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                  <text>. . .1

D-8 Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

January 31, 198Q:

Pomero.y-Midcleport....-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

-.

'Sprits' drive family ·from home -in Wisconsiri.
the last lew months .
• HORICON. Wis. !UPI) - Jn a
The couple said they saw
cue recalling the movie· 'Polterstrange glowing shapes and
aellt," a couple and their three
heard voices, that an apparition
cblldren Qed their home because
IIIey believe It Is haunted by . of an old woman appeared tp
· IIDwlnr splrttli who speak In their son, a chair and a suitcase
lllrNteatng voices and move moved by themselves and their
2-year-old daughter was so
objects In the house.
frightened
she awoke screaming
''Tbey've been -thr(lugh an
several
times.
ordeal that's mind-boggling,'' .
. The case recalls the 1982
Pollre Chief Dougl;ls Glamann
Steven Spielberg movie ''Polter·
said.
gels!;" In which a couple and
. He said he ~lleved the family
their three c)llldren ended up
was telling the truth when they
fleeing their home In a new
said "sonietblng" had possesst&gt;d
subdivision because It was
their home. "They are riot out to
haunted by spirits who destroyed
make money or write a bo!&gt;k," he
· said.
the house.
Glamann said he toured the
· · Glamann would not Identify
home
Monday nlaht with other
the family, but Horicon City
o!flce~s. a pastor and .one of the
Oerk David Pasewald said the
owners of the ·home but found
property was owned by Allen and
nothing unusual.
Deborah Tallmann.
The · curious flocked to the
Glamann said the family
small Dodge County community
.moved Into the three-bedroom
ranch house In a new subdivision -of 3,600 last weekend looking for
the "gl\ost hou5e." Glamann said
about two years ago and left it 10
days ago to ·s tay with relatives - police barricaded the· one-block
.after a series of unusual events · street because of the crowds;

~·

in

The Tallmanns', an Interview
Wednesday with the Milwaukee
Sentinel, said the experiences
heganaboutslxmonthsagowhen
a clock radio In their son's
bedroom kept changing stations
by Itself. "We thought. it was interference," Deborah .T allmann said.
"I looked at the radio and I saw
that the knobs were moving and
the red thing (station indicator)
was' going back and forth
across."
She said she removed the radio
from the boy's room.
Strange events continued, and
Increased In ' magnitude, the
.
couple said.
"There were nofses In the·
house that we could not account
for," Deborah Tallmann said.
Once, the boy's suitcase slid
out from Iinder 'his bed and back
again as though II wa·s moved by.
a . hand, she . said. Also, baby
sitter reported that a chair at the
kltche.n table .. "started rocking ·
back and forth" with no apparent

Ohio Lottery

Redskins
NFL champs ·

~

.

explanation.
right out ol the floor. It was gassy house searching for a prankste:r:.
Initially, the couple thought and foggy ... II rose up I here and and then went to the front steps&lt;-;
their children were making up that voice came out of there and
-"Then II started glowing lnsldt~
the 'stories. But in early De- It said 'You're dead.'
the garage, an orangish red-;:.
cember, the bOy and his 2-year"These green eyes appeared There weae flames coming out Ql-;old sister related similar, lode- right out of this thing and then I the overhead door. There well! -·
pendent occurrences.
.:.:·
. two·eyes In the windows.
saw flames, and. It was gone."
The girl awoke screaming
'I
said,
'My
garage
Is
on
fire~:.
.
•
The couple left the house jlnd a
several limes. her mother said.
few days later, consulted with Then I looked again- and the~ "She started screaming that their pastor, who went to the . wa$ nothing.'''
;. :..
there was fire on the door of her house with them.
Referring to the talk aroun41·
room. And these noises that
"He blessed our house, gave us town, Deborah Tallmann said;' :.·
would go 'shh ... shh ... shh," · communion In our house, gave us :'Don't they realize whatthey a~ ;:
Deborah Tallmann said.
·some tapes to play church doing to us? I don't know what'(•
She also quoted her · son as music," Deborah Tallo;nann said. worse,' living there or having I&amp; :;
. saying, "I saw an old lady
A day later. the events began deal with this. If this Is so funny:; ~
standing by the door In my room: again and th.e Tallmanns fled for why aren't we living there?" -:.,:;
A little old lady, really ugly, with good, moving In with relatives
Glamann s1ild his tour of the:;
-long black hair and a glow about who live out of town .
home found ' no evidence that anji..
her like fire." The boy also -said
Around Christmas, Allen Tal- pranks had been pulled on th£ •
he heard a sound like "feet lmann said he "challenged"
family.
·-::
moving across the carpet. "
whatever mysterious entity that
"We wanted to see It the I'!!··
The woman said no family was In the house.
were any recording devrces or;:
member was harmed or damage
"! walked In this house yelling . some kl~ of projection equip;done to ~he home.
at the top of my lungs 'Pick on
ment," he said.
The event that drove the
me. Leave my .kids alone. If you
Nothing unusual was found, lji!::";
. family from the house came
want to fight, I'll fight,"' he said.
said.
·.
~'
about' tllree weeks ago, Allen
' A day later,he said, "I had just
"My job is to !&lt;eel&gt; the peace IJ!· ·
Tallmann said, while he was In
put the key in the door and just
the neighborhood, secondly li&gt;-:;
his 1-year-old daughter's
like that, it · sounded like the
see If there is somebody screw in~.,.
. bedroom wailing lot her to fall
howling of wind, but there was no . around with these people;;, h~::
asleep.
'
breeze. 'II' said 'Come here!'
said. "If that comes• up ullo'-:;
"I heard this vacuum-like r~alloud.and rea 1 to the point."
founded, the res I Is somebod~~
He said he ran around the
else's ball game."
••Ism and mentioned my name. sound ... · and this thing came
They wanted to know what I wa$
teaching In my clasess."
"The agents alSo asked about
the woman I work with In Central
American Activities."
Knitter said thatwoman probably was his wile, who has
retained her•malden name.

'

Daily Number

375
Pick 4
7713
Super Lotto
5-8-21-14-22-38

.

Page 5

•

enttne

e
No.184
1988

'

members of the Coalition for
Public Sanctuary, a national
network offering support to those
fleeing wars in Central America.
For two years, Cornell was
coordinator · for the coalition's
Cincinnati unit_.
.
.
· Knitter said he was told by the
colleague that FBI ageJ;tts "said
they were concerned with terror·

..

-

·····.

..

Tribune - 446-2342 ~~
Sentinel -~ · 992~2156 ~~

Register·-

67~1333 §~

-

THE NEW

TUXEDO
LOUNGE
IN THE

DOWN UNDER
RESTAURANT

PARENTS GATHER - The newly formed parent support
group, Parents. For Education, mel Sunday afternoon at Meigs
Junior High. Many Meigs Local parents attended the meeting to

IS INTRODUCING

Jeff
Montgomery
TUESDAY
EVENING, FEB ..2
5

February Is
Presidents'
Month

·'

1987 PONTIAC STE
"TOURING EDmON"
Features anti-lock brake ayltem, steering
wMel radio controls, Hi-tech alacb ooic dnh,
16"x8" cast alum. wheels, opecial auspe!i- '
sion, quick ratio rack's pinion ltlterlng, power
windows, locks, antenna, etc .. low miles.

FACTORY UST
DIS(OUHT
SALE PIICE

'11,497.00
4,597.00

$13,900

1981 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

· As a country, we honor Washington and Lincoln.
As a company, we honor our Pres1dent, David Vetter.

Come Meet President Vetter
Thursday, February 4, 1988
10~30 a.m. to 12:00 noon
Open our Bmonth Presidentic;tl CD .
Special $5,000 minimum&amp;Special High Rate
· Effective February 1-5, 1988

discuss how participation In the organization·might h~lp them to
take a more active and positive role in the education of their
children.

President makes final push for Contra aid

Pitcher for the
Cincinnati Reds

to 7 P.M.
Autographs &amp; Pictures
Available .. Stop in, meet
Jeff and try our new
Tuxedo beverage.

1911 MARK-Ill
CONVERSION VANS
V-8 engine, C20 challia, S/WB. air. til~. ·
cruis&amp;, oak trim. 4 captain' a chaira, rear
sofa, good for light ~owing, Chevrolet
chassis. Brand new.
·

SALE PRICE

S16, 900 ..

1911 CHRYSLER
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Only 49,000 low miles, T-tops,
turbo angina, automatic. air conditioning. one owner.
WAS
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Only 38,000 low milas. local one
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1978 JEEP CJS·

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WAS S5495,00

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ontiac

26 Cents

Special panel
established by
Meigs parents

FBI denies investigating professor . CINCINNATI (UPII - FBI
officials have· denied that the
agency conducted an investigation Of a Xavier University
professor who has spoken out
against U.S. •policy in Central
America.
Paul Knitter, a theology ' pro·
fessot at Xavier. told the Cinc.ln·
nail Enquirer Thursday that he
was Informed by a-colleague that
·two FBI agents had been on
campus asking questions about
111m.
"Contrary to Information volunteered to the media ... Profe&lt;sor Knitter has never been
Investigated by the Cincinnati
FBI nor has lle never been the
subject of FBI surveillance,"
Terence D. Dinan. special agent
In charge of the FBI's Cincinnati
··· ·, offite; .. said Fhday , adding..th.a t
FBI agents never solicited information about Knitter.
' "Neither Professor Knitter nor
his political views are of any
Interest or significance to the
FBI."
Dinan also denied that thr FBI
has investigated the Friends
ReUglous Society, the Maryknoll
Sisters and the Church of the
Brothers in Cincinnati .
The Center for Constitutional
, Rights. a •New York headquartered lawyers group,
announced Wednesday that it
had received more than 1.300 ·
pages of government documents
showing the FBI had Investigated hundreds of organizations
and individual opposed to U.S.
policy In Central America.
Knitter and ..'his wife, Cat hy
Cornell, · have been vocal in
opposition to U.S. intervention in
Central America and are

2 Sections. 12
A Multimedia Inc .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 1, 1988

:=:-.

a

Chance of rain 90 percent
tonight. Low 45 to 50. ·

WASHINGTON !UPI ) - PresIdent Reagan is nearing the
moment of truth In his drive to
win congressional approval of his
$36.3 million aid package for the
Nicaraguan Col)tra rebels with
~Yitaj6f, -spttee~- befOre t-he
crucial vote .'
. Reagan planned to focus on one
of his · favorite subjects In an
afternoon speech ' today to the
National Religious Broadcasters
conven lion, considered a receptive audience.
· On Tu~sday evening. the eve of
the House vote on the Contra aid
request, the president will deliver a final !elevlsed appeal In a
brief prime-time speech.
Some undecided congressmen
.w ere expected to get telephone
calls from !he president, and he
rriay summon them to the White
House today and Tuesday to keep
the pressure on.
The aid package, includlng$3.6
million lor arms and ammuni tion, ~ould be the president's last
hurrah In a six-year effort to
promote the cause of the "fr!"edom fighters" battling the Sandinlsta government in Managua.
White House aides said they
expect a close vote. while Democratic leaders in the House
forecast defeat for the proposal.
Th~ president took lim~ out
Sunday from his ardent lobbying
tor the Contras to host with his
wife, Nancy, a Superbowl party
featuring the clash between the
football titans, the Washington
Redsklns and · the Denver
Broncos.
About 40 friends and former

campaign aides were Invited to
watch the football extravanganza in the White · f!ouse
theater. While the guest Ust was
not ·released, sources saia press
sec_retary· Jim Brady and his
·):VI{e,,sara~. ·y;er.e ~!llong' th9se
InVIted. · '
' ·
Dress for the affair was cas4al,
and likely burgundy and goli:llo
match the colors of the Washington team, and the menu was
down to earth; hot dogs and chili.
· The Contra aid vote Wednes day comes with the Marxist -led
government of Nicaragua in·
volved In direct cease-fire talks
with rebel leaders, a major step
toward possibly ending the
bloody civil ~ar that began in
1981.
The choice for the lawmakers
has never been so clear - .a
straight up-or-down vote In the
House. no amendments or
a.llerna II ves .
The Senate is to vote Thursday,
but the plan will be dead If it!ails
in the House.
, House Democratic leader Thomas Foley of Washington, a foe of
Contra ald.
told NBC-TV's
" Meet the Press" Sunday, "I'm
very sure we are going to win. " ·
But he added, "In Washington ·
nothing Is certain. The vote will
be close. But. I'm sure It will be

allowed to talk."

.

One or the men said they had
hand ·grenades, but he would not
elaborate on other types. ot
weapou.
·
"You can bet lilt are heaVIly
·armed and nobody had better try
to get here," he IBid.

1"

l

Iowa caucuses: One week to go
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) - Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois
claims a big boost for his presidential bid from the endorse111ent
of Iowa's major newspaper, and former Arizona Gov. Bruce
Babbitt Is trying to catch up to front-running Democratic rivals
through new harsh attacks.
.
.
With one week lefl before Iowa's presidential caucuses, the
stalled Simon cam~lgn hopes the coveted Des Moines Register
endorsement will put undecided voters Into the senator's camp .
in whal is shaping up as a lirht three-way Democratic race.
"U give's some momentum to our campaign," said ,Simon,
who quoted from the newspaper's praise In a speech to Black
Hawk County Democrats In Waterloo Sunday.
Rep. David Nagle, former state party chairman, said the
endonemenl should help Simon. "Paul needed a boost. I
thought he had been sllpplnJt," he said.

proper · channels within the
school system . . Parents For
Eduatlon hope to be able to
provide direction through those
channels.
Several parents st~tted during
open discussion tliat a group like
Parents For Education Is "much
needed." And although Parents
For Education came into being
because of the recent Meigs
Local teachers strike, parents
agreed it Is lime to "put the strike
behind us."
After discussion on several
other areas of concern, the group
broke up in to smaller groups to
choose the representatives -from
each of ihe schools. The panel of
represent~tives. along with an
executive council, will now com. prise Parents· For Education's
governing board.
It was decided that as soon as
. the new board can meet togethe r
to develop the direction in which
the group will now conlinu~.
another meeting will be sche'·
duled. At that lime. it is hoped ·
that information can be provided
to update parents of their rights.
and of current issues now affecting the school system ,

UMW, coal firms
teach agreennent
•

Both sides said they would
WASHINGTON IUP!) - The '
withhold details of the agreeUnited Mine Workers union and
ment until the pact was ratified.
the nation's biggest association
"I don't charac ter'ize the
of coal companlesreached agreement this weekend on a new agreement as positive or negative, " UMW President Richard
contract about 30 liours -gefo.re
Tr
umka told reporters . " It's in
65.000 miners had lhreaten'ed to
the
membership 's hands. It's up
go on strike.
to
ihem
,"
The announcement of Satur·
"These
were tough negotiaday's agreement , which must be
tion s, there were hard Issues. but
ratified by union rank and file
because of the good faith on both
plus each of the 15 companies
represented by the Bituminous sides , we were able to reach
Coal Operators Association, lol· agreement without a work stop page, " he said .
lowed contract talks that had
The union' had , threatened to
continued since Nov. 12.
strike
when their current con·
The agreement affects some
tract
expired
at midnight Sunday
65,000 of the union's 85,000
agreement was
unless
a
new
members in more than a dozen
by
then.
The settle ment
reached
stales. The miners had been
. working under a 40-month con- was announced aI 6 p.m .
Saturday.
tract. The length of the new
"The companies already had
agreement will not be disclosed
until it is ratified, negotiators . been notified ol a strike if the
agreement had no t bee n
said.
reached," UMW lawyer Michael
Ratification vote by union
.
Holland
said. .
membership was set for Feb. 8.
Noting
that
"1984
was
lhe
first
Union executives were to m eet
with local leaders today to lime we reached an agreement
without a strike in 20 years."
explain the proposed contract.
UMW spokesman Joseph CorcoOn Friday, the local presidents
will meet with their members .
Continued on page 12

Toxic spill closes
US 52 at Ironton

Indians seize
newspaper office
LUMBERTON, N.C. ·- Three
· heavily armed Tuscarora Indl·
ans seized the local newspaper
office and took 17 employees
hostage Monday. threatening· to
)!Ill theni unless thejr demands...
were rtu~t.
One of the three men told
United Press Internailonal they
were heavily armed and were
prepared to kill if anyone tried to
·come In the newspaper building.
He said they want action from
·the government. "Our people
have suffered long enough in this
county under a corrupt white
government," said the man, who
was not. Identified.
A newspaper employee who
answered the telehone at the
Lumberton Robelonlan office
said the sltualklll was "very bad.
He's prepared to kill. I'm not

rejected."
adviser Colin Powell. also ·on
Foley said Democrats have NBC. said he believes the vote
been "disappointed" with the .. ,-.will be "very . close . " He said
pace of 'the democratization of passage ·was needed to make
Nicaragua. but more aid to the sure . ('licaraguan President DaContras would undercut the niel Ortega does not go back on
.Guatemala, City: peace ptan _ap- hi.~ PJOmi,se tci.llJake refocms. ·
provedbythe•pres!denttbfCosta
Secret!lry of State George
Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Shultz. Interviewed on ABC-TV's
"This Week" and Powell di·
Honduras and Nicaragua .
"Frankly, I think from the verged In their responses to
beginning the . policy of the questions about a Miami Herald
administration has been the report tliat the administration is
overthrow of" the Sandlnlsta considering appeals to third
government, Foley said. "Their countries for Contra aid if
basic underlying hope is that Congress says no. Such a tactic
somehow they can bring . a was adopted ea rlier and exposed
as part of the Iran-Contra
military solution."
Foley said if Reagan's aid scandaL '
.
request is defeated, the Demo"I'm· not aware of any such
crats would support a package to plan . We will abide by the vote of
help the peace p)'ocess with "no Congress," said Powell.
. lethal aid, not a dollar for lethal
"We're running this very
aid."
straight up," he added.
White House national security

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentl'lel Staff Writer
Organizers of Parents For
Education are hoping that par·
ents in Meigs Local School
·District will look to their group
for information and support to
help ensure that all students in
the district receive the best
possible education.
The newly formed support
group met Sunday afternoon at
Meigs Junior High to formally
organize and to elect representatives from each of the nine
schools In the district to comprise
a panel for the group. Approximately 80 parents . representing
each of the nine schools, were in
atteridance.
Goals of the -organlzatiOJ; were
outlined with the primary objective being "to provide ,tbe best
possible school syste m for all
children In the district. " It was
pointed out that for this goal to be
realized. parents of the school
district "must get involved."
It was stated that the time for
complaining Is past : and that
parents must now lind solutions
to problems or answers to
questions . by going through

KIDNEY OPERATION ~
Ron Diles, Jr., a student at
Melp Junior Hilh Sebool, Is
conllaed to Doctors HOBpltal,
North; Colunibua, where-he 18
scheduled to under1o Hl'lery
for the rer~~oval of ri kidney
and polllbly other aurpry.
Ills coaflllemeat II expee&amp;ed to
be for ld leu&amp; a IIIHth and
)JIG 1UJ COIIId ru to t~everal
mothen. Rf1 mother,
'DIIII, II a&amp;tem,U.g
to Ita)' Ia «lllllm'- to be with
ller durllll thll period.
Row..er, 111e II Ia lleed of
lh•pclaJ ........ Coatrlllatlllll ... earMIIIBJ 1le f!MI
to Boom J11, Doeton Help!. tal, Nortll, Colllmllul, Ohio
· tltOt. The room pboJe
number II 181-4300.

l••••te

•

IRONTON, Ohio IUPI) - A
tanker trook loa!led with tOXIC
phenol stfuck a metal signpost
lying on the roadway early today.
puncturing the tank and spilling
the chemical, authorities said.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
closed a five-mile stretch of U.S.
52 after the accident, which
occurred about 3:30a.m.
Authorities said It was . not
known how many gallons of
phenol, a chemical used to make
explosives, leaked from the
tanker. The truck was carrying .
5,200 gallons.
The driver told police he was
headed east when he struck a
~eta! s.f~npost lying on the
highway, puncturing the tank.
Both directions of the highway
were to remain closed while
authorities cleaned up the spill.
Lt. Paul Rapp ·of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said ri hazardous
materials company would remove tbe topsoil and sand used to
halt the flow of the chemical.
The 'truck, owned by the
Chemical Leamen Co. of Exton,
Pa., was loaded at the Arl.ltech
Chemical Corp: In Ironton, and
. was head~ for Louisville, Ky.

LAND OFFICE BUSINESS - What with tbe
warm, 1111111)' wealber on tbe weeltead, the aew
Tropical Car W•b, located In the Full:llillftdfnc
oa W. Main St.,l'lmeroy, wu tlolng a land oUice

'

btmla• u ra~~~.- p&amp; t11e1r Yeldlll• cleaned
up. Tile aew ear ....... apu1 h IIIJ Balpll Day of
Mlaernllle, doel. llaDd wuldaa 8H waxlag of
veblclea ucl doel plclnlp 81111 dellvii'J Ml'vlce.

.

\

•

�Mooday, February 1, 1988

...

Pome10y~MiddleP&lt;)rt.

·

Comment
Th~

Dail:y
.
.. Sentinel
~

111 Ceurt Street
l'omeroy, OhJO

.

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS..MASON AREA
~~

IS:nt;9

'

.

"'"-''-""T"I ,...,.._r=;l,;=o

~v

ROBERT L, WINGETT
Pu.bll~her '
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aul&amp;taat Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General MaDBger

.
AMEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press ,
·. Association and the American Newspaper )?ubllshers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 wordl
long. All letters are subj~ toediting and must be·siin.ed with name, ·a ddress and
telephone. number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good raste, addressing lJsues, not personalities.
·

When will Celeste·get
:u ntracked? Inquiring
·minds want to know
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- Statehouse observers. and even people
In the governor's office, are beginning to wonder If Gov. Richard
Celeste is ever going to shed the scandals, foot-in -mouth and shots in
the foot, and start ru nning the state.
· First there was the redeem ing election of 1986, where Celeste won a
landslide victory over his longtime nemesis, James Rhodes. The
ffi'st -term politica l maclng and contracting scandals were behind
him. It was a chance for a new beginning.
The came the Ill-s tarred attempt to mount the presidential
merry-go-round, reports of sexua l escapades and more scandal, this
time in the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. with contracting
Irregularities and the handling of sexual harassment complaints.
: Most recently the governor, meeting privately with the editorial
board of The Dayton Dally News, claimed he had pushed former
Adjutant Gen. Raymond Galloway out the door because of the
mismanaged Ohio National Guard scholarship program.
A reporter for Tl\€ Columbus Dispatch pieced eVents together and
discovered Ce leste did no such thing; that Ga lloway's retirement
date arrived a nd he took it. Celeste phoned"the Dayton editor to say he
had mlsspoken and, when the Dispatch story was published. finally
admitted he . had not accurately recounted the sequence of events
surroundll)g Galloway's depart ure.
"He gave a great State of the State address and we' thought ,· At last,
we're on our way," ' sa id one frustrated employee In the governor's
office. "Now this."
· It seems a s hame. because Celes te has done some good things. for
the state. especially in the areas of economic development, higher
education and menta I health. •
· Though he has n.unked some tests on appointments and managerial
skills. he met his grea test crisis with his best performance - the
savings and loan sca nd al ol1985 lost no money for depositors and the
state has almost all of its $129 million back within three years.
Carolyn Lukensmeyer, the governor's chief of staff. explained the
fib about Galloway by saying Celeste is frustrated that scandals
continue to dog him and that he' s not getting credit for his ·
accomplishments.
·
.
First of all, the governor's public relations crew puts out so much
drivel that they wou ldn't know a n accomplishment if one stood up and
bit them . When you cry· 'wolf' · repeatedly , alter awhile nobody pays
a ny attention.

Statehouse news

Fulfilling the Guard
• "•
•
tuition commitment
Sen ..}an Michael Long
The-cost of a college ed ucation
is so high that few can afford it
without some sort of financial
assista nce . In our stale, many
have been able to obtain a hig her
degree because of aid received
under the Ohio Na tional Guard
Tuition Grant Program. The
grants pay all tuition a nd fees at
state-supported Institutions and
up to 1,034 per semester at
private institutions in return for ·
a six-yea r commitment to partie·
!pate in Ihe Ohio ~atio na l Guard .
Imagine the shock and dismay
of current participants when
they lea rned last October th at the
Guard co uld not pay their 1988
tuition. Fortunately, Ohio legislators recognized that the state
has a moral obligation to honor
the commitments made by the
National Guard .
On Oct. 23, 1987 the Ohio
National Guard announced that
the tuition program was $4.6
million In debt and that 1988
tuition cou ld not be paid. This
was the result of poor management. The Guard had e~ceeded
the statutory limit of · 3,000
Scholarships per year by 1,800.
Tuition was also paid for partie!.. , pants who did not qualify for the
program or who had violated
their terms of service.
After promises by state legislators to rescue the program, In
late December the Controlling
Board approved a $4.2 million
loan to pay . promised tuition
through June of 1988. The Guard
' Is to repay1 the loan by selling two
unneeded armories In Canton
and Toledo and by eliminating
$2.5 million In repairs and
Improvements to other facilities.
This plan was designed by a task
force appointed by Governor
Celeste. While ·It assured students who participate In the
program now,' It Is a short-term
solution.
The governor's task force
addressed the long- term Issues
by deciding to reduce !he grants

to 60 percent of tuition costs
beginning in fiscal year 1988 and
to allow only Guardsmen who
had. applied for the scholarships
before November 1, 1987 to
receive the aid this year. These
proposals have not yet been
acted upon in the legislature.
In fact : there Is now talk of the
General Assembly having to
come up with an additional $5

Page-2-The Daily Seminel
Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 1, 1988

Howard's .pork exresss

d~railed

~

GENECADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Cent ral Michigan needed two
ga me-winning baskets to beat
Ohio University Saturday after. noon In Athens. Nevertheless, the
Chippewas left town hot on the
heels of Mid -American Confere nce leader Eastern Michigan.
The fir st game-winner by
Cha uncey Scott with three se. conds to play was disallowed
when one the officials Inadvertently blew his whistle prior to the
shot. He said he thought he had
heard the scoreboard buzzer
soulld amidst. all the noise.
After a · dlscus~lon, referee
Roger Parramore ruled the ball
be given back to Central with the
same three seconds put back on
the clock.
That done . the Chippewas just
duplicated the ending. But, this
time it was Ed Wilcox who lofted
a corner jumper over the outs tretched hand of 6-foot-9 Bobcat
John Rhodes, giving Central a
.67-65 victory.
· It lifted the Chippewas to 11-8
overall and 5'2 In the MAC, just
one game behind Eastern Mighi·
gan . beaten 81 -78 Saturday after·
r10on by Western Michigan. OU ,
which entered the game tied for ·

8UT, THIS TIME
TttE'fvE GoNE Too FAR! .

RACINE - Although most
teams would be content to put 86
points on the · scoreboard, the
Miller Falcons fluttere&lt;! in frus·
tratlon as the mighty Southern
Tornadoes touched down to
sweep them away 117-86 in a
scorching hot non-league basket·
ball contest in Racine.
Hitting 9' three-pointers from
25-foot range. Dave Amburgey
spearheaded the attack with. 38
bullseyes , while counterpart Jeff
Caldwell added 23. Senior post
man. Kenny Turley knotted 17
markers, Shannon Riffle 11.
Dave McMillin 10 and Shawn
Diddle 9. as 10 Tornadoes penetrated the scoring column.
Despite the fan s 'being left in
awe of the Tornadoes ' barnstorming. Miller' s Tom Dulle!
grabbed game-high honors with
a clinic of his own , scoring 39
points.
· Tim Hatfield also had a good
evenin g with 29 markers, John
Edwards 17, and Ch uck Dutiel
c
with 9.
Unlike the KC -ga me on Friday
evening, Saturday's tempo was
blistering as Southern opened up
a· 23-16 fi rst period lead, upping
the score to 57-38 in a 3~-poinf
scoring spree.
·
By the end of frame-3 Southern
had· a 90-64 lea d. hitting the
century mark with 5: 55 left in the
game. The final ended 117-86.
Pr ior to the ga m e Southern's
Jeff Caldwell was honored with
the game-ball as lhe hit the 1000

Hart was caught, made the
Donna Rice affair, In Hart's ·
opinion, such a "damn fool
mistake"?
(Even today, he
clearly regards It as far less
blameworthy than any number
of misdeeds uncovered In · the
Iran/ contra Investigation. "I
didn't shred any papers," he
reminded Kalb.) ·
'There Is, however, always the
possibility of blackmail. If the
Donna Rice affair had occurred
during a Hart presidency,' one
must assume that the negative of
tha.t picture 'of her on his lap
might command a formidable
prlc~. In cash or ~orne other
form .
And our more ardent feminists
can be forgiven for wondering
whether, at this point In our
national life, we want as president a man with Hart's demonstrated attitude toward women,
InCluding both hls wife and Rice.
At any rate, we are Indebted to
Gary Hart for making his postlion clear. We can take him,
warts and all, or we can leave
him . "Let the people decide."

My advice to the .candidates __G_e_org_e_M,.--cG_ov_er.....,..n

the United States can make to
Israel's security Is for us to carry
out the role of an honest broker In
million to ball out the program.
the Middle East peace process. It
The extra $5 million would' be to
helps neither Israel nor ourcontinue to provide 100 of tuition
selves when presidential candl·
costs after June and to accept the
applications of those who lnvo- suggestion based on personal · dJljes give In to such politically
disastrous demands. The proper
experience.
luntarlly missed the November 1
answer
for a presidential condeadline. Some who missed t he
Lately I have observed several
tender
to
this request Is "No."·
C\11-off date were In basic train·
of the candidates making a
Another
mistake I see some of
mistake that , I made as the
lng at the time, so there Is no
Democratic nominee In 1972 the contenders making, which I
excuse for not paying their yielding to speclallntetest pres- am confident they will one day
tuition.
sures that are not In the national regret, Is their unreasonably
The legislat ure must act to Interest.
harsh judgments about each
ens11re that till:' tuition program
The clearest example of this Is other.
remains solvent after June, that
the yielding of candidates to a
At one point In an NBC
Guardsmen continue to receive
presidential
candidates' debate,
full tuition, and that the program small but .~nergetlc band of
Jewish voters who want the Rep. Richard Gephardt referred
is no longer mismanaged. There American embassy in Israel to Sen .• Paul Simon's economic
are two bills pending In the Ohio moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusa- views as "Reaganomics with a
General Assembly that address lem. I made such a commitment bow· tie." This may be a clever
the problem. On another front, In 1972; other candidates are one-liner, but It Is untrue and
the new Adjuntant General has going down the same mistaken unfair.
promised to keep legislators and road in 1988.
· A third mistake that I see some
other interested parties InIt would be disastrous for of the candidates making Is
forme!] of changes In the pro- American Interests In the Middle getting, too uptight ' - possibly
gram by publishing a mopthly East to take such a co\lrse. from fatigue and excessively
Ohio National t;;llard Tuition Fortunately, no American presi- heavy schedules. Recently VIce
G·rant Newsletter.
dent ever has. Jerusalem Is a President George Bush turned on
Close cooperation between the dl
t d 1 I
Adjutant General, the leglsla- · spu e c ty. 1 does not legally James Gannon, editor of The Des
lure, and the Governor should belong 10 Israel. Indeed, the city Moines Register, who was modlead to measures that ensure the Is as meaningful to the Moslems . eratlng a candidate's debate In
of the Arab world, and to Iowa, and blasted him for his
tuition program continues to Christians, as It Is to the Jews.
editorial ~plnio,ns on Bush's role
offer financial assistance to
In the Irangate scandals.
Guardsmen attending· college.
It Is part of the "occupied
Every presidential candidate
The state has no choice but to territories" taken over by the
has
been the subject of at least a
fulfill Its 'Commitment to these Israelis In· the 1967 war, but Us
legal status has never been few "unfair" editorials. But a
and future students.
resolved. That Is why the United candidate who explodes and
It you have any questions or · States has refused to locate Us loses Ills "cool" In public weakcomments on this or an~ other embassy )n Jerusalem. If we ens his public standing and his
lssu~ thai concerns you, do not were to do so, our srandlng ·and
capacity to lead.
·
hesl.ate to ·c ontact me at my · Influence In the Arab world
A fourth and final warning I
office, Jan Michael Long, Slate would collapse.
would give to candldllles Is to
Senator, Ohio Senafe, State·
Israelis and those who support avoid pledging Instant, unilathouse, Columbus, Ohio, 43216, or , Israel, as I do, must realize that eral action by ·the president to
call 614-446-8156.
the most enduring contribution reso!ve the nation's problems.
· ~erhaps a mal'\ who has sought
the presidency of the United
States and lost should avoid
offering advice to other ·contenders. From.time to time, however,
I feel strongly tempted to make a

Nearly all of the major problems.
Nearly all of the major problems
wlll remain 'unsolved unless the
next president can develop an
effective. working relationship
·
with Congress.
A presidential candidate Is not
running for the office of king. He
seeks an office that Is embedded
In our constitutional tripartite
system of checks and balances . It
Is, for example, Congress that

determines the amount and nature of federal' taxes. It Is
Congress that has the constltutlonal 'power to declare war .
A pre~idential contender
should understand that the only
oath ·he takes is to uphold the
Constitution and to execute the
laws of the land. He should avoid
pretending that, If elected, he can
slngle-handedly resolve ali our
problems.

Rod Strickland 's 30 points. Alien hit a pair or free throws
sUpped to 12-5. With the .score with 12 seconds left and Charles
64 -64 with 1; 25 to go, Brown Smith scored 18 points to help
. Georgetown defeat Connecticut.
converted a 3-polm play .
At El Paso, Texas, Darrell
Saturday, No. 1 Arizona
downed No . 14 Illinois 7.8-70. McGee scored 14 points , includIng the winning basket, and
~ .-nlana defeated No. 2 Purdue
.
Charlie
Thomas added 13 to lead
. ~~- 79, No . 3 North Carolina
New
'Mexico
to a Western Atshaded Georgia Tech 73-71. No.5
hletlc
Conferenc~
decision over
Nevada-Las Vegas pounded Pa- ·
UTEP.
clflc 92 -67,No. 7 Brigham Young
At Iowa City, · Iowa. B.J.
botnbed Air Force 95-75 and No.
Armstrong
scored 18 points, all
10 Oklahoma edged No . 17 Iowa
on
3-point
baskets,
to )ead Iowa
State 96-91.
and
hand
Minnesota
its. 22nd Big
No. 11 Pittsburgh topped BosIn
Its
last
23
outings .
Ten
loss
ton College 73-67, Vanderbilt
At Providence, R.I .. Eric Mu r·
crushed No. 12'Florida 92-65, No .
15 Georgetown edged Connecti· dock scored 7 of his 17 points In
cut 60-59, New Mexico bumped overtime to pace Providence,
No. 16Texas-El Paso70-69, No . 18 which overcame a 47-28 deficit
early in the second half .
·
Iowa bashed Minnesota 76-51
19 points, Stan Kimbrough added
At
Columbia,
S.C.,
Terry
DozProvide.n ce downed No.19 Villan17 and Barnett and Tyrone Hi1115
82-76 In overtime and South ier scored 20 points and Darryl
ova
each .
,
.
Carolina stopped co-No. ·20South · Martin added 19 points and 13
Akron rolled to Hs sixth consecrebounds to lead South Carolina
ern Mississippi 97-78.
utive win 'with an easy 96-57
At Tucson , Ariz .. Tom Tolbert past Southern Mississippi.
decision over Brooklyn College.
scored 20 points and Steve Kerr . . - - - - - - - - - - - - Ken Cullifer scored 17 poJQIS.
added 17 to help Arizona become
Shawn Roberts 16 and three other
the season's fir st 20-game wi nner
The Daily S~ntinel
Akron players were in double
In
Division
l.
figures . The Zips led 51-19 a.t
At Bloomington, Ind., Dean
(USPS IU-9611)
halftime.
A DivisiOn "of ,Multimedia, Inc.
Garrett
capped
a
31
-polnt
Youngstown State continued to ·
performance by scoring with
Published £'very afTernoon , Monday
struggle, dropping an 87-62 Ohio
throogh Frid ay, 111 Cou rt St. , Po·
Valley Conference to Murray . live seconds remaining, lifting
mer oy. Oh io, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Indiana
to
a
Big
Ten
victory
State.
lishlng Company / Multimedia. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·2156. Se;.
In the OhiO Athletic Confer- that ended Purdue's winning
streak a t 16 games.
co nd class postage paid at Pom eroy,
ence, Heidelberg and Ohio North·
Ohio.
At Chapel Hill, N.C., Jeff Lebo
ern remained tied for the lead.
sank five consecutive 3-point
· -Member : UnUed Press International ,·
Northern beat Baldwin-Wallace
Inland Dally P ress Associ at ion and the
shots in the final 4:17. rallying,
60-49 and Heidelberg got by
Ohio Newspap er Assoclali6n. Nationa l
North
Carolina
to
an
Atlantic
Advertising R-epresentative, Branham
Marietta 88-83. In other OAC
Coast
Conference
victory.
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue;
contests, it was Capital over
New York, New York 10017.
Vegas,
Nev.,
Clint
.
At
Las
winless Otterbein 91·49 and WitRossum
scored
17
points,
includPOSTMASTER: Send ~ddress changes .
tenberg over Mount Union 85-55.
t.o The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Ing
three
3:polnt
shots,
to
lead
In the North Coast Athletic
Pomeroy.
Ohio 15169.
Nevada -Las Vegas, 19·1.
· Co nference , Ohio Wesleyan
At Provo, Utah, Mike Smith
SUBSCRIPTION KATES
grabbed a share of the league
By Carrter or Motmo Route
scored 23 points and Jeff Chatlead with a 112-88 victory over
One Week ................................... $1.25
man grabbed 15 rebounds to
One Month ..................... ............ $5.45
Allegheny, ·handing the Ga tors
power Brigham Young. The . One Year ........ .. ................... $65.00
their first league loss. Also in the
SINGLE COPY
NCAC. it was Kenyon over Case Co ugars, 15-0, are the only
PRICE
major
team.
.
unbeaten
Reserve 60-50 and Wooster over
Dally .......... .... ......... ....... .... ~ 25 Cents
At
Ames
,
Iowa.
Stacey
King
Denison 80-57.
Subscribers not desirin g 1o pay the car'
scored 36 points and Mookie
Mid-Ohio Conference · ac.tlon
rter may re mit In advance direct t6
20
to
power
Blaylock
added
The Dally Sen I inel on a 3. 6 or 12 monl h
found Urbana over Cedarville
basis. Credit will be given ca rr ier each
72-71, Rio Grande over Malone qttahoma to its second Big Eight
week.
triumph over Iowa State in four
74-69, Mount Vernon Nazarene
N o subscriptions by mall permitted In .
days
.
over Ohio Dominican 88-83 and
areas where home carrier service Is
At Boston. Charles Smit h
available.
Walsh over Tiffin 66-60.
scored 25 points and grabbed 10
In other garnes Saturday, It
Mail Subscriptions
rebounds for Pittsburgh , 15-2.
was Ashland over Northern KenInside Meigs Count~
'At Nashville. Tenn.. Will
13 Weeks ...................... .. .. ..... . $17 .29
tucky 53-52, Hanover over Bluff.
26 Weeks ........ ..: ....................... $34.06
Perdue
scored
19
points
and
!ton 81-74, Defiance over Wil52 Weeks ......
...... ....... .. .. $66.56
Vanderbilt
hit
all
23
of
its
free
mington 98-71, Findlay over
Outside Metp County
throws for it s sixth straight SEC
13 Weeks ..... .............. ............... $18.20
Dyke 107-91, W&amp;J over Hiram
26 Weeks ..... .. .............. .......... $35.10
victory.
79-76 and Charleston over Cen52 Weeks ............. .. .. .... ............. $61.60
At Landover Md.. Anthony
tral State 103-95.
lately."
Also Sunday , No. 6 Temple
beat Rhode Island 77-70 and
North Carolina State topped ·
DePaul 71-66:
At Kingston. R.I., Tim Perry
had·a career-high 27polnts and 15
rebounds to power Temple, 16-1
and 10-llnthe Atlantic 10. Kenny
Green scored 18 points for Rho&lt;le
Island, 17-3 and 7-2.
~~ Raleigh . . N.C..
Chucky
Brown collected 22 points and 10
rebounds and Rodney Moore
added 17 points to ·Jead the
Wolfpack, 12-4. DePaul, led by

games, Toledo beat Miami 88-75
and Kent State edged Bowling
Green 74-72.
.
At Oxford, Toledo got 19 points
from Chad Keller, 16 from Mark
German and double figure scorIng from three others in Its
victory over Miami.
The Rockets led 29-27 with 5:40
left In the first half but wept to the
dressing room with 40-31 bulge.
Toledo · broke the game open
:with a 14-5 run at the start of the
second half that Increased the
Rocket lead to 55-35 with 15; 30 to
play,
At Kent, Stacy Williams hit an
18-foot, game-winning jumper
with 5 seconds remaining as Kent
State beat Bowling Green. Jim
Mangapora led the Golden
Flashes with 20 points :
Anthony Robinson and Steve
Martenet paced Bowling Green
with 22 and 21 points.
· Cincinnati beat Dayton 76· 74 In
overtime
as .Cedric Glover
"Tommie ;Johnson hurt us.
25
points
and hit a_ pair of
scored
That long-range shooting won't
clinching
free
throws
In the final
always beat you, but it did today.
of
the
overtime.
seconds
We played well enough to win,"
The Bearcats led 74-72 with 12
added Hahn. "The Lord tests you
and we'll survive the test. Therl' seconds left before Glover sank
are 9 games left and a lot of both ends of a one-and-one
situation. Negele Knight hit a
things can happen."
In Saturday 's other MAC 15-foot shot at the buzzer for the
Flyers.
'
At East Rutherford, N.J. ,
Byron Larkin hit a 10-foot jumper
with 16 . seconds to play to lift
Xavier to a 78-75 win over St.
Peter's.
Xavier trailed 75,74 before
Larkin' hit a 10-footer from the
point mark for his four year lane. J.D. Barnett sa nk 2 free
throws eight seconds later to
career(771 prior to this year).
1he scoring.
complete
SHS hit a sizzli ng 56
Larkin
was held to a se&lt;\son low
percent(29-51) and 12-16 from
3-pt. land With 10-26 at the line.
Miller was 30-54 for 55.5, 4-13, and
.14-21.
SHS had 36 'Bounds: McMillin
10 and T!Jrley 8, while MHS had 38
led by Outlets' ten.
,
Miler's downfall came with 29
turnovers; while SHS had 13, 8
stea)s, and 3 asslssts . Fouls were
19 &amp; 26 respectively.
Jay Rees' clube won the
reserve m atch after trailing by ·
nine in the last round, 60-48. Chad
Taylor had 22.Todd Grindstaff 8,
Roy Johnsons and ; Brad Maynard "7. Bruton had 15 and
Doughty 14 lor MHS.
Southern travels to Oak Hill
Friday for a piece of the SVAC.
Score by quarters:
Southern ......... .. 23 34 33 24-117
Miller .. ............. 16 22 26 22- 86
SOUTHERN (117) - Chris
Stout 1-0-2, Dave Amburgey
4-9-3-38. Shannon Riffle 3-1-2·11. ,
Jeff Caldwell 6-1-8-23, Scott
McPhail 0-0-0. Mike Amos 1-0-2.
Dave McMillin 4-2-10, Shawn
Your local power company is a
Cunningham 0-1-0-3. Kenny Turpart
of American Electric Power,
ley 7-0-3-17, Shane Simpson 1-0-2,
· a family of power companies.
Shawn Diddle 2-5-9, Brent Shuler
So the electricity you use to brew
0-0-0. TOTALS 29-12-23-117
MILLER (86)- John Edwards
your morning coffee comes from a
6-0-5-17, Chuck Dutlel4-1-9. Kevin
network of people and power and
Newman 0-0·0, John Fulk 1-2-4,
Tom Dutiel 14-3-2-39, Dough.t y
-.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ resources that links seven states.
t::;::;;;.o "'
That network helps us deliver
1-2-4. Hatfield 2-1-9, Larry Dishon
1-0-2, Stlckard .1-0-2. TOT,ALS
electricity quickly and efficiently,
30-Hf-88.
while keeping down the cost.
second with tentral, fell to 9-9
and 4-3.
.:'I feel very bad for Ohio
University and Billy Hahn." said
CMU Coacl\ Charlie Coles, " but
I'll take this victory with no
second thoughts. we fought our
tails off and any time you come
out of here with a win, It's g.ood."
Central won the game although
Dan Majerle, the MAC's leading
scorer , got just 5 polnts,19 under
hrs average. All those came In the
first half.
Tommie Johnson, however,
picked up the slack for Central,
sc9rlng 32 points and hitting 6 of 9
from 3-polnt range . Paul
"Snoopy" Graham led OU with
31 points.
"I can't fault our team," said
Hahn, who saw his squad drop its
third in a row after seven
consecutive wins. "We played
hard for 4.0 minutes.

a

This morning 23,316 P-eople
brought you your coffee.

Scoreboard.u
.
Mt Vrrnon II. J\Hidalld II

Prey ~ores

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ftluokl•yt• Tnlil -Ill, Slrlrnundoah Ill
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fill Thukt•ft f.l. MW~lllllo• ·lat•bon Ill
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fill Brnokha~\'rn II. fol O..SIIPfi 3~
ful U-.ll"'• MriUnll')' M. O.y " 'hilt• it
l'nl \\'MJk·r~n il, Dt'lll.wllrt• ll'l

CAADIDA"TE

C'••

NITE

"'t.

Duy nuan,..Jul 5i.

Da)'

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/

.

.Berry's World
•

and Eric Manuel, two of the
nation's most prominent high
school .Players a year· ago ,
combined for 22 points to lead the
Wildcats, 14-3.
Ellis collected 14 points, 6
rebounds and 5 steals In his first
· college start. Manuei had8 points
and 4 assists.
"I'm real please&lt;) with the
performance of o'u r ·two fresh men," Kentucky Coach Eddie
Sutton said . "I liked the way they
played. The chemistry seemed
better today than It has ·been

Tornado quintet
rolls ,past Miller

Hart's offer to America ---~_w_u_tw_m_R_us_he_r
•
dential
candidate, a mistake ..:...
Indeed, "a damn fool mistake"and he Implicitly pledges that it.
won't happen again. (Or does he?
It would f?e better If the pledge
had been explicit.)
The question Is whether the
general rule thus laid down, and
the way In which Hart applies it
to himself, Is enough to satisfy
the American people.
Kalb rightly pointed out that
the general rule e ndorsed ·by
Hart was adopted In the days
before technology made possible
a far closer monitoring of the
private behavior of public figures. Can we, Kalb I"Ondered,
reasonably expect it to be the
rule today? Hart's reply was that
we must, unless we are prepared
to forego the services of a great
many widel¥ beloved politicians.
(One example, certainly, would
have been Hart's own hero John
F. Kennedy, Who kept the White
House humming with the comIngs and 'goings of his numerous
lady friends.)
If that Is so,' however, then
want, aside from the fact that

;\t Louisville, Ky., LeRon. Eilts

· Cole~ felt' bad,for OU, but happy to win tilt

TJ'IE INTE~Ac1ivE ToYs
8AI) ENoUGH,

ft&amp;rroll 311

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"I'VE GOT m Why don't we go with a 'GONG
SHOW' FORMAT?"
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'

By MIKE WElL
. Rill\Y Selkaly matched his
UPI Sports Writer
career-hlgh ' of 33 points and
Kentucky and Syracuse used
Derrick Coleman added 18
breaks from their Southeastern
points, 9 rebounds and 6 steals to
liQd Big East schedules Sunday
power the Orange, 15-5,
to good advantage.
"Something .he Is starting to
The No. 9 Wildcats, routed by
understand. Is when teams play
Vanderbilt 83-66 Wednesday,
man -to-man we are going to get
stifled Notre Dame guard David
him the basketball," . Syracuse
Rivers and beat the· Irish 78-69.
Coach Jim Boehelm said of
Rivers scored 21 points but hll
Selkaly after the senior center hit
just 7 of 17 shots and made 8. 13 of 17 shots. ·"When they play
turnovers .
zone It's a different story."
Syracuse. having fallen from a
Gary Grant led Michigan, 17-3,
preseason No, 1 ranking to No.13,
with 22 points.
dropped Nil, 8 Mlc!Jigan 89-11.

WASHINGTON - Every
Senate or House floor. One of the rightfully should be saved for projects sent over by the Senate.
Christmas, members ol Con- boldest Is New Jersey Democrat correcting typos and. rnlspell - The committee looked like an
.gress ~&lt;Cramble like ,e lves to pass Jim Howard, the foreman of the lngs. The Senate refused to buy easy mark, but It wasn't. The '
members said no to most of
their favorite treasures Into law Capitol Hill Pork Factory, better hls "corrections."
Howard
's more questionable
.So, Howard forged on to the
before the recess tor the hoi!- known as the House Public
projects.
, House Appropriations Commitdays. O!ten, the. lawmakers hide Works Committee.
Down, but not out, Howard
tee, which was working on the
little presents to themselves In
While other l awmakers
then
tried to tack his pet projects
l&gt;lgger bills. The surprises some- grappled with trimming the continuing resolution, the bill
to
the
Budget Reconciliation Act,
times masquerade as housekeep- . budget deficit, Howard ~pent the that keeps the government runihe
bill
that Congress hoped
lng changes, euphemistically Iast weeks before ·christmas ning unlll tndlvldual bl!dgets are
approved ..You might think that's · would slice blllloris from tile
k n ow n a s . ' ' t e c h n I c a I · . bringing home the bacon an
unlikely place to find millions deflcl t and settle the Wall Street
aruendments."
scouring the Hill In search of
In road projects, but jitters over the growing national
of
dollars
Several members recently got ways to stuff a few more road
·c aught sneaking In funding for · projects into the stockings of his you can't keep a good porker debt. To no one's surprise,
everything from sklllfts In Idaho friends. He failed, but not for lack down. Howard's aide told our Howard's proposal was rejected.
Howard had only the most
associate Stewart Harris that the
to a ~enter for the. 'study' of of heroic effort.
.
generous
, of Intentions. He
Belgian endive.
At first, he tried to create his congressman only, tried the backwanted
to
divvy
up $31 million In
The holder members make · own bill for these ,giveaways - a door tactic after the committee
road
projects
for
the districts of
their proposals In the open, on the "technical corrections'' bill that had let stand some pork barrel
his friends In Congress: It was
probably just colndldence that
those friends Wen~ also senior
,members of the house Public
Workss Comnllttee; John Hammerschmidt, R-Ark., Glenn Anderson, D-Callf., and Bud Shuster,
R-Pa .
Howard and Ills pals run a
'~JERE
system that hands out public
works money based on polltlcal
clout, not on merit. That Isn't to
say these particular projects
""'&lt;=-....
wouldn't be worthwhile, but th~
system doesn't allo~ for much
weighing of priorities. Howard
lavishes money on hls friends
while other urgent projects go
unfunded.
. Pork players argue that the
money comes from the Highway
Trust F;und, which Is a separate
pot of gold and doesn't count
against the national debt. It is
funded by gasoline taxes. What
they don't seem to grasp Is that
many of the states· would rather
have the money go to needier
projects.
For those states that manage ·
to delay the unwanted projects
and spend the money where it is
really needed, Howard had a
Christmas gift, too.

Former Sen. Gary Hart's tele- forward · detailed and explicit
vised discussion with Marvin proposals on many of the serious
Ka]b before a live audience at problems facing the nation. Most
Harvard on the afternoon of Jan. of them are simply wrongheaded
3 was a fascinating affair. It from a conservative standpoint,
demonstrated, at a minimum, and many of them wouldn't even
that Hart has done some ·serious survive·the scrutiny of a reasonathinking in the months since he bly skeptical liberal. But by the
withdrew from the Democratic standards of his Democratic ·
competitors they have the precipresidential race last May.
He clearly doesn't e njoy dis- sion of a fine Swiss watch.
On the Issue of womanizing,
cussing his reputation for "womanizing." But he's ready to do so, · Hart's position Is almost equally
within limits, If he has to clear. He argues (If I understand
provided he is also afforded an him correctly I that for 200 years
opportunity to discuss Issues he It was broadly agreed In Americonsiders far 'm ore relevant to can .politics that an office
his candidacy.
holder's private life was nobody
,Kalb proved an excellent Inter- else's business unless It Interviewer, first offering Hart the fered with his conduct of that
opportunity he demanded and office. Hart endorses this rule, Is
then questioning him, politely willing to have it applied to him ,
but very firmly Indeed, on the and Is apparently prepared (at
painful subject. The result w~s a least henceforth ) to itve by 11 .
program that raises In their .
On. the subject of his escapade ·
sharpest form certain extremely with Donna Rice, he Is unwilling
difficult questions concerning a to discuss It In detail, perhaps
person's qualifications for the partly out of a concern for Rice's
sensibilities. But he readily adpresidency.
Let me begin by giving Hart mits that the whole thing was,
the credit he deserves for putting from the standpoint of a pres!-

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The Daily Sentinel Page--3

Kentucky, Syracuse post Super Sunday hardwood wins

Anderson and
van Aua

Ohio

�.

Page 4 The o.ily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. February 1, 1988

Monday. February 1, 1988

Meigs edges Point Pleasant

BLOCKS SHOT - Meigs' Brett Bissell (33)
blocks PPHS shot during Saturday night's
non-league hardoowd action at Point Pleasant.

The Mar11uders won, 82-77. Defender on right Is
John Burdette (00). On lowerleltisMikeBartrum
( 15) .

Redmen defeat
Pioneers, 74-69
CANTON - A winning week
for Rio Gra nde's men's basket ball team ended Saturday with
the Redmen ove rcoming a Malone lead in the second hall to
post a 74'-69 victory · over the
Pioneers a t Osborne Ha ll.
The Redmen are 19-6 overall
and maintain second place in the
Mid-Ohio Conference with a 7-2
mark. Malone is in third place at
6·4 and is 10-11 on the season.
Hal Smi th 's cl ub. which had
defea ted Rio Grand e 77-76 on
Jan . 5 at Ly ne Center on an Andy
Booth j.umperat the buzzer. took
comma nd of th e floor early,
bu ildi ng a 22-8 advantage over
the visitors with 12: 38 remaining.
Rio Grande's defense, keyed by
the performances of seniors Ray
Singleton and Ron Rininger,
pic ked up an d held the Pioneers
to 12 additiona l points . while the
vis itors scored 23 poin ts to trail
34-31 at halftime.
The Redmen remained a round
3 po in ts behind Ma lone until the
JO: .13 mark when the _game tied
48-48. With 8:25 left, guard Jim
Kearns sa nk a 3- point field goa l
to put the Redmen a head t53-52)
lor the fi rst time. The visitors
were to sta y a head ol Malone by
as much as 5 points. wh ile
Malone cam e as close as 1 t67-66)
with le" th an a minute
r emainin g .

The Pioneers then missed a
shot. all owing Rio Grande's
Brian Wa tkin s lo net anot her
:1-pointcr. putting the Redmen

ahead 70-66. Singleton then hit 4 ·
clutch free throws to give Rio
Grande the win.
Singleton scored a total of 27
points and recorded 7 rebounds to
help the Redmen win the game, .
while Rlttinger had 20 points and
10 rebounds. Kearns had 13
points . From the field. Rio
Grande was 51 percent on 26 of 53
tries and netted 13 of 17 attempts
on free throws for 76 percent.
For Malone, guard Keith
Troyer had another top game
against the Redmen, scoring 26

ra';~~r~ r~~u~dsa:: l:~:~st;4
points, 14 rebounds and 3 assists
to complete the double-figure
sco ring for the Pioneers, who
sa nk 28 of 55 attempts on field
goals for 51 percent. Malone put
down 12 of its 15 iries on free
throws for 80 percent.
Saturday's game opened the
second round of MOC games for
the season. The Redmen travel to
Moun.t Vernon Nazarene on Tuesday for a 7:30 p.m. game.
RIO GRANDE (74)- Anthony
Raymore, 0-3-5-3; Brian Watkins, 0(31-0-3-9; Jim Kearns.
0(4) -1-5-13; Ray Singleton. 9-9-1 27; John Lambcke, l -0-0-2; Ron
Rittinger. 10-1 -3-20. TOTALS
27(7) -13-17-74 .
MALONE (69)- Todd Martin .

1-0-1-2: Tim Schlabach, 3-0-1-7:
Perry, J-0-0-2; Keith Troyer.
11 (]) -3-3-26; Rex Adams, 5+3·
14: And y Booth, 4-1-4·9: Mark
Mason. 3-3-1-9. TOTALS 28( 1)-12-

1

RAY SINGLETON

I8-69.
REDMEN NOTES: Ray Singleton, the 6-3 forward from
Painesville, wa s nominated for
MOC Player of the Week for his
performances in las\ week's
games. Singleton, who ha s
played in 24 of the Redmen 's 25
games . scored 17 points apiece
against .Tiffin on Tuesday and
Wilmington on Thursday, boostIng his total to 27 against Malone
Saturday. Singleton scored 25
points against Tiffin on Dec. 1.
Tickets remain available at
Lyne Center for the Rio GrandeDyke ga me to be played Fe b. i 2
in the Richfield Coliseum . This
game will precede the Cleveland
Cavaliers-New J·e rsey Nets encounter se t at the sports arena.
Ticke ts are going for S5 at Lyne
Cente r a nd wi ll cost $9 at the
door.

Washington grid (ans celebr3:te title
WASHJNf:TO N IUP I )- Up to
fa ns celebrat ed the Wa·
shington Redskin s ' Super Bqwl
vic tor y in the streets ol the
na tio ~· s ca pi ta l. hanging from
30-foot ligh t poles. stopping traf- ·
fi e and dancing vi ctory j igs. At
Iea st 21l arrests we re made and a
m un i n the c r owd was shol ea rl y
1110 .01~ 1

t o d a~~ .

Quart erbac k Doug WIilia ms
threw !.o ur touc hd own passes
Sunda y to It' ad a dizzying 35-poin1
outburst in the second q ua rt er
and bring the Redskins bac k

from a 10-0 -delicit to bea t the
Denver Broncos 42.-10.
One person was shot in the leg
abou t 1 a.m. in the Georgetown
business di strict mob-, pollee
said. Authorities also reporled
celebra nts broke windows and
overt urned a taxi.
Police had no motive or suspect in the shooting. The victim
was hospitalized thi s morning in
stable condition.
Dozens of off-key renditions of
"Hail to lhe Redskins" echoed
th rough Washington sub,w ay sta·

By JIM SOULSBY
Despite the fact they led for
thirty one and one half minutes of
the contest, the Marauders
seemed to be flgl)tlng an uphill
battle to overcome other factors
of the game as they jousted the ,
Big Black Knights of Point
Pleasant 82.-77.
After trading baskets to ·tle the
score at two with 1:25 el.apsed in
quarter one, Meigs · outscored
. the ir hosts eight to one ill the next
three and one half . ITllnutes of
play and held a six point bulge at
quarters end.
In the second frame, PPHS
drew first blood on a field goal by
Steve Miller. Following that,
Meigs used a full court press to
force four turnovets in· less than
two minutes . Field goals by
Brent Bissell, Mike Bartrum (2)
and Joey Snyder. one Bartrum
charity toss, gave the Marauders
a thirteen point edge before Point
could score ' again. With sixteen
minutes go11e. Meigs had a
thirteen point lead. ·
HI ttlng the offensive and defen-

MUS girls topple Falcons

Score by quarters;
Trallng most of the-game, the
Meigs defense tightenecf ln the Meigs ............ ......... . 8 28 44 56
early part of the flnal quarter o(· Miller .,... ................. 14 34 44 52
play, denying the Falcons the
The Meigs girls JV squad
good shot and the Marauderettes
opened a four polnt lead enroute posted a 41-29 win over the
to a 56-5.2 triumph over Miller.
Falcon Reserves In the opening
Down by fourteen at the contest of the night.
halfway mark of the game,
Kelly Smith was the leading
Melgs came back to knot the scorer for the game with a total of
score · afater three quarters. 12 points. Jennifer Taylor finAfter gaining the advantage In Ished second with 8 for the
the final frame , the Marau- winners. Rounding out the scorderettes slowed the pace and Ing for Meigs were Amy Rouse 7,
forced the Lady Falcons to Kristin Stanley 6 and Missy
foul.Jeimifer Taylor hit on four of. Nelson, Amy Wagner, Shannon
flve from the line to ice the game. Newsome and Kim Ewing who
'
Missy Woods' 20 points, com- had two each.
ing mostly during the second and
The junior Marauderettes
third quarters , kept Meigs In the were never In serious trouble
thick of the fray and earned her during the contest, building a
gam e high honors. Wendy Fry seventeen point lead at the end of
finished in double figures with the third quarter.
ten and Cheryl Doughty led the
Tournament Play Set
Fa lcons with 16 markers.
Coach Roger Foster's Marauderettes will meet Wellston's
In the rebounding game for
Golden Rockets In the opening
Me igs , Fry had 7 and Woods 6.
round of tournament play at
Tammy Wright was credited
Alexander Hlgh School on Tueswith 6 s\eals and 4 assists an\!
day, Feb. 16. Starting time for the
Shelly Stobart had 3 assists.
game Is 6:30p.m .
From the free throw stripe
Should the Meigs girls win,
Meigs hit 10 of 19 attempts and
they will play Galllpolis on
Miller had 6 ofll. No stats were Thursday, Feb.18, at 7 p.m.
avallable on ttetd goal
percentage.
College scores
Box Scores:
Ohlo C'ollt•lft' Bat~kkball Rt•!lldl t~
8)' Unllf'd PrMt!llnWrnat;tlolllll
MEIGS- Stbbart 2-1-5; Woods
Naturday, .Jan. 3fl
9-2-20; Fry 5-0-10; Jody Taylor
Kt&gt;nl Sl 7-1, BowiiDK Grl'!rn 7.!
Tolt'd• IlK. Mlaunl 75
. 3-2-8; Wright 2-0-4; Beth Ewing
t'l&gt;nll'lll Ml"h 17, Dhill J,Jntv 115
1-1-3; Jennifer Taylor 0-4-4; ·
flnclnftllli'Ui. lht.yto• i .J (ol)
Xavif'r 711, Sl. Peter' ,. ':5
Smith 1-0-2.
Munay St In, Vo.-~town St 112
MILLER - Doughty 8-0-16;
Akron H. Brooklyn 57
Ohio NqrA.rm 10, Bakh·ln·\\'itlhut• ~A
Stiles 1-2-4; Simmons 3-1-7: Lytle
c:a,W.Ill 11, OI:W!rheln n
3-3-9; Cheryl Dodson 3-0-6; Altier
Hrlde~ IUl, Marlett. K:l
KIIWmt•rJ HS, Mt Union 5:;
4-0-8: Ca rol Dodson 1-0-2.
Ohio WKh-yan 112, .o\.Uel{hny (Pa) lUI

'

--""""l'

~~

MONDAY

I

e

/

93

618 EAST MAIN STIEO
H&amp;R ILOCK LOCATION
POMEIOI, OHIO 45769
(614) 992-7271

Super Dilg

6 Pc.
and
Chicken
Coke Nuggets

spo
7
Double
Homes lyle

Brazier

99(
MARAUDER WRESTLERS- Memben of the.
1987-88 Meigs Marauder wrestling team are,
kneeling left to right, Nathan Baley, Jeremy
Heel(, Joe McElroy, Jell McElroy, Wess Howard

and Eric Heck. Standing behind lhtm are head
coach Kevin Sheppard, Aaron Sheets, Jared
Sheets, Wes Young, Decker Collums and Anthony
Miller. -

.

THURSDAY

3

2

99(

regular
Hot Dog

Chicken
Fillet

45&lt;

SJ39

4

FRIDAY
Fish

99(

5

SATURDAY
lanana
Pean~t

~lit

NAMED MVP - Washington Redsklns quarterback Doug
Williams walla to hand of! late In Sunday's Super Bowl, played In
san Dlege. Wllllama, wha set Super Bowl records of ~ yards
passing and four touchdown passes, was named tile game s MVP.
The Reuklns won 42-10- (UPI) '

6

or
luster

99c
Small c.. I sc
Parfait

"CAN

Da•rY Qu en
700 N. 2nd Middleport
. 992-3322
""

•

"Generally, I was pleased with spectator's leg and bounced in.
the round," Lyle said. "! didn' t Couples then missed an 18-foot
three-putt. I only had one or two putt for par to match Lyle's
putts per hole and didn't bogey bogey .
until 18."
Lyle again left an opening on
That bogey almost cost him a
chance at a playoff. Lyle hit his the second extra hole, the par-4
approach shot at the par-4 hole 17th. He left his approach shot
into a bunker, then missed a par just five feet away from the hole,
putt from 15 feet away to settle but .pushed his birdie putt to the
lor bogey . That dropped him one right and had to settle lor par .
shot behind Couples, who was Couples hit a 3-foot par putt to
playing one group behind the stay In It.
.
"I couldn't get m yself settled, "
Briton.
But Couples pulled hls tee shot Lyle said of the birdie putt.
left on 18, bouncing along the adding that he thought he saw a
edge of a lake until it struck a break in the putting llne, but i1
went straight.

But at the next hole, the 18th , ir
was Couples that lefl the opening,
hitting his tee shot int o the water
for the second time. After taking
a drop, he then hit his approach ·
shot in to a pot bunker.
Lyle hit his drive Into a fairwa y
bunker and put his approach shot
behind the green. But he chipped'
to within 12 fee t of the hole a nd
two-putted for a bogey, earning
the victory when Couples missed
his bogey pu tt from 30 feet.
"He gave me the (trophy) in
the end /' 'Lyle said of Couples.
" Maybe he felt sorry lor me
missing the putt beforehand (o n
17) .. .

Washington Capitals edge Flyers
By United Press International
Kelly Miller ended a 60-mlnute
goal tending duel and eased frus\rations bullt up over 42 games
with a single shot Sunday.
The Capitals' rlghtwlngscored
his sixth goal of the season 1: 33
into overtime to ·Jift Washington
to a 1-0 victory over the Phlladel-

phla Flyers.
"I've been a little frustrated
with my offensive play this
season," said Miller, who · has .
collected only nlne points In his '
last 42 games. " I was really
happy to score the game-winner,
but I wou ld have been h~,PPY if
any one of us had scored.

Miller dug the puck out from .
behind the Flyers net. skated
around and flicked the puck off ~f
defen_seman KJell Samueisson s
slick and past goalie Ron J:~ ex:a ll ·
to give the Capitals their first
oyertlm e victory and. the Flye~s
llieir first -overttme ,loss this
sea~on .

"It was a nice dump by Rod.

tLangway).Jdldn 'tseeSamuels-,
son on th e left , but took one s tep·
that way and thought he must be
there so I went the other wa y.
Fortunate ly, I made the righ t
dec ision," said Miller, who set
personal highs for goals. assis ts
;tnd point s last season. " I 've been.
putting my best effor t in to every
game, bu t I wasn't seeing resui ts. Maybe this 1goa l) will
change things around ."
Washington goalie Pete Peet - ·.
ers, who mad e 28 saves and
recorded hls first shutout s in ce~
Nov. 23, 1985. sa id Miller 's
production this season ha sn't
reflected his effort.
"Kelly's been fru strated . He's
been playi ng hard and not gettin !(
the rewards," Peeters said.

•

'

.

Junior. guard Chad Leach
scored 22 points to pace Kyger
. Creek to a 63-53 win over visiting
Hannan, W.Va .. Saturday night:
Leach, in halting the Bobcats'
losing streak at fo)lr. had some
help from-senior forward Mike
Bradbury who sank 13 points
and grabbed 13 rebounds, and
junior guard Alan Denney, who
hit for 10. Senior post Bill
Loveday, who scored nine, also
grabbed 13 rebounds.
Mike "Bird" Wilson led the
Wildcats with 20 points, and had
some helpfromTonyYoung, who

·

scored 12, and Charlie Hagley,
Kyger Creek will host Oak Hill
who had 11. The loss snapped Tuesday night.
Hannan's five-game wfnnlng
KYGER CREEK (G 3) - Leach
7
1
streak: .
· ·5· 22 : Bradbury 6·0·1-1 3;. Den_The Bobcats led 24-20 at ney 4-0-2-10: Loveday 2· 0·5-9•
halftime behind 24-for-58 ·shqot- Hodge 3-0·1:7; Reese 1·0·0·2·
lng from the floor that served to TOTALS- 23· 1•14-63
keep them just out of reach of the
HANNAN (53) -Wilson 7· 0·6·
visitors . Hannan shot 18 of 59 - 20; Young 0- 3 · 3 · 1 ~; Hagley 3· 1·2·
11: Dalton 1-2-0-8, Woods 1·0·0· 2·
from the fieldKCHS, now 6-10 overall, sank TOTALS- l2-6-ll-53
14 foul shots In 2.1 attempts and
Team fouls
committed 13 turnovers .. while
Kyger Creek 17 • Hannan 16
Hannan had ,11 points from the
line In 18 tries and had 19
miscues .
,

r-------------------------

pons and burgu-ndy and gold jammed Into Georgetown for the
caps, towels and T-shlrts. Fans festivities. Twenty people were
jumped from cars and danced as . arrested - 13 for disorderly
conduct, four for robbery, two for
· traffic stopped for red lights.
Redskins' fans packed bars assault on a police officer and one
and restaurants In ttie chic for receiving stolen goods.
"Thank God the crowd ls
Georgetown section of the nation's capital, cheering " Go starting to gQ home," Gentile
said around 1: 10 a.m.
Skins" and shouting war-hoo\SOliver Smith of Deep Run,
Just before halftime, the nor.
N.C.,
a man In his 60s whose suit
mally lively streets were virtu tie
made him stand out In the
and
ally deserted . But after the game
mostly
college-age crowd, was
ended, they were filled with
drivers honking horns and cheer- asked why he was at the street
celebration.
Ing pedestrians blocking traffic.
"Ignorance," Smith said. "1
The caps on a fire hydrant were
ripped off and water gushed into wanted to see what 1hls Is all
the street A Georgetown Unll(er- about."
Kristine Johnson, 23, a Parker,
slty student, Identified as Roger
Black of Rockville, Md., mooned Colo. f' native and Denver fan,
the crowd from atop his 30-foot attended a Super &amp;wl party ln
perch. He was called down by WashiMton stocked With Redsklns fans .
•pollee but not arrested.
"We (Denver fans) are much
"We're not going to arrest
anybody. This is fun," sald one more civilized than them because we don't take It person·
policeman.
Pollee estimated 100,000 people ally," she said.

I
.·

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Dlllwereth Monday, Ftbruory 29, Titnt: 5 P.M. til 6 P.M.

..
j.

during the first quarter of Sunday's Super Bowl,
played In San Diego. The Redsklns downed the
Broncos 42-10. (UP!)

ELWAY SACKED - Washington Redskin
safety Alvin Walton (40) sacks Denver .Broncos'
quarterback John Elway (7) lor an 18-yard loss

"Today's Memories .:. Tomorrow's Treasurs"

"-

•

•

TY/

KARL A. KElLER Ill, CPA
KElLER BUSiftESS SERVICES

1

•

• t on... _
Continued
from page
was htng
__
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OUR JOB is to help you make and
save money.

TUESDAY

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SUNDAY

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c·.
k
H
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ger
...
ee
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·
snaps
an
_. ..nan.
KY
k
f•
63
53
·
m
nmg
·
strea
at
tve,
•
•
W

Df'flanc:e liM, Wllmlnclon 71
t'indlay 111'1, Dyke tl
M.' AJ IP~tl 11, Hlrnm 'i6

Outrltol!.to• IDS, Cc-ntnll

'

I

Lyle captures Phoenix Open In playoff

Turnovers spelled doom for the
Meigs Reserves as ihey commit·
ted 31 to only 15 for the Point
Pleasant JV squad. The Little
Marauders fell behind near .the
end of quarter one and co\)ld not
recover for the remainder of the
contest, dropping a 73-53
decision.
The quickness of the. PPHS
defense proved to be the difference In the game as that factor
resulted In numerous steals and,
consequently, easy lay-ups for
~
·
the winners.
Cary Betzing led the Meigs
team In scoring with 15, Randy
Hawley added 9, Jay Humphreys
and Doug Stewart had 8 each,
Scott Barton chipped In 5, Eddie
Crooks 4 and Bret Little and
Chris Stewart had 2 each.
Point hild four players In
double digits with Fogelsong
leading the way with 19 followed
by Stephen Henry's 16, Rich
Reymond's 13 and Jeremy
Blain's 10.
The Marauders travel to
Warren on Tuesday to take on the
W.a rriors in a non-league af~air .

W•OIIlf'r Ml, l)e.ni!IIOn !11'
Urhll ... 1't, CedaniiW 'U
Rio Grandf' 1'4, MaJonc G1l
M• Vernon I'M, OMo Domlnicun K:J
w~t~•lll . Tlftln en
1\itihlllnd SS, N11rther• Kt•.tucky at
H11.nowor (lnd) Kl , Blullton 1-'

·POMEROY - The Carleton
School
River Racers won their
fions and tra ins were lull of
game
Thursday
over the Cubs
celebrati ng fan s. man;y of them
from
the
Guiding
Hand
School by
shouting at th e top of thei r lungs.
41-38
score.
a
Anti-vandalism posters featur Ray Lauderml!t was top point
ing Williams were ri pped from
subway cars a·s a prized sou- getter for the Ri ver Racers as he
venir, with one !an using the · popped in , 35 points for the
pict ure of the quarterback as a winners. Hi gh scorer for the Cubs
makesh ift mas k to th e cheers of wa s Darrell Waugh who canned
12 mar kers.
other riders.
Other score rs for the Racers
On the streei s downtown , ca r
were
Hugh Roush with 5 points
horns blared and passe ngets
Sandy
JohnsoJl who picked
and
wer e hanging out the windows
Short, of the Cubs,
up
three.
Dan
wavi ng Redskins pennan ts , pornhit
for
6
while
teammates Bill
Continued on
5
Brucher had 8. Gene Shaver 2
and Jim Bartley contributed ten.
The River Racers won their
game from ML Aloysius by a
forfeit on Monday. They will
tra vel to Ross County riext
Thursday to face the Tigers.

•1

By DAVE RAFFO
Smith's 58-yard run;: Willlams'
down. He was intercepted three
'UPI Sports Writer ,
50-yard pass to Sanders and
times.
SAN DIEGO- Doug Williams,
Williams' 8-yard pass to Clint
"Did it surprise me the way I
who wearied of b~lng proclaimed played?" · Williams asked In . Didier.
a role model for young black response to a post-game quesAt ·halftime, the Broncos
quarterbacks, became a mod el tion. "Did lt surprise you? That's
trailed 35-10 and were a broken
for all quarterbacks Sunday a heck of a question to ask me,dld
team.
afternoop.
The five scoring drives took a
I surprise me?
He destroyed.the Denver Bron·
total
of 18 plays, averaging 19.8
"All week long the Importance
cos ITlOte , quickly than they of being a black quarterback was
yards per play. Due mostly to
believed possible and lifted the thrown around, but before I got
that quarter, the Redsklns .set or
Redsklns out of disarray so fast here,I Knew one tfilng - I wasn't
tied 14 Super BQwl offensive
one of hls teammates likened the the quarterback. of the Washingrecords.
'
. .
experience to sheer fantasy.
· "The five straight possessions
. ton Redsklns · beeause I was
"It was like dreamland, " sald black. "
where they,scored was really the
Redsk[ns guard R. C. Thielestory of the game," Broncos
Williams' offensive support
mann. " Everything th at Doug · came primarily from rurnlng
Coach Dan Reeves said. "They
threw and everything that we back Timmy Smlth and wide
got so far ahead, It made It very
blocked wenf for big yardage. receiver Ricky Sanders who set . hard to catch up .."
It's unlike Redskin football to records for rushing and receivSmith, a rookie named the
score that 'fast. We' re used to Ing yards respectively .
starter
over George Rogers
seven, eight minute drives- not
. After the game, the Redsklns
the game, gained
minutes
before
going 80 yards in a minute."
savored their gritty comeback
204
yards
and
two
touchdowns on
Williams threw four touch· while the Broncos regretted how
22
carrtes.
He
broke
the record
down passes In a shocking a quickly they wasted a strong
Marcus
Allen
set
when
he gained
35-point second quarter to lead start to lose a lopsided Super
191
yards
for
the
Raiders
aga!r\.st
the ~edsklns to a 42-10 victory 'Bowl for the second straight
the
Redsklns
four
years
ago.
over the . Broncos and their year. The New York Giants
Sanders
caught
nine
passes
for
second Super Bowl title in five routed Denver 39-20 In Super
193
yards
and
two
TDs.
His
years.
Bowl XXI.
receiving yardage topped the
The 32-year-old Williams ,
"That's the only one like that
mark of 161 set by Pittsburgh's
whose role as the first black we played all year," Redskins
Lynn
Swann In Super Bowl X.
quarterback to start a Super ·Coach Joe Glbbs said. "We made
Bowl placed him under Intense such an awful start, I didn't know
scrutiny all week, needed only I8 what was go!'ng to happen ."
plays to fashion five touchdown
Gibbs has coached Washington
drives and lift the Redsklns from in three Super Bowls and won two ,
a 10-0 deficit.
in his seven-year tenure. His
SCO'ITSDALE. Ariz. rUPii"I didn't come here to be team appea,red headed for defeat Sandy Lyle used seven b!rdies to
remembered as the first black early Sunday, trailing 10-0 late ln force a playoff In the $650,000
quarterback in the Super Bowl," the first quarter when Williams Phoenix Open and a bogey to win
sald Williams. whose star. was helped to the sidelines with a it .
crossed pro football career ap- knee injury.
Lyle spent all day Sunday
peared all but ov~r only a lew
"1 was petrified almost to the chasing the leaders from seven
months ago. "I came here as the point of lrnmobility." Redsklns strokes off the pace, then twice
quarterback of the Washington owner Jack Kent Cooke said. "I
left an opening lor Fred Couples
. Redskins . The most important thought, what has happened to to win the tournament. Lyle
thing for me to do ,was to play up our Washington Redsklns who earned a victory with a bogey on
have prepared so beautifully this the third e~tra hole.
to my capability."
Williams connected on 18 of 29 week ."
"As long as you make sure you
passes for 340 yards, four TDs
Then Williams came back to win, It doesn't matter what
and an Interception. He br'oke the field .and hit Sanders on an fashion," sald Lyle. of Surrey,
Joe Montana's three-year-old 80 -y;:~ rd touchdown pass with England.
·
Super Bowl passing mark by nine 14:17left in the halt
. The fashion over the final lour
yards and ou !played Denver Pro
"In: the first quarter we wer- holes was like that of a club
Bowler John Elway as tho- en't making any plays and all of a
tournament, a stark contrast ·
roughly as many expected Elway sudden it started happening,"
from Lyle's hard-charging round .
to outclass Williams. ·
Thielemann said. "Doug hit the ' early In the day that allowed him
to catch up to the leaders.
Throughout the week, Elway , long touchdown pass which was
to
be
a
possession
plax.
supposed
He carded seven blrdles and
was touted as the paragon of NFL
Sanders
broke
It
for
80
yards
and
one
bogey on the 6,992-yard,
quarterbacks, but Williams took .
that
seemed
to
get
us
going."
par-71
Tournament .Piayers C:lub
away the MVP award. Elway
On
their
next
lour
possessions,
of
Scottsdale
In firing a 6-underhad one of his worst professlnal
on
Williams'
the
Redsklns
scored
par
·
65.
That
left him with a
garries, completing 14 of 38
27-yard
pass
to
Gary
Clark,
15-under-par 269
four-day
total
of
passes for 257 yards, one touch·
and tied wlth Couples, whO had a
1-under 70 on Sunday.
(")'. '
'. ' \1:P'"f

KriiJOn.&amp;l, CaM Rewrvr SO

Carleton school
defeats Cubs, 41-38

p

Williams sets milrks;
Redskins win, .· 42-1 0

82-77 for non-league·victory_·
had h.ls second good nlghl since
slvi! boards with determination
the schedule resullled picking up
In quarter three aided the Meigs
20 for the Marauders : Joey
five In maintaining that lead
Snyder and Brent Bissell finished
despite the fact that they were
ln double digits with 14 each.
zapped with eight personal foul s.
Bissell· and Ba"rtrum swept the
The most costly came on a
boards
for 14 and ' 11 rebounds
technical against the Meigs
and Casey Hill led
respectively
bench as what appeared to be an
Countlans
with 12
the
.Mason
obvious foul against the Maraudcaroms.
.
ers was not ·c alled ..The resulting
Meigs shot 48 percent from the
four polnt play by the Big Blacks
field hitting on 32 of 67 and made
pulled them to within live (55-601
18 of 25 at the foul line for a 72
With 5:11 remaining ln.the game .
The ,Marauders did not choke perceyt average. The Blg Blacks
hit 29 of 71. including 4 of 10 three
under the pressure but again took
command handling the ball well polriters, to post a 41 percent .
and forcing the opposition to shooting average and had a 65
commit ~even personal fouls In percent ratio with 15 of 23 from
the final one and one half minutes the charity stripe. Turnovers
of play. From the line during that 'w ere even at 19 each.
Box scores:
period of time; Chris Smith hit 6
MEiGS Burdette 0-3-3;
of 7 and John Burdette 2 of 2. The
Knights can credit Craig Hensley Snyder 6-2.-14; Smith 7-6-20; J
for keeping . them close as he Baker 3-0-6; Bissell 6-2-14; Barcanned three of · fiVe three poin- truro 10-5-25; Durst 0•0-0; Nelglei'
ters and one free throw In that 0-0-0; Brothers 0-0-0: Powell
time. Hensley took game high 0-0-0; Sisson 0-0-0.
PPHS - Roach 4-4-12; Sayre
honors with 33 points.
·
1-0-2;
Hensley 8-4-5-33; Hlll3-0-6;
Mike Bartrum led Meigs as he
Vickers
6-2-14; Miller 2-1-5;
hit for 25. Teammate Chris Smith
Faber 0-1-1; ·DeJarnette 1-0-2.
Score by quarters:
Meigs ...................... 16 37 56 82
PPHS ...... ................ 10 24 44 77

The Daily Sentinei'-Page-5

'

~'r· ----------'"'"'""---....--;---:,-.--.~-------::\,-'--1~
~~

'

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

THIS
EE 'S
OA ES

.._,.,...

FEI. 2-Wamn LocC11 - Away
FEI. 5-WIIIston- Harne
FEI•.6-Logan - " -

GilLS BASimALL
FEI. 4-WIIIston - ,Away
FEI. ·1-Ftd.-HOcking - ~!!~me

BoYS BASIOBALL
FE,. 2-Miller - Away
FEB. S-Hannan T..- - 11omt

GIRLS BASIOIALL

'

~,,;.._ &lt;--);

•

•

;},

-c...

SOUTHERN

•t

.,

Btn H. Ewing•Piredor :
~-

;&lt;'

'

,(' :om

.PH.

FEB. 1-Sr111m11 Vallej - Home
FEB. 4-Hannan Trace - Away

992~2121

101 MULIJRRY AVE.

POMEROY, Of!.

BOYS BASIOBALL
FEB. S-Oak Hill - Away
FEB. 6-;-Ftdarai-Hocking - Away

GIRLS BASimALL
FEI. 1-Sauthwntern - Harne
FEI. 4-0ak Hill - Harne

BOYS SCHEDULE
USED CARS
.I:W CARS
USID CARS

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCIJEDULE

&lt;COMPLETE AAOI.UOA SERVICE
•MA.IOA REPAIRS ·

&lt;COMPlETE WH(El AUGNIIIIENT .,
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ACCEPTED

PAT HIU.,. FORD, Inc.
BODY WORK

1992-21961 ~~~~NCE
.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-18 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec •.&amp;-Southern ............................ Away
Dec: 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Parkenlug Cath. (6:15) ••• Away
Dec•.22-North Gallia (6:00) ............ Harnt
Jan. 1-Symrnn Valley ...................Harne
Jan. 12,..-llylll" Cr11k ...................... HGrne
Jan. 15-0ctk Hill ............................ AWIIJ
Jan. 19-Fideral Hocking ................ HGrne
Jan. 22-Southern ...........................Horne
Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away
Feb. 2....;.Miller .................................. Away
Feb. 5-HJII'nan Trce ........................Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ...................Harne
Feb. 1,6-Parkersburg Cath ..•.•.•.•.•. Away
Feb.19.-Symmn Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Ftderal Hocking ..............; Away

Dec. I-East ern ''"''''''''"'''''''"''''''••..•Horne
Dec. 11-0ak Hili .......... ~................. Home
Dec. -11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec.• 22-llyger Creek..................... Away
Dec. 29-lncian Valey So. ... Convo. Center
Jan. .2-Southeast•" ..................... Away
b. 1-Southw..t•n ...............;.....Htttnt
Jan. 12-North GaiRa ........:............Htttnt
Jan. 15 -Symmes Vallty .................Harne
Jan. ·22 -Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-llyger Cr11k ....................;.Home
Jan. 30-IAiller ................................ Home:
FElt. 5-0ak Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Ftdaral Hocking ................. Aw!IY
Feb. 12 -Hannan Trace ...................Home
Feb 19~Southwntern ................... Away

BOYS BASKETBALL

1'0111 rauas

TIIVCK~

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan.

26-Aiexa~r .................... Home

Jan. 20-Pt. Pleasant................ Away
F~b. 2-Warren local................ Away
Feb. 5-Wellston.........................Home
Feb. 6-logan ..............~.~............Ho1ne
Fib. 9-Athens~...........................Holllt
Feb. 12 -Federal-Hocking ;.........Home
Feb. 13-Vinton County............. Home
Feb. 16-Federal Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 19-Miller ........................... Home
Feb. 20-Nelsonville- York .......... Hame

WElCOME

•461 3RD AVE., MIDDlEPORT; OH.

·~

..

WITH US"

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
REVISED SCHEDULE

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
B87-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOl
1987-88 GIRlS BASKETBAll

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan. 25-Belpr'e ..........................Home
Jan. 21-Aiexander ••,.................Home

FARMERS
BANK .
&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, .OH.

PH. 992-2136

Jan. 30-Miller ...............: ..........Home
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

4-Wellston........................ Away
~-Federal Hocking ............. Harne
11-Wellston ......................Harne
13-Southern ••••••.....•...•.•••.• Horne
15-Eastern ....................... Away

Dec. 7-Southern .............................Horne
Dec. 10-Hannan Trace ...................Home
Dec. 14-Millir _, ............................. Home
Dec. 17 -Saulhwestern ...................Harne
Dec. 19~Ftderal Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 23-Mtigs ................................Home
Jan. 7-Symmn Valley .................. Away
'Jan. 11-Kyger Cr11k .................... Away
Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Jan. 21-Southern .................. ~ ...... Away
Jan. 21-North Gallia ..................... Horne
Feb, 1-Symmts YaHey................. Home
Feb. 4-Hannail Trace ......... ,.......... Away
• Feb. 11-Sauthwntern ..•.•.•.•.,....... Away
Feb. 14-Ftderal Hocking ............... H!Ime

Dec. 7-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec:.1 o~Oak Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... 'Away
· Dec. 17 -Hannan TrCKt .........~.........Homt
Dec.· 19.,;._l~r .......................... Aw•y
Jan. 4-lyger Creek ........................HOIIII
Jan. 7-Sauthwtstarn .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gol~a ....................Horne
Jan. 14-Symmll Valley ................ Away
· Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................;.. Away
Jan. 21-Eastern .............................Homt
Jan. 21-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Feb. 1-Southwlltern .....................Htttnt
Feb. 4-0ak Hill ..............................H01111
Feb. 11-Haman Tract .................. Away
.Fe~:t. 13-Meigs .;............................. lWt.'l'

Page-7

shadow.) ,
Next is the Washington Post Co.,
led by Katharine Graham, with St.2
billion.
In third place is the advertising
firm Wells, Rich, Green, which. bad
$665 . million in revenue last year.
Mary Wells Lawrence is the CEO.
San Francisco's l'Aprlt de Corp. is
fourth, with Susie Tompldn at the

helm.
Christian Dior is fifth, headed by
Colombe Nicholas. ·
.
In sixth place is Copley Press in
.San Diego, run by Helen Copley.
. Dear Ann Landers: I hope a
certain woman (I'll call her Mary)
sees this letter. She is driving ' me
crazy.
·
Mary calls 1111' every night. If I
am not at home she will keep
calling until she aets me, even if it's
I o'clock in the morning.
This woman is not informed and
has very little·to say.
I find myself struggling to keep
up a one-sided Conversation that I
didn't want in the first place.
· When I ask her a question she
says, I'Ungb hungh, ungh hungb ... "'
and never wants .to hang up until
she is practically snoring. I have
come to the conclusion that she uses
me as her substitute for a sleeping
pilL
.
Please publish this Jetter, Ann ..
Mary reads your column religiously
and she ,will surely recognize herself. Thanks a million, .. SOME·
WHERE IN PENNSYLVANIA

Ann
Landers
DEAR SOMEWHERE: Don't
thank me until you read my
answer. My remarks are for you,
not Mary.
Forgive me for haulip&amp; out an
·old landers cliche, but nobody can
take advantage of you without your
permission. Th~ fact that you per·
mit this nightly intrusion indicates
that you, too, have a·problem:
If you really want to put an end
to it, say, "Sorry, but it's not
convenient for me to talk now. I'll
call you when ' I'm· able. Good
night" Then ring off.
DEAR READERS: Here's your
laugh for the day, I read it in the
. Farm~r·s Almanac: No patient
should attempt to leave'the hospital
until he is strong enoul!h to fare the

SARAH L. STOBART

Everyone does drugs, right?
Wrong. And today, more and more
people' are aware of the dangers in· .
vplved..Ifiou want to be in the know,
too, write for Ann Landers' new(y revised booklet, "The Lowdown on
Dope. " Send $2.50 plus a selfad·
dressed, stamped No. 10 envelope (39
cents postoge) to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, /II. 6115/1{)562.. I
ANN LANDERS •

'

Circle .birthdays .observed
.the two children by their parent s.
grandparents: Grover and Elsie
White, Woodrow and Virginia
Fortney, Harold Circle, and Lula
Circle, Other. guests included
Sheila, Dan, Klrt, Danielle. Tlf·
!any Spencer. Synthla and Vince
Robinson, Serena White and
Scott • Barton, Dixie Circle.
Wilma and Ralph Ballard, Steve,
Cindy and Stephanie Circle.

~

Cl988, los Angole~ Times Slflllicata and
Creators SyndiCite

nating. the seedlings should be
kept under lights.
Talking oil "Indoor Plants",
Traveling prizes furnished by Margaret Belle. Weber said that
Ruth Erlewlne and Dorothy poinsettias should tasl through
Woodard were won by Binda April If properly cared for. She
Diehl and Ruby DiehL Stella said that pink ones last longer
Atklns will furnish the prize next than red ones; that the plants
month. Displaying arrange· skould be watered dally and fed
ments at the meeting were Mrs. once a month. Azaleas do best in
Turner, Mrs. · Canaday. and temperatures of 60 degr.e es .
Another paper, "Snow on Ever·
Binda Diehl.
for the program, Mrs. Nichol·· greens" , was by Ruby Diehl who
'son had a paper on ai~acllllli and . suggested -s hakjng tHe· lieavy .
feeding birds. She said by vary· snow off the bushes or using a
tng tb,e kinds or seeds It Is broom to remove It so that there
possible to attrdct different Is no damage to the branches ,
birds . She stressed the lmpor·
Next meeting will be held at
lance of continued feeding In 1:30 p.m. ·on Feb.'29 at the home
winter once It has been starled,
of . Marcia Denison with Mrs.
Mrs . Erlewlrie had .an article Parsons as co-hostess. Members
on "An Early Start for Marl· are asked to take a seashell .
golds" and suggest eel_ planting which can . be used for an
·seeds In January In an Inch of soli arrangement and seed catalogs
In a styrofoam cup. After J(erml· for display,
gements.for churches during the
month, it was noted.

Plans for preparing Valentine
fruit plates lor the residents of
the Meigs County. Infirmary
were made when the Rutland
Garden Club met recently at the
, home of Binda DiehL
Pearle Canaday . presided at
lhe meeting appointing Neva
Nicholson. Margaret Belle
· Weber and Pauline Atkins to
work on the form used In
nomtnatl~llle outstanding
· fiA.,..,tc,l
' .. lo!Lll . •r
II was not
that Roberta
Wilson has moved to Kentucky.
For roll call members answered
with a comment on btfds which
they are 1eedlng. Ann Elizabeth
Turner 1 co-hostess, had devo·
tlons reading an article entitled
"We Have to Ask" followed by
prayer.
Mrs. Canaday. Margaret Par·
sons. Ruby Diehl. Mrs. Atkins,
and Mrs . Weber furnished arran-

Valentine
Love .Lin

SpeCial

CHRISTA CffiCLE
and
JEFFREY CffiCLE

'Spoon and Cherry'
nearly ready for
sculpture garden

BRISTOL, .R.I. (UP!) World's 'most-traveled' man
and relax." Thompson said.
the city by trumpeter Mark Swedish-born sculptor Claes 01·
returns home: AKRON. Ohio
Relaxing for Thompson, how · Morganelll. vibraphonist denburg, who helped pioneer the
eve~. does not mean an end to
(UP!) -A lawyer recognized as
Warren Chiasson. vocalist Carol Pop Art movement with · his
the world's most-traveled man
traveling.
Cass and their unjon, LocaJ802 of· sculptures of American junk
"What I'm trying to do Is taper
has returned home from a trip to
the American Federation of food. has turned hi s attention to
the South Pole and is already
of! and see a lot more of the Musicians. ·
giant tableware,
thinking about another odyssey.
United States." he said,
. Judge Saxe agreed the 1926.
Oldenburg, 59, now one of the
A crowd of about 200 welcomed·
Thompson, who js self· Prohibition -era law aimed at
world's foremost designers of
Parke Thompson. 68, at the
employed. said he has taken, 36 curbing speakeasies was unfair. large-scale public sculptures. is
Akron-Canton Regional Airport
trips In the last 31 years, most of
"I find that such a three·
finishing up work ·on a 5.000·
musician limitation restricts ...
Saturday.
them four to live weeks long.
pound, 50-foot-long spoon. The
Repeal of cabaret law means freedom of expression and is · blg· dipper will eventually bai·
In the 1987 Guinness Book of
World Records, he was called the
'fun city': NEW YORK (UPI)- therefore unconstitutional, " he ance a giant cherry, designed by
"most traveled livjng
Therepealofacabaretlawthat · sald.
Oldenburg's ·wile, and take Its
American."
was implemented to control
For musicians, club owners
place setting in a sculpture
"It w;~s sort of a rough trip, but
speakeasies a half-century ago Is and music-loving ctuzens the garden in Minnesota. ,
1 enjoyed lt and I certainly
being hailed as a victory that ruling Is something to celebrate.
"It looks very good, but it stili
appreciate being able to do it. to . could turn New York Into "fun
' 'This could make New · York
needs some work, " Oldenburg
have , tlie sta!lllna and the ' city' ' for music fans.
another New Orleans," said
said this week )Yhile visiting
health, " he said of his South Pole
on Thursday. state Supreme publjctst Charles Comer.
Merrifield· Roberts Inc .. a boat
' adventure.
Court Justice David Saxe re· "They'll be playing In the door· building company on Narragan·
Thompson left Jan. 11. stop·
moved a three-musician llmlla· ways all over town. We'll have · sett Bay where the spoon is being
ping In Chile, the Patriot Hills In
tlon he said "nearly eliminated twenty Bourbon Streets here, It'll cast.
the Antarctic Peninsula, the certain types of music. such as be fun city all over again." ·
Oldenburg estimated It will
Thlei ·Mountalns 300 miles from
Dixieland and bluegrass music · ,"This could bring in a wh&lt;lle
take about two more weeks for
the South Pole ·before ~eachlng
land) also had a negative Impact new era of live music In New
workers to finish his mammoth
the pole Itself.
.
on jazz."
York." said Terry Dunne, owner utensil, which boasts a !Hoot·
"My wife has made me sort of
The law was challenged In a of -Tramps, a major club in the
wide bowl and Is made of heavy
promise now that I'll take It easy June 1986 suit brought against city.
aluminum plating .

toY• you more today thM'I
.... b.ltriY ... HIPP¥' V•lentlne't

··

Y

COMPOSE YOUR OWN VAL£NTINE
MESSAGE ... it'S EASY TO DO!!!
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Enctoitd Pill~ Find ' ' Special Pltlllid...

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of "Ditrrent Strollel/' Not aU tile
stan wW be fllllshllll the 26-plua·
· mile courae but they will be

. THE . ART ON AGING: Art
Llakletter, 75, appreciates life a
great de111 but he has figured out
how he wants to die, "I'd like to
die In my home, tn my own bed
and with family and friends
around me." he told The Boston
Globe. "I don't want to be
maintained artificially. I don't ·
advocate suicide or reckless
euthanasia but If I was getting a
serious disease, I'd find a way to
do away with mysert." The title
of Unkletter's !Illest book ts "Old
Age Is Not for Sisales" and he
wholeheartedly believes In Its
title. "lt takes pll to grow old,"
he says. "You've go\ to accept
physical limitations. You don't
see as weu or hear aa ~II. You
can't malle Jove as well. Sexual·
ity Ia not neccessartly an act at
sex but reoopttton that there's
an 0~1lte sex and maybe

you

want to snug1 le. Sex Is leSs like
the Fourth of July and more like
Thanksgiving.:•
MARY BACK ON .TV: Mary
Tyler Moore Is·worklng on a new
series for CBS lo debut In the fall
and says she ~earned a lesson
from "Mary," her short-lived
sitcom flop or two years ago. She
says that In her early ·hits, "The
Dick Vaa Dyke Sholv" and "The
Mary Tyler Moore Show," she
. was "surrounded by brilliance.
The last time out. that was not so
true and I'm never going to take
that chalice 111atn." In the new
series, Moore will be a career
woman butt he show will tocuson
her home lite. Her character will
be a divorced mother of one who
marries a Widower with two kids.
The children, however, won't be
the stan. "We don't want to add
to the tetevlllon parade of
adorables.'' Mpore told TV
Guide. "We're aotae to bit
anybody who threatena ·to be a

COMPOSE Your Own Message Bl
e ow

i
I

"

bringing In pledges on a per-mile
basts for several charities,

Valentine Love Lfne! ·

!

·~~·

By WU.LIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
STARS ON THE RUN: On
March 6. not all the stars on ·
Hollywood Boulevard will be
Imbedded In fhe sidewalk on the
Walk of Fame. Running through
the streets In the third Los
Angeles Marathon will be Corbin 1
84lrnsen, the "L.A. Law" star
and a veteran marathoner, ·a nd
8ueu Ruttaa, who plays Roxie.
his loyal secretary on the show.
The celebrity field also will
tndude Brian Patrick Clark of
"General Hospital,.. who won
last year's celebrity division,
laek Scalia and Pat Colbert of
•'Dallas," Catlly Lee C!Wb)v
1o1m T•ll and Mary Bart of
"Entertainment Tbnlgbt,"
former NFL coach Geeqe AIIH,
lliVft'al memben of tbe Loa

Forwer.

Crio

--feopk--------------~.~------------

f

Mt&lt; and Mrs. Jerry Stobart of
Albany entertained recently with
a party in observance o! the
second birthday of their daugh·
ter, Sarah Lynn Stobart.
A Mickey Mouse cake was
served with ice cream. A !tending
were her brothers, Josh, Dave
and Chris Wandllng. and her
sisters, Julie and Penny Wan·
dllng, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Ervin,
Keith, Scott and Brad, Randy
Carl, Rodney Van Nest. Mr. and
Mrs Don Roush. Julie Roush and
Matthew Wandling. Sending gifts
and cards were Sarah's grand·
mother , Mrs. Edna Stobart.

Rutland -Garden Club me·ets

..

Rtwll•t•

Stobart notes
birthday

HONEYMOON CRUISE - Pam and Bryce Buckley of 36767 .
Texas Road, Pomeroy, pose on The Udo of Carnival Cruise Lines
new ship, "Jubilee", as it sailed out of Miami. The couple were on
their honeymoon cruise aboard the 48,000 ton floating resort bound
for the sunny Caribbean with ports of call at Nassau, Bahamas,
San Juan, Puerto Rico, and St. Thomas, U.S. VIrgin Islands.

cashier.

Quirks in the news

GIRLS SCHEDULE

"COME

Monday, Fe~ruary 1, 1988

'

, ·.· :
,.., ._.

turn·

EASTERN-

•;,

. .-. ... ...... .. . -..·,_

Dear ADa Landers: There. has
been a lot of talk and a great deal
ll(ritten about how women have
improW!d their status in the work·
place. But have they really made
any substantive progress?
I don't know of any big compa·
nies that are run by or hire an
imprel!i~ nWI!~ of remaies. Most
businesses do no more than is
required to stay on the sunny side
of the law: employ the minimum
number of women so they won't be
charp:d with discrimination on the
basis ofSex. ·
'
With so many top schools
ina out larJe numbers of female
MBA's you'd think · that women
CEOs would be aU over the place,
. but they aren't. I find this not only
Sll"BJIIe but unfair.
Please speak to this in your
column. - SKEPTICAL IN ROCH·
ESTER .
DEAR ROCH: And how are
thiiiJ" in Sleepy. Hollow? Good
grjel! How can you not know ihat ,
the number !If w11men who head
businesses and sit on 'corporate
boards has skyrocketed in the last
10 years?
The following information comes
from Savvy magazine:"
The lai]!I!St businesses in the
United States run by women:
In first place for the fourth
straisht year is Eueetauder cosmet·
ics tompany, named for its chair·
woman. lJist year the revenue was
SIJ billion. (That's a lot of eye

BOYS BASimAll

"DIGNtll;; AND . ,
SERVICE ·AtWAY$"

By The Bend

:Have .women advanced
in the workplaces?

MEIGS

The ·Daily Sentinel

i

I

II
IL

1

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!

munchkin on the head with a
mallet."
. TRAVELIN' MAN: They call
him the world's most -traveled
man - Parke Thompson, the
68-year-old lawyer from Akron,
Ohio. who Is recognized by the
Gulnness Book of World Records
as the most peripatetic fellow
around. Some 200 people greeted
hint Saturday at the Akron·
Canton Regional Airport on his
arrival back home after a 20-day
trip that added four more stops to
his record - Chile, the Patriot
H!Us In the Antarctic Peninsula.
the Thiel Mountains 300 miles
from the South Pole and the pole
Itself. Thompson now has tra·
veled to all the world's 308
countrlell and geographic re·
gtons. Why does he do It? WeU, a~
a kid "I enjoyed maps, history
and geography, so It was natu·
rat," he said. "The more I
traveled, the more I liked It"

I

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~

ADDlES$ ....................;;;;;.......... .........;;;,
CITY .............................- . .......
•......... CU, - llllil YOII .... 1111 - AI An lnt .. ,..,..

------------ -~--ONLY 20e m

I
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wa~o

MAIL CHICK 0"' BRING
. AD·TO
~

.

The Daily Sentinel
1ll

IU.
OEADUIE:
11111. 2 P.1.
V1llltlnt mn. . will Ill PIIIHIIMd 1ft 011r S.nd•r Tltlts·Stntl·

nil an Vlllftllntl Dly1 Iunday, Ftlnlry 14th. Sind mtiiiPIIO
,our loved oltl and rrllnds Ill GIHIIIICI ltlp Countltsl

MESSAGES WILL lUll AS Ull£ ADS.

,,
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.

'.
•

'·

�..

-..

p

8-w..- Daily Sentinel

M~ND......... Oh'

Monday, February 1. 1988 ·

Monday. February 1.1988

; ~~~~~:=::~~·~~:::=__~--------------------~ome~:~z:::~:
·::~··~:ro~----------~--------------~----~~-old man.
Malenkov, who was born Jan.
8, 1902. was living alone when he
died. He bad lived In Moscow
since retiring from the hydroelectric plant In 1968 on a $480
monthly pension.
Although his hour in the Soviet
spotlight was brief. Malenkov
first enunciated the doctrine of
peaceful .coexistence with the
West 11nd the internal policy of
giving ~nore consumer goods to
the Soviet people.
·
Both policies were brought to
fruition by · Khrushchev, who
ousted Malenkov tlrst from his
party post In March 1953 and then
as prime minister In 1955.
Khrushchev parlayed peaceful
coexistence Into summit meetIngs wl~h President Eisenhower
and patched up relations with
Josef TJto in Yugolslavla. who
Stalin· had ousted from the
Communist bloc..
,
Despite Malenkov's outlining
the future direction of ' Soviet
policy, his biography was
sprinkled with · dark hints at
ruthlessness, possibly because of
his close frleritfship with Nlkola
Yezhov. the feared head of the
secret police during the height or
the purges in the 1930s.
Like some of the other leaders

of the worker-peasant state,
Malenko was born of the bourgeoisie, the son of a well-of!
white-collar family In the Urals
city of Orenburg, since renamed
Ckhalov.
He joined the Bolshevik revoJu,
tlon of 1918 and became a
political commissar at the age of
18. He was sent to Moscow . for
political training, eventually becoming . Stalin's personal
secretary.
During World War II, Malenkov. a pudgy man with soft and
womanish features and fat fingers, became one or the five
members or the Committee or
State Defense, which was headed
by Stalin and oversaw the victory
over the invading German army
In what became known as the .
Great Patriotic War.
He appeared to stand on the
threshold or Immortality when he
delivered the funeral oration at
Stalin's burial. But In a space of
four years he was ·shoul(jered
completely aside and sent to run
the power station In the Far East.
In 1968, he retired from that
post on the Chinese border and
came back to Moscow to llve out
his days in obscurity. causing the
refrain from many Muscovites,
"Malenkov, is he still alive?"

STALIN'S MAN -Georgi Malenkov, who held
both the posts of secretary-general of the
Communist Party an,~ premier following tlie
death of Josef Stalin In 1953, has died, the Soviet

::.( ."""
·
The crowds , sho.u ted anti-government slogans
outside Communist Party headquarters before
dispersing. REUTER
'·
~

PROTESTORS- Protestors carrying Solldarlty banners march in the northern city of Gdans!&lt;
oil Sunday in protest at massive price hikes
ordered by Poland's Communist government.

:-P 0 -~·an
_

•

d's mal•Or Cl•t•Ies, p Iants protest
'J
.

·
•
··
d
• hik
massive consumer goo s pnce
es sa~~ipping
By PATRICIA KOZA

WARSAW. Poland fUPli
Police increased their presence
in Poland's major cities in
anticipation or more protests
over government jlrice hikes on
consumer goOds that went into
• effect today.
Solidarity branches in two or
Warsaw's biggest factories- the
!2,000-s(rong Warsaw foundry
and the Ursus tractor plant with
24,000 workers - declared the ir
readiness Sunday to strike over
the hikes, said Jerzy Kolar zowski , spokesman for the out lawed Polish Socialist Party that
has links with the Solidarity
trade union. In Warsaw and the north ern
city of Gdansk Sunday, police
broke up demonstrations against
the price hikes that average 36
percPnt. and Solidarity demanded the increases be
· resc l nded.
Solidarity spokes man Janusz
Onyskiewicz said Sunday night
he had no personal knowledge of
the actions at the two plants , but
noted that regional Solidarity
leaders .can operate independ. ently. Solidarity sources in the
plants could not be reached.
Both plants s till. have Solidar "it y suppor ters- up to one third of
the workers in Ursus by some
~stimates- despite th e ba nning
~f the union after the Imposition
of martial law in December 1981 .
Strike committees also were
formed in an unspecified number
of plants in the southwestern
Solidarity stronghold of Wroc·
law, Kolarzowski said.
Dissident sources .said ZOMO
riot pollee troops were concentrated In major industrial centers In anticipation of possible
trouble.
A neighbor or the mammoth
Warsaw foundry said plainclothesmen with binoculars were
placed in ·some of the houses
nearby. "The surveillance is
very discreet," he said.
Pollee presence was Increased
In the southern city or Krakow
and nearby Nowa Hula, the site
or a huge steel-making complex
-where unconfirmed reports said
strike readiness also has been
. declared.
"For the last few days the
militia have been alert." a
source in Krakow said. · 'Qne call
· sense the ten.s lon."
Poland's 38 million people

'

(

·
brought down successive Polish led by Lech Walesa. met In
ieaderships in 1970 and 1980 Gdansk on the situation arid
because of price hikes :
released a statement demanding
The scheduled price hikes have withdrawal of the price Increase,
sparked panic buying as Poles which "will spark an avalanche
wailed in long lines for sugar, of wage demands' and another
rice. flour and tea or to fill their round of Increases."
gas tanks.
Prices went up an average of 40
Sunday, police peacefully · percent on food, 60 percent for
dispersed a c'r owd of 4.000 gasoline, and 50 percent for
demonstrators in the northern public transportation and
city or Gdansk who chanted, housing.
"strike tomorrow" and carried
The price of white bread, for
posters proclaiming, "down with example. jumped from 10 cents
hikes '· and ''down with to 14 cents. up 43.75 percent.
communism."
The government first anPolice also broke up a demon - nounced last September there
stratlon In the capital by about would be price Increases as part
2.000 people alter a mass In St. of a pia~ to restructure the alllng
Stanislaw Kostka church, where economy, but was forced to scale
one huge sign declared strike back the plan after falling to
readiness at the Warsaw steel obtain ~pproval of a majority or
plant.
Poles eligible to vote in a
Strike readiness is declared to referendum last November.
mobilize workers when leaders
Lithgow in 'M. ·
·have
set a date
onconditions
which a strike
BUtlerfl. y,
will occur
unless
submitted to the management are
met. a Solidarity source said.
The date of th e strike is not
announced.
Th e government announced
the price hikes Saturday even·
1ng.
as h as b een the cus tom t he
last several years, and followed .
it up with an extensive television
and radio blitz explaining the
reason for the hikes , followed by
telephone hot lines ror questions.
'Tve got three children. I don ' t
know how lm going to make It, "
said one woman Interviewed on
Polish television .
The average monthly salary In
Poland is about $100, and about 60
percent of It ' goes for food . The
government promised a supplement or $20, but · few Poles
cons I d e r it a de quat e
compensation.
The nine-member Solidarity
National Executive Committee,

sources said the fate
of the crew remained a mystery .
"We just don't know what has
happened to them." said a
spokesman for the ministry of
merchant marine in Piraeus.
Greece, who was reached' by
telephone 'from Bahrain.
State-run Baghclad radio, monIto red In Cyprus. said Sunday
that Iraqi warplanes had attacked two ships In 24 hours.
Quoting a statement from the
Iraqi high command, the rad io
said warplanes attacked tWo
naval targets, Iraq's military
parlance for Iranian-chartered
tankers or freighters.
In addition to the MV Mare,
Iraq also attacked a "very large
- naval target" _ Baghdad's .
phrase for a supertanker _ at
midnight saturday. Shipping of·
licials co 11 id not conlirm the
· attack.

to 'Child's Play'
HOLLYWOOD IUPI 1
Catherine Hicks and Chris
Sarandon are again paired in
the suspense thriller "Child's
Play" for director Tom Halland at United Artists.
Holland. best known for
"Fright Night" and '.'Fatal
Beauty,'' co-wrote the scrips
with Don Mancini. for producer David Kirschner.
Sarandon,. who also appeared In . 'Fright · Night,"
shared the· screen with Hicks
in . the recent film "Like
Father, Like Son."

r-;;;;;;;;;::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::~~

SUPPORT THE SENIOR
TH
CITIZENS CENTER WI
YOUR MEMBERSHIP··

WASHINGTON tUPI) Actor John Lithgow Is set to
star in the stage production
production of "M. Butterfly,"
which has Its pre-Broadway
run at The National Theater.
The play is scheduled to
open Feb. 10 and will run
through March 6, with the
Broadway opening set for
March 20. The story ls "based
on newspaper accounts or the
1970s detailing an lnternaIlona I spy scandal In Beijing,
lnvolvlng .a French diplomat
and a Chinese opera star.
Lithgow is perhaps best ·
known for his appearances ln
the fllms "Terms of Endearment,'" 'The World According
to Garp" and "All That Jazz."
His stage appearances Inelude. "The Changing Room,"
"The Front Page" and "Re-,
quiem for a Heavyweight."

.

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MutDreanlllld Americian Bxpren
OK. (Send Clld number, ClllpiRI due,
lflcl ........IRI.) For .... IIMce for
cRidit card ordcn ONLY call ~me
24 hou11, toll free 1(800)527.l'IOO,

ext. W705.

_ ....,...,.

_______
_
___
... -_........... _
...

· - - ....-

...... _

..... _

~

.. .. . ...

•

COLUMBUS. Ohio t UPI\ People who enjoy blueberries are
receiving an unexpected health
bonus. according to . recent
research.
Some recent reports indicate
that pectin In fruit fiber helps
reduce blood cholesterol, and
Andrew Proctor, a food chemist
in al Ohio State University points
out that blueberries are an
excellent source or pectin.
" People talk about the benefits
or dietary fiber but don't always
mean the same thing," Proctor
says. Fiber is simply what is left
after a food Is digested.
"The pectin content of dietary
fiber is being shown In medical
studies to reduce cholesterol In
the bloodstream,,.. he says.
"Fruits and vegetables have
pectin that Is shown to be able to
lower cholesterol 'l n thP blood."
Pectin is thought ' to hind to

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigi fndustri••· Int .. •

also ifttereeted iri coordiRIIt-

1101

E. Moln •l.ll.lr.

POMEROY. OH.
• 992-2269 .
NEW LISTING - Little
house, little price, in town.
lot viith old house that
needs lots of work. WANT
$4,900.00.
.
NEW LISTING
Cheap
house that need s rejl11ir-but
will make gooo rental in·
come in Pomeroy - want
$14,000.00 but make offer,
owner 'may help finance.

.

.....

....•

,_
,...,..
t:=

~~-

"'u'

___

=::·::

. t:o~.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

.
,::=
=mi... _,_
~

·EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
I 2 Gauge Shotguns Only

10-7-ttn

PH. 949-2801

WHIT£ HIU RD.
_RUTlAND, OHIO
742-2035

949~2860

or

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

1 2-3i'-8'1'1 mo~ pd.

4-16-16-tfn

New Location:

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

.z~
-

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213 .
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Wa Cerry Flahing Supplin

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE
!6141 992-USO
RISIDINCI PHONE

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992-77S4
1128/IIR

MEIGS OFfiCE
MACHINES

New &amp; Used .
SAUS·SERYICE ·
SUPPLIES

Royal &amp; SCM Typewriters .
Royal I MAX Cokul!lton
Royal &amp; Maa Cash Registers

HOMER BELT

.

long lli!tlom, DH. 45743

Ph. (614) 843-5486

1-26-'88-1 mo.

MARCUM 1
CONTRACTING I

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILOINO
•ROOM Ai:JOITIONS
.:KITCHENS • BATHS

I

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

UMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Now Ho_, Built
"'Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801
NO SUNDAY CALLS

10-8-tfc

3-11-lfn

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Roger tlysell
· Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

•ROOFING

AEMOOELING S.
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
PhOM Day Of htftifttl

.,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

REPAIR

992~6282

Alto Transt1lulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

915-4141

GIMill COIIlUCTOIS
Refenmc:n
1 1·3·ttn

..

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
'88-tfn

6-17-ttc

lnwn MOVIES to YHS rAPE
let us convert those old

SKATE·A·WAY

·BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

Home Movies awer to easy

VHS.

CHESTER, ON.
. OPEN

or

614-662-3821
New Holland, lush Hog
Farm Equipmont
Decllr

·

1-3-'86 tic

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addont and remodeling

- Roofing end "utter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

1 -27-'SB -1 mo.

(Fraa Estimates)

GUN SHOOT
.EVERY
SUNDAY

BINGO

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10-9-tln

1-22-ffn

YOUNG'S

985-3929
or 985·9996

E•••P••••

fer•
Partt &amp;Sarvlet

CAll AMY CARTER
BOB'S ILECrRONICS

446-6.9 39 or 446~7390

WED.-FRL-SAT.
7:30-·1 0:00
Call for Birthday,
Church, Private
Parties .Mon., Tues.,
Thurs ., Sat. &amp; Sun.

Aulhoriud John D"re,

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 ~· 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-15-'SG.tc

An nou nc e111 en Is
3 Announcements
Notice: Opening of Poor Man's
GrocefV on Kingsbury Rd. Februery 1. Hours: 7 :00am. to 9 :00

pm .·
Needed AKC regittered minia-

FIREWOOD

$3500

Hertonbech, Deculed.
ESTATE NO. 23224 Third Portio! Account of
Johrl T. Wolfe, Trulloe of
tile Trull Crooled Under
Item V of tho Loot Will ond
T-ment of Creed Joneo,

P~r

4171: Women's Sizes S

· (30·32). M (34-36), L
(38-41), XL (43-46) are
lm;luded. One main
pattern part lor pulkm
pants, nq side .18ams.
Each pattern $3.25 pius
75e postage•handling.
tN Y&amp; Mt rllldlnts add sales w I

Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SlACK
614·992-2269
Evenings
1/ZS/'1711 mo. d.

Usi~K lhtCiassifitds
Is as £psy •• ...

The Daily Sentinel
7

KEN'S APPLIAJ:ICE
SERVICE

985-3561

Wa Service All Makes
1/22/88/tfn

992-2198

Zip, liD, Pllllrn ltutnblr.

3 Ctllllaaltl ~oiiU&amp;) .
llihtii!IIU .. . . 0111 . .
. . . IIDaltllllld below.
11~ olllloMtr Qocllll
121-PIDI1 8how 0111

•Washitrs •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Will luy or Houl Away"

PAT HILL FORD·

loa 4000, Nllnlll , 4t1llfl.
'4000. Print Nlml, •
011,

FMIC:IL\•

DEAD OR ALIVE

We can repair and re·core l'ldiltors and
huter cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We elso
11111ir Gtts Tenb.

leiidto:

1

WANTED

RADIATOR
SERVICE ·

..........

•

"At Reasonable Prices"

Listeninc Devices
Dependable Hearinl Aid Sales &amp;~·i••
C) Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

locust, Ook, Cherry

r-t.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

.. -,

NEW LISTING - large
older home in town. 4. bed·
rooms, basement, large lot
ONLY $14,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Approxima·
tely 27 acres ol vacant ground
close to Pomeroy. Beautilul
building site for special home.
Firm at $16,500.00.

-·-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
JERRY'S
.CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER ·

Basham BuDding

NEW LISTING - Here it is!
A-frame witti over 3,200 sq.
.ft. of space. 4-5 bedrooms,2
baths, large rec. room . &amp;
situated on 2~. aT:res of
ground . 2 car garage with
storage. Many leatures. Only
serious buyers should cal li

....... --..fartlle-

,,

-··-~--

••••

Business Services

.,,

,..,_,

___
.~·:

ou,.

••

•

ing the UM of thlo vehlcfo
with ony public, prlvote, ond
tion. Intends to MJbmit an porotronolt oporotors In tile
application for capital IIIII· oreo. Anyone lntoretted In
tance under the provi1ion1 aubmitting • propoul or
of Soctlon 181111 (21 of tho1 coordlnotlng tronoportotlon
MNICH Clft olllein 1110 . .
c-ooed.
'
~ Urban M811 TF8nlporUtion
ESTATE NO. 21430- FIAct of 1984, 11 omonded, to co111ry delllto by contact· pelllnt Penon.
ESTATE NO. 2111111- Fi- no! ond Dlotributive Account
provide tr•neportatlon •r· ing: KoHli 0. Bleck. Buo.
Mgr .. ot tllo Moigo Co. ld. nol ond Dlttrlbullve Account of llevel'ly llelloy Eucutrlx
. vicao lor tho hondlcappod
MR/00, P. O.lo• 307, Sy- of DoUJIIoo W. Utile, Execu- of tho Eotote of Holley l.lftend/ or devolopmentelly dlo. 'oblecl citizens within tho rocuoo. Ohio 41771. Writ- tor of tho Eototo oflylvlo Q, thlcum, Oeceoled.
Unllu oxcoptlono ore
county of Melgo, Stetl of liOn corilmonto ond/ or pro- Pool, D-Ied.
flied ,thereto, Mid ilecounto
ESTATE NO. 23713 Ohio. Tho are~t .oppllcotlon poulo mull be oubmltled
be for hllt!ne bolos:~~
.will requllt 11 I co,.rted within 30 doyo tothug.,oy Third "-rttot Account of Mo- ·
· van wltll whMicholr 1111 110 odd,...-given obove with o t!tyn 11. N-mon, Guordlon uld Court on the 7tll cllv of
. pe ..engorJ oUondord. It io copy to the Ohio O•r.· of of the EIUIIII of Eroet Pout Merch. 1888.11 which d~,ne
oUih Orr.
uld occounto will be conlild· ,projllfited tllot (411 hondt- Tronoportltlon, 21
Frant II., Columbuo, Ohio.
ESTATE ft!O. 18108 ond continued from day
copped ond/ or devoiopT - Annuli Aocount of 10 cloy untllflnolty dlop aled
. m..,tolly dlubled cttema 43211-0BIB.
'
Louie a. YIUIIIM. Guonlllln
will uoetho oorvice -171 (1121; (2}1. 21C
A...,
...,_
lniiiUJIId
of
IIIIo
Eltllll
of
Wlltom
-doyo PI' wOIII lor tronoporR---. an Incompetent rney file Will... Uaepdono
Public
Notice
totlon to ,omp:=•· hobllllltlon. ooc
q, re10
•- llld
...........
te or
theto.,.mott__
ESTATE NO. 21134IN THE
ci-eotlonel. -loll ond
nollnd
Dlotrlbutlve
Acoount
liOn
of
.........
..,.
COMMON
PUAI
COUIIT.
oilier -llfjzed poofuoloof Adrian 11--. Euoutor """ flYII cll'/l , . , to die
I'IIOIATI DIVISION,
niiMrvicea.
of the . _ of J - P. Moip lndullrWo tno. In·
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Ill for hMIIng.
lloloeriii,Ot
d
llolllll •. lutilt. Jutlge
·. vlllocammemund/orpro· IN THE MATTIII OF
IITATI NO. 14M7- P~
eo-llltMCIUit.
HlTLIMINT
OF
-~· from
Ill ond
1111111 NIM
nolllld Dllltlbutlve Acaount
Puta• Olvlllan
pullllc.
prlvelo.
,.,.. ACCOUNft.
ofM ....... I .............
MeiBO c...,, .Ditlo
I'IIOIATI COUIIT
outrlx of till 111118 of 0118 (21 ,, 1to
MEIGICOUNTY, OHIO
vloton of . - ....... '
pcllld In tllelllbl (21opptl·
Ala au"" and vouolltre of
IIIIo following nomed flducl·
• cotlon.
Moigo lnduttrloo. Inc. lo _ _ .....,flhldln
·private non-profit corpora-

! c:::

, _ , ..

• -•

!:"~.

Public Notice

the Prabeto Court, Melgo
County, Ohio, for ·opprovot
end-,.nt:
ESTATE NO. 222114 Eighth Portio! Account of
Korw~eth W-. Quorclon of
tllo "-'""" end Eomo of
A-no French. on lncom·

·--.._._.. ..,
·-___
_
--·---·-m-: ::::
!::Et.Ei'::
·........._ -·
·--·... .
--·-

..
....._ot
· ·.._
·.- · · ·....
·-·

. Cl~•fled p.,.~
th•
Joflowih&amp; 1ehpPwne acll:a.n p:l ...

.bind cholesterol molecules In the
digestive tract.
"If that's so, then we want to
hilrvest and eat the blueberries
when the calcium pectate levels
are highest or process the berries
so they have a higher level of
calcium pectate." .
Proctor says once he's Identified the benelits or the different
tri&gt;es of pectin found In blueberries, plant · geneticists can find
.the genes that cause them. Then
piarit breeders can develop new
varieties of blueberries that have
high ievels of the most desirable
pectin.
If blueberries do significantly
reduce cholesterol in the blood.
Proctor says growers will want
as much of this benefit as
possible.. Claiming to lower cho- .
!estero! is an excellent marketing tool in health-conscious
America. he says.

Public Notice

Public Notice

OOA"

;w.n

___
__ __

._,

11:-

to $60 billion market - and they·
such as The Weekly Reader,
have a tremendous , influence
With a bankroll or $36,000 from
other educators·, they began a
over other consum.er groups,':
NEW .LISTING - Ranch
style hom·e near Rutland.
newspaper with glitzy color Forziey said. "Kids eat and wear
graphics, snappy photography, what they want to eat and wear." . · level lot, 3 bedrooms, family
room. garage. Needs some
' Young American built a clrc·ugrabber headlines and articles
work. $27,900.00.
latlon in its first year of 70,000 as
written, for kids.
Kids won't find much bad news a supplement to suburban weekNEW LISTING - little 'ole'
in the paper. The articles are lies In the Portland metropolitan
house in town. little 'ole' price.
area. It. spread to other cities In
mostly upbeat and Informative.
3 bedrooms, basemen~ garage
It was front page news, for
Oregon and southwest Washingin basement Equipped kit·,
instance, when Mr . Potato,Head ton, growing to 200,000 and
chen, washer &amp; dryer. Needs
work. $7,!Xl0.1Xl
gave up his pipe as part or the netting a 9 percent profit In 1985.
Great American Smokeout and
Using the· same piggy-back
OWNER WANTS ASALE! Has
when Superman returned In · a
drastically reduced the price
new movie · to promote (\lstrlbutlon. the paper launched
on this 3 bedroom ranch
a major expansion In . middisarmament.
style home. Central air, large
There have also bee!) cover January Into California and
lot, garage, PDlches. WAS
arpcles on Martin Luther Ktng, Washington stil!e, jumping in
'38,500.
ONLY $33,500.00.
the Pope's message to Amerkan circulation to 1.1 million. Three .
youth, and kids' Interviews with regional editions or the paper are .
SOUTHERN DISTRICT being offered as a twice monthly
various politicians.
Onl(4 months old. 26'x64'
Nashua double wide home
"If there Is an earthquake, we ·supplement to newspapers In
suburban
Seattle,
Bellevue,
and
w/2
baths, 3 bedrooms, all
focus not on death and destrucelec.,
central air, eat·in
Tacoma,
Wash
.,
and
In
the
tion, but on why It occurred,"
kitchen
w/sky lights, formal
communities
surrounding
San
said Forzley.
dining·
room, !iving room
Francisco
and
Sacramento.
Today , the 'paper Is also full of
w/cathedral ceiings, garden
.
advertising from both regional Calif.
tub off the master bedroom,
By the end of the year. Forzley
and national companies, such as
located on appx. 22 acres.
hopeS to ·move Into 20 other
Sears and McDonalds .
·
You finish landscaping and
"Kids are a very powerful and markets acrciss the nallen and
decks. Call for an appointfurther
expand
his
staff
of
18.
ment ·to see this one.
Influential market~ a $40 billion
REALLY NICE' ASKING
$45,000.00.

cholesterol ln the digestive system and keep It from getting into
the bloodstream .
Proctor became Interested In
blueberries because they are
becoming more popular. He will
talk about his findings during the
Ohio Fruit and Vegetable Growers· Congress, Feb. 2-4 in Dayton.
About 30 (l"rcent or blueberry
fiber Is pectin. Apples have more
pectin, as do bananas ani! citrus
fruits. Proctor Is trying to find
differences In pectin levels between different varieties of the
berries. He Is also looking at
changes In pectin before and
during harvest time.
"I'm looking at the three types
of pectin In blueberries and what
percentage or each there ls at
different growing stages," Proctor says. "Some USDA studies
suggest that calcium pectate can

,

.. ATEl

··--.............
__ _____ _ .__,..
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·-_::;:::::.::.:-:::.=.:--I
. ·---"'-··
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... - ~~-.---- · ·-

Blueberries for the health conscious

No Dieting-Eat NormaUy

· Now Available 1o Public

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

CALL (614) 992·2104

PORTLAND, Ore. tUPI)
When Ml ke Forzley worked as a
counselor for troubled youth In
Chicago, he never dreamed he
would become the publisher or a
flashy newspaper for kids that
·now has a · circulation or more
than I million.
But that is where the idea was
born. ·
"It all began with getting kids
prepare'!~ to succeed,". he said.
'·one or the 'coinmon denominators lor success ls reading and
·knowing wh.a t's going on in the
world around you.
"Our goal is to battle illiteracy
and develop the habit of newspaper readership," . he said.
"NeWspapers have been fighting
a losing battle to gain young
readership and then hold it."
Forzley , 43, and his wife,
Kristina Linden , 41, both former
teachers. founded Young American in Portland in 1983 with the
Idea that they would offer kids
: something different than they
found in their local newspapers
and traditional kids publications

New 'Fal Magnet' Diet Pill
Guantnlees Fall Weight I.Dss

.lfyouneedtolose20,SO, IOOpounds
or more, you CIIJl order your supply
of these new highly successful fat-

Mall 1M coupoll Wow with your $3 ·m-btrshlp fM to
the Melp Couty S111ior Cltl11111 C111t~r, ' lox 722, Po·
Mll'oy, Ohio 45769.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

By PET.ER GILLINS

Doctors lnYent
'lazy \AI.ay' tO.
Lose we1·ght

Within 2 days you will notice a
change in the col9r of your stool as
the fat"PIIII
particles
Do are
A/I being
the ..eliminated:
1.J"
nunr
According to the doctors, the fatmagnetpillsdoallthe work while you
quicldylosefatwithnostarvationdiet
menus to follow, no calorie counting,
no exercising, and no hunger pangs.
It is 100% .safe. You silnply take the
pillswithaglassofv.a.terberoremeals.
The !itt-magnet pills have just been
offeredtotheAmericanpublicandare
already sweeping the country with
record sales and reports of dramatic
weight loss. It's the "lazy way" to IQSe
weight for people who enjoy Clfting.

....

l'OUQ(f

Kid paper reaches 1 million ·

.

From 'Fright Night'

,.

"

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

"I can stand up before any thousands of years, so what's a
group and wlt)lln a minute or two year or two?"
WASHINGTON (UP!)- When
have them· In the palm of my
Saffer said his quest for bricks
Basil Saffer, a 68-year·old lover
hand," Saffer said. "By the lime Is often complicated somewhat
of old bricks and lively advenI finish a 28-mlnute lecture, they by the fact mosWorelgn countures, was asked to app~ar on the
have a respect for the brick."
tries have antiquity laYfS regulatDavid Letterman talk show, he
Saffer, proud of his public lng the exportation of t-heir
fretted that "the oldest professpeaking prowess, has deemed artifacts ..
sion in the world" would take a hrlckmaklng the oldest profesRemembering a 1973 advenshellacking.
slon In the world, a distinction ture to Afghanistan, he ·said he
Saffer, who won't quibble when
usually given to prostitution.
round the brick he wanted but
called the world's authority ·on
"When I give lectures to civic had trouble getting it out of the
ancient brick, has trekked thou- groups, there's always some wag country because a government
sands or miles to retrieve a single who has a comment," he said by ornclal reneged his .offer to let
specimen lor his museum, the
telephone from his current home Saffer have lt.
Geperal Shale Museum of Anin Gaithersburg, Md. , outsl&lt;!e
"I was left holding the baby."
cient Brick In Johnson City,
Washington, D.C.
he said, adding that he ultimately
iTenn.
J
•'I tell them, 'If you allow me to managed to get the brick out,
He twice turned down offers to talk about my experiences with with the necessary legal docuappear on NBC's "Late Night !heoldestprofesslonlntheworld, ments and an escort, just two
With David Letterman," but I'm sure the (civic group)
weeks before revolution swept
caved in, and stacked up pretty president will let you talk about the country.
well against the put-down master your experiences with the oldest
"When you see thousands or
on .a segment aired this month.'
profession In the world.' They bricks laying about of no value to
"I didn't want the museum usually don't say much · after anybody, It's a bit frustrating,"
denigrated ," said the native that."
he sal~( his efforts to properly
Englishman who emigrated to
Saffer, who left the South to be make off. with other countries'
America's South following a tour nearer his grandc.hlldren in· Wa- .. ancient bricks. "The only place
with the )3rltlsh Merchant Ma- 1 shington's suburbs, said he is where they mean anything is the
rines in World Wa·r II. "I can acutely aware that most people General Shale Museum.
. handle my sell, no problem there, . don ' t understand his fascination
"I'm probably the only person
but I did not want fun made of the with the kingdom of clay.
who -has traveled thousands of
museum," he said.
•'Many people are puzzled,
miles for just one brick," he said,
Through his dedication to the somethlnkl'mnuts,"Saffersald adding he jetted to Sri Lanka
museum, Saf!er has garnered of his life's work, which began 25 believing he would return with
some prime possessions for the years ago when he took a job at one brick, but was offered one
200-brick display, Including a
General Shale, one or the nation's dating from each century.
chunk from the tomb of King Tut
largest brick manufacturers.
"We have a 2,000-year history
and one of the world's first and
"Someone will be passing by of Sri Lanka In brick," he said of
oldest documented bricks un - an.d I'll just be taking lots or his museum.
earthed from beneath the bibli- photographs of brick walls."
Asked If he· lives in a brick
cal city of Jericho dating to 8,000, · He said he, too, was lnlt.l ally a house he paused and said , "I'
B.C.
.
hit mystified by the minds of have to say no. I getupset about it
By comparison, his brick dat - archaeologists.
'"
every time I walk Into. our
Ing to 1550 from Wllliam Shakes•'I would write letters to fellow . townhouse with hll Its nonpeare's birthplace In J;:ngland's archaeologists and not hear from durable materlal."IIe said he
them for more than a year," he once lived In Bristol, Tenn .. In a
Stratford -On -Avon seems a
said.
"I gradually began to house that was "brick inside,
modern-day "baby" -the· nickabsorb some of what they felt. outside- all over. I jusl.forget
name he fondly places on all his
highly prized bricks .
You're dealing in hundreds of about It and suffer."

Baghdad radio also reported a bunkers in fierce fighting along
clash between Iraqi soldiers and the central warfront.
Iran said Iraqi troops susIranian boats loaded with assault
tained
heavy losses after skirtroops. The radio said Iraqi
mishes with local Kurdish tribesgunners opened fire on 10 boats
men in Iraq's northern Kurdlstan
filled with Iranian troops as the
province.
vessels approached Iraqi
territory.
It said its troops were active
along - several sectors of the
The radio did not specify where
warfront, killing an unspecified
the Incident took place. but It said
number ol Iraqi troops on the
the Iraqi attack forced the troop
boats i.o flee.
· western front and shelling IrQqt .
positions in the south.
Shipping officials said it was
Military experts said Ira.n ls
not clear whether the crippled
trying to keep up the pressure
ship MV Mare was working for
"along all sectors" of the Iraqi Iran when It was hit, and the;,&lt;
Iranian warfront to "weaken and
said Iraqi warplanes may have
overstretch Iraq's better
attacked the vessel by mistake.
equipped but less numerous
Shipping officials said the
troops. "
Mare, whose owners were listed
as Good Faith Ltd .. or Piraeus, , - - - - - - - - - - - - - Greece, may have been on its
Diet PiUs Sweeping US.
way to deliver cargo in Kuwaitwhich like .most gulf states is
officially neutral In the bitter
7-.year'old Iran-Iraq war but
leans toward Iraq.
"If the ship was about to
o(fload In Kuwait when It was
YYf
attacked, the Iraqis have' made a
mistake:· one shipping executive .~aid.
.

Iraq ·or reported by shipping
sources this month.
Baghdad radio also said Iraqi
troops killed !56 Iranian soldiers
and destroyed 19 infantry

.. . .

By JULIE BRIENZA

Foreign Minister announced Monday. Malenkov
(L) Is pictured with Stalin atop Lenin's Tomb
reviewing a 1952 May Day Parade. Malenkov was
86.

br~~:~~~~;~~~~~tea~~~~~~~~c~~

.-

Archaeologist happy facing ' the wall

Panamanian-flagged ship crippled,
'
Iranian boats chased away by Iraq
By LEE STOKES
MANAMA, Bahrain (UP!)
Iraqi warplanes crippled a
Panamanlan-fl(lgged ship in the
Persian Gulf, and fierce fighting
continued along the Iran-Iraq
warfront, with Baghdad claimlng It chased away 10 boatloads or
Iranian assault troops trying to
land In Iraq.
An Exocet missile !ired by
Iraqi jets slammed Into the
Panamanlari-na'gged · freighter
MV Mare at 9 a.m. Sunday,
setting it ablaze ahd forcing toe
crew to abandon ship after
issuing a distress call, shipping
officials said.
The American warship USS
Chandler, on routine patrol about
62 miles north of Bahrain ln the
central gulf, spotted the 9,112-ton
vessel adrift and smoking off the
coast or Saudi Arabia six hours
later' u.s. !)a val o(ficlals said.
A helicoptetfrom the Chandler
Investigated the Greek-owned
MV Mare but round no crew
aboard
"The.crewhad abandoned ship
and could not be spotted... a u.s.
Navy spokesman in Bahrain

.

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

:~·soviet secretary-general, premier after Stalin . dea~ at 86
MOSCOW (UPJ) - Georgi
Malenkov', the immediate successor of Josef Stalin who lost out
In a power struggle and became
one of history's forgotten men ,
has died I! t age 86, Soviet
spokesman Gennady Gerasimov
said today.
Ma lenkov succeeded Stalin as
Communist Par!y General Secretary when the dictator died
March 5, 1953. By the middle or
March he had given up the party ·
Post to Nlklta ~hrllshchev , be. coming prime minister In the
government- a post that led him
into oblivion.
,
He ruled as Stalin's successor
for 10 days and as prime minister.
for a year. Arter his final ouster
from the ruling circle In 1957,
Malenkov was sent to the Chinese
frontier. to manage a hydroelect ric power station Until his retirement In 1968.
Malenkov's death leaves only
one man from Stalin's close Inner
circle alive, Lazar Kaganovlch.
Last year. Vyschesalva Molotov.
Stalin's foreign minister, died at
92, but unlike Malenkov, he was
readmitted to the party in his
final years.
Geraslmov said only "Malenkov has died '' and gave no cause
or death, but noted that he was an

.

Middleport. Ohio

127~ and Oolillll

1~ Till tltrl
Adilll.lllllilr 1a•1 ,..,,._

1·13-tfc

ture Dachlhl.lnd for llud service.
304-773-9666.
Attention Electrolux customers,
Frank Fult1 is now your authO·

riled factory aalas and service
representative.' For tervica call
304·937· 2272 anytime .

4

Giveaway

To a good home: Puppie1 . Pan
Golden Reuievar, part Engli.t.
Sauer. Could make good hunt·
ing dogs . Calll14·44&amp;· 2885.

Free. while 1upply lasttl Mala
and female puppies. mixed
breed . For lntorm.tlon, e~M
114-742-2137, 1uve nemeand
phone number.

Puppies

-

'A Doberman. :11.

Booglo, 304-&amp;75-7245 .

J monlh old mele, Dalmation,
had all shots. Call after S.

304-&amp;71-2415.

.

•
8

Loat end Found

FO&lt;rnd, blolik and wfllte -

male dog In lowm.n Run area.

J.,....ry 28111. C.H

114-148-

2221 or 114-t4t-zotl2.

of.,.__ .,....... ..
fOil\ E. Moln lt., ..............

Pound: 11m

••

'

Kitten, nltUtr.d, all shots. claws
removed. d•k gray and white to
goOd home, phone 304-175&amp;038.

-

In Ohio Alvor

·

�·-

•

LAFF-A-DAY

7

44

···--·-GanTpolrs·· ........
&amp; Vicinity

51

. Apartment
for Rent

2 BR. lpta. I CIOIB'Jf, kitchen·
appl. fumliahed. w..her· Drvet
hook·up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Aptt. Call 304·87&amp;· 7738 or

·

Z18 Third Ave .~ Feb. 1 , 2 . 3 , 9 -1.
Curuins. drapes. furnhure. picturn, aome eJ»ppillnc".

Furnlthed apt. ne11.t to library.
One .prot. .tlonsl adult ontv.
Parting. Call814-448 -0338.

.......P.om-erov ....,.....

2 BR. ept. Stove &amp; refrig.
fumlthed. Near Go Mart. Call

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

814-448-7028.

BEAUTIFUL APART~ENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

··-·····"··················-······

SON ESTATES,c 538 Jeckton
Pike fro""' f183 a mo. Wtlk to
sh.Op itnd mDVI81. 6 14-446···

Buemant Moving Sale .. Feb. 1,
2, 3, at yellow b1oc:tt houM
acrou from Hubbards GrHn,

2518. E.O,H ..

house in Syraouse. 9 :00-3:00.

luliury T.era Apartmenta . El•
gent, z Br. 2 ftoor, f~lly
carpeted. CA a~d heat. Private
entrance. enclo•d patio. pool•
playgro~,tnd . Start- $299 par
month. Utilltift not included.
Callll.t.-367-?850.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·"For twenty years I was 'just
a hobo' ...then I was 'only a
bum, ...now I'm 'one of the
homeless,' and 'the pressure
iS giving me ulcel\S!"
·

Wedemeyer' s Auction Serviceavailable 11 your convanien·ca

and locations. Marlin Wed•
meyer

Auctioneer-

614 -246-

5162.

9

Wanted To Buy

we
ceth for tate model clean
usedpay
c••·

J;m M;nk Chov.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene John !!ion
a14-44a -3a72
TOP CASH paid for '83 modl!l
and newer used cars. Smith

Buick-Pontiac. 191 1

Eastern

11

Complete households of furniture &amp; antiques. Also wood &amp;

coal heaters. Swain'.• Furniture
&amp;. Auction. Third &amp; Oliva,
614-446 -3159.
Want to buy: Used furniture and
antiques. Will buy enti!B house·
hold furniahing . Marlin Wade·
meYer, 614· 245 -6152.

· Standing timber. Call 614· 379·
2758.
Buying daily gold,. silver coins,
ringt, jewelry. sterhng ware. ol~
coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middlepon, Oh. 814·

992·347a,

Raw fur. beef and deer hides.
Gyn Sing and Yellow _root .. We
have wheat and n1te hies.
Trapping supplies far sale. (Buying used tHIPI). Last day to buy
fur , Feb: 6t 1988. George
Buckley. Hours 12-9 . 814-864-

·

Standing timber. Cell

2328,

~14 - 742 -

Employment
Services
11

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

12

eXCELLENT WAGES for spare
tinle assembly worfc; electronics . crafls. Others. Info. call
1-604-841-0091 . Ext. 2987.
Open 7 days. CALL NOW! .
" friends Retail Corp" of GallipOlis Ohio. seeks a competent
sates' person to work in children 's clothing store. Must be
highly motivated and LOVE
working with children. Send
resume to: Friends Rtttail Corp.,
P.O. Bo x 981 , Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .

Senior citizen. RoOm end board
for one ledy. Special care in my
home: Raisonable. (:all 614-

Furniahed houae. 3 BR . 29 Neil,
Galllpolia. ·uz&amp; . Ci111448·4416

992-aBn.

aftltt' 7 PM ~

Rooms f'Dr ' r8nt. day. week.
month. Gallia. Motel. Call 614·
446-9580. ~ant u low aa &amp;1 ZO
month.

13

3 BR . houte, 2 mi. out 141.
8360 1 mo. Oep. &amp; ref. required.
Cell 61.t.-446-92Bb aftM 6 PM
&amp; weekends.

Weeltly. monthly rat~s, utilities
paid. Cooking facilities . Down·
town location. Senion wei·
come. Park Central Hotel. Cat1

SERVICE JOBS.

Now Hiring. Your area . $13.55q
to $59.480. Immediate Open·
ing s. Ca\11 ·315-733· 6063 E•t..
F-2758 .
Need babysit1er to come to my
home. 2 children. Uve close to
hospital. Ref. required. Call

614-446-049a .

Needed : A person to live-in with
an elderly lady, light housework.
room, board and salary. Call
614 -446-1092 after 7 PM .
Government Jobs. S16,040 S59, 230 year. Now Hiring. Your
Area . 806.-687·6000 Ext. R9805 for current Federal list.
Excellent wBges fgr spare time
as sembly work: electronics.
cratta. Others . Info 1-604-641 0 091 E~et . 30?6 . Open 7 daya !
Federal. Stlllt e 11 nd Civi l Service
Jo bs. Now hiring . Your area.
$1 3, 650 to $59,480. lmme·
dia te openings. Caii1 · 315-7J36063 Ex t. F2766 .
Womcm who want to earn extra
inco me. Must be 18 or older. If
qual ified may st11rt immediately.
Call 614-698-4370.
AN needed for nursing rehabiH·
tation unit. Requires caring
individ.ual who 's nursing pr~c­
ti c,.e is geared toward rest'?rmg
roiidence to the home envnon·
mont 85 much as pouible.
C o nta c t Nan c y VanMeter '
O .O .N. Amari cer.': P_o meroy
Nursing and Rehab•htatlon Cante r. 614 -992 -6606 . E.O.E.
AVON . All areas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2645.
R. N,, physicians office. please
send resume to Bo~e C-16 care of
Point Pleasant Register. 200
Main St ., Point Pleasant, W. Va.
25560.
LP.N.-P .H.
Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
Center seeking energetic II·
censed Practical Nurus. Immediate pan time employment.
Experienced in long term care
preferred . Excellent fringe benefil and salary pac;:kage. Call
personnel oiice. Pleasant Va,ley
Hospital . 304 - 675 - 4340 .

E.O.E.·A.A,

Clerical position ev8ilable; appli cant must be proficient with
calculator and typewriter, have
good sales and custo'!'er skiMs.
previous elericalupenence pre·
ferred . E.O.E. Send resume to
P.O. Box 26, Point Pteasant, WV

814-446-0766.

46 Space fo·r Rent
OHice Space tor rent . Expel.
downtown G•dlipolis location.
Inquiries cell 614-446-4222.

PM.

Will quilt vour tops or make
quihs. Cell Pany at 614 · 4~6 -

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 614-992·
7479.

. 2 BR house in city . No pett.
S3Z5 month. Deposit &amp; reference required . Call Witeman
Real Esl•te. 614·446-3644.

Space fo• small trailers. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air and cable. M111on.
W.Va. Call 304-773-6651.

3 bedroom house for rent in
Syracuse. Call 614- 99~ · 7689
after 6 :00.

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Oallipolil Ferry. 3.04-676-.
3073.

Business
Opportunity
NOTICE!

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

Beauty"Shop for sale in town .
Call 614-992-3664 for more
information.

Real Estate

6104,

Unfurnished housefor"rent. Fully
c;:arpeted. nice. and clean. energy
efficient. Will· &amp;)!Capt 1 or 2
children. 614-992-3090.

· 47Wanted to Rent

3 bedroom house. 8176 month.
Mulberry Ave. Call 614-9925587 or 814-992-7460.

4 OR .. lireplace. full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolit. S29,900.
Call Oays-614-446· 1615, after
5 :00· 4·6-124 • .
Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
Locks on Rt. 7. 2cargarego, liice
lot. Immediate pouession. ~ill
consider trade in of mob1le
home. property, etc . Bargain
priced. Call614-448-8038 .
2 bedroom. 2 baths, 2 car
garage. level lot on . Rt . 33.
Swimming pool. satel•te, close
to Meigs High . Call 614·992·
3264.
7 room house 1 Vz beth, 4
bedrOom on Gravel Hill . ~er11ge.
770 Ash St. Middleport, Ollio.

Co11614-992-5714.

-

Must 1all to settle estate.
beautiful two bedroom homo.
108 Legion Terrace. Pomeroy.
Interested parti .. , call814-992384 1 tor appointment.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths. full
finished basement, new furn•ee
end central air. garage. fenced
yard. low 80's, z•14_Mt. Vernon
Ave .. 304· 676-1774.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Wanted to Rent· Needed imm•
diately 3 or 4 bedroom house to
rent in Gallipolis. Call614·767·
2752 after 6pm.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR .. water. sewage furnished .
Beautiful river view. No city
taxes. Foster's Mobile Home
Park . Cal\614-446-1602.

Homes for $ale

Merchandise
51

Household Goods

1•x70 Wlndtor with 14d0
addition, 3 bed room•. black top
road. appro• 3 acres. Gallipolis

F..,y, 304-178-1930.

Farms for Sale

30 acre farm : Mottly tlllabl•.
Near Rio Grande. Pond. barns.
good home. C1ll 614· 246·
9182.
39.4 aCfea: Two oldllf" houf.. •
outbi.lildlngt, portd. App.ox. 20
acres tillable, county weter, Ford
tractor. Kyger Creek uhoots.
136.000, N1g. Call 81-·388·
9704.

&amp; Acreega

Be your own t10P. work your
3?0 ecret. Apple Grow, W.Va ..
own hours, 16181 position. ~m ­
Rt. 2 frontage. aand, greval,
mi .. ion. unlimited opportumty,
il-tterviewt Feb. 8 . 8 :00, 2'13 · coal, located 4 mil• from Dam
site. Ideal for development.
Jackton Ave ., Point PleaNnt,
304-829-2360.
w. va .. 304· 8?5-1728. ,

1~

Model 12 . 12 ge .. Browning 18
ga.. Univer1al 12 ge.. 31 Aa·
mington 12 ga. Call 614·4•8·

334a .

Bidwell Caah Feed Store now
ready for spring. In stock ell
tobacco supplies, all fertillnr,
fencing, gerden seed, w11ter &amp;
drain pipe. Cell for latest prices1975 GMC pickup V:. t~ft 16
series, 360 engine. Standard
trana. New clutch. motor rune, ·
but nHdl w:otii. •400. 4000'
tobacco or tometo atickl. 16
cents each. 3 tObacco bale
boxe1, 8100. for all. 60 pc;:s.
used tin roofing, 82.00 eacf1.
250 gallon water tank. Horta
drawn plows. Cell 614· 379·
2437 .
Mi~ed

hard wood 1iaba. $12 per
bundle. Containing approx."1 Y.a
ton. FOB . Ohio Pellet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. _8 14-992-6411 .
Movi';i\b, mU11 sell tw.p cemetery
lots at Meigs Memory Gardens.
Will sell both for · $500. Call

614-992-.a240.

SWAIN
Nice 2 bedroom tr&amp;i18f'. large
AUCTION
&amp; FURNITURE 62
Firewood 1delivered, stacked.
-yard . Kanauga. Call 614-448Olive St .. Gallipolis .
&amp;35.00. Mason Counties. Gilli·
7473.
NEW· 6 pC. wood group- $399 . polis, other aress within reuon
Uving room suites- $199-$699 . at our discreation. 304•895Bunk bed&amp; with bedding- $199. 3446.
Full tile maHress &amp; foundation
starting - $99 . Rec liners SURPLUS DENIM , Cerl1ar1 .
· starting- $99 .
Rental Ck&gt;thing. New heavy
USED· Beds, dressers. bedroom
coveralls U2 .00. heavy new
3 BR . Mobile Home in country,
suites. 8199 -8299 . Desks, work clothing. boots all winter at
water furnished . 2 children. wringer
weshet.a complete line re11onable prices. Sam Sori'le·
1166 plus $135 deposit. Call
of used furniture .
rville' !l, Old Rl. 21-junction
61 .4 -388-9686 .
NEW- Western boots- S30. lndependanc;e Road, Eut Ra$18 1L up. jStea' &amp;
venswood, Fri. Sat, Sun; noon·
Furnished 2 SA . Mob ile Home. .WorkbCiots
8 :00 pm .. 304-273 ~ 5865.
Located at K &amp; K Mobile Home soft toe). Call614· 446-3159 .
Park· Eastern Ava. Oep. &amp;. ref.
County Appliance. Inc. Good' Oak firewood. Can 304·676,required. Call 814-256· 1187.
·used appliance• and TV sets. 2767 after 4:30P.m . Ask for
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Woodman.
3 bedroom-Metropolitan Hous- Sal,
a14-446-1699. a27 3rd,
ing approved . Children 8&amp; pets Ave. Oallipolii.. OH .
MajorCredit Carda! Regardled
welcoll1• Kyger Creek Schools.
ot !?!edit hittory. Also. new
Call 61 • ·446-64'1 0 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES cred•t card. No one refuied! For
Washers. dryers , r&amp;frigeretora.
information call ... 1·3115· 733·
77 Oakwood, 2 BR , gl• heat. ranges . Skaggs Appliances.
AC . wether -dryer , In Rio Upper River Rd . beside Stone 6062 ext. M2938.
Granda. Cell614-246-9143.
Crest Motel. 614-446 -7398 .
"HOMES" LPN gas furnace for
mobile home. complete wl1tl all
Mobile home for rent . 5 miles
from Gallipc;»lis on 218. Call Amana side-by-side 22 cu. ft. tile fitting1, 304-676-2061 .
rehig. treezer· ice maker. avo a14-26a-aoo9.
cado. G . E. electric tange with PICKENS USED FURNITURE,
2 bedroom mobile home In hood . avocedo. Call 614 ·246 · 304 -676 -1460 : G .. ranges
21 ,24,&amp;30 in .. 876.00 &amp;• up;
Middleport. Ohio .. Refer!nt:e 9621 •fter 1 PM .
end Security depo11t · raquued. Antique Wing Back uphol1tery LPN gea rsnge 875.00; 21 in.
304· 88"2 ·3267 or 304-773 - chair. Queen Ann LAgs. Pair of electric range; refrigeraton
856.00 • up; Maytag wringer
5024.
Mahoganv end tables. Good washer 896.00.
conditiort. 614-992· 6861 .
2 bedroom trailet, Flatrock area. 1 ~------,.,.-.,::-:-:~==
46 a"t:r" of pulp wood, write
"8160 . month, $100 depo•it.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Landowner, Rt. 2·Box 291,
304-676-6063 after 6 :30p.m .
Beds. desks, lamps. tables. Gallipolis. Ohio 46631 :
couchs, chsiril, dinnetu, misc.
Mobile home for refit Kariauga . Half mile out Jericho Roac;l. New exerciting machine, m~n
Reference• and deposit. 446· S:0_0-8 :00 Sundays 1 2 :00· te~Jerel machine1. tl~. 304-,
4597 Of 304-876-6196 .
6:.0 0, ·304· 675-1450.
676-7315.
' .·
recliner,

good t:ond.

Golf clubs. phone304-8715 -

1 7

44
for Rent
Apartment

APARTMENTS. mobile hOmes.
hOuset. Pt . PleuentlfMI Gallipolit. 81 4-...&amp;-8221 .

17ao.

Golllpolls. Ohio Coli 814·4441·
2783.

1983 Chw"y. Citation. Am rtdio,
.,.o. trono .. ·pa, PB. 19,000
mHH. • , 700. Con bo - · Ol tho
Gellipolia Dally Tribune or for
more lnformetlon cell 814-441·

Julie Wobb Ph, 814-441-0231.

Orsgonwynd Cattery Kannel.
CFA Himalayan. Pe,.len end
Siamet8 klt1ens. AKC Chow
puppiel. Cell 614·446-3844
efttr 7PM .
Par1 white Chow Chow .&amp;
1/16th wolf puppiea. t160
each. Ca11614-Z58-9333.

814·44a-1149.

German
Cal

~Ia.

Femsle Lhau Apso &amp; female
f•ret . Call after &amp;pm. 814-446·

4737.

Musical
1nstru ments

67

lotul electric guitar, t100.
Yamehil 8 string flat top with
c:all· •121. Batt guitar eptlker
cablnM with 1 111 lr,ch JIL • 1
15 Inch Peevey black widow.
•150. Call &amp;14-379-2161.
Guitar Leugnsll Individual in·
slruction. Brunicardi' 1 Mulic,
8,.·441-0687 or cell Jeff
Wamsley instructor, 614·448·

eon.

For Sale or Trade

__

Colll14·441-3921 .

f m n Snppill!'
~ LIVI! ~ III i:k

61 Farm Equipment

614-281-84&amp;1.

Jlckton. Ohio.

Ma11ey FefgutOn, NN Holland.
Bush Hog Salea &amp; Service. Over
•o uaed treetora to chooH from
&amp; complete line Qf n.w • uaed
tQuipment. Largest Mlection in
S.E. Ohio.
1030 Cue tractor: Cream Puff.
Mu•t be IMn to appreciate. S
bottom plowt. tran•port disc.

M7&amp;0. Colll14·288·1122.

2010 J.D.tractorw/ J .D. equipment. 2 row pla,.ler, plowt,
rotary hoe. pott driver. t3QI50.

Call 114-281-1122.

20•30 Harvestore SUo witt'!
sweep-arm MloedM and New
Holland blower. tiSOOO. For
more klformetion write: George
C. Iorden· P.O. Bo• U1 .

Chllllootho. Ohio 41101 ,

1982 Old1. Brougham Cudets
Supreme. 68,000 actual mlle1.
2 dr. Exeat. cond. t6200. ~II

514-446-3204.

1987 SublrU QL 10. 4 dOOf,
micl red, power sunroof. turbo
engine. &amp; spd.. AC. AM·FM
capette, tilt, cruiH, PW, power
door locka. Just 1 1,000 miles.
Excellent condition . Ctll 614446~217 after 6pm .

72 Olda. Delta 88. Gaod condition. •360. Call81 ... 245 -9284.

1981 Oldt Cutla.. LS . Eltcellent
condition. t2200. 1,976 Chevy
pick-up heH·ton. t1800. C.ll

Phono 114·949-2110.

1980 C.dillec Sedan De VIHe.
fully ~ipped. good condition.
121500. 1188 Celebrity Euros·
port, 31,000 miiM . Automatic.
• cylinder. cruha. air·
condttioning. t7.000. Cell814·

949-3027.

1981 Toyota Celica. PS. PB. air,
auto., sunroof, ' cyl. Excellent
condition. AM-FM radio. Cell

814'·98&amp;-3&amp;98 or 114·992·

'72 V.W. t?&amp;O.OO. '48 Wlllln

Jeep t1.oo·o .oo. 11•·441·

81 Chevrolet Ceprlce. t10,000.

304-175-20118.

.

1971 Pontile Grend Pri)t W ...
new .tirea. needs t,.nlft'll11ion
wark, t&amp;OO.OO. Beforei,:OO call
Of

Chevy Vega.

304-a71·24&amp;7.

304·89&amp;·

t371.00. ·

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 Ford plctl-up truck.

•12ao. Colll14-288-1122.

·::_:ID:,:od.:.·..:.C:,:o;;,ll..:l..:l4-~:-441;,·_11_7, 8.
·IDMiaod hoy or o - 1ft .,._.
Wo.

74 Ford 'h ton

pick~p.

Runt

good. •8oD. Coli .114-2419214.
.
84 TDYDf:i ~Mokup. Excelillnt
condition. 14,000 mlloo. 4 oyt &amp;
tpd. lot.lll or take -.over ,..,.

....... Coli 114-44a-1234 ...
for DIVI.

1911 l-ID. 41!1d. Lo-W\tholr.
Alplno
Prloo 07000. Con
114-441-IOH.

o..-.

1811 ChO'I'I 1·10, ntond cob.
k*led. UGIMI?t oonclitton. For
•~t ....... poymonto.
c
- 114-HI-4107.,
114·
111•1411.

boloo. Mlaod hoy 1ft - boloo.
Coli 814·211·3314,
Jo-.Ohla.

2 bedroom apt. for rent . i•~•
and refrlg•etor ~re furni1hed .
Ctrpetld. "flee aenlng. Call
'

.

"There! Vve finallY taken down
·~., Christmas lights! Satls!IBd?l"
'

'

srA~DeH

i

RON'S 1elavition Service.
House ·c•ll• on RCA. Qunaro
GE. Speciellng in Ztlf'lth. Call

•
I

· ~·..:7":....:.eo;;.;•..:•._:- - - - - : - -

•

2454.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Fetty TrM Trimming, etump
removal. Call 304· 81&amp;-1331.

WHAT

I BIT

HAP~E:DTO
'!ttJR FIN$f!~

IT.

W,/15 PURELYA REFLEX
ACTION. I SLJDCENLY

IT

NOTICED...

Starks Tree and Lewn Servic:e,
11wn care. landtceping, ttump
removal, 30•·578-28'2 ar

HON JW.lCH IT L.a?KcD

LIKE A H.;;DONALOO
F~FRY.

TrM trimming and remo...,al. odd
jobl.. tree estimates. 304-8?1·

3312.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

+Q5

• 8 6 52
+A J .74

By James Jacoby .

+K86~3

+AJ92

448-4477

·

~JU"tJ(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Statue

5 Applaud .

MOVIE: 'Weekend
War' ABC Monday Nigllt
MovleC
(!) lllJ !!yea on the Prize:
America'• Civil ·Righte Years
Examine the rocky course of
schoOl desegregation in lhe
South. C
·
i1DJ 111112l Newhart George
decides to fulfill his dream
fantasy of selling used cars.

8

Larry King Llvel
9:30 ® College Beokelball
t1JJ 111 (!2i Oeolgnlng Women
Suzanne is in deep trouble

11 CD

m m())

·aJ)N-

General Hauling

DOWN

l Yankee
great .
10 Picture
2 One kmd
puzzle
of flu
12 Anger
3 Boxing
13 Empower
judges'
115 Italian
verdict
Yesterday's Answer
TV
4 Hurricane
network
part
16 Bowler
5 Soft and 16 RoU-eall
27 Slanted
17 On the smooth .
word
30 "The alarm
(in
6 Gave for 19 Sharpened
is hiding)
a time '
20 "7 a.m ."
Attraction" 31 Cord
7 Lawyers
18 Hymn
grp.
23 Emula~ed 33 Solitary
20 ._ Easy
Pieces"
Vox
populi
Van Winkle 36 Bath tester
8
24 Derogatory 37 Boston
11 Drool
21 Songwriter
14 Kind of
rumor .
party
Previn
board
~5 Transmit
theme
22 Maple
. genus

23 Emb81Tassing
display

25 Skyscraper
part
26 Curtain

material
27 BOWid
28 Geraint's
beloved
29Sign up
32-de deux
33 Stripling
, . Untried
315Moon of

Neptune
37SA.
monkey

Cil Hogan'o Heroeo ·
11:001]) RemingtOn Steela Steele
in the Chlpa

87&amp;·1781. •

raised

9 Catch
sight of

5I

Aeeldantial or dommerclel wiring. New sent1ce or repalre.
Ucenaed slectriclan. Estimate
frn. Ridenour Electrical, 30.t.-

40 Want
41 It's often .

part

10:30 CD Varloua
lllJ The Making of a
Continent Look at the Great
Basin and Lava Plains and
Yellowstone National Park . .

Electrical
Refrigeration

'38"Loma-"
Of the dawn

39

I!Dl 111 a21.

DAILy CRYPI'OQUO'I'F.S- Here'~ how to work It:

(!) Sign Off
1!21 Moneyllne .
1B1 Soap
Ill Cil Love ConnectiOn
11:30 11 (2) all Beet of C.reon

OH11rd Wtter Servlcil: Poole,
Cilternt. W.tlt. Delivery Any·
timl. Call 814-ot.ot.8-7404· No .
Sunday calli.

(!) llportoCenler (L)

ma....

J a J Watet Service. Swimming
poole, ciltamt, wells. Ph. S1.t.·

IILONGFELLOW

·

One lettA~r$tands for another. In this sample Ais used
for the three L'a X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the iength and fonnation of the words are all .
hints. Each clay the code letters are different.
.
.

l'lo P.l.

IJI)

lllJ Hometkne Outdoor deck
CQI)Itl'uCIIon ia Illustrated. Q

R • R Water SaMet. tfome
citwa, wellt, paals filled. Farmarly Jamet Boyt Watere.Catl

II) lportt Tonlahl

Paul Aupe, Jr. Wilt• Service.
Poole, cleterna, welfe. Call 114-

Night A d&amp;tactive is
overlOoking important clues.
(R)
,
9 MIQnum, P.l. This leland

el!2l 'Hul!ler' cas L8l8

304-871·6370.
441-3171.

CBYFI'OQUOTES ,

2·1

eCIJTul ·
12:00 CD 1umt llld Allan
(!) .....

2919.

o.-, l'lllllnt

Ctllbrtly

T....... Golf llld
From KDnl, Hawaii (A)
Uphol•tery ,

·

,

TYZKR 'X

I .....

C:gltt '

AKPY.-UQVZ

I sa ollll Tlmll Anlund All star
11111\b to Mr: TlltviiiOn.
12:10 ill National Gla.raplllc

,,

/(

HVY

KX

NKTVHKZT

Q A '

aliMfliilerii:TIIe

• tlltli(" .
12:10 CD .laalt IMnr

XHPQZTYXH

HVY

JVMPMJHYPKXH~JX

I.

1!=:.:1

triaountya,.e Z2yun. TMbeet
lit ltr&lt;n- ullliololorlnt. CoM .
304·171 - 4114 for free
..tlmat... ·

QA

QZ'Y

Isn't Big Enough

WettertOn·• · Water Hauling,
rtasoneble rates, imm~late
2.000 gallon delivery. ~l•tem•.
'DO&lt;tlt, well, etc. oall 304·171·

2/1

AXYDLBAAXR

• t::Uine 1:;1

2411-9211.

·~

+

(NR) (1 :43)

CARDS

'

EAST
+10

SOUTH

Ill (l) Benny Hill
10:05 I]) MOYIE: All tiNt Marbleo

OFF AN'. PLAY

WEST

The m~ern bridge world is full of
+AK972
gadgets - special conventions that
. • AJ
help partnerships gain excellent re·
• 632
suits, for the most part. Conventions
+Q 10 4
also have their drawbacks if oppo·
Vulnerable: Neither
nents know how to use the information
Dealer: South
to their own advantage. In tO&lt;Iay's deal
we see the splinter bid in action. Wesl
Nortb East
Soulh
North's jump to four clubs described a
t+
hand with good spade support, 9-11
Pass
4 +•
Dbl.
4+
Pass Pass
high-ca)'d points and a singleton club . . · Pass
•g.u points,S ing1eton Club
With a minimum hand and the knowl·
and good support for spades
edge that the queen of clubs was a
worthless card, South su,bsided in four
Opening lead: K
spades, but the damage had already .
been done. East had doubled four clubs
to show strength in the suit, and that East would be construed as suit-prefenabled tbe defense to function With erence. When the two of clubs dropped
absolute precision.
t bl w t h' It d t tir e
West led the king of clubs, expecting gently on the a e, es 8 1 e 0
to hold the l~d and wanting to be able queen of diamonds and the defendr;rs
h ld
quickly took two diamonds and a dla·
to judge how the defense s ou . pro- mond ruff to set the contract Is it like·
ceed. It now became theresponslblhty I that this would have happened if
~h!"~o~~d ·~~~"!d~a~~g~ftoa!~~kb Jorth had sim~ly responded with a bid
continuation, so the card play~d br •of f~r spades · .. ..

(121 Evening News

YOU'D NEED
A TAXI TO GO

GollipoHo, Ohio

Phone 814-441-3888 or 114·

87

.Q10973

lllJ I!JIIIIwl

Cor. Fourth end Pint

+

Splinter bid
boomerangs

a

CARTER'S PLUMBINO
AND HEATING

NORTH
%-1-81
+QJ8643
.K4
K LO 9 8
+7

James Jacoby

with the IRS: tho solution Is
not pretty.
10:00 (I) Straight Talk
(!) Ethnic Notions: Portraits
of Prejudice Take a
disturbing voyage through
'American history. tracing for
th8 first time the dooply
rooted stereotypes that have
fu8led prejudice against
blacks.
t1JJ 111 (!2i Wloeguy

671-2903.

a.

•

BRIDGE

..

lil Ill ClJ

VACA'TJQ\J
~

Mowroy'O UphatotorkiQ .......

Hoyfaroolo. oi.IOporbolt.Col 1 - 3eo Chwv pllkup, '114-848·2714 or 114-182- ~ ..-.... •a,ooo. 104-

&amp;313.

IS

l!STATE.

-----r------

., ..o, Col814·4441·8407.

Hay for ule. .lMte round bela.

t&gt;LL. \AJE. HAVE. L.EFT

.PlOTZ

SWEEPER end 18Wing machine
repair, p1rt1. and •upplin. Pick
up and deliverv. Davit Vacuum
Cleaner ;-~one halt · mile up
George&amp; Creek Rd. Call 814-

1987 Ford RongOt' s. a IJid.,
86
Alioi-FM·CoiO, 8,000 mlloo, Coli
814-441·2323- 4 PM.
,
Short bed with topper. Radlel
thft.l7,000origln.tmlles. Very
g- condition. -hborllood
Rd.. Gelllpollt . Mut 1811.

&amp; Grain

MEEK

Unconclltktn.t lletime guaran·
tee. Local reference~ fumiehed.
Frn eetlmetes. Cell collect
1·11.t.-237-0488, day or night.
Roger1Basement
Waterproofing.

84

Old gent: "I k18p my c~h safe by hiding it·In an empty beer

can lying on the lawn. No one will PICK It UP there.'

'chases attar Paul Newman
when he films movie In
neighborhood. 1:;1 •
lllJ Wonderwortcs English
family struggles to make a
living In Australian mining .
town. I:;! .
(121 PrimeNewo
t!J) MOVIE: Acro11 the
Ptclflc (1 :37)
fl) (l) MOVIE: The
Philadelphia Experiment (PG)
(1 :42)
8:115 (l) MOVIE: Car Waoh (PG)
(1 :37)
•
8:30 D !2l e1 Valeria's Family
Recently diVOrced 'Sandy
Hogan moves Into her
brother 's home. (R) 1:;1
t1JJ 1111!21 !;rank's Place Big
Arthur fights rival chel who's
accused of stealing his
recipes.( A)
9:00 (I) 700 Club
D (2) 1111 MOVIE:
'Fiathdance' NBC r,londay
Night at the Movies (R) (1 :36)

WAY, FELLASI

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

82

. SCRAMUTS ANSWEIIS.
Picnic - Spoof - Opium - Quaker - PICK It UP

t1JJ Ill (!2i kate &amp; Allie Allie

COMIN' THIS

IIII

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LEITERS
I 0 GET ANSWER

team. Q

Home
I mprovemehts

885·3802

A PRINT NUMBERED LEITER S IN ·
':~' THESE SQUARES

t!J) WKRP In Clnclnnllll
.
Cil Too Cloee lor Comfort
6:35 I]) i.eave It to Beaver
7:00 CD Remington Steele Steele
in the NeWs .
D CD PM Magazine
· (!) SportaCanter (L~
(I) Enterllllnment Tonight
Cl ()) People' I Court'
(!) lllJ MacNeil/ Lehrer
NeweHour (1:00)
·
Ill) Newt
(121 Moneyllne
Ill (!2i 1111 Wheel of Fortune
t!J) Cheers
fl) Cil M•A•s•H
7:05 I]) Andy GriHith
7:30 D CD (I) Hollywood
Square•
(!) College Basketball
C)()) Judge
11)1 Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
(121 Cro11flre
Ill (!2i 1111 Jeopardy! 1:;1
IBI Bamey Miller
.
Cil WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 I]) Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Father Murphy A Horse
from Heaven
8 CD IBl ALF ALF gets a
special visit /rom casl

comedy. C

I

Complere rne c·hvckle quored
by f1lling in the missing words
L.-..L.-.L.-JL........L-....L.......,
. · you develop from sfep No. 3 be low.

(!) Televlllon Look at tl1e
BIJolution of tele\lision

Serv1ceo

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells completed tame dey.
Pump selu 1nd t8r'Jice. 304·

I

ATZOLE

f-__,:,:15 -T-1~~6...:;lr-=-lr---1 0

in his hometown hockey

2-1

Sign on a pamphlet folding
machine at a printing company:
"Restricted oreal ViolatOr$ will be

·=---~------, - 1 "

MacGyver •
MacGyver discovers coercJon

9448.

1971 Merc:ury Satillill SebMna.
blue, 2 door. 304-898·3e92.

Now buvlne ahell com or e•
corn. Cell for latest qUotl_lf, Rlvlf'
Ctty Fann Supply, 11•·646·

Hey

1979 23 ft. GMC motor home.
Deluxe. Nice for lreveling or
conttruction worken, ate .
Priced tO sell. Call 114·388·

9162.

'74

c ·-~NP.

304·578·2398 or 114-441-

1987 Buick Some,..t. 4 cyl.,
auto., P.S., P.l. ; air, like nsw.
Only ZOOO miles. •12.200.

1·304·171·4038
3433.

GoLf.

PLAYS:l&gt;
..

I

-L..-L..-L.
. ......J.L-..J

L.

Wi ())

'THERE'S A llARI(HAIR&amp;D BASE

441-0294.

1978 Ford F-100, 8 cyl, 3opd.

64

19?9 23 ft. GMC motor home.
Delu•. Nice of

1971 Ctmero, ~50, automatic.
"rough body. Runt good. Good
wOrk car. C.H 814·446· 7211
etter 6pm.

II

I·!
I' I .:.

FACRT
~~.;.......:.;.....::....;..:.....;,.--!.

members of Gilligan's Island.

6. Campers

1973 Opal atatlon wagon, good
t:on.dition. C.ll 8 1.t.· 379·21 43
or 8;14·379-2137. .
. 81

-----------

One Hempthlrt boar. 1 Y••old .

.,_,.

79 Motors Homes

614·388-97B9.

78&amp;1.

CROSS• SONS

' :t. Dl DN'j. .l:

8488.

1977 Black Monte Catlo. All
options. 'Nice c:ar. t7&amp;0. Call

SI'O~TS' IN

niE't' C.AL-L~D M~
"WRoNCi WAY CAL..LAtfAN~
:t. DIDN'T l&lt;·Now '(oU PLAYe()
foo"t'SAL.t..!

GOODf

t..O. Coli a14-448-0988. Wo

197S Pontiac Grtndprix. Z dr.. buy junk tra~tmiuiana.
auto. •950. C.ll 81 4-446-1816 j.::~=:..::.=::.:::::.::::....;_
ot "8·12_.. .
Land L Tire Outlet tlretrucklot~d
uteFeb.1-5.131nch·18.1inch.
1950 Ford Coupe. 3151, auto.. from •&amp;.00 up. Loceted acro11
PS, PB. lW. Nc;.t orglnlal. Re~ from Sahlo Statlan. Tuppert
to drive. t1100. Call 114-388- Ptein,, Oh,o. 814-992-1134•.

:r. PLAYE:P

CO~I.fGE

)Pof!-TING

Ut~ 6 rabuilt-treMmlaiont. AM
internally inapec1ild &amp; guern·

814·949-2801 '

Yamaha tound system. Turnte·
bie, tuner. cassette . deck. preamp. Power amp. ESS ClllliC
tpeakers. 0 'sullivan cabinet.
New coat inc:tudlng tax· Ul33.
Ysmahes very belt componett.
Sell tor •2•00 ortredefortruck.

WH~N

&amp; Accessories

-r-1

I-I

.e

Auto Parts

76

5911.

Caiii14-3S8·1104.

992·5618. ,

814-982-3711 E.O.H.

197&amp; Monte Carlo. Exc.t. cond.
in 6 aut. 310 engine. tBIO. Cal
814-3BB·88.t.7.

.1987 Olda. Cutlau Supreme .
Cell 30•· 773·6816 or 773-

a71;-3889.

ezn.

CoH 114·388·8240.

Pisno t100.00. Phone 304-

304-882·3236.

114·441-4711,

Conage efficiency, tot•l elect·
ric. rafrigeretor, etova. nice.
HUO epprovH. 22111 Mt. V•r·
non Ave .. Pt. P1eaunt. 01 •·

1-----------

1881 C.v1ller RS . Uke nsw,
20 000 mlln. Auto .• AC, PS.
Pe: AM·FM-Cau .. tilt. •eooo.

Carvin DC12&amp; Leed Guitar
8375.00. Ctrvin tpeeker cabinet with four 12 inch Celettlons. tl65.00. Both exc cond.

-v.s. "3&amp; w..t.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Y-e·.

1982 Berlinetta Camaro IAidl.
EJCceUent condition. PS, PB.
cruiM, air. stereo. rear defrost.
reclining seats, low mileage.
Originial. Call 814-448·2886
after 8pm.

69

75

1979 Hydrasport Bus boat, 10_
19n Camero (r~l. 91,000 HP Mere. ss prop. Mere TM.
mllu, auto ..
eu;oo·. C.ll trailer. Sperl, EC. Call6~··4•6·
.· 614-441· 111 5-D•Y. 448· 1 2.t..t. · 19:;4:,.1:.:9:.:•::fl.::•::r_:5:.:P.::
.m.::,.;.·- - - - . , .
afte,-&amp; PM.
1Fully liqpt. 18ft. 8111 Boat, 36
1881 Ford. Eacort, t2991. Call harte M8rcury:Power Tri"rn. Uke
814-286·1622.
new. Garage kept. 814· 8_12-

Groom end Supply Shop·Pet
Grooming . All breed .... AII
Jtylet. lams Pet Food Detler.

Full blooded white
Shepherd puppies for

1.-=,:,;'==;;====F=-

2342.

HorHs tor Ill• Standardbred
1nd TennaUH Welkan. Cell

a14-448-7503.

1987 CR SOOR, never been
raced. Cell for price. 30•·176·

71 Auto'• For Sale

304-882·3287 or 304 -773·

Unfurnithed, one bedroom ger·
age apartment In Huntington.
WV . . C.ll 304·121·1061 or

•

CA11614-94!-2959.

~iveatock J

304-882-2561.

Harley Davideon Sportt·
1118Recently rebuilt. ·Many new
tar.
peru. New p~int job. t800.
814· 9a•
u- 4420 •
•

·

·

e

Honda Aero 80 Scootllfl. 2 for
.-1000, Both 1984, 1 under
miiM, 1 ufMter BOO milu.
1000

56 Building Supplies

2 bedroom f~rnised•apt. ref ant;~
depotlt, New )·Iaven. W. Vii ..

Beec:ti Street, Middtepor.t, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnl1hed s~t. utili·
· tin paid, references end deposit. ·

Clll 11.t.•992·6086 after 1:00
p.m.

od

2881.

~6=02=4::·----~~--~~·

clo. hcollonl condhlon. •&amp;oo.

b.tet. Mixed hay · large ~ound
belee. "Csll 814·286·33"34.
Jackaon. Ohltt.

t~';96~-~3:0;4;-a:a:2;·2~2;0:4;.;::!:~::2:,:::;;;;~l 62 Wanted to Buy

1 bedroom apt. for rent. Utilities
paid. 3112 miles south of Middl•
port. Rt. 7 . 614-387· 0811 . ·

1984 Kawa11ki KX •o i'nolorcv - ~

&amp; Grain

Mind hay oi' alf1tf1 • tquare

Cllll1~·251·1281 .

614-3Ba-9686.

U Hsul truck• and trailer&amp; for
rent, 304·676· 7421 , .

Rocker
1967 HOlley Park· 12x60. 2 BR ..
1 bath. 27K10 built qn room.
CA . fuel oil furnace . 10x6~front
awning, carport awning . Good
cond. Must move. Call 614·
446·2858 after 6 PM .

35 Lots

•

Convenient. 2 BR cottage in
. Gallipolit, 5 rooms 'plus bas•
ment and garage. Call614-446·
1890 or 81-446-2325.

lNG CO . recommends that you
do busineiS with people you
know. and NOT to sand money
through the mail until you have
investigated the offering.

33

a7&amp;·6491'

Mobile Home lot for rant. Total
· electric. Priest Mobile Home
Park. Call 614-367-7438 .

Finan cial

31

Pink &amp; white full length prom
gown . size 3. 860. Call 304·

Trimline Treadmill. Excel. cond .
Call614·446·8189 after 6 PM .

514-992·22a4.

!

20 cu .ft . Hotpoint ch..t freezer.
8150 . 2 -. 8ft. tool baxas-slde
mount for pick-up, t400. 6 inch
chimnev blower for wood ltove.
8100. Call614-256-1891.

Hay

IIDl 111 (121

(!) Nightly Buolne11 Report
1111 e (!2i CIIS Newe
lllJ Body Elec1rlc
(121 !ntldo Polltlca '88

.:_::::._____'----~

SWIMMING POOLS- 1999
Reedy ' mix concrete end all
New left over 1987 Model Concrete tuppllet. Call .,.. Valley
Paola . Hugh 15x24 ft. swim · Brook Cement 1nd Supplies,
area. 4 ft. deep. Include• deck. 304-773-5234.
· fence. filter • warranty . Jnstal..._
·t ion &amp; financing available. Call
24 hr.J.1,1·800-3415-0946.
Pets for Sale
56

Large 2 BR hs . wjth stoiJe &amp;
refrigerator. 1226 per month.
Deposit required. Vinton area.
Call 614-388-8121 .

Will do Federal and State Income
Taxes: typing. booking. and
Notary nrvice. Margeret Ptrker

21

54 Mise: Merchandise

64

.

Antiqutl. buy or sell. Riverine
Building Materiels
Antiquel. 112• East Main St .,
Bloctc. brick, aewer pipes, win·
Pomerov. Hourt: Mbn .. Tues ..
dowa. lintel1. ate. Claude Win·
and Wed. 10:00a.m.·6:00p.m.,
ten, Rio Gran~. ·0, CeM 114·
Sun. 1:00 p.m.·6:00 p.m. By
245·&amp;121 .
chance or appointment. Run ·
Moore. 614-992-2628.
Concrete blocks lllltilll!l. yard or
delivery. M11on 81nd. O.Uipolii
Block (;o.. 1 Z3lh Pine St.,

1977 4K4 Che\iy ton pick-up .
GenMal Electric cook ""st0\18.
Oliver tttctof with end loader.
Gall 614-379-2798 .

44~-1a15 ,

54 Misc. Merchandile

1811M: Coiii14·317-Qe41.

Commercial building fqr lease.
DotoVntown Pt. Pleasant . Stores.
offices. A-1 Real Estate. Carol
Yeager, B.roker. Call 3Q4-676 ·

Furnished 1 BR . house. 938 Flrtt
Ave. tzoo plus ref. &amp; •so
depotit. Call 614-446· 403B or

8393,

Give piano, Casio Keyboard and
organ leuont in my home to
beginners, sdvanced students.
Alto teactl chording and trans·
posing. If interested call 61•·

Furnished Rooms

,Antiques

I ' ·I I I IL
::
. .,.;1~. . :,1.3,.0.:. R...,..,-;1 1

CIJ e())ABCNewil;l ·

Valley FUrniture
19U YamehaYZ 12&amp;. Excallent
condition. t9SO. Call 1144·
New and used fumitura and
applicancet
Call 114-441· ..
~--------.;,.---:------"""----1 ::.:.:...:.:..:.;_
378-2111 . _ _ _ _ _ __
7572.
HOUfl. 9·5.

the

below to form four sim ple words

®Beit of Bill DanceiR)

Motorcycles

74

Buy &amp; Sell Antiques. Buckeye
Peddler, 814·446· 7812, Evenings &amp; weekends.

45

Call ut for your mobile home .• 2 BR .. with fireplace &amp; v, acre.
insunnce: Miller Insurance.
8260 a mo. Celll14-448-7881 .
304-882-2145 . .Also: auto.
home. life. hulth.
Hou18 for sale or rent: 1400 sq.
fl .- 3 BR., 2 full batht. utility
·room. family room. 24)1.28 gar·
18 Wanted to Do
age. Level lot. Rt . 36-Rodney
area. Call814-441-2858 after 5

0322.

J. s FURNITURE
!Formally Parson'• Furniture)

lett e r$ of
0 foReovrrronQe
scramb led words

IBlN- ·
(!) SportaLook
(!) l)r. Who
lllJ Colorsounda
(121 ShowBiz Today
IBI Fa~ of Ufe
Ill Cil Happy Dayo
6:1151]) Aile~
6:30" CD 1111 NBC NlghUy News

304-n3-5944,

Graclou• .living. 1 and 2 bed· ·
room epartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apartmenu in Middleport. From
$215. including utilities. Call

a14-992·7216.

Insurance

90 Daya 11me as c-.h with
approved credil. $ · Mllu out
Bulsvllle Rd. Open tam 10 lpm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614·448·

..

DUBONA

e CD m m())

1877 Roy1l Oldt loeded. all
power equipped, exc. cond.
•1.186. : 19811 :Jimmy Bluer
4x4 loaded. cloth lnt.rlor. aport
whee!l, axe. cond. t9,500.

WORD
GAM I

fd;rod by CLAY R. 'OL\AN

Death Do Us Part

.

~

Keyttone C-.ic M-ae· D ge
or Ford. ExerciM machine. Barr
generator. tool1, knifta, craftt,

Large 2-3 BR . houH. Plenty of
storage. Hendenon area. Call

'&gt;LEa"!

Go In ~he anow wkh"a Toronado.
Front whH4 clrfw. 1979 Oldt
Toronade loaded . 30•· 17154ot13 evenlngt.

53

882-2588 ,

HAA,~

T~~~t:~' S©R~}A-~f..!f~~

8:00 CD Cruy Like a FoK Till

3 room &amp;. b11ttl ap1rtment. 114
St1te St. Call 614·4.t.6-3356.

6 room unfurnished apt. for rent.
CAll 614--992-5434 or 304-

a14-44a-7026.

Television
Viewing

M~ A~J«Vr ~~~·~
~ 1b

-t he Daily Sentinei- Page- 1.1

EVENING

Calllhen'eUiedT!reShop.Over
1,000tlra, tlzea 12. 13, 14, 11,
11. 11.5. 8 mlln O;Ut Rt. 218.

a14-992-7787. EOH.

Nicely fumish«&lt; 1m1ll house.
Aduht only. Ref. required. No
pett. Cilll 614-448-0338.

Lonely pre-tchoolar needs company. Will btby sit frM 1nother
pre · sch~er couple hours day,
time in Middleport. Grandma;

Eny Work ! Excellent Pay! As·
semble products at home. Call
t or information. 312-741 -8400
Ext . A-313 .
FE DERAL , STATE AND CIVIL

tiomes for Rent

·ohio - ·

1.1988

W.O.

79 Ford F-210XLT. 400anglna.
Auto.. air. 13.000 mu... Gerege
kopt. t5900. . Coli 114-44820711 fteningt . .

1.t.115 Eattem Ave.
Uving room suitet.fram •n1 a
up. Bedroom suitll f.t.B9.96 a
I:IP· Complete microwave stancla
tlQ.96 a. up.
..
·
Com11 ,1n an d mHt tho new
Ownart.

Furnish8d · lpartment-7 Neil.
Galilpolis. 1 ·BR. t22&amp; . Utilities
peid. Cell "4 46-4416 after 7 PM.

3 BR . houn &amp;. garage. A-1 Real
· Estate. Carol Yeeger·Broker.
304-6715·110 • .

Situations
Wanted

Government Jobs S 15,400 872 ,500. Now Hiring. Excellent
Benefits . Call 504-649-7922
Ext. J -313.
Sell Avon . Get your ·own Avon at
a discoun·t. Cell 614 - 44~·3358 .

41

aoo-a42·3619.

992-6403.

25550.

Furnish&amp;d 2 BR . apartment.
Adults only. No pett. Inquire at
First &amp; Olive St., ask for Rote
Stllner.

Rent~l s

Money Fo' .Colltgel Pert time
jobl. Join' ihe Army National
Guard. 304-176-3960 or 1·

A11e ., Gallipolis. Call 614-446 2282.

47a1 ,

Nice1 BR . apt . ~sngeandrefrig.
fumlthed . Wster a. garbage
p11ld. Oepotlt required. Call
814-446-4346 aft'' 6 PM .

t~;~~~~~~;:::::-r:::::::::::1

Vani &amp; 4

1

So,.. and ehairt prie~ from
·t318 to tll5. TN ... 1150 and
up to t 1 215. Hlde·a·bedt t390
to tl95. Recliners t221 to
t371. LlmPI tz8 to t12&amp;.
Dinettes t101end up to ••tl.
Wood table w· l chair• t211 to
•111. O.A •100 up to •3?&amp;.
Hutc;:hes tot.OO end up. BuM
beds complete w- ~•
U81and upto•3tl . 8abybeda
t 1 10. Mattre.... or box lOring a
full or twin 118, finn f7&amp;. lftd
t88 ." Oueet1 sett t221, King
f310. 4 dr.wer c.._.. ·tel . Gun
cabinltl 6 gun. G.. ar .aactric
range t375. S.by m.ttrnllt
f35 . . . .6 .
d frllmM uo.
f30 • Ki " frt a tiO .. Good
ael
of bedroom ault"/
metll Cabinett, hUdboards t30
and up to t65.

-

FebruarY 1. 1988

73

Hou10hold Goods

,.,,.

~

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

876-5104,

8

Monday.

POnleroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Page

.... ..

Q A

CQDYP

K H X·

DMHXQZ

Q D Z

AQXHYP

Yeeterday'a Cryptoqaote: BORES BORE EACH
OTIIER TOO, BUT .IT NEVER SEEMS TO TEACH THEM
'

'

AIM'HING. - DON MARQUIS
II

,,.

'

�•

Pllga 12-The Daily Sentinel
. •

~~~~~~:2~::~---=--~~:-------~--------!P~om~~~~ro~y:!M~M~~~~ap~~~~~O~h~io~------------------~~----_2M~o~~~~~~~~~u~a~~1~·21!9~8~
'

--Area news briefs-EM51J~ seven weekend ealls

East and Midwest.
Pre-dawn temperatures today
were below freezing, !rom the
central high Plains to the Great
Lakes In advance of the Canadian cold front. Early this
morning the front had driven
temperatures to 20 below zero In
northern Montana and North
Dakota.
Brisk northerly -winds - drove
wln.d chill factors to 57 below at
Minot, . N.D., said National
Weather Service lorecater Hugh
Crowther,
.
.
But farther · east five high
temperature records fell before ·
dawn today as a flow of warm air
out of the Gulf of Mexico pushed
the mercury to levels well above
normal.
High temperature records for
Feb. 1 were broken at Buffalo,
N.Y.. where It hit 53, and
Burlington, VI., where It was 50.
•!\round Nation
, . Rochester. KY.. recorded 56,
A blast of frigid Canadian air
Syracuse, · N:Y.. had 57, and
Youngstown; Ohio; was at 51.
drove wind chills as low as 57
below as it swept ·across the
Two dozen high temperature
northern Plains today toward the
records fell Sunday across ihe
eastern half of · the nation !rain
Great Lakes and New England,
threatening to snurt out unseaGreen Bay, Wis., where it was 41,
sonably warm weather In the
to Atlantic City, N.J .. which
notched a 63.

Foreclosure actions filed.

Three fon'closure actions, one 1 against Randy L. Riffle,
Shade. et al.; another against Robert J. Varian. Langsville, et
al; and the third, against Frank W. Houser. Rutland. et al, have
been !lied in Meigs &lt;;:ounty Common Pleas Court by Diamond
Savings and Loan·Co., Findlay.
In another !oreclosure action. June Ann Lowery has been
granted a judgment of $6.300 from James A. Schuler.
Judge Charles H. Knight has stepped down as presiding
authority in the case of Vernon Bartels against the VIllage of
Syracuse. 'Knight has requested the Ohio. Sl!preme Court
appoint a visiting judge to preside In the matter. ·
·
An action by Charles A. Ritchie and Lor! K. Ritchie has been
dismissed.

Stocks higher in
active trading today

I

Janice S. Kinneson
Janice Sue Kinneson. 33.
Langsville, di ed at St. Anthony's
Hospital in Columbus on Saturday followrng a brief m'ness.
Born in Wellston on Dec. 23.
1954, she was a daughter of
Perlene Spears of Willksvl1le and
t he lat e James Franci s
Kinneson.

UMW. •• Continued from page 1

Federal · Reserve Board will
launch a more accommodative
monetary policy leading to lower
·
Interest rates. ·
"If the economy weakens, you
will definitely see the Fed come
to the rescue," said Rao Chalasanl, bond and stock market
strategist with Prescott Ball &amp;
Turben Inc. In Cleveland, Ohio.
"We do look for some kind of
easing."
Harry Miller, portfolio analyst
at Johnson. Lane, Space, Smith &amp;
Co. in Atlanta. said the outlook
lor Interest rate relief was
"hopeful," but the market still
was plagued by ~nc\!rtalnty and
low Investor confidence.
"The last (ew weeks We have
seen very dull a-ctivity," Miller
said. "And while this can be
attributed to a lot of things. It
comes back to the same lack of
conviction that has been evidenced by virtually everyone In
the market since October."
Miller said many Institutions
and Individuals are on the
sidelines "waiting for a consensus to develop. This is still a very
difficult environment in which to
convince clients that there are
opportunities because of the shell
shock o!Oct.l9." ·

Also surviving are a brother
James Robert Kinneson of Rat eli!!; one sister, Mrs. Barbara
Pierce of Langsville. She was
preceded in death by an in!ant
daughter.
Graveside services will be
conducted Tuesday, 1 p.m .. in '
Wilkesville Cemetery, Rev. Marvin Markin officiating.
Arrangements are by McCoyMoore Funeral Home In Vinton.

CoJTeclion

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As o! 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
or Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power ........... .. 29'h
AT&amp;T ... .. ............................. 30
Ashland Oil ................... ..... 56%
Bob Evans .......................... 15V.
Charm.lng Shoppes ...... ........ 12 %
Cl ty Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul .. .......... ..... ... . 36
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 58¥8
Heck's Inc ............... ... ...... ... 1%
Key Centurion ..................... 40
Lands' End .............. .'........... 19
Limited· Inc . ....................... 18%
Multimedia Inc ................... 52'h
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Hobbins &amp; Myers ................. 7%
Shoney's Inc . ............. ......... 22%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington lnd.:........... , .. :.l7 %

ran said the rank-and·ftle meet·
lngs with local leaders Friday
were the "crucial factor" In
gaining ratification . of the
contract.
"Clearly, you have to under~
stand the contract Is not ratified," he said. "If we called a
general strike about 65,000
workers could walk out."
The nation's top three coal
companies, Including Peabody
Holding Co., belong to the group,
making It "wlthout·question" the
UMW's biggest contract, Corcoran said.
Tom Hoffman, spokesman for
the coal operators, said approval
of the agreement "will not be a
cumbersome process!' for the
companies, such as Peabody,
Consolidation Coal Co. and Am ax
1
Coal Co.
The national agreement covers
worker.s In more than a dozen
states east of the Mississippi
River Including Kentucky, West
VIrginia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Alabama, Ohio, Indiana and
Illinois.

I

Area deaths

,.

By Unllecl Preu International
High -temperature records,
two of which had stood since the
year the Germans attacked the
French a I Verdun, were broken
or equaled Sunday In parts of
Ohio.
Afternoon readings sta tewlde
climbed Into the 50s aand low 60s.
Highs ranged from 54 degrees In
Findlay and Toledo to 63 at
Cincinnati's Lunken Airport.
In Akron-Canton Sunday, the
mercury hit 58; eclipsing by one
degree the old record for Jan. 31,
set In 1916. Besides being famous
for the World War I. battle, .that
also was the year Gen. John J.
Pershln!( cl)ased Pancho VIlla In
Mexico.
The 1916 record high of 54 was
equaled In Toledo Sunday.
Other reeords for highs were
broken In Findlay, Mansfield.
. Youngstown and. Zanesville.

Meigs County Emergency Medlcaf Services reports seven
calls over the weekend; three Saturday and four Sunday.
Saturday at 2:18p.m., Tuppers Plains to Marcinko !;toad for
·' Robert Marcinko to St. Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Middleport at 11:15 p.m. to Hartinger Parkway for
James See to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy\at 11:18
- p.m:to Route 33 for JeH Hinkle to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 4: 04 a.m., Racine to Route 338 for VIcki Boso to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:29a.m. to Route 124
for Leroy Bartrum to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy .a t 12:59
p.m. to Condor St. fo.r Wayne Williamson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 1(): 08 p.m . to Butternut Ave. for Michael
Hubbard to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Stock
prices moved higher in active
early trading today. extending
gains won In the previous two
sessions amid a growing optimIsm over ihe likelihood of Interest
rate reductions.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose28.18Frlday, was
up 10.45 to 1968.67 at 10 a.m. EST.
Advances led declines 855-342
among the 1.618 Issues crossing
the New York Stock Exchange
tape. Volume was · active,
amounting to about 48.70 million
shares during the first 30 minutes
of trading.
· The prospects for lower interest rates provided the stock
market with a much needed
boost last week as prices staged a
broad advance despite evidence
of continued uncertainty and low
investor confidence.
The Dow Jones Industrial average rose 28.18 Friday to close the
week at 1958.22. For the week, the
index gained 54.71. or2.9 percent.
"The market held up reasonably well for the entire week, "
said Ricky Harrington, an ana lyst with Interstate Securities
Corp. In Charlotte. N.C.
Analysts said the market's
advance Thursday and Friday
reflected a strong belief the

Ohio reports record
high
temperatures.
.

Kenneth R. Shuster. Dexter,
was fined last week in Meigs
County Court, $250 and costs, .
three days In jail and his license
suspended for 60 days, for DWI.
The name was lncorrecily . reported as Kenneih R. Shultes In
Sunday's newspaper.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -Edson
Roush, Racine.
Saturday discharges - Erica
Garnes, Kathryn Evans.
Sunday admissions - Vicki
Boso, Portland, Ore.; Wayne
Williams, Middleport; Michael
Hubbard, Syracuse.
Sunday discharges -Barbara
Johnson. Daisy Sisson, Janet
Jenkins.

Announcem~nts
Sorority to meet
The Heart and Hands Meeting
of XI Gamma MuChapterofBeta
Sigma Phi Sorority wlll be held ·
Tuesday, 7:30p.m .. at the home
of Johanna Shuler. Gifts are to be
wrapped In white paper with pink
bows.
Olive Trustees meet
Olive Township Trustees will
meet Friday, 6:30 p .m .. at the
Reedsville Fire Station.
Meet tonight
Letart Township Trustees will
meet tonight rMonday), 6 p.m ..
at the office building.
Rutland Village Council will
mee t Tuesday
Rutland
councilnight, 7 p.m., at
the civic €enter.

Hoffman declined to discuss
contract Issues but had said the
mine owners seek "a contract
that recognizes our need to
compete in the long-term in a
tough energy market;"
The contract must "allow
tunlonlzed mines) to compete
with non-union coal . .. t and) with
gas and oil. ... (and permit)
coal-fired electricity to compete
with hydroelectric power," Hoffman said.
The ·association, which once
represenied more than 100 companies In 1980, bargains for only
15 companies. Some 24 or more
companies pulled out of the
organlza lion and . signed "me
too" contracts which say that
they agree to pay whatever
settlement tlie association
agr'ees to.
South Central Ohio
Today, occasional rain. High 60
to 65. Winds southwest 5 to 15
mph . Chance of rain near 100
percent.
Tonight. more rain, possibly
heavy. Low 45 to 50. Winds
southwest changing to northeast
5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 90
percent.
Tuesday, still more rain.
Cooler with the high 45 to 50.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of snow in the north and
of rain or snow in the south on
Wednesday. Fair thursday.
. Chance of rain or snow Friday .
Highs hl the 30s Wednesday,
from the low 30s to low 40s
Thursday and from the upper 30s
to the .upper 40s Friday. Lows
from the mid-teens to the'mld-20s
r;torth and from the mld-20s to the
mld-30s .s outh through the period.

.....

Pick 4

Page3

3861

•

a1 y
Vol.38, No.1 86 .
Copyrighted 1 988

•·.

·~·

EE}SNOW
-RAIN
( /,;:;1 SHOWERS
,
FRONTS:
Warm "
Ccld
. . Sialic . . Occluded
Map shows minimum tempP.ratures . At least 50% or any shadeq area is rorec~st to receive precipitation indicated
1
UPI

11

WEATHER M~P - Snow will be l"idespread r~om the central
. Rockies through the central Plains and the Iipper Great Lakes
region. A b11J1d of freezing rain Will develop across south central
and northeastern Kailsas. Rain showers will occur from the
Mississippi Valley through the Tennessee and Oblci valleys, the
lower Great Lakes and Middle Atlantic st9tes Into New England.
Rain will be most likely across the Ohio Valley and lower Great
Lakes with a few thunderstorms across · Arkansas and the
TeMessee Valley.

.
.
said
that
.
lighting
and
Councllman
Bill
permission,
the
mayor
· BY NANCY YOACHAM
could
at
'least
Young
reported
that
he
m
et
village
workers
Sentinel News Staff ,
start
cleaning
away
the
brush.
recently
with
electric
company
What to do about debris In the
representatives, Young has been ·
West Main St. area where a rock Councilmembers agreed they
would
like
to
see
the
debris
pushing for some time for Instalslide pccurred In late November
Jation of decorative lights along
was discussed Monday night by cleaned away and a damaged
of
the
area.
but
the sidewalk In the downtown
trailer
moved
out
members ·of Pomeroy Village
also'
agreed
that
It
would
be
a
section
to beautl!y the village
Council. Mayor Rlc)lard Seyler
expensive
proposition
and
eliminate
poles on the
much
too
said several local resl~ents have
lor
the
village
to
atte~pt
to
have
parking
Jot.
If
the
new lighting Is
. asked him what council plans to
from
the
site.
Jnstalie'd,
Young
has been told
the
rock
removed
· do about the mess.
Council
has
not
given
up
the
that
the
double
light
poles will be
Because the slide Is on private
Idea
of
Installing
new
street
made
of
all!minuin
or
fiberglass,
property, there Is nothing . the
lighting
In
Pomeroy's
downtown
and
will
probably
be
higher
than
vllhlge can do to begin cleaning · _
area.
·
the
poles
currently
In
use.
shopping
up. the' area without permission ·
Columbus and Southern · Is
. Young said electric company
from the owners,' said Mayor
representatives are now checkSeyler. If ti1e' owners would give responsible for the downtown

•

\.\

ent1ne
1 Section, 1 0 Pages 26 Cent a
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

TWIN

EA. PC. ·

FULL

EA..'PC.

right, after emerging·from his den at 7:32a.m.
today. Phil did not see his shawdow, calling lor an
early spring. (UPI)

1,

Corf1)0site index o~

Leading Economic

Indicators

council to lease a computer from
the Leads Co. in Columbus to use
in ver!lying · registrations ·
through the State Bureau of
Motor Vehicles.
· Council's dec Is loll to lease the
computer was made at the last
regular council meeting.
Costs for the computer would
be approximately $400 per month
plus installation fees. Strict regurations must be followed In using
the computer to access ln!ormatlon and the system can be pulled
by the state at any time the
regulations are f10t followed

properly.
Councilman B(yan .Shank reported that Pomeroy Fire DeP!!rlment's new truck should be
arriving the e nd of March. First
truck payment of $27,000 will be
due upon delivery said Clerk
Jane Walton .
Walton also Issued a reminder ·
that cemetery fees of $5 per
grave 'for annual maintenance
and upkeep can now be paid to
the vlliage.
The mayor's report of $J.9281n
fines and fees collected for the
month of January was accep-ted.

•

tilde~

1967-tOO

several months that Celeste
wanted to move Transportation
Director Warren Smith Into the
chairmanship o! the Ohio Industrial Commission because of
controversy surrounding
Lancaster.
Lancaster. a black man, was to
be shifted · over to the Public
Ut!ilt!es Commission ,of Ohio to
replace commissioner William
Brooks, also a black man, who
was retiring.
Under a 1982 law , the 11member public Utilities Commission Nominating Council
makes its recommendations to
the governor. It recommended
Lancaster and three others.
"It was close," related one
member of the council in recal ling how Lancaste r got on the
short list. "He was the one that
squeezed by.:' This council'
. member said the decision was
dellb€fa tely delayed while a vote
was rounded up for Lancaster.
. The law requires public utili ties commissioners to have at
least three years' experience In
one or more of the following
fields: economjcs, law , finance .
accounting, engineering, physical or natural sciences, natural
resources or environmental
studies.
Lancaster is an attorney who
has worked for the Ohio Adult
Parole Authority, the Kroger
Co., the Bureau of Workers '
Compensation and , since 1976,
the Industrial Commission.
The law also requires that the
primary locus of the background
of'two of the five commissioners

Is on energy, and for two other
commissioners, on transportation or communications
technology.
"We want the Nominating ·
Council members to shOw up and
tell us how they considered
things." said Sen . Richa rd Finan, R·Cincinnatl. ·Chairman of
the committee.
"The questioning has been,
how does Lancaster fit into these
categories. and .1 don't think the
answers we' ve gotten have been
very adequate."
·
Finan also is in charge of
overriding Celeste's veto on the
bill . delaying the mandatory
aspect of _the auto emissions
testing In Hamilton. Butler,
Cuyahoga. Lake and Lorain
·counties.
Finan said· Republicans will
caucus to see how many voies
they can raise to override Celeste. Twenty-two are needed,
the same number that passed the
bill last wee k..
"I know the governor 's people
are beating on them rsenators
who voted to delay the testing) ,"
Finan said Monday .
The governor sa id he talked
with "a hall dozen" senators,
"primarily Republicans, " in an
effort to sustain hi s veto.
Testing began Monda y in the
affected areas, but motori sts
whose last names begin with C
· and D don't have to have a
certificate of Inspection until'
they want to register their
vehicles later this month . An
override would mean they don't
need a certificate until next year .

Index figures down 0.2 percent
DAVID VESEY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UP I) - The composite index
of leading Indicators, which foreshadows economic growth, fell 0.2 percent In December for the
third straight monthly decline, the Commerce
Department said Tuesday.
·
The downturn In December followed revised
declines o.! 1.2 percent In November, which
reflected the plunge In stock prices, and 0.1
percent In October. Originally , the department's
Bureau of Economic Analysl,s reported a 1.7
percent decline In November and a 0.2 percent
Increase in October.
Since World War II there have been 12 instances
in whiCh the composite Index has declined three
consecutive months . Eight of those ' Instances
have been followed by recession .
In this most recent case, however, two of the
monthly declines. In October and December. have '
been small and are subject to revision as
economic data. reach government analysts.
Five of the nine seasonally adjusted_lndlcat\)rs
available In December contributed to the decline.
The;r- were, In order of Impact,· building permits,
change In prices of sensitive materials, es(1eCially

lumber and scrap meta l, average weekly claims
lor unemployment Insurance, stock prices and
average work week.
Four indicators were positive factors in the
December index. From the largest to smallest
contributor, 'they were contracts and orders for
building plants and factory equipment. vendor
performance, new orders for manufactured
consumer goods and money supply .
The major contributor to the November
revision was change in Inventories. while cha nge
in credit outstanding was the major reason for the
October revision, the department said.
In the !ourth quarter of 1987. the composite
lndex·fell 0.5 percent. That followed Increases of
1.1 percent In the th!Jd quarter and 1.6 percent in
the first and second quarters . ·
The Index, 'starting at 100 In 1967, was 190.7 in
Decembe.r.
·
·
The composite Index of coincident Indicators. a
monthly appr9ximatlon of aggregate economic .
activity, lncr,eased 0.8 perce nt In December .
The composite Index of lagging Indicators
Increased 0.7 percent In December, the department said.
·
·

PUNXSUTAWNEY. Pa.
the 10·pounci rodent.
(UPI)- P\!nxsutawney Phil, the
At the ceremony were exweather•!orecastlng groundhog, change students from countries
today emerged from his hole iri a as diverse as Ireland, Colombia,
steady rain and !ailed·to s~ his France and Mexico.
slladow for only the ninth time In
"It makes you think that some
the past 101 years - a harbinger of the things Americans do are a
of an early spring.
little strange, waking up to see an
The , rain-drenched crowd of animal, "said Helena Gomez, 18,
abOut 1,000 people cheei-e'd wildly 'of · Colombia. "'«$. don' t do. lt. . ·
when "the Great Prognostlca- Maybe to see a person, but not an
. tor" emerged -lr0f11 Ills electrl-' animal. It makes you realize thai
cally heated, man-made burrow America Is a completely differatop Gobblers' Knob and whls· ent country." ·
pered his prediction In "groungh·
''It's really con!uslurt~ and
ogese" to James Means. presi- unus11al ·and even a little bit
dent · of the Punxsutawney crazy" said Ivan Desentis, 17, of
South Central Ohio
Groundhog Club.
Mexico.
Rain or drizzle today. with
"Phil came out Qf his official
When the dflybreak extravatemperatures !alllng Into the mid
home at 7:32 a.m. to start his ganza In Punxsutawney ended,
40s. Occasional rain tonight, with
second century with an accurate the furry forecaster was whisked
a iow near 40. Rain likely
prediction. He has failed to see to thedowntcr.Vn municipal buildNEW YORK IUPI) - Poll~ _ Edwin ~erez, 30. was In critical
Wednesday. with highs in the low
lils shadow,'' said Means, the Ing and snuggled Into the l)eated
scoured
a residential neighbor:--...sondltlon after surgery for a
40s.
sole Punxautawnlan of. 8,000 In · den - complete with lights, a
The probab111ty of precipita- hOod today for a rooftop sniper gunshot Wound In the lower back,
this. blue-Collar, western Pen- pl'lvate waterfall and a view of
,
tion Is neat 100percent today.and whose. gunshots killed one man the spokesman said.
nsyivanl&amp; town wllo. Is well- the public park - that Phil
wounded
three
others
on
a
Candido
Sepulveda,
25,
whose
and
tonlg'ht _an.d · 70 percent
versed In PhD's tlftlVe tolllflle.
shares with his cousin and
Brooklyn street corner.
head was .grazed by a bullet, was
Wednesday.
Lepnd has It that'lf a ground- understudy Baniey.
The
assailant
fled
the
top
of
the
lrl
fair col!dltlon. Jorge Gonzalez,
1
Winds will be from the north at
hoi seet1 bta ahadow he will be
"This Is the best advertising
tenement
on
Bushwlck
Avenue
35,
was at Wyckoff Heights
10 to 15 mph today and from the
scared b*C:k Into his burrow for you can .. set. It's all over the
after
opening
fire
about
8:
:IOp.m.
Hospital
hi Brooklyn In stable
northeast at 10 to 15 mph tonight.
six more weelcl of winter.
world,". Hld Mayor Mike Catan·
Monday,
said
pollee
Capt.
Wilcondition
with a leg wound.
Bdellded Forecut
Meana llkl It II only the ninth zar~&amp;o, Who haa been a resident of
llam Wern. On the street corner,
Do2ens of pollee otflcers spent
Thtll'lllii,Y throu&amp;h Saturday
lime ID t1te paal'101 yean that the Punxsutawney since 1919. "I tell
A chance of srlow Thursday, his targets were talking and early today combing the dilaplanimal klqdom's most ac- people that Punxsutawney Is the
with lair weather Friday and a enjoylng the unseasonably warm dated build!• of the largely
claimed meteorologllt has pre- weather capital of the world and
chance of snow Saturday. Highs weather when they were struck . residential· neighborhood In an
dicted an early aprllll. ·
outer &amp;~Mace."
eHort to find the trlgaerman,
will ranp from the mid 20s to the by the small-caliber bullets. ·
Many In t!W crowd' lhr\lipd
Club otflotalalnsist that Ph ills low 30a each day. Overnllfht lows
Shot In the head, Jose Correa, said Detective Ted Emanuele.
ott the 47-di!IJte weather and
the very ume groundhllll who wiD be In the 20s early Thursday 35. died about 11:15 p.m. at Kings
Helicopters clattered over·
. ralllaad toalted f&gt;!lll wltll beer as
head aa officers went from
bas been reportlq on tbe dawn of and In the teens Friday and · County Hospital In Brooklyn, a
Mealll. In top hal and talla. held
ColiUnued on pa,e 10
· hospital spokesman said.
•
door-to-door In lin effort to fi~d
Saturday mc(lllqa;. •

Weather

Sniper kills ·one, wounds three

EA. PC.

EA. PC.

· EL

~

STOlE HOUIS ·

9!30 AM-SaGO PM •·

!!l

fti·MJ11

•

.

ing Into ~osts related to installalion oL the new poles. Yqung
believesmucho!thelaborcanbe
dpne by village wor kers, thereby
saving money on the project .
Mayor Seyler reported that
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources employees have
begun core drilling the hillside
behind the Pomerqy Masonic
Lodge building. If testing proves
that water from abandoned coal
mines Is causing slippage prob!ems to develop on the. hillside,
then ODNR will reclaim the
problem location.
.Application has been made by

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I )
The Ohio Senate Ways and
Means Committee, In a rare
workout on a gubernatorial ap'po!ntee, will" be raising sharp
questions again this Week about .
the , app(&gt;lntment of · Leo~ard
Lancaster, a former state Industrial commissioner, to the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
'rhe committee was to hear
testimony later today from the
noJl\inatlng council which put
Lancaster on a list of four
acceptable candidates last
December.
In what seemed an obvious
political ! m,ove, telegraphed
weeks in advance, Gov. Richard
Celeste chose Lancaster from the
/
,list. '
The Senate planned to convene
,
', &lt;U~ l.;,3Q. _p,m,.loct a&gt;' to, consider.
· among other biils. a revision in
the state Boxing Commission.
Senators also may try to
override the governor's veto last
. Friday of a bill delaying for six
months a mandatory auto emis sions inspection program in the
Cincinnati and Cleveland areas.
The House meets Wednesday
at 1:30 p.m .
Lancaster has been on the
griddle at two ,prior Ways and
Mean's Committee hearings because or the mysterious way In
which he was appointed. The
Senate Is empowered to confirm
or veto certain guberrtatorlai.
appointments, and most sail
·
through untouched .
It had been broadcas t for

HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M
SATURDAY9 A.M.-6 P.M.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

(SOlD AS 3 PC. SET)

MQN.·SAT.

tonight .

·Panel questions ·. appointment

Punxsutawney Phil ~
predicts early spring

KING

rain

Wednesday . Highs In low 40s.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 2, _1 988

• INDIVIDUALS~FEDERAL-STATE
• OUT OF STATE RETURNS
•· BUSINESS - SMALL OR LARGE
• PARTNERSHIPS
• CORPOUTIONS
• OIL AND GAS

QUE~N

Occasional

Low near 40. Rain likely

Rock slide debris Pomeroy . council .topic·
)

EARLY SPRING? ' - PUnxsutawney Phil Is
rattled Into the air by his handler, Bud Dankel,

Jennifer L . Shuler. Shade, has
filed for a divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
from Martin A. Shuler, Little
Creek, Va. A restraining order
has been issued against the
defendant.
David Powell, Racine, and Eva
Lee Powell, Sandyville, W.Va.,
bave !lied for a dissolution of
their marriage;
A divorce has been granted to
Paul K. Arthurs from Catherine
R. A hurs.

RAIN

277

.'

Divorces sought

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. COWNS

Daily Number

NA:nol~4!. WEATHER SERVICE F.ORECAST Tp 7 AM E$T 2·2·88 • ·

Council to meet
Chester Councll 323, Daughters
of America, will meet at. 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. Members
who are going to the rally are
urged to attend .to practice
presenting the colors.

10°/o PENALTY WI~L BE CHARGED
AFTER THE FEB. 12 DATE ON REAL
•
•
ESTATE TAX.

Ohio Lottery

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~========~===========~;;;;;;;;;;;;~

LAST DAY TO PAY FIRST HALF REAL
ESTATE TAX WILL BE FEB. 12, 1988.

•'

Widespread snow was forecast
today from the central Rockies
through the central Plains and
Into the upper Great !1akes. A
band of freezing rain was expectedtodevelopacrosspartsof
Kansas. with rain . showers
spreading from the lower Mlssls·
sippi,' Tennessee and Ohio val- .
leys through the Middle Atlantic states Into New England.
-

Redmen· battle
Mount Vernon

·weather .

EXTENSION
GRANTED
.
.

'

The balmy weather was not
expected to last.
"It (the Canadian cold !ront)
will begin pushing Into New
England and the lower Great
Lakes by ,this evening,"
Crowther said. "It looks like
•most of the eastern U.S. ~hould
be warm today, but by. early
Tuesday, temperatures should
be cooling down pretty much."

'

I

'

I.

the killer, Emanuele said. Traf!lc was closed of! for live blocks .
"We're knocking on doors
asking If anybody saw anything,
heard anything, knew anthlng,
anything that can help us." he
said.
.
Pollee had no explanation for
the shooting, he sal«&lt;. The corner
was not considered a known drug
location. he said.
"We don't know why. We know
how, but not why," Emanuele
said. "It could have been a
dispute, drugs. a million things. "
Although pollee searched desperately for witnesses, they said
It . appeared the only wltnes~ ·
were tht! victims.

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