•.
(See HOOPS on Pace 5)
•.

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.

Latrell Spn~well scored 18 or hi! 24 seventh straight ALlan tic Coast they touched the ball in the extra
Conference game Y{ith mort~ than per1od, came within one point of
_&lt;con_tin-ued-from_Pa_ge-4)- - - - points in the second half as Alaba- 30 - to lead Maryland (9-10, 2· 7) the national r~cord for points
ma (18-4) beat Texas A&amp;M, handing
the 3-14 Aggies their 1Oth to the upset win over Florida Slale scored i n an overtime period in
Northwestern 58
deficit. The victory moved the
their victory over Georgia Tech
(14-6,6-4).
In Ann Arbor, Mich., the slnlight loss.
Buckeyes back into a tie for the top
(I~- 7, 3·5). The Tigers scored 24
Clemson
95
Colorado70
Wolverines (13-5, 5;4) extended
spot in the Big Ten with Indiana.
pomts,
one less than the national
No,
15
Georgia
Tech
78
No. 21 Oklahoma 68 (OT)
their dominance over 10 NorthwestNo. 12 Missouri 81
record
of
25 last reached by WisIn Clemson, S.C., Clemson (12In Boulder, Colo;, Donnie
ern (8-11, 1-8) to 15 consecutive
Iowa State 7l
consin-Green
Bay in 1987-88.
Boyce made two free throws with 6, 2-5 ACC), scoring every time
In Columbia, Mo., Jevon games as Jalen Rose scored 12 of 12 seconds remaining in overtime
Crudup scored 19 points and his 14 points early in the second to seal Colorado's upset of OklaMelvin Booker added 17 as Mis- half. The Wolverines struggled to homa (14-5, 2-4). The win snapped
souri beat Iowa State (16-5, 2-3). lead 24-23 at halftime, but pulled a 24-game Sooner winning streak
The Tigers (15-3, 3-2) used an 18-4 away in the second half.
over the Buffaloes (1078, 1-4) datNo. 18 Alabama 74
run in the second half to seal the
mg to Jan. 13, 1982.
TexasA&amp;M61
victory.
No. 22 LSU 70, Florida SO
h College Station, Texas,
No. 15 Mkhigan_81
McDonald's Reslaurants of Gal- -due hailed the continuing support
In Gainesville, Fla., Shaquille
O'Neal scored 23 points, grabbed lipolis, Athens and Henderson, of McDonald's in sponsorins a
15 n~bounds, blocked six shots and W.Va., will sponsor the men's bas- game each season and in assishng
drew 14 fouls to lead LSU (14-4, 7- ketball game between the Universi- the university's recruilment effons.
"When I look back on all that's
1) past Florida (10-9, 3-5) in a ty of Rio Grande and Ohio DominiNowlcnoy ........ 26 L7 1 59 194156
South
been
accomplished at Rio Grande
Piual•qh .......... 26 21 6 58 232204
can College on Saturday at 7:30
Southeastern Conference game.
Clemson 9~. Ootqi.a Tech 78, or
N.Y. lslandon .... 20 24 7 47 19S20Ci
academically
and in athletics I
·11.m. in Lyne Center.
Dell ware SL 96, Coppin St. 93
Maryland93
Pltiladclpltia ....... 17 2510 44 152179
know
it
couldn't
have been do~e
I.SU 70, Florid• 50
A drawing for door prizes will
No. 23 Florida State 85
MatylaDd 93, Florid• St-15
without
the
interest
of organizaAdanw Dlvlllon
In Tallahassee, Fla., Walt be conducted at halftime, and
Miuialippi. 76, Swth Cuo\inl61
Moolleal .....•..... 32 20 4 68 175135
Mia . . ' SL 75 Ceo . 66
Williams scored 38 points - his appearances by the restaurants' tions such as McDonald's "
8011ton ................ 26 19 8 60 I &amp;4176
Mo:lfs, il,N.c.~ob«ol6
Buffalo ............... 21 22 10 52 192189
famailiar characters - Ronald Lawhorn said. "Their sponsorship
N. Carolina A&amp;T 66, WWion· Salem
Hanford ............. 15 26 8 38 15117S
McDonald, the Hamburglar and of our games bas really been a plus
54
Qucbco ...... ......... 12 34 6 30 158 217
Nonh Carolina 15, Duke 73
Mac Tonight - are scheduled . for our program."
Penn Sl 84, Old Dul'linit1179
"One of J!te thin$S we've been
Tickets for the game are available
Soulh Alabaml90. W, Kentucky 16
Tc:nnc11oc 83, .luk.anaaa 81
successful
wnh at Rto Grande is in
at the three McDonald's locations.
v · · · 61, v· · · Toch 57. 20T
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
gathering
community
support for
A donation by the restaurants to
W~~ 8~.-Aohovillc 75
Norris Ohblon
the Rio Grande Athletic Boosters our institution," Perdue remarked.
Team
W L T Pls. GFCA
Midwest
lleucit.. ..... ..... . 29 16 8 (&gt;6 218 175
Trailing most of the final round, organization has enabled the uni- "The backing of a firm such as
Ball Sl. 57, Tolodo 34
Cltic:aso .............. 24 2110 58 1n166
the Eastern Eagles broke a 63-63 versity to continue seeking out top McDonald's is an example of the
Clncinnad 71, Dayt.on48
St.Louis ............ 2222 9 S3 18211W
DcPoul 91. Lo)Oio,lll.63
tic with I 0 seconds left to play student-athletes. Both Redmen link between our campus and the
Minnco"" ... . .. 22 2l 4 48 I 1'&gt;61 79
EvanMU.,r7, Valparaiso6.5
Toronto .............. 11 31 5 39 144194
when Pat Newland stole the ball Coach John Lawhorn and Rio community, and we are very appreW.-Olica&amp;o 14, NE Illinois 79
Miami,
Ohio
69.
E.
Mich.ia•n
liO
and
passed to Tim Bissell for the Grande Athletic Director Tom Per- ciative of their support."
Smythe OlviJion
MicJUaan 8l , Northv.a~em S8
Vancouver ......... 30 14 8 68 186149
layup
that gave Eastern a 65-63
Mi11ouri 81 , Iowa SL 71
Winnipeg ........... 2222 11 55169 165
win
Tuesday
night at Hemlock.
Mo.·Kanu• Cit)' 97, Colo.-Colo.
Calgary .............. 2224 7 51 199190
Sprin 47
.
Tim Bissell led the 9-5 Eagles
Edmoaom .......... 22 26 7 Sl 19120'1
lf.towa 76, St. l...ouiJ 66
LoaAnaele~ ....... 20 21 11
51 182195
with
28 poiniS. Jeff Durst added 19,
Nebraska
85,
Oklahcm•
SL
69
SanJ01e ........... .. 13 J7 4 30 140235
Ohio SL 16, W1Ko111ln 72
and Charlie Bissell had nine.
Ohio U, ll, CenL Mkhl&amp;an 5l
Wednesday's scores
Bruce Lanning led Miner with
Punhle 6S, Minnclota S7
DolroiL4, WuhinfOO I
W. Michigan n, Bowling Green 70
23.
N.Y. R•ngen4, Pitllbutgh 3
Wright St. 91, Younptown St. 73
Eastern hit 24-64 for 38 percent
Toronto 3, Minne101a2, OT
Edmonm 2, Manual I
and
Miller 25-61 for 41 percent.
Southwest
Coi&amp;IIY 5, Qucboc 3
Eastern,
which had 25 rebounds,
Ala"b-..1 74, Tcus A&amp;M 61
San J01e 5, Chicaao 2
Arkansas St. 98, Jacisooville 89, OT
was led by Charlie Bissell with 12
Hounon 67, Southern Meth. SO
Tonight's games
and
Tim Bissell with seven.
Tc.1u
Tech
63,
Te~~u Ouiltian 57
SINGLE &amp; BOXED
B01ta1 at Philadclphi1, 7:35 p.m.
Miller
had 30, led by Peyton's
New Jeney 1t St. loui. , 8:35p.m.
Far Wesl
Hutfotd atl..ol Anaeie., 10:3.5 p.m.
eight Eastern had 19 steals and 13
Colorado 70, Oklahoma 68, OT
N.Y. hl1nden at Vncouver, \0:35
turnovers.
E. Wuhingtoo 11, N. Arizona 64
pm.
Eastern won the reserve game
Frld.ay's games
Ohio boys high school
54-47 led by Roben Reed and Wes
Minne.ou at Buffalo, 7:35 p.m.
Arbaugh with 14 each and Pat ·
basketl.l all scores
Toron\.0 u Deuoit, 7:35 p.m.
Newland 12. Mike Duffy and Mike
N.Y. Rangcn: at Wuhington,7:35 p.m.
Amelia 71, New Richmond 12
Calgary at Winnipq. 8:3S p.m.
Sex iOn each had 12 for Miller.
Cin. CAPE 14, Cin. FiMeytown 47
N.Y. I•landeft at Edmontm, 9:35 p.m.
Quarter tolals
Cin. MadeUI62. Cin. lndiln Hill Sl
Cin. RcadinJ 58, Cin. Doa Puk 54
Eastern ................ .l9 12 1519 = 65
C'IJ\. Wyonung 58, Cin. Marianont 46
Miller. .. ................ 13 16 19 13 = 63
Major college
Orand Rivcr69, Lai.eRidgc 39
EASTERN (65)- T. Bisse114- .
&lt;mnd
V.U.
53,
KWond
50
basketball scores
Hamili.OD 85, Millon! 41
5-5=28,
McGuire 1-0-0=2, Durst5Loveland 37, Cin. Taylor 36
Eosl
Savoy 2-1-0=7, C. Bissell
2-3=19,
Perry 69, Fairpon Huding 59
8011Ul U. 86, Vermont 76
P)'m•wnina Vall. 82. Cardinal?o
4-0-1=9,
Buckley 0-0-2z2. TO·
Bucknell 74, Nav)' 71
TALS -16·8·11=65
0uq.....,,
84, Ken• 8o,.20T
Transactions
F..ltum 58, eot1,,.,..
MILLER (63)- Doughty 2-0Harnrd 65, Hanford Sl
0=4,
Peyton 8-0·0=16, Smith 1-0Holy em. lj, Lafayeu.c 7S
Baseball
LciLiJh 76. lllmy 58
0=2, B. Lanning 5-4·1=23;L. LanAmerican La1ue
Looalotand U. 86, Brooklyn Col. 75
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Apd
93 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
ning 1-0-5=6, Watkins 0-0-1=1,
Loyola, Md. 68, Xavier, Ohio S2
~ lt!t!m wilh Milk PUWlt, catcher, 1nd
tdlinc 86, Rider 10
Paige 2-2-0= 10. TOTALS - 19·
992·6657
Mark McLemore, infielder, on minorSL JIM',• 70, 801100 Coiletc 60
league conrncu.
6· 7::63

college hoops ...
backs' Robert Shepherd came up
with the ball but missed a 12-footer
and Day missed a tip attempt
Tennessee (13-7, 5-3) grabbed
the rebound with four-tenths of a
secood lefi and had its upset.
No. 8 Ohio Stale 86
Wisconsin 72
In Columbus, OhiO, Chris Jent
scored a career-high 27 points and
Jim Jackson had 26 as Ohio State
(15-3, 7-1 Big Ten) came back
from a seven-point second-half

McDonald's sponsoring
Saturday Redmen game

Scoreboard
In theNBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allaftlk Dl,glon
W L Pc:L

Ttam

NcwYork ..............29
801t.an .................... 21
Pltiladclphia ...........23
Miami..... ...•..........23

GB

16
II
24
2l

.644
.609
.489
.479

1.5
7
7.5

New Jcney ............19 21

.413

10.5

Wubinpn .......•.... l5 30
Orlando ..... ............. l2 35

.333
.2l5

14
18

Eastern edges
Miller 65-63

Central Dhillon

Chict~---······· ·"" ''39

9

.81 3

Allanu ................. 23 23

.500

15

467

16.5

.383
.283

20.5
2l

~ . -~:==:i~

g

Milwaukee ............. 21 24
Indiana ................. ..18 29
Chulo&lt;l&lt; ····· ········ .1 3 33

:~! 1 1 .~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwtst Dl•lllon
Ttam
W L
Utah ....................... 31 18

Pct.
.633

San Antonio ...........27 IS

.600

2

HOUI\011. ................. 25 21
.543
Denvtt ...... ............ .l7 28 .3711
Dallls .................... .l3 33 .283
Minnetw ................ S 38
.174
Pactnc Dlvis&amp;on

4..5
12

l'llnlali4 .................31 14

Golden Sl.ltc ..........29 14
Phocnil. .................. 32 16

LA . Latm ............ 28 18

Se~uJc ....................24 24
L.A. Qippm ....... 22 2l
SacnmcnKI ............ \6 31

GB

BAS.ALL YOUR
VALENTINE DAY NEEDS

16.5
21.5

.689

.500
.468

I
.5
3.5
8.5
tO

.340

16

.614

.667
.609

•Cards

Wednesday's sc:ores
Seattle 9S , New Jmey 85

•Gifts
•Party
Supplies
•Gift Wrap
•Books

Cleveland ltf, Philadelphia 101,

OT

Miami 126, Goldca Stale 124
Detroit 102, Milw1~ec 94
801u.!91, HOUSLon 85
Orlando 1o:J, Minncsau I02
Phoenix 126, Chicaso 114
L.A. Lai.m tOO, L.A. aippen 95
Sacramento 100, Utah 98

Tonight's games
HOUitan 1\ Now Yolk, 7:30p.m.
Now Jcney at Wallhinglllrl, 7:30p.m.
Ooldcn St~tc at Charloue, 7:30p.m.
Orlaado at Atlllua, 7:30p.m.
Dttrol&amp; at CMnland, '7:30 p.m.
Denver at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Port1aad at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Indian• at San An\.OI"Uo, 8:30p.m.

No games Friday

MILL STREET BOOKS

In the NHL. ..
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrkk Dhillon
Team

W L T .... GFGA

N.Y. Ran&amp;"' ····· 3517 2 . 72 210171
Wuhingtnn . .. 30 1 ~ 4 64 2.23180

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The Daily Sentinel.
.

Contemporary.living
By Cindy S. Oliveri
Look younger as you age.
Sound~ impossible? Not necessartly. Pay altention to what you
eat, how you move and how you
face the world each day. You may
be able to look younger as you age.
Here are some simple ideas to
get you started.
. • You are as young as you eat.
D1et plays a major part in the aging
process. Food high in Vitamins C,
E, and beta-carotene may destroy
"free radicals"; the molecules
responsible for wearing down our
cells and bodies. Also pay attention
to the amount of water you drink. It
ts suggested that you have 6-8
glasses of water daily. Try to
develop a diet which includes a
variety of fruiiS and vegetables.
• Exercise the years away. A
study of 13,000 Americans suggests that by shifting from sedentary living to moderate activity, can
dramatically ward off the signs of
aging. Just ~et off the couch turn
off the televtsion and go for a ;.,alt.
• Environmental distress. Smog,
humidity, dry air and sun exposure
may reak havoc on your looks,
regardless of where you live. Men
and wom~n both need to adopt a
gentle skm care regimen. Water
may be a crucial ingredient. It's a

Thursday, February 6, 1992
Page-7

good idea to splash some on your
face befon~ you use a favorite skin
cleanser, then rinse thoroughly
before applying moisturizing
lotion.
• Pick your bad habits carefully.
Excessive alcohol consumption can
cause blood vessels to lose their
ability to constrict, resulting in a
dry, monied complexion. Smoking
can d.eplete the amount of oxygen
reachmg the skin, causing wrinkles
and dryness, both of which will
make you look far older than your
years.
• You are what you think. When
you feel good about yourself, you
dtsplay a youthful glow; when you
are depressed, you look drawn,
harsh and old.
What goes on in your mind ,
shows up on your body. Worry,
gutlt and anger aU make you look
older. Your shoulders droop, posture becomes slack, and you feel
out of sorts. On the other hand,
adopting a positive mental ouUook
can reduce stress, enhance selfacceptance and lead to a youthful
exuberance and appearance.
Are you doing as much as possible 10 look younger as you age? If
not, work at some of the ideas in
this article to help you age more
gracefully.

Dr. Jack Kevorkian arraigned
on double murder charge

By MAL~OLM ~TTER
AP Sctence Wrtter
NEW YORK (AP)- Scientists
have discovered a genetic abnormaltty that apparenUy causes the
most common adult form of muscular dystrophy, a .discovery '!tat
could help research mto developmg
a treatment .
The findmg also should allow
bette_r. d1agnosis of the inherited
condiu~n, called myo10mc dystrophy, either prenatally or before
sympto~s appear in later life,
experts said.
Early diagnosis is important
bec~use symptoms may not appear
unttl afte~ ~ person has had children, unwittingly passmg along the
flawed gene:
Myotome dystrophy affects
about one in every 7!CI.XJ 10 every
8,CI.XJ people worldwtde. It causes
weakness and wasung of volun!MY
muscl~s. and ~ften produces dtfficulty 1n reiaxmg muscles, which
mterferes w1th movement
It also can lead to. life-threatening irregularities in heartbeat as
well as cataracts, mental slowness,
p~mll!trn: balding, gastrointestinal
compltcabons and sleep dtsorders.
AI_though ~ne type of the dis~ IS. found m newborns and can
k1ll qwckly or cause severe mental

retardauon, myo~omc dystrophy
usually shows up m adolescence or
early adulthood. It can ' lead to
death in one's .50s or 60s because
of heart or resp1111tory fatlure.
The new research is reponed in
Thursday's issue ~f the journal
Nature by three mternattDnal
research teams with members in
Canada, The Netherlands, Sweden,
Bri~n !l"d ~e United States.
ThiS wtll lead to almost foolproof presymptomatic diagnosis or
pren~tal diagnosis," more widely
applicable than a geneuc method
used now, commented Dr. Henry
Epstein, director of the Jell'}' Lewis •
Neuromuscular Disease Research
Cen~e~ at. the Baylor College of
Medtcme.t~ Housto~.
In addiuon, the discovery maries
the stan .of learning details of what
goes .wron~ m tlte body . to cause
the disease s effects, wh1ch could
help leap to de'icl\)Pm$•a tre:'tment,
he said 1~ a telt$1\iine tntervtel'!.
: Epstem, who•d1~ not paructpate
m the research, said the newfound
genetic abnormality was of a type
dtscovered only recently. It has
appeared in two other, unrelated
dtseases.
"The bet is now on we'll be
able 1;0 find thts _m other disorders,
both mhented dtsorders as well as

BILL STIEG.

DOYLESTOWN, Pa. (AP) Sally Je~sy Raphael's daughter
d~ed acctdentally from the comb1~ effects of several legally ~scnbcd drugs and non-prescnpuon
dr~gs, the Bucks County corner
satd ~y.
.
Allison Vladtmir died of n~spira~ory !!"'est, Dr. Thomas Rosko
$81d !lunng a news conference.
The coroner said the' drugs alone
were "certainly not lethal or overdose levels." He said, however
"their collective effects wer~
enough to cause respiratory
"There is no evitlence here that
Miss Vladimir intended to ead her
life,'' Rosko said.
The 33-year-old woman was
fou~d unconscious in bed early
. Sunday in a private home behind a
bed-and-~realcfast mansion owned
by Raphael.
·
Vladimir, a chef from White
Plains, N.Y., was last seen alive
about 11 p.m. Saturday. She· had
been unemployed because of back
problems
Rosko refused to reveal the
number or ldnds of drugs found
citing the family's privACy; He said
alcohol was also .a ''contibutlng
facror," as wen~ Vladimir's weighl
and cigarette-smoking habit. She

Free concert held
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP)
- ROCk!lf John Mellencamp says
tdTV s~JIPC?I1td him, and now he's
SUPPQrtJng II.
' Ht held a free concen Wednesday for about 3,500 people as pan
of a campaign by rock 11ar1 ro get
the cable COII1JIII!f Simmons Communlca•ro o.ner MTV.apin. ·
Sammons canceled the music
video SlaliCil Jilt. I in a move that
affecred about 109,000 IUbscribm
in Johnson City; Vlneland. N J
and Benulem Pa. .Tho comJliny . ·
said' It made ihe switch to hold
down cable 111e1.
. .
Pop ~ws Paula .Abdul, Phil
Colllu Ull Rpd Ste,wut bavo
appoa~ fD

to COII)plaln.

was about 5-foot-6 and weighed
more than 200pounds.
· Vladimir was not in10xicated at
the ~~e of her death, Rosko said,
decllnmg to giVe her blood-alcohol
level.
·
.
Raphael C!lnccled tapmgs of her
talk. show th1s week. Three weeks
earlier, on Jan. 11, the youngest of
Raphael's eight children, Jason
" J.J ." Soderlund, was critically

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possibly some of the acquired ·
problems like aging and cancer "
he said
'
Genetic material lies along 23
pairs of string-like structures ailed
chromosomes This 1
c k
focused on a ~egion :rcs~r;~r _
some number 19
The abnonnaiity is that one se •
ment of genetic material is
g
ally long. The segmentun:,s~~
appeared to be unsiable beca · ·
lengthened as it passed thr': :
successive generations in fa il~g
in ste with increasin
"! les,
the di~ase
g seventy of
· Helen Harl
f th
· ·
of Wales Coiflg~ of ~~it~ersi!Y
Cardiff, a co-author of the ~hn
said it is not known how these :
ment becomes enlarged B 1 oti g
that genetic material is 'ma~enu ~
building blocks called bases ~he
said the enlargement probabl
comes from . creation f
y
copies of the bases normal~ 10
.exga
segment
Y
at
The identi f th fla ed
probablv wil~~ ro end wl .ge~c
soon said Dr Leo C~hauh:J'
man '0r the ~edic~ advi 'c :
miuee or lhe M 1 sory com
Association wh~~I.:J' Dystropr
the stud . '
pea pay or
y

- ,......
j. . . . . .

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...

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....

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0

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........ ·~·--·· ·(

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injured in a car crash in Montrose
N.Y.
'
The 19-year-old is still ho 1· 1
ized, recovering from leg ri~ ~d
facial injuries.
'
a
Vlad1mir was one of two dau hters Raphael had with her fo~er
husband, ad.vertising executive
Andrew Vladimir Ra hael is now
married to Karl Sode~lund a~
mer television producer
' or·

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KNIT SHIRTS, JOG SUITS
DRESSES

SO%o••
'

LADIES

BENDOVER COnON PANTS
lLOUSES.

Fashion Cllcllataf.

20% OFF

Regular PriCe .. .

Lias Coupon

_...

-

Yo\1 pay Only,

. '

--•••
•••
-·

U5
3.11

s• •••
•••

a Styied In [)eCOiator CoiOf8

I

MIDDUPOII
Mo!l.-111. 9ai00Sa00

TV 1111 UIJIIII viewers
.·

·,

l·!
•'

. . . .,

.... . . _

\-.o - .. tr tll.o _ _...,

LADIES COATS, SWEATERS
1 LOT DRESSES, SKIRTS

o,..

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~~=::~::=:·::. ;::::: ;: ;~.-: !ii·~!..~~.J~~~~:~~-~~~~
--.....·-- 1...,__-..: I

Autopsy shows drugs, smoking and
weight killed TV host's daughter
Assoc~ated PressWrtler

people who play with the people •~
money I~ they are cops," Fiegei
srud outside the cOurtroom
·
If convicted or ftrst-deiree murder under the open-murder charge,
Kevorkian could face a mandatory
penalty of life imprisonment without parole. The drug charge carries
a top sentence of two years' imprisonment
After the deaths of Ms. Miller
and Ms. Wantz, a State panel suspended Kevorkian's medical
license. He has appealed.

Shortly before their deaths, the KevQrkian within 24 hours if given
women made a video in which they notice by the judge or prosecutor.
described their pain and their wish
He said, prosecutors "did this in
to die.
secret so they could arrest Doctor
Ms. Miller suffered from multi- Kevorkian and put him in handple sclerosis and Ms. Wantz from a cuffs."
chronic pelvic disease. Neither
"These are malevolent, sick
woman's illness was terminal.
A medical examiner ruled their
deaths homicide, not suicide.
Kuhn set bail at $5,CI.Xl on each
murder count and ordered
Kevorkian not 10 assist in any' mort~
deaths if he were released. Fieger
said he expected his client to post
the required 10 percent.
The charges, which included
one count of delivery of a controlled substance, were issued
Monday by an Oakland County
grand jury. They were kept secret
until after Kevorkian's arrest
Wednesday.
"Once the medical examiner
ruled it was a homicide, after that
2MEDIUM
we had no alternative'' but to prosPEPPERONI PIZZAS
ecute, county Prosecutor Richard
Thompson said in announcing the
AND COLAS
indictments.
Kevorkian, 63, a retired pathologist, was arrested while walking
near his Royal Oak home. He
_ ..
.... . . . ..
I
smiled when he was led into court
·- ~· · · ···~· -"·- .....''"' '"""'"'" "
...
.... ..
..L
in handcuffs.
------~-- Fieger told reporters he had
asked permission to surrender

By STEVEN DRUMMOND
Associated Press Writer
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Dr.
Jack Kevorkian was arraigned on
two murder charges Wednesday in
the deaths of two women who used
his suicide machines after saying
they could no longer bear their
chronic illnesses.
Kevorkian's lawyer predicted
the charges would be dismissed. He
noted that no change has been
made in Michigan law since
Kevorkian in I 990 helped an
Alzheimer's patient inject herself
with a fatal dose of drugs. A ftrst·
degree murder charge in that ease
was dismissed.
."There is. no.crime of assisting
SUICide 10 M1ch1gan,'' Fieger told
Oakland County Circuit Judge
R1chard Kuhn at a hearing. "Doctor Kevorkian assisted those two
ladies. That is not a crime.''
The new charges stem from the
Oct 23 deaths of Sherry Miller, 43,
of Rosevtlle and Marjorie Wantz
58, of Sodus. They were found
dead in a cabin north of Detroit
hooked 10 injection devices invent:
ed by Kevorkian.

Genetic abnortnality linked to
adult form of ~us~ular Dystrophy

B~

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arrest''

RS13SOC

Rl1614A

31' FLAT SQUARE CONTRAST 52 PICTURE TUBE

By The Bend

Thursday, February 6, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-The Dally Sentinel

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15.110

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Ohio
Ohio University.
College of Osteopathic Medicine

FamilY.
Medi&lt;:ine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicme
Question: I have had several
episodes of sinus infection, so my
family doctor sent me to an ear,
nose, and throat (ENT) speeialist.
This doctor took X-rays and rec·
ommended that I have sinus
surgery because there was fluid and
bacteria accumulatmg m the smuses.
I saw another ENT specialist for
a second opinion before the
surgery. This doctor said that it's
ok to have three or four episodes of
sinus infection each year and that I
didn't need surgery. I'm curious
why the two specialists gave me
such different recommendations.
How serious do sinus infections
have to be before sinus surgery is
· advisable?
· Answer: We are not sure why
the human body has sinuses. At
times it seems that their primary
function is to provide a continuing
source of misery. As I'm sure both
• ~f the ENT specialists told you.
:~nus infections are a relatively
·.common complaint. There arc sev.·era! conditions that increase the
chances of having repeated sinus
infections, including having less
than perfect anatomical Sll'Ucture_of
the nose and sinuses. If the opemng
• from the sinuses to the nasal pas. ~age is too small or the "honeycomb" structure within the sinuses
is such that fluid is easily trapped,
infection is much more common.
Also, those with chronic irrila·
tion and swelling in their noses,
often due to allergies, are frequently victims of repeated sinus infecuons. The increased swelling of the
: mucous membranes of the nose
· both produces more fl~id and
allows it to be trapped w1thm the
otherwise healthy structure of one
or more of the sinuses. Once the
· fluid is stagnant within the sinus
chamber, it is likely to produce an
infection -just as occurs when
sinus obstruction is caused by
abnormal bone structure.
A third condition is a less frequent cause of recurring infections.
Impairment of the body's i~mune
system - as often occurs m Illnesses such as diabetes or AIDS can produce repeated infections in
· · ·· ihe sinuses and elsewhere.
· ·
Treatment - whether the

repeated infections are due to aller ·
~ies , structural abnormalities or
1mmune system problems involves antibiotics to clear the
infection, decongestants to help
open the drainage pathways from
the sinuses, and occasionally,
agents to help make the mucus less
thick and sticky. Often. additional
treatment directed at the specific ·
cause of the recurrent infection is
also required.
Sinus surgery is indicated when
there are repeated episodes of sinus
infection - more than four per
year - and the bone structure is
abnormal. Individuals with repeated infections and normal bone
structure usually have little
improvement with surgery. Surgery
is also necessary when infection
has advWJced to the stage that it has
actually destroyed some of the
bones that form the sinus. The
involvement of the bone, called
"bony erosion," can lead to a very
serious complication of sinus infection. The infection can spread ·
through the bone into the brain.
resulting in a serious and potentially life-threatening brain infection.
Question: Could any harm
come from following the second
doctor's advice and not having
surgery?
Answer: Yes, but harm could
also occur from following the first
doctor's advice. What you have
discovered is that the practice of
medicine involves considerable
judgment. Few decisions are "text·
book simple." l"d suggest you have
a sinus cr scan, because it is' much
more sensitive at identifying areas
of bone destruction within the sinus
than are sinus X-rays.
I'm sure your family doctor or
either of the ENT specialists will
order this test for you. If there is no
sign of abnormal bone structure,
especially no destruction of bone
by infection, the odds would then
be pretty good that you could safely follow the seco nd doctor's
advice.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
45701.

.
Community Calendar items
· · appear two da'ls before an event
. and the day o that event. Items
·
must be received well in advante
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Revival at Old
· Bethel Free Will Baptist Church on
: . Route 7 and Story's Run Road will
. . be held through Saturday at 7:30
· p.m. nightly. Rev. Norman Taylor
js the evangelist. Pastor Ralph
Burcher invites the public.
TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. All members arc urged to
· auend.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post home.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
: :Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Slation. The public is
" invited.
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
.
·
Athletic Boosters will meet Thurs: ·· : day at 7:30 p.m. Election of offi·
: .. . cers will be held and final plans
will be made for the fifth and sixth
: : ··: ·grade basketball tournament. All
:
members are urged to atlend.
.
••
•,.
::
:

RUTLAND · There will be a
_yputh rally at !he Rutland N~e
-church on Thursday at 7 p.m. w1th
:'Greg Cundiff as speaker. Refreshments will be served and the public
is invited.

.'

'
.
: .• • . • CHESJ:IIRE - ~e Gallia-Mei~
· ·•· -commumty Acuon Agency w1II
:
hold its free clothing day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at the old
•:high school building in Cheshire.
i POMEROY

- The AA group
: wlli meet Thursday at 7 p.m. al
•... ·-'Samd Heart Catholic Cbun:h.

·-- ..

.

LONG BOITOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have preaching and
singing on Friday at 7 p.m. with
Pastor Steve Reed and local
singers. The public is invited and
fellowship will follow.
HOCKINGPORT · There will
be a round and square dance at
Hockingport on Route 124 at the
home of Kenny and Millie
Reynolds on Friday from 8 to
11 :30 p.m. Music will be provided
by "Don, Buddy and the Smokey
Mountain Drifters." Jim Brown
will be the.caller.
ANTIQUITY · There will be a
song fest on Friday at 7 p.m. for the
re-opening of the Faith Fellowship
Crusade for Christ Church. Featured singers include Homeward
Bound Singers, Jackson; Glory
Land Singers, Delaware; Highway
Gospel Singers, Columbus; and
others. Rev. Franklin Dickens
invites the public.
SATURDAY
MEIGS • The Meigs County
Grange Youth Group will meet
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Ponderosa
in Gallipolis, followed by a meeting at 8 p.m. at the home of Pauy
Dyer. All grange youth in Meigs
County are invited to attend.

ew arrival

Rutland gardeners meet
The Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the horne of Mrs. Chris
Diehl in Rutland with 10 members
and one guest, Sarah Dawn Jenkins.
Mrs. Diehl had 'tlevotions and
roll call was answered by giving a
New Year's thought. The club
creed and collect were repeated and
the officers reports were given.
Plans were made and money
collected toward Valentine sunshine anticles to be delivered to residents of the Meigs County Home
by Mrs. Stella Atkins and Miss
Ruby Diehl.
Several members had placed
arrangements in churches and at
Eastern Star meetings. Dorothy
Woodard will place a Valentine
arrangement at Overbrook Center.
Mrs. Diehl had on display a
winter arrangement containing a
cardinal. Neva Nicholson drew the
traveling prize furnished by Pauline
Atkins and Mrs. Woodard the door
prize.
The program was Winter Plants
and Birds. Stella Atkins reported
on cacti and succulents from
Hyponex Book on House Plants.
She said that cacti and succulents
owe their ever-increasing popularity to their spectacular form. They
need maximum sunshine and are
not harmed by dry aunosphere.
Mrs. Margaret Weber chose the
Black-capped Chickadee as a
favorite. Because of their uniform
good nature even in the coldest
weather and their confiding dispositions at all times, chickadees are
among the most popular birds.
They come to feeding stations provided with suet, sunflower seeds or
peanut butter. In the wild their food
co nsists of insects, seeds and
berries. Mrs. Weber gave two
poems concerning the cardinal.

By JIM DRINKARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) B~shing aside charges of partisanship, the House formally authorized a probe into whether the I980
Reagan-Bush campaign schemed
with Iran to delay freedom for 52
American hostages.
The House voted 217-192 on
Wedn~sday to proceed with the
mvest1gauon, s1x months after it
was requested by Democratic leaders.
While Republicans cried foul,
Democrats said they only want to
put to rest allegations that the 1980
Republican campaign got the
hostages' release postponed to

RUTLAND FURNITURE
COMPANY'S

forestall the re-election of Jimmy
Carter.
The vote fell mostly along parry
lines, with 34 Democrats - primarily southerners and conservatives - joining a solid bloc of
Republicans in opposition.
The timing virtually ensured
that the probe would extend well
into this year's presidential election
season. Republicans loudly
denounced it as an attempt not to
get at the truth, but at the president .
Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La.,
said Democrats were pursuing ailegations made by "liars, felons,
frauds and opportunists."
"! feel confident that in the end
the American people will say to

Days

l.luu,;c;

an ad

COPY DEADLINE

Call99.2 -2156
MONDAY

RECLINING

thru

SOFA

SATURDAY 8A.M. TO 5P.M.

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

• Ad1 ouuide; Gallia, Maaon or Meigt eountiu mu.t be prepaid
• Receive discount for adt paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Giveawa)' and Found ad. under 15 wonb will be
run 3 daya at no r.harp.
• Price of ad for all capitalletten it douhle price e.d COil

• 7 point lrne type only u•ed
• Tribune ia not reaponaible for error• after nrat day (check
forerrora firu day ad run• in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that muat he paid in ad,.anc:e are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A clamried adntrlittment placed in the Gallipolit Daily
Tribune (excepl Clauified Diaplay, 8uaint'.la Card or Lesal
Nottcea) will alto appear in the Point Pleatant RegU.ter and
the Daily Sentin el, reachil18 o•er 18,000 home~

. . .I •

StorlJng Sllv•

9.95

.,..-

·Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
2:00p.m. SaiUrday
2:00 p.m. Monday
2:00 p.m. Tuesday
2:00 p.m. Wednesday
2:00p.m. Thursday
2:00p.m. Friday

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42

$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15

2~

36 7-ChMhire
388-VInlon
245-R.io Grande
256-Guyan Diat.
643-Anbia Oitl.
379-Walnut

985-Cheoler
843-Porllond
247-Lelart r.u.
949-Racine
742-Rulland

S7(&gt;...Apple Gro.,
773-Muon
882-New Hnen
895-l.elart
937-Bullolo

66 7-CoohoiUe

I \l l\1 'I l'l'l ll '

33- farm• for Sale
34- 8 .,.;,..,. Bu;ld;ngo

3~ Lob &amp; Ao,.•g•

36- Real Ellate Wanted
Hl\T\1 ~

GET RESULTS • .FAST!

41- Houtct for Rent
Truck• for Sate
42- Mohik Homea for Rent 73-:- Varu &amp; 4 WO'a
43- Farm• for Rent
14-- Motoreyclu
44-1\partment for Rent
7~ Boau &amp; Moron for Sale
4~ Furni.thed Room•
76-- Auto Paru &amp; Accooooii,.J

46- Space (or Rent

77- Auto Repair
7~ Campi.n&amp; Equipment '

47- Wanted to Rent

2-ln Memory

675-Pl. Ple..anl
458-Loon

For Sate or Trade

Profeutonal Senicu

,\ll\1~11111\

Gallia County Meigs County MIIAOn Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
992-Middlepora/
Pomeroy

Mwicallnatrumenu
Fruiu &amp; Vege~.ablea

$ .60
$.05/day

~-----

Classified pages CIWer the
following telephone e:rchanges ...

~olUpoUo

l· I \ \ \! I \I.
21- Ruaineu Opportunily
22- Money to Loan

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

3- Announc:emenla
4- Cinaway
5- Hoppy Ado

ll- Help Wanted ·

12- Situatioru Wanted

48-- Equipment for Rent
49-- For Leate

\ll·. BUI

6- Loat and Found
7- Lo.t and Found
8-- Public Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted to Buy

14- Bwinea1 Training
15-- School• &amp; lrutruc:tion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa~r
17- Mi.tcellaneout

18.--- Wanted To Do

•CRAFf .

• LA-Z-BOY . • ENGLAND
• BUSHLINE • BROYHILL *NORWALK
•BRVARDS •FLEXSTEEL•CATNAPPER

..

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~· .

CLO;SEOUT ON llll919 &amp;1990 Wll PICIS and SELICTID Wll PICKS
The Card Box otill boo a huge oeleclion of Comic Book&amp;
rrom Old to New ror the Comlc Book CoUecton

RUTLAND AMERICAN
LEGION HALL
8:00·12:00 P.M.
WHITES-HILL BAND
ADM. $3.00; Cou1&gt;1esll~ .oo
Under :

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Now You Can Pick Up Your Monthly Baseball,
Football and Basketball Beckens

OPEN MONDAY·SATURDAY 10 A.M.·6 P.M.
CALL 667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINtMENT.

'LEARN TO DANCE"!
Tuesday (BoaiMilrs) Child10n &amp;
Adults
Point Pleasant Youth Center
•5:00 p.m. &lt;;:toggjng lege 4 &amp; up)
•7:00 p.m. etoggong &amp;
Counii}'.Westom
JunK&gt;r and High School Students
ana Adults
'8:00 p.m. Baftrcom and
Counlly .Wntem
!Adults) Singlas and Couplos
Class Fea: $5.00 fl"r porson
Each weal&lt;, month pild in advance
An adult that brings a child gets their
· class frNI
Instructor. Mikki Casto, 675·3888
Fu'nl Easyl Great Exe!Qsel

Choose from Twin, Full, Queen and K1ng Sizes ...
all at one low. low price for the mattress and boxspnngl

Also save on:

$128.

.SIZES

EVERY
SAt NIGHT

PRICE REDUCEDI
r..Kilg ...
The plo

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY EVENING
7:00P.M.
202 NORTH SECOND ST.
(Old Firestone Store)
Middleport

the maltmss sleeping rile world ·

I I

Bashan Building

goa;•rnd

ALL 8/ZEB•••ONE LOW PRICE ...-~ E
EACH PIECE
s
FIRM
FI.RM

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

w..
has botn
reduced 10 ~. lrt.m. S73,l00 ord OWIII
foooting ol 'I' lo 110% ol JllMI ai!QII11111j bo f.""
b~ for IIJ~-~ Ia bit •OIJ nio n oo 3~ '"
11 io Rocile. 4IlK, 3 loil11_2
I 8R f!l.
PrOflllly ir&lt;lodes 4,800 ·~ n. furm
Coi614-9!H I04for .
Panill ..,.

STATE ROUTE 124
.UlLAND, OH.
742·2211

DEWXE ALL

Bus.iness
Services

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

ea

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classl(ieds.
8

6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

Factory Choke
12 Gauga Shotgun Only
Strictly lnforced
9-13-'91-tfn

.' lH\111 .'

\\lli~F

por
Plumbins &amp; Heatins

51- Houaehold Cooda

Ex~avatins
Etectr;,ol &amp; n,r,~,,.,i;.~

52- Spor1ing Cood.

53- AntiquH

General Hauling
Mohile Home Rrp.w
Upholtlery

S4- Mite. Merchandite
55-- Building Supplies

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
·EVERY fRIDAY EVENING
7:00P.M.
202 N. 2ND ST,. OLD ' FIRESTO~£ STORE
MIDDLEPORT
Furniture, toy1, tool•, guna, grocery He1111,
alway• •omethlng new &amp; different every -k.
Al•o buying tumlture &amp; mlec. houeehokf ftem1.
SMOKING PERMITTED
AUCTIONEER: COL W. KErru MOLDEN
APP. AUCTIONEER: HANK CLELAND
814-742·2048 .
Now Booking Spring &amp;Summer Auction•

14
SESSIONS - 51400
Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14

949·2826
OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
t-6-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

Merchandise
In Memory

VALENTrNE DAY
SPECIALS .

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

H.E.C.

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524
1·22·'92·1 mo.

low Grade Oak
Saw logs
$150 per 1,00
Delivered To
OHIO PAllET CO
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·9.92·6461
1·7-92, 1 mo

MARCUM
CONTUCTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp;Room
Additions
'
985·4141

EXCAVATING

MY UTILE BOY
Ill~ him down to 1l1tp one night
·
When I wob up llell1011111hlng -n't right.'"'
God hlldllken my little boy Jtho fiiiiKI my hMrt
full of joy. ·
·
I know thiN II 1 nNIIIOR ha hlldlo go, but I IIIII
~ him, piNH no. I jull don't I"! "' 1houkl
hiiYIIo go.
.
·
I lito fMI I wabd 10 long on my aw. boy, for
· Oodtoju.tcomeandt• hlm•l ha-.•~
1 know tMI h• 1e • • from _..., lind hum,
but, Oh, how I wllh ha- llllhareln my..,...,
· I lind an' of my lcMito my IItie boy, c.Jeb, who
lllh the h-lllbcm. .
.
I LOVhnd lftl YOUII
'
.

RUTLAND • There will be a

iound and JICitW'e dance at the Rut·

land American LeaiOn Hall on Sit·
W'day from 8 p.m. to mldlli&amp;bt wilh

mulic by County Kin B1nd. Ray
Fitch wiU be the caller. The public
is invited to ~~tend.
(

' ~

PTOtomeet

.

.._, Uommr

1Wild to Mild tllalllll to tha God ~-•• for
thl
.....
llullft ""to LOV!o
'
.
lilllld
( '

t':t..

The Portland Elementary PTO
wiU meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.

Boxes • Ca~e Pans •

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES .,d
TRAILER SITES.
LANOCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCI(ING
FREE ESTIMATES

c•

.. .. · ·: CuHers • Maids ·,t ·

·.JLOOX Cllocotm
. , IPJCW,
wWte •• ••
$1 .15
•• '2.15 NOW .

HOMEMADE CAIIDl

s............, . '

a-late Cltinles

. 99z.3838

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

Startlnt
12

22

Pruning and Landnapltlg
frH fstlmatn-25 Yrs.·[xp.
C.. oltor 6 P•· -'92·fl2J

c•

nu.1-ror1

MEIGS

KING'S
HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES

Men...............'77S ea.
Women ........ ..S22S ea.
Couple .................s4 S0
Family ..........

New Hornea, Add•lon1,
Siding, Pole Barns,
Painting. GarlliJe.l,
Pon:hea ·
Fill ISDIAfiS ·

..ssso (41

Buslness ....... ..S650 (4)
Students..............s1 00

6

NO SUNDAY CAllS

J&amp;L

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

2/4/92/1 ...

INSULATION

Homes

•VInyl Siding
•RYhlacement
indow
•Roollnp
•Insulation

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Co11pare

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742-2097

Free Estimates

985·4473.
667·6179

539' Bryan Place
Mickflepor~ Ohio
111141tfn

TROLLEY
CUFTS

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and ·
REMOVAL

lEI. lancll-10:00 '...,
KIDS CliFT GASSES
Rabbloo, Spool Ooltl. '

•LIGHT HAULING

Potpoorri Hooot Socko and

•FIREWOOD

Ill. 9- ValocJIIH IIINo 11ttse
10111m fiOI 1111 MUll'
Ill. 11-A4.1t ..... Ols111
6:30 J!CC •
hr Mnlol• Col! 614-992•2549
SPECIAL VALENTINE HEIUIIS
Fob. 7·14 Opon Till I P:m. r
Opon Mon..SII. 10 .,..5 pm
Sunrll1 1-5 p.on.

Yalantlno Pl111

BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6·12·90-tfn

WHALEY'S
PARTS
Frame

In Custom

NEW &amp;USED
FOR All MAKES
&amp;MODUS

992-7013 or
992·5553

OR TOLL FREE

1·100·141~0070

DUWIII, OHIO

R&amp;C EXCAVATING.
lUtJ.DOZING

Now In "
Stock ~!

llONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMEN'I'S &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULIN:J-Imtllone,
Dirt, Q
and Co.ll

.n1.;n~m1

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS'nd .
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT' ":l!W.\0f.E
LICit.. • Sttflft SclttiiiN. ell lt. 141 ••
(614) 446·M16 wl-100-172-5967

12-&amp;-lfn

II

~I

'1,

'

'

lU.1Ji~~~U' ·

College.............. ..S150
1/31/92/1 mo.

11·22-9.2·1

MERIINS' i. DISKINS.
. ·. WHITE ~. MILK CHOCOlAJE
SEMI·SWEET- Retl, Plllk

f&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
REMOVAL ·

COUNTRY MOilLE HOME

3 Nl10 MoiJIIo lla11 for Ront
jist N..-th of P•oray.
Stortln' at '225 p• mo.
6 4-992·5531or
385-&amp;227
213192/1 mo.

WANTED

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

54 Mlscellaneouq

pc.

COOLVILLE • The Coolville
VFW-Post No. 3478 will have .a
chili dinner at thc,S:oolyille Lions
Club building on Saturday from 47p.m.
'

,t_

15
15
IS

6
10
Monthly

Bt:LLETI N BOARD

FAIRPLAIN • The Liberty
Mountaineers will perfonm at the
Jackson County Jamboree in Fair-- .
plain, W.Va. on Saturday.

!

C::'"

.

ATHENS - The Southeastern
Ohio Traditional Dance Society
will hold an old lime Square/conaa
dance on Saturday from 8 to II
p.m. at the Dance Factory in
Athens. Cost is $4 per person and
· Kathy Anderwn is the caller.

li'

~
out to get Reagan or Bush but sim· to $2.S miUion.The
investigators
face
a
daunt
pi y want to clear the air of a rumor
that, if true, would amount to trea·- ing challenge. Some of the key fiji
ures in the alleged scheme, mot~
son.
notably
Reagan's then-campaign
They point to public statements
manager
WiUiam Casey, have died:
by Bush, Reagan and Cartar in
Some
documents
that could lie
favor of an investigation, as w-ell as
appeals by some of the 52 important have seemingly disaJ?!
hostages.
And much of the stOry 11
on testimony from witnessei
The investigation takes its name
backgrounds en
from the I980 Reagan campaign's with
~
fear that Carter would win release dubious
of the hostages through diplomacy
on the eve of the election - an
"October Surprise" that could also
..•
rescue his political fortunes.
The Con~ressional Budget
Office has esumated the cost of the
House investigation at $1.2 million
•

-~

u-.

Bracoloh.... - 1

Words

I
3

I 'A Mile South of Tuppers Plalas ~
01 State Route 7 (Look for Slg1) ""

u.,.,.a.a

of the House panel that investigated the Iran-Contia arms and money
affair.
Hamilton has hired as his chief
counsel Lawrence E. llarcella, a
former assistant U.S. auomey in
Washington who earned fame by
snaring renegade CIA agent Edwin
Wilson.
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
D-Wash., denied any political
motive. "I am not in the business
of trying to use this for any JXl!lisan
or electoral purpose," he told a
reporter. He said he hoped the
investigation would yield at least
preliminary results by this summer,
well before November's elections.
Democrats contend they are not

•The Area's Number l
Ma:.;ketplace

TB~~ABDBOX

~.~~!.:!!? 2

-'

t.

SAVE

NEW YORK (AP) - Country
singer Garth Brooks says his womanizin~ didn't ruin his marriage; it
made 1t stronger.
"I'm not telling anybody, 'If
you're not happy, g\) out and screw
around because your wife will
become a dynamo for you,' but I
got to be honest with rou, that's
what happened for me,' he said in
an interview with USA Weekend.
Brooks, 29, said his infidelity
led him and his wife, Sandy, to
separate briefly after six years of
marriage.
"Then I finally straightened
up," he said.
The couple are expecting their
first child in July.

•1992 FIHrBoMblll Cards.....
•1992 Oanruu Bauball C.nii ..................9Sc pack
•1992 Toppa Baooball COr&lt;lo ......................so, pock
•1992 Score Bla•blll Clrdi ....................... SOt: pack
•1 991 Uppor Dock s..oboll Car&lt;lo .............Ht pack
Wt SJIJI Hovotfi1 LEN' SERIES I I II In Slock
NOW IN STOCI
Toppo S1adlum Club Hockay COr&lt;lo
1881 Score Pinnacle NFL Foolblll Promlor Edblon
~1*u- Dock FOOiboll...................................e~
NFL Wild Card Foolllll Wlx Packl
Hall ol Fame vo. Olympic Car&lt;lo Now In Stock
Dock Baokllball
StorTrokSorlooi&amp;U ·
NFL Pro Sol Platinum Sortn I &amp; II
Mutcll C1" I Vette Sell 1n:l MID Race Clrdl
(Thno 3 Solo F..- Tho Car Buffo)

themselves, 'What in the heck was .
that all about?"' L'lvingston said
during five hours of often vitriolic
debate.
But Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind.,
who will chair the investigating
task force, said he believed a formal probe is the only way to reach
some final resolution on the allegations, which have persisted for
more than a decade.
"I do not see how you can get
to the bottom of these matters
unless you have a formal investigalion by an offteial parry with subpoena power, able to take statements under oath, and able to have
secure access to information,'' said
Hamilton, who also was chairman

GIGANTIC

Garth Brooks
talks about past

The Dally Sentinel-Page

House to probe 1980 Reagan campa.ign over GOP complaint$

Michael and Angelique Dorst
are announcing the birth of a son,
Aries Christopher Dorst on Aug. 7
at Holzer Medical Center.
He weighed seven pounds and
eight ounces and was 20 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mike
and Jean King, Coolville. Maternal
great grandparent is Ruby Morris,
Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are ~·
ine Ferguson, Pomeroy, and Milford Dorst, Apple Grove, W.Va.

Mrs. Roben Canaday reponed
from Horticurture Magazine that
anytime after the first of the year
broken or cut branches of favorite
shrubs can be stancd to force. The
branches are immersed in warm
water overnight to soften the bud
scales. Then they should be placed
in water in strong sunlight to stay
around 60 degrees.
Miss Diebl gave the tip that bird
feeders sbould be clean to stan the
feeding, then filled with seeds,
bread crumbs, suet and related
foods. Carefully remove any heavy
snow in feeders. Birch trees release
their seeda now providing food for
feathered friends and new trees.
The poem, ''Today A Wonderful, Exciting, Positive Day" closed
the program and the president
asked a blessing before a table of
plentiful refreshments.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

or

PN-V•Jentl""

Community calendar

Thursday, February 6, 1992

.

�1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11

· SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

Help Wanted

Mana~ttoloalat

3

Noodod. Boollt Ranjal. Uppar

Announcements

CU.• Beauty Salon ~state Route

160, 114-44«-l~:or Dorio
tDorlo),
OIW82·1'1H tKolly).
'
llodloll AahUnt wanlod.
· 1111on Co. phyolclon wont• filii
lima modlclt 11011t1nt. Send
talllma to PO So• 245, T"ppara

Mtll SII)IIIOO: Quyo • Glrll. Call
Today. Oato ToniGI&gt;t. 1·100-407tOOC, $2.115/mln. Uus1 B• Ovor
11.
Roduco Sale And Fill Whh
Go- Capilli And E·Vap

Or Kolly. 114-4

Diuretic At Fruth Pt.rmacy.

4

Plains, OH 45713

Giveaway

17 blgl Of lhlmlnum CIOI, Clll
m1~

With Exp.rlenct. Full Time, Day

cal, 1pprox. 1

Shlft1 Excollanl Bonollta. EOE.

yr. old, 614-89:2.a&amp;H after 5pm

S.na Rtaumt To Personntl

plio,

14

Horu Manure, Harmon Park
Stable&amp;, Point PluHnl, WV.

Lg. chut trHztr, works, 614-

1'12-2328
1!1 Monlhs Old, Family Pet,
Sh1phard And Chow, Interesting

"Fire and brimstone doesn' t sound nearly
as bad as the low ceilings."

Malt

Malt,

PI"•

11

Yard Sale

Help Wanted

614-992-6831 atttr 6pm
Mayla9. ringer washer for parts, ALL Yard Sales Muat 81 Pa id In
p
dotsn 1 run, 614·843-5211 even· Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. $lSO.OO/Oay rocesslng Phone
ings
ths day before lhl ad is to run. Ordans! People Call You. No Ex·
sunday lditlon • 2:oo p.m. perience Nac•uary. 1-800.255F~day. Mondoy odlllon • ~:00 242·
6 Lost &amp; Found
p.m. Saturday.
Alto
singtr nltdad
tor
Found : Llnl• Tan Dog, Has Llttls
"Aetltcllons Trio". PltaM reply
Blue, Green Collar, Vicinity; 8
Public Sale
to At. 2 Boll 314-B, Letan, WV
Along
River
Bank,
By
25253.
&amp; Auction

°

McDon• lds, Gallipolis. 614·446Dog:

Whltt

Rick Pearson Auction Company, Anonllonl Earn $300.00 To
Symoa, lull lime auctlonur, complete $500.00 WMklr Roadlng Books

FuiiJPart.Time,
Shoestring Ridge, Reward! 614· auction urvlca. Llcenud Ohio,
441-061g,
Wotl VIrginia, 304-773-5785.
Guar~nlud Paychtckl 1-501·
484·7000 Ext 546.
W/Whitl lpoll Of'l Chiii,~IIOO•

Hartford area, 304·882·3288.
white

klt1tn,

Kathnor

Lana, 304-675-1B4Z
kOST- black Schnauztr w/Whltt
throat, lriendly, Curtis Hollow

Rdl Forked Run aru, lost Jan.

~lh,

Home.

At

LOST mala rabbit Buglo, rod
LOST

11184 Clmaro Z-28 T·topo, 350
ang, 1uto, loadea,1 13000, or
trtC11 tor S·10 Blaur or S·10
tRICk, :JOW75-3319
1984 Cllllua Cloro, Oooct
Shope, 7a,OOO IIIIIs; 11184 Pon·
1110 Aaro, SE, Eltcollent Shape
614·258-6149 Anytlmo, Or 614:
2!1-1m Ahlr 5p.m.

Sectional

28x52, 3br, 2 _Batha, Country

Khehan, 10x26 A~aehlb Porch,
Spacial Low Prlcl, Eltcollom
Financing

Anilablal

French

Cllr Mobilo Homli, Inc. 114-4461340 Or 1-800.231-4417.

10 H(X..Il

()Rt€R Ut-ITIL.

-...... 1 CAN'T WAIT

YOU PM FOR THE
OtlE" ltJ£ ~IPI'tD
lO YOOTHR6E

nlAT L.Ot-1!;. !

M

IIJ Newt

614·11115-4432

9

Wanted to Buy

,.,.-...,-,.:..~..,;,....;.;___:.!___
Ustd Mobllt Homes, Call 614·

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Pay,

Excellent

~4.::46.::.().::17.::5:.,·---,:----,--,-Wanted To Buy : Junk Autot
Wltn Or Without Motor•. Call
Larry Lively. 614-381-9303.

Transportalion,
407·292-41lt7,
E•t. 571. 8a.m.a10p.m. loll
Refunded.

Wanted To Buy: Small Mobllt

Spoaro, 304-675-14211.

Home Or Travel Trai1tr, Mu.t It
Atltast 180 Squar11 Fttt, Wanted
To Make Small Ot1ice. 614--256-

6251.

BeMiit•,

AVON I All Arn.• I Shirley

assistant for
local physlcltns' oHk::t, part·
tlmt only, nnd rtsumn to
Ctrtllltd

m~dle~~l

Dally Sontlnol, PO Box 129M,
Pomeroy, OH.

~OST: LadiH wrist watch wllh

'JQVtn chain band. Vicinity: Bob

Employment Services

Construction Workers, Ntw
Protocl To $22 Hr. Carpentara
Ltborers.t. Palntt,.., Orywtd

iD
The Jtllmoni.Jl
IIIInllde Edition r:;r

Construction
11 Help Wanted
Wanted, naw proJ•ct, to $22hr.,
Lost: wn111 Bird [)og With Black
carpenters, laborera, painters,
Spott, Reward Otfertd! VIcinity: AVON • All areas, Call Mtrllyn drywall muons and htlpars, 1·
Gtorglt CrNk Road, Gallipolis,
800-551 -0163
WtaYif 304-882·2645.
61,f.446-244S, Ask For Paul.

the

CLRSSIFIED RDS
Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?H

675-3984.

41 Houses for Rent

675-4035.

2 bedroom all eltc home 3042:00 PM only.

304-675-7138, M·F 9:00.3:00 or
3:00

and

Will do hOUHCIIInlng, have Jll04
reference•. 304-875-5413.
2br Home, Near Gtlllpolll And
Galllpoll• Chy Schoots. 614-446·
Will do aftJcel: hau .. clunlng:
1817.
M ~"t:/' Tutaday, or Thursday.

l'I111,1Mvo JIIOMogl.

bedroom

3

Maadowbrook Addn,

Ftnancial
Business

21

Opponunlty
INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
lllcommtnds that you do busl·
ntsa wilh peoplt you know, and
NOT to lind money lhrough th•

mail until you hav• ln'IHirgsted
tht offering.

house,
1405 Cedar

St, 304-675-3753.
3br 2 Batha, FP, OW, CA,
$475/rno. Oaposh Required, 6t4·

446-4222, or Evonlngs: 614-446-

2174.

electric and gaa, r1f. required,

614·949-2217

Hou11 for rant In Pomeroy, 611\·
992-8265 ennlnga
Point Pleaunt ArM: 3br House,

Quick? No Way_! But W• Hav• A To Schooll, $400Jmo. RtlltrenGood, StHdy, AHordobll, B"ol· cas Roqullod. 614-446-3537
n11s. Won't LA1t. 1o800-2B4· Evenings .

22 Money to Loan

1---=-----42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

BEWARE OF Rlp..QFFSI
Got Tho Truth About Phono Ap- 2 btdroom 111 tiK, Ashton
provals, 800 Numbers, High Upland Ad, Hud accepted, 304·
FHI. For REAL Loant Call 803· 67!-4088.
293·1641. Bod Cr.clll OK.
ii Bedroomt, Large Yard, City
School District, Kona"ga , 814·
23 Professional
446·7473.
Services
2br Mobile Home, C101• In, No
Polo, 1200 Per Month lncl"'l~nl
WI Con ~liP You Find MONEY Wotor,
FOR COLLEGE. Evary Studont 3617. $100 O.pooH. 614
Ia Eligible For Financial Ald. Ex·
tr1 Ordinary Tuition Service.

814-440-1V64.

Late moHI mobile honw, bath
and holt, Sind Hill ROlli, 304-

175-3834.

Real Estate

3 Unll Rontol, Sll"alod On 112

Acre LolhMalnt.,anct Free, Excelltnl S ape, ~14-441-1568 .

4 rooms new roof, double Jot

B11tmead1 aruJ.- $22,500. af1tr

5:00 PM, 304-l!o-5762 or 304·
882-3237.

,.

3 BR HOrne for aal•. Low 20's.
New kitchen, wrirlng, h11tlng,

,-

chy· Point Pltaunt, WV. 304·

1'unr your duller· into em~lr,
Sell it the easy wlly••• by phone,
rw neetllo lem'e your /rome.
J•lace your cltissified ad tO(lay!
I 5 wonls or· less, 3 days,
3 paiJer·s,$6.00

uteiii~•L

]()

_____

compltl• home tuml~~~c·
Hours: Mon-Sa1, 11-S. 1
0322, 3 mit. out Bulavillt Ad.
FrH o.llvery.

304-882·33117.

AKC
Tucup
tamale,
Pomeranian, a mo old, had first

;;;:'14~11

Fllh Tank, 2413 Jackton Ave.

1980 GMC 4x4, 61,000 MIIH, Ex.

Regilterltd black/ whl1e malt

1988 Ford F15(1 414 XLT ltrlal,
loaded, extended cab, $11,000,

tnlmals and supples.

Coeur Spaniol puppy1 groat

Ctll1nl Condition, S2,800.

441.()731.

J:i 1200, no ch.ckl, 1114-992·

614·992·7563

Thl PMocl v.tontlnoa Day Gtftt

74

AKC Roglttorod Booton Tarrier
~pplol, Now Toklng Dopoolls.

114-441-211t3.

llkl now
Phalzgrol, "Yori&lt;'Town" Plottor,
m~tny

extra pltces $75. Call 614441-i87111 tHar .II p.m.

PICKENS FIJRNITURE
Nowl\lood

~~ell.

304-762·2226.

57

cublc ft.), can 114-992·7147, $50

B"Y or ooll. Rlvorlno Antlq-.

Hours: M.T.W.

10:00 a.m. 10 6:00

Farm Equipment
4020 JD Tractor, Loodor, 1!!,950;
Lalo llodlll 4000 JD, 1~850 ;
Long 480 01- Tractor,
Hog, $4,450. Ownor Will
Flnanco. 614-2111-1522.
Ford Form Tractor, $2,300. 114·
251-1240.
lnlornatlonal 424 DIHII Tractor,
BliSh Hoa. 13,315; - lnlllrlll·

1522.

(2:00)
(J) Golf United Airlines

Hawaiian Open, 1st round
from Honolulu (L)
III (J) II Columbo A
deranged woman resolves to
murder !&lt;glumbo's wife. (A)
Stereo. !OJ
IZl, The Astronomera Stereo.

mlloo

For Salt: 1988 Hondt 300 Utility
4 Wht•ltr, Excellent Condhion

•

iSliltre1121e
Albtl1vlllt '92:
I 'Momenl With 1M
cludea All

/tXJ ..I'M A

bolt wilh 150 Suzuki engine

grNt cond, $8,500. 304-

SO:IOLOGI5L

675-15:\H.

OH, WAn: ..

1M Wl&lt;i"TING A ~ ON /HE
GIM!Ill(kS 0£-SJlRATt. ~
WIU ()Sf: 10 A\.OID B£./NG
ALONE.

Equipment, C.ll Afttr

6p.m. 614-446-1753.
11187 Straloo tl'UV Floh-N.Skl
loadld,

Woold A preview of the XVI
Olympic Winter Games .
(2:00) Stsreo. Q
Q]) • The Slmpaona Homer
has it rough when 1,1arge

EEKANDMEEK

1983 C.Ray, 21 Ft. C"ddy Cabin
V-8, Excellent Condhfon, In~

t::O\J'T G/)

leaves him to care for

a PolmeNtwa Q
1111 Thtlt'l My

Porto. 814-245'5877,

114-379-

e

Home
Improvements

Affordable ProfHslonal Home

Ropalr. Elactricot, Pl"mblng,
Roollng, No lob too small, ~"

MY #.OM eAY5 MY Qlo.D

11-4CN THE NEXT Be&amp;T

MY D,AD AI.WAYS
SA'1'S IF 'rCLl c;tiN 'T
WIN 1Hg.\AAI..L ...

eHOIJL.D PUr IN FOR
e;ARl.-Y ReTIReMENT.

THING' IS NOT 10

L..06E-ANY.

Htlmafn, plAit call after 7:00
PM or INn mnHge, 304-8~

3984.

jj2verly Hilts, 90210
Andrea leads campus
support lor condom
dlstrlbut~ on campus.
Stereo.
11J MOVI : Silent Nlgl1t,
DtadiY Night IV: Initiation (RJ

1977 FoJ&lt;I LTD 1nd 1m Ford

Van, both 351 motors A aUio,
both run good, na r~aeon•bll

offllr .,.fuHd, 814-Hl-7462

Ant;

Eflclrlc hoopllll bad ~=­
t1DO.
not

flllolrocont

rpmaN0-304'

Complltollol&gt;llo Home Sai.Upa,

BARNEY

Rtpilrli Commerlcal, Aetfdln·

Uot lmprovomonto. lncl"dlng:
Plumbing, Eleetrlctl. ln1urance

4218.

r, ploys 38

-11011.

Claim• kcop4od. l14·251·1111.

I CAN'T FIND

Curtis

LOWEEZ.Y
NOWHAR I

Home

lmprov.ments:

YMro Eltperllnco On Oldar a

Hewer HarMs. Room AddlUona,

(2:00)

=

.

ARE COMIN' OVER
FER SUPPER!!

~~eNIMd

rooms, put 'fP vinYl

Electrical &amp;
Refrlgel'ltlon

••••o.

a long, sell·addressed. 1tamped.on...:
lope to Astra-Graph, c/o IIIII nnapaper, P.O. Box 91428, ' Ctevitll)d, OH
4-4101-3428. Be sure to state your zodl·
ac algn .
•
PISCES (F... »MMrCCI :10) Bull~
.matters are likely to bo ,, _ eompJ!da,t,
edt0daythan1Mywlllbetomorrow. Try
to keep thla In mtntl when Hltlng up
your appointment adtedule.
ARII!I ~ 21•Apf!l11) YOI!'II need
a bit of elbOw room tOday In order to
tunc11on ellllctlwty. Try ,lo act lnclapen, ·
danlly ol other&amp;, 10 yG!I'II be able to loClll on . ldvMCing your Immediate

87 UphOlstery
=~:::::::::~
~·lllt+fl Uphotll!l.!ftl -

...... ·
IO\I1Ir-.,.....,.

.........

=~.~

-

have the top minor-suit cards for his
strong opening bid. West should bave
realized that his only cbaace to win
four tricks was to find East with Dine
(or jack) doubleton in spades. West
should bave continued with a third
round of hearts. True, it concedes a
ruff-and-discard, but South couldn't
have a useful discard to make.
Suppose declarer ruffs in baad and
leads the spade jack. West pull 011 the
ace immediately and leads lbe beart.
six. East ruffs with the spllde Dine.:
promoting West's spade 10 o the 111!1··

.....,....

tine Irick.
~

_..._

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle .

,14 lilr IIIIo . .

.

ACROSS

Anowor lo PrtYiotlt Puule

36 Hoat
37 Capital of
Greece
38 Wooded hill
38 Ell
41 - Kapltal
42 Comparative
IUIIIK
44 Singer Edith

1 - up:
accolerales
5 - La Douce
9 Sign ol the
zodiac
12 Corn lily
13 Wordt of
denial
14 Pay penalty
for
15 Having no
light
11 One of tht
Three
SIOOGII
18 Supply with
luel
19 More alendtr
21 Malt parent
23 Lair
24Mlatrablta
21 Prenk
28 Beatie McCartney
.32 Ptllpitatlty
34- drum

46 Race, o.a.
49 Taenaa•
MutantTurtlea
53 Rubber tr11
54 Shocked
58 Fltur-d.. 57 Unit ol
prtiiUit
58 Elm or oak
59 - Angelea
60 Senaiblt
61 W1rnlng
device

3 Actor Donny
Pt4 Baa•
5 South of
Mich.
6 Ballowed
1 Simple
8 RtqUIIItd

DOWN
1 Teall
2 Departure

,

&lt;D Roed o 1o0wn Cha~es

=:..

=•

bl!t

Geii~CII
1:41:'=,..

Houston, a black attomey,
leeds the legal campaign to
overtum the Constitution's
sanction ol racial
=tio;JI :OO) Q

LEO (./llttl 21-Aug. 22) Trade upon eK·

prcMiullllo.J.::·

...

11'---------,.~--...J

35

~ today, eapeclally II you're requ!Nd to ma!Co a critical decision. Use
Ih e - technlqUH that -elucctll•
BERNICE
tuiiOO: you prt¥\OIIely.
BEDE., OSOL
VIIIOO (All- 21 lopt. 221 An avonue
too: milerie! goln could come through 1
ctoM •ocilla today. Someone might
Inc:!~* you In alOin! endeavor thai hu
prorNIIIIg potontllt.
~ '(lept. .act. 21) You might
'automatiCally gal Involved In partner·
lhlpa today, WhiCh, tortunatety. Ia your
llrOng 11111. The rwautta look like they'll
be !ft11111111Y lllnlllcill, ,
·
COl· ,: . . . ,, , ICGIIC'IQ (Oct. ......... D) Grau Is
TAIIIIUI (April....,,:10) Tiki tltM not tlkety to 111oW undlr your r.et today.
today to at111ighta11 out a matter you You'l know w11at hM to be clont, end
know wMn't hlndled ptaplf!y, IMII you'N gal right to 11. This lhould bl a
Pill. 7 1•
.
'
.though Olhlrl ltMllvtd. may not be
0ppor1Un1t111 oould be more ll'lldent In · IWWII ollhla 18ct.
IAGITT
(llol. II Dee. 21) Your
!hi ve-' .,.... !IIIII IIIIy haW bWt In W I (Mip 21...... . , In IJOUP..... IJOIUirlll' 11·11 I high potnl today, end
the pall .....,. ~eel dtiVatlloday,youmayO.JUIIIIadiO p',.lltllytobe ... otoelied-·
w1 IUIIV~~~~n't go lolfii\OUOICI flOw.
ptly !hi key~. Wlltlho!r you tllllt It or • you go. You ~ 1 kniOit tor bright·
(ollll...,. 111 Ult your not. UN )'OUt lnlllatlvtlo,kllll d!lnpon enlna!ip II JIUf tn&gt;dveoMnta.
11111 d!Jmantll~ollaaiCtoclay, OOUIII. •
, CAMIICC II (DIL IWIII. 11) H you
don't dlloOUnl y01111ntulllon. Both CANCIII ( - 21....., 22) You'it .,.. haW l l l a t o flnllllt an lmlhould be g~v~na ro1t 1n your tNnktng.
cycle wttere you may be more
portlnl
loday, 1!1' 111
... IIJIIIIIIIII•lllngthe'I laM any looM
11M!
Ill ... ve- -- ,.., ".... .....
•
!ftlllllnol be able
A!IUIIII*' Aitfo.Gilpll 1011111 ...... geilodly, 1fOii
..
l&amp;lllitOIJ¥.

...

1~

~lndPino

114

Openinclead: • K

.

~stereo.
J,~Prlmtnme LJve

..

ASTRO..ORAPH

. ~,gr

lloollngM . . . .. W.Holtl.

Paa
Pass
Pua

Colltgt Bellitlball

Clner't PlulcM4

_,..._,__ _

Eaol

Pass
!t
Pass

Arizona at Stanford (L)
10:00 !II Now•
(J) MOVIE: Mat1tllon Man (AI

Plumbing &amp;
· Heating

1.1 •. _ _ _ __
·'··------------6. _ _ _ _ _ __,. J 4-~.:___--,....._ __
7. _ _ _ _ __
.l5....__ _;;..._..:;.___

Nar~

2•
Pass
Pass

10tlt

.

aiding or· trolllr lltlttliig.
245.fl52.

West

=

150011te. JOUnd boln, kop4 In-· 304-578-23111 Dhlo I 46-2454.
olda, S20,114-115-3M11
Davia
S.W.Voc
Sorvlco
GoorgH Cnak Rd. Porto, s~
ptiH1 pickup. and dallvory. 114441.. 294.
.
Tr J n sporlilt 10n
Wll build pallo co._, dacko,
'

13M.

Sao~

, 2t
2t
tt
.

1111 Fllht!_Dowllng Mylttrleo
Stereo. t;J
9:30 (2) • IIJi Late Night Willi
David Lallermlln:
AnniYen1tJ David Letterman
celebrates 10 yeare of stllpld
pat tricks, lop 10 lists, viewer
mailllld oilier aUIIness.
(1 :30) Sloreo. C

OF MY KINFOLKS

ABOUT,
SNUFFY ?

Fo""dotlon Wort&lt;, Roofing,
Kllchons And Bolho. Fru e..
llmiiHI RoltrtncH, No Job To
Big Or Smalll514-441-0225. .
F111man'o PltHnblng And HNt·
lng.IM-25&amp;-1111.
Ron'• TV SI&lt;VIco, -lollllng
In ZlnHh · oloo -1:\11 ~

Far - : SoUl 10Ft. 1111111·
ltte Dfth, TWo Box Syetem,
1380: 12" Chlln Sow, $30. 814-

Yesterday we looked at a defensive
hand in which a defender bad a chance
to defeat the contract. But feeling he
had no chance, he gave up without a
ligbt. Today's hand is similar. To test
yourself, cover the East and South
hands. Against lour spades, you lead
the heart king: three, lour, two. You
continue with the bear! ace: jack, live,
10. What do you lead at trick three?
South's opening bid was strong, arti·
licial and forcing. U North-South were
going to end in no-trump, it would be
best lor West to pass. But the overcall
was normal. Perhaps a good sacrifice
could be found. The rest of the auction
was natural .
At the table, West switched to the
club nine at trick three. Declarer won
and led the spade jack. Tbe contract
could no longer be defeated.
Hoping that East was holding the
club ace (and playing to get the con·
tract two down with a· club ruff) was
optimism in the extreme. How could
East hold the club ace? South had to

at NllhYIIIt Now Stereo.
a urry King Uvet

SIXTEEN

ARE YOU
So PANICKY

WHAT

~~~-=u~~ ·~ .

$1250, 814-9t2·

1'121
1981 Natltuo 14x70 3br, Good
Condhlon, Aok $10,500.1~

tries to keep things together
at Sondra and Elvin's house
()llrty. Stereo. C
(!) .lire You lltlllg 8eMd'l
QJI
DreKIH'I Clan Otis
tapes his will on video after
teaming a good lriend has
died. Stereo. C
QD Amellcan lluolc Sloop
Steleo.
··
1111 You Allied lor 11. A!PIIn
Stereo.
8:00 (2) D IIJI Clltero Rebecca
hires a plano ptaysr who
becomes Obse8SJ¥81y
attracted to her. Stereo. C
&lt;D (!) Myateoyl Rumors fl'y
that Tennison may be
replaced ; an arrest Is made.

~

Broyhill twin, whho conopy bad
wllh Sort1 boK oortnga end mot·
...... $100,1t4-992·75ll4

.AKQ
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

8:30 (2). IIJ Colby Show Cliff

Servtces
81

Doll Stereo.

t78Z
.i0815%

•w
z
tAK

Play it again,
Phillip

Maggie. Stereo. C
11J MUlder, She Wrote Q
QD On 9lllge Stereo.

Auto Pans &amp; .
Accessories

2213.

r:

I

house. Stereo. Q

(!) MOVIE: Operotion Cobro

r

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

44U5111.

:1 •.----------- 1.1.- - - - - 1
4., _ _ _ _ __
12.·-- - - - - -

"··---- - 446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

Elvin move into their new

OH, ,._W,' OH , ~E.!
VOU ARE INDEEP

tu

.154

SOUTH
tKQJU5

By Pbllllp Alder

8:00 (2) D IIJ Colby Sloow CliH
and Clair help Sondra and

ALL&amp;YOOP!

EAST

WI!ST
+A 10 2
.AKQ986
t115!

•s

7:35 (J) Sanford ond Son

ALLEYOOP

114·

very good conditron. $600 614·

""'h

p.m,_!"nday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
l14-n:i·2521.
LOST: RowoJ&lt;I To Till Porson
Who P1110hlood Anllquo Boby
lopllsm Gown Frat~~ Golllpalta
OtllrNCh Cantor, Golllpolll.
111t1 Gown w.. Dootot.cl Bv tlonll N;M!i 800 Ford 12,150i
Mlo11kl, Fomlly Heirloom, WILL John DttN 1020 Shorpl $4,995.
BUY IIACKI Plt111 C.ll814-446- Owner Will Flnonco. 114-21114441.

·-------·

Budget Traittnilstione, UMCI &amp;
rebultt, ttartlng at $98; Aulo

61

ALDER

Michigan State at Iowa (L)

Motorcycles

4,500

tQJIOH
.J713

PHILLIP

a Crosoflre

z.t.n

.J)

@ Spof11Ctnter

QD B4i a Slllr Stereo.
@ Collegl leakelbell

:::::::-:=7-~!.-=:~:-­

76

Farm Suppl tes
&amp; l tvestock

ooch

1124 E. Mtin Street, Pomeroy.

·--&gt;

spinat pltno, nttds
luning, $100. and mu11 pick up.

UMd Kenmore double oven
rang• or ra~lgarotor for Nil (25

Antiques

1

A ~t$11" TO 5E:E

1983 S"oukl 450

NORTH
t71

Slereo.9

~ MocNetl.l!:.e.r
Ntwllltour 1;;1
1111 Wheel of Fortune Q
1121• Family Feud

Kimball

304-675-2208.
L"dwla dr"mo, 3 pc. with high
hll, Zltdjlan oymltolo, $400.
Prlco negollobl0. 114·245-51148.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FIJRNITURE. 82
B"ndy
II
Ano
Olivo St., Gallipolis. Now I UNCI Solman
fumhure, hllln, Wltttrn &amp; S.uphono, flntolllc cond, only
$385. 304-175-2162 anytlmo tor
won. boolo.l14-448-3159.
Information.

·'

c

\liD

Musical
Instruments

Houuhold fumlshing. 112 mt
J«rlcho Ad. Pt. Pitas1nt, WV,
call 304-67S·1450.

H

Because of the number of speeding tickets he
received, my neighbor had to attend driving school.
"What I really need." he elCI)Iained, "is a set ol brakes

BRIDGE

Stereo. t;J
Moirltd... With Children

fALLS

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Point Ploaaant, 304-675-2063,
'"" llno Tropical llshl birds,
small

3

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWIIS
Halves • Timid • Began - Umber • BEHIND ME

Camera

(J) Entt!!flnmen1 Tonlghl

IT.

~OW/..1/'IG

ohols 6 wormad, $200. 304-882· 1988 Mozda LX trtJCk. 111117
Hond1 125 four whnler, new
284t.
IIJM l blttory. 304o77:J.51og.
Dog HouN1 For Stl1: Several
Sl-. 1 112 Mill Ollt At. f41, 19111 FoJ&lt;I Rongor, 19,000 Mlloo
•
Wayne Shoemaker. 614-446· 15,1100. 114-441'0731.
0593.

2

that will stop the car BEHIND MEl"

7:30 (2). IIJI Jtoplrdyl c
(!) Now It Can 8e TokJ

GET

$TUC/( IN li,

on body, $800, 614-

114-367·7927.

table S50i couch,
$200; s ptaco olltlng

Apanment
44
lor Rent
2 DR Apt 322 Third Avo Gal·
llpollo, Batora ti'M 814-44~748
614-251-1903
2 bdrm. opt. In llldd10pol1,
uUIIIIH fllmllhod, $2751 mo.,
514-9411-2217
Apt. for rant,_ 1175/mo., 1175
daposh, 118 t/Z E. lloln St ., 814992·7511
BEAUTIFUL APAIITMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jocklon Plkl
~om S19Vmo. W-* loom. .&amp;
movloa. Clll114-446-25111. EOH.

EIIU Hom. c.nter, 1.aoo-58G-

Jood,

Oak

COtfll

you

pups, 1979 4x4 Chevy Luv truck, runs
4x4 wortts, low mileage,

446·7720

53

Betore?p.m.

Boxer

wena and

IG

1

aMorteyllne
1111 The Wo1ton1
7:05 (J) Addama Family

FRANK AND ERNEST

Ngl.

raglattred

where

8 r:i~iR~UMBfRED 1 1 1 r 15 I' I' r I' I
I) ~~~~~~MBlE FORI I I I I I I I I I .

1IJ MacGrver Q

&amp; Cocker Spaniels. 304-"576-

AKC

0

1121• Eo]Dni'fnmenl Tonight

2207 till 11 :00 PM IN VI miS·

lllytoa Clolhll Oryor, Eltcellenl Thorough Brod A"llrallon C.Uio
Condlflon, 175. 114-448-1452.
doa pUppies, 8 wka okl, 135.

north of Pomo10y, 814-38H227

5710.
1972 VoUont offlco trlllor, 12x55,
holdo 3 offlcn • baih,.,..,,
move~

Upper Rlvtr Rd. Bnlde Stone

Crollllolol. C.ll614-44fi.7398.
LAYNE'S FIJRNITURE

cond, 304-175-3214.

wOOilb"mor, .,.1900. 304-175- Efflcloncr, opt. for ront boautiM
1
7725 or 175-1112 (oob).
carpet, n ce couch •na bar, 304·
875-8042
Tupper Plains, 1-story 2-bdrm
house, utility rm, attached F~lohod 3 ROOOM And Both
gorogo, u .. ,., otorar t.JIId· YPI\alra, ctun, No Pets,
rng $211,1100 IM-Nll·21'1 .
Rafaranco And OepottH R•
qulrod. l14-44e-15tt.
32 Mobile Homes
Fumlthtcl Apartment, 1br next
for Sale
to Ubrary, porltlng, cenlrol hNt,
air, reference~. &amp;14 441 0338,
To And Tille Down. Praownod Botora 7p'.m.
MobiiO HomH, U.. Your TIX
Rofllnd. 50 Homu To C.._o.

muat be

9, _ _ _ __

·central · air,

GeMrltlon

t.male Himalayan cal, in
11a10n, no papttrl, S100 obo, PS, •B, PW, POL. 1111, cr"l11,
614·H2·"'60 Ilk tor Aman~a
eunroof, pemlum sound, call
btlweHn 5:00 &amp; 5:30 Mon lhN
AKC Chln111 Pugs, P•klngese Soto304-675-3983.

Up to 8 mo.. frM lot rtnl IVtit.lbll on MW ttorn.• placed In Walnut chnt, 1riplt dr....r
Co"nlry Mobile Home Pari&lt;, j"sl wtmlrrow, nlghllland, $150, exc

675-1939.
In town. twa llory, three btdrooma, full buement, 1·112 bath,
IHIOhod 1-112 Clr gar1~.
Cantrol hoal ond air. Evonlngo
CI11114-441-87V1.
Roducod To Soli: 149,900,
ChHhlro, Dhlo. 904·932-6959, Compi•Uy FumlahMI Small
904-1132·71l1V,I14·367-o649.
HouH, $250fmo. Plus Utllltlll,
ThrH mile• out Crab CrNk, And O.poslt. 61olo44eo0338. Coli
pool,

Household
Goods
Big Sovlngo On All Corpol In
Stock. C.1h And Corry, llol·
lolton Carpel.. 114-441-1'144.
Froll FIN Rofr!Qarotor, Copporo
tono W11 $154", Cut To 195;
ReMa ..rator Harvest Oold, Uk•
NoW,)1115; Upright Fill.., $1211;
Whl~poot W- ~lVIII Gold,
Sll:fl; Kanmora Watltlr $75;
Wrw~poot -ltlr 2 Y•ro Old,
Llko Now, $195; Whirlpool
Woltlr HaiVoy Duly Wu S15CI,
Cut To 1125; Kanmora Dryer
$115. Sklaao Apptloncoo, 414441·73118, ~ 1--4gg.3499.
GCOO USED APPUANCES

4 bdrm. houso In Raclno, 12501 Washtra, dryers, refrlgtratora,
mo. plus deposit, you pay rangn. Skaggs Appiiii1Cia,

VENDING ROUTE : Gol Rich Clrpelld,
Newly Rodacorotod,
Nice Neighborhood And Cloll

8363.

5I

·

!Ill• Star T,..: Tlie Next

1990 Chtv Cavalier Z·24, blk &amp;
sllvt~ 32,000 mills, 3.1 L, auto,

3yr old

2 btclroom unturnlahld house,
nice locaUon, dlpotlt required,

after

895-3a21.

·

I I I I' I

I

(!) Leglllltive UP!!Itt
1111 Curoent Allolr ~

2 Rabbit•, N.th1rf1nd Owarft air, caa. deck, cruln, till
Hlnne, Dutch. wllh 11utch. 304· 16,300. 614-245·5946 .nor 5 p.m.

Merchandise

458·1806 bolwMn 9:00 AM &amp;

675-1373

NewoHour

(J) II Cenci

comprnsor, holst, exc location, -=
304-875-403!.
·
Groom 1nd Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. All broods, otyln.
Oftlce spaco, 1114 VIand St, Pt limo Psi Food DSIIIr. J"llo
1989 Buick Clnlury V-8, 4 Or.,
Pit. Control IIIII, olr cond, 304- Webb. Call OM-4411-0231.
49,000 mi., power door locks,

Rentals

·

&lt;D MecNelliilhrer

~5""bl_y_o_ut_o..:.mot....,...lva-,.-,.....,.,r-go_r_•a-•. _56__P_et_,s_r,..o_r.:Sa:.::.:.le;.__

Will car• tor invllid In my homtt 2 BR 2 full Ba1t1s fireplace, dtek
Racine 1r11, re..onable, gooa $350. Per month Oap. + 2
loe~tion and cara, 614·94g..2393
Raterencas raquirad 614-446·

61

For lease

....,. 49

w11ktnda.

31 Homes for Sale

2. ---------------

trall•re

ltblt. 304o67S.2722.

6 1.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2llt-10.
Boforo, oftor ochoot. Oropotno
wolcomo. 114-446-8224. NIIW In-

;

I .__ ______

LOts tor sate,

·

Smiling he said, "Oh
P I GS 0 S
I'd say about ten ···--··1"
'
I
Compleoo tho chuckle q"Oied
. .....J.L......J
by filling in tho milling -d•
1--L._.__-L.- L
yo" dovolop from llep No. 3 bolow.

\il

G..rgH Portablo Sowmlll don't

·

..

soldier what
difference
between

r--:-:-- : - - ---. Slates.

Q

:_.:..c=-=-:,-.,.,--=----

lant Toddler ca,., 614-446-e227.
Partnership Dance lnJ1ructlon.
Profsttlonat
young couple
t1achlng Country Wntam,
Ballroom, Latin and Modem
partnarshlp dancing. Slnglla,
Couples and groups welcome.
For Into piNH Clll after 7:00
PM ask tor An1111 or Jim, 304·

·

1IJ ScoobY Doo

Trimming. Fr• Ea;timat•sl &amp;f4·
367--7957.

M110111 And Holporo. 1.aoo.551.

REWA RD. 614·258·6795.

e

1

~~• asked
White stationed DYerseas, 1
another
the
I I' .I' I" Hme we was The

I

ij

11:11 CIS New1
• Andy Grlfllth

r .~

1 1

CA RRE

Tour
Worfd Today
1111 Rln nn nn, K·9 Cop
Stereo. Q
6:05 (J) Benrly Hlllbillleo
8:30 (2) • IIJI NIC News
!II Saved IIY 1M Bell
III (J). All(: ~~
&lt;D Wild Amarlcll
Squn One
Stereo.

i

1~

.

a

OUpCiaae
1111 New Zooro Sterao. Q
8:35 (J) Andy O~Hith
7:00 D 11J1 WhHI of Fortune

Mist Ptuit'l Day Clre Ctnttr.
Sar., affordable, chlldctl'l, M·F

. r..,.M_,A_FT-E_,R......1 ~

!Ill• 1
01t1t Stereo. Q
1IJ Smu 1
0 lnlkle th Senior P&lt;lA

Avall'lblt.

0163.

inns Rtllaurant or Foodland.

1 11, 11.
1111 1121•

~ Re~nRainbow C

and blocks 1 only
$151.94 per month, Call 1-800.
467-7671 between 11 :00am-5pm.
lng, tteps

,.

2

Call 614-245-5887.
E l R TREE SERVICE. Tooolng,
Trimming, Tre• Ramoval, lo4Miga

call304-81'5·1157.

PUTSON

\ZI Square One TV Stereo.

Rotraln
Now!IISouthaootom
B"oln- Collogo, Sortng Valloy
Piau. can Todliy, 814-146-431711
Rogllltrltlon IIIM5-1274B.

haul your logs to th• mftl luat

low to form four simple words.

(J) Vkllo Power

Business
Training

nay Araa. Rtferencst

(J) (J) II

'"""" ol lito
words be-

~eramblod

EvENING

&amp;:DO (2) •

---.......

~,

0 lou
Raorrango
r

M

THU., FEB. 6

/1\00H$ WoO .•.

Wanted to Do
Will Bobyoh In My Homo. Rod·

tun blooded, blond Cock•r

L.ost

Skyline

~E H~Ve

Television·
Viewing

T~~ CAtlC£1..
MY~ ...

/Nit. lliOiiW-PPI£ ...

2951

578-2304.

Aod"cod:

::JJI&lt;.I(l .

I---------T"~-------~ 18

Sponlal, 1y1. old, h"""brokon, 7

4287.

lor Sale
2 lrolloro 14x70 a 12xl5, $2,000.
for ltolh will not - · • •· 304·

part

Shephlrd, 5 WHk• old, catl614949-2328 1ft1r 5pm

Mar~lngo,
Had All Shdo
1992 Tags. 614·38H528.

Autos for Sale
1112 Pontiac T·IOOO 54,000MI,
A~, 4dr., a"lo., $1575, 814-742·

No Phone Calls.

pup-

I ~ homl Cl.ltl
part Slbo~an ~"sky,

71

O.partmont, ~olzor Clinic, PO
Box 344, Gallipolis, ~ 45131.

FAO P"ppiH Will 81 Rudy For
VallnllnH Day. 114-245-5981.
FrH to

_

KIT 'N' C~RL YLE® by Larry Wrlghl

32 Mobile Homes

Mtdlcol Transcrlpllonltt • Elt· Turn your 111 refund Into. 1 n1w
lllrionco N_.ory. Madlcol home, 1992 141170 S.bdrm, In·
1'1rmlnology
And Accur~tt cl"dlng ' dollvory, III·UP, skirt·
Typing. 5alary Commenaurllt

114-143-5211 .. on~ngo
Bl1ckl grty

1992

Ohio

Sentinel

Ill tD. Knm Landlna
Pierct stalka Sumner wlil1 a
rifle; Val starts her boOk on
Sumner. S.'!'l!li Q

Kl=..:r
0 7GO Club With Pol

llobsl10:30 (!) W1elilllg111111 llapclll ·

• Orooll and Qlllllt
11:00 (2). (J) (J). Ill tD.
allllwl

'

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.

"

,.. ..
I

'
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q .',
'

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Nfgld Court

&lt;DIIIwlnleh

.

.

I

.~ Hill

...

'DJO

Stereo.

I:~
o'"'L.

0 lonlll1orm Stereo. Q
111Gne

,..

·

u-=v."'
C
MI
.s.:o.••
.
• A'iiil.llua!O ......

EDFAUKA .

EKAUKSC ' E
DFGK

11:30!Jl:'i Mgllffn'l Onl

!"'~.,.-~=.:;a ·· r::r-~-

litiWtdlotcliOiilllo.a,rnt•lallllrlirfllllllntiiU5pkla lnl8thlr\llill. ·

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The hordttt pan of dlractlng Ia 11""' , ~
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Mlcllatt
Winner
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�Thursday, February 6, 1992

, Pomeroy.....Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel ·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
girls defeat .
Spartans

Pick 3:304
Pick 4: 9894
Cards:

10-H; K-C; 9-D;
9-S

Low tonight In 20s.
Saturday cloudy. High in upper

20s.

Page4

•
Vol. 42, No. 1113

2 SecUono, 14 Page• 25 cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 7, 1992

Copyrtghtod.1992

Meigs County freshmen do poorly on state test
By stafT and wire reports
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ninth-grade students who took
state proficiency tests in November
turned in better overall scores from
the previous year, results released
today showed.
However, ninth ·graders attend·
ing Meigs County's three high
school! showed poor test scores.
The Ohio Department of Educa·
tion said 40 percent of ninth ·
graders who took exams in reading,
writing, mathematics and citizen·
ship passed all four tests on their
first attempt.

THE FABRIC SHOP

7tfi tfiru 14 tfi

PROM DRESS

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StafT
Students in the first and fourth
grades in the Eastern Local School
District are learning the importance
of positive living skills through a
program known as "BABES"
which is sponsored by Health
Recovery Services of Atliens.
Beginning Alcohol and Addie·
tions and Basic Education Studies
(BABES) is a primary prevention
program designed to give children
a lifetime of protection from substance abuse.
BABES accomplishes this by
·assisting you~g people. develop

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.

STUDENT lNTERACTION ·Steven Weeks, Amanda Wheel·
er and Crystal Bennett, all fourth grade students or John Perine at
Tuppers Plains Elementary, are actil'&amp; out a skit as part of a lesson
In the BABES program. The program, Beginning Alcohol and
. Addictions and Basic Education Studies, assists young people in
. developing positive living skiDs. The program is now underway in
the Eastern Local School District.

Prices Good Feb. 6 thru Feb. 14

SHOES
Sweetheart of a Soft Spot
Sal•

SATURDAY,
·saoo Off
too special tor a paper \kllenflne,
gel her the f?rever kind. Choote from dozens of
rings. earrings or pendants wtlh diamond$. rubles
or the beautiful rhodolite garnets. Brqwse. Ask us
quesflons. \bu'll be our welcomed guest. Come
flnd her Just the right 'Valentlne7
•
•'

•

&lt;OMPLETE ST()(J(

Kuhn arrested, jailed on charges

40%oFF
~S$0RTED OIOCOlATES

·IN VAlENTINE HEm
2tz. Reg. 9Sc._, 69C
16 Oz. 56"-'5.39

Eac• Pair Soft Spots

~ she~

•

(OMPLOE STOO

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that 21 year old
George W. Kuhn, Jr., Dexter, was arrested on Thursday on a war·
rant of receiving and possessing stolen property from Meigs Coun·
ty. Taht warrant stems from a fugitive from justice warrant charging
him with grand theft in Mason County, W.Va.
Kuhn is accused in the West Virginia warrant with stealing two
Labrador Retriever.s from Dr. Danny Westmoreland in January.
. · Kuhn is to ap~ in Meigs County Coun for an extradition bearing.
; · He is lodged m the Meig~ Counly Jail.

WOMEN'S

COLOGNES&amp;
PERFUMES

20%0FF

J~welry theft reported

.MEN'S COLOGNES
&amp;
SHAVES ·

Am.
· 25%.off .·

Get a.:FREE Valenl.ine Flower (llld Box
of candy With Each Purchue.

. Nancy Campbell of Tanners Run Road in Racine rcpor'ted to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Deparlrnent that sometime within the last ·
week, a pair of diamond stud earrings were taken from her resi·
dence. She also iepOrted that IWO or three months ago, a gold chain
. also ,had di,.Ppearcd.
'

•'

'JM~af®.
212 ,E. ~In,

:- · Drought relief available · ·

·

BOb Brer, pirector or Meigs County Emergency Ser~i~es,

~y attended a meetlllg in Norwalk, hosied by the Nonh Cen·

ll'al Ofilo D1011ght Disaster Committee (including Huron County
; . E~lii:Y Mafta&amp;ernent Director, Bill~' Amq thole pre·
ICI'It were Fred Dailey, Dim:tor of the Ohio~~ of A&amp;ricul·
ture; Lany Adams, Assistant Director or the OhiO ~~ of
' · Agricullw:e: U.S. Congressman.Paul Gilmer, Swe Repmentalives
Dv,oight Wise and lUchanl Rench and Sydney Walktl of the State
.'
'
.
.
Coatln~ on pqe 3

Ptfntroy

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y

' 'k

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Franklin County Common Pleas
judge has · rejected Columbus
Southern Power Co.'s attempt to
impose a 28.4 percent rate increase
without regulatory approval.
Judge Richard Sheward declared
unconstitutional a state law that
allows utilities to impose rate
increases if the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio fails to act on
increase requests w!thin ~75 days.
The POCO, Which sull is hold·
ing public h.earings on the rate
Increase, has ll&amp;id it will rule some'
time in the-spring.
·
• ,Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley and Columbus City AUOr·
ney Ronald O'Brien flied a lawsuit
· against tire $202.5 million increase,
calling it unconstitutional. The
increase would add $16.21 to an
average residential customer's
monthly bill.
Sheward ruled that the. rat~
increase would cause irrcpatable
harm to IIIQ,cily of Columbus.
Columbus Southern spokesman
Thomas Holliday 18id he, was not
· aware of the decision and had no
. COOIIIICIIL

Columbus Southem can appeal
the decision.
·
•
Spratley !'raised the ruling,
whicb prohlbats Columbus South.ern from imposing the rate

.

..
; ,

Judge rules rate
increase attempt
unconstitutional

- - -. Local briefs---.

WATCHES

20%SAVINGS

ability to better unde'Stand how to
protect themselves from alcohol
and chemical dependency situa·
tions among their peers and within
a family structure.
Ttu;ough the drug education program the students are presented
seven lessons. Each lesson is presented in story fonm and each one
has a !Wo-line title. Those lessons '
include Self-Image and Feelings
(I'm Looking Good and Feeling
Fine); Decision Making and Peer
Pressure (She Made Me Do It ...
Didn't She?); Coping Skills
(Accepting The Things I Cannot
Change and Changing The Things I
Can); Alcohol and Other Drug
Information .(Lei's Play Party); ·
- Oenidg"H~if''(Retr):at is NoHlcfeat
11!ld Failure is Not Final); Review
and Cenification (Wrapping Up);
and Helping Children from Chcmi·
cally Dependent Homes (When
You Don't Know What To Do.)
The lessons are presented by
certified trainers and certified pre·
senters. These trainers and prcseo·
ters are authorized by BABES
World Home Executive Staff to
perpetuate this program. At Health
Recovery Scmces there arc four
certified presenters: Rebecka Flan·
ders, Belinda Fleming, Kim Mas·
trangclo and Dawn Fitch.
The presented conduct the
lessons through the usc of, seven
colorful puppets. These puppets
were created by working with chil·
dren in elementary through high
school groups and include flash
cards and worksheets. Characters
include "Buttons and Bows McKit·
ty," "Myth Mary," "Early Bird,"
"Donovan Dignity," "Recovering
Reggie," and "Rhonda Rabbit."
For further information about
the BABES program, contact
Health Recovery Services, Inc.,
P.O. Box 724, Athens, Ohio 45701.

POMEROY.

VALENTINE SPECIALS

~W!!tlm

positive' living skills and by provid·
ing them with accurate non-judgmental information about the use
and abuse of alcohol and other
drugs.
Workers with Health Recovery
Services feel by being sensitive to
and approaching children at specif·
ic developmental levels, BABES
presents complex concepts in a
simple, factual and non-threatening
manner.
This important information is
presented in a manner designed to
gain the atten~on of children and to
cause them to develop a desire for
healthful living and give them the

SPECI.9LLS

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., FEB. 13th
2:00-7:00 P.M.

POMEROY

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THE FABRIC SHOP

Sfop by

11 0 WEST MAIN

In 1990, 33 percent of the ninth·
grade class was able to pass all the
tests on the first try.
"Although passing the tests is
. only one of many measures of sucCess, the proficiency teSIS dO reprc·
sent a significant pan of our effort
to move to a performance-based
educational system," Sanders said
in a news release.
Ninth-graders showed improve·
mcnt in passing the mathematics
and citizenship tests on their first
auempL
Fifty percent passed mathcmat·
ics last November. compared with
43 percent in November 1990. The

citizenship passage rate last
November was 62 percent, com·
pared with 55 percent the previous
year.
The percenta~es of students
pass10g the read10g and writing
exams on the first attempt were
about the same last November as in
1990, with rates of 79 percent for
reading and 76 percent for writing.
Native American , African
American and Hispanic students
continued to score lower than
Whites or Asian Americans. However, the depanmem said there was
an indication that the gaps in pass-

The department said more than
ingrate had staned to close.
The department said the latest 93 percent of the state's tenth
results continue to show significant graders now have passed the read·
gender differences. More females 10g test, while 90 percent passed
passed the reading and writing the writing test. About 77 percent
tests, and more males passed the have passed citizenship. and 63
percent passed mathemaucs.
mathematics test.
In March, all nimh-grade and
Percentages of females passing
tcnth·grade
students who have not
the citizenship test and passing aU
four exams were about the same as yet passed all four proficiency t"&lt;Sts
will retake the exams they failed.
the passing rates for males.
Students
may retake the tests each
. About 125,000 nimh graders
November
and March through their
'took the proficiency tests. In addi·
senior
year,
giving them at least
tion, more than 59,000 tenth-grade
eight
chances
to pass each of the
students took one or more of the
exams.
exams.

Program designed to protect
children from substance abuse

Has Alarge Variety of Fabri's
For Your
•13 Colors of Sequins •Taffetas l Satins • Lace l
Metallics • Glitter Appliques
• Rhinestones l Pearls ·

Sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association

Only 18 percent of ninth-graders
tes ted at Eastern High School
passed all four tests.
Southern High School ninth·
graders did a little better with 25
percent passing all four tests.
Meigs High School's ninth ·
graders recorded the best test
scores with only 28 percent passing
all four tests.
State law requires any student
who receives a diploma after July
I, 1993, to have passed all four
proficiency tesiS.
State School Superintendent
Ted Sanders said he was extremely
pleased with progress being made.

"'

lnaease.

DEl~ A1'E

ENSUES • The Issue of whether a
statement from the current Leading Creek Con·
·servancy District board could be read into the
court record was a major issue at Thursday's
sentencing of Jack W. Crisp. Crisp, a former
president of the board, received an 18-month

sentence on mismanagement charges. l;lere,
Crisp's attorney, William Eachus discusses his
side of the issue. Pictured from front are special
prosecutor K. Robert Toy, Eacbus, co-defense
counsel William G: McLane and Crisp. Ultl·
mately, the staletilenl was not read.

Crisp free on bond; attorneys
file for appeal Thursday
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT ·
Jack W. Crisp is free on bail
after being sentenced on charges of
misma~agement on Thursday
morning, and his attorneys have
filed an appeal in the case.
Crisp, a fonmer president of the
Leading Creek Conservan9 District, was sentenced by Judge
Roger Jones on five counts of
receiving or soliciting improper
compensation while serving on the
LCCD board. Specifically, Crisp is
accused of voting in favor of and
receiving $5,000 wonh of Christ·
mas bonuses, in violation of state
law.
· Jones was assigned to the case
because Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III was Meigs
County Prosecutor at the time of
the investigation of Crisp's activi·
tics.
Crisp and Special Prosecu10r K.
Robert Toy entered into a pi~ bar·
gain agreement in November. That
plea bargain called for a suspended
one-year jail sentence and a oneyear period of unsupervised proba·

occurring that ' (defense counsel)
has failed to cover is the proteCtion
of the public from this cnme recur·
ring."
"In fact," Jones said, ''proteeling
the public is the primary and over·
riding factor in sentencing this
defendanL"
Crisp was also fined $5,000 and
was ordered to pay restitution,
which was paid in November when
the plea bargain was accepted. That
restitution, totaling 59,075, was
forfeited to the General Fund of
Meigs County. Crisp also agreed to
waive his rights to $120,000 in
retirement funds owned by the
Leading Creek Watershed Associa:
tion and held by .Midland lnsurance

Company.
Among the other conditions of
the plea bargain agreement was the
stipulation t.hat seven felony mis·
management counts against Crisp
would be dismissed.
Extensive discussion was held at
yesterday's sentencing hearing ·as
to whether a 20-page victim impact
statement, prepared by Athens
Attorney Thomas Hodson, could be
read into the record on behalf of
the new LCCD board. After a confcrcnce between Judge Jones and
counsel, that request was denied.
Theswtement was, however, filed
in the coun folc, which will be sent
to the Fourth Di strict Court of
Appeals.

Meigs board, OAPSE
contract extended 3 years

The contract be!Ween the Meigs
Local Board of Education and the
Meigs Chapter, Ohio Association
of Public School Employees, has
bee'n extended for three years,
lion. ,
~
None.theless, Jones sentenced Supt. James Carpent~r reported
Crisp to six months in jail on each today.
He said that the only issue
of the misdemeanor charges. The which
can be opened during, that
sentences on the firSt three counts
are to be served consecutively, or . period is the matter of insurance,
one after other, while the other lwo ·that being contingent upon a
are to be served concurrcntly,•or at change in the overall insurance
the same time, as the other three. program offered by the disuict.
Meanwhile, plans arc moving
That makes for an acnaal sentenee
forward
for the district to go into
of 18 months. Following his com·
pletion of the jail sentence, Crisp is the state loan program.
10 be placed on three years proha· · While a scllool dis1ri~ Is in Ji!e
loan ~m, the .state sets certain ·
tiqn.
~
constramts
which include no
Jones stated that there were cir·
increases
from
local tax dollan in
cumstancea not covered by either
salaries
nor
increase·
in staff size,
party in the case that g(,vemed his
thereby
giving
the
lotal
district the
decision 10 sen~¢ Crisp to a jail
opporlllnity !0 make ~hanges which
team.
"There are many factors that will reduce the overall opcratin&amp;.
need to be consldcnid by the ~ expenses.
Teachers will, however, rcc:cive
in any sentencing matter." Jones
salary
increases if the SI:IIC mini·
said;"but one factor that keeps

mum for beginnin'g leachers is
increased. When the state mini·
mum is increased, teachers at most
levels receive similar increases,
Monday Supt. Carjlcnter will be
in Columbus to secure approval for
a state guaranteed loan of $560,000
for the current fiscal year which
ends on June 30, 1992.
The district' was earlier
approved for ·a·S.I mijlion loan,.fol- •
lowing an audit by the personnel
from the orrICC of the slate auditor.
That was certified 10 the Ohio Swe
Depanment of Education and is
now going before the Controlling
Board of the Ohio Legislalure.
The district ilready llaJ in place
the' Rquired expenditure reduction
plan whi'ch calls for SJVin~s of
$100,000 in insurlmcc ·promaums
by ~sing a reserve fund, and
includes elimihalion of two teach·
ing positions either ihrou&amp;Ja auri- ·
tiQn or reduction in forte (RU') u
.well seine red~tion iq aides.

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