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                  <text>P II 10-:-lhe Dll¥ S11tit1el

•

Meigs County honor roD-------·-----------------------------Suzanlll! Clay, Altdrea Cleland,
Alesha Keney, Mah Ann Kibble, ·
Angle Murphy, Christina Pooler,
Leigh Ann Redovlan, Aaron
Wilson.
Tenth Grade: Steve Barnett,
Jill Chichester, David Gumpf,
Sheila Lattimer, Danny Lawrence, Elizabeth Lawson, Jenny
Masters, Toney Maxey, . Julie
Rime, Danny Short, Keith
Spencer, Amy Well, Sherr! Wolf.
Ninth Grade: Jeremy Buckley, .
Lisa Hoffman, Nicole Kanawalsky, EliSe M(lnlcke, Michelle
Metzger, Matt Mlcha¢1, Karen
Morris, Carrie Morrissey, Tra·
cey Murphy , Mike Roush, Sherr!

J. Smith.
EIKbth Grade: TYson Rose I all
A'si, Andy Watt, Penny Aeiker,
Amanda Barringer, Kathy Bernard, Charlene Dalley, Nora
Eastman, MeliSsa Harris, Shelly
Hendricks, Randy Kaylor, Ma·
rllyn Kibble, Michelle Murphy,
Wendy Rach, Robert Reed, Anita
Thomas, Amber Well, Jaime
Wilson.
Seventh Grade: Brandl
Barber, Ryan I;luckley, Jessica
Chevalier, David Johnson, Joe
Karschnlk, Heidi Nelson, Jamie
Ord, Jessica Radford, John Suttle, VIc VanMeter, St11cey
Woolard.

Brian Bowen, . Mike Laughery,
Cll.-ter El-lary
WUI, Angl Wolfe, Beau Bailey,
G1111er Nutter.
·Sixth Grade: JesslcaKarr, (all Wesley, Kart:.
.Fifth Grade: Katy Mulcke,
A 'si, Melissa Dempsey , Robbie
(ajl A's) , Laura Buekley. Sherry ·
Riverview Elemenlary
Murphy, Nicole Nelson, Brandl
Reeves, Lauren Young, Heather
Sixth Grade: Rebecca Evans, . Burke, Anrela Chaney, Billy
Francis,' Tracl Heines, Sean
·
Connie Pooler, Jeanie Cline,
Well, JennlferMora.
Maxey, Kelly Osborne, Erin ·
Fifth 'Grade: Meredith Crow. · Candy Mays.
'
Sexton.
-~
and Marla ,F;recker, (all A's) ,
Fifth Grade: Pllvld Baker,
Fourth Grade: Blllena Bucha· ·
Patsy Aelker, Eric Dillard, Les- Angela Bissell, Martie Holter.
nan, Chglitopher Buchanan, :
lie Parker. '.
Fourth ·Grade: Paul Frlden·
Wesley :t;luckley, Michelle Cald- :
Fourth Grade: Kelll Bailey, stlne, Judy West.
well, eremy Keltl, Lamar Lyons,
Stefani Bearhs and BllleePpoler,
Third Grade: ChriSta Circle
Kelll Norris, Joey Weeks
(,all A's). and Brandon Buckley. and Stepha'llle Evans, (all A's),
Third Grade: Jessica Bar·
Third Grade: Valerie Karr', ShaneChureh, Wes Kanawalsky,
tram, Je~llca Brannon, Jennifer
(all A's), Joey Dlllori, Radley Heath Proffitt.
Cline, Joshua Hager, Sarab Hof·
Faulk, Dilstln Huffman, .Jessica
!man, SarabHouseholder; Allsha
Marcum, . Jason M(lra, Aarori
'flippers Pla.lu
Rojas, J.T. White.
Sixth Grade: Jonathan Avis.

,.

. Cqnnle J. Blbble Dunfee, .92 A,
to Benton T. Dunfee and Kathryn ·
J . Dunfee, Orange.
Merwin Eugene Smith and
Mar)Qrle L: Smith, 2 A, to Ben
Rpger' CoppiCk and Sherr! Coppick, Bedford. ··
. Jei'J'YR. Hubbard and Kathryn
Hubbard, 20 A, to MGD Hunting
Club, ·Inc., Bedford.
Wlillam T. Hart and Ethel
Hart; parcels, to George Glen.
Hart and William Reid Hart,
Beford.
John V. Bogard, Jr. and
· Barbafa Allee Bogard, parcels,
to John V. · Bogard, Jr. lind
Barbara Alice Boggard, Chester.
Russell Seymour and Karen
Seymour, parcel, to Parsell R.
Nelson and Llpda K. Nelson,
Salem.
Marvin K. Gardner, · ,Judg.
Entry, vs Brenda M. ,G ardner,
·
Salem.
John A: Bryan and Dorothy L.
Bryan, lot 48, to, Blllle A. Davis
and Ruby A. Davis, Middleport .
VIllage.
John E . Lyons and Janice M.
Lyons, lot 6, to John E. Lyons IV,
Racine VIllage.
Del las Lightfoot dec' d., cert. of
trans., to Mae Lightfoot, Emmett
Lightfoot, Everett · Lightfoot, ·
Frances Lightfoot, Della Mae
Overturf, Genevieve Burdette,
Maggie Lee, and Ethel Wopds,
Salisbury. ·
·
George P: Jones and Mildred
Jones, parcels, to Southern
Power Coal Co., .C olumbia.
Helen E . Hart and Virgil Hart,
dec'd ' by exec., right of way ,' to
Buckeye R.ural Electric Corp.,
· Inc., Salem.
Southern Ohio Coal Co., right of
way, to Buckeye Rural Electric
Corp.~ Inc., Salem.
RaymondE.McKlnney,llOA.,
to DoriS L. McKinney, Salem.
Deneal Kelly Conley, · Erica
Lynn Diamond, Misty Ellza~th
-McKinney, Raymond Guy Ru'pe,
Brian Patrick Wayne Rupe and
Reva McKinney, llOA, to Doris
L. McKinney, Salem.
Bruce Reed, affld for notice or
preservation, to John DenniS,
Salisbury:
Ron Dongan and Cecelia Dongao, parcels, to Ron Dougan and
Cecelia Dougan, Columbia.

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Pick 4
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011 nlaiM paceat. TIIM 'IPJ,
hlP Ia mid...._ Cll..ce ofrala

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Z lectlonl. 11 P....

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A Multlmedle Inc. N-111-

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Cipal . ~~U~ v~rbally of mental cruelty

·. · Br. CJUJtLENE HOEFLICH ; · · soon atte'~ Cbrlllimas her'son WIJ.S

paugh 1181d _lbe and llel""")usbl!nd
knew anything a_b&lt;Jut this, and school. A l!earing on that matter
S.Uael New•
visibly upse) about somethJng. decldeil to.co"tact Ca,rl· HY.~ll,
she said. '·'yes." · '
, .
&lt;!lsO took place In opel! session in
. Chiii'Jes of · mental cruelty ~, She said , that she 'was 10 fiOn· Melas_· CountY juvenUe officer.
Mrs. Mood!Spaugh noted !hat August. Also at that time the
~alnst a Meigs Local School
cerned that she went to the They aalied him to meet them at
her son Is hyperactive and on matter of putting children under
, principal were verbally hurled
teacher and also discussed . the the school ihe following morning.
medication and Is subject to desks was brought up, Barton ·
" by tiarenta of a Rutlapd ' tblrd
fact of ho'!Y ber son was reacting
Mr. Moodlspau•h ialdthatMr. ·seizures and that the school said.
with his doctor at Children's Hysell did meet them th!,!re the
knows of his eondltion.
' erader In an open hearing at
Barton said that th6se parents
~ay night'• meeting or the
Hospital In Columbus. In the next momlnl. that Hysell•talkeil
"Being !!laced under a desk, came In and· a hearing was held
Me,l p j:.ocal ~ ·or Education.
beginning. she said she had no to Adam· and tltenthey all' went · solitary coilflnement for a child with Greg McCall, tbe principal,
.Maklna: the charges against Idea what was upsetting ber son.
Into the school. The principal had
that's hyperactive, that's mental several parents, teacher, the
Greg, McCall, prlucipel of the · Then on the evening of Jan. 24, not yet arrived, he said, so they cruelty anyway you look at It ,"
board of education members;
and the press on band.
,HarliiOIIvtl~ and Rutland EleMrs.Moodlspaughsaldsheagaln went Into the !J.rinclpal~s pffice
Mrs. Moodlspaurh charged.
Hi! continued by saying · that
;~r~r·r~::·;w~
. e•~ Julia and tatkeO· to Iter son to !ry· and find · and Hyse\1 ask~ the. younrster
In response to the comments
parents or out the probiJ!m and· l!e told her .to demonstrate what had been
from the parents, Board Presl- "What you're talking about here
that he had been "put under the done to him.
.
dent Robert Barton said that he . happened back Saine time ago,
Mr. and
Moodls·. principal's desk" for punishHe took bls . coat off, walked
wanted to refer to the "problem before we ever had that meet·
about wltat had
ment.
· arowld the desk, and got under•
at Harrlsorivllle.....closet con• log," to which Mu . Mood !spaugh
child at ,the
"He was made to .stay there, neath the desk, ac~rdlng to Mr.
flnement." This was an Issue l'i$ponded "No, I do not know
to
crOwd
the principal left the room and Moodlspaugh. He said .that Hywhich also Involved McCall that."
before
the
door,"
she
said.
.
•
.
sell
then
astr,ed
the
secretary
.to'
where
children were punished by
shut
The question . of when the
the
That evenbig, Mrs. Moodla- ·come In and be asked her If she
being put In a large closet at the Incident happened, whether It

!Mal• '

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OF

FURNITURE
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UPTO

£
·eNDS

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CoritpUed by: ·
· J!;mmopae Holatela Conro
.Becorder, M;elp County, Ohio

Pick 3

apin, 77-71

I&lt;

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Land
.·transfers ·

.. lep&amp;KI!JSII

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Eplem Dlatrict
.
The honor roll for the second
nlne-wee.lts' grading period In
the Easrern LOcal School District
has been released' by Supt. Dan
Apllng.
To be listed on the honor roll
students In grades 3 through 12
must have achieved a grade of
"B" or better In an subjects.
Special recognlton was also
given to students making an
The following students made
the honor roll:
Twelfth Grade: Crystal Kaylor
.(all A'si. Ernie Bakl!r. Carrie
.Bernard, Sherr! Bissen, Debbie
Brooks, Ellzabelh Bryant, ·
Shawn Bush, Rae Lynn Dailey,
Tina Foster, Scott McDonald,
Kym Mcintyre, Amy Murphy,
Mary Parker, Krist! Parsons,
Robin White, Susan Wolf.
Eleventh Grade: Mark
Murphy, (all A's) ,'Chris Adams,

Ohio Lottery

¥iMouri '

,

The third .llx weeks honor roll
tor the Letart Falls Elementary
School hu been announced.
Maklnc a grade of "B" or above
In all their ~ubjects to be named
to the roll were:
· First Grade: Katl Cummins,
Holly Hannan,. Garret Kiser,
Fallon Roush . .
Seeoad Grade: Jessica Alley,
TIIfany Barnes, · Autumn Hill,
Ryan Hill, Misty Sellers.
.
Third Grade: Vanessa Blevins,
Pantel Hannan, Jane Hill, Mike
Johnson, Mike Manley, David
Nance, Travis sintth, Carrie
Stobart, Rebecca Wotte:
Fourth Grade: Amber Atkins,
Wesley Hall, Dean Hill, Julie
Hunnell, Travis Ransom, Jen·
niter Roush, Billy Tackett, Hillary Turley, Ranetta ~heeler ,
Fifth Grade: Jeremy Lyons,
·Ryan NorriS, Jackie Proffitt,
~ain Roush, Jessica Sayre,
Lora Sayre, Vanessa Shuler . .
Sixth Grade:· Jason Barnett,
Jennifer Cu111m1ns , Jason
Shuler.

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.OFF

REG. Sl 099.95-BUJE

$11995

REG. 5999.95 ...,... RUST

FLEXSTEEL· RECLINER

S399 95

'

WINGBACK. RECLINER .

.

SALE PRICE
DECA STUDENTS FROM BUCKEYE HILLS
(J.V.S.) ·

DAYS
14 lG

BAR STOOLS
SALE PRICE

THRu

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RESTONIC CHIROTONIC
EXTRAORDINAIRE II ·

FULL SET

'

lEG. S949.95

QUEEN SET

leg. 1949.95 ' Reg. S1099.9s'
Your Choice ·
Your Choitt ·

Reg. '1399.95
Your Choice

SECTIONAL W/INCLINERS
and· CORNER TABLE

ROUND METAL DINEM
' .&amp; 4 SWIVEL CHAIRS .

BLUE- Reg. S1999.95

-

YOUR CHOICE

~89995

METAL DINm~
6 BEIGE VINYL CHAIRS
REG. 5299.95
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SALE PRICE

t

'

SAME A.CS

$449 95

Sl 399 5

•

BRO~N-

Ret •.'499.9S

SALE PRICE

$19995

$89995

Reg. 5599.95

Reg. 51799.95

CA~~!

•

SALE PRICE

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Reg.

OAK

"

SALE PRICE

I

••

S3999S

S29995

RUST WING CHAIR

CORNER HUTCH .

pro ·

S499.9S

YOURCNOICE

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Rag. $299.95

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SALE PRICE

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All •rchandllt

seeks se~t
Meigs commission

on

Boant·discusses

SKIPPERS
BED &amp;·BUNKIE

$29995

• Reg. S799.95

SALE PRICE ·

:

$299 95 · $69995

GrHn '&amp; Mauve .Fioral
Reg. S$49.95

Reg. Sll99.95

SALE PRICE

Beige

COUNJ'RY LOVESEAT

CORNER DINEnE TABLE
2 BENCHES • 2 CHAIRS
I

Gray w/mauYI flow1rs

SALE PRICE

DAYS

KING SET

$34995

·SECTIONAL
WI INCliNERS

ENGLAND
SOFA

Your Choice S299 95

$299.95

~;·Q4ickel

P.M~

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the aevetal 1houaand
oiat to
rlglatered: voters of tbe djstftct,
only about 600 were returned.
Tbe surwy results ~were· better
than two to:one opposed to the
conaolldallon and tile building
program. he reported:
He 1181d that "ali 'tar as he Is
concerned t~re 'IS'!IOlhtng to be
·.put on the ballot atcthll ttine. I'm
, not prepared tonight til offer any
alternatives:"
· ·' '
·
Tw~ 1. of ·the bc;lard mem~s,
however, ~~ ,RuSJ~! and Robert
Barton, president, were em"
'
. , Bill QU,Ickel, of Dav'-·Qulckel He was also the Learqershlp phatiC In thelrcontentlon•thal·the
Correspondence Course Director bond·Issue has to·go.on the ballOt
In~11rance,, hu filed as a de~t~o­
for
twO years. ·,
cratlc.. ,.candidate ·ror Meigs
because of the pi'Qbable loss of
Quickel's other actlvllies In· · the four mills.
County Commls$lolll!r.
Quickel bepn In the Insurance . elude being a past associate·
They were referring to the four
buslnets with Western Southern glllll'dlan for the Pl)meroy Job's mUis ·which will ao off the tax
Life and purchased Davis· Daughters. lie Is acllve In the dupUcate In J)ecember when the
-Quickel Insurance Agency In Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce MelliS Hlrh School construction
19l7, and has. received· a, life (now Meigs C?un~ Chanl~r of costs are paid off:
undei'Wflter•s training course Commerce), and the Pomeroy
If the four mllls are not
de~lgnallon. He also has a degree Merchants Association. He Is a
renewed then residents ol the
' In englneerlbg from Hocking member of the Meigs County !Jistrlct will see a decided deScltool Board, an associate crease in their tax bUill. If the
Techrilcal Colle(e.
, He Is a past memb6 of the member of the Ohio Tgwnshlp .tour miJbl are renewed as a bond
Meigs County Park Cqnimlsalon, Trustees Assoeiatlon, and the Issue then residents will not see
Executive' an lncreaae In their current tax
·Cmemlle~ of the Ml~leport ·Iiemocratic
·
. M!&amp;onic Lodje, Scottish Rite and Committee. ·
rate.
·
, .. · -'
.
·York Rite, a past officer· and
He Is married to Shirley , , Itw.as,ll9weveratlntectQutby
. advisor 'Of the Mldciieport Order Richardson Quickel and they
~ard President
ton ·t hat the
of De111ol&amp;y·where he had served have three cblldren . attending bol!rd Ia not Interested 1p forcing .
.,
. .
as
a ·state ofilcer for two. years, Meigs local schools.
.
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. anythllii the realdent• ol the
•i
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district.
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. ''Whatever )'Our declslo.n II, we
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will accept. I wal)t everyone,i!l
, thls'roOm to underatand that," he
said.
Expreaslnr· coneern about
keepilll "communty s~booll In
the ~UDlly" we,re two rest·
By NANCY YOACIIAM
would .apSJI!ar that a greater dents, NCJilll, l'jelaon of Pomeroy.,
'S..Iblel Newa ll&amp;ilff
number than three lay offs had and Paul Gerar.d or Ml~wort.
Red!lctlons In fu!!dtna over the been exPecled. at ,least by 'Both asked about the alterna·
paatfew years bave led to layoffs member• or C.A.A.'s Equal Emlives to coniolldatlon and bOth
within the J.T.P.Il. (Job Train- ployment, Opportunity (EEOi
called for public IJiput Into
II!&amp; Partnerllblp Act) Program, Comml\)ee. The EEO Commit· whatever plana mlaht he pro- ·
· operated by the. Gallla·Melgs tee: II one of three · separate pOlled for ~pendlq the tour mills
Community Action AaellCY1 ~
committees within the tun board.
If they are put on the ballot,.
The(IOvernlnrboard of.C.A.A.,
According· to Jam~ Horan, a either lu a 1peclal election or In
comprised of members from GalUa County member of EEO,
the November
. reneral election.'
both Melp and Gellla Coun~s. · hewasnotlfledlnearlyFebruary
Board Member Rupe1 howmet Tueaday evening at Guldin&amp; by Sidney Edwards, executive
repeated that h.e didn't
ever,
Hand School• ~. to dla- · 'direCtor or C.A.A., tbat three
"want
to. dlscu• what . we are .
CU8111f&lt;!poledlaYoffaotJ.T.P.A. J.T.P.A. employees had been
IIOIDI
to
do with the mollll)' at thla
·peraonuelaJJdOtiultmatten. The laid off and aeveral moll! (at
lellllhY meettq eaded In a brief leut five.or llx) were 1101111 to be
· uec:utlve u••IIOA ba wblch three • laid off. Hopn aald he asked
laYilfti were .lllli'OYed. Accord· Edwardl. to deliy tbe lay otfl
ll!ltollazeUIIciltelYey;u•tut · untllEEOcouldmeet, ''wlllehn
director of C.A,4., the lafoffl did on Feb. B." EEO liMa
'IDcludl•empliiJeeatC.A.A.'I . · requestad a meetln1 of lbe full
..,_'two ~· the board to dieeu• the . JI1'DIIOtl(l
.
AttlU. ofllce, All layoffl 1114 what lbould or lllliloiiOiuk'IUG
~ CUI'N!IIIJ worklq· at ,lit bappen to the J.T.P.A.
tile a.lllpplllatelllte office, but · . Prlllfli'll.
·. '
'Wllo Uwi Ia
c;,nty, II to . · Ill addltloD to OPJIOIIna the lay
beiJ'M 'aaiidtpl'iltltlrvy.
offl, u I*' .dud""' Edward~
Frin die clll"' I' 1ft that took upon recommeadetlon of
place• 4111'1111 lhl opl6 ..ton J.T.P'.A. Dlrc:tor David
part Of yetterday'• tneetlllc. It
Contln111!4 on pap 16

··on

WERE STAY\NG.OPEN UNT\L
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FULL SET

$9 995

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S39995 .

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*FINA·~
FeaRUARY

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REG. 5199,95·
30" DARK PINE ·

$1.2995
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to PriOr Sale

Olicken .nOodle·
dmner sbted
...
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T!ie MlddieP6rt tv~aellne

Chapter No: 172, Order of the
Eutern Star will have a homemade chlckeD noodle dinner on
· FrklaY. ~· lll . m. to 7 p.m. In
:• · ~meat of the· Masonic
· :Temple. 1D Middleport.
· · Tbe co.ttli Shnd the menJ will
:liiclllde llllnlemlde chlckenflllld
u,
·DOOCIIa, ll"eD beana, a
·clleJ:•Y pte, and coffee or te .

-

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=:wofllce

llleta-

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will not vote on bond issue

time, but just about putting the
four inUis for renewal on the
ballot. "We dont't want to lose
that · four mills," he again
repeated:
Gerard questioned how you
can plit something on the ballot
without determining what Will be
done with money, "Youcan'tjust
deal with generalities al;xlut
.these things," he commented. ·
In respoD$1! to that Carpen'ter
said thai there n~s to be some
dlscu11!0n ··bY the board as to
whether and when to put the four
,mnll Ollthe ballOt, and lfthey.a re
1\ll.tontheballot,whattheywould
;;,~~;;~~~bo~Dd~-~· :·,.~pu~on
for. We have tQget "our
•
· ~Icli_:t!l.l.l.!:~,. ' ...-so ·to speak;'.'
~~-·it~illlellt. ·
After a le~hly ,dlsc\lsslon

.,

.WALL UNIT

YOUR CHOICE

BJ ~LENE HOEFLICH
~ New•,Staff
Voters Of the Melg$ t;ocal
.School District wlll not be votbig
on a bond lssuetoralsemoneyfor
•the construction oftwc buildings ·
ln which ali elementary SChools
of the district w.ould be consoU- .
datea In the May Primary.
That WJIS the .decislon .of the
Board 9fEciucatlon at a mee\lng
Tue'sday nighi held In the board's
·meeting room. ' .
1
••
,A large crowd was lin hand at
the meetlng, whlch l)eall ·with
several controveralal Issues.
MoatWei'etherttoaskqueatlona

SOON.

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REG. 1249.94- OAK FINISH

YOUR CHOICE

··Meig~ ~ ~esidents

was before McCall was reprl)ffianded bY the board or after
that dme, was repeatedly asked
with Barton countering several
times with the statement that
"this happened a period of time
back but he was just now telling
you about it. Is that correct?"
Barton repeatedly stated that
"Mr. McC;I.II has already been
corrected and told that It Is never
to 1\appen again, and as far as we
know It never has happened
again since that Harrisonville
Incident."
The board president conte!lded .
. that If the Incident took place
before McCall's hearing on the
HarriSonville situation, then the
,:r~atter has been taken care of by
Continued on page 16

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November.
Kennedy was employed as
i\1 last night's meeting, how: boys' varsity track coach for the
ever, the board did vote to put a
1989-90 school year and zane
one mUI operating levy. on the ' · Beegle as head baseball coach
ballot In May to satisfy the
for the year, both pending
.c ontract requirement wjth the
ce1·Uflcatlon by the county s11per~Meigs Local Teachers Assoclalntendent; Snowden voted "no"
lion. The motion for one mill
on both contending that certlflcacame from Robert Snowden who
tion should be required first .
detailed the history of defeats or
Tammy Wright was hired as
operating levies placed before
reserve softball coa~h .
. the voters. Five mUis have been
Dock days were granted to
rejected several times, the . two
John. Redovlan, and Juanita
mUis last election were rejected,
Lambert, and a 30 day leave of
so why not try for one 111Ul,
absence to Letha CotterUI. .
Snowden explained. He pointed
After a lengthly •discussion,
out that one mill will generate
with Snowden voting "no" on
about $100,000. The matler
both niatters pn the )!aSia of cost
· Pll•sed by~linoi!S vote with .. · ~ tll~:'i!latr~t in ail'iilatllln
some· 'ae~&amp;Ptory statement tl!'P"'·at.lo · :Athietlc. ~,ocl8tlon
. ai)Qut t~f, !t'.'JQUnt coming from
ffii!,~M a, pr.(lflt · t~' . ~.rd
withBart&amp;'~b~Uil,btit '' • R:Il~ii!Molll he voted In the kf&amp;iltett 'l~t..OVal 'tor tii~"use Ot
for puttlliathe bond Issue on the . .affirmative.
the Meigs High School gym for
The board also voted to again the boys and girls basketball
Mary primacy ballot, 'R obert
Snowden, anot~,er board advertise for sale the old Meigs . tournaments. The boys will pay
$100 a night while the girlS' fee
member, said that .no way can Junior High School Building.
we go on the May Primary Supt. Carpetmer pointed out tbat
use Is $50 a night.
ballot." He poln~ 'out that It . an estimate on asbestos removal
The board approved a field trip
takes a 4-5 11\&amp;jot(ty vote and · was secured and sllinds at for the high school band to go to
Indicated that he wasn't abil1it to $200,000. He said thillthere are no Orlando, Fla. In April. Board
voll! In favor of that. The fifth new purchase pgospects.
Member Richard v'aughan
member e&gt;f the bollrd, Jeff
, Penonnel MeUer•
charged that the band "bad not
Werry, was not at tl)e meeting.
The resignations · or Rusty been up front on the money deal
Snowden continued that 'he Is aooklnan as varsity basketl;lall when the uniforms were pur"leaning toward getting every- coach and Cliff. Kennedy as chased" If they have money to
,thing together and then putting assistant track coach was make the trip . .
the bond Issue on the ballot In accepted.
Continued on page 16

.Witefe

Deputies_. arrest two men on charges
Two arrests. were made Tues· a safe was forced .opened. The
day by deputies of the Meigs safe and two cash registers were
opened and approximately $5,000
County Sheriff's Department.
In cash was reported stolen. Also
Kelly Spaulding, ·Gallla
reported
taken were . several .
County, surrendered to Me las
VCR
rental
tapes which were
officers on 11 . ielonlous'. assault
later
recovered
outside In a large
warrant. He will appeat In Meigs
can.
Also
recovered were
trash
· County Court today
two
large
crowbars.
The depart·
fWednelday).
'
Also arrested Tuesday was Joe m~nt reports that due to the
. Gray,_~ute 2, Racine. He J10111ed coilstructlon of the sate, It was ·
bond and was released from jail, theortied that the lntniders were
according to the sherlfrs report. In the bulldlnl rot i!Ome time. II
The dl!partment Is lnvesligat- was also,reported that an alarm
ing reports of breaklngso and system was tom off the wall.
enterlnp which occurred .In
TupPer• Plains Saturday nlght
•
and Sunday mornlnr. . · ·
According to the ~port, the
flrlt breaking and entering was
discovered at 8 R·.m. 'On Sunday at
Hliwll'l 76'Statlcin.
·
Entry was reportedly gained
Br IVLIE E. DILLON
by tearl111 out a rear door ·and
Seatlael Newa ·l&amp;aff
wall, alid movllll an Ice .c ream
Greta
Lynn Rime, Eagle
cablpet. Clrarettes, nashllahts,
Rldg!!
Road,
Racine, a Rnlor at
a cap, candy, and pack&amp;aes of
Eutern
·High
School, has been
nuts were · reported stolen. The
admitted
.Into
the
Honol'l TutorItems were later found hidden
Ial
College
at
Ohio
Unlversliy for
behiad a garaae at a residence
the fall qwirter of 1990.
north of the alation. Hawk
,
·
Rltrle was accepted into the
ntPOI'ted that aome !\ems were
pi'O(Il'&amp;ni
by the Department of
eaten at the station and others
PoUtlcal
Science.
•.•
were damared when knocked on
the floor and wal~ on. ·
Accordlna to Charle~ Moore,
The second breaking and enter:
Eastern High School prtnclpel.
tng was not disco~ untllll: :jO
there are 25 honon tutorial
pm: tin Sunday even~n~.
prorrama at Ohio Untverllty and
~co.rdlat to' tbe' report·J;od.
there are about 50 people Ia the25
wic:k'i Grocery was enlered anci ' prQirema. In the pol,l tical

Loraine Beth Tucker, Tuppers
Plains, reported that she had a
leather jacket and purse stolen
.Monday evening frOm a friend's
car. S)le stated that her. purse
was found by a c hurch.ln Tuppers
Plains and this was when she
realized tbe theft had occurred .
Sheriff James M. Sciulsby also.
reports that Ju Ue A. Jolmson,
Newport News, Va., was arrested Saturday Wen Inc on 'bad
check ch(ll'gell. She was released
from custody after appearing In
Meigs County on 26 bad cbeck
charges .

Ohio, University admitS f:HS
senior into honors program
Academy, and on her Interview
In which It was stated llhe had a
great deal of motivation aDd a
drive to do well.
"We are' very prodd •lle wai
acci!Pted Into the PI'OII'IIm,"
stated Moore. AI for Rlflle, she
very modestly stated thll, '1'm
happy I· was accepted."

··

ICIIDeed~tOflhello_...

collelf/ there art ei8JIIetudelltl.
Whlla etltlldlq O.U., iWne
wJII be enroBed ba Dine polJikll
l'c:lence
within the~•
tuiOrtat collep and lbe Will be

co-

lii~OI!I_..,_ilula.

Rlllawaa •lactld outOflll&amp;nY
eppUe&amp;Dtl from all qwr lhl
CXI,IIIItry

ucl -

_.t ol

tJiolt

epplleutl were
acllolan
In the 181tlnl ~. aecord1111 to Moore.
.
She waa 11ledecl bllld on h•
experience 11 tbe Honora

.,

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•

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Commentary

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•

•

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Yl810n8 win
lOth straight

••
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-;f.;

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i,,,

The Daily Sentinel

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South
Africa .·has·· nofh:big .Pn Mauritania·,
.
.

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.

Btlt•••n BalllOWikl

mark'ln 17 pmes from Dec. 27,
1980 to Fe~ 2i.
.
"lbe game was too close to
think . about It (free-throw
streak)," Bird said. "I jllllt
.mlued it. No excuae.
''We l)layed our beat ball down
the stretch. Ill the beat ot battle,
the lut think .,Ou think about Ia
· 1etlln8 tired. We played go¢ .
defenee and Winning our first ·
1ame after the (All-Star) break·
was Important." .
· Blnhcored 25 points In the first
half to help Boston open a :~H9
calpry mamea'coatte
.
lead'at halftli'ne.
tbe lee aa lie llOp8 tile puck and his delenseman Dana
Houston twice pulled wlthlh
at
bocks Jalallden' Alan Kerr Into the coal net In ~e first
polntln the tlll81 quarter, the
theN- Co!llleum Tuesday, (UPI)
.
· 'laSt ·tbne. with 6:13 left. But
Bolton outscored the Rocke!s
12·2 over the next 3% minutes to
.. ,e&lt;:Ure the win.
·
·
''Once again, we fell apart In
the fourth qlJ8rter," Houston
coach Don ·Chaney said. ''We
'.
• ·
,
have got to· do a better job of
's coring In the fourth quarter."
' ,. ·
.
• ' r
··.
Elsewhere In lhll NBA, Chi· ·
•_!' J'
·:.. • : ..,/
cago defeated Miami 10'7·95,
9: 57 o! the second period. Goal·
By JOJUII SWENSON
....
.-;if ..J 1
•
' ;
·Indiana routed Charlotte 128-10~.
tender Rick Wamsley had
VPI Sporla Writer .
~ ... """-" .
•
.._,.
New York outlasted Atlanta
·Fifteen yearsago, Bryan Trott· stopped Trottier's l!!ltlal shot off
1An14t·109,
.MSan
ler played his first exillbltlon a two-on-one break with Pat
1
1
---~~~~:..........e expect · to n every me
on o ""' .•
11.
n·
LaFontaine.
game at Nusau Coliseum Wear·
. __;__ .'.... •
-'-..!.
~· .:::·"'-'
"~:::;...;
.. "' """'
'"·::r:r:.tr:m:-7 _ _. . _ game we play.''
. ·• ·
nesota 110·1~ In overtime, Pholng a rookie's number more . .The 1·0 lead lasted 57 seconds
.BATI'LE FOR LOOSE BALL ..:.. san Antonio' a rookie aenaaUoa
Denver went 7:32 'Without a .enbt beat the· Los Angeles
suited IQ a football player, but. the before Joe Nleuwendyk's shot
, (L) David Ro
, biiii!IOn battles with Pallas' Jami:s ·Qonal~ lor a
field goal In ·the final 'quarter, Cl)ppers .UB-96, Sacramento deway he skatejl laterally · and went In off the skate o! Gary
A
Til. d
going · from II\ 83-81 le.a d to a feated Washlngton 106-98, .and
Roberts, who was credited with
an
del paled the puck It was
· k1o1e ball durtncllrst quarter action a&amp; Reunion rena es ay.
10S.90 deficit. Detroit outii.COred Portland beat Seattle .1~0-106.
·
the goal.
obvious
he
was
going
to
be
a
good
, !UPI)
Denver 31-16111, the ftnal quarter.
Bi1111107, HeatH ·
Then
at
14:
42,
Nhiuwendyk
put
·
one.
'
~.:ss·
"Whai-makesthemsotough', "
f't Miami, .Michael Jordan
Four Stanley Cups, 1;348 points Calgary ,up 2·1 when he was set up
aauau
DenvereoachD!IugMoesald, "Is scored 26 points to help Chicago
and
1,104 career games later, by Roberts and Sergei Makarov.
..
they .can-slow the ganie down! go snap Ita longest losing streak o!
"We Jet down and they took
Trottier became the '15th NHL
one-on·one with out: When the sell$on at four games. Rony
advantage of us," said Trottier,
score
500
goals.
player
to
they're ll(;(lr!ng, now you've got SelkalyscoredaMiaml·record40
The veteran Islanders center who Insisted that the goal was not
to go agalnat a set defense. And points, eclipsing the old record of
scored the historic goal against as important as' helping his team '
Upon emerging from a 90. they can &amp;et more physical'. "
34 points set by Kevin Edward.s
NEW YORK (UPI) - Basethe Calgary Flames, but was win.
Islah Thomas led Detroit with last ~ear. 128 B
t 115
' 'No way I was going out of my
minute session, neither side
ball's labor talks took what may
disappointed that his team went
elaborated on VIncent's sugges- 17 points. Michael Adams scored
aeen , orne •
way and startpr~slng," Trottier
prove to be a positive turn
do.wn 'to a 4-2 defeat.
lions. O'Connor described them 19 for Denver: Lali'nbeer bad 20
At Indianapolis, Chuck Person
•'The guys let down," admitted said. ''There. Is something bigger
Tuesday, with negotiators agreerebounds to go with teammmate and Reggie Miller each scored 23
Ing to consider suggestions from
Trottier. "They said, 'Hey, the going on here than just' Bryan
a s . " s u b s t a n t.l v e and Dennl&amp;. Rodmn' s 17, glvin" lh" points· to help Indiana hand
Trottier trying to get a goal. We
pi'()Cedural."
'
.
,...
"
~
guy's got It now'." ·
,Commlsslone~ Fay VIncent.
Fehr
em
pitas
!zed
he
had
no
Pistons
a
59-31
reboundlilg
ed1e.
Charlcitte
Its
11th
sttalght
loss.
Trotuer became the 15th " have a team concept, AI has a
Cautioning against talk of a
..I'he Lakers, to me, are still Rex Champman scored 20 points
'breakthrough, union chief Don
player In NHL history to score team concept here and It Is very
way of knowing whether Vln· 'better-until , Detroit beats them for the HllrQets, who have lost 17
lm(lOrtant. The guys stick with It
500 gl)als.
·
Fehr. said he would summon
cent's suggestions would lead to ·· again,. • Moe said.• •'But they're of 18.
,
and
I'm no different than anyone
•'We couldn't get ourselves
members of the Players Negoprogress. But the fact that both still, tlie two best teams In the
JlJIIcka Jlf, Hawks 1..
else."
tiatif1g Committee to New York sides a~:reed to consider any· leilgue."
·
At Atlanta, Patrick Ewing going all game.'' said Islanders
De.rek King pulled the Islandon Wednesday. Owners represen•
thing at all represents change.
At · Houston., ,Reggie. Lewis scored 31 points anjl Charles' Coach AI Arbour. "We were
ers
Into a 2·2 tie In the final
tatlve Chuck O'Connor said he
going
against
the
grain.
Trotti·
''The mere fact that we're at
23
1 d N
least
debating
a
framework
for
added
25.
points
for
the
Celtlcs.
Oakley
added
to
ea
ew
second
of the second period on
er's
goal
should
have
given
us
a
;would spend the day .caucusing
discussion
of
these
Issues
Is
a
.
Bird
had
not
,Dtssed
a
free
throw
York
to
Its
sixth
consecutive
the
power
play. but Calgary got
with ' the Player Relations
lift, but after It happened we let
bit
!lhead
of
where
we
were
Since
Dec.
19,
and
til!!
7lstralght
victory.
Dominique
Wllkllls
little
thlrd·perlod
goals from Doug
down."
·
·
Committee.
last
week,"
Fehr
said.
leaves
him
\!1
SI!C!I.
n
d
place.
on
the
scored
33
points
tor
Atlanta,
Glli'nour
and
N!euWel!dyk
for the
Trotder, In his 1,104th career
, ,Jolqt talks
resume as
Talks began Nov. 28 and have aU-time ust. Bird sank hll firSt whlcl\ suttered Its seventh loss In gaine, scored tl\e opening goal
4·2 ildvanta)le.
1~arly as T,~~~~~~when training stalled on the Issue of revenue three attempts In the second hillf eight games.
,
Continued on page 4
camps \1
welcomed
~ut of a goalmouth scramble at
continued
on
berore
missing.
MufPIIy
set
the
Continued
on
page 4
4
their
arrivals.

~

WAS~I~GTON-Wh~peace MaurtW:nta·/~ntrlbutiori to . ~ .
and frl!fldom are becoming the moderJr torture methods Is a
·"
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
International norm, It Is Wise to technique. Jmown as "the Jag·
~tes · ·has . PJ'QleSted human !pents denyJng Amneaty '(
remember that people whose uar." ~ vtctli'n Is hung upside
rights abuses In Mauritania, and Clalma. The Mauritanian Eni·: 1
~~
.
names you cannot pronounce and down from a 111etal bar and • the go~rnment there appears to ,busy In Wasblngto11 did not
~m~ I""'T'"'L....L--,-,~c.~
whose stories you w!ll never hear beats· on th'e soles .of tbe teet.
have scaled back the expuls!Ops ..,tum our. phone calls.
·• .
~v
. ..•.
su!f~r . atr~ltles .every day In Onll, who alLegedly spel\i biB last
il!lce thatprotestinAuguilt. B11t.
in 1986, ~ group of biiiCk,
ROBERT L.-WINGETT
countries that the average Amer· hours on :the jaguar ..was Mothe United States views Maurita· tnte1Jectua14 rtJeased a booklet.··
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Publisher
General Manager .
lean couldn't find on the map. · .. ha~ Yerp Ba,~ a blaek school
nla as a rare bird- m~te !bey called "The ManJteetooftlle
Mauritania,· ·on the northwest 1telidnlaster. 'His. torturers sus-. Arab nation - and wants · 'to Qppressed · Black Maurltan·
PAT WHITEHEAD
· coast of Africa, Is just SI!Ch a pended hli'n over• a fire. Wit· · J;llalpt)lln gOQd relations.
JaltS." They urged blacks to unite
Assistant Publisher/Controller
country. Its sister on thetlpofthe nes~i!i ,ll!bo saw his ~Y said he
• The regtine of Mauritania's
a.,tnst the AI'a~domiJiated &amp;yllcontlnent, South ~rica, gets all ) was ~ With burns. . .. · ' , · ' pre"!dent, Col. Maaouya Ouid . ·tern. Which ·tbey descrlbecl aa,
A MEMBER of The United Pn!ss International, Inla:nd Daily Press
the press, but the racism In •· Bii'• · crlme ·was that lie sent , Sid' AbmedTaya,doesnotseem·, betng "as peratctous · as ·
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Mauritania
Is no less virulent.
· l~tters •. to !)!hers . dOCIIrhentlng
to be..mak!ng: mucli effort to end apartheid." • •
·
t ! ~....
'
·.· A military republic ruJed ' by !l!J.llses eommltted;lJ. galnst ' the torture and execution.. In~a . Tlloist!who.spokeuppalda'!'gh
· -LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
Arab"whlteMoors,"Maurttan!J blaclls.by &amp;~C~~rlty fotch ln·'the' -recentr~rtonMaurltanla, the .•·fn'ie1· Tlllrty_ people .were .ar· .
words long. All leiters are subject to editing and must'be signed with
has .~n the. scene of ' mass senegal Rlvl!f Vjlile)',-Onept:tli!! .. human rlgilts voup Amllesty·· . !ll!lted ln . connection with the
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letiers wUI be pub-- · ·
~xpulslons of blacks, hundreds of
reclple'lts ·of Ba 's letters. was a
International listed the OIII!Oing .tnanUeSto and sentenced to prl·
Us bed. Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues, not persona!!·
ties.
·
politically motivated arrests and Mauf1ten1a~· teactler · named : abuse&amp;: Taya)las ru!i!\1 Maur.lt&amp;· ·so,n In a remot~: vllla~e. One .of
numerous cases of torture and ~~u Hama~ Ba. : He was
nil sill~ 1984'vh!en he took over _them ,was writer Tene Youssouf
.,
- reportedl31 , arrested ~ a.nd tor.. In a.bloodless coup.
· . Gueye. According to tile Am·
execu.Uon since lastAprn. ·
The white Moors run· the lured, J11siillecau~- Ba wrote to . · That report, concludlid that . ne.sty report, lie and other
11atlon, ~!thoUgh they,make up him. ,
., . .
. . ·•
Taya's failure ta, prosecute his
pr~ners were forced Into bard
onl:,: 40 (iercent of the almost 2
TheUnlted States glv.es Mauri·
security torce-s forhuman rights
labor, beaten .regularly, chained
abu.s es Indicates " policy which
at night and fed only small
m!ll!on population. The black tin lA $7 mll)lol!·a y~ar. but that
Mauritanians are expendable, apparently . doesn't buy much
amounts to condoning the use of
amounts of ric~.
.
·•
a11d the government js ~lng to · leverlige. A spokesman for the
torture."
. ' '
In Septembej'191!8, Gueye died
great lengths to demonstrate · State Departnient toljl our reporT!le Mauritanian .m inister of· In prison at ·the· age of liO from
.
By ROBERT SHEPARD
that.
ter Greg Moore that the United
WASHINGTON (UPif - .After several months of Investigating the
Information has Issued statesevere d'arrhea and beriberi.
conduct of Rep. Gus Savage, D·IIL, the work of the House ethics
·ee
·
.
Three more political prisoners
committee was nearly undone recently when the panel's report was
AA I '
\AI
dl~ In the sa~e prison In late
relea.sed.
' .
t'
II'Hf ·....
11 111~ ·•·
' 1988~ The. re!JIJlinllll 64 were ·
Savage, who was accused of making sexual advances to a Peace
•
transferre&lt;! to • •new prlsO!I, but
'.
were reported tb be so week that
Corps volunteer during a trip to Africa, took advantage of the
they could move on!:,: bY
committee's procedure to claim vindication and to fire off a
'i,
· crawling.
.•.
·
broadside charge or' racism aimed at his House colleagues, the news
media, the Justice Department and others.
·
Severe diought
.
for
two
de•
~j
I
The ethics cqmmlttee, In a tide! written announcement released on
.cades In Maurltanlil. has exacer·
bated the tensions between .
a Wednesday, said it had. filed a report. on Its Investigation of the
blacks and · white Moors as
charges against Savage and that the report would be made public. It
was lear ned that the panel planned no disciplinary action against
. , various groupe! vie tor the fertile
Savage,.but the printed report- containing the critical findings of the ' ·
land along the Senegal River.
Last April, disputes along th,e
investigtatlon- was not available to the ·publlc unt!l Friday.
Sa., age, moving to put his own spin on the case, scheduled a sl¥!ech
river gave t!le \~Uurt~~lall government thP. excuse to confls·
in the House chamber Thursday. In that s~ech. which was carried
cate the land ilnd cattle of blacll
nationwide over the C-Span .&lt;;able system, . Savage claimed ·the '
(atmers and rome the farmers to
committee had concluded the evldel)ce against him "was Insufficient
eros&amp; the river li1to neighboring
even to warrantfurther Investigation, not even a slap on.thewr!stnor
\\\\
·even a ·mud rebuke."
Senegal. Between May and Sep. .tem,ber, . 50,000 black Maurltan· "
The committee report, however. told a different story. "Savage,
· •
·tans were rounded .up and
did, In fact, make sexual advances to the Peace·corps 'v olunteer"
des pite her strenuous objecilons, the report said.
expelled. .
. '
Hundreds who , resisted were
Savage's conduct·, while visiting Africa In hiscapadty as a member
reported· to have been arrested.
of Congress, was ''contrary to the standard' of conduct expressed In
·"
anlj, In some cas~ . tortw:ed and
(House rules)," and "The committee clearly disapproves of
'
executed. Two boys, a1es 10.and
.
Representative Savage's conduct," the report said. ..
' 12, were arrested when theY .tried ·
But the way Savage told it to thousands of television viewers, he did
not get "even a mild rebuke."
·
to sneak away with- their goats
•'
The eth ics committee decided not to take .any further action agillnst
. ,~ . ..
,. .
and ihF!!P· they ~te)ater found
Savage In part because he had written a letter of apology to the Peace
.
, , •. •
;
•.. '·'
, .
. with. their. thr6ats cut. " · ·
Corps volunteer. saying he had not Intended to offend her. But the
.
sincerity of that 'apology Is highly suspect.
·s
·
The unfortunate womal! who endured Savage's advances
_.:.
·i........___..;·· - - . . , . . . . . - - - . ; . . . . . ·. .
•.. .__
,
reportedly had to ul!dergo treatment In a program for. victims of
., •
ll'
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.;. ....
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\.•
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sexual assault, but Savage, In his speech to the House: tried to suggest
..
. .,
the wom~n·s ·condition predated her encounter with the amorous
For too long, Ohio has been. a smp~uardous'mate;lalsm'tothe · southeastern Ohio would be spe- . though necessary, political. tasl(. .
...-~
congressman. .
du~plng .ground for hazardous · s(4te: t
·.. ~ '· ''·
c!al' beneficiaries of tills law. ,
While .the free now Qf ,com:'
For Savage, the·entire matter was a case of racism and hewas .the
waste transported from out·6f· 1 Wh!lt i:bti means' is that states,
sin~ lrazard'o us waste dumpers , m!!;ce; l~cllidlng waste, Is· p~o- ·
innocent victim. As It turned out. racism did Indeed become an Issue · state. Between 1982 and 1987, . Including. 'Ohio, would have t'o
usually try to find area outside of tected by the U.S. ConsUutton; If
In the case, but it was Savage- not the acc.users, Investigators or
Ohio took In a total of 4.1 million work . harder • to find better ·· big cities to dump their trash.
Is ,m y belief - and the· bell~
media - who made it so.
.
.
·
tons. of ljazardous waste. most of · meth~l!:;of dlsposlng Qf hazardThis bill also would put Ol!lo In many experts - that the .S enate·
. The public that heard only Savage's view of the episode was nottold
It coming ~rom New York,
ous matt:rlals than trucking It · the~torefront of states trying to . blllls a constltutlonalty accepta· · ··
that the woman he accosted is black. Nor did Savage mention that the
Pen.nsylvan!a and New Jersey.
across suite l(nes .. Air~ady Ohio· enact ,responsible legislation to ble . means of "encouraging re.:
chairman of the House eth ics committee, the .blpartisan panel that.
D\II'!ng the same . period, Ohio and five, n 'e lgbborlng, stales glonal' cooperation to solve an•
· limit out-of state trash. In 1988,
·
.
.
conducted the lnv~stigatlon, is bllack.
s6tpped a. flluch smaller amount,
Michigan litdtana,.Iillno!s; Min·
the Ohio General Assembly
li'nportant national problem. In '·
, Instead, Savage unleas hed a barrage of racist charges, suggesting· 1.5 m!lllon tons, to other states.
neso.ta'
.wtsconsin· ::... are
passed House Bl)l 592, a good
proposing this.bill, Oh\o Is actljlgi
the allegations were brought against him and the media spotlight was
. ·This enylr\)nmentally lrres- .t aking 'ijl~ -riaponslble st~ o(
start. 'That ia\v s'et up solid .waste
responsibly·. Now all we can hope,
focused on him s!n\ply because he Is black. There was no. mention
.ponslble era, however, likely will workltig on a cooperlltlve plan to
plannll!g districts and set targets for IS that our netgh~ring states~
from Savage of 'the three other House members - all white - who
regu~tf lnters·tate,.shiPfllents-.
come to an end U legislation,
fro waste reduction. .
to th!! East hj!ed our mes5!l1e. -'
were accused of sexual misCOI!duct In separate cases im!l
'.Passage p f i this ' leiilstauon
Senilte · Bill 314,. t~at I am
Now we have to go ·one stef
If you have any questions·
Investigated by the ethics committee amid a flurry of news stories'
co-sponsoring In the Senate ·ts
would.eild the era of Ob!O being a
further. Nationwide, one of the concerning this 9r any Other
about the allegations.
approved. Under Senate Bill 314,
dumping gFoulld tor ~ast ·Coast
most contentious Issues. Many of
piece legislation, please do not
It Is I!Ot surprising that Savage would attempt some spin co.ntrol · i Introduced· this ~eeJI, states .that
waste, 'aild1.- 1\Dcoura&amp;e states
our neighboring states are avoid·
hesitate (o contact.'me by wrltlllg .
and try to portray himself In the most favorable light, but the House
do not have a huardous waste
along· the Eastern Seaboard In
lng· the political connie! accosl·
Senator Jan Michael Long, State·
et hics committee should not help In that effor t. If the panel finds
management plan approved by
lmprovfl their own waste dlspo- · ··cated with slUng hazardous
house, Columb~s. Ohio' 43215 ur
misconduct It ~hould quickly make that finding known and head off
the U.S. ·Env!ronme,ntal Protec·
sal pr'!ctlces. Those of us in rural
waste disposal sites' by sli'np)y
by cl!lling (614) 466-8156.
distortions of the truth suc h as Savage attempted :
lion Agency ~ouldn t be able· to
and small t!lwn southern and
not performll!g this •pall!ful.

]ackAnderson and Dale· Van Attn

. Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

a

Ethics report
.
contradicts Savage

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NEW YORK (UPI);... James
''Buster"- DOuglas wiln undlsputed claim 'to the heavYweight .
champlonshtprUesday.when two ,
of boxing's governing bodies
declared hli'n the rt&amp;htful&amp;ucces·
sor to ·MJke.Tyson. ' ·
•
'the Internallonat Boxing Fed·
eratlon al,l'eacly recogntied .Dou· '
glas' as' champion· but ,that
amounted to. one-th~ of ·the
crown. The World Boxln&amp; 1Usocl·
'1\j 1Uion and Wo.rld Boxl'ng Councli &lt;
-.. granted fortnal app'roval
/;:i Tuesday.
·
. _ 11!i,i
The rulings caine on the same
·~ · day representatiVes for bllllo- .
. \
nalre developer Doft!lld Trump
clafmed
to haW an agreement
1 with promoter
Don King for a -

at;

·s.i.d

ot

Letters to the editor,

'

~\; ,·.,1~,~ ....~

~~·~

•All shook up"

•

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Robert Waters

.

Berry's Wo.rld

in history

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Wllreeta

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Trottier becomes 15th
NHL .player to score
500 ,career markers

l·~961lasUtadehfeedateedd

,

Tyaon-Doilglasrematchln·Atlan·
tic City, N.J., June 18. However,
Klllll .. ld auch talk Is premature.
"We don't have a rematch,"
King said at a news conference.
•'What we're trying to do Ia to.get
one."
However, Douglas' ·mana1er,
John Johnson, said Tuesday
night that be will m-:et with King
In New York Wednesday to begin
neglttiatlons.
The developments all sprung
from Douglas' startling knockout
of Tyson In Tokyo Sunday.
touchtns off confusion · across
continents among fighters,
promoters, television executives
and boxlne offiCials, with tens of
mWions ·of doUars at stake and

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-----""!'--Sports briefs

r

HOQUIAM, Waslt. (NEA)
dozen others of ~lightly less
resulted In the discharge of an
Residents of this C&lt;ljlstal com·
severity, Involving ~0,000 to additional 40,000 gallons 17 days
I'm all shook· up.
to be left In until nature takes munlty In Washington know little
100,000 gallon~ • . are , barely• later. Most of the on eventually curred In recent year.s along .the
Too many letters - instead of
them back: They are out of sight about the recent pipeline rupture
notice(!.
·
'
·
flowed Into municipal sewers and Atlantt.c Coaat, but the recent
the Meigs Coul!ty EMS, they·sent
and you can't hear 'em so why that dumped 567,000 gallons of
Nevertheless, on lpllls pose a then the Los Angeles River. ,,
New York area spW Into Arthur ..
SEOEMS. They hauled m e a~xiut
can't they leave It alone. Sure we heating on lntotheopimwatersof
continutng·probleniofconsldera·
The spUI In Grays Harbor · Kill, a 13-mlle-long strait separ' 10 miles and charge!l me $326. I . may need those spots for roads, the New Y·ork metropolitan area.
ble severity, as this ilimmary of .occurred In Decem~r 1988 when ating Staten Island and New
appreciated them and needed
etc. but give us right of refusal.
But New Yorkers are equally
selecled ' lllltfor Pacific . Coast ' the barge Nestucca was ram"\ed Jersey, was especially .evere.'
them. I may I!Ot be able to pay
Absolute law dldn' t work In . uninformed about the oil spUr a
acctl!ents du'ring ?the 1980s "by Its own tug. ')'he'tug's crew
. The J111lroleum lllduatry .now
though because some political. Russia, maybe we better stap year earUer'that began with the
Indicates· ·
· ·
•
·was attempting to recover a tow ·says It Is belatedly actln1 to
dude wants to ·use my Society . back!~' off.a bit there.
release of more than 230,000 " The worst spill In Washln~~f&lt;~n's line that had snapped when the enhance Its ablllfY .to respond to
Security pension (I've paid Into
How to stop It? Get Involved!. gallons 9f heavY bunker fuel here
his~ occurred : In DeCember boat struck' the t?arge .and rup:. sptl~. For 'loo m&amp;JIY years,
that since 1939) fo pay on the
Don't give your kid ten bucks and In Grays Harbor, then blackened
-1985,. Wilen the on tanker .Arco lured an oil tank,
however, It hail Ignored the·
. natlona I debt. ·1 dldn' t make that
say get 0111 of here, give your 300 mnes of shoreline along the
problem.
· '
Anchorage ran aground off Port
. F~wer accldeQts h!lve · ocdebt.
.
wedding pa.rtner $10 and keep $10 coasts of Oregon, Washington , Angeles, Wash.;.and dlschargl!d
, I'm happy thqugl\. because I
yoursel~ and all go out together.
and Brltjsh Columbia.,
·abllost 240,000 gallons of Alaskan
'
d!dn' t die. I m lght not have had a
And vote when this politician
·Indeed, th~ thousands ot on
crude on IntO coastal waters.
place· to be burled because
IntroduceS these l!ew laws, mak~ .spU)s that are recorded every
In 1!84, the tan)ter Mobil bll
already · some political dude
'em give gpod cause or vote 'em year along the Atlantic, Pacific . ruptUr'ed after running aground
wants to give some other dude
out. Get someone In . office to and Gulf coasts and 111 the '· 111 t~ .Coiu!llbla RIVer, spilling
l'M ~'liNG T~IJ&amp;I,;E
the right to dig up my Mom and
r~present us qrget rid of 'em jus)
nation' s . J~vers, harbors and
170,000 g81lo111 of on. In January·
COPlt-tG WITH P\l.L THE
Dad whenever they want and put
like you can get rid of me. Give other waterways generally rei988, tbe'· tank-barge MCN 5 sank
'em wherever they want.
the paper to s0meone else.
PRE:SSURI:S TO . S4C.CEEO;
celve little attention outside the . off ShaJtnon Point, near Ana·
The only thing Mom al!d Dad
Signed,
communlttes where they occur.
cortes, Wash. , dlschargt.,.67,000
TO 1-\A'IE. SF:&gt;&lt; AND TO USE
needs from ·our world is a l!tlle lot
Brooks Sayre
The 'most notable exception .·gallons of bunker fuel.
..,
ORIJGS AN.~ ALCO~O\. ,
In AprU 1988, a broken drain
}las been the worse on spill In tile
'
...
t
., nation's history. Tbe March 1989 · line and a vaJve .mlltakenly let!
grounding oflhe on tanker Exxon
open at a Shell refinery In
ME,
Martin~. Calif., allowed 432,000
Valdez In Alaska's Prince Wll·
'
TOO'•
!lam SOunciJed tO '!be release of gallons of crude oil to escape
By V nlted Press biternaUonai
almost l,l million gallollll of crude from a 12.5 million gallon storage
Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 14, the 45th dayof1990wlth 320 to foUow.
on and tb.e sul!lequent befOuling tank Into Carqulnez Strait; SuiThis Is St: Valentine's Day.
·
· ofmorethanl,OOOmUeaofeoast.
sun Bay, San Pablo Bay and •·
' r
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
· · ·
A trio of smaller on aplllalaat eventually San FraJtcllco Bay.
.
.'
•
The morning stars are Me~ury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
summer -;:- of1 1be couta of , · S~ellapent Cl•.JIIIlltoll to clean
'·
The evening star Is Jupiter.
'
· .
Texas, · ·Delaware and Rhode up the damaae tt•" ~. bi
Those bOrn on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. Tlleylnclude
'Island - briefly attracted !be addition, tbp C!Jmf*y late year
'
Polish astronomer Nicholas Copernicus In 1473, suffrage leader Anna :nation'$ attention because they agreed to pey lilnOitaDftlllllon. •·
•Howard . Shaw In 1847, comedian Jack Benny In 1894, iports ' .occurredallllllllltmuit8neoualy. llicl~ Jut Iader
mUilon
I
co"'mentator Mel Allen In 1913 (age 17). Teamsters uniOn presl4ellt
The Cout Guard AYI that to restore damtpellMI'Ihlanda
.·.
,Jimmy Hoffa - also In 1913, broadcaster Hu1h Downs In 1921 (age
more than' s,poo aeci!Sental 4111- and to aequtre fdd•lonal we69), 8Jld actresa-slnger FlorenceHenderson In 1934 (_a ge 56) .
cbarjei of oU a11d biller toxic tlanda.lll thet't11oa. '
--.
.
. subltaDCH occur every year.
Ill September • · a Mobil
Oa tittfda" Ia history:
, Apprw(lin-~ cloziiJ or thoie plpelflle bruit llllt 1111 000 pllons
· EtheWeatCoastcltrualndustrywasbom, 1'heflrattralnload . ·accident&amp; :
y receive na· of eraile 01lla1D
of
01
leftLosAnplflloreuternmarketa.
· '
. ttOnalpubllcltybecauaetheyare · Enc!ao, eaut:; ·II .Lot Aqela
.,
• Ia
Prelldent Theodore Roosevelt algned a law creating a
the wont apfJII,tnvolvlllllOO,OOO auburb. Wheti ~ ruptUre wu
r
Depar~Jnent ~f Commerceand' Labor. r
galla...
~· But abOut a belq r.palred, 1 llcolld ilreak

To~ay

· 1

Oil ' ~pill: not an unc.,hmton· occurence
•

one

~·~..,,_-.,.&amp;. . ., Wtojlettheho~wlurtadvanhotage.

,

.~ a.

FAiwiT&lt;i'icE-

~ut~~ri~~:. nile' Douglas undisputed champion

· .:.· . Sen~ J,an:M.·Lo
~----_,· lria:
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'VPIIpada Wrt&amp;er
A team streak condnueifTues·
day ,Jitght wblle an lndlvldJial run
fell abort.
.The Detroit Pia~ defeated
the Denver Nugpts1!)6-96, ty11111
a club record wltb thett lOth
conaecu tive vlc:tory. Larry Bird
mluedatreetbtow.attermaklng
7~ stralgbt owr18 games, falling
abort of the reoord 78 .,. · by
Calvin Murphy Wit)) tb4H11uaton
'
Rock eta.
But Bird scored. 38 polnta and
grabbed 14 rebowlds to h~lp the
Bolton Celtlcs defeat the Hou11ton Rocketl ,107-!M. . '
'
At AubUrn' Hills, Mich., Bill
Lapnbeer aad '{.lnnte JolaniOD
combined for 1'1 folll'lll-quarter
pOints and Detroit llsed tis
'league-leading defeiii!C! to" alow
down the league's best11ffen&amp;e; It
was the third time In franchise
history that the defendlnl: cham·
pions wori 10 atralgbt, doing ao.ln
· 1986,and198'1. · . . '
·
"One of our goals," Jobnsori
said, "Is to get the c~plot1Sbti&gt;
and defend our title. The other Ia

·"C·o·......
··on·er' ·vm·.c·en
' •.
.a··•ds .baseba._ ll talks·.

.. .

~~· II:··. '·
· enate o·.i II.~' ..,~·"11-. :~:·'...-.;.

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thecredlbllltyofboxlng'sauthor·
Illes OQ tbe 1~.
King spoke at a news conf~r·
ence attended bJI Tyson. The
former champion · wore dark
glasses to hide a bruised left eye
he suffered during his lOth-round
knockout loss to Doliglas. He
offered !10 excuses for his first
professional defeat and said he
could be ready to tight In two
months.
· ''The only thing I'm asking for
from the champion Is a
match," Tyson· said. "Then I II
be OK.''
An Immediate rematch woul~
pEvush dasldeH Nlyfo. . 1d chHallenger
an er
o 1e1 ,
e was
signed. to fight Tyson lor $12
mWion on the same date and at
the same site. Ho'"'leld's cam
, p
says no agreement'over Tyson·
Douglas has been struck with
them or Dougllis.
:
"We're far, far, far from a
deal," said .Dan Duvil, Holy·
field '.s promoter.
King Ia the promoter forTy son
and Douglas. The spike-haired
promoter safd he ho~ Douglas
will gtve Tyson another shot to
"'et the world know whQ Is the
best fighter."
"It Is only fitdng and proper
that Buster Douglas reciprocate," King said.
The IBF recognized Doliglas as
champion Immediately after the
Tokyo bout, with the WBA and
WBC withholding judgmj!nt until
Tuesday.
.
The Indecision by the two
gpyernlpg bodies s(ems from
objections lodged by Tyson and
King. Douglas received a long
count when TyiOn knocked doWJ!.
Douglas In the eighth round.
Tuesday, lclng said ·Jie was

Its mlnli'num·age rule that will
· · '~: cfclllll
enable
1990 U.S. pairs sliver
Donald T-r ump Sfld that Wll·
medalists
Natasha Kuchlkl and
mingtgn, .,. Delaware, ~I l!e the
· IT'S OFFJC~L .:.... Ja111es "Buster" Douglas pula the World
TOdd
Sand
to participate ·In the
starting .~lllt for th.IS year's Tour
Boxing Council championship belt over Is shoulder lor keeps after
worljl champlolllblps Marc:b 5-11
deTrum~blcycle race, ali 11-day
belnc named by tbe. wile and the World Boldnc Auoctatlon the
competition tr11v.ellng through 13 In Halifax, Nova Scotia.
undlllputed heavywelr;ht champion of the world. Douglas had
Sqauh
.
cttles. " ·
'
. already received the .International BoxJn1 Federation champion'
Mark
Talbott,
29,
beat
David
Foatball
' ahlp after knocklnl out. Mike Tyson lor the IItle. (UPI)
Fotinet University of, Pitts· Boyum 15-9,15·7,18·15 to capture
burgh star . James Rooney, the $20,000 Alexander Hamilton
brother of late Steelera owner Art ·Life Pro Squash Classic at
Rooney, died at age 84 ~r a Minneapolis. Talbot earned
lengthy lllnesi and StrOke. A $4,000 and won his fourth s tralght
running back and punter! ,James tournament. The next comiletl·.
Rooney was 111&amp;0 Pitt's top ~·r· lion Ia In San Francisco.
. . Tetiiiia
' By United PNMinternattonat · books. ''T)Ie guys Notre Darrie
In 1929 under COI!Ch Jock Su'tber, On the eve of the year's mosv has got are better than the ones
land .... L.A. Gear Inc. sayslthu
The United States Tennis Asso~jgned 49era, qual"'i!rback Joe ciation nominated Martlila Navli'nportant test for coUege foot·
anybody else ,has or Is going to
Montana as
celebrity
· · ball Jirokrams around the coun·
get."
ratllova, Zlna Garrison and Pam
try, the Notre Dame Fighting
The Irish ·added to their al· · ~an for 1ts $liO ~llllori ''Uutop. ShriVer along with Jennifer Ca·
Irish and Ohio State Buckeyes ready beefy group early \his · (lllble" ·advertllllnl campmgn. prlatl, Gig! r,rnan~ and Mary
An L.A. Gear spokelniaq...lalel it Joe Fernandez to the Federation
appear ready to receive the week With a commitment from
highest grades.
240-pound fullback Jerome Bet Us
ls,a "muftl-mtllloa doDar"·Pllct: 1 Cup team. The competltlotr Is
•t'
Ro • Ill
' .•
Wednesday Is "S Day" for of Detroit. Also Included among
·
1D I
·~ ';; ·
scheduled for Atlanta next
· Unlverltly of ColOrado atudellt Suinmer. '
thousands of high school football ·the nation's top 50 recruits· to
·
.play~rs .:.. "S" as In Scholarship.
hli\le committed to Notre Dame ·Scott ·Elliott aet a men'• noord
' .
for. racing up the E_mplre $tate
· · It Is the first day they can sign are runn,!ng back Jeff Burris of
Bulldlnlf'• 88 filghts of stalrll;and
'scholarshlp_agreetnents with the Rock Hill, S.C., defensive end
an
Australian !)hysical eclllcltlon
coUege of their choice. a ritual Bryant Young o! Chicago, tight
which helps provide an education end Oscar McBride of Chlefiand,
teacher defeuded her .title l,n the
13th ann.-1 aprlilt to IIMi top of the
for many you1111 men whd could Fla., . o!feJ!slve ·guard Aaron
.
.
.
.n ot otherwise · obtain one but ;;,.Taylor of Concord, Call!., lineworld fi-lk)'scral*'. -=llllltt
which also Is the root cause for backer Jim Flanigan nfBrussels,
lO.llllnullel Vld
flnlailed
much of what' Is wrong with Wis., and fullback Dean Lytle of
secotldl. · '•
~ · '
coUeglate football.
.
Brevard, N.C.
..
The biler:•.: .. . .
The bitter recruiting wars
Ohio State, l)owever,hasmade
have been spiced this year by a major dent In the upper
ton hal
u· ~ti -~ .•
. .. . :"
coaching changes at Michigan echelons ofthe.recrultlngderby.
State, Clemson, Arkansas and In addition t~ Smith, the Buck·
Alabama - four schools which eyes have conunttme11ts from
'
traditionally rake In a · l'!rae cornerback Larry Kennedy of
WDI ..............11.tt
share Qf top talent,
Sarasota, Fla. (the No. 11 player
But moat of all, this year's on the top 100 list) and quarter· ·
~Unl season has &amp;eel\ a
back Joe Pickens of ClevelaJtd
gravitation of talented ptayen to
(No. 13).
two ·of the moat tradition-bound
Another top lOG quarterback"AI tiJii ... ef.... PI• tie,,'
..... .,
.football pJ'Oil'amsln the country Prell ton Harrla .of Columbus,
Ohio (No. 58) ... has alao agreed
- Notre Dame and Oblo State;
NrtTfl,- .
Pl. M!·JSS6
"At this pOint I don't think to •liD With the Buckeyes. The
uybocly can catch Notre Dame quarterbacks wl.l lllkely be red'tbll ,ear," aald l!fu Emfinger of ahlrted by Coach John Cooper
HOulliDII. wiiO pull out one of tile next aeuoil, bill Smith Is being
UtiDII'I
rec:'ndtlq plde- .
Continued OU paae '

Notre Dame, osu·
head recuriting class

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~

SPEOIAL OF THE WEEKI
.BAI·B·QUE

· S1~34 .

liO&amp;PifS DAllY· VAWY

IIIFY

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unaware of the decision by the
WBA a11d WBC to recognize
Douglas. He also denied trying to
"overturn" the outcome of the
fight, saying he only sought to
dramatize the need for a
rematch.
.
"I've always recognized Buster D9uglas as heavyweight
ehamplon," King . said. "There
has never been a question about
that."
Tyson and King had contended
that because the referee was.
slow In picking up the tlmekeeper's count, the extra seconds
allOwed Douglas to escape. The·
bl en efntedlngDo the _rountdt shoundfedt
us1 a r
ug 1as go o . 1s ee .
Douglas recovered and In the
lOth round delivered a savage ·
combination that flattened
Tyson . ..
The WBA, based In Venezuela,
and the WBC, based In Mexico
City, Initially said they would
review the fight and rule on
Douglas next week. However,
both groups acted Tuesday.
''The WBA has declared Bus- .
ter Douglas the heavyweight
champion, unencumbered with
no conditions attached," Jimmy
Binns, WBA general counseh
Continued on page 4

The Daily Sentinel
tUSPSICUII) '
A Dlyllloe ol M•Kimedla. Inc.

Publlthod every altern~, Monday
t11r01rt&gt; Friday. lll Court Sl., fo.
meroY, Oldo, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlnc Componyl f!lulltmtdta, lllc.,
PomeroY, Ohio f~781. Ph. !192·21SS. s.,.
cond clua poatqe pold at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Member: United Preoa·JA101111tlonal
Inland Dolly Preoa A•oo:tatlon anett ho
Oldo Newape~ Aaaoctatlon. National
Adverttatnc
reaentattve, Branham
Nowapeper
eo. 733 :Iblrd AVI!I1UO,
New York. New York 10017.

POS'IMASTER: Send acl*eu chan..,.
to The Dolly s..ttnot, m Co1111 51 .•
-oY·ado-.

SutlatiPnoN UTili

a,eam. .. - • ..,.

aneweetc ...................................suo
. OM Month .................................1'-10
One Year ....................... ,......... 1'12.80
liNGLE COrY
PllKZ
.
Dally ................................ ,... Ceata

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•

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Lady Marauders

defeat Rio, 75-53:
Cei!tral sta'te shook oft a
dogged Rio Grande dete~Ue early
In the first hill to 10 on a 20-polnt
scoriae spurt.' spurriJII a 75-53
victory over tile Redwomen
Tuesday at Lyne Center.
With Debbie Fredrick pumpIng In a total of 16 polilta, the Rio
ladles mounted a sb'ong come!lack In the bottom ball, but the
scoring gull, was .too' wide to
bridge.
"l think we may have ~ a
little Intimidated becauie we
hadn't seen that many gOod
athletes In one place before,"
Redwomen Coach Doug Foote
remarked. "But It was a areat
learning experience for our kids.
We'll be okay."
·
The Redwomen stayed close to
the Lady Marauders as the game
opened and were down by eight
(26·181 when 'the visitors, le«1 by
Trlcla Harris With a game high of
23 points; went on their run and,
held the Redwomen offense al·
most In place tor the remainder
of the half.
Central State Coach· Theresa
Check said the difference In the
game was In tbe Lady Maraud·
ers' defensive p~sure and' In
controDing the boards. Central
State posted 44 ~'!!bounds. to Rio
Grande's 30.
"That's our ·game, to get the
ball inside and shoot for the high
percentage," sl)e said. "Bu! all
night, Rio Grande seemed to be
In the right place."
'J

-.

Check added that she··f elt the
Redwomen game presented
problems for her team all the
way. " Next year, this will
definitely be a team of the
future," she notect

''We Ulndlad lbetr tn.aoliay,

On

bu 1 we jlllt didJI't aet
very
many good allots," Foote said.

With Franli Back fl~ .
game bleb of 29 polntl, . ·
ville rever.ted a lead beld by
vbllillgRioGrande'l'ueldayalld
. Inc~ allead to a ll8-108 victory
ove~ the Redrrien. •
,
Brad Schubert 11!!1 tbe Redmen
witll 28 points to bold tile
advanlage over the boats until '
the, last seven minutes or the
game, when Back's tbree-polilt
· field goal anappecl a tlli at 95. . .
The tellow Jaclu!ta, now 18-10
and ~In tile Miii-Ohto Cooter~
ence, stayed ahf!ld throuah ef·.
tectlve shootlilg and dead-on
results at the tree throw lllle.
Gary Harrison, who had 211n
the game, h,lt a pair of key
·
,

ti'lfecta IUUtdkeeptheRr'uJH
machine 101111, but foul fnMible
realllttae In the 10u ot Mark
Erslall ud Jollll' l.ambclle and
1111'111Mra kept the vtaiiOII tram
advaotllll. Jert BrOWII added :U
to the Redmen oltftM.
cr .

Br GENII CADDa

or lbared the I'1UIIIel'1ip spot the sea1011 schedule - Thursday ton last week, finished third with
llrat four weeks of the voting, night agatnattlhrlchsvlllleCiay· 141 polnta, followed by Oak
COLUMBUS Ver111111ea
continued ltaslldeand finished In mont - wltll roach Jack Van Harbor and Bel !II Ire, both of
CIGIIIPieted a ellmb 1rom oblivion
fltlb, 'despite a 19·1 ·record. The Reeth challenging hla young whom also lost for the first time
1'11aday when the unlieaten
Bulldogs received 156 polntl.
team to uphold IU No. 1 rating.
last week.
·
Rounding out the Division I Jist
"I'll tell my .glrll they better
Round lag 011t the 11 list were
· Tlllr•
aelected ,IU No. 1
liealb Ia the final United Pres•
were Beavercreek, :Westlake, nollose," •ld Van Reeth; whose · Garfield Heights Trinity, North
' Jnterna~nal Olilo 111111 Scbool
Rocky Rivet Magnificat, Milford. West Hobnea teams )Von three
Royalton, Lebanon, warren
·Hlp Scbool Board of Coaches' · and Wooster.
consecutive .stale titles In 1984, Champion and J.efferson Area.
Division nr glrll' .basketball
· WeitHo.bnes,19-0, alsoba.d one 1985 and 1986.
Fort Recovery, will) an 18-c
ratlngl. .
, •
•
~·IC remalnlnl on !tl regular
Copley, a 41·38 loser to Barber· record, baa two regular &amp;eason
,V~IIIes, which completed a
20-0 regular R&amp;SOD With wl.last
WHk p,er Trt,CountY North and
Co\1iigton, &amp;\!Vanced fi'QIII third
p~ to (lrst tbe tlael week,
moving : past both Richwood
North Union (19-1) anq Heath
(:1&amp;-2) In the last or six Weeks of

Sfete, . .7t. aDd BlufftGa liS tl
Dlllance~ '10-8. .
_,

111row lJae 112·21), · aetted a2
reeonlecl 14

reboUIIdl and

t~a
._ - :
.
T;ieiiowJacbtabtul'ota
CZN.a\'ILLE (lD)- .._
trtea 011 fillll
for 56.1 Con*, H~13; 1'odll Pe 'flit·
percrit (3-lG c. fbtle.polllten) toa, 3-J.l-11; Fruit Back. Jll;
alld IUk u olD atllmpa trom 21; Ken Ruew, 1-3-15; Davttl
TbeRedJill!ll(lJ.ll,~),aliNd • the rout llilll· for •.7 pMCftt. BarMI, '1_..20; J.clft Cll..,.a, .
by nt. at the half, tillllt their Cedarvtllt waa credtled with H
1-1·1-10; .Mlcblel MIIIID. S.O.::JO; ,,
b,laheat marglil .at 7'1-eG In the
reboUIIdl ud .·turned over the Domlnk McKiDiey, ~10. "ff..
seeond perto&lt;J beture tbe' 110111
balll2
TALl Of-..111. . ·'
' · "·
wqrlred tl!elr way back Into ,!be ·
Butb tliama will next' play at • JUO,QJtANDII: (tte)• .- Guy ·
pine.'·· • •
·:. ,.••
11ome Saturday. Tbe Redmea · Hw!1101i, &amp;-2-3-,21; Mark ~PIWI.
·,
.. I!Git J!lutfiGn at7siO.p.m., while · 1-1·2-T: Brad SCbubl!rt.O-t-1-Jii
Rio.. Gf!iJIC!e Hjlt 50.6 ~ent 'nrtln vtalls the Yellow Jacllela'
Jett Brown, . '1~·1-24; Jolla
trorrf the noor, COI!JieC!Ing on «0 . athleUc c:eallr.
Lambeu, H-10; Troy Doaald·
ot 79 attenlpta, lncluiUng 4U
In Dllltict 22 IICOrei trom son, 3-3-t; Oa!'lul WIUlama,
percent on thr8e-polnt field goals
Tllelclay reported by UPI,'Walsb 3.1-0-9. 'l"'T.U.S ltil-11-1111.
,
116-36). ,In 111ldltlon. the nedmen 'walloped Maloae, 1U-t0; SliaW·
Ballllmncore: BleG......., ·
~ere 57.1 percen 1 fi'OIII the tree nee State 1lppecl put Ce!ltral . Cdsr.lllle -11. , ,.

llPI.II_..Wr.

aom

u-.

w••

.

•&lt;, · .

Pirates top .To~~~ 45-4() ~n

I ,

l

YOIJII&amp;,

Flyers end 71-same losing streak

oveitime

claim Douglas. signed an aareement stating It he beat Tyson, he
would make hls first' defense
against Ho1)11eld. Douglas said
as 11\Uch In his triumphant return
Monday to Columbus, Ohio.
.
"I want a . return bout with
Mike Tyson, butltwouldhaveto
be after Evander Holyfield," be
said. His manager said he hasn't
discussed terms with Holyfield's
hancllersand has not sp_oken With
the Holyfield since atler the tight
In Tokyo.
Gary Selelnet, vice president
of. operatlo,. 'at .trump Plaza
Hotel · Casino, said .a TysonDouglas tight would be ·hl'ld at
the Atlantic City' Convention
Center.
·
"However, there are snme big
details to be worked out, not the
least of which Is Douglas' decl·
slon on whether he wants to fight
Tyson," he said. ''It's Douglas'
call. We are all going to have to
walt and see what comes out of
the negotiations that are going
on."

.

llaUotlng.
.·

•·

I

l

SVAC...

Notre Dame... contlnuJtr~i&gt;a~~ -

0

't

''

·

. SEED

.

Be
' n'J··a·nun
. .: • J• Sol, M'
Obstetrics &amp;

'r

(muwp)

•

..................
,.
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· ~.Jea'•'IU

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.,

rg Pllh IIJNe.goaJ fltlrey ill till
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'1 was ready to plq but be
~:' well," Wllalteft •Id. '1 ·
I !1&amp;4 to eara rlffl')' game
"'•'trt'Jilm il!d·J .....U, bad to

wa..... • toll$ll ,..,.... "

la . . . *I'M•t' 1TIIelday
:·· •nell._.-.
&lt;&gt;••••• Qraaf Con·
defeated Dan Goldie, 6-4, 2-6,

: 11-3; Tom Nljslen of The Netber~
;plllfll"·
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IIIII AUIIl
Cll ' .

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I

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~

TO~ONl'O (UPI) Nl,nth
• · ~ - Jlnl Courier was ~··only
. •eded•playtl'i;,wbd pw~atfld to
~- aciYdtla to tile ' ·MCDIICI, ·round
·~ ' il't .the $1.2 million..
i SkyDom.e '; "fcjrld T~nnls
''tolll'll&amp;lllent.
. . '
'
. Tbe•Dade City, Fhi.', ·resident ·
~lly dlspatc~ed
Allstrl!llan · ·
o.rren CabW, &amp;·O, w.
r No~'leeded piJI)'ers were
' eltrnmated,. bring the -two-day
'
.
. ..
total-19 six.
Jim Grubb, the ,12th seed trom
TuiCOii, Ai;lz.,los'l to CzechosloY·
, aldan Marian . Vajda, 1-6, 7-6
' (7-5), 6-3;'• wblle No. 1 15, ·Pete .
-,sampras of Rancho ' Palos ·
Verdea ..Cal)t., hliCI1tC! rellte'from 1:
~ his mlitcll Wltli Kelly E;vernden
with a puJied an&gt;ID ,tter losing
,the flrstiHt'7l6· (8-6) ;, '
1
, Oilly Courter and lOth seed
Jaime Yzaga have advanced out.
• of eight seeded players who have
played sci far.
.
.
'
.
Courier, 19·, is considered to be
.one of.the'rtslng young American
stars on the tour. However, he
,-;says he.. doesn't feel any extra
pttssure.
~; "I don't feel I'm carcy!ng th~
:' flag or anything like' · that,"
~Courter sald. "There's 10 ~ys
' ranked ahead·of me sotbere sno
' ~ real pressure that way.
.
'
l .. : ''The only ttine I feel extra
l pressure playing In the United
~ . Stites IS because l have to get,
tickets for my family and friends
'·to see me play ."
,,&gt; Courier wouldn't have much
'.trouble getting tickets ·for the
· SllyDome event. For the second
~ straight afternoon 9nly a few
, hundred s~QI"II were on hand
:·for the afternOOn 'draw: Those
~ pre11e11t saw Cou('ler have little .
· }· dlftlculiy With CahDI. ·
·j "I played pretty .well •nd
Darreli ileflnltely didn't PIIIY up .
to his capabilities," Courier said.
t "Ko~; you never tr:nowwllen
,o11're a.olitctoaet a toua~~matcb
aad you have to take tbem , (~
· · easy ones) when you can get
them."
1 ln a night match; Canada's
Martlil ·wostenholme defeated
Todd Wltsken· of Carmel, Indl·
. ana, 6-7 (3-'i), H, 7·5.
Wostenll4bne, 28, Is raQked
141st In, tlie wc&gt;rlil and defeated
· Wttlken." railked · 45tll,. Jilst one ·
week after the Indiana native
. aclvanced to the final til tbl ATP

''

P,ICIENS .
HAIDWARE

TVC standings

-·,

'

s..tsra• o.

aomv

&lt;'

Courier in
8eCOnd ·round
at Toronto
·,
.·

•GAIDIN ·
SEED.

-v

They c,ugbt tlle sillth poeltlbn

. • l'tckerlilgton, which . w-.s to
'WII!d up Its selllon Tuelday n,lght
against Cbllll~!Qthe. going tor lis .
.19tb' Win In ·20 games, again
:dornm.ted the balloting In DIY·
lsiqn I. The 1'!J1!rs rec~lved 22 of
28 first place votes and bad a
2'11·208 polilt margtn over run·
n•up Cleveland Kenlle(!y (20-0).
North Canton GlenOak wound
lip thli'd, 1llst two points behind
~ennedy With 206 poln", fpl,. lowed ~" Loflin (19,1), which
. sutfer!!d.lls·only loss a week ago ·
• '-fo ·catUpolls: .
.
· .
4 Cantmi McKI1iley, wht~h held

•

rott•nr...

'

·!Wtlre Plckerlliifon In DIVIatOn I,
~~ 8Qtme8 Iii. ~vlston ·ll ,aqd
:(o~t Recq\'(!1;)' •In DlviSipn IV. ,

dinft''

ern.........

',

Best Buys
own I

the ~t. tor v,raalllea' poll
C)lampioublp. 'rhe LIOBI·banded
Beath a 52~ llelbac:k left week
alld alio wu tile ~" 61am to
,l!lat North (JQm. .
·
~ Qlber . tllrM c:.bamp&amp;. al·
'll!ol!cll IIIIDe ·ot;;them bad compll1111 'IQ1r :.;n~UJa'il . .-aQill,

IPRINS.WILL ,
lOON BE IIERE.•.

Comm"•• •.none·r

McDQnald, also 20-0, advanced .
one spot to third, With Worlblng•
ton Chrlatlan (19-1 I, a loser In 11s
final regular &amp;easfon cond~1 •
slipped to fourth, . o 11owe
Y
Middletown FenWick (18·2) In
fifth.
.
The rest of the small school list
consisted of Berlin Hiland, Kal·
Ida, Buckeye Central, Lords town
and Zanesville Rosecrans. ,

. Bexley., a •Divislqn II team wttb

'

,.

·

.a11·2 rec:ont, sllould pt mucb of

•
scored all but 11ne of h!5'~·pobits · ••seven jlotnta - · five by Hill and
In the paint to lldd.ioinll nieasure two b)( pOint'. pard Tom Ra·.

.....

&amp;

•

,Ill ~~o. 2; 1:11en 1110ved to tttlb,

IM~ •
~~- ••

.

B)' G. SPE)'IICER OSBORNE
blvi~lol) IV RJo Grancle aecuo.;.l ,,
Trlbline Staff Writer
tooll'nament next Wed!JHC!ay at·7.
· Ironton St. Joe's offense finally
Of balance to thl' gariae-hlgll '26 wltnis - In that trarrie to the p.m. ',I'he wtnr~er ot that game
gnt ott the ground ilnd kUled a
points of JUnjor forWard Mike Flyers' 24. ·
·
will face North GaUia on Tues·
71-game'loslng sireak by pulling · Ak,e rs. Also working the Inside
''We Will regroup for our day, Feb. 27 at 6: 30 p.m.
flY!! menlndoubleflgures to push
for St. Joe \l'a&amp; ,'fol')Vard 'Tim playort game at home against Score .IIJ qllli'tera . ,
tbeFiyentoan85-52pouridlnllOI
Latka, a musclilar 5-11 sopho- Grace ChriUian," vowed Oblo Valley ........ 11 16 1 18:-52
Ohio Valley Christian Tuesday
more wllo'chalked'up 14.
Albury.
St. Joe ...... : ........ 19 20 24 22:....s5
night at Ironton Junior High
· The,Defeilders. ,.ho never ltd,
In the preceding Junior varsity
· ST: IOE (II) - Alters 9.0.8-26;
School in west Ironton.
.
dldn'l· keep anylietter control of game, the Defendera .won 27·21. I;atka ~0.2·14; Matt Smith ~0-1 ,
''This lsa good sendotffor us,"
the ball than they did the boards, OV'a Cbrla Graham led all 13; NI~5-0-Hl; Jones1.()..8.1Q;
said St. Joe bead coach Jim
as the Flyeic~ grabbed Several . eager&amp; With l3 poliltl. Mark Woods 2-0-1·5; Heighton 0-0-4~; ,
Mains. "This Is our tint wln·ol
loOse balls 'In · and )round the Smith led the . ,.. I( With 10.
' Mark Snl~ 0.0.2-2; TOTALS - .
the season an(! our flrstslnce tile
~ntjn:tbeJirst half. anll cashed
St. Joe, wblcb fllded Its seuon
·~ ~.
~
198'1-88 season; .
.• ·
' tl!em;,tll for enouih -~IDi!ts to . at 1-18 will meet ~!WI Trace
.,........ ""'2&amp;-!Jt 141.2,.;) ·'"' c.
"That'sthe worst any team In : pOSt a 12-polnJ lead at hlill\lme.: In: tbe openlq contest of the
l'rae ....... - 27-t4 l&amp;l.t'lf.) :· ...
organlz4!d_spori.l bas done;: said' ' As St. Joe'$ front ilrieof AJilits,'
·
·;
.......... -3$ (A,kera U) . . '
Ohio Valley bosa William Asbllry ¥att Smlth .aniU.aika sbackled
stan.
Allll.. - 20 (J-·~; ~~
of his team's~J!!rformance. "Any · the 6-4 VanMatre !n ,the paint to
-.,...
.each)
.
',. · :n
mistake you can name,. we made · the' tuiJe of six 'pillilts and nine
....,..""' - 14 .
'
. (AliiiiiNil .
it."
rebounds, Ohio ValleyguardDax
OHIO VALLEY (Ut - Hill
TEAM
W L .PF PA 3-4-5-24; Peavley 1~; VanMa· :
The,Defenders !6-11). who bad Hill found more success outside
three starters - Benton Hall, naiUng •tour · tbree-polnters to; · Eastern .......... 14 5 1400 1346 Ire 2·0-2-6; Hall1·1-0-5; Rawlings
E.T. VanM11tre and Greg Wray .half othls team-high 24 points to North Gallla ... 13 6 1383 1221 1·0.2-t; Back 0.1-0-3; Peck 1,0.0.2.
- recovering frnm the flu, hurt become the only Defender to Southern ......... ll 8 1339 1178 TOT.\1.8- H-11-52
'
Hann,ln Trace 9 10 11)9 1119
t~temaelves by letting the Flyers
register In double figures.
Free lllrOWI - 16-26 (61.5'Ji)
S.Valtey ......... 8 10 1127 1166
PN• Inside allflosl at will, which
The tblnl qllllt'M'r sealed the
ltebtllllllll - 25 (VanMatre !h
allowed 6-5 cen.ter Matt Smith to .visitors' lloom, as ovcs eked out SOuthwestern.. 7 12 U65 ·1350
a.uec1
abo11 - · 3 Iby
Oak Hill ....... :, 4 , 15 1119 1328 }'anMatre) '
.
,
·
· ·
'
•
Kyger Creek... 1 18 10M 1458
.ballla- 6 rRawl~ •~
c ' d. '
3
$leala3 !Peck 21· .·
~- ~~ge
.
.
.
'
~ '
,.
•
,
(SVA.A.-1
· 'h_,rs'-16
·w L PF · PA
Phoenix, which has 15 of 18 and .counted on to be a niaJor run,nlng c:ommltin~n'ta ~tim ~ lop' 40), TEAM
. Mavericks 103, SpillS 1111
Eastern
..
:
....
:
..
12" .1 971 853
At Dallas, Derek Harper hit
eight straight , against tbe
threat.
·
, ~tala. OCI,.A·and Texas AI:M:
.'~o,.
,i,;Cllpper.s dating back to. 'last
Smith rush~ fol).2.322 yards
FIOFidli Slaterecelve,!la bollus Southern......... U 2 995 763
back·to-back three-pointers mid·
and scored ,31 touc:hdowns last last wee~Cend ·lf)th .the 'c:ommlt· North Gallla ... lD 3 · 966 ~25
way thrpugh the fourth quarter
season.
season In addition to Winning the ment of linebacker Ken, Alex· · Hannan Trace 6 7 780 747
put Oallas ahead for good.
JUnp 1M, Ballets 118
. 1flO.meter dash at the state track ander of Austin, • Texas. Alex· S.Valley ......... 5 8 785 892
Harper scored 22 points to lead
At Sacramento, Calif., Danny meet. During his three years of ander, one of the top players In a
Southwestern .. 4 9 · 893 905
Alnge scored a g&amp;q~e-hlgh 33 high school competition, Smith state loaded 'With talent, had Oak Hill .... .. .. . 4 9 807 932
the MaveriCks, who have won 10
of 12 games. Terry Cummings · points to help SacraQtento end a
averaged 9.4 yards per carry.
n~rowed his chOice tO· Florida Kyger Creek... 0 13 730 1010
NOW IN S10a '
led San Antonio With 22 points.
six-game losing streak. Earlier
After Notre Dame and Ohio Slat': Notre Dime and Uouston TOTALS .... :....... It 52 etrJ te%1
Jazz Ill, Tbnberwolves 104 ( OT) · T1lesday, the Kings traded
State th
k'"a h
n1 1
. AtS311LakeCity,Kar1Malone
KennySmlthandMikeWilllama
'
oae maw"' I e most - s unnnl{ the UnJxl:!nlly of
lmpacton'thenatlonalleVelhave Texas l,n his home,tcfWt .
(Beeene•)
scored40polnts,lncludlngslxln
totheAtlantaHawltsforAntolne been Flortda · Siate (with· four
, ··
.,,·
TEAK
W L PF PA
overtime, to lead Utah. Bobby
Carr, Sedrk:,Tolley and a second,
'
·• ·
Nort)l.{:;allla ... 12 1 644 472
Hansen contributed 22 (Jiiinta for
round 1991 draft choice.
·~'
So th
12
'
.
WDo'JI
Continued from
pa
· ge. ~.:,-.;...,.3
II
' '
the J azz, who won thelr 1.th
Trail 'liMen III, Supul•cuitc.
·
...,.,....,
•• "--:---:---·
~,;,:;,.;,::.;
""n•JI
trace 7 ~ 16 .~ ·fi61'·
5116 ·455
502 "
consecutive home r11me. rony
1M
.
. '
- • '
..
.,.
c bell l!d Ml
w1
T
shiu'lng, which oWr.ets have Mlnneaota. . ·
• Oak HJII ......... 8 5 61,2 540
pac
Mefota lh .
At Seattle, erryPorterscored 0 projioaed as a means · .to "eost
The union's n...U.Uattag COm· S.Valley ......... .7 6. 5116 528
~
J
~ . '!
29ampln
po ts.
a season-high 31 points, Including
·•·
Southwestern .. 3 lO· 502 609
·
1
Sull8 118, Cllppen 91
17 In the third quarter, to lead
certa nty." Owners fl.re locking mltlee consists of Paul Montc;r,
9
At Los Angeles, Tom
PorUand, which trailed Seattle
tralnlilg camps until they reach PhU Bradley, TOJII Herr, ' Rick Eastern .......... 2 11 475 &amp;46
AI Yowr Seed N••••
at ·least the Ouulne ot an , Honeycu II • Rlc k Horton, Dave K.yger Creek... 1 12 357 611
Chambers scored 30 points and
104·102 Wltb 1: 51 to go. But tbe
Jeff Hornacek added Zl. lnclud·
Trail Blazers outscored the Son·
agreement.
)3ergnum, Jimmy Key, Jeff TOTAU ..........IJ U Ga aa
lng 25 flrst,half points, to lift
lcs 8-2 the teSt of the way,
·
'The commissioner has made Ballal;d, Tfm Belcher, Brett
.....u•
some suggestions, which we Will Blltier, 'Joe Carter, Iton DarUJII,
'1'11--.. 1 flaal
·
'
· Continued from page 3
be d'1
h
ld
Orel
t:r-~
•-.·
r,
J?anny.Jac
..
•A•
Cross
Lanes
65,
Symmes
Valley
-.ou.u ng on eac s e w1111
..,_
.......,
~
our constituency," O'Connor Scott
eraon, Dave Winfield 52
·
, ....., PbliadelnhlaH,
said. "These·are, ,lugg~tloi)S on and Matt Young.•
·
" Ha
FrTrid.,'atl~
Nleuwendyk's two goals gave R.anaers ed
•- Vancoul(t'r
•r" 5:3, how we lll8Y proc........
...... ·'"ey
""- are
'.'1 don'',~t "now
w•..-..!' 11 'any•: So n,_n
ace • NO
...,. • ..; G
Creek
'
.
Quebec. stopped
•
1-' ""'"
thwee-..
him 33 on the season.
Chic•""
be~at
Buffalo
4-1,
and
St.
both
IUba
,
~
.
tlvll!_
j!lld
procedural.
.
Wbl(i'
·lJIIS
Is
iouig
lei
,0
yet,"
u,
r"~
at
·
,l"tli
allla
IUSOII,WY.
"We were getdn• second and
"Beyond t-t,
~~ 1 don't ·w ant .to
Fe~"
OlltHIIIattaaerm
_'.,•·,';·· V ·1,
'
Louis nip
MIJUII!&amp;OJll 2·1 In
'" '•-'".'.
_.,. '1"'-""'A*-tlbal'
n-"'~a..,.
Southern
t .....,_
third chances In front ofthe net;''
' "
·
get In a dtsc:uasloq ot wbat they
atter ~·ve liad an~lly to •
. a , .., ..u ... , a ley
said Nleuwendyk, "and I didn't OT.
ltaagen
.;
il1,.er.
1
'
.
are.
But
We
wlllspelid
tOmorrow
br~t the various memllefaoftbe
,
_
_
_ _ _...;._ _ _ _ _"!""_ _ _ _._;.,.;i;,..,~......
expect that to happen, consider·
At Pblladelpbta, Jobn Oattid· · dlsc:uaslilg those suggestlonl and Players Neaollatlng \::iiqnih!e •.
,
,
, ,
·
· ,·
lng how well the Islanders have
nick ICOred two goals, lncludlae
prllumably · agree to Jet back per~ we'd be IJI.aJIOIItlon to
1':'\ •
been playing."
tocetheronTinlraday."
beti1D to dlacuas
of the
•
•
,
aLl•
Elsewhere In the NHL. the NY tbeaame-wlnner,andualsteclciJi
a third to belp',lllt New York
Tbe PRC coilali~ of VIncent, conce,ta. But not.tac~ay."
Ranaers snap a two-game losing
Am,m ean League President J;lr.
'
streak. Tbe loas dropped PhUa· - Bobby BfOWII, National Leape
delphia's record to 1·7-1 111 Its last . President Blii.Whlte, plusllWners
Gyn~ology
(All Gama)
nt. games aplaat Patrlcll
Ft;ed Wilpon of t~ Mets, Fnllt.
(Chil411irtlr and ~'s Hemth)
TEAM
· W L P OP . Dlvlllon opponent&amp;, gave the
Kuhlm!lnn. or · St. Louts, Jotil ·
Wellston ........ , 17 3 1461 1171 Flyers an 0-18-1 mar)[ when , .McMullen of Houston, Bud SeiiJ
Mlller .... ., ..... ., l4 6 127'1 H58 tralllngatler twopertoclaandlett
ofMII~ee, JerryRelnsdortof , •
, COmplete Pre-Natal Services
Trimble .......... 11 8 1158 1136 them 12-15-2 at the Spectrum thts" · the Wbl•,$ox and CUI Poblad ~
'
BeliJFl! ....... " ... 12 8 1442 1078 ~-· '
.•
'
~ual Gynea)Iogic Cteck-up ·
Alexander ...... 12 8 1273 1197
Nlllll 1 1 t, eu.u 1 .
Fed·HockiJII ... 9· 11 1366 1~
AI Quebec, Tony McK.ipey
· Pap Smem, +'bat. ~t:lona ·
Vinton County. 9 9 1141 1019 and Mare Fortier eac11 IICOred
Pimlly~
Meigs ............. 3 17 1091 lfM twtca to fill u etld to the
It Othfr 08/GYN
Nei•York ....... 2 18 1016 1431 Nordlquee ll·rame· toalq
, .......,. •• r11~
streak. Scott Gordon earned hla
' '
.Athena 62 Trimble 51
flrat NBL vtetary IIi flw trill
Wellston • Jacklon 56
wbllt bloc- • a11o11. Tbe taa
(~04) 67~3400
'VInton County 85 Miller 7t en11a V•leGioCI'a . . ..,..,.
lrnalieUp)
'
......., atrwl. .
..
Am 1
T pm

Pl. st.ons

S~nti1NI-Pag1

· ' ·loDOWolHI 1W;Uw put ~w,o weeu at

Ironton St. Joe shackles OVCS 85-5.2
'

. .

games i:emalillng as do a number
of Northwest Ohio schools , The
Indians played Convoy Crest·
view Tuesda)l night and take on
New Bremen Thursday night.
Fort Recovery finished With 12
first place votes~and 186 poll
points lor a flnal28-potnt margin
over No. 2 SQuth Charleston
SQutheastern, which wound up
regular, season play at 20.0.

Tlie Tlgera,.who flnlsbed with a
1'11•141 '!'llll'liD over I'UIIIIei'I!P,
lt'ol'tb UnloQ and a 12·2 ed&amp;e In ·
fltat place votes; weren't ewn In
Ute top 20 the (lrat week qt the

sara•

'

The Deily

Vet Rilles captu•ses UPrs Division· III girls ·~age title_· ,

Frnm ·t he naor. IUo Grandi:
managed 22 _o(73attemptsfor30
percent to Central State's 44.7
percent (33-12), Till! Redwomen
did better at the tree throw line
hlttlnll 10 of 13 tries tor 60
percent. The vllltora connected
on 10 of 20 for 50 ptrcent. .
Foote ba.l led tbe WOrk of Jiuard
Clildy Rldfeway, whO With Jennl
Couch ))ad six rebounds. and
Fredrick, who did the buik of her
:icortngln the 1e&lt;:0Dd ball. Kerrl
Kidwell led tbe team on the
boards with eight; Rio Grande
held Ita total turnoVers to 18,
while the b•Uielt Central State's
hands 20 limes.
(
·~
. .!
,.
·.
··,~·
· ':
Foote announced the Redwomen, ·now 18-10, wlil pl8y iln
B)'DAVEIIABIUS
·. _, teBIIII ~• JI!arehed e~ll· ";other
In the over11me ' the Pn~ea · of , l7 trom the line tor 51'!t.
additional seas911 &amp;arne befOre
(lVP Colftllpondent .• · · burkeUorblicketasNorthGallla , won the game at the foul 'lllie.as
SOulllem grabbed 31 rebounds
the District 22 PlayoffS. Tiley will
The No~ Galllii Pirates hit ~ ·led lit' !IN half 18-16. Trlcla Wolle Cordell blt3 off and Susie ROble ·with lane Ann Williams getttng
. be at . Fairmont Sta,te (W.Va. ) of 6 free .throws In overtime to ' '01 Solltlietn and Rita Cordell of waa2for2,ThePiratesilutai:ored·· 8. Southernhad24tumoversand
Satw'day at 5: 15 p:m. Central
defeat the Southern · Tornadoes North · GaiUa each ~ored $ ot . the Tornaoda W In the extra
committed 21 fouls . • Besides
State (18-4) Is at home Thursday
4!).40 In the Olvlaton IV gtrla' tlielr teams points In the second frame to poal the win.
Wolle, Sara Duhl and Wendy
against West VIrginia Tech,
sectional touvnament opener qu!'rter.
"
'.
Rita Cordell was the only North
Wolfe also fouled out.
llox -rl:
Tuesday night . at Meigs High
North GaiDa pulled away .to a
Galla player In dollble figures
So"lbern closes out the seaion
RIO GRANDJt (A) - jennl School.
30-25 lead at !be e11d or the third with 23. Tbe Pirates bit 19.of 62
wlllla 2·19 record, NortiiGaiUals
Couch, · 3-0-6; Cindy Ridgeway,
·North Gallla will advance to qlj&amp;rter as CordelL· continued tromthefloorfor;;t7of19
nowil-14.
1·0.2; Debbie Fredrick, 6-4-16;
second round play on Thursday With t!Je hot :band with 8 thtrct
trom the line .Jpr
. Notth
qur..,. tatata
~errl Kl4well, 3-2-~;
Mindy
night against the number one, q\Uii'ter points.
.
Galla bad 47 ,.
with
' Ncirtb Gallla .....8 10 12· 1Q 5-45
Montgomery, }..()-2;.Ann Barnlt~.
seed Miller Falcons at 6:30. at' • Butta. the fourth quarter thl! - Mary , W•I . IJ'I
1, and· So~~cft!eril ...... :.... &amp; 10-8 15 0-40'
4-().8; Angle Packard, 4-0·8. TOMeigs High' School.
, TotnadoeHame atorinlftl back. ,Sual'e Robjf 10: 'l)i! Pirates had ;. ~,.. (lalla : · (q): Rita ·
TALS U.li.Q. . ·
·
·
It was a close game from start Trtcla, Wolfe led lh~:c:barge wltb
12 turnover• and waacalltd for13
Co~n 10-0-3·23, nna Myers
CBN'l'&amp;AL ll'fAh (10) ...:
to finish; as.North Gallla led at six Pl?lnta. So,utber)ltOOk.thelead
f«1Uls.
.
. ~:
··
~~ Mary West 2-0-0-4, Susie .
. .Lynnet.te Jackson, ~2-2; ·Evelyn
the erid of the first quarter by a · with llbout a : m~P,ute !llld a half
S(!aiOr ·Trtc!l! wotre .cl~ 'llll , ~' fto!lle , '142-4, . Beth SaliSbury ·
·wmlams, 7-.0-14; Tricla flarrls.
her career wltb !an JbOd 'P.t:lle 1 2,41;2•6. Tetlila .:.. lM-'1-41
t, ·
score. of 8·6.. Thia.Myers led ttie left IQ the . game at U :o~ a
7-2·3·23; Trona LOgan, 0-1·1;. Plrl!lj!S with 41n .t beflrstquarter, 'bucliet'l)y
Dul\1, bu'r (:otdell
with 16 point&amp;~ fowtna Clllt '
ielllllaa (tl) - .l'tllca Jones
Allee Hill, · 0·1-0-3; Brldgette .while Tonya Ingels matched her · hll a desperation shot with .i6Put· · late In the folitth quarter.' She
2-!):3-T, Sara Dubl 2.0.~-4, Trlcla
Sherman, 1·0-2; Helen Bradley,
oulput~wllh four of her own lor «0 seconds let! to force tile game
WN ·the only Southern player In
Wolle 7-0-2·1&amp;, Jane Ann Willi·
H-10; Jackie Sessnms, 1.0.2; · Southern ln,.the quarter.
Into overtime.
llouble flgurea. Southttrn was 15
Bllll ().().2·2, Tonya Ingels 4.0:1-9.
Maty M'Bengue, 9-li-18. TOTAI:s
In the second period both
..
of491romtheftoortor31'11:,and10
Totala-11-4-11-tt
••
30-S-lt-15.
Halllme -re: Central state
42, Rio Grande !1.

Authorities... Continued from p&amp;lle 3
said from his Philadelphia ortlce.
Binns said he spoke by telephone Monday nlgbt to Gllberto
Mendoza, the WBA president.
"That conversation took the
place of the meeting scheduled
tor next week," Binns said.
The WBC Issued a statement
from Mexico City, saying It
reached a "unanimous and lm·
mediate decision" to uphold
Douglas' title.
"We hope to clarity that the
World Boxing Council lmmedlately awards the world Cball)·
plonshlp belt to Bus!er ,Dougw,
which 11e has been wearing with
such dignity.," tile slatenlent
said,
!1hould a Ty!;oJI··DcliJR
match take place,
would be In poslllon io
lee for stepping ·
Duva, a publiCist In
camp and wife of ...... ~· ...... ; said
more than money Is at Issue for
Holyfield to ~lve way, adding
there are "scenarios that might
be acceptable to us:" ·
Representatives of Holyfield

Redmen lose in : late

~MidciiPQI'I. Ohio

I II

·. FOODLAND
KING SIZE

White Bread

t
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

�Walt! ud

Pomeloy-MW'tport. Ohio

Scoreboard ...
Girllntin81

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U • .,.._nTrJ.Valle)'•: JLGMle~~(l)

II; 14. Wllilml It; II. U&amp;tl IA•ttl)eMd
ae, Tippee••· It eatll; n.
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fl. WWell!!f"'l*IJ {1.. 1) ..................... 1ft

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L 01'811\llllle (11-1) .............................. 47
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ti .C.~~wa~tr (n·IJ ....... :..... :..............It
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ud .,._....,. lluell; II. CllilpiiiFalll
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EMMr• • • • lit 11. .la~JIIIIM t;
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S. 8C S..-t.III&amp;HI Ul) ( ... ) ....... ~ .. 111

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ft , •cllfl:pr CHI..-1 (I) U'J'· I) ~ ..........:11

.............. ( 1'7·1) ........................... .Jt
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Sec. .. &amp;..: IL UlwJ 11.-.1111 It,
h&amp;er'• .....,........ .....~...... .

IS. ltle) DeG.-.11 RlwnA* Md .,.,..
G. .w_,, I Ul'll; 1$. C.ntJ ·
o-t_.ew I; II. Ul~l Nonr.ill Sl. PIMI
ud Ce¥1-at•., '7 earll; 11. (Uei NI'W
........ Tli-VIIIIrt ud MUelra. 1 w
e•ll: •.a...tal.
Cftt'll:

.

:.·
.~

This week's games

··'

.•'

0-kl

c..,, ........
,k..,..le
....,_.lo_.

,

a,

TIIII"'NII"•

u.~ee.,,..,

WJ:DNaDAY, PD U
Keat8tal Balla
_ , . .. C..Oollllldll...
. ...... o,.. .. 0111e U•Mrlll1

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IUIIWI•WIIIacealBt~llll!lbHf '

Olllt N•rtller• a1 , • .,. Carrell
lltU•-•Binm
All....,(h)MWe....

OWt••c~....._
fttt~

•
'

IIOII.. W•Ifl'u

-~

Peeler paces MisSouri's 77-71 victory ·
By TOM WI'I'IIEB8
the end,'' Ford said. •'It can't get
UPI s,ar1a Wrtlter
much bJaer than thll. We really
Anthony Peeler, who spurned needed this game. Any away
nearby Kansas to ;attend Mis- pme you get Is an. advantage.~ ·
souri, II giving the Jaybllwks .
The Jayhawks erased a 10more reasons to rue the decision . polnt dettclt and forged a tie at
Peeler, froin Kansas City, Mo., ~ when Peeler foUowed a shOt
was the city's Jilgh f!Chool player with a basket to put the TIJII!rs up
of the year In 1988 and narrowed with with over five minutes to
.
his choices to Kansas and Mis- play.
souri. TWo years later, his choice
Doug Smith added a pair of
Is st!IJ having an Impact on both tree throws and Kansas could get
scbooll.
no closer lilan two points the rest
Peeler ico~ 22 points Tues- ofthe way.
'
.
day night, ' belplnJI tbe fourth'
The second-half lull In the
ranked TIJII!rs. defeat No. .1 Tigers' game was attributed to '
Kansas for the second In three tbelr •'prevent . offense, " by
weeks, with a 77-71 victory over Coach Norm Stewart.
the J aybawks.
•'Then we started to run the
Peeler, who bad a game-high offense again. We got the.. ball
24 points In the TIJII!rs 95-87 win Inside and shot ' our free throws
on Jan. 20, drew greater satisfac- well."
.
tion from Tues4ay 's win.
"It feels good, added Peeler.
"Since I 'came from a.bout 40. "Our defense took over and we
. mUes frOI'I\ here, and a lot of hit our free throws at the end.
people were giving me trouble ·We're In a good position. It feels
about not coming here, this win good that we can play on the road
probably mean 1 more," said ·and win. We have to keep playing
· Peeler.
· hard because we've got Okla·
, Mlssouil Improved to 23-2 boma on Sunday."
overall and s:I In the Big Eight
In the Big Eight, you have to be
whUe Kansas dropped to 24·2 and ready every time out and now the
7-2 In the conference. No. 10 Jay hawks may need some help to '
OklahoD'UI, which visits Missouri get back In lt.
'
Sunday, Is third at 5-2.
''This .Is a tough one," said
,The Jayhawks were plagued Kansas forward Rick Calloway :
l1Y poor free throw shooting, ''We're,now a game behind them
maklnl just eight of 16 from the In the league. We're going to try
free-throw line. More telling was to get soml! l)elp from somebody
one of four shooting at a paint else to catch them."
when the Jay hawks wer'e erasing
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty, · ·
,
a 10·polnt deficit. ·
No. 2 Georgetown was upset by
"I can't say our missed free Providence 94-90, No. 11 Georgia
throws cost us the game, buttbey · Teeh nipped Maryland 80-78 and ·
sure didn't help us; ·• said Kansas
No. 13 Connecticut edged Pitts·
Coach Roy Williams.
· burgh 80-77.
.
While Kansa,s was missing !ree
At Providence, R.I. , Carlton
throws, tbe Tigers were pu ttlng SCreen scored 29 points to , lead
11
the game away with nine
Providence over the Hoyas In ·a
shooting fr.om the foul line over
Big East matchup. Providence
the final 4:20. The only two
nailed a season-high 12 threemisses led to Ml'ssourl rebounds.
pointers to Improve to 13-8
Freshman Travis Ford, the top
overall and 6-6 In the Big East.
free throw shooter In the confer'
Georgetown's 'Mark · Tillmon
ence, had two free throws In that
equalled his career-high with 39
stretch.
points. The Hoyas fell to 19-3
"I beard a lot of crowd noise
overall and 8-3 In the conference.
bu I I bad told the team that I
Providence Jed 83.72, with 2:35
wanted the ball In my bands at
len before Georgetown closed to
lour with 16 seconds to go, bu I
.
'
Screen made a pair of free
Tuesday's scores
throws to Ice lt. Providence
played without leading scorer
Eric Murdock, who'w asadmltted
to a North Providence hospital
earlier In the day due to an
Irregular heartbeat.
At Pittsburgh, Freshman

Nadav Henefeld scored 27 points,
Including tour on free throwa In
the final mblute Tuesday nllbt to
lead'No. 13 Connect'Jcut. The win,
coupled with Georgetown's
upset , moved the Hulltles Into a
flrlt-place 'tie with the Hoyas In
the Big East Connecticut Improved to 21-4 overall and 8-3 In' .
the conference. Heneleld scored
19 of his 27 points In the second
half. Chris Smith added 22 points
for the Huskies. Pittsburgh, 10-12
and 4-7 blew several chances ·to
take the lead In the final minute.
Brian Shorter lee! Pittsburgh
with 27 points and Rod Brookln
added 14 .
At Atlanta, Ga. ; DeDDI&amp; Scott

scored 36 points to lead the
YellOw JacJcets ·to an Atlantic
CO&amp;JtCoaterencevlctory.Scott's
thri!e-_potnter snapped·a ,76-76 tie
wltlt tess .tban two mln~lf
remaining. Tony Mu~bu
bad a chalice to tie the ga
·
when he was fouled . with two,
seconds remaining. After mills•
lng the first 'tree throw, , Massenburg attempted to· miss the
second one on purpose but failed
to. bit the rim. Kenny Anderson,
scored 17 pi)lnts and Brian Oliver
lidded 14_lor Georgia Tech1wh!cb·
rallied Its record to 17-4 overall
and 6-4 In ·the ACC. Massenburg
led the Terrapins, 13•li and 3-7
With 20 polall.

of

·«·.

.

PEELER HAS HOT HAND - Mlaeourl's Antbony Peeler'led all

seoren wltll 2! points u the number two ranked u,.e&amp; the number

one r1111ked K1111- Ja,hawks. Mike Maddox wu plquecl with
loula tr,ta1 to defe!Jd aralat llbn. (~PI)

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·=81MCIIId..CI

dltatl'laiiMr•IHII ·

.....,..vtd • M Wrtpl: Sf;
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Bueball
The Yankees signed Infielder
Randy Velarde Tuesday to a
one-year contract .... Mels first
baseman Dave Mapdan, .who
had filed for arb! !ration, signed a
one-year contract for $395,000, ,
the club announced. ·... Cubs
·reliever 'MiteI! Wllll8ma hu
agreed to a one-year contract,
'averdng salary arbitration.
Bulretball
The Sacramento Kings traded
promising poblt guard Kenny
Smith and forward Mike .Willi·
a.ms to the Atlanta Hawks In
exchange for ruard Sedrlc To·
ney, power forward Antoine Carr
and a 1991 second-round drart
choice.... The·MIIwaukee Bucks
extended thl! coqtract of forward
Brad Lobaus thrOugh the·l991-92
seuon by two years ... , Simon
Gourdine hal been named General CoUDII!I of tile N aUanal
,Buketball Playets Aasoclatlon.
TeleY181oa
Home Box Office'a live telecut
of beavywellbt cllamplon Mike
TyiOD'IIIIIIIDinfdefeat to.James
"Buster'' Douala• nteelved a 31t9
Nlellea ratlq and 46 lhlre, the
cable III!!Worlt llllil. HBO llld It
expected perbaJII Ill hJahl!lt
numbera ever Friday nllht when
the fllbt ll .rellrc.dcaat u pll't of
I two-hour PJ'Oirlln. HBO'a
hllbl!ll·rated lbow ever wu a
1913 •!rlnr of "An Officer and a
O.ntleman." The tum garnered
a 39.4 rat)JII and '

FARMERS BANK and ADVEST,· INC. ,
Cordially Invite You To ltt,nd ·Qnl :Of
· Two Free Se~J~inars.
F.IDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1990.".
10:00 A.M.
: and· 6:30 P.M; ..·' ., .
MEIGS COUNTY PUBLIC .LIBRARY.
.

Main Street,

Po~er~y,

t

.·,

&gt;,.

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Farmers·
Bank~

. Your,Communlty .Owned Bank ·
MEMBER FDIC

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YQu do - ~member, I suspect,
that ,the big Valentine box at ·
scKool was·one of the wonders of
~'lba:t no ODe
the Universe? Of course, It
· can dllll)l."
probably still Is, but what a
~ · :ikllow,Sam.
~tcb. Today's classroom ValYou'veplayed I!
enttnes are dinky and tacky- no
~nand
way will they compare to the
'alllee many
ones we enjoyed way back when.
uae
hopelessl)r
And, hey, w~n't it a greatfeellng
1
,: ,tell In love with
,
to go home on Valentine's Dayy
the romantic lnuotq~ qt Caaab' with that load of the great
Janca some 40 ye~~r.s ago:" ' .
questloo from all of your classAstlmegoeli, by:;_y~'rerllbt,
mates , who had through, the
that Is apun-~moreandmore magic box on the teJicher's desk
realize that the 11&lt;1111 maku some uked you to be.thelr Valentine. I
: pretty dranltl!O ilt&amp;tementl, In '·' always asked God to let my pUe
'\tl~ aame of JO:vc! 8n9 rpmance .. , runne!it over. Aqd He· did. Of
But we appare11tly relate to It, COUI'Sil,belngsJowonthetrlgger, '
just !IS we reJ.Ite: t~ Valentine's It took mealoil&amp; t1p1e- flveor10
Day·-nowls lhla.COincldenceor years at least- to realize tbll'
; what? Yep, tt'a the 'onlY day, of · 111e · v'iienunes . were really a
the year wben _
;we all romance social gestiare·- one stze fits all
romance - .the ,day we all love -and that they didn 't REALLY
love •..: ' '
.; '
, ·!·
, -, want me to 11&lt;: thelt Valentine at
• Of ,_course, 'If,, Y91i~re like me, : all.
Gads - what a rude
; YIIU
~·dv to~;p!Vqlt against . awal\l!lllng.
. ~ today 1 YalaDIIDI!i,.. tbole -u ndeBefore we get completely out of
coratlve, bard cards that line the yesterday, I do want to mention
racks at stores acrQSs Meigs one little trick that wenthwlth
Count)' and the nat,lon. If those Valentllie's Day and'belng poor..
plalli Jane Valeittln!)s ·are all If you will recall, sometimes
you've ever known then you funds were just allttie low so one
probably can live with 'em.
had to be resourceful. With a
However, If you knew th~ Valen· good eraser and a little luck, you
·: tines of 5j) years ago, t~n you, could change the best of last
too, must be In the state of revolt. year's Valentines Into practiAbout the only positive state- .cally new ones. Heck -It wasn't
mentyoucanmakeabouttoday's too difficult. After all, everyone
Valentines Is that they are wrote In pencil back then- that
expensive. One day, I predict, was the BBP perlocj- you know,
some company will adopt the Before the Ballpotpt Pen. .
phllos~ that everythll)g old Is
And so we've come to ·today.
new aga,ln" and will reproduce The . Valentine has · slipped not
, ~epllcas of the. Valentines of onlylnqualltybullnlmportance.
. yejlieryear . .You kn9w, the veity
Often today, It is an accessory to
:,colortiil ones that ,folded out accompany some atttactlve through the help of a honeycomb and often also expensive girt- to
hinge - the ones decorated with mar-k the day of romance. What' ,
, lace and cu·te,J lttle arrow-armed self-respectil\g person would ex,, cupids. 1'U be gla~ to ,h elp such a peel a Valentine to stand alone?
, It just won't fly,
company get rich quick.
The commerclallnteres ts have
Of COUJ11e, If you're over 40, Y!JU done a real'good job In educating
can remember when theValen· 'us to that fact and we are offered
tines W.ere pot kept neatly In the , all sorts of special gift Items staid display racks of today. In especially designed lor the day": llpme •toresthey.were laid out on to prove the world will always
~· fiibietlii&amp;lde tbe'ftoiit windows so
welcome "lovers." ·
:.. . that you ·could real~ get Into
· You can select a heart shaped
browsing. In other stores, tbey l;lox of candy - In vatlous coloPs
Were scatllirt&gt;d In shallow bl.lls and poundage; flowerit In con·
and :v.ou equid do lile,sarne tl!lng.
talners especially designed for
Wasn1t It great pitching around . the day; heart sha,ped•jewelry.
- , !n lh9se pUes of ~;olor? ,.
Or II you really ,want to make It a
; , ' Ariel ~lie co~t? &lt;;ieez' ·-;- for a real personal observance,
, · penns,. you could get " pretty there's underwear carrying· out
dandy Valentine - abo1,1t tl!at the bell1'1 n" If.
.. same · u~e you could S:ISQ get a
So -If the signficance of today
, ' Pretty dandy pleceofcandyfora sUpped your m,lnd, not to worry.
. cent. For- those e:~~tt11 special You still have a few hours to pick
, ·J!I!OPie&gt;.of ,course; you co)lld go up that gin- and Valentine- to
~or 'the· two for·a "nickel c11ies; the "help prove that:
.,, 10 centers, 9~ tor a q~ter you '
" It's still the ~me old story,
• ,got one ot tne deJIIXl!' jo6bles.~th
"A ·fight tor love and glory,
all o{'the'\lace, cutout .«Jeslgn,
"A case, of do or die."
l»ior llld sentlll'telltal ve~le.
"So- play It again, Sam. ADd,
. · ·Of co~, tile' V'ai8ntlnes wer· by the way, Sam, do keep
. ; ~~~·t periOII&amp;IJzed, .. Yciu ~w4n; t smiling."
,
· buy any.~Jfl.;all)r:des!IDI!d for
' •B rother! Slater, Mo~r. Pad,
VIce .PJ'esldeot Quayle; .()r Qear
~ .32nd COUsin, ,-\nd the.messagei;
• 'were' I alHhat ,pOsttlve. ·MO.fof
, them met~llly ~ked you to be the
· · ~ender'l 'V.tllle , wbJJe, others
more·bok!Jy'itated: 1'J,WantYou
~- Fo~ ' M)&lt; Valenilne.". In Its day,
tl)e · li~11ir"• nieisage'. • syemed
pretty'bold. ':
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" . And there wete kits. If you bad
• ·art ouQCe 0t talent, you cowd buy
· · tiu'.or .~ aupplli!&amp; til one box to
. make yoilr Valen~Jnes. And these
• could, ~ .very special.:.. that Is; ,If
'' yolt ha4, that ouilce ,of talent. -1
The iayinl "sink or swim~ II orl&amp;l·
,discovered at an 'i!arly ap that nally attributed to tile EDIII•h play·
.J!d better 'lOY the ready mades. •rtcht \VUU.m Sbakeapeare.
" -BOB.BEFUcR
• ''Wol!ian needa' mail end
m..thave hla mate;

man

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If you are interested in learning.
about your options concerning
the distribution from the Kaiser
Alwninum USWA Employee
Stock OwneJShip Plan. callus at:
"

,

. 500 Vlrglnia Street. East

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' ,VD!tecJ. Center, SUite 1000
· •• Chmleltam, WV 2&amp;301 ·
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,AcJvest
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304/344·9641 orl-800·444·2994
Eciwwd R. Stoce
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Flj\anclal

eor.unaru

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Women's business seminar set
A .' Women Business Owners
Conference will be held Feb. 24 at
Ohio State University. The con·
terence will focus on realistic
strategies and resources available! for successful business start-ups, growth. and expansion.
"Women who own or are
starting a business caq benefit
from the opportunity to network
with others as well," Emerson
Shimp, Extension Agent, Ec«;~­
nomlc Development notes. Reg·

New member voted
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Is tratlon for the conference
closes this week. For more
Information resident may contact the Washlngton County
Extension Office, 614 373-6623, .
Ext. 215.

Program presented
Rev . Harold Traswell, of the
Cheshire Baptist Church, presented ihe program, "Holding Up ·
Hands" at the Men and Women's
Fellowship meeting of the Rio
Grande ASsociation held recently at · the Pomeroy First '

'

Carol Ault was voted In as a
Following
a business meeting,
Baptist
Church.
new board member at the recent
refreshments were served,by the
meeting ot the Serenity House
social committee.
·
board of. directors.
,
, Members attending were Sister Jean Kaiser, ' Leslie
Chambers, Tom Hairston, Pat
Erroll O:mrc)y of ,Chester· reTope. Rita .Fields, Nancy Scar· ,
mains confined to 'University
brough, and Unda Warner.
Hospital, Oilumbus. Cards may
Unable to ,attend were Diane
be sent to bini at Rhodes Hall,
Lewis, Jennie LeW'IB, SallY Clay,
Susan Hlidlon, and
Tom
RHd
.
11th
floor.
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BERNARD MARSHALL :
went Into the ministry of evangelism about eight years ago.

nter Clearance

ntlnues

At Dan's
50°/o OFF

ON MOST SEASONAL MERCHANDISE
LAST CALL FOR INSULATED FOOTWEAR
ALL INSULATED
0/0

30

BOOtS

/4

OFF

!===~2~9~0~~~~~~~~~=~0=h~lo~==~·

Hospitalized

CE SALE
-· DELUXE EUREKA UPRIGHT
•Powerful Ufetlme Lu~rlcated Motor
•Top Fill Dult Bag
'Power Drivan Beater Bar-Brush Roll
•Adjultable Ca,.,t Heighth
•Brilliant Headlight

.11110 lED

BOLOGNA ~·•••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••
L!· S1.09
SHIEDPfD..,..Ib.o$2.19
COOKED HAM ••••••••• Slic.ED.....Ib. $1.99
ECJIIIICII :
.
CHOPPED HAM •••••••••••••• ~•• S1.29
MEAT SALAD•••••••••••••••••••••L!•••• 89(

DBI MAlE

HO~DE

IIAYD VAllEY

GOLDEN DEUCIIIIIS

GUDEA

lPPLES .........u..a.. 3/S1.49

IUFT -IKAN

NEW GIEEN

MED. EGGS .......... s1.39

Sli(ED
(HEESE ...........U,Rl.... S2.49
SHEDD'S T.-EI

MARGARINE •.A.M. 2/51,09

UllAGE ............~~~1. .... 49c
SWm POTATO

YliS .....................~~r...stc

MODEL 1488

Eureka Uprigfd
4.0-MolDr

.

•• Ptlltlla c.,eJitllglll
..., 111811

• Edgllle1n1 • 11111• Sldll)
• ,_,II!Mtt lllllw
llrllllllRoll
• ....FlU ...

3.5Piak

H.P. MotOr

$6995
1~1

011-IDA POTATOES

HASH BROWNS..........~~~!•.:. S1.49
WELCH'S
GRAPE JUICE .....~~••••••~~~!;... S1.19
WICK'S 2
PIE SHELLS ••••••••••·•••••••~:!~... S1.59
GENOM ES CEIEAl

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Bernard Marshall, pastor ol
the Word of Life Church, West ·
Milford, W. Va. will be conductIng special services at the New
Ule Covenant Church of God,
Ches~r. Feb. 18·21 ..
The services will be held at 6
p.m . on Sunday evening, and at 7
p.m . on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday .
The public ts ln.vlted to atte.nd
by Pastnr Gary G. lllt~es. The
church ·Is located at the top of
Chester Hill on ROute 248 and
Rlebi!l Road.
Marshall attended Fairmont
State College and Duke University for two summer terms ol
theological studies: He was licensed to preach In 1976 by the
West VIrginia Conference of the
United Methodist Church. After
pastorlng many churches, he

P~l

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Wheat, tiDt Securities. Inc.

r' t

MAiiEnNG

ACHIEVEMENTS - 'ae:veral were recoplled
for llllll'bUIIr achievements In Columbu 'lloutlaera Power' a 1M
pr'opiwn olferlnr "Golden Opportualtlea"'io Cll8lomen lutallllll
bea&amp; pumJII,lla:hllnl aild other electrlclll'equlaimeat. Sbarllll the
"cold" In tbe .Atbeas Dlvlaon were areli wla•n, left &amp;e rl1bt,
sealed, ere- Prall, Shade, 1111d Be.etta ''Tiallle" · RedovliD,
Pomeroy, and ataadtnc, David R. Cra!Jlree, dlredor of General
.Marketlar and Cusdt0111er Se~ces; Rowead stevens, Athe1111,
MIICS manager, and Michael Hollaepfel, Athens Division
manger.
I
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Ad$

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9.92-2136
221 WEST SECONDPOMEROY, OHIO

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·For ~,. Information (ontad Roger Hvu or Bruce R-.d at 992·2-136
I

Y'Jednllldl'l. February 14, 1990
Page 7

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RSVP

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The .Daily Sentinel
Special service slated

the

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·SAVE STEPS!

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VIUia, ........ IN. OT

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IIJNDAY, PD II

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You will soon have to make an
rtallt
decision regarding th•,,rollover opfions qn
the distribution' of cash. and
. stock . fronl
your ·company's retirement plan•.-··
DON'T MAKE YHAT D.ECISION UNTIL• YOU:
.
• Get the .Facts
,,
.• Review Your Options
• Understand the Tax Implications
.
• Get .Yo.-r Questions Answered
'

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,Sy The Bend

are

'I'Bll_.AY, JI'D II

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v. february 14. 1~

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

LUCKY CHARMS •••••••••1!.91~ •• S3.19
JOAN Of AIC 8
KIDNEY BEANS ••••••••••!9.91'-...•• 99c
STOIILY
APPLESAUCE ••••••••••••••U.2Jo.t •••89c
JOY
' ,
· DISH DETERGENT •••••••u.vJ, •• S1.89
•PEANUT BUnER ••••••••lt.9l-.. S3.99
VUIC SMIIWICH
PICILES ••~•••••••••••••••••••u:tL•• S1.29
CORN SYRUP •••••••••••••lt.tL•• S1.29
FACGMmE
·PANCAIE MIX ...........u.t~•.. S1.69

.....
-J

..... ...-

I.IIAI_, Ell'", Ellrl

t IIIIIPwua•IIDIDr

t:lltllla.•'1 I l111'1YIIr

c.,.IIIIIIM
•11111111 lin 111M

Buy now end glt a 1ut1 YMJ'a ~

Extra PIUII ~loft . . . With

-v ful ... dOm llllc
.IUitlltll ... dealer lor
dllalll. HURRY . . . Limited
. lime allarl

ftt·IUS

�Pac

8 The IWy Sa ltillll

Ponwor M'dapowto Ohio

SOCC construction
project is completed
SALEM CENTER - Whooah! aliowroomtorlbe~arsyatem.
Tbat'a tile nolle making Dave · Tbe cars are dealped to ~
Jlmlaon smUe lately. It's the back and forth a_erou a central
110ilr created wheD a 30- ton ear poaltlon where eoalts ~ tor
loaded with eoal movea over a storage untO It can be dlseharpd
bopper and · bep · unloading. onto lbe belt system to be taken
Aad for Jlmlsoll, that noise out of the mine.
meaaahtsseven-monthconstruc·
Once the coal arrives from a
lkm project was suceesstully more western area of the mtne,lt
completed.
·
Is dumped IDto one or the bunker
Tbe project waa the CC!mPieUoli cars. Depending upon the coal
.or a l ,OOO.trin,movtng ear bunker . now, ODe or two thlup happena,
.;... a tlrst for American Electric The coal may drop tliroueh the
Power mllitng operatkma - at ear dlreetJy Into a hopper whleb .
So11thern. Oblo Coal ComJII!IIYi' s feeds It onto the maiD belt for
Melp No. 31 mine. Jimison, transport out of the mine. Or, If
assistant general mine supervi- the coal Ia arriving at a capacity
sor, hu been the project engi- of greater than 2,100 10111 per
neer for the system ·~ con- hour, the excesa Is stored In the
struction began In June.
cars unto It can later be loaded
Operation of the bunker began onto the main lli!lt. •
the tblrd week IIi January ancl a
To carry the stored ,material,
small dedication ceremony the open bottom of the cars Ia
marked the occasion. J .E. sealed by a nat belt. When a car
"Jack': Katllc, senior vice prest, · reaches the djscharg~ p()llit, or
dent - fuel·$upply for the AEP bunker core, there IS a break In
Service Corporation, broke a . the sealing belt. Gravity eventu.
bottle of nonalcoholic cham· ally causes lbe"whooill" noise of
pagne at the site to salute the coal fallllig Into lbe hopper.
completion of the project. KaiUc
The movement or the train cars
was on a routine visit to the Melp Is controUed by a rope haulage
Division.
system driven by a hydraulically
Tbe bunker acts as a surge operated winch. The cars tra'vel
system to regulate coal now from 20 feet per minute as they move
the mine so that none of the belt back and forth across the dla·
systems are overloaded. Tbe charge point. .
system currently handles coal
On each side of the bunker
being produced by the mine's core, 420 feet Is provided tor
longwall and Its supporting con· storage · of the loaded and un.
NEW BVNitERSl'STEM - ~new bunker system a&amp; Sou&amp;llem
tlliuous mllier sections.
loaded cars. The cars sit on cross
Oblo CoaJ·Company'• Melp N•· 31 mine Includes a &amp;rain of 13 O!'ft
Tbe system Includes a train ot ties and two 85-pound raUroad
33 open bottom cars. Tbe cars tracks which are placed 10 feet ·
each have four wheels and are apart. As a comparison, the
coupled so closely together that tracks used for transport tn and . Is actually burled under the noor
tbouehout the system.
. they appear to be one. long out of the mine are set only 42 In the concrete," he adds.
Jim Tompkins, vice presl~nt
continuous car.
Inches apart,
The winch takes Its directions and general manager for the
Construction on the project
More than 1,000 cubic yards of from a computer panel which llicluded excavation of up to 44 concrete were poured for the meas~ the amount of coal Meigs Division, described the
feet of material In height and entire bunker proJect, Jlmlaon coming In and gcilng out or the work on the bunker as "the finest
more than 1,000 feet In width tO says. "The conduit for the power bunker via sensors placed construction project I have ever

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~m C8I'J, Tbe caneaob welpiO&amp;m.liall are coupledao cl~
&amp;optber lbat &amp;bey appear to be
1•~ ~mlnuou 'lU:· ,. .

oae

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seen." Its·completion Ia actually Into the mine In 'halve$. All the
a culmination of a number of equ·lpinent was· brought In
projects that resulted In the
through tlie mine's ·'slope en·
formation or the Meigs No. 31 irance and brought frOm the
mllie," he aald.
tra~;k to the location otthe bunker
"Tbe volume of material and · by lhe use of a monorail beam.
the manner In wlllch exca~tion Tbe rest or the assembly was
was required as well as lhTilze finished underground. .
aiid number of components
Jimison credits ihe successful
han~ed made Ita very maislve
construction project to "careful
undertaking from a planning and ' planning; preparation andteiim·
execution stand~'nt," Tompwork.'' OJ)' lbe part' ~f ~ those.
kina aald. .
· . .
emplli~ who work~ 'd irectly
. "It's amazing u .v·:-k"tt took . and lndlr~lyl on the 'bun~r . .
. to get It In here for ho~. .'.mple It
"There ' wlis ' a great amount of
really Is," Jimison say:;. The support from ail areas," \Jimison
cars · were assembled In . the said, "both Inside and outSide the
maintenance shop and brOught
m~e.''

- Star Grange ,meets·.; .

vm;ws

OPERATION -

I.E. "lack" KMUc:, sealor vice

Jll'"ldent - l'aeJ aapply lor lbe Amerlcaa Elee&amp;rlc Pner Servlee

Corpora&amp; to., wu oa band at 8oathen Ohio Coal Compaay'a Melp

Corriinunity calendar

POI'tfEROY -The XI Gariuna
-Epa lion Chapter, Beta Slpna Phi
:Sorority, will meet on the upper
Plliiwa oy parldng lot at&amp; p.m. on
Thunday 'to go toSebuUau for
the Valefttlne DIIUII!r. Bring
:watkiDI order• and money, and
necklaces that are completed.

r

POMEROY - The Melp
County Chamber of Commerce
· will meet 12 noOn Thursday In the
library at Meigs·· High School.
State Sen. J'an Michael · Long,
0-Chllllcothe, will be the
speaker. Chamber membera and
those Interested In jolnlnl
Chamber are ufled tllattend and
should call the Chamber office,
· 992-5005, to make reservations ..

LOW' CAStf PIKES

lENT

RACINE -There wUI be a
regular meettq of the Racine
AmtrlcaJi Leg!Oft Poat 602 on
TbW'Iday at 7: 30 p.m. Dun are .
to paid and refrellunenta will be
(lee CALBNDA&amp;,,,...lll

. SOFA I CUll

'

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.

~RYNEW

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·• With psyiH~rri grain ---: 8umes

. ttle .soluble fiber of ~t ~ran, · . .

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'

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110.95 ..

TO OWN

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

on

group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at the .Sacred
Heart ~athoUc Churc,h at 7 p.m.
Call 1-800-333-5051 for
Information.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
· Junior High School basketball
· and wres tUng banquet will be
• held at 6: 30 p.in Tburdaay at the
· aehool. The Athletic Department
. will .provJde.t!Je meat and bever. age, and playersaretotakeother
: food as assigned.

at

Bowling party h~ld by class

Proceed

supper will
tile meeting.
.Apfll 7 was the date announCed
for llie ll!!wlllg COllies~.
·
There .WE!re 25 !Jieni:tleni agd
stx .Jun.~ra ;P.resenr~· tor ..t)le
meettne. · ·
• . . ... .
, Pla~:ror tllllS&amp;turdaymeetlng ·.
Include meeting . ~t ttlje Sal~m
Center Flflt Station for.a potlilck
supper at 6: 30 p.m. · ~llowl!d 'by
work. talr bpoth mal,rtals and
flin nleht. A_ _
· ..
..
' ' Tbe meeung'was (allowed with
a poUIIC)I suppe~ e.nJoyed by ai t

The Young Peopl\!9' Class of Nancy Buckley, Ann Buckley,
the Reedsville United Methodist · Brian Reed, Patd Henderson,
Church hosted the churcl! con· John Henderson, Andy Hender~.
gregatlon at a bowling and pizza son, and Danny Lawrence. •
party In . Ravenswood, W.Va.
VJ51tors from the Eden Onlted
recently.
Bretheren Church Included Gary
Attending the party were Reed, Pam Wolf, and •Nick Wolf.
Sandy West, class leader. Mike
RUTLAND - An organtza.
Events like the bowling party
tlo~l meeting of tbe Rudand
Weal, Denise west. Mamie Buck· 8l'll a regular feature of the
ley, Jimmy Buckley, Rosem11ry group's activities, ac:Corclllig to
Baseball League, will be held at
6: 30 p.m Thursday at the Ru dand
Young, Lauren Young, Howle Brian Reed, class member. The
American Leaton. ball on Beech . Lawrence, Barb Henderson. class meets Sunday IJIOmllip at
Grove Road. Anyone lnteres led . Frances Reed, Grace .Weber, 10:30 during the' church Sunday
Chester Buckley, Anita Thomas, school.
IIi the sllllll!ler league for Ru·
..
!land should attend .

WEDNESDAY
• PORTLAND - The Lebanon.
·. ToWIIShlp Trustees will have a
: special meeting on W~ay at ·
1
1 p.m. at the township building.

: RACINE - The Howard's
Stars will meet Thursday eventhe RA.clne Masonic
· lnr
. Temple at 7: 30 p.m. Wives are
Invited and refreshments will be
· aerved. '

No•.31 miDe durta1 &amp;lite ballker's first week of operatlcla to break a
bo!Ue of aon-aleoboUe cbunpance a&amp; &amp;be aile.

"February, a Month of Hope ·
and Love" was the tl!eme for the
literary program conducted by
Kitherlne Riley, recertUy when
Star Grange met 1n re~~Uiar ,
session.
·
·
· GeadiDp Included ''Three Little · Words" by Patty Dyer; "It .
C8me'to Pais," by PauUne Rile;
"Becaull! I Love You'' tly Freda
Smith; "That Is .I rn '&lt;Jsslble" by
Christine Napl,er; ''Spouse ·
Alike" by Opal Dyer; and
"Healthy Uvlq~ A Gift That
· Goes Stra11~ to the Heart" by
Katherine Riley. A closing
thought by ' Catherllie Colwell
concludelilbe program. ·
Tbe Ch!lrter wati draped In
memory of Ruby .L ambert durIng the meeting. ,
· Joyce and Henry Good were
Initiated Into membership.
It was annOunced that Meigs
County Pomona Grange visits
Athens Co.unty Pomona Grange
on March 8. AD oyster stew

or less!
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·We Reserve The Ri1ht To
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STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday ·

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8 AM-10 PM

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MAXIMUM
.10 COUPONS

· 298 SECOND ST.
.·· POMEROY, OH\

·sEE STORE
·.FOI "'AILS .

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., FEB. 11 THRU SAT.,
. FEB~ 17
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PORK

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$ · . I BANANAS !
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MAXWELL HOUSE

Master Blend
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Coffee
34.5-oz.

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12-Pik 1kz. Bottl11

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COCA COLA CLASSIC, 2-LtTER BOTT~E , .. •1.11

FRITOS BRAND CORN CHIPS lO.OZ... fl .•

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Help Kroger Support The Annual
Second Harvest Canned Foods · ve.

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD
TO OEALERS
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COPYRIGHT 1990 ; THE KROGER CO. ITEM.S AND PRICES
GOOD SUNOAY. •EB . 11, THROUGH SATURDAY. FEB . .17,
1IIIIO,IN POMEROY. OHIO

•

FAMILY PACK

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wo woll oHar you your cholct of o campo- 11om, ava~obla, roflecling tho urnt IIYingl 01 I rllnchtOk which wil
entitle you to purchne tlie o!lvortllad itarn ot tho ldvtttllad priclt
within 30 days. Only one ~dar couP.,n ,Yil be accepted pilr hom

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AIMRTI.D Jl£111 POUt:\'-EKh.of diiM advltlilod
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to be readily •v•!loble for alliin' uch Krogar Storo, txc.pt II :

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The t~ wUI be shipped
postpaid at the right t lme for
plantl!lg between March 1 and
May 31 With enclosed planting
Instructions . The sbt . to twelve
Inch trees are 11Ulranteed to
grow or they wUJbe replaced free
of charge.
To become a member ot the
Foundation and to receive the
free trees, send a $10 member·
ship contribution to Te" Dog·
woods, . National Arbor Day
FouruW!on. 100 Arbor Ave.,
Nebraska City, Ne .. 68410, by
Feb. 28.

~----~-==•••;;;::---:.....,:---:~:l':::;::::::=::::::::=====--=-=:-::----.--~a~ttr~ac~t~so~na=b=!rds=a=
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'Free trees available

.
·· ·- - - - ~ ·~
tland. The admission Is $2 single, Rev. Earl Fteldl lllvltei the Conlmunlty Center In· Kenderand S3 couple. The vubllc Is public.
son, W.Va. The caller will be
FRIDAY
Invited to attend.
.
John Wa!llb and the dance I•
Ten free while flowering dog{)
MTVJU)AY ·
open to all square dancers.
wood treea will be given to each
MIDDLEPORT - The Evan·
ll!lliie Chapter No. 172, Order of
CHESHIRE_ There wUi be
POR11.AND -Tile FJ'eedom
person who loins the NatiOnal
the Eastern Star will have a
free clothing day on Friday at the Gospel Mlslllon Qlureh, Bullan·
Rtn'LAND _ There will be a Arbor Day Foundation during
chicken noodle dinner on Friday GaiDa Meigs Commlllllty Action -Stjvenvllle l!f-d In ~rttand, round a.nd slow dance on S11tur· February.
·
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the . Agencyfrom9a.m.tonoonatthe
will have a llymn ,sing J&gt;D dayattheEIIDeniJonPost4,67tn .
The fil'e trees are pa~tof!he
Middleport Masonic Temple.
old high school building In
Saturdlly at 1 p.m. Rull and the Rutland from 8 to mldnll(ht. The nonprofit Foundation's Trees for
The $3 menu will Include chicken Cheshire.
Soutllern Hilla Slapn w!lllead public II Invited to attend.
·
America campaign.
noodles, green beans, rolls,
the stnatna. The public Is Invited
''The white flowering dog.
cherry pte, coffee or tea.
'
HARRISONVILLE -There
to attend. ,
,·
SALEM CENTER -The Star woods will add ·year-round
will be a revival at the Harrison·
• ·~
Granae will meet Sat\U'day at beauty to your home and Jlelgh·
HENDERSON _,the Galt!a 6:30 p,m. at the Salem Center borhood," John Rosenow, the
Rtn:LANO ....there will be v!Ue Hottnesa Chapel on Friday,
sweetheart dance on Friday . Saturday and, Sultday at 7, 30
TwtrJersSqllare'Dan~Ciub·wlll Fire station. A potluck dinner Foundat!on'sexecut!v¢d!rector.
'from 9 p.m. to midnight at the p.m. nightly. Rev. Robert w. hold 8 dance on Saturday fl'om wUI be served at 6:30p.m. All said. "Dogwoods have showy
American Legion Hall In Ril· Wilson will be the evangelist and; 1!-11 .p.m. at the Henderaon members are Invited to attend.
·spring flowers, scarlet autumn
.
tollage, and red berries which

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The Dlitv Ssntlnei-PIIgs 11

OAr~d'!l.munit~ cdlendar.-.r. -__.:. :. :(Fro~m. :.:;CALE: =;,;:ND;.: AB.:.....
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COUPONS

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IN THE DELl-PASTRY stfOPPE

Deli ·Frelh Slced

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P.ga · 12-The Deily Sentinel

VYI Jl 7 tw. '*""¥ 1-'. 1110

Pomeroy-Midd'aport...Ohio

.., 14. 11i0

Soviet troops reportedly won't interVen~ in Taddtik rfttls .
MOSCOW . (UP!) Anti·
On Jan. 20, Soviet ' troops city bus terminal Tuesday as carrying three cartona of milk.
communist Tadzhik rioters car· · stormed the Azerbaijani c;apltal wellastbelargestbulldlnglnthe
Despite ihe presence of tanks
rytng metal rods and cans of
of Baku to quell disorders In capital, an eight-story maternity . and tmpOflltlon of . a Jl,ilte '.cit
gasoline hll the streets again
which anti-Armenian violence hospital.
.
e~reency, p~~ten Iii Du·
Wednesday In the capital city of
.swelled Into a mutiny agalnstthe
At a giant rally, "the partie!· sl1allbe , 'l'llesday attacked ' the
Dushanbe to Insist that the
Communist Party. Gorbachev pants ... demanded that the headquarters of the Tadzhik
communist leadership quit and
said last week he was forced to Communist leadership qidt and Commulflst Party's Central
the local KGB be disbanded,
send troops to Baku to thwart the disbandment of the Tadzhik· C:Qm.,alttee and deDJ811ded lllat
Soviet news reports said.
what he described as an undls· lstan KGB (security pollee) and · t~e rilll,lnly, Moslem republic.' I
In parUament, Soviet .leader
gulsed coup attempt.
the MVO Interior Ministry ((» · leaden res~~n ..
Mikhail Gorbachev V.f)Wed
Wedneiday, however, the dally lice)," the of!lclal Tass news
"The situation In the city Is not
pseudo-nationalists In Tadzhlkls·
Komsmolskaya Pravda news· agency said,
undw control," Soviet telev!Sibn
tan who Incite violence will be
paper said three officers were
Komsomolskaya Pravda said sail!' In IIJI ~ l)rgenl midnight
punished.
reprimanded for refusing orders the communist 'leader of the · broadcast.&gt; •crashes' are taking
"We must apply the law In all
to go to Baku and one was ousted republic, l{akhar' Makhkamov, · piace hi'~ p~es In the' city. ·
force to those who under the
from the party.
appeared before the people Tues· PogrQms, social unrest lind as· '
banner and slogans o! national
One of the officers, Capt. day and announced he was saults i\pptlnue.
rebirth are drawing nationalities
Alexander Kalachev, was quoted quitting,
"According . to ·prellmlpjlry ,
Into the struggle for their ambl·
as saying, • 'I served !or two
But Radio Moscow's print data, since the begill.!llng of the
ttons for their own narrow
years In Afghanistan. · I- )mow service salc;l,Maktikamov'S reslg· clashes 'a"TiieO:Pk! have died.and ·
egotistical alms," Gorbadiev
what blood Is, what human losses natiOn -vas not accepted at an 180 people )lave. ~n wounded,''
said.
are, and the sending of troops to emergenCy republican party pie- the television old.
,.
But Radio Moscow's print
Afghanistan Is now called a num later Tuesdaf, In effect
'T~o,t!ctal Tass news 'agency
service, quoting Soviet army
mistake.
leaving him at the mercy of the·. repottedfearUer.. iOS Pf!OI,lle, In· ..
headquarters In Dushanbe, re"It can easily happen that In a crowds who continue to demand' eluding ~- pollee or,soldters; had
ported army troopsll\!eployed In
year or two, sending troops to he quit. ,
) been wo11Dded.The'TV)'eporfo!a ·
the city wouiQ not Intervene.
Azerbaijan wlli be called a
Trud said Tadzhik rioters
. higher ileath . toll and fewer
''The division which is demistake,"· be .reportedly said.
announced at the rally Tuesday . wounded -Indicate{ some of the ,
played in Dushanbe has not
In Tadzhikistan, young tiOters they had chQSE!n a provisional
' wouill\ed may h~ve dle4. •·:; -·
Interfered and wlll not Interfere
carried metal rods and cans of committee, "which In their ·
.!, News reports. said young riotIn this con!lict,'' It said.
fuel and threw up barricades opinion, Is tl&gt; nlle tlie republic." , ers,ramP.!Iged a~alnst ArD)enlaJI
Soviet television said the death
Tuesday, _according to Trud, a
'Soviet televisiOn ~bowed fires refligees: from last month's potoll had rtsen to 37 In the unres).
dally ,newspaper. Soviet televl· burning In the Tadzhik capital, groms I~ Baku, which lef(at ~E:ast
Late Tuesday, anli"communlst slon showed similar scenes In the while white-helmeted riot pollee 62 people dead. Most pogrom
Tadzhlk snipers . battled riot center of the Tadzhik capital with green shields cordoned off victims were Armenians, while
pollee and au thoritles sent In
Wednesday.
the center of the city. One minute 159 people;· most Azerbaijanis,
tanks to quell the rising mutiny,
Trud said mObs set fire to the o! film showed a smiling Tadzhik were kllkld In the Soviet military
· · - emerging from a looted store

action.
·
SovlettelevtalonaaldtbeTadz·
hlk vloleDCe left "eeonnous·
material dlmqe.Thelllllllberof .
hoolllan elemen" II lllereulllg
wltheverybour.Tbly..-come
trom, many different regtm.."
Radio MMclow'l prblt tei'VIce

BANGALORE, India (UPI) - ··' Capt. S.S. Oopu$kar and A.,E.
nejl.,r the village, .
·
·,
An Indian Airlines Airbus carry· ..Fernandes, were not .on· the'
Firefighters battled the bl'aze
lng 146 people crashed Wednes- · hospltalllst of Injured and were
for about two ho!lrs, the offlclaJ
day on a landing apptoach to the
beUeved to have died.
said.
.
Bangalore airport In southern
The flight . originated In the
The official , said 139 pas·
sengers - lricludlng 10 foreign·
India, killing 89 people, an western port city of Bombay and
airlines official said.
w~ OJl Its way to Madura! with • ers - and a crew·of seven.~ere
Fifty-seven people survived an· Intermediate stop at
aboard the plane. Two of the five
the 1:10 p.m. crash of Flight Bangalore..
flight attendants survived, he
IC605 and were taken to two
The alrllne official said the said.
.
nearby hospitals for treatment, AlrbusAB-320-anewp~nethat
The flight was about an hour
the offiCial said.
entered service late last year late when It departed Bombay at
Many survivors suffered third· caught fire before It crashed near 11:30 a.m., he said.
degree burns and were In serious the vlllageofChallaghtta,.notfar
Civil Aviation Minister Arlf
condition, although at least three from the B!!ngalore airport.
Mohammad Khan and other:
passengers escaped with only Bangalore Is 1,~5 miles south of senlpr offlcjals 1\U'tNe\" Delhlfor
minor Injuries, doctorsatBanga· New Delhi.
,
Bangalore tol!lvestlgate. A team
lore' s Military Hospital said.
However, witnesses said the of 'e xperts from the Airbus
The alrllne official - said the Pla'!e caught !Ire and crashed ·lndustrte Consortium In Toil· .names of the pilot and co-pilot, jjlter Its wheels hit an embank· · louse, France, flew to Bangalore ~
•
ment on ·Its landing approach
to assist, company officials In
'
· ·

Studen.t drU
. .·. g· use down
..· a.gain·

wASHING'I:ON (UPI) - DJ.e.
gal drug use among high school
seniors declined again last year
as the popularity of cocaine
plummeted to Its lowest level
since tile mld-197ils, a federally
!lnanced survey showed.
·
University of Michigan researchers, who conducted . the
study for the National Institute
lor Drug Abuse, said Tuesday
that the decline occurred despite
a significant Increase In the
number of students who said It
was easy to obtain drugs, lncluding cocaine, heroin, LSD and
PCP.
"The broad trends we are
seeing are due almqst entirely .t o
den;~and, not supply," said Lloyd
Johnston, principal researcher
for the survey. "This reduced
demandlsattrlbutablelargelyto
the Important changes occurring
In the attitudes, beliefs, and
social norms among our young
people."
"In fact," .he said, "the likeII·
h.ood of a young person In high
school or college today actively
using Illicit drugs Is !\boUt half of
what It was a decade ago,"
The report was Issued two days
before President Bush's drug
summit with the presidents of
Peru, Bolivia and Colombia In
Cartagena, Colombia. Leaders of
the cocaine-producing nations
say U.S. demand for drugs Is the
cause of their problems, and .
Bush has said he ·will try to show
America Is cutting drug use.
Drug policy director WilHam
Bennett told a news conference
the survey Is evidence· that

progress Is being made In cutllllll: In· thelrilfe; in the last year or In
demand and that more a~lon IS the lasrmonth fell to their lowest
needed on -upplles.
'
levels since 1916.
' ·:These statiStics suggest tha~ ' The petcen~ge who had tried •
for high school students, drugs cocaine fell to 10.8 perce11t, 'the
are still ~~ all·too-aval.~ble fourth consecutive decline froni
commodity,. , he said.
And a hlghofl7-.3percentlnl985.0nly
that's why we·.~e going to Colom· 2.8 percent used cocaine orv;e:a
bla this.week.
month, down from &amp;.7 perceritln
The 15th annual report was ' the peak year of 19115.
based on surveys filled out In
Johnston acknowledged .the
class by 17,000 seniors. For a lOth student survey was unllkely to
year, 1,200 coUege students and flpd heavy crack users, but said
6,600 other high schoql graduates there was encouraging neWs .,
who had responded to previous a bout the c&lt;icalne derivative:
studies were surveyed again by
The number of once-a-month '
mall. '
.
·,
craclt users among the senlots
The study said the percentage Willi i.4 percent, up only slllhtly ..
of seniors wbo ·ever h.a d used an from 1.~ percent In 1988 .. But the
Illegal dr,ug fell for the seventh percentage whO had trted cra~k
straight year to 50.9 percent, fell to 4.7 percent from 5.4 · ..
from 53.9,percent ln.l988. , - . percenrtn 1987, and the percen·
. Thepercentagesofsenlorshad .tage whO had used It In the. last
· used any form o! COCaine either year t"emalned at 3.1 percent.
..:
,-

(

•

,•

reported , .wtde.pread lootiDi, .
wltbpoUculldlnterlorMIDiatry
troope ''barely able toeontral the
situation. Mqre groups of youq
mWtallts have beeD arriving by
bus from tbnJurbout the repubuc. Alltl-.vn-lall senttmenta
are fllllllloi h~"

~

.

,,,.
•

POMEROY AND MID~OBT'S 0mJ
LOCAlLY OWNED
PIZZA SBOr.,

.

"

.
•A;,,_..,.t

SCHOOL: SEWING MACHINES

1

Without the UH ol .oki t•hioned cams orprogra~m.ers. . .

•

ft1 IU l11d Aft.. lth1R1,

the.lnvestl~=~~~

446

PloUCIAIIY

Coun.

•

011.

Or

~'Special Care . o.r People
;.~·/~.·:.:/W~o . Are Spe.cial. To You"

&lt;~
. . . I... U1

I

7;110 I I:QO DAIU
MU

Ml

,..Iori

mortg~QeS

•

·
Condominiums and mobile

hOmel

· • Vacat!Oil

'

homes

SCA WOLFE S·YSTEM
THE NEW NUVALAIIU.
BULBS

'.

• Cart; R. II .1, and boaII
' '
• Even IWIIII!ning
poolS I·

.

:{

.

Mllce apre vout l ...jly won't

have to Mil their hOme or

· otll81 poa...slonJ ]vat to roiM
I

Gift

,. ·''

quick euh. Call today lor 111
the dtltalll _.,. Nltionwide:s
8COnOft1iCII,Fif•le"!! pro·
tiiHIOn.
' •

w-. Of·
~::lt.-:ieth ,.;::: C:
buo. 0111o 4328&amp;-0403 untJ·
of ~

of . . . Archlioct ....
E .._
' 30 ~- •--•

=

~.otlce

•

' '
.c.....
.... Porm
"' lhilof - to
lid
Pt~~t~Dnl.

~~ troJJi leh k.' rtrllt, Ov~rfnok Ceater roolllllla&amp;el Oaa :Arb: (l•).ud
::
."

!,

~~.

, _ "' lond. , _ of Con-

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

. . . EIO lid Ceftdltlono.
. . . _ . . , . to . lldduo,

NeJUe Caraey _(1'7) "llo llave celebrateclll'7 Val!atlae Days!

•
.,

•: '

I

.;1;

lpnlfl

Cw11tNot

·""

'

·I have always look forwar-d to my birthday because it is ·on

Valentine'$ Day. My mother called me.her "Comic" Valentine! This
; •'is .my second birthday at Overbrook~s'I have lived here over a year:
I r~ally like it here, everyone is so good to me. · . .
My husband always got me a.big Heart. Box of Uiiidy; he and I
. wo.uld eat the candy and I would."eep the.bo~ for a)odg tim~ We
were married 57 years before he.died and we lived atl of our married
life in Charleston. I like the City, but now I like my "little apartment" that I share with my roommate Ona, here at Overbrook

'I HI end
DacWMJ~~te

OltMr

ere on

••
""", be
- - It
the "'"'
••••••
oflia.:

.

~of
Miik:kiNdw ~iete.

Oivllllft .. Nlllo Worko.
0111• of . . . Arclllteot

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

:
301Mt._.__

I,

CGII

1t

""',._

e OH, 4 1111 0403

luldln 1

,.

. . . of

· Ce I I Otrloi
Columbut. Ohio 432111

·---

·c....,.,..,

l!olderoEuh•itro.lno.
0111o 44131

Nellie .Maude Carqey,
'! '

"Aunt Maude''
' '

446 Galhpoha
367 Ch•fwr•
388 Vinlon
' 246 Rio Gflnde ,
251 Gu.,.n Diit
6U Arabia Oist,
379 Willnut

Ar•• Code 304

992 ¥•ddlt4J'0(1 ·. &amp;15 PI
.

•sa

Pom~ttoy

985
1143
2.7
949

Ch. . .r

Portland
Let•n falls
R'i cine

1·12· Rutl.-.d
667 Cooldle

Pl...-nt

-

Cotlloo of the Notloe to ltd-

Jli . . . SICIHI

.

"'....,

........
........-- " . •

PIINia IIIII

aacom~

·~

·---"

frill.

...

·•

R. L IIOLI.Ort
TRUCKING
CIESJU, OliO
•GRAVEL

11

73

45
46
47

Wanted to Rent

48
49

Equ1pment tor Runt
For leMe ,

Bu~als &amp; Motors lur Sal u
Auto Pilfh &amp; A f; t.IOilUii
77 Auto Rep ..u
78 Camp•ng Equrpn,em
79 Cilmpen &amp; Motur Homus

1&amp;

76

S e r ~1ces

,

81

Fru1ta 6

V~getilbiiiS

59 For Saht or Tntte

CHIPWOOD
WAmD

W. Ya. cw,,na, Inc.
.....,..t.i. fd.

•UMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHIN(i

985-4422
ElWIN

CONSIIUaiON
DllnD. OliO
Cuitom Built
Homea.
. Remodeling •
Repair Work

WANRD

PAINTING &amp;.CO.

LOW GlADE OAI

llmiiOI 11111101

DIUVDD TO

FREE ESTIMATES

..........

Y.Y IUSONAIII
IIAVI llfllliiOS
AnD 6 P.M.

OHIO PALLn
COMPANY

.......

(614)915-41

IUMHOME .
·-•a-t~•·
S..li1r
Cltl- and
Ooodllotol
T.L.C .
27 Yro. 'Exp.
!lefor.,_

USID lPPUliCIS

i

Duwaaum

•o.

IP

209 'South 4th St.
Olt. '

"LOW

ROOFING
NEW -IEPAII

I'IIIC£ REDUCED - 1'0IOOY PilE - futy-one

Gutter!!
DowniJ)Out8
Gutter Cleaning

acres J*os a l980 Uberty mobile home. BeiUiiful view, ·2
ctr ,..,_ pornh on 3sides, 3
stura&amp;e buiklnp. and wn. 2
llOd sized lledroams, blr
window, equipped ktchen
Real pmacy, ~00.
'
18AIIE
All OFFER - POlEROY - Oldir home wilh
2 ·bldrGCIIII, 1 bllh, frlltl
end rur parches screened
' in. Hn N.G.f A Olllppx. 1
acre. $10.900.00.

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949.
-2168
, . 2·1·'~ MO. pd.

EICl¥11110
&amp;tdCIIIG

TOP• SOIL·
FOR SALE

~lean!

IYiillble.
lor a mobile
niW home.

'

II,

992-215

"Fr" Eltlmlt•"

'"· 949-!101

or lu. 949-!160

FURNACE ·
FURNACE

992-5335 ar 915-3561
Acren , _ PeJt Office

992-SUS or.91J.3561

·-~·and

CLEAIING

NEWLAND
ENYEIPIISES

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

.... ,...wtr
1614) 667-Jin
' .

7-la.'

Ill

Roger ~ysell

Garageow.

... 114, , .....,

AUTO &amp;TRUCK .
REPAIR
AIM Tru•l•ele•
.... ft2·5682
or 992-7121

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

ON•s -APPLIANCE

DOZEI
'
.
SITEWOII • !lOADS

4-25-lfw

'

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

01•s APPUAICI
SIIVICI
1111

lhlw•ii'LWritillll

BISSELL.
SIDING CO.

FUINACE

992-6173

36619 511
POMROY. 0110

•VINYL SIDING .·
•A~UMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

NO SUIIIA YUUS ·
H6-16:11n

lan•calll*!

915·3365
Z '90-

ss: Services
lot uo do it far yoo.

'-----~~~·~1~1·-·~~~d~n~l :::::::;::::~==~

THANA .

to

.... 992-3561
S15SI par ton

7:30-4:!)0

IS ...
BE"""'li"'ER

rltht to wolve ony lnformoll·
reject ony or ell

tl• or

Take tilt paiot Ml of

7:30·8:00

OF

puty DlrociOJ, Divlolon of
Public Worltt, 1•erw1 the

••••...,.r ....

Mon. thru Fri.

AIWIFII

opening tl1eroof. Tho Do·

SAW LOGS
$160 .::...

Buying Hour~;

AT ALL

,.,....,... llftd 1orvloo MJppjy
oon'treotl. 1ro oppllc:llble to
thll loivit.otlon to bid.
No bidder .,., withdrow
hill bldwilhlnllxty(&amp;OJ.doyl
lifter tiM octUII elate of thir

Home lmprovamenh

82 Plumbing &amp; H•Mrnu
· 83 E~«:willtlnp
84 .. EI_.uc .. 6 RuhifJtlf'llltiOn
85 Gun~al Hauling
86 Mobrlt~ Hunu.t Rttpwn
87 Uphollt&amp;rv

· 154 Mite . M•rchllf!d!iif:lo
SS Bu.lding Supphl:*
· 56 , Pets lor Sale
57 Music:allostwrnt~nl5
~8

S~tfc

VHns &amp; 4 WO 's

74 MOIOfcyclts

M e r c ~and is e

Swv1ct:S

Busi

AutotforS&lt;Ho

72 Tun:ks lor

51 HoUsehold Oood~o·
52 · Sporting Goods

W1nted To Ou

~

111111 ....

Ill

Ap1rtm""1 for ~unt
F~rNsh~ Roomii
SPIC:V tor Rem

bldo.
THE DEP ... IITMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
DIVISION OF PUBLIC
WORKS
Carole J. Ol1hevlky,
Deputy Director
(1) 31; (2)7, 14. 21. 4tc

'JIIfre,...... Ctc llfW
fer
·Mile ••• M1l1 n,

' ....... c

Farms tor Rent

44

81111184 of the 1 13th llegu·
.., leooion of tho Oenorol
A.-bly, ond opecillcolly
tho r~N~Uifementa of llevioed
Code Section 123. 1111.(cl
(21ond (3). reletlng to minor·
lty luain•1 EntorpriH Sub·
contravt1 end · meterlat

$39,900.00.

2

43

Tra nsport ation

OF PUBLIC WORKS. OF·
FICE OF STAtE ARCHI·
TEeT AND ENGINEER, 30
EAST BROAD STREET.
35TH FLOOR. COWMBUS:
OH. 43281·0403.
Tho Minimum Wage Rote
lloqulr-to ~ Reviled
Code (!1111pter 41 1II ond the
Equal Employment Oppor· .
tuitlty lid ConditloM of A•
viud Code 8ectlon1 1113.111
end 1 113.lll.1 ond the Gcvernor' 1 Eucutlve Order of
Jonuorv 27, 1872oro oppllcoblo to thl1 bid lnv!Uition ,
THE MINORITY SET
ASIDE REQUIREMENTS of
Amended 8ubotiluu Hou•

Carpet &amp; Yinylllooring with
hell pump end central air.

ruuuruoo -

Hou"s t.or R11nt
Mobile Hom" hH Rent

tho Mlnorttv 8uoln•1 Do·
velopmont Oivlolon by col·
ling (614) 418-6702 Of ToU
Freo on 1·800·282·10811.

.

POMEROY, OH.
88!:!2~1_
/
HEW LISTiiiCI -' FLAT·
• WOODS ROAD - . Nice 3
bed!oom, ) bllh modular
home Jiltila on 1.11 acre.•

42

Public Notice

bidden. ·
lido lhell be -rod ond
oddr•lod to: DEPART·
MENT OF AOMINISTIIA·
TIVE SERVICES, DIVISION

-E.-WLII

Sooo..&amp; f'ttrllltlfU

Public Notice

Bid. Guoronty ond
Contract Bond mult be II·
ouod by 1 Surety Company
meeting the requifomontl of
Article 2 of thelnttNCtion to

m•

Hay &amp; G ..un

65

Public Notice

Th•

Subcontractor• and

64

l;tijUfnl

21 . Busin•t bppO/tumtv ·
22 Moiiay to Lo¥

ponied , by . e BID QUA·
RANTY meeting the roquk•
m.nta ol Soctloil1113.14 of
tho Ohio RIIVIud Code.

terlol 111pplior1 mey 8C!JL"""
for their convon'-.
111d Spoolllaltiono or por·
tlonl - - · by paying for
the COlt of -oduction ""d
honollng.
Controctoro. oeq~iflng •·
otot.nco ' In MCUring bl.
. from Certified MBE Mlbcon·
tracton ond 1uppU•e "'iy

· 63 ' li\H!SlOck

A eli! Ettlll Wante.d , ,

Public Notice

E•ch bid mullt be

filrm EqUIPf'IVnl

62 Wanted tp Bi•'t

lots &amp; Ac:•••ge

~.6

"-IP Wanllld
Situ.tton w.,ned
ll'llurMw
8us.n•s Tr ..,\"'11
.SchOols &amp; lnstructmn
A1d10, TV • C8 Rttpo~tr
M•sc:etl.nwout

23 Prolw•onel

&amp;1

FMr·m s tor Sate

3&amp;

&gt;

576 Appllf ~rove
113 .Mason
182 New H•won
895 Letart
937 Duff .to

&amp; Livestuck

3 I Busineu B~.alld•nus

53 Ant.ques

teo~

MENn $26,500.00.

•

1,1
12
13
14
15
16
'17,
11

Muon Co, WV

the country on 7 acres of
ground. Excellent rentll ·potentiat. CALL FOR APPOINT·

Clowloncl. OH. 441111

ColumiiUo. Ohhl43211

...

Count.,

'IUTIAND - 3 lq~ers ill

Dodge lloporta/ICAN

F.W.~ ,

'

M~ugs

Area Code &amp;U

o..'::M:~= II

otHo Dep1 'tlttent of
· • 1 Tranepat•tlon
. S1p1c ... bi*.. wll w
.........edfor:
EST.
CONTRACT
OF COil
Allbelt•A. . d ln..- . flo. .' '
- •·1 ptmment .. _. ... 183,231,00
A PIIE·bld·-r.enoe will
be . lllld on ·to~ •·"'· on
l'elorulry 21, tHO; D.O.Q.
T. llilbfllt 10 . . . . . . - . ,

MuMiotum Ort.., Mer.._, -

lnllaltk fer
Yew , ..IRtiM

s.,
••
$JON

by tiM Dop • • - of

-

,..,..._,.. Sorvlcoo. 01-

ONe, ,.

•

GalllaCounty
AleaCod.614

,

Public

Certlfkat..

12

.notlflod of thlll '
by the Ohio Envif·

,:-,:.11oe,.J':W"':,:

·

• Buaine" loans

-'tor

fl11•

Farm SJppl!e:;

fsl al e

Honu11. tor Sale
Mobtl• Homn to• Sll! t!

· 33

1 Y•d S .. e(peld 1n ~dv~nCel
8 Pubtu: Sale &amp; Auetion
9 w.-t ... to 8uv

/uflowiflj{ I t•lt'Jihmw t•xt·lutrtl{('.~ .. .,_

onmenul Protection
AaMcY-•;..";;,~of flo· Thurldoy. -ah 1, 1180,1t
1)8
••• 111111nt1 · 3:00 1p.m. Eawtan ,......,.
~ n,ne. end ap1ned Jmmecla.
1-'¥ ,.., ......... flimloiMg .conwrt t1oo State Equal Em·
,tlolftiod,.... t' .. Tho VII- ... - l l t ...d .............
t. . of ..............., . . tho loloor far ... .....utlon ' ploym•t .• Coordinator · bY
c.IHng (114) 411·8380. or
,. thlil .,..,._. •d _,_ton ot.
-·~~.....- wit be per· . Prajlot No; '770-88-018
fenned In ihafulure:
•1~11108 Ab1._ Md
R•l Estate General
PWS 10 •1300312 '
lnllllellori flept-ent
1:11 .14,'111, 11, 3tc .
s.-lde"Heolthand

Term!

your 1181111, Including:
• New lfld second hOme

C'ltJ.~si/it•d /la!{t's cm·t•r

lectton

113.ot lnd 1113.07
f ~ Ohio 11-~~ ..._
0....
- - ..
.
public _..,.
lo
.... ..........
_
h-ber•

.

S~r 'JiCl·S

P~le N~ice

•ton
nitrate......................
..
..
" - be1ni1

Flex Term Is economlcoi
..
decreuing 18rrn Insurance
that's perfect tor proteclinp ,
your llnllly'l credit bJ pay1ng
ott your toant 'ln the event of

Jio .... , ........... ~ ....

--to

~ Nqu•w o .oommuitity
Ollfllll' u•u • pound

31
32

En:pliiYIIIenl

7. Wln. . . .d npl1a1d.

I'UBI;JC BID
ADVERTISEMENT
PurMnl. to 111o pr...,.,lonl of

5 Happy Ads
,
6 lost and Found

Re~l

41

pr-

~--t.wt.

~-.1741-11.ZIIAIIII of

• o,_,...,a.,

Rat" .e re fol eonMtutMt _run~ e.r~..,. ypd-Jw.. l b•~:tr•ulll;t
tor.. tKh d., a1 1ep•r••• ads 1
.
.
..
'

I. Left fwlclor In
IOcetlon.
I. HoodlnproperJocltion. '

,.·

1 Clld of thank•
2 InN~
l ~....... ,,

,30

SI ,J()Jday

15

A11 rn:.n r:e 111e nl s

.20

f13.00

..-g order.

.

• _ . . . . , _ .,_.,.,
the lnrrrgonlc llhMIIc:lll1 lr•
-1011ic. berlum. -lurn.
cllromlum, IMd. _,.,..,,

'

With Nationwide's Flex

.42
.60
06/ day

'Public Notice

.;=111" I Ullitil~~::=i~ ~
' · ·t~ p!tlo ~mlnlotratlve

: .: . , "t·

89.00

•

se.oo

4 . ...., ...... 1 . _

4M10. -

:....-:: :::.~.;

•

111
)5

IIUelnteol •lldlo1111.,_llr of . .' 8. DoOr · -. -roplocod;
· ,ond In wcojicl~g . order. 11
.
of """"
lthlrln
-."-' · ' dOll
.......
of llooded.
lit. 3, Cherry llillge, Po- '
Pluoo oend your bid
- · Ohio 41781. ,
.....Ill On tiM . - ·...
··
RobortE. 11u0t1.
· ~lid on D - TrUck
..._.Judge llopoir'' t10 lie op•..., l'ollnr·
IAnl K. Nw- od. Clork ""'11, 18110. 121 7, 14, 21 '3tc '
...d bid to: llodne VI·
taao, 11o1! 3711, Recine. OH.
4.771 ;
'
Public N oticle
Think You for PlrtlciPit·
PUIUC
lngln tho - . .
·
111e Wege·of
Fronk Clel•d. Mayor
~ to
' 121 14, 11, 18, 3tc .

"*··

.

pr-

•-ton.

·No. 21e1 2.
Metyl F. H""'!MI!III. Rt. .1,

_._--::-:

~

I ETTE

MID~ER

In

c..

llodclllfl: Ohloj

0"'' 1'6 Words

1 00 PM. FAIOAY

". Public N otiC!'

On' "~ 30, 1tl0. In
thil Meilt · ~~~tv Probate

Insure your
loans for
peace
'
. of
. mind ·

4~/1

2oOO PM THUIISD!'oV

tHtUAY PAfl!'f.R

NOTICE OF '
""OINTMENT OF

FIIDAY; FIIIUAIY .16r 1t90
10:00 Ul. 10 6:00 ....

a. second opinion '
of tampering
''

·2 .00 P lol, TUESDAY
'" 2 .00 PM: WEDNESOAY

Public Notice

OHIO UNIYEISnt INN

•

notk~~SI

1 I 9,8 A.M. SATUROAV
1 OOP .M MONDAY

MoNDAY' ,APER ,
IUESDA.v .PAP,E~ I .
WlDNfSOa.Y Pa.~ER ·
THURSDAY PAPIA
SI,JNOAY PAPER

OME Dlt ·,,ONi.Y

'

Yatd $o.h.os

"

14 c)•ufuld advttf1fkmumpli1Cuclrn lheO;uly Stm1•1"' l!!a

'·
.
~ •
·

Your priCe With this ad II Onty $198 , without ad $529 · .
'

_,

. ..

.

1

'

wfll ·"•o ..pp11uw ., 1ttu Pti Plu••nt Renrstur lind the G01llt
puhs D.ltly lrtt.r•tt. 'rtuK:hHtg nvvr 18.000 hon115
·
' '
'
'
.
COP.Y, OEADUN~ .
OAY BEFORE PUILICAUON

'
'
Th8M machir181 .,. al· brMCI , _ With a 5-yur manuflli:lurefs
warranty. With the nl'! 1,.0.NECCHI SEW &amp; SERGE Sawing Mach Ina
you juet IIIII the Color Coded dial and ••• magic happen! Straight
S.wing ... lluttoni'IC'ies (any sizt) ... Zig Zag... lnvisibla Blind H•ms ...
Monograma ... Satin St~ch Embroidery ... Appliquw. ,.Saw on Buttons
and Snapa... Top St~ching ... Eilatic Stitch... Sirft911! . Stretch Stitch ...
ProfiNional Serge-Over I.OCik llltch .. ALL ~ .PLUS MoREl! ·

.

_.·•

. ..:•1 . c;l..-.,trvd tlnpl., , B"sm-• CiHd otrtd lay ,.I

••w

CAsH, CH~. YISA, IASI£RCMD.,iAYAWAYSACC~P.TED

.,

lu Mumurtam
J

NECCHI'S IChoal· aaln dlllianmellt onl.red the production of latge
quanl~ies ol their NEw 1110 SEW l SERGE s.wtng;Michlnn, antici·
palinglatge~ .... tlwan~ldulel-,-.notrealizld ... n...
IIIIChlnM 1111111 be ~~~~Ill M mac:hln• Glfered metha most modern .in
. the NE~ liM.
miiChin• are miMia Of llltl81 a.nd
on all
·flbrics · Danirn . .. Opholstery ... Canva~ ... Nylon ... Silk ... Stretch • th•y
evan- on 1.-llwrll!

n-...

-~

I :.SO dlltOU"' l01.cts JNiid 1ft •dltlo11ncu.
,
•free' ads : 0NIIaw..,· n~fountt ads under 16wQfdswrU bv
ru" 3 d.rn at nu ch.ge.
' •
•
. ....._ ot M lOt •U cap.~all•n•rs ' lt doubht puat of ad cost
• 7 poNit' hne tVIMI unto, UMd
•s.ntlhtlll 11 not rnponslblll! lor .,,.,...~._hut trr•t 1.1., IChudl
tar •rrutl tttit d-v lid runs til p..,.,.l Ct~ll b!Jiore 2 .00 p m
, diW •tutt publtcahOtl' flll m•kwcorntc:tiVn
•Adl lh .. tftUil bit ...d '"acfvilnCU ill'~
Coml Ot lhilnk'H01ppy Acb

ED

U.N

'

Rete.
t4.00

15

Monthly .
Me1gs. Galli• or Mason cvunt•• must btt Jq

15

Words

10

,

, P,.• ,.. ·, -

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Days
1
3
6

ClOSED SUNDAY

~Ads- OUtMdo

'

CINEM~

, ,

POUCtf:S

..

The White ' Houle IBIMIUncemenl' canie u ·the Bulb admlnls·
tratlon was making fl~l pi-eparations for lbt! four-nation
Andean drug summit be!Di held
Thursday In Carta~na. Colom·
bla. Bush will attend the
meeting,
.The Invasion of Panama
prompted consternation In Latin
America and evoked concern
that the United States was
reverting to· . "aunboat diplomacy" In the region. ·

RATES

.,. fO .PlACfAN.:AD CALL992·2156
MONDAY thru F. .AY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
· · 'I ·A.M. until MOON SATURDAY

·PIUA·

a:

Panama fllleluates and uauauy
thing for which all Americans
numberl abotil12,000, Fitzwater should be proud." '
aald. Tile U.S. Southern Com· · FitzWater said ·U.S. combat
mand hu Its heailquarters In troops are policing the streets of
Panama City, a!ld the United Panama City as the nation
States Is operating the Panama rebUilds under fhe new leader·
Canal until the turn of the ship of· President Guillermo
century, when control Ia 'lven to Endara. The pollee duties will
Panama.
. ·
gradually be turned over to the
SpeaiPDa about the U.S, ser·
Panamanian pollee forces and
vlcemen, Fitzwater said Bush the new government. No llmeta·
commends "the effortJ of all the ble has been set yet for the u.s.
troop. In Panama, the brave men forces to ret urn lo the sole role of
and women. Their task Is some- protecting the Canal.

·classi

.a-16 01; PfltSI'S

•

FriUice said.
•,
·The government-run Indian
Airlines has been . plagued by
frequent strikes by Its engineers,
who Mve In the past complained
of lnadquate training for han·
dllng the Airbus planes.
The plan'e was one of14 A.J20s
the . consorUuri'l delivered to In·
dian Alrllnes, officials In France
said, out of total order of 31
plane$, The A-320, first certified
as)llr worthy- In February 1988,
with Internatl&lt;mal
v 2.500motors, the
•, " ' ':.~ " .' •
. A!J'buf A-320
· 26,- J988,_ at all'
. Mulho~. , F.rance,
' a'nd InJuring
· lliltlally
lastmonth

occurred.
Prealdent BUlb dlapatched .
about 13,000 ~ from · the
United States to lobi the approxl·
mately 13,000 O.S. servicemen
alreadY In Panam1 at the starr of
the Invasion to de(JOII! Noriega,
who wu wanted In the United
Statet on drug trafficking
charges. Noriep, the leader of
the Panamanian Defense For·
ces, surrendered 10 days later.
He Is awaltiDi trial Ill Flortda.
The _size of the U.S. force .!n

16 .INCH DILUXE

'
SPRING VALLEV

.

'

,PIZZA

,.

··~

ol

U.S. troops .
in Panama
dip below
invasion level
--

Indian airli~er crash kills 89 on:Jar:idi~g· appr:oach
•

WASIIJNCTON IUPI) - .The
Ualletl Stlt. . now hu aam1l1tr
mlUtary force In Pansmt tban at
the 11me of the Dec. 20 Invasion
that ou.led dicta tor Manuel
Norlep, a WbJte House 1poke.
DIID Did Tueld!l)'.
Wblte Houe press secretary
lllarllll Fitzwlter told reportera
that 13.50f U.S. troops are
stsUoned In Panaro~, down from
the 13,!187 military personnel who
were In the Central American
country when the Invasion

r•·

and

QIFI

heater corn. We can
aha aclfl llctil and roll
aut rafllat••· We aha
rlpflir Gas T.....

PAY HILL FOlD
IIZ·21N

Middleport,

SIIVICE

~

, ........ Oftlct
217 L Sic,. P1
1V131' •tin

••r

._CINE
GUN CLUB '
GUN· SHOOT
EYDY .SU.AY
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Facto(y Choked

12 Gauge Only
H·lt-lln

BISSIU
BUILD liS

CUSTOM - 1
HOMES &amp;GAIAGfS
"At le1asn•l• Prkll"
"'~ 949-2101

or lu. 949·2160
hy ......,

NOS!fDAYCAilS

GUN
uc.

............
FlU DE".
IVIU·

SAY••GHI

.....

6:31 ....
11 ._..

Strklltly

Ottlr

�•
. ..

14-The

___
-----""'

-·

LAFF-A-OAY

........
...
- ---.weon-••
Noll!lllY prop1n1
1
on
a
In- HI-.
3 Annoui'ICIIIIenta

•

•

wv. .. iiliWty

-Pailooj.

8.

K.

llftow . . .....

Molhor

lo

........ . 1...7·7221.

,.

~

,.. -

Rooms

wldlnf"' ,_. I ld1Chon. 1 -

- -·AllPark,

bo on
-

coeUr

..
141.

coon TN!Ior
371-4104, .,.... U02.

room.

llnplflll

8

F-111..... - ·

ooold,..

i.

73 Vans .. 4 WO'a
1fl'l ChiVy Short ..... Lot8,
now port. oilld"'l, IUOO. Nop-

1 roam office far Nnl. $100 Jllr
room, AI utlltUee lncl d1J. Call

49

Oftr\"9

NO, 'I'OU CAN 61VE A .
VALENTINE TO SOMEONE AtH
IJJAV 't'OU WI\NHO ..

tlablil. 114 Ul4120.

·m.

p.,,•..,_

For

I '

1

.

"(OV'CAN HAND IT TO THEM OR
MAIL ~T OR 61\IE IT TO THEM
·A I« IJJAI{ YOU WANT TO ...
.

51

Situation
Wanted
aronc1o hoo _,,.. 1n prtvoto
coro homo. 614412-1140.
18 wanted to Do
lob'a Lawn care, om• cutting,

Wanted to Buy

3 old cermdc tube tor water
trouaM. e14--.a210 .,.• ..,.

landtcaplna,

ca,.. with or Without

Holr llyllot lor growing
....... - - oolary,
lulltiOII po~-tlmo, 001111 groW

---tlan.RIMrtne MtcMnlci. Experlencrd

0111y ntod to optily. Solory

oc,_ .lrom K·
llort. 114--141-2424, 1·-721-

Sltlrtoy

01 a~ Ponabte S.W fill.
Don' Hoool Your ~Me To Mil,
We'll come to ,_., · 304-lfl..

1117.
· Houl owoy any traoll, bluoh, a
llla....c:ompulor, lioto .... 1-..ctor, IS ro- unwo,.od M-. qulied, Send ,...,.,.. lo: P.O. ratoo . .._loblo. Coli anytiiM
BoK1tNIB-,OH411t4.
114~51-M2t.
~ llllll!lcotlano lor Mloo Paulo'o Day Coro Contor.
IIortno, Rl. 7,

r

eet:lmatea,

44U411.

Willi ue( 814 Ullt22.

• AVOH I · All Arooo
Spooro. 304-17&amp;-t421.

rr..

trtmmlng,

304-e75-2tlt.
'
EloA T- Sorvloo. Topping,
trtnoinlng, ohru~-•-~ 1.romovor, Prunl"'l .....,.... 114-

poe.

Help Wanted

work,

trM

Ulp.m.
- • or Ponloo, Daytl011: 6144414107, Evonlngo: 614-311-

11

Sa,., afford11J11, etllkleaN. 111-F

1 o.m. • 5:311 p.no. -

2.,._10.

Before, after llllhool: Dl'opolne
• I me. t14 41411214.

0274.

Fmancial

' AVON •

All .,.., Coli llorllyn
Wuver 304-112-2145.
· AJcoholl[)nog Cowooolor to

· Business

21

Opportunity

proVtdo Counoollng, odUc:otlan,
prwentllllone, Me. In In out

-·!'i·

piOioroOcl. EO&lt;pOrtdoilrod. Sond loy
2123110 to: F.A.C.T.S. Rt. 2 Boil
273-A, lldwoll, .OH 41114.
dtgrot

IININTENDOII

Own Ano-o'o HOTTEST $IS

Quolltlcotlont:
DOgroo,
odvoncod

potlont
l o r'o

IIIFM, EOE.

•••IMtt

Anlndon:
-lncorn11 for
toonoo - b l y """'- Info. coR
504441-17110 Dopl. 1'2303.

Booutlalon
hovo
...
Npr'a -IJoenM.· II..,
Soft 9unootlor!f - y lhop, Ru!lond,

OH 114·742·2334.

~...-;:.IN:. . :.AI;.·.:t.:. .·I_~:. .:;EI,. ':x:..l~-~ i~oc:::~:~~· .~: c~uckl•
.

.

mour.. Primo 1ocou....

rural IMII clllv. J.

1 -·

bovo rolloblo
drl¥lng . . . -.
1144.,.....oltorCpon. ·
Paolllooll - : UlootJio tumnura
..._.....
Soono
-I&lt;MP'"'I· loloo nportonco
llolpfool. A- ot: Topo Fur·
totlon • -

~­

roiUm of lnvtol"*" QUAAA"TEEDI 1-74MOIIO.
'
INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINQ CO.
_........ thot ""' do
bt ,,,... with piMPle rou knaw,
and NOT Ia Nnd money
through the mall until you hive

ln-tlgolod tho -rtng.
llpollo. 11 lllt-12 noon. Wid., Attonllon
ecou ..,
Thurtl., Frt., Mon., Tw. No Rooldo,.o: A -pilbllc, olr.lng
of
llook lo bolftg modo by Mooon
phonO Cillo ~~~-·
nMowo.111.1oioondA....,..QoJ.

. --------...1.---------1
Business Services

=·

w.t. . Tours. Inc. to
• an ncuNIOn wnel
tr0m Point P..... nt, on the

Ohio
-loy
.. ....
AoquOol ond
lor Konowtto
lntonitollan
only. Ma.., County Wlter
laura. Inc., P. 0. lm: 243,

Hortlonl, wv 25347.

Household
GOOds
LAYNE'S RJANITURE
Soloo ond c:llolro prlcod lrGin
------·
$311 to 8181. Tobloo 11!0 and up
to lt:U. Hldo-o-loodo SHO to
Rentals
1181. -llnora $2211 to 1371.
Lonopo 128 to lt:U. l10f orid up to $4115. Wood
41 Houses for Rent
toblo ...,.. cloolro $2111 lo 1111.
tbr. h..- In Rio Crondo, 8t4- -ko 1141 up to 1371. Hut14011 6 up, bUnk 311-ttMe.
ooorbh mon- 1215 ond up to
Country Homo For Solo: 2-31or, $311. boby bedo 1110 - CA, $201000, nogotloriollle. 814- - or boi&lt; oortngo hill or ~7tu. '
$71, firm Sli, arid •••· au..n
Olio 1275 a up, King 1350. 4
In - ... Sci!oOI Dlotrlct. Nlct, d,._ chool $61. Gun Coblnoto
2 bed_,_ 1200. Phil utllbiN I, I , a 10 IJ!Jn . Bob¥ mott,_
ond ,._.._114-14._2801.
$36 I $4'5. Bod lramM 121.
RMII or Sale: Eurwb 3 Dt 4bi' a.- Slzo 135 I king !ro011
$50. Good Mloctlon oiHd000101
~ 1 112 botho1 _J2BIImo.
euiM,
metal
ailbla •te.
...... roq'd. 614-44~--~zzz.
-boollll 130 ond up to Ill.
110 clop oonoo oo cooh ooorbh op42 Mobile Homes
onwoil crodll. 3 mi. 0&lt;1t lulovlllo
Ad, Opon I A.M. to I P.M. Mon.
for. Rent
thNS0t.Colll14--l~.

call tocloy
44W311.

for ~

•

'

Hay&amp; Grain .
dryer, ~. $41.
310 Auto. plllol, noW. · Good · -Bion oollod hoY.
1300. 114-441-7075. J'
·wot. 11.31 por IIIIo. .t4- 1II, XLT, low
+441~4~08~3:_
.
..,.,---:-:--,---:::-~·
1
-7720.81' muot ooll: It.,...._
De.a P'-rer for · automabUe, ::
1300.114-441.0011.
Good mlxod 'hoy foio - · Ploono
114-142-2221.
74 Motorcycles
FIIIIIIOOij. o
for- l d.
- · o.tl-r
Hoop
""'ochora
~ •t.ao por - . - - 11111 Yamoho Yl. 210. gclll!l
•valr.W.. 114-112-1113 or 114- 33
,.,-,5·-~.,.,..__..,...,.,..,...,=- 1 cond, runo .Woll, 5800. 114'44&amp;141-.2344 ovonlneo.
Hoy lar - · CAll 114·742-2tit3.
11531.
Ful tlauro olzo lonnol ......,, Lorgo ..... n.t boloo .. hoy lor tll5 Yonooho, Vlrogo, muot -1
&lt;11101
' -·"'I ($300). ..... 114~411-1417 . '·
.
•
- llrao
•!cod .
t14-441-7140:
11,800
0.8.0a. I! 4- u":'7.,
PfOMOr- Com, $43
bog
King 1. cool 8umor, uood a up. Volunoo dl_,nt Ill,. I~ 1111 CR:UO Hondo, IXC oond,
for 2 wlntora, ..,Y good cond, to l'ab Xth. lo1o I Nool Toylor, It ,100. 304-175-2841,
1300. 114-37lJ-2111, 61 4-3"$- I144Q..Z211, ori14-143-ZZ14.
2134.
.
KX 128 dlri blko. - ·Plot,_ I
Wlloot llraw lor oolo, 304-175- jug. $410. lt4--141~11.
Portoblo llglttod olgn 1311. Froo m4.
Lltttno $47.110
75 Boata &amp; Motors·
box, 1-too-e:D-3413 onyt1011.
for sale
• . , . r.ck .,...,.,, Dual ca.
Transportal1on
Htle *""· All-fM tuner. ....._______~_ , 11172 17 ft. s-raft Trt-Hull
Tumtlblo. CD ployor. Two throo 1 - · 125 HP, Evlnnodo
- - -- 814...2-2887.
71 Autoa for Sale .
oomptllo top, . - up1oo
.
2 bed"""" lrlller tor Nnt, • • 3~ce bedroom eulte, Cllll 304cotll14-a1111ollor 7:oo ,;no.
(1011) lor ...... 304-f75- •
· otnoy, "donlm, -·• 1
1~1.
~~ue~·------~~ -hi,...
10% and
- "como~
' on . . QMC ......, 4 .,cL $300. Alven:ldl Mat'IM, Rt. 7, 0..
ooloct
hoovy
l14-4~ft.
. llpol!_o,_o_c- from K-llort,l1450 pnlo corpot
:I bed~ r..nodeled, decltl $121, check ua out
-hlng. Slim Somorvlllo'o,
· CUt'Wk v... outomotll:, "''""'· 1-eoo-2'1N274.
Junat. _.,...,.. Rd, Rt 2-1, 11711·
buill orouiii£ 114-742~173 oolt lowDrtcoo.Mollohon
M00. 304-f
3 II.
. .
Nrlw Era, WV. Noon-7;00 PM, Frt,
..... Of 114-lft-41021 Albor·
tho. •
11711 ~.., , Ndlred IMihlr, 79 . . Climpera &amp; .
Sol,
Sun.po1•1col
!,Inionadvenlolnd
··.....
.
wltll olllft kit. PS. P •.•
Motor Homaa. .,Mabile ltonla lor .... or fHt.
-lobloo, ,oppoil)lnooroto 3J)ol: outo.
PW., AC (no ' compi'on ),
Colll14-lt2·7471.
273-1155.
.
clororno oklo...._., o1aollonl 1fl'O VW 1Colftll0'. . llor'l good
Nlco 2br, tumlohod, nlco yont.
lnnoo, runo vory - · Flrot -Ilion. MOO. Coli lt4'1112·
. Building
Cky dlllrlct. 210 Porclo
......
~-oloth,
cor- ;=:,.=..,,..-...,..,=,.:,..'--=-,._.
119711.
voltt. -cJold
wbh- ooddlo
II: Konoueo. 114-441·7473.
Suppllee
4+3, bnolla ~- top; - . 4 1114 Jhyc~ 2110 Trovat TNollor.
new OaaJyuwe a ,ooo Mllual 21ft., awni!:'Q. UNd 3 timea, ln44
Apartment
. brlak, olpoo, ..... mlloo. 117,100. 1Exaollont con"' t - nolrol concllllon. ~0000 USED APPLIANCES ., _ llntM.i .to. Cb-. Wlrt- dftlon. 114-347-1.
08D. Mull ...,•. 114-247_--llllt.
for Rent
W.....,., dryera, r~lt. ., tora, Rio Grande, OH COH 114ra-.
SlliiGGO AI&gt;PII..-, 2....12t c
1m Plymouth - . . sw, 1 , ... Palomino fold - · com1 br, rul •aadbuml"g fiNpiiCI, U- AI- Ra: Booldo Ilona
cyl., outot ftuno good. Roiodr to l&gt;lna_traitor. uooo .. 114-1112·
fumlahld , all UtiiiUea Plfd, In· Croll Motol. Collet4-446-7311.
I;;..
MOO. 114-379-2104 oltor 3t17
eluding ooblo. ldool for ono t&gt;t~
eon, -,_..,.., Mobile Home HOI! II hold
llllntenmce;
for _.. ·or ll'adl, 21 ft.
Part&lt;, lt4-446-1102.
Rootl"'l. .-lropolr, olcllng,
1871 Flol · 1,11 MOO~ 304-171- Yell lllaM c.m,... Complete ·
- - l r , .. ...,...JY, odd lobi.
ldt-.W blth....., Ololpo 1:
11110 oftori:OO·PII.
'•
2 bedroom opto. for ront. COr· atlonoiM. 114-3714120, Ook tar lUI PetS for Da'pottd. Nlco oottlo:... IIUndry
4 ipd, 4 cyl, 4 dr. ..,,...
·
~-~..,....;,.:.;,..,.;--,....~.,.,..­ 1110
11111!1- 114'7.Q.:I011. . .. ~
h)ciiMioo o..aoblo. Cilll14-112"· MIIch.
- cortourotor, bot·
3711 EOH.
Kino olzo wotor bed with pod- AKC !lao'td AlMrtcan Eokl- loatchboclc.
tory, ,..... • ...... Aololng
docfrall $200. 304..75.1510 oftor llolo Dog. •t00.11U41-7071 .
3 room opt. portltlly tumlollod, 1:00PM.
Services
AKC Roglot- Bo-• .150. 114-4'18 8435.
new carpet, nwr paint, fttlr
·Woohl.,..on
Sclooot,
ltOO King olio wotor bed for oolo. Hou"!\l.""ptoo.
loft .. I tilt Codllloc Sovlllo. Qood
1250. Good Cond. 814-371-2247. wllo. . 5t25. 11
..7U.
condblon. CAll 114-742-211111
·
12211114-441·11110
(cloy, MoM'~ .) . ,,..- . - 81 .
Home
bol- lo.m ..fp.no.
Uuttt' ...u Gaa ..ova, air can. IOnlir Collie tun · bloadad, evening• •nd WNklnde.
3 room unlumlohod oiPI. U!G. dltlorwr, alngla bed. Call 114- .. 11 montho old,
lmproveme;;_nt;.;;s~$50. 304-88MII03.
utllbloo pold, SamMvllte Aooby, 112~025.
304.e71-3030,or 17114431.
·Drago;MJiwt C.tl«y Kennel.
PICKENS RJANITURE
Perllan,
....,...
and
31 W. tpl. z br., .1 both, prlvoto
NewAJood
llnooloyon ldft-. ·Chow otud till Z·:la eo.. ro. AIIIFM Co•
-potlo.
CioN IO Houoohold tumlohl"'l· 112 nol.
PS, PI
lulorn.tlc
I"""'Y ~~- I oltopplng con- Jorrlcho Ad. Pt. PINOOnl, WV, p.m. · 114-446-3844 oltor 1 Htte,
fer,
waler
....,
triM coll304..75-1450.
tranomloolon. 134115. 81'"'*
4fl'4.
~~~ S2eelmo. C.. 114Clothoa

-plot•

BE CAREFUL,
CAR~!

SOON
MISTS

THE
WILL MOVE ·
IN!

DO~OT~AAV

ABOUT US! WE
WIL~ BE ALL
RtGt4T!

The White Houoe Opera diva
mezzo-soprano Marilyn
Horne. actresefsinger Patti
LuPone, and other guests,
star in this sparkling new
special.
am 1111121 Grand Slam
Hardball and Gomez recruit

Wlli--"'"-

the aid of an

woman. c .

e l ~;~sive

con

.. IIJJ MOlliE: Prtnceot Bride
(PG. (2:00)

M I CAfJ'T

t=

RePEffi" IT

0 Prtm•N•ooor•

~

t!]J Muriler, She Wrote Simon

Says. Color Me Dead .

® Conv1r11tion With Dinah

@Movie
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Hondo I The
Apocheo (t :45)
8:30DQD CJ(I) Head 01 The
Cllll Charlie's plens 10 •

f'

stage the musical Hair are .

met with opposition. 1;1
Croolt I CheH
t:oo D (1) a Night Court A

a

pregnant Christ1ne think s

RUTUND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE
742-3088
• Tire Sale11
. •Front End .
Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; lube
•Brake Work

IWN ST., RUTLAND

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

- Room Additions ~ .

11101111 lolttono. I wtoo. old.
~ or Uloc point. ShOll holr
135, L,ong holr sao. 114-112·

- Gutter Work
'
- Electrical • Plumbing
- Concrete Work

pupu-

7201 .

-Roofing

Volonllnt pupploo, AKC roglo-

..:.Interior &amp; Exterior ·
P1inting

tiorod
CloOoo,
Pomeranian, Lhuli ApeD, Shih

(FREE ESTIMATES)

T Z.,O, Slloorlon Huolloyo, ~
17114113 Of 114-711M71.. .
Wltontod: Molo oponlol lvr
-~~~~
Muot bo
AKC raellliorod. 1114-371-3721.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
1·30.'19-2 mo.

1-1.5-'!MH!n

57

''

- Co~or'o

n~Pw&amp;oy.

Real Estate

~ , (614) 44&amp;-7619 or (614) 992·2104

PIANO CARE
Rog- lllono tunl.,.. con bo
a much~ thon

=
··-·

J&amp;M Ptono s.vlao,
711-113:1 Wllloo· 304-1122321, •• Word; 111441 4110

=

31 Homes for Sale

2IH- Avo.,,_-"'·
4 lt8draarn, flnllhed '

2 oor ...... - · - 17

Fdh - ; 114 182 11117, Mill

.

•polnllnent
- · -114-211
lll,tltiG,
1214.far . .

=·to.

U -· Hill

Run Rd. Vory

_lilt_ . . a

P1011p. 11 .....

-h-.-·. .
3yr old, 21or, -

~

Nvl... dining
h.

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 6 S.R. 143
- · Wrop oround ALBANY , OHIO: Rt. &amp;D 6 S.R. 143 .
HENDERSON. WV. : Rt. 35Adj. toSideroEquipmont
In yord. city ..- . ,..,.7~
NEWHOURS:
.
0111 .
POMEROY: 9 o.m.-7 p.m. 7 Da,o
oormon
ALBANY: 1D a,m.-11 p.m. I Ooyo, Cloood Sh~~~~~-.1 Found:
~. Folo.11 on Rl. t41.
HENDERSON: 10 a.m. -5 p.m. 5 Doye. CloHCII

2 ourcloo blkoo, 1 mo.1 octlon
110rtob1o both "" sao: 1-aoo-~m. Aok 1or Pato, 12-lp.no. .
I plooo llvlngrono oul1o. 1175.
Iampo 131. 114-182·
3114.

Clean Dry Aluminum C•n•. 38C per lb.
WE BUY ALL NON FERROUS SCRAP. lATTER lEI,
STARTERS.
ETC .

l14-tt221tl.
Fow

W!JIII .......

?

.....- On -- - ~~­
-Out
101. Aloo
lnafl d1d
In •le: ~- !Ill ll1t1Mt

STIED
PIZZA

LOWEST I'RICES
HIGHEST QUAliTY
FlEE lOCAl DEliVERY
POMEROY AND MIDDlEPORT'S OM. Y
· LOCAllY OWNED PIZZA SIIOf'.

Pizza-Subs.S,Iads-Daily Specials
992-2221 2·1·'!10-1 mo.

•••·2

~ :Ptr (~L1Pfi 1 1P·
\

I'Jt ',

lo

ARE YOU DOIN'
SPRAWLED OUT
()N TH' FLOOR?

,

SNAFt!® II)' Bruce Beattie .

lond.

32 Mobile ttomee

tor811e

1..

C.l'l'lloro 301-, IDMtld,
110100: 11119 Corolco, 2.1 v...

='11ft, olr, 110,1100.11~

, . . Qrolill Am, t~e- m~;

r'

-

'

84. · Electrical &amp;

•

a

For lotO: 1112 l'tr-.th ....
pomo, lopd, oil . _ AMn'll

-. ohopo. moo. 114M7.01fl,l1-7·7717.
.
QCMUINMINT SElZID -lal•
ChoVyo.

Surpl..:

• ..,.,. Guido, (1) IOWI7-eoQO
Ext. 8-10111. .
.
.

-·14

ooorntll buo ltol, plaoT l
~~O"wriorooortll

·=

IIOYIIINIIINT IIIZIIhlohlct•
tron1 •100. llordl. Meu11d11

• ..,.,. a - . 111 10W17

- ChoVyo.
Eat.8-10111.

'

72 Trucks for Sale

1111 ·- 304-74W3113.
toft dulllp ' IIUCk,
ltolbed,
till Dodao plokup. 2tl ooolo.·
oallool llllloo. Good - I1B10.11444..-.

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•

D (1)
Quantum L••P
Sam leaps Into lhe life of a
young native American Indian
In 1970. 1;1
G18 Dtll Chino S.ach A
comatose buddy of Vinnie's ·
raises the issue of death with
dignity. 1;1
(l) NllooorawiiCIJ
am e &lt;D WIH(IUY Vinnie
goes underground as a .
-·•
the
relallonshlp
work.
Mall
$2
to
Match·
LEO
(~uiJ 23-,i!ug. 22) You c•n accom..
maker. P.O. Box 91428. CleVeland , OH pUsh a lot or Utile things loday .thal you
smaiHown 4eputY. 0
44101 -3428.
have lelt.unfinlllhed In the past. 11 you're
•IIJJ New TWilight :Zone
PIKiEI. (Fib. 2ll-lbrch 211) Someone motlvltad 10 do 10. thiS lime you 'll com·
1121 Evenln(l Nan
IDNaooora
who 11 eep1ratad lrom you geographi- plete each job. ·
'.,BERNICE.
cally bul not In spirit hll been very an•· 1!11100 (Aue. 23-lept. 221 A syelem
10 : 30(l)Cio~
Hou-: S BEDE OSOI,.
loue to hoar from you. A call or note on lhlt workl extremely well lor a friend of
!nepirdon Embark ·on a
your belllll tod"Y will be appreclllted.
youro can be IPI)iled to your own prob- '
mue&lt;c:al roillrCOitter from
AJIII!I (lllicll 21·Aprll11) Thll coukl lema today. Try to u.. tile Nme procetmOky night dubl to churcll
be an advinlageoua day lor joint ven- du,.. ~th aa llttfit variations as
··· choir rlhelruls to chlrt
tur81. Somollhing extraordinary mlghl poaolble.
Houltlln'l Impact on goapel
' occur that bolli ...,.... ltWOIWd. wtU .._... (llpt. »&gt;at. D) Your poaolbll~~~In 11111 bluea musiC .
piOk up ·oo t111c1 uw In WJIYI that ooor111 . . lOr ldcllng 10 your -.rOll took
COtltPOUnd biMIIII.
ext... JIIIy encotrllQlng In thiN cycle.
lp IIIII Mwlt RusH(( tickles
TAIIIIUI (April a ..., a) e - Chertoe could p11ty ~rather un1C1ut role
tnllunlty ..... 01 publiC
' thaullt your pi Ill II pllnl 'lOOk ptW1Iy In your alf8lre.
tellviiiOn ludllnces.
good, keep an open mind regarding the· o aeoN 10 (OIIt. Ill No1. Zl) Don't be
·.lto8GII·Dt~lari'IYIIIOnlbyOihlri.M·
,..DIIIII to dllolrd old, ~II*
CIIN 81 lllh Tontpt
,.
Plb. 11, 1 •
... IIIMr'f 0111 ctpt might be ~ to IdeM Myou come up wt1h ualt of 1re111
•
1
tllcltllhll todly. 0ccMIOitalil' II 1111118
11
In: lila tar lhNcl " IOaltl llkl you '1¥111
2111 An .....,. ..... to lllllltch lltnM In ntk1JitMm,
lljttabllllt-allmportantmal.,.qb- ;
ooaurattllll ' ~ #OJI...,. (lift. a41n It)
•
. \'ieee
llllllflll. Your poaolbiMiy for Jteltt.Ying
1'81111 g-ter 8om1Dtte you IIIVe IIUied with Cllllllcl_ , (IOOCI.
tat tlutll(l eratlon ,_tty IIIOolcln(lltlr I ..., to
(~ 11) All opIOlllllltln(l on you're now retlpJ-te. Today !tel.... might...,.
Gf ·a
lllllln·IIIIY lie -.Illite.
OUII way to do H.
!~•JIIU'n toO CUI- (,._11-.lul;ll) II alert 1t1r CA IIICONI (DeL Zl lp 11) You'M
11111 a 1d!l, you might Wllloh H epur.Of..~ot h..,plniiJIII that ' . :.fi:(IOIIIIICIII Wllln ,au ' dupld llr I* OOUIIn WIMI
IIIIMinllilld beloN your .,.._ could brl(lhlln llld Ivan up your tllr- . -.1 you - • • a1 u to
.,_ liP In Mllml. Btll'lo.
to IMIGII up 1 brakan , _ , Hoaauw, 1 llexlble IOMclole IN :• • ·
...,... n.. al!lnm . to
ConwNIIIINI Will DIMII
IIIIo Gllllll Mltalw11llcer oan help ury to
you the lltltude JOU'I ,... tlllfn 10 your llllantiQa.
0
CoiUIIIJ ToniiM
~to ~.will! to. tloto-. ._.to~

~i'air1IIIUIII~

Hlllllna.1000.C!!

IOOOeoL,..,eii_l
W., r 21 1Ua 1'11111.. ~

114-

a

Roblrlleln

Refrigeration

Undor Wlti'IIIIY. ...... AMIMO
rodlo, wflool driYo. 311417&amp;-7111.
.
.

CoMftOO.

Fann Equipment ' ·
1030 eo.. ..CIIIool
plow, tro-' dloo, 210 ....
_ , Doolllt, · •litao; !134 rnt'l

a

a

.

. . ' loloo
.... ··
&lt;;ol!lmortcol
ro(\igorollon,
llooniod o~rtclon, 304-17&amp;-1710. ,

INm 8100. Fortll. Mlf'Didll

tr,\,k

, - o d l l - . - h.

1111·7123.

~ .MAIN

1 112 blith.

=
.............,...... .
-In-"t

.

81

.....,...........

PAYING AS OF TODAY. JAN. 30. 1990
#1 Copper 70¢ 1* 11.:

"·=-·

Y10101to1 monitor.
Spoollor114
maw,

3 llldrDGm ....._, 2 full MIM.

OFFEIS 3 LOCAftOIIS TO SEIYE YOUM"

OoiUpotlo,

dllr.iL Tollo ovor poy"'"""o.11e, :':'-!4~--1=-41-.;:.·.:;3·~•;-,;-""7,-~
143-41453.
'. ~roofo Hooting, .JIC anil

i licensed Clinical Audiologist

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

. MAWU WHAT

'

Four1lt lnd p "' . •

PS low nollooga. EKcollont con·

417 Second Avenue~ Box 1213
Z ·GIIIipolis,-Ohio 456JJ ·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Mulberry Hgts', Pomeroy,

fllumblng

' ondHoot~

, . . Cloovrolot Corolco. AC, P8,

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

about moving home to
BuHalo. l;l
(!) College Baoketboll
QD CJ (I) Doogle Howaer,
M.D. Ooogie saves the life of
the coolest dude in the
school. 1;1
.. . (l) Con..rvlng America
· Americans talk about efforts
to preserve the(! home
waters. C
,
(!) Am-.n Plltyhouoe The
life of'Zora Neala Hurston is
celebrated in &amp;ong 6nd
sta&lt;ies. (1 :30) Q.
·
•
am
e1121
J•k• A!)CI Tlto ·
,.·
F1bn1n C
'
0 Lerry _Icing Livel
0 MOVIE: D1ngarouo
Pursuit 12:001
Naahvllle Now
9:30 D (1)
De1r John John
quits his teaclling job for a
lucrative publishing job., 0
G1
CJ ()) Anytlllng Sui
Love ~nnah must assist
Marty's glrllriand lru&gt;lanning
his blrthdly party. 1;1
·
1:50 ()) MOVIE: 3 Oodlelhers
. (2:15)
10:00 (1) 700 Club Wltll Pal

a

OriOn ArnDIIIlor,

1150. 1144t2o212f. 132 8uttor-

Dependable Hearinc Aid Sales .&amp; Slt'1vi~
Hurine Evaluations For All Ages

,-.·

Mullcal .
lnetruments

110 won Loollo

Devices

,.

THERE 60f-5 A
60CO SA::lRT
WITHCGGON
HIS !=,ACE.

"

..

.a

d e~elop

~tep

from

I' I' I' 1• I' t I
1111111

l-It-H

+K 10 5

.

EAST

WEST

+B

• 52

.1098 5
tK1098t
+Q 72

·

How can you make a trick from K·

10-5 facing 6·.4· 3' YQu can lead ·up to

• K.Q·7 2

• Q.J 5

+AJ98
· SoUTH

the king and hope the ace is well
placed. And you can also lead toward
tQI0976 43
that K·IO and hope that the Q·J is in
.AJ
t7
front ol the king. So sometimes the 10
will force the ace, and at other times
+643
the ace will be in front of the king. Fi:
Vulnerable: Neither
nally you might be able to eliminate
Dealer: South
some ol the defenders" side-suits and
get a trick by means of an endplay.
Soulb
Wen
Elll
After three spades was r~ised to
3+
Pass
All pass
four, West led the heart 10. Declarer
could readily see that the contract
Opening lead: • 10
would depend ~pon makhl£ a club sible. Declarer luid to hope that "the
tnck , but touchmg that SUit could be partial elimination was enough. So depostponed. So declar~r played the Jack clarer played a club and put in dumof hearts under Eas~ s queen . East re- my's IO·spot. East won the jack but
turned a h,eart Declarer won, played unfortunately had no more diamOnds .
to dummy s dtamond ace and ruffed a A heart I rom East would allow declardta!""nd, and then led a spade .to dum· er to slulf a club I rom his band while
my 5 ace and rulfe_d another diamond. rulfing with dummy's jack of spades.
A spade to dummy s k!ng was followed Alid a club from -East would be away
by a ~earl roll. At thiS pomt dec;larer from the ace, making a trick lor dumw.ould have liked to roll. dummy s last . my 's king. Kudos to declarer for play• diamond, but that was stmply not pos· in• for the chance that East had starte
ed with only three diamonds. ·
&lt;

CROSSWORD
by J.HOMAS JOSEPH ·
• ACROSS
3 Italian
1 Liz Taylor
export
film
4 Measure
. 5 Shore
· 5 Cold spell
1 0 Out of woilc 8 Pll&lt;!dle
11 Israeli
, 7 Oriental
statesman
nurse
12 Lure
8 Without
13 Albanian
(Lat.).
capital
i Salver
14 Corrupt
11 Set up,
18 CaH for
as a play 25 Airway
35 Greek
attention 15 Nuzzle
28 Jog
river
17 -the
17 Weed
28 Famed
38 Smirk
mark
18 By moulh
essayist 38 "The
19 Gaze In . 20 Anc. Dead30 Harry ..
Tender
a way
· Sea
Callahan's
•
21 Stimulate·
kingdom
descriptive 40 Hail
23 Knuckle: 22 Unoriginal 32 Gangling
- larewell
head
24 Popeye'a 34 Wild party 42 - culpa
27 Holst
girt
. (al.)
43 Snoop
28 Opposite •
29 Shit (Fr.)'
_30 F.amous

· "Fats"
31 Nerd
33 Fldo's doc
34 Capture
37Rugged
ridge
39 Downright
41 Frolic
44 Misarly
45 Town In
48 Easy to use
47" -it
again, Sam" t---1---1--

DOWN
1 Apron part
2 Odalisque's
chamber ·

6-+-+++-

DAILYCRYPTOQUOO'ES-Here'l hew to work It:

2114

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the tine L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apostr~, the lenllb and formation of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letten are different.
·
~

1-14
•

NF " VN H V

RFXX-TNQAFJ
BJJLOFUHEXF
HXX

-

QW

XBEUHUP

ZBANFA,

HZOBUHE

R. B X X B H 0

B J ·

. U F G. F X A.

N

H .

~ ~,

H.IZ

WXHGQ1U.

, D q ·z R'8 .I

Crnt•••••••

Y11tula1''•
A CONSERVAtiVE IS
A MAN WHO IS 100 OOWAROLY TO FIOtn' AND
TOO FAT TO RUN.- FIRT 1UJ8ARD
.\

\

•

No. 3 below.

NORTH
+AKJ
.643

JAMES
JACOBY

~

(f)

qu•••d .

by fi lling ill the missi ng words

tl\6 32

I~ ~~t:~~~·;;,~:,Tonight

....,....

.

BRIDGE

1!11 1111121 a Jeopordyll;l
ID IIJl M'A'S'H
0 Ciooall,.
0 Night Court
7:35 ()) Sonlord And Son
8:00 CD MOVI!: Love Me Tender.
(2:00)
• m a Unoolved
Myaterlllo E..mine the
~~~·~~a~~~10o~! woman
reincirnated. t:;l
G a CJ ()) Growing Pains
Stop~ Ia&lt; a minor tralfic
matter. Carol finds herself in
I(!)
·au. C In Porf.orman.ce •t

-rt.·

.

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
Sprain - Uniil - Hotel -· Backer - KETCHUP ·
Automatically the sports star signed the menu and
handed"~ to the small boy. "Thanks," said lhe boy, "but
· alt I really wanted \YSS the KETCHUP"

criminal beachhe~d In Miami.
Stereo.
121 .VidloCountry
0 Abbott And Costello
7:05 (]) Jefferoono
7 30 e "" F u F d
:
.., •m Y eu

-11111....

_

PttNr NUMIIfiEO tmus IN

Japanese mobsters estabhsh

bott::J:

c-.

_

(l) l!l M1cNell Lehrer
NewoHour
am 1111121 a Wheel or
For!uneO
1D IIJl Night Court 1;1
0 M_oneyllne
1!J Miami -Vice Secretive

&lt;

rJt

•

i THESE SCMJARES .
6 UNSCR.t.MtllE
AIOVE t!JTUS
TO GET ANSWER ·

IJil
Drn PM Mag11ino
CIJ College Baoketball
G a e ()) Curront Affair

11\!011. 114-

.

you

a

......,. tho -lpllan
prlan, .. K-llar1'• PharmacY,

I

Politician to judge, "Yes .
Your Honor, I wss speadlng,
but I am a ~ressman ."
~~..,..--,....----. Judge \o politician, Ignorance

(l) Body ~lectric
l!l 3·2·1 Conllct 1;1
am ., 1121 CBS Newo 1;1
•IIJJ Throe' I Company
I!J He·M1n
Top Card
0 Hangln' 1n
6:3S (]) Andy Griffith .
7:00 Sca,..row &amp; Mr,a. King

Merchandise

KLECR

-r:.....:;~..;:.....:,..~.
D0 R" u I
I
-j' I-...I.1L-J ~·!:
1~..L.-.J.L....J...
.

Ga D(J) AIC Neoooral;l

Merchandise

.

h·
·...

(jj SportiLook

54 MlacellaiiiOUS

Employment Serv1ces

I

a

Lea"

Billion.

no01or0. COli Lorry Uvoly 114311-9303. .
~

e 1121

0 World Today
IH!Jem
ID Cbartn In Charge
&amp;£05 (]) lkverly HIUbillleo
6:~. (1}
NIC Nightly Nawo

lllddlrp :rt. •tun:&amp;.y night. ~,..
.,, ,a- tum lmO PollOI

Junk

IIJ

continues . C
(!) lquero One TV 1;1
.IIJJ Andy Grltlltll ·

I

2

0

Motorcyct. Auoclllllon
(l) Degra11l lllgh Lucy llpally
agrees to .shOOt the Zits
video: hate campaign

. /'

114-182-3142 ·R
•
Loot: bloctt purao ot ~ lor,

9

1

CIJ S.ll Of Amerlc1n •

llobllo H - Ptorll,
Roulo_ 33, North of
Loto, rontolo, pono, - · Coli
114412·7471.

01•=·
..... ,...,....,,_No-..Ad=r-..

HYPCIS

ern aa'i. ~
a NIIWI

16

I
I I I 1I 1

•

6:00 lf.~lle -And

-po.

Lltayette ... ll. 114 411

14

EVENING

wtth
-troller·-· AI
COli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-771-

Coun1ly

month oklllodl· lrtndlo

WED.. FEB.

,'

.

58111,-WV.
~lac­
11448 Spaea for Rent

..... .

Television
Viewirig

.~

..... tt.c:a?Mtll2.

·furnished

1111 thrao b o - - bolho,
14a:70 mobile home, ulume
loon, 30M~ .

Loot: 3

.._........... ...-

.-a.II., -

,.,. 12180 two bid UOII'I all

BORN LOSER

1878 Cl _ ulot_1r.t
I :':411
......
.,•toll. , 11

-=-

411111/Z
PI
II 11.11

.. .... :
lnalrdl .. $12,00o. or
..... otlw, 30~-~J~.~M~,

1112 CloytOII 14-'1!, 1101 2
bllloo. 21or, 1111- · ~.

pupploo, ~zm.
Pujoploe.

One .,,, oom. up 1 ,... ....

.... wtlh blue 1rtm, ... 710. 3041'7M411:1.

-~~ •Ond 2 lo011lo

1 -

1111 Trnr· m aiMt. .,..-,
Wllh lip oul ....,_,_ ·

Apartment
for Rent .

Sentinel-

The

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nolloo out Jlftl Hill lid, -

Giveaway

4

44

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:1 ,OH4Jf31 .

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32 Mobile Hom•
for Slle
C.UI141111M1r.
1110 ~ Parll 14170 . .

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Vt'ulrut '"'· F.uay 14.- 1910

Pomeroy- Middeport. Ohio

�.

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11-The Dilly $1 ~lei

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Panaov Mlddaport. Ohio

Principal .verbally accused.. ~

Continued trom page t

:en""'' M, Hopn uld EEO a!"'

that they had never lntellded to
close
allboueh they knew
that aaticlpated bllciJI!I cull
would be a problem.
Ho~. both Hogan and
Meadowa dllalfeed with Ed·
warda and Gloeckner In regard to
bow the Information bad been
presented to EEO. Said Mea·
dows, "EEO Is brought together
and we get statements that say
this. Then In another meeting
we're told this. We can' t tell It
two different ways In two differ·
ent places."
Edwards did agree that he had
delayed mailing out lay off
notlcea at the request of Hogan.
"And the picture has changed,"
be said. "The worst case scenario Is not going to happen."
Before closing the open session, Edwards el!plallled In detall
tbe financial situation of ,l.T.P.A.
with regard to payroll, operating
el!peDIN!S, etc.
The m~lng ended with the
executive JN!SSicin that resulted In
the three Jay offs.

He also addecllllat EEO feel$

:twO aatelllat c4flceiiD Pomeroy
· eo~ wu also recommended

·b y Edwards. EEO Committee
]IMII)bera oppoled the Jay offs
tlecau• It appeared to them that
ilo CODIIderatlon was given to
'per-.ael ~enlorlty, and tbat If
lay offl were approved as recom·
tneDcled, all minorities would be
:etlmlnated .from J.T.P.A . payOnly the positions of book·
-aeepu and a few training posl·Ilona were io bave been lett on·
j,ayroll, HO,an explained. Employees In some of these positions
llad fewer years experience with
the . pJ'OtP'am than those ~lng
1&amp;rgeted for lay off, he said.
- As a result of their Feb. 8
lneetlng, the EEO Committee
t;;ameupwltbseveralrecommendatlons which were presented to
tile full board last night. The
recommendations were ex·
'plaiDed by Rev. Don Meadows, a
· ~elgs County member of EEO.
Among EEO's recommendations
was a proposal to review the Jay
Qff policy of C.A.A.
: Rev. Meadows ~tated that
EEO finds the lay off policy "too
'!ague" and allowing "too much
leeway to someone to hand pick
who they want to work." The
poUcy needs to be more specific
In defining how persons should be
considered for layotffs, Meadows
said. Therefore, EEO recom·
mended the governing board
orderarevlewotthelayoffpollcy
of the agency and report back to
next full meeting of the board. ·
Director Edwards said he did
aot oppose a review and possible
change In policy, but assured
Meadows and other EEO
members at the meeting that the
policy Is legal as written.
"Legality. Is one tblng," said
·Meadows. "I'm sure It's legal
and valkl. But fairness Is another
'tblng."
The review.of the poUcy by the
EEO Committee, which will then
report back to the next full
meeting, was approved.
· In regard to the allegedly
•
,proposed closing of satellite
offices, Hogan said that EEO
.opposed such closings "because
·Ji would be a ,.,.
'""'
. at dlsservl~ to
·Ole people we're supposed to
help." Hogan said tbat EEO
would rather ~nslder alterna·
·11. ve changes to k1eep the satellite

roll.

~!flees open.

v. Ftlbrully 14, 1~

· Ohio .Lottery

Viqpnia

Continued from paae 1

the board. Followlqtbal orlat- soDVIlle lacldent I bat tbe' prlncl· her son t~ school. Board member
na1 coniplalnt wblcb Included DOt pal was putlln&amp; children UDder 1.any Rupe uured her tbat abe
baw been aaotber COOIIdel'allon
onlY the principal but a teacber tile delle. The board president didn't jlave to be afraid for her
ot J.T.P.A. Director Gloeckner
at the ~hOOI. the board did resPODded "Yes, were bad been · 1011 for a couple of·teaaocla. He
before the list of employees
cbange Its aludent dl5clpUne told lllat this bad llappelled at explabied tbat while It Is diUklll~
taraeted for Jay off was
poUcy.
·
.
HarrlsoDVIlle. Ya, we were to dllm!IS an~ ,the firs~·~
prepared.
Mrs.
Moodlspaugb
aalced
the
,
a~e of that." .
.
baa at readY been taken to
From comments ma~by Rev.
,
board
·
membe!'s
If
they
were
She
then
aslled
wby
tben
were
's traighten ou.t the prol)lems.
Meadows, there bave apparently
aware
at
tbe
time
of
ttie
Harrl·
parenll
not
advised
of
what
wu
"He' 1 been told not to ~ lila!
In the not too dlstaat pUt been
bappenJna.
·The
onlY
tblnga
we
apln
aD4 he knows how ~ere
grevlence procedure• flied
heard
about
were
at
Harrison·
tile
seco.
nd.$leP W..Tbe pro~;e~.~ Is
wltbln the agency which sugville,
Rutlaod
wu
never
menti·
·
In
action,
and you ilave the wprd
gested that dlscrlnilnatlon. may
oned
toourknowledge,"sbesald,
of
the
board
here that If be does .
have been practiced over a
,
wltb
Barton
commentiJII
tbat
anything
.ll.ke·
tlllll aPlil, .~the
period ot time within J.T.P.A.
Aline Weavet
"you
mlgbt
be
corri!ct."
·,
second
steP
wUJ,
~ taken, and
Meadows went on to say that
Again
Batton
aslced
about
the
that
Is
anotber
step , tpward
EEO wu DOl saying tbat the
Aline Weaver, 75, Racine; (!Jed
date
that
the
cblld
was
put
under
·
dismissal.
J.T .P.A. director bad acted dlsWednesday morning at Veterans the desk, wltb the board. pres!.
crlmlnatorlly In the pUt. "built
Memorial Hospital.
· dent explaining again that ~lf _II
The board president . again
does not look very affirmatively
·Mrs. Weaver was theda~bter was after the discipline bad oeen railed 'tile question of timing of
wben you proniote a minority to a
of the Jaie Earl and Jennie meted out to McCall, It was tbe ·rncldent - addresslna
111pervlsory capacity one month,
Hellman Holter. She was a
dll'ferent ·t han If the Incident Mrs.bMoodlapaugh with the
aod twomcin~s. Jater, dfopthem
h•lrdresser.
happened after" that. Mrs. MOO: · question, "Why would he get so
off the payroll alimg wltb other
She Is survived by a brother dlspaugh coiinler!!d lllat she did upset about tbls -now, wey now,
minorities."
and sister-In-law, Olan and
t h ...........,
IY that's what concerns me.!' BarDOl knowwben I a,.....-~. on
ton agamltitei:ltbaltbetnforma·
Other questions from EEO
Mll!lrl!d Hoi ter, Mansfle!4, and
thalli happened.
. were brought to. the floor,lnclud·
several nieces and nephews.
Going back to tbe night the lion be:IIAa Is that this happened
lng why EEO was notlnformed of
In addition to her parents she
youngster told bla par.entl about sometime ago. - ' ·
eatller Jay offs, aDd why EEO
wu preceded In death by her
being put under the deslt, Mrs. . Bo~d ~em~ Rul\2 th~m,
was not apprlaed In full detail of
husband;J.W. "l:loone" Weaver,
Moodlspaugh said that when her ·c alled fo~ an Jnvesttg•llon to see
J.T.P.A:'s gloomy financial al;~nd a brother, Paul Holter.
son beard them calling Hysell, ·. If anyd;llqg b(UI happen~ since
tuatlon earUer than two days
Services will be Saturday, 2
the )uvenUe officer, he became the Harr)Unvi!Je lncJl¥nt, tbe
p.m. at the Ewing funeral Home
before the proposed second
hysterical and locked hl~lf }n. reprlmajld at tbat time "and !be
round of .Jay offs.
VeteraDt Memorial
with Charles Norris officiating.
the
bathroom.
ChaRS£ II)•dl~lpUn! pol!,o/t. · :{ .
In, aaawer to tb-.quesUons,lt ..,-Tuesday adinl&amp;slons- Charles - Burial will be In Greenwood
She laid that . Adam said ~
·Superlntendeiu CarPenter Said
seemed that Edwards had called Cundiff, Middleport.
Cemetery.
"was
really
In
trouble
now
that
be bad talked to . the ,
In EEO IMicause he felt he should
Tuesday discharges - John
Friends may call at the funeral
h«ause
be
had
told
us
and
,now
secretary
and toblm (apparenUy. •
apprise thell1 of the situation, not McKenzie, Ann Williams.
home on. Fr,lday from 7-11 p.m.
we
were
telling
someone
else."
referring
to the principal, and
because be was actually required
She
asked
him
why
be
tb011gbt
he
,
tbey
botb
had
said this ''has not .
to by policy. EEO Is supposed to
In
trouble
and
sb.
e
quoted
occurred
·
since
the dlsclp)lpE;
was
monitor hlrlngs and firings, and ·
him
as
saying
'.'I
wasn't
supposed
'
policy
was
adopted
,b y. the boilfd'~
apparently the proposed Jay offs
Continued from page 1
to tell you and dad what after the Harrisonville l~ldent.
were "out of the norm," accord·
happened."
We~ bave alreadY · reprimanded
Jag to Edwards, because of the
Jim Vanamaa. spoke to the was for a more fair policy on
Another person at the meeting the principal for whatever hap- ,
circumstances of the situation.
)loard on the subsdtule pay lor , fighting on school .ptopetly: He
confirmed that putting children pened before then,''
.' · .
E"'O 1hen.
d ·
""
requeste a reeva·
bus drivers and requested tliat eontended that ·his son fought
under
the
desk
for
punishment
'
Despite
the
supertotendent
and
luatlon of those who have been
be
paid
the
same
subsdtutes
back
when
he
was
"punched"
by
has
been
golng
'on
under
this
hoard
members'
contendon
that
.
targe~ for ·lay off, at which
amount as a beginning regular another student. The .Principal
principal for some time. She said •'nothing like this ·Is happening
ti ·
Ed
c1s tte ted to
:driver.
me, · war
a mp
agreed that was what. happened
that her child Is now In junior ' this year", the parents Insisted 1
clarity some matters.
ThP. salary of board members · but con!ended she was a biding by
high school and knew of sllCh that teachers should be con"We won't have to layoff In the
wu
an
Issue
with
Rupe
propos~
school
poUcy
when
she
assigned
Incidents. At least one other tacted to see If this Is stlll going
numbers recently discussed, .. he
lrw
that
the
payment
per
meeting
detention.
person
In the crowd attending on.
explained. "And let me put to·
be
dropped
from
$80
to
S60
a
other
action,
the
board
In
qld the same thing.
.
Board meinbel' Bob Snowden '
rest any thoughts of closing the
meeting since there1are now two adopted a statement to modify
Mr. and Mrs. Moodlspaugh said that be had · also .checked
satellite offices." Edwards went
regularly scheduled meetings board policy concerning tbe use asked for some report on what with the school and had been
on to say that, the orlglDal Jay off
each
month. The vote was Rupe of drugs and alcohol. First time
"punishment ·Mr. McCall ·re- • assured ·that · &amp;11Ch punJ,9bment
1 d the
II
f
proposa an
· sugges on
and .Vaughan, "yes",, an&lt;l offenders, the new policy states, celved for the problems at was not ·hap"penllig this school
closing offices "was the worst
Snowden and Barton, "no".
will be given automatic tO-day · Harrisonville."
year, 1989-90.
'
case scenario If we did not get
Appeals on two expulsions was suspension and mandatory coun·
Barton said that the board
"It may well 'have happened
1 fund " A
t1y
held In execudve session and sellng ·with a . minimum of 10 couldn't go into that. "You don't ./ last year. but no one I questioned
certa n ·
s.
pparen ' necessary fundlq came tbtough
there was a hearing In open session Including the parents, aat know what you are dealing with would say It Is happening Ibis
".as late as 11:29 Tuesday mornsession
on a detention matter. their expense. The board with the when you deal· with unions. It's year. I bad been told It happened
lag" which would eltmtoate the
Appearing
In open session was new policy also reserved the not easy," be com"!ented.
the ·yearr before - )letore th·e
eed 10 1 0 u
n ·
ay
as many em·
tbe junior high principal who right to" expel automatically
Supt Carpenter Inserted t!1at Harrlionvllle lnclden_t occurred ;
ployees as had been suggested.
assigned the detention and anyone who Is selling or supply· "the punishment given was the - buti'vecometotheconcluslon
Both Edwards and Gloeckner
Danny Dodson, one oft be parents lng lltegal substances. The new punishment recommended , by , ihat It bas atoPp.ed. There ,Is no
ld lllal th
h d
t t
of
the two boys Involved In a fight policy will take effect once It hils our legal ro,unsel:"
sa
ey • mean
Indication that ' Mr. McCall Is ,
portray the lnformahon given on school property.
been
approved
by
the
school's
M!;'l.
Moocllspaugh
sal4
that
doing
~ that'. -iurrently ,"..Sn9w,den ~
earlier In the month to EEO as
Dodllon's
request
to
the
board
abe
worrlea
every
day
abe
sends
said.
, · · ·
. .. "
attorueY.
·
the "wont case scenario" and

North Carolina

Meigs residents...

1963

Super IAIJto

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p·
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Area deaths

Hospital news

Piek 3
599
PIClk 4

&amp;lip&amp; past

omc..

:'1111 mel tile ciOIIq ot J.T.P .A.'s the 15ylqottotmtnorltleubould
· ·tlld Galllpollll, which according

t

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·Vol.40. No.181
Capjolghied 1990

£

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Parkei'Sb.Bg fil"m hired for feasibility study
firm · was also considered, but
By NANCY YOACHAM
Swisher decided upon 1:\urgess
Senllnel Newa S&amp;aff
Nlple due to the !act that the
an!l
Upon recommendation ot Ml· ·
firm
has In the past worked
cbael Swisher, director of the
successfully
with other· Meigs
Meigs County Department o!
County agencies . .
Human . Services, the Meigs
The . feasibility study ~Is the
"Ciillllty Commissioners ap·
result of a directive from the
·proved hiring of the firm, Bur·
district director of the Ohio
gess and .Niple; Parkersburg,
Ilj!partment of Human Services.
W.Va., to complele a feasibility
study of the possible . need for · Cosl5 for tbe study are totally
reimbursable by the state.
additional office space for HuIn the feasibility study, an ·
man Services. Cost of the study Is
architect
will be evaluating pres·
not 'to exceed $3,500.
.
en
I
office
needs of the depart·
The commissioners · approved
ment,
as
well
as future needs
the hiring ot Burgess and Nlple at
over the next 10 years. T!ie
their regular Wednesd-y meetarchitect will review ca5e load
Ing. A few weeks ago they
growth at the deparlmen t and
authorized Swisher to · being
certain economic Indicators
Interviewing architects tor the
within the counfy. Based upon
project: Another architectural

flndlqs of tne . architect, ·a celved a resolution from Scipio
determination will be made as to Township Trustees and a signed
whether or not current office petition .f rom two affected prop·
accommodations meet the needs
erty owners requesting the clos·
of the department.
lng of Township Road 458,
, Currenyy, t~ .department. ~Graham Road . A third property
owner, the Ohio Department of
leases a main building on Race
St. In Middleport, and three other
Natural Resources, Division of
office spaces on Second Ave..
Forestry, has submitted a letter
also In Middleport.
· stating they are also In ·a ccor·
In anotner matter related to ·dance with the proposed road
the Department of Human Servl· closing. Based· upon these docu ·
ces, the commissioners met with · ments, the commissioners have
a Middleport couple who were
Initiated steps to close the road. A
publiC hearing on the proposal
questlonlng their allotment of
lias been scheduled for March 14.
funds from Human Services. The
. commissioners made ca.l!S to the 1 p.m., In the commissioners'
agency on behalfof the couple. A oftlce at the courthouse, with
special meeting between the
publiC viewing of the road to take
couple and thelrcaseworkerwas
place 10 a.m. the same day ~
arranged.
.
The commissioners have reMeigs County Treasurer

Dozens of pow~r outages were
By Unllecl Prell International
·. A winter storm that ·.cllated reported overnight, and scores of
'northern Ohio with Ice Wednes· schools canceled Thursday
day continued' Thursday morn· classes.
About 50,000 customers of the
lng, but rising temperatures
prompted the Nailonill Weather . Cleveland Electric Illuminating
Co. lost their power late WednesService to Issue a flood watch.
Rain fell over all of the day : but a CEI spokesman sald
nearly all were restored by early
Buckeye State Wednesday, with
·
freezing rain alld slf~£1 coating Thursday.
Power
was
out
on the cam·
roads In the northern half of t)le
puses
of
Kenyon
College In
state, north of Interstate 70.

.

Sheriff stlll looking
fo~ una~c,ounted
funds
.
•

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AT PAT.HILL. FORD·
1990 RANGER.

·1990 TEMPO

1990 ESCORT

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SIONS BJU. - Prealdent Bulb chats wltb S\!(:retary of State
James Baker (L) after tile president signed a biP authorizing
enteJ'Iency aid lo Panama Wednesday. Busb left early this
morn1D1 Ill attendtbe drug summit In Carta1ena, Columbia. See
atoey on paJE lZ. (UPl).

!Woyer .asks for lielp
.'in. solvb,tg problems

•

$AVE.S2l7000
•

Wlltn You Buy Preferred Equlpmellt Package
320A Spedat Value Package
1-lpeed TreMniiMion

Wide VInyl Body Bide Molding
AM/FMI-

-nnt8CIOIMI
Power l'-lng
los... VIItWI,_.
f t - Window l)efroeter
lnat""""'tlillon Group
Dlgltlil Cloak/ a-head
Console
Ughl/a-rtty Group
Duel Electric Mirrors
Luaury WhMI c-•
1.11. Efl4 cyl. I!II9IM
AM/FMC.-

Sticbr Prb
Package Dit1aunt

$9545.00
677.00
493.00

Pat Hill Diuount

Cash llacl&lt;

SAVE S3l53.00

·'

1000.00

$7375.00

Doliverod Prkt
(Tar &amp; Title F1ts Not lndiiiWI

When You Buy Preferred Eqlllpment Package
2261 Special Value Package EquipMtnt:
Air Concltlonlng
Power Door Locka
Duel Eleatrlcl Control
MlrroN

TlltWII.a
PolyU.tWh...
R- Wlllclow Defra.ter
Ughl Group

lpMd Control
Power Window•
AM/FM CMIIIIOI
Optional Equlpm•n:

,

Auto. TNna.

'

.

,•

'

•..; f

I

When You .IItty Preferred Equlp111tnf Package 164 ·
With Ma1t'ual Tr...lllis•lon
··
PACKAGE EQUIPMENT:
XLTTrlm
P211 IIHI OWL TlrM

Podtage DilaHmt
Pat HID Discount
Cath llacl&lt;

SJ3,059.00
17 37.00
677.00
750.00

Dtli••• l'rict $9 89s·.oo
(Tu &amp; ntlt

Not lnciHtil)

'

'

Deluu Tut- Pllnt

Sticbt Prb

,._,., . . . .lng

,,
•

Chr-Re•lteplum...,
AM/FM lt8reo C . .0/40 Spit Bench 1Nt
lllcllng R- Window

THhomc..t Abnlnum Wh....

OPTIONAL EQUIPMENt:

Cash J1oclt

411MGVW
Air Condlt:laloiiM'*na'll

'

....

•13,1~1.00

·

1500.00

Podti(S llwaiil·
· Pat Ill DloiMitt

2.8V·Ieng!M

...

·~"'

' ~'

Sticbr , _

' '', 6'53~

'-$99'J'QO

Dellwirllll'rlct

IT• &amp; l'ltle !!it'hldaii!l) .' .

tt.ndtne Pllak~ge

'

PAl Hill FO Di I

,,

'

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Mlddltp6rtj.Ohio· .

461 South Third

'

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992·2196
I

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'•.;

l

•

George Collins sul;lmltted to the
commissioners an estimate of
$1,000,000 as the aggregate
amount of public monies that
mlght be available for deposit as
active funds during the next two years. Active funds are monies
that are drawn from all the time,
such as checking accounts.
At Collins' request, the ' com·
missioners passed a resolution to
begin taking applications from
area banks to act as depositories
lor the county's active funds.
Current agreements · with area
banks will exppre on March 31,
In · other matters, 11 was an·
nounced that a multi-county
meeting ·with Ohio Public De·
fender Randall Dana has been
tentatlvelysetfor5p.ni.,,Feb. 27,
at Chillicothe. The meeting Is

being held so that Dana may
explain a proposed plan .yhlch
could save the counties money In
assigned counsel fees to represenl lndlgent clients.
···
··
..
It was also announced that the
Meigs County Park Commission
Is sponsoring a meeting on Feb.
21, at 7:30 p.m., at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy, In
which Donald Schmidt, of the
Oh lo Parks and Recreation Assnelation with be the speaker. The
comm lssloners and other area
governmental authorities are
being Invited.
Finally, a request from Meigs
. Probate Court for the addition of
a budgetary line Item for lndlgent Guardianship was
approved. ·

Flood watch .issued for northern Ohio

°

'

2 Soe~lons, 1 6 PogH 2 5 j:en10
A Multimiillie·inc. Nowopo""r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday; February 15. 1990

°

•

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Low toal1ht In mid 4011.
Cbuce of rain 100 percent.
Friday, high neat 80. Cbance
of rain 80
·

S.lS.l6-29-30-4I
Kicker 471460

Increased oy 6M percent .
. By Wire, !$taff Report.
The chl!!l justice said Ohio's
. COLUMBUS (UPI) ,- Chief
, Jusdce Thomas Mo~ of the" judges and courts are attempting
to modernize their rules and '
Ohio Supreme Court urged the
adapt to the changing times. But
Ohio General Assembly In a
historic address W~esday 1o he said the Legislature must
provide proper · penalties and
· reforll) the juven)l~ justice· sysfurnish
adequate prison space.
tem, solve tbe Jail space crisis
"The first priority Is the
and reducie the scourge of drugs
lnOblo: I .
•
juvenile justice system/' said
Moyer. "AIIhoilgb I personally
.• In a ~'Slat!! of the Judiciary"
believe that educl!tlon and expeadiSresa, believed to be the first of
rience will ultlmat~ly be the
Its kind lnOblo, Moyertoldajoint
long-term answer (to the drug
. Jegjalatlve seselon he wants ·the
problem,. we must deal swiftly,
judiciary and d;le Legislature to
declllvely ·and crel!tlvely with
work hand-In-hand on the probevery
juvenile offender, from the .
lems · without compromising
flrst·tlme user to the hlgh·llvlng
their llldependence.
trafficker," said Moyer.
Galua County Common Pleu
Judge Donald Andrew Cox atThe chief justice said juvenile
judJI!I want broader authority
tended the speech at Moyer's
over adultl In the lives of young
lnvltatlo!l yesterday, and said
,the · Chief Jusdce'a commenta
drV, offeadera.
'1inp you to explore all of the
.were well recleved by the Jealslature and tbe judiciary.
·
alterllatlvl!tl available In the
rehabilitation of all .juvenne
Moyer outlined the court's
history, Cox aald, their accompabllaers. reau,lleas of their
ability to pay," lie aald. "Stalls·
llstuneqll over the put three
I
tiCI and (:OIMIOII lelllll! tell Ul
.years.
• ·Of particular Interest to Cox tbat· a flnt-. or MeOnd·tlme
juwnne abllaer of drup will
were Moyer's commenll on
gradute from the juWDDe jua·
eombattlna c1rue abulll! and tbe
lema It pments to today's tlee system to the acllllt juatlee
J)'ltem.
.
ay1tem If be or abe 'II men!ly
warebouted
wltb aerloua
IIIII 'll'lm JtatiiUcs, Moyer ·
offenclerl.
Ioiii tile lawmakers · 60 to 90
'11, 1111111 be obVious to 118 all
pillliDt at the juwnlle or domesthat cannot be
tic relatlo01 cues Involve a ., that a
served becau. there II no room
auiMtance abuse problem, and
.tbat ·111 the Jut two years, In tbe jall or prison, or uenlellce .
Continued on paae 3
·
· clrul·l'llated juvenile cua have

-•nee

~-

, --·

,. Melg1 .. SHe~IW" JilmJ M. ·kin, Texas Road, Pomeroy, was
traeilng west on Flatwoods Road
Soulsby Is requesting that any
around
7 p.m. when she struck
Meigs Junior High student's
and
killed
a deer that ran Into the
parents who may have noticed
path
of
her
1988 Buick. Damage
their child with excess money or·
was
listed
as
heavy to the front of
unexplained newly purchased
Mankin's
vehicle.
Items, talk to their child to
A report of criminal damaging
ascertain If the money · might
have been given tbem by another · at the Meigs County Fair· ·
ground's horse barn on Tuesday
student.
·
Sheriff Soulsby reports that the night Is also under lnvestlgatloh.
Ralph Calvert reporled to
money was part of $9,000 taken
from a Bailey Run Road res!· ail thorltles that some time Tues·
dence In December. Approxl· day evening, a plastic tarpputup
mately $3,500 has not ,yet been as a windshield had been cut In
several places. Calvert also
accounted for.
Two 13-year·old juveniles will reported that the !Ires ani! seat
appear In Meigs Juvenile Court on. a racing bike (used In horse
next week In connection with the racing) were also slashed.
Anyone having seeing' any
missing , money. One of the
acllviiY.
In' the area Is asked to
juveniles has admitted giving
contact
the
sheriff's office.
money to various students, but
are
also Investigating
Deputies
does not remember all of them.
a
report
of
a
theft
'of. batteries
Public cooperation In thts
from
a
bulldozer
and
a loader.
matter will be appreciated. An
The vehicles were located on
effort Is being made to recover as
Depot St. at Rutland. Bob Ball, of
much of the money as possible.
Assistance from parents will . Ball Run Road, reported the theft
ease the parental responsibility occurred some time Monday .
VIcky Peckham, Wells Road,
In the matter, Soulsby said.
A motor vehiCle accident Wed· Middleport, reportell that around
nesday evening on Flatwoods 1 p.m. Tuesday, an unknown
Road was Investigated by the vehicle came onto her property
and struck the corner of her car
sheriff's department.
According to Information from . port. The matter Is being
Sheriff Soulsby, Rebecca Man· Investigated.

Miller to fde for re-election

the state lhrough Thursday
night. The rain was expected to
saturate already moist ground
and some areas may see flooqlng
as early as the afternoon.
Rainfall across the state
through Wednesday morning
was generally between one·
quarier and three-quarters of an
Inch during, but at Versailles In
west central Ohio more than 1 ¥..
Inches fell.
Southerly winds were to continue to warm the state Thursday, with temperatures topping
out In the the 60s In the south to
the mld-40s lntqe ,northwest.
The front was expected to stall
at Lake Erie 'J'hursday and a cold
front rn!lvlng out of the Plains
states ThurSday night will bring
another roun~ of heavy rain and
thunderstorms to Ohio through
· Contlnu~d 011 page 3

Scholl promoted.by patrol
Trooper Jeflr!!Y L. Scholl of the
Athens post of the State ijlghway
Patrol was promoted thiS week to
the rank of Sergeant by Col.
Thomas
W . Rice,
superlhtendent.
Sgt. Scholl Is the son of retired ·
Highway Parol Lt. Bruce R. and
Faye C. Scholl, who reside In
Cbllllc9the. and the grandson of
Mrs . Frances Scholl of Pomeroy.
Sgt. Scholl was r~asslgned to
the Eaton post where he will
serve as assistant post commander.&gt;He joined the patrol hi
1980and has served at theAth'ens
post smce that time. lie was
chosen PQSt Trooper of the Year
In 1986.
The sergeanf graduated from ·.
Untoto High School and attended
Ohio University. He and hls ,wlfe,
P11mela, live In Athens with their
daughters, Mollie and Megan.

JEFTREY SCHOLL

Local news(briefs----......
Celebration
Ball tickets available
.
.
.

'

'

,

Tickets for the 1990's Celebration Ball to be held Feb. 231n the
ballroom at Ohio University's Baker Center are aval.l able
Tenth · Congesslonal District closely reflects the needs and
locallY from Gerald Powell. ;\dvance tickets are being sold for
Representative Clarence Miller concerns of the constituents he
$10 per person or $17 per couple. Tlcketswlll be $15 and $25 at the
of Lancaster will flie his petitions represents. Miller pledges to
door.
to run for re-election Friday with continue to provide active and
Communlverslty, Ohio University's CO!ltlnulng education
the Fairfield County Board of resjlonslble representation. He
program, Is sponsoring the event which wlll be held ~rom 8 p·.m .
Elections, a ·spokesman said views the Issues· of the environ· ·
to midnight and will feature the Gentlemen III, a popular dance
ment, education, long-term
today.
band from Huntington, W.Va.
Miller, a member of the health care, the antl·drug effort,
Prizes will be awarded during the eveninghand a
Important U.S. House of Repre· and the reassessment and realJo.
photographer w1'u also be on hand.
.
sentatlves Appropriations Com· cation of budget ouUays· lor
,Powell, a professional dance Instructor, wllllead line dances
mlttee, hu represented the 12· defense, as the main Issues of the
and mixers throughout the evening.
.
county lOth District In upcoming
Table reservations may ~ made for groups of 8 to 10.
Washlngton for thl! paat 23 years
·-Advance tickets for the ball may also be purchased at the
.and Is In the tdp 10 percent of the .
-office of Continuing Education, located In the basement of
435 member bouse In terms of
: "Memorial Auditorium on the 0 . U. campus, or by telephone,
seniOrity.
·
1-800-336-5699.
'
The Lancuter lawmaker en·
tered congress at the same time
as President George Bush and
servedasabOUJecolleaaueofthe
A section of road at Stale Route 124 and Dewitt's Run Road In
·president's In the' 90th and 91st
the 1-&lt;&gt;111 Bottom area has bee~closeddueto theamount ralntall
concresaes.
In past few days, according to a spokesperson from the state
Citing his close asaocla lion
highway department In Marl~tta.
,
"
with tbe president . and the
The recent rains caused a portion of the road to flood, and the
aatl8factlon tbat cornet fi'om
rqad bas ~ closed aliice Sunday.
'
belq actively hivolved wltb a
It was reported~~ an emergency contract bid wlll be let for
new admlnlltratlon, Miller Is
tbe repair of tbe area.
bop!JII to continue bl5 aervlce In
new
Waalllnlton for another two-year
. '
•
term.
John D. Riebel, Meigs County Superintendent of Scbaala, wta
Tbe · congresaman expre11ed
a nve year conlrlct at his curretlt utary wbetl the Mill
plana to run an · aareutve
Local Board of Educatlnn met Tuesday nlabt In 1M - - ,
re-election cllllpalp bhed oa
board offtces.
.
bl&amp; record of aervlce to tile people
.
·
Continued
on
paae
3
,
r:J. the lOth District. Polntina to
CIABBNCII:
E.
MILU!:B
bll voting record aa one that

Section of road underwater

Riebel receives

itwn

II; . -

r·

Gambler and Oh1o Wesleyan In
Delaware, forcing the postpone· '
ment of two basketball games .
Denison returns to Kenyon and
Wittenberg goes • back to Ohio
wesleY&amp;!! Thursday night to
make up those games .
In Marlon County, the Ice
broke limbs and knocked tree~
down along Ohio 203 between
Marlon and Prospect.
With the rising temperatures
- mid-morning readings were
mostly In the mld·30s In the
northern counties and higher to
the south - the ·threat of Icing
bad ended.
But the NWS posted a flood
watch .f or all but the southeast
cprner 0t the state tl!rough
Friday inornlng.
Widespread rain, with some
heavy, rain and thuf1dershowers .
possible, was expected acr!lls .

f '

'

-- 1 -

•

contract

••

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